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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-01-11 - Orange Coast Pilot7 17 at .. GOP Chainnatl Labels THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11, 1979 Bill11 Carter 'Bigot' . ' .' "°'-pt, NO. u, I MCT!Oltt> • PMH t • l I • • • • . l • Iranian Moh Burns U.S. Flag E By Mediator IaMes IJmber Legs Strike News Blacked Out I I. 11 BJ bYllOND l"Bl'&ADA Qt • ..., ......... State-appointed mediator Dbraza Mrvicbln hu impoeed a ~ news blackout on the status Of r contract talks bet.ween Huot- ~ 1ngton Beach Union High School District negotiators and st.riklng l teacher leaders. For the second consecutive night, district and teacher leaders haggled over contract la· sues until dawn · MacDavid's Loses Usage Of 'big mac' TEL AVIV, Israel <AP) - Mac David's restaurant Jost Round One in the burger war to- day as an Israeli · Jud&e ruled that it must st.op using the words "big mac." But the trademark dispute between McDonald's Corp. and the local eatery is not over McDonald's attorneys in Israel filed for a permanent in· junction against MacDavld's and in the meantime asked the Tel Aviv d.istricl court to grant a temporary lnJunctlon. They claim MacDavld's uses trademarks which the American hamburger chain has regtatered here, although there are no McDonald's franchises in the MlddleEut. Judge Hanna Even-or ruled that MacDavid's could keep Its name -· at leut until the case ls decided -but thatit must stop US· tng the words .. big mac" on its menus and packaging. Mcl>QOald'a claim· for over Sl ,000 in damages was reduced to a $270 (ee to compensate for legal expenses, to be paid by the party which loses the final suit. The cue ls pending and, accord· Ing to MacDavld's attorney Am· non Helled, "rt may &ake yean to settle." MacDavtd's appeal to America.a tourl.ata ls obvious: The restaurant ls decorfted in 1tars and stripes. It off era a "blg mac" aandwlcb made of two all· beef pattles, 1auce, lettuce, onion• and optional cheese. The words "btl mac" are lo lower -ca ... laoweuL.....»'llJie lb• Clee llAC, Pate AJ) -. Six Arreeted TIJUANA, Mexico (AP> - Federal aut.borlU" aay alx men, tncludtna a Tijuana bank maoaser and four llexJca• tn the United SUttt, bave·been at· retted tn a larp.~al• C*aine smuuu..,m.. But the wallloul by about half the diarict's 861 teacben that began Jan. a continues l.oday at seven Weal 0r8Qle County hi&b schools. Assistant Superintendent Howard Roop, a district negotiating team member, said the secrecy edict may be "a good s1gn" that a contract settle- ment with striking teachers is near , Roop said Mrvichin told dis· trkt and teacher necotiators they will (ace a $1,000 fine u one of them violates the secrecy or· der. School board members have scheduled a 9 o'rlock meeting tonight. Striking teachers scheduled a late morning meet-ing today District omcials have kept schools open by hinng about 800 substitute teachers. •'Substitute teacher daily pay was raised from $60 to S80 last Friday. Last month, 400 members or the District Educators Associa· lion, the group spearheading the teacher strike, voted to walk of( their jobs the day after they re- turned from holiday vacation if their demands were not met. U mfJer Lasses Prior to the all-night Wednes- day contract talks , teachers were demanding what amounts to a 10 percent pay hike over the 1978·80 school yean and binding arbitration in grievances. Terry Landsverk, Pam Swagger. Conme Olson and Jackie Carr are among Fountain Valley High School dancers hosting 10 top high school troupes at the third annual Choreographer's Winter Concert at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday In Huntington Beach "High School Auditorium, 1905 Main St. Dancers from Corona del Mar. Laguna Beach, Marina. University, Dana Hills. Capistranq Valley, Brea·Olinda. Orange and Villa Park high schools a lso will perform. But school board members Wednesday morning agreed to orrer teachers a seven percent pay boost alter July and no pay raise for the 1978-79 school year. School board members have been staunchly OPJ>06ed to bind· ing arbitration because they contend it will erode local con· trot. Billy .Blasted Teacher leaders and district negotiators have agreed that any pay bikes must be given (See STaJKE, Pa&e AZ> GOP Official Raps Carter Recor d Lows Hit Midwest WASHINGTON <AP > - Refubllcan National Chairman Bll Brock today called Presi· dent Carter's brother, Billy, a bigot and urged the president to publicly disavow his younger bt'otber'• allecedJy antl-5emiUc remarb. •1 fte AMoelaled Prell 4 BUly Carter, while accompe· Record low temperatures nytna a hiah·level Libyan del· were recorded tn the Mldwe.t e1atlon on a tour of Georgia, tod~y witb tbe thermometer bU been ~ritlc~ for such re· dippln1 to• clefnlel below lel'O marks u "lbere 1 a bell or a lot ln Mln..-ota and JC below m a more Arablana tban there ls suburb of Qdcqo Jews" and for aaytna the UnJttd Temperatune u low 81 21 Stai. lbcMald .Mt tti "boeUlity" ..,.... ...._ MlllUDl'Ud.. baa. toward Ubya. ' Wlacomtninto .. lowerlllchlpn --vet ••I w~ Hlbblq, lltna .• recorded cballenstnl Bilb' Carter'• rlabt tem,.,... et • below _.., to free apeech and "we cannot maklq 1t tbe eo&dillt 11pot tn tbe te1ally contain tbe dl11u1t1111 country, and there wne anO-litmitllm that laces hi• re- unoffidal reporta ot .40 read1n,a marks." eh e where In no rt be rn Added Brock: "We have yeUo Minn.-a. outlaw btaotl'J' l" the United In Plano, 111 ., a wHtern $tate1 1nd when the bl1ot'1 suburb of Cldeqo, the ~ OPlDlom reeult in the 11tW1Ct.lon bltMbelow. of Pt• bltot'• JNed, we can't•· • • I / peel him to put a rem on his ton1ue." • Brock said ·•to some extent, each or us is h i$ brolher's keeper," and asked President Carter to speak out a1ainsl Billy's actions. Billy Carter's remarks have displeased Georgia state or. nctals and lncensed such aroups as the American Jewish Com· mlttee and the AU.-nta Jewish Welfare Federation, which wu reported to have uld Billy was (8eeBIU.Y, Pl .. A!) SOUth eoUt Ptau•ll •one tll1 showroom arena" In Januaey. Stories a plct\nl detail th1a 1peclal .. ,., ... "' Velllel" tn today'a Dally Pilot. T\ml to PaceM. Nixon Back s U.S . Bracero Work P r ogram TIJUANA CAP) -Although he says he couldn't 'do much to implement it. former Pre1ldent Nixon says the United States should restore a bracero pro- gram so Mexican nationals working across the border may "work with dignity." "A• I come to Tijuana and see these people\ here -hard· worklnJ, nice people and then find they move across the border to make a little money to send back and they are atte&ted and harassed -It's wrona." Nixon said Wedneaday . He and lonttlme frlend Chart• G. "Bebe'' Reboao we~ la this border town 20 miles 10Uth fll s.n Di•ao tor 1 mMI fll • enehlladu and beer. He· talbd tntormall1~reportenor1'· Juana's ABC newtpaper. U.S. and Mexican otrtctalt abould ··won out 1 le1a1 way •h•r• the rtpu of the workers (lej NUON, Pace AZ> Several Killed hi Clash TEHRAN. Iran <APl -A mob - hauled down and burned the - American flag today in front ol tbe U.S. consulate in Shiraz. top- pled three statues of the shah and stormed the secret police he adquarters. reside nts re ported. Between two and eight people were killed and 10 to 15 were wounded when agents or the secret police. SA YAK . opened fire to defend themselves. the Shiraz residents said. The incidents broke out ai. Prime Minis t e r S hahpo ur Bakhliar tried to win the support of Parliament or his newl y in· stalled civilian government. In Washington. U.S. Secretary or Stale Cyrus R. Vance voiced strong support at a news con ference for Bakhtiar's effort~ and urged the lraman military and other elements or the strife· torn county "to find a way to work together.·· Shiraz residents. contacted by telephone from Tehran. said the violence began after some 10.000 to 20.000 people gathered at a ci ty square for an anti-shah rally. The crowd marched to the consulate. where they hauled down the U.S. nag and burned 1l in the s treets . The d e m - onstrators then de molished statues or the shah before at· tacking the secret police head quarters during the four-hour riot. In Tehran. Bakhtiar promised to stop selling oil to South Africa and Israel. fire "unneeded <See IRAN;Page A%) Co ast Weath er Patchy fog and low clouds late tonight through {ll ld ·morntn~ Friday . Otherwise mostly s unny Friday with some hil{h cloudiness. Lows tonight 44 to 50. Highs Friday 63 to 61. IN81DI! TODAY At the .caie of HotDOfi op- proocltes Us 20th btrthdoy. goonw,,.,., otttaola and rea· ideftt I Ott wondermg aloud wh•th•r growth shokld ~ C¥rNd. SM •'Ql"OIOinQ Pouts·· on Page.Alf. ; Honest, A be? lr tr lc!, for m on a s t a tue of Abraham Lincoln in downto"'n Po rthrnd aft er an ice storm moved through lhl' u rt•:J cur lJcr Wt•dnesday. Crunbodian Official Rescued by 'Copter DANGKOK Thailand I AP> A T h at hl'licoptcr r esc ued C<Jm bod1an Ot·put y P r emil'r lt·ng Sar } from <'a pturc by '1l'lorious Vie tnamese a nd Carn bod1an rebel fo rces toda y and the• OU!.lcd Offi cial then new out of Ban~kok . for Hong Kong, Tha1 c.orlineofftc1dlSs a1d /\ 1101 ht•r helicopter albO made a hril'f l.mding 1n.<,11fo C'a mt)()(Jrn Jn<I rcturm·d to Thailand. but tht•rt' "a" no ronf1rntalwn either -of t ht' l'hoppe r i:. p1 e ked up Pr e.,1dent Kh1eu Samphan or othl•r offi cials of the fallen Phno m Penh "overnment. There were no reports on tht: fate of Kh1 eu Samphan or of Premier Pol Pot, but reliable ThJ 1 mi li tary J nd We8te rn ::.oun·es s aid the beleaguered Cambodians a::.ked the Thais to allo" tht.• t ranl:t1l of about :SOO or th e i r associates and lht:ir fam1 h1·-. to China. their only important ally wh1h.• they were m powt•r T h e s w if t h e li c opte r 1•v a1·uat1on <'a me as Vit.•tna mese tanks and infantry wert> moving Stable Looted In Costa Mesa BurRlars brokl' into a horsl: ::.tablf' ;it lhe Or a nge Cnunly Fasr~roundi. 1:1nd look morP than % tlOO worth nf riding equip ment. Costa M<'sa pohcl' said to d<•) Ll•shc Cannon, 22. of 2535 Carneg1t> Ave . Cm.ta Mesa . told poll<'<' she went to her stable Tuei.day and found lhat lhe door hurl bet•n rorced open Four western saddles. silver horse bits and rems were amon~ the m1ssinR items. polir e sa1ct I I (•r hor!*' wus not disturhed Warship Mission tSTANUUL. 'J\1rkt•y (Al'I /\ U S Navy g u Id c d · m i s s 11 t• 1k ::.troycr sailed lhrouf.(h the Bo'>voru8 Straits Wt·dnt'sday in- to t ht' land-locked Hlack Sea for a fi V<' day "show the na1f' m1s s1on. port. sourn•s rcporicd. OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT .,.,. h1~? \ot'\f O..ilt P1tM •1thwf\tc.r\• ,. 6ft'1~· ....... ~ rr'"'~ 0 ltdf)lfi..,..d .,. tri. ()J ... ~ ,,-.,.. I r'\lbl·'~(OfN»r>Y 5-1N1Al.,.Ota.,,.....,,. f'vftfltMO Ml:>NJo11t '"°'~ f rttt.11 '"' (tr l111t Mf"U H•--entl ft..M"' H""llftlf8f\ lN"lif f\ t •ff' l••f\V4illf'-,.....,. t ......... f".#•lh '°"'ft(O.•I A 1r.Ql4t ''"....,...·~I\ 9'*t•"'9itt --.. ......... , .. ~ ~.,, r,_. llflftil'•P*f ,,.,.,.1\ft•f'ot ,..IM"I 1\ ,.l lJO Wtl'\I fl•, ~h.._.., ~~t•M. ... ( ........ ,. ••• ,. .. ~-f'tll-..... "."' """ ""*" lwf J•t ' .. c .... , Vitt.,., .. ,,., ''''"''"""""'''~'°P"" 1'-nlC•"" ''"" ""::::. ~"" ..... ::· Cllttl .... ""' It!(-• ... " •\\11ttl'tt MA"•UIMI Ufltor\ Ttlephone (114114~1 CIHllfled Adwtnltllll M2 6111 towa rd the Thai borde r along lli~hway 6, according to r eliable mtelhgence oourct'i>. Rtiporters a t lh e b o r d e r t o wn o r Aranyaprathet. 124 milt.'& east of Bangkok, said the helicopters landed an Poipet, just across the frontier /\bout 20 tanks a nd an unknown number of troopi. of tht- ne w Cambodian government were sighted to the south of Poi pet. The tanks bore markings o f the rebe l Kampuchean !Cambodian> Unlted Front that the Vietnamese army led inlD Phnom Penh on Sunday. But there was sl)e(:ulation that they we re Vietnamese tanks in disguise, since Hanoi's s tory is that Cambodian Insurgents and not Vietnamese are doing the fighting. The airline officials said Ieng Sary, the No. 2·man in the fallen regime. members of his family and possibly other officials took off for Hong Kong itboard a regularly scheduled Thai Ol&bt. Some sources s aid earlier that Pol Pot m1ght have been killed during the Vietnamese invasion. But China 's d e puty foreign minister reportedly told the Japanese ambassador to Peking he was alive in Cambodia. The depose d communist leaders retreated to northwest C ambodia after they were driven from Phnom Penh, lhe ca pital, and had been reported sti 11 In control of a bout 20 percent ol the country there. But Thai military sources reported new victories in that region for the advancing Vietnamese army and their aJliea In a pro-Hanoi re bel Cambodian inovement. The sources said one or Ute l os ing side's two major r emaining footholds. the town of Siem Reap and the a ncient te mples of Angkor nearby, had been taken by the Vietnamese, a nd lhe town of Battambang, the fugitives' other major holding, wa s bombed today by Vietnamese warplanes. f'rfHll Pag~ A l . MAC ••• American upper case burger. Mac Oavid's is owned by two lsraelia. David M•acn and Yl1al Zomer. Magen claims he has the right to use the name Mac- David's, pointing out that In &-ottish Mac David means son or David. "Well, my name Is Davld,,and the hamburger fB my son, he said. He said that before opening the restaurant eight months a.o he s ought a McDonald s rranchbe, but hJs r'equttt w~s never answered. A McDonald II s pokesman ln Oak Brook. 111 .• said the company has no plans to expand to the Middle Eaat. But the hamburger chain r~g· l11tered Its trademarks herci flvo ycare ago under reaulaUoM allowlng T11raell and American firms to protect tMlr name• and symbola In both countries. In her decl1k>n, Judgo Ev n-or Hld 1he 11~ no direct conaec· tlon between MacOavld and tho word m:.c which 11 one of McDonald '• re1l1Urcd trademarks. A• 1oon aa •h• ' flnlahf'd readtn1 her decl1lon, bot.h aWet ••id they were con- 1lderiaa appeall. They have ~ da11 to ni. an appeal to tbe l•raeU l\IPfefM court. Sm.oldng 'Unsafe' fi',....P~.4J STRIKE .•. afte r the state-imposed saJary freeze is lifted. Evitknce Called Overwhelming M eanwhlle. principals at Marina and Westmlnater h1gh schOoll were att.emptlq to avert. threatened 1tudenl walkouta at thole campuae1 ~Y. WASIONOTON IAP) -The aura on 1 neral •A.1a be hH · •ov rwbtlmtn•" ·•vkl nee that 1mollhte caueee death aad dil· flH What be doeln't have hi a way to help people atop. Tboat' were among the con· clualons In a 1.200.paae report Ii.· 11ut-d tod1ay by Suraeon General JuliuN llkhmond ln a "review und reapPraiaal" ol researcb •~ cumulated lbfi paBt 15 years. "Thll doru~nt reveals, with drumullr clarity, that 1moking I• t:vt>n more danaerous -in· deed , far more dangerous - than wa• supposed In 1"4." said II EW Se.:re tary Joseph A . Calltaoo Jr. But the report acknowledles that ooth1Jll hat been uncovered SMOKING REPORT SUMMARtZID -Page C5 10 115 years that makes it easier to quit smokina. One t'bapter concludes: "It Is hoped that in another 15 years we will not have to say, ·we still don't know what works·!" Callfano contended the report ''demolishes" c laims by cigarette manufacturers that there la no proven link betwet:n smoking and cancer and chronic dl1tias~. " Commenting before the report. was released , the Tobacco Institute predicted· it would be "more rehash than research." The institute characterized ex- smoke r Califano as an anti· smoking zealot and issued its 168-page re port. saying the "pre· Ot'cupalion with smoking may be both unfounded and dangerous because evidence on many critical points is conflicting ... and 1l diverts attention from other suspected hazards." The new surgeon general's re· port is based on no specific new research and contained no startlin~ conclusions . Its thrust 1s tha t the volume of research carried out since the initial sur- geon general's report 15 years ago makes all the more certain the conclualon that smoking con· tributes to cancer, heart dis- ease . bronchitis, emphysema a nd other ills . That first report created a furor and led to the now-famous warning printed on each pack or cigarettes sold in the United States: "Warning: The Surgeon General bas Determined That Cigarette smoking Is Dange~ to Your HeaJ~." Unlike I.he inltlal report, the main findlnis in the new study fi',....P,,..Al IRAN .•• • foreigners" and let the religious leaders opposed to Shah Moham- med Reza Pahlavi and his Wes tern I zatlon program ''supervise government ac- tivities.'' Presenting h1s civlUan cabinet to the lower house ror a vote of confidence next week, Bakhtiar appealed for support to end the year-long political and ecooomlc turmoil generated by opposition to the shah's autocratic rule. But he m ade no reference to the em· battled ruler ln bll speech. "Now that the treasurr Is empty and the raclortes are idle, I beg you to endeavor to start them again.'' he said. BakhUar aaid relations with the South African sovemment would be reviewed and oil saJes halted because of that govern· ment 's apartheid policy of racial segregation. Turning lo Israel, he said: "The lranJan nation has always shown its unity with the Arab brothers and has always sup- ported the rights or the Pal· estlnlanpeople. Likethesaleofoil to South Africa. the sale of oil to lsrael will be stopped," hesald. Both nations are dependent on Jr.anlan oil. Iranians are Moalems, but not Arabs. The United St.ala has said it· WOWd supply Israel If the Jewish state stops getting oil from Iran. fn T el Aviv today, Shaul Galal, sPOkesman for the Israeli Energy 'Minlatr')t, n1d Israel can get by without franian oU. "We're not worned more or less than I.he real of the Western world. but we will bave to adapt ou,..lvea," Galal eaid, BakhUar's 20-mlnute speech to a packed house of 298 deputies was well received and was In· terupted occaalonally with •P. plause. Expected antl·ahad dem• on1tratlon1 outside did not materialize. H08pital Penalized MAYWOOD <A Pl-More than $30,000 In elvtl penalUet have been aae1Md a1alnst Maywood Com munlty Conva1ucent HotplUI. cc)unty &.ealth •uthorlllH Hid. The county D~portmcnt ot ~alth Services reporttd WednetdaJ that the hOlpttal ... t>lted for ruhare &o prov Ide adeq&aate nuraln1 mHIUrtl to prevnt bedlOC"ll and patient.a from b't• ln their 0W1t•utl •en~ra~I have been rePOrted Hpara as the research that &ed to t m WH completed. M~h of the m"teriaJ locorporat· t!d ln 1-M new report was con· talned ln lO earlier reports to Congreu. the most recent ono 11111t fall on the sharp In crease In lung cancer among women. HEW estimates that although 14 million Americana s till smoke. 30 million have quit alnce 1914, and the percentage of adult smokers has dropped from 42 percent then to an estimated 33 percent in 1978 "Its lowest recorded point ln 30 years " Total u. s. cigarette conSUQlP· Uon dropped lut year for the rirst time in 10 years from 617 blUioa claaretu. to us bllUoo. The amoklnc rate among men plummeted from 63 percent ln 1964 to 39 pel'cent In 1978. but among women it has remained •vfhually wachanged at about 30 percent.'' sald Richmond. It has shot up 8JDOl\8 teen·aae 1Jrll, ~ percent of whom now tmoke. about the same percent._ge aa teen-age boy1. The hu1e report contains 13 chapters on biomedical re- search, five on behavioral re- search and four on s moking education. It lists SQ authors and nearly 100 scientists and e xperts in and out ol'government who wote or reviewed the $250,000 re- port. Students throughout the dis· trlct have expressed diaaatisfac- tlon with some or the aubtlltut.e teachers hired to temporarily replace strikers. About 200 teachers and stu· dents held a candlelight vlgH and 1Jnaalona ln front of the dis- trict headquarters Wedn~sdey night where the dusk to dawn negotiatiOl18 were held. Some teache rs spent the rught m front or the office! In cam-pers. Mesa Driver Held About 40 Pickets marched in rront of the ·dlstrict 's schools in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster today. Huntington Beach police re- Newport Car Chase Ends With Arrest . ceived complalnts that striking teachers were allegedly throw- ing n ails In the street in front or Marina High School al 7:30 a .m. Wednesday. Parents also called police to complain that pickets were as- s ertcdly blocking entrances and passing out flyers to students telling them nol to attend classci; at Edison High School. Newport Beach police arrested a Costa Mes a m o t o rist Wednesday nlght after they al· lege they pursued his car through winding Newport s treets at speeds up to 80 miles an hour before it crashed. Offic~rs said the chaS(? ended when the driver ran a red light and crashed ml.o another vetu- cle. Police Klentafied the suspect as Kevin Robert Abhe. 24, of 150 E . 25th St . Costa Me!>a , Ashe was charged with evading an of· Fro• Page A J BILLY ••• ricer. He was released on h1s own recognizance. .Officers said Ashe s1,,1Hcred cuts and bruises in the 7:50 p.m. cras h ·at Campus Drive and North Bristol Street but refused medical treatment. The driver of the second car. ,.,..,,. Page A J NIXON .•• Marshall Phillip Fisher. 38, of 1524 Keel Drive , Cor ona del can be protected. where they Mar. was reportedly not inJured can ~et adequate salaries. un- Police said the incident began e m ployment. Socia l Security minutes e arlier when Officer and all the r est ra the r than J ohn Larson responded to a rt'· leave it a:. it is no w , whe re port of a disturbance <it 106 Via they·re crossing the bordn Xanlhe. Lido Isle JI 1 d Larson re po rtedly spotted anyway and it's all l ega an Ashe's small foreign car parked they have no pro tection ... he added . in the rruddle of the street. When The brace r 0 pr 0 g ram Ashe allegedly began honkmg launched in 1942 allowed Mt·x· the horn. Larson approached him but Ashe drove away, police icans to receive housing, rooct. s aid. medical care and wage protec- t h t1 o n whal e wo rkin g 1n Counterin.g the Pr,..,ident's Mt.d· When Larson drove a ter As e d .1 d . b . "' 0 d t h · agricultural an ra 1 roa JO s m die East peace etforts. and attempte 0 s top im. the Unitc.'<i St ates. The program Billy is reporte d to have police said. As he allegedly ended an the mid-605 when or· responded to a question about s peeded up. running a stop sign ganized labor contended the pro· LI.by an support for l<'rrc1r1st and a number of red lights. k' k h h h. h 1 · gram was ta mg wor away groups by saying: "The Jewish T e c ase · w ic a so in· from Americans medl·a tears up the Arub coun· volved two other Newport Bea<:h ,_,i~ 1 k 0 h 'ff' ··congress nc~ to oo over trl·es full t1'me, a"' you well police officers and twos er1 s d d I I I "' · h~" ~ t > the situation a n eve op a <.'i::n know... deputies, reac 'L:'U S~uS up ( f k r M 80 I h as the <:ars 'A a y or wor ers rom . t•x1c·o The Libyan government m1 es per our . h ... car eened thro ug h w inding who 'A ant lo work int e Un1tc11 headed by Col. Moamar s treets on Lido Isle. up Old Sta tes to get across the border. Khadafy has been criticized as a Newport Boulevard and across to work with dignity and send supporter or international ter· s ide streets to Irvine Avenue. money back home." he said. roriat.t. lncludlng the Palestine The accident occurred at the Asked if he would push the • Liberation Organization and the point where Irvine Avenue program. Ni xon s aid. ··1 can't Japanese Red Army and for tu s becomes Campus Drive and play a role ... I play a role by opposition to Carter 's effort.a to cro11es North Bristol Street, saymg it and maybe some body make peace between Egypt and polices~d. else will do something " Isra~e11.~~~~~~~~~~~.:..:.:..:..:::::__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__::_~~~- January White's Sale LA•Z•BOV ® SAVE ON EVERYTHING IN STOCK SAVE $ .. Re«J.$339 NOw 5299 ... HUNDREDS OF CHAIRS ON SALE Reg. $349 FREE ltMll•ateDel•ery Now 5289 SAYE 560 WHITE~S lA-ZalOY COSTA MESA -E. 17th It. (Across from A•lotlt. nt•t to Marie calenden) 142-1157 MISSION VIEJO 21192 Merauertte Pky. 12 b40C:kl So\lff'I Of South EHt Banlt ~·t VOivo Dtaterl 495-5902 - J Orange £o8 st EDITION Ye•rB••e tew• Dally New spaper . ,.,.w~ IRANIAN PRISONER MASOMEH SHADAMANY CELEBRATES Rm of 68 People Freed From Ufe lmprtaonment ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORN IA THURSDAY, JA NUARY 11, 1979 N TEN CENTS U.S. Flag Burned Anti-shah Mob Riots in Iran City • TEHRAN. Iran IAP) -A mob hauled down and burned the American fiag today in front of the U.S. consulate in Shiraz, tos> pied three statues of the shah and stonned the secret police headquarters, residents re· ported. Between two and eight people were kllled and 10 to 15 were wounded when agents or the secret police, SA V AK, opened fire to defend themselves, the Shiraz residents said. The Incidents broke out as Prime Mini s t er Shahpour Bakhllar tried to#Nin tbe support of· Parliament. of his newly in· stalled civilian government. In Washington. U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance voiced strong support al a news con· ference for Bakhtiar's efforts and urged the Iranian military and otbe1 elements of the strife· tom county "to find a way to Presenting bis civilian cablnet work together." to the lower house for a vote or . Shiraz residents, contacted by confidence next week, Bakbtiar telephone rrom Tehran, said the appealed for support to end the violence began after some 10,000 year-long political and economic to 20.000 people gathered at a d· -turmoil generated by oppoeltion ty square for an anU·shah rally. to the shah's autocratic rule. But The crowd marched to the he made no reference to tbe em· consulatel. where they hauled batUed ruler ln bis speech. down the u.S. flag and burned it "Now that the treasury Is in the streets. The dem· empty and the factories are Idle. onstrators then demolished l beg you to endeavor to start statues of the shah before at· them again," he said. tacking the secret police head· Bakhtiar said relations with quarters during the four·hour the South African government riot. would be reviewed and oil sales In Tehran, Bakhtiar promised halted because of ·that govern· to stop selling oil to South Africa ment's apartheid policy or racial and Israel, fire "unneeded segregation. foreigners" and let the religious Turning to Israel, be said: leaders opposed to Shah Moham· "The Iranian nation has always med Reza Pahlavi and his shown its unity with the Arab Westernization program brothers and has alwavs suo· "supervise government ac· ported the rights of the Pal· tiviUes." -estinianpeople. Llkethesaleofoil to South Africa , the sale of oil to Israel willbestopped."hes~id. Both nations are dependent on Iranian oil. Iranians are Moslems, but not Arabs. The United Stat.es has said it would supply Israel if the Jewish state stops getting oil from Iran. In Tel Aviv today, Shaul Galai. spokesman for the Israeli Energy Ministry, said Israel can get by without Iranian.oil. "We're not worried more or less than the rest of the West.em world, but we will have to adapt ourselves," Galai said. Bakht!ar's 20-minute speech to a packed house of 268 deputies was well received and was in· terupted occasionally with ap· plause. Expected antl-sbad dem· onstrations outside did not materialize. Rescue by Helicopter Felony Gun law Backed Billy Blasted Cambodian Official Snatched From R e bels SACRAMENTO <APl - By unanimous vote. the slate Senate today ap· proved a bill to bring the "use a gun. go to prison" law back to its fu l l strength after a state Supreme Court ruUng. GOP Officia l Raps Carter BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) - A Thai helicopter rescued Cam bodlan Deputy Premier Ieng Sary from capture by victorious Vietnamese and Cambodian rebel forces today and the ousted official then new out of Bangkok for Hong Kong, Thai airlineofflclalssa1d. Another helicopter also made a brief landing Inside Cambodia and returned to Thailand, but there was no conlirmatJon either of the choppers picked up President Kbieu Sampbad or other orricials of the fallen Phnom Penh government. There were no reports on the rate of Kbieu Samphaa or or Premier Pol Pol. but reliable Thai military and Western sources said the beleaguered Cambodians asked the Thais to Record Low Deep Freeze Hiu Mi dwest By 1be Associated Press Record low temperatures were recorded in the Midwest lo· day with the thermometer dip- ping to 39 degrees below zero in M mnesota and 34 below in Plano. Ill, about 50 miles west of Chicago. Al midday today, the mercury was hovering around the zero mark in downtown Chicago. Temperatures as low as 30 below spread from Wisconsin into lower Michigan this morning, with EauClaire, Wis.,recordinga 30 below readlng, the colest in the state. Hibbing, Minn., recorded a low temperature of 39 below zero, making it the coldest spot in the country, and there were unofficial reports of 40 below zero temperatures elsewhere in northern Minnesota. Other Illinois low readings in· cluded Rockford. ·24; Moline, · 18; Millington, ·31, and YorkvUle. ·29. Coast Weathe r Patchy Cog and low clouds la~ tqnlght tbroush mld-mornlng Friday. Otherwise mostly sunny Friday with some hi1h cloudiness. Lows tonight 4it to 50. Hlahs Friday 83 to 67. 'INSIDE TeDAY A• the lfotl o/ HawoH ap- proocta.• U• 20th bh1hdo11, ge>VfMIMd O/ffC*OJa and rta• ktcnt• on wondfrlftC1 aloud whither Qf'Owth thoWd be curbfd. SH "G~ Patna" onPooe AJf. allow the transit of about 500 of their associates and their families to China. their only important ally while they were in power. The s wift helicopt e r evacuation came as Vi~tnamese tanks and infantry were moving toward the Thal border along Highway 6, according to reliable intelligence sources. lleporters at the border town of Aranyaprathet. 124 miles east of Bangkok, said the helicopters landed in Poipet, just acf"088 the frontier. About 20 tank s a nd an u.nknowo aumber of troops or the new Cambodian government were sighted to the 1outb of Poipet. 1be tanks bore markings of the rebel Kampuchean CCambodian> United Front that the Vietnamese army led into Phnom Penh on Sunday. But there was speculation that they were Vietnamese tanks in disguise, since Hanoi's story is that Cambodian insurgents and not Vietnamese are doing the fighting. The airline officials said Jeng Sary, the No. 2 man ln the fallen regime, members of his family and possibly other officials took off for Hong Kong aboard a regularly scheduled Thal night. Some sources said earlier that Pol Pot might have been killed during the Vietnamese invasion. But China's deputy foreign Wast College District Cuts Full Session By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OI t11e Oelly ,., ... Slaff A ''sharply reduced" summer session for colleges In the Coast Community College District was approved by district trustees Wednesday night. Only courses "deemed essen· Ual" at Orange Coast, Golden. West or Coastline colleges will be offered because of reduced finances, said di s trict s~kesman Richard Simon. "No date has been set for the opening of summer school. All sports programs and many liberal arts and basic science courses will not be orfered. "The projected block grant rundlns by the state makes lt linpohjble to orrer a run session, said board President Worth Keene. "We don't even know if we are going to receive a'block grant." Clinical coune1 such as COi· metoloo and nunin1 wlll be sWl be ollered, as wUJ ethnic programs and those fully funded by the federal government , sald Simon. • It wtU be up to off1clal1 at the individual colle1ea to decide what other courtn un be of. fered wtthln the h'amework ot ffduced~. Before the paaaa1e of Propmi· tlon 13, U. Com.. Qlmm~ Colle,. Dlltrtct rttelved ap- proxi......., 7' penea& « JU rundin1 from loeal property taxea. The IUlte la DOW IUppertinl \be dlltriet, IDd thl1 yur alaaa.d about • mUU. for operatka Simon iiid the n.uN ii • ._.• '*'""' ot ..... tM col ....... IO won wttb. J minister reportedly told the Japanese ambassador to Peking he was alive in Cambodia. The deposed communist leaders retreated to northwest Cambodia after they were driven from Phnom Penh. the capital, and had been reported s till in control of about 20 ~rcent of the country there. But Thai military sources reported new victories in that region for the advancing Vietnamese army and their allies in a pro-Hanoi rebel Cambodian movement. The ·sourees said one of the losing aide's two major re.ma1niog footholds, lbe town of Siem Reap and the ancient temples of Angkor nearby, had been taken by t.he Vietnamese. The vote was 39-0 on SB 149. sponsored by the Senate Judiciary Commit· tee, sending the bill to the Assembly. The state's high court, in the Tanner decision is· sued l aat month , weakened the 1975 law mandating a prison sen· tence for anyone convicted of using a gun ln certain felonles. Bracero Program Favored by Nixon TIJUANA <AP) -Although he says he couldn't do much to Implement it, former President Nixon says the United States should restore a bracero pro· gram so Mexican nationals working across the border may "work with dignity." "As I come io Tijuana and see these people here -hard· working, nice people -and then find they move across the border to make a liltle money to send back and they are arrested and harassed -it's wrong, .. Nixon said Wednesday. He and longtime friend Charles G. "Bebe',.Reboio were in this border town 20 miles south of San Diego for a meal of enchiladas and beer. He talked informally with reporters of Ti· Juana's ABC newspaper. b .S. and Mexican officials should "work out a leg~I way where the rights or the workers can be prote<:ted, where they can get adequate salaries, un· employment, Social Security and all the rest rather than leave it as It is now, where they· r e crossing the border anyway and it's all Illegal and they have no protection," he added. The bracero program launched in 1942 allowed Mex· leans to reeeive housing, food, medical care and wage protec· lion while working In agricultural and raUroad jobs in the United States. The program ended in the mid-60s when or· ganiied labor contended the pro- gram was taking work away from Americans. "Congress needs to look over the situation and develop a legal way for workers from Mexico who want to work In the Ynited Stales to get across the border, • to work with dignity and send money back home," he said. Asked if he would push the program, Nixon said, "I can't play a role ... I play a role by saying it and maybe somebody else will do somelhln9." WASHINGTON <AP> - Republican National 'Chairman Bill Brock today called Pres•· dent Carter's brother. Billy. a bigot and urged the president to publicly disavow his younger brother's allegedly anti·Semitic remarks. Billy Carter. while accompa· nying a high-level Libyan del· egation on a tour of Georgia. has oeen criticired for such re· marks as "There's a hell oC a k>l more Arabians than there it Jews" and for saying the United States should end its "hostility" toward Llbya. Brock said h e was not challenging Billy Carter's right to free speech and ··we cannot legally contain the disgusting anti&mitism that laces his re· marks." Added Brock: "We have yet to outlaw bigotry in the United States and when the bigot's opinions result in the satisfaction or the bigot's greed. we can't ex· pect him to put a re!n on his tongue." Brock said "to some extent, each of us is his brother's keeper." and asked President Carter to speak out against Billy's actions. Billy Carter's re marks have displeased Georgia state of· ficials and incensed such groups as the American Jewish Com· mitlee and the Atlanta Jewish Welfare Federation, which was reported to have said Billy was countering the president's Mid· die East peace efforts. Billv is reported to have Sailor Missing SAN DIEGO <AP>-A sailor who fell overboard from a ship operating al sea 65 miles southwest of San Diego has been identified as Seaman John W. Pellerin of Santa Ynez, Navy of· ficials said. A search was called off late Wednesday when no sign or Pellerin was found, the Navy said. responded to a question about Li hr an support for terrorist groups by saying: "The Jewish media tears up the Arab coun· tries full time. a s you well know." . The Libyan governme nt headed by Col. Moamar Khada£y has been criticized as a supporter of international ter· rorists. includintt the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Japanese Red Army and forhis opposition to Carter's efforts to make peace between Egypt and Israel. Al the White House. press • secretary Jody Powell replied that Billy Carter is a private ciU.zen and does not speak for the president. Wayne Faces (;al,l BltUhkr Operation LOS ANGELES CAP> -Actor John Wayne of Newport Beach has checked into the UCLA Medical Center for a gall blad· der operation, his office said to· day. The 71-year-old Wayne, who underwent open-heart surgery in Boston last April, will have the operation Friday or Monday, said Tom Kane. an execut.ive with Wayne's Batjac Produc· tions. · Kane described Wayne as in good spitils and s aid the veteran actor spent part of Wednesday "walking around Westwood talk· ing to people before he went ln." Kane said Wayne had been bothered for some time by a gaJI bladder condition but said ctOc· tors had waited until he re· cuperated from the heart sur· gery before scheduling the operation. "Everything is go now," said Kane. "He's strong eno1Jgh now, so they're going to go ahead wilt\ it .•• Smoking Danger Reemphasized .,..,.. 'RI HA I H' Horace Kome1•Y. presldem of the Tobacco Institute. ha• termed tbe 1ur.1eon general•• report on smokinl "more reflasb than re· 1earcb,'1 Causes Death and Disease WASlllNGTON {AP) -The aurgeon general says be bas "overwhelming" evidence that smoJUng cauaa death and dis· ease. What he doeen't have is a way to help people 1top. Tbote we.. amona the con· ~ cluslona ln a 1,200-pa1e report ll· sued today by Surgeon General Julius Richmond in a "review and reapprallal" of research ac· cumul1ted the pall 15 years. "This document reveat1, wtth dramaUc clarity, that •moklftl la even more danserous -In· deed, far more dan1eroua - than W,U ~La 1*," laid ._.._w lt1r.ur:y Joseph A. &Jifano Jr. .... tbl report ·~ that ~ ha beea'uneoYeied in 11 r ..... u.at ...... It Miier to qult 1..-.... OH dMllMr ~1Uc111:. !•n -ia boptd that ln Jnotber 11 Jlart we wW aot bav• to 1a1. •we ltlll don'\ ILDow wbat warb't'' Califapo contended the report " d e mo 11 s & es " c I a l't'n a by cigarette manufacturers that there ii no proven link between SMOKING REPORT SUMMARIZED -Page C5 smoking and cancer and chronic diseases. Commenting before the report was released, the Tobacco Jnalltute predicted it would be "more rehuh than reaearch." The institute characterbed ex· 1mok~r Califano aa an anti· 1moklQC 1ulot and iuued lt.1 1•pa,. repoa'\ 111ln tM "Jn- 9Ct11p1Uon wtth 111' .:~be botb unioUnded and claftl•toUS • • • beeatM evidence on man.y ciilleal poinU ii eonll.lctlna • . . and It diverta attentk>n from other 1uapected haaardl." The aew aurceon 1eneral'1 ~­ p0rt la bued on no tPtCUIC new ·<leeSllOID.NG, Pa11 Al> • . A.2 DAil Y PtlOT N Low-inconte . Ho01e8 Concept Accepted A propoeal ell:ited to l•ed to atfol"dablt a.a.. fOf' famWtl ma&iq a.. than 10,0UI ....a. ly WH approved In principle Wednead~ by Lho Oran1 Coun· ty Board ot Supervtton Tht hom11 would Hll ror '21,000 OC' l or ""'t fOf' ao more than tllO montbJJ • .cconl· 1n1 to ronnwa contained ln tbe hou1ln1 eltment Mtnc atuctied for lnclualon lo th county•1 a~ n"raJ plan The boul QI tlemtrlt al8o la f',....P..,eAJ MO KING. • n-11carrh and cont l ned no i.tortllna .-onclwilorw. Ila thrust 1a. that tbu vol1.tme of reHarch l'Orrled out slnce th lnltJaJ 11.tr geon central' report l5 years u10 mak all the moro cenaln the conclusion th11t 1mokln1 con· tributes lo cancer heart dla· ease. broncblU1, ell\physema and other Ills. That lint report created a turor and led to the now·f amous wamina printed on each pack of cigarettes sold In· the United States: "Warning : The Surgeon General has Determined That Cigarette smoking l s Dangerous to Your Health.•· Unlike the lnJtlal report, the main findings in the new study generally have been reported separately as the research that led to ibem was completed. Much oftbe material lncorporat· ed in the new report waa con- tained in 10 earlier reporta to Congress, the most recent one last fall on the s harp increase in lung cancer among women. HEW estimates that although 54 mi11ion Americans s till smoke, 30 million have quit since 1964, and the percentage or adult smokers has dropped from 42 percent then to an estimated 33 percent in 1978 -"its lowest recorded point in 30 years." Total U.S. ciearette consump- tion dropped last year for the first time in 10 years -from 617 billion cigarettes to 615 billion. The s moking rate among men plummeted from 53 percent in 1964 to 39 percent in 1978, but among women it has remained "virtually unchanged at about 30 percent." said Richmond. tapeeted" to ~vlde alf(lrdobl b0uln1 for mod rat lnt'om fl•lllet -lboH earnln1 bet .... 110.000 and 111.000 "' naeU;y, dtpendlna on f 1mlly atse. Hou1ln1 for tho1t t1mlll•• should ~ no more than $40,00U to purcbale or "'30 monthly to real Ftnal ICtJon oa th houalnK element=ulred by •l•ll• haw, I.I entlrl by Jan 24 Tbe ment la auppo td lo 1111ure csequotf' available bous tn1 for low and modMAte ln-rom famlll In a county wbtre th av r.,. r al price of a houH la '10,000 and tho aver11e naw hom t'05ll Sll3.000 'l'o mduc lower·COtt hou1in11. th.., n~w dOcuml'nl would fore 1lc velopt•ra to provide 25 percent or ,u.-h hou.'Jtng units In u {leW 1kvdopm1•nl to l k advantage or <'OUnfy dmtnlatratlve review shortrull that would save them money • Al'Wlr""'9to Saging Goodbyt- Gov. George C. Wallace bids farewell to the Alabama Legislature Wednesd<1y as he prepares to leave office next Monday after an unprecedented three terms a5 governor. Al10 lncluded are provl1lons for blaher ~natty construcUon and reluaUon of tome bulldinc at.ndardt for proJoct.s provldin& aflord1ble boullng. The e~ment alao carries coun· ty pled1ea to afaresalvely punue aovemmen aranl pro- aram1 to aid In construction or new affordable housing or re· habllltallon of exJaUng lower- cost homes. Noting that the county's future economy might be arrected because emp1oyee1 in both tho prlv1to and public Hetor can't afford houalna, the element al.lo calls tor pnvate buaineaa ano in· dustry to help f'Ue the housing prob l e m a or their ow n employees. County stafr member• aro us in& the U.me prior to llnal ele· ment approval to r evlle the document baaed on crltltlam from the atate'1 Department of Hou1 lng and Community Development The propoeaJ lacks speclflct.. th• d•partme nt charg~d . eapcclolly In uaurances that the element'• retammendatioru. Wlll be "tranalated Into a course of actlon." SlmuJtaneou.sly. county 1uff also wlll be corutid~rlng recom- mendaUona from a variety or 1peclaJ UMrelt 8l'OUlJ8 raniing from the Houlina Coalition of Orange County to the BulldJng IndUJtry MloclaUon. Newport Center Health Facility Favored Backers of a proposed outpa- tient surgical center In Newport Beach won the first round Wednesday In their attempt to gain state permission to buJld a Sl million raclllty in Newport Center . The Health FaclUUes Review Committee of the Orange County Health Planning Council, after hearing six hours of testimony. decided to recommend in favor or the facility proposed by Surg1care Associates Inc .. a spokeswoman for the cSluncil said today. However, because the finding contradicted a staff recommen· dalion against the facility, and because of the lateness or the bour. committee members con· tinued the meeting until Feb. 9 to come up with more specific reasons lo support their de- cision. The proposed center. which Surgicare spokesman Raymond Berg has slated could lower costs of minor surgery by up to 60 percent, was opposed by staff members because they said it would duplicat e outpatient facilities at existing hospitals. including Hoa g Memorial Hospital. However, the spokeswoman for the Health Planning Council said today backers of the center rallied considerable community support. Arguments in favor of the center. which a Pl>• renlly swayed the committee, Included the facility's prop()Sed location, ad jacent to office buildings housing several hundred pbysl· clans. and Its convenience to residents living east or Upper Newport Bay. Followint the Feb. 9 meeting, the committee will present Its recommendation to the Health Plannlna Council, which. In tum . will make • recommenda· Uon to the state Dcpartll\ent or Health. Although the nnal decision ~ts with the state health direc· tor, the spokeswoman said the counctl'a recom mendatlon usually weighs .heavily. Mesa Driver H e ld Newport Car Chase Ends With A.rres·t Newport Beach police arrested a Costa M esa motor is t Wednesday night after they al- lege they pursued his car through winding Newport streets at speeds up to ~ miles an hour before ltcrashed. Officers said the chase ended when the driver ran a red light and crashed into another vehi- cle. Police identified the suspect as Kevin Robert Ashe. 24. or 150 E. 25th St .. Costa Mesa. Ashe was charged with evading an of· ficer. lie was released on h11> own recognizance OHicers said Ashe suffered cuts and bruJses In the 7 · 50 p.m. c ras h at Campus Drive and North Bnstol Street but reflJS(.'<l medical treatment. The driver of the second car. Ashe's small foreign car parked 1n the nuddJe of the street. When Ashe allegedly began honking the horn, Larson approached him but Ashe drove away, pohce said When Larson drove after Ashe and attempted to stop him. police said. As he allegedly . speeded up. running a stop Mgn a nd a number or red light~. The chase. which also In· volved two other Newport Beach police officers and two sherirr·~ deputies. reached speeds up to 80 miles per bour as the cars careened through w1nd1ng streets on Lido Isle. up 011· , ~cw VtJ• l noutev ard and acro~s side streelll to Irvine Avenue Kulik Cites D rug D eal SOUl'H COAST PL4Z4 VIEWED South Coast Plaza Is "one big showroom a rena" in January. Stories and pictures detail lhis special "Parade of Va lues" in today 's Daily Pilot. Turn to Page A9. Marshall PhJlllp Fisher. 38, of 1524 Keel Drive, Corona del Mar. was reportedly not inJured. Police said the incident began minutes earlier when Officer Joba Larson reaponded to a re· port of a disturbance at 106 V~a Xantbe. Udo Isle. The accident occurred at the point where Irvine Avenue becomes Campus Drive and crosses North Bristol Street. p<>Ucesald. Other Coverage Add\Uona l Newport Beach coverage appears today on Page AU. Testifies Reprisals Threatened by Mob Larson reportedly spotted -By KATHY~*N~,.__~~-w-. ~;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~L1~n~edPnit~h~attJhre~d~1dn~'t:--~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::: 01t11eo.11,1t11ets..H heroin bust a couple of years n •port his ki napping o e back that involved a couple pohce because of his ties to the J One·lime Newport Beach re8i· dent Alexander Kulik told an Orange County Superior Court Jury Wednesday oht purported dope planting scheme hatched by his former business auociate H1chard Willis . Kulik. testifying in his own heroin possession trial, con - tended WIJlls otrered to m ake a drug plant so a group of IO· called "ltallana," Orange Coat resident.a with alleged mobllter t1t>K would be arrested and sent lO jull. fie told the Jur-)' the ·•ttallana" hud demundod SS00.000 In cash i.1nd lhrNatc>nod reprlul Ir thu t•111th wwm'l paid after th" aroup tuil1wd n · c·1w. him from o kid nnPJ>lnJ( for rnn"'Jm In Au1uat um Mt •rwurtl. Kull k lt111tlrlud. Wlllll• 11ftnrNt to mttk11 lh tltUM 11l11nt hut hfl rt(ullk I WH ftJUM w 11 h Uw ltf'roln hy mll•t 11kn Whll11 1trlvl111& Wllll•' n11~1m1lvci Htuh l'IH K ultk, •l'"' ,. ttnhmd11ut ht lhn "'f!J1hn11 .1111rn Uov.111 rnurth11 1·1u1n, wn11 IH rf'•tc;d In Wllllll ' NO 111 11 Ml11Al11n v1.,J11 p#I kltlM l1if tu111r• oftf't tho howm •••rlttll hh•11 ,,,.,. flnJmllr• 1111••., lhli~ "'""" ..... I I "''""''' "' h-.rnw Ill 11 h111C Int~ h1u k ... ,., · Mr Wllll• ,.,,.,,.,,, f1tlltln• 111111 1111'1 1111 lhnt h• 1111_.I to tHt "" Aru1l11M11 1111llc•n otllt'"I ," K1•tlk lu.llflt<c1, "tllld ull10 •tut"'' ttt DAILY PILOT ·~-rz:­ ca.r::,\~,......-=:~ .... °""" C'.MltlN"'·~~ w~'&.~'lii~ million dollars worth of heroin " II a rc Krishna rcli~iow; sect anuary • • Willis went on to say he hcid connections with the "federnl .. tn the past we have never strike force" a nd police and had any help from the police be· federal agents could plant drugs ang Hare Krishnas," he testified. @ on the "Italians·· leadrng to their . In fa<'t. we havf! been more or L A -z . a 0 v arrest and imprisonment, Kuhk less pcn.ocuted by lht•m. To ask tesUfied. thl•m for their help would have He contended Wlllls pledged been futile " "he would help Uli get thebe Italians out of our hair." 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How 5299 HUNDREDS OF CHAIRS ON SALE .... $349 Now 5289 FIH '"""cl .. 1 Dell•tty SAYE '60 WlllE'S i.A·Z·BOY COITAMEIA • 1 .1ntt I t. (Aerot• ,,..,., .... ,., •• Mlt lo ~rlt Cattftdtrt) 142 ... 17 MISSION VIEJO 21112 Ma rautrlt• Pky. , (21>40C"' SOufh Of South [Ht lanll .,.,, Volvo O.altt I 485-5902 • • ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thur!dey, JMU!f'Y 111 1979 DAILY PILOT AS By Mediator , Strike News Blacked Out RallwayOK'd TUKJ Cities EnJone Plan OCEANSJDE <AP> -A proposed SS milllon elevated railway connecting major shopping centers has won approval of both the Oceanside and Carlsbad clty councUs. Honest, Abe? Icicles form on a statue of Abraham Lincoln in downtown Portland. Ore., after an ice storm moved through the area earlier Wednesday. Marsh Destruction· Oaimed in Lawsuit By KATHY CLANCY °' -0.11., ,.,._. s-.tt Members or a Huntington Beach environmental g roup have filed an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit to hall what they contend is iJJegal destuction of the Bolsa Chica marsh. Amigos de Bolsa Chica Inc .. co-presidents Herbe rt a nd Melody Chatterton and past co- . president Rhoda and Kenneth Martyn name 10 defendants in the suit, including Sign al Properties Inc. and several state agencies. They are seeking a court declaration v ldlne a 1973 state se ement which gave Signal clear title to 1,700 acres of marshland and an Injunction to halt any development in the area along with alleged filUng, dikiniz and deizradation of the wetlands . The Amigos also call for a run accounting or tidelands rev· enue. a lleging millions or dollars in oil drilling tidelands cash "is accruing to private in· dividuals and/or corporations" rather than going into a tidelands trust. ln addition. the Amigos seek civil penalties or $5,000 per day per defendant for alleged viola· tions of the state Public Resources Code and one-time fines or $10,000 per defendant for alleged infractions of the California Coastal Act. A spokesman for Signal Properties had no immediate resp()nse to the lawsuit. Other defendants include three firms bearing the SiJtnal name. Aminoil USA Inc., which leases some SiJ(nal land and W. R. Grace Inc.. a development firm which owns 40 acres near Sprin g dale and Warne r Avenues. Also named are the California State Lands Commission. the state Attorney General and the California Department of Fish and Game. Jim Leiby, chief or operations fQr the Department of Fish and Game. said he was not allowed to comment on the laws uit. Ed VaJI, corporate counsel for •the Grace firm. said the com· pany's 40 acres are in a holding pattern while California Coastal Act planning Is bemg com He said he couldn't. comment directly on the suit's allegations since be hasn't seen it. •'The plainUfrs have environ· m ental concerns." Vall said. "We feel the ultimate plan adopted should ba lance con· cerns for housing, recreation and environment." The suit centers on environ· mental ls.sues which have been discussed -for many -¥ears, in· eluding such things as what part or the marsh can and should be reclaimed and exactly how much of the 2,000-acre Bolsa Chica really is marshland. The Chattertons and Martyns said in their suU they live near the weUand and have "biked on. studied and photographed the area for years and have spent hundreds of hours attempting to restore and preserve the Bolsa Chica area." "California's coastal wetlands are one of the state's most Im· portant natural resources and a vital part of the marine eco- system," the sult reads. By &AYllOND ESTaADA Of .. o.tlY ""'""' sute·appolnted mediator Ohrau Mrvtcbln bH tmposed a n wa blackout on the at.atus or contract talk• between Hunt· Lnaton Brach Union High School Dlltrlct ne1otlat.ors and striking teacher leaders. For the second conaecutlve ai1ht, dlatrlct and teacher leaden hag&Jed over contract ls· auea Wl111 cJawn. But the walkout by about half the district's 867 -teachers that began Jan. 3 continues toda1 at * * * Ttdks End Picketing Moratorium A one·day moratorium on teacher picket lines was can· celed this morning aner a six· hour mediation session failed to bre ak a d eadlock in the Westminster School Celemen· t ary I District. Bar Kaelt.er. an official with the West Orange County United Teachers, said pickets returned at s chools this mornin g .. because no new offers were re· ceived from the district." H owever, di s trict spokeswoman Barbara Wlnars said the district made a series oC new proposals at Wednesday night's negoUaUons. · She reported that the Californaia Teacher Association representative refused to accept the offers. Miss Wina rs said the new pro- posals included: -Increasing fringe benefits from $1.(>00 to $1,100. -Increase In release days for teacher association president or his designee to do association business with pay from 13 lo 15 days aMually. -An agreement that t~achers would no longer have to stand noon duty. -A written guarantee that one-half percent of te achers would be granted sabbatical leaves annually. -Agreement to allow teachers to take two years or personal leave of absence without losing teachlngposlt.ion. . Teachers reviously reduced _ r pay mands to 1 percent · increases for the 1979-80 school year. But they also are asking for 15 percent or all future reve1'£ues in excess of what the district now receives from the state lo go towards pay hikes. Man Arrested In Gun Battle A Santa Ana m a n faces charges of assaulting a police of· ricer after engaging police in a gun battle that ended with no in· j uries to either side. Santa Ana police said the inci· dent erupted at 8 p.m. Wednes· day when two nurcollcs officers went to the home of Robert.Brill, 47. al 627 N. Garfield St. to serve a search warrant. Brill allegedly shot al the of· rice rs and the offic.:rs shot back. Officers said they shot at Brill eight times before he decided to surrender. Federal Funding Flayed Cozmty's Cities Attack Development Grams Some of the cities that are get· ttng federal grant money through the County of Orange aren't happy about the way next year's $4.6 million is going to be spread around. The dlssalisfaction emerged Wednesday during a hearing before the county Board of Super visors on the Housing and Community Development grant. The couaty administers the grant for its own unincorporated areas as weJI as 12 o( the cities' with populaUoM or less than 50,000. including Irvine, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano f;n,d Seil Beach. La Habra Qty Manager, Lee Risner. complained Wedneadar. that the pcrcentaae of the a • locations to the cities hat been dropping since the Pf'OITlm wu launched four years ago. Ula complaints were l\tpPOrted by I rvlne Clty Councilwoman Mary Ann Galdo. Risner. 1pok man for the clty re91 .eentatl ves. ""tall"lll. "\\~ supervilOfl to l8btl.sh a policy I'll ' ll the ratio of alloca • l ont. . • Mrt. Galdo su11eated that prioriU ueed by county 1talf member• In dlsre1ardln1 Qr rf'oommendlo1 pro1ram1 re- quuted by the cltJ" alto should be revtewed. S&apenllOr'I aald tbey wUl hav t.betr atdlil wart on U.. - matters and asked that a report be ready by the second Housing a nd Community Development hearing Jan. 31. Laguna Beach Mayor J ack Mc Dowel l a s ked during Wednesday 's hearing that the $15.000 recommended by county staff members for his city be up· ped to $250,000 to provide homes for low and moderate income families displaced b y the BluebirdC8nyon landsllde. , SupervillOl"S said they would consider the request, but won· dered about the ablli\y of the cl· LY to apendJhe grant money. Accordiri1 to Supervisor Ralph Oiedrlcb, La1una 1Ull has $220,000 in unspent grant money from the pall two years. c~ of. ficlala eald It's earmarkocl to provide 100 unlts of 1t1nior citlien houalnt. but the project ls belAI aJowed while attes for th~ project are belD& coll· aldered. Bob Pulavat, the county El· vlronment1l kana••merit Alft" cy 1tatf m•mbe.t who ad· m lat4rl the HUD arant.t. told aupem.ort be hQ ~lvtd ..... qu.1t1 &otalinc SU dllllion b' the S'.6 million aUOeatJon 1llit counly wUI refflve from tM recteral Dll*tmta o1 ff~ and Urban , ~••lofm•nt lllll year; ~ ~..,u:i~, ... J Orange Coast ciUes are : Irvine: $115,000 for land ac· qulsition by the city for con· structlon of apartments. The land purchase would enable the apartment developer to charge lower rents. Lasuna Beach: $95.000 for k>w cost loans for housing rehabllita· tion. <'Ibis would be ln addition to the landslide rtllef funding. l San Jqn Caplltrano: $180 000 for land acqulsillon b j the LOS Rios Housing Development Corp .; $35,000 for the re· conslruc:Uoo of Los Rios Street between bmon and Vetduco streets and the lnatallaUon or at.onn drains 1n the area; m ,ooo Cor low coet loans for houalnc re· habilitadon. Also Lncluded in the proJecta under consideration are tnree for unincorporated areas aJonc the Orange Cout: 8Ht• Au lldOtt: ~ ooo ror low coet loaM Tor houslna re· babUlWJon., -S•pertof' enae Trlaa1at: 12$,000 for low COii. toaos '°" bo~ria r~habillta'Cop ln ibJ• 'Island or coanl.)'. territory near Hoa1 Memorla1Hotp6tal. 8"tllleall o.-t1 : $450,000 ror acqultlUoft or two sites for al· fordable bou1ina, both renul and ownenhlpi with tnl,000 earmarUd for and acqullWon aad m.-tor .tdlUoUI dil- poei&MD eq •• • • seven West Orange County high schools. Auistant Superintendent Howard Roop, a distri ct negotiaUng team member, said the secrecy edict may be "a 1ood sign" I.hat a contract settle· ment with striking teachers ·is near. Roop said Mrvicbin told dis· trlct and teacher negotiators they will face e $1.000 fine tr one ol them violates the secrecy or· der. School board members have scheduled a 9 o'clock meeting tonight . Striking teachers scheduled a late morning .ineet· ing today. Diatrlcl officials have kept schools open by hiring about 600 substitute teachers . Substitute teacher daily pay was raised from $60 to $80 last Friday. Last month. 400 members of the District Educators Associa· lion, the group spearheading the teacher strike, voted to walk ore their jobs the day aft.er they re· turned from holiday vacation if their demands were not met. Prior to the all-night Wednes· day contract talks. teachers were demanding what amounts to a 10 percent pay hike over the 1918·80 school years and binding arbiiraU~ in grievances. But sc~ool board members agreed Wednesday morning to offer teachers a seven percent pay boost after July and no pay raise for the 1978·79 school year. School board members have been staunchly opposed to bind· 1ng arbitration because they contend it will erode local con· trot. Teacher leaders and district negotiators have agreed that any pay hikes must be i;t1ven arter the state-imposed salary freeze is lifted. Mea nwhile . principals al Marina and Westminster high schools were attempting to avert threatened student walkouts at those campuses today. A week after Carlsbad endorsed the transit. Oceanside's council a pproved it unanimously Wedt)esday. "We think it will teally help traCfic conditions," said City Clerk Irene Dueh.ren. The promoter, Bob Ladwig, suggested a four. mile railway lln.k1ng several Oceanside and Carlsbad area shopping centers and spanning both California 78 and El camino Real highway. To obtain federal funds for 80 percent of the costs. Ladwig s.,aid state legislators have agreed to seek ro percent state matching funds. The cost to municipalities was unclear. New Laws, Funding Sought in Campaign tr there are going to be any controls on last.minute smears in Orange County political cam· paigns. county officials are go· ing to have to change some laws and provide some money. That was the c.oncluslon- reached this week by .. the four members of the County Fair Campaign Practices Com· mission. Supervisor Thomas Riley ea rlier had asked com· missioners to come up with a plan to strengthen the com· mission, a s:equest apparently made in resi>onse to Supervisor Ralph Clark's effort to do away with the grou~ that was formed in February. 1918. The commission ·s job is to monitor campaigns for county offices a nd local legislative representatives insure that the candidates don 't misrepresent themselvesortheiropponents. Commission chairma n Bill Thom of Anaheim said the com· mission's only weakness 1s 1t.s inability to react in lime lo deal with the last minute smear cam· paigns. He wants the county ordinance that created the commission rewritten to include provisions prohibiting the mailing or broad· casting of campaign material seven days before the election. He a lso wants a budget of about $3,000 so the comml~ion can. if necessary. advertise Its findings. "The press has been very kind to us so far." he commented. '"They've covered the hell out or us. "But I'm concerned we arc someday going to have a n im· portant finding and it's going to come out the same day that World War III starts and it 'II gel squeezed out of the news." His recommendations wen· backed by the commission's three other m e m ber s. Al Driscoll. Judy de Ar akal and Ray Litrell. The fifth seat 1s va· ca nt. awaiting an appoantm~nt by county Supe rvisor Ralph Diedrich. Drexel Heritage Wil@~®IF SALE SAVE 15% o.-..... c.._-, b90 Ati9 ~re SM S7 U Or•-"'9"' """°!leg Ul9 S. $ 199 I~ O•~"''" "no 1180 S. S649 #.fj•Ni• '"'""""""' Reel ""''"' s.t.S99.- \. ~'~ o.-. ..... ....,. oec• b90 A'9 U MI 54* SJ 19 Drexel translates F(ench provincial : Classic new Cabernet II 11~ a lollely bOQues1 from the deslglWs ol IM 18#1 CClntu<y and Frend\ pt()llnCial haS nevet been more OfacellA tt\81'1 in Cet>emet 1ra by (.)oexef~ The OIOfY cl reel clMJd wood 11 here. de8P mclOl9 and exoepllOOllt veneer er~ in parQUetry panels Abt:Ne ua. tr*9's a bt1llionc new oo...--.. .... ,. Sitt ~Ai,.. I~ on ptCatl sdlos and veneers -deep. deW, elegancly OstressOd U'f~v. ~pieces. too W'I t:JMNid. ~ pe""4 Fer bOCtOCJT'IS C)"""IO room.. _ and v<Y. OC'4mt hQMt-we reccmnund CubemOl 11 to 'r'Q.11 .. + -.... _,.. -· _._.. Your Favorite DHlgnor Wltl Be Happy To Aultt You ll 11 HAalOI II.YO. C:OST A MISA 646-0275 . " ' ' ---_........., __ ....__..... -L - ~4 DAIL V PtL.OT t ing ... ~ ...... ~ Te•~~''' Marplil•e · Coastal Beachhe ad ON TBS WAftaPaONT: tt'I ~be ta.......un. to obHrve tbe procnu ot a lawault Ult by a poup Ol private property ownen ap.i.Mt Calllorida Coutal Commlllioft. 1bl& one may lbape the rtahtl of prol*\1 OW11t!MI ln the )'eal'I alMad. Wbat baa "baPMMd la U\at tbe IWq ~y OWDe1'1 claim the CoutiJ Commllaloa ect.a Ule•al1' wbn It ,... qutrea dedicaUon ol a public acceu to the beacb before an own rlulloWedt.omak tmprovenwtn\&Oftbllproperty. You can d bite both aldN of UllJ qu Oon lon1 lnto the nl11ht On Lbo ono 1lde, lh private own r baa the rllhl to the tun use of It.a property On the other. the publlc hu a rtahl to 1CC111 to the public coutllnt. So now It ll Uktly the courta will decide. ·IT DOflJ SEEM, howe ver, that the coaatal eommlulon and l\a staff have taken an extraordinary lnW.l ln 1alnJn1 W~e! Ctttun Dilcot¥Ts Net.0 Acceu to the Beach new public access routes to beaches across private property. This seems to be particularly true \lihen the private prope rty owner appears lo be arnuent. Some coastal commission members and start people have made statements suggesting that In bygone years, local governments were Jax in prot.ectlng public beach ac- cess. This ia, or course, pure bunk. It almply demonstrates that those making the statementa don't know wbal they're talklng &,!>out. • MORE PROPEllLY, IOme credit should be given to the ,clever local offtdaJI of yei~ wtM> did take tteps to ... sure public acceu. Consider Newport Beach, for example. Ever ooUce all -tbe-d~Ls that. a2 to nowhere? These roads dead· tmd Into the ocean front or into ay. They aren't muctr good ror drivif\8 anywhere. But the pioneers who lald them out knew that the 1treet end would assure pubUc access to the waterfront. Same way ln Laguna Beach. Notice bow many _public streets simply dead-end on a cliff ovedooklng the beach. And public stairs have been built down the curr race to lbe shoreline. THOSE FUNNY DEAD·END at.reels In Laguna were no accident. They assure public beach access. Sure, you can find some areu ln both Newport and Laguna where private property ownen may have IJ'OWD bUlbes or built We1al walls to make It appear that a public acceaa It.reel end is cloled. And that practice abould be baited. If state eovemment I• really Interested In enhancln1 public uae oft.he 1borellne It would be better advlaecl to lm· prove the accesaet It already controls rather than pecklng away at private property ownen who they figure ml&hl have more than two aulta ln the closet. NATION I WORLD Inflation Continues Pace W ASIONGTON CAI»> -Rlaln1 Cotta of lllOUM. food and machlpery pulbed whol ale prtcea up 0.8 perc:.nt la Dewmber u lnOallolt keDt up l\a momntum, tbe Labor Departmtat Mid today. For all al 1171, wboleaale prices roet t . l ptrcent, tbe bla-t aucb lncre111 -~ an 11.3 percent Jump In 19'74, the departmenl Mid. ln 19'77, pric:ee went up I .I percent. The wMl .. ale prtce new-ea retumed their climb lut month. . arc lm])Ortant becauM tbey ire rllln1 o.e percent. an t1rt1 till" ol what eon.ume.ra Beef and veal Drie98 turned up can expect ln the way of prtce tn December alter deollalni In chan1 .. 1n tbe next few montbl. November, but pork prfcea TBS u PDCENT lncreaae •liJ~ wre bltbet' for proc. torDecemberwulbe1ameutn eaaed poultrr. f ruH a nd November and about average ve1etables, dairy product.a and tor th• pal four months. cancly. Prices ot •IP dropped 4 If avenced out over an entire percent. year lt woU1d amount to 10 per· cent. •llehtlY above the 9 per. cent to •~ percent rise ln the Consumer Price lodex that had been projected for 1978. The report meuured flnllbed Jood•. or the price ol products Just before they are sold to con- aumera. The Producer Price Index for flnlahed aoodl stood at 202.4. meanlnc tbat wholesale prod- uct.I that cost $100 In tbe base period ot 1967 cost $202.40 last month. WHOLESALE FOOD prices. wblcb bad eued µa November, THE PalCE or •uollne tc>kl at the refinery roee 4 percent In December, and the p rlco of kerosene roee 2.8 percent. Prices also were bl1ber for shoes. pretcrtpt!on dru11 and • Ure.a. Tobacco oriea.dedlned. Business equipment, such as machine tools, truckl and bull· ness furniture, roae by o.a per· cent, makine It barder for busl· nessea to Invest In the future. The report was released aa urban officials and tbe Senate leader of President C..-ter'a par· ty were livine the Admlnla.tra· tion little encourqement on its antt-lntlat.loo program. Warner Clauckle• 'Doonesbury' Strip I Censured by GOP RICHMOND, Va. CAP> -Sen. John Warner chuckled over Jibes against hlm In the comic strip "Doonesbury," but la con~emed about what he aaya are factual errors In the strip, an aide a•ya. BUI Kling, the Vlrginla Republican's press secretary, said the strip's lmplicaUon -that Warner bought the Senate nomlnaUon after the death of the previous GOP nominee -waa lnac· curate. It didn't happen that. way, Kling said, "ancH was there." • THE REPUBLICAN caucus or the Virginia General Assembly Wednesday cen s ur e d .. Doonesbury" creator Garry 8 . Trudeau for his satirical treat· ment or Warner and his wife, Elizabeth Taylor. Trudeau could not be reached for comment. Warner bad nothJng to do with the censw-e moUon, l{Una said, addln1 the senator knows he Is open to political aatlre. "And It 's the nature of political satire to be brutal," the aide said. IN THE .. Doonesbury" strip Intended for publication Wednes· day, Dick, the buaband of a fie· llonal congreaawoman, says: " ... remember when the party's original nominee died in that accident? The Warners were IO stricken with sympathy that they ottered to take on the campaign debt and to set up a trust fund tor the f am Uy. Guess who was then tapped the next day?" Warner, a former secretary of the Nav1, wu nominated to seek the Senate post by the Republican. State Central Com· mlttee on Aug. 12. The previous candidate, Richard Obenshain, dled in a plane crash Au1. 2. Warner bad sought the nomlna· tlo n earller, b ut lost to Obaenshaln in the primary. In the strip dlatrlbutAMI for UIO Tuesday, Dick tells hls wlle he won't go across town "just to meet the wife or some dim dilet· tan le who managed to buy. marry and luck his way lnto the \J .S. Senate." THE SERIES HAS been run by the Richmond Ti mes· Dispatch with an editor's note saying the cartoons may offend some readers. but tallure to print the strips mi&hl be eon· 1ldered cen.sonhlp. Jn the eomlc strip released for publlcatJon today. Dick says of Warner's ac:tresa·wlfe: ". . A tad overweight, but wltb violet eyes to die tor." Dlck adds he saw the quote on a bumper sticker. T he GOP legislators voted without d.iaacnt to "express our outrage and Indignation" over the comic strlp. The GOP caucus has 28 members out or the 140-member General As· sembly. T H E MOTION'S sponsor, slate Sen. Wiiey Mitchell, said the legislators wanted to let Trudeau know they conaider the satire "outra•eoualy ortenatve to good taste and common de· cency." lfftales Burned Carcasses of more than 50 whal'--s are being burned along the east coast of Baja California, about 350 miles south of the U.S . border. Burning was begun to prevent disease and odor. Marine biologists are puzzled ~bout the beaching of the sperm whales. which may be the largest such incident in the Western hemisphere. Marine 'Jump Jet' Axed From Budget WASlflNGTON fAP I -President Carter's defense budget wlll de· ny the Marine Corps $203 million it had sought to continue develop. ment of Its prized 'jump jet" bomber program. administration sources sa). The sources. who asked not to be ldentilied. said the rejection of funds In the f&scal 1980 budget. to be submitted to Congress ln less killing 11 alnnen. than two weeks, coulfi spell the end or the AV.SB Harrier. which the Marinel have envisaged as their main battlefield bomber to provide clote support for ground troops. THE MA R INES have powerful friends ln Congress who could be expected to argue the corps' case. The plane ls called a "jump jet" because IL can take ofr and land vertically. using small clearings cl06e behind the fir· lng line . A prototype flew forthefinrttimelnNovember. The Marines bouJbt 110 first· Jeneratloo AV.SA Harriers. built Ul Britain, but 32 have crashed, THE FORD admlnlslratlon authorued lbe AV .SB In 1978 to correct tbe earller model's lechlnlcal problems and » ~ve the advanced Harrier 1reater ""Tinge and weapons-carrying capacity. McDonnell Dougla:. Corp. of St. Louis won the con. tract. The long-range plan was to build 336 AV-88 models at an estimated cost, counting de · velopment and production. of about $5.7 billion, accordlfll to the Marines. But outside the Marine Corps. the Harrier has many Oefens~ Department critics. One official called it a "turkey." Portland Blacked Out Ice Storm Cuta Power, CID1ea Airport Temperfd•re• "''*" Albu'q11e A,,..rlflo A-vii It ........ AllMl~Qy hltl-• llr~ ··-·"· ..... llOtlOft ........ ClwlW\Wll Clll<eot Clll<lr>Nll ,,. .. ,_ "'""''"" C><ll fl Wiii Otnver Ot•Mol"" Otlrott Ouhlllt F<tlr-1 HMt ... H-HOOlellllll .._ .... lllCl'.,,..1• Llttlt lltO 1.MA1191._ leul•vttlt Mtfflllfll• M._..I Mltwt\111" ....... ,. Ntlt!Vtlle Hew Or .. ,...,y.,. _.... Olllt. (lly °"*'-PllllM'lllflt• ..._.. i-lt'*'tll ' ··-::re& ..... ., .... -.. ..... CillMlllllle ..... ......... .... 1---·----c.. .......... ..., . , . .. \_ INSTANT COLOR ICELAND POPPIES Another oorseoua backgro und of brtght color In r~. yellows, oranges and pa1tel1. R~n hybrid varleUes wUI bloom through late apring. PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabuloul tardeft color In beds, batk~tt or PQCS-bl.,.., yellowl, oranga and whlta. PRIMROSE Rogera h .. both Engll1h and f airy varfe· ties-the foundation of any aprlng garden -available In white, yellow, red, pin"-, orange and blues. o CYCLAMt.N An' e>Utti.nd(ng plant for bedding or pots and • great dtcorator IMm. Multl·bloom Dowen come In whltee. nds. phw and ~tedcolon. AZALEAS Beauttful flowtTl"fl 1Wt'8f"" plantt, truly a C.lttorMa taYort .. In ,.., pink•. wh1ttt andl01M anlqUe\I ....... W .... Htll1 Rd. et MacArthW Bhld., Newport Btac ... (714) 640-SIOO Open 0..ly 9am to 6pft\-Fl()t't11 640·6 774 \ Cl a 8 n f1 0 a •• .. •• ft Cl t4 • ti .. I • •• •• I ' . , 1 l ' . .. CALIFORNIA No Spaceman Jared Reisman, Sh who because or severe allergy problems as been forced to wear s paceman-like gear to purify the air he breathes, enjoys a new toy with mother. ",. ........... Marlene. The Carmichael youth left today for Denver where he will undergo tests to determine the cause of his problems. Snit Hits Coast Policy Homeowners Challenge Public A ccess Rule LOS ANGELES <APl Actor Burgess Meredith is among those speaking out In a court action that challenges a policy requiring shoreJlne owners to allow public access to their land before being allowed building and Improvement permits. The action, Ciled In Los Angeles Superior Court. claims the state Coastal Commission's policy is unconstitutional because il deprives landowners without adquately compensating them. Although It Is not the first time the policy has been challenged, the suit by the Pacific Legal Foundation and ~ California Coastal Council 1s Rain Causes Rockslides By The Associated Press-I /\ warm Pacific storm poured as much as five tn · ches of rain on areas of northern California In 14 hours. c ausing house flooding and highway rock slides ln Marin County. Rockslides temporarily closed a lane along parts or the tWO·lane Lucab Valley Road In Nicaslo, i;herlH's deputies said. Streets and basements Judges Rappe d o n I.Db h ying were Oooded In other a reas or the county, In· eluding Mill Valley, an areas or Tam Valley al Camino Alto Road, the deputies said. T H E COUNTY r e· ce ived four Inches of ;ain in less than 14 hours by 6 a.m.. weather of· ficials said. Shelter Cove In northwe s t e rn C alifornia r eceive d LOS ANGELES (/\Pl more than five inches in T h e c o u n t Y • s the same period. municipal judges have Elsewhere in the San II d Id Francisco Bay Area a illega >' pai an outs e com bi nation of high law firm $52,88S to lobby tides and rain caused r o r t h e m . s a y s tideland noods. Supervisor Ke nneth Th e warm-winded Hahn. adding that no r~ins also fell on usually county funds will be used to pay the bills. s now-prone are as at high altltude!l in the the first to ques tion the requirement on a Matewide basis . Meredith and 10 other homeowners filed declarations in the s uit. The plaintiffs. said in the suJt filed Tuesday tha t they want court-ordered guJdelines defining the coastal commission's authority to require public access to private property. The foundaUon 1s a conservative statewide legal group, while the council represents about 6,000 Calilomla property owners. Jud$(CS can hire out· Sierra Nevada. Pre- side legal counsel only dawn temperatures with the approval or the were In the 30s along In· Boa rd of Supervisors, terstate ~ through Don· which the Judges failed ner Pass and Blue Can- to obtain before retain· yon where rains were Ing the firm of Gibson, also heavy. Rain also hil ---·-- Dunn and trutcher. ski resorts ln the Tah~ llahn told r e porters area. Wednesday. According to the supervisor. the county auditor reimbursed the ' judges. who hld the legal tees among expenses from the various 24 Municipal Court dis· tricts. The expenses list· ed were for such things aa travel and expert wit· ne11 fees, Hahn added. Tlv'lday. January 11. 1979 DAILY PILOT A 5 Anti-busing Backed Measure Would R estrict Courts SACRAMENTO CAP l tember. must ehmiruite aegreea· districts should be re· -Another measure to T h e C a 11 r o r n I a lion regardless or causf' quired lo Integrate only reatricl lhe 1>0wer or Supreme Court has said Th c fede r a I h 11( h 1f there Is evldence of In· slate courts lo order that school dis tricts court. less strict, says tcntlonal segregation. 1chool1 lo Integrate has----------~__;,__;;-----.:........;.....:.........;.;;.;.;.;.;.,;;,.;..;.;..;...;..;;.::~;...,;....:.;__ besun lo move throu1h the Leglalature. and supporters think it wtll pass thll lime. The conatltutlonal amendment, aimed primarily at overturning Los Angeles' mandatory bus lng program. was sent to the Senate floor Wednesday by the upper house's Education Com· mlttee. The 10·1 vote came despite a plea from the panel's only black member. Sen. Diane Wat.son, D-Los Angeles. to kill it. SENATORS have twice approved similar measures by the same author, Sen. Alan Rob- bins. D-Van Nuys, since 1977. But both amend· ments d1cd In the As· sembly. · This year. supporters are relying on the fear of many Los Angeles . area re5k1ents that the Los Angeles plan will s pread to nearby d is- tricts. They say th.is fear should gllte them the votes needed to gel the amendment out of the Assembly Judicia r y Commlltee. its slum· bling block ln past years. if approved ·by the Legi s lature, th e measure would go on the ballot In 1980 for voter conslderaUon . THE amendment. SCA 2. wouJ(t overturn lhe Los Angeles pro· gram and some others by requJring state courts to use the standards of the U.S. Supreme Court in deciding whether to order Integration. JANUARY CLEARANCE Atl Camille bV Thoma5v111e reduced during o ur J anuary Clearance -this includes ltvlllg room. dtntng room and bedroom furniture Shown: Eleganl dining· room furniture reflecting the charm. grace. and splendor of the French court of Louis XV. Table. chairs and large China Wo• SJlfl.00 Now '2795°0 I ' I ntenor designs by: Dick Metteer Polly Dodds Hitchcock Morgan A.S.1.0 . Hundreds o f other items drastically reduced fOf' this sale' DICK METTEER Fine Furnishings & 1 nterior Design 1727 Westcltff Drive. Newport Beach • 646-1678 Open 9-5·30 • Closed Sunday Evenings By Aooo1n1men1 Dul there is question whether even that re· quirement would have an impact in Los Angeles, which began a massive school busing , ___________ 11111!1 _____________ __ prog r am last Sep- 8 Edit ri I P R«>Mr1N Wffd tPubllshtr ThomH K"vll/EdltOf O ranoo Coast Daily Pilot 0 a ag.e ________ T·h·UrW-•.v •.• J·.".U.•'Y.'·'·· 1·9·7V·--------·8·•r.be_,._l(·r·el·b·IC·h·/·E·d·lt·o'·'··'·P·-ot-·E·d·'·'°'··· 'Family' Ruling Raises Qu stiotis It 'OU hvc in :i li.>llM' an Nl'wport Ot•a.u·h -.Ith your PoU e. two t·hlldrt.·n ond 11n old 'chool c-hum, you're hr<'uk•n ttw I "' T h t'& bc~nu. t• ~ r .1nlll). ~U('h us ·~ l)('rmttl d to h\t~ 111 u a~IC'-fnmily r~ td nUal unit . '"' d.,f ined by lt\o city u' t•llh<'r o .:roup ul pt pl \\>ho .ll'e rt>lutt'd by hlood . marri(IRt' or .u.Juptlon . or no mon· than four unrelau'd JK'rM>n'.'>, or nu mon• than four iwrson~ 1f uny of them ore unrt.'lott'<.l Now th1..· t'lt l'OUOl'll 1 ... look in.: at I ht• po albillty or n>ducang f um1h b) dl•fimtmn tu no mortt thnn th~e un rt•llllt'<l lk'l"Oll' T hl• thmk 1n~ 1s th.it urm•ltilt•d 1wri.oni. 1tv1ns toj(etht•r u1 l' usu.all\ ,ulults. u::.u.111\ t'U<'h tun{' ,1 ''til . and lhui. add to t ht> pui kml( 1>roblt-m ·in n ·n .im ur t'""· purt1cularly Balbou. Bullxw JsJjncl Jntl \\'t•sl 'frwport Uut Wl' l>t·ht•\ l' Pl.11tn111~ t'omm1~Mon members were wist• lu~t wt>t•k to abk tht• plunnmg blJff to look Into somt' ulternut1 wb to th t-('uunt•1I b prnposul. i-.aymg they don't wunt to relieve or1t• problem and pt•rhups cc.iuse another Tht• t·urrcnt Jnri prn1>0sl·d dt•fm1tlons arc unfair lo stu<lt•nts. low-incumt· rwrsons und landlords w ho depend • on studl'nt renters rn the \\-tnll•r They ubo invite dlb· rcbpect ror the luw · Perhups tht• city miJ(ht rhct•k to st-c 1f. indeed . re· d c fi nini? ~1 fomily a:. it did a fC'W y<•ars u.:o i rt•ducinf( the numt>t'r from r1vt> to four 1 twd <.inv appn•t•1ablc c..>ffo<'l on the pu1 king problem We doubt thut 1t diet And wt• suspc'<'l ltll'rt' '::. :i twtkr. luirer way of c1t•ttlin~ with tlw s ituation Reasonable Protection Nt•wport Bt•a<'h Counc1lwomun J ackie Heather hai, <·omt· up w1th what is <.in excellent suggestion for protect ing people from being quoted as e ndorsing a candidate or issue without pt•r mission . M rs lleather has proposl'd. in connection with a re· , 1scd <.·1ty <.'a mpa1gn funrling ordina nce. tha t written ap- prova l be required before a pttrson could he cited <.is en· ciorsing someone or somt'thing S he also said sht• would hkt• to sec restrietwns o n re· usi n~ newsp<.1pcr quotes out of cont<>xt in <'l1mpaign m<Jlerwl. Thl' rt•v1st•c1 or<l inanc·t•. which is c111Tt•ntly b<'ing rC'· \ 1scd aJ(ain. wi ll hP considrr<>rl hy the City Counc·al Fch l~ Wh1lt.' th<>n· v.tll lw som<· d 1ffic11 ly tn dc..>ftnmi! just v. he.at "0111 of <·orllcxt" nw:rns. 1t st>cms rcasonalill' t hat a 1wrson should h<' a s ked 1f ht· or she doc:-. indeed wis h to t•11do1 '>l' a ('and1cl;.itl' or 1s:-.u" C'11 rrcntly. thl.'re 1s ht tic µrotcct1on against outnf,!ht fulst·hoods or :igumst words spoken in p rivate• being hallyhooed ahout in publicity mat cri<J ls ai<ams t t he s pcakl'r's wi~hc:-. At least on the level of <·1tv elections. tht•rc 1s a possih1hty somt· p rotel'lion <·an be· grantl'<I We think Mrs. Heather's suggestion sho uld be given serious considera· l ion. _ Osprey Outbreak - SaiUng e nthusiasts in Newport Harbor h ave had to put up with a variet y of inconvenicnce~·from a s hortage of slips and lack of la unching facilities to a burgeoning of boat burglaries And now they've got ospreys. Ospreys. who h aven't deigned to ha tc h l hcir eggs in Southern California for more than ~year~. are protected by law. And, in a c lear defi a nce of property rights and respect for othe rs. t hey have insisted on buildin~ their nests in the m asts of p rivate boats. The first time. th<.' stCJte Departm e nt of Fish a nd Game and a host of oth<>r offi cials went to great lengths to move the nest to a pi ling so the boa t owne r could sail again. Now a second nest has t urned up in u boat m a&t in t he ha rbor. It hasn't bcc.m cst <.1 blished yd whethe r it's an osprey nest or perha ps even built by hum a n hands as a joke. n ut t his bird's nest s loop mania ha s gon e too far. one way m· the other . We don't think the high cost of p roperty in Newport Bt·CJch is uny excuse:> for a few birds or even f calhery fakes to think they can stick <.i nest anywhere they want. If this do<:sn't stop . the next thing you k now nests will bl' turning u p on C B antennas. And what would ha ppen to the city's parking prob· terns then'! • Opinions expressed m the space above are those ot the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their author• and artists Reader comment Is mvited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd I Femininity By L.M. BOYD These scholar" who mak~ 11 study or the masc ullnfl.1)'· reminlruty ratios 01 men unct wome n contend lhat girls url' at their m06l feminine when In the e ghth grade. They're reportedly most masculine in their middle college years And they thereafter become more and mor e feminine os they grow older. c-Item No. 582C In our Love D.-.ar .Gloomy Gu My friends. we ROl lrou· l>lc, Rlght here In Newport city. And that 1tarta with ''T'' And that rhymes with ··p·· And tba 1tands for Paul <al! MUSIC MAN and War m a n 'A file on divorce Is the report that 1n the Malnbar region or India a woman cnn thro w out a husband 1:1imply by leaving his shoes outside lhe door. That 's it, pol. Take a walk. Mnry Pickford starred in more thon 200 rnotlon p1c· lures between 1909 and 1933. Out or that mnny you'd think there'd be R few she'd r egard os wino r1. Eviduolly not. though. She clolmed she n ver made o film Khe liked. Q. "Why ls the little finaer reterred lo os the pinky?" A Corn from the Dutch ''plnkJl'" meaning exactly that. llttlo flni:er. That ort of thief who makes orf with the mo1t money per offense on the uvera11e 111 the computer criminal. Known loHCI to dat~ wherein computer pro· 1ram1 have been chonaed to alphon off funds amount to 1450.000perc Q . ''Wher•'• Mt . Chomolunim.a?" ~-Thal 'a what th e Tll>el&DI call Mt. Evertlt £very alxlh South Kor •n IJ nomed Kim Devious Drug Endorsement WAS U1NGTON -In the publtc rl'lallona &ame. an un tohcllt'd ob) ctlve •ndorsumenl of the cUtnt '1 product I• a pearl of artal PM <'t!. And whit auch t•ndorst'l'Mllt•. Ill< 5Mtarla. can occur nuturully , tho cultured vurlt>ly la tor mor provalenl Scratch an obj cu v endorse mcnt and you'll g ncrally rind 11 ~u <'urclully culti vated by u nu ck One parhcul arly t frecllve B1m rmck used by corpornte Im· (1ge bulldt>rs I ~ MO "l..'dU<•a uonal (•am pu16Jn" that ls Ku p polled I ) 11pon:;ort>d us u pub l i<' 1erv1ct• hut which . when J>ro p e r ly ha ndled . re· s ui ts t n favorable publicity for the com· puny '!ii product. The carefully Hel~c:lt'd e x pt•rts who a r e persuaded to take part in tht• educational campaign can wi nd Mailbox up H unwtttln& s hills for the 1pon1<>r'1 merchundlae. A CLASSIC example 1>f the ttthniq~ was recentl)' present· ~d by Roche Laboratorlea. maker or the tr1nqulllzln9 drua Vall um. With tome 3 bllllon of the mood-alt.erlng pills prescribed each year. Valium ls not only America'• most p0pular ore· scr ibed tranquilizer. st s rar and away Roche's most popular presc r i ption drug. R oc he grosses a quartc r·bllllon dollars• a year from Vallum. more than ha lf or the company's total sales V a lium and o th e r benzodlazeplne tranquilizers en· joy an excellent reputation for effectiveness and safety . But there is growing concern that the drugs are being misused. FOR EXAMPLE. Valium can be extremely dangerous when take n in combina tio n with a lcohol. Accord1ng to estimates by the National Institute on Dru1 Abuse, Valium by ltu lf or mtxed with alcohol or tome other drua account.c4 tor S4,400 emer1enty room vll\it.I and 900 deaths between May 1978 and April W17. ApparenUy worried about the lncre11e In unfavorable pubhcl· ty for their lop money mtker. Roche u ecutlves decided to sponsor a nationwide educa· tlonal proJram on stress. aimed at physicians and the general public. Although the procram wu billed as totall y objective , our special investigator David Zi mmerman concluded that the prog ra m has li de f inite tilt towa rd the use of drugs to treat stress. AND TIIOVGH Roche's flnan· cial backing of the educational proeram is disclosed on promo· tional llt.erature sent to medical writers. there is no mention of the fact lhat the company manufactures a drug that 11> used to treat stress. Roche's role ls further ob scu r ed by t he use or in· termediariea to run the educa· llonal campalcn. Tho prosram wus "developtd' and J>rodUced" by Health Learnina Systems. a Bloomfield, N.J .. company that specialir.es ln such things. Thw. It waaJtealth Leamtn1 Systems. not Roche. that appeared to be running the 1how. The company managed to ob· lain a preatlgtoua Institutional sponsor ror the naUonwlde cam p a 1g n Corne ll Unive rsity Medical College. One of the promotional item!. mailed to d~tors was a cassett..• recordl n1 or Dr. Theodor e Cooper , dean or the medical s chool, being Interviewe d hy Edwin Newman. Valium is men· tl o ned seve n times and benzodiaiepine alx times on the t ape. No olhcr drug Is mentioned byname. Oil. COOPER said he used the trade name Valium because "conversationally" Valium hHS come to at.and for all such drugs He was aware that aeveraJ other firms produce rival brands of be nzodiazeplnes, and said he would have bee n careful to "me ntion everybody's produ<'t once·· had he realized that men· tio ning only Va lium woulct a rouse susp1c1on . Cooper IR oontrad1cted by one of his assistant deans. Stephen Scheidt . who admitted he wa~ · 'i..urpnsed" to hear the frequent ravoroble mentfan of Valium on the Roche-financed tape. ··1 ·ve made it dear that lthese pm- 11: r a m s 1 s hould be largt>ly altruistic. W1th a mild l>it of Milf· inte rest,·· he said. HOWEVEll. in the program materiali. so far sent out to JournahsL-. and doctorx by 111.S. Va lium 1~ th e o nl y ben todtaLcptnt: me ntioned by name and us ually the ref \'rcncc 1s ravorabl<• Yet a n Ill.'\ 0Hic1al 1ns1sted that Rol'hc h:.ul no control over th<' material 11 was paying for. "The companic~ that put up the money for our programs never see the copy," he told Zimmerman . Yes. Virginia. there 1s a Santa C'la us He wears three·pwcc s uits and works In a corporatl' boa rd room. Any endorsements he geL'i are objective and un ohcited. and have not hing to do with the toys he gives -.wuy. ,Teacher Pay Not Meeting Living Costs To the &ht.or : The letter lo the C'rlitor in Sun· d ay's paper from a parent slates (J general d1 ssat isfact1on aod lack of respect for teachers. I a m a te acher who loves children and e njoys teaching. yet it Is a constant distraction from the job to be concerned constantly with severe financial problems. The cost of living is going up and President Carter says be happy with a 7 percent increase. Most or ua would be happy. very ha ppy, with a built-In cost or liv· ing Increase. but our salaries are frozen at June's level. Last year I received a 2 percent in· c rease. Every year teachers earn less. WE LOVI:: our r hildren too and want to feed and educate them. Why should teachers and their families bear the financial burden or Proposition 13? Does that mother realize that with a master's degree. 50 units beyond the m aster's a nd 18 years or ex· J>t!rlence a teacher earns only $21.000" That's not much of a s alary tor a professiona l person at the peak of his financial lire A teacher a t the top of lhe 11alary ischedule does not quallry for the cheapest home In Orangt• County. Also, we do our own typ· ing, dittoing. grading . research. leHon plannlnJt etc I hove not now nor e ver had an a ide . T. WILSON A •p•al P0Uc-t1 To the FAltor: The l1tte~t d rl vl' b y our Imperial ~realdtint to provide American 1uppart for a gang of Communist butchers while et t he 1rn rne tlme withd rawing !lupfort for our oro.weetern. a nl ·Communist fr iends on Taiwan ac ms to ht! but n 11tep along the path where Rhodcala, Iran, ond Nlcaruaiua are current- c ruu a ltlH to o ur :a b ysm al foreign policy. ('a rttr'!I dee lslon furth er unde rscores th vast htOuenc:e or the communlat ldeotoay In WashingtOn, O.C. His prettnse of "champlo" of human rl1hu" evaporata ln a cloud o( opium 1moke and dried blood and tcartl from 90 Million lnnocen vlcUm of the communiat conQ'U'tSt In Atla, WHAT conc"'lont did Carter oak tor tn· r eturn l or o ur rec:oanltlon! Apparently oone or we would have heard about them A l II as Ca rter for gotten R<'d China ·s part in the a~gress1on in Korea and the slaughter in South East Asia·· Certainly not. Dec 15. 1978 was another day or w1llrul surrender. We can only hope now that the new American Cons ervati ve Movement is strong enough to force Congress to re new Its responsibility as the conscience of America. W. SPENCER MARQUIS Par~"'• Appal~d To the Editor : As parents of a child attending Fountain Valley High School, we 're appaJlcd at the uctions of the teachers In the present d111pute. Why Is classroom lime being used to present the beliefs or the teachers? Why are tea(•he rs telling students that truancy is acceptable during the strike and will go without consequences" W h y a.re s tude nts h l'I n g ·ncouraged not to coopera te with the sub8litute teachers? THE SITUATION could he used aa a learnlnR t•x pcrience fo r students ,were both sides or th e iss u e d i~c u~~e d . The <'Olle<'livt b&rRolnlnj( process a nd arl>ltrnllon un• u wuy or Am e ri ca n lif e. h ut "hra inwu huig" Is not To compound m a tters. thf'se statements huv~ been m ndc for weeks not Just days No wonder the l'limpua Is In chum, KENNETH ANU MARGARET MASON • ....... 13 To the Editor: r Propo1 ltlon 13 muat bt J ewl1h : It l3 blarncd for so many lhln1a. In your "Houslnar Supply Drops," Jan. 5. 13 ls blamed. Prop01IUon 13 had nothing to do wlth the howdnJC ahortagl' thot hu been lncrt11ln1 bccau11<' .iovernment has had the extra t u mon~y lo a upport lhe myriad.a ol burcaucrocle11 Utat regulate.tta 1uppty. And If locul 1overnment1 d11coura1e housing de velopment because lhey won't 1tet 11 much property tax money from It. that lt their (ault. not 13. . And bow 1.3 will "further re· durc lM upply of IRnd aval11b1a tot devek>pment and lncrctaae the prLce:· u stated b)' Brown·~ " Office o r Plannlnii ond RuHrch1 11 too moot • question to be 11iced. At Is h~w It It reapon1lble for r nt lncre Rents have been lnrreasing wit h the increase in 1nflat1on . lor years past. But 13 has its i::ood side Its cutdown of government 'i; sur · pluse s m ay stop Brow n 's California Housing Task Force from s ubsidizing 80.000 hou.<ting units, as proposed by Ma rcia Mills of that fo rce. with more bureaucrat ic waste a nd tax dollars. and instead m ake them ease the restrictions placed on private enterprise that 1s ready. willing a~ anxious to provide the housing need ed . Ma rcia Miiis. of the League or Women Voters. seems to hav<' replaced Claire Oedcick. of the Sierro Club. as California ·s powerful creater or chaos. It Is lime for some logical alternatives. GOLDIE JOSEPH T~pa11en 'Had If' To the Editor: The re la an ugly mood de· vcloplng among we taxpayer., that crosses alt age. pollUcal. and occupallonal groups. We taxpayers ha ve reacht.>d the saturation point with city. st ate. and federa l employees who "demand" higher wages a nd more be nefits while our country Is curre ntly In dire t>conomic straights Durln~ our t'Conomic crisis. luxpoycrs art> st ru~glln~ desperately to kt."t.'p t he ir Job~. hom es. cars. und good health. We a re llred of strlkeK and demand8 made by our servants und ror more. when we have I~ Any sc:hool teacher. riremnn. b us driver. p oli ce m a n o r g arbage coll'<>cto r, etc .. who Ceeh1 t'R' or sh c:mnot live on the i r present salary u nd benefits. 11hould quit th<>l r Job immediately and s<.-ck employ mcnt alonpldc u.s In the private sector UNTIL the econom y recovers, we will not tole rate elty. atulti . and federal employee receiving any u lary or benent lncrca. es.· Quotes "It should have happened a long lime a,o ror lbe uk~ of the peac ol UM •cw:ki-U.:... .Neey flood." -a p ... setbY rn Peklna. Ibo Chl·e....,. to an American r e po r ter t one1rn l n1 the t1Ubl11hment or r~l a tlon1 between the UnJted &ates and Chln• In fart. we taxpayeri> may hnvt.• to reduce some of the benefits they now enjoy. Although the mood of the la'<· payers 1s an ugly one. govt•rn ment employee~ need not worry JUst yet. beeause we arc defui.<'d pohllcally Jn November . 1978. 1l a p pear ed th a t Gov Brown would sense our mood and would tap this vast political resoun·t•. He has yet to do so Oncf> the pohllc1arn> at all levcb of gov e rnment realize the sheer powt>r or this ugly taxpayer mood. tht•y will be swept into any office they sef'k I( Howa rd J ar vis werl' 20 years young, better educate<i. and more of a poli shed learter und individual. he would be our P resident In 1980. Facts are that Mr J arvis Is not sue~ a man. The re are R>0 million Americans wailing to be molded into a cohesive political rorcc. Who do you think will step forward to lead us? WAl.T BLANKENSIUP A la•kan "''., To the F.d!tor. This is In refe rence to your rt·· cent story about an attorney In Corona del Ma r suing a neighbor over the "extended height" of u tree. True. a view of the ocean lit a !