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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-02-01 - Orange Coast Pilotatty • .. . I l . 1 oes • r . -~~ PATRICIA HEARST. ACCOMPANIED BY FIANCt BERNARD SHAW. WAVES PRESIDENTIAL COMMUTATION ORDER After Ave Years of Kidnap. Crtme and Puntahment, H•rreu Walka 0 '4-0f Prtaon • Free Woman ree- \ -I" " • . . DAILY PILO T ~: Boat .BlfiSt Tllroms Tmo . * '* * 10< * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 1, 1979 Into Nemport Wat~• . . . . VOL.. n. NO. n., IECTIOMS,. ~AGES I ams _.._oast . Area; • L====::::::::==~==:::;:::::;;;::::::=;::~~~=--~-..::::::~---=~~~===~~~~ffff1Tornado, atty Hea~~t ·Fr,,eed Hail .~P ., I ·Applause Greets Her at Home County Wet, cold ·.January ended Wednesday in a burst of freak weatheralongtheOrangeCoast. HILLSBOROUGH CAP> -A smiling Patricia lJearst walked out of prison into bright sunshine today aod was driven.directly to her mother's plush s uburban Sa n Francisco home, a free woman after a five-year odyssey of kidnap, crime and punish- ment. S he w as met al the Hills borough home by her mother and a large group of othe r family members and friends who burst into applause as her car entered the driveway. Ue r father was not in the group outside the home. The· Hearsts have separated. Miss Hearst went inside brief- ly, anJf then came out to chat with reporters, having donned a T-shirt with letteririg ·that said: "Pardon Me." Asked whether she felt her or- deal had cut five years from her Jife, Miss Hearst said, "I agree in a way. It's just been five years that I would rather have spent in another way, and I just hope that I've gotten more out ofll than bas been taken away." Earlier, at the prison in Co a s W~atber Chance of rain 70 per- cent tonitbt, 20 percent Friday. Brief heavy rain, thunderstorms and gusty winds al times. Lows tonight 38 to 45. Partly cloudy and breezy Friday with highs 54 to 59. INll8ETOD.-w -Gov. Ed...-d·G. Brot0n Jr 1a111 he'• Qitring a lot of thotlghl to ~..,,.,..~ dnt. Corter h• tit• JHO primarlf1. Some o/ htl OC· tionl, though, wnn .be¢nd tlw "~" it•· Storv on Al3. Pl e asantoJ: Miss Hears t emerged holding her commuta- tion papers high over her bead. She was met by attorney Geor.ge Martinez and her fiance, police officer Bernard Shaw, while a str engthened security force patrolled the a re a and a California Highway Patr ol helicopter hoxered overhead. • As she walked through the en- try area, she kissed Shaw on the left cheek. "This is quite a difference from last time, and thank you all," she .told reporters who gathered at the gates, apparent- ly meaning the day she arrived 'Expel' U.S. at the pfi.c;on last May. On that day about 100 re- porters crowded around and she rushed into prison. refusing to talk. Her release from the prison about 30· miles southeast of San Francisco across San Francisco Bay was televised locally. "I w3Dl to thank my parents, my sisters and Geor ge and Bernie and all the people on the committee," Miss Hearst said, smiling broadly as the sun rose behind her. She was referring to a group formed lo pressure President <See HEARST, Page AZ) ... Klwme ini R eturns· To Iran's Chee rs TEHRAN , I ran <AP ) - Ayatullab RuhollJh Khomeihl came home from exile today ta a wildly enthusiastic welcome.and declared his anti-shah revolution will not be complete until U.S. influence is expelled from Iran. ... "I . . . beg the Almighty to cut the bands of foreigners" to l~sen their grip on Iran. the Chad's F olks ,~pe Rap PLYMOUTH, Mus. <AP> .:_ Massachusetts will not use a kid·· napping charge or extradition lo force the parents or l~ukemia vic- tim Chad Green to return from Ti· · juana with the boJ, pros· ecutors say. Attorney General Francis X. Bellotti and Plymouth County Dntrict Attorney Wllliam C. -()'Malle, said Wednesday they bad "nb current intention" to act a1ainlt the GteeDI, who fled the state lo 1et Laetrile treat· ment for tbe S.,e•~ld. The dedsion was aMounced Wednesday after • Superior Court Judie. found Dtana and Gerald Green in civil cont.empt of court because they fled deapite a court order He or- dered them back by Feb. 7. 78-year -old bearded Shiite Moslem patriarch prayed before throngs of followers. Khomeiru•s first goal is to replace Prime Minist e r Shahpour Bakhtiar's govern· . ment wit an Islamic republic. But BakhtJar again defied the rellgious leader in a broadcast Wednesday night, saying be would "resist chaos and doubtful element.a.'' and "will not permit the 'reins of the country to be held by anyone except the cen· tral government." Khomeini; railing against "despotism and colonialism" tbat be Nid have perverted If•· Dian culture, ulcl 1D u arrival speech that Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi "bas ·made the a rmy follow the .orders of another country.'' The anti·sbah movf.ment wlll be successful only 'when the roots of colonial.tsm are pulled out," he said. . He did Dot mention the Unitecf States by name, but there was no doubt what country ht was talklna about. . Durtna tbe fiipt from Paris, the ascetic rellliout leader slept on. the floor of the upstairs blr on his chartered Air rr .... jumbo j9&. 'I'M ~ner le: three Umes and landed at . . u • milllon Jubilant fo lined tbe ll·mile route be took .. (Bee la.AN, Paae A1 > .............. """' Torrential rain, bail, sleet, snow. and high wi'nds bit an Orange Coast_tha_t h~d basked for much ol the mornmg .under a bright sun and a cloudless sky. Santa Ana added a tomado lo l ihe astonishina, Hat. ~ fR~ twister ~med • along south . *Metn Street leaving toppled trees, shattered homes and shops -but no injuries -in its wake. CRelat- ed story, pict~. Page A3 > Then the the rain came back Wednesday night and early to- day to binder mopping up opera- tions and add piore traffic problems to a Main Street that was already jall)med with rush hour traffic and cars filled with sightseers. By contrast, the Nataonat Weather Service said today, Februar)r is coming in like a lamb. . The forecast calls for showers tonight with the possibility ofbigb winds early Friday. "But then," a forecaster said, "things will begintoclearup." TWISTER DUMPED SHATTERED HOSPITAL SIGN Freak Wind Sn.-tt:hecl Chlcke!'•, Dovea and Signe The long ranie forecast calls ror a weekend Qf sumfy days and warming temperatures. "And not a storm in s ight," the weatherman predicted. "Put , your umbrella away." ~'Woman Hurt In Newport Bl&st'~ · Huntington Beach resldebts said ' suit of armor would have " been better proteetion the.ft an umbrella Wednesday against hr!le. ba1lttooes that-drummed on the roofs of houses and cars . and covered local beaches. Two Newport Beach residen'ta were reportedly recovering 'to- day from an explosion aboard their cabin cnliler wblcb blew them into the water ln Newport Har~r Wednesday. Leonard Gotlried, 4t, of 12 Landfall Court, WU U.-ted at UC Irvine lledlcal Center but not bolpitallled. Deborah Got· fried, 30, ol the same' address, wat treated but not admitted at Hoa1 Memortat1tol)ltal In ·l\{ewport Beach. ·OT .... Comly Harbor PllrOI offtclall Nici Got.fried lo&d tbem be smelled au aboard · tbe JO.. foot GYPllJ Rover aboat noon. ..................... M&da, a.ere ... • eaplwt1•, amesata ..... While, lb• patrol fireboat foq)at .... .,.... lD tbe moortns area betweee I and C 1treltl on the Balboa Peninsula, the in· jured pair. wu rushed to barboa patrol beadqueten-abomf the patrol boat. where-they were treated by Newport Beach paramedics. Harbor patrolmen bad no eaUmate of dama1e to t6e boat, wbicb belonp lo Gotfrted. 'Ibey salcl lbe cause of tbe exploelon ls sun under lnveat1.1ation. Hail" and high winds bit Newport Beach and Colla Mesp. An estimated 5,000 residents of those cities were without power ' durln1 the afternoon untU. em,r1ency crews reptac.a dOwned power lines. . · Mem"rs of the sberi_ff~ ... Harbor Patrol cloc~ed the wtnca: at 70 mlles an bOur. Severu small boau and yachts wenf' ripped from tbelr moorinp b1~ · tbellllta. • FloodlM caused problems iD many communities.· Beacb~ 0::1 So--a;.t Boulevard between Adam~ .._.nee ueaa Avenue and llempbla Street lit. SALT LAKE CITY <AP>-' HUlltinCton BeKb wu awash a , The Utah le1t1lature "" ap· the bellbt of ~ 1torm and dt1 proved a l'elOluUoa calUq for a crews ti8d lo pump water ,... · ~ ........ eoDftDUoa to ... ........ ...... ~ q1lln • balwed federal budlet. Aalllol .... bl 0Paue Clam· Tile Utlb Senate puRd tbe res· ty'• hvtron1Qentat ll•D•f•· ot..iton 21·1 Wtanesday after ment A1en~1 1atd pub le the state Home voted 70-2 in facilltJet IW'YlYed tbe beav1 favor of tbe bW. (lee noa• ..... Al) • • • .. • .. _G asolirie··sales Ban ,.,w ......... ACTOR RETURNS TO TESTIFY IN $1 MILLION SUIT LM Marvin, Wlf• Pamela, EnteLl.ot Arlgeles Court f ... 'Suicide T h reat ' WASlONDTON fAP> -Gov· t rnment offlclal1. faced· wlth conUnul"I ehortatea or Iranian .crude oU, aH con1ltlerln1 a ban on S\Ulday aaaoline, aales and a variety of other meaaures rem· lnl1cent or the 1973·74 Arab oil embarao. Ener1y Secretary Jamet R. Schletlna•r said Wednesday the Carter adminlatratlon wiU· de- cide by April 1 whether to im· pose mandatory conservation fQ eaaurea. But he said sucb ac- tions 'lr'Ould not be needed if lbe f',....P.,.eAJ HEARST .•• Carter to commute ber sentence for bank robbery. Shaw had been quoted· Wednesday as sayin1 hi• fiancee ml1ht wear a bulletproof vest when ebe-letLP1119n but she did not. and Shaw saial~e had beenjokl!lg. · She was dressed in pale blue s lac ks, a navy blue parka, brown leather platform shoes and wore a gold band on her ten public voluntarlly tavea fuel. Amon1 the mandatory meaturee that mi1ht be taken are aUoc:auni 1aaollne from re- floerles to dJstrtbutors and aua- pendln1 evenin1 and Sunday salea, government otflclal1 said. Al10 under consideration la Umtuna motoriata' purchaaes to alterna~d•Y•· Direct ratlo ning has been ruled out. official• aaid. So rar,,Schlesln1er said, "the position of the U.S. baa not been dramatically affected" by the upheaval In Iran that forced the shah to leave-that country. The virtual shutoff of oll exports from Iran· "is Just beginning to bind now." be said. The United States normally gets about 5 percent of lta crude oil from Iran. Other oil-producing countries. most notably Saudi Arabla, have made up for much of the Iranian loss. But there have been re- ports the Saudis would produce -arr avera~e or only 9.~ million bar.rel~ a day in the first four months of 1979. The normal dai- ly avt:rage Is nearly 10.S million barrell. Schltelntet aa1d he bad seen nothln& from Iran that would ln- dlcate a return lo normality 11 Imminent. • The moet optlmlatlc eeUmates say production ln Iran will not resume for at leaat several weeks. It would tak' 1lx months for the country'• production to return to accepuble levels. ex- perti say. ln a related developmtnt •. Exxon Corp . announced \tedonday it la reduclDl·lupplles o'f cructeoUtocuatomeraby to per- cent. And Standard OU Co. of California asked the Ener1Y Department for perrni11lon to limit. to Jut year's level, the amount of Chevron "jasolinf lt sells to dealers. Both companies attributed their action primarily to the situaUon in Iran. Last week. Texaco said It would bold supplies this month to 1978 levels. On the po11iblllty of -man- datory-eonsePVatle~ measures. B. Jack Werre. a spokesman for Chevron U:S.A. -Jnc .. said. "as of right nOw. we don't see it. - Fro•Page A J Stated by M arvin J hand. . . . STORM D AMAGE. LOS ~GELES tAPl -Actor Lee Marvin says he kept his six- year affair with Michelle Triola Marvin going because he was afraid sbe might kill herself or tell the news media about his drinking habits. her abortipns and other secrets. Marvin' made a dramatic exit from the witness stand Wednes- •day, af~ testifying as a hostile witness for Miss·Marvin, who Is s uing the actor for a $1 million property settle ment for the years they lived together. Marvin said his former lover took a drug overdose after • fierce ar~ment ht 1961 and at she r epeatedly thre ne~ suicide during their arr· . The actor said after an ar~u· ment in 1967, Miss Marvin con• fronted him wlth a gun and two shells and asked. "How do yoo load this thing?" bospitaJ, · lhen returned to tus Malibu Beach house, be said. "When I came home she was there and 1 just did not know what to do.·· he said. •'I was still trying to get out of this situation but I felt stymied . . . I was afraid she would go out a nd · complele the job." The actor said he took her back "because of the human ele- ment -the torture she must have gone through and the fear that .must have accompanied an act like that." Miss Marvin told a reporter later that the 1967 overdose was not a suicide attempt. She Hid she accidentally mixed some . medicines. • Under questioning by Marvin Mitchelson. attorney for Miss Marvin. the actor said he fre- quently ordered he r to leave his home. .. In her ·left hand she carried what she c~Ued her "elem~)' blanket ... a nowered afghan that she crocheted and embroidered while at Pleasanton, hoping to be released before she finished it. It was completed before Christmas 1978. . At one point s he paused, tu~ned to her attorney's wife. In- grid Martinez, and took from her a beige sheet of heavy paper whlch she waved in her left band toward a crowd of about 150 re- porters, saying, "There it is, the commutation!" -· • • taln' and high wtnds with rel-aettMr ltreet'waa clOHd. alively littledamage. &ancho VleJo Road between Southern' California Gas of-Village Road "in San Juan ficials said today that the con-Capisirano and Via Escolar tinulng cold weather haa meant aolrth of llisalon 'vtejo wH record levels In the supply of cloaed for two bouh late natural gas to homes and bl&Si-Wedneaday wh ile wor kers nesses. clnnd llNd Uaat bad moved onto A total or 3.3 billion cubit Itel tbe pavementf1J)aunearb)'eon· of gas was supplied Tue~day to atruetlallprvjed. establish a new record. The Tbe Cal lforn la Hl1hwa)' company aald emergency sup-Patrol said tratnc moved well plies of l(as from Texas and • on all roads t hrou1 bout the Oklahoma will insure continued storm with a number of minor supplies for Orange County. collisions attributed to heavy And custodians of rain gauaes rain a nd rain-slick pave ment. Asked.if she planned to do any ·were kept bOlly Wldneaday as Jn San Clemente, fireme n writing, she said, "I'm golng to the new dow. npour gave them we.re called out to pump flood - have to." f h · · res statistics for their log water from the public library at She told reporters she was go-books . 233 Avenida Granada. ing on a trip, but would not say The Moulton-.Niguel Water There was no damage to the where or whe n . The n she District gauge shows a total of bµilding or its books but the c;llmbed lnto the baek seat of a 11.04 inches of rain thus rar this mopping up operation compelled station wagon t>etween Martinet season. Last year al this time the library staff to defer opening .. -T-ahirt Plea U.t by Bar TRENTON, N.J . <AP> -·Sta.. liquor lnapecton did not 'violate the free •.-.eh ·•l•bta~.,_._ Hopewell bar by 1uspend- in1 tts license for en- coU'rallnl contestants in wet T·ahlrt compeUtlons to cut away parts or their aarmenta, the Appellate Dlvi1lon of Superior Court H)'ll. The court rejected Wednesday arguments by owners of Ch a r I e y 'k ,. Brother bar that a slate re1ulatlon barring lewd and immoral activity 'in llcented bars ls vague and abrld1es First i\me nd· meqt guarantees. -- The three-Judge panel sald the· U.S. Supre me Court has ruled states may consUtuUonally im- pose liquor regulations prohibiting activity that partakes "more of gross sexuality than of com · munlcation." Court Denies Neu:M Accl!s-s - BELLINGHAM. Wash. <AP • The BelUngham }:leraJd's. bid far access to documents showing why the stale charged Kenneth A. Bianchi with two counts or fi rst-degree murder has been re· Jected. Whatcom County Superior Court Judae Jack Kruti refused Wednesday to cancel his otder sealing the afndavit of probable cause filed in the strangulation deaths of Karen Mandie, :a. of Bellevue and Dtane Wiider, 27. of Bremerton. The bodies of the two Western Was h i ngto n Univers~students were found J an. 12 ln a locked car near here. Bianchi has pleaded innocent to the two counts and faces trial March 8. Brown's Plan In Showdown "I ~ frightened." Ma rv.lo tt----~~·,d..._'· . l '~n~~ou tbjs was a shotgun capable of blow- ing someone away." Following the episode, Marvin said he resolved to break off the relationship. He rented an apart- ment for Miss Marvin, but she never used it because a vug overdose la nded her In the hospital. he saii:1 . Miss Marvin spent two weeks with a friend a fte r her r elease from the · · WQy did you decide to take her back?" aslted Mitcbelson. '·. . . She pleaded with me and al>Ologized. 1 guess I had too much forgiveness." 11nd Shaw and drove away. Jn ~he utility h ad lo".ed 14 .17 the facility until noon. front were two bodyguards and inches. • Elsewhere in San Clemente. Mrs . Ma.rtinez. _ -Orange County Harbor Dis-·geologists wer:e monitoring tirlct has logged , 10 .02, the earth movements that they Orange Qounty Floofi-Co'ntrol believe might accompan)'. any Bribe Off T Id District chart shows 10.86 ~nd further rain. Keenly willhed SACRAMENTO CAP l -A showdown Is looming between two former allies. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and Asse mbly Speflker Leo McCarthy. as the Assembly opens hearings today on a constitutional convention to require a bai11nced federat budget. .......... t •. Cour.t. Voids 'P o t Seizure SAN FRANCISCO <AP> U.S. Customs agents who arrest- ed a marijuana smuggler in 1977 after discovering 43 pounds or the weed concealed in burlap bags acted illegally because they dldn 'l have a search war- rant. a state appeals court has ruled in upholding a trial court. The court rejected an appeal Wednesday by state Attorney 'General George DeukU'leJlan. T he Court of' Apj>eal affirmed the order of M1l rin County Superior Court Judge E. Warren M cG uire suppre ssin g the evidence and d ismissing state ch a r ges of impo rting and transportln hashis h against ohn Mich hyte. Appointment Set "And you lov"ed her , dido 't you?" asked Mltchelson. er 0 the gauge at Or a nge Coast were the Shorec liHs "Mob\le TUCSON CAP) -Garner Ted College stands at 12.75 inches for Country Club park and the CaUe Marvin reddened and growled tbrougli gritted teeth: "I did not love her!" Armstrong. ousted evangelist the sea.son. Nina area where slippages have fo r the Worldwide Church of Tbe rain eased today and pro-been r ecorded in recent months. Marvin. 54. and Miss Marvln, 46, met in 1964 when be was star· ring in "Ship of Fools" and she had a bit part. They lived God, was offered $50',000 a year vided some relief for cre ws lry-In north San Clemente. Pacific by church treasurer Stanley ing to mop up flooding on some Coast Highway remained closed Rader not to talk about church San Juan Capistrano streets. for t he second day between finances, the Tucson Cili~n re-_ ~~mino de l Avion a nd Del Aveoida Estacion and Camino together untiJ 197.Q. • •" • • ,,,., . por.tedJodai,.~ •• --· _ --· ___ • Ob 1 s ~o Street near CamJno Capistrano. due to flooding and CapTSt"r'atro were -B"wastr · but--mud slides. - I .. ". ·-··· - IRAN TENSE. • • from the airport to the capital's ··we are succeeding, but this largest cemetery. Is only the first stage," Kho- Some 50,000"'"Islamic police" melnl told the welcoming crowd maintained order all along the in a loud, firm voice. route, and more than 100,000 He accused forces he did n~ sup po rte r s jammed t be Identify of trying to restore the cemetery. shah to power but declared: Shouts of "God ls great" and "The imperialist shah regime is "Welcome Khomeini" 1reeted all ln the past and cannot be the ayatullah, an exile for more brought back again. Our success tban 14 years . as he rode Is the result of the unity of all through the throng ln the back of the people ln this country. They a blue Mercedes. Occasionally, all follow one word (Islam ) and the chaufteur accelerated to even the religious minorities are force the ca-r thro ugh the united with lslam." swarming crowd. 'fhe crowd sur1ed forward Near Tehran Uni venity, shoutlna "Allah Akh~ar !" (God where. more th,an 40 persons la Great) u tbe ayatuJlah bave ·been killed-th• paat. week finished b1a statement, pushing ln clashes between Khomeini's hlm against a stairway, and aupportere and the army, a ban· aides had to shield him until the ner read: "When evil 1oes out, crush wu pushed back. -1u!"°lfii~ Mlftistn. ,.._ - -Tb~ "Jo-vtrnment tele'vtsroJY I 00'\ OF C HAIR ~ ON DISPLAY The Assembly Wa ys and ~eans Committee hearing is the first · of at least two scheduled this month on a Senate-passed resolution. backed by Brown, to c all a national convention to draft a constitutional ban on federal deficit spending. · LOS ANGELES (AP> -State Supreme Court Chief Justice Rose Elizabeth Bird will name a Superior Court judge to a handle further pretrial matters rn the Worldwide Church of God re-~eivershlp case. both sides have agreed. A selected crowd of 1,000 wa1 ' Hrvice lbowecl about 20 minutes admitted to the airport terminal or Kbomelnl's arriv1l and then to greet the religious leader. A announced it was ohutting down c rus h of shoving, ahouUng •'because of te.chni.ea.l--dif- mullaba, or Moslem priesta, re· ficulties." bca.I•• a..z.a.ye Sllewc .. sa..,,. O"ANOE COAST DAILY PILOT ff"lllOtMo-CM\t 0-.IY ~Oo4,..-Ut-lv.l\l(ft1\l0Wt .,......,,~--~ •~P<ll>l•-dn•t..,.Ot­ co.111 l'vb41-~'I ~P"•At• fClollOft• M• rwtiu~ho It~' t~ '••ti•• tor Cnttt Mf'W N--1 ~<t<h ,_,.,,.,...., -h ~­ tttO Vatln ........ u..,.•"""'"" .....,thC-t • ........ ~JOCll~l\PUll•nt"'llhtv"l"'U"' ~,., r,. .,...._,... .,...,..,,,.,. ... ..,, ... , m _.... ... ,~.CMl•M<fio .. C•tttOfr'l••t"',._ ll-'1N-,,."cN<ll tM l'-'11•- Jetl II, C-Y lltlcO .... ,1,,..,1 OllO Ge"'•lll Mlltl•l)"f 'h•"l••lt.Mt IOlltr ntMfto.U • !lllWfWlt'M M•••o•-. t<llltr CM•'"' N L•.. lll<IWI"' r N•tt 4ultltnt Mflfl<talllO ldlltl• porters and others mobbed him al the entrance to the reception lounge; one mullah tried to climb over the backs of re- porters, and otbe1 mullahs shouted (or quiet ~d chanted from the Koran, the Moslem ho- ly book. to restore order. Aides told reporters aboard the Boeing jetliner that brought Khomeini home that he probably will announce a provisional gov- ernment to replace Prime Minister Sbabpour Bakbliar and bis cabinet in a few days. Giraffe Stands 4 1/:b-foot Ca1t Supportl Leg. · . . Wobbly but showlni spunk. rains," said Jo Scheller, park Tennessee, a two-year-old publicist. "It was very muddy giraffe wet1hln• about 1,400 and be aot stuck, and trylna to pounds, stood up '(Vedneaday utrlcate himself be broke the after sur1ery ror • rractuted lei,·" leg, a Uon County Safari omclal She said the an1mal'11 aae ls said'. "UP" a teen-qfl' ln human Tel.,t1•n• <'71•1....,., A park spokeswoman said the terms. Cla""'"A•9 m 1 .. netu>M1t • animal wu equipped with a "Belng a young glrafle, be "-~~· 4~-foot aut durtn1 tbe three-simply didn't know what'li'e waa hour oPef'etiOD. 9be said lt wu 1e&U111 lnlo," abe 1a!d. ,__,110r-c-...~1~ oa&r dlit _,.. atme ......,, A tr I 111UiW' WM .....t durio.f .... 111D WU per1ormed \o t1x a llnlfe'• the opentioD. -,-~ .. '''C .. ,. °'-ca. .. :r.:·1111·"' ""' broktn .... Tb• lllimal, 1cqulre"i~ =::1" ~ • ....:.~~~r."~"::!l ~:r: Th• animal, wbldl •••born ln • b--"-loan io montbt ...... -,.,, ........ ,..-..T '"'" .. ' "'"'"'"to1 e1 '~ • -•~1 ,..,.,...,,_ capllvU.y In TennHlff, frac-will be kept In a 1maU enclORO . tc,r.:1:1~· .. ,~:~r. .. ~--.:'.~::. ~·:. ' tured ltl a.ft forelq atwr walk-area ot \bl wtldlile preterve ror _,,.1,. •• ..... , ••,. ll'tft'"'' Mi••'"' inl i8'0 a rtv• bed. abo\lt ... ~. ·•uat.U the 1., l1 ...... ,..et:. -~ ~-·rl ~-.-eE-S-l 5EL~TIG ~._y • IEST SERVICE • IEST PRICES SA VE OM THE FAMOUS SWIVEL IECL'911IER ROCKER Choose Yow SealllMJ Comfort With LA·Z--109(®, ' MIUION VllJO 211t2 Marguerite teem."':?., T • Mon,. 104 lat. 1().8 aa...._ .. ~~--~ .. .,..='=-=.=u:•:-:::'":''===::"'..-"ll happeaed due to the ...,,.......,._....,.. --f -______ _.... _______________ ------ • t Orange ~•ast # I E DITION ' . . ·~~ WAVING PRESIDENTIAL COMMUTATION ORDER, PATRICIA HEARST LEAVES PRISON With Her~· Her .Rance and Former Bodyguard Bernard Shaw, Whom She'll Wed Soon I ~~ -2atty H~arst Er eed: ApplaWJe Greets Her at Home HILLSBOROUGH (AP> - Patricia Hearst walked out or prison l.Qto.l>rfgbt sunshine today and went directly to her mother's plush suburban San Francleco home, a free woman afler a five-year odyssey of kid· nap, crime and punishment. "I think that I've gotten a Jot stronger, a lot more self confi. dent. I take a lot ot things in stride that make other people ran apart." Miss Hearst told re· porters during a celebration in· side the tastefully furnished ·home in this wealthy San Fran· cisco suburb. Her homecoming wa s weetened by a large crowd of family and friends who burst In· to applause as her car entered the driveway. . Her mother, Catherine, em· braced her, and later told re· porters she "marveled" at Pat· ty's "sparkle." •'It's t.b'e most wonderful party ot my life," Mr. Hearst told a group or abou 50 friends, re· porters and police officers invit- ed inside to a catered welcome- home bnmch of champagne and · eggs Benedict. Among those present were Janey Jimene2, a former federal marshal who walked Miss Hearst into the courtroom every day during her two-month bank robbery trial and shed tears for her new friend, and the Rev. Edward Dumke, who spearheaded a ni-tional· cam- paign for the presidential com- mutation which came Monday. Miss--Hearst 's father, Ran- dolph, arrived shortly after she did and said that his daughter had "her sparkle back and I think she'll be okay.'' Mi ss Hearst, who continued smiling throughout her party, wore a "Pardon Me" T-shirt and a medallion with green rhinestones that spelled out Survivor, and the number 2+74, the date ol ber kidnapping. ~e said she would add the date 2·1·19 to the piece of jewelry, a cm from fiaJJce Bernard Shaw. Mias Heant said that after ber marriage she would be known aa- either Patricia .Heant or Mrs. Shaw. 1"l don't anticipate-anyone cal ling me Patricia Shaw because it seems so foreign to me and my name has always been Patricia Hearst." Shortly after noon, Patty and her fiance drnve a_w~y -1rom the house after packing several suit· cases in the back of the station wagon. A driver 8Rd an unidentified woman were in the back seat along with Miss Hearst and Shaw . . 'Violent Weather Assails co.ast Tornado, Hail Rip CoUf!lf -Wet, cold January ended W ednelday in a burst of freak weather along the Orange Coast. To~· rain, ball, sleet, snow aqd high winds bit an Orange Cout that bad basked for m ucb ol the morning under a bright SUD and a eloudleu sky. Santa Ana added a tornado to the astonishing list. A ferocious twister screamed alon1 south Main Street leaving toppled trees, shattered homes and shops -but no injuries -in its wake.'<Relat- ed story, pictures, Page A3 > Then the the rain came back Wednesday night and early to· day to hinder mopping up opera- tions and add more .traffic .... .Pt<>Jtl~ to a Main Street that was already jammed with rush hour traffic and cars filled with sightseers. ~ By contrast, the National Weather Service said tOday, February is coming in like a lamb. The forecast calls for showers tonight with the possibiUty of high winds early Friday. "But then," a forecaster said, "things will begintoclearup. '' The long range forecast calls for a weekend of sunny days and warming temperatures. "And not a storm in sight," the weatherman predicted. "Put your umbrella away." Huntington Beach residents (See STORM, Page AZ) Schmitz Race ....... -- 'Dareatens V .S. KhOmeini ' Gets A . Wild Welcome TEHRAN~ llA.ll <AP.>.,_-AyataJ1all RUhollab K.bolbelnl came home from eirile today to a wildly enthusiastic welcome and declared bis aw.i·lhab revolution wtlt not-be-eolllplete..:until U.S. influence is expelled from uan. "I . . . beg the Almighty to cut the bands of loreigners" to loosen their grip on Iran, the 78 -year·old bearded Shiite Moslem patriarch prayed before throngs or followers. Khomeini's first goal is to replace.Prime Minister Shahpour Bakbtiar's govern· ment with an Islamic republic. . But Bakbtiar again defied the nli&iom lellder ln a broadcast Wedneadar nlgtA, saying be would .. resist chaos and doubtful elemeau" and "will not pei'mit STRIFE IN IRAN A~CTS ISRAEL-A15 the reim of the country to be held by anyone except the cen-tral government." Khomeini, railing against "despotism and colonialism" that be said have perverted Ira· nian culture, said in an arrival speech that Shah Mohammed <See IRAN, Pa1e AZ> - Open Space · Issue . . Tops Land Hearing By SfEVE MITCHELL The county plan, te rmed 0t .. o.1ty •••uutf "basically a good one," by the Guarantees that at least three· commission staff, caUs for de- quarters or the 10,000 acre Irvine velopment or a community or Coast be kept in open space was 30,000 persons housed in nearly the biggest bone of contention 12,000 tmita in return for reserv- among regional coastal com-lo& ~uarten or the 10,000 mission officials and county and acre expanse for public and Irvine Company planners. . private open space. That issue ls a primary -problem to the commission staff But disagreem e nt arose in discussion of a local coastal among the three lactions on a plan for the pristine land between staff recommendation that there C d l M d L be a guarantee of sorts the open orona e ar an aguna space land will remain open Beach. V S l Coastal commissioners met space . .r Or eDft e for nearly four hours Wednesday Any development by the '. night in Huntington Beach to <See COASTAL, Page A%) ,--~Ti6 ~3~l"°'"=:e!~=~: ~---. -·-·u :·---___ _ B~ GA•Y GaANVILLE ~~~11~':!e ~~i:::~!s :r:u~~~ Orange Co ast 0t ... De11Y ,......... bearings on the development °'"" ...... ~ .. ~ ,.,..,_ HAILSTON!S COVER SAND ALONG THE OCEAN FRONT IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Ufeguerd Tower and Edf90ft Company Power Pl9nt (background) P•rt of R•re Scene Disclosure statements filed in Pr<>.uam Jo.r. one-or the most Santa Ao.a today show that by valuable chunks of land remaln- tbe time Republican John G. Ing in Southern California. Sc!bmltz won bis bid to return to Other key issues discussed the state senate last November before a room packed with • his campaign committee bad clUzens, included low-coat bous· d t $328 314 Ing on some or the high-priced 7"Kymla Charge-Droppe ;.~~~:.;:.~~~~ ~~r.~::n.~~~:s~:·E " "-.... committee rePorted t'bat the lrvineCOmpany. ' ·~pending bad resulted ln a I U--1•-JU• l r.' £t flt • -1, -~L-deficltof'8549. lFiuu&IAlft J:~igKe ~Q.le '-iO 1111.&ea JOr Va,IBn Cord0Ya'1 cam-paten dis· :r.:~•-;~-e_;;::._1 __ • · w••llam· -. ..:..-bo -•--wu un-closure statement bad not ~ OJ ,;:,,,.,we ~e~::i_•:,'u":,~~ ~-J!, ~~ ~:~..:~e County ll'and JUl'J av~ableD,;rc;.nme:t'tbis morn· reached the relistrar's office late · Dtatri t aed Ai Kymla could not be .-eacbed. ing. ' tbilmorntn«. n. .• JUO F;re Jauel Water c • u ,..-•· 'or co--_.tblt mornin~ Six ...... -es a=Kymla la· -But Cordova bad rero:rted LXlf, l ~~ ., trict employee• to perform •' U&UK:U.. .....-. aoendinl *'"-"'in h11 ef ort by ~ t..a bave been dla· Court offlctala said 4'1· volvedtbreealle ldenta. (jet. 24. --·uv• mtased in Central Ora.nae Coun· mllaal wu read into the court They included allegaUoaa that Wbea coupled with heavy ty Munldpal Court. record without any reference be-two diltrlct employees lnltalled apendinl lD the five-candidate Court~ iaid today dll· tng made to Kymla'a employ· tile ln Kymla 'I Newport Beach Jlepi»ublfcan prim ary election mt11al came We d nuda1 mentf\lture. home,• wor1rer used cllatrtct ....... ...., • .-mtdwQ u.roup tbe lh1rd day ot Tbe water district manaaer eq~lpmeat to plow Kymla's lawn lut June, ~ cam.-.p w-.""" a ctoeed door~ bear-ud oU9er lour emp~1ees blrn and two dlem9loleeb1 ~u!_,a =::.~ :!~.:: {:: lDI into ux cbaraet of embeale--remained oa dat7 with lbe dll· aralnafe tcb • t e )'.-u• tlUa dlltrlct ...,_te Mat former- ment and _.itProprlaUon ot trict 9inee tbetr Indictment ud home. 11 held bJ .Republican I>IDftls l'UbUc PRP8"1-tlsal ·faced the Uae 1ab1equent ftlln1 of a Carpenter wu reportedly She former Newport Beach clt1 ut-mlnal complaint wbleb 'm•teoltlyever. ooud'T. replaced t be 1rand Jury ~tbaclollaldaJ1oftbecam· ----~J:a := l 'r;1.:\! ~ma«lcm io dilmllt cbartll Id t' reported Neelv· -Odl•J' dimiet ·-~~ a1abllt ~mla ... • .. by ...,... eolltrtballoD hom ' .... ,,.,._. .... _...,_ D•P•t.r ~J>l1trlct 1 AUonae1 • <lleliWMHS.P ... AI) •• A column of smoke roH from the Orange County SanltaUon Dtstrlct's facility net.r tbe San Dte110 Freeway in Fountain Valley tbil momlol u part of a simulated diaalt.er drill. Oranie County and at.ate of· nclala, u wen u local emersen- c y personnel, took p.art in "OperaUon Shaker," a drill bued OD u tma,inary eartb· quake ln Brea. Tbe amoke atmulated tbe U · ploaon of ........ tank. Tbe dila.ter drill tDdtld at aooo. ' We ather Chance or rain 70 per- cent tonight, 20 percent FrRlay. Brief heavy r~. thunderstorms and gusty winds at times. Lows tonight 38 to 45. Partly cloudy and breesy "Friday with highs 54 to ~. IN818ET8•~Y Goo. l:dnwnd 0 . Bron Jr. 1011• lw'• pnno o lot o/ tllouglat '° ~ Preft. dent Cdrlfr fn th• JHO prhnoriet. SotM o/ IU oc- • t'°"C, 1'9ouQh, (iHm be,ond tlw .. ,,..,._ .. d~ •. SforJI on AU. ··-· .. -I / 91 PftlUP &OSMAat Ot .. o.in ........ Fluor Corp exttuUv • tOn· cernf'd about lb Pre<' m 10 01 of Iran's A,yatuUah lhahollah ~~---¥.laGm•GL:t .. ~I .bq the Alrntahty to tut t aDdl * • • - Eeaving Iran. forel•IWt'I·" today were dee d· Tb• L~ Fluor Corp llleraUy meant lbat lhe hands of 1111 •Mdttr to evacuate • aeon malnlalna olfltM lo th JranJ&n roreltn advt.sen abould be cut of &.heir ftrm '• •mployHI ln the capl&al, T•an. and bu several olf 11 a wamlna a1atn1t In· 11:: .=7ocs ... •fialDlt. emp~ npervlalQC • utural terfereoce ln the Iranian 1ovem· _:; J tal project ln tbe IOU~ of ll'M. rant. .. de1potj1m and c61on1a lam" In Paunan. rluor offtciaJs nid its wblcb be a.aid baa pene.JUd lbe r 1_.eolteaman em· • Amerlcko employees probably aa :t -"it-. (>alllt "llttt 1>e eweH-.d ""ery...oen . .1.~ * Sunday Ban: O~c-G~ situation," but hl9h-leve~ of--"W•'r-0 not golni to k!ep peo. Ileen ol the company have been 'Pie whe~ there ls dancer," ooe meettna for two days in the said. "'They wUl .not be left If the Irvine heedquartera · to cfecicle loeal usessment l5 that there l5 wbat lo do, and when to do lt. serious danger. The nuor•.PQlteemn .... t»-~ .. P~are-nat~tutt.-n·.-Juat compHy ls ln constant com· a matter of planning. Sales· to Be Mulled WASHINGTON CAP> Gov· rroment offaC"aals , flC't'd with codUnUiJli shortqc of I ranlan crude oU. are t0p.sid rtaa a ban OD Sundl)' aaaoUn1 ale a.nd a variety ol olbt'r measures rem anbcMt ot lbe 1973·74 Arab oil e mbarao. £nero Secretary J am R an l\ltr11e o1on1y 8 5 mllllon barrf'ls a day In tht farst four · months of 1919. The normal dtl· ly nt-raee i• nearly 10 5 million' barrcu Schlesln,er SIUd be had een nothing fg>m l~an that would m· d cate a return to normality la >inminent In a related development. munlcalion with the tJ .S. State "We'll either stay or go. as the Department for advice. situation requires." Tue.day.. the U.S. Embassy in The comp&Ay ls completing Tehran urged American com-work on a $300 mllllon natural panle• to evac1,1ate non-essential gas liquids"turbo~xpander plant personnel and dependents or al Pazanan. The job ~s ~n employees a.a soon as poasible. accepted as mechanica y com· One F1uor executive sald com-plete. ~ final lnspectl n work paoy olfidals are try"1,l to de-remains. termine whether the aYltullah's Fluor also built an oU reri.nery s tatements reported today atlsfahan. Prop. 13 View . Plane Loses Poli8hFilm BUDAPEST. Hunaary <AP> ~The orictn.al fllm of a new Hun1artan-PoU1b co-production tltled "!n Route" 'was lost en route from Wanaw to Budapest, a Hungarian news~per eported ...... .-• · · · • Producer I s tvan Fogaras told th e newspaper Hetfoel Hlrek the film bad. been flown to W a.rsaw to be •hown to co· orodu~. 4t waa to be r.e· Ol'l'lect-ilr trvctrpest u re11-tered luggage by a Polish &irllhe, but never showedup. . · The original was to be used for making copies for nationwide distrJbution here. If it is not )ocate<k another four months would be needed to piece together lbe finished pr~uct. STORM ... said a suit of armor would hav1 been better protection than H um breUa Wednesday against huce ha1.tatones that drummed on the ro«s of houses and cart and covered local beaches. ijall and hlgb wfods ht Newport Beach and Costa Mes Ao esUmatea~ reaide-ts _....,...._._"*".., those cities were without power _during the aft9rncion until e merge ncy cr ews replaced· downed power Unes. Members of the sheriff'• Hubor .Patrol clocked.ihe..windl at 10 miles an holJr. Several small boats and yachts wer• ripped from their moorings bJ the gusts. FloodilU( caused problems iA many communltles . Beaclt Boulevard between .Adamt A venue and Memphis Street ia Huntington Beach was awash al the height of the storm and cilf crews had to pump wat.er fro~ ~ several hopleS. -----------~ · Authorities in Orange Coun· . ty's Environmental Maoag~ GI ment Agency said public Oomy facllitles survived the heavy rain and high winds with rel· 1 allvely Uttledamage. SchleiJnger a d Wedn day the Carter adrrunilt.raUba will d cide by April J whether to Im· pose m~atory conservation measures But he said aucb ac- Uooa would not be needed If the publl~ voluntarily saves fuel. · Among \,he mand atory measures that might be taken are allocatint gasoline from re- fineries to distributors and sus- pending e~eolng a nd SimdAy sales. governmentorriclals said. Exxon Corp. announced Wednesday it ia reducing supplies of crude oil to customers t,y JO per· cent. And Standard Oil Co. of California asked the Energy Department for permis•lon to limit, to last year's level, the amount of Chevron gasoline it sens to dealers. Both companies attributed their action primarily to the situation in Iran. Southern California Gas of· ficlals said today that the con- Speaker Says Sclwol A_id Problem Seriom ~~c~:'cf ;:~~1:~tbJi~ b::p a:;a: r natural gas to homes an:f busi- Also under consideration is limiting motorists' purchases lo alternate days. Direct rationing has been ruled out, officials said. So far. Schlesinger said, "the position of the U.S. has Dt>t bet!n dramatically affected" by the upheaval in Iran that forced the shah to leave that country. The virtual shutoff of oil exports from Iran .. is just beginning to bind now," he said. The United States normally gels about 5 percent or its crude oil from Iran. Othe r oil-producing countries. most notably Saudi Arabia. have made up for much of the Iranian ioss. But there have been re- ports the Saud.is would produce' * *. * fi',.._PageAJ IRAN. . .- Reza Pahlavi "has made the army follow the orders of anothei: country.'' The anti·sbah movement will be succes~fui only. "when the roots of colonialism are pulled out.·· he said. He did not mention the United · States by 1',ame. but there was no doubt what country he was- tal.klng about. During the flight from Pari~. the ascetic religious leader slept on tbe noor of the upstairs bar o n his chartered Air France jumbo jet. The jetliner circled three umes and landed at 9 a.m. as a million jubilant followers lined the ll·mlle route be took from the airport to Uie capital's largest cemetery. -L•st week. Texaco said it would hold ~upplies thk--mooth to 1978 levels. On the possibility of man- datory conservation measures. 8 Jack Werre, a spokesman for Chevron U.S.A. Inc .• said. "as of right·no'10':\we don't see it By JERRY CLAUSEN Ot U. O..tr ~IW Sta~ Parents concerned and con· fused With what J>ropoiltion 13 is- doing to public schools got little solace Wednesday night from a school adrnlnlslllll._tors' lobbyist who spoke in Newport Beach. WiJlia~ Cunningham. ex- ecutive clirector for tbe Associa~ Diedrich's Trial Fees Hit $61,000 By GARY-GRANVILLE Of tlle Dally ~llet S~ Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich 's courtroom bat·-, lies have cost his supporters more than $61.000 so far ln legal fees paid to four lawyers. The money has been collected from political sources at a series of fundraisers incluclmg a lunch at the Villa Fontana restaurant ir Orange last December that raised $40,700. At the Dec•mber fundraiser the guests cons umed $1 ,110 worth of Villa Fontana vitUes and competed for $900 worth or door prizes. gold coins converted to jewelry. Included among the paying guests were a larJl?e number or firms and indivisuals who reg· ularly contribute to county s upervisorial campaigns and who frequently have an interest in decisions by the board of supervisors Among those who paid $1,100 for luncheon tickets were the l rvine Company. Shappell Jn. dustries, restaurateur BraOPer- rin, Hon Development Company. Pacesetter Homes, Orange County Steel Salvage Company and 'lobbyists Frank Michelena and Sandy Sandling . · • . . Among lesser donors were Philip J . Reilly, president of the Mission Viejo Company, VTN, Avco Community Developer s and the Baldwin Company. Included in payments to at- torneys made either through the Ralph Diedrich Birthday Party Co-m mittee or tbe "'R'alph Diedrich Defense Fund is the $3:iO it C06t to unsuccessfully de· fend Diedrich against a parking ticket. But the bulk or the money has gone to Diedrich 's former lawyer. Marshall Morgan. •' fi'r ... PageAJ COASTAL HEARING. • • Some S0,000 "Islamic police" maintained order all along the route . and more than 100,000 s upporte"r s j a mme d the cemetery. Irvine Company. the stafr sug· reasonable amount of time. and Shouts of "God is great" and gests. should be predicated with as long as the company )ijls the "Welcome Khomeini" greeted a guaranteed phased dedication right to bulld on the land should the ayatullah, an exile for more of open space. no public funds be forthcoming. than 14 years. as h e rode But Richard Munsell of the But members of the audience through the throng in the back of co unty 's Environment a I appeared uncomfortable with a blue Mercedes. Occasionally, Management Agency. said that l h e a pp a r e n t 1 a c k of Ute chauffeur accelerated to recommendation is unaccepta-permanence of any open space rorce the car through the ble, a feeling echoed by Irvine land. . swarming crowd. · Company officials. UC Irvine professor Wesley Near Tehran Universit y. He said the county is not able Marx, said a commitment for where more than 40 persons to justify a company dedication phased dedication is a must in have been killed the past week of nearly 4,000 acres requtred the coastal plan. He said a legal in clashes bet.ween Khomeini's under tbe commission staff's opinion on the staff's recommen· supporters and the army. a ban· recommendations. And he ques-dation for dedication is un- ner read: ·"When evil goes out, tiooed the staff's legatrigbt to re · necessary, adding, "This '1ocal the angel comes ln." quire such a <1edacallon of open coastal plan l is a major test of A selected crowd of 1,000 was space. the Coastal Act." .1 admitted to the alrport terminal Irvine Company planning Huntington. Beach student to greet the religious leader. A director Donald Cameron Dave Hall said guaranteed open c rush of sho ving, s houting agreed with the county, saying it' space walesaential, considering mullahs. or Moslem priests, re· would not be reasonable ror the the ·'finger-like development porters and others mobbed blm company lo dedicate la nds along the riclgelines in the Irvine at the entrance to the reception without. assurances of fair CQm· Coast." · . lion of Calllornia School Ad- ministrators, laid it on the tin& earLY in bis 90-minute presenta· -tion•to the Newport-M.eaa. clis· trict 's School Community Ad· visory Council. "Nobody knows what's hap- pening lo Sacramento," said Cunningham. a former. superin· tendent of the Newporl·Mesa ~cbool system. State legislators. he said. face possibly "~ most difficult a.s· signment in the history of dem· ocratic gove rnment" in at· tempting to shore up puo11c services rollowing passage of the tax-relief initiative last June. Cummingham indicated there is only one bright spot resulting from Proposition 13. He said public education will cease being "all tbin&s to all people ... becaua~ boards of education and superibte ndents will have to say "no." "We in education can get back ·to those thinl(s we know how to ·do well -educate ... Cunningham said stbool dis· tricts won't Jcnow until late July ·or Augus bow much money they'll ha e ·for fiscal 1979-80 because ~ the confusion in Sacrameo OYer lb.tee bills· and the legisl lve processes re· quired in eventual compromise. ·•Meanwhile. the district superintendent has the job of figuring expendlture!l without any idea of income.·· he said: "Businessmen would laugh at such an idea." The distribution of surpluses last yeaT and Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's freeze on teacher salaries saved public education last year, Cunningham opined. "If those two thing~ h!id notoc· curred. 