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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-27 - Orange Coast PilotII /I ·Bubbles. Changes Ponds ! l . . I I I • I ' I ............................................................. j ' Nixon Estate Toor Draws 8,000 Viewers : 'DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 27, 1978 llfOL. 11, MO. •. J SICTIOMI, li rAGH 'Worth tlae Pric~ 8,000 View Nixon Estate By STEVE MITCHELL OI .. Deity...._. S~ Some said they loved it. others said they couldn't even get their cam eras loaded before the whole thing was over. But many of the 8.000 or so vlailors who paid $2.50 apiece to see the Nixon estate by bus in San Clemente Sunday, thought the tour was well worth the money. Brief, yes, but worth the ticket price. And San Clemente Chamber of Commerce folks were surprised at bow smoothly the nine·hour P0!9k Arrives In Capikd for /Janna Trial operation to display the former President's home went Sunday. Fourteen charter buses shuttled back and forth from La Casa Pacifica lo San Clemente High School, with three buses entering the well·kept grounds of the SO.year·old home every 10 minutes. Just like clockwork. Alex Goodman, executive manager or the city's Chamber of Commerce, stood by shiny tour buses collecting yellow tickets from tour·goers. ''It's really running smooth, isn't it," he said. as he counted out numbers lo the bus driver in· side. "We started at 8:30 and we haven't had a backup of visitors yet." Things were running so smoothly that the high school parking lot never reached capacity, with lines of visitors ' climbing aboard buses at one point, and getting off further down the line. Jerry Weeks, San Clemente City Manager said the cost or the tour to the city would be less than $3,000, even with the ticket sales, but added restaurant owners and the hotel business would reap profits from the one- day tour of La Casa Pacifica. In TOngs11n Park Arrives in DC For Danna Trial ' a as Police ~Find No Traces Television crews crowded around buses with disembarking passengers, asking the tourists (See NIXON, Page AZ) Wanted, Dead or Alive Coast ~en DetermiilBd t,o Corral W amkring Hippo By PIBUP ROSMARIN Clf-..... ~·-Lfon Country Safari rangers were ordered today to c•p&l.lre Bubbles-the hippopotamus who escaped from the animal park a week a(U), leadj.NI a someUmes merrychase-eliveordead. "One way or the other we're . gotn1 to catch her," said senior ranaer Steve Clark. "If we can't tranquWse her too11bt. we're · aonna aboot b•." Clark was a member of a tbrff<tman team of ranam who were Uftabl• to pt clOle entUab to tbe three-ton animal early to- day to ,nre a trlnquWsina dart Into her htdt. He aald Bubb1H surfaced twlce ~urln1 tbelr hippo 1lakeout, but didn't come out ot the poad ln which •b• took i'efUteo«LipnaCanyonRoad. Clarli ntcl the blpp0 lben el•m benild out ~ the J)Oftd, and aa ranpn waited for her to I~ fer eno.a1b away from °'* wlter, ;IOWd tliroUida a blitied wtr• '~. -ma !1• .,., to tbe road. Ransen have tried to 1et dis· tance between Bubbles and water 10 that when lhe ta tran· quWzed she would be unable to reach the water, where sbe Teens Beat Victim, 85 SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Pollce were aearcbln1 toctu for three teen·a1era wbo terrorized an elderly San Franclaco couple and plstol·wblp1)ed the 15-year· old buabend HMelna becauae be had no money to alve them. Police 1114 the three male. all about 17, e1C1Ptd wlt.b U and two rtnp Ukea trOm the Wile at Dlf~ • If ra. Mary If lclllff, 17, and a lO·J•ar~d 1Jrl vl1IUn1 tbe cowple were tbteatened; and foreei to lie OG tbe tloiol" l*at Jteltb•w.ia~ would probably drown. "It's not lik~ we lost her,'• Clark said. An astooished motorist travel· Int Lasuna Canyon Road braked at the aiaht of a hippopotamus grazln& alon& tbe side of the road, and called police. Law enforcement oHlcers from Irvine, Laguna Bea.cb1 'the Cllllornla lliahway PaUOl and the county 1berltf'1 oft'ice conver1ecl OQ the scene, and with the ra.nien ch-5ed Bubbles acrou the road and into another laJce, on the other aide. lS feet from the hltbway. Clark wd the rancers fired . their dart auna twlce at tbe flee-ln1 JJubbleJ. apparentlJ mllltna b<>tli u .... The Costa Mesa pollce h6Ueopter );a1l• circled the uea. ~ a •potliCh\ • tbe new poftd. . Clark &aid Babblll WU apot,. te4 Uala ll)CJl'DinC. aWl in tho pc>DCL Blppopat•mn11 a1*Mt IDQlt <a. lllPl'Ot Pace AU Weather Chance of measurable rain 20 percent tonight in· creasing to 40 percent Tueldfl. _Lows tonight 41 to 54. lllghs Tuesday 58 to 65. l f \ \ . ' • i r I , •• .. •t 1, 1\2 OAJL Y PILOT s Mond1y Fobru17 27, 1978 ConsUiner .Prices Still Rising LOS ANGELES (AP) - Consumers in the Loa Aneeles- Long Beach -Oran&e County metropolitan area paid more again last month for nearly all goods and services except e ntertainmenl. the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics re- ported today. tRelnted story, A4) The new consumer price index for all consumers rose six-tenths of one percent from December to 185.5. which means that what cost $10 in January 1967 C06t $18.55 lru;t month. 11.!d Bruce Hanchett, the bureau's regional commissioner. During the period from January 1977 to January 19'78. Hanchett said, the index ror all consumers rose 6.1 percent. Hanchett said the bureau began this month to issue three indexes Instead of one each month in an effort to give con- sumers a better idea of their day·l~day buying power. Strategy Meeting Union Must Sell Pact to Miners WAStnNGTON <AP) -Some 400 t>oal miners and United Mine Worker!> district representatives -the men who will have to sell the union's rank-and-file on the proposed soft coal industry con· tract -are getting the word to- dc.t Y on how lo go about their task Argument Cuts Jarvis Backers SACRAMENTO (AP) - Voters who ti ave an opinion about the Jarvis pr operly tax initiative favor it nearly 3-1 in a new poll, the Sacramento Bee ::.aid today. However, when supporters of the initiative and undecided voters were told a major argument of opponents -that the in- itiative would cause a s tate tax increase or cutbacks in local services -the division between supporters and opponents was almost even, the newspaper said. The Bee said the poll was based on telephone in· tcrviews of n2 registered voters by Public Response A::.soc iated of San Francisco, between Feb. JO and Feb. l.S. F,....PageAJ ffiPPO .•. of their days submerged under water, sticking up only nostrils for breath, They reed at night and must come out of the water to forage. Lion Country spokeswoman Jo Scheller said the fact that ~ubbles crossed Laguna Canyon Road makes the hunt a serious business. "People traveling the road could have been hurt," she said. "Our first responsibility is to the community. Tonight may be her last chance. Ir she poses a threat to human life, I'm afraid Bubbles ~-have to go first." Cop Killed In Collision LANCASTER <AP) -A col· lision between two sheriff's -patrol cars answering a burglary call left one sheriffs deputy dead and another critically injured. Deputy Gregory Low, 30, of Lancaster was pronounced dead on arrival at Antelope Valley Hospital Medical center follow· ing Sunday's collision In this des- ert community 70 miles northeast or Los Angeles. OAAMOll COMT s DAILY PILOT Although the contr act has been criticized in the coalfields, top union officials feel that if they can adequately explaJn the pact, the union's 160.000 striking miners will approve the contract next week and be back an the pits by mid.March. Members or the u nion's bargaining te~m scheduled meetings with the miners and district representatives at a downtown hotel. The bargainers are attempt· ing to steep their audience in what the unfon would get from the contract and trying to anticipate what questions the 400 or so men will have to answer when they meet with local uruon representatives throughout the UM W's 21 dts trlcts this week. The 400 rank -and-fil e members were chosen by UMW President Arnold Miller, who Friday night called them, "my people." Mill er says he has no plans to go into the coalfields and stump for the proposal, as he did in 1974. Rut Miller did plan to make an appearance at today's indoctrination session to remind the district representatives or their r esponsibility under the un- 1 on constitution to back the tentative contract. "Some or our people failed to support the contract proposal in 1974," s aid Miller, who steadfastly predicts the current pact will be approved. "The UO· ion's international officers and . the international executive board will act against anybody failin·g to meet their responsibilities this time." The ratification vote will be conducted next week in 2,100 local union halls. Before the balloting. educational meetings will be held in each district and local officers, in turn, wUI then hold similar sessions with the rank and file. Following this. a 48-bour wail· ing period ensues before the miners cast their secret ballots. F,....PageAI HANNA ••• The ex-rice dealer, who left Wasbl.ngton 18 montha aeo, once entertained dozens of con· gressmen at laviab partlea at bis George Town Club. Park bas an agreement that all criminal charges against him will be dropped provided be tells the truth. He told reporters be hopes his testimony will help end the al· leged influence·buying scandal "so that we can move on to something more positive which is to enhance the relations between our two countries." House Investigators say Park's testimony is central to their determining if any present or ex-congressmen were in £act influenced by money from Park and should be char1ed. Earlier in Hawaii. Park said a form er South Korean in· telligence chief lied when he told a House committee that Park was an agent of the Korean gov· ernment. "That's absolutely not true:• Park said In an Interview televised today. Asked whether he was saying the former ln- telllgence chief was lyin1, be said, ''I think that is correct.'• Park Insisted he 1ave campaign contributtona only to congreumen who were bis friends, and only when they asked, ''to help tbe American political 1y1tem in my own way." A former dltector of the Korean Centr~ Intelll11nce Agency, Jtim HYlUll Woolt. tald the ethle1 panel that Pa.rte and Hanna prolblsed &ti.at lf tbe JtCIA helped mate Park Kor••'• exclusive rice dtil• tn tbl1 cou..ntry. be. woutd mate payment.a out of eommlaalon mooey to eonareAm• •tto ~ Jtcn-ea'• ~ .. Ta.e COn1Utat.ton problblt. membtra o( Con'"'98 trom et· c1ptln& lflla from •t•nt.I of faretsn eovemmem.t. The COD- ~en wbo took P-'OHY ft'Oln Pak'•--~ kDei Ill.in oni; u a bU1iMllm• iDd W~ par\Y·ilver. • Besides the index for all con- au mera, he sald, there wUI be a regular consumer price index aa before. coverin1 only blue collar and clerical workers, and a re· vised index coveriD1 purchase ot several items not included pre- v I ou sly. Such items include wigs, sleeping bags. citizens band radios and a wider ranae or sporting sooda and automoblles. The revised index or blue col· lar and clerical workers rOM .7 percent, be eald. The index for all consumers, includin& the new revisions and job categories, showed lncreases in all major areas ot spending except entertainment. which had dropped 2.6 percent since December 1977. The hlgbeat Increase was reflected ln food and beverages, where price hikes ot 1.6 pe«ent accounted for almost half of the overall rise ln con.sumer costs. Apparel and upkeep coals in· creaaed the least -by one-tenth Trashg Street Scene of one perce nt over the December 1977 index for the same cate1ory. the report showed. The breakdown of increases for the remalnina four categories showed that housin& costs were up six.tenths or one percent in January over the pre- vious month, transportation prices edged up two-tenths or one percent, medical care costs rose nine-tenths of one pertent,. and other goods and services ln· creased 1.5 percent. Tons of gar bage fill 6l st Street, between Fourth and Fifth Avenues in the Bay Rid~c section of Drookl\'n Sunday. Neighborhood residents dumped the ref- u~e there after protesting the alleged lack of response t o pleas tor pickups. Coast to Get Rain For Most of Week The rains have returned. And they're likely lo remain for most of the week. the National Weather Service said today. Allen Dascomb, weather public service specialist, ex· plained that a high-pressure area that kept storms from the Orange Coast for the past two weeks bas dissipated. A weak low-pressure area has moved in rrom the southwest, Dascomb said. In addition, a high-pressure area is building up over the Gulf or Alaska. puabtng storms south. Temperatures along the coast should be 10mewhat cooler. with hips In the 00s and lows from 4.5 to SS dqrees. Only a trace or rain was measured thl1 morning, with rea4ings ranaing from .02 lo Huntiqton Beach and .03 in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach to .13 ln LapnaNlguel. Seuon totals so far are 16.81 ln Newport Beach, 17.78 ln Hunt- ington Beach. 18.96 in Cos ta Mesa. and 19.68 in Laguna Ni1uel. Last year's rainfall totals at this Ume ranged from 6.~ inches in the south county to 9.41 inches in Hunlinaton Beach. Booze Fatal To Student ALFRED, N.Y. <AP) -One Alfred University student was dead and two others were in critical eoodition after drinking heavily at a fraternity party, a coroner said. Dr. Irwin Felsen, the Allegany County coroner, said an autopsy showed that Charles Stenzel of Sayville died of "acute alcoholic intoxlcaUon." Llsted In critical condition al Bethesda Memorial Hospital in Hornell were Philip Feua of Massapequa and Willlam Bush of Lancaster, Pa., both 18. ............. PRESIDENT, MRS. CARTER APPLAUD HOAOwtTl First Whit• HouH Concert Since Hoover Er• I LateEneore Hormritz Pkiys Whits Home WASHINGTON (AP) -1t wu a return Whlle Hou.se eqqeJl18\t few planiat Vladlmlr Horo1ritz. The tut Um he ap. , ~ared there wu a half eenbJry qo, wbeo Herbert Hoover ln-. Ylted h1m lbol't1y after h!& 11.S. deWL Horowlta psfonned a reclt.11 Suoday Wont President and Mn. Cartls' -1 250 invited peats, ioewdhia aome of the coutl'Y'• mOll famou mU.Sclana, In hlt lntrOd\ledoa .. Cuter called Horowltt "• true nadona1 ~uare" Jl*wtt1 received prolon1td apl)la\&le ..rter bl• flr1t number, CboPln'• .. SOoata ln B-Flat M\D«." a Potoutae b7 &be eam• com~ ud Kocowit1' own vartalionl ol a them• from Gtore• Bla.t'• ••carmen.0 He .i..o pl91ect two othv work.a by Ct;Opio,Sclnunanti•i nfiawn~u and apolb by BachmaDlnoU •• l' • Seven Escape Injuries in Sea Collision SANTA BARBARA (AP) Seven people escaped Injury when an oil tanker and a fishing vessel collided in the Santa Barbara Channel. the Coast Guard reported. The seven, who were crew members on the 58-foot Cishlng vessel, were transferred to a Coast Guard cutter after their boat collided Sunday with the Sansinena 11, the sister ship of the ill-fated Sansinena which blew up in Los Angeles Harbor in December 1976. Coast Guard Petty Officer D.K. Tooman said the fishing vessel took on water rapidly, and shortly after the crew members were rescued the $80.000 boat sunk. It was not known how many people were aboard the Sanslnena JI , but Tooman said no injuries were reported from the 810·foot oil tanker and the extent or the ship's damage was unltnown. The Coast Guard planned an investigation into the cause of the accident. Suspect Held. In Viejo Wife Beating Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers have filed charges or felony wire beating against a Mission Viejo man who alleged- Jy beat his wife on the head and face with a coffee jar during a weekend squabble. Deputies jailed Lloyd Laverne Beverly, JS, after being called to his home at 22722 Via Santa Rosa. to halt bis alleged auack on his wile, Jessica, 35. They said Beverly hit her ln the face and head with such force that the coffee jar smasbeddurlng bis attack. They said Mra. Beverly needed treatment for her injuries at Saddleback Community Hospital where doctors removed class splinters from her face and then aUowedbertoaohoq,e. omcera aald Mrs. Beverly told them tbe attack aiemmed from a quarrel over a telephone bW. Skekton ID Investigated VENTU\tA (AP> - Authorid• AY a -.ietoa found lod.Ced amon1 U.. rocks ol a Ventura Jelly tl>aJ be t.b n- tnatns ol. a Ventura boai.man "'1l11Sn1 alnee January. The coroner•• otnce aald Su.n- d a y tbe 1keletoti bad been bat~red by waves for 10m• Umo and tdlnttftc Uon would have to be made tbrouah donlal reconta. l F,..,.. Page AJ NIXON ••• bow they liked the Nixon tour. Carl Rosengrant. who came up from San Diego with hl1 wlf e and baby to tour the estate, said he was impressed with the Nix· on grounds, but not the lour. ''Jt was like watching a t"1Qls gam e," be said ... Your t yes were bouncing a11 over the place as the bus sped through the grounds." Karl and Lydia Schneider also ca!T'e a Jong way for the tour, driving down from the San Fernando Valley. "It was a little short," said Schnelder. "Ibey could have slowed it down a little." But his wife said the tour was "very nice and the grounds are well. kept." "It's not as much of a home as a b1e operation," Schneider said. "You been there yet?" "Well, look fast when you go," he laughed, grabbing his wife by the arm and beadin~ for his car. Steve Schroeder was doing the most business Sunday, selling a special Nixon edjtion for LS centa a~opy. "You bet I'm busy," the ii. year-old businessman said . "I've sold about 150 programs so far and it's not even 10 yet." He said most or his customers were the ones getting off the buses. ''They've already seen the house, so I guess they want something to remember it by," "l get 10 cents for every copy I sell," he said, jingling the change in his pocket. Elizabeth Henderson, of San Juan Capistrano, standing an l i n e with her son , Areb Henderson. 10, said this isn't her first tour or the Nixon home. "I was there once just after he <N ixon) stepped down from of· fice," Mrs. Henderson said. •·1 aUll feel badly about It." As far as Nixon's ~ Inga, the former Newport Beach woman said there's been worse. citing the Tammany Hall gan.g and the Teapot Dome sea~ "We came back from those, didn't we?" she asked. .. 1 just don't see what all the hullaballoo is about. Nixon should have just destroyed tbOle damn tapes," she said, tugging at her fox &tole. .. But l still think he'll .- public office again," she smiled, grabbing Arch by the band. The line or onboarding visitors moved swiftly as buses rumbled out or the high school parking lot, stopping just long enough to pick up another load of passengers. Tbe conversation in line r anged rrom Nixon's resignation to home towns of the visitQl"S. "Can you imagine anyone coming all the way from Boston for this," one local woman said. ''I wouldn't even drive down from LA for this tour." Ruby Kepford, who lives In downtown San Clemente. caught a ride from a friend lo the high school to make the tour. When she got off the bus, she was smil- ing. "1 enjoyed it. Jt was just like I thought it would be.'' she said. "I thought it was real nice of the Nixons to open up their home for us. But s he said, it would have been nicer if she could have seen the couple. "The tape recording on the bus said be was working on tus memoirs when we went by tus offices," the older San · Clementean said. "I would have liked tobaveseenbim." Proa Page Al UFOs ••• Airport tower, said be and bis partner, Bev Taylor. were pre- paring to give takeo!f direcUcms to a twin--engine airplane when Taylor yelled, "What the bell is that?" "l jumped up outta the cluill' and it was a -this sounds dumb -it was a big green ball," ~ Lockwood. who has five years experience in his job. He said the light appeared to be two to four miles away. about 30 feet in diameter and about 20 feet above the gound. "By the time you could coant one-two-three, it bad gone down:• be said. He said he did not think It w.s an aircraft since it was "a solid mass of green." Although the slabtinp were near Aliaa1 High School, J ackl;n . said the lights were report.edbt- too big to be devi.s41d by Jtida optical tricks. Japan's TY Blanked· Out TOKYO (AP) -lnatead of uc1n1e Encountera of the Third Kind" an4 Forelp Minlater Sunao Sonoda, Japanese TV viewers lot 10 minutes of blur. deafening noise or absolutelr. oothlna. A power f allure at the t,• foot Tokyo tower uusecl tbe mayhem, phasinS out Sonoda on one channel, .. Clo•• EncoQnlera" 'on aaother aQd black.int five other cbannela. • "Por halt an hour we reoeiVtld • at le'alt 1SO calls... ooe barrled switchboard operator uld. Many callers lbou&ht poUUcaJ radtcala were Jammfna the airwaves qain . I . . 01".ange Coast EDITION t}'OL. 71, NO. S8, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES By PWUP ROSMARIN 0t IM o.ilf l'li.t Stall Lion Country Safari rangers were ordered today to capture Bubbles-the hippopotamus who escaped Crom the animal park a week ago. leading a sometimes merry chase -alive or dead. ''One way or lhe other we're going to catch her." said senior ranger Steve Clark. "If we can't tranquilize her tonight, we're gonna shoot her." Clark was a member of a three-man team of rangers who were unable to get close enough lo the three·ton animal early to· day to fire a tranquilizing dart into her hide. He said Bubbles surraced twice during their hippo stakeout, but didn't come out of the pond in which ahe took refugeoffLa&\llla Canyon Road. Clark aaid the hippo then chtm bered out of the pond, and as rangers walled for her to get far enou1h away from the water, plowed through a barbed wire fence and made her way to the road. Ranger~ have tried to get dis· tance be-tween Bubbles and water so that wben she l~ tran- quilized she would be unable to reach the water, where she Freeway Push Mesans Launch Petition Drive Costa Mcsuns with an t!VC on dropping 80,000 signatures in favor of completion or the Costa Mesa 1-'reeway into the laps or, state legislators h;n e organized a petition drive. The group of local residents is calling itself ··citizens for Completion or Route 55," and so ·far, the week·old organization bas generated about 500 ;signatures. l J elf Overstreet, a local busi- nessman and press secretary for the organization, s.ays the com- ,. plet ed petitions wtll be personal· Iv deli\'ered to the s tale le~1slators before June 1. The dale is an important one. savs Overstreet. because or budget discussions regarding an environmental impact report needed to begin the Jong delayed project, first approved in 1944. Without the approval of an El R, lhere would be no hooe of getting the freeway extension project started for at leas t another fiscal year. he said. "If we wail much longer, it's Close Quarters 110 Aliens F ormd in 2 Trucks· ,\ i·ecord 110 men, women and children were found c:rammcd inside two rental trailer trucks S1..1turclL1y. \\hen the trucks were ~topped at the U.S Border Patrol check point on the San Diego Freeway, just ~oul h of San Clemente. THE Al.JE~S --some as young as one year old --had probably paid in excess or $20,000 for their ii· legal ride to the l 'nited Stale?· said John Wesson, agent in charge of the check point. . Arrested on suspicion or smuggling the Mexican nationals into the United States were Bruce Alan Jacobsen, 25, of Mt. Vernon, Wash.; Lhtda Funkhouser, 21. or Vista; and a 16·~·ear·old Carlsbad ~ outh, Wesson said. THE THREE SUSPECTED smugglers were to be arraigned today in a San Diego federal court. The Mexican nationals were transported back across the border. N. Mesa Residents To Off er Proposal OC'velopers and represent;H1ves of the North Costa Mesa Homeowners As· sociation "111 bring their com· I promise proposal aimed at negating a March 7 initiative before the Costa Mesa City f Council tonight. ~ However, councilmen have e1aid they would not comment on 1 the compromise during the public meeting set to begin at ~:30 p.m. in council chambers, 7'1 Fair Drive. plex on 63.8 acres near South Coast Plaza. Previously, the city council approved a plan for more than 500 apartments on the Arnel segment of the acreage near Bear Street and the Corona del Mar Freeway. The initiative would limit de· velopmenl on three parcels totaline 63.8 acres to sini:le family homes. The homeowners are expeded to take a formal stand on their initiative following tonight's presentation of the compromise beforet.beCilyCouncll. going to be loo expensive to build," Overstreet said today. lie added that the support or residents would provide an extra push to the efforts or city offtctals and local legislators. Local officials hav~ str4?ssed com pletlon of the Freeway (Newport Boulevard> to save downtown businesses and lessen traffic congestion on • Highway 55 which handles as many as 77,000 cars daily. Organizers plan to extend the (See PE11TION, Page AZ) CM Rezone Foes List Fmances . By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH • Of~> OM....,.... S&att The Acliv·e Taxpayers As· sociation. a devel01>er ·backed group urgine the defeat or the Nortll <iolt,a Mesa Homeowners Association reione initiative on the M ardl 7 municipal ballot. has catlltftcl t.aiDpeilfl ~nds total in I $10, T10, accordJng to a financial disclosure statement filed today with the city clerk. The Jar1est aingle contributor ls George Ar&Yl'Os. a partner in the Arnel Development Company of Santa Ana, who has donated $2,3:50, City Clerk Eileen Phinney said. Arnel's ta acres ls the largest of three parcels that could be re- zoned for single-family homes instead of apartments if Costa Mesans pass the homeowner· gene;rat.ed iniUative March 7. Acreage to be developed by the C. J. Segerstrom de· velopment firm is also included in the i(litiative and Individuals in that organization have donat· ed $2,300 toward the antiin· itiallveeffort. A telegram received today at city hall lists a $3,700 donation from Property Investments West, Inc. of Irvine, bringing the total to $10,770. The Active Taxpayers As- sociation has spent $6,864 so far, according to its campaign statements. The money spent so far has been used to pay for phone calls and the association's head- quarters at 3001 Red HID Ave., (See FINANCE, Pace AZ) c Jon Paradis, president of the homeowners association, says aom e council reaction is es- sential if bis group is to reverse ttl stand on the controversial re- ~one initiative. The compromise, reached after numerous m eelings between homeowners and three d,velopers, calls for a com- J>fnation or single·fomlly homes and a professional office com- Mesa Candidates Seek Co11ncil Seat Coast Weather Chance of measurable rain 20 percent toniaht in· creasing to 40 percent Tuesday. Lows tonight 47 to 5'. Righs Tuesday 58 to 65. Young tf!Jnlt 1tar Traer. ' ~"'1in Q.t. Ima o/ /an mal • t;ut 1tilJ ahowt brr brac11. and figgl11. Ste~~· Photo 81. ···~- I' would probably drown. "It's not like we Iott ber," Clark said. An astonished motorjst travel- ing Laguna Canyon Road braked at the sight Of a hlppopotamllt grazing aioni the s\de of the road, and called police. Law enforcement officer• from Irvine, Laguna Beachi the California Highway Patro and the county sheriff's offiee convecged on the scene, and wllh the rangers chased Bubbles across tbe road and into another lake, on the other side, 15 feel from the highway. Clark said the rangers fired their dart guns twjce at the flee- ing Bubbles, apparently missinl" both times. The Costa Mes.a poUce helicopter Ea1le -circled the area, shining a spoUlght on th• Surveying Slaughter • APWi....-.. .Japanese fishermen surve~• some of thl' 1.000 dolphins slaughtered on the I kt bl.111 ' h';ll'h in Japan. The fishermen are hanng p1uolem'> di sposin g of the t·arc-asscs. They wanted to dump the dcacl dolphins back into the sea b1:1t w~re \\ arned by official~ the;.: would be violating ant 1 pollution laws . Park to Tefflfy-· At Haftna's Trilli --~ -- WASHINGTON (AP> - Tongsun Park. accused of being a South Korean influence- peddler, arrived in Washington Sunday and will testify next month in the trial of former Orange County Democratic Congressman Richard T . Hanna. Hanna Is accused of conspir· ing w1lh Park to buy influence m Congress. Park 1s also scheduled lo testify Tuesday before the House Ethics Committee prior to the Hanna trial. Park said he'll testify fully to "once and for all get down to the bottom of everything so that complete truth will come out." The one-time Washington party.gi\·er made lhat pledge as he arrived to begin ctosed·door testimony before ethics com· mattee Investigators. "I hope that as a result or my giving my side of the story as well as I can recollect how things did happen, 1 hope we'll come to a happy ending," Park told reporters on arr1 val. Park has been charged in a 36·count criminal indictment with trying to buy congressional influence for the South Korean government. He is accused of paying Argument Cuu Jarvis . Backers $100,000 or more to several former congressmen and of making campaign and office ac. count contributions ranging from $100 to $5,000 to 24 con- gressmen and one unsuccessful candidate. The ex-rice dealer, who left Washington 18 months ago, once entertained dozens of con· gressmen at lavish parties at his George Town Club. Park has an agreement that all criminal charges against him <See HANNA, Page A2) Mrs. Dummar Admits Fraud In OC Welfare LAS VEGAS CAP) -Bonnie Dummar, beheved by attorneys for Howard Hughes' relatives to have been involved in the al- leged forgery of lhe contested Mormon Will, has testified that she had pleaded guilty to a welfare fraud charge in Orange County. Under queslionmg by attorney Paul Freese Friday, she admit· ted being charged in May. 1973 with making false stalemenls in: order to obtain California welfare. But she said she bad not been allowed to explain the circumstances. "They ran me in one enci and out the other, and 1 don't re- member anything," Mrs. Dummar said. "I know I wanted to take care or it and they wouldn't have anything to do with it." Freeze, who represents rel· atives of the late multi· mlllionaire who were not named in the will, had asked Mrs. Dummar iC her husband Melvin had feared that she might have been Involved in drawing up the will, which leaves one-slxteenth otHugbes'estatetoDummar. .. Didn't Melvin have some suaplclon that you mlgbt be In- volved? .. Freese asked. "Hadn't you had a significant problem of being held eccountable fw mis· representation?" "I don't Jtnow:• a'he 1atd ... I remember trym, to 91'Plllln." Siie Mid that ebe bad not Wl· deratood tbe proceedin1s in Oran1• CcJunty 'Municipal Ocwt and bad met with the public de- fendef ilP()Olnted for her fer "on· Jy five mmutea0 bdor• heir case wudu~ • Rein Returns, · More Coming ' Along Coast The rains ha\'e returned. And they're likely to remain for most of the week, the National Weather Service said today. Allen Dascomb, weather public service specialist. ex-; plained that a high-pressure i area that kept storms from the 1 Orange Coast for the past two l weeks has dissipated. A weak low·pressure area bas 1 moved in from the southwest. nascomb said. In addition, a 1 · high.pressure area is building up over the Gulf o! Alaska, pushing storms south. t Temperatures along the coast s hould be somewhat cooler, with highs in the 60s and lows from 45 to 55 degrees. Only a trace of rain was measured this morning, with readings ranging from .02 in Huntington Beach and .03inCoota Mesa and Newport Beach to .llin LagunaNiJ(Uel. Season totals so far are 16.81 in Newport Beach. 17.78 in Hunt· ington Beach, 18.96 in Costa Mesa, and 19.68 in Laguna Niguel. Last year's rainfall totals at this time ranged from 6.50 inche$ in the south county to 9.47 inches in Huntington Beach. .. t { ! · .. Tlaeg're Ott and Rmanfftg '.\lore than 900 runners turned out earl~ Saturday for San Clemente's first annual 6.S mile r un. timed to coincide with the city-'s 5oth anniversary of in· ('Orporalion. First to cross the finish line was 17 -year-old Tim Varley of Sim Diego, who ran the course in 33 111111ul es, 55 seconds, reported Steve .Judd. city recreation· coordinator ... People at the half way point told me Varlev breezed down the hlll as i f he'd just run 100 yards not· six miles," Judd said. Other winners in eluded man and wife. Pete and Sue Peterson of Laguna Beach. The Petersons each won first place in an age divis ion. Mrs. Peterson abo had the beht time among women runners, completing the course Ill ·10.5 minute~ T he racew::isofficially closed after90 minute!> Two County Drug R11nners Plead Guilty E'ro.. Page AJ SAN DIEGO <AP> -Sentenc· ing 1s scheduled March 27 for '" o Uran~" County men who h,I\ c pl('aclc<l guilty to charges in c·onn<'<'llOn "1th a major drug· 1raffirkin~ 01>erut1on l\ulhorit1cs said thousands of pound'> of mar11uana. for dis· 1r1hut1on 1n the Seattl\! area. wen• brought into Dana Point .\1 anna a hoard 30,foot power lt0ats opcratin~ out of Rosanta Bcitl'h 111 Hap Cal1forni::i L>a' 1d Charil· ... Chr1'>t1an. 18. a 1oof1ng (Ontr;it·tor from lll1wnt'Y. ;.ir11t 1\ugusl l'alm1en. Hi of Orang•'. :-uhmitled their i.:11111~· picas Frillay in l' S . Dis Hll'l C'ourt In filing 111 ... plt·J. Chn:.l1an .1~r{'l'd In forfo1t fl\ c res1dcnt1al loh 111 th1• lklchursl arl'J or llul·n.1 Park. which 1&ulhont1es , har~cd he had bought with drug ... mugghng prof1h The forfeiture of the land, with .1n estimated 'alu(~ of SliS,000 m;irk.., thr f1ro;t 1101" lh1' Ua1·ketc"Cnng. lnnucnce Act has h<'C';l Jppllect SUC'C'C'S"fulh· .1ga1n ... t .1 \\'est Co.1st drug 1raffir kcr. orru ials said. E'ro• Pa~A J PETITION. • pct1t1on dri\'C into Newport R" at' h . In inc, ll u n t 1 n g lo n llr:irh, Tust111 and Fountain Valley for added support. Those intt•resled in signing the pct it ions need nol be registered \'Olers, said O\·rrslrcct lie 1" askin~ support from local hus1ne11ses to stock the pl·t1t 1on:. anct rrom local res idenb 1ncirculatmathem P<'t1t1ons may be obtained by 1 ailing O\t~rl'-trcct at 751 ·1.111 Lt'lt'-'r" mailed lo him at 3303 Harhor Bhd ?1U1lc Kt2. Costa .\lesJ, '~ill he included along "1th petitions Costa :\lcs<1 City Council 1·and1date-. Arlene Schafer and Oon Bull arc serving as co· l'hairmen of the committee, but both say they are remaining in the background 1n order to eliminate claims that formation of the committee is related to the upcoming March 7 election. Both Bull and Mrs. Schafer have said they would step down from the committee IC they are elected. · . -0..ANQI COAff C DAILY PILOT ' MESA CANDIDATES. • • are telling the government to cut spending." Whal other key lssuea are fac· Ing the city! "A major Issue is com· munication between the council and residents. We want a quality of life in Costa Mesa that 1s con· sislent with what we've had m the past. The way to ach1eYe this 1s to have the council available to all groups m the community " Why are you qualifl~ for the city council! "I think my hus1nei;s and civic 1·x pl'nenee has gl\ c·n ml• I he IO · sight into our romrnunity needs I work \H'll with ull wj!mCnl'> of the community ·· At 20. Carl '.'1nklf• i' th<' \Oungc-;t cand1dutl' for th<' Coc,IJ :\le~a C1h Coun1:1I lie attcntll'<I local elementary c,c hools and 1, curtenth ma1orn'll! in business .il Long Re.1ch State after tr;insh'rnnb from Orange Coa~t (' oll e~'-' :\il'rkh• 1:-. unmarried. He ll\cs ;it 1211i Conwav Ave. H o~ ~ii ( } OU \Ol t' on t h • Sorth Cost a )lesa r•zone in · Ill alive? ··Right now I would vote aga1n!>t 1t because they've got a r ca son ab I e Mt •1u1 compromise for busin('ss in the area." said l\J erklc. adding that the initiative process tends to generate too much emotionalism. Besid es completion of the Costa Mesa Freeway, do you have any spectnc Ideas to lessen d ly lraffic problems! "I think the situation Is bad, but not that bad We need synchronized signals and better plannlni for the ruture com· plet1on or the freeway." ~ erkle advocates more local use of mass transportation. What Is your s ta nd on <he Jarvis lax Initiative? 'Tm gl:id it w('nt on lht' hallol, but I \\OUl<I \Ole ;iga1nst 1t, although 1t l~ts lei!islator~ I-now thut 1W-011le ar{' llrt'Cl 1Jf higher tu>.e~ .. What oth.-r k.-,• is~ues art' far· In~ tht' cit~'! · "T "oulc1 likl• to c;('r morc- «OOpNat1on in n·i:ard' to .ill <1'Pl'<"U. of thl' l'll) ·~ fulure. W h~ are )'OU qualifi~ for thr Cll) Council? "I h4n• nolh1n1 o:. far .. :. quallricat1on~. but I'm eaizer to learn." i.aid Merkle. !>tressing that he sees the need for a gn·Jtt•r \OUlh \01ce in <'nmmun1 I\ JrfJlr~ Cubans Join Fight HOME 11\PI · Eritrean 1n surgents today reported for the fir~l time that Cubans are f1ght - 1ng olongs1dl' Ethiopian trOOJl~ on the northern 1itt•ing of the two front conflict with ethnic rt>beb who seek to secede from Eth1op1a. Thai Bandits Rob CdM Woman, Guests Sl' KllCYfAI. Thailand (A Pl A Corona del Mar woman was among a busload or tourists "a' laid b'' four masked ~unmen at . the old Thai capital of Sukhotai. "Thev had cloth over their races like bandits in the mov· ies," said Myrtle Greenwalt. 88, of Corona del Mar. ··ono grabbed a bracelet off my wrist." Police said today the victims lost the equivalent of $1,000 in Th ai money as well as watches, camer as and jewelry. The tourists. mostl y westerners living in Thail and, were exploring a kiln site amid the ruins of the 13th century capital 235 miles norlh of Ba n gkok Saturday when gunmen armed with shotguns and a pistol emerged from Fro•P_,,.AJ · HANNA ••• will be dropped provided he tells the truth. He told reporters he hopes his testim ony will help end the al· leged lnfluence·buYlnl acandal •·so that we can move on to something more positive whlcb 11 to enhance the relaUona betw~en our two countries." Qouse lnvut11ator1 uy Pa~k's testimony t1 central lo their determlnln& lt any pruent or ~·con11'e11m~ wer• ln t~ tnnueoced by money from Park and abotlld bf.char~. Earlier Sn Hawaii, Park Hid a for m er South Korean lo· telllf tnce chllf lied wbon be told 1 HOQ comrrOttM th.it PN'k was an a1ent of lhe Korean ov· ernment. bushes and demanded cash and valuablei.. membt.>rs of the i::rour said One toonst, who asked not to be identified. said some or the women hid jewelry h.) putting it In their mouths A passerby apparently alerted police who arrived on the scene moments after the bandits escaped. A police spokesman said orncen recovered cash and som e valuables dropped by one or the gunmen. \ TONIGHT COSTA MESA PLANNING COM MISSION -Regular meet· mg. City llall . 6 30 p m OCC LECTl' RF. ··Ex plonng Cal1forn1a Wine:.," fine Arts 119. 7 .JO p.m. Tl'ESDA\', FER. 28 :-.; EWPORT MESA SCllOOL ROAR D ReRular meellnj!. C o s I .i !\t e s a l' 1 t v c o u n c ii l·h.1mbl'r~. i 30 pm · · II E 11 I '.'\ I> T H 1-: II E \ DLJ!\ES" Dr Giles T Bro" n IN·tur('r, OCC Forum. i 30 pm "\'01.PO:"E" South Coac,t Ht'IJ<'rtory Th('41t1•r. 1 ul'~d.i\ Sunda~ throu~h April 23. 8 pm Fro•P•~Al FINANCE. • • Co:.ta Mesa And a $?.000 pa~ ment to the l ' S Postal Sen ice. apparent!~ for a mailer to be i.ent to r eg 1stered \Oters prior t o the dection 1s listed F'ormcr Costa ~tesa ma.)ors \Inn l'1nkl(•\ and W1llJrd Jordan .irl' ~cr\ 1nJ.? &~ ro chairmen of the ta>.pn.)en.· group. claiming the lnlllall\e 1:. an am proper "'ay to run cit~ gov ernment in this ca~c The 1nlt1atlve was generated ;iftcr north Costa Mesans he<' a me angered 0\'4lr City Council appro\ ul of S'-''·eral hundred <1partments on the Arnel parcl'I ,\,-nel officials have since "Ith drawn the apartmentf in fa\'or of a pr0Ccss1onal offi'-'C com pie'< comprom1:.e that ha:. been agrc1.-d lo b~ the l"orth Costa ~le!>a llomeO\\ ners 1h · sor1a11on JIO \\rH•r . the hom('O\\ner' ha\ c not tul..l·n a st.ind on the in 1l1athe betuu!>e lh<'r«' 1~ un certa1nt~ a' lo hO\\ the City Council will rcan lo the pro· posed comprom1~e 5 Bodies Found DE~VER I.A P) 'The bo<hes of five Iowans were found in tbe wreckage of a plane an southeast Colorado late Sunday. Ba:ardous /tl.aterials . ~ransportatio~ , He8rings Set W ASlONGTON (AP) -Even before the two train derailments t hat c.used 20 deatha ln Florida and Tennessee, the federal gov- ernment planned unusuany thorough hearlnes into the transportation of hazardous materials on the nation 's railroads and hlshways (Relat· ed story. photo. A4) The National Transportation Safety Board figures there are 6,000 to 7,000 derailments a year. Kay Bailey. acting board chairman, wu so concerned by the continu ing s pate of de· railments involvine da nserous substances that Thursday she caJJed for rare full-board hear· lngs on the matter. The NTSB hearlnes in April will look at bow lhe railroads and trucking' firms handle what board spokesman Edward E . Slattery Jr. ter med "all kinds of exotic materials that cause battlefield-like damage." Slattery said in an interview Sunday that amon the causes of der ailments are poor road beds, "the worm~ get In the tics and the tracks spr ead;" heavier and longer rail cars. "the rails aren'I any ~tronger ;" and railroad response to pressure for greater safety. ··they always tell you they're broke." In addition to the NTSB hear· ings, Sen. James Sasser, o. Tenn.. planned to meet today with transportation Secretary F,....P,..Al WPPO ... Schetter said the fact lhar Bubbl~ crossed Laguna Canyon Road makes the hunt a serious busln~ss. "People traveling lhe road could ha\'e been hurt.'' she said Clark said today tho main dan~er to people is to a number of photographers. reporters, COi · lege Mudents anct other people ''ho hu' e searrhed for the animal themsel\eF, u~lnA nJ~hlt~hts "We can·t control the: cro"d. Clark ~iltd ··Espe('1ail) th(' pre!>S Seem~ like ('\er:v time you turn around. there s one on }OUr nl'ck ·· Bubbles escaped a week ago b~ bulling her wa) C\ er a :.;,ec 1al anli-esc~pe corral in \\ h1ch she v. as placed because of pre\ 1ous escapes. and bashing through a park perimeter h:ncl' Hubbies had escaped •wite bdor~ "'1th her 800 pound daughter :\Ir:. Scheller said the park " <'li!hl other hippos \\ crl' confined to a i:pe<'utl barn when they . t~. sho" t'd ~tgn!> of "anlinl? to go O\ er the \\ csll A new hippo ci1s 1Jlay area is be11t& butlt to stop the potential of a masfi escape Th<' ~O·lar futile l'fforl h> pork ran~ers to bring Bubhl('s back ;iii n~ has cost Lion CounLr> a !'ma II for t uni!. accot<!1ng to !>('n1or ranger Steve Craig Craig said last week that the park had spent upwards of $3.000 for O\•ertime costs, and rental and repair of equipment ··The animal's value is onl} a few hundred dollars ... Craig ~aid llowe,er. Mrs. Scheller dis· counted the expense in kecplnf? ranger~ on Bubbles watch ··she rcpresenu. a go!d m:nc le the ccmpanr at this limt ltwcaui.c or n;.ition\\ tdc publlc1 ty 1. Behen• u~. 1f there 1s ;.i thence ~he can be brought back ah\·e. there·s not o person here "ho doesn't want her bark It would be a terrible waste " • "Our first responsibility ii:: to the community. Tonight ma) !)(' her l;.ist chance. H she poses a threat to h uman life, I'm afraid Bubbles will have lo go first.'' Brock Adama. Sasser says he wants an invest11ation Into the F e d e r a l R a I I r o a id Admiol6tralion'g inspection system. Sasser complained Sund1ty night that the stale did its in· ~pectlons on Tennessee's 5.'100 m lies or track until 1974. Ten. nes!>ee had 12 men doing the job. Sasser says. Now that the federal agency does the work. only five men watch track co~ d1tions, the senator says. One ot the two derailments that claimed lives in the past three days occurred in Waverly\ Tenn. Twenty.four tank cars de· railed in the West Tennesse~ community Wednesday. On Fri· day. one of the cars carrying propane burst, sending a fire ball Into the town. Twelve persons died; five homes were destroyed and 12 busine"es damai:ed by the fire. And on Sunday, 55 miles west or Wuverly In a rural area near the towP of Cudes. 24 cars do. railed. One of the cars leaked hOdium h~drox1de, a substance hurmtul it breatheQ or touched." Some 100 people were eva<'uatt cd fro!l' their homes for fotN hours T?1ey were to be moved out again today while the d<'· railed cars ure righted by railroad workers.' · Earlier Sunday. a freight lralll derailed near Youngstown. Fla., spewing ltqufd chlorine that became a yellow ~reen cloud that killed eight persons. An ad· d1tional 6i "'ent tot he hospital. "It ltteral!y burni; your lung~ up." bald Al !:'mith, an E n v tr c n rr. en t at Pro 1 e <' t fb'n Aeency ir.' est 111ator , on the scene Sunda> "This is chlorine.'' Slattery said · Th:1l !-\\hut thl·y used m World \\<tr 1 to k1!I the arm1e~ und hue th<'Y huH• it out in thut pea( cful cout nrys1dC'.' · Mom Finds Son's Body Sl:\tl \'ALLEY <AP) -~· ~\ rr. other ended a three· "c~k sea1 ch lor her miss· inu son when she spotted tht. w1cck<1ge or his car in ,• rav?nc near here. .•1.:thont1n satd \ t.nlura County i.h('riff's c!cpi.:t:u· reC O\crcd the boc!' er 'Dean Goodman. .:1 . :!2. of C;iri<'Jl<l Park 11' -.•c!l I•:!' rar Suncla\' aft1 r • .:o.•r \.<X.<'rr<m foum1 thP ~ \\ I l l I;~· J.! ( \\ h 1: l' r' fl \I ti g I r I C· l! ~ h I h l' •• : c :1 C:oodrr.an s doi? \\as :.land· ?r~ guard nearh~ The rr.;.in harl b<'en m 1:-~ · tr).! !-•nu• F('b -; after an aqtument with his family The <:a use of th" nC'r1dent ":ii: under mn•st1gat1on unrl a coroner !' 1 cport v. ll!> pending. Transcript Of Cannibal Trial Found .\10:\TRO!--f. < olo <A P '- Thc c r 1g1nal. handwritten transcnpt of the mal of AJfl'1ld I:: Packer -Colorado's on~· convicted cannibal -has beed located an the basement or t.f\l~ Gunnison County Courthouse. ~ The transcript. frayed at the edges nnd yellow with age after nearly 95 years. was found as <'OU I t crr.ployees packed old documt•nts tor shipment. to the ~t;itc arch1Hs 111 Denver, sttfd :\1 1 k e ~ h c r; p a 1 d • c o u r l adm in1btrator IM the ith jud1c1ai D1!>lntl. Th<' troni.cript mcludes the I ('"t I Ir. on~ O( the 21 Witnesses "'he uppcured agamst Packer. "" well all the text or the tc~timony be gave in bts de· tcn!>e. Sheppard said. A typewr itten copy of the t r an sen pt 18 in t he at ate archives. Sheppard said, but Ont orl11nal was coMldered lost un-llr last week. , Packer was accused of 1dJU.ng anct ealm& his ri ve lraveluag companiona w~ the 1raup wu caua ht in a blluard ln Februarv 18i4. He was ltted In Aprtl tm l n t h e Lake City , Col o., courthouse and tound guUty-.oE. m urder. P•c~cr'• teathnoey lnttud~ the observation tha\ hts meal.' liter hl1 companions d ted were. "wally." • I Sheppard t iJd tho ~mtirt. h•• bttl\ pl~ tn a c~ vault •nd tM tounty wtU • k ~ atale lo allow ~ papen to ,... main In an aru ~u~tom. rethtt lh•ll bd.na sent to l>eftver. ' C.Oruu~r . Ptices flpAgain LOS .\NGELES <AP> -Con.um-. in the Loa Anceles· Loni Beacb-Oran1e County metropolitan area paid more 81aln last month few nearly all a~oda and services except entertainment, the federal h•au ol Labor StaUaUca re- por\ed today. (Related story ~ . •[fbe new consumer price index tor all consumers rose six-tenths Of one percent from December to 185.S, wb!ch means that what adst $10 in January 1967 ~t .$18.SS last month, said Bruce Henchett, the bureau's regional commissioner. During the period from .January 1977 to January 1978, Jlancbett said, the index for all consumers rose 6.1 percent. .Hanchett said the bureau -an this month to Issue three htdexes Instead of one each .onlh in an effort to give con· IOlers e better idea of their day-to-day buying power. Besides the index for all con· aumers, he said, there will be a regular consumer·price index as ~fore, covering only blue collar •d clerical workers, and a re· vised index covering purchase of -le\leral items not included pre- v;ously. Such items include wigs, sleeping bags, citizens band radios and a wider range ~f sporting goods a nd ~tomobiles. ., The revised index of blue col- lar and clerical workers rose .7 percent, he sa1d. The index for all consumers, including lhe new re\'isions and job categories, showed increases in all major areas of spending except entertainment, which had dropped 2.6 percent since Pecember 1977. . The highest increase was reOect.ed in food and beverages. w.here price bikes of J.6 percent accounted for almost half of the overall rise in consumer costs. Apparel and upkeep costs in- creased the leabt -by one-tenth of one percent over the December 1977 index for lhe s ame category, the report showed. The breakdown of increases 1or the remaining four ~ategorie1> showed that housing costs were up six·tenths or one percent in January over the pre- vious montb, transportation prices edged up two-tenths of one percent. medical care costs rose nine-tenths of one percent, and other goods and services in-rreased 1.5 percent. FootOOll Star Chases Car The/ t Suspects PACIFIC PALISADES (AP) ~ Pro football running back Anthony Davis sprinted into 11ction when a stranger drove off in his 1954 Cadillac. but it took two sheriff's deputies to ta~kle a pair of .alleged car thieves, llUtborities said today. > A neighbor of Davis' spotted three people apparenUy about to t~ke off with the Tampa Bay Buccaneer's car late Sunday land alerted Davis as one of the men drove off in the former USC 1star's car , said West Los 1Angeles police officer Michael ~HaJ:~·is got into his other Cadillac -a late 1940s model - nd went after t.he 1954 car while is &irlfriend and a neighbor 1took ore in separate cars after the two other men in another car, Haien said. . Davis and his girlfriend cor- nered his stolen while Cadillac. Tbe driver fled on foot and Davis followed but failed to catch him, said Hagen. Back on the Pacific Coast Highway, the nelehbor managed to briefly block the car carrying Uae other two alleged car thieves, Hasen said. One ot tttem confronted the nei1hbor and punched him. O.lly ,.,.._ Swff ,,_. --.-..---~ .. Ii ... . Monday February 27 19~a DAILY PILOf A3 Strategy Planned "Union Must ~way -Miners on Pa.ct WASHINGTON (Al>) -Some· -400 coal miners and United Mine· Worken dlstrlct representatives -tbe men who will have to sell the union's rank·and-file on t.be propaeed IOf't coal industry con- tract -are getting tfte word to- day on how to 10 about thelr task. Altbouih the contract bas been criticized in the coalfields, top union officials feel that tf they can adequately explain the pact. tbe unlon's 160,000 slrlk1ng miners will approve the contract next week and be back In the pits by mid-)farch. Members of the union's bargaining team scheduled meetings with the miners and district representatives at a downtown hotel. conducted next week in 2.100 local union h.tls. Before the balloting, educational meeUn,. wUl be hdd in each district and 10cal ofticers, in turn, will t.ben hold similar sessions with t.bo rank abd fl.le. Followin1 this, a 48-bour wait- ing period ensues befor& the miners cut their secret ballots. The results, tabulated by local union tellers, ahould be an- nounced the next day. NIXONS LEFT DOORS AJAR FOR 8,000 'VISITORS'" This Is As Close As Viewers Got to Estate The bargainers are attempt- ing to steep their audience in what the union would get from the contract and trying to anticipate what questions the 400 or so men will have to answer when they meet with local union representatives throughout t.he UM W's 21 districts this week. The 400 rank-and ·file members were chosen by UMW President Arnold Miller, who Friday night called them, "my people." 8,000 View Nixon Home in Cle1nente Miller says he has no plans to go into the coalfields and stump for the proposal, as he did in 1974. But Miller did plan lo make an appearance at today's indoetrlnation session to remind the district representatives of their responsibility under the un- ion constitution to back the tentative contract. By STEVE MITCHELL Of -0.1ly l"llel SlaH Some said they loved 1t, others said they couldn't even get their cam eras loaded before the whole thing was over . But many of the 8,000 or so visitors who paid $2.50 apiece to see the Nixon estate by bus in San Clemente Sunday. thought the tour was well worth the money. Brief, yes, but worth lhe ticket price. And San Clemente Chamber of Commerce folks were surprised at how smoothly the nine-hour operation to display the former President's home went Sunday. Fourteen charter bu:.cs shuttled back and forth from La Casa Pacifica to San Clemente High ·School, with three buses entering the well-kept grounds of the SO.year-old home every lD minutes. Just like clockwork. Alex Goodman, executive manager of the city's Chamber of Commerce, stood by shiny t.:>ur buses collecting yellow tickets from lour-goers. "lt"s really runnini smooth, isn "t it," be said, as be counted out numbers to the bus driver in- side. "We started at 8:30 and we haven't had a backup of visitors yet " Th 1ngs were running so <.moot hly th.:1t lhe high school parking lot never reached capac1l), with lines of visitors climbing aboard buses at one point, and getting off further down the line. Jerry Weeks, Sim Clemente <:it.r M ana~er said the cost or the lour to the city would be Jess than S.1.000. even with the ticket i.1iles, but added restaurant owners and the hotel business would reap profit.8 from the one- day tour or La Casa Pacifica. Television crews crowded around buses with disembarking 1)jssengers, asking the tounsts how they liked the Nixon tour. Carl Rosengrant, who came up from San Diego with his wire and baby to tour t.be ea.late, said he was Impressed with the 1'ix- on grounds, but not the tour· 1 "It wall like watch,ng a tenrus game," he said. "Your eyes were bounclng all over the place as the bus s ped through the grounds.'' Karl and Lydia Schneider also came a long wa) for the lour, drivine down Crom the San Fernando Valley. ... w .......... General's Rites "Some of our people failed to support the contract proposal in 1974,"' said Miller, who steadfastly predicts the current pact wUJ be approved. "The un· ion's international officers and the international executive board will act aeainat anybody failing to meet their responsibilities this Ume." An honor guard car r ies the flag-draped cosket of Gen. Daniel ··Chappie" James Jr. on arri\·a\ at AndrC\\S AFB. '.\Id. James. former commander 111 chief of the :\"orth American Air De fense command. was the fir~t hlack four-star general. The ratification vote will be .Job Ends May 12 Unionfiives 'Grades' for Bus Chief Confinm Plam to Resign Solons' v ~ting By G~~~~R ... '!.~LLE One <>ranee County legislator received a high raUn1 from a Orange County Transit Dis· labor union for bia votin1 reccwd lriet <OCTD> General Manager Jast year and another local 5olon Edward Lorilz made it official receivedazeroscore. today, announ~ng his res- Highly rated by the AFL-CJO lgnation. in its 1977 legislalive review was Lor1tz srud he is leaving the state Sen. Paul Carpenter, D· transit district because he and Cypress. Given a zero rating district directors were unable to was Assemblyman William reach agreement on a new con- were unwilling to give him that kind of a package. OCTD Directo r William Farris, for example, said. "There ls just no way we could come close to anything like that. I think Ed knew it. And that's why he resigned.·· Plunges 1,000 Feet. Dannemeycr, R-Fullerton. tract. ca 1if0 r n 1 a AF L . c Io The 46-year·old executive told s_pokesman John Henning said directors during an executive For the pasl year Loritz has had frequent public dis- a ~recments wilh OCTD directors. Howc\'er, the parting of the ways Friday was described as amicable and friendly. RV Crash Kills Gov. Edmund Brown's 1977 rec· session Friday he is quitting ef- ord was "essentially a pro-feclive May 12. His resi&nation, gresslve one" and praised As-although not announced sem bly Speaker Leo McCarthy, publicly until today, was reported The departing general manager ha~ held OCTD's top executive post tor the past three years. He replaced founding D-San l''randsco and his Senate Saturday by the Daily Pilot. Santa Ana Woman counterpart, Prestdlent Pro Tern Two weeks earlier, Loritz had . ge neral manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding. James Mills, D-San Diego. sent OCfD directors a letter Among the legislaUon the un-asking for a new four-year con-Gandhi Boo d A Santa Ana woman was killed early Sunday morning when a recreation vehicle tumbled off an isolated mountain sen·1ce road m pre- dawn darkness and plunged down a 1.000-foot embankment, according to a coroner's report. Searchers scoured lhe most forbidding terrain o f t he Cleveland National Forest for three hours before finding the body of Mary Ann Hanzel , 29, of 750 S. Lyon St., Santa Ana. They were drawn to the scene after the woman's companion hiked three miles through the rugged terrain to report the 2:30 a .m. accident, a county flre rescue Official said. Marine Philip Hipe, 24, of El 'I'.oro Marine Corps Air Station, was apparently thrown out of the four·wheel drive vehicle ear- ion cited as victories were an In-tract calling for a salary-fringe sle ly in its tumbling descent down crease io maximum dlsabtllty benefit price tag of roughly NEW DELHf, India (A P> the steep mountainside. insurance benefit.I from $119 to ~.OOO a year. Indira Gandhi's two· month-old The woman's body was report-S1 6 bill I · k I Tb t t )d h h'ked ed found 750 feel below the dirt 4 . a g Vlni wor ers n-a reques wou ave I rebel wing of the Congress Party sernce road while searchers re-JU red on the job the right to his pay package by about $13,500 won a decisive victory in a state choose their own doctors and a annually. election in south India, gi\'ing a ported finding the 'eh icle bJll authorizing construction of While no negotiations resulted boost to her comeback drive and another 250 further down the the state·s first liquefied naturaJ from his contract request, it was prompting the head of the rival mountainside gas terminal. 1 "-··-th t d ' to C f · · Officials believe llipe was ..---------------c_e_a_r_t_o_LAl_•'-"" __ a __ ,_re_c_r_s __ o_n .... t:: .... r_e~_s_a_ct_1o_n_to_r_e_s...;1g .... n_. __ knoc ked unconsc ious when thrown from the tumbling recreation ''ebicle near Bedford Peak. It wasn't until shortly after S a. m . that he was able to hike to a Silverado Canyon residence to call a nearby county fire stat.ion and report the accident. A M arlne rescue heltcopter from nearby El Toro M arlne Corps Air Station first spotted the wreckage and victim's body shorUy after 8 a.m., officials &a)d. . the a11igator. ... raT:1 'I Killed My Frieb'J~ .. . . ·· Huntingt,on Youth F tree& MamlaughU!r ~ County SMrifrs Deputy Michael W. Ogden, who tried in vain to revive the Mussell boy. Hla frien<U were atumblln& around, Injured and hi aboclt from CMtr oym lnjarles and tho al&ht ol tbelr=lnt pel. Ht. tom Qa, tla• dtlver: "OI tb• car. w . boolted into o,..n;e County Juvenile Hall on ebarps of felony mao1lau1hter and felQny drunken drlvtna. accord- tna to oalcer Akin. Throu~t °" PfOC'5J of ~ ins ~tel after tbe tr1*1c ac· cldtDt lnvolvlna two other pa11en1era who e&e•Ped with minor lJUuii•• polk• Mid. be kept beratJ.na blmaell tor h1a buddy•• ckath. Ont·cl the «her JoUU\a In Id· dlUon to the 17·year..old driver held on f41GD1 cbll'I• WU ll'• • . f . I I • ) , .. '" "' 'I ,.. • • . , I 4 I I I , I Jl.j DA.It. V PILOT Monday, F.c>rlW) 27, 197& ·~ Jost ·· ·:·:., Coasting •' ·. . CleDlente Meniories R EMEMBERING SAN CLEMENTE: I lament that because of family circumstances, I was unable to joln the ~ultlludeli who, over the weekend. celebrated the soth an· mversary of cityhood for San Clemente. My family bas con- Slderableroots In the place. . Today, however, most of post.celebration speculation mvolves whether or not it was worth $2.50 to be whisked through former president Nixon's place on a seven·minute bus ride. . While 1 won't join that speculation, 1'11 suggest to y<>ll that I would have skipped the bus even if I'd ~n able to show up for all the celebrattng. RIDING THROUGH the old estate probably would have reminded me of the dead fish, or my former tonsils, or maybe my grandfather's bell -all memories tbat would have been melancholy. Since there was considerable fuss over people getUni to ride by Mr. Nixon's home, the fact that this place was once the grand estate of Hamilton H. "Ham" Cotton was somewhat obscured during thecitybood celebration. Ham Cotton, an oil millionaire,· was one of the found· ing forces of San Clemente back when it was developed In the 1920s as the Spanish Village. And he built upon the southern edize.nr the village the grandest estate of them all. Its grounas were C'Cpansive with trees, shrubs and lush gardens manicured by an army of gardeners and groundskeepers. Today, much Qf the acreage is gone; sold off for sur· rounding subdivision development. BUT I N SAN CLEMENTE'S boom years, it was magniC~cenl. Since the Cottons and the Murpbines were good friends, I spent some time visiting there when just a toddler. Once I recall when left to my own devices, I got into Ham Cotton's goldfish pond which was in the central tiled patio. Somebody had left a fishnet nearby. I started chas· ing the fi sh with it. Somehow I got one of the larger specimens out of the pond but it escaped the net and began flopping about furiously on the patio tiles. I panicked and kicked lt lnto the rose bushes where I'm sure it met a horrible end. But the secret end of that goldfish probably saved my end considerable discomfort. Another time, my folks told me I was in for a real thrill -I'd gel lo stay overnight at the Cottons' place. I was treated like a prince and slept in a huge feather bed. I couldn't figure out why. The next mornmg, they whisked me off to the city where the doctors separated me from my ton~1ls. First the treat, then the treatment. WHEN MY GRANDFATHER Murphine's own estate was destroyed by an underground spring, he gave the Cottons his big iron bell that had graced the driveway entr ance to his home. The Cottons placed it In their own circular drive. I've often wondered if it's still there. But maybe it's just as well I didn't go back to see. I might have found the bones of a long·dead goldfish. Or suffer a sore throat. Pennsylvania Hit By Storm, 2 Dead HAZLETON. Pa. CAP) -Plunging temperatures and freak snow squalls contributed to several major traffic pileups, includ· ing a chain reaction crash involving at least 11 vehicles that killed two people. Stale police said a short but fierce snow squall early Sunday evening raked Interstate 81 about 25 miles south ol here and dropped visib~lity to near iero just before the fatal pileup. AT LEAST 14 people were injured in that wreck, which forced the closing of an 18·mlle section of the busy higbway in both directions, stale police said. Earth moving machinery waa called in' to help dear the debris. Ten people were hospitalized with various injuries, six of them in serious condition. At least eight passenger vehicles, two tractor-trailer trucltl and a garbage bauler ~ere involved in the smashup. state PQllce said, apparently triggered when one traclOC'·traUer truck skidded on the roadway. ONE CAR BURST into names, killing a female puseoier trapped in the back seat. The second victim was tbe driver of a truck, who apparently .bad climbed from the cab oChls vehicle and was 'trying to direct traffic when be was struck by a skidding automobile. The names of the truck driver and woman were not Im· mediately available. StJtte police belicbpters were used to transfer several injured people to Ashland State General Boepital, located about seven miles north of the accident site. * * * ~ ~ WASHINGTON CAP> -Consume!' prices rose 0.8 percent in Januaryt the l!U'fest increase in nearly 8 ye!J'. because or sharp in· creases an food and housing costs, the Labor IHpartment said today. The Consumer frlce Index for all urban consumer• rose 0.8 percent last month after rising 0.4 percent ln each of the past three months, the department said. The Increase was the largest since a l percent rise in February 197?. "About two· thirds of this rise was due to price increases of 1.2 percent {or rood and beverages and 0.8 per~nt for housing," the department said. "Among other major expenditures, transportaUon rose 0,6 percent and medical care 0.8 percent." THE DEPARTMENT also re- ported that the average worker's buying power dropped by 3 percent since December, the sharpest one-month decline in 14 years. The department said the re- duction in real spendable earn- ings was caused by a't.2 pef'Cent decr ease in aver aee weekly earnings and a 1.8 percent rise in taxes, particularly Social Security. stores, lor restaurant meat1 and alcohollc bevera1es." the de· partment said. "Among 1rocery store foods, meat prices advanced sharply," tbe department aald. "Poultry. eggs and fresh fruit and veeetable prlces also s howed lar1e tncreues partly because s uppUea were restricted by adverae weather conditions " it s~d. ' Sugar priee1 rose because of new tarif!a, but coffee prices continued to decline, the report said. HOllE·OWNEKSHIP costs rose l percent, mainly because of hilber house prices, home m ai,i~enance and repair services, mortaee interests costs and housek.eepjng. NATION I WORLD AP Wire~ Today's report was the first in a new system the department is using to try to cover the buying habits of more people. The de· partment expanded its index to cover all urban consumers, about 80 percent of the U.S. population. Tbe department also is m easuring praces paid by urban wage euners and clerical workers separately, a measure used in union contracts. This in· dex also rose 0.8 percent last month. Medical care costs were up 0.8 percent, used cars rose 2.5 percent and price increases were recorded for airline, taxi and bus transportation. AERIAL VIEW OF DERAILMENT IN YOUNGSTOWN, FLA. THE 1.Z PERCENT increase for food and beverages was due to "'higher prices for most types of food purchas~ in 1rocecy Frost Aiding Nixon Revise Of Me11Win NEW YORK CAP> -Former Prealdent Nixon. aided b) television interviewer David Frost, is revisln1 his memoin because of aUegallons made by his onetime chief aide H. R. Haldeman. the Trib said today. The newspaper quoted un· named, authoritative sources as saying that Frost, Robert Markel, editor in chief of Grosset & Dunlap, publisher of lhe hardcover version of the Nixon book ; a nd ~ woman identified as Nancy Brooks, described as a copy editor for Grosset & Dunlap, are staying at a motel near Nixon's home in San Clemente and have been traveUn1 back and forth to the com~. ••aELIABLE SOURCES wltbin tbe Nixon compound tn San Clemente. d well u out· aide, conftrined tha_l a top teftJ team .hu been pdlled together to tewrite portloas of tbe boolt," the Trib said. Nixon's bQOk wu scheduled for public•• May lS. The Trib quoted a spokeswoman for Grosset & Dunlap as saying, "I can only say that it is due out aomeUmein5fay.''' In hls boot, .. Tbe Enda of Power," Haldeman s.al1l Nixon initiated the Watergate break·in and was involved in the cov· er·Up. Tossed Like Match Sticks, Deadly Gas Killed Eight. Deadly Gas Kills Eight 89 ~jured as Chlorine Tank Car Derailed YOUNGSfOWN, Fla. (AP) -Hundreds of 1)e<>ple stayed away from their homes today as workmen t>ecan the delicate task of righting a de· railed lank car that ruptured. killing eight people. with a ghostlike, yellow cloud of chlorine. Eighty· nine people were injured. Salvage experts also bad to contend with a loaded chlorine tanker 1 a tanker of liquefied petroleum gas. one filleo with ammonium nitrate -which Is a highly explosive base for fertilizer - and five others loaded with caustic chemicals Workmea planned: 3rd graf WO&KMEN PLANNED to ring the site near this small Panhandle town with a wall of earth and to smother the chlorine.car with foam before lrY· ing to clean up the wreckage left by the derailment early Sw'<lay. Officials plaMed to make air tests today before telling the 700 to 1,000 residents who were evacuated when they could return. Russell Gober. a member or the National Transportation Safety Board. said it appeared the deraflment was caused by a broken rail but that was a tentative conclusion. THE ACCIDEJ"lit'T came a day and half after a derailed tank car carrying hqu1d propane gas ex· ploded in Wa\'erly, Tenn., sending a ball of flame tearing through the center of town. Three vistims of that aceident died Sunday to br· ing the death toll to 12 and more than 40 were still hospitalized roc burns. • The Florida dead. who were in their teeQli and early 20s, were exposed to the chlorine as, tbey drove along U.S. 231. which parallels the tracks where more than 20 cars of a l20·car Atlanta & St. Andrews Railroad tram jumped the tracks about 2:30 a.m. The car engines of many people choked to a stop in the gas, trappmg some and forcing others to run for their lives. .JAMES AND MADELYN Mi11er were among those who had to fleo. Their engine stalled when they stopped for a young man waving frantically for help. "While we were running we could hear peopl~ screaming, 'Help me, please help me"," Mrs. Miller said from her hospital bed. "I knew I was going to die." THE FINAL VICTIM, a IS.year-old girl, was not found until late Sunday afternoon when a helicopter crew spot.ted her lying in a field ~ross the highway frocn the wreck. The train'a eaglneer, Ray Shores 53 was the last survivor to be rescued. He took t~ the swamp along the tracks where be found a pocket of un· tainted air and waited eight hours until being rescued by a helicopter. Mirror of American Liie a Course by Newspaper The television shows you watch. The The Freeze Hits East eoast . .. . To earn two-~its; residents of Coast, Rancho. Santiago and Saddleback Community College Districts may register bv re- questing materials from colleges serving their area. Register at-Coastlin.e Community College by phoning 963-0824; Santa Ana College by calling the admission office at 835-3000, and Saddleback College by calling 831 -9700 or 495~4950, Ext. 291 . Te.peratllNS Mltll '-~ 31 .. ,, ... ., 74 •4 19 S4 21 ., 24 .50 u .. 