>p<>C1al th.in.c. but putting a l rt'C Into the view somehow cnhancl'~ it a ll. WHEN WE lived In t\nc horaaf'. Alaska . people• fought hard to save lhe trees from over-icalous developerti. The trttS gave ul\ all so much more beauty In u land where we would givt a lpt for more reully tall trees <tho severe winters In somt' oreas keep them shorter 1. If only we could take lhl' "Flahcrt)' trC<'" with u• wht•n we happily return to t\lnskn thli. spring, we could ~lvf' tt such o trt'a!lured place to llvc a nd d<>· light all that passed It~ way. • On m)' wal~ tontaht I counted Ovt'r 100 trees of a _ara.nd SCOll' and I shall off r 11 quiet prayer for them all KATHY GORHAM • IAttfrt /rom '~"-" ore .ccomr. Tht ngfll ro condtnH lfttm to JU 'J'OC~ or •llml'IOl• hf* it rutrWd 1Attn1 oJ JOO wordi or "" tUCll ~ Qtvn fll'•/fmlee. AU "1rm mlll( In· d..U ~11rf oftd mciilmf1 Clddren· bliC *''"" mow bt wttMnd on rt qwlt If ltl/llc:tent ''°'°"la apJJOrfnl l>oftrw wcLf "°' bt ~. AT YOUR SERVICE I NATION "Cor a pmblnn., Th" u>rilt to l"ol °""" Pal wtU nd rtd ioPf, {1«10ng llw Q1UWeq and. acfaon "°" ncfd to lOll.lf ~~· °' ooomunma ad h.rintu Mciil ~, qwltlON to Pol 0..1ttt. Al Y°"' ~'tC,, Orcnoe Coo.It Oa&IJI P'tlof. P 0 8oz 1 • Ccnta M•to. CA tmt Al moat1 lltt.n a.t JIOl"t>W 1'ltlJ M 01U1.IH'rtd, but ~ ~· or k rtm "°' mclumng ,,.. ~n·1 fMll natM. oddrcu ond bt.l.stMu houn · phoM num t>.r ca.rmot bl-c:oimdlrtd. Thia coltnnn QPPfCJ'• dci· l~ ucqt Salvrqa." f'la•f'> Rn•rd-• W••Pd Old'! DEAR PAT . What's the t way lo wa11h OK Given Singer For Club ~ EDGARTOWN . Mua. <AP> -ln1er Carly Simo n ttaa auccHded where Bil Matfailed. · The F,dtartown Board or Selectmen aranted a li- quor UcemetotheAvmar Corp.. for a night club called "Hat 11n Boor," to ope r ate on Martha's VJ.neyanl between April and November. .... .,..... .. PARTNER The board las\ week ~.JetMMtY 11, 1979 DAILY PILOT A 7 cblldrcn'1> p14Jumu to keep ~m namer t rdant• J .T .. Irvine Doe"t .-. ... ,. ll for•• a ••m Uaat bUJd1 -. oa tbe fabric Hd •ruaes Oa~·ttt.atdaal pro. 11 penles. la&ead, me a .._...te detH&Ht, or If yoa prefer aoa-.,-.pbate clekrcenaa for ecoloaleal , rea10na. ... double tbe recomm~nded amoanl of a IMavy.._, Uquld deterseat. 111da as All, Wu k, Braudl)yumo. Carty Simon pr~ented Mc Donald's, ---------the fast-rood restaurant chain. from opening a branch In Tisbury, 12 m iles northwes t of Edgartown, by refusing to approve a variance ln one of its zoning laws. ClallriM bleatla la not rec.ommeadecl, bul lt CID be 9'llCI oa flame-retanlut fabriu made wlUa mH·mlde ftben. aacla H ayloa, polyester and SEF modaeryllc. But don't ue cbJorioe bJeacb oa name-retardant eoa.-beeaaae lt wW dec:reaee I.be efledlweaea of tbe flAllla. Alwayt ue a water Mft.euer, aucb as Calgon or Boru, U tbe water ls bard In your area or lf you ue a noa.pbospbate detergent. Do not use fabric · softener. Wann-water wuhlng, low-be at drylni 'and ao tr.lag alao are recommended. 'Butt Bftlcla Boob Bagged DEAR PAT: Where can I learn the location of free nude beaches lo California, the rest or the country aod other parts of the world ? D.S., Newport Beach Yoa and other .. total tan° rans may be ID· tetttted ID two pt1bUeatlolls, "Free Beaches San," •blc:b UsU aade beac~a. l'e9011.a and vacaUona a.nagboal tile world, and .. Free Beacbes Gulde," wlllle• eooeemn&es on aade beacbel ID the U.S. For more Information, write to 0 Free Beachel San and Gakle, P.O. Bos 1.3%, Oshke>U, Wis. 5'90%. 1 Prtvate DDde retl011.a and camp lnlormatlon la t available from American SaDbatlllDg AuoclaUoa, 110 N. Mills Ave., Orlando, Fla. 32803. •Jnsul"'CllW'e Can Br DropPftl DEAR PAT: I pay a monthly premium for 'Medicare hospital insurance protection because I dldn 't have enough Social Security credits to get It. · 1 also have the medical Insurance part of Medicare and pay the monthly premium for It. Can I drop the medical insurance? B.R., Huntington Beach U yoa are baying tao.plUJ lnaan.ace protee· tlon, yoa eanno& cancel yoar medical lnauranc:e wltlaont loslnc your boapltal laaaraac:e too. However, yoa cao cancel yoar bospttal lnnranee and atW eolltlaae you medical lnau.rance. E•pfotlet/! B~lfts A..i.-.atlc1 DEAR PAT: One of my employees was badly burned in a chemical explosion. It will be a year or more before he ·can work again. I've arranged for a Social Security representative to help him apply for disability benefits, but be wants me to find out how be can get rebabllltatlon services too. Where can I find out? H.T., Santa Ana All people who apply for Soctal Security dJa. abUJty benefit.a are c:ouldered for vocational re· bablUtatloa .emc:es. Even U a penoa cloeA't meet tbe reqlliremeota for dllabWty payments, be or abe may .U.U be ell&lble for rebabWtatloa aervtc:n. ·Tbeae may lncfade counseling and guidance; medical esamlnatloa and medical, surgical or , , bospUal services; and pbyslcal aids sacb H anlllcall llmba, bracea, bearing alda, eyectuses or o&ber devices. Tbe Social Security representative , canglveyoumorelnformatJon. MtlllloldlRf1 ~••••• Told DEAR PAT: My wife Is a part.time student who works evenings as a waitress. Her employer re- quires her to report her tips so that he can withhold taxes on what she makes. I think he ls withholding too much. What's the limit on withholdings? S.T .. Huntington Beach In 1978 the maximum amoant or conblned wages and tips aubjec:t to Social Security tas ls $11 ;100. A percentage of 6.5 ls wlthbeld, ap to a masimum of $1,111.85 by ~acb employer. lneome tax ls wtt.bbeld on all earnlftgs. Tbe amoant of wlth.boldJng ls , based on botb the amoant earned and the number of Hempttons each employee la entitled to clalm on Form W-4. Yoar wtfe may w1sb to vertfy ber ln· come tax wltllboldJng lo IRS Pabllcatlon 15, "Employer'• Tas GDJde · Circular E," avaUable from you local Internal Revenue Service ornce. ......,..... Preteet• PeUet1 " DEAR PAT: I've been talking to various ln· eurance acenta about buylna a policy on my We. • All of them tell me to be sure to get a 0 non· forfeiture" p_rovislon as part of the policy J decide to set. Eueuy wbat ii thla? • K.R., SANTA AN ••Noaforfeltare0 lan't wbea Delt~er team 1bqw1 11p for a balJCame. Tiie nonlorfettve pro- vlaloa. a part of muy &ypee ol lmuruee, relen &o 1 valaea wklc:b bldld ap wbea yoe•ve been paylag m· to a poUey ftr a wlllle. U Y• IDddenly bave to a&op paylag you premlama, >'°" doa't &Ive ap <forf eto . daetev....._ , IJle ....,uce compaldel off« several ways for t.be ~Y owaer to ... ..,orfeltu'e vales. "" eu &Me them la ca8' (tee U»e table of ulh 1 •alllet la a pallcy> or ba.e die lnlvuce com· PUJ ~ tt te )'09 .SUI ....,_ la IDl&allmn&a' , ..,er a perMd ti U••· Or 109 cu '8Q a MD· f.-ftttse ...... a. UM form ol coadaed 111• la· , , .. nee ,...._... Wt&IMll& fmtMr premium• &o .,.,. WANTED--••A.••NDs • 6Dl8TONES .....,_ ~ JOMPI>• ta M arching for ctJamonda •nd 0"•4"A• ~ pm.te lrtdMdu.lt Ind .-. ... Otnful ~ Md eveluotlon by our t•P9rtt Hlghett ,,._ patO. Cell 540-9080 10.9 deity, Seturd• HH, lu.td., d.-d ~tor a.tty Gr'°9 °' ,, ..... v...-wau ·wel1 by loseph JEWS URGE TOYB4N NEW YORK CAP> The American J ewish Congress bas ureed the Toy Manufacturers of America to follow the lead or West Germany's Toy Retailers Associa· lion In recommending a ban on the sale of war toys bearang Nazi in· signia. Ms . Simon, wife of singer James Taylor, ls a partner In the club which , accordi ng to papers riled with the s electmen, will serve meals and offer "some folk, some rock and re· corded music for danc- ing." ,u K, LE I ...ONLY Mutual Savings geti them all together. Only at Mutual Savings wtll you find an of these special services and high Interest accounts for savers. Now there are more reasons than ever before for bringing your savings to Mutual Savings. .,I FREE tax pr9parotlon tiy H&R BLOClt THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE 6-month Money Markert Account Effective 1/11(19 ttwu 1/17179. Annualzed yteld assumes funds remain on deposit for 12-months. Ralee 118 llJbtect to change at renewal based on the U.S. 1teaeury Bill rate at that time. $10,000 or more aocepCed. No feel«~ charges. ~ ecx:ounta at Mutual SaYiflgl • ir.nc:t to $40,000 by ., agency of the tedetal ~There• a tubetMUal penalty tor eettv wtthdrllwal of '*1tfic:lte accountl. . . . \ . 1 1 I DAii. Y PILOT Thuf'lldey, Jenuary 11, 111'1 PtateoftheD•r SIT Da -C>ntd by Alan Caot...U Jr.1 a 'Hollywood doctor. Zit la a llul a.:pr91ton for pimp& Dr. Cantwell la a derma&altOCIJt. Supervisor Tells Goals Wieder to Attack Mandated Programs Newly lnatall4!'d Oranso Cowl· ty 1 c.-ond dltlrlcl Supervisor H1rrlett Wltdtr Hid Tu ld1y one or Mr 1oall wlU be to 1tt.ek federal and 1t1te mand1tod pro. 1ram1 that luve county lax· payel"I to root the bill. • "I hope to be able to chau.n,e that wllh the ualttanco of my vlronment, health and retuaees. Mu. Wieder cited other pro- blem• she "" raclna the county 11 tbe htah coat or boualnf. where to put a reglon1l airport, and how to cut 1pendln1. ''We're no Jonaer suburbia," she aald, "We're an urban coun· ty with W'ban problems. noted that one women's club aave her an en1raved 2-by-<4 "and you know what those are uaed tor -to get the attention ol a mule." As tor her own perceptions about belii1 a woman on an otherwise aJl·male board, Mn. Wieder Hid, "You get ao you've got • Job to do. You don't t.b.lnk about what you are." Resourceful rolluge1,'' M fl. Wled4'r told 1 m l· lna or Oalboa B 1 y R • ~===========:c:====:_· p u b 11 c 1 n However, Mrs. Wieder aald she la optimlaUc for the future of the county because of the eff ecta of Propo1itlon 13. the property tax cut LnlUaUve co-sponsored by Howard J arvta. Workshop Set ·Cranston Sets :County Talks 8y O.C. HU811NG8 • Ot .... Dollly ~ .... ~ lJ .s. Senator Alan Cran.at.on will be In Orange County tonl&hl and Friday. The Cafifomia senator Is scheduled to speak too.le.ht to the county division or lbe stale Leaaue of Cities during a dJnncr meeting al the Anaheim Stadium Club. Friday afternoon, Cranston will vlstt the People's Center In Fullerton, tour Casa Placentia In Placentia and meet with Orange County Chicano leaders at the Amerlcan Legion Hall in Placentia. Friday night, Cranston will address the Orange County Bar Association al the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach . • • • R EP. ROBERT Badham, R·Newport Beach, wtll be one of four congressmen Interviewed Fri- day in a Channel 50. KOCE-TV program scheduled for 7:30 p.m. The "Voters' Pipeline" program hosted by Jim Cooper will focus on the topic, "Orange Coun- ty in Washington ... Tho program will be repeated at 10 :30 p.m., Tuesday . • • • THE ANNUAL key awards program or the Democratic Women of Orange CoWlty 1s scheduled for 1·30 p.m .. Saturday, at the Communication Workers of America hall. 3602 W. 5th St., Santa Ana. The program calls for "Democratic nominees and ornceholders to honor the women who have contributed countless hours or work throughout 1978." ••• FORMER REP. Charles E. Wiggins is scheduled to address the World Affairs Council of Orange County Monday during a luncheon at the Disneyland Hotel. Wiggins' topic is "The Past is Prologue." The former GOP congressman said be will compare the world situation that saw the rise or Hiller and Mussolini with conditions that exist today . • • * A MEETING aimed at organizing local sup- port for the Gilbert Marijuana Initiative has been scheduled by the Orange County Central Commit· tee of the Peace and Freedom Party for 7:30 p.m., Jan. 22 at the office of the Orange County Registrar of Voters, 1300 S. Grand Ave .• Santa Ana. Bart.on C. Gilbert, the author or the initiative. will be the featured speaker . • • • GOLDI E JOSEPH or Lldo Isle was Installed Wednesday as president of Balboa Bay Republican Women Federated. Board OKs lab Job Fees Orange County Supervisors have approved fees for some of the lab work done by the county Health Department. According lo a report given supervisors Tuesday, the henlth department last year spent $752,000 ad· ministenng a variety of ----·----- blood and other types of u n d e r t h e r e e tests. schedule approved by In return, the depart· supervisors, the county ment gathered about will r ecov e r ubo ut $2,000 In lees for the $45.000 of that cost. work· The new fee schedule, This year, health of· which goes into effect in ficials say the cost for March ranges from $2.50 running the lab work to $280, depending on the and administering the type or test. tests could go as high as In approving the fees, $776.000. supervisors added the proviso that county Aid Available Health Officer Morton Nelson could waive the fees at any time "In the To Families I n le re st o r pu bit c -----health." A total or $300,000 ° In federal funds has been made available for pro- grams aimed at assist· ing low Income In · dlvlduals and families In Orange County. Officials of the Orange County Communlly Development Council said applicaUons tor In· clualon in the awarding or grants s hould be directed to the councll 's planning department, 14'0 E. F1rat St., Santa Ana. Doctor Jailed LOS ANGELE.5 CAP> -A Hollywood physi- cian has beell sentenced to four months In Jail and ordered to pay a '6,250 fine aft.er pleading o contest to 38 counts or Illegally prt'acrlblng drufa. Dr. Rupert A. La Cal le was placed on probation for three years. FOi THI NONSllotW. TOUCH: D·eco INTERIORS IH'tlmOI Pl.Ml••• AMD CONSUL~ W o m c n Jl'edtreled et the Re uben E . L ee In Newport Be a ch . · · t wiaoH. hope to work closely with the Orange County delegation lo Sacramento and Washington." The former Hu.nUnaton Beach mayor aald 40 percent· of the county budget is direct.I} aftect· ed by auch mandated programs, especially In the fields or en· .. l 'M SO excited that I'm an otrluholder In post-Jarvis," Mrs. Wieder said. "Tt1e things I wlll strive to accomplish would not have been possible a year ago. No one was d irecting tbemselva to the concerns that everyo n e Is directing tbemaelvea to now." In a lighter veln. Mrs. Wieder Joked about being constantly re· mlnded she's the first Orange County woman supervisor. She A work.shop designed to pro- vide information on bow hiltoric resources can be preserved has been scheduled by the Oranie County Historical Society and the Calllomlans for Preserva· lion Action. Officials said the workshop .will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m .• Jan. 20, at the old county courthouse. 211 W. Santa Ana Blvd .. Santa Ana. CERAMIC WALL TILE 12·FT. VINYL FLOORING . l r ' COUNTY A TnNTION BUILDERS ___ ,_ _______ _ Request for Preliminary Proposals ~ECTION 8 Housing Assistance Payments Program Write or Call: Department of Housing & Urban Development 2500 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles. CA 90057 TELE: 12131 688-6286 ________ .. ___ _ ~ttto,. Witch For More Fl 1111111, Specific lnformetlon " '\. In The Legel rl * * \ Notice SectlOn Of .. I llU~ '""''"" This Newepaper OPPOlfUNITY On Jen. 11 & 18 '\J • ._ ,# •EASY-TRIM VINYL & SELF·STICK BACKS -SUPER·OUICK FLOORS! • SNAPPY DESIGN, GREAT COLORS! DN£1COA1 LATEX FLAT •FLAT, EVEN FINISH FOR WALLS . TRIM! •WASHABLE! (JtJ!l 5ss 'P,,j,tt ~l. SOUTH COAST PLAZA Playful Pinto symbolizes the charm of South Coast Plaza. Children and adults alike enjoy riding the carousel ' • . .. .. , Sony, no mtlt ot~oatlrr. lltttlltfl fin.I. Ii.mt In stock on 111t .,. nwbd In Md'I dlpertment. lnttrmedl•• m«kdown• hlw beJn tllken on most lttms. _____ l.magn1 .................. i • Advertising Feature Plaza Will Be 'One Big Arena' By JOHN M. DODD s.-i.e~--- .. "South Coast Plaza will be one big showroom arena in January. . •'The biggest introduction of n w cars ever at South Coast Plaza" is planned Thursday through Sunday, a spokesman said Eleven dealers from the Harbor Boulevard of Cars wlll display 1979 models. About 50 cars will fill the plaza, includ· ing Cadillacs, Fords, Chevrolets ~d many imports. A "Modem Living Home Show" is planned from Jan. 20 to 28. Ninety ex- hibitors will fill the entire mall, the spokesman said. The show includes demonstrations. ex- hibits and seminars. The following room oisplays will be featured: -Bedroom by May Company -Dining room by Sears -·Living room by Bullock's -· Family room by Cricket Ltd. Demonstrations include crepe cooking. sewing techniques, flower arranging and custom woodworking. Other booths include: solar energy, room additions, landscaping and furniture re upholstery. Seminars on microwave cooking, food processing and interior decorating also will be featured. Another community event scheduled at South Coast Plaza includes a "tombola" party by the National Foundation for the March of Dimes Jan. 27 in the Jewel Court. Tombola is a British game. This event is by invitation only, and people should contact the March or Dimes at 979·2270 for information. Tombola prizes include jewelry, vaca· lion trips and a racquet club membership. South Coast Plaza sponsors many com- munity events, including high school proms and dances. The plaza is a 2·million square foot "boulevard" or stores and shops. "Shoppers encounter a total shopping experience, with 160 stores and several major department stores," the spokesman said. Restaurants, a children's carousel and a Jewel Court with a stained-glass dome enhances a visit to the plaza. "South Coast Plaza is the focal point for Orange County residents who maintain the high standard Qf taste and quality. and ror the towists attracted by U:iose stan· dards, .. the spokesman said. S10tater1 ar• amdng t1u! merchandiK on _. at Woolto0rth 'S ift South Coaat Plaia. Thurldey, Jenuaty 11. 1979 DAIL V PILOT A 9 CAMEO SHOES SOUTH COAST PL.Ali. COSTA MESA '---Lewi ..... ..., c.. 546-121 0 cbm5 LID ~ SEMl-A .. AL SALE! .. •t"•• oroduc:t ha• ftO ----"""' , ... -Nal!Qnll Reel Oole look! we ~ve got an eye·poppi ng below eost and at .eost JANUARY SALE · Starts Friday, Jan. 12, 10 a.m. Mon. thru Fri. • 10·9 Sat. · 10·6 Sun .. 12·5 All Sale Merchandise From Our Regular Stock blouses-tops-sweaters· T-shirts par¥s-skirts-dresses .Reg. $20 • $30 Reg. $30 · $40 doo r-busters r Reg. $10 to $30 •1weaten •tops •blouses •T·sblrts epan&s •dresses While They Last! .. •$ • All alet llaal -Ne lelUdt -No E1d1H ... SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA ' A•• OAA.Y Ptl.OT I Advertising Feature South Coast Plaza .May Go. ays Cookware ...... - A "cookwear explosion" array of utensils. pots and pans is found at May Company in South Coast Plaza. SEMI-ANNUAL joyce-selby style! II s loday Theres a sale goong on A sato. Joyoe·Selby ~yte. A sale on tl'llS !>oason s most up-10-tho-mlnvle sensa1tono1 shoe styles 'f:1f Joyce· Selby. Theres shit a lino selecllOll ol our e•c1ting IOOIWOOr de$tgned witn '/OU- lhC Amencan woman-<n mOnd And me sa"'ngs are e•lr30fd1nary• Don I m<ss our sale loday-Joyoe· Selby Style• $25 We have your size joyce·selby shoes --------------------------------------------------- January Clearance Sale Gal's Fa1Woa lkners: Orig. SSS.$90 .. Now: $24.99-$31.99 Gal's FcnhlOll Skirts: Orig. S 18.22 Now: $9.99 to $13.99 Gal's '-h: Orig. $20.$25 Now: $1 3. 99-$16. 99 Guy1 ,.... Ir a-s: Or1cJ. SI l-S25 Now: $11.99-$14.99 ..,. .... Slllrh, 1 ..... L °"'" Sl4-S11----,...._ NoW: $8.99·$1~.99 s. ... s •• .,. J_.., 14. S....C...t .... .. """" ............. ..... 556-65,15 •I May Company In South Coast Plaza ls "¢xplodJni:t wtth cookwear." "We're having a cookwear explosion · -people are more Into it ror decoration. rather than ror use." said Ed Kamer. divisional manager of the home furntshlng.s department. Copper cook ware is the m06t poJ>ular. he added. • .. PEOPLE ARE buying food pro· cessors. and the peak popularity was at Christmas. "Our best model · · and the first one made -is Cuisinart. • ··we plan a demonstration booth on food processing at the Modern Living Home Show in South Coast Plaza Jan. 20 to 28," he said. May Co. also will reature a bedroom display at the show. BEDROOM FURNITURE at May Co. includes exclusive designs by 1bomasville and Burlington. "We're one of the only department stores to offer exclusive designs by the store." Kamer said. This makes the prices more com· petitive and the quality higher. he added. The designer is Ferrel Fullerton. May Co. also will have a flower ar· ranging booth at the home show. May Co. also features a wide fashion selection. At Dianes Pat Casarez models a bold Hawaiian print straight wrap skirt with a jade cotton top from Dianes in South Coast Plaza. Unnmtakably Snowden Mize Marks Down Merchandise All stocl: at Snowden Mize Sports is marked down 10 to 20 percent. "The whole store ts on sale. and 20 per· cent is a conservative estimate." m~ager Cathy Santos said. Snowden Mize is an active sportswear shop on the upper level or the Bullock's wing in South Coast Plaza . Half of all business is ln sport shoes. Miss Santos said, and 30 percent is in ski clothing. No sporting equipment is stocked -only sportswear. Only men's sportswear is featured, but ladies' sportswear is planned for spring or 1979. ··Our typical customer is a 25-year-old active male," she said. Although Snowden Mize reatures "basic active sportswear," Mlss Santos said trends in actlve sportswear are toward a more f uhionable look. Fashionable biking. clothes wlll be popular in spring, she added. "Weather permijtlnc. peop&e are &et· ting outdoors more -not JU.t here but all over," she said . i>rices~at Snowden Mia .,.moderate to expensive. "We have •tan•ted retail pti~es but tbe,)!.:.re...lower dw1nl our aale." she said. Name brlnds lnclade: Gant, lzod, · Adidas. Puma, Nike, Brookt and New Balance. · HourB are rrom 10 a .m. to 9 p.m. dally, to e p.m. Saturday and rrom noon to 5 p.m. S\IDday. Snowden Mize attr•cu many cu1tomers beca'!'_e of the 1aleapeople. "They all wear clc>thes we aell ... Johnston &Murphy SALE Choose from a select group of J &M styles in a variety of colors and fine leathers. Formerly $66.00 t-0 ~.00 NOW $39.90 to $59.90 I ... ,_, South Coast Plaza . Advertlsln·g Feature ~. Januaty t t. t97'9 DAIL v PILOT A I I --:·People Dress Up More Gap Features Family Clothing People a long the Orange Coast dress up more than they used to. That's a view offered by Ron Karl. manager of The Gap in South Coast Plaza. The Gap ls a family store featuring clothes that are a "benefit to ~l ages." "We have sizes for mo6t people. with waist sizes from 25 to 50, ·• he said. The Gap styles customers with con· temporary fashions at "moderate" prices . .. We consider ourselves a ;eaos store. and we try to cover the market with dark denims and straight legs. ··we have more quantity than most small stores." he said. A popular brand for men is Brittania. a nd Pe-nd imento attrac t s wo m en customers. over the world. but most or our callfomia clothes are bought in California. "In Southern California. for example. our buyers go for Ocean Pacific. and in New York, people have never heard of Ocean Pacific." he said. The Gap is open from 10 a. m. to 9 p.m. daily. to 6 p.m . Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m . Sunda . Super Values a special mCICJazine comiftCJ Jan. 24 and 25 In Coast LIFE Models go round in contemporary /Cl3hions from The Gap in South Coast Plaza. ··we have regular buyers who shop all and the DAILY PILOT '" Ifs happening now at May Company ... come ·in and start the New Year right Women's wear Misses' leather jackets and coats Soft grained leafhef joci<ets and long coots with tte belts and detailing. 6-18. reg.89.99-149.99 69.99-109.99 rrmes' coots l03 Misses' separates Include cotton/ polyester denm skirts. vests. jeans. and mae. 8-16. were$24-$.10 15.99-19.99 nisses' sportswea 422 Cordigan sweaters In misses' sizes. Acrytc blazers. tie-necks and V-necks. S-L were22.99-24.99 17.99-19.99 niss8S' sportswea 62 Polyester toppings wtth the look of slk Assorted styles In worm rew shades. stzes 8-16. were SZ2 14. 99 mdn lloof top5 31 Sheer polyester prints in a selection of patterns and solid colors. D18. comp. vd. S24-S26 14.99-15.99 man lloof top5 178 Children's wear Famous make girls' dresles for sizes 4-6x. Choose from tong and short sleeves. were Sl9-$36 13.99-26. 99 cttien's 56 Toddlers' famous make dresses fOf sizes 2T-4T. BeOJtlful selection of styles. • wereS17-S34 12.99-25.99 chlCten's 128 Health-tex® clearance tor Infants. todclers. boys ond gi1s. A wide setect1on. reg. $4-2250 2.99-15.99 dtten's 160 ------------------------· Accessories save 40L on linen hancl>ags Choose from our lage selectlon with eathtone fX>IVlxethone fTin comp. vd. $20 11.99 tad>ags26 save 40L on nvton umbrelas ~styles In soid colors or briglt pttnts. ~vetl299 6.99 fosliof\ occessol1es 19 Qiana» nylon sepaates Mx or match them In OSSO(ted sold$ and pMts. ~vet~ 14.99-17.99 mOO ftoOt tops 6 ~ elf women's llppera Manv stytes and colors. No better tnw to ea... reg. $4-4.50 2. 99 hoeiety 468 Save~ on~ Jewsv &-ocetets, pendOl 1ts. ea1k OL mgs and more. ~ f~ make costl.me jewelry. corr'4'). vet $4-516 1.99-7 .99 fosNon JewE*Y Zl "Oscar" by Viner A low stocked heel moccasin with leather upper and stitched sole. reg. $26 16.99 womer<s sroes 431 "Come" bV Famolare® QJorter strop sonda with H ~ wedge crd open toe. ccmel orly, reg. $42 29.99 womer<s sroes 457 ''Am" leaH l8f boot with 5P-" ood budde trm. Side ~. low heel Assorted colors. WEW9$50 39.99 ~sshoelrl leather sport shoe with a t'(1l stocked heel ~ trm. easua comtort 1n assorted cdorS. reg. $40 2A. 99 ~sshoes9 "Ruby" bV Prima' Donna The city sandal that's petfect with pants or ~ stocked heelr~S20 14.99 womer<s shoes T12 Bae Trap ~2" aandc* Fcb1c or leather str1:> ~ on a low wood sole. were $23-$28 -14. 99 warens shoes T29 Lingerie Save 30!. on warm robes Loungee'S-.. Crusade(' robes for ju1iors. Nylon triocetate in assorted colors. Stzes 5-13. r~ $30-$40 22. 99 lrQeOe 132 Robes and loungewear P..s.M-l sizes in a bea.rt1ful selection of fcb1cs. COiors. were$25-S.18 18.99-22.99 robes crd iarQewea 53. 1l5 Save 2°' on assor1ed pa .ties Enkc:U~ nylon In . 3 PQPl.b styles with cotton lned panels. Wt'Me. rude crd pastels. 225 each Of 3 tor 5. 99 lrOerie 28 Save 40L on long gowns Gmat selection of styles In eosy-cae brushed rr-ton/ooot~ . S-l. comp. vet S10 5.99 lrOerie 504 fa I K>\JS maker bras~ lined stytes In Band C cups. Wt'Me <Xty. special 3.99 fro,elie 44 pqarnas and gowns Assortment of warn cotton flannel prtnts jJst In trne for cold ~ caTl>-vet Sl6-$18 10.99 rroerte 504 Men's and BOys' Men's 8otartf •500' uts with vests 1n woas. wool b6ends or woven ~er. . feel $17&Sl95 $109..$129 "*11 c::tJrtro 2l Men's pttnt sporWW1s ~er la'Q or lt'O't den• n llZee S-XL. ~ S20-Sl6 10.99·12.99 rr'19rl1~\l4 Men's assorted pants in cotton d0fim or cotton c:xxOsay. sizes 32-42" waists. were9.99-10.99 7.99 men's doltif"O 174 long sleeve dress shirts In polyester and cotton Stzes 141h-17. 32/~/35. were n99-S16 9.99 men's~6 Men's polyester Hes Choose from cu very lage 98lectton of solds. pmts, patterns. were 7.&>-00 3.99 memdottWoB Boys' sweaters and jeans Aaylic sweaters. polyester and cotton jecns. were S10-S16 6.99-9.99 t:>oys' dott*O 14. 23 SYteatef ri1s and jeans Young men's acrylc shirts. S.Xl. and HD. Lee jeans of cotton or polyester /cotton brushed denm wereS17-S2'2 12.99and 14.99 ml<e's pace 130. m 196. 450 Young men's plaid shirts. jeans Pre-shrunk •cotton flannel shirts. S-XL. Cotton/~ter jeans.~. were$1()..S20 6.99and 12.99 ml<e's pace 8l 130. 133 Young men's western style stWts Pr&st'Y\Jnk cotton gauze In colOfful plc:ids with tong sleeves. Assorted styles and sizes. were Sl4 9.99 ITlke's pace 83 Polyester and cotton shirts in western styles with peort-tone srop buttOI'\\ pods, S.XL were Sl6 9.99 ml<e's pace 83 Bovs' screen print T..shirts From Hong T~ ColOffU screen pr1nt T-shits wtth a variety of scenes. S.Xl and 8-20. ~ vd. S6 ' 3.49 beyS' dottrg 23 Save on boys' }ackets Choose from assorted poputa fobr1cs. colors. sizes 8-20. were$25-$45 17.99-29.99 beyS' dottirQ 14 Housewares 11.pc. Farbet'wafe® cookset Save 354lt. Stoiness steel~ ctoO bottoms. open stod< vet t28.93 79.99 houaewaes 151 Save 4°' on 4-pc. fondue pot Q.dty stai1es.s steel set hos blmer. stand. pot and matching plattef. lded tor ~· reg. Sl2 6. 99 housewa'es '19 15-pc. wood tool set lncUdes wood barel. meat tenderizer. whsk. potato masher. spog-ettt fOOc. sdod tOO< and mae. reg. 1299 6.99 housewaeS 13.5 Save 25!.e Eurekd'J YOCUlm • Upright model teem.es ~wav oa-A~ beater ba. 5-pc. tool set. reg. 99.99 7 4. 99 hOIJlelNaes 73 &.nka9 ESP updght vacuum• Extra Suctton Power. rdJdes edge cleaner. 5-pc. toolsetcrdbeoterba. special 149.99 housewaes 73 &.nlca9 Power Team • Combines the beati"g action ot on upright with suction rx:twer of a c:onster. lnckJdes 9-pc. too ~k. A~b.Jy. special 199.99 housewares 73 • For 0 free oq;1{ a the mcnJoct\.re(s waTCJ')ty, Wl1te Moy ~. P.O. Box 5045. Los Arge6es. CA90065 Budget store Save ~ on ladies' robes worm ArreP tnocetate a)d nylon in sizes 5-M-L 'Wefe 18.99-23.99 14.99-18.99 bud llrgerle 815 -except cemtos. thousord oaks Misses' cardigan swea1ers All oay11c 1n assorted sizes. styles and COiors. . \N0f0 16. 99 11.99 bud sptSWT. 840 -except cemtos. thOusord oc1'ts Misses' assorted blouses in cdol'ful polyester/cotton~. sizes 10-\8. WEW9n99 8.99 bud sptswr 834 -except cemtos. thousord oO<s Men's pajamas in cotton flannel Of cotton broadcloth. Many COiors in sizes 5-M-l-XL reg. 7.99 6A9 bud men·s 806 -except cenitos. thousond oats Men's polyester knit pants 1n assorted solds and fancies. 5election of colors. were 7,99 6. 99 bud men's 814 -except oenitos. thOu:sOnd eeks Men's PVC jackets in leattier-IQok v1ny1 tOI' rugged good looks. Asst. sizes. ooloo. wem12.99 9.99 bud. merrs 817 -exoept oenttos. thousand o0<s Men's pullover sweaters in o1 oavtc. ~ sleeve stytes In m<X'IY calofs crd sizes. wemn99 7.99 bud. men·1 809 -except coottos. thousand oaks AISOr1ed leather handbags rddes artch and shoe.Ader stytes. Save row. were 7.99-'lfJ.99 5.99-19.99 bud access. 671 -except centtos. thousard OCJkj May Co., Costa Mesa -South Coast Plaza-3333 So. Bristol -546-9321 . -- •• Dally 10 • 9:30. Sat. 10 -7, Sun. 11 -6 • AJ2 DAILYPILOT Thu...O.y. Januaty 11, 1979 Advertising Feature South Coast Plaza Shoe Store Springs to By JIM POND W.CI .. t.<li.t Wrttff I nncs Shoos Is ready to spring lnto the new fosttlorus . Ores y, li ghtweight, strappy shoes for women's spring Cashaons are now arriving ut the shoe store at the top of the escalator in the Carousel Court. Southern California has two shoe seasons 1,iccordlng to Manager Ron Curpenter. become more f emlnlne, as opposed to the boots and heavy.soled shoes ol winter. Innes Shoes also stocks men's shoes, but Carpenter says the change in seasons is not as dramatic In men's shoes as in women's. Dressier step-into shoes are available with thick wood bottoms and thin soles. Carpenter said these shoes are not ex· elusively a r ... hion item, but work well With alJ f aahJons. New Styles During the spring, women's shoes Innes Shoes follows regular mall hours. CaJI 7S4·9379 . . Innis s~s m outhCoast Plaza/eaturea early spnng shoes I. Magnin Cuts Prices J\ <'Dtalog v.1th all sale merchnnd1~e 1~ offered eve r y Januar y by I. rtagnin, South Coabt Plaza. Featured th1 b year arc bed and bathroom linens. ''WE'RE KNOWN for our f ash1ons, but .,.. c also have fine lint•n," 'said Manag<.·r Karen Ohnnger Name brands an ·bed linen include· Ca rlin, Avanli, Floppy Bears Warm Heatts At Great Things " 'i1a11 & hettlan boW &oanlthtMkw & germen belwwe I ametlcen c.emlct ' ltfMll bNk•ll & t>raz111an furs ' japanete tcltlOfl & me1dcan pOltffY & afgNf\lttanl pillow• & engllsh ~omet.,, & nofW9Qlan tllvef &etc. & etc. &etc. Wamsutlu and Penc<><'k Alley. 8 a th room linen brands are: Avanh und Patrician and Luxor by Martex. I . MAGNIN "private stock bcau- t y s avers" are marked down 50 per· cent through March. These include s kin balm, organic sham· poo, bath oi l. skin cream and makeup remover. Spring warm weather c l othes al~ are on !>ale. "RED, WJOTE and blu always are im· portant colors for prlng. but this year they are especially s trong.·· she said I. Ma g nin 1 ~ a •·specialty ~to re." with better und dL·· signer clothing. The :,t orL' al~o fcaturl•:, mt·n ·~ clothing.• Store hours arc 10 a .m. to 9:30 p.m. dai- ly, to 6 p.m. Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m . Sunday. '"Floppy bears" from Germany de· light both children and adults at Great Things in South Coast Plaza. All gift items at Great Things io South Coast PJaza are "design-oriented but func· Uonal. '' ··we have inexpensive fine things lo expensive museum pieces. ··we specialize in gifts for people wt\o are hard to buy for." spokeswoman Darlene Capua said. Many items are imported from Japan. Germany. Poland, Israel. Africa and the Philippines. One of the most papular items is a life like "floppy bear" from Germany. '"We're all crazy about our bears. They're alive -they have spirits and we poke holes m the plastic bags they come in so they can breathe. "We have a waiting list every year, and we sell most of them to adults." she said. Other items at Great Things include Paolo Soleri bells, toys from the Museum of Modem Arts in New York and salt s hakers from the Permanent Collection of Modem Art in New York. ··we have African burial statues. and wind chimes made by a Laguna Beach artist." she said Prices range from less than SS for a geodesic dome to S600 rugs. Great Things 1~ on the lower level next to Bullock's . . . . to give with love SOUTH CO~T PLAZA (714) 751..0510 N&XT TO BULLOCK'S ENTRANCE • FIRST L!VEt. .. . ... J ''E ;ve Cut to Fit You and Your Bu.dget" It's storewide and it's stupendousl Markdowns In fNefY department sweaters, ~rkas. stocking caps. SC8IY8S. gloves, wool plaid shirts, warm-ups, ski-jackets, vests, turtlenecks. Markdowns on famous names and very famous names: Camp 7, Skyr, Silton. Winning Ways, White Stag, Pendleton, Grandoe. Woolrlch, Wigwam. Aspen, Powderhorn . . all of the biggest names to wear in sports. Hurry, while fantastic selections last. M1ss1on Valley Center • 349 Fashion Valley South Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol Street Nothing Like It In California . . . 176 stores. including world famous designer stores • Bristol & 9• OiegO Frwy. (405) Cotta Mn. .. , . I Advertising Feature 1'Vldly, Jlftuery 11, 1171 Feminine Shoes ~eign at Cameo Variety !n Cemlnlne aboes j>re· dominates at Cameo Shoes in South Coast Plaza. "We have everytblng you can lm11ine from klda' teMJ shoes to sandals and dr ss 11hoes. "People who shop here range from younf,alers to 87·year-olda. ·We have shoes for hllh fashion, career gtrll, young adults, students and tbe older set. I-ANNUAL SALE ••Oar llMt range from four to 11 ln AAA wtdth to wtde width. "Our customers come from Arizona, New England and Germany," said Chris Bucknam, buyer for the store. Sixty five percent of the cllentele at Cameo are return customers who "don't shop anywhere else," she said. Cameo'• .,claim to fame•• is the un· usual sizes and qualitr. service, she said. Prices at Cameo 'aren't high, but they aren't low," she said. ' Name brands lnclude: Socialites, Cob- bles and Red Cross. 1979 will be a good year for footwear. she said, because women will dress up more.for both leisure and business. This ls because women are dressing with more femininity, she said. The spring line of shoes will be un· veile<l at Cameo by the end of the month. REG. NOW S149 Feminine shoe styles predominate at Cameo Shoes in South Cameo also leatures a line of Tano leather handbags, from clutch bags to "oversized carpet bags." Innes SHOES Coo.st Plaza. · South Coast Plaza recently added these trees to create an outdoors look in the Carousel Court. Shoes Follow • I Fashion Trend "Shoes always go with fashions." Joyce-Selby shoes in South Coast Plaza. for example, features high-heeled shoes to go with current dressy fashions for wopien. "Neutral colors beige, bone and white -MU go well with the red; white and blue colors that always are popular ln spring fashions," said Dan Scurlock, assls· Lant manager. Only Joyce and Selby women's shoes grace the shelves. "If Joyce makes one style, Selby makes another -they don't overlap." 1978 was a ··fantastic" year at Joyce- Selby. and Scurlock ·expects 197~ to be twice as good. .J oycc-Selby is a specialty 9tore hC'c ause customers a re better served that wa y. · "If you spread yourself too thin, you can't please your customers," he said: Most women are brand·conscious. When women ask for other brands than Joyce-Selby, he directs them to the correct store. Some department stores have Joyce· Selby shoes. but few have as wide a selec- tion as the South Coast Plaza store. "We specialize in fitting shoes. and we rEYcJ ll y do care about our customers," he said. 9• ...... U...tted to stocl& -..... SORRY MO IAIMCHICIS! Ladies & Jn. Dept. aasortment of tweatsh1rts style 35421 ......... .S7 100~ ~., pentstlzM 32~. tityte .eo21 ................................... S 11 sweeter aaortment ............................ 6.66 essortmeot of toPS for ladles and Jra. .......... .., •. $6 chlldrens Jog auita. alzes 3-7 .•........•... $1 & SI 0 chlldrena robee. lizes s-M-l. ....•.......•... $6 & $1 footed sleepers. sizes 4-6 . . . . . . . ....•.•......... SI DISCO DRESSES 1/2 OFF REG. PRICES Mens & Boys Dept. boVI sizes 8-18 llannel blend shirts end velour Shirts •................... S4 & SS mens t9n'YNfapa ••••••••... , .•......•....•....... $3 big men Jackets. sizes tx"'• ........... ~&SIS assortment of mena Jeane ........................ $6 mens van c:ort faded CtXduray.Jeans •.....•...... $1 mens wool blend shirts ............................ S9 sweater aesortment for men ..•.••......•. $6 to S I J knit shim for men. sizes 5-M·L ............•....... $4 adults t-ehlrts, some With design• •••.•••••••... l/$9 WE HONOR MOST :'\IAJOR CREDfT C.\RDS South Coast Plaza UpperLevef Carousel Court I• Stool AslOI l11•nt 20°/o Off RecJ. Prices Jewelry simulated turQuolse Jewelry •............. 500/o OFF real fade ,ewelry assortment ........... : .. 500/o OFF abalone Jewelry ........................ 500/o OFF chlldrens boxed Jewelry assortment .............. 77c earring Jewelry boxes ......................... l .99 Jewelry box assortment .. .. . .. .. . .. • .. . .. . . . . 9. 99 Electronics webcor am/fm racho and blk/wht portable television set 115tv521 A (6 only) • . 139. 9 5 yon< am/fm-8-track player model #A5180 ......................... 59.11 Ill genius calculator ........................... S~ 754-9379 Hardware door Jams • • • . . . . . . . . . . • . • . ..........••....... I. 99 water atwtnkers •••••••.•.•.....•....••••. 10% OPf ! water saver showertlead ................ 500/o OFF padco paint kit ................................ 2.50 assortment of door locks •.•.•.•......... 50°/o Off · Assorted Planters 1/2 Off Reci. Price Toy Department target game • • • . • . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . S4 mouse power ~h . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... SI grt explorer • . . • • . • . • . . . . . . . . . . . .............•... S4 hotwheelt roaring rKeWay .......•.............. $ I 0 pre actlOOl11POrts . . . • • • • . . ...................... $2 game p.e g s. •..•.....••................... $I 0 A "wide variety" of sizes, from "nar- rows to wides and everything in between," DISCO SHIRTS are stocked at Joyce.Selby. SportillCJ Goods yellow Jac:tcet .•••••.•..•.•••..•................•. SI table & chair sets ................................ SI Althoui:rh both Joyce and Selby are $7 fo $I 0 ··excellent" shoes, Joyce gained popularity' / in California, and Selby gained fame on the Shoes & ~ccessories East Coast, he said. A n;~;;;~;:u~~imraniiimiiiitl ~ IOCka • .. • · • • .. • • • • .. • • • • • • .. • • .. • • .... • • .. • '.Jl • aMOrtrnent of ladlet shoe• •..••.•.•.•.•••••. $2 & $5 men• QOf'durov tlippeta .•••••••.••••....••.•.•. 3. 99 Mt<>rtment of boot• .................... $13 & SI 4 carryall hanelbeOt .............................. 5.11 teevee mox. adult & children sizes .............. 2.97 felt slippers •...............•..•••....•......... 2.99 Curtains 112 off clte•"-•d pa11 ...... of amt•••• ....... Home Furnishings pe~c:helr ........... , .................... 69.99 • ti.r corner atllld • . • • . .. . . . • .. . .. . .. .. .. . . . . .. S I S .. XL 2&0gotfbells.1 dz. ..................... ., .... 6.tt #3 golf Iron • • .. . . ............................. 2. 99 football teraeva-Sizes M&L .................... 4.ff solid bfaee gun hangers .••• -. •••••••..•.......•. J. ff AMF Mopeds 2 Only $199 Housewares plasttcware assortment •• , , •.••....•....••......... $2 hibachis .............• , ••••.•......••• , ••........ SS fulce extracior. •......•..•.••••.• , •• , •••. , ...•. $2 hbby glasswear asaortment .. .. .............. $3 42 piece dlnnerNere ........... • .•••••••••. I f.tt 3 pc. aauoee>an Mt • . . . . . • • . • . • .•••••••••.•. ~.$2 Personal Care cologne gift sets for men 4 pc. set in aragarance Of rueelan leather • . . . ... 2.50 hair roller assortment ........................ 4/$ t aasortmentolhairoombe ..................... 4/$1 ~ mighty pro 1200 watt dryer ...................... Sf Miscellaneous It linen cltendar towels .. • . .. . . • . . .. . 2 for SI wall calendars .. .. . .. • .. • . • .. .. • . ...... 50°/o ~ #61 tote luggage • .. • • .. • . . . .. . • .. . .. .. .. . • .. . . $6 ftf'l'llly blbleS .......... ' • ' ....................• 1. ,, _ wvtera drink mix. 24 oz. .. .. . .. . • . ............... S I bu11ccendvcorn .............................. soc•. Bottoms Up Bikinis in a BOttle 1 Pound StarlJght Mints Assorted Storage Chests Happy Home Paper :rowels J llUYWITH CONl'IDDIC•I eaTt .. ACTIOll QUAllANtaDI , Al4 DAILY PILOT Thundsv. J.nuart 11. 1179 HAWAII ' Growing Pains Felt • ID Aloha Land HON OLULU f Al"'t lllwall'a Kaual lalano re· cently SOl Ill f11·1t Jtot>U&bl. and some rt•sld oou art t'lamorlnJ tor a a t'on tt btocau • ol httavy trofflc On Muul, 1 dro*tna v.:a h~ld to ttt buy•n ror • t'ondomlnlum. ~fore lhc- Ktart of COf\SlruCOOn, bttau (' more than t,200 appllrant.a it0ught th\.' 148 W\lll ON OAltU. THE main l•land, wbhc blah achool art-Involved In t'laborate nlhl~tlc playoff s<'ht<dult':.. rivaling those or th•· pio h•blonalb. bc.·oust• or u pro hfttrot100 of ~chool On tluwaul bland . .s cit• solatl' vokuruc lund thut u ft•w yew-s ago sold for a <'Ou pit' of lhouund dollar\ JO :.t<'re Ill l(Olog (or $2tl,000 an arre because of lhl' promtw of ~eot!M!nnal energy TheM.• set!mlngly unrelated happenings on the state ., four major lahinds are llnkt.-d a s products of llawa11 ., growth in population and t.•conomy AS THE STATE ap proaches its 20th birthday, governnl811l officials and re sldents are wondering aloud whether all tttls growth hat. Develnp~nl of lslanth Brings Call for Curbs ~n aood and tr al •hould not ~('Ur\>9d The rcsl<k·nt populaOon haa Jum ped from bout 000.000 ut the Ume or at.atehood In ID~f.l to n 1t1mat<'dtlO,OOOtoday Gen~raJ fund rt'Vl'nU('•. lht• mcaaurc> or lh l' a t ult"11 \"<'Onomlc arowth. have tn· <'tt ae!'d from Sl~ 1 million In 1961 to alm68t S700 milllon In 1977 Through .Novl'tnbn, th,•y wC'r.• up anolht•r 17 4 p..r ('t•nt THE GR~ STATE pro duC't haa 1ncreu"ed about 500 fH'r cent t.lnce 1959 to $7 5 bl I hon The populatllon • ancreast• 1!> ~een evcrywhl'rt· Truffle congestion was un heard of on the neighbor is lands 1Mau1. tfawa11 . Kauai, Molokai 1 Just a few years a#lo· Now truffle li1;hl:. a1 e being added. one-way traffic patterns are being dc· vtsed and other steps are be· Ing taken to cope with the m· fl ux of people and their automobllet.. Parking al Honolulu 't. !l(.)ra wtlnat Aln Mounu tihop· 111n.i t'cnter. with Its 7,800 •pur t>I, U64.'Ci to bt no pro. bh·m l•Xt't'Pl during the ('hnstm~ i1hopplng aeason. "NOW I HAVE trouble finding a p lace lo park ulmo11t any lime I eo there ," 1 ya one shopper The number or pubhc high st•hools on Oahu j umped from 16 ten ycurs ago to 21, a nd more are plUMed The most noticeable evidence ot growth Is in hous 1ng Neighborhoods that one time were graced by s ingle· fa mily homt."S have given way tohlgh-nsecondomlniums. FORMER PINEAPPLE and s u~ur cane lands arc s prawlln~ subdivisions . The a mount of land m agricultural use has dropped by 300,000 ac res m 20years. With the increase in hous- ing has come an unbelievable lnrrease In prices. A lhr~· bt>droom home In a m iddle· class Oahu subdivision sells for $90,000, more than double A~WI~ WORKMEN SHOWN AT KAPALUA DEVELOPMENT ON HAWAII'S ISLAND OF MAUI 1,200 People UiMng Up to Purchaae 31 Townhouae Unlta at Thia Site the purchase price e ig ht years aeo. A Maui condominium o wner rttently rejected an offtr of $200,000 for a unit he bou1ht for $50,000 only three years ago. THE AVEllAGE PRICE of slngle ·farnily homes on Oahu wns St40.000 last m onth. says the Ho no lulu Board of Realtors Tt)lrty-one townhou:.e u nit.!. in the K.apalua development o n Ma ul were sold. an a drawing before the swrt or construction. for an average or s.442,000. "Not many or us can afford thot. But these arc a rnuent people who apparently want a second home in Hawaii," says Albert V. Vincent, presi· dent of the Hawaii As!>O<'ia- tion of Realtors. There appears lo be little speculation buying, he says. PART ..>F THE buying craze may be based on "infl a· tlon psychok>gy," says Bank of Ha wall economist Thoma~ Hit ch . "Investors ore deciding to get out of the stock market, out ol the bond m arket. and into real property, where they can beat lnOallon. ·'I Ulch sayi>. Alo ng w1lh new homes there are new hotels. office buildings and Industrial com- plexes, which have boosted the conatruct.lon Industry to a billion-dollar-a -year busl· ness. The building crane Is known as Hawaii's unofficial slate bird. WHILE HOTEL construc- tion continues at a moderate pace, sUgbtly ahead or the demand that keeps most of the existing hotels at 9:J per· cent to 97 of capacity most of the t1m<'. the focw. for loca tions has shifted. Wa ikiki's 602 a cn •s ar<• nt·~rly saturakd, \\ith 23.00(1 hotel rooms, and ex1>ans1o n as concentrated on neighbor· ing is lands. Even Molokaa. a q uie t is land bypass<'d hy most tourists. has a muJor resort hotel. Sinrc the Jt!l airlim·r cul travel lime to the island<; 1n h a lf 15 years ago. th<· number or a nnual vis itors has swelle d tenfold to 3.5 million in 1978. up about JO percent from the prc v1ou~ year . TOURJSM HAS become a Sl.8 billion a yt•ur hu~in(•ss. lops in tht.· ll<.1 w :.Ji1an economy WALL TO WALL PEOPLE ON HONOLULU'S WAIKJKl BEACH Cruah Tuma lnveat~· Eye• to Outer laland• Tourist devt>lopmc nt has been i.o cxlcnsive that the re lb un oft vo1c<'d ronccrn that thl' industry 1s dc•.,troymg what 11 1s St.'lhng llawa11 ·!> natural beauty. Tiwr(' also 1s conN·rri for lhl' "aloha spint." the ut t1ludc of warm und rurang fqcndi.h1 p th<it m:.ikc b Hawaii's pt'Oplc th(• ii;landi.' greatest assl·t Bt•<'aus c· of th1 ~. unrl bcC'uuse tour1i.rn is s ubJet't to the wh1mi. of tht• natio nal economy. state of(1cials hope to dcvclop some e<'onom1c eggs outs1dl' thc tourii.m bask.ct GOV. GEORGE l\rayosh1 b promoting s uch 1ndui>trles as aquarullurt' and m ining of manga~ nodules from the• oceun floor . not only as :.i I t c r n a l 1 ,. t· l' c o n o m 1 l' sourCl'!>. but a lso as In dustri~ that are not likely to add lo the influx of pfflpll• This is part of Ariyoshi ·s _ <'Ontrollcd growth pol1<·y. aimed. an part. al curbing 1mm1grnUon Lui.l YL'ar, ;1 l aw his adrn1n ls trat1on p u s h t• d l h r o u g h t h t• L t' g i ~ I :.1 t u n lo p r c v t• n I nl'W<'Omt•rs from Jumping on· to the \q•lfart• rolls wa., quickly killed by thl-court!> a ':i unconsl1lut1onal. A l<1w passed last year giving local re~1dents priority m public Jobs has yet to Ix• tcs tc.'<1 CONTROLLE D GROWTH means "a preferred future. a chance for our children to re main an lluwaii, to get Jobs an flawah," Ariyoshi explains . ··No growth mt!ans no jobs ··we need lo be a growth s late. but growth al lhc rtJ(hl rate a nd an the ri~ht pla<"t'!>," 1-ic !>ays It Helps Me Manage My Tiine • -. tl!l/!t~ ..... ~ , "" \ ' I'm a working pro - fessional. I also manage a household. The Daily Pilot helps me in both occupations. I depend on the Daily Pilot to find a babysitter, and I save money by clipping coupons and studying the ads. My job requires me to know what 's happening around me, and the Daily Pilot informs me with I.ocal, national and international news. The Daily Pilot is an im- portant part of my life. It's an asset every working woman needs. - I • • • , .. DA.ILY PILOT " To Subscribe Call 642-4321 .. , - ' • • • I I s • - LOCAl Thurldlly, Janueiy 11. 1979 L/SC DAIL y PILOT A J S Book on Gra1nmar Finds Favor • • By JACKI 11\'MAN OI .. Oeltf ~ ~'*" W11Uam Kappel• b h vo a.ram mar ii llke clothel • "Yo" hav l.A!\'ll and ou hav tuxedoa," 1ald Kappel ei print' pal or Corona d 11 Mar Elem ntary cbool. "On la approprlat• for a dlffereat altuaUon " Kappel wu espJalnina that it tan 't nt-t'esaary to pul down dtUd~ '°" lhdr ml k ~uch 13 lUtylt\I "ll'a ml'" IB$lHd of .. It '' I" to te rh them rorn:o' l J.o;nal'-h. , IN8Tl:AD, KAPP .LF. uqi~' lt'1H·h1n.i .:r<tmm r illa 11 tool blU dt'nb t•an u.-,t• Ant.I lo ht>lp thut vttu t' ul<inai. M 'I written a l(rammar book that'• bolnc ua d by a.c.>v"ral acboola in lh Newport MeH Unl(I~ hool Olatnct. Kappele Hid he wrotl' the book. wlUcb la pMnt d by th~ M"hool cl1.ltr1ct and wltlch h l!I 1ubmillln1 lo pro1pecUve comm rdal publi.hen1 ber•wie ho eo\tlda't llnd a romprehtn1lva •l•monttry cb 1 srammar &ext. 1N tltT£AD. 'll A I D. publlah r1 put arammur into a • rl • or book• tor dltt'1rtnt Rr•d<' levt-ta, mwklnt& il difficult for te <'lwr• Lo quickly look up (l()lntic of 1trummur. K ppele. who a~nt 1c.>veral month~ or lr~e lime writing the Boogie on Down the Bay book. aald It lhcludea many extrclad u well 11 f1cb. The book II ~ln1 Uled In the dl1trict'1 middle 1chool1, ln ud ult oducallon , and at M &artner'a l':lementary. where Kuppelc wu principal last year. IT WIU. At.80 form the basis of •n ex~rtmental grammar courae for parent• Kappele plnnft to teach thls s prtna. "Far more lanauage Is le::irned by im1tatioo than by lc<'tur~11 In the classroom," he •aid. potnltn& out the need tor pareol 11 to und ersta nd 1rammar. Kuppele sald h e finds arammar exciting and bas been interested lo lt for many years. 0.11, ... , .. s ... tt ,,_. This adventuresome trio zipped past a D<.11ly Pilot photogr aphe r who was sa1hng on Newport I (arbor waters n:te ntly. The ca meram<1 n noted that the Wl'l ·s uited youngster lx·mg towed by lht:! outboard had turned his Booj:!1c board into an aquuphme. Waler s kiing in' the lower bay is de finitely a no·no. So is Boogie boarding behind a boat, if the Harbor Patrol catches you. Growth Financing Eyed College Seeks $12.5 Million State AUl Saddlebark College will apply for s t ate funds totaling $12.5 million to finance the district's proJected growth program beginning in July 1980. But tru s t ees put • administrators on notice th1 !> -week thal Lh ey want a full discussion of propos ed parking lol and road ~onstruction on the district·:. Mission Viejo campu:.. AND WHILE BOARD m ember:. voted 5 lo O. with Larry Taylor and Norra!>a Brandl abstaininJe. lo approve the apphcat1on for stale atd, they clearly wanted more information o n Saddlcbt.tck -Collef!e circulation plans. Those feeling!:> <·c•ntered on one item. a $1 6 million rcqut!sl for site development at the M l!.Mon V 1 c Jo ca mpu s, in c I u d-1 n g construction of u parking lot t.tnd S7.2 Million an exlension or a loop road around the school. "I would like to have someone investigate the cost of Rett.ang carriers or people movers lo gel people from the lower campus to tht• upper campus," Trustee llurrielt Walther said. SH E CTTED THE availability of parking on the lower campus where many of the college's classes have been moved to new bualdmgs on the upper campus. Board President Larry Taylor agreed. ·'There has never been a real dlsrussion on how we're gonna move dirt IRradinRl and how we 'n • gonna· butld parkmg lots und roads,·· he said "Parking to me •~ not that big a problem and the loop road is not that big or an item." Sewage Plan Plans In Aliso Approved A long-delayl'd plan has been approved to build a $7.2 million sewage treatment plant serving seven south county agencies in the scentc Aliso Canyon m Soulh Laj.!una. The South Coust Region a I Commission th ts week dld tack on one more condition. ALISO WATf;R Managcm<'nt Agency officials UJtrced to lbe s tipulation that they must allow acces11 easements lo foUow or cross all sewer line easements to protect public ac<'ess. Commission s taff memb<'rs who prepared the complicated document package Involving the seven sewag e treatment agencies and varioui regulatory agencies pointed out Aliso Canyon's importance The region Is one of the few natural acce!:>s routes through the mountains lo the coast and affords a variety of recreatlonul uses. THE PICTURESQUE canyon afforOs a habitat for al vanety or endangered l'lpecle& of .wUdWe and native shrubbery. Stl II Qthe.r conslderntions Involve Its archt>o1oglcal and paleontologlcol value and AWMA spokesm n already bave aereed to tunnel under a sacred tndtun bunal ground to preserve It. which must still be approved by the Ca lifornia Coastal Commission. is parl of a r e gional approach to waste treatment m the booming South County. This $10.83 million plant would pump sludge through a 48·1nch ocean outfall pipe. One requirement imposed on the A WMA organization w~.s deslgn of the system so all pi~'s and mains lire out or reach of Aliso Creek floodwaters. South Coast County Water Dliitrlct lines installed too near it In the 1t9st have suffered storm d~mage. Wddlif e Slides Slated in Clemente A color 1tide l)l'eH-ntatlon Ob wildlife ~anctuaries throughout •the United S~aie1 la planl\ed • Tueld•Y In San Clemente at the annual dinner meetlna of the Soutl'I Coast Audubon Sc>clety. The proposed loop road extension would go toward an exit to the west on Marguerite Parkway. The parking lot would be built around the proposed classroom building. slated for state consideration in next year's budget. TRUSTEES AGREED TO allow college officials to apply for five projects wtth the condition officials come back to the board for further di!:lcussions on the parking lot a nd loop roads. Once each projecl 1s approved by the state communaly college chancellor's office. trustees mu s t agat n approve the proposals for submillal to the state Finance Department for <'Onsiderat1on in the governor's 1980-81 bud~et That approval r equest wall come in October The five proJecls approved for submittal are. -$7 M I LLION FOR working draw i ngs and construction on the s econd 20 -acre inc rement of the district's norlh cumpu~ in Irvine. -$750,000 for equipment In the new classroom building on the Mission Viejo campus. -Sl.6 for site development on the Saddleback Ca mpus. including the controvers ial parking lol and loop road extension. -$2.7 MILLION FOR THE purchase of the finul three 20-acre parcels at the Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center Drive north campus site. -$l.5 million for site development· a t lhe north campus's second 20 acres . For his ~xt. he researched both old and oow grammar books. "YOU MA\' NOT believe tbls. but arammar la cont.rovenlal." he said, with the controversy centering on tradlllonal grammar versus the spoken language. Hla book tends toward the traditional, Kappele said. In fact. he enco urage• teachers to have students use their knowledge of grammar to look ror errors in newspapers and on television. "Kids love to find adults ma~lng mistakes, .. Kappele said. ON A MORE SERIOUS note. he added, "I thjnk that the most important lhJne for any adult next to technJcal competence is use of the lanfuage. 'Tm convaoced that or two engtneers of equal competence in eneineering applying for the same job • the job will go to .be one wlth the better language raclllty,'' Kappele said. "I think we owe lt to kids to make sure that they have that." But he stressed again that It's important in correcting children's grammar not to make them reel correct Englis h is stifling them. ''WE'RE NOT TRYING to tell you you're a nerd if you sa y 'ain 't ' when you're running and playing soccer, .. Kappele said.· 0.llY ~I ... 'Ult "'4llO GRAMMAR 'EXCITING' Wiiiiam Kappele Rain Delays Radio College Transmitter Held Up H eavy rains have caused delays or up to two weeks in the transition of Saddleback College's lO·walt FM radio slal1on lo Orange County's bigges t non .commercial a1 rwave oulle l . the' s tation manager said. Initia lly scheduled for-a quantum leap to a 3,000-watt broadcasting capacity Feb. 2, station officials are estimating the increased capability won't be operating until the third or fourth week of February. THE D ELAY IS in construclion of a transmitte r s ite on O'Neill Ranch property south of the college. ·'The access road to lhe site Is a dirt road and it ·s gollen pretty muddy up there." Ball Weisgerber s aid. "Our crews will be out there checking the road to see if we can get back out there." Once the transmitter is constru cted and be~in s transmitllng the KSBR s ignal CSS.5 on the FM dial l, Weisgerb· e r estimates almost 500,000 residents north to Costa Mesa and Santa Ana and south to Sun Clemente will be able to hear broadcasts. THE STATION ALSO will increase Its hours of operation to 6 a . m . until m idn ight. On Fridays and Saturdays. KSBR will remain on the air an extra hour. until 1 a .m . And the Increased output will bring a change in programming. "We'll be going to a softer format. away from the rock and roll we've been playing up to now," Weisgerber s aid. "Our new format will feature the top 100 albums during the day and jazz al rught. .. THE S I GNAL WILL be broadcast an stereo. utilizing the latest equipment. Weisgerber said. Opened in 1975 primarily a!'.> a vocational education Looi for the college 's communi c ations program. lhe station will still feature student involvement. but official s have hired a professional news director. "We want to J:et into mor<> public affairs s hows and we want to expand our local news covera~e." Weisgerber said He mdicatcd surveys of some 2.000 Soulh Or<J n~e County lisleners showed they wanted KSBR to provide more coverage or local news, anc luding city Hearing Set On City Funds A public h earing on how $650,000 in federal rt'venue sbar· Ing funds should be spent In Newport Beach will be held Jan. 26 in City Council chambers. The hearing as scheduled for 2·30 p.m. Both written and oral rommenlJI will be acrepted. The sum includes $400,000 in re· venue s hanng for the 1979·80 fis- cal year and an expected car- ryover of$250,000 from the 1978·79 fiscal year. council and s chool board meetings. WEISGERBER SAID THE station plans to broadca st mdny public meetin"'s and will be covering local news and public affair s events in the early evening. before the jazz show begins. Much or the cost associated with increasing the broudcast power is being borne by a $107 ,000 HEW grant to the college. Saddle back trus tees have provided matrhing funds for that grant and the O'Neill Ranch has donaled the land for the Lransmitter site on a lease basis. The San Diego Ga !> and Electric Company as prov1dtng Newport-State power to the transmitter site mostly at Lhc1r cost. as a public service. Wets gerber said. AND. H E I S HOPEFUL s upport from community members will come once the slallon be~ins broadcaslin"' "We'll be askmg local catazcns to assist us," Weisgerber said. "We 'll be puttin~ out a monthly program guidt• at the beginning for free. "Once we get established. we'll be asking those who want to c onlinue rere iving it to subscribe to the station." Weis gerbe r s aid several groups and companies in the area have exprc:.sed an intere.t an underwriting speciul e vent!> on the station. Doivnzoning Plan Causing Dispute Newport Beach City Council members sald that they want downzoning procedures t.o be~in for a parcel or land on Cdasl Highway west of Superior Avenue. despite strong objections from tht· landowner the State Department of Transportation. CouocU members said they want the stale Department of Park~ and Recreation to acquire the land tor open space use, now that state law enab les its purchase at its original price. Recall Topic Of Discussion In Clemente Legal, philos ophi ca l . psyrhological and financ1 J I aspl'cts of recall t•lcct1on will be di scus s ed ton•Rht in San Clemente. where three memb<.'r)> of the City Council face a recall election Jan. 23. Tomght's non·Qa rtis an d1s- c uss1on of the rN'all procc'~ will be sponsored by the Ca1>1slrano Bay Area League of Women Voters The league meehnf! as scheduled to began at 7 15 p m. in the auditortum of the San Diego Gas and Electric Com· pany offices. 101 W. El Portal. Joan Riddle or Garden Grovl', editor of the Cahfornaa League of Women Voters· monlhly magazine, "The Voter,'' wlll dis- cuss recent changes in recall leg1slat1on. said Betty Sherman. publtclty chairman for the local League chapter. Mrs. Sherman said Danny Freldenrlch or the Callfornaa Voters' Group will d1 scu:.:. psychological a nd phi1osoph1ral Implications of recall ln add1· lion. League members will pre· sent Information on what the San Clemente rt-call wall cost Cl· ty taxpayers, she said. Additional information on tonight's meeting is available by calling Mrs Sherman , 492-6528, or Jean Sidell . 493·6730. COUNTY MEMBERS directed lhe city Planning Comm1ss1on to 1nit1ate downzoning to open space despite a strong letter from CalTrans protesting sueh uction as Inverse condemnation. However. counc il members :.aid they a rt> urg1n,I! local ll'g1slat.ors to help get thl• parcl'I on a pnority pur.:hasc h~t being compiled by the st utc parh dl' parlmenl, :.ind that thc•rcfore they don't bt.•h eve tht•y an• depra ving the land of econom1<· value . C'OUNCILMEMBERS a l ~o said the downzonmJ( is cons1s lent with counc il acllon last month, changing the des ignation of I he CalTrans Wl''t pan·el from res1dentaal lo o pen span • on the city's general plan Zoning must be rnmp~ttihlt• with genl•ral plan dt's1gn;.111on. so council m l•mb<'rs :.:ud they hav<.' to changt> the zoninJt Cur. r e n I I v . t h <' I a n d 1 s 1 n a n Unclass1f1ed Zone and would have lo be zont'd before any dl· velopment could take plurt!. The land originally was a<· quired by the slate for lh<.· now defunct Coui,I Frl'l'w<iy. Youths Gain Rec Honors In Newport ~wport Beac h youn~8ler!. who have shown oulslunding m- t ere s t . ubal1ly and sportsmanship in recent city recreation programs were Uonored thls wee k by the city l>urks, Beaches and Re<:rea- tlon Commission. Award1' In vollt>yhall und volleylennis W('rc prtisenled to Carri Arnold , Cana Giangregorio, Wendy Heht.'. Kathryn Kolstad, Christine Pinkert® and Patricia Ronald. Honorees ln nag bootball were Reed 8earbower, Steve Bregman. David Cunnlnaham, Cbrla Donohue, Mike F'crguson, Chrl1 Frucndt, Bobby Gallivan. Erle Hoag, Drud Kamph, Wadt• Kerley. Sltv hdlaan, Stacy Mu.1ama. Mo~her, Davld Rooney, Oean Ruort. Matt Turnbull and Ed Wagner. Currently , he t'ombln~d dllllrlcls · territory generates about l.9 m illion aollon1 or- aewage pu day and muc h etnuent la reclaimed and hauled inland. TH TREATMENT PLANT, Tfte .Ude 1how"'llJ lollow 'ftln- nttr and lnatallat.ioP of olllcera, uld Art Palmer. president.~ dinner meetln1 ls scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m . In th Ole Hanten room at the San Clemente Community Center, 100 Calle vllle. This · couplo and their pooch Jot some bad news recently from Newport Beach animal control officer in truck: Dogs aren•t permitted on the city's beaches during the day, even on a leash. Durlna winter months, leashed canines can ~ e corted on the sands between 5 p.m. and 9 a .m ., but they're strlctly verboten dur· lng the day and at any time between June 15 a nd Sept. 15. Swlm teem members recelv-ana awards were Kim Akin, Vldcy MacKenzie, Amy Nov ky, Min- dy Novuky, Ricky Scotl and OcoralnaSmllh. I (J ..... .............. i( • 19. '- •• - - A,. DAIL y PILOT Crftlr AP ...... Nelson Hm•kt'f~ll r s a y s P r t' a t d e n t Ca rte r ·~ movl• lo rc:ilorl' d1plomat1c n •lut1oru, with Chino wa11 "n ghl" but lhut it was "rushed und poorly handled." H~ said il foiled lo µro tc<'l the interest~ of Taiwan. Sherifrs Daughter Nmned . SELMER, Tenn. (AP> The daughter o ( the late Sheriff Buford Pusser of "Walking Tall" movie fame has begun taking control of her father's estate. Dwana Pui.i;er Alex ander celebrated he r 18th birthday by signing documents ac<'cpllng responsibility for the estate which has been involved an legal dis- putes smre Pusser'i. de· ath In an automobile ac- cident m 1974 CllAN{'f:Ll.OR Dewey Whittenton re• le ased to Mrs . l\lex- ander about $75,000, but rC'taml'd control of ahout $140,000 wh1c:h m:J y lw u:-.ed lo puy taxes on the cstalC' Pu i.s~r was m ade fa mous by lhl:' 1973 mov 1c ··walking Tall'' which portrayed his exploits as the Mc Nairy County sheriff durin,;i the 1960s. Two seqU<.'ls have since been filmed , a nd his estate was primarily made up of r oyalties from the films . MRS. ALEXANDER'S g r a ndmothe r . He len Pusser . 70, originally was named ~uard1an of the estate wht>n her son died . The COIJrl rchcvell her of the ~uard1ansh1 r> two years ago when 11 was revealt'<i i.hc i.penl a lmos t $1 50,000 in a fruitless inves tigation into PW>Ser's death Afte r Pusser's death, his daughter lived with her grandmother until getting marned. The court later or- d e r ed th e A l'tna lns uram·e ·Co , which bonded Mrs Pus~c·r-, to repay lhe money into the est at.c MagaziJW Omits Big PSA.Story SAN DIEGO IAP> - Poclfic Southwes t Airlines d evot ed 16 pages of Its January edi- tion of "California Magazine" to what are described as lhe mujor news stones or 1978 But on(' story It left out was the collision of a PSA jet und a s m all plune not far fro m PSA 's San Diego head quarters Sept. 25, killing 144 people. An explanation was of- le'°ed by editor John .Johns, an otriclttl or East West Network Inc .. whi c h publi s h es magazines for several alrllnH. "We are In lhl8 bulll· nes1 and have stayed ln lt for 10 yea~ betJtUI ,. • w.e are seMillve to the feelings of our cllcntR, the alrllnea." Johft said In Lo11 Angcll-'11. Thuraday. J1ou1ry t t , I 79 CALIFORNIA I NATION Bill Would Permit Medleal 'Pot' Use ... &ft'.'"-•T.,: SACRAMENTO fA f>) Docton In nncer. Johruion Hid he mu.l vomit 1'HE BILL BY Sen. Robert 0 1 WANT TO •treu thJa In no way :'·: ~.v~e:,$..::·: Cattrorruacould 1>••·scrlt>t'! m•rtjuono for five or !!I" h<:>urA 1i1t u tlmt>. ond Pre:.ley , O·Rlvcralde, and Al· la the forerunner of an attempt to .:: .. ·: IS .'!'(H,11'!:'.;··.:· for m~dlc11l 01lment• lncludin& the munjuan lt'avr• hltO almo11l n•mblyman n l'ICh I Rotenlhal, D· le1aUze marijuana. I wouldn'l !iup-. ·. · 8t ;~·t~r;-r. · ranc rand 11l•ucom11 undl'r a bill an without "any problem," 1..011 Ange~. would create a state port that," Preeley 1aid. :. 'A ~:1 .r:;!1 10 . .': troducl'd "TO me, tho luuc II a morul 01\C' Is comm188ton ror u two.year pilot ... t! A·· n~ ,....;.,, Ap~ar1na w1tb th• lwo I 1111lutora It belt r tor me to aufft-r or u eo u ht pt•rlod The commission would huv~ Four other states. Florida, ·'(:f~r..:· . ~ . ..,,.~_. prop<Htlf\I Lhcl m otu,. Tu day was tlu marijuun , .. JohMOn u kt.>d rt• to a1lprove each •peclflc cue or Louisiana, New Mexico and llllnols, \d _,;c,. ~~ '-··= l•aul Johnson , " 23 Yt! 'old ~rter1. 1ay1ng he wa8 uncomforto mnr ijuanaw;c. hoe similar laws. and lhoee stale!J · VJ&'.t.~·.·~'"4~: fUur ldco m•n who hua llodakins hie wllh hovm.i lo do aoylhlne 11 have trouble gettlna marijuana from . " . ~ · :'.':~·UQ ·~· ... •::. · :: dlau t• und "•>'• he u tll m1tr1,Ju1rn lt!I 1 Presley, a former deputy 11herlff in federal authorities, Rosenthal aaJd .. · '.ij '"'" ·,;.,,. · ~ 1U t101ly becall.!~ or hl1 lllne 11 Rive rside. said it was Johnson who For that reuon, the bill will allow -.".Art'6,.0 ""t"'" ,: Johr\IOl'l 1oy11 h can c:omt>ot ha" helped convince him or the need to the atat.e t.o obtain the marijuana , ...... ., u~· · n · .~: BF.C'Al'SE OF ('llEMOTllEllAPV nou•t•u with one or two nuarijuana leealizc marijuana UJe tor medical from atale or federal narcotics :·::.._::-,~~nl K'f'. :. treot mt nls (Ot thf' dlal'lu1t•, a form ul d1oretw. · trt!atm('nt. authorities. ·· • !> 29 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 7 IN ORANGE COUNTY Costa Mesa -(714 > 646-0534 370 E. 17th Street Next to Ralphs El Toro -(714 > 770-3079 24346 Rockfield Boulevard Next to Vons on El Toro Blvd. Huntington Beach -(714 > 963-5694 10044 Adams Avenue · In the Albertson's Center At Brookhurst Garden Grove -(714) 638-1041 9747 Chapman Avenue In front of JC Penney's In the Garden Grove Mall La Habra -(213) 694-3765 1435 W. Whittier Boulevard In the Albertsons-Longs Center Tustin -(714 > 838-8970 522 E. First Street In Larwin Square Westminster -(7 14 ) 894-0519 15252 Goldenwest Street Near Albertson 's Coming Soon To: La Mirada: La Mirada Boulevard In the Gemco Center On Imperial Highway Costa Mesa: Bristol Street At Sunflower 3 Convenient locations to serv e you Huntington Beach Store 10044 Adams Avenue at Brookhurst next to Albertsons Market• 963-5694 .. ____ t; ADAMS IX Vl i~o~ ~ .,_ 8 IX IX ~ ATLANTA al ..J Westminster Store on Goldenwest between Bolsa and E dinger• (714) 894-0519 (next to Albertsons Market) -oz: • BOLSA ... Costa Mesa Sto~e 370 E. 17th Street • 646-053A <next to Ralphs Market) ci w . w > > w > ..J < > a> W < RALPHS < ti ~ ~ MARK ET ~ ~ ~ <( 11LJ ~ ~.__o ____ ~.._ ____ ..,......,._ __ ...,._ ~ . ~ e. 11 h Cl) To celebrate our 9th anniversary, Great Earth Vitamin stores are offering tremendous savings on these 9 popular vitamins. 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Offer ls good from January 11. 1979 through January 21 . 1979. II D.P-. ~ lat participating store~onlyl II II II II •••••••••• N•••••••••• -... ... .. t . . " r . ,· . I , 1 . ·. INSIDE: •Stocks •Business s -, 1P;•_. ..... ·M·o•v•1 •• s ... ·T.•.'•.v.1s.10~" ................... .;.;~;;;.~~ ...... .;;~'~ ..... .:;:"~.-.0~ts t·~· T'h&ndly.'*'*Y 11, 1179 DAILY PtLOT r-• ., ( '. FOf!e-to•f aee Struggle i l I . . Ocean View's Brad Brower <4 1 l finds himself sandwiched between two Estancia players. Jeff Gasper Cleft > and Tony . Camp 130 ), as he struggles for a rebound. Estancia knocked off the formidable Scahawks. 69-61. For story, see page B2. .·Murphy Fast Out of Box Gets Fresh Start Matured Anderson Stars for: SCC By ERNIE CASTllJA) Of tM OMIY P'li.t Si.tff For an athlete whose career seemed to be washed up before It even got started. Paul Anderson Is doing quite well these days. : So well. in fact. that in just his second season with the Southern California College basketbalJ team, the 6·3 guard Is averaging 25 points a game. shooting 59 percent from the field. 81 percent from the free throw line and is acknowledged by his coach as the team's hardest worker. CON IDERING THE NEGATIVE LABELS that have been placed on Anderson during his rocky past. the fact that he's even playing for a college is somewhat of a shock. Not that anybOdy ever doubted Anderson's ability to shoot a basketball. It's just that many-including An· derson himself-<1uestloned whether he had the discipline. dedication and desire to become a complete player. As he puts it: "I guess you could say I had an attitude problem." Part of the problem stemmed from Anderson's low key approach to the gdme. He was never the rah·rah type, nor did he hide the fact that he disliked practices and pre- f erred shooting lo working on fundamentals. Not surpris- ingly. then. he gave coaches the impression that he either wasn't trying or he dldn 't care. "I R EALLY CARED," HE INSISTS. ~"I just didn't show it on the outside. People saw me differently than I saw myself. I'm not a very emotional guy but I would go out and give 110 percent in a game. Practices, though, were a different story " Thus. despite the potenUal Anderson showed while averaging 14 poinL"i and earning All·South Coast League honors for Corona del Mar High in 1975, he went nowhere when he graduated. lie was recruited by Orange Coast College but didn't play in two years there because of con- flicts with the coaching staff. Basketball games were reduced lo the one-on-one and p1ck ·UP vanety. His future as a player seemed doomed because of a lack of confidence. communication and maturity He was a classic case of burn-out. the player with potential going to waste. "I DIDN'T THINK I WAS GETrlNG a fair shake," Anderson says of his stint at OCC. "The minute I came out. I was the last man on the squad so I said 'Why fight it?• The same thing happened the next year." Naturally. Anderson became frustrated and only his love for the game kept him from hanging it up. "I played in a lot of rec leagues, church leagues, open gyms and anything I could get into." he says. "It didn't help break my bad habits but in a basketball sense. il was good. I was always the run-and·gun type of player I think that's what I do best. "PEOPLE WER E TELLING ME I could play basket- ball on the coll ege level but I wasn't so sure. I didn't know where to go. I had no Idea what was going on." • Wody Shares Lead in Hope Golf Clmsic Oddly enough, It was a chance to play in a spring league at SCC that gave Anderson one rinal s hot at coll ege competition and a chance to regain some Jost pride. He played well enough to earn a scholarship and a new lease on basketball. "The coaches here give you a chance," he s ays. "They pick up guys who they think can play basketball. not Just 8,UYS with good press clippings and credentials. J seem to ril right in here because it's pretty loose. They're not strict I ( ' PAbM SPRINGS IAP l -Ex-f uberant Bob Murphy had some . very positive predictions. ..This ~is tconna be a good year. Maybe , a great year. Maybe one of my , best." • But Charles t:oody, a 41-year- old veteran who shared the first-~ round lead with Murphy in the Bob I lope Desert Golf Classic 'Wednesday, declined any pre-! diction at all. 1 "NOBODY," SAID COODY, ... s a ny more s urprised than I am to see me shoot a 65. It was 'Just one or those days when everything went right. I have no false ilhi.5ions, what with the lack of practice I've had, about keeping this going . .. That's not to say I expect to play poorly But 1t won •t be a t I shattering experience If I do." They matched seven-under· par efforts -Coody at La Quln- La and Murphy at Indian Wells - In the opening round of the open· Ing tournament of the PGA Tour schedule, a 10-month grind that offers.some $13 million in total prices. JOHN MAHAFF E Y , the comeback kid who last year won the PGA and World Cup lilies, was one sho\.offthe pace with a 66. And he. too. was surprised . .. I didn't expect to come out of the box with that kind or a number," Mahaffey said after his round at Tamarisk in bright, sunny 70.degree desert weather. Art Wall . the SS-year-old Na- tional Senions Champion a nd 1959 Masters wi nner, was next in this five-day, 90-hole grind with a 67 at Indian Wells. The group at 68 included Billy Casper . Rod Funselh. Randy Erskine and J .C. Snead. Snead was at La Quinta, the others al Tamarisk. UN DER THE U NIQ UE formal for this tournament. all pros play one round at each of four desert courses, each day with a different three.man amateur team, before the final round at Indian Wells Sunday. Leonard Thompson. Tom Purtzer and Wally Armstrong had 69s, the best scores at Bermuda Dunes. where Jack Nicklaus shot a 71. See ANDERSON, Page BZ sec SCORING LEADER Paul Anderson Black Hawks Get the Edge, On First Goal C HI CAGO IA P l -The Chicago Black Hawks have come up with a nearly fool-proof method for their fans to beat the traffic home from the game. See who scor es first, then leave. assured that the team whic h Jumps out on top is vi rtually certain to win or lie A Giant Decision? Carew to Choose by Sunday By DAVE CUNNINGHAM 0t Ille 0.lly Pilel S~ll Sevcn·time American League batting champion Rod Carew seems certain he won 't be playing for the Minnesota Twins again next season, and says he will decide by Sunday whether he will be wearing a San Francisco Giants or Cahforn1a Angels uniform in 1979. ' "Right now. 1t·s a tossup between the Angels and Giants. · Carew said in a press conference in San Francisco Wednesday. THE GIANTS ARE THE ONLY club which has been given permission by Twins owner Calvin Gnffith lo talk with Carew, and the 33-year-old hilting star has been in San f',r anc1sco since Mon · day. _. ..... This Time Lake.rs Nicklaus, making his first ap- pea ranee in this tournament since una. admitted he really doesn't .. want to play golf nght now. but I committed to play !>ome lime ago." The winner of a record 15 major professional titles said he plans to trim back his schedule even more this season and concentrate on the Big Four tltles -the Masters, PGA . U.S. and British Opens . ff the 8.221 diehards who braved below-zero temperatures to watch the Smythe Division lea ders pounce on the Los Angeles Kings 13·01 Wednesday night had het'dPd that advice. they might have been home before the end of the first period. .. There·s a pretty good chance I'll be in a Giants uniform next season." Carew said Wednesday. "By Sunday I should ht.• able to tell them yes or no. whether I'll be coming out here ... · W,in in the Clutch DEFENDING CHAMPION Bill Rogers had a 70 at Bermuda Dunes. playing with the top celebrity amateur group that in· e luded host Bob Hope and former President Gerald Ford. Actor Clint Eastwood a lso was scheduled to play in the same .zrou~. "but he didn't show uo and that really disappointed my wife," Ro(erssaid. Ted Sulley scored his 13th goal of the season with the Na- tional Hockey League game just 2:26 old. Ivan Boldirev added No. 18 et 4:44 and Doug Wilson lit the final red lamp or the eve- ning at 13:28 of the opening session with hls third goal. ff Carew says no. that would leave only the Ange ls. And Immediately after hcartng of Carew's comments at the press conference, Angels General Manager Buzzle Bavasi phoned Griffith In Minnesota. r BOSTON IAPl After listen· lng l o playe r -coach Dave Cowens preach hard-nosed de- fense for two days in practice, the Boston Celtics had the message. For three periods, they played the way the man wanted against the Los Angeles Lakers Wednes- d ay night, leading 69-66 while holdlngl<areem Abdul-Jabbar to I Just 12 poinl.'I. UNFORTUNATELY for the Celtics , there are four 12-mlnute periods in the National Basket- ball Association. And the fourth quarter proved decisive as Ab- dul-Jabbar came alive •nd the Lakers handed Bost.on Its fifth· consecutive defeat by acortna 12 points ln a row down the stretch for a 99-89 victory. ·'The defense got aagreulve -d'""~ stretch and that was the dltlerence," Los An1elei Coach Jerry West said after the Lakers' fifth victory ln the tut eeven camet. * * * '"*I"' .. " . • " i. 1Q..llOIT t7 H 1i 1 ... 2 t I 2 11 I H 1 1 .... a H • I H f 1 .... .O•IA .. ·'Basically,'' said Boston power forward Marvin Barnes, "We went with five men In the second half. We were runnlng, they were subbing, and Jabbar was walking. I think we just ran out of gas down the stretch." ABDUL -JABBAR, who finished with 20 points and 12 re- bounds. tied the score ff9-89 with 3: ll remainlng. Then he took command on defense and the Lakers pulled away on baskets by Don Ford, Lou Hudson. two by Jamaal Wilkes and another by Hudson. "We played well, t>ut bit some bad minutes down the stretch," Cowens said. The former president, Rogers said. was even rar on his own ball for the fina nine with two holes Lo go, but finished double bogey-double bogey. including a four-putt on the rlnal hole. "He probably shbt 83 or 84 on hJs own ball," Rogers said. Coody one-putted 10 times - See HOPE, Page B4 ~ ·'That was one of our better periods all year," saJd Chicago Coac h Bob Pulford . "We rorechecked them very well. "When you score the first goal, usually your team's pre· pared. That's why you get the first goal," he added. "There's a drastic dJfference between the nuaiber or gomes you win when you score the first goal and when you don't . At home. the Black Hawks are 10·1·0 when they score first and 0-5·6 when the other team draws See KINGS. Page BZ eAVASI "COMMENTS LIKE THAT could lead to a tampering chaJge. so I just called to assure Mr. Griffith that we haven't had any talks at all with Carew ... Bavasl told the Daily Pilot. ''I wouldn't know Rod Carew IC he walked in this room right now." The Angels have. however. sent a list of players they would be willing to trade If Carew were the bait. And Carew has staled publicly that the Angels are his No. 1 choice. "ll would be nice to stay In the American League." Carew said Wednesday. "But l'\'e talked to some player!> who've told me you really haven't played baseball until you've been in the National League." CAREW SAYS THAT 1118 other motivations in pic'11ng a team are location l"I want to play in Cahfornla" 1 and plt}'ing with a cbampk>nship-callbcr team t ·•Money's not the important thing to me . I've been un·. SeeGIANT,PageB4 UCI Catches· 49ers. on the ·Rebound f • • r , ' ... By ERNIE CAIJTIUO ofiit D.lllY ftltlt ••" LONG BEACH-Uke walklnt into the cave of a h~ngry and ancry bear, UC Irvtne'1 buketball learn has drawn the dublous tuk of openlnl Paclflc Coast Athletic Assn. b¥ketball play asolNt • IAnC Beach Sta~nere lonJ1l1t. WHEREAS UCI COACH nm T\ft ml1ht have once niured hla team could catch the naUonall)'·ranked .eera nap· PlDI and lookini ahead,, the Anteaters inltead wtll catch Lona Beacb Statt try. tni to rebound from tbne ttra..,,._ rHd loa1ea t.oatOt '8:05> at the Loni Beaeb Arena Wbll'e tbe4'1f9 vt UM. JU1t cm""*•·~ Bucb &Ut. w•• unbeaten (s.-0) and ranked lAth ln tho nation. Then came Friday's 79·'18 lots to Duke, runntrup in last year'• NCAA champlonahlp and the team many figure to be the beat In the nation. Down after blowinc a 14-polnt l ad In tbe second hair. the 49ert were humlllat ... by North Carolina St.ate. 100-73. tht followin& nl•ht and then stunned tfondny by Loyola <Chle110 >. ts.18, a team lt had beaten earlier In tf\e aeaaon. "We're back homo and th1t'• t.be boat thtn1 that happened on the trip." 1ay1 Coach Tex Wlnter. who aonetbeMu has 1ulded lhl-.S to the MeOnd btltatatt In 1cbool bll&ory. ''WE'D.NOi' GOING tu,,.mc,'' be ' ·added. "That would be ridiculous after losing on the road to the caliber or teama we played. We put all OW' eggs lnt.o one basket, frankly, and we 1eared everything for the Duke came. We made a good effort and should have beaten them but th n we didn't lorcet about ll and prepare for the next two came•. •·But we're \n 1ood #plrtl1t now ind we're certainly glad to be back home ·• T he 49ttl seem lo have recovered quite .well. Alter Clvlnl his leam the af- ternoon oll Tuesday. Winter put hll club tbrouah a late nl1bt workout that he called "our belt of tbe aeuoa. •• 11 there wa1 any doubt u..y were dlacouraaed. or ntn look.Ina put UCI towards Saturday'• confrontation with Cal State Fullerton, Winter erased them. "WE'RE GOING TO BE all right,'' he said Wednesday. "I don't think wc'U have a letdown. despite the psych Joti. lrom UC Irvine to the contra!'¥. They'v• gol the type of club that could beataua They're 1otng to. ytay a lot. dllferen type or aame theft they >Would •P any body elJe." .. Tift admit.a the Anteaten need 1 near• perfect perfonnance Jutt to stay clos4 lo the PCM pre·aeason favorttes. "W4 havo to mlnlmlze the number of euj baakell they 1et. the number of beak they 1core ln clolo ran1e. oft the I 8M UCI, l'•I• as: • f ;. .. . .. . 81 DAILY PILOT Thut'lday,January 11 , 107' A Capaule Report From the World of Sport• Hollywood H nderson Does His Thing for Media From AP Ollpatdtta DALLAS Hollywood Hendt-r80n "''" lov ln1 ll lt WU the fant day Of Supt>r Bowl XJ11 prar· lice and lho br b one blmsell wtt~ the t't>nltr tlf att~ntlon t the Dallas Cowboy practice lleld l.taihta allntf'd orr his num row. aold n< .. '('kl•~ as televu.lon cam•ras and pholOflrnl)hf'rs crowded round "'Look m n clntt. llollv-.iiud." a ohotoeraoher n·· QUC ted HoUy"'ood lookt'd menacing As his teammates qldt>lly dressed around him. llendenon. the Cowboy stron&bldc llnebaclter. held rourt. The qU<'titaon." came ropld fire. "Would Pittsburgh choke like Los Anaelea?" "Does Pittsburgh bave class?'' Thomas Henderson, never the diplomat, said "The Steelers are In· Umldatora. They are leadln& the league ..... .,..so. ln penaJUes. We bave to take the same approach they dU when we played them ln Super Bowl X. We have to g1ve them a dose or their own medicine. "I will be a renegade in the Aame. l'm not leaving the field. I'm the ouUaw. I'm on every team you can think of. I wish l could play offense. They are going to look on that field and see No. 56. They are going lo have to think No. 56." Then he added, glancing down at his shirt "JC you ain't for Dallas you a in't ror B-L·E·E·P" T-Shlrt. and said .. They know how tough I am." Nearby teammates never looked up. .------'1-ie ol dae Da11----- 0lympic silver medalist James Botta, a triple jump specialist who works as a security guard lo meet expenses: "I chased one thief for eight blocks and through three homes. That's an outdoor record." ~,..,Flu,.,.,, Rock• Colorado Anders Hedberg capped a five-minute, four· ~ goal fl urry by New York In the second period as ' the Rangers overcame a 3-0 deficit to whip the Colorado Rockies, 5-3 ... Bobby Smith's goal at 15:55 of the second period gave the Minnesota North Stars a 2·2 tie with Toronto and extended to seven games the Maple Leafs' winless streak ... Nick Ubett scored two goals and Paol Wooda one during a 93-second span late in the third period to give the Detroit Red Wings a 5-5 tie against the New York Islanders ... Peter Lee scored two goals to le~d Pittsburgh lo a 3·2 victory over Montreal . . . Right wing Don Murdoch of the New York Rangers said he was itlad lo be back on the ice as he played his first game of the season aft.er a 40-game suspension stemming from a drug possession charge. Sonics Keep Pace, Belt l1tdla1ta Juk Sikma scored 19 points a nd Gus m Williams added 16 a s the Seattle Supt?rSonlcs got on track late in the first period and pulled away for a 118-98 victory over the Indiana Pacers . . . Two free throws by Atlanta's Steve Hawes with two seconds left in the second overtime gave the Hawks a wild 117-113 vie· Lory over the Milwa ukee Bucks . . . Jollas Erving scored 28 points, 17 in the third quarter, as the Philadelphla 76ers :-.napped a two.game losing streak by defeating New Orleans, 123-t 12 . . Artis Gilmore scored 29 points a nd John Mengelt and rookie Reggie Theus combined for 50 more lo lead the Chicago Bulls lo a 120·116 victory over New Jersey ... JobJldY Most, the radio play-by-pla}'._ hroadcaster for the Boston Celtics for 22 years, lost lifs voice and had to turn over the microphone in the second half of the game with the Lakers. Most was replaced by Jimmy Myers, a s portscaster who bad been watching the gamf' from the stands ... Pro guard Pete Maravlcb says the New Orleans J azz has adopted a style of pl ay unsuited to his abilities and he's sure the team wants to trade him. Oldo State to Pick Coeu!h Soon Ohio State. in a bid lo retain some of the state 's blue chip recruitang prospects, may ¢•] name its new football coach within the next 48 ~ " hours ... The Ohio Senate bas officially re· cogmzed former football coach Woody Hayes "for his many years of dedicated service to tbe Ohio Stale University" ... All-American nmning back BUJy Sims or Okla homa acceyted the Davey O'Brien Award from the Fort Worth Club Wednesday nlght and said the honor meant as much to him as the Heisman Trophy ... Ken Gray, the Denver Broncos' offensive line coach, Is retiring from coaching lo give more time to his business interests ... Oklahoma's award-winning lineman. Greg Roberta, and Stantora linebacker tiordy Cereslno, have been picked as captains for the North in Saturday's Senior Bowl football "ame ... Running back Earl Campbell of the Houston <>Uers was named NFL Offensive Player of the Year by the Associated Press ... Defensive end Al Baker of the Detroit Lions was choeen as AP's Defensive Rookie of the Year. T....._,Radlo RADIO: Basketball -UC Irvlne at Long Beach State 8:05 p.m., KFOX <93.5 FM>; Cal State Fullerton at UC ~~s~ Barbara, 8:05 p.m., KWRM (1370>. Bob Harvey re· TV: Horse Racing -Santa Anita resul•· 7·30 nm Channel 52. "°• · r · · • Six-mile Run Set Sunday An AAlJ·sanctioned 10.000-meter run will be conducted Sunday al the Fashion Ialand Newport Center complex. o Tbe race, 8.2 miles In lenat!!., will 1tart at the Bell Towers ln front of Robln100'11 Faablon J1land at 9 a .m. T he raee-will-l>e... <".nndJlcle<J within the s hopping complex and Includes a aertea or multiple loops, tum1, l~lloos and de • renta. Faahlon llland ls localed Just orr tho Paclllc CoJsl Hlahway In Newport lleach. Nearly 1,000 partlcl· pantt are expected to compete In Lbo race. R~st•traUon be&lna at. 7 •.m. and c!Oeel al 8:30. Entry ree lt ~. For a dditional In · rormaUon, call 6'4·2021. f • Deity .... ,.......,·~ ........ ~ETBALL MtuldOck Shines Estancia KOs Ocean View • By ROGER CARI.SON Of ... .,.,. .......... Eltancla High 'a Eagles came ur. with several wlnnlnl com· b nations Wednesday ntaht and it couldn't have come at a better time as the Eagles needed all of them to subdue a tough Ocean View High Seahawk quintet. 69-61. In non·league basketball. The Eagles of Estancia Coach Larry SUnderman made 21ol40 shots from the field <67.S per- cent>, bad four players score in double figures. got a sterling ef .. fort by 6-0 senJor guard Dan Maddock and 100 percent aboot- lng from M jl.Ulior Steve Van Hom, who made all eight at4 tempts from the field and alx aholl from lbe gratis line. THE GAME ITSELF was loosely officiated with too many offensive charges and elbpws ao- lng unheeded and it eventually evolved into a slugging mat.ch with 18 seconds left at Estancia. move wttb ~ Camp and Van Hom each seonng four points to give Estancia a S().44 lead wtth 1: 11 1pent in the fowtb period. THEN llADDOCK. returning to the lineup after a back htjury sidelined hf m. made his pivotal moves, fint with a defensive re· bound. which Van Hom convert· ed into a layup, t.ben with a tip ror two PolDl$ 8S be followed his own missed shot. and finally with a steal, which Van Hom culminated with a short baseline shot to make it 54-tO with 5:54 left. "I thought we ran pretty well and got die ball up court." said Sunderman. "l was pleued with our quickness and with a healthy Maddock, we're going to be bet· ter. "And we had good balance with four scoring to double figures. We needed this game. but we have a long way to go de fenaively." WHO'S ~ILTY? --Estancia High's Steve Van Hom C42> comes m for a layup and makes contact with Ocean Vte.w's Tim Naaktgeboren on the play, Naaktgeboren trying to draw a charging foul and Van Hom of course hoping for a blocking call. No foul was called. ' ' "We've bee n In physical games before." said Ocean View Coach Jim Harris. "But we were shooting free throws too. It made no sense to go lmlde it was just brutal. We have' to learn that you're six-to-eight points down when you're pla)inl m another good team's gym." Ocean View had a 44-te> lead with 1: SS left in the third quarter when tbe Eagles made their OCEAN VIEW. which had won five slT8:'ght to grab the No. to ranklna 1n CIF 4·A circles, rut 20 of Its first 35 ahot.s <57.t per- cent.>. but the accuracy went out the •lodow after that as the game contin~ to degenerate Into a pbyslcal brawl. The Seabawka fin1sbed with 42.2 per- cent, mlPlnl 22 of Its last 29 al· tempts. The 6-6 tandem ot·aopboinore Wayne Cerlander and Tim Naaktceboren combined ror 21 points and slick 5-11 guard Jeff Andrade pumped In 18 counters. Fro• Page BJ UCI ••• ' Break and ore the offensive re· ound.'' says Tift. ''.Beyond that, we have to play sohd defense to try and restrict their very good players. Last, we have to operate a very stable offense and shoot a high percen- tage." LONG BEACH ST ATE features four returning starters. three averagin g in double figures. Michael-WiH!y, a 6-9 junior forward. is averaging 19.2 points and 9.1 rebounds a game. Ricky Williams. a 6·2 senior gua rd, Is averaging 18.9 points and Francois Wise. a G-6 junior forward, 10.3 points and 11.8 re· bounds. UC I relies on G-6 center Phil Bolden. who leads the team in scoring Cl4.8) and rebounding <5.6). Swingman Steve McGuire is second in both cat.egories < l.3.8 a nd 4.6) while Lester J ones has scored 18 points on back-tc>-back outings and has 29 assists in eight games. Front Page BJ KINGS ••• first blood. The Kings are 12·5-2 when they strike first and 5·14-4 when they don't. "With our team it's a big lift because we're not a high-scoring team. It gives us a lot of con· fidence. ·• d efenseman Wilson said. Coach Bob Be rry. whose Kings have played six games of an eight-game road trip, agreed that the first goal gave Chicago a psychological edge. "We gave up those first goals by not being ready early in the game,'' he said . "We played well in the third period and l know they Hhe Kings> were tired." •'The Kings have some in· juries," said Pulford. ''They miss Mike Murphy <leg strain) out there and Bob Murdoch '•boulder separallon ). " kw911yhft9ft Los Anotlft o o ~ Chl<-OO 3 0 0-J f'lrtl Pt<lod -1, OllYOo. llulley 1J CHloQlnJI, 21"6. '· C.NufO, llokltrev It (Murr•y ~I 4 ...... J, Cllk-oo. 0 Wilton J 10. .. • .... ..._.,· u 11. .......,lft .. NoM. • ~-~· • 5Kond Pwlod NOiie "9Netlff .. Bullfy Chl, 2 41, lklflrt, CN, 7 Cit; H•twetel. LA, 1t IS ' II T1~rd ,._,lod NON fli9Mlty L~ Oil, $11p11 °" OHi -Los Aft9tle• ll·ll·10-J1. ClllC41QO 11-10+-a Go•llu -Lai Aft911n, uswnl. Gilt<~ IMIOtlto A-t.121 ' ' F,....PGfleBJ ANDERSON •.. and work on drills every day, the stulf I can·t stand. "I GREW A BIT AND GAINED a few pounds and that helped. Plus I matured. But a lot of people said I wu washed up and I wanted to prove to them and myself that t could do it. And I think l proved it. .. It didn't take Anderson Ion~ to do 1t either. Last season. despite. two years away from organized ball, he averaged 16 points and four assists to help the Vanguards to a 15-14 record and a co·championship of the NAIA Division 3 Southern Conference title. This year. he is e merging as. an unselfish team player. witnessed by a 33. porn~. l2·ass1st performance Tuesday that included a six· fOf'·SIX Showing from the free throw line in overtime. .. My street skills have come in handy." Anderson says with a Slight smile. "I'm sUU not the team leader type but more of a middle man who scores a nd hands out assists. I don't bring the ball up court but I don't have to. We have a ~rea l team here and everybody works together. doing what he d()('s best "l'M STILL TllE SAME. just more mature." he adds. ''I'm low key still but I don 't think I have a bad attitude. rm Just not the gung·ho type who goes jumping up and down all the lJme. But there's no doubt that I'm trying. I'm trying as hard as I can.'· t ·or once, hts coach agrees. "He's the hardest working guy we have out here." says first-year sec Coach Ed Moriarty. "He'll stay and shoot for half an hour after the rest or the guys have gone home. And he's tireless. We can make a change and j ust move him to another position if we need an extra guard in there. He seems like he can go on forever." For Anderson, just getting a rvesh start in basketball will suffice. But that scoreless span of 4:53 for Ocean View after it took a 44-tO lead on buckets by Jerr Fitzhugh and Naa.ktgeboren pro. ved fatal. Van Horn's 22 points gives him 11 20-potnt games ln l3 outings. Camp fln1abed with 14 points and Craig Keup and Tim Krohn!eldt add ed a dozen each to the Eagles' attack. 0cffftYC.W l611 EllMKi.( .. I Andr- Alll~ e,_, C.rl...O.r Fll11NQn ...... ,~llOl'elt NO !let-IL ,.,..,, •• ti -• 1 •• I 1 4 i 0 10 I I IS ' 0 1 7 1 • ' 0 1 1 0 • M9ddoek U.~r V•n Horn 1(- Kroflnl•fdl Prttt- C..,,..P 21 f 61 To1•1t SQto'Ot .,. ow.n.n 19 ti Ip < • 0 .. 