40 percent of tbe school -districts -would be bankrupt by this March." F~PageAJ SCHMITZ ... the Carpenter For Senate Com- mittee as well as a $15,000 dona- tion from the Gun Owners of California Committee. Also helping (o fuel the one· Um~ American lndependent Party presidential candidate's closing election drive was a $7 .ooo contribution from the Republican oriented Lincoln Club as well as a $10,000 Joan from the California Republican Senate Campaign Committee. The Schmlti clisclosure stale· m ent shows that be paid political consultants ArnoJd Forde and Bill Butcher $3.5,000 for their services in his cam· paign. "Contested amount" is written alongside the listing of the Butcher Forde fee payment. It was not clear from tht nota· lion ~r it was Schmitz or Butcher · aod Forde wbo were contesting the amount. The SCbmiti disclosure slate· ment shows that, in the final two weeks of bis victorious cam· paign, $99,991 wa$ received in contii1>Ufions and loins. nesses. A total of 3.3 billion cubic feet ot gas was supptred Ttre~ establish a new record. The company said emergency sup· piles 01 gas 1 rom Texas and 1 Oklahoma will insure continued supplies for Orange County. I And custodians ol rain gauges · were kept busy Wednesday as i ~ the new downpour gave them fresh statistics for their log books. The Moulton-Niguel Water District gauge shows a total of 11.04 inches or rain thus fat this season. Last year at this time the ut.\litY had logged 14.17 inches. Orange County Harbor Dis- trict h as logged 10.02, the Orange County Flood Control District chart shows 10.86 and the gauge at Or ange Coast College stands at 12. 7S inches for the season. · The rain eased today and pro- vided some relief for crews try- ing to mop up flooding on some San Juan Capistrano streets. Camino del Avion and' Det Obispo Street near Camino Capistrano were awash but neither street was closed. Rancho Viejo Road between Village Road in San Juan Ca'pistrano and Via EscoJar south of Mission Viejo was closed for two hours late Wednesday while workers cleared mud that had moved onto the pav~ment from a nearby con- struction project. · That amount wasn't enough. however, to avert the $6S,468 def- ic!t the Schmitz. carripaig-n t0m· m1ttee teP,Orted ~when i\ closed The ca 1i ro r n i a Hi g b way th~ books on the 1978 election Patrol said traffic moved well dnve that rel~ the fonnt;r . ojl al' roads t.hrougbout the s tate senator and ·U:S ... con· storm· with a number of minor. gr~ssman. to elected o(face after collisions attributed to heavy a SlX·year absence., ra~n af!d rain-slick pavement. I 0 0'\ OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY Come See Our fantastic Buys in La-Z-Boys -. leuoee;~.,_.. mttll41h~ct.rie4--to -· peoaali.on..-.~---__ --· . .H-'?.,!.aid !,!!!.llll segmen!s of de· climb over the back.L .ol re.· _ .As far auubll_s..a~q_ulsltJon of velopmen wllT-eb'clS\Wlle-er. porters, and other mullahs open space. Cameron sad that 'lJlllfded devetopment-,.-and-~~ shouted for quiet and chanted cannot be guaranteed, "for the gested the company place all its hal.e&le,. •as•• Ua1pp1 __ ,..et: • IEST SILICTIOM from the Koran, the Moslem ho· same reason the building of boualng lo one area. ly book to restore order:~ 11 ,600 dwelling units <by the He chatged the countr with ......_ Of'ANOa company) cannot be guaran-1tiviog too many concessions to COAST " teed." the Irvine Company. saying, .. DAILY PILOT TMOr_C_O..lyPllOI,"'•"'-""'-___ ..... , ,,_,....,....,0 .. 0.- c .. ~1 ,,_~c-~ ... ..,.,_..,. pWll-'"'O _., l!w-,,._., IOt C..•• MH.t, N--"~""""-_..,,_ t..., Yen~.•·-·~ 11o ... 111-.11c .. ,4 ., ·~,--...... -1-..u. ... ._ .. _ -·L Y,. or11t<.-t _l< .. >l•t pl-I\ ... )]II W." 8•• So!IMI. CMU ""tw. (•llW,..••iw. ._,, .. _ -·-·--·- ~ ............... ............ l.tliltr ~ .... .._ •ldl9rl• ..... llt\lt141111 ........ 1 ... £0llO<• ' He said the company would be "The county and the Irvine happy to make open space lands Company could have bad a joint available for public acquisition presentation tonight. Th•y said as long u It takes place within J the same thing." • • y I . Man, W o~an · Hurt ID Newport Blast Two Newport Beach residents When he ~ the englne h•tcb, were reportedly recoverlng to· there was an explosion. officials day from an explosion a~ said. their cabin cruiser which blew · them into the waler ln Newport . Wbllo the patrol fireboat Harbor Wednesday f ou1bt the blase ln the moort.nc Leonard Gotfrled. 46, of 12 are~ between 8 and C streets on Landfall Court, wu treated at the Balboa Penintula. the in· UC lrvtne Medlul Center but Jured pair waa ru.sb'ed to harbo• oot holpitaliaed. Deborah Got· patrol headquarters aboard the fried, 30, o1 the same address. patrol boat, where <bey were was treated but not admitted at treated by Newport Beach Hoag Memorial Hoapltal In pararriedics. Newport Beach. Harbor patrolmen bad no Oraqe County Harbor Patrol ..Umate ol dam•1• to t.be boat, offlclall Ind Gotfrted told them whJcb belonp to Gotlried. Thay he smelled cu aboard the 30-1ald the caUH of the explotiOn II foot Gypay Rover about noon. atlll under lnvesU1auon. ' • IEST SERVICE • IEST PRICES SA VE ON THE FAMOUS SWIVEL REcUMR IOCKER Choose Your SeatlllCJ Comfort With LA-Z-IOY® COITAMllA 369 I. 17th IT. <Acroa rrom Rolf)ha. next to Marte ColeflCIOn> 642·1617 Mon. • Fft. 1 ().6 Sot. Jo-6 Cloled8'RlaV MllleoN VllJO llltl ........... Plcwy •. (ComefdA*V • ~Via bcc*Jr) •tl-8902 Mon. • ffl 1().6 Sat. lo.& aa.ct.._, 'Santa Ana·· Hit ·~-4~~·.,, 'lo Rado - . 8 TOMtARLEY Of_.,...,... .... Hnrold lioyeT ran to the front porch of hla Pocnou ' homo IOU&.b. Sant.~e4Dnd!Y. Wh~ saw ttte branches, farbace cans amt-. a1s.: ploy dverti ll\i sign salllnl put hit front wlndow. H • reached lbe porch ju.'\l ln time to see hla fiock or ch1ckcru 'plucked rrom hls front yard by what s e med to be an invi Ible band and deposited, quawkin.g ondclucking, lnhisneighbor's yard. ••MY ('..OD, IT W f antasllc," Boyer said. "I got ~lown OH'r twice doing it but I ran round there and brought them ull back. They're all a little scared but okay '' · ~ Boyer 's home was directly in the path of a tornado thnl cul a wide swath of damage as it blast· ed its way through south Santa Ana in a southwest to northeast path. .:· :-.· . ... • • The phenomenon. described by Boyer 49, as being ' ··a long, twisting cloud with a black tail,'' left a trail of s hattered windows in s hops and homes, tom and up· rooted trees, signs that were lifted from their base and dumpedtwoblocks awayandanoverfuriled car. ., • Delly .......... .., •ldwlrlll •~ tur:ned car. ANIMAL HOSPITAL LIES IN PATH OF VICIOUS TORNADO WHICH HIT SANTA ANA t'" Heavy. Structural Damage Reported at ritertna~ Faclltty on Main Street FIREMEN ESTIMATED THE damage at $100,000. "But that's 'conse01,ative ," a fire captain said. "We haven't seen the fulf extent of the damage A ev· 1 · Twins Kim a nd Kerry McGrath, 15, ran to the door of the family store on Main Street near Edinger when they heard "a whoostiy, whining noise and we saw palm trees sailing past our front window." BOth ran for cover in the store when the rear plate glass window erupted in a shower of glass and splintered wood and littered the nearby street for 500 yards. Both were unhurt. But both were reprimanded by police and firem en for not seeking cover at the outset of what they saw to be so!Jlething more than a storm. SYLVIA ESPINOSA OF 3533 Calle La Qwnta~ San Cleme nte, swept up the broken gta~s-from the front of the· Santa Ana .. veterinary Hospital and ,.;_, described the lack of injuries in the 30·seconti · tornado as "nothing less than a miracle." -The veterinary assistant was tending ~nimals in the building when, s he said, the structure rocked un· der the impact of a tremendt>us wind. · The hospital's s ign was plucked from its stand and dumped two blocks away. As if in ironic com· pensation a sign from a store further down Main Street was dumped bythestorminitsplace. "OUR ANIMALS WERE very, very frightened, Mrs. Espinosa said. "But, thank God , they are un· harmed and we will soon have them calm again." • l*IY Pleet Sutt ...... Residents said the first warning of the tom'Bdo was when the sky over south-Santa Ana "turned black as ink:" They s aid the first victims of the high wind ·that (ollowed appeared to be white doves that escaped from an Occidental Avenue,Yard when their HUGE HAILSTONES DEMOLISHED PATIO OF THIS HOME IN HUNTINGTON BEACH DURING WILD WEATHER Bo~lee Myers of 21341 Antigua Survey• the Damage to Her Property After the Sun Ca~ Back Out aviary collapsed. · "But they're all up~ the trees there, billlng and cooing," a police officer commented. "Nothing and nobody was hurt or killed and that has to be the most fantastic feature of this tornado." .Tornadoes, Hail Batter San Diego By The Associated Press Tornadoes ripped off roofs and drove golfbtlll·sized hailstones through windows, floodwaters paralyzed San Diego County, and the desert around Palm Springs was glued with snow for the fU"St time in 30 years as ~e violent storm moved east tod follo'Wed by another. 0 alb was reported - that o Mexican woman who fell into a Tijuana drainage ditch and drowned Wednesday -and a San Diego man was missing and feared dead after . he was swept away by floodipg that entered dozens of homes . and several hotels-. Mll!!ifl~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~ Hardest hit was San Diego's ~ Mt~stor'l"YaHer,wherectbe'U8U81-- ly placid San Diego River over- flowed into llotel Circle and its adjacent golf cour.ses, parking . lots and at least one theater. (Related photo, AS.) At Cinema 21, three showings of "Superman" were canceled after patrons left to rescne cars from the torrent. About 100 residents of a Chula Vista mobile home park were rescued by volunteers with boats and taken to a Red Cross evacuation center at Allen -Elementary School in nearby Bonita. Water invaded dozens of homea tn Lakeside, Santee and Le&LCMlla . Th.CO~ulliJWtll~ Sweetwater RiHr awept into homes in Bonita. · The deluge dropped nearly a~ inches of rain at San Diego's Lindberlh Field, while National . DIMY ,... ..... ,.... Cily reported a whopping 4.82 PALM TREES AND HAIL ON THE LAWN IN HUNTtNGTON lncheslna24-bourpertod. ThA Foll• Becll Eut Wiii Never 9e1eve n Power outag~s ·hit Alpine, ••,-Julian.-the Pactric Bnc~t -Loma and Paradise Riha areu Blinc;l Shooter Gett\ 5 Years o~.:r::~.iN:~~":.~:t~~.:d LOS ANGELES (AP) -A blind cndJted with 300 dayt· alread)t -tlle desert community of Bor- u u n tin Ito 11 B e a ch man 1pem.1D custody, said Superior re10 6prlnp where snow fell. who shot at an offici~l of the · Court Judce Franca Rotblcblld. FJoodwaters broke loose U S l m I Jr t i O I a D d HVeral moblJe homes in the La ' · · m Se• . HebadbeenlnJall1incebllarreat MesaParkeutof70thStreetoff Naturall.uUoa rvlce tut awn when be fired a .22-eallber re-J ·---"-• .. _... ·" • _, .......... mer wu MDteDced Wednelday 11-~ww °' .uu po"ce l..u ....,. tofiveyuraiAl&aleprilOD. volveratomer!eweU,tbe~ bt1 Jrone• floated down Robert Cor~tt. •2. will be toroftbeLolAnleleslNSofftce. AlnndoCnJoa. · ---_.___.........:----- Save 15· to 25o/o on · · __ u Pholstered Chairs aitd s~j~~ In a Wide Choice of Fa bric ' -Our sale events are eagerly awaited, and for very good reason. When we offer reauctlons. you save imp0rtantty on the very finest sofa,s. love seats and chairs made today. Upflolsttiry fabrics, construction and cushioning 'l"re of the h1Qh9st quality_ Sty.Ltng. is lmpec:elble, Included In 1he low sate prtce. COrne-chOQse today -the beaut If ul result Is furniture to cherish, In gvery room In your home! - o v E R 2 o o·o· FAB RI CS T .O CHOOSE FR O M including JI elvets, Matlasse's, Tapestrys, Cotton -Prints, Textures, ~n:::-: C o. rd u r o y s a n d ·~ Brocades. ~ ~winter ·Furn ..... · .......___.,...__. ~ PROFESSIONAL ,,__ ....._ n.n; 1 M . l•H. AtOA OE8fONEAs.----=i= .. Jut .. Coa tin , .... . . Tobacco Industry . . .. ~F~--··· Wlllal WAY DID IT 81.0W'f -A\ lHt4rePOi't today, Oranae County'• bt'and·ne•, •~..tcn'11 HaU of AdmlGlltraUoft bulldl~ wu IWl atudln& at. the Ch1c Cen~r ln Santa An:a. Th f aiooua Sant.a Ana tonsado failed lo I tiL Tb.la DJ., 1urpriM aome uvaot oblerven of county iovemmeot wbo, lo rec.nt times, have really been nap· 'Plna about aUe1ed conalrudJoo na .. ln the Mven-month· old Mat ol county rovemmeot. The couternaUon wu created by some 1111lna beams. aome of whlcb bave cracked, la the MW edltlce. Tbeee be•ma have heal described u "laraely dee· oraUw." You auapect W. I.I bureaucratic Jar100 lntDded to IOCKIM tMM pef'IOOI wbo walk beneath the beam.a, aqgat,. lqthattbeydon't "larply''~up. TBVS IF ANYTBJNG drops off to the pavement below,Jt woo't be largely Import.ant. Unless it hits you , maybe. · f1 Anyway, the whole $9 mlllioo county building ~ms to 'Ii ~· 8 ~1! :;;..;-.,...;:r.;;":a.,-.. ..... i.Jlm!_ -c,_./ ~ ....... ~:-­ Orange County Merchant'•Temporary CMplay. oj GOOtU have survived yesterday's big blow in Santa Ana. There hasn't been that much wind up there in years when a politician wasn't talking. Now the county brass bas announced they're-going lo bolt on some temporary braces to• keep the largely decorative beams from doing any more cracking or creak· ing. 1• These bolt-on braces have been described by authorities as largely temporary. Ab, the county people could sure learn a lesson from me on that temporary installation business. IUST AWHILE BACK, my wife caught me out in the garage, nailing some nails into. the wall. •'Why are you putting those nails in there?" she inquired sweetly. ' t "'lbese are just largely temPOtU"Y bangers for equip· ment vilaJ to our survival around bere," I explained. "Things like our auto tow chain and battery jumper cables." · "How long_ will it be before you find a permanent place to bidethatjwik?'' she persisted. .. TllAT WILL DEPEND on bow long we need these nails to be largely temporary," I explained clearly. "We'll have a permanent place for this stuff in the near future." Well, 1 don't need to tell bow far ofl the near future ls and how long largely temporary has been doing the job. You are left hoping the people wo:~f'~ on the county ~all use attractive bolts in those largel!.:f~po~ary braces. ._ __ .. __ : --.... -- Poliee ... an, Er ••• Cop's Sex Change OK'd WASIDNGTON CAP > -Bon· nle Nora Davenport bas been certified fit to return to work with the District of Columbia police force as a policewoman. She used to be a policeman. Miss De ve nport, 35, said Wednesday she was delighted to learn Ulat city doctors issued a fit· ness certificate. She underwent sex-change surgery two months_ ago. The next step is for police de· partment personnel officials to decide whether to reinstate her.' Police officials familiar with the personnel procedures .involved said ber remstatement was ex- pected to be approved routeinely. \ IOS'l'ON t~) tr-year- 1tudy ol '·* people baa f~ to turn up any "'~port for the tobacco lndu1try 1 araument that 1mokon dJe younier becaute at tome hidden weu· ne11 other than cigarettes, re- 16arcben say. G ary-11. Friedman, J,!f directed the atudy said, "I tbls addl more evidence that 1mollln& la indeed a causal factor leading to death." Tobacto industry supporters, among otben, have arcued that .tnokera may have a blper death rate than non-smokers because of unidentified genetic or environmental differences, not the cigarettes tbeinsel ves . .. w~ about-to tey ~test that idea by look:ine. at as many characteristics as we could of smokers u compared to non· smokers," Friedman said. "We wanted to see if they could·ex· plain the relatio~hip that we found between smoking and mortality, and they did not." A report on the research, con· ducted at the Kaiser· Permanente Medical Care Pro- gram in Oakland, Calif.. was publlahed in today's issue or the New England Journal of Medicine. The stf was funded by the Coun~ll r Tobacco Research· 0 .S.A., organization financed by tobac comp~es. THE researchers kept track or .C,004 middle.aged men and women for 11 years. They found that overall, the death rate among the smokers was 2.6 times higher than among DOD· smokers. The researchers took into .con· sideration 48 characteristics or the people's Jobs, health an~ person'llltfes. Among these were atcoboJ consumption, blood pressure, occupational exposure to chemicals, use or sleeping pills and complaints or insomnia and depression. "None or them explained away the smoking-mortality re· latioosbip, '' Friedman said in an interview. CEfA Units Due Shakeup WASHINGTON (AP) -The This row Qf snow blanketed mailboxes along a road in Oak Cr.eek Canyon, north of Sedona, Ariz,. gave residents a Feb. 1 A~~ white greeting. Recent winter storms in northern Arizona have dropped as much as a foot of snow on some areas. Reds Fire New Missile Soviet Backfire Bomber Used_for Ltuureh WASHINGTON <AP > -The Russians have .launched a new type or cruise missile from one or thelr Backfire bombers ln a new 750-mile lest fir· ing, actord.i.ng to lnlelllgence sources. . , Tb.is suggests-that the Rusaians may be work· ing alon8 a similar research path as the United States in developing a new air-breathing missile that could be fired from bombers or other aircraft at targets inside enemy territory. The United States is working on an air launch cruise missile with a range of about 1,500 miles. Current plans are to deploy the first squadron of B52 boqibers armed with such missiles in December 1982. IN BIS ANNUAL REPORT to Congress. Defe~ Secretary Harold Btown said last week: "As yet, there ls no evidence that the Soviets tiave developed a cruiae missile comparable to our alr launched missile, although they may be develop- ing a long-range cruise missile or their own de· sign." He provided oo other details, but told question- ing congtessmen 1Uly long·ra~e Soviet cruise mis· sile that might be deployed would, like the U.S. weapons, be subject to limitations under an im· pending strategic arms limitation agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union. Pentagoo sources said Wednesday that Brown believ~ aAy Soviet long-range cruise missile that may be under development is less sophisticated than the American weapon. The U.S. air-launched cruise missile would be• equipped with a unique terrain-following guidance system, t>ermitting it to streak to its target at htgh subsonic speeds only a few hundred feel above the Eartta•s surface. Thal low-flying ability, coupled with the swarms of cruise missiles that would be fired, from 8-528 sta.oding well outside the reach of So· viet .air defenses, is coun~ on to defeat any Soviet difenses that. may be devised in f:be 1980s and be yo~. Tbe Back!'ll'e bomMr is Russia's newest and bas been a subject or contention between the Unit· ed States and the Soviet Union in the SALT negotiations. The Russians claim the Backfire is intended only for use in its naval a'<Q>tlon force and against peripheral medium:range t"gf!ta fo Western Europe and Asia, not against the United States. Labor Department today an·.-.~Wlllio~~~~,,,,_~~,,,,_~-.,.,,.~-.,.,,.,,,_...,..,,.,,.~...,..,,.,,.~-~----~~-----~----"""".,.,,.~-~ nounced an overhaul or Rs CET A public jobs and training program in an attempt to eliminate shoddy management. fraud and other abuses that have plagued the $10 billion 'pro- gram. .FIND YOUR NAME . In today's Daily Pilot-classified ~p&ges·· WIN ncKETs WQRTH • 11.00 Key changes in CETA - which-stands for Comptehensive Employment and Training Act -include a shakeup or lop management in Washington, im· proved monitoring or local operations to spot fraud, and new rules that specifically ban nep~lsm, polilical pattooa~~-----~-~-~~~------~-~-~-~~-~-~-----~--~ and other abuses. Other changes set tighter eligibility requirements geared more lo poor, long-term un- employed people; reduce wage rates; limit employment in a public job to 18 months, and en· courage private industry to participate more with the gov· ernment in creating new jobs. LONG BEACH .New Snow.Muffles East · Bitter Cold Rep.orted_in Northern ·Plains Albefty AlllV'CW-A1Nvlll9 Atlllftta llaltl- 0 '""""'*" ••~m ltols. Bottllft • lltlff•IO Owh111WV Ollcato ClM.fflnatl Ctewla!'CI Col~ 0•1 Fl. W'll C>efwtr Des MOINS O.troll Ovluttl Hartfonl ........ Hoftotuh1 ~-llld' llPOI•• llu'.scttr Lai.V... Utfle "-* \MA,.... Lovlsville Mefllplllt Ml4ttftl Ml,.. ..... _.s-St.P. • "' LA ~ ...... W. ....... ._ •• ,. 11 3' 11 40 14 :i. 11 34 ,. :i. 1' -4 ·17 q 1 .02 u 't. ·:o, · ,, I> .n 21 1S .27 ,, 3 ,. . ,, u .ot 2S • ·°' SI 10 ,. s ' ·11 ,. 12 .OJ " . » 11 .7 ·" " .. 41 » 10 4 ,. •It v .n .. >O IJ " 44 ... " . n 11 76 ~ ,. 12 IS ·7 '"Wl*1 llNc:I\ ,. .. .OJ Palm 5'"'119 » JS I.OS S...Jow ... 31 s.n .. Ct\61 S4 • r.t.tv-., 11 o IJ.11. 8 __ ..,, .... -.... ,,...,,.. 4lt ..... . llalf ..... ltllMs lfl"" ~ .... .... WHt .... llMH1y cote '""'*Mllftt _,.. ,...,.,_In t11e N«1Mr1'1 Plaln11. In "" -*" '*" of , .. Mtlon, -warnm,. W9l"a IUl*I tor r:."• of Ofllo, tt.""'ylv•nl•, Mary •rid, Weal Vlrvlftla, Vfrtlnl• MIC! Nonll C.f'a!IN. A d•Hl•tlllt Uor"' In Ill• So11tllwHI NI Pf°O"'Pltd wlllltr "°"" waml19 In .,....., of Colorlldo, Ut•ll, Navada, N•w Molco arid Ari,_, In lllt (·fftlr•I M14hfftl, '•"'· lffatllret ....... to -41 MW nro ~""...,,....,, ........ ,,... u. u..-Mlralwllll Valley. c ... , ...... "TM,,_..,...._ Is tM -" .. ......., ~ UMt Nw ..,.... ... ......... __ .. _.._ ~ KCWfl '-a ~M•rCll .............. ...... c.e--. ...... "'' , Ille Noni! Amtrj~ffl (OntJneftt to Ille •••I, accordl110 to or. Jtrom~ Nam1ls Of UC SM Olego•s S<rlpe>s Institution Of OcNnoor .tPllY. • '-W.~ CO!d ""111Ct waters fl'Onl tllt Gull Ol·AlasU -lo Ille 119 of IN lale """MUia," Ntl'NIS Uld ..... ~ .......... ~ ••• two dt9f'ffS cOOlw """' llOrmal. '" -pl~'-It -·~ "'UCll H Silt deOfHS c-rl'-nomwl." At Ille MIN lime, 1"1tler out 111 ttle PIKffk. Haml.H MIO l!lef"e Is . ••roe _, of watff tMt h •bout "''" e1e9,..s w.,mtr than usual Nemlas said Hie ClilNrefl<:e In Ille I-edjolnlft9 POOis Cr'Mtad a lYsten'I that 1uckte1 polar air l\lrtller tovtll llWM\ """"91 MHf>wtll .. , Ille polar 11r ...a .,.. t"'llkal air com~ 10 c .... Pf'l<lpftat IOn. Cea•tal tt'ftltller 5Mwtr'I lilfl'OM ...... -llrlitf l'tNvy '* 9"d ltMldtf'Stofms. Pert> .., <leWot .... '"""" dlMc9 Of l'Mf<......,. ......................... .....,. ,rlN., ........ ,,.., $4 t• "· OoHttl _,._.._ wlll ,.,.._ MIWHll 0 •llO 54. tnl9nd tel'I• .. .._ .... , ... -.-.. ...a "· Tlle w.-r len'llltfatlll"t wlll llt !1. S•rf Reperc """...... INdl: --.. ""' ..... ~,.., " ..... ""'"" .... ? ....... llR • You mlly win tickets for 8:00 P .M. performances Friday, February 9th, or Saturday., February 10th. Or a Matinee performance at 3:00 p . M • o n ·s u n d a y • Febr'Uary 11th, 1979. Long Beach ArMI, 300 E. Ocean Blvd. Long Beach, tallf. Into. (213) 436-3661 . It's easy. Look for your name in today's classified section. If you find your name and address, call 642-5678, exte nsion 272. We'll arrange for you to pick up your tickets at the nearest office of the DAILY PILOT ~--. i--_...;___..llllllllll'illllllll"lllllllll~--------------_.....-------lllllllll~~---------...--------1111111111.___~-------------------~~~-- -·==- . ·taollege· ~id ~yed Schools Fa6e Toug!_i Re-examination 12 Charies" Fi~d A/ter: Gun Attack SANr DIEGO <AP> -A freckle-faced teen-aee girl has been cbaraed with 12 criminal counts. including· murder, in ~ connection with a sniper attack in the parting lot ol Cleveland Elementary School. · . . . TUEY ARE IN line for $852 million from the state in Brown's 1979-80 budget, an amount equal to 70 percent ol all of their revenues. , . •·community colleges more than any 'other type of govern· meat are going to be subjeet to <ll1 incttulng level of review," Hammsald. • ~ea Road An unoccupied car is awash in Spring Valley after Wednesday's storm dumped more than two inches of rain on the San· .-!:-f -I Diego area. Dozens of roads were report- ed closed in the area and many houses were evacuated. The attack k11.led the princlpal and head custodian and wounded eight pupils and a police officeT. A P E'ITl10N filed Wednesday _._ in Juyenil~ourt by the district attorney1 s Office accuses Brenda Ann Spencer, 16, of the shoot- ings. THE COMMUNITY colleges, wb1cb are . gettmg $817 million this year, are the only element of local government receiving such massive state funds with- out extensiYe...state review. And Hamm s8.id the relative lack ol control ·IS undoubtedly going to change, because both the go·vernor 's office a nd. Legislature are looking for places where controls are lax. Moi-e-.. Farm Workers Leave Jobs .. In the petition, Deputy Dilj.rict Attorney Charles L. Patrick re- quested that Miss Spencer, who police say bas a histol"}' of petty theft and drug abuse, be tried as an adult. The petition also alleges .. special circumstances," which means that lf she is tried as an adult and convicted of murder, she could be sentenced to life in state prison without parole. IF THE-CASE IS handled in Juvenile Court. the girl could be free in sewn years. In addition to murder, the Ted· haired jmlior at Patrick Jttnry High ScbOol was charJed with nine counts of assault w1th intent· to kill and one of assault with a · deadly weapon on a police of- ficer. . Juvenile Court. Judge William L. Todd Jr. said be will p~bfbly set a date next week for a hear- ing on whether Miss Spencer will be tried as an adult. Until the early 19705, com- munity colleges received all but a small fraction of their support from local property taxpayen. Team Policing Plan to Stop LOS ANGELES (AP) -On Feb. 11, the team policing ex· »etlm.ent initiated by former Police Chief Ed Davis will be terminated, says Police Chief Daryl Gates. Instead, Gates said Wednes- day. detectives and patrolmen ·will again go their separate ways. Under the team policing policy, detectives and patrolmen worked together in 65 teams, each unit responsible for one .geographical area and all the crime5 within it. By Tbe Aseocla&etl Press A bout 1 ,200 more fa:rm workers have walked off their jobs to protest strike-breaking ef· forts of lettuce growers on the Ive of a rally with U~ted Farm Workers Union founder Cesar Chavez. The rally was scheduled this afternoon, when Chavez is to arrive in Calexico. Other than the walkoff by ex- tra field hands at six farms, the lettuce fields of the Imperial Valley w•re...ulatively peaceful OD Wednesday. 2 1eisColllcle SAN DIEGO (AP > -The crewmen of .an F-4 Phantom fighter were hospitalized in sta-· ble condition today as ·a search · went on for two other fliers miss· ing after two Navy jets collided 64 miles south of San Diego, the Navy said •. Lt. Cmdr. James McNair~ 32, of Calltonment, Fla .• pilot of the "Charles Dickens" ' A .unique exhibit of 25 life-sized figures fr.om f avorite Dickens' novels ./' ----=\at F~hion lsla~T~rsday, Februa11Yl-.,,,,,,,,,,,.= thru Friday, February 12 m #3 Fashion Island------ Characters from ~ Christmas Carol" --~av.id CQ/lPerfield," "Pliver Twist" -and many more ~~ ...... Cre~ted espOCially for this premiere tour of the tJnited.~ates by Berm ans & Nathans Ltd., of London F-4, a.cd bis radar intercept of· ficer. Lt. Ted Dewald, 29, of Point St. Lucie, Fla .• were plucked from the sea by a Coast Guard helicopter Wed'nesday. Their jet collided with an A-4 Skyhawk during a routine train· ing fiight, ·a s pokesman s aid. The Skyhawk cr~w was missing, C.....KIU.4 _,,. AZUSA (AP) -Four Covina te~D-agers were killed when their compact car plunged 350 feet down a mountainside and landed upside do)Vll in a stream. California Highway Patrol of- ficers said. · · The victims, all 17, were iden- tified today as James J . Muraca, Ronald D. Cleary, Scott Spencer and Charles Robert Stickley, said CHP Officer Jim Cox. • .....,.. ,,..,,. Reeer d LOS ANGELE$ <AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown J r. 's 1978 re· elect}on expenditures totaled $3.26 million and he outspent his Republican oppenent. former Attorney General EveUe J . Younger, by more than $1 million, according to campaign reports. Brown's expenditures between July l and Dec. 31 were the highest ever reported by a gubernatorial canclidate in the general election, state campaign experts told the San Francisco Chronicle on Wednesday. · ~ON'l'ERA, Calif. <AP >- Former Charles Manson fol1owerLes1ie Van Houten bas beeQ denied parole despite good evaluations f rom prison psychologists and staff mem- bers. "Society bas no defense ... in this type of crime, except to isolate tlJe offender," ·eommuni· { STA.TE ) . ty Release Board c hairman Ruth Rushen said Wednesday. "We feel we must o~erve you longer before we can project your p~le date." D.A., Cops Sued SACRAMENTO <AP > M•,.hael D. Small, a San Rafael attorney. has filed a S2.4-million damage suit in feder~court here accusing Solano County. Di strict Attorne Neal McCasUn, sheriff's depu · s and Vacaville and Vallejo police of battery, false arrest and false imprisonment. The suit stems from an inci- dent in front of a Vallejo home. reportedly used as headquarters by the Hell's Angels motorcycle gang. . Making Roo• for ~prln9 1s-Now-1N-PROGRESS-.. . . ~ on FALL -HOLIDAY cmcl EARLY SPRING CLOTHING -SHOES' cmcl ACCESSORIES . . Metl's ·Stor• 65Fa•••·• ...... 64~6500 WOIMft'I Ston 33 Fciitalon Island 644-2400 ThUf'lday, Febtuar; f . 1979 Ti-affi~ Proble m .. Robert N Wee<t/PUbll sMr -.., Barbar& KrP1b1ct11Ed 1tor l•I Pao• Editor Won't _ Di app e a~ Br~Wn l~_~ends to. L~ac;I Change . . • -Nefponn.wtrt Hl dibonnea~ $pOOSOCh ttd b,y.C';ua. -roupt as -th SAC~ENTO Gov. Ed· Ph.D. 's~· :d the :~mid ~.: L;n; ;naidered a political · ~ • ......,....,_-=na::::o~~.-i'· force an end or deficit spendin1 and halt what he calls .. thJs pe rNerse governmeQt money r r tut'& ~ mber o ommerc~ frequently mund C. Brown Jr .. tu from who defend red-In k spending oddball. Brown findl that h11 of. at v icwe<t by urt r-dlnn r J>'.e k n occ 1 om for ut· Olm:h na t tht' ridJcule of Jim-even at the peak of today's re-tensive has suddenly made him a tet\ftg bland and ch~ ttmar ot llllle--t>T no ublta nN.• my Carter's Wasbtngtoo over covery cycle. At the end, de· fixture at podiums he used to Such w not th t 14 t w ek with lrvln Compnny · h i11 demand tor il conatlt u· legates In the nf#tion's most s hun. Hesbowedupsomewllatun· ide.ol ~ Kt"t'-ln"r,...=--=--..,,.;c::.;,:: lionilly Im pond b.11,an,cd liberal Qemoeratlc party_pve expectedly al t.he..San [Uncisco Kremer rho e to s on ~bat h 1 become o hlahly fod.-r.»I budal't, ls convinced the him a standing ovation. convention of the National Food • machine ... Th~ decfine of the U.S., he-told us. is directly tied to the decline of its cus:tency wliiclt ln turn is fili'eclty · l'ODtro Ol)'T "flll'lrP""'--·-=;.......;;........_+-~1<•.-i.-.oa ~8e a< I Preett"'" fep 23 and &•lkfeidJAr. And h<.> mud.: om good Potnli dam tnt~I . inflatlon·connected THAT IS the quintessential 45 minutes. highly unusual for ...IlJ.atnc~the i m~se red·ink s pending o( tne past 11ozeJ\ ---+•-._ ... years. Politicians in Washington may have trouble understanding that. he says, but voters have no In h.i st rnl~httorwanl remark , Kreme r noted thut p011tical changes that he intends Brown today: e~plaln. then al· Brown. Four days earlier he in· eve n if all d 1 N to •hape and lcAd tack from what he feels is a siated on addressing the top brass · eve opment "' re lO h a t in ewpart. t r amc In the ft w <h•ys·of his sec0nd secure positi9n of political of'the Big Four auto companies problems wo uld contlnu to grow beca use or regional t er m . Brown-has alre ad y strength. Brown, an original foe <.guestaoftbeCaliforn.iaCh1mber growth · • w r o u g b t or California's Proposition 13. of Commerce > at the Century trouble at all. . Brown is acutely sensitive to charges that he is a political op- portunisi who has undergone frequent conversions -now from a liberal Democrat <who managed Eugene McCarthy 's 1968 presidential ca mpaign he r e> t o a con s'e rva live Republican. What has changed. h e i n i s ts, a r e. object\ve cire!umstances and the voters. ·'Before Franklin Roosevelt. no one c&Uld imagine the New Deal.'' he told us. "Now what is cornl ng irr the-'80s -1» -one can begin to appreciate . We a rt moving into a new cycle " -a cycle that will change the map ·ot today's politics in unpredicta- And t\e polrtled out that t1 de velopme nt continu s to ....... · p o I i t i c a I had his eyes opened to reality Plaza Rot.el. Out-of.state invitl· be bloeked in N WJ>Ort Beach buildings probably will be· chunge he re when voters here approved it by tions for Brown are piling up in gin springing up a round the city's pe riphery , dumping that has split a huge majority last year. As recordnumbers. U.eir traffic ·onto c ity streets WJthout contributing tax or h 1 m r r o m one or his top aides told us: "He other dollars toward solving the ctty's proble ms . conventional feels he experienced something IN IDS• interview with us at ~ While it wo uld be unlikely that the head of the area 's party_ leaders very personally about the voter ·the s t a t e capitol. Bro wn biggest land deve lo pment firm would t a ke anyt hing but a and delivered mood today that few other politi· ridiculed opposition to hi~ call .Pro-d evelopme nt tttan ce, hJs rem a rks s ho uld be take n ~~u:~Lngb~~I~ clans have felt." tor a constitutional convention to ~eriously b y the N ~wPort City Counc il's environme nta lis t e l e c t e d majority. . Re publicans -Continued city inaction on unta ngling the snarls · is and.influential businessmen. se lf·d efeating . AH.tbe "thou s halt not" tNffic a nd build· But....11 is the n ation al ang o rdinances a re t<A'.1"litUe -and 20 years to late. We'll Democratic party and" the 1980 have to add traffic movement capacity just to stay e ven presidential nomination, wbich SpOtlight Deserved Newport Beach City Manager Robert W ynft us ua lly stays discree tly outside the s potlight. · But la s t week it was focused directly on him as he was named Citizen of the Year by the Newport Harbor Area Cham ber of Commer ce. T he e nthusiastic applause a t the cha mber dinner showed that ~his wa.s a p0pula~r d ecision. Wynn1 who took over his funct ions as d ay-to-day head of city oper a tions in 1971, has displayed unus ual t act , level-headedness, honesty a nd· competence under stress.· In any city, th.e m a nager must frequ~ntly balance de- mands by employees on one hand and taxpay ers oil the other . · Wynn, ~ a dditiont h as had the une nviable task of having to cef>e with a· council sha rply di vid ed on issues or development and en vironme nt. His diplomacy a nd sense of humor · no doubt deser ve som e of the credit for k eeping th e city's Political disputes from degen erating into the personal attacks seen in some othe r councils a lon g the. coast. , The chamber m ade a n e xcellent choice in honoring this well-liked and t a le nted public employee. CalTrans I s · Watching Motoris t s who m a ke use or. Newpor t Boulevard 'Route 55) over the next fe w days can 't be' blam ed for having the feeling they're being watch ed. Thos e· a ntenna-laden vans parked b y the sid e or the r oad a re fro m ·the state Depa rtm ent of Transportation. CaJTrans is taking traffic counts to determine what to do in the way or "op er ational improvements" on the o vercrowde d roadway until a decision finally i~ made on whethe r or not to 6uUd a free way into d owntown Cost a Mes a . It's not the fi rst. time that t raffic tabulations have been atte mpted by CalT r a ns. In fact, officials d id a count not long ago. But they blew it. T he count was low, lead ing to the er - roneous conclus ion that ther e was no need for a ny im- pro ve ments to the b usy boulevard. Cost a Me sa officials c ried foul a nd Cal'l'rans is now giv· ing the study a nother go. That's nice of them, of course, b ut t he mistake qua lifies as fuel for the slightly paranoid Costa Mes a n who .has com e to believe tha t the great ditc h that bisects the r oadwa)' is a permanent la ndmark fo r the H a r bor Area • Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expre~sed 9n this page are those of their authots and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 .Sox 1560. Costa M esa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·432 1. Boyd/Walking By L. M. BOVD What may be most s1gn111- cant about the fact that the average woma n walks 10 miles a day is that it's one mile fart h e r t han the average man walks a day. wh ich is the·correct term for a horse that 's white and bay. roan, bro wn or ·chestnut. Please note, "piebald" only alludes to a white and black horse. Q. "Why's a quarter called No doubt the drinkers of two-bits?'' iced te a with le mon in it A . That Mexican coin Brown clearly wants. that will feel the full force of Brown's political conversion. Brown is hurling his challenge directly at President Carter. Sen . Edward Kennedy and the party's tradi· lional constituencies. As he told us in his om ce here: "America is running on panic today" and voters want blts ic fiscal cha nges to end the -horror of in· n ation and make Ame rica com- petitive again. BOTH BROWN'S principal legis lative leader. Assembly Speaker Leo McC arthy. and the s t a t «!'s to p D e m ocr at in Was hington. Sen. Alan Cranston, have publicly brok e n with Brown on his Jan. 8 inaugural dem and for a conslit.ulional b.an o n f ede ral red ink . Indeed, Drown is probably the first just· elected governor lo be booed by his own state party. as he was at the Democratic conventio11 here J an. 20 when he firs t api>eared at the podium. Instead of backing down with apologies, Brown ~arefully built his case in a tightly reasoned ex· planation <>f fiscal "reality." theo. attacked "experts,·• "the ble ways.·. TO REPUBLICANS and con- servative Democr ais. this is like ca tnip. F red L . Har tle y . chairman or Union Oil. refused to give Brown a nickel for his re· election campaign ; he recently sent $20.000 to help liquidate Brown's $800.000 campaign debt. Republican Assembly leader Paul Priolo, the No. 1 opposition regislator, has informed bis par- ty be will do nothing to blunt Brown's balanced budget cam- pai gn . O n e or Spe a k e r MtCarthy.'s trusted Assembly l ea d e r s , a D e mo c ratic powerhouse on the Ways a nd Means Com mittee . warned McCarthy to e xpect no a nti· Brown help from him. saying : 'Tm sticking with Brown and the balanced budget right into the White House." Brown h im se lf is a m a n possessed of an idea and entirely convinced of. his rectitude. U he can convince his party and his country, lhe world will be bear · ing more from Jerry Brown. Taxpayers.Running Out .of Generosity To the ~r: • responsrve ·iOth~ people they J..e this fioe man received from the perishing from tht; earth. ~ut 'We ha ·ust been treated l9 a paid to represent : they must1:;t Orange County bar and that his ~ur :untampered with franchise glimpse o what is described as continue their .allegia nce to an re-appointment was richly de· 1s sUU our best hope. "a lean a d austere budget:" a idea whose time is past. served" (end quote > B r-·. BORCOMAN budget with a deficit of a stupe-This co1tntry's representatives fying $29,000,000.000! are tJtis republic's first line of NOW. dear voters. your dis· L14JI.•-.. _ f ltd b, d f · Lf I' t h claimers at the polls w1·nd up as . . """'"•""'•• "fl T e huge federal agencies that e ense . .-owever . 1• ose h ave been c reated over the r epresentatives cannot or will-··accolades for the judge. and · To the Editor years remain basically intact. not sense that the winds or your many. many votes aga~. In your J an IS editorial. The weight of their fat and c hange are blowing , the Constitu· him. for.whatever reason. are as "License Boards Due fo r Cut. fossilized bone will continue to lion wisely made provision for a nothing compared to the "over-back" you expressed a partiality be borne by the working class. second line of defense -the in· whelming" i upport gendered by for maintairung those licensing Not only have no significant itiative process. It's a drastic the vb.SUy !ewer in numbers of boards whi ch affect pubhc safe. cuts been made. but we now cure ... but we're irt desperate his assciciates. Thus we view a ty. Unquestionably, each licens- must witness the efforts of a times. j udg e's deter~inat ion or the ing board must be a ble to stand la rge segment of'1.Congress to in· STEVE G. CHRISTMAN de mocratic process. up to public scrutiny. But there crease social programs. s ub· Also. her concern to have the is far more to be measured than sidies. and welfare . We are told 'Bit ol Cl••., public know how wrong they just public safety to justify the that the enormous sums we have were. is touching indeed . And we existence of a board spent over the !ast 30 years are To the Editor: all know how practiced Gov. In the case of the Certified inadequate. We are chastised for The only one with any sense Brown is at nulli(ying results at. Shortha nd Repor ters Board. being selfish a nd are reminded ln that UCJ hewspaper episode the polls. A sure way· at limes. there are a number of cogent rea· that we have a moral duty to was· Miss Bjomeby <student of· to gain a lucrative s pot. even an so ns for its 'm a in t e na nce those less fortunate . ficer who confiscated issues of "elevation," is to lose at the Unlicens ed and incompetent I wish to stand toe-to·toe with •the student paper). polls and get overwhelming sup-people acting as court reporters those who accus&i the working She showed a "bit of class." port from one's cronies. as wit· have caused difficult problems Americans of greedy dis;egard Hooray for her attitude! ness the nationa~ scene als.o. and legal entanglem ents, plac· for the old, the needy and the I realize that it's very difficult . I do not brini ant~ ~uestion the ing the litigants on both sides of minorities. and state a position for young people to know whom m~egrity of t e JU ge. but It a case in Jeopardy and resulting they seem unable to grasp. to imitate in our sick society but brrngs to mind that there 'lre too in great expense to the tax· · th t' · h th i ( ul·_.. ma ny losers at the polls that are THE AVERAGE tp payer has . a s no~ so muc . e r a ~ .. s kept alive. on the political and payers. been effusive in his generosity·; st 1 1 5 thle ffaultMo~ the8 1r lorebbeartosbe. public scenes . by bei ng re- he has backed his words with the v~ e or . iss JOrne Y wa rded powerful pasi\ions by AS A result of a recent case sweat of his brow to help those ~~~~anted editoll of tShe UCdl stu· virtue o( being rejected by the :!_nvsocn' ·vpti.~ ga• daes~r' 1bbeodt cbyh teb• ~ unable to help themselves. He th hnehwshpaper · ohun s ats voters and having friends 1n •.. "' " " has given until it hurts and then oug s e as enoug sense o high places. . judge. prepared recently by one • 'WMY"rb'UY~tmlft"'tlnrrthcr -kitowtt-u the-real was- t thirst quencher known fer.red to by cowboys as a bit. to the scientists is grape Two of them were about the ~· gone-en.to.doubl...aAd...trij>.&6ocihe-know '!'._hat is l'_l,£.WS~,9rt,!itJor;.a. __ .Eu~wbile-we-haY unlicensed pe rson during a ~onlribution. The New Deal. the ev~ opmg cUlfure. (rustrations enol!fh Crom those tt!'ngtbY~rtm1rnlt tmrt tn--Santa--·- New F rontier a nd th~ Great MRS. LOUIS D. MARKEL we duly elect to office. of"any o Iara Gou.nty, both parties ex-. -- j uice . equal of 25 c~nts. ' The wor;d ·"sermon" isn 't · in the Bible, l 'm told. Q . "Wh y is a z an y character sometimes called a s c re wba ll ? Why that word?" • A. Best giiess is it goes back to horse talk. A blend- ing of the word "skewbald" . . Gloom y Gu I wish 'peopte ·Uke F .W. .D. who.run arouod say· i ng , "I l o v e w et weathel'" (Gus, Jan. 24)' wo u ld drown ln a downp o ur o f "character" -or re- move the t.wo feet or mud from my conttruclion job•Jte. ' P.H. Q. "How fast can a house mouse run?" A. Four miles an hour 1s tops . Antonio Roig of Majorca died a few weeks ago with exactly $50 in his possession, onJy enough to p ay burial costs. In 19501 he Inherited IO acres of lano from an aunt , but was oblised to sell it, because he d1dn't have the '$50 then that it would have t-alten to builaaJeoce-aroun<! ~ the propeqf" aa required by law. OnJy fi ve years 1ater, the building boom was on. and the new owner sold the land for $20 million. tr you koow a nybody named O'Connor, you might menUon this: Chllm ls the O'Connor · famll'y tre e of Ireland can be traced back farther than any other in the Western World. Accounted tor so far are 61 generations all the way tb King Feredach the Just. born in A. D. 75. Glie nt asks If Lowe ll T homas i n ve nte d the new a r ee l. No, al r , the • Rualam dld that lhlnl Jn 1118. Society have been "-tpported to our greatest h'ustrations are the peel to have to retry the matter the hilt by · the guy with a t'et~• lpere d wor k or tho.se a ppointed (not -at a cost of $200,000. • h k I d b l . bl The Ce rtif ied S hortha nd payc ec . To lhe..Editor·___ e ect e >to un e 1e-v a y W h th T ~ -. • .__.-.~..... Reporter&· Board, an i ndepen~ e ave seen e m assive 1 wa~ apalled when I read yvWe 11w w1u u .... .,., ..... """..,· and lb i t d h Wh t this dds "'-• 1 th t dent impartial state lkeos-grow 01 governmen an ave Judge Lamoreaux' apologi·a ca·n a a ......... o !t a r. b told th t th t ....... i G t r th 1 b ing board. has not excluaoo een a a growu.J s a letter to the Daily Pilot of Jan. .. ovemmen o e peop e, Y W h ~h th 1 d r th l ., · potential licensees. As a m atter necessary. e ave seen ~ e 24 I regarding J udge Leonard e peop e an or e peop e is of fact. •there is now an over- working ranks thinned by the aJ.· Goldstein's re,·ectlon at the 1 ( .. th' • thi .. abundance of court reporters in ure o some ing .,or no ng polls. Surely, her idea to justify h welfare programs and been told circumventing the people's de--t e state of California. Your sug th t it ls nf rt t I I vit geslion that professional and a u o una e Y ne a-cision. Is cause for great alarm . ble. We have seen our economy I. do not know either Judge lt1efcs trade orgaruu tions adminJster m anipulated and altered and Lamoreaux or the object of her examlnattons for competency been told the problem is too defense. Judge Goldstein, so l do cert ainly would be -open to complex for us to understand. not allude to either's qualifica· criltcism. since those groups ob- We bave watched as our ed.ue.