3 ., 34 .. JA " .. ~ i Al • u .. 2S tZ %1 " a ,. a • • 44 a • ;: ': .ot l ~.:. • ·ft • 2' " a • JI tA n ,. '1 n • • 2' 14 n • ( f Of course, DailY' Pilot readers may read the weekly articles for enjoyment. To enhance that enjoyment, Coastline Community College of- fers •ectuses, community ~ forums, festivals and worteshops on topics related to Popular Culture course materials~ For in- forfJ'l\tlon cen ·the college at 963-0811, extension.256. Courses by Newspaper -one mor~ reason Why Orange Coast peopte rely on the DAILY PILOT . . 'I J I ' 'BERKELEY (AP> -Police •ro foeualng on ~ tonc·acUve raplat•a noxtous trademark -~s powerful, oily body odor -in their attempts lo find the at- tacker they have nicknamed •'Stinky." • Believed responsible for more than 60 sex attacks in the pas t five years, the raplst is s hrewd • •nd careful. No vlcUm bas seen f\ls face well enough to give •uthorities a description. "AT TIUS POINT we Could look face.to.race at him and have no way or positively l<tentifying him," admit.a Police Inspector Brian Oliver, one of three officers working full time on the case. Police now plan to have ~tinky's vicllms sniff at product .-amples provided b y the Standard Oil Co. to try to give in vesligators a little more to 'iYOrk with. I ' Oliver admits the odor won't 'l)rovide the evidence needed to convict the attacker, even if it leads to his arrest, admittedly a long.shot poss1b11ity. "THE ODOR ll> not the way we'll get him." Oliver said. ·•Even af a Jot 'or the victims could agree on an odor -that one thing as definitely the scent --.-there's no way we could lake " those women into court and dub them experts on smell." Hundreds of calls on the origin qf Stinky's odor have been re· ceived by the department, but so far they have run into dead ends. At least 62 rapes and possibly as many as 100 have been blamed on Stinky. Police are convince<t they are dealing with one man. The smell and his methods tare always the same - even conversations he has with victims. STINKY'S targets since 1973 have usually been women living alone or with infant children. His most recent was a former television reporter who bad r e· ported on his exploits. Police know h e is black because of partial views or his skin. has voi ce a nd hair characteristics. He is believed to ,be about sax feet tall. muscular .and possibly between 2S and ~ 1 years old. Jle usually strikes between midnight and 6 a.m., most fre. ·• quenlly prying open l oeked windows and a rming himself , with a knife from the vtcUm'a kitchen. THE VICTIM. often unaware he IS there until &he feels the knife again&t her throat, is im· mediately blindfolded with a pillowca&e, dishtowel or piece or clothing. Oil Tanks B .urn -------· ........ 4 .......... ___ ..__ Monday, February 27. 1978 . .. s DAILY PILOT .-l~ .· on ; . Governor See$ End to 'Discrimination' WASHINGTON (AP) -Gov. Edmund'G. Brown Jr. said Sun· d ay n i8hl be exp ected a breakthrough with the Carter administration to end what he called discrhnin.atlon agai~st California oil pJ"oductirs and re· finers lo the federal entitleme~ts pr9gram. "Today was the most cQn· s trucllve response by the administration oo this subject," Brown declared. He is an Washington for an annual gov- 6rnors association conference HE SAID HE met privately with adminfstratlo'n officials along Wlth attending a closw • session of the governor s on eMrgy matt.era held in the Ex· ecutlve Offioe Buildtng. Brown said the entitlements progra'l\ WllS deplped lo help those producers and refiners Us· i,ng Calilor(lla beavy crude oll ~ut the P,rogram backfired so Qtat forei~ and Alaska "sweet and light" oil was cheaper. . Brown .said this lllready had resulted ln the ''closing in" or 200' California wells and the re· duction or drl11ing for others. WHAT WAS needed. he said. were incentives to spu r Ca lifornia production , something that would help tbe nation's balance or payments problem because of the deficits incurred from buying foreign oil. break Calilorniii oU needs was a first step. THE ENERGY Department will hold ltearina:s on California oil"af\d It$ prob) ems M ucn ;J0·31 in Long Beach. Asked about small California refiners who us• foreign oil because of the high cost of in· alallint equipment to ecological· ly clean up s ulphur heavy California crude, Brown said that expanding refine r y capacities would be a partial answer. "What we need 1s capital," Brown emphasized. adding that saving on foreign oil would .be a ready source. HE SAID BE also had made the polnl to the ado1lnlstraUOt\ that $.173 million dollars for solar energy and $129 million for geothermal energy In an overall energy budget of $12 billh>n dollars was inadequate. Brown said he was opposed to res0Jndin1 a state law against operation of addltional nuclear reactors unless a means f~r get.- trng rid of waste was a dem· onstrated fact. He refused lo &ay he wouJcj veto leeialation permitting oper ation without guaranleeli waste r emoval but made it clew he felt those wanting the Ja?J changed were doing so becaukv they knew there presently ls no way of guaranteeing plant waste con be dtsposed of Free Consultation ' Blue Cross Studies Need for Surgery NEW YORK (A P)-One of four pateinls who were told the~· needed surgery and who sought a second opinion were told by tbe second doctor that the operation was not necessary, a new study. says. And preliminary results of the two-year study by Blue Cross and A dark column of smoke rises from ~~ Geµy Oil·-Field near Santa Maria early Sunday when a n explosion igmt· ed four oil slorage tanks. There were nQ injuries. Authorities planoed to pump oil toda}· out o( lqies sen·. ing the .tank's. clearing the ar~a for art iD\·estig"!ion. Favoring foreign to domestic oil, Brown said, "doesn't make any sense.to me." The. governor was not specific on ·what t he administration would do but said an Energy Departmmt call last week for a nview of wbat kind of Prife Blue Shield of Greater New York also indicate that most patients are n ot taking advantage of the firm's offer to provide free second opinions when surgery is recommended. "We are continuing to study the patients who '°'1gbt second opinions tp add further data to ne bow many had operations immediately anyway, how many deferred. them !Dr a year or two, or perhaps indefinitely," Blue Cross· Blue Shield executive vice president D .. Eugene Silberf said. ( INSHORT } UJ> money for an American banking flrm that allegedly laundered money for the cocaine trade. Rep. Lester Wolff, chairman of the House Committee on Nareolics. said Sunday on Ute CBS·TV program "60 Minutes" that the Cuban president put ~P an unspe<:ified amount of money to Ii tart the firm W FC, based in Coral Gables, Fla. 4 Victims Found;. ·D~ad· CHATSWORTH (API Searchers today discovered the bodies of four people killed when thf? airplane in which they were flying crashed in the Santa Susana Mountain s in nortbwers tern Los Angeles County. The wreckage of the single· engine aircraft was found about 4:45 a .m. by members of the Civil Air Patrol. The plane, which crashed nellf Ui.e Simi Valley Freeway and Roclty Pe11lc Road was located b.>; an eDJergehcy distress slgnal comine from the· wteckaae. Names of the people aboard the pla11e were not..r.~sed. Non• Get• Rat• By The Associated Pres11 A moi.aCure:-laden w .. lerly flow which spread showers across p~rts of Northern California over the-weekend was expected ~o bring more light r ain today. and JoniJhl. • ( STATE J The most substantial rainfall figure Sunday was recorded in Red Bluff, where .24 of an inch fell , the National Weath er Service reported. a fire that destroyed a 26·foot cabin criti~er and forced its owner, H~n'ando Camargo, 46. a nd a friend , Rosemar y Espinosa, to jump into the sea. authorites said. The boat's owner told Harbor Patrol officjals tbat he had been trying to charge the battery Sun· day when it burst into names. The results released Sunday were based on· 1,soo c.ases in which subscribers obtained con· sultalion from a s econd physician. ee.anc& BeJeeted JERUSALEM (AP) -Prime 1\1 inister Menachem Began met with the U.S. Mideast negotiator t.oday and said afterward hrael Dam •Afaecur refuses to commit itself to a SACRAMENTO (AP> -Pfll'Wle\"folate'Cf total pullout from occupied Formt!r Los 'atdtg~les Police SAN JOSE (AP)-The sons of -· fa nas. ?r to c r~ation of a Chief Ed Da~·1s teadlng ~ ~ one·tlm• underworld figure Pale~timan .state, m effect once torney G«>eralB\.tlllleYlM:ineer.ui .i i.Joseph "Joe BanU!ls'' Bonanno aga1P. ~ectina two k ey the race for Reeu'bllcan were to appear at a court hear· Eg~~ab'peacedemands .• •nomlollti()ft for r~rnor, says a. lng tod~ t.o..,(ace ch•rges or Assistant Secretary of State J poll hr'I'hlll~ta o Bee. • l7f'rdlt! Vio'•tto\tr sheriff's or. Alfred Albert.on coofened with The poll, pubUshed •Sunday. fitials taid. • ..Begin for ~ conUnuini als-o indJeatect that Democram • Salvatore 'and Joseph Bonanno ~ .l'but:tle 1nedlalion effort ~ Go\'. Edmund BrOW11 Jr. has Jost · 'Were UC'ested by U.S. marshals f!od a. basis for ~gypUan·laraell s;ome othis-popuTarifY: in surJ)tlse, pre-dawn moves agr~eme_nt on a declaratlan of 'Sunday on warrant.a issued by P r 1 n c l p l e s f o r p e a c e U.S. Dlstrict Court Judge Robert negotiations. Atherton uld he P . Peckham in San Francisco. was ~ot ready to propose a com· MARIN A DEL REY (AP> The specific nature of the al-promise formula. A 1park from the battery caused •Jeged probation viQlatlons was ~-A ... d not tmmedlately known, but de-~ .. re. c"ue Spark Causes Fire Ezftlo•lon Probed WAVERLY, Tenn. <AP) -A railrolid official said Sunda~­ that a propane lanker car ex· plosion which killed 12 and in~ jured scores may have been caused by weakness in the walls of ttle 28,000.gallon steel cylinder. ''That tbeoey is one fhat we may settle on:• said Phillip L. Hoopu. Louisville and Nashville. Railroad Co. resident vice president for Tennessee. IJdlai Cleared Mlv\MI BEACH. Fla. <AP> - Aides to ~omia Gov. Jerry Bn>~~a11 la~ unions have itJ-dica~ that their donations will be hlfh enough to pay off Brown 1 nearJy $45,000 deficit from his unsuccessful run foe the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination. ; J · t D-. t talls were expeeted at the show NEW YORK (AP) _ A New QUEENIE '8y Phil lnterlondi Jllllq e •-..:;.rOr cause hearing todaf'before U.S. Y.or)f congr~man say.1> Fidel ------------------.. . M~gisV-a!e ~9tdinJlla.cker. C'astr . t p some or the start· Brown made a plea for funds during a Saturday breakfast ,neeting of AFL-CIO Executive Counc il members and union i;epr.eseJliauves as they wound up a week·long convention. 1· \ I ~.'' Museum Aid 'Set ' • •l , -. . F ear~d ·. ,..·~~~~~ r-' -• ~. r' 'Y*'~Fff.,, • Bankf'UPt4Y P I ki• • . ~ Dlvwte • o ans :~,,~~. • KOKER SAID Polanski round il bard to adjust lo prison Ure .and' ltlnled that 'he 'would flee the ,CO¥').lrY rather than I act ~ t.Vn•~' bars. ''ht said ir be was 1oi'ng to get mare time he Wa$ goln1 to leave ahd.pever ~roe back to lb~ United States," Koker salll. :·r ~ _. idea be wouldbeeau11ehewasverydepress.d.'' .. • tncorl>or•tion • Acclcte.'lt·lhJury •eviction • Colltctlons 640-2507 *THREE MONTHS MEMBERSHIP $38.00. *REGULAR PRICE $68.00 /ntroducing- SUSl E HARPER ................ .-~-'-... ~ltOlb&.H•clotMl-~l ..... IOf· . .,... .... _,,....,.... ____ ....., _, ___ _ .. kllloMdat--•ta-1-encl ""'' -~ .... .......,11_, ..... -. -•11un111--v-. v-_....., __ . .., .. .._. __ -·-V-9'"-oel.....,,IOll""' -ltit""" "'"'*""' • ..---1.-'11 ··--··~111.....,.. _ _. ..... ,._ --""-· • W...1...-1-.... ...,on ... ni.-1n T-.-""'l""""'ole"'4>!)'1-lyl-The¥ ···---'------~ltMtl04 ---"" "~·--l!lllM-.. bt~:;;'.:"".,,;!':111"::::'o ort"f __ ,..,._ teol T....,. .............. _ ... golltotwow"""' ~---11"41...,__CM_ "-•IMll40--•='"'*-.,'"" _ ... 11_.,.._ .......... ----·""""' s ( ., i .. .i .. ..., __ ....... Al .. . ... ora~cm.1oanv~ro1 Editoricll P!MJ.e ... ................ ---............................. ... • RObtrt N. Weed/Publllher ThOmls K~ll/Edhor S.rblr• Krelblch/EdJlort•I Pave Editor , .. i ~Ieclorate Role. 1 !Significant Here ' • Ability and fitness aside, it was unfortunate last week When Orange County Clerk William St John decided . a,ainst running for re-election. . . St John said he decided to bow out only after he was .~onvinced pending legislation that would make the county clerk an appointive rather than an elective otrice will be defeated. '" The retiring county clerk may be right. Senate Bill Z135 may be headed for oblivion. : If so, the electorate will be spared the experience of ·having the state Legislature say what has been an e{ectors' choice shall henceforth be a county Board of $\lpervisors appointment. . There is a strong case that can be made for reducing the number of elected housekeeping Jobs in government by replacing them with appointed officeholders. This is particularly true in the case of municipal governments where city hall is closest to the scrutiny of the taxpayers .and voters. Alas, this may not quite be the case when considering the past machinations of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. You can understand, in this specific h1stance, why the electorate might be wary of yielding any control. ·Cycles vs. Residents . A battle that may reach the courts appears to be 'developing over Friday night motorcycle racing at 'orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. A key qu estion to be settled is whether or not the paces can continue on the state-controlled fairgrounds e\"en though the Costa Mesa City Council has rejected the operator's request for a business permit. Despite city rejection on grounds that noise from the .racini machines and the frantic crowd-baiting shouts l{om the public address announcer are a nuisance to surrounding residents, the race track operator plans to go ahead with an international meet on March 3 and 10. The request for a business permit is viewed by the race track operator as a "courtesy.. action. He bad already taken out advertising for the racing even before making the permit request. Although the t rack operator says the racing machines will have new sound-r educing mufflers installed and sound barriers will be placed to reduce the racket, Costa Mesa city officials are apparently less than ·convinced that the improvements will amount to an effective remedy. Perhaps it is time that the track operators consider a location where motorcycle racing would have less impact of noise and congestion on surrounding neighborhoods. Motorcycle racing is indeed a popular sport and draws !ans from a wide area, even beyond Orange · County. But the fairgrounds are surrounded by residential 11cigbborhoods. And the people who live there do have a right to expect some peace and quiet. New Views of Work Time was wblli elleHhkmm of the eilb\.bour day and the 40-bour work weelt were regarded as prime accomplishments fort.be benefit Of the American worker. But the labor picture chanies and ilow the talk is of such things as the four-day work week, "flextime," ..-manent part-time jobs and job-sharing. All are being tried by various buai.neaes and industries in various parts of the country. , The goals are slmllar -to improve employee rale, reduce absenteeism and accommodate the reasing number of two-job households with minimum · ruption of family life. ~:: The four-day week, consisting of four 10.bour days ; owed by three consecutive days off, has had mixed cc::ess. The principal drawback seems to be the fatigue. tor of the long work day. ~ So-called .. llatlme'' glvee employees a choice of lng 1n a.a boor or two early er late for their full t.bour day. Thi.I can be vsy bandy for the W'Orken, t lrrvolvea same horrendoua planning problema !Of' . players. HGusewlvee and retlreell who want steady, la not ·time wcrk are finding more firms offering ~anent -ti.me jobs. This helps the family fUlaDCes 8Dd gives "1Ple>yers access to talents and training that might ~erwise be wasted. ;! The idea of having two people -often a husband and e team - share a alnlle job is catching on 1n some eas, notably in education. This gives both worken the isfaction of a job and a paycheck, a1oag with a chance fj take turns keeping the home fires buming. ;-:,; All of which eoes to ahow there's more than one itl>roach to solvinll employment problems wblle ~ing •With our changing aoc.tal mores. · cl. • . ltona expt....S In the ep909 &bcMt .. lt'°99 of the Dally Piiot. Qt'9t views expr1•1d on thla p-ee 8'9 thole of Mr authoq and ~·Reader comrMnt 18 inYltad. ~the Delly Piiot. P.O. Idle 1560, Cotta M• 'OA 9'282e. Phone (1t4) 8'M321. .:~ Boyd/Look,.alikes ·!_:: 81 L.•. BOYD ~eati<m ariles as to why ~then and 1l1tera, who 40D't loot all that much alike w.ben youn1, tend to re· t4ID ble one anc>Uler more' lild ID4n u tbe1 .,._ Can 411117surmisellbqto~1'tth lelion, b81r eolor and .iakM .. At/I ,... tbo dis-- t.incUons ol the akin. It frays the bair, certafnly. And quite frequently the aenes insist that brotber1 and slaters wrlntle a1milar17 as they grow older. That which once most obvloult Ht tbem apart d'VW a;p ftnt. leenn1 onlJ' that -.blcla most o}». Ylousb" blDdl tbem toaeUtet at tut. W8*cb tldl space for more pbUoaopbleal di•· 1ertatlon1 •• demand warruta. Nicholas Von Hoffman Huge Judgments Warn Industry The cue made headlines a few days ago. A $128.5 million dollar, Jury-awarded Judgment against the Ford Mot.or Co. The newsreaders on radio and television spoke about it being a record. Most of tbe money was awarded to Richard Grimshaw. a 13-year-old boy who was ridine ln a Ford Pinto when it W)lS struck behind by a blow from another car which ii· nited tb e Pinto's eas tank. The Pinto with its con· troverslal 1as tank has become the Chevy Corvair of the 70s. The car with the reputation as the most dangerous vehicle on the highways. Whether or not it truly is, the Grimshaw boy was burned over 90 percent of bis body and has ·undergone, ac· cording to newspaper reports, 60 operations since the 1972 ac· ddent. He is described as horribly scarred and in need or another 30 operatlona. Whoever is or is Jack Anderson not at fault, the last 1ix yean ol this younpter's life must have been one of tbe molt ill· describable pain. ALL OP Tm8 and mucb, much more must bave been known to t.be jury which lilteaed to the cue for ahc montba before coming to Its declalon to UHU this huge penalty. ln the modem legal system, boweYer1• Judees have many ways ot volaJ.DI jury decisions and, .in effect, maldn& the 12 clthen.s wbo live tbelr lime to trla1a little more than or- namental attenct.es at wbat are judicial leevees. 11 any cMe would aeem to cry out for a downward adjustment it would seem to be tb.ls one. Even tboutb the J.njurie:a are traelc and the family baa already bad $12:5.000 ID medical bills, lm't the enormous sum un- conscionably hlp'? Auuml.ng for the parpo1e9 of cilleulaJoo the Pinto ii lDdeed an unsafe automobile. then the answer ls no. This hu1e award will not on- ly be of some help to the ac· cident vlcttm. but to IOClety as a whole. A few judgments like that and no automobile manufacturer la goln& to make an unsafe automoliile. The cost of remedy· SQ• dealp error or beeflnl up quality control will be as Mt.binl compared to the COit of a doaen or so $128 mllllon dansacejudgr:nent.s. SUCH Judonents also obviate the need for federal safety standards, which businessmen ••:r dr&1 down productivity and yank up COits. (Parenthetically, let lt be Doted that in denytne the cbaries a,ainst the Pinto one of the defemea Ford ls makin• la that the car .. met all applicable federal aafety standards." Which brtnp up the poulbtllty tbat ne&Uaent manufacturers m a1 be able to protect themlelHS a1aln1t da:::r 1uita by tompl,ytq with e- quate and bureaucratically botcbed '8fety ltandarda.) The Idea that the law courts mllbt lndireet.lY proride all ol ua with hllb qual{ty ccmumu pro. t.ectlon by &lvtni Justlee to COO· aumens h:Uured by low quality meTchandise ts not likely to catch on. Mamafactmers and In· smnce companies are already putting on a big drive to COD· vlnce us. Le. those of us wbo escape being hurt by what we ba_.y. that lt is us who must ul· Umat.ely pay for the Judameuta. TUE TBEORY ls that U Jones and Johnaco Wld&et Joe. are bit with a mammoth damage Judgment tbe insurance com- panies must raise the rates ol every corporatioq ln the~= lndu1try. No such theory o however when YoU and I want to buy car Insurance. Then we're told the hleh risks have the blab rates and the low risk.a have the low rates. Why raise the rates~ the non·neeUgent. manufacturer who ls selling a sate product? Because by doing so, so much clamor and fear ii caused that. leglalatlon will be introduced llmitlnf the she of the jude ments wbicb may be awarded. That, of course. wrecks what could be a simpl~ non-bureaucratic self-enfordJje safety system. Approximately the same thing happened when the doctors aJid the insurance companies pulled their malpractice con of a couple of years ago. The "crisis" was resolved by making lt next to impossible for the victims t.o secure compensation for their injuries. TBEODOllE Kostoff, a lawyer in Bridgeport.. Conn., re- cently filed a suit. against a parcel of insurance companies and advertlalng agencies who. the injured consumer's legal remedy by jur1 tampering. medy by jury tamperlne. , Speclftcally Kostoff ls objecting to ads placed in three national magazines , atatlng, ••when awarding damages in liability cues, the Jury ls cautioned to be lair and to bear In mind that money doee not grow on trees. It muat be paid through insurance premiums from uninvolved parUes, such u )'OW'Self. Koskolf's legal theory ts ncml and probably won't be sustained by tbe courts, but give him a gold star for t:ry1ng'to safeguard this form of consumer pro· tectlon. The House of Representatives recenUy shot down.Ralph Nader's proposal to create a federal agency to represent consumer interests before other governmental entities. The reUGG for the bill's defeat MmDI to hne been ir· rit.atioD and c!ilappoiimment at bow poorly eo much eomamer protection le1t1latloa Ila• • worked. But tllat doesn't mean 11e don't need proteetlon, if not from tbe trlllC1ldte la'aDCb. tbm from tbe law comu. Report Says LNG Storage Can Be 'Lethal' W ASHINOTON -Tbe netura1 gas t111du1try baa iDTHted billions in &nu:IACll1IN aD4 _.., inf .preclou.a but cranat.rou llqald natural •u· Beat ab-~.~. ol U. .. .. rNea ........... Ue ha' Ct~ PoPGlaW eaters • ._.. •tat. ···are~• • •· ~Maeouldcnatea~ The General AftlOUDtlna Of. floe. one of tb• tou1best •atcbdOI. ac•aciH in 10Yernment. has warned tbat mOlt of tile atora1e • facWUes are located '"wit.bin lethal distance of maQ major U.S. ctu ... ::~:..~J----<*It." Yet tat.a 8ow, MCONb1r to the ecwenunea& ......., •*lM& tnan1 of the so-eallld aftlt7 de-•1P featm. mq tall tatalJy ID Art Hoppe u.e even\ of burriea--. earth. quake• or other natural di•· aatera arubotqe." 'l'lla INDllti&Y, wtll bUlkw Jlt state, bM DOW !'Meted to t.bla erUldlm by l1wchtn1 a fierce eoantsattaek on tile General kWllDllalOlkie. Accordlne to a conftchatfal memo prepared for House Enera awrman .Jobn ~ell. J>.llldL, ~ PnnuN ta growiaf to temper or complete17 aappresa the GAO'• uploalye report on tbe dancers of liquid natural pa. Altboqb GAO ~­ ficiall wW not openlt admit lt, aoureee wWdn tbe &leDCY report that PrellUre ii mountiq to un- prececltated leYela." The lndililtl7 ILu turne4 tta big pm Dal anly Qpoa the GAO'• --~ bat upoa tM Oou\ Gaard • •bor• patrol1. ~-.....-.A)' that-U.. Cou& Guarttt eftorta •-io nal..-. ad eoatro1 the duaer" bm takera baullDC liquid natural gas "have been could pour a. • .highly aplosive s talled for more than five cloud over the urban com- 7ear1. •• munlUes of Everett. Chelsea and It would ecst the lnduatry 8 SomervUle," wams the memo fortune to relocate 1tora1e chnllail)'. facWtiel w CGDlltnlct new CJDeS. The dlnpr of a dlsaltroas col· The natwal cu companies~ lilion 8t .... lotUDg a giant. thenfcn, bave much to lain ii · llamlu ftrebllll~ la .ako a real they can face down the aov· po11lb1llt1. Tbe eoD.ftdentlal enunent. memo. dtlq an lntemational BOT WOllBIBD Gftlcials are takin1 a bard look at the liquid natural gaa buard.s. New York C l t 1 ' a f o r m e r F t~ e Commllsionei-John O'Hapo ls quoted ill the congre11lonal memo as warntna that mus evacuation of tbe dt1•s boroucba would be DeffUU')' to deal with a liquid natural gu eatHtropbe. Yet the memo notea tbat the evacuatJoo 11would be an impoalble tut and amounts to havtn1 no emet'1enc7 procedures wbataoe1er:• • ID Boston, Ufallare or transport or stor-.e facmu. study, states tbat a •ftn&e of .. one ol ffel7 foa:r tanken in senlce bu a .waton every year." Footnote: A spotesman ror the lnt.atate Natural Gu As- aoclatiGD acknowlecleed that m. dustry repreaentatlvea had preaed the GAO fOf' copies of i~ critical report. "But," he insist· eel, "there hasn't been what I would call preaurin.... AQ of· flclal of the Amertcao Gas N, aoclaUon ~8 .. ted tbat the criUdlm d have a poativ& effect. 1"lbe IDdultry la worrlecl about providing tbe tuel safely.~ be assured our JWSC>('late J~ Kitchell. ; # . It's Up, Up and Away with the ·californianauts . . . . -t • ~ ! l I \ ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES Joh Excha~ge Revealing By JACKIE RYMAN otUltoelly ............. Richard Slm'On came back from eleht months ln EncJand '1Jlth a new baby, a custom-built "sailboat, a lot of friends and the memory of some terrible ;.weather. . "It was cold, damp, cloudy, ·fo11y, snowy, rainy, sleety - .-everything the postman is guaranteed to walk through, -that's what we had," said •.Simon, public information of- ficer fcir the Coast Community Colle1e District. • He had taken part in an ex- cbaqe of jobs, homes and cars .,with the Open University's ,Kevin Moloney, who for eight month.I took over Simon's job. ACCOMPANYING him were bi& wlfe Katherine and daughter Jennifer, 4. They came back .')Vitb an addition: Brlltany, four -months. She has dual citizenship. The one thing the men didn't exchange was salaries. and Simon is glad. "Americans are grandly paid in comparison lo British prices,'' he said. He said rent and housing there .are considerably cheaper and clothes are slightly less ex- pensive, food costs about the same while a gallon of gas runs about $1.60 lo $1.90 a gallon: YET SOMEONE in a com- parable job to Simon's would earn only about $8,000 a year and a news paper reporter perhaps $5,000 to $7,000, Simon said. "And they're heavily taxed. a .minimum of 33 percent," he said. ''I did a lot of talking to different people and they are terribly dlsgrunUed with their economic position." The country is highly socialized and strikes occur almost weekly, Simon said. EXCHA~E PROGRAM Rlcfiard Simon "Their government's milking them, as far as I'm concerned. And I believe the unions have strangled the country in- dustrially." THE OPEN UNIVERSITY, u four-year, primarily mall-order Institution which serves people who can't attend the r egular un- iversities, is located In a town with the picturesque name or Leighton Buzzard, Simon said. If anyone's curious, that's just about a mile south or Heath and Reach. Publicity activitlea are somewhat less creative than in the U.S .• Simon believes. lie said pubUcist.s there issued news releases but rarely wrote up feature Ideas, and brocburei. were designed along traditional lines using what he termed drab colors. IN ADDmON, political COO· troversies wracked the unlversi· ty , with charaes levied of com· munlat influence among the staff and of censorship on the· stalt newspal)er. The biggest controversy came over the political activities of another • Open University Information of- ficer who was trying to lower the age of consent to 3. tie was fll'ed, Simon said. People seemed stand-offish at first but warmed up on further acquaintance, Simon said. They particularly enjoyed listening to his little girl Jennifer's American accent until, after a few months in pre school, she picked up "a legitimate BedfordahJre accent." "THEY WERE VERY curious," Simon said. "The first question from most people was, 'What is America llke?' They bad no concept of size or dis- tance. And they have images of .America via the terrible television that is imported there." Whtie there, Simon decided to have a 37-foot sailboat built at Plymouth. "They make the best s hips in the world for the money." Unfortunately, while he was gone, hi$ boat slip in San Pedro was blown away. Stlll, Simon said he was glad to get back, especially since be just missed the heavy rains. He said Southern California pre- sented a sharp contrast to the subdued colors in En&land. "I ALMOST HAD a visual shock when I got back," Simon said. "I forgot how beautiful the fruit Is here." Previous travels had taken him and his wife to Africa, Asia, across the Himalayas. and to New Zi!aland, South America and Greece. Simon said. "But I'm really happy here in Southern California," he said. "I can feel the pigment in my skin wakening." For the Record Deatlu Elsewheret. ........... 01 "·~ "'-'.......,,. MINCH, lAwa ,.,_ -"elllfl Edootr; AARSEN, hrt 19MU... -Cofu•.-: P'lrLl!STl!R, VI<-• •"" Fr•n<I•; LEES, Wllllarn E. •net .h1cllll• A.; W'IRO, ICI"' 'I, a "d Larry; TROMalNO, Am.-L end COLUMBIA FALLS, Mont. <AP> -Former Montana Gov. J. Ha10 Aronson, 86. died Satur-da y night in the Monl<lna Veteran '& Home, where he'd spent the last fi ve yeara. He served as governor from 1953 to 1961. GLENDALE <AP> -Ernest Palmer, 92, who shared an Oscar for col· or cinematography In Tyrone Power's 1941 epic ... Blood and Sand," died ln hh Pacific Palisades home Wednea· day. DEL RIO, Texas <AP>- -Ge«ge D. Mier-, 94, a wealthy South Texu rancher who at one time entertained Hollywood personallUes al hla two ranches in Mexico, died Wednesday. WASfUNOTON <AP) -Portia Washtn1ton Plttm u., 94, daughter of black educator Booker T . W ashlogton who founded Tuskegee loalltute In Alabama. died Sunday al her home in W aabingtoo. GREENVlLLE, S.D. (AP) -Tbomu A. Wofford, 69, former U.S. senator, judge and member ot the South Carolina Senate, died Saturday at his home afU!r a Jong lllness. DENVER <AP) -~Ured M. Balley, 84, nturallst and director emeritus of the Denver Mua.eum or Natural His· tory. died Friday or • heart condition. AUBURN <AP) - ,, .... hdahl Jobauea 7t, one ol the orlaJUf dozen elders who formed the California Ski Instructors Association in 1939, died Wedb..U, lo Auburn. SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -· D•41e1 a. ••Dwd1 ' Pwktat, "· ODe of the ccMlbU'Y'• first daredevil motoretcllatl, died berit. FDADrop•...-e DEAR READERS: The Food and Drug AdmlnlatraUon bas withdrawn Its long-delayed pro- posal lo Increase the te~els of iron added to bread. The withdrawal concludes a seven· year battle between nutrlonlsts seekln& higher Iron levels In bread produ cts and hematologists who believe that increased iron levels could be dangerous lo people suffering Crom bemocbromatosls. This Is a rare disorder In which the body is unable to screen out iron. FDA said there have bffn no adequate studies showing the safety of increased levels or iron in bread and concluded that the prol)06ed increasea "are not pro- ven to be needed, safe or ef- fective." Ne1Dlnde% DEAR PAT: Will you please ex plain the revised Consumer Price Index? I'm particularly interested in the new CPI for all urban consumers. W.S., Fountain Valley The revised Consumer Price Index Includes a new CPI for all urban consumers, a revised CPI for urban wage earners and clerical workers and the an· revised CPI for arban wage earners aad clerical workers. Thia one will be dropped after the .Jue U78 lDdex Is pubUshed. Tbe all arbu con.samera Index locludes croapa, ID addltiee to wace earners and clerical worken, whklll bl&&.orlcatly have been excluded -salaried workers. the sell-employed, re- tirees and lbe unemployed. Approximately 81 percent of the total nocd.nsUtational cMUaa population will be covered. Peraon1 la mlUtary services. In· atltutlons and those living ou&.- 51de urban areas will not be ln· eluded In any Index. The revised CPI for urban wase eamen and clerical workers repre1ent1 about half t.be poplllatlon COY• ered by tbe CPI for all urbu coneumera. Tbe Bureau of Labor St1U1Uc1 hopes for Improved accuracy of data through cban1ea In 11mple deal1n, collectloa mtthocll and method of cboollnS retail stores In wbJcb price data are collff&. ed. A m~r cbanae In the proc· esa of aelectlag products foJ" pricing wtWa the stores atao has been Introduced to price a larger range of 1ood1 and services. Food Items formerly priced Ute nnt week of eacb montb will be priced dart.De the entire month. Collectloa of prices of other ltema wUI be spread more evenly u weU. lldlOleeb DEAR PAT: I've noticed that some fish products carry a Department of Commerce In- spection seal, but others do not. Is federal inspection of fis h mandatory? B.J ., Costa Mesa Some fresh, rrozeo, canned, breaded, or otherwise proc:eued flab products are lDspeded ud graded by Ute NaUoaal Marine Flabery Service of the Department or Commerce, but tke program ls voluntary oder the Aptcaltare MarketlaS Ad of 1941. lupecton cbeck pluta for cleaallneSI aDd t.be prodad lo r wholeaom eae11 and adherence to tbe prodact•a standard redpe. The lupector alao may irade product&. Certilled fish products are stamped "U.S. Departmea& of Commerce, Packed Under Federal lnspecUon" or with a ..U.S. Grade A" sllleld label. Tbe federal tospeetloo label In· dlcates the product was Inspect. ed, atatlstlcally sampled and found to be safe, wholesome and .•. DAIL V PILOT A 7 or 1ood qaallty. Tile 11tJetd lai J I• Jinn oaly to top quality pr ueta, u.altorm In Ilse, fr~ defecl aod fresb ID navor ..S odor. •• ~ A. brand name IJsUni or tuQ. crab, fl•Js 1Uck1 and ot~tr seafood proceaaed re e1tabl11bments approved, l>J' federal lnlpectors ts avallabli~ a free booklet, "Seaf~ Product.I," from the Coaau lnformatloa Center, Pueblo, Coto. 8100t. •:• .. ... ae.du A1'0idaf»le2' ~·.,, WASHINGTON <A P > -Sdn'le women who died after trylng the popular llqutd protein diet mi~~t have been saved by closer medical attention, an examirul- Upn of their medical recordsq- veals. Al the same time, the govern- ment privately has tbrown~t as Inaccurate or inconclus e maoy of the reports of 15 d of f.ersons on the modified-fast die , but It publicly continue$ io list these cases as "under ··~­ vestigation." The records shbt.- thot a few who died were not even on liquid protein or otbci: protein diets. • ~t,.Lato DEAR PAT: Was I out of liue when I aaked a custom up. bolsterer I'd hired to provide tWe with a written estimate of -work 1 wanted to have done? He seemed upset. Is this an un~ request? :- G.L., Huntington Be~Ji The upholsterer sboald llave provided a wriUea est.imate fw a •:reclftc custom apbolltery .n. an asked for yoar aut.borha&.lo_p before beClaAlal work. ~ ¥ required by law. Excess work w m aterlals charcea wUbo'at costomer consent also ls prq. hlblted. .· J ·~ .. ·. skilled counselors help people sort out their own lives. Here people gain new resources to handle the problems they thought were too big to handle. If you know someone who is e:iperiencing an emotional crisis. call the Problem Talk Shop. A trained counselor will be at the other end of the line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any questions you may have. Please make the call that wlll show her somebody cares enough to listen. · cn•>oo1.1sa1 1110 £act Chlpman A.venue, Suie.109 o..-•• CaUiornla "888 (714) 768-3831 I " I •· ' \I " .. .... .. " • j L Of J ti i ' ~ y ' . . ~ ' ' .floum, Daum and A.,a9 0 $oped and curved sidewalks provide a challenging playground for Soya 1\iing, left, Patty Bedard, center and Nichole lones, aJl 8 years old. Their sidewalk sanctuary is located in tM #ea of Ridge .Route Drive and Muirlan&J 'Boulevard in El l'oro. ·. Barkers' Righu lfpheld ;:~A YONNE. N.J. (AP) ._.1. The City Council has affirmed a dog's right to express himself. "The man who cannot t.Nln his dog to shut up 1•:not as intelligent as lit& dog," argued Daniel .f ,Sweeney, the Board of Health representative who requested th& ordinance. "Something has to be done to train the man." But the council, after listening to two dozen disgruntled dog owners, rejected an ordinance that would have made it illegal for anyone to own a dog which "habitually, constantly and continuously barks or cries." Th'e rej ec ted ordinance proposed a maximum penalty of 10 days in jail and a $100 fine for violators. Six Camp ~ire Meetings Set . N~l Art&ile Slated M eetj.nsa are being scheduled to orianhie Aa art auction. with tamp Fire Girls, kindergarten through th1rd pieces of art sold at bids grade, in ,Mlsaioo Viejo, Lacuna Hills, San Juan as low as $1 and up to Capistrano, San Clemeute, Capistrano Beach and $2,000, will be held Laguna ~ach. Friday, sponsored by Founded in 1910, Camp Fire Girla ls a national youth organization whlcb encourages glrla to create their own values ud help them develop skills and bu.man relaUOl!SbJpe, said .Jane Grey, county representative. , t THE FOLLOWING MEETINGS haYe been scheduled: -Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Harold AmbudLI School, 28001 San Juan Creek Road. San Juan CaDlstrano. -Wednesday, March 8, 7 p.m. at .Ell Morro School, 8681 Coast Hipway. Lacuna Beach. -Thursday, March 9, 7 p.m. at Pali.sades School, 26C6 Via Sacramento, C8pistrano Beach. -MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1 p.m. at La Pu Intermediate School, 2.Sl.Sl Pradera Drive, Mission Viejo. -Tuesday, March 14, 7 p.m. at Ole Hanson School, 189 La Cuesta, San Clemente. -Wednesday, March lS, 7 p.m. at Allio Sdlool, 21.SaWesley Drive, Laguna Beach. . . (.. .the South Ocmt YMCA. The evenm, auction. which ls co-apomared by the Lacuna NugueJ Jaycees, will be held at 26076 11C'".i<Jetty Drive ill Lacuna Nlcuet. begtnniq at '1:30. B\ddlnf ·tor all lien. begins at 8 :30 and .cocktails and hors d 'O;eU VJ'eS will be MrV,ed. On the block 1rill be oils and watercolors by local and 1Dternatiooal award winDiDa art.llta.. For more hitormatklo, call the SoatJa Coaat YWCA at 831·1822 er 495-0453. ,. ' LOCAL I NATIONAL 6 II.N. Sitlaries Rise U.S.; Soviet Union Proie.1 Extra.Spemli,ng UNITEl> NATION$ CAP> -:-The United States doesn't llke it, and neither does the Soviet Union, ~t aoon 75 ofOclals of tbe United Nation.a will be maklne more than'$7S,Q09, a year. Th•t'a morti than tb• atiart~ of Vice President Walter Mopdal& or Chlef .Justice Warren Burier. I•norins demands for belt· t11hfenin1 from the United St•tes, which pays more of the U .N. costs tban any other member. t.be world organization has promoted six assistant secretaries·senerat to th'-.. rw of underaecretary-1eneral. 'Their new tltle9 carry 'raises of '10,000,. making their annual salaries about $86,000. IN ADDITION, A NEW ••super" undersecr~tary-1eoeral will be named lll 'a few wMb to oversee all the ecooomlc pro- blems of the world. His salary: '99,350. Secretary-General Kwt Waldbe~ ce~ $110,650, not counting beltdfa and other al· Iowances. The latest round of "recla.ssl.ficiations .. brinp to 35 the number of U,N. officials maktne lb«e ~ ~.000 a year and to 75 those •Uhl& OTeJ' $75,000. Among the 75 are nine Americans -five assistant secretarles·eeneral, three un- dersecretaries-general and one bead .of a specialized agency. 'THE HIGHEST PAID American ls former Rep. Bradford Morse. a llusachusetts Republican, who draws t99,3:i0 as admbllstratcll" of the U.N. De\'elopmem Pro- aram. · By contrast. U.S. CA cabinet dliefa mate seo.ooo. But their stay in government la muallY a temporary interlude and la Clllen preceded and followed by much more lucrative employment in the business wcrld. Among the professional politlcian1, West German cabinet ministers are the highest paid in the world at $73,300 a year. France pays eov· ernment ministers $52,250, Sweden $36,000 and Japan ~~- TUE tJNrl'ED STATES. which P•1• 25 pe:rceat of the U .N. budtet. has ccwuateatly opposed enlargement of tbe upper ecbelona of the. U.N. civil Ml'Ylce. . Ar .... TOP.PAID AMERICAN • F. ar.ctford Morse Rep'. Lester L. Wolff of New York, a DemocraUc member of the House Committee on International Relations, has warned Uiat the United States might Consider voting against future U.N. budgets unless salaries are kept .. ln line.'' Yury E. Fokine, a minister in charge ol'ftnanciai atrairs in the Soviet Mission, agrees that U.N. salaries are "unjus tifiably blgb." ·TB ESE U~LASSIFICA· tlons do not mean the high oftlclalJ b"•e ee<rvlre!lll 1\e func:tlons·or responaibfUtin,•• b.,.. said. "They are ju&t promotloas for the sake ol. prornotlom - bicher poaltiona and tnore money." ·, Tbe Soviet Union is the aeconcJ blnest U.N. contributor, paying 13.S percent ol the budiet, ,• A prµtclple Inherited from the Lea1ue of NaUons stat.ea that to attract qu.allfied people. U.N. of. I ftclals should mak~ •• ma.ch as · the highest paid civil aervants ln tbe world. the AmerlcaDL A U.S. OF~CIA,L said wblle salaries at the middle and lower level of U.N. officialdom cor- respond rou&bly to the U.S. gov- ernment's scale, those at the up· per levels are ••way out of line." A tJ.N. financial expert said U.N. aalari~ eeem hleh Americana b cause U.S. salaries haven't kept pace. He contended the U.S. 1ov- ernment bu put Ml "arbitrary: unfeir0 ceiling on the salaries ~ hlaher-ranklng officials because • ol congr~ pressure. The U.S. official defended tlMP' ' American practice, saying: "These top jobs ofter something money can't buy. whether It's prestige or the opportunity to serve the nation or the world, or both." . AMERICAN OFFICIALS say U. N. health and retirement benefits, pensions, vacation and sick leave are also much more generous than theirs. For example, the U.N. health plan covers psychiatric and dental care, wbic:b the U.S. pernmmt doesn't provide for ltl' employees. U.N. employees also pay DO income tax. But the)' pay a staff assessment that goes back to the U.N. budget. U.N. aourcee say it ia about equivalent to U.S. in.- come taxes, but the U.S. official said ita's "pot quite that blah." LAST DECEllBU. economy· minded delegates to the General Assembly Introduced a re- solution to take away the privilege that top.level offici.als have of flying ftrst-class •. After some debate, a watered-down version emerged allowing ~ to fly first-clasa when mot time exceeds nlDe hours and In other "most exigent circumstances. .. That, one diplomat aaid. was the ftrst .. people'• revuh api.nst blgb ~.N. liviiig.'" • • I •• •Stocks •Comics f •Television -.., INGLEWOOD (AP> -The Los Angetes Lakers have won 15 of tbeir last 20 games, but coach Jerry West was unhappy, and that's putting it mildly, folio\\<· ing their latest National Basketball Association outing. Boosts Nicklaus ·'When you give up that many Points 1t doesn't look like you're too iTiterested in the game," said West following the Lakers 127.124 loss to the Detroit Pistons Sunday night. "They play~d well and shot well but we -got enough point.a to win on almost any night." Sbol well i9 right. The red-hot Pistons made 72 percent of their field goal attempts in the second haU and 61 percent overall in raising their season record to 28-32. The Lakers dropped to :42-29. ~:·we tried to get everything to the basket and except for Chris Ford, we did," said Detroit coach Bob Kauffman. ford. who made 9 or his 13 field goaJ attempts, mosUy from Jong range. connected on a 15· foer1·ump shot with 1 :04 remain- ing: o snap a 118-all tie. Erle :\J-Qoey's three-point play with 37 seconds to go .clinch ed the \'iclory. •·\fhen you can't do it on de- feni~ you have to worry about tb~effort," said West. ••J feit we sbOu ld have burled theDl an}'tlme in the game. I just feel we're a better ball club. •'jbe only thini they were do- irlt.....,as playing hard and It paid ot:r .... eontin~ West. •"The ba?d pad,boutbai.ketballisdefense.•• OltfltOIJ 1117) -M.L. Qrr"JO, ~ IS. \.ift!11-U, ilotfty 21, .... Ice IS, OeuvlH.tO, C. P'er• 1 I. "totllll SJ 21-21 127. -~•tfOllL&t 1110 -0 .. 11"' 11. o. ,,... '· ·~Ol.J"41W •• H-1', Nl..n Z2, Sco411, ~., 12. K. ~·. R--·· TetalsSI t'-• -.u ... O.Jt9ft 11 ,, ,, J7-lt7 L ... Al'telH ll Jl 20 -12A l'o"lt<I o.A -M.L. CA«. TOlel fouls -Detroll U. l.OS AnQtlff i.. Tedllnul•-Delroll HSlsteftl '~'" Jo"'u A -14,.,.S. LAUDERHILL, Fla. (AP J • - Jack Nicklaus is back. And he's about as hol as a golfer can be, which can only mean trouble for the others on the tour. Especially with the Masters justsix weeks away. ··I said a couple of weeks ago I would be reasonably sharp at · the end of Inverrary.'' said Nicklaus Sunday after winning the lnverrary Classic by scoring five birdies On the l ast five holes. "I think I am about on the schedule I wanted lo be. I'm playing reasonably well. "I now have lhe confidence I might not have had had 1 not won," he continued. "Those are the things 1 look for &oing into Augusta." Nicklaus. whose last victory came in his own l\Jemorlal at Muirfield last May, rallied Crom nine strokes behind at the midway point Friday. lie shot rounds of 66 and 65 t9 edge Grier Jones by one stroke, Hale Irwin by two and Andy Bean and Jerry Pate by 3. To his own amazement. Nicklaus successfully won his third tournament in a row here ut the par 72, 7,127 -yard lnverrary Tournament with birdies on No. 15 through No. 18, three of them from off the green. .. I played beautiful golf up through 13 holes,•• said Nicklaus, who shot rounds of 70, 75, 6& and 65 for a 12-under-par 276 and the $50,000 first priie. "I played well but was kind of dis- couraged al that point because every time I turned around Hale and Grier kept making birdies and I kept getting further behind." P l aying in th e same threesome with Nicklaus, Jones and Irwin kept the pressure on. Jones was four under for the day for 67 and 11 under for the tournament al 277. lrwin was one under Sunday and 10 und~ fO( the tourney with 278. Pate and Bean wound upat279. . "I was seven under and three ~hots back or Grier al that point," he said. "I made the birdie off the green, and whal happens to me, Hale holes it oft the green and Grier holes it, too. I gained sometb111g, but not that much. Jones, who took hdme $28,500, said Nicklaus' birdie chip of some 80 feet on No. 14 "turned the wholeday around." LHdlnq "-And ,.,,.,.,.., wlnnln., IA 11\e lnverrery Claul< o..er u. PAr·n, 1,121.yard lnverrery Cowltry OIJb C:-H Jao Hlcklllll\ UO.IOO Grier J-• Ul,500 Hale lrwln\11)!0 Jerry Pate" 1,000 A,,,,,, BHn ,11,000 Bo41Gllder,,,OOO Lou Gra"""' $1,J75 Lyn LOii U,l7S Howerd T..tltr U,l7S J.C. SMecl U,7!0 0.My l!-dl U,1!0 ~::..~=~ AMY .. OflllM.l)S Boll Mie•rwtoe,l15 o.;c"' "..,...'sun Gii MOf-U.500 Barry JM<-.1 A.JOO ic ...... ft'Z ....... ~ 0 IOOy 0 lic-t U.•,. FOfHI FeLlw Sl_.,., Joe ,._,.,. U,..1' c;.w ... -g ... 19 O...~U,41' NI HMCllQ 12.,09 .... "' ,_ sz.• JK1tll-$1,tl2 Ben c..._...".a12 OOft J_., ,1,a12 l.M TNYIM$1,t12 T-ICl\all-411 Artie M<HlcUe $1 .. IT T_., ._ $1,A11 Al191tMlllW'1_.IT •• 1 .......... " ... " -'-lll•M'f.,, ",A 11 Ch«lft <:--, 11,m L" 1!1*,.$1,TU T..-.nfl!lllW'1,t2S Slew~lt$1,U) 10-1~J1· •1-n.n•1-111 ... 11 ........... 11' 10-71·7141-719 ...... n~i,. 10-,.,......,_2IO n n-10.10-2to1 10-1 S-... 10-lM II 4 .. 10-7A-1tol n.11.11-n-m ...... IS-71-JIS 10 ,._n-7>-MS IA-71.),..._W n.rww.-• ... 1J.11·1>--• 7To10-IJ'H--111t ,,.,..,,.J>-.., "'"*7.S.7-311 ... ""'"".,._.1 ... ~1Ul--1).1S.10--- ,, ~11·10-- 11-7>11-n-• 1...-.n.~ 11-n.~f-- 11-1i.1 .. n-• 1.., .. , .. ,._,.. ,,., .. 11.11-2'0 ~7 .. 1.s.11-2'0 N·1Hi.n-1'0 ,..1>-15-61-1'1 1J·1 .. 1Mt-1'1 n .1s.n-n-n1 ,..,J.1>n-1'1 1 .. ,.., .. ,,_.,., ,,.,.,,.,..._,., 71·7Mt-1f-1'1 n.1a.1 .. 11-m 10-1').1'-1S--1"1 ... ,._n.n-m • . \ ·--~ ......... TRACY AUSTIN KEEPS THE BALL ANO LIFE ON AN EVEN KEEL ' Sports Clipped Short .wftsliin~on , ; I . , " . . BASKETBALL Area Trio Earn All-couBty Los Amigos' Ward Player of the YeaT ; Tempers Flare Jan ,·an Breda Kolff of the :-.:ew York ~ets is held ba<'k b,· Boston·s Sidney Wicks after ,·a n Brecht Kolff and c·edrick :\-lax well engaged in a brief fi ght in the second quarter of Sunday's :'.':ational Basketball Association game at Rutgers Athletic Center in Piscatawa~. :--; .J Both combatants were ejected. Bos ton won. 94-92. Three Orange Co•st area high school stars, led b.)-Sunset Leaau~ piayer or the year Rpter Holmes ~f Fountain V1llev . captured berth.S 6n the ()fflti&l. 1978 All-Orange County bosketball team as selected b~ the Orange County Sport.swrltera Association. Ho1mes is a first team selection after lead~nl bis Barons teammates to the Sunset Leaaue championship. Fountain Valley won 21 strai'gbt Ieaaue &•mes and Holtnes, an all-tourney selection in each of his three outings, was the catalyst. Ilia overall ICOring avera1e was 22.7. Second tum honors 10 to San ClemeQJe llitb guard-!Qrward John C.-son an all-purpose $Ol't who could hit the boards aa wetl as riddle the nets fli>m outsl4e. The ts-6 Carson wu tbe ~th Coast LellC\l.t'S player of th~ year •nd tie avei-qed 19~4 per start lb an -attact Uaat did not dwell on hl&b·scarini 1ames. Also a seeood team selecUon ls Jim Price ol Es~cia (Costa Mesa) High. a 6-3 forwa:r~ wboee 16.1 scoclnt average is decefv. Ing. Price was Estancia's weapon on the boards and played both ends of the court with intensity. · The player or the yeM ls e.6 Orlando Ward oC Los A.miJos <Fountain .Valley) High. Ward can and did do i1 all with bis St. Monica's Wood, S~ ~ Threaten Capo's Cong~rs SANTA MONICA-Capistrano Valley High's Cougars may feel they've ridden the road to s uccess in the CIF l ·A basketball playoffs with two ma- jor assets guiding them -an ace in the ba~kcourt and a stepped up tempo keyed around the fut break. And the last two victories in playoffs action have seen the Cougars dispose of fast-breaking teams with an outstanding in- dividual. But as the eliminations pro- gress. the road gets toucher- a nd Tuesday night (7:30) at Saddlebac k College the St. Monica Mariners invade with 6-3 ~uard Leon Wood leadini the way in a non-stop run and iun offense. Wood, a first team All·ClF 2-A selec tion last s e aso n as a i.ophomore and the Santa Fe League's most valuable player for the second straight year, has averaged over 35 points a game for the season. In the playoff• he•s popped in 48. « and SS points and he does it with 54 percent accuracy, ac- cordt n& to his coach. Chris Corliss. "Leon ta only a Junior:• says Corliss, • "but he's already bad AUSfIN .•. feelers from over 150 colleges. He's a very intelligent kid and he's only 15 years old,'' says the coach of the Santa Fe Leaiue SCC to Play Westmont Southern California Collea• won the coin flip and rl1ht to enter the NAIA Dis trict 3 basketf>all playoffs as the No. l seed among the tn o or sec. Point Loma and Azusa Paclf1c. all of whom tled with 7-3 rec- orders. T h us l h e \"a ng u a rd s o f Southern Cahforma Coll ege are idle until Saturday when they face the No. 2 seed, Westmoot College. All game s v.111 be played at Occidental College in Eagle Rock. The playoff schedule: NAIADl*ktJ......_.. .... "9f'l at O«MlttQI Tltw .. a, 4-alola n Alww -Pl. Loman R .. _ ~ •: »-Tllwsclay'l ~ •-S....,,.,. catllorlU Olllt9f "9 w........ IMrcU 7:30-WMtUwwsS.t.......,.a~ef .. •:JO oame -di• ~Ofldav's "'-s vs .-.rs ee U. SCC-Wtt._t..,.. C"'-1 ...... 1 -OISlrlct Ali-v.Jr-. Contlnaed From Page B-1 until she turns pro. Sbe gets only to have her children play tennis partial help on her expenses only because it was healthy and from playing toumamenta ... c o u 1 d p r o v l d e c o 11 e g e As long as she stays an amateur. scbolanbipa. But the wbole the expenses incurred are out of lamlly excelled at. it. pocket. except ln Vlreini• Slims, Jett, 215, now ln law school, where her expenses are paid out was former!)' ranked S6th in the of her winnln&S. but not lboM of world: Dou1. 2a. wu the top her famUy. The rules don't pla1er at Cal State (LoD8 permit expeaset ol a cbapercme, Beach> laat 1pri.Qa; John. 20. Js a and abe needa a cbll*'Olle. ao varalty player at UCLA and b~motber..,eawitbher. Pam, ~· Yt'bo played qlll the .. ID wtmbfedaa Ind at FONSt wosnen • prQ circuit for five . Hilla. ahegets only $60 a ~J and ,ear1, now works for the Loa no air fare.•• be continued ... And An1et• Strlno of World Team her mother and I had to pay our T!~'· own. way. This means it has to · People aomeUmes ask me if be a rich person's game but we we 1et jealous of each other but • we never do, .. Tracy said. manage to afford it. So she'll be "We're so close, we're always poor until she turns pco, and hopln• for everybody to do the we're certainly oot getUng rich belt.•• at it." Asked whether Ttai:y ia 1et· tin& .rich pla1ln1 tennis, 'ber !c~ller aald Tracy .. will be poor champions !or the second straight yur. St. Monica enters Tuesda.> ·s batUe witb an 18·5 record. Wood can bit from outside or drive the Jane, the latter so ef. fecti vely he fouled out lbree de· fe nders in the quarterfinals victory O\W Santa Ynez ln the attond half. He didn't &et a slagle f'ield 1oaJ In the lecood Ila.It.. but con. nected on 20 of 25 from the. free throw line in the last 16 minutes or action. And he operates best when the Ma riners are running. "Our of. tense Is geared around our de· tense." says Corliss. ~·we try to keep things going as fast as po~sible and no team on t.he l·A level has run w1lh us. vet. J"d like to see a team rnn wlib us for lhe tull Caur quarter~. it would be interesting " Al so looming as possible roadblocks lo the championship finals Saturday at Long Beach Arena are starte" f\od Neal (5·11)1 center ·Deve Wl'Qbtlcky (6·5> •. and Corwuds 'Steve Draaovtch <6-U and Bob Rlebter (S·ll ). "Neal averaies about a,ht assists a game and he's anraged 16 points a game Ln the playoffs.. IC be bas a good fame we'U win,•• sa.ys C'Cr.llss. a.-..c.0.11 ., ~ 4' 1' St.~ JI LA~ ,. ~ ,. .. ..,,..., .. " ........... ., .. IMiry St• n L..-6& t01~1-"' ... , ...... 14 71 s.,~ '° "'"" .. _ U 7S CatMGr• n CrnP ,. .. Alef!Wo\y ,, a.c.i.c• .. ,, P•.u.t. 111 A'--Y 40 CJ,. .. ......... .. . ~ ..... .. a.........-SI M •1.-.. 112 L..s. ... SI 10 SW.I• YMt Metro Loop Top Seeded • t1 SJ ,. '° jl .. .. sa C1 " .. . LONG BEACH ...,. A mat.ct.up of the Mllalop and S9utb C0aat confereaces ln two 1a_mes of the openln1 round ol the state .JC basketball tournanUnt hil'bll1hted Sunday's aeediog meeting. here. The tourney will be t.eld March 15·18 at Long Beach Arena. The top s.S tn the ~ 1ou to tbe lh~J!olitan Conlent>ce ~bamp < etsf'leld, El Camino Of P'sadena) -while the Missl<'I\ a.Qd Soutb Cout cbampiona are ....,... t .. and ROGER HOLMES FounWJn vaney nuid moves. qldckness, rebound- ing ability and defense. Coacb or the year laurels go to Tom Danley or KateUa <Anaheim) HJeh. who kept his Leam on top ot the Oranee Coun- ty polls all year. Among the standouts Danley dev~oped this year are Ray Donnelly, Randy Whieldon and Ed Patrick; an choices on this elite 16-man team. The first team. aside rrom Holmes, Ward Donnelly and * * * JOHN CARSON San Clemente Wbleldon, is rounded out with El Modena (Orange> star Bill Trumbo and Val e n c ia <Placentia > High ace Paul Gilbert. Only twa juniors dol the list or standouts-and both are juniors. S a nta Ana Hlgh's Herman Brown and Servile <Anaheim) Hi gh 's Steve Buechele were selected. Brown led Santa Ana to a third place finish in the Century. First Team * * * Pla~ er. Mhool Ray Donnell~-. Katella Bill Trumbo. El '.\todena Ro1f'r Holmes. Fountain \"alley O rla ndo Ward. Los Amigos · Pi.iul Gilbert. \·a1enc1a R and~· \\1ucl don. K<Atetla Second Tf'am 'I ike \\"11 t. Sen ile W<1rren Ell i ~. Los Amigos John Car...on. San Clementf' Kevin B1)\\l<.1ncl. Rl'e<J Jim Prkt', E~tancla Third Tf'am Sloan Carlson. Sunm· Hills Ste\ e Bu~ch<.>le. Ser\·ite llerm<.1n 11ro\\n. Santa Ana Ed Patrick. Katella )like Ta~ !or . C~·1>ress Height f).5 Fi-8 6·--(i.(j Ii·:) 'i :l 1;.; r..o 6-6 fi. I 6·3 Ii I li·2 Ii-7 . )·10 fi.:J Cl. Avg. Sr. 19 .. Sr. 2 10 Sr. '>'> ---·' Sr. Ii.Ii Sr. 2? --,) Sr. HJ 8 Sr. 15.5 Sr 1-l :1 Sr. 19.~ Sr 20 Ii Sr. 16.J Sr . 22 0 Jr . 20.2 Jr. }Ii :; Sr . 1.'i .:1 Sr. HU JIM PRICE Estancia Area Sports Calendar MM1MY c-.-. rrt VolleyiNll-s.nto ...... COi._ • GotcliM> WHI Cotl ... C1 .JOI. ~,,..., 8Hhl1Y11-CIF 1-4 •mlflMIS (c:.,15'.-- \'oll_,, H'-'"' 5t. ~at s. r n .. t11 ~. l :llll Cl~ 5'Nll Sc1we1s _,.,..... CH~ ValW, Qwttll"" Higll YI Lutllltr• (Or .... )~ .. Coll-~) ... 7:.,; ~ ... , CAMI ... n LA Solll-• ,.._. ..... ~ tylLOS ....... 11:• ._ .. 11-<Je ..... a-at "-1-(l:ISI; U.WWnlt\', 0... 14111$ _. T ............. Al; LOIVM ~at Lo~ CS: UI; ,,,,.,. Hitlll.t OM L-.. 0:1SI; ~ V .. 1.., at La --0 : ISi; El Toro et ar..,.. CJ: 1'>: Coclltlr-v ..... OlrlllioA • ""'"1COll OlrtstS• CJ ...,.._,: H~ Ellis _...., C-Dori at ~ ".,...· ,..,... ...,.. • c-i. ......... e-i. °' ~ddl ... cll. CorOll• Itel -•t SA Vel'-", .it oil 1 U I; Ctffllos at ~-II Coll-ll;lOI; Goldett WHI COit• • LAH ..... 12:30). Tracll-~n Cl-I• 4tf s..1111-11 Nigh IJ, U I; _,., Oel at 1tof114111Hilb1)-IS). T~Mll~ -..,.. ""'1lor •I F ....... -. "'""'· ln910<i 8H<ll .. EstOMla, O.U.n ~ •I M•rlM , RoOll'IQ Hllb al C-... del ,._,Mission V1e10 a l S..I• Ana, s... C-• •I LOS A""90', LO O...ltl~ at ~ e..u., El Toro al a-.,. 1•11 •I >:UI; LB Wilson at F-1.ain Vol.If"( '1:301; El -at ~I,_ V•lley 11:301; UC ''vlN at USC 11:Jll; Or-c-t Col'-.t G<'OIVMlll Coll .... OoldlPn Weil Co4 .... at lA Vall..,, Cl'"" COlleet at 5-1-<ll c:.llf'lt wll .. 21. Gl•IS M*-i--o... HI~ at~.._,,, C4Mla Mn. at MIU'°" vi.io, Unlwrsi~ at S... Cl41mMto, (Mona de! -•I El T• .. ~ H••-.. EdltOf\ ~" v.i..,, at""-· HWtllllQIOft llffcll at WH1rnfMW. ~ Dltl OC COOl,..lly, c.,111,_ Vol..., •t 0.. ...... _, ...... UbwtY ~ " ......... \laltey ClvlMIM at -Iller OWbti.t. OclNll View 11t ...... G•llldlt "911 ol J·ISI; ~ .. 0....,.. a ,,.,,,.. """ u.w ; ~ • ..._.. Clll. Les Alamitos ' •, I ,, •, • ' Race Entries -ne ••o It.MS ,. 011tc MAt. .... Cl41"'111e ...,._CAI_.,.._ ~ • ,ot~. 4 .,._ ..... 1S .... < ... ~., .... n ..... ''°'"''•• ''''" .... ~- ~ ~ , .... ., ... "' -Tott t•.n-1; .... ,. Tro.,11re llfllertl; MIU., Wllfl,..•r ll ••••••l ft)l ,_ • ., .. ~, ....... . ta.,l\eU; Of .t.IM IC Ot .... .,I ~o ... r c:-1 ~'""'· Llll .. •I• tGfWl-.1. ,.,.,.._.,_. POUltTM llACa -Ollt Mll9. ~·· Ntw Yorll (ltl"'l•t ll•Mlc .. 1. M.,tl to 9-tOft ,.rttlll. PlifM $a.200. Cl•lrAln9 81111•10 Tra .,.,·e ll D ag . . . C OMPARE OUR C O MPETITIVE R AH~ ' . . I \ • ------= ~ . Monday. '•bruary 21. 1078 OAA. v PtlOf ·~ .,-.TON==-ril Aa11&1e ,_ ._. ...... a yea Ill JM._ ancl boo9t*9 cw to.._• ~ .. IQ im, Yw,..,.. .. abt tbmtJ..awere ... pHUJ~·Ma••• rn TU. a =~• .. 11D lmolr, aaa.u.. wMda bu mUqed to Ila-.......,. O'fel' ~ i.W but matltlllhel•lf'k I" t Jla~. omca. • ta1m a• dmtD lit ua So nea. dJd tt . co&t to mM9 lUi '"llictl that .lt d-....s oeU(f $lOG 11>UlloD 1D ....... ·iinftll OD llM:iie ...._ Aftw ,.,tnc Ua &ueS. It was Wt wkJa·a·.-tpro&ol• mun. I N09r LOOK AT RAT MPP£N£D last re• wbea GUJde..,. lD •~• ~7UW ~ bave llClt MID re-"'* yet but baMd oo tbt am.mOlltb ,....Jta, ll appears tlLat U..eomPlft)' netted &boat $7$ .-.. • dltil9 .-es. .. SO. ID. 111ean Gweae·a Ml• .... up a ~t. tta pr'olita 50 puaat. U lt were ~..., todA1 u amoothly u k ••la i-. P"ft.u ...d -lllillkJD •.Je&r. cmeae•a,licJba-lllff...._ ~ ........ tam.W.ar wttt. Wa u..~--~ro i-. --........ dh-idll!ndl or $1.• a share. In 1'n. they reeelwed $Uil a abare. Tbelr stock, wor~ $C0 a share la 1966, DOW sells (ot $25. Maney Tree How can y.,. tell so man)' raiar bl..._ and do so poorty1 The aawer II that there'• mltbiol wroni with Gillette's •Yin& buslnea; lt'a doing One. The trouble lies with the Glber basi.Deasu GUlelle has entered.. THE BOSTON co•PANY nE~ • u.e tbt In- cludes deodorants (Ri&bt Guard, Soll & Dri>, dilpesable lighters (Cricket and 5Uper' Cricket>. 1bampoaa (Earth Horn. White Rain. Lemon·Up), bair sprays (Adara), hair rinses (Tame>, hair dryers <Max>, wrl~ lnstruments <Paper·Mate and Flair), fire extiqu.isben and smoke de· tectors (Captain Kelly) and plant foods and pot1inC soils (Hyponex and Swiss Farms). It's an imposing list. But if Gillette coaJd eliminate them and stick with the shaving bminess, it trould pro- bably be belt.er off. In the deodorant market, Rilht Guard ia locked lD a bitter struggle with the Ban line ol Brist.ol·Myers, and Ban holds the lead. Cricket ft1bts tbe Ble li&bter to a standstill. Gillette ranks No. 4 in the sbampoo market with a 10 percent slice. Flair is the top ..W.O.. JOl'OU poJat pen, but Bic overwhelms Paper.Mate ill die ballpolD1 marln!t. GIUE'ITE IS ABOUT TO try another extension. Its Max band-held blow dryers held about 30 ~ ot that market, and this spring Gillette will laa.nch a $ll milliGD ad drive for its new Ultra Mu hair shampoo. which it claims is formulated specially for blow dryer men. Gillette is lookina bere for the same s.YMr&l' it gets ln the shaving business. Gillet.Le's blades account. for a percent of the $l50 million blade marlr.