0 1 I ~ • 11 & 0 ,, 4 ) II tJ 0 •• \ . , . U 1S •~ <kHfl View IS 16 II 11 •• E•'""''• •• u 16 2l •'I Tot•I fOvl\• Oct•" Vit.w II. E•l...C.1• 10: Foul.cl OUI -... h<llno<•I -·-VMI _.,, •E,l•f'<•••. (.Oil(.n M..,rt\ tOt...., vw:w•. Evert Tops Renee OAK.LAND -S«ond-seeded Chris Evert lost he r service twice in the second set but scored three service breaks of her own to beat Renee Richards 6 ·4. 6·4 Wednesday 1n th t.• women·s tennis tournament at the Oakland Coliseum Arena. Earlier In the day. No. 3· seeded Betty Stove lost a 6-4, 6·3 decision to Mima Jausovec. Prices goOd thru Jan. 14, 1979 NGK regula eoz. sorav bottle Dlswtves gum lforn PCV varv~. OW'· t>uretOf oans. ilUtom;inc ct\Oke\ Spark Plugs ~~!~~~~rf 69c BP6ES. B6ES, BP1ES tor E.0. Datsun, TOVota. manv u.s. or tmpcneo cars Hl21 Tall Ught or TumSlanal Light ~~rel #L1157 MACHINE SHOP SERVICE AVAILABLE~ • ·South Coast Auto Supply 688 West Baker (at Bristol). (714) 545·8408 United Auto Parts 2902 W. Coast HIRhway, (714) 646-1 647 lllo\I \!or r\ oprn 1 d'J ~ '•••k c'll tllt lor .. t1on nt.H you lor r1.HI lloun. ·•• ••~· ...... , •• ••••'·''" ,. ···• .. S3 - 8 'in ling :tlor ~t • ~ • 10 lhe an ttie ~ed I re- ( - BASKETBALL I HORSE RACING Thur9day, JanuafY IL 1979 DAIL V PILOT 83 Boes Win Opener Beasley~ Mesa Upset Tritons Balanced Marina Rolls Gauclws alp Ap aches ·rht COila Mc!la Hl11h bHkct halt l~•m evm I\$ re('Ord at $·5 for the knM>n with a 11urprlalng, GO ~. ul)t('t victory over hoeling hun Clem~nte Wt.-dnesdu~ nlaht. FV, Edi.son Log BQJJketball Victories The Oranae Cont 11 nd s d dltbark ro ll~ae huketbAll l\'am1 took Uwir r.howA nn ttw ro»d W~llY l\i&hl Mod ram• home wilh vl('tor•• H Oran ,. Coaal ~ It• SCluth Coaat Con hmmc t>PeMr by '*h1ppln1 Ml San Antonio, 611 61, ond Sad dltbark . uptur~d Ila ucond •lr~l¥hl Mlulon (.'onr .. n •11t·1 ttMnie wllh a 100 76 d a ion over lowly Southwnl~fn ·rhe PiraWtl r '<'f'ivl"d •tronK perform from auard Ray Or!Jllll and center Pt>tt' Neumann ~ hn had 17 PQlnll aplttt Thl' Plrllt-. 114 3 ovt>rall \ had tu ovtr<~mt• un eArly 11 9 dt·f1r 1t an defl'allf\lil lhf' Mounllt-14 The Plratt.., mode tlw ronw back from ~ floor ""ht'fv th~·'t wt•re an umazinA 61 l>t'rt't•nt ronnertin.: vn 'l7 or u .. hot ul kmpts Randy Wh1e ldon wa~ lht• 1parkpfu11 of ttw. • ddlf'b•ck ut t11ck all t~ 6 4 fr hnuan fmm K at~lla M'Ort-d :'lO polnh Ml '411 -t•ll Or•• .. c-t 1 .. 1 ~ .. ·-~ 1 ....... t4W"'Jf'Mtt.•t ii. rttlJ.f\t ._t•W\tn\ """" ........ -f11l•h .. M. .. Hi. I I 4 '°"'"''"'' I U t f t t• Heun••rt" I t If I I I Or1jlll ;. I II 1 .J ti A•d" t 0 -. I I • Wiii' I I • I • • ..... 0 I O I t v_.. U••n ' • •• f '9 ,, • ., 14 f ' o I I f1tht1! I 0 '/ l ol•ll 11 u .. ~;ttlll-Or ... (O.M '1/.0 Tt-1•1 '""" 0.•-f-' ••Ml "°''Ar""'• .. II, I OW+.d"'11 "•J" IOt"-"'-II ~~~""' AAt (..i" -.. -AM4t••• l.•\t'tlit• .,..,.... .... , . .,.. ....... .,,., .. " .. I fl I ·~ ... \ I It • 0 II ) • 11 I 0 • • \ t " I 0 • ,...... 1 ' • H•llltllje J II "-"'"'-" 7 " I 11•t\ f'• I• h N .... ,_.,.., .. '"" IH M•ton• "wf'lt'-(H4'1~ b.t41•'f' () Ii ,, .... WeO w .. ~ ... u ••t•l• It II Ill I j II ... " • ) u I ~ " . V I J • ' 0 I I 0 1 w ... ,, t-4•1U1rns ~lMM' )) J"' 104•1 °"""' ~·1-• 1' ""'1tm.• ,.,,, II , OUl•d owt ._.._ t. nf'H~t1I "'""It . 'W\1 Ol• o.t-~ J Th Mu.tan&• were k-<l ln t.he non leagoo rontcttt by 6-2 senior forward Cbrls Beasley, who •ror d 14 p0lnta and grabbed 11.-vf'n rf'boundis, and he was sup- ported by junior teammate Dan- ny Bouer who chipped In 12. San Clemente was led by isenlor forward Ross Sutton. U•l•MIMl .. I ,, . .,., 114'••'•"' Ocun1ru1 \ lu• • l \14 °"111•••••10 M•tt•r 10101\ .. " .. ) l 11 • 1 '' J j • J I ' 1 0 • ) 0 • 1 , • h I) 60 u .. c .._....1111 Acl•M\ """ H•ncoc• Htll M<v•~w Mut1111•n P•11tt S1evenwn s.iuon w-Tol•I\ ,. " .. l l • I I J I • • 0 •• 0 0 0 I 1 • 0 u 0 1 1 • • J 11 • 1 .. lt.10 )I " ... ..,~ (0\I• M o W " IJ " t• -4'0 ~n Cle,,,....., 10 I~ " 20-)I I olel\ IOUI• S... Cle......,t• 1•. C.olt• -U .. O..i.<IOUI - Marina IUgh, Ora.nae County's The victory for the Vikings basket of sending the contest i.Q· No. 2 ranked team. had little was their nth agalnat only two to overtime. trouble In dlapoelng of Loara, losses this aeaaon aa they broke The win runs Fountain 75·~. ln a non-league basketball out quickly to a U·polnt lead at Vall~y·e n!COrd to 7-6. cont.eat Wednesday night. halftime and coasted the rest of Edison received a sparkling In other action Involving the way. performance from 5·9 senlor SunH t t.eams. Fountaln Valley The Barons of Fountain Valley guard Rex McDonald in its rout posted a mild upset lo defeating got a strong firformance from ot Cypress. visiting Palos Verdes, ~2·50, and 6·4 senior Che Fields to help de· McDonald 11cored 14 of bis Edison showed It.a strength by feat Palos Verdes. team's first 17 points for the pounding Cypress. 60-43. Fie Ids tied for high.game game, flnlBh1ng with 22 on a 10 Ten players saw action for honors by scoring 19 for the for ~ shoot.Ing l\ight from lhe Marina In lta aame with five Barons while also adding six re· floor (83 percent). scoring In double figures led by bounds. The Chargers jumped to an Keith DaWton's 13 points. Lead· The Barons. with an elght·poinl 11-polnt lead at the end of the ina rebounder for the VlldJt~S lead entering the fi nal period. first quarter and never looked was Kevin Olaon with nlne. ne had lO hold on for their lives as back ~s they ran their season re- also contributed 10 poinll'==tt.'~---P!..!.a!!lo~s~V'...!:e:!r!!d:::es~c:.!a~m!!!:.e_w~it~h~ln~a~~co;::r~d=t=o=9-=5=.=======--- * * * MorilY Otl •• ft .. , .. ,,. s 0 10 OIWMI • 1 10 Heldtfl,.1{11 0 • OowWMI ) I) H•lton , 11 MEN'S CLOTHING Sl><IMlr 1 10 A .. 110 I ' NtlMlft I I ' Tennis Club Membership Los Alamitos Race Entries V.Drl•I t40lmtt\ Tol•I~ M<f•tl~ f•lk e .. ,. Oo~lcl\Ofl Jallnson 0 0 ,. "-•1141 ,, J 1 2 2 \ 0 0 SEMI-ANNUAL 0 0 " 15 tt .. ' I 1 • 0 • 0 • SALE , 12 515.00 a Month .... llm1ted Memberships available tor a one ttme Registration Fee of $25.00. Located at the 18 mllhon dollar South Coast Plaza Hotel. Call 540-2500. Ext. t300 South Coast Plaza Hotel Tennis Club Bnstol & San Diego Frwy Costa Mesa Halliday's Semi-Annual SALE St a rts Today 17th & lnttnt Avtt., Newport 8Hch, ulif.1714) 645·0792 j T on19llt'\ OU.'1•..-W lnlr .. t rir~ Poll I '0 ,. It!. T llACl JlJO v•<cl> J vur Ol(h .. UP f-llllM & MMe\ PurW' ~. 100 """""'O I'"« "·000 Vttri ln\001'" fUttnk \i Lddv l U• 6•r IH•rt1 (.hf1,ty tO¥"" 19f004ii'\t Afpfl< a i.r11t"("11flt\\ tC.~r I~'-' I t IV Uuth'rlll ITrMWtl"I Urown H•t•• (l IPf"t•m• fr/I''' ~ork•IPn•\• tPf'rn1111r ». ~1nwotr .,,.\\t<>n <HOUO" • 11..0 ,.,..now tc.<cl01•I, l1lll~ P.,..040 h•r fAO&u t \fCONO ltACE J!O r••O\ J Y••t Old\ C•t Ur<d Pu"• U 100 <.••1rn1no ptt<• "4.CJCKI Jtny Jl't4: •Rr(•O"'' Spe n•'" Am4ntf"" 1w . .,01 ~\\1 C~ •4onw Ut;tr1 I (....no-, '-'"' .... ,,,,.~,I l r h ',pt1t ,._,,,..,I Im .. w 1nn•nQ Poll' v t(•td0 14) t-fow• M tftuh MtH' IMVI•\ THllllO llACE ))IJ V•'ll' JV<,,, 010\ & uo ......... u.200 Cl••m1nQ ptltt "·000 Mr C•on tt••rtt. (Mro1n f out 16<trdl llu""" HC>f11br<J tOr00/61. M•\l•r M-VOO tW~rol (,o '"' ll1r>q •L•pf\'1tml. 1""4t J. .. ,, k-t •C' .. "'"· • Wd• Tru<klt th~•ton1 (notch Ouao O•tlQP'tt f('•"Q• f ) P0<tity Ve"d'f c 8un•,. •. Po-Net th UUQ t r' r141i,ure' Vaque ros f'OUllTH llACE -.00 Y...-0\ l v•ttr old m••Ooln•. PvrH \?,JOO. Cl•11n1n9 o<•ce "·SOO. ~lum And CIW'11" ,.,........,, l••• Hoo Cooy tMart1nl; "'" ot E••v t(terlul'I. Anoowr llm.,. IL•w1\1. C•t Bo••ro 1Fr"\ton l, Jo\eQO C(ard0/4H. M•<On M l\t "IPf <l<ouonl. Paraon,,.,..o..o.• IWal\Onl, H IOOf"n Bo'~ (fr~d\Ur~). O\.C•'' ~..ciow t~•I Fl" TH ltAC~ .00 yord\ J v••• Old 11111~\ Pur~ \0.000 T .... l .O Pnm*r• 0.1 Alto O.roy lttal\ t f u\t 01111\IOfU *'"'Y !>t~ter «S..Mi>Wr I A Roon ,.,.art t W1nt..-r Dr'•~~ ''-"""~""'• (.th h .. m N F-•lchuM cM•r h n Cnun•y Cn'<.._tn tM1,..\I, C••Dl• ~ t<111y •M 1tc.hetll (l•\\•t C•nvo" • ( d rd o 1,. • • ~um t• Ao m., n t 1· 1 hf<tt\U'f"I ftt"~ P•n CltOh•m• Ir ut kd IOU I (Hlonon I SIXTH ltACE 400 •••ch J Y~"' olcl\ 111110 P\lr"' M.000 T ht• l ~ Pri m er• 0•1 A no <h:•bV u .. •h t..,cotlcl dlvl\-1 / M •\\ A"Q"I A..o l~rMrl, C..lltonl Ch•rot-tM+t<PWIU , ,J4tt\ HOY••~ JMI l tiott l. S,omfbOdV" D•r•1n tLton•ml, f'lylnQ v ~ t(M01>1e1. Owoe Ju.trw 01.,Yt',I, TN ll•llenna t(tertuo l. s..mp.n Slllv t(r~•ll<'• I, J<HIO<ld Rex" IS..rnpter1. Go C•t1ot1<1 ( f rt•\Ure ). SCYENTH RACE 400 yarO• l V•d< o•d 11110... ""'"' '-"·000 rn,. l• Pr1m•r• Oet Ano ~rby h idh 1th11U 01\0I• \ I 11 Co•~·· I J ) t400tltlll(f( 1 I \ Sotnion 0 0 0 Coflm•n 0 0 0 ICOllll 0 0 0 Tol•I• 11 10 ~ S<-lty Ol;at1 .. ' M•rln• 20 13 • 1• IS lo.tr• 10 11 17 " ~ Tot .. foul\ Monn• 17, Lo.it• 11 . ro..,11c1 out M<f•r•ono. Oo•clion tLO<t<• I c, ...... (0 1 W 1ll111fM \ Collon• (drclwt'll .,.no or IN. Iv•, M r l(ern-t y b~I- 8ow•n M<()onelO t·hn1 ••n.m•rv o ....... Ruo•n MOrO•" ~"'°"°"' lolhl<ttt ... II Ip 1 0 • I • • I ' II • • ' ,. I 0 I> II I •• II •l •• tt .. ) l • 10 2 ,, \ , 11 ) I I 0 I I I 0 ) I I I 0 1 0 ' 0 Tot•I\ 10 :k.e by Oowrt.tt ft ( yor~" o 10 11 16 Ed1\0n 11 17 10 II CJIV"•OO) P t 50 47 lov Trt';twr• tL1onaml, Nlpov. 0 8 -OIQ<Y ISumpltrl ~v L<Kli\I IA<l•ot l S.un<. y l(tefl'Y'). WMt " wom4n 1 ol•t IOU1\ Cvor•" "· 1:c11wn i.. f ouled OUI Nont.' Victory Sen ior Dan Mon· leverdl' scored 18 points lo lead Irvine High lo a 50.47 non·lca~ue basket- ball v1rtory over vls1tmg Laguna lltlls Wcdnes· day ntJ:ht. The 6·2 forward hit 50 percent from the noor on e1ghl of 16 shots. and he was ably supported by teammate Mike Livsey who added 16. Both lea ms shot 44 percent from the floor for the game, the dif· ference came In the number or shots taken as Irvine took 18 more ( 59·411 than its OPPO· nent. Tht• victory fnr Irvine was 1ls fourth in 12 oul· 1ngs I his season l•" ltd•lt·v (Ofl"llH· ("•Vt/ e,.,,.,~ r r•\t-"' s .. eno•, lol•I\ l -Hlthl'11 ,, lrvlne Ulll 1 1 I " ft ,, \ . 1 • I I) ' l ' . 0 1 0 • II " .. " ,, w1.,,1on t 1 • Ru11v J o • W f'l\ol f 1 4 Mon tf'Vf'f()t I 1 11 L1•._..1 8 0 1' o.... l l • f ortnq~r t 0 1 Tol•lt 16 I ~ sun 1ty OIH<1en l•QVflllHlll• II o I) I) 41 ,,...,,.. u I• .. I~ ~ l o l•I IOult Irvine II, l~ Hll!l •• f'Oulecl O<lt -· Pro Scores H.tl_l .......,.It AHOI. L•hrt tt, tlo!.ton" Cnlt-170. N_Je,.,.y 116 PIHl•cl~lptll• 11>, -Orl .. 11\ 111 All•nl• 11/, MllwM,.. IU 11011 .... Ult Ill, Ind°''""" H•IMNI ~lt•f l• ... w Cn•c•ool, lllnlllO Ntw VM' ott...O.n '· Oetto11 \. ••• Plll•OV•Qlll, Mon!<••l 1 MlnM\Olo 2 TO<OlllO > ... N•,. YO<'• R.,.n S. Colorltdo J t(rfl'e Qer). Mt\\ P ow •r Po1nl • JrPtl\Ufft) llltt .. l u'ly l~MO \H•rl f. Je•1ou~ w omttn tW1lwy1. A••""'"' IM.ll~ll•* Ot•UQhttul Moo Qlt" 1p .. ,,_,, ttGHTl4 AACf 810 ••'d' l v .. r 010\ & UC> Pur"' U.~ C1~1m lnq Ori<" $.ll.000 T°"' l~ Al•m•IO\ Ao"moo< w·oollml\I CtuD \•nd A1vfl'r Aull•h 01•,.t t Oft ("•'Ott CJlovqht DvP" \ A-.tr""'" ( l rt•\ur••. I It Prowr> It ,9,oo~Hf'ldf Mt W tllOW ~"nU\ !Cieri\ .. I "'"" lll•nQ •Cr~•q<·• I C..-vml>'I' CN<I< tPwrwr I. l •lll .. Dull" ll •P'>•ml NINTH llACf OClO 1¥6' l Y••• Ol(I\ & UC> """" U .* C•••M•nQ O<IO U .000 I H"''""" 69.0Clt 18rooll\I, BrlOM P •\\ IW.,..,I. Sc>o4 Aier1 llMN<•I Al .. mll~ t~ tFrev1. fem,.nq1on tC.OrdOi•I. !>lrtOt"n ,.,._ ,,..,.,_,. Fenonhc f11Qf\t t8roollll•l<ll. Co Onf'O t Tt••~rtd, boo V•n Moon 1Ao~hl ..... .,, ........ ,,., btd<JY J .lf .. \ 0 H•ra Snutll f'11ro1ooon• H•lt•1\ M Arte'\ C\9"""• rot•I\ to 11 I 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 • 0 \ J . ) 11 • ,_..,, V•lley t »I ,, ti Rru•~ t 1 (OW•" l I Eooeone1-• 1 1 f .. ICI\ I J H•<I-• 0 H~rcl ~ 0 lot•I• 1J • k-lty~ P•~ Vef'dt\ IO 10 .. 14-\0 f our110111 v .. o.y 11 It 11 6 n lot•I loul\ fovnl••1t V•lln Q, p.,10~ Verclltt "· f-OUIOCIOl/1 ... _ Race Results Los Alamitos ,.or-...v 1m11ot,._.v~,,_11,..1 °"".,...-.... Ftr\I r.oce Cl•-• Lu<~V w in tB•rcll lUO. 6 60. 4.IO, OM4'r1 81..e s.11 tClerln•I • tO. • 60. RellallA t P•rner I i 41() U E a.oc I• " II P<J•<I \12'.00 S.cond '"ce-Pl••dY\ True••• <C..r<IO,.I 1~00. I.AO, SOO. 0...rt., B•nOer tW•rdl •.•O. • 10, ''""' Cluthn IOe<l\~11> .0. Ttura r•ce-OuPf" 8 !.1•'' l(t•r.U .. I •IO. l .0. J 10 Ntr (ult USC Star Doubtful LOS ANGELES IAP I -Senior guard Steve S m ith of Southern California, s uffering from a muscle spasm ln his back, was listed Wednesday as doubtful for Saturday's Pacific· 10 basketball game against UCLA . Smith Is lhe second leading scorer for the Trojans with an · 11 3 average If he can't play he would be replaced in the starting lineup by Don Carrino. a starter last season who has ~n the No . l re· 11erve al guard th.ls cam· palgn Coach Bob Boyd, who Usted Smith as doubtful, also said that reserve f orwa r d M a u r i ce Wllllams. a freshman, has mWed two d•Y• of practice W\th tend,n\tl11 lo hl• left knee. C..Uv tRO\IQlll 100, • 80, C.••n>11••n tW•hOnl 11 IO. \S t ... 110 11 " paKI \11\00 fourtn r•t • '"""'"" "o•nl I C1<<10t• I 1100, "80. J IO. f 1 .. m1nQ ~no IC• .. Qtlrl • 00, 4 10. 1.-v•I tH•rl I 2 80 ~11111 r•o llrNtOC><"n IC••-·• 10 00 •• .o. l 80. """-" CN<>•n llll<-•OI • '°· J •O, How lu<~v 111 .... u 1 I '° u C•«I• ... ~. o••O \II \0 4J,111tP\ tMe ~John Cl~.,,U,~1 I> 60, • 00, J .0, A N1QM 5oHc1 I HArt I ) IO. ) 00 S.ltv '>I,.... IW4rdl \ 00 ')~.,ltlh re<" Ov•IY ' C.O •R-n• JJ 10 " '°· I .o. lMI••• I( 1no• M•n oW•honl I 00 \ 00 E•"""' C.o I Pf'""' I \ '° u E •e<I& 0 61 P,,•0 \~SO f ,0n1" ,.,. £ .,., r tip tMv•,., 1.0. 4 10. )00 -for VOu If t<\IC>n1 J .0. l 60. M<>JU'lt IW.M'IGnl 1 00 Hit"" r•<• Tt""fotO 8•• R1tn •W•rOI tO 10. S 10 \ 80. H"IA 0.,..,., l(t••Q•tl 1' •O. I) 10 ')(lUIQQ• IW•l\Onl llAO U LAe<t• I• I • O•>O ""° so ""~nd<lft<• ).\Sol Santa Anita ~.......,.., llf1flef7~,.-... ...--~· "'''' ••<•-l(lno ll•<' IM<M•~I ~00. 120, HO. 8r1Qnl OIKOv•f1 ICotclttrOI Joo. l.IO. Perov Ouv 1<,•r,.,1 J.to s.,.,.d '"'' LOnQ lt\Ut l()llv•retl IS .0, I 00. "'°; 80ltn1~ Pt!troM 1P1nc•v• 1.00. •.tO RtQnt Arrow (Sl!Oetn.e"' t S IO. 11 d•1•v ooublt 14 ti ~ \)1 00. r111rd r•ce <if...O.•le• 1P1ncot s ao, > •o. 1 eo . s1n1..,1 P•• o(Hl~I ~ 10, S IO, Vlb<MI (rtow 1Ramlre11J10 l'ourtrt r.oc• N<lPOllllno tM<>M I ~I .0. t• 00, 1110. Un.._erl IC.r•nl I I 00. S IO, lltgt>I l<1bOI 1SOren\Oftl 1000 r dlll r .Ct' h OOr\ Oyn .. "y , Corci.rol I• 10 • '°· •IO ToU<lll Al tDI\•• tM~H•rout 1 • 00 • 10 Cr• .. cl..clely t~nl I 41() U ••'" •• 110 11 ~Ul'I OO S••th ••<e ho' C•nO• C.•• 1Sl\OOlmo1<1 2040 1 t0. &:IO o.a dv' l••• tPw•ovt > .O. J 40, ,,_ Out iC•\t-• •IO S#v•nlll r.oc•-8l<Hldt•'t 0..11<•• tM<Her-1 UO, '00. 2 40 8"19•um ~1 ... 1 IPiertel tOO. •20 ~"'"'' tC.ulMlll uo. ~ E.a41<1e 11-~I IMHCI \109 00 E'9ft\f! rK• tnt.nlW lltOdtlqu<lll 21 ta, t 00, aM; Swtn CNeof t ll'~<tl ..... U•l ,..,....,. CM (MCHMIMI 'A,t.,.11 reca IC Oe Cio 1P1ncey1 1 00. J IO. > oo,"lrtlll<t<ll Prol- «Gor#r'OI sao, uo. M<t-1Tor•1 I oo. u IMtcU ,~,, H141 u1.oo. Allelt!Mnt,._.1•.°"- Now In Progress! REDUCTIONS FROM 20%to50% SUITS&COATS Regular 125.00 165.00 175.00 210.00 225.00 265.00 315.00 Others to 50% off Now 101 .00 134.00 141 .00 168.00 179.00 212.00 252.00 All Boyswear 20% to 50% oft S'elected Furnishings 1/2 Price Merchandise From Our Regular Stock- PASADENA all the FEATURES NEWPORT BEACH • 4 key memot)'. stOl'ed constant e green fluorescent display. 12 d1g11s, minus sign. lloat1ng or fixed decimal • automatic and manual tape feed. no pnnt switch. minus number prints 1n red , • one line prim buffenng on output • item count key, non-add pont key, plus/minus and exchange keys, sub- totals e 1()¥,. x 8 x 2W', 6 lb. 2 oz .. AC 110 VOii e APF Elect~ brand model 2iSA buy before the price goes up nowonly 19.19 epedal purohaMS. though riot rfduOed In pnoe, 8f9 urnt1td quantity ltema bought to be eXCOl)liOnll valuee South Coaat P.tan-,y.., .. ill 545-0431 ,.. ............ 1 .... CowlM , ...... "u.. Def AIM 'el!Moft lqolf9 ( -------~· ---.-.-~ - DAILY PILOf Pr p • wim Re ult . ..._ ... , ., ... _ ... , .. 1W"'• '"I.to I fi'I-.. I\ I IW lrM I N1•11Mr •UI I ·~· I ...... II I tl f l '" It I I ~ t )lit, .... I .,.,,...,_Ill J ''' t 'WI,. •1.il 1 t•t I -l"""ll tJ "°' lltll•• I ......... , f\.\ t, I Wtl-IUI lit ., ,J Or•n 111114' IW _.,.., I It'-~-tUI "f , t ............. lil ~t I 11111 !ti .... I °#)•II'' I U f t ...,_,,.It l l H ... ...,1u1,.1 W ~ .. I •e9 1f I I a f I • •• I~ t it • f l 0...1-IUI • U f t0G -· I .......... I 'I J ....... lffl lot ... •••I I l-II f I 48 t I Wr•ll I I 10 t , J "91 .. IUll tJ f ..... I 1.a-1•J Jl a • ca .. -•1.~11 100~Y t•••v I,,_.,. t ... IGO"" I _,...., 111 t 11~ I u..-w llMll H I J ... ,,..,,,Niii '4 0 1111 1..00 I 1•,.••ll •(M l J Ill 0 1 ! .n1.1 .. ' t<Mll ,,. I,.__"" •• I \t ···~ I --· f(llAI u. I ""'-"• Ill l•O H•try t11 n• 0•.,,.t I l>•\0'9 .. •), I '-"•lllfll 11 t .. t l ~ • lnq 111 II '' 10011• I 14oN\111Ve I l et,_\ll(Ml l'I I (h..,on ti Mt I 0111 tOO he• t ~h•tiut• •t-.o ff• I ~.,,, t•1 ~I I l O•n 111 "' f \llO ""• ' (. 't'*'""• IC ,.., ~ .... I l PWI ... 1 l j/ t I llMIO'lk I( Ml I 0 I 100 l><t< • I -<fi'l1 •II la I I l'IOtll llMI VI I F111nMnn t(Mt I CA• tll') f)<r~\I I I fttltllO tC Mt I O> 0. I ~· l M t I C/'f I I '1l••v+t ltt t tt. I •OU ft•• r•IAY I (. Cl\I• ft.WW J • ' ()(eM V .. W 111, Lc••r• 0 If/() ""'<ll•V r•i.t¥ I ()t Hn "'"''"' I \1 a 100 lrro I Avltl 1(1111 I'\\ > Mii..-40V1 I 11' • I (.Mt 1011 I I 01 0 100 tnclo I """""" 1011 t 1 I• I I '>-IH• 1011 t I 111 > I '>' • ..,,, fl ti )o I 'IO '••• I -· 1011 J >• f, I WY"IOvOI' IL I H I I (,_ IOVI J) I tit••t111 I c ... fbt.i IL I 41 ll, 1 M ~I OVI •I (, -oo.• tOV1 JI I tOIJ OullHtly I 'wll>o• IOV I 1 01 I 1 'Yll• 0 1111 111 J -tOO ,.,.,. I <Wld tOV 1 lJ •• 1 Jolly IOVI '' I I l'o..01 4011114> 4 )00 Ir.., I folly l()V I l )0 S l H.tdy IOVI • O?' ) l-Y IOV1• ., • fhurtd1y, Janu1rv I I , 1171 "~ ...,,, ........ 1(.0a...to I OW-• tOVI I Ol f , 1 It,..,.., OVt l 111 lMW•bberl0\111,.J 100 b<l'~I I ,,.,._.. IOVI 1 11 I. 1 E lhOI •011 I ll I' I ~-tOVI I 14 > -·••t '"'•1 I ()(I' ........... l U f TIGHT QUARTERS Okl ahoma State's Matt Clnrk pl11yi; 11 light as he guards Missouri's Curtis Bercy_'1J 1 lloKl ~is~ouri w<.is turned back hy Oklahoma St ate. 73 fiJ MM-1"4 ''# W~tmwnler M ~ m_.dW"1 r .. •<11Y I MMH\• t )I 9 1"° frp I C.,.lt-f>N t t ... ~ 1 fittl'Mk tM t \I• l Mc{.I""" !M l 1 01 0 .0 frf'• t .,...., !M J 1\ 0. 1 Mof"•Dtlo tM1 7\ • J. l •O-fQ IM•)\1 111'1 '"°" I W..,\o,,_<11", IMI ) .. I 1 W1fl H•y !M l 1 10 I ) "K-11 IW I1 11 6 Rebels Bonnin' (J1•onq I lullt,.."C~O IM I 7 8110 IMI I ",.,, ... , '"'' 100 .,, I (fO/•<f>' cw t 1 ~ 0 1 Hi.IQI"''' •M I Ill• l M<C,tynn IMI I ~ J Vroman Hot, Wichita Not •oo • .. ~ 'Fl•f\dafMl)O \ '(OU'fl lW l )/16 ' ( nmpU"'I• 4MI 100 I \(JO fr.-• 1 Wt t''""~'QlH IMI S It I I ( ro11P1r 'I \ '>6 • I NU<l'"nl tM I 6 1') "10 (Ml * I ~tfo"\ fWI 1 01 0 1 Wtl"hr• lMt 11"1 ) ...,_nQ IM l I 0-• f'rom AP Dlspatcht>s I.AS VEGAS Cenlt'r On•tt Vroman * College WEST N~v.O••Ld\ VeQa\ 111, W1cr\1t•" H•> ()rflo~l -1 I IW-.t1An.irt M l 1 ~) J th1''f 111 1 I I) 0 l y,,wort1 'WI1 1J 1 'torl'CI 25 point~ nnd pulled down 17 re - bounds Wednt•!»day niJ(t'-t lo le ad Nt·v.id<J·Las Vt•J?as to a 111 89 t•ollege bask<'tball v1C·tory O\l'r WIC'hlla Stale. 89 400 •rr-"fu'f 1 M1tr1fltt I .tQ 1 H•wpor't H•r•r cMtftt•t•d Hw~ltl'IQIOI'\ leMtt by tortett f 'rona Pagt> Bl HOPE ... lllClUdtng :.IX Of the la!>l l>l'\'l'O ho les in his effort wh1l t' Murphy had a n ama7.ingly !>Ohd round. J Jc d1dn 'l make a bogey hit every fairway. e very green and !>Cored a ll seven birdies from wiUun Sl·ven feet. lie said some new eyeglasses. with which he's just become familiar, were a key to his lm· provt·d play <tnd the basis for his prl'd1ct1on of a bclll'r season ·· 1 have an astigmatism,'' 'he said ·· 1.-:vl•rythin~ was slopinJt off to tht• right <Jnd J was miss- ing everything to the right. I've hud som<> glo!lscs for about six months now and, while l 'm still not comfortable with them. <it least I can Sl'e where I'm go- ing.' t-"'' rOUf'\O 11~~f'' w ... d.M\d111y '" ttwt Bob HOC» °""''I GcMI C.ht\\I( 8 M"rphy lJ 31 •\ c. c.ooe1, J) lJ t\ J ,,. .... 11.y 31).t .. A W•ll U>.t 61 .. C.""'"' 31. l1 •• A["""" "' .. M '°"""''" n JJ .. U C.•""'' JI n 4>4 W Arm\ltnQ ).t J\ .., II W..O~tn\ lJ .a. •• T Pu•ll•• II> U •• l. l lw>m"'°" )~)4 .. K f er(lu\ U<M •9 8 J-•·· •» 10 M MtC.llOQh :i..lo 10 r tt•e. n • 10 M H•¥"\ ll ll 10 A c,..11M1r-lo i. 10 G . Jonr \ ~:W 10 M MtCumbt< lA;i. 10 l. Gr-n~m 1'-:M· 10 ( '>•fluOO )).3) 10 O.tdw•r<I\ ,,.:M 10 0 Poot•, :M '» 10 ( Id•• l~ ll 10 8 c •~Mn,, .. nu -10 R M•\\nQle J~)$-10 8 M0<1-•f\ )) l>· 10 H Tw1lly ,lo Jlo 10 0 Poll! IA a 10 l N•l\Oft :W ll II ~ w-dk •n• lJ a II 1 ........ ltll/1 0 M-y HA 11 A. l•l'I• J1 • 11 G f\urM • J> It G Mo111•n JJ • 11 J H·<~••u\ • U 11 1.. Tr•wino ·~ • 11 J MtC,,O• rt l1 II 0 Hiii u JI 11 A Nortn H )I II li (urt 1):1&11 8 & .. •fll J/ lot-11 f J-~11rr '1 :M I I W l"m :J6.JS /1 l l 011 II :W 11 K lerlu JI ).I /I J P•I• J1 :rt II D ~-" .M l/ 11 M '>tl••n J/ :W II ( c,,.,..,,. un n G llrew., l)ll n M M<lPncJOn »->tt /1 R l•ndo'r J)J/ n J (OllK!r l :J6.J6 1) 8 llO~l>l>rQ l}-J/ 17 J """""' :J6.J6-n Ct Lllll•r ll-:M. n J He•• J!o-31 n 8.8 •1ro ,..,. 11 J.MtOer 34-a -n C..Slr;1~ M--311-n A.Peunu »-31 n V M•l'11n 3W -r2 A.Bun U.ll 12 l HlnUe 34-ll -12 J, lnm•n :i.-Jt.-n 8 .()ocNn U·U-11 A Miiier :U.._,, J Flt!<ll J4..:lt-1J 0 Et<l'llb<QI' :S.-31-11 0.0110.t :J6.U-7J DB•kflr ~3 H Gr .. n ,.._J.f-ll [.Peer<• ~-13 ""-.. , 31·»-ll £.Owmen lS.lt-n P J ... OWI' ,.._,._1l M Hiii :J6.J1 ll J tM<l<~v 41-»-n II Nltllol\ JI·~ 1J J Wllll• i.,11 -IJ 0 lld•bfo• 1' )I IJ I '>~II •P 11 0 Ot• lfl l\ IJ Tht• lk lwb. now 11 :J. t rutlt'<J 47-46 at halfttml'. but broke• tht· $.lamt• OJ>til by outscoring th<' Shotkl'r!> fi5·42 in the second haH. Vroman. who had scort•tl JUSt two points and had only sax rebounds an last Saturday's 103 96 upset loss to Utah. sl"Orl'd 15 of his points a~a mst Wi chita State 111 thl' scc·ond half as the Rebel!; took th~ lead ror good at 48·47 Ma'lf land, 82-BJ RALEIGH. N.C. -Ernest Graham scored a J?ame-rugh 24 points. including a turn a r ound j umpe r with sever seconds left in the second overtime Wednesday niJlhl, to give Maryland an 82·81 upset victory over eighth-ranked North Carolina State in un Allant1c Coast Confrn•nc(• ~u ml· The Wolfpat·k 's ran al opportunity to salvage a victory failed wnen Charles "Hawkeye" Whitney missed a 15-footc r ut the buzzer . Maryland Improved to 11 3 overall and 2· I m the ACC whale N.C. State dropped to 11 ·3 on the season and 0..2 In tht' league. The score was tied at 74 at the end of regulation play and neither team was able to score· in the first overtime lt'a~ For~•--~ 5 8·58 WINSTON-SALEM. N.C Wake Forest used Its s pread offense Wednes· day night and Frank Johnson scored 19 points as the Deacons upset third· ra nked North Carolina 59·56. G uy Morgan a nd Jim J ohnstone added 14 points each for Wake Forest. After tralllng for the IJ)ajorlly or the first haH. Wake Forest pushed a.head on a Johnson layup midway in the second half to give Ufe Deacons their first lead at 41·39 Dtdce, 73•54 DURHAM, N.C. -Led by center Mike Gmlnskl's 17 polnts and 11 re· bounds, the seventh.ranked Duke Dlue Devils trounced Clemson 73·54 before a capacity c rowd in Duke's Cameron In· door Stadium Wednesday night. T he Blue Devils, who were playing their first Allnnllc Coast Conference gam e of tne season. raised their record 'to 10·2 wllle the Tigers dropped their third stra1gnt. t,;1em11on'1 recora 111 now 9 3 und 0.2 In the ACC f~ro• Pa11• BI Connors Advances GIANT DECISI~N. • • dcrpald for 12 ye art, but the biggest thing Is playing with a winning team,'' Carew said. "It'• no run aolng home after every aeat0n and wotchlng the World Series on televlalon," added the hiller wtt.h a .333 career avera1e EVEN IF CA&EW D8CIDE8 to go with San fronclsco. a deal couldn't be made until F eb . l~. when the lnterlea1ue tradl!'« period begins. And Ir Carew reJecta the Olanta. as he hH once alr-eady when an earlier trade wa1 made, the next •t.eR would be for the Twins to glvo caurornta perml1110nto11>tak with Carew. •'We feel conlldenl we could reach an a art ment with Carew once w have th• opportunity t.b t11lk with him,·~ J:Savast uye. ''Jl'• Jutt a mlttef' of belng able to make tbe deal with Griffith " And Carew. who earlier 111d he wanted to be the hlah t·pald plnyer In bucball, baa mellQwed on that Point a bit. ·•t'm not lnterealed ln mak 01 OU\raaeoua money." Carew 11)'1. •'Tbe bl,..l thine to me I.I the enjoyment that comee from gettinll bu• blu • nd ll•tenln'Vo peopl cheer." J . . From AP otaeatcbff NEW VORK - Teen-ager John McEnroe beat Arthur Albe, 6·3, 6·1 and defendln1 cham· pion Jimmy Connors downed Harold So lomon , 6·1 , 6·2 Wednesday night In tne first round ot the Grand Prl>C Maatera t e nnis tournament. In Wtdneaday'1 olh r matches, Brian Gell· tri ed defoet•d Raul Ramlru 6-4, 6·1 and Ed· die Olbbi be•l Corrado Baranutll M , 6-4. H8w•ll &• PM1fk lv!l>N<)n 61 ovu t4ow"u 10?, Mtt<Mutftt• 10') HttWdh H1k> lOO, Stmon Frd\#tt I J N~W MUl(O HIQhldfld\ 11 I I l~"'" u Puoet t;ound ''· C•ntr•I We.1t1n11ton 11 l't!Ol~r><I\ 81, (•II~< n 61 \t M•rlm \. 1CM fllocft.y MOut'llf'tO 14' <,t M••v '·Ken tA lletMnv 61 '>•n O•f'QO 98 t nrnl• 111 U Wtutmetn .,, wn.t""ortl\, Pl'O • . .,.,,,.., EAST Bu<llntcll 63. <,1 J~·,. i-., 61 I or C..nt\IU\ 99, M lllltfW 1' C1nconn-11 ll. Pill\OUrQll /~ D•r 1"'°"111 n. Amflet>I) I •on• II, N1-re .. 111 l • !>elk' 'IO w Kef\luoy .. l•ll•Qn 81. Mulll~,,.,..,Q •1 "'••Y 16. Md IU1t1mo<e C.O H PPM\YIY...,.. "'· To""* ,. R-IMMlc! 91, BcKton C.ot II '>t Pel•• • 10. Hat•lr•" '>vrecu.,. ~."-""!>I 10 1111rmon1 ... o.tew•rw 1• V1ll•no•• ti>, ,,..\MKfl•1>•ll• )I W VtrQtn<df3. VlrQtnld lt'<ll81 SOUTH Ali1tktm1t ~. LOut\>t4h11 \' It> Aldi 81rm1~m 4)J. ~ Ml\11t1a.a1p"1 Appelt1d>1.,, ')t. 7•. Oavld\On 6) C•llw>llC ll, RICllmon<I 1' Cll&dtol ... VMI $J O"ylOn II, Now Ofte""' 61 Du•• ll. C.lflm\Of> ~ E C.•rot11l4t SI>, S c. .. ro11n. )) £ f •nntt\~ 74, T 1tnne\w. T .,, h ~' lOll"t.,,. I M.ll IO'I. Murrey <o1 ff~ M•rwtano 11, N. C...rol1"" SI 11 I Of N C••O·Wllm•llOIOll •). s. Al•Dom• tJ S1euon )t, ~ FIOfld<I $4 r..,1_ 14, f lOrt<M SI . .0 v11111n .. ~. Wllli.tn&-Y i. W•ll•F-IS•.N (.MOllMM MfowtllT ll•ll SI II, Ctnlr .. MIClllQen 14 Bowllr>q (ir~IO. I("" SI tA O.lro•l 13, Loyot•C."'<-I• f ••"'"'"e "· 11...,..,,, Oll+o )9 l( ...... s1 ~.to1or-i. OfllO U 14. ~. Ottoo .. O•IA~ &a. I(""'"'' 0 oi.1.-SI T>. ~''°"'' U Sf. J~ lnO., ll, 8ullor .. !of '"°""SI>. AocJ[,,.,,.I (.ol I(•" .. Tot-14, N llllnot• II W. MiCl\IOMI II,£. Mkl'llQen IJ SOilTHWHT ArlleflSft1',AkA .. 1 unAW ... Houston4l JC Standinss MIUION COfl,, ... Nca w l ,.,, ,.,. !>edeltM>•d , o "' m AIV.rtl<H ' 0 20-1 Ill Ctlrut I I ,.. IJI Pet~r 1 14' "' s.110 .. ooc.c 1 "' 10 Sen hrnMlllno 1 1 IU llO GMfl.., O 2 1.oe , 111 !aOvtllwutetn O 1 10 m .... ...., .. ~ Sedcli.!No lat, Sollt~1trn 1• Sen DleQIO cc. 4S, Cltru' tO P•!Om9r ... c.Mlev U Rl..,.ralde l>G, s. e.rnerotno M laNNrf'tO-. Pel~r.tl~~ S•n OMIOO CC 411 S... h rnMOlfl<> P•lom•r .ti SOut-.. n Cll.tl4tJ •I Cilrllt ' - BASKETBALL I SKIING If the Boot Fits • • • Skien' Choice: Gimmicks or Basics? ll1 Di\V•; {'UNNINUlli\M oi • Otl1W l'lltf lttll Cl tn lJ ttl H ., II f • d " h 1111 "Wtilll .. 111..am It•• IUlllUI thlu• 111 11kl~n. «'•lt•H'l1tlly In h•l 111• 111 r(4 ll I &HIUllll fi'or 1ti.l u11t'I'· It • u 1111rally ll1&rN•d lhnt omi rltitdll • "uh 11f •k It, h<111t", &Wlt11t 11111 W"t 111 (' I() l h ' "" I 11 II k I 'I' h I' .11 ti Ill .. drtl11lltt llf'Nlll KUT MOWI' "'" ,MN w1111ltJ11 t ch~nm or Vf'lllUrlrJM Olll IJl1tl1 ltlO "IOJH'• It ttwy 1lltl11't lllltfl hllVt> •l11v1•11, " 111' I h•I, tt1111Mh-. llf 1u11 1I11 u "', 11 ll 111!1 ru 11111 ••Ill 1('r1•f11t , lt1'11 Ul lll llllthtf WtllU Hllll 10 1 11111ul1111 .. t 11111 lui lr.Vf'll rnr " rlflVftt ty 111 1 f1 l;1 II 11kh•t ltt1it1f1 Ull' l1f1flllll Jlll•f ltlt 1111 port >1111 1111 •1011 fltlft l10M 11 1111 1 ,,,, '"'""' •lt1 ~·· ,,,, 11111•11• 111111 I 1111111 I 1"1' Jl•il I h•• I 11HllfP 11111111 '"''"• ,,, lllliti-' ,,.,,,,, """' 111 111#11 ,,,,, ''" "'""' ,, I \I f. ll"W &flflllffll ~ 1111 ,,,,. trlulltt•I 11••111111.,• ,.,. 11111111111 """II i\111 q~I •·•ft11t1111,.ol 111,.111111111 l11p1111 lwmv •·~·,, 11., ''''" ''' '''' I"' II I t fl '"""' t t'OM ~ ~·t t f f f Of,O•t ht UI 111111> lltl 14f!flH Ill~ I ltt. f f&>W I 1111111iilltl1tll l11111tl111A II f1111lt. llV•• • u If I • I " 1 I 1• • " , ,, I' ' ' • '"I ........ ,,., ' 111111" • Clll \' 11111• V.Cll ii t111 II ""'1111111111 I h•1l ''' lnllllrt" 11hu111 th,. Jlf'W ,~., J,11111111• ltl11 tll11 11. lllllfl'll' Itri· n u11r I\ rr111 ur••11 tlw flr11t CuJly 11111 n1 lull•• 11kl IJruk<' It your toot llOJ•n rn•c> of lh~ binding, 11 iruk~· lf'Vl•r plungH lnlo lht• l'oow ond ftlops th<' ski from con llnuln~ down the s lope T h e brochure p ict ures handsome young men r ipping througn a slaJom course and of· fe rs some almost sexual ad copy: "MORE PROTECT I ON against premature release than ever before. No one nas to tell you how Important retention is ... the brochure says. Once the skie r has purchased his SI 15 fully retractable ski brake binding s. he can J(radutate to othe r "needs" such as The $20 ski tote earn er for µoles and skis, t he S250 !>lereo l"assctte player covert•d in waterproof foam rubber 1 com~ plete with headphones so you can list.en as you ski >. the S25 fur·li ned boda buR. and the $75 hollow sk1 poles which can be filled with the liquid refresh· mcnt of your choice. AND THAT'S J UST the begin- ning. Once you get lno the swmg or gadgetry, you'll find electric foot warme rs that fit inside your ski boot 1$801. glove liners and sock liners to keep your appendages C'ven warmer 1$4 a pair\, and turbo·chaq~ed goggles equipped with an electric ran guaranteed to keep your vision fog ·free < $60 L And a skier so well equipped wouldn't dream of hitting th.: Ski Conditions MQ\tnlelfl HIQll -2 J l•t Of DOW-and P«kf!d pt>WOl'r l r<K•\OflW'W..._,l_<l\elr\Opt'r•llfl9. HOllO•y HUI 1 J l""I of_..... -l)e< ... I- OI "' tou• cf\etn 09tf•l•"IJ ~· !Mnlri .. -'J -of _.,., end _ .. .., PoWO•r, flw'M ""1«• llfl\ OOt••llnQ Ml 8eiCIY -t•lA lllC;r.-, 11v .. Of twr ,,..,f\ Ollf'••l•no -•0 cono•llOtt\ tcr•t•• lllOQe 4 lwl Of ~r ...0 !>«•.ON ,,,...,_, .. _ Ml W•t""""" ~\ 1 .. 1 Of ~r ..-0-kl'd powOttr t'f'O tr-.1r-; OOtW"•llnQ (r•\141 llldQll 41 ln<llH Of ~r •no 1 .. 0 -1111 099r•ll"9 S-~II -I\ 1"4 Of POW*•. -kl!O pOWCl~r •ncl.....,........ -· •" hw -., 1111• -••1tno s-v.i1.., • s ••t tt pecllf!d ~ eno lrll<H of ---· •II u .. Cll<ltrt-r•ll .... Goklrnln9 •24 1Mllnof~-P«k.oneof lllrH(ll<tlr\--'1"9 G•t ... Y-41eY -1-4l•I,._1un11<• HfltO,l•tr•I· llW) alop 1 In bll.K' Jetn • !to hr 'I\ nlMl 110 tor tho S!iOO Europt•tt n wntc-rproor ski irnll. th\' S2~ Nordlco l'Ompetltion itkl boot"I 101CI the S300 Hntil Primer Cort.I I I 11kl11 Anet tho run aprt•, 11kl outm. "l1 If ci hlo for lounarlng by th1· n1 •01tcfo wtth th c:luHf4 st ol ak1 l1Uflttl~•. l'IHI COit. • , W II, )'OU MN I It• 1111111 tt V Tiii': TlMte: U\(11 fllnotlc hu!t ~1 •11 ' h o ct ., v ~ r 9 l h I rur tw 11• •ult It," 111•'• run Ill' " bill 11( ti t>i f l>rl~tAnaoth(•othcr routt• ,_,,,, 1,11y H._t llt"nti't•1111U • A Huntington Beach s ki shop of· f~rs Its budget skls, Pol Mnd u nvu bag to urry them In ror $140. nnd the least expen11vc• boola run about S45;'~ y ~ ~ sklln.i rorlcs.,thanS200. Perhaps tbe Ddvlce of Phil Mahr • a contender for Oly mpic ~old In the U'l80 Olympic Games. would be help(ul. ·•Don't try to tmp~ anyone. Get a aooct. c:omlottable 6e(up. itom thlna you (eel &ood in. Get 1'0methlng you enjoy llkaina In .. Mubrt uys In other words. 1C the boot ftl• wt'la r It ••w Hook Out ki Like a Bum, I.Jive Like a Bum Uy Oi\VJ•: ('\JNNlNGHAM Of .... o.11• ,,, ....... " A 111101 .. rrom 11 1ww hook t•n11u !C't'ftwSkl 1lum·,o uldt• lo M 111101 11111 w111111r1· "Too 1111111y IH'(1pl1• llv1• lht•lr llvt•s lltl' wuy lhl'Y ski a 1uount11ln Th•·y fl111 I n 11111 lhut mukt•11 them co mfortubll• lllld IH'Vl'I >jkl llf'yt111tl . lluw i•nn tht•lr hkt Inf( o hlllly I 11111rovt•" ltow 1·nn th1•lr llvmi.t nblllty lmprovt•'' t-1 uk1• cuch n\'w run un odvt•n l ur('. Put on your bifocals und stalk lh1· mountain wildhte " ( SKIING J The wntc•r who penned the book calla himself Nipl Chinook. and tus volume 1s dtr~ted to the penru1ess, op portunity-seekinR '>kt bum. nol the average, vacation· bound skler The best way-to approach a ski bummin' lifestyle. he ..... nys-;·1s·W1th ·an appettte· for adverttuae ·and·-ground bed He warns that a complctt· a bsence of ftnanclal ambition 1~ essential. Chinook tells how to beg, borrow and !>teal such necessities as lodgmg. m<>als and urt tickets. Some or the suggestions are unsavory to one <u: customed to niceties tb~ book recomme nds tomato soup 1 ketchup and hot water 1 a nd slt>eping under an outdoor stairwell But Chinook doc·s pro''l' onl' important point you don t have lo be rich to :-.kt "Time and money arc <.·ouMns m that both can bt· spent carelessly," Chinovk pt\ilosopb1zes "But their rcla tionsh1p 1s dist:mt, sinc·c money. once spent. can be acquired again, whereas tame spent carelessly is forever lost · · The book Is nvailabl<' at seleded bookstores and ski shops . • • • Wall Mammoth Mountain and three ad.Jacent areas merge and expund lo becomt• the sm~le largest skt center an the world., Maybe, but the ball is now m the hands or the U.S. Forest Serv1cc In May the Forest Ser vice will decide whether the land in question should be das:-.1fted as wilderness rcscrv~ or opened up lo rccreauonal development. Tne Mammoth Winter Rccre<ition Pl<in calls for a series of interconnected ski ureas near Mammoth Moun lain. including Sherwin Duwl , San Joaquin Ra<Jge, Whitt· Wing and June Mount:un. The Far Wt•st Ski Assn 1s one of the lobby groups pushing for the plan to J?O through. They clatm skiinJ? is grow mg at an annual rate of 12 percent and by 1990 that area "'111 need toservicc60,000skiers a day in peack season A major winter sports <.·omplex plan for Mineral Kmg was re«ntly s hot down for conse rvatlonalist reasons. a nd many skiers see tnas Mom moth plan as their last hope. The US. Fores t Ser vice. m eanwhile. 1s considerin" 13nd around that area to be locked into what they call the Road less Area Hevicw II !RARE II 1. "If any part. ot these connecUn~ area.s go in goes into RARE If, we wall huve lo forget that part of the plan," s ays Carl Martin, winter sports specialist for the Inyo Na· tlonal Forcst "This 1s not an ambitious plan." Martin sayo; "We should have had thcsl' fac1 hlics year-. ago." By May. skiers should have thl'tr answer from the U S Forest Service. • • • Some people think the only way to be assured of good ski· ' Ing Is tojetofflo the Alps. but 1tJustisn't true Last month Val d 'lsi•re. France's premiere Alpine re· sort.. had to cancel five dayo; or World Cup racing because It didn't have any snow Prep, JC Basketball JAii. 6·111, 1979 Hla..ICHOOL CeMwY Lt'*" S•nlf AM Y.ileY 74, •1 MOC!f'M S. POOilltll SI, VIII• PMll ll Tu•llll ... Senle AM 4/ ~1W19!1'5,C.envottll ,,,_ • .,L....- l)uen• P.Wll 14, i.--" .. lrOf ... WWIY HlllUI Wole•n )I, Se•.,,... .. MeQflOfle 1•. A.-1m S. 0 .... °""" L...- f)Ql,. G<-•'· !a.tnl•-00,, I e Ou1nl• 19. 0¥CMI\ Of'O .. •I 1.0\ AmtllOl tO, AAMllO Alttm1\0\ $0 0r....-u.... ( \C)et•llT• U flrH ti Lowtll ti, l'ul .. nOfltt Et Oor!ldoH, V-•• \J I.• H•llr• M, Soft«• 0 ............ COIM>n .0. CWren 1J Etlenc1a ... OcNft View &I C.O\I• MltM 60, Sen O."""'te SI Merl.._ 7S, (Ollre J4 Cllplllr-V-4..., tt, So. Tom1nc:t .. fovnlelll V.iley S2, P-V.,Cltt\ 50 lf¥tne50,~HtllUI JUNIOlllCOU.R08 t.-CMtt~• Ore110t Co.ti ... M1 Se" AnlonlO .. Cerrtlot M. 5.wlt• AM IO Groumont ... Sell ~Me .. \I 1'1H -MIWCM.-a sPOat•eAC•TION RECREATIONAL VEHICLE SHOW "°"'''. . ...... .. Jrl t 12• t&I Kid.I ( 6· II I 'I - I ( - 51 ,! ' ~ • • • • ' • ' ' ' ' ' I 1 ' j I l l ' ' l I ' GIGANTIC WINE SE[ECTIONS .'L .. ~-FROM THE FOLLOWING CALIFORNIA WINERIES Alm•den Andre Angelo P•p•glnl B•rengo BHulteu Vinyard Beringer Buena Vl1t1 Call•wey C•rlo Roni Cell•r Select l otlle Ca. Aet. BARBERA - - Gall0, 1.5·LITAl ......................................... 2.50 13.80 Louis Martini. 150-ML ............................ .2.39 28.00 SebasUanl 150-ML .................................. .2.94 32.00 BURGUNDY Beaulieu Vinyard, 1so-ML ................... .2.20 23.92 Charles Krug, 150-ML ............................ .2.03 22.00 CK Mondavl, 1.5-urRe ..... : .................... .2.52 13.70 Franciscan, 150-ML ................................ 1.82 19.80 Glumarra, 150-ML .................................... 1.79 19.38 Mlrrasou, 150.ML .................................... .2.33 25.30 CABERNET SAUVIGNON Almaden, 1so-ML ..................................... .2.94 32.00 Beringer, 150-ML ...................................... 4.04 44.00 Cellar Select, 150.ML .............................. 1.37 14.85 Charles Krug, 150-ML ............................. 4.04 44.00 Christian Bros., 1so-ML ........................ 3.13 34.00 Geyser Peale, 1so.ML .............................. 3.63 39.80 lngleno•. 150-ML. .................................. 4. 78 52.00 Louts M111Jnf, 150-ML ............................. 3 .13 34.00 • Robert Mondavl, 750-ML ....................... .5.88 64.00 Sonoma, 150-ML. ...................................... 4.04 44.00 GAMAY BEAUJOLAIS Beaulieu Vlnyn, 1so-ML .................... .2.42 28.32 Charles Kftll, 150-ML ............................ .2. 75 30.oo Cresta Blanca. 150-ML .......................... .2.83 28.80 Glumarra, 110-uL ................................... .2.42 26.40 Mlrrasou, 1so-ML .................................... .2.53 27.50 Parduccl, 150-ML .................................... .2.13 23.1 o SebastlMI, 150-ML .................................. 2.48 21.00 Simi, 150.ML ............................................. .2.50 27.20 MER LOT Almaden, 750-ML ...................................... 2.94 32.00 Angelo Papaglnl, 750·ML ............... -.... 2 .20 24.00 Louis Martini, 150.ML ............................ .2.91 31 .80 PINOT NOIR Christian B(ol. Plnot St. George, 150-ML ................................. .2.99 32.50 •Fetzer, 7bO·ML ........................................... 3.19 34.78 franclSCM, 750-ML ................................. 3.23 35.20 •Geyser Peak, 150-ML .............................. 3.19 34. 76 Louil Msttnl, 75o-ML ....................... : .... .2.91 31.80 Mlrrasou, 150-ML. .................................. .3.54 38.50 Parduccl, 150-ML .................................... .3.83 39.80 Sonoma, 110-ML ....................................... 4.04 44.00 GEWURmRAMINER Almaden, 1so-ML .................................... .2.94 32.00 Cresta Blmca, 15Q..ML ........................... 3.24 35.20 Gey .. Pelle, 750-ML .............................. 3. 19 34. 78 MlrTUOU, 750-ML .................................... .3.54 38.50 Mmatny VlnJri 150-ML ................... 3.83 39.80 SebaltlMI, 750-ML ................................. .3.83 39.80 Simi. 750-ML .............................................. 3.83 39.52 •WHEN AVAILABLE SUMMIT WINES Ch•ndon David Brvce Kenwood Chappetet Fetzer Konoctl Ch•r ... Krug Flrntone Korbel Ch•tHu St. JHn Francltean Lejon Chrlatlen Bro1. Franzla LeD,omalne CK Mondavl Gallo Llord1 I Elwood Colony OeyaerPHk Loa Hermanos Concannon Olumarra Loat Hiiis Create Blanca Hana Kornell Louie Martini Crlb•rl Bottle Br C1. 2.27 2.17 2.87 2.00 1.84 2.29 1.85 1.82 2.11 2.87 3.67 1.24 3.87 2.84 3.30 4.34 2.84 5.34 3.87 2.20 2.50 2.39 2.20 2.30 1.83 2.25 2.27 2.87 2.00 2.84 2.71 2.90 2.93 2.90 2.81 3.21 3.30 3.87 2.87 2.94 2.90 3.21 3.30 3.30 3.30 Inglenook Mlrraaou Bottle Ca. Ret. RUBY CABERNn-- Celllr Select. 750-ML ................................... 88 9.57 8lllo, 1.1-l.ITlt! ........................................ .2.84 14.38 Inglenook Nnalle, 1.M.•TRl .............. .2.72 14.80 ZINFANDEL ..... Vlltl, 7IO-M&.. .............................. .2.92 31 .80 Chm1el lrug, 150-ML. ........................... .2.75 30.00 Clwtltlan Bros., 1so-M &.. ...................... 2.42 28.30 Geyser Peale, 75o-ML ............................. .2.24 24.28 Inglenook, 710-ML .................................. .2.75 30.00 •Kenwood, 750-ML .................................. 2.83 30.80 Louis Martini, 1so.ML ............................ .2.39 28.00 Mirra sou, 150-Mo ................................... .2.53 27 .50 Pedroncelli, 150-ML ............................... .2.03 22.00 Sutter Home, 150.ML .............................. 3.30 3&.oo CHAMPAGNE Almaden Blanc De Blanc, 15o·ML ...... .5.39 58.00 Chlndon Napa Valley Brut. 1.11 ....... .5.78 83.00 Franzll, 750-ML ................................... 3/5.00 18.99 Korbel Extra Dry, 750-ML ...................... 5.08 55.18 Le Domelm Extra Dry, 1so-ML .......... .2. 75 30.00 Mumms Cordon llouge, 11M111L. .... 14.18 154.80 , ......... Ex. Dry, 710-ML ............. A.95 54.00 Andre, 750-ML .......................................... .2.07 22.48 CHABLIS Angelo Pap1g1111, 150.,..L ...................... .2.03 22.oo Beringer, 150-ML ..................................... .2.03 22.00 c K Mondlvl, u -LITRE .......................... .2.52 13.70 Christian Bros., 1so-ML ......................... 1.84 20.00 Glumarra,1so-ML .................................... 1.12 12.05 Mlrrasou, 150-ML .................................... .2.33 25.30 Paul Masson, 1.s-L1TRE .......................... 2.80 14.15 San Martin, 150-ML ................................ 1.11 18.51 Sebaltlanl, 710·ML ................................. 1.85 18.00 SCJuveralft, 750·ML. ................................. .2.18 23.85 Taylor Callfornla, 150-ML ...................... 1.79 19.36 FRENCH COLOMBARD Almaden, u -uTAE .................................. 2.48 13.49 Cellar Select, 750-ML ................................... 85 9.19 Cresta Blanca, 150-ML .......................... .2.03 22.00 Psduccl, 710-ML ................................... .2.42 28.40 Pedroncelli, 150-ML ............................... .2.03 22.00 GREEN HUNGARIAN • Buena Vista, n o-ML ................................ 2.83 28.80 &kl'nsra, 75o-ML ................................... .2.15 23.32 Sebaltllftl, 750--ML ................................. .2.20 24.00 Wllbel, 750-ML. ....................................... .2.58 28.00 RHINE Almaden Mtn., u -LrrflE ........................ 2.46 13.38 81110, 1.1-LrTRl ......................................... 2.37 12.87 8fuftllrrll, 1.l·LITIU! ................................ .2.21 12.05 Paul Mauon, 1.s-uTRE .......................... 2.80 14.15 LIQUORS Keuler, u1-L1TR1 ................................. .9.79 55.33 11111,..Dol& llllnd, 7So-ML ................. .3.85 41 .22 Dnllll CoUllty lowtlon, 7IO·ML. ..... 4.01 48.08 TM H"'9-.., no-ML. .................. A.10 48..38 Old Crow IO-Pr ........... 1.71-LITlttl.93 50.52 111111 111111Clllldlln,710-ML .......... A. 71 53.28 CHABLIS1 RHINE z ·aa ~......, VIN ROSt OR 8UR8UNDY LI~: .. lllllf'I Ill, 1.1MJTR1 ........................ .1.00 50.IO lonlln'l lln, , ................................... .3.11 44.IO .................. 7'0-ML. ............... .1.31 72.21 Old lit!UIJll• loolDll, nwu ............ A.OS-..:0 J-.-...Ir1111.1.11-UTR1 .................. 13.11 74.20 CullhO ..... T .... 11, 180-ML ............. .1.17 11.31 811.a llillt JMlllt ...,, ., 7IO-ML ........ A.II 51.44 Ci•• ••• 1-.111-. ............. .J.31 37.11 ....... l101 11-Pr.,ouMt .... A.1147.U ' ... ) Monterey Vinyard Sonoma Oakville Souveraln Parduccl Stertlng PaulMaaaon Sutter Home Pedroncelli Taylor Cellara Robert Mondavl Trentedue San Mqrtln Tulatln Santa Barbara Welbel Sebaatlanl Wente Bros. Simi Bottle By C1. .80 2.40 2.47 2.84 2.50 2.20 2.03 2.50 2.57 2.17 2.30 1.84 3.00 4.84 5.25 1.59 4.-60 2.50 12.89 4.50 1.88 1.84 1.84 2.29 1.87 1.01 2.11 2.38 1.55 1.50 1.98 1.82 2.25 .77 1.84 2.20 1.84 2.39 1.91 2.00 2.34 2.23 2.15 2 .01 2.38 ' ZacaMeH Bottle Ca. Rel JOHANNISBERG RIESUNr- Barengo, 150-ML ...................................... 3.24 35.20 B ....... 750-ML. ..................................... 4.45 48.40 •Buena Vista, 1so-ML ................................ 4.03 43.92 Cresta Blanca, 150-ML .......................... 3.24 35.20 Firestone, 750-M&.. .................................. A.04 44.00 Inglenook. 750-ML .................................. 4.04 44.00 Mtrrasou, 710-ML .................................... .3.54 38.50 Montny Vinyard, 150-ML .................. 3.19 34.71 • Robert Mondavl, 750-ML ....................... A.04 44.00 San Martin. 1so.ML ................................. 3.44 37.40 • Santa Barbara, 110-ML ......................... 2.83 28.60 Simi, 150.ML .............................................. 3.63 39.52 Sonoma, 150-ML ..................................... A.04 44.oo Souveraln, 150-ML .................................. .3.07 33.50 ROSE AlmMlen Necm. u -LITRE ................... 2.4& 13.36 Charles Krug, 750-ML ........................... .2.03 22.00 Christian Bros. N1P1. 750-ML ............. 1.M 20.00 Paul Masson, 1.5""-ITRE ......................... .2.60 14.1 S Robert MondlYI a-.,, 750-ML. ....... .2.75 30.oo VEllMOUTH ctnnno sweet. 750-M&.. ....................... .2.39 26.oo Glllo sweet orDry1so.ML. .................. 1.35 13.35 Martini & Rossi, 110-11&.. ...................... .2.93 31.92 Paul Mauon, 1so-ML .............................. 1.52 16.50 Trtbuno, 1so-ML ...................................... 1. 79 19.35 CHARDONNAY Almaden, 1so-ML ..................................... .2.94 32.00 Beringer, 150-ML ...................................... S.25 57.20 Christian Bros., 1so-ML ........................ 3.49 38.00 Franciscan, 75o-ML ................................ 4.55 49.50 Geys• Peale, 1So-M&.. ............................ .3.83 39.60 • llonls & Elwood, 750-ML ....................... 4.45 48.40 Mtrrasou, 1so-ML ................................... A.55 49.SO Monterey Vinyard, 1so.ML .................. 4.84 52.80 S• Martin, 750-ML ................................ .3.63 39.60. Sonoma, 750-ML ..................................... 4.31 48.82 Souveraln, 750-ML........ . .................... 5.12 55.69 CHEMIN BLANC Cellar Select. 1sir-ML ............................ 1.1 1 12.67 Chrlatlln Bros., 1so-ML ......................... 2.42 26.30 Colony, 1.l·LITRE ..................................... .2.36 12.81 Cresta Blanca, 1so-ML .......................... .2.83 21.eo Los Hennanos, 1.1-trrR1 ...................... .2.81 14.20 Mlrrasou, 1so.ML .................................... .2.IO 31 .46 Monterey Vinyard, 750-ML .................. .3.19 34. 71 OllMlle, 750-ML ....................................... 1.87 20.35 Paal Masson, 150-ML ............................. .2.35 25.50 • R.,..... Mondavl, no-ML ........................ 3.13 34.00 Seblstl•I, 750-ML ................................. .2.20 24.00 Sllnl, 710-ML ........................................... .2.39 25.98 Wente llmc De Blanc. 1so-ML ........... 2.11 26.00 • 2.94 4.04 3.66 2.94 3.87 3.87 3.21 2.90 3.87 3.12 2 .39 3.30 3.87 2.79 2.17 1.12 2.86 1.38 1.62 2.67 4.77 3.17 4.13 3.30 4.04 4 .13 4.40 3.30 3.91 4.85 1.06 2.20 2.14 2.39 2.37 2.83 2.90 1.70 2.13 2.84 2.00 2.17 2.39 -DAILY PILOT fhur10ay, J1nuary 11 111111 Business Quiek Sales Follow Bid for Heirs B JOUN Cl NI l''f' ·~ ............... ., .. Wht•n tht• undt•rtakl'r. lhe tax mtn. \ht• l'UUN. t~ •\lOmt')A and th" t•rtdll()Ni 1rt• t"rou h With lhe efll lC', \Mn> mlght ~ httl• ll"ft for lhc!i twin, said lht> ln&~fll&n \ ar o' r 30 )Hra. •ould ire t• h t>•lt> the pa)'m~nl burd n BU. Using atl clt-<'tl'Onh' C'Ort1µu1t•r and t~ execuuv~·s t•urrt-nl nf't worth, be sho"'ed that If lht' man we~ to die that day, "t'°'"'• co t•'' ~ consume 38 3 Ptr cent of hi.a ,ea c.tate. The 1n&urantt •.c•nt wouJd ht• wC'll p 1d -bout Sll\,000 in thl' hrat ~t.,.1.r and ,1,500 a ye.-r for the rol1owaoa nlnt yeu• Thl'n•i.nn hf> ml6fht r celve $:'JClO .. :v.eaar for NiC'ln.1¢ lhA J'l()ltcy A .~ILYSIS lu ~lraous 1t1111a o n Dollar Houndtoblc h&11' IOfit lb l)Oltsb. A mort-cxclu..,ivc club has been formed The 1op ot The Table, mad_, up of those who seU $S m llllon of lnsur1net1 ln a year. Tbt ~ult. Anot..bc:-r million doHar whole 111• lo1uranre Uapplt""lt ol ull rnlathl be th1• life lnaur~n<'t company. which h • tound • 1row1na murk~t In b11 poht'IN ln lh1• 1nalantt II waa M !la<'hu'K't~ Mutual. but 1lmosl all other btg 1n11unira nrc MASS MlJTtJAL alone sold more than 800 of the million dollar plu.:s v<>licles last year. lops In tt. industry. Whtie some covered the lives of housewives and children, the vast majority were on executive Jives. har1n1 ln the trend polai•y wa .. 1>old. almo'>t 4' uu a ntt..-cin.: that tht> eic ''cuth1e'a ei. tote would pas~ lnla<'t to his family. und U<'tually .:row 10 the process. \\llATFVF.R C'OMPANY II> i nvolved. the t«!chn1que 1!1 111m1lor. with the "'"""' relying heavily on hypothetical, com puter p roduced probak or lh1.• 1nd1v1du1.tl ~ l•!ltt.tll'. u111ng ~·~'tual 10\'l'OIOtfos or 0n8t'l!i A growing number of these policy sules are for the sole purpose of providing estate Ii· 4u1d1ty, or to leave an estate in· tat't for the deceased 's heirs 261 1n urn. and 310 or so last year u NI•• THE EXECUTIVE, age SO, or In some instances his C-Ompaoy. would be charged ahout $30,000 a year In premium s, bul dividends, averaging $9,000 a "Artt'r ht• catt'bes his brl'lllh." :.a.):. Dave Rarkhut•u:.t~r. d1reetor of estalt• plannan~ for Mas:. Mutual. "t.he client reaUzes how important estate plannmg 1s The s ale o ften rottow:. 1m mediately Birkhaeuscr 1s convinced the trend will continue. especially s ince many insurers have re· rently lowered prices and raised d1v1dends. a result of lower than • I So effective 1s the technique. especially in llmC's of anflauon and high truces. that the once 11 Starting a New Business Acccordlng to CelHOfnia BusiMH end ProfHllons Code(~. 17900 to 17930) ell per90nl dofng bualMll under • fic:tltlou• n•~ muat fHe • atatament wtth the County Clerk end heve h publl•h•d four time• In a ne-.paper aentng ttle e r•• In whi ch ti'•• tMallne .. I• located. The •t•tenient 11 required by lew end 11 nec.1ury In protecting your bu1lne11 neme. Moat bank• require proof of flllng to open commerci-4 accounts. The DAILY PILOT provide• both fifing •nd pvbClcetlon MfYlcH. We hev. ell tM neee1 .. ry form• and rnelnt•n • deity 1erylc• to th• Orange County CourthouM. Etttt.f atop by one of our conYenlent office• or phone the LEGAL DEPARTMENT 642-4321, Eat . 332 for more Information end f0fm1. WE AU COMCHHID WITH YOUA HU&.Tl4 ByTeny Grant, R .. Ph. The dis pt·ns1n1t of a presrript.ion mcd1C'1ne 1 .... muc•h more thun an ordinary lransartaon A doC'lor has dc·u•rmined that a sperifir druJ! will help a person with an 1llne11s and he hm; J?tven r arrful instructions us to the name and strenseth of the drui::. the amount to be taken. and for how Ion~ at should be used Ali your pharmaC'tst. we ha,·e translated these instructions and from them prPpared your med1rine Often. we mu.~t J?iVf' you a dd1t1ona l informal.Jon as to stor1n1t tht' presl'nptaon. po'l!>1blc i.1de rfrects. posi.ihl1· rf'aC't1onl> with utht•r products ilnd othl·r raut1on~ YOl'H OOCTOR Ct\~ PHON F. llS wh•·n n111 nl·ed a medir1nl'. P1C'k up your prc~crapt1on 1r shoppln~ nearby. or wP will dC'l1 vt>r promptly without extra rhar~c-. t\ "real man y p eop le entrust us with lht•1r prcsrripllons. Muy we tom pound yours? PAD UDO PHMMACY ,,_~ 351 ........ Rood ......,.,. ..... 642-ISIO Answer Page. For the phone calls that can't wait. Answer Page offers the most complete selection of "beepers" In Southem ~llfomla. We have regular beepers, twc>-address bffpers ·· even silent bffpers that vibrate nol~elesslyl And every bffper hH Just one }ob: to alert you to Important phone calls In· stantly, anytime, anywhere In 10&00 sqitarc miles or California. (No one covers more territory!) If you have Answer Page, you'll never miss a crucial call again, because when someone wants you. they simply dlal your number on any phone and your beeper gives you the signal. It's as usy as that! You pay one low monthly rate, with no limit to the num· ber or "beeps" you can receive, no special equip· ment to !mt.all and no extra phone charges to pay. So why wait? Call the number nurest you and find out how easy It Is to stay In touch all the time ··with Answer Pagel fU~EVJffi ffi(jE 731-7777 °' Oii lnfomwttlon ror lhe 4'Mw .. P•Qt ofll<e n<'•IUI you ~~ ... ..., ........ tow 'Timothy J . Doaabue has been apJ>()inted pro· duction manager at Law~ Alu Stern Public Relatloos/Advertlslng, Newport Beach. ResJ>Onsibilities include supervision of art and media production and agency li~on with sup· pliers. He had previous ly worked ~e advertising and publishing industry in M ichlgaii~ • Samantha D. Ketchum bas been named vice president and cashier or CommerceBank, a commercial bank planned to open near the Orange County Airport in January. She has spent more than 2S years in the banking business, most recently as tbe vice president and caahier at South Coast National Bank, Costa Mesa Beforelhat, s he was employed by Valencia Bank and by the Bank of America. where s he manag.ed branches in Anaheim and Placentia. • Newport Homl" Loan, Inc., Newport Beach. has named Bob La Joie, Laguna Beach. invest· m ertt counselor. lie works with professional corporation retire- ment plans on second trust deed investment op- portunities m Orange County real est.ate. • John P. McGowan, Irvine. has been named senior account executive at American Home Mortgage Corp., ~ewport Beach. He is former s ales tralrung manager and pe nsion consultant for ADP Pension Services of Newport Beach, a pos ition he held for three years. lie handles pension, profit sharing and retirement plan investme nts. • Leonard T. Baxter, vice president of Fidelity Federal Savings and l.oan Association, has been named manager of the association's Newport Beach/Westcliff office. • James F. Lyons, NewJ>Ort Beach. has been nam ed vice president of marketing for National Programming Corp. and its s ubsidiaries, Five Star Services and Five Star Productions, all of Santa Ana. He will direct marketing activities and be responsibile for development of profit improve- ment strategies for clients. Before joining the company. he worked for IBM in San Francisco. • Wayne Garey, Dana Point, has been named director of operations for BiddJe Development, Inc., Newport Beach building firm. He is former director of purchasing and field operations for the Christiana Companies. lie will direct field operations for Biddle's residential and commercial projects. • Patricia Foster, one of Bank or Newport's original staff m ember s. has been named vice pres ident and senior trust officer. She began her banking career 18 years ago in the trust department of Citizen's National Bank Cnow Crocke r Bank) in Sant.a Ana. Before joining the Newport Beach bank al its inception In 1972, she worked with the former Newport National Bank, Newport Beach. • George 'Coloorb, Newport Beach, has been named a director of the Southern California chapter of the National Association of ExbJblllon Managers for 1979. He heads George Colouris Productions. Anaheim. He produces the Southland Home and Garden Show and the George Colouris Recrea· tlonal Vehicle, Van and Boat Show. both sta~ed an nually In Anaheim , and the annual Cahfom1n Sports. Recreational Vehicle and Boat Show at the Santa Clara Fairgrounds in San Jose. 26-Week Certificates FSfJC ANNUAL lffKTIVE YllLO % • ANNUAL ltATI! For certificates issued during 1I11 thru 1I17179. --...-.. -- Minimum $10,000 lntarest compounded doily. No fMs. Eorn m0<tr thon ony bank. ........... 11 .2.S1\ lli9het "'°" u s. ,,..,...., 1111 4'lw-I rete, wlucll It ....,_e4 WMlll)'. n..refote. rote Ca aublect lo c"41ftve 01 •-ol, wlllcll '°"Id •ffMt onnvol ,i.ld. fecl•rol 19911loOott• .....,1,. o 111b1ton•lel l•lef••I ~IY f0t eotly "'illlllfe·wol ··-,.rilfltet• .. Sonto Anoi 979·7580 S.A. Fothlon Sq1 83-4·011 7 Newport Beach 1 631 ·2611 Huntington Beoch1 898·9666 exp cted mortality, and buai· neu e fficiencies owner must be other Lhan tho eic· ecut1vc <otherwise a million dollar policy on a million doUar estate would make it a S2 mUIJon estate I. Frequently, therefore. a wife or a business or an 1r· revocable trust is named both owner and beneficiary. und state wxes and profes11ion31 fees without being forced lb h qu1date real assets, such u .1 buaine1111. LIFE INSlfllANCE. Birkhaeuser says, may be a unique vehicle for preserving est»tes because it lsn 't subject to tax e ble gains taxes ii the benefi ciary is other than the de· ceased'sest.ate. To accomplish thls. the policy Provided for this way, the heirs are immediately in a PoSi· tion to pity orr creditors. federal In fact, Uirkhaeuser main· tains. such insurance re Im· perative If a business ma n hopes to leave hls business unepcum· bered. llis heirs, he points out. are powerless people .-IOved. perhaps, but last In hne. Sysfntt MINf"• What is billed as the biggest mining system in tht> world is in operation near Bonn, West Germany. at the Hamback opencast soft coal mine. It is com- pr i st-d of a bucket wheel excavator and ~ slacker that, with other equipment, can do as muc h in one day as 45.000 people can do us- ing picks and shovels. Man in foreground pro· vides perspective on its size. ' Ov~r Tiu~ Countt•r HEW YORK IAPI Cmw T~t ~ ... .:.~"::"t~" ConnC.n •\ ConP•P oon.t SoKurllte• Cr•wta ~-~~.:i:~·e::. ln\..W•n<.e & tndu.sl· Cn>uCo C..tlrFf'el 0.nt•M •I \IO<"' 014'0.\ AE L Incl .... lloll O•:tM.u AFAProl ..... 10.... g:L·~:t AYM Cp .,,, s AOdhnW "'• ·~ 0.tC:.nT Ael•Aou 1~ J'" Oellnt8 Ad•Ml<r n n'" Oe-yEI A ......... 2'1"-30..., Ol<1Cry\ All<olnc 18\olo 18"' Ol•nCru :~r~tp '°"" 11 .... Oo<vtel n ... nv. OotlrGn AFutn Oonl<lsn l ll·lb 3 IS.16 OorcllGI AC.reel 11 .. 11\fo Ooyt08 AMl(rO'lo IJY> ,. Oun111nO AWelclnQ 11• ... , ...... CNr1ron Amttrr 1 ll-11> l E~r11~ A...011• ••• 0 ., EconL•ll Anneu•8 l~H'• EIP•\EI Ant.CP • , .. ..,. Eia.rB" Ar~nC.p , ... ,.., EleHIKI ArkWG\ ,,~II"> EIMOOVI 4'sdCot• n~. 21 Enr~• AllC.•LI IS"' IS"> Entw•sll ~~~~ '"" e•, E~11 11 ... 14'-~I nAI Bkamllt II 11 .... •brl 8•"'"' .. v ..... -... 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P(A Int ··-1(). .. >lf>rlSI \ .. \ . tJ..., •• P•b\18 ,, ........ )lr•w(t ,. lo ... . ~ PcC,,I> n 11~ ~':t:'eehc i. ·~ ?•-. 2.S. :~::xi '"• . .... \'o ••• . .... . ., 9 • -r•miMt. lJ 3A u ? 1S .. "-"•( nt •&1• 1•'9 THumP ~ loll ., .. P•trol1t ..O'o ""• f M'\l'\4nt ,,.,, .,,.., 18..\• ''' Pe111oon ,., ., 11¥-1 Ttff•nv J8• .. "°'• 18 , ... Pt,.roSS "'" IJ T •P'6fY .,.,, ..... '"' 1 Ptnll'11\ 111• 19'• TO'<O(P \ ... ~ ,~ .... 10 PoonH18 "" 10'• Ttn\O<O •• 10 14\11 1• .. Pl•\111\f 1 ... 1 ... TncoPd ... SI .,. ... Po\$1\ l'• Jcl • T rotnOC. ·~ .... ]\'t 4\ .. Pr09ro l lt1 ,..., Ty....,.,Fd " .. ""' tn. 11~ PllS•NC 10•1o IOft UnM<G•I ..... . .,, JO J11,, Purl Ben )() ... ,, .. , US Suro 1~· .. """ IJ ,. PutOC•P 11 4 .... US Tr<• IJ•• lA• • 11'1• 11 OV.llnn' s•. s·' UV•BV> 11"-""' IOV> 17 R_,.p, .... ··~ UpP•,,P 10 .. " , ~ 10 R•f<hm n I• ..... c.., ~'• lO"- IJV> "'" R•ymncl :IO ,, V-tnOu~ 1 ..... 11'., 11 ••• .., =~i~ .... .... V.on<•Sn \ . >'• 181' 1~., , .... 1s , V••<ro .... • ,. ... 3,. lloOC>My ,.. JI V4N8•n 1J• ••• ,~ ... , .. Row ion )•• .... W\1'1£f'r 14...,, IS • , .. . ' 11 ....... . ... • •• Wpt>CP' 8 .. J/ ... JI ., Ru.Sin• 1,.. n .. Wf'IGttrt I> 1 • •4• IC>loo S.Ollt't J"' 4 . =~1:~i .. :1 •• q 1µ. , ••• Sun DI , ... ,.. l'. 3'"-I :~ ~~·c:~ '1 IO WtnMlq J.., • I JI ... JI ... WmorC ,.,. JO 18 ,., ~ •• 0.11 10 10'" WOOclLot 1• • " , • .., 10 Svcm\tr JO )I WWE"Q . .. .... :JO JI ) Si'l•wmt J7 ~ WrtqnlW .... 7 13~ lol ... SohelStS ~i<f t I .. llonUI• f'i r 10''1 111i.·" 1Q.J.. 2(>J .. 1'9 ''• 1 ... I 1).lo 11 I.. i'WASD1lfl S11mnaary 30 , ..... """ "'• , .... HEW YORI< IAPI Mo'lt .cttvt!' over !SY>,..,. ti.<-•~ llO<k\ "'r.::"" II• ..A!>O ,. , J• .. H•"'f' y04.,._ Kl A"'ed Cno 18<1o ,. ... 0.yllr\ u•.qoo J•-. 3., 13"-• 1''-Ol!Hr 1:~ s ·:~~· ~ ~J·~· ... , .. .. ,,.,. • t •• 11 n MCIC 17Z(:, ... .... •I ID 21 ,. • ., Cov•noe I ,,, . . I~ 10 .... l•MSH" .... IW " ]A ,. " u Hy•llCP 00100 ,. . XI"> .. IS ... 161'f tnfhv ':s'?& J 1 ID J ~ IO .. t 10 n..,.n ... CollSoC.• •.. s • ... 171, 731.i. GnHellll II YOO IJ"' 1J • . .. .~~~J!., AOv•n<~d 460 IO"t 10'4o 0.<ttllfcl 409 II II'·• Un<MnQ4'el 1,00'I 1,)Jll l/p s aNd Doam&11 UP\ ANO DOWNS .. EW Y~IC tAPI The 1ol'°l"t"9 to\I .._. tM OWr llW Collntw \IO<~\ """ •Mt..,I\ tl\dl h•w -uc> 1ne mo\t .,,., -tne most .,.secs..,. per<enl ol <Nln90 ~elk'U ol o;ol~ IO< Wotan ..... Ho \KU<ltH'\ tr.oing Del<M '1 •re It'<•· "°"" N•I -p.,.unl-,,,_...,. tlW dolt.,,.,._,. ml-IM pre•tou• clo>•"9 btO pro<e ....0 100.y°\ ••~I bKI prt<tt. UP\ N~ L4\I I OmnoSclt' S•• 1 ~~~.~?: '" l , ... 4 MtlrO()vi 10 s Al .. ~l<lnl s • .. At(nff'(:" \ ' I !.umr\EI IJ .. • 0.-w•yl:I 1 9 0<•<01"" 1 10 11>E <,, I II IRE 111 J 11 Rewi.t 1 IJ WlnBeef 1 " SurvTt"\_ .. ·~ TPC wt .. I• ~-~ "''• I/ 1'. II tunn1nd I'• ,. 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N~w hlOn\ 31 XI w morC "'" 1'> Ott , , 1 ,, I • New IOW\ IOul Witt Melld(oH> 11.JIS,IOO•n vlMoclW '"' . Oii Id '" Off 11 MUTUAL FUNDS INVESTIN(, c.l•lft lkllio(k F-•led l'uncl\ Hot M•n M1J l)tl .. ,"el 111 I St"'-" .. d ••> 10.00 Swln GI ),J; 407 COMPl'NIES llutl<k 1J.641 1J.ll Arn LO<' I II I 1S INAFd II II 11 Oil l~p 8 IS •• , PllQflm Grp !lo ... , '" 11..oil 11 •1 HEW Y()fll( IAPI C•ndn lSJ ttJ Empt• \I.II .. ISi Gr-M.t.-ion 11.n Pl10 Fel llS.1111 Sl•I• BondGr; Tr1e fol~ QUO>-Oivtcl J .. 1 '1 "°"' E ti 7'I C.rw111 oi.IO SU f'dlnc I• 13 ISM M•9 C J S1 J.71 Corn F '-M • 8S t•liOnl, $UllCliiecl by Monlll U.lO M 43 HHcm IJ 11 M .. ltl<I>"' 3 ., 3 /'J M•U .. ,_, M•G In t ls '28 01• Fd '-'• \ 1Q ,,,. Hatloftel A•-1· HtWS • u '.. MonM I 00 NL '"' '" H) .. 1181 Ml T • 93 H>.11 PIOM•• Funcl Pro0 F •. n s " ••IOn Of SKurlllM NVVn 1J SI ".. MMM t 00 NL TrP•Sll HJ... 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"I 11 ¥ (•..., I • Th\nday, January 11, 1919 N & DAILY PILOT 8 7 Not on Radf.o TV to Reduce Show 'Pitches' By MILTON MOSKOWITZ tr you had the feeling you were being swamped by commercials on televlalon and radio, that was not un er· roneou.a lmpreuk>n. They prol1'erotcd to the point where advetti.sel'I acttamed -and this monlb abould bring somt- rellet. At flrlt SJance you might find il odd for advertisers to complain about too many commercials. But If you thJnk about it for a moment, you will see it makes sense. THE NETWORKS AND STATIONS mlsht want to run as many commercials as possible. But the advert1!'lers. who are payln& the tab, fear that their messages w11J get diluted ii there is commercial overkill. What especially f rrltated the advertisers -and many viewers -was the torrent or network comme rcials for t heir own shows. A made·for·l'V movie would end a s much as 10 minutes before the hour. and that space would then be flllt.'d, back·lo-bac k, with pitches for network programs in· terspersed with paid commerciala from ad· vertisers. Jn the past fiv e ye ars the cost of a 30· Money Tree second commercial Ln prime time has jumped from $26.500 to S.52,000. If you had to ante up that kind or money for a 30·second sales message, you would be angry too to sec It buried in a cluster of commercial announcem ents. Peter Spengler. who heads up advertising for Bristol· Myers <Butrerin. Excedrin. Clairol. Datri I. Ban), put 1t this way to the broadcasting industry · "CLUSTERING IS AN INVITATION for v1t>wcl1\ to get up and leave the room . An csc:ilat1on of clustering con. cerns us greatly. If TV expects to continue to be a viabh• and e ffective medium. clustenng is not going to make 1l sellable." When advertisers speak. broadcasters listen. Effective this month. the networks a re supposed to be cutting back s harply on the number or progr am pitches they run. The reduction should be at least 50 percent. The advertisers and broadcasters re main at log· gerheads over two othe r issues. The broadcasters would like to have available 10 minutes of nonprogram m aterial in every prime t ime hour; the advertisers would prefer to huve a nine-minute limit. <\nd the broadcasters would like to be able to run rive rom mercial!'i back-to· back : advertisers think four in a row 1s enough : tht>y 're afraid the broadcasters ure going to drive the viewers out of the room. RADIO STANDARDS ARE much looser. If you art sit· ting in your car with the radio on. you're u prn .. oner of commercia ls. Stations arc allowed to huvc 18 minute:. or commercial time un hour and up to 22 minute!' 1n special circumstances Ther<''s a movement on to de regulate radio stations and remove all the limits on com· m crcial time. That may usher in lhc era of the station that carries mo re commercials than programs or the station which 11:> a ll·commercial "Look Ma. no pro~ram:. ... Srock Market Rallies During Last Hour NEW YORK <AP ) -Reflecting som e fairly poor news about wholesale prices and caution about the impendin){ release of money supply figures. the stock m arket slipped today before rallyingJui.t before the close. The Dow Jones averogeof 30jndustrial issues wus up:J 12 points to828.05. The Labor Department said producer prices had n :.en a seasonally adjusted O 8 percent in December and 9 1 Jlt.'r· cent in 1978 The money supply fi gures were released afl<>r lht• m arket closed. The money supply figures arc cons idered Important by analysts us a prt.>d1ctor of future interest rule moves by the Federal Reserve They showed no bas1C' in- crease in checking accounts and cash Stof"k11 In Thr Spo1 ll9h1 Due to late transmission today's listing w ill not appear in the Dally Piiot. 1Jp11 aHd DoK~n• P<t UP Ut up u 1 UP u 1 Up "' 8C Ui 8~ llt Up ¥ l Up t 4 ~~ ;.~ UP t UP j I Up ./ Up I 8: n ~i tt'1 u11 8C : . NfW YORK ll'P AtJv•n r•J 0.tlfttHI v;,~~·.~~o .. Nt·w "IClh\ Nt•w •t'Jw ... , . ., Tn(l,W il·IY IJl .... ,,.,, Get ,.t\. &)Iii ,.,., ..... ; ) I J• .' I Due to late transmission today's I istlng will not appear in the Dally Pilot. WHAf AMfll 010 Nt;W YORI< IA!'I - • -DAii. Y Pll.OT Thtirtday January 11 1979 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS • UOVfl • • •"' "Cheyenne Auiurnl'" I t ... I JMIM &t-t. Nclwd WlOmMtl A tlibe of ~ indl-- ll'le llllQr8te from tMlr 1>9r· 1en ~tlon to their ~.J~ ldWtrd "'"* hoata thla piogram In~ to hllo l>Ytlve or poMntlely lbu· ...._. pet9ntti ld9ntlty "'* c.Ntd..,altlnO ~. • o.wn fOITP. M.0. . ~hyroldtem" I·)(). 0 WHAT'I ~ Raf and """" ... llO ""1· lrlend8 In ...,"Ch Of the eiu. -and c:o'41ed th.. °' ··11c1 ... man." • T'tt£ 000 COUPl.e Fall• \/Olunt-• on behalf ol Oteet and hlmtlllff to take Cllf'9 of • "'*I bOy. '11) TUAHA80UT ··T 1te Bad News Oood ConMc:tlone'' Jene Howatd ~ ,_. vis· Ila IO Ptended lwnlllea. F eliela LOwe villtt rnlfl'I. ~ of • c:ommuNI tJual.. -Ol'genizatton. Jenny Sherman plays a prostitute told by Quincy (Jack Klugman > that she is suff e nng from gonorrhea in t.orught 's episode o! "Quincy " at 9 o'clock on NBC. Channel 4 t:oo. Cl) IMNA8Y JONES Barnaby uncovers • blune wertlme robbery '#hi.le '"-11ga11ng "" etmy ~Ulin'• deaer1ton. and wtnd• up belr'Q charged With menaleUghter. G llC TAC OOUOH • ADAM-12 A atOlen car containing toys for a Nady tamily 1a the OC>jeel OI a Wideapread &eerch fD 21 TOHIOHT al) NEWSCHEcK Cl) tl.te BEAUTY 8HOW 9 MATQHIAMEP .. M. 8:00 8 Cl) lltE WAU'ONS John-Boy'• paralyzed friend la !alien In by the lamlly who try to peraua<te him to 11art • ,_ Ille for hlm9elf. Oaaa llel Ll•tlttfP 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTlA (Ind.) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 KCST (ABC) San Diego m KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles ID KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles 10 KOCE·TV (PBS) Hun11ng1on Beach TV Producer Raps Video's 'Witless ' Fare By JERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD <API -Producer Grant Tinker says he believes television comedy Is becoming "somewhat witless" and aiming at the lowest common denominator. "IL doesn't demand much of an audience," said Tinker. head of MTM Enterprises. which made "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and now produces "WKRP in Cincinnati," "Lou Grant," and "White Shadow." "It doesn't necessarily have a beginnlng or an e nding. I guess that's the kind of show that is com- ing on television. It aims for the lowest common denominator." HE SAID HE THOUGHT "Mork and Mindy" was saved from this category by the uniqueness or its star, Robin Williams. Tinker, who participated in a panel or lndepen· dent producers sponsored .,Y the Hollywood Radio and Television Society. sajd the creators were to blame "We all know the machine runs the way the networks want it to run." he said. Aaron Spelling, producer or such shows as "Charlie's Ange ls" and "Family," told the nearly 1.000 broadcast executives at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel that he thought the public was getting the kind of programming it wanted. "ALL THEY HAVE TO do is turn It off and they'll get what they want," said Spelling. "We're in the entertainment business. I'm sick of such terms as lowest common denominator. We're in the business or providing what the public wants. U it's 'The Nutcracker Suite,' line. If it's 'Family,' fine. If it's 'Charlie's Angels.'line." G MARK TWAIN'S AMERICA "Tom Ed11«1 • Lightning Slinger" David Huttman portraya Tom Ed•aon. the American gen1u1 who invented Ille llght bulb, In this show hoated by tna preeminent 11orytet1er Mark Twain IW•lker Edmonllonl 8 MOVIE • • • "lonely Are The Btave" (19621 Kirk Ooug- lu, Mich... Caine. The ahtflfl and hi• poue track down a cowboy who h.u NCaped from Jail and la hpedlllQ ror tile moun181n1. (2 tits.I 8 0 MOfU< & MINOY MOttt repor11 to Ille Immi- gration bu,.au 10 register himself as an alien. 0 MOVIE • ···~"Away AH Boall" ( t9561 Jall Chandler, George Nader A lrenlPO'f CfffW provea Ill worlh white unde< allaGk d1Klng Wo<ld War II. 12 hra I Q) CAROL BURNETT AHO FRIENDS Skit& "The Famtly," "The Digs .. 0 QUtNCY Outncy QOM undetCCMW •t • mental lnatltutlon to invettlgata mut'"-and pallent-abuM ctlarget. f.I @) BARNEY MILLER Aeporta ol polloe oomJP- tlon cauae Barney and his men to be lnvMtlgated by the Internal Attalts DM- alOn. Q) MERV GAlff1N Gueata: Wayne Rogers. Eric Cennen, Denny John. 1ton. Pia zectora. SMiiey Hac:a. &l) JWSED IN ANGER FOU.OW-UP al) RAISED IN ANGER Edwerd Mnef h0el8 thla l)f'C>gfllm Intended •to help ablnlve or potentflllly abu- sive PllCJlfll• Identity their chHd-l'al81ng pr<>blern1 • 1uo D 111 SOAP IE$>tll0de 401 Selly tells Mary that Burt hU l>Mfl cheating on both or 11\em: and Jodie mun one tut ellempt to marry Carol. 1~ 0 N8C R£PORf8 "China: A Clau By lttell" In thi6 documentary lllmed NBC'S REYNOLDS EATS WITH STUDENTS People More Open. Wllllng to Talk Now Weather Gal Out Over Clothes Tiff · LONDON CAP> -It's not all sunshine stand· ing In front of a TV camera to tell Britons what sort or weather they're going to have. So Barbara Edwards. the ooly weatberwoman who appears on the British Broadcasting Corpora· tion screens. announced she has quit the job after nearly five years. OSTENSIBLY. IT'S because she only gets 45 seconds per forecast twice each evening. "That's a sketchy service and a waste or time." s he said. "It should be two minutes at least." But Barbara. 40 and married to a banker, con· fesses to another and more feminine reason. She Spelling drew a laugh from the audience when he said, "I don't think we sophisticated people or Hollywood should tell the unsophisticated people out there what they should see. I think they're brighter than we are.·· · can't wear the clothes she wants to in front of the cameras. PRODUCER DAVID Gerber said he saw a coming boom in pay television that would provide a new means of financing programs. He said it could come as soon as the next five years. ··The networks might be getting second runs after pay Q!levision," he said. Producer Lee Rich, a former advertising ex· eculive, whose shows Include '1'he Waltorus" and "Dallas," was asked if he thought pay television would carry advertising. He replied, "I think ad· vertlsers will go Into pay television. lf the pay peo. pie will accept them. They're hookers like anyone else. They go where the money Is." BICll WAS ALSO asked why the same faces tum up on show after show. He said, ··They become box office. They will attract an audience and are going to give a program a certain kind of appeal. There's a tendency to go back to the same people who can deliver, and don't give you any trouble." ,.. "I WASN'T ALLOWED to wear light colors like white, cream and yellow because they ren~t· ed the studfo lights which bad been set up to highlight the weather charts· and not me." she said. "I couldn't wear s pots. stripes or checks because they shimmered when I moved. It made my choice very limited and dlfficull." However. Barbara is still reading weather bulletins on radio, where she ls given 2th minutes and can wear any clothes she likes. .. .... . . ,.,.. .......... . TUBE T OPPERS NBC IJ 8:00 -Mark Twain's Amerlca. The story of Thomas Edison is dramatized with David Huffman portraying the famed inventor. KCO P II) 8 : 00 -"Cheyenne Autumn." Jcihn Ford's epic western about a tribe of Indians migrating from their reservation to their home ground. James Stewart and Rtchard Widmark sta r. KCET D 8:00 & KOCE 19 9:00 - Raised in Anger. Edward Asner nar· rates this documentary on child abuse. In China. llnCflorrnan Jedi Rayno1c11 rec>Ofl• on ~ the ~ we prepering their younger 08f*8110n kif • rOle In INklng their country a~. l l=:v A cihlldhood friend of Buddy'• mottler trlea to lure Buddy Into•~ on lhelt8gll. • NIGHT OAU.ERY A--a-fora friend that an. hun't ~ llnoe chlldhoOd. 9 NCYVA "The Long Wiik Of Fred Young" From Navato lndl· "" bOy to nudMr ptlyll- e>tt. the ~le ol Dr Frede<· lck Young It profited '1i) RAISED IN ANGER FOLLOW.OP 10-.:3018) NEWS 11:00 ::=NEWS UAA8CW8 MOVIE • * • * "Pmatiurgtl" ( 11M21 John \. Wayne, Manene Oletrlcll. A man loHs many lrlende In hla nllent- .... d'1ve for po.-In the llMI lndue1ry. (2 "'9.1 Q)ntEOOOCOUPLE Q9C8f ~ Of ralllrlg money for a new bad wtl4wl ne bum• a hOle In Feb'•· G) THE OOOOIES tD DtOl<CAVETT Gueat: Isac Stam. al) F00181&8 "~ For A Dey'. A fl\le- yeer-<>ld a1ten1ton..get1er·11 peranl8 team about their deughler'• need tor he< ownldenllly 11:30 f) Cl) M 0A0S0 H Frank ~ UC)Mt with Htwltaye and ~ IMm undar houM .,.,.. •. (A) D TOMOHT Hott: JOhnny Caraon 0-tti lMry Getlln. eucs. tty Rlcl'I. Angie Olcklnaon. 9 TWIUOHT ZONE A~llc:e angel C-- der hes • hltd time Mm- ·~ Illa wings. U 9 STAMKY& HUTCH s ..... v and Hutch 00 after a doeboortler who mut'• dared an und•rcover OOllOelnlln. (Al I ntE GOHO SHOW OETSMAAT CAPTlON£O ABC NEWS MORNING 12.-00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE Afr.id of death. a man mak• • pact with the dllVfl tor lrnmortaMty. • AL.FRED HflCHCX)()( PAE8efT'8 A little man ~ Into a mining town wttll 8'1fl)fi. i t.ufta. OETBMART llfEPMONER ··0o Nol ~ ~ ()ti My o.ritng" TM Pnloner undwgoea .,, .... "- tonne.lion wtMCtl lrwwntts hi• mind and l*'IOMlltY tnlo anothw man'• bc>cfy. 1~ 8 Cl) C88 LATE MOVIE • • in '"Columbo' s- Song" (19741 Pwlw F .... JonMy Cash A country mutlc •• ., 1861• .,, ..,_ otene eoc:tdent In order to k Ill hll Wife. 12:30 8 MOVIE * • * .. Act Of C.Ollt" ( 19551 l<Jrk Doug!M. Owry Robin• An Amcwfcal\ .of· cl* beoorM8 ~ Wllh a PattliM ~ (1 rv , 155 m1n I • MOYll • • "Game Of 0.lh" (, ... I Jotln Lodw. A4Jdray Long. A llun'-', IMnQ on an 1tt1nd. makH lhlpwfedlad ~lrnt Of8'/ '°' hit _,, ( 1 "' • 30 ITWl,I • MOYIE • • * "Either And TM '°"9" (1te01 Join Colllna. Rlctlard ~ A ~ maiden. Chol8n by the Kltlg Of Perlla to ,...,._ hie '°"'* queen, tnea to "811 the perMCu!lon of .. ~.(21n.) t2:37 8 111 MAHHIX Manno. -Ghea tor ,,... IOfmer head ot a company aullj)eCtad ot kflf1ng the fl<m'a MW prealdent tlnd hltl "*11-. 1:001 T()M()fW)W ' L.OWOP£RTI 1:t0 WANTm OfAO OA AUVE 1l411 NEWS 2:00 NEWS MOYIE • * ~ .. Panic II\ The Cl1y" ( ttell) Howard Duft. Und8 C#lalal. A go¥ernmenl agerTI MCrlfioea hill Nie to -lt'9 city ot Los A11g9-IM from atomic oae1rue- 11on.12 ,.,,.., • MOYIE * * ,,.. "China Ventvt"•" ( 1953) Edmond O'Brien, Barry SullNtn. At the end ol Wortel Wfl II, a tmllll 1orc19 ot MarinM 11 _.,, 10 cac>i~ a J8C)8neM Aoml· rat tlnd bring him to the U.S. lor ~tlonlng I 1 hf • 30min.I 2;-081 NEWS 2:21 NEWS 2:30 . MOVIE • .,,.. "Untlllttlrut w11e~ (1Mlll Stephan Au<kan. Mid* Bouquet. Mad wi1tt IM!Ouey, a man p1ar19 the "**' murdet"' ..., he catches hi• wife With anol'* man. ( t IW ~ 55 ITWI.) :t31·= * ·~ ~Rnget Of Guilt" ( 19Se) Ricflard BaMhat1 • Mary Murphy. A young woman aopear1 from nownere and contn>nts a rnarrtad ftlm l)'oducer With Ille lnc:redible llOfY of their kwe •"air. ( 1 ,.,, • 40 min.) ~-MOVIE • • "The <MM Of The J LMng COfyJM" ( 11H14)- "' Wa1en, Roy R ~ An VtoOtint nWlllOl\tl,. nlturN floOfft tw grave to 8*'09 hie '*""Y'~ lllOta. tlOrl of 1111 w4sn. ( I hf , llO min.I •:oo 1J MOVIE *** "SIMC>lng C. To TriMt•" (11Mtl Jew! I(.,._ A1b«t u.o..i. The ~ ~-, .... ~-· C>OMOW8CV In whlct\ ... al people •ttemot to ~ pou•tlon of a 111111 ~ (211r1.J . ~ •:1tl ~EDWAAQJ :: = =· • • "Lady In OlttteQ I 1°'31 PMil Lule ... G19y A meg1c:1an·a ~ tum• lnlo mur"-· ( 1 hf t 30mln.) Chinese Opening Up TV Report Shmm Dramatic Changes By TOM JORY NEW YORK IAPI -NBC News Correspon· dent Jack Reynolds recently spent two months in· side the People's Republic of China, bis seventh trip to a country he says stood "a world apart, re· mote and aloof, for thousands of years ... until now." Reynolds found, as the observation suggests, tbe peo_ple of this vast and bewildering country more-Opefr and Wtlling to talk than ever before. And that Is,. perhaps, the strength of his report. "China: A Class By Itself." to be broadcast at 10 o'clock tonight on Channel 4. "Never. on the previous visits," Reynolds says in "a personal note" offered during the hour-long documentary, "have officials as well as ordjnary people been so candid, so eager to talk about almost everything. .. ANSWE RING QUESTIONS, and asking them. too," the correspondent says. "Questions about how much I earn. Questions about Carter, Nixon, nonnalizaUon. computers, cost or clothes, education.. jobs the future." Reynolds' report on China is a timely ex· aminaUon, coming as it does on the heels of Presi· dent Carter's decision to normalize U.S. relations with the People's Rel)ublic. But Carter's dramatic announcement was in December, and Reynolds and bis crew filmed the documentary for "NBC Reports'' in September and October. The report was conceived as an examination or a cowitry straining to become, in the correspon- dent's words, "an educated, tecbnologlcally sophisticated nation ... a super, super-power, In a class by itself." NORMALIZATION NECESSARILY altered NBC's course -indeed, the documentary original· ly was scheduled for broadcast Dec. 29. 'lbe ruult is a less forceful examination ol education and social structure in China, and more a unique and intriguing short course on lh1s mysterious land of a billion people. worth a look for that ceason a lone. "There ls, today. a new mood, an openness. optimism," the correspondent says at the outset. "Wage increases, more consumer goods, produc· tion goals, even personal ambitions. for a people tiring of political campaigns. ·'Less suspicion of each other and outsiders," Reynolds continues his descrtptJoo. ·'In fact. a China open to foreigners, espedally to those the rr' "'..' ... \ I . Chinese had been taught to hate: America ~. Japanese. many Europeans." REYNOLDS, LARGELY through intrvllt. s with students, educators and government tel s. offers a glimpse at China emerging from ti· intelledual Cultural Revolution, bound by politital and social structure, yet moving toward a goat'or becoming a modem. industrialized power by Ule year 2000. Should China fail, the correspondent says in his conclusion, "there could be more interoal turmoil. the kind tha t seriously damaged the Chinese educational process and created an isola- tionist. suspicious outlook toward the rest or the world. "But if China succeeds," he adds, "It will change not onJy the economy of Asia, but·thc en- tire world." Jack Lord Plall8 Hawaii TV Movie HONOLULU <AP> -It's not certain if "HawaJJ Five-0" will be back for a 12th television season. but its star, Jack LDrd. will appareally still be working in Hawaii. Lord says he has received approval from CBS President Robert Wood for production of a feattve· length television pilot, "Makai Range." · Pitches Cut Advertisers' com· plaints have been heard: Beginning this month, networks are supposed to cut back sharply on the number of TV program pitches. See Page87. r;;;j.:;.-.;;.-;-;-;;;;;i our m.mberl were c:. .. In Cart'• Jr .. United Alrtfnea, Uncol~ury. Toyote, DuPont a Milton Bredley commerdelL O...• .OOof--\~ C•\I IOI re•r If\ ltlrl'I\, T Y , com,...ru<M~, ptlftt --. & .o.t• _,. We Need AU Agaa 6 Typea Cell Now F« Appointment loUtft Coelt Actof't Co-Op am ....... ..._..._ L---~!!7~---J Al.A. a 111 ""°•~,.,.cc..,. lMI ~Of '"I MOTION f'ICl'\N .... , COOtOlll.L#M~t~ ""' I " ti'fERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION I MOVIE REVI EW Th&nd.y.Jan~ty I I, 1979 DAILY PILOT 89 C~tllA .. •mmsa_n.;~:· Four More Shows Open ~ ................................. ... .. KING OF THE GYPS1es·· (A) "LOOl<INOFORMR.OOOO&Nr,,o Dran14, Original,, Opera, Cometly on Boards .. MAGIC" (A) "PAAAOtSS Alt.Er 'flO) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR .. <PO> MIN BOOY SNATCHERS" (PG} DOLBY STEREO FQRCE TEN FROM NAVAAONe·· <PO> "THE BOYS IN COMPANY C" fR) • "PINOCCHIO" fG) "REVENGE OF THE PINK PANTHER" f PGI "FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONc "HAUOWEEN" (R) .. NATI AL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE· "AMERICAN GRAFFITTI " (PG) "MOMENT BY MOMENT" "HOUSE CALLS" (PG). "MAGIC" "EMBRYO'' (A) "UP IN SMOKE" "BLACK SUNDAY" (R) CUNT IAS1'WOOO IVll'f WHICM WAY IUf LOOSE ll'Ol I.I .I. '0UUfN'S t.OID Of THI llNGS !Ml .,, ... ,..,., ......... & '°'" snwm1 STAUOHI PAIA&HSI AWY l"OI """ AMUICAN OUlffT'I 19'01 ~ ~YWM<:M · WAY MIT LOOS.-r•a til5 SATl-'-1...... .... ... .... . ' ........... t D e l11 Siiloo1ee 1'onli111•UI IMPORTANT ltOTICU CHILDllOI UllDlR 12FllUI 11111111111 ......... ,..,, ..... ~·····--· ... <ii:BI 1~1 ';:Ji:~, Ml .~..:o 1::urE: TWO AC'T10N llrtJI CYCU OtlUi-1 P\US MAOWNllUl'll • CUNT unwooo MIT W'lllOI WAT l4lf lOOll ~I ~ THI OAUNTUT Ill WMltomlOS W* , .. ,,_ ...... "" ft'80f&AUMMlll .. I, J ThrM mot"e k>taJ thea~ra n the January brl1ade o1 ng1 Ud1 _._end, and anot tr· rivet on tbe calendar Tuesday. brtn1tna to ehiht UM number or auae productlonl on the boards dur1n1thennt18daya or 1979. Sh1rlnc an opeotni nJat>t f"rt. day wtll be ''To KJU a Mock· lnablrd" at the Westmins ter CommunJty Theater, t.be opera "Ole Fledermaus" at Orange Coast College and an original play, "Gothic and Bumpers," at Golden West College. Waiting In the wings ls "Play It Agaln, Sam," which bows in Tuesday at the LagWla Moulton Playhouse. ALEX KOBA IS directing "Mockingbird," 'the stage adap· t alion of Harper Lee's novel which became an Oscar·wlnning movie for Gregory Peck. Blumen Young is playing the leading role of the lawyer, with Chris Afree and Angela EUen as histwocbildren. Others in the cast include Regenia E,,t.es, Clark Burson, Art Winslow, Chuck Gresham, Ann Lapp, Leon Brawley and Richard Gordon. Performances will be 'Oliver's Story' ) glven Frldaya and Saturdaya at 8: 30 throuflh Feb. 10 at the theater, 7272 Maple St .• Westminster. Reservations 893·2885. "Die Fledermaus." Johann Strauss' comic opera, will be pertormed Friday and Saturday of this week and next In the Orange Coast Col l ege auditorium by OCC's Five Pen· ny Opera Company. Carole Boelter, founder and director of the group. will stage the produc· taoo, which bas a cut of 120. ALLEN JOHNSON. Jiil Goodsell, Melissa Tosh, Mike McCormack and Nicolino FurtJcella are featured in the opera. Curtain time ls 8 p.m. and tickets are available at the box of· fice. Golden West's Charles Mitchell is both a uthor and director of ''Gothic and Bum· pers." opening a three.weekend run in the GWC Actors Playbox. J im Harryman, Renata F1orin. Jerry Usury and Carol Stockmeyer bead the cast. Curtain time is 8: 30 for performances Fridays through Sundays with a 2 :30 matinee scheduled for Jan. 28. Reserva- tioos 892·7711. DOUG ROWE, managing director of the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, will play the Woody Allen role in "Play It Again, Sam." under the direction of Marthella Randall, when the comedy opena next Tuesday. Others ln tbe cut are Francy Watah, Nill Anderson and Fritz Boehlke u Bogart.. The show will run for three weeks. playing Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8:30. and a matinee at 2:30 oo Sunday, Jan. 28. Call 494-0743 for reservations. CONTINt1JNG their respec. live engagements at local playhouses are: -'''Ibe Contractor'' at South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa. Performances Tuesday through Sunday at 8 p.m. and matloees on Sa~urdays and Sundays at 2:30 through Feb. 4. Reserva· tions 951 -4033. -"Man of La Mancha" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente. Performances nightly except Monday at vary. ing curtain limes. Reservations 492·9950. -"THE ROA R OF the Greasepaint, the Smell or the Crowd" at the San Clemente Com munlty Theater, 202 A venlda CabrUJo, San Clemente. Perrormances Thurs days through Saturdays until Jan. 27. Reservations 492-0465. -"Norman, Is That You?" at the Harlequin Dinne r Playhouse, ~ S. Harbor Blvd., just north or Costa Mesa. Performances nightly except Mondays at 8:30 through Feb. u. Reservatlons979·5511. Is This Sequel Necessary? By ARTHUR KNIGHT ( ) Tllelf .. l.,WMdR-'W Somehow. I found it difficult to generate any deep compassion for the hero of "Oliver's Story," a young man mooning over bis loss of All MacGraw and who has to make do with Candice Bergen. E.9peclally since he ls also a successful lawwer who happens to look like Ryan O'Neal and will soon inherit his family's multimillion-dollar knittinc mills, whUe Bergen ls merely one of the Boowlta of Boowit Teller. It sbould happen to you. "Oliver's Story" ls, of course, the "continua- tion" of Paramount'a phenomenally successful "Love Story" from a few seasons back, based again on an Erich Segal novel, with a screenplay by Segal and John Korty, who also directed. Whether theTe will be a third "continuation," as strongly hinted in this film's final shots, seems highly unlikely. ntE TROUBLE 18, l'M afraid, that O'Neal Just isn't much fun to be around. With the loss of his beloved Jenny, he Immerses himself in his law work, talcing on cases of minority tenants against wealthy landlords, fighting the bureaucracy for better housing, that sort or thiog. Curiously, nothing ever develops from this facet ol the plot. nor from the efforts of well· A LtlMl\SAL PICTURE • T£CHNICOl.0R"" ..,__. ................... _.... cmmAWUT UDO w.tm!Ntet (714) 892-4493 Newport Buell (714) 87H350 HELD OVER! "I JUST LOVED THIS MOVIE!" -Judith Crist MOJ/IEREJ'IEW meaning friends who tell him, in effect. "Have I got a girl for you!" O'Neal would rather be morose. Then, with outrageous lncons1stency, be takes off In panting pursuit of a jogger cBergenl who happened to laugh at hlm in Central Part, a.od in no tlme at all they are dating t.enn1.s at 6 a .m .. dlnner in New York's posher restaurants, long drives ln the country. All of which makes O'Neal even more depressed ·aod depressingl. WHEN TOE TWO RAVE a falling out, Oliver confenes to hil psychiatrist that he never expect. ed he could feel so miserable again. The psychiatrtst takes this as a sign of progress. "Is that bow you know it's good?" O'Neal replies. "When It hurts? .. Obviously, he's a young man who likes to have everything two ways. The plot lingers a bit over Oliver's reludance to give up law for the family business, a dilemma that ls easily resolved when he overhears some of the workers telling each other what a great guy the old man has a lways been <Ray Milland reprises as the senJor Barren. l Mostly "Oliver's Story • is Ryan O'Neal feel· ing sorry for himself, acU~ petuleotly with Bergen and friends, and gazing broodingly into the camera -as if searching out another sequel that probably will never come. ......_ , ... wltll l•UI•• ll .... '11•1n..11atYw 111111111 wttll ... -Gene Stialil. KNBC-TV Ellen Burstyn Alan Alda ·-·--~V'J THE . ,, .. .,, .. ..,.! ... I WIZ ' ·: ................. . MOH-lfU. 1:00, 1:00 IAT ...... . , ....... ... 7;00, t:OO ht!Blo;~t Mark6lplace On l'he Oranoecoa$t DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 0Nc..itl9fw.• 842- .. \ . . , . . . . .. . 819 DAIL V PILOT Thul"ldey, January 11, 1179 Universal Fined in A ·ctor's Death DENVER <AP 1 -The carbon man11 r for Un v nil In Stud o Cl· OSHA'• flndlnaa Hid "a proper carbon monoxide to infiltrate the monoxl po•.on.tn d atb of actor ty, CaHI .. 1 Id l rlno w11 l120. vtsotllatlon yat m for the acnerator dre11ina room. reaching levels whida Rich ard Kelton Ot'curr d bec1u1 Univ l ha lS daya to cont t c-k,auat fumea on trailer 22S2 would cause death or serloua Univ r111I Stud did not proYictt a the flndinaa. Youn& Hid he did not Kelton'• dreaalnc room w rt not pro-phyalcat harm ... prop r v ntllatlon 11yatem for x· know whit 1ctlon Unlver11l would v1ded . The exh1u1t fumee from th Kelton'• widow. Elleen. ls entitled hau•t fu~. aw r K.elton'a dr 1na take.· aen rator unit were beln1 exhausted to a cuh settlement or slightly less room. (('(f(•r1la1t-nt'yhHfound Ktltondh'dNov.2'Jlnarnak hin und rnuththetrallerunlt."' than U0.000 under Ca lifornia .;; MERCURY SAVINGS ,,,.,//01111 tllllt•trllll l••H The rt'&looal <hr ctor of the Oc· dr uin1 room mounted on a trall r The aenerator 1uppUed electrical workmen's compensation guldelloes. cupatlon I • afely ind lltalth Ad· t hortly allt"r h went Into the trait r power to rwi a heatlna unit In the Young aaid. Jt she chooses. ~laid, Erecurlve Oftlces: 1sn Edinger Ave .. mlnl1trn1lon In Ot-nvl\r. Wilham Cor to aludy line. fol' th nlml~ ol th dreHll\I room. OSHA 'a findJng said she could lnatead accept weekly pay. Huntmgton Beaoll, CA 92647 rlaan. uld w d1w~day lbe vtolaUon tC'lev111on rl • "C ntenlal • On the black fabric, draped over the side or menta that would total $55,000 over !>,,"'""'" c.1,,,(t,,,,,, Rrq•(}(lnl o11•r<'·· wu a ··1wrtoua" brc: ch of OSllA day of hla d •th. lllmln1 waa t.aklna \bu truck to proteet It from the cold. the next8""8yean. 8955 va11('y v•cw s 1 Bueno P!t•M CA 90l·~O 6'Uidl•llt that could c~rry a flnt of plac at lhe IUghland Ranch aooth or "didn't allow the exhaust fumes to Kelton, 35, had been an actor since :>01 1ss Avn1<>"01vo Ca••o" CA0014i, G:l Up lo •1.000 Denver tacape from under the trall~r. hls cou-e days at the Unive ... lty of ??ll:?I LdlU>I <>'"" 01 (L1tktd'ot1·•11 [ ll()<O CMl:?uJO • • '-& "" 1()()1 ~ 1"'pn1111t11wy L11Hnb11 CA90eJI KELTON WAS fO\JND tlumped Kansas. He appeared on Broadway •140Lo,.riBN1c1>B1vo LonoU1»1r.1> CAooao1 • •Ol••'i.,: CORRIGAN ot:CLINF.D to uy ovtr couch by"• co-worker Al· "THE EXH.\UST FUMES from and toured eight m onths with 1o'l!l11v1"eeiyo Tu~"" CA92680 ·;er~~".. i hi th e er t it hl h 235 N C11ru• Avt> We~I COV•"8 CA 91793 what hoo h~ ~Pn Im~~ u~ t~mpts ~ ~vv1 mo s~ e i n aor un w c were K~hariM;_H~e:~~m~~~-··-A~M~a~~~r~o-r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _T_~_rr_y_V_o_u_n_ac_. _c_o_rpo~r_a_tl'_l_rus_u_r_a_n_ce __ ,_u_lled___ ,_ __________ tr_a..:;p..;.ped __ Wlde __ r_t_he_t_ra .... i_le...,r_a...,l_lo_wed __ r .... or _ _..:::G:..:..r::..::avJty ~.:_ " ... and they lived happily ever ofter." "Ever ofter what?" \/IP Treat ment Hefner Awes Press .Cynics W ASJIJ NGTON <A P ) -· Hugh Hefner came to Washington, Playboy Philosophy in high gear, and the way the news el'tablishment hung on every word tt might have been the president of the Unit· ed States talking. "We try to put Into the magazine package an mtcllectual interest and an erotic interest , which is the way we are as people ... he says. Pens fly across notepads. "The planet is gelling too s mall for na· tionalism." . Tape recorders catch every syllable. "THE WHOLE IDEA OF A FREE society is that the society and the slate are only there to serve people." Notebook pages nip. Hefner. the originator and grand panjandrum """"'" of Playboy Magazine, had come to W ashingt.on to promote the magazine's 25th anniversary. The treatment he got could have been lht! envy or any visit· Ing head or state. Event one: luncheon speech at the prestigious National Press Club, grilled by the country's toughest press corps. Question: "When you curl ·Up in bed, what magazines do you read ?'' Her: "When t curl up in bed, I don't read magazines." Question: "If JllCn worked as waiters in a Playboy Club, what would they be called?" lief: "Waiters. probably." Question. "What are your measurements?" Her stutters: "l don't know." EVENT TWO~ AN INTIMATE gathering for a sel~ct group of reporters in his palatial hotel suite. A proud introduction of daughter Christie, a bright 25-year·old. ·'She ls teaming the business. There Is no generation gap between my children and myself. It Is remarkable, considering she ls female. that we have similar values." Hefner says his 72 percent. or the stock in the Playboy empire or nightclubs, hotels and casinos might some day be split among Christle, her broth~r David and the Playboy Foundation. . "It's conceivable a woman could be rudhing Playboy." he says. lighting that trademark pipe. EVENT 111REE: 650 fNVJTED TO a recep- tion al the press club. A thousand appear. Bunnies pour champagne. Hefner lets the party jell for an hour. then walks ln with Christle at one side and Candy Loving at the other. Candy Loving, 22. has a pretty race and a love· ly s mile. With clothes on. reporters don't seem to recognize her as the Playmate·or the Year. Photo- graphers do. They ask publisher and playmate to pose. Hefner and Candy clink champagne glasses. • Christle, unrecognized, walks away. Hefner poses with Sen. Charlea Percy -··one of the few Republicans we ever supported'' -and Derpocratlc Rep. Abner Mlkva, both from Jlllnols. They are listed on the Invitation 11 the reception's 1p0naora. HEFNER, INTRODUCED AS ntE Mao Tse· tung of the Se~ual Revolution and as tbe man who put 1taolee tn t.he navels ol naked ladlel, appea n uncomfortable with the attention. The elboW·to- cl bow report.en, uaed to prime ministers, pre· mierl and even a prince or two. seem awed. ID a quiet coov•rutlon, HefMr AYI he'• 1UU o almple soul who Ulce1 to drink Pepel·Col1 and play 1amee. He allowt that orl1lnally be wanted to call hla m•••dne "Stal Party." He'I sJad lie dWn't, becaUM "ll't a UUle dlf· ncult to linaelne bwude1 alt over the countl')' wlth antlert on tbetr beads." DAILY PiLOT ~I 1 )Ult. out E•P•OllllY m•d• to ' K.,lft'I rigid lf*lltlCe- tlonl. Deep Ml pleello ltllY '#Ith lldder hookt. 8" roller fra~• and all-, eurpoee· CO'/.,. '' a2. ..... 1.49 ·2~ zig-zag and Ill ... you can cut It lllOn otlllr holJll uw11 Bleck I [)ect(er't Jig eaw cute ourvea. ecrolt•. Of' ttralght "' wood•. met1t1. pl11tlc1, and more. Doublt lnNated, UL IPPf'OYed. fTI04, Reg. 115.H 1611 12•• a ooo·ooopsl don't make a messl 9'x12' plutlc drop cloth prolecta floor and fur- niture while you paint •.. 0< protect• outdoor fur- niture, ahruba. etc. while you're painting or from the elemental Reg. 39' reverse your course . lock your door, · · slilgle-handld. Slngle cy11nder d..slod( with heavy duty r dead· boll Polle. , .. ,td. All atHI. Kwttcaet #880·3. Reg. 17.90 lSr "8()..5, Reg, 18.80 . 10!! • 1poUt' off .. llldon BlllGfC & Dedier 112" rew<•· Ing ''Clntt. f'MtU<.. unique . h'*dl• dHlgn, 1huntad br•h 1y1tem gu1rd1. ff!eot\eble e· cord. Double Insulated. #1224. Reg . 39.H • • INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Horoscope •Erma Bombeck •Comics . 1 Thurdy, JMu•ry 11. 