-UonsT but I a m .concerned over v1ously have a self-serving in- ttonal system has been tinkered the thwarting of the people's terest in otitaining ruore dues· and fUSsed with an<rbeen told ft" fra ncb,i.sc. ..... To ::1t;'-:!tecUon for th• is the dawn of a new age. <Quoting Crom her letter to the cons umers. of our services _at. SOCIAL SECURITY ls a dis· editor. in wtucb she also quotes torneys, judges . liUgants, and aster in the face of rampant, from her Jetter to Gov. Brown> taxpayers _can be provided by fed e r a lly c reated i nflation. "As Jean be seen, the loss of t he Certlfled S h orth a nd Welfare programs are a bu.sect ln these Judges was not based on R B d h ditectrelaUon to the loss or dlpl-any personal dlsqpllficat~ns or e porters oa r l rough lb ty "'orced on it. partic!panta. Ill· acttv-ttiea,. bul wa. more a llcen"lng procedures . ., ..... CARY M. CRAMER. CSR centives to Individual enterprbe blanket vol'e against Incumbents President CallfomJa Ccurt are suned at the very Ume when and in no way reflect.a aaalost their ability to create jobs la Judge Goldstein. I am 1here(ore lkportcrs Assocaatlon needed most. The attempt to wr1tlng this letter to a11k if there • Jegialate 1ood wUI among ~ has ls anytttin.i you can do to keep u tters from ~! er~ wlc~ condemned o ur children to him in the judiciary. cllher by TM pghl to ~ ~t~b1 to tri become namel s (aces starlns r e · a ppol ntm e nt e lse where fPC'(t or ~Lammote Label ii re~ from the windows · or pauinc thro ugt\Out the state . or an Ltfr•r• 0/ 3lllO word.t or ic .. 1IMl bt ·. buMI. •l tv,atlon to the Appellalt 7-~ ~~ mvc ·'--Mli.it•ra rnu.t• Our lead~rs mu!lt realize tJm Court." ··t trust that you wtU " .,... to~ ci.:~.-.~adllfm .......,. ___ ,,...,.._~ their cbarWr la not to crute a shar: lhla letter wllh the public JD Cit o.. is1 fJld "°3=bt atMeld °" ,. pbiJOlopldcaJ lr\tt mill "'whicJt to help them UndMStand mo... qtleltl/ rfQIOflta.,.ftll. w all mUll t.a.or.,...., IHlt be fully the Ot«,.belmlq support PM" .... ..,.,..HthM. \ ... --=='g :.\nderaon I ·~ Saga ~f Cambodia's 'GOd JGDg~ ·.HECK~S~ME•'S STIRE . FEBRUARY· CLEAU•CE SALE STARTS ·FRIDA·Y, FEB· 2Rd ... A FINE SELECTION OF 9U.ALITY CLOTHING REDUCED TO PRICES THAT MEAN GREAT SAVINGS ..... . SUITS . . GIOUP OF sum Requlor to I as.oo ••••..• :. !. -•.......•.•.. ·~ •.•.• ...MOW 129.75 HOUP OF suns Regular to 195.00 .......... ~ .... ' ......... MOW 149.71 & I 5'.75 GIOUP Of sum Requlor ~.00 to 225.00 •••••••• : ••••••••••• ~W I H.71 & I H .75 AUSTIN HID & DAI( SUn'S>Requla 235.00 to 250.00 •••••••••• MOW 17t.71 & IH.75 HICKEY RlEEMAM SUITS Regula 365.00 t04185,00 •••••••••••• MOW 27t.7S to 299.75 J SPORT COATS GROUP OF SPORT COAl'S Regula to 115.00 ........................... MOW lt.75. GROUP OF SPORT COATS Regular to 125.00 ••••••• : •••••••••••••••••• MOW 94.75 GROUP OF SPOaT COATS Reg00r to 135.00 ................... · ....... MOW tt.75 SLACKS WASHAIU POL YESTB & COTI'OH SLACKS Regub to 28.50 •••••••••• MOW I 5.15 DRESS SLACKS Requlor 27.% to 35.00 ' .................. : ............. MOW It.IS WOOL & WOOL ILEMDS Regula '45.00 to 55.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW 2'.15 ~·~ !J4' A .. ~ ~.; ~ + ·~ -t .... ~ SLACKS Ft.ORSHIEM SHOES Requlor to 56.95 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW lt.15 TOPSIDBt •ooTS RequlOf 50,q5 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW 34.15 DRESS SHIRTS GROUP OF ARROW AMD GAMT-DttlSS SHllTS Regub t 5.00 to 20.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW t .15 RegulO" 1.1.00 to 2 J .SC> •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW 11.15 NECKWEAR NiCICIJ6Requlor q.oo to 12.00 .... : .. u• ~,, •• , •• , • •'L•••• ..... NOW 4.tt l for 14.00 MECmES Reqvlor 12.50 to 15.00 ............................ MOW'·'' J for 20.00 JACKETS WOOL JACllTS WITft LIAnB SLlffl PATCH Reg. t/1.50 •••••••••• MOW 49.15 LIAT'tB JACllTS Regular 125.CXY •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW H.11 LIA 118 COATS Requlor 2'45.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW I lt.71 .( • 1467¥191.We ... ..,.,. .... • 1442911tw., w..... FROM INTEllVIEWS with re-fugees and classified in - telliaence reports, meanwhile, we bad cbronlcled the story of slau~r and oppression in Cam ·a. It's a story Sihanouk has now confirmed. He told a press coof erence eloqoenUy: "I wouJd like to see my people have the right to their pagodas, to tra~l.f~ to love and to be loved, to be able to se~ their wives and to be with their wives aad children and not be separat- ed . . . These are basic rights or humanity ... We are not anima ls. like buffaloes and oxen." The human tragedy in Cam- bodia, with ita terrible toll, sur- passes all other news shocks or this decade in sheer horror. 'It/ remains to be seen whether his- tory will bold Richard.Nixon and 'Henry Kissinger accountable. j gl '' Ne-it? " IL Every seat on our 7 a.m. nonstop from Ontario to Sacramento is ~. now on sdle. Save 20 % off our regular fare. Price isn't the only sweet deal on this flight either. Breakfast .pas e_s_, o coffee, juice and a -., . newspaper are all free on board. Early boarding is available too. -...' ~ Corning home the &ame day? Our 6: 10 p. m. return fligh t is also o n 'sal~ Both-sale flights take off Monday iliroµgh Thursday, now through March 14._ · Call your Travel Agent or Air California Reservations m Ontari6, (714) 983-2743; Colton. (714) 825-6900; El Monte4 (213) 444-4501; Los AQgeles, (213) 627-540 l : Palm Sprtngs. (714) 327-8556: Riverside/San Bernardino. (714) 825~6900 . 0.SAC/ONT-8 , . .. . Sale159.95 !n~!~~ ·~ nteord chenger, play/ record c•sette and 2 full rt~• 11)4take'9. T .uner fe1ture1 aolld atate en1•tN, tfg'"6d ttrnlng __.......,_.!laJ.IOdJl.M!lt JnAML. ----M-antennH. 119e5 ••• 111)0 Sa1e s99 Reg. 139.15. Compact stereo syatem features AM/FM stereo radio with cassette play and record, two 5H"full range speakers. #1730 Amplifier, 2 speakers, 8-track tape deck, reg. 59.95, S.le$44 ; ·sa ie· 39.95 , Sale24.95 .. Reg. 49.95. Mini cassette -recorder/player with AC/DC operation. Features LEO recorder and battery indica- tor, digital tape counter with reset button. ~6546 ----'"'r'>'"' •1 ~) --~ -Februa Reg. 29.95. AC/ DC tape recorder with automatic stop, LEO record indicator. Built-In condenser microphone. 16530 Save on kitchen applianc8s! Sale 259.95 Reg. 309.95. 3-cycle convertible dishwasher. Conserves water,· deep and random loading racks, telescoping second wash level. #3930. 9 cycle convertible, • reg. 399.95, Sate-319.95 ~ 3 cycle built-In, reg. 289.95, Sale 239.95 9 cycle built-In, reg. 399.95, Sale 319.95 Sale439.95 Reg. 519.95. Touch control micro- wave with memory. Cooks by time or-temperature. Features defrost and slow cook settings, 625 watts of cooking power and a 1.3 cu. ft. oven capacity. Comes with microwave cookbook. #5780 [!11] Sale 279~95 Reg. 339.95. Microwave oven with 625 watt peak cooking power. Dual power selector, cooks by time, 1.3 cu. ft. oven capacity, 25 minute oClmer. Cookbook Included. 115830 • . r Sale137.95 Reg. 167.95. Gas water heater with glass lined tank, fiberglass insula- . Sale89.95 w t record G.banger and 2 ap,ake'9. 88R3 ceramic cartridge, 1tyfu1 tracking force adjuatment. Tuner .. Saves240 ·, features soUd 1tate,chuaia.--""""'!!!'rl?.!ra..9'=<N. .... .- bullt-l!'1 AFC, lighted tuning dlah PMieteNo-tl~e---+.-.....;....;... ____ -.;,~.;;....---::.-..----~,-t ~...,__.,._ _ tor llghl Wood grain vinyl on wood orOducts. #1322 , Sale 249.95 Reg. 2".95. Stereo with 8-track play and record. AM/FM stereo radio, record changer and 2 speakers. #1762 Reg. 731.80. Our MCS Serles® 33 watt eompcnent package Includes a 33 watt receiver, direct drive turntable and two 3-way speakers. #3233/6601 /8225 Modular Component l p tems MCS Serl••~ warranty. ·· • Full 5 year warranty on speakers. • Full 3 year warranty on receivers, turntables and tape decks. ·~Sold only aa aaet. . Wltf11n 5 years of purct>aae of apeak9rs or 3 years of purchase of recehters, turni1blet 1nd tape ~ Of ttlls Modular Compcnent 8ysteM. we will. at our option. repair Of reptace these Items If defective In material or workman1hip. Just retum it to the nearest JCPenney ftctllly. 33 watts ~MS mini- mum per channel. two channels driven at8ohms. 20.20,000 Hz with not more than o.a•1. total · harmonle distortion. Save s7o on top or· bottom n 1 refrigera1 t . Sale 489.95 Reg. 559.95. 17.6 cu. ft e mount fr06t·f ree re frig n Features power econc n switch, reversibl~ doo h able shelves. On whee 0 kitchen cleaning. Whit n available natural deco colors. #0618 ... .·sale;t 489 '~ Reg. 559.95. 17.6 cu. ft ~t mount refrigerator. Fe1 ti power economizer swl e able shelves, reversibl 'o Frost free. On wheels f e kitchen cleaning. Whit re available natural deco colors. #0818 Save•100 w-----------llf~--:t1tea .. 'f'tt';t5:-tt.f9'811•t.~l9•.~"~tv·h~1~·-­ tion, adjustable the~rmCo·---l-.~--------~~-.J5rii!Uu&i~~~~Lri~.----~~.,._..---. state and built-It' gas \ ,. _ • -~ ~~-4--offee~ett~reie-~~ - low 2 oven 8ftd cooktop '" range. Features electronic Ignition, continuous clean interior, clock controlled program cooking, black glass oven door, aluminum burner heads, digital clock. #2848 pilot and burner. 40 gal. size. 1167 44 50 gal., reg. 167.95, Sale157.95 Same day lnatallatlon wMr• evallable. Sale 79.95 Reg. 19.95. Two-speed upright vacuum. Four height adjuftments, 12 Y2 qt. top-fill dust bag, 2'4' cord, edge cleaner. 2680 .tt=.=r==-::===-. JCPttw-.y Product Sei wlol You C9IJ.,.,... °" .'°'4•wt ~ Senloe. 0 --~ buy. ffom UI, --·working. Save_ on these upfight Sale 279.95 Reg.319.15.16.1 cu. ft. upright freezer. 3 fixed shelves, celling evap- orator tor ewn tem_pefa--lura. Wl\tte. #1114 ..::.1. • -· Reg. 39.95.Micro cassette tape/ recorder /player features built-in condenser microphone. DC operation. Earphone Included. #6506 Sa1esa9 Reg. $99. AC black and white TV with 12" screen (meas. diag.). 100% solid state, detent VHF I UHF channel selector, rotary c9ntrols and quick heating typ& picture , ·-tube. 11013 ~ .. ~ nMnm •1002 Sale S239. A ... U79. 100~ solid state color TV with 1 O" screen (ITHtakdlaa.L. f8~\.!'IJ •"• • n Aufomafrc1'ioejunl ng; mem· ory .\lHF tunln9, automatic color purifier, detent VHF/ .--:::-.·. UHF channel selectors. #2014 --·I •. Sale 124.95 Reg.149.95. Portable AC/DC black and white TV with 5" screen (meas. diag.).. Shoulder belt and big carry handle. single antenna for UHF and VHF, batteries. car cord and ew phone incllJded. 11002 Reg. 49.95. AC/ DC cassette tape recorder/playe(with AM/FM radio. Features automatic stop, bass/ treble cQntrol, built-in conden- ser mi~e. #3246 aving ~~ays for yo~r · family! ; erator /freezers! "'· sa·ve sgo ount rs! op at or. lzer J • adjust- foreasy- and tor 95 ottom ure~ h, adjust- do~rs. r easy and tor Sale 339.95 ... Reg. 369.95. 13.6 cu. ft. custom top mount refriger- ator. 2 fixed shelves, mag- netic door seal, automatic cycle defrost. White only. 10214 Sale 409.95· Reg. 469.95. 13.9.cu. ft. refrigerator/lreez~ -.. on this la~ge capacity team! . -. Bleach and fabrtc softener dispenser 2-m-1 agitator Sale319.95 Reg. 389.95. Large capacity washer, two wash/spin speed combinations. Washes large family size loads! Ftratures variable water level selections, 3-water temperature combinations. White and available natural deccrator colors. #1935 I f ' "' Sale 279.95 R\g. 319.15. Matching gas dryer. Features 2-crcle time dry, end- of-cycte coo down, high and low temperature setting, removable lint screen. White and available decQrator colors. #5945 Electric dryer, reg. 279.95, Sale239.95 Large capacity Full One Year Warranty model 111935, 11•9•5. •5935. W1th1n one year of purcllase. we woll pro- vide nome service to repair or. at our op11on. will replace this JCPenney automa11c wasner or clothes dryer 11 11 1s detective an material o{ workman- ship. Parts and labor are included Just contacJ the nearest JCPenney tac1111y for prompt service . ' • ' , ' .1 . .. . r I, 1 ' , , .. ~ • t . . .. . . I ~ l· I J ild Ch8sf freezers!. ------~~~j~~--Save~mpact--·----···---­ . washer/dryerteam! . Sale 269..95 \ Reg. 299.15.10 cu. ft. freezer. Features spring loaded hinges, key eiectortock, adjust- able cold control, foam insulated. 16910 .. Timi P~ P.llf\ The~ Tll"9 Peyment Pl.-. ii h COlw•tt. wy Wfll/ to . budttti.vt~ 0 j' ·J--- • I Sale 259.95 Reg. 219.ts. One speed compact automatic washer. Connects to kitchen faucet with snap coupler. 24" wide, rolls on casters for easy storage. 13920 Sale179.95 Reg. 1n.H.•Matching efectrlc dryer. Operates on regular house currentl 24 • wide, rolls on casters for ea~ storage. Whit~_.v..allJlble.natural -decomorcofofW. !N850. -.. ~ PertonMnc:e Ptln AM about cu ~ Pllftonftll ICll. P\ln: unlmllld .... .., nlned ...,lida• tar one tow r-tr c:fwVI. . . 0 1 \ ORANGE COUNTY f OBITUARlES School ·nding Probed Apply Now FirefighJ,en Needed , Men and women seekinl suaoe~ duty as 87 0 . • HUSTINGS poaltloo to a'f.Ude the proposal for ·a national urban Cirefi,ghten with the California Department ..... ...1•10rn~~o.1T:_ .. ~h:-',. A ~L-~l-1.. park for Orance County to ~~alil:!!!<J[.;.·!""·~·-:-'----...-_-~,r----l'~~pp&y. '°'-LAWmber of, ... ;;----.P""fi•f1•+---._., ... • "' ""'" " ~ ....... -" ....... ---'"Plrtteno11. b in.. s third term in available poets between toclu And F~b. 28, 1ponaor1nc a ratty tonl&bt 10 di&cua the finan· Conireu, 1ave up bis assi~ent on the Mercbanl the state a1ency has announced .. C'lna of pubU c achoots under Proposition l3 11nd Marine and Fisheries Committee to land. the In· Orange CouatY applicants, who should be what can be ~one bout It -terior Committee Job. 110t less than 18 yean old, should apply to the Tho rally, to which the pubUc ls invited, ls Last year be got a bill through Congress for a De partment of Forestry,.180 S. Water St., 1cheduJedto1lar1at 7:30atSant.aAnaColle(e. Most study~ of 17,000 acres of coastJaJ land between Orange. ' o l 0 ran I e Co u n t Y ' s •tat e law m_a k era Newport Beach and Laguna Beach for pu.rebue . havt aceep~ed tnvltaUon.s to the event,_a_c_ceo_rdin_._1 _· .. a, federal urban park. The stUdy is currently being t~fl16b41 Dlfecl'UJ'"H'ntt Stover. coDdtf~"ml~'"". ----~~--"'!-·--------.i=-------~ The rally Ls one or sev·efal being const)lcted The land in question lies within Republican • ~0(1\\lfll iOO'Aball• Th.11 ' O'\C'f"doin& tht> prt'pciCltJ~C'. 1dl•J , 11}oo1~k mt>" • ~Diego Se~ Horse 'R ider Tax SAN DIEGO <AP l The San Diego County tbrougbout the stile by the teacher lobby in what Bob Badbam's 4oth Congressional District . CTA olficlall describe as "a massive errort to£" · • sure that tale senators and assemblymen are · ALL THREE 0•r 0*ra.nge _.ounty's state ly lnformf'(i as they tackle pending school fina " \,; inc leftshiUon senators -Democ ral Paul Carpenter and • • • Republicans John Briggs and John Schmitz -vol· LOIS LUNDBE&G, chairman of the Orange ed with the majority wheo the Senate. on a 31-5 County Repub&kan Central Committee, says she vote, approved a proposed stale constitutional baa appainled former congressman Charles Wlg· amendment <SCA 2 by Sen. Alan Robbins, D·Van gins and former Health, EducaUoo and Welfare Nays) that wo\&ld curb the power of state judges \0 secretary Robert Finch to the GOP State Central integrate schools. Committee. All aix of the county's assemblymen ar~ Usted. • • • along with the three state senators. as co·autbors &EP. JERRY Patterson, J>.Santa Ana. said or the measure. • •• chances of establishing a federal urban park along the Irvine coast have been "greatly strengthened" by bis appointment to the House Interior Commit· tee. · "I'm very pleased," the congressman com· mented. "This appointment puts me in a better .T HE O&ANGE COUNTY C'oord lnating Republican Assembly and the county's Republican Central Committee have passed resolutions againat forced busing of children as a ·means of achieving racial balance in the county's schqols. OtJnty am es· Six Advisers ' .. Six Orange County pbylsicians and-medical specialists will be paid $11,000 to advise the coun· ty's Office ol Emergency Medical Services. ~ The ope.year contracts with the sbt m'° ;fas approved by counly supervisors at the recommen· dation of the Human Services Agency in which the emergency services office i& located. THE SIX WILL HELP county officials with a federal Healtl\.,. Education and Welfare grant which is to pay! for development of an emerge'ncy medical services system in the county. They w:m also aid in the study of need for a county trauma center to treat accident victhns. 1 The six advisers are: . taxman Is saddling horseback riders with a new levy to ralse funds for the pUl'chase, construction and maintenance of equestrian trails. The tax ap<>pted by the county 1ast fall-and im- pleQ\ented Jan. 1 requires payment ol a $10.license fee for any horse, mule, donkey or other equine used for pleasure riding ortrail use. Blind Offered C -Dr. Richard Cales, a specialist in emer,en· Ours OQ cy "IJ!edicine affiliated with AnaheiD) Memorial ~ -HospataL ..-. -Dr. Robert H. Bartlett, director of the UC There are at least 27 ,000 horses in the county. . Classes Se i in Physical Fitness, Grooming -OC Leases Farmland An SO.acre parcel of rarmland next to Mile Square Regional Park in Fountain Valley h as been leased to Murai Farms by the County or Orange. County s upe rvisors agreed to accept $44 ,000 for. an 11-month lease on the property D eath No dre• DRAPER WALTER A DRAPER, rtisldent of Coste Mew, C. P••sed •w•r January 31. ,.,, H" Is \urvlveO by "'' wllf'. 8Htrl<• 0.11per of CO\ta ~». C• One t>rotllff, Fr11nk J Dr .. r ot COll• Mui. C. Funeral serwlces will be N ici Of'I Frl<llly. Febr"6rv 2. 1'7' •• II AM at Bell 8roeclw•Y CNPl'I •1111 Mr DeathJJ Courses in physical fitness and self improve- ment are being offered to blind students as part of the spring semester E 1-J/ICNrthe,•~ being planned by Braille '3~1 • ~~ Insutute Orange County ·GLENDALE (AP> -Community Center . Great Basins Petroleum Organizers said the bi- Co. founder a.aymoad G. weekly m en's c l ass .. Sco&ty" Greene. 80. beginning Jan. 29 is de· died last week of an ap-s ig ned to im prov e parent heart attack. He was pres id e nt and S h I hi c hairman of the Los C 0 ar8 p Angeles·based firm Golden Wec:t College from 1956 until he re-" tired in 1971. nurs.ing student Linda . ....,; Janson of Huntington MOSCOW <A p l _ Beach has been granted Dmitri lvanovlch a $250 scholarship by Blokbintsev, 71 , a lead-Blue Cross of Southern ing .Soviet theoretical California. Sh e is a physicist who directed psychology technician at the coostructioo of the Fairview State Hospital. mobility, posture, mus-blind or all ages. ln· Dale Ave .. Anahl!am. cle tone and circulation. formation about the can be obtained by· call- A women's self im· center, located at S27 N. ing, 821·5000. · provement class will ' focus on grooming, cos-V I R ed metlcs diet and eli· 0 onteers eque&l quette. Students will Volunteers wishing to partme nt of Orange learn to detect spotted participate in a vanety C o u n t y ' s H u m a n clothing by touch. Qf sociaJ work projects Services Agency. All classes are free of a re being asked to apply · Details can be obtained charge to the legally to the sociaJ services de· · by'Calling834-4703. lrvine Medical Center's bum unit and a professor · or surgery at UCI 's College of Medicine. ·-Dr. Ralph Rucker, affiliated with Children's Hospital of Orange County CCHOC > and a faculty member at UCl's College of r(edicine. -David J . Schapiro. Supervisor or the UCl Medical Center's Poison Control Center. -Dr. James Pa"ano. a Tustin cardiologist. -Dr.JobnWest ,anOrangesurgeoo. West is one of the co-autbon of a tteent magazine article detailing the success or San Francisco's trauma center in saving lives of traf- fic accident victims and comparing it to Orange County's accident mortality rate. Cales is to receive $6,000 for bis work while the other physiclaas will receive $1,000 each. f' Werre" Howl-oflkletlt11,1. lnltr· f'llfl'I •I lt111ttooood Mttl'ofl•I P••k. f'rletllh may <•II tor vlsllellotl el Belt Broeclw•y Mor1ulry Otl TPlll~<l•Y. f'et>ruary 1. 1'1' lrom •PM to I lO PM. l>on.tlMlftl ""9Y l)o ,,,,_ to I,..., Or ....... COUlll"f CMlcer 5oc~tY ~II 8rO.O•o ~rtlllll'V Cllrwtors. ~ •uo Soviet Union's firs t _C~o_s_t_a_M_es_a_. ___________ ~-----~--------------------------------------~ atbmlc power plant in 1954, died Saturday, Tass reported. ' ,.ETEltS MARGUEAITE..A PETERS '"' de111 of ~ S.KPI. Pl\\4!0 •wlv Jenuary lt. tt,. al Ho(llt Mll,,....,181 HOSPlllll S...Vlwd by ""~-Harrv Peters. Cle\191'1•• Btlly B•IKC<k. 1 qr.1nclchllclrtn. Merlle. Helrl~ end Glnoer Sl1rkev 11nd 2 Qrt•• 11rancl<Plll-. MICllMI Ind Mlthellt Helrlr19. Prlvtlt l<'IMlly ~'"''es weni 11e1c1 1,,terment. Peclflc View MtMorlel P•rlt. Newport BPll<h C•l1fornl1 Olr"lor\ Pectllt Vl•w Mortuary. "'4-2100 FISHIEll ROBERT C FISHER, •O<' 83 ol COJIA M~. pes\eel eway Januarv 30 1979 Survived by wole Miidred Gravtsl~ wr11c• and lnterm~inl Fri· day 10 AM. Dire< tNI bv Westmln"er M•morlal P&rlt Mo rtuuy •"d • ~metery ' 25 Coas t Students Make Lis t Twenty-five Orange Coast res idents a re among more than 2,000 students at UC Davis, who have been named to deans' honors lists in -~--------seve r a l academic ... IB.1. IROADW A Y MOttTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mase 642-9150 SMm4· TU'THIU.·LAMI MOITUAlY WISTCU~ P4APR Crernttory • Flower Shop 427 E 17th ~t Costa Mesa 646-4888 ,..Cl POTMltlS SMITM'S MO«TUAlY 627Main St Hun11ngtoo Beach 536-6539 PIH FAMILY COlO..IAL FUMIUL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave • Westminster 893·3525 categories. They are: COSTA MESA. Jon Kennell! Nl•bel CORONA OEL MAR Ml~I Funltwro. Mllr'lt Tenence Peeoon. J•-s Lou;s Rou, 4W>d Mi,!Mlel C.rt Sclllebff EL TORO -0.111 ,.,_ ConcMV. HUNTINGTON BEACH. Erl' Munso" Tulles. Oet>l>le J e•n Br•<11monte. Vlctori• ,,..,, .>owptt. • •nc!She~LvnneMlllS. LAGUNA BE.4CH: GleM Allen Helcl•ncUlll1rene-. -LAGUNA NIGUEL Koll' D•nlel Wllll•I-. . NEWPORT BEACH Jemu OodOS Comcllon. l<•l"I"" Rita DI-· °"· BerN<a Loul~ El'Qfar, °""919' Cllandl~ W&t..,,,. A-II Wllllem Pelm•r. Susar1 Elt•ln• SI< Inner. Alhon Chlw Wiiie, KathlMn A"rw Lec1uw. Lwre Jeen Shfollo,,, end Ml<l\HI ~ Wanoroc:ke. SOUTH LAGUNA: TPlomu Lew.-.nce Grindle and Ann Louise Hert111. PACI C VII ~---0€C~e--- ~IA1 PAH Cemetery Mor1uary Chapel 3500 Pac1hc View Drive Newport Beach e.+2700 McCOttMK:K MOtmlAIUIS Laguna Beach 4~iM1 5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan cao1strano 495-1776 IALn.e86H~ NBA&. HOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-iMSO ' H Lecture Series: ''Textile Arts or the Wor-ld'!-will be-the Soopic of an evening lecture series to be offered at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, on three Fridays beginning Feb. 9. Series lecture r 0 . Mona Shelton said classes will meet i n OCC's Science Lecture ff..aJl from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. Series lickets are available at oct•s Ad· ministration Building. ----- .SAVE s20~0 s50~ PEA SQUARE \ YARD You're <*fain 10 find '"-color of your ct10lce In 1hl1 wide Mlectlon of 14 aolld COior• • ~ A~1 .. 1c 1Hon'I' pluah of lrevlre Stir pclyester et e NYlnga of $3.00 •q. yd. • $7.~v,,- SOFT N' SILKY Lu•urlou1ty eoft DuPonl nylon 1n •MW cut & loop 1f"fl•· Hell-Ill end SCotchgard trea'8d for _.,, tnillntenenc. end lonp-. Setect "°"' 8 .Wtte colomlon9 "'e MVlnge of $4..0C> eq. yd. SS!Q AEDUCED 30% Heet•MI nylon ...011y plu•h s549 1!yle. A apec:lll value 1n 1b practical 110il-hldlng. to1'141-01Mone colOratlona. S•Y• so vo $2.00 tq. yd. Save $3.00 ~ tquere yard on $ lhl• YefY popullr n)'fon plUlh 5sa c•rper.setiermsm •lgtn up.lo-det• aolld colon -so vo Clffr1nc. Prk:edl SALE ITEMS AVAILABLE AT PAlmCIMT1NG CARl'ET TOWN STOMS . SANTA.AMA 2911 SO. •ISTOI. .............. c ........ u ., ..... • ....,. .... W.•1 •lii.11·1 l lMU7 • - WESTMINSTB I IJJI llACH ILYD. .. ..,.... c..ew., MecPa u111 ~IMM f •~WM..1'11n.•6 ...... '. s.. 11·1 H J.714' STATEWIDE CLEARANCE SALE DRASTIC REDUCTIONS MANY MANY UNADVERTISED SPECIALS WE MUST CLEAR OUR FLOOR STOCK TO MAKE ROOM FOR TRUCKLOADS OF NEW STYLES! PAOOINO AND PAOFESS,!PNAI. IN$TAl.LATIOH AVAll.AkE fl((l!.OA'I', Tll t • IAT flLL f • S~Y ! I 1 •,_A E lSflMATC" IN \'QVfl 14()~• CAS'I' CM.DU TEHMI • IO-to 0.'I' HO INT flU T ACCT9 • IANKAM[Af(.AAO • MASTEH CHAROf '°""9CllW' '--Ho ~··1,..;;;;;;: ____ ...:;;:,;;;;,;;;.~---....;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:,;:;;;;::::l , • r F F . fluts :in :A:mtr11k:__R0Ute8-Pr0.posed-· TN•ftl Sen. Herman Talmadge. 85, bospitallzed for treatment of ex- b a u s ti on and alcohol abuse. couJd be re- 1 Squirrel Moves in 'Utterly:' SANDPOINT, Idaho <AP> -You might • wonder why one 'of lhe most contented kittens _ in tbls cat's Utter never purred. Ten months ago, Sap. • pbire, a Siamese cat. • gave birth to a liUer of seven kittens. Two days later, one of the kittens died and Sapphire was heartbroken, says her owner, Carol Cox. 'l'BE NEXT day, a neighbor asked Miss Cox to care for a newborn squirrel. The s quirrel, -eyes still un- opened, had be-en found covered with ticks and fleas. Tbe squirrel, dubbed Samantha, survived un- der tbe care of Miss . Cox. a 21-year-old employee or the Idaho Flab · and Game Department,· who turned ·her over to Sapphire when her job interfered •with the foundling 's "re · schedule .. ' • • MJ.88 CO says Sap- • pbire was o rjoyed at the idea or b . g her litter enlarg to seven a1ain a d after thoroughly cleaning her ad.opted s uckli n g, Juc ked her under her c hin and went to sleep. , It took" about 12 hours before lbe squirrel could 1 be coaxed int<i trying :;apphire's milk. But she 'finally did, and, "From .(bat day forward. the squirrel was a kitten," .=said Miss Cox. . Samanth a, who learned to play with the ther kittens, is grown · llnd on her own, and !'Sapphire a ppa r ently ·could care less. The 7. '¥ear -old Siamese h as h e r 'bands full . Last •eek. she gave birth t.o , e nolher litter. This time, . )ill survived. -- _ _.._._ I . ...,_.._..rw... ·Iii/con . NIKKORIENS Buy the Vlvtt.ar. 283 ••• get the Lens/ Alter Adapter for ONLY 1 C. \/Mtar 283 ~ FA· 1 Lens/ Flller Adaptet JAMBOREE! The world's finest le~s. specifically made by Nikon for use with Nikon and Nlkkormat cameras. Unmatched for sharpness and color fidelity ... nearly suey to choose from. All specially priced. so yoo don't have to settle f0< less than a N1kkor. See how much more exciting they can make your photography when you shoot with the confidence of Nikon! Nlkkor Al lenses 28mm f/3.5-$209 35mm t12.a -t169 105mm f/2.5-t249 131mm f/2.8-$286 131mm t/3.s-$1a. SOOmm 118 Reflex-$496, 80-200 t/4.6 Zoom-$689 NIKON FE Ifs automatic .. . ifs compact .. . ifs a Nikon! FE Body -$339 with 50mm f /2 lens " -M19 with 50mm f / 1.8 lens -M49 Motor Drive MD-11 -.,. SB-10 Flash -t69 NIKON FM The Vlwlar VI'" En&qer. ror black· and.v.tltte~: $179 per between Boston and Catlet· t1bur1. Ky.; the Ioter-Amerlcan between Chicaeo and Laredo, Texas. ---=~a'ff'4l · cles•-t-'---==--....a.-..ii=::i"-'=f OLYMPUS OM-1 CHROME w/50mm f /1.8 " I $224 OLYMPUS OM-2 CHROM E wf 60mmH1.8 r $334 100XLC Flash -$16 - 35T Chrome -$109 -~-. T' ' •. _.,·-.' A 110 Outfit -$149 .............. than the four or five weeks planned t»' doc- tors at Long Beach··Naval R•aioaa Medical Center . 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(@11117 .1111 m111111izsh lmcanmra. • ~ullV euromat•e lllll>OtU<e IXH'trOI 11•• etecl•on•c ove • ComD4e•et)l'8urometic llosh oocrotr1on-. used With Conot11e O • Butl,...•n setf t1mo1 • M9nuat ove11.ae o4 •U10 exPOaUre l\ISl&m O<Klllble • E•etu-Cenof\Ol OU'Ck-toaO<ng moc:hano.m ·~Ca6,,,....,..,...,~ ......... -.... ~~ .............. ·~,._..W"'°9t,,.,...rd .. ~~ '!!..:] _,. i. ....... l6A~~"-"'.,..., ~·-..~·.,..,...,_ •U-C~~"°""""' ...... c...'°MMJ 01.--.!;"~*:::'J:O:::__,-:.....~· AT-1 BODY CHROME WITH 50mm f/1 .8 lens -$229 Canonet G-11117 with Canolite 0 Flash -•126 lF!ID FD 50mm f/3.5 Macro with extension tube FD25-$1&• Lehses .. Versatility keynot~ this selection of linll Canon FD lenses With tttem, anv etca trve cllalltnge is wnh1n your scope -and VoU know that you wrtl meet rt wnn lhll technical excellence vou demand Canon lenses are renowned lhroughout the photographic: community as some ot 1ne finest Optics ever pcoduced. Once you'w used lhem, you'll sav the same FD 2lmm f/2.8-•139 FD 31mm f/3.5-•79 FD 13&mm f/3.5 -•104 Zoom FD 100-200mm f/5.6-$175 Zoom FD I0-200mm f/4.0-$386 . o service orien ted .store, wi th c.ompetitive prices .. . . .. 3121 EAST COAST . HWY t:DRDNA Dil~ MAR (?14) 973 .. 4970 \ • ...... .. .. VENTURA COUNTY JUDGE RECESSES TRIAL SO MOM CAN FEED HER BABY Mary HovlC'9 8urpe Daughter Laura aa Baby Sitter OJnger M~tter Watchea CALIFORNIA I NATION 7'Nrr~D •IAllONllS • GEllS'l'ON~ .... Spires Dinner Specia~s .. Served 3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday Baby SIOwlng Trial ·· Recf-,sses ·Ordered for Juror Mom's Feedings New vor·k Steak soup and salad. choice 01 pota10 or nee p11a1. I' roU and butter. INCLUDE~ BEVERAGE $3.65 CAMAR ILLO <AP > .,. Whenever Mary HovJng 's baby gels hungry, the longest trial in Ventura County history grinds to a halt once more. Mrs. Hoving, 27, is a juror in a medicaJ malprl!ctke trial, but is also the mother of a premature 21h-month-old girl named Laura who, under doctor's orders, must be breast-fed .. derslandini. We just an want to get it over with." · The 11-monlh-long Superior Court civil trial resumed Tues- day in Camarillo Municipal Court with final arguments. Ru!Cner then moved Ute trial from Oxnard to this small com- munity 10 miles ilW&y. The- municipal court buifding, which had been shut down because of Prop. 13 cutbacks. was reopened specially for the i:ase. MRS. HOVING SAID that THE COURT EVEN hired the when the trial s tarted las t baby sitter who looks arter March, she didn't know she was Laura wbtle Mrs. Hoving sits in pregnant. Her baby was due the courtroom three miles away. "I TRY TO FEED her before f ~er~y~' but it· came thrfe weeks Despjte all the arrangements, go in the morning," Mrs. Hoving Since all the alt.emate jurors "It's Just aJJ sorts of hassles,':... explained Wednesday. "She's had been used by then, the judge Mrs . Hoving said. · eating every two or three hours. stopped the trial and waited ror .. "I can't get my washins done When she gets hungry, the baby h or m ake dinn§r or anything like sitter calls the court, the judge e[~ura was premature and had that," she said.· calls a recess. and I leave to a heart murmer. so Mrs. Hoving Her busband Ray, a 30·year. feed her." said she was ordered by her old recreation supervisor, has Top ·Sirloin Steak 1/2 Chicken Sunday (noon to 10:00 p.m.) ·soup and salad. choice of potato or nee p11ar. roll and tiutter. INCLUDES BEVERAGE Monday i.oup and salad. chotee or potato or nee pilaf. roU and butter INCLUDES BEVERAGE $3.35 $2.35 Of Judge Ben Ruffner a nd her ~diatrician to breast-feed the been doing the housework, she fellow jurors, Mrs. Hovfqg said; ild. added. "They've been more tha~n~u~n:__·_.2~-----------"---------:----------------------------:------------------ Dad Set T9 Figli~ Ruling • $.PRIN G FIELD , Ma ss . L~P ) A divorced father went to court to fight a judge's ruhng that prevents him from telling his young daughters there is no Santa. Claus, no Easter Bunny and no Tooth . Fairy. · . Wayne F. ,.elton, 35, a firefighter who belongs to the Jehovah's Wit· nesses religious sect, a sked a state appeals court Wednesday·to over· turn a lower court order and that he stop reading the Bible to his daughters and talking to them abou his fundamentalist views of Ctfristianity. HAMPDEN PRO bate Court Judge Frank Placzek on Tuesday or- dered Felton to either stop discussing religion with his daughters on vis- iting days or forfeit his righttoseethem. Felton asked for tht court-hearing to obtain a findin g of conte mpt against his ex-wife for denying him visiting privileges with Deborah, 7, and J ennifer , 4. BUT AFl'ER hearing Diane C. Felton's ac- jlllt\L Q.f •• th e.....v is iu. ·Placzek warned Felton aga1nsl nproselytirlng." "He was confusing them by telling them there was no Santa Claus, no Easter Bunny, no Tooth Fairy," said I Mrs . Felton, 32, a Congregationalist. ''And I bad told them there was:" ' . . . v -- ~t?AlR ~ . . ())~A~Q<t~ FINE HAIRSnUMG FQR MEN & WOMEN 541-611 iw 631 -9925 2 °""" *atloM to ""' JOll hi F-t• Vc6y . . . : - Semi-Annual SALE INFANTS· TODDLBS IOYS·GllLS I .. . . . ,.. Anl~on'Jd SHOE SERVICE • for Handbags Luggage &-Zipper Repair Rt90Mf R.,... c.te.-for SPIRY • TOPSIDB Doa't tlwow ..-, ,_- COMfortflble old .......... . --; -.... -w • .,.,. md l'tsele ............. --·e6tiifeCN11'9·'"~---- • S.. C-+ =Wciltclff "--• ....... ...... • S.--. ls.te ... , -· ,_ Grade #I .Rose Bushes Circulm- Saw. 1188. FELTON said her husband does not1 believe in celebrating, religious holidays such as Christmas, adding . .•• · "but that 's bis religion. These are my childrvnl and 1-'U'l'atse them my ,iray.'' OFF Blades The coupl e we.r e divorced arter a two· year separation. Fellon, wbo also bad been a Congregatlonallst, was bapt.iud lut year aa a Jehovah's Witneaa. He baa remarried a woman who also la a J ehovah's Witness and la raisln1 her twb YOW\I sons In • th1ll faith. ••1 WAS ehocked by the ruJ.lnl," Felton aald. "I 'had eapected tlle judce would uphold my ricbt to eee my children and my rilbt to reli1ious freedom.·· " WIHAYIUYI MAINE LOISTIR! MARKET BASKET WISTCUFF~ .... ,.. ..... OPEN THURSDAY NITES TIL 9 Ch oose 7\4 -in c h chisel-tooth combination blade. croacut blade or PIVWOod blade. All have precision set. ground teeth. C714Uf'll.7"4PV7~ .Y ... • r ..91 DOtJG WO.US · At a ~mber meetlq wtLb labor leaden, "I bad never tbouabt that balancina tbe term, be embraced lt as tbe wUl of the people and Wblc9' Browll aa11 labor rtqu.ted, be 1&11 be federal budafl wu an uouaual idea. or even a declared blmaelf ''a bom·a1a1D ta-cutter." 1 SAfncRAMENTO (AP) -.l«T1 Brown, cany: · an-.t Al Barba. naUonil poUUeal ~ ol tbe radical prop01a1. But elven tbe reaction ln aaOWN ROPES TO &ELL TBE balanced . ~-:... ~~~ .. ~~ i:= Af'L.CJO. II orsutMd labor would aupport blm or Wuhlniton. it was u tbou&b I'd propoeed a dlf.. budget kiea to libero. u President JobnloG bad for UM~ lD ua ---. . s.a. Bdward Keuedy. ff• aaid be Sot DO commlt· ferent lorm of pvernment. Perhaps I had.•• been fe>tted to balance bll budlet. be 1818, Vietnam • menth'Om ~· Brownaa19. ,.. .-• . ~Wd.havt ~n avoided. And today'• badaet de· ~~otlAPl~lt~a'i=:t:~==~C~INr~ft:U..,_:-~~.~llANWlllLS.: . n: woaa-=-=-.A-T-TB"""":l:......,ls .. sue"""""!b""'e~.--aEACl'ION_..·~t"'"•~CAUFOaNJA~·~-~·~':""'!!'!TO!'::="°'.=-"o~WN~"S~ ..... ncr,ti1fDa.DCi Orellft-.Jd t1Jat>pr1,..up npnut~ beU.wa cu be UHd to challenle Doth Cu:ter 'aacs maneuvenu ls mixed. Some liberal Democrats aovemmenu. • Kennedy. Tbal la the propoulbe embraced ht a · are enraged by b1a adopUoo of a cau1e eham-Brown used that argument at tbe UberaJ· · Janury .,..eb for a CGMUtutlonal conveoUoo to ploned moetly by conaervatives and by Ute tiebt dominated state Democratic Party convutJon. He draft an ainendment ~ulrtq a ba.laaced federal state budlet be unveiled lD January. _ · was areeted with bool, but by tbe end of b1a 4S· badlet. ''Thia man tblDb be can become president of minute llddreu, be recel.ed a .Undln1 ovatloo. , ___ "'oa"in&Rf.l~~!~-yY_ b~ woa n•· "' ·atliliiUCii ... dorMtneat ol • C'ODftGtion to,.. qulr• a balaaced !•deral -Pederal defteltl, 8""'11 says, are a root'ca.uae the Uatt.ed States by haVlna Herbert Hoover cap. · It was anot.Mr example o1 the N1anclDa act -~;::=:=-'.':"'.. ===:\.'Jl.UllillJJ.QA. Allbou1h tur....._Demee••tie~rty~"talct Dntd·ftobeiti; ~Jdl.llld.J:j.ihl.!IL-.Lthe bachelor overnor t arter'a 1980 bud0 et Democratic"--leaderof~1 sta•-Senate. basuaedthroUgtiOufhlspontrc: cane ' bucllet. - -He la •troaab' criUcblnf. Carter oo lnllaUoo. ...,. -He baa uked a naUonal labor leader what h1a cbaocel ol ao AFL-CIO eftdonemeat woukl be.· ATTBE SA.mE TIMB, 'l'RB 4C)..year-old Brown ha.1 stopped talkiDI ol an •'era ol llmlta •• -b1a phrue few lbe Deed to save tbe enYironmcDt and , rcaoureea. And eooe. too, are rel~ to Zen and other counter.culture tr~ that made the nation notice this odd Democrat It la time, be says, (Or America to setback to bal~oced budgets, less eovertunent, lea meddling in the affairs of distant nations, and tav1e1'iellef lD the country's fundamental soundness and future. ''AIQerica right DOW IS not build.lDI for the future. It ls stealing from it,'' aan Brown, wbo de· teated •carter lp three 19'14 primaries aAd challenged btio in. two otben. "What we're seeing today Is decline abroad and decadence at home." AND BROWN COMMENTS: uj SEE a. lack of faith. in the future on the part of people about to re- tire. I see frustration at the supermarket. And ob- ' viously it's time for some kind of change." This all bas a populist ring reminiscent of the anti.government exhortations of Huey I.Ong, Georee Wallace, Howard Jarvis and -on oc- cuion -Jimmy Carter. And it is the sort of talk • Brown has med since his political debut on a Los Angeles school board 10 years ago. /~ ~Tribute to ~11rman Rc1ck\vell and Retrospective of Earty Am&rtcon Illustration Saturday, Februafy 3, 10:00 to 5:00 Sunday, Ft'bruory 4, Noon to 5:00 '1b.J won't"'°" ro mm rhls rae oppcm.nry ro see one of the lorge5t <X>llecnons ot eoty _ Ameflc:an llllsroflon ever ~ In Sovme!n calfanlo. • Show highlights wtll lndude or1glnal P.ockwell 1rmrretJ ~M;hOnd~mcgrtrphs inrltrinn suctl h works 05: ~Our to · ~7-:' '°'Soyt"9 Groce," "famlty Tree:· ''Holwshoe forging eon.st." Ol)d "PUppy • l.c7ll'9 Patfglo. .. Also on . display Wiii be atginol oils aid drawings by such renowned Amertcon llluslrofas as: J.C. ~. N.C. ~ Chodes Dono Gibson. Howard Chondlef Chrtsry. ond Jomes MollfgOlnety Flagg. All ~ on display wtll be OYOl'loble fa pud-.ose. Gallery open Tun.· Sat. 10.5, Sun. JZ.S other houn by appointment ' __;.( -= .... ·-""---I -~7 . I COAITHWY. 8 -:------MAI' HOT TO !ICA\.l 1741 Watcliff Dr., Newport J¥ach (71•) 646-4515 NEWS .4NALt' 'IS proposaltrtmsthedeflcttto. .._ me ~ . Brown described it in bla campalp: .. ~e '29 blllioo. Brown says it Is And state Sen. Qa.rry Keene, a Democrat al· ·ask me, 'Are you a liberal? A comervatlve? I atUl tnnMJoaary and tnacceptable. lied with Brown lD the .,._t, adds that be cannot think you c.an be both." ... a. tion support a candidate "who rides into the Wbi1e--...;...--------------Browo la a late aupPQrtA:r of uua conveo • House on a conaUtutlonal crtals . . . be bas 'fblCb bu ~ eodoraecf by 1' states and needs 10 perpetJ-·•-." mo.re atatel to be convened. But Brown la lD tbe ,.-. battle just u tbe proposal ta 1a.inlnl momentum. Some newspapers allo bave bad critical Tbll campalp a1JO allows Brown to use the editorlala. same tact!.c 6ot.li be abd Carter have used auc-The Loe Angeles Times termed Brown's call ce11fUlly lD tbe put -to allp himself with. tot a constitutional convention "a clwnsy lffb for fruatrated voten a1ainat government. national attention." "TllE n8CAL EXCESS BY THE federal gov-J'BE WASBINGTON POST SAID IT "dis· ernment la recognized by 75 percent of the pelled any lingering auaplckml . · .. be mieht be fit Amerttcan pe0ple . . . , • • be says. ''So the only peo· for national leadenhlp. '' pie who can't recopize this seem to be a rather Brown, meanwhile, doesn't act aa. ii· be-ls limited g roup of expert s that dwells in bolhen!d by the critiolam. He goes along 'praclic· Washhigtoo.'" · · ing his favorite approach -moving both left and Carter called a constitutional convention on right, seekin& support frorp liberals and coDlel'Va· tbe budget proposal a "danaerc>us" idea tbat tlves. mlgbt open the door to other amendments ratrtct· .He oPPOSed Proposition 13's praperty tax cuts tng civil liberties. Brown says tbls ls a "SCU'S'-lal:· unW its tandsllde adoption by voten. Tben, during tic... . . his succesaf'ul re-election campaip for a secona ,, E"ands Unlimited: Catering to the needs of s·ingle professionals, two-career f am Illes or anyone who values his or her Jelsure. Let us do your grocery shopping, stops for dry cleaning, etc. Pack. and unpack for moving, feed and walk pets, water plants, ready your home for painters, wait for ph?fle man or plumbef, etc. Open r,our summer home or whatever else you don t have time to do yourself. References. $10.00 an hour. After 5 -55~ -. . - Are yo~ a "cookie-:jar''~? Some old-fashioned ideas are never · out·of.date. Like saving money. ; But, with tne cookie-jar or bank-account approach to saving, you are always tempted to take out money almost as often as you put it in. And you never seem to have the13ig Money when you finally need it most. The Erice tags on the things you're saving for-a new home, college. · retirement, a business-are already high and getting higher. Way out of the cooKie· jar crass. So a savings plan where your ... • I . money turns into Big Money over the years makes more sense tllan ever. I At Imperial, we'll give you a systematic plan for saving. With our high interest rates on savings. and the many services Imperial now offers, saving is an old-fashioned idea whose time has come. We'll help you select the plan that's just right for yolL We'll make it easier to save, with higher interest than any bank. And your money will be safe. But. most important, you'lf have the Big .. Newport Beach-3366 Via Udo (71-l) 673·3130 Co.ta Mea-3310 Brutol St. (714} 540-71ro1' ~ .... _, __ Nnwport f;m~ N~11 (:eQter l)r. (714) 6"·1.Sl .,,. Money when the time comes. $3 billion behind you. 90 offices. Telephone transfer and more. So don't get caught with your hand in the cookie-jar. · Save with a plan. At Imperial. 01mPERIAL SAVlnGS , ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION Saving. An Old-:faeldonal Uka whose tim~ hOll comr. .. ~t E~ucator Found People 'Beautiful' 8)JD&YCLA. N ._..~ .. r .... an""ae""~··e~· deal Robert Moore Uku to talk about h1I wblrfwlnd. 10 day tour of sout.beut.em Cblna. Armed with 1t at01 and ·-~..-wno<11 tRJ • e r counts qlaodet and ll'QIU'Hllou C-.ftf6n. Uilq and Kw Wn. AND TllOlJGH BE lls wrilinl • a paper abo\4 TranlportaUoft as •be oblened lt. bla mott vivtd" collectloaa of th~ newly re· opened Peoples Republic aH of . lta people. "Tbey are totally buullful wtth bea uO(~l cblldren; pretty sloici b~er· r lb y C~· r lo u a, · Moore says while leafma through a roe ol color pbotos taken during lhe tblt be la "auaptcioua" of "Everyone work.t. You see the &~; -~ MN.id.er~ JllmylL ~ ~ (icJdl J.ClllQlll. IL....J an t11:put orrCh nl •lttr only 10 .anlmaJJ, dayt or tr1vel tber and olfen ''And there la a tremendous only to rec.'OW\t lmpre11lon1. drive to rum. • tN'mendous de- Hls first and laat lmpreuiona · alre for knowledge. er tNltCblna baa an •bundlnce "We had ·th-r.ee Cbinue- of people. ''No pl•ce· In 01,1r aul1ned lnterpretera .. They in eMna we.ire.--btU.v4l4 Mac>.'a relp-ha4.. we abl lo look out a window -paued them by, educatlo~ bu1. bot.ti or ~rwite and wile." ool lff pt0ple." Hi• a~cond lmpreulon : THE COLLEGE leader's only bkycl vlall to an educatlonal facility So many, that downtown blcy-was to a commune hl1b school cle pa~g 104.s do a brlak busl· near Nannlng . ness . Education, even ln th"e ONLY A· FEW cars chug sciences, ls "almost totally a Chma's roads and streets, and lecture and rote-type opera- most or those are taxicabs, be tiop,.. be saysJ "There are no says Tn.lck.s, buses and a small, laboratories or apparatus." . versatile garden-tractor make There is no indication or beat- up .inost of lbe motorued vehicle log or air conditiouing in the n eet. . · . . . schools, students wear the With the excepti_on of the few prevalent dark blue Mao uniform hotels i:&tering to foreigners, and sit two to a desk with eyes electric lights are confined to glued to the primary teaching aid s treet corne r s . Even the b~ackboal'd. LOCAL . CANTON, CHINA, STREET SCENE PHOTOGRAPHED BY COLLEGE PRESIDENT MOORE lmprealona of an Abunda.,ce of People and Blcyclea Eve..-here .. · Orange Coast College sponsored tour. MOOtt• mercantile-style, mulll-atoey de-School atbletlc programs are ~rt~~~~~~hl~~ ~4~tH~~~a~U ·~=============================~------ Coleman·type lanterns. field, but the Chinese are ex-Moore and his wife, Pat, were among 18 Californians in an Asian field excursion course . between Dec. 16 ana Jan. lA. The gorup spent the Christmas and New Year holidays in Canton .. Their only reminder of stateside festivities was a lone Christmas But elettrlcity appears plen· ercise conscious .. and anxious Uful for industrial use -even at for world. r e cognition in the commune leve.J where athletics . machine shops repair equipment orindulgeinligbtmanufacturing. "JOGGERS ARE all over the place," Moore recalls, "and the "TUE AREA WE were in is people practice Tai Cbi· Ch'uan the bread basket of China," (fluid, slow exercise forms > • tree in the lobbY. of their hotel. . . Moore says. "Farming is in-everywhere. Even old men, as THOUGH THE three-week tensive. l was impressed with individuals or in groups. tour touched Korea, Hong Kong the civil engineering aspects, "The people look physically and the Ptµlippines, China was th~. well-established terracing lit. other than for colds -wblch' _l _he_m_a_ln_ev_e_n_t._M_.:..oo..,...r_e...:c:..::.o.:.:nf:...;e.:.ss:.:e.:.s,--a=n:.:.:d:..l:.:a=n=d .:..rec.:.:::.la=m==a=tio.:::o:.:._· ____ _:w~e..:..p:::ro:..::bably gave them." ... income tax: no work,_ . . . no worry, nt>math, no charge. Tomahawk Missile Tests OK POINT MUGU 'CAP > -A U .S. Navy Tomahawk Cruise Mis-· sile successfully com· ' pleted a test flight ·off the coast of Southern California, the Navy re· ports. The missile, equipped with an ac.tive radar seeker, was launched this week from a ground launch platform at t.be Pacific Missile Test Center here. . It then located' and flew pver a target ship before returning to a re· covery area at San Clemente Island, where it was retrieved for further use In the Tomahawk test pro-- gram. The Navy said all ma· jor objectives were met in the demonstration, in- cluding ignition of the missile's solid· pcopellant boost motor and transition to cruise anJ . 