~ with Trac 11 U.. top seller in the nation. Gillette's prowess has slopped over to the shaving cream market. where its two brands. Foamy and Trac II, take one-third ol the SllD mil1ioe market. Bul \he fact is Gillette has never beeD able to dupllate in othes fields wbal il baa dooe in the ahavina '8ied'. ltaaon and blades todaJ represeDt onlr 30 puant el tM company's $1 .6 billion in sales. However, they account fOR 7S percent of the profits. The otber product.a add up to profitleu prosperity. Report on Inflation Blamed for Decline NEW YORK <AP> -Some lllh'erse inflatJon news helped push stock prfces into •craituU decline today. Tb~ r>miv Jones avera~e al :te lndustriab, \IP more than 2 points lnearlytradin1, lost 7.•to7&3S. Losers Otltnumbered gainers by about an 7-G marcin am one New York Stock Exdaance-lls.ted issues. The market's early gains. were auributed lo st.renlth in the dollar In fomgn ex~ and the tentative coal seltlement announced Friday........_ But brokers also noted uneertalaty over whether strik· lng members ol lhe United Mine Workers WOQJd approve the contract proposal when Uw::J vote on It next Monday. SC~blnTlw s,,.,,,,,,., NEW YORK (4PI· 511.., '-· IWI<• -aet ~ fl/f 9le ,.._ -• 11e11 .. -Y-Stodlh~~ tnollfl9 Mt......, .. _.. ._ tt, Weyeyhw . .. . • . JU.JIG '1~ -~ T,,_ Cp.. . . ?:JI.-·~ -\111 .. IUM~ .... ..._ !M•····• (e!llftl l'tct.. . . • ... oco 141-\ v. [.SI 1(--·· . ,_. .. ~ -1 .... T_..,t Ceftt • • i.z,,_ U-. -\\ ~le:'~:..... m:: = : ~ fnOll .. •. 141,100 ..,,,. -\\ Jlotew (p .. · •.. 149.Jl)O '1'" -I'll S.ny Corp. U6.100 1~ + lo\ ~Ill~~.::·:. :;;;: )t: ~ ~ Cl"l'tM . . .• . • ,,.,709 tll\ + '" AmTt . • .•. .. .• u•.• .._ -'A ~of'tl.<Al'I ,,. .... Do9-.... ·-.... • .... OJ::..~-~ ii:~ •TM ...,._...... t ... IS Utt 1«1.• Mll.Jt la.a .__ t..J7 ~ •• ~~-~.~-Mo~~ Tr• ...................... ... .. UUI• ...................... 41',-U Slit ....................... !._,__ NEW YORll CAPI SAtA$ N8 YOf!IC CA•> ·NV St-* ..... .._ ........... _ ............ ...... ~i..-................. ~ ._._ .......................... a... .... -. ....................... t1. YMr t99 ......... 1 ........... j T-~---·······-·••••• W ,,.ft'.................... 77 ttll ..................... -~-..... -.............. ......,. .• EVE.NINO • l'0011 =-.... • ~Offll ~ 1Ht l/NtDt MJtOt T ... 8rllCfyt ~ City Hall to-."'*"· ·THI~ A YOl#lg nutM 18 fap41d In the~get-0-11 nlOflel Holc>lt•I. ll..ICTNO COMPANY HIST<>f'V OI' Ml!>CICO "SPlln At The Time Of Coflu" e:~I :_..w• •*** ''o.Clen Of EYlf' (1954) Gay COoper, Su.en Hiy'#lnl. Greed, iM1ou9Y and retribution pltgue tine ~IUt•I IVIOd· ed In Melllco ~ lfle gatd Neft dey9. ( 1 hr.. 30 min.) G OOHCEN'fMTION CD 8EWITCH£D Dlo1n landl ti. ac:coufll Iller .. Ind .. ,...,.tetecl. • OVEAEASY Ou.ta: Alu Cohen. Hiidy Pll1la. t9 OIMEN8IONI IN CULTURES "Evolution" Cl) .IJHTA .... EO WORLD , 1"SatlceyeSllmon" OJ)IMERV GRIFFIN 7:00 0 NBC Nl;WS U \.IAA8CLU6 fJ A9CNEWS CiJ eowl.INO FOR 001.l.ARS m f l.OllE l.UCY Lucy la 1Uapec1ed ol being •he myste<•OUI burglar. "MademeX " C!) ADAM-12 A rejec:l eO woman at1emp11 au1c;ici. ti) MACNEii. / l.EHIW' REPORT Sixties Trio Laurie Heieman, Christina Raines and Season Hubley <from left ) play three \'Oung women of the 1960s in the con- tinuing drama ''Loose Change" tonight and Tuesday at 9 on ;\;BC. Channel I '1i) COUECTIVE BARGAINING GOES TO SCHOOi. Cl) TO TELi. THE TRUTH 7·30 CJ ANO BABY MAKES TWO The problems that race unmarrieO teenage gtrl• who get pregnant ano some posslble !lolullon• to their plight we examined Q NEW\.YWEOOAME fJ ™Ars HOU YWOOO "The Spy Game CiJ JOKER'S WILD m THE BRADY BUNCH Morcla gelt 1 par1-11me 1ob C!) AOAM-12 II'& the wrong aeason lor a phony cych1t arid 1 phony 1!.e_Pl•ance aa.le till L.A. INTEACHANOE The liflt pert ol a m1n1 111r1e1 on ta•atton '' prMent.0 m FRENCH CHEF Summ4!r Salad• Cl) S 100,000 NAME THAT TUNE Clu111n~I l.lsti•g• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles ~ Wll.O, Wll.0 WORLD OF ANIMALS 8:00 0 (!) 0000 TIMES · Wlllona The Other Woman· W1llona IS - peeled of being . UHi olh« won\81\" ..t>e<1 Boole man IS ll'f0u9/ll to be atepplng out on tlt1wtle ti KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles II KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles fJ KABC-TV(A8C) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ. TV (Ind) Los Angeles <!:I KCST (ABC) San Diego GI KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles CJ UTTU HOUSE ON THIE PfWRIE CD KCOP·TV (Ind l Los Angeles fD KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles CD KOCE·TV (PBS) Hun11ng1on Beach .. A M~I PreciOl.tl G1h' C>Mpttto Ille h.ipptnCss ol her lamlly O•lr the lmpendlng btf'th Caroline·• exc;1-1 ~um• to worry Do11ce.-'s Story Ben Vereen's ROots Aired on TV Special By JAY SllARBlJ'JI BEVERLY HILLS (AP) When he was a kid growing up in Brooklyn, Ben Vereen took his first steps toward s how bii, <'Ourtesy of a passing gent, a kind or film. flam man for a dancing school. and 5aid, 'Ab. I guess you·re go- ing to be another BUl Bojangles Robinson,' .. he recalled. .. IN MY HEAD, l said, 'Who's Bojangles?" But I said, 'Yeah, s ure.' Didn't find out who he wu until much later in my hfe " A year later, he said, singing entered his life, courtesy of his godmother, Mary Eddie, wife of a minister. She "kidnapped'" him, he grinned, off the str~ts on Sundays and look him to church. "'*' .,,. ..... that . aw.~. boy. • MOVlf * * * "Dvc* Soup" 11m1 The Min er01n.a. A any dlctalOf ...,, hie OOU!\tl'y Into baltte. (I hr., 30 min.} 8 9 IOC MIUJOH DOUARMAN "The Damon MIChlna" (P1112ol 1) D MOVIE • *'-' "Vllda la ~Ing" , ( 187 t) Burt L1neaa11r, Suaan Clatlt. ni. murdltei ol an Innocent black mall Nn• Into trouble when ~ attempta to repay the man'• widow by teklnO uo • collec:tlon. (2 "'' l G) OAAOL 8UANETT ANO ""IEHOS Oueat: Betty White. G) MOVIE • • * "The Roman Sprino 01 Mra. StOl19" (11161) V1V1en Leigh, warren Beal· ly A woman glvea 1.4> an unpromtaing acting cat- lor 1 --of romancea in Rome (2 h<a.) m TWE PAISONEll "Many Happy Returna" The ~ eecepea ll'd ~· In ci-111ng ri.cll IOLondon. '1!) QUE PASA, U.S.A. 7 E•eryone works on Cannen·• musical revue. deeplta Juana's stage l!'ghl 8:80 fJ Cl) BABY, l'M BACK "Beat By A Orum" Ray II accusec:r or trying to buy his ch1lc:lren'1 love Wtief1 he learns Jordan wonta a sel ol drums 1111<1 he trles to meet t hll "need " m 1128,0000UESTION '11) OVER EASY Gueais Alex ~ H110y Park1 9.00 8 Cl) M0A0 S0H Chwles lltlCOYlft a cw. for hte rundown oon<11tJOn. anc:r Rec1ar enters his mPUM In 8 Challenge rKe wltll I Matin• Corp1 rodent. D MOVIE "LOOM Change" (Part 2 of 3) Kate a journ1ll1ttc ~ llouriaMe end Ille ~ • turbulent al181r with an ol1-beat actor. Jen. ny "*"ri. • Polltlcal activ· 1at; Tenya,1--.ln the •rt world, begins an unheppy relallOnthlp with • Mlf-cent...ct. metned KU~CI(. 8 QI A8C MOVIE The guy, Vereen said, 1•ls walking dow n th e s treet a nd "She taught me this song, 'His Eye is on the Sparrow.· an old Ethel Waters song," he said. "l sang it the first time in church and she played these heavy gospel chords. I just loved it " •••ten l 'm just doing YUHM my kid things, playing ball. I was about 10. He says, 'Younf IJlan, is your mother home?" I hid yeah." Valerie Bertinelli of One Day at a Time will host the KNBC documentary on teen-age pregnancy "And Baby Makes Two" tonight at 7 :30 on Channel4. .... TUBE TOPPERS KCOP 111 8.00 -"The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone." Viven Leigh stars as a burned out actress \vhofinds romance with a yoonger man <Warren Beatty) in Rome in this 1961 movie. '-NBC E) 9 :00 "Loose Change '' The second of three parls / oC this TV movie following three women thtough the 1960s .\BC O 9 .oo '·Such Good Fnends." O\·an Cannon and James Coco star in thi:,. 1971 l'omed~· about sexual prom ii,cu1t~· * •• ·Such Good Friend•" ( 1971) Dyan Cannon, Jamet Coco. When• Mllllllly lruetfated Wiie ClllCO\I ........ 11\8(• fled to a philanderer, she dedde9 to outdo him In promtac:ulty (Network adYIMI lltewar d1acn!~ I • MlAV OIUFRN ' f'SYCHC SUAOEONI: M~E Of\IUUSION The new eno luc:rat""- 1n1ernat1ona1 trade In "operations wllhout aurllefY" being carried on b:t healer• la examined. '11) DAVID SUS8KINO Part I "Your Slnolle Geta tn My Eyea • The 881119 Over Smoktng" Pert II "A ConYlfullon With Leo Rosten" t:30 II Cl) ONI! DAY AT A TIME ·'The OreH Designer Jul,. • 111 tor • l>Undle or SU1P'Wea -.,.. enter• a ck-deelonlng QOl\1"1 and llgurel '* ---.... _up I KIT OIF GAOUCHO 10:00 Cl) LOU OMNT When "OU get8 Mid of I local ~ p6ot and mlk.. pteperetlon.I to pttnt the Slory. the C.l.A. ltepe In end Lou .... u.. 1e::· Ralpt\'I edvlcle to Ed on how to 1191 • promotion l>adcllrM. INYlng Ed with- out a job. 10: t5. L.EHMAH: SU Oeclr-'1114nnar AoCw> Letl- man cepeur .. the~• o1 the ... In tlwl "*' 10:30 •• NEW& THE OAIOIHAU: WOMIN IH Alff "Ab ..... • Collecltor Of Soula" Allee ....... qrwl6- motllar'ly ~ blllal . '* lottllrlght ObearVlrtloftl •"d 111• p•n•trallng, ailmC* lllollnt. ponraita 11:00 .... s; Cl> QI HEWI Low, AMERICAH STY\.! "LCM And The Lonoeet Nlgllt" I.ulnar and OOloret .,. on thlfr way to Lal VegM. ~ 09' bt1. "loYe Md The Pt!oNa" Boyd and Daphne retu<n lrom a rormal patty 0 MOVIE • • ·~ "Tiie Catcher" ( 19711 Mk:hul Wltney, J111-MldlMI Vlnc*\L A '°"'* poll« detective ioW>a wtth en und«gtOunct MWl9IC* l>Ub4ilhet to c:a.1e11~ -*'1ad ~ lor prlYef.e dlenll. (2 ,..L) • THE 000 COUlllE Fella'• amateur opera company hall • ptOOlem "°"*'IM~ qulla. • LErl "4AI<! A OEAL DOCCAWTT • MACND.I~ ~ t t:aG 9 Cl) ta LATE MOYIE * ·~ "acr-Of The WolW'" (ft74) Clint W•er. Peter Or--. A~ ~-of ra11r-r1 to "-* "'* ~ to be. k-WOii. but II actually an "*"-tMt -.. • 111.wMt! form (A) .. TONIGHT'S LAT£ST LISTIN~S CJ TONIOHT G11ee1 hoal Tom amoth•r• ou .. 1a· Datior&tl "'"'"· ... ...., ~ lfvwft,..,, v ..... . Piil '9111Mn. • I.OW, JJAf.NCJli Im.I "L~ And The Jinx" An eoc•••nl-pron• 11r1 eute*lt tll•t Ifie " • llnll· "LCMI ,An.d TM '1fll KIM" A Cll"9 mltl INdwttentlY dl~t 111111'1 Ql'MMll ltMntlon. e 9 POUCI ITO"" "Spenllh Olaa" A roolt.lt requee11 a tranatar fr6m • rtuv NIG'lb«tlood Into Vie heMt of the l>Mrlo. Dall 1VnN Jr., Joe Santoa 11,.::.-a<") OITIMAAT CAl'T1iOHfD AK N!WI MORNING tl:OO I TWIUO.HT zofff CftOel.WM MOVIE ** .. ~ (19'7)""""' Rlc:Nrdtdn. Chlpl Reifer· cy. A younoeter 11'1 Aualrl• Ila'• bl.wi country ltlet lo railt rnon.y to buy 1 blcy• de Ind gell '""°'* with OMO•'*-. C 1 llr .• 30 min ) 12:30 D MOVIE • • "Oh, suu,,nal" (1933) G-Au1ry, Bootll liowlrd A ltrlpped CoW· boy II thrown ofl • train. ( t llr.J GI ALFRED HITCHCOCK "And TM OtMn Shall Bloom'' 11".17 8 ITARTIME ••A Bono Celled ReYenge'' Sal Mh\to, &kl Byrn.. A all'OI'. no lcwlQlf poput.r 1111111 Ille yO\lflg 11111>11c:. tn. tO ~ their lnter"1 -IN Cllugflter of• mo¥ll iii°':O..... The .._,. eon of en •t:IOfMy 8low9 ..,,..., to be ~ by • grOUp Of l9rtol1lta. ,:00 8 TOMOMOW Tom Snyder talkl to. Jo._ Comblt. tlle llr8I ~ 10 eql'9I the 8aeque .. _ ... of .i.i Alai; Cuban "lrMdom fighter'' ErnlMo Miiien; Or. Ferdie Pacheoo, peraorltl p w11clal\ l o MUllatllnlad AM Q tS~ r "A Dey Called A J11g11at'" 1:IO=~ • * ''Tiie Long WaJI" ( 1054) Anlllph~ Oullln, OherlH C61>"fh. An aml14tll8 1/lctlm ~ 111111 "" .. llooUMd ot ...... def end rOl>bary. (1 nr .. ~ min.) .- ~ 1!411 ftl¥W8 .. 2:d0 NOl/8 • : ~ z:oe • MO'lll I. •• "Wild, Wiid W.,. .. (t9M} Oery Clatke, ~II Noel, A lfudenl pur~ Iha glfie and tN ~Of llidlng .tlie ·~· reaott-type ~ ( 1 "~ 20 min.) • • a.-ooe HEWS a:21a~EM • 3:11 D ITIW !DWAJIOt : .. Tue•dafl'i Da11d..e /tlo.,fe• MOANING • • 11:30., • • * "The Story dJ• &tiler Costella" ( 1t$f) Joan Crawford, AOll8llO Bruzl. Altei gatnlnO fame lllrough charllaltta work, • girl r9011n1 light, heating and apeeeh followlr19: an emollonal anock. (2 llra .• 20 min.I AFTERNOON 12:00 CiJ * * '-'< "The Big H+ ver" ( 1950) Van Johneon, E!Utbelh Taylor. A y<>Ong lawyer 011ereomee his peculiar drinking pr~ ti.I«• It deelroys hie •1e. (1"'··30min ) $!00 tml * * "SWingef'a , ParedlH" ( 19851 Clllf Ric:Ntc:la, Wiii• ~A boy II hired a• ~ In • l6cal nlOYlll proc!uoo• lion. ( 1 tw., '° min.) : 3!JO. **'A "Marlowe'" • t 1H91 Jan1H o ar..:,,, o~ Hunnicutt A pt1¥9te eye, hired by • glff to ~ her mlu lng brottler, encounter• oanost-Jnd murder• he 0-...,, • airip-1-d-Ind '* hulband ( 1 "' • >30 min ) • Comic Real Character. SEATTLE <AP > The guy who plays the addlepated airline navigator on CBS' "Rob Newhart Show" isn't acting entirely out of character ll 's difficult. fro m a con- versation, lo tell where lloward Borden, n;n'igator for European Delivery Service, takes off, and actor Bill Daily lands. A quest.ion. or the hint of an 1 m pending question, launches Daily Into Bordenesque heitd·in- the-c loudness. "The first time l saw him, I knew he was a com- edy gentus." Daily s aid of Newhart, who was Indeed a boyhood friend in Chicago "THERE WAS A costume par· ty and everyone came es some dumb thing. but Bob came as Leonardo da Vinci. God .knows how much time It look to make up. Under his arm he was carry- ing a Mona Lisa, half-painted with the painl0 by·the-numbers still on the unfinished half. Crazy." Moving right along. "My weight has stayed the s ame over the years," t>aily said. 'Tm a sensible drinker. I don·t smoke much. Well. really, l"ve never smoked. But I hate exercise. I used to swim when we bad a poot -I'm a great swimmer -but I was always catching colds. I quit swimming and haven't had a cold since.'' Breath. "l DON'T LIKE to eat boring meals. though. French cooking is boring. The sauces are boring. Put me by a sandwich m achine or something like that and I wouldn't care If I didn't eat for 37 years. But give me something like this -pointing lo a lunch or rettucini and shrimp before him and I can eat forever. .. And," he added. "I'm a chocolate freak. I love Franeos. After 18 Hershey bars you tend to throw up, but Frangos have that hint of mint in them and you can ~at them forever !·' Daily's hands described circles in the air for emphasis as he talked. He was dreued like Borden -slaclts, shirt open al the neck and lapels laylng over a knit sweater collar. • • "808 IS A very heady aclAllf." Daily said. "He knows his lines. does n't hke to work . says there"ll be two rehearsals and that's it. l 'm a physical actor. I like to rehearse more." Alter service in Korea, Daily attended Goodman DraJDa School in Chicago. worked as noor director for a Chicago 't~ station and spent 16 years with N BC in various non-acting functions He came west with Steve Allen a nd Mary T yler Moor~·s husband, Grant Tinker. who gave him a job as Maj Hea)!i on the "l Dream of Jean~e" series. "I LOVE GRANT Tinker. He gave me a number or jobs. I was even in a couple or episodes of 'My Mother. The Car.' It WJlS a good role for me, because l"m a physical actor and I could do great things with Jerry Van Dyke, who played the lead. But it was wrone. It was too sick. having the mother as a car and the relationship. Now if il had been ',~Y Grandmother The Car' And, bingo, the man promptly .talked Vereen's mother into e nrolling the kid in bis dance ~chool : "He snowed her on this wbole idea of. 'He has the potential lo be a dancer."' · TURNED OUT TJJE cuy was ·right. Ben could dance. And sing. And act. He's proved il in •Broadway's "Pippin," his NBC sum mer series a few years ago, in ·various TV specials and as Chicken George in "Roots." ANOTHER S TEP in hi s career: his junior high school principal, Ben Ruskin, urged Vereen to try out for New York'~ famed High School for the Performing Arts, even though Vereen never considered it. "I wanted lo go into aviation. maybe the Army or Air Force. be a lifer,'' he said. But the school look him, g,ave hlm hls first formal training In perform- ing. Later, he met theater guru Tom O'Horgan. The Serious Side of Steverino · Thursday, Vereen is on ABC again at 10 on Channel 7, in his own special, "Ben Vereen . . . His Roots." But he glves no cl'~it at all to the dance school whence it all tJegan. Vereen a mild, gentle guy, says th~ joint was crowded, a waste <>1 jlls Um.e and bis mother's hard·e&rned money. But sUll, 1l Ut up an early desire to join the ent ertainment fraternity. "I'll never forget going to the school one day and a cab drlver turned lo me, saw my tap shoes, He said O'Horgan, who cast bim as Judas in "Jesus Christ, Superstar," had a school where singers, dancers, actors and musicians taught each other their crafts "and I was fortunate to run into him. .. flE 8EUEVED that theater Is one, 'that all the!e crafts come together, and the total actor must be able lo tap them all. It was a great lesson. because from that day on l've done just that." ByTOM JORY NEW YORK CAP)-Steve Al· ten is a fuMy man, quite ready to acknowledge "some kind of silly setting to my computer." But there's a sober slde to the wacky comedian who, over the years, has made millions of TV watchers laugh. "As a comt>oser al)d a musician, I'm totally serious and romanUc," said AU en, an accompUshed pianist who had. just been snowed out of a tou}>le of concert& in B~ton. "The tne who plays !be piano ls totally different rro m m e the humorist." It's difficult to look at -Steve Allen as anythin1 but a man with a well-tuned sense or humor. "Almost everything does strike me f\lnny," be said. "And whether It's a gift or a character flaw, I am able lo laufb at most or what goes on ln Jife. • · ALLEN'S TALBNT reaches into several forms of expre&1lon -be'a a writer as well as a composer and musician. But he's best known for bis work In television. And he'• 1ot a couple of TV thin•s 1otn1 DOW. Allen is host for "The Great 1978 Adult VJ!ntrlloquism and Comedy Show," runnina throuah February on the Home Box Of- fice cable TV network, and hls ''Meeting or Mlnds" series begins its second season on public television March 16. The pay TV show features som e of ventriloquism's bellt people Uke Edgar Bergen, Jimmy Nelson, Shari Lewis, Jim Henson and his "Muppets" and Jay Johnson of ABC's ··soap.'' ALLEN llESEARCRED and wrote the.acrtpts tor ".Meeting or the Minds.," which premiered in six parts on Public B.raodcaatlng Service stations last year. The programs feature dis- cussions with important people from the p ast: Theodore Roosevelt , Cleopatra, St .. Thom as Aquinas and Thomas Paine. Allen Is moderator. ', The second season will include reruns of the first six programs -a book ot scripts from; the first season will be publi.sh"1 in April -in addition lo a package of new shows. , "'IT MAY BE· the moat •im· portant thing I've ever done:• Allen said of the PBS sedes. "It's the kind of thing that can be watched 1,000 years from now and stlll be as meaningful u it is today.'' · "I wish the facility with wflich I work bad something lo do Mth quatlly," he went on -was:he serious~ s l •> by Brad Andtno~ BOOMER . ~· •• . . ,. •• •• 1: •• .. .. .. . ' ' . ' ~ I •• . ,. I . r ,. "Look, Marmadukel The children aren1 i · • • . here ~ this Is NOT a school bust'" 'FUNKY WINKERBEAN · Define the fallowing. . ' . : ~.1----~------~~--~--l ':· ' .CASEY ·- ~OOH MULLINS ~LACES, EVERYBDPY-1 "TtfE SEcOND f Pf SODE' OF ' oUR ~CITING SEFi?IAL IS ON~ ' • ~ -n-feRe NH P.AiZTIC\.l&..A2 1V ~'OJ~'T l.&'f'~~N ~TOf~ J GORDO . L . .._..,, ,..,_, v. ma PEANUTS by Cl\atlel M. Sdltll1 1 I ~iiiiiia~ I ~--II" Q ~~ l»y Tom Batlalr I I I I J I I r ~ .,- : ~ . ~ ~ THAT ~~ ...... -,, . DOOLEY'S WORLD CRVSli\L ~ -IM AAW.t MY ANtJUAL f(lRTUNE5 AAf <»JLY SPRING GOt.i~OF-A '\t1. 21: -rtx:JAY !.. I BUSWESS SA1.E ! J I DR.SMOCK t' j I YOUR St>RGSRY ON THA-r PA"rl6N-r'S MANP WAS ORIL.L.IAN"r, TMose FINGE!!RS WI&..~ SURl!&..Y ee WAL.KING THROU6H 'THE! 'YetkOW PAGes A<SAIN ! D'OC'T"OR.' by Tom K. Ryan IStl'T' ri l.IONH( ~ J FA"fl: WIU.. "THROW US ~~' Tllll'S CUllllU nrm ACROSS 50 Bog 1 Kiiied 51 Astound IHoe 52..FUlll b11116- 10 Moat~ M~ 14 ~'°°' 58Flnance 16Mo6e--c.nt8r: 2 18Jal-word• '· 17 Fllnlltm. 61 Dorul I M fl' A 1 E ' l ' . •tar• bonea 18 N. Pac. 9'2 Payvp brown alga: 13 F«IMf U.S. 2worda coin 20 Toward ui. 64 Time. of day sunaet 85 ~a rela· 22 l.u haary &e Bnlt• .._... 23 Secrlflce ,_. ,. 2• Artilt Van 87 =::c- dlr- K I I ~I lb 25 Very recent DOWN .28W~ , • 32 Gu ... a; 21 FOfQt pro6-« &111\1 ·-· Comb. form 1 Third. •l IM ~ 4 7 Mountak\ 33 Tranalerable track 2• Tflle:k star 9'IUll ri del4Dn 2Ttieatw 25The--49~1U '''> 36Tr~lng 3~!__ llegr"" 511"8Crita.a ,,, device 4 M~le 2e Run ton lb'9 . :. 38~ one 21&'.4:,': ~~~! ; 31£,...,... 5 Cllaailty 28 Atourua tlea «I c........ ~ =1he 2~ IDwfif'I 64 .......... •' ... tly 88• •*· 30=.... 55:.~-"' .C1 Alda,forone 9Veitea 31 Medea no-'' •a Nlgfltclub to Wmlno aqm se Fiber •treet 1ttR1 34 Sodal dlvi· source 45 ~ 11 "'Ttiera llDft 57 Sotn11h Comb. tonn ought to be· 37 Vilnt.td ri¥ef& •&Join -1-38\.lndowa sa,....,., .. together 12 flallofing • i.. ~ • ' • 48 Brought 13 S.etum 42 Seed c:°""'" 60 ~ HJ about t9Mtkeboty 1191 c..., .. .. .. DAILY PILOT Monday February 27 1978 • By the Associated Press The following are Billboard's hot record hits for the week ending March 4 ns they appear 1n next Week's issue of Billboard magazine HOT SINGLES f. LO.VE IS TlllCKEJl TllAN WATER -Andy Gibb CRSO I 2. STAYIN' ALIVE Hee Gees CRSO> 3. SOMETIMES WllEN \,\'E TOllCll Dan Jlill (20th C<:ntur) J 4. EMOTION ~amanlha Sang < Prl v ate Stock) ~ NIGHT FEVt-:n Ike Get>i. CRst)) 4. DANCE, OA~CE , DANCE. YOWSAll YOWSAll Chic lA lllanllc > l LAY DOWN SALLY Eric ClaOlon <RSO) TOP LPs 1 "Saturdav Night Fever" Soundtrack <RSO> 2. BILLY JOEL The Stranger <Columbia> 3. JACKSON BROWNE Runn- ing bn Empty <Asylum J ... QUEF.N News Of The World BABIES GROW UP TO BE COWBOYS -J CAN GET O'FF ON YOU Waylon & Willie CRCA) 2. DON'T BREAK THE HEART THAT LOVES YOU -Margo Smith (Warner Bros.) :1 DO I LOVE YOU Fargo (Warner Bros.) Donna ·I WHAT DID I PROMISE HER LAST NIGHT Mel Tillb <MCA) 5 WOMAN TO WOMAN Uarbara Mandress <ABC Dot> EAS)' LISTENING I WONDERFt.:L WOR.l.D Garfunkel /Columbia) Art 2. l CAN'T SM !LE WITHOUT YOU Barry Manilow lArtista> 3. BEFORE :\1Y HEART FINDS OUT Gene Colton <Ariola America> .J. EVERYBODY LOVES A RAIN SONG -B.J. Thomas (MCA) 5. GOODBYE GIRL -David Gates (Elektra) SOUL SINGLES I. FLASH LIGHT -Parliament (Casablanca) 2. IT'S. YOU THAT I NEED Encha nlment (Sky Tower) Princess Grace o! Monaco, who won-an Oscar as Grace Kelly for ''The Country -Girl," poses with -the , Speeializing m· Siekos Q: A rew )'tars aio &blrley MacLalne made a movie bl Wblc• IM, pl•yed a soclatt~ wttb a brother wllo was pouesaed by Ute 1plrtt ol a dead friend. Could you tell me the name of tbe movie ud wbat b•ppeoed to the actor who played Sblrley'1 bl'Odaetf -Jim Tlck&Jn, Columbus, Oblo. A: Th~ 1972 mm was "The Possession of Joel Delaney," wit)\ Perry King playing Delaney. He's currently starring tn a brass· knuckled"-'Universal picture about a .,li~alty • cop caper called "The Ct>olrboys." Perry agrees he. pla}'a. kloky Ch&\tacters. but ls good-natured about belnJ typecast. "I know that I can ma~e people's fiesh ~rawl. but lhat only happens on the screen or staae. People have alwns told me l have weird eyes, very h~avy-lidded. "'"° Apparently stnge and movie ll&htin& civu them a drugged or drunken look. Almost every part I've ever played has been some kind of a deviate . .But.'' he assures us, 1'1 promise you I don't fri&bten my wife or children." Q: M•Y we pleue bve tome tact.a aMut John TravoUa, wllo wea l from a tweaU.OC &o tile bot&est •new actotf Alto. ~ eaa I write to him! - Llada o•c .• Banaak, Cal. A: Johit celebrated hls 24th birthday Feb. 18. Born in ~lewOod, N.J., to Salvatore and Helen Burke Ttavolti. He is Italian. F..dueated at Dwight Morrow HJgh School. Height &-0. Wei&hl : 170 lbs. Eyes: Blue. Hair: Browro Hobbles: FJylng and cars. Hi.s career ent.ered lhe stratosphere of super- ':· stardom with "Saturday Nl1ht Fe\ler." Prevlous!Y has films were "The Devil's Ralnt" "Carrie," •titi • '·The Boy in the Plastic Bubble." Re ai. ap~ peared ln two plays, "Qrease" and ''0\ler He.-e:i <You can try writing Travolta c/o ••sweatho111'! ABC-TV. 4151 Prospect Avenue, Los Angeles, Cal\: 90027.) • Q: I woutd llke &o know If the memben of A.e rock group Kl11 use their real •kmea! Allo w!M do tbey come from and where ate they «at.DI! - Joha Cassidy, PeeksldU, N.Y. .. A: Tbe star. singer /guitamt Paul Stanlei lYJbo does most or the iatkillf in the act), played around with local bands. Peter Criss the drummF <makes up like a cat> sot his job by runni.Dg tjib ad in "Rollin& Stone" -"Drummer -11 yea~· experience. '1 Gene Simmons, the baas plavW" <known as the Reptile or Demon>. also breathe, fire and spits blood. (Quite a switch from belnC"• sixth-grade schoolteacher in Queens.) Au Frehley, lead JUltar, ls reported to be the .. ,m:a most talented' musician ln that category. B4tJs Paul and Gene spent two years booklng their Ofb · shows and promotinJ themselves. They latchedM- to Kiss by advertising in the VU)age Voice. A:td gave their first concert as a group June 1, 1973~ tts the opening act in a N. V. club. They're never r-e-cognjzed in public without their weird makeup a.Pp get-up. In 1976 alone, K~s fans (we're told) s~t over $150 mlllion on albums and other by·produc\S. CElektra> 5. EHIC CLAPTON Slowhand 3. ALWAYS AND FOREVER Heatwave <Epic> 4 TOO HOT TA TROT Film Adviso·r')' Board's Award of Ex--cellence for her work -.-....... , .. ••Nl'!'llla Send your queationa to lly Gardner, "Glad YQI& Aaked That," care o/ thia newapaper. P.O. Boz 1114., Chicago, Ill. 60611. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will an.na.r · as many queatlom °" the11 can m their column. but tGe volume<>/ mall makea ~r$0ual r.,,Uea impouible. CRSOJ COUNTRY SINGLES 1. MAMAS DON'T LET YOUR Commodores (Motown> 5. STA YIN' ALIVE <RSO ) in the documentary Bee Gees film. "The Children of Theater Street." ' WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Including Beat PIC1ure -- Best Actreu • Anne Bancroft Best Actreu • Shlrley Meclaine Best Supporting Actor • Mikhail 8ary1hnlkov BHt DirKtor • H.rbert Ro11 THEATRES-ORANGE CO SENIOR OTIZINS $2.00 SO. COAST PLAZA :M1Url1111Sl*171t ""'- "SEMI TOUGH" 111 DAILY ~ 6:004:00.1~ SAT~ 1~11<»1'.Je. .. Jt SO. COAST PLAZA MlllrimlSlS..1111 rMt,_ •...i.•...i--u..r...,- 'SATUIDAY MIGHT FIYH j ,09, "° PASSft I Ill .,,..,,_,. $AT,,_ ht'-~lt-1- SO. COAST PLA A . m. I 1111,_ 0 0H GOD0 lPG I ...... ,..,.., .... ~,.,_~·­°'LOY~S 6 ft"4R SftAH61ff• ............ ,"'" ..... _,.,.. .. CINE MALAND , ... s.. ... ~11$-1111 ...... . ... , •IMOKIY & THI I AHOn"' .. ,.., _ _.,,_.......,..,_ 'THI SPY WHO LOYID M ...... ,,_.~ .. CINEMALANO :t:t::* ......... ,. • .. A tBO It.INT HOntlM'• IVf A IAMDWICH'" . ....... ,,._,......, .. "CUUIMHr .... , ............ ,,... NMl4'-'"'t 1511 W. IUNElOWEA W 0' 81'11STOL CM . .6'0-05M A "WOil.D'S GUAn sr V \.OVlrlNI SoecW l"ftcle 12:Z lo' 00 p ... AT cm CIMTU CrMEMASI •Ullf S-a HolWmyll Sf.JS i\Clvll Grumbllng Gloomy Gus t In the PiCaS·SiO'S OPEN TO THE 1UBllC I HAPPY HOURS 4 to 8 l Hon"°"''• Dancin,! Tue. thru Sat. OPEH 4 P -2 AM • SAT I PM-2AM Dress Code Fri. & Sat. Pri•ate lackgallllllOll loom 630 Newport Cewhr Dri•e NEWPORT IEACH 640.47 11 WM.TDllHlV-. "RUN FOA YOUR LIFE. .. CANDLESHOE.. CHARLIE BROWN" ~ 746DAIL\'SAT4UN-1_......_7~ t•la.40SAT/ION-4~ MCa8 'WHICH WA.Y IS UP?" (A) "NORMAN. tSTHA.T YOU?" 'OH GOO" (PG) ..GUM BAU RALLY" ''ONE AND ONL V" (PG) ' "WW & THE DIXIE OANC~ KINGS" ON STAGE IN CONCER'll ...,.. lttAYO. • NllOAT wno lOOllMO-FOI Ml. GOOOUI .... nttJ,.,u ,,.. & ••M Uf, A 14#1 J: .. I ttM I,, .. 4 ••H •Uf UYOI NOMU<ll llC...__,_ CQUUS111 llllO'L·Tlll U411! .. 11 I J 6 tt4S Mt. 6 MIM.-t a_. I 4t0 I MS 6 t 1•S •• l ................ tt•fflf , ................. ~"••l ... ....,~, 190llC .. ~"'\llllC•-tt '"fCI ._.,.._.. ........ ,......,, ...... ·~f.tt ... •V...Wt•N4t "Beyond & 8-ck Plua (G) "Acron The Greet Divide" -.. \ I \ • .a - ' . INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Horoscope •Lifestyle •Cl11slfled l Friends !outside 1 . 'All the preaching In the world doesn't do it for 'them. When you give them a hot meal or give a little girl a pair of shoes. By CHERYL ROMO Of .. DallJ l'llel Slotff Susan is a California Girl. The pretty, 23-year-old mother is the dau ghter oC a Newport Beach physician and look!> as if she'd be more at home on a tennis court or on t he beach than anyplace else. Susan 1s a herc>1n addict and is serving time in Orange County Jail . She has no one to turn to. Her two young children have been placed 1n a foster home. She has been ''disowned" by her parents, who also rt!fuse to sec their grandchildren. And she says she was recently allacked and beaten by a group of Civc women while she slept in her bed in the jail infirmary. The young woman, who says she wants to enter a drug rehabilitation program, and who says s he became dependent on heroin after being introduced to it by her boyfriend, believes the worst punishment she has received so far "is not bcmg able to see my babies.•• Most or the 150 women In Orange County Jail are not like Susan. They are minority women and com e from low-income families. Many do not speak English -compounding their problems. But, 1n some ways, their plight is similar. The maJority arc confined for drug-related char~es, have what ls often termed a "dependent" personality, and have children on the outside they are worried about. Some of the mothers are in jail charged with wel(are fraud, like the woman with five c hildren whose hus band is trying to keep the fa m tly together. Ile a nd the youngsters are l.J v1ng in a motel room with two beds. ,. Mary Denlgan, director of Friends Outside, a non-profit organization that visits and attempts to help prisoners and their families, !>ays "the problems are legion once you get in (J m ll." The organization exists entirely on donations. Attempted or actual homosexual rape is not uncommon, Mrs. Denlgan says. "They don't com e in as lesbians, but they learn it out or boredom " She has clearance to go inside the Jail to offer as~stance to inmates. The Newport Beach resident also says there 1s a strong code of ethics among tbe priloners. . .. . -. . ... . ..... . . .,,. ..... ,._. '·:." . ' . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . P· ' t 1 If a prisoner complains to the authorities about mistreatment from another prisoner, as Susan did, there 1s a significant chance that she will be dealt with harshly by other inmates. Mrs. Denlgan says it' Is difficult, if not impossible, for inmates to see or·touch their children, beduse "there's no place to put them." She tells of seeing babies ~ the front lawn o r the jail being car&<( tor by lhree-year·olds while husbands viait.ed their wives. The prisoners, she says, are allowed a certain number of vis,ting hours in a month, and must talk with visitors by telephone through a glass partition. Many times, says the director, the reasqn for their being in jail is because or an amoral attitude that prevails In certain elements of our society. •'They truly dOl't ·~ believe they.. are doin& J ~methlng immoraJ. They don't/eve feel " Visfting hours at the Orange County Jail. ashamed or too bad when they are locked up again. They are repeaters and they have a dependent personality. They feel more secure in the hands of Big Brother and they have a general sense oC belonging,'' she says. Mrs. Denigan points out that being in confmemeot for some 1s like a "poor man's club in a sense." In many cases, the whole family is In jail off and on -reinforcing a stereotype for the nextgener.ation. She talks of the mother or four children, who are all doing time in different prisons for murder. And there is the 33-year-old woman who was gang raped and as a result of the in· cidenl bore a ton, now 8. Sbe worries about him constantly and wonders whether she should tell the child the drcumstances o( hia birth. She, too, is .in j all. -----• • • is another way to live and that there are people who care. Help may come in a simple form, s uc h as arranging a bus trip for a family member to see a relative in a Northern California prison or clothing a child. "J.....feel it's environmental. I think it's gen e rations oC e nvironment," says Mrs. Denigan. "These people have lifetimes of being apart from each other and lifetimes of crime." ' £ t She sees no reason that the next generation of young people will be any dlfCerent, unless •o j groups such as Friends Outside "can repair the • damaged family that is left behind. You must be able to put a plug ln this leaking dike." ' . What can her organization do for the • children? "Basic things. All the preaching in t the world doesn't do it for them. When you give them a hot meal or give a little girl a pair of t s hoes ... " Friends Out.side may be contacted by calling 1\1 ary Deniaan at~-0336. This dress of egg ... shell Qiana is so versatile it can be wom anywhere. t l ' \ t ~ \ I ~ .. ) . . . Monu.-y. February 27, 11178 . . . . . . . - •• t • ,. " e e • • 4 • "'I • . . . .. ..,. ........... "" ... ,, . , ,... ANN LANDERS I FASHION Seven Sins in the World ••• Silk (From Page CO ~f the fabric, first stroking up and down and then across the stain. ''U you get a ring, start over." he said. Grime on the sleeves of silk blouses should be removed with the fluid immediately, he ad· d ed . The owner of silk garments also should have a good ironing board, a sleeve board w1tb a mill and a good steam iron for pressing when the spotting is done, the designer noted. (All pressing should be done on the wrong side.) Silk fabrics should not have to be pressed after normaJ wearing, Kleibacker said, because most wrinkles will fall out when the garment is bung inside out over night. "But you should ex- pect a few wri.Dldes. That's what great fabrics are all abouL" Kleibacker said silk sales, both in fabric and ready lo wear, are increasing steadily in the U.S. every year. ''We've gotten over the fear of cutting into it," he asserted. Silk is "ideal for today's fashion mood," he said. It is unstructured and light, giving the soft, fl oaty look important for spring and s ummer. American Silk Mills is producing broad.cloth, crepe de chine, silk handkerchief Unen and many combination fabrics, such as silk and Qiana. Most of its raw materials come from China and Japan, though South Am erica is starting toemeree aa am ajor silk producer. "Silkworm experiments in this country didn't work:' he noted. "The climate and humidity are factors, and silk worms need mulberry leaves." The climate is right in the Orient, however. and m<>Te and more fiber Is being produced each year to satisfy the growing consumer de- mand. Klelbecker belleftS more people would be converted to sllk if they would just give it a try. It's not bot, cold or stifling llke synthetic: fabric, be said, and it provides "a great look." For those wishing to sew a spring wardrobe in the new s ilks, the mill la offering pale shades and neutrals , all of which will go together. The fall will bring deeper shades of these, Kleibacker said, in the cinnamon and russet families. "Black also is tremendously im· port ant," he added. "It's even be1nC shown in Paris." l'-_B_o_r_o_s_e_o_p_e ___ ) DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was very much impressed with the funeral services of that dearly l oved Senator from Minnesota, Hubert H. Humphrey. If ever a man earned the title "Greateat Llvl na American," it waa HHH. Our entire family waa glued to the TV set watching both funeral services -the one In the rotunda o( the nation's Capitol and the church services In St. Paul. Our eyes were moist when Vice President Mondale said. "Ile taught us how to win -he taught us how lo lose. He taught us how to live -and he taught us bow to die." President Jimmy Carter, in his eulogy de· llvered at the Church of Hope in St. Paul, quotA!d Mahatma Gandbl 's list of the aeven most grievous sins. I wlah I bad written them down because such gerns of wisdom should be read and reread. Can you find these seven sins tor me, Ann? -JUST ANOTHER AMERICAN WHO LOVED "THE HAPPY WARRIOR" (A V E R M 0 N T REPUBLICAN , AT THAT) DEAR VERMONT REPUBLICAN: I was among those P""9Dt at the tenkes la 8'. Pa .. and waa also d_eepl:r moved by tbe ftlOCIU. I too, waa&ed a .c:op) or tbe Prealdeat'a q.ote· from Mallatma GuAI and managed to 'et IL H11re Illa: "M abatma GaDdlal once wrote t .llat there •ere •even alas In U1e werid • pleaaure wltlaoat eon~ acteaee, knowledge wltbo•t cbarader. com· merce wlU.OUt mo.-allb', adeace wit.boat •amalll· t y, worabtp wltboat sacrifice, aad pollUu without prtnclple." President Carter then added , "Hubert Humphrey may have sinned In the eyea of God, u we all ... bet In the eyea el Mu1tma Gaad•I, B•b•rt H•mpbref waa wleltoat ...... DEAR ANN LANDERS: I made up my midi 1t It happened Bags are made of macrame, leather, canvas. wicker. In the Bag ln bJu:lnl shades, Sprin1 will be a most coloriul season. From the south aeas to south of·the border, prints atz:zle in brl&ht primaries. Soft and pretty, the clear pastels of pink, yellow, blue and ll&ht sreen, colOI' the abstract brush strokes ol geometric printl. It's especially true ol the water color prinu ao right !or the femlntne lllht and airy dresses. Contlnuinl the romanUc lnfluences that have been so PODUlar these past few seasons,~ ~yles will carry the romance through Spring and Summer. 1be hottest color this season ls khaki. It ranges in color from olive drab to all the beige family shades. Making tbelr ccotributJon to the fashion pie!tare are bandbap ln natural style. Naturals aueb as belfian linen. canvas, crocheted straws, rope and "no.color" leather and ~I wW show up in casual and dre11y desa.na. Natural aecenta aueb u wood, horn, tortolae, leather and bamboo blgbllgbt and lntenldly the tread further, wblle ao&d alltteas and perks up the dalps [n 1eometric closures, cbalna, laandlea and studs. Shapes raqe from the amall straw basketl to the tarcer con· vertible attacha. Draw1trln11 and uneonstnaded shapes move from in band stylea to the shoulder looks. one mor~ time I would write to you. I am going to sign my name and ad· dress and you can print It for the whole world lo see. I've had it. I received a birthday card this morning signed, "With Love from Harriet and Fiddlesticks." I want you to know that "Fiddles ticks " is Harriet's tqy poodle. This woman sh~ns her do1's name to every-. thing. I don't want best wlsbia from a poodle. It's the same at Christmas time -only worse. Harriet isn't the only one. Other friends send pictures of the "family," with dogs. cat.a, monkeys, rabbits, goldftab, bamaters and canaries all lined up - and named, rt~ along with the chlldren. Will you please say something In your col· umn about th1a in.suiting practice? FROTHING IN FRESNO DEAR FRIEND : Please note, I made up a name for you and put you In aootber part of tbe country. By the time this letter appeare In print fOU will UD · doubtedly •ave cooled off. I'd hate to laave YOW' lett er ruin your frlendablp with Harriet forever, and lt would have, bad I prtnted It as you wrote It. (You'll notice I also changed "Harriet's" name and tb•t of ber dog.) Many people coMlder pet. part of the family. Even If you think It's wacky , accept tt. Remembe r, dear , "Everyone is a llllle queer -but thee and me-" CONFIDENTIAL to Not Laughin g : Nobody says you must laugh, but a sense of humor can help you overlook the un - attractive, tolerate the unpleasant, cope with the unexpected. and smile through the un· bearable. StartBelng 1be \\bman \bu wanrto,Bel MJJ..c 19711 your h11M1g pomt• C•ll Of come'" today lor a rompl1111e111ary an•ly5rs and program 0.-.uiSSIOll Joh~ PERSONAL OEVELOPMEI. T & MOOEll!IG SCHOOLS ORANOE 3 Town & Country (714) 547·8228 call 142-5971. Pul • few word• lo work for ou. --MESA~~~~~ UPHOLSTERY ~..J.l New Shipment ~STOCK FABRICS 50 O/_ *OFF ON ALL /0 STOCK PAUICS REG. '20 to 13~ YD. NOW Y, PRICE SALE 20 0/_ * OFF ON ALL SPECIAL /0 ORDER FABRICS • with this ad CUSTOM REUPHOLSTER Y •CUSTOM DRAPERIES CUSTOM-MADE FURNITURE f,.. lstlmata• 642-9555 Reupholstering A' Prices You Can Afford or Viait Our tarp Showroom A Factory at: 1645 Superior, Costa Mesa Swta: Tueld•y,Feb.28 through s.turd•J, MU'Ch 4 Look! We had our picture taken with a TV star! Big Bird! Choose one 5x7 or 4 walJet sizes in natufal color,-just 1.9_5. Hours: (TUMdly tlW '11Mnday) 10:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. 2:00 P.M. to 1:00 PM. (Frtdly) 10:00 A.M. to1:00 P.M. 2:00 P.M. to S:OO P.M. 1!00 P.M. tD L'OO PJt. (81Udly) 10:00 UL tD t;GO P.M. 2:00 P.11. to 8:00 P.IL an.1 haW vour child'• photo taken with one°' the oang from Seeame Street"'. Pick 8'g 8'rd. Cooklt Moneter, or Bert and Ernie atufftd characters. Select from MY8t'll dlfferent poaee. CcQles and enta~ta evallebte at tilgher prices. Two°' thf• chlldten {lo ege 12) In one photo. 2.11.. No ~ntment neoeeaary. Charge tt. Sesame toya and crothea avalleble at JCPenney p I .. , ~ ' • . l . ~ • I . I ~ f ,a , ~OATlNG I LOCAL PO'BUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE •tenTIOUI lllUSINa$S M..._STATllM•NT ,.,.. 1ollOWI,. ptrson1 are doing htlMU•: RAO RAMP, 76' N .... ton Way, Cotil• M4lq. Qllllornla 921'27 Tod<! ll*rt S<ll .. ~1...-•, U 1"1 Vlrwlnla fllv Gosl• Meu, C.IUOfnla 91~1 Wllllam Ll•yd Sheller, 7U Vktorla. C.O.\a ~. ~lltornl• ,,.,, Thia business Is condu<l•O l>v • general parlnet$1llp, Wiiiiam L. Shaffer Tiii~ sta-1 wa• .. ..., wllh ti. County Cl1<k of Ounga CoWlly on FabrwaryZl, 1971. FMJ» PvbllSMd ~~ c:oast Dally Pllo1 , Ftb. 27 -MM.•, 13, ~. 1971 J'U.11 PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS BUSI NHS NAME STATEMENT n.. follOwlng '*'""" Is doing !Mnl M•sa~: KNICKKNACK DISTRIBUTORS 91'6 Ottawa RI,.., Circle, f'O\.W'lla1n va11..,, c.llf....,.• '2108 O.boran Michelle Pontlo, 8701 01· tawa """" CJre1e. Fo1.tn1aln llall1y, C.ll~111a t21GI This bvSlne14 Is ConclucltCI bV an ln- dM dlHI, Deborah M Pon1lo This s•••-n• wa> 111«1 wllh Ill~ Counly Cl.,k ol Orange Counly on fetinHry 23, 1918 , . ..,2. Publl5/leel Or-Co.111 0.111 Pllol FH1. 21 and MM •. 1l, 20, ltll 711 18 PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITlOUS IUSINISS NAME STATEMENT n,. IOllOWl"ll oerim b doing ~. lieu as: G. w. WELOl~Ci. 111'0 Weal•rn .......... s1 .. 1on, c.llloml• -- Gweftllh W. ~toen, 4'115<-rlo Dr.. H11nUnotot1 8Hch, C.lllornla t'):Mt Thh bu\lrw9S I• CondYCled by M In· dl•1011a1. c:; w sn..1c1e .. This •1411_,_ w• flied with IM COllftly Cltrt of Or..,~ C....nty on f ebfuary 2, 111L Fmn Pul>ll\l!ed Or-Co.>•I Oall1 Pllol, f eci<uuv •. 11, ll>. 21 1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTIT10US 9USINEH NAME STATEMENT TM t0Uow1ng 04'fson ., Ochn9 bu,,. ""'' ., ART CE~E'R f'A~HIONS, U76 5. Co•u HIQ"•d.-, L•gun• 8e•cP'f. C.lllo<nla "*SI Marv Emlly Ftnton, 1UIJ L• Clpllla, M•u•on 111110. ~hlornla ~•H T~h b usln<tSs h conoucltd l>f • .._..,....,_p MA...,F_on TN• , .. ._ w• fllt!d wllfl ti. Coolftt!f C'-of Or.,99 County Oft ....,_,a. "11. PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI 9USIMll.U MAM&ITATllMllMT nw 1o1-... --11 ...,. -i. -~· THe MICK TVl.L Y CO., •It~ Cl'l'd• Or., Huntlngto" 8eacll, c.a111ornla Mtctoael R.. Tull1, '612 Pw1 CIVOot Ot''. H\lfttlngton B••t h, C•IUO(ftl• ., ... Thi• botKo""s Is cot>dtoce.d try ., If>. Cll¥1<1Uel. MlchMI II. Tully This stat-wet flied with,._ County Cl-Of ~-County on ,_,..,,,,,.,, ,....., Publl"'9cl Or""99 c-11 o.i1y PllO(, Fell. 13, 20, 21 M>el MM.•, lfll SU.7' PUBLIC NOTICE flOTICE 10 Cllll!DtTOtlS SUl'EIUO. COU•T CW TNB ITATEOFCAUl'Olll.MIA~ TN a COUNTY CW OAANGA ,... """'247 £1qle of ELEANOR I(. WAY aka eLEANOR K. OAl. Y WAY,~. NOTICE 15 HEREBY 0 11/EN to IM ereclllor• o! IN llbcNe -4 c1e<•n1 INll all ~-NYll'll clahM ao-lnsl n. said elk-are ,_,lrlld to me o,.m, wltll uw ne<H-Y wou<:IWrs, In tha office of 1i. <I•,,. ot ti. ebovt enlllled C»<Wt, or 10 prewnl !MM, wltl• the nece•sary •ouc'-r•, to Ille un- Cler1lgned al Ille offke of Jeu F. Hl9fl, '••23 H•mlln Stre4't, \Ian Nuy•, ...calllomla, wlli<h It U.. place of bull· ...-ss ol llW ..,.,.~In •ti ,,.,.11.,., ..,.,,.1111no 10 u.e est.Me of Mid de· ...cadent, wllllln lollr montllS al IW llw firs• pulll!uil"" ol lhl• notke. O.IH ,,_.,,.,y 2. 1971 Ci4ot'oe L. W•y E.artor ol lhe Wiii of the-...,..,.,., Decmdal!I IUSP.ttlOM *DNall!Neser.t ~ ... .,..~~ ~-· c:natnMMS Tef1 CZUl~Tlll' .... _,_~ Pullllslltd 0r-. c:a.t Dally ...... u ..aMatr ••• u. 1'71 '12·11 PUBUC NOTICE YACHTS SET SAIL IN F1RST RACE OF TIMES TROPHY SERIES 30 Entries Crowd Star11ng Line at the Los Angele• Yacht Club Tinaes Tropla!f Opener Rainbow Winner By ALMON LOCKABEY Dallf l'tlet INtl .. Wrl* Rainbow, skippered b y Don Gillelson of the Long Beach Yacht Club, was the overall handicap winner of the first race of ihe Los Angeles Times Trophy series in a slow 68-mile race around Catalina Island. The race, which also included -. achls m the International Offshore Rule in the Whitney Series, the LilUe Whitney Series for Midget Ocean Racing Association yachts, and the Midget Ocean Racing ~leet compel· ing in the Hannah Kooaman Series, started from the sponsoring .Los Angeles Yacht Club Saturday 10 a light southeast. breeze and beavy haze. THE WIND SWFTED to the west Saturday night as the yachts slid down the backside of Catalina Island on a spinnaker run. Most of t~e ea~ly finishers arri\'ed at the finish hne Sunday on an offshore breeze result- ing in ll dead beat to weat~er. The f1rsl yacht to finish al 3:45 H m . Sunday was Bill Pascoe's 53· foot Scandalous from the Newp<>rt Harbor Yacht Club. The corrected time winner in the IOR division was Ruffian, sailed by E arl Dexter of the Voyagers Yacht Club. The victory also gave her the Brokaw Trophy for that Individual race, known as the Midwinter Catalina Island race. THE SECOND RACE of the series for all rour divisions will be next Saturday 1n a .short race from· Los .. Angeles to Newport Beach whi~h will a lso include yachts entered in the Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ahmanson and Dickson Serles. Corrected time results: Whllney Serles OVERALL -l , Ruffian ; 2 , Insatiable. Tom Armstrong, CYC; 3. Decision, Paul Berger, DRYC. . CLAS.S A -l, Blue Norther, Bill Sullivan, LAYC; 2, Fiver, Dennis Choate, BYC; 3, Dog Patch, Don Ayres, NHYC. CLASS B -l, Ruffian; 2, Insatiable; 3. Decision. Times Tropt.y Serles <PHRF) OV ERA.,LL -1, Rainbow; 2, Ricochet, Ted Fiazi, LBYC; 3, Cheetah, Karl Kloklte, LA YC. CLASS A -1, Rainbow; 2. Ricochet; 3, Cheetah. C LASS B -l, Ruffian, Ted Zellmer, LSF; 2, Vroom, Martin Green. LSF; 3, Wind Mistress, Don JliU, CBYt. LltUe Wbltney Series (MORA) C LASS A -J, Stargazer , Deaver/Headden, LAYC; 2, Rum Line, Wilson /Castillc>n/Fokman, KllYC; 3, Winsome, Richard Brown. CBYC. CLAS.S B -1, Olvera St., Harold Sellers, SBYRC; 2, J abbed Agam, CBYC Syndicate; 3, Sparrow Hawk. Copeland/Desenberg. BYC. Koolman Series <MOBF> CLAS.SA -1, Siren, Grover/Mark. PMYC; 2. Bad News, Stan Sorenson, ABYC; 3, Honey Bucket, Bob Anderson. Navy YC. CLASS B -1, Lupe Tai, Dale Kind. CBYC; 2, Fortune, Fred Stevens, LA YC; 3. Du.sty, Tony Rietdyk, Sl BYC. T~d Turner Ready MaeJrinac To Def end Crown Capo Bay In his first major test since beina named Winner Yachtsman of the Year for 1977, Ted Turner ot Mackinac:, sailed by Atlanta will return to Long Beach ln March to de-Wes Thompson of the rend his tiUe to the Congressional Cup match rac-host club was the Class log series. A winner Sunday in the It was Turner's victory in~ Congressional · second race of the Cup last year coupled with his defense of the, Capistrano Bay Yacht America's Cup against the Australian cbalJeoger Club's San Juan Series that woo him the coveted Yachtsman of the Year for Performance award. Handicap Racing Fleet Turner will be up against nine other match-7acbts. race experts including two other former winners ot Trophy winners in the Congressional cup, Scott Allan of the Severn each class: River Yacht Club (formerly Newport Harbor c LASS A -1. Yacht Club) and Dick Deaver of the Los Angeles Mackinac; 2, 0 . W . Yacht Club. . . . Harold, Hilltrhompson, The most recent selectee is Robbie Hames, of DPYC· 3 Gold Rush, the ~an Diego Yacht Club. who will represent the Kell G.:Ubbs, Capo BYC. Southern California area. Others on the roster are: CLASS B -1, Vul&ar Noel Robbins, A~straJia; Pelle Peterson, Boatman, Hugh Curran, Sweden; Thomas O'Brien, SeatUe; Tony Parker, DPYC; 2, Wandrin Star, Annapolis; Graham Hall, Larchmont, N.Y .• and Mike Wathen, Capo Barney F1am, representing the host Long Beach BYC; a, Avante, Hal Yacht Club. Conrad, DPYC. Mesa Boat Firm. CLASS C -1, Wlnd Runner. Paul Timon, Capo BYC; 2, Bold Forbee, Ed Cummins, Capo BYC; 3 Vivace. Expands Facili•ti•es BmClore.DPYC. CLASS D -1, Torrey • Dave Cooper, Capo Racing Dynamics, of its three models of BYC; 2, Green Weenie. am all boat. and spar fiberalass Finn masts Craig Ftotey, DPYC; 3, manufacturer of Costa world wt.de continues at J aw breaker. Bob Mesa has ·announced a slow but steady pac~ Melville, DPYC. the ~xpansion of Us ~ ... facilities to two other P.n· -_:ize 16 Cats r: . locations in Costa Mesa. IUA, • The mold shop for boat manufacturing has ~ • he"' Lo d been moved from 1638 e ... U ,gu,e Placentia·to 2941 Gralce SI~· ee· ~::;io~~:CS8~~~ Flrty-two Prlndle-18 catamuans ~•r: Flbe.relua and com• wetghed ~ ... ~::mi:: ro ~ ::e ~e posit• spar prodl.lctlon bcM41e at~· • pl ........... to partldpat. lD r e m a in• at 1t2 2 that eacb ~•1!.. .... ==':ust haft a 'falld PlacenUa Ave. dasa aanc._=...t~-•11., Th -•• --t1 .. meuaremenl11.·~:nu,..-aftlll9U#• • uu.u ,,. .,.~ Tbe Prtodl6-J.e mut ntO a mbdlncam flf IOO =·~~m f« ~.A=~ o1 en u.e bMtil ~ lt1 Newpol't JI double wu 308 .. .4 • .'~.;::-..-...:.:~ m bottom J1DL SblpaMlltl ea117 compena ....... w l:TCJI Salloa Win .... DAILY PILOT c:J Moiling Microbes Irvine School Ge"8 $70,000 Microscope By PIOUP ROSMARIN Ol I .. Oell't "tt.t S~fl Sara Nealon twisted the focus knob, punched in the next higher magnlficaUon and squinted. The University High School, Irvine senior journeyed where only a handful of students anywhere in the country have traveled: Into the nucleus or a yeast cell 20,000 times larger than life. HER CONVEYANCE was Eemoo-Tbreegee, an EMU-3G electron microscope worth perhaps $70,000. The microscope provides not. only immensely magnified views of microbial Ure, but a built·in camera to take the pictures which are all the vast population of students ever sees. . It cost taxpayers nothing; it was donated, u are some other highly unusual instruments you can find in Jim Shannon:s chemistry class. "TllE MICROSCOPE came from Japan Election Optical- •co., in Burlingame," Shannon said. ··o ver there," Shannon walked about his laboratory, "1s a m o d e I D B · G T u_I · traviolel/V1sible ratio recording gr ating spectrophotometer and a 10-inch strip chart recorder that Beckman Instruments gave US: "Then there's a model 100 in· fra -red spectrophotom'et~r which we got from the Perkin· Elmer Co." "WITH THESE you can identify any kind of substance. It analyzes thing s and automatically draws an identify. mg line on a graph. It's just like a finRe.rprint." Shannon apparently has a gift (or persuading people in private andustey to subsidize his lab. The payoff for them, he _says, is th~l more students get interested m s cience and are prospective staff scientists and technicians. He's busy lately tryinit lo drum up the donation of an ul- tr am lcrolone, an instrument that can cut specimen slices as thin asa2.Smilliontho£aniocb. ••THEY'R E MARVELOUS teaching tools." Shanoon said. ••But they're tremendously ex· SARA NEALON TAKES TURN AT ELECTRON MICROSCOPE Instrument la One of Only Two In U.S. High School• pensive. The schools can't afford them. The only way you can get them is to ask for them. So I went around and started asking. "It's unfortunate we have to rely on pictures in textbooks, when. with these instruments, students can look directly at what they're s tudying, get theia hands on it. "I'm working pn a plan to bring kids from elementary and inlerm ooiate schools to see our in· s truments-demonstrations of .how they work., what they can be -used tor.· BY TIIE TIME young people get to an electron microscope. r eally get turned on. They can't help it. "We need things like this to turn young people on. Most kids think science means you've got to bave a genius IQ. They fear the qualifications. Gee, lbey S2'f, that takes brains. "But with these instruments, we can show them science is not just for brains. u·s also for kids wbo can work with their bands. Showing of Tot Film Extended "A kid who goes through b~ can go to an employer, aay, ~ science lab, and tell him, l~. I can use an electron m16- c r o scope. I can use p spectropbotomet.er, 1 can use u ultramicrotone. Free showings of the film • .. Tut, the Boy Kini," will be ex· tended through March at the Huntington Beach Central Library because of large turnouts. · The movie will b e shown Wednesday evenings March 8, 22 and 29 from 7:30 to 8 :30 o'clock. lt also will be s hown two , .. -~- Saturdays, March 18 and 25,. from 2 lo3 p.m . Orson Welles narrates the film, which shows views of the artifacts found in Tutankhamen's tomb many of which currenUy are on display at the Los Angeles County Museum of Arts. ··uey, he can do it all." FV Approves Policing of Private Roads Fountain Valley City Council members have given city police permission to enforce traffic 'laws on four private streets as requested by 39 residents in the neighborhood. Rick Bracy of 8828 La Zana Court told the council that · the area has been plagued by young motorcyclists and drivers who race up and down the s treets. BRACY SAID Fountain Valley police have been unable to ap- prehend the offenders because the traffic violations . occur on private property. "We just want to live in peace and harmony with safety, .. Bracy said . But. one resident, Juan Llovedl of 886() La Zana Court opposed the plan saying police enforcement won't solve the real problem with the youths in the area. "WE CAN aolw the probhm wlthout police bee.use tt is u Internal one." Uovedt told tbe council. Llovedt one of three area re. idents w~ opposed the plan. admitted the youths pose at problem and "sbow clisrespec with obscene gestures, threats and by littering the streets with broken glass." Councilman Mary Adler, who lives in the nelgbborbood affec\· ed by the council's action. voted tn favor of the plan at did ~ rest of tbe council. THE FOUa *8et8 IDYolved are: La z.na Cowt, Su H= \ Lane, lA Dana CCIW't and Y1~0 !:::. ue .. located DGr8l of Slater A•enue b•tw.- JllapOlia and Newland ~t BB Corporation "~ Headed hy Woman . Ratb nan.,. hU ~ cboeeh J>tetldent of th• Hu.n.Unaton Beach Public FaoUhlJl• • Corporatloa. Mn. Bll.lq; 1t1iO IUCceeda J flft'1 Sapp. la tJ!le ftrlt 1 womanto~tbe~~1 · The PFC .CW u UM lor Cb• libnQ act dYlo......, dd .... •e• opill'lldcnll ot'die tftlD~ .... I.. -· A DAIL V P1l.O f • PUIUC NOTlCB PUllUC N'OTICE llOTtC.W 10caao11011s fU,.ato. C:OUIU Ml TH• ITAT• W CAUlllOtntlA "9t flt• COUNTY O~ OllAllOa ........... auet• of MAltGUall tTf aALU.110 91taTT Oecetsed. NOTICI! IS Ma11lev GIVUI '° ... Uecllten Ill Ult *-Mf'Md --lt!R 811 ...,_ ....,,,. c.i.1me ege!Mt ......... _,...,,_t•lll• IMl'lt, •Ill .. ~ WllCll9n, In lh4t eftlC• f/f tM clertl of Ille ebow ...... ~ --.:-.--.,. PUIWC NO'l'ICE Pl1BIJC NOTICE PVJLIC NOl'ICB PlJBLlC HO'l"IC& PlJBLIC NOTICE ltlJBllC NOTICE ' . --... _.. __ .............................. ~ .. . PUBUC N01'1CE f'IC'fl "°"' ausU•HS MM'•n&TW ... MT ,,.. ••• _.. --k etlAe _, NH•' MIU VfllOl'S l'U'NT, ljOS-A Mtu Vt•M Ottvt, CHta MtH. c;.11 ... ,,,.,,.. ... lt.,o ~ w ~ ._,I ...... No ), Lot Aftlel .. , C.tHttftl• ..... Th" Mt-h c~•ed l>y ..,, 111-... ._...t. '"""~ Tllll lllt-1 #a\ flt# whll lht '°""'• Clt•k .. 0.""99 c-11 Ofl FtbrlMlryt, 1'1t.. "'""' Pulllll~ Or .... CMal 06!11 f'lltt, ..... ll, ... u -IMf ••• ,,,. m.n P\JBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PIC'TITlOUS t\1$1 ... U MAM&IUftM&MT Tiit lellowlllO "'""' ••• 41olne bualo--: ~ IMCHINE SHOii', 1wf ,_,.,,., I.AN, """'lftl!Oll .. "'"· c.11 ... 111 ...... o-H Kuti, 1Uf1 s.MAI Ml" L•llt, "IHICl1181ell a..<11, Ctlltofllit ,.,.... MtrN 0 l(;jjl, 1"5' ~· 4111~ ~11\f, H...,.I.....,. 9"<11, UtltorlMe nw• '"'' llu\ir.111 '' ~t41llty911 lft. _.~·--·· Mar9'e O. 1C11t1 Ult tlM-••• llM41 wltll C~nt1 Cltrk of Or-vt (;ounly °" Ftl>,....fY .. lf1t .. ...., Pul>ltt-OrMOt Cotst Otlly l'lttl, flt0. ll. IO, f1...clllMf,6. "71 S...1• PlJ8UC NOTICE l'ICT1nc.is •USIMUS M&Ma ST&TaMl!MT Tiit lollowll'lll ptrions att 1101110 but,lnea~ ., · PANDA Pt.UM81NG, INC., nu w. MtcArltlur 11..S., • II, eo.i. ""'-Ml· Celllor11lt tM» Pend• Plum1>t119, l11c ., a Calllotnla corpor•lltn, lSU w. &.1~!~Tt~..i.. ""· eo.1a ""'-"· Tllll llUlll'ltU It CO!Wlutlt4 by• cJ• -··-· P•-l'IU"llOiftO, In<. .....,..O.lt-. p,.11,,...1 Tiiis l\a-•• fll.S wllfl 1M G~llty Clfflt ol Oftft99 c--, ., l'•bruoar, J, 1'19. ,..,. fll'Vbll.,_,, Or .. COHt o.lly f'I~ ,,_,, .. ,,, 20, v. lf11 PUBUC NOTICE NOTIU TO CtllCHTOllS W P•a1oa COUaT CW ntl ITATI OP (AU'°""'" POil TNaCOVteTTO,.OtlAM•I . ...... ..,.. EJi.t• of OANll!I. C. ~Nlt.1.V, Otcu"9d. HOT ice IS "lrtl•V GIVEN IO tM (teclltw1.,"" -... .--INI ell.,.,_ Mvlftt ~·~I llW HI• decllOtftl •• ~ lo HI• n.1'11, wllllW.-IW'I' ~Ill the olllu et the <._ of IN •llOW 1<1lltlff c_,, « to_, IMl'ft, wltll IM necttsarv .. -. .... 11, •• tN -dtnltft•• at U» Herth C:.fltlily 9outavar41, S.nl• Ana, Celllwnl•, wtlkh Is tlle Ill«• flf t<lllMH ef lllf "'*" ....... "'alt"*"'"~ .. , .......... f/f ..... ~. wltMfl ...,, ,,. ..... .,. "" ltrst pulllk.t\ltfl .. '"'' llOl!c.. 0.ted ~ 16, 1'11 CHfll.i s. Centllillf I!~ Ol lllt Wiii ., 1111 ...... ,...,.,, ~ U .NCY a llNt6MT U& u.o..ic.. .. ......... ""~ , .... c-wy........- .-. ..... ~· tzl1IJ , ... .,.,.,.. .. ......,, .... .__,.,, ,.,.. ..... Q>Mllt °'"' Dally """'· Pelll:Jt•V •wr.6, I), tt71 .,,.,. 6 4· 2 .. 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s S. I F I E D· 6 4 2 .......... : .. ' • • • 4 ,. .. . . . __ , ... EM:---· Tlll l(Utct Marimt .. Oft u. en. C.t DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS oAll.YPILO~ ...._.,_w. .............•.•.•...• , ........ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Clll\ s.41 tt. And tt. Trede It With I Went Ad [842•5878J -w a OM Call Semce Fast o.dit ApprcMll HUGE FAMILY .... h .............. l'f' aw.tGl1 • • . ••••.• ,.,....... HOME ._... .. ._., ...... -~ ,,,_ ............. -!Off • Bdrm. large family room. fireplac e . iooosq.n. hving area. Quiet tree-lined street."' HCMH Few ScA !Honn For S-. WW Hil all terms. Only ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m.500~ · Gt•r_. • 1002-G........ 10021'~\l~j!lljfnljt ........................ ·•••it•••················ 1f, • 71 r.t 546-8103 ..._.. ....... , Motlce: A.II real estate advertised In UUa newtpa,per i.tl sub· jec:t lo the Federal Fair Houtln1 Act of 196& which makes it 1Ue1al to advertlH "any pre- ference, limitation, or discrimination bued on race. color, reUilon, aex, or national origin, or an lntenUon to inalte any aucb preference, Umlta· Uoo, 0tc1Ucrimin1Uon." IUILDEIS IAIGAIM -Bu ilders personal 4 bdrm residence now oHered in luxury area. Priced at only $112,000. Cal 640-6161 llAUTIFUL MESA VERDE .. Exception al" describes this beautiful adult occupied condo. Immaculate condition, new carpeting, outstanding location across from pool & school. Priced at $2,900. 546-4141 Serving Co5l<l M e~a -lrv 1nP Huntington Bf'ach -N e:wport Beac h MESAYBDE POOL Exception'11y fine home on shady cul-de-sac ltN!e\. 4 Bedroom, 2 bath w1lh cracklina bri ck fireplace le big enclosed - patio. Full price $93.500, CALL $58-2660. «::SELECT T' PROPERTIES . FAIULOUS 1ix bedroom custom home. Lll>da Isle. Over 5000 sq. fl. with pool, jacuui. sauna " 1Up for M'yacbt. This newspaper wi.U not lcnowlnflY accept any advert sing for real est.ate which is in viola· tion of the law Gt Mr.a I 002. Ge Mr.a I 002 :.1a.fl. atORS: Adn rtfsen dalld cMdc their ads daity CMd report .... ron lllNMdtahty. Tite DAILY l'tLOT as..-s W:ailty for .... fint • cornd•11tt.Olily. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llSTIUYIH MIWPORT IEACH for ttut. completely re· modeled. up&raded home m the new. nPw. nt•.,. -paml 1n1out. cpl!., drps. plumbing, kitchen & landscapln1. 3 Bdrm!., l·ustom brick frplc . I\ better buy you won 'l gel Only SJ 14.900. 64~7270 l'*"'CORdo sso.ooo. Beautifully upgraded, paneled It papered. Soundproofed. Lota of stora¥e. Lath & plaster. Pool. sauna . quiet 1eelus1on. Adult.a a&e UI. m;;~ Do...-sa.o. e ... YJew Open and spadous-5 bdrm home with dining room and game room. Patios that wrap around all this 5000 sq . ft . pnvacy. 2 Fireplaces. all ol lhe extras. $360.000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 64M2to DISIUILE One oC Tu.rtlerock 'a best areas. 3 Bdrira .. family rm., Plan l. Beaut. con· dltlon. exciting extras. J..owe.sl price at $112,500, mcludes I.he land! C. F. ColesworthY .W.TC>aS 64C).OOfO &ASTSIDE HOME + $ 1.000 IKM Lovely 3 Br 2 Ba home, hardwood noon, enern aavin& swimming pool, 3 near new apt.a, 2 Br 2 Ba, pvt rncd yards, cathedral etas. Quality conatruc· Uon. Reduced lo $227,500. P ... e who need people lhouJd always check the s.rvtce Dtreetory tn the DAILY PILOT \ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WESLEY N Balboa Island Really A..\U•Wt °''~""T ~'IUtf 673-1700 II TAYLOR CO. flEALTOHS .... 1111·1· t!Mfi JUST LISTED! llG CYH NEW TOWHHOMI S 140,000 Beautiful "Oakcrest" model w /large living rm & formal dining. 2 Bdrms, 2 baths & bright sunny kitchen. Pool, jacuzzi & tennis els. Sec. gate. WESUY M. TAYLOa CO .. llEALTOllS 2111 S.Jaa, .. HmsRMd 2 Bdrm. house + bachelor unit; on corner Jot. Priced lo sell at $139,500 IMCOME!I! .. BALBOA PENIN. $ Years young; duplex. ! up & 3 down; ocean s1d~· of blfct. Pride ot ownership property , good rental history. $189,000 Including land! MEWroaT CIMTa. M.I. 64<Mf I 0 673-3663 &U,22SJEves .. 1002 ~-, .. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• associated MOUNT AIM VIEW MEW HOUSE IARGAIH IALIOA PEMIMSULA JUST MARVELOUS Cape Cod. 2 Story, 4 bedroom. Owner will finance and ls flexible. Almoet •·on I.he beach". COLE OP NEWPORT REALTORS 615-5511 8 110K£RS rtElll TOl1S l 01'i. W lott,,c o • 1 • ~ •t J OCEAMFROHT Chamung 2 BR. home. 2 car garage. Best swim· • min& & fishing area, .. creat neighbors !. $Z75,000? ..,. lay Prop. Redtors Luxurious 3100 s q. ft home on hillside with spectacular view of snow ~apped Saddle back Pt10W1lains. Luxuriously appointed with premium fpatures too numerous too lis t. Priced under builders current price for next unit al $162,500. For •ppolntment to in· specl call 962-7788. ,Q. K€Y ·v P.€ALTOP.s• * 675-1060 * 1----------r~~~~~,.~ HARIOR VllW LUSK IEACH STORE • ~ Raht! your fam in Fallbrook. Sell your home. buy our 6 acre avocedo grove. 2 stry 1\ador, .abr. 3f/p home. Ubrary, pool. cbic"ens Xlnt schla. Pre-Lisllng pnce $329.000. By ownr. 1·728·22S2 ONLY4LEFT This home has many WITH PARKING .,. custom features. Large courtyard, beautiful Storefront on Newpo~ oUve tree and many rose Blvd-over 2,000 sq.ft.,.._ bushes . Bui I t . I n + 2 adjacent lols. Build:..., bookaheJves, formal d.ln· Ing is versatile as tG •• led r II Ul!Jlge, lot.s may be paved lng room. pane am Y for parking, available oia-room w/parquet floor, contract of sale. $325.000,, ,, huge pool. _.,,... ~m-t t '•. Iii I I \I I \ .. 1 ' , ' ~., ' : • ~ Ot llil I Hurr Wht !\'. Jll.tl!(r ; 11 ~ Nrw'-'C\., 8 1":.1 "• 8 17 1 .S t 67~ 4t-J~ ~ BOAT Luxurious condos near beach, 3 huge bedrooms. I~~~~~~~~~~! 2~ baths. Would you believe your own pvl yard' Open Sat1Sun 11·5. 2283 Cany on. Costa Mesa. TRlrt.tx E. COSTA MESA, dlx uruts. ea. w/2 bdrms., 2 ba., d\n. ITU, lndry. & frpl. Askintr $185,000. Seller motivate d ! 752-7710orSS2-0434 Dkr. MISSING! Newport "9f Reoh,1 slhfthtiiilll\i\ffi r--£-.... ST-S-ID_E_ 2005 Balboa Blvd. '""" 3 Bedroom. 2 bath! VA &: ~ FHA terms! Room for' Boat or RV. Call Now! RED CARPET 754-1202 LOW MILEAGE ~ Bch.673·2058 Close to W~stcliff shop- ping. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath. family room with fireplace. beam ceiling, etc. Alley entrance with lots of RV parking. Ask· Ing $89,900. Call 54~1151 2 BR. Orange Tree coo.- do. Clean as the pro- verbial whistle! $64.950 T&fNIS AMYOHE? Super Bturrs 4br unit close lo Newport Beach Tennis Club. Reduced for quick sale! Sl59.500, Fee 111mple. 67)...4400 HARBOR A Di\'lsion or Harbor Investment Co FIVE BEDROOMS. 2 atory 2 Ba Carlsbad By The Sea bome. Complete w/POOL, VIEW, FPLC & xtru. Vacant at $110.000. Call: WAU.ACl•Co REALTORS 7'~729-59'6 OCEANFRONT By owner, priced to sell, make offer. Two unlt.s. M&-7219 or 5l58...m1 -4-'4· HERITAGE . • REALTORS R·2 NEWPORT HTS Darline hOUM, room for 2 more units. Call Cleo at open house every after· noon. ~. 386 15th St. or •••United Brokers, 646-74.14 RB> UC ED Beaut. Medll. 