117' DAILY PILOT Behel Without .... A Skirt When I was little I always wanted to look and dress hke my mother But when I became a leen·ager. there was no one In the world l didn't want to look like more than my mother. After all, she had painted fingernails and wore horribty·1ong s kirts. spike heels that pinched he r toes. seamed nylons and litll~ hats with veils. And she put her hair m pmcurls every day to make it fuzzy. I as a rcrtified member of the New Left anti-establishment generation which ad\'ocatt..'Cl the s implification of lifestyles a_nd roles and scorned the practice of such time-consuming bourgeois act1v1ties pro- tested my mother's generation by wearing the s hortes t s kirts possible 1 in bas te leather with Levi Strauss snaps >. open-toed and handcra fted Jacobus sandals. and my hair straight as a ruler and parted in the middle. My fingernails were an earthy nail-bite without a trace of chemical lacquer; and nylons. if I even wore them. were ul1htarian, non-run pantyhose. During the early •705• and in what J re- fer to as my "Mere Denim Furuc Period." I refused to wear any chauvinist trappings at all Im ot her words. no skirts I. Though I occasionally flirted with false eyelcis hcs and mas<,>a ra, I was getting back to basic values -Jil..e 100 percent ·cotton and cowboy boots f<~inally after many years of careful practice I had achieved what I truly believed lo be a total alienation from my parents' superfluous values. Then one afternoon a few months ago, I found myself becoming bored with myself Skirts had once again entered my life and I'd discarded my cowboy boots but 1t JUS1 wasn't enough. It was time for ~omething new. drastic and different. On a lark. I decided to find out what I looked like with fingernails and went to one of those acrylic nail salons. I There was little hope for my real nails. ) The nail sculptor, as he is called, ap- phed something to my fingernails to make them each look like a tiny surfboard. Af. terward, I went home and painted them red . It was uncanny. Suddenly I found myself sitting around admiring my little surfboards and soon began thinking maybe a gold bracelet would accent my now feminine hands. So I bought one. After I brought it home I realized it ~as not a bracelet at all , but a delicate anklet the sort my mother and her generation were fond of wearing. I was immediately charmed with hav- ing this tiny chain on my ankle but it didn't look right with my thick ·h~led shoes so I went shopping and bought some with pointed toes and spiked heels. The look was really beginajng to come together. with the exception ol my skirts, which were way too short. And I needed just a bil of padding in my shoulders. So I purchased a few more items and while trying them on I noticed that m y long. ~tra1ght parted-in-the-middle hairdo was beginning to lookout of place. J needed some bounce, some curls, and the only thing to do was twist my hair up on lop o' my head in a bun <like Mother <See ROMO, Page C3> Cheryl Romo'a column now appears In the Dally Piiot twice weekly. It wtll be publlahed Thursdays and Sundays. Eldon Williams repairs broken television set. Steeling It Roger Davis has an unusual collection of Oriental weapons. By SUDITll OLSON has ever been created. Spanish. and Ol IM D<!lly P1101 Stall G d thl I You could probably make a good erman swor s are no ng aga nst a Japanese sword . When the pun about Japanese s words: Finding Japanese made swordli. it was a re- one cheap at a garage sale would be ligious experience. a real "steel. .. That's because "the steel In a "Each sword was a special thing. Japanese sword surpasses anylhlng Many are signed and dated." that has ever been created." accord-Davis said each area of Japan de· Ing to Roger Davis. a Laguna Beach veloped its own distinctive style for resident who has a collection of t.fie the weapons. They can be placed by Oriental weapons. the grain of the steel. the shape of the He lectures for service clubs and temper line and the curve of the Jlbrary groups, surprising his au-blade. diences with the Intricacies .->f the The menukls. or handles. orte11 are weapons and their beauty as art ob· ornamented with sllk braid for an ex- jects. tra touch. Many have tiny scenes carved on Davis. who Is manayer or support them. some nave mother of pearl scabbards smoothed to a mirror systems for the city of rvlne. has ob· finish and others have delicate silk talned his swords from various braiding on the handle. sources. Including one from the late All have finely honed blades. which artist Arthur Beaumont. Davis keeps eiled though they are He said many were brought back to never used. 1He keeps them stored in the United Stales ·by servl.cemen a banlt vault.> after World War It, but the first In- DAVIS 1'1RST BECAME in~rested ~~:~e ~!t~::tr~e~~s i~~~d~t'h'~ In swords as a child. when m~ I d the td youth• become fasclriuazed Ith ls an I ln m ·1800s. weapons. "I went through a pen then ~ THE SWORDS come in three sties. thinking that guns ldll. which wasn't long, or the "katana, • · the medium. or too · nice. and Japanese s words "whlzashl."andsmall.the "tanto." seemed like a rewarding outlet for "The typical warrior would wear those kinds or things." two swords, one long and one short." He said he appreciates the swords Davis said. for thel~ "crartsman shtp, and Wh-at were ·they u.aed .for? aesthetic beauty," not"'lheir power aa "Theoretically they were all used as weapons. weapons," Dav.11 said. "But I v.ou&d Davis' tn~rett was (urther pl<l*d su1pect that most were used for when he discovered a whole new dre11. A businessman .or merchant world of Eastern history and would wearoneofthele," he said, In· philosophy tn colleae. "I realized dlcatlna a sword wilb a carved han· there wu another world beyond the dle. X ~-. Wettem," he aaJd. . " Ht> foeln't have a f"9Hte In hla J1pa.nete awords see1T1ed Hite a collection -t ••YI he probably could •OodJumplq-o(fpolnlforhlas(udy. · chOote • ll'OUP he likes better than · the othen. .. IWOlt08 HAVE BEEN around Japanete sword collectors 11 a •Ince 800, but few exist from• that aroup ~ a loosely knit bunch, Davls time period. From 1100 on there are noted. Many belon1 to the Japanese iood aworda." Davis said. Sword Colleetora Club of Southern "The ateel surpa a anythlns that Callfornla1 whlch meeta In Los . . . \ . • ' CJ Pow! Violeliee . To TV 7V repairmen tell tales of video vandalism - one viewer shot out his screen, another threw a vase at the TV set. By DENNIS McLEUAN Ol IM o.ity f'li.t St.ltt We've all heard about violence on TV but what about violence to TV? Consider· • ' In a Denver bar last year a group of irate Mon- day night football fans succumbed to a seemingly universal rantasy -they greeted Howard Cosell 's appearance on television by flinging bricks at the TV screen. In Memphis several years ago the late Elvis Presley was none too pleased with the show he was watching. He did something about it he re- portedly picked up a gun and fired into the screen. These are just two of the more well-pubhciied cases of a llttle·known phenomenon: television abuse. Less well·known instances of outright wrath-whether directly or indireetly -against the one·eyed monster are uncommon. but they're not unheard of, even along the Orange Coast. AL THOUGH ACCIDENTS ARE the most frequent causes of damaged TVs, most re- pairmen sooner or later come across their own tales of video vandalis m. .. A man recently brought in a set with a broken screen ... says Jack Webster. service de· partment manager at Davis-Brown in Costa Mesa. "He said. ·r don't know what ha ppened· the lube just blew.' Well, you know what hap- pened." Webster says he found tell·lale pieces of a vase inside the set. "About three months back a guy brought in a lS·inch color set ... recalls Eldon Williams of A·l Te levision in Costa Mesa. "He had de- liberately broken the picture tube because of a lack of communication with his wife ... .. lie said they're closer together without a TV.'' adds W1lhams' technician son. Steve. WllLIAMS REMEMBERS TIIAT "Years ago l had a guy-shoot his screen. He was watching some Western show The guy said he was mad at the way the thing turned out." Merlin Luce of Ed Murphy TV in Mission Viejo says one customer kept bringing ln his set · for different problems. Finally. the man ap- parently got fed up with taking it in for repairs. .. One night he-supposedly was cleaning his .32 and it s upposedly we nt off ... Reasons Luce. "The setprobably acted up and he got out a gun and shot it." Don Bailey of Bailey's TV in Costa Mesa says he never had anyone "go for the glass." but 15 years ago a customer was watching a football game and the TV went out. "HeKicked a hole in the side of the set -1t was a console. It came on again long enough so he could finish watching the game." Repairmen emphasize that damaged screens really are a rare occurence. New sets (See VIOLENCE. Page C31 ...... .,., .. k __ __ Roger Davis with his son, Dusty, and Onental swords. Angeles. his own well-organised sword re· rerence boo«:- . I s .i I Oavls said he used to be a member but doesn't have the time now, thouah he still hfs friends in the olub with whom he *iallze . It 'a a hobby that often ctrawa raised eyebrows. ''People look at you atranaely when you t.ll them You col- lect Japaoeae swords," Davis said. "Someday I would like to come out with a pictorial book, a compllMlon or dltterent Wngs J've aeen," he not· ~ · ed. "But I'm not ID authority. It's Just 110methJnat ten.Joy doing." He doesn't sell any of hla collec:tlon and likes to look at other people's specimens. which h photo1raph1 for It's not easy to find Japanese swords today and Davia said be locates new ones "mostly by word or mouth." And, for Davls. the hunt l 1 u enjoyabl u PoNQSlnl the prii . DAILY PILOT Thurld1y. J1nuary 11 1979 PUBLIC NOTIC M<Jllt•~ •OM>••P0et11a1un ......... ._,,...., oi-llMll "'" .... 0."111""' ""II ,... Ii. ,._,....,. Iv• .,., .. "" ....... ,,., ,.,.,~ ...... , --....... '''"" ....... , "'' ... , .. . I~" Clot• 0.1•11 l"'I .-.-...... ,_,, ,,,. A dH\ N\10'\ In\~ ~tn "wtinl• An. Avt.nUll Apl l 0 ~ ... ,.,. (••Hill f1Vtp41,n.q f)tMy <.ue•I tl•tlY tt1lot -··•),II tt'V PUBLIC NOTl<' • •ICTl••OUI IV••N•U """"' ~,., .. ,,_, .. , ,, " fht fulkJ-wu"-' ~f\ifJft J\ aMtl\I liij\t fW' ,, •h 't•H••1ltf" t4•.' .. ONt~ ..... 4-de•n' Aon • ..,. •fYfttt"Vf"" tu• " c__.1itmo1• ,.,_.. H tt(lo! •t ( N'llillffti• Mwt Vt"h•rl (•, ... t-tw"ll•'Vf·-··~-l'o l;tHfUff\l•YJ' .... f n1 t;u\1n.1u •• '°"""·h" t4"J Oy ..,, 1n c:l•w•th, .. • H I• rt(l\tt.,,4U .If IF\1'\ \l .. hOWhl .....••• ,,, "'"" '"'" (r•wnt1 t 1.-t • <tot Ot.m..-lhvn1v '" 0. t t tnf• I II IV ·a PUBLIC NOTI £ •u,.11110. coon o,-;.;;-- """ ~ CA~l'OtfNIA-011 fMI COUNTY 0, OllANO ~ ...... NOTl't O• Ml•tttNO O• ll't tlTtOfl l'Ott HIMAJI o~ wtt 1, A.HO 1.IHllU l HTollMallTAllY t •I• I• •I a Alt 1 6 ltA Wit I Col• f 404M• O...-... HOflCI 1$ lflllll'Y QIVIN 1 ... 1 ltANNI Y II Hl"JY Ill .... 111owj ..... ," ....... '°" •p1 ,.,.~,. Of ,.., ••• •net i\\v••to1•"' \ ..,...,, f.,.e•nw•·••· • •• 1h• ''•f•t+tlnltt. , ••• ,M'M ...... , .. , h it ~ ftH tyti"""" ....... yt41M"\ -"' , ..... . ,,_ ,,,... --· _.,..,.... .... . llft •~ '"" ._ ,.,,_,, n ,.,.. •• 1000 ....... , ........ ,,_.. •• , ... 1 ... .i -IN•Je<_,,..,., .-11>11r, ... •nt\it (ltt,.. W.tt 1n trw C •t, t ,.,.,.. •• AM ( •hfDf'fliA t>•h"'lt r ... ~ • .,. ,,,.. "'"' ' ........ "'°"" "'°""'''' (._ ... . Wll..llA•All tltC)JMY -·-·-·-"••llef'•---~-Toi ru uw ......... ,, .............. I uttu.,....,tl"iani;p U... It If 1 I ~ 1,.u1w11t w 4 ~ t I tf1't llJ• l'tl8U(' NOTl('t; ,., .. ,,. "(llTtOU\ I U\INI U t•v1t11 ,n.dt)1.-""" (t .. •\I 0-tilt ... H°"t HAMa tl•fMeMl"t (). < • 1tilM ' /1 l'fl. u•J J .. n~t ~ 4 I I"""" t1~ttt.-H'l11 r" I on I '9•i1Ht\Q f•U I \II '"'"' ,... •• ,, .. 11 M H r [\Af6 \FllV•rt .. I., ,. 1'1( flflOO,aU\INlU NAMl ~16llMINf t ht· t11th1w 1t1t; owr..,.,.. h 0o1nv t~\1 .. " Pl I Ml11r;t, (t'f I U 1110, .,., ,., • tor• u untH•-JtOn tt ... tc h C••1''"'''" t1tJ,Mt J•f"'f'' W 0..Vf"tt\ Jtl01 ~t1ttf1rt l...•f"• Hunll,,,,.,fVlt u.-.n (ttllf0"'•• qoi.,.. (r•\ht•wi l•d"'' N:'*"'"'' t'4'•" C• <r/ .. J '•""'•' " ,.,,. "'' ,,., ......... flt I•' ~.,_'-. tt flt t1 f'I (/I \'JM., l f t\4\ ,.,f1'111•'ftii I\ Ptlllh• h •I h• .,o 1n 11" ltit,.I J.f•••t A f •t' f ht\ 1 ... 1.,T ... 111 *'·• f h J "''"' l"'t (v~,,I ; [1••• ut •f1U•~ t 1111, tH't 0.-t "" f••t I it 'I ..... , Putih'-""-"'tJ (~ ,.,.,,. C u.t\1 [lo1tdV Jt,ft1t 0.• /I hi "''I '"" • ti l•I• "'441 1e Prof Says Snoring's Music 0 E A R A N N mott ot which I have co m I n 1 t o v h 1 t 1 n 1. A N 0 E R S L • • t hHrd at l•ut 20 tlmea. I Februury n I I h l m Y h u •band Utttn to tum pl nty dur· The woman talks In and I wt n l lo • n In& my waakinJ hour•. I ceeuntly plua the fact 1ntcreat1n1 dinner Jn don't want to lltten to t he la quite deaf. And t ht I roop w re two hlm Ill nlaht, too. plea.e don't 1ua11eat a H•rvard proi r1. ror Pl au print my letter hear1n1 old. She has a a.ome myltt'rioua r Hon 10 th f Ill drawer fuJI -1ay1 they wr br1an to dl•"Ut" pro ettor w • e • " It I wu no m.tch for make her norvoua. Jn A•• £allders hoatlhty, particularly hia fac ile tonaue. In the meantime . her i.monti marrn.-d coupl • fact h d I monoloat,_ drive me up One '1f th• profo11ora · 0 mo e me eel tht wailvAny suggea· ,..rsonal queatlon. How place at night when I'm u1d the bnt indication like a fOOI. tlone! -BUOSVILLE ;hould I respond to the away. of trur tompatablllty Who wu it that said . D EAR BUG$: Nod J e r k s ? -A N hNwN•n a man and wife "You can always tell a pertodlc:ally. Smile 1 lot. AMERICAN How can l remedy the 111 HER rHcUon to HIS llarvard mWl -but you Think about Mmetb!ng s t l u at i on w 1th o ut snorlnR Ac<'ordlna; to can 't tell him much ., .. -I D EAR AMERICAN: a I i e n a t i n g m y thl'I erU<Ule orof(lnor. a I R K £ 0 JN C AM e ae. It'• 1lways 1 good Idea d auF,hter's friends·! I wom .. n who trulr love11 BRIDGE D E A R A N N to aDJwer a rude ques· don l want to appear h e r hua band ta n ot DEAR IRK ED : LANDERS: My mother tlon WITH 1 question. stingy but l can't con botht>rc'<f by hhi anorlnM Probably 1 Yale min. 15 Greek. My father is Example: "Wby In the tinue to feed the troop~ at In fatcl. U II "muslt to Tbtnkaforwrtttac. Italian. My skin i s world would you Hk a these prices. HER ht•r l'Urs" bceau11c &he darker than m 081 queatloo like mAT~" u MOM knows ht> is &ctllna ht.!. 0 E A R A N N Caucasians. In the past the lunkhead persists, rt-Ill LANDERS. Every now year I have been asked Just keep repeating your DEAR MOM: Tell I spoke up, is Id hls and then you print a let· if I am Puerto Rican. question. Tbe dullest your daughter she must theory wa. non•ensc. t e r about compulsive L e banese. Mexican. clodwlllcatcbon aftera putaaeodtotheplgad and asked. "What about talker s -those non·slop Syrian, Indian and wblle. and no fooUn'. H's HER llER re1;t'! ltm 't that 1m types who refuse to re· Black. respoaalbWty to K'fl that port ant.," Hu re plied . llnqulsh the floor and D £ A R A N N ber guest. behave -~ 11 W h e n 1 s a y m y yours • 1a snoring will not in· manage to monopolize parents are Greek and LANDERS: I'm a work· · terferc with her rt:st In every conversation by llaltan. 1 get those odd int mother wtth a lovely Popcorn. pretaels, ANN LANDERS •ooe.-..,.• P,,P.,11111y Poow eoni-" .......... ""Pf~ ~ltflmt ..... ,~ .. -"' Ml olOti ft .... -IOC*I IWto4' Pow.\ 11""*'0 ·-50 kj[CftJM 'IHI) S11111 Ille lltw \It¥ "''h • NH Vou1 t.lf toolfy lfl I j)f' ...... COftWtll!Oll a>d P'Ol,jf.., 0-K<l)ilM II IM K/>ool llUlttl yOU f "'' bu\.IM'\\ " t.onou< lfld by •n 1n f'Jtv1du111tl 1.<t'"" W 0.•V• '" PUBl.IC NOTt<'F. fact, 1l htllps her rebt connectlne every sen· looks _ as if 1 am lying teen.age daughter. She potato chips, iced tea, ootter becaust• Lht! sound Lenee to the next with or hiding something. has many rrteods who frail punch, and other 1scom forting" "and ... uh .. Please tell me why likeher lorherself-but I n expensive l r eu1 ,.1crtTtovseu~•Hru My husband and I Please teU me what to would anyone car e they also enjoy raJding should be provided and ORANGE COUNTY 3 TOWN & COUNTRY ORANGE (714) 547·8228 cu':.:~. ~~:·;:--:: ~;·~,.:;.i...,c.:~~. •::;. NANll sun ,M1Hr have bt.-en married for do about my slster·in· about someone else's the refrigerator and the rff& of &be cooteals ,,..,,..,11r, '' ,.,, 111• 1"11" .. 'l\Q , .. ' "' ••• ''""'9 23 years. I love him. lie law. who fits th Is freezer. This attack on of tbe frtdge and freezer ~•-i r.u .. n."•' ethnic background., I 1•uo1""'''c"~"'> c""••Dn••• Po•o• ••t1tRAr1 ~l kv"'" r1 1 ti. a greut teller or JOk(•!> desrnption to a T. She's would nev.er <.isk such a our food supply takes declaredoff.Umlls. C) 1 mr>n 11 Ill !Ofl o"<I 1""l•llY 4 M F A l'lOWl AP• ,A I rf Pl)ll I \/01/----------.:._ _____ _::_ __ .:_ __ _:_....:_..::.._:.:.,::.:,:..:::_..::.::.J..:::_..::.:!:__:!::!!:,~.!_-------~_:-----------------~-==~==----_:=== •I .,,.. ,, ... ,, r PIA·.. Hu,.11no1on O•tH" I '\61/ 11 c •••torn1tt f"f7...,, PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINCU NAME STAllFMlfNT '"" •nUow•no CWt\.Ofl\ • .,. do1no .. ;\Int'\ •\ THf P£~<,ONAl TOll(t-4 (l[ANlt4C. ~~fl VI C ~~ Hbl Avfk oao In.,,,.... (Aldllfnt.t 9111,. 111 Attrt'OO .no en Jlti<H• ~no. Jltl Avocddo frvuw.Ci81ffornl4!l(f'1/S• 1 ,..,~ tlu\lnft\ ·~ tonduc: tt'd by •n In d ft;tOu41I Alt<•.tt~ttn fnt~ ~l_,l,.""•nl """"' fllt<1 with '""' County Ch,~ ot Ot•"QI' Count" on Dl'rt·m~r n. 1'11 .. I_? •'ub1•~"'-"'d °'""O"' Co.~1 Oolly Poor O.•~,.,b•" 11 Z8 1971 -u J•nwry • ti 191'7 PUBLIC NOTICE ri, It ,--,,~,11 .-W;tU• 141\7 At•• •nrw Ot1vt" W· \hmt1 lrf (•lllnrm" V7&1!.J .Otttn A.th• r 1()11, 1100 f Cl<, nn lllvrl I ""'I ~io<ft. ('"'Cl'"''' l h 1\ DU\HW '\ ''" , onduc t•d tJv " 01tnerul pttrtflll ''"'D N•iff-w,.tt\ lht\ \htlHntnt W"' f1lf'(I .-.illh It'!• (tJunr.-r1,.rti ,,, O'·•nfJ'f C<»untv on rxt .. mbo, 1~. I'"' "''~ Publl\"'"' Or-(OMI o ..... P1101. Dtc,.mbtor 71, 19. l~TI dnd J<tnu•r1 •. 11 191~ '" PUBLIC NOTICE ~l(flTIOUS IUSINE\S NAME STATCMlHf tne •0How1nooitn.ont\t1of"90U\•"""\t. WPV Alli!, 701 )llopyorO W1ty, \u1I• l N1·wr,,t,,t 8t-lftn. C•fttorn1~ flJ,.,,..j Wotll~m k1Clqw4y JJI• \lo,, I '"°• Nt·wrt"''' t~.-. t1, (A1Horn1tt Y7oetJ ffCflTIOU\ BUSINESS rru ttu\•"'I"'\ \ ,~ ,,...., b~ •Jn in N6Ml STATEMENT Cl,.idu,.1 ,,, ~~·.·,..,tullowu·lQ Ut•r\Of'I I\ domo bti'-' W1ll1urt1 R100W1•v (./l.L rOLOR PAfWftNG ,.,. Thi,._ ''"U·tfttonf #A ,,, "' #tlh o-. Mt nt• V•\t,1 Avt'nttf>, (O\IA M•\A, County f •~o of Ot•"9"" C<•unt1 u n (llll~l)rmA "1b1, Ortttmbl r 1b, 1918 f dn .. 1hd W1tll11m Gtlfl• ttt Mqnu V1 l.t Avrn.,,. Ctnt.t Nw·..., C1111fn.rn._. 97bll 1 n rtu\1non\ ht ')n(IUC tNf by •n in ,,,.,.f(hJd l t-n,,-,unf1W G•I• rtu\ •,tot• .. ov•nt w,.9> •llt'd wnt\ '"'" <~univ c tfirt. r,t Or.-n~ Countv on Nm,,.mhflt 10 1'18 PI010t1 1 ·vOh\twd Ontf"llQ4 Co..t• 1 Ocllly P1hH, (lo • m1><-1 2t 111 1'11 -J•-'Y 4, II, 1'19 PUBLIC NOTICE 1'10101' Pur>l••Ni<f <..lf#llftQI Co."' D·•••Y "'••v1 c,,..c .. mo.tr lb. •w• m"KI J'"'"''' v • t 1 ·~ !~19 PUBLIC NOTICE CP·l•O "'ICTITIOU$ 8USIHl!U HAMa UAl•MENf Th• loltowlnq ,,.,..,... "'' ltotnq 0..>1neu •~ euu & 8U'>H TAVE~N . .,, w .. ,, mh !>tteet, (0>1• Moo. C•lllO•nt• '1•11 "'°"'' , 106'10 F , .. ,,. t'un11,~ OrlW'Ql• f'o•it Q,,uly fl•IO,, l>vt>•• ·~ 0.AIW)' (""'' Oallv 1>1101 O.umbt• 2a, 1911 -J..,.,.,. • ti, I,..,. m t)f, , • lb, lffllt CIM J•n~t 'i •• '.. It. "'' l"fllf PUBLIC NOTICE (.OHA Ml\A \ANITAllY OU1TlllCT O llAHOI: C:OUHTY, ~lt~O•NtA ~•GltCT ..c> 111 Jl*U NOTIC2 INVITING e10l 14011(( tS Htl<l8'1' (llVfN lllel ••lod f'fOIY.-O• wltl De n<atw11 llY '°"' r11, 0.-a,..,, befWI! ot .,,. U-w llwiMt \t,,•tMy ~\trKt ., her Off K• ".,,. (11y H .. 1. I/ F•1t Ort.._, C..le , .... "° f-"lllu,,.. Uf1'11 ll'W -94 11 fiO • tn ........ 1Ytfl ~ 1 ...... ,,. It/~ .. Ht 11 t1 l1Mt 11-f Nfll t• W#l .. IJ 1.~)llt f •'"" U..., ~tlj 1'1 fl• f .,. .... 16 If •tf' ,, • ..,, ~,, .. ,, ot4 Nf, .All. 1•UIJ ... A.tfl1 t1Alf,._t~t fl1f• 41'tf/. /I.It/. I JI ll V l l•Utl< .. lf<•• \I A t1tir1 ... t '"'J(1l f1 ttWo ' •• .,"' ( '"'-" llN't• ....... .,A ~ .......... ·•·r.ir••, ., .. fl•, , t.iult_. t 01J4 ...,-,..,,~•• n'•r w °" • '"" 0 • ' ., ... cAf14. tA '"' 01ftf kif Of ....... ,, ..... """'" ... ,,., tt•ll. ti ::~ c~, :~,~·Qi~~ <~~w!:i "Vo"' .,.,., <A 'I w .;oll U. m-ti t tl'fd .-o "''""-'' t •• ,, w """' .,. 11\11 ... Gfl ttw °'"' .,.,._.., tCof'tt; 4W1d iu lht t•'-¥1nct1 UfCWldld "'' ,.,.., '""'"'•' ..,..,,,,-.nc ..wt " .. ,, llo •t111rr~1•!1 ti, • '"'lllltll Of ....... ,. t hrU °' • blO liOlf>f ,,,, ""' ••• tllen r..1 ,...,.,..,~ 110' I Of ,,,. •"""'"' VI 11• lio4 """'-P<IY•OM 111 '"'° ''>•f•"'•W'Ml'•fMt t1t'h"'t t<(Jflfl I~ Hilt Hilk f;l\11ti11,.1 it,.. butd elf IAt•• tvif CA u-.. (.u\fA """•• )•1111.,, IJti.lfl<I ............ .,..., .. •ll •1J•1-. ll'•••lll"lf .... .r.a ... 41• f ••9'f• •ft •UlfdialHe flf'lftl t•\11111, II.I &.lif ,,.HJ.,. .... t.,,...fMi/f4n gt tn. ..... ". P UBUC NOTICE C:OSTA Mei.II UHITAaY OllT•tCT D•AHOl COUNTY, ~l.ll'OltHIA ~•OJaCHt0.1 11110 ... t HOTIC8 INVITIHO e1DS NOllC.£ •• .. c•cttv c.111£N """' MIA,.cl P•-1• ,.tit lie r.C:•lncl tty I"" ( lly '"''"· ... t.lt•ll Of ""' c:Atl• Mew \•nlterv °'"' o< 1, •I ,.., oftlt.• 111 ltw t 011 llotll II '•" 0.1"" C.0.1• "'41H ( allllHnl•, Uflltl I ... ho<lf 01 11 W • ffl M ,,_,,.II llOtY uf J*"'IMrY. t•/9. ol WIWll lirrw ,...,. •Ill ... __ lNtrl11 •1 .,. , • .,, ••oud'" '"" r.IMW •• I t1•u1otf' tc-,f t\#nt•l~ltt(I •It l•t.ot af\d l"riet•fl•t• fUt fr'4 I Qn"4tut Utlfl of • i'hl '"" f 'If Wf.A MA IH IH Ill< Hl/)AN AVI t111t, C..l~Ll If r-11 •i•Jl l'ljlJ Ill llMUOA lllllVl t 111111< (,Al 1f(JM4IA \IHtlr 10 M/oll~ t,foV'..J<fl .r NII r ,. .... "' pt.,,., ~.11 .. 110..• _, othet ,.,,,,.,, ci-xum.Mt tl\•• .... no ... Mel •I .,.. elfllU "' '"" u .... '* "' l•ut.41< .. ,.,,1( ........ ,,, .. ~ ( "' ...... If ll•lr Orlvt, c.ci..u ,,.. ... C •l11orni. .... ~ffrltff ., "00 "" •d<J•llon.tl ,,,., .. tf $1 IXI •Ill 119 n..-ot """"' .. bym•U t ~h DMI ~I 119 m"6e on 1"9 11tO -· '°'"' -'" .... "'41V'et --'" I ... t-••1 OOU••.,..nh .rlcl •11•11 i. •<tOtnPtllli.d by • untloect <hll\.• ., cetlllet"t <MU Of e blCI butl<l lllf nol teu lrtan IWI --110 I Of I"'°' """i<illl tot llte t..cl nl-PO•bl• 10 thll f(ltle Mow~••••'"""'' 11011(( "I Ultltillt GIVI ti Owl Ille 8ot•ll GI Dirt< IOU Of I ... ( ..-1. M• .. knll.,~ 01'4•1<1 hf\ lo.,•llllOh nlalllllllell • p1ev•1llflll •Al• •"" " ... "' ...... 11\ A<(ot<IM•• ...... 1 ... 10 ~ P••CI cwt """ tel\tlrlf' 110t1 1>1 the •!JO•• enlllle<I lmp,,1v•menh lhtl ••od •ale -.... ,.., <04l0slt•G llY llw l1>•1tJ 111 0.rott"1t• Dt R•"'lulHin NO " 111 on Ju<• I, 197• •"" I• Ull Ill• In tn< lllllu t.l tnto "'"•tant ~<•••••v /1 I ... Oflv• , ........ MeM n .... Mid •••• •IKl ,, •I• .. ti.rein .......... 10 ano What Are Your Favorites? The Daily Pilot's Annual Poll of Comics NANCY OR. SMOCK SHOE MISS PEACH GORDO MOTLEY'S CREW PEANUTS DENNIS THE MENACE FUNKY WINKERBUN AGATHA CRUMM JUDGE PARKER MARMADUKE TUMBLEWEEDS GERIATRIX MOON MULLINS SUPERHEROES • Here are ballots for two members of your family • • • If you need ballot• for other• In your famlly, thl• ed wlll be repeated tomorrow. • ""11•<1 lll"llJf!t""''~ "'' 1""1 •••U ••lo ••tit •••I• '#4\ 4tdwt.Atd Ill' II• btl<f'O CA « 11r. « IM• "" Jur,. I ttll J>r Fh ..,..tuh"" flu /I 111, Mid 0> 1111 Ille 1t1 '°"' .. ,,. e vi 1"'9 A•\•\t•1f ._.,ff, .. , w, II t •u Otl1tt • ,,, .. M•\.11 (•l1fwn1• 11 ... t ... ,o t••• " fl•t•ln , .. .,,..-to .tMJ ~H '" 1111• NOllh •• !ll<NQl'I lut11 """ I uni ~ .. ,.,, ""'' tortfl '-'tHn Mtd Ut•I Mt1f' ··•lo, H ._..., l/Y Wl<I t •tol1'fl0fl 1• '"""" • IHI• I 01 tnll Noll•• 11, •• ••••no • Tiit c••lr•,~ot •11•11, tn Ille IHfrlotm-• ot Ille-~ tlld lmt.,OW •fMnh, <011t0tm t0 I"" l •ll<W ,_ ot ,,,. Sl•I• Of C..llotnt• -6tll<to l•w• •I .. IO 'Jlllle, <ICll>flt .... U..rete, "'"" .... eatel)llOft Olllf OI WC II ••tt•llllll• 0 l'lltly lie ,_,.. _, llW -tt•I •doill•IJ In 1111\ liollu •• lllollQll 111111 •!Id •om11W1Atl1 ,,... 1..rtri hll••ln, •IWI 111a1 •••<I ""'· •• ~teo 111 w10 HHOIUllOll I• lllMle • iMrl Of 1111• 14vllo llf •lltt•.,l<.• r11e <•nha<l•r •11•11 111 Ille perltrmanu Of llM wotll •"" tm Pftvem•nt• t.Mftrm lo 11'11 l-<lbO< COCN I ·; • .-VFive(s)F°Av·oRiTe-CoMics·ARe~--------·1 r·;v-iiVe(s;F9AvoRi;:e-coMiCs-i"RE: _________ ! •t.ivltt --1 M wftl<ll CW« ... l"f\ ht~1'nde• .,. ltllc.,, •AO Wllltn It•,,. not ~ ~In< Ille Pl'O•l\lt•" ... tM ltOor c:-. "" .... -. "llMIO< ·"'911 M ·-~ly 111 IM -OtO" •lllHllJ 1 ... . , .... ( ..... fl<IOr .,...., -_., 1111 ~NllKlvnrel -••"411• ,WOCl\lr.cl Ill ll'f UllllM \IOl!t\ -lr!ly -tee Ill/ff m•ler .. I• ,.,,.,, .. , .. !\HfN 111 Ille Ufttltel \leln. WO.i.t••ll•llJ all h9m mett,.•1• ll'OCllA•d 111 I ... Uftllt d \talu. Ill IM P,.llOfl!\oth<t Of llllt tllfl lltKI No ""' """' lie •-MMtM ...,..., H I\ -Oft • 11491111 '°"" IVNIJ • .. d llY ,,,., , .... M9w ,,.,,,..,, 0 .. 1.1.i - t• "'"' "' _. ...O...C. _,.,. IN .,-. """"'' Ol "'9 ........... , ·~· J •<II Olddff mvt.t lilt ll<e_, •lid •tw ltl'9q1181•f.ia• """'""' 11\1 i.w Tiit ...,. .. o.,,rc IOf\ ..... Clllte Mew t.nltMY Onttkl , ... ,,..., \M •'9111 •• ····~-.. , _.... ·~~ ..... ...,Cl .. Oll'f(lllr\ .. llW O.l@Mi~ ,..., 0.ltrld PvbO ..... Of ... CM1I DMIY ll'li.t, IAll119~Y '• II. !tit ,,.,.. ·1 ...... t.i.i. .. ,., .. _. •lie ...... , law• .. .-lit••• . ....,,~ .... '"''· wllll lhe Utefjlltn only Of •IKll .. 11. lton• u may bll requl/'M vnotr Ille 11419<1•1 ... .._ t)U(\Wlll IO""""'" -<tt•lllil• Mf•IHl<ltt ........... """ Wlll<ll llellt llOl 119111\ .... fMGM 11\1 IM erowhtont •t th• l •t>•r Ctd• P,.ltnlW.• M law ""'" lie ,,...,. en ly Ill tht ,,..,,,.., ptOYldeel .... tew Tiie tOl>l•otlot W..11 -tftly un. -11111.CI-1118 ....... , pteclu< ... Ill I Ult UnllH M_... -tlflly ,,..nvle< 111•..i m•ttllet\ m..>ullKIUr•ll on '"" U"llH \I-. ""411'-ll•lly •II '""" metefltlt ll'OOu<flG Ill tht U111tttt ,, ... , 111 Ille ~1101 mell< t Of ll>O Ulft lftKI ... 11111 tl!fll "' <4111-.0 1111 .... ,, I• M•O. on • -""'" ,_.._ '"' co ... MoiM ...,.,..,. °'"'"' •"4 h ...... "' ..... <IMC. otllll ,,.. - WlliOll• 9f '"' ..,.._, '"'1i••"lllfl" •ecn lilldOot "''"' • ttonW(I •ftd .i.-,.,..._~"'"' a-,,11qv1...o "' tew 'tlle .._ M Oll"kNn ti \tit c.t. ~--t.Mtr'r Dl.itkl ,_,.... ,,. ,...,. .. ftjttl tllY., ... bt(h. 1.. . .................. 4.. . . .. .. .. . . .. . . . ..•. 1 ......................... 4 ........................... i 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . s. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I 2 •..•..•.. 5 .......................... . 3 .......•................. 3 .. ' ..................... . MY LEAST FAVORITE COMICS ARE:~ MY LEAST 'fAVORITE COMICS ARE : 1 ................. ' ..... . 4 ............... t • 1 ...................... t ••• 4 ........... ' ............. ' 2 •............ ' ..•••••••.. 5 .......................... . 2 ...............•......... 5 ......................... . 3 .. ..................... 3 •................ MY AGE IS: I YOirMtfl,_ ...... Olnc., .. Ott °"I• "'-WI a.it•JO!tlrirl uJ;j.11 ,Q. il .Q. ~ .OJ;;JM U..Q.11 .lQ4 ~ . ..JL• ·,..J;l 4Q OJ;JM 1' M•ll to: Edttor, Orenge Cntt Dally Piiot M•H to: ectftot, Orenp Coil1 Deity Pltot 1 tt.O. Bo• 1HO, 5'0 w ... , ltreet P.O. lox 1MO, 330 W. Bay Stre!.t ·' .... I t Co9la ••aa, CA m21 Co• ..... , CA l2t2t fllllllll ..... Or ..... CMil a....,,., ... J_, ..... "" a..1• : I --199:·------------···---·--·._·----·---·--·--·--........................ _ ............. ------~-~-------- lRTA lfrano t .., .... o.-. Jtlf LE DE Co. anw n ' u l • . ' - t .":I I tu NI ,... bo Ml " Rt 01 E s. Bl :i. JI JI M ,. E• b( JI JI v I ' • HOROSCOPE I ERMA BOMBECK I SINGLES CALENDAR ••• Violence to TV <From P•&f' C'I ) ha' t thick ll8'l't\' WI•'~ thitl h bondl•d to th• JHClurt• tulx> And It ~ould t ltt' .. lrum1•ndou1 umount ot forrt to hurt 1t "MOST OF Tlt 0 \M Gl-:O i.l'ls haH IM."t'n droPJN'(I or II p1cturt• fr me! r111,_ 4tnd th1• n t k ot tht• PH'turt tutw brt>R~'· .. 11ay11 Hailt'> Wat r cirtpptnM Imo u "'l '"on of th1• moM romrnon t•u' of d1mn1i1t· l'hallt•y ur" b1.· 'ltronal> Uf.K~ la thut rilunu. not tw kl'pt on or no1i1r ttw T\ llt• uli,o ha found TV~ \\Ith rn1•ltc•d c·11ndl<· ~ " 1ru 10\• And, ht• \\ urni.. 11110 t lw JJ tht• llullo~t'\'n pumpkin on top of th,. l\' 'l'ht• ht••l from on"" •t.•l !lpoJlt'<l lht· pumpkm rau'inJl 1h moldy ln.,•ll•s to oou• into 1 ht• '• t Waml T\ "·In f1N <'•IO h.• 11nollwr 1nd1rt•c-1 r 111 "1\' <'f d. m:1~t· Tht• ",., mlh uf th1• h·lt•\ 1i.1u11 " J mu~n\'I rvr t'.1t' "ho 111\ I' 111 1 111 I u11 on tup Uut lht' Wt•nunj!h llHIUC't•nt hohll rnuy 'IK'll di\ J:.h·r Ont• "'om Jn rt•t .ill' \\ 1lhdftl' h<HI J rut thJt htid ob\ 111u .. l..hJnt.•\ truuhlt-111Kl 11 "'" ron .. 1.tnl I\ ',1U'\lllJL tht• 1 \'lo "u out "ITlll"I. •Ot K "O"-Tll~. ht• '"'" tht• fur rt•pt:.ilt.•d IAUlllJO 'tJJ1•11t nttJrt• th;HI SHMI wn u·111>: or tht• '·•mt• problt-m ~ull~ ~ot nd of thl' l'dt I think 'tu: ------ RUFFELL'S If your anchor 's away UftHOLSTEIY rou can find • new one W.Y .. W..t n the Boating ..-. .... classifl4lds of the Daily Pilot ltU.._...lhd. 642-5678 c .... ""'"--541·0Ut If 6~~&~·~ " ·THE SALE CONTINUES! FURTHER REDUCTIONS! ALL SALE ITEMS 25°/o-50°/o off & more! '9us ... '" our bcrgalft tabln! '!!"'!'> -l/J1a«Je/I~ BIDTIQUE Wllllum . u 1uont•t•r T\' lt'J.lll1rmun \\ho l'tJl'lt'd 1n llHH. 1tJ )., I \'l' heurd ull !l•Jrh or "tor h:• In nny kind of wr \'i<'t~ businei.~ then• , .inlnw lo bt• unuio111l 11toril'11 Jbout 1l " Th,• followmJi urf' two cont«ndt-r!l for 1ome futurt• TV n •11&•lr man'11 top tult.• uwurd fla1lt•>. ,.ho hai. bt•l•n 1n bui.10t'M! J4 veurs ont'l' ~ot o :wrvtt.'l' {'ull from 1tn t·ldt>rly wonwn "ho llvt'd ma truilt•r purk Tht• womun. he• rt·1·u111.,.v.11nted him tu f1>. ht•1 n·t ... o Johnny Curt.on rouldn't :iN · ht•r l\ppurt•ntly, ~h••flt'Vl'r tht.· lttll'·night l'Orne · dlUn loc,ktl(f dlrt.·t.·tl~ into lht• <:umt.•ru und madt• J 1•rut.•k to tht• .iut.ll1•nt.·c. the uld wumun Look. 11 !It' rsonall y · Sht• "ould "att.•h the shu" through .i ltttlt• hlllt· In (I nt.·~ pupt.•r llO C'uri.on c.-ouldn't S('l' ht•J . '>Ji~ Btlllt•y "I hud u tough time c.-onv1nt• '"¥ ht•r .Johnn) Cunmn rouldn't sel· her 1\nd lht•n ttwn: "'li:. W11Humi. huni.etr "hu onrt• ~ol J <'Ull from .1 mortuur_> McDougall. tht• <'"' nt.•r rt•porkd lhot his S('t had q uit on him \\ 1lh,1mi. 'hd back the <·hai.s1!. on the TV ,111d found lh,• l)roblem nt-~l to the h.Jgh vollllRl' truni.f111 m\'r I i.ml'lll'd 1t as -.oon as I went 1n II IA •I' U lit•tU1 IOOUI>(' That mout.t.• \Hls frit'd to a crisp I grnl>~cl 11 b) its t.111 "1th my lo ng nose pher~ ·and held 1t ui> J '>a id. ·Mr Dougal. this 1s a c.-ase for you · · ( Horoscope ] FRIO/\\', JAN. 12 LEO <July 23 Aug HyS\IUNEYOMARR 22• Study Cunc•t·r AR f •~S 1 Ma re h 21 . message for· valid hint J\prll t91 : Be practical A \'Oid self·decept io n f.?l'I the foc.-t.., <rnd put VIRGO 1 Aug. 23 St•µt them tCJ USl'. Bt• spcciric. 22 1. Wish IS rulftlled . but fra nk . n·fuSl' lo be 1n-not 1n rnannl•r ongtnall) t1m1d<1lcd a nt1 c1pated You rin1.!>h TAl'Rl'S rAprtl 20 cyclc. courst' of action :'11 a v 20 1 t\rr1·nl on takes nl!v. tw1:.t. turn wnlJOf.?. trav(·I. cn·al1H· elq1rt!si.ion. cxriting re LIBRA <St·pt. 2J·01•t lallonsh1p Ochne:ite di·· 22 1 Breakthrough irl I dicated. You advance s ires . a n:i ) zc pl a rcs and people c.-areer and personal hfr GEMl:'lil i :\t av 21 benefit. Leo. AquJr1u:-. June 20 1 y 0 u· can figure prominently. purchase luxur} Item at SCORPIO 10ct 23 barg<un r;ite 1f per!'\ts· Nov . 2 1 1 Tr av<.· I . lent and a l<•rt pu bl 1s hing. sp1 rit u<i I lido -Newport Beach C'ANC'l::R •.Junt• 21 l'nhghtcnml'nt lhl•:-.1• Par1c1ng Lot Entrance July 22\ What Sl't•ms a an· fcaturctl 'fr2~e~'9 ~it2'i.'k_t,!1'rt'l'.. r s l' I back (' 0 u Id SAGITTARIUS I NO\' ~1"P''"P~t·~1--v-v·~ f/-'~wti!MNlll''P boomt·r1ir1g in your 22·Dcc. 21 •: Arc.-ent on --------------------.....:..:'3:..".:..0:..:.;r ·:.._ _______ f 1nanc·1 a I s t al u ~ o f DRASTIC REDUCTIONS IN SPORTSWEAR FOR MEN & WOMEN, SLEEPWEAR, ROBES LINGERIE & SWEATERS. Now Through January 24, 1979 SINCE 1949 OC~AftTMEHT 9T0ft~ 1816 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. .._.. t :JOto 6:00 Qoaed -..., r1ou ca..vtHIEt>ITL y "TOUR lliAR lt<TUHCE -IMO Of MAGHOU4 partner. mutt· E:\am11w v ario u s u s pcl'ls of C'halll'ngl'. proµos1l1011 Oivl•rsify. slrt•ss :1d:1pt ahility ('i\PRIC'ORN I Dl'I' 22·Jan. 191. Ac.-ccnt 011 leiz:it I ies. Joint l'fforts. cooperation. pubhl· 1 efa lions. partnl'rslup. mar riagt•. You havl' an oh .!> l a c· I l' t o h u r d I 1• Aquarian aids 1n un or th odox fa ~h1 00 AQ UARI US t Jan . 20· Feb. 18 1: Emphas1!'\ on being cons 1deratl'. givi ng plenty and e>.. pecting to get a fair n.•· turn. Gemini . Virgo . Sagittarius person ' h gurc in M'cnar111 Tht· numbl·r 5 abu play:s ,1 roll'. PI SC t;S !l'l· IJ. I !I March 201 Emph<is1s un {'reati vity , l'mut111n;tl r esponses. spt'culation. r o m a n c· tc> Yo u r 1• discover lovc·d rtnl' Spice return:. lo lifl• Taurus. L1bru . Sc.-orpw could play kl·} rule)) E .... • ... 1Jee1c ThUtlday. Janu1ry 11 1979 Books on Mom to play and lo<'kf'd th1• door afterward · · Jeanne's head shol u1>. DAIL y F'ILOT C3 JANUARY J2-20th NEUY'S of PUERTO VAUARTA Ceftbrcrting . . . 14th Yr. In Son Juan CaP1trono 7Jtt0 .. ,.MO , ..... o.--. 56t.Jtlt The KIMI un(I T<'ll book!. hOVl' bt.·cn with us ror iwveral years now. Th(•y're lht-exposl'S us ually written by a dis · c urdl'd mis tress o f a gC>nl'ral. a silver .... a re po lis her ut tht• Wh1ll' llou ·e. or so m conl' whose dog once had a hyslercctomy und oc· cup1cd 1.1 bed ncxl to Jacki<> O's do~ in the re· covery room. .. N o t du ti n g l h c . 7 8 9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii blizzard we didn't " 1 I\ lo{roup of u ... ·in the m·1~hborhood \\<'re talk· 1ng th<' other day about thl' c.-urPcnt be!'>t·seller. "Momm1c Dearest." 1n which Joan Crawford 's daughter reveall'd he r bizarre ctuldhood .. Y ou don't suppos<' thil> is going to slart a tre nd. do you'!' asked Jeanne. "1\ trend for \\hat·•" a:.ked Pal. · · f'or kids "riling about their mothers." "C 'm o n ." I said · We 'n• <il l "'ondcrful mothers I mean. whal could our kids poss1bl) 'a) about us thul \H· wouldn't "ant an~ont.· lo knu" ., .. "That's right. .. s:iid .I u n l' · · 1-: \ 1• r .> t h 1 n ~ "l' \'l' donl'. \\ c 'vt• clone uut or pure IOH' for our C'hlldrl'n. right" .. "You s hould talk ... countered P<1t. .. At lt>ast I didn't ust my kid's own money to buy bark her teeth and tell her 1t was fr om thl' tooth fair} " .. I will never tc.•11 you anything again in the ul most confidence." said Jeanne ··Besides. I kno w of someone s ilting here in th.ls room who look along tranquilizers on a family vacation and was going lo tell the kids they were vitamins." "I never us~ them' .. s houted June "We've s urely made our s hare or mistakes ... said Jeanne . "H ow about you. Erma" I sur· pose your children art.> so perfect you ·11 coml' out 1n book form somewhere betwe(•n St. Joan and Mciry Pop pins " "Last Mother's Oa~ ... I sa id . · I i.:ot J homemadl' card from my son ll showl•d J Mom m1e sm11tng "1th J large bunch of roses 1n ht'r arms On the 1ns1dt.'. the me ssa ~c said . JANUARY SALE Mari·Bey LAMPSHADE Co. UP TO 25% Of F ON OUR REGULAR MODEST PRICES ON SELECTED LAMPS. LAMPSHADES AND FINIALS OUR SPECIAL TY • Custom recovering <?f dny frame • Designing unique shades for atnamps • We also carry a large selection of lamps o1nd Orange County'' larQ41st selection of reodv·mddP shades 298 E 17111 S1re11 Co111 M ts1 CA 92627 714/646 7753 I 741 All1nt1c A ve Long Stach. CA 90813 213/691-4006 \lonoo lhru S~1urO~y I 0.00 AM 10 S Hi 1'1-1 During tht• nl·xt ten m inute.•:-.. the !>1lcnl't.' v.a!'\ deafenan~ "HOPE TlllS SCE:'llTS iii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ YOU INTO ORBIT !-'OR A LONG TIME " "That's s wttt. .. said Jeanne. ··What's tht• matter \\ith th11t ·• · · Pat v.as the f1r!'\l to break thl' sound harrwr "I ·11 bet evl•rvone h<'rt.' ha s ar ont•.ttml· o r another put her c.-hJlc.I out "If the kid ever ll·arns to s pell . 1·m dc.:ucl • .. • • • Romo <From Pagt' Cl 1 u:-.ed to do 1 at leas t until I could decide "twttwr 111 havl' a pcrm<.inent. Thc..·n I rt•,tlizcd tht• bun v.ould look so m 11d1 lwll l•r with a little hat vou knil\\ OUR BIGGEST SALE OF '79 s 1-3 'I! = a. ... 0 .., ~ a.. ¢. c. ... -.. I tlw kind with lhl· \'Cil acros:-. ·the e\'C!>. Shoppml-! for ~l'a mcd nylon!> was <1 i·eal d1on• and tr) ing to find the• net·e~!>an garH.·1 IJl•lt \\<JS next lo impossibll' · --SPECIAl-- Wlwn I finall) pulled the look togetht·r . I went to ~ct· :\lother. I found her \o\c<.iring her hair in lh<' s traightest fash1on possibl(' and drt•sst•d in a pair of faded denims and a T -shi1t. The person I tried so hard not to look likt• now scorns civilization a nd lives in the desert rai sin~ goats and making rock ~cul pl urt·~. :\1othcr husn 't worn a dress or a pa 1 r of nvlons in at least 5 venrs. Otll' !>hould nc\'Cr take ihcmi,t'lvt·~ too ~c.·nou:-.1~· around a mother. She has pro· h:ibl) donl' cvl'rything you·n· l'\'l'r thoug ht 01 t "ll't' $1~~~~~1 .dpt....._~ .......... Single!' Calftadar ~ /,AIJ. SALE STARTS ri""/J~ JANUARY 5th P EOPl.E SAMPLER: Coc.sthnc Community Colll'gl' "'II prt•i.ent a seminar dcs1~ncd lo help people meet others C'Om patiblc• to tht'm The It rst M.'S!'\IOn bt.•f?tnl> Fri dJ) .Jan. :!Ii For an formation C'all 003-0811. l'' l 2511 Semi-Annual SHOE ~I NGLES -;;:;:::========;:::=;:::=~::;:;::;:------------------OISCTSSION GROl'P : ~ Ornngc Counly W('st C'haplt•r of Parcnls Without P:irtnt•rs will dise uss "Selfishness Thl' Hationol Kind Ver sus the l rrulio nal" on Tuesday, J un. 16. For m ore information cull Pcg~y al 772·8422 or Me rry at 750·0577. 1 f you haUt' an 1lt>m for I he Singles Calendar. ~end 11 to Cheryl Romo. f'eotur lflg Depart mt•nt Orttr1fH' Coast Doily Pilot . I' U l:J1u 156(). Costa Mesa Cn 112626 Ptease include µour name address and pl11m11 numbt>r Now m Progress 20-50o/o REDUCTIQNS ON ALL SALE ITEMS SOME EVEN MO~Et FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK fiV 0 C4?.1•1.~L':!?LO~~Qf f 333 E. 17th St. • Costa MeH 8flll•"0 11\t P1111:0,tl01i~ $42•1781 ,.. ... ' Open Mon lhru Fn 10-6 S11urday 10-5 ; .. • t" : --· •• JANUARY 11th thru? V3 to V2 .off I FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK AT OUR NEW LOCATION 1Ben1na ln1ern11t1ona1 Pancakns/ •ALL SALES FINAL ,,J ~ -p ~· ..... "' .1, • ~ -·~ •• '• . 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 642·100 S I N r. L E 1>: X P lo.: R · t•:NC'E : ··com m u n ,1 ~ .1 t 1 11 n s r o r S1n~ll•s" \till hl· the lop11" 111 1111!'\ "-l't•k s µro grum h1•i.:111111ng a t 8 p.m Frtrl;I\ .. I.in 12 All a,.:c•s S.'l Pt r Jll'r!'>on Cull 007 9fiO!H11r d 1n·c.-l11ms BALBOA SKI ca.ufj: f''or 1 nfnrn101 111n uhout thl!'\ s~uson·s aC't1vith•s. t•all Wnyn(' lfoovt'r. 645 7979 Art Show Toc1ay ttlru Sun 1n !hl• Hunl11'1Qlon C•1fl!llr mall 1® ;lll'tt!ll' will Dfotelll tn•r COll"<:llon' ol 0tla !¥1M lch1nga IO<I o!Mr OrtOIMI 11rt- all al tlard-to-r 11 rmc., Beach Dlvd at San 01900 Fwy UP TO ¥3 OFF and MOREi • FLORSHEIM • AMALFI • MIRAMONTE • SESTO MEUCCI AND OTHERS • FLORSHEIM • BALLY (I AND OTHERS • CANVAS FOOTWEAR SELECT ED STYLES • BROKEN SIZES #54 F~SHtbN ISL.ANO, NEWPORT 81!ACH (714)"144-4223 #27 MAl.N STREET, ALHAMBRA (213) 292·5878 All SAL.ES F-INAL ..... ... .. • ;. .Vf ~lY P\l.OT Thurtday Jenirery 11, 117'1 . MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson 1-f ( ._ ... I_..,__, "The cop wo1 ju1t about to teor up t e ticket when Mormoduke popped bubble gum in his face I" SUPERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX COUSIN Al.ICE-5AYS- ~~ TMe '\/ICi lN\ ($~'THE-~ MOOE~ PA.'/ D1SA5n;:.14? ! DENNIS THE MENACE .. . . . FUNKY WINKER8EAN ! lklED '4»4AT c.>aJ &\ID I ~-· T J ' ' J l MISS PEACH by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta by Ferd & Tom Johnson GORDO TUMBLEWEEDS ~ONCE H.A5 fMJM O'.:MPt.At"fD ABo<JT ANYT~I~,, ~Y. .. •t l(IH l..e Jr(~l,_L~ ~lftHL.f. ate•"""'-" w 1 /r//'/ by Tom Batluk ... AGATHA CRUMM PEANUTS A ~ 6ROW! nw'5 A GOOD ONE ! HEE MEE HEE HEE HEE ! COMICS I CROSSWORD by Charles M. Schulz t', ... SORRI(! HEE HEE HEE HEE! I AUAiW5 LAU6M ! MEE MEE HEE! by Bill Hoest BO'T WHY 00 ' ALL RI~, YOO WANT TO 6UNNY, TALK 0USI N&6S '? TM~p.I W~ CAN CH.,RGE" T~E' LON~~~ M A~IME66 E')(PiN'SE ! DR.SMOCK H I, "I'M c::>oc-roR C R l e>e>S, 1l-f5 P5PIA"T"RIC IAN RIGH"'T".' SO WHA''f''(...L,.. VA HAVE:, c::>OC. !' MOTLEY'S CREW MY NAME! OW, MY NAME~~ ... 80f you DOl-l'i AAPTA CAU. Mt. MA9:rl ... 'IOU CAN CAU.. NJE. MARTIAN ... ~ YOU CA>J CAU. Me AN Al..16~ ... OR you by Gus Arriola by Tom K. Ryan HI by George Lemont O H,A ~URe.ON ANc::> WAWA, ):: GU~SS TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Pitch untt'> 5 AellllQutSh q Anew 14 BN1001n headband 15 Over 16 MuslCdt composition 17 Rusl· 19 Lady - 20 Ouosllont:r 21 Cun n Dtidt ?4 Crushect inward 2 worcts 77 Stall' ?Cl Provider 31 Tinker 35 Distant 31 fresher J!l Pester •O Leners 42 ACIOf George -u ()peratea 45 Demise 47 N1Qerian cnv 49 Perrntt SO Tenst0n ~ Patrtelc or Pearsoo ~Boot. e q 56 Bookwoirns ~Sharp blow UNITED Feature Syndicate 62 Show -Wedneaoay s PuUle Sot-.d b4 Opponent 65 Publte 11ouse b7 Act IMl'- tool. 2 WOfdS 10 Home 11 Sea eagle n Pecan.cg 13 Tru~ted 74 Carry 75 Trickle DOWN i --a 11,tltf'f l Throw out J Br,1vt>rv 3 w011h 1 Shirt port ~Snip 6 Slender ttniat 7 Oest1nv 8 BoredOm 9 Mac.aw 10 Gauzy lab- rlc, e g 11 Ptc.>r t2 AdOred ~·· 13 Tnamei. OS tuary 18 Pomp 12 Aoce1v£>tl :t:!'l i !! '!. ..!..!'! 17 ..!. .! I I l.S.~ ~ .. .!!. .! ,! ,.,n •• I _2 I I I .& II I ... 0 u II I ......... .... o I ' r r ' I l I I , ' A N ' " ( l l I A c ' 0 --s f ' '. l I A s ' A D .at11 • •• I> N ,,, •-o I It ' v CIO Cl •It A f tlvlt I I> II ~ .. ~ I f 0 I ,llAIM I OOE .......... • •a lo N c -~ \ I • I V •• "l ( . ·-· .. ··~ • I • lllO • 11£ ro~+• r~Ti ._ ~ ~ t-,._ A I N S f 0 • .. , u ·1 • l' I I I I f &vr A f A r !'~ I •' ~ • a Of~ ~llll.., 7~ -Of M.irch 48 Sky SIQhl~ 2& Stair DO'.I ~1 Afl8iil ~I 18 Tlla1l<1rwJ ~ Commanoi. temple !iii Region 01 JO Royal Ch111a 32 U S patnot ~7 Hindu 2 WOfdS Ot10Cl"•• 3J Slave Of old ~ Sluml:l+·r lA Remainder !J9 lrant<1n 35 -and monarch evPn.., 60 Wolf J6 lf'n(}th units &1 Surmount- 31! R<1nh•1 1nq 't 01q C.1l(J.i1 v 63 C1phf'f r•vl'nl 6& t.onducl1;d 4J G1•t llCI r I b6 c .. n prov 46 Hd~h·t• bll Buw !lug ,.,, &.-___ _.,. NANCY . . . .. NANCY···A08REVIATE THESE STATES A ND DESCRIBE EACH ONE , .... , •"" if •• .. .. -...... -..... ,. . ' -.. by Emi• Bushmile.r WASH. ILL. ARK. • t --~· ...... I I ' I ' NATION I CALIFORNIA Thurtday, January 11, 1879 OAILY PILOT C5 QUEENIE Bread-making Adds to Popularity Woman Finds Success Formula in Baking For the Record .......... LI~ LAS VE~ -rl"9t lk..,wt\ IUIJ«d lier• lr>Cluelt NELSON MARI CA -Roberl Ar~O • .w. •llO A-P.v~. 11, botnor CO\IA~ MILLEA HAYWARD -OW" Allet>. ••. ol S•n Ju•n C..Phl•-. anc1 R<>i.rta L,.., •I, of C.Ov~ OELLEBRA OE WITT Re,,_ E • 30. •11<1 ""'°" C6ml11e, 24, both 111 S.11 Clemente oec.u BROWH·BUllGARO -Alllert Jr, :i., •lld C¥r\e LM. 23, bOCll Of lrv!M. JAC1(S0 ... 8R0$1(0WSl(I MICl\HI J •y, 2', Of s.tl Clemeftle, -Kerin M9rle, 201 of LA Mlr.S.. OfiC. J4 AMBAOSE·LANZ" -Marllll EO'Wenl, i.. afld OwlMOPllH "M, 2•, bot.II Of s.tl Juen c.piJlr- C>aC. U J CFFAll!s-MC KAY -Rotlff1 a.ti, U, •nd P.Crlc141 -'fin, )1, llOlh OI ~··-... ~C.2' MULLIN·~N -L..rtne L-1•. 11, !,~~t!t~~1t;rly G••) 11, coin or PONO·M"RSHALL -Ge<•lcl LA!.I,., of Glen Cow , Teu,, end fert Lvnn. It, 01 Hun11"91on 8M<tl 4HOllEW$-COJI. -.>en 0. .. 21 .tnc! Ml Mn Lorr-. bOlll OI I ounl•m v .... ,. DCC.21 CA TTAMEC>CARAANZJl -P•l>IO EdmunOo, ~. end l.YCY Mol<,ICM .. ne, :M, botn of Hunt1ng1on O..w.11 AHLO·FULLEll-V•r•lon J F .. •s. •nd O.•ne P" )6. bOlll of Fount..,, V•ll•v FI TZGCRALO.OY81EC -St•,,..n R•< ""'d, 23. end lrllN, 24, bolh of Huntonoton llNcll. BUD·OAVIS -Rt<N<CI " .... .,,., Goene L .• ~ • ....,,ol ~ &e-.h V4SOUEZ.cALOWELL -.Hllrey R , 21, -AllA A., 11, ll04n Of Hllfll· •noton e..ai. GILLETT£·1(1!!LL Y---OouQI H C.ne 24, •llcl Tetr' LH, 11, l>Otrl ol H11nl•1\910tl 8McJ\. AIPPE·FOAESTEA -Cnarlu l'r-rl<k, -. of W.Slmlnster, .,,., Ellie C.. ~of Ge<rttot.. oec. n WlllG+H·TATUM -G.\Y>n 1(elttl, )4, end Selly Jo. u. DOlll o1 Hllfll"'91411' Beoocn 8ROWN·OAUAS -Ml<llMI 0.vHI, H. of N~ e .. cn. •"" Slier,. -'-11•. JI, ol ~nstt<'. KEARNEY·ELLIOTT -W•ller Brten, .... .,,., 1C•1n-. Mcltelll ... lO. botn ot \'loltstmimt•r LATHROP.v.MaEAT -E<IW•rd A. :n. •ncJ SuSM C..tr.rint, II, 00111 01 Hunllnqton e..<" 0€C.1t ADAMS·DE REGO Tno<ll•\ Jarno. n. -"'-'Y AnOru. 19, ()oen of Hunt11>111on Bea<n · Binlu Deatlu Elsewhere 'OUNTAU!V4LU!Y COMMUNITY HOSPITAL ~20.lt1t SEATTLE <APl -M r. ena Mrs. Georo• Pr<ttt, T h e R e v . A A Wotmtn\le<,boy • • 0.•-21.1'71 Lemleox, 70, 3 Jesuit Mr end M<s. Rtcr.erd ica.,..r, Four>-prlest who served as ••In V•ll•Y. boy .d f S ~n.1m pres1 ent o cattle Mr. ano Mn. K..-11 e.,,.,,s, Hunt University 17 years and :noione.~24•1m who was named the Mr .,,., Mn. Rk Nrd 9.,,.,,.tt Jr, S<' hool 's chancellor In Col••-u.v•rt • ~U.lt11 1976. wed Wednesday. Mr ano Mrt. llNC.e Bar•••"· HIOlll ---•119ton B•«". Qlrt KNOXVILLE. Tenn. Mr •n<I~~;,:~...,,""''°" IAP> -The Rev. CUI· llH<ll,Q•rt rord Barbour. 83. a Mr.-~~~~Jr,H .... I· former h ead Of the lllQIOtlBHCll,l>o't Presbyterian Church in ~:.~~"o.vid VetlOn, ~ J..an ,-------t.he.. Unile.d._Slates or ~•.1m America, died Wednes· :;;!""a.=.o~""P••i\ICM)i-"'"'"'· ~ day. He also served as Mr and Mn. -Galinoo, Hunt· p r e s i d e n t 0 r t h e •noton Be~~'· 1m Pittsburgh Theological Mr. •n<I Mn. J-L'°"'· Cost• Sem !nary. ~~~ G4enrl Fil••· M1s•ion v ... SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -ln•lng Breyer, 70, n national authority on school law and the ci- ty schools' legal counsel for 40 years. died or ran rer al his home Tuesday. HOOOHTOH GCORGE It. HOV~TON. rHICMftl ot Mll~IOn Vleio -~ •w•v Jen..-rv 9, 1'1' 8om AIWll l, ltO"' Clenlend Onlo S11rvllted by wilt Cnrhton•, motner •nd l•lner Mr •nd Mr\. Wtlll""' HOuQh!Otl of '°'I• -'-'· >On P •111 "°"9l!IO" of T ttnne»tt. e b<Ol '-r P•"' "°"""'on of ct .. #•-. Onio. • ~•\l•r Mr\.. ltNl<y Mark of Quine., C• , • \lllfr Ari-ModkM of Cott. -'-' Fun~rat -..rv•<t\ ere Hno&no •t PKlll< v ...... MMlv•rv. JjOO Pe<lllc Vot• Orl\19, ~ BM<n 04VIS MICHAEL J OAIVS, "c:I"' 24, ol ~n •• Alla, ~'"' •w•y JllnVllry •. 1•1• Surv 1 v~o bY motntr L•ur e . Qr 1ndrnol,_, Verne !>lrt.,lll<I, llenoe Juoy O••l~y O\ilPfl Mrv•<• .na 1nh~r m#nl rrlCl<tV 10 30 AM Olrt<le<I t>y WMIMlrt\IH Mrmori.1 Peril MorluAry ...OC•mel .. v McCottMICIC MOtn'UAJlllS Laguna Beach 494·9415 jo.bOY Mr. a nc1 Mn. JONI R klWl<Otoon. I rv!N, girl J_,.2,1'7' Mr .->Cl Mn.. IC.,.,,.111 !>-art, ~lo;M• 1no1on Buen, o•rt Mr and Mr-.. AIC«l O.Smet, """' 1no1on B~..cn. bolt J•"""" 4, "" Mr •nd Mr<,. Ronel<I Robtn\On. Hunt• •noton BHct>. boy J.........,5,1'7• Mr. "'"° Mn.. Elclen Petorscn. F(KH>- ... 11 V•ll•Y. DOV J...-rt 7. 197'1 Mr eno Mrs. Enr11•rclt Leno, Wn tmlnUt<', l>o't Coast Pair Wm in Vote We s tern Stat e University College of Law students Dav id Valles or Costa Mes a and Rick Rosales of Irvine have been elected officers in the school's La Raza Law Students Association. Valles is vice presi· dent, and Ros ales, secretary. Dentist Cited SAN FRANCISCO <API -Laurel Robert80ft ah)'l)' admit.a 1he hu ball" at lea.at 10,000 loavet ol b ad ln her mere 3S yeAB. But tht flour duat· Ina her oorea l"ertaJnly ltJn 't white. It was tn her Rertteley ltitchtn 10 yean ago - tM namt»ake of her popular cookbook. "IAu.ntl'I KltC'hl•n" that ishc bl-gun cxpttrlmenUna with Vf'l"tuiAnltm and whole foods. eatln& wheat Jtc.-rm and totu and bnwer'1 yerun by the cupful. Maat, aht conc:luded, "was t1omuonc tilse's muarle.,'' and a.he 1toppt,-d eullnti at SINCE 111EN, HF. HAS LEARNED to pre· J>4rt-fooda that f.lea.ae lhl' mtn<l and tas~ buc:b ti '<4etl u the body 1 nutr10onul ~tuckptle. She shapes loaves ot whole wheat and buckwheat and rye and .itutcm Md M>)' flours all be11tc mstead of while Her cookbook, htavy on bread recipes. 1s one of the be.st stlllo& ve11etar1an cookbooks of recent ycan ls11ued first m hArdcover by Nilg1ri Press. run by volunteers at the r etaluma commune where Robert.son now lives. the book was just reissued in paperbaC'k by Bantam Books. An estimated 83,000 copies of the hardbaC'k sold and more than 100,000 paperbacks have been printed. BESIDES RECIPES, IT INCLUDES nutrition tables. the story or a few families' switch to veaetarianlsm, and a guide to a simpler, fuller life. Meals should be "a kind or sacrament," shared with loved ones, she said tn an interview. Bread·making, she said, "expands your rela· tloru1blps with people dramatically, and nothing is more important. "I found when I worked a 40-hour week that nothing meant 85 much to me as getting home on Report Called Just 'Rehash' WASHINGTON <AP> -Representatives of the tobacco industry didn't even wail for today's scheduled release or lhe surgeon general's new re· port on links between smoking and health to de· nounce It. The liming or the release-<>n the 15th an· niversary or lhe first surgeon general's study - shows It is more a "publicity stunt" than a seMous scientific treatment or a significant health prob- lem . officials or the Tobacro Institute told re· porters Wednesday. Institute President Horace R. Kornegay said he expeclcd only ''more rehash than research" because the scientific literature shows "no dramatic new breakthrough" for Joseph A. Califano Jr., the secretary or health, education and welfare. to report. The report by Surgeon General Julius Richmond said s moking hna been clearly linked to lung cancer, heart disease. bronchitis, em- physema and other Ills. Kornegay released more than 200 pages of new publications by the organization restating the In· dustry's position that laboratory evidence is con· meting on the links between smoking and health problems. despite the statistical evidence or con· nections. * * * * Smoking Report lists 'Dangers' * WASJUNGTON <AP> -Here ls a summary of conclusions from the surgeon general's report on smoking and health. -The overall death rate for current cigarette smokers ls 70 percent higher than for nonsmokers. It Increases with the amount smoked, but 10 to lS years alt.er they quit, the ex·smokers' death rate Is about the same as nonsmokers'. -Cigar and pipe smokers have "slightly higher" mortality rates than nonsmokers, but "substantially lower" than cigarette smokers. -FOR LOW TAR AND NICOTINE cigarette smokers <less than 17.6 mg. tar and 1.2 mg. nicotine> the death rate is SO percent above non- s mokers. -"Coronary heart disease Is the chief con· trlbutor to the excess mortality among cigarette smokers," followed by lung cancer and chronic ob· structlve tung disease. -Cigarette smoking is a major factor in the risk of heart attacks and sudden death in both rqen and women. Smoking increases the risk or heart attack tenfold In women using birth control pills. -Cigarette ~moklng ls causally related to lung cancer in women and men. Lung cancer may sur· pass breast cancer in a de(;ade as lbe leading cause or cancer deaths among women. Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan cap1strano 495-1776 IAl.Tz.IHGHOH ~LHOMI 646-2424 Costa Meta 673-9450 Dr. Terrell L. Root, 1897 Newport Bl vd., -SMOKING IS A CAUSAL FACl'OR ln cancers Costa Mesa, has been or the larynx, mouth and esophagus. awarded a fellowship in Epldemlolog1cal studies have shown a "significant the American College or association" between cigarettes and bladder Dentists. cancer . Cigarettes also are associated with kidney -----------cancer ln men but not women. .. IBLUOADWAY MOttTUAJIY 110 Broadway Costa M..- 642·9150 IMl1M-nm41t.W.AMI ~ WISTCWPCHAPIL Cre,,_tOtY •Flower Shop '427 e. t 7th St ColtaMesa S'4M888 PmCI •O'IMllS SMnH'S MOITUAlY 827 Maln St. Huntington Beach 636-8539 ,_FAMLY ~f!UMaAL NOMI 7801 8o1N Aw W ttn1n ter BQ3.3525 "" . -Cigarettes are "~lgmficantly associated" with peptic ulcer disease and increase a person's risk or dyina from tt. · -"Workpiece chemicals may be transformed into harmful agenta by smoking." -Babies born to mothers who smoked during pregnancy weigh an average of 200 grams less than thole born to nonsmoken. -~TERNAL SMOKING "INCREASES ntE rtsk of 1t>ont.aneous abortion, or fetal death, and of neonatal death la otberwise nonnal Infants.•' -"Evidence ls growing" that children of smok· lng mothers may have defideocles in physical 1rowtb and mental and emot.looal devel<>pment. -Chlldttn whose parents smoke "are more Ukely to have broodlltls and pneumonia dwinc the flnt year of life." -Litt.le ls known about why the 1mokiD1 habit ''Is so widespread and dlfflcult to break.•· -Although some younJtsters experiment with amoklq ln grade school, very few are "•ddtcted" F========--=-to ci,arettes by the end or ninth lfAde. High school PUBUC NOl'ICE 11 the crlUcal place for their 1moldn1 decil!ilona. . . , ... --... .) 81turday and makln1 bread," she recalled. ''f atan.d With 11x loaves every Saturday, UK>n 14 loavn. "It'• hard to believe someone can't rind time to bake ~ad II they want to." AIL OF ROBEllTSON'S RF.clPES t8ke time. Everything is don&.Jrom scratch. from vegetable stocks, from yeast and lona-cooklng beans that mU1t be soaked overnight. Her recipes require thou1ht and devotion. They are for thole who love to cook. "It does lalce more time. but we have found that it'a worth it -in terms or the food and what It does to bring people together," she said. Unlike most other vegetarian cookbooks. ''Laurel's Kitchen" favors brown or raw sugar over honey and discourages Lhe consumption of more than four fruits a day. "I feel 10 bad about honey," she said apologetically. "Aesthetically it's divine and ecoloelcally it's much superior to sugar. But real· ly, it's Just sugar. The bees have refined lt." ROBERTSON WEARS A LONG PLAID skirt. a shirt and pullover sweater. comfortable rukine shoes. no makeup and no Jewelry. Her hair is piled on top or her head ln a loose bun. She and the other women who Uve at the Petaluma commune, called Ramagiri. do all the cooking for its 40 members. They do not feel op· pressed. "ll is a way of giving the women a lot more Importance." she said. "The men can do the carpentry and none or us are trained in that. We try lo use the 1kJlls we have." A .. ~ EXPERIMENTS WITH VEGETARIANISM Laurel Robertson Showa CookbOok PtJBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "ICTlTIOUI •UMNUS "'CTtTIOUS •uSINEU NAM« STATWMaleT HAMI $T4T£MElllT Tiie lo11owtno "'Mn It Hint TM toOowk'fl """°" "dolnO 111111· ~W..OtH. M»H. VIOEO STOllE. 'lllOEO VOtCE. 4.C. ELECTRIC. )Ola.""" 0. u 111 w. 11tn Slrul, CHI• Mn•. VIW., S.n J<*I c.pitlr-. c..i ........ CelHon>t• nw .,.,, All•n N•Yman11, 411' S.ton, Atlt"9cl C. W.rd. lCll2' Aw 0. u trvlne, C..ttlomle Vin•. Soft ~ Cec>n•r-. Celllor,,..e Tiii' """""' It <OflOweted D¥ en '7'1S tftdfv,.,..... Tllh t>uttMU Is <,,,_led bf en 111-4 N_,,.,,,, dtvldu41 Tllll \1•1"1'Wftl .. ~ lllecl WllPI IN AH red c. Wero County Clerk of o.._ C-ty Oft Tll11 tl•t-t ,..,, llled with Ille J..,...ry t, 1tl9 CounlV Cle•• ol Oret19t County on ,-107ro J•nu•l'y •. ""· P\iDll\l'led Or-Coot o .. 1v Pilot, 1'107m J•n.,.ry 11, 11. lS-F•-rv 1, .. ,. P\tl>l•\l..o 0rilt>Qf Cbe•t e>.l•v PllOI, PUBLIC NOTICE 4-1" JentHfy 11, It. 7~-Fet>rwry 2. 1•7' 10S-1" PUBLIC NOTICE SU .. ElllC>tl C:OUllT 01' TNE H4TEOl'CAU~Nl4 'Olt TNE COUNTY°' Olt4NGE HO ....... NOTICE O~ MlAltlNG O' "ETITIOH l'Olt "ROUTE 0' WILL ANO LlnEllS TUTAMlNT411Y 1'011 4UTHOlllZ•Tt0N TO 40· Mlle l\TE ll UHOlll THE INO•PENOEHT AOMIHISTA4TION O,UTATUACT. f\ldlP 01 eeqCNIECE F CHINBE RG Dt<~•Wd NOTICE IS Hf11E8Y C,1VEN 1""1 H411RY L CLARICE ,.., lolt'CI ""rton" Ptt•llOl't for Pr"Obi114' ot Wttl 41ncf •\ \u.nc:e ot L.•tt•r\ ''""''..,,.nt•'•· •"O for •"l"<H't1•tt0n lo .-Sm1n1\ttr undtor '"-1not,..no.~t .Om1f\1 \ltdl1on ot f\tttl•\ A< t. referHM",. In w r'11( ft 1\ m.oe ror turthltr 04rUu.;•d" d~d lh•I tn. ttm.a •no OI«• ot ~.,,,..Q •r..t '•""" PVBUC NOTICE FICTIT'IOU!o 9UStH•K H.,... ITATeMINT flle lollow-per'°'" •re ~ but.ft\#\\ ff AMt:lllCAH PROf>EATt(S. 1~1 11.t-•r Street .• Ollte Mew, ee111orn1 .. .,.~ Aot>er1 411rfd B•nn*"• 1111 E lle•m•t• Av•1u .. e., Co'lt• M•'*· C...110•1'•• 4162• Brian Wllh.tm B•nnett, 7971 ft I•\"'~'" •vtl'w•. (O\t• M•~•. C,.tttorntA •>fa.h M1thc1el How•rO 81rtn•11. 2811 E ,., .. ,,, .. ,,. Aw•nu•. (O\t• MW\i.t. C..llfof'n•• mlt f P\I\ bU\1,,...\\ I\ <onO\#Cled by • fjl!neral O•r1--"'tP Rooor1 Allrt'CI 8-11 Th1\ ,,.,,.,,...,.., w &\ flte<t .with t,,... Coun11 C1erk ol Or•~ County on JdnUotrY 10, 1•tt PUBLIC NOTICE II•• 0.-otn V•t tor JM11Mry 30 l~M. "' Fl01"6 fJlrYITtOUS IUSINl'S& 10 00 • m ·~ow courtroom ol D~!Mt I Put>ll\,,.., Or-CO<l\I O••h Pllol, NAME STATIMENT '1CTITIOUS BUSINESS rnenl No lot -.iKI rouri •• 100 c ... , J•"""'Y 11• 111• 1~-f'•t>r..-r~ 1• ~'~ Tll~ IOllOwlftQ P'f<"wn h dol"O 1>1111-NAMllTATl!MEHT Cenltr Drow-Ylle\I, In It... Coly ol Sotnt<1 ·------------ MH "'' Tiie IOI._,.,., poJrM>n I~ doono buN-""-· C~••lorn •• SAM·s EOUIPM(NT RENTAL, niu ••. D•t•cl J"'""''Y •, t•M PUBUC NOTICE lltll C.•ll'N ...... ,,ue. f'-l•ln Valley. SI LIC()foj SOLAR SYSTEM&, 2Mn WIU.IAM l St JOHN, C.lllornoe9770'I ""•nclla o .. to, M in ion Vle10. County Cl~"' l'ICTITIOUI IU&tNESS SAMUEL AUG[ 110 (,ARCIA Sii . C~llorn1•m7S HAllllY L. CLAlllCe In Pro Per N4Me ST4TeMliHT 11•u GaleN A.,.,., •• f-te"' V•lley, Oona1<1 G """•"on, uu2 1uo E11un10 0n.. rn• 1011-•no .,.,.ont ••• OO<nq Celtforn1•'710'I Av t nlele O~uo, MtUIOll Viejo, Art ... la,C4'1-l>v\l,..S\a\ ,,,, ..... , ........ ,~.ectDyen 11\• Collllor111•'21o1S Tet:447-4l42 L . P . HUTTON ANO A!> dlvlCl..et TnlS l>llSI~ It Con6iocted Dy et> .,._ Pul>losht'd 0r01199 C.0.\1 O•llY PllOI, !>O<'.t" r ES,~ SomerMI '--·Hun-s....... AllQtro o.rt•• 5' clrvHlv•I Je-ry 11 11. It. 1m 10..-1• tinoton o..cri. c..111om1a t2M9 TlllS U••-•• , llled ... , .. -0 0 ""°"'°" LOIJl\e PnllllP• HUiton, ... ,, Cov11ty Clerk ol Ot-COunty on Tiii• , ........... ••t llltO "'''" ,,,. PUBLIC NOTICE ~r••• LAne. H ..... •"OIOft e .. tn Jet1.,.rv•. 191'1, COl#fllY Clan ol 0.MIQIO County °" C..1ttorn1•,,_ ,-101111 J-ry •. 1'19. J emu H•fn9l"" H11t1...,, 1M> PvDl"Nd Orat191 C.O.M Dally Pilot, ''°'"' 15u.,1 a10tt coveTM C4Lt,.Olllel4 !>om~rul L-. Hunt1t1Qlon lie•< J-•ry 11, 11.ll-Fecw ..... , 1, "" l"vbll,ntd 0.-C:O.M o .. 1y Piiot, COUlfTT0410tlANO£ C..111or .... - ,,.,, J-y 11, 11. ZS-F.-y 1, ''" C4ll NO.•-'"'' bus•nen It c-vc\ed l>Y .. PUBLIC NOTICE SU~•llt<Nt CCMHIT 04I TM• ST4T• Of' ClM.lf'OttlelA '°" TM• ~Mn OP OftAllO&... NO. ,,,...,,,. NOTICI o~ MEAltlleO o~ ... TITICHt f'Olt f'ttOeAf• ~WILL ANO Ll'TT•ltS 0 .. AO · MINllTll4TIOM. E•l•le of ERNA M. GEARING all<I ERNA C. GEARING. 0.C.e•W<t NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN t""I ~"llOH A. loc;All l\n Ille<!"""""• ... tit-tor Protle1t of Wiii -It ' oi LAflltn of lldmlntttretlon to !fie r. r•l•nince lo ..n1<n Is ,,,. I PIK• Of Merino ""' ,..,.,.. "' lor~ner P•r1lco;ta1t.. -1n.1 I tor JanUAry n, 197', •t I 00 • In ,,,. C011r1room ol 0.0¥1 m No J ol wl<I cour1, •I 700 Clvk Center Ori"" Wf!\I, In 11111 Cltv of !.<Int• Ana, Calllornl•. Oeted o.<-r 7'1, 1'11 WILUAM E St JOHN, Couritv Clerk l'l'ltOM A. 81NTLEY mW . .i~ SllMt '""",,.....,ea.......,.. Tef•.,H»S 41t-Y let' ,...N._,. Pvl>l"Ncl Or~ C.0.51 Oalty Piiot. J-ry 4, s. "· ,,,, PUBLIC NOTICE ~.,, 0110£11 TOIMOW CAUSfi oener•I .... ,,~'° FOllCKAHOEO,NAMIE Lou• .... p Hun .... In 11 .. MottW< or IM "°"'"·'-of Tn.\ -'•1-1 w.o> hleel w.tn 111< PUB.UC NOTICE ~LIN MOTTER -KELLY MOT Co""IY C101rk of OrMIQe County on -~----------iTEll 1>V _, mothff CATHERINE J_,y9,1919. ,-1CT1nous•uMHEU UHOBEllGFor~otN-1'197111 _ ~H•-ftrMeHT JO.LIN MOTTER -KELLY ..-OT Pvolt.,_, Or-Coffl 09flYPilot. '-Tiie IOl-"O perwn• .... clo+,,. flfl .... ,,..., .. .,..1111on '" ""' ,_, .. _... "· ••• "-F.on.My '· .. , .. llln'o-.:l:.G. COAST CAHOES. s-*E:~E ·Ei':17fJ·.': -pusuc NOTICE IQJ./ .. Ui~~.:~lve, Colle Meu. JO·LIN llNOBE AC •no ICf:LLY luu -· S... Sturoeott Ortw. LIHOBERG Co•I• Mu.a. C..lttorn<•'24a II" Mno-t -n!CI th.II"" !M'rwn• SUPElltOlt COUllTOI' C4L1Jll0•••• llol>or1a Aml>le, H• Sti1ro-on tMetT\led '" .,,.. ,...II.., .;1or~wod •P COUHTT 01' CHllANOI Orlw, (O\IA Mr-w. C.111°"''• '2626 ""er t>elorp lhl\ court •n O.Or-.r1,,...nl 1tO CIVIC CINTl!lt O•IVI' Wl'ST fnos llU\I""\~ •> <onOll<led l>y • NG. J di 100 (tVIC C.nttr Or1v• Wt•I, SAHT4 4N4, CALll'OllNI" oeneral p,,<1,,... .... p \oonte AM. CA1otorno•. on Frt>ru,,ry 70 CASE HUM8Ell 0.1>*~ OllU """°"' 101'1, di 11 00 o·ctoO "m ... no tnt" SU~ IMAlllllAOE I Aobtn• Al'nt>k •nO '"fl'~ \"OW (MJY •• ,.,,.., ,,..... "' ,,. .,... ~rrlft09 Of P-••t.otM'r Tiii\ slat•rTWnt wot filed wolh tn. 1111"9. wlly "'"' l»lll•<l" tor <MnQlt ol JOHN A BANOEICA •no R"'"""°' nl County Clerk ol Or•noo Co..ntv ..,. n•mt' \tlOUlt.lnol Dtor~n•~o LI' OONNA E 9ANOEKA Jonu•ry9, 191'1 ,-101m ... :! ~~~~r",':~~~~ ~.::.~~ NOTICE• YCMI ...... -,....,, T"• on or .. no• Co.o\I o~··· PHot • ( .... ,. ,,.., ci.cto. -•nit YOU Wtlll<Hll Pullll\l\e(I Or-C.0.\1 Df tly Po lOI, • "°"r lie•.,. -rd ""'"' YCMI rffpOnd Janu ... ,y 11. 18, Uctna Fet>tudt-y '· "'q new\p~p,., of Qfln•r•• ( "' ulci1•0n ;ttt 10 M R•M a.. tlt..,.ttwt Oft v P\IC)U\ri.d +n tnucOf.M\try l'tt 1.-.,1one.~4. w 1" Y'-' 1'*1'1 Wffk 1or '°"' con-uu•~ _.,, proor lle!0;";SO, U•tecl IN '"'° .. ,...nd..,.. ------------iog:,::j~~~;~Q El trtbll-_... cleclchf' ,-.,. Ud . PUBUC NO'flCE Bruer w ~' •In allclltnc•• •,,....... oue Ud. ,.._. Ju<>Q> ot '"" ...,. -tro • lO o.. .. I.a• la 1n•orm• lt'1110 w pooriorCO\lft ·-q ........ . NOTICE TOCAEOtTOtU 04V10 ALLEN ,,I.All I ro ..... R ... __., HO.,..~ inns. P_...,., • 1"" """'..,,,., ""' 11ieo • Pf'I• SUPfElllOtt t'OUllT OF TNE Al1H••· CA "'111'1 hon con<o"""<;I YOU' "'¥rt.tQ<' You STATE OF CM.Jl'OtlNl4 '°" AftorMr•'-,,.. ........... uen ·-w Wllh1n .IO THfi COUNTY°" OllAHOl ,...,._,.. d•V' ol lne <Nie tnat '"'' ~-" hi: IJUI -IJO:J o Ill tllt Maner ef 1IM E~ et LOIS P,,1>1t\ned Or-CAM\l l><tlly P•IOI \er": ~-::. fail to tol~ • wroll#n JIAN G4RCl4, o.u.-J-.ry 11 11. H enG f#O<<.erv 1111•7:,. r._.., .,.1,,... w<ll time. "°"' °" Notlu " ~ 00.,... to ct9dflor\ __ o-_•~ ••ult m•• °"' ,...,......, """ u.. <°"" -------------ih•v•nQ <l••m' •Q.ttr'tll If\• \••0 --------cModent to l•I~ WtCI <l••m\ on '"" PUBLIC NOTICE mo •nt~r • ~t <-.•n•no ·~ c,....,. SU .. l'AIOlt cou•r 01' THI STA Tl 0, CALll'OllNIA 1'011 THI COUNTY OF Ofl4NGI HO 4"'* NOTI CE O' HIAlllHG 0' "ITITIOH P0tt PllOMTE 0' WILL AHO ,011 t.ITTl!llS TISTAMIH· TAAY ANO 4UTHOAIZATION TO AOMINISTlll UHOelt THE IHOePeNotlNT 40MlllllHll4TIOH Ol'l!!HATUACT C\lett ol MAORONA ELIZABETH PRINCE, 0.C.e~. NOTICE IS H£11F8t' GIVEN In.ti c. "· HIGO•C lie\"'"" lle<eln • !>ell loon for Probolt• of Wiii iind for It ,,._. oi l..el .. fl Tetternentery - eutnortt•tlon to edlnlllltt•• Int ttletH -r 1n. ,,..,....._, Aclmlf,,.tratlOn ol Est•tet ACt. reft,...ce lo ..n1en Is "'"°' for tunl'lff ,,..n1<u1ar1. ~no tt>•t Ille II-..,., OI«• ol ..... ,.~ ,,.. \<time ,, .. -tel IOI' J.,,...,.., JO, ,.,.. ••• tO·OO • m .. 111 ll't C011r1room ol o.o&n· me11t HO. J of talcl court, at 100 CIYI< Centet Ot1w WtM. 111 IM (Uy or S..111• A11e. Callloml• O•led J_., 1. tt1' LEE 14.. 81tANCl1, c_,,c....,. •OST II OM a SAllOAM U'tMel'IM"-... 0 ... anl EelMe 1$1 ..... , CA ttttl Tel: l1141 '1Wtlt ·~, .. ~._, P\11>1"""' otetlQtt CMst D•••v Piiot, J.,..,.,., 11, 12. , .. "" 108-1'1 PUBLIC NOTICE oHK• Of """ <~r1l Oi tM •k>N'Yt<J 1\N"l(.t1w• Ott otf'Wt' on»<~ <OfK•rn1nq court 01 to or•w"t lfMfT\ to 1nf' ---d'""'°" ot oroott·tv. t.Pl)UWI \upoor-1, unc1ersioneo •t llW ort1<1 or GERALD • ....,.. tn°10 cu\IOdlt.<"'ICl-1 •llorYW~' l ALPERT. 11l3l Toal A....,._, No HOTl,.lc;ATI~ 0,-'"'•· lO\h, ->v<n otrwr re1~1 "' ''· 1n ,,,.. Cllv of lCI' AnQelei. tn ""' l'UNO AVAtL.A•ILITY m•r "' fl' ... '"° °"' lne courl, .. n •• n •tor•W•O '°""ty, whK" 161\f'f Offt<tt 1\ T "• 0f'~rtnwn1 Of HOu"nq 3nd lOWIO '*"'U tn U~ Q4tn1\runef't ot 1111 P••<• ol """"•" 0 1 '"" Urbe" o.,.,...__i w111 .. cupt Prt· ,._, i..o.oncioimonevorpr-h or Wt'dfl'f-ltqned in •II matt,.,,, per1Alnfn0 tttTHnt11rv D.-000\.ti\ to,. nf'••v con OO'litf 'f'•"t lo wld "'"'~ Sutf\ cl<11m\ w111> 1,,. ttrv<teo '-'H>O ""'" u,,.,.,r Int ~ c. 11 you.,..,• -,,,. .Mvou ot Nl<~U••Y _,,.,.. ~I "" 111..i or 11on I ,..ou .. na Aftl\l•nc,. P ,.,,...n,, 0 etlWfte? In'"'' men.., 1.,. ,...,,.,0 pre\•nf~O ., ••Of'•S.ttd wtlntn tour P"09,.,tm, to btt to<41tf'O •l"l tnt> County dO M "'°"""'•• to ""-t your wrut•n months •lier llW hrtl 111101tu11on ot of Or•n<I" C.oltlom<• ,.... ..... u .,.,, ,...1IMIhteclOft1...,,. '"" notlo ~o., '""' ti-HUD Pro<edlJf"'\ ... Dfl•cl °""-..... ,, Oatecl J-ry •. 191'1 ll•11k1nq. "PP<tndu • ,..dndl>ooo. WILl.14M (,ST JOHN, Me<'Vld O.lln G.trcl• /420 1, Cnq 11, 1'. 11.tt~ tnat tnr ret1k ,,.,..,. AdmlrntrMrl•oltne •nci Sll•ll llr\l l>e penormul lo• pro 8vNa1eti.l'vt,.1. E t1•I• of"'"' o.aioent POYI\ ott thM!t ••M• w111cl't l\4•t not 0.llUIY OfiltALO L ALPl[ltT .,,..,.IOUSIY nJ<••veCI $e<hon • N-or JUOITM 4. UUllHY •n-yatt..ew llth.01> CotHtrvctlon AH•\1•11<~ uur.c .....-A- iu»Teu•A-, 81111C1er\ i>«k•h wtlt corit•1n • lht ot So;lte lOS .... 11 Int etU\ l'YlltrtOn, C4 '2611 LOI Aneelft. CAtOO!S Propo'"" mitv be •u1>m111ed I>• r.i· 11141111 uu Plll>IW..O Oranot eo.11 O~ly P iiot. prlv•I• own•" or PuDlll Hoo;sma Allerney '-P•tltlotOW January I0, 11, 14.ll, 197' Aoencv 1PHA1 owntr\ for 01r.ct tOI' Puo""""' 0r.., C.0.st Delly Piiot, 117.,. tr.cunq "'''" HUD, or l>V PHA\ on J•nu••Y II. lt,2hndt-eOrWry '· ,.,. _,, OI ownen .... ,, WflOm llW PHA IO'I ,. ------------•~W\ to tor11r-.1111Kwent to .., PUBUC NOTICE. Annu•I Contnt>utions Contr•ct w11n HUO AJlllOuQll wlll<l9nt contr-.t •vUlorl ty II not prttenUy •• .. l•OHo 10 tuncl lllt llfllb to.end l>'I lnh l\Ol1l1<•I-, llW UtMI ofh<• ••PKh •t V1r1lt bt ~ •••ll•b•• Acc0r01noty .,._..,,. r•· ce1w<1 '" ,~ to '"'' "Ot1tt<•t~ m•Y b~ 'e•~< t•d onty '' c.ontr•<• .... llo••IY l>Komtt••••l .. l>N' Tt1•r• MP Ml H41ft\.olt>CI 600 ""'" •v••l•t>•• ..,_ "''' ROI•<• Pt-ole<u \Nit "" """'"' to no more tn.• toll ...,. th •I •"Y -IO(•l>Ofl. no le\\ 1-,.... ot #rK., P<OIKI "'-tll t>e J-room unttt, llO ~ INft I~ Oi •A<" P'O~I , ..... '"' • -""'" ""° ,,,. ~l•n<~ ol HCll Pl"O!KI .n.11 l>e ) _,.. Ut\11\. """'°"'" ot •"""'or ••n \llotll be tor tllru or m ore -m wn111 ..,..,. Fovr or more ~-·-•-or , ...... t•m>•y conn.,. T~ .,.; tllrw-t>tdto.M -" mey 0. lleh II Ille lnatltnvll'I lllltnber Of llll1U -¥1Ctd llYlen ..... \Lolt I• llMlltcl to-•t I Pl'OOOS~\ INY .. WOmltt"" et MIV time prior to Milty I, lt1' fM field Of. flee w111 l>*t<n .,,. renll _..,, W tM montn IOr .. i.cllOn --· ,1 •• 1. lllQ with .,.,., Ofopetolll Wl>l'llltled l>Y 4;ao p"' on,,.~, n. "" \ubm"•IClfl -lllllK \IWll l\OI •~1' 10 ~Wll ,., pl"Of«O In wn•tll Ille Nl<lllltr ol .. 11\ltcl """' will lie ltll'ltl .0 to )0 pef(tl\I W leh Of tht Owtli 1114 11n1t1 He ... wr. Mii prooo""'" ,.-<t"'" •lier IN -llftol .,;Ill 1M r• •••••Cl on1, 11 •11lfl<lt nt tontrKt tlllflorUy 19ft'W>IM ltom tnu not1llt•· llotl" '"Ila,,..~ .....,..,,... ...... IU(llon '°""" .... ·-..,....,. Won'lletlcill .... (If\ 1..-Ill.~' ~-•et ~ INY 1111 ~ .,..... "".,..... Qton. .. ,..,,_, et "°"''"' -u.- 0••• •••"'•"'· U .. Wll\llHe h<lleunt, t.•• A"9fl", C.11,.,.,.•• tlOU, MlfOllCllW ttlll ..... ~l"'-f Or .. CO.tt Dolly f'llM. .-,., II, ... "" lll.n PlJBUC NOTICE 11-HOTICIE 01' EUUl TllANSl'l 11 To Creditor. of lnMt. sn ... end 1ntoo11 ~·" ,,~,_., HOl•Cf' I\ twr•Dy OtWll 11'•1 tn~ lr•n•l•ron In"' 511,.,.,.,d •n-""" •r• .-1 10 -• Bu•t. ''"""" 01 "'-"v to -'"' LM -M<orton 1, ... Tren•I•'"' TN""'"'"'~­of II• T ,..,.""'"-Ille Tr..,\~\ Mt Tr(Nll~ ~ ,, __ w A- Cotota ll'•w. Ot-c-. C.11•ort11 .. Tra n"•"" 11711 11Ut'd ,,,..., C..rnto-, c.i.-.. 'O!Ot Tr.. locelion OI Ille -"Y lo ~ lten\terred I• ?tS• f'•tt•-ANO. Ct\le Mew. Ce 111ornl•. 0••1111• ()ounty,(M ......... Tiie '°"""" to lilt lr-IOn'M It ell \loo -trllClt, 111i.....\, ..,.ptMnt •llCI lllUlllOfy o• 111•1 tUrt\tllltt IMl\l""t "-., OocUIO. F"""'lur• IOC41M •t lint llltW ,.,_I. CertttO>, Gelllor11t• t0101 So fer elk k-IOIMlt-le"""' Ille tren\lenlr\ NW l\tt llMO MIY IMltlMtt ....,,. or IHIOt'to other 111.., Ille allOft -11\t lf\e -.,._ l••l ~.-'II• Bui. T••ll\t•r " t• 1>" t01>M1rnme1eo Oii or •h•t ,._,, ,.. 1•1• el 11\to ••w ott1Ct1 ol .,.,., C NYQUOI, ltCIO 0.... ~-1, Suitt .00, ,...~,, 8'o.K11, C.11•-··..,. . Tn.tt tn. 14151 d.tlll fOf llttnt Cle+<llt Ill th• •\trow •tterrtct to ,.,.,.,n •• J-•ryU, ""· °"TIO ,_..,--,, "" "OUI C.H .... SI. 1'~'f IW Tt•lftM' ,.AUL C. H'tOUIST ......... .-uw , .. Deft ...... ....... ...._..~ca.,... "'*",._. °'*"' CO. DMl't ll'llOI. ,_,." 11, tm .. -... ••!lllJ!<#Jlll .. _•~· ......... . .-. ... - ., ' $ • -;O 2"' Y ,_.L.OT :, • PlJaUC NOTICE , ,, ...... '"Of' .... OOH.M ... ,- -UM Ofl Jl(Tlflaut IMIM .... t •-I , ... ......,... ... __ IM4_ .. ttoe-••ticrn--.-.•-••Cll IAY Y fl atNAllV •t40\f'ITAl. OU llrU \lrHI, • ~ '""" c.l•lwrftle.,... , ... 1'1(111-~' N-.. """ ...... -..... '"Or ... C.-1' ... o..i.w ... .., ... lu" 0 ~"'""'' l>V M ,_ ~1111 •••• .....,.,. INtll, C.Nf ~.~ ... , .... -. .... 111111•-I 1119110~ ffth ·~ -llleit ..... ""' ,_,, C:ltt'll M Or....-CWlllY ..i l»c •f'llMf ... " . ...... ............ 0. .. ClllM Cllt!IY f'ltil!I. 0.Umtltf k If~ _, ~'f ._ l., 11, 11/t '"." PUBLIC NOTICE litOTIC9 TO C• IDt TOtn •uH•tOll COUH Of' '1111 n •Tl Of'CALlflOll"IA ,,_ '"' oouwn °" c.AtMt ... .,.. ltll lt et JOHN ' MA•IOL,, o.c ..... NOTl(I IS H lll l 'f' OIV'N .. ,,_ .,...., ...... ___ ....,. , ... , ... -...... ,"'(-........ ""9 Wt<I -Me,_.... fe 11 .. .. fft.Wlttl .... -y~lll .... 9ffl(•" .,. ,_ ............... , ..... ,_,,, ., .. ..._. "'""' -· IM ~o....., ..-~ .. ,,. "" -~--~ .......... .... ....... c:.i...,.,,.., ...... It .. ~· t4 Mlftet\ .. Ille wder ...... I<' •H ,... ..... ~ .. .,..~-­ ftl<Mtl\t, W!IN!o .... --..... .,.. Jin• DVCttktllM .. ""' Mlk • O•tfd O.C:.,,..., u .. "11 t:OWIH MAll!Ol J ·--oilNWlll .. ttMtW -...0 OK""'1 .... A'f', ITlll\.HIO& Jo. .. ................. .... NMlft, ~·.-JI ,,,, ....... .... ,,..,._, __ P11llll•lled Or-(Ool\I 0.1IY Pi101, 0.<oMIMr 11, 2', lt/1 M1CI ).,..,., Y o, . "· "" PUBLIC NOTICE • --l'ICTITIOUl •UllNIH NAMe lTl~YIMINT The fol~ __, h OOlf'9 IM.l•I llltt\ e\ YICTOlt (.OMMUNICATIOHS IN(, t•1' S.u-SI, He-1 llte<ll, CA t7WO V tel« Mlottle, »20 8-woed SI , ~ llNCll, CA '1..o Tiii\ """""' h ~ llY .,. ,.,. ····-· Vl<WIN!tle, P~ Tllh ,,._, ... fl ... wllll IN ,_,., (.-of ~ ..... G-l'f Ott l>e<tMbef II. 1'1• "*' .. P\1011.-Or ... C.OHI 0.llf Piiaf 0.< 11 • M. 1'7', J.,. 4, II, lf1' j6j I 1' PUBLIC NOTICE ,,..,.. "ICTITIOUS MISINIH HAMI STATIMENT The rollOW!ftll .,.,_, ••• OOl"O bU\l"~'ff \CA KING KORHCR, Jtt• E C.001 HI0'1w•y. (OfOtt• 0.1 M••. (Allf0<nl• '1'2) Ml<11 .. 1 o Ce•d, lttl Hem 1no .. •v. 1rv1 .... c.111orn1•92114 E•rl Wllll•m SltlCMtr Jr , ,., ~·mot! Oro-4. ''"""'· CAl!tof>lle '7114 • l "" t>u\I""' '' conchKl.0 l>Y • go,rwr•I pet1,..,,.,,lt> f •n Will~ St.iootr Jr Tl>I' \!.,.,.,...,. '"'" meet w1111 tll<t (ou,.ly (.I-Of 0.engol Couftly Ott O•omber 20, "" HltYICI[ ISCllOWCOflWA•V 14JM .. Klllll..._, WH4Ml11Uer, ~ n.611 l•<r•• ... .i..o o:i:~·:..~~:;;r ..c:1~:~ ;;~: "· .. ,. -------)!?_!:!I P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •US I NISS NAMalTATaMe NT Tllelol~--l\dol"'00u>IN1\ ., ARMSTRONG OflLAHO I 4 WU.L, LTD, Mii Vl<t LIOO. S..lte •• HtwPOf'I lle«fl, CellfOtN•~ Arm\I,_ C.ploreOOf'I ~y, • C..lltOffll• uirpar.,lon, a.tit Vie Lido, !!<Ill• *· ......,,, llMcll. c;.utoml• ., .. l r 111• ""'"'"'It c:.onOucttcl W • llmlt· •e>0rtnerV.lj). "''""lt'Oft9[ •plor•lloftC.0 . ~•IPM1ntr fl "' Artmtrono Tlllt "•lllfl'lefll .... , llled wltll t~ Countv Cl••• of 0••"99 COll"l'f °" 0.<•""""'' ... ""· .... ,,,. Put>ll\MCS O<enoe c.o.nt 0.11, Pltot, °"' Jl,11, "71""9Jtll 4, 11, "" ~" PUBLIC NOTICE .... '°' SUPl•IOlt ooun Of',.... STATIOflCAUl'OtllflA f'CNI THI[ ()OUNTV 01' otlA .. Oa ......... tn '"' ~"~ ol ,.,. E•t•I• ol Hllillll'f' C GUHETII, .. '° --" Hlliltll'f' CHAltLES OUHCnt, alM "-"" H.C OUNEn1. O.C.UMd. Hotlu I• ...,...,., Oi..,. lo credlt•n N"•"9 <I ...... IQllHKI lllO MIO O.C..-oem 10 11 .. ~<•al~.,. ..,. office of -<1~• o1 '"° -...1e1 <-' or to --•-1111 ... -~_d_.IN offl<• of 8411\11 ol Amefl<A HT a. SA, U1 So ,_, s1.-. ~ Af\Qtle\, CA 'llC>11, Wlll<l\ .... offl<At I\ lllO pl.U of t>o<\l,..tt ot ltw -"9necl lf'I ell -ter> fMrle4111f'19 to WICI ftl.,e Suell <tel"" wllll lllO nK••t¥Y -~" rnv•I ... " ... ,,, or~ ft .. orewld w1111l11 16ur mot1IM •fl•r Ille llfll 1111bllc •llon ol IN\ no11<e. o ..... a.."· ""· a ..... of Amerl<• NT "SA ii lliK-t GI I~ Will of MIO._ ,.....,.,MWW1tl,_ ·~ ........ , ... 1..ew ........ ._ ... l.ftA ....... CA""t . ,,..o,,._ Publl•llecl Ol't11191 Coe•t O•llY PllOt, Jan.•. I I, It, U. '"' 11' , • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T e L A s s I F I E D -;;;.~------------------T~h-•~B~lg_g_•_•~t~M~er~k-•~tp~l-•c~e~o~n~t~h•~O~r~a~n~ge~C~o~a~a~t--------------------" DAILY PILOT CLASSIFl.ED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, [ 842 •5878 ) One Call Service Trede It With a Want Ad Fast Credit Approval !OUAL HOUSfNO OPPORTUNITY Mitt I, •• Motta: All ruJ •t•l• adv•f11atd In WI newtpapcr 11 1ub 1t'd to tho •·f'detal tr111r lloualnti Art of 11161) wbldl mall It Ill 111 to adv.rllH "any pr~ fr~nte, llmll11lon, or dianimlnaUoo t>.Hd un rlK'\!, ro&or, relllltuo, l t•a , or MUOnal 0111m, or un intention lo 11Hlla a 0)' Mith prde,renc., lim1ta uon. ordacnmlnauon " ~.~~ ....... ~.~.~ ..•..... ~.~~·~····· ~.~~ .....•. ~!!.~.~ •.•.... 11~.~~ ...... . Q, .. 1 OOJ I 002 .... ,.. I 002 Ge•r.. I OOZ G1MrGI I 002 Ge•ral I OOZ ... , ...... ..••.••••.•..•......••. . ............•.•••..•.. •••·•···········•·•···· ·•·········•··········· ...................... . • •••••••••••••••• Sl'ICIAL ATIIMJIOM Hid IT. JOHNS CAlHOUC CHuttCH ~e • bedroom, a bath bomt with lar1to badcyard ud new paint hllld4t. Owner will help flnance. Only '78,500 CALL 556-2660 Thi• rnaaolflcent 180 dta. ~n vlew home UI Juat wallln1 for you. Al•oh.itt!Ay a wonderflll buy In llw1 pnvah.• 1:om· munlt y u f Cam e o 1111hland1 4 Odrm1 •• SELECT f11m1ly rm . etc l.A't ull PROPERTIES thrllJ you by 11~in8 tbla hOmi' NOW I $195,000 Victorian clu1k. com· 61l-4400 mttelaJ zone on bu.ay 4 HARBOR lane 1trtt1t.-In Tu1lln Very old. 1uperbl y ratored & beautifully decorated, with every modem amf!ftlty lnclud· A l>l\ 1,mn of int aecurity t)'lt.em. 2 I I.II r1or I nH·'>l lnl'nt Co A«tCll. bu«e uee.. park· ln& (cw 10 can. $325,000, /.'"' '.. . ~ ''·!e ll'.~ " ., ~ fo •,•• ~'fli 11 1 ' ••• I I 2 . ,,.. ... ..., 1··~ .. n~ I ~ ..,. . lec1t omc. lndepenct.nttr owned 8nd 0c»eretecr. 100/o DOWN HARIOtl VIEW .. L.LS :J Hdrm, l ba <'XN'ul1vc homt• Owner will finance . No r r<.'d1t needed lmmcd possession . l.ASTIWFF 1bla oewapaper will not ---------owner will finance. Tradea, lea1ea coo- 11dend. Owner·Broker, Rick AJderette. 731·5115 . CUSTOM HOME SUllOUMOEO IY GOLF- Right in the middle of the Mesa Verde Golt Course sits this 5 bedroom. 3 bath family home featuring a 3'car garage. Jack & Jill bedrooms <making this a 6 bedroom h ome>. radiant heat. a separate play yard and a delightrul swimming pool. The price on this Unique Home is $300,000. Huge 5 Bdrm, 3 ba, 2 s tory. just redecorated including new carpets & still prtced thousands under market at $166.500. blow101&lY accept any advertltln& for rool .Uk whlcb la In viola Uooollheluw. MNIAMCH Situated oo 11,50011q. ft or 1pnwUna1 l•wn w/bono rorraJs •barn la thlJ lov· U~lfJUt: li()Ml:S REAL TORS'. 546-5990 TURnE ROCk €'Jy 3 bdrm, 2 alory ranch llACH COTTAGE .ac>aS: Adnritten home w /shoke roof. Balboa Penin s ula 2 _..__a. -...1 _... Q u I e t co u n t r Y a l • bed.room cotta~e. Older 1525 Mesa Verde Drive. East, Costa Mew also 1n Coronel del Mdr. at 6 75 6000 Plan III Broadmoor -5 Bdrm. 21fi.! ba on f e<' land. Good locat1on, great value at $155.000. ..._..._.,_,,,_, mospbere w/d tv ad· Mi/ -~ dr~. Just reduced lo dilloo. R·2 lol t oo! _... = ~ home. lmmacu ate con-R.C. TAYLOR CO . 640-5112 '°" ,_ . The $lZ1 ,000. 545-~91 $135.000 . DAJLY,.LOTa1 ... 1 ( h 0 ......, for .... first --~·j m1;121t1mt carred IMerffoR °"'Y· Real Estate HamesforSale l•CINT'IAL---.. •EW•• -PO;;;;;l_T-.. ~ HOMl AMO POOL7 3 bdrm in lovely North Costa Mesa. Walk to schools, shops and transportation. Hurry best buy in. area only S77 ,950. CCII 546-4141 WESLEY N TAYLOR CO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Authentic Spanish 2 Balboa Island Really · Giese.. 1002 bdrm., l both doll house; """'''~'"""'_..." ••••••••••••••••••••••• block to beach. Owner 673•1700 HEAl .TOl\S •,1 111·1· l~HH CU.SSIF4lD HOUlS Ad~l11"''" muv 1•l.1r1· 1h .. 1r ;,d" l)v 11•h·11h<1n1• 11 Ola m 111:> :10 r m MfH'll1"vlhrn F1 1rl11v 111onuonS111urduv ('(Jeoi'rA M !':SA OF Fin '. a;wi w 11 .. v .... ~ ll4}lll llllNTIN<;TON llt-:AC'll 1711'1~ H1•1;t•h lllvcl ~ ll'iV I.ACUNA Rt-:Anl 11118 OIMtn<'yreo l,1111un• Buch 4~ ~r.a N()llTll t'()l llliTV 1h11l lrM' :.40 1:ao CU.SSIFHD DUDLIMH 111'..rthrw lor co11v Ii k Ill• 111 ~ 30 11 m l h1• duv ht•lflf't' pohhrul 1110 1•a rt'flt lllf'l\<Jrwl.iv & Mon di.v l':d111nn" wh1•n 11i'>"1hM '" i.u1urd11v 12 noon CLASSIFIED IEGULATIOMS V.1111011~ A<tvc•rt1>1rr~ flht1ulft c·hN'k lht•1r 111lh clu1lv & n•rw1r1 ,•rr '''" lmllll'''' u ll·I v . Tll t: IMll .Y 1'11.{Yf U~""""°" httlJUllv lor lhl' l1r~I In ('0Ht'C1 lrlM'rllM only <.'ANC't:l.l.ATIONI' Whc'fl k11lint1 Ull 11<1 ht• llUll' lo l'l'IHk(• 11 rr'11irc1 nl lh4• K 11.1 , Ni t M Ill·: II 111\'f'll \'OU hv \11or ull 111kc•r 11~ tt•••(•IPI nl ynur r11n<'1•lh1llnn Thi• kill numbl•r inu•l h1• flrt'"''" ll"1 hv th•· 11c1Yrrl l't•r 111 1'11"M•Ol 111fi•11uh• 1 .. vlng state; aalling _________ _, $125,000 873-*3 • OPEN HOUSE .. REALTY SPr 11inq Co ~la M e sa Irvine Huntington Beac h -Newport Beac h IACICIAY IARGAIM Luxurioua Woodatream 3 bedroom. 2 story. Witlk lo pool, Y.M C A., shop pmg. $9UOO. 1()'7,, Down Hurry, take advanlal<(e Call646-4477 llYIHI TMIACE VIEW HOMI Spectacular panoramic view of the harbor, jetty, city lights. Catalina and gorgeous sunsets. A sight to behold ! 2 Large bedrooms plus maid 's rm & sitting room. formal dmmg room & d e n . Lovl'ly p ool in enc losed c:o urtyard. $310.000. Sel' any time. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .• REALTORS 2111 San JooqiiM Hlh Rood HEWPOttT CENTER, H.I . 644-49 I 0 AWIMHU •UQUIDATIO._..* •6VAHOMES• EXECUTIVE Invest.or Ll9,ui<Lallng SPECIAL Homes ~A~,?LLEG E G reat neighborhood. Sharp 3 bdrm Sum · metfield home w/lge rm. ly rm & rrml din rm Almost new npls & custm drps. Move In eon· dJUoo. Better hurry! On· ly $95,950. M5-949l In a neighborhood or 1m . and MESA DEL MAR posing homes. this 3 HURRY-They are In bdrm Stu r d a v en t ~ ~~G and WON'T Weetcurr 1s a bargain. SO down to ••ts priced ror )'OU at $159.000 ASK f'OR There's old fashioned 4 BR-$74,5001. quality In lhl!I modern IRI ~ AC)eltf home. Newport ll 1~h 541-0800 ...._, .. + Crph! School District. Call ua to 1---------It's true! Glant corner seet.hlslnstanUy appeal·•---------lot. 4 Bedrm·2 bath Ing home at 540-l LSI .... Posslble '1 dream house! ALL NEW OLD CORONA DEL PAINT INS IOfo: AND MAR OUT' NEW PLUSll 4fY~ HERITAGE /' 4,000sq rt. C A R P E T I N G r. W'~ C.....__ Yes!!! Tr1pl~ A. double 'lllRUOlrr! ALL NEW ...,,_ ..... ..,.. ~ lot just oH ocean ROOF! An Incredible FO~ESTE OLSON ·~· . ' .. . .. . • REALTORS ---------1 Nice starter/retirement ••c-.o-c-3 n l!IXER Blvd. Formal t1 v1ng rm bargain-super tocat1on home-3 Bdrm&-all re i---------"'1""1 +family rm w/wet bar. too! Take advantage call rurlllabed-oew carpeta, l•IOOM FORECLOSURE! 5 tar~e bedrms. each ~l700t.oday• IAl~UTYIAY =ht:~n~~y~~d. IAltHARIOR ~~::. 3w~F"~o 'l~t~r~ ~r~· p~~~leb:~~ios~ 1e~"""ililil1 """' Great roe car /boal col· With ·"-·· In cbarmln11 f I ll • c.--• •-1 I d'-• -·el" 3 BR borne with kid • ......., ., orec oaure s or Y. """nu a ... rcase em mg UJV 1 lectors, dogs, I , gatedSeavlew. Bank bas notified owner to 2nd leve l. 4 car · · many amenities. Formal gardens. $70,000. 21C77 Yacht Grayling d it's intent. Good loco· encl08t..id garage. All.this I~~~=;;;;;;;;~-~._ OR, BBQ In kitchen. $279,900 Uoo. 67X107 Lot.size. f'ull under one roof oo corner Open and s pacious · price Just $65,000! Take lot. Don't let this one Rel Great for family living advent.age. caJI 762-1700 1,1wiay ! Call 673-3550 a nd entcrtalnlng. Now! ""'~"'"''''"'"''U'~" ,. A~LSTATE PET~&~!~: •-w-.-,-&tNO--MT--[ i 'iNill [ 91 IRl!ll For Ad Action ___ R_EAL __ 'J_OR __ a __ l---------1 w/4:1: boat tllp. Big 2 -bdrm & den, 2 frplcs, CAHYOU 18.JEVEITT Sharp 3 bdrm condo Almolll new crpta. Shows blflly. !..«• p1tJo. ldu l atarter home or &ood ln· tis~~ MEW YI.AR'S SPECIAL BAYFRONT HOM E, LARGE SLJP FEE LAND BAYFRONT HOME. LARGE SLIP FEE LAND BAYFRONT HOME. LARGE SLlP FEE LAND BALBOA PENINSULA $750.000 OPENTOMOHROW 1·4 SEE BILL BENTS AT 1024 E. BALBOA BLVD. A CO&OWIU. IAl«8 CO. 644·8060 2111 IAHJOAOUINHH..UltD. IN Nlw.oRT CPfTU bltnl, 2 oov. patlol1 3 car pr. Owner wUJ be1p BIG 00 n.nanc:tng. $350,000. JACOISllALTY '7M'70 1-----------1 veatmeot. Phone now "or Sale By °"1>er 4 8r 2 before Its aold ! I M5-9491 Be Buena Parlt home. DU carpet • kitchen. frplc. Sharp.ready to move ln. $76.Bil0.~149 a .. lfied Ads 842-58'78 Want Ada TRl-PLEX $109,900 32 bedroom units with enclosed garages. New exterior paint with this pride of ownership investment. Buy thls one a nd watch your money grow. 540-3666 Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 MllDHH.1'7 Help yourself lo 3 Huping aelection of Qualified Hopefula In the OAJLV PILOT HELP WANTED ADS ' Sell Idle items 642·5678 macnab I Irvine realty A TTEHTION: IMVESTOttS! Start the New Year right with an extra-lg . duplex in Corona del Mar. below the highway. 3 BRs. 2 baths each urut -great investment for ow ner/occupant or invest or. $240,500. Martha Macnab 642·8235 . (M-104) 642·1235 .... 6200 '°' Dover Drive Harbor View Center trvlne al Campus Val .. y C:.nter" 752·1414 Siii< & ,INtf PEA~UTS ... .. • ---T OAll. Y PILOT CZ ........... Wt ~H11ttH '-S. ....... ,., W. ,, ...... ,.,. S. HwMt '°"We Ho.ttn For W. T!u!d!y. J!nu!ry n , 1979 ·•·•···················· ...................... ···•••················· ......••.•............. ····•····•·········•••· ..........••.•.•••....• t , .. ,.. IOOZ •i•r• 1002 O..W IOU .._,_. I OH Dw,_. 102' ......... 1044 ..._...ForW. ......._,_,. °"""lfflllt• ·•••····•··•··••••····· ·····•·····•••···•···•• ....................... . .................................................................................................................. ·····•···········••···· DIVORCE CU..VllDAU ... .,.,. .. _. 10'9 ... .,.,. .. _. 10'9 Cc arcW UDO ISll B•y view from 2 patio dec:ks en.hone cuatom sp clous ~ bdrlTl.. 4 bath tr dlUonal h<>m : like new. Ideal rot l'nt rtolnlng. SS00.000 OCUNNONT Qu lity l'r nsma hip ln mahog. trim & oak n rs t.s off W landmark : 4 BR. 3 ba homt-In fin t locaUon E&tabb hed ~ & lowns $485.000 I ACIC IAY l"lnc 4 bdrm • 214 bath ram.Hy home on qutt>t cul do sac Oversli ed PoOI. pJayhoo.'ll', stora11~ $169,000 Tf"rmi . IAYAONT &•H•rul fine bnyfront homt-s wtlh pa r & sbp A YALOH Wttll rnn~trul'tt.>cl 3 BR. I ba oak fl oor, purt1sl bu. ttmE'nt roncrete foundol1on 1'1uts are $120.000 Fe BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR Jll ll<1 y\ulo tl•·••' "4 ti ~.'~ tJIOI SPYGLASS SPECIALISTS RARE CORONADO MODEi.. Th1!S huct to fincf popular plan in t'X<'Cllent tond1tion wi th grei1t v1cw. 5 bedroom!;, furruly room. dinrn~ room. large lot. $4l!l.500 NEWPORT CENTER REALTY 640-1812 NEW USTING! UKEA HIWPOIT IEACH WATERVIEW7 Newport Helgbt.s, cholct• See this highly upgraded loe. 2 Bdrm. & 3 bdrm. townhouse in preSllJIOUS houses, with l~lcs. ·cop· pe r ~mb ng . + works . Sl99.950! lalMHt lay .... op. Rffffors • 67S.7060 * . BAYCR.EST NF.WON MARKET Excellent noor plun, 4 Bdrm. 2 '·'J ba th. 2 fireplaces beautiful yard on romer lot with room and access for RV Good \la.lue at 1179,000. 4~Ul" * IOl!.,A,\\ c. "'~ · .. · ~_. .• -· ·------- A Hint of Spring! 9018 SIZES 8-20 - Rancho San Joaquin: J bdrms .• 3 baths; over- 1oolrang Mason Park & Lake with pict.uresque U.C .l. Campus & Turtlerock Hills in back- ground. Walk lo golf ooune & tennis courts. Pnced al $165,000 ~OWN 673·7l00 ... .. ._,,_ .f .... Have someth.m~ you want to sell? Classi ed ads do it well. 642-5678. ---- Air Militaire Lingo ... ~ll 2 bdnn. cvS.dc-1ac. 10% .. •••••••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ,...,...., 1600 YORCl:SSALE downornodown VA. SACRIFICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Red. s10JOO w seuoo Altlnt 5Slo4$82 BeauttBR, poot. apa, lgt ~000 ON NEWSKOPPINO . Dana Potnt Beach atylt 8to10 AM le Pm yard Xlnl area. Sa.42.$00 CENTER !:-v.!!~· ~:~ :,1e~· SAC RIFICE! Bout, fnM.1UAJl. 04 Bdrm. 2baUI ho~e Newport Beach Area • MLlll aell Immediately :~bnda• 3 :r 21~ HOME + A" w/pool. lac· lam rm. ~= r':t ~:.San~~ :!:':!i~i'ut home or p~cedeJf!~g~z ;,.~knet~ 2BR R2boua0~ +A pt o~1 er ~:Pi'!:" ~ ~~~°!~~: Prime blab traffic counL lNVESTMENTSTORt; 8oth nr lake 673·4311. ~· . 1a rorner ot. Owner wUl flnance. No U,000:;,., feet rent.able Fi i i .a. ...... •.a.5y 1•.a.eH UYl.u.!.. m.t71~ ~ hoW'a Owner/All view DJR. L/R, den crfld.ll needed. 1155.000 IJ)llee. .ooo. ~ """ 5"" ......, • 1225.000. Apptonly 2L5St . balance. A1k for Ed ~ lllln Co. Men'• C. '"as......, to ... • l N •1n 'tuu wttlll a.w r .. t11 s ct. T1liwe ti .. e _., ........ 9ld 2Yt ~-W.wtlllii w ........ ace of ... ~ .. .. -==~Ion .... ,. .... ,....._.., . w .. tott. Mecti ... ..ty St7.IOO. 4tM ll 2 a..-: a.aut.4br.2~ W,..le«h 1041 Andrcwa Rd. Agt ~964.3'SS 63 3400 -.. ~v~,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4().()808 '"" bl. ram. rm . h.orne. I::•· •--------'44-a751 tenalv• cedar thruout. 4 duplex, lndudlng bay fCMft DOWN Mu a t • e • · Term II · front w ~ exchanged -MIUU San Clemente. Ideal Mom $L?3,000. 493-11>18. d 0 w n I n a p II: g . BY OWNER. Will carry & Pop bulldtne. 700 ~ t't. tfldt-leadt 1040 Zl3/6M-33>0 ba1 on contract.. Choose oo ~Camino. plua Apt __,,_ from 9 difterent ve~ant above $85 ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• propertlea. C.M ./Npt BERntA.HENRV Mll.Dll'S CLOSEOUT LOVELY LIDO area. No quaUfytng nee. REALTORS New 3 Br 3~ S., Just a home on a sp1tcious $6' Prine. only· Call 54!-S399. 21.s Del Mar 49'2·4121 few abort block.a to the tot. A roomy single story Bluff bd beach. VA or conven Ca 38dnn, fam rm home. 00.1: 3 r , 21,A, ba .• Stores. ortlces. & desk tional t\nanctnc avalla l_!seY charmingly decorated $1 JOO. Pnncapall only· space. New bui ldang ble. ~133 & with country French 640-0208 A I C. x In l Io c . In 024 Co kitchen, oak floors , 2 Br+ den. 21,A, ea. view Westmltuter . Global I SPANISH VILLA mpany fireside formal d1n1~ d bacll:bay, beautifully R.E. 89Z-3393 •••• ••••• • • ••••• ••••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• "I'\..... ... -~--Ith l ....... d I d •G.....a ,.,.............., w ennis. "'''"'' suuned an ea decorated. assumable Prime Waterfront com --------· ·--------fireplace. and 3BK. 2.,.. CONDOMI NIUM gla.!sswindowsandwarm g:\4 loan SU.000 under mercial location t or ~~~IO ba. MULHEARN Split level wood & &lass. natural )VOOd tones tbru-market.644-8304,64-4·7785 &ease 1n Lido Marina BAY& BEACH D_....l....&sa....-pane 11 e d w a 11 s , OUI. PLUS BALBOA PENN. Vlllage.673-0462. In lb.la auper 4 bdrm, J -_•r ....,. .....-cler estor y w 1 ndows . bath Meu Verde Home. 754-7800 wtu~ater views. pool, 2 A larce pool sue south DUPLEX C•do.htf-:'~Tow.-a atory, cuatom pool & BR. den, dtmng room pauo.1295.000 Remodel th as prime ......... 1700 Jacuu.I, temfic family Want to lMQt beach proper· Sl49,!i00 for appt. to .ee located property & make ·-••••••••••••••••••'• 450 NEWPORT ~T . DA. • 75tfa11 bomt. Call 546-5880 for ty ror what Its really • ~644-7i l I a bundle of $$ 3 bdrm. P'or Sale by owner. mondnlonoaUon w o rt b ? B e a c h downstairs, bach... up· Lowest priced condo In CANYON CREST . :~ s-~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS •. a choice area. handy to marll:eu & Fuhlon1--------• bland 1hoppan1 ·yet liW· Uc1ently secluded for pnvacy. 2-Story end unit condo with over 2,000 sq ft. or Uvlng space. J Bdrms .. 2 baths & 2 trplcs. Community pool. 11auna. jacuiz1 & tennis courts nearby : price on ly$133.~. Dream Come True Lush atrium entry . gourmet country kitchen f e atured here ... J bedrooms. rlreplace, din Ing & patio. $106.500. Call now! BKR. 540-1720 WOODBRIDGE ... a prestigious area In Wl lrvme; bandy to rap1d1-------·---tram .. yet quiet enouah , ________ _ foe the lightest sleeper. it's an award wlnnma condo with 2 bdrms. & den, 2V.. baths & rozy ll'l)lc. Never been lived in. ReallsllcaUy pnced atS119.~ BAY& BEACH 450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. 759-mll l 1006 ~trc.o leoch I 018 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TopofSpyCJln1 CUttm lot-Plans 8000 s.l. home. great vu. $3.50,000. 546-lltl TRADE UP! WAmM' TOIEIOUGHT Priced below markel at S.,llOO. Take advantage ol Uus 3 bdrm home on a large lot. For more in· formal.Ion call 546-5880 .. .,~;HERITAGE ~·· •• ··•REALTORS SAT/SUN llo 5 2004 Calvert MakeoHer. 644-5757 EAST SIDE Cozy collage. 2 BR. hardwo od fl oor s, fl.replace. double garage. S..500. Roy Mee..., Rltr 541.7729 . MUSTSILL $5000DOWH Sl>eclahats. Call Chris, U04So Coast Haw1ay SWl's. $129,500. Call days Newport Beach. 6 mos . Ci!ntw")'2lSurf. 536.7542. in Village Fair ~eves67~18 o'd2 bd, 2 ba. 15 BJ: n.-. LAGUNA BEACH .,.,.. '""'-1044 497-2457 ll' Boal allp. Waterfront per Cl, NB. Cul e Sac. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOM HOME Comm. Condo. J bdrm. S48-8038, $8l.OOO. SACRIFICE ! Beaut Woodbridgo J Br 2148 ' PLUS elegant 2 Br condo priced ~low market. Both nr lake. 673-4311 Owner/Agt. --------L~T OF 7 2"'1 ba. SW.000 Call days o.lexn/ 4 Br. 3 Ba. master bdrm 644~ eves 67S..fl018 IWh S. . 1100 *DUPLEX * retreat. 2 trplca. formal PLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orean side of hwy. level dining, 3 car garage. ap· DU Emergency UquidaUqn b~ lot. easy access to beach. prox. 3000 sq. ft. 2297 La Both 3Br. 2bu units. Owner. Near new 014t- Noods palnt, minor re-Unda Court. $189.500. Steps to beach. Unit up st.anding deluxe Duplex pam; ideal for home & Owner/Age nt. 642-2164 or has large balcony. Unit on BLUFFS above Capo READY AND income. llurry , only _67_3-0782 __ .______ down ha.a frplc Asking Bch. Both units havl.' $159 000 $187.000. Call for appt. panoramic Ocean view. 2 MJsS1onRealty 494-0731 W.ENDLg'8mhome3+ 714/962·2.456 BKR. Ask bdrm. t'h b a. frplc . WAJTING -Plus2onR290'bwldable ror Paul. PRINCIPALS appl's. Just reduced to . l.agurtoHllls 1050 lot.$28SM.7101Seashore. ONLYPLE~E. $1.57,500.0wnerwilltake Largest Oeerl1eld Pa rk ••••••••••••••·~··••••• owner. Will consider 2nd. Drive by 34638 home in appealing ll'a~eou.s !2 Sty.4 br. Olndotrade fi4S.8410 SACRIFICE Camino Capistrano then earthtooes. Freeform frmJ dfn·g. lrg FR. 2.,.,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Beautiful 4Br. pool.spa, call Owner at 937•0531 pool and spa. Perlect for ba, upgrd's galore' Bltn lg yard. X Int area. (wt,.~) or'94·9S83 (eves entertauung Owner wall vac. gar opnr. brick IESTIUYIMTOWM $142..500673-4311Agt. V.J;> help rmance. An invest· patio. prof Jodscp. All TRJPLEX +guest ON CHERRY LAKE wtmds). ment at $15.1,000. Call for thJs & more ror only Great 4.,.. Br. 4 Ba. 2 frplc. 9~ A Special 4-Plex details. $1.32,400 Really World, Smr/Wntr Rental assumable loan, terms. In a pr es l i g i o u s ... -~..--~ n:,~1 I I' ~. Hf-"•l l't. . ~,r· '.>!1 I ./lll)U~ ORANGE TREE COND05 2br Iba a/c d/w frig spa pool tenrus balcony elc 165.000 hurry ! 494-4954 IUY FROM OWNER 5 BRor4+bonus, 211) ba. cpt thru-0ut, rrptc. s un· deck, jac. $105,000. Ph 714/484-1900 San Diego Beautirul Upgraded Greenbriar: Woodbndge Place. $138,500 Assum. Loan. Owner/ Agent eves. 559-1497 MAKE BID 3 Bedrooms, 2~ baths. 2 fireplaces! Asking $113,900! Seller will nnance! Malteorter! T• to Red c.p.t WeU.hftl 7S4-l202 UHIVBtsm P ARIC Stun ning Stanford ~.Feeland Agent SSJ ·4682 8to10AM & PM 7G8-3S8S Close to Beach & Bay Ow p I I ..... ...,......,..,.... near Hunt· .-.en """M k Ofr By ner r n on y. ''""'6'"""....,.... t --..ai--. I 052 _...,uuv-a e er $268,000 642-1121 dys, in gt on Harbo ur . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ·~ Jones RHffy, Inc. 67~16evea/wknds Spacious, dramatically 673-62 I 0 designed urut with ex-Laguna Niguel Realty • SPECTACULAR VIEW 3 bdrm located on pre- st1g1ous Monarch Bay Terrace. Lg poolsn.e lot. spac. IJv rm w/frml din· ut~ area. A qual. cstm built home ror the dis- c rim at 1 n g buyer . $2:50,000. . 493-9494 495LS220 496-241 l 830.5050 OPEHFRl/SAT 1·5 One ol a klnd. Brand new wtocean vu Elegant F r e nch Pro v . 1n Monarch BayTe rnce. 32719Sea Island Dr 640-6259 cl~~ )) Sl0,000 Down tASTILUFF 5 Br 3 Ba. expanded bv- utg rm, lg kllchen. den. rrplc, .Owne r will finance. No qualifying. $217,000. Owner. 640-7778 IEACH DUftLEX l·BUt. to ocean; newly renovated. SLSS,000. MEWPORT IEACH REALTY 675-1642 RARE BLUFFS CONDO l story 3 bdrm. on green· belt. overlooking park. close to shoppin g, Comm. pool. Pnncapals ooly. S 1&5.!iOO 581-66 78 OM THE CAHAL Lge. 4 BR. 2i,., ba .. new kitchen; 2 fl'l)lcs .• aun- deck; pools & tennis. YOU own the land. S24S.OOO. 10% Down . OWC . Owner/ agt. 548-1290 · NEWPORT HTS. 1300 SufMX &.... pensive views. Only $167.500 for this 3 84().254.5 960-4370 bdrm & den home on a ii--------• corner lot wittun walkmg distance or the Westchff shops. Vacant & ready for a happy family. Wag. gmhom Rltrs. 675--6160 SIXUMITS &-2 Bdrm and a 1 Bdrm house on big lot. May take more. Must lrade- prefer commercial or in· CUSTOM dustr1al. C all Curt Herberts Barrett Rlty. reatures galore make ·642-~~5200~~~~~~~ this fine WESTCLIFF1- h0me spec a al. Soaring .. _..,.,...., 2000 vaulted ~am ceilings •••••••••••••••••••••• canopy the s pacious familY room. Hide.away den. Wtndlng t.ree lined street. Cloge to school. SltE.500. 645-7221 FAw ook AcrHge 18+ acres. $14,000 pr acre. Owner rinandng available. 25% down. A !1€\TIGE: /~ i HOME:~ ~~~~:::t21 3333 W. Coast Hwy, NB e 645.6646 Westdff l.dty 76 UNITS S-. ._ I 010 ly OWNER •••••••••••••••··~··••• Low rent. Taite over Almost Hew Custom Bue cola 9~ loan. No vacancies . Property located at 1049 West 2nd St, Rialto. CAU. 542-1676 for Wo. Bkrs welcome Ranch style 3 be4room CRUMMY 4 PLEX home with plush carpel.ll, And enjor first user's tax benef t s In thi s s mashing, new Sproul duple.x ; 1'11 wood, shake. used bnck & the latest goodies. Only $265,000, may exchange for CdM R-2. Assume balance or•---------DAEAMHOUSE Lovely 4 bedroom ramlly room home w /Spanish ceranuc tile entry. fami- ly room and kitchen. Co'zy r1replace. view ol city lights, mountains and valleys. New paint. new carpets. new dis· hwasher. $110,500. This house is a treat to see. COU Of NEWPORT. We have two 3 bdrm .• 2 bath ho mes, In great location! Both have Oak firs. & lirplcs. The one with the 4 l'ar garage is $134.000. the ottier has a s hake roo r a nd a greenhouse for $137 .500. dining. family room . Investor's delighL All 2 flrepllice and greenhouse Br appta. New paint & window! $81,500. BKR. caJl>et&. Priced right at Ca II 540-1720 $00. 000. rCotoua <kl u/(a;i $140,000 at $1380 mo. Meaa Verde 4 Br. 2 Ba execul.lve home. Pool, jscuul, no quabry1og. Owner.1~-6519 _,.,.J."'fi'ufUJtlie.> i----- ~ 67.J-8W~ FtfA-V A 2435 E. CoHI Hwy., CdM $68,500 3 bedrooms. large yard. quiet cul de sac. 645-9161 OCEAN/CANYON VIEW Jasmine Creek condo, pools/tennis crta. 3 br. lam-rm. Owner andows. 11 Jasnune Creek Or. . .. ' RB.ATIVELY SIMftlE We aolve problems · the eternal "where do we put Mom & Dad". is easily answt!l'ed in this Park II Fordham with separate quarters for the in·lawa. Well located · 2 pallos · Improvements to please all ·solve your problems by ma.king an appoint menttoday. R.EA.LTORS 675-551 I CALL 646·4463 TARBBL A PR€HIG€ ___ -_,,,.._. ___ /~ ~ HOM€~ 3333W. Coast Hwy.NB 645-6646 ······················· ·---------Fantastic 2300 sq. rt . home in Eastbluff w/5 Mable Ho.Ma 4 BJ.duplexes "lownhome" rent a Is For Sde II 00 Incl. bayfroulto be exch. Uve m Newport's ~st ••••••••••••••••••••••• down In a Pk g . address in a home of --------• 1 __ 21J_l_fi84.3200 ______ _ your own & enJOY over MOltLE HOME ••u CH FIXB $23,IXX> of rental income IMFOIMA TIOM - Prln. only . As king Rent,optiontobu.y mro. $115,000. '\ 64().2!)8'1. , OPEN HOUSE REALTY red hill ~ .. :. 552-7500 By owner Monarch Sum mil 2 & den condo SllS,000. 495· 1407 or 334.3.104 $650,000. Ownr/ Agt repo's, k>an assumption San Clemente Tri-Plex. 640-5296 or 963-0926 .,_ _ 1 0 A c pnced to sell. etc ~Y maoce · · · WelJ located 2· 1·1. CostaMeta 1024 ~ ...................... . """' I I '•' I I I I I I :.1 I I I I I I t I I I I I I I I I t I I Sm11t as yoo •ea• 1t-tlle new m1fitaiy km 1s dashing Y'I soil. Clochet cap ••th 1aunl'f pom. pon lnm and ~rl of WOISled· we11hl synlhthc-.ery QulC~ u sy Pattern 7124 d11echons '°' WL "p adJUSIS to ht all s1zt! Se~ now' Sl.50 !Of each pattein Add 40C L . 