1250 Cifi C,,.1;fical11 ReJee~a,'6 at an'I · UJ.6lc/;//PlazaS/o,. ;/),awi"g 011 :;..~. 13, 1979 flight on its ·t urbofan ___________ _,_ ______________ .:.._ _________ _ Join the Los Angeles Federal Family of Savers and turn the job over 'o a Tax Specialist. ' sustainer engine. Tbe flight was the 37th test flight for the General Dynamics-built missile, which was ~e­ signed for both land at· tack and s hip attack missions. This year, spare yourse1f the drudgery of filling out personal income tax forms. Do as thousands of Los Angeles Federal Savers do: let a specialist figure your de- ductions, do the math, fill out the forms tor. SEX-c.4.RE both Federal and California State regular personal Income tax returns. There's no 1HEME SET charge for this service with a c:teposlt of WASIDNGTON <AP> $6,000 or more in a high-interesf Savings -A group called zero Account, or $10,000 in a higher-interest Population Growth bas ELAINE SCHLUP . ~~X'l~RT · DESIGNER/ JEWELER . .. ... "--... eoam@ INVENTORV REDUCTION Investment Certificate. • declared ·Valentine 's Day "Love Carefull)' .. This also entitles yoa to a safe.depOsit box, "The 'theme of 1979's y Day." JEWELR Travelers Checks, Money ora~rs, docu---Love-Carefully Day.,-be-1--:_._ __ t d II t. d A d 'II lng coordinated by ZPG· ---'--men up ca ton an more..-1"\n you re-Massachusetts, ls the-~ -"'CelvErhtgtTer.intere!Hharwtny. comme1ci&f---........ •--'----trt-9"'-a-ft>~ ........ ---~ ... --I.. C bank-pays, compounded-dally. Your sav-' responalbWties of teen· •• __ -[.~-·-------···~~~~..-.~ lngs are insured by a Federal Agency. agers, lnctudln1 the right to say no to sex." the organizaUon said in ~o make an appointment now to have your a news release. income tax rett.Jrns prepared at a time con- venient for you. The sooner you file, the .. faster your refund can be mailed. Savings Insured to $40.000 . LOS ANGELES EEDERAL S1\V'INGS NEWPORT BEACH - 3201 Newpor:t Blvd. ·across from City Hall • 675-4500 OPeN Mon. through Thu111 I At.I·~ PM; Fri. t AM .. PM Prematurely withdrawn <;erhf1cate Accounts earn interest al the Passbook rate. for the term ol Investment. le~s. 90 days • Head Oll1Co. l OS Angeles red•rol Saving-; end Loan Anoc1111ron • One Wlls11tre. Los Angolet 90017 •0th r (){races tnrough0\111ne area '\ Force OK SAN ·FRANCISCO- CAe) -Tbl) Calllomta Supreme Court has · ruled ~t mentally re· larded people f aclq in· voluntary clvtl commit· ment to a state boapital may be forced &o tesUly a1aia1t tbemeelves in court. In tbe S.! de el1lon, tbe majorlty found that comtituttonal auaranteel qainlt self· lncrimlutioa did not ex· tend to tavoluntary civil commitment proceed inl•· . .. an unprecedentid opportunity to own SIGNATURED, ORIGINAL -pESIGNS by ELAINE Special store hours 10 a.m. · 5:30 p.m: .· SAVE lj up ta· 3 3 DAYS ON . FEB.1 -2- '"th• A,.CADE V~IA/MC/At ~t a, /o~ le41 9'decliDn ~-c>NE oh KIND lacflfl DINNER RINGS~nd other selecmi DESIGNS mounted with beautiful GEMS. - • ALL JADE ITEMS • 18K FR~NCH IMPORTED CHAINS • 18K EARRINGS by GARNIER of FRANCE • 14K EARRINGS by RUDY LEVY tnd CHESTERFIELD ~ Limited Q\a•ntltl" subl«t to prlDf Slit loft\', no ounom orc:Jtrs tt thete prices • ~ ELAINE SCHLUP· DESIGNER /JEWELER I 301 MARINE AVENUE . ~LBOA ISLA~O. CA 92682 WEDDING SliTS NOT INCLUDED I ·' Connell Report Mesa ListS 11 Prioritks ' . ll 's been about nine months since Costa M·esa city council ~sat for a day-long d1scuss1on of where the tity s hould be beading. Here. in order or council-designated jmport.ance, is a brief status report on how the city staff is achieving the desired goals. The report was presented to the council last week by Caty Manager Fred Sorsab<.il. · TRAFFIC CIRCULATION CNo. 1 priority>: An environmental impact report is under way on a potential freeway ~xteosion of Ne~rt Boulevard (Route 55) into downtown Costa Mesa. The . " C/N DAILY PILOT ,4 U tens· tO Hurt Israel · needs, seem s certain. Israel claim• to be well prepared, wtt.b s ubatantlal reaervet and an American paraiMe to make up any lbortfall for the next five years. But Waablnstoo bas -~tJPm'Zd=~c:~ mand to receive oil from EaYOt after 1lrMl leaves the Sue& GUii oil field it developed olf tbe oc· cupled stnal Peninsula. -TN cJ' ''''" bee tfeeOme a must for larael in peace nelfftflia~ ......... -.... ~~--·I "We are close to -mo.t ortli world's oil. but oa1)' countries far away will sell U to ua," an of; ficlal complained. empbul.aing that Jarael wants to avoid as mucb as· possible paying to transport oil across oceans when there are surpluses next door. -l&AN'S COllMtlNITY OF ao.ooo Jews is tbe focus of dis· creel laraeli govern.meat efforts, so far not very successful, to en- couraae them to come to Israel and escape a poasible pogrom if Mocslem fanatics gain the upper band. . .. Tbere are examples of forced conversions of Jews in Iran. ·even in tbe 20th century.·' said Arye h Sbmuelevltz, Iran s peciali s t at Tel Aviv University. Iranian Jews nourished under the l)rottttioo of the shah. said Shmuelevitz. but their future is not so clear If the shah's mal.o religious opponent. Ayatullab Khomeini, wins the power strug- gle with bis vague concept of Islamic rule. • widening or Victoria Str~t on the city's west si.de is being given priority. and funds are being sought for realignment of 17th and 18th streets. An Israeli just back from Iran claims that a "National Front of Iranian Is lamic Youth" has circulated a pamphlet' vilifying GENERAL PLAN UPDATE CNo. 2>: A Joint meeting of Council and Planning Commission memgers was scheduled Moo· day to discuss the March 1980 deadline for implementation of a new city general plan. NOTSE ELEM ENT <No. 3): The noise ejement of the general pla n. This portion is the first element t.hat will be brought beforf' the Planning Commission this month. SIGN ORDINANCE CNo. 4l . Two sign experts will arrive in Costa Mesa on March 24 for a day-long review of how sign or· dinan<'es are workmg in other cities. REDEVELOP.MENT: CNo. 5) The city bas allocated funds C$2 million • for. purchase of properties in the area designated for downtown redevelopment and a senior citizens housing project COMMUNITY APPEARANCE <No. 6>: Work is under way on tree and grass plant4ng for the median along Harbor Boulevard from Baker Street south lo Wilson Street. The project, set for com - pletion in mid-May. will.cost the city $167,000. There has been no progress, however. on other community ap- pearance· gQals such as getting rid of abandoned buildings or join- ing a K~p America Beautiful program. LOT COMBJNATION POUCY <No. 7): The cily is supporting the policy" of combining property for greater density development, but officials have yet to take steps to implement t.he concept as a city-wide policy. _ _ __ -- DEFINITION OF RESIDENTIAL DE~<No. 8): No pro- gress to date, but council members will disc s the issue when the Land Use Element of the new general plan is br ght to them. COSTA MESA MARJ NA <No. 9\: Some discussions have taken place with Newport Beach city officials over the possibility of put- ting a marina along the Santa Aria River . However, city of- ficials are putting a .. no progress" label on the Marina plan. TEMPORARY ZONING <No. 10): The council may lift a zone that allows residential homes along 19th St~t to also function as ,private businesses VI SITOR AND TOURIST BUREAU IJllo. 11 ): No pro~ress bas been made. and council members have shown no indication that a tourist bureau will be n~ded in the future. Newport Statues Hit By Vandals N~wport Beach police said to· day they were trying to figure out how someone pried loose two 600 to 800-pound concrete statues from in front of ~ interior de- sign firm, stealing one and Creek Spanned Irvine Company workmen walk length of the,temporary bridge installed on Jeffrey Road over San Diego Creek in Irvine. The 80-foot span of portable steel is same type bridge used by U.S. Army in Vietnam to ford rivers in undeveloped areas. Bridge will allow traffic acros~ until replaced by permanent bridge in eight months. Com- .pany spokesmen said temporary link can't be opened, however. until at least day and a half of clear weather to allow the laying of asphalt. Doh~ny Surfing · New Musical cliwf Named !. ~~~~~b ~·~~~~led ••*age about l:r~!!.~~~ld . finger -size break in a sewage 2,000feeto~fthe bea_ch . · co mposer, arr anger and outfall pipeline leading lnto the S~owe said be nob~~ the ~pill pianist, bas been a_pp-ointed ocean at Doheny State Beach durmg last weekend s low tides musical directo r for the 1979 Park has prompted county of-and called county officials. Pageant or the Masters an.er fi cials to close the f>Opular surf-. SEBRA R}ant superintendent voting by Festival of Arts board ing area to· swimme r s and Tom Dittman said the latesl of dlrectors. surfersuntiltheweekend. lealt is in the same· location as a . Henn. who bas arranged and Jack Stowe. m anager of the break last fall in the 20-year -old . conducted for artists such as south coast area state parks, pipeline. ~ . Helen Reddy, recently returned said the ocean .bas been closed Dltttnan said he will not be from a r ecording session in from the north end of Doheny a ble to estJmate bow much Czechoslovakia. where be con- park to the south point of San treated sewage leaked from the · ducted the Praglle Radio Sym- J uan Cr~k ·because of treated pipeline until a diver can de-·phony Orchestra. e fflue nt flowing from the termine the exact size or the The musician who holds a pipeline. break. bachelor or music de izree from State parks omcials and of-In the meantime. the pump, fl\ount St. Mary's School of ficials at the Southeast Regional station bas been s hut down. Music In Los. Angeles, also R ec lamation Autho r ity , minimizing the flow from the pursued a year of ·maste r 's _operators of the 2.oeo foot out-break, Dittman said . studies at the Cali fornia fall, said the break in the A new nutfall is currently un-Institute of the Arts. pipeline appears to be about 100 de.r construction to r eplace the Heon has scored five full- . ~ar~s offshore. The pipe usually old line, SERRA officials said. length feature movies· and two short subject films, one of which was nominated for an Academy Award. He is presently involved work- ing on an albuDt project for ABC ' . Records and also on an album with conductor Carmen Dragon. l:lis salary was not announced. Auto Crash Injures Two Jews as "bloodthirsty" and ·telf- ing them to leave Iran or be killed. . -ISllAEL'S EXTENSIVE - but little-publicized lies with Iran have been abruptly cut, and hundreds of Israelis are waiting to see if"it will be possible to re- sume interrupted projects and exports worth an estimated $300 million last year. Israel started receiving Ira- nian oil through middlemen iri the mld-19505, said Shmuelevitz~ and "closer relations came in the early •eos, with Israelis invit- ed to belp develop agriculture." This expanded into Israeli work in industry and construction. even as Iran .on the official level was totally pro-Arab. "U you talk to intellectuals in Iran," Sbmuelevitz said, "they stress the historical connection betw,een tbe Persians and the Jews -two ancient nations re- establishing themselves in tbe Middle East. two non-Arab nations but still in the Mid~e East." THE SHAKY NEW Tehran government or Prime Minister Shabpour Bakbtiar said it wiU end relations and oil sales to Israel. But Shmue levitz notes: "Even the shah said that." Sbmuelevitz added that~-e Bakhtiar government sur es. "We wiU have to wait t see what happens. But if Kho eioi comes to power .. there will no oil, for sure." Heritage Park Given State · Design A.ward Irvine's He ritage Park bas re- ceived the 1978 California Parks and Recreation Society's En· vlroomental Award for Com- munity Parks. given for out- standing design and dexelop- ment. The award is to be presented s mashing the other. ··,•'1ifilll~i!.1~~"'"·-~··••fll.llJfllJI! --:---~-Tfi·e-i<S'S'A-~ dl--S-C'Overe-ct-·!'. Two people were injured Tues· formally at a banquet in Sao day in Newport Beach w~o a Diego on Marcb s. Co&La Kaa.,yout.b.:a..Ci.LI.kid<l~-Wednesday at Lydia's Inc., 400 W. Coast Highway, where the two figures had been cemented into the sidewalk for the past 18 years. The female s t atue. Gloria, valued at $750, wes missing, while a companion s~atue of Caesar, valued at $950, was found shattered. · A spokeswoman for the firm said t.he statues have a great deal of sentimental value to the store owner. Cat Burglar Takes Cai1k A NeWl>Ort. Beach W()man who awoke and glimpsed a man walking through ber bedli>om tbou1ht it wu ber husband m:atil four hours fater, wben Sl,200 tn cash was dl1covered mlaainc, N~wport Beach police said. T\Jey said the cat burglar a'p- parenUy entered tb.rousb an un- locked door Monday al about ' a .nt. at the home or Darrell and Linda .Bentley, 2334 Ar all a St .. Notbln« •H disturbed except the cuh, wbicb bad been left In.· the bathroom adJolnlng the Wroom, poUc. u.ld. ... qi Latldt .. tJae Bard lt'a11 A telta'-englne Beecbcraft, owned by Perldowen Airways, Ltd., ol Reading, Pa., waa lareed to .-Ice a belly JancHQS when the pilot encountered 1ear difficulties. Ronald L. Ferrell, of Aberdeen, N.J., was hospitalized with back Injuries. The pilot, Eugene R. Wittke, also of New Jersey, was not lnja.red. They were the only two persom on the ptane. j in the rain slid over the center ~tn!" 11artr"Soclety-pt'e1tenh· dividerandhltaoothercar,theo a w a rds annually _in five burst into names . categories based on size or the Tommy Madaen, · 19; of" ·s21 par.k. Wilson St .• Costa Mesa, and Heritage Park was selected Marguerite Williamson, 73, of over entries from Anaheim, 1508 W~tcliff Drive,· N~wport. Claremont, Fullerton, Me n· Beach, were bOtb treated at docino County and San Fran· • Hoag Memorial Hospital i n cisco, in the community parks Newport Beach but weren 't classification. ' bospitaliJed, authorities said. · The 45-acre park, off Walnut PoUce s aid the incident OC· Av_tnue near CUiver Drive, adja- curred on Dover l>riYe n.ear Cliff cent to Irvine High School, Drive. serves the entire city. School Thief :Geu Peiicila A tblef wbQ.. j)ur1larhed MariDen Elementary kbool 1D · Newport Beach lbould have no • trouble lcWinc up bia loot -he's Cot 900 plDd1a ~do tt 1ritb. Newport Beacb police said the borslar, wbo appareatJy Md a pa111t.Y, raided the school at 2100 Mariners Drive over the wedeod. Tbe thief escaped with a . S2CJ pencil ~DI macb.lne, IOO pencl1a valUed at 163, and• ln colnl from vehd.iq machines. A teac:ber at tbe school bad re· porJ.ed a pa11ke7 1011 two moatbl before, poUce aakl. ~ The park includes a million· dollar aquatics complexi a youth services center. blcyc e trails and picnic areu. · There are plans for a libtvy, and an arta and crafta center if under comtruction. t Rock. Concert Set Al Irvine School The Univenity Hlgb School, Irvine, guitar department bas •clMduled a student rock coocei:t for 7:• p.m. on Feat. 8 and 8 p.m . on Feb. 10, tn the campus audltol'tmn. Ttcketa are $2 ·for 1tudtata wta.b ltalllea& body Carcia, aao for OCben, avaUable •t tbe ~ • \ .. ... ~ . TIE CLlllES RAC .:::.•Costa . Na ..... Wi Hm .W Olt °'fed ... Hr llO OP THI MAJOllTY OP OUI IYBYTllMa .OU! Na h A Swlllc•• Dt911._. ••. Wlllt Tn•n•m . PIUINr STOCI ..... ,.. 'RI 11rW,...... ....... .,.,,..,, ••AIDLISS .... ~ .......... Ow Dita J .. , ...... '1'1111 ....... I ..... MOW- OF COST OI LOSS IMCUll9tf Wt ,._ Te Mme S-...... DN1Hc Ull DAY ..ell YISTBDAYI At C..t ••• MMr C..t ••• a.w C~ •• • C ....... Ow Matt r 1-..::. 't ... Qr1111W C.... It Acca~l·d Mill• Nit DI .... act. Wt..._ TW 111111•LOWNICIh1'e o.1J nllMj · u.tl MM Of Ow ,,._. Seid W T.-.... W= ...._ = Wll ........ SWIFT I P05ITM Sii I Dll ACTIOMI C-. .. Md ~ COlllu; 17, IVBY rTa. IN OUI STOii MAS ... ~ Y PIJCI lwry .,.._. Y• c.m S,... -t .. W., Met S.. ..... -OW n.. SLASte FOi 9UfCI DI~ Mo111n1g .................. Hiid hdi ••• · .. , .. Ll!Tlitst ~ FwA '-In-Te Cwt . ' . ' • ALL PRICES SLASHED ' ' ' · o To tostl Near Cost! Below Costl • MEN'S JACKETS MEN'S MEN'S J.ADIES SPORT SHIRTS PAJAMAS BLOUSES & TOPS "PUllTAM" "HMMIMfiTOM" Dtln• ,..._ pnu ... .w;-"WILD CHHIY" "DlnOS" "SPllE" "LAMCH" "LIYIS.. ..rl•ty ef colors. Sbu "WIA~ .. GLADIAGS .. • . . Ila &COATS "PACIFIC TIAIL" "LIYIS" "llMMIM&TOM" "LOH M STUFP" 119 •toe• htcW.. dowa flU ........................... fedth, .... foc•th. 1009/o wool ,...... ~ Cllld ..... llJloa l•bh, cordwoy1 Cllld ...... lie) •..t,fy of cblon Ill sbn ~XL 3 CJF'OllPI -WILDAIP' °'OFF SHOii"'-' 5-M.t,..XL OUI ENTIRE STOCK. "CHESTNUTS." "ACTION T"' otlten. 11tt NWnt ttyllt _, "LEYIS" .ct ethn. l1tellldn colors ht poly•lten, cottoM, IEG. SI 3.00 $6 .• b.ci mid lllort Mn W..... Wettds. '-1 cmcl lllort _....la tciM pric•........ 0 T·.Wrh. llllit tops. cltco ...... sins ~XL 4 We)....... w"ttn. Giid .-ell ..,.., Drftsy Ill& IAL . 15. TO $14.95 s9 88 -.,nc. .... :.... • =:.~~~~.~18.• 1K.T0$6s.ooS24 .• -.,,a ... :.. • II .......... SIS.00 to SIS.GO IOW Yl·Y20FF MEN'S BELTS "LEVIS11 11HICkOK" Ilg • ...., of..,..._. c ...... *" 21 .. 54 .... tJl"OIP· V20RMORE OFF . MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS .. AHOW' ttyln litcWt ICewt, lard. ...... .tc. "°"' aiMI .... ..... " .. toldt. = ..... ..... colon lltt4/141/J to 17 /I 71/z. 3 WC) "'°"' IK.TOSll.00 s5 • -.,,a........ • IK.TOStl.00 $6 • -.,nc......... • 1~.TOSl6.00 $8 • •,,tee........ • MEN'S LEVIS rylff IHl•de • ..all.L AJG •• llLLS, MUVO FLAllS, STIAHMn' U.S. SHll .. TO FIT, COIDUIOYS. All •• ................ ce1on .. ..... 2t to JI. OUI IMT'm tWISTOCI. ~TOA1' 59~• $6 • .----------~ •d cawal, ,..... .ct FcMcy. :~~~~·.~~... ~ 5-Mol. 3 to 15. 5 .... ,......... MENiS SUITS 7--r-=~ .. ~~~·.~ .. sa.11 & SPORT COATS 11G:T0St.oo · $3 • ,....,.. Al .,. brmd MW, ·~ w..f ] tciM priu ... , •. ,.. I s10 U .ct 4 ·pitce ....... '°"''"'" . s5 U =~~~~·.~ . = :=-.: ~-: =~~~~:~ ... -. $12 • .._ 3' to 46, • .,...... sa.ts s7 88 =~~~~·.~. . ~~STOCtcsum, ~~~~~ .. ~··· • =~~~~-~~~14~88 IK.$119.50$$51690.00 88 =~~~~:~~ .. ~$'·· .,___ ____ _.... .-.,nc..... • llG.TOSlO.oos12.a MEN'S KNIT 0 u I EMT I I E s T 0 c IC .. prb .•.... SHIRTS & SPOITCOATS PLEASENOtE T SHIRTS · • "PUllT AM" "HANG TIM" IEG. $55.00 to SH.OO LADIES . "HOllE" "DITTOS" s19· a cooRD1NATED • JAHTZIN" _. olMn. .. ~..... I , ............ WcJ .. -11-c ..... -i... . . to s31.a SPORTSWEAR ICMMJ md lllort llMTn. crew ..t "FllE ISLAMDll" htcl•dH colhrlcl. Tlf'riflc 11llctlolt of 1--...._ _______ ..... foc•th. ,_... tMrtt. .......,. colon, • tbet ~XL 4 Mcj •Hh. sWftlhn. tldrtt, tops, ttc. CJNllPL . LADIES Al_.. _.ctl• g or coorllll•td • . s2 • lit fWt HI .. w"t colon. =~·~·~.~n... e D"9Hpt~.~~!!! . ...t, SllH~I~~~~~ . ·s 4 a ,.... ........ ....., of .... HG. s•4.oo .. sn.oo =~~'.~:~~····· · • ;..:;::..-::;µ.:-,~~ Y2 PRICE =~~'.~:~ .... ::·: =:. ... 525.a =~~.~.... . L--:;,__ ______ :i___. BIG & TALL DRESS SHIRTS BIG & TALL DRESS PANTS "HAGGAI" "DAYS" "THE IMACl'1 "LEVIS PAMA TIU.AS•. "'PUllT AM"' I OOo/o polyHtns ht a bl9 • ....., of al ""' ..,.. .... colon, ~ ...... ,....._ ......... smt40to54.l .,...,. ......~~... :~~-~ ... st.a BIG & TALL SPORT SHIRTS ....UllTAM"' •srtu-"'LA~lr ·c•IB cwr o1111n. A he •1• 11llcHall of II ... ..,... lit..., ....... cotta.. ..... 91-. etc. ...... .... _.ort dffy~ hi lilH XL to XXXL 4 CJF'OllPI HG.TOSl9.00 s7 • .. price ........ • HG. TO $21.50 59 • .. price ......... • IEG.TOS25.ooS12 • · .-pr;c....... • HG. TO Sl0.00 s14 .• •• .,..tc.. .. .... • ·11G&TALL SWEATERS ..,__ MITAN .. Ill a .W. •arMtr of c...,_., ;...,.,... cr•w• Hd Y·Hch. I OOo/o wool, wod ....... acrylcs. Al .. .................. ......., HW colors, wl• Ycrri.ty of ~-fal w ....... sa.. XL to XXXL. OUI ENTIRE STOCK. l!G. Sll.00 to $30.00 a HMpl IHJ rOM O•r s 12 .• t.g. ~ EYBY ITEM 15. TO $21.00 _ a-----------111 IH THE STORE IS OM Mh Pfiu · .. · .. · • REG BIG TALL Y2 OR MORE OFF SALE. loyi lt•ls I . $14 • .. • lltlrtt. _, -lodlts IK. TO SU.SO LEISURE SUITS ap arel, underwear, .. price .. • .. • • ,_.. -' _...., fecbh t. • . -..~ ·1~t::===-=-~ -=--===:.:====·===t ......,....., .. ~,...... ... __..... __ ... .. -..... t.fwka. 5'.., lit ttock .. ... war..., HftJ, •'-orts. BIG & T •LL ll .. o 54. ••••· '°"'' •d ttc. .. SHOP EARLY A x-... Fol UST SB.ECTIOH. ·CASUAL PANTS ltt•t •d prices M- nrtlled ...... l•d to ••• 11, .......... .. ................. Fridllf, hb. W. at I 0 A.M. FIRST COMl·FIRST SBYID. "LIYIS" "HA•GAI" ''.LH" ............. Strt-...... &.rm fw w.. .............. Mtto. -...................... ... ..,., ...... ..,... . ...., ae.n. sms 40 to 54. 2 ,... . =~~~5~12.U &•11.• • IK. $59.IO to $15.00 yow dlekt ....... 5 5.00 &510.00 I t J i ~.,.. -"'-~--- €ouri Gesture OAILYPILOT G riIJDnV ·Is Back---'. -.. ...__. ___ r.,J---' --.... , q • • ~ • I • Drcigster Has New Car, Driver Of .. CNffy,... Sc.ff Gae.., .waa~JA..Je~~~~~~~~~i....__; bis new Cama.rooln prepara or eoae o bis team's_ pro stock drag racing title· al lbe NHRA Wh1ternatlonaJa lD Pomona this weekend. Bill "Grumpy" Jenkins bas relieved bllJlself of the driving responslblllties and has turned that phase of the operation over to young Larry Lombardo. But be still baa a band in the operation, one ol the mott suc- cessful oo the c!rcuit over a span ol years . .... y . BIG TmNG IN aACJNG bas always been malrlng a car run," be says. "The ooly reason I started driving at national eventa was to· prove an 'egotistical point.' I k.lnd of got locked into the driving when it turned out to be a good promotional gim- mick." Jenkins Competition is the winnlngest drag rac~ team in history with 22 NHRA national UUes, 17 AHRA victories and two IHRA wins along with countless .other major independent title_s. This is the start of a new year and Jenkins was at Orange. C<>wtty InternatiQoal Raceway early this wee testtos a new Camaro for the Wintematiopals event. "WE RAVE A NEW CAil to run and have bad it only a few days. That's why we are here at OCIR and it's getting close to , competitive actiqn. We aren't on a winning trend yet but there is a good chance that we will get there this week. BILL ''GAUWY" JENKINS standards of excellence in dra,g raqing. . Has be ever given any tbougbt to other types of racing! Marina's Truiett Hatton (left) -and Hunt- in~ton Beach's Rico Thompson reach for a rebound in Wednesday's Sunset League basketball game. In the foreground are Curt Wooten and Kevin Olson (32). Hunt- ington Beach upset the Vikings, 63·60. For story, see Page B2. "The current Camaros are a litUe more streamlined and have a better weight factor. Tbe car was brand new last Monday and there ii an awful lot of work to do to aet it ready. · "I've done a lot of innovating over the yt?ars ·and som~ Of the changes lfave made me.some money and some have been copied. "I'm very interested in the stock block Indy thing, ... be says. ''If there is enough profit in it, I might drop out of-drag racing in another couple of years. I plan on staying with ncing as long as it will support It.self with the belpofsponaors. "If 1 go to Indy, it will be as an engine builder and an iDtereated person r1tber than an owner. Once Agqin, Allen Trails Fratianne From AP Dlsp1klles CINCINNATI -Lisa-Marie Allen, skating out of tlie Ice Capades Chalet of Costa Mesa, is in a familial' spot after tbe com- pulsory figures competition in the U.S. Fig\.tre stating cham- pionships Wednesday. - Allen trails defending champion Linda Fl'atianne by five points in the compulsory portion o! the pro1ram lhaHflunta 30 per- cent of the total score for the senior ladJes competition. Fratiann,e has a score ol 92.90 to 87 .90 for Allen in s~od place. Fratianne received seven ordinals (the first place ranking from all seven judges> while Allen picked up 17 ordinals. Aimee Kravette of Costa Mesa and skating for the Ice Capades club, is in 10th position with ?4.50 points. OTHER AREA SKATERS doing well ln tlie early competition wei:e Vicki DeVries of Newport Beach ln the novice ladies who was second with 13 ordinals and .... 53 points and. Tom Dickson. of Nei'l5()rt Beach in the junior men's category, tM leader. Fratianoe, 28, the senior ladJes cbam· pion every year since Dorothy Hamill ... 1 rN turned professional with the Olympic gold ~ medal ln 1976, was awarded first place on each of the three compulsory figures Wednesday. The figures are Judeed on bow accurately the skate.rs dupllcat.e_pie reqwred Joopg and'figure eights ln the Riverfront Coliseum lee. The Nortbridge resident turned in a routine that bad a racier look. There were more shoulder turns and more mature woman-llke movements . TAI BABILONIA and Randy Gardner, also of.California, are dominating the pairs competition. The duo is so much better than any o~ American couple that people are comparing them to the East Europeans, which in pairs' competition is the .highest compli- ment of all. Going into tonight's free-skating phase, worth 70 percent, Gardner and Babilonia have seven ordJnals and 79.70 points, far ahead of the runnersup, Sheryl F.ranks and Mi~jlael Botticelli (1.5 and 74.90) and Vicki Heasly and Robert Wagenborter (27 and 72.60). Anderson's 42 Fires Up SCC Southern Califomta Collegeo- tuned u2 for its Southern vislon NXI Dls rac showdown with Point Loma Fri- day night with a 109-101 non· conference basketball victory over visiting Redlands Wednes· day n11bt. Pauf Anderson was the big 1uo, scoring a career-high -62 points with a blazing IS of 24 fro~ the fjetd, 12-for-12 from the free throw line and a dozen as- sists. Randy Adams was also in· strumental in the victory, hittinc 12 of 19 from the field and plck· ing off 15 rebounds, while Mike eTswen<!er-RCl~ 11 ~ntrto -- the winner's totala. ........ 01'11 .. ". YoOk-I 0 2 Aeul I S 21 8-tt 1 J 17 Sly 11 J 24 9oYd l. !_ , OodHrd •• 12 ~kle l 0. w11111ms 1 o t ,...,, • J 10 '*'• 41 ,. tOt HllfHtN: 4Hll. s.cM c-. ""'' .... -----'-• ...... Anditrwft tt.wklftS Doody Fr-omm 11111.., Clo.,.... Totets .. ... .s. µ • 2 u 12 • 21 1S 1' G 1J l , 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a ts,.. TOie! foult! ........... SoGel ~ M; Fouled out: Goddord, P•ul IAodlaftdll; ToctwlkM f!M: Moms (SoOll Cel1t9tl. Kings ·s~ SI . · · . m.nPmg, llow-·kad LANDOVER, Md. <AP> - Washington# Capitals' Coach Danny Belisle Woul~ have b4:en satisfied with a tie,. buf bis team t:ra-me thl'OOglrwith-four goalsjp the fll'W period for a decisive 5-3 . victory over Lo$ Angeles. "I think we deserved tO win tonlgbt, but the.way tblngs were going, I wol.Jld haye been happy with a tie," Belisle' said foUow- iog Wednesday night's Natidnal Hockey League game. "With. the loss Tuesday ni~t. aa a coaeh you worry' about go- ing into a tail spin , but tonight'~ win prevents that." .. · "' The Capitals suffered a 7-4 losi to Detroit Tuesday night.. The Kings wasted little time ln scoring ~ Dave Taylor put in the first of bis two goals on a quick shot from the reft circle with only 57 seconds gone in the opening period. The Capitals tied the score in the second period with a Robert Picard power-play goal. Taylor gave the Kings another lead before Washington scored three unanswered goals by Picard, Greg Polls and Dennis Maruk in a span o( three minutes, giving tbe Capitals a two-goal lead. Los Angeles Coach Bob Berry said Walter, who ls making a run for rookie of the year honors, bas •'played very well against us. We don't see him that oft.en, but his statistics show he 's a very good hockey player." "I BA VE -'NOTH ER· new concept this rear that may prove as Interesting as the one 1D ·1972 that was copied by almost everybody. ·'We hav.e a different chassis design that b«skaJly µses less tubing and depends more ori tb'e eogii)e and p-ansmission for car struc· tlll'e. We'll alSo simplify the rear suspension. "I expect the car to do well at Pomona considering how quickly we are getting it dialed in. We stand a pretty good chance of winning but it will have to be an outstanding feat consld~rin,g the short ti.o)e we have bad the car.". · • JenkillS will long be' reol.imbered for his ·dri\'ing achievements but bis ~ ienius lies tn mechanical concepts -and i.DDOJaUons be has incorporate4 in bis c~. · . ·. ms l?ECBNIQU.ES have ~come the ''I was lD NASCAR racing in 1975 with. someone else as a partner and we were looking around to put a team together. But we were d<>- ing better in drag racing and went back to it. It's bardtosayilwewouldswitcb." BUT RIGHT NOW, all energies are con- centrated on. ~etting a new Camaro ready for the Pro Stobk Ciivision of the WintemaUonals at Pomona this ·weekend. and few will bet against Grumpy watching the action from sU-ietly a spectator5 standpoint. He picked up the name when be was in the retail business and says: "It was prob· ably because too many peo{>le were asking too many questions and I gave them a rather quick answer.•• . He bas capitalized on it ever since and ms Cfl'S are known as Grumpy's Toys, a trademark that ·is well·kno'WD in drag racing circles. . ·Surf .launches· DrillS .. .. . Managemem Optimistic as '79 season Nears . ' . By ERNIE CASTILLO Of !tie Dally Pti.t Si.ff Amidst claims by manage· qient that the team goal is Soc- cer Bowl. the California Sun soccer team begins official prac- tice today. "I'm fully convinced we can go all the way to Soccer Bowl." says owner Don· Burns, who has s helled out a lo t of money towards that end. The Surf. which was eliminated in the first round of the NASL playoffs last year, bas been busy acquiring players during the off season and even more trades are in the process. for Seattle, reportedly would like to move to Southern California and \he Soundlrs might accommodate bis wish - fora price. Seattle wants the Surf's Al Trost in exchange. Trost. consider ed one of the top. American soccer players. has captained the U.S . National Team. The top Surf scorer last season and tbe No. 2 career point-producer. Trost bas been with the franchise since its in· cepUon ln ~-Lows seven years ago. BOTH CIWRSKY and Trost have clauses in their contracts allowing them brveto any trade. The Surf will move its trairung camp to Palm Desert Feb. 12. returning to play the Moscow Dynamo Feb. 23 at Anaheim Stadium in an exhibition game. The team also bas an exhibition game at Cerritos Marett 2 against Vancouver to benefit the Amertcan Hearl Assn. CnJs.,, Southern THE SURF, WHICH will work out at La Palma Park. recently acquired a pair of high-scoring players. Jimmy Hinch and Dave Huson, to beef up a scoring at· tack lb.at was the team's weak· ness last year. ~~"'°'*" Hlncb was the 1976 ASL .m~t .._.,.,. 1 ' 1-.J valuable player before sttUng GoHers K eep -Eye-s t o the .S kies ~J~~r _ . " Aii9elff. ·h~-~laat. aeaaon .wilh c.o.DJ.ract dii;.. 1oi-1. :57. 2. wost11~. Ptcord u • .._,, faculties. Huson scored 28 goals 11:11. ~ties -Eoestr-. LA. 10:.w: Plc«d, for the Arcadia Shepherds ln W•sfl, 11 •• ~. WM, 11:41; W•'*· W•t.. So th Alrl I t tt·2•: r~. LA, tt:14. u ca as year. s.<onc1 ,..,lod -a. "'" .,. .. ,, rey10r ,. The SurfeilJ"ller bad acquired 1Gort119>, •:SS. Penanlos -Hon. LA. 1:2•; A 1 N Frank \Allt9, wn. n:s.. x e e u m a n n , r111rd "9r1ec1 -•· w1111•110to11. P1<ard 1s Krautbausen ·and Brian Joy llto'lfO, Stroll>. t:'9. s. W•tlllft9tOll, l'olfs • from San Diego IStl'Ols, Qwm111), •:SJ. 6. Wa"""9to11, MM\141 11 • ll-. Ulaftdtl, 6:4 1. t.os A1199tes, MallefY 6 IO!olllle, Wllllams), 10:40 ••. WHlllll9'0f\, w.11 ... 22 151 .... t., MaNltl, tt:24. "9NlllH -AOPS. LA. 1:J1; ~. lA (MJor,1 :17; l.aM, Wal, .... Jew. I : 17; Marvll. Wn.l:JS; Mallery, LA, U·4'. Sllots Oii tHI -Los A11119t01 ... 1-12-11. Wastllllf'Oll 1·11·1-22. Goallel -Los .Allgitles, LffMnt, Wa"""91M. ·-•-1 ...... GENERAL MANAGER Paul Deese baa also been working on a deal that would bring goalie Tony Cbursky into the fold . Cburaky. a three-year starter LAST YEAR'S CHAMPION, Pieklnc1 Your ·Favorite Sid Area ~=~~~~n~:~:~ir0~e~ e . . players lilted in the PGA media ~TIC CUNNINGIWF~~-°' .. ~,........, Wbat makes one aid area better than another? Wb1 do eome people 1war t.bat Nortbstar·•Taboe la tbe ONLY place to ski. while otbera inlllt llAIDIDOUI lloun. taln luupnme? m..tr taklq • clWr11lf Qp Nortbltar. bUt lbe amwen are nveaUnc nooetbelea. "Penanall7, J pnfft\ &paaw Vallq," lakt cme Staatord Uni~. atudent u the c!lalr llided up the mountain. "It's a lot bl11or. More runs, more variety. '11lat'• wtaat I Ike ... ' ..auld~e who are maktn1 their place," Nlc1 • JOllDI .,...... 1111>1Mtlllllllrdihw __Wrd or fourtli appearuee bin. aaow off lier panta as SM-stood in tbe wt= Gary Jacoblen and l>wllbt Une. •"J'be rum are nice and euy. '' Ne.U ~tied for third last year are both ed.ered and will be tee- lns off at the first bole la Friday's competition. . Wbf do many people cbooee Snow Sam· mlt Oftr Squaw Va0eJ? And wbJ do IOIDe aklera turn ap tbelr noses at ALL Calllonda reeorte and Jet oter to Oob'aclo eve17trip? . . "Snow Summit, Snow Valle1 and Wrlgbtwood. Thole are the only placea t uauaUy so," commented a blab 1cbool senior u be aUd forwud, lnPUlnl to come olf the A chair. ·•1 Uve~iD IUventde and I don't set a chance to 10 m•ch farther than that." Amons the Southern Cali· fornl• club pros playtna ba tbe tourDamellt are Willie Barber, Art ScbllllDI. Dave Sheff, Mu B1yb1, JohnQ1 Jacobs, Rafe Bott., Skip Whittet. Jim Powell, Paul Scodeller and Dave llcKM&iaa. TBDE AU Al llANY reMOmfac r..e: lnl a nlCll't u then are atlen. weekend tbe OeUJ Pilot qabled ..._ at ........_.laldllla,.....Hmpletaua&- tempttoftndafewoltbeUIW9l'I. It ii bJ no mew a r• 111Dtatlft nr-:n7, .me. tbe onlJ u.ten qwtioaed ..,.. · '-rbln'1 Jail IOIMthlq about Hort.ta.tar tbat noae ot tbe otber areu bave,,. Mid a part-time aki l.Dltndor. ''Tbe employeem are muda Dlc:er. mucb more belpt\d. •saswooo 18 THE 81:8'1' plac. by far," said one man in hll early 20I, an employee ol a car "'8tal company. ''Tbey atw.,. 114 1D01"t &D01' 'lP tben, and tH '°'""" -..... lot .... than Ul1 p&aee•." . • •'Ski Incline la probeb!.J mJ fnoti~ •O&E aUNS, N'ICEa employees, better IDOW, ealMr ~ cloMr locaUon. Eich 1kier cboM a amerent retort fOf' a dlf. fereat reuoa. We mJcbl J•t u eull.r Uft beard Hien ...._ l'9IOi1i beta• bl terraln, ele••tkJD, ....UcaJ drop, number ol llfta, (lee .. All&A, ...... ) TBS TOVaNA•ENT la allOlllCINd b7 tbl SU Club, _. proceed• 1otn1 to Hoac Memorial lbpttal. Paw Salata ii ch&lrman of tbe event. .. / ct I, I '· t p I, I '" ... -· ' -------...-..-.......:el ----... Ce •I die ... ____ _ Rurmlna. back Larry Ceoella, a 33-year-old Cree agent hoping be can latch on with another NFL team next season, wbeo asked what be bas been doing late- ly: "Sitting here wontierl.ng about wbeo to plant tbe corn . . . and bow not to be picking it when it comes up in the ran. I'm top young for that ... WillNI .. Ult• Sot1le• P1qt Portla•d Seattle's Gus Willlams scored 23 points, in· m eluding a layup with 23 seconds left, to seal tbe SuperSooics' llS-112 National Basketball Assn. victory over Portland . . . Paul Westphal, Waller Dam and AJvaa Adams combined for 78 points as tbe Phoenix Suns tprned back Milwaukee, 123·ll8 ... Lloya Free scored 2S points and Swen Nater cont.rlbuted six free throws in the fourth 'Quarter as the San Diego Clip- pers scored a 112-104 victory over the New Jersey Nets . . A layup by Clif- ford Ray in the last second of play earned the Golden State Warriors a 108-106 comeback victory over the Philadelphia 76ers . . . Ced.rte Maxwell pumped in 28 points to lead the Boston Celtics to a 119-102 triµmph over tbe Houston Rockets . . . .-oho Drew scored 31 points and Eddie Johnson added 28 as the Atlanta Hawks buried the Kansas City Kings lJ0.118 ... Bob McAdoo wuTPHAL scored 34 .points as the New York Knicks broke loose in the final 14 'minutes to defeat the Detroit Pistons 108-86 . . . Marvin Bames has been sus- pended for two games for his latest absence with the Boston Celtics. . . The Atlanta Hawks traded No. 1 draft ~hoice Butch Lee to the Cleveland Cavaliers in excha nge for Terry Furlow. . "· Slnlti Slatds DOIOll Pet191da•, 4·J ~· Montreal's Canad lens continued their ~ stra ngle. hold on the No rris Division lead in Na-, tional Hockey League action Wednesday as Sten Sbatt scored a pair of goals and added an assist to lead the Canad.lens to a 4-1 vtctory over the Pltts~urgh Penguins . Pe«er McNab's -2Sth goal of the year. a five-foot shot late in the second period, lifted Boston into a 2·2 tie with the Chicago Black Hawks . . . Left wing John 'Anderson scered two third-period goals and Darrvl SlttJer reached the 20-goal plateau for the seventh straight year as Toronto coasted to a 5-1 triumph over the St. Louis Blues . . . Bobby Lalonde, Gay Choulnard and Bob MacMUlln led a balanced effort as the Atlanta Flames defeated the slumping Buffalo Sabres S-.2 . . . Rookie Merlin MallnowskJ scored at 13:30 or the third period to give Celorado a S-1 lead, then the Rockies held on for a S-4 victory over the New York Rangers. No Seeeat tor Borg at Rie,..ond Bjorn Borg breezed to victory in his second-·• round match of the Richmond Tennis Classic in ~ Virginia Wednesday, ba rely working·up a sweat ~ while ousting Russell Simpson. 6-1,. 6-2, in SO minutes. In other matches Pat DuPre defeated 'Marty Riessen, 3-6, 7-6, 8-6, 6-2 and Tom Wilkison surprised Cor- rado Barazzutti, 6-3, 6·4 . . . Kerry Reid ,beat Pam Teeguarden, 2·6, 7-5. 7-6 in a women's pro tournament in Chicago. Three other seeded players were less fortunate, as Wendy Turnbull lost to Marise Kruger, 6-4, 4-6, 6·2; Ann Kiyomura fell to Greer Stevens, 6-4, ~-3; and Sue Barker lost to Virginia Ruzici, 6· 1, 6·3 . . . Johan Krlef defeated Phil Dent, 6-3, 6-0, in. opening action .$)f the Fairfield Bay TennJs Classic at North Little Rock. Earlier, Butch Walts defeated Chris Freyss, 6-0, 6-3. · ' . IJtala'• Pf•• to Talk 1t1,Ja VS€ OTHER SPORTS -USC bas asked and been given permission to talk to Utah basketball coach Jerry Plm111 a bout the head position at. the Paclfic·lO Confer'!nce school Amie Ferrin, Utah athletic director, said Wednes- day. . '.Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner A.J. f'oyt re- signed Wednesday as a direetor of Championship Auto Rac- ing Teams and said be would rejoin the U.S. Auto Club ... Rain Wednesday for~ at least a one-day delay in the beginning or the 19th annual Winternationals drag races at the LA County FaJrgrounds ... Hungary's Andrea Matay, ~~~~~~~-~n~~~=:!::~~~:~~~~TRACK/BASKETBALL . •1 EaNJt: CA.STllLO Of-Deity "" ..... INGLEWOOD -t 'ewrunneneverrunu taat on an lndoor track u they do outdoors. Bur Natt Blaty, a compact senior at Marlu ffttb,aeefnajustrtihttortheboardl. ~·-·IM.trr111t :'f 11 two-mjlet.wo weea.aao at lb Sunk1at lnvltaUonal in Loe Ancelet, t5 ·et-conda taster Chan hto outdoor beat. • rrtday, he'll be b1ttln1 the boards a1ain, lhla Ume •CllMt lhe cream of California'• prep dlatance runners in the junior two mile ..&l.J.benmt&.tndool'Ga~ . Tbe race at tbe Forum bu alto attract. Rooo. tbe 1t'7I MU athlete ol tbe year who ed Cbuet Alauma ol JUa!to and Paul Med· Ht four world recordl at vll')1q dla- vtn of.Lot Anaea... botb ol 1Wbom are sub-t.ancesloupanolUw..Ulutapriq. nlne miDu&e lwo-mllen. Al.lo eatend la UC II te 1111 .... Wbo b Mlaaioa VleJo'• Jeff Vandereema. Wbo nn ftllil~ '°°3J:1f:r f:., :doc;..-:e. U: a 4:18.t mile at-tbe 811nkttt meet. MarC\18 u11on, Is entered .tn botb tbe Iona Clark ol~~~Boblrtl~:!"~~~,,_. ........ -tutn.-...,.J.-..eo..yud. a.b.Tee•••te Dte,o. rry Greer la entered lo tbe open mile, UC Irvine'• Dave Daniela wW run a two-but only u a rabbit for UCl craduete .mUe race lo the nmes meet but aaaloat Steve Scott and world record bolder John much fatter competition. He'• entered ln Walker. tie open event wblcb bu attracted Henry The meet begtns ~t 7:80 . .. .-. ........ ._ ..... ...-....... ---~~---·-~---.._. .... _.. .... .a..•m--....... -.._... ___ ...,.._'"-•I ARMED FORCES -It's a free ball and everybod~'s V'J· ing fo r it in Wednesday night's Sunset League game between Huntington --Beach and Marina. From left, the contestants are Huntington Beach's Rico Thompson and Jim Eldridge, Marina's Kevin Olson and the ·Oilers' ,Pierre Ayala. 'HB Sizzl,ea Sky-high Oilers . - Upset Marina .. .... . By llOWAllD L. llANDY Ford was the only p9Iaon_in ._ 0t • o.11y ~'"•"'._.. • the gym who said· be saw ~ lt was a ~-high Huntington ball go through the basket. ll Beach High School basketball came on a shot by Ri.c o team that took the floor Wednes· Thompson wbo was fouled in the day night to face tbe highly-act of sbooting and should have regarded Marina Vikings. bad a pair of charity tosses. And when the fin~l score was Instead. be got ll field goal and ~ated~-~ Huntington Beach missed the free throw. . Olien niaq a-6:f.60Ui>se Vlctory-- bver tbe ·visiting Vikings in .. THAT WASN'T WHAT beat Sunaet Lea~ play. . us." Popovich said after the Marina e~red the game as game "Byt it wo uld have --1.ue-~------.m.Qz:ange CcM.&Aty ~han1ed tl\.-.wbol tnt-eR¥---:.--__,. '.and seventh in the Southern Sec-there at the end. lion ClF 4-A pol~. The Vlkes baa ·'Give Huntington Beach won seven straight and took a credit. 'Ibey did an excellent job 16-2 recoTd into the game. The and they hustled all over the' loss leaves them at 4-1 ln league, floor and pl ayed well. tied wi1h Newport Harbor. The "We didn't handle the ball • Oilers are 3-2. very well against their press and The Oilers came charging out we b a d two bad s ho oting with a tight pressing zone de-streaks. Even at tbat we were fenae and some accurate shoot-·· able to come back ·and get the ing while the Vikings were hit-lead but then we made a couple ting a couple of cold streaks . of t urnovers and fell behind MARINA WAS DOWN by 11 at' one point in the first half and down by 10 for the final three minutes or the third stanza and the first two of the final penod as the teams exchanged baskets. Coach Steve Popovich's Vikes came roaring back each time. taking the lead at ha lftime. 32-31. but never getting closer than two in the waning minutes of play. , While it made no di!Cerence in the final score. referee Rocky Ford gave the Oilers a "gift" basket in the early going that could have touched off a con- troversy in a one or two point game. again." . Huntington Beach Coach Roy Miller was happy with the vie· tory. ··we needed that one," he s aid. ''When we played them before, Rico didn't play. At that time. l felt we matched up pret· ty well with them. "WE RAVE A GOOD inside game when we are on and we worked ..all week on screening them out and off the boards. "Our kids just played their hearts out. We had our backs against the wall a·nd when that happens, you will fight. bite and Irick-anything to win. We were sky-high for this one." Ocean View Breezes; MD Loses Sailors Edge FV, Tie for Top Spot Curt Woote n, Hu ntington Beach's cent.er. learned earlier in the day that be had a stress fractl,ll'e of a small bone in his ankle. It bad been diagnosed as a s prain but he had the ankle taped and played despite the pain. "TBIS WAS A BIG GAME for him and he fo rgot about it, .. Mille r said. "It Is extremely painful and be came down on it wrong In.the, third quarter when .. we took hitn out but he had it re - taped and c~me back." Newport Harbor High 's Sailors have moved back into a Ocean View H.igh's Seahawks tie for first place in the Sunset re main one game off Katella League basketball . race follow- Hlgh's pace in Empire Leagqe Ing Wednesday night's 43·42 de· basketba ll warfare following cision over defending champion Wednesday night's 65-52 triumph "Fountain Valley in the win.Qi ' over host Cypress . · gym. Mater Del, however, fell into a Also a winner wQs Edis three-way Ue for first place in which put the stops to h the Angelus League as Bishop Westminster, 51-44. Montgomery kept the pressure Newport Harbor got rich on throughout in taking a 68-60 be hind the shooting of Jon decision on the winner's court. ' * * * Wayne Carlander was the. key E"-1111 ............ ,.,., .to Ocean View's triumph, scor-Kene"'e"' •: ~ ': M<wi1ti.-"" • ing 22 points with an ll·for-14 M<Oon•kl ' • 1• wet1i~ : ! ,: performance from the field. RH11•11 J 0 ' t. Pen.,. 1 o • Carlander also dominated the =~ ; : 1; ;: ! : : boards, taking 14 caroms. H•i. o o o 0r1t11ttt , 2 • Reserve Frank Waters came ~~rs ~ ~ : PMioe • o o o off the bench and was credited Lotttleot o o o ouu o o o with five assists. Ocean View Tows '' 15 5' K :::.t 1~ 1: ~ play ed its game with board sar...,o.-n strength showing' through with a ~:~1M.., ': 1: 1: r.::! 49-33 edge over Cypress. To"'' louts Edt'°" ''· Wn tm11111.,. 11; ........, Sal Gaytan and John Saunders OUI: Tipton <Wn11m1M ... 1. scored 2S and 16 for Mater Del. .,_...v • ...., ttti ,. •• ,.,....._ ,.,, but Bis hop Montgomery's "" • "" • veteran quint.et had four players ~!