3 BR, 4 BA home. xtra wide lot, huge court yard entry w /Ult fountain. Lido Isle. $259,500 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 ~HI 833-9781 I Hesfet'•Brown UAlf •S IVY COVERED IRICK TUDOR! wans of tvy greet charm. ing cottage m Newport Hts! Colonial hvmi nn! Rich redwood decor~ Pub tavern lutchen w/walk-in pantry. l l..arie bd.rms, 2 ~uxe ... baths. Man sh:e den! ~b doors to private garden patio! Lu~h grounds w/aparklin& waterlalls.! Just listed! Breathtaking value !! Hurry! ! Call. MS-o303 FO~ESTE OLSON ... L t•\ .. .._,.41A .. , .. .-...-.,_ 00 vou ADULTS OHL Y OFFER A SER.VICE! BeauUlully upgraded 1 • year old t.ownbome in a Let the public know with country setting. Briclt an ad in lhe Dally Pilot fireplace, air condl· Service Directory. It can t.looed. earth tones. An- cost you as IHUe aa $1.8.5 outatanding value dt per day. FOt' more in· tM,000. CALL 751-3191. formation and complete •. SELECT · rates call M2·5e78. PROPERTIES... A CCUWILL IW«ll~. 644-1766 1 I ' I .. •' ' , . . ~ ' .. ':! ,. ., , ,.... ... _ ................ ~ J. TOUCH Ol= MEW ENGLAND lc6ooPt1h 1'ttla 1007 ......................... Steps to beach. 7 units. 6 2 br, l bach. Pool. s.so.ooo. Terms open. MS-0721 C•l•moleoch 1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MlSAVEADE A 11 beauuful 3 Br home In pert rond In flnei;t area. Look at lb11 pnce _1109.000. Ai\. ~1103 WOUU>YOU IWEVE ? Duplex, 2 Br. l bath elleh 14 yrs. Ne\ er before. never aaain at suu.ooo. 759·-03S8 J\¥t. ~IWUOOt( Hwnllngt• IHch I 040 4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely ••••••••••••• •• •••••••. popular CAMELOT mdJ. Thls lovely home located S&S Resale Speci11llsls 011 a cu.l·de-uc within 3.4 or 5 bdrm models easy walkuie distance to avail. some w /pools. So. Coast Plaza, tbeatres 968-46CYl & reatauranta. Many out· Penmngton Properties MiW HOME IYBYTHING IS FtltST CAllM . you '11 love this nearly new home. just 4 houses removed from Ocean Blvd. in CdM. It's an exceptionally sharp New England style 3 bdrm. & formal di,ning rm., also brkfst. area. There-s a cozy frplc. 4' all rooms have catpedral ceilings. It's fun to sit on your pat.to & view the blue Pacific, with the beautiful Uilboats passing OCEAN VIEW QuaUty constructed duplex w/large 3 BR, 2 BA units. Nice ocean view. Upper unit bas beun ceilings. Located in serene sett1ne Jn caplstrano Beuch. Ask· Ing $159,SOO. standlna feature1 in-1---------1 elude: -C11st011t wood •d t1n1, ......... c whltewattt--4 city •lew1. Ah Vllto ....._,,.,,500. 497-3331 ... even the view! Br~alhtaking with tree tops, roof lines, harbor and ocean and twinkling lights by night. Thi s original Harbor View H1lls 3 bedroom has been r e done to perfection : n ew paint. carpets. decorator touches . lighting and landscaping. This 2650 sq. ft. delight is priced at $284,750. U"" IC>U I: t1f)Ml:S REALTORS', 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona def Mar Jlso 111 Mrsc1 Verch· . .it 546 5990 RE.Sales WM. E. Doud & Co. ILOVE VETERANS and know they will love my 3 bd, 2 ba. l need a new owner. Call 897·0321 BEACHRmE.AT $57,900 VIEW Steps to pounding surr & 1.:ry:.tal :.and! Back yurd l'i b1ty area playground. Winding wooden walkways to secluded en· try! Gourmet kitchen. b~ .. PnlY $279\soo. 759-0811 fi.ut """ Glut Wuuiut 8Ug. UDP ISU Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den. 4 baths. llvinJ( rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. s uite. llG CAMYOH 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor P lan 3 w/patio views from each room. ~25.000 IAYFROHTS Several fine bayfront homes with pier & sUps BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR RHltors. Est. 1907 (714)759-0422 34 1 8CJ ~~1d1· Orov" N B t>l:J o lol Step-<lown conversation !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! area +fire pl ace! Sui;ishine breakr~st Gwral 1002 Gwr.. 1001 ---------1 patio. Pool. Jacuzzi. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-··••••••••••••••••••• \•olleyball. Garden bvmg FIXER at1tshne:.t.S41~10 --------1 •VETS• . 3JACRE $62,000 .,,, I • • •. "" rf' IE UNIQUE IN 71 Z...ODoW. [ -I Does the thought appeal Just hsted' Ba1.•k Buy ~ ' • to you? Ir so. coos1der Z...OCosh arl'J' Cla:.!.11.' .... tung . • joming the prestlelous Homes in all areai.. all porch w Vil'"'" or ('OUn -: omcei of Unique Hames sl%us. Call tr)s1de Crlstal dmmi:' 3 for a fantastic 11778. Ac Veterun HOUStng Agt. Huge ~room-.' Lar~~ IFYOU'VEIEEN celer ated comm1:.1>1on 541-0100 AMCHOl.AGE IMYISTMIHTS '7 I 41 496-771 I Cuatom Drapenes Covered patio Decorator Wallpapers throughout Outdoor gas BBQ Auto. Garaae Dr Opener Skylight 1n Fam. Rm • etc BY OWNI-~R 979 -8123 Pnn. Only $109,900. Cor'OROdef M• I OlZ Asllume 4.5 loan. 4br, 2ba, patio, pnroe loca. 1 m1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• from bcb. lnc:bep'd, re· Triplex deco lhruout . .557 .2005 2 Bdnn., 1 bath home with rear uruu. Sound in· NEB> A LARGE YARD? venmeot io Corona del Mar. $175,000. HORI HS REAL TY 3 BR, in upper bay area. Just right for enterta1n- 1nc. Great, heated & LIU ChicJ&et1 50tlp ... It couldn't hurt to call Chuck Nash about a re· wardlog career in real estate. Free training IC you qualify. 540·5101. DIVORCE FORCES SALE Super Meredith Gardens home, 4 Bdrms, family, formal dining, large 1Sx36 swimming pool. Hurry & see lhis greut family home at only $141.SOO Call S4(HlSL ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS flltered pool surrounded I~~~~~~~~~ by profusion of greenery. - * 494-8057 * NEWLY REMODELED 1,_. BA bltn kitchen lots t BR. 2 ba, UOO sq ft, lo 3 BR. S. OF HWY of wailpa1>er & f~esh dwn pymnt. xlnl area. 675-7931 _ pamt. St 15,ooo. 831-9952 Rea_l_lo_r_. __ _ cozy 3br, 2bu + guest VALLEY 640·9900 ()po Sat1Sun 12·5. Pnme house. Frpl. 2 patios. R·2 loc:i. Jbr. 2ba w frpk. lot. Pri.n. only. Sl57.000. ~ C\ r'cl p:.itio . No ,\gts Owner.640-7030 ~~ $81.i50 Ownr847 3119 CostoMe.a 1024 .......__ 2STORY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden condo. 2 br. patio. WITH IOHUS VETS FREE pool, security. $47,000 or Qwet home in Family Housing. Zero down. zero ~rer M!_-835J_ home in quiet residential C06ls. Any city in Orani.:c area. Lovely upgraded Co. Call 24HR VET AGT OPEN HOUSE with wood and mirrors. Skyhghted patio cover 556-0777. l83.5Tahlt1Dr,mMesa and wet.bar. Call E/SIDI TOWMHOME Verde. Open Mon-1''n , 546-5880 Agent. Former model. overlook· 2-5. JR. EXEC CONDO ing waterfall & stream. COZV FIREPLACE Atttique fplc. cover'd O..PoW l026 3 Br 112 Ba + shower, patio & side yard Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• covered patio. Rec facLI. for dog run or garden. 3 c-.-:sh MCIMioft OPE!'I HOliSESUN 1·5 BR + 3 BA + den .,._.. Cl Pnced below market for Unique Dana Point 19IS80 aremont a fast sale landmark has been con \gent 9Si-070t 754-7800 Vt>rted to 3 unit.. Perfe<'t CLOSE TO BEACH ror owner 0C'cupal1on 5 hr. 2,, bas. wet bar. plus income Ocean 1 h t SOUTH LAGUNA @9·~1 LAGUNA NJGl'J.:r. 495·1720 DANA POINT "93-881Z lrYIM t 044 lrvlM I 044 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• THE RACQUET CLUB FEATURES A WIMBLEDON nus elegant 5 bedroom home WJLh pool and spa is 1n move in coodtlion. Profe ssiona lly WOODIRIDGE BroadMOOt' home, 'BR .• furn. rm., atrium. pool, spa, decking, lndscpd .. fenced "The works" Reduced to $125,000 AGENT 640-5560 RANCHOSANJOAQUTN 2 BR. 2 bo, air cood. den, wet bar, fully Curn'd. Former model. Prime soil course locaUoo over- looking lake. Priaciplei> only, $129,500. 752·1211, landscaped and vacant. afters· 752-()768 OWNER MOTIVATED 1---· ------ SUBMlT YOUR 01"· DEERFIELD 2 BR, 2~: FER'' bu tWl\lhse. Frplc, dbl RANCH REALTY 551.2000 SAMDYIEACH ONLY $134,950 What a hiestyle! Walk lo lvly lake & beach. Saal, swim. picnic or just s un· bathe · 4 big bdrms. 2 baths. huge fmly rm w/b1g frplc. rrml din . vaulted ce1llngi.. hvy shal<e plus a btfl atrium. 759.1501 gur, very nice, $73,800for quick saJe. ~-~91 __ REDUCED DRASTICALLY!! Th1i. fabulous Plan a Park Home in beautiiul Deerfield features over 2SOO sq n of gracious liv· 1ni: with 4 large bedrooms. Completely upgraded and unbelieva- ble priced at $128,SOO. SELLER IS ANXIOUS!! SUBMIT YOUR OF· FER!! open k1t1.·h~·n• Room f~r LOOOOOOIUNG scheduJe, in-house i.w1n g ---------hur~c~· ~l'l'Cb "'"orl.. ' lodns. cre .. u .. c i.ale:, CHARMING r J k 1.• u d \ a 111 J ~ l' ' : for u 2 br 1 story adu~t dlds. compull'r ll'rmmul Vl\>\4 1mpr~1n1facadc Pu~ <'pts, cus om drape:., C'ompl. landscpe. --------S2IS,OOO lrg yd, l yr old. Plan 1 8A~ llurn • CJl!f;.15 0:1o;i eondo for _undt'r $SO~. & .icllw training & ad CAPE COD <·all u~ We \t' !:Ot ONE. Be fll'•hl)· upgraded w1top ---- - C7 •eol h•ote Inc ... liiiiiil ~l68-J37t rrurustrullon 11n1c1ue ,.. 111 ·ill with Unique llom1..-. c1uahty m11ter111l. View of New Condos, 2 Br. 2•., Bu. (~IW\'11?!Ji$i§ij ~~~:~;~~~a~~~: ~~dr~i;~ ~-~a~:s~ 1 ~lt~t~/& ~~~~;;00~11~ Real Estate Handle man at 546-5990 bdrm. l bath rent a I unit. spa 6754912 Broker OCEAN VIEW EASTSIDE Dramal11: '1ew from lhl' CUSTOM mai.tt•r hdrm. "Pl'C Perfect home for the Jr. 1.1cul.ir vrcw from the exeeuh'e on the move. II\ mg room Hrcatht ak· Beaut 1 rully decor a led ing Vil•\\ from the thruout. 3 Spac1ou11 k1ll'hl•n Thi>. 4 hdrm, 3 bdrms. Ll<:t" modern level homl' 1-. 'acunt & kitchen . .Fantasltc fam1· ""'"1ll'r 1-; anxious. Pool, I) room "t!Dl.A.'rta1nment ~auna. J.1tun1 & tenn~ c·cnter wd1replace. & wet Nl'"'"P•>rl lfl•'l area bJr llugeR-21ot.Callto- 546-ZH3 da'. the pnce will $Ur· r• un.'" \ ou. 6i'> 7J'tl 1 ~•1~·1111 nvo o~ ON f: LOT :! l!r homes on one 50,.. ICIO H 3 lot lnvt•s t in the future. Owner may hl'lp I mance. al $.SJ,900. Ca 11 . WALUCE&CO. REALTORS 71 ...... 33-6490 HOME + INCOME Ye;, income. Tlus duplex rould do 1t. Call for de· Laib 968-337 l 3 UHITS EASTSIDE This ideally located 1n· come property may ~ just what you llt'e loolunK for. One J bdnn.. 2 bath & 2 one bdrm units CIOle t o :,hopp1 n ii & LraosPQrtallOO. 646-7711 Hf'THGTS CLASSIC 3 Bdrm . 2 bath . 2 fireplacei. rorrruil dmang room. large ramll y room. dbl detached garage, comer lot Boat acte&s 1>09slble. Many more xtraa. ~2213 Amen i t 1 c s PLU S ! -·--- 1 ncl ud ing huge mstr ---------s uite w1s1 tting rm . CUSTOMIUILT Jacuni in mstr bath. A 4 Bdrm, 2 bath. wOOfl per f e <' l pr Ide of noors. new i.·atcr healer. ownersblp property water gonner. copper w /incomc bea1dcs' plumbing. Beautiful pool 64&-77ll w1tb heater & filter ~ Walker & Lee Real Estatl' Manyxtras. $87,SOO lloJMcC...a. lttOMewpo.-t ll'#d. Cost.~ 541·7729 Me5a del Mar. by owner 1 BR. Pool. xlnl cond Owner will CJrry 2nd. S93.000. ~7 Prl':'l1dio Ur Call anytlme m 2251 E Side Custom homt' Ml'T. ARIA 2000Sq rt .. 3Br. huge 11:.vEC. HOME ram. rm .. 3 car .:ar • on tliA R·2lot.Agt646-7!!!__ A wdque opportunity for a fmJy to move into the MESA VERDE Newport area & ~cape Out o( stat.e owner must paying an outrageous !ld13 BB.. 2 ba .. on cul de price. Live In a btll sac. SBS.000 "Buccola Built'" Home A. JoOnson Bkr 979-4964 HORIHS REALTY 1-1n<lmark im.ooo call * 4944057 * art 5P~l 847~l080 Ot><'Orator·s Model Must 4.'t' 3 br. I '• ba. frpk, i:;uarded romm Pool. Jacuu1. tennl). condo $92.500 By OWnC'r 496-5185 1042 .......•........•...... JUSTLISTID Harbour Lane 3 Br, <!'a ba end unit w/24' boat s lip S uper s harp' $155,000Call now. DAMA LIGHTS PURCB.L RE.AL TY Lo\'ely 2 Rdrm-2ba con <714) 1146-2828 dom1n1um i.1th m 1n1 • ocean '1ew 1 :i mile from '"'~ I 044 Dan• 1'01nt ~tarina •••-•••••••••••••••••• S7ti.!m Cal'44-721 I FOR Dt-:Tl\11-'t AWIHHER! Large home w Income Duplex 38r, 2ba+2Br. ~ unit. t:ach w1frplc AIJ elec kitchen Wrap around pntio for easy h\· mg. $135.000. Open Sun· day l-4. at 2"621 Cordova <Cor Viol.et Lantern> Decorated as onJy a professionnl designer can do 1l .you'll love lhts 2 bdrm .. 2 bu . <! patio townhome m Uni\ Park Jmma culal<'' You'd never believe it·, been hved in lU month~ Ped et·t for bac helor youn)! C'uuµle or reuret• St 12.00U CAPE COD WARMlr BEAUTIFUL $53, 900/$2,150 3 Bdrm, 2 bath WestcliCf S7'20S known for 1pacioua rm 1.us " hu,e wudrobe & Owner moving over seaa . ._ _______ _ s1.0ra1e space, Only a Will sac. this lmmac. cot· few bloclc.s from CllH Dr. tage style 3br homo. &tbeffarbar.Justllsted. Many flOod (eatures. 646-'1'1ll SlS,150. For immed. saJe Agt 159-0358 TOT AL DOWM! home. Huge living room, plU:S $7;10fJIUlk• sw • .oo needed to buy 4 bdnna, 2 ba. Owner says brint of· fers -wm consider au. call '1:51·~ or 673·3430 897-03%1. Windin e roadway to elegant formal dining soaring 2 story retreat! area. gourmet kitchen. Private grounds protect Spectacular shimmering secluded l'ntry to lavish pool with waterfall. A EAST ltv1ng room Gourmet rare opportunity iJ you kitchen overlooks sun· have been looking for shine courtyard! Wind· somelhlne ai a r6a1lslic Real Estate IACK IAY VU SIDE ing s tairway leads l price in the Weatcllff --------- !!weeping master bdrm area. Hurry on thls one! IUMO MEW 2,000 Sq. ft. 3 Bll, bonus plu-. child's r<'treat' 646-7171 l IR·~i.tOO! rm .. fam. rm. w/ wet Char~er! 2 Bdrro, 2 llurry' S<'ller 1s anxious. ""''"'' o. "" •;101-11•"'' Jts tr\¥'! .< ~.!!~ new bw. Swtm pool, Jae., RV bnth! o common waJla! i~·u~·sr ti i ~111tn ~~~~ ~:!J· ·-~-r-~-:-.·-~-~-t-;-~-~-:-:-~_:_i_~ ~~~~~~~~13br, Jge fncd yd, close to bedrooms + 2 blatb1. OMl.Y $62,SOOI lge Jot. owner. 169.500. Find what you want In shopping. etc. $58,500. All Family~. Trialler iu:· l"resb p~~I Neat & 31138roadway. fW&.-0131 Daily Pilot Classifieds. terms. JV 831..()900 ceu. Citlfaat 1~1700. clean 3 uunn bonae oa Ol'fro11nq•4ISHPlllQ4'j '' ~ .ue.t. N•w root . . ~ .......... !~!~!':~~----·..!!!~ ~Iii ·~~H.:!:·$!.W~ cae:. ~---=-••••-fCJlf'deta1la re1ardll\ghew FHA proerarn fe>I" lower RACH Y A'-UIS "pymta during 1Rt 5 Yl'll. ' 5 Bdrm Pe .. lnaula Pt. Hurry on t his o n e! 110181 ILlllS ~D. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE FRONT ~ow IAY vaEw Stepstobeacb. $197,500. ~1 lllYTHIS! Ertjoy ocean breezes 1n thia nearly new Dana Point hilltop con dominlu.m. fl's a larac 3 bedroom, 21, bath, 2· ~tory mode l with wet bar, fireplace & 1eclnded Sparuah patio. Owner is IDOYllll & wants to seU. S88.* C:J Coldwell Bon~er 3 Jdooard't Bay Piasa Laguna Nlguet 496-7222 131..0136 IUILDRS LOOK AT THIS SlllC & 'INlf AIRCRAFT MAHUFAClURE R l A F A I R C H I L D H I l l E R B D E S A L G U 0 D L L E N " 0 D C M R • 1 s·o I L l y D p I " s " K l lVRRUIRE S UT !USJRClEOAAAEORCPEI GU~CALHHA~ICREUCUNS ClOHBVOkCQRMURSJI~H NOSASGMC8RRAT8VHK£A RIPLVRYOTRIJCMOJENI !VlOElELClSAAN"D!PR AA~ODIAKNSWRFDDKIOC 1Wll"THTCITAUAAtTlR DHIQPREO!JIONHJNQ&A JAHTHATN~OVNAIOkA"f ICARACtERIHIMNNLUCT WOODBRIDGE ESTATES JUST REDUCED RANCH ltE.AL TY 551 .2000 TOWHHOME $67,990 Comfortable 2 BR. 2 ba, 1\ beautiful J erreri.on family rm. Central air Model. Totully upgraded cond, new carpel, many and professionally extras. Park & swim· landscapt.'Cl. This most mmg pool. 551-0543 attracti ve 3 bedroom -_.:.;.~-----­ townhome has Just beC'n Pre-ListingGreentree reduced to $109,500. ror Sharp 4 br, den, 3 ba fai.t salt.> home, ram rm, form. flj WOODIRIDGE RE.ALTY 551 -3000 -- DWlFfELD CH.ARMER din, covered patios, lrg _ yrd. extensive wood paneling, beaut. c.rpt & much more. $104,900. Owner.~ . LaguM IHcll I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IESTIUY OH OCEAMFIONT with its own sandy beach in Laguna Beach. Or fered at $310,000. 131-9411 494-1035 1257 S Cst Hwy, Lag Bch BOND REALTY OHLY S97,500 Won the "Builder's de· sign award"! Profe ss ionally landscaped & pretty as 11 model. Hurry on thtS one as the seller is motivated Three Arch Bay, 3 Br 2 &we're gelling IOUl or AC· Ba, spill 2 level bome, tJon. 759.1501 lovely Jiv.1~~ room . kitchen, d1n10g, area w /nlce ocean views. Lndry rm, Jee d osets. aboul 10 yrs old. Br owner. $279,SOO. 49&-3933 A DR1nwooo JUST REDUCED This beautiful S&S home features 3 large bedr ooms, 1s fully landscaped with loads or redwood decking. gas BBQ and fountain. Pnce reduced to insure quick sale and fast escrow. flj WOODIRIDGE lPRESOOTI' Largest Woodbridge model.. 2600sq.tt.. +3 car gar. 5 or 4 br+den. 3 Ba, atrium, air cood.. fuJly lndsc. highly upgr. Mex- ican Pavers tile. Lge lot. $S,OOODOWH NEW 28r, view. $125,SOO Lse/optlco. 494-7084 An&mON! Check us for all lhe latest Laguna Beach area muluple listings. srtD~~ ~ 499-2800 W.,-0.... 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,,, GoldeeYHn 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, hilltop suite in Leisure World. Brand new wilh fantastic view oC the valley & mountains. '85.900. NORIHS REALTY *49~057* S7S,500 3 br 11'1 ba. frpl, country style kitchen, blt-ln5. paiUo, s prinklers. owner very anxious to sell. Grubbl Real~ 527.st73 Nr Park & lal<t>. $186.000. ...... ...... IOS2 Bkr/Ownr 552·4121 or ••••••••••••••••••-••• wkdays 83S-3S3S ieJd. Aspen; 3 BR. 2~ ~ ps BBQ, end of cul de aac. Open Sat, Sun. JM. By owner. ... 552.1944 red hill _ 5'i?·h0'· lo ... Se bl fo c M .. ... •. NI SI tt 14' Ill tll 8' - .. " . . .. .~. ·-····· .................. ~ .. . . . . ......_,_,. HotnetFor W. Cthtra..t•.... ott.-RMl•tcM. • ~.~~•••" ~.~~~ •• • DAILY PIL6T C7 ;:=..~·····,··a·s·~ :,._u.••···.·.:.~···.·:.·;· ·::.::;,;_·~···•••••• :::.:::·,,.··.,.···::.., .. :·,oo·· G ••• J • '!11202 • ..,...__,.... • .,..._ __ _ _.._. ----or .. --·-• • C:O...MIM l224 W....U•f•ll•cl .._...,,.., ... ,... ., hw1tar.ll1Md ............................ ~................ Fers.t. t 100 .................................................................................................... ~ .................................... . ~.,..,, s Dedra> + ....... .-.............. , ........ u.ltt c-·-"' ...... , °" Contrn1. 1425 nio. J~44 ... .,.... ..... 316t .... 3724 d ll 2 ba'"" f ~-u..... OM-.. .. •• "CH l "''lff Ha'1•n Esch .,..._ n.... ... , ... OK ft.. •••"•"••••••••• .. •••• ••••A•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • "'• am•rm, .-""r""'' nur. ,,.._,. n ~ : . Before you pay 1omt ...,., ..,.,..., "'ua · uvp A.IC, l'r•nch drs. P' t ~ice Ju1t rtduced to Sea capa lcaunset.a. a btfl w/lrplc. Owner 11 unit: a1ency for th• "RUN SlOJtt.ra. 54&-6102 MOY£ IN UAWl.I. frmt eourt)'ard, $123,900. $121,000 on this 3 bdrm. IJ famll.)' paraduie. 28r + 1600 SQ ft. Desire to trade A R O U N D • • e a I l nu 3br. 3ba, z 1tey luxury condo w/Sllp ft>r 3S' boat $50 WISC Ir UP ~ 1:'1·7098 , rac:nllr rm hbme near bonua rm ln El Mono By for boun or condo in Coolumtn Gulde. aave 3 Bt. 2 ba. lae yard, 362 n. Sbora. ~ean view, Qllt l)r. It hd pened the Sea, yoor own pvt NeYtport Beach. Good on fee time ••• 4c Hamilton. $.WS. bt, lut walk to bch. cum! iate, oak Cl.rs., 1buU.r1 & a bch. part rent OO!y $160. fmandna. no Bkn. Rep· mooey 6.u-uoo' &Ml). 13S-t305 4 br 2 ba, din rm + fam brh:k paUo. C A L L T 0 D A Y I ly Ad# 116. Dally Pilot, --;;...·------rm. Many extru . .Mm MdlHIRS COVE (PKl086) Box 1560, Coata Mese, Foe lse, beaut ocean view 3 Br, 2 ba. JUO O>llege ~ Sl UM.n 646-4463 CAI.JFORNlAPACIFlC CA~ condo, 131.h lloor, The Avf, College Parle. Close , &5,000.4~-2958 Mobile Home Realty 2·4 Ptexes $148,000 ea. Marirul Club, OceaJWde to acboola & shops. $415. Mlt.tl.VMfo. 1067 *Park Lido condo, split-2708Harbor,Ste208 OomJ)llrable uniu have Ca. Adlt.s only. $800 mo. _mo.;...;...._S.S._7_'38 ____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• level. 2br, 2 ba, fee land. 540-$937 • aold for $155,000. Ait Contact Century 21. Mis· New 3Br. 2~ba, duplex, Most sell Madrid 640• <4br, $85,000. Agt, 675-6775. ~1103 sion Realtors, 122·1901 l&e bade yard, 2 cu &ar. 2400aqft,beaut.Joca,11r HURRY!! Malile.._.Ll•lftg m4> 556·6393 ~cul-de-sac. Sl.29,900. Atth,.... Lohfor$4M 2200 HOMEFINDERS C.Uevea837-43JS SEA.VIEW We 'have numerous & A••••••••••••••••••••• TbousandaofRentals New Bedford 3Bdrm + beautiful tnobUe bomea SHIMG IS All arena all prices *-"stlc LClll.orca den, fam. rm, panoramic for sale in establlahed IBJEVI~ Sample: 3 Br, 2 ba, ram rm, up. view. Reduced for im· parks in CM, Nwpt Bcb, . f .. SBacb walk•-beach .,. 500 ow Hunt,. n gt on B ch 'nus beautiful 5000 sq. t. •• • .., graded thru-out. Deat med. sale. $238, . nr 1 T 1" • houae 00 2~ acres. Fan-su;o Bach NB Util pd view in area. Qwet cul-49'7·1SS9 Laguna, E oro, ,, tn tastic view, owner anx· $3l03brN.B. UUl pd. de-sac. $99,500. Open t O V 1 y , . An a be i m & BKR LIFETIME SERVICE house Sat/Sun 12·5. 23682 1avcrn WMt" Westminster .. ln price ious. (714 ) 6"76-5711 557-0122 Via Chmpa. By owner. Ivan Wells home, needs ranges to fit mos t 581-7137 work. Unbelievable sav-people's pocketbooks, ORS22-2.080 angs, $188,000. 4br, 3ba, $10,000 to $40,000. We are IUILDEIS , .. wport leach I 069 pool. 2450 sq ft. 548-44.13. as near as your phone ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1817 Commodore CALIFORNIA PACIFIC Have many choice lots, Sm 3 br hse. One bse off 3206 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 brDuplex. fncd yrd, gar, l250 mo. lat & last. Kids & pets OK. 548-0758 S280 Quiet. Nei&bborhood 2BR +Giant Vd, Gar. Lndry Rm Too! <S482P) S38S Tastefully Designed 2 Lg BR+Walk-in Clst.& Bullt•ins Too! (6464P) UHTIMlS IMC. 8'&(1171 131-055 LOWEST WESTCLIFF by owner. also ..._ acres & up. wattt. $550/mo yrly. 9-5. Mobile Home Realty Pnced right. Seller sub· 832-3640 Aft S & wknds 4 Br. 2 ba, an 1cbJs. New 2706"::o~le208 ordinallononsome.Lasl 499-2715 cpt'g, fenced yrd . PRICE IN NEWPORT Q.ist. blt ranch style. 4br. 2 BR. 1 BA dhl. wide 2-ltlta, din'g & fam rms mobile adult park. w/lrg pool. $189,500. $26.500. Call 675-4392. 642-9194 645-2850 HAL PINCHIH •---'·----- · ~:iculative market . ..._ P••••a 3207 "50/mo. 548-S30& ln N.8 .• Skyline, 900 sq rt. · (7l4) S71-s69l ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• 3 Br, 2 Ba, Fam Rm beaut decor, new crpts & OR S22-0S30 CUt.e 2 Bl' house, fplc, gar, w/fplc, pvt back ya.nl, drps, frp le &lndry, mir-~ard. avail lmmed .• yr-~mo. 752-0617, a1ent lncl'd. STOO mo yrJy. Studio.1 bt!droom No 11ee.d to walt. This ' -0.vidlon Rily, U.S.t$73 Maid sen-tee, pool b•droom home in 2378Newl)Ort8J.C.flf . Utllvetalty Park 11 emp-Blutfa 3 8R, 2\ll ba. hi me sc1Mnss or~ ty and rnity for you. ireenbelt! $&0 1-......:.........:~..:..:....;...;.;......;...;.~- Asld,og sns. per mootb Alen1 tu-113$ SUSCASITAS Nicely f'Urni.sbed 1 bdrm. oo OCM year lqse. UNCHRIALJY 551.JOOO Closed gar. $230. up. I t I Via Lido Mord Adul\s. no pets. 2110 DRIVE BY aod you'll NewportBJvd. see the prestlee of these t.wo nmtala: 2 bdrm, din· $195 & ~ 1 br mobile lntc room and patio home5. Mature adlts. on- '100/mo. 2 BdTm+den ly. No pets. Quiet. and patlo. SS.SO/mo. See 11eeure. 1991 Nwpt Bl. andaubmttyouroffers. &t6-U73._ ----- Wat"fi°"t Hwa R&ITAl..S C•6ll·l400 M.aclltWJl•leoch 3740 ~~~~~~~~~ ...................... . 3BR,2Ba ..•........ ~ 3 BR, 2~ be .•....••• $525 4 BR. 2\AJI ba • .. • ••. $850 4BR. a a. ........... $'145 IAYSMORIS 3 B~ 2 Ba. fplc. pvt beaches, $615 yrly • 642-3286 RENTALS GALOll $250. nlce 2 Br bu rel. Consumers Guide 645-4900 STUDIO ''Wteldy ..... , .. Jo'Ull lutcbeo & TV Llnens & Utllll.les MJLETOOC.EAN Royal Wfff Motfi 1Z1 Yorktown Blvd Beach Blvd at Yorktown 5lM41 I WATERFRONT Np\ ~IHch 1748 Shores 3 br, 2 ba, lr'esh ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTOR W. Oceanfront 4 BR. beach house. $335,000 rors. S27.900, see to ap-OFflCEILDG SITE IY. S500. CONDO preciate. P.P.645--0247 . HuntingtooBeach TSLMgmt 642.1603 3 BR2 BA, fple, carace, ft ~13C.ut"'5l>a:hWlflE W /IOAT SUP MOllLE HOME 27 000 sq ft lot near storage, masalve yard, -------- palnt, frplc, patio, etc. LAGUNA BEACH MTR Comm. pool, tent\i&, walk INN. $6$/wk & up. Maid to beach. Vrly lse. Fam. serv. eolor TV, heated $'150. mo. IW6-8653 pool. (714l 494·5294.. 98S Marshall Rlty 675-4600 Prof. decorated 3 Br lB lOxSO N M P~c1flca· Hospital 5 CaplstraROIHch 3211 nopel.8.$42S.AvaUApr1. l•-------- Townhome in waterfront 19~; Muit b~w mo~ecl Points Shop. Cntr&Civic ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-UJS, evs 642·0835; LIASE/ontOM N. Coast Hwy. CAMALFROMT project. Owner Anxious from park. Excellenl Center. $135.000. 3br, 3ba in duplex. Ocean -~--------New 3 Behm Heritage lluge4BR.,2•2 buths + Sl59.500 cond.$3500. DavidBourkeRltr view. double gurage, l>cinaPolnt 3226 Park Condominium llRS42S 2 Br. 2 ba , furn rumpus rm. + ram. rm. Waterfront Homes 645.0377 546-9950 fireplace, near i.chool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/family rm, 2\.2 ba. Top Two story t wn h s e . Redecorated. Util. incl w/pool table. Skp~ to Call6l l·l400 - -0 $350.496-8268,1·528·5101 WEHAVETWO' quality carpeting & tile featJJrina beaait. fplc, Pvtprkg.J.:aundryfacal ocean! Sl55.900 , _________ t 9 7 6 2 n R 2 b 11 MoeMtain. •Htt, • flooring. Detached 2 car pvt patio. encl gar. com· Avail. now $450 mo. yr CAYWOOD REALTY ___ ___ Goldenwi!st 24X,64. local Resort 2400 2 BR beach cottage, lrg Deluxe lrg 2 BR twnb!e gar. Never lived in. plete rec facilities AND ly. 497.3493 _ lNC. s4H-l200 NF:WPORTBAYFRONT. eel an San Juan capo. •••••••••••••••••••1••• ~ard. $375. 493·4353 or slyle.duplex. Pvt yard. Immed occupancy h d Newest terraced View Colorado River. Needles 661-1161 ~/mo. .... .... Imo was e r ' r Y e r • 1 BR apts, furn, all ulil in IYOWHER Npl lits pool home. 3 Ur, ram-rm. completely up· ~rad e d & re·mdl 'd. lmme d o ccupanc y Frpll·, ext u:.c o( toe Its around pool & frplc. Won't last $145.000. Call for appt, 645·2549 or 540-3666 agt. Fran_k. __ BYOWHER Spacio us Executive home. 5 Bdrm, 4 bath w /view •n prest1g1ous Dover Shorl'S on Galaxy Or.6462332 2Br, 2ba Condo. New _... · refrlserator. lst&last-+: cl. lndry facil, pvt c·pts. full secunly bldg. park P . P . 496-3169, Calif. PP. has. quality ~It, Coronadet Mar 3222 Wnhm Poc:Hk dep. S57·5i10 XS5 daya, park'g, avail April l , for Boat :.lip. Sll8.000 Prin 661·3991 3 Br1 1-2 Ba. 12x65 mobile ....................... Neat 2 BR duplex apt Properlin 494-0321eves/wknds perm. r""•ideots. 250Clift I 2 ---home. 12x55 cov'd Pncedri&hlS2'15/mo. I 1512 .. 93 Z260 ...., ~~nd;~eve!.3 3 -9 " 4 HUNT.IE.A.CH carport&patio,4"walls, 2 DR, 2 ba. bayfro.nt ~ 73 • ., • • LaC-talyS.0 Dr.~·3493 LIDO ISLE Open Daily 12·5 ~ViaJucar 4"-lg br. 3 ba • .hg hv cm, • 2 lot.s·tennis/bch. $249.500 Owner 675-S259 llGCANYOH TOWNHOUSE BeauWul 2 Br, Cozy Cot-6" insulation, W /D, cent. "'?me; share pier. & shp. ,_."......_ Model perfect 48r +den, LOIJMCI MICJIMf 37 52 tage for two in garden air, storage, pvt bch, Side & front patio, dbl. 496-77 It ll 1-l 136 Woodbridce new 2 Ir den, :MOO sq ft, 3 car car, $625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lake s etting 5• Adult boat dock. min to gar.$800Mo. 2 be house. Lake,CCls, mo.962-9565 Scenic views, luxury Park complete w/pool, casinos, also selling Agent6'13-5l54 ff'~-·-_.. 32 .. 0 ar"--no ts se ad -__. • P . ..,,, pe · Lr 4 br 2 ba du l•x ult apt.s, (urn & unf tennis cts, & much much 5 Ox 15 o homes it e. 2 & 1 Ba, (pie, w/yard, no •••••• •••••••••••••••• $415. mo.~ aft. 3 & C:: ~ w $SSO P'" · Near Regional Shopping moT'e.<JY122.8).$1.5,999. Transferred, pets. $375 mo. Call LOVELY 3 BR, 2 Ba wtcods. ,,.!~90n5vi~ay·a, 673.ifi~7 ~enter. Heated P?ol. CALIFORNIA PACIFIC w/sacrifice. J . Cisco, 640-4829alt6PM w/frpl, OW, crpt, kid/pet ...,...., zi N Al I Mobile Home Realty 714-9'J3.1606or1·326-3'193 OK. $405. 963""567 Agent. Woodbridge new 4 Br 3 eve , Jacuz · r. comer v jc u 2706Harbor,Ste206 CozyPoppySt .. 2Br1Ba, Nofee. Ba Fam Rm A/C nr Pkwy&Paseode a.en 540-5937 Olltofeo-ty w/fplc. grdn patio, Yrly ---------pa~k. pool. SsSO ~o. H.V. Hom.es, Carmel; 3 cia. ALICIA PLAZA fll'operly 2550 $475673-5426 a!t4PM 2br. 2ba, gar, In m1 to bch 64CHCM4 ~"2 ba. $600644.7383 & VILLAGE Greenbriar model. 2 ec..-n:i.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S39S ---------"6 story. 2 bedroom. Lt!ase Property 1600 2 BR, 1 ba. Comer Joe. TERRIFIC 3 Br 2 Ba 581-6151 581·61~ tor $725/mo. wath option ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-L .. ___ "'--~•..a.-Frplc.. patio. garage. 3br. ram rm. lrg master w/tplc, D/W, syper area. HOME, 2 lge BR. 1 :14 Brd.b2 1 Sorry, no pets. od ... unar__._~ S39S 6441220· 549 8755' t-t'K 963-4567 A ... No fee sty, 2 car d.nveway. REOUCEO to buy at t ay·s pnce' MEDICAL ILDG 2 & 3 BEDROOM · · · • bdrm, pool, $475 ~· • .... gar, 2 bl ks beach. Shut· ='lt'wport Crei.l Co nclo ONLYS147,500. <DntwnSao Clemenle) VA·FRA CostaMfto lZ24 UniversityPaik4Br.2'<'11 ters, fplc. D/W, elec Hewporthodt 3769 ll1Ghly upi:raded. hrdwd J QUA 1 L [IJ .Sale-Lease-Trade GARDENTOWNHOM E. ••••••••••-••••••••··~ !._'!;.pool. 11 mi to ocean. baths, fam rm. Newly range, W /D area. $<&50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nr~. 2 BH. 2•2 ba. den, PLAC~ iRmDentalSuitei. 2cargarages. _. decorated. SSSO /mo or mo. Avail. Mar. l . Npt B. 2 prof, men seek wrkrm & lahr:iry S111c • :PROPEl'n'u;;e 8 Rm Medical Suites hes 1·757-1623 AJ LAST 714-846·5666, Bob Graf lse/opt. 752·1239 eves 873-3909 ah SPM third to shr tux hme. lge 11("'3n\'ll'W Hetlut·cd ror :._ -752-1920 Inc. J w y----c 'UPER Bd 2 b 640-0166 pool ,._.,Im .,.,.. ........ • ~med ~Jlt• Owner . ·~L~llT·IEACM_ ay • ~> 0 s " rm. a 1 Br home. lge m ed yd, 2 . ..-0 • .,...,....,..., 498.0660 499 2237 INCOME PROPERTY A. Rtftt .. Senice w 'frplc. crpt. fed yrd. l..agaMo IHch 3248 car g\lr. $325. S l2!1,50U. ti J 2 124 2 · San Clemente 1076 ---• YoeC•Feef ~. 9634:i67 Agent, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-5722 642-t>706 _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOX213 Ft. lot on Coast Utilize your creah ve A.t "°"'9 Wittl fee. painting talents & get ---Dy Ownt>r. :1 br 21 2 ba BEACH DOU HOUSE Hwy, N.B. w/1475 sq. ft. startcdw/tbislowpriced WEGUARAHTEE while waler vie w. im· Walk to Riviera Beach. relaJI store + garage & duplex, currently rented. muc. Nwpt Crc!'t tcmtlo. On natural canyon with apt. or office + 2500 sq. Only $27,500. Call George Owner leaving stutc . ocean vaew. 3 BR, 2 BA ft. vacant pkg. area. Frey, 542-3456, Ben Sac. Pnn only. 673-5313 & with extra i,; lot. Never $195,000 Hink.le R.E . 673-3627 eves agam at only $125.000 BERTHA HENRY 'REALTORS Profess. bldg. across Red &tote FERMAHDO'S HIDEAWAY 3 Br, lbath house on qwet Penlnsulo St. Js t ume on market in 17 yr:.. J\gt. 642·3338 READY TO MOVE IN Illuffs. professionally European decorating Stunning J br, 2 ba. fa m1 ly rm, w/many extras+ vi ew . Best tiuy at '$165.000. Palnclt Tenore. Property House 552-4414 or642-3850 RAM I LI HG EXECUTIVE ESTATE Wftelan lllAl l ~TATI from N.B.P.O. 1900 Sq. W..t.d 2900 215 Del Mar 492-4121 ft. Lse S900 mo., sell ••••••••••••• •• •••••••• $125,000. Agt. 646·2414 2·3 BR. 2 ba, forced air, OceaR VW-o.lnH/ beat .. frplc. No lixer up· 2 'Br 2•, Ba lri level U... S. a 108 per. townbome. Screeened 646-8301 pauo.~y S76.SOO. ••-••••-••••••••••••• -GotfCarseYlew Nearly new spac. tnplex •-..a.. Br ,.,_ Ba A-higbl in xlnt area. fl67 500. --2 i..... • -. y 640-7114 • • •••••••••••••••••••••• upgraded home in pre-HomftFwwl.a..d stage area. Price in· lftcOft9 l'topetty 1000 ..... •••••••••••••••••• eludes washer, <dryer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.-t.a.d microwave ovn & tr~h cmptr. call now! leachC .. 5 Br 2\-a Ba. formal din- ing rm, Palos Verdes fplc, lge comer lot w /ce· ment badminton court. VIEW REALTY DUPLEX -Extra sharp 2 BR units. both w/prvl polios. Owner will help finance. 11\come $700 per month. $139,500. Cal 640.511 Z Aft. 3106 $46S View The Sunset~ 3 BR W /Beamed Ceilings Huge Game Rm! (6754PJ AOULTCOMDO 2 BR. 2 ba. yrly. S425o STEPS TO IUCH 3BR. 2ba. bay vu $1050 1BR.1 Ba .. yrly. $285 IAYFROMT 3 BR, 2 ba., yrly. SSSO associated 8R0kfAS REAL ~~;;S •vii. ...., •) ,.. " e • . .. • I I • .• I Iii " • I • ........... . .. . (ll DNLYPU.Ol Monday. F~ 27, 1178 ~Add it .•. Build lt...Olaper it ..• Hammer It ... carpet lt...Cement it ... Wlre lt...Hoe lt ... Clean IL.Move ~it...Press lt ... Palnt lt...Nalt lt ... Plastef' lt ... Flx It ... SERVICE DIR1ECTORY Plumb lt ... Palch it ... P tpe Jt ... Remode l It...' Roof It ... Landscape lt...Tlle It... Trim lt ... Sew lt ... Haul It ... Add it... Plant it... Alter It... Learn It.. . ...... c •• .,. c.p.1111.. c:-.t/C.c..... 9edric.I t4IYlng HouMc~ Mo~lltg ,~,..,.. .. , ....... , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Wihr. dt'yr, dabwshr re· t.\IJt.om. r"rnodfhn1, uni All typ~11 concrete ELECI'RICIAN·Priced OCC Student.~• T. truck. HOUSECLEANING "Two Men Will Move Paint Your Castle !Drams &r Sewer cleared paJr~. Rua. 641·5848 que Ii unusuial work block work . planter~ right free estimate on Trash, tree trim, Randy £X1>ER1ENCED You" We handle Ira Ir SpeciaUiing In resldrn· No charge over 115.SO llQYU.me welcome. ll YTI In area. custom bric It lie " large or small jobs &U·5703,9'19-8489 847·3637 sml moves·oH1ce &. tlal homes. Int. " •xt. W/C 0 . C.&f. residential ........ .,., PalomboCon.t.~-8314 bonded 842~ Uceru;ed 673-0359 Strng student, b1~ truck , lftcom.Tmt household. Distance & Pleue check our n · D.Nel!IOOSS1·3783 ••••••-•••••••••••••••lcarpel\ler looklnt for Pac·"c Coner ... -. Lo '" •~cuts, clnup. aulind local, also packing. ferencet. Lie # ...,_•11-. • . - U ---·-d wrlc deck nc &. rh ' UI ..,... '" K-Mel Electric. lnd .. u""" D ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lowest legal rate. G I d f .t -·· T -~ .__raw amiaaed your , l ov an day & full day rates. comm res &maint avs 494-7669&494-2129 l'alC preparation by Lic/lnsrd. Cal T 111-944. uar., nsr • ree ea .••••••••••••••••••••••• asphalt! Call 831·2440. spec. Clean writ, refs. Wi-32.57 -Honest & ~eliable. ·Free LOW EST RAT ES 1 N former l.R.S. agent Ph 847·7278 Ted. 636-7085 ReCria. sales & service. Beaded, Uc .. inal.lJ'ed. Eves. 675-0ll82. Bob. Coeih odor eet. 979-8MZ. $24.50 lat hr. TOWN 754·0273 ...._'--Coast Painting. Cstm ext Reliable. bonnt work. Mas~er c. rartsm .an . u•u •••••••••u••••••• ~ Bigtruck&trlr,freeest. w~·'dn' h ·-~Senict1 /int., airless apraying, cal1Emie$4J.1.Sl5 • __. s 1 It od I -~ 646-1.208 uw t you rather ave ••••••••••••••••••••••• 661~ -v-fipech,a .. y . r1emaJJ eXlning, R J Huffman" Son, Uen ••••••••••••••••••••••• acertifiedpublicaccoun· N ul t ----------1•.....a... ••••••••••••••••••••••• llWI .. yrs oc y. t 1'-'tt c .. --m All•· Add Prof J Lan .. -l t i une cona tan 30 yrs a1n --~ $1SANY rets.499-310S w• .· ...,.., .,. , apanese ""cap. tta..ect..li•i an prepare your n· Pri d ( ll Quality P Uftf. Lowest •••••• ................ . KATl'ER patios, cabinets. in&"gardenlng.Malnt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• comel4Xreturn?For an exy. v. utyw/am Y rat.es in town. Freeesf.ROOFSlnstaUed ladOI')' Eve&wknds by appt. Carpen~ Is Cabinet wrk Corrruca. ~ew const. Res incl. mowing, trtrnmmg, Wlint 8 REALLY CLEAN appt in your home call or ented care. Ca 11 Jack87S-8338/6'75-7280 direct: eltab SS yra. Call Default/Divorce $17S• Free estunatea aml jobs & comm I. 645·4644 or spraying weeding Free HOUSE? Call Gingham 968-8182 2.131881-3776 for informa-Haro&dGunoMt-2961 Collections 30%• & repairs, eva. 673-5125 548&1.Lic&bonded. estlmat~.545.7072" Girl.Freeeat&&s-5123 tion&appt. PainUng. Homes lntr & ---------Drun.ltdnvmg $300 Alvin -Landac~ '~'P -i Exterior. Specialty: RoalsForLe11.Alltypa. (uptotrial) - . ~-le Gden contractor,dnew, ad· CLEAN-UPS/HAULING HOUSECLEANING is our ........................ :::':~.!!.~ ..... Apt.s.Loratu.831·2508 Uc/bond'd. lmur. Free Unlwfldetalner-default ~~-_..... • 1l1ons, remo , res.. Prunmg-Phmling business. R eliable LANDSCAPING. estimate. 894·9"21 or s~ ooruU price ••••••••••••••••••••••• comm. Free e:.l. Spiro Free est 642.9907 Reasonable prices. PETERS PAINTING Painting. lntr/Extr. 2.Syrs 537-4133 -Simplewills $3500CarpetManwllllayyours 548-8250;547·020-I _. service. Janice's Raa· 968-8783or54751Wli Expr'd. Reas Rates. in Harbor area. St L1c1....:..;___;_ ______ _ •Courtc0&t:sextra or mane. Re pairs & --. . .• --Exp_.gardener&cleanup. gedyAnn'satS4S·l800 Free Est. Call Gene 183281,642·2356 • TimothyLasltloo,Atty. cleaning too! Guar work Oen. ~ontractor . t ounda· Trimm1na:. prunini; Have lime for yourself, Custom LaodHa pe 552-0458 Plashr/lepalr T,...5-nlce (714)636.7200/afl 7PM ul bigger i.avmgs. Free tlons., addallonsic re· Freeesl. 646-5401. Pedro call the Moppetts Clean· Services. Ken. All PROFESSIONAL ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••.•• call (213)43Hl91S es_l._64_5_364_6 modeltn~~tor Geftwd---S-erY-lc-.-,--ing Service. 546-2393 re-646·J770 Painting. Inter/Exler VERYNEATPATCH free trlmntlnc. r epair, _ rerrals ----Mosoew 'f o-o•, '"'Ork guar"•"·"""• JOBS •·TEXTURE removal, over 24 yrs. 4-a--Shampoo & s team clean. ~.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• nc:~ .. '""""""" Free-t.• ~.1 • ..., ""'mblnedex .... r919 ......... -·-.... Co . _. • ...,..... ... .-. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ----~----~ Og'1 ~ '-V r-~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lor bnghleners; wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• llANDYMAN: Carpentry, B 1 k 1 Pamuns. Extr/lntr. Ex· 1 l . A & E Systems. Auto roll cpts 1.0min bleach Clean Custom drapes. spreads, electrical. plumbing & THE SUH SH I~ E ~e~~~c!~a~~~b~ pr'd, honest, neat, reas. PATCH PLASTERING Remova s, t r m m1n,f, up awnings for the molor hv, dm rm. hall $l5. Avg shutters & all window floors. 847 ·2787 • 557-4504 GIRLS Irvine. 675-3175 eves Uc'd 964·1045 Dave A l_ l t y p e a , F r e e r~~:e~. ~1113~ d , home & travel trlr . All ~°_1 ~~~ ;t:~bpe$~OO<i';!1/ coverings at discount HANDYMAN. Home.a & Housecleaning & office --estimates. CaUSf0.6825 ~ & ali~. Im~ed. Cpt repair 15 yrs expr pnces. Shady Deal, 743 apts. Conscientious specialis ts. Spec. 00 Masonry, concrete, YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs expr home installation. Do It · 5 ll IUf · Baker St, C.M. :>49-3325 Cratuman CallMS-0302 apts. & R.E. work. Serv. Inds c p e, w a 11 s, in w!".l}~'?,v76e~i_?J· Free PLASTERING Wllldow et.ailst 11-lOAM &:>-7PM wor my e • s · 7 days wk. Bonded, in· w a I kw a y s, patios esl.s. ~ n..nuy Homes, additions, re-••••••••••••••••••••••• (.213)"""'·""""' 531-0101 . ""-....11...2 --' ~ _.__ d 5 o 9 .u .. ...,..., t cco f ee ests l ..,,,., ~u ..........-...-...., __..., s u r e . 4 • 5 2 5 ~....,..., f\ne Exw. Paintina by a u • r • ow Windows cleaned, re· •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Canyti· me) • rates 586-4892 bl b I Cal plfttet Cateriftc) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~~ Mov'--R. Sinor. St. Uc .• iru;. Try · asona e, us ne11es, ELECTRJCAL SE!?VICE SKIPLOADER. Dump ~ me o.,,, <ccc<24h PludMcJ bo ...... •-apt.s .... 7"'"61 C LLS h •· 'M LL ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ...,.,........, rs. ...,_..,. .... A $15 r, <>< S A truck. HAULING, tree Silver Hammer Framing BAKERY. Do you have Co. Com. Res. Room any. problems wllh your adds. SSl-4820 baking goods? We sllll -----have t'apac1ly to pro\'lde Have ~omelhmg to i.cll'? your needs. We offer Classir1ed ads do u well. qual & scrv 549-4995 JOBS842-8233 work, grading, demo etc Carpet Cleaning STEAM MOVlNG, HAUl,ING & Pror paint •g & paper ••••••••••••••:•••••••• 8311257 orSHAMPOO. Al!!ofloor CLEANUP S. Heai.on. hanging. work ltUJr. HOMESAVERs. Plumb· tWtbard EMctric -------& window t"are 971-1154 Free e.l. Coll. i.ludents 1''ree <:i. l. 536 4; 80, mg & Heating. Free esl. Lie 3271~ 645 69i.i Dutch Mamtcnanrc 8& B. 673·1 tli6 536.u&'.I $10 hr. Honei.l & reliablc ----SELL idle items 1o1 1lh a ------------sen·1ce. BofA. M1C OK. Want 1_d Help".' 642 5678 DBJJy Pilot Classified Ad. Classified Acb IH2-S678 Want Ads Call 642 5678 Sell idle items 642 5678 751·3~org.&7-0383 People who need People That's what the DAILY PILOT SERVlCE DIRECTORY is all about! Apcir't1M11h u.fwtt. A.partrM11ts u..tarn. Apartntetth Unfww. ApcrrtM.nts Unfwn. Aport1Hnts Unfum. / Offic.e R...tal 4400 ....._ Lost&Found 53061Ei-111_:iDl·~.,,_tlf & • ............................................. 4 ................................................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opportunity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. • -r--· - Corona def Mar 3822 CostaM.sa 3824 CostaM.sa 3824 HimtiftclCNtl.ach 3840 Sc.Ci.n.nte 3876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost Fem Blk \'orkie, blk !.•••••••••••••• .. •••• ... ·~···~··~···~···~··•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE EFFICIEl-IT w bm. ans lo .. Missy0 • l.Jabs Wmted. 7075 -- -Nice 2 br w /garage. l $345. 2 Bdrm. 2 lJa, ram-ALTER.NATIVE LowDown/Tenns Vic Finley/36l h, NB.······················· PRIME LOCATION 2 Br deluxe stuc1lo, ulil pd. cltild ok, no pel.6. SJOO. 376 Muriner's Cove rm, liv·rm, din·rm. frplc, Mo. to mo. rent incl: Plant:.. gifts. lnler1orlf. Heward 6 7 !I· 9 74 2 ; Bltns, crpts. pool. $275. E. l6thSl. 2 br 2 ba. dbl gar, pool. innewduplex 661·0936 R good local., xlnl lslr', ,_67_5_-4_92_1_. ______ BABYSl'M'I NG -M y 2 Bedroom. 2 Bath. 1978 Maple. 548-6118, -jacuui & secur. $395. · e c e Pl · s er v · ' ~orS59·7165 home. Rea.sooable, relia· fireplace. $.t2!1 mo eves645·5647 2Br. iiarage. frplc. dis· 1 ~1094 Scmta Ana 3880 pel"llOfla.hted phone l'O\"· ---------Found : Female Germ. ble. any boun or age. 67S.2311 days. A~ent. no ------hwasher. balcony, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• erage, conf. rm. mail Laundromat : Co~t a Shep· }oung. gor1eous. Call Julie,5'8-7144 ree. WESlWAY TRIPLEXES peL'I $295. &t2·1906 ~cur new 2 br, 2 ba. encl. 2 Br studio nr Npl Fwy. M'n • undeq:round prkg Me5a 27\V, MD. Gross Vic Los Alamitos Area.1..:.::..:.:...:..::=..:.::...:..;..:.._.:.._ __ _ ~ ~ ~ COSTA M.,.:SA -----c• t d It A ,,, dlt s ·>95 /m &morcmNewport SIS''" "24,000. T"rm• 431·3476,430·2894 Full charge bookkee ...... ~~ ' ,.. .. • • . garage ,u1e a u s ..... a 'I -o.. THE EXEC~rlVE vv • ~ ~ ,..... --NEW3 BDRM FAMILY F:ASfSIOI-: near nt'w 2 S310 979·2228; 546·9261 ~·l_l29or494 6310 SUITE."·' u70 673 57.u --.-. . w/4 yrs. current public Ulx 3 Br. 2'2 bath. frplc. /\P'fS" Fl'OM $395. litl l Ha . !pie. enrl ~ar. -- ---.,.. ..,.. -LOST. Blk & Tan Mini· acct'g, wants sm. acct.s. ' I At """S T ..:.. 3890 ----Rl\'L'.0 ""1DE.c,~. D_aschund, '"·mule, vrc to work on at hme. j?ar a.it·. l:iundry. Nr Private buck yards . ava1 "ar. J _...... per Br;;ncl IH'W l br. llH USnn .,.,, q rt d lux rr1••0 \V .,_,..,, '\ I h 3 .,... ('"·· l 6 I 1181 L d k d R ••••••••••••••••••••••• """"'' · e co "~ . High \Olum-rarp-t •-NwnlH"t:,64ti5800 M I M t 1eac 67 11,, _ garages. 2 t'hildren ok. mo , ... nr ag 1. a n mar con o c c t9th St. C M s150 mo. "' ~ "' .::..!:..._.. _ _ _ ar ene on gomery n.o peli.. Near South 2 or 2 H1. ('pt. dr ...... o,·1r. fal·il &. ,.,CL' guJrdl'CI .! Br.:! ba lrplc 1o1o1>.h1.·r & ·1om S40 2200 rum l'leaninl! i.hop. Bid~ Found· l-'1lm an envelope 9621~ Corona tll'I Mar n •nl.il n ~ ,. · " \dll ... -....... mo 5"'' 4'1"' _._ "'"> d " lhlng quarter~ ab1) ----------Coasl Plaz;i Hen Lal of-w o hkup p •lio no pAl• ' " ,,.,, ·• ..., · .,.. UJ ;-er .......,. mo + ep t bu.. •top Bui.hard ~peL·1ali.,l Apt'houses. u .-·' 5'52o.t30 rt 6 a' Jil t9M ·5280 u r J d. • • / Ltvc·m child care. xlnl $Wllup <:all Carol al rice open Wed lhru Sun 2 k1cb $310 hit II, Dl'l Charmini: :! Bdrm. frpk. -a pm AIRPORT OFFICES 11...., 1931 .\dam~ 9bll 9576 cook. European, non· 12-4 820 l.lakt'r St l blk l & :? room su11t•l!., all ""' Uo~d Heally 675·~ · · Mar 645·9455 palao. ~ar. Pel & child Apa; t nts Funti.tted ------Personals 5350 s mok<>r, non-drinker. ---_ w or Bristol. 557-5215. -OK. S295 IS4l:l·91!15 or u.;f;ftished 3900 ~~;~c~~4~~~a...~S1.·~· Womeni. Spemlty Shop ....................... 498-1343 Bathelor apt, nice ocean New 2 Br. OiW. encl gar. DanaPoint 3826 -••••••••••••••••••••••• Bncttol. Suite 200. :-.! 8 Wei.lcl1rr area, xlnt Drmkmgproblem'! --------- \'ll'W. no children or l)<'ts $270. \\I Mar l 2025 ••••••••••••••••• •••••• 2 Rr I'~ Ra, fkplc,ne~. <'pht" THE EXCITI !':G E6U1bW.h1.-d 17 yri., call Call Akohol Helpline Recently rrtired excec & •250 mo Ut1l f 1rn & drJ)h. G bl s II) ~JC 17141~7·7010 54813!18.ifl6 ·JOP~t "''h d 0'>CJ83() wtre awaiting arnval or ~ · Charle Apt B 5411 5763 Du p I ex. s pH ta ~ u I a r ~-l I II. ~·3835 PALM MESA. A.PTS. --------"'" rs a ay <h"'7' grandch1ld look inc for ti75-248S ---1x:can"1ew Newtt>IU ,,11 -MINUTESTONPT IUlsqft.Sofcsonamonth )J eal ~tarket, full y hse s1lt1ng. beginning $350. Watch lhe Boah • 2 br. New crpL'I & floors. fl 2 hr. 2' 2 ba. $-ISO mo. 2 Br. 2 ha. encl. j!ara.:<'. BCH to month for no longer equ1p'd, beer & wine. •MICHELLE'S• Apr 1.1~-0888 lBROnThe Harbor dsbw!!';; K1~5~1 N° 759m06 :Hi02 Hrookhurst. SJ:.!5 Bach.1&2BR. t.han5monlhs 2l3·96-t·7111&965·2914 OutullMassage l De 0 • (6753P l pets._.,,.,, mo. -· -mo 962 0778 from $220. & up. 586·0070 --10AM·2AM 731-4462 ,we. c r . -----2 .HH . lgc. modern apt.--·----Adults.No Pets lnveshmtlt A.dulls. no pets . 2 br, Btltrsi bar. blln5. encl. $2.35 WalkToP1er' lS61MesaDr. No l'o:<la Mesa, 5 rm 803 n..--..-ity 5015 Spiritual ~odft- 1815 So. El Cammo Real $350 Minutes To Beat'h jaclllli & pool "3 r. w 5 b r / d r )'er ~la:.tcr Suite l BR• ~q ft S32 l mo. All -rrrr •-w 2 BR W/Enc Ga aa " 15 Blks East or !'ewporl I n k •••••••••••••• ••••••••• . r .,e 645·2498 Children OK . $300 Enc Garai;e! .AS!l-jiPl groum oor. front pr g. ~en I.iv Rm! (752SP) -Bl\d l A C prof bid&. etc .. ~ .. Es l ..... C. $-lSO New 3 br. 2 ba. t:. ~18eve ~9860 _..,... ,.,.. " -s:m View Catalina' -----~ 220I> <898-0771 AJl-4555 side, delu'<e • encl. gar· 2 Br 1 Ba, ref rag. "love, no 2 BR + Ilea led Pool' • "'RGE 2 IR frplc. yard. d1.1ldrcn pell. $275 mo nd k . p ~ Of'r1ce Space a' ail. pvt en· l BR, 2'') ba. View or TSLMgmt 642-1603 714 833.oiiz1 7"14.tH() 076.'l Su R~IMES .~~I l FROM $235 MO lr). 2 i.u1L<•s. reas. 1827 Investo r desi r e d to SanClemente. Fullyhc. part1c1pale tn e'Cc1ting __ F_o_r appt. 49'l·7296 Waterfront R.E. Project RELAXING MASSAGE 100'"'0 return on capital Bob James-Lie Masseur w 111 6 mo. Several fringe Outcall 9·9. 494·!11 l l ocean! 2 Blks. to beach 3 B 2 li l Q t t·ollei:t ' Qwet bldg w1~aut1rul We~ l cl 1 ff Ur N 8 . SSSOMo Ajrt. r a ap. uie area. -1198-0TII 631-tSSS Jndscp&. CO\ 'rl garagel\. 1>31-o!IOO MASSAGi Chuck Jloyler 675 3331 bltns, <'pL.;, drps, no pets Surf . whtwater vu. 2 BR adulb, oo pcb Ideal for -- benef1h ' SI0.000 req. Im· med. 67a.13J~ a.m. Pnn c1pals only• 7IOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• l4CCOUHT /111'1 CPA ore. N.h. Ex~ thru financial stmt.s, ~ qrtrl'y PR retms, Type' 50wpm. gd p h volce1 Perm pos. & plsn 'l sur- round 'gs. Frin1e bftle. Appl Sat incld. frD.'1480. --'3255574238 2ba.S3SOmo /\\Jalnnw 1_:......... adults 35 or older OHirespacesa,Jil.lo&hr RGUREMODELS .2 BR. 1•, blks to ocean. , ---~19219 s,101919 ··-3844 LEEWARD APTS. 2020 \\1th comm art15tgroup. PUTYOURMOMET ESCORTS ul11il1l'S furn, $360 m o ~~~~1dge a:" ~o b~~g~1~~ . -·-._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-ullerton ,\\ c, I blk t: or 0 v l' n t S' mi P r a ~ . WHERE YOUR OUTC "'LL O ..... LY AcctngTEM,O• "'IBYkkpng Adlls. 2500 Seaview. see . · · Lri:t 2 ba 2 ba. rt>rng, Sublel a beaut1rul Wood Newport 1,,.1 •• 1 blk s or 585 SI~. Sk)'par~ Cir. OUTH S "" " """ aptl!J,675·2"186 children.$320 64!1·7522 patlo.supert'ln.SJ2Smo bndge Pm<' 2 br. 2 ba 88,. 631 ,. ... 17 In-. \ery nice \lo'ilh ex-M I 611-3811 R isle Tod •-rk ~ ...... c L ""' Th ru percent a ~e 1 __________ 1 eg r ay "'wo r~ta .... _.0 3824 f.O''RSF'.""<)NSAPTS ...,....2 opper antern apt unl1l 7•15178 for on --·---tra.s 549·403S ~· . "-•-~ ~ .... ,..,.., R .. 000 owner&h1p. in me.it pro· 0 "''CE OF FUN on vanous accounuug .. ••••••••••• •••••••••••• Spacious 2 br lwnhse. l ', O""Tler 9fi0.5742 I Y S 35 o I mo 1'1 an Y ooms .. --~, bookke pin a aas go b I ' t --amen1l1es incl lllke. ••••••••••••••••••••••• U e I u x e or r I ces & ces.smg plJnt, enabhn~ Btfl nude girls dance & e k& 1 l . Adult 2 bedroom. supt•r ~·1 P0~ • P'•J," 10 NEW1&2Brapt11 Pools. pooli<.boatmg&rPi:. a(· H k h tl WJrehouse s pace . to purchase directly rap &usion. t OA M to ments. Wor cose to location . No pets /\ ull> '~P<'li.. 5·735 Jat'u1z1. ot'ean \lt'WS t l \di! 1 ()(>mw itc enc e 1-4003100 sq. rt Full fromrarmer 644--0687 JA~I Mon·Sat, 12PM to your home. Fleure S22S / m on l h. 568 W .Joann St. 646 &~3 From $275/mo. Ad Its on· pe1vti/es5._<1' 1 l8s3 of~\.~: .• n? $.'J() WCl'k ~up se<'Urt ty. 642 '1463 or ----Clerks to Sr. Accoun· " " -~., "' 5411975~ MoMyto Loan 5025 8PM Sun. 62S N. Euclid, lanls needed tbruout Wilson. inq~.!:_e apl.:.E ._ 2 brm. carpeted, wooden _ly. No pets. 661·367!1 wlmds 833-4629 Dayi. ·· · &U 7~--------••••••••••••••••••••••• Anah 559-6150 Orange Co. LAM4MCHA.A.PTS ~~t~~ncc~~n~~ts'~~ HuRtillgtOftleoch 3140 l.acJIMaB.ach 3848 ~~!~~d7~r1 :~~~/~~~~ EXPA.HDIMG78? ht,hdlr3rdT.D.'s FREESl::SSIONW/AD_ RobertHalf's l.arge 2&3 bedroom children . $260 &tS·l751 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrallylocall'<l.235 room:. F\illy serv. ofc s pace LOA:-.iSAVAlLABLI:: *SANDY'S* Accounlemps J;?arden apt~. Ds hwhr, aftcr2_ · · Sll\RP. beach. 2, 3 R~. l BR. Nice. Close m. SJOO MANY \4 llh ktlt'hen. ~tart.-. al 64• sq ft in the Cred1tnoproblem 5005.Maln,St.eSOl blt.ns. l'.'ncl. gar, gas bbq. rrpl, dshwshr. ~aragc. w oul gara~e Adlts. no phone & T\' Swimming d}nam1c N B. ;airport Broker, 752·5903 Oulcull Massage No. Tower, Union Bank Pool Gas pd. mScoll Pl. 2&3 Br $260 & $300. Fam•· _pauos. 96Q...2.3S8. _ pets. R~rs. 494...5380 pool. Jacu,11, and rec. bu." area. Spoct! 3vaaL ---973_.0329 lnTheCityofOra.n.ge 6"12·50'73 ly complex. no pets. an"'uD HEW room. Daily & weekly 800-lti.OOOsq rt & wareltl>e Money Available. many •SHERI LEE• 714/835-4100 2200.221-1 Colll'ge Ave. """" 2 Br, 1 ba. frplc. sundeck, rat-t~rt n, r m •• 8 a !IP :ior sq ft. Prop. Mgr sources, all proJecu. CertJCi'ed ... a ... • euse c M. 542.9750 Mgr. 3 Br apt/condos, con\ e· vu, M.'50 mo. yrly. Open ~ .. 5 " 1 i; ro ... Judy Clark. 833·8813 or SSOK min. 752-60.S2 "' .,.., Woodland Village ---naent loc. 5 uruts avl. ~()() Sal/Sun.~; So. Csl Hwy. week. 645-4840 stop by Commerce Park. --------House Calls. By appt. A.CCOUMTIMG cu ~Paulanno 2 br, newly decor., pa\10, up 064 1507,640-1751 497.2004 ------• <&lOOBi~h. MONEY 838-6838 Bish op Graphics ia Beautiful new adult ear, no pets. $265. Vocotioft Retdalt 4250 Low rates fast approval. FOXY I •DY Irvine bu i~ • .,.,_. apts. Gre~t loc~tioo. 2 546·9950orS46·6418 Ll\'E !llearThe Beach! ~ leodl 3t6' ....................... Dependable, honest I.A Ing for sharp pen;oo who Is 2 j · CcnodelSol ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCAi-..A.rea service. 2nd's, 3rd's, sw. OutcaftMaas-has exper. preparin g fllOO, .acuzlls.. Sl70.2br,refrig,C&D,pvt Beau11·rulAdullApls •"'RK ..... E'6180RT HAWAII .,..... nna"Bob -...-It I . Move1nlmmed1at.ely . A 11 ..-"" ,.. .. "'... 38drml!l-thewaler nr on MacArth ur Blvd. lnf(S,968·""°" . 731-3561 paper wor or comr patio. t ts, no pets c115 & Wat.er Paid. '"' ill b dlf; .8achelorS225-S24S 731·B W.18lh673·7787 21661 Brookhunt. llB ~~!,~:~~ow!i~~e! _!_lono. ~da~. 770·2654 =s:ql~~.1~~~~~ti~~a1~: MoMyW..ted 5030 PREGNANT~ C · ~~~~t. %1c!; by -62 665..., BIG BE RCABIN ••••••••••••••••••••••• . aring, •~-h, ''""'"" .... u .... m. 1 Bdrm $2.6S·S27S 2 Br w /gar . adlts, cpts. ~ • ~ From $279.50 A pro vements, Bro ker. confidenl.lol counsehng & """" ..,.,,... ...... ~ -r 2 Bdrm $295-$325 drps. Tange. fncd yd --Spectacular spa, total 2 Br. fplc. sips 8. Tl4·~·1i01 10'"'? return. secur~ ~Y referral. Abortion, adop-Heavy emphasis oo de. Rental omce ~:::,~<;; ~~·. ::g·:;:: 2~~~,1~~::~c~emn:. ~~j:~~~J:.r10~~:',; .. ~eekalsotor wSkharnd.:54:343010 ~~:i~1 ~icp~~:e":1'1~~: ~~~~pmg. 547·2563 ~~r~c~~~~:~:r~ol~~~ 0 D jl 9 ., S A $2 846-6907 •--:· cou--/\t Fashion """" • .. Sl,200,000 interim loon eluding dental & beallb pen a Y .., anta Ana ve, 70. -............ ,..,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-1-ss R__.._. .. 450 TSL M t .,.,., • 20 5 Island Jamboree & San -..,..._ .. req'd , all due in 2 yrs ESCORT SERVJCR Insur., 2 wk.s paJd vac pet' anageme.n .,:,.,....i lo · Deluxe poolside xlra lge · BESELECTIVE •••••••••••-•••••••••• 559-4693 631·5080 yr., Sat commensurate 7S4..()(lllor642·l603 2 e ·r, 2 ba near school •. 2hr. 2ba. bltns. dshwhr. Joaquin HJlts Road <.iain a reliable .. oe.uxE OFC'S "' dJ (71 .. , , .... 1900 ... ..., 'Ind-· T--t -Also Hiring w/exper. We are tn-.,llaVI .. &..A.a eho""'. ~s. mo Nr. beach.. fll, ts, no pets. .. ...... roommate. I ,,,_....,-r:-7_.. • ... p 1 _,.... .. ,.... .... .,....... c.,., .,...,., Con!. rm., sei&t ~. a I ""~ 5035 terv1ewing now. lease 2078Thurln 998·0659 ...,.,................. Dlx 3br 2ba lower dplx 1 Call Share A Hom e 'Apt paneled, sm. wlule in re· ,.,..... Phy1icat Massage By caU Susie Auld for an I b 64S-746Sor&&45658 2 1 k •••••••••••••••••••••••Therapist. Appointment a ....... (71.,..,.,,__, .. tJrand new, afle 2• 'f, Id 1 r d 1 Cla&e to beach. 3 br, 3 ba, hilt to bch. No pets. $450. · ar l or yr ease. La e ,,.~ .. "'""°""""" l"" ba townhouse w/lam ~ .dor2 B~Y t t eepe~, frplc, encl. gar. Fn cd lse. 979-04.93 NEED A ROOMMATE? Foresl area . Ken l LOWEST ~~~~-Steve, 548·2817 !Ambitious Couple Wanted room. Xlnt area. $350. tsi e j a, poo • patio dshwbr $415 21702 Call The Profeaatooals Harkins. 1.'SL Mgmt 642·1603 no pets. Ch fdren ok. erookhunt 982.0778 Lwcury adult 2 br. Steps to you've seen•-hear or! 714-581·9393 lnhnst Ratet Need a rna.lli'ng address?. to manage a smaill ll ~· ------------• $27S.S48-0016 · bch, ocean view. $425 "' 1 tT D • al ness p /t.ime. W not uu E/Side, tight, airy 3 Br, 2, .. 1 Bdrm / t' " 1 "2 Br aplll newly re-'Ip . 5515 River Ave Radlo·TV lndustrfal lllfttal 4500 I • ·I, 10 A confidential phone terfere w/your J>raen~ Ba, blt.m in triplex. $360 ..... deck ..,...,1w ne~ cpil 3&11 decorated. 2"" biles lo 6'2-2566 Time Maaa.tlne·Press ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd T.D. Loon•. menage service? Call JOI>. Musl be wU.lin& to .No .pets. 552·4201 or ~mo. va · beach, elec & wtr pd. n....---. 1 b 1 ~t-02.AnsUHuMrrm Shr semi & p vt. ore FairestTennssincel940 Gail551·5669;83f·9236 lea.m.Mr.Hall,M2·1634. 551-1241 81n-3l73 """~view. year Y. 2 r, spaces. S 8 5 · $1ti0. Sotffet> MhJ. Co. STUNNING •0 1 B ba d uplex. $4SO. mo. ~cessrultySincel971 Skypa r k Cir, Irv . 6_.~2171 545•0611 Wanted: Attractive girl Alarm Company nds MESA PINES De r Cond 2 BR 1 ~ b I 1 644-6780or642 3639 832-<tt34 .. &," w/a lot of free time to service person. T op garden apt pool rec o. • 9• rp c, · S49-403S travel, snow & waler ski. wages & good worldng 1 Br S2 8 5 • S 0 me area ms 710 W lsibSt newly dccor'd. Nrsltops WATlltFllOHT Roommate to 1hare 2Br.•--,-U-l_LD_T_O_S_U_IT __ Retired couple has money etc. Reply to Classilled cond. Ask for Ftorence. w/garages. Poo l , · · · • $350mo.~l242 UDOlSLI 2ba Park Newport. All tolend.lst&2ndTD's Ad 11 180. Daily Pilot. 228 Forest Ave. La1. "iacuui. Adults. no pet.a. 1 Br, stove" r~rrta, cpts, 1 br l ba'\lpper unit. blt·ln amenlUes. 75&-0CM4, dys 5,000·20,000 Sq. ft. Agent, l-837·3H4 P 0 Bo 1560 C t Bch Open d aily. 2650 Harl• drpe, paUo. $225. Adil.II , stove & dishwasher, ~Aaent 979-2500 WPIESacenLEti!',ANVe.TCA.~LO'«-t·1J;;;;~;;.,.,;; .... ;;;."1'--Mes~ eatir 92627 OS 8 __ . ______ _ ·Ave. C.M. (Mesa Verde no pets. MZ·l&IM t d .. a J ·II ' . IA P A R T M E N T Dr E. ofl Harbor Blvd). crpt.s & drapes, patio, 1 3 Br. 2 ba, 11~loc,bcech "y' 2 C..:£1 CO. 'enoaai•/ Tall handsome pro· MANAGER -Retired C:OU· "'"2447 '2 Br, 2 ba , all bltns, frplc, car gar. S275 + Sl!JO sec. car gar, wa" · r-"'--__,, 4350 REALTORS ••4.4910 1 ~ta ll!-,,;-...a ,,_. 1 .. ·--Submit ldda & .,_-....., "" _. .._... aperous prof. m an seeks pie to manage Costa encl.gara1e,,,aUo,lndry dsp.963-112U Y · ..,.,.,. • ... dt••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• YoUngbea11tiful girlfora Mesa 10 unit bulldlnt Largo 3 Br Townhouse rm,$325. peta.675-6670;631.SSSO SIN G • """9t"-•fft/ ...... cttMtlh 5100 11 l wtlb "Patio, garaa• + TSL Ml t M2-l803 2 br 2 ba, lower unit, bit In LE GARA E FOR R , ... bu.sil\e3S tc pleasure trip near a conven eoces. 1 Q l t 1 m swve/disbwasber, crpta2Br.2ba,gar,poo14u pa . R.ENTS2$mo.,6mo.in ~ ....................... to the worlds mos t No children. no pets. ~~Its, :oepe~:.mfsT~: NEWLYDECORATED &drapes, encl. paUo. 1 AllvUlpd. Nochldmor adv.546-4253 •••••••••••••••••••••••Grand Opening or T he beautiful lt'op ical Pleasecall&4&-44'n. ~33ll orS7~5Mg 2br, new crpt, wtr pd, car pr. $350 mo+ USO p et1. $445/mo. C a ll ....... Sliver Touch. H and paradlte. AU expenses ._ .. ,, • $2SO. 2192.s Placenlla. secur.•32ll 6'1Nl!IS1;S'75-572&. S3Smo.Stora1e onl.Y,ln· Oppu....., IOOl Crafted Jewelry & paid. Pleue r eply 1m.rnled10fflce toN.8, lrmldMew .. sw.; Ca ll btwn l ·S M ·F b udl d .,_ l B fAreA A32S_J.,: 11A7thMP). ofr •o••H•H••••••••••••• Macra m e. Opening med.lnclud.pbone#Box needsblueprintpet11QO &-Del 2bl' 2baloft ar 2 • 63Ml20 3 brm 2~ a at o. en, Spaolout Uw.v lee 3 r 2 o. . ve, ... 1 SAN CLEMENTE March lit. 1154 S. Coast 11134 Dally Pllot P.O. Box olfice me&941D&er. Good' ux~ \ frp l, wei-bar , blUna, Ba, A .. vfront. Pvt beach --0 G · •· P-" ., .. _ u-. ' ..... -.Beach 1560 Costa Mesa, CA transp. aaenUal. CaU den ~~t· evel. Frplc, 2 br 2 ba townhouse nr . carpeta & drapes, paUo, tmn11"'":"• yadll clu.b. fJSO vn.-1..tal 44 0 roomiJll • -._...p. .....,,,,, .._.... Ql:2S 631-1100. - akyli •-deck. eov .. try Fairview &t Bak.et'.' No stove/dishwasher. 1 car yriy&M.675-7687 •• .. ••••••••••n••••••• Retirh>f a fter 1 1ood SCRAU•IEJS seWfti. No ~ or pets 545-1.1182. aar. MSG mo. SI.SO aecu.r. IXIC. sums years, loe louUoo " nn. '*" 180 E. 21st. $45-9$4.3 . 11163-3211 Nr beach 3 Br 2 Ba lower. Delu:.to private office. d~aiifl·~RY 1.wwERS ewa,....aradan Almost n~ 2 br, 2 ba , tplc~,drp1~1ar.1rty 1 unny, •Ir cond ., REALTORS Aft'1 MIW a.SIDI twnbse W/er>.cl. gar . ms. .-&I-... cua..--lie. . ~ ~al.l.sed pbo-ne COY• 211 Ofl Mar '91i-412.l unJ ... -Lo.lc- .,. 2he Townhoust Up MS-Sl.218:83'7·580S A·.....id~o .. 1 .. ~~-of $650VoUeyba11AnJOQlf •rat e , Hcrctar l1l Probe-Parote- Bl/say male under 21 pref. Discreet, since.re friends. Poealble abare home, John 538-2282 OUTCAll MASS>.GI •731-0931• gjad;d L~patlo. _,,.,.._tralAl ,. __ .. ,...,. WJ ...... -~ IBROoS.ndl MrVlce available. Eat)' TRAVILA88'CY BlLIS • • _ _.. r"""". llv11\I· VitJt lhe Hullt· a.. (• ...... P) (f'Yf1 acceu • Baker ..... _ .. .,..,doc:to lso er ldi'tn ~. m '375. 2BR+2BRTownhoun inct«1Tenac.fora tout ~To..-m .,..,. &t C M 0 Nr O C FIAMCHtSI uu°""..., r v • MS·i50 HW, I U4!U Patlo+Oaraae (MSSP> ollhe oewestrctJrem ent l330Watd\TbeWav• AliPort:i79.21e1 ' · • si.rt y~ own Travel ~~~~ ::!'~c:nJ lirDolorea McKee1an ~ -•·'" 1 --YouA•ltForltl facility ln Huntln1ton t BRW/Walk·iftCloe!tt+ • --low•--Nflwork alt'ncJ. S. • b .. ent metwoBIU.S. liter will not be ----------1. _,.,, 0 Beach. ---..... .... part of t be e_rowla1 rwpcxlSible for any bll!t LACASAAAMCA'·. fZ1o. ~Wdw. 1•!.BR1 +<? .. f!tP> (714)848-8111 1, .eea:~~H 1~P) oro 111&c• lo Ne'WPQrt· travel ln®IU'7.IJWtup, Ylf•.._.. 1300 ch a rted by J ack A • ... • --.:.i...;.a ...a..;;,;... ' _.me r u -' II .wn .. -. ""-Alrpwt Area. ReeepUon, ualn ln1. tecbatcel • ....................... Mllltr. --·• .._.,.,, llMTIMIS IMC. V•unt 2 •t~. 1~ ba, 111&0T11 m ..m .-. "" coate~ merchaftdl•lnJ tupport LoKor FOWMI a r:tf C.ll ---s.ntc-----AU uu .. pd/ c~. dJPi, -.cm1 831-'W Newl1. d~:..!_ec1 ,,.. •• --.....a·,--~~d.-•176 nn,kttdl,aecy1en die· provldied. Total lnvtlt> Aoltul Au 1t uu P.u•• nS360 pool. lndlT .cs AdDlt.a "5C> Ph$Sl-.J _, ----"' ~ &.u • bin me\ltaS30.000.Tete.lfr. IMP53'7..m3.nofce. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••r H, oo , .... ar Vl SW OF OCRAN • -: • •••••••• ••••••••••••• Ill ~y ~c • e. Bu, 114.Ja .traQ _ ~ ~· GOLi'. Ttachlnti PfG, 4 c lllldrea. c a I S ue: CITY, 2 br. a tNI, (rplc, aer, Ut.a, end tara.ce, I U. 1118 dtirll • Yinr. • ,rn.aao. < tOTSM t 10 LilST: 1110111. DoMrman lt:llOOl ln the privacy of sa1.n11 or Henrt i b .. m C't ll, ,uua d, cpta. drp1, •• u o. Walk to bbtb, encl car, omc.e•~~. 231> le. t1th, Mallet, Oet anlront N~. ftm, a mo, btWo Ma ln It yOUr badr;)'&l'd, tlltft to MU.lJ'7 1• ~-prqe. '315 ~ • Cl•lt•abr, •aoo roo. rncd )'an!. QS. ~ll 1 ,CJ1, •UJO or Mt47A Owner-w/htlpl\ul\te. LU• St, II o. Ndt GJICS. drlvln1 ran10 • 1011 m.mt .· , .a.i.. 1 •ev.. _ "' .-.. __ . "" ~ • ~ ~-"" .. , MZ-ftll attn.•Z714 C10trM.S&l.a&4idy•/eva ' ~I l : . i ii • ' ..? 1 \ • - '6S t.ol up $11 ~ loc ( ••• Seti bel for Cl• Nil .. .... -'Net SaJ mt ___, 14'1 $ !· I :~ -~ .,._ .. , .......... "' «t::!::C:::!:::C:r.:¥ -11 .... ________________ ....... _ ~---- ~'!.~ ..... ?~!0 ~~~ ••••• ?~.~! ~~~ ..... ?1~~ ~~~ ..... ?~!! ~~~ ..... !~.~~ I . ~ . AT1'1'ACT1V£ 1irl lo .... ..,.., ... ,G eAMVAS --1c .. •.. HtlpW.ted 7too~W-•.ct 7100HefpW..t9cf 7100 HeipW•hd 7100 Monaay. Ftbruaty V. 1978 OM.Y PILOT 28 •••MEE rM~ c~ ~~e1~i~· ore Dnl"LUiTaua SIAMSTllSS ""'"'nl OIUQ-% ••••••••••••••••••••··· ······•············•··· ;:~;:1;;··!'••••••••• ••6&N8Ri.'Loinc•E••• UlN A J)errnanent part tiftle 'l'op pay, top worklna CASHIER muat en!OY phone con· attruBlfRS Auto Mechanic. own tool.I. po:1ltlon lt currently c:ond. Stralaht Ano O INSPECTORS t a ct • w or Id o a ~ '12 N · Cout Hwy. 1i1vailable ln our Laguna Marine.548·1486 w/c111to1nert i. de&all • mRDED LaaWla Beach. ~-7~. Hills office for • Tellet FREE Ex periet1ced for outstanding specialt \' TECHNICIANS work. Paid vacation. ~ DOIEOJATELY Atn'OMOTIVK witbpreviouaretaihale11 Carwaab.f/tovet'llapp· store in Fashion Island . Newport Beacti. slclcpay,protltsharl.nt& TOP ,.AY!I! HOW HIRf .... "" experience invOlvlnl ly at Metro Car Wasb Work hours 9am 6pm . Mon, Tues, Thurs, 1~~£MBLERS be&lth Insurance. Apply All mtna da 1A,, •. ".,. considerable .public con· 2950Harbor BJvd., CM IW.J Mon·P'rl, 81\M·HPM. -•. >'· iw,... ... To round out our Sale• taaM. Typlnc and flex C S.CNfary to $950 Fri. & Sat. ~ust hare 10 key calculator ex· CDI Corp bH aeveral Barden'• PMt ControJ, :r:ve includes Staff, previous ex· ibility 1.n worldna.bours ..,...,o•r21 Growin& R.E. develop perience. openin1• for people 696 Randolph. CM . -~~:_~I "1hort perience not necessary. required . wuf' work M•ture, sharp. capable ment firm needs expet"d Reply to classified ad no.167 w/solid electronic oper. 546-$$70 da _. ....... ~ta. Holl· Medical plan. All com· Saturdays. We ofter 8 ofhl&h volume. Fut secy w/Uttle stat typing. Tbese are local lonat----·------H 1 • vau~ion pay. pa.ny benefits. Staggered proareesive etartlnl advancetori&ht person Sh helpful, but not man· c /o Daily Pilot term Joba w/xlnt pay 98tlftAL OMca · o. Ualllatlon plan hours. Apply tn person to salary. Please call ror METRO CAR WASH datory. Super co. Xlnt PO Box 1560, Costa )J esa. Ca 92626 rates. f\al1 Ume. Sharp. uper. Harvey Wallbanger. appointment: Pegu 2IC50Har~ Bl, CM benes. CALL TODAY person. Must be accurate 3MIC...-Drbe S4M741 <Across Frnm ~ Orange Co. Airport) Equal Oppor Employer ATLAS CHR·YSllR PLYMOUTH Open Dally & Sunday 'lil 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa 546-1934 Boyd (714) 75M911 Call Sally 540.6055 typist 4MOWPM·Bllllng. • · Cashier ror retail ~ "-'-W-&.......1 213/&»11'0;7141581-4796 GR.EATWISTllM hardw~ruu time, will ._..,Wa..t.ct 7100 ._.,. _._ 7100 COi CORPORATION -'"--1p•• SAVlMGS train. Pref. mature lady. s.cy Trne $600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_ .... _.....-__ ... _____ _ An Equal Opportunity/ Call for appt. Phil. Perfect spot for recenll•-------•t•--------!lmHARBORBt., 8-8 l()(ftce AffirmativeActlon 6'2·ll33 sec. school grad to earn Clerical COUNSROA COOTAMESACA.92626 Me1M...,./Ga0fc Employer Male/Female' ________ while learning on job. SR. TYPIST C7141HM022 M.arinenSavlnphure· Cashfer wcMted f /t. Good typing. Sh not Pumanent poeltlon, our ---------• girement for 8 f/Ume Apply I n person, necess. BeauttCul 'OiAtaphone Ne....-of"' No .. x ... ~ Fash.ton Isle loc •· out· • ~ ~,,..... ... ... .. ~•. ENGINEER crow Messenfet & Bankina Alrporter Inn Hotel, "' ./Stat nee&d, wlll train to test. General O!ficeA.ssJSta.nt. TELLER P /TIME 18700 Mate Art.bur Blvd. standing bens. I JBM Executive interview applicants. M E • B S M E o r Must provide owo vebi· We are seek Ing a No phone calls. Call Sally 540·~ I Repro Mus l ha v e i o o d mec:banlcal de$lgner ex· cle & type min 3S wpm . ASSIMILERS AYON custo~er oriented ~~iv. Chef for priv. country T .tTechnical telephone ability. Notyp. per. in small electronic Xlnt benelitl & working B.ECTROMIC ~or p/time teller position club in Or Cty Salary 'ypitt $700 NEEDED ing. Salary +com· components. Some draft. coods. ApplyatMart.ners Time on hands, tired of in our Newport Beach Se · · ToP co. will train good IMMEDIATELY misalon & xlnt company ing req'd. Good advance· Savings, 1515 Westcliff TINES & EXP. staying at home? Meet ofc. Recent teller or open. nd resume to typist lo learn new word Long & Short Term As· beoefits.CalUorappt. ment. Financially Dr.N.B. EOE. Rapidly growing Irvine people. make money & cashiering exper. pret'd. Box no, P.O. Box 1560, proce1Sor machine signmenls. Holiday & Vidor Temporary secured position avaii.1 --------- -CO. bas immed openings ~ave fun . Become an w /lile typing. Xlnt Daily Pilot, ~ta Mesa, which ls .. wave of I.he v "cation pay. S..