1Tf ,.,.;._ 1ff'-l\1".... uch pa1tt1n fOf fnst<lus an "i ma11 111d nandhn& $1114 tiac Alic•lreob N[W1 lheS1$hecl.c1nct1ed0111s1 Needlecraft Dept. 105 t\ the locus of lasll1011 inter Dally Piiot nl S.,llnen su11ounds •t .... 1'3. WC... St. lltw !tom 1COOoecl nec~hnt to llowy f.t, "' 10011. Prill! ......., 'lttft$ to '"'11hn1 '~"' ~ z:i,, Plltn •1111tr. P11nled P1ttt1n 9018 Mrsws NCW1NOw1 Our 1979 NC(OH Sttti 8. 10, 12. 14. 16, 18. CRAfJ CATALOG-owei 100 POPtt- 20 ~· 12 (Ml ~) .. ~ I• de$1CYIS. 3 ft• pattan JI. 1Md$ 60 '"'h f1b11' ri1n~ed lft~ Seild 7~1 s.I Ut .. _...,._Md 1~~ ~ ~:= • .. _,. ~ ,. fint· m-Arp. ., o.... uo ct. ............. Send to; 12"rilftl """"· . . . . . uo MMIM MUTUI IMltll",~........ lJO 114-Glfta II °"""""",. lJO Pattern Oopt. ••2 IZJ.Stltdl '•' hkll 1.H 01llyPilot U2-St.ff '11'PtlftQvl .. SIJS m.r .... a..olh ... ,ue iu w.t iaa St.. 11 .. '"' "' m-btf """"""'· . . . uo 10011. PMt llAll(, NJOltSS. 11a.•1ttJ ""' Qdtl .... 1.00 lJP\ Sal_. Sl'fU llUMIH. Us.II,,.. Cfldltt ..•.•. 1.00 All ht ne-'lothti JOii '*° '°' llMlll&Mt Clfta ....... Sl..00 your busy hit ll'f 1n OUt SPRING> 110.1' Jtf!J be ......... 7M SUMMUI PAOlRH CATALOG• ltNtw I a.rt .•.•.•• ·11.n OrtQft. topubts. Potnts, tats. l•talMI ..,.. .... l.fll llCflm Plus $1 !iO htt Ptll'tln 106-...._. r.-. ..... l.IO COM~ $tjld 7$t ........ c.i.t,,,, llM l»lwkelilm •M.fUt ,......._. -....... ._.. l~T..-n '"' W.H ..... f ...... 1k 1 Ollifla .•• su e tt2.._ Qt6 . . . . • nt ID .... '' Will .•. SlJt •ltl .. c.lldllll .••... 1M • I 1 , , .... -.. ? • • • lttAHDNEW TOWNHOMES Qxne & see Ule best buy ''Britt.yWooch" In Newport Heights . (F.asuldeCotta Meat) Comp~y remodeled 2 moot.ha ago. 4 bdrs. & 2 En~Uab Tudor 2"3 Br ba. :m Ramona Place. s plat level. 2&3 car CM 548-8038, $94,900. g a r a g e . •fr p 1 c s , Owner/agent microwaves, greenhouse ___ ....;;;_ ____ _ windows, pool. spa. MoolHcelloToWfthoute TENNIScourt. $14,500 dowo to take From$89,950 over, no q_uaJi(ying. 4Br, 64&006lor9SS-l920 2ba, laW>d.rynn, dbl al· Developed by tch encl far. 2 pools, Jae. Woodtree Dev. Co. rec bal • et.. S7S,350. -"'--H Owner/ Agt 771 · 1301 .-r ~ CHM (Mike) Huge S BR. 3 ba, avail -.,...--,..-----1-0-2-6 211. $199,500. $46-1141 ...................... . ,... .... P..ty Ele11nt single family Great bom es , flex homM w/ocean &l vallty flnanc1n1. beat areaa. vlewa. Coming soon. 546-1141 s.sw . ---------S©~4'l~-~£trs · That lnfri9uin9 Won/ Gome willi o Cliudle ..... ...,QAY .. ~ ·~n;:-~: :: ~ ............... ........... lwf ....--• •j ,... e••tt • ....,. .. , BLUFFS FRONT ROW 9~ H-5.....__ BERTifA HENRY BAY VIEW J BR MUST -..--.. REALTORS E. rt . 3 bdr . fam rm .. e nclsd SEU NOW AT '76 E Anaheim 795661:41~ 215Del Mer 492-4121 glf~a•n yd. PalJOS, 10 yrs old. PRICE OF $162.500111 w. Anaheim ...... S8S,0004~n9 (TifOUSANOS BELOW WesllDUISter 848.8895 COM TRIPLEX 3·2 BR. A Crowd.. OTHERS>. S PECIAL Anaheim sse-1011 prlnc only. $195,000. .. in th is delightful L*Forfft 1055 SITUATION. DON'T Santa1fla 554-1070 Subj. to 10/31 ellcbange. Turtlerock 4 bdrm .••••••••••••••••••••••• MISSTillSOEAL.Agent -ca 11 6 7 3. 1 4 1 8 home ... or curl up with Owner paid $160,000, a11-640-5560 S l6,tOO eves/wknds. hu.bby and the kids ln sume 80% loan. No quail· --------- your spacious kit/Cam. fyinf!, owner desperate. ---------ST8tS TO IEACH rm. Three patios orter $5000 takes all. 963·7330 SHORECLlffS Dbl wide '61 trallerama PIJMI COMM'L LOCATION Heart of Laguna Beach. Prestigious build ing. Savings~ Loan as a ma· Jort.enant. Sl,400,000. total privacy. or a few Agent. CDNS188) 3 pvt ~h & steps and you can enjol •-ua--_-,_-v-·-A~---1-0-6-7 pier. Sub lettlng allowed. the romm. tennis & poo . -"'r-VIEW 1..-0cat.ed In Traeasllre ls. It's 2020 sq. ~. ol beauty ••••••••••••••••••••••• 318)1 Pacific Coast Hwy. withloadsofupgrades! THIPIESIDEMT Beautifully remodeled Lag. Bch. Offered by la In the White House & family home In e•cluslve Re n a 1 u a n c e M . P . you can be too In this Shorecliffs. Magnirl~cnt 714-4.9&-3816. a..WHl-Rfflty 1980So. Coast Hwy. LAGUNA BEACH 494-1519 955-1570 bealll.lful Casa Blanca 75 coun'"" kitchen. terrirlc ( d r. 3BR 2•~ b f -:r l·BR +. ulJy reron . Pvt. an. • .,.. 11 • pro master swte. separate beach •· dock, Lido Isle. andacaped. Nestled tn Id · in w 't .. privacy. 2 m inute Jog ch.I ren s w g. 00 $29,500 Agt 6'T~IU70 from rec. center. THIS la.st! For private show· home has It ALL. ing call Newport Beach on Lado, TWO DUPLEXES OMILOT! •JUSTS 120,500 *. 2 ~~ooo. UALTYWOI LD 768-ISIS . •SllS,000• 'tSZ3 l'AM PUSDa·IRVINE i-~~~~---- ~....... 1052 ~Mlgllel 1052 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ MONARCH SUMMIT 11 Btfly. decorated B-Plan. 2 bdrm + den •. 2 b a th s. Panoramlc Saddleback Mtn vleWB. located on cul-de·sac. City lights by night. Must sell. Co"M)l. vool. jacuzzi & clubhouse. $127 ~. A~IAMCBCO. 49s-12a2 831-0836 "'" UI I • .., ,._ ............ • 20XS1 Gullstttam. a bdr. 2 &lleve It. Lowest price ba. adult park Hunt· ln Eastalde Cost. Mesa. inglon Beach, for sale by Cozy and cute up&raded owner,1162·3071. Interiors; attractlvt• Acrl81J1 for S. 1200 brick aidinL. outaJde. A ---------1 ······················· real steal! 1 1920 under 5t:::~~ld Oak J QUAii, PAHOUMtC VIEW rrom Newport Bay to Mt. Baldy. Elllquia.lte bome. :M hr warded 1ate. 3BR. den, lam rm. 2 frplc1. Jecuul. $298,500. Call d•r• 844 ·8?2~. eve• m«l18 .. ~".Loadedwlthemo-PLACE lion, WI lovely iontle1 PIOf'BTIIS rollln1 view property .. Just waltinl ror your new Tl lllO P.M.I homep~~~L ._ent_to_,bw.__ __ bM_cb_p_rope_ .... r· l/676-51,1 or l /5.23-'462 ty for what 11 .. r eally * worth? Beach B. DUMPO a , ..... "•rtr 1400 SoeclaUata. C.11 Chrla. AT'nfE BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oentury 21 SUrf, $3f.1~. Wbat a buy l A llttlt paint Carllbad, beaoUIW ocean 1--------- wUl make you$$. Even fronl, commertlal build· ..... 11 i•••ll baa It.a own pool! Hum IAI a: l of a tl.od m • ...., •P1¥1 ''btllil eon. •save! I &el·.'f44. ~ •PPl'O• J.S.nlO ICf ltnlCtelL llJO.GOO Prlo· ~UI')' ll G<*l St.ar ft:;.::Wl Ol'MltAwav·~:;c:' ~ ~I I 'I A I en t www -uu.. C I I 0 ft , Marby-<: lo motfla " ctftter "' tow1'1. --Terma. Arudowl ~rttr. 1141434·1735 ..... '/WI old .Wf for aew «!fdl .. wltb a a• *1.1CWC71 -f "-'•~ u..-.ahtd .,._.., u.1.-lhed Ap.tw.• "'""lhd .,....._ ... .....,..., ..,_ ••••h u.fwa. Ap6I tcw•h u.rtura. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• DAIL. V PILOT Thurtday, January 11, 111ro M.11"U.fw h:lid HlwlU.Mwl.a.d a...-IMD 1141 ..... ~ JZIO "'"'*''""' 376t C..M.N llZ4 ,.... JeZ6 ~INdi ll41 .•••...•....•.•...•........••••••.•••••.......••••..............•••.. •··············•······• ••.............•.••••.. ····•••······•··•·····• ............................................. . C...MiM llJ4 ............ l140 s • a bl. 2nr1ar. h>cd a Bt 1~ t,a tOOdo nu lectl1ler SJOO.. I Br. crpta. drapH, Br TwllhH, 2 ur Otadroot 1 br •Pl t400 -· .. ••••••••••••••••• "••••••••••••••••••••• ye1,., .n "" AYall l'tb. ~. noor.. Nr. So' Cat __ Aa•ll31490 ctl1)0n. kfdl OK. suo ,.,....,trp&c.dea&M:yd, mo. Nr. Victor Uu.gu . 1 UtilTS-C.M. N ... UJ bdrm. lrpk, Nft' 11t 2 twdroom 1 tGs 4"11~1 Pfau, tllcl 11r11• ID One bdrm, ~ blk mo Nodoip. 979-0134. 1 yr oW bid&. f'U. mo. (21J)l7t.2'7Z3 Beaut.. new buHdlna bllnl. 2 ~arqe.. kM> ~. orZ bedl'OOID • ..S.n N•• s bdrm J\t ba Poot kidl play "'11 No bay/ocean. Avail 2/1 on '41W.._ A"S -~--------~.alot~allon •14>6',S., • *57$ ~u•wtndow 1at11 ,trpk +atra• C-~~t\v~ .. !!.0 1·• motomo.Owner/AI\. l8drmtrldls.320 Pool N.wcondo.1Br2~Balflliwm_.1Ndi 38'9 lliLl.ovmt.a tu 1 •2hr' rondo POiO' jacuul home rtve blodt1 to OrHn •lew Cloac to ..._am or.,,.,._ :144-7MI jacms:I. doled ara et trpJc ()('tto vie-.. ncur'. ·-•• .. •••••••••••••• -·.., NrS Plu.1''31' No beach Prhah~ 2 rar lrbe&<'h Noamall nuutlrul 38r 2 ba CM la wt.rod A~una' 0 ~~.Jae: Adltt PAllNIWPOaT --IVIM PdalSM87• 1ara1t ru111 main llidl/oopeta Avail Jan w/pool playtrouDd oi.. TOTAL Pda. 3113.lliai.ut.on c·~ nopeta Mi>.de.%113 . Bachelors l or 2 I~ OOWM laincd yard Adul\11, No LSl.h. fJ'OO 494 I010 h w uh• r d b I 1 ar ~ • · · Bedrooma fl 'l'Ownboua~ 4-Pla • J PaG\lL)' LI a 8 r I .,.. 8 1 P9U lna~,.. at 617 ltlh 14,U •dep ' 340·A Car . 2 bdrm 2 ba. Condo. Oeo t"romSMil.SO A .. uroe. Seller wll ~. ffJI<' wet St,,. · C1H)IS(M331 a...-t... lJIO r l11e Call Ronata 'I ft~ Beaut. 1roundi. nice & vw over clltr1 above Spect.acular 1pa, tota l ca.r:r, pa.,.r. Mn1m bat, fam rm. aardl:ncr, ~.,.a.om., 2 main .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ MAW~ f:et. Adu.JU. oo pet.a. 3 Mari.na.'415mo.~ recreation prosum, ~ Atat Oary O ~~0~1~~~u~t tobeedi.Jbr,t N ,l•m rif!W•Br.J&,lf lamrm. ,_...~ 3216 AJ)cutrMnta. r bun\alow. Pool, Fbr&eue· PtNlfuclcon· aodalprocrem.7r.:IJ1.8 ~~~~· Glmtorm~-~1~~'f:~~'"i~ -~·:=~~ ~;··~·;;;;·;~:·;~~~· :==.~t. ~!:*1:.Z.'i.? ~.a~~T:c~i::~:: =~~d~~:~ -N9w I br, •~ ba <'OOdo, • ....._ M•n>' t'Xlrat Cll'•7U>•ftlPM Walk lo 9th St beach. vo .... _3M '42.S mo. 24096 Paaeo 17141644-1900 M ..... dbl pra •tip Open IUdl Otlt No pct.a '700 U.--..... 3ZU $450.$3872 '' -· _. -....~-.. Qirorua. No 1mokln1, ao1-------- Aa1Eln1 only •111.&oo bum ull .,, •• Poot, cs-.,.r.0 lee. IM~ ........................ ._..,.,....a.4_. daya a yearl ~--...U peta. PH.S3l·2llG Becbelor ualt ~ block MWt Mii flllt l'ttnc on =.s:,. ul SU0 NI 0 U El. S H 0 R ES · ~· --:UOO • lecna.UW ~. New beautiful 1a rden ......... led 3140 from be.ch. All utll pd. ~ Sccltt B.eall)' ~ TW •I Br. IP 11_rd, fitova. ~ 4 bdrm. 2\.\ ba, :r•nuuauuue•ou• 1 41 ledroo• ='ta, pool 1P~5 ....................... No IDda, no pets. 201 E. --WW at .. Yttde 3 br SSD AJT utU paid. No l•m mt, bucb, tennla. -·••••••• fumlahed & lBr S3l5 SHARP. beach 1.2 "3 BR, Balboa Blvd. S250 per famJly rm. frplc:. all !*A ISUln4 183&/mo. 493 6293 ur MOlll.IHOMI Unlurniah.d ZUr $340 frpk, dllhwshr, aara&e mo.+ eecwity dep. Call h =I JtO = ~~: = J er 2 a. t"Ondo on tht• 1411~ IHPOIMATION Apanm.n1a Adulta.nopet.t. &pa&b.960-2358 _b_566-__ 7707 ____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1*'1-$.1521 Ol71 WMi Adult.I ooly. No l Ur, 2..., b1. 2 rl"l)IC., Rmt, opOoo lo b'-'Y' lnfo, •AU UtWtiH Pcdd 2250Vaniuard Way ro..--d Vil.. Delux 4 BR, 2 ba, gar. no c t M 30' 300' ~ ~ 6"«.0f iltr»l l' Townhouu. f\'PO's. loan a.aaumptloo •Mol.taMReqWt.d (atNewportBlvd> ~I 8 peta, steps to bch, ~75 .:.:. .. ~·~.OOO•Bkr -IJOS/PITS()I( 3DR. l'-D•.bll fn rd VltllJ 1:58> mo 49'M!292 r~=::y financeO.A C. •Swlma.lae.T.W.. 646418or5'0-9626 New l"2 bdnn I llll} yrtylse.6+M1C3. s.~ ~K. 1 BR az:i • rant. fpk, 1GW Th•nw• hUo hm or th .. aea. on Mabie HoMt Stan lalllaN. SUPa MICE adult apta an 14 plana $C'1$. 3 br, 2 boa, baJcony. 2 BR •3u . H J UIO, LA> SC7S M812$1l orMfi t MMatthSummll.26r.2 Westm.llllt.er 848-3m •Adf ..... llhctor. •Locbd11r.w1i,1tot from$31S. + j)OC)la, lcn• mci. sar&JC. All bltru., Lah tw s.· 2200 ..... _ noomtm 7711 XS$.2. Lli tw.' lanai J ae & pool Anaheim ~1011 ,, .. ....,, ~ •9/WpaUo. lndry rm. nil. wat.erfalla, ponds I btktobeach. Yrty. ••-••••••••••••••••••• ADULT CONDO Mii So $0 lmmac 4 br. 1 ~ ba. All adlt comm S4.9S/mo. SanlaA.o.a M4-7070 • H.aldt a...._.. •Spec.la! cabinet.apace = ~ ~~~~ TSLMcmt &42·1603 W\11lrlld&o2..., r.or1 acre C•t Pla.t loft bdrin , QUl~t cuJ df' 111u· •~t u1 c.JI 831>-8G95. aft 4pm. Eut Anabelm ~ PLUS MUCK MOR.El *Gu heal. Pl ~·· Mchdden then West on IACtm.Oa UMITS an lib lo 11:1.ko, Nev1da molt ultts pd. by OWt\f'r xlnt k1C l'hlldr~n ' ptla l-ti 3 Br 2~ Ba home W Anaheim 761 1442 gas bot waitt aU free. McFaddetl lo Se lod S22S+• _111 foe raah. eallboal. car. Ttopeul tel. W/alream. ~ l!CM2Tyl~rClttle lrplc, patios, comm: Oakwood •Aduba,nopeta. awpo.w. diamond•. 1old, etc c. aviary, pool, jar <iemin.IHhy ~ pool/JI<' soo m o . c~:·*-" Gardec.Apaatuwota lBdrm.$280. Wlqe.(714>m-51M 201 Ll••LMI. m.'181 ':lfil.naf more. S37~ mo •BR. Zba Euc. lyp~ &S978 u.t.-.. slttd 3425 N.wponhach/North ZS:~loA'=.'~M . ~~;lybfs~ C. ...... S56-7J07 Will tnde 3 111b4ivklod hocna. Xlnt toe. c&off lQ L* Forest 3255 ••••••••••••••• •••••••• 880 lmne 842-7605 pyl, pt.ed eotnnce + 2 All AduJta ao pet.a, 2 bdrm ~ Veaaa tor cub WH ttldc 3 br . I ba llChla. ~l or lM Shown ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adult.I over 40. 3 br un· lot Ilda> ,,_ So lb tt 2 ba from $330.j lac pool ·-" I. AMr ~l·m··-... • Refurbl1 bed I Rea Iii by -•u ·~ AC r .. __ ..... $390 3 Br East.side. 2 pa...... me WI • • • • • _, -, w .......... ~u appt vooy • .-v. l 130'onlbewat.er! Jbdrm .. ~·H........:B vn\y, recrea· (714)MS-4~ cb.Udren OK ..... 2,.l St. g.arqe. Swtmmlng ~. clubbouu. Shown by tU.~7W1 lhu'p! ~.Av ..... 21 epmOlllHa70 2ba w1lhpnv:itedock.2 ._.. .900-l366 H.wJ>odBeacb/8outb ~ .... Jacum.Tennlaeow'll. l appta..only.549-3965 . ....._.._, lf13-.5M'J. Townhouse. 2 Br, )'e&n new. $6$0 per mo. Bayfmt. Belmool Sborc 2 l?OO llth SC. 546-85da)'ll. btk to Hunlinaton shop-EASTBLUFF. Beaut. apt, TrirPrtla 2300 8und n.iw o verslud frplc.~Uo.jac.. Avail . now . 24306 br, 2 ba condo ln s~. (Dowwot16th) Newb'decorat.ed3br,2b• oinlcentermall.AduJta. bealL bay view! 2 br, 2 ·--•••••••••••••••••• Hl.CCOLA Home in new pool. !wo 6314 Paochartrain 754.7900 bid&. Wetbar, wshr/ (714) 642-8170 lownhouae. Spacious, No -pets . From S-435. ba. Frplc. Huae patio. • Olt>ta Meaa sub-d1vis1on ---dryer ad It 1 Adiill• only, no P"t9 fiteptace & pool. Quiel Seawind Vlllace. 15555 Pool. Nature adults,. no ~~~Mob~~1<!.,~~ 7~ 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Llv. rm, Vacant 4 Br l lAI Ba, ~Va.fo 32'7 _,,., ' u 11 on y . area. Adult.I, no pets. Hun\lagtonVllJageLaoe, ~· .,. ..... 721 Ami'gos .,..,.,...,, ......,. ..... vv .. d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ mo. Boal slip avail. Mod•I• °""" dcl'll 10·7 • ....._ •uc _1 67c CAM> H.B ,7u 1.....,996 -.....__ 2 ... ~ rrn•u rot' "' fam. rm. ~le, Z car fenced yard, cul· e·tac, 213-434-9603 50-9?197-L>Cr ....... ~ : .,._ ·' .,. .....,.. 1. ay. Shown by appt. ""'"•.t. .... v ' " •11 ..,..., OK •• .,., 963 011c ReadY to move In. 3 br 2 ' ,, · Star Yark $39,000/ bst f:::-M·.::.J:r mo. ...... "'''" " ba. frpk. dAhwhr, patio. Deluxe tUrise, (60l Lido> A,. twah 2 Bdrm. llf.i ba, paUo, sml 2 Br, children welcome.1_64G-0349 _______ _ dr. (714) SU-5452 Manner's Co ve Condo. fncd yd, gar. IGds & pets z Bdl', 2i,; ba, ask cor u.fwWahed dot ok. no childnm. $325. no pets. Start.ins at mo Stepa to beach. 2 br rrplc '7'7 22~ Mee Too lrlr, in JIDIM.ZIATH 2+2 end unit. Tennis, ok. $4.25. Agt. No rec. Rila,673-1020.752-5710. ·-•••••••••••••••••••• ~0• 645·9100 or mo.846-8>7. bar/kild>en, S37~.' Yrly'. ~.call art apm, ==~~a::~li ~,~·~~~~~ ==-=1 1269 D.d~~~ n~ f.~s~':>lad~: ~~!~ .......... ~!~ •2Eutaideea__._adwt12dBbrlden, VIia~~· =.::,f 1 er, pool, Haw•• Det«t. lik.e new. SS25 mo. leue. ~PM's. .. ..................... $325 846-J:i63 S2S5 Lovely la 2br. Very . ~. gar, .,.._.Oce. adutts, oo pet.a. $320. mo. btort 2400 Apnt. 548-7729 llACH S650/MO Yrty Sun~y 1 BR wiau xtras. &er~tK.c~:e·sat!: $425. • 64S-8822 Juru« 1 BR, 1 BR & 21_M4-4 __ n_67_. ____ _ -•••••••••••••••••••• . ~4tnbcdr,Zdba,dshKwhldr, UtlltletPald . nr S. Cst Plaza. Adlts. 17 .. 7 Suma " pen . New 2 Bc,lddsok,garage, BR.2 BA.Sec:u.ritypro-2 Bedroom, avail Im· J bdrm ~-... lron ... ood 2bdr.lba,fam.rm,allbu • Y •Sar. I bo .,. .. L i:oowaah/d ""' hookup vided~~k-~ard1en· m•dlately. "'o p•ts. ·"""""'· .. bl •--f I •-I & pets ok Edison JI S Laree2•tory me, big S32S mo. incl ~as & wtr Anaheim, Mgr . 14. ·~ "~ ~J ~ ,, ~ Country Club Palm l•uuo, rp c, ....,5 mo. 1 · f -· room1,vault.ed/beams,2 846·3563evs•wknd 991..sua.· . mo. 2521 Orange try . l\n k i t c h Newport Heig hts Desert. Ready 'for oc· lalmdry rm. 831·293'7. 455 · .A gt· n ° t! e · huae bedrooms, 2ba, T • Ave. 552-12118 w/lumtooua cl&t. Pll&lh 64&3106 • cupanc r Afrl I 1979 964-2.566, 97J..297t lflll~ deck 2 patios gas 10M•a11M ..._,, .. d .. • 3807 carpet. lge pvt paUo or · S140,ooo Cal eveolngi C~~ 2 n~r ..!~';f:'{Y· Cute 3 br, 2 ba, dsbwh.r. BBQ: 01w: rerri1. Encl ~d 3525 ....................... 2l~· 1,ba_.2~'ft.acdrpe, 0~ balcon•e• w / xt ra RE·LISTINO: 2 BR 7 14 • 8 4 4 • 8 2 8 5 o r w..i.oo: $275~:9417. • covered palio. focd yd, B!l"· work space, laund ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newer 2BR 2ba, yrly. ~~ • · arpo r storage. Pool, spa, li&ht· Dl4)1a., attractive pallo0 71U75-Mf6 pr. Kids & pet.a oil. $445. hllp. 1 child, no pets. LAKE FOREST 3 Bdrm, $400/mo yrly. Adult.I/no ed t.eonia COllrt, loctry for Calif. living. 642-2267 ' 9UfCIC MOVE IM Agl, no Cee . 96-4·2566; Greathouse. 960-5844 ~IA 81, nncrowave, corn· pd&. Eves213/2S7·9'7'9'Z &per, jmt flniabed, 2 BR. ~~ .... U. ~~ prev!!wr n... .... N-sub le··~ 2 Luxury condo, Can,on Bnmd new 2 br 1.,., ba m.297! . mg to(> .• Lands~ serv. 1~ ba apt . bltaa lg •aa&&a rav1.u S2IO ..-...... ... .. ...,n -~ Coun8 lrYkCldubarea, 211: 1r 2 twnhse. Easlslde. Hall 1 ... ~-~·Boal dock. 3rbr,12\AJ ba Fireplace. 2. sq Ct. 3 Bdrm, 2v. ba, $650. pr lcitdl., ·pv\ la l.IDdry 'rm · 1mo0A. MModetoladopenu11 k . d2ai1ty5 ~M" .. ~ ba~,101444/MO Art a, w n I or w y . ....,_..nhlru• 00 r r ·-'!"'JI'-condo.2story, rp r.bltn Clubbouseduaincl.~75 mo. yrly. Worldn« girls ~e euncseck Adults' --_._ 49J.7S87,588-1008 ~--~-~ + 110 sq lo Hcrilaw 3242 kitche n. Yrly ssoo . mo. Eva. Dave, :>45-7506 m'· 313 Alvarado Pl. c .... :. -.... . . w I c h 1 t a Av e ( "l -..eory p-1-.& ---------• liaury liVIDI. nJy $395 ... ,....._... Y k St •09M ~ ~ mo. l left! Drive by '>CAO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'7S-6775 A.gt. 1-0234or87S..3600. or town> e. ... . Cabin for rent. 3 Br, _,,., Stl.ldlo coodo ilh 1 . Lce 2 Br apt, garace in 15 714-~ Oiolce2BR, 2ba w/Crpk , Green Valley LaJte, near Orruiie Ave. Then call • w v ew •UDO ISLE. 3 BR 2 Ba, Ap lwah hnMlhed S100 Nace bachelor. Resp unit complex. Adult.a, no catb ceilings, water Snow Valley, 552·8160 642-0?B2. ='~ &~:~~~from love lge. paUo. $750 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• adult. No pets/utU pd. pets S290 mo lJ!l hut NMr beach1, 2 br, 2 ba up. v\ew. Refs. req. $800/mo wkdnd.11<867-2220 2 Br, 1 ba refrig, rnrd SSM588:&4S-6822 lc6oaP...._. 3707 106E.Bay Ave,Apt 9. dep).1t.6?Umevea. · per. enc . &•race. No or Sl200/mo. r urn . y ard. c iosed ga r , ~e 2BR, 2~ ~a. 3 Br Ba ho ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:C.-.. Mar 3822 wat.erbeda! Adulta ooly. ~~ _ .. _,_._ ok, no pets. $345. =· Jac, sauna, teon111. 2~ town use, BEA~ View p er 2br SWnai.ng lrg 2 BR 2 ba N ° P e t s · 2 1 1 O 2 ---------uwun :u B1"g Canyon w/s pec-. I • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• nm..t...n~ pool' ........ Br kh s t $325 Beaut 2 Br apt :::.-..:::·~::.~::-~·••••• 548-0438.682Joann "B"'. /mo.842-3167 ·~-"~-i 1 j $500 a Its utl pd 303 E _..... • · -""· 00 ur · · · ~,.......-..,_..,... v e~. poo . ac., F.dgewater (l)B7l:2866 ~ 2 BR. 2 baths, atop 710W. St. 962-0778 w/magnilicent view, 6ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• $32S 11mall 2 BR hse + dln· Rent or Lease. l.ge dlx teon.18. Av8ll 2/1/79. SOOO garage. O/W, sundeck, 2 bdr I b f I Udo Park Dr. 673-3302 ...._,....., 3 106 Ina rm. No peta. CbJld coodo, arwater. 2BR, 2&,'J mo. AflGPM,833-3264 1 bdr., off stn.>et parking, frple. Radio garage Eastside 2 br & d~ split· lndr).' rm~··~ ~t;,f, Yearly. New 2.Br with ·-••••••••••••••••••• OK. 213/851·3220 baths, bltln1, retr1 g. Delightful 3br, fam rm yrly$300 opener. Blk. to ocean. level, frplc, skylight, all or675-ai70 a«t. d/w, wsbr/dryr, ava il """°"NT .. nR b W I W c p t s ' home •-Hrbr Vu H1"lls. 673-fa70646-6238 SSOOmo.~10 extras. $420. mo. No 2/1 128' ... ~otb St lit\1 .. ""' "' • 2 a, 3 Br. l~ ba. Clean. Frplc, washer/dryer , pvt yard, "·' children or pets. Days · ..., .. · 123 E. Bayfront. $685. crpta, bltm, fncd yard. 2 c.tr gar. Pool. $495. OnlovelySl.Pvtyd.Xlnt Coro..a .. Mcr l722 Quietlmmac.2Br upper. 64M262;eves00-9543 SHARP/NEW 2 bdrm $450/mo.673-3925 Hetb21l/478-3577da)'ll l4!lO mo Nr shopping ""-"·W.._ .. _ •• .,,....... schl5,S875.640-4546 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beam ceilings, Uv rm +den. frplc, ,ara1e. No --------·-· · · · "'~GI IUJUD~ • f 1 r 1 2 BR. llf.i Ba bt .. ~-O/W c h ildren. 3a mo. 2BR. Iba. single gar. lrllRt 3144 Appt.548-8300. ...,.... 1244 Walktobe,acbfromLarge Oceanfronlwlnterrental. rp c, re r g, range, ' '""'· ' 982·7788ukforMack. Part. furn. $375/mo. -••••••••••••••••••••• Immaculate 3 bclr. 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bdrm. 2in·ba. Newport 3.br. 2 ba, huge su.ndeck, Pcre~~/:;.•YP:!25 R.!~~ :1~~~i aduJt.t. SUPER b Waterfront h o m es ..t-,.___. Coodo Home. 2 car ri I b t o, o 11 a D d on ..., ~ 1 r~l gar QT! 1 ....... Woodbridge 3br, l ~ba w / new punt_-,..., c_rpt.a., 2 Woodbridge 38r t V. ba, "'~• N bes be h Adu.Ital peta ~7610 ' ' ' -·....., d 0 car .. r cav .... u n 1 garage. lrg. patio. t.en· ewport 1. t ac · 00 · $325. Beaut. new 1 br loft frplc, trfts. 5. Adult.a, ---------waaber, ryer. pen -·· · -o, e c newl Near Lake & parks. nil, pool, et.c. lmmed OC· Fully fllmisbed & ready or:Kt-3122 Sly1e apt, frplc, paUo, all BG-11583; "2·.5251. WATlllfftOMT patio. SSOO. 559·1589, ~~UcowitryP.u/kPe Nopec.s.$4S0,83M800 cupaocy. S6SO per mo. lo be enjoyed. Daya bltDs Spacious 2 b d 2 b SISB-ZJ.Zl. -·Ava . now . . 6fS.o:M5 752-7410: eves838-2l89. 2 BR,2ba., delwce! . $410 Specious aew 2 br r, en, a ---------• S525/mo. 71~156. Her. Park. 2Br. l~ ba, 2Cargar.S500Mo. TSLMamt &U-1603 2~ ba t.ownbome as>ti apt w/ape<Ucula.r view . ....... odt 3148 . Comm pool. new! no r.i............ c-t Condo. 4 CodaM91a 1714 Ageate75-5830 /l rut s all Luxuriousappiolntments, ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Adult ~VIOg, new duplex pets, Brk patio ,395, ·---~ ,.,..rormal d1n· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. -brand new adult w uxury ma. m aaody beacb, beaut. Chanblnl 3 BR, oceao spacious 3 Br 2 Ba 833-8800 br, fam rm, Upper 2BR. 2ba, sundk, apts. Spac. 1 & 2 br ~Rea.It ~ ft:t~ns, overlooks view, 1~ blb to bcb. Avl w/gar agea, HOO mo. Ing. S500 mo. to July 15, SUSCASITAS fplc, beam ce1l, delux, w I townbs e llY I e . Y Island. Boat slip Ow Ju.oe. UUJ pd. $465. 6C2-7458 Cenyon View. Ne w ~os~~~ ifoo~ ~~dt'~ =. :.:.m:i~51 ~u~'. ~~~/596·6805, ~uJed move-to Feb. Deluxe beach apts, rrpk , avail. Adults, no pet!.. 486-SOU 3 Br 1~ Ba + de + townbouae. ZB R. 2ba , ~. Adults, no pet1. 2110 1Bedroom1340-S3S0 encl 8~ patios . (714)673.8414. 3169 aardeoer, S440 mo."Sgls !!!>!,<;:.,,pool, S650/mo. lgedlx2br,2 ba. Pluah 2n-..t~•,,•c:•,,,.c ~. LIDO BAYF'R ONT. ttawport leodt " ....,.,....,.. 2 Br, 2 ba condo near Newport Bl. 5484968· :J: ~.-.._.._._... ••••••••••••••••••••••• OK.3133 0ublln.979-7836 fL--lla-. crpt, , patlo, fp k . TSLMgml "2·1603 2 Br-, l ba. lddl welcom~. Supe rb view, s andy ., _ _._, .. _ 1 bdr ,,_ t 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Condo, beach. Refri&._ w1 I D. 12 magr• leodt 3740 Bltns. war. AduJt.s, oo 3 bdrm .......__.._ .. " A nears Potntl. $285. See bearh, frplc. 2BR, $650. HomitlUllfwwfdled c.a.IMAIUC :· ex gues g1ra1e, pallo, crplli, CM enc. gar .•. ,., c, poo • -••••••••••••••••••••• peta.$480. mo. 64S-3779or · ................. e p(. manaier at 7671 Com · Pb~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm 1875/Mo. Nice dJ'lll, eppts. ~ sauna, Jae. $550 mo. W ~ Rates 6464714 OC' 840-9.135. Adults 1 ~ ba. S42S per modoc'e, ta. Sorry, no -1 -Br-. _ba_c_k_uru-.l-. _of_Ca_pc Gt t .. 3202 M2·31l85 $330 w Coodo 1 BR 673.fi6lO; M5-95J6 Spacioua Studios & 1 Br So. 0( hwy, all bit-ins mo. Ou paid. &42·SC71'3 pc.'ll. Cod style bldg ln ea n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Br" den. 2\A.a ba, \AJ blk patiooeoo stream: tennis: IEACH LIVING Coml Bedrool m Suites wtd!Sbwasber & refng, 1'mbse 2 lg. Br. 1 \A.a ba. 2 BR, 11\le Ba, quiet. view nery Vill. Bit-ins, drapes. from Nwpt Back Ba~. pool, adults , DO pets. Htw 213 IR Homtt Pete Kitchens wood ceilings, eartbtone gar. eocl yd. crpt. drJ)6 . or golf course. Adlts only. carpet, 1325 mo. Avail PROPHTY Olympic size pool, tenrus Evee· 673-5003 55IM426 Beaut. PaUo/Pool carpelinlietc. Garage Cul·de·Sac, s chool. 213-588-S4l2evt 2/1/79.673-6522 9·5. MANAGIMIEMT ct1, jacuzzi & sauna. ' ' Widen, L.R., fam rm, Maid Service ·TV w/wsbr, erspaceS36S $.12$..873·..'YTUI Single family condos, Uve a &ood active bfe. Deerfield patio home. 2 br ~ deck, pal, frplc's. 1 Mlle to ocean mo. 95,S-eves. Lal'ft 1 Bdrm S26S. n..iel Califomlan Apta 11£2 Br Eastbluff area g arden apartment• and com· $5.'50.646-9251. &deoor a br.Submitoo protJ:f:U~erdec::i~. R::x,al.Suites ,.__,,_u-.._ ••24 bulldio1 with bea~ul Cloee to bch 6' abops: typeaduJtUving.1 br, I mnrc1·a1 Pror•sslonal pell & cblldnn. Avail. ...... '"'"'" II. •100. Call ----1--.1. ..... Id l f FromSZl5 ... 7176. be-. mo. 2 br, 2 ba " · ~ · MESA WOODS nr. So. Feb. l Ordnr lo I $S2S .,.. ....,., ex • ortrtown et ••-••••••••••••••••••• ...... car ... I · ea or s.oo. mo. Sorry, DO pets. ronacleolloua and reUa· eat Ptau. 3 br '.+den/or. "Ai,t 8'7MlfJO c · Marlene al 831-3444 or Beach Blvd Need 3 Br unlura apt, E· adulta over 35. No pets. SIMKioue 4 bdrm. Near &44-3738. hie. Alk for Keith or flee, fam rm, frpk, mo. · &44-881111. 5lM41 I or side C.M. or Npt lit.I ror LEEWARD AP'n?t 2020 8teach. With room addl· -------- Joba at r i um , n Ice l y UNTALS 543-2000 ~ re1pon mother FuJJertoa Ave, Clb&&eu\ t:Joa,S800rno.s:J6.2190. ._0 ... lltif!.f{;J~·~g~= .. ~apedN yard & clnul·. 2BR.21f.iba ... .,$395/475 .... ~ d Bd w/2 teenl attending Npt Newport Ave, & lblk -•• 3176 ·'i-.·-·-----...,...., o...t• S6SO B ba ••""' DeaUUlul ecor 5 . rm •-leoc:h 3741 Hr"-H.S Not_,.,.-IOUlbolS.y).631.ost7. ~2 bed, close to-·••••••••••••••••• ••71 • . ,....-. . 3 R. lV. · · ·•·· · · . ......., home on LIDO with __,.... ... · .... ~ -... b,.__ I c-XCLUSIVE OCEAN ·-• cl -r 840-7'99 3 BR. 2 ba '""""'/"""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apt _ __..__. b _.. f ...... w garaee "" ...... · · ....... _,,,"""" fl nett amenlti ea ~ ·Y euu 0 2 bdr 1 ba all bltlns -S»-7330° · FRONT •· 2 bd --------rvACANT. Beautiful 3BR.2Yl ba ......... '6t0 I l 'LAGUNA BEACH MTR Jan Plapb84S-1'8S7evea I .d ' r · 1 ' -.... · l "" rm . .._....... 3206 4BRJ .. -or "' BR "-p 38R.3ba ........... '625 '"°°mo eue. INN. $75/wk "up. Maid . . .:;,n ry83r~ rp c, ADULT """'.,. apt's, avail. Secu'!tY •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ..... u · "" 4 BR. 2"11 ba $650/950 -&erV color TV heated ~ 2 br, l '4 ba, paUo, I mo. 1· • .,.... s)'lltem, elevator, dash •RR&.. den, dinla« rm. f\tam. •~mow'.rrp1~~ sq 4 BR, 21h t>a:iiooo NB ON WATER, charmlnc 2 POOl··uw <714) 4M-52N IDdr1 nn, adultl, oopeta. Neu new townble z br 2BR. }~ bal, bllUm. npew WMber. dbl ovens. Pen· ""Uo w/1•• bbq. Ntw _, ~i......... bed1'00m 2 Nth w/boal BN eoUtHwy . TSLMcmt Mi-1603 l lf.i ba ear rncci at, cptal ... ,.... nc au. V\ t.bouae with f'rplc & prv. ,,_ .Up S750/mo. · · • • . P1 ·• patio. Nr bcb, park, aundect from S32:5 up. Ule, v.ry clean S775 Mesa Verde, 2 BR, den, WaterfrontHomea Supe r ocean view. LAMAMCHAAPTS ~~· 8'5"'655 PM & !~~JIS·~u.~$345/mo. aas4or996-l123 fr15."'2 cxweredpaUo,a.lcoyard. 611 400 S I b ..... w........ .-,Ill._. ... ,. _ ,... __ to ...... ~• •. s .. ~.... -1 pac ous I r +. Lari• l,261 .,_.room · 28Rapt -smo Cl'""'eto C"'I t1-•edr 1211 ~ -.uuuo ".' uu.,.. Steps/beach, fireplace. 1ardeo apt1. Adults. Util included l br $195. 2 br apt. yard, (!&rag~. be9ctL ·•• · "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~19ssoo. 644 Sl81 or $4.50. 811-0480 Ollhwhr, blt.na, encl. 1ar, Patlo. Adult.a quiet. 1828 lddl pets o K cio.e to 498-f3:M A.veil 1·10 2br house. Charmin& Oeeanfronl Small Bah. Ulll.1 In I• bbq. Pool. OH Pd. "F''PlHeOU~bnl2_. achoo I i · n I ce•--------- Rdr1C. Newly carpeted 0-Polllt 3216 38R, den, dlnlna rm, c u :acb 178ScottP1.IC-&073 ~ '$300 per 2 bedrooms ocean view Walk '° bch. 34648 Via ••••••••••••••••• •• ••• • frplc • yrly · 876-19811 :rlo :: ~ W ....... vua-DUPLIX mooth. &t7. u9o. · new carpet.ji, drapes, Sa~ Catalina "4•·fJS36 for 48R.Fam Rm,DlnRmJ3 Udolale 3BR 2Vtba 220 • · •--r Phab studio, newly re· Clemente S300. PM appt $425. yrso6d. Own« lived. LO Via ltba c'a, 19'oo . a..,..aHfh 3750 BuuUful brand new modeled. Fr. towDbouae ~3 Br, 2 Ba. frplc, _... Capt.•rano Pallsad•t ma1nt.S500.-.10.ev1 lt523lAMMJ>a:IRvtME N-0151 ~3 ....................... ..tultapta. No pets. Pool, atylla•, 2 Br + 20x10 bit· 1 nu &Jd:b c pta. ---------• "' ' 1 bdr b t v I Jacuui. <>Den dally. bonus rm 2 Ba fully Uled very caeao, OK. no s.t. A.a 3180 lownbo uso for lcaH. New 3 bdrm. 1~ ba. pool, Hent.ap Park, lrviae : 3 Houle for rent 1n Newport .... ~ ti• llplr, o e ~ ~ftt. UlthSt. & wallpePerect carpeta, pell $155. 170&2· D •-•••••••••••••••••••• Coa1U.Joe vie w, c1tm tennle, n ear beac h. br,~ba.famrm,DR, Beacb.3br.2 ba. trg. ~-;;,:.l•b~o:!rg~ Bacb.'255-tau drapes. bldna, all. EmeraldLafl88.l274 ADULT-9UIET Wit for owner. 2 Br 2~ 7JA..Wl-1A052U.831MM.&8 new, pool, ups radod. fam. rm. Gardtnerlncld. '1'nMuo. ' l Br~ garace w /wuber & •Walktothtbeub• 2 BR, 2 8a, bltns, O/W, ~ai.~1~~~7 ... 8Taro 3232 '660mo.OfO.ll46. $700.CaJIM4·7897. 3769 2Br$31Ha50 ~ bOOkUp, auto door C.. .. Sol oewcptl/drpa. Encl gar. ---------....................... UnJv Part Terr. 2 Br. 2 t61wpotileedt TSLM&m\ 84,2.1803 openerrr.v. patio, com· Ueaut.il\IJ Fatted a1r beat, walk to Corw .. M., 3222 New lovely extra lae 3 br, be. frpl, view, nr. pool. OCEANFRONT .... SS75 ....................... •4MDMIW ~·1 4f~upnJL~ s~~~~c:r AdultA&JU S.Ost~i:;mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba, fam rm, frplc. $475. Call 652·7896 or 2 Bachelora Available IAYFIOHT 3 br, 2 ba, aU ea.ctrtc. 1\illp/Ekieft. $40s mo. No %1881 Brooltbunt, HB 2Brbome,adultt,oopet.11. Childre n ok . Allio 551-lJIS. Call foe more lnformu. Covered parkln1. $475 ptts.548-8754 t6~6Hl ADULTUVIMG aara1• eardtner. $426 Wood.a. ~so. 8'HH9; Oraoa tioo Condo, 2 BR, 2 ba .. year· mo. 800 W. Hamllt.oo. Beal.IW'UU I~ ped mo. 875-7251 770-51.LS 1 Arc. pOOt, :.!:. J':c~.d~o JONIS llALTY, hM: ~'~B.RfOHT 838-2917 or641·Z164 1Q:r 3 bdrm 2 ba. Kida llACHWOOD APTS ~ 1'&/ Bdrm !nit.•;. ~2~•",~rc~·~ ~! •• !~.!~ .•. ~?!~ peta.a".!K&-078$. 673-6210 2BRt~·frt>-.we> =~L~~~~ mo..:m.Peta· $375 ~r ~.1~:,~.~2 ba RecN!:,:!:r,:c1~Ut~: yearty.C.1155'....o Oaarmlniexecutlvehty HERITAGE PRK. 3br. 3 S OllA~ ba, pYt patio, pool. lrabech.bltns,pV\pallo, erw. Jl44 Rentap:Uf8?9 •1 ;.__.;. _______ , .. BR ... ~ pool room In bll ram. rm. d.r. new up Udo la.le, cbarmlng J BR, 31!f!·2bbaa, wn1tr·,....,.. Adult.a. S300 73$ Joana etc. No children or pet.a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r-~ Avaltablt l•te F•bru•ry : ... 'b:\'8Cho0ta UN\ J rldea pool. $6.50 mo d~ lat opener, fAm , 3~2 ,)'T y,..,,,, St....,ewie. 12JO. WO Victoria, call m>S.flowttW-7980 ~ty 3 br . 2 ba Oft ror· ~7 • ..,.,,.. e«>-1141 ·11m1 pet OK. lolt.ial rent 2 BR. Iba, yrly. '43$ M6-3l9'1 -\· Rancbo San Joa,wo 2 rw:r w/lle yard. Le~. ' neaotia~ lo return lor 3BRP·ltc1!9'0."'5 ..sAPIMIS . bdrm condo w ~!'· 4tf -·~wl1lt1d UT& mo. U8·a232 : PQr-tmnla onenll'd, new Neal a br, 1 b,a, frptc, tou c h up pa lnlln1. UD~ l BR '315. Pool1 JaC\Wl, Lae 1 br~ gar. ladry. =w/utru. '"""'-Y· •Ulu .. aWlc• 3900 ~ lu1urlou1 townhome. dlhwhr, cover d pa(lo, 8'1$-3'7f1 2 BR. 2 ba, frpl. Pool. icar. aYa 1 • Aaulta, no reM1. many cloHY, 4· ""••••••••••••••••••• vaultedceilln&1.frp&c a fncdyd,1ar.Klda&pota • Adulta.Ul5 pell. 2650 H•rla Ave, ~lee 1\reel . nr 2BR.1Bacondo.DW,AC, JASMIMI C.-Bt bit Ina tkyllgbt wet ok. $425. Affu no fee. SF.AVIEW. ' Br a Ba. le &tNM1. Blvd. fl J.ltb IAl. 5pe. Pool om t.ea.nl.s MOllUHOMI lllmU•Pf9•.lve 2 BR In bar, POOliJac., dbl 1t· IM-2*;rta. · Z-lt.1. Pflv, ••te, tennis, --· 2 br, Ht ba Dd Oftdotdep•· · ."!"'115. •::r,: !!J-t.· No ~ peta'. NOIMAl10H Al"lbtoo• colora. Pvt ta.cbed IU'lll•· Near Lot GNM 3 br 2 ba rrplc pool, $1300. ~ _._,.,., No -._._ Ra, CllldoD '° bQY'lnl comm. PoOl~~· Caballero Sporta Club. dlbwhr .,a0o, toed yd: Cbarmlna l bdr .• opll =.~~·pet». tG2lCI &-i..ct. 3141 repo'1 Jou auumptJO:: AYallaow. l • ~5. Sfl.Dll bet. 9•6, !i.Kida•pettot.$445. bmd.. clna •• frplc, crtyd. TSLll(mt IOH03 Lat bacb, bltns, <'pll, ~;•••••••••••••••• *-Euyfintnc.0.A.C. toma. Mc&ftt. no fM, IM·l5M: U SO/Mo . Yrly roll. .frpa, ar F1lrvlew • tame.. Uh New Broadmoor a.::..-. 4BR, frp)c, n•r" »Tl: ~ BEAOH'RONT Blaut 2 Bil. Z ba, Maa Baker. ~. ao pet.a. 1 bdrm. 'At bLt to beach ..... .._Store -~ -a Winter ta1 2 B 2 Ba Drive\...~r S.A. Cntry 161M2 -per~.-• Santa S.a.l•w bome. View, tile yard. Nr. Ml Sea. Calltamla Romea 4 br, 2 Blllla. 1uper bay vlow l 3 2 car ;:.,~ . .Jo mo'. Cub. "' fncd yard, 2 -An.I 5$4·7070 HC'Urity and erhacy. rutt. "14. Pb~. ba, patio, fn~ yd, car, BR.2'Atba.S750lfo. ~ carport w/storaie. st.ss Euta* 2 bf, bttna. no 1 8r uUl lDcl. $325. 2 br :_::-= ~mo.Ownerm-MIO ~ Kldalr= "'45. Al\. Aaent644·1W mo.m-aue •• a1-1a&a. peq.S300. mo. ~. U\11 lncl. Tbomton W.Ana.bolm 78l-1442 C... MeM 1224 S br, J'°" ba, 11, LR. trplc. 001•1 ; tn-21nl. ._ ,.._ ... ..,7,.. SHOITTllM. l'UIM. Bd t r ~l !Ut)' a:n.-o bAnabeUn tse-1011 _.................. tam rm, apllt l•vtl, ta • -•Ilda 3241 -YWW• ... • SUgtitty hJ1ht.r rat• tt 2 rm •P • • un urn· I Brand new 3br, a'Atba, yard, neat bouH, ru:. _,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• onlY 1 th w famlb' complex, no pet.a. 2 Br 1 Ba, II paUo, wll One bUt to Main Bch • hl>lc. Dbl 1•'1· pool 6 ~1 MZS. 55lol455. ;·;::.;::•;:;;t•~·~:: 2 bdr., 2 ba, coodo aar., 1 BR. i ba~fUtn~ .• '* -. &a •.Pt ~ Collete l"OOllder ~t or chlld. ahopa. 2 bdrm 2 ba. Jiatual. lmlo tobcb.. Yr· KJdaUI\. Prplc, klde/petl ok. Locetn vu Nee/Mo. 2BR.1 ba.'hciale ••.• $475 ·Ave,&09'780. s:mmo. 752 nso Ocean view. 781-MSl or '=· No pm. Im. It I __ .._.. Jl•O RoU0L tac>. •2211 I BR.. 2~ ba. MW homt, 3 BR. M ba., MW d~ln: bdrm. l bavc.Uo• newly 1_.....U ______ _ IDS mu. -•.•-••• ............ •--*· ...... _,_ ... ~... l bdnn. l ba . .,..ty paint· ~}:IW"· !!....!::· 1ara••· pitlo.t /W; ~l.ed. J O~ u.p. N:i aJtb. lrl 2 BR 2 blka uuu-. "" ..... m111I 1JUU114 ed.$300 _.. rv"' C:NJdrm•petau.K. S47S -~64&--11 &otnbeadl No. Laauna 3bdtm.lrl •JU'd •• NrOWOoUtt••Martna tor...m.WalltwVlctort• ....,°'__ IMLn 671-1170 Mo.D•Mfller157~7t lbr+..._. __ ~ •.• ..._, .... _-pd. *-*•. Driw bf NaUona · HS. J br, 2 bl.. paUo, f'nt'd bcb. Panoramic Oce1a · -~..1..•~11 --•w. Utl -per . mo. lat. ·)'d. tar. IOdl •Pit' DI. •ltw. 1 bdnn. 1tudy, 2 BR llowt, clolwflo J>.ler: f.Bll; aa"' l cSOOr 1Nm l l!lr ... a.D, refri.&, lQdey.r•DOO.l. wtr. pd. l•+fJOD Ch1)d,. pe usa. Aat, DO , ••• .rard llUOmo.•cuor ..tr ,. • .,\ed. ad P• btacb. v•··· Wlaltt ~ IM) peta. TM c 1_dll1. No pet1. S27t Oalill1led Ada. 1fWJ' ooe. <lKO.U_,. •zm:m21nt i7NDO -.~TAftlPM ..,.......... Jam..lft.1'717. •u.o ...... eeatar. ,. , .,. . ,,. .... • ' .. a:::"" • . .... J . " • :. - - .. • ' Calm wortE. ori deal.ciu MclisN'• W Coai.l Hwy. NB ... .Sltl ....... ..,. •. •••••••••••••••••••••• Pn 1' I H I I ....................... ....................... ...................... . l"owldaU001 rc1teloln1 K 6 8 Wood fenclna. OOC St~nt I Ton ltU<'k w1l11. blMk1. plllloa a.u. la ftnrt l'l'p&lr Tra1h. tree trtm. Ron l.k'ct. a.sou ... .._ MMmD.tu·<*il eo.s103, &0m4 Q61C.. P'enr• Rulldor n .. d11 O IEAPEST hauling In won1 l"I yr1 uper In town Free ~Um1te1 wooa • eh a In It n k eG-Zlla5. ~· 1300 ~aft~m Lite haullnic mov101. C.. •11 I Garaae Yard c:lunlna. •••••••• •••• •• ••• • •• ••• Reas rat.es. M2·0706 Cl•an up1. thuhnc. Have P /U will haul 1.And1c1pln1 lmmtd anythlna. Cheapest llC!l'Vkll\j. M.2 9801 rat.es.~ Uardenln11 . Clean ups .• U... lrimmlq. frH etl Stron1 st udenl /Tre~ ~U r1dH SU.~ :-urds cl~ared, trash 494-71189.494·2129 available GardcnmJ. cl eo UJll' ' ----------··••••••••••• .. •••• Comm/Rb M1k.-. a.11 landst'1plna Ceorae Ll--................. Action l.t'11al T)plnl 'A'e1Uare <:ars-t C~aoen O•n 'I Co ntrat'lor n..hl ~1072 ...-~ ()j ., O.ok ein or ab.ampoo ••&-9119 aft a. Lie •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• "un°" r\q>&c} Abo 14>holattt) Work Ufi6S11 G .. Senlcff AMWAY Coa mel tct. W •MU, 845 :M6 ca. .,_.,. Tn.lck m<>wil wtlt -·-• .. ••••••• ••• ••• NutriUon, Houaewarea. hrl. Pr. • .. l . nu. ratH Wood fu.ru Npaln, room •Ml. AXfT• Home Care & Comm'I. AU k1tleb ol l)plntt ln m)' ~'' adds. rool ~palr.ganel Ca.....,nler. palotlnfn "2-1634 hoow t..:.x.,.r . fut. •<' C• ... tq &.. Tf<JT)' 133-~ • .. ---------d dbl --Reas. r-.te. 15 yn. Hol•1de•ln 9 ~tee. ._, ~us ... .; •••••••••••••••••• ~ area $41-t~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• at'Mf'ld,k )111 lad 'Wll •••••••-•••••••••••••• • ROBIN'S HOUSE· ''k>..an your olhl-e .,,. aml CA.... UaMrd Bedric I 00 IT ALL CLEANJNO SERVICE. bu1u n\'~~ for l ft't> Prd..uk>nala available urJ27Ul~4 ~ IOI' a thoroughly clean 631 m»afu roralhffalra. ~ 540--0857 ----0..11nlder> Sc:-rvt'ri. F.UX..'TRICIAN·Prtcild Pro I Ir a o s I 11t1 on s ---------C•m•t ~ Cl~upCrewa c~. n&bt·fTtie HUmat~ on Eng/Span/Frenc h . WantaREALLYCLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONTACT lail(e orsmalljobll EugenJa842·7Sll <8:30-Sl HOUSE" Call Glngbam ca~ & C'ountt'r To~ Wtatcliff t..iCUllled 6711~ H•t••" Girl. Free est. ~5123 Carpentry Re•s tklilpruabty Resoortta B.ICTRICIAH -•••••••••••••••••••Happiness, honesty, job Rata Call Boblk2 137& 1611 WNtcUrf. Slc-20!I Res Comm'I lnd Ranbl Vinyl 6 home repair. weU done. C.11 The Mop 831~~wport 8ea7i su 18 Z5 Yn exper ' tJ<' • t781>4 l pa.mt.Lnl. odd job&. Free pets Cleanang Service. CALL 646-1I2' est. m.L007 lnlured. 546-2393 Carpenter. Fret-f}ll Any --------- saz.e jobs Call Allan or Have somettuns to sell? Have somethJ.r'1f to aell? SELL Idle 1tem1 with u Tony 846 M49 Oaself1ed ads do It well. C'lllllified ad.I dO rt well. Daily Pilot Cluslfl(,"d Ad. WANT ACTION? Cla&Siled Ads 642-S678 OAILY PILOT M:zatdnxt I t1111 l .........,,,~ ........................................................................................... Comp. hou1ecleanina Baock, brick. •lumpetone PainUna qual. wwk. 30 Ap\11. condos Fut. wa&. plant•ra Ilea.on yra e•p~r . Honut. dpndbl.$6.00hr 552..0lOS Li e/bonded . Bob . dpndbl. lowest prices ntECLEANlNO LADY 873..()JMW.9906 U c/Bonded/ln.s. 631J.540S 1--------- l!:fnctenl hsedn'a. rell•· Mo¥McJ WAUPAPBING ble &ervace, rsn rates. In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs otrerf'd. Eve11, 1&.nd. M2-s:ICM ·MOVTNC "STORAGE· 631-DS. 675-1266 llooleclearung Reaaona· ble . Own trana References 979-711.W SPECW..L~T AT· LOCALS ,allot Protmaional packlna. ••••••••••• ••• ••••••• • • ape Cttatiooa Ell pert ihapinti. Ulinnln&. 5lWnp removal. 67S.2:82l Ins. Lowest rates 7 days Wooden Gardtm Strur · V111u&Ma11terCharl(c lures. patio cover&. COMPLETECARt: P.U.C. #T·l.23431 staini, wd dks. goiebos. Trimming. removal. Woman haa exper. & rers. AMERJCAN1lt/549-7002 Reis. R~nbl ratea. Free clean-up&. llc'd /ln :s Pw-.tiwy/rapert'") est. Curtaa Stanton. 1-•--~------- Mer3PM. C.116'2-~ I mdactpilMJ ....................... European Landscap~r . Top work. Fau pnce Ma1nt. Rers. 646·4871 dys/eves. .... •••••••••••••••• ••• _675-_ .. _______ _ PETERS PAINTING ,..._./l_,mr Expr'd Reas Rates ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Eal. Ca II 0 ene Nut pale hes & textures M2«58 Fl&IST. 193-1419 Dll(·lt Landacape. Reas. ~Ung. Extr/lntr. Ex· PATCH PLASTERING pnces. Prot. landscape & pr~· honest, neat. reu. 1 A I I t y p e a . F r e e spnhJdera. 646-7070 Uc d964-1045 Dave estlmatt!!i. Call~ t1•owy Prof painting. Ext Ir lnt ...... IMJ ••••••••••••••••• •••••. low rates. Refs. Free •••••••••••••••••. ••••• lirickwork. Small jobs e6l. S3&-4'180. 536-4383 Ptumblng rep11r. S~. an Newport. Co6ta Mesa & flne Exttt. Pai.nUog by remodeling & copper re- 1.rvtne. 67S.317Sevee. R~Sinor. St. IJc .. a.n.s. Try f:r · Good price:&. Top me.836-SSSS24 hrs. t Plumbing. 537-3194 Block & slumpst.one walls. planters. driveways. lnt.ext.servin& area for7 ltocttrt......, ~7649, 631-3588 yrs. Prof. qual. work. Rel>8lrs, water heaters. .,.,._J 1 Resld/Apts/Co mm . toilets,slnks.fas,24hrs. r ..... .,.acesc:o1e anters. etc o-D c""' O•-c h l l 0 R f ~n n.c"&I. ave.~ \,;neape. s o wn . New· re el. e s. c.o t. S48-0193 M&-0464 Knowles Paint.tog, ant/· ext.. Sand blaat, lext coat· B&M Plumbln&. water U you· re looking for a bet· '"" Comm/ Res 836--1120 hln. f umace. disposals. ter Job, you won't want to -... · fneeat.831-9282 miss the employment Classified Ads. your one· columM In Classified. at.op shopping center.. Want Ads Ca 11642· 5678 fut.est draw an th~ Weal. . .a Daily Pilot ClaaalfMld Ad. 642·5678 A l'lct1tlcw• 81111,.. .. Heme Stetemenl fl .. d Wllll lfle Cowlty Cleft& II vellcl lor he yeete eh•t wh~h time conllnul"t .,.., .... .__, ,.11 ... P11bllcelklft 11 l!KelUfY only II there et• che119 ... CM! !tie l•191 Oepettfnefll et the DAil\' t'ILOf lor 1 .. 10,,11et1on e nd .,.~ .. ery *-- 642~21 Elll.332 ~ 4000 ..... tost.cre 4300 Offkel...... 4400 ...._Mall ...... 4500 Lolf&"-d 5300 Lod&Fomd 5300 JabaW..ted. 7075 HtfpW.e.d 7100 W..tH 7100 .........•.........•••..........•......•.••.....•...........•.•••.•.. ··•••·············•···· .................................................................................................................. . Female wanted to share 3 ~ Sq. ft. otfice space to •...._ICldor I•• br apt w/same. Own i.ub-leue in Laguna •MISSION VlEJO • U>vely 11ar00n.'l·Bmoks balh. s:?20. mo. CdM llll15, La Paz R. d. Just Prime location swt.able wtr fall 67J.l775 llOUlh o1 the San Diego for romm'I or ind'I use. •Kitchen Jo'acal. avail. 2bdr, 2 ba, fully rumishoo , Fr~way. $308 month. 1850 t.o 2060 sq ft. A/C of· •Jacuui, heated pool on Ra I. Pen. $IG5/mo. Avail. now. 830-8030 flee, 100 amp power. Call •WkJyorda1lymaidsrv. (714)522-4254 days ; •TV & phone available 6'7S-632S_le_v_es_.___ Deluxe medic a I s u1 te. (714)675-3534 eves. As low CK $63 W k Fem. wanted t.o shr 3 Br ~ flr .. ~rona del ...... W..t.d 4600 2277 Harbor apt. $1.5S mo. COM, 2 blki. · Re~cs Corp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mt"Sa 645-4840 from beach. 673-3S8S aft ---------Responsible. working ---1 ~. ...-wrc>RT CEHT'Ett w r I t er s eek s o n e Room w/kllchcnoelle Female Roommate to 10,000sq ft. bedroom cottage in $tiO week & up. i.hare 2 bdrm. apt. In Luxurious paneled of· c.ororut del Mar or Costa ~-117~5 Costa MC$a. Sl7~ Call fices w/speclal extras. Mesa. Quleln-0811 e11sen· ---979-Ql?S c o n f c r e n c e uaJ. Write Classlf1ed Ad Rooms for rent: 2 bdrs.1---------rm I ba t b r 0 0 m . 1206.. Dally Pilot, P.O. iutchen pnv., betw. Bay Mature female roommate shower/kitchen. Contact Box 1560, Costa Mesa &Ol.-ean. 673-12166. t.o hare first class apt.. Loulse Dahl. 92626or call 67S.38S2 ---Lake Forest area. $187 CORPORATEREALTY BeauUful room lo house, each. Must be21. 493.1320 Lady needs pnv. rm al $25 J:ood location. ror lady 8 lo 5. 496-6477 aft. 5 97s-Glll wk w/some kitc hen Kitdwn pnv's 548·3308 Sharon 125.500 s q. rt. orfaces. pnvlleges. 741-0179 In f)-om $85. Incl. uUI. 779 l..a(WUl Ekh area. Furn room & bath. Female roomma l t> E/s1de. C M SIOO. rdrig neede<J t.o share apt. in _w_. l9th __ s_t._540-__ 2200 __ . __ ,Need 3 Br apt, unfum for SS2·420l COM. Must be respon~a AJRPORTOFFICF.S employed. r e11 pon . ; ne 4 br. dm rm, 2 ba .. _e ble & neat. 67S.9206 or I to 3 room 1wtes. all mot.her w/2 teens in Npt .,.. 11" 67:>2:>63 service11. No lease req 'd Hrbr HS area. pref E· nr. OCC & shops. $125.1---------From siso. mo. lmmed sideC.M orNptHt.sarea rno Messages646-1909 w :r,s 2082 S E not over $32S. Apt needed -.......__ .-..£ 4350 occupancy. · by end or Jan, phone ~·w funushed house In niir-...,... Bristol. 54.lite 200. N.B 64,5.78S7 evs. lrvtne. M or F. 18·Z7 yrs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (TI4)S57-7010. Own rm. JllC. pool, patio. Double gara&e. 20th & No. Costa Mesa, 700 sq n. SUIJtle Fem1Ale needs lBr B . $200/mo. S51·6294 Olav~. H B. $60. Also $3SO/mo. Ground floor. Nll or CM oran ber 2·1. V~ ........ 4250 ~~same area $35. Tom 54().2200 Haa cats. Under $250. ·•••••••••••••••••••••• ' . DESPERATE! S-48-6393 Hot11e for rent, Big Bt>ar $40St.oraAe ool( ln~wre al Plaubec.tl•• ber 3PM or 844-3682 <.:1ty Sl!J5 6. linens fum 325 J 17th . p . Of Santa Pnvale sut~le~tb re-n.. _Landa. ______ _ S2S rutely pr cpl. $4 ea Ana Ave. aft. l lam ,.., ..... ,. add.penlOI\ 548·1969 Lock Up Garaae 205 lion & secretarial ...._t/IH••t/ " service. conrerence ~ Diamond Bal lse. $45 ruom. all raclblles. 2082 •••-•••••••••••••••••• ~~~~.~ .. ~?~.~ 67$-62391·'128-4m Michelson , I rvine ... "81:11 Rmmate t o sh an 2 ~gle garage nr. Hoag. 7SZ-0234 Opput.lty 5005 bdrm/2 ba apt. $142. Single garage In Npt MIWPORT/llVINI .. •-••••••••h•••••••• $1"2.50/mo + ulil. non· Crest. 67S-8lll. Ex.et'utlve office with s moker only. John Offlcel...tal 4400 receptjonpbooeana. WELLESTABLISHED 84&81S4/97l-870S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• coof. rm& more. $325. TROPHY SHOP ,. ... do SUS.LET newly e>pened 955--357$ Xh:Jt San Clemente loca- . ~ wn prestige office space orr ---------1 Uon New inventory & U•eng Expense.! 17th St , C.M. Telephone EXECUTIVE eq\A~nL SM,000. stuu-cahome oraptmcnt answering. typing. ac sums AAllACH RLTRS l)JUSt ·G).uL~ UNLL\l ml> counting services avail. Luxurious private oHices 492-2 I 00 '\i L· '1« ~..._,'-' C'J.¥'d1<'R $!95 per desk. 645-SSSI with personal telephone --------- {" ·~~ )_.._, ...... ,-i $180 Up. Office-store. 480 &executive secretary· SO. OlEGON KJ2.4134 Sance 1971 ft. NC. 17301 Beach Bl. ConlJC!~.C.:e~°:'m Retail & wholesale pro· ---II 8. LEASE 842-2834 Nr. So. Coast Plan. duce & natural food bwn· ROOMMATES MOVE your marine-alrportUreeways. ne111. Approx $1,000.000 r1..-a...1 S onen"..,,b1111messNOW '! BAK.ERCENTER in sales 1978. $2~0.000 ~•...,..-ave """ "' o po Bo lllatonc Cannery Village 979-2161 .errm. wner. . . x EnJoymore. Payless! location offers conv ---------• 1658. Ora n u Pass. All Ages & Llfcstyle11. ""rkina• s....._•tele ans COM -.-,.I Oregon 97S26 We Check References ..-" ...,.... VrTl'-Call 546-4282 5 v c • r e c e P · Prestigious 3 desk apace lionis t•s ccretary• quiet office suite with L·--• La 2 bdrm 2 b photo('noy•bookkeepang• plush surroundiogs with ~~~-e.l "inf' 634 o:..Cn oar accoonUDg. Marine Ex· old CdM charm. central· '-""""' rv · '<JUJU cbanoe Bui Id in". 430 ~ Gall ., .. ly k>t'at.ed with beautiful ----1 32nd St. NB. 673-3601. lg s unny s undeck. Gardening route for sale. Truck, mowers, edger. 548-3'95 Mew..._ TnDt Dtidi SOlS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 hdr hse, clO!IC to beach. fo'rom$350 ______ oceanside O( ColUt lfwy. Sl50 + •., ~ti Reliable C.dM dlx suites, uUI pd. Would make great corp LOWEST p1 sn 848 95Sf; AC., am~I pkg. f'r_ WO. olfiC\.'S. 560 sq ft . Only N d 67 .. """" ~per mo. 67S·Zll l Agt. ...........__t R_.._ '\'t1F wekome to s hun• 2 400 . o s~e.'...:req~·~·:::..:_a~·uvvv=~I·-__:.--~--:--:-"'-~ unrl hdrm co ndo nr II. ~sq ftofc.S20Spermo. Downtown Huntington ldT.D.'1,also lhrbo ur. $2 00/mo. Heatlncld.SZJW l6lhSt, Beach. 210•1\ .Main St. lftdT.D.LoaM. IMG-J800. NB. 64,5.3626 One 2·rm office av a al. Fairest Terms aloce 1949 FEM. rmmte wanted to . SllO. 960-lSSll. ~ Mtq. Co. shr J br home. 3 bl ks Ele&anl omces up to 760 "'· hed Ulltl paid 64Z.2 I 71 {45-0611 sq rt. on Newport Bl ..... nus u es · ---------from ocean. H.B. $133 C.M.64.:>2lll; 646-6303. Airport Atta. 225 sq. fl. £' mo Eves: 960-37U0ays: Sl!OOpermo.833-0821 --~- 833-76T7 3 EXECUTIVE SUITES .............. 4450 """°" AUNIQUESERVICE Newport Beach. Con--•••••••-•••••••••• Lolt& f e r e n c e r o o m . ·-·--••••••••• •••• Let m help cut your rent Secretary/Xerox/ Phone 2 Vacancies downtown • 119e1•..ts 5100 an hall. We carefully answering avail. Call HunUngtoo Beach. 210 ·--·•••••••••••••••• S<"reeo for your lifestyle. Pettt Wendell 751-4530 Maio St. Mini mall. Our fees are less . Ref's ror info. _ll00-__ 1568 ______ _ ~E RENTALS S00.13l0 sq. rt. Hwy vis· Newport Mariner's Mlle. ASSOCIATION ibtlaly, new crpt, drps. & Modem S02 sq ft store. t046N.1'usllnBl,Or. paint, underground 2830 (Cl Avon . Ste J 6.11MIOOO; 639·0003 parkJng In No. Laguna. _213-477 ___ .100_1 ____ _ 5&1186 San Clemente. 4000 Shr f\Jm. 2 Br l Ba an beach area. M/F. Refs. UJX>Sq. Ft Newport Bch. Square Fl on Del Mar. Greg. ~7 ance prime loc. 75' ft. Parking. loading dock, ----'1 QaJI Barbara 955-2274 ideal down town. Retail Roommate, B I , 3 Br 2 locaUon. ea. yrly rent.I $157 mo. ~uxe office suite Sub-BERTiiA HENRY me. uUI. 673-8632 . leMe, 800 aq. ft., In a pro REALTORS ----fess. bldg. on Bilach 215DclMar 492-4121 Roornma~ to sbr' 3 Br l:Slvd.. Reception area, 3 --------- houllc NB. 21·30 y111 ABC prlv. offices, cabinet pref. $185 + uUI. 631·33'7S wottc & othet eitras. All 2 roommates wanted ~. &Jaoit.ortal aerv. In· Fem. to 11 hr Dover _cl.;__Ca;__ll_: _•_a_•_oz __ _ Shore8 home. S16S mo. Hwpt c...... Offices _Mi-__ 1508_morn __ l_eves __ . __ , Complete full aervlc• Bchfront apt. r~nl nef Avail lmmed. Ca I ~9Ul 11tk tor Dan. atpl autt.e. 2 lar&e or-ncea wtt.h ocean view•. TJ41&40-23e0 /\ G,._1t Pll'CC t.o Llve! NewlJort Beach-47$ llQ ft -WIHAVl- SIVIRAL SHOPS 1n CaDMrY Villqe SIV9AI. OflfltCIS 1n Newport Bea.ch BURR WHITE REALTOR . IMC. 6 7S-46 JO Udo lal• Furn .. N.B. avail. on aubleue In ---------home, a hare w /prof. beaut. otnct romplex at BALBOA ISLAND PENNY PlllCHEI ADS ONLY S2 Sf.II 1my lt•m « com· bmatJon o( 1t1"m1 for f1S or lt'U wath a Penny Ptnchc-r Ad. 3 lilW'S for 2 consecutlvt' da111. F,ach addltkln•I Un4' lK 60' ror t.be2daya. Charge it' No rotnl'llfl'Cial ad1. '"' mort 1nrorm1t1on and to pl act your 1d ca II 642-5671 llftlO. 'l'Uet. nitea. • 10, Capistrano V11tcr HI Scbool, cuh pr au. D).118'7 Lost or Found a pet? Call Animal Ass utance Lague. 5.37·2273. no ree . Lost: AJ1 black Shep/Lab Prac. nww. p/t, Corona oux male Vic. Bear St & del Mar. Laguna Beach Sunflower. C.M. Jan 2nd. only, refs. 67s.8861. APT MGR couple age 40 Aut.omot.lve +t.o manage well matn· SA.L£S Lost: 2 gry Ing hair Kit· tens, 12 wits & 7 mos. call SCB-1351. CM area. lained :n + adult uruts in FULL TIME Refined Pr a vale Duty Orange County. Xlnt te-FOR LOC"1 nants. SuJary + bonus. ~ Loflt· Comer Cedl & San Practical Nurse Live-in. <714)521·8541 8 :30 to 5 PEP IOYS m8907. 832-5030. ta Ana bm & wht spotted *-9W ext. 102 pm. AUTO surra. y puppy. l\t answers to Immaculate professional ~ouw SECURITY OF· .STOIE LOST 2 yr old. F cream clrd Siamese cot. Blk on ears, feet & tail. Was oper. oo, sUcbes m. Vic 2500 Orange. CM. S25 Re ward. 675·4990 a ft 7PM ScotSt'Ooter. 543·3830· apartment cleannang. nnm 1 ed l FICER Exper. FI T . mm 1ac openan~:. Found; L.rg::cOOn Hound. _56-_3_ll_4_.______ rules J ;,3<H2Pm. perm Goodsalal)' and worklni: I or 2 yrs. tan/bmtwht. Wo u 1 d 11 k e t 0 d 0 po!iition Call 549-3281 condltaoos. Apply an f;4.5.l:i08 aft.sieves. mecbarucal drafting PIT E_O.E. ~BRISTOLST Found: Wbt/BUc Terner eves & at home pre· 1·--------COSTA MESA Found yng. male black Dobe rman . 14th & Orange H.B. 536-5070 m 1 x . M a I e 6 4 5 • l 5 O 8 ferably · 962-6808 AS SEMSLERS aft.sieves HtlpW..ted 7100 A mlnaumum of six AUTOMOTIVE Found: Male Pug dote ......... ••••••••••••••• •months factory as· UsedCarDMV Fawn w/ blk ears & ACCOUMTIMG s.embly expenence re-&eo.trod Clerk FOUND: Male German Shorlhaired pup, black and wtut.e. Approx. 2"'a to 3 mon. okl. Ca II 645-1508 alts I ~Cfi. muule. Adult. 64S·l.50ll Newport Center finan· qwred. ApplacaUona be· Excelleot opportunity &c aft.sieves dal firm bas an Im med ing take for all shllts. benefi1a. Hours are 8 t.o !> M .f'. Salary com Found: lnshSetter. male opening ror an account WtherLodiCo. mensurate with ex VNy frie ndl y In· ing clerlt. Bank recon-5555~oddlftA•e perience. Please ~all dJanapoli&/ Bushard, II B clUatlon exp. helpful. Bernie at 968-9 08 Xlnt working rondllions ,.......,_ leac.h OT Lost. grey female cal, 1 & company benefits of. IAUSl M · ORS ~ dol Mar. Heward Found: Yng fem mixed fered. Apply ln person or Equal Opportunity 979-2500 64().7SS2/675-S42S Shepblck/tan.Maln H.B. call: Employer Reward: Lost small whale Ubrary. Jan 10. 847 7204 ADP Maltese Mal e do g . Found · Germ. Shorthair. ~SIO.._. <Her1t). Vac. Westcurr. l v 1 c y 0 r k t 0 w n / r.....,. " tooth lert. 642·8264. Goldeowettt. Llhr collar SERVICES 8» 7210. !J00.1319 180 Newport Center Dr. Loil. Vic. 17th St/Tustin. 2nd. Floor CM. blk Fem Toy Poo· Nt:wportBch die, ans. to Sabrln11. ,............ 5310 Reward. Call 642-31U aft ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ &PM RELAXJNG MASSAGE EOE &bJames·L.tc Masseur found: Retriever ? pup· Outt'all 9-9, 494-:ml ACCOUNTIMG py, nr San Juan School. ---------O E TED QaJl495-S685 PREGNANT? Car101. MATH R J N confident.Jal counseling & PERSON to train for ac- FOUND: German Shep, referral. Abortion. adop· ctg J>O.l. MacGre1or tan & bUt. thln blk collar. lion & keeping. 1-;V;aChla~-~·;~;;;;;;·;;;;;; 846-l036. Vic Warner, or APCt\RE 547·256311 Graham ----~---- Found· Handsome brown male Labrador. Leather collar. Mesa Verde. 54().1458 Lost: Femole Bassett. Vic : Newland & GarflPld, Hunt. Bch. Reward.675-6887 Found· Golden retriever. vac. Thurstln School. Laguna Beach. 640-9250 Weekdays Found: Shepherd/buaky, med. size male dog. 642-9187. Vic. Ogle Park. Lost: Golden retriever, I''. reward, Sat. Jan 6, vie. Catalina /Tha Ii a . L. R. Wear1nr choke chain. please call 494-2067. ••Breezy'' Found· Australian ? dog. Black. grey and tan, c hoke chain . b y Capistrano train depot, COUNl'RY GIRL *ESCORTS* 3$ hl1' 957-8474 Spiritual Reader 181~So. El Camino Real San Clemente; Fully be. For appt. 492·7296 XX DANCE OF FUN XX Beautiful nude girls, dance al exhlbttlon & rap sessions. 9AM to tAM every day. 2060 So F:UClid, Anaheim. excit- ing 24 hr recor ding :;43·1422 MICHELI.I'S •o.tc..I• 11AM·2AM SM-3749 UMDA & Vtckl o.tcall MOUOCJe For Th""' of It! Serving all Orange Co. 835-7313 493-7023. ~-------- Loat : M . Golden •ESCORTS* Retriever. m gm collar. 972-1131 "Zachary", reward. ---------581·2806 Date & Modeling. Prof. e8COrt.s & models. Day or Last: Fem Blk Lab, 7 mos. no collar, CM area. evenlrut. By appl only V\satM'C. 661-6732 in. Reward. 557-0226 •--------- LOST HltstAH MASSAGE l year old neutered male. FIGUU MODILS shaded allver. (Max). ESCORTS Vic. Greentree lrvme. OUTCAU. OHLY Uberal Reward. 55&-0879 o.y., t•H. hr Found : Blk /Tan F . 631-2140 Shepherd/ Retriever GOLD~ GIRL Vic. Vona La1una Hilla ~ 581-4878 . ·-.-.--""-& ___ _ Found : Me n s aold k~ bractieL Vic. Newport. ·--·••••••••••••••• Jan-6. l'IS-4889 Sdtooel • FOUND lge. red/brown older dog. wht. mknp. l'C*. lab mu. 893-4e83 Found, Springer S~n'-1 .....,_.._ 7005 ....................... Proudly Announces Our Move t.o Larger Offices. Visit Us At Our New Location. COLDWELL BANKER BUILDING SlnTE200 2333N BROADWAY SANTA ANA We have an increasing demand t h roughout Orange County for ex· perienced uccountiog & bookkeeping personnel. Call or vis1t us today-e are kloking forward to greeting you m our new k>t'ation. 1714t 135-4103 FREE PARKING ACCOUNTING Work local temporary aalgnmenu. Open lo all sldlls. CelfofoAft Afpal ulwaM Toct.y 557-0061 ~o~ o ffice • ~OJ overloa d F:qu:fOppor Emp:oyer /\Cd.'g; Jr. Accounta.nt or full Ch&f'Re boollkee.,.r ror CPA ln CdM. Typing req 'd. Cal I 875-2a70. ADMlN. A.SSIST ANT Part time poaiUon wllh arowiog proreulonal ft1to In Newport Beach. Good telephone techna· que. tYl>loJt & reporting. Call \la.-Johnson at 640-«m A#J.COMllltwls AthleUc Asst. to eoach girls basketball Davis Mlddle School. 2 ~··­Uons. Sliil per posatioo. High School ~loma & exp. Call S56- Aa.C.omolive J.C.PIHHEY 24Fuh'oml.,_ ha immediate opening ror Commlsa1oned .eU· ang a peehltst an •utOmodve center. XJnt l!J'OMCYnVE . sav1c1 Je>eS! 111 . Heavy·duty tin~ mcduuuc. expe~ced. 112. UKtat mechanical lM tecbruca.an. experienced. Pleuanl working condl· UoN in Orange County Airport comple x . Permanent, varied. Ul terestaog. Exe. pay. benefit.5. Opp. for advao cemenL See Martt. HOWilDCMYl'Oltt Dove & Quall Sts. NEWPORT BEACH company beoerita. apply 1--------- in person. lO•m"'pm . bysitter.EI Toro area. E.O.E. M/f'. Matlft woman, start.In!( Jan 2nd wti:. days 7 am to 4 :30. Care for tofant. Rel. req ifi8. 7446 Automobve SALES RILL TIME Babyslller, Days. your ~ LOC ... 1 home. For infant under I ~ -yr w/ working mother PIPIOYS ~p .. deJ>t,:ndable with AUTO SUPPLY re<. Phone eves. 897 -8776. STORE BABYSITTER-for 11 yr lmm.-dlate opeivn~s. old yng lady. my hm Good salary and working Alter 3::.>pm some ev:-. condatlons. Apply in Balboa Biil.9th St area persoo 673-86366. 15221 Bueti Blvd 1....:..---------- WESTMrNSTER IAIYSmB OUJd care. My home or yours. Sday week. lnlanl 8"11 mo. Maw.re woman. 963-2305 Hunt. Bcb. BABYSITTEK p/tlme days, must h11vc car. Npt Beat'h.. 64S-Ol28 BABYSITTER needed Auaomotive IMSTAUBS FUUTIME FOil IA TTlllES .AMDTIHS rEPIOYS AUTO SUPPLY STOll full ume for 3 airls. my Excelleotstartmg salary home pref"d. llB areu. for S day week: Excellent 536-8667 aft 6P M wor1tlng conditions and ------- opportwut.tes ror advan-8abys1tter needed 5 day~ cement. Liberal wk. my h ome. Lill· employee benefits In· housework. live in or out dude hoapitaltuUon tn· Call Mrs. Thomai.. sunmce. liCe ins11rance SS8·2603 dys, 963·6281 and peo.sloo hand. Apply evea/wknds. in person 12» E lSTSTREET Banking SANTA ANA DPBllNCED Automoltve 5.AUS PA.RTTIMI FOttLOCAL PIPIOYS AUTO SUPPLY STOii Immediate openings. Good salary aod workJng conditions. Apply In ~BRISToLST COSTA M&C;A TRIRS S..-..C:OO.t ............. An Independent S.1nk 8495unflower C M. s.46-S300 BARTENDER exper for rocktaU lounl(e. In C.M CallM&-2823. Mt6PM Beautician manage small shop. Sal. & comm. Hayr Barn 609 W. 19th. C M 64&-8480 646-1145 Auto. Europeoo mecbaruc &t or apprentice. Ex-Btdcpr., fUll cll&rRe with cellen.t opport. N. e. typing skills. Laguna 548-1338 8eat'h office tor R. E . ln· · veatment co. US. 797 l Female, liver Ii: wb.ltc, approx. 3 to e years . ~ 150I al\.a/ eYell. REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL OFFERS 15 ~ve Bluelioe operator Exp. MICHAMtC Nee. C.M. Blueprint Ma.TIMI ~ REWARD for return of Blatlr Balboa Crulaer tateo from SaYOO Oruaa. NB U/22/'18. MS-7857. Found: sm.p blk &a: whJte remale PoOdle. 1/7/79. 11th " Tustin. Costa Meia. call to Identify. $42..-01$1 G9tst Ledwe ...... *Oub Cow'IC avallablo •Materiall provided. •Small c:lusu for penooallted ln1lrudlon. ~own wte--ilay •nleblcla.uee. •Placement up to 90"4 ccmmialon. *PEOPLE* flOILOCAL IOATMM.D• PIPIOYS. Worldnlforeman needed N d d AUTO SUPPLY to,.rvlle conatruc:Uon 88 8 STOii fl NMmbly °' ~· diesel ~cellfint awtina salary ftbttalau flahlot boat. I d. t ly from D'5 to 1294 for 5 l-~_ .. _l_63 _____ _ mme 1a e day _.. ~ndinl oo EEPER, FC. lhru $5 quallflcatlona. Mu1t T.8 . conttr. eaper 89 have brake. rront .. nd • Salary eommen1ur1tl" M/F, your ahare $225, MacArthur / Jamboree Owtlootln& Maline Ave. caU lmmed for det.1111. Occupancy Feb. l . Call ance or at«e, $$00 Mo. m.8819 f)'a.MSande1$2.8091 Apat67W'100 flUm. prh. otnc.. new •tfyouwantycuradvt1rU1 ~c:~~~.se~on~~ kt U1w-..... 4100 Loet: GS REW ARO tor blue Saimonit• make·up ... rlK' caM wl\.h con~nll. Vic -~ Pornou AVO. C.M M t -Drawt-6tH'tO Free3Wtek ~,;~:~~ • tun.up experience. £x· w/v.por. Send ruun;t• • I or Gals ceJltni worlrlna t'Ondi· to: Cla11Jned t\d 09, UOOI and Q9POt'tunltlea Dilly Pltot. PO Box lMO, No s lln 1 . No ex· for adv an c em c n t. Colla Mea, 0.. 928:M ~ nee. COm1>101 LI b t r 1 I 41 rn pl OY ee ~--~---- ' . ln& met•••• to reach 848-7448 •••••• .. ••0 ••••••••••• more peopJ1 at lower NOW LEASING Otuce coet, Claaal!led 11 tho Dlx lnl«ior dtst10 1tudlo, WarehouM. Xlot loc. on I way to 101 Call Now! ondM • .-mo.2856E. ~rrw,.mAnabe:lm. eo.S11 Qiillfwy, OCIM. U'.n aq. ft. TI4·111.o80l Acute-BeHef -bllt D RECAL.LllD round: Sml OR. lb'lateundewut.be W1· maa.~ft'POl'l_:vd "' ~man t know. Slit Bay SO. mono. aft« be dled.1..bll f\nd -"al 104.f want 111 ~ waa llltCALLLD, OlllY PUot QaMlfiedl Hl·IOOl 493-0442 Katella Real EltaUkbool Zlll1 Oamioo Caplatrano Sm Juan Capblttano . " .,.... ... . ..... ---............... ~ ...... ' ) wUlint to train. Part ,.b=e f I ta In cl u d • · Un» °' fWJ time. Call utlon IMW'Allte 1be futeat draw In the Mn.Ooltto.aM·l.377 ptMliclnf\Jnd.Appb': w t. .• Dallr Piiot _P'!nd.....;.._wba_t;_t£'! ____ :n_an_l_l_n I ZMI BRJSTOL a-lned Ad. Cal Today DilUJ' PUot tdl. COSTA MESA _&tZ-_&178 _____ _ --... ~ ...... - l j , - - l (10 DAil Y PllOT Tnurwo!IX, January n tl 7t ~.~~!! ..... ?!.~~ ~~~~.~ ..... !!~~ ~~.~:.~ ..... !!.~! ~.~~ ..... !!~~ ~.~~ ..... ~!.~~ ·~~~ ..... ~!.~~ 7100 r>RIVtRS . Jo'Ull um~• •llLNtDAY Jn,urance l'eraon u Paitt·Tlme work SIOO Pf'r R•·,tl p;,1d1 .. ~ .. 1"' ~~~ ..... !!~~!~."!!.~~ ..... !!! ---------Clu, 1 _dtll ~--~In f Sharp 111 n u d ed pc!rif'n<'41d In ptr1'on1I 141GIMGIMlll ~ 18 yri & ov1<r Sw t'\.l"pt time I.it 'Unlit ilLll'MI) alodL 111 Soc.1611 lll.ithlt'hool arad 11 aal llne1 wanted fo r 1 n R.lpktly upandlna 0 C <'crt ~ kl()k1n1t 1or u 11ood ~m while )UU it••rn COOK n t•11n tut" lloW drh lnl( fnda)' ln ··~ ufrlc\! C11ll t utanee •aenr)I 6441 9432 l\tm LI look in• for Ml~ future lnlo 4 J(/ IO " °" t'w-m ~ runt•h brokt I CLERKS FEDCO is hiring irµandfol rt11t aur anl r.-eord (on t 1u l Mr aft l ""',"Hl"lll J t:ngineH Thi i n PM962 t$4i O.l1 ro1 "fiPl 67~220111 ,,.. .. ••• .,... "' 11n1toni pl li11\e evu. dlvidu.l will be rnpon11 N.11\ ~ ..... m·u w wuu. M1u1ln ur Mr M•>ltna <' I ""-Id t"·ll ov.-r 21. eo11plt>!I prl"f'd ble tor docvm nlln« '" pany TIM£ ~~ .!" I .1&~ P'anuty-OWlW'd U1111 n1n ~1r r• ay u um.-lrvhlf>aNAA ~ 4881 -hJu ....i d M I I!"'' 1:.ST ""TE t1on off•" p1 .... 11 nt !oiml bookkt'l'plnll firm lemvv proccuurea. • _....a ,.. worll1n1 cond1111>1u l>rhtor rur Aluq ir1n1.11 ~· r u ponalbli: 111r l a oUnll toobn,, tr111n1n11 EVENINGS SAUSrtoPlE (food uppon unlth·• rur arrh aupptJ · 1tpply in *lllln( to I urn n1•w JANITORIAL 4t provldlni tedmir a l Wt"lllt'!f N T .iylor Co 1, ., M.ht.nt't mrlll 1-,xn ll nl pt'nw•1 ooly R•pu :! 2flO 11k1ll• ror aul>f!r oUlre Purt Um" evee Newport support for l e n 11e mbly Adu.lu with outatl.lndm1t 33-ye11r old firm wholl) rotnp1on) llt'n••fltl N~wp0rt C:t!nl"r DrtVl' pOlliOoo Typlnl( '* to key u e 1 c h , r l' a E lC ~ spWl11l eompass~ II 1ltr•ct1vl' ~t!lonalll11·• OW™'<i & OJ)t!r oted by ,1,. r"'"~ d' lrt'11 Appl) N R 'llpl'r a mui l 1•lt11lt' P''nt•ncrd adullJI 14 00 ramttu Reqwr •m\lnt 4 who enjoy ~orkmti with foundt'r Wi im · M l ,, l m 111t·11i.1h.· full 11nw u1~·n1ng~ Will ll'<.1 1 1\ \ 1l rl tlll ~ l>h l !\l'i'> of . l tHl I) pl' I .. t I u II "' t l It l' x l ' t• 11 l' ,, I 0 1llllll'11m 11 w' l or ;uh 1u w 1•1m·n1 tnprt'llllin muvtm ... ..,~ 111'..Ll''YltS l'a ll ror 11 pi;o1ntm4'nf hr or au b euntrMe t Y"" r 11 e 0 11 t'11 1' lud., Sta rt •t S3 ~ pci .ubA1d1lit ). bt•nr h 0 1 ~ "" v, .. or lnd1.1.1tn•I h:chnolOllY 46() B1':1'Wl!:~N it 00 .; OU "'th" ..,. .. d ...... h '•~· ~ RP&tr ... ••d 1• 1J r II r I",. u I ~2922 213 m .(11 1:1 n'leetuuueal en1t1ncenn14 hour Phont'~ 4321 .. :xt lr""fthl~" h ........ u11 ... u .... h uu•11ho ld m in 111 ~ c;11u. FIUOAY wnrlt e Jtperlener nol YM wi u roun t (• < 10 '' .. ,\p ph Ill IH'I .. Oil 1 H fl Ill \\'1·d1td iJ\1'> 1:1 l I' 111 ~.11111tl.1\ .anci ~l1111l.1~ Ml rn• Typlna" i l'nl ore work Jamt.onal. 1·x~rll'nci·cJ, ncccaury Ofter t•x Atk fot' Jim ttC('('1!ll tn mnnit)(t'ment PIT f\ra to 1u1t your Adults only , P /T /Jo'ull eeUent ml>dlClll & dental EQullll"'portunn~ tor :iH li.liarH'•• JI "11' i.('l\cdult!. 00 5212 Unw, locul t'VH . $4/hr to hmefll• Please send re· fo:~~loyl!r , llnw Our in hou~•· vuJ.-o 2lOOH..Wll•d c .......... DllVUS au m e to w w rl~t . !Jlp.• h•ltnl( & ~111<'" tru1n M1•n or woull'n !:J yn or Gt•LRIDAY $900 atart.1>793323 Sci Ufi Drill PBX tnll 11ro1tr.1m b:, Tom ohh•r Knr1w lht• coul en c ing n· H" ..... '1\1< 1~ th•· fin""' r••i1I N •...,. .. X.J.111. oppty w/N8 firm trot, 4040 Campu.'i Or . /\n .1 w t>r1r.~ .... r v 1(•• .,.,.._. ~ ~ • < , for ('lln\ ho11pll1.1I riht"' •1 ••00•11 "'l'e ... or f0f'oulgoina ea1e..,r g1rl KeYl>Wleh Newpor t Ht>aeh . Co ol>(•rittorrull6'PtT C:..t ll es1att·tralnini,1 i1vuiwbh' mort• Or111\1tl' C'u11 1<t Xlnt oppty for:ldvAnN1 DATAENTRY 92l6llO SJ.S.3561 WP tU1VPUJ1 opcn1n.:for 1. ht"' th'alt h ln1ur11n ct• aft1•r vruh a11 un" ry ri.-riod t.\<rrv u tht'r ~k nJ otf AllV IY l.t l!I ~1Pf'nor N Ii 'dlnw l'uh, 17300 Mt nwnl Must be fum11J11r Senlor o-rator ror well .... 1e:o.~·r'!Otl1' with l'I) ll1•rr111•nn l"<1u11laln wl all S"''tY •· -'( ruiic ,... P8X OPF.RAT 0 k lhu111;.1>m. e h;ir,,1·le1 & II •"'<' ,., Sia' •r ,, "'"' l'Atabll~ht•d "ro wln " Mlll I d d Or C A ... l l 11 •·Y ··~ ' •{ tion~ Mu•t b'"' 8 .. 1r ~ • "' ea man wa nte to 11n11e o rp,. Mt·" n l'l(nty t<; rnt1lt tl our b N h ( P " •· ,. 0 "' "' VfllnKe Co Corp Xlnl ··-'-r t b hb d h h 1•1 .. 11 ''"" > "' • motiv"tecJ . lnl .. ll••n t . """'" or growing com in er u:;y <1w1t c 1 IA hlitnd•1rd · Yu u1 ... '· 1 " • " lx.tfWf1l$ & workln• con M h ... IT J. .. T d h r d k r.UC"uc I have fast. aeeurlllt' lyp ,. pany usl a ve ex r .. ,c I oy 11 1 t.. own pnvdll' C'l'o ,,n<f nn k II d1t1ons Min 3 yrs of -nence In runn1na L E 0 l :i.•any ht•11ufltb pfirt t1m 1 p I 1111 1 I s . stro na or kt!ypunr h rt•qd 1 n M ,... " ... ·• • • 1· ':. l'b l't>P •· I 1111.11 I lp11t•l I ~1111i \ I '"I''"'' r \I I DRIVER WANTED &M•Z•llon11l "kalla and 37411 3742 hc•lp(ul or we 5rt up of mill m aeh1nes Pay .ic<'ordlnsc to t'XP C.Omtn11>~1on 1tpl1t ui;i tu the a bility to work m will triun Pay will rom · Supervisory ex~nenre S4&3333, 11.33 33:iJ 70'~ lnh•rvu!w b> dP dependently Xlnt <'O m<.'Nurate w/exJ>('r Ap n eed e d Good <'O 'fSTCOHTROL pouitmentool) bene fits Mon t 'r 1 ply 111 person, Mo n lhru 1>eoer1ts Apply 3123 W Wt~l.F:Y TAVLOK C(J COOIC J.C.H.MMIY 24,..W•l.a.d SUNDAY ONLY To d t>ll\t'r DAI LY l'ILO'f hundlM lo rat m·n Ill N1•wport Beach UH'" ltt'Qu1res van or lut.C<' "talion wai:on & a vuod dr1v1n g record 11 30 SPM Ylt Ulll' rail Fri.8a~S m MacArthur.Santa Ana S teady JOb fo1 r 1Khl ~a1tori1 644 41110 "" t 7"'., 7"'"l pitl"'l<ln Traint"t· P rofit "'---------· r .. eanor a -· .--no.... R-Inc Models h " •,.... -.,.-· s Wlfl R & itroup heullh Gluier. exper. r u11tom 170.U C llellc AH· We need ne w faces U Apply Mon ~AM nQOn RECfo;IVlNC rrurrot man. top pay , Irvine you have what 1l tak\•11 to Uoyd.'I Pl-:.l Control ~, good ~nef1ls. 646·3231 (714> ~ 0331 bl> a model call WI now E Oyer Rd s A RECEIVING Ho ukkl·t•p cr 11 1>!.l for n=1tuu1 unt :. rl 1.1)'M ~r ""k lnel1b wctik cncll\ :-.o Oran.it-l'o $4 UO 1Jt•r pr f lt ll for tlJ>V l 'n• Bin ~ Wik for l'um qt'rk 7 11. f>u1'1 t1mt• "'r1 Sal II IJOI lO 1 11111 S3 00 pn hr li7a Puula rino 751 olli..'12 Hewpot+leoch 1• currt>ntly 11n•cpun11 1tpph1ulloo.a for C'OOK 3S Hr• St iirl tnll puy $3 7S O u t~t o nd1n11 bt•nc•f1t8. !<Int wurk11111 eond1tinn 11 A pply 1n persUCl. Mun thru Fri. 10am-4pm F. o t: M I" COOKS WANn:o .. \Ill & !?/time 1111 slllfli. Coll 642·8881 , The Gnnd er fWHt.Jjur.inl. IOOtCKHf'Ett "Rttttaurant e111.w r lwlp ful but not m1111d&lory Lov ely t1urround1n.i11. a()(}(! hr.. & l(ood Mtlar) .. ·or ia ppt , coll Dd>IHc M7 8220u t 231 lt•rk. Nt:wport Uc.ic h lt\llurnnc•c Co. n••t•d» rut an1< & roding dl'rk Ap t1tuclt· for rn11th & d1•tull work Good hundw rll COUNTtm WOM/\N HOOKl'l\."Tl';l 11• 11nl(. M1ni m;tl 1ypinl( Towntt>C'Olllr11t1:4 ln rt'll l'art tim e JH'f'll" on Sli(lO mo 833 114!1() tu..I <'t'flll•r Mu11t be uva1I Moo & Tut•it No 1·Kpt•1 weekends App ly 1930 nt.,. .. ,_6 41r y AllVI Y 10 C.1l•rks,Pt 't1mcn111•work. Nt>wportUlvd.C M Pl'""Ofl Penn)'f>Cl \t·r lbi.iO week~nd ~, No rxp1•r COUNT ER GIRL l'IT Plal't~ntia c M Ill'<' Slop N Co, 7 IS No . · 1.our a . A11u h <·1 m IO!ll l 30 SJ hr. City ---------•I 77411210 Cleane r s, t.o~ He h -----494-1.~ IUYER ottded fur est ab elel' b'onJc mlg eo Puf't'hai.c vlectromr romponenlb, ul> t'!mtract rabnrallOll, lollow·up ordcr1> Mm 2 yr~ t'XP Good wa l(l''o, ht·nt•f1l1>, l'OOl(eniul at llltMPh CLERKS UTOTEM Operuni.?s Now Available for full or p/llme clerks on 2nd & 3rd ~h1fts No DECC In-me ~6 47:11 DATA t-:NTRY Rapidly exp;md1ng eom pany n1..«lh full lime da ta entry oper ator If you have IG-key we wlll tra in Gr eat s al a ry , x lnt benef1~ & good workmfl environment l'·or ap11l. caJI Mary. s.9-8043 ex pc r n<>ecss ary -w e • .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii .... • train Start S3 per hr As sl munaizers lo 13.60 hr Manal(t-rs to$5.50 hr /\d t.::qual Oppor Jo:mploycr CAMERA P rr~un rull vanccmcnlOPP.Ortun1llt'!I 11m1• m tht' <.:a mna Uc pt to th<.it.t• who quuhry. For 1''11 mal1ur wit h PMT mforma 11on 110 lo our Pru<'l''lt.. Ex p(•r pre fr lll'art-st m.i rkel or l'flll A1>PI) Penn vs a vt•r lflll(J t11t'l llw J>l'rSOnnd off11·1· Plul't•nl1a /\ ve C M al l24-12 Lllm!JhOO St Garden GrOVl' s:rr ..SitO 1-;qual Oppur Employer C::..nva.'> l'l'ri.on Bo11t 1•ov 1•1:.. expcr S a lli. lJ) !-.d1od,, G75 IH23 Cl\SIU F:R CASHIER-SALES lln14ul' retail nursery hits full & part llml' JI0:4i· 1..1111111 available for 1>ulcs 11n1•nlt'<l upphl'11nl!I F.x 1·1·lh'nt oppqrtumly for h1•ud cushier . Plt'aM' up· ply in ptirson . ROGYS GARDEHS 2301 San Jooqwn Hills Road Q1m 9262.S Chlld care nfi"d1..'(J for 3rd .:rade Jtltl, Cahf School arl'u, fro m 7 4S lo ll: IS AM 546 l4SO oft S COLLATOR PAO<E« Walhnl( to train on m d uslrio us cart'er i n d 1v1dual to pac ku)(<' 1..-ducational materials . l':Xccllent working condi· lwns and be nefits . 40 llour week. Apply North /\me rlcu.n Servle c Center. 1.339 E. Warne r , Santa Ana. Equal Op· por:wiity l!:mg loyer. COLUCTOR ror growing retail bus. No out.tide eolleehon. Gd pay & bener. Wlll.111x to train Inte rested pen;. Call for appl. C7 14 l 838 4890. Tustin area Ms Thomas. ------- DATAEKTRY OC'll Vl'ry & G 1•ner al Helper, •recway Auto. 26242 Avery Par kwa)', MV. Delivery Driver. good drivanii record. neut up pcaranec. Co11la Mesa Dluepnnt. ISM> Superior. C.M.Mll ~71 DELIVERY PER.SON, 35 hrs wit. No wkcnds. for C .M . Pharmu<·y , 642-0106. Deliveryperson. P IT . must be 18 or older. Good drivinR rl'C<>f'd. 7Sl·4705 Deliveryman MOONLIOI ITERS PIT. ea rly AM home d l' Ii very ol LA Tl mell Con tael Carr. tlR a rea. 842·~. or 839-2091 C'J.111 642.-4321 Atkfor DonWt•mnsor HanySe•y Equal Opportunity Employ•r f:RN ESTO'S tONTINl!:NTAl. C'UIS INI'.: llt'l'd !I l'XP l'rt e n l'l'd wwtl•r, hoecle:.!.. kitctwn h•·lp & dlt.hw.i:.he r . App ly in per!.On after lPM. ll43l2 Del l'rado. Oona l'Ulllt GENERAL LABORERS TRAINEE ~SEMBLERS PACKERS Mu•l have reliable transp. & phone. Long & short term u sl1tnments. Holiday & vacation pay. llo1pllallzatlon plan nvallable. VOLT l f~C -.tAt••"""ft\/•t•• ll41C ...... Drh-e 546-4741 I Aeross From C h1ld t'ltrl' Wo rk1nit College Student over 21 ~olh<•r, 2 school aJ(e yrs Part time , lite f'luldren , l 30 lo 6 ·00, J&nilon al work du~n)( Mon thru f'ra Irvine th..-week Late morning ari•a ~-6712 or early afternoon. '4.00 D e nta l A ss i s t a nt , Oran:tteCo Airport\ ch.a1ulde, sh ort we~k. t-:qual OppOrl Employer frie ndly off1ct> ... x . ·~-~~-~~~~~~ perle n ce pre f erred. ____ _ Tustin. 832-SllOO ----~-----Gt'nl Of rice S!IOO per hour. Hours to f1l New York Weiit Mooeti. a.sue 631·5600 PHARMACY CLERK G-R·E-A•T Landscape & Ma in-1lie Profei.:i1<>nal~ t:Xp.•r. f'/T No ru ght:. 01 OJQUC rN;11 I nur~t'ry hWI rull ttml' pO!>lllOO available Plcai.e uppl) 1n l)t!n.on SALlS JOI HOW lenance Expe rie need OPEN mature adult!!. Cull art. C 00 O p A y , GO o D _4_!1l_l'M_7_5..:...l·..:...0009:.:...:.... __ _ MOOHUGHTIMG? 963 7225 Mot.el·Hotel wtwnd11. It typ1n1t reqd Apply 1n p l'r .. o n 111 Ni.•wp orl C ••n t•·r l'harma t ). 40(, Nt•wpot1 Ctr OT. Nli I Jquor Store Clerk Newport lleat·h 541M~1 HOU RS. GOOl> CON OIT I ONS . MANY FRINGE BENEFITS t'AST GROWING COM PANY PROMOTES l.ivc an Companion with FROM WITlllN. THAIN ll~ht housekeeping for F 0 R T O I' widow Non s m oker. M A N A G E M F. N T EnJtlls h preff'rred. Must Wiii train.front dCllk Pcnionable. full tlml' .,._sodor tnn 645-4840 PH ON t-. I N T EK Vtl':W1'.H!-. 101· M kt '~ Re6earch Cu No i <Jle' PIT. Will train. Tu:1tin ROGYS GARDENS ZIOl S11n Jot1quin Iii II" llOlld Cd m 92B2f1 S T A R T S · · I M dnve l'IN1sant pnvute M I'; 0 I • T F. I. Y · · 'lwlC Call 644 7468 aft K E Y U 0 I\ R 0 7pm E XP .. :Htt:N~~;--- HEl.PfUJ. WI': llAV1'; MACHINIST OUR OWN T RAIN IN<; 4 Day 40 H r WH k Mot.el·Hotel Rebef rught uuditor 4200 c~rienee pref ~sodorlnn 64s-4840 MOTOR ROUTE 2_31 7991 l\;ilhy PICTURE FRAMER t:Xpr'd 111 will t ruin f'art or fll1m1• San Ch•m<.•nt•• lll'l'3 Oa v' 4!12 6224 . l'Ve' 4ll2-IS2'73 .isk for 'r1 m P1ua Ma n. l'lll>t'Ml:n1•1·d l'RGE NT !'>49 1:.11 H1•rt·pl10n1 ~t . 'yp1~t OU WPM Co"ld ~h-sa 7SI 0831 PROGRAM P(JT ON DY Cen1 maehuh· work o n TifE COUNTRY'S TOP quality 11~rcr.,pat·c rom 0 R C A N S /\ L t: S ponent.s & assemblers PEOPL I': C ALL AT Must be.• able to work 0 N C E F 0 R from detailed planmng INTERVll-:W. ORGAN sheet& blucpnn~ Apply EXCHAN G E , S TAN mpeN00 7am 5pm. Mon The 0 31ly Pilot ha~ " ---------• H r C I': I' T I 0 N I !-. T Sfo::GtfITAHV Hiii 11m1• 111 r l.1 r ~ •' IJ 1 " fl•· r I ' mC1 nu1tt.-ml'nt Comp<111' m Newport IW<i<'h. Look ln~ IOI ambtllOU,.,. ••41 thw.1ru.uc per~on l"aPJ blc of handhn.: bu"~ p ho nt'' & m,,,- re~pon~1b1illw,. Guoll frunl offl('(' .ippt>ara nc1· ~om 1• t-XI> h t-IJ>f UI $61S1 Mo fo'or inwr1.11l'l4 plt'IL'W l':Jll Su!.11! nt 11 75-201~ NUNN 714 /S86 7302 Ulru Thur GUARDS B>UR IHOUSTRIES IMC. 2101 Dove Street . N 8 large rout.e in Nt.-wport FUii & plllm<' All arens Uniforms furnis hed Ages 21 or ove r Rctirt'd 1----------Muclurust MOOELSHOP lieaeh are a . Mo nday thru Friday afternoons pl1.t> Saturday and Sun day early mornings Ap prox 2i., hours per day Saeli bond roqwre<i Ap prox.imate e arnings, S500 per month. Must have dependa ble ·auto Jnd aood dn vmg record welcome No cxpencnel• nee. Apply Unive rsal Protection St-rv1t'l'. 1226 W. 5th Slreet. Sontu Ana lnlervwws huur,., !I 12 & 1-4 Mon thru t-'rt ll o s t cs s t p l La m l' Bartender . full t1 ml• <.:all momangs ~ 741K HOSTESSES Day & night po~ /\pply tlwn 3pm-5pm, An('1t•nt Marinl'r . 2607 W l'!.t llwy. NH Hotel H o usrk et-p1 n ft Porter 4pm lo 1 lpm Uruon bendllll Ca 11 for a JJ?l i;.&S 5000 !_' l 520 H~INU1crs to work for Jaruce's Ra1u~cdy Ann Tues·fTi. 8-3 64S lllOO HOUSEClEAHERS & Housewives. P lt1me work. S t a rt 1mmed ~28:11. 968 2810 ---H 0 U S E C l. t: /\ N ... H NEEDl.;D to work approx 3 days pc:r week Hourly waJ(l'. Will n ee d o wn transporl_!!!on it9!H62 I Housekeeper 1''1' & PT. good benefits . ":o E Bayview Convalcsc<'nl Hosp. 2055 Thurin St C.M. 64.2·3505 HouMbelMr/Sitffr Part Ume lrom 3 lo 7. days varied . lif(hl housekeei>ing, c are of 10 )'T. old. 848·7824 before 9amaft. 7pm MACHI MIST lmmt'thutt• op4·n10J.1 an uur K&.0 lab fo r 1n dlv1ctual t•xtx•r1C'n(•ed m tht• bwldm)( of prototype l'<IWPffil'lll & m thl' de Yl:I Opml'fll of lht• nt•W rmxJ\K:l.'> Must b(· abll' to opcrtitl' lJui.H' m a<'hlnl· :.h<>P touls llath\'1>. m llb , I( r 1 n d t • r ' 1 • r l' a d hhwpn nti. & w11rk from 1.>flJ?llleen n~ :.kt•khl'S W<' provldl' un cxl'ell<>n l b<'n l'f1l s pul'ka~e &t i.alJry r o mmen1>u ro1lt• with l'XJ>CMt'Ol'l' Apply 9 .. m 4pm dail) AMF VOIT S A -------- Mach.trust TOOL ROOM MACHINIST Do you hnvl· 3 or more• )'TS exper 111 tools. joJ:~ & fi x tures "' Ar e yo u ramillar w/eomprcss1on & illJl'<'lion mold n•pair~ for rubber or pl1111tir"' Are yuu c·apubll· or set uni: up & runnini: tracer lathes & m1ll1nA Please apply in pt·nmn HOW.lay Costa Mesa CircuWioft Dept. MOVIE FIRM SESCS 1200 EXTRAS Ca sting now for maJ film. a ll a ge!.l t y pes, M l f' E xrept oppty tu break into m ovu •., S20-S2UO per day po:.s 1714> 761 1244 VIDF.O CASTlNC S E RV IC ... <Now 1.114lh year I NEEDED 3 key proplt• w/real esta te. bus m('t.'> o r 1ns ura n t·e b..t <'k growid. 557-021~ Newport Beaeh ramlly or 4 desire a hve·in maid to petform dom~l1e dutie~ & babysit ror 2 eh1ld ren Lg private quarte rs wtpnv entry in guarded oommun.ity Salary com men s ur a te w 1l h qualifications Enr<h~h speaking prcfcrn·d Her 759-0909 cJuyr.. 631·22114 eves. mar hlne11? If so. we ......... ~ ""TT~D ...... T would like lo talk to you. n1vn • "" ~ """ Our co mpany 0He r 11 Veterinary Hosp . L ive study employmt!nt & in, lite clcanJng Refs good company f>Uld fr. Call days, Mon lhru f'r1 Inge be ne fit s Apply day, 9-5, 960-4139 9am-4pmdally. Nlne Aide. 7·3.3-11,11 7 AMF VOIT Exper pref'd tmmac 41 3801 S Harbor bed Conv. Hosp. So S A Housekeeper wante d . lmsli.A _____ _.E •. O ... Eiiii.I _M9-__ ~_1 ____ _ Mature. must drive . -Nurse • LVN Part llml' English preferred. full MAIDS 11 .7, rmmac . 41 bt>d ume help for 3 boys in lovely Ma libu ho m t· f'.xpenmt'ed. full time. Conv Hosp So~ A 213456.8326 also part ume 6'2·3030 $49-__ ~_1 ___ _ Housekeeper l.1 V<' In , wate rfront ha rbor home. F.ng!Jsh s peaking only John. 840.3080 HOUSEKHPH M:ud!I & stock boy want ed ToP wages paid Th<' Inn 11l l..aituna. 211 N C:ooat llwy . Laguna Beneh MA.IHTIHAMCE PL AYG H OL.Nt> AJDI:. J lloor day. SJ z: per h r C.ill Ld~Und Beach Schools. 4\M 11546 Prt'schoot T eoehe r , l'lCper only As l4 for P atl1. 641>-43186 OOa m ll 30pm Pr111tmg PRES SM AH Letter Pre~'>mJ n fo r M 1 1• h I 1· V ,. r I 1 ,. ,, I lle1dlebc.·r~ l'l,1t en . ..t i..u RECl'.:P T I ON I S t / SECRETAltY. N!!wpor1 t'.(•nter · Front om c.·1· av pt-'arane1· ,, mu:.t. tll:J\'Y pho111·.., II It• I) p 111 ~ S,:f 11WI h IJI I 1 1111 ,1 I t;4t).5470 hanrl & rnt11·h lyPt'!.l'l R t-:t: E P T il.1\ W () H ' till!( S.'> SO lo SH 50 per hr N H t-· T .;al.tr' IH'J' for QUd l ppr ~ l'Jll lAl!~r Nt'IMUl.ll<IZ K~1:!, Woodv 7~1 ~· llA.>t•rt•:1t1011 ----------;\pplll"<il10n.1 llO"' b 1•t1l1' .11 c·eplt-d S2 9\1 iwr h()o 1 l'r1nUJl l( IMMEDIATE onHIMGS PRESS orR. Dcnldloft or Multi esp cunER llNDYY TECHNICAL PUISYSTEMS 22lOS~Drhe Anahli"" CA 92106 t714)9l7-05JI 1.-;Qual Opportunity E:mploy<'r ~ / t- f>RO DL!CTION c:u :HK TRAI N l':t-: tu helpSui>t•n 1sor Vane d & 1nt t>n•s t 1n ~ dut1~ Good oppor ror advan<'ement i::ot-: "'11bratex (;orp 557 7642 INSPFX.'TOR TR/\INt:I': No e xp. n.-eess.irv OelaJl~('10U.' 1::0 1-; Fabnalex Corp ~· 7642 rttODUCTIOM ENG I NEY lo~tart CJllLDC'Atfl-. INSTRlX:TOllS _1-IAN(?Y ~1/\N Ot:<iK ST1\fo" ... Apply tn iit•r-.on WAl.LBANG l'~HS INC 1600Adam..,Ave C ~1 TACO BELL Jooopportumt1c:. ,,,ail .. b1e Apply 1n 11c r:.oo ISS51 8 rookll 11r"1 ~t \\oestmin~t,·r Mu::.t ~· IK f'X)t: Re11t.1uranr M Jndl!•'I Hap1dly l(rowmi.. 1'111 .• l'h:.11n Nl'W rest..turani und1•r l'On,true 11un 111 BJ l hn .i t:x<·•·l l1 11 1 iirowlh o µpo r IJ•" & bent.>f1t... Call 557 S!l!,.I tor l'tppt or ~l·nd rcsumL' lo <"las!>lfll'd 1\d s::r.3. 0 ;111) 1'1lot. P O "°" 151;11 ~la Ml-Sa . Ca 9262(; RA.llitaurant Counter lle lp Irvine Clubl'\Ouse . Good !)a¥. xlnt work1ni: cond w/ ruJJ eluh pM vlil'J(l'S J rJek 7:><1 7500 Restaura nt l(itchett & Cowiter f\JH & paf"1 l lml'. lun,·h hour Cal! ~7.0093 Hilp1dly t•xpundlnl( 0 (.' farm 11> lookini;: tor ,, Prndu1·t1on I' nfl11w1•r !•--------• ThJ<, Ul<h"uiual 14111 bl' Ju>:.lJurur.l r e 'I p u n ., 1 h I ,. I c• 1 FAST FOOD doeum entanl( Jsst'mhl• f:/\RNSU! S prlK"~d u re-.. <:11·,1.:nm~ llOtJ.'<t'Wl\<'l> ,\pJJI)' Cl.EIUCAL your school s chedule. Nrwport. Center hnan t 'o r s ame p e rson c 1ol firm l!eek l nl( wee ke nd bartender rei;ponslblC' lndivldu11ls trainee Job nvallablc. for u ccountlnf( clerk $4.00+llps. 645·8375 ort. Dental Ofrice, eitcepUonal Stock Clerks S6SO+ opportunity for the ri11ht Data Proce!!slng Lady to llve ·ln Prl vul~ pitnion. Call 644 06IU Prgmr Analyals $18K room. bath & TV. $400 SUPERVISOR & I qual m11lnlt!nanee man in bldg trade Supe rvisor must be slronit in electrl e al, plwnblng & carpentry. Tht..'lre are perm. posi uona wlchance ror ad vancement Gd. working rood's & benefllg Phone bt w n 9 AM & 6 PM . 493-0l.2fl or send resume to N11Juel Shores Com munit y Au oe 33654 Nlitut•I Shorc11 Or . La g Nlgll<'I, 9~77 NURSES AIDES need<-d to give lende r lovini< care to the e lde rly pa t1ents Wall 1ra1 n qualified pnsonnc l Earn while you team All shifts avail Apply 1445 Superior, NB loollnx. trumanj( & pro t:xvonch ni.. res t.iu r J nt vldlllJC le Cl)lllCQI '4Up1JOrt t•h&l1 watll over 5\1 un1l s for the asst>m b ly 0 1 "'11m1ly-0wnt'd organt~•· s p('('lal eomp llSS{'~ & lion Offl'(' p lt>,ISUtl l l'Bmt'raJ> ReqwrC"mt'nts, work 1n It l'On d 111on ., t y P " r '4 c ti I I l· 11 1· • Good opportunill.-11 ror me<'ha ruc11I enJClllet.-nng JOvanremcnt. Excellent or lndustnal tcl'hnolo((y l'Ompany bt>nc·h b . t-;,.. work .:xpe rlt'nce not pentin<'e desired Cull necessary . o rre r l'X Delly or Larry 644 :ei\H celJent mcd1eol & dt•nlal orapplytka'n rsoo benefits Please 11end rt• pus ll1on. Aceountlng ]_Oe_m ______ _ buckground. 10 k4!y ablli· ,._ u.. s I ty. liftht typlnR helpful. "'°''"Mlfl'Y 9" ce Xlnt working r ondihons Opportunity w /pay . & company benefiL'I 0r. Mature woman w /car frrt-d. Apply In person or nt'eded to home make eaJJ· several hrs a day for ADP PENSION SERVICES I~ Nt•WJ>Orl Center Or 2nd t'1oor, Nt•wprt Jkh 644 4300 ext 263 Jo:oi-: elderly L..ttguna Beach area . 497 2375 COM,AMIOM l_,iv1· m for elderly lady l'ersonnl cure needed Thutli eve thru Sun •·ve tm-96ln COMPANIO N Nuri.l', L.Jve-m for elderly in v alld C8 ll 673-6ili7 eo. ...... operator IA'adina Orenacc County Servlr t< Bureau h as operuna for I 2 yra exp operator w /workln.C knowlt'd&e of DOS/VS or OS: POWER VS. J CI. & JECL. l8M 370-148 w/communlcatioos. Xlnl faelll\lea & frlnae btnefiU. Tuea thru Sa\, lAt It 2nd atillla. Call for Interview appt. EOF.. PllW:inl) a ciu1ln.ct ad 11 • uay u d1alln1 your IJhone Give IAI • r all. We'll do the Aft. tu-5171 Dental Asst.: lli11hl y motivated. ene rgelle, ex· perienced. 11s11t. ror GP offi c e . Grl'a t al · mosphere, 5 hr. da. 5 do INtc. 830-1395 or 837 .0710. Dental Choir-side u 11 8U ROA 4 day week, GP, 11d. bent>flts. top salary 847 3507. 962 377..t. OF.NT AL-Orthodontic As· !I L Exp prc:f'd . C all 4.94 1417. Oe11k Clerk11 . npply In p e rson . Tht• Inn Al Lagunn, 211 N <..'0•11l llwy • La!Una 0}1&1 A Ride Dri•en ()perllle modem cqwp ment " door to door tranAp CaUt. drivt"rl' lie req'd No prtor .xper ncr Good drt vlna rec' a mual. No Sunday work Orang«' Coaal Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt. lier rmlM, F. Vly. DIETARY AI DES •t coov hoep, Day & PM 11hlfl1. Stable emrloy ment. Apply 4"5 ~o_r_. N_U ___ _ Donut ahop work F'ulltpl, eve.., no "xp. nee. Apply AM O.K. 'a OOnuta, 2980 Fairview. & W K mh St..CM Orlvtr, Stoelc Clark. Chane~ for edv1net· mtnl. muat tnow O.C fll"tt. Pae. lnd Supply, 2117 !!· Halhtway, SA ---. ..-......... ,. Finnnd al Secy $1K mo. 644-8819 Call For An Appt --------- NuralnR • NURSES AIDES lrvtll-0 Personnel Agency HOUl!eplant knowledgea· 488 E 17th, Costa Mesa ble people. PIT . for route State cert only, $4 hr 8 Pd holidays yr. Slelt pay. Bayview Convubeenl, 2055 Thu rl n , C . M . 642-~. maintenance Must have Sutte224 ~2-1470 reliable trunsportallon. GIRL NIDAY Full Ume. Mus t be good tY'Pll!t W/<'ommon seni1e. COOstruellon & R.E . ex· pr helpful but not nee. Located in Newpo rt Beaeh. ~11lary open 645-3050 UPERACTtdN IN THE COMICS SECTION OF THE DAILY PILOT 751-4760 Uouaewlves, Couplf'11, dt'· siring supplemental 111 comt' In spare lime 963-7225 ~ume to . W Wri 1<ht , R OfficeMennge r-Soles Se1mt1f1c OnllinR Con ·~ger Good opportunity ror ad 0 vaneemcnt. Wlll lral'nlno lrol. 4040 C.'ampus r , e11perlenet' nt-r c asory N.-wport HcJl'h , C'J llol.l.wweres & Jt ll\wnrc•11 snlcll elerk. ell pc•ricnrl' tL'Q'd FUii lime Must be 25 y r, old or 1-lr<MI-------· I 6 FoshtM Island older &-bi' avail on Soturdays. SS7 01124 o r PROGRAM AIOI':, Ct;1'A Lw_ ... _w•rpotmrt••le-ac_h_ Mi.naJ(t'r for wom e ns r.per iulty 11hop 1n So Const Plua F.xp only Cull Shirley 213·964·0332 Collert 774 609U t52S M cl! J po111t1on. mu"t h•• un .. Verde #208, C08tt1 Mesa l'mployt'<1 for I.> wk" a nd f ount a in V:illt•\ rl''I ~ol hardware 11al<>l> elerk. exper1en<'C req 'd Full time RI O N HARDWARE 10 24 Irvine A v e . N U &GLµ3.sk for Phil. Opening for qua lified d1'fll Poeollon 14 ·11rowll1 h&JJ"StyUst Top PllY 1n r lub. f'\' II n 4C hr' wk the best inte nor decoral Contact Linda Coodnd' ~sr~s°'1.~e"t~~;e.>: ~orS49 7~ Mam4111ctunn11 tlou.Hwives. Need e11tr11 moMy? £am l200 wkly ahowina framed ori'lnal oil pa1ntln11 from $19 t.hnl Partyplan No In· vet tmen t . T e rry . 631·2401 Stork/Rec:t•lvlnll Ckrk E11perlenec n~·cl'!Nary Knowiedgt o( lumber &t hand tooll helpful Call Bruee. 548-2256 Prr Takt' lnvrntnr)' 1n locaJ store Cur nl·t· tn:ADSUP INC (714)~ 1--:.0 .E. PACKERS. ware house. AaMm. With or without .-lq)ttieoce. All shll\a No fee. Pa.Id weekly. Im med/ .)obi near your Wriltl Phone •, t:xp to ICC303. f\C'I" :lO L Paramus NJ 076S2 REAOCNG AJDf: HSKPR Uve t n. Pvt. Rm Bo. T.V 3 children Nr CdM Reh. 673·0N0 McdieaJ Receptlonill ror busy doetor'11 offlu• Salary open. hencflta. ..... 9: »&: 00. ~7 ·6300 MIDICM. ASSIST. home. Tra.lnlnC provided 3pm 7pm on Mon & Wed. S3 II SM!' hr Thl· Rt'Jdln a Nini oamo. 1<120.N enstol st. T.mporaey Suvl<:e1t Sle240, Np\ Beh 9M t 105 INDUSTRIAL Scwlna. Hot AJr ~t.-WIU lrllln. C811 G42 ~. Alleralata back oUlce. W\11 tntin Cnll Brenda at ~541Ml MNCnl EOJI; Rtl\J ~late MEOIC_A_L_A~S-S-T-f or PARTTIMF. INSURAN£E J r wiropra"\I" 01.. Wiii (314 hr d.a)'tlmt' t hlftl tn Tyl)oil40-45WPm. ma or "' , ' .. chOot• from in ea of 1eH ·ln1urenrt ad train 8om• kldl ot bill· several OC location• rnin.lttrator ' New orllcf' In& Ii rollt<tlona prt f'd. NC1r A SALES JOR No In Irv Room for 1rowtb Wtind• C2l3> 312 9275, exper ~ We will train for ambll lou• peraon wkde)'I ~ Qlnlart ni. ~ Oorter S$Z5 mo. •tart rr. Call M~'1 AJ•'l P IT fMnl at&46-~Wfflld•)"S ~ uldor Janet At omr. t:itP'~ ~u r d _,_ - Im E O E. P1Mtic1w1eon. NH Call SDJ.. \die Item wlth • WMMd Retulta M2 Sl'78 MZ • uUtO Dally Pilot Clualrled Ad 'TMIMKllG And be bill with u 11 .. adlnR Reid t}itattt Co lln t PllY P.tan. million t.lollur loc.1 Uon. full lime man11JH•r Will train n~w .t Jlcnt'4 C.ll Al S<ellloilO tor con fldentlJI ln h•n 1 '" 88.'t-:i87 l ~ Walktu & lett ROlllE'SR.AG &MOP WOml'I' nl'l'O~d no14 Good pJy Good h1 .. ~-OOS':' ll'I\ A NF:W CAREt!tt AWAl'ffi YOU fo:Xpencnc'' the rt'warch of ·• pro ttrl''llll ve <'O Oevt'IOP iwlf conhdt:Mc. pml ll\<.'Om~ w Ith 4'0 n llnuol tl'nlnmit tr.3-<M.l or 673 43:11 • lei! BRlDAl. SHOP Happy. pleat1nn\ workm•. rond l'n!tr r ''"P In r ... uol rlothln~ :ttl!c11 COfilo1 M<"'_.o~a W.-1 1 .1!t~ , lt!C'lt~ lull tlm•·. ftHiclC'ld tor °"'m ·t fOOCS ltott 1n Q>t11.1 Mes.a For .;pp t '5*9282 . .. j..f -- g b, u, (' tr 1f It· 11 0 Ju t l'r ir :)I )() •• i •• I _. r· '· I• ·. •• VOi - J I 4 • ~!~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!. .. ~~~ ..... ?!~ !.i:t!!'.'.'. ......... ~~.~~ ~.~!~ ....... ~~.~~ .................. ~~~~ ~· Je,,U!ly 11, 1971 DA.ILY PILOT CJ, IALISCI... -... •Y/•-~ •••••• &eauulul I& hand carved Baa men'• •ll• ix. 3X" AOHA tUa Darll Bay ...... a.,,-lotO ...._,.. to60 ,... H .. Needed for bard•er -·-~· MW dJ.nl.na uabl4t & I chain. 4.XL. ad quu\ clothln1. ti are W0/Star oo .................................................................... . dliltrlbul.or, Marine •K Good = fl onto W.-.OUSIMAM t1 Daller'• ra<'ll, Old MitafljacktLI &48-:11111 fOlttbead. rHd)' and Vet BABY ORA NO topleu 173 ERICKSON 32', 7 '72 Dotaun utJlU,y truck Pll1• ......,,, Cal ~~ Urne. 1~0,.!~ ITAIT 1140 -ett. Worid flniah w told aoU Ali 111.,. IOIO Clleclled for breedloa. Al Good cond '400/bett olr. t>ap, wheel, very clean. wlovemead rack $1600, S4Nr7l for IRIJIO ntmtn cs t:. Soalnttrtni JohtNl1lY que bnu S*\I. 6'"d'~'. ... ! ................... Health <CLABB'ER f75..4331evea.llwknda. Pvt ply. Evea <11•> ... m __ .i.w __ . ----- •-.U.. ~n~· S.~C'Otnp&Jl~ IDt 8oth1n Alt1\e<>n -ah•ST S"' ' d bl 8LOOD1,IN E> Mutt ~ IOtJ • e •. 5 t 0 2 d. y. -.. ord .,.. .... , ~-·n" ..,,,.. .. ,,. _. .,. P'rtie rnedjral dtntal ready to put' o your '""' r.L .. en t 1• Sacrlflct $100. Call ---. <%1.a)Cll).JUIO '" r r_, ...., " " uu "" /I houw 03.3319 Im Pl . re c 11 o er I , n 73'7..fMt ••••••••••••••••••••••• du.al wheels II tank,, Sal-,-._-------""" SICalfAI Y ~lnNew~irt book('a1u. tlc Olsen NEWPORT301l auto, air cond .. radio. CMapla,Y Jewc.lt)' ~ ..... 11" IO t 0 Model tlome Furn I' •1ld ~ 1061 Well equipped. 2 boat PIB, PIS, 6'1~S.WS . F\iU omr poeiOon 1vaUa w.taail, lnt:o'J hu an ••••••••••••••••••••••• (1'41 :.41> 3077 ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner, mwal aacrHlce. '7S El Camino ClaHtl' bl• for reapooatbl lmtDfdlat. vacaoC'f for• •'Rf;I GHT DAM AO EV Dn--• cu.tom made Cell for low Ince ai M t rlfl Old tharp• lod ll<Yl'POINT SALE 3308 MtB1' SACRIFICi;:Twin .-• • • Detalla U _5750 UI HC ce. er ~ Ill "chaah .. U nu tlie dua~ll.: ~ W W•roer n.r llarbor. or l\IJJ mat II box 1prln11 anOque &old, l4Jt8. 10x8. 751.zn'O • • aml truck + ca.h or of 11111• •lore, • I roll II SantaA.na IJN.2921 128 C~ntury Model abefnlllrods.581.a.30$ . fer.64M711. ~.:.c~~ !:i::~~· ~ ~~ SH Pn':t 8lLJCSCR>!F.Nl';RSwant llomeFum(7l4)54l»3071 Je.wttry 1070 SanW\a22.hult.1ohalh1i &8ChevTl"uck'A 4!saddl · lur'!TelJ m.tLUt l"llq,bulpetroU••pr. iccJ Cld,~u••• N1icu I aru DA.ROAJNSU1«1refn1111. SOFA"U)VF.SEAT ••••••••••••••••••••••• full race, 14,750. Cal tanks. A IC Kerston~ S•&.U tYl>W lkJU trlhublUty en ~~:-'l:v ~~':,';· :J::~ St78 century Model ur d . h41art ahaped dla. ~·:~~~i:,1 fc! t'lUaU. wheels new U5oo _,.___ &Odl'i.lwtthad<omandl"• 8~t lonery !lturl' I n Appl~08U.~ Home f'uro 71049·3077 atud eant':lf:, allo l .ot akat.ea "hoc.key a.kat.etl _642-_~_o _____ _ Eleaant flu J•••lrv ~ loed la Ual CMMacM Mar ntttd11 .-ic ~;, Mforarq. otaott.nl.llA·. waipll. az2&3 llha. 844-85l9 • •t:;:""'I 9070 '73 F' ....... LM""". 16' "ar1tti ..ion tu1• lnt~rt'IUnl pt • pr "' J>cononntl dll per'd Hl('ll lady !lull CA.511 PAID llldo·a·beds S179 Olsen llftl r YI "'~ vvv ... for maturt', r .. po ~ lal")I ba.vd up tlm. ~ da)'t. XJnt work Wihr/Oryrlll / Rl'frlis, Model Home Furn JlC"&bKid vi.Jue. Must sell S..tl Goodl 1094 •-•••••••••••••••••••• vain. HM mi, xlnt wo11111n w Julh up m rq>r fltu .. .-r all for ina ('Unib, t;apet·lally wortinll or not ~1·81.33 (?14) 5'9 3077 torcaah. P.P. 98'·3290 £.7!'1............... SU'5 AYAl&.Al&.E $6300/orr 495-4752 .. rr Gem hltdJl~lrful an 'f')l J.nr A•ll ln Cinecbtottll: Ol~ 1010 WA.5t1ER DRY~R SAU: Queerl 11' RB m1ttlboic ~out 1010 CA.5HforyOW'CUNI YACNewport646.o5Sl 191BFontPU.2:SOCampcr !118-m.nM. )GIJ'7 1---~M.llCs.rll delu.lle m ulti cycle spmgs S89. Kine 199 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 541-JOIJ NEEDSUPf ne Special/w// caam pc1 _______ _. c-•n ... •y FaaJuon laland lln•n1•t modell Complt'tely re Century Model llomt LUGGAGE TAGS 38'Sauoo':'t w shell. PIS, P/B. $lOSO or SALC:> --A" a.-rv1cu firm . 'It ~It, reftnllhed. I year fUm (7l4)5'f.3077 rromyourbuatneaa card. SMOWSIUIHG Dick 675-1393 o1Cer.675-5911af\.6. WO.D rttOCISSIMG llM~l'l' ~oq'd 3611 San fuarant.ee Your <'ho1ce Send ont' card for each ACCISSOtltlS '7• OMC 454 ~too '.fl ooo 1-\lll and PllM lime pue1 Uool •vatlabl• lor HI•~ mcnWd applicants N 8 i." nrm Miiuul Or , a200, Nv.pn l.39e11ch Delivery Salt tq plus one spare We I M P 0 R T E R S Balboa bland res. nd.I on-· a. h · • ~Inc btHtht •ff1r ffch.N()c0l2J enc:b ltS19. So Couitt **llUY•• CLEARANCE SALE shore mooring. Wiii ma .. mpersell.$4900 uct y tor op11ratln1t Appbance537 ~ Good 1.111ed l'\lm1ture & ~~natf..'.~~!0 ~anglll Oiscoollnued h.De1 at up puTCl\ueboaLm-3115. _DMnZ _______ _ V)"det' word pew inii STOQ( P'BSOM Appliances-OR I will strap, meeting airline to60% saVlllgs. Goggles, • llbo eed 11 v-9570 UUS'8SOMS CAS .. M ·SALIS HIADCASHtB •~tem fi a1111 l,t>l•I tt!c t\IU Umt &i J> 1· Pt>rma 32G.~ .. ~~. VE. Gd Con~.... sell or SELL ror You. f o requirements. Pre· s uoel as1e1. a oc k s, 38 •a .at 0 s 1 p. ••••••••••••••••••••••• duu~ Top tli. ndt'<l 111 1wnt po111t1on Stock & wl<X -... MASTaS AUCTION vent loss & theft! For a gloves. beltpackl, back ~~::.r ~.~~.,: · 811 m 1971 FORD YAM <'I I> Pinc. 80 lOOwpm Jarut.onal dull"°' Apply 673-6880 64M6t6 &-l ll-9625 personalned tag enclose packs, skl ba1s. boot · Surfer van with slick frng bt>n4' Sal cllm 1tore mar Moo fl'r l. v egelablt Jui ce r wallpa~r. rabric or bags, sld repair ltema, ti ah1ft h.l·buckets ma~i. UCCLBlt C&.atCAWALIS -~-·_:._:e_~_;_;;_~_ ~ ~•-p_e_r l 3~SIUC SHOP Corooa~~ All Wood Bunk bed a ~yb;ck "af~~~ &yo:~ :fes~~~.~~~ ::~~t !!!':'t.~:!~ ......... ~~de& 0&:t~te~ Stcl ff Al'Y 2200Harbor Blvd. 'M wlmal & box sprngs or tags. Or try two cards sues>. C~ara. S./ mdes! A real winner! lJ )W llkt' phUllJI ~ pco. pie. thla la your op partwuty to work In 1 un lque retail nur~ery Ple!IM" oawly In pt-~n. Side by side refrigerator chest bed $99. Olaen back t.o back. Sid Imports, 3001 R~ ltlillt ti 20 (1LJ953'7). ~mu,,MG SWIMMIHGP'OOL Freezer S260. s mall Model Homes . 71t PRICES: ~~vi~ad~·Jl~~5~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALLFOROUR _, • M-.tau ... ce waaher&dryerWeach, S49-3077 $2eaor3/$6 """" "0 Oldercamper .. aalt,w/o I PR ROGBS GARDIHS 2301 San Joaquin Hiiia Rood Olm 9262S SaJes.Mature person part Umc hourly evt!S & Sat. 'Ille Coffee Bcao ~!I 1766 *SALES MANAGEMENT TheClotbc11 Tame 3 Nt'W locations Dana Point , S an Clemente. Irvine lmmt>d1ate openlngi; Must have exp & over 20 yrs okt 1 871 2394 AJjk rur Uawn MJ~k-ctroru~~ l1rm In Irv. tndulitr'I complex h~ un opcntnt: for nn ex Pl•r'd MJrk c tln g Scot· rt"lllry . This po11 r 1.>qi; top ~retanul 11killi. ai. wl•ll as exper In rontral't ud· ministration, proposa I preparation . cu~lOml·r order proccsi.lnJ(, oral & wnttt'll commumrataons with customers Send resume or call ror personal \nterv1cw . (714) 557-7800 JoAnn OU.en ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNICATIONS INC 3150 Pullman Stre('t Cost.a Mesa. Ca 92626 Sales Ni!ed part tJme. ex-Sec per'd salesperson for retar>'/Dlctauon young fa.ah.Ion women 'i. Skilled typLSt, ant~restcd ahoest.ore Prcrer rem11lt' tn leanung word process bt.'tween 18 & 25 Ap~y at ing. Excellent benerlts • · New Irvine lorat1o n Dates Footworks, ulh Fred S James & Co Coo.st Pina Village or lnsuranee Broker. Call caU 979-~ M a u r a n e B r u d I c y . SALES 752-0000 E.O E. P RIVATl.o: PllONJo: ----SYSTf;MS Secret.anal 24 Hr . r ecord i n g lmmed opening for 714.540.11~ person .w /good typing --skills, du:taphone exp. & salesperson on nt>w pro-knowle<ll'(e of gen offtc·t• duct bnc to call on bust-proc-edures. Pun or full ness leader11/quallty re-lune. Barbara, 549·9923 uul outle111. Potential ~,. et a r y p h 0 n e S200U/mo with raise , • afler 3 moe. A((e no bar· sollcit.oc, Rood "peakmg rier Mr. O 'Keete voice. neat uppear~rnce. ~2200. good typing •. 831-0902 Classic Graphks. SALESf'BSON -ret.ary·Gal Friday tull Part Time Only tJmt> for intenor dcs11in 1-:vei & Saturdays (inn in Npt Bch ~-203.1 Oestlaler Clotht"!I. l':xpr Required C..11 Tues thru Friday 1:-'or Appl 549 221.3 SO.~~~A SaJe8 SECafTARY For marketing & sales dept ol Fashion Isl ln vestment Firm. Good skills. exp . req. Call 64().-0123 PIT aaleeperaon to work•-------- tveniA,p, experience or will train right pen1on. Apply in person. Ask for Mr CaMOl"I. Hemphl11'11 Shoal. 5' Fashion Island. NB. 644-4223 .-. .. .I • J Salary and hours open ~58411 CASH PAID '15tapS1 ooea. Mon-Fri, unltlsold. truck. SlSO. Stove & SPEC AL ICE. Nl~d own tran11p<>rlu Al&ffoft 1015 For l(d used furn . anti-619t.ag.s$1.50eit. Goll clubs (Irons only> refrlg,.94().2"00 11~" 7080 • 10 or mot'e Sl 40 ~a ... _ .. o-u lion~ ••••••••••••••••o••••• qucsa<clz:TV's957 81~ Sales Tax Include.'<! ,...,..., .-... ,. ne: 15 let& at Sacrifice. 9' cabover CONNELL CHfVROUT 11"£11 ~Aa...at S '"'Lir.S NOCARD., Mfrs. cost. Salesman's camper w /gas elec •u.ii;rnv" A 5 PUBLIC L'URNITURE Movin11 Must sell antique samples5819648 .....1ri r.oo ., ,..,. " . ,. Oak din set, Oak wall un Drew your own or stmd · '"" g, •• or · ""' "• 'l\.?ill.11ho1 11:,.i I 'I IS f' \ \1 ~ S \ ,46-1200 Work p/llrnc 1n our t.t:lephone 11ale11 room and sull h1tve pleasuru lime for yoursetr AM & PM i.hif\s avullable W u11es + t'<>mm. Cull for dt• Laib. I. A 1'1 M lt;S 54() OJOI TtlaphoM Solicitors Need 5 sol1C·1tors am mediate ly Hr:. 3 9PM Mon Fri $3 00 SJ 75 pr hr Easy & pleuont work No selling Call Kathy, 7S4 1601 TB.EPHOME SOLICITORS Expencnced Only. Sell Daily Pilot. Htf(he&l corn- m1s111o n paad Your l)hoM at home. Over 21. l.O C..rd. Call 835-6453. 