~~·:' ; : : ~=en j ~ 'c: in double figures and never E111M111e•-• 1 o , ea1c1we11 s a " Sweek (20 points) and tbe re- bound i o g of Swe ek Coine 'caroms ) and Bruce Caldwell (Seven rebounds, 13 points r. The Sailors bad a seemingly comfortable edge at 39-32. but a pair of three-point plays and A slam duhk by Chet Fields cot the Newport margin to one point. And w1tb six seconds to go the aUors blew a one-and-one op· tunity at the line and the rons of Fountain Valley got off a 10-footer as time expired. only to see the baU bounce ofr the rim. Ed is on and Wes.tminst e r slugged it out in an icy issue which saw• the winners conhect on 18. of 52 (34 percent>. Thompson was the catalyst for the Oilers in the early going. making three steals in quick s uccession as Huntington Beach moved in front. 18-11 with 12 un- answered points. ~ .... 16 .. """' ) I I Tleut OllOI' Ht.O.n,.ielt D•wM>ft l<en0n ~¥•Y Nt tlO<'I To"'!\ • , 10 • 0 12 l ' ' • 4 l2 ) • 10 ' 0 , 14 17 60 HWllll..,... llHctt It.JI Waote1> A.vet• ore"" EldTldV• Tltolnp- Paqn•MJh .. It '" \ t n · 1 0 6 I II 1 f • 11 b 2 ,, • 1 " n u w 5<•• lllf o....wn It 10 1 t1-4JO fl IJ 19 I•~ Prep Swimming Results .. ._. .. _ '"· l"-Wlll .,,.,i.," JOO,,,..,..., ,.. .. y-1 N--1 Merbor ,.,. t 100 trw-t, Unc0l1> IHHl 1 4t.1; 1 wm .. m, INHI 1'.U.1; J. Elder !FVI l :SJ.1. lOO tndl>-1. H...,.ltot> INMI J.0$.,; J. 0.vts (NM t t:Ot.l; 3 n sa.11IFV!1 16.J so frff-1 JoltftM>n (FVI NICl\oll (l'VI n .•. 2. f'vltewnt INH)t3.J;3. Vk ll"Vl24.4. 100 fly-I. Devis (NH) SU, 2. Moffet (NH) _,..,., N....ttn9'0ft Sffclt 11 200 m.<11~ .. "'t•V I MUfllln9101> 8e.o<I\ I ~1 ... JOO lrH 1 .. IKlllO<'I IM8t I H •. 1 ,.UQtnl (M l t. 02.», ]. Mor.otto IMI t·OJ.~ JOO lftCI0-1 ~twetl IH8l t 1& SI: t. ~noy (M l 2·1111: l Umpf>enourlH81? ,, '3 so ·~" l Wlllte IM) ,~ °' , Winfrey tMI 14.~: 3 HU!Jht' (H8 t 24.e.. Otv11>9-I Cot• (H8 1. 7 Lul>cllen•o (Mt. J ---24 • ...eqt.Wed .the. WfJPleD~ ~dti~oo.!.l!Jg_h jj!J!l.JU'S.,COrd ..!?!. 6-4~" in Budapest Wednesday ... four veteran Lea '"Zlies averaged 231for12 games to move into tM fir.st round lead of a pro bowling tourney in San Antonio, TeX} ~ -'flailed.----~ ~-flfl!IL --J .O DooQk, 0-) H•rlow-3 o ' Lln•kY 1 o , ,11.A1.l.Gcleo.(NMU ot.. -- 100 f,...-1. "'°4ttVl!ftt (NH ! JO.I; t. Hl"'t01$ (l"VI 'U; :I. Jone\ O>IHI SU. t~CMt.----· ------'- .... - T~•.U. Following are the major sports event' on television tonight. Ratings are: ./ ./ ./ ./excellent; ./ .f .f worth watching; .f ./ fa Jr ; .f forget It. · , {s2) • p.m., Ch•n!'•' &2 ./ ./ ... • Mei ... Del( .. ) llth• ... , .. -,, . HutJCNrd t O 4 StrMt o O o ( .. I Stotl I 0 2 o.clcllt 0 0 0 S.und@n Sll•Mon GaYl•I' Cook PH body S<ltultr llretttuu Tot•ls ,, It. ' , 16 2 1 • sewald • 7 U Or.VO 0 I I LKk 2 0 4 Oont•IM 2 2 • C.r•oll I 0 2 a.i .... en U I~ .0 Tol•lt $C-llly0..1Wn " " '" 4 ' tt l ' 10 ' • n l 0 6 1 4 II 0 0 0 2lt,. .. Meter Del u • 11 22-60 111"'°11 Moflt9dn* y u u 10 26-.a Totel fOUls Met.,. o.t 20. BIM!oo Mott100t•4rv II: l'ooilecl out Seund9rs l,._..•r O.tl, Gonro!llft ""l>OP Moftl9omervl, TKhnlut tout. S.W.kl 181sll0tl MOiilto(NI ,), T ot.tt tt 0 '2 TOl•ls tc."ehO..~ " 7 4J P'OUftttl" VtltMY 11 12 I 10-42 Newport HMW • u 10 10-4 Tot•I IOUll : "OVfllt lll V•li., 16, Newport H•r110r t ; ,...._ out· None; TeC111tlcat fevl; 11.ule!ICI (~ Vttti.,1. COLLEGE BASKETBALL: ca1 State Fullerton at Utah State. 0c .... v1ew 1u 1 Announcers: Eddie Alexander and Roman Gabriel. ""~ 'r ~ "! Cy ..... (ft) ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 t '-• 1 2 tJCI Plays San Jose_ C.rlendW II 0 n Utah State wlll be attempting to stay In the PCAA race HHkt,,.._., 2 ' ' with a victory at home against conference IHdlng Fulter1on. ~--~ ~ 1 : Wlnlems Geltlns CMGw•ll SefWlof' Mel ..... HtnMM\' Or~ SAN JOSE -UC Irvine'• buletball team won 't acape the PCAA Coach Bobby Dye's Fullerton Titans ar'a two o-mu. In frOlllt "•11111o111 1 1 1 of second place Utah State with a 6.() coofw.efKA...l:flCOtCL ---:-1-· .. •.;z, . ~ : • ' ' !l 0 0 6 0 • -cellar-U: h triu btt• tooi1bt. But the Ant.. eatera can pick up aoft\e last' place com· pany by beattn• San Joie State on the Spartana• bome'cou.rt. lCelth McDonald (17.8) and Brian Jackson (17.0) lead weten t 1 • Utah State'ln overall scoring with Dean Hunger the Aggies' leader In the conference with an 18.0 mark. Mike Niies, catvln Roberts and Kevin Heenan teed Fullerton. 1Ml1(9"11t ~...-..PW ....... OweM 1 0 4 ' 2 4 20 u n I p.m., Chen~I 5 ./ ./ ./ COLLIEO• •ASK•T•ALL: UCLA at Orevon. AN-ICWS:-Mlke Wlllden and P9tt Newell. UCL.A's Bruins, tied for the Paclflc·10 lead with USC, wtll be facing the first of the Or990n university teams tonight. O.Vld Greenwoodt the fifth leadl"9 scorer In Bruin his-tory, leeds UCL.A.TN Bruins are flft~anked In the nation. RADIO: Basket~ll -C.I State Fulferton at Uteh Statl 6 p.m1, ICWRM ('U10). UftlWf'lltv of PllCfflc et Lent ..... St4te, 1:05 p.m.1 KfrOX (93.5 t:M>. UCLA et °'=1 ': 10 p.m., l<MPC mu>. FNCI Hessler, BobStelnbrlnck r • .. Tetelt • ft t "5 'Towlt ._..,,.......,. Ocffn vi.. 1' D n ,,_. C'tJll'9te • 10 • w ,..,... TOlel "'1111 ~View '7, ~ 1tt ~ out: NHltftWeft !OcMll View), Gr....- (Cy-u), "--!.-e Confirmed UCI , comint oft ~ • 1tr.on1 performancH GULF SHORES, Ala. (AP) -a1alDaL PCAA leader Police Chief James Maplet laid Cal State 11\allerton, la today lab telts bave conflrmed CM In conference play, tbat coc.me WU the IUbe~ 4-11ODUM1911' aDd l·S planted on tbe car of a Cautorida oa UM road. San JON aportawriterwbocamebenttoln-State, wblcb 1tunned ...............Uller&..ltablll'~ ...... .._.UIM._,~..,.......,- llaplel Nici aa lnveeU1at1on II 101.-. IMt WMk, la 14 eoaUnulnlandt.berebanbeen~ lD CODI~ &Del •·14 an .. tl. o•erall. · soo free-t. H•rTt-. INHI •·s1.o; t. Wllll•"'• (NH 1 S:OU ; a. Eldtr (FVl S·03.0. 100 tledl-1. Uncot11 (NH! 51.•; t. "-INHI JI, t; J. S.v-ll'V I I :00,0. 100 br'Nst-1. ~ INH I !:OS.I ; t . 9erWtton (NHI t:C&l : ),JOltMIOrt (P'Vl 1:10.S arr.. ....-,-1. ~Harbor J:.11.t. 100 Uy-I "-(Ml St'°; 2 Jester (Mt !&ll: J, P•"t' 0 4811'00,'7. . · 100 fr 1 wtlU (M l 51.71; t . M<OtYM IMI ' 51:221 J. l40Q!w1 (Hll ~.... ' JOO ,,... 1 .. ad!~ <Mi l ''IJ ... : t. Wlftttn . IMI S:41_.., J. Outnof>ez tM8 1 S.s.:J 7'. 100 11«.k-I Wei.-t IH8• I 01 ... 2. Metloy (M I I 06 03, J UtnPile_,r (Ml I 1 0. 01, 100 llf'eii.t I ~ ... h IH8 1 L01.0S; 2. YM !Ml 1 ·1?~.J.Wftll (Hlll l IH _, ,,.. r9trt-4 Me,.._. l ... 04. r BA8KETBAL.L I HORSE AACINO • ~· . Pirates OCC Sinks Cerritos; Fullerton Loses 8J '6flN 8£V ANO But unlike Saturday, Orgill and said GWil, "I'd like to t.Hlnk we 're r Alamitos, SanJa Anita Results ••OelffNllJa.tt Akin pmetrated better, threw lnprettyaoodpoailioo,butalotol Needlna a 1tront victory crisper passes and looked for teama are rtcbt there with us. ~··••INY Loa Alamltoa J)erformance to revitalize the their abota more. AD)'tbinaiapoalble." •• ,. .......... _...,.....,....., Or~ "O)Ut bnntbell teem. ..s -A-:;ttlt w,iw..· ~ 16!• Ftm r-..wll\ ~ !P9rnerl Jl.lltO. noo. "'" .......---ft"' •• ,,..._.~a.a..t;-1 ...... H .._,,, lbe ratas feasted on vtsltins TBE P IRATES, who fed not likely happen ll Orgill and ~oe;uUK'9 t>l01.-.-..o. C.rrtto. Wednesday night u ll It throughout most or the game; Akin stay true to their.vow. $KoM ,~-••11\11 IPffnerl u o. ,,.,, • was a seven-tOU.ne meal. stJll needed an ~rt-to~ , .. , o..ren..., rr-.. 1uo.'20: PMKt S b he -81 f Ace (MytietlUO. parked Y l guan,1 ay o out the first half an take a 35-32 Ot-.e c.. ._1 n.in1 reQ-lllll 1~,. 11411• uo, uo; Tl'\lly I Akin and Ray Org 1. and advantage at the intermission. .. ft • wu1 oo <LlfNml 11.10, 1.00: wre11 ... " ~v e DI YI ormve Ttbt• -""'1T1"luMe!!"'tPiil'luil' ... rtibell!!!Sil'"ttlleiflf"'ftt"tlll!t--tt-111111e1-= I 0 ~ I I )1.AO;U•ll.Kle .,..)1Mtld.l.J0. 11.1~.l!~~~~~~~~e~u~m~a~~nn. the for the second ball as 0r.ft11 n.111e • 2 ,. .... o o o ,,_,,. "*' ~"'U...---... --+--t ' ·= ~ 2$: ~~ Ol9ftCa IH--11UO,1.lltO; Prfn Pirltet re un rom uwidllf"'llAf Attrr!l!brt!d'~ill!"--s.~ ............... ..._J,1...aj~,,-::::.--r · ..... ~,~1·~;~--~~~~-·M""""IMll-"t~•~----.................... _... ......... ._. ....... -:ficeat o.11y ~.,.......,., ....nc11 o•o-n loll tut Saturday to Santa Ana first three baskets to give them ~· 1 , • Alllft "' • 10 Flml r--Thlnlt IMMY CT1'Mwr•11uo, • .o, by dlaposink of Cerritos. 86-74. a nine. porn t cu s b I 011. Tb e Wr..... , 0 ' Price 0 , 0 UO; ,.,.,., ... IB«'dl 14 00, 12.lltO; a--Te margin stayed between 8·10 Tot.1• n 10 74 HelH'MIWI 1 , 1• · <Bnlt*,>.ue;u•,..,_ '"'111 "1c1•u.oo. M<(llnnl(ti I 4-6 Sllffll r--4N C..t 81rd CBanUI 12AO, 3.IO, THE WIN SNAPPED a nlne· paiota until the eod despite the Toun 3',. • 2.AO; ..... EllMH'-<My ... > 3.00. uo:Jet 0uc11 game losing streak against the fact' Cerritos shot a sizdinJ SO-Hetnlme!Or-.o.ett,,>s..n. "' 1~12.a Falcons and, coupled .wttb Mt. percent (32··53> for the game. ..!4:.':'~111~':~2t!;.1~'•"oe CN•t "' •• :;-e=.:;~~~r .If ... ~~·;•,::: :·:: San Antonio's 63·62 upset or The Pirates also s hot well (57. * *. -. .E~ -((.rdOle) UO; "·-... 11 Fulle'rt.on, put the Pirates back pe rcent). but the difference ...,:19':~K.-Midl!19MAdnnce 1c..rc10a1u o, aJone atop the South Coast Con· came at the boards where they -~COASTCONl'uu•c• •60.1.40;M<.0otv~11>erner••.40.3.00:&oun ference staoaings with a 5·1. outrebounded the Falcons 32·16. a..e.~ o-.., ... L Ma<11 1M1tcN411>00. rd ~ NI""' rKe-W!Clle Nelson l~tl 14-«I. 7 20. reco . OrM>99 CMs1 s 1 " • , oo. ~ Oeddv cw .. _, •.eo. uo: --"We came back and played TIMMONS SUPPLIED the ~f.t.,,,,.,.,Anb>!o ; ~ :t ~ Suclf'tmo 1Ben11s1 11.60; is met• 11~11 P""' well," said OCC Coach Tandy bulk or the rebott0ding as be re· s.meA... 1 1 u 11 ~l:t~.on Cillis, re(erring to the team's corded 11 rebounds to go with &rou"-' 1 ' 11 " Pb ' a} rf f )l ' Cffrlt~ 7 4 10 10 ys1c pe ormaoce o oWtDg bis 11 points. Neumann added 59'1 oi..-MeW 1 • u '° tbe Santa Ana loss. "I thought ' six boards and 16 points. .........,..s-- we sbot super and so did they With round one of ~onfereoce ~~==·~':!!.'1 1,,.. .. ,..:.,-;:,.;: a4mfftl1111 (Cerritos). We were looking to j>lay completed, the Pirates no.w S.nteAN'1.Grownot1US First r--5ort119 0..r (S.llU••' 1000, fOO. be more of a threat tonight." baveaw~koffbeforehc>Sfl""l't!t. -w • ... ..,...~ uo:-Se<m~~~UIO...lAO. Joey ""w.M6 Mt Seti..,_..c0r-.eou1 9 1on ... 1t020 · Vowing prior to t be game SAC Wednesday. t. 5-fM An .. I °'"''°' 's.cOftd r.c._F•to,•'• Prln<eH IB•llH¥1 • never to have another off night "We are where.we need to be." Groumoritacs.n Dle90¥e~ 1uo, •.oo. uo: Se<m we1c11 IPln<•Y> s...o,4.AO the rest of the season, Or~· and 1w1111e11 lfl0dri9Uf1> uo. S2 cs.11v doutlla 11.a1 P11id•1lO. · ·bis backcourt tea mm ale • put Third r....-<M Leur• IM<Harvuotl t.IO. S IO onadazz.lingoffeo.sivedisplay. Ti • Ti F · lJO: .s11oro cRocir•vue•> is.60. 11 .0: A,.,,. t e • 0uerrerol~1 •eo T HE DYNAMIC Duo C'Om· n ons op 0 Fovrtll r~ Flm PrlfMr 15-... I lt60. • ' 1.20, UO; I.,., ~ICMWHI S 20,A..20. a....:. bined for 46 P<>ints with 32 ol 1r.e 0eu ,__,vue,110 60. b · in tb db-"' -Flftll r~ .... Ruter lC«mmJ J4.IO, 1000. ~~~r;~~~~~~~~~~;+,;;;!j~~~~~~-..;,l ;?~~!e~co~.m~1n~g~~~ee~~~e~·f°::1n~o~i~ni;"~ii.'--1~~s:~~-Ea~unia F erncso·!"'c~~~,~-"!'~~:=:!r'~~ !E..:.i.~~~-t;f~~ take another night o • re1 ra · ., ·.-~..-. .... --------10IJdl>.~«aJIO«Wtt Ed 1~me•er> s.eo. • '°· e d Orgill, who finished hh . ' . 3 oo: Tr.oer s.m cMc<¥nwin •. • ,.,. "" night's work with SiX aSSlSls_and "':'V:~or:'~Terruto'i O<um CM<H•rtJWI 26 points, 18 coming in the Mission Viejo High's Diablos seven of nine aUempts from the uo. , . ..o. uo: v11r;119·~ Joy''°'.,.,..,, uo. uo. SeCODd half 00 9 Of 12 shooting took a giant Stride toward the fieJd in scoring 14 pbinls. Metlu•'i Pt1 l~sl 3 20: IS eucl• 11-11 pe•d fromtbefloor. · South Coast League basketball ~.._.u.s1 ~tr-v.eteyc'11 39 :'1Qt1111rece-£1oqueftt IPl 1 iw:•v•• . .o.uo.uo. Santa Anita Rehound Speda lis t "I think it's good that we lost championship w~-esday night .. ". .. " '-Hand 0-1$110e1N11¥1s.oo.3.20; ···-Mom because we realized we can be as they opened ;'a two-game ~=-~ ! :! =:..o ~ ! :! ·c;:~!~.:_uo~ Mofley,,.., 1Toro1 "'°· beaten," added Akin. the team bulge in the· l)eague standings. J.uul 2 1 • 8,..,..,t , 111 Ho, 4 20: .>ecque11ne cPliw:rt> ua. 3 20 Sllv Huntington Beach High's Curt Wooten (54) does his lhing -which is grabbing rebounds -in Wednesday night's Sunset League basketball game against Marina. Kevin Olson of Ma rina (right) tries to tip it away while Pierre Ayala looks on. Huntington Beach won, 63-60. See story, Page 8 ·2. captain who finished with seven with a 41.33 d~ision over host M<DoNld o 1 1 ScllUllert 1 o 2 T•~.'::c~~::~.U••ec••<>-n "oc1'~00 assista and 20 points. "Nobody in Dana HillB. :!:,,~ ~ ~ ! ?.!:...o. ~ ~·: this conference Is bad . .. . Moving into ~fff>nd place tie B¥11•r"" o t 1 lbey'u all good." with Dana s was San ~~; ; ! ! Tearing a page from Santa Clemente. Which J>Ut aside visit· c.;,,.., ' o , Ana's play book. Cerritos played ing Laguna Hills, 62-44, while Tot•is 1~s~~ a 3-2 zone for most or the game. Capistrano Valley also claimed U9UN ee.c11 " 20 1s s-ss ' a share of second place with a c.;'!~~-i;o~:~~ ... ee.c~' u~ c!~h~~ E I Rall P M' ~7;~h~n ov~r visiting Laguna ~:!:'.:.C::~..,::·1=~ 11Ht111. ast esa The key struggle was.at Dana U.-Mllb .. 1 s..~1u1 ag es . y . · Hills where Mission Viejo solved a19Mt ': ~ ~ ee"' ~ ~ ~ Dana Hills' ·height across . the e.1i.y 2 1 s H~oo 3 o • front line with a .steady detense g:,~ ~ ~ : :!v.111 ~ ~ ~ t h a t c om m i tt e d o n l y s i x '-" • l 1 • MMI• o o o C del M T -I-;;;. · J • personal fouls. !'::r ~ : ~ :,.~;, ~ ~ ,: OTO~ OT J. mmp~8 rvilW Mission Viejo's defense held ,,,,,_ o ·o o ~" o o o · . Esta ncia High 's Sea View.-- ..League-leading Eagles survived• a Costa Mesa ambush· Wednes· day night and escaped with a S0-·48 basketball decision to maintain a one-game margin over Corona del Mar Corona del Mar, meanwhile. was breezing t.o a 78-46 dedsion . over visiting Irvine, wbi·le El Toro was forced into overtime before taking a 58-52 ve rdict from invading University. COSTA MESA llAD a 48--47 lead and the ball with 16 seconds to go, but an offensive foul gave the Eagles the ball and Craig Keup scored a clutch free throw to even the count at 48. Keup's second shot missed, but E stancia rebounded and with seven seconds to go Steve Van Horn stepped to the free throw line and conne<:ted on both ends of a one-and-one situation to make it 56-48. Mesa got one last chance, but tossed it away with five ~econds remaining. BOTHTEAMS FOUGHTitoul with 2·3 zones and Mesa began to freeze the ball with 4: 00 left and a 48-47 lead, only to see it slip away with the offensive foul away from the ball that gave the Eagles the edge needed to turn it around. Dana Hills' Mike Samuels to ;,-:-,; ~ ,! e ight points. while Pete w.-1 o 2 DeCasas, the leading scorer in T .... is " • " T~ • • ., SC..lrl~ the league, netted 17 to lead Mis· Ut9VMHllls 12 10 1 ts-4' sion Viejo. SM c1e~ n '° 21 "-41 Ross Sutton was the big noise ,,!~:'~cs'.!!:'~~~~1s; at San Clemente as the 6·2 senior 11i11i.u1e1tV1ete <•H o.u .... tsa> Sao Clemente forward turned "".. .. "• Laguna Hills inside out with a B•1ts1< 2 o ' s.-11 3 1 • Rotem 3 1 • .i-s 1 1 s season-high 26 points, thanks to o.c..ses • s 11 Andrews 2 o ' a 12-for-17 performance from the F•k "' , 1 ' D'OoflMll ~ o 10 rl.eld. . HvffmMI l 2 t Kr'9tt 0 0 0 BeNdla o o o SmYltl O O O Sutton also had eight or San HMl'l•M 0 0 0 Metlllev , 0 • Clemente's 16 steals during the Tot••s is 11 " To1•11 u 1 33 ~ .. ~ game. MlssloftVJeJo • •• 11 .,..., R ieb Evans was Laguna ~~:.':U.s: Mission v1e.; ,,• o~. ~111~ Saddlehack Romps Dave Koehler and Rich Kin· dorf led the Corona del Mar al· tack with 18 and 14 points, while the El Toro victory in overtime eam~oo the heels or two buckets from Matt Simpson ,and three free throws by Mark Walker. .,,,,..,. 1461 c;.,_ .. -"'' Brae.h's bright spot, making Fou>Hout:None. E agles Rated Fifth SAN BERNARDINO -Sad· dlPback CoJlege's Gauchos kept pace with co-leader Riverside in the Mission Conference basket· ball race Wednesday night with a 110·93 victory over host San. Bernardino Valley College. Kevin Ma gee was Sad· dleback's major weapon with 27 points on 11 or 22 from the floor and 14 rebounds, but he had a lot of help in the form of Randy Whieldoo and Mike Howard. Whieldod scored 18 of hls 22 points in the first half and Howard connected on 8 or 11 and a pair or free throws for 18 points. Saddleback bit 51 percent Run Set for UCI from the field as a team and was up by 20 points in the second half. San Bernardino's Kevin Rigley, Mike Phillips and Jim Williams scored 22. 21 and 20, but Saddleback had too much bench strength. s.&••·-~11tl .. ". P_,l"l<lr 3 1 I Wt\lel-,, 0 71 LAIV•llee I ' II a.con 3 o " ~ llS11 HKll-4 306 How•rd t 1 II 0.11• 1 0 ' e......n 1 o 1 Hettlno-0 I I Tot .. s .. 1' 110 SH._.....19'1 Houiton Clln<Y Al9ley Loql Wflffl9r W¥d f'tlllllps Wllll•ms BrY•"t Tot•ls lg ... 2 0 ' 2 0 ' • "n 1 0 " , 0 ' 0 , ' . ) " 9 1 20 I 0 1 '' 11 n H•"tlmucore: 5-•eo.ct ~ Tot•I lout•: s.ctdlel>Kt 10, S.n a.,~ 14; l'ouledout· None. * * * Wlvlott Auoy Mofll•- llvwy °""'' Fori•r e.tts Weise Tot•ls ,, " "' I 1 4 • 1 ~ 3 0 • 1 I S , ' 6 1 , • 0 0 0 0 0 0 .. " tp AM•rn ' 2 10 JollMton 1 1 • tClndorf • 1 14 K~ter 1 '18 Pl<k~" 1 0 6 8t"OCtman 2 0 ' Spinn ''' Jones 1 ' 6 v&nsteen~1 J s Gul\M1S I 0 1 MelOy 0 0 0 MC Cor,ell I I l IS 16 <Ii> Tolll\ 2'1 20 7' $(OA lrl 0...,,en trviM 13 10 I 1~"6 Co.--det INlr ,) 13 ,, 11 ,. Tot•I touts· trvlne 13. ~n• clet _, 18; Foui.dovt Welw flrvlnel . E,._.. 1511 M~~ v..,Hom Keup I( roflntelcll Prlu ~::,,;, Totals 19""' ' 0 8 1 ' II J , • 3 0 • 0 0 0 ' 0 • ' 0 1 Cettet.leM i.1 B•oer ll~itstn Oomlntc 8 lu• S lul Miiier Sutltrt Irie! Totets ,, "tp J 0 6 1 1 16 , 2 • ' 0 8 I 0 1 s 0 10 0 0 0 n '" ,, . )() Sc..-. •Y o.,,n..., O.W.it Est•n<I• IS 17 • •-SO MISltOH CC*,.!llUfCC LH.,_ W L " 1 , W L Cott• Mew 16 10 14 t -4 1• • Tolet touls: Est.Mia e, Cotta Mew IS. Fouled A 13-kilometer run will be con· ~ff«ll ducted Sunday at UC Irvine, 1t1ver-M~ beginning at'8:30a.m . ;-::-~"° I> I 1' 4 ou1 8. LUX (Cillstl Mesel. ' ! ~ " • u..i-wt? fUl Et r-c•> Estancia High. by virtue or a recent 00.57 victory over Corona del Mar, bas moved into the No. 5 slot in the CIF 3·A basketball poll as selected by Southern California sportswriters. Corona del Mar. with a 15-2 overall record, dropped from third to fourth, maintaining a three·point margin over Estan· cia < 14-4 > in the rankin~s. CIF ...... 1119'Mll ... ,. klleol, rwcwd ~· I VtrtlUl'llOtl llMI Ill , 1119._ ""°' no l Pn-..i 11'·31 11) • l 0119 Bff<ll Polv II s-4 l .S s Complon 11).31 n • Moml"O'\lde 114-41 1• 1. M•riM IM-21 Sl a Cr~~""• Vatl9y 11).)1 38 • Else"'-llS-21 11 10 81 slq> Monll)Oft'e'Y 114-SI 11 Otlltn MMer Oet (1).31, Al~tlr• (IHI; A<tdlenctsUWl;SMIM4rcos ll~I. b~u .. .-.....1 1,NortlllRl~l IMI l«l 1. OowMv 11 s-21 111 l. lot AmlQm CIS-31 104 6.C.0-.. llUr(tS-JI ., S.Et\Mc'MlM-41 • 6. lllel OllNI 111·SI 61 L~llMI &1 I S.m-llHI St •. Moftrovl9 117-ll 1• 10 G ..... e (IJ.41 tl ~rs: HH Wiison (l ... l; LO-II 114-21; s.M• Monl<e ltMI; 8e"9r1J Hlllt (1~11 V•i.tlc'- llJ.SI, Otn'ltot Cl).SI; Troy 11:1-41; A-- 111 .. l;UH_,• Cl~ N~ ............ I Al9'1ettl ltS-21 1. C•brlllo 11~1 , CovlNllMI • Mission Viejo 116-71 S lndfo (IS.01 6 Mo..-V .. tey (l).il 1. Victor V•flr( llCMI I P•remount ( 12-S I '· M•yf .. r II M l IO SIHY• 11"31 <>tt>.rs: Hert I 11•1 I; NOttflovle• lno'lon llM I; El Monl9 (1+.41, Ct~ 1-A .. .-..11 I«) 1n 107 .. 83 ~ «> ,.. ,. ,. 112 .. 1. ~· 1. S...C. 0 «• (IMI; 1. SI. Monl<e lt'-31; 3 Mlr•lflff Ill-SI: 4. 8-'"9 IM I; 5. "'°"'<194r ""9p 11•11; 6 c.ttltdf .. 111·SI; 1. V•IMv Owls- ll•n 11•31;' e. A•l•llon lt).SI, 9. 8osc.o Tecll fli~l;tO. U.)~ C»-11 -.._.. o.-Ar'tffsldt ow1. Alamitos Entries T........-s~M IE...nn Plnt~:7:4S • Ft•n M CIE -350 Y••ds. 3 yMr Olds. Pline si.100 o ...... nv price M.ooo. Howe s Mloute M•n CMYlesl ; BllM L~•f CW•rdl; l(lpy l(lpy IKniQl'ftl; Soufld The 0..,.., ILIPll•m l; LAia Solll IPwmerl; Wlft Moftcl.ty 10..luel; a..,., Guy IA"91rl; Bo COnstrlctM l~HI; Diet ~ IAOU911); Go A Plenty le.Mii. Sl!COND itacE -uo V.,ds. 3 Y•., old .,.....,.._ PlorM U,100. Cl9knl1191M'ice IS.ooL osc•rs ~· l8•n11u; Au"• Te e111y ILucllle); -.c• ,,_ C~1; Sl>ewfly. 1119 CT..--ll Alc.-t IPernerl; Glitter-Ing 8 119 CLitlf>Mil; Aerl#I O..r99 IMltcllelll. Oennv Oo llll<e lc:..nlDal; Circus Act 1Ad9'rl; Mos~ MIHte OKI< .-io1. TMt•o llACI: -'10 v.-CIS. J VM' old!> & uo c..1·8red. Putw '2.100. Cl•lmlftV price U.000 Plttl Flcllle (Fr'HtOtll, Zlp•n Go ll'°"9ml: W•9's Aeciuesl ITr••s urel; AoOln Sea IClerluel; O~rtlm~ IPemerl: Nettle's uQ.. IS.nut: Un owrve 1c.rooie 1; AkWM °""' t-ln (Ad9ir). FOU•TN •ACIE -3SO yards. 3 year old ....ickHI._ C.l·end. Pu<W u ,100. C .. imlnv prt<e IS.000 • Klftd9 S/lifty 1"°"9111; Ouel0uH'1 (Clerlswl; GolftQ Limits 1841rdl; 8-tt• Too CW•n!I. E•o•• Fly IC•rdoH '; w1111 .. w .. Ctoude IBr-•l; Jetme Som......s l~rNrl: E~ 114•r11, HMf An A19t CMy!HI Wli'dys ~ (1(11'91111. flll•Tlf •AU -l70 Y•nK. J veer okb & uo f>urWU,IOO.Cl ..... illOP<k•U,000 S•v•nnall Ev~ntt I Han I, Lii Bui Loud (Ward I; l(kt A $1\aw jB.tn-sl; Go Qt! Llm<I\ tClerltsel; Weffeftd Fun ICre-verl; Aal\e A Aum11<1s IK.n~ll; Tru<~l1111 Sixteen IAdafrl. Tiny l(NllCanfBrooC<s>. SIXTH ltACI! -l70 y.,..,s. 3 "., olds & uo P\lrs. '3..IOO. O•lml"" ork e S..500 llr'911t Policy lc:.rdOt•l; SHms F.,r CAOUQlll, Hew•ll.., Isle (Blln-sl, UHi!' 0Ull<' CL1.-,.m1. Tont.00 Umll 111¥dl; Bo Helo IH•,,l: Jtt c.tc> l•i" IMltd-.111 SIEYl!NTM llACE -3)0 yards J VHr old 11111es 1>urwu.eoo. Cl•lml119 Pr1ce11.soo Sfl(' It A Jet CTtNwre>; Precious -~ (Knlgllll; Rebel F•Y• IMylul: o, ... , •• !Pernerl; Kits lnteftt!OM !ClertHel; u.ttS .. ..,,. 18.,dl; Mis. Flllmlll9 Jet IBanll•I; D'fllilQO Mis- sy IAdefrl. • EtONnt•Aa-Oywtts lyeerotdS&uo.AI· towanc• P\lf'MS.,SOO , Jet T"°"9f't IW•lwn I; Med•llst <•out" l: EHy Luigi IH•rtl, Flitel Aten (Cerdora>. Cllllldlp ll'reriurel; e .. ter APoflo !ACS.Ir>, Notller l(ln«N MAft COe,lswl; Alcocl'le1 Lo"f' lllerdl. "'""" UClf --yen!$. J YNr -.. uo P\lr .. U, 100. o .. m1119 l)(lce u,ooo. . Husllln C-ILIP1>9ml; Double Deft CAOU911 •; Ut10jo Joe CB«d I; Du11et LO MIM'llO I l'oi!rNr 1. Leo Pflllm IWerdl; Good I*• ICrw991rl. ~tull IC•rdorel; V•ln lndlM'I l lCnigllll; Im• s. .. ..,...i. <k•'t lT~•r MldStorm IClerluel. --~...c .... 1A111,..a.Jund au~e.tJ_or:_t.ll,e -~,$ cc Newport Harbor High cross coun· Soul_._. try team, will be through the UCI •O-.!feY 4 3 ,; I~ ' f9 ft 4-'9 ft I-____ ..,..._-~....,.---·~" He;::::_ " ,.'"'',..,"--Girla!..Baaketh I 6 I It MCL .... lft ? ' 6 Sim-I> 0 11 :------------, campus and acljoinlng communi· ty. Awards, ranging from running gear to watches, will be banded out to the lop finishers in each division. Entry fee is $6 the dn or the race. • 0 1 0 20 Bryl,lrl S 0 10 M Wiison 1 0 4 ..._..,.,SC-eonull 1 t s C.Wllson s o 10 s.dd~ I IO. S... &ern.rdtno •J Most.y 3 o 1> Heu 1 o 1 P•IOmer 1J. S.. ot.90 11 Tot•l5 1' ' Sl Rtvenldlt !01, Cll~ll Sout!IWHtenl ... Clleftty .. ~Y"IG9ft'lft ~ .. SeddlebKll S.n e.merdlflo •t P-Rlversldt al S.. Diego CC Cltrvs., ~ttm · Ba,sketball Scores EWtllE LEAGUE CkMIO View .S. C'fprH$ S1 l(ete1 .. .a, l(ef!Mdy • LO«• S4, L°' "'9m!llOI .. ANCMLUI LEAGUE 81.._Mllllilll!I .. .,, ... .,_..., Del to ...,,., ...... St...eM., (441 Plllt X 7S, 8llflaCI Amit,.,. Cl'.NTU•Y LllAOU• l'OCltNll "· ~ '° SIH!t.e Me YA!lleY S1 • Or"'90 4' Tvtllft 11, VIII• Petti 90 SoftleAfte ... EIMe9eftr57 ottAM4M ~aoua l • ........... 8"""°'111c141 '2 El ~-~Sol!W•4' V-..Cle ... ~ .. LOM+IJl.~SI OAIHMIN ~· L.•Aoua l• cw ........ GerW\0.-46 lell LOIArnitOl .. .__..AlelftlM~ Sef\llewo "· 8elM OreMe .. I l'lt91WAY '-SMW• T,..., 6', ANflelm" 8-,.,_ P , MlllNl!e » teO Stclf...., .. ,...,_.s S1W1Y HJl1'91. ~j4 -UMUC Lii JoNlrl "· °"""""' SJ La Poly 14, Mlll .. efl U L • ....., ... ~ .. . . ~ y....,, 6.J, U9ltN hecll. l lf9VM 8Hcll ~0<1119 JollMOn S, HI~ 10, W.ti.t U, COrcowt~ 7 C•oo V•ttey scorl119-Mooneyll•m 16, Wllll•m-"· O'H~ a. L.OVmen "· llodlt.u 2,0..slle..e. ~.., °"9'1erl L4f9UN 8Ndl t 6 • 10--JO Cepo Vefley 11 It 14 I~ \ ' ILACKWALLS lWBISS 145-13 xtx .... 2t.tt 155-13XZX .... 33.ft 185-13XZX •... 37.tt 185-14 xzx .... 41.tt 175-14 XZX .... 42.tt 185-14 xzx .... 46.H 285-lSXZX ••.. 4J.." ~ ... :~ 185-12 xww •. 43.tf 175-13 XWW •• 46.ft 175-14XWW .. 4t.ff 18a.14 xww .. SJ.ff 195-14 xww .. 16.H 215-HI XWW •. 6t.n 15XWW .. 71. .. ·•ICK aOBll'WSON Medicinal Mr. Jung T. Wang of Marin County baa permluion to ship shed elk anUe.rs to the Far East and this just midst be a case for massive in· vesttgatioo. It could be bigger than Watergate ooly on an J.ntematlooal scale J . Ed•ar Hoover must be turning backflipg in bis grave over thls deal. Interpol, the CIA, f{ealth and Welfare. Food and Drug and the T ·Men should be put on red alert. And just maybe, the manhood of the California sportsman Ja in question. · THE PRESS RELEASE from the Department of Fish and Game began. innocently enough. The statement read, "by a 3,to 2 vote, the DFG colD· missioners, in their Jan. 5 meeting in San Fran- cisco, approved on reconsideration lbe application of Jung T. Wang for a permit to import and possess Rocky· Mountain Elk on bis property_ in Marin County." According to the DFG release, Wang was de· nied b.is original app~cation three months ago. But when Wang came up with a new plan for fencing in bis elk, his application was aooroved. But the ltey to the re· lease was what Wane in· 0 ., ~D'9 tended to do with the elk. t.J I.~~ Tbe release revealed "=:--------Wang plans to raise elk . and to remove the antlers for shipment to the Far East where the product will be used for "medicinal" purposes. Wait a minute! Medicinal purposes? IT WAS THAT LAST SENTENCE that hit me right in the lights. Caused my eyebrows to twttcb. First off, a Jot of us around here ditl oot lall ore a turnip tr.uck. And a lot of us know rhinoceros horns, elk antlers and elephant toe nails are ground into powder and used in Asia for a dose of aphrodJs1ac. • Secondly, if the Asians want ground.up anUers to improve their love life, then what is wrong with good old California tule elk horns the bucks shed every year in the Owens Valley herd of 463 animals?. And bow aboul the bucks' antlers from the over 100 deer herds in the state~ What is so special about a potion made from the bucks in the Rocky MQuotaim? ' I 'ftllNK THE MA1TEll deserves immediate in vestigatlon. , After all, California n~ money to offset tax- es. And shipping horns lo the Far ·East market could help balance our trade deficit. U enough or tbia powerful stuff was shipped East, .maybe the dollar would become as valuable as the Yen. Did our DFG commissioners think of this in San Franclsco? And did they consider exportlng the raw materiaJ for an aphrodisiac could cause new dDd mighty armies to be ralaed lo a sensitive area like China and Southeast Asia? America spends billions feeding the starving millions lo that part or the world. Millions more on their birth control. · IT WOULD 'SEEM A~ our_nandiose plans Clreamed up 1n-Washingt.n seem to have a way of running smack dab_ualD11..e1c:b.Qlber~ • - ---·Tlils elf tliTnili a tood example and leaves me confused. I must ask myself U shipplne apb.rodlllacs ls in tbe best interest of our aatiooal Policy? Has anybody cleared the .idea with BUJy Carter, who appears expert on foreign a(faln't Does an lonoceot move like approvinl Wang's plan cauae nations to eventually collide and. gov- ernments tumble? la this the little straw in the wind Uiat breaks the camel's back? Now you all must know I am the Jut man to see anyone denied his pleaaure. But U this atuff reany worts, sbouldD 't all bonlS, l.nclud!na goat and buffalo, and catUe, be declared naUonal treasures and kept for our own? MAYBE TBl8 81'\JFF abouJd be letaliJed and aold ill the corner druastorea around LelaW"e World for lmtauce. iib;t I am trying to sey, lt'1lle "stuff~ worts. we aboukt ftnd out flnt, t>efon we start ltv· lnl tometblna Sood away qalJl. la t:ll)' event. tf thia potion ls aa bot as tbe Allaaa tldak, I would like to be able to buy ao OC· cational btt myself. And what about the rest of you Calitornl1 1port1fam? SbOuld we whip up tbo comerv1Uonllt.9 ud 1tart 1 1ave our elk from export campalp? ~ · I CM 1ee the bumper ltrip now on a mlllloo can oo the freewaya ... SEX. . Janior Collete Buketball f . -... --........ ONTARIO F,....P9ffe8I SKI AREA· ••• b:a-:rgain IUt: -uctr~t ·ra-US, availabilitr of lodging, ski scboob, availJabiUty oC a nursery . . . you name it. ~The 'best way to pick a "favorite" ski area ls to sample several unW you find one that's comfortable. Not eveeyone c.an afford to go bopping through four states testlng ski areas, however.'· 'So we proVide . here, courtesy of the Far Wesl Ski Assn.. a mini -rundown on a . few of the more weU-known resorts. Lift rates are for an adult all-day pass, aod ski school rates are for group all-day unles~ otherwise in· diealed: GO\.OM411tt-t.lttra1fl '' JO;Terreln:Oper. c-••~. 3S Ptr<•nl lntermecii.1•, 20 ~ .. IMO!-•: Ufts: 3 cl\alrs, >,_to-'"· S-1 St-. lt•IH. '6; Ei.ve11on 1,100, Nursery: no, Loe• tlon· tOOmlle.lromLAlnWrlgtttwooct. HOLIDAY HIU. -Litt r-1.s: $10; T.,.,.etn· JO perct111 •-1. lO ~ent lntermedlele, «I Pt•· Hftt IM0!11Nf; Litts· 4 <Min. t T·ber, 2 ,_ IOW1; S-1 ScflOOI Retes: II: £1ttvetl0n: 6,600; N11rser,.1 no; lo<•lfll"I' Wnl of WrlQllt'woacl, eOout 100"1lltsfrom LA. MT. IAU>'f.-Litt rates: '10; Ttn•ln: ,..,..._ C•!!I upert. .., perunt IMet'Medl•t•. 30 pitpnt 11e91,.,,...: UttJ: 4 CfMlits; Siii S<lleol RNt:""- ev•ll•~; IElwetlOft: 4,lOO: H-rv: no; Loc.- tlon: 17 mlM-lrom LA. MOUNTAIN HIOM -Liit ••tel: SIO; Terreln: M .-re:el'll ~. JO percent lnterrnedlek, 14 perceftt b9111W1tr. Lifts: 2 e:Mlrs; $111 ScNo4 Ratti SJ group ll•lf-d•"; IElevatlon: 6,IOO; NurMry: no; Loca111111: Wrl9!1twood, In San Gebtltl ,.,. illlOul 100 ml'" frQl'lll.A ~- ;' .... • Snow Aplenty _Lpngest SetUon -Jn Ski Bistorj-? By DA VE cUNNJNGBAM Of .. .,...., .......... Here1s a collecUon or ski news tidbita from up and down the slopes of California: · · From this week's Skillne Newsletter, published lJl San Fran· cisco-"Soutbern California mountains are beetnning to look like the Rockies and Sierra. Depth.a on some of the ikl slopes in the San Bernardino and San Gabriel Mountainl are five feet. "If. the ston:rls keep on truckin' and. the temperatures stay below freerlng level, this ~ tie the. longest seuoo in the southland's ski history. . ·· · Ski area· operators are not eomplainlng about .buainesa ... and for aome in Southern California lben'a every indication they've found snow that can truly be transformed into while gold.·' •• * SKIING are a must for weekend skiers, midweek skiers. . ALONG THOSE SAME LINES, Snow Summit re· po'rts that reservations, available throwUI Tickelron, and recommended even for TbepopularSanBecnardino raogeskianabubeensoldoutlOof the last 12 days. Sometimes an entire days' Wt Ucketa are IOl>bled up 2f houri in adv an.ce. ··The cnmcb has been spurred by a semester break for schools and the arrival or new snow, making coDClitlou good-but crowded. ••• MORE THAN A FOOT 9( new IDOW fell OD the Southern California ak.I. areas in the past three days, and mot.orlata are ad· vised to carry chains in their cars. Some puses sWl required chains on Wednesday. aod weather cooditlona are always subject ,. SNOW SUMMfT -Lift rele$: S10.JO; Terrain• 20 Pt«*ll t.-rt, 50 11t<Unt Int~.... JO percent~: Eltvellon: 1,200; Lifts: I civect end S dolltlle Cheirs, 3. rope IO'ln; $111 ScllOOI Rates· • io: NwwfY: YH, I.out loft: etiout lCIO Mlltts tts1 of L.A . to.sudden c'1ange. . SlfO'# VALU!'f: -Litt r.its· S11; Terrel•>: u per·ce111 tlqltf1, lO o.runt l11ltrmtdl•t!-4S per. c•nl ii.t4-; L~ S dleln. S rooe 'IOWS; S-1 SC:'-! relft: S$ 9f"OU9 l\elf~y. IElttveOon· •.aoo: Nurtery: no; Lotetloin: ts Mllft f rOl'ft LA MAMMO'T'H MOUNTAIN -Liil reltt< SIJ; Terrain. lO percent ••P9rl. 40 "runt '"' ttrcnedi.te. 30 percent bt91Mtr: Liii• 1• cllelrS. t tremt, 4 T..citrs; Siii Sc'-! A ales: $14; ei.v .. llO<\: 7,.00; Nursery: 110; l.Ocatlon: itn mlleS llOrtll of L A ' JUNE MOUffTAlll -I.Ill retes: SU; T•tTfl~i JO percen4 •xoert. JS percent lftttrmedl«•, 3' oeru11t ~r: Litts: S <h•lrs. 1 l-be<; Sid S<'-1 , .... , $14; E•evetlon 7,600; Nu,,.,.,: no; 1.0cetlon:Dlmllt1~of LA Ha:Ava:Nt.Y VALLEY -Liit .... ., $U: T••· , rein: U ~ eapert, SO Ptl"teftt I/II•~•. U pen:tflt ~: Elev•llon· t , 100; Lifts: 1 trio pl• end t4 OOUblt cllalrs, 1 trem, s T~. • mltty.mltes: 5111 5<,_ Retn: S1'; Nunery: P9fldl119; Loullon: 180 mllH ee'tt of S... ,..,.,.. clKO Kt•ICWOOO -Lift relet: $1J; TetHln' 20.,..-. tent ••Ptrt. 60 o.runt lllttnnedl•I•, to 1*'Qlflt be91ftfttr; Llfb: I cllelrs, 1 T·o.r; l!ln•tlon: 7#!0; S-1 ~ A•IH: SlJ; Nursery· 'l'H; Loe• lion: JO Mites south Of Lelle T ellOt on the Cellfomle Skit. . SQUAW YAU.IV -Liii r•ltt: $14; Ter,.ln: 30 perc.nt •XPer1. 40 o.ttent lnter....oie~. JO percent ._,_.. Liitt· 1 llOfldol•. 11 ct\el"· t trem, t p0me1, El•vetlon t,100; S-1 SC,_ Rett1: SU~ llell-dey; NurHry: Yft; LOc• tlon: 10 mlle$ '°"111 of lrud <. .. , wHt of l..Aq TellOe. PA•K CITY· Liit rms· Sit; Ttruln $1-· Ctftt ••pert, ... Pt•<•llt ~lllMr, 17 Ptr'Ctnl be911111er; Lltb: 10 cllelrs, 1 llOfldol•; 5111 $<"°°4 Retes· '1•: Eltvetlon· •,tOO, Nyrwry• 'l'ft: L- tlon: 17 mllts ~I of Seit Le•e City In Ute/I. VAl\.-Llltrettl' SIS: T..-raln: JO,,.rc.ftt••· etO..t«l~IWnedl• ... JO~ri 'Dtti · " cNtrs .. 1 .,.-.. ' llOIM: ~· -$C'llOel Ratti SIS. Eltvetlon· I.JOO. Nuoery: ...... ~ )Ion: 100mlletwnlolOennr lnColo<edo. Field Hockey Hllllll ...... IMcoll I,~ Mettiwl Hunt1n111on B•ech •<orl119 : O.nnlston 2, J tclllOfl, IW.001,Li.c--t. Pro Scores . The National Weather .Service says more snow was ex~ted today. *** BEA VENL Y VALLEY WILL BOST a gathering of 2SO or the world's finest amateur skiers next week for the International Ski Federation's 10th annual Crtterium Mondial Citaden. Fifteen nations will be represented in competition for the ladies' and me~·s giant sfalom, slaJom and parallel sl~om finals. *** SQ.U&W i ALLEY IS OFFEBING a unique ticket refund policy. U you don't like the conditions, you can get your Utt ticket money refWlded. Skiers can purchase tim~stamped, all-day lift tickets at either the gondola or tram booth, ride up to elevation 8,200 look around, ski a little, and lf he or she doesn't like the situation, get a full re-rund. The time limit for requesting a refund is one ·hour after purchase of the ticket. ••• THE SECOND OF FJVE "Boogie in the Bumps" contests ls slated Friday at Kirkwood ski area. The others are planned March 2, March 16 and April 13. ' A five-year custom at Kirkwood, Boogie in the Bumps b ' a series or mogul freestyle contests open to any skier who wishes to compete. . • A $15 entry ree makes each skier eligible to win part of the $750 cash purse. Judging is based on spe~>: control, upright aerial maneuvers and carved turns. · Southland Skiing CondiJions CryUet It .... -8-Of -..0 lnclltt, .. n I,,_ ~,,.._...__JIU~ ·--S-"""""' -hw 2'-1t Inches, .. ti lnC'llfs of ..... -· -llU-' Md 11,,. ~ llfb ... -otlotl. s-v....., -e-•n lnchf•, -fOOt of --.11 ... tlfl•-.tlftQ. ~ -a.. ~ ln<lltt, slw lnclltt ot --.-1mopere11no Me"'MOtll 11Mt111tal11 -73-lnt ll INIH of llerd.,.(11 4lftCI -IF'Hll _..,.,, '" 21 11111 -r•llnt _..,. -.111er permits.. J-......... -8-JO Inc:""·~ eN N O ed llOWdtr. tour lftt.\ef'CI e f.t1er ot>tr-1~ ~ Nltll -a-Of lMO Inches, .. n 1,.. .. _:twe<lllll••"""•""'.--........, .... -a-of -.. lncllft, -fOOt of --· ""'llfb-.tlnf. Mii ,_.. -3'"111<11 bett. 10 lllCllH .. - -· tllfW llfb opw.tlnct. Mt . ...., -e.. ot two Inches~ ....i peO.d ~ •.. 12 IMMS of,_ sNw, tow lffts operell,,.. kr ...... -9-Of *46 lnchft. .. IO 111- cllet --· -<llelr, llw tows oper .. I~. Mt. ·---8-up to n lne1"• ... 12 It\. <llH Of --· DOWOtr end ~-. two llfb ..-<•11119 Basketball -"18UC NOTICE SuH•IOtlCWllT_CMJ .... tA 1Standings ClOUMTY CW OllMlea CMaNO..-o:cf!F,.=ft..m IU9tlST UAeU9 ._ '" ...... ~ .. ~IN MOTTI• _.IC LU' MOT· ...... CMr.il Tl• :i 11191r fNlllW CJl>TMeatMI! ,, L W L LllllOI RO -.r CN••Uf MeMe ,...,. 4 ' • f6 a JO.UN MOTTWR • t<IU, Y MOT· ....... ~. • 1 ,, ' TIR"-',.._.·=~~ """'"""" '""" a t 1J • ..... ~.. to t:oi-t :t 11 I <~ M..,,_ -t.-JO.t.IH ,~.., ..... ' . • It MOY I!" _, l(a:U.Y MOn£fl IO Wltt1Wtl11•• ' 4 • 11 .10.LIN LtNOIRltO ~ KU.LY .... ., .. " . ...,. ••NOH"°" ltll.._.,.,....., .. ~ L...-0-.. ............ .., .. ,,,__~- W L W L f:." MIOn Wt~~--i[f\eMle s • IS • i et 1'0 Orie W..1, C......•Mw . ' IS t s.nc ....... ~ ... ~ l!l T-, t 1 " lt7', et II:• o'e:lldl ..,,..., .... ""4•~ J , • • Mid ttlef..__.,. ~. H #l/ltY ... .,. Ul'll~ ' . s " ....... -........ :'"*' .... "'-"' IMflt • f . ,, -~-., .... IOUnl CQUl' LSA4MI• It Is I otWt'ed lltM a ~ of ..... ....... IJIK-... ...::~~ ~· i • Mfu..._v;.,. W L W L ' 0 11 a 0..-.Hlltt , t " • sane--. J t ,, ' c,..11,,_ veil/, ) t 11 1 t=::::" ' . • 14 • • t I) a:wta• LUOU• "*"-0--.. w 1. W L lt~le s • ti 1 Oc...., Vlow 4 I IS 4 ~· , 1 s " IC'-dY t ' ,, • C'l'Pf'Hl • I 4 • 10 Le$AI ........ • • • 1) PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS aUSINliSS N&Ml!STATllMa:NT TM fOOowlnt .--Is OOI~ llusl MHH ilfWHe .. r .i: ......... (=etlon, ,.,.., ...... "' ::7." -· -.., ., 119 ...... ,,. le tfle .. , of Mid .......... 0.llO.I~·· .. ,, a,,_ .s- Judqie of "-DAVID~~' •nn s. ~ 11¥&. """"'4..,CA..., ==--= T .. : 11111 _,_ "'*'''*' 0r.,. ONtt o.tly ....... J~ II, II, U .... ~I, t'1•. 11~7." PVBUC NOTICE SILICOH SOlAR SVSTEMS. ~ AUlldl• OtHO. #lnlo11 Viejo, Gellfornletz.IS ' Ooneld G And•r\on. 1•Ut A¥•nld• 0.Ho, M•H•on Vle lo. C..llforn•• 92'1~ f Ill\ l>Uill'lt\> Is <wiclucled by ....... CSIYld\l•I 0 G.Alldt<>On Tiii\ n•t-t ••~ Iliff WTtl> 11\o County Cl~rll 01 Ore<191t County Oft ~.,, ... ,.., .... ,. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICTiTIOUS aus1Ma:SS NAMI! STAT1!Ml!NT f ... fOI~ -.,. d01"9 IMISI nenH OLl!!NNEVRE ASSOCIATES. "1 ForeU Ave11ue . Suite 1?, L•Qull• 8"<11. CA ~I ··• H•rold L yncft, Jr , ICM7 OldrlllJOn Way. l-<t9\IN Bffdl. Cl•.,,11 E1 J-#ur•r, 1t14 Arell• Slrtel. N....., lloecb. CA '2WO Tl\I\ W~MU ll (O<\<IU<ltd by a 9fM•••~o. ~.--~~~ ·--· Tiiis ,,.._ "WM Ill .. Wlttt Ille c-1.,. Clerll. of Or-C-f'I' Of\ J-ry u. "" • l'ffllt$/ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cf'G'lt p., ..... ,tcnnous IUSINHS HAM« SJATkM•NT n.. foftowincJ --,. dolft9 INtl· MUH: GARY COM PTON & CO. CltEATE, 1•11 Wutcllff Orlve, NeWP«t leodl. Cal"'""•.,... Gery ~. 202'1 O..n1•lf Le,,., Htlntlllf!Oll INdl, C.lffOr'nle """ Tlli. .,........ Is condlo<tocl tty on ln-dMdvel. . ~··----™• ~ Wft lllfd wftll ltlO ,_,,, C:IMI of Oree199 Cewtty on -'-Vf'l.1m. ••ST••N MUTUAL ••c1tow C'OttP. PullllJl'led Or9191 CO.st Delly Piiot Jflfl. "· "· l"tll. '· .. "" ,,. •. mi.-.. ... ,o ~~ ... ............ , ... -----------·• ...,.,...._.or.,. c..st oooy Piiot, PUBUC NOTICE Fetl. '·I, IS, 22. "" •·rt PUBLIC NOTICE " t I\ I I I, 0 .. If • a a ad I)· r, V• o. a; Id by 20 ~- to lte ~ n --:·~ '" u: •• 11 ~ I ,,,.., 'J ,.., J70 1~ 18 • "" >O,ODO J0,.000 «I.ODO .... ~,ODO ~-= JCl,.000 .. 10,0DO Prtv ~ "' m IC! • St«• 41ftW(• IH .... of '.\ 10~ ... 'dqwn ,..n r•··· lm-tt -~ I prl" ~ ... ,,. .... ' • .... 1o11 e111t flOI d In lllot ~--..... .. -= O•Y ,, .t11• ... :r.;. 7! ..... \llmettd ,_..,, ......... ·= Cll •• • ~.., •itvr• _, .· ..... c .. ...... ....... ... Cllw9t Exira, OUMtT ..... .__._ .............. 1.32 .:71 ,47 S.88 .............. ,, ..... ,.n.Lmte.10.9511.17 10.33 ............. OUAWJ-........... 1.u .... 4.37 41.41 4.12 ........ i,1'-U1'M .......... .: ................... l .71 55.33 9.23 S.•lllM'• 7-CWown, ,:7'M.nu.' ...... 10.11 12.01 10.35 . ~ .,u.,.. Ancient Age. 7JO•ML. .............. M ............. 4. 70 53.15 4.43 DIYllUCounty, t.75-UTAl .................. i .98 50.70 8.4S · E8"1J Tlnm. a...t ................................. .5,57 13.00-· 5.25 •••r.10 Hlgll, o_uART ....................... 4.91 55.45 · 4.83 l.W. H ..... 88-Pr., 7so-ML ............... 5.89 94.37 5.37 Jllft .... 80-Pr., QUART ................... 5.57 62 .. 95 5.25 Old Forister-, 86-Pr., 7IO-ML ............. 5.34 80.38 5.03 WlldTll'Uy, 101-Pr •• 7IO-ML. ......... 10.08 11~.01 9.51 BRANDY Christian Bros., QUART ........................ 5.89 68.58 5.55 E &"J Brandy, 750-ML ................... : ........ 4.83 54.66 4.58 Korbel, n o-ML ......................................... 5.04 58.97 4.75 ."18S$0ft,QUART ...................................... 5.80 85.60 5.47 Bolg,.flavorecl, 24-oz ............................. 3.98 44.91 , 3;74 Walker Flavored, auART ..................... 4.92 55.64 4.84 Asbach UraH, 150-ML-......................... 11.71'133.30 · 11 .11 COGNAC Counolsl• V .s., 7so-ML .................. 11.93 135;00 11 ;25 CourvoislsVSOP, no.ML ........... : ... 14.32182.03 13.51 Hen~sey Bras D Or, 150-ML .......... 17.44197.38 18.45 Hennessey v.s., 1so-ML .................... 11.98.135.25 11.28 artel..v.8Jl.r75MH ...................... '"'n t:t.31-128.00-10.81- Saftgnat vs, 150-ML ............................. 1.83 88.89 7.39 .. SCOTCH •ottte c ... Retell Reta» lalllldiM, 150-ML .................................. 8.39 72.2~· 8.02 lllCll I W11119. QU~"T ~ ......................... 7.85, 88.52 7.21 • CNYll llegll. QUART .......................... 13.99 158.35 13.20 Ctuhy, TIO-ML. ............................. : ............ 5.33 80.28 5.03 '" euny San, u~urR1 .......................... 15.90 89.95 1s.oo De..-'1, J.75-LITRE ........ : ..................... 15.21 85.99 14.34 81111llV8t,12-Yr. Old, 1so-ML .......... 13.281so.29 12~53 J & 8, 750-ML ........ 1 .................................. 7.38 83.25 6,94 Johnnie Wiiker, Blaclr, 150:ML ...... :1 0.10114.24 9.52 Johnnie Walker, Red, u5-L1rRe ..... 15.89 89.93 14.99 lauder's. QUART; .................................... s. 79 65.52 5.46 Old Smuggler, 1so·ML ........................... 4.oa 46.06 3.84 Passport, 7So"'L .................................... 5.04. 58.99 4.75 Scoresby, QUART ................ , .................. 5.52 62.46 5.21 .SUMMIT WINES VIN ROSE OR .. . CHABLIS, RHINE206 --BURGUNDY 1.L1TRe (CASE OF 6) '12.36 CAJtADIAN TEQUILA . Black Velvet, 1.1s-urRE ...................... 10.83 &0.09 10.02 Cuwvo, Gold. 150-ML ............................ 5.87-68.31 5.53 Canadian Club, 71G-ML m ..................... 8.70 .75.84 6.32 CUervo, White, 1.75-LITRE .. ., .... ~ ......... 11.75 66.47 11.08 Canadlmt lonl Calvst, auART ••••••••• 5.83 85.95 5.50 cuervo Almondraclo, 150-Mt .............. 7.57 85.&a . 7 .14 c .. dlan Mist, 750-ML ........................ 4.63 52.32 4.36 Montezina Gold Or White, 750-ML. • 4.31 48.68 4.06 Seagram's Crown Royal, 150-ML. ... 11.31128.72 10.73 Pepe Lopez, White, QUART .............. , .. 5.29 59.78 4.99 Seagram's v.o., 150-ML, ....................... 6.70 75.84 6.32 Puerto 11111111. OltOOl.D, 150-ML .............. 4.57 51.71 4.31 · GIN Sauza Conmemorat,tvo, 150.ML ......... 8.68 98.10 8.18 a.eeteater, QUART .................................. 7.94 89.77 1.49 Two Fingers, White, 1s0-ML ............... 4.97 56.25 4.69 Bombay, 750·ML. .................................... ,6.57 74.25 6.19 VODKA . Booth's HI & Dry, 150-ML ...................... 4.54 51.36 4.28 Crown Russe, 80.Pr., u s-L1rRe ....... 7.92 44.80 7.47 Fleischm.U.'1, us-uTRE .................... 8.82 49.90 8.32 Gllbey's, 750-ML ............................. _ ....... 3.39 38.21 3.19 Gllbey's, o uART ........ : ............................. &. 17 58.41 4~7 . Kamchatka, 80-Pr., QUART ................ 4.1gr 47.33 3.95 Gordon's, 1so.ML ................................... 3.98 44.90 3.75 Popov, 1.1s-1.1rRe .................................... 6.99 41.80 6.97 Seagram's, UM.ITRE ........................... 9.84 54.52 9.09 Relslca, QUART ........................................ 4 . 19 47.35 3.95 Tanqueray, 1so-ML ................................ 6.11 1s.s2 8.38 · smtmotf, 80-Pr., 1.15-L1rRe .............. 10.11 57.54 9.59 RUM · Smtmott, 100-Pr., 750-ML. ................ :.5.30 60.00 5.00 Bacardi A ....... , QUART ........................ 5.58 83.06 5.2& :o:chn•Y:t a:;:r .. 750.ML ............... 7 .SS 85.41 7 .12 aacnl Sll¥er, 7so-ML ......................... :4.55 51 .44 4.29 o schml , .Pr., 150-ML ............ 3.98 45.00 3.75 . Castillo light or Dartr, 7SO·ML ............ 3.43 38. 75 3.23 ZINFANDEl- Mpn-JnalC11i, 7SO·M_L..: .................. 6.58 74.50 6.21 CeilarSelect,7so·ML .... -:-;: ..................... 1.01 t0.81 .9 t- hHle c .. ....... " ..... CHElll ILANC . llJfllger; 710-ML ..................................... 2.75 ,30.00 2.50 •• ...,, 750-ML .................................... 2.23 24.20; ~02 eels Select. 750-ML. ........................... 1.17 12.17 1.08 ...... lful. S7J-ML.u. ........... '. .......... :.1.75 U.OI 1.59 Fnncllcan, tso-ML. ................. : .......... : .. 3.23 35.15 2.13 Louis Martini, 1&0.ML ........ :. .................. 2.31 21.00 2.17 Mlrruau, 1ao-M.L. ......................... : ........ 2.90 31.48 2.83 lloftlaf'ly, 750-ML ................... • ................ 3.19 34.71 2.80 Sell•a.nl, 750-ML ................................ 2.20 24.00 2.00 SoftOlfta, 750-ML .... -......... : .. , ............... ~ •• 2.88 31.20 2.80 RIESLING • .......... 750-ML ..................... : ............... 4.45 48.40 4.04 (alo, 1.5-LITitE .. , ........................ .':, ... : ... ,.. ~.84 14.31 2.40 •ce.tes ~' 7!50-ML ........................... 2.18 32.00 2.87 ...._., Vlneysdl, 110-ML. ............ 3.19 34.1t 2.80 Paul Masson, H O-ML : ........... v.: ..... , ..... 1.84 20.00. 1.i7 . 'Souverlll\ 710-ML ................................ 2.82 28.49 2.38 St. Mldtelle, 7110·ML ..... ~: ....................... 4.14 45.10 4.14 . CABERNET SAUVllNON Almaden; 750-ML .... r.: ........... , ... ;; ..... L ... 2.71 29.50 2.46 Cll .. SOl1Cf-11CMitL ........................ ~ .. 1.37 14.85 1.24 ChftaKrug, 7IO-ML ............................ 4.04 44.00 3.67 Ch8laau St. Jean Rouge, 1SM1L ...... 