-.lctt Xlnt benefits. Mission ralOflice ·intllefoUowl.na: AVON representative. salary & working conds.,_c _a._92&!6_______ future." Great oppor. in Hospitalizaliol\ plan 171415564520 VteJO area. cau Lillian ~wer telephone, some •H.andSoldering For more information Apply llt Marinen1 Sav· --------• beautifulofc&bestbens. avail. ~~~~~~~~ 581·3830. (Graduated lite t)'plnJ, some book· -stulfing PC Boards call 540·704 l or Zenith ings 1515 Westclill Dr Call Sally 540·60SS _ Engineers Acceptable>. keeping. airport area. •WlreWrapping 7.1359. NB.EOE ' Qerical EOEM/F COUMTHHELr -Prefer non·smkr. Suc~~~t~~';.~~nts.I~~~~~~~~~ ·aa···-· .. ··,."-... ·----· OFFICE PEOPLE ~.T:"9ping1tt~1: P /time. Hrs 11·2 & ~~=rc~,!~:i . .._549--_ 2400 ______ _ Will have good manual Babysitter-housekeeper. ....... NOBODY DOES knowledge of bkJcpng & 3'48 e-... Drive ~4~~0· Dependable. working cond fringe GIRLS MHDID 'dexterity & posllive can· live-in or out. CdM area. UMIOM BJ.MIC some gen. ofc exper. can 54M74 I benefit&. ' Sandwich delivery, 5 do atUtude. Work hrs 1 child. 645-5885 NEWPORT BEACH MORE FOR YOU win I.his fantastic oppor. <Acrou From Counter help, yng lady for KA TILLA RIAL TY, days wk, 4 bra day. Own 8Alll-4:30PM. Co. paid 5--. -----Has An Im-edlate to oo to s .... ~1 at co. e·· OranSeCo. At . ....,..rt> sandwich shop, ideal ror , ... C tramp. J!:am ovr sa.so. benefits. Salary Open. a_ bys 1 t t e r wk d y s ... "' "'""' ~ ·,.... " • h C 11 8 Callorapplyinpenon: T.:Ki-6pm. N.B. Mr. Hood ~l'.ifJ.°c~ THAN ZIP! ::;;iP~:r. learn on·line F.Qual pporEmployer ~~~f.r A11~h~~~e~i~~ Calf Glenn Burchett ~~ am-lpm , PROG11 ... u D "'TA 833·2900 days. 644-614l aft Call Sally kitcben help, Ask for l7141774-084 ..._ ______ _ -"" " eou.ecno ... s 540·6055 a · a1 G ·1 oc d · Gu ... •os ... " enc · en c ulies. Marvin 846·3820 •" IMC. Babvsitter full ., t 1 CLEtlK C...tfffed Employee Clk Typ Tm'"' to 5575 Accur. typist. Qppor for &crow Ofer-Jr. Full & p/time. AU areas. 167S2H 1 A ' · ume un 1 Banking exper. desira-SurveyProve1: Good, stabl"'e co. wi'll adv.st9·1167. COUNTER KELP Manaiement potent. Unilorms fum. Ages 21 Irvine ae venut> June . 30 hrs pr wk bl lit t . A T . c ·t X1ntco.benefit1.Contact ~~~~~~~54~9~-0~335~1 thereafter. 21.2 y r old e, e yping. ttrac· "Zip Wonderful" train accur. typu;t to lov· CL....,., . o P wage s. I Y orovr. Retired welcome. girl. My NB hom e. t1vesal &benefits. el 5ftft • Cleaners.494·1~ J. Andrews. Irvine Sav· Apply UnJvenal Protec· &W.aa7l Please apply in person Y vanety duties. Xlnl F 1Ume invent.ory control --------ings & Loan, 752-6456. Lion Service, 1226 W. 5th to Doris Mitchell. "Zip Fantastic" advancement & bens. clerk. S::Klam·5pm. The Custodian needed, part-St. Santa Ana. lntervw 6lONewportCtr Or Call Sally 540-6055 Show Of! 350 Clinton, time. beach area. Call Exper'd. bus-boy. week· hrs9-l2&l-4Mon·Fri. N wport Be h 558 "Zi S · " c M 673·l690 eves, 675·0334 ends only. Pri Club. Call ASSEMILBIS W e w i l l t r a 1 n . Babysitter MacGregor Yacht Corp. Wanted: Mature. loving l631PlacentiaCM . lady. a .. Nana" for baby ~ual Oppo:Empl= IP upefjor ... Recon Clk $500 __ . ----days. for Marion 673-3515 Some acclng exper. or CLERJ<,.H.S. GUARDS Exper'd waitress. week· Full &r. P/time. Wort any ~EMBLER sitting part time, must have refs. & own trans. BAR GIRL, nei"bborhood "ACTUAL QUOTES" schooling helps to land AHtttdallc,e Offtc• this oppor. to be trained 10 Month year. Apply DATA OPERATOR ends only. Pri Club. Call sbl/t.N.B.area. Uniform lmmed. opening for so· for Marlon. 013-3515 furn. Retired ok. Teleph ./INSTANT to balance co. bank Laguna Beacb Unified EMPLOYMENT stml5. Tremendous bens. School Oi$trict, 494-8546. 842-7181 • Mission Viejo co. hast---------bur. full & part tame, need for assembler. 2 Bakery-Mature Woman, Salary + · 646-SS44 meone w/min 3 yrs ex-& cat req'd. Nat'l co. per. in data entry on ca rd --------• Call 833-4683 9am-2pm. Great co. "I was hired the first day Call Sally 540-6055 I wanted to work." ... F CLEtUCTYPIST Yrs exper pref'd. but not F /time .. Varied duties. lliUTY nee. G<X>d manual dex-Will tram. Start S2.15 hr. punch & key to disc Factory . Des'--~!~::::: Prefer In'· ~SEMBLERS n.H.-H....,_. terity & good eyesight. App I>: i n per s 0 n • Several Assl.stanlc;. Won· Small components. Will French s ~astry, 1l70 w. derfuloppor. toassisttop also pick up & deliver~~~__ _ ha1rculters & stylists. Zeutzius--Orange. "'Had a job as soon as I rilled out my application'" ... D. Reed-Whittier. "Took about 10 minutes" .. M. parts. Must have own . Good sohd training pro· transp. & be insured Banlung . gram. Richard Ouellette Call Lillian. S8l·3830. Progr_ess1ve ~ndependent Salon. 200 Newport Ctr hank 1s seeking bank ex-Dr. NB Beese-Pa.sa. ASSISTANT MANAGER per _B_E_A_U_TY_S_A_L_O_N_d-e:.-1-re-s n e e d e d · E x P e r OPERATIONS operator11. Please l'all for ./YOM Wort& Wh~n YouW..t "They keep you 21p ping" ... P . Swope-Bev Hills. '"If I need a week off 1 can get it"" ... J. Tap· pon-Torrance ··1 got a two month JOb right away ..... M. Beese necessary. Apply in SUPERVISOR d person btwn 2&4PM. appt. 963-0717 ays, .Mon-Fri, al the Big Xlnt benefits. Call or 968-6141 eves ___ _ Y e 1 I o w JI o u s e send resume to --------· Beetaurant. 3010 Harbor SANTIAGO IAMK ~.~;_c_ .M. Ask for Larry 535 E. 1st St ....... MD Tustin, Ca 9268() 832-5200 Dm't drop the ball! Get a 'Equal Oppor Employer job wil.h a low-cost Daily --------- Pilot ClassUied Ad. Sell thl.np rut with Daily Pbone~ Pilot Want Ad». Two for You 7236 fx,A&B~ SIZES 10~-18~ t., 1ff ,.,.;..., 11fw.~- Boat Manufacturer DEPT. HEAD Wood/C..._. Shop Top quality sailboats. Challenging assign · ment-Full beoehts. medical, dental, optical. Call Bob Wallbaw . Eriaon Yachts. 54().3001. Boat Manufacturer ERICSON YACHTS Has I.he followlne full · time openJn.cs ror ex· per"d help. Wages based on experience. FtMISHLINE C.AaPIHTBS CAllMIT SHOP ASSIMIUIS HAIDWAU IMSTALURS BGIMIMAM F\r1I benefits. medical, dental, optical. Pleue apply in person at Security Office SUCSOH YACHTS 1931 Deere Ave, S.A. IOOICKIEPH/MGI. Full charge thru T/B. Fast w /calculator, %, Good typist. Growing mfg. co. Newport Bch. 631·222.S IOOKKUPEtl Exper'd, F/tlme. A/Pay, invoicing. filing. typl.n1. Beaut. pleasant ofc. App.. ly in person lo Mr. Fuentes, Robert Bein, William Fr<>lit & Assoc. 1401 Quail St, N.B. Bookkeeper, full charie, construction exp. nee. thru T/B. 8-ume M.L. Pasa. ./THE GRli TEST PEOPl.ETO WOl.KFOR '1ltey treat me like a friend" ... K. Klein-LA. "Your personnel know what they are do· ina" ... R. Cathcart-Bev. 1-Ulls. MANY LOCAL JOBS Apply Immediately CALL DIXIE 979-7406 %.IPT....-ary P~Servlces 3420 Bristol Street Costa Mesa Clerical SECRETARIES With 4' wttbou.uh. TYPISTS 11ln4Swpm. We have mu,y tana & short tam ... lpmenta avail. now. Tempo offera vaieaioa pay Is referral ..._. NEVERAFP!E ATTEllPO. 6~ l f MPORAl~V llflP ff'v1M 540.4455 17802 sty Park Cr, SC.101 S.J.C. '61· 1211 32122 Camino Capistrano F.qual ~Employer Plu:mbinl, 1170 No. Blut -------Gum, Anaheim. 631).28$1 Qertcal DOOKJCEEPER/RBCPT. TYPISTS ' Patt time needed for yng rapid growina co. Ex~. SECRETARIES preferred. $4.00 pr hr. Moo·Pri. 8-12. 6314723 or Seek temporary employ- m.'354 ment where we make It IOYS· GIRLS worthyourwhllt. 12-18 yean ot age. Even• TOP JOI ing work. Obtain new TOPPAY 1ubllcrlptjons for th~ Dal· You're Your Own Boss ly Pilot workiog with afl ~o~ of fi c e • ad.ult 1upervtsor. Earn S20 to l30 per week or 0 overload more. Call (.213) 597--0CIN noon to 6pm. (2)3) 517.0061 ~'73. 5pqi.epm. C&tl 87DBlttbSt, N.B. eouect. I~~~~~~ Tax Acct Tme toSl 100 Fantastic oppor. to tram in Fortune 500 corp w/potent. to promote in to mgmt. Acctng degree req'd Some corp. tax Fountain Val l ey Chamber or Comm ID· terview'g for 2 cleric t ypist, CF.TA employ temp pos. Mu11t be res of Ftn \1)' & unemply'd 30 dyi;. Type SOwpm. gd w 1ph publil' Call for call 644·l389 9am-nooo PACKAGERS ls now exceptia& appl fol' THE IRVINE CO. styllstw/clientele. SSO Newport Center Dr & GREAT Newport Beach LABORERS OPPORTUNITY EqualOppor Employer Many Needed Now! No r-----642--8484 ___ _ exper. necess. Earn top Hair stylist for beauty know 'I helpful CaUSally appt 962·4441 540-ooss DISHWASHER l•Cl-e.rk_______ permanent. full time. $$$. All 3 s hifts & salon in San Clemente. weekend jobs available. Call4.92-665SforappL Tempo offers vacation pay & referral bof!uses. Sign up today & · start work tomorrow. Commercial Rot..- Co. urgently nel•ds casualty & <."Omm'I pro perty rater Xlnt oppor Sal nego. Call Rita ~e to$825 1 Yr exper in gen'I liability lands pos. in this fine co. Great hens & good raises. C&U rut.a Drndthetp S700up Pleasant easy going Or needs 1rmllar type person to run small ofc. Xlnt fringe beneflfs Call Rita 540 6055 The Brown Bagger Rffi. UTOTEM 369 E. 17th St., CM, <across rrom Ralph's l ' Convenience 01SHw •sHER Market Fit1me nights. Apply, Stuft Nood le. 215 Positions now avail. 2nd Riverside, N.B. S41J.74l8. & 3rd Stults at all our D . • · locations. Start $2.6S·$3 omesllc Couple, . hte hr. Interviews conducted hskpng, c~autfeur be & Moo-Fri at. refs req d. Reply ta 12442 Lampson Classified ad no. 166, c/o Garden Grove 537-4840 Dally Pilot, PO Box 1560, We promote from within Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 Equal Oppor Employer 6 ~ TEMPORAH ( Hl LI' twper/lewty Salon. Steady work, lite duties. f1ex hrs. Apply, Ricl'lard Ouellette Salon, <mNewport CtrDr, NB . Hostess. El Torito Nds day hostess lliloo-Fri. 833-9740. 4221 Dolphin Striker Way. NB (near lr*e S4M4SS1-Ma_c_Arth_ur........;;..> ---- 17800 Sly Park Cr, HOSTESS Ste 101 Apply l.n person only, No S. J. C. 661·12 I I p&One calls. The Derby 32122CaminoCapist.rano Restau.rant. 1262 S.E. F.qual Oppor Employer Bristol. SA. ·----~~~--Do YOU Enjoy Female Packagers. Merit H~~~!s & F la raises. CaU 548·5125. 1537 Need ind i v i du a Is Day1eve duses. Place· as11i0ft _Mo_nro_v_i_a_A_v_e._N_B ___ , w/pleuant appearance ... s.c, s•oo.., ~~ Nsi~ ~s:ti:4a~oi Olreer spot w/successful Waitresses trvine Enter t & challen&inf File Clerk,_part time. tile & personality to work full world of ~il cosmetic typing & phone. Mature & p /time including sales. We are seeking bl onl wukends in our sales of. people who are interest· ~=· e, e.xper y. lice. Mu&tbaveactivere· ed tn learninti from & --·-------al estate license. land dev co. Good skills ---· ·-- &PR perM>nalit.y. COLLECTOR cau RJta 540 ~s working with pro -Fl Ple8$eCall644-3389 feMlooals in the fashion LMS 9am; 'tilNooo Secratw t $950 Coast.rue. ked. gd skills needed to laod vanety pos w /expaodln& co. Salaried position in Costa Mesa office. Mrnimum 1 year ex· perience. Finance com· pany experience helpful. Call Bill Watkin s fleld . In lhe unique set· Educational media com-THE IRVIME CO. ling ol f _!Slµon Island we pany needs women & sso Newport Cent.er Dr offer comprehensive men, noactlngor model· NewportBeacb train ing & excellent lng exp. nee. All ages & EqualOpporEmployer benefits-which Include, minority encouraged to GrowtJroPpor . Call Rita "•()..anu: 714·549-4aJO. E.O. E. .... """"-~---~~-- medical, dental. life in· apply. Must be avail. HOTB. surance. profit sharing & days for 1 day at a time Exper. full time niaht TtlexOpr $650 6 Mo's exper. lands this poe w/ane or our finest co's. Xlnt bens & great great potent. Call Rita COMPAMIOM FOR ELDERLY LADY in exclusive Newport Beach home. Very light worlt.. Reis pref. Salary opeo +room and board. Call 833-7622 from 8 to 4 ao opportunity ror employment. SS per hour audit.or T ,;. A personal nrowtb. w/3 hr min. Appto -..m · opwa.es. PP· "' ~ '"' ly in person only. The Apply In Pel'$On SAM to 3PM ONLY on Ambassador Inn, 2277 10am-ll:30am Mon-Sat Thurs. Mar. 2nd, Con· HarborBlvd .. C.M. Or Call for appt. cept Media. Ste 201, 1500 ---------, 644-1212 THE .Ro ... DW ... y Adams Ave, C.M. Housecleanini personnel, "' • guaranteed llrs. top Mdn9 *Y to $850 _wk___;dys ______ I Beaut. new bldg. Outgo· --------- 41 Fashfon Island. NB Gardener, maint. Mature. wages. Must provide own Equal Oppor. Ernployer Tennis racquet cluD. trans.540-952S 536-81132 an 1 PM Ing indiv. w/good 11kills for personality + bos!. Xlnl growth potent. Call Rita s.t0-60S5 G.n Ofc' $100 tr you enjoy variety & prefer n smaller growing co. thi1 ls Cot you. Top sPot for person w/mod t;yplng. Call Chris ---------Housekeeper.Aid, exper .• CONTROLLER DUFTSMAM General Office. Pref priv. rm Ii ba, choice 3 y I · I I u m b e r e x ,P e r . Laguna locaUori. 494--5093 Supervise acct.ng rune· rs m n exper. 10 e ect-~/receivable & 1nvoic· before8 PM tioru; for 2 Newport mech. mechanical. & mg. Must be good typist.•--------- Be a c b d Iv is ions of PCB detail & at;sembly Start $650. 540.0040 N.B. Housekeeper. matuze. AMEX .li~-ted co's. Ap-drawrngs. Must have . hl hift 111 I • ood U k IL I t l!.62 r DAY ~..!..-.SCM ~-:,_6n gues. prox $9M in sales. Req's i ne wor ~ e ter· ~ uuuao _...,~ CPA w/2, 3 yrs In Big 8 + lni. Xlnt pay & beaefits. 2 yrs in corporate EOE. Scientific Drilling t's youpayfor Housekeeper, p/t. Stu· management. Salary Controls, 4040 Campus a30dayadl.nthe deota0K.$.lhr.t9SWJ· range $20K to S23K +xlnt Dr, N.B. 557·9051 ask for DAILY PILOT dance I>r. NB. 6f.2.1.2Z5 co. benefits. Mail resume Kathy Tiemallft. savtCE Oousekeeper, live-ln. care = to ~.1.so to Penonoel Di.rector. DRAPERYOPERATORS Dl•~ORY for 2 sml children. -PO Box 2820, Newport 'd Tb Cl . ~· L . Ni l N G co.oeeda1park· Beach.Ca92863. ~xper · e assac DOITNOW! •IUD• 1ue • on-ina peraoaalit.y w/mod ~~~~~~~~~ Draperies, 3851 Birch Sl. 642-5671 smoker. Ref's recfd. typina to help in ofc. N.B.546-143lor759·1648 1---------1_49&-8238 _______ _ Learn &earn In this run COOKS -------HefpW..e.d 1100 HllpW.....S 7100 spot. First & second position.a. RECTRICIAN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Chris 540·605S Day and night. Top pay. Apply in person. Quiel Hospital l.......ce to$1 IOO Cannon Restaurant. JOURNEYMAN Account assist needed by 34344 Green Lantern. Cll1e of lhe best co·11 in Dana Pt. NEEDED area. Exper. in c.omm'I --IMMEDIATELY lines. Lonj term assignment. Call Chris 540·6055 Copy Control Ho6pital "vacation pay. Hospitalization plan ..., ... , suoo Cl rk T . t Tt\11 U1P [IOI. tor person 8 VplS VOLT I I • ~. 'U I nl t ' It •I I , w/aoo4 1kllls " strong The Daily Plfdt b .. u backarouod h\ construe. opening for a copy con· donfteld. trol clerk typist. Must l can Quia 54HCl5S t.ype 45wpl'.Q electric. Job 14-c...-. Mft cona11ta ol COP)' cootrol, 546-4741 s.cy, • lft te $100 fllJ.n& 4' general clerical (Acrou From Allllt ~· of outa.._nd. dutfes. Opportunity for Onna•Co. Airport) 1q Joc.i oo. Gnet..-advanomient. Excellent :qua1Oppol'1tm01oJtl' for penon w/dl~e com~beoelltl. ~~~~~~~ ltsnanut. ba~. Call Cbr1a 5'0.e055 Cusyl ;:toSIOOO You can Wt 1row-ln& firm JCM& ban com put« blaelcrOUQd &c lite cer.i1 ore ulll•. Xtnt po. tent. Cal.IChJ'is J'orh\tervlew pl ... call t>eitorutel ()ttlce eo.4D1. ext r?t OIMeGI COAST DAILY PILOT 3,10 w. Bay St. Coltalfl«ieu Equal Opportunity Employer Tbat'•ALl..YOU ~ tor a 30daya0 in~ SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSP;ITAL "HOSPITAL WITH A HEART" EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES "EARN & LEARN" "OPERATION EDUCATION" September. 1978 C.E.U. Provider#oiMea GOING TO SCHOOL? CHILDREN AT HOME! Schedules adaptable to 1Ddividual beeds ' Bour Sb.ifta Available For Full/time "P /dine IN'lol.VM'S...\91$ . For turtJter inCormatioo please ccmtact: ' I \ I I • • CJe DM..v.'11.or . Mandr;.1•bru!tf2'7.1m M.lpW.ncl 7100 tWpW.t.ct 1100 HefpW..W 1100 He4,W..tt4 7100 .,,.meet ao10 w. 1oss .............................................................................................. ···················~·· ..................... . .......... 710 tw, W99te4 710 .W,W*"M 1100 Sec:retery for Pr-operty RVINE ChURCH RUM· ... -................. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ProductlbftMaaaJe.ment SaJesm1tn, R-cal Estate Mamt eo. ~1 atrooa The Reuben Wcaher & DrY•t MAGE, SALE. Sat. Feb t~. IOme n1u·1 MOTOll.OU'tl DEPT Hrln/ ror •du.It comrollnlty, in bookkeeper,tyiflst. Peo-Uk~ nu delux mulll· 2~. 9AM·•PM, 18422 Inc. lady an whlchr, )day lVN l.ara• Dally Pil~ rouu • UUI Lacuna Nl&tuel aru. pie orltnto<I. Growln.s E. lee cycl• modtla only . CUiver Dr, Jrv. Univ. Wlt.H.B.714tllG~ 1nSoolhLaiuna1..11un• WOOtl/C.....,.Shop Btwn «MO yrs or aae Co. Salary negotiable. Cumfletely reblt re· \Jnlled Metbod11t W11nt Une Maoufr•ur"'r hill .and part Um" pueo1 iq,i~l Monday tbrouab Top quallty aallboats. can btwn lOA.M·l2noon Send resume lo. P.O. .. ?iwTtJaktn~. f In 1 bed -y •a r -. __ 2586 ______ _ kn~ v . area ~~ttda tl008 1vaU Good 1.Uuy J'rlday afternoon•, Cblllen1lo1 au Ian· ~~~~'9M~~m~~~~ Box 2990, N ewporl nPP• u om ror auarantee 1 pnce only, Furn., appl., ~lothlnc, ~ belp 6 power w xlntbenefrt.s Saturday and Sunday ment-fllll bepeflls, _ Be1cl\,CJ\82*!0 CO~~=~S your choke Sl90 each misc. 28 Tangerine, aewlnc macbloe oprs &yvtewCoov. llc.M;i,1 mornings. ApproxJmale· med.lea!, dental, optical. SALESPERSON .,.~ • ....,n ·cal trainee Apply Jn Person ~hde31lrdve,">:,~l! ... ewnd;' <Onlgtree> lrv. SSl-0787 83lu,.., ~Thurm.C M. ly~petmonth~roat Call Bob Walsh11w1 &Cr _.,,~.,,u.; ........ tu3U .... • • -M2·3.'505 earnl.Qp. ~ 00 caab de· Ericaon Yachta, S40-800l al\ demonstrator at JIO'lllon. for conaenlal 3PM t.o 5PM 11 k e n t1"' re tr I g • 1, 1070 lnst.aller Nffded fOl' Car Posit r~ulred. Phone Rua Crafters So. Coa11t Nwprt Bcb luw firm. 1111. Coott Hwy fl'ftUn & rang~s at ~ Stereo.Mustbaveexper M.A.CHIMISHOP 642-<Ull, ask for <'trcula---------Village. Mus t be ag· Prefer 6 mos exper. top Hewportle la the cost at South Coabi WA..,.TED p .. v accordina ·-ex--r fore ft .. M/F lion. Leave name and RIAL m An gressive & i.ales onent· slull11 required. Salary v.. I n....v... E ocl AppUanCCI, 537-254.2 f"'lll • ~tools pref~but'ftot -TOPPA.Y-number ond make ot P~oreasional licensed ed.Prefor20yrsorolder, commensurate w/exper. ~ua V)')'Vf mpoyer TOP CASH DOLLAR nee. ~ply at 3721 S Jf you're looking for autotobeusedandyour sales people wanted. 90Hr11perwk 546-6340. Contact Maggle646·4466 KenmorewuherS75.0E PAID FOR. YOUR Briat 1 s A call will beretumed GeneJ"OOI commisaiona. S 1 . Tow Ttuck Drivers ex· her """"9 c JEW£L.RV, WATCHES, o, · · permanent, steady pos1 · Advancedtrainlng. a esper son. Marrne Secretary, 70-80 WPM per'd Top pay. Apply was .-. 5. uaran• ART OBJECTS. GOLi>, insurance Aeency \Ion I hat offers reul HURSUY MEH 64P 5062 hardware knowledge re· typing, shorthand, ex-G&W.Towing toOo lrvin~ teed 56841672 SI LV )I; R SER V l CE, Aaency need.a elrl, tix· l(rowth ln both monetary F'lll time. mal\Jre mile q'd. F/T. 673-4080 perienced, reliable, Send Ave, NBM2-l252 lic:ydts · 1020 Jl'JNE B'URN A AN- per. In personal lines. & personal recognition over 21 6 Days 1 net C~ Z I Crocker sates retail resume to Box 172, c/o ••••••••••••••••••••••• nQUES. aa..2200 raUiigsStart$900.Rapld tllenwewanttotalkwlth Sat/Sun. Work w ith Du1ly Pilot, P.O. Box TRUCKOllVER-advancement. Send re-ynu. Position requires plants, trees & dellvt•ry. IHI&.... TROPICAL FISH 1S60, Costa Mesa, Ca. DBJ-YPltEP NEW&USEDBUlK&Sd Diamond approx 2'At Ct; m1rumum 5 yrs exper on Sal"'•• A.MD llRDS 112626 ·-Recond. Buy. 118 • tra e .. en"agement. ring, best. sume w: Box 153, % Dul t c h · Exper. pref. $3. hr up. ~n Kn ed & For vit. It min. mfg. Gd Cycle & Co. 2488 Newpe>rt oC; or irade for late ly Pilot P.O. Box 1560, M! up o punc press, Laguna Hills Nursery exper in area, Top p/t0.':1 ..... !!,req'd. Jl'ull retary, for furruture math. lJnJng req. Know Blvd.C.M.842-7910 modA' cadlllac or 7 ....... Co6ta Mesa, Ca 92626 c·hucker,. mill, lathe. etc. lnc. El Toro. 830·56.'13 • cnllber to joln successful .....,. ~ "" Tool & die exper desiru-----firm in Newport Beach, -------saleamao, 4-5 bn dally, LA 4r Oranae Co. Days. lulklf'9,_,.oteriah 1025 Prin only pleaee. Dr. Insurance.Group llt•alth ClamlS F..xammer. 1-:xp at lea.st l yr. l''/tlme/P / t1me/Homeworlt Sul ble Smull cleun shop. ....URSES •IDES/ (;dM Submit resume in SALES-U NUSUAL OP-typing. J>hone, die· fringes, Ene. speaking. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bemard99'7-MZ1 •·~-•-h " A PORT l! ta phone, filana. 557·5389 Neat & cl n. App I y Co~m .. epan"'y~pruo1dwhosw·1pt1.tauls&·. ORDERLl!S c'Ol\fidence lo Ad . No. 29, . you are en· 8 · l 0 AM Mon.Fr I, Wanted Clean fill dirt. Mltcel•IC*t 1010 D;illy PUot p 0 Box thuslastic, ambitious. L1"nw1lco Labs 21•3 10861 Westminster Ave.••••••••••••••••••••••• llra1-urance 59 Bed Facility. J om a . . . ..A11·e·-1'0 yourself & • .. '" ·~ 1560 C08ta Mesa Ca "" ''" SECTYS EOE M /F Newport Bl"d., c.u. G.C. Blwn •·ernwood & Cole lnstn.nwnt happy group & enjoy the ' • · your ability tlus could be • "' Taft Bus n~ ~ R W .& ~ED xlnt benefits. Bay\•1ew _!2626________ 1t' Sell mouvaUon pro SECRETARIES · ~ ' es A"' •--------1 Corporation Conv 2055 Thurm Ave o .. al "'··ta•• Sal p 1 <>rams. •Subsl•"lJal In : Wafttn/Woitmse• 761-2_07'7_____ TOP CASK DOLLAR .I. .. 2 8 080 EOE • • "" .:.; ""' es eop e .. ~· ........... be I . ted F 0 ... y 0 u R Insurance ., .. -CM 642·3505. wantt!d. Up to 90/10".0 come. •Immed advanCt!· ,......,, peop.e onen · DoCJI 1040 PA ID "' open. 549-1767 ..... -v"l'ValST IJt N t 8 h ment opport. •career op NOBODY DOES $4 hr. Vac, sick days, in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• J~ELRY. WATCHES, --' '"' .... •CHl .... IST .... URSES •1DES comm. sp · wp c s"• ...__..r.,_ aH. UI"-" ART OBJECTS GOLD Xlnt · · l""tA " " A 531-0900 port w/unllmited futur~ ... """'""1"'· ,.._.......,. DOG TRAINING • • , OPPor. totralJ\ in the Clas~ A needed for 3-11 Sluft. L'/l1me. W1"ll .....;.......;.;;__;_ _____ ~ SILVER SERVICE field of unde~n·ung o " ,. Call Mr. Harvey 642·5794. MORE FOR JOU WAITRESS, bre-.. 'ast ... Y~•r Place AP M'""' • '.. r Bndgeport-M11l & Lalhe train. Lido Conv. Center ,--------• AM .. ..,.... ... u-f'INE FURN. & AN· leaal. Type 45 wpm, Pr k .... '"« Su A NB tt-• ""-tale SandunchShop lunch, exper'd. Ben John Martin 548..()()59 nQUES .... "'_.. heavy phones. var1ou•. ec1s1on wor . c.xper ~ penor ve, ._ ico ... B • R t t -..-_. ore duties. Some math req'd. Phone for ;ippt 646-7764. LOAN SECY & TaHE GENERAL HELP THAN ZIPI rown 5 esHaura5n • AKC· Golden Retr1e\·c i-:~..:....:.;...;.,..,~-__;_--- J"''tude. M7·9051 & ask for Ron --:-Due loan expansion, we P/t.Mon-Fn.Callbelwn • 31106 Coast wy, 0 • puppies,6wk.a,$100.0eld LUGGAGET.AGS .,... p /TIME CLERK Adu ms. Top Benet its ~amter.i ~anted (41 open· are seekmg an organi1ed 8-3, 833-8919 Laguna. ttnd & obedience back· from your business card. W k Scientific Drilling Con mgs. 5 \'rs exper Start & aggresi.1ve sec'.y who Sand""ch Shop, Newpon c...tffled EMployHs WATCHMAKER gmd 754-1095 Send one card !or each or approx 4 hrs per tro'-. "'"O Campus l>r. S5·S7 hr. Ste\ e Wein, h dJ 1 -· ir--.._O•H d T .. 0 .,, """ cun an e persona con· Beach n--.... part llm" ~·-, r..-To 1ssisl engineer 11!-....toY-80 .. 5 tag plus one spare. We ay. ype " wpm , N 8 ~-Ol56aft3pm. 11 RE 11 1 '="" ~ l'TW'lf -.. 1 amwer phones. onnou::. _ _ _ ____ _ tact we . . . c s re· help. u .30-2:30 Mon·Fri Zip Wonderful w development of de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• return permanenl Y office duties Mui-.t uc MACHINIST p "'RT TIME qwred & knowledge ~f Will train. C..:all aft 2PM llcate precise instrumen· sealed attract1Ye tag & "' loan processing i::. 00'>"""'• z· F ta ti t;i•·on for oil ri·eld. Good LOVABLE bPllYed rem strap, meeting airline wcllorgani:ted TOOL ROOM MACll EVE .... , ..... G GR ....... ~ IP an s c ... G Id L I t • d I ..,. ..,. M , helpful, but we will train working conds. co 0 en ii> 0 .:oo ID. requirements. Pre· App Y In l't'rson Days home 631 1094 S:J0.2 Mon thru Fri ,~orm & Cutter Grinder Sl75 wt'ek Atlradi vl•. the r1i:ht person. Position Sandwich & Salad a!i Zi S . henefiu & top pay. EOE. · · vent los.s & then! For a Safeco lftwrance Co for Ol"hl~. OU(J:OIOI(. enlhui.1 aslH' lbs ID hour newThEI ~·oro sem bl ers. SAM l p M p upenor Scientific Drilling Free Female Norwegian personalized tisg enclose 17570 Brookhursl Clas::. .. ;.. Onh . pcri.nna II t}. Work 1 ni:( runl' ofr is 111 a Mu~t be neat. tie an & Controls. Newp0rt Dch .Elk Hound. Family dog w11Upaper. Cabric or F V I . with youth. Mu~l be over career oppar wttbe Na-dexterous. $3.00 Per hr ..... CTU .. L"'UO"""-S" Phone557·9054 needsyard.S59·0l5l "Day Glo" paper & we ountain aley Toppay+ovcrtime 25 & hU\'e 11 depcndublt? lion's L;iri:est Home 979-0747 for appt. aft • • "" ,., AskforRonLitUe will back & trim your ~ual Opp Emplyr m If Jtosan Inc. 2901 W · Coast car. Supcrvisini: adults & Loan Drokcr;ige Firm. lOA.!\1. Lon ·s Kitchen . To right home, perfect tags. Or try two cards ~~~~-----I Hwy. NB. EOE l'arneri. Available eve. Please Call /INSTANT Window Washing Asst, family dog, med 111ze back to back. Jnlenor des1gnt-r nds qual Prr assist. Please cull ll75-5548 wknds/evs. JANITOR ', Days, permanent job, vref mature person. min wage to start. Ca II t>a-4770Call btwn 9 s. MACHINIST & Saturdays. 642·4321 , AL MAYNES Seamstress wanted for EMPLOYMENT lull time, no exp oecess. male, Shelt1e type. PRICES: (Lathe> Wanted im-ext.250. between 1·5 PM. 2131924-7611 sailm~[i·~-3467 "I wa:shiredthefirstday NwptBcharea.645-1392. _~ __ JM_1 ______ • S2eaOl'3/$.5 mediately! 2 Yrs exper. _As_k_for_J_1m _____ ---------I wanted to work" ... F. WordProc:essor f'wHllwe 8050 4/5t.agaSL60ea. own tools A LZ In. PART TIME Zeut1ui5-0range. '"Had Typist, secretary. Strong ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~a::!·:.:ea. dustries, Inc. 173 E R.E. APT SALES. well SECRETARY a job u soon u l f11Jed SHtypingreq'd.Applytn S'Aift.longcustompadded SalesTuJncladed Paularino CM Days established ofc nds 2 lie 'ThelrvineCo is current· ~::_:.ti::~C:~~~~k person to Mr Fu_en.t.es, portable bar with NOCARD? 979-0233. Wknd only EVENINGS & highly motivated ly seeking an on.call about 10 -•-,_ .. M Robert Bein, W1lha'!' multiplex tuner, 8 track Draw your own or aend 646-2206 salespersons Will tralll. secretary. 1·3 } rs exper. nu.nu...,., ··· · Frost & Assoc. 1401 Quail & tumt.able-aU are built· -·"'e, a"'"'---, phone It Adult!> with outstanding, P/Tok. Bkr SSIH>l7l. 1)--pmg 6S wpm & dJc· Bttse-Pasa ...... UUI~ Machine operator. full attractive personahtie~ • phon EXCmMG JOIS St,NptBch. Ins-plus two custom we'll make one card per JANITORIAL/ lune & part time. no ex· who en1oy workinit with RECEPTIONIST, Gen 'I ta Ple!;e call 64-4·3389 CLOSE TO HOME Merdtc.diw wrot.liht iron bar 11.ools. tai. Add~ each. HA.HDYM.AH M/F per ll('('e;:s~ry JIB Indus lads Start ut $3 50 per Ofc duties. Full-time. 9um 'tll noon ••••••••••••••• Sharp! 581·7446. Send chetk or money or- · :-._,.,,_, to m~1nt ·•1n our ('tr 897·1106 -hr Phone 642-4:rll. •250. SS7 2731, Costa Mesa THE IRVl .... E CO "A diancc to do all d1f-~ •••;O•OS der to: '-"'""""' " " between 3 00-5.00 PM -" ferent kmds of work & -.,....... * * f BUY* * PILOT PRIMTIMGi hrandnewbu1ldmgm1t:. ~f,\IOS 'IOf:EUEU. e-t A.skforJim Recept/Secretwy 5"50:'\:ewportCenterDr m~~t ult kind:. o r........................ . PO Bo 560 dean rond1t1on. Some penenccd llr nut we "''II I' 1 0 30 h k .._ .. c h l'awport Beach people" F. Elzey-MUSIC IOXll!..r Good used Furniture & Costa·M~a~ia. 92626 knowleoc:ti:eorl11ecarpen Hain. StarlinR w;.i ge .q ua pportwnity r w • .., . ..., r + EqualOpporEmployer P~u .. Work ne\er gets ~ Appll1oces--OR 1 will 11y&ekl'tm·ulcxJ>t•r re ~i5 hr Mu~tread.\\rlle _Employer ~nefils TypmgSOWPM . boring" S \tartel CLOCKS sellorSELLforYou. ---------• I Co pmd ho pllal & & 1 tran.<1cnbin1t dictaphone --------O I k SI 'f h N" '-I MASTERS AUCTION I• ~ ~peak t-:ni.? 1!.h ,\pply PAR.T TIME. young m;in 1 Jllrl offirt• at Da> Treat range-· 11c1 wor ot •• ac mes, 1c..e o· 1129 95, f"rame. pedestal, hflo m::.ur at 1141 Su C'i.I llw}, over 18 to re;id & drl\l" mi.>nt Center Child clOSl' to 11.here 1 li\e. deons, phonographs. 64'"8686&833-9625 heater, matt, hner and Cofelnstrun...t l.;tl!un;ilk•ad1 ~9-t-653:1 (or \It.ion 1mpalrt'd Guid:.incc of Or;inll~ SECRETARY workin~ u:. often a::. I World"s lariiest selec· (111 kit. Float"N Dream Corporoti0tr )oungmun,2;iftcrnoc1ns Count> 6467733 Call w;rnl " S l,a\t'rly t1on . Also gifts . CASHPAID Waterbeds.21164Beach 642-8080 EOE.. ~AID"ANTt-;o per \\k S350 hr Mu::.I ~lcHl·Thur!l-1 12 , Ope-nm"!> C'Urrenth Cost.t\let-3 furniture, antiques. For gd used furn, anll· Blvd.HB.900-~ JANITORIAL Gen 'I Janitonal duties 111 rlud. stock & maintain· inn rci.trooms, clc11nmi: snack b11r tables, housekeeping of sulC's floor & offices Ca II for 3ppt. (714) 751·3\81 D!lk for Joan. 'l'kc Antique Guild 1801 E. Dyer Rd, SA DooQwxotcMotel h;i'e vulu1 drl\"rs lie ,. .YOUWORICWHtr. .... American lntemauonal: qu1$&clrTV'11,!l578la3 ...._ _______ _ 21"" N Bl c•t " l'XISI. an adminir>tratl\ ~ ....... .. _:_"" _!WPo~.,~ 673..fll74befr5PM REC...-10 .... IST YOUW•"""'' 1802 Kettering; lrvloe, ·-. ------------..,. • " & a i:t·rwral ~t·cretary "'"' ;54.1m . Open Wed .-Sat. S glass coffee t able. Univ. Athletic Club Part·TimP Rccrl!atlon. For small co. Good l)'p WI! <tn· ,,,.t•ktnl( peoplt'· '"They keep you 7.1 p. w/Walnut wood. cu1>l Mbmrshp. $.150. Mamtcnance WSI , CPK. Sr lifesaving mg. Good persona ht). oncntt'd. 1·11n,1·1t•nt1ou~ ing" r Swope Be v. mad c by Low es 644.5034 ERICSON y•cHTS . ~.6S""rhr Call642·1593 peopl .. "'1th I( ood llllb ··ir I need a -.eek SfEWARTROTH F\lrniture. Must sell, due•---------A req d J"1time Summer. "" If M4-5404 seeretanal sk1lb. Enjo) o . I can get 1t" ... J Tap· ANTIQUES to move. Glass top 1s Irvine Coast CC mem· Pl.ANT MAINJ lleceptlonist /Sec 'y excel lent t·om paoy pan-Torrance "I got a A.mencanOak Dealers dark in color&%" thick. bershlp for sale. $650. w~kends only. Marine beoefit.s two month job right 7SO E. Dyer Rd. S.A. Call 581·9066 aft 6PM Call646-1705 MECHANIC PBX type bu.1mes'I Newport Apply9am·noon away" •. M. lieese-(alNewportFwy) bestoffer. i...;.. __ __;_ ____ _ OPERATORS Beach Call 645·7100 Moo Frt. Pcr..onnel Pasa 7$1-8922 Sq. yards dark green Primary skill must be .. • "THE GREATEST -------Earth lon4' plaid chair. 2 carpet w/pad. sufficient electrical. Must be ca pa· Lon~ &A..l!~~":!m, as-Receptionist, telephone:. PIOPll TO yrs old. Snuggly com· foe-three llxlS' rooms. ' ble ol working indepen. H lid •. w some bkkp'g & sec'.> UIRRJOJT W'-"" FOR WHOLESALE fortable. Purchased fr Elec. range. 557-5228. Ladies Lier Rm Attend. dently Full bene hts. :signmcnts . 0 ay "' skills. Pay, negotiable. IM ""'"'" TOnlETRADE Btggan, Furn., must1ell1_; __ _..::: ____ _ 2 or 3 days pr mo. ideal medical. dent.al. optical. \ ac pay. Hospdahz.ation Mal . neat appearance. HQTll . '"They treat nw like a due w move. Bal ofr. for Sr C1tncn Pr1' rlease apply. an person. an avail 673-tOllO______ fnend" I\ Klem LA NOW OPEN CallS81·9066 alUP t country dub. Ca II atSecunty Office ~Newport Ctr Dr "U~ually the pay is 644-~~ for appl. &fclO(lt Yodth llec~ Director Newport Bench higher" B Key Torr TO PUBLIC Admiral Alr rond .• Wlfil -----Must he "people lonng F.qu.al Opp Emplyr m f "Your peri.onn~I know standard size encase ounnaline mink stole .t LEADED GLASS person 1931 Oeere i\\e,Si\ per.on ·· Some art1st1c wl\at they :are do · OPEN7DAYS mcnt Wlndow. 110 \Oil hat, fur sport coat, COS· needed.part & full ttme ,_________ ll41 C...,-Dri•e ability WSI & CPR re-1nic" R Cathrart -A WEEX 9·6. max, BTU's. xlnl cond 6 tume ~welry, antique i14-s:J6.6S6l _ M 11 n 3 g er. An:. we ri n I! 54&-47 4 I q d Sal open. 644·5404 _ Be\'. Jlllb s.dowa Alltfqgff Ud mo& old, must sell due to cryslal, 1ilver. Sbawn by Ser \ ~I us t .... , B (/\cro5s f'rom •Secy's. Gft Ofc.. M1t1Y Local Jobs I 5ZtZ •-a..-cL•,..0 move. Pa.id S32S wtsacnf aJ)pl. M&-17S1eva. · "u " RestaurantllelpNo14h1r Sl•OOO _... 111~ SlllO Call .. "l"'""' f LEA.SING REP :.upen 1sory c-tper. PBX Or-ange Co ,\1rport I mg part·lime help .\ppl) to • Appl) Immediately H.I. 1714) 893-7509 ~bl · "" . ......., 8 t La le model EL EC · .\llrnctlve apartml'nl ex}>l'r helprul Mu!'t be Equal Oppor Employc•r btwnJ&5P\! daily F:mplo)ers Pay All Fee:. CALL DIXIE ~~~~~~~~~! T ROLUX Ya cu um I . . m;iturc, hardworking. wir.uDY'S Ltl Rt>lnder.i Agency . B b f •-lk I b h. Cb comp ex i.ceks .indl\ self starter Ask for ----IA" 4020 Birch. Ste UM Oth Annual Antique show 3 Y. urn .,. cot. L e w power rm eap. w/successful lea.sine ex Luc11lt> alt lpm. 645 8197 p ET IT I 0 N E RS -Old Fashion Ne~'p()rt Beach 8.13·81911 979-7406 & sale. Mar. 3rd, 4th & new ~-$60. • 640·6864 aft _642_.Qf'7 _______ _ per. t.o show apts & han ----Full part lime. Good pa) Hamburgers Call for Appl/Estab '65 5th, l'ra & Sal l2·9PM. 2pm Mi~ die leasing .arran11e· MATURE WOMAN daily.SJS..7711 l~UrookhurstF.V. ZJpTt"'fOll.., Sun 12-6PM. Laguna 4piecesfam1lyrmCurn.6 W.ted 808t mt."flls.Muslbew1lling lo p /Lame to welcome ----------------P ......... S.-.lcts o .... '"-M f Art · Id wurk weekends & have newcomers & contact PKYSICAL ntERAPIST Rel'taur11nt-Now hiring oc8C•L useum o • mos o , $490. 894·7095 ••••••••••••••••••••••• adaptable schedule. merchants. Flexible hrs. Full or Part time. xlnt pit day help only. Apply SICIET.A.l.Y ~~arl:i:!:t XYJlhc;;rcl~AA,.~!_D· ~.SO, ult6pm&wknds. Shoteun&tt.argetpi.s1ol CallS44-3389 Need <'ar. lite typing. oppty fo~ ao aggressive betwn3-WEN05pmdaYU"Sy With high level try,ina _________ ,_w ___ a_._"""°_...,._co_u_n_t._,RlVlera convertible sora. 6Jr.Ol85 9 •t'I PT. Rapid salary advan ~kills ••mln 60 wpm ' Ill· ---------AnU Oak dr am 1 noon M7·3095. · · • .que easer & Good condition. $75. ---"' •t • & THE IRVIHE CO cement + bonus . Old Fuhloo terested in arowlnR with Service Station Atten-commode, best orrer. 546-4843 ~,. • .SSON rtCe t D MECHANICAL LA/Orange Co areus, Hamburgers a 'young, aggressive dant, exper 'd . Day & 675-9419 Emil,...... 1015 ewpo ? er r ..ASSEMBLER salary commensurate 26405. Br1swl, SA Orange Co. Based Real Eves. Full & p/tlme. Ap· Medit. Style Table. 6 side .. .-.1~•••••••••••••• .. •· Equ1:JeO::~~~~O)'er ROTARY SWITCHES w/abiltty. Call Vlck1•~R--=---=--__;_-M_....;.;; __ Estate Development ply1 Shell StaUon. 17th & Aflpll•c" 8010 &2armchulrs, $16$0. Call Exec. det1k $139. Drafting _______ _._1 Have immed. openmgs McFarland. 714-957-1071 estaurant anagement Firm. For salary detaUs lnnne, NB. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6454123. tbl $75. Exec ch r s, in our final asscmblv -Trainee fOT Pina Parlor &1nt<'rview contact Lynn DISHWASJI ER. Wh Ile S»SGll. Wood desks $7S LEGALSECRETARV dept. Requires goodPhyslcalTherapy OCarea.SalS800+.Will Boel:mer.714-5S75770xlOServiceSta.Nt1btAttend SearsKenmore.Portable MahogSlereo cubinet,6' ea. Files 135-$85. Part-time two days a wk, hand dextenty.)tin 2 yrs DIRECTOR train. Food exper. nee. 2 Or 5 nites a wt. Apply, delwce model. Push but· w/drs & abelves. $125. fluorescent lite fixtures, cxper only need apply ex per . ~n small flhyslcd~y ~3224or752-27119am-StcllETA.RY Sl'lell,17th"lrvine,NB ton controls ror 6 cycle lttakeofr.AftS,645-7857 4'footers$10. Worktbls Busy but pleasant H.B. mechanical .assembly. S«-Ylc• Spm wkdys. :-.iewport Harbor Yacht settings. Butcber block el60. 6!1·2T77 office $5 hr. Call J1cque Cole Instrument Corp., #S"'• .. .r •Lo1r.vER... Club needs secy w/good Serv. Sta Help needed Im· top Can be converted to F 0 U R P 0 ST F. R ---------847-604l M2-8080EOE 268.Bed Aftut• Gan'I -A ..,. ,,. typtng & sh skills. Call med .• F\Jll or pit. Apply, undercouoter. SlSO.OO. OOUBLECANOPYBED Beautiful portable ---------1 · ... "' '" Non·suralcal face lift, l\lr11 • Ackerman Wed 900 E. Cal Hwy, Nwpt Call 83.S-09lO after 5:30 Good cond1t1on $75 Signature manual Hollp1t.a.l on the beach In distrtbutoc-& sales posi· thruSun. 673-7730. 8cll p.m. MS-1961 typewnter. $50. IM6-8S79 Liquor Stor e Clerk, F/lime nights. 3S37 E. <:6t Hwy. CdM 673·7~ Live-in companion, hoUJekeeper, capable,--------- refined woman, able to drive. Non smoker. non drinker. 493-4601 Loon Processor SR LOAM PROCESSOR La gun a . Su pervl1e t.lonsavall. 714-768-3403 <r-u.....u La eves. physical therapy staff, SECaET A.JtY rarMitM illr• ~....... FR G HT DAM AG ED 1.Y boy recliners f7S •--------- participate in teacbJne ---------Permanent part·time Sec.ntary HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 each. Ski boots. aU sties. repQrting machine, program. Salary com-SALES clt-rical position for an Type 70 wpm. Sb uo. Sal w. warner nr Harbor, Nancy. S40·1~ days. good condition $100 farm. mensurate w /u.per · $SSS$ energetic, responsible, S86Skt'854a mo. Contact Santa Ana. 979-2921 EV'el: 644-6333 848-9722anytime. Xlnt benefit•. A · d c tit a U lfl d FEELING THl experience person. •P r no n e CASH PAID Movlni: Almost ne"" IBM Selectric II 10/12, ~h/a~~eunci~~fo:~tlt~~~ PIMCH7 ~~~~;~di~ ~~-District, 496-1215. For W&h(/Dryn/Relria dioette, oak. form. tp, 4 nearly nu. Dual .beads. portunlUes. 11mellle Boob bu pa.rt· tions. Non-amoker. Moo· bbo worti.DJornot957-8133 lthr Capt. cbrs, pd $500, $650.67s.71SOanytime. Callf. license req'd. Ex-time Jo ba in our day· Friday 2:30-5:30. Switc ard Opr. Wiii . 11$215. Upbol. swivel chr "-a °"J-s IOtO per. as cl1rec:tor or uals· telephone sales omce. 3 Call Barbara Davis train. Muat be avail ...... ,., 1005 t:1°~n cstm made ...................... . lant direct.or in an acute Shifts aval11ble. 8:30-1, weekdays 842-1626 wltnds & evea. ~197. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 42 ulbransen Rialto • 2 care hospltal Pbyalcal Les"A b. 1 Therapy Dept. pret'cf. 1·5 " 5·9. Salary + Telephone Solicitors ex--tone ca mets. YT' Please Contact Personnel Office South Coast Comnlunlty Hotpltol 318'72 Coast Hwy So. La(luna 714/499·1311 F.qual Oppor Kmployer comm. + bonuses. ----... ---• perienced only. Sell wBJTruity.548-0276 Permanent. SECRET.ARY Orange Coast's leading JONATHAN'S HAMMONDC3 Forappt. call Comm1 Loan Platform. newsp11peralbome, your w/LESLIE 133.a095 Neat appear. req'd. Type Dhol>e. Part time or full. ANTIQUES $159Sor Best Offer Equal Opp Ernplyr m/f 60 wpm. accur. Sb 80 Highest commlulon * 536-42163 '* wpm. paid.Call~l.SPM Wholesale to the trade Cull 714/SS8·5280 For An lntervw Appt UMIOM I.AMI 810 Newport Ctr Or, Newport Buch F,qual Oppor Enu>loyer only. = in Fountain Valley ,.. Sale Feb. 28th ~ Preview All Day TIU 5:GO ... Sale Begins 6:30 P.1'1. ~ Featuring •••• BraH l&em1 Cllatra Dffk• Dltolay C.bldeU Balla&aadl ...... lr~Gl-- HtltalOut tt~I I JtoUTo,. Sllowcues Sldeboardl Tables Tlu Tn•k• \Jnnal Pieces Wudrobn 1'11bnudt '°" colored TV's . .Both le!s!' than l yr okl. Sooy, 21 Tl"\nlt:ron $500/bsL Sanyo S3l0. Both perfect coPd. 8'1!M002 ...& ....... ,, ., .. ....................... ...... Poww 9MO .. , ................... . 1S' V Al.£0 algmium ft.I. blni boat trlr w/complct. acau, ln- dd'I boat Cf)Y# 4l awn· ~ ... ~ Jobmqa mot.or. V1JIW1S motor. bait lank. cl'Pl'I • miae-b more. l1'llS or llll otr. Call F'ran btwn •·•PM wkd:rs. TI4-~ ' ' I ' , .. . ................. . -~-~1--------------· • :: llNh_ P•wtt 9040 loGh. Slips/ Thldu 9560 Aaltot W-.ted 9590 Autot, l..,orfed AMtot, l•flOrlect Monday. February 27. 1978 OAILV PILOT Cl I ....................... Doc.kt 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 35' CHRIStRAJo'T ••••••••••••••••••••••• It' i:l!!P'. -l\\ WI WIU IUY ~ 9720 _.,Roye• 9756 AMtoa, lmport.d Aufoa, Ua.ct Atlfos, UHd Aft.c•bin/dualstauoo NEED SLIP for new 34' y·ou1 DATSUH ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••!'••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Twinehrya V8's/2 heads sailboat Mr White "Ho... PAJO FOR OR NOT •72 Datsun t 2oo, Xlnt #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. YolaWCllJH 9770 AMC 9'05 Ford 9940 ,!l-uled· survey Al. pntd --675 1393 ~ -ol '"• TOP DOLUR oond. nu clutch " paint, ROY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl.2,000 AY646,9000 T --atl v.11,~v · FORTOPCARS $1700 or beat offer. JRR CARVfR '72 VW 411 Wiiton clean. •7() Homet. Creen. AM, r-...,.... • on 968-4108am. &oodcond. $1550. FM stereo cass. nu llrt:S ' 1 PHIL GREAT ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ROLLS·ROYCE r>4ll·tl507 $7501oCr. 645-9626 evs --LONG ~Sale/ NEW 1978 '73 Datsun PU. Good 1S40Jamboro ----~· FOR Rent 9120 COURIER t•ond Special whls, $2350. ~wpon eutll '70 VW Fstbk, reblt eng, i5 Pacer. xlnt cond, lo FORD ~ISHIMGI!! •••••••••••••"•••••••• 4 eyl,, 4 ._, ,_,,. _ 213/639-9610 ~ very good cond. Must sell mi's, stick 1>hi!t, A/C, 21Ft.CHAMPl0Y 1960CbevyStepVnn,con· 1"9• a,.,.. C.-1111m TOP u~ ... -9727 CLOSEOSVNOAYS tonig ht. $1325 /0tr. $2100.768-0155.551-2343 " MOOMOOI T·Too. A•dlO. ~ 673-4570 -CF5417BB. Flybrldae Vert.eel into camper. Xlnt Hell ... lO"lj b•d tS•r DO' I "'R ••••••••••••••••••••••• XLNT BUY CadlU.. 9915 single screw, _galley: run'g cond. Nds some 8GTATA1M727> ~ Sharp '66 &Iver Shadow. '68 vw pop top cmpr. Nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• bead,balttanlc.Sleeps5. bodywork&palnt,$1500. s4949 PAID 1ranc1Mew"77 white. R.R.-Rlghthand pnt. DU rblt eng. Clean! ~ine completely re· 492-llro FORCLEAN HONDA Cars dr. XJnt cond, $14,900. flOOS/b&tofr.536-8742 cl. ~~:,c ze:a~d Motorized likes 9140 GIJST.l·FSON IMPORT CARS MANY Call Patrick. 5524414 71 SUper Bug. t..a· ,., ...... ~ Dwt .. ,, ...... new, unused 2-way FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ALL MODELS 1o Choose From! T~ 97 65 Very Clean,. radio & RDF. $6800 or New Balave Moped Black UNCOLN MERCURY u11ii.11vERSITY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548.(1276 ......... c ..... , ,.,..... • best otter. call eves & Low Mileage $375. Call 1oeoo aeoch a...i.vo•d 1""111 Bil wk:nda. ttS-9376 968-0!63 H"n"no'"" .. om. OldsMObHe •"'Pl~~~-'TO BUG, c.;:1 cond, • '71 Glaastroo 17', I70hp Motorc~s/ , 842"'144 Honda Cws • GMC $1600~offer °'S:~!?*· 'ft LTD Cntry Sq. Sta Wgn, lo mi, AM/FM rf rt, Im.mac. $2400/bst ofr. 844·9788 eves. • Volvo eng, 270 18/0B. Sc · 9150 ~ (JI TrKks Very gd cond $3000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---2850Harbor Blvd. '66 Sq'*-tblt ebf., iood 673-7529 • . SUZUKI RM 370MX . Less '63 lntern'I PU. Short box, Costa Mesa 540-9640 '76 TOYOTA cond., 1 ownr car. $800 OVER 100 CADILLACS TO CHOOSINOM AT ALL TIMES '61 Galaxy new brake~ & valve job, good lrani.. car. $600. 586·8573 SEA RAY than 5 hrs running ttmr. w_ht spoke whls. lrg knob· WE PAY TOP DOLLAR COlOUA SIDA.MS bst. 9'19'8878 Including 1 set of tic b1es. 4·cyl eng. Ofr. FORTOPUSEDCARS 1972HONDA 11v10 11an~ • .., condlbON<IQ, LllColn 9945 Special 17' l>peft low Including trailer ski, fish, cruise downs. a ramp & a bike 979-0183or7~·0146 FOREIGN. DOMESTIC COUPE m:.f,~~!"'c::'~ stand.$8SO.Callaft4PM •77 Ford P U 150 y .8. orCLASSICS 4.speed,roofrack&only --.011erGOQC111W'u2·26-TI 751-3474 · PS/PB. jumbo tires. 15M tr your car is extra clean 39,000 actua.l mil•. ldeu mi. 642-4097, &124736 see us first. for t ldera & t urfers. '75 250 Endro Yamaha ------BAUER BUICK (00708Z). $700.AJter 6 P.M. ·~~~~~ ~v $1171 $7,850. 962·4822 l• ~'' 2925Harbor Blvd. ~• ·ro Triumph 650 New top, end-stock $650. MS-098'7 After7 PM HARRISOM"S SEA RAY 3101 Coast Hwy N. B. 631-2547 '75 HONDA 250 Enduro1 dirt & st. 700 ml, gooa ----------1 shape, $500. 552-8075 1978 '74 Harley Davidson. xlnt SEA RAY ~~I~ mi, mny xtras. 30" Sport FilMr Blue '76 HD Super Glide. Outriggers· VHF radio 2300 mi. Loaded. Bait tank·depth sounder ___ $3500_ • 552-8500 HH011111• of Ille v111111, .. '73 TOYOTA P'ICIC-4'P ' crl . AM/JM,..., -Cllflper $11411 It\ ....... -hi (Lie. 8-1786ll) Costa Mesa 979.2500 Autos. lmpcritd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Audi j707 '77 Bonda Acord. Silver/bllt, 2700 aalles. ........... .,.. ••••••• ,. SS500. llult aell. ~- '13 Audi 1001.S, 4-llr. •uto, air, AM/FM. Xblt cond, ~ 9730 Orig ownr. Nu battery, ••••••••••••••••••••••• brk.s & paint, $2300/olfer. '67 XKE. Must sell Mts. 540-8190 aft6. 833· 1414 or 556·0985. '73 100 LS Audi. auto, _Des_.;:..per_ai.e_·_i ____ _ clean. $2800 <>r besl offer, '6' XKE Rdslr. restore It ~-2346 betwn 12 & 5 make t&'$ S22SO or uade and Much more 77 Suzuki GS750, full GUSTAFSON Demo loat. I Only!! dress, inclds warranty, LINCOLN MERCURY '74. Immaculate SLlOO. Special Price $2295/bst orr. 642,-0561 1000 &eot~ '°"'•-d 29.000 nu, new tire~. AIC, for truck. 646-0862 Motor Hom... We/ '""n""''°" leo<tl. orig owner. ~2850. Ph $38,950. Rent/Storage 9160 842 ... 44 5'12-4963 __ _ HARRISON'S ....................... ~ := IMW 9712 51:..a. n.a.y Rent a 1977 Excutive ,. ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ -Motor home or Mini· '77Toyot.a P.U. Sspd. long 3101 Coast Hwy, N.B. motorhome from Herb bed. 23.000 ml, st.ill under 631-2547 Friedlander. Call any of wrnty.M000.842·5~ --------~ these numbers 898-6777 1 ton '64 Chevy flatbed, 537•7777 reblt eng., new wood bed, 82 ... 8•8 xlnt cond. Offer. 3141 • Barbados Pl , CM . R RENT 20' Mlr Home S57·Sl6l completely equlpp'd, l•1;I·njji~~ii~~iii•i; 1978 BMW's HERE NOW! Best or Both nice '72 XJ6 w 1350 Chev eng & turbo trans. Not a hol rod, good mileage. g reat pcrlorma nee 768· I 529 '73 Jaguar XJ12. Xlot cond. New trans, bralces &Ures. $7,5-00. 494·8917 ........ 9732 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1972 Jensen Inept. Im~ mac. 216.000 mi. Best of· fer. SC-31188 9735 53295 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 1 111 • I," • I • • •' I\\\ -"',..., ~• •' ,..,If ACM IEFOUYOU SB.I. YOUlt TOYOTA, SEE US! MARQUIS TOYOTA Ml8mONVlEJO 811-2110 4'5-1210 77TOYOTA COlOUA AUIO. 1--....... -· ._ ..... ~ oi .. fOOtf """~ ... ..,, .. 53595 BILL MAXEY TO YOTA I tt 1 ·-•• 11 .. d •• • '\' •, VW '73 Super Bug, AM/FM 8 lrk cassette. New brks, radials, xlnl cood. $1900. 673-5399. '67 Baja 1600 engine. Body lift kil. White sPoke rims. On & orr road u.r.. 0\1 Coolant. New r•tnt. Many dras. 1800. ... 9404 /Nabers Cadillac :?600 H.irtmr Blvd. Cost.l Mc-SJ 5-l().9 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Lincoln Conllnental. xlnl.cond., $3900. 531-1477 Mercsy 9950 ....................... ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST LINCOLN-MERCURY '6' vw Bua, nms &re4f. Dealership is now OPEN asc>oroffer. •71 Cadillac Et Dorado RAY FLADEIOE 67S·0015 Convt. XJnt cond. Make LINCOLN-MERCURY '70 vw s d oiler Mutt sell as soon 16-JBAutoCenter Or. e an, sreat ' lbl S44-6194 SDFwy-Lake Forest exit tond .• stereo. $1200. Wk aapoa e IRVJNE 640-0791, hm '93..5593 Exquialte whita le black 74 830.7000 Yd•o 9772 COUl>e de Ville, loaded, lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• mJ, below BB. 5118-5540 75 Monarch, 6 . cyl, xlnt --•yo .. IU"" cond., new tires. FM ~ ~ • '72 Coupe DeVUle, nu atereo. air cond .. $2950 AUSIOVOLVO, tire9, brkt. stereo, tape firm.893·8176aft6PM See us at Southern dck, air. Choe brwn - Orange County's Volvo w/beige top. Xlnt cond. ~ Headquarters. Best ofr. 644·5465 aft 6 MAR(i)UIS YOLVO "13 4DI' SdV, good coad. .3MISSl·-8100N4V915~1~1 0 56,000 mi . $300~ •v • <Wholesale> 644-4 l98 eee, OIAHGI COUNTY 837·7630 !::vans VOL VO '74 c.d Sedan de Ville, lo EXQ.USIVELYVOLVO mi's, till wheel, lthr In· LarirestVolvQ.Dealer ~aa. '4675. 968-2Z44 •. in Orange Oounty ! BUY orLEASE '61 El Dorado Classic, ·Hom• olllt• 1970 MEROJRY S9AM Aulomlfll:.-ICllltwm. power 1teering, oower br1ke1. AM/FM stereo , 1teole1 A buulyl ~.c. t02e&l0. 1978 SEA RAYS Soecial Sale very ciean~673·51.33 "Hom• .,,~. COMPLm IOOYSHOP MOW OPEN ~'~=m~ =~~~~ulinrr~.r~ e] e: ~l ofr. 840-2380, .....................•. --~---- .. Chla coupe. Nu pnt, -----.-----2025 S. C...o 99C7 ••• -' ..... :-H •• • •• 5 1246 GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY ~'h Open Bow $9,277. 228 HP, trlr (Stock #535 & !1577) 20' Runabout $9,735. 228 HP, trlr tSt.ock #556 & !1541) 22' Cuddy $12,366 loaded. 228HP. trlr (Slock !1550 & #549) 22' Overnighter $13.361. Loaded. 228 HP. trlr. <Stock # 542 & ll S-lJ> 24'CuddySl3,977 LOADED, 228 HP. trlr (Stock #554 & 11557) HARRJSON"S SEA RAY 3101CoastHwy, N.B. 631-2547 GYPSY t."l "Ht.._ Hot lhoww • £..% .,. • Oolptlill • Sit.ts • SldMfts T oyot• TNClll ,_ H11d .. af•1 Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 111• e ..... ''•"' "-•' ,.,~·. HIJM'•NC,.fQHlf&l..H Vlhnt" 1975 LUV PICK-UP 4 cyl.. 4 speed. 'Save on gos costs I with this one. 11 Super buy. (Lie. ~ ·17 41 BZ). s99 Dt4. ... _ ...... ..,,. _.,.,_.,... fCI·---, .. & ~ ..... ,.~ SUI• ti "'d. ,.. It<: & .,..,_"""""' _....._ ,_ !Tft. ll,...COlN MERCURY EX CB.LENT SR.ECTIOH OF IMWRESALES Wt> may have your next rar in our In\ en tor.> Ca II •n1. clutch, no rust. '71 Cqtoona X rt n. 2 D · •••••••••••••••••••••!>• SUl95.'41Mo2J.30 A/T, radio, ~at.er, 17,~ Anaheim 750-2011 '75 ~amaro LT, aood Hun••no'°" &eotti. 16800 Beech Bovlev°'d mi. Good transp. car. '75Volvol84E,4-dr sedan cond. 350 eng .• air, 842-8844 ·~;,o~~~t~~ ?;~ !\lust sell! $750. bstoffer. 18,000 mi's. Xlnt cond: AM/PM stereo. $3ROO or ~~~-~~~~~~~~W cond 1213)697-3851 eves 58l·25SI loaded w /xtras, $6500. besl.646·87G2 3 fl5 ; ___ _ 1974 Con\' . 30K m1. i1ke new, S.1900 Xtra equip 497·1336 PIP.~165 70Camaro. PS, auto, xlnt MustCDJ 9952 '76 264GL. pwr steer/ win, eon<!., PP. Runs ~reat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• do-A'S. n1r, leather seals. $1550 ofr. 751·7820 or Bil AM/FM. sun roor. clean .• _63_l_·3335 ______ _ $6750. '76 Volvo 265 GL. Che.,..,._. 9920 Pwr steer, air, AM /FM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w. today~ 831-2040 495.4949 Mcuda 9738 ----------...................... . ORANGE COUNTY'S & ~•ce-Le•a•na Roy Ccrver ,htc. Rolls ftoyre BMW 1540Jamboree Newport Beach 640,6444 --------- CREVIER miracle mazda Maida RX4 Wgn, 4-spd . air, spec. sound & CB. electronic 1i;:n1tion. owned by ur nut, \'ery lood cond. $2050. 494·5060 dya, 494-61l66 eves. 52495 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA I ••• I ...... Ii.& ••' ...... , MU NflNC,t°" It •(. .. Mercedts .._ 9740 '73 Corolla. Xuns i:ood. u••••••••••••••••••••• Mich. radials, Call '78 • 300 D. snrl, AM /FM stereo. brwn metallic. Bamboo tnt. xlnt cond. $13,500. Dys (213 ·, 930-2050, eve. !714) 962-0976 anytime n0,2518 •75 Toyota Corolla SR.5 wlAM /FM. air. 5 spd " 30.000 mt. Xlnl cond, S2:800. 646. 2914 '70 280 SE. Mint cond. Bil PS/PB. P/Wt..alr, Beker Europa AM/r-M, bucket •ll!lll!:!l!''I seats. U600. Dys 754-7585. eves 496-5404 65 Mercedes 8". Sl~. Xlnt ~ondlUon. 4N·5N2 clean, nu tire~. $675-0 837·7333 dys, 955·1636 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ 9901 ....................... GORACING!! Lola T-300. '72 model, gd t'Ond, less motor. Trlr Jn. d . "'76 regional champ. '77 nat'I chomp. Ex Ongias club car. Gd for dnver school or com p e t l t i o n. EZ maintain. Wlextras. $4750 or trade. 631-209'l or 646·5696. "Ho"'• •' '"• V1lling" .. • Jt ,.. *. ,.. ,.. ! ,.. lt I Jt .. ... Jt BILL MAXEY TOYOTA llll1 l,.od1lt•d. 14' 1 \S$. HU .. TIMC'. f ()IOt•C M ROGER MILLER-SAYS, 1-......;:;;=====-- "SHOP IY PHONE" '74 Mustang n. 4.cyl, 4 , 494-1131 546-9967 speed,A/C.$1800. * 825.3379 ,, 995S ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Olds CuUass Station Wagon. lmmac. J Owner. auto, air, many xt.ras. $1.52S. M0-9030 aft 5 PM f===~~~===-1~~ ............. !!.~~ '61 Corvair, P.G. R&H 1973 Squire Wgn. 31,000 <Gu old. Xlnt eond. 27 orig mi. Nu tires. shocks mpg + aale &a.s lank! &: batt. Auto. air. Make rroo or bit. 6* 7014 Wild of r. 581-1086 an$ Bill. ·'Hom• ol 111• V1k11tfiJ~ 71 FORD rtHTOSIDAH • cyl_ --· s.n. _,,a..er-K.ll"</11 -·(Uc. t1CJFC) 5 1246 GIJSTAFSON 9965 ....................... Tl Flreblr'd, xh1t «md, lo mi's. AJC, AM/FM 8 t.rk. •&G>lm• tet. IX• ~l- llP er SS X• k n e 11 (> s f t • , I ' /. . I l -f.'.12 DAil Y PILOT f I l I ··- . ~. .. ... Lighter in taste. Lower ·11.J~~stilll, the sam.e guaUty tlia')l~ ~e .. a.ta . , ; ~ )' t. , .; ~r • •, • • ,;~ • .. . .. . • ·' It . • • • Huntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 58, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ... -.. ORANGE COUNTY, tALIFORNIA ........ _..._ MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1978 Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks ~ l TEN CENTS. l !BB Again Considers McFadden Closure ~ By ROBERT BARKER Of llW O.lly l'llet Sqff A controversy concerning the possible closure or McFadden Avenue in the northwestern tip of Huntington Beach has sur- faced to haunt city officials once again. This time, the City Council has indicated it m ay be leaning towards closing the street to through traffic because or safety concerns and noise problems. Valley's Hopefuls Profiled FollolDITl{I are the final reports zn the current senes dealing with the ~leven candldales for three seats on the Founlwn Valley City Council The election is March 7. I' R eports on the nine other candidates appeared an the Dmly i Pilot last Wednesday, Thursday and I Fnday. t Carlos Galindo, 34, or 9769 Emmons Circle. and his wife I have lived in Fountain Valley since 1971. Galindo is an executive as- sistant to the Long Beach City -Counc il and mayor. Why do you think y ou could do a better job on the t:ity Council &ban yoar op - ponents? Ga lindo GAu1100 points to his •work for the past two years as a City of Long Beach aide, ex· perience with federal and county officials during the past five years and his educational back· ground as qualifying him fot a .aeat on the council. · He holds a master'• degree in public administration from USC and bas worked as an ald.e to former Con1reaaman Cra1& Hosmer and former Oranae County Supervisor David Baker. "l know bow to make the clty•s voice beard in government and bow tA> make the clty work.•• I I What can the Oty Council do I to improve postal service la Fountain Valley! ' Galindo said he worked on the city's post office problem several years ago as a con· gressional aide. .. The post office needs better access, more parking and fewer long Jines. There are not enough windows to serve the people wbo go there. •'We must continue to write to the post office management to make sure they are aware of the problem." Should the city councll con: sider "Using vacant school blllld· inc• or unused school sites for community acllvlties? ••someone would have to make a strong argument that we real- ly need these facilities. "The maintenance costs are the key. We are not in a 1 financial position al this time to , expand our services lo this , way." l Galindo said he favors , enlareement of a propos~ park t area near Ems A venue and 1 Bushard Street by the city's purchase of land nearby. The , l•nd may be put up for sale by 'the Fount a in Valley (elementary> School District. "The question wouJd be bow , much we could afford to ~nlarie ~at park area." Whal cu tbe Oty Coandl do aboat dr•• abase amon1 • ........... Va1Jey•1 J'•Lhf ••Pu1hen should aet 10 to 20 . 7ear1 and a mandatory life •entence on tbelr second 4'i'UI seUine offense. I will IJ'¥b I• 4tiffer pen,Jties wbetldr I am elea.d or 1ltOt. ., The council embarked on this course or action in 1975, but retreated in the face of a massive citizen protest and the threat of court action. Councilwoman Norma Gibbs says the closure action should have been taken two years ago. "The traffic gels worse and worse," she sald. "Closure ap- pe ar s to b e the only alternative." Last Monday the council scheduled a public hearing for March 20 to consider possible closure as well as a series of less restrictive alternatives. The area is bounded by the Lusk Industrial park on the east and residential sect ions and Robin wood School on the west. Residents along McFadden Street favor closure for safety reasons. However, an even larger number of residents in adjoining A.~WI~ PRESIDENT, MRS. CARTER APPLAUD HOROWITZ His First White House Concert Since Hoover Era Late Encore Horowitz Plays White House WASHINGTON CA Pl -It was a return White House engagement for pianist Vladimir Horowitz. The last time be ap- peared there was a half century ago, when Herbert Hoover in- vited him shortly aft.er his U.S. debut. HoroWftz perlbrmed Ii recital Sunday ~fore President and Mrs. Carter and 2SO invited guesta, including some of the coun\Q'a mos\ fasnoua musicians. 1" Jib introduction. Carter called Horowlll ••a true national treasure." Horowits received prolonged applause after bis first number. Chopin's "Sonata in B-Flat MlDM." a Polonaile by the same composer and Horowitz' own varlat.lolll of a theme from George Blz.et's "Carmen." He also played two other works by Chopin, Schumann's '"l'raumere\" and a polka by Racbmaninotr. HB Teen Facing Man~laughter Rap A Huntington Beach teen-ager who police allege kept plaintive· ly murmuring: "I killed my best friend •.. I killed my best friend ••. ,'' faces manslaughter charges today after a fatal Saturday traffic accident. Huntington Beach Fire Department paramedics pro· nounced Mark Mussen, 16, of 16151 Warren Lane, dead al the scene of the accident which oc· curred 10 minutes after midnight. His body was crushed when he was thrown from his friend's car as it slammed into a curb at Graham Street and Bolsa Avenue and then rolled over on top or him, police said. Trame Bureau OCficer Orva Akl~ said the accident was dis· coyer_,cl by off-duty Orange County Sherllrs Deputy Michael W. Ogden, who tried in vain to revive the Mussell boy. His friends were stumbling around, injured and lo shock lroro their own lnJurles and the alght of their dyiJll pal. His ~panion. the driver of the car, wu booked ll\to Orange County Juvenile Hall on charges of felony man11au1bter and felony dnlntm dl"Mn,, aceord· balrr=t ~PrOCeN ~ be- f.n• booked after the \ra•lc ac· ciclent lnvolvlnJ two othu 1)1Uenier1 •whO escaped wlth minor injuries, police said. he kept berating himself for his buddy's death. One of the other youths in ad· dition to the 17·year·old driver held on felony charges was ar- rested on suspicion or being drunk in public and mis· demeanor posaession of marl· juana, police said. · He had less than one ounce ol the illicit weed and was therefore Issued a citation to ap- pear In juvenile court. Investigators said the car's driver, whose name was not re· leased because of his juvenile status, was making a left turn from Graham Street onto Bolsa A venue when tbe crash oc- curred. They sald the tarn was too sharp and the car went out or control, strU<ing the cufb. Funeral services were stiJl pending today al DUday Brothers Mortuary in Hunt· ington Beach. nelchborhood• are askln1 that the str~ remain open both for convenience and for access for emergency vehicles. They also point out tbat tbeir safety would be threatened lf tbe street were closed and they had to drive on heavily traveled Bolsa Chica to get to tbelr homes. Trucks still use tbe street to ~et to the industrial nark. A member oC the city's Plan- nlng Department said that efforts to control traffic have been lm· posed. • · The str-eet was narrowed and stop signs and bicycle lanes were installed and speed limits were reduced. "Overall the traffic has slowly Increased," Bill De rrick, a transportation planner, said to- day. A traffic study shows that 4,000 vehicles currently use McFaddeh Avenue. JC the street remains open, the volume is ex- pected to increase to 9,000 ul· timately. When tbe issue first came up in 1975, the industrial developer reportedly expressed wiJingness to close the strei!l at his ex· ·pense . Con struction bad already started for the closure before the city backed 'l(C after .residents (See CLOSURE, Page .U) Korean in W ashingWn Park Will Testify . . In Hanna's Trial WASHINGTON CAP) - Tongsun Park, accused of being a South Korean influence-· peddler, arrived in Washington Sunday and will testify next month in the trial or former Orange County Democratic Congressman Richard T. Ha nna. Hanna is accused of conspir· ing with Park to buy influence in Congress. Park is also scheduled to testify Tuesday before the House Ethics Committee prior to the Hanna trial. Park said he'll testify fully to "once and for all get down lo the bottom of everylhine so that com plete truth will come out." The one-time Washington party.giver maue that pledge as he arrived to beein closed·dOOr testimony before ethics com- mittee invesUgat«s. "I hope that as a result of my givlng my side of the story as weU ea I eaa r~oll•ct how things did happen, I hope we'll come to a happy en4lna ... Park t.Qld ,. ......... °" "'1Yat. Park bu been charPd In a le-count crimlbal lndlchnent . with trytn1 to buy conereaaionaJ infiuenc• for the South Korean government He ls accused of paying $100,000 or more to several former congressmen and ol maklne campaign and.office ac· count contributions ranelng from $100 to SS,000 to 24 con· gressmen and one unsucceuful candidate. The ex-rice dealer. who left Washington 18 months ago, once entertained dozens of con- gressmen at lavish parties at his George Town Club. Park bas an agreement that aJI criminal charges against him will be dropped provided he tells the truth. He told reporters he hopes his testimony wUl help end the al- leged influence-buying scandal "so that we can move on to something more positive which is to enhance the relations between our two countries." House investigators say Park's testimony is central to · their determining il any present or ex~ongressmen were in fact Influenced by money from Park and should be charaed. . Earlier in Hawaii, Park said a form er South Korean In· teltigeifce clUef lied when he told a House commlttee th•t Park was an agent of the Korean 41ov- ernment. ' ' "That's llbsolutely not true," Parle said in an Interview televised today. Asked wbelher he was sayinc the former In- telligence chief wla lying. 'he said: "I think that is correct." Park insisted he gave campaign contributions only to congressmen who were his friends, and only when they asked, "to help the American political system in my own way." A former director of the Korean Central lnteBigence Agency, Kim Hyung Wook, told the ethics panel that Park and Hanna promised that if the KCIA helped make Park Korea's exclusive rice dealer in this country. he would make payments out of commission money to conaressmen .. to help Korea's cause." The Cortslltution prohibits members of Congress from ac- cepting girts from agents of foreign governments. The con· gressmen who took money from Park said they knew him only as a busi~essman and Washington par ty-giver. Damped on Sidewalk HB Polit;e Probe l Death of L.4 Man · Runtlngt.op ~each police are problne the deaUl or a 30·)'eat· old Loa Angeles County man wh~e "°"' was found dumped on Ii sidewalk next to a furniture store early tbls mornihe. Tbe dead 1'11an's name was not releued pending noUficaUon or his family. An autopsy was set for today to determine ca.use of death. An anonymous telephone caller told IJOJlce at 1:22 a.01. the man was fylna near the Viking Furniture St.ore, near the corner or Beach Boulevard and .Ronald Drive. • PoHce Sit. Lu.is Ochoa said It ha s not been determined whether the man is a homicide victim. But Ochoa said the body was apparenUy dumped at the 2 Huntington Men Facing Rape Charges • scene, across the street from Huntington Jntercommunity • Hospital. The victim's auto was found parked near the furniture st.ate_ Two Huntington Beach men have been arrested and charged with the Feb. 19 rape of a 23· year-old Westminster woma n they allegedly picked up and as· saulted near a downtown factory. police said. ; Ochoa said no drugs were ... . found in the victim's possession. No arrests in connection with ·• the d eath have been made. Ochoa added. The body was "' taken to Smith Brothers Mortuary in Huntington Beach. Arrested are Paul Edward Knight and Charles Frederick McPherson, both 28. Both men are being held in Huntington Beach Jail In lieu or $25,000 bail. Both suspects are charged with rape. Knight ls also charged with sex perversion, ac· cording to police Sgt. Luia Ochoa. Ochoa asserted that the two men nicked un thP vlrtl~ ,. .. Beach Boulevard while she ·~.:! 1 bitchhl~g at 8:4S p.m. The attackers allegedly threatened the woman at knirepoint and forced her to dis· robe while parked in an auto in back of Camljro Mantacturing, 7061 Clay Ave., Huntington Beach. The woman struuled and bolted from the auto only to be recaptured and raped by one of the men. poUce said. &teat Pilot Ejects Safely MOJAVE .