1·3P M. TtRI & GENERAL AUTO SERVICE 5 day work week Apply NewPort Tin• Cenll'r, 3000 a::. Coai;t llgwy. CDM •All"JIONS 1L'l. 17 cu rt ref rig, stereo name, addresi;. phone & Store, Rutcarant, 1_M&-0629 _______ _ 1111 spkrs P P. 87&-•985 we'IJ make one card s;er lar 1095 1970 vw pop.top camper, FRIDAY 7 :30 PM Lag. Add 25< each. ••••••••••••••••••••••• new trans, radial t1re11, IDeden WekOtM) UUR.A MODERN Send check or money o r· Deli-Box 6', GOOd c:ond. 18K ml. n ew en gine. ~~~JA~~J~K s00d ~!:J8;rc:::e~ holds dl'l',.\°LOTPRIMTING ~11Laguna Bch. ~~more . S2860. Mas A · reversible luxurious PO Box 1560 t8f$ UctlOn c·ush.lons Colorful India Costa Meaa. Ca 92626 Glass topped showcase. 2075~ Newport Blvd tapestry, warm brown S50 581_," long, 17" wide, a.ctric Can 9t JO c .M. vmyl on reverse makes PinbaJls Poosballs Guar :ll"hlgh 675-3183 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ru. shape stay In shape' & del. 1325 & up. Family Electric Cart· Good cond. S82:S. New, will sell or Attade 840-ZWI TY, It.to. Near new batteries, bit lkydes 8020 ~~~T"~ Make offt!r --0-1-asa--col-lect-1-0-0-. --i •• ~;~ •••• ~~!.~ lrlcharger."50551-MtO ••••••••• •• ••••• ••• •••. -----P P By appl. BeaUllruJ 25" rolor TV. 2 ~ad libs ft 40 9' Black V1oyl Couc h, 839 72ff1 yr wmty, free del $128 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o Comn2ny look& good. must u11 ~'* • I!'."' First SSO lakes ~v11, John Wayne Tenn.ls Club . 1lfE MO.PEDOLt:R /wed lch Cnn 67J.57M lull lamdy membership. Muntz IHrk FM car or New PEUGEOT M 0 -3.S. & 10 spd M X Bikes $1075 "l>h 645-4344 eves. boat de<'k, gOOd cond SJ(). PEDS Reg $469, Now Parts & repairs all Medll. Dining Rm Suite. 63H219alt5. 1299.631"3830 '76 CHEVROLET SURFER VAN Aulomallc, AM /FM stereo t.ape, pwr s teer ing, hi·ba c k scat:., .. pec1al paint. crwi.t;: con trol, pop-top roof, aux gas lankli , Tacomu wheels & low miles. L1r lB83754 Ser. P32A7 $5199 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 7060 HARBOR Bl VD COSTA MESA 642 0010 makes . Cus tom bit 8 pc, china, tbl/8 chr~. ForSaleT1!rany·solN.B / clas81cbl.kes Ork Oak. $275 ph Corporal~ Membership loah&~ tw.cwcyc-.. 2470 Nwpt Blvd CM 847-0406 n4-644-9030 Ask for Deb· &,iipmtllt Scoohn ti 50 B by B ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i3 Dodge 100. 6 cyl. ~.,:-. 642·7910 ' .,"-at USl ---------1Beaut1Cul all wood ---------1CM1•rd 9010 MustSac. '79 Yamaha7SO saver.•;~ . c ~an MJU\11 10 speed bike $75, monastary dining rm 3 Used aluminum patio ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .. l800 ml. Sells ror ter/exle · $2990. 645-048 likeoew.CallBob set., 6 chairs. See & buy covers· 7x20', 7x24'. 13185 WUI sell ror $2900 •• 68 Dodge Van, yellow, 842 7:r76 1225orbest. 673-8420 l2xl5' with screens & ~. lotsol'xtras. Men's 10 spd P egasus Bicycle. Gd cond. $60. Ph 646-3364 or 645-8823 2SMALLKID'S BU<ES $15 EACH. Call 6734417 Mlclltg Mohriol1 8025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6' couch + mutch1ng chair . eorthtones, EnrJy Amer Xlnt r ond . $500/bst otter 75l·l81J2 be! 4, 551· 1289 aft 6. SOFASIOO II fl lrndltional green xlnt.cond. 675-9823 Lathe • Crartsman 6" Antique oak table. 6 acrew culUnf' with all at-chairs $700/or trade for tachments, mcl. milling pool table. 642..9677. attachment & motor SLEEPER WAT~RBJo;D ~ Call 213·592·2036. l""'yrokU:200. !Ilg Hbr. area. 675-W2 .. .. . . . . . shades. All 111 good cond. SIOOea.673·5547 4 Sale,'71 Yamaha 250 ____ 54_5-_4_157 DTl Good cond. $300. '73 Dodge Van. AIC:.. xlo1 Uke new queen size mat-642-3271. Enc. cond. 842-8172 ufl !>, tress & box spnng, Sealy 213/..,... ••"" d Pstrpd1c nrm. 640·5296. '76 1.25 YZ mono shock, ..,._...._, ys ..._ ________ u Xlnt c.'Ond. fast, sac $450. l!n4 Chevy, iclnt runnin.; O'NeW Supersull. Taped ---~-M-.....t..-,---~--Todd,536-3.'582. c-"., ""tm "ca•~. whl~ seams Used on('e -=• an•c.e :uuu ...... ~ "" ~ dosen't m $110 MS-0256 Service 020 '72 Yamaha 125 wllighlS, stereo. $2800. 646-3185 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu Ure. nu batt. $350, Aft Approx 75 sq rt rust shrt La rs on Sh Ip Yard 3, 548-2308 shag carpet, rood cond. Newport Beach Jan. "' --------- $200. 2 lg woo area ruJCs Feb. winter rates. 10% Harley-Davidson 68 "Whlrlpool" elegant. <nu chscounl Yard labor & Sportat.er : SITOOfarm. at seoo ea> . bol.h $450. haul ouu 642-$320 642-UU 54&-3641 . "6-7833 Browrung 12 gauae shot loah, Msi• Ru n ; 5 ahol. auto. ....... 9030 Bellwm made. New with ••••••'•••••••••••••••• ltbr case. $350. Also '75 Honda 250XL . Xlotcond. 98Ml7! '7600DGE SURFER VAN Air cond.iliorung, powt>r lt.eeri.n1. automatic, V-8, map, conversion, "JM Black" custom t.h.ruout MuatSeel (5489) SS799 HUNTINGTON BEACH AMC.JEEP 16'7Sl Beach 81/847 ·9551 ~~~a n Dagge r 5 · lnflatablt Boa ta Motor......_ Sela/ W..e.d 9590 New/Used/Demo's. Eko ...,/S...... t 160 ...................... . W'IHDOW SHADES Matine. 714/754-1732 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWILL IUY wooden abutters. mini lShp Volvo Pent.a MBlOA 1976, Harvest-Dodge, 'YOUlt DATSUN blulda, woven woods & gas marine aux. Like 19~ · 11,000 ml., sleeps 5• PAID FOR OR NOT window UnUng. January new.$750.S52-Sl92 ~I.!!!_. cond, $9,1100. TOf'DOLLAR Sale 20%-30% off . ._,. ........ ASPEN 645-8951 loah. ftoww 9040 . FOR TOP CARS ••••••••••••••••••••••• T......,.., y,...,_, 9 t 70 Cafl)et mill sells direct on ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BARWICK DATSUN ""'.1r1 I 11,111 I ,q•I 1 t ,UICI priceanywhere549-8181 wheel, 35 ' R . hath, 831·13 75 493.3375 Cull rolls only . Lowest SEA RAY 'S l979 Kountry-A1re. 5 loaded w/xtras. lncl. AC, · Bnck eqwp. 350 E. Cone. 17' to 36' WD awning etc Mu1:t mixer, 2 HP TarJCet • · · ., Porta saw, 5' scaffolding · sacrifice. $14.500. Also. •-bra"es Bwlden auto HARRISON'S 1978 Chevy t\<&T, 454 i:vet&more.646.sc.« SEA RAY IOATS ~~~~r-~;~1 - JOHN WAYNE'S Tennis 3lOl Coast Hw1. N.B. Club Fam 11 y Me m · --•'•l•l··2.s.4.~7 __ •1AMtos fw W. berahtp. 673·3351. ---------1······· ............... . ~=~ . ,. 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. . WE BUY CUAMCARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 'X.?dl.HIM•f Hild ' I " I ·\ \H ~" \ 54'-1200 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAPPY Used Car Mgr 540-5630 1011\SO\ & SOX • l lNCOlN·a.4£RCURY PAID FOH OR NOT WEWTLL BUY YOUR CAR fo'OR CASH! vw· •. IMPOR~. SPORTS CALL TOM OR i''RANI\ - T rtd J , 1 "1't ~ 1_, 1 "411 Mlel. lll•...W Altlot. UMd Aldot, Used Aldot, UMd • UMd CJI DM.V PtlOT hu IV· enUSl • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••'••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• W ............ 1 rW ....._, .. , W ..-e 9744 ~·=-• · 9710 C Wu: ttll Qu1•t tt20Ct19r 9tU HU ~ ....., ti .._.....,. •••••••••••••••• ............................... ,-................................................................................................ . ........ •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• oa. lOK ""ONT ••••••••• ...___ '7l0 a-t U O lilMll ..U 'Tt M .. VW bul. auto., clttft '11 Sedan de Ville Whit. "lt.. ECARLO '18 XR T fully e quip '•Conv. 6 cyl. auto, PIS WI IUY ~ .............. ::?::"•••n•••••••••••• ml. 1la~eoc:=· = All/I'll. nu ""f suoo It.hr. ti.er. C B .. nit whl . Low mi~. Ult. cruise. AM/ll'M tape Xlnl cond new top, Beat qver S2000. W , ~CA!,!' 1 ..... *D.&.'TSU ..... S• .;,4 1o ml. 1m~. m1 ·• 4. 1• M.Tpmt7541 •way teal. 21.000 ml. ~:!:1•l cd:g~•fo:k':. ~~t..!e!!_S3700, after ~175i.-S · re um MW " ... vro... " " ,,...,, recotd avall ••• ..,., ll VW 8Qblr, nu llrea. rbll Ownc:r drl ven 19500 AM/FM Loaded' (~I u-in v•,,.-. "JGC\.Wtom cow ~:l~~ ~.'':~ &.ftl•....... •·&. lSZ·lHI. All '· o,.e 9746 Ht. SIR. AM /FM . ~.. 14299 70 c=:: XR7 low ml. lllnl ~~~~ ....... UMdcarl Of Al...... ~'I-••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ct.n. tl.IOO. Kvtt75-4f75 '72 Coupe dt Vll&t. aold 6 HUNTINGTON BEACH JSI a, 8'4088eves. ,._ JOI SALIS L. ING Jaa XJ . am\\, purc •7.U)peUlaata COUft-. 0,.167.mt. white. xlnl. coid·,} UfC JEEP II.AMO PAR UVlC "'11· '11, ml . wlOM tnlM iUlO ltUI.. v\AYI •11 ~rbacll VW XI t owner. 1trv. reau 1r..,, 18751 Beacb Bl/84'1·95Sl Leather inlJ'. new paint, ttSS MAC PHIRSOM lnN. chfn'>' Nod Dr\ tap, r9.coab&e. 11&141M» taMI. 0 mllel on rebJit aut tH to apprecaal.CI. :t;I top, AC, PS. PB. 70 CHIVIOLIT ~.=-=~~f!/:: ctya,4'J&1G~ ..,, AM /f'M cuaette 12,450.144-2382. on 4:as~u~:·~inf'4 UAW>C«iter Drtvt tenna. HO.HO Dyl ,_,., 9710 ...._.1500.IJl.'12'7' , .. S..S de Ville. All OP· ownet'. PP. 964-l848 IRVINE llAllBOR BLVD .. aa,ev•49UIJJ_ ••••••••••••·•~•••••••• 'tt VW Sqbk, oeedl work e=~~k:.:.~7~95· ,_,. fiiO '74 OLDS CUTLASS AM·i.pe, air condition· ln&. power 1teerlng & braka, vinyl top. (5461) 761-722J 140-6410140-llU 1111 'htl•· u •• blk • .., •xx.£. 1.00 pt car, New loeded w/tVtr)'tll'"'l ... an ,. El Dorado. The Want· =/Ureellnlr • en1. drtven only 15,000 us .... One A G • $'800 900 So. C:O.t Hwy. bat m *' wtth ~are Jwtt • !'!,f"'-Y1 • W Bui. •uper custom. &J~ em · "' · 12296 HUNTINGTON BEACH ,AMC.JEEP -. t7JI lib MW M.-t _. ot New ll:lkc eq. lr•na Ir ":a~f" .............. ••••••••• SM.600 with tla..500 pa;· brdM, mny xtru. In 11..m-• ttl 7 ~~~~~~~~~! 18'151 Beach Bl/&17·9551 9957 ....................... 11imeblrt bank loaD. • a&orale e!nct ,.. M.000 ....................... .:: Oa)'I ~41-H7l. evu laveat. muat 1ell ,....,,.. •.ODO/bit ~f. Muat See! "74 MONTE CARLO Fully fat'tory equipped wtth all the Monte Carlo IOOClies ! (5540) '72 Runabout. needs aome work. $400. Must aell. t10 ...................... 73 Loot.S 4 dr, air. uuto, 43K ml, l'lOOO or bfft 6',S-1151 "°' ....................... '8'1 m> Maril Ill, on1. un rraculaw. 68.000 ml. bell olfer. 673·ZMS, 831 ·2313 •DllYIA* •UTILL.* SAVE A LOT .. ~. 9.l• • ' BARWICK OAT\U"' 8jl 111S ~'il-l37S ----·•we need to WY clean Oetaun uaed can" $WW ~Top Dc>Uar $ miracle n1azda r ·- Mercie ..... '740 ._ TUI• tu. rebtt ~na. -'°---·----- alk>)'t, 510Hd. muat aeU. n Volb. bus. Engine & 98800 486 )145 dW:b. 9,000 milea old. --;t12. N is.~. Body eaceUent! '2.SQO. Mdll SeU Call Larry 67M080 day1 ~atU. 646-409"ea. ' * • VW Pop.top Camper. Side ...._ lmmac cood. '*°' Pb 83M804 ?6 llllctl • "9ck "1'li Sriroceo: 35,000 mi. P.-ICM C.., X&raalwp. suoo al\ 6pm sunroor. air cood., •· caU•l.538 track atereo, alloy•. ---------Xln't cond. Lo mlles. '10 ac. beaut orig paint, (Olil7l x1nl tramp car. $1~. CMda ,.,.. .. Call-.U.. VW•PORSCH&AUDI '10 VW Sqrbk, auto, good 4.s E. Cout Hlway coodiUon. $1200. at Ba~lde Dt't ve 131-9794 IMW '71 ~HARBOR BLVD Im Mercedes BenJ 450 Newport acb 673-080t Vot.o 9772 •"••••••••••••••••••• 540441 O 540.02 I J SEL. Loaded. Blue ex· * COSTA MESA DATSUN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-------~ -=-~_;_ ______ , taior, blue leather lo· New 79 280ZX Arr. P /S. 4 terior. $19,000. Call an.er· --------IOI McLAIB4'1 pall. salver Lie. pd. ooon6'$·261.3 VOLVO Sll,347 5.»6409 1977 450SL. auume lease. -•••••••ml 34 mo balance. bcauurul ·111.0 cs coure 4speed, sunrooC, leather, power windows, silver, A M /FM stereo . c32'7UKV>. 1977 210% 2+2 Showroom cond . Sunrool. velour. AM·FM- casaette w / 4 spkrs., air cood., sunscreen, Western mag5 , Michelina, plnatri pes. <ZOU ZA> Anxious. Of· fer/trade. ~3463 7SIMW5lOI AJAA)mlt.lc power steer· "73:MOZ. euto, A/C, mags, lnl & brakes, 11r condi· AM /FM, xlnt cond. uorung, Sahara beige. $4(0). Eves498-2503 (<n96) '72 Datsun utility truck '78 BMW '133la w/overllead rack. $1600, car. no down payment. P.P.~7778 * UNUSUAL 70 Mercedes lea 6.3 litre Sedan. Xln't cond. (318JG L) $1995 Chld& l•erlOlt VW•PORSCHE•AUDI ~ E. Coast Hiway at Bayside Onve Newport Beach 673-0900 * I.ow, low mileage. _831_·_1S86_. _____ --1 LOADED! Automatic, "'18 280'Z black, lo mi's, ---------ruby red metallic ell· ~Take over pymnts 19'14 4SOSL. slvr w/blu t.enor with tan interior. w/lo down. 673-6842 aft lthr, xlnt cond. Call Dr <01219) 8pm. Adams, 962-3319 or ~-------~ S52-31158evea. • 77 IMW J20I 1W73 Datsun, new paint, 'T1240 DIESEL AM/FM, 6 Ures. rebuilt Automatic, air condition· . $ll75 546-1421 Must eell, bst orr. Lo ml. llllTCPE. all rblt. $78$0 8118-3381 ~ Replica. 3.000 1n.. immac, many xtraa. <Xr. 631·2992 '74 914, lo ml. nu clu • konis. mny xtr&11. Must 1e11. bst. orr. 842-8463 '5 911S. rebul It eng., 0 miles, new crpts, AM /FM tape. new brakes. abocu, $6300. uc. urrzw. 642·11225, 116U4aJ, IOI McLAIEM'1 SALES. SERVICE AM>LEASIHG OVERS~ DELIVERY EXPERTS IAALllKE VOLVO 1981Harbor Blvd. COSTAME.5A 646-tlOl 540.9467 OllAMGI COUHTY VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO LarleSt Volvo Dealer in Orange County! BUY or LEASE DIRECT ffr.l'l·, 2025 S hester Anaheim 750-2011 •76 f'OltSCHE 2 Swed ls h v o I v o tlZI Mechanics now at T·TOP '71 Cama.roa-Cbolce of 2. a>lb are equipped with &II of the Camaro ac· ce11orlea PLUS till wheel. stereo 8 track. ral~ wbMLI • More' (275TZTI. SAVISSSSS COHMUL CHEVROLET /\.,. 11 , r I•'' IL 1 • ''-"I \ \1 ~-., 1 546-1200 $2895 HUNTINGTON BEACH AMC-JEEP 1B75l Beach Bl/847·9551 '74 Monte Carlo, lo m1. w/ many optJons. $3200. 562-S828, 7S2-231.5 19'76 Moote Carlo, mlnt cond. options. Radial tirell. 67U106 eves 72 Monte Carlo. Xlnt. cood. 3SO auto. bucket "15 camarot'LT. AM /FM seats. power windows. at«, new Urea. maaa. air, new pamt & trans. outsell. 492.2637 12100. Pb. 646-1740. 9,20 "10Chevy Wagon, 350 eng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~:6°° or beat 1977 CAPttlCE $4,,, Last model Corvair. 1 owner. Xlnl cond, must Our BEST BUY!!! V8. sell. $l095 or best orrer. autometic. air cond .. 499·2916, message pwr. ateerlng. till wheel. 137·12'10. radio & extra low mllea. ----.----- Extra clean too!!! • El Cammo SS 396. 4 (3UiW\') spd. $1000 eng. less than l · wll old. New clutc:h. CONNELL CHEVROLET mags. All rece1pls on eng. $2000. 540-2300 eitt.. SM.Rex. Kim 567 ·589'1. '7S .Pinto Wagon V-6. auto tram, 20mpg, low miles. , ... ·-~•-IM9o''"'"., $2900 /ofrer . c 714 l ,.k __ c-,_ 548-8112:$ alter !> p.m. & -----weekend•. o r <714 l "74 Rancbero. Squa~. Xlnt •lOOO, ext. YR wkdays. mech cond. Fully ftf ..... 9960 ~~eed• pelnt. •••-••-•••••••••••••• . •·74'-YI.• '48 Torino. new paint job, ~ cond, (tuns xlnt. eood tires .. motor. ad Paint. vinyl top brand iot.~./dr.~ new. Rur d efroster, '7Z Couriec-. new eng1t1e. A/C, PIB. heater. Must Bettdrerl-4861 see! Reasonable • llM-l&ll. $3995 HUNTINGTON BEACH AMC.JEEP ~l Beach 81184'1 ·9551 LMcolil 9945 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prop. 13 rortt1 sale '78 Matti; V. l'1K m1. nu cood. Loaded. Assume P•Y· menta. 673-9303 • •••••••••••••••••••••• POMTIACS 1977LEMAHS $3999 COUPE. V8. automatic, air oond .• pwr. steenng • 8 track 1tereo. Ready to go!!! t442RKQ). 1'16LEMAMS 'X.?\ I l.1rlM•I 1\1' d ' ' '°' I \ \1 1 ·' \ 546-1200 Mwcwy 9'50 NOVA-pwr brks. pwr ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3499 CXXJPE. V8, au\Omatlc, .U cood.. pwr. &teenng fr vinyl top. A front lme car!!! (116NlK>. 'Tl CHEVY MAUBU Clallic. automatic. V-8, air condltloning. power 1leerlng It brakes. Honestly immaculate! (561 $2995 HUNTINGTON BEACH AMC.JEEP 16751 Beach 81/847-V,,Sl 1977 CHEVROLET IMPALASIDAH Automatic. pwr. steer· ing, ractory atr cond .. tinted glass. waw llres . wheel covers & LOW miles. Uc. 85'1RLD Slk. P3642. strg, auto trans, bronze ORANGECOUNTY'S wlblk lnt. SL300. 642-2978 MIWIST aft 5 UNCOLN·M ERCURY Cllrpler 9925 Deaienbip LI DOW OPEN ••••••••••••••••••••••• UY R..A.DllOE '7 2 Ch ry s . N . V . UNCOLN·MERCURY Brougham. 4-dr. clean. \5-1.8 Auto Cent.er Dr. luxury. loaded, lo ma. SDFwy-1..ake Forest exit $1..JlO. ~ IRVlNE ean.tte 9932 IJ0.7000 COMMEll" .. CHEVROLET ':-\.." H tr t.11r IC' ·1 I I "'I \ .. , ~." \ . 541>-I 200 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CORVETTES! Specializing in excellent Corvette body & paint super vised by Ric Wnght. '74 Mootego Sl. Wason .• "1' Pent. Aatre Wgn 4.cyl, aU powel'. tllt wbl. CIC. IWto. '11'. PIS. P IB, tit Roof rack. $2200. ~·2'022 wbl. nE'w brakes & tires. $2l00. 673-3826 HOW ARD Che•rolet Dove & Quail SLs. '72 Montego: Xlnl cond. a....;..-------- A/C. P/S, $1400 Call aft. 6 '78TRANS AM 562-733'1 LOADED! Including T· tap,mucbmore! (l781S4t '74 Mont.ego Stat. Wagon. $789!> Deeeft bei alk>YI 1 Ivan's, 1995 Harbor condltlon1~~. AM/F~~ ...:Blvd.;;.:...:......:'....:CM;__._~_1982 __ _ sttte0cuaette.<00&0> llfOUYOU 1ng, s tereo radio, _engine-=----·---· --1 lmmac, dy 754-6341 eves Madera in color. <03309) 'T1280Z 641>-~ 2+2 ..:.:.,:...:.:;.:...;... _____ _ $4777 THEODORE NEWPORT BEACH IJl-0555 All pwr, Ult whJ . CIC. HUNTINGTON BEACH red rack. $2200. 548·2022 AMC-JEEP ttllltm19 9952 18751Beach811847·9!>51 850 N. Beach Blvd. La Habra CAl Beach & Whittier) '7141522-5333 C ndays 5 speed, showroom nice! AM/FM, alr condition· Ing. (5612) S7895 HUNTINGTON BEACH AtfC..JEEP 18751 Belch Bl/84'1·9551 Aat 9725 1977 Ml% 450SL Complete wltb stereo tape, cruise control, power windows and much mot"e! 2 LO choose from! (ll4TLQ> 1975 M1%240D S&L YOUR VOLVO, SEE US! MAIOUtS VOL VO ~ION VIEJO lll·ZllO 495-1210 ROBINS FORD JQ1,c llARBOA !llVO CO'>IA Ml"A b.'.11 C'OlO 1978 Corve tt e H1 performance. 4 spd , $13$0. Call dys 979-5345. evs aft 7 846-8741 Fred. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VICJll• 9974 1966 Mustang Con v . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Compl. restoraUon, wire "74 Hatchback. 43,000 m1, wheels It Merttd~ doth xtnt rood. Beaut extr top. Best in Slate. 17~. SJJQO/biitolr. 673 l890 MMl209. ----74 Vega Stat.Jon Wgn, xlnt F\Dd what you want in cond. $750. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto. trans & AM /FM . a.-9715 Immaculate tbruout' ••••••••••••••-••••••• "16C.orv. calm paint. auto. "73 Monte Carlo. euto, PS. T-top, Ut wbl. PIS, mag PB. air. New tm tram & whls. P/wind, AM/FM exhaust system. Rttent sttteO & tape. 3SK m1 . Daily Pllot Class1f1eds. SSZ.3905 "16254GL. AM/FM stereo. tune ~-67S-0380. S7*)0. 552-8968 9100 Alltot, Mew 9IOO Hew 9100 ltht Int. snrf · A/C, A II ....._Mew tlOO A.Mtos. Hew xiru.m-8986 I ...:::::..:::.;...:~.:.......----•• • • • • • • • • • • • ••••• ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••• • Eltcellt!!1t 1mue~r and TEST HIVE oua oogubWs. (780 LC) ... ac•• Fantut.ic Cloeeout .,.; ...- aaaa LAST CHANCE FOil 1'715J01•1 SAVE! IUY Oil LEASE MOW! 7t'• HOW AUIYIMG! •IMW• •RESALES• '74 2002 hp. (373LPF) "75S30ia IW' <560MML) '7620024sp. (54BPQM> 'T1320i 4 ap. (283SPl) "165.U 4af (315RKS) 'T1631 CS (68VI' J E) '78 73.11• (5180308) '78733141p. (505WPF) on 1978 Models lt76 MIZ 210 Of 'IHI YIAI" 1979 Models Sedan complete with k now arriving SlmJ'OOf. power windows, Good lnveator1 ln at.oc · MUST SEU.. stereo and cndae coot.rot. HurTJ .tille~}' lut! DICK MILLER Must see to appreciate! MIRACLE MOO'OBS <13X118> MADA/UMAULT 13> W. Warner, S.A 2,1.50 Harbor Blvd. '75 Volvo 164E Superb Priced below book. st&-0605 aft 6PM. '7S 1'4; 30,000 IRl. 5+over· drive. P/~1 P /W . stereo/tape. mlcheUns. Xlat cood. C.ll 640-82'70 • 5$'1·2132 We have a &ood aelectlon COSTA MESA ---------1 ~ether fiDe MBZ's In 645-1700 · 1978 242GT. AM /FM ~1:'~e~' = c::li: ::rveot.ory. Call UI \(). WI... 9756 ~ cond., muat compl. ser v. record. Y ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• .:..:~;.:...;... ______ , StD>toffer. 644·1055 11110• Vil •1 DEAUR IN U.S.A . "'18Sp6der: S spd. blk/ext. 1~• ROY red/lnt. amlfm cass. TM183H748orl7141~ I IR{ c•avER 35,000 ml. xlnt. cond. "" $4800SSZ-7604 2BCSE cpe ~ cl1111lc, ROUS~ROYC£ ~;__...;__------I -r-i I,_ .H""""" '76 124 Spider low mi. mint cooa.., lo ml, new .....,.,, .. .c11 AM /FM tape , Mag alvrpainl,sunroof,AIC, MN464 wbeel.s. new top, xlot cnUe control. AM/FM. Q.OSlOSYf'l>AYS caod. MW 838-1031 days Aft6, SSZ-$181 'SISUverCloudl ..... UMct ....................... AMC t905 MM475wlmdsevea. Muat sell 1976 280 S $19,000 Ailo limited number .._... 9727 <>wtaocUngcood. P.P. f18Ml44 im 320i's ls still evalla· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-3782 ,.......,. ble. call us today! .-..a ... _ ?9 ~ 9744 -,-.-131·2040 495-4949 ......... """"' -••••••••••••••••••••••• H,,....D .&. Cars · ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Toyota Celi ca . 1977 BMW 320i·Black witb '-'" " 1977 MGI AM /FM stereo. Mutt Lan mterior. air cond.. MAHY COMYEllTIILE tell! AM /FM cuaett e, ToCliioDMfrom! 4 ~map, atereo. Call~ Mlm. chea c linu 1 aUtrae "c olnn di ml : I b.llVERSITY dee rack· A front line '67 Coron• 4-dr aut.o "" car with ONLY 15,600 ,,_ .......t 'cln lD ai oui' tion.(041SXE>. Pn. pty. .....__._ ottac.=bile. GMC milell! (145S~U). See it. ve10:;-upboi1 .. aood $9500.Call~1475. .---· dtivell&you II ••~ • ..,... 8'2-3351 ORAMCH COUMTY"S Tncks IUY IT!!! u .. , .. , _,.,. . ....................... OLDIST 2850Harbor Blvd. '72 Wagon, mual sell, 1979 IUICK & Costa Mesa 540-9640 $1250/blt off, Rum good. .__. ~ c-Erlc~a.oe.. -.... ........,.-Ml.t sell '75 HondomaUc. 3.3 Turbo. aded & with Gd cond. $2200 Pb 'T2 Corona: 4 dr. Met. ONLY88mlles! 00802). '38-11118 gold, blk vnyl top. Xlnt ~ y $7695 Sales-Service-Lea1ln1 cond. new tires. All tt0WA"ao CM~ low C..er ,Ille. <laaifted Ada M2·54>"18 xt.raa. Original Owner. 28 RollSAoyce BMW ... ...-. .,._w 9 ml. per 1al. Ne-94'10 DoveltQuallSts. J bor ,....,..."111 NE'WPORTBEACH 1540 am ee •••••••••••••••••••• _ewa.________ 133-0555 Newport Beach 640-MM '72Hlgh Luit Camper wilb --------C.8. AM/FM cua tap&. 'T1 Ekdra. all extras, CREVIER '75 5111, 4 apd., 491000 ml. aUver met. like new iJUD roal, tt.eno c .... .-100 Pn. Pt)'. 144.7520 wk ' dQI 67W958 ev•. "74 BMW, t lVT Bavaria, beaut. cond .• auto, +:rtru. Under book. 544-Zl'7 J $1550 Call 548· 1492 8Ul 90CJd. clean cond. $5,995 ! Call Art 1178 Celie a GT, 5 apd. AM/FM 1t.ereo, air. good bey. Uc3'2GT8955-102ll '78 TOY<YI' A COROl'I A Clean. Low u'11e9! (5381) ~ KUNTINGTON BEACH AMC..JECP 117$1 Btach Bl/147-11651 m.'7080 673·918'1 ·a Riviera, loaded, nds minor tune·up. $'150. •e:M. 9$7-"33 "16 LTD 4 Dr, auto. elr. PS/PB. CIC, blue fab ln· (fl', allver extr. Blue vinyl '°" asoo PP. 586-9505 c •• "'' ....................... '71 El Dorado. retired Vt .. ••• '770 G.M. l;aecuUve Owner ..... ••••••••-,..••••~ clrlv.n oo.1y, Pnme cood. 't71 IAlll1' '11.980 483-7183 4 Door. ' •DHCI. 10011 '18 8"Ule, all opt's. met. loob •'-(ft ~y. navy blue,_... MS-~ L09_kl • drtvH llkt -.d31.-,.....;.40t;..•_•.....;...or;;_642-_40f'I __ • _ NEWI <121TWL>. ,. 'Cid Ooupe de vm~. SAVISlf P'\lll power, 1unroor. .... MM30'7 COMHHL CHlVROI i: T -.,... 11 ' ! • I r t I .,, I !14h-I JOii '14 '1eetwood. Loaded -..lell 7SMal . HARBOR BOULEVARD OF CARS . . ---. . .. . , .. ... - I ) .r ,. e rr ~· 1r rs ( , ., Huntington Beach Fountain V'!il!~Y our Hometown Dally Newspaper VOL 72, NO. 11, 3 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1979 TEN CENTS ,..------~~---Questions and Answers-----------------... How St •1 •o• aT ILUKEA ................... PIU"f'Ota have alway heard 1rt from their high school sons and dauabters lbaf teachers aro no 1ood and that go I'll to school la a wute ol Urn But lbete kinds ol complaint.I haave a•ined deeper sagnlfkance in West Orange County btcauao of th atnke by about SOO teachers in HunUnatoo Beach Union HJgh School District 'a Mven high schoofs. Reports have circulated widely that back1ammon and other games are being played oo classroom time and that substitute teachers are serving as babysitters. Tbere bave been some walkouts by students as weH as scattered valdalism. Parents are asking if, indeed, chaos reigns in the rlassroom or if the education process as continuing. BOARD PaESIDENT ZITA WES.SA and Superinten· dent Frank J . Abbott were aaked in separate interviews Wednesday to give their views on what is taking place. Here are their responses· School St JONa•ed Bolsa Chica Lawsuit Filed By KATHY CLANCY Ol U. o.lfr l'llel Si.ff M emb,,rs of a Huntington Beach environmenta l group have filed an Orange County I Superior Court lawsuit to halt what they contend is illegal l destuction of the Bolsa Chica . ma rsh. Amigos de Bolsa Chica Inc., <·o -presadents Herbert a nd Melody Chatterton and past co- 1•resident Rhoda and Kenneth Martyn name 10 defendants in the suit, inc luding Signal Properties Inc. and several state agencies They are seeking a court dee laratioo voiding a 1973 state settlement which gave Signal rlear title to t.. 700 acres or marshland and an Injunction to halt any development in the area along with alleged filllng, dikinl! and deuadation or the wetlands. mental issues which have been discussed for many years. in· eluding such things as what part of the marsh can and should be reclaimed a nd exactly how much of the 2,000·acre Bolsa Chica really is marshland. The Chattertoos and Martyns said 1n their suit t.bey live near tbe wetland and have •'hiked on, studied and photographed the area for years and have spent huhdreds of hours attempting to restore and preserve the Bolsa Chica area." .. California's coastal wetlands are one of tbe state's most im- portant natural resources and a vital part of the ma rine eco- system," the suit reads. Attorney t;ynda Martyn of San Francisco. who Ciled the suit on . behalf of the Amigos, declined to comment until the defendants have been served legal notice of <See MARSH, Page AZ) • The Amigos also call ror a full accounting of tidelands rev· e nue. allegin " millio ns of dollars in oil drilling tidelands cash "is accruing to private in· div1duals and/or corporations" rather than goi ng into a tidelands trust. Jn addition. the Amigos seek civil penalties or $5 000 per day per defendant for ;iJeged viola· tions or the s tate Publi c Resources Code and one-time fines of Sl0,000 per defendant for a lleged infractions of the California Coastal Act. Suspect Atknitted RB Slaying? A spokesman for Signal Properties had no immediate response tD the lawsuit. Other defendants include three firms bearin• the Sij(llal name, Aminoil USA loc., wblch leues some Signal land and W. R. Grace Inc .. a development rirm which owns 40 acres near Spri n gda l e a nd Warner Ave nues. Also named are tbe California State Lands Commission. the state Attorney General and the CaliCornia Department or Fish and Game. Jim Leiby, cblef of operations for the Department of Fish and Game, said be wu not allowed to comment oo the lawsuit.. Ed van. corporate counsel for the Grace farm, aald the com· pany's 40 acres are in a holdint pattern while California Coastal Act planning is bemg completed. He said he couldo"t e.ment directly on the suit's alleaaUons since he bun't seen it. ·'The plaintllfs have environ· mental concerns," Vall said. "We feel the ultimate plan adopted should balance con· cerna ror housing, recreaUon and environment." The suit centen on eovlron· SOllill COAST PUZ4 J'IEJJ'ED Huntington Beach Police Of. fleer Dan McKerran Wednesday testified that murder suspect Dennis S. Schwab declared, "I shot him" when the officer con· fronted rum Jan. 2 as Robert J. Byan lay dying at their feet. Schwab, 36, or 324 Clay Ave., Huntington Beach. was bound over to Orange County Superior Court to stand trial on the charge largely on McKerran's testimony in West Orange Coun- ty Judicial District Court. Tbe fiberglass factory produc· lion foreman pleaded innocent six days ago. Investigators allege be shot Ryan, 21, a neighbor whom he had never met, in the forehead with a .357 magnum revolver following an earlier altercation. During Wednesday's brier pre· llmlnary hearing, OUlcer McKerran told what he encoun- tered as one or the first ln- vest11at.ors to arrive at the Clay A venue address. "I round Mr. Ryan dying on the landing," be said. lnveaUgators say as far as they have been able to de- termine, Ryan went to the apart· mcnt shared by Schwab and a roommate that evening to return aome borrowed car keys. A scuffle or loud u1wnent ensued,~toPollce. The1 say R.Jan left and then re. tu med, powadtna eway oa the apartment door and wa1 ap· parenUy lbot at Dear·,olnt blank rant• wbmtbedooropened. ts Faring During Strike Q. HOW MlJCll AcrtJAL teach.Ing is gotni on! A. Mrs. Wessa: About halt of the regular teachers are 11llll in the classroom. Education is proceeding but It isn't normal. A. Abbott: An awful lot or education is going on. There have been problems in securing substitutes In advanced math and science classes but teaching ia getting better every day Q. WILL STUDENTS RECEIVE credit for their work for the semester that ends Jan. 26? A. Mrs. Wessa: Yes. Students will receive report card grades. Their work for the first 12 weeks of the semester were recorded previously Q. WHAT HAPPENS IF a student receives a grade from a substitute teacher that he' or she considers unfair? A. Abbott : Our number one criterion on this area is fairness to the student . A review process will be set up at each school by the principal. rr student~ reel they received an unfair mark, a test will be drawn up to measure achievements. Q. HOW A&E STUDENTS comporting themselves in the strike? A. Mrs. Wessa: The majority has been super. There have been some walkout.s and some vandalism but you have to look at the mwjority. A. ABBOTI': Students have been very good but there is. a frustration on their part to get their regular teachers back. Q. HOW IS ENROLLMENT! A. Abbott: 77 percent of the students reported to school Wednesday. That Is about 10 percent below normal. I rind it somewhat amazing that 77 percent or the students will cross picket lines to go to school. <See STUDENTS, Page A2> e News Blacked Out litnber Lasses Terry Landsverk. Pam Swagger, Connie Olson and Jackie Carr a re among Fountain Valley High School dancers hosting 10 top hi gh school t roupes at the third annual Choreographer's Winter Concert. al 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Huntington Beach High School Auditorium, 1905 Main St. Dancers from Corona del Mar. Laguna Beach, Marina, University. Dana Hills. Capistrano Valley, Brea-Olinda. Orange and Villa Park high schools also will perform. Westminster Picket,s Back AtSclwoh A one·da1 moratorium on teacher picket lines was can· celed this morning after a six hour mediation session failed to break a deadloc k ln t he Westminster School <elemen- 1tary I District. Bat Kaelter, an orriclal with the West Orange County United Teachers, said pickets returned at sc hool s this morning "becal.19e no new offers were re· ceived from the district." H o w ever, di st ri ct spokeswoman Barbara Winars said the district made a aeries of new proposals at Wednesday night 's negotiations. S h e reported ttut the Calllornaia Teacher Association represematlve rQfused to accepl the offent. M las Winars Hid the new pro- poaala included: -Increasing fringe benefits Crom Sl,000 to $1,100. -Increase in release day1 for teacher -.ociaUon president or bis deairnee to do a~latlon bu1ine11 wtth pay rrom 13 to 15 daya aMually. -An aareement that teachers would no toncer have to stand noon dut.y. Iranian Mob Burns U.S. Consul Flag TEHRAN, Iran (A P ) -A mob hauled down and burned the American flag today in front of the U.S. consul ate In Shirai, top· pied three statues of the shah and stormed the secret police headquarters, residents re· ported. Between two and eight people were killed and 10 lo 15 were wounded when agents of ·the secret police, SAVAK. o~ fire to defend themselves, the Shiraz residents said. The incidents broke out as Prime Minist e r Shahpour Bakhtlar tried to wln tbe support or Parliament or his newly in· stall ed civilian government. In Wuhinfton, U.~. Secretary of Stale Cyrus R. Vance voiced strong 1m.J>s>Ort at a newa con· rerence for Bakhtlf r 's efforts and urged tbe Iranian mlUtary and other elements of the strtle- orn county "to flod a way tD work to1ethcr." Shlru resldentst contacted by telephone from Tenran, said the violence be1an alter aome 10,000 to 20,000 people 1albered a\ a ci- ty squ*"l.fot an antl·lhah rally. Coreigners" and let the religious leaders opposed to Shah Moham· med Reza Pahlavi and his West e rni iallon pro~ram "supervise governmcnl ac· tivltles." Presenting his civilian cabinet lo the lower house for a vote or confidence next week. Bakhtiar <See IRAN. Page AZ> &rordLow Deep Freeze Hiu Midwest By Tbe AslOClated Prus R ecord low temperatures were recorded In the Midwest to- day with the thermometer dlp- plng to 39 degrees below zero in BClnn esotn and 34 below In Plano, Ill, about :;o miles weAt of Chtca•o. At mldday today, lhe mercury was hoverina around lhe zero mark ln downtown Chicago. Temperatures as low as 30 beloti 1pread Crom Wisconsin Into lower Mlchlaa:ihls morning, with Eau Claire, h1., recording a 30 below relldlnl. c:oleat ln the state. All-night Talks Repeated By RAYMOND ESTRADA Ot -Oallr ,., ... $t.tt State·appoinled mediator Dhraza Mrvichm has impos~ a news blackout on lbe status of contract talks bet ween Hunt· mgton Beach Union High School District negotiators and striking teacher leaders. For the second consecutive• night. district and teacher leaders haggled over contract 1s-s\!H until dawn. But the walkout by about half the district's 867 teachers that began Jan. 3 continues today al aeven West Orange County high schools. Assis tant Superintendent Howa r d Roop, a dis trict negotiating team member. said the secrecy edict may be "a good s ign" that a contract settle ment with striking teachers ii. near. Roop said Mrvichan told dai. tricl and teacher negotiator.., they will race a $1 .000 fine if om• of them VlOlates the secrecy or der .. School board members haw scheduled a 9 o'clock meeting tonight. Striking teache rs scheduled a late morning meet mg today. District officials have kept schools open by h1ring about 600 s ubstitute teachers Su bstitute teacher daily pay was raised from $60 lo $80 last Friday Last month. 400 members or the District Educators Associa lion, the group spearheading the teacher strike. voted to walk off their jobs the day arter they rt.- turned Crom holiday vacation if their demands were not met. Prior to the all-night Wedne!>· day contract talks. teachers were demanding what amounts to a 10 percent pay hike over the 1978·80 school years and binding arbitration in grievances. But school board members <See STRIKE. Page A2> 'Coast Weather Patchy fog and low clouds late tonJght through mld ·morning Friday Otherwise mostly sunny Friday with some high cloudiness. Lows tonight 44 to 50. Highs Friday 63 to 67. lNSIDE TODAY A• 1118 •tote of Hawaii op- prooche• flt !IJ1h barthdoy, QOutrmrnmt otl'dOll and,.,. ~nt' ore wondertng oldtAd. whether growth should bf curNd. SH "Growing Pa11u" on Po~ Alf. 1-'ex .... ' ,. South CoUt Plua la •:OM bl1 aho~room U'elN~'m Jaauary. Schwab'• defene attorney, Ort1or7 PoUUtkl, of O•rdea Grpve, Ml not reveea.d what de,_.._.., be will develop for........_.~ HIJ-dkl-eeldJm ~a re'ductka ~bell trvm --to *50.000 fir lebwab, wbo ........ . -A written 1uaran<ee that one·b1lf percent or teachers •ould be •r• ted sabbatical ............. The ctawd marched to the conaulat•z. where th•Y hauled down the u.8. nae and burned It ln the 1treet1. The dem- on1trator1 tbea demolished statue• ol the lhab before Ill· tacking the HCret police heed· quarten ~--&JM rour-taour .riot. ·1. ~.* · Klbbtna, Minn .. recorded a low ttm~rature or 39 below zero, mak.lnl lt the c<>ldett spot In tbe ~. ancl tbere are unotrlc:tal reports of 40 below zero temperatures elsewhere In north m llllNMllOta. \ Storl• and plctww &Kall tblt special "Parade of Valuet" In today's Dally Pilot. Turn to Paae Al. mained ill Oraap County J1U 1lnce the lboatlftl, ) -AINllUl"l to allow .. acbert to take two jean of pel'ICftal leave ol abeence without loelnt teacbinl pol)Uon. ''<'II l'i In Tthf•, 8-khtlar promlled to lt°t wllina oil to South Africa and arael, lire "unneeded . ) . { I • A2 DAIL V PILOT H/F Thurlday January t I. 1979 Low-inconie .Hotnes Concept Accepted A pro~al t"ICpt'l'led lo ' ·ad lU atrordabta ho int lor famll muklnic I 1 thun Sl0,000 1onuul ly w• L>t>ro,Nl 1n 11rtn<'1ph Wt•dne.!.dl1 bl tht' Orunttc> C'oun ty Boan! of Supc•rvl"OrP< The hornu would :!it'll ror '2!i,OOO or h''-' or n •nt for no mon' than $210 monlhh . uceord- lnjC to CormuJue t•ont.tmt•d In Ow boua11na ~14.'mcnl bt'tn6t •tucllt-d for ln<'lu loo 10 lht• 1•i1unt) ·., aenerol pl1J-n Thu houti1na dt•mt!nl ulso •~ Wntrol Funding Urged If there an· goiJU: to be .tny l'ont rols on last minute smeari. 111 Orange County polit1<'8I t'am P.JIJ.:nS. <'Ounty om~wb are go mg to have to chani~"' some l.iwi. ancl provide some money. Th at was the c one I u~;ion reached this week .by the tour members of the County Fair Campaign Practice:-. Com· mission Supervisor Thomas Rile y earlier had aiskcci com m 1s s1oncrs lo l'Omt• up with a plan to strengthen the com- m 1ss1on. u request apparently made in resporu.c to Supervisor Ralph Clark's effort lo do awa y \\1lh the J?roup that was formed in February. 1978 The comm1sswn's Jc>b 1::. lo monitor l'ampa1j:!ns for t'ounty off1c·es and lot'al ll'g1slativc· rc·prt"sentall\•es insure that the cund1dates don't misrepresent lhems elvcsorlhe1ropponents Comm1ss1on <'hairman Bill Thom of Anuhc1m said the com- m1 sl>1on's only weakness is ill> inubilily lo fl'IJ<'t in time to deal w1lh lhc la!il minute smt•<Jr cam· p:.11gns He wants the count y ordinance that rreat('d the commission r<•writll'n lo indudc prov1isions proh1b1tin~ lhl' m<.iilin~ or broad· c·:t 'lling of campaign matcri<tl :.t'\ l'll du vs twf<>rl' the elel·t1on. Ht• <1lso wants a budj?et of al>oul $3.000 so the commission ctin . 1f necci.sary. advertise it!> findings. "The press hus bC't'n very kind to us so far .. he commented ·They 've covc•red the hell out of us. .. But I'm ('Onccrned we are someday going lo have an 'Im· porlant finding and it's going to com e out the sam<' day that World War II I start:. and it 'II get ~queezed out of the news." II is recommendations were bucked by the commission's thret' o lht•r m e mb-ers , Al Driscoll , Judy de Arakul and R<1y Litrt'll The fifth seat is va- t:a nt, awaiting an appointment by county Supervisor Ralph D1cdrich County supervisors are ex- pected to discuss commission re com mendalions int wo weeks Ocean View Schools Set Science Fair Stude nts in Hunting ton Heach's Ocean View School Dis· lnct will stage their 10th Annual Social Science Fair Monday I 15·181 through Thursday and the public is invited. The exhib1t1on will be at lla rbour View School, 4343 Pickwick Circle, in the Hunt- ington Harbour area. Right after school is the best time to view it. S tude nt social scientis ts omong 150 individual award· winners among 24 campuses in the <'ounty's largest elementary district are then on hand to ex plain their exhibits. All entries will be displayed in t h e Orange County Social Science Fair later this spring and Ocean View students scored highly tn it last year. OIUNOE COAST " r DAILY PILOT '"" Ot•,,...C•\I D.ttly .,,,.. w1lftwPhc"t'~°"' f'•f'Wl'O ttw> ,.....,, •''~' '" Ovbt••hfO b¥ thif'Or4J1'0# ( .. \t Pubh~"'UC~• i.o.r .. t•Ml't_,,.,. ovm•\,,..d .........,,.¥ '",...,... F ttc:IA• I~ l0\1 .. ~""' ,_.,#lXl'1 l\lltlllMft H'-"'ftnQ'Oft lt•M " Fff/Vl't '~""•• .. • ""tN \~o..tPt \oul'-C .. ,," \t"Qlr ••OtOAtlf'ft1l~l"aiub'•"...,ds..t~rcN'I\~ ........... ~,.. ... ..,., ..... ___ ._ •• »& Wot! 110 Sl•H I ("'I• ....... (MlfOf_ t,.,. 11""'111-,.,,"l(tiflo"I .tM fl>lN1~ J•Oll Corin Viet Pf°MO.nt e!'Wt CHM" .. ""-'~l9r' T-••KM.,I (11110' '':'::~~fftM= CIWll'1-•11-~ ~-, ... " ~,,.,,1•f'1--.n•a•Nf'dUon ·-., ....... .,.,1 O•tr>Ot GWlllY <•1., H"nllnoton l•ecfl omc. lllfl'fl•••~~ ""'-"'"'" ... "" ~ 0 96~~.,... Ottleel ~ .. M~ .... -.,oM•..-1 OMi.ww ,,..,..1-.,$1_. xpeclL'd tu provid urfordabt hou.lna ror mod nl lnrom tamlllH -tho1t terntna btt._ 110, and JUS,000 an nually. d p ndlna& on family ll11t HouJln& ror thOIStl famlllu• . hould C05t no morl' lh11n $40,000 to purehu. t• ol' $330 monthly to rt"nl r-·1naJ daon on lhu ho""111g t'lcmt·nt. N'Qulr\'d b) 1-l utt• luv. nt1c-1p;1ted by Jun 2'1 I he document Ii. aupP<*l'(.I to TRIKE ... .a.rrl't'd \\ l'dni.'"l(luy mont111.i lo offer teucherN it-Ven pe1 rt•nt PJY booi.t .tfll'r July und no !Ill\' r.11 e for tht' 1971t 70 !tChool y~·.11 SchooJ board membforli huvc be4:n •tOWlchly op~cd to bind tng arh1trat1on ht•<·uu!\e th1•y contend 1t will crock locul l'On trol Tn<'ht·r leudt•rs jnd dl:Jtnct negotiators havt• "io?' N.id I hut any pay hikes must bt• given ufter the stale-1mpobell salury freeze is lifted. Meanwhile , prlndpa ll> ut Marina and Westminster tugh schools were attemptin" to 11n•1 t threatened st udcnl walkouts ut those campuses today Students throu1thout the dis tnct have exprnssed d1ssat1sfac· tion wtth some or tlw s ub!!l1tutc teachers hired to temporarily replace strikers About 200 teachers and stu dents held a t'andlelight viJil and singalong In rronl of the dlS· tri<'l headquartNs W<'dnesdoy night where the dusk lo duwn nt•gotiation~ were held Some teachers sJ>('nl the mgtll in front of the orrices in cam- pers. About 40 pickets marched an front of the district ·s sch.ools m Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster today. Huntington Beach police re- ceived complaints that striking teachers were allegedly throw- ing na ils in the street in front of Marina High School at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday. Parents also called police lo complain that pickets were as- sertedly blocking entrances and passing out flyers lo students telling them not t o attend classes at F.dison High School. Fro• Page A I IRAN ••. appealed for support to er\d the year·long political and economic turmoil generated by opposition to the shah's autocrat.Jc rule. But he made no reference to the em- battled ruler in his speech. "Now that the treasury is empty and the factories are idle. J beg you to endeavor to tilarl tbem again," he said. Bakhtlar said relations with the South African government would be reviewed and oil sales hulled because or that govern- ment's apartheid policy of racial segregation. Turning to Israel. he said . "The Iranian nation has aJways shown its unity with the Arab brothers and has alwavs sup- ported the rights of the Pal- estinian people Like the sale of 01 I to South Africa. the sale of oil to Israel wilJ be stopped," he said. Both nations arc dependent on Iranian oi l. Iranians are Moslems. but not Arabs The United Stales has s<1id It would supply Israel 1f the Jewish stale stops getting oil from Iran. ln Tel Aviv today. Shaul Galai. spokesman for lhe Israeli Energy Ministry, said Israel can get by without Iranian oil. "We're not worried mote or less than the rest of the Western world. but we will have lo adupt ourselves." Galal said. f'ro• Page A I MARSH. • • tbe suit. The agreement, negotiated after more than two years of dis · cusslon gave the stale the rif(hl to tto eventual 557 acres im- mediately inland from Pacific Coast Highway. In return, Signal gained clear title to about 890 acres of mars h lowlands which h ad been clouded by st.ale tidelands ease· men ts. Clammers Eye !mooring Tith A new set of minus low tides beginning today was expected to brlna crowds or cJammcrs to west county beacbc today In search of the wUy bivalve for their chowder keUles. The sen• of mlou. .a and • mln&11 .7 foot lldea l.a u:pee\ed lO tut through ttte weekend ac. cordlna lO Bola• Cblca St11te Belich rangers. Low UcA, occ:un about mld- afte1 •• oon and clammlftl t1 n · peeled to be eood lhrouO the weekend wlth m.n,J 1ealooed handl takliil hOaM llmlta ol 10 clams. J auurc OiCMquolt• av1ll1bl~ hoUI· lnM ror low ond moderato In· com~ famlli ln a county wtM!re lh Av roe re.al prtc ot a bOUlf lJ f10.000 and tho ovenl(' IW w hom l'OSlff JU3,000. To Induct lowt1r·oot1t hou11tna. the n•w document would force tl4'v~lope111 to provldt• 25 p(lrcent of 11uch howdna units tn a new d~vt-lopment to take advantaa uf c•ounty udmlnl1tratlve rt'vlcw 1l\Ortculll lhut would 11uve them money ;..;•'"CAMBODIA l \.Pur11t btUmb1114 ,,.,..,.,..,.... RESISTING REBELS Siem Reap, Cambodia Cambodian Official Rescued BANGKOK. Thailand <AP > - A Thai h elicopter rescued Cambodian Deputy Premier Ie ng Sary from capture by victorious Vietnamese and Cambodian rebel forces today and the ousted official then flew out of Bangkok for Hong Kong, Thai airUneofficialssaid. Another helicopter also made a brief landing inside Cambodia and returned to Thailand. but there was no confirmation either of the choppers picked up President Khieu Samphan or other officials of the fallen Phnom Penh government. There were no reports on the fate or Khieu Samphan or of Premier Pol Pot, but reliable Thai military and Western sources said the beleaguered Cambodians asked the Thais to allow the transit of about 500 or their associates and their families to China. their only important ally while they were In Power. The swift h elicopter evacuation came as Vietnamese tanks and lnf antry were moving toward the Thai border along lllghway ~ accordjng to reliable intelligence sources. BB Man Faces 'Reckless' Driving Rap A 35-year-Old Huntington Beach man was arrested on charges of r eck le ss driving Wednesday mornin g a fter a group of Edison High S<:hool teachers told police he tried to hit them with hJs auto. David Edw1o Atkinson was booked into HwiUngton Beach Jail on the mlsdemeanor charges following the 9:30 a.m. incident. SociaJ Studies teachers Mike Shi m pooh •nd Georg• Roswell performed a citizens' arrest on Atkinson ror allegedJy tryinf( to strike them as they were pkket- ing oo the sidewalk in front of the school. When contacted at his home Wednesday afternoon. Atkinson denied the incident but declined exteni;ive comment on the ad- vice or his attorney. ·'They said they were going lo g~t. back at me:· Atkinson as- serted. Atkinson was referring to what teachers told him art.er he criticized the strikers and s upported Huntington Beach Union High School District tru1tees at a school board meet- ing Tuesday night. Atkinabn &aid M ~as dropping off bis daughter at the school Wednesday morning . "He wu coming right at us," s aJd teacher Shlmpocfi. About 20 teachers surrounded Atkinson's sedao as he tried to Joavc the parking lot. Teacher Don Levy 1ald he opened the car door. grabbed the keys fron\ the 11nltlori and pulled the driver out. Two campus security guard.'l ~revented violence as tempera narcd . PoUce U. Jim Walker said wltne11e1 told officer• that tho driver "made an abrupt left tum olf M8'n011a ar.t ~Into the- parkidl lot driveway.·• "Tbty <tM 1triken l Mlleved b• wu tolna to kin them." 1ald Hal Striem, a plckettn1 Ed.laon Hlih creative wnttna wacher. Walk.er Mid AUdnloa wa1 re- leaMd on .,., bml and wUI be ordered to appeu lo court within two Weeki. ' Ahw included are provlalona for hlah r <Nntlty C!OftltrucUon and relaxation of eome buUdlng 1tand1rdl for project.a providing offordable houlln ... T he element ellO carries coun- ty pledaoa to aiiareulvely pureuc government grant pro· grunu lO aid in COfUltrucllon OC new urrontable houalng or re· habllltaUon ol ••l1tln1 lower. cost ho mes. NotlnM that the county'• future economy rnlsht be Mffccted College SUDllller Reduced By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OI w o.i•r P04'l si.tt A "sharply reduced " s ummer session ror colleges in the Coast Community Colle~e District was approved by district trustees Wednesday night. Only courses "deemed essen- tial" at Orange Coast. Golden West or Coastline colleges will be ofrered because of reduced rlnan t'es . sa id district s pokesman Ri chard Simon. No date has been set for the opening of summer school. All sports programs and many liberal arts a nd basic science courses will not be offered. "The projected block grant fundinJ? by the stale makes it impos sible lo offer a full session ... said board President Worth Keene. "We don't even know if we are going to receive a block grant." Clinical courses such as cos- metology and nursing will be still be offered, as wUI ethnic programs and those fully funded by the federal government, said Simon. It will be up to officials at the individual colleges lo decide what other courses can be of- fe red within the framework of reduced budgets. Before the passage or Proposi· lion 13, the Coast Community College District received ap· proximate ly 70 percent or its funding from local property taxes. The state is now supporting the district, and this year aJlotted about $68 milUon for operation. Simon said the figure is about 85 percent of what the college used to work with. because emptoyees in both lb prival~ and public aeetor can't afford houslng, the element 4'1SO ca111 ror pnvate oua1nel'IS and an· dustry to hetp ease the housing problems or their own employees. County staff members are us· ing the Ume prior to rinul clc· ment approval lo r evise the document b 1ed on criticism from the state'1 Department of Ho u slna and Co mmunity Development. The proposal lacks specifics. the departmPnt charged, es~ially in assurances that the element's recommendations will be "lranslaled into a course of action." F,.._P•geAf STUDENTS REACT. • • Q. DO YOtJ FEEL lhat students have been propagan- dized? A. Mrs Wessa: There's oo doubt that som e have been used as pawns by som e teachers. Some teachers have talked months and m<1nth.s about the situation. But stu dents have been the victims of all sides. They've received information from the leachen and us cdistrlct officials. l A. Abbott: Ye". They·ve been given information that created problems for them They were told not to go to class because s ubsUlute le1tchen have no control over their grades. Q. HOW MANY SUBSTITUTES ure teaching'! A. Abbott: There were 484 in the t'lassrooms Wednes- day in addition to <1 pool of 75 more who were retained in case they are needed. Q. ARE TUEY QUALIFIED? A. Abbott: They have teuching credentials a nd many are very capable We have weeded out a few who were not up lo standard. Q. WHAT IS THE KOLE of lct'turers '1 A Abbott Lecturers with e xpertlst-in ~pecific fields can teach up lo four d<1ys with a !ipc<:tal cr1:dc11t1al We started the strike with SO lecturers but are phasing them out. Q. HOW IS THE SUPPLY of substitute teachers hold- ing up'! A. Mrs. Wessa· Ve ry well We ve received requests from 25 more teachers Tuesday looking for work A. Abbott. There are many recent graduates who have no job because of the current surplus in teachers They are no" soliciting us. Q. HAS THERE BEEN any coni.iderahon for sub- stitutes LO replace slrik1::ri. as pt!rmanenl teachers? A Mrs. Wessa: I couldn't say that We are moving each day at a time. Our main purpose is to reach an end to the strike and gel teachers back In the classroom. Their students miss them. ~-Abbott · There arc no thou~hts to replace regular teachers. But we'vt• h<Jd un opportunity lo see their replacements in "gam(' conditions" and they will be put in the job bank for the future. About 10 percent of the dis· lrict's 867 teachers leave each year because or attrition. Q. THERE HAVE HF.EN reports of b<1ckgammon and other fun and gamt•s being played in the chsssrooms. b; this true? 1 A M rs Wessa : We hear that :.o much. but nobody is willing to come forward and tell us where these activities are happening School offlc1aJs vi~it classrooms regularly. I can't say these things arc not happening but none of Ub have seen them Q. HOW LONG CAN the dtslnct continue lo operate? A. Mrs. Wessa· Indefinitely. A. Abbott· Indefinitely Every class 1s covered. We wall not close school. January White's Sale , LA•Z•BOV ® SAVE ON EVERYTHING IN STOCK leg.$339 SAYE s.o How 5299 HUNDREDS OF CHAIRS OM SALE Reg.$349 Now 52 FREE l111M•ate Dtll•ery SAYE 560 WHITE'S LA·Z·BOY COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO • E.17ttt It 2Ut2 M8rluerlte Pky. ,. (Across from Ralptis, 12 blocks 5ou ot SOUttl Eest nt•t to Mari. Caltndert) 8-"" .,.st VolltO o .. 1er> ; 842-1117. 4'LU02 Mon:-Frl.1M Mon.·Frl.1M lat. 10., l•t. 10.5 CloMd'lunder CtoHd lundey ( I - ... CALIFORNIA ,. DAIL y PILOT A 5 ' Anti-busing Backed Measure Would Restrict Courts SACRAMENTO <API tembcr. must eliminate segrega-districts should be re- -Another measure to The Ca I i r or n 1 a llOn regardless of cause. quired to integrate only re1trlct the power of Supreme Court has said The fede r a I high 1f there is evidenCl" of 1n- 8tate courts lo order that school dis trirts court, lets strict, says tentlonal gegregatir~ schools to integrate hu-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;:;;;~;;;;; No Spaceman Jared Reisman, 5, who because of severe a llergy problems has been rorced to wear spaceman-like gear to purify the air he breathes, enjoys a new toy with mother, Marlene. The Carmi chael youth left today for Denver where he will undergo tests to determine the cause of his problems. Suit Hits Coast Policy Homeowners Challenge Public Access Rule begun to move through the Legislature, and supporters thlnk it will pass this time. The constitutional amendment , aimed primarily at overturning Los Angeles' mandatory busing program. was sent to the Senate noor Wednesday by the upper house 's Education Com- mittee. The 10·1 vote came despite a pltta from the panel 's only black member, Sen. Diane Watson, D·Los Angeles, to kill it. SE NATOR S have twice approved sim ilar measures by the same author, Sen. Alan Rob· bins, D·Van Nuys, since 1977 . But both amend· ments died in the As· sembly. ·This year, supporters are relying on the rear or many Los Angeles· area residents that the Los Angeles plan will spread to nearby dis· tricts. They say this rear should give them the votes needed to get the amendment out or the Assembly Judiciary Committee. its stum· bling block in past years. ·If approVed ·by the Legi s l a ture , th e measure would go on the ballot in 1980 ror voter consideration. TllE amendment , SCA 2, would· overturn the Los Angeles pro· gram and some others by requJring state courts LOS ANGELES <API Actor Burgess lhf' first to ques tion the requirement on a to use the standards of ri.1er1..-dith is among those speaking out in a court sLatew1dc basis. the U.S. Supreme-Court~ action that challenges a policy requiring shoreline Meredith i1nd 10 other homeowners hied tn deciding whether to owners to allow public access to their land before declarations in the suit. order integration. being allowed building and improvement permits. The plaintiffs said in the suit filed Tuesday But there is question The action, filed in Los Angeles Superior that they want court-ordered guidelines defining whether even that re· Court. claims the sUttc Coastal Commission's the coastul t•om misslon"s authority to require quiremcnt would have poliey is unconstitutiona l because it deprives public access to private property. an i mp act in Los landowncrswithoutadquatelycompensatinglhem. 'fhc roundation is a conservative statewide Angeles. which began a JANUARY CLEARANCE by {!/~. All Camille bv Thomas'l•lte reduced dunrog our Jarou11ry Clearance -lh1s includes 11v1rog room. d1n1ng room and bedroom lurn1ture Shown Elegant d•n1ng room lurrollurP relle<:hng lhe chwm. grace. and sptendor 01 1he Frencn coun ot Louis XV. Table, cna1rs and large Cn1na. Wa i SlStS.00 Now •279500 Interior designs by: Dick Metteer ... Polly Dodds H•t.chcock Morgan A .S 1.0. Hundreds of other items drastically reduced for this sa1e• .I DieK METTEER Fine Furnishings & Interior Design 1727 Westclllf Drive. Newport Beach • 646·1678 Open 9·5.30 • Closed Sunday Evenings Bv Aop01 01menr A-•·~-~omu=~•n~_J1~·~·~·1~s~ro~•;•~·~·~·~1;~~~;·~·l•;·;~;•;"~N:•:·~·:·:·:~~·:~:·~Jm~·~·i''~'i"!'~':"~-~·c·b]•~·~1n~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ been challenged, the suit by the Paciric Legal 6,000 California property owners. pro gr 3 m I as t Sep· Foundation and the California Coastal Council is ., Rain Causes Rockslides ByTheANsocl•ted Press I A warm Pacific storm poured as much as fi ve in· ehes of rain on areus of northern California in 14 hours. causing house flooding and highway rockslides in Marin County. Rockslidcs temporarily closed 1:1 lane along part!\ of the two·lane Lucah Valley ll.oad in Nicnsio, sh<'riff's deputies said. Streets and basements Judges Rapped on Lobbying LOS ANGELES IAPI The county 's municipal judges have illegally paid an outside law firm $52,885 to lobby for th em . says Supervil'lor Ken net h llahn , adding that no county runds will be used lo pay the bills. were flood ed in other areas of the county, in· cludinR Mill Valley, and areas of Tam Valley at Camino Alto Road, the deputies said. Tll E COUNTV re. ceivcd four inches of rain in let1s than 14 hours by 6 a.m., weather of- ficials said. Shelter Cove in northwe s tern California received more than five inches in the sarne period. Elsewhere in ·the San Francisco Bay Area a combination of high tides and rain caused tideland Ooods. Tf'ie warm·winded rains alliO fell on usuall y s now -prone areas at hiA:h altitudes in lhe Judges can hire out· Sierra Nevada. Pre- side legal counsel only dawn temperatur es with the approval or the were in the 30s along In · Board or Supervisors, tcrstale 80 through Don - which the judges failed ner Pass and Blue Can .. to ·obtain before retalh-yon where rains were•..,.,...,~· ing the firm or Gibson, also heavy. Rain also hit. m::~r"{· Du nn and Crutche r . !ki resorts in the Tahot..": llahn told reporte rs a rea. Wednesday, Accordfng to the supervisor, the county auditor reimbursed the judges. who hid the legal fees among expenses from the various 24 Munici pal Court dis · lricts. 1be expense• ll&t· ed were ror such things as travel and expert wit· nesa reeti. llahn added. T ll E NATIONAi. Weather ServiC'c sa id the rains would continue Into Friday in mo11\ northern a reas or the state. r.11>Y Rain or heavy snow wa s forecast from Yosemite northward in the Sierra Nevada today end tonight with s now at the 6,000.fool level. Rain 8 0 8 8 VS If , a day with snow above OiillMKC " turning to showers f'rl · C lal ""~ s po kesman for 1-lahn . s1ooo reel were also Level Loop. E)(t a, "<'.._,. ~.•id the county h•d foreca11t for thd 'Mount Tough & lOOrnY Weave put a halt to a n y Shasta Siskiyou orea. SAft $2.00149-Y4. sut"d to Oibao,n l>unA l'areeast-ln lhe 4e! with 7.....:7 HURRY ,OR SEIT further checks being is· ·Mountain highs were $600 =~·~r:~··:.ir.•0~· Iowa i.n the 000.-• •. 1 lol •, 0. ,4 . WI HA Yt SELECTIONS! LIMITEO checks akeady IS1ood . THERE WH i1;0 0 HOWAll VINYL Ir-.• .G~~ I. !ES-MANYONEO'-AKIND! The taxpayen are not possibility the ratn •--------------------...... ---,----:"'f--i-- out any money. Either would turn to snow WEST"'l""S_,.. Glbaon. Dunn and above 8,000 1 .. 1.ln lhe SANTA AH/. "'" •- C•ulcher lo 10101 to northeastern moontaln1. 2911 SO. lllSTOL 15331 IU.CH ILYD. don1le thJa service to the weather ll'rVlce , .... ,...ef.S..C .... ,._•I 0 "'• ..._.c.w.,11 r ,, the Jud1es or the Jud1ea NJ di ,.... a M • t ~ T--. w-. .... •' areJOinl to pay for it Meanwhile rain was W.....,.tat•w.••·--ll:I w .••·S-.ll-1 · out lhelrown pockeL" expected IO conUn•• Jn 556-8217 193-7546 Law ft'rm apolr•tq•n the San Francllco Bay Jim D'Mol• MW U. fldt ,..,.., with hllbl In tk wou'd be tiled today. 609 and low 808. J \ .. Carpet Co .. rlng Callfornico Wall To Wall • -\ • " t 1 l ' ,. I ) s r d '" ,, h • y e ·t y • A•.,,. o rangtleoas1 oa11v P1101 Editoriftl Pge .......... __________________________________ _ Thuf9d1y, J1nu1iy 11, 1'79 Robert N Weed/Publisher Barbar• Krelblch/Edltorlll Pat91 Editor Teach er St rikes: A P ower Stru ggle The week-o ld West Oranjle County high school teaebers' trike has dl!11ruptt'<l th education nd livua or 21,000 students While teachN'I ond M'hc:d board m mbeni bfckttr. youngstt.'t'S arc s uHerang The mam assu 1n the atnkc appear to &e: · Bmd ng ar bitration b)' a ~ut rnl than! party ln aJl teut·he r i;tne' unl'l'!> that re ch the !>Chool board · Guuruntt•\'d p ty rtllb~ when the htate·lmpos.ed a 11lary freell' 1s llfh.'<.I The raise~ "o uld ~th equivalent or a f1 ve percent luke ror lhe 1978 79 school year and • almalar boc>tit for 1979-80. Teachers fet•l lht!y hove loM around ln lht proposed e<.>ntract ~inrt> 1t ofkr~ le~~ tha n l u~t Yl' r 's pact in aome area~ IJ1ndina arbatruttoo sound:. llke Cl rc.>asonable enough contra ct 1:.sut• unlit lt ruu 1mphcat1on:. are explored. In fact. 1t has oc'<'n a long-tam~. h tgh praonty 1oal of tl'acher uruons. mmed at loosen ing tducatlonal controls by local trw>tees Arbitration by a third party make~ sense tn pubUc edut'allona l systl'nl 1r a debate devt!lop~ over interpret•· lion of tt <.'ontract It's qwtc ano ther matter if urb1tra t1on as used to set terms of a contract. Then the control is re moved from the locally ele(led school board and placed in the hands of outsiders who a re not charged with establishing or meet· ing educational ~oals. The tluntmgton Be a ch Union Hig h School District board has· a cted in the public inter est by sticking to its guns on this issue. Pay demands in the Huntington Beach strike are a bit puzzling. Teache rs have been offered a 5 percent salary increase if and when the state -impos ed freeze brought on by Proposition 13 is lifted Similar offers ha ve been accepted by most teachers in s urrounding districts and even by other employees in the Huntington Beach district. It is an issue tha t has to be resolved in Sacramento, not on Huntington Be ach picket lines. It is easy to sympathize with the frustration of career teacb.ers whose living standards are slipping in the face of inlation. Those frustrations are not unique to the Huntington Beach Union Sc hool District. They a re shared by thous ands of state and local public employees whose pay was frozen in the wake of Proposition 13. It appears to us that those frustrations are being ornnipulated by la rger forces in a larger battle over who will control California school districts local school boards r espons ible to the taxpayers or teacher unions tes ponsible only to a few hundred members. While the forces meet head-on in Huntington Beach. 2'1.000 students are stumbling through a badly crippled school year Don't Compromise Huntington Beach City Council members have every chance to make a n intelligent decision Saturday when they try again to fill a vacancy on the council. The officials made a futile attempt Monday night to (ill the seat vacated Dec. 18 by Ron Shenkman's resigna- tion. But after seven ballots, the two council blocs wound up divided 3-3 on the top two candidates: Ruth Finley and Ralph Bauer. Council members now indicate that they will start the selection process all over again and introduce more candidates for consideration at an all-day retreat Satur- •ay. Adding more names appears to be neither necessary nor wise and it could lead to an unfortunate, compromise choice. Both Mrs. Finley and Bauer have unquestioned credentials for the job. Mrs. Finley is chairman of the Planning Commission, president of the Orange County League of Wc;>men Voters and a recent member of the Grand Jury. She is knowledgeable, hard.working and dedicated to good government. Bauer is a straight talking. no-nonsense chemical engineer who knows the ropes in city hall and is sym- pathetic with its problem s. He has been active in the community and has served as president of the Huntington Beach Union High School board or trustees. Someone should take the plunge and change his or her vote so one of these candidates can receive the re- quired four council votes for appointment. Otherwise there is a danger that a less qualified can- didate may get the position because of a dea_sUock. ' . Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ,artists. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd I Femininity ByLM.BOYD These acholan who make a study of the roasculinlty- remlnl.D.lty ra\JOI or men and women contend that tJrls are at their most femlnlne when ln the eighth grade. They're reportedly most masculine ln their middle college years. And they thereafter become more and more feminine as they rrow older. Item No. 582C In our Love and War man's file on Dear Gloomy Gus Is the Huntington Beach pollce officer 1/ Brutal m.s. gov't report) and over ·sexed <pu•t. prayer meetJngsl ... or 2/ Sickly Cilek-ins> and uw•'91Jd (SalU')' di•· puteJ. • R.O.O. CilMlnJ ... -U lf't ...._ =:..J; ~~~t:. ~et= ~~, ................. . _, "-'ClilMlt".... .. divorce ls the report that in the Malabar region of India a woman can throw out a husband simply by leaving his shoes outside the door. That's it, pal. Take a walk. Mary Pickford starred in more than 200 motion pie· lures between 1909 and 1933. Out of that many you'd think there'd be a few she'd re1ard as winners. Evidently not, though. She claimed she never made • film she liked Q. "What do the towns or Ny Aleaun, Norway, and Puerto WiUlams. Chile, have ln common1" A. One thing only. 'l'bey are farther from the 9e1uator than any other town In the world. Four nort.Mrn atalel -ti· llnois, Obio, Pcnnaylvasda -and New York -each bu more than a million resJdenta over ase H . Only three toUthem Mtee-Gtllloml Texas and Florida can cJatm lb• aamo. So oot everybody'• nUrln• to the 1un btlt, ,._ ... nca. Amonl those who eao't vote In uwalt. UM not onlJ women, but 1oldl•r1 and poJJcemtn, too. Jack And non Devious Drug Endorsement WA SHINGTON -Jn the publlc ttlatJon.• 1ame, an W\- M>lltlted obJ~ve eodo....elMDt. uf lM cUeot'a product ia a pearl ot a reat price And wbll such endorkmenta, Uke J14'arll. can uccur naturally, the cultured vam1ty i. f r more prevalent. Scratch an obJectlve endone· mtftl and you'll generally flnd lt w11 camully cultlvated by a nack One particularly effective slm mlck u..ed by corporat. Im· lie builders '9 an ''educ•· tlonal cam· palgn" that ls IUP posedly 1ponsored ti a public nrvlcu but wblch. when properly handled, re· 1ult s in favorable pubUcity ror the com· pany'a product. The carefully selected experts who are J14'rtuaded to take part in the educational campaign can wind Mailbox up aa unwttUn1 shills tor the 1ponaor'1 merc:handlle. A CLASSIC example of tbe technique was recently present· ed by Roche Laboratories. maker of the tranqulUztna ctru1 Vall um. With aome 3 bUUon of the mood·alterina pills prescribed each year, Valium la not only America's mo1i Pol>Ular Dre· scribed tranquUlzer, it's tar and away Roche'• most popular preacrlption dru1. Roche groan a quarter·bllllon dollars a year from Valium, more than half of t be company's total sales. Valium and other benzodiueptne tranquilizers en· joy an excellent reputation ror etrectlveness and safety. But there la growing concern that the drup are belng misused. FOa EXAMPLE, Valium can be extremely dangerous when taken in combination with alcohol. According to estimates by the National Institute on Drue AbuH. Valium by itself or mixed with alcohol or some other drug accounted tor 54,400 emergency room vlslts and 900 deaths between May 1976 and April lm. Apparently worried about the Increase In unfavorable publlci· ty for lbe!r too n>Qney-maker, Roche executf vea decided to sponsor a nationwide educa· tlonal program on stresa. aimed at physicians and the general public. Although the pro1ram was billed as totally objective. our apeclal investigator David Zimmerman concluded that tbe program has a definite tilt toward the use or drugs to treat stress. AND THOUGH Roche's finan· cial backing of the educational program is disclosed on promo- tional literature sent to medical writers, there is no mention of the fact that the company manufactures a drug that is used to treat stress. Roche's role ls further ob- scured by the use of in termed.lariet to run the educa· Uonal cam=· The procram was "deve and produced .. by Health Learning Systems. a Bloomfield, N.J., company that apeciaJl.zes in such thlngs. Thus It was Health Leaming Systems. not Roche, that appeared to be Nnnlng the show. The company managed to ob· taln a prestigious Institutional sponsor for the nationwide cam paign -Cornell University Medical College. One of the promotional items mailed to docton wu a cassette reeording of Dr. Theodore Cooper, dean of the medical school, being interviewed by Edwin Newman. Valium ts men- tioned seven times and benzodiazepine six times on the tape. No other drug i.s mentioned byname. DR. COOPER said he used the trade name Valium because ··converaationally .. Valium has come to stand ror all such drugs. He was aware that several other firms produce rival brands of benzodiazeploes. and said he would have been careful to "mention everybody's product once" had he realized that men· tioning only Valium would arouse suspicion. Cooper is contradicted by one ot his assistant deans. Stephen Scheidt, who admitted he was "surprised" to hear the frequent favorable mention of Valium on the Roche-financed tape. 'Tve made it clear that <these pro- grams > should be largely altruistic. wtth a mild bit of self· interest," he said. HOW£VEa. in the program materials so far sent out lo journalists and ~tors by HLS. Valium i s th e onl y benzodiazepine me ntioned by name -and usually the ref· erence ls favorable. Yet an HLS official insisted that Roche had no control over the material it ~s paying for ... The companies that put up the money for our programs never see the copy ... he told Zimmerman. Yes, Virginia. there is a Santa Claus . He wears three-piece suits and works in a corporate board room. Any endorsements he gets are objective and Wl· solicited. and have nothlng to do ,with the toys he gives away Teacher Pay Not Meeting Living Costs To the F.ditor: The letter to the editor in Sun· day's paper from a parent states a 1eneral dtasatisfaction and lack of respect for teachers. r am a teacher wbo loves chtldren and enjoys teaching, yet it is a constant distraction from the job to be concerned constantly with severe financial problems. - The cost of living is going up and President Carter says be happy with a 1 percent increase. Most of us would be happy, very happy, with a built·in coet of liv· lng increase, but our salaries are frozen at June's level. Last year I received a 2 percent in· crease. Every year teachers earn less. WE LOVE our children too and want to feed and educate them. Why should teachers and their families bear the financial burden of Proposition 13? Does that mother realize that with a master's degree, 50 units beyond the master's and 18 years or ex· perience a teacher earns only $21,000? That's not much ol a salary for a professional person at the peak of his financial life. A teacher at the top or the salary schedule does not qualify tor the cheapest home in Orange County. Also, we do our own typ- ln1. dittoing. grading. research, lesson planning etc. I have not now nor ever bad an aide. T. WILSON A•••IP•U~11 To the Editor: Tbe lates t drlve by o ur Imperial President to provide American support fOf' a gang of Commu111Jt btltcher! while at the ume Ume withdr•wtne support for our pro·western. antl·communiat friends on Taiwan seems to be but a step aloo1 t.be path where Rhodesia. Iran, and Nicaragua are current caau a ltlea to our. abys mal forelan poUcy. Carter's decl1ion further underacoret the vut Influence or tht communist ldeolop In W ashlngt.on, D. C. Hls ptetenM of "champion oC human rt1hta" evj\~ltS In a cloud of oplum - -Mbtt• ... ~ :.od and~ from 60 million Innocent vlcUms or lbe communist conqueal In Asia. • WRNI' cancesalona did' Carter ask for l n return for our reco1n1Uon? Apparently none or wt would have heard about them. 4 t l Has Carter forgotten Red Chana 's part in the aggression in Korea and the slaughter in South East Asia? Certainly not. Dec. is. 1978 was another day of willful surrender. We can only hope now that the new American Conser vative Movement is strong enough to force Congress to renew its responsibility as the conscience of America. • W. SPENCER MARQUlS Paretet• Appal~ To the FAitor: As parents of a child attending Fountain Valley High School, we 're appalled at the actioM of the te achers in the present dispute. Why is classroom time being used to present the beliefs of the teachers? Why are teachers telling students that truancy 1s acceptable during the strike and will go without consequences? Why are stude nts being encouraged not to cooperate with the substitute teachers? THE SITUATION could be used as a learning experience for students were both s ides of the Issue discussed. The collective bargainina process and arbitration are a way or American life, but ··bra6'nwashing'' Is not. To com pound matters. these statements have been made for weeks not just days. No wonder the campus is in chaos. KENNETHANDMARGARET MASON Stlldftlt'• Sffle To tbe Editor: The teachers or the Hunt· lnston 8-eh Union Hlgh School District abould be fired. They are lgnorina the students comp=etel . We are not even be· lng t about by them. If they re cared about educ al· Ing us they "MOUid cooperate with the substJt\ltet. The teachen have taken with them the roll boob,) the crade bookt and the lt0on-Pl&n1. They are blamJni the school board for hlrint ··\DluaUfild" tubttitutea. The aubltltutes would be ablt to teach lf they had fame matertal to work .with Teachen bave lnflMenced atu· dent oplniont on the 'llrUce lssue. 'htey have dltcuut'd lhelr ont· tided optnions on the t.uuee in quHUoo. I'•• beard aeveral dltrerent ltori-. ~ the 1ame ll· ------ sue. A lot of teachers do not "un- derstand what "binding arbltra· lion" means. I wish all of you could have been in rny classes listening to the propaganda. I sincerely hope that the teachers get their act together very soon. NAME WITHHELD Fountain Valley High School Student Tazpa~ "Bad It' To the F.ditor: There is an ugly mood de· veloping among we taxpayers that crosses all age. potitical. and occupational groups. We taxpayers have reached the saturation point with city. state, and federal employees who "demand " higher wages and more benefits while our country is currently in dire economic straights. During our economic crisis. taxpayers are struggling desperately to keep their jobs. homes , cars. and good health. We are tired of strikes and demands made by our servants and for rnore, when we have less. Any school teacher. fireman. bus drlver. policeman or garbage collector. etc .. who reels he or she cannot live on t heir present salary and benefits. should quit their job Immediately and seek employ- ment alongside us in the private sector. UNTIL the economy recovers, we will not tolerate city, state, and federal employees receiving any salary or benefit increases. In fact. we taxpayers may have to reduce some or ,the benefits they now enjoy. Although the mood of the tax· payers is an ugly one, govern· ment employees need not worry Quotes I'm sure thal ll the world should blow it.sell up. the lut audible voice would be that or an expert s"Ytng It could never be done. -Pet.er U1U.O• "lt-theuld have happened a long time ago ror tbt sake or ~ peace of th world. It's very Jood." -a pUHrby ln Peking, Kao Oil·dlieaa. l,o an American reporter conurntn1 the eatabll1hm1nt of relations be\ Wffa the United Stata and Cbliaa. just yet. because we are defused politically. In November, 1978, it appeared that Gov. Brown would sense our mood and would tap this vast political resource. He has yet to do so. Once the politicians at all levels of gov- ernment realize the sheer power or this ugly taxpayer mood. they will be swept into any office they seek. If Howard J a rvis were 20 years young, better educated, a nd more of a polished leader and individual. he would be our President in 1980 Facts are that Mr. Jarvis is not such a man. There are 100 million Americans waiting lo be molded into a cohesive political force. Who do you think will step forward to lead us? WALT BLANKENSHIP B~lp Nf!eHd To the Editor· A ssemblyman Dennis Man~ers' concern. interest, in· nuence and political skills helped bring about a healthy. speedy conclusion to negotia- tions between the Huntington Beach school board of which he was a member and the District Educators Association. We are again stalemated. The Issues are of much importance to the conflicting entities. 11le is· s ues as I see them involve teaching conditions on the one hand <~uch a s con t ract language I anu polit.ical careers on the other. This may seem an unfair statement to two or three members of the board: however they must be regarded as a wlit As a constituent of As · semblyman Mangers' area I must assume he is aware of the crisis we are experiencing in the' education pro c e s s o f more than 20,000 b&gh school stu- denta. I urge him to use the skilb he demonstrated as a member of t he Huntington Beach Union Hlch School District to help briog our crisis to a healthy con- clusion. DUANE L. OE1'TY Teacher, HBUHSD " d I• tf b a y e t "I s '• t .,·,. 1\ ·LOCAL fHnntington Buses Tops ' c School busrs in the llunUn((ll>n Be11ch City <rt mf'nt•ry 1 School Dlstnct bav bffo iiv an A on their ttoort l"ard lor th lxlb 1tra11b\ year by Callfornt Rh&hw~ Patrol trv.P"rton • Jim Woltl • district 11upenilM>r ! t1i tra PGIUt on, aald lhl~ report i rnuna that the buses ant kept 1n 1 ,..iP lop ~lbon b<'caus~ ol n · ~ .,ert ttpalr work and daily In· • 'aPCCUC>nl. ·•1 BF.lJEV•: \\t! m a(Cht ho''"' the 11ufost transport11lLon dt•v.-n ment in the 11talt'," he nJd ! Punch . . • ' cur o1n~ra1 who mndt· th•· tnnual urtt) lnl'pf'~llO rl In lHcrm r, 1•vt-lh diat11d lht• h11h t 1lbl mark, an A cor nc.-r ralli\A Wolfe d M ha bttn with 0.. dlstrkt 18 yean and Lhcm· b1Jn't bee'l'I on 1hcld t of u tblld belnt injured •ht~\' In tra 1l. HE SAID THIS dJltN<'t IK bu t·~ and four van• tr1an1port .1hout 1,:nl puptls to und from :>l'hool daily New Sc-bool 6uper1nlendent I. a w r t• n t• r K ,. m p t' r . w h o partlrl1h1ll>d 111 h11i fm1t bourd ml't•tlng, puut lrlbuto to Wolfe .ind hla 1•mph1y~e11 Tuetjday n1((hl 11 11 tut outistundinu a nd Im 1101 I u nl ut• r o m pli i. h m l' nt rr1 wh1c h we ull can take pnde." h1: aa1d r-=====;;;;.-- for quick resuttsL. s_et your salls for the DCNtt· Int CIHtifled ~s of the O•llY Piiot. 642·5678 NO. 1112 BARE ROOT ROSES • " ... then again, this match was a complete contrast. Joan was serving from the left-hand coort and ... " $1.27 ..... _. . .-. · Complex Wins · Key Victory ; Developers of a ~.32 million combination 136 unit waterfront townhouse complex near Hunt. mgton Harbour and an adjacent commercial com· plex have won a victory they predict will hasten the multi-useproJect. The South Coast Regional Commission voled • to allow expansion of the shop area from 50.000 to 85.900 square feet to make it economically reasible under Coastal Act rules ~ LANGUAGE OF THE LAW REQUIRES that i, be prima rily visitor and tourist-oriented in nature. including such amenities as eating places: sf)Orting goods shops; marine hardware deale rs or • recreation equipment rental facilities. Ha rbour Pacific Ltd .. which received its original commission permit nearly two years ago. ' .-e ·t hought in monetar y t erms a nd asked ~ permission to nearly double it. • Commission start afdes had already ques " lioned whethe r the joint venture by Harbour .: Pacific Ud. and builde r Jack Chalabian could make • 1l with so.ooocommercial s quare feet. ' . J HOWEVER, OVER THE months another l.'Om · • m 1i.sion requirement stymied completion of : escrow. threatening the entire package, which • commissioners liked. ~ Members or the ll·man commission prohibited i occupancy or the final 40 units bf t he 136 con· ! dommimns on Edinger Avenue, directly across a • manna channel from Sunset Aquatic Pa rk. ! Chalabian told commissioners there was no ! way he could close escrow and begin building lhc ; shopping center if it appeared too few lownhomes ., would be occupied to support il. > ·' ·! WILLIAM II. DUNCAN, REPRESENTING • Ha rbour Pa cific and Chalabian, told com· : missioners the homes are under construction and ' soon will be finished ~ By lifting its occupancy ban on 40 units until ~ the commercial center 1s finished fi rst, Duncan ; said both will accelerate toward com pletion. ~ And the city, which required inclusion of a • public park, will have 1l perhaps by year 's end. " The project includes a bathing beach and "' esplanade wa lkway along marina waters for :} public use. amenities which could be finished by 2 summer, Duncan ~xplain~. ~ -· .. HE SAIDTIIAT WAS contingent on clearing up ... • 4 I he proh1h1tion of occupancy oft he last 40 uni ls being ~ built so Chalab1an can obtain title to the othe r parcel , and proceed. : Facio~ S unset Aquatic Regional Park. the new : dcvt.>lopmcnt will be directly across harbor waters ~ from Peter 's Landing, a new development on J Coast Highway al 26th Street, Sunset Beach . •• ·I .. • i :I J .. Scuba Deaths Rising; Soulh, West Gaining WASHINGTON (APl -Deaths among non· professional scuba divers have risen only s lightly nationwide although sharp increases have been re· corded in Hawaii and Florida where fatalities con· tinue to be high, the National Oceanic and At- m ospheric Administration says. T he agency said that figures for 1976, the latest avrulable, show fatalities rose nationwide. from 131 In 1S75 to 147. Hawaii had 1l deaths in 1976, up from six the year before. That trend was qttr lbuted to increasing use of warm water recrea· llonal arcaa by casual visitors. the same reason the death rates were hlgh In Florida. which has 4-0 death•, _and CalifomJa. HaHway ~oedown Slated at GWC The Golden Wett College Squaro Dancers have·~ • 1cheduled a "Half\\'ay HOedown" trom 7 to 10 p.m ., Monday In U:e college center at 1S744 Golden W eat& .• Hu.oUnaton Beach. Member1 Hid vl1tttn1 clubl are Invited to partl~lpate tn the 1chol1rablp f\and raller Ad- mlaalon bl St.SO. a We have ao many b.autiful healthy bare root roae buahea and ao many •ari•tl••· I have aome planted with my 7.98 buahea from Oregon and you cannot tell the difference. JIG SAW •7504 7" FINISHING SANDER #1404 1244 CASTROLGTX 20/50 WT. MOTOR OIL 63!T. I checked the price at two placea. a motorcycle ahop and a high performance part• abop. Unbell.vablel GLIDDEN INTERIOR SPRED SATIN When we make a deal, we make a deal. You have a choice of tbouaanda of colora at no extra coat. Great interior latex. ThurlrMy, Januery 11. 1979 s DAIL v PILOT A l 5 20% DIS COUii SA lE Seacllff Vlloge • H•tlwgtw leach Main• Yortctoww • ,.._. 536-4511 Hows: 10.6 Daly & S•dmy 10.t Fri. & s.t. . . COMBINATION VACUUM& ~·· DRll.L 8" RANDOM ORBIT PO USHER •9320. •9001 •7912 13•• 2999 HOMTEL 4 FOOI FLUORESCENT SHOP UTE 799 Goah. I can't bell.ve thia price. (Okay. let me abow you a high•r on•.I Tub.a •xtra. l -1 - --., - P"- SQUARE TOP ROOF LOUVERS l(x12 •...•...•••.•••. 2.22 l(xl8 ••...•..•.•.•.•. 3.33 • Hffala Glass • Arabia China •Jewelry SALE STARTS JAM~ 6-21 Shop c:r=J l_n ·~ KALEVALA FREE GIFT WRAP FORA PROPANE TANK Moat useful "canned" ga~ (don't want to say "bottled" 'cause it is a . rugged metal container). Attach your torch. light, heater, stovv, or whatever. Keep a apare. Hate to have to say, "Goshi Hon, I ran out of gaa." 14.l Fluid Oza. 7~" 1.62 HP CIRCULAR SAW •7314 3777 RECIPROCATING SAW •7SM 3777 HOMT 4FOOTWRAP ARO UNI> FLUORESCENT FIXTURE 1699 It'• a two tube fixur•. Aro the tuboa extra? Cb•c:k your choice: Yea. No. I._ -14"24 ...••••••••••.•• 4.44 ~~ PLASTIC ORNAMENTAL GRILL 33c PEEPHOLE DOOR VIEWER 97c b I, t , t s ) ,. 6 r d I· tf h a y e ·t y I / ·- J8 DAILY PILOT Critic- Nelson Rork~feller s a y s P r t• s I d tt n t Ca rt{' r 's move to r.-~ton• dtplomatic rt'lution .... With China was "nght" hut thut 1t wus "rusht.•d and poorly handled .. Ht- ~Jtd it flulffi lo pro· h •t:t the rntcrests or Taiwan. Sheriff's Daughter Nruned SELMER. Tenn !AP> The daughter of the la te S he riff Buford Pusser of "Walking Tall" movie> fame has b<'~un taktnl{ control or her father's estate. Dwana Pusser Alex ander celebrated her 18th birthday by signing dorume nts accepting responsibility for the f'state which has been involved an legal dis · pules since Pusser 's de· ath in an aulomobile ac· l'1denl m 1974 C HAN CELLOR De wey Wh1lknton r('. leased to Mrs Alex ander about $75,000. but retained control or about $110,000 Whll'h mety Ile ust>d to pay tuxes on Lhc> estate. Pusser was m a de famous by thl• 1973 mov ae "Walkmg Tall" which portrayed his explmts as the McNair y County sheriff dunng the 1960s. Two sequels have since hl'en filmed . a nd ha :. t-S late wai. prima rily made up of royalties from the fil ms. MRS. ALEXANDER'S g rundmother, Hele n Pusser, 70, originally was named guardian of the estate when her son died The court relieved ht.>r of the guardianship I wo years ugo when at was revealed she s pent a lmost $150.000 in a fruitless investigation into Pusser's death. Arter Pusser 's death, his daughter lived with her gra ndmothe r until gelling married The court late r or- d ere d the .l\etna I ns urance Co . whic h bonded Mrs. Pus!'cr. to repay the mont·y into the estate. Magazine Omiu Big PSAStory SAN DIEGO !AP) - Pacific Southwes t Airlines devote d 16 pages or its J anuary edl- ti o o or '"Califo rnia Magazine" to what are described as the major new$ stories of 1978. But ont> story il left out was the collision or a PSA jet and a s mall plane not far from PSA 's San Diego head· quarters Sept. 25, killing 144 people. An explanation was of· re red by .editor J ohn Johns. a n oftici'al •of East West Network Inc .• which publishe s m agazines for several airlines. "We are In this busl· ness and have stayed in it for 10 yea.rs because we are sensJUve lo the feellngs of our clients, the airlines," Johns said ln Loa Angeles. Thul"lday, Januaty 11 , 1111 CALIFORNIA I NATION BUI Would Permit Medical 'Pot' Use .. '*A".-rf SACRAMENTO IAPl -DoclOtl In ranter. Johnson aid he must vomit 1'H E BILL BY Sen . RoberL "I WANT TO stress this In no way : ~.IJ££E.~-~.:.:~ CaJ1rorru1 t'OuJd pr <'ribe marijuana for rtvf or • x hou ... at • tlm •. und Prr11ley, O· Riverside, and As · 111 the rorerunner ol an attempl to . ,-.:: ·lS 11-fE ;'.:Y:~ for medlcal allm•nt1 lnt'ludln1 th marijuana luves him almosL semblyman Her1chel Rosenthal. D· legaliie marijuana. l wouldn't 1up. . . 8 -.;:it~ « ... unctr and glaucoma u.nd •r 1 blll In without "any prob& m." Loa Angcle11, would create a st.ale port that," Presley said. ·A f ~:1:r:::·1l).'.': lrOduted . "To ~. the luuo Ii 1 moral one l& comm I slon tor a two· year pilot . t! A. '1. · ,......,: Ap~1n~w1th lM two I 11 latort It bttt r tor m@ to i utrer or WI.,~ ht period Th commls1don would have Four other states. Florida, {:r~f .. L"'N.~: ~ropo1ing m 4141Urt'I Tu tlday wa1 tie marijuana?'' Johnson usk{'d re· lo approve each specific case o( Louisiana, New Mexico a.nd Illinois, . w·. -r'd '·.~,.aA·~·: aul J o hnson , (I 23 year old porttra, t1aylnR hew 1 unt'Omforta· marijuana use. have abnllar laws. and those states ·. •~··~":~~4.cr.·~ R•vt'nl(k, man who hu llodackira ble with havm" w do nnylhtng 11-have trouble getting marijuana rrom . · · · · · :~:: i•O ..-:·:: ··:·: dtffH and ~•Y h ust>1 manJuuna leaal Presley, a rormer deputy sheriH in federal authorities. Rosenthal sa.id. ·. 'iJ " · : : illt'A&ully bf<'au or hli. •llnl' R1vers1de. said tl was Johnson who For that reason, the bill will. aJlow /·A~ ~,-,. ."<lF..: JohnlOO 111ty1 he con l'Ombat his helped convince him or the need to the state to obtain the marijuana ,.,... . ·.ff~ n · ., BECA E Off (111':MOTHEaAPY nausc• with unt or two mortJuuna le1tallze marijuana use for medlcul from state or federal narcotics :·: . .-; · . .'.().f:J'!'J "'·":::,,.·: lreatmtnl for thf di ea"e· a form or clfiltrtl~ treatment. authorities. ·-· • ;:) · 29 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU IN SOUTHERN . CALI FORNI A 7 IN ORANGE COUNTY Costa Mesa -(714) 646-0534 370 E . 17th Street Next to Ralphs El Toro ---: (714) 770-'J079 24346 Rockfield Boulevard Next to Vons on EI Toro Blvd. Huntington Beach -(714 > 963-5694 10044 Adams Avenue In the Albertson's Center At Brookhurst Garden Grove -(714 ) 638-1041 9747 Chapman Avenue In front of JC Penney's In the Garden Grove Mall La Habra ~ (213) 694-3765 1435 W. Whittier Boulevard In the AlbertsOhs-Longs Center Tustin -(714) 838-8970 522 E . First Street In Larwin Square Westminster -(714 > 894-0519 15252 Goldenwest Street Near Albertson's Coming Soon To: La Mirada: La Mirada Boulevard In the Gemco Center On Imperial Highway Costa Mesa: Bristol Street At Sunflower 3 Convenient locations to serve you Huntington Beach Store 10044 Adams Avenue at Brookhurst next to Albertsons Market• 963-5694 ----~ ADAMS 8 ~ ~~o~ a: ~ ATLANTA CD .J Westminster Store on Goldenwest between Bolsa and Edinger• (714) 894-0519 (next to Albertsons Market) BOLSA Costa Mesa Store 370 E. 17th Street • 646-0534 (next to Ralphs Market) c:i . w ul > ~ .J > c:D w i.p RALPHS < ... (!) ·MARKET z a: z -~ c( ( ·D t;; a: ::> ~ 0 ... z To celebrate our 9th anniversary, Great Earth Vitamin stores are offering tremendous savings on these 9 popular vitamins. Use the coupon to take advantage of these great values. • - VITAMIN VITAMIN LIVER VITAMIN c A E TABLETS VITAMIN VITAMIN POTASSIUM B-12 ZINC NIACIN B-6 GLUCONATE GLUCONATE 99t VITAMIN E., 400 i.u. 50 capsules 99t VITAMIN C, 500 mg with natural rose hips 100 tablets 99t VITAMIN A. 10,000 i. u. 100 capsules OPEN7DAYS Mon. thru Sat: 9:30 am to 6:00 pm Fridays: open till 7:00 pm Sundays: 11:00 am to 5:00 pm 99t lJVER TABLETS, 10 grain (Argentine Baby Beef, desiccated) 100 tablets , ~ NIACIN, 100 mg 200 tablets 99t VITAMIN 8-6, 50 mg 100 tablets 99t VITAMIN B-12, 100 mcg 200 tablets ~POTASSIUM GUJCONAlE. 586 mg 100 tablets ~ ZINC GU.JCONATE. 100 mg 100 tablets MASTER CHARGE. BANKAMERICARD. VISA QUALllY VITAMINS AT DOWN TO EARTii PRICES ••••••••••COUroN•••••••••• : ~ I GREAT EAR1JI VITAI\11N STORES I ~ : II 9th ANNIVERSARY SAi E 11 II II II II II II m I · 9 This coupon is good for the purchase of any of nine listed items for 99C each. II II .. Limit one coupon per customer. · II • Offer is good from January 11.1979 through January 21. 1979. II • , lat {>artldpatln only) 11. D f. _:II --·••••••....-mwafl ·••••• •• -...... • _ ..... _..._ 1 ""8 llllt ln~ ll\e , wou'd IN flltd loday. IOf ancUow eoa. l • s -~ d I· 1r h a y e :t y s . .. t ' t -8 I· ll i > ) r I' 1 ·Irvine f.DITION VOL. 72, NO. 11 , 3 SECTIONS, l8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · 'Your Hometown ally New8paper THURSDAY, JANUAAY 11, 1979 TEN CENTS Irvine Church Site Costs to Be Set Prlc" taas wlll bl-afrlxed to potential Jrvi church llH b the end ol thl month, an lrvtm· Company spok~man told Cih Council membel'1 this we k Dick CIJlDOfl, a tompany v1l't' president, eald pru~es will be act b.> an Independent appr~nacr, will consider property dt•vtlua lion caWMld by church con.strut' lion and should be leH costly than similar parctliJ purchued IO the past, Cannon 1 nnounctmt!nt umt> dur1n 1 port to th rounr1l by a community tusk forrt> appoint ed to study a n1l.abi1\ty or church land lo lht' city 1'hf' tuk forCf', Including lrvml' C.O reprt'senlut.lvP , hw. 1denhficd (our tks uvallabll• for ucqu1s1t1on over the ntxt 12 month~ .and 11 mort.• 1rhedullod for uvatlab1hty over the nl'xl five years The Cit>' Council rormed the APWI,...... Saging Goodbye Gov. George C. Wallace bids farewell to the Alabar:na Legislature Wednes day as he prepares to leave offlce next Monday after an unprecedented three terms as governor local Taxes Share Seen Diminished By PIOUPROSMARIN OI U. 0.1IJ Ptlol St.oft Irvine Mayor Bill Vardoulis' I contention lhat other cities share I he responsibility for housing Irvine industrial workers, because other cities receive more an property taxes from Irvine properties. raised questions among many taxpayers. They wanted to know how that C'an be. How, for example. does Vardoulis calculate that a city hke Anaheim will receive more property laxes from lhe Irvine In· dustrial Complex than Irvine will. 1 Related editorial, Page A6). According to county officials, Va rdoulis is right. Distribution of local property taxes is not handled as it once was. Proposition 13 and its im· plementing legislation, SB154, have revolutionized the manner in which taxes are redistributed. No longer can a city, for exam· pie. be considered '"rich" for the property taxes gamed from a property, such as an industrial complex, within its borders. Under the new system just into effect this year, property taxes countywide are pooled. From the one pool, county government dis· tributes shares to the various tax districts according to a com· plicated rormula based on rev· enues derived by districts in the pre· Proposition 13 era. Chuck Krueger, senior accoun· tant in lhe tax section or the Oran~e Countv Auditor's Office, <See TAX, Page A2> atudy fl"OUP ln September after area clernm~n ln(f'rred that Irvin~ Company, which owns most or the city's undeveloped land. hu been Insincere in com m1tmcnta to et Utde land for church development The group. lnrludmg Council Members Mary Ann Galdo and David Ills, launched u study re· garding the requirement for churches in Irvine, means for foundln~ them and lbe potential • for a !arge interfaith facility to be commonly shared by several religious organizations. In September, Roger Boal· man, an associate director or the Southern Callforrua Evangelistic Association, said only rour permanent church buildings cur· renlly serve Irvine's estimated 47 ,000 residents. Cannon told the council he saw no imbalance in church develop- ment. He said 12 sites already have been sold to church or· gaoizallons and the company has proposed 11 olhera. mostly in undeveloped residential areas. lo analyzing task rorce objec· lives, members reported to lhe council they hope to plnpoint church sites next to commercial development to take advantage or possible shared parking. A key objective is establish· ment of the interfaith center, they said, consisting or rive to seven church facilities clustered on one site. "The site chosen .. .is localed at ,University Drive and future Harvard Avenue,·· they report· ed.," Presently, there are seven to 10 religious organizations in· terested in this concept. .. Task rorce chairman the Rev. Ken Dunkelberger told council members the cooperative ven· (See CHURCHES, Page A2> U.S. Flag Burned Ami-shah Mob Riots in Iran City TEHRAN, Iran (AP> -A mob hauled down and burned the American flag today in front of the U.S. consulate in Shiraz, top- pled three statues of the shah and stormed the secret police headquarters, residents re· ported. Between two and eight people were killed and 10 lo 15 were wounded when agents of the secret police, SAVAK, opened fire lo defend themselves, the Shiraz residents said. The-incidents broke out as Prime Minister Shahpour Rakhtiar tried to win the support of Parliament of his newly in· stalled civilian ~overnment. In Washington, U.S. Secretary or State Cyrus R. Vance voiced strong support at a news con- ference for Bakhtlar's efforts and urged the Iranian milllary and other elements or the strife· torn county "lo find a way to work together." Shiraz residents, contacted by telephone from Tehran, said the violen<'e began after some 10,000 to 20,000 people gathered at a ci· ty square for an ll nti·shah rally. The crowd marched to the consulate, where they hauled down the U.S flag and burned it in the s treets . The dem - onstrators then demolished statues of the shah before al· tacking the secret police head· Brock Asks Disavowal quarters during the four-hour riot. In Tehran, Bakhtiar promised to stop selling oil to South Africa a nd Israel, fare "'unneeded foreigners" and Jet the religious leaders opposed to Shah Moham- med Reza Pahlavi and has W esternization program "supervise government ac· ttvit1es." Presenting his civihan cabinet to the lower house for a vote of confidence next week, Bakht1ar appealed for support to end lhe year-long political and economic turmoil generated by opposition to the shah"s autocratic rule. But he made no reference to the em· ·Billy Called Bigot WASHINGTON IAPl - Republican National Chairman Bill Brock today called Presl· dent Carter 's brother. BUly, a bigot and urged lhe president to publicly disavow bis younger brother's allegedly anti·Sernltlc remarks. Billy Carter, while accompa- nying a high-level Libyan del· egation on a tour of Georgia, has been criticized for such re· marks as '"There's a hell or a lot more Arabians than there is Jews" and for saying the United States should end its "hostility" toward Libya. Welfare Federation. which was reported to have said Billy was countering lbe president's Mid· dJe East peace efforts. Billy Is reported to have responded to a question about LI by a n support for terrorist groups by saying: "The Jewish media tears up the Arab coun· tries full lime, as you well know.'' The Li by an governm ent headed by Col. Moamar Khadafy has been criticized as a supporter or international ter- rorists. including the Palestine Liberation Organization and lhe Japanese Red Army and for his opposition to Carter's efforts to make peace between Egypt and Israel. Al the White House, press secretary Jody Powell replied that Billy Carter is a private citizen and does not speak ror the president. At a news conference today, Secret ary or State Cyrus R. Vance said he was not familiar with BilJy Carter's relationship with the Libyan delegation but said the State Department is "continuing to watch and ob· serve the situation" in Libya. battled ruler in bis speech. "Now t hat t he treasury is empty and the factories '\re idle. I beg you to endeavor w start them again," be said. Bakhliar said relations with the South African government would be reviewed and oil sales hailed be<:ause of that govern· mcnt's apartheid policy or racial segregation. Turning to rs rael, he said. "The Iranian nation has always shown its unity with the Arab brothers and has alwavs suo· ported the rights of the Pal· estinian people. Likethesaleofoil to South Africa, the sale of oil to Israel will re stopped.'" he said Felony Gun Law Backed SACRAMENTO <APl By unanimous vote, the s tale Senate today ap. proved a bill to bring the "use a gun, go to prison" law back to its full s trength after a state Supreme Court ruling. The vote was 39-0 on SB 149. s ponsored by the Senate Judiciary Commit tee. sending the bill to the Assembly. The state's high court. in the Tanner decision is· sue d l ast month , weakened the 1975 law mandating a prison sen• tence for anyone convicted or using a gun in certain felonies. Brock said he wa s not challenging Billy Carter's right to free speech and "we cannot legally contain the disgusting anti-Semitism that laces his re· marks." Added Brock: "We have yet to outlaw bigotry in the United States and when the bigot's opinions result in the satisfaction or the bigot's greed. we can't ex· peel him to put a rein on his tongue." Irvine Campus to Open Brock said "lo some extent, each of us is his brother's keeper," and asked President Carter to s peak out against Billy's actions. Billy Carter's remarks have dis pleased Georgia state of- ficials and incensed such groups as the American Jewis h Com mltlee and the Atlanta J ewish Saddleback College officials are expecting 1,500 students to begin classes Jan. 22 at the dis· trict 's new 2()-acre North Cam- pus site In Irvine. Dr . Edward Hart. assistant superintendent, said today re· cent rains have not delayed completion or instructional buildings but could push back schedule<! landscaping or the facility a\ Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. "Two instructional buildings will be ready to go when classes open." Hart said '·we may have a small problem with finishing the Ccentral l court area . but that won't i mpedc classes." Officials are registering stu· dents at a trailer placed on the North Campus. The trailer is be· ing used to keep students out of the consturuction area, Harl said. Originally scheduled to open last fall. thP lrvinP facility was delayed by heavy rains early in 1978. Then. the northern campu!