3.63 39.80 3.30 •Psduccl, 21.l-()Z..m ... ft ,.,_,.,,.,,;,, .. .,.,,.,.,3.83 39.80 3.30 ·1oblrt Mondavl, TIO-ML ............... .:"'" 5.88 84:00 5.34 Sllllltllnl' 750-ML ......... , ................... : .. a.22 35.00 2.92 •1o1111111 Alexander cnnm no.u L. a.08 18.05 7.34 . , BURGUNDY -leringer, 21.e-az. ....... : ........................... 2.03' 22.00 Cresta lllnca, 750-ML ......... .' ............... 1-; 70 18.37 Louis M..Unl, 1so-Mt.. ........................... i.92 20.10 GAMAY BEAUJOLAIS Chm1es Krug,:H O-ML .................... : ...... 2.75 30.00 Gl .... srl, 750-ML .................. .' ............... 2.42 28.40 Mlrrasou, 750-ML ................................... 2.53 27.50 PINOT NOIR ~ l'OtOTIT.OIOtMMI ,..,flrlatlan Bros., 1so-ML ....................... 2.99 32.50 Alllllden, 750-ML .................................... 2. 71 29.50 •cre1ta Blanca, 1so.ML .......................... 2.83 30.80 Robert Mondlvf, 150-ML ...................... 4.78 s2.oo Sonoma, 150-ML ..................................... 4.04 44.00 IMPORTED WINES Dry Sack S,_,.y, u.oz. ...................... 5.17 58.35 4 . 70 81•1&11, LIOfltAUMILCH,23-0Z. .......... 3~85 41.95 3.50 Moc a.ti Rose, 24« .......................... 2.57 27.90 2.33 Lan......-Llebfraumllch, 1-urRE 2. 75 30.00 2.50 Rlunltl Lambrusco, 24-oz. .: ...... : ........ 2.52 27.45 2.28 L-incers lrose, su.oz .......................... 5.97 32.50 5.42 Ron Rico, WhHe, 1.1s-LrrRe ................. 9.84 ss.as 9.28 . ChM'les Kru , n~ ................. T ......... 2.75 30.00 2.50 -Ron ICO, Gild, ouART .......... : ... : .... : .... 5.33-W.37--s . .....-~--..."""",..-Ta lliitii, 1so.ML •• ::=:: .. ::-m ... 2.23'2'4.20~-~~-~-------iPEcw. SELECTIONS IRISH Gallo, 1.1-l.ITRE ........................................ 2.84 14.38 . 2.40 Jallft Jll •1 ... ood; 750-ML ................................... 2.83 30.10 2.57, Old .. ;-1, US.UTltE ................. 13.00 74.20 12.37 -Pldroncell, no.ML .. ~ ........................... 2.03 22.00 1.M Tullll O:,'IMIL. ......................... 7•17 11•11 8·: SCllO-. u-UTRE ........ ..; ........................ 4.03 21.94 3.88 · 4nore 'no..ML ...................... 1.00 79.13 8. saner Home, 750-ML ............................ 4.45 48.40 . 4.04 CHAm.IS a.fnglt', 750-ML. .................................... 2.03 22.00 1.84 Cfwtllllll 8rOS., 750-ML ....................... 1.84 20.00 1.87 GllWrra, 11CM11L .......................... , ........ 1.12 12.05 1.01 CRIBARI WINES l.M~IMtn.Whfte,1so-ML ............ 1.a2 17.60 1.47 ~ Clllluu St. J ... , 1IMI~ ................. -5.05 55.00 4.18 CMtaa. Bros., 110-ML.~~.~.~ 2.03 22.00 1.14 flrlltanl, 710-ML ......... ~.c;»!~~ ... 3.03 33.00 2. 75 CHABLIS, ·-aao -CHAllllONllAY ~;;.~~;=-:::.V:AJ.-u-fu I:;.~ ~~~ ==-=~::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :: ·~~ ~::;.;;.~=~ (CAR Of 4) 111.!0 21.14 2.24 52.IO 4.40 41.12 3.11 :ar, 'OV· 30. ,us ; red by 20 Ex· - s to ·ate the •I O( f Pr~. cs:J '°'' 370 111:! ,, • Prev. ·~ ,.. m 10 • Stott ..,MC• i.y• 1no1 • told •• ... Dreams oanee in" E1n11ers . • It to Ul 1LMJ A.Del tbeG lt Wf'nl 00 not a ll'MU.l but I pre. clpttoal ~UM." Hart aaJd. TH£NCEFO&TH. HA&T expectf the stove-owners will be tookina for a reliable supplier of Harvard Bullaell Scbool: BE WAI 1ucceufw tn nal M&a&e,M~uWlleftatCMlt on hll own "J\Wt lD tlme to set .clobberecl." quaUly fire.-ood. He believes The firewood bu.lneas wu that delcribee the Firewood Co. tlarttd almoet u an acckleat when a downtown developmeat ''I tNllk moet ol our cuatomen deal bUlt.ed and left Hart tbt tMH-tM)-'N deeHnt •rilt11!a"IAH••••--•PfflllMllll~M1"i111W'•-*•WAN~IWI DO pa. ol l\lfl wbo have dropped Olle wamecl. ,,_, ~ mdUlld·n1t· tet11ns · · ·~'89it them wood. them and abOul 20 · tut year," be said. "Tbe only otbn people, .. Hirt sald, "And time I got excited about it was in I.bat'• what we are. We've in· tbe winter when it was fun ." 1tJtuUooalll.ed it." ' Actually, the firm counts close to 2.500 raidenUal .customers aod Hartt. far from qualifying la a dropout. He graduated from Emdry University with a degree in medieval Enallab, tried Jaw school for a year and then earned a master's de1tree at BAaT'S CSEWS deliver lop gndtld by moisture content and accompanied by Oyen offering instructions for fire-1>ulld1ng, rumi.Datioas oo fire's appeal and the like.• Hart is planning a store in Wasbington, D:C .• next year as the beginning of a franchise operation. Coasial Firms Report ''The demand aa I see it is ex· plosive," Bart said. ·'As IOOll as everybody faces up to what energy costs, we'll all be better ot!. Then wood is going ·to be damn ecdnomical alternative as a supplement," be said. ''We'll be in the right • place." ~re Pl~ Noia ~ year were $9,600,196, CQ!Dparecl"witb $10,111,308 in the year-earlier quart.er. . Net lncoine from operations in the first nine GEORGE HART STQKES DREAM8 OF FIREWOOD SAl.IES _ He Sare Company •tn9tllutloMllze1' Dtopplt19 Out · Comprehens1ve Care Corp., lrvlne, bas an- nounced it privately placed $1.7 million ot 9 per- cent convertible iubord.inated· notes due 1988 with a group o( lenders beaded by members of the Kemper Insurance Group · The notes are-not subject to call before Nov. 30. 1981, and are convertible into the company's com moo stoCk at $10. 75 a sbve. · moot.ha oft.be current fJ.1caJ year wu $2,353,519, or $1.14 a share, and revenues for the nine months totaled '29,582,179. In the comp.arable period of th& .last year, net in.cqme fr.om operations. was $2,865,ln, or $1.32, and revenues amounted to $28,428,494. ' • PacTel Repo..ts 7%·o ·eeline· " The company plans to use the funds to dis· charge $850,000 ot ex,i1t.lng bank debt, purchase equipment to modernize its recently acquired _ Viewpark Community Hospital ill IM Anceles and provide wor~ capital for its careunit pro- gram. · The ~mpaoy provides alcoholism treatment and psyciatric care . -Directors of MSI Data Corp., Costa Mesa, have declared 10.cenl dividend, the eighth consecutive cash dividend since May tm. · · · The dividend is payable March 14 to shareholders of record OD Feb. 14. . MSI has reported net income from operations tn-tbe third f"lSCal quarter of $654.,636, or 32 cents a . share. eompared to $962,lll4, ot 47 cents, in the comparable quarter or the last year. The company said the primary cause of tbe decline in earn.Inga. was a temporary sborl supply of C-MOS semiconductor memoey .chips for handheld portable data entry terminals. The company received 300,000 shares of Western Digital Corp. common stock during the third quarter in settlement of a damage claim. This resulted in an extraordinary credit or $339,000, or 16 cents, bringing the company's net income Jor the third quarte.r to a total of $893,636, or' 48 cents • Revenues for the tbJrd quarter of t)je current Mler•ll•C• llepert• G.•1• Microdata Corp .. Irvine, has reported that ror ·the first quarter ended Nov. 30, 1918, revenues were $20,446,000 and net income wu $1,353,000, or 60 centa a share, with 2,264,000 average shares out· standing. First quarter revenues for the J)l'e¥1ous -fiacaJ year were $8,414,000 and net 1.ncome was $640,000, or 29 cents, with 2,260,000 averaae shares outstanding. · The results for the last full 12 months were re, venues of $75,983,000, net income or $4,197,000 And earninp per share of $2.12 on 2,263,000 average s hares outstanding. • Microdata manufactures and markets busi- ness computer· syste,.s, key-to-disc data entry equiQment and peripherals. fbeco Selk Olldto~ l11terf!•t · Oxoco, an independent Newport Beach oil and gas producer. has announced the sale of ill .71' percent interest ln the Cap Bon permit, consisting of 972,000 acres offsbot.e Tunisia in the Gulf .of Hammamet. for $285,000. The sale involved the transfer of the interest of Oxoco and six other companies to an intemational oil company. 'lbe sale la subject to tbe approval of the Tunisian government Under terms of the agreement, Oxoco received $214.236 at.year eOd, with the balance to be paid on tbe aeeoad anniversary of the agreement. Of'IN YOUlt MOUTH! Answer Page. OICGroup To Meet By Terry Grmt, R. Ph. Not too very long a.go\ t has command b y a 'dentist was more than enoul!h to strike fear lnl just about everybody. It was a prelude to pain and a person would rather do! almost anything else than k eep a dental appointment. Row far we have come in a ·few. short years. Today. very rarely is Uiere any pain involved In dental work and your d e ntis t mostly ls .concentrating on prevention of problems rather than treatment. New techniques and equipment have made a visit ot the dentist a pleasant experience. And the wide variety of dental aids we stock can make your job easier betwHD visits. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription ii shop- ping nearby, or we wtU deliver prompUy without For the phone calls that<:an'twait .. Answer P~ offers the most complete setectlon of .. beepers" In Southern Callfomla. We hllve regular beepers, two·address beepers -even silent beepers that vibrate nolselesslyl And every beeper has tust one job: to alert you to Important phone calls In· stantly, anytime, anywhere In \.Q&Q9 ~mil s' ·of California. (No one covers.m<Ke umltoryl) U you have Answer Page, )1>1.1'11 never miss a crucial call again, be<:ause when someone wants you, they simply dlal your number on any phone and your beeper gives you the slg.nal. It's as-easy as that! You pay one low monthly rate, with no llmlt to the num· tser of "beeps" you can receive. no special equip· ment to Install and no utra phone charges to pay. So why wait? Call the number nearest you and find out how easy It Is to stay In touch !!! the time --1o11lth Answer Pagel ' fH~SWffi ffiBE •. Topics ranging from federal legislation to community involvement to trade scboola will be aired Sunday through W edoesday at the Dis-. beyland Hotel in Anaheim during the semi-annual conference of executive. directors of the Opportunities In· dustrializaUon Centets of America. Keynote speaker for the conference will be Dr. Leon Sullivan .. founder and cbairman of OIC of America and pastor of Zion Baptist Church in North Philadelphia, · .Dr. Sullivan, a member of the board of directors of General Motors Corp., wUI apeat Wednesday '.a.t the Orange County OIC's seventh annual babquet, which coincides with .the conference: OnBoard ----•extr~har&e .. f\JreJ\ many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound 73-C--7777 -Or u11 lnform11t!Onrortiiei.nPer ~ Ofrf«nurU'tYou. .....,.1o111..ioo""" "'< ---SACB.t.M~ • yours? -.. ........... r...-imo.._cy fneo.t._, lll ........... ....,.,. .... M2·1UO -An.De Salsbury of San Franclsco•s Hataht· J..-----------__.._ ____ _, Asbbur)' Free Medical . Ung classified ads are the belt place to buy or seU ski we•r and equipment ln the Dally Pilot. 642·56'18 Cllnlc was •PPolnted to tbe 1tate ·eoard or MedlcaJ Quality As· aurance by -Oov. Ed· mund BrOwnJr. 26-Week Certificates FSfJc ANNUAL ~Tl For certificotes issued during 2/ 1 thru 2/7179. -- Minimum $-10,.000 lnterett compounded doily. No...._ Eaftl more than any bank. · .._;., hM It .US....,_, ....... U.S. ,,.~ tlll .............. wttkh I• -~--·I'· n...r....,. •• , ................. ,_.r,wllkh _,.. ..._, -""' ,lekl. ....... ,...i. ................... _ ... ,_,,., ,_..ty,., -" -~ .,_cMtl~ Santa Ana: 9~·7.580 S.A. Fa•hlon Sq 1 83'·0717 Newport 8each1631-l611 Huntington 8each1 898-9666 Pacific Telephone has report- ed a 7-percent per .t~oUJmon share decline in earnlnp for ~ateodar year 1918, compared with the like period in·lm. •'Both 1978 8nd wn· earnings results have been adjusted to reflect the potential impact on the company of tbe long - standing tax issue related to a Cali!ornia Public Utilities Com- m.loo Order," said Gordon L . . Hough, ~atd chairman. BEFORE REFLECJ'JNG the potential impact of the com- mission's order. 1978 earnings _j>_er common share would ruwe -tiee012.32. They aie $1.85, a re. ductioo of 47 cents a share for the year ended Dec. 31. "Even though we had signifi- . cant .gajns ill · procluclfvity and ex.perieoced unprecedented telephone growth in 1978, ow-net income increased only 1.5 per- cent or $4.9 ID.lllioo, from um·s resta(ed net income." Hough said. Se91Jinar Planned Howard L. Sbenson, former ch.airman of the management department at Cal State Northridge: will bold a consult· ing seminar oo Friday from 1 to 6 p.m. at the Newporter Inn. Newport Beach. · Fee is S85. It is aimed at de- i guer~ authors.--realtors, engineers, graduate students, ~ufacturen' representatives, sci~ntists, psychologists and in- vestors. O ver The Counter HASDU....,. "The earnings reflect results as though the refunds and back tax liability associated with a 1977 PUC . order bad been re- alized." THE 1177 oaoEa could · mak~ PacJfic Telephone ineligi- ble <or certaiD tax benefits and ~ require \be company lo pay back tax.es o! more than $3 billion by IJM4. It a.lsq calls for a refund to customers or more than $29> million as of Dec. 31, 1978, .and a prospective rate re- duction of more than $60 million annually. · A request for reconsideration of its Dec. 11 denial of a petition for review of the order is pending ·~foretbe U.S. S~preme Court. -r- • I ' I i !.... t. K " " " I& • Thurl4day~ lo in@ Pri e TR ANSACTIONS Car la•urance· Sex, Marriage Affect Its Cost Money's Worth NEW YORK <AP > -The stock market recovered .sUghtly today, breaking a week-long trend attributed by analysts to uncertainty about the economy. The l)ow Jones industrlaJ average. down about 20 points this week, was up 1.65 Points to 840.87. Losers led gainers by 8-5 on the New York Stock Ex- change. Worries about oil supply. the failure or major banks io rouow Chase. Manhattan's lead in cutting tbe prime rate from 11~ percent to u ~ percent. and uicH cations that the economy was slowing had contributed to the decline or stock prices. analysts said . Sl fH'lu I• TM- Spof llgltf ')PEN H lon l ow (IOU Cllq lO IM 831 " '°·" m .ss a.o ''' 1.6> 10 Tn\ 711.17 fU.n 111.'1 1H >•-014 IS Ult IOUJ 0._.4 103 ... 104.SJ-0.39 " .,,_ ,.. 03 ,..,os m .11 a..n . o.os lf"CNS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1,ltJ.tDO i~~ :::: .. :.:: ::::: ::::: ;~;: •S Slit . • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • . • . • J,11•,JOO HEW YOfllC IAPI ~ ... J,oc!ay ~ 760 1041 ~ J70 1155 ,., " ·~ It 9 2•1 •'re not going that way, Marmaduke. You always stop and goulp · with all your friends I" SHOE --by Jeff ~cNetly -. .. I • COMICS I CROSSWORD. bV Tom Batiuk ·Pf;ANUTS t by Charles M. SChuli 'CALJSS M Y · -res-r -ruee wAs KE!Pi" WHE!R6 IT AL.WAYS CALJ<SM"T" 1"HA"f" e>Rt<S H"T'" MORNING SLJN! . . by Biil Hoest HOW HM ..i£ MANA"" "TO GiT AWAY WITH IT FOR ')() I.ONG ? ' -.· byGu~A~a " t'Cl)Wiftm~ ~ i ~~~ I ~~ f ~i ~ TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS •6 Refinement UNITED Feature Syndicate '8 Thrash Wedne.tdo'a Pvule Sol-.d I. Nips C9 Sorp11se I<:. • s • ti ll 1., ,. ,. $ If f 0 6 Side dish 50 Blaclctnorn • l I I • :E ti I c •• 1 0 • 0 11 Philippine 52 Frolic , . , , ti .. O N ( ' 0 I/ II ~ tree 56 U.S. mil S I ... a I D • • I M 0 II t; I 14 "Get -:--groop onr· 57 Scout 15 Insect staoe 60 Ar11cte 16 Egg drink 61 Commerce 17 Juggler 62 Uselul 19 Mineral 83 Econ. adv1s· 20 Verity ers 21 l ion feature 6-t SWOfd 22 Massenet 65 Touchy opera 24 Chaflces DOWN 13 Deputy l9 Remorseful 26 Ablhty 1 So. slate: lo-18 Interjection 41 Aba~s 27 Aloof lormal 23 Tap drink 42 Beverage 30 Salty fluids 25 Can ·s "G.rrs nick 32 Rockflsn 2 Moslem ne1gntior name 33 Sow chief 26 Containers 45 -~t>er sul· 4 Ml(:htmr -3 Sound W SPfleres It• _., I l E $ -• a ,. _ -• s 5 • .. ' I ' • S I I ' U L I If A D I f ' . L ( 0 I II a IC A • . ~ II If IA II O !~ [!~ •• 0 .. O• II I " E• l l , E ' ( ti$ 0 .. • G l 7~ i i -•11 I A I L E ;"- • t ' ' tll1 1 $t II ,f ~ f I :t:-mrt 1 · .. "~ ., " I" l II 'i ~ro 11 "'' 'I" . I IC IA T 'lir-G rt & '';a I 1a ... 1u 11 ) • .. part 4 Showing 28 Shoe 1nsens 46 Glue ___).?.1'1 .n~md. SJ>arted.:.... •.• ......29J1~ena, _______ _,_ .. 38·= foot 011 ~ 30 Condemn city ------------------. WHAT 'KIND a; euBBl..E GUM 1010 YOU CtlVE ME?-·- 1 C-'N1T MAK~ euosi.es by Emit a.st.miller TRY TAKING TMe WRAPPER OFF FIRST 39 Castro's 6 Mr. Mamer 31 Rodents '8 B<»boo land 1 East Indian 33 Individual: 50 Crust 40 Holy figure: nee Abb<. 51 Vetn of ore Abbr. 8 Overdue 35 Man's nick-53 Elevator 41 Campos 9 Pasl name tNn bldgs. . 10 Inactive 36 COmmon 54 Thaw t '2 Theme 11 Inebriated: Scottish pre-55 Quarry I. 43 Delight 3 wOfds fixes 58 Cycle • 45 Flexes 12 Efe'™!nl 38 -Webster 59 Not''\ ! I ~ .... -.. ... . \ - PUBUC NOTICE ·----·--------1111"1t .. o'ftc• TO C• lfOl'f"O• S HQ,A__, SUPlf111104l CO()ttOl'T"I! ITATlfOl'CALl~NIA fO• TMll COUNTY OF OllANGl Ill t1M ~el tM lfsl.W of LOIS JU•M G&flCIA. o.....-. Noheo• •• M••Or Q•vefl to trfdllon "•v1n9 tletm\ egaln" 1nt• Uid de<eCMnl IO Ill• Wld cl .. lml "' ,,... ollk t ot ttlot ;ltA ot IM ollOrt'Wtd court or to preunl tnem lo ,,,. Uf\otl\iQMd •I I~ offo<e ot GERALD L. ALPERT; lnJ:I Tn.s A-NO II. '" \ne CllV o4. LOS AnQelt•. In ·~ elOf~,)aod CQul>ly, Wl'otOI l•llu OHICIP Is tb e P••c.• 'oi b"''"•~•-o• tht--•soo-'" •fl ""''ten r>ert••n•"11 to wld '"el• Sue" claom\ wotto \ne M<~U•ry -nen mu•t i. tolood or Pf'•'•ntf'O •t. .. '"""'O w1tf\•n tour "'°"'"' '""•' 1ne '"•' Pll04•<•11on Of 1111\nOlote 0.1..i J-V '· ~,, M•nhe S.1tn O.~•• Aom1nl~tr•trt11 of fhf> 1:: .. •te ot .,.,d Dt'Ced<:"' GEll&lO L Al PfU AltOf'My •I U w ~UlJTnHA-111. "• ,, '--'•"" .... ca .ac1u Puolllhed Ct'lttl9t OMl•I De lly Piiot, ,,.., ff;-19.U,~l;i~ ----_....;;: ___ _ PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "'tM _ ........ -OMll«f\1 .... NNlll ANO IUNY IUI l'e61 .._... ....... Ufte ITI ...... AM. CA ftltl ,.. 111•1 bMID ............. ~""1• l'UOll ...... Or ..... C..•I 0 <1111 Piiot, J • u -F•• 1,1 n tt,. 1a1t PJlBUC NoTlCt; PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE NOTlc• TOCll•OtTOAS SUPElllO. ~ttT 01' TMI • STA H Of' CAll f'OA N 14 f'OA -nt• CIOUMTYOPOtlA .. Glf .... A-tl:ISO £tl.lle Of NANCV OEOAGIA AAN. 00l"4. e>e<wwct. NOTICE IS HEAE8V GIVEN to !he creclllors Of tN .oo... ,,...,_ -~ tllet •II ,,.._ h.tvlf\O Cl•lmt tOotln't "" U ICI ~ •n '-lr.d fo .... llltl'!I. wllll .. NOH•rY ¥0U(lltrJ, In tM otfl<t Ill IN Cle,. Of IN,._ - lllltcl covrt, ~ to or.M11t them, wllll IN M<tiMf"r _,,..,, t• ~ lln- •raltNCI ...... M l<•. ff Jttllt Ao\. ,Hl•Clt. UI S. L•ll• '-"• .. u, -•tHtN, (A '1101. wlll(tl ft tfllt jllke .. "'"""' .. tt>t ~ ...... '" ... ,,...tten ..,,..W119 IO Ille fflft• of Mid OK""'I, wt\Ni\ '-~"' ellet Ille llrtl .,.,_;k .. lefl tlf tlll• flOU<e. o.-~ ~. ,..,. ~ '-""""1 W L*V1-r t.c,.,,.cit \IV W\11 Of ......... Nl'l'tld CllUdtnt JC*M M. POOUICM .. , ............... " .......... CA9'1't ,..,Cl,.,.... ."""'"' ·---P11t llt• Orenot 00.Jt 0.llr ,.. .. JM.lt,ts, ..... 1,1.~ •' DAIL. Y Pk.OT " Q :DWlttGfaa~-.... &rnde ed h I ·o• 1&.llaa TVt -s.1waaore •·· Aa&erta, N. Y. 'Glad YOU Ask T at A: Not qult.e. When abe showed up at tbe atlldio"We&lina a trwpanmt eown wbidl 1efl UttJe a., Mm Ip _.. Hy • .,... t.o th~ lroa~naUon. tbe prod~r objected. So abe 1Upped on a paJr ot red ti1bta. Mlal Lollobri&lda after u. We f11 Slb•Wla ,..,._, -Alnudrla later ct""rMOted, "l lueN ~ naveJ w11 COD· •··Cal '•• Oll6il. aldtred tee> tex.)' for the viewers. ' .• ~ A; 'lboulb Jil&ed..a ·~etioa." tt maUa.)'DU Q: l'.e 8enr laeat4 to~-~ .. Yert wooder aftes' ~ t.be author's delcriptioo ot •d•I& a.tr •'8· .... old Is lllef ~ Pried· tbe characters: "Ali.too Cooper bu bmoeence, ln· au, ...._. 'Beadl. Fla. tesrity. md • eenauoua beauty beyond ber years A: "l won't teJl you bow old t am." Joan ... And eoea on to become the IDQlt itamoroua moAns . "8'4 the candles on ll1Y lut blrtbday cake movie star tD t.be world. Jimmy~ Her first aet otr o.a-• •• ee .... a ._ a.a eftlllt.::w .......W .._ ~ lleant ~·t Fllp WU.. .... start bomoeexual. er;:, Jobnlon: Her flnt huaNnd, • : York'• =·-A"'n~119ae-Mf 1a.c--onLee1911._ ..... ,11.,i.At11U,.u~U11c...-...._,111a19te .... ~tJ11ti~11W111""',....Stran1e: A debonair 8rit.llber down CUy, N.J. on bis luck -8.Qd c:ount.lna-OD-AJ!IOD to ch•n1e it. A-Vou"ve got the'nKbtstart -Uie wro lllie-VcV .&bj-Ameriea's heartthrob, a bomosex· hotel. Fllp'a c,.reer started at the Manor Plaza ual actor wbO scars b1a face and wrecks bis Hot.el ln Sao Francl.sco. II was career. Leonard Role: The feisty 8roadway..pro- • ln 1954 -and Wllaoo (a clerk> ducer who makes ADaon believe in We aliO love- doubled by doing brief comedy until a plane crash teaches ber the horrors or bits in a revue staged ln the death and looeUneas. Billy Hunter: 1be singer who hotel's ballroom theater. He tries to step in Roee's shoes -and ftndB be cannot .won a steJ(iy job~ a colDic fill them. David Osborne: A dynamlc Engllah •c· when bis boss let him do a ~-tor with a wife, a drinking problem and a spirit as .edy walk-on as a drunk. He's wild as Alison's. Alison Cooper inspires 1osslp, been high <profesaionally that wtna fame and an Oscar. and becomes known. is> ever since. simply. as the moet beautiful woman ln the world. Q: I 1et tlae feellDI that She is The Idol." Any questions'! wi~ S&eve MeQQeeta la't too darUJed Q: Is Richard Harrls now a reformed drunk? bemg a moYle sapentar. Am I rtcbt! ...-Flo L., -Tracty s.,.PUtabarp. · Seattle. A: Yes. ·'1be crazy period~ my life ls over," A: Could be. ''When I look into a mirror:· lnslsta the supentar. "I really enjoyed it and have be once observed, "l don't get gooeepimples . . . ,no.regnts. But l have a different approach to liv· Alt.er I've got.ten my sugar in lhia business," he lng now." Hanis decided to go on the wagon dur· said, "I'm going to take off and run like a tbJef! ·· ing the filming ot "The Wild Geese" with RJcbard Q: lm't ador Sam Jalfe, u eail1 TV clod.or, Burton anC1 t<oger Moore. Watcblng tbe agonies oi tlte fo~ mu ofllaat era! -o.dley Flekls, . bia friend. Burton. while be himself was trying to Madl.loD.. Wlac. stop drinking helped him make the dedJion. A : Not yet. The v,eteran medJc of tbe "Ben . Send J.40U1 qwltiona to H11 Gardner, "GJad You Casey" series was the 1978 recipient of the Paul .UUd That," care of thia net.OIJJOP'T. P. 0 . &a 11748, Robeson Citation Award. Chicago. m. 60611 . Marilyn and H11 GardMT will Q : Before be ldllN bis wife and lalmeelf, OMtDeT aa '"°"ii queations as they con in their column. ·Wasn't adot Gig Young fearful &bat he would but the volume of mail makei ptNOflal ~, hnpo&it· become a '1ctfm of Ute ·'Cane· of &M Olcar"! -tu. · TOO SEXY? Gin• Lollobrtgtd• Phil Kelly, llollywood, Calif. . A: ~ legend has it that once a star wins ap Oscar, his career goes downhill. Gig claimed s hortly before bis death that tbe famous Jinx was a thought tbat badn 't' occurred to him. He won his Oscar In 1969 for "They Shoot Hones, Don't They?" After thJt, his ca~r did seem to decline and be failed to land top fl.lm roles. He bad recent· ly been touriilg Canada -bot>inl for a Broadway comeback in a play called, "Nobody Loves an AJbal.ro6S." One oftbe la-st interviews be cave was . printed under the bead "Show Business Survivors." 'The· 1ast" une ·or t<Jcbari1 t.:ee's story read: "Gig Young is a survivor and is frustrating the Curse· of the Oscar." And bis last movie. ironicallv. was titled "Game of Death:" Q: Du Telly Savalaa decided be'a bad it with televlslon? -Marshall Daffy, Syracue, N.Y! A : No way. And to prove it be bas just signed a ·long-term exclusive TV contract with CBS. He plans to star in, a TV pilot as well as three made· for· TV movies. · • Q: 1a 1& tne tbat sJm Goldwyn onee tarDed doW1l Erue.t lldmingway wt.ea &be p-eat writer wanted to sell bJm a book! -Ltae1 Price, Pblladelplda, Pa. A: Yes. Back in the 1930s. Hemingway offered to sell MGM's Samuel Marx an wiwritten novel for $25,000. Marx contacted Goldwyn. who snapped: "Why should I buy a book that's not even wrlt· t.en?" But the book was lat.er written under-the ti· lle. "For Whom Tbe Bell Tolls," was made into a picture in llM3 s~ Ingrid Bergman and Gary Cooper, and made a bundle of money for Para· mount .. Q: The book t.llat jut came oat by Da.W Bea· Jamln ealled ''111e Idol," lan't It really p•Uened Actor Sues Hotel NEW ORLEANS <AP) -Actor <;eorge Pep- pard and his wife are s~ng the Hilton Hot.eh Corp. for negligence 1n the· theft of $24,939 worth of jewelry during the Mardi Gras season last year. Officials at the New Orleans Hilton refused to Jet him hire and pay -security guards to-protect t.be jewelry and are therefore to blame for the theft. Peppard said in a suit. . The theft occurred January 21J, 1978, while Peppard was in New Orleans to appear on a Mardi Gras parade and to promote a movie with bis wife . . c:1nename 6 scPeen ' 63U 255 3 camPLE:x MATINEES SATURDAY I SUNDAY .. KING OF THE GYPSIES" CR> "LOOKING FOR MR. GOOOBAR" CR) "INVA ION OF THE BODY SNA"rCHERS" (PG) "COMA" "ICE CASTLES" (PG) "MOMENT BY MOMENT"" (RI "FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE" "FORCE TfN FROM NAVARONE' "~IONIGHT EXPRESS" (R) "NATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE" ''AMERICAN 0 .. AFITTI" (RI "MOMENT BY MOMENT" "HOUSE CALLS" (R) "MAGIC'" "EMBRYO" (A) "UP IN SMOl<E" (A) "A BOY ANO HIS 000" Al.L oatv.••tftt °"" ldtP..M.Mlelft'LT c:... u.... ti~ ... .,.,.... • K. ......... .,. ..... ~ Disney Goes.PG \ . ~ 'Take Down/ Not for All the Family?1 -By BOB THOMAS velopment. we thought it would be a \ HOLLYWOOD <AP) -What's this good idea to pick up outside ,films 1 -the IMney organization releasing a nd add to our progr~t:n· i:ake j a PG-rated movie? Down' is not exactly our karid or rdm ;' Parenta of America need not (ear it ha11 a different kind of appeal. Ours ~ that standards are crumbling in that generally attract the roung. au· 1 Burbank bastion of purity, Walt Dis· dience:we're not strong withthe,15-U l oey Productions . .Tbe company'uub:. youp_. though our new re!ease, 1'h_e t sidiary Buena Vista Distribution North Avenue Irregulars, may be, i.f. Compey, plans to release '1'ake youdon'~mindtbeplug." " Down," a movie about high school Buena Vista started looking at out .. wrestling made by the American aide films last October -an amazing l Film Consortium. number are produced with no u~ • Produ~ and directed by K'eith surance they will .ever find the Merrill, winner of the 1873 doeumen· marketplate. Most of the s ub· tary featur~. Oscar f!>r ·~ Great missions were rejected ... Take American Cowboy," <he new film Down" met the Disney criteria: "We stars Edward Herrmann, Kathleen felt it baa a box-office lure, that lt 1 Lloyd and Fernando Lamas. An out· was well done and in good last.e; we : side production, it will not bear the could distribute it without defend· Diane)' n~me. The · PG <parental ing ounelVes." .guidance) rating apparenUy st.ems . · . . from . a fairly harmless bathroom Ludwig s crew wtll ~ releasmg . a scene record number' of 10 Disney filma 10 · 1979, including the Sl7.S·miJUon space I t:'Oll THE LAST two decades, epic '"?be Black Hole " a s well as five Buena Vista named for the Burbank reissues.. He ex~ts· to market no , street the studio fac~s bas devoted it.s· more than two out.side movies per efforta strictly to diatrlbutlng tbe G· rated Disney films in this country year. other companies handle the Disney product in most foreign countries; a major exception ia Great Britain. Buena Vista president Ir'ffng .J,udwig explained the policy change: ·'Our own production has reached bei1hts we have never before as:hieved. Besides ouc usual fine family entertainment, we .are ex· pandlng into new areas . 'The Black Hole' is the prime example. We are aiming for wider areas and using bie&er names. •.,-o KEEP PACE with that de· \,tP ) DINO DE lAURENlltS presents A MICHAEL CRICHTON FILM S10rrtng BUENA VISTA IS the envy or the film business. ,its profits mounting steadUy while other distributors rise' and dip. The company manages to set new records with a staff of 100 in· eluding the home offi ce: 80 of that number sta ff 18 offi ces throughout the country. Ludwig estimates that other distributors employ two or three times as many people. Would Buena Vista ever release an R·rated film ? "I can't imagine it," said Ludwig. SEAN DONALD CONNERY suTHERLANr , and . LESLEY-ANNE DOWN A JOHN FOREMAN PRODUCTION -~~~~~~~~--~~~----~~~~ S ad C1GtD11 . Michael Conslantine plays a veteran character act.or who e son dies of an a pparent drug overdose in tonight's e pisode of "Quincy" airing at 9 o'clock on NBC. Channel 4. pMle ~terl mMtlng In PMll elANFOM>AHDION Fred and l..9Mor11 go ~ IWld 111'<1 "*"'" ..... stranded In lhe fOt'Mt. • HTONOHT "P.,.,,llng Per.Ma 8'*911 Out" v......,. ~ call In with Ql*1i0nl ooncernlng proDl•m• tac•d by pwents. (2 l~-84 2 f) 7:JO 8 Q8CO MMMC Hos! Peter 8'own. Gu.1· Enchantment I IN 8EAftCH ~ ... DATINOOAME Olan.net L l•t i np 8 KNX1 (CBS) Los Angeles G KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles G KTLA ttnd) Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego O KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles OJ KCST (ABC) San Otego tD KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles • KCOP·TV (Ind > Los Angeles ID KCET· TV I PBS) l os Angeles al> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach .. , THE GONG IHOW TIC TAC DOUGH ';' AOAM-b AMd and MMloy work Wl1h Ille lntamal An.Ira ~ wNltl • •actlYe .. - I = wroogd<>inO. l tM leAUTYIHOW MATCH GAME P.M. t:oo 8 (J) MR. HORN er.Id Cerredlne POf1"9YI tfte legefid9fY fn>Mlet ~ ur• Tom Hom. whote Ql'Wt lneluded the ~ IUrl Of Geronkno ~ I lllnt ... bounCy flunlet. Richard Widmark ind Katen 8laok CCHtM. (Part 1ot2) 0 CMa'9 8C.INR HIROl8 8tuce JenrMf hoet• lhls apedal featuring peftor- mancea by IOUf' 'Qr&\.' t citCUI act• • Mtlallat EMh e.ie. polat bMr train« \JrllM eo.ttctlef. Pedro cantlo on the high ~· and ttapeie at1ia1 Tlto Gaona. 9 OOtLEOE 8A8l<ETIAU. Oregon vs. UClA • TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS • f~ridafl'• Dayr i•e no.,le• AFTERNOON 12:00A ••'"'"TheGk1~" (19651 Roeallnd AuNell, Femanoo lMnU.. W"-' a oambler'a daughter lnher· II• a caalno, lhe lriea 10 cwercome tile problem& blMnlng It. t 1 tw •• 30 mon.) •• * "Suzy'' ( 193e) Jean Harlow. Francl\01 lOM. Fleeing from falM murdw cnargee. a wonian fllls In io... with a m11t1 who 1ume out to be lrwoNecS Wl1tf her ~ lrOUl>le. (1 hr, !iOmln I l:OO 0 * • • ''Summer With· es. Wmtet Or~" I 19731 ~ WOOdWwd. Martin Balsam A W01N111 who i. Munred by her c:tllldhood turns to h4'f lluaband tor undlr'alanolng. ( 1 hr., 30 mtn I 3:$0 0 * * • .... "FanlMtlc: 'v<>Y'aoe" (1966) SllC)han 8oyd, AaQ\Mll Watch. SUJ. geons atld !Mir equipment are reOucad to m!C1'0be ~• In Ot"9r to pefta<m a oel1ea1e operallon 11\llde tile brain of a famoue SCientltl (1 lw .. 30 min.I TraCking Dowii the-Life of a Legend By JE&llY BUCK for televialon. I understand McQueen is using the He also made a tough jungle movie io Africa, ._ HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Tom Hom led enough Geronimo chase only briefly, then going ioto_bis but said filming "Mr. Hom" in Mexico was the lives to keep an entire series going. Two of those da~s as a bounty bunter." toughest one· yet. lives are the basis for a two-part CBS movie, .. Mr. "It was mainly because of the heat," he said. Horn." · J ACKS, A LONG-TIME producer of Westerns "The tetaperatures reacfled 136 degrees. Not only Hom tracked down the Apache chief Geroftimo until he 'did ''The WaJtons," said, ''I feel David was it affecting people. but equipment was break- in the 1880s, was a cavalry scout, cbapipion rodeo Carradine was born to play Tom Horn. The ing down. W~ bought a thousand.Pounds of ice in cowboy, Pinkerton detective, s.oldier in the similarity between their personalities is incred.i-El Centro: Calil., and by the time it got to Mexicali Spanish-American War and bounty bunter. The first. ble." only 300 pounds were left." and the last form the foWJ,dation for T•Mr. Horn." ---------------------------------------- STARS OF FRONTIER SAGA 'MA. HORN' David Canadlne and Karen 8Jaek 'Horn' on TV . Misses Mark By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES CAP> -''Mr. Horn," tonight at 8 on CBS, is one of those proj~ you'd figure just couldn't miss. It's a story about oo~ of the most interesting Americans who ever lived, fron- tiersman Tom Horn. As a Pinkerton agent be t>rought iD some of the West's most notorious desperados, but quit because he said it was too tame. He boasted about killing, saying, "I look at it as a business proposi- tion and I think I have a comer on the market." DAVID CAil BA DiNE Sl:ARS as the icy, enigmatic Tom Horn in the four-hour, two-part movie that airs tonight and Saturday· at 8 on CBS, C)»nnel 2. The bard-drinking, closed-mouth Horn m•kes Gary Cooper sound like a chatterbox. The P\rt originally was ·written for Robert Redford by WU1iam Goldman, but Redford de- cided not.to do it. rt marks the television debut of Goldman. who won Academy Awards for wriUng "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and ''All the President 's Men." The original script was used \.mcbanged for television, and Jack Startttt direded it like a theatrical feat.ure -with oumeroµs long shots, breathtaking views and a leisurely pace. And that may be the movie's undoing, because it slam very slowly and doesn-t build a bead of steam until halfway into the first part. Here's a subject whose real life begs no Hollywood endowment; be was a cowboy. lnclian EXCEPT ..f"O& &ICllA&D Wid mark 's re. fighter, detective and bounty bwtter. Best, bis life markable performance as Indian scout Al Sieber, hasn't been mined out by television or the movies, the entire first episode on the capture of Geronimo which gives this story the l>romlae of freshnas. might have better served as a preamble to the The script was written by William Goldman, second half. The Saturday chapter, tn which Horn wbo owns Oscars for bis "Butch Cassidy and the tu.rns bounty bunter and is disposed of when be Sundance Kid" and "All the President's Men" outlives bis usefulness. is by far the best. screenplays. Good. Playing the enigmatic Tom Karen Black stars as Ernestina, who bas a Horn is the enigmatic David Carradine, with brief affair with Horn wbeo she comes to AriJona Richard Widmark as the tough old Indian scout Al to claim the ~Y of her brother killed in the bunt $eiber, HOr'n's mentor. ---.. for G'el'Onimo. Sbe -reappem 17-years later, IT roST COULDN'T 'ln£.Q ou think b t 't widowed aod running a rooming house in • ::a -· ·n-=:r.t n--· ~-Y ·--:=.. ....lLL. Teb.e>'"" Wyo. wher,e..Horn ls-IWDmooed-to-wi,._ uoesn \ qw,e m e n., ei_ er. .a., _ . out the catue rustlers Set against a beautiful Baja Calif onua scene. H ~ bi jo · u "Kr. Hom" effectively presents a Butch Cassidy-om~ s b too well. ne fmally becomes Sundance Kid analou in Widmark and Carradine an embarrassment to the cattle barons who hired Jn tonight's two-hour episode (the two-hour con'-him, and when he mistakenly ltll1s a ~pber:cter's clusion airs Saturday) Widmark enlists Carradine son , lt provides a convenient excuse to bang him. In the tracking of the great Apache chief, Geronimo, and the two spend much Utne tradine anecdotes and generally carcying on like a couple of Old West characters. There's attraction in that, and Western fans will like all the shoot· 'em-up action. But there are huge gaps iD the story line wbich<take5 • quarter- hour to develop that might make the impatient switch channels. FOR EXAMPLE, W1TB Hom and Seiber in the lead, a group of cavalrymen enter Mexico looking for Guonimo. The-y run into a croup ol Mexican soldiers who want to bow what these blueeoat.a are doing in &heir country. Hqrn. Wbo fpeaka every langu~Je known to man, explal.DI that they're just looking for Geronimo. The Mex- kaas say, 'That's O.K. with ua.' or sometbtaf tike that, and •tree to let the Americans pus. Next thing you know, boCh skies are blutiq away at eacb otbtt. . Anotber time, Hom tries to save the life ot a GOLDMAN UNCO~ED Jnformation About· Horn while researching 'Butch Cassidy and. the Sundance Kid ." "He developed it for Redford," said Robert L. J acts. who produced the movie for Lori mar "Productions. "Steve McQueen simultaneously 1ot the same notion. McQueen boqbt tbe book 'I, Tom Horn.• I doll 't know why Redford dropped the pro- ject, but It reverted back to United Artiltl and we acquired it. "What we bad wu a very expensive William -Goldman•scrtpt. U it waa done u a.movie. lt would take $12 JDlUh>G---95 dap ol abootlq. We did tt for e &ll&ni CIU Ml aQllod a~ tcbeaule-](WU a lone aerlpt, and we bad to cut 50 mioutel out ol the flnt part." He said one reason Redford may bave alven up tbe project wu that tt actually telll two dlf. ferent llories that are 17 yean apart. "It .doef make for a gap. but to nu th.It a~p would take a 12·bour movie," be said. "It's reaJ.11 beUer·aalted captalD wbo was kUled in one of the ear t1 -Dance------r--Q-W--•• -a-W--e-1-1 .. ---•lrlrmllhet. He tails, and a few weeks later, tbe &D I& captain'• 1ilter, Karen Blacl~. comes to coiled ber brotber'I body• It's all very cool. very buatneAlike wbft lfsi' Black meet& Carradine on her way to Fort Bo-le. Sbe: ''Did you know my brother?" H,: "Oh, a lit· tie." Df 'I'll& ..ay NEXT tcene tbeJ''re ID bet cabtn mMini whoopee. without even the befteftt o( a coa:umrdil ~ak to set. aequatai.d. ' .. - HOLLYWOOD <AP> -After 11 years OD "Tbe Lawrence Welk Sbow." dancer Cissy Kini bu turned in ber toe ahoea to ~me a cboreo- grapber. ''Klu IQna baa decided to takt up whit ln the ppt Ud been a bobby, c~apbinc ~· dently produced musical 1bow1, ' a 1pott1man for Don Fecldenon Productions, the Welt'• abow's producer. aaid. Final of Four AnnoUllC8111ents · _Jf You Missed . T-he, First Thre e Announcements · -You Missed 9 Great TV ~rses For College Credit . . . But It's Not·Too Late We Offer 12 Transferable Courses. o~ -·~~ HOME GAIOfNa" A.,tcllffwe I I 1-2 •If• 1#2001 ·-:=:-:.. ..,..... ........ .. ....... ..... .. .. .,..... ., .................... ... ..._ .......... .. 3 Of Them Are M ... tu ...... ,.,,.11.,.11 ... ,....._ .. ::· .. -· .... . ,.,.. ... .,. •• ; •••• •• ••t ................ .,.... .. .. .....,.. ............ .. ...................... c ........ ""'",...... ............... -.. _ -T CJ:·~~ OF MAH'· ·-~ - ti ..... 175--.J ..... f#J45f TWt c...... f M•H• •• ... • • Ip •.t el+.....__. ............ ...., te K9-e, W1tety. H d •l .. f , H 4 t •e .....w--. ..... ....... ..._ wfhd tlie ... ,.aw ef ............ To Discover The Offter 9 Telecourses " And To &roll, SIMPLY. CALL AS.,_. CIMMumY COLL• .. -ENTERTAJNMENT / INTEAMl6StON I Feiller Re.,ue • 'Hold Me' in ~e~~ Ooe of locaJ commuaity tbl11et'1 ftoeet bgUn WH the Ora.n1e 8tudJo 'l'beaWlr'• pl'Olfa.m of puncentJy tomtc •ketchH by h.unorilt JW. Fell· fer wbkb ~ ln liM a.nd ran fO( UM ~r pa.rt of-.~ bi0ran1n:nd, liter. IA 1W1ywo0Cf.' - . Jl wu talled "UtUe man lD aea.rcb of bi• ter10\al aide," di~tbd by Mary Eatman wltb . orta inal mualc bf GI M W..cott -and it was simply auper b. Unfortunately, It 1polled oie for ~ subwqwwwt IAOI* am ut ,.,_ 1wvw. O'l'llEa 1a1G1rl' SPOTS include Allan Stone'• ••ash,_ alliMt motbel·'who ~ ft· .croaebea on ber married aon's life. Sorrell .. 'V~£-xwwprw-Nl'l'--!w!-.t.h~y'-"1'm'HOICl~-:.-.K .. "e~"'::'a\··· --11W'1anyl"llue~·• treattn-o . lb~ Nf'wport Harbor Commu.nily Theater doean't McLougblin's Lonel3' Machine se&JDCD Kalla -.uue wo.rkUtte.rrormeT iHboulhthepeifonners ~he performs-Fe1rrer·s-oft.repeated dancer are good a~d the C9ncept o( director Corey Young fa stylish and 1maatoalive. Some or the •Irita from "lit· Ue man" (Superman and the Lonely Macbine amonc ·them ) are p~aeot in tbe Newport pl'odud.ioo, an lo· dication that Uua is, at least p.rtially, vintage Felt· ~~ . · Felffer revues have cropped up oft.en over tbe ye.ars -at the old Open End Theater. by the Santa Ana Comman.lty Players, and even at South Cout: , . Repertory. Nooe of them· have held a candle to the Eastman-Wescott version, and It would be wrong · to expect as much 'from the Newport Harbor playe rs. a group less than a sea.son ·ola which ap- pa renUy doesn!t even know bow to spell l the play.wright 's lastnam& <~s billed u Pfeiffer>. While much or tbe program f.U. to Jell eff~. Mon-Thur~t:15-8:00,t:45 ' lively, there are some ·very good moments - Frt. 5:30-7:30-9:30-11:30 though not as many as there should be. The beat S.:;~~~doso. skit of .the nigbt"is performed by the troupe--s most s un. 1 :30-3:30-5:30. impressive member ,. Nancy Ellen ~lter, as abe character which la less effective than 1n east pro-duct~. One pu.ule ln the Newport production. ls why the Bernard Mergeodeihler skits are u algned to !he balding Stone rattrer tban the younger McLoughlln, who more aptly fiU.the.preconcepUon of tbe character~ And one waits -\n vain for Bernard to tranaform himself Into HosUJeman, but t.b1s Feifferian lampoon ls absent in "Hold Me." · The show continues Fri.days and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. and Sundays an hour earlier at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Qrlve, Newpbrt Beach, !or three more weekenda, closing Feb. ll. ' • CAU.BOA&D -. Tryouts have been announced for .. Pinocchio," the next oflertng from the cbUdren.'s <Workshop of _the Costa 'Mesa Civic Playhouse . .. . r eadin gs will be held for youngsters 8 to 15 on Monday ~ Wednesday from a. to 5:30 p.m . at the theater. on the Orange County .f'airgrounds . . . • for information call 754·5159. Auditions rdr Agatha Chrtatie's play ''The Hollow" will be held Mond~t 7:30 p.m. in the Acton Playbox al Golden W College . . . direc· tor·Cbartes Mttcbell will be a cast or six meb and"Six women, •ilh Bri · •&cei!nts helpfuJ . . . the show opens Marcb·23. 7:3o-9:30 r aps with God outside a loved one's hospital room. lt:=========---.....:=:.:::_ __ _J Jt's a slinging piece, splendidly delivered B.ACKSTAGE -:1South Coast ,\ctors Co-op re· • I ports that over 40 Orange ~ residents have Wh 1 Fl k · been cast through the orgaruialion in nationally en• ac er' y adve rtised ~mmer~ials ... information OD the °'°"' c. teem Newport ~ach servtee m~ be dbtained by calling ~1-.:r~ I MOYll MOYll'INI 957-0282. ~ , •• {._l.J.. ____ ---""' w • Fl TbeWestminsterCom· ______ N_ICK_ILOOl __ ON....;.CNt __ ,. as m ow'er !Dunily Theater ls st~C·~ 1ng a ben e f i t .... -. ~·.,,.,. MAH Ato4 '"" tu nu w n rf of ""' Kill "......... CALIPOINIA sum''°' · pe ormance .a o 9M-2.eoo 121,.••Ut•._.• ... u.••••• ByBOBTBOMA8 ·a Mo.ckio~bird " for HOLLYWOOD CAP ) -It waa enough to glad· Larry Pierce, who _.lost den the calloused heart of any veteran movie preas. both legs in a mo~rc;ycle agent. . . accident, Sunday at 7: 30 Cl'INT U STWOOO lt ., •••• ...... ,, ... 994-2400 MIT WMICM WAY IUT lOOM \l'OI 12'» t t » t NO t l-U • H J & I te ~e newspapers and televts\on stations iave. attbe~a~. 7272Maple promtnent play earlier th.is month to the discovery St., Westminster. . .call o(.10 b.a.od:made. "pods" ia-.a public park-of the-836·9432fordetails . ., . s uburban hamlet Sie rra Madre. What were these str ange three.feet paper things that resembled something fallen from a giant primordial tree? ....... -'--2131531·9!>10 ...... 11t. ......... 213/SJI 9!110 '"""' .. ~ 1131531·9540 ....... .. i.-- OfOIGI C. ICOTT MOYll MOvtl IN > '"" NICULOOION <f'OI . C\INl USlWOOO Film buffs knew.>. local television station bad just presented Don Siegel's 1956 classic, !'lnvaaJqn or the Body Snatchers." A new version bad recent· ly opened 1n the oati.on 's theaters to considerable acclaim. The villain of bOtb pieces were ,iant podS containing s pbrea that Invaded the bodies of normal citizens, turning them Into automatons. THE SIEGEL MOVIE WAS ftJmed 1n Sierra Madre. Just so nobody would miss the polbt, an anonymous person called the Los Angeles media with news or tbe pods' arrival. . · Was it the prank of some lively spirit of Sierra Madre? Or did the long arm of Hollywood preu agentry reach into the qµlet little town? ,;;;;;;;;;:==~-------.:-:---:-.=,...:a · Many veteran publicists hope that the latter ls MIT WMICM WA'flUT l~ l'Ol 1:00 • i 1>0 • "°' • 11>0 a 101-213/Sll 9~0 '"rift IHMUDA ftf.AMMr ..~ .. l •t• "'WATBStW DOwtf'" -.. I "llJ.SS Til91r -"COIYln'I Stl1t•• -·-... c. COSTA MESI . So. Co11t '" ~6 7111 J••n 811\1ol • •t• P''""9 ''MO-::;-~~NI true. If so, it would prove that the spirit of hokey __,__ tom.foolery still lives . . »>,..--1-.--:1.-·~But it's almost"impossible to pull of( a stunt Whet\ this l2yiarold mut.a"mind I eoea to WOf'k .. .Watch<>Ut "'OUYWS STon-.,.. "AMMtlHAU." .. ,.._ .... .. "MATIOMAL LAMf'OOtn AMMA.L MOVSF f' __ ... ,_ .. ,NJll-11-7: ...... •™MONMS "MAO.IC" l'WI "ffl.S °'LAURA MAIS" I ---"A Tiii"« TillAT IN HOllOU' J. DfVll T1MIS flVI 111 2.HOHOtt HOl'ITAL 111 _........,...,..-... __ _, 3. THI COl'51 GltlNDtH ell or0toc c. scon MoVll MOVtf "°' 'LUl HUKtl! lllAQI! ll'Ol IOllY MlllOll e ITllMIOl4f lllMlllOll tcl CAlnllf,., "'"' THANK 000 In .. tOA YIN! Cllflf fASTWOOO MIT WHICH WA 'f WT lOOSI 1'°1 '"'' OAUNTl.ff fll CUNT fASTWOOO Mil WltlCM WAY MIT lOOlll"t "'"' CMUHTLIT 111 .. l -t l'lllllolQlf lOINOll tel CAITUI tM1 ~ CASfY'S IHAOOW !!fl ... ,... .... _.. ..... -... . 