<AP> -A former test pUot M!il1 ejeeted from his disabled P·UM Startt1bter ebort- ly before it crubed Sunday ln an unocc"'Pled bombina ran1e east or Ed warm Air rOR• Bue. Daryl Greeu'"yer, wbo as-sembled ~ pl•a trorn $120,000 . ln 1a1v .. ~ Wts, t.old oU\c1alt . it m-1functloMd abortly Idler takeotr llOm Mojave Airport. Air Force ~eonn.el plcllect bJ• up after &bl cruh -..cl took blm to Uae ~ b ... ~P'\al for: a ~p. # Creue;at er attracted at· tnuon lllt t w• tedenl ~ lUf;nipefmYlton .. :rr,r:~j ..m.;1'arpll.JM.mt of v~~~locaafetlree­.... Ochoa said the victim hadn'l been robbed. Ocean View Board Eye8 Enrollm~nt Changing patterns of pupil enrollment and what they mean for the future of Huntington Beach's Ocean View School Dis- trict will be scrutinized tonight at a special school board meet- ing. The session will be at district headquarters at Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue at 7 p.m. followed by an ex- ecutive session for discussion oC district personnel matters. Coas& Weather : Chance of measurable rain 20 percent toniaht ln· creaaln1 to 40 percent Tuesday, Lows~nlgbt 41 to 54. Hiiba Tuesday SS to 6S. l~llD~ TODAY Yo11no tnnif itar Trac11 Auttin ~ lot. of ton mail. but atilt._ Mr braen.cm4 giggltt. S. firV, Photo Bl. 1 •••• ' A.2 DAIL y PILOT HIF Monday; F!btu!ty 2'7, 1'71 1flU Qtdt ••• 12 OCTD Manager -Confirms Plans By GARY GRANVILLE Ol t• 0.0• l'llet •i.11 Oran1e County Transit Dis· trlct (OCfD) General Manager Edward Lorltz made it official today, announcing his res-ignation. Loratz said he is leaving the transit district because he and district directors were unable to reach agreement on a new con- tract. The 46-year·old executive told directors during an executive session Friday he is quitting ef. fective May 12. His resignation, Rains Back For Another Week's Stay The rains have returned. And they're likely to remain for most or the week, the National Weather Service said today. Allen Dascom b, weather public service specialist, ex· pl aincd that a high-pressure area that kept storms from the Orange Coast for the past two weeks has dissipated. A weak low-pressure area has moved in from the southwest, Dascomb sald. In addition, a high.pressure area is bulldJng up over the Gulr of Alaska, pushing storms south. Temperatures along the coast should be somewhat cooler, with highs in the 60s and lows from 45 to 55 degrees. Only a trace or rain was m easured this morning, with readings ranging from .02 in Huntington Beach and .03 in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach to .13 in Laguna Niguel Season totals so far are 16 81 in Newport Beach. 17.78 m Hunt· ington Beach, 18.98 in Costa Mesa , and 19.68 in Laguna Niguel. Last year 's rainfall totals at this time ranged from ti.SO inches in the south county to 9.47 inches in Huntington Beach. Two County Drug R11nner@ Plead Guilty SAN DIEGO (AP> -Sentenc· ing is scheduled March Z1 for two Orange County men who have pleaded guilty to charges in connection with a major drug· trafficking operation. Authorities saJd thousands or pounds of marijuana, for dis· tribution in the Seattle area, were brought inlo Dana Point Marina aboard 30-foot power boats operating out of Rosarita Beach in Baja California. David Charles Christian, 48, a roofing contractor from Downey, and August Palmieri, 48, of Orange, submitted their guilty pleas Friday ln U.S. Dis· trtct Court. In filing bis plea, Christian agreed to forfeit five residential lots in the Belehurst area of Buena Park, which authorities charged he had bought with drug-smuggling profits. The forfeiture of the land, with an estimated value of $175,000 marks the first time the Racketeering, Influence Act has been applied succesatully against a West Coast drug ttafficker, orficia.la said. Soviets in Orbit MOSCOW (AP) -Two Soviet cosmonauts are In their 12th week in orbit aa they approach a world space endurance record aboard the Salyut 6 space station, Tau baa reported. OAANOI COMT "'" DAILY PILOT althoucrh nnt annnun,.11tf publicly until today, wureporWd Saturday by the Dally PUot. Two weeks earlier. Lorltz hid sent ocro directors a letter asking for a new tour-year con- tract calling for a salary.fringe benefit price tag of roughly $55.000 a year. That request would have hiked his pay package by about $13,500 annually. While no negotiations resulted from bis contract request, it wu clear to Loriu that directors were unwilling to give tum that kind of a package. OCTD Direc tor William Farris, for example, said, "There is just no way we could come close to anything like that. J think Ed knew 1t. And that's why he resigned." For the past year Lorltz has had frequent public dis· agreem e nt s with OCTD directors. However, the parting of the ways Friday was described as amicable and friendly. The departint general manager has held OCTD's top executive post for the past three years. He replaced founding general manager Gordon "Pete" F\eliling. Car T11mble Injuries Fatal ToHBBoy,6 Funeral services were pend. ing today for a Huntington Beach child, aged 6, who died Sunday night of head injuries suffered Friday when he fell out or the family car and was run over. Christopher T. Houghton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Houghton, of 9331 Lassen Lane, succumbed at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach at 7:20 p.m., according to coroner's deputies. Police said the left rear wbeel of the family car driven by Houghton passed over his son's head in the accident which OC· curred at 12:30 p.m. Friday. · The tragedy happened just a short distance Crom the family home. a.a Houghton was tUrnina from Bigbend Lane onto Lassen Lane and a rear door ot t.be car swung open. Spokesmen at Peek P'amUy Mortuary. in Westminster saJd the family was scheduled to meet today and make funeral arrangements. Fro.. Page AJ CLOSURE. • who favored keeping the street open obtained a temporary res training order. , The city is now liable for closure costs which would in· volve the construction or two cuJ -de·sacs. The cost ls eaUmat· ed at 16,300. Several other alternatives also are to be considered lo addition to closure. They include the Installation of a one-way street or elimination of a left turn from BoleaChicatoMcFadden. Milk Slogan Said Sexist SACRAMENTO <AP) Lawyers fOf' consumer, minority and women's groups aay that a statewide milk promotion campaign that uses the aloaan "milk white is in" ls racist aod sexist. They have ur1ed Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and state Food and Agriculture Director Richard Rominger to terminate the camp•ign and stop the California Milk Advisory Board from spending $1.S mWion on it. Rominger said he hadn't bad a chance to look over the com· plaints and couldn't comm6nt. Bob Lowry. a Stn Franc~ public relations agent for tho Modesto-based Milk AdviAnrv Board. •aid be WU .. ut.oundedf· at the charges. Booze Fatal To Student .. ·-- ABOUT 8,000 PEOPLE GOT THIS VIEW OF NIXON SAN CLEMENTE ESTATE Grounds to La Casa Pectflc• Were Opened aa Part of City Blrthdey Celebration 8,000 See Nixon Estate San Ckmente Operation Goes Smoothly By STEVE MITCHELL OI • o.llr l'li.t Slotff Some eald they loved it, others aald they couldn't even get their camer,as loaded before the whole thing was over. But many or the 8,000 or so visitors who paid $2.SO apiece to see the Nixon estate by bus in San Clemente Sunday, thought the tour was well worth the money. Brief, yes, but worth the ticket price. And San Clemente Chamber of Commerce folks were surprised at how smoothly the nine-hour Jarvis Issue Put to Valley Candidates The 11 candidates for the Fountain Valley City Council in the March 7 election will be quizzed tonight on the potential ef. (ects of the Jarvis-Gann prop- erty taxlimltlnitlative. The candidates' forum will be11n al 7::.> p.m. at the Hunt· tngton Beach-Fountain Valley Board al Realtors office, 8101 Slater Ave .• Huntinttoo Beach. The event, aponsottd by the Board ol Realtors, is open to the public. Candidates have been asked to prepare remarks re- g a rd Ing t h e Jarvis -G ann measure and on three other is· sues. Hopefuls also wlll be quiued about a proposed city cultural center. Fountain Valley's status aa a "bedroom community" and the definition or a general law city In California. Argument Cuts Jarvis Backers SACRAMENTO <AP) - Voters who have an opinion about the J arvls property tax inltlatl ve favor it nearly 3·1 in a new poll, the Sacramento Bee said today. However, when supporters ol the Initiative and undecided voters were told a major argument of opponents -that the in· itlative would cause a state tax increase or cutbacu in local services -the dlvlalon between auppottera and opponents was almost even, the neW•P•Ptf ••Id. The Bee said the poll was bated on telephone in· tervlews of 712 re1lstered voters by Public Response Aaaoclated ot San Francisco, between Feb. 10 and Feb. lS. operation to dl!play the former Preaident's home went Sunday. Fourteen charter buses shuttled back and forth from La Casa Pacifica to San Clemente High School, with three buses entering the well-kept grounds of the »year-old home every 10 minutes. Just like clockwork. Alex Goodman, executive- manager of the city's Chamber of Commerce, stood by shiny tour buses collecting yellow tacke~s from tour-goers. "It s really running smooth, isn't it," he said, as he counted out numbers to the bus driver In· side. "We started at 8:30 and we haven't had a backup of visitors yet." Things were running so smoothly that the high school parking lot never reached capacity, with lines· or visitors climbing aboard buses at one point, and getting off further down the line. Jerry Weeks, San Clemente City Mana~er said the cost of Fre•PageAl VALLEY ••• private Industry for 12 yeara, 1 feel I am qualified al operating on a "Umited budget and getting the job done. "I also did the same type of .work in the Air Force for 12 years as a supply supervisor. "Ir elected, I would insist that all city departments live within their budgets without a de<.'rease in services. We will do without frills that are nice but not necessary." What un Lhe City Council do to Improve postal service in Fountain ValleyT "The present post office would be adequate if it was better managed. It is up to the council and citizens lo contact postal authorities and insist on better management. ·'There should be more windows to avoid long lines. Relocation of the post office would not solve the problem.'' Should the city consider usln' vacant sdtool baUdln11 or un· used school sites ror community activities? "More parks and a cultural center are not now necessary as many parks are not being full y uaed at this time. I can't see (use of closed down schools) by the city ln the future. "There ls sulflclent room at Mlle Square Park for a cultural center ll It ls ever required." What can the City Council do about drug abuae among FOCU1tJln Valley•• youth'! "Th~ drug problem will not be under control untll state and federal government enact laws to arrest and prosecute pushers and drug users with minimum jall sentences." Irvin aald the City Council lhould back aucb laws. the tour to ihe city would be less than $3,000, even with the ticket sales. but added restaurant owners and the hotel business would reap profits from the one· day tour of La Casa Paclfica. Television crews crowded around buses with dlsem barking passengers, asking the tourists how they liked the Nixon tour. Carl R.osengrant, who came up from San Diego with bis wife and baby to tour the estate, said be was impressed with the Nix· on grounds, but not the tour. "It was like watching a tennis game," be said ... Your eyes were bouncing all over the place as the bus sped through the grounds." Karl and Lydia Schneider also came a long way for the lour, driving down from the San Fernando Valley. "It was a little short." said Schneider. "Ihey could have slowed it down a little." But his wife said the tour was "very nice and the grounds are weU kept." "It's not as much or a home as a big operation," Schnelder said. •'You been there yet?" "Well, look fast when you go," he laughed. grabbing his wile by the arm and headin.11; for bis car. Steve Schroeder was doing the most business Sunday, selling a s pecial Nixon edition for 15 cents a~opy. "You bet I'm busy," the 12· • yea r·old businessman said. "I've sold about 150 programs so far and it's not even 10 yet." He said most of his customers were the ones getting off the buses. "They've already seen the house , so I guess they want something to remember it by." "I get 10 cents for every copy I sell ," he said, jingling the change in his pocket. Elizabeth Henderson, of San Juan Capistrano, standing in lin e with her son, Arch Henderson, 10, said this isn't her first tour of the Nixon home. "I wu there once just after he <Nixon) stepped down from of. lice,'' Mrs. Henderson said. "I s till reel badly about it.·• As far as Nixon's wrongdo- ings, the former Newport Beach woman said there·s been worse, citing the Tammany Hall gang and the Teapot Dome scandal. "We came back from those. didn't we?" she asked. "I just don't see what ~11 the hullaballoo is about. Nixon should have just destroyed those damn tapes," she said, tugging at her fox stole. "But I still think he'll seek public office again," she smiled, grabbing Arc,h by the hand. The line of onboardina visitors moved swiftly as buses rumbled out of the high school parking lot, stopping just long enough to pick up another load or passeneers. The conversatloo in line ranged from Nixon's resi1natlon to home towns of the visitors. Stanton Biggest Raiser Fountain Valley Mayor Roger Stanton has gathered more political campaJgn fundJ than the other 10 candidates in tbe M erch 'l city council race, ac· cording to City Clerk Evelyn· Mcc lendon. She reported that to date. Stanton has collected $2,722 and :.pent $1,612 or his political war chest in his bid to win his second four-year term on the council. Stanton received a $100 con· trlbulion from local real estate agent Barbara Weber. He also received a $75 donation from o(. facials at the Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club, 17066 Newhope St .. Fountain Valley. Hopeful Carlos Galindo bas gathered $2,464 and spent Sl,352 or that total in his bid for one or the three open council seats. Long Beach City Councilman Ernest E. Kell donated $200 to Galindo's campaign. Frank P. Bryant, a Fountain Valley in· surance man made a $100 con- tribution to Galindo's cause. Galindo received a $100 donation from Huntington Beach an vestment broker Daniel C. Montano. Galindo, a Long Beach t1ty aide, also loaned $338 to himself. Incumbent Councilman AJ Hollinden has collected $2,L75. and spent Sl,25:5 in his bid for o third four.year term. Hollinden loaned himself $450. records indicate. Challenger Chuck Thomas. a telephone company employee. has received $1,924 in campa.l&n donations but has already ac· cumulated $2,168 in political bills. Thomas has contributed Sl.385 to his campaign and has re· c ei v ed a $500 loan from bis brother Fred Thomas of Bel Air. H ope(ul Ben Nielsen. a Fountain Valley planning com· missioner, has collected $1,731 and spent s:no to date. He bas taken a $50 donation from Costa Mesa develoi?er Robert W. Johnson. · Candidate Walt Hammond. another planning commissioner seeking a council seat, took out a $.5,000 loan but reported he would only use $1,000 of the funds for bis campaiim. Hammond has spent $712 so far, records indicate. Hopeful Phil Johnson, a grade school teacher, bas received SS88 in contributions atld spent • $US of lbat total. Manny Alarcon, who ran an unsuccessful council bid in m~ has collected $410 and spe1tt $322. Candidates Bart Sbigemura. Felix Rocha Jr. and Raymond Irvin reported they collected less than $200 each io campaign donations. Retinng Councilmao George Scott decided not to seek re- election for a third term. Scott is seeki ng the Republican nomination for the 36th State Senatorial District. 118 Facilities . Under Council Study Tonight The Huntington Beach City Council will discuss spending money on a number of city facilities that have either de- ter iorated, broken down or are m need of repairs at its meeting tonight. Included in the considerations is a study or the "deteriorating" . city pier and repairs or a storm drain pumping station at Ban· ning A venue and repair work at the Warner Avenue brldjt~. • The council also will dJstuss the location of board and care facilities in the city for emotionally disturbed residents. A public hearing also Js scheduled In City CouncH, chambers at 8 p.m. on next' year's city bud~et. City Administrator Bud Belsito sajd the bearing wtll give N!Sident.s a chance to comment on how money should be spelll The earlier part of the meet-· ing wUl start at 6:30 p.m. ln. Room B-8.. ~ Will Ra~gers Kill Hippo? 81 PRIUP lt08•A&JN Gii .. ..., .......... LlOA CcwdQ Sefari rancen were ordcl'ed toda1 to capc.uro Bubblel-:-tbe hippopotamus wbo ete•~ ft'ob2 tho animal park a week ~l-:lr,« • ~!,.Djdm• IPltrJ t v.orv.-. .. One W81 or the Other we're aom. to emll her ... Mid MBlel' rut• Stne Clarll. ''lf "• can't tranquWM bw ton1tb'-"'" conn• shoot het.'' Clark wu • member OI a thr"·man teiiP ol nqwa who were ynab&e to~ dOH ~ to the ~toa Ulmil ffi11 to- . di)' t.o flri I ~ft& c1m't Into b• hide. He 1a1d B•bbl• Mi'flieN twJce du.rlDI tb•lr blppo ltdeout. but didn't come out or the pond in wblcb ah• took rtfu1eottLqunaCanyon Road. Clark said the hippo then cl•mbiired out of the pond, and H ,.....,,. wJ)lod lot her to get far •noucb away from the water ploW.d ~lb a barbed wire ltttee and macJe her way at the si~t ot a hlppopo'tamus grazing along the side ot the road, and called police. Law enforcement officen from Irvine, La1una Beach, the California Hi&hw•y Patrol and the county sberlff'a office converged on the scene, and wJth the ranpra cb&ffd Bubbles acro11 the fOa4 ~ Into another lake, on the other aide, 15 foet from llMI bithw_,. ctarlt Hid the ranaera find Utelr Qrt l\lDI twice at the flee. Ina Bubbles, appar nUy mi.ulna both Ur:nee. The Costa Mesa police htllcopter Ea1l• circled the area, ablnlnc a 1poWC}lt on tho DtW pciJd. Cluk Wet Bubbles WI! 1pot. led tbla mornlnft sUU lo the pond. Hippopotamuses spend molt of their days submerged uod« water, lt.lckin,s up only ftOllrils for breath, They f eecf at niabt and must come out ot the wM41\• to forage. ~. .,l Llon Country spokeswoman 'Jo Sch e,tter sald the feet t.bal Bubbles cfOSJed Lacun• CaD7QQ Road ma.le the hmt • Mr1oQS • business. "Pe(>pla travelln~ t9 !'OM~ could ha\'e ~ hurt. • ahe al.Id. "OW' nm reapon.albUlt.J ii to the communit,y. TOQfJht m., be her J Jlt C:htnce. 11 lbe ~ a threat to human llt , I'm afrild Bubbles wW have to 10 nnt." ' t i ---___ ....,_ -- Irvine VOL. 71, NO. 58, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA By PIOUP ROSMARIN 04.,,. O.lly Piiot Statt Lion Country Safari rangers were ordered today to capture Bubbles-the hippopotamus who escaped from the animal park a week ai?o. leading a sometimes merry chase-alive or dead. "One way or the other we're going to catch her," said senior ranger Steve Clark. ··rf we can't . tranquilize her tonight, we're . gonna shoot her." Clark was a member ot a three-man team of rangers who were unable to get close enough to the three-ton animal early to- day to ftre a tranquiliiing dart into her hide. H e said Bubbles surfaced twice during their hippo stakeout, but didh't come out of the pond in which she took refuge off Laguna Canyon Road. ; Korean in W llShingron Clark sald the hippo then clambered out of the pond, and as rangers waited for her to get far enough away from the water, plowed through a barbed wire fence and made her way to th~ road. Rangers have tried to get dis- tance between Bubbles and water so that when she ls tran- qulllzed she would be unable to reach the water, where she I I I .· l Park Will Testify In Hanna's Trial WASHINGTON (AP) - Tongsun Park, accused or being a South Korean influence. peddler, arrived m Washington Sunday and will testify next month in the trial of former Orange County Democratic Con~r essma n Rich a rd T. Hanna. Hanna is accused of conspir· ing with Park to buy influence in Congress. P a rk is also scheduled to testify Tuesday before the House Ethics CommiUee prior to the Hanna trial. Park said he'll testify fully to "once and for all get down to the bottom of everything so that complete truth will come out." The one-time Washington party.giver made that pledge as he arrived to begin closed·door testimony before ethics com· mittee investigators. •·1 hope that as a rdult of my ·one's Enout-.i Flap Rages Over Space Duo PIIILADELPJIIA (AP) ·-Two villainous, h eavy·breathing Darth Vaders are making ap. pcarances in eastern Pennsylvania, and a flap bas developed over which really has .. The Force" with him. National Beauty Stores, a Phlladelpbla retail chain, advertised the appearance of the masked Darth Vader at lwo outlets in a promotion for the sale or "Star Wars" posters. That prompted Harry Geissler:owner of Factors Etc., Inc .. the firm that has exclusive rights to mark et "Star Wars" paraphernalia, to charge copyright infringement. Geissler said the real ''Star • Wars" character was making appearances in Read· ing, Pottsville, Selinsgrove and Lebanon. ··we don't want the kids to think there ls more .than one Darth Vader. There is only one:· Geissler said. 1 Trustees to "'Vote . On Pool Contract Snddlebac k Community I Coflege District trustees will ~' consider awarding a $1,019,200 contract tonight for the con· struction of a n olympic·size ' swimming pool on the Mission Viejo campus. Shirley Brothers Inc. submit· ted the lowest of four bids on the project which includes an ad· jacent small training pool, con· crete walls, offices and storage facilities. 5 Scouts Found BIG BASIN (AP) -Five Boy Scouts from the Vallejo area were found in good condition after being lost overnight in a rugged area near Big Basin Redwoods State Park during the weekend. Weather Chance of measurable rein 20 percent toniaht ln- cre asloe to 40 percent Tuesday. Lows toniaht '7 to 54. Hiahs Tuesday S8 to 65. INSIDE TODAY You"' tnm• ""' rrocv Auel.In get• Iota o/ /Oft f'lt(UI, bill •till thotDt 116 brG«t.oltd gfggk1. See "'7n1, Photo BJ. •••ex Construction of the project ls expected to begin April 1 and be completed within six months. The pool will be used for the col· lege's classes and swimming team and public recreational swimming. District administrators are rec. ommending that the contract include a clause that wUI allow truatees to stop the work and term in ate the agreement if the Jarvis-Gann initiative pa.saes ln June. The pool has been planned for five years. Originally, lt was to be buill in early 1975, but trustees chose instead to build handball.racquet ball and tennis courts on the campus. Tonliht'a meet.inc wUI beM at '7:3Cfin the library on the !li.a- sion Viejo campus. giving my -side of the story as well as I can recollect how things did happeh, I hope we'U come to a happy ending," Park told reporters on arrival. Park bas been charged in a 36·count criminal indictment with trying to buy congressional influence for the South Korean government. He is accused or paying $100,000 or more to several <See HANNA, Page A2) A Close Encounter In Salinas? SALlf.fAS (AP) -Two air traffic coat.roUer& and several other people repcarte4 seefnat hU8• .,_ llitda IWoopl.,_ out ol the JQ near Salbtaa &anQy nicbt. but • police c.beck of the ar.a turned u_. nothing today. .. SolMtbln& did bappea ln that area. but what lt was ls un· known," Salinas police Lt. Ray Jacltaon said. He said police had no ex• planationfortbellpts. JadtJOO lald five aqaate mUes or farm land were cheeked Sun- day night with eeiger counters. infrared-devices and f"ae trucks with searchlights, but nothing unusual was found. . Th~ lights were reported beinf sighted about 7:10 p.m. moving rapidly tow.,-d the earth near Alisal. about ftve miles east or Salinas, Jackson said. Most reports mentioned foul' ••very. very large'' green lights, Jackson aald. One person said they were moving al about 50 miles per hour. Another said the lights seemed to be attached to a single object about four stories high, Jackson said. Richard Lockwood. an air t.Parfic cootroller in the Salinas Airport tower, said be and his partner, Bev Taylor, were pre- paring to give takeoff directions to a twi~nllne airplane when Taylor yelled, "What the hell ls that?" .. I jumped up ouua tbe chair and it was a -thil sounds dumb -It was a big green ball," said Lockwood, who has five years experience in bJa Job. He said the llgbt appe1red 10 be two to l°'fl' miles away, about 30 t eet in dlanietcr' ~ aboUt 20 feet above tb• •OUDd. would probably drown. "It's not like we lost her,•• Clark said. An ~tonished motorist travel- ing Laguna Canyon Road braked at the sight of a hippopotamus grazing along the side of the road, and called police. Law enforcement orficer1 from Irvine, Laguna Beach, the California Highway Patrol and the county sheriff's office convereed on tbe scene, and with the rangers chased Bubbles across the road and into another lake, on the other side, lS feet from the hlP.tway. Clark said t.he rangers fired their dart eun.s twice at the nee- ing Bubbles, apparenUy missing both times. The Costa Mesa poll~e helleopter Eagle citcled the area, sbin.lng • spoUi&bt on the new pond. · Clark said Bubbles wu spot. ted this morning, atlll in the pond. HlppOpc)tamuses spend most of theJt days submerged under water, 1Uckln1 up onl_y n~UJ!• for breath, Tl>ey lee4 at t and must come oot of the water toforaae. 1Jo11 C4W\tfy 1pe>ke11roman Jo (See mtro, Pa'e AZ> Surveying Slaughter .Japanese fi shermen survey some of the 1,000 dolpluns slaughtered on the Iki Is land beach in J apan. The fishermen are h a\'in g problems disposing of th e car cass es. Thev wanted to dump the dead dolphins back into the sea but were warned b~· officials they would be ..-iolating anti-pollution laws. Arraignment SetinNarco Sales Charge An Irvine man who police said is a partner in a Costa Mesa furniture manufacturing com- pany was scheduled for ar- rai&nment today on narcotics sales charges . James D. Harris Jr., rr, was arrested at bis home, at 7 Chicory Way, Friday evening, on a warrant issued after a monlh·long investigation. Police allege that, al the time of his arrest, Harris was prepar- ing a pound of Moroccan hashish, a narcotic, for sale . Police c laim tbey made several narcotics purchases from the man on previous OC· casions during the investigation. Street value of the narcotics was about $1,~. officers said. Police charge that sales were made to local Irvine residents and people in other Orange County areas. Harris was being held on $10,000 bail, Irvine Police Lt. Jerry Boyd said. The investigation was headed. by detective Ron Flathers. 5 Bodies Found DENVER (AP) -The bodies of five Iowans were found in the wrec~age of a plane in southeut Colorado late SUhday. Argument Cut&]arvis Backen A record 110 men •• women and children were found ~ammed. Inside two rental trailer trucks Saturda\\ when the trucks were stopped at the U.S. Border· Patrol check point on tbe San Diego Freeway, just south of San Clemente. THE AU£NS -some as Y<>Qng as one year old ·-had probably paid in excess of $20,000 for their il· legal ride to the United States. said John Wesson, agent in charge of. the check point. · r l i. ' Arrested on suspicion or smuggling the Mexican nationals into the United States were Bruce Alan Jacobsen, 25, o(, Mt. Vernon, Wash.; Linda Funkhouser, 21. of Vista; and a 16-year-old Carlsba~ ' ~:outh, Wesson said. . THE THREE SUSPECl'ED smugglers. were t~ ' be.arraigned today in a San Diego federal court. The Mexican nationals were transported back across the border. .-. Thai Bandits Rab CdM Woman, Guests SUKHOTAI, Thailand CAP> - A Corona del Mar woman was among a busload1 of tourists waylaid b)"four masked gunmen at the old Thai capital of Sukhotai. "They had cloth over their faces Jlke bandits in the mov- . ies," said MyrUe Greenwalt,,. 88, of Corona del Mar. "One grabbed a bracelet off my wrist." Police said today the Ylctlms lost the equivalent of $1.000 1n Thai money as well as watcbe1. c:ameras udJewelr)'. The tourists. mo1t11 westernert living in Thailand, were ejp)oring ii kiln slte amid the ruins or the 13Ur century capital 235 miles north of Bangkok Saturday wflen gunmen armed wilh shotguns ' "nd a J)lttol emerged from f bushts and dematlded cash and t vatuabld. members of the f group sald. ·· r One t~st, who asked not to t be fdentlfh94. said some of the ·( women hid jewelry b.1 putting it in their mouths. , A pass«by ~alerted l police wbo MTf vld on the scene ? moments after the bandits i escap~ A JIOUCe SPokesman s~d emc:e.rs rtoveted cash aml some va!llables dropped by one ! ot the cunmen. l ~ i • I ~.J • '.Daeg,re 011 aad fltaaaheg More than 900 runners tumed out e~ly Saturday for $an Clemente's first annual 6.5 mile run, timed to coincide with the city's SOth anniversar~· of in· corporation. First to cross the finish line was 17-year.old Tim Varley of San Diego, who ran the course in 33 minutes. 55 seconds, reported Steve Judd, cit~· recreation coordinator. "People at the half way point told me Varley breezed down the hill as if he'~ just r!Jn 100 :,:ards not six miles," Judd said. Other winners m· eluded man and wife, Pete and Sue Peterson of Laguna Beach. The Petersons each won first place in an age division. Mrs. Peterson also had the best time among women runners, completing the course in 40.5 minutes~ The racewasofficially closed afterOO minutes. Mr D T II F ..... P-.geAl s. . .11mmar e s mPPO ••• SJC Official's Son Faces Of Fraud Conviction LAS VEGAS CAP) -Bonnie Dummar, believed by attorneys for Howard Hughes' relatives to have been involved in the al- leged forgery or the contested Mormon Will , has testified that s he had pleaded guilty to a welfare fraud charge in Orange County. Under questioning by attorney Paul Freese Friday. she admit· led being charged in May, 1973 with making false statements an order to obtain California welfare. But she said she had not been allowed lo explain the circumstances "They ran me in one end and out the other. and I don't re· member a n ything ," Mrs. Dummar said. "I know I wanted to take care of it and they wouldn't have anything to do , with it." Freeze, who represenls rel· atives or the late multi- millionaire who were not named rn the will. had asked Mrs. Dummar if her husband Melvan Two County Drug Runner@ Plead Guilty SAN DlEGO <AP)•-Sentenc· ing is scheduled March 27 for two Orange County men who have pleaded guilty to charges m connection with a major drug· lrafficking operation. Authorities said thousands of pounds or marijuana, for dis· tribution in the Seattle area, were brought into Dana Point Marina aboard 30·foot power boats operating out or Rosarita Beach in Baja California. David Charles Christian. 48, a roofing contractor from Downey. and August Palmieri, 48. of Orange, submitted their guilty pleas Friday in U.S. Dis- trict Court. In filing his plea, Christian agreed to forfeit five r esidential lots in the Belehurst area of Buena Park, which authorities charged he had boueht with drug-smuggling profits. The forfeiture or the land, wllh an estimated value or $175,000 rn arks the first lime the Racket~rtng, Innuenct Act bu been applied successfully against a West Coast dru1 traffi er, officials salct. OAANQI COAST DAILY PILOT had feared that she might have been involved in drawing up the will, which leaves one-sixteenth of Hugties' estatetoDummar. "Didn't Melvin have some suspicion that you might be in· volved?" Freese asked. "Hadn't you had a significant problem of being held accountable for mis- representation?" •·r don't know," she said. "I remember trying to explain." She said that she had not un- derstood the proreedings in Orange County ~, ·ipal Court and had met with , : public de- fender appointed for her for "on· Jy five minutes" before her case was due. The i.Jwjdenl occurred prior to her marriage to Dummar. Mrs. Dummar. 31, baa tbree chlldren by her first marrlace. Court records ~how that she was 1iven a 90·day suspended jail sentence. placed on three years' probation and ordered to make restitution. On Dec. 10 1976, she was to ap-pear in cahfornia for a pro- bation hearing but failed to ap- pear. A warrant for her arrest was ordered but not issued and court authorities indicated they were awaiting the outcome of the Mormon Will Lrial. Mom Finds Son's IJody SIMI VALLEY <AP) - A mother ended a three· week search for her mtss· Ing son when she spotted the wre<:kage of his car in a ra vine near here, authorities said. . Ventura Counfy shertrrs deputies recovered the body or 'Dean Goodman, Jr., 22, Of Canoga Park in· side his car Sunday, alter Joan Goodman found the wreckage while driving thro u gh the area . Goodman's dog was stand· Ing guard nearby. The man had been miss· lng since Feb. 7 alter an argument with his famlly. The cause of the accident was under investieatton and a coroner's report was pen dine. Milk Slogan Said Sexist Scheller said the fact that Bubbles crossed Laguna Canyon Road makes the hunt a serious business. .. People traveling the road could have been hurt," she said. Clar k said today the main danger to people is to a number of photographers, reporters, col· leee students and other people who have searched for the animal themselves, using flashlights. "We can't control the crowd." Clark said. "Especially the press. Seems like every time you turn around, there's one on your neck." Bubbles escaped a 'week ago by bulling her way over a special anti·escape corral in which she was placed because of previous escapes, and bashing through a park perimeter fen<'e. Bubbles had escaped twice before with her 800-pound daughter. Mrs. Scheller said the parlt's eight other hippos were confined to a special barn when they, too. showed slgna or wanting to go over the wall. A new hippo dis· play area is being built to stop the potential of a mass eacape. The so-rar (utile effort by park rangers to bring Bubbles back alive has cost Lion Country a small fortune. according to senior ranger Steve Craig. Craig said last week that the park had spent upwards or $3,000 for overtime costs. and rental and repair of equipment. ··The animal's value is only a few hundred dollars," Craic said. · However, Mn. Schetter dis- counted the expenae In keeping ransers on Bubbles watch. "She represent.a a cold m ine to the company at lhis time {because of nationwide publicl· ty). Belleve us, it there Is a chance abe can be brought back alive, there's not a person here who doesn't want her back. lt would be a terrible waste." "Our first resporuiibility la to the community. TonJ&ht may be her last chance. If she poses a threat to ~um an life, I'm afraid Bubbles wil_l _bave to 10 first." Suspect Held In Viejo W-de Beating Orane• County Sheriff's of. ficers have filed charees or felony wife beaUna a1ainst a Mission Viejo man who alleged· ly beat bis wile on the bead and face with a coffee jar during a weekend squabble. Deputies Jalled Lloyd Laverne Beverly, 8$, after Mini called to his home at 22722 Via Santa Rosa, to halt hi• alleeed alt.ck on hla wtte, Jessica, 35. They said Beverly bit her in the face and bead wlth ncb force that the Goffee Jar 1mubed durtl\l llll attack. They said• Mr1. Beverly need•d treatment tor btr Injuries at Sadd14tblft Oommuntt.J Hqepftal Wh•r• docton remond llaas •Plinttn frmn bw face and then allowtcttiil' to 10 bofM. om .... Hid v.... Beverty told tbeD tbe attack lttmmed from • tulaTtl Ovtr a ttl.pbone bill, Drug Charge The teen·age son of San Juan Capislrano City Manager James Mocalis faces a preliminary hearing in South County Municipal Court March 10 on charges of selling a restricted dr ug to Laguna Beach un· dercover officers. Kevin Mocalis, 19. who li ves with has parents at 31281 Paseo Olivos in San Juan Capaslrano. was arrested last, week after turning himself in to Laguna Beach narcotics officers. Young Mocalis was brought to the police stat1on by bas father after officers earlier visited the raty manager's home with a warrant for the youth. The younger Mocalis was not at home. but his father brought him to the police station later Thursday evening and he was booked for sales of PCP with bail set at $10,000,. lnveatiaators said Mocalis aJ. leeedly sold small amounts of the drug, also called Ang.el Dust, to officers on two separate occasions. Autopsy Say!f Marines Died Of Beatings BAKERSFIELD (AP> -Two m arlnes stationed at Camp Pendleton whose bodies were found in an oilfield near Taft had been beaten to death, authorities said today. The victims, Richard L. Rog· genaack Jr., 19, of Babrsfleld, and Herbert H. Thumm Jr., 20, of Thornton. Colo., also had suffered slash wounds from a blunt instrument. But autopsies listed the beat· ings on their heads as the primary cause or death, Kern County Cor o n er Richard Gervais said. The victims were found Fri- day afternoon lwo miles east of Tan, and the autopsy indicated they were kllled between 10 p.m. · Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday, Gervais said. Their wallets were mlsatne. •. Hazardous Matft9iab Transportation Hearings Set W ASfUNGTON CAP) -Even before the two train derailments U.at ca&rsed 20 deaths in Ftortda and Tenneuee, the federal IOV· ernment planned unusually thorough hearings into the transportation of hazardous materials on the nation's railroads and highways <Relat· ed story, photo, A4 > The National Transport4lloll Safety Board figures there are 6,000 to 7,000 derailment.a a year. Kay Bailey, acting board chalrmah, was so concerned by the continuing spate of de• railments irtvol ving dangerou~ substances that Thursday she called for rare full -board hear- ings on the matter. The NTSB hearings in April will look at bow the railroads and trucking firms handle what board spokesman Edward E. Slattery Jr. termed "all kinds of exotic m ateriaJs that cause battlefield-like damaie." Slattery said In an interview Sunday that amon the causes of derallments are poor road beds, "'the worms get in the ties and the tracks spread;" heavier and longer rail cars. "'the rails aren't any stronger;" and railroad respopse to pressure for greater s afety. "they always tell you they're broke." 1 n addition to the NTSB hear· ings. Sen. James Sasser, D· Tenn., planned to meet today. with transportation Secretary Brock Adams. Sasser says he wants an investigation into the Federal Rai l road F,.._PageAJ RANNA ••. former congressmen and of making campaign and office ac· count contributions ranging from $100 to $.5,000 to 24 con· gressmen and one unsuccessful candidate. The ex-rice dealer, who left Washtngton 18 months ago, once entertained dozens of con· gres!'lmen at lavish parties al his George Town Club. Park has an agreement that all criminal charges against him wall be dropped provided he leJls the truth. He told reporters he hopes his testimony will help end the al· leged influence·buying scandal "so that we can move on to something more positive which is to enhance the relations between our two countries." II ouse investigators say Park's testimony is central to their determining if any present or ex.congressmen were in fact innuenced by money from Park and should be charged. Earlier in Hawaii. Park said a former South Korean in· telllgence chief lied when he told a House committee that Park was an agent of the Korears gov -ernment. "That's absolutely not true," Park said In an interview televised today. Asked whether he was saying the former in· telli~ence chief was lying, be said, "I think that is correcL" Park ins isted h e gave cam palgn contributions only to congressmen who were his friends, and only when they asked, "to help the American political system in my own way." A former director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, Kim J{yung Wook, told the ethics panel that Park and Hanna promised that if the Administration's inspection system. Sauer complained Sunday night that the state did its in· spectlons on Tennessee's s:roo miles of track until 1974. Ten· nessee had 12 men doing the job, Sasser says. Now that the federal agency does the work. only five men watch track con- ditions, the senator says. One of the two derailments that claJmed lives in the past three days occurred in Waverly, Tenn. Twenty-four tank cars de· railed in the West Tennessee community Wednesday. On Fri- day. one of the cars carrying propane burst, sending a fire ball into the town. Twelve perso.ns died; five homes were destroyed and 12 businesses damaged by the fire. And on Sunday, 55 miles west of Waverly in a rural area near the town or Cades, 24 cars de- railed. One of the cars leak~ sodium hydtoxide, a subsbnce harmful if breathed or touched. Some 100 people were evacual· ed from their homes for four hours. They were to be mov~ out again today while the de· railed cars are righted by r•ilroad workers. Earlier Sunday, a freight tralli derailed near Youngstown, Fla., spewing liquid chlorine tbal became a yellow-green cloud that killed eight persons. An ad• dilional67wenttothehospital. ··1t literally burns your lunp• up," said Al S mith, &O' Environmental Protectio11' Agency investigator, on the . scene Sun<ia)'.. "This is chlorine." Slattery said. ''Thal's what they used in World War I to kill the armies and here they have it out in that peaceful coutnryside." Transcript Of Cannibal Trial Found MONTROSE, Colo. <AP)- The original, handwriltell transcript of the trial of Alfred E. Packer -Colorado's only convicted cannibal -bas been located in the basement of the - Gunnison County Courthouse. The transcript, frayed al the edges and yellow with age after nearly 95 years, was found ai;o court employees packed old documents for shipment lo the state archives in Denver. said Mike Sheppard, court ad m inistralor for the 7th Judicial Dislr1ct. The transcript includes the testimony or the 21 witnesses who appeared against Packer, as well as the text of the testimony he gave in has de· fense, Sheppard said. A typewritten copy of the transcript is in the state archives, Sheppard said, but the original was considered lost un· Lil last week. Packer was accused of ld.llint · and eating bis five traveliQg companions when lbe group was caught in a blizzard in February 1874. He was tried in April 1883 in the Lake City, Colo., courthouse and found guilty of. murder. Packer's testimony includes the observation that his meals after his companions died were "salty." Sheppard said the document has been placed in a cour thouse vault and the county will ask the slate to allow lhe papers to ,.. main in an area museum, rather than being sent to Denver. I Laguna/South Coast VOL 71, NO. 58, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FOANIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1978 llfternoon N.Y. Stoeks (, 8,000 Take Tour of Nixon Estat · I l J ABOUT 8,000 PEOPLE GOT THIS VIEW OF NIXON SAN CLEMENTE ESTATE Grounds to La Casa Pacifica Were Opened as Part of City Birthday Celebration Wanted: Dead or Alive ·Hippo HWllers Vow to Catch Quarry Either Way By PIOUP ROSMARIN Ol doe o.lty Plle4 $gfl Lion Country Safari rangers were ordered today to capture ,Bubbles-the hippopotamus who escaped from the animal park a week ago, leading a sometimes merrycbase-aliveordead. .. One way or the other we're &<>Ing to catch her," said senior , ranger Steve Clark. "If we can•t Uanquillze her tonight, we're pnna shoot her." Clark was a member o( a ' three-man team of ran&ers who South Laguna Blaze Blamed On Arsonists County fire investigators s aid today they believe three youths seen in the area may have been responsible for a Sunday afternoon fire that destroyed a VM CA building in South Laguna. Fire officials estimated the damage caused by the blaze in the wood frame building near Ben Brown's Restaurant near the mouth of Aliso Canyon al $20,000. They said that while only the ldtcben area was gutted by the ' flre, the aged building is prob- ably a tot.al loss because of smoke 1 and water damage. Ao early investigation showed 1 · that the wood building served as ( a storage house for material ~ed to operate a Christmas tree · 1ot, investigators said. They reported people picnick- ing in the area reported seeing tltree youths near the building sborUy before smoke told ol the blaze. were unable to get close enough to the three-ton animal early to- day to fire a tranqu1lmng dart into her bide. He said Bubbles surfaced twice durin g th e ir hippo stakeout, but didn't come out of the pond 1n which s he took refuge off Laguna Canyon Road. Clark said the hippo then clambered out of the pond, and as ,»angers waJted for her to get far enough away from the water/ plowed through a barbed wtre ence and made her way to the road. Rangers have tried to gel dis· lanc e between Bubbles and water so that when she is tran· quilized she would be unable to reach the water, where she would probably drown. "ll 's not llke we lost her," Clark said. An astonished motorist travel· ing Laguna Canyon Road braked at the sfd\t of a hippopotamus grazing along the stde of the road, and called police. (See mPPO, Pac• A!) Coast Skies Rainy; More on the Way The rains have returned. And they're likely to remain for most of the week, the National Wea th er Service said today. Allen Dascomb, weather public service specialist, ex1 plained that a high·pressure area that kept storms from the Orange Coast for the past two weeks has dissipated. A weak low-pressure area has moved in from the southwest. Dascomb said. In addition, a high-pressure area Is building up over the Gulf of Alaska, pushing storma south. Temperatures along the coast should be somewhat cooler, with highs in the OOs and lows from 45 to 55 degrees. Only a trace of rain was measured this morning, with readings ranging from .02 in Huntington Beach and .03 ln Costa Mesa and Newport Beach to .13 In Laguna Niguel. Season totals so far are 16.81 in Newport Beach, 17. 78 in Hunt· ington Beach, 18.96 in Costa Mesa, and 19.68 in Laguna Niguel. Last year's rainfall totals at this lime ranged from 6.50 .inches in the south county to 9.47 inches in Huntington Beach. Teens Beat Victim, 85 SAN FRANCISCO <AP) Police were searching today tor three teen-agers who terrorized an elderly San Francisco couple and pistol-whipped the 85-yur· old husband senseless because he had no money lo give them. Police said the three males, all about 17, escaped with $13 and two rings taken Crom the wife at knilepoint. Mrs. Mary Micallef, 77, and a 10-year-old girl visitina the couple were threatened and forced to lie on the floor but neither was harmed. Reaction 'Mixed' • OD ~aloe So.me said they loved It, others said they couldn't even set their cameras loaded before the whole thing was over. 1 · But many of the 8,000 or so visitors who paid $2.50 apiece to see the Nixon estate by bus in San Clemente Sunday, thought the tour was well worth the money. Briel. yes, but worth the ticket price. And San Clemente Chamber of Commerce folks were surprised al how smoothly the nine-hour operation to display the former President's home went Sunday. F o urte en charter bus es shuttled back and forth from La Casa Pacifica to San Clemente High School , with three buses entering the well-kept grounds of the 50·year-old home every 10 minutes. Just like clockwork. Alex Goodman, executive manager of the city's Chamber of Commerce, stood by stuny tour buses collecting yellow tickets from tour-goers. "It's really running smooth. isn't it," he said. as he counted out numbers to the bus driver in· side. "We started at 8:30 and we haven't had a backup of visitors yet." Things were running so smoothly thal the high school parking lot never reached capacity. with lines of visitors climbing aboard buses at one point, and gelling off further down the line. Jerry Weeks, San Clemente City Manager said the c~ ol the tour to the city waold be less than $3,000, even with the ticket sales, but added r4~taUrant O~•r• and UM botet bustnesa would reap profits from the one. day tour of La Casa .,14,clfica. Television crews crowded ·around buses with dJMmbarking passenkers. astlng the tourists how lhey lilted the Nixon tour. Carl Rosenerant, who came up from San Diego with his wife and babf. to tour the e&tate, said he was mpressed with the Nix· on gro\.lnds, but hot the tour. "It was like watching a tennis game," he said. "Your eyes were bouncing all over the place as the bus sped through the grounds." Karl and Lydia Schrtelder also came a long way for the tour, driving down from the San Fernando Valley. "It was a llWe short " said Schneider. "Ibey could have slowed it down a lltUe." But his wife said the tour was "very nice and the grounds are well kept." "It's not as much of a home as a big operation," Sc.bheider said. "You been there yet?" "Well, look fast when you go," he laughed, grabbing' his wife by. the arm and beadlnJ( for his car. Steve Schroeder was· doing the most business Sunday, selling a s pecial Nixon edition for IS cents a <;.opy. "You bet r'm buay," lbe 12· Year·oltl businessman said. "I've Sold about 150 pronams so <See NIXON. Page Az) •• ·' Dally Pllet Stwt ~· 'NIXON SHOULD HAVE DESTROYED THOSE DAMN TAPES' Local Tourist Elizabeth Henderson, Son Arch, 10 Strategy Meeting Union Must Sell • fj Pact to Miners WASHINGTON (AP) -Some 400 coat miners and United Mine Workers district representatives -the men who will have to sell the union's rank-and.file on the proposed soft coal industry con· tract -are getting the word to- day on how to go about their task. Although the contract has been criticized in the coalfields, Marine Held In Burglary A Camp Pendleton Marine was arrested before dawn Sun· day when police, alerted by a re- port of a man jumping the wall of a south side nursery, as· sertedly found him hiding under a nearby truck, with $75 worth o( plants in his car. Elmer Betancourt, 21, oc 215 Monterey Lane, was arrested on suspicion oC burglary. Police said the plants were returned to Champaigne Gardens Nursery, 2002 S. El Camino Real. Betancourt was to appear to- day in the South Orange County Municipal Court in Laguna ~iauel. top union officials feel that it they can adequately explain the pact, the union's 160,000 striking rrliners will approve the contract next week and be back in the pits by mid-March. Members of the union's bargaining team scheduled meetings with the miners and district representatives at ~ downtown hotel. The bargainers are attempS ing to steep their audience in What the union would get Crom4 the contract and trying to anticipate what questions the 400 or so men will have to answer when they meet with local uruon representatives throughout the UM \V's 21 districts this week. The 400 rank.and-file members were chosen by UMW President Arnold Miller, who Friday night called them. "my people." Miller says he has no plans to go into the coalfields and slump for the proposal, as he did in 1974. But Miller did plan to make an appearance at today's indoctrination session to remind the district representatives of their responsibility under the un- ion constitution to back the tentative contract. t J I '5 Bodies F oond DENVER CAP) -The bodies , of five Iowans were found in the · •reckage of a plane in southeast Colorado Jate Sunday. Laguna Council Ga~flidates Speak Out i Coast Chance of measurable rain 20 percent tont1ht in· cr"8lae to 40 percent Tuesday. Lows tonight 47 to S,. lllgba Tuesday 58 to es. By STEVE MITCHELL oe .. Dll!f1 ,...llAIH Laguna Beach voters will 10 to the polls Marcb 7 to elect three peraona from a field bf nine canclldatea to tpur-year terms on the City Council. To assist vo~ers, the DaUy Pllol •sked eaeh of t))e candidates to anaw-er fiye questlpm. The questions, tbe ana\lfeta and brlt!f blo&raphical data about the office soekers follows: of '790 Wendt Terrace, bas a wife and two children. The niae•yHr Laguna resident la a business execuUve !or tbe Fluor Corp. and is a graduate of Cal State Northrldge. 'James W. Bui.op, 3*. of 1023 Santa Ana St~:Ts' mar~led a,ncl serves "8 ~legal c~ltut lOt" a local att.qn~ey. The Cal State LQna Beach 1raduat.e bas a Juris doctorate from Western $t4te Unlversit.J •nd jh•s lived in La1una three years. 1>,~•,!Y,''<µ.ot Kelty U. Boyd, 33, of 571 Lombardy L._ne. ls 11 USC grad'1afe \Ybo bas lived all his life fn La~da. Re ls married .. nd os>erates a lbe&il re\itU trtore wltb bJs wlf4! tn to~. He and his . wife have a 1·~-hte~. stock brokeraee In Laauna. Diana R. Dlke, 32, of 718 Coast View Drive, is married and has two children. 1'he 10-year ta1unan .is business manaeer or a 1._ndscape Cirm and ls chaltman ot the c:lty's planning commtsslon. Adena Ga7, 3$, owns an advertislna agency and lives with her bUsband ahd son at 005 <lrif(IUt Way. Her form al edµcatloh lncludu study In ,.. ar~hitecture, ll'&Phlc arts, com- munlcattons, triarketini an~ business management. 1 M agg:te Mew, of 320 Moss St., is married and has four' grown children. She bas a bachelor's degree from M arymount College in New1 York and has attended Columbt• University, The 12-yearf Lagunan won't a;ive her age, and instead quotes Oscar Wilde: ··Any woman who will tell her age will tell an.vthlng." (See LAGUNA, Pa1e A2) ---- . \% DAILY P'LOT L SC Mond Laguna Candidates Tell Their Views rroducUvt. Our le1aJ poeJUon in 111lndlall lneome In th• form ot Argument Cuts JarvU Backers < Om'lnu.d from Pace Al) Barbara Smlth, 58. or 710 Summ1t Drive, is a ro-year prqp . erty owner 10 Laguna Beach She has a bachelor ot Arts degree from USC and lists her· occupation as businesswoman. Mrs. Smith was unavailable for an interview and dechned to a n s wer the questions by telephone. PbylUs Sweeney. 52, or 2775 Temple Hills Drive, is the in· cumbent councilwoman. A re- altor. she has a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Maryland and is married and has four children and two grandchildren. Candidates were asked In personal Interviews to give their views on five issues confronting the city council. Following is what the nine hopefuls had to say: Is the San Joaquin Corridor a must for South Orange Couty? And 11 ao, should It be located In· land of Laguna's Greenbelt? RAGLIN -I am not con· vinced the San Joaquin Corridor is a must for South Orange County. It's my opinion that the Board of Supervisors is looking for justification to have it built. I do not believe it would remove traffic from Coast Highway. The incr eased population caused by the corridor would increase traffic. BISHOP -No. This 15-mile freeway would only bisect open space to service intensive urban development in the Saddleback Valley behind Laguna Beach. It is a must for those landowners -not the rest or the county, or for the taxpayers who must pay for tt -some $150 million. BOYD -It will be a must if i-.o uth Orange County continues to develop as rapidly as it has. The deci?>ion on location will come from the city, county and state. but I think we have to work with other cities, and agencies to make It best for us as possible. DAWSON -The corridor is designed lo serve a population of ::!43,000 already in place and to relieve Coast Highway of truck and speed commuter travel. I think 1t 1s necessary to its area ~nd dc:.irable for Laguna. Its location logically parall els the northeastern edge o f the Greenbelt. DIKE -The corridor is not a • must for Le1guna Beach. If I were Orange County's planning consultant I could more ade- quately answer whether or not it is a must for soutbeul Orange County.' Whitt. the eouJtty Is planning now as a maximum population may not be ac- ceptable to the residents io two yea rs. If the corridor does happen, I would like lo see it placed in the most northeast portion of lhe Sycamor~ llllls area and preferably out of the Green bell. GAY -Yes, it is a must . We can't ignore the population growth in Orange County. ll will come whether we like il or not. So let's plan for that growth. 1'1 EGGS -It is inevitable. How can 30,000 people in an art colony stave it off? But we can harass them night and day and &iodaya. too. It ahcu.ld liot b9 located ln 1.a1wta'1 froot. yanl. I want It lotatea ln 1Qm1CJO• el.M'• front yard. SWEENEY -I do not feel there is a need for another freeway in the south county. However, if the county is de- term ined lo build a road, it ghould not be located to Laguna's Greenbelt. Tho dtJ should continue to participate lD the declaion-makin1 proeen. In 1971 there were t'J accldeatl on Laguna Canyon Road. During that same time l,!81 traffic cltatlodS were lsaaed aloac tbe city's portion of that roadWI)'. What l• tbe IOluUon to the blgh rate of deaths and colUalou on Lagua CaQyon Road? BAGUN -Expansion of the road from El Toro Road to the <San Diego) Freeway to lour lanes Is both environmentally sound, economical and practical. A solid double line or a barrier down t.be middle of the road will only further Increase the passing which takes place on the right shoulder of the road. BISHO~ -As a layman driv: ing the canyon it seems to me the real problems are dancerous curves, poor si&ninc, lack or controlled ~cceas to roadside destinations, allowed speed• and lack of lane separation -not the number of lanes. Solutions might be realignment of the big bend and two lanes wlth a median strip, and possibly a third bus lane. Better signina is already being addressed by Arnold Hano. BOYD -Englneeri1f"g ~s been the problem. I'd Uke to see. it divided from El Toro Road to the freeway. A divider is needed to stop tbe deaths. DAWSON -An accelerated adoption of the Cal Trana offer would, without widening the road, lower the speed limit in the business and residential area, create three passing areas. and extend the painted traverslble median to keep cars separated. This may not be the ultimate answer. but should and could have been done long ago. DIKE -My solution ls to make it a tw~lane divided road from El Toro to the freeway. I believe passing lanes or transversible medjans do not ad· dress the issue of safety. We have to get rid of the abUity to pass. The problem from Broadway to El Toro Road is gelling onto and off of lbe road. A possible .aluUoo could be a frontage road t)'pe of ar- rangement. GAY -The solution ls widen· Ing the road to four lanes where necessary and a center divider to stop peopJe from crossing over into oncoming traffic. The city should incorporate flood control al the aame time. MEGGS -I want that damned freeway sign taken off -it's not a freeway. We should change the speed limit from 5S to 45 miles per hour from beginning to end, not a penny over. Let &he cops naU them if they 10 over that. Need OWi'· head lights on that road. ( don't see that it bas to be widened. just re-engineered. lt'• the wont FroaPageAJ NIXON ESTATE TOUR. • • far and it's not even 10 yet." He said most of his customers were the ones getting off the buses. "They've already seen the house. so I guess they want something to remember It by." "I gel 10 cents tor every copy I sell," be said, jingling the change in his pocket. Elizabeth Henderson. or San J uan Capistrano, standing in line with her son, Arc h Henderson. 10, said this is n't her first lour of the Nixon home. "l was there once just alter he <Nixon> st~pped down from of. OUNOI! COAIT DAILY PILOT fice." Mrs. Henderson said ... I still feel badly about it." As far as Nixon's wroap. ings, the former Newport Beach woman said there's been wone, citing the Tammany Hall •ans and the Teapot Dome scandal. "We came back from tboae, didn't we?" she asked. "I just don't see what au the hullaballoo Is about. Nixon should have just destroyed those damn tapes," she said, tuggtna at her fox stole. ·•But I still think he'll seek J>Ubllc office agalD," ahe 1mlled. grabbing Arch by tbe band. The line of onboardinc visit.en moved swiftly as buses rumbled out of the high school parking lot, stopping just long enoultb to pie k up another loa-d of paasenaers. The conversation lo Ji:: ranpd ttom Nixon's re&ip to bome towns of the Yia.lton. .. Can you tma11ne anyone com Ins all tho wa, from BOiton for thl1," one local woman said. "l wouldn't even drive down from LA for thll tour.'' Ruby KtPCord, who live• ln dowotoWQ San Clemeate1_ cat&Pt a rlde froin a friend to me b1'b school to IDaA ~tour, Wbu ahe cot ott the bU, tb• wat liDB· in1. "I enjoyed lt. It WU ~ Uk• I tbot .... It 1'0Wd be," 1M Hld. 0 1 tbaulbt It WU real lllee of UM NISGlll to oPeD •P ... bome•ua. Bu& atie • tt wOild .llnli l>Ha 1detr lf •bil -.id haft ... th•~.,W: ''Th bPI:·~• oe u. bua uAd be WMiwklnil • M9 memciln wt.a n .._ ~ IM ofllcu, •• tbe older *•• OtemtMMll Mid. ••1 WOUid ll8ft liked t.oba:veMeGhlm.11 ' road In CaUfomla and I'd brin1 Gov. Brown ud lb• cblef trafflc en1lnMr don heN by the aerulf. of their n«b to Me thlJ men. nver1t condemnation is five years of aubslanttat proper· temioua. NeaotlaUon is the only ty assessmen\jumps. Fire. police practical answer. Any rea-and sanitation are essential. The SWEENEY -There must be Immediate 1afety improvements on the road. CaJTrans bas been very alow ln responding to re- q u eats or the city for lm· provefl)entl. l feel the toed from El Toro to lb• frMWay, where the mlJ«ity of fatallUea occur, aboutd be wkteaed ln such a way that a center tnedlan can bo placed in the road to a void headon colllalom. We are lookldg into an innovative signing program on the road and bopel\llly CalTrans Will COOPefU. sonable st a nce by Laguna big jump has come in non· Beach would be a pleasant sur-productive paper work de· SACRAMENT() <AP> - Vo t ers who have an opinion about the J arvls property tax lnltlatlve favor it nearly 3·1 ln a new poll, the Sacramento Bee said today. prise and should res ult in partments and that's where cuts cooperation to end the lawsuit. must be made. Tbe pluudnl commlalon bas endoned a '12 mUUoe parldag manaaemu& fl•• wlalcl• ...id lnclade &lane puldac nraetures ID "• ~ area. What are &be alteraa&lvn lo spencUag U.at ••••l (eepec.lally wt~ larvil ltaaatq ever tbe dty'a bead> and bow wOdld yoar plan be financed! BAGUN -The Lumber Yard structure mltht. be buill thJ"ough private fundlng and a lease operation to the city. The Glenneyre and Broadway park· Ins struct.utes would be fldanced by the cit)'. I would recommend increued parking fees and an expansion of the residential parkin1 permit program to finance these two city parking facilities. . An increase in parking ln-Ueu fees fOf' downtown merchant. ls probably also Justified and fUnd· in& may be found from gov· ernmental aources. BISHOP -I question the parklnc management proposal tself, resuvtng final Judpnent lowlnc a mere detailed study the plan. It seems that 361 ad· tlonal parking apacea would t in tbemaelvea suffice. Conalderlna our small buin and land area, ultimately the city may be forced to become a pedestrian community, with parkln1 outaide the city year around. BOYD -t do not support parklne structures In the downtown ha.sin. We need pro- feaaionals in peripheral parking to work on a pUot proeram foe · parkin& outside downtown. The commission's plan is too ex- pensive. DAWSON -Eatbetlcally, these atructura are atrocious and not ID keeptn1 wlth Laguna. EcooomlcallY, they are a dis· aster. For local UH, we can tr•de dty-owned property fOf' several '-Veit pocket" or Pepper Tree type lots. DIKB -My tlO&uUon would be to au.empt lo fund one parking structure, preferably ~ated at the Lumber Yard. Parking structures wtth a HCC>odary use <commercial, aenlor housing> serve a laraer crou-secUon of the community. f'\lndin1 bu to come from thoae who benefit from partdn1. GAY -The alternative to a~ $12 million ii lo induce private enterpriM investment to create prlvatel1-owned structurea. MEGGS -I'm asainat the pro1ram. I wouldn't pay $12 mUllon to revive my mother. The profram1'1 off by about ., m Wion. I would buy the car wub and make It • parklnl lot. u well u .ome 1u station lot.I. SWBENEY - I have long felt a parklna ltrUdure ID the vidnl· t.y of the clt.y ball parklq lot ls neeeqary, AIJy stnact.un abould be ftaanced b7 tboM wbo benefit from il Tbe dt.1'• 1eneral fUnd should not be called upon to f\nance pmidn1. S'oold &M clt7 eoatt.e lta etNlrt baUle wltb a.Kiie Palos VerdH °"" ~amore llllls, or de·••HX It as al least oae ealMlldate ku ,...,11ed! Mat fonn of cempnmlM wwld yoa actep& •IM SU.acre ,...eel? DIKE -Negotiations with Rancho should continue. Settlement depends to a great extent on the potential location of the San Joaquin Corridor. I oppose housing In the Greenbelt. However, I do believe that if the corridor becomes a reality the boundaries or the Greenbelt would have to be reeUgned because the freeway violates the soala of Umlted development m the GreenbelL ~ GAY -The court battle must be settled and de·annexatloo is not the answer. Once we cul it looae, ll comes under county Juri1dlctlon and the maximum bou1tn1 per acre may result. MEGGS-We should continue ne1otlaUona which aeem to be favorable to the city. It's like 1lvln1 away the canal. Why give somethlna away when we can win? SWEENEY -We should not de-annex Sycamore Hills because then we would lose any control over what happens to that acreage. We are looking for a basil ol asreemenl lo seWe the lawsuit bet«e the July court date. All ol the city's legal costs, b}' the way, are bein& paid for by our insurance carrier -not general fUnd money. Wllere woald yea eat tbe city 1Mad1et u die .lanll , .. nlonD naeanre la approved by voten Jaa~t! BAGUN -My analysis of our starring suggeata that adequate services could be maintained with a cut of from 20 lo 24 personnel. 1 would propose that recreation personnel be paid totally throu&h charges to res- idents for recreational programs. BISHOP -Whether Jarvis passes or not. I would favor more cost -erlecllv e management i ncluding con- solidation ol some departm~ts. ·re-allocation to city staH of some t.uks currently contracted out at an annual $500,000 cost. the use ol zero-based budgeting among other expedJents. I def· lnltely oppose the meat-ax ap- proach <ot cutting personnel.