> became a Propos1t1on 13 v1ct1m when officials were forced to cut back on the number or classe~ offered lhts spring. "We onginally planned for 32 faculty members." Hart said "We wound up with 11 or 12 because or budget constraints ... Thal cutback in faculty mcm· bers lead to a decision to out off <See CAMPUS, Page A2> Coast Irvine Mulls Limit On Attorney's Time Weather Patchy fog and low clouds late tonight through mid · morning Friday. Otherwise mostly sunny Friday with some high cloudiness. Lows tonight 44 lo 50. I-Ughs Friday 63 to 67. INSIDE TODAY A• the state of llowoii ap- proaches it• 20th bfrthday. government oJJ'idoU and ru· idenfa are wondering aloud whethf1' growth should ~ cur~d. Sa "GrO\OfflQ Poma" on Page Alf. l••ex t.IY-~ Al~ a ~7.' :::.-0 i: Mil*':........... ~ ......... ..., ,.,,... .... e= Al Mlltll.tt,lllMt M o-1t ....... ,}Mwt ~ Ct °'"'9 ~ •il t..:= E~ J J:=:-' ii'' =, M ........ ....,..._ ... ,..,,... .... Irvine City Attorney James Erickson ls working this week on a proposed ordinance lhat would prohibit individual City Council members from recelv· ing his aid in wording laws they'd Uke to Introduce. Ericklon was ordered by lhe council ln a 3·2 vote Tuesday night to draw up the new plan. posslbly for Introduction In two weeks. Mayor Bill Vardoulis called for t he action when he learned that Councllwoman Mary Ann Galdo bad asked Erickson to dralt an ordinance calling for anll·infiat1onary measures at cl· ly hall. Mrs. Galdo's request followed her return from a National League ol CiUet conference in St. Loul• where clty le.den trom tbn>ulbout lho nauon were atked by l>retldeot ~ ,upport Mll·lliDtU6n le MayorVanloull• It ........... that the city attorney -who re- cel vet approldmately 9100 an bour from the city -abould nol begin work on drafting laws un- :ess ordered by a CQuncil ma· jority. Councilman Larry Agran joined Mrs. Galdo lo voting against the move. He said It would be unfalr to council mem· bers unfamiliar with drafting law proposal•. He and Coun· cllman David Sills ~re the only attorneys on the panel. Silla, however, joined the mayor and Councilman Arthur Anthony in the new direction. He Indicated the city currently can· not arrord to pay ror such leglelative counseling. SOl!l'IJ COASI' PL4Z4 J'IEWED South Cout Plaia Is "one bit showroom aren-a" ln lanuary. Storie. and pictures detail tMI apeelal "Parade of Yalu•" ln today'• Dally Pilot. 'l'urn to P11eA1. \ s -~ d I· •f h a )' e s '· t \ t s I· 1l ) ill DAILY PILOT Thul"9fty, Janua-'X I 1, 1111 RV Status Changed In Irvine A re<'l'\l4lllo1utl vfhlt If! dooln'l nl'c.uanly havt' lo be 84 1ndM-s wtdo to bit' N n ldttr«t an M·lnch wldt" v~hkle an Irvin FQllowlnte four m unlba of i.t udy, th<' •t•ab lnai of anti· r~t'rHIJonal vfl\!t'k· rompl•6 , t•ounte r t'Ompla•nta by RV owners •nd ev n i;omt aid pant>l to . 1d1~ p m•I mt' ur . men~. loo c1ly \.'Ouoc1I •>111 an 84-lnch·wlde RV Cln ht-88 lnt'b wide Councllmen ununlmoua.Jy ap.. proved tbe antroductton or an or dlnance anwndment m kint tM two lnrh u llowancc Tueaday nag ht. The omendment rolluws ap prov al ol Wl ordinance o yeu ago restricting the width or r~crealiooal vehk les parked on c1ly streets to 84 Inches. T ickets have been Issued. city officials say, on a "com plwnt only" basis and every pohcc of ricer in the field carries a tape· measure to determine aclual ve hicle width. Part or the problem. council • members learned, ls lhal resi· dents purchasing vehicles described in sales literature as 84 inches wide orten come home with a truck a little bit wider ortcn 8S.5 mches wide. Under the year-old ordinance. the vehicle 1s s ubject to a park· 1ng citation Neighbors disencha nted with a prolife ration of vehicles on some streets have even insisted that s ide-view mirrors make the \·ans or mini-homes even wider. The council 's amendment, when given final approval next month, will allow mirrors in ad· dllion to the vehicle width. But council members still aren 't l'!u r e wh a t the con troversial RV restriction will do to s afety and traffic situations. They requested the city staff to report back 60 days after the law's errect1ve date regarding how m any more RVs are parked on rlty streets instead of In rent cd storage areas. Wayne-Paces Gal,l Bllllkhr Operation LOS ANGEL~ <AP> -Actor John Wayne of Newport Beach has checked Into the UCLA Medical Cent.er for a eall blad· der operation, his office said lo· day. The 71-year-old Wayne, who underwent open-heart surgery In Boston last April, wtll have tbe operation Friday or Monday, said Tom Kane, an executive with Wayne 's Batjac Produc· ttons Ka ne described Wayne as In good spirits and said the veteran actor spent part of Wednesday "walking around Weslwood talk· mg lo people before he went in." Kane said Wayne had been bothered for 80me lime by a gall bladder condition but said doc· tors had waited until he re- t•upcrat.ed from the heart sur- gery before scheduling the ope ration. "Everything is go now," said Kane ··nc's strong enough now. so t hey're going to go ahead Wlth 1t .. Home Burglarized For $1,580 Loot A burglar used a credit card Wednesday to slip a lock on a slid· ing gla88 door at an Irvine home. the n s tole $1,580 worth of valuables, police said today. Phil RJehle, 35, told police the burglar look a stereo set, a color television set , a man's watch, a ~mm camera, a reel·to·reel tape recorder and a 1971 Cal Stlrte Fullerton clu1 rin1 from hll home al 14741SweetySt . DAILY PILOT n.-r.r.::- ~~~4.:.TJ:- OW::.,";.!:n.. .... ~-- - Bawhwald Bu1t1p H umorist Art Duch\\ aid «lcfti and artist Leroy Neiman shed their ja ckets as lh«y do " number on the danct> floor al a New York d1:-<·o The <K'cas ion was a 25th an· niversary party ror Pia.) hoy maf!:JZrne. From Pa9e A I TAX DISTRIBUTION. • • explained how . 1t works. Property tax(':; unde r Propo:-.1 lion 13 amount to one pe rcent of the 197S.76 market value or pro perty. Thrre are adJUSlm<'nh lo lhat value of two percent per ~ 1•;11· for inflation. und ut n.•a!>sttssnw nt v3lue for propt'rty rc•M>ld In addJlion. homC'm\m•rs puv taxc:. to ret1 r<· bonds approvu l within their tux1ng d1:-.t ric h berore July l, 1978 Only lhl· ftr"il category or property lax-the• one percent basic lax 1s pooled c•oun tywide. Bond taxes are collt!c:l1.'<.I and al located only local I y. Of the buic properly taXC's, .!p portioned among all 8li county school districts and 170 c1tlC's and special dislncts. 62 percent got•s to the schools and the remain1ni.: 38 per cent lolhe cilies and Sp<:(·1al districts Each or the cities and SJ)('('lal districts receives a share of lht.· :18 percent allocation, equol lo 1ht• percentage or lotal county , c·1ly and special district properly tax es it averaged over the lui.t thn:t· years. This percentage is called a loc;tl agency revenue factor. The same applies ror school d1~ lricls within their 62 percent <.11 location. The significance of lhib can ht!· demonstrated by the cxamph: or what happens to the pro perty tax es or a single l<JXIOg d1!>trJC:l, !>U<'h us the Cityoflrv1nc . Under the distribution formula Irvine taxpayers are included with all other county tuxpayt•rs nn an equaJ bas is to fund ull l'ount.,. school district.ti, c1t1l'S, i.pcl·1al districts and the county gcOC'rnl lund. The local agency revenue fJc• tor for Irvine !which> delcrm1m·i-. Water Costs Going Up i11 lroineArea When they get th('ir n€'w bills next month, Irvine re'i1denb. will discover it's costins them ahtchl· ly more lo drink water, wwih d1she1 and clothes, and bathe. Directors of the Jrvlne Ranch Water District this month hlkod the price of water by a penny per hundred cubic fo e t <748 1allons> Since tbe typical r esident of the dlstrtct usea 1,500 cubic ft-et of water per month, his bill wUI be 15 cent.a htaher than u11uol, or $5.85 a month. The Increase became effective> Monday tor both treated a nd un· treated wateT. Tht board cited o S5 per acre loot wholesale rato Increase •m· poeed ~ tho MetropoUtan Water Dtatrlct of Southern Callfomla aa the re110n tor the lncreaeo. • the percentage of property taxes t·o llectcd from a ll agencies throughQul the county I is about 0 11044. To figure lrvtn<''s tax ret4urn from. i-.ay. a $50 million property w11 h1n its b1J rd(•rs . seve ral c al<·u lat1oni. urc.· neC'essury. Th(• property ll) taxed at one pt·1 cent, yielding $500,000. Thal ha lf million dollars is in a coun· tvw1dt> pool Ofthal. 38 percent.or $100.000 I!> shared by all 170 cities ll nd s pecial districts, according lo their revenue factors. Multiplying Sl00,000 by Irvine's rev~nuP factor yields tl tax into the t•1ty general fundof$836. 01 her districts with greater rt"vcn ue faclors get a bigger pie~e of tax pie from that same lrvme property, then. than does Irvine 1ti-.<>lf a radically dirrerent tax dis tribution scheme from pre· ProPOsllion 13days. 13duys · For example. the city of Anaheim, with a revenue faclorof 0 0258, receivea nearlv six times lh<' the property taxes off Irvine properties than does Irvine. On the same $50 million property, Anaheim gel8 $4,902. Of coucse, the city of Irvine gets 1lB share of Anaheim property tuxes , and the same share of ~·very other city or s pecial taxing d1:-.t rid Ac·t·ord1ng lo th e co u nty auditor, no dlslriel is gelling pro· portlonately more than it has lw cn getting under the old s ysl1.•m The money is JUSl being s huffled around differently. liul ~ome public offic1al1>, such us Irvine's Vardoulis, see a vast "hi losoph.ical <hfference. Smee Irvine properties actuaJly rirt• ht'ncfiting other cities more than lrvinl', aL least as far as property tax. Vardoulis main· tains that other cities should share the reirponsibilities as· sociated with indu11try . For example, regional housing ollocutlon plans, wh ich attempt lo assign responsibility to cities fo r providing housing for its workers, view a city with weighty industry as having a weighty housing rcspons1 blli ty v araouha feels responsibility for boualng should be shared in some way according to tax benefit.a that accrue to the variou.<. dlstrlcll in Orange County, on a re•lonal basis. Of course, Proposition 13 re vamped only the manner in which property taxet are di!t.ribut.ed. :.'.>ther ~t)' benetlll or de· vclopm«!nt, auch as tale. taxes. pormlU andthellke, favor the city or dlttnct In which the de· vclopmenl It bu1ll. f',.._P.,,eAJ CHURCHES • • I OAILV PILOT • Trustees Ask Funds Irvine Board Files Grant Needs Jrvln• achoot board members s ubmitted applications for federal grants Wednesday to support programs lnvolvtng han- dlc apped students , cons umer education and library research. But they rejected a proposal lo establWt a sort or hatrway house ror youths whose problems at home are so sertoua they would be better off livlna elsewhere. Bruce Givner. district assis· tant superintendent in charge or special programs, suggested tbe board apply for $78,510 unde r a federal program to support ex- perimental education. The plan for an "Irvine Group Home" would have provided housing for an estimated 15 troubled adolescents over the first year. In addlUon, some 75 families would be Included ln a part nL education proaram to hf'l p them cope with their children. In 11iluutlons wh<•rc reconcllia· lion with the family wus decided imposs ible, tho dl!'trll'l would itl· tempt lo pluee Aludcnls In foslor homea 1'hl11 would t>e dont· with the coopc.·rallon find 11pprov11l of tht• 11111 urul pnrent s 'l'IW rmlpOROI Wltll lo t11rf' 1wo hou11t!p11rt'nls u1 n r1•11t1•cl fuc·11l tv. plu11 u et11uuu•h1 r, an od n1111IAt rator nnd o tutor Glvner 11old u 1llHlril'I "11udy t•onl'lud1'(J 1lwr1• If.I u ,1trour1 or youths "whose home 1Jituationa curre ntly are at a point where s upp0rt and guidance ls nonexi&- tent." The unhappy hom e life, Glvner s aid, results In truancy, poor grades and attitudes, an· llsoclal behavior and crime. The school board, though sup. portlve ol the concept, decided the district was the improper agency to pu~ue the proaram. Trustees dire c ted ad · ministrators to contact county agencies to take leadership in the matteT. The board approved grant ap- plications in other areas, to the U.S. Depa rtment of Health. Education and Welfare, totaling about $264,000. The handicapped students pro- gram would use computers to h e lp t e a c h r eading and mathe matics to the learning handicapped. Student.a would be given com· puteritcd instruction a nd problems d isplayed on a t.elevlalon acreen. About 80 handicapped elemen· tary. middle and high school slu· dents would participate. The dis· trict 's two-way television ayste m would allow many ot them to use computer lnstruc· tion at the same time. The budget for the first year Is $129,000. Sub6equent granL<t are bema sought to support two ad dltlonaJ ycura. Two other programs ror which the board seeks grants a lso use computers . District residents would be a lerted lo promptness, quality. low complaint rates a nd at· tllude1 ol buslnesses ln the com· munlty olfertng home services. Plumbers, electricians. pest extermlnalors. carpet cleaners. bulldlne contractors and landscape architects would tw amone the service occupation~ rated by the computer. Computer termlnaJs would be placed al libraries, s hoppmg centers, schools and se nior citizen centers in eight city loca· tlons. People will be able to re quest lnformatfon on numerous topics related lo home main· tenance, repair and improve-· ment. Besides the $96,000 grant soueht from HEW. the program would be paid for by a district contrlbutton of $19,000 and a Control Data Corp. contribution of $173,000 In computer equip menl. The t hird grant, of $39,750, would train school librarian:-.. students a nd residents to UM• electronic bibliographic record systems. Housing Concept OK'd Wunty Moves TOUJard Low.income Program A proposal expected to lead to a ffordable housing for familiel> making less than $10.000 annual- ly was approved in principle Wednesday by the Orange Coun· ty Board of Supervisors. The homc11 would sell for S25,000 or less or rent for no more than $210 monthly. accord· ing to formulae contained in the housing clemt.•nl bt!ing studied ror 1nclus1on 1n the county's general pl::in The housing element also 1s expected to provide <1ffordable hous ing ror mode rate income fa.milies -those earning between $10,000 and $16,000 an· nually, dependln1 on family site. Ho using for those fa milies should cost no more than $40,000 to purchase or $330 monthly lo rent Final action on the housing element. required by stale law, is anticipated by Jan. 24. The document Is supposed to assure adequate available hous· ing ror low and moder ate In- com e fammes in a county where the average resale price or a house is $70.000 and the average new home costs St 13,000. To induce lower -cost housing the new document would force developers to provide 25 percent or such housing units in a new development to take advantage of county administrative review shortcuts that would save them money. Also included are provisions ror higher density conslruction and relaxation of some building standards for projects providJng afforda ble housing. The element also carries coun- ty pledges to agg r essive ly purs ue government grant pro· gr ams lo aid in construction of new affordable housing or n · habilitallon of existing lowt"r cost homes. Noting that the county·s ruturl' economy might be affect ed because employees in both th•· private and public sector can ·1 afford housing, the element abo calls ror pnvate ousines!> an<l in dustry lo help ease the hou:.111~ probl e m s of their own l'mployees. Planners to Meet The Irvine Planning Com mission la expected to concludl' a lengthy series of bearings on municipal plans to meet housing needs when it gathers tonight The commiss ion meets at 7 30 p m atCity lJall .17200Jambort.•t· Blvd. January White's Sale LA-z-aov® SAVE ON EVERYTHING IN STOCK SAYE s40 •eci. $339 Now 5299 HUNDREDS OF CHAIRS ON ,, .. SALE •eci-$349 Now 5289 FRll 111-clate Dtll•ery SAYE '$68 WHITE'S LA·Z·IOY COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO HIE. 17th It. a.2 Mer,U.rtte Pky. CA<rott from ltetpft1, C2 btoc;lls ~ of South Eost -MWl to Mtri. C.MMttt) t.nll pe1t Volvo OHier) . M2.ae51 415-5902 Mon . ..,rt.1M Mon.·frt. 1M l.t.10.• a.t.1CM CtoNd luftd•J CtoMd lurid•r • • ·- CALIFORNIA N~Spaceman Jared Reisman. 5, who because of severe allergy problems has been forced lo wear spaceman-like gear to purify the air he breathes. enjoys a new toy with mother, APW .......... Marlene. The Carmichael youth left today for Denver ~here he will undergo tests to dete rman<' the cause of has problems. Snit Hits Coast Policy Homeowners Chal lenge Public Access Rul~ LOS ANGELES <AP> Actor Burgess Meredith is among those speaking out in a court action that challenges ~·pohcy requiring shoreline owners to allow public access lo their land before being allowed building and improvement permits. The action. fllt'd in Los Angeles Superior Court, claims the s tate Coastal Commission's policy 1s unconst1tut1onal because it deprives landowners without adquately compeMating them. Although it 1s not the rirst lime the poUcy has bee n chaUenged. the s uit by lhe Pacific Legal Foundation ;.ind the California Coastal Council is Rain Ca~es Rockslides By The Associated Press I /\ warm Pacific !>lorm poured as much as five in· chcl> of ram on areas or northern California in 14 hours. c·uus1ni:: hous e flooding and highway rockslides in Marin County. Rockslidt>s temporarily closed a lane along parts of the two-lane Luca!> Valley Road in Nicasio, sheriff's dl'put1cs s<1id Streel'i und bal>ements Judges Rappe d o n .Lobbying LOS ANGELES <AP> The co unt y 's municipal judges have ' i llegally paid an outside law firm $52,88.5 to lobby for th e m . say s Supervisor Ke nne th Hahn, adding that no county funds will be used to pay the bills. were flooded in other areas or the county, in· eluding Mill Valley, and arC'as of Tam Valley at Camino Alto Road. the deputies said. THE COUNTY r e- cei vcd four inches of rain in less than 14 hours by 6 a.m .. weather of· f1cials said. Sheller Cove 1n northwestern California received more than five inches in the same period. ElseWhere In the San Francisco Bay Area a combination of hig h tides and r:.iln caused tideland floods. The warm ·winded rains also fell on usually s now.prone areas a l high altitudes in the Sierra Nevada. Pre- da wn tempe ratures were in lhe 30s along In· lerstate 8> through Don· ner Pass and Blue Can- yon where rains were- the first to question the requirement on a statewide basts. Me redith and 10 other homeowners riled declarations in the suit The pla>nUlfs s a•d ;n the sWl filed [sday that they want court ordt•red gwdellnes efining the coastal comm1ss1on 's authority to require public acrl'SS to private pro1>erty The foundation t!> a coni.ervat1ve statewide le~a l group, while th<' council represents about 6.000 California property owners. Judges can hire out· side legal counsel only with the approval of the Board of Supervisors, which lhe Judges raued to obtaln before retain· ing the firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutc her, Hahn to ld reporters Wednesday. also heavy. Rain also hil __. ... ,, ..... According to the supervisor. the county auditor rl'lmbursed the judges, who hid the legal fees among expenses from the various 24 Municipal Court dis - trict&. The expenses list· ed were for such things as travel and expert wit· ness fees, Hahn udded. , ski resorts in the Tahoe- area. SANTAANA 2911 SO. •STOL .............. c... ......... , ... w ,.....,. ................ . 55.6-8217 " nu.t.y, January 11 1979 DAILY PILOT A 5 Anti-busing Backed Measure Would R estrict Courts ... SACRAMENTO (API -Another measure to reatrict the power of state courts to order schools to Integrate has begun to move through the Legislature. and supporters think It will pass this time. The constitutional amendment, aimed prtmaril¥ at overturning Los Angeles' mandatory busing program, was sent to the Senate floor Wednesday by the upper house's Education Com· mittee. The 10·1 vote came despite a plea from the panel 's onl ~ black member. Sen. Diane Watson, D·Los Angeles. to kill it. SENATOR S have twice approved simlJar measures by the same author. Sen. Alan Rob· bins. D·Van Nuys, since 1977. But both amend· ments <tied in the As· sembly. This year. supporters are relying on the fear of many Los Angeles· area residents that the Los Angeles plan win spread to nearby dis· tricls. They say this fear s hould give them the votes needed to get the a mendment out of the Assembly Judiciary Committee. ats stum· bling block in past years. ir approved by t he Legislature. the measure would go on the ballot in 1980 for voter consideration. THE amendment. SCA 2, would overturn the Los Angeles pro· gram and some others by requiring state courts to use the standards of the U.S. Supreme Court in deciding whether to orde r integration. But there is question whether even that re· quirement would have a n impact 1n Los Angeles. which began a tember. must eliminate segrega· districts should be r.· T h e Ca I i f o r n i a lion regardless of cause. quired to integral~ Ollly Supreme Court has said The fed er a I h 1 g h 1( there is evidence ol in· that school dis tricts court. less strict. says tentlonal segregatao·n JANUARY CLEARANCE by f!T~, All Camille by Thomasv11 1 .. reduced dunng our January Clearance -this includes living room, d1n1ng room and bedroom furniture. Shown. Elegant d1n1ng room furniture reflee11ng the charm. grace. and splendOf ol the French court of Louis XV. Tablo. chairs .and tarot.' China We, $lS f S.OO ' I ntenor designs by: Dick Metteer Polly Dodds Hitchcock Morgan AS 1.0 Hundreds of other items drastically reduced lor this sale' DICK METTEER Fine f~urnishings & 1 nterior Design 1727 Westchlf Dnve. Newport Beach • 646-1678 Open 9-5.30 • Clo~d Sunday Even1nqs Bv Aooo1111m~n1 massive school busing , __________________________ _. program l ast Sep WISTMINSTER I IJJI llACH R YD. ....... c.e. ....... " ,..; ...... ,.,...WM.,..., ... ,.. .......... .. 193-7546 • ' •, • s .. ~ II I• ( h a y e l v s ·. t l l s ) Orang Coo•• D•llY Pilot Editorial P!MJ.e ............................................................. Thurw1y, J1nu1ry \ '· l97i Rober1 N Weed/Publisher a..rtwra Krelblch/Edltorlel Paioe Editor H ousing Pro b lem Shou l d Be Shared With tht• po su~c of Pn po 1t1on l:l ond a nrw mt'lhod or dlstl'abuUn1ot J.U't>JK!rty lax rt•HmUC"'>. t•thc.-~ In Cahfonu no lwlg a· •M'l • 1-uuil)' bC' oof at dm·cUy from nch 1u-op l't llt'l\ \\llhrn thl•lf boundunl' l 'nd<'t 11nplc•rncnt1~ lc1<tbla11on. SBt:W. the countv d1stnbuh-:-lht• r<'VC¥('" to t•1ly, sc-hool. watt-r nd special dist ru•b.. l>.tsl·cJ 1111 J t ompht•utt-d formulu to dl'lt-rmant• t·.1t•h ,..nt1t' ·, ,h,1n· 1-:;.ich d1 ... 1 rlt't n'l't'I\ l'"' J six«· •fwd pcrcenlase of the lutul propcrt\ tJx pie. 11rt''P\'l'tt\l' of munlcap I or other houndura~s Foa t'\Jmplt'. tht• ""-.km pc•rm1h .i C'lty uch t11' i\nutw1m tu ht•m•fll fmm prupt•rh t<nt!s generated by In lr\t· 111tlu,trrnt dt•Hln11me nt Of l'OtH''l!.e , Irvine alw twrwflt.., from Anuhc1m pr·oix·rt" law' Mnci? revenue foc:- to1 S Ufl' <.iJI l'Ompult'<i of( lht• '\<tOW plC' A point .1hout th1.., thJl 11 'uu.· ~ta~or Bill Vardouhs nt.11\t>i. and 11 i:.t•cms 'ahd 1s t h.11 1f benefits from the wt•ulth or l0<·ul propt•rty tm~c·s •Ht· tu ht! felt countywide. tht-n <•ny r<'~pons1ballt1eii. ..,..,~uml•d with that wealth ltl-.t.·wtio.l· bhould bt• shurcd In parti<.·ul:ir. Vt1rdouhb 1s c·ont'crned about the feel - 111~ of rc.1ouonul ph.1nnen, that dt1es with rich industrial propt•rties ought to be respons ible for 7.oning decisions providing housinJ! f'or industria l workers The imJX•ndmR development of the Irvine Industrial ('omolt•x Eus l. and of lar~<.· tomme r cial ventur('s planrtl'cl, t•unws lhc n•::.J>0nsibil1ty tu pl1:10 hous ing for \\Or'kt•r:- Bt'CUUSl' some of lht.' b<.·m·fils of Irvine mdu~try. throui.(h clt slributinn of vroperty Laxes. a r e s hared <.·nunty w1d<• Varuoulls feels ttw responsibtlites ou~ht to lw s han•d to som e..• extl•nt as we ll It 's a thought worth ponderm~. Is the burden being thrus t on lht· t·1ty of hw me really a fair or equitable ont•'' Planning Challe nge The resignation of Irvine's planning director. Eddie Peabody Jr .. was the third in that city in the fi ve years that the job has bee n around to resign fro m . Irvine's two other plunning directors lasted only u yt•ar ee:1ch. Ccrt:.iinl y a rapidly growing city like Irvine. which is 1n u sense on the leading edge of the experimental model <'ommunilies. presents challen~es to planning. But by now tht· r1ly manager and the City Council ..;hould havl' ht•t•n able to find someone equal to those r hi.tll cngt•s w ho will st<.iy around lo work on them. If tlw <liret'lors have been able men. then something l'be dt•miy is wrong, he 1t the working conditions. the sal~1 ry. or tht· assumptions under which the men took the job C hungmg ph1losoph1es and ne w assumptions brought h~· tt ~h<.inged cast of characters on the council may help t·xpla111 the more than usually cphemerat quality of lht! Job of lrvint• planning dir('{'tOr . Thl' council, whose ma.1ority a sked Peabody to quit. might wei~h carefully the qu<.ilitic~ it wants in a new pl<.inning director Administrative ability. held by the majority as the quality it most wants to abide in the director, is a useful. • necessary component. Hut a planning director needs to be more than an able lackey to a council's political decisions. He has to be con- fident enough in his ability and in his profession to be an expert and guiding shaper of the planning policy the council will rpake. lie should have the intelligence to know when to stand his guns on the firm battlements of sound planning principles, and the creativity to know whe n to vary from them . And the City Council mus t give him enough latitude to exercise his imagination and problem-solv ing capabilities. &nsible D e cision Three cheers and lifeliml' passes to the volley ba ll court for members of the Irvine Community Serv1ct·s Commission who bucked city policy a nd retained th<• namt• of Pres ll•y Park. Presley. named not for the s inger but for the de - vclopl'r of thl' park. Randall Presley, was the choice of homeowners who u se th<' neig hborhood vestpocket g re<:>nspace Caty planning a1dcs not<.-d recently I hat city policy prost·r ibcs the nnming of parks a fte r people. a nd Jobbll'cJ for a chan~c The mayor. too, lightly pressured for o new name . Looking at the list of suggestions f•ompiled for \he commissioners· benefit. we're please..~ to no end that they stuck with the estimable Presley Park. It 's just as good a name as Lollipop Park or Mork's Mountuin. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those ot the Daily Piiot Other views e•pressed on this page are those of their authors and .artists. Reader comment Is invited Address The Daily Pilot, po. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd I Fe m i nini t y ByLM.BOYO These schola~ who make a study or the maaculinlty- remlnlruty rattos Of men and ""omen contend that girls arc at their most feminine wh('n tn the eighth arad~. They're N-portedly mott m"8cullne ll\ their mfddle college yeurs. And lhey ther aft.er ~me more and m0tt f emlnlnt u they grow older Item No. S82C In our Love De ar Gloom y 6 H the San Clemente golf course rupturn n tho Hrth At(' ('Ull,t'd from hoavx bulldo:U • "ould you hll tb nauln11 dim ••o f'luuru or Mn" J .V. and Wnr mun s file on divorce ls the report that in the Malabar region of lodla • woman can throw out a husband simply by leaving hit s~ outside the door That·~ It, pal. Take a walk Mary Pickford starred In mor ~ than 2(Jq motion pk· tures between 1909 and 1933. Out of that many you'd think there'd be a rcw ishe'd reaard H wlM~ra. Evidently not, thou1h. She claimed she never mndo o film t1b1 llked. Q. "Why•• t}le llttle. llo•er referred lo as t.he p1nkyf" A. Coinc" frpm the Dutch •·pfnkJe" nuuu:)lna euctly that, lillla nn11er. That tort or thief w.., make1 off with tht most money per offenu on th • Av r8f10 ia lht ~omputor (!rlmtn~I. Known lottet to date whuetn tomputer pro- arama have beee ~banctd to •ipbon ott tuDda amount to toU0.000 per cue. H~ dO YoU 1ccou.nt for the fact that twice u many peo. pte In their 20I u tn lbelr.,. ere ltrt·h•ndf!!d1 I Devious Drug Endorsement WA~HIN01'0N In the public 1"1 laUon.t Jame. an un eoHclled obJ~tlve eodonement of th cUcnt's product ill a pearl 11( 1rHt price. And wbUe 11uch t•ndort1l'm nUs. like pe1rls. can occur n11turally. the cultured HHi~ty ls far more prevalent. Scratch uo objective endonc- . ment and you'll eencrally frnd 1t wu1 c .. refully culUvat.c..>d by a nack Ont partlt•ululy errecllvl' gimmick used by coroorutc im-~•tt• l)ulld •r$ ti. an ·'€.'<luca lloo<.11 cam pai1n" that ii\ i.u ppo-.edl y RJ)Onsored as u publi c liCrv 1n· but which. when properl y handled. re· ault11 in favorable pubUclty for the com· pany's product. The carefully selec ted e• perts who are persuaded to take part in the educahonal campaign can wind Mailbox up 111 wiwilllng s hills for the apoMOr 'a merchandll4!. A CLASSIC example or the technique was ~'Cently present· ed by Roche Laboratories. maker of the tranqulllzlng drug Valium. With some 3 billion of the mood-alt~ring pills prescribed each year. Valium Is not onJy America's most popular ore· scribed tranquilizer. it's ru and away Roche's most popular prescription drug. Roche grosses a quarter-billion dollars a year from Valium. more than half of the ~mpany's total sales. l Valium and other benzodiazepine tranquilizers en· joy an excellent reputation f?r effectiveness and safety. But there is growing concern that the drugs are being misused. FOR EXAMPLE, Valium can be extremely dangerous when taken In combination with alcohol. According to es timates by the National lnslitute on Drug Abuse. Valium by ltaell or mixed with alcohol or some other drug accounted for 54.400 cmercency room vlalte and 900 dealhl between May 1976 and April im. Apparently worried about the increase ln unfavorable public•· ty ror their ~ money-maker. Roche executives decided to s ponsor a nationwide educa- tional Pr:oJram on stress. aimed at physicians and the general public. Although the program was billed as tot.ally objective. ou1 special investigator DaVld Zimmerman concluded that lhe program has a definite lilt toward the use or drugs to treat stress. AND ntOUGH Roche's finan- cial backing of lhe educational program is disclosed on promo- tiona l literature sent to medical writers. there is no mention of the ract that the company manufactures a drug that is used to treat stress. Roche's role is further ob· s c u red by the us e of in- termcdtarielS lo run the educat· tlonjil cumpalgn. The program WllS "developed 3nd S)ro<JUce<f" by Health Leaming Systems. n Bloomnetd. N.J .• company that speclallzcs in such things. Thus It was Health Leamlns Systems. not Roche. that appeared lo bt: running the show. The company mana1ed to ob- tain a prestigious Institutional sponsor ror the nationwide cam- paign -Corne ll University Medical College One of the promotional items mailed to doctors waa a cassette recording or Dr. Theodorl.' Coope r, dean or the medical school. being interviewed by Edwin Newman. Valium la men- ti oned seven times and benzod1azepine six times on the tape. No other drug ls mentioned byname. DR. COOPER said he used the trade name Valium because "convensatlonally" Valium has come to stand ror all such drugs. He was aware that several other firms produce rival brands or benzodia~epines. and said he would have been careful 10 "mention everybody's product once·· had he realized that men· 11onini? only Valium would arouse susp1c1on . Cooper is contradicted by om· of his assistant deans. Stephen Scheidt. who admitted he was ··surprised" to hear the frequent favorable mention of Valium on the Roche-Onanced tape. ·-rve made 1l clear that <these pro. ~ram s 1 s hould be lart?ely altru1sl1(', with a mild bit of self. interest." he said. HOWEVER. in the program materials so far sent out to JOUrnahsts and doctors by llLS, Va li um •~ the o nl y beniod1azepine mentioned by name and us ually the ref crcnc1.• is favorable. Yet an llL..l'.i offi cial insisted that Roche had no control over the material it was paying for "The comparucs lhat put up th(• money for our programs never see the copy:· he told Zimmerman. Yes. Virginia. there is a Santa Claus . lie wC'ars three-piece :.u1ts and works tn a corporate board room /\ny endorsements he gets are objective and un· •'>Olicttcd. and have nothing to do with th•• toy-. he gives away. Teacher Pay Not Meeting Living Costs To the Editor The letter lo the editor in Sun- day ·s pupcr from a parent states a general dissatisfaction and lack of respect for teachers. I am a teacher who loves children and enjoys teaching. yet 1t is a con,slant distraction from lhe job to be concerned constantly wtth severe financial problems. Th(• cost of living 1s going up and President Carter says be happy with a 7 percent increa!le. Most of us would be happy, very happy, with 8 bu1lt·tn cost or liv Ing increase. but our salaries are frozen at June's level. Last year I nxelved a 2 percent tn· crease. Ev ·ry year teachers earn less. WE LOVE our children loo nnd want to fC'cd and educate them. Why should teachers and their lamrnes bear the financial burden or Proposition 18? Does that mother realize thot with a master's degree, 50 uniL'i beyond the master's and 18 years of ex- perience a teacher earns, only $21.000? That's not mut'h of a salary for a professional persofi ot the peak of his financial life. A teacher at the top of the 1rnlary schedule does not qualify for tbe cheape11t home in Orange County Also. we do our own t.yp. tna. dlttnlng. gradlna. research, teafton planning etc. l have not now nor ever had an al<te. T . WILSON A•••IPoHrw To LM Editor: The lucst drive by our tmperlaJ Prcaldrnt to ~rovlde Amerlcian support for a 1n1 ol Communl.1t butchers w Ue at the umc Umc withdrawing ftupfort for our pro·wcatern. nnt -communis t frlcndis on Taiwan seemJ to ~ but a step elons Ute path where Rhodesia, lr1n. and Nlcaraauo are current cuualttca to our ubysmal foretgn policy ___ carter· _dec:lslon further und r co the V'llt lnflutncc or the-comnaunlll Ideology In •w 1hina1on. D.C. Ills pretense of ~harnp on of human rlghUI" t"~pora: In 1 ~loud ~f opium !\moke and dried l>lood and tears from GO mtlhon Innocent vlctinu of the t'Ommumat conqutit tn Aaln WllAT conceeaton. did Carter osk for In return ror our recoinltlon 't ApparenOy nOM or we would bHe bHrd about them. • 11:.is Carter forAO tll'n Hell China ·s part m the ai::i::rcss1on m Korea ;.ind lhl' slaughter 1n South E~ust Ahia? Certainly not. Dec. 15, 1978 was another day of willful surrender. We can only hope now that the new American Conservative Movement is strong enough to force Congress to r<'new its responsibility as the conscience of America. W. SPENCER M /\ RQUIS P•rntl• Appallftl To the FAitor: /\s parenL'I of o child nttendlng Fountain Valley High School. "'c 're appalled ot the actions of the teachers tn the pre!.ent chspute. Why ls classroom timC' heini:: used to prei;t•nt the bl'l ll'fs of th<' teachers? Why are tcur h('rs l~lling students that truancy 1s at'ceplabk during the strlkc :1ml will go without con11cqu<·nt·c1f' Why ar<' s tud ents b ei ng e ncourag<.>d not to <'OOr>l'rtttc with the 1:1ub8litutc teacherR? THE ~IT1.JATION could I><' used as u leammi:: experi<'nl'•' for stud<>nts were both sides of lhe is~ue discussed. The colltrtlvc bargaining pro('cs:c and arbltration arc a way of Amertcan Id e. but ··brolnwash tn~" la not. 1'o c ompound muttcn . thc!ic• statements have been madr for weeks not just doys No wond<'r the campuiJ I" In chu08. KENN.ETJI /\NO MAttGAR£1' MASON ......... J:t To the F.dltor: Propo1ttlon 13 must be JewiJb; lt la blamed for so many thlnt•· ln )'OUT "Howilna Supply Drops," Jan. !5, 13 I~ blamed ProposltJon 13 had n<>\htng tn do with the housing shorta1e that has been lncreasJng beceusC' government hu had the extra tax money to •upport lhe myrladl of bureaocrncl~" ttun·- re11ul1te Ill supply And tr locnt 1ovemmenu dl1coura1e housing d•vtlopment becauH they won 't ael q much prp~rty till moQfy from It. that ts their roult, not l3. And how 13 will "f\u1hc>r ro· duce the supply ot land avotlablc ror d1vtlopment and lncreaH th prt~. '' u stated b)' Brown'• Offlo• of Plannlnt and a .... ~. la too moot • quallon to be ...ad. A• la how lt la rffponalble for reht lncreaacs. Renti. have been incrC'as tnJ! with the Increase in inClal1on. lur years past. But 13 has its good 111dc lb CUtdOWD Of 80VCtnmcnl ':. S UI pluses may slop Drown':. California Hous ing Task Foret• from sub5idizing 80,000 housinl( units. as proposed by Marci..1 Mills of that fort'l', with more bureaucratic was te and tax dollars. and instead make them ease the restrictions placed on private enterprise lhal is ready. willing and anxious to provide the housing needed. Marcia Mills. of the League or Woml'n Voters. seems to have replaced Claire Dedrick. or the Sit•rra Club, as Califom1a'1:1 powerful creater of chaos. It 1s lime for some logical ullcrnalives GOLDIE JOSE Pl r Ta~pa,,er• •ffad 11.• To the Edit.or: There is on u(i!ly mood de- veloping among we laxpaycl"I\ that crosses ail age. pollllcat. an<! occupaUonal groups. We taxpayers havt' reached the saturation polnt with city. state. und federal em ploy~s who "demand" h i1eher wages and more benefits while our country I~ curre ntly 1n dire economit' alrai~hts. Durmg our l'<'Onom1c crisis. taxpayers nN· struggling desperately to keep their jobs, homes. cars. and good health. We arc tired or s trikes and demands madr hy our scrvunt.s und for more. wh<'n we hav<-less. Any school teacher. fireman. bus driver. pollet'man or "it rbo itt collector. etc.. who feels h<' or she cannot live on their present salary and benefil.4'. should quit their job Immediately and seek employ- ment nlonRSldo ua In the private sector. 1.JNTIL the economy recovers. wt will not tolerate city. st.ottt. and f<'deral employ~s r~celvtnR ony MtlBry or benefit incre Quotes "It shbuld have hap~Md a lone Um~ ago for the aako ol th~ peece of lbe world lt 's veey aood ." a P&1Hrb1 ln Putna. Kao Cbldeq. to an A.mer1can reporter conctrntn1 the Htlbllshment of relallona between the United St.alea Ind China. In fact. we taKpaycrs may huw to rcdu('e some or the benefits thC'y nowenjoy. Althoul'(h the mood of the tax- puyNs ii; an ug~y OOf', govern- ment employees n~ not worry JUSt yet. b<'caUM' we arc dcfust:d politically In November. 1978. it appt>a red that Gov Brown would scn.<,e our mood and woold tap this vast palitkal resource. I le has yet to do so. Once the politicians at all levels or gov- ernment realiz<' the sheer power of this ugly taxpayl•r mood. they will be s wept into any office they !)Cek . I f lloward Jarvis were 20 year!' young. better educated, and mor(• of a polis hed leader and ind1V1dual . he would be our President In 19RO. Facts are that Mr J arvis is not such a man. There art' 100 million /\merican.'I waiting to bt• molded into a ('Ohcsive political force. Who do you think will step forward to lead us? WALT BLANKENSHIP A l•alca• l'lnc To the Editor: This is in referen\."t' to your re- cent story about an attorney in Corona d<>I Mar suing a nel~hbor over the 'extended height· of u tree True. a view of the ocean i~ a 1'peclal Uune. but puttlna a tree into the view 110mchow cnh1&nt~i. 1t "II. WHEN W I'! liv ed 1n Anchorage, Alnka. people fought hard to save lhe ~ from ov<'r•&ealous developers. The trees gave us :;lit so much more beauty In a land where we would ltlvc a lot for more really tall tre<'s <the severe winters In some areas keep them@ortcr1. If only we could t1ke the "Floherty t~ with us whtn we happlly return to Alaska th18 spring, we could 1ive It such a trcusured place to live and de• ll&ht all that .!,>HM'd ltt way. On my wa~ tonl1ht 1 counted over 100 tl'ftt or a grand scale and t 11hall offer a quiet pr~r tor them all. KATHY OORHAM • LffCne from rtodere OTt Uldcofn• TIM rtglU lo ce>ftd~rttt l«t.,I co ftl lpQCf "' ''"""'°'' hbtf "rtM'Wd. IAtln• of aoo .oord.t "' ..... """ bf gtMi prt/..-nce. Alt lftUre,....., M· cl• ~,. oftd maUMf addrc•• bW "°"''' mo.v H IOIMefd "' r.-_., ., ""~ '""" .. ....,..,.,. A>ff rv wtU not ti. p..bUWd. ' . t • • 17 I ~ ... _ DAIL. V PILOT' La una/South Coast Your Uometowa Dally Newspaper VOL 12. NO 1 l, 3 SECTIONS. 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11 , 1979 TEN CENTS ' . Laguna Planners OK K1-ishna Church l .. aw1u Bea<'h pl11nn1n11 rom m11>11111nt•r'!j ttatn.'fll ununtmou..'I) Wl·dnt•!!da\ th,• local branch of th~ 111\h.• krt11hnu N-h.Ch>ua sttt ~hould bt• ullowtod to t'Oftt 1nuc re <'on:.tru('tton of 11 r hurch thl• ~roup purrhni.t"(t more thlhl .1 )l'iH u~o Work on rl•novalion M the 10 yl'Jr old building at 2R5 1..-tiaon ~"t v.n11 hulkd by the cal> l.t~t )l'ar v.·hen J qut>:,lwn aro:.e Honest, A he? 11 to wht'thtr the UH of the two tory chureh 08 u pl•cc of wor hip wu abandoned by thl' prt•\-IOU& owTit*r But t'lty o(f1ciul11 blUd today lhl' Krtlihn1u~ may not conhnue lh,•ar rcnovullon plan!\ until the t. nd or a ~ c.luy uppeuls period The plannlni: tommuuiion's t111~k Wt'dnetKiay night wus to m terpret o city ordinance dealing with use o.f the building for Icicles form on a statue or Abraham Lincoln in downtown Port1anct. Ort> • after an ice slorm moved through th<.' ar:'ca (•a rtier Wcdnt'sday. New Laws, Funding Sought in Campaign If I ht' re are gomg to be any <·ontrols on last-minute s mears to Orange County pol1tacal cam 1rn igns, county officials an· go in~ lo have to change some laws Jncl provide some money Thal wa ~ the conc l usion reached this week by the four members of the County Fair c·a m pa1gn Practices Com - m1si-.ion Supervisor Thomas Riley l'arl1c r h ad asked co m - missioners to come up with a plan to strengthe n the com- mission, a request apparently made 1n response to Super visor Ralph Clark 's effort to do away with the group that was lt>rm~d m February, 1978. The comm1ss1on's Job is to Coast W~ather riitc..hy fog and low <.'louds late tonight through mid morning F r iday. Othe rwisP mostly sunny Friday with some high cloudiness. Lows lonl"ht 44 to 50. Highs Fnday 63 to 67. INSIDE TODAY Ai 1h.r 8'att of llowoU av proach.<'• 1ta 20th birthday. Q'Wrmment o/JICllJU end res 1denta art wondering oloud wh.r 1 h.tr grmcth should ~ curtwd Stt "Growing Pcdnt" on PoQ.t M4 monitor campaigns for county offi ces and local legaslativt representat ivcs insure that the candidates don't misrepresent themselvesorthe1ropponents. Comm1ss1on chairman Bill Thom of Anaheim said the com- m 1ssi6n's only weakness is its inability to react in time to deal with the last minute smear cam- oa i 1ms. H-e wants the county ordinance that created thf' commission rewritten to include provlsioru. prohibiting the mailing or broad- casting of campaign material seven days before the election. He also wants a budget of about $3,000 so the commission can, if necessary, advertise its rindmJ?s. ''The prei;s has been very kind to us so far,'' he commented. ·'They've covered the hell out of us "But I'm concerned' we are someday going to have an im- portant find ing and it's going to com e out the same day that World War m s tarts and lf'll get squeezed out of the news." His recommendations were backed by the commission's three o th er me mbers, Al Driscoll, Judy de Arakal and Ray Litrell The nnh seat la VS• cant, awaiting an a ppointment by county Supervisor Ralph Diedrich County supervisors are ex· peeled to dlsc uH commission recomme,ndatlontlntwowc ks. SOl!l'H COAST PUZ4 J'IEJJ'ED South Cout Plau tJ "OM bi1 ahowroom aren•" tn Janu•fY· Storlet and pkturfl detail thl• special "Par.de ol Values" ln todoy'I DaUy Pilot. T~ra to P•ge ..U worship servlcet. 'fhc church had been used by C hristian congregations for worship servlces ror four decades when 1t was sold to an Ira- nian businessman in Septe mber 1977 Hoosb.iar Saedi purchased the building from the First Christian Church of Laguna Beach for a re- ported S211.500, intending lo build uhomeonthesite. But the lnvestor turned arow.d and s old It to ISKON of California, Inc .. the Los-Angeles based Krishna organization on Dec. 1, 1977 for a reported $225,000. The question before com- missioners was whether the church use was abandoned dur· ing that two and a half month period during whic h Saedi owned the building. Krishna attorneys maintained It could not be proved the intent of the investor was to change the use from church to residentiaJ, or that there was a n overt act to prove another use was pJAnned for the site. And, the attorneys said, since no plans to change the use of the church ever came to fruition while Saedi owned the property. the church use ~ad not been abandoned. Commissioners questioned whether Saedi could be con- sidered the equitable owner or the property during escrow with the First Christian Church. a period during which he may have offered the building to the city. That might create an overt act to change the church use, they <See KRISHNA, Page A21 U.S. Flag Burned Anti-shah Mob Riots in Iran City TEHRAN, Iran <A P > -A mob hauled down and burned the American flag today in front of the U.S. consulate in Shiraz, top- pled three statues or the shah . and stormed the secret police headquarters, reside nts re· ported. Between two and eight people were killed and 10 lo 15 were wounded when agents of the secret police, SAVAK, opened fire to defend themselves. the Shiraz residents s aid. The incidents broke out as Prime Minis ter S h a hpo ur Bakhtiar tried to win the support of Parliament of his newly in- stalled civilian government. In Washington. U.S. Secretary 11ackout hnpOsed On Strike By RA VMOND ESTaADA Ot -o.M., "*" suH Stale-appointed m ediator Dhraza Mrvichtn has imposed a news blackout on the status of contract talks between Hunt- ington Beach Union High School District negotiators and striking teacher leaders. For the second consecutive night. district a nd teache r leaders haggled over contract is- sues until dawn. But the walkout by a.>0ut hair the district's 867 teachers that began Jan. 3 continues lOday at seven West Orange County high schools. Assis tant Su pe rinte n dent Howard Roop, a di s trict negotiating team me mber. said the secrecy edict may be "a good sign" that a contract settle- ment with striking teachers is near. Roop said Mrvicbin told dis- trict and teacher negotiators they will face a $1,000 fine if one or them violates the secrecy or- der. • School board members have scheduled a 9 o'clock meeting tonig ht. Striking teac he rs scheduled a late morning meet· ing today. District orficials have kept schools open by hiring about 600 s ubstitute teachers . Substitute teacher daily pay was raised from $60 to $80 last Friday. Record Low Deep Freeze Hiu MUlwest By~ &l10Cla&ed Preas Record fow temperatures were recorded ln the Midwest to· day with the thermometer dip- ping lo 39 degrees below zero In Minnesota and 34 be low ln Plano, m. about 50 miles west or Cb le ago. At midday today. the mercury was hovering around the r.ero mark in downtown Chicago. Temperatures as low as 30 below spread from Wisconsin Into lower Mlchl11n thls morning., with EauClalre, Wl1 .. recordina a 30 below reading, the colest ln the state. Hibbing, Minn., recorded • low tempera\ure of 89 below zero. maldn1 tt the coldest apot ln the cOun<r)', and Uliet• we.-. unofflclal ~ of 40 below zero temperatures elMwh•~ in northern MinnetOta. Other lllinota low reaillnP tn· eluded Rockford, ·24; Mollne1 .is: Mlllln1too. ·31. ana Yorkville, .29, or State Cyrus R. Va nce voiced strong support at a news con· ference for Bakhliar's efforts a nd urged the Iranian military and other elements or the strife- toro county "to rind a way to wort( together." Shiraz residents, contacted by telephone from Tehran. said the violence began afte r some 10,000 to 20,000 people gathered at a ci- ty square for an anti-shah rally The crowd marched to the consulate, where they haul ed down the U.S. flag and burned it in the st r eets . The dem- onstrators the n demolished statues of the shah before at- tacking the secret police head- r quarters during the four-hour riot. In Tehran. Bakhtiar promised to stop selling oil to South Africa and Is rael, fire "unneeded foreigners'' and let the reli~1ous leaders opposed to Shah Moham· m ed Reza Pahlavi and his Wes t e rn1zat1on program "supervise government ac· tivities." Presenting hi s civilian cabinet 10 the lower house for a vote of confidence. next week, Bakhtiar appealed for support to end the year -long political and economic turmoil generated by opposition to the shah's autocratic rule. But he made no reference to the cm· Railway OK'd Two Cities Endorse Plan OCEANSIDE <AP > -A proposed $5 million elevated railway connecting major s hopping centers has won approva1 of both the Oceanside and Carlsbad city counclls. _ A week after Carlsbad endorsed the transit. Oceanside's council a pproved it unanimously Wednesday. "We thjnk it will really help traffic conditions.'' said City C1erk Irene Duehren. The promoter. Bob Ladwig, suggested a four. mile railway linkinj? several Oceanside a nd Carls bad area shopping centers and spanning both California 78 a nd El Catnino Real highway. To obtain f edcral funds for 80 percent of the cost s. Ladwig said state legislators have agreed to seek 20 percent state matching funds. The cost to municipalities was unclear. Disavowal Urged Billy Carter Bigot, Says GOP's Brock WASHINGTON <AP > - Republican National Chairman Bill Brock today called Presi- dent Carter's brother. Billy, a bigot and urged the president to publicly disavow his younger brother's aJlegedly anti-Semitic rem arks. Billy Carter. while accompa· nying a high.level Libyan del- egation on a tour of Georgia, has been criticized for such re- m arks as "There's a hell of a lot more Arabians than there Is Jews" and for saying the United States s hould end Its "hostility" toward Libya. Broc k said h e w as not challenging Billy Carter's right to free speech and "we cannot legally contain the disgusting anti-Semilism that laces his re· marks" Added Brock. "We have yet to outla w bi gotry in the United States and when the bigot's opinions result in the satisfaction of the bigot's ~reed, we can't ex- pect him to put a rein on his tongue." Brock said "to some extent, each of us Is his brother's keeper." and asked President Carter to speak out against Billy's actions. Billy Carter's remarks have displeased Georgia state of· flcials and incensed such groups as the American Jewish Com· millee and the Atlanta Jewish Wetrare Federation, which was reported to have said Billy was countering the president ·s Mid- dle East peace efforts. battled ruler in his speech. "Now that the treasury 1s empty and the factories are idle. I beg you to endeavor to start them again." be said. Bakhtiar said relations with the South African government would be reviewed and oil salei. halted because of that govem- menl 's apartheid poli~y of racial segregation. Turning to Israel, he said: "The Iranian nation has always shown its unity with the Arab brothers and has alwavs suo- porJed the rights of the Pal· eslinian people. Lake the sale or oil to South Africa. the sale or oil lo Israel will be stopped.·· he~aid Cmnbodian Oiief Saved By Chopper BANGKOK. ThaJland <AP) A T-bai helicopter r escued Cambodian Deputy Pre mier Ie ng Sary from capture by victorious Vietna m ese and Cambodian rebel forces today and the ousted official then new out of Banj{kok for Hong Kong. Thai airlineofficialssaid. Another helicopter a lso made a brief landing inside Cambodia and returned to Thailand, but there was no confirmation either of the choppers pic ke d up President Khieu Samphan or othe r officials of the fallen Phnom Penh government There were no reports on the fate of Khieu Samphan or or Premier Pol Pot. but reliable Thaa mililarv and West ern <See RESCUE, Page A2) Woman Raped In Clemente A 46-year·old San Clemente woman was reporlc..'d ly struck in the face and raped before dawn today by an assailant who en- ter ed he r s outh city home through an open window. Details or the attack were not available from San Clementl' police today while investigators interviewed the victim. But a description of the sus· peel provided by police said h1: was a white man In his 20's, with a thin build and curly long hair . Police said the woman ap- • pareotly tried to fend off her at- l a c k er llnd may h ave left scratches on the left side of his face and neck. The victim was t re ated at the San Clemente General Hospital. The extent or her lr\jury was not released. Ku1ik Cites. ·nrug Deal 1 Testifies Reprisals Threatened by Mob By KATHY CLANCY Ot•Dell"f~•utt One·time Newport lJeach real· dent Alexander Kulik told an Oranee County Superior Court Jury Wednesday of a pu.rported • dope plantina scheme ~ by hll fon:ner business QIOClate Richard Willia. Kulik, tettlfYlnl tn hla own heroin PQlteHlon ·tTlal •• con· tended Wlllll ottered to make a drU• plant IO I croup or IO· called "ltallam," Oran11 Cout realdeatl wttb •IJeaed moblter t& .. would be arrested and a&t. t.o Jail . Re told the Jury tho ·•JtaJlana" had demanded $500,000 in cash and threatened reprisal if the cash wasn't paid after the group helped rescue him (Wm a kid· ':;f,~lng tor ransom"'\n Auaust Afterward, Kulik toatlflcd, w11111 ottered to make the drua plant but he <Kulik 1 was found wtth the heroin by mistake whUe drlvin& Wlllis' expenalve Stut.a car. More Cover88e Other south Orance County covtra1• appe1r1 today on Paae Ats. Kulik. also a defendant In the Stephen John Bovan murdl·r case, wu arrested In Willis' cur In a MiJSlon Viejo parkinJ( lot hours alter the Bovan slaylnl{. SherU'tt depuU .. allese they found the 1.1 pounds of heroin in a bag in the back aeat. ''Mr. WUlls •t.rted talklnR and told ua that be uted to be an An.h-1m ~ce officer," K\lllk testified, 'and also sta ted be waa an informant on a larJe heroin bust a rouple of years back that Involved • couple million doll•rs 'worth of berolll." Wlllb went OC\ to say be had <Ste IWUK. P11e AJ) I • I .... , A.2 DAIL V PllOl Rmaawag Trailer S an Cle mente f1reml1ll working c1ub 1dt· tht· City HaJI fire sta taon Wednesday .art~r· noon heard a crash and looked downhill to Set' what they thought was an overt urned semi-trnil<.>r truck on the northbound Sun Di~go Freeway. Uul arnvmg on lhl' M·1·1w. firemen couldn't find the trUl·k only tht• overtu1 ru•d t1 .11l1·r Driver J ames H..ob111,1111 ~ ot Unm~<.·. told firemen ht• :-.t opp1•d ttle t.1ndt•m trul'k an eighth of a 11\llt· d o\\ 11 Llw r<1.1d . afll'r the rear trailer hr11kt· frt't', strutk " guard r;.itl and over llll llt'd Housing Concept OK'd Cowity Moves Toward Low-i1icome Program /\ proposal expected to lead to affordable housing for famihc!) making less than $10.000 a nnual ly was approved in principle Wednesday by the Orange Coun· ly Board of Supervisor!). The homes wo u ld sell for S25.000 or Jess or rent for no m ore than S210 monthly, accord mg to formulae contained In the housing element bein~ studit.>d for inclusion in the county ·~ general plan The housing 1·lt•nwnt :il!<o 1~ expected to pro' 1dl' .1ffordalill0 housin~ for mod(•ntll' 11w1mw famil1e:-. l ho:.l' eur11111~ bet ween $!0,000 <1nd SlG l!Oh .1ri nually. dependini.: on fam1h size. Housing ror thosl· famll11·~ should cost no mon· thJn $40 mo to purcha~e or $330 monthly to rent Lagunan Facing Tuv Arson Counts A Lagune Beach ha ndyman police believe set two homes ableze within moments of each other Tuesday, is being held on 125.000 bail today, facing two counts of felony arson and a mi~· dem eanor trespassing charfo!e Andrew Harry F~nk, 52, w11~ lo be arraigned t<><J>y in South Orange County Municipal Court on all three charges followin)( the intentional torching of t~o homes located four blocks from each other in Luguna Beach Tuesday Police said today they believe · the distraught man rode his mo- ped to the twme of Episcopalian priest Robert Cornelison at 704 Su01mil Way, where he alleged· ly used a nammable material to set that two·story structure on fire No one was in the home at the time of the 2: 10 p.m . blazt.>, police said, and police and Ore investigators placed da mage to the structur e at more than $80,000 Pobce said they believe Frank returned to his home at 425 Shadow Lane within mome nts of the Summit Wa} blaze. and set h is own bunga low on fire . Damage to the structure was estimated by n re officials ut $10,000 with anothe r $5,000 Senators D e part M OSCOW <AP l -Senate minority leader Howard Baker and five other Republic<1 n senators left M08cow today for Iceland and New York after a four-d ay visit to the Sovlel Union that included meetings with President Leonid Brezhnev and Jewish dissidents. O"ANOI COAST L K DAILY PILOT tMOf-.CNttO.Uy Pt ... •1tft•f"IKfttt<tim l1tft1"CI tn. ~ Pftt-. l~l)Ubt!\tw-<I b• lfW 0tMQll> Co•\t PtJ>.,.~C~., ~twr.tt,....:Jlt.ort• Art Pvblll.,f'O Mon0.1tV t~rOUff' I r1d10 tor (11'1" Mt1\4 N1t.._I 8.tMh Hut!11ftQIOtl O•Mh IOU" let•Vetl .. ,1._.~ltet~ S....thCN'4 " t•"fJ• ,....,_. ....... ,, ,..,,..""""" s,,.,.,,o. .. •"Ct -··· n.. Dfln(ijMll °"'"'"''"9 pl•fll ,, .. ,. W•" II•• lll'Nt c .. t• -· Cet1t0t,.•••»,. "~ ... -Pt,., ..... t11M ~l'lihf( , ... " ""'" VICI PrM.IOlttt eM GtfWtf .. Ma~ ni-. ....... l•tor '':.m::,,~.:=- a. ........ ~ 11~1' ... lt •h-'"""1 W••, .... I!.._.. ' damage to contents of the homl! /\ n <11g hbor said she saw Fronk leap on hts motor bike and s peed off Jus t momt'nh before smoke bt'~an pouring from his home E ngines from all lhn•«-Lu~una Reach stations respondt'd lo tlw two fires within minutes und an.on mvest1g.itor-. '-'t·rc· on th•· sct-ne a short t1mt• lalc1 prolnn~ . th rou~h tht· ushe~ anc1 dch11!) c1l bolh lo<.'al1ons Frank wat. arr£'ste d lute Tue~ day evenin11 after a wom1rn h" ing two doors down from his Sh11dow Lane buo~alo" rt'port((I that she found him aslctp in h1·r home. Sht' called pollct.> and lht· man was captured several blocks away on Mountain Road and Coast Hi~hway Police said they have no firm motive in the ton·hin&ls. but said Frank and Rt.•\ Corn<>hson were long.time fr1£'nds I<' r a n k 1 s cur r (' n l I) u n employed, but has worked 1n the past 15 years tn Lai;cuna li<>at h as a repairman and hanrh m.1n PoLi ce 1>a1d he hai. no rl·l<it1vl·~ in the area. Party S latecl In Cleme11te For P ageant The annual kickoff party or San Clemente's La Cri-.tian1tc1 Pageant /\ssoc1at ion ls plannl·rl from 8 p.m lo midn1~ht on .Jan 27 In the Aqua Marini• Room al the San Cll•mente Inn, 125 A\t Esplandian The pageant asso<'lat1on r&1:.1·.., funds lo support the dty .., mid s ummer fiesta , in<'luding a portrayal or the first Chri'ltlan baptis m in early California h1~ tory. Volunteers slagl' lht• re-creation of the baptism of a n Indian child in a naluntl rnnyon 1n north San Clemente The Jan 27 party will mt'lwlt• rc.'fre.hments, entertainment 11nc1 dancing, Raid Miki Wolfe, ai. sociation spokesman. Admission is SS. Ticket.c; are available from the Chamber of Comml'r<.'t.'. I 100 N. El Camino Real, 492-1 l:JI Radio, Tape Gear Taken From T ruck A cHhen '1 band r adio. cassette tape deck and tape •. valued at a totoJ ot $1.022, wf're reported llolen Wedn day' from a Jocked pickup truck, parked In a San Clemente pior·1ldc '» parkinlJ lot while lta own r took n train ride lo Loe An(ll'l 1. PoHce sold the elcctroqk tJ(! " was ~tolen from a truck owned by Oble Do'Lortnio, or 687 W1lkln1 Horse Lane, L•l'una Hilla. 'nltl truck waa apparently entered by sofneone who pned off a door lock, &)()lice sold • Final art1on on the housing t'lt>1m•nt. n:qu1red by state law. 1s anl1c1pated by J an. 24. The document is supposed to assure adequate available ho~~­ intot ror low and moder ate in· come fam1h~ in a county where lht• avt.>r age resale price of a houM:' 1:. $70,000 and the average nl'\4 hom•' tosts $113,000. To induce lower·cosl housinli(. t hl' nt''-' dol·ument would force rl~·\ l'lopcn. to provide 25 percent uf ,111·h h1111~1ng units in a new tkvl'luµmcnt to take advantage ul 1·cn111l) .idmmi~trallvc n•vit'w shortt·uts that would save them money 1\bo indu<kd are provisions for higher density construct.Jon &nd relaxation or aome buildin~ standards for projects providing arfordabl~ housing. The C'lement also carries coun- ty pledgc·s lo aggressively pursu(' government gr11nt pro· ~rami,, to aid in cons lru<.'t1on or Ol'W affordable housing or re- habihl11t1on o( existing lower· <'O~t homes Nutmg that the county·l-1 future •:t. on om} might be a ffected lw1·ause employees in bot.h the pri \al(• and public sector can't afford housing, the element also ra11s 1or pnvate ousmess ancJ m- du.,try to help ease the housing prohlt>ms o f th eir O'.'<n employees County staff mem bers are us· IOJ! the time prior lo final elc· ment approval lo rev11~e the docu menl based on criticism from the l-.tatc·s OC'partment of Housing a nd Com munity Development. Th£' proposal lacks specifics. t h e depart men t c h a r ged, especially in ru;surances that the elc•ml•nt ·s recommendations will bP ·1 nm~latcd tnlo a course of art ion .. S1mullaneously, county staff also will be considering rerom· nwndut1ons from a variety of ... pec:ial interesl groups ranging from tilt: Housing Coalilton of Or:lnge Counly to the Building tndust1 y Absoc1at1on F ro111 POfl# A I KRISHNA •.. reasoned But attorneys for the Krishnas, a nd Lal(una Beach Ci· ty Attorney George Logan said that whether the property could bt· conside red Sacdi 's during cs<' row was nolf'e levant. They argued that while the buyer might be the owner except in hllc, should the escrow have failed , the property would revert buck to the seller. Commissioners s aid they t·ould find no proof the use had h<'cn abandoned lo t he r apid turnover of the building to the Krlshnas, and voted to continue the churct> use of the land. which 1s 1oncd tor residential use Only CommiAslon Chairman Hellnda Blacketer expressed ('onct'm over the vot e, saying '"you know my biasJnthis case " In voting for the aect the com- m1i.sion chairman sald she op- posed the church u11e ~cause or lhe lack of parkln1 on the c hurch grOW\dll. which would hue bffn dc!alt wtlh had the Krlahnu been forced to seek a conditional UH perm it on the property. . The fssu may stlll be ap. pcot~d to the City Council by OP· pqfltnts of the decision or a council member: city ofnclals aotd today. In tt.. meantlme, the tct may not contlnue work on renovoUna the btdJdJn1 until th 20 day oppeal period concludoe e rly next month . Smoking Perils Repeated WASHJNGTON IAPl -The •urgeon general says he has "overwhelming" evidence that 1moklng causes dealh a nd djs. ebe. What be does n't have is a way to help people stop. Those were among the con· cluslons In a t,200-page rep()f't is· s ued today by Surgoon General Julius Richmond in a "review and reappraisal'' of research ac· cumulated the past 15 years. "This document reveals. with dramatic clarity, that s moking is even more dangerous -in· deed. far more dangerous than was supposed in 1964 ," said HEW Secr etary J oseph A . Califano Jr. But the report acknowledges that nothing h:as been uncovered SMOKING REPORT SUMMARIZED -Page CS in 15 years that makes it easier to quit smoking. One chapter concludes: "It ls hoped that in another 15 years we will not have to say. ·we still don't know what works''" • Califano contended the report "demolis hes" c l aims by cigare tte manufacturers that there is no proven hnk between smoking and cancer and c hronk diseases. Commenting before the report was released . the T obacco Institute predicted it would be "more rehash than research." The institute characterized ex· smoke r Califano as an anti- smokmg zealot a nd issued its t68·page report saying the ··pre· occupation with ::.mokmg ma) be both unfounded and dangerous . . because evidence on many critical points is conflicting . and it dive rts a ttention from othe r suspected hazards." The new surgeon general's re· port is based on no specific new research a nd contained no startling conclusions Its thrust is that the volume of research carried out since the initial ~Ur· ~eon general's r<'port 15 year~ , ago makes all the more certain the conclusion that smoking con· tributes to cancer. heart d 1s- e ase. bronchitis. e mphysem a and other ills. Tli1lr first r~port created a furor and led to the now-famous wa rning printed on each pack of cigarettes sold in the United Stales: ··warning: The Surgeon General has Delermincd That Cigarette smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health." C>Mly l'llot $'-ff ,_ EYES NEW CAREER Club Director Brady Boys, Girls Club Chief Quits Post Michael Brady. six.year direc- tor of the South Coast Area Boys and Girls Club in San Clemente. h as resigned to ente r a new care er and will be leaving in mid· February. William Kendall. president of the Boys and Girls Club board. said today that Brady "feels he has done as m uch as he can <as director) and wants to move on to other thlogs." Kendall said Brady has been a part or "vast improvements .. in the club's program during his six years as direct.or. A $256.000 gynmasium was added to the Boys and Girls Club facility at 1304 Calle Valle in 1977. at a cost of $90.000. due to donated labor and mate rials. ·Kenda ll s aid Brady played a big part in see· ing gynnasium built "He kind of grew up with it llhe gym >." Kend~ll said. The Boys and Girls Club cur rently has a members h ip of about 1.000 youngsters. aged 7· 18 After school and Saturday progranll; include sports. e ra/ts and field trips. Kendall said that Boys Club of America will be advertising for a new di~tor to succeed Brady In San Clemente. Applicants must have a college degree and two years' experience with the Boys Club organization. The new director will probably start about March 1. Kendall said f'ro• Page A I KULIK •.• connections with the "federal 11trikc force" and police and redcral agenl'i could plant dru~i> on the "Italians" leading to their ttrrest and Imprisonment. Kuhk lPStifled. He contended Wllliti pledgoo "he would he lp us gtl these Jtaliu111 out. of our hair." In later te1limony Kulik told of a trip he and his wife made to Europe and the Far East in Oc tober 1977 but dented buying the seized heroin on that Journey. IMtead. he said. he a nd his wife purchased rubies and sap· phires in Bangkok and $35,000 worth of furniture in Hong Kong ror the $300,000·plus home they were buying in Newport Beach at 22 Linda Isle. In earlier testimony g ive n Tuesday, Kulik testified about his abduction by a drug dealer. Bovan, who wa~ later shot to death Kuhk testified that he didn't report his kidnapping to the police bt!cause of his lies to the Hare Krishna r eligious sect. "In the past we have never had a ny help from the police be ing Hare Krishnas, ·· he test1f1ed . .. In fact, we have been more or less persecuted by them. To ask them for their help would have been futile." In another development In the case Wednesday. witness /\n- thony Marone Sr took the Fifth Amendment to avoid ans wenng questions Marone IS the rat h er of another Bovan murder defen· dant. Prosecutor Ron Krebcr said today he intends to file felony charges against Ma rone for his r ol e in the alle~ed pislol- whipping or Newport Bcal·h businessmen Robert Shea and Byron Linde. managers of a rirm in which Kultk and St:!Vl'rnl associates had m vci.lmenlb. I'...-Page Al RESCUE ..• sources said ·the beleaguert>d Cambodians asked the Thais lo a llow the transit of about 500 of their assoc1atl's and their families to China . their onl~ important ally while they Wl'rt' in power The sw ift h e li copter evacuation came as VietnameM· tanks and infa ntry were movinl{ toward the Thai border along HJghway 6, according to reliable intelligence sour ces. Reporte rs at th e bord e r town of Aranyaprathet, 124 miles east of Bangkok. said the helicopll'rs landed in Poipet. just across the frontier January White's Sale LAiilZmBOV ® SAVE ON EVERYTHING IN STOCK SAYE s40 RecJ.$339 HUNDREDS OF CHAIRS OM SALE Recj.$349 FREE l111Mclate DellYery Now 5289 SAYE 560 WHITE'S LA·Z·BOY COSTA MESA 381 E.17th St. tAcross from R•IS»ftt, nut to Merle C•l•nders) 842-1857 Mon .-Frl. 1CM 1a1.10.s .. CloMd lunday MISSION VIEJO 2ut2 M•rauertte Pky. <7 blOClcl Soulll of South East 8411nlc ~st Volvo OHier i 415-5902 Mon.·Frl. 10.8 S1t.1~5 ._ ct CloMd Sunday • ' --.-..... .... O.ift' ........... - Thu!!day. January 11, t 979 § DAILY PILOT A 3 Funding Flayed Cities Attack Developnient Grants Some of tho cities that are get· lin1 federal arant money throuah the County of Orange uren ·1 happy about the way next year's S4.6 mlJUon is aolna to be spread around. Tbe dluatlsfacUon emerged Wednesday during a hearlng before the county Board of Supervl&ors on the Housing and Community Development 1rant. The county administers the grant ror lt3 own unincorporated areas as well as 12 or the cities with populations or less than 50,000, lnchading Irvine, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and Seal Beach. La Habra City, Manager, Lee Risner. complained Wednesday that the percentage or the al- locations to the cities has been dropping slnce the program was launched four years ago. Hia complaints were supported by Irvine City Councilwoman Mary AnnGaido. Risner, spokesman ror the city repreaentatives. called upon supervisors to eatablish a policy governing the rotio or alloca· tions. Mrs. Galdo s uggested that priorities used by county start members in disregarding or recommending program8 re- quested by the cities also s hould be reviewed. Supervisors said they will have their aides work on these matters and a.sked that a report be ready by the second Housing and Community Development hearing Jan. 31. land purchue would enable too apartment developer to charge lower rents. Lagun• Beach: $95,000 ror lof' cost loons for bouaing rehablUta- tion. (This would be in oddidon to the landslide relier funding. 1 San Juu Caplstr•no: $180,000 ror land acquiilUon by the Los Rios Housing Development Corp.: $3S,OOO for the r~­ construd.ion of Los Rios Street between Ramon and Verdugo streets and the installation or storm drains in the area : $7S.OOO for low C08t loans for housing rt!· habilitation. Also included in the pro1ecu. under conf'iderahon are three for unincorporated areas along the Orange Coast: Santa Ana HelKbts: S50.000 for low cost loans for housing re· habilitaUon. SAODLE.BACK STUDENT OtANi ~WARFIELD ASSISTS WITH NORTH CAMPUS REGISTRATION 1,500 U~wate• bpec:ted Next Weelil et New lrvlM F•cHlty Opens Laguna Beach Mayor Jack McDowell asked during Wednesday's heanng that the $75.000 recommended by county staff members for his city be up- ped to $250,000 to provide homes for low and moderate income 'FL-•'ll IF/ake families displaced by the I.'""' "'4 BluebirdCanyonlandsUde. Superior A venue Tri•n~te : $25,000 r()(° low cost loans for housing rehabilitation in this island or county te rritory near Hoag Memorial Hospital SaJdleback Four Craft Shows Su~rvisors said they would , ,,..._ .-.. C U consider the request. but won-J. ,W ODS p dered about the ability or the Ci· r· ty to spend the grant money. OWEGO. N.Y. <APl -According to Supervisor Ralph Soutbeu& County; S450.000 for acquisition or two sites (or .if· fordable housing. both rentitl and: ownership. with $375,000 earmarked for land acquisition and $75.000 for additional dt~· position expenses. Opening Rejected in Laguna A man wielding a large-Diedrich, Laguna s till has caliber handgun walked S220.000 in unspent grant money · to th .... 1: tat. · from the past two years. City of. in e ,..,..ce s .ion an ficials said it's earmarked to this s mall upstate New York village early today provide lOO units of senior NewCa~pus Saddleback College officials are f:'Xpecting 1,500 students to begin <'lasses Jan. 22 at the dis· tnct's new 20-acre North Cam- pus sate in lrvmc. Dr. Edward Hart, assistant superintendent, ~aid today re. cent rains have not delayed com pletion or instructional buildings but could push back s cheduled landscaping or the facility at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. ·'Two instructional buildings will be ready to ~o when cla<;SeS open," Hart said. "We may have a small problem with finis hing the (central l court a rea, but that won't impede <·lasses." OU.c1als are registering StU· dents at a trailer placed on the North Campus. The trailer is be· ing used to keep students out of the consturuction area, Hart said. Originally scheduled to open last fall, the Irvine faciJity was delayed by heavy rains early in 1978 Then, the northern campus became a Proposition 13 victim when officials were forced to cut back on the number of classes offered this spring. "We originaJly planned for 32 faculty members," Hart said. "We wound up with 11 or 12 because of budget constraints." That cutback in faculty mem- bers lead to a decision to put off fmal construction of a science- mathematics-engineering build- ing for lhe20-acrecamp_µs That building will be complet· ed shortly and will probably hold fall science and math classes. Hart said he could not give current registration figures for the Irvine campus because stu- dents were registering at both dis· trict campus<.>s for classes at the northern fac1hty. ' ... A DISGRACE' Larry Doty 'TREMENDOUS IMPACT' Mlcheel O'Steen ROP Board Backs Audit Finn Hiring BY ANNE COOPER Of .... OMff PIMI SWff A $4,500 audit of the Capistrano-Laguna Beach Regional Occupational Program was approved t.hls week by the ROP governing board to comply with a request from county schools Superintendent Robert Peterson. Following a unan1mous vote by the board, the Warren H. Baker firm of Downey is to be hired to prepare the audit. In a Dec. 5 lelter to ROP board president Robe rt Bachelor, Pcl4'rson advised the board that he, as county schools superintendent, is responsible lor correction of problems point· ' id out ln audits of ROPs. Peterson then listed seven dis· crepancies pointed out last sum· mer in an audit of the Caplst.rano-(Aguna Beach ROP by auditors Balser. l\ortwiu, Frank and Wakelina, of Newport. Beach. The county superintendent ~­ quested that the ROP board tell him by Jan 31 how the dis· crcpancies would be corrected. He alto asked for a written 1U.te· menl from an indepeodent audit· lng firm by March 30, tndicatlng satisfactory corrccUoa or the dll· crepandes. The ROP'• fiscal mana1emeot has been under fire ainee Sep. tember. when uslJtant ROP ad· •• minlatrator Edward Quu.da told Orange County Sherttra ln· vett11ato~ that Ito autpected chief ROl> admlnlttrator Jerokl Simona of uaini ROP purcbue orden to bu,y ltema for bl.I own • UICI • Allhouab the Sheriff'• In· vestigation which resulted from Quesada's allegations failed to turn up s urflcient evidence against Simons to warrant the r1Jing or criminal charges, Simons submitl<.'<f bis resigna- tion in December. ll was accept- ed by the board on Dec. 12, with a comment from board member Jan Overton, of Dana Point. that the board's acceptance of the resignation '·is not to be con- strued <to mean> that the board feels Dr. Simons is guilty of any criminal charge." Quesada, who c hallenged Simons' administrative methods, has been on a board· imposed paid leave since Oct. 3. Appearing al this week's board meeting, Quesada and others questioned the ROP's new purcha1lng policy, which they said would sUll allow ad- ministrators to make purchases without board authoruallon. Over Quesada's obJecliona, the board voted to approve pay. ment of $1.387 ror ham radio equipment purchased by Simons. Quesada has claimed that Simons bousbt the r.cllo equipment f« hit own penonal use and had lt set up tn hl8 home. Slmom a(hnitted to aheritf'• lnve&Upton bavtn« tbo radio ar lil1 home, bUtaalllbe \911 cheek· tn1 the ~wpmeM out for an elect.ronlla coune lie planed to Leach. ROP boar4 member wnuam Kentle ot Lqune Beach aald the radio equipment WQ -ttlNed)t marked wttb ROP id8nttncadon• ''To Mk U. ftndft to take It • back woald be......., .......... be 1aJd. By STEVE MITCHELL and threatened to shoot citizen housing, but the proje<:l °' llW o.11, Pl••Uwff any officeT sleeping on the 1s being slowed while sites for Man Arrested In Gun Battle Members of the Laguna Craft b tbe project are being con· Guild will be allowed to display JO The man flashed the sidered. their wares three limes this year g un . possibly a . 357 Bob Pusavat, the county En· on Forest Avenue, but a re· magnum. in front of the vironmental Management Agen-A Santa Ana man faces quest for four additional Sunday officer 00 duty before cy staff member who ad· charges or assaulting a pohceor- shows was turned down this making the threat, police ministers the HUD grants. told f1cer after engaging police in a week by the Laguna Beach City said. supervisors he has received re-gun battle that ended with no in· Council. He then stuck it back in quests tatallng $11 million for Juries to either side. Craft guild officials originally his coat and walked out. the $4 .6 million allocation the Santa Ana police said the inc•· sought seven Sunday street Des k officer Michael county will receive from the dent erupted at 8 p.m. Wedne5· shows in Laguna, but the council federal Department of Housing day when two narcotics om~n. Devine, the onJy officer on d Urb De 1 t t .. ' r majority said three or those pro-a n an ve opmen ms went to the home o Robert Bnll, the lO·man force on duty year 47, at 627 N. Garfield St. to serve posed shows would conmct with al the time -and very A~ong the projects recom-u search warrant. the Chamber or Comm~ce's much awake chased the mended to ... u,_ ... ,1·sors for the W. t F ti l h d 1 thi " .,.... • Brill aJlegedJy shot at the or in er es va · sc e u s man on foot for several Orange Coast cities are. racers and the omcers shot ba(:k. year from Feb l6 to March '4. hundred yards before los-Jrvh~: $115.000 for land ac· OCfice rs said they shot at Brill The decision by the council ing him. quisit1on by the city for con-eight times befort> he decided to came at the end of a half·h<>ur struction of apartments . 1'he ~urrender disc~~oo~lhesu~«tin~·:======================================~ cil chambers and was punctuat- ed by boos and catcalls from the standhtg-room-only audience of craftsmen and artisans. Their displeasure came when Mayor Jack McDowell. support- ed b y Councilmen Howard Dawson and Kelly Boyd, refused to allow artists an opportunity to address the council on the con- troversy. The council had heard rrom Chamber of Commerce prcsi· dent Michael O 'Steen, Craft Guild president Larey Doty, and a me mber or the city's Arts Commission. who offered to mediate the dispute at a future meeting. When the motion was made to allow only three shows on Forest Avenue. bands shot up from the audience, and several persons said they would like to speak. But the council. with the ex· ceplion of Councilwoman ~lly BeUerue, indicated it had heard enough, and wu ready to vote. The 3·1 vote (with Mrs. Bellerue dissenting and Coun- cilman Wayne Baglln absent) came amidst grumblings and shouts from the packed council chambers. "If this is democracy in ac- tion, then I don't know what to think," Mrs. Bellerue said, shaking her head. She was joined in her disbelief by Craft Guild president Doty, who said the council should not have cut orr public comment. "These are local artists and many of them are merchants in town ." Doty said ... They shouldn't have been shut off like that. The meeting was a dis- grace." But chamber president O'Steen said his offer for craft guild members to join the chamber in its Winter Festival still stands. lie warned lhe council that compeUtioo from the craft guild "could mean a 50 percent reduc- tion in our attendance ,at the festival grounds l" adding that redu ction "would have a tremendous Impact on Laguna Beach." O'Steen said that without the Winter FesUval Laguna Beach would become a one-season economy and said the 16·Year· old event improves winter tourlam ln the Art Colony. The chamber is also on record as opposing the Forest Avenue craft shows beeause or problems related to parking, traffic COO· gesUon and safety concerns. The chamber board said the shows are "oot compatible with the growth of Laauna." Meanwhile, chamber otltcials and Craft Guild leaders have agreed to meet on Saturday. "to see \f we can iron out our dlf. rerences, possibly for next year," the GuJld's Doty said to- day. ~ "Maybe we can work out o 1y1tem that will benefit the chamber and the 1rtl1t1," he said.· He Hid bll main concern with the '1:-mbcr·run Winter Feat1 the S8S entry fM to local artilU. Md whllJ chamber offlcl1l1 1r1u• thtr fH 11 cheaper_,_.. day than the Craft Gulld'1 f1J fM for each Sunday 1bow. Drexel Heritage Wilrrn~®1f SALE SAVE 15% °"""" ..,., C-Oltd Reg 1819 S4lllt S745 °'"""'' "'9"' .. ...., kt<V l ;l'JIJ s... '' '' '" °'"""' Aeo l lflO S... S64t lfil•-· 1-.n """""" ""° 111fl.,. S*Stt.ee. '\ \.,,~ 0-•"" ....... ~· OO<I Heg ... ~ s. ft21 f Drexel translates French provincial: ~ ~ Classic new Cabernet II ~-=--===~,,,,.. PAOFESSIONAl. IN'TE~ DESIONEAS -II<; a ~ 08QU881 lfM'I IN!~ OI me Im Cenu.ry ono Ffenc1l ptOYtnC181 nas never been more gracCJlullhoo 1n Caberne• .t'" ...... Urexor" lhe g!Or'y 01 re.ii carved wooo rs M!e deep mol<>ng'l and o~cepl10nlll v~orarrsmansn1p 111parouotryoon<J1S Abovoall, lhefe's a 1>n1•an1 now hnish on pecan !i()llQ!> and lleoetlf'S -OJeP Cl<.\lr el90Jnlly OSllCGSOO Accent p!OOeS too. 11'1 orusneo stnpea l)ll•nl For beOIClOm'i, din.no room-. encl yO.Jr en11re hOmO-we rt.IC()l1'Y'n()( CabOrnwt 11 to you• Your Favof1tt o.tigner Wiii Bit Happy To AN11t You 1215 HAllOI ILVD. COSTA MISA 64'--0271 ' J ,, ·~.f OAILY PILOT c wlda ·~ Tom~~''' Marpblae Coastal ""Beachhead ON 11R WAT aFaONT: lt'•E"' to be lnt.ereaUn• to ob erve tbo pro1rea1 of 4' I• uil uat nJod by • 1roup ol erlv1te property own rs a1ainat CaUfornJa Coastal Commtuion. Tb.11 OM may abape lhe rtpta of property ownera ln lbe ye.art ahead. What bas happened ls that UK' 1uin1 property ownera claim lbe Cout&f Comml ion act.a llleaallv when It N · quires dedlcaUon-ot a public acceu to the beach below. an owncrh1ollowedtom1kelmprov m ntaonb1aproperty. You can debate both 111d4 of Lhl• qu lion lon1 Into lhr night. Ont.he ono aid • Uu.i priva~ owner has tho rtaht to the rull use of Ill proputy On the oth r. the public hat a right to access to the pubhc c:oasthno So now It la UJcely thti courts wUI decide. IT DOES SEEM, however, that the coastal commluk>n and its stAlff have taken on extraordinary Interest In aalnln1 Wowee! Cdwm Di.acoveTI New Acceu to fM Beach new public access routes to beeches across private property. This seems to be particularly true when the pnvale property owner appears to be affluent. Some coastal commission members and s tarr people have made statements suggesting that m bygone years, local governments were lax in protecting public beach ac· ress. This is, or course. pure bunk, ll simply demonstrates that those makini the statement:, don't know what lhey'r4! talking about. MORE PROPERLY, some credit should be given to the ,clever local officials ol yesteryear who did take steps to as· sore public access. Consider Newport Beach. for example. Ever notice all the dead·end streets that go to nowhere? These roads dead· end into the ocean front or into the bay. They aren't much good for driving anywhere. But the pioneers who laid them out knew that the street end would assure public access to the waterfront. Same way in Laguna Beach. Notice how many public streets simply dead-end on a cliff overlooking the beach. And public stairs have been built down the cliff face to the shoreline. THOSE n.TNNY DEAD-END streets in Laguna were no accident. They assure public beach access. Sure, you can find some areas in both Newport and Laguna where private property owners may have grown bushH or built Ulegal walls to make it appear that a public access at.reel end is closed. And that practice should be halted. rr stale government ls really Interested In enhancing public use of the shoreline ll would be better advised to Im- prove the accesses It already controls rather than pecking away at private property owners who they figure might have more than two suits m the closet. llVldir.~ ,,, '"' NATION I WORLD lnflatiOn €ontinues Pace I WASIUNOTON <A 1» fU1ln1 coats of 1asollne, food end machJnery puthed wholesalu prtca up o.a percent In Detember u lnnalloo k.ept up lla momentum. the Labor Department ta.kl today. For all ol 1'18. whol ale pnce1 rOM 9. l percent, the bla-t auch lnncaee since an 18.3 percent Jump In 1'14, the department l&id. In 1977, prlet11 w nt up e.e perc~t. 'tht wbol ale price llsures are Important becaua they arc an early •IKn of what conaumera CUD expect ln lhC! Wly Of price chan1ea ln the noxt low months. THE t.I P!&CENT lncreue for Dec~mber wua the aame aa i~ November and about averag' tor th put rour months. If averaged out over an tntlr~ year lt would amount to 10 per• cent, aU~tly above the 9 per· cent to 9.S percent rise In the Consumer Price Index that had been projected tor 1978. The report measured rlnlshed 'oods, or the price of products just before they are sold to con· sumcrs. The Producer Price Index for riniahed goods stood at 202.4. meaning that wholesale prod- ucts that cost $100 In the base period of 1967 cost $202.40 last month. WHOLESALE FOOD prices. which had eased m November. fftumed tbelr climb INt month, rfalnt 0.9 percent. Beef and veal price. tumed up In December after decllnlnl In November, but pork prfcet a Upped. Prices were bJlber for proc. esaed poultrr,, fruit and vegetables, dairy product.I · and candy. Prices ol e111 dropped 4 percent. THE Pa.ICE or gasoline eold at the refinery rose 4 percent Jn December. and the price of kerosene rose 2.8 percent. Prices a1Jso were higher for sbOes. preacriptJon drues and tires. TobaccoorJcttdedJned. Business equipment, such as machine tools, trucks and buaJ· ness furniture, rose by 0.8 per· cent, making it harder for busl· nesses to Invest in the future. The report was released as urban officials and the Senate leader of President Carter's par- ty were giving the adpiinistra· tion ritUe encouragement on Its anti·lnflatloo program. Warner Ch~kles 'Doonesbury' Strip Censllred .by GOP R~CHMO~D. Va. CAP> -. Sen. John Warner chuckled over jibes against hlm tn the comae strip "Doonesbury," but is concerned about what he says are factual errors In the strip, an aide says. Bil.I ~lng: th.e Virginia Republican's press secretary, said the strips 1mphcallon -· that Warner bought the Senate nomination after the death of the previous GOP nominee -was inac-Tuesday, Dick tells his wife he curate: . won't go across town "just lo lt d1~n t happen that way, meet lhe wife of some dim dilet- Klingsa1d, "and I wasthere." tantc who managed to buy, THE REPUBLICAN caucus of the Virginia General Assembly Wedne s day cen s ur e d "Doonesbury" creator Garry B. Trudeau for bis satirical treat· mcnt of Warner and his wife, Elizabeth Taylor. Trudeau could not bt' reached for comment. W a m er had nothing lo do with the censure motion. Kling said. adding the senator knows he is open lo political satire. "And it's the nature of polilical satire to be brutal," the aide said. lN ntE "Doonesbury" strip Intended tor publication Wednes- day. Dick, the husband or a fi c- tional congresswoman, says: ..... remember when the party's original nominee died m that accident? The Warners were so stricken with sympathy that they offered to take on the campaign debt and to set up a trust fund for the family. Guess who was then tapped the next day?" marry and luck his way into th~ U.S. Senate." THE SERIES HAS been run by the Richmond Times· Dis patch with an editor's note s aying the cartoons may offend s ome readers, but failure to print the strips might be con- sidered censorship. ln the comic strip released for publication today, Dick says of Warner's actress·wlfe: ". . A tad overweight. but with violet eyes to die for." Dick adds he saw the quote on a bumper sticker. The GOP legislators voted without dlsaent to "express our outrage and indignation" over the comic strip. T he GOP caucus has 28 members out of the 140-member General As- sembly. THE MOTION'S sponsor, state Sen. Wiley Mitchell, said the legislators wanted to let Trudeau know they consider the satire "outrageously offensive to good taste and common de· cency." Whales Burned Al' WINPflOte Carcasses of more than 50 whale!! are being burned along the east coast of Baja California. about 350 miles s<;>uth of the U.S. border. Burning was begun to prevent disease and odor. Marine biologists are puzzled about the beaching of the sperm whales. which may be the largest such incident in the Western hemisphere. Marine 'Jump Jet' Axed From Budget WASHINGTON <AP 1 -President Carter's defense budget will d•" ny the Manne Corps $203 million it had sought to continue develoµ· ment of its pnzed 'Jump jet" bomber program, adminis tration sou recs sa31. The sources, who asked not to be identified. said the rejection of runds in the fiscal 1980 budget. to be submUted to Congress In less killing 11 airmen. than two weeks. could spell the end or the AV·SB Harrier. which the Marines have envisaged as their main battlefield bomber to provide close support for ground troops. THE M AR I NES ha ve powerful friends In Congress who could be expected to argue the corps' case. The plane Is called a "jump jet" because It can lake off and la nd vertically, using small clearings close behind the fir· Ing line. A prototype flew for the first time in November. The Marines bought 110 fi nit· generation AV-8A Harriers. built in Britain, but 32 have crashed, THE FORD administration authorized the AV·8B tn 1976 to correct the earlier model's techinical problems and to gwe the advanced Harrier greater range and weapons-carryinA capacity. McDonnell Douglas Corp. of St. Louis won the con. tract. The long.range plan was to build 336 AV-88 models at :in estimated cost, counting de· velopment and production. of about $5.7 billion, according lo · the Marines. But outside the Marine Corps. the Harrier has ma ny Deren.,<· Department critics. One official called it a "turkey." ~'----------------------------- Warner, a former secretary of the Navy, was nominated to seek the Senate post by the Republican State Central Com- mittee on Aug. 12. The previous candidate, Richard Obenshain, died in a plane crash AuJ?. 2. Warner had sought the nomlna- t Ion earlier. but lost to Obsenshaln ln the primary. In the strip distributed for use Portland Blacked Out Ice Storm Cuts Power, Cwses Airport, Teaaper•••r~• HI Le .. , .. ... INnY ,, 0 Albol'-., n "'m•tlllo ,. I) A'11evllle « .. All.,.1• .. ti AU..,lkOll tt 21 .. IUl'Nf'e » 1t ,01 etrm"91M1m " u 81M"Mr<' , •It ..... JS tl ,n 90610f1 JO 11 81111• .. , .. , ,,. OwlJlllWV 26 12 .01 °"'"° J ·10 CllKlllMh 0 J Clevet.nd U -S .01 c.otumll<lt •• 0 Del Fl.Wiii • n ,AT O.nv•r ,. IJ DHMol"" u ., °''""' 1S _, Dul11lll ·~ .,.. '•1•1'1111• , ·) Hen_. t1 II Hel..W •S J .ot .. _. .... ., IJ '2 HIMltlOll n .. ... , 1 ....... , ' .. Liii .. "•0 .. .. lOtA•I• ., .. LOllltVllle u ) ~mPfll• "' '° Mleml n 10 Mlhlftllitl .. 1 •IJ Mlll .. 11 ~. ., .,. HHllWllle ,, ll H•w~1llt u ., H_Y.,, "' It Nof'fOlll .,, u 0111e. c11, " ti ,Iii Om41M ti ' .01 ""lled'llfll• ,, ,. ~· ,, ., PltlMllrfll •• 0 f .., .... Dt8\'ery ;e ... =I •• -..,J< II \'W de> ..oi ,_ --·~·"'""'-·' .... .,,,, _ _. ....... _ .. ...... o. 111'4 ~ti yOll IO "°' , ........ :?': • .., • ·~ lllllOf" l •Ill -rci-r-GllOf Oth_ .. C~f~ ¥ ~ °' Cowllly ... _ ....,.,., _,~ ... ..., ..... et .. -w..1-• MloU\t 1o1~c~~·"'°t-11 Nll.llJM ·-0-"°"" II~ ,.,.,.,_.... ........ • • INSTANT COWR ICELAND POPPIES Another gorgeous background of bright color In red1, yellow•, oranges and pastels. Rogen hybrid varle11es will bloom through late spring. PANSIES ANO VIOLAS Fa..,..lolia 9arden color In beds, basket• or pot1-bluea, yellows, oranges and whltn. SNAP DRAGONS Add bright and pa1t•I color with thl• 1tat1ly ftowtr. Crtate beautiful bordtrt for -~ ... ....,. ....... t cut nowen from VC)Ur garct.n. PRIMROSE Rogen hat both Engllth and Fairy varie· ties-the foundation of any spring garden -available In white, yellow, red, pinks, orange and blues. CYCLA~ An outstanding plant for bedding or pot. and a great decof'ator Item. Muld·bloom flowen come In whlta, reds. plnka and variegated colon. AZALEAS Beeutllut ftow .. ng ~ plent•. truly a c.w.r.i. favorite ln redl, pinks, white• and tome unique vartett.. Han .Joaquin Hlllt Rd. al ~acArthur Blvd .• Newport BHch, (714) 640.'800 o,.n Detty tam to 6->m-florltt 640·6774 , I CALIFORNIA No Spaceman Jared Reisman. 