2. NCmOI llOIMAL = l.MCW'll-11• ,. nowadays," says a longtime publicist. "In the old days, we bad carte blanche to do anything that would get pictures and stars tn print. Now we bave to go to the producer for ·permission, and usually he 'll say, 'No. it isn't dignified."' · "BESIDES, THE MEDIA has changed," adds another. "In the old daySfllWe'd bring a whopper to a city editor and he'd say, 'What tbe bell it'll liven up tbe paper.' Now you fµxl editors wbo are so worried about being corrupted "1at they tum down anything that smacks of press agentry. ... • Recently, a half-doien veteran publictits' sat around a lunch. table in a studio commissary and exchanged remembrances or stunts. past. Lilce all . good press agents, they maintained their aoonymi· t y._ Their credo: Get the movie, studio or star to pn nt , never yourself. One of the lunchers recalled the silent era when be was assigned lo ballyhoo the premiere or a Buster Keaton comedy in San Franclaco. The Ku Khtx Klan was having a -postwar resurgence in America, and the publicist bought 50 billboards proclaiming "The KKK Is Coming!" SAN FRANCISCANS WEllE in a furor and the police chief hauJed in the publicist for a'n ex· planation. "It means 'Keaton's Kolassal Komedy Is Comlng," · said the man. "I'll give you 24 hours to get those billboards down," the police chief replied. A Paramount praiser oLtbe early .1930s-came up with the Driiht idea or training so parrots to say tbe title or Mae West 's 0.t:..~'de • ..:.:.COm~.ll~aod- ee e ome me, rv t6en sending the m to newspapers around the country. For the premiere of "Planet of tM Apes," press agents hired cblmpa.nze.e pickets to protea\ playing of simian roles by buman acton. For lut year's "Fire Sale," a buketball game bet"'"'1 midgets and giants wu staled in the middle di Wllabi.re Boulevar d. ADd now the discovery or pods in Sierra Madre gives comforting· evidence that press •eentry lives! . I ,11\\ f'I \~l'-1 . STARTS TOMORROW lmr HMOor &. Adam• ~141 FOUNTAIN VALLEY TWIN 114118rookttU4'9t 139-1500 70MM DOUY STlllO 9'SAME TIME, IBT YEM: SAME lAUIHS, Alff YW{ A .,_, ... ..... ............ ... .. two utcktg just beyond ........... . -~Cl\alftllli'l,1-A.T.._ Ellen Alan Burstyn Alda ~'11~ GNext.~" NOW PLAYING .-..s· NEWPORT Newport Beach 644·0760 , .•. ..., f"wll ....•. .., .,,., ... ·s.11..,..~ . 4ff.ijJ'j' S JI hllr c.... ., .. 111-lllt u.A.MllC..... Wa I 2 I• ltMl4' ....... ""-... £ _.......,.. ........ . ~. L~• I " ~­.... ,. ...... , .. ' Plus "UP IN SMOKE" ''THE LATE GREAT PLANET EARTH" (PG) Mo"""rt 7:00, t:Oo "THE. LATE GREAT PLANET EARTH" .., ........ 7!0l,t:t0 _.,. . £ fL\?@M rr ~®[fWD©@ . . ...... 0.tn' • Fre.11 Prw.11N OEAll PAT Can you ~ll m *h re to write ,_ the tof'Oml tion that explains bow to break dat· hie cock's on c nned Cooda• At the pncea I'm 1>•Y iq today, l wont to make'$ure the canned roods I buy are not aged products. ,. J J .. N~wPort Be•cb •eca~ .. 8Und Da-.ea .. rroa &lie New Yort 8ca&e CO..Hmer Prot.ecUoa 9oanl, • Wulalacion Avt'., &lbaJl)', N.Y. 1Z2lt • • ., ••• Abold Fir~e• Traeeler. ' DEAR-PA't: Are there any enrcisea • penon can do to avoid the inevitable stiffness that comes with.a long plane flight? Mybusband has to travel a lot and be always compla'ins about arriving so tired and cramped from the trip that it 'a bard to get ent.b.uaedabo.ut busin~ _ _ . . T .G., San Juan Caplstrano E~erdae expem say ·era..velen eaa avoid tile ar· rival blabs by maJn&alolog adequate dr~ahUoa la Ute trma aad leg&. If a loQg plane or trala trip caues cramps and sUllness, get ap aad jut walk back aod fortb every bouT or so. U thla l.aD't feasi· ble or teems awkward, jaat s1retch ap oa yoar toes to keep tbe calf muscles la &one and &brow back · yo1111 shoa.lders and shake )'OW' arms every hoar or .0. Wearing C'Omfortable clodrlug and IYClldlng ttalllt adergarmeots also la advised for Joa1 trips. Soaldng Better 'l'laa• Bnula DEAR PAT: Is it better to soak the bottom of a .fence post In· wood preservative or is painting it with the preservative sufficient before putting the post into the ground? I'm going to put up a yard fence and want to check this out because I've hea rd varying opinions. t'l. E., Huntington Beach A VS sources say it's better w soak tbe end of the pos&. in a container of wood preservative for about 12 bours than to just apply &be preservative --= ..... mrus . you p an Wsertbe post ln a con· crete base, the pa~ that Is imbedded ln concrete will probably bold lndefinJlely regardless of how a preservative is applied. Pt•tfl Prf•e En• at S0,000 DEAR PAT: I don't know much about cars a nd would like.Jo find out how long a fuel pump should last. A service station att.endaril told me be thought I needed a ne w one. but J want to know what I should check for before I go ahead and have the work done A.N .. Costa Mesa The sta&e Bureau of Automotive RepalT says an average fuel pamp should last a& lelisf 50,80I • miles. It suggests bavtng a susplcloas fuel pamp checked as aoon as possible by a reputable garage with proper Instrumentation. Flael presaatt of as UUJe as Z-4 pollbds per square lncb can be normal. If lo doubt, check with the service department of any car agency seUJng yoar modf>I for the eor~d fuel pump pressure. Unscrupalous service statloa operators-or garage owoe('ll ban been known to sqalrt raw gasollne OD a -fael pa mp and claJm that the pa:mp has faUed. Be sare yoo weren'J. a victim of tbls trick before yoa autborhe a repair. llldml 76 Bartd~• Tire It'~ DEAR PAT: I bought two Union 76 tires, which are included among the brand names men- tioned in the A YS column as being covered by the Firestone tire rec3U. I called Firestone about replacement and was told I had to work through Union 76. A Union 76 sales representative told me Firestone and Union 76 were "negotiating" a re· call procedure. • Both of these lites blew out wbil~ I was driving walh my family on lhefreeway-onewithsucbforce that it knocked the fender skirt off the car and it was subsequently run over by a truck and cost $23S to replace. I shudder to think what could have hap- pened. I would like to know when and if these tires are going to be reraUed, but I can't seem to fi.nd out ·, onmyQwn. R.E.,GardenGrove GreJ LaBrache, Unloa 00 Co. 1pokesman, saya Joa sboald bave yoor tire dealer clleck these tlrea' aerial numbers to eatabUala bow yoar settle· .meDl wW be bodied. Tlr8-wltlt sertal-namben from • •••171 wlll be replaffd rree of charge wttb no proof of purchase feilalred. U the serial DGm· "----.M, ..... ....-.. .. a...,._,...,wUI be a91te41 to ptewe--~t---"ll:j•~--~ &be tires were parcbased OD or after Sept. 1, 1175 to recelv,. free replacement.s. LaBracbe says yoa slloald pllone UnJoa oil's castomer service depart· meat at (213) 486-6718 II 8Jl)' protaems re1ardlng seUJement arise •. St.Ide Baadla BoHd•p DEAR PAT: My grandson clalms there are no national hoJidays In the Unitecl Stat.es. I say thtire are. This debate has been going on sloce Veterans Day, which I still think should be observed on Nov. 11. J .J., San Clemente Y om grandaoo 11 teclmlcally conect. Eaclil 9'a&e lau ;.rtadlctioa over It.a lllolidaya, wltl~ a1'e dalpated by legtslatln enadmeat or nec.ulye proela•atloa. Most states do obeene die feder.,a kl•I llolldaya, evea ~ Urie pftllaeat a.t C-Crw eu lep8y ... ._. .... ....._,. eldy fer U1e DlltrJd of Col••'•• and for federal e••~· All die Nies olMlerw Labor Da1 • die flnt •01M1a1 la Septe•ber .... 109'0 lie plealed te lea,. a.at Lotdllaaat MJNbllppl ... WINwbl CGGUalle die tradMloul Nov. 11 Mlena· .... efVet.enMDa7. hot water all the time Super efficient gaa water heater with glHa-llned t1nk1, rapid• hot -.ater recovery 1y1tem and anargy·MV\ng feature8. 74~. ........... · ......... 11.• .. ..-... : .......... -.- ~ ............. 114.• •• • t SANTA ANA J ' Son CMQo Fr~ COSTA · MESA ' [J~. kids can't knock It Kld-tetted Glidden Spred lafex aeml.glots enamel glv.. you a non-yellowing Improved duc.abll!JY enamel finish. Reg. 15.25 10~ ' ... brassy, classy tire facade Black framed tlrescreen with brua trims. Hanging brush a°"<! poker. #155. lleg. 2.4...95 88 loolls llke the real thing R•prOdtJction of • m1n- zanlta ttump, 24" log with ,,.n. Rl9dy tor hoolc·up. .#AMS-2i. Aeg. &4_,95 3911 * .[£] . .. luttrig finish In flying colon GHdden'I Spred Satin Latex wall paint • . . goes on 1moothty and leave. a long- latting good~lng tlnlah. Reg. 9:'09 : ·7?! - '· · dramatlC accent 'before the fire' s.plece antique br ...... t ~· ~:: the better to see you by .• , • cov• up dirty tricks . Glidden Spred Lust.-. Alkyd 1eml-glon dries to a velvety ahe_en . rAlats" grease. steam & dirt CSepoalts. Reg .• 18.95 11!.. ... for a really. ~harp· Job how hot Is It? Skll'a 7v.'' circular aaw wfth 1-215 h.p. motor. standard duty. UpP9r and lower die cut aluminum guards. Double ln4utated. #538. with hanglnq_ poker and. ~tm...BeG-3"5.--~l---ll11!¥>o..m..il>L-_ 88 I ._.......--- , ' llfdS .. •. on sale Alt our Indoor Md1outdoor llgtiang ttxtu,.. now at ..n· lettOnal NVlngtl 20°/a off r I • •Horoscope •Classlfled • ~. flONery 1, 1979 OAtLY l'tl.OT ~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::x::.. --e~r.w.:~::miliiilliliilll~aa;Glsm~am~-. ' --Thf1 ·me11 -ot -fish ervades-the-large, airy warehouse on Paularino Avenue. 81 SUDITB OLSON Qt-~-.... There's eomethtn1 fia)\y Sotnl Oft ln Costa llna.· · . It'• all happening in • warehouse bu»cliD1 when buBdreda 0( l1Jh are mounted each month uader the expert guidance of Geor1e Lee, mariae tax.idenni.at. blm in Costa Mesa. A tb1rd aon. Jordan, manqes the brucb lo Hawaii. AN DIPOUANT part of the family la the collection ot call -Lee!a belt worken. The "squad," which lncludes Pipsqueak, Pockets, Tweety Pie, Peep Peep and Spiro, keep the mice away from the dozens of specimens wait· lng to be mounted. . Lee, poatb(y the only person practicing this ·dJin~ art in tM Ulllted States, saya the field la wide open. He claims he only does work for 15 percent of the ft.she rm en in ~ country, leaving the otber 85 percent up for grabs. lt'i an exacting job and one of bis cootinu· inC problems la finding skilled help. There are few )'OUDI J*>ple, be said, wbo are wtlllne to spend the years of apprenticeship necessary to The aubtle smell of fish pervades tbe large, airy wanbouae oo Paularino Avenue. Fish are shipped in frozen from Northern California and Alaska, and Lee receives skins from all over the worJ8nce the skins ire 1n the warehouse the 90-<tay process of rebuilding them begina. Gabin0 Rodriguez skins a fish. become a competent taiidermist. · • • E\'en his own sons, who work for him, are .. not excited-about the prospect of takhig over the buiness. Ilia hope might lie in bis grand- daughter, Amy Beth, now 10, who mounted ber ftrsl fash when she was 6. The business bas always been a family a(. fair. Lee's wife, Beatrice, is the secretary and b1a two sons, George and Gordon, work with One of tbe most difficult portions of the work is skinning the fish, Lee said. "Tbe.re are different ways to do it. It depe~ on the IJ'OUIP • Each group la treat.eel differently." The key la to keep the skln and sciles in· tact, Lee said. Once tbe skins are received tbey are cured or tanned. Then. molds are made of tbe shape ancf a permanent "body" la made for each fish. The skins are then stretched over the forma and fixed permanently in place. 1 FINALLY, THE SKINS are restored to their natural colors with paints. Lee bas aketcbes and ..diagrams for what hundreds of ' varieties of fish should look like ao tie can make the mounted skins look authentic. · "The bablblt decides the color. We use a happy medium between tbe dullest and brightest," Lee explained. . Tbe last step is a protective lacquer coat . Marine taxidermist George Lee with one of the giant specimens: Dia1lf1e~ Feinstein ._._~-SfTfJ''s-Sari-Prarrcisco-S firs woman mayor. BJ NADINE JOSEPH a-.............. SAN FRANCISCO -Dianne· Feinstein bas added to the wide-brimmed bat another aymbol of fenpnine political clout -the fiuffy blouse aad blk white bow. And like New York'• Bella Ab1u1, San · Francisco'• tint wo01an mayor ls a toulb lady. --~-----Ma. Feinstein, slender and dark-haired, ~ oftlce under tragic cln:umataoces -·after I tbe City Hall UIUSinaUons of Mayor George lloscooe and Supervilor Haney Mlllt lut·Nov. .. 2"1. ~ . m 8KlllT WAI 1UU lt.alDecl wtth blood • ..Jde.a, u adiDI m&,or under ta.a dty dwter, lbe made a telntled pledp that Saa Frandleo ''mat and wW pull it.self tocetber .•• The 6-year-old Stanford sraduate qaicklJ Pl"Oftd abe,wu •determined, abrewd and am· biUoua politician. • Aftel' a week of maneuvertna, she wu . elected mayor by the Board' of Supervilon ._ complete lfo8coae'• term, wbicb eodl at tbe close of 1979. Insiders say abe ta eon· aidend a ... In to win her own term, altllouP aenral •tl"Olll candidates have already an· aoueed plan& to oppoee ber. In an lnlerview, she aakl lbe waata to be lmoft • • ma10f" W,bo HNI a lot for peofle u41ltile for Mleo.IOIY • . •.-m ONll WllO lbowl eoneern bJ trJtD1 to do .................. ..w.··1...,....,. wbatlttak• co move a bureaucrlC)'." , Dianne Feinstein ,,. neW mayor tald ber = tut wW be to~ PGlt·Propo&ltion 1J problema. "I'm tum, a look at IOV•rnmeat wttb a view of retailorinl it in smaller.,...._," Ila. Peimtein, wbo •• ftnt elected to the Board of Supervtaon. lD 119, nD two --ctUful campalpl for IDQOI". Her Interest la mUIUclpal polltJa dates back to lier childhood wben her ..cle took ber to wbat be called "Board of Stuporyllan ~· lnp." -,;-· A 0.EaVA'llYll: ~.Ii. ........ I PGblkl jnlle dMfllled "' -M eool lillll <eee~ .... a! ' Wrongs: Sqhjeet-to CtiBnge ."What'• wrong ~lU alJl'ays be wrona," becina Ricbard Hugo's "Tbe Villager." A sr-t line for a "11lmlst, but what about those of • who still hope! • , I came across t1lia poem tueked insJde the covet of one of the bulljq notebooks where I keep my joumala and~· I wu in tbe mid· die ol making-another trip backward throulti life, reading •«ain tboee rusty-dusty words of love, ~ and bapplneu I Md captured so bold· , ly cm cOllege-rulecl notebook paper with tbe aid of a Bic B119ct Fine Accountant Point Pen., It wun't an eaay trip. Never ii, especlallJ • wbicb b8rdeDa and protect.a the paint. Lee· said the main dif(ereMe between his work and o&her companies' is that, be mounts rather than stuffs. The ~ that s.tuff usually use straw and the finished product "doesn't have the prbper anatomy," ~ sald. Mountin1 the smaller fish ls tbe most tedious. because moat of the wwk, includins the painlin&. bat to be done with more care. "An 8-to 10-iocb fish t&kes as mueh time as a 20-lnch fish," Leitsaid. '"L'.ee said the skinl ~ .. very fragile".and that be I.Ur~ lQ work with unusual fish. "But we've done lnelll all," be added. "We've dOne rainbow trout, yeUoWtail, tuna, marlin, sailfish and dolphin, from Mexico, New Zealand, Tahiti and Auatralia." · . OT8EU COME from Fiji, Guam and Hawaii. where the company has representatives trained lo remove the skins, cure and pack them for shipment to Costa Mesa. Lee also is doing some work for the San • Pedro Maritime-· Museum and be bas bad celebrity ~uatomers such as the Shah of Iran, Bob Hope and Desi Am.az. · Lee himself basn 't fished much since the early '40s w.ben he was a machinist at Pearl • Harbor. . "t ftabed all the time tben;• Lee said. "l was mounting specimens for myself and 1 learned the business by trial and error." -He started by mounting butterfly fish and <See llAllJNE, Pa1e 0> Two of the cats that chase away mice in the w819house. ·- ' wbell 10'& tldnk you•w-e cbaqed a ireat deal O\'er tbe years ancl find you really haven't - much. A J'l'OfeMOI' once told me tC fou put a l>lank .•beet of paper in front of you add Wein writioi, after 15 minutes of 1oln1 throucb multiple levels of consciousness, you will find your own truth. "The inner spriftl," be called it. · Many of the pa1es where twas trying to find my "inner •Prine" are still blank with only a dateline at the top. I keep u..!m to remind me of tboee elDJ)t)' ~ when· r wrote a1'd didn't Uk~ my own truth.-ao I Hiil it crumpled to tbe Coyote Canyon dump. <See ao•o. Pace a> -~­ ERM'il.aoMBEC K/HOROSCOPE •· Fetn8te1n ( ~ . (,..... P ... cu . -.. -· _·.B_o_r_o_•_(!_OJJ_ .. _e_~1 /\ --.--..-.. -...,.... ~ .. •• FROM IA-tbeJ lbow. 8omt ~ .. .. fudaawel with FalOA y. FEB. z .,.w... -TwO ot w ftnt ada M lnQ'Of "9N ,.. By SYON EY OMAaa ...... um all poliC'e cMpart .. t ott'lctall ... , ~ 0r A.RIES (March 21-April 19): Get going OD •lfona• •ad tb•t lier tlalf •• , .. her ... ve plan wbJcb could increase income. Be thol'OUlb .,. .. ,.. •• ,.,... · • · 0 -=== do your .. homework." Empbasls on money, tn: •"ften•1 a datlll!er ot ltolaUoa la l.bb' job:" • come potential, collecting .pertinent data. aaW Ml. Nllltel• T.1 waot to bow wb•t peopJe • Aq uartus, Leo, Scorpio figure prominently. ,-. are tll&nldna. I Uh the one-on-one coot.act. The ~ H F Your posiUoo is solid -:-don't giv.e up something " mott iatltlYl.aa upeet ot P.UbUc ur~ 11 t.bC_"'bill· 0 · AOCI ror nothing. · ,.. bty &o P,'ck -.> a phiooe and 90lve a bumu pro-,._.__, ~ -T V&\18 (April 20.:.Ma.v 20); You receive A VERY SPECIAL .. llem. . · ime9sa&e provid1qg areen ll&bt for exciting proj-· JN l'BS •AST -~ A. lot ol mothera I I offered to feed him ln· ect. Be ready for quick chan1es. cballenaes ·. Uberal, who campat1ned aaa1.n1t t.be -''lbnhal· o rdtnmT'Jlbt travfDOa111. --ftfHI-eppmtmdty to-Ylndtemte-rtewr.-oemtnt:-1f----.-..---------*·---1 -----..._ ... ---tHIDUoa ol-.Su f'r "'bu-wooed mtdd~ w~ It ct>mee The IUllettloa by my Virgo, Sagittarius lndlvldua!s figure prominent: aen teaderl and developed a penchant for eott· to their children'• "ec-lJue ana to a ·mer--1¥~ ---Fl NAL Cl:EAR·A-MC OF culllD1. She also bu foucht acalnl\ rent coatrol -tloo ot a boyfrleod or a by' tbe phone wttb sand, GEMINI (May 21.June 20>: Friend who had ru~ · _.,.. __ _ and a 9tU'f real-eltate apeewation tax. 1lrltrlend. runnlng through wu flnanclal problem could strike pay dirt. You HOLIDAY APPAREi .. I'm more pra1mat.lc than I wu, ·• lbe The)' want to know rtdlcuJoua. However, 1 benem because of past favor and expressions of • ...,, may.or aald ol Mr 1w1kb fTom left to center. "l how old, bow tall, what did slip a calendar un-unde~tanding. Family. member may be tem-• believe tbat l'\.ULl'Llnc a city coaa!lta ol knowina their father does, whel'e der bl.a door and circled .porarily confined to home o-r hospital. There is GREAT BUYS! ~ howtobalapcelntetttta.'' they live, the scope of the mootb no need for alarm. " Born ln San Francisco of Ruaslal) ancestry. tbeil-education, what Panic dldn'l set in un -CANCER <June 21·July 22): Clandestine Ma. Feinstein attended local schools and their plans are, for lbe t11 one day when 1 was meeting is romantic but please protect self in 1radualed ln 19" from Stanford with a deJ~ ln future and how they reel standing bJm near and emotional clinches. Pisces is very much in pie· blatory and PoliticaJ science An early marriage about cbJldren. saw him dial "1~ tu.re. A wish ls rulfllled, but this ls no reason for to an attorney ended in divorce. They bad-one I Oorl't care about any "Who are you call· extravagance. Conserve assets. daughtef. Katherine Anne, now 21. Dl". Bertram of those thmgs. All I ing?" I asked. LEO (July 23-Aug . 22): Whal seems an ob· Felnstein,wbosbewedinl962,diedinl977. want to know ia, "Is he ''You know," be said stacle la actuall,Y a healthy challenge. Know it AN EAaLY supporter of .the proposed or she a local call or a "The same person I 've and act accordingly. You'll have more . -;· rederal Equal Rights Amendment,' sh'e toll!" been t.alldng with for the responsibility -r eward !actors multiply.' ~ aevertbeless angered feminists by ber s-u>port I don't reme'm ber lastmooth... · ·Capricorn, Cancer persons tlgure In your " . or a ballot referendum that would have left names or faces of old "But I thought she personal scenario. Stick with number 8. · female city employees al traditionally low flames. All I remember was a local call." . VlllGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Finish" rather salary levels. is their area code. One ··Don't worry.·• he thal) initiate projed. Accent on education, • ". Unlike her predecessors. Ms. Feinstein's or my sons once dated s aid . "It only costs langu~ge, travel. long-range prospects. You will , style as mayor is far from ·casual. Sbe. works an area code 513 for six · abou t eigh t cents a encounter aggressive; inventive individual who · , Jong boun. demands tHe same from "her.staff months. It was mar-minute. Besides this· ~ould become a y.atuable ally .. Submit :" apdlikestooverseeallmatters. . ' riage by Ma Bell. I . isn't j\ISt some silly kid· ·IIlanu.scrlptorfonnat. .. -. figured we were spend-inf~tuation. This is a • LIBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stress (ndepen.-r---:R:::U-:f=fE=ll:-:-,:.:S:-~,,_-.._ _______ .. ing-$35 a month to share person I genuinely care ...,ence, origlnal~ty: outlet for creative endeavors If hor' such insights as : for aod want to spend b~~omes available. Emph~sis on digBlDg UPHOLSTERY roJ~~~ :1':t a~!~! "_Whal are you do-the rest of my fife with beneath layers of superficiality. You get challce WllM Y• W• n t h e B o a t 1 n g in~_?" · She's Important to me~ ~o prove a m~Jor point. One close to you bas ..... cluslfleds of the Daily Nothing~ what are She's special and there f10ancial surpnse-ofpleasantvariety. 1122 Hel'bor Blvd. Pilot you doing?" isn't anything I wouJdnlt SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Maintain low . Com ..... _541-1151 642-5678 · "I don't want to inter· do for her." profile. Listen. observe, let others show their ~~~~===~~=~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~e.1 rupt you if you're doing "I'm glad to bear ¥OU bands. Play your own car~ close to chest. Take something." say that. " I said, special c.are where legal agreements are -c:On- ·."J told you I wasn't "because according to cerned. . ·- doing anything." the phone bill you owe SAGl1TAJtWS (Nov. 22·De<:. 21): Plans "You sure?" us $36.86. in Jong distance come to fru1Uoa. Your natural capabilities "I'm sure.:· charges."' · sargetoforefrdllt. AnotberSagittarlancouldplay "So, what's new?" I learned something outstanding role . . Another one of my that day. When toll CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan: 19): AcceGt on ~ids showed an interest charges enter the room c.r~atlvity, change, travel, ki.leidoscope of emo-~n a lovely girl who Uved . . . love goes right out lions. Leo, Aqulirius, Scorpio persons pJay key Just a few miles from us. the window. roles ln your sc~nario. Yo-11 gain opportwiity for It was great. I didn't greater !reedom of thought, action. • --SP~CIAL GROUP OF . DRESSY DRESSES Reg. $44 • $58 · Now $12-$18 ASUAL. BLOUSES & SKIRTS • Reg. $20 • $38 Now$5-$18 COME E ARLY FOR B EST SELECTION. SOUTH COAST VILLAGE STORE ONLY. 0 IA,.._. . have to worry about a Wedding and engage· ~QUARWS.<Jan. 20-Feb. 18): AC"Cent quali- d e e p t n v~o 1 v e men t ment announcements run ty,. dtµ"ability. Put finishing touches on project SOUTH COAST PLAZA · because tbey were never on Sunday in the Daily '!h1cb ~as much to do'WiUtyo~eclU . -~- off the phone. He set bis . Pilot. Forms are available ty. Don t attempt to substitute for tiuality. ~I LLAGE alarm to call her in the .a~ au Daily Pik>t oflices or Pl;SCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Spotlight 0 0 ' morning. At night I used by calling the Features sb<?rt JOumey, relatives, a uniq11e report which 3840 SO. PLAZA DRIVE ~o go lo and remove the Departmenl.642·4321. brings enlightenment concerning iamily SANTA ANA phone from his ear as be Engagemerai announce· member. Taurus, Libra Scorpio figure prom- ,. I '· I I slepl. It was like .h~ng· ments. with black-and. inently: Be versatile' without scattering 979-2085 ing upan~mbil1c~ wMeg~~~~~ fu~~. ~ma~r~s:~=~=•:U:®:·~-~s:ti:c:k_~=u~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cord. Ar. soon as they bride or lhe couple, must number 6. ~ Jett one another at be received b11 the •' .... __ _ school in the afternoon Featurea Dq>artmnt m they would shout, "I'll ~eb before tile wedding call you when J 1et home'• date -. Fin1t Shm:.~ Since 1903 --------... A high naturat cork wedoe supporting quality Italian styling and leather. In this season's new color .. , "Hemp" ... $46.00 ~ ~~~ SHOES --____..,.. . tt"t=a altlon l ... ncf. Newpon !'eacli . . .151-9551 •• -~Romo . (From P age Cl) In looking ba.ck at the salvaged words, even tbouth there are feelings I didn't like then and jlon 't like to see now -I llnd me there and·in me I see .the courage to change what I am able to change. n.e_ mistake~ we have made in the past are still mistakes and will aJways remain so. And they are bound to becom~ future mistakes un- lesa we examine out reeUngs closely and learn from them~. • We all say. "U anly I coulcj have ... or would have. . . " and we never finish the sen· tence. We can't. The reality of the past must be. accepted ln order to move forward. · During times of stress or transition I find myself sitting lo front of that blank sheet of paper1 trying to sort out my feelings, trying to make sense of them. It helps. And if you've the courage to write down your reellngs and-not send them to Coyot~ Can- yon, it's wise to eollect them in a very private place and· 1ook back periodically to s~ bow · you'redoing. . Write every day if you can -even if the best you can come up with is one word to ex- preaa where you are. And don't t.b.lnk you have to be a "writer" to reach inside ancf touch. younelf. lo addition to maklng journal/diary/poetry ent(_I .. (lt doeln't ma~r what you call them -my eon calls his "fetters"), I collect blank ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~l!ll!!lllll!ll!!lllll!ll!!llll•im••~---4ar.da-wllb-p1ctm:ea..oo-lbem.anct uae~tb&~J:ic.. lures .>f symbols of my fecUnas. r'ltnd them lo book and card stores and I mall them to people I want to convey leelings to. Inside, I might write one word like "hello" or I might rm ever; lnch ol space. Theo I rush off to the nearest mallbox with the enveJQJ>e's glue sUll wet because I'm Im· pulslve and willing to risk someone elae feelin1 my feelings. There ls a danger tbou1b: Mott pro- fessionals will·warn you not to mall such com-· municadoos because ln a burst of emotion you m•Y HY something you really don't want to 11y. . • 1 • · Now, after preaching the wisdom of buyina blank cardl, notebook paper and Blc Black Fine Accountant Point -Pens, let'• 1et back to IUchard Jfua6 ~"What's w!OQI will always . be wrong." T • Only lf you don.'t want to snake tbe effort to change t,t. -bllls, coupons, calendar, recipe_a,_ receipts, notes, phone numbers, , ___ _.. .... .RSJcoals,,etc.~allorganlzed . South· Coast Plaza 545-0431 Puente Hltlt Melt W•t Covfne ;-.ton Plaza Del Amo ,.,.ton lqu9re Open_....";• and &Anday .. . . ... J ~ DEAR QVANDARY : Th·paio la IM neck you 'descrlbe IOUd.I like tbe kind of roommate most women woald adore. ••• Marine· Tllett are worse bulls ---------------------11 u... DOt being able to <Fnm Pase Cl> d••t propmy and talk-has progJ'eMed to the bicPlt ones possible. lac oa u.e pboae a lot. If "We p6oDeered a lot, of firsts in marine tax· ~o• figure the pluses idermy," he said proudly. "'l'bey were stuffing acaJa1t the minuses, and we were mounting." yo11 •11 see that Louise He still views bis work as a bobby and looks awtaJJy good oo spends time every day lD tbe shop. "We like to tile score sbttC. be a round our buisbess. It's fun," be said. But D E A R A N N : clouding bis fun la the fad that be is getting Grandma is 84 years older and there is no one to nm the business. old', is in good healtb, "We 're ready 'to qutt and enjoy ourselves, but and her mind is better our sons aren't interested," Lee said. than mine. She has a lot "1bere'• room for people to be in business of energy a nd does for themselves: If you're a good taxidermist I things that many women don'taee bow you can mia&.~' r -Singles Calendar S I N G L EXPERIENCE: "Giv- ing Whatl Have to Offer" will be th~ topic of this week's discussion begin· ning at 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2. All ages: $5 per person. Call 997·9600 for directions. BALBOA SKI CLUB t for information about trips and social ac - tivities, call Wayne ~ver at 645-7979. -SINGLE PARENTS AND STEP FAMILIES: Coastline Community College i& s ponsoring a lecture series beginning Wednesday, Feb. 7. For information, ca ll ~-0811. CREATIVE SU RVIVAL IN AN\ INTIM A ·TE RELATIO NSHIP : I 000 lrfltol Ho. Piasa ... ..,.., C.... IC---J•arM & .....,Mi.t · H--.: ICM Moll.. T"""' Wecl. 10.t n..,. M lo.l;JO W. ~955-312' Coastline Community College will sponsor a lecture series at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 7, at the Ebell Clu b, 515 Balboa Blvd., Balboa. Additional information may be obtained by call· ing 963--0811, ext. 256. UP 10 60% PARENTS WITHOUT PART NE R S: The Orange Coast Chapte r bas a 24-bour line for in· formation about upcom- ing activities. Ca ll 54§.5788. ORANQE COUNTY 3 TOWN & COUNTRY 'ORANG£ . (714) 547·8228 OFF O..ledStyles .. seoeon l19-.to$2'.00 MOW ~. Fef>fuety 1, 1tr7'9 ...,...,. Pvblls!Wd ~ oi.st Deity Pflol. ""·I, I. IS, %2, tm Jl),19 PUBLIC NOTICE Going Into Bualnes&? ... ~ UDO llLI 1~1\~•'*'9!1 .... ~.-+-41t111IMl'lef1 '"""' tiJ11ttrdffb e anca cu1tom •rtt·lou• G hdrm .• · 4 bath trtdltklf,.. hnt0 t Uk new. Jd al rot ent•tt•lnh11. c.w,..r lot. '800,000 ll.C. l"A no~ co 640-1112 SIMWOUS HOUSI Hie• aooo Ml rt t •too·. dc•l&ned for aentttou1 couple, madly In lovl'I with uch olht1r 1..4• udow owtter 1wlo wrth lhoWW for two1 .. nrlaffd spa Ill lrvpktl aardt'n room Sf.par-' m•ld~ ~lrlH•, Alt \411\e ooo. fir•t tr1.111t d< ·~. • Matlt, ua nee , '"'1" newspa nGt 541-0800 • K~v ~"fly ace any ~ l dvert sing ror· real1 ____ ... ___ ," AE:AUbi(SA estate ..-hlch ls lll viola· • • • tioaoHbe law. ~ Ben Epsoo ,.,.,...-' .18 Sea~lrd Cou~ _ ~.!!':~•••••••• v!~·~r of G••" tOOZ TW9'"9nctwfi "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' lo tf.e .. j . WP8t I.A Y FtXEtt . 5 bedroom. 3 bath'. tiu!lt b). John LytJe. Needs J?t.b ANNUAL ·LOHGHAOH RODEO at lhe Long Beacb Arema, 300 E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach. To claim >'t*f Ucket.a, call 6'2-$618, ext272:i • ·• *. . TLC but the pnc~ f's n&ht.. Located l bl()(k from· m1lhon dollar ncstam esutes. a soar· 11\g :? .storY, open beam aJU> way With skyllfbtl It mdoor 1arden lits JUSt 1-------- ln.!lde the front door. O\w JOO() square f~l or lllxUI') b\'1n$. Fu II prtee 2 81~2 STORY· MQC I• Y-VllW Unn)8tt'hed · op~rtunlty to be on "" atre In ~ Beaob ind tnJ joy majestic vluw. CUslool 4 Bd.nn hoJJle °" cul de 15ac. Muat '«If to appreelate all thl• ol· · Cera! sm.ooo. • PEtE R ~000 Call ~2660. $48 850! • SELECT New pa?n~ & n e w COSTAMISA carpets. FRr.E one yr I PROP~RTIES home warranty! PriV1lte Attention builders, o· -patio, manicuared vestors. everyone ! 4BR d grootlds ,.incredlbly LargeB·ZlQt wUh c~t.e 2 + en sp&cl<>US IA>wnhome! Call ~~on rear• Oil· . r ast. 152.1100 ! • " ~ som ()Pf,,,ij! •• ,rn .• ,,,0,.,NI((· _ .._1cry,... __ i~~~efir!~I;!,~ ~fi0~: [~NIJll ---.·.!.1.t.1.o.6'o ... • __ , modeled kitchen. EX·IL_;-:~·~,,~~~'.ft~.=~~111~-~·!!!!•!••~=r~ ------r---cellent toc ataon. hn· i.: -- 450 "EWPO.,..c• ,. ... Dtttv• I • LOYI OP l'AMILY ••• . . . Is rettected ·hf ftttr''hl1ntro"• amenltJ of Ulla home -much of lb con1tructlon w•• SPECIAi. ror • member of the d v Joper'f t.unU1. Alt room• r• 1paclou1. lhcludtnt I bdrnu. & 2 balhft. The h\Jlt Uvl"• II dlnbuc roomi +.lht J>lltlc> rr 1l• •n · "easy now " ror tnU rta&nlft-, Oftl1 .$226,000. <In Canaoo mat119J. 1 ·-* SHO~i.lfF$! .. : .. Forever_ ~ ~l°""'" MorolnQ ~ .to Ooean ovenoo1dntl t>elflTlftlr'Dt1o'rl 6itlo areas. Q ~robms + oori ~. ~ ceilings. mint condition. fee 1..W. PffiVate ~ec:h6'.. $350,00Q. Flrat o""1ng:~-.:it. oozy. Call '><r' ' .. macula\e bargain! Call SSOr,r_.. ~ NEW.,. • fasl to take advantage! For Residential AP· 1 MEWPC>aT•EACtf ~t~9·11H~l081N<('f• ldlYset?~;tt.Ndc> CUSTOM~Qti11 , [WIMll! c:~~~:~· Hilaoavu-~M~ ·~·~WtI~~ 'Unbeli~bl6 ... vahae! s bdl'im:• d•oull ! Only $80,901)! Cracltlln 1 Cireplace ! ~IJ~f1,alaera patio! Can't last at th1a price! !'Call~ --B _. Popula.i; Pakr19o .. O<kl 1 lf'OX• DX> sq~U 'P¥I J.,a • . IF YOU HA VE · ' SINCE UM6 in fine condlUon. Fout Lln4• Court. Sf89,500. THE T. IME•. · . Ii It Pos·n..i...1 bedrooms, Coc;.mal dining Owner/Agent. 642-2164 6r ... ""'"' roorn abd famlly room. 87).(1182. We have your home! OLD co:~A DEL Quiet corn'er next to -------- FOREST£ OLSON . "'. ' OCtAMNo.,n Ou•llt 'I 1•t lf/t •UlHtn•hlp In mahoa.~trlm ·' .,,.h 11•,.>f"• 11 •~ off thl• landmork: 4 .. U t, t1i. t1mt16 In tlnttt1t lotutlon. ;, ~f AIJllftJ'M rr~h a-la.wnn '485.000 I ' '401< IAY trhi" 4 lMit m • ~ hMt h t•mllly hom~ on •tlllt1 l,1 11ul ;f., 1iu.t• Ov«1ralied pool. 111.,.u~, •lll •1a tUW,000. Terms IA Y,10..,. · . ~ v~· ,., ,, .. ,,, h,.yfront homr11 r · wntl ,11br & .. ut •YALOH w"'' •''"'"'fwtfid, a nn. 1 ba. oak tlrmr , p11rflu1 h111oimc nl. roncreto toon,tAti(lft, rlnh1 t•rt'a. 1120.000 Fee . . CAPICOOSTYLI C... .. M9r IOZ2 Two br. a tlil coado. Pool ................ •••••• • ~~.ClolJto Top_ofl!J:!•• ~. Only S71.SOO. a.tin lot· eooo a.I. A t:aDe that you can re.:. ..___ ........ l vu ...,_ ooo ·~.m.5370: ~-.·-· . A ~~:!°E . SHORECUFFS . ' • Step.down Into your lvly 4 ogo ft " greenbelt. You own the ~Iott VIEW • 1~vit11~g liv. rm, arter y , , 1 4-.... ~·A ',. ble land and ttie price is SPLIT' LEVEL. ,iiiiiii~·~·~,-~-~~c~u~u -...,...._.r--~.....-:.. v1ew1ng t h e ran c h !!5· · .. ~poc { 'fou rigbtat$117 500 Double doon open into k:ltcnen&oversi.zed rmly wade lot JUSl o f "OCean COUOF~aU-.-RT this lovely 4 bedrm ~-.s. * *U.S. * * VIEW rm. vou·u say ''lf the Blvd. 'formal Uv,ng rm """',.."' home. ForfQal dloiog ..._,,,,"""' "' restls--Ok.tthis f.'Utake +!ad!Dyrmwtwetbar. IEA&.TottS room&UvingrQlw/fplc. ll55"9MALRD. VEJt'DIU~ 1t ! " Phone tOday tor S large. bed~ms, each 675-SS I I Family room' adjoining '2 Bdrma., 2 bethl, frplc., * UUU1'1 * a pp t . Open Eves. wilb i\ s own bath~ 3 -------•1 Cully built·in all el~c ~family rm .• de· l.mpoeing atooe facade gives w~ t.o lmpreutve entry hall featuring spiral staircase leading IA> magnUicenl muter ~9491 ~Jooed private paUOe. kitchen. 3 Bedrm1 ,up ~a car saraa~· 00 Spiral staircase leading BEAUTIClll ~maater suHe & la.rte Jee. f{acw; c\oee Recent cbanfte in V.A suite. Fabulous country rep may eeable you to kitchen shares ocean & qUalify for J!OOlOOO bome CMYOO views. Large lot, lolms with aoaou.1telY, NO room for pool. lacredible to 2nd level. 4 car ir:-~· on bonus rm on to~ c"~bet & enclosed garage. All this BEAUTJFUL pr;y._~ 10•01 le vel. pncedatSl0.500.'Callto w1der one roof' oo com er A al"'· .t( · ;o Sptetaculal-'view of see! .--· ,DCJWNPAYMENT. family bome. For Jot. ODO '1 let Uds "OOe get re udu Y;. llp~a ng ocu'!l.... ~~!.bor & oite rra.3883 ' ~--Eves away• ~aU&n.IWl> . thruout. Extra ta; 3 'o/. err~ ENCH.AMTIHG o1>1N i11 • '' \'1{it.;'15 ii. N" • cond~. Fr P le" poo • li~,:. r11 9." s 'VI'< to ti( N<'I • 1.\ ; • k . 1•· I ~~~e~-~ W .... ltN Ea.... private showtnl call :rrm~~rrn ~'x 9 ~ associ ated EnJ=~~:?a~n or '' 1111~ loan 1~:~;" inter~t your own pnvate com· _.,, .~ =, =-=• :==-rate. 979-s;J7(). t\J.'I ,,. f -"'•-t.J1 •. • 1./..-, • • _-., ~ , I r t , t ....,. .We'"' the~ ~ that help tbe muruty. you own the land ·A . ~~~e3 ,:~A~msr!i'~~: Newport Het.,,..ts .' L'f.SJj.':4 TE. s..dPolelh••• and h f 511 -• Best for sUttl Best floor 1-------• ble warm ome or £R . Rf'Xt pl.an with 3 bedrooms, 2 "3" FormoreWo.c.aU: . __ • ..... ,.... MlwporlC...... 541.0100 640-5317 ~~i/fm1jy 1 ~~~ . 3 QRJJ' ! --~ .. .....--~.._,.....,..__· baths, formal dlol~ and intcnor pal.lo. Open ertctercJ~$~iri~~~~ .c;utufou~ f:b"·.:c:e~leat UNllS ........... t006 . sv.o~o:mAL feeUng and sunny wilh Ian <it: Wa 0 ~ OH a.i LC>T nrice al only 11f,900. Best B!l' &EACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ -woods and wa rmth . Oue.t.c!,~~ j3{;-'1' Eastslde. QJ&t.a Mesa. 3 ittrm!•FHA and VA a.nd , ~ &MIOMMIMT $335,000. Call Lucy \Yoii!N •0•"'\'4> i.«1' bedrm channel' .. Formal C ti I B tt ' Two 2 bdrm. units ~laraebedrooma~wo Howes • li~ rm w/real wood onven ona '. ~ er "WS)n't last +owber'a hideaway; bat.ha, huge entenaln· : burni.Qg fireplace. Love· Hurry! Our best ways $110.c.D.Clll ' seller will finance. mentdeclt. View olhilla. WA~~J>NT ·.. ~ ly .remodeled··kitchen goflnt. .. ~ '4M-t41 -..-~-... private beach access. REAL ESTATE . ,;. w/custom c•birft!ts & MiWPOlT llACH $176.500. 1-771·0456., or 63 400 passtbnrwlndowto dln· -··-67trl.a.,.2 _~_9585 _____ _ · l·l Ing area. Added oa fa.ml· -•' ---------•I ly rm . .Q>clvel'ted garager.~~~~~~~~ c.-.. M9r I 022 may W uaed fqr lge ........ •••--••••u•• SMASHING CLASSIFIED 1NDEX ,. Pia,. At Call -&tt·5811 __ _ IUOH .................. ~a-• ..... My ••" ••r•rl •rr•ra ..... ,,.,, TiueO.ulT rtlOf-~ .. .... ,.,... ... -"' ._,...._,, HOUSl:S FOi SALi IOOZ · llH one RW. ISTATI llOO·ntt uKrALS )1 .. ·4'H USIMISS, IMYHTMIMT PIMM«:I ..... ,.,. ANMOUMCB l•m .... L~f·~ -·-'9S04.A U ... SllVICI DIUCTotlT .... . sc)toOU• IMSTMICTK>M "" . JOISW.,.,_ nn H&PWANm'' 71M MmCtWaSI ........ ... '°'°" .. IOATI & MADtl 'f:.,,.n ....... 1'1At8fOlfAW ........ ..,.._. ,.., . ..,. game nn. AD tbia al an WA,.,.9.tn' ' · S ~~~~~~~~;~~ w/42' boat aUp~ Bii 2 BR!=~~~.~.==~~· ·:~~~s!.. VALUE ln I "deo, 2 frplca, .bJ\U .. ~ t...~1111911••-• ...-~ '' • Qli k cbeek Ulla a g e ~ 3 lar J!;_r. A WC4SI •ullM f~tY home on an R·2 flnancln ~{l:,001: ....... I.IOI v•w bedroom ~. lot' w.!!!!J~r~!'llder ---'--======"-• ~·· u . ~ :::.r;:_irt:;;!::r!~~· •·s·roo• ., ...... ·-=-~~nyon: JACOIS ltlALTY a....UO. '° details that hi r Io C! a tto n 4l t1 ~~~~ ~~·· sm)m. 9*#121 ~THE REAL , ESTATE RS -- lf you wanl your advertla· ina messaae to rea.ch more people at lower • ccet, CJaaalfied la tbe Trlde your old ~f for way to go! Call Now! l!_ew _goodies with a 6'2-5878 CL141Wedad. ao..5f7'.; --tl ~!Jl- 1 I • 1111 I I ' I ' • • 4 • u ... ~c...... 640-1357 ........ tot Dowe' Orlve M"110t Vjew Ceft"' ·-~'l'Ch··•r:..,OMt· ..----... -. ·' . L IM IAYSHOUS . ere in Europe - but, better yet, l 's Bayshoree. A totally rcmodt>led. nnd tsUll coey home with 3 bedrooms, incl. a completely · separate mpster suite, hardwood floors. a hot tub In the patio, an "xtr:,.cfiely copvcnle nt and modern kltChen and M setting amid stately tr · , yet rloee to the beac!h and bay. Proudly presented *1& a Unique Home at '3.W,000. U,._.l()U f1()M I R E:AL Tons ·. 07fr0000 2A43 (ost Coasr H1<Jhwav. CoronMiel Mar .1h(J 111 M1·\,1 Vt<td!•. Ul b46 !-1990 • OWNER WILL CADY-I~ on this beautiful 4 Bed.rm. 2~ bath home. in t.:ake Forest. Featured in L.A. Times Home Section . Home has deck with bench seating. $109.500. Call Craig, 631·1266 . . ft/MAX of costa w. "'"-· .. .,.. ...... Ille. , 234 l. 17t• Street, Cost. Mete 631-UU Nationwide Network o( Individually Owned and Operated Real F.state Office5 Piii FSIDE COSTA MW A very attractive 2 bedroom fl'Qllt cottage with CQZ)' warm fireplace in front. A BRAND NEW DUPLEX ls nestled amongst mature trees on thf" same 55 by 173' site. The dupleJC contains 2 Bdrm, 2 bath and ·3 BR,• 2 ba units PLUS 4 car enclosed garages. · Great income property with a realistic investor's price of $205.000. · · RO.IRS RIAL TY . 67~231 I fllliL1~~JOQ.l.aT.t.1M C:.-.. M9' I 022 · MeMI t OZ4 .............................................. Atrium; Del-ahHul Exec Owner ~tsy-tTbedroom home Wlth built ins. din· ini. Cic.eplace. a la rm. patio and garage opener. $106,500. BKR . Call ~1720 Wl. -· PRIVACY + PRESTlGE ...... ., .... .....,... Sp11c:'-a 3 llt 2 I.A Owner's unit. with fireplat'e + three i lJR z Ba unita.Call ~5880 for more details. "::.~• HERITAGE • • REALTORS See this super 4 BR & Slash-..a•, FamRm home located In CU C d M · s C a m e o Hidden 2 Storv Hlahlands. Quiet at. Outslandi.ng ranch -;tyfe napbere, & key t.o pvt .a bedroom home w ith beaCb. Make Uus a Uni· ~ at $.l?9.900. Call wetbar, garden t'Dlr)'. at open family room, eatJng 'a... area and lQta o( closet Hmi»or View Hlffs space. 2 (ireptace •. Executive style home. Mor": r educed to lmmed. poss. Ocean & $144,900. BKR Cail Harbor . view. 48Rtram ~ 1720 rtn. 1225.000. 1014 Sea 'lllll•ft&L L a n e . Opn h se II ftllat- Frl/Sat/Sun. 640·4018 -· P.M's VIEW! VIEW! IUUTY HAS • IAYSIDI COMDO-lllH CAnUR• Extra nice 2 Bdrm condo ln lhis aupe~. 4 bdnn S overloolrin~el and bath Mesa Verde home. 2 1*li:l>iilY · 500~ ........ ~stcsrr-; ~\M'Mi\ .. poor • ___... ... -......... FQR INFORMATION 1:11. temnc ramily ., C411644-72 t I a¥>re inr~:ct.~ for ·-=.e.,. HERITAGE REALTOR~ ~ ·cae: 110111 ILlllS aa. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE CAPISTRANO BEA.CH Deli-,htful Duplex On The Tost Beautlf ul Sandy Beach In The' Entire Area. Each Unit Has 3 BR • P'a mtly Room W I Fireplace • Winter/Summer Rentals. Price. { MS0.000. PALM SPllMGS SETTING In · Newport Beach. Fabulous End Unit On Great Greenbelt. 3 BD W/I' BA . Huge Patios. Storage Galore • Sep. Master BO Suite. Low Leasehold. Short Escrow. $155,00Q . A "JoY or Newport" LlatlnJ. • r t.ingo~••2 lihlh-"' On tt1e OrW9I Coast loo -,o t•noo r1~ ''."?-· HERITArE REALTQ( : lllANDHEW TOWHHOMES ~Valley 1034 : PRICED RIGHT! This latte home h.as ~ bch-ms .. 3 ba .. 3 car gu.rugc 1md a large patio PLUS ~n excellent loca· "lfitt Woods" 1East.s1~osta Mel>~I l 2t32Simta l\na 1\H• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------i llon. l::nghsh Tudur 2&3 Hr 'Pill leHI. 2&3 C:H garage. frpl t"l>, microw:h·es. greenhouse windows. pool . !'>pa TE.'INJS court. I OWNER HOME Prom S89.9SO 6-&6-0061 or 955-1920 Developed by Woocjtr~ Dev. Co. Golf Coene Hw ....... °" •oct. I 040 ~~~~~ ..... !~~ Huge S BR. 3 ba. avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 . $199.500. 545-3639 ~su.fne loan. Fantastic 3 l•--------BR. family rm. hom e in IY OWNER H. 8. X tr as g a Io r e Grca-t ho m es. flex 187.000SturRcalEslaU.'. financing. bl!'ll art-a:. i54·621>2 • ~~ -·-~ -POOL & SPA :I hOm'--:. undl'r ~ll.lltiO 111 St.ipt r UIJgrad .. <f 4 Bdrm U.r.tu M('':J l 'u ll ""n1·1 Sto:rn11114 with v.iu/'tcll furlmm!'dcr::ttk-&7!icfRitt'.2 t•t-11in1t!.. !>cxr conH•rs a -r\iv"""<)oH A LOT lion pit. s plit level. 1 3 BH l 2 Bk f?OOd 1:~lom pool & spa di re~t East.side lot·uuon ownl.'r ly off master bdrm . ..F.x· . · lC'rtO r featur es aruuous. Sl25.0UO . slumpstone & iron gate ,1€cTIG€ w ith fountains . :ind _ _ > gazebo. Only l mile to I HOM€~ the beach or Edison 3333W c~t H Hi#lh. $113.000 VA or · "· wy. Conv __ 6_4_5_·6646 . RMI Estate EAST SIDE I BR older home. R·2 lot. l'liltle in. $00.000. Owner IA'lll provide rinuncing. Roy M~Cardle. llltr. 541.7729 Profflsionols 963-8377 MO MAIMTEMAMCE Spanish Villa Townhouse r-ith tennis. fire place and 3 Bdrms. 21, baths. lltduced lo $102.900 MULHEARN URGENT! R•affy bqister Reduced from 754-7800 $ll7,000to $91.000 lrriM 1044 OwTM:r ha.s moved away ••••••••••••••••••••••• d.lld ts. wailing to close W O O D I R I D G E :.inother escrow-urgent that he sell his lovely CONDO.· ·lBR Mesa Verde home. 2 Br. 111'2 ba. nr lake, pool Compareforyou.rself. & s pa . Seller moy 6'45-1103 646-6789 finan('c, S6900. Hier. ----~----· 55&-617t WHAT If••• there was a spacious 3 br, lar ge opt.>n bt.>a m added fam rm. formal dirung rm. at the l'nd or ii QWt!l eul·dC·SIJC strl.'N for only $87.500? Sound& good? lt L<;! Call now' TR'ROCK/..._or rlan 2 Modified 4 BDRM · 2 BAT H SI27.500 rec Open Sat/Sun I 5. • 23 Bethany Or. Knoll ProperliH 752·2838 6 ... 4·2542 645-7221 Turtle Hock Glen 5 Hr . 3 ba, 31.:ar gar , A/@. spac(' for RV. Own er /ai.tl 21 Phone 645·077~. evs_·. __ Turtlerock. New 2 bdrm. -~ den. 2 bu. Condo Best Wntcltff Realty vww. air cond. all up. mxa U,,ER grades. $126.900 Owner " 714-fM·4T72 2t31 Sant.a Ana Ave. CM B>.OOO. Only $5000 down. UNIVERSITY. i\ssume · 9~% loan. No points, no cre<Ut checkii. PARK 3 bdrm. l~• bath. fncd Y~alleryofHomes Elega nt 3 bedroom toW'ilhome wltl\ assuma· Kirk Lamb. 631·0900 ble loan. An end unit and '15lmr. cor n scpg 2 '")•ou··vw1rtmr tand. e yearold. S BR 21'.I ba. ex· oow ten decking w/8' jac. L.,:e mstr sle, cusl features lhr,uoul. By o wne r . SJ3UOO. 642·5t'li3 Arc h itect remo deled e-RANCH Rf Al lY 5!11 ?000 wood . glass. hrdwd --- floors, decks, s k)'11 ghl WOODBRIDGE aUium In roast.er su.lte. ~:78~ Owner sue.soo SPECIALS PRIME Oeslrous or livlng In the beautiful Lakeside com- munity ot Woodbridge? We have homes avltffa· ble in the~ price range from $72.900 to S\45,000. Please call for details Causey & C.Ompany WOODED WONDER 1'rees and short walk to beach. 3 BR upper plus new l BR J:Uest unit below. $157.100 • 1104 So. Coast Hiway 1n Village Futr l...\GU~A HEACll 497-2457 *DUPLEX* Ocean Slde of hwy, level .. lot. easy ocl'ess to beach. Needs paint. minor re· pairs: ideal for home & income. Hurry. ·only Sl.59,900 Mission Realty 494·0731 OPEN SUN. l2·3 IOOCHIQUrTA , SUPER charming 2 BR . 2 ba .. lg~. h v .. rrpl.. hdwd. pegged floo rs . w ood p a n e lin g, books h e lves. patio: 11ccan s11.le hwy. l<'ew stf'~ to beach. N. end Probate sale. Asking S2lU.OOO · submit. 2 BDRM home. N. end. R 2 lot. can add ·unit m9.$00 PEG ALLEN REALTOR 494·757!1 BY OWNER J Br. 3 ba. 2 kitchens, 2 · frpll'li. fom- r m . lrg w o rks h op . superb oc1ian view. fully crpl'd . many bltns. $270,000 w /2nd TD al 8"•'~. Prine only. Call 7141494·1.365. MOUN TA l N CA BIN CHARMER by owner. l bd. aJJ natural wood, oak ~. frph: .• )'1lrd. Xlnl for expansion to ocean iew .. ~.~ BY OWNER $121.000. Walk to beach & town. Coiy. immaculate cot· taie, totally renovtite<l. 2 Br l Ba. some ocean, view, mature trees. big back yard. covered deck. Pnn. only. 494-7296 DAMA POINT Beautlful ' bedroom. 2 bath execulive h om e with panoramic oc68n, coasl11I & city light views. Private \naste r st.ite with beamed cell· Ing. fireplace and ~lew <*k. Heated p()OI with jacuni. Close to the locatJon near the park on a corner lot In a. quiet 'ne1ghl>Qrhood dos~ to South Coast Plau . 8 ,500. Jt W(lllflRHlflr.F Hf Ill r Y • marina. $299 900 . T .. toRectc_,.tt W• Lishft 7S .. I 202 ~~1 .1000 o..,.-. 1026 1 ______ _ ....................... THICOLO ... Y Elegant slnglc fun lly " bomes w/<xea.o "..valley 3 be.droom , 2i.