> BOYD -I would take each department A throu1b Z, go tbrouch them, •~e wher~ we have an excess of people. We n~ to analyze the city's audit to see where we are overstaffed. DAWSON -Tbe county as- s e uor bu elven the city Youth Beaten; Car Stolen In Clemente A 20·year·old San Clemente youth told police he was knocked unconscious In a south side park· ing lot early SUnda.y by two men who stole bi• keys and his car. Dennla Wrieht of Wl Buena Vista said he bad juat left the Locker Room, at 3707 S. El Camino Real when two yoong men wrestled him to the &round. Wricbt said he was knocked out.· and when he came to hi• keys and car were 1one. He called police from a nearby phone booth. Firemen transport· ed Wright by city ambulance to San Clemente General Hospital, where be was treated for a aptit· lip and ttleased. Patrolmen located Wright's car nearby, at Avenlda Lucia and South El Camino Real, six hours after the assault was re· ported. F,...PageAJ WPPO ••• DIKE -Should Jurvis pa~ 1 would recommend tbal the $500,000 surplus in tbe city's re- serve balance be allocated to al· levlate lbe $1.6 million cutback the city expects with the in· itiative. An across the board cut on all departanent levels will bave to be analyzed baaed on put perrormance. Tbe role or city mana1ement and that de· partment's budget deserves a close inspection. · GAY -The city bud1et does not need to be cut If Jarvis passes. There are many avenues or additional revenue to the city and much·needed services such u fire and police do not need to be cul. If there's dead wood, I'd cut it out. Additional revenue could come from additional hotel/motel bed space for ad- ditional bed tax. or changing tour buses $1 per passenger to park in Laguna Beach. MEGGS -I'd start 'with the city manager who is using scare tactics with talk or no fire or police protection. We could raise the parking fees in U.e meters and end the parking sticker program -or raise the rates. As a homeowner, I support Jarvis, and as a 10th generation American, I say give Carter away and keep the canal. SWEENEY -I would not eliminate any essential city services should J arvls pass. and neither would I eliminate our transit system or recreation pro- grams. If the revenue available lo the city is substantially cut, however. all of us in Laguna Beach may have l{) adjusl our demands on these services. College Board To Consider Pool Contract Saddleback Community College District trustees will consider awarding a $1,019,ro<> contract tonight lor the con· struction or an olymplc·size swimming pool on the Mission Viejo campus . Shirley Brothers Inc. submit· ted the lowest of four bids on the project which includes an ad· jacent small training pool. con- crete walls, offices and storage facilities. Construction of the project is expected to begin April 1 and be completed within six months. The pool will be used ror the col· lege's classes and swimming team and public recreational swimming. District administrators are rec- ommending that the contract include a clause that will allow trustees lo stop the work and terminate the agreement If the Jarvis-Gann initiative passes in June. The pool has been planned for five years. Originally, it was to be built in early 1975, but truatees chose instead to build bandball·raequet ball and tennis courts on the campus. Tonight's meeting wllJ begin at 7:30 in the library on the Mis· sion Viejo campus. Burglars RiOe Oemente Store A downtown San Clemente hardware store manager told' police his business suffered "ex· tensive loss" when burglars ap· parently entered the store through the roof Friday nlght. However, when supportets or the initiative and undecided voters were told a major argument of opponents -that the In· llialive would cause a s tato tax increase or cutbacks In local services -the division between supporters and opponents was almost even. tbe newspeper said. The Bee said the polt was based on telephone In· tervlews ot 712 registered voters by Public Response As s ociated of San Francisco, betweeri Feb. 10 and Feb. lS. Park Ready To T,estify To 'Truth' WASHINGTON (AP> - Tongsun Park, accused of being a South Korean influence· peddler, arrived in Wasblnaton Sunday and wlll testify next month In the trial or forin;er Orange County Democratic Congressman Richard T. Hanna. Hanna is accused of conspir· ing with Park lo buy influence jo Congress. Park is also scheduled lo testify Tuesday before the House Ethic• Committee prior to the Hanna trial. Park saJd he'll testify lully to "once and ror all get down to the bottom of everythin& ao that complete truth will come out ... The one-time Washington party-giver made that pledge as he arrived to begin closed-door testimony before ethics com- mittee investigators. "I hope that as a result of my giving my side of the story as well as I can recollect bow things did happen, I hope we'll come to a happy ending," Park told reporters on arrival. Park has been charged in a 36-counl criminal Indictment with trying to buy congressional influence for the South Korean government. He is accused of paying $100,000 or more lo several former congressmen and of making campaign and office ac· count contributions ranging from $100 to ~.ooo lo 2• con- gressmen and one unsuccessful candidate. The ex·rice dealer, who lftt Washington 18 months ago, once entertained doze ns of con· gressmen at lavish parties at bis George Town Club. Park has an agreement lhal all criminal charges against him will be dropped provided he telJs the truth. Loose 'Gods' Investigated lnCkmeme San Clemente's 50tb an· niversary festivities appeared to be off to a great start Saturday, jud~ing from the police lo_e. which recorded "two gods run- ni.ng loose" In town. The log entry for 7:48 a.m. said that a local woman "called to report that the two gods tbal li ve at 905 Ave. Salvador are running loose again. "Animal control wu advised and will respond," the log eatry concluded. BAGI.IN -Tben aboul4 be a tbre.·put.r ..ulemnt amon1 the cllY, the county and Rancho to leave Sycamore Hilla as eltber open space or a re1'°"81 park JIU?Cbased by the county and ulUmately de-anoexed. Use of thl• park wU1 be primarily by tnland residenta and therefore aboul4 be pald for and malntalned tiy coaant1 1ov· ernment raUMr th.a tlle rel• lctemolLapnaBeaeb. Lt. Clifford Gates or the police department said today no in· form alioo was yet available on what was stolen in the burglary of DeNaull's Hardware, 711 N. Law enforcement officer• El Camino Real. The matter is from Irvine, Laguna Beach. under investigation Gales said. A police departmebt spokesman explained that. It was "dogs" and not ''gods'' runnine loose. The error was typo- graphical. the California Highway Patrq\1 • and tho county aherUC'a office conversed on the 1cene, and wJth the rancen chased Bubbles auosa the l'Ol(d and Into another lake. on the oth• aide, 15 feet from the hiehw&Y. Clark aaid the ran1en fired their dart IUDS twice al the Oee- lnl 8ubbl11, appvenUy 1nl11ing botbtlm-. BUaOP -I bellH• Ult• Tb• Co1ta Meea police ~••&Nad9Clflandlti0ul«b& bellcopter E•ll• clrcled tho reHrvtt for cooHnatlon, atff, 9hln1q a QOWSht on the ttcNjtlGG and aplc1ilture. lf n.•w pond. La•M• r•llMulab9d eoatrol Clark llf4 Bubbles was spot. tJriuO ••nnalltloa, we oNcl tec1 Usla monuna. .Ull ha the ••• · t.•oo to 2400t boueea ~ · ~· • ..... ·-·n .. _.. IB~mw .,..a most ---~·--· "'~~­UM.trcr t1 •w.me.; ::-• ~i=r.::~ •OTD -l>t·••••11Un a. llillllt emnt Cllllt el UM,._. ......... Jlll'~d Sib' a.-.... ,....,_•~W•lllirllililba•• U.CGUnln•P*•ftmanJo ....... &: laflll• 18 UM 8cbtlt• 'aifd &he faet tbat. ·r1L .... -.::..~ ~ BaW!lea CIUllS IAIUM Canyoo ,.,... coee._w.,.mllUan. ltOid maa. ta. laul • Mrioq ........ DA .... -Oili' 1efa! 11ADa '"Peo;lt traftllD~ Lbe toad •r• •l••••r••• ••• DOD• COQldbivebembUtt. 'ibe11JG. • Close Quarters 110 Aliens Found in 2 Tnu:b A record 110 men, women and children were round crammed inside two rental trailer trucks Saturda\', when the trucks were stopped at the U.S. Border· Patrol check point on the San Die10 Freeway, just south of San Clemente. THE AUENS -some as young ns one year o!d • -had probably paid in excess or $20.ooo ror their il· Jegal ride to the United States, said John Wesson, aaent in charge of the check point. Arrested on suspicion ol smuggling tho M exlcan nationals lnto the United States were Bruce Alan Jacobsen, 25, or Mt. Vernon, Wash.; Linda Fun)(houaer, 21, of Vista; and a Ul·~ear-old Carlibad youth , Wesson saitt. THE 41HBEE SUSPECTED smugglers were lo bo arraJeed tod11 ln •Sen Dleao fodtral court. The Mex\can naUonals were transported t)ack aero the border. \ ' 1 ' ... ·. . . . :: . . ' ... CALIFORNIA BERKELEY (AP) -Police are focuaing on a long-active rapist's noxious trademark - his powerf\11, oily body odor -in their attempts to find the at- tacker they have nicknamed .. Stinky." Believed responsible for more than 60 sex attacks in the past five years, the rapist is shrewd and careful. No victim bas seen use # • . .. :: DAILY PILOT A~ . .. I ~ Brown Hopeful on Oil I . Govenwr Seea EM to 'Discrimination' ·! .:: ;:· WASHINGTON (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said Sun- day night he expected a breakthrou'h with the Carter· administration to end what he called discrimination against California oil producers and re· liners In the federal entitlements program. "Today was the most con· s truclive response by the administration on this subject," Brown declared. He is in Washington for an annual gov- ernors aasociation conference. break Calilomia oU needl wu a first step. THE ENERGY Departmenl will hold beartnp on CalUomia oil and its problems March »-al in Long Beach. Asked about small California reflnel'• who use foreign oil because of the high cost of In· stalling equipment to ecologtcal- 1 y clean up sulphur heavy California crude, Brown. Sflid that expanding refinery capacities would be a partfal an.Wer. the. point to the edmlnlstritio11 tbat s:m million dollan for solar energy and $12t mlllion for 1eoth~ma1 energy ln an ovef'Jtll ener1y bud1et of S12 bilUoo dollars was inadequate. Brown said be was oppos~ to resc1ndi"8 a atate law agattuit operaUon of additional nuclear reactors unless a means for ~t­ ting rid of waste was a doO'l· onstrated(act. • ; • his face well enough to give authorities a description. HE SAID HE met privately 1 with administration officials along with attendJng a cl06ed session of the governors on energy matters held In the Ex- "Wbat we need is capital," Brown emphashed, adding that savinJ oo foreign oil would be a ready source. He refused to say be w®Jd veto leglslatlon perm itt(og operation without guaranteed waste removal but made it cl4F be felt those wanting the ~w changed were doing so because they knew there presenUy is no way of iuaranteeinc plant waste can be disposed of. ·~ . . . ' . "'AT TIUS POINT we could look face-to-face at him and have no way of positively identifying him," admits POUce Inspector Brian Oliver, one of three officers working full time on the case. Police now plan to have Stinky's victims sniff at product s am pies provided by the Standard Oil Co. to try to give investigators a little more to work with. Oliver admits the odor won't provide the evidence needed to convict the attacker, even if it leads to his arrest, admittedly a long-shot possibility. "THE ODOR is not the way we'll gel him." Oliver said. "Even if a lot of the victims could agree on an odor -that one thing 1s definitely the scent -there's no way we could take those women into court and dub them experts on smell." Hundreds or calls on the origin of Stinky's odor have been re- ceived by the department, but so far they have run into dead ends At least t>2 rapes cind possibly as many as 100 have been blamed on Stinky. Police are convinced they are dealing with one man. The smell and his methods are always the same - even conversations he has with victims. STINKY'S targets since 1973 have usually been women living alone or with Infant children His most recent was a former television reporter who had re- ported on his exploits. Police know he 1s bl ack because or partial views of his skin, his voice and hair characteristics. He is believed to be about six feet tall, muscular and possibly between ~ and 35 years old. He usually strikes between midnjght and 6 a .m., most fre- quently prying open locked windows and arming himself with a knife from the victim's kitchen. THE VICTIM, orten unaware he IS lhere until She feels the knife against her throat, is im· mediately blindfolded with a pillowcase, dishtowel or piece of clothing. ecutive Office BuJlding. Brown said the entitlements program was designed to help those producers and refiners us· ing California heavy crude oil but the program backfired so that foreign and Alaska .. sweet and light" oil was cheaper. Brown said this already had -resulted In the "closing in" or . 200 Calllornia wells and the re- duction of drilling for others . WHAT WAS needed, he sald, were incentives lo s pur Ca lifornia production, something that would help the nation's balance or payments Pi • problem because of the deficits incurred from buying foreign oil. Oil.Tanks Burn A dark column of smoke rises from the Gett v Oil Field near Santa Maria early Sunday when an explosion ignit· ed four oil stor age tanks. There were no in.1u nes. Authorities planned to pump 0 11 toda.\· out of lines sen· ing t_he tanks. clearing lht• arcu for an investigation Favoring foreign to domestic oil, Brown said, "doesn't make any sense to me." The governor was not specific on what the administr ation would do but said an Energy Department call last week for a review of what kind of price 4 Victims Found Dead C HATSWORTH (AP) - Searchers today discovered the bodies of four people killed when the airplane in which they were fl ying crashed in the Santa Susana Mount ai n s I n northwerstern Los Angeles ..Cou nty. The wreckage of the single engine aircraft was found aboul 4 :45 a .m . by members or the Civil Air Patrol. The plane, which crashed near the Simi Valley Freeway and Rocky Peak Road. was located by an emereency distress sagnaJ coming from the wreckltge Names of the people aboard the plane were nol releaaed. Nertll Get•Rall1 By The Auodated PrHs A moisture-laden westerly flow which spread shower'> across parts or Nonh e rn California over the weekend wa~ expected to bring more li ght rain today and tonight ( SIA.TE J The most substantial rainfall figure Sunday was recorded in Red Bluff, where .24 of an inch fell , the National Weather St•r vice rcporfo<l Dam ·AMacr SACRAMENTO <A P ) - Form er Los An&eles Police Chief Ed Davis Is leading Al· torney General Evelle Youn1er in the race for Republican nomination for govfrnor, says a poll in The SAcramento Bee. The poll, published Sundav, Jbo indicated that Democratic Ciov Edmund Brown Jr. has Jost some of his popularity. Spark Cawi~• Fir~ M ARl~A DEL REY (AP) -- A spark from the battery caused a fire that destroyed a 26-foot cabin cruiser and forced its owner, Hernando Camargo, 46, a nd a friend, Rosemary Espinosa, to j ump into the sea, authoriles said . The boat's owner told Harbor Patrol officials that he had been trying to charge the battery Sun- day when it burst into names. Parolel"a.i.tetl SAN JOSE CAP)-The sons ot one-time underworld (l&ure Joseph ••Joe Bananas" Bonanno were to appear at a court hear- ins today to f•ce charges of parole violations, sherlfT's of- ficials said. Salvatore and Joseph Bonanno were arrested by U.S. marshals in s urprise, pre-dawn moves Sunday on warrants issued by U.S . District Court Judge Robert F. Peckham in San Francisco. QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi lnnaate Report The specific nature of the al· leged probation violations was not immediately known, but de· tails were expected at the show cause hearing today before U.S. M agibtrale Nor.din Bla'cker. w---------------------------------. BE SAID BE also bad made Free (;ons•ltation ... . Blue Cross Studies·· Need for Surgery ... NEW YORK (AP>-one of four patelnts who were told they needed surgery and who sought a second opinion were told by tl)e second doctor that the operation waa not n~ssary, a new s~clf says. And preliminary results of the two-year study by Blue Cross f'Dd IN SHORT') Blue Shield of Greater New York also indicate that most ( patients are not taking advantage of the firm's otrer to provide free second opinions . when surgery is recommended. up money for an Americisn "We are continuing to study banking firm that allegedly the patients wbo sought second laundered money for the coc<\bte opinions to add further data to trade. see how many had operations Rep. Lester Wolff, chairman immediately anyway, how many of the House Committee on deferred them for a year or two, Narcotics. said Sunday OD \he or perhaps indefinitely," Blue CBS-TV program "60 Minutes" Cross· Blue Shield executi•e vice that the Cuban president put up president D .• Eugene SUbery an unspecified amount of me>Pe)' said. to start the firm WFC, liased in The results released Sunday Coral Gables, Fla. were based on 1,500 cases in which subscribers obtained con- s ultation from a second. physician. Demaau Rejf!ct"ed JERUSALEM <AP) -Prime Minister Meoachem Begin met with the U.S. Mideast negotiator today and said afterward Israel refuses to commit itself to a total pullout from occupied lands or to creation of a Palestinian state, in effect once again rej~cting two key Eeyptian peace demands. Assistant: Secretary of State Alfred Atherton conferred with Begin f« two ~. continuing his sbuWe mediation effort to find a basis fQr EgyptJan·laraeli agreement on a declaraUon of principle~ for peace negotiations. Atherton said be was not ready to propose a com· promise formula. ea.iro Aeeued NEW YORK (AP) -A New York congressman says Fidel Castro .put up some of Lhe start· ~PrefJed WAVERLY. Tenn. CAP> -A railroad official said Sunday that a propane tanker car ex - plosion which killed 12 and m.: j ured scores m ay have be.{l caused by weakness in the walllt of the 28,000-gallon s teel cylinder. : "That theory is one that we may settle on," said Pbilllp .i.. Hooper, LouisyDle and Nasbvibe Railroad Co. resident vice president f~ Tennessee. lleflelt Oearetl MlAMI BEACH, Fla. <AP> - Aides to CaHfprnla Gov. Jerry Brown s,ay l6r unioos have At· dic•ted tbat their clonaUons will be high enough to pay o(f Brown's nearly $&5,000 deficit from his unsuccessrw run for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination. Brown made a plea for funds during a Saturday breakfa't meeting ol AFL-CIO Executive Council members and unfon representatives as they woq~ up a week·long convention. · · Safety Feared For Polanski Principal Role's Power Upheld FRESNO (AP) -The state's Agricultural Labor Relati()JlS Board has the aut.hqrity to hear unfair labor practice com ptaints involving farmers and farm workers, an appellate court says. Several farm groups contended such power was un· consUt.utional. NEED A LAWYER? · LowlAplfff "I used to look forward to retirement, but not in th1a ~-'' .. Museum, Aid Set SAN DlEGO (AP) -A nationwide campaign Is being started to rebuild Lhe fire-ravaged San Dieao Aero-Space Museum. I The leacf was taken over the weekend by Gerald Warren, editor ot the San Diego Union. ln callln1 on news orauriaUons and aerospace muaeuma acrou tbe nalioa to belp, The fire, which 1nvest11a&on think wu atarted by youtbl playing Jrlith •Jno¥ bombs Jut Wednu· ilay nlibt, del&.royed a maJ« bulldlnc la •wntown 'Balboa Park aad ~ hl1c.oric aircraft« •'1..ed LOS ANGELES (AP) -A lonely and ~epr~ssed Roman Polanski spent his entire 42 days in prison conr1ned to quarters because prison or- ficials reared for his safety, says a fellow inmate who became the film director's confidante. ''He (ell lonely, because he wanted to go out in the yard and they wouldn't let him." Terry Lee Koker told the Los Angeles Herald Examiner in an , interview published Sunday. : ·'There was a few people in th.e joint who want-• · ed to get him. Because of hls charge. They called • him baby raper. • • "HE WANTED to go out so bad," Koker re-• called. ''He'd gel up in lbe morning and run up and • · down the tier, you know, because that was bis ex· • , ercise." Polanaki was sent to the California Institution tor Men al Chino for a ps~biatric evaluation after he pleaded guilty Aug. 8 in Santa Monica Superior Court to unlawful sex wJth a 13·year-old girl. He fled to Paris on the eve or his scheduJed sentencing. KOKER SAID Polanski found it hard to adjust to prison lire a.nd hinted that be would nee the countrY' ratber than face m~ time .behind ban • "He said lf he was going to get more lime he ·• was going to leave and never come back to the it United SUltes," Koker saJd. "I had an Idea be • would because he was very depressed.•• • The rum director hated the prison food and it aave his away, Koker said. • replkaa. t Iii • ~~~:-::-----~~~~~~------- A moon rock' and eome small ttemi 'iiiV!~: • A1parade of sari Dl•••• hu ~ unebferin& bUrned Item• Md trjill' to mah repatrl. f t ! f WASHINGTON <AP> -The principal is the key educator to bringing about change in the schools, studies show. · A million-dollar study on school violence con· eluded last month that the prtncipal'a role ts critical to solving problems involving student dis- orders. Other studie$ found a princlpal's leadership crucial in adjusting to desegreiation and in achieving high academic standards. • Olvon:e •Bankruptcy •Crlmlnat • WlllS·Probat~ * I ncorporatlon •Accident-Injury •Eviction • Cotlections 640-2507 •I oruJon-cmmrom . . . . MODA FIORENTINI. • I Our Exclusive New Italian Line - Orange CO&at Dally Pilot EditoriOI Pge .......................................................... Mondey, Pebruaty 'D. 1911 Aobtft H. WMd/PubUlhtt' Thomes Kenll/l!ditof' 8-bera k,..lblch/Edltorlel P-ot l!dltor Electorate Role. Significant Here ... Ability and fitness aside, it was unfortunate last week when Orange County Clerk William St John decided , ·against running for re-election. ·. · St John said he decided to bow out only after he was ·'convinced pending legislation that would make the ~punty clerk an appointive rather than an elective office .'.Will be defeated. .' The retiring county clerk may be right. Senate Bill 2335 may be beaded for oblivion. If so, the electorate will be spared the experience of having the state Legislature say what bas been an electors• choice shall henceforth be a county Board of 'Supervisors appointment. There is a strong case that can be made for reducing the number of elected housekeeping jobs in government by replacing them with appointed officeholders. This is particularly true in the case of municipal governments where city ball is cl06est to the scrutiny o1 the taxpayers and voters. . Alas, this may not quite be the case when considering the past machinations of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. You can understand, in this specific instance, why the electorate might be wary of yielding any conlrol. ~:Cycles vs. Residents A battle that may reach the courts appears to be ·developing over Friday night motorcycle racing at Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. · A key question to be settled is whether or not the races can continue on the state-controlled fairgrounds even though the Costa Mesa City Council bas rejected the operator's request for a business permit. Despite city rejection on grounds that noise from the racing machines and the frantic crowd.baiting shouts · Jrom the public address announcer are a nuisance to surrounding residents, the race track operator plans lo ·~o ahead with an international meet on March 3 and 10. The request for a business permit is viewed by the race track operator as a "courtesy" action. He had already taken out advertising for the racing even before 01 a king the permit requesL :· Although the track operator says the racing )l'lachines will have new sound·reducing mufflers .installed and sound barriers will be placed to reduce the . r acket, Costa Mesa city officials are apparently less than convinced that the improvements will amount t-0 an effective remedy. Perhaps it is time that the track operators consider a location where motorcycle racing would have Jess impact of noise and congestion on surrounding neighborhoods. Motorcycle racing is indeed a popular sport and draws fans from a wide area. even beyond Orange· County. But the fairgrounds are surrounded by residential neighborhoods. And the people who live there do have a right to expect some peace and quiet. New Views of Work Time was when ~tablishment of the eight-hour day and the 40.bOU work week were regarded as prime accomplishments for the benefit of the American worker. . But the labor picture changes and now the talk is of ·~ch things as the four4ay work week, "flextime," permanent part-time jobs and job-sharing. All are being t,ried by various businesses and industries in various .r.rts of the country. •.:: The goals are similar -to improve employee :~orale, reduce absenteeism and accommodate the =.~creasing number of two-job households with minimum :it;sruption of family life. :::: The four·day week, consisting of four 10-hour days :1onowed by three consecutive days off, has bad mixed i~taccess. The principal drawback seems to be the fatigue. :~ctor of the long work day. ;::: So-called "llextime" gives employees a choice of :<i>ming in an hour or two early or late for their full :eght·bour day. This can be very bandy for the workers. :~t involves some horrendous planning problems for :jJJnployen. :::: Housewives and retirees who want steady, but not :foll.time work are finding more firms offering P@]llanent :J!art·time jobs. This helps the family finances and gives :a:m ploye:rs acceM to talents and training that might :~herwise be wasted. ::: The idea ot having two people -often a husband and :;,;te team -share a single job is catching on in some ilf eas, notably in education. This gives both workers the =Htisf action of a job and a paycheck, along with a chance ~take turns keepjilg tile bome f1i'es burning. • • All of which goes to show there's more than one ~)>proach to sohing eo>ployment problems while keeping '!CU> with our changing social mores. •• • • I • ~nlona expn 11«1 tn the epece above are thole of the Oaily Piiot. ~ views expreaeed on this page are thote of their authors and *tlats. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Dally Piiot. P.O. :Box 1560, Costa M .... CA 92628. Phone (71•) 6'2-4321. :· . ~~ ... •.. ... Boyd/Look-alikes :::~ B1 Lii. BOYD . : ..• Que1tlan arlael u to wbr ~Ulen and 111tm. wbO ..4M't look all that IDGeb alike ~en youc. tend to re· #mble one another more· · #.! more a tbeJ a1e. Can .!Ojll1 surmlle it UI to do with P• Jatm, balr color and Ale i-. the di. . : .. .:.:· r.·. Dear I Gloomy Gus tlnetlons of the attn. ti 1f!t19 the balr, ~.And qUlte ff.1t~be~ :i.~1~': wrtnk'Je almllarly u tbey grow older. That wtdQ ooce most obvloualr ht tbem apart lives up !Int, leavt.n& onl1 that which moat ob- vloual1 blndl tbem together at Jut. Wach tbla 1pace for more phU01opblcal dJa· aertatlon1 •• demand warrama. Q. ..All riSbt. i.e, wbat did Public l:Mmr Number One and U .& Prellclent Ben- jamin lllrrblao la.ave ID com-moat" A. lust laa~ to bow that on., atr. Tbe:t,were botll bwi.cl Jn tM .... eemtterJ. At Cron Pmlt, 1D4. Nicholas Vo~ Hoffman Huge Judgments Warn Industry Tbe eue made headlines a few days ago. A $128.5 mllllon dollar, jury.awarded Judgment against the Ford Motor Co. The newsreaders on radio and television spoke about lt being a record. Moat o! the money was awarded to Richard Grlmahaw. a 13-year-old boy Who WU ridtne in a Ford Pinto when lt was s truck behind by a blow from another car which ig- nited the Pinto'& gas tank. The Pinto with its con· troversiaJ gu tank bas become the Chevy Corvair of the ?Os. The car with the reputation as the most dangerous vehicle on the highways. Whether or not it truly is, the Grimshaw boy was burned over 90 percent of his body and has ·undergone, ac· cording to newspaper reports, 60 operations gince the 1972 ac· cldent. He is described as horribly scarred and in need of another 30 operations. Whoever is or is Jack Anderson not at fault. the last llx Jean ot tbia younpter .. , We muat bave been one of the moat In· describable pain. ALL OP TBIS and mucb, much more muat have been known to the Jmy wb.lcb l1ltened to the cue for 11.x IDOlltbl before comln1 to lta deds1on to .-. this bqe penaltf. ID the modem legal ayatem, however, Jud.lea have many ways ol .ol~L,~ decisions and, ID effect. m the 12 citizens who ctve tbetr time to trta1a Utile more than or- namental attendees at wbat are judicial leeveM. If •llf cue would seem to cry out for a downward adjustment it would seem to be t.hll cme. Even tboaah the lQjuriea are tragic ana tbe famllJ bH alread)r bad $125,000 In medical bills, isn't the enormous aum un-conscionably blgb? Aaaumlng for the purpo1e11 of dlacuulon the Pinto la Indeed an unsafe automobile, then the answer la no. This huge award will not on- ly be ot some belp to the ac· cident victim, but to society as a whole. A few judgments Uke that and no automobile manufacturer la golnc to make an unsafe automobile. Tbo c:ott ol remedy. iDI deaJ.sn error or beeflni up quality control will be as Dl>tb1n1 compared to the cost o! a doaen or ao $128 mll11on dam aae judgments. SUCH Judgments also obviate tbe need for federal safety 1tanduda. which bualnesamen say drac down productivity and )'ant up costa. <Parenthetically, Jet It be noted that In denyJ.ni the cbar1ea against the Pinto one oC the defenses Ford is making is tbat the car "met all applicable federal safety standards." Which brinia up the poealbWty that ne&llgent manufacturers ma)" be able to protect themselves against damage sulta by compb'inl with Inade- quate and bureaucrattcaUy botched safety standards.) The idea that the law courts might lndlrect1y provide all of us with high qualU;y consumer pro- tection l>y giving justice to COD· sumers in.lured by low quallt.y merchandise is not likely to catch on. Manufacturers and In· surance companies are already puWng OD a big drive to con- vince 111, Le. tboee of ua 1Vbo escape being hurt by what we buy, that it la ua who must ul- tlm ately ~ for the Jud.Jments. THE THEORY la that if Jones and Johnson Widaet Inc. are bit with a mammoth damage jud,ment the insurance com· pames must raise the rates of every corporation ln the wideet Industry. No such theory obtains however wben you and I want to buy car Insurance. Theo we're told the b.iih risks have the b1gh rates and the low risks have the low rat.es. Why raise the rates of the non·negll1ent manufacturer who la sellln1 a sale product? Because by doing so. so much clamor and fear is caused that. legislation will be Introduced llm it log the ahe of the judgments which may be awarded. That, of course. wrecks what could be a simple. non-bureaucratic selt-enfordng safety system. Approximately the same thing happened when the doctors and the inaurance companies pulled their malpractice con of a couple of years aeo. The "criala" was resolved by maldng it next to impossible for the victims to secure compensation for their injuries. THEODORE Koskolf. a lawyer In Bridgeport. Conn., re· ceotly flied a suit. agalnat a parcel of insurance companies and advertislnt uenctea who, the injured consumer's lecal remedy by jury tamperiDg. medy by jury tampering. , Speclflcally Koskoff la objecting to ads placed in three national magazines, staling, .. When awarding damages in Uabllity uses, the jury is cautioned to be fair and to bear in mind that money does not grow on trees. Jt muat be paid through inaurance premiums from uninvolved parties, such as yourself • Koskofrs legal theory is novel and probably won't be sustained by the courts, but give him a gold star for t.rying"to safeguard tbia form of consumer pro- tection. The House of Representatives recenUy shot down·Ralph Nader's proposal to create a federal agency to represent consumer interests before other governmental entities. The reason for the bfil's defeat seems to have been ir· rttatlon and dlsappolDtmeat at bow poorly 80 much CODSUma' protection leeialatlon bas worked. But that doesn't mean we don't need protection. If not from the executive branch. tbm from the law court.a. Report Says LNG Storage Can Be 'Lethal' WASHINGTON -The natural gas Industry bas invested blllions in transporting and st.or· ing .precious but dangerous liquid natural 1aa. But un· fortunately, mmy of the 1hlp- ping routes and 1toraae sites lie in densely populated centers where a '8at. a fire or an U· plosion could UMte a boloeeust. The General Aecounting OC· flee, one of tbe toaabeat watcbdoc. agencies In government, bas warned that mOlt of the storace · facilities are located 0'withln lethal distance of many mljor u .s. clUe1. especially OD tlae Eut Coat, .. states a conMellUa1 memo. Yet test.I lbow. accord.ID8 to the 1overnmeat ~ocUton. ..that many of the 1Halled ·~~cf&. aip feature. may fall tn Art Hoppe the event ot hurrtcanea. earth· quakes or other natural dis· asters or aabota1 .. " TRB INDCBTBY. will blWons at atake. bu now reacted to this crlticllm by launcbin1 a flerce eounterattack on the General AcCOWldna Oftlee. liquid natural gas "have been stalled for more than flve years." It would cost the industry a fortune to relocate storage facilities or conatruet new cnea. The natural eaa companies. therefore. have much to gain ii they can face down the gov· ernmenL Accordiq to a eonftdentlal memo prepared for House Enera a.airman John DIDpJJ. BUT WORRIED officials are D·Mlcb.. ''indUltrJ pressure la taldni a bard look at the Uq11kl growtni to temper or completely natural pa buarda. New York suppTeu the GAO'• explollve C i t y • a f o r m e r F lJ e report on tbe dancers of liquid Commlaalooer John O'Hqea ia natural pa. Alt.bouih GAO of· quoted in the con1re11lona1 ficiall wW DOt openly admit lt. memo u wa.mlng that mesa sources within the aienc1 report ev acaatlon of tbe ctty•a that Pn!lllln II m0t1ndn1 to 1ID-borouahs would be necessary to precedeated leYela... • deal with a liquid natural cu ..... _ •-.-.-.:.. ... __ .__.Its~.. cetaetl'opbe. Yet the memo u~ ILUU-~ -~ IA5 notes that tbe evacaatlon IUDS not ool1 upon the GAO'• •'Would be an lmpouible tut watt-hMn but upma the Cout ·d t t b J Gu&rcl'8 1bore patrol1. an •moan s o av DI no r-.. --'-·' .__.. •• .__ sav em er1enc1 procedures ~-u ... -. -· ~ whatsoever:• · that tbe Cout ouan1•a effort.I .. to evaluate and control tbe In Boston ... fallure of daD1er'• from tanbn baullq tran1port or storage faciUtles could pour a. • .higbJy nplmtve cloud over the -urban com- munities ol Everett. Chelsea ud Somerville,'* warna the memo chillingly. The danger or a disastrous coJ. 11.aion at sea, iOlltina a giant. • flam lnc flreball, ill also a real po11lb1Uty. The confidential memo, citing an lnternatlonal stucb'. states that an averace of .. one ol ffVer/ four tankers In service bas a co.Waion every year.•• Footnote: A spokesman for the Intent.ate Natural Gas >.:;, IOClation acknowledged that in· duatry representatives bad preued the GAO for copies ol lts crlUcal report. "But," he insis~ ed, •'there hasn't been what I would call preuurtna.'• An of· flclal ol tbe American Gu A$- socl a Uon auag~sted that tht crlUclsm could have a positive effect. •"Jbe Industry ls woni~ about providing the fuel safely.', be assured our associate Jaclj Mitchell. It's Up, Up and Away with the ·caiifornianants . bact about this l~ bid; nea. I'm lolnc to plant the~ Oa1 and make a lont forty\ .ec.d apeecb polntlq out tba\ the wbole parpoee ol our~ pro1ram ta to prove - CalJtomla UC.t7le II ..., and tbat 1. aa .tt1 leaclln Npraentative, aboWcl UMnfore be eleded Presldeftt. •• : .. TBA'r8 woadeJ'fal. eo..: emor. But our computer elate lbow1 that 10Q anuat a... JUU( retl'o·roeketa lJl eaactl.J e.i leeoDclL'' : Orange Coast EDI ION To4ay's Closing N.Y. toeks VOL.. 7l, NO. 58, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.ORNIA . . : MONDAY, FeBRUARY 27, 1978 TEN CENTS . •angers to Get .B~b~les Dead, Alive? By P•ouP ROSMARIN Ol t ... 0.lly Piiot SIAtfl Lion Country Safari rangers were ordered today to capture Buqbles the hippopotamus who escaped from the animal park a wee~ a~o. leading a sometimes merry chase alive or dead. "One wav or the other we're goilft to catch her,'' said senior ranger Steve Clark ... If we can't tranquilize her tonight, we're . gonna shoot her." Clark was a member of a three·man team of ran1ers who were unable to aet close enough to the three-ton animal early to- day to fire a tranquWitng dart into her hide. He said Bubbles surfaced t w 1 c e during their hippo stakeout, but didn't come out or the pond in which she took refugeoffLagunaCanyonRoad. Clark satd the hippo then clambered out of the pond. and as rangers waited for her to eet far enough away from the water, plowed tbl'ou«h a barbed wire fence and macle her way to the road. Ransers have tried to get dis· tance between-Bubbles and water so that when she ls tran· quilized she wottld be unable to reach the water, where she Density Viewed NB Council Eyes Moratorium By JOANNE REYNOl.DS • OI , .. O•lly P•IOI ~1•11 N·e w Jl or t Be a c h c 1 t y councilmen are expected to dis- cuss a proµosed hu II ding moratorium again tonight The sub1ect was br ought before councilmen two weeks ago by members of LEAF (Legal Environmental Analysis Fund). an organization ded1cat· ed to the reduction of the "amount of future development lhal will be allowed in Newport neach I By la\.\, it takl'i. a vote of six ol 1he seven cou ncil members to E?nact such a measure Two weeks ago Mayor Milan Dostal was absent from the t•ounc1l meeting and Mayor Pro Tem Pete Barrett abstained because of a conflict of interest. He does b u s in ess with the Irvine -Company. the city•s largest land·owner. With only ftve members vot· ing. councilmen could not vote on the moratorium proposal two weeks ago. so formal action was put off until tonight. However, at the meeting two weeks ago, councilmen agreed to a plan put forward by Councilman Don Mcinnis that developers and LEAF members meet in a public negotiating session to work out a com· promise. The first of those negotiating Close Quarters 110 Aliem Formd in 2 Trucb .\ recorn 110 men. women and children were found nammcd in..,1de two rental trailer trucks SaturchH·. when the trucks were s topped at the U.S. Hord er· Patrol l'hl'l'k point on the San Diego Freeway, just south of San Clemente. THE AUE~S -some as young as one yea~~d -had probably paid in excess of S20,000 for thetr iJ. legal nde to the Cnited States. said John Wesson, agent in charge of the che<:k point. Arrested on suspicion of smuggling the Mexican nationals into the United States were Bruce !tan Jacobsen, 25, of Mt. Ve rnon, Wash.: Linda Funkhouser, 21, of Vista; and a 16-year·old Carlsbad youth, Wesson said . TllE THREE SUSPECTED s mugglers were to be urraigned today in a San Diego federal court. ' The Mc:-..ican nationals were transported back across the border. '\. Thai Bandits Rob , CdM Woman, Guests SUKHCYI'AI. Thailand CAP ) - A Corona del Mar woman was a mong a busload or tourists waylaid by four masked gunmen at the old Thai capilal of Sukhotai. •'They had cloth over their faces like bandits in the mov- ies," said Myrtle Greenwall, 88, of Corona del Mar. "One grabbed a bracelet off my wrist." Police said today the victims lost the equivalent of $1,000 in Thai money as well as watches, cameras and jewelry. The touri sts, mostly west~rners li ving in Thailand, were exploring a kiln site amid Coast Weather Chance of measurable rain 20 percent tonight in· , creHlne to 40 percent Tuesday. Lowa tonlpt 47 to.'4. HJ1hs Tuesday 58 to 65., the ruins of the 13th century capital 235 miles north of Bangkok Saturday when gunmen armed with shotguns and a pistol emerged from bushes and demanded cash and valuables, members of the group said. One tourist, who asked not to be 1denti(ied, said some of the women hid jewelry by putting it in their mouths. A passerby apparentlr alen.ct police who arrived on th&~ moments afler th~ bandlt1 escaped. A police 1poke1man said officers recovered-euh and some valuables dropped by one of the gunmel"I. sessions is tentatively slated for March 16 during a joint City Council·Planning Commission study session. Martin Brower, a spokesman for the Irvine Company said the company currenUy is 1>teparing plans for all or its major re· maining residential sites in the city. He said those plans include proposals for the Castaways, Newporter North, Westbay, Big Canyon and· a condominium site in Newport Center. Brower said the plans will in· elude alternatives and he noted that the company does not view them as "advocacy plans" on which action is beint sou1itbt~ but <See DENSITY,~Page AZ1 Park Ready To Testify To 'Truth' WASHINGTON CAP> - Tonpun Park, accused of being a Soath Jtoreaft influenn• peddler', arrived lo Wasblncton Suqday and will tutify neirt month ln the trial ol forarer Oran1• toeoty DemotraUc Conar•••rnal\ R1cMard T. Ranna. Hann• Is accused ot 8111'Pir· tng with Park to buy lntl\aet\ce in Con1ress. Park ts also scheduled to testify Tuesday before the House Ethics Committee prlor to the Hanna trial. Park said he'll testify fully to ••once artt for all get d9wn·to the bottom of everythln& ao that complete truth will come out." The one·time Washington party,glver made that pledge as he arrived to begin close4·door testimony before ethics com- mittee investigators. "I hope that as a result of my giving my side of the story as well as I can recollect bow things did happen, I hope we'll come to a happy ending," Park told repc:lrterS on arrival. Park has been charged lo a 36·count criminal Indictment with trying to buy congressional innuence for the South Korean government. He ls accused of paying $100,000 or more to several formet congl'easmen and of maklnt campaign and office ac- count contributions raneing from '100 to $5,000 to 2' COD· eressm~ ~ ~ \iplGctepful candid~ The ex·rlce deal~. "bo left Wa$binlton J.8 snontb1 •i:o. onc:o enterta~ned do&eQa of con- greumen at lavtah parti• at hll Georft'Tbwo Oub. <1e1 RANNA, P .. e AJ) would probably drown. ·1ua not like we Jost her.'' Clark said. An astonished motorist travel· ine Laguna Canyon Road braked at the sight or a hippopotamus crazin& alone Uie side of the road, and called police. Law enforcement officer• from Irvine, Laguna B~ach , the California Hiehway Patrol and the county sherifrs office converged on the scene, and wilfl UI• rangers ch•ed Bubbles acroas the roed and lntet another lake, on the other side. lS feet from the highway. Clark aa.id the raoiers fired ·their dart "'ns twice 1rthe ftee. 11JI Bubb1t.s;4U)p,uoenUy misstng both times. The Co1Ua Mesa police bel}copler Eagle circled the area, atuning a apOtlight on the S°"'eging Slaughter new pond. Clark said Bubbles was spot· ted this morning. ttill in the pond. Hippopotamuses spend most of their days submerged under water, sticking up only nostrils for breath, THey feed at nltht and must come out of the water to forage. Lion Country spokeswoman Jo <see mrl'O, eace AZ> Japanese fishermen s urvey some or the 1.000 dolphins slau ghtered on the l ki bl;rnil h<.'ath in J apan. The fishermen are having µrublems disposing of the car casses: They wanted to dump ,the dead dolphins back into the sea but were warned bv officials lhev would be violating al'\ti·pollutioo laws. · C~ose .. ~g, QPft.ters? .. 'Suvoping Green Liglw' Seen at Sal,inas .I • • .. SAUNA.I (A'l -Two alr traffic controllers and several 'other people reported seeing huge green Ufhts swooping out of the sky near SaUnas Sunday night, but a pOlke check or the area turned up nothing today. "Something did hap(>en in that area, but what it was Js un· known," Salinas police Lt. Ray Jackson said. He aa\d police had no ex· planation ror the lights. Jackson said five square miles of form land were ehecked Sun. ·sf ay night with gelger counters, infrarfd devices and nre trucks with searchlight&. but nothin& unusual was found. The lights were reported being sighted about 7:10 p ,m. moving rapidly. toward the earth near Allsal, about five miles east of Salinas, Jackson said. Most reports mentioned four .. very. very larie" green lights, Jackson said. One person said they, wete moving at 1thout SO Mrs. D1immar Tells Of Fraud Conviction LAS VEGAS (AP) -Bonnie Dummar, believ.ed by attorneys for Howard Hughes' relatives lo have hffn lnv<>lved in the aJ. Jeged forgery or lbe contested Mormon Will. bas testified that· she bad pleaded gailty to a welfare fraud charge in Orange Coun\y. Under questlonlna by attorney Paul Freese Friday, she admit· ted being charted ln May, 1973 with making false statementa in order to obtain California mUes per hour,.kotlter said the lights seemed to be-attached to-a sinJl& object about four stories high, Jackson saJd. Richard Lockwood, an air tratfic controller in the Salinas Airport tower, said be and hls partner. Bev Taylor, were pr~ parihg to give takeoff directions to n twfn·engine airplane when Taylor yelled. ''What. the bell is that?.. ..i •· 1 jumped up outta the chair • and it was a -this sounds dumb .. -it wu a big green ball," said Lockwood. who bas five years " experience in his job. He said the light appeared to be two to {our miles away, about ~ 30 feet in diameter and about 20 feet above the gound. "By the time you could count one·two·three. it had gone down," he said. He said h&did not think ft was an aircraft since it was "a solid mass of green." Although the sightings were near Alisal High School, Jackson said the lights were reportedly loo big to be devised by kids as optic al tricks. 5 Bodies Found DENVER (AP) -The bodies of nve Iowans were found in the wreckage or a plane in southeast Colorado late Sunday. ( 1,f DAILY P.LOT N f',.._Pa.,AJ DENSITY •• ·• rather, .. up1an1 fro~ -,wbidl dialogue can ensue '' The council's action on the moraLortum proposal remains in doubt. Three s1m1lar pro· posals have been voted down in the paal year, wlU1 Mayor Dostal and Council members Lucille Kuehn and Mcinnis lin- ing up againsl imposing a moratorium. However, last Tuesday, at a candidate Corum, Mrs. Kuehn said she would consider institut- ing a four-month building moratorium while work is con> pletfd on lhe city's com- puterized traffic model. The model Is seen as one or the keys to the reduction or future building bec·ause it is supposed to help city officials figure ool what the traffic Im· pa.ct will be if density is lowered. Mrs. Kuehn's change or hea,rt my indicate a compromise is in the works, although Dostal and Mcinnis would have to change their previous anti-moratorium votes in order to enact the short· term moratorium cited by Mn. Kuehn. Moratorium backer Jean Walt, the organizer of LEAF and president of SPON (Slop Polluting Our Newport) said she plans to discuss her group's proposed lnUtlaUve at tonllht.'s meeting. LEAF asked the council to in· slilule f moratorium on proJeets of more than 10 resldentlal units and more than 10,000 square feet ·or commercial or industrial space while work is being done lo revise the city's general plan. The general plan revlslon rests on the completion of the computerized traffic model. LEAF members told councilmen two weeks ago that. unless that revision results in the density reductions and de- velopment phasing that they want, they will circulate an in· itiative petition aimed at reaching their goals through the city's voters. Mrs. Watt said today that work on the initiative is conUnu· ing. NB Lawyer R. B. Pegram Dead at 74 Reginald Byrne Pegram, a l ong-lime Newport Beach res· ident and a former lawyer for the California Division of Highways, • isdeadattheageof74. Mr. Pegram died Feb. 24 at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Burial was at sea. The 1926 Stanford University graduate was a commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve. He re- tired as chief deputy counsel foe the state Division of Highways in 1968. Mr. Pegram is survived by his wife, Wanda, of the couple's home in The Bluffs section of Newport Beach; a son, Albert H. Pegram of Sherman Oaks, and two grandsons, Stephan and Robert of Sydney, Auslr alla. The family ·has guggested memorial contributions to the American Cancer Society, Ol" to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Thief Enters Sma11 Space Newport Beach police are looking (or a burclar wbo crawled into an lrvlne 'terrace 'home through an J.8.lnch square door used to provide a firewood .access to the fireplace. , David Nelson Hibbard of 1900 Seadrift Drive reported the break-in to police Sunday. He llsled as misslnc a color televllion and several pieces of silver worth an estimated $1,310. Pollce said the small thief 1ot into the home while the Wbbard family was absent and ransacked the residence l>efo.re tleal.in.8 the valua~ DAILY PILOT 'Goos~ Takes Wing This 1928 Ford trimotor, nicknamed the "tin goose," is shown at Lon~ Beach Airport <below) and in the air as pilots Mich.ael Garner and Frenchy Sevard got it off the ground and headed toward Las Vegas. The flight was expected to lasl about three hours. The plane was re- conditioned by a Huntington Beach firm. Transcript Of Cannibal Trial Found MONTROSE, Colo. (AP)- Tbe original, handwritten transcript of the trial of Allred E. Packer -Colorado's only .convlcte4 cannibal -bu been located in the basement of the Gunnison County Courthouse. The transcript, frayed at the edges and yellow with age after nearly 95 years, was found as court employees packed old uocumenls for shipment to the state archives in Denver, said Mike Sheppard, court administrator for the 7th Judicial DislricL The transcript includes the testimony of the 21 witnesses who. appeared against Packer, as well as the text of the testimony he gave in his de- fense, Sheppard said. A typewritten copy of lhe transcript is in the state archives, Sheppard said, but the original was considered lost un· Ul last week. Packer was accused or killing and eating his five traveling companions when the group was c~ught in a blizzard in February 18'14. He was tried in April 1883 in the Lake City, Colo., courthouse and found guilty of. murder. Packer's testimony includes the observation that his meals after his companions died were •·salty.'•· Sheppard said the document has been placed in a courthouse vault and the county wUl ask the state to allow the papers to re· main in an area museum, rather than being senl to Denver. Drug Suspects Sought in NB Newport Beach police sought additional suspects today whom they bell~ may be Involved with local residents who alleged- ly agreed to sell undercover of. ficers a pound of cocaine. Taken into custody Friday in connection with the case were Susan Jil Gutierrez, 27, or 331 Grand Canal and Donald Mark Hawkins, 18, of It Cypress Point Lane. Detective Mike Hietala said undercover inveatigatora al· JegedJy set up an agreement with Miss Guitierrez and Hawkins to buy a pound of cocaine for $25,000. $4,000 Loot In Burglary An unlocked kitchen window apparently provided the access point for but'glars who broke ln· to a Spyglass Hill home, Newport Beach police said to- day. Charles R. Bearden of 11 Carmel Bay Dri•• tol4 oUieers valuable• worth nearly $C,OOO were taken durinc the breat~iD which be dbeovertd Friday. Llatea •• ~Suln1 wu a porcelain clock, a camera, a ·stereo. caab, clotbea au a televilioD. ._ . Late Eneore l!-orowitz Plays Jrhite House WASHINGTON (AP) -rt was a returrt White House engagement for pianist Vladimir Horowitz. The last lime he ap· peared there was a half century ago, when Herbert Hoover in· vited bipl shortly after his U.S. debut. Horowit& performed a l"ecital Sunday before President and Mrs. Carter and 250 invited guests, including some of the country's most famous musicians. In hls introduction, Carter called Horowitz "a true national treasure." Horowitz received prolonged a{>plause after his first J\um ber, Chopin's "SOnata in B-Flat Minor," a Polonaise by the same composer and Horowiti' own variations of a theme from George Bizet's "Carmen." He also played two other works by Chopin, Schumann's "Traumerei" and a polka by Rachmaninoff. Gems Stolen In Newport Newport Beach police are looking for a cat burglar who slole $1,300 in cash and a necklace from the bedroom or a Cliff Haven home while its OC· cupants slept. Earl Williams of 324 St. Andrews Road told police Fri- day morning he found his jewelry box and wallet in his den. where the sliding glass door was standiQg open. Williams said the wallet and jewelry box, which contained the missing items, were in his bedroom when he went lo sleep Thursday night. Police Probe NB Assault An Indiana resident, stabbed in a fight in Newport Beach Saturday, was listed in good con- dition today al the UC Irvine Medical Center. Newport Beach police are still seeking the man who stabbed James Bradigan in the side at about 7 p.m. in front of 110 24th St. They described Bradigan as a transient aod sald the man they are seeking may have been a traveling companion. They said today Bradi&an has not be.en able to explain why he was as· saulted. E'ro.t p~ AJ : HANNA ••• Park has an agreement that all criminal charges agaillst him will be dropped provided he tells the truth. He told reporters he hopes his testimony wUI help end the al· leged influence-buying scandal "so thal we can move op lo something more positive which is to enhance the relations between our two countries." House investigators say Park's testimony is central to their determining Ir any present or ex-congressmen were in fact influenced by money from Park and should be char&ed. Earlier in Hawaii, Park said a former South Korean in- telligence chief lied when he told a House committee thal Park was an aeent of the Korean gov- ' ernm enl. • "That's absolutely not true," Park said in an interview televised today. Asked whether he was saying the former in· telligence chief was lying, he said, "I think that is correct." Park insisted he gave campaign contributions only to congressmen who were his friends, and only when they asked, "to help the American political system in my own way," A former director of the Korean Central t n\eJHgence Agency, Klm Hyun& Wook, told the ethics panel that Park and Hanna promised that H lhe KCIA helped make Park Korea's exclusive rice dealer in this country, he would make payments out of commission money to congressmen "to help Korea's cause." BazardoWJ Materials Transportation Hearings Set WASHINGTON CAP) -Even before \.be two train derailments that c•u.aecl 20 deaths in Florida and Tennwee, the federal gov- ernment planned unusually thorough hearings into the transportation of hazardous materials on the nation's railroada and highways (Reial· ed story, photo, A4) The National Transportation Safely Board figures there are 6,000 to 7 ,000 derailments a year. Kay Balley, acting board chalnnan, was so concerned by the continuing spate of de· ratlmenls involving dangerous substances that Thursday she called for rare full-board hear- ings on the matter The NTSB hearings m Apnl will look at how the railroads F ..... PageAI WPPO ••• Schetter said the fact that Bubbles crossed Laguna Canyon Road makes the hunt a serious business. "People traveling the road could have been hurt," she said. Clark said today the main danger to people ls to a number of photographers, reporters, col· lege students and other people who bave searched for the anlm·al themselves, using flashlights. ''We can't control the crowd," Clark said. "Especially the press. Seems like every time you turn around. there's one on your neck." Bubbles escaped a week agC1 by bulling her way over a special anti-escape corral in which sbe was ·placed because of previous escapes, and bashing through a park perimeter fence. Bubbles had escaped twice before with her 800-pound daughter. Mrs. Schetter said the park's eight other hippos were confined to a special barn when they, too, showed signs of wanting to 'o over the wall. A new hippo dis- play area is being built to stop lhe potential of a mass escape. The so-far futile effort by park rangers to bring Bubbles back alive has cost Lion Country a small fortune, according to senior ranger Steve Craig. Craig said last week that the park had spent upwards of $3,000 for overtime costs, and rental and repair or equipment. "The animal's value is only a few hundred dollars, .. Craig said. However, Mrs. Schetter dis· counted the expense in keeping rangers on Bubbles watch. "She represents a gold mine to the company at this time (because of nationwide publici· ty). Believe us, if there is a chance she can be brought back alive. there's not a person here who doesn't want her back. 1l would be a terrible waste." "Our first respons10111cy 1:s w the community. Tonight may be her last chance. lf she poses a threat to human life, I'm afraid Bubbles wil~ ~ave to go first." Wrong Meet Date A story in Tbursday's Daily Pilot incorrectly listed Tuesday as the date for a city council candidates' forum to be sponsored by the Newport Heights Homeowners As· sociation. The association's forum will be held March 28. and trucking firms handle what board 11pokesman Edward E. Slattery Jr. termed "all kinda of exotlc materials that. ca.use balllefield-like damage." Slattery said in an interview Sunday that amon the causes of derailments are p00r road beds. "the worms get In the ties and the tracks spread;" heavier and lonaer rail cars, "the rails aren't any stronger;" and railro1td response to pressure for greater s afety. "they always tell you they'r e broke " Jn ad.dition to the NTSB hear- ings. Sen. James Sasser. D· Tenn., planned to meet today with transportation Secretary Brock Adam~. Sasser says be "ants an investigation into the Federal Railroad Adm inistrallon's inspection system. Sasser complained Sunday night that the state did its in- l>pect1ons on Tennessee's S,700 miles or track until 1974. Ten- nessee had 12 men doing the job, Sasser says. Now that t he federal agency does the work. only five men watch track con- ditions, lhe senator says. One of the two derailments that cluJmed lives in the past three days occurred in Waverly, Tenn. Twenty.four tank cars de- railed in the West Tennessee community Wednesday. On Fri· day, one of the cars carrying propane burst, sending a fire ball into the town. Twelve persons died; five homes were destroyed and 12 businesses damaged by the fire. And on Sunday, 55 miles west of Waverly in a rural area near the town or Cades, 24 cars de· railed. One of the cars leaked sod1u m hvdroxide. a substance harmful ii breathed or touched. Some 100 people were evacuat- ed from their homes for foor hours. Man Arrested In Stabbing A Newport Beach man re- ma med m custody in city jail to- day following his arrest for aJ. legedly stabbing his roommate during a fight early Sunday morning. Glenn Mark Stilinovicb; 21, was taken into custody on a charge of assault with a ~adly weapon. He is being held ia lieu or s10.ooo bail. His alleged victjm, MaPired Cruchalla, 38, received ''hat police described as minor in- JUries during the fight at the apartment the two men shared al 920 Irvine Ave. $8,200 in Jewels Stolen in Newport A Newport Beach man who · lefl $8,200 worth of jewelry in his car while he was golfing Sunday, told police someone broke into his auto and stole lhe items. George Meadows told officers the rings, watch. necklace and bracelet were len in his SU"eet shoes in his car which he parked at the Irvine oast Country Club JUSt before noon. He said when he returned to his vehicle at 5 p.m. he dis~ covered the pieces were gone.. ' •t told me Varley breezed down the hill as tr he'd just run 100 yards not e\x miles:• Judd said. Other wJ.nners f!l· duded man and wile, Peto and Sue Peteraon ot Laaul}f. Beach. the Pcteraons eath won first place in an ale dlYisiOI\. Mn. Peterson also had the best time amQGI women runners, completing the courso in 40.5 mlnutts: Tboracewasofficially closed after 90 minutes • ' I 7 Saddleback Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks VOL 71, NO. 58, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, FEBRUA~V 27, 1978 Rangers to Get iJufJbles Dead, Ali'l'e?" By PIUUP ROSMARIN Ol IM O.lly l'ii.t Sl•ll Lion Country Safari rangers •ere ordered today to capture Bubbles-the hippopotamus who escaped from the animal park a +week a~o. leadin~ a sometimes merry chase-alive or dead. 'One way or the other we're ~olng to catch her," said senior ftnger Steve Clark. "If we can't inquilize her tonight, we're gonna shoot her." Clark was a member of a three-man team of rangers who were unable to get close enough to the three-ton animal early to- day to fU"e a tranquilizing dart into her hide. He said Bubbles surfaced twice during their hippo stakeout, but didn't come out or the pond in which she took refuge off Laguna Canyon Road. Clark said the hlppo then clambered out of the pond, and as ranaers waited for her to get far e nough away Crom the water, plowed through a barbed wire fence and made her way to the road. Rangers have trie<) to get dJs- t a nce between Bubbles and water so that when she is tran- quilized she would be unable to reach the water, where she I O.lly ,.. ... ,... • .., l'atrkll O' 0.--11 ABOUT 8,000 PEOPLE GOT THIS VIEW OF NIXON SAN CLEMENTE ESTATE Grounds to La Casa Pacifica Were Opened as Part of City Birthday Celebration 8,000 See Nixon Estate San Clemente Opemtion Goea Smoothl.y Nftyllili.t ..... ~ .... 'NIXON SHOULD HAVE DESTROYED THOSE DAMN 'fAPES' . .local Tourist Elizabeth Hender1on, Son Arch, 10 rlpidly toward t\e earlb near A(lsal, about .five miles east o! Salinas, Jackson saJd. Most reports mentioned four ''very, very large" areen liJhls, Jackson ~ald. One person sald thfy w~e mov~ at about 50 miles~ hour. Anotber saJd the li&ht• Hem«! to be at~cbed to a slngl~ objec~ about lour stories hleh, J acaon ·~ would probably drown. "It's not Jlke we Jost her, .. Clark saJd. An astonished motoc:lst travel· ing Laguna Canyon R<>ad braked at the sight of a hlpJ>Qpotafl)us grazing alone the side of the road, and called police. Law enforcement officer• from Irvine, Lacuna Beach, ~ Califorma Highway Patrol ana the county sheriff's office converged on the scene, and with tbe rangers chased Bubbles across the road and into another lake, on the other side, 15 feet from the highway. Clark said the rangers fired their dart £Ul1S twice at the nee- ~ Bubbles. apparently missing both times. The Costa Mesa poli.c& helicopter Eagle circled the area, sblning a sJ)oWghl on the Korean in Washington new pond. Clark said Bubbles was spot- ted this morning. still in the pond. Hippopotamuses spend most of their days subrnerged under water. stJcldng up only nostrils for breath, Tiley feed at ni&ht and mut come out o[ the water to forage. Llon Country spokeswoman Jo <See IDPPO, Pa1e AZ) Park Will Testify • In Hanna's Trial WASH ING TON (AP) - Tongsun Park, accused ol beio& a South Korean influence· peddler, arrived in Washington Sunday and will te&.tiry next month in the trial of former Orange County Democratic Con&ressman Richard T. Hanna. Hanna is accused of conspir- ing with Park to buy influence in Congress. Park is also scheduled to Clnsure Of Stables I ' Sparks Tiff Lake Forest bone owners are expef;led to .-a&. 1 tonieht with an at.t«ney to determine their Jegal ataws in an apparem lirt wttb .Ocdd.atar LaAd Research ov' r dOtSure of the area's onlv stables. Mrs. Nate Sutton of 2'682 Vla del Rio, Lake Forest said today 'her husband sent letters regard· ing-the meeUn1 at Use Sun and Sail Club to ZC horse-own.Ing families of the exclusive Lake Forest area who stable animals a l Lake FOC"est RidinJ Center. The riding center's lease with Occidental Land Research ex- pires Sept. 1, ·said stable operator Kathy Warne, when the land is turned over to Oranae County for park development Mrs. Sutton claimed that her family located in 4ke FOl'est, planned by the Occlclenlal ftrm, because of advert.iaed equestrian facilities and horse trails. She said Occident.al has made no ar- rangements to relocate the stable when the 11-acre facility on Serrano Road near Lake Forest Drive Is tumed over to the county by Occidental for Serrano Park improvements. Mrs. Sutton satd that when her family purchased its home, "there was talk (by sales personnel) about the stable be-• inl moved across the road. Now they have informed ua there prob- ably won't be a stableJ. because no land has been spedncally set aside for it. •'We feel It's mt&· representation.'' ¥rs. Warne, stable qperator, said ~be baa been lc~klng fpr property on which 'to move. the stable but that land at $S(),OOO an acre ls too expenslve. She said that because her lease llf expir- ing, thete ta"JMllU)m1 se can do <SeeSTA.BLES, Page AU testify Tuesday before the Jlouse Ethics Committee prior lo the Hanna triaJ. Park said he'll testify fully to .. once and for all get down to the bottom or everything so that complete truth will come out." The one-time Washington party-giver made that pledge as he arrived to begin closed-door testimony be( ore ethics com- mittee investigators. "I hope that as a result of my Argument Cuts Jarvis Backers • SACRAMENTO(AP)- Voters who have an opinion about the Jarvis property .tax iqitialive favor U nearly 3-1 in a new poll, the Sacramento Bee aaid today. However. when supporters of tbe iniUative and undecided voters were told a major -argument of opponents -that the in· itiative would cause a state tax increase or cutbacks in JocaJ services -the division between supporters and opponents was almost even, the newspaper said. The, Bee said the poll was based on telephone in- terviews of 712 registered voters by Public Response Associated of San Jt'rancisco, between Feb. 10 and Feb. 15. Rain Returns, More Coming Along Coast The rains have returned. Amt they're likely to remain for most of the week, the National Weather Service said today. Allen Dascomb, weather public service specialist, ex- plained that a high-pressure area that kept storms from the Orange Coast for the past two weeks has dissipated. A weak low-pressure area has moved in from the southwest. Dascomb said. In addition, a . blgb-presaure area is building up over the Gulf of Alaska, pushing storms south. Temperatures alopg the coast should be somewhat cooler, with hiahs In the 60s and lows from 4S to SS degrees. Only • trace of rain was measured thls morning. With rddlnp ranging from .02 1n Huntington Beach and .03 in Costa Mesa and Ne-wport Beach to .13 ln Lacuna NiiueJ. Seuoa tota.la so far are 16.81 ln Newport Beadl. 