5, who because of severe allergy problems has been forced to wear spaceman·like gear to purify the air he breathes. enjoys a new toy with mother, Marlene. The Carmichael youth left today for Denver where he will undergo tests to determine the cause of his problems. Suit Hits Coast Policy Homeowners ·challenge Public Access Rule LOS ANGELES <AP> Actor Burgess Meredith is among those speaking out in a court action that challenges a policy requiring shoreline owners to allow public access to their land before betn~ allowed building and improvement permits. The action, filed tn Los Angeles Superior Court, C'la1ms the state Co<1stal Commission's policy 1s unconstitutiona l because it deprives landowners without adquately compensating them. Althou~h it as not the fi rst t.Jme the pohcy has been challenged. the suit by the Paciric Legal fo'oundat1on and the Californi a Coastal Council 1s Rain Cawes Rockslides By The Associated Press I A warm Pacific stor m poured as much as five in· cht:'s of min on areas or northern California in 14 hours. causing house flooding and hi ghway rockslides in Marin County. HochltdC's temporarily closed a lane along parts of the two.lane Lucai. ' Vallt•y Road in N1casio, were flooded in other shcrafr's deputies said. areas of the county, in- Strects and basements eluding Mill Valley, and areas of Tam Valley at Camino Alto Road, the Judges Rapped on Lobbying LOS ANGELES (AP> The coun t y's mun1c1pal judges have illegally paid an outside law firm $52,885 to lobby for them . s ay s S upervi sor Kenneth Hahn. adding that no county funds will be used to pay the bills. deputies said. THE COUNTY re· ce1ved four inches of rain an less than 14 hours by 6 a .m .. weather of. ficials said. Sheller Cove in northwe s tern California received more than five inches in the same period. Elsewhere in the San Francisco Bay Area a combination of hi ~h tides and rain caused tideland floods. The warm-winded rains also fell on usually s now·prone areas at high altitudes in the Judges can hire out· Sierra Nevada. Pre - side legal counsel only dawn tempe ratures with the approval of the were in the :.>s along In· Board of Supervisors, terstate 80 through Don· which the judges failed ner Pass and Blue Can· to obtain before retain· yon where rains were- ing the firm or Gibson, also heavy. Raio so hil Dunn and Crut che r , iki resorts in the atioe- ll ahn told reporters area. Wednesday. According to the supervisor. the county auditor reimbursed the JUdges. who hid the legal fees a mong expenses from the various 24 Municipal Court dis · tricls. The expenses list· ed were for such things as travel and expert wit· ness fees. Hahn added. ' . the first to quest ion the r equirement on a statewide basis. Meredith and 10 other homeowners filed declarations in the suit. The plaintiffs said in the suit filed Tuesday that they want court·Ordered guidelines defining tht' coastal comm1ss10n 's authority lo require pubht· access lo private property. The foundation is a conservative statewide le~al group, while the council represents about 6,000 California property owners. SAt-ITAAMA 2911 SO. lllSTOL 11111....,..tS..~"-•Sap•• w.....,. ............. . 556-8287 Thurldsy. January 11 1979 DAIL y PILOT A 5 Anti-busing B~cked Measure Would Restrict Courts SACRAMENTO CAP I t.ember. must eliminate segrego-d1str1cts should be re· -Another measure lo The Ca I 1 for n i a tion regardless or cause. quired to Integrate only restrict lhe power of Supreme Court has said The Cede ra I h 1 g h 1rthere is evid41nce of in· s tate cour(s to order that school districts court. let!S strict. say11 tentional segregation. schools to Integrate has ________ ....:.;..:__:..:~~~~.:..:..;.;;...;..~::...__:.;;.;.;,;;.;.;.;.;.;;.;..:.:::.;;..;:.:;:.::;,;;,;,.:.:.:..._ begun lo move through •--------------------------• the Legislature. and supporters lhlnk it will pass this time. The constitutional aO)endment. a imed primarily at overturning Los Angeles' mandatory busing program. was sent to the Senate noor Wednesday by the upper house's F.ducation Com· mlttee. The 10·1 vote came despite a plea from the panel's only black member. Sen. Diane Watson. D·Los Angeles, lo kill it. SENATOR S have twice approved similar measures by the same author. Sen. Alan Rob· bins. D·Van Nuys, since 1977 . But both amend· ments died in the As· sembly. This year, supporters are relying on the fear of many Los Angeles· area residents that the Los Angeles plan will spread to nearby dis· tricts. They say this fear should give them the votes needed to gel lhe amendment out of the Assembly Jud1c1ary Committee. ats stum· bling block in past years . if a pprovcd by the Legis l ature. the measure would go on the ballot in 1980 for voter consideration. THE a mendment. SCA 2, would overturn the Los Angeles pro- gram and some others by requiring state courts to use the standards of the U.S. Supreme Court in deciding whether to order integration. But there is question whether even that re· quirement would have a n impact in Los Angeles, which began a JANUARY CLEARANCE All Camille by Thomasvi lle reduced during our January Clearance -this includes 1iv1n9 room. dining room and bedroom lurmture. Shown Elegant dining room furniture reflecting the chwrn. grace. and splendot of the French court of Louis XV. Table. chairs and large China. W o• SJStS.00 Now 52795°0 I 1 tntenordes1gns by. Dick Metteer ' Polly Dodds Hitchcock Morgan A S 1 o. Hundreds of other items drastically reduced for this sale' DICK METTEER Fine Furnishings & Interior Design 1727 Westcltff Drive. Newport Beach • 646-1678 Open 9·5 30 • Cl9sed Sunday Evenings By Aooo1n1men1 massive school busing •---------------------------p r og r am l ast Sep· WESTMINSTER ·a IJJI IMCH aYD. IW4lrt c .... u , ,, ....., a ,,., • ' • '-"' w-."""' .. ' ,.. .......... . 893-7546 Covering Callfomkl Wall To Wall f / ' ~ .... ---~---------- --·~ -.- ' ''8 L/ £' Orange Coast Oa1ly Pilot Editorial Page .................................................................... Robert N. Weed/Publl\Mr S.rtMlr• KrtlblCh /Ec:utOf'l•I P~ Editor Sharp R s ponse Was Out of Line Luau.nu lkuch <'<>unclllt\Jln W•) n O Un 1 nolt.'f1 ror his out~µokcn munn('r at City C'ounrll me •\mg"· ond often hl1' ~harp verbluwt.• '"on t1rg t Hut l"lt'ml•nlt. ht> modt• t.a~l wt• ·k du11n1 u prP:-t>nlul.Jon by v1ctun s of thit• Ul ut•btrd Cnn un land ,Jh.lt.• \\ t•rt•. u1 ht:~t htwlrl 'h "' Uol,• Ch,•tt'. pll'"ldt•nl o f tht• homt•uwn1.·rb ' a:.bot·tut11111, told l't>Unt•1lnw11 tm. tlroup ""~ 4'Ubmttllng routinl' VIOl>t.'tl\ d.tmu.ct• t l.11m:-~•th the rlt) 1n ordc•r tu c·ornt• und •1 u too du\' sl.t1 u1,. of h m1t.111un~ ror lll1n the fu1m~ llt· g1·al·1u11 ... I\ told tht• c·ouiw1l thul the chtlms nn· not l:rn:. u1h I h.1t t Ill' u·..,111t•nh JJIPrt'l 1.1111 t ht• "'ork tht.• e ll y ha~ <lont• 011 hdt.1lf or lht• d1~.1:-ll•r \ 1t'l1ms. untl utd th<.' i.:roup 1~ dotni.: :.o un ad\ IC't' nt 1b attornc•v But C:h,·n· .., ..,t ,11t•ml·nt ll1d not .,,, well with Bo9hn. ''ho rt•mJrkl'd. That ·-. hkt· \ou h•llins u&. Don't mind~ "halt• wt• otn•w ~ou ."' fh• ut...o hkl•twd Ghl're's r('murk.s to, ·· A.,k1~ u..., to ... milt.' '' htlC' \H' ~" t• 'ou the ohaft " P rof)l·11y c-ltum~ ,u e ft led t'\ t'O week with tht.' Cit~ ('ounnl. .uut tht.' t·oun(•1I rout111t•I\ refors them to the t 11 \ .., 1n .... uram·l· t·~u-r1t•1 · lkrnurks sm·h a ::. Ba~Jin ·., \\l'l'l' uncalled for. and 1·t•rl <t1lll) not :.ipiu·oµl'iult> in th~ l'<1:,e of homeowners who lost t•\ eryttun.: 1n lht• 0<'l 2 ~l11lt· Geologist Needed San C'lem!-'nll' city go\-C'rnmt•nt ts bring only prudt:nl to <·ons1dt·r hiring a geologist stufl m e mbet or c·onsultunl to tw ··on hoard" in the c·vent of anv nt!w la ndohtll!s. Ttw l>t•<· 18 l;,rncl..;ltdt· at thl' ShoreclifCs Mobile Country Cluh. '' hH'h 1mpt•rilNJ ut leust four S70,000 mooilf• horr\l':-0. found tht• dty fl'ly ing on u geologist hm·d 1,_, t ht· pm k ·., fl\\ nt'I':. for an l'Sl1mate of whtil danger the ~hdt· µo.,c•d C'1t~ l1lanr1111g 01rec·tor .Jumes Lawson. amon~ ot ht•r:.. polllll·U uul that althou~h the park's 1H'olog1st ts ,111 l'lhiral prolcssionul. hl' might he t·xpectl•d to havl' -.ornt· bias an fa, or of hi.; t•mplo~·l•r. I .:isl WCl'k rcs 1dl1lllo of C'allt· ~in.1 :ippeetll·d to tht· City Council to hcilp "'H'l' tlw1r honws 111 what thc•y s<.11d mig ht turn out lo bt· ~111olht•r Bhwhtnl t'<Jnyon." likt.• the d1 ..,a strous Oct 2 l.md::.lu.h: whwh left 50 homeless in l.:1gum1 Bea<'h But th1 · r1ty has no unbi<1st•d eXPt'rl qu<ilifit•d to l'V<.lluat<.• lltt· l'Xtt'nl of thc prnblem on C'allc :\Ill<• I·:\'t•n 11 s,111 C'lem<.•flll' nt·vt•r has anoth(•r lundsltt.ll· and 1t 111-.t·h ro11ld ii C'it y l'mptoy('d ~c·olo~1st would tw ;in il',.,d m C'\ Jluating propo:.ed dc•veloµmcnl tJ( lhl' ttl y's ~1.0011 ;t<·n•s of 1:ind1 Ian<!. where• ~eolog1C'<il prohlt·m~ h,I\ t· :iln•;uh ht•\•n 1dt·11l 1f1t•d Road Solution Li:igun:.1 H•'ach j ., finall y t<Jking thl• fir'>t stt·p~ to H·movt' two t·onlrO\'t•rswl roads from the tountv's muster plan of arterial hi~hways. · Te n homeowner groups in Luguna have for yeurs opposed the c reation of thoroughfares on Alta Laguna Boulevard and Temple Hills Dr ive. suying they fear inla nd resid ents will use those two hilltop road ways to lraver~5c their ne ig hborhoods. They suid <.'ounty highway funds that would <'Om<• Laguna's way a s a result or conforming with the county's maps would not compens ate for the noise. s afety problems a nd traffic· congcslton tht'.V \\01tlrl s uffer should the roads be cxlt·ndt•<l. And beside~. thc•y urguc•d. a 1on10g error made t he c·1ly ineligible for thl' malC'htng h1~h\\ay funds thb year anyway ~ now tht· t:ity. with the promised help of Fifth 01s trict Supervisor Tom Riley, will attempt to bring the tounty's h1ghw<Jy mup into c·onformity with the ritv's. That would make Lagun<.1 ch)(ible for futur<' road rund~ WhiC'h 1s \\h<.tt th<• tity i,ho11ld hav(• done tn thl· fi rst pl a c·c. .. • Opinions eitpressed in the space above are those of the Daily Ptlot Other views eitpressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv11ed Address The Daily P1to1, PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Femininity By L.M. BOYO These ~rhol:srR who mukl· :i s tudy of the muscultn1ly tcminin1ty ruuos ot ml·n and women <.•ont<'n<I that g1rlc; arc· a l their most fcm1ntm· wht·n in the eighth ~radc They're rc·portedly mo~t masculine in their middle colkj!e years And they thcrl'after becom1· more um.I more feminine a!> they grow older. ... Item No. 582C in our Lovt• ond War man 's file on divorce Is the report thal in th<' Malabar region of India a wo men can throw out a husband almply by leaving his shoes outside lbe door. That's It, pal. Take a walk. Mar y Pickford starred In more than 200 motion pie· tures between 1909 and 1933 Out of thut many you'd think the re'd be a fe w she'd r aard u11 w inner•. E~ently not. D<.-ar Gloomy Gus lfthe San Clamcnte aolf course rupturel\ In lhC' earth arc cau!wd from heavy bulldoztnj, would you call the eMulna dama10 Flu ure or Mtn! J .V. though. She claim ed Rht' m·vcr made a film she llkf'd. llow do you :wcount for the fart that twice as m any r'oo- pl<' 1n th<>ir 20s as In their 30s art' left-handed? Q. "Why is th<' little finger referred to uis the pinky?" A. Comes from the Dutch "plnkje" meaning exactly that, litlle finger Thal 11ort of t hief who makes off with the m ost money per offemte on the aver a g e is the compute r criminal. Known losses to date whercln computer pro arams have been ch11ngcd to siphon off funds amount to $il50,000 per case. Q "Whal do th,~ towns of Ny Aleaun. Norwuy, and Puerto Willia ms, Chile. have In eommon?" A. On~ thing only. They are fnrtht'r from the e quator tht1n a ny other town In the world Four northern states -II llnol11, Ohio. Pcnn11ylvaniu und N~w York -each hu more than a million retldenta over ate 6$. Only throe tK>uthem elates -Cullfornla. Tex11 and Flortda can claim the tame. SO not everybody's r ettrln1 to the s un btlt. plooae note. Q . "Wtitre 1 1 M t ChomQlunarna'!'' A. "'rhet'I 'Whll the Tibetans call Mt. Evefi t. Every ahtth South Korean la naml'll Kim. Devious Drug Endorsement WASlllNOTON -In tho publlr relutiona 11mc. an un· ollrltt'd objccllv~ t•ndoraciment u( the t•llcnt'11 product 18 tt pearl uf JJ,r •at price Aod whil., auch 1•11dor11t•mt•r1t11, llktt pearls. cun 1wrur nulur lly. the <'Ultured 'Jrt1:ly 11. fJr mor(' prevtilt'nl St•rutch un ohj<'ctlvt• endorse· m.-nt uod you'll aencrully '1nd It \\ IUI C'Urt•fully t'Ultlv41ted by u tlJt"k Onl' pur11cult1rly f'ffccl ivc u1m11urk Ubt-d by corpon1Le tt11 · uiie lrn1l\.11•1i. 1a an · '1.."<iut·u tlon1l t•ttm 1JUl&:11' thut I' 1111ppo11t.•dl y 11 pon11ur\'<l ui. ti " u b I I \' 11e r VH't' hut whh'h. when propt•rl y h a nd l ~d. r(' it u I t s i n fovorablt• 1>ubllcity ror lhe com· 1>an} 's product The curefully sc lcct t•d e x pt.>rts who are !)t.>r!mudt•d to l:Jke J>i.trt in tht· educational cumpaign can wiod Mailbox up a1 unwitting shills tor the 1pon1or'1 merchandise. A CLASSIC eumple ol the technique was recently present· ed by Roc he Laborutorics. maker of the tranQuiUiln& drua Valium. With some 3 billion of the m ood ·alterlng pills prc1u:r ibt'd each year. Valium 111 not only America's most popular ore· scribe d trunqulllzer . IL's far and away Roche's most popular prescription drug. R oche grosses a quarter·billlon dollars a yeas:. from Valium. more than half of the company's tot al sales. Valium u nd ot h er benzodlazepine tranquilizers en JOY an excellent reputation for e rrectl veness and safely. But there ls growing concl'rn that the drugs are being m1 sui.ed FOR EXAMPLE. Valium can be extremely dangerous when tak e n in comb1nution with alcot)ol. According to estimall's by the National Instit ute on Orut Abuse. Vallum by It.self or m ixed with alcohol o r some other druc accounted for 54.400 emeraency room visits and 900 deaths between May 1976 and April um. ApparenUy worrtcd about the increase In unfavorable public! ty for their top mon~y.maktr. Aoche executivci; decided to sponisor a nationwide educa· tlonal pro((ram on stress. aimed al physicians and the general public. Although the program was billed as totally obJecuve. our special investigator David Zimmerman concluded that the program has a definite tilt toward the use of drugs lo treat stress. AND THOUGH H.oche'~ finun· cwl backing or the educational program is disclosed on promo· tional hlt'rature sent to medical writers. there is no mention or the ract that the company manufactures a drug that is u:.ed lo treat stress. Roche's role is further ob· scured by the u s e o f tn· termcdlarlcs to run th~ t.'<lucu tlonat cumpalan. The program was "developed and produced" by lleulth Learning Sy»lemf.. a Bloomfield. N.J .• company that speclalliea in 1uch thln11. Th~ it was Health Learnina Sy11t.ems not Roche. thut appeared t.o bl· runnin" the show. 1'he C<lmpuny managed to ob- tain a prestiglowi lnst1tut1onal 11ponaor for the na tionw1dt• cam pa1gn Corne ll Un1vc rbtty Medical College. One oC the promotional ittim'- matled to doctors waa a casset te rt>cordlng or Dr. Theodore Cooper. dean or the mtd1cu1 l'ichool. being interviewed by Edwtn Newman. Valium 10 men- t Ione d seven time s <tnd benzod1azepine six times on the ta pe. No other drug is mentioood byname. DR. COOPER uld he used the tra de name Va lium becaul'll' "conversationally" Valium hub come to stand ror all such drugb He was aware that seve ral other firms produce rival brandh of benzodiazeplnes. and said hl' would have been careful to "m e ntion ever ybody's product once" had he realized that men 11on1ng only Vulium would urouse SU8PICIOn. C'oop<.,•r is contradicted by on<' or his as:.1st11nt deans. Stephen Scheidt. who admitted ht' was "surprised " to hear the frequent ra,orabll' mention of Valium on the Roche ·financcd tape "l'w made 1l clear th1.1t <these pro J!ram '-1 :..houltl be ltirJ.!l•ly altru1s l1<'. with H mild bit of self· inkrl.'st." he said . HOWEVER. in the pro~rum materials so for Sl•nt out to JllUrn.Jhsls und <.loctors by Ht -"· Vul1um 1 ~ th t• un i v henzodwzcpinc mentioned by name and usually lht• rt•f erence ts favorable. Yet an llU; offtc1al 1ru11stl'Cf that Roche had no cont rol over the material 11 was paytn~ fur. ''The companit''- that put up lhe money for our programs nevl•r set.• the l'Oµ} ... ht· told Z1h1ml·rman \'~·~. V1rJ.(m1a. thert.• 1s u Sant..i Cl::ius lie weurs threc·p1e1·1• ~utts and works in a corporall' board room Any e ndorl'lements hl· f.?Cts art· ohJt.'cl1vc and un suhl'llt'tl, :.ind h<ivl' nothini.! to do with thl' loy-; he J,!tvcs a way. Teacher Pay Not Meeting Living Costs To the Editor The letter to the <·d1tor in Sun- day ·s paper from a pttrent states o general dissatisfaction and lack of respect for teachers I am a teacher who lovt·s children a nd enJoys teaching. yl'l it 1s a constant dlstruct1on from the job lo be concerned constantly with severe finanual problems. Tht• cost of h vmg Is going up and President Carter says be happy with a 7 percent Increase. Most of us would bc happy. very happy, wtth a built-In cost of liv· in~ increase. but our salaries a re frozen at J unc s level Last yt.>a r I received n 2 percent 1n- crl'asc. Every yt·ur teurhcrb C'arn less. WF. LOVt: our <•hildre n too und want to foed and educate them. Why Rhould tcache rb and their families bear the financial burden of Proposition 13? Does that mother realize thut with a m a11ter'11 deRrec. 50 units beyond the master's and IR years of ex. pe rlc nce a teacher earns only $21.000? ThtU's not much of a salary for a proft>Sslonal person at the peak or hu; financial lift• A teacher ot th~ top of the ~alary schedule do<.•s not qualify for the cheapest home In Orange County. Also. we do our own typ· In~. dittoing, Jtradinc. research, lesson plannin~ etc. 1 have not now nor eve{had an aide T . WILSON Dla£,.a-llfd~ To the Editor. The other night In La1una Beach City Council chambers. we had another kind of AmeTlcan t.ra1eqy A very unin· formed counrllpc rbon rcod a statement prcipart'd b y other persona. It was full of half· truth•. and no truth•. It peraonlfled bureoucruttc phtlot0phy und murdered "t>fol· a-Ride." This wa11 taxpayer&' mQney, our own money. oolna returncid to the clUzerui of Laguna Beach In a pllot proaram with no cost to ~· ~l)I ol L•funa Beuch. Dlal·a-Rlde le so Important for afaut·tnJ, Hntor cltJieoa and the city ol La1una Be.ch that It would ta.kt 1 book to ccWeT Its full potenUal, •nd Ill IOIJ to lha cltbtftl of Lapna Beach. TR S ACTION taken by the City Council ••• not only counter·producllvo, ll wH a • tragedy. and all the l'tllzen~ of Laguna Bea<.·h are the lo~cr!> As a senior 1:1t1zt•n. a tax· payer . a home owner. and one who helps pay pay the salary of the city staff. council, etc .. I don 't like lt one b1l. In my opin· ion. their mid-viclorian think· ing in the latter part of the twen· liet h century is out of touch and out of step with our limes and totally unacceptable . w 1th Proposition 13 a fact of lifC'. and fiscal pr udence a n~essity, I wonder why Lhrec councllperfions. namely, .Jack McDowell. Howard Dawson and Kelly Boyd, ki lled "Dial-a · Ride " I !IUgl-(es L they explain their "bizarre• artrnn" lo the t•1t1zens of Laguna Beac h. and JUSt1fy. if tht·y can . their rt"ason~ for doing so J\nd n·m<'mhcr the shut-ins and senior t•1t11.(1ns ar e the real lo~ers by the uclio11 they have ti.lkt•n /\LAN 1-: /\DAMS PareMt• A ppalle d To the Editor· As parents of a child attending Fountain Vallt.>y ll1Ah School. we· re appalled at the aC'ttons of the lcuchers tn the prl'i>ent dispute. Why is classroom time being used to pres<>nt the ht•lit•rs or the tear hers·· Why tire• tcacl1t!rs telllng ittudcnls t.hut truuiv'y i!i acceptublc during tho 11trik<' and will 1(0 without conKCQU('llCt•s'.' W 11 y a re st u d t' n t s h" I n g e ncouraged nut to t·oopcrute with th<.' sub.<Jtltut~ leach or~·• THE SITUATION could be used os u lt-arnlni< oxp •rll·nrt• ror studf'nt.'I were both sides of the las u~ dl•russed . T he collcctlve hargulninw proec1111 a nd orbltratlon ure A way of Am e ri ca n lif e, but "brulnwot1hlng " Is not. To compo und m<•tl<'rs . these stntements hove been m udt• for weeks not JuKt days. No wondt•r tht' curnpus Iii In r hno11 KEN'NETllANDMAHGARET MASON ........ 13 To the FAit-Or: Pro poi.ttion 13 mull be J ewish. It ls blamed for t0 many thlnas. In your "HoUJln1 Supply Drops." Jon. 5, 13 Is blamed. Propo lllon 13 had noth.lna to do with the housing 11hort•s• th1t haa been lnel'e11lf n1 b uu.o covernment hu bad the extra tu money to 1upport tbr 'myrtada of bureaucracl that rt1ulaui U.1 aupply. And It local J(overnmenb d1sr11111 :!Al' hou~1ni: development becau.w tht•y won t get us much prorx·rty t:1x mont•y from It. that 1s lht•1r fuull. not 13. And how 13 "'" "(urtht.>r re duce the supply of fund uvulluhh.' for development and inr rcasc the price," as statc·d b} Brown'" 0 f f 1 c e o r P I a 11 n 1 n g ..i n 11 Research. ts too moot a question to be a sked. Ai. 1s how 1t 1s responsible for rent increases Rents have been increasing with the increase m 1nrtat1on. for years past But 13 has its Jto<>f'l side. Its l'Utdown Of government's SUr pluses may stop Hrown '!I California llousin~ Task Force from subsidiling 80.000 hous1mi units. as proposed by Marcia Miii~ of that forct•. with more bur<'aucrallc was tt• and tax dollar s. and tnstead makt' the m <•asc the restrictions placed on private enterprise that 1s ready, willing and anxious to provld1• the housing needed Marcrn Mills. of the League of Womt.>n Voters, seems to havt• replaced Clalrc Dedrick. or the Sierra Club. as California 's powerful c reater of c haos . ll is time for some logical a lternatives GOLDIE .JOSEPH Tazpaffer• •ffod 11• To the F..dlto r· Thcre is an ugly mood de velopln1t a mong we taxpuyer11 that crosses a ll age. polllicul. and oecupauonal groups. We taxpayers hJve reached the 1rnturallon point with city. s tat<'. and fedcrul employees who "demand" higher wages und mor<• b<'neflts while our rounlry I~ currently In dlr'l economl(' straights OurlnJ! our economic c rlsls. taxpayer;; a re struggling desperately to keep their jobs. homes. rur~. and good health. We urt' tired o( t1trlkt•11 and demand~ mad<' by o ur 11nvanll ond ror mor •. when w(' have let.a. Any school teacher. fireman. bu s driver. pol iceman o r itarb ge collactor. etc . wtto fteli. he or she cnnnot llvt on thf'lr preacnt sal nry and bf'nefll8. should quit their Job Immediately ond eek e mploy. rntnt olonJullde uit In ttw prlv11te aector UNTU. the economy ~v ra. we will not tolel'ntfl clty. ata"'. and federal e rnployc.u receavtt& any Hlary or ben ·flt lncrea11e1 In fact, we taxpayers moy have ,. 10 rl'duc(• <tOmt• of the benefit:.. thl'y nowen1oy. 1\lthou~h the mood of the tax pi.lyers 1s an ug ly one. govern· m(•nt l'mployees need not worry JUsl } cl . because we arc dC'fuM-d pohtic·ally In Novl•mhl'r. 1978, 11 app1·i.1rt•d that Gov Hrown 'A<ould sl.'n.'l' our moo<l and would tup this va!>t p<>hltcal resourCl' I It• has yt.•t to do so Once Uw polll1<.·1ans at all ll•veb of gov ernment realize the sheer pow(.•r of this ugl~· taxpuyt•r mof)d, thl'Y wlll he S""l'Pl 1n1 u any offtcl' lht•y set•k If flownrct .lorv1s wt>rc W year~ younj(. bellcr cdul·ated. and mort' of a polished h?adt•r and individual. he would he our Pn•sident in 1980 Facts are that Mr Jarvis is not such a man Thl•rt> ar<> 100 million Amcri<.'am. waiting to be m olded into 11 cohcsi\'e polittcal fore<.•. Who t1u you think will i.lcp forward to lcu~ us" WALT RLANKF.NSllJP A la•lcan \ll4t1e To the F.dltor: This ts tn rererence to your re cent story Rbout an attorney in Corona del Mar s uing a neighbor over the "extended height" of 11 tret'. True. u v1(•w of the ocean is a spe('ial thin~. but putting a tree into the v1~w somehow enha nce:. It all WHEN W E l lvtd in Anc horage. Al u ka. people foul(ht hard to save the trees from ovcr·tealous developers Tht trees gave us all ~o much more benuty In n land whcrf we would give a lot for more really tall trees !the at.'vcre winters ln some urcu!l keep them shorter 1 tr only we could take the "Flaherty tree" with Yi when we happily return to Alat1ko this spr lna. we eould give It auch u traaiJured ploce to live 1i1nd de · light ell that pus11ed Its way. On m y walk tonljht I counted over 100 tr of a grand acul and l aih.all otter i quiet prayer for them all. KATllV OORHAM .. • 1Attn1 /rom rtodt,, o~ eoelcome Th. right to condnH I.Un• to /it .,,act or tllm1natt1hfHl &t"'l'lrff'nlfd Lttttrl of JOO wordl or lfu wfU bt Qtt>f'ft prej'1m(.e . .411 ftrrtrt rn"'1 tn· tllltU ~gMtvn and rtuultng oddrlH but notMt mo11 N Wfthlltld °" rt· qv.tlt f/ ftA/ff.cl~I 'flUOft U QA>Crtftl. Po.t'l/ wtll not~ publWl«i , range Coast EDITION Your Hometown Dally Newspaper VOL. 72, NO. 11, 3 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES • Al"~ IRANIAN PRISONER MASOMEH SHADAMANY CELEBRATES Arst of 68 People Freed From Uf• lmprtaonment ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11 , 1979 C/N TEN CENTS • U.S. Flag Burned Ami-shah Mob Riots in Iran City TEHRAN. Iran <AP l -A mob hauled down snd burned the American flag today In front of the U.S. consulate in Shiraz, top- pled 1hree statues or the shah and stormed the secret police headquarters. residents re-ported. Between two and eight people were killed and 10 to 15 were wounded when agents or the secret police. SAVAK, opened fire to defend themselves. the Shiraz residents said. The incidents broke out as Prime Mini ster Shahpour Bakhtiar tried to win the support of Parliament of his newly in- stalled civilian government. In Washington. U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance voiced strong support at a news con- ference for Bakhtiar's efforts and urged the Iranian military and otbe1 elements or the strife- tom county "to find a way to work together." Shiraz residents. contacted by ·telephone from Tehran, said the violence began after some 10,000 to 20,000 people gathered al a ci- ty square for an anti-shah rally. The crowd marched to the consulate. where they hauled down the U.S. nag and burned it in the streets. The dem- onstrators then demolished ~tatues of the shah before at- tacking the secret police head· quarters during the four-hour riot. In Tehran. Bakbtiar promised to ~top selling oil to South Africa·· and Israel, fire "unneeded foreigners·• and let the religious leaders opposed to Shah Mobam- m ed Reza Pahlavi and his Westernization program ·•supervise government ac- tivities." Presenting his civilian cablnet to the lower house for a vote of confidence next week. Bakhtiar appealed for support to end the year-long poliUcal and economic turmoll generated by opposition to lbe lhab's autocratic rule. But he made no reference to the em- battled ruler ln his speech. "Now lhal the treasurr is empty and the factories are tdle. I beg you to endeavor t.o start them again," .he said. Bakhtiar said relations with the South African government would be reviewed and oil sales halted because of 'that govern· ment 's apartheid policy of racial segregation. Turning to Israel. he said: ''The Iranian nation has always shown its unity with the Arab brothers and .has alwavs suo-ported the rights of the Pal· estinlan people. Like the sale of 01 I to South Africa. the sale or oil to Israel will be stopped.•· be said. Both nations are dependent on Iranian oil. Iranians are Moslems. but not Arabs. The United States has said it would supply Israel ii the Jewish slate stops getting oil from Iran. rn Tel Aviv today. Shaul Galai. sl>Okesman for the lsra~lt Energy Ministry. said Israel can gel by without Iranian.oil. · .. We're not worned more or less than the rest of the Western world. but we will have to adapt ourselves." Galai said. Bakhtiar's 20-minute speech to a packed house of 268 deputies was well received and was in· terupted occasionally with ap- plause. Expected anh·shad dem- onstrations outside did not materialize. Rescue by H;elicopter Fel.ony Gun I.aw Backed Billy Blasted Cambodian Official Snatclwd From Rebels SACRAMENTO <APl - By unanimous vote, the state Senate today ap- proved a bill to bring the "use a gun. go to prison" law back to its full s trength after a state Supreme Court ruling. GOP Official Raps Carter BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> - A Thai helicopter rescued Cambodian Deputy Premier Ie ng Sary from capture by v 1 ctorious Vietnamese and Cambodian rebel forces today and the ousted official then flew out of Ban~kok for Hong Kong, Thai airline officials said. Another helicopter also made a brief landing inside Cambodia CJnd returned to Thailand, but there was no confirmation either of the choppers pl.eked up President Kbieu Samphan or 4 other officials of lbe fallen Phnom Penh government. There were no reports on the fate of Khieu Sampban or or Premier Pol Pot. bul reliable Thai military and Western sources said the beleaguered Cambodians asked the Thais to Record Low Deep Freeze Hits Midwest By The Associated Pre.S Record low temperatures were recorded in the Midwest to· day with the thermometer dip- ping to 39 degrees below zero in Minnesota and 34 below in Plano. Ill, about 50 miles west of Chicago. At midday today, the mercury was hovering around the zero mark in downtown Chicago. Temperatures as low as 30 below spread from Wisconsin into lower Michigan this morning. with Eau Claire, Wis .• recording a 30 below reading. the colest in the stale Hibbing, Minn .• recorded a low temperature of 39 below r.e ro. making it the coldest spot 1 n the country. and there were unofficial reports of 40 below J.ero temperatures elsewhere in northern Minnesota. Other Illinois low readings in· eluded Rockford. -24; Moline. 18 . Millington, -3 1, and Yorkville, -29. Coast Weather Patchy fog and low clouds late tonight through mid -morning Friday. Otherwise mostly s unny Friday ·with some high cloudineis. Lows tonight 44 to SO. Hl&hs Friday 6S to 67. INSIDE TODAY A• the ltale o/ ffolDCUI ap- proache1 ft• 20th birthdo~. gowrnment oJ/lCfall oftd rt•· ~· arf ~ aloud whtthtr growth should bt cur~d. Sff "Gn>\Otftg Poml'' on Page Alt. ··-· Al't-~ A1 =~ et ,,_...,.... u • A4 L M ... ,. .:t ~'!:. ........ .a e: i==· j .. ~ otarw =~~..= ~~ E lllt .. ..._.,. M .,. ............ M ..... fll ........ allow the transit of about 500 or their associates and their families to China, their only important ally while they were in power. The swift h e licopter evacuation came as Vietnamese tanks and infantry were moving toward the Thal border along Highway 6, according lo reliable intelligence sources. Reporters at the bord e r town or Aranyaprathet. 124 miles east or Bangkok, said the helicopters landed ln Poipet, just across the frontier. A bout 20 tanks and an unkncwm number ol troops of the new Cambodian government were sighted to the south of Poipet. The tanks bore markings of the rebel Kampucbean <Cambodian) United Front that the Vietnamese army led into Phnom Penh on Sunday. But there was speculation that they were Vietnamese tanks in disguise, since Hanoi's story is that Cambodian insurgents and not Vietnamese are .doing the righting. The airline officials said Ieng Sary, the No. 2 man in tt,e fallen regime, members of bis family and possibly other officials took off for Hong Kong aboard a regularly scheduled Thai flight. Some sources said earlier that Pol Pot might have been killed during the Vietnamese invasion. But China 's deputy foreign C.Oast College District Cuts Full Session l minister reportedly told the Japanese ambassador to Peking he was alive in Cambodia. The deposed communist leaders retreated to northwest Cambodia after they were driven from Phnom Penh. the capital, and had been reported s till in control or about 20 percent of the country there But Thai military sources reported new victories in that region for the advancing Vietnamese army and their allies In a pro-Hanoi rebel Cambodian movement. The sources said one of the losing side's two major remalnlnl rootholda. the town of Siem Reap and the ancient temples of Angkor nearby. had been taken by the Vietnamese. The vote was 39-0 on SB 149. sponsored by the Senate Judiciary Commit· tee. sending the bill to the Assembly. The state's high court. in the Tanner decision is- sued last month, weakened the 1975 law mandating a prison sen- tence for anyone convicted of using a gun in certain felonies. WASHINGTON <AP> - Republican National Chairman Bill Brock today called Presi- dent Carter's brother. Billy. a bigot and urged the president to publicly disavow his younger brother's allegedly anti-Semitic remarks . Billy Carter. while accompa nying a tugh-level Libyan del- egation on a tour or Georgia, has oeen criticized for such re- marks as .. There·~ a hell or a lot more Arabians than there is Jews .. and for saying the United States should end its "hostility .. toward Libya. responded to a question about Libyan support for terrorist groups by saying: .. The J ewish media tears up the Arab coun· tries full time. as you well know." The Libyan government hea d e d b y Co l . Moam a r Khadafy has been criticized as a s upporter of intemational ter- rorists. incluclini;t the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Japanese Red Army and for his opposition to Carter·s efforts to make peace between Egypt and Israel. At the White House, press secretary Jody Powell replied that Billy Carter is a private citiien and does not speak for the president. Bracero Program Favored by Nixon Brock said h e wa s not challenging Billy Carter's right to free speech and "we cannot legally contain the disgusting anti-Semitism that laces his re- marks." Added Brock: "We have yet to outlaw bigotry in the United States and when the bigot's opinions result in the satisfaction or the bigot's JCreed. we can't ex - pect him to put a rein on his tongue." Wayne F a.ces (;a},l Bladt:kr Operation TIJUANA <APl -Although he says he couldn't do much to 'mplement it, former President Nixon says the United States should restore a bracero pro- tram so Mexican nationals work,ng across the border may "work with dijlnity." .. As l com~o Tijuana and see these people here -hard- working, nice people -and then find they move across the border to make a little money to send back and they are arrested and harassed -it's wrong," Nixon said Wednesday. He a nd longtime friend Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo were In this border town 20 miles south of San Diego for a meal of enchiladas and beer. He talked informally with reporters or Ti· Juana's ABC newspaper. U .S . and Mexican officials should "work out a legal way where the rights of the workers can be protected, where they can get adequate salaries, un- employment, Social Security and all the rest rather than leave It as it is now. where they're crossing the border anyway and it's all illegal and they have no protection.·· be added. The bracero program launched in 1942 a llowed Mex- icans to receive housing. food. medical care and wage protec- tion whi l e working in agricultural and railroad jobs in the United States. The program ended in the mld-60s when or- ganized labor contended the pro- gram was taking work away from Americans. "Congress needs to look over the situation and develop a legal way for workers from Mexico who want to work in the {:Jnited States to get across the border. • Lo work wilh dignity and send money back home, .. he said. Asked if he would push the program. Nixon said. "I can't play a role ... I play a role by saying it and maybe somebody else will do something ... Brock said "to some extent. each of us is his brother's keeper." and asked President Carter to speak out against Billy's actions. Billy Carter's remarks have displeased Georgia state of- ficials and incensed such groups as the Amencan Jewish Com· mittee and the Atlanta J ewish Welfare Federation. which was reported to have said Billy was countering the president's Mid- dle East peace efforts. Billv is reoorted to have Sailor Missing SAN DIEGO CA P > A saiJor who fell overboard from a ship operating a t sea 65 miles southwest of San Diego has been identified as Seaman John W Pellerin of Santa Ynez. Navy of· ficials said. A search was called off tale Wednesday when no sign of Pellerin was round. the Navy said. LOS ANGELES <AP l -Actor John Wayne of Newport Beach has checked into the UCLA Medical Center for a gall blad· der operation. his office said to- day. The 71 -year-old Wayne. who underwent open.heart surgery in Boston last April. will have the operation Friday or Monday, said Tom Kane. an executive with Wayne's BatJac Produc tions · Ka ne described Wayne as in good spirits and said the veteran actor spent part of Wednesday "walking around Westwood talk ing to people before he went in." Kane said Wayne had been bothered for some time by a gall bladder condition but said doc· tors had waited until he re- cuperated from the heart sur- gery before scheduling the operation. "Everything is go now." said Kane. "He's strong enough now. so they're going to go ahead wilt\. It. .. Smoking Danger Reemphasized) . . .. ..,..... 'AIHAIM• Horace Kornel•Y I pnaldent or the Tobacco Institute, ha • termed the •ur1eon ¥eneral '1 report on smokinl 'more re&aab tban re· aearcb." •r '1 • Causes Death and Disease · j WASHINGTON <AP> -The Camano contended the report sur1eon general says be haa "difmollshes" claims by t "overwhelming" evidence thal C'lgare'tte manufatturers that • smoking causes death and dis· there Is no proven Unk between ease. What he doesn't have ls a way to help people stop. Th* were amonc the con· clu1iona tn a 1,20().paae report b- aued today by Suraeoo General Julius Richmond in a "r~view and reappFeleal'' ol r ... uda ac· cumulated the paat 15 years. "Thl1 document reveals. with dramat.lc clarity, that amokinl Is even more danttroua -ln· deed, Car more clan1erous - than wu •uPPOMd tn 1914," said HEW Secretary JoHpb A. Califano Jr. But the report aeknowledpl that DOtb1nf baa been uncovend In 15 yean tbat mak• lt euler to quit 1moktna. One chapter coach .. : "It (I boped that ln aAOtMr 1$ yean " wlll not have Lo NY. •we at.lll don't know what work.a'!" II l I c SMOKING REPORT SUMMARIZED -P•ge CS smoking and cancer and chronic diseases. Com~ N:fore the report wu releaie6',~e Tobacco tnaUtute predicted It would be "mo.-e rebMh than ,..aearcb." The Institute characterized U • amoker caurano as an anti· amottna "alot and luued lta 188·paa• report aaylna the "pre- ocw.,,..UOU with anw*lna may be both unrounded anti 4anaeroua . . . because evlduce oa many critical polntl la confilcUn1 •.. and ll divert.I attention trom other auspeci.d b11ard.a." The new 1urceon aener1l'1 re- port Is beHd on no apeclnc new < SliOtaNG, Pa1 AJ) ~. .......... PROOF 'OYERWHILMINO' 1., ~u~ Genenll Richmond . .-, .. , DAll.'V PILOT ' J DAil Y PllOT C Thurtday, Ja~uat) 11, tl11 Low-inConie HoDles Concept Accepted A propotal \IX cled to I lld to ffordabl how nJ tor f amlU maklnt leal than 110.eoo aanual· ly waa approved In prlnt'lple W dn tday by thf Or11n10 Coun l)' Boord of Supt•rvaaorJ The homH would u tl for w .ooo or I ~ or reoi ror oo more than s:aao monthly. •C't'Of"d· mM to formuluc eontained ln ~ houalnfl t'lt'ment bt-ln• atudlfd for lnflW11on in th,• \'Ounty '6 gt'lwral plun. Th\' hou:Jlq ti meat abo ui f',....P.,.r I MO KING. • rl'i.~oirrh und c..·ont lntd no '' ..rtltn~ roncluslon.'I l b thrust as that ~ volumt' of reu~h earned out 11lnce the Initial sur geon genera.I' rtporl 15 ytart ago makes ull the more certam the conclusion that smoklnc con tributes to cancer, heart dis use, bronchitis, emphysema and other ills. That finsl report created a ruror and led to the now.famous warning printed on each pack of cigarettes sold In the United States: .. W arnillg · The S urgeon General has Determined That • Cigarette smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health." Unlike the Initial report. the mam findings in the new study generally have been reported separately 11 .. •he research that led to them was completed. Much of the material lncorporal· ed in the new repart was con· t.ained in 10 earlie r reports lo Congress. the most recent one last fall on the s harp Increase in lung cancer a mong women. HEW estimates that although 54 million Ame r icans still :,moke, 30 million have quit since 1964, and the percentage or adult smokers has dropped from 42 percent. then to an estimated 33 percent. in 1978 "its lowest recorded point in 30 years." Total U.S. cigarette consump· tion dropped last year for the fir st time in 10 years -from 617 billion cigarettes lo 615 billion. The smokin~ rate among men plummeted from 53 percent in 1964 to 39 percent an 1978. but among women it has re mained ··virtually unchanged al about 30 percent." said RlchmoDd. expected to provlcM 1fford1bl hou.aint for mod rite lncorn famllfH -t.hoae urntn1 between 110.000 ud tl&,000 an n-.all)', depend1n1 on t1mtly 1111. Hout n1 ror thoa famillt• ahouJd COit no more lhan $40,000 to purchaw « $D0 monthly to rent f"tnal aclk>n on tbo howlinw I m nt. required by stole luw, la anUctpet.ed by Jan. 24 The docwnent ll auppo"ed to tnur• adt'qu1te available houa· 1na ror low and mod rate In· ome tamlh In a county where the-uv raa reaalu price of • h<>Ull I rro.ooo and the aver11• 1ww homt• ~11' St 13,000 To lmtucu lowur·e<> t houalna. th•• 1ww d<K·umenl would force tkvt•loJX'N to provide ~ perct-nt or IHll.'h hou ... in~ unitff in a OOW dl·vdo1muml to tak udvuntuiie of t•ounty itdmlnh1lratlve r..-vlt'w 11hortcui. that ~ould &uvc Uwm money ----~~--~~----- Safling Goodbye Gov. George C. Wallace· bids fa rC'wcll to the Alabama Legis lature Wednesday a!-. he prepares to leave office next Monday after an unprecedented three terms as governor. K11Jik Cites Drug Deal Testifies R eprisals Threatened by Mob By KATHY CLANCY OI • 0.11, .. 1 ... $~ One·lime Newport Beach resi· dent Alexander Kulik told an Orange County Superior Court Jury Wedne11day of a purported dope planting scheme hatched by his former bwsiness associate Richa rd Willis . Kulik. testifying In his own heroin posi;ession trial, con· tended Willis offered to make a drug plant SO a group of SO· calle d "Italians." Orange Coast residents with alleged mobster ties would be arrested and sent to Jail. lie told the jury the "Italians" had demanded $500.000 an cash a nd threatened reprisal if the cash wasn't paid after the group helped rescue him from a kid· napping for ransom in August 1977 Afterwa rd. Kulik t estified . Willis offered to make the drug plunt but he !Kulak > was round with the heroin by mistake while driving Willis' expensive Stutz car. Kulik, also a defendant in the Stephen John Bovan murder C'a:ic, was arrested In Willls' car 10 a Mission Viejo parking lot hours arter the Bovan slaying. She riff's deputies allege they round the l.l pounds of heroin in a bag in the back seat. "Mr. Willis started talking and told us that he used lo be an Anaheim police omcer." Kulik le11t.1fied , ·•and also ataled be DAILY PILOT fMOt-.r(..,IC»ttv~t« ••"'~"'''~ OtNdlM ....... fl'ff\t .,.....,.,_,..,,,.o, .. , .................... ( __ ., ... ,_ ... ~ •114>4••-_.., ,,,,_ ~ .... , ... c .. u. Mo\• .. .-.. .otO.. M .... l ..... Oll .... ..,,._ t•ifllV•ll•• frv.N .....,,.. .. .c_ft./..,.fll( .... A ,,,_... ·~ "'''°" ., ,.,..,tNd \ah•f'Orrt ~ ......... ,. '""It"'(-............. ,._ ""' Dt w ••••• ,14 ...... -C.W-.-C.lll-•'» "-"-""'"--~·­*'" c...... Y•U ..... --0..Wal-..0 -. .. -...... n:::::;..~ ~" .. "~~- r was a n informa nt. on a largl' heroin bust a couple or yeurs back that involved a coupl(• mlllioo dollars worth or heroin .. Willls went on to say he hud connections with the "federal strike force" and police and federal agents could plant drugi. on the ''Italians" leading to their arrest and Imprisonment, Kulak testified. He conten<fod Willis pledg<.'d "he would help us get these ltalaam, out of our hair · In later testimony Kulik told of u trip he and his wife made to Europ<' ond the l"ar East in Ot'- tober 1!117 but denied buying the :-.e12t.'d heroin on that Journey. Instead, he said, he and his w1f1~ purchased rubies and sap. ph1res 10 Hangkok ;md $35,000 worth of furniture In Hong Kong for the $300,000.plus home they were buy1n1t in Newport Beach at 22 Linda Isle. Mesa Driver Held ·Newport Car Chase Ends With Arrest Newport Beach police arrested a Costa Mesa motori st Wednesday night after they al· lege they pursued his car through windtng Newport streets al speeds up to 80 miles an hour before it crashed. Ortlcers said the chase ended when the driver ran a red light and crashed Into anothe r veha· cle. Police Identified the sUBpect. as Kevin Robert As he . 24, of t50 E. 25th St .• Costa Mesa, Ashe was charged with evading 1:1n of· fleer. He was released on hii; own recognizance. omcers s aid As he surrcrcd cuts and bruises In the 1· 50 pm. crash at Campus Drive and North Bristol Stree t but refused medical treatment. The driver of the second cur, Marshall Phillip Fisher , 38, or 1524 Keel Drive, Corona del Mar. was reportedly not injured Police IAld the lncldt,nt began mlnulel earlier whcl'I Officer John Laraon reapondt'd to a re port or a disturbance at 106 Vlo Xanthe, Udo Isle._ Larson reportedly s potted Ashe's small forelcn car parked In the middle of the lftreel. When A1he 1Ue1edly be11n honking the horn. Larson approached hlm bul AIM drove away. police eald. When Lanoft 4t0ve an.er AIM and atlempted to at.op him. police Hid, Aabe aH11edly 1peeded up, runnln•. IWP •lan ... • tlW'Dblr ot red lllhta. Tbe cbue. which 1110 ln· vol•«! two ctblr New1M>rt Beach eouce. omeen and two •h•r1fr'a cHpUUel, Naebld I~ U(> to • mllll per bOut u UM cart careesaed throa1b wlndinC 1trt1ll oa Udo ltlt. uo Olt I Nt'WpQrt Boulevard and across i.1<k i.tn·('ts Lo lrvine Avenut: The acr1dent occurred al the point where Irvine Avenue becomes Campus Drive and crosi.cs North Bristol Street, pollct.> said. Service Held For Ex-Mesan 1Derek Jacobs l'"um•rol 1wrvices were con· dueled today for former Co!.ta Mesa residt>nl Derek Cosby Jacobs. a county prob11l1on of· ricer and attorney who dll'd Moncla~ of a heart att:H:k He was 47 Mr .Jucobs wa11 a county pro· b3taon off1 Ct'r from 1983 to 1976 During t+iat time he received a law de~ree from Western Stat£ University. He opened a law practice In Costa Mesa an 1976 and was a m e mbe r ot the Co:sto Mcsu Rotary Club. · He later moved to Jndlo where he served briefly as u deputy district attorney before return· lnll to private practice ln Orange In June 1978. Mr. Jnoobs reetlvcd a Purple Heart for his aervke with the Marine Corp.41 ln Korea. He ts survived by his widow. Oenevl~\IC; two daughtera, Kathy Jacobs of Sacramento ancl ac.Uy Jacobi of Cotta Mua • and a slater, .Dana Chavei or l..on1 Beach. -- Services were held at the First Unit d M tbodilt Church In Co.ta Meu with R v Chan Clark ottlclatlna. A private burlal followed . ... A lao lncltKkod ere provisions for higher dtnelty con1trucUon and relaxation of tome buUd.ln1 1uind1rda ror projccu providing •rford1ble hoollna. Th~ el ment etlllO currl~a coun· ty pled1ea to uuruu lvcly puraue 1iov rnmenl ar1nt pro. J1rum11 Lo nld In conatructlon ot new uffordoblo hout1lllR or re· habllltutlon of exlstlnt& lowor· COil homut ' NotlnR Umt th c..•ounty't1 ruturc economy ml1ht he uUt•ctud because employees In both the private Ind public aeetor can't afford houslnc. the element also ca1111 tor pnvate ou.smeas and m· dustry to help eruse the howslnlC probl e m s or their own employees. County st.aft members are us· ln1 the t.ime prior to llnal ele- ment approval to revise the document baaed on crttlclsm trom the state'a Department of Houstoa aod Community Newport Center Development. Tht proposal lacks apec1f1c11. the d e partment charged. especially In a.uurance• that t he element's recommendations will be "translated mt.o a course of action." Simultaneously. county staff also will be considering recom· mendations from a variety of special interest groups ranl!ng Crom the Housing Coalition of Orange County to the Building Industry A!lsociation. Health Facility Favored Bttckens or u propoecd outvu tlent 11urf(lcl1l cente r ln N wport ~each wo n the tlr•t round Wednellduy in their attempt lo aaln stott p('rmhuslon to bullet u SJ million facility In Newport C\•ntor. ce nter. whic h apparently swayed the committee. Included tho fac1Uty'1 proposed location. adjacent to otllce buildings housing aeveral hundred phySI· clana. and Its convenience to resldenta living east or Upper Newport &y. fl'ollowtng the Feb. 9 meeting, the commJtt('C will present its recommendaUon to the Health Planning Council. which. an turn. will make a recommenda· tlon to the at.ate Department or Health. Although the final decision rests with the stale health direc· tor. the spokeswoman said the council 'a recommend a tion usually weighs heavily. The llcolth fl'ocllitlUll Rcvat•w C<>mmlttc<t or the Ora.nwc <.:ounty llcnlth Plunninl( Counell. l.tft cr h('u rlnlJ 11lx hour11 of tN1tl mony, dt•t•ldt•d to r1•eomm1md In favor of I he for lllty r'ro1w 11ed li y Surult·art' A11110c.'lull111 1111· , u 2'l>OkCllWOrnura for ltl\' cgundl 1111id tc>dny Jlow1•vt•r. hN·wu1w lht• rintllnl( rontrudlell'd u 11tuH n•rommt·n du lion u.culn11t lhl· (JtC'lllly. t1111l bnUUlll' Of lhl• lulc•nf•MI Ot llW hour. commltlt't· mc•mben con llnucd the ml-.illnw until t 'cb U to cOml• u11 with moro 11~clf1l' n·u1101111 to 11upport lhl•lr cit< d:sl11t1 Candidates Sought For Board Position The propo11NI <'enter. which Surg1care 11pokcaman Raymond Berg has slate d could lower costs of minor s urgery by up to 60 percent, was opposed by :,t.a!r members because they :;aad 1t would duplic ate outpatient racilitie-s al existing hospitals, in c luding lloag Memo rial Hos pital. However. the spokeswoman for the Health Planning Council said today backers or the cenll'r ra llied considera ble community support. Arguments in favor of the SOUFH COAST PUZ4 YIEWED • Costa Mesans mt.crested in be· Ing appolnted to a seat on the Newport·Mesa school board can pick up applications beginning Friday. The vacancy was created by the retirement of board pres1· dent Don Smallwood. Only reside nts living in Trustee Area One can apply for the post, wstrict. omc1als said. The trus t ee a rea covers northwest Costa Mesa It run.":> north from Ba nning Place to S unflower Ave nue and 1!> bounded on the west by the San· ta Ana River. The east.en\ boun dary is Harbor Boulevard to Baker Street . then ea:it to Fairview Road a nd north to Sunnower. Applications are available during regular working hours at school wslricl offices. J60J 16th St., Newport Beach. They must be re turned to School Superm tendent John . Nicoll's office no later than noon Jan. 19. South Coast Plaza is "one big • Board members will then re 9howroo01 arena" In January. view the applic ations and s ub· Stories and pictures detaU this mil rankings to acting school special "Parade of Values" an board President Carol Martin. today's Daily Pilol. Turn to She will tally the scores a nd Page A9. come up with a list or no more than five potential people who can fill the vacancy, ofhcaals said . The top applicants will be in- terv 1ewed al a special pubh<: meeting in February and a nl!w board member selected. The replacement wall have no votlnR powers for the first 30 days after appointme nt. and then wall be up ror clecL1on on Nov. 30, 1979. Stable Looted In Costa Mesa Burglars broke into a horse stable at the Orange County Fairgrounds and took more than $6,600 worth of riding equip ment. Costa Mesa police said Lo · d ay Leslie Cannon. 22. of 2535 Carnegie Ave . Costa Mesa. told police she went to her stable Tuei.day and found that the door had been forced open. Four western saddles. salver horse bats and reins were among the massing items. police said Her horse was notd1sturbed. JanaGry White's Sale LA•Z•BOV ® SAVE OM EVERYTHING IN STOCK SAYE sa lecj. $339 HUNDREDS OF CHAIRS OM SALE 199-$349 SAYE 560 • .WHITE'S LA·Z·IOY C08TAME8A MISSION VIEJO •E.17thlt. 2*2 Me~uent• Pky. -CAcrou from lt•IPf11. I? blOCk\ SOY Of Soutfl f!•&t next 'o AMrlt C.ltftdtrt) IS41M ,,.st VOivo 0Hltrl 142-1117 495-6902 Mon . .f'tt.1M • .. ltlt.10.I Ck>Md lund•Y CloMd Sunday CALIFORNIA No Spaceman J ared'lleisman. s. who because of severe allergy problems has been forced to wear spacem.an-like gear to purify the air he breathes, enjoys a new toy with mother. Marlene.. The Carmichael youth left t6day for Denver where he will undergo tests to determine the cause of his problems. Suit Hits Coast Policy Homeowners Challenge Public Access Rule LOS ANGELES <AP> Actor Burgess MerC\dith is among those speaking out in a court action that challenges a policy requiring shoreline owners to allow public access to their land before being allowed building and improvement permits. The action, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, cla ims the state Coastal Commission's policy is unconslltullonal because it deprives landowners without adquately compensatmg them Although it is not the first lime the policy has been challenged. the suit by the Pacific Legal Foundation and the Cali fornia Coastal Council is Rain Causes Rockslides 8y The Associated Presi. I A warm Pacific s torm poured as much as five in· ches of rain on areas or northern Cahfom1a in 14 hours. causing house flooding a nd highway rocks lides in Ma nn County. Rockslides temporarily closed a lune a long parts of the two-lane Luca:, Valley Road in Nieasio. sheriff's dcputie~ said. Streets and basements Judges Rapped on Lobbying LOS ANGELES (AP > Th e co unty 's mun1cipal judges have Illegally paid an outs ide law firm $52,885 to lobby for th e m . says S u pervisor Ke nnet h Hahn. adding that no county funds will be us ed to pay the bills. Judges can hire out- side legal counsel only with the approval of the Board of Supervisors. which the judges failed to obtain before retain- ing the firm of Gibson, Dunn and C rutche r . Ha hn told reporters Wednesday. According to the supervisor, the county auditor reimbursed the Judges, who hid the legal fees among expenses from the various 24 Munic ipal Court dis - tricts. The expenses list· ed were for such things as travel and expert wit- ness fees, Hahn added. were flooded in other areas of the county, ln- cludmg Mill Valley, and a reas of Tam Valley at Camino Alto Road. the deputi<.>S said. TH E COUNTY r e - ceived four inches or rain in less than 14 hours by 6 a.m., weather of- ficials said. Shelter Cove i n no rth western Ca liforni a r eceiv e d more than fi ve inches in the same period. Elsewhere in the San Francisco Bay Area a com bi nation o r h igh tides and rlfin caused tideland noods. T h e warm-winded rains also fell on usually s now-prone a r eas at high a ltitud es in the Sierra Ne vada. P re- d aw n t e mpe ratures were in the 30s along In- terstate 80 through Don- ner Pass and Blue Can- yon where r ains were- also heavy. Rain also hit. ski resorts in the Tahoe- area. the first to question the requirement on a statewide basis. Meredith a nd 10 other homcownNs Cited declarations in the suit The plaintiffs said in the suit (i)ed Tuesday t hat they want court-ordered guidehnes defining the coastal commission's authority to require public access to private property. The foundation is a conservative statewide legal group, while the council represents about 6,000 CaUfornia property owners. ~.Janl.UllY ,,, , DAILY PtL DAILY PILOT AS Anti-hus~g Backftf . Measure Would Restrict Courts SACRAMENTO <AP ) tember. must ellmlnate segrega-d istricts •hould be re- -Another measure to T h e C a J i f or n 1 a lion regardless or cause. quired to integrate only r estrict lhe power of Supreme Court has said The red er a I h 1 & h if there is evidence of an · atate courts to order that school di s tricts court. less stnct. says tenhonaJ segregat10n. schools to integrate has __________ ....;...;,_...;._ _____ ..;;._ ____ __..:o;__;.:..._ __ _ be1un to move through the Legislature. and supporten lb.ink 1l will pass this Ume. The con s titutional a m e ndme nt. a ime d./ primarily at overturning Los Angeles' mandatory bus i n g program . was sent to the Senate noor Wednesday by the upper house's Education Com- mittee. The 10·1 vote came despite a plea from the panel's only blac k m e mber, Sen. Diane Watson. 0-Los Angeles, to kill it. SENATORS h ave twice approved similar measures by the same author, Sen. Alan Rob· bins. D-Van Nuys. s ince 1977. But both amend· m ents died in the As· sem bly. This year. s upporters are relying on the fear of m a ny Los Angeles- area residents that the Los Angeles plan will s pr ead to nearby dis · tricts. They say this fear should give the m the votes needed to gel the a me ndment out or the Assem bly Judiciary Com mittee. its s tum- bling block in past years . If approved by the Legis lature. the measure would go on the ballot In 1980 for voter consideration. THE a m endment. SCA 2. would overturn the Los Angeles pro- gram and some others by requiring state courts to use the standards of the U.S. Suprem(' Court 1n deciding whether to order integration. But there is question whether even that re- quire ment would have an impa c t 1n Los Angeles. wtuch began a JANUARY CLEARANCE 't ·~t<W . ,~.,. . All Camille by Thomasv111 u reduced during our January Clearance -this includes hv1ng room. d1r11ng room and bedroom furniture Shown. Elegant d1n1ng room turn11urP reflecting the charm. grace and splendor of rhe French court or Louis XV Table. cha1rs and largo China Wo , SJS9 S .OO Now 52795°0 1 I ntenor designs by: t Dtck Metteer \. Polly Dodds Hitchcock Morgan A.S ID. Hundreds o f other items drastically reduced for this sale' DICK METTEER Fine Furnishings & Interior Design :727 Westc!ttf Onve Newport Beach • 646-1678 Open 9·5 30 • Closed Sunday E.o11·n1n9,, By Aooo1n1m1::n1 mas:-.1ve school busmg ... _ ... ________________________ .. program l ast S~p - tTown Covering Callfornla Wall To Woll Yv'IKOAVJ TIU. t • I AT TIU. 8 • IUNOA'I' t I \ • 'llH UTWAT t IN VQUR ..011 [ASV Cf!IOIT TEA,_.I • l0-00 to OA'I' HO INfC"UT ACCTS • tANICAMIAtCMllO • MAST&A CHARO• ...,di ri I .. Robert N. Wffd/Publl$her ThOIN• KMvll/Edltor Orengo Cocl~t Daily Pilot ..:JI to a r=~,.e _______ ·T·hU·m·ey·J·."·u·-iv-'.'··'·91'1---------8·a·r·bl·r·4'·K·r···'b.IC·h·/·E·d·lt·or·l··'·p·~-.e·d·l1ot--- City Must Solve Bridge Di put C'o"it~• h:•s.1 's \u~ .. 11t1d1• t)ftmffi\\ ncr-. w ml no purt of far of( µlun to t•xtcnd \\'1 IS'On St rt.'l'l u\ c-r th Suntu Ano ttnil'r Lu llunllDHtcm lil'Ul'h Tht.• brHl):t' crussln~ 1!\ nut u n,.,, pl .in nur thl' onl.)' on•· no\\ hsted on cily and t•ount} m.td" .:n ma"t~r 1>l 1n!\ Gi:slct AH•nu~ ttr\d Jtth Sttt•t•t abo ure h~led foe futur(• t•xhms1on. \\llh 19th .1ln• Jth "l'l for c<>nslru•·llon IJdon· l!Jtll · I ( .111 thrt•t• Ill'\\ hrnl..it•s .11 t' hu11l q~•rhaps Within 20 )'4.'ltr:-.) Cost.• M, • .,,, "ouh.I h.i \\' f 1' 1• hrtd)lc croulnfl lnto llunl mtietnn lit• 1cb bt.•l\H't'n I' .u·1ri,· t 'oa ... t lllghway nd till' SU ll llil'J.?O 1-"tt\\ t\\ li1dt~"(I, , ... ,, \\\'"'l l1 .11f1C' rlcl\\ ha~ ~1h\<1\'~ bt.-cn 1 prob h·m w ('o.,\i1 M.-.... 1 . .imt trall11· st.1t1s t1l 1&n~ point to un unnu;il :1 Pt'r<'t•nt 11-.l' in It)( .11 ti allH· Uut tlot""'i-. <.'n,to Mt>'a rl'.tll) ''-''ti f I\ t• brict.ces to llunl in~ton Ht•.u·h • Tht• humc'im 1wr:-. .1ml ... orm.• council mem ht·n. sa) no, .1m.l up5>t•,11 lo h." t• .1 \ .1hd point when the' t-ay 1l ''"ul<I ht.• I lunttn~tun th·.1l'h motorists. not CoMa M,•sa1~. "ho -...ould u:-.c thl' Ot'\\ h) \\a) l\ more frequently Thi:-. ,1ssumpt10n lS ba ... t."d on tht.• number or Hunt lnj.!lon tk <wh tl''1d<•n\-. \\ho no" 11:.t.• the Adams or Vic· torrn bnc~t.·~. rulhcr th.an Lhc 105 f>'tL·c\\ ay. t o g~l to work al lhl' la vin(' lndu~lrtul ('omµlt•x It should al~o ~· noted thul nu co ... t esllmat~ has been mad<-' on the new hn<f ~t·s Ttw haltll· lx.•l\H'l'n ,, uh~tlt· ... ahd thl· pt l'SCrvat ion or 11c1ghborhoud mh·~nly 110'' n ·sb "1th I ht· City Council Costa Mt•sa i:; thl' "ll'ad ugt•nt') 0 11 th!! 1s:-.uc of new hndge croosm~l-. llt•n• t hl• s1'1.1at 1111\ g1'0Wl\ mot"t.• t•omplcx Tht•rc· 1s <1 <'<>ndominium d<•vt'lnpm(•nt now Pl'ndmg on the right of .. , ;1y for th<.• Wilson Stred bridge• The t·nun<'1 I w1 II tw .1skf'<I l\londJy hy plunnNs to Ul'· l<•Y a dec1s1on in order lo ~tudy th<' need for the Wilson ri~ht-of way A Ion~ munitonum would be unfair· to both tht• homeowners and the developer . Yet a brief study may be in order. and there certainly is need for city officials in lluntington Beach and Fountain Valley to give their \.-ie ws on the need for more river links. If Costa Mesa goes ahead on its own a nd removes any bridge route from the city master plan. there could be problems in regard to obtaining future county road funds Although City Council members arc showing support of the homeowne rs ' anti-bridge feelings. this 1s clearly a !'l1tuation that calls for delicate handling. Redevelopnient Move For better or for worsc, Costa Mesa's Redevelopment Agency has acquired a $2 million line of credit to begin buy ing up the rcm;1ining private ly owned parcels horden'd by 19th Street. Center Street, Harbor Boulevard and P ark /\venue. The condemnation is to make way for a new, ac·ctl>Si· l>le , modem and ''beautiful" downtown business cenlcr. When the old businesses and homes in the block arc h•v••lcd and a new s hopping area r aised, city officials suj.!· gest, the downtown area is likely lo see greater proi,peri· ty, more business and fewer traffic snarls. . It oouJd mean an end to stagnation and possible ..t>lum safety problems in the heart of the city. Also expected are greater tax returns on higher downtown property 86Sessments and through larger sales that might otherwise be generated in neighboring cities. A major problem. of course. will be the individual hardshiJ>S creah.>d among property owners and tenants uprooted from well-known business locations and longtime homes. Every efrort s hould he made by the city to aid the "v.ictims~· of dislocation and the offering of property prices fair to t_>oth the owners and the taxpayers paying for the properties. But all else aside in what will become an emotional issue, city officials should be commended for finding- ways to move ahead with the program. Their efforts re- move the ax of indecision from above the heads of those leasing and owning property in the area. - Hedevclopment is on the w:J.y. • Op1n1ons expressed 1n the s pace above are those ot the Daily Ptlol Other views expressed on lhts page are those of their authors and .artists. Reader0 comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd I Femininit y ByL.M. BOVD These scholars who makr a study or the masculinity. femmiruty ratios ol men and women contend that girls arc at their most feminine when in the eighth J?radc. They're reportedly most masculine in their middle collc~e yearb. And they thereafter become more and more feminine as they grow older. Item No. 582C in our Love and War man's rile on divorce is the report that in the Malabar region or India. a woman can throw out a husband simply by leaving his s hoes outside the door. That's it. pal. Take a walk. Mary Pickford starred in more than 200 motion pie· tures between 1909 nnd 1933. Out of that many you'd think .lkar .Gloomy Gm Som ethlnR should be- done about the trnshy wa lkwuy rrom th~ Safeway \o lhe Alpha Beta ot 17th and Oranae. lt'1 looktn1 like ffkt d row In Loa Anceles. A.BC. there'd be a Cew she'd regard as winners. Evidently not. Lhou~h. She c laimed s he never made a film she liked. Q. "What do the towns or Ny Alesun , Norway, and Puerto Williams, Chile, have in common'!" A. One thing only. They are rarther from the equator than any other town in the world. Four northern states -II· linois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York -each has more than a million residents over age 65. Only three southern states -California. Texas and Florida can claim the same. So not everybody's retiring to the' ~un belt, please note. Q. "Why ls the little finger referred to as the pinky'!" A. Comes from the Dutch · "plnkje" meaning exactly that, little finRcr. Th at sort of thief who makes ort with the most money per orrense on the avera.ce 18 the computer criminal. Known loi1se.s to date wherein computer pro- grams havo been changed to siphon off fund.a amount to $00,000pcrcuc. Old you not suffer lrom brom ldroatphol>t a, you'd probably never bother to buy deodorants. BromldrOltpbia ts the tearolbodyodort. Amon1 tboH wll~ ~ vote lb Kuwait. lilt"'i*·WTY"' women, but aoldlen and pollctmen, too. J ack Anden1on Devious Drug Endorsement WASUINOTON In the public N'latlons a me. un un · aollc1tt!d objective e ndor5ement ur theo client· product is a pearl f1f areut priro And whtle such l•ndor1uim •nu . llkc pearls. can oecur naturally, the ('Ultured vu rl<'ly 111 tar more prevalent. ~kr1Atd1 un objective endo~· meot and you'll 1enerally find 1t 'WJI caN'fully cultivated by u rtJck Ont' parllc ulnrly effective &11romlck usCld by corporate Im 1tgt' bu1ldns 1& an ·c.'<fu<'J t in nul c11 m pu1in" that 1s i.u p1>Qi.t'dly !iponsored a~ 61 public i.l'rv1c .. hut which. whl'n prop\'rl y handled, re ll u I t is 1 n favorable publlclty for the com· pany 's product. The carefully selected experts who are J)t!rsuad<'tl to takc purl in the educ11lional campaign can wind Mailbox up as unwitting s hills for tho 1pon1or's merchandise. A CIASSIC example· or the technique was recently preaent· ed by Roche Laboratorlea, maker of the tranquilizing drug Valium. With some 3 billion or the mood-altering pills prescribed each year, Valium l• not only America's most POPUiar ore· scribed tranqulllzer. It '1 car and away Roche's most ~pular prescription drug. Roche gro1Ses a quarter-billion dollans a year rrom Valium. more than half of the company's total .sales. Valium a nd other beniodlazeplne tranquilizers en· joy an excellent reputation for effectiveness and safety. But there is growing concern that the drugs are being misused. FOil EXAMPLE, Valium can . be extremely dangerous when taken in combination with alcohol. According to estimates by the National Institute on Drua Abuse. VaUum by lllelf or mixed wlth alcohol or aomc other drug accounted for S4.400 emergency room visits and 900 deaths between May 1976 and April 1971. Apparently worried about the Increase In unfavorable publlci· ty tor their top money-maker. Roche executives decided to sponsor a nationwide educa· llonal program on stress. aimed al physicians end the general public. Although the program was billed as totally obJectlve. our special investigator Davtd Zimmerman concluded that the program has a definite till toward the use of drugs to treat stress. AND ntOUGH Roche's finan· cial backing of the educational program is disclosed on promo· tional literature sent to medical writers. lbere is no mention of the fact that .the company manufactures a drug lh41t ls used to treat stress. Roche's role is further ob· sc u red by the use or in· termedlarit.~ to run the educll· tlonal campa\1n. The proaram waa "developed and _produced" by Health Leamlnai Systems. a Bloomfleld, N.J .. company that specializes In such things. Thus it was Health Leamlnt Systems, not Roche, that appeared to be runnin.r the thow. The company manased to ob· taln a prestigious Institutional sponsor for the natlonwlde cam· palgn -Cornell University Medical College. One of the promotional items mailed to doctor5 was a cassette recording or Dr. Theodore Cooper. de~ of the medical school, being Interviewed by Edwin Newman. Valium•ia men· lioned seven times and benzod1uepine six times on the tape. No other drug is mentioned byname. DR. COOPER said he used the trade name Valium because "conversationally" Valium has come to st.and for all such drugs. He was aware thal several other firms produce rival brands of benzodlazepines. and said he would have been careful to "mention everybody's product once·· had he realized that men- tioning only Valium would arouse s uspicion. Cooper is contradicted by one or his assistant deans. Stephen Scheidt, who admitted he was "surprised" lo hear the frequent favorable mention of Valium on the Roche-financed tape. ··rve made it clear that (these pro- grams> should be largely altruistic. with a mild bit of self, interest," he said. HOWEVER, in the program materials so far sent out to JOUrnahsL-; and doctors by HLS. Valium i s the o n l y benzodiazepine mentioned by name -and usually the ref· t·rc>nce is favorable. Yet an HLS official insisted that Roche h3d no control over the material it was paying for. "The companil'S that put up the money for our programs never see the copy, .. he told Zimmerman. Yes. Virginia. there is a Santa Claus. He wears three-piece suits and works in a corporate board room. Any endorsements he gets are objective and un- solicited. and have nothing to do with the toys he gives away. Teacher Pay Not Meeting Living Costs To the Editor: The letter le the editor in Stm· day's paper from a parent slates a general dissatisfaction and lack or respect for teachers. J am a teacher who loves children and enjoys teaching, yet it ts a constant distraction from the job to be concerned constantly with severe financial problems. The cost of living is going up and President Carter says be happy with a 7 percent increase. Mosl or us would be happy, very happy. with a built-in cost of liv· ing increase. but our salaries arc frozen at June's level. Last year I r~ived a 2 percent in· crease. Every year teachers cam less. WE LOVt; our children loo and want to lt.'<'d and educate them. Why should teachers and their famlUes bear the financial burden of Proposition 13? Does that mother realize that with a master's degree. 50 units beyond the master's and 18 years of ex- perience a teacher earn! only $21.000? That's not much of a salary for a professional person at the peak or his financial life. A teacher at the top of the salary schedule does not qualify for the cheapest home in Orange County. Also, we do our own t)'p· ing, dittoing, grading, research. lesson planning etc. I have not oow nor ever had an aide. T. WILSON AfJp•al PoU~11 To the Editor: The l a test drive b> our 'mperial President to provide American support ror a gang of Communist butchers while at the snme time withdrawing !I U.PfOrt for our pro-western, a nt -communist fr iends on Taiwan seems to be but a step along the path where Rhodesia, Iran, and Nicaragua are current casu alties to our abysmal forelRn policy. Carter's dccislon furthe r underscore!l the vllat Influence of the communist tdcoloay in Washtnf(ton. O.C. His pretense or "champion or human rtghta" evaporates In a cloud of opium 11moke and dried blood and teani trom 60 mUUbn tnnocent victims of the communist conquest in Asia . WRA'I' conceAlonl did Cartn uk for In return Cor our • nco1oltl-Oa? ~pparenU¥ none or we would tJlve heard aboul them. t I !las Carter forgotten Red China ·s part In the aggression in Korea and the slaughter in South East Asia'! Certainly not. Dec. 15. 1978 was another day or willful surrender. We can only hope now that the new American Conservative Movement is strong enough to force Congress lo renew Its responsibility as the conscience of America. W. SPENCER MARQUIS Parne•• Appalr.d To lhe F.ditor: As parents oC 3 <'hild attending Fountain Valley High School. we're appalled at the actions of the teachers 1n the present d1~pute. Why Is classroom time bein~ used to present the ~liefs of the teachers? Why are teachers telling students that truancy 1s acceptable during the strike and will go without consequences " Why are st ud e nts being encouraged not to coop~ratc with the substitute teachers '! THE SITUATION could be used as a learnini< experience for students were both sides or the issue discussed . The collective bargaining process and arbitration arc a way of Amerl<'an life, bul ••brainwa.shing" is not. To com pound m atter s , these statements have been made for weeks not just d ays. No wonder the campus is In chaos KENNETHANOMARGARF.T MA..c:;()N .........• 3 To the FAitor : Propbsition 13 must be J ewisb; It ls blamed for so many thlnas. rn your "Howiing Supply Drops." Jan. 5. l3 ls blamtd. Propo1ition 13 had nothtna to do with the houaing shortage t.hot has bffn Increasing becauRc government has had the extra tax money to 11upporl the> myriads of bureaucracies that regulate It.a supply. And If local Rovernments discourage hou.tlng de,elopment bttausc they won't get as much property tax money rrom it. that ta their fault, not 13. And bow 13 will ·•further re· duce the supply of land avalleble tor development end Increase the price," u au.led b1 Brown's Office of Pl•nn l•a and Rt1H~.k~ too moot a quest.Jon to N . At la bow ll la respoQlltile for rent tncreases. Rents have been increasing with the lncr_e»_e in inflation. for years past. But 13 bas its good side. IL<; cutdown of government's sur- p l uses may s top Brown's California Housing Task Force from subsidizing 80.000 housin~ units. as proposed by Marcia Mills or that force. with more bureaucratic wast e a nd tax dotlars. and instead make them ease the restrictions placed on private enterprise that is ready, willing and anxious to provide the housing needed. Marcia Mills, or the League of Women Voters. seems to have replaced Claire Dedrick. or the Sierra Club. as California's powerful creater of chaos. It 1s time for some logical alternatives. GOLDIE JOSEPH T11%paf1er• •Bad II.' To the Editor: There Is a n ugly mood de· veloping among we taxpayers that crosses all age, politicat, and occupat1onaJ groups. We taxpayers have reached the saturation point with city, state. and federal employees who "demand" higher wages and more benefits while our country is currently in dire economic straights. During our economic crisis. taxpayers arf> struggling desperately to keep their jobs. homes. cars. and good health. We are tired of strikes and demands made by our servants and for more, when we have less. Any school teacher. fireman. bus driver. policeman or garbage collector. etc.. who reels he or she cannot live on their present salary and benefits. s hould quit their job Immediately and seek employ· ment alongside us tn the private sector tJNTJL the economy recovers, we-will not tolerate city. st.ate, and federal employees receiving any ulary or benefit increases. Quotes "It should have happened .a long time ago (or the sake of the peace or lhe .world. It's very 1ood." -• pautrby in PtlclnR. Kao Clal·dtaJ, to an American report ~r concernlne the t11l1bll1bmen t of rel1Uon1 between tbe tJnlWd.. Slat.ea atld China. J - In fact , we taxpayers may h<.we to reduce some of Ure benefits they now enjoy. Although the mood of the tax- payers is an ugly one. govern- ment employees need not worry just yet, because we are defused politically. In November. 1978, it appea red that Gov . Brown would sense our mood and would tap this vast political resource . He has yet to do so. Once the politicians at atl levels of gov· ernment realize the s heer power of thts Uj?ly taxpayer mood. they will be swept into any office they seek. tr Howard Jarvis were 20 years young, better educated. and more of a polished leader a nd individual. he would be our President in 1980. Facts are that Mr. Jarvis is not such a man. There are 100 million Americans wailing to be molded into a cohesive political rorce. Who do you think will step forward to lead us'! WALT BLANKENSIUP A laalcart l'f..., To the F.ditor: This is in reference to your re· cent story about an attorney in Corona del Mar suing a neighbor over the "extended height" of a tree. True, a view of the ocean is a special lhinS?. but putting a tree into the view somehow enhances It all. W H EN WE lived in Anchorage. Alaska. people fought hard to save the trees from over-zealous developers. The trees gave us all so mucb more beauty In a land where we would give a lot for more really tall trees flhe severe winters in some areH keep them shorter>. H only we could take the •1Flaherty tree" with us when we happily return lo Alaska this sprlnSJ, w~ could give It such fl treasurtd ploce to live and de· light oil thnt passed its way. On my walk tonight l counted over 100 trees of a grand scale and t shDIC ortcr a quiet prayer for them all. KATHY GORHAM • Thunday NYSE 2 P.• (EOT) P~ COMPOSD'E .. TRANSACTIONS •• Retail Sales Increase WASHINGTON <AP) -Retail sales increased by 1 percent last month. a sign that consumers are do· ing their part to .keep the economy growing, according to government figures. For all of 1978. retail businesses sold 10 percent more than in urn. Thal incrense roughly matched the rate of Inflation for the same period. The Commerce Department said on Wednesday that retail sales last month were $68.9 billion, an increase of 1 percent from November tm and 11 perccmt. greater than in December tm. Securities to Be Sold WASHI NGTON <APl -The Tttuury aaJd today it will sell $1.2. bUUon ln U.S. securities to Swiss cltJzeoa as on.e of ita steps lo ~upport \he dollar. Tbt go\"tnunent previously Jas Sl.5 bUllon in eecurltlea to Weit Germua IDd bu beea ~ aala a1lo to the .lap&IMIR. The aai.ID forelp ...,..,De&ic>M were~ NOv.1~ the sov· tmmn toot van.tY ot-,. to ~the plUllllat dollar. • I Not on Radio TV to Reduce l Show 'Pitches,. By MU.TON MOSKOwm lC you had the feellq you were bean& awAmped by commerdals on television and rudio. that wa5 not an er· roneou.s impttsaion. They proliferated to lhe point whel"t' advertllers icrumed -and Ulla mooth should bring 10me relief. At f:lnt gt~ you might find It odd for advertbers to complain about. too many commercials. But if you think about it for a moment, you will see it makes senae. THE NETW<>aKS AND STATIONS might want to run as many commercl.als as poesjbJe. But the advertisers. who are payiai the lab. tear that their messages will get dUuted II there UI commercial overkiJI. What especially irritated the odvcrtisers -and many viewers -was the torrent of network commercials for their own shows. A made·IOr·TV movie Y'OUld end as much as 10 minutes before Che hour. and that space would then be tilled. ~k-to-back. with pitche s for network programs ln· terspersed with paid commercials from ad- vertisers. l n the past five years lbe cost of a 30- Money Tree second commercial in prime time has Jumped from $26.500 to $52,000. lf you had to ante up that klnd ol mooey for a 30-second sales lnes58ge. you would be angry too to~ It buried in a cluster of commercial announcements. Peter Spengler. who heads up advertising ror Bristol- Myers <Bufferin. Excednn. Clairol, Datrit. Ban 1, put 1t this way to the broadcasting industry: "CLUSTERING IS AN INVITATION for viewer~ to get up and leave the room. An escalation of clustertng con· cerns us greatly. lf TV expects to continue to be a viable and effective medium. clustering is not going to make• it sellable." When advertisers speak. broadcasters listen. Effective this month, the networks are supposed to be cutting back sharply on the number of program pitches they run. The reduction should be at least so percent. The advertisers and broadcasters remain at log· gerbeads over two other Issues. The broadcasters would like to have available 10 minutes of rteAprogram material in every prime time hour; t.be advertisers would prefer to have a nine-minute limit. And the broadcasters would like to be able to run fivl' commercials back-to-back; advertisers think four in a row is enough; they're afraid the broadcasters are going to drive the viewers out of the room. RADIO STANDARDS ABE much looser. IC you are sat ting in your car with the radio on. you 're a pnsoner of commercials. Stallons are allowed to have 18 minutes of commercial time an hour -and up to 22 minutes in special circumstances. There's a movement on to de· regulate radio staUons and remove all the 1Jm1ts on com· mercial time. That may usher in the era of the station that carru: ... more commercials than programs or the station which 1:- all-commerciaJ -"Look Ma. no programs." The only question then: Who will listen? 8 Clinics to Aid Small Businesses The initial program in a five-month series of eight free clinics on smaJI businesses will be held Jan. 22 in the santJ Ana Library's Spurgeon Room. Sponsored by tliC U.S. Sman Business AdministratiOn. the Service Corps of Retired Executives. the Santa Ana Public Library and Santa Ana College. the series is de- signed to focus on eight areas of business decision·makini; THE J AN. Z% MEETING WILL BE devoted to the sub· jed of "Business Plan for Retail and Service Businesses ·· Serving as moderato r for tbe cliruc, scheduled from J to 5 p .m ., wiU be Bill Davis, retired president and chief ex ecutive officer of Western Consumer Industries and a member of SCORE. Davis said the initial clinic will be structured around a djscussion of key elements and basic planning techniques for s mall businesses. · Each or the sub6equeot clinics will focus on a specific question and will be led by an expert in the field. OTllER CLINICS SCHEDULED FOR the next favc months. their dates and the leaders: Jan. 29. "Special Problems of Women an Small Bµ.~1 ness." Discussion by Shirley Laskin. former retail chain owner . college instructor. SBA lecturer Feb. 5. "lolroduclion to Foreign Trade.·· a discussion of importing and exporting management including com· ments on resources availabl(' for assistance. Led hv Harold Levi. formerly with Berth. Levi and Co .. lne . Ne w York. Chicago and London. MA RCH s. "PROTECTING VOUR Asset!> -Bus1ncs:- lnsurance ... Led by Seymour Levy, former president or Llfe of America Insurance Co. Matth 12. "Marketing for Small Retail and Service Businesses." basic and innovative marketing techniqu~ for business. Led by Alyn Sercovich. rormer president. Seeman Co., Inc .. San Francisco. May 7, "Financial Planning for Small Business ... Led by Garry Hollaar . retired president or the First State Bank of Litcllfield. Minn .• and SBA lecturer on itmall-busines:- finance. ' MA\' 14, "UNIQUE PROBLEMS OF Service Firm Management." Led by Pamela Cibbarelli. president of Cibbarelli and Associates and Information Managemcni Consultants. May 21. "Successful Sele<:lion and Training of Person- nel... a discussion of pl'oblems and te<:hniques Led by Herb Sands. former president of Harvard Ma nuracturlng Co .. Cleveland. Because space ror the clinics is limited. the sponsorin~ organization.'\ have requested that participants make re.· servations by calling the Ubrary at 834-4845. The library i:. at the corner ot Rosa Street and Civic Center Drive ln San ta Ana. Vehicle Bills to Rise WASHJNGTON fAP> -Receipts of automollvl• service esublbbment.s wm rt":.ch about S27.6 blllJ<M' in 1979. 11 ~rcent ovtr 1978 levels. accordin~ to th~ Com merce Department. Repalr and auto-truck I Ing and rental itCCOunt for 90 perce'll or those receipts. t.he department "llld. Water Scarcity Noted ' • DAILY PILOT I 111 I.'· .11 \ \ J nny rman pJ1y1 a proetltutt' told by Quincy <Jack KJusmon l that ah ia urf nna from &onorrh • \n ton.ll(ht •• c•p1 od ~ of "Quincy" ot O o'd<X·k on NRC. ChAMel 4. • TIC TAC OOUQH • M)Atl..11 A •lcNn CAW~ IOW'I fl"' 8 needy ftf'lllly 9' lhe C>bjlet ... Wlde9pfMd ...,, .. •nTONIQKT • HlWIOHICK ll t1MllAUT'f1MOW 11 MATCH GA.Ml 11.M, I 00 9 (f) THI WALT~ John-loy'• p1raty1ed lrlllnd It ~ In by Ille lll'flily WflO II) to Pit~ hHn IO 11"1 I new.,._ IOt ltifnMlf, Oaa•lld L b • l•g• 8 KHlCT (CBS) Lot Angeles . e KNBC (NBC) Lot Angel et I KTlA (Ind) Lot Anoelot KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) l<FM8 (CBS) San 019go D KHJ. TV (Ind) LOI Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San 01900 I KTTV(lnd I Lot Angeles KCOP·lV (Ind I Lot Angoln • l<CET· TV (PBS) Lot AngoletS • KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach D MANCtwAlf'I AMINCA "TOftl rdlton • LIQhlnlrlg W10* ' O.YIO Hvttm1111 potl•tyw lom ltlltwin th41 Am•r"•" g1n1u1 who wwenltod the llQhl butt> In lhll tlW)W holltoo by the r11t111n1n•nl 1toryt•ll1r M••~ lw•tn IW•l••r I OmQJ11tonl 8 MOVll • • • ''lonely "4• Tilt lflil\'CI ' f llHJJl) Kl#ll ()ooo IH MlelhHI C4llM lhe •IMlrllf Md 1111 poMI trllcil down • c.owbqy ...,., "'" 411GIC)lld lre>m ,.if 11nd II h4Mdlf1g fOt lhe mount~ f2hr!J 8 9 M<>fl'K I MIHOY Maril rllC)Ofl 1 to ti,. ln'1tll o• '"°" buf_, to regltl« hlll'\Mff •• Ml llflltn G MOVll * * • '"' 'Awey A• ()Ojtll" ( 1951) Jill Chllndler. 0-09 N4ldet A l~t crew pt~ 111 "'°"h wl1*I IJnOer llladl duolng World W1rll (2 ~1 • CAAOl IUfVCTT AHOfMNOI .MCMI • • * "Oh1yeMe 411tUIM" ( llMI ""'* ....., •. NUwd Wldmartl A lllbe fil C~ lndl- IN llllQt ... ltOM thllt Mr• '"" ~•loll to '"'* -~,J'~ rcrw.a ,._ ._.. 11111 Pf .., .,,.... ..... IMMMt Ot pottmlllly .. ...... "' .. ICMnllfy ... , ~o=.~ MD. ~·~Oldltm" ·-~ .. Raj .... ...."" lwtrP girl frtendl In .... "ot llte. tlWI llnd OO¥ef9d llllit of 1111 .. INlll" • • Tl4 000 OOUl'\.I f •h ~-· on tMihtllf 01 Ole., llllCI 11tmNH to ,..,. .,. ot • M'ltlll bOy -~ "Goud Connectlonlt .. Jene .i-o '*"''"" ,,., •· 111 lo •deno.d ~ ,.,.. l.,.. llielt• ~ l*t ot 1 CIOl'nmllNlf ..,.._ neNOt~ e-oo• ~JONI.I 111n•by uncontt • bU111• Wllttfnlt fo«>Mfy wt111e lnV911Qellno 1n wmy c;.aptalll • ~lorl. llllCI wlndt uo being d\lrved w11h~. D OUIHOV Oulncy "'* undilt00'4r •• • .-itll ln1tllu1ton 10 lnVMllgate lnUftt« ~ ~ll•OI ~ 'Mfgel 8 IAAHIY MIU&A ~·· of pollc1I COttUC>-llM "-rl.lmtlY llnd hit ,,,_,., to be 1n.,..ttg1tld by ""' ln,.11111 Aneir. OM- tlon 4D MOW OIW11N OlHllllt. W1y1~ Aooet't· r rlc Oat men. Dl!Mr JoM. 11on. Pll z.clor•. 8hll'9y ~llllltl. • MIMD IN ANQIR roll.OW.uP GD fWll.D IN ANQCA rdWWd AIM' hoal• 11!11 ()tOQftm lnllllded to hell> •bl.lllN9 Of pot«ttlllly •tlv- IMI l)tlt9nll IOentlty lhelf cf1lld teltlklg ptotltlma HOG QI IOAP (£~ 401 8llffy .... Mery lhet llut1 hN bMt' c.l\oNtlnQ on both of than'>. llfld ~ ,,,..... OM IHI lllllfl'll)l IO rnt<ry Cetot tetOO 0 N80 MPOfn'8 TUBE TOPPERS NBC B a·oo Mark Twain's Amortra. 1'11c atory ot Thomu EdJson ta dr motl1 d wlth David Huffman portraylna th famed inventor. Kcor • a: oo ··ch y nne Autumn." JOiin Ford's epic w~stern uboul 0 lrlbo or lndlana mlpaUna from th Ir n rvaUon to th lr home around. James Stewart and Richard Widmark 1tar. KCt'T 9 H:OO & KOCE 9 9:00 - Rallied ln Anger. Edward Asner nor· rate• Uus doelumcntary on child abuse. TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS "'*'-NI AIMtWt .... dis Moomle ~With . ,....... ""',, ..... t!Wll ."°"" • • ''Qe!N OI Olt1'I • c ...., .ittNt "°°". Au«ey L0n0. A ._.., Mno on en t1l1nd, m•llH .,,.... • ., ~ ""1 tot .. .,,...,... ( 1 "' ' ~"*I) •wcww • * • "ltllllt liltd TN Kint" I 1MOI Joell COllne. fillcNfd [Oll'I A JudMt\ ~. Clf'IOlefl by ttle IClflt OI ,_.,. to ,..-. '* '°'""" QUMrl, " ... to ,,.,, lfle ,,.,..,.ion Of "" ~.,a 11n1 t.t;11 •U ~ Menn!• ...,~ '°' the '°'"'* ,.,, Of • COfl'IPllllY .....,_ ot lllllWlg Iha tit'" 't MW IJ'lllldlnt lflCI nt.mll1fWI UIOl lOMOMOW &.O\tl °""" t*J WAHTID: OMO Oft MNI .... , ... HO NIW9 ~ • • 141 ""-*> In TM CllV" ( '"" Howwd °""· ~ Ct ltl ti A OOv11ntT11•U IQlll'lf ~ Illa llflt lo ...,. tM Git'( of lot ,.,.. ,_ from elOmlo cteMruc- tlOn er 1w1 1 • MOVll • • \4 "Ctl!N Ven1Ut1" c 1'631 tdmond o·en.n. Berry ~ Al Iha end Of WOt'd Wtt N, I llnti fore. Of Metlnel II Mrll to <AOM• • .,.,..._. Admo rll lflCI brtno him to the U 8. !of Qllllttlonl1'Q I I 111 , 30 min I t:Oll NEW8 l:U NIWI a:t0• MOVi. '* *141 "Unflllt!IUI Wiie"' (!Mil 8'-*' A.udfan, MlcMt Bouquet Mad with jMlouly, I mtn pletll Iha ~ murdlllf"' """" ha Colle!MI hltl wll• with lftO(tltt --( ' tlf ~ 115 min I 1:111 = •• I+ "f.lngtllf Of Ollltl .. 1196411 Ndw'd llaleNt1, Mery Mwrpfly. A l'O'l"O wOfTllf\ •t>t>e~• trom llOWMr'I lfld oonfront• • "*"" ltlm prOIMllf Wlfll !tie~ •WV ot 1'- !0'4 If!• C 1 ht • .0 "*' I 3!IO. MOVE • f 'rida w•• Dat1d~ Me.,ln AnfANOON 12:00 D • •141 ·<£~el lhe Truttl" 11t6tl ~ 0 H•a. John "~ A boy campatgnlng on • '"NofhlnO But Thi lrvth" p&etlonn ~ -llVWofl'--•~­ (1 ht , 30 tn1n I • ••••"Man 0t Conquell" c lt:Mtl Rlc:tlM Ola, JcMll\ Fontaine ~ ... QI~ account of IMt Houlton. CllWOftlC9nO Im OfHI '*'°"" traoea.. lflCI ''~· I I ..... '° lftln I J1IOQ) ••• -~--.. lhl1t' I tH7) R.o-' Wegnat, Senta ..... A ~ ~ .. '** °" Ille condlttorl .... .. In In llWVQMIOn Of .. nudlrSOfUI ..-..&> hr • 30 "'*' I t;IO ••• ~ -..,,..,.. (1"61 .............. Yul er.,.._ A ~ pecilftet le ~ lo I .. Id ~ GIC)tUftnQ. Gamwl"'flj lllllO '°" ,,. 8mllll ...... Worid W11 • (I l!lr. 311 """' l'llo.111 '"The hmlly; lhe Clo• .• ' China A CllM By II.NII" In thll dOC\lmenltfY lllmed • • WTha CurM OI Thi • ~'-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~.--.,, .. =·TV Producer Raps Video 's 'Witless' Fare By JERRY BUCK tlOLLYWOOD <AP I -Producer Grant Tinker 11aya he believes t.elevialoo comedy ls bet'oming "somewhat wtUess" and aiming at the lowest common denominator. "It doesn't demand much or an audience," sald Tinker, head of lt1TM Enterprises, which made "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and now produces "WKRP in Cincinnati," "Lou Grant." and "White Shadow." "It doesn't necessarily have a beei.Dning or an eoding. I guess that's the kind ot show that iJ com- ing on televlsion. It aims for the lowest common denominator." HE SAID HE THOUGHT "Mork and Mindy" was saved from this category by the uruqueness of its star, Robin Williams. Tinker. who participated In a panel of Indepen- dent producers sponsored by the Hollywood Radio and Television Society, said the creators were to blame "We all know the machine runs the way the networks want It lo run." he said. ., Aaron SpeltiJlr."1)roducer of such shows as "Charlie's Angels" and "Family," told the nearly 1.000 broadcast ex~utives at the Beverly WllJlb1re Hotel that he thought the public was getting the klnd or programming It wanted. -- "ALL ntEY HAVE TO do is turn It off and they'll get what they want," said Spelling. "We're In the entertainment buslnesa. I'm 1uck or such terms as lowest common denomJnator. We're in the business of providing what the public wants . If It's 'The Nutcracker Suite,' fine. If It's 'Family,' fine. If it's 'Charlie's Angels,' fine." Spelling drew a laugh rrom lhe audience when he said, "I don't thlnk we sophlsticated people of .HoJlywood 1hould tell the unsophltlticated people out there what they s hould see. I think they're brighter than we are." PRODUCER DAVID Gerber said he saw a coming boom in pay television that would provide a new means .of financing programs. He sald lt could come aa soon as the next rive years. ''The networks might be getting second runs after pay telcvlsion," he said. Producer Lee Rich, a former odvert.islng ox· ecutive, whose shows Include "The Waltons'' und "Dallu," was asked 11 he tbou.ltbt pay television would c,rry advertising. He replied, "I think ad- vertiser& will go into pay television, U the pay peo- ple will accept them. They're bookel'l'I like anyone eJae. They go where the money la." aace WAS ALSO asked why lbe same faces tum up on show after show. He said, "They become box ornce. They will attract an audience and are tcolnB to alve a program a certain kind or appeal. 'Ibere'a a tendency to go back to the aame people wbo can deliver and don't glvt you any trouble." ' I\ NBC'S REYNOLDS l!AT8 WITH STUDENTS People More Open, Wiiiing to T•lk Now Weathe r Gal Out Ove r Clothes Tiff · LONOON IAP l ll'a not. all aunahlnt! stand- ing In front or o TV camera to tell Britons what sort or weuther they're aiolng to have. So 8a.rbaru Jo;dw:ardi, the onJy wuatherwomun who appears on the Urltl1th Droa.dc1.111Ung Corpora. lion screens, announced &he hWI quit the Joll urter nearly five ycur11. 08TENSIBLV, IT'S tw<'ollllC 11h only ""ti 45 seconds J)«.'r forocwit twice ench evening. "Thal'8 a 11kctchy 11crvicc und o waste of Umt!," she 1u1d. .. fl ~hould btl lwo mlnulc11 ut least." Hut Barboro, 40 and marrh.>d l() a bunker, ron fe11e11 to a.n<Jthcr und mort• fomlnJne rcuaon. She · can't wear the clothe11 11hc wunt.11 to In front of ttw cameru. "I WASN'T Al.LOWED U> wear light colon1 Ukc whJte, cream and yellow bccowui they reflect ed the 11tudlo llghtA which hod tk.-en 11ct Ul> to highlight the wcuther churls and not me," 11he 11uld. "I couldn't wear lipots, atMpe11 or chccks bccauAc they 11hlmmer('d when l moved. rt made my choice very limited and d)ftlcult.'' However, Uurbara 11 11tlll readlnfl weather buJleUns on radio, where 100 11 atlvon 2~ minute» and can wear any clothes 1hc Ukea. > /' Chinese Opening Up ; TV Report Shmm Dramatic Changes By TOM IORY NEW YORK <AP> -NBC News C-Orrespon· dent Jack Reynolds recently spent two months in- side the People's Republic of China, bls aeventb trip to a country he says stood "a world apart, re- mote and aloof, for thouaands of years ... until now." Reynolds found, as the observation suggests. the people or this vast and bewildering country more open and w11Ung lo talk than ever before. And that ls, perhaps, the strength of bis report. "China: A Class By Itself," to be broadcast at 10 o'clock t.oo.ight on Channel 4. "Never, on the previous visits," Reynolds says in "a personal note" offered during the hour.long documentary, "ha"e officials as well as ordinary people been so candid, so eager to talk about almost everything. ''ANSWE RING Q tJES110NS. and asking them, too," the correspondent says. "Quations about how much I earn. Questions about Carter, Nixon, normaUzation, computers, cost or clothes, educallon, Jobs the future." Reynolds' report oo Ch1oa is a timely ex- amlnatloo, comJaa as lt does on the heels of Presi· dent Carter's decision to normalize U.S. relations with the People's Republic. But Carter's dramatic announcement wu Jn December, and ReynoJds and his crew ntmed the documeirtary for "NBC Report.II" In September aad October. The report wu conceived as an examination or o country strainlog to become, in the corTeSpon- denl 's worda, "an educated, technologically Mlphlallcat.ed nation ... a auper, super-power, iD a clusa by lt.seU." NORMALIZATION NECESSA&JLY altered NBC's course -lodeed, lbe documentary ortgioal- ly was scheduled for broadcast Dec. 29. The result la a leu forceful examloat.lon ol education and social structure In China, and more a unique and lntrigulnl short course on this m)'lterlous land of a bllUon people. worth a look fcw that ~uoo aJooe.. ·'There la, today, a new mood, an opeoneu. optimism,'' the correspondent says at the outset. "Wase lncreuee. more conaumer goods, produc- tion goala, even penonal ambit.Ions, for a people tiring or poUtJcal campaJgns. "t..e.a ausplclon of each other and out.alders, .. Rer,nolda continues his description. "In ract, a Ch na open to foreigners, especially to those the (T .......... l .. c-........... uu . ' .. Chinese had been taught to bate AmeQc&m, Japanese, many Europeans." R EYNOLDS, LAaGELV through inten't~'S with students, educators and government omca.ats. oCfen a iJJmpse at Cluna emerging from I.be .... intellectual Cu.lt.u.ral Revolution. bouDd by~ aod social structure, yet movtnc toward a Coal "f1I becoming a modern, industrialtzed po1ttr by Ge year 2000. Should China fail, the COrT"eSpondent says in his conclusion, ''there could be more 1Dlernal turmoil. the kind that senously damaged die Chinese educatJoo.aJ process and created an. 4cla- tiontsl, SUSplC10US outlook toward the rest Of the world "But if Cuna s ucceeds." he adds. "It will chance DOl ooly the economy or Asia, but the en- tire world.· Jack Lord .Plans .. Hawaii TV Movie HONOLULU IAPI -It's not certaiD if ··Hawaii l!We-0" wtll be back for a 12th television season, bd ats star, Jack Lord, will apparenUy still be WOltiQC in Hawau. Lord sa~ be has received approval from CBS Presideal Robert Wood for production of a feature- lengtb t.eleV1SIOO pelot, "'Mak&J Range." Pitches C ut Advertisers' com- pla ants ha ve b ee n beard: Beg1ruung this month. networks are supposed to cut back sharply oa the number or TV program pitches. See Page87. ,_ .... ...._ ________ , In ju9t .. peM 2 WMka our,,......,.....,. cast In Cart'• Jt .. ~ Althea, UftcOI~. Toyota. DuPont A Miiion .,_.., commerdM .. °"' 400 af --· -· <,Ht l•\I .,.., "' 11111\\, T V., <omf'Mf<Mll\, pr1M _,., I. YOKe own WeNeM M Age9 I Type1 C .. I Now For Appotntment .~co.. Actorl Co-Op .,., ................ ---~!!!7~--J Ai.I. a 111 ""°•'IL.Ml Mc.NI '"'MA4. °' '"'lllOfot ~ OODI °' •&.1 MOUU flON THUTAEl-OAANOa co SlNIOI crrmNS 12.0I> 50 COAST PLAZA ,. ....... ..nil,..,_ MUD4~fet ..... .......,... ..... ...,~,......., .. ., ... _ ... ,...... SO COAST PLAZA '