17. 78 in Hunt• lnatoCl Beacb, 1$.'6 in Costa Men, .anct 19.88 ht L•cuna NllO•I. iLut year's rainfall t0ta11 at th1t UIDo 'tanaed from eM incblli tn tM aouth county to t .41 lncbeis In Uuntiilgtob Beach. giving my side of the story as well as I can recollect how things did happen, I hope we'll come to a happy ending," Park told reporters on arrivaJ . Park has been charged in a 36-count criminal i ndictment 1 with trying to buy congressional 1 innuence for the South Korean t government. l He is accused of paying, $100,000 or more lo several <See HANNA, Page AZ> . RV Crash Fatal to SA. Woman f A Santa Ana woman was • killed early Sunday moTning w he n a r ecreation vehicle tum bled orr an isolate d 111ountain service road in pre· dawn darkness and plunged down a 1,000.foot embankpient, according to a coroner's report. Sear chers scoured the most. forbidding terrain of the Cleveland National Forest for' three hours before finding the body of Mary Ann Hanzel, 29, of 750 S. Lyon St., Santa Ana. They were drawn to the scene after the woman's companion hiked thrQ miles through the rugged terrain to report the 2:30 a . m . accident, a county fire ! rescue official said. Marine Philip Hipe, 24, of El • Toro Marine Corps Air Station, . was apparently thrown out of 1 the rour-wheet drive vehicle ear- ly in Its tumbling descent down the steep mountainside. The woman's body was report- ed found 750 feet below the dirt service road while searchers re- ported finding the vehicle another 250 furCher down the mountainside. Officials believe Hipe was knocked unconscious when thrown from the tumbling recreation vehicle near Bedford Peak. It wasn't until shortly after 5 a.m. that be was able to hike to a Silverado Canyon residence to call a nearby county fire station and r eport the accident. A Marine rescue helicopter from nearby El Toro Marine Corps Air Station first spotted the wreckage and victim's body shortly after 8 a.m., officials said. ~ i Coast ' • Weather 1 Chance of measurable t rain 20 percent tonight in-I creasinc to 40 percent Tueaday. Lows .tonight 47 to S4. Blabs Tuesday S8 to 65. INSIDE TOD}l Y Young tnflU dilf' Ttoty • Aaftin gdtl 1oc. of ta mail. ~C 1HU,,.,.,,. ha' tlfoc.a.ond gfgpks. S.tt.on/# Photo Bl. . Ja•ex . 0.lly l'llot S~tt -le NIXONS LEFT DOORS AJAR FOR e.ooo 'VISITORS' This is As Close As Viewers Got to Estate Fro• Pag~ A I NIXON EST ATE TOUR. • • "Well, loo!.. rast when you go," he laughed, grabbing his wife by Lhl' a1 rn and head in~ for his car. Ste' e Schroeder "as doing the most business Sund a), selling a special :'oi1xon edition for 15 cents a ropy ·You bet J m bu!iy," the 12· ~ear -old buslnl'ss man said. ··[', e ~old about 150 pro)(rams so far and it's not l'Ven 10 vet " lit• said mo!'>t.or h1-. ,;U!'>tomers "l'l'C the onl'!'> gelling off the hui,es "The) 've alreudy seen the house, so I guess thl'\' want ::.omt>lhmg to n :ml'mbcr 1t bv " .. , gt·t IO l'l'lll~ for every l'OP)' J srll," he said, Jingling the change m his pocket. EliLahclh l l<·ndcrson. of San .Juan Cap1:-.trano, sta nd1n1: in Ji n c w ith h er :.on, Arc h Henderson. 10, said tt11s isn't her first tour of thl' Nixon home. "I was there once just after he <Nixon) stepped down from of· f1ee ," Mrs Henderson said. "J still feel badly about 1l " As fill' a.s Nixon's wrongdo- ings, the former Newport Beach worn an said there's been worse. citin g the Tammany Hall gang <1nd the Teapot Dome scandal. ··we came back from those. didn't '"e?" she a:-.ked ··1 JUst don't see what all the hullaballoo i!> about. Nt"Con shoul d have just de~troyed those damn tapes," s he suid, tugging a l her fox stole. "But I still think he'll seek public office again," she smiled, J{rabbing Arch by the hand. The line of onboarding visitors moved swiftly as buses rumbled out of the high school parking Jot, stopping just long enou"h to Japan's TV IJfunJMd Out TOKYO <AP> Instead or "Close E ncounters of the Third Kind" and Foreign Minister Sunao Sonoda. J a panese TV viewers got 10 minutes of blur, deafenln~ noise or a bsolutely nothing A power failure al the 1,056· fool Tokyo tower caused the mayhem, phasing out Sonoda on one cha nne l, ''Cl o se E ncounters" on unother and blackin& five other channels. "For half an hour we received at le'Dst 150 calls," one harried switchboard operator sttid. Many callers thouQht politic at radtcalS were jammln1 the airwaves again. O"ANQR OOAIT te DAILY PILOT pick u p anot he r lo ad or passengers. T he conver sati on in line ranged from Nixon's resignauon to home towns of the visitors. '"Can you i magine anyone coming aJI the way from Boston for lhis," one local woman sa!d. ··1 "ouldn't even drive down from LA for this tour." Ruby Kepford, who li ves in downtown San Clemente, caught a ride from a rraend to the higl'I !>Chool to make the tour. When she got off the bus, she was sm1I · 10~. ··I enjoyed it. H was just like I thought it would be," she s aid "I thought 1t was real nice of the Nixons <o ope n up their home for us. But she said. lt would have hccn nicer if she could have seen the couple. "'The tape recording on the hus said he was working on his memoirs when we went by his orrices," the older San Clcmentean said. "I would have liked to have seen him," Vice Admiral Allan McCann Rites Slated S AN DIEOO CAP) -The ashes of retired Vice Adm. Allan R. M cCann, who directed the rescue of survivors from the trapped submarine Squalu1 in 1939, will be scattered at aea this week. Mccann died last Wednesday in N a val Regional Medical Center al 81. A memorial service was held Friday ln sub- urban Del Mar. M cCann, a graduate of the Naval Academy in 1917, uaed a rescue chamber which be de- veloped lo remove the 33 sur· vi vo r s o f the S qualus o(I P ortsmouth, N.H., after the crew had been trapped und&- wa ter. After World War II, as com· mander or the batUeship Iowa, l\f eCann transported President H a rry S. Truman to the Potsdam peace conference. He was named commander of the Pacific Submarine Force in 1946. M cCann is aurvived by bis wife K'atheryne of Laauna Hilla, thre e daughters, nine grandchUdren and alx. 1reat- grandcblldren. Suspect Held In Viejo Wife Beating Oran1e County Sherltr1 of· flcert have filtd cbar1•• of felony wUe bt1Una •ttlnat a Miaslon vtejo man who .U"ed· ))' bHt b1J wif• op &.he bead and faoe with • eorr .. Jar ~ • weeJttnd aquabbl•. D1put1es Jailed lJoyd Lav.ne Be"rJy, 35. al'tw btlnt call.ct to h11 home a1 21712 Vla Santa Rota, to hati hll all11td aU.k on hit wl.(11 J•alca, 85. • Tbe.v •aJd Beverl~ lilt Mr' tn the face and bead wlth aucb for~e that 'b• coff .. i J-t am...,.61141&ltDI ble--. Thil ••ld Mu. ,1t1yerly aHded U'.~.•tmtot tori bill laj81'.tti •' ild~k COlinaUN&r HOU&tea ru'lt' ~'";:=~-= auowtelblitotoboin1, Otflcen •al•·· lln, ,NrirU told them lbe ati.Mlt .._ .• from a quarrel oVer a telephone b1ll. W ASJUNOTON <AP) -Some 400 coal mine.rs and United Mlne Worken dlttrlct rtpteHntaUv• -the men who •W have to Ml.I the union's rl'.llk·and·rlle on the proposed IOft coal Industry con- tract -are aettln& the word to- d .. y OD bow to 10 about their taak. Althouah the contract haa been criUclzed In the coalfleldl, top unloo offtclala feel th&t If they can adequately explain the pact, the union'• 160,000 atriklne miners will approve the contract next week and be back in the plta by mld·Marcb. Members of the union'• bargaining team scheduled meetings with the miners and district representali ves at a downtown hotel. The bartainera are attempt- ing to steep their audience in what the union would get frem the contract and tryin1 to anticipate what quesUons tbe 400 or so men will havt to anawer when they meet W1th 1oca1 umon representative. throughout the UM W's 21 districts this week. The 400 rank ·and -flle members were chosen by UMW President Arnold Miller, who Friday nitbt called them, "my people." Mlllv eay1 he has no plans to go into the coalfields and stump for the proposal, u he did in 1974. But Miller dld plan to make an appearance at today's indoctrination aeaslon to remind the district representatives of their responsibility under the un- ion constitution to back the tentative contract. "Some of our people failed to support the contract proposal In 1974 ," aaid Miller, who steadfastly predlcU the current pact will be approved. "The un· ion's International officers and the international executive \)oard will act against anybody failin g to meet their F ootlJall Star Chases Car 'The/ t Sm pee ts PACIFIC PALISADES <AP) -Pro football running back Anthony Davis sprinted into action wtten a 1tran1er drove oft in bl• 1954 Cadillac, but It took two 1hertlr1 deputies to tackle a pair of alleaed car thieves, authorities aald today. A nelchbor ol Davia' spotted three people apparently about to take off with the Tampa Bay Buccaneer'• car late Sunday and alerted Davis aa one of the men drove ott ln the former USC s tar's car, aald Weal Loa An1ela police olftcer Michael Ha1en. • Davia sot Into hl• other CadUlac - a late lMOt model - and went after the 1154 car while his 11rltrtend and a nei1hbor took off ln eeparate cara alter the two other men In another car, Hasen aald. Davis and hJs strttrlend ear. nered hla stolen whJle Cadillac. The driver ned on foot and Da\'ll followed but tailed to catch hltn, uld Ha1en. Back on the Pacific Coast Hi1hway, the riel1hbor managed to briefly block the car carryinc the other two alle1ed car thleve1, Ha1en aald. Ont or them conftonted the neilbbor and puncMd him. A1 they escaped, the netlbbor naned down two 1herifr1 dep- utlea, who chaHd and •P· prehtndedtwo youths. Booked for lnve1t1aatton of 8J'and theft auto wu John W. Greenwood, 11, ol the Compton area and a 17-yur·old male companion, Ha11n ••Id. The thlrd per"tOO ,baa been identlfted ·and P91lce uld hl• arrest Is ex· peeiid lborUy. J' ... P-AJ ' STABLES ••• responslbllltles this time." The ralltlcation vote will be conducted next week In 2.100 local union balls. Before the balloting, educational meeting• wUI be held in each district and local offtcers. in turn, will then hold similar aeasiona wlth the rank and rue. Fotlowtni this. a 48·hour wait· Ina period en1uea before the mlner1 cut thelr secret ballots. The relUlts, tabulated by local union tellers, should be an- nounced tbe ne~ day. Mlller ur1ed the miners to read the contract, copies of which have been sent to the rank and rue. and not be swayed by the rhetoric of members who have been critical. T~e UMW plana to blitz the coatflelda with radio and television ads ur1in1 ratification. The thrust of this mecl\a deluae la expected In southern Weat Vlr1lnla'1 dia· tricta 17 and 29, where nearly S0,000 mlnet's live. Both President Carter and Labor Secretary Ray Marshall saJd Sunday they think the rank and file will approve the setUement. F,.._PageAI filPPO ••• Scheller aald the fact that Bubbles crossed Laguna Canyon Road makes the hunt a serious bualneu. ''People travelln1 the road could have been hurt," she said. Clark said today the main danaer to people i• to a number of phot.oaraphers, reporters, col· Iese student.a and other people who bave searched for the animal themaelvea, u1ln1 fla1hll1hts. "We can't control the crowd." Clark aald ... Especially the press. Seems like every time you turn around, there's one on your neck ." Bubbles escaped a week ago by bulling her way over a special anli ·escap~ corral 1n which she was placed because of previous escapes. and bashing through a park perimet~r fence. Bubbles had escaped twice before with her 800-p ound daughter. Mrs. Schetter said the park's eiaht oUlef' hippos were confined to a a peel al barn when they. too, sbowed •lift.I of wantln1 to ao over the wall. A new hippo dis· play area la beln1 built to stop the potential of a maas escape. Tbe •far fuUle effort by park nn1er1 to bnn1 Bubbles back alive baa cost Uon Country a small fortune, accord Ina to senior ran1er Steve Cral1. Cral1 Hid tut week that the park bad spent upwards of S3,000 for overtime costs, and rental and repair of equipment. "The animal's value Is only a few hundred dollars," Crail sald. However, Mrs. Scheller dla· counted the expense in keepln1 ran1ers on Bubbles watch. "She reprnenta a 1old mine to the company at this tlme <because ol naUonwlde pubUcl· ty). Believe u., If there ls a chance ahe can be brouabt back alive, there'• not a peraon here who doesn't want her back. Jl wo\lld be a terrible waste." .. Our first reaponalbUlt.y la to the community. Tonlaht may be her last chance. U abe poses a thrt1t to human Ute, I'm afraid Bubbles~ .have to 10 tirat." Bm Funds Nixed W As.mNGTON (AP) -LaWI problblUna the uae ot federal money for court-orcJered busln1 to racially lnteirate publlc aobool1 were It.ft untouched by the U.S. Supreme Court today. The Ju.attce1 retuatd to review an appeal by Kentucky Gov. Jullaa M. Carroll contendlng tbat atatea and loc:al ofttclala forced to d••sreaate 1cbool1 by bualng ou1ht to be able to alk for federal help In metUng coats. One's Enough Flap Rages Over Space DUb PHILADELPHIA <AP> --T wo villainous, heavy-breathing Darth \'aders are m aking a p· pearances in eastern Pennsylvania. and a flap has developed over whlch really has "The Force .. with him. National Beauty Stores, a Philadelphia retail chain. adverti~ed the appearance of the masked Darth Vader at two. outlets in a promotion for the sale of "Star Wars" posters. That prompted Harry Geissler, owner of F actors Etc .. Inc .• the Cirm that has exclusive rights to market "Star Wars0 paraphernalia, fo cherge . copyright infringement. Ge issler s aid the real "Star Wars" character was making appearances in Read· ing. Pottsville, Selinsgrove and Lebanon. ..We don't want the kids to think there is more than one Darth Vader. There is only one," Gelssler said. Job Ends May 12 Bus Chief Confirnu Plam to Resign By GARY GRANVILLE °'""Dall• f'llM ..... Orange County Transit Dis· trlct <OCI'D> General Manager Edward Lorttz made lt otllclal today. announcing his res· ignatlon. Lor1tz said he is leaving the transit district because he and district directors were unable to reach agreement on a new con- tract. The 46-year·old executive told directors during an executive ae11lon Friday he is quitting ef. fectlve May 12. His reslenaUon, althou1tb not announced publicly unti1 today, was reported Saturday by the Dally PUot. Two wttks ear Iler. Lorltz had sent OCTD directors a letter Fro•PageAJ HANNA ••• ' form e r congr essmen and of making campaign and office ac· coun t contributions ranging from SlOO to s.5.000 to 24 con· gr eas men and one unsuccessful candidate. The ex-rice dealer, who left Washington 18 months ugo, once e ntertained dozens of con- gressmen at lavish parties al his George Town Club. Park has an agreement that all criminal charaes against him wlll be dropped provided he tells the truth. He told reporters he hopes his testimony will help end the aJ . leged Influence-buying scandal "so that we can move on to something more positive which Is to enhance the relations between our two countries." House investigators say Park's testimony is central to their determining if any present or ex-congressmen were In fact lnnuenced by money from Park and should be charged. EarUer in llawaU, Park sa!d a · !orm er South Korean In- telligence chief lled when he told a House committee that Park was an a1ent o! the Korean gov· ernment. "'that's absolutely not true,'• Park aald 1n an interview televised today. Asked whether he was aayin& the former in· telll~ence chief was lying, be said, "I t.h.lnlc that is correct." Park insisted he eave campalp contrlbuUons only to con1u11men who were his • friends, and only when they asked, "to help the American polltlcal ayatem in my own way." A former director ·or the Korean Central lnteUlgence Aaency, Kim Hyunc Wook, told the ethics panel tbat Park and Hanna promised that if the KCJA helped make Park Korea's exclusive rice dealer in this country, he would make payment• out of commission money to conareasmen "to help Korea's cause." askln1 for a new four-year con· tract ca1Jln1 for a salary-frlnfe benefit price ta& of rou1hly $55,000 a year. That request would have hlked ' his pay pucka1e by about $13,,_ annually. WhUe nG> ne10Uatlon1 resulted from his contract request, it wu clear to Lorltz that direct.ors were unwilllnl to live him that kind of a package. OCTD Director William Farris, for example, 1aid1 "There la Just no way we coula come close to anythin1 Uke that. 1 think Ed knew it. And that'* why be resigned." For the past year Loritz bu · had frequent pu bll c dl1- a 1 r eem en ls with OCTD directors. However, the parting of the waya Friday was described as · amicable and friendly. The depart Ing generat manager has held OCTD's top executive post for the past three years. He replaced founding gen e r a l mana ger Gordon "Pete" Fielding. College Board To Consider Pool Contract Saddlebac k Community College District trui tees will consider awarding a $1,019,200 contract tonight for the con- :>lruction or an olympic-size swimming pool on the Mission Viejo cumpus. Shirley Brothers Inc. submit· ted the lowest of four bids on the project which includes an ad· jacenl small training pool, con- crete walls, offices and $torag.e facilllle.s. Construction of the rroject is expected to begin Apri land be completed within six months. The pool will be used !or the col· . Jege's classes and swimming team and public recreation'1 swimming. District admlnt.trators arerec- om mencllng that the contract include a clause that will allow trustees to stop the work and term lnate the arreement if the Jarvis-Gann initiative puaes in June. The pool has been planned for five years. Originally, it. was to be built In early 1975, but trustees chose instead to bWld handball-racquet ball anc;l tennb courts on the campus. Tonight's meeting wlll begin at 7:30 in the Ubrary on the Mis- sion Viejo campus. Autopsy Says Marines Died ~ 'Beatings' ~~; Close Quarters ' . BAKERSFIELD <AP> -TWC> ' m arlnta stationed at Camp Pendleton whose bodl11 wwe found 1n an oiltield near Taft 1-1 been beaten to death. aulboriU. said today. 110 A.lien.a Found in 2 Tmdt6 A record 110 men, women and children were found crammed lnatde twQ rental trailer trucks Saturday when the trucks we~ stopped at the U.S. Border P•trol check point on the San Dieao Freeway, just south of San Clemente~ . TRE A.UENS -tome as YoUnf u on~ year old -had probabl)' patd In excess of '20.000 for thelr 11· legal rJde to tl\e Unlted States, said John WeasQn. aaent in cbar1e or the check point. ,\rrelt.s on 1ueplclon of amufgllna \he Mexican naUonilla into the United Stales were Bruco AJan J •cobaen, JS, of Mt. Vernon. Wash.: Llnda hnkhOuS, 21, o~~lttai and a 16-y•ar·old Carlsbad ~th. W-.ol' ta1q. TD 'ftlUE IVIPBCl'EI> 1mu1aJen were to be arr~ today ln a San Dleso federal court. ~b• Meilcan neUontls wtril tranapo Cd back . aero.a the bariler. "' • The vlcUms, Richard L. Rae· aensacat Jr .• 19, of Bakertfttlcl. and Herbert ll. Thumm Jr 20 of Thornton, Coto., alao \;f 1uflered llaah wourM1& lrom a blunt Instrument. · But autopale. lllted the beU-- l n f s on their heads aa t~ (>rim aey cause of death. K.o , County Coroner JUcbard i GttVals aald. : Tbo victims were found Flt· day afternoon two miles eut ot T att. and the autopsy lndlcateil, they were killed between 10 p.rn. Thuraday and 1 1.m. 'Frtda,x •• OervaJa 1ald. Their walltta wn m~11Jn1. Odler. Coverage Oth.r IOUtb Oran1• County newa appears today on Pace C3. Se~nal · Abuse I • Studied · BJ LAUIUE KASPER Of Tiie SIMI' MliM SUit Sexual child abuse. .. It's a pretty scary subject and many people don't want to Wk about lt -even therapist.a," aald Rick Capaldi, wbo is a fa!>ilY counselOI'. .put therapists and other pro- fessionals will talk about lt next w•ekend during a seminar called "Sexual Child Abuse: A UJ!ited Effc:rt." which is being of. fered through Saddleback College's Forums for Learnin& pr~gram. apaldl organized the pro- gr m because he believes there is a lot of sexual child abwse oc- curring in south Orange County. He doesn't have statistics on just bow often this crime occurs but he said, "There is a tremendous amount." One school nurse in the area spends her week dealing with this pro- blem, be said. "We think the only people do- ing it are nasty, dirty old men," Capaldi said. But they often are f atbers, brothers, cousins or 'friends. "They're the guy next door or \he woman next door," be said. The counselor said one 'Study showed that 75 to 85 percent of. these crimes are committed by family members or friends. Another study showed that 45 percent of all molesters are fathers, he added. Often, the counselor said, these crimes go unreported. Family members often want to ignore or forget al, he said . "lt's an ugly thing." Even therapists fear dealing with it, he said. They may be un- certain how to spot it or fear th al their therapeutic re- lationship may be broken, he ex- plained. Or, they may not UD· derstaod the leeal ramifications involved. But Capaldi said, "I think we're becoming more aware. We're realizing these things do happen and they have to be dealt with." Be said one purpose of the seminar is to help professionals know what other profesaionaJs are doing about this problem. With the help of 25 experts who work with sexual child abuse, participants also will learn to identify sexual child abuse and methods of treatin, ita victims and perpetrators. The seminar will rua Crom 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. both daY$ at Be~n Brown's Hotel and Rutaurant in Soath Lapoa. The series ls open to pro- feaaionall and others wbo are in-terested ln the problem. f're. registratiom and payment of a $2S fee are required lhroogb the Saddleback College Office ol Community Services. Capaldi also has or1anized programs on family therapy, mid-life changes and step fa111ities for the college. He said he has planned these programs for the college because "I basically think the south county area is kind of starved for things like this." Dana Point Man's Speed Boat Stolen Orange County sheri(f's of- ficers are investigating the theft from Dana Point Harbor ol a speed boat valued by t.he victim at $20;000. Deputies sald owner Georee C. Kilby, m. of Lancaster, reported the theft of the white-and-orange .. Buoys and Gulls" from its moorine site. ; . s DAIL y PR.OT A3 ·Provost Marshal Nained '.Daeg're Ott a n d Running More than 900 runners turned out early Saturday for San Clemente's first annual 6.5 mile run, timed to coincide with the city's SOth anniversary or in- corporation. First to cross the finish line was 17-year-old Tim Varley of San Diego, who ran the course in 33 minutes, 55 seconds, reported Steve Judd, city recreation coordinator. ''People at the half way point told me Varlev breezed down the hill as if he'd just run 100 vards not" six miles," Judd said. Other winners in· ctuded man and wife, Pete and Sue Peterson of Laguna Beach. The Petersons each won first place In an age dh·ision. Mrs. Peterson also had the best time among women runners, completing the course in 40.5 minutes: Theracewasofficiallyclosedafter90minutes. Con Kills H imseli to Keep Vow SAN DIEGO CAP) -Gary Sunday tbe ring Newbold l>. m • Saturday w be n a an exit ramp on Interflt.ate 8, it Edward Newbold, crouched an fashioned from a prison spoon patrolman saw four men get cut blew a tire. Police closed in on the back seat of a car, raced and decorated with an abalone of a car in a quiet business-the crippled vehicle and the four through the darkness while com· shell was placed with bis other residential area wearing ski gave up. panions fired shots at pursuing belonglnes in a sack at a local masks and carrying at least one But oaly three climbed out <4 San Diego police. hospital. rifle. the car. Amid the gunfire and frenzy The nurse who slipped the ring The four spotted t.he officer. The fourth, Newbold. lay Saturday night. Newbold might ore his finger did not know where jumped back into their car and slumped in the back seat wttb a have glanced at his ring and re-it bad been made or how its raced away. single bullet through his bead, membered a vow he had once former owner had forgotten one The officer, joined by other fU"ed by bis own band from a .25 made: that he would never re· resolve but kept another. patrol cars called by radio, caliber automJltiC, a col'O,JU!r'S turn to prison, the place he had His three companions were in began the high-speed chase. deputy sald. Jeft Just three months before. County Jail for investigation of When one of the patrol cars was Newbold was rushed to the Newbold had also vowed that five counts of assault with intent struck by gunfire police r e-hospital but died a short time if he ever slipped back into his to commit murder and assault turned lbe fire, producing a tater four days before his 40th old ways and got into a scrape on a police officer. battle in which more than 20 birthday. with the Jaw, he would just as A highway gun battle that shots were fired. He bad kept bis pledge never soon blow his brains out as be ~nd ed ln their arrest and When the vehicle carrying the to return to prison. sent back to jail. Newbold's death began about 10 armed. ski-masked men reached A friend said that Newbold, Son Faces Drug Char ge The teen-age son of San Juan Capistrano City Manager James Moca1l1 faces a preliminary bearlog in Sou~ County Municipal Court March 10 on char1es ol selling a restricted drug to Laguna Beacb un- dercover offtoera. $2Million Fire Probe UJntinuing Investication into the cause or a $2 munon Ure at a W estmln1ter radlo-electronica plant three weeks aio continues today, following cleanup of some of lbe heavy rubble remaining at '\he acene on Friday. who was released from Folsom prison Nov. 23, promised he would look at the ring he had made every day lo renHnd himselr of how be had bated lt there. The friend told how the K ansas·bcl"n Newbold had been in and out of prison since his youth. He had served el1bt years, the last time for armed robbery and parole vlolatloo. •·1 have no doubt be did shoot · himself. That's exactly wbat be told me he'd do," said the friend., a former Folsom cellmate who asked not to be identified. By ~a&e4 Press Camp Pendleton'• command- ing celMll'al N.YI be bas appoint- ed a new provoet manbal for the M arlne base after Col. William F. Saunder• Jr. uked to be relieved ol bla duUea and reuslped. Maj. Geo. Carl Hoffman named Col. R. C. McDonald to succeed Saunders. McDonald bad been commaning officer of the buec:crrecUona battalion. Hoffman aald Saunders made the request ln view of al· Je1aUons aJ"alnst him that be or· dered mllltary poJlce in· veatisators pt'Oblng drug use amon1 MPs to uae any m6ans abort ol pb,yltcal violence to Qb. lain infarmatJoo and to make suspecta "feel Uke ma11ots." The general aald Saunders asked for an lnvestJgation of the allegations, raised tn eworn testimony by six MP enlisted men and an officer during th~ court.martial of an MP accused of takinS a $6 radio from a civilian Joaina on bue. Hoff mm alao approved majo• security changes at Camp Pendleton designed to lncreaae protection for dependent familles against rapista, child molesters and burglars and in- sure quick response by MPs to family calls for help. Dependent wives bad com· plainecf bitterly that base authorities were huensttive to their pleu for help ill some emer1encles. There have been reported in- stances of rapes and attempted rapes, molestation of dependent children and prowlers on the base creatin1 an at.omosphere or terror within housing areas. Amooi security measures cr- der ed by Hoffman are replacement of burned out bulbs in street lamps, trimming of large trees that could afford shelter to criminals in housing areas, study of posaible erection of a seven-foot high chain fence around the Wire Mountain Houa- Sng Area. increased military police patrola and formation of self·defenae classes for de- pendent women. Violence Flares MANAGU~ Nlcaraaua (AP) ' -Prestdent Anutuio Somma. whose family bas ruled Nlcaraiua fOl' '2 )'ears. pledged Sunday Ile wUl relinquish power completely When bia term ends ln 1981, but 9fiole:nee betwem bis foes and government troops broke out again lD two dtl~ Kevin Mocalls, 19, who Uvee with bis parents at 31281 Paeo Olivos ln San Ju.an CaP.fatrano, was arrested lut w"k after turning bimself in to Laeuna Beach narcotlcs officers. Young Moc.U. wu brought to the police st.atton by bls father after officers earlier visited the city manager'• bome with a warrant for the )'OUth. Faulty wiring w-a defect tn an oven bas been projected u the probable cause of the Feb. 6 blaze at Silicon General Inc .• 7382 Bolaa Ave., penctmc a fm.al conclusion. Work crews uslnr a crane which reached through a gaping hole in the roof ol the structure at 7382 Boin Ave., moved heavy equipment inside the building. Body of Exorcism Victim ExMmed The younger lfocalls wu not at home, but bia father brou1ht him to the Police station later Thursday evening and he was booked for sales of PCP with bail set at $10,000. Investigators said Mocalis al· le1edly IOld small amounts of the drug, also called Angel Dust, to officers on two separata occasions. Mocalis wu arraigned Friday at South County Court and re- leased on bis own recognizance to await a March 10 preliminary hearing. lt'hder M a.le Jee clings to the beard. glasses and h e lmet of kayaker Ron Dann of Boston after he completed a rugged white water trip down Maine's Rapid Ri\·er. Union Gives 'Grades' for Solons' Vo ting Ooe Orange Count)' legislator received a high raUng from a labor union for his voting record . last year and another local solon received a zero score. Fire Jnspectm Chuck Merz said today the gear was blocking an area he want.I to check for further possible keyw to the origin ol tbe devastating fire. "Jt' a a Vfll'Y, very sfow proc- eu. It's a vet; difficult fire to pin down.'' Inspector Men aa.id today. Seventeen among 4S firemen from four different aaencies in-volved required hospital ex- amination for possible ill errects due to deadly chemical rumes contained in the smoke. ASCHAFFENBURG, West Germ any (AP> -The body Of a 23-year-old woman who died ln 1978 ~tter undergoing exorcism waa exhumed because a nun had a vl&lon the body wu mystically intact, police said. · The body of Anneliese Michel. dug up Saturday from a cemetery 1n lbis north Bavarian city, was found to be "normally decayed,'' a police statement s aid Sunday. M lss MiCbel's parents, Jf»fl and Anna Michel, demanded the body be exhumed after beinC told by a nun that it .. ls nstlng completely lDlact ln Its srave." pollceaald. "The vtew of the parents • pt"Oved ltlelf untenable. The de· cay of the lltl's body, which bad been lD the ground a year and a half, wu far advanced:' the atatementaatd. Tbe aun .rho reportedl1 bad the vision wu not identified. The parent. and two Roman Catholic priests who performed the exorcism are to go to trial March 30 on charges of negll1eat homicide in the death of the fonner education student. t.be a11igator. •• t_·~ • -, •• · ... " .. .: '. t. t I .. •' I ",: \ · .. . . . •, .. • t .. . . r . .. , & :::!@ ~:.· · ~ •M ... pldae · .. Clentente ·Melllories REMEMBERING Si\N•CJLEMEN'Tf}: I lament lbat because of family clrcum1t~, I was .unable to join the multitudes who, over the wefkend. celebrated the 50th an· niversary of citybood for San Clemente • .My family has con- sideruble roots in the place. · Today. however, moU of ~t·celebr.atlon speculation involves whether or not it was 1¥0rth $3.50 to be whisked through former president .Ni.xon's,place on a.Hven-mlnute bus ride . Whlle I won't join that 5pecu1Jltion, I'll 11uggeat to yO\.I that 1 would have skipped the bus even if I'd beea able to show up for all the celebratJ01. RIDING THROUGH the old_ estate ~9bably. would have reuiinded lDe of the dead'fish. or my fdrtner tonsils, or maybe my grandfather's bell -all memories that would have been melancboly. . Since there.Jt1~co~slde;ab~ fuss oJer peopl; getting to ride by Mr. Nixon's home. the fact that this place was once the grand estate of Hamilton H. "Ham" Cotton was som ewbatobscured dUl'int if e ci~hood cele~rat~n, Ham Colton, 'an oil millionciire, was one or the found- ing forces of San Clemente back when it was developed in lhe 1920s as the Spanish Vi1lage.1 And he built upon the southern ~J?e.l'lf t\le village the grandest eatate of them all. Its g__roun<1s w~re t!'Cpansi've with tfees, s'hrubs and lush gardens manicured by an army of gardeners and groundskeepers. Today, rtiuch of the acreag'e is gone: sold off for sur· rounding subdivision developtoent, BUT IN SAN .CLEMENTE'S boom years. it was mugnif~cent. Since the Cottons and the M\lrphlnes were good friends, I spent some time visiting Uiere when just a toddler. . • Odee I reeall when left to my own devices. I got into Ham Cotton's goldfish pond which was in the central tiled patio. Somebody had left a fishnet nearby. I started chas- ing the fi sh wiUi jt. Some~ow I got one of the larger specimens out of the pond but It escaped the net and began flopping about furiously on the patio tiles. I panicked and kicked it into the rose bushes where l 'm sure it met a horrible end. But the secret end of that goldfish probably saved my end considerable discomfort. Another time, my folh told me l was in for a real thrill -I'd get to stay overnight at the Cottons' place. I was treated like a prince and slept in a huge feather bed. I couldn't fifure out why. The next morning, t~y whisked me off to the city where the doctors sep'1'Qted me from my tonsils. First the treat, then the treatment. WHEN MY GRANDFAmER Murphine's own estate was destroyed by an underground spring, he gave the Cottons his big Iran bell that had graced the driveway entrance to bis home. The Cottonll placed it in their own circular drive. I've often wondeced if it's still there. Bu~ maybe it's j_ust as wen I didn't go back to see. I might have found the bones of a long-dead goldfish. Or suffer a sore throat. ,. PennsYlvaitia Bit . . ' . By SiOrm, 2 ·nead HAZLETON. Pa. CAP) -Plunging temperatures and freak snow squalls contributed lo several major traffic pileups, includ· ing a chain reaction crash involv10& at least 11 vehicles that killed two people. State polke said a short but fi~ce snow squall early Sunday evening raked Interstate 81 about !5 mlle!t' soofh or here and dropped visibility to ne\lf zero Just before the fatal pileup. . . AT LEAST 14 people were lnJu* ln that ~eek, \fhlcb forced the closing of an' lB>rtlile secUon ot the buSy highway lo both directions, state police said. Earth moving machinery wu called in to help clear the cJ,brii. Teo.) P@C>Ple, were hospitalized with various injuries, six of lhein In senous condition. · · At least eight passenger vehicles. two tractor-trailer trucb and a garbage hauler wero involved in the aJQasbuP., atale police said, apparenUy tri11ered when ooe tractor-tt8ilet truck slddded on the roadway. ONE CAR BURST into_ names, killing a feJDale PasseDtlet trapped in the back seat. Tbe second victim was tbe driver~ a truck, who appa{eotly .hail climbed from the clb <Sf hts vehicle and was 'trying to direct traffic. when he was st.ruck by a akiddin' automobile. , , The names 'of the truck -driver and Vloman wete not lm· mediately available. State poltce-beli«0pten were used to transfer several in.iutec:l~le lo A~Dd State General Hospital, located about seven mire&nortli 0 the acCident site.--. --* * * • • • • WASHINGTON <AP> -Consumer prices rose 0.8 percent In January1 the largest increase in nearly a year, because or sharp In· creases m food and housing coats, the Labor Department said lOday. The Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers rose 0.8 percent lut month after rising 0.4 percent in each of the past three months, the department said. The Increase was the largest since a 1 percent rise in February 1977. "AboUt two-thirds of this rise was d~e to price increases of 1.2 percent for food and beverages and O.IJ percent for bousing,11 the department uid. "Among other major expenditures, transportation rose 0.6 percent and medical care 0.8 percenL" THE DEPARTMENT also re- ported that the ave rage worker's buying power dropped by 3 percent since December, the sharpest one-month decline in 14 years. The department said the re- duction in real spendable earn- ings was caused by a 1.2 percent decrease in average weekly earnings and a 1.8 percent rise in taxes, particularly Social Security. stores, for restaurant meals and alcohollc beverages," the de· partment said. .. Amorti grocery store foods. meat prices advanced sharply," the department said. "Poultry, egga and fresh fruit and vegetable prices also showed large increases partly because supplies were restricted by adverse weather conditiona," it said. Sugar prices rose because or new tarlrts, but coffee prices continued to decline, the report said. HOME·OWNERSHIP costs rose 1 percent, mainly because of higher house prices, borne maintenance and repair services, mortage interests costs and housek~epjng. NATION /WORLD -Today's repart was the first in a new system the depcu-tment is using to try to cover the buying habits of more people. The de- partment expanded its index t.o cover all urban consumers, about 80 percent of the U.S. population. The department also is measuring prices paid by urban wage earnel's and clerical workers separately, a measure used in union contracts. This in- dex also rose 0.8 percent last month. Medical care costs were up 0.8 percent, used cars rose 2.5 percent and price Increases were recorded for airline, taxi and bus transportation. APWl,.._to AERIAL VIEW OF DERAILMENT IN YOUNGSTOWN, FLA. Tossed Like Match Sticks, Deadly Gas Killed Eight. THE 1.2 PERCENT increase for food and beverages was due to "higher prices for JJ106t types of food purchesed in grocery Frost Aiding Nixon Revise Of Memoirs NEW YORK <AP) -Former President .Nixon, aided b) television Interviewer David Frost, is revising his memoiN because of a1Jegation5 made by his onetim" chief aide H. R. Haldeman, the Trib said today. The newspaper quoted un- named, authoritative sources as saying that Frost, Robert Markel, editor in chief of Grosset & Dunlap. publisher of the hardcover version or the Nixon book; and a woman identified as Nancy Brooks, described as a copy editor for Grosset & Dunlap, are slaying at a motel near Nixon's home in San Clemente and have been traveling back and lorth to the compound. ••RELIABLE SOURCES wlthin the Nixon compouQd in San Clemente, as well alt out· side, confirmed ij)at a top itevel team haa been polled together to rewrite portions of the book," the Trib said. Nixon's ~ was scheduled for publlcation ?tfay 15. The Trib quoted a spolCeswoman for Grosset & Dunlap as saying, "l can only say that it ls due out somelimeinM'ay.''' In his book, "The Ends of Power," Haldeman said Nixon initiated the Watergate break-in and was involved in the cov- er·up. Deadly Gas Kil/'8 Eight 89 ~jured as Chlorine Tank Car Derailed YOUNGSfOWN, Fla. <AP) -Hundreds of people stayed away from their homes today as workmen began the delicate task of righting a de· railed tank car that ruptured, killing eight people. with a ghostlike, yellow cloud o{ chlorine. Eighty. nine people were injured. Salvage experts also bad to contend with a loaded chlorine tanker, a tanker of liquefied. petroleum gas. one filled with ammonium nitrate -which is a highly explosive base for fertilizer - and five others loaded with caustic chemicals. Workmen planned: 3rd graf WORKMEN PLANNED to ring the site near this s mall Panhandle town with a wall of earth and to smother the chlorine car with foam before try- ing to clean up the wreckage left by the derailment early Sunday. Officials planned to make air tests today before telling the 700 to 1,000 residents who were evacuated when they could return. Russell Gober. a member of the National Transportation Safety Board, said it appeared the derailment was caused by a broken rail but that was a tentative conclusion. THE ACCIDENT came a day and half after a derailed tank car carrying liquid propane gas ex· ploded in Waverly, Tenn., sending a ball of name tearlng through the center of town. Three vistims of that accident died Sunday to br .. ling the death toll to 12 and more than 40 were still hospitalized for burns. The Florida dead, who were in their teens and early 20s, were exposed to the chlorine as they drove along U.S. 231, which parallels the tracks where more than 20 cars or a 120-car Atlanta & St. Andrews Railroad train jumped the tracks about 2:30 a.m. The car engines of many people choked to a stop in the gas, trapping some and forcing others to run for their lives. JAMES AND ~fADELYN Miller were among those who had to flee. Their engine stalled when they stopped for a young man waving frantically for help, "While we were running we could hear peopl~ screaming, 'Help me, please help me', .. Mrs. Miller said from her hospital bed. "l knew I was going to die." THE JilNAL VICTIM, a IS.year-old girl, was not found until late Sunday afternoon when a helicopter crew spot.led her lying in a field across the highway from the wreck. The train's engineer, Ray Shores, 53, was lbe last survivor to be rescued. He took to the swamp al~ng the. tracks where he found a pocket of un· tamted air and waited eight hours until being rescued by a helicopter. Mirror of American Life • a Course by Newspaper The television shows you watch. The The F~ze ·!J,Jit,S : East Coast To earn two-units; residents of Coast, Rancho. Santiago and Saddleback Community College Dlstricts may register by re-. questing materials from colleges serving their area. Register a• Coastl i n.e Community College by phoning 963-0824; Santa Ana College by calling ttie ·admission office at 835-3000, and Saddleback College by calling 831-9700 or 495--4950, Ext. 291. Temperaturei.Dip fjom Rockiea'.io Glilf Te.Pft'aturn """ .... ""' " ti 6S .... ... 2A .... ,, SI • ... ,.. 50 2' ,. J ... 34 ~--~. t ; ~ '~--.---- " 1t 27 • . " • • ,. .. N 2' 20 ,, " . ... '° •II • h a D • 2A a 19 ., 01 . ' 2' 14 n ,. f Of course, Daily Pilot ' reaClers may read the weekly articles forr enjoyment. DAILY PILOT • . STOCKS I BUSINESS , I • Monday, Febfuary 27, 1978 s DAILY PILOT 8:J Not So Mh.ar Growth Cuu Ttro Ways By lllLTON MOSKOWITZ Assume you were makln.1 SlS,000 a year 1n 18 -"'d boo!ted that to '60,000 •year In im. You would no doltbt think you weredoJna pretty well. But lt depends. Take a company we all know, Olllelle, whlcb ti.as managed to quadruple Ju revenues over that period bul must still feel u lf ll'• runnlnt In place. Gillette did take in $400 mllllon 1n 1966. So UWe d It c0&t to make lit producu that tt cleared qeartr 1100 mlllion in pretax profits on thoee 1aJes. Aller payana ka taxes, lt was ld't with a neat prollt of~ million. NOW LOOK AT WHAT HAPPENED last year wben Glllette took In '1.8 blUlon. f1nal f11Urea have not beell,h· J>Qrted yet but based on the nine-month results, It appears that the company netted about $75 mllllon on those sales. So, in 11 years Gillette's sales are up 400 percent, lts profitl SO per~nt. If it were operating today u amoothly u It wet ln 1968, proflta would be l200 million a year. GWette's long.aufferina abarehot•s are funWar with thlJ tale ol woe. In 1986, they received dividends ol $1.20 • abare. In l917, they received $1.50 a share. Tbelr stock, worth $40 a share ln 1966, now sells for S2S. Money Tree How can you sell so many razor blades and do so poorly? Tbe answer is that there's nothing wrong with Gillette's shaving business; it's doing fine. The trouble lies with the ot.ber businesses Gillette has entered. THE BOSTON COMPANY nELDS a line that In· eludes deodorants (Rieht Guard, Soft & Drl), disposable lighters (Cricket and Super Cricket>, ah-mp00$ <Eahb Born, White Rain, Lemon-Up), hair sprays (Adorn), hair rinses (Tame), hair dryers (Max), W!'tting instruments <Paper-Mate and Flair), fire extinguishers and smoke de· tectors <Captain Kelly) and plant foods and potting aolls (Hyponex and Swiss Farms). It's an lmpo6lng list. But lf Gillette could eliminate them and stick with the shaving business, l1 would pro- ba bly be better off. In the deodorant market, Rlaht Guard is locked in a bitter struggle with the Ban line ol Bristol· Myers, and Bao bolds the lead. Cricket figbta the Blc llehter to a standaWJ. GUlette ranks No. 4 in the abampoo market with a 10 percent slice. Flair is the top selling porous point pen, but Bic overwhelms Paper-Mate 1n the ballpoint market. GILLE'ITE IS ABOUT TO try anotller extension. Its Max hand·held blow dryers bold about 20 percent of that market, and this spring Gillette will launch a $17 million ad drive for its new Ultra Max hair shampoo, which it claims is formulated specially for blow dryer users. G illetle is looking here for the same synergy it gets in the shaving business. Gillette'• blades account for 62 percent or the $350 million blade market, with Trac II the top seller in the nation. Gillette's prowess bas slopped over to the shaving cream market, where ill two brands, Foamy and Trac II, take one-third of the $130 million market. But the fact is Gillette bas never been able to duplicate ln other fields what it baa done ln the shaving business. Razors and blades today represent only 30 percent of the company's $1..6 bllllon in sales. However, they account for 75 percent of the profits. The other products add up to profitless prosperity. Demand Strong For New Housing This year's housing market is a contest between de- mand and the money supply. Demand is the strongest in many years. Mortgage money Is tightening and there bas already ~n one round of raises so far this year, says a report by Advance Mortgage Corp. and Citicorp Real Estate, Inc. Both are subsidiaries of Citicorp. There won't be any clearcut victory but demand will be served, the report says. The Ughtening mortgage market will depress, but not suppress, the housing boom. WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN a 2.3· million-start year with a more ample money supply will be a 2.1 million 7ear instead. <Last year was just short of 2 million starts.) The conclusions are publlsbed in "U.S. Housing Markets," a quarterly survey of U.S. and 17 major local housing trends. Most of this year's additional starts, says Advance Mortgage president Robert J. Mylod, wlll be con· dominlums and subsidiaed rental units. Starts in the multifamily sector should Increase 30 per~nt to more lhan · 700,000. It will be multiples' best year ex· cept for the 1971-73 ( ) boom. even though-de-H 0 USJN G velopment of con· . ventionat rental '-------------apartmenu swt is lag. gio1 in most of the country. Single-family atart.s should decline about 5 percent to 1,400,000 or sUgbllY less, be aald. The boom ta changtna locaUoa.s. Mylod 11ld. LAST YEAR•$ STAa: CAUJl'OltNIA, ls leveUng off after squeezing the specwa-. out of lta market. The top individual market, Houston, bu ov•bullt. Thl& year's star perform .. wlU be the mountain re- «iton markets and other Southern markets. Many of these were fiat or alipUy depressed a year ago but were turned around by a wave of mlir•tlon boom the snow belt aftet last year's bitter winter. Denvw and Phoenix wound up with their best •lnal~f amlly yean aD4 Dallu with ita bat year for total unks. Nationally, a recOC'd U00,000 alnale-famUy homes (tract and custom) were abscrbed lut year, 20 percet higher tban the best previous year on record. Rental vacancies are as low as any tlme llnce the end ol World War ,JI C5 percent). Extltiq lloroe aalea dlmbed all thtough i.m and were a tb.trd bl&ber at year-end than at the beglnninc. ''CAUPOaN'IA," SAYI io!M>. •••AY be the Giily extenalve bouslnC market tbll •come do"8 from a lqb without crub1n1. eotoparua, JIG& market& IA J'IGrtda In 1112·73 and In CaUlorala ln tbit..rtt • pused atn.J.aht from boo1e=-tft'Cll't ..,~u.t ~ 1-*n ~ 1D01t apKU)atan oat ot lllat'inarttt bJ last fall. 1'tl1a waa followed by 1Gme ~ lff, ID, demand and plfcee aid 10me lDmWe ln UDdil'-ec•aw:UOa lnvent.c1r1. San Joee Ud On.nae Count.J, ~ -..iats. bad been~ and ..... ~ tM bl ... Nd qv.tte aha.rp d.cJJnei lD fovtb~pennltl. •·u°'"""• it.ate wide.._..... arettm "'7 Jow tty bi1todeal at04ar4a ••i an coaceat.oted la\ tho over-1100,000 r_.. ~laltil riMil iqd price tnDds are •Wueil Ii ~-Wtib JIA ~. GG' are alroa,,laJ UW ttMd allia' maibtl. · .. ..;.~~:nc.:===="* .. NlcL • ...,. belOW .._an ..,. ..,..;·1uc1 below ... the'"* ewe~-~ lMI ~· Blt.liiilldn Ond ll"iM!INlt. to mo.e.,.. Ii ptce ,...., IAWo lliocn•vlhio nUoi .. ~ 11p to• terdllt -S. ID-• cues, 40 ptrHnL SciCDe ""1 llD.il CoMcil mt t ~ aroUnd lfO,.,,..... ,.. •• ) '=' l . l J • fl.I DAILY PILOT EVENING ·11:...wa EMPCMNCY ONtl GAMWT • THI MADY BUNCH The 8tedyt light Clly Hall to 111t1 • pettt. • THE MK>K1£8 ~an. .... lhtt '"'** w.ntll • tloy. -~ * * ... "Ouc:11 9ouo" ( 1~) The Mini Btotllet9, A tMy cllc:Wor 1Md1 hie OOl.ln\ly Into battle. ( 1 11t .. 30 min I 8 0 SIX MILLICH DOU.ARMAH "The Dimon MIClllt\t'' (Pwt 2ol 2) G MOVIE .. . I ~ A young nune 11 raped In the \#lderofound Olflgl ., Mtnloflal Holpltal 8D ElEOmlC OOMPANY Cl!) HISTORY Of MEXICO "Ss*n At Thi Time 01 Cotta" * *"' "Velda It CcMl\lng" ('8111 eun La~ter, Suuti Clark. The mutdlt« ol an lnnoolnt blaok m111 rune Into lrouble w11en he ettempta to repay 1111 11111n'a wtdow by tMlnO up I OOllactlon. (2 lltl.) 8)CAAC>t.~ AHO ""1EHOS • ., . ' 9 AICN!WS uoe MOW **** "011den 01 b 11" 11954) OQtY Cooper, Sutan Hayward. Greed, )Ntovey end retribution plegue thrM 1dllenturers strend· ed In Mextoo dUflng Ille gold rvlh d1ye. (I hr., 30 min.) Q CONCENTAATION .., MWITCHEO Ollrtn lands Ille ac:count after all and 11 re·lnatated. fa OVERIASY Sixties Trio Gue.ta: Alex Cohen, Hiidy PAika 'Ii> DIMENSIONS IN CULTURES "Evolutlon" (I) UNTAMl!DWOALO "Sodlaye 8atmon" Laurie Heieman, Christina Raines and Season flubley c from left) play three 'oung \\omen of the 19ll0s in the con- tinuing drama ··Loo~c Change'' tonight a nd Tuc~day at 9 on NBC. Channel .J. ({Ji MERV ORJFAN Ci) COl.LECTIVE BARGAINING GOES TO SCHOOl (I) TO TEU THE TRUTH 1:00 0 HBO NEWS U UARSClUB 0 A8CNEWS Q 90WUNOFOR D0l.l.AR8 7;30 0 AND BA8Y MAKES TWO Q) f lOVI LUCY L\IC"f It -~ltd ol being the mY11teriou1 bUtgler. "~X" (I) ADAM·12 A rtlec1ed wom•n attempts suicide fE) MACNEIL I LEHREA REPORT The PfObl9ma that l•oe unrnemed ttenege g1t11 who oet pregnant and some poulble tlOluUons to ,,,.,, plight Ila lltamlned Q NEWLYWED GAME 0 THATS HOUYWOOO "The Spy Game" 0 JOKER'S WILD Cha .... ~,~ ...... ,,. 8 KNXT ICBS) Los Angeles II KNSC (NBC) Los Angeles 8 KTLA jlnd ) Los Angeles ti KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB {CBS) San Diego I> 1<1-U· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 KCST (ABC) San Diego CD KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles CD KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles fl> KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles '1i> KOCE·T\l 1PBS1 Huntington Beach Danf!ers Story m THE BRADY BUNCH Marcia gell • pan-tune jOb. (I) ADAM-12 1ra the wrong ~ lor a phony c:yclla1 and • phony D2J>ll•nce Nie. fli) LA. INTERCHANGE Tne firtt part of • mlni- Hr les on taaellon i' 0tesented al) FAENCH CHEF ··summer Sallda" (I) I 100,000 NAME THAT TUNE ®) WILO, WILD WORLD OFANIMAUI 1:00 tJ ()) 0000 TIMES "Wlllone, Tiie Other Woman" Wlllona la - peeled ol being "Ille otllll' woman'' wner> Bookmwt Is tlloughl to b9 atapptng out on Ills wife 0 LITTLE HOUSE OH THEPAAIRIE 'A Moat Precious Gitt" Oesplle Iha ~ ol her lemlly over Ille impending birtll. Carotine'• .. c11_1 lurna to worry Ben Vereen's Roots ~t: Betty Wlllt•. CD MOVIE • • * "Thi Roman Spnng Of Mra. Stone'' (1ff1) ViYlln Leigh, Warttn Beet· ty. A woman O'-up an llnpfomillng ec1111Q ~ IOra..,...ofr~ltl Rome. (2 llra.) • THE PAl80NEA "Mlny Happy Returnt" Thi Prleontr MOapte and tuc:CMds In getllng blldt to Lorldon. ID QUE PAIA, U.S.A.' Everyont work• on Ctrrnerl'a mullcal tlll'Ue, dHplt• Ju1n1'1 a11g1 fright 1:30 G (I) llABY, l'M IACte "S.t By A ONm" Ray It llCCUMd of trying IO bUy Na Cfllldrtn'• lo"9 w"8n hi •IMml Jorden Wlnll I NI ol dn.trn• and hi trlN to mMI that "need." Q) I '21.000 QOESTION 6!) OVER EASY G~ta: Alex CoMn. Hiidy Parkt. ~8 (1) M•A•S•H Chlf1M d'--• a c;ure IOI hit rundown ~ltlon, ind Reder tntert hl1 m<IUM In a Challenge r- wllh • Marin• Corps rodent 0 MOVIE ·~ 0"*1gl" (Plr1 2 of 3) l<ate'a Journat1111c Cir-tlou,.,_ end 1111 blglna • turbUltnt anllr with an Ofl·l>Mt eclot; Jen. ny matriel I pollllcal Kllv• 1st: Tanya. 1 euc:c.a In the arl world, begin• an unMppy rllatlONhlp wllll • Mlf<*ltered. married llOUlptor. 8 0 A8CMOVIE · Aired on TV Special By JAY SllA.RBUTT BEVERLY HILLS IAP I When he was a kid growing up tn Brooklyn, Ben Vereen took his first steps toward show biz, <'Ourlesy of a passing gent, a kind of fllm· nam man ror • a dan cin g ~chool. The guy, Vereen said, ''is w alking down the st reet and I'm just doing vunN my kid things, playing ball I was about 10. lie says, 'Younf man, is your mother home?" r said yeah." und io.aid. 'Ah, I guess you're go ing to be another Biii Bojangles Hob1nson,'" he recalled ''IN MY HEAD, I said, 'Who's Bojanglcs?' But I said. 'Yeah, surt" • Didn't find out who he was unlll much later 1n m y hfe " A year later, he said. s ang1og entered his life. courtesy of his godQ'IOlher , Mary Eddie, wife or a minister . She "kidnapped " him , he grinned, off the streets on Sundays and look him lo church "She taught me this song. 'His Eye is on the Sparrow,' an old Ethel Waters song, .. he said. "I sang it the first Lime In church and she played these heavy gospel chords. I just loved it .. Bo•tea Valerie Bertinelli of One Day ala Time will host the KNBC documentary on teen-age pregnancy·' And Baby Makes Two" tonight at 7:30 on Channel 4. .. . T NIGHT'S LATl:ST LISTINGS ... . -. TUBE TOPPERS KCOP at 8:00 "The Roman Spring or Mrs. Stone." Vi\·en Leigh stars us a burned out actress who finds romance with a yoongcr man <Warren Beatty) in Home in this 1961 movie NBC C!) 9:00 -"Loose Change." The second of three parts of this TV movie following three women through the 1960s. ABC fJ 9 :00 --''Such Good Friends." Dyan Cannon and James Coco star in this 1971 comedy about sexual promiscuity. * * * "Such Good Frl•ndl" (1911) Dyan Cannon, J•~• Coco. Whlft 1 MllUllly truatr•t9d wite dllcowrl Ille II mar- ried 10 • Pfll\lndttW. "" dlOldee to outdo him In promlaeully. (Network llClvtMa viewer dilGretton.) I MERV GRIFFIH PSYCHIC 8UAOEON8: MIRACLE ORILLU8fOH Thi ,_ llllCI luefatlVe 1n11rn1llon11 trade In "operation• without turgery" bting carried on ~ hlller9 Is ~amlnld l'lllO ~ll1rt1 Ille wondetl of "" ... In lllla lhof1 t0:30 •• HEWS THI ONGINAl.4: WOMENIHAAT "Allot Niii • Col*lor 01 Sollla" Allee Neel'• gr•nd· mothlr1y extarlO< bet ... her forthright ~tloi\t and th• pen•tr•llng, *'-' ~t. portrllta 11;00 .Ille 0e (I) 0 HEWS LOVE, AMENCAH 8'TYl.I VIE -·· I per1olf•I ohya1c:l1n ~o Muf!MvMdAI. • llf'V ~ "A Dly Called A J60UAt · • • . . 1:30 = • HIWI ·,• MOYIE • '* • "Tiie Long Weci• (1tlM) Antllony Qul"l, CllUIH Cobutn '"' __.. vlc:lim ~ tNll lie .. _...., ol ~­ dlt end tobtlety ( 1 Ill':• ., mill.) ••• .. 1:471 NEWS • ·~ 1.-00 NEWS , :.: •'. 2:08 8 MOVIE .-• ** "Wiid, Wiid Wll\tet• (1"8) Gery Clettl .. ~ ~ A atudent Pl#M Ille gftll 9nd Ille tpoft ... lkllnO wna. tti.ndlf11 .,. rll0t1•!ype oollege d ttl., 20mln.) a.-oo • Niwa S:tl 8 H!WIMAKl!Af : S-M 8 ITlVI! EDWARDS ! ... Ttw•daft'' Da11t l111~ lff o.,lt-• MORNING • • '1i) DAYIO SUl8KINO P1r1 t "Yout Smoke G&t1 In My Eyea • The Bellle Oltlr Smoking" P.n II "A Conver11tlon W1111 Leo Rotlen" "LCMI And Tiie LongM1 Nigh!" Luther and Doloret are on thel.r way to L" VagM, but get loll "LOltl And The Phonltl" Boyd and Daphne ratutn from 1 lormtl l*lY· 0 MOYIE "Oh, Suunna l' a-Autry. Booth d. A llripped c:ow- thrown Off • train. ( t 11:30 Q) * * * "Tiie Story dP Ealh« ColllllO" 11~1) JoDn Cr1wt0<d, Rou4no Braul. Atfet gaining llfne lhrOUOll c:hlrll9ble ~ 1 girl ragllM light. ""'1ng end IC>Mdt lollowino )In em<>llon.I shook-(2 lwa., 20 min.) •.309(1) otlEDAYATA TIMl * * ·~ "The Catcllar" ( 1871) Mk:hMI Wltney, Jan-MletlMI Vlnctnt. A "tlie DrMI 0Hlgnar ' Julie .. In for • bundle of surptlN9 whllll .,,. ..,,.,. '°""* polle9 de1tot1Ve tOlnl with llll underground a dr-dtllgrllng oontesl and ... "" -Clr-11 all _,up. I BOT Of' GfllOUCHO 10:00 ()) LOU GRAAT When Lou getl ~ of • local ~ plOt and makes preparlllona 10 print Ille ltoty, tM CI.A. llept In and Lou deflel the ~ publllNr 10 "eaten" wanted PltlDnll IOI private cffenta. (2 hrs.) Q) THE 000 COUPl.l F1lh1'1 am11eur opere compeny hN • problem wfltn tlle beritOM qultl • LETS MAI<£ A DEAL DICK CAVETT 81) MACNE.IL. / LEH,_,. A£POAT iE::' 1t:l90 fJ (I) C88 L.ATI! MOVIE ··~ .. ~ Of Tiie WoAf" (187<1) Cltnt Wiik«. Relph'• .o'1lol to Ed on hOw 10 get I PfOtnOllOn bec:dres. INvtng Ed will!· °"'a job. to:11• LEHMAN:BEE Olcar-wlnner RoOln L.elt- Petet Gr-. A hunt« ~ out of rellr_,t 10 1rac:k ""1111 ~· to be a klllw WOif, but .. IC1ualty en lllllmll 11\11 IUll I human IOrrn. (RI Comic Real SEATTLE (AP> The gu} who plays the addlepated airline navigator on C BS ' "Bob Newhart Show" isn't actrn~ entirely oot or character It 's difficult, from a con versallon, to tell where Howard Borden, navigator for European Delivery Service, takes off. and actor Bill Daily lands. A question, or the hint or an impending question. launcheio. Daily Into Bordenesque head·in· the-cloudness. "The first time I saw him, I knew he was a com edy genius," Daily said of Newhart, who was indeed a boyhood friend in Chi cago "THERE WAS A costume par- ty and everyone came as some dumb thing, but Bob came as Leonardo da Vinci. God knows how much time lt took to make up. Under his arm he was carry- ing a Mona Lisa, half-painted with the paint·bY·the-numbers s till on the unfinished half Crazy" MoVLng right along. "My weight has stayed the same over the years," DalJy said. 'Tm a sensib don't smoke much. ell, really, I've never s moked But I hate exercise. I used to s wim when we had a pool -'m a great swimmer -but I as always catching colds. l qu swimming and haven't had a c d since." Breath "I DON'T LIKE meals, though. Fr is boring. The sauc Put me by a sand ch machine or something like that and I wouldn't care if I o't eat for 37 years. But give something like this -pointing 0 a lunch or fettucini and shrim before him -and I can eat for er "And," he addd, "I 'm a chocolate freak. I l e Frangos. After 18 Hershey b rs you tend lo throw up, but F angos have that hint of mint them and you can eat them fo ver!" Daily's hands described circles in the air for mphasis as he talked. He was ressed like Borden -slacks. s irt open at the neck and lapels 1 yang over a knit sweater collar. AFTERNOON . 12:00 G * * 'h "Thi Big HanG,b- Yet" ( t950) VIII Johnlon, EMzabtlll T aytor A young llW)llt OVlfCOmH hll peculiW drinking P<obltm bef0<1 It de11roya 1111 Ille. ( 1 llr., 30 min.) 3:00(!1 **"Swinger's ParadlH" ( 19851 Cllrt Richards, Wllllt Slezall. A bOy le hifed • • stuntin.n In • loc:ll movie pt~ Uon.( 1 hr., 30 min.) 3:30 D • * 'h "MarlOwe" , • (19891 J1m11 G•rr•r. Gayle Hunllloutf. A ptlvJC• eye, hired by a girl to 'find h1r mining broth•r, encount1t1 gengsters~ murder es hi cna... 4-1 • 11rip.111ae dancer ~ 1111' husband p hr :-oo min,) "BOB IS A very heady ac411." Daily said. "He knows his lines. doesn't like lo work, $~Yi> there'll be two rehearsals and that's it. I'm a physical actor. I li ke to rehearse more.·· After service in Korea. Daily attended Goodman Dr~a School in Chicago, worked :u noor director for a Chicago 1V station and spent 16 years with NBC in various non-actCng functions. : He came west with Steve Aljen and Mary Tyler Moore's husband, Grant Tinker, who gave him a job as Maj. He~on the "I Dream of Jean¢jiite" series. • "I LOVE GRANT Tinker. He gave me a number or jobs. J ~as even ln a couple of episode;; of 'My Mother, The Car: ll was a good role for me. becau'Se I'm a physical actor and I coul<t do great things with Jerry Van Dyke, who played the lead. But it was wrong, IL was loo sick. having the mother as a car and the relationship. Now if il had been 'My Grandmother The C1tr' .. And. bingo, the man promptly talked Vereen's mother into enrolling the kid in hts dance school: "He snowed her on this whole idea of, 'He has the potential lo be a dancer."' . 1 TURNED OUT TUE guy was 'rlght. Ben could dance. And ;sing. And act. He's proved it in •Broadway's "Pippin," his NBC ·summer series a few years ago, in 1various TV s pecials and as Chicken George in "Roots." ANOTHER STEP in hi s career: his junior high school principal, Ben Ruskin. urged Vereen to try out for New York's famed High School for the Performing Arts. even though Vereen never considered it. "I wanted to go into aviation, maybe the Army or Air Force, be a JiCer," he said. But the school took him. gave him his first formal training in perform- ing. Later, be met theater guru Tom O'Horgan. The Serious Side of Steverino ; · ( " Thursday, Vereen is on ABC again at 10 on Channel 7, in his own special, "Ben Vereen ... His Roots." But he gives no 4!redit at all to the dance school whence it all began. Vereen a mild, gentllF" guy, says the joint was crowded, a waste of his time and his mother's bard·earned money. But still, it Ill up an early desire to join the entertainmen t fraternity. .. I'll never forget goin& to the school one day and a cab driver turned to me, saw my tap shoes, He said O'Horgan, who cast him as Jodas in "Jesus Christ, Superstar," had a school where singer s, dancers, actors and mus icians 'taught each other their crafts "and 1 was fortunate to run into him. "HE BEUEVED that theater is one, that all these crafts come together, and the total actor must be able to lap them all. It was a great leaaon, because from that day on I've done Jusl that." By TOM JORY NEW YORK (AP)-Steve Al- len is a funny man, quite ready to acknowledge "some kind of silly sellin& to my computer." But there's a sober aide to the wacky comedlan who, over the years, bas made millions of TV watchers laugh. "As a composer and a musician, I'm totally serious and romantic," said Allen, an accompU1bed pianist who bad Just been snowed out of a couple or concerts in Boston. "The me who plays the piano ts lotall}" different from me the humorist." It's difficult to look at Steve Allen u anything but a man with a well-tuned sense of humor. "Almost everything does strike me funny," fie said. "And whether it's a gift or a character flaw, I am able to laugh at most or what goes on in life." ALLEN'S TALENT reaches into several forms of expression -he's a writer as well as a composer and musician. But he's best lmo\ttn for his work in television. And be'• got a couple of TV tb1ngs going now. Allen is host for "The GrQt 1978 Adult Ventriloquism and Comedy Show," runnln& through February on the Home Box Of. flee cable TV network, and his .. Meet.inc of Minds" series begins lls second season on public television Ma h 16. The pay TV show features some of ventriloquism's best people like Edgar Beraen, Jimmy Nelson, Shari Lewis, Jim Henson and his "Muppets" and Jay Johnson \of ABC's "Soap." ~ ALLEN RESEA.Red£l> and WTote the scripts for "'.Meetil\g of the Minds," which premiered in six parts on Public Braodcasting Service stations last year. The proerams feature dis· cussions with Important people froin the past: Theodore Roosevelt, Cleopatra, St .. Thom as Aquinas an4 Thomas • Paine. Allen is moderator. The second season will indude reruns of the first six proarams -a book of scripts from the first season will be pubJished in April -in addition to a paciage of new shows. • ' . "IT MAY BE· the most im· portant thing I've ever done," Allen said of the PBS s~es. ··1t's the kind of thing that:can be watched 1,000 years from now and still be as meaningful as it is today.'' · "I wish the faciUty with w~h I work had something to ~o with quality," he went Of\ --,vas be serious?