\ bath vlewa. Coming soon. Cok>ny home. UPtitalrs ~111 you musl $ee the buge boau1 room. F1ulbh: ~ocean~. terma.1811.500. New3 bd, l1e nnl".-'(3rd 0 bd .H P. aulte). Ail 883.otm: '44-574 . BEAtrr. 3 yr old ! br. 2 bs. tnan,y upfl'ltdt.-.. xlnt .... --~~~t N't&. 984.000. By ownr. ~ -.t\7' 1$l 1S4J CiJ Coldwell Bunker 3 Monareh Bay Plab LaRUna NIJuel 496-7222 IJl.OIU F.ast Bluff 4 br 2~ba • 2 frplc. See Cat.Una from dlnine room. Owner. Mtwparf 1 .. ch ~ 069 A-1kitl& SJ59,..SOO. &44· 1323. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lowest priced hOllle in *, (~ DOWN'• Harbor View, Avall .. ble .,.,uuu 1n, March. J . Doran . • 3 Br. pool Npt Hts. As· Agent. 759·0619 liWllt.'S bal. or Sl.50.000, '1200/mo. Apfro" 10'·< int. No credl ·needed. Owner will carry, va· cant. Calll45-S399. · MIWLISTIHG ' .......... !': ..... :s Br 2 :aa. a coppw J>lumbiAC W/DflW water i.r. rcreed alt' hir, ac w fVf .-W lft'TlMG carpet.a. A Sbal:P up. DOVB SHOltlS graded ~•la coodi• . IA YCllST ticn borne w 1many other REALLY spec tal s reatW"eB.dllJ.9.SQO._~ Bdrm. larae & lovely Waterman. 5A8~ · fa~+r8~ROKERS ~ 6'6-~:~c1eo rorafJ:i~39 Al~*PUSSJJ . NEW1M Reahy Co. . Hf}WPOIT HACH a3l oovr~~·· "~ CUSTOM HOME SLUFFS '~1" Ll\S'l' OF 7 Mas le r b c cJ r b o m 4 Br. 3 Ba, master bdrm down.stairs lo this' 4 Br retreat. 2 frplcs. f'Orma I bonus rm home on ~oice <iJninl, 3 cu garage. ap· treenbell. O((e red at """'· 3000 sq. ft . 2297 Lu SL54.500 .• Owuer/Agent.SU.216'or 1 '/". Unda Court. $189,500. @/A~ 67l-0782. • ,, v s..ca...• .1076 ---------1 , ....... , ........... . 15.9,QQ b~~~' ;jg~~E " 1><101. jut·. fam rm. from this c harming co mpletely rcmC>dclcd. billside homo.. ~ Ls Big lot -much more. Bcdrm.2ba.dhting arca Owner wiJI finunce-ri;o o(f living rm+ nice fami· cr~1t-needed. Sl55.000 ly rm. l mp r ess Ive balance. Ask for Ed landscp'g. close lo schls. Chernow 964-2"55 . Will consider lse/opt. On· ---------1 ly $111,000 DUPLEX By owner . reduced lo $175,000. BOth 2 BR units. l blk to ocean. Good In- come area. 675-<W75 $PACIOUS 2BR. den DR. LR. vtew+ 1 BR apl o\·er ~ar+6 car prk ·g. 215 St. Andrews -Rd. See hy uppt. /\gt Crane 540-0608 DOVER SHORES Gorgeous house -best view 4Br. 4ba. fam rm. AIC. 3 car. $450.000. Owner.114 646-4700 eves. EAGL;E'S HEST llM .... h . RARE OPPORTUNlTY TO ACQUIRE 1-'ROM ESTATE OF' ORIG IS AL OWN ER. THIS" "UN· OOMMON" ltSCA RCE 3 BR . END UN I T , UNE Q U ALLED PRIVACY. COM MAN· DING BAV VlEWS & UNLIMITED POT6N- TIAL VALUE. Agent 640-5560 OPEHOAILY Comer location beamed ceilings. frplcs & floor lO ceiling windows that af- ford a view of a scclud41:d patio & garden. Features that make 1300 SussC!x Lane a desirable home. $167,500. Wigl(enhorn IUtrs. 675·6160. -------- ~.~ HERITAGE HtAL1UHS VAC:AHT! ._4.0cc..-c7 PUS114H AaEA Ample room for toge t h eTn ~s s. 4 lg Bdnns. 21 ~.batbs. (curl up ln frdnt of the cozy frplc in tbt.IWlllter suite retreat) the kids a nd their rnend8 ~ill -enjoy the dinlng/f~miJy rm and lar ge living rm w/frplc. cheery kitchen with service cen ter, Cov"d t)atlo. d~k ana cemented area ror dogs or storage. A real bizy at si.:ll.000. O,..Hse~ ~to••tsll ••-'•S•J11a11 -'-----·-~ ' ..... ~ ·""····--·· .... No "drive-bys·· pl ease. If you 'r e serious about property. call for an a ppointment. If you 're serious about a position on our staff. call for an interview. · QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES. INC. .C7141 752-1920 IBR 3ba. den. dining rm. patlp w /gas bbq. New tll~. very clean. $175 675-1442 • -.... ·-- I I SPYetAU 19.L ........ .._ OM bdrm ~ bllt ~/~. Av&it 2/l on n> to· mo. Owner/Agt. JM.l'Mt ¥ ........... 4250 SHARS DtW ofrlc~ I* A&. 2 •apt. uptlain. Adull.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 111 / Mo Co a ta This IBR bome bu a beautiful Ytew ot IOWWPAY..-.T b2ba Maplftcent Back o o I y . no~ l s . ~---IJowM for rent, :.eeu !!:!.'..J.Ntwpott aru "I-a ttocnttc. ta WHY ch., Bay·81.if1 V\ew; TtM•I RefWWM. Me *3 ..,.;;;.....,... n ... ·•-e 11-.... - alrablt o.c. perk . pao1.,.. Dehucel Short New. beautiful i•1tden i5' ~:pr-cpl. '~i NEW C.e .,.._ fof Masf' . • Npt Harbor 6 the~ formal Lv rm • dioina rm. d n, bttakfut DOOi&. Ml)&l'llte pett BR/BA. ,ac., ala.rm 5J!1UUt4) A•kln1 aub-leue avail. March Ctuslsf5ett11Mi ~,pooUt ~ al\CW'lp.a.$9-1... Cdm OD PCR acrou ale':'° gz u .. ae1"1 ::~u a..-1414 ~'2 2::t.:=laput z Bl' t380 Houle for r.nt. Bil Bear h'ou;t' CrowDa it.ii. Pvt l)'lteiil. IDlert'Gm, -==-· AU util. • malnten tnc bi _ ~ITLI01t'9Mtl S.Cll •• 1776 level. Fr11tc:, d ec k , Adwts.oopet.s 0'1alPJt,UMnS,11.1.m. r::J..:ac. HOO •ca ft. ..... , ................. lloUabt. all e.tU'U. M20 ~V~ard1W•r 95 mtei)r•Pf"' m . C.H • • ' ..,,... -· ............ , •••••••••• a ...... _... • ...... -..... ~ .. ·r I ........ ..... mo. ~o chlldttn Ot pets catNewPort 8 Yd .rt«ap.m.548.tGlll ... I.JO' oe tM water!' i'A:J:im ~ c:;;;,,11 3b~•3:a ... ~:~ ~~46·UU: eves 5'0-~ -810 BEAR_C_A_P_IN--OH THE ~ ~:: .=bztt~·,~· ~m -.,..,or•-s:m. IW""•le~ls ll40 2BR.frpl,cpta, 11teepi11. .WATER! A v • , I n 0 w • ,. • 0 .. ... _ _..t.r 2 BR, 1 0., 1 year new. ••••••••••••0 ••••••••• W0 k Of wlmd. 640·M65 P'LUIH IUITIS ... • v apecloua a. clean. ~ New l.uicQ.ry Apt Loctttt'd --------- leaae $1.l&O per mo. ~ .......... na.-. Punthattriun 'TM 'POOO C • •i , 1 1 mo. No pet1. Ownr/AIU \., blk from Bclach Blvd ...... sa.r. 4100 350to1JOO ·ft. >Mllll•Vlef9 12'7 • •"' • • 5.1M0311: ~I Corner of Tury .. J.K. It -·-·--1'?11Wr-~~===t=.. 1-u1ti1 .. ..,.altM•.JJ11itJUw;;.,~:; """'5 hhl' 3421 Viewpoint Ln. Open ,.. ..... _ et .. --.-..::...,;..;:.;.;.:.;.:=.::..,~: u.• u &ouM s•b .c.. iwa'*..Jpm --.. -Lw.Mln-.-~~---+- 'Dllblil:le Y'Ur old l br, I bM, focd B&yh'N. Belmont Shore 2 Adulta .. H• ba. $425 mo. lo 4pm. Cull tor Info Uilllt 11,__., vm-~ .4 >'d. ~ge, kld • s>et• br. 2 b.I condo lD sec. Cltar1l)ln1 £n/'lsb cot· Oupald.642·5073.. 848 3133 Shnruhom or111tment -~ .. .....,.. ITS-3662 tw. z bl.~ p.1Uo. ~ ~1lllu l e' bid.a Wetbar, wahrJ ~kltctnvgty~ f.ut.alde 2 br. bltn1, no 3 BDRM. 2 a , a amry Q.J.1.\1 fl)AnJ Um1MJnn ' br. clu. ll.J 1 Su. ~ i.~·ar~. IOdl .. pet& tte-..: __ ... 12"-f ~~:.o. ~:t1!g, ~~~ll. frplc:. torcecr a r near. 'll'fU, sm mo. CMCM!78: k~&>t ... lf60/mo \(~ 'l~ J "'1 v C~1t'l.>H" MIW OMCIS clahwood Meu V.Se · • no l\.. ...-n-• 21:M)t.,.,,,S40-97r1-off · 1115.1.~.675-mf 55:..UOlevesarts 984-1~ r.11f,..,,,..})11.4 ... \M, ll •• twa.M,... olllCCL'----T--SC'D Lit ·+ laat.~Lt 114-ISll,m I ·-• .. ••••••••••••••• · •-•--L 11 ..... ~~··~ ........... 1 • elrporl •r••· w lfull or ('107) IQ.GS-"-Udo law 3 BR 21 ba 220 2 Br tum Wlfu Ith I ·-e 1 Or £.,.I patio _,.... ----.. ...,.. ··~ .. ,. ..,......,...J NrYIC. aood ___ __.;_...;.;;..,~''.=.;;.""""":::.'-Walk to the~ 4 lar1ee V • . • J • Walnut Sq Condo. lrvln• 2 or rn w _.adul & •• ooly,' nt""'o 'ta. 1887. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' KIDS . bdnn 2~tbe mcl.paUo 1a llbua. $UO st.Y.2 bd,2ba,pool.SUS rlreplace $490. Avall .... pc ROOMMATES Pf'I~ 1411151 /DOGOIL UJOC'~l paaer ~Ul.IM6-330 M>m.111nU1wll.ndl. now.201~1.675-9229. ~oorov 1a . C M $265 bdrm , 1 ba . I blk to " Al->rt•r •Dffl-•-c". Me.a Verde 4 bdrm. 2 tl&a --ti4$-te30. b h Slvre M •.-..... .,... ~ ...... ' patios. lario fenced --VlEW. 4 Br 3 &a. I& Newport Terra~ Condo ..... P11lullM )107 uc wo me v u. 1325 -· =. ·~• lll'(Tttar,.I ~v on prt· • yard sos per m o ShN1>28dnnCoodo.S325 2~. prlv 1•t«". lenn1s. 2bt2ba.DR.JF.R.Close ..... •••••••••••••••••• AUADULTAnS. 41H4127anytlml" .. ~tY m<>rC' P11ylc-,•' ,.,,,.._ ll4'>"'7-ta31 $68104 permo.Call962-7788.a k pool,S1300 CUIHl896 to aUa.menlt1es. tn~mo. tm. 2BR w/de(k. New HOWAVAILAIU ~.~e:k~ .. ,.~~1,, CdM Omd Ord.;MIO ~t forEbot 1 'y Ml-433.1 paintatcpt.s.l~&llcto 3br.Bunc•low,2 brapt ~Hilk JllO .,. .. 2d:ii1 BR, Eaat~nde CM -tGCAM OH beacb,673-8279 Pool. Jacunl & RBQ ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.114"'4282 . ldu.l f~nt Ip :1 ~7175 or S2S-311ZS. a Br <'ODdo. 1" b:a, (>OQI, DIAMICONDO 2.BR 2BA Np(. Terr. con· ..,____ b aru. cwCoodo, Lag Ula. 38R A UNl'~U.,KY.llVfl'll: Y. <M t y Ava&.lnow. · JaCU.W: N<1 pet.6. $425. For lease: avail Ftib. do, snal. sty. eod unit '"""""""" unit 2 br. 2 a. 2 SORRY NO PETS 2ba. rrptc. ~. No pel.ll. "" ~ • • ui. '''°' 11ltlc111 adJ n l""841 -WWII ·~ hv. area. Crt. 54l-803I bay. 81$1,t E. Balboa. y ,. Colla Mesa an ....... •-----------""UI ,,.., p cut. your rto11t ~ --• ., 12 ~ .. B .,. ... _____ 1 ta~Rhelt: ~i 3 Bdrms .• 3•b•th&. SteOmo. as-Bl& DlpJ*r car1ar.Nrferl')',oceun. 177F..22ND.ST. 714n~TialtfJpm. ·~ .. _1 Alrsw;tl•r tff1t•I No Uc-lmmac. Near br, ba. lllgyd. $465 Lovely yard as e ntrr. ly. $455/mo. in c l'. ...., ... .,., MlwpOt'thece. "'' In h11lf . We: r•r •t ultr -· .;J So.CoutPluaM().7499 . mo. 1 t,_~+ el dep. area. snoo Mo. Inc .~ ............... d washe r /dryer. ref. 310 Vlctor11a. 2 br, 2 ba , ....................... 11ereentoryourUfet1lYll• tM)'fttwlfrlfflt• Dill 3 BR 2ba, E 'side. ~ a,ardentr ••••••••·~·•••,•••••••• ~. ground Ooor{ all t•h..<C • rAJUC MIWPOIT. =, tar" r ••. ttrl'• 11t IMlrJ VIUa ... fltplC, encl yd, gardener, Larae I BR 3ba condo w/2 aHH HUDSON ..._., ...... , ... 3707 Ver:y clean, lbr ~ blk to covered park 0 •· no pcta, 8 h I l 2 81fARf! ftY.NTAJ A ..._,, dbl gar, drps . $50Q. car 1ar. $450/per mo. ltlALTOlt ·'44-0322 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. Utll. lnc:ld . :;t~~·64~~~73~ ~~· n!J~:&~0wnhg:ae1 A880CJATION h<Jt)n11.lt1irAi.C•'PW1,t1r ~l.849 . 8Z2l WUdwood Dr.~ ml Oceanfront beautifully S.US/mo. 675-~ eves. Ftoms.349.SO 10'6H.TuaUn81,0r NMlf.., ~r liark C)rc l., e. , tobch. 2131438-4UIOarter elegant Oondo. trl· f urn 2BR frplc ·orwknda. Bachelor. new. areal y,. Spectacular •pa, total &.JUHOOO.fl394MX4 ~OIA1 PSIDE LUXURY 6pm. level, 2 8.R . 2h ba. pool. balco~y. aar. Wlnle; side locallon ·S20l mo. recrotlon proaro m . 3 a-. 3 ba It den, 2200 sq. Jae., 2-car gar. $575. No ·~. 640-4784 Le Bay Front 2br. 2bn.. ~·U3l ; eves 837 .()6e6 social prognim. 7 j)()OIA, 8 " 11hr w /l't"m, clun rt + lu.sh gardens. pool, pets. 962·6154 Rhett. frplc, garige. Pvt Bch. tenn.18 (OUrts J\t Fa11hlon lW.cr .. PV\ yrd, 1111r, I~ ~. S6SO. mo. 673-6336 ~ llACH LIVING Oceanfront, yrly, ta l Br, Vrl,y lease. Adults unly. •THE DAISY• Island, Jumboree & San t200 + SU~ Of'&12·0082 i.a-...z& 3 IRHOIMI maiture adult, no Pets. nopeU.$850,673-2162. •For KI DS & th ei r Joaquin H.•lls Road. ,.__ $475.673-4894 C1flstr-h-h·3818 parents 1714)64,..1900 • 3 Br, garage. large yd. 2 Wtden L R fa01 rm • - -•Pool ba • · " · OEACH ~er p k0 lb ••••••••••••••••••••••• . no dog~ $450 mo din, deck. pal, frplc ·s. • • r •· r. o1'ot. Lol 979-013&. elec gar-opener. Both $375. Adi . utl pd. 303 E. Capistrano Palisades •Dishwashers 3242 professionally decoral· Edgewater (I )871·2866 Custom built Townhouse •2 Bedrooms & 1 bath Oe1uxe4 BR. 2 ba. gar. no pets, steps lo bch. $515 yrly lse. 6'4·U03. 3 bdm). fenced ya rd. $450 Kidi 4' pet OK. ed.-t&OO Ir $700. Call c:--.. Mw 3722 'forleaee.Coastlinevlew. •Walk topark. Marlene at 631-3444 or ••··~··•••••••••••••••• canlen, 2 bdrm. 2~ ba. 18th at Pomona. CM SSSO. 3 br, 2 ba. balcony, ~poMable Mali• wunh responinblc f cmoll.'. to stuu~ upt or t·ondo £c u pens~ 1n bt"ach art-u t213> 323.o.84 Ron 644-81189. Sml bacb, non amkr. R~my . For the di'· (1141631-3.SlS · encl. garage . AU-blUls. 3bdrm. fi~ace. garaie. •---------1..-..-------· mature person. $220/lncl criminative. 661·2871 blk to beach. Yrly. -----------ya rd .. $395 p e r m o .• -'"' util ,..~.. 1 Br + loll. 2 ba. ref. TSLMgmt 642·1603 /F to share hbt apt, 2 60-4MSS 2br 2ba bllin. pool. 2-Stry Tow••se · 675-SD/875-SM -Mw ll22 stove, pool, adults. no IAct&Oa ..... 115 olb bch. Room hu fplc, 673-7893 lennl.s, beac&. S'TSOtno. on the WATER with ci,.,.::r::: l72J ·-·····~··•••••••••••• pets.$380.646-2901. "'" · ...,. bath. balcony, 2 1 .. ..--H'EIGHTS ls t /Ls t Do"lc ittr enAT SLIP I 1 d d ,..... • LoVelY2tiedrmd11plex.nr •~25+• It .... '6 .-.-...--ARIA . day714/B94·17"J7 eve: -/mo.' nc u .~ · ~·;·~:·;;z1~·;:.;:• ~~·'featuring fplc & East.al~e2 BR.1 ba.. 20t L .alb?!':fi. ~:uui~~1· S200 .--L~ 1nltlWHu 213/S82-2971. WATERPQONTHOM·ES Matu .... adlt.s o•l". No' s1ng1e car gar. Call pool,patio,nopets. ,..-•---55.11.7707 • . rw;.,. •· ' .,.. '""' ~. 631 • I 400 · pets. , °Quiet, seci:;.:. 1991 wlcda,)ts 9·5. m 558·24 ll S280. 548-0916 --"_.... -y & daughter will shr 3 ~~n~i~~~: ~~~1?~3;10~ NwptBlvd.646-837J ... ~~ 5 & wknds (1) Vl&J.AMEOERA 3 Br 2 Ba, encl gar,-re· Br2 Bahouse.l205mo+ Gatages. fenc<."<I yds. & Broad moor, brand new. 2 Br. 2 ba. new crpts, .gas cenUy upgr~ded. close to ~Mu~ Broadway· decks. Corner Knox & Tennis crts. pool. clbhse. b~t:~t ~)·mg:.rea~ w~ Rates Unfurn 2 bed r m apt stove & dshwhr incl beach. AvaJI. 211. $475 1--------- '0ran ge Ave . C .M . $700. mo. Call Tobin 64.5-0776evs. SpaciousStudios& Yr'ithin walkin~ distance Encl. garages. Couple permo. lst&last + $150 Female room mnl~ nded •CHAlMeHG• <.:dM IAfk c: •wt..; 1tv111lu IM f'~h lit Y<Ju'll lovt' •JUT t holt'I! of w•llpllft'_r •nd wt11t.e 1hutt,.rs Ct'n tr»Jly locat.e<I 111>uth nf OOMl h1«iflWIY 325 sq ft ONLVS2'7~/mo. 'IOGBSltlALTY 675-UI I 300 sq. ft. Dlxe olc, nu crpt, nr C.r.t. DMV. $130. UW U>cl,546··4114 eves. l larie room whlc:b can be divided. Carpet.a. drapes. prl vate restroom Storage. $2$0 per mo. uw. paid, Call 548-3878 Ask for Carol. Bwlding fo r lease o·n· Newport Blvd. Plenty or parking. Call 646-3928 5&25 · $650. 63 l -1388f RealJ.Y,84&-l37f. · 1 Bedroom Sultes -to-beach. Avail immt.'<i. pref. Children ok. No i.ec. 67~9. 992-4112 to share lg 2BR home, 1·756-2908. ....-.----uuxury 3 br. 3 .ba condo, CompleteKJtchens ·Cal.I wkdfS 9·5. < l ) pets"$340. Util pd. except WESTCLIFF 2 br. 11 ; ba CdM. 675-9206,675·2563 1--------• WEATHERLY B~Y . elec. gar. opJir, frplc, MaidServlce ·TV· ~~ds241(11)996and·ll20art 5 & elec.2324 Elden.645·1965. townhouse. Adults onlv. c-em 24"tea"hcr. nds rem CdM SUm5 2BR. beam ceilmgs, frplc. Prestl~e 4Br twn~m. dshwhr. 'trash. complr, .. ..., J ,., "' " patio. fenced yard. boat slip, pool, tennis, 2 Newport Crest D.R.. Closetoallmajor 2 br, 2 ba Twnbs . Pool. No pets. $410. mo. 1728 rmmate nn-s mkr. for 2 1\vo story detalched and $375/mo. AdJts. no pets. fp, wshr, <;tryr, refrg, pool, tennis. Klds ok. no freeways and lrviine• c:-taMfta 3124 Jae. & Rec Rm. Nr Coast Bedford Lo, 548·7533. BR hse In CM. S165 mo. s hingled "Ha nsel & 631·2177 or644H>789 BBQ. Agt Diana 840-1371. pets. $585. Agt: No fee. . Newport Beach areas. •7:•:;:::,:H••:•:•"••S••• Plaza. Child Ok. No Pets. BAY VlEW. Stunning 2 646-fil89aft 6. ~id~: I ~ilbly ~~ ~~~~~ Mesa Ve rde 3br 2bu. or840-4027eves. ,..,,.2566·,973-2971 . Ro~al Sui..__ -"""'""' "'"' s 4 0 0 m · 0 . br 2 ba frplc Huge F I r • ""'"' ~ ~e 1.2&! bd~arden 642·1~/673-5781 • • · ema e roommate or ch,;lrm and sophistica· kitchen bit-ans, cov'd hM . 3244 2C8> ewJ?Ort Blvd d · patio. Pool. Mature Balboa Island duplex tioo. Wall to wall cpts. paUo.enc~.yrd.Ck>seto .. ••••••u............. IAYCIEST .. 642-26teor• apts. A uJts. shwhr, 2brlbaFAheating,garg. adults. No pets. $560. 675-0562eves. · warm paneling, beamed ~ps & schools. etc. Luxcoodolaite sel'g. 1 Br Beaut decor 4 BR. living 54J.2000 =-· ~~· W.·~:s~:t y3rd. Childd/ Pet OK ~. 0 ed 1 cellinp Plus pot.bellied N1ce. $.'500 ·3143 Samoo &ba,bltns,balcony.rec rm, dUiing rm,/3 Ba. Pl.....,,.,,_3 "~"'..,.11 $ 25mo + eposits. BAYFRO"""b' d 1 2 rem rmmte want g. fireplaceinexec'solfice. Call&M-5187or644-8519.~ rac.S375.213/291·9969-familyrm,cu.atomdrps, LaiJ-aleocll 3741 ,.,_.....,, ;......,._ Avtal.lmmd.00-4479 b f l'l'•· .. -~k· e~e CM house. ll.50 mo Age Garden sun-deck for -f~lc rad,. o int.ercom, ...A_ .. _.__ vtM-r, rp c,."""' pnvgs. ~30. 546-2777 ,.....,_ ,_,, al~ E. Side 2 b J N ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,....,.,_.. .,.,.....,... 3 Br. 2 ba up;r.r. Mesa del 1ff~ patio, elec. gar. ullUl)e Wlorm s . • r. ba. 0 IBfTALS · · grdnr lnd. Slt250. • "GUNA B•ACH MTR. Be t'f 1 b d 710~ at 7~ a ft . pets. Dbl gar . lrplc. JBR. lV.. ba .... •A""/"50 ~7058 '""' "' au 1 u ran new Mar. $35 . No pets. 9S mo. "673·6336; Fem. wanted to shr 3 br gardener. $375. 548-3683. 3 BR. 2 ba ....... $550isso fN11il. $75/wk & up. Maid adult apta. No pets. Pool, 54&«)36. 642·9666 apt. SlSSmo. CdM. 2blks eq S$12.60 per mo. BR, b scrv., color TV, heated jacuni.-Opendaily. .......WT K .... G ..,_., bd N H Crom beach. Avail. 1m. Mmtseetoap_J>!'eCiate. Available Feb. 15th 3 2'h a ........ S6SO •UDO ISLE* pool. UtJI. (714) 494·5294. ~ 9SSW.191.hSl. ""' A I" ·~ .. 1 rm pt. ts. 1 med.673-3585. ltOGBSltlALTY Brand new partially 38R,3ba ........... $625 98SN.CoastHw)'., Bach.$255-$265 RESEllVATIOMS adult, no pets. $240.1--------675-2311 funushed. 2 bdrm. 2 ba 4BR,2lfl ba ..... S650/950 3 BR, 2 ba. Lrg. Sunny . tBr.....,.·$305 Brand d 1 2 BR 646-611J or642-7745 4th nn·smkr to shr lg·---------• Condo w/ frplc. 557-7162 4 BR. 2'h'ba. SlOOO NB -Patio. Ac~ to tennis. ~.end atucho, clean, x.lnt · 2 Br $335.$350 new e uxe · hse w/3 guys Nr OCC •• bch & club. Call Frank 1oc, walk to beach. $275. TSL Mgmt ~ 645_8122 2 Ba apts. Xlnt Costa Brand new condo, 2 mstr Sl!iO mo 557·37Sl · ........ ............... 4450 2 Br. gar, fncd yard. Boat Karl. (2131653-7900. tnel ut.11499-3636 Mesa locatJon. Available bdnns. 2'h Ba, garage i----·-------storage, pet ok. Adlts. • MESA PfMES March 1.1979. From S375 +carport. frplc. ocean F looking for M /F to ••••••••••••••••••••••• $350. 546-7506. Bach. Apt. Ocean vu, pvt. 1 BR sns. Pool, jacuzzi. per mo. Brin g your vu. thick carpet. no pets. share 2 bdrm hse 11. B. Newport Mariner's Mile., Br-2 8acondo.sgl levet. yd. walk to Victoria gar. avail. Adults, no roommates.Call, s·s30. 546·1392 or sioomo.960-331.5 Modern 502 "In store. •••••••··~l·•••••••••.• Af).. 759-0226 IB3--0993 549-24-47 l. req,, quiet. liberal 2l3-C7'1·7001 0-P--lZZ6 newly dewated, $625. bmh . ..., Incl. uUI. 2ll pets. 2650 Hodo Ave, • 11!1 2llf190.5538 2 6 3 0 (Cl A von . 2 BR "'-"o ""'can vu 022 8600 · 2br lba Upper on the male seeks same. Ocean •---------.. ......,.,.. · "" · w;r J · c k 2b d Mewpon le~h ·u6f 'd of Balbo E · ew pt L g Store 2oxso. downtown tennis. PQOI, $125. Call asnune 1 . t r~ r, en. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 2 BR. 2 ba. Mesa ocean s1 e il· X· v1 a . a u n a . Cost.a M b 714/833·4669 Mr. Red-poo. enrus •. s pa. Jiec Drive, n r S.A. Cnlry lt.C. TAYLOR CO ceptional street. 1301h ·9664. · esa, nr. usy cor· dick. "'523"· gate. Avail. April 1st. 1•YFIO..-Cub. Pvt Coed yard. 2 640.5112 40lh St Yrly $400 mo. i--------ner. $495 Mo . Bkr. "' '-"P'"'5l>l:htvlflE &M}-7639. "' "' carport w/storage, S43S Don 673-0ID7 Modem -rum. ()('eanfront 1_6'75-_6700 ______ _ vr~ldrni~~~.b~a~y~~: 3 Br. 2 ba ~e n~wly re· HEWPORTHEtGHTS ~.,.C:S2 BR.2 ba.,year· mo.~l.39 .. 6lJ.1816· 3 BR. near So. Coast 2 BR w/frplc . W/D. fum ~·1 ~r. .. ~:~t SJ~ For store & office space at reasonable rates. 500.5000 Sq Ft MESAYEROE DltlYE PLAZA oceanvu.$550.493·7112 decrt'd, crpt'd lhruout, AREA y,STfPSTOlliCH NEWUHDAPTS Plaza.S490permo. · kltch. Ocean vu. Nr 675-4918 549-~ Bay/Fash Isl. Save, walk 1---------- New 2b 21 b d pa tio. W/D. c omm MEWLG.TWHHSE. 4BR.3ba.,wntr.$600 1 Bdrm & loft $350. l<l .. SOK to work/bch. $550 lse. '"""a woman nds rm lo . r 12 a con. o. pool/tennis crts. ehldms 3BR 2... •-e..o'K Frpl P l u ~ ... 2sly 2frplc overlooking 3 Bdrm. 2'h Ba. f)'plcs, • .,., wnv. -c. .. rec room. oo ' 2 b 1 ba nnt1l $275 673-8617 rent/share apt by Feb. · · . play yard. Yard maint we\ bars. Laundry rms. 2BR, 1 ba, yrly. $435 jacuui, closed garages. r. • n--· · ---------a.Can afCord $125 mo. 1525 Mesa Verde E. C.M. 545-4123 ~~~:. n d J ae· $4 7 5 lnc. $500 mo. 963-1381. Garages, renred yds. & Gas & wtr pd. Adults, no 00-8084 IOam to 7pm. 'Al blk to beach. 3 br. 2 ba, l-497·27M. Lag Bch. -------.--'Woodbridge JBr, t '4 ba, decks. Com er Knox & pets. 393 Hamilton, C.M. Townhouw Dtlplex downstl bltns. Crpl, palio, 1-------''-----Deluxe 1 br. l ba. yard. ne'4!NewLake~&parks. Orange Ave . C .M . 645-44ll. Redecorated3br,llh ba. gar.LeaseSSOO. l «lb Nee<IFemto shr3 Brupt 1;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;; __ _ pat.Jo, no pets. UUI. paid No ...... ts.$450.833-8600. $625-$650. 631·13881 ·garage.J:vt paUo. Bltns, St.64().6140 Irv. nn-s mkr, $200 . .....,.., 1 ,,_,, 1 3879 "" 1 7c,c_ ...,,... ~ HICE cpt.s •-...,,.. Lots mo e Karyn. 967-7120, 559.-8188 MAlttHB•s MILE .....,. ""'· · · ---· •Lockedgar.w/lgstor. Nopets.548'.8754 r · 5-taAna 3880 •--'--------PRJMELOCA1 10N B Toro 3232 ~~r: 3p~~ ~:~~rp;~: McLain Townhouse El •0/W, pallo, lndry rm. ••••••••••••••• ••••• Male seeking same to shr ON WATER. Available ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar, kids & pets ok. $445. Dorado Model, golf """""69 •Special cabinet space 2 Br cottage. frylc. beam ADULT LIVIH 2 Br l ~ Ba apt, CM. $150 for retail or frofessional CkJse to frwy. 4 br. 2 ba. Agt. no fee. 964.2566; course view. $800. mo. & V An.a. •Gas heat, gas cooking, ceilings, patio. closed Beautifully landscaped: mo_._548-~_1.am_____ offices. Tota of 3000 sq frpk .patio.rncd Yd.gar 973.2971. Century 21 Newport LIVING gasbolwaterallfree. gar.Adul~only .Nopets. Spac 'l&r:2 Bdrm units.~ n . Can be divided ioto Kids&pctsok. $4SS. Agt. . Center,640-5357. •Adults.nopets: ~o.7 E·s1de. 642·3102 C\()6C to shops & frwys for'lttlt JO sW Ueruruf·ta. no fee: 964-2566: 973-2971. 1:i~u2.~rb:e~ai.~~-;~ S.°"9•• 3276 ~83::=th er pm. Recreational facilities .................... .. a.:;;~:=--• Fa.I .... y.-1•-y 3234 paU'o, frplc, mirrored -••••••••••••••••••••• Apartni•nta, 2323E1d A C M l Br. stove & ref rig. Rents from$285. $40. lnquire at 325-J 1 1. r.~~~~~~~~ -Ent•n......t--•nt. · en ve, . · Adults. no pets . $250. rA11< PLAZA I ..1r San•.a •"a Ave. aft ••••••••••••••••••••••• wardrobes, cotrl air . lovely 2 br ... pallo & encl. u:J.lllll 642-7605 "' ~ <"' ExecuUvehome48r2Ba. elecgar.door.Condoad· yar d . Near beach. R.aeation... ~T 54!Hl>20. :IJOOS.Ftower556-7960 UAM.54().()130 Plush unique suite pre- freeways/schools/park. vantages w /no ma1nt. Deduct 1100 from rentror Youn-36S ~.-...-v" 2 bdrm. iurrage, private Seal leoch 3884 Gar a ges . ca nn e r y stige offices in Spanish SS75. Bkr. 955-1440 Tennis, pool, gym. $475. manager of 8 units. No days a yctarl APAITMINTS patio. bul It· Ins . No ••••.••••••••••••••••••• Village, Newport Beach. s~le building. Major San tW'-*Ofta.ach , 240 675-8138;493-6097 ~&1~~~~5~~ Calle 2Br$220.lnlantsonJy. duJdrcnorpets.lllOVic· On the water.o 3 br. fam 675-4912 Cemente street. Long -,. "' • Beautilv.l 51ngi.. Mature adults. No pets. toria. rm) l~ ba, 2 story, Cape ------term lag. Suitable for ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 3BR 2ba, frplc. Many 1 & 2 Bedroom 2450 Newport Blvd Cod. $6SO m 0 . 1213 > Nt!w Oar ages for Rent l)tuisiclao, attorneys or New-tiegant-2 bedroom amenities. $575/mo. 2 BR house. S hop. Costa Mesa 2.Brl 8a $350meSm2Br 001-5331 Costa'Mesa other professionals . SSSO.or2bedroom+den lmn>edoccupancy.l?S52 ping/beh. Vrly lease Fum.iahed& $325.1 BrS300.548·8204 . t0x22 675-5800. A0 e t 714 /.929750 $575. Cedar & window Sequoia Tree. 675-2033 or' $375. 125 Ave d e l,a Untumlahed Clean 2 BR 1 Ba, lge pvt 646-2316 SoulltLCllJlllMI 3186 --------Gl~ " . · pr home. Five bloocks to 55'7·7010 ·Gndla. Apar1JM«1111 patio. refr1g incl. Adlts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• OfflceR....., 4400 •--------- -· -~~~~te ~~~';;. -MIHLUKUH-~-' v~:e: a:e~i ... ~:~--:;:e:~-:.n:: ~~01;t F.aslal::11 B~z~alr· 3:. ~~~~r~i!!~~~-, .. ;:~ .. :W~:~~:;~~ =~-~~ .. ~~~~. tained yard. Adults, No 3Br,3ba&den,2200sq. view. tennis, garage. -New(pts/drapes lnbolh. corated, $575 mo. Call sub·lease in Laguna ~Inquire at srr 18th fL + lush gardens, pool SGS4812-073' • =.i_.-. T..W.. stYle apt. frplc. paUo, all 631-3646 an 4 & wknds. eves. 554·7812 Hilla. La Paz Rd. Ju.st •MISSION VllJO * · <714> ~l. paUoa. t650. mo. 673-6336 tllt:S. 1 &2 BR cpt.s drps bllns south ol the San Dfego Prime locatJoo suitable Executlv horn 2 ii «6'2-0282 . 5-laAIMI 3280 •kti~ ... 1o1. gmt 642'1603 encl oa~ adults no nots' 2br apt. lblk to priv. bch. Freeway. S308 month. Cor comm'l or ind'I \&Se. e e, m es ••••••••••••••••••••••• Freelv.Ddosy lnmc:Me Beaut. brand new adult ~sSs7 .. ...~ . Vlew $550. Also studio Avall.now.83IMl030 to beach. 3 bf, 2 ba, fam The Terrace 2 br 2 ba 3 Br 1~ b d • Heallta aua., JaNalit :::!cespace. $340mo. 1850 to 2500 sq f\. A/C of· rm. frplc, dshwhr. Prof. frplc, 2 car garaie. up'. .... ~ ,.,.;._• NcooSoo, Cnul PLUS MUCH MOllEI • apts. Spac. 1 & 2 br Brand new 3 br. 2 bJl, cov· Dell.lU medical suite, flee. too amp power. Call landscaped . Incl. ~ S45()mo SS!M8li c • .,.... 11""'•· r. • s W/townh&e s tyle . eted parking children C1 nr Corona del (714)522·4254 days; gardener. Many extras. . .. :....1130e~-. Plaza, encl. g,a rage. Oakwood Scheduled move-ln Feb. · • .,,.. I 11ttr.•11HH1 n __ ,...:.:..._, ffi4)675-3534eve.. Kids Ok No ....... ..,Cl\ , -..... Pool. kids play area. No L acce&M<S. No pets. $450. 4 w ar. ne .............. ~Corp. •.:a. No. fee_.,..;:;_.,= .. · • -• _ _..... 3•41 ...... $450. M0-2363 or Garden •---enta l Br, 1 Ba ......,c. -""' 1138-2917 or 837-1809. • u.tw.illnd JtOO 6'1s-t'100 lmhMlriaJ 800 to 1600 sq ft ngl ...,... ...,.,., --.---A' .--"t"""UU ---2 Bdrm .-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ ffl N 973-2971. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• msrll. N.-poet ~ 2&.1~Ba ~$425 apt, ..... um, f•ml· mE EXCITING .500 sq:" ft. offices. ..., .... o ca. ewport. 1 & mucuae quiet 111 ac. 1 story Condo 2 BR 880 l"1ne TSL 111gmt 642·1603 ly complex. no pets, 1285. PALMMISA Ans From $14S. Incl. utll. 779 1_64.S-_211_· _1_: 646-6303 ____ _ Vacant 4 Br l Y, Ba. Frplc. ~Ida/pets ok. 2 ba kllcbell w1'b1tna' (m l&ch) "'-..._-zm apt 3. College Ave, W.19thSt. 5'0-2200. Lt--fenced yard, cul~e-aae, ftoulb.MS0..._2286. family. /-''-'-gr t.1o' .... .......,21g. Br. l~ ba . 642-9760. MINtfI'ESTONPTBCH 1--------·J-• 4550 . lddsOK. $495. 9Q-Ol7S uum& mt pa . <714) 64~SSO pr. encl yd. crpt. d rps. Bach, 162 BR AIRPORTOFFlCES ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• -----.,.-----13 Br townbome ~oceu Commun. clubnae & N•wpott hacb/Sovtb Cul·df·Sac. school. 2 Br. l ba, all elec. Brand from$255fr"IP· 1 to 3 room suites. all New Garages for Rent 3 Br, new coodo. 1 mile to view. ~/jac. ssso mo. ~· Ample 1tora ge. 1100 16th St. s:m.673-5719 new. 187 E. 18th St. $350. Adult.a. No-J)etS. aervtces. No lease req'd. Cost.a Mesa bcb. Total rec pltg ....... N>M.213/.....,1...,~ & fwy cloee. (Dowwa1l61hl ~lBdrm....,".Qui•• mo.Alt.$41·5032. l!i61MesaDr. ~ ...... mo •-m-~ ''Ox--...-.. lrnmed occun avaU. OD 1 _,.._,.,.,, -v•i Off AY&. 633·2777, 171•1'"•" •170 -""' (581.kaEaatolNewport l'IVUI -· • uu ...,.., ., -v•~_, yrlse. (2.13)Bl.9-5Mt: New a bdrm, 2111 ba. sa-5791. , ........ ding with beauUful Comtortabl~ new 2 br. 2 Blvd> occupancy. 2082 S. E . ..,~ 2500 rt 8d born garagoe, frpk. + xtna. Mwheonly,90 ,.... landscapin1. Ideal ror ba, kid• ok, no pets. hm·5pm5*91MO , .;.._...;.;.;. __ .~.;..l!.;.;~te.;..· _200 __ • _N_._B. 111.1i1_111,111_1a.~~ ... ~!4? '"""" tci 4 e Ocean view. Close to bdrm. '500 per. mo. on Nodela dal 1°" adulta owr *5. No pets. ~.-e5t385. mo. ,. ~<WL~· :;:.~~ =·n~1~l~~~ r::'.~n:'r~a~'. Short t~1. bayfroal 3 ~~v:.~lk= 2 BR, clean. prlv. patio,= ............ ~~ ,._:;:t•• ::r::~lb!~ek:r~l:! _.--=---=---=--------:--t..=':.::an.:!:/ISth.=:~=.:•::::=::::::80'7::.:.=.0_ •1Sf.tll8 · BR. 2 b.lt111. tl:IO mo. Newport Ave & 1blk laundry. $31$. bedroom coua1e Jn -·phaautll A.Ct8'1M170 IJOUthol8ar).Gt-03t7. •MO 546-&41B •••ilHlllf ...... Privatuulte wttb nNP· Oorona del Mar or Coat.a 38r2Ba,garage.nlcel12bcbin.2ba.DeW"Carpet, ~ 32" • Wfii61 ,__.. .... _._.8~ .. -Uon It secretaria l ...... Quiet.n.a .... decorat.edM75. oceen vkw, frplc. $525 ••H•H•••••••••H••• W.U mU. Beac.htroat 2· Sl1J. Lg. lbd, newly .dee. Bnnd a BR ._.._, _. ........ ,....,.. aervlc:e, conference Ual. WHte ClaMil'-d Ad 11Z:as11 mll.lncl.417_.. ean Vlew·Moureh bdrmiM'f~.S3I01*'11t.o. pool_, adults, ·.-o pell. ~pie' ':io. '450 2 .::: -Kltchen11acf~~a(-•1. rooro. all faclUUes. 2082 tD, DailY Pilot, P.O. tbnmlt, adult comm. 2 (.Zl.8) 2875 a.JlnhPlee,ofrS.Ana .. _... •J--·-............ ..!!a Mlchelaon, Irvine. Box 1.54I08UCoeta Mtta ·---conu1..a... ... l210 BR"-d ~50 / "' ~ ... i•.a.M tUAA"" eva/'fl,....... _ ....... _.._.,.,... -·-----or" ----'""'" "'...... -en i1 mo. Cit-to ....... cb ~ br +' nve.-~. Y' ,.....,...,)..., ft6 WklY dall-... ·--.. ••ir--Etfideacy deelp· 3 blka ....................... Comm. cha • pool, _...,. ....... • • • BR Da -·· r-.. a on 1 Ba, newl)' painted .1V" or ., ma ... arv. to ocean. nr. buaea. bdrm, a be •• frplc1 bar, Jacw,a, .tc:. Teal I: Bab· dal .• wblter.tr1l.Jr· 2 l'it-,av.. cu, l., lnaide ft out. $325 mb. ft1V pboneavailable ..wPOl'T/llY• Elderb' aentJcmaa waata ~froid town. Very diahwHber, Inca yd, cockReall)'lnc.48M797 lJ.A&t CT1•)r75olll0 fplc,Pl;f:.=mo. Call Pam or Larryt ,_.,...,.c.. txecutlveoro-with lo •hr Jpl, CM a rea. private. Waw pd. NO =~= tbtd. '500 JIH . . -~-------Cost.a ::.Harbor~ Z"6 :=e :_:s .am l>OOS. $350 mo. $350. 1 BR. steps to beacb Neer'newUwtownhoUH, 3 br, 2\'J ba, aJr cond., · · · •Wa.aud•4Brtaoua.w/2 Move-IA.CaU-.-e. ...... 3252 Ip 3br ~ W/Plltlo. 1ara1e, fncd patto, WMl'l/dry, rtlr1fi· frplc, 2 , ___ 956-..;......3S7_5 ___ caraarapwf7a.rd. Han· !xclmtveloc·Beadlwalk.•-•11••••• .. •••••••••• drpt, \J)ruou\. trc;l'i:: 541-Mlt ceileroltowa.•.mo. car far, teon s crt A RoomwlkitdleoMUe CcllldJJt sul'-, utU pd, dymaa/carpeater ~ leal t.baa 2500 ft. tram SEATERRACE blllm. F.R. CO¥'d p~\Jo. -.-..afrwbda. pool, C.M. SS~tno. "°wedltup. /IC ampl 1*1 l'r szso ......UW/tOt. dtcorttr oce.n. bute atrhun, 3 br, Bdut.IAal Homf 3 bdrm, '*· ear It.fl. Nr •bOP· Feb lit to hH u . et0-2747 evedrw . ~11$5 •'· NolMi,.qd. 17.....0 "l•,am" will rep1tr • •~lie..,. JOO '4·"· Sba.~f\Pl'l•ate P!nt ca~.b•clll., fwy. ~aw,._•1•p:!11': 18r.lba.U50~ft.Fplc. J Ir: l'it Bl 'towDbouff Pttvate bath kltcbetl It hm. prt om palilt, ~or re-- baauann..Onl)'tm/mo. ·~omm. • t ennta, Jllle~ns, ~ r .v. at•P• fo b:':. ••is. ;::. \~D~!f =~h patio, ~01: laundry priv'*-Prtrer dl!cior,w/~.S:.:::i. =:':J:"ID ~ • 51Mlll~ =~-=~mo. '-•t ;~··-HY· m.ma -.mi · _... _,....t •t A.dwta ~all 1 lacl1. sns mo. rm, t'9Plef', monthlJ lor1'tnt,.._.allowm. ~---.,. . 4dl-4M Avail F""eb bt.141·551'1 ... .,.. •1141 . ' • ~ . " .. I If ...... I ' ' 111•' ' ..... • "'*I' ll'•ar ... -.. 1................. ............. .•.•..... ........... ........... -····---........ --·· ... '·····~····· 'All.,.,.eltm11&nodo9 CUSTOM ~wotlll~I R.emodtl. r•P•lr ,fen llepalre, Randtmn WaotaJlEALLYCLEAN ~ .. LaodaeaP4_r. Hard •Orkla' mu./ PAINTERS N&l:D Repalr ft Rere)(lf. AU ' .W.edctitlona Ueo ro ldfellaL• r om: :::r:;1 oldt1ne Retlr•d Flnman. AOUSE? Call Oluoam rw -WOtt. FaJr price. Lowllt ae..:I raw.. lu. WORK: H yn up. t1pea -1ht1111e1. /9ll f1SM1tll0 IMrTlal. Cati w110,, , p.lf'ynlo Plumbl•t. elec . Oirl rreusl9'.S-$f23 "4lt.~td1111tv•. 8tkmJIZIO.S4&-7'43. lnt/ex fr Acc. tlnf•· rockthakea-cocnpo-ut . • • • • 1 lfl .,., ... · .,., Lk d Mr. Palom· ~. paint.Int. ett. J • _ _....__ ... , IP 1~ Work 1uar. 147 ·~1 I / Free Cit. 541·$13G Fia. -I•--•-• ' a.o.•mt AAJ bouffbold repair. Call Jaolee't Rauedy E._..aper r ai ._ m.UOt. Avail. --.. ••••0000• c:...tSerl... · 'l'\av Ma-14.lla&ftt. Amt'1 llolll«leallin1 for • LOw plic•. -.. ••••'0 ••• ••0 • ---------' .,...,.Moeero "'"\; ................. ~allt1"1 No :a tborou1' reliable • par. t yn np. PrmPAJNTJ~O IDt/nt. 8euo•able. ""*"It reroof. Sllake, 1111..-Ql•Parlllal lot •·,.r» • ttM• c1 .. " job too a•ll ~ H.aactJrnen • Reaa rat.ee, courteous urvlee. l.Jc'd/Bollded. Noburo. l:xpr'd. Rua Rate1. Depeedable. Tree •t. comp. Ouara!'teed. •a.paln •Sulcoach1 Coliar' brtfti ..... ra: wh• s.-ro. 'Dl·llTJ .~~· pat ,.._ _,,@l-llla.97·1113 ~t. C;'ll <!•at Jaz.W..,.. -. . Briln.M-051,l.._, . s ..... ~ ..,..._ d..k.. N•.-.._....... ....... ~~~~J:' .._.ne'a HouMclM•· Doo't t>. fooled wltb , 0 • M Pale.Uni. lat• 1'1anupubllc.l'OCllre-I=....,,· ~r.:m~~o~ tt•~;,-.;;;; ... 1ST1ao.. • ~~~,~0wa ;:TT:'c:~:·.",':: r::,·1.1.:r'.fe:t·~: ~~~.at.' ~ \C::,1S::u.!:!i -.t= .. t. ••••• -.... g. vw t~ '* -uo21J)I.....,. Hudyawa • carpeatry, ~. eod .. plut· ue·d .... 1065Dave mwi. ~,.Ung. •hble* " Mat1ut woan will Do =';.,Jal' it~~ d'rj!1~· 1 ~·U? el~e!'e ~ =.leo'!fJ. ::t'~1·ll·LaDdac:ape. 'Cw~· !n •int. £XC!LLJ;NT P.6,IN· =1~S:.~ :::ri-,::=.:. ._ ~HIM>l ~~~::n ~Umatea. l .. aoaablt ~Dl!Otli~ot Ii;: =~Fr" 'R:'-==~~~· abintlea6blt-up~g. ' ~-< ~-"'-'"--....., --....... _. ..1D.-X1I ..-v-'-• · lt-yf'I':" n,..r ... '" wUI -~-·~--"' ___ _..,.,._ °""'"-io.ra&ea. UC'd. AleDC>' -••••••••••••••••,••• ....... &at 1 m . Member m~-:• a.am t'ltu l\UO up LkWed m-Ga J..,.. _ toliil...-ilP*eaaac fme l!:ai.w. Paintbr& by ~Owaubet ~i-1!Jcllm.,..~.---t'""-.,.___ ·~!ti .....,.""' ro•r Pl1atinl earpeatry lite ~'!lllltlt:-9. lre., w . T1j No WalUna DMIU • &llS aft.t area a Truell mowal ua.IL Fr ....................... ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Let .. do \be bla ~ U~e plumb., 'ce:U1.n1 rePatn me. •506$M bra. ~t~n'1* ~~~i'4jt ....... tMa-MS-IHI K • I WOOd ... clA1 occ lkudtot. 1 Ton truck. noon. windowt • cpt •· *' Reu. 541-0SU .... eel. aervtnc area for 'l .... II • s,.. Mature woma• tLt l ll c• ... • ... _., __ =·· . Trull. ~ trim. Koo Outcb MalDleoaoc:e • r::;i.. ~~ qu.al. w.ock.. p ... -. ............. D .... ,, .......... _ ......... . Mb)'9h er Mortaer!a a ---.• u• -•••-. '71·~ kn 'I -.i ~"'_..._. _ .. v 5oM. liiitlullt laalaUed.. .. ....._ ... 4 . ..,1_. ~.................. .4J8Cll _.., _ _._ ........... -•••••••-e1ia1Apta/Comm. All types . free tal, elect, phnnbtna. ---------1iiiii _______ " &'9' · CHEAPEST hau1in1 lo Rellab&e Houseeleaol.o~. Bridrwork. Small jobs. Real. Deve. 5IM425 emtillla&es. C.UHMl825 ft'eeeaL Ucd. 751·98'1'2 t ' ••S.•ke CA.,.... -·•• .. •••••• ...... town Fr~ Eatimales. ~)'!'.exp.Cal Newport. Costa,. .. 6 WAU.P.,...... Fh •••1 --.-................. Pral .. &onab evalh1ble -la R•lunita rut Na-2115,M.S-1"90 J ~ · · · lrvbw.1'7$-3l~evea. Refaofftred Eves ....................... •-• MAIUHAMON&Y WOltS lara1lalfalra _.. • · • -·••••••••••••••••• ~ bJll ~ · Serven dn.•.&.rof. Own tool• Lile hauJla1·movln&. HOUSEKEEPERS All types of maaoary , Gl-31m.l'B-l2116 :l repair. Spec. ln CERA M JC TILE : Mf'V1c.tor a.o.~Cttwt Cook• DIY't .LUl/Mt,SQ08 Gara1e·Yard cleaaloc. !t'ir"etk~~ Wei. patios, patio cov· Knowlea PlinUna. Int/· = • :.:rrTre· kitchw. batbl, enti"ys. , sml •ind.Mdl.lala NTACT ... nlr• · Reu.ratea.ec.2·0'705 shot~~foronefee~ en.blkwalll.S41-t150 enSADdblut.lm~t-t:=P1um~.~.i1Mop Your tl1e or mit\e. P'orfrwM.f'D.TIJl .. ldUf --···•l'tt•••••······ ..... c.r.s.t-Ylc• 631221.9&IU ......... iJll,Comm/S..11&-na . IG-3079 'NecDIP'er Avalla~le. Np ~r:1~:,~z: Gll'deoiAI,. cltaD·UP9 " ......................... ~ US" ·~lean· ·-····--·-········ Papedaaaatnc ltartlng HOMESA.fER'f· Pl~mt>-•·.-CERA.11---.-C-TI_L_E_•_AJ_l BeKb ..,. •. fl/ P•I• + Newportetac\ =c~Mi Geoue MIDOUAGICPL. in&. We'rebonestlcefri· ·MOVINGlrSTORAGE· at •oo per.Sidlle rou. ~-.e~~·aO::.~ t;ypee. ~· ntes. Free phonecbar&•·STUC* GH.230 ~1191 ' Jusl.aklbeaut.llehm. denl.C.U6'1S-Ol'3 SPECIALIST-AT· •--AakfotBob. is reliable service. -.uc:enaed.531-35'2. l'"c:oat•t.ed d.lvortt SM. . Comp I . r • rd en In a are lookinl for a place to ~ALS Cultoca WaUpaperltlg BA/MC OK. tTMOeS European craft.a man all Pen.blnkluptcy~. C_ .. /c:c.c.r.te ~u::·tTee~~rn~y& ~e~~~~g':in~ ~!~• .. ••••••u• / =t':8~· AUWortGuar.FreeEIL Beach City's Plumblnl k1Dda of Ule \natahed. t\cnON ••••••••••••••••••••••• re ovaf. Re11onable. It bas to be cm and in a WO UL D N ' T Y 0 U ViN Ir MasterCb&l'le 8'1MJ,51 wW beat. any est by lO"k. Uc/BoDded. S.-tuel =~= rouodaUoaai retaining~ gdneiahborhood.Wi!eia RATHER have a P.U.C.•T·lZMll G\&ar.a.hr.$48-0193 TNes.nke ----------. w,aps . bloc1t1 , palloa. t ... S..ices a perfectionist. Would certified Public Accoun-,\MERJCAN7H/$49-7002 ~~~~a· DrUnclieaft1nlS3.50lcup. ·~ ................. .. C:. ,. ... , Uc d. 536-5013, 548-4308 ••r comlder staying in a bm. tanl prepare your In· ,..___._ ,.. __ .,_ 1J 'd ._ bl W 11 • IXOY E) f--t. '"•ll .,.. hrs. Lu.idac. ~pe aUons Ex-••••••••••••••,"•••••••• ....... _ --are travel· ....-t"'" r-··-.. ? For ..,., ... .,.... ... ,: c • e. ay e ' '""' ~· '-9 ... • ... __ in ·-·················· Ca.ldC... ~ FfVrr WllU'C v-·-.. ........._ -.. ~·-·-Insured. Tl 1$881. M&G2I 8'13-m> pert g, .WIUUI g, Carpenter. Fr-ee DL Any ••••,••••••••••••••••.•• ·~ ,.. • tncorpertlapsonalemp. appt.caJJ961MlJ2 P f i I le stwnpremovaJ.67$-2821. alze jobs. Call Allan or Uc'd Faml\v daycare Carpenter, painting. I.rant. Call ~-1333. Uno , '""'A'S ~Ni: on~;Q'~ PaioUftl le waUpapertoc '1....., 1_tm. _______ _ ~.&t&-IMt w-.. bool 'Program to Rn.I. ratea. u yn In amwer. Wnte P.O. Box. TAX&..Ms~•"'aVlCE ae cuaaJ. wort. realOllabl~ . • ...,.)••"' . ,.,._.. B. Soil area. S41-l?S2 WI. G.G. Calif. 92640 ~ "MoYinc Out " About?•• prieoe. Refs. 547~1 _ .... •••••••••••••• TRJMMING, ALL KJNDS CUSTOM aerveyou.N .548·2631 .. ch ii Pen/Bua Income T•• "Don't Delay Call To-, . Toppins. removal , IDteriorCs...-ntry '"s'•nr'or a.. • 11 ~111 a 0 I Cal18'2-M39forappt. da"" LocaJ ._ ••·•·w""e ctJSTOp .. ~'!!fG. It •not wbatll coal-cleanups. L1c /l n s _. by J -;:.: a"'""" -_.. - - , { eeeeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeee >I -·-~ IU n.&&~ a U .. but ~l lt will pay! -J.IM,5 ay. • . .,.,..._,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ... ••••••••••••••••••• * ROBIN'S HOUSE· PROFESSIONAL.. serv. 24 bra. 7 days. acDRYWA.LLRJ!:PAJR l&e)'el'MamL~J.316 •--------- Thde 10UI' oJd •tuff for E.C. FRANKEN Oen. Ha~. akl l~der, dump CLEANING SERVICE, INCOMETAXSERV. ~ Deoeadal>le, neat. reu. new 1oodiea with a C.OOtr. Add a roo~1 Im· trtr, · ,, tree wrk, ror ·a tboe'Ouibb' clean Yourbomeormxotflce. A1lt for Rieb Bua. P\Dd wtaat you wot in ~ad. IG-5178 prove. 673-5920 Anyume 'Uona etc.13M2S7 bouse . .$40-08.Sf For appt. call~~. ~Ads lf.2..$171 $40-SZIO a. br. fM0..'1271 Daily PUot Cl...meda. 'a Tree Service. Top- plq, 1talrtn1, le thin· a1ftc. fMl.11239 .... Wehd 4600 .... W•••I ...... ,._.., SJOO ~!!!~! ....... ;.~?~~ ·~ ~~:!'~:! ..... ?!.~ ~~~:.t .... ?!!! --'!~ ..... ~! .. 7100 -·-••••••••••••• r.1anrA1/ ••-••••••••••••••••••• WortinC married couple Lott Ir hilld Loll: Or. abrtbr Male C.l, lD thetr 50'1 aeed unfuro " .. ••••••••••••••••••• whl ca.e.t, wbt feet. Big Zbdrmbouaeorapt,CM Wa•c••• 5100 Cyn . NB. Reward. er NB area wttb reason•· -··••••••••••••••••••• 7:!1-1008 RELAXING MASSAGE -····················· 1---------Babyatuer •anted ..... YT Oerical, mature person.--------· BobJacnea·LlcJbaaeur Jaill W..nd. 7075 A.$EMBLY old. My H.B. bome ap. atcurate tYllllt. good COUATOtl OutcaJl9-9. "94·Slll ••••••••••••••••••••••• prox 3dya wk. ~CH. wUJl n1ure1. £xc~11: . PACICR PREGNANT? Caring. TRAINEES Cwernlte~R.ef. req. Older .benefits. New Irvine Wlllirui to train an in· ble rent. References. _....,., 1---------We'U take &ood care of l"l.nftl LOST: Reward. Miner St. coQCl4eoUalcowisellng& PERMANENTWVEJN woman r~. CAil loc.auoa Fred S. James dustrlou1 career ln· re!erral. Abortion, adop. COMPANIONS/ S31>Z32&. llllurance Call Maurine dhldual to package Uon&keeplng. PRACTl~~~RSES (OtlDPllflNCIDJ Babrsitfer needed Im· Bndley. 7$U880 educa\Sonal materials. APCARE St?· WELL SCREENED mediately. Mon-Fri. 2 CLERICAL Ellcellen\ wortcing condi· Y .................... v .,.., ""17 Slall'.le9e cat w/blue col· -,, . .,......,. -·~ PINCHEI ., l d I I evaorweellends, ar, o 1 preacr pt on medieation.~l s.1 ...... ..-... EMPLOYERPAvs Mi·cro · boys.~ Alt. s :30 coa111rern••' ;::;:=.':~~it~ 1.SlS"so. El Camino Real FEE wedubya. ~ Amer 1 can Ser v l c e lAst: MJn. Soauzer. fell'l. Reward. Vlc COM. 4650 San Clemente; f\llly lie. DYNA SEARCH El tr . Banld.DI ~lob o{~ available ~r. 1339 E. Warner. Oceufront art studio. For app\. 492-7296 P«sonoel Semces ec OOICS TEI I Ell. with m~y fUle, super Santa An•. Equal Op· Vf!r'J Private.Capo. Bch. Lost: Brn/wbt Springer lOZ1 E4'J'H.AA-~ _ __ comp&DJ• ud they're portl.IDlty Employer. 752-1828 ....................... ONLY S2 ~-.im Srll anrlteanlr-eocn· · apanlettl ml>/fm11·2'f. -We are nekinc ln· For ow Costa Meu of. &UFREE! ~~~~~~~~~ ---------11 bwlt.too ol rtema for '7S Vic: Warner/G.W,at. MICHELLE'S 835-lt.59 divkiuala foe fint shlfl flee. Experieoce pre· 54M055 I= , • ll•b •N/lrtnt/ ~,:J~ie,,:j:'~ HB.Rwd536-5024 UAM-~o.tul-:as.3749 Semi·retired exper male ~L ~w'fti =~~l Mr. Wa1i.er Caw=tllPw11•al =~:e~. ,.._.. ~uve daY11. Eacb REWARD $100 ..... nuneaaJd,cbaufforwell traln tbe r ight. in · Ctlt • •.. rul est.ate buslness you -·•••••••••••••••••• ldclit~I line la eor tor for retum ol my white •ESCORTS* or lDcapacltated penoa, dMduala in Ulit micro • ' u Z7tO CM may qualify aa • part I •IN theJo'!!::·~~r!!i. cat«laloleadingtoher ~ eJeclrooicalnduatry. ~~~~M. A!kJO•FREE time ·~eeentative for 0,pa lwlty 5005 retum. Locll hair fem 972,.1 Ill -------------•.T .... _ Stewart 'nUe Co. Earn -.. •••••••••••••••••• For mott lnfornnuon w/Wbt flea collar. End of Bartender, Female, very ,....,.._ .AA f.,qual()ppot Empl)'r 1---------•1 an avera1e ol S80 per W\abtolnv•l3to5M ln andtopl•ceYouf•dc•ll collar ls~ wtwht MASSAGI rellable, lookinc for lu.ar...... Beauty HAJR STYLIST a..ERJCAL transact io n . N o amaU businela t1l use our thread. Vic Harding f1GUR1 MODELS leJi~&'::.:..~~~eDt .,...,0 .. ::"" .. •et needed, Reds Hair :it.YI· D-~lsf minimum requirements bkkPI IDCml SVCI & 642 5671 Lane & Yortctown Ave. jOb. .. inc. So. c;t Plua, CM ~-, • .._... and you do not have to NewportCtrOfcMt-9470. • KB. Call 962.-4682 art S ESCORTS HllpW-.d 7100 Comprebenslve com· Awb'iopenoa.54().88. "'-'" _. .J .. che up your present BURGERS ai BEER on ---------1_pm.:-.----'-----OUTCALL OM&. Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• pen,y beDefi'tl l.ocludlng today"t PIP9t' ..-r poalUon. Call Michelle at ' ~ beach year round. Binge, Tue&... nita, S.10. F o u N D : F e m . Delp. • ..._ W =~~~~r:tJ:t IOOllCFI • llClrnONIST. -::,1{! Jf.c~~ eax~ Seats 4.S + 2 windows + Capi1lrano Va lier R l lonahalred yellow cat 63 I ·2140 ~COUMTIM• penoo to: ML CHAllGI citing opponw\ity for ex· l'elltall.Aat. 7SM400 School, cash pr zes. w/flea collar. za. E. 16th GOLDEN GIRL Cl.8UC TRANSM S1( We are teeking a fuU ETC tna locome. Real Estate Jleal i:atate OUlce · &»ll.8'7 _St._C_.14. _______ 1---------Anen~leveJposlUon\a A cbar1e bookkeeper Uceasees are oot eligi· Manaaer/Partner. Ma· • * * . r --t P'arrol ire•o ·-Physical massage by !_vallaC""'bH AinCCOour· UNTJSALNESG ....... ble ror keepiac ~ MIDs ~. ;or franclUM~prlme ror~ ~.... ._ .....,. • · ~ • lic'd. ma1aeur technl· ... "" CORP. • ~s,.!ordi~~Hy ,!!.: u1-ner. Caab lnvealmentror 1r _-. yellow, Peeln. OAGL re· clan . 4·SPM-Appt. DEPARTMENT for a --• ·~, ... ied r·~ - '!4 of bualneesa & bllJ'IWay ward.~. 541-2.817 penon who b .. limited "'1Y ~emealcom· oro.,.·-.-.,;-,;o~;,: ... ua.tt1,.Y manaaemeat. Must be -Irvine Lost female white ---------=en~ ls •m· 31&2CampuaDrlve .,.,.. ~ beaefi~ .... • tioemed •experienced.· Youarel.bewlnnerol Samoyed/Sbepberd. •$19UIM• " ttolurn. ,fi .. "fn.860:o lsftiaandaJpowthpqten·~~~~~~~~I 531.1193 TwofrffTJcUh Dana Pt.•area. Reward. Modela&Dcoru tDell.nitdyion. Dut•ie'•rowUtincposud~ tial.OdJorMlldraume Clerk. f.11. Sales . .All . to the ~ MaJe.Female lud .. eqoal ptJ f/h toBev.901-8111. lbl.lla Good P•Y.. Will .. COMPUTER OPERATOR * * * 17'lhAnnual Ann. Destiny. Sharon, aud.itingo{saJearepona, =yem rJJ/ ~!~~~ tral.D.'i.sJ.SGlaler.CM Ley ---LOMG HACH F~d .. ~.!!.e• 1medldum. Heather. Breoda cash depoiita, some fil. ____.. • 1st and 2l'ld Sblft pos(. lions avallable Im· mediately. Experience oo System 3,1/0 . and Spoql1ng. Excellent com· pany benefits. Salary comme.-urale wilb n.· perience. Apply: -NAU~ yr og log &t general clerical ATJ11,ACJ1VE GIRL Jn 170016th Street IODEO vi c Bo l a a I w· ar d · 3' hrs aervtng o.c. wQrk. Excellent benefits telUgent, 1oPhiaUc~ted , __ 147Z1 __ 11&1e __ ,_1.rv_._127_i_4 _ NewportBeacb at the Long Beach GardeoGrove.839-2988 ' Askaboulspec.rates & worlr.inl condillon1 Ort wttb!oocl telephone .~.ER Youan~wlluleror Artna.300 E . Ocean 75z..8701 wtthagrowinccompany. I I ~-Two Fne llckeh Blvd.. Long Beach. To fouad very large lop Apply in peraon. v 01 c e ell c t n I Bookkeeper ror pro· • tolhe clalm·your tlcketa, call eared rabbit. Mesa Seek: Bi/GlyMaleUnder mE.lOLLV ~Jt~n~ ·~,1~ 1reaaiYe company. 17t.bAnnual 642-~extm. Verde.1167--0138 21. Friendship. Llve·tn? ROOERtNC friday. recepUonilt. Prefer computer n · LOMGIUCH * * • "'---'·. w...1-b .,_., ___ 1,...,, Discreetonly960-6667 110UGWetteAvenue bot ..... ,1 t perience. Salaey com· r~ .... ---~ , .. , · ea 927 1 esa. ru or par menaurate w I exper. . · IODEO F.at bat seafood eggioUs Brookburat/ Banning. ~~114 Ume. Some Ute office Sead reswne~: Huish at the Long Beach & wontoas at' London ldeotlly.9113-8478 NICOLE'S skWs & Jood edYCaUon Management 33208 Arena~300 E . Ocean Gourmet fish " chips B + excepUoaaJ croomioa Paleo Cerveu, ate c. Blvd.. CAO& Beach. To 893S a G Blvd GG. Found: Male tri"Ttl ...... o.c.stlldlo 1--------are required. $1,000 per San Juan Caplatrano. dai.m your tickets, call S37..aolll2 . . . . Hound. 50-60 bl, ~or Beauli!ul girls-private AttounUDI month to at.art. Please 9'al'7S MZ-~exl272. <wb'1brn/blk). Vic: Ed' 1'C>OIJl3: lend band written re·---·------* * * SCRAM-LETS Inger. betwo Spr· 531·9530 , sume to Claulfied Ad , BOOICPASTEUP lngdale/Edwards, KB. IHlll•Rr......,. ....-D•'ho Ptlot po ...,.__ ...... ......., w '-c 11 •t b '"""" ~ • · · Part time person on Ambitious couple o r ANSWERS ~D;bbl' or.: a us you won . e accoun£ii1i. Bolt ueo. Collta Mesa, Mon.",..__ No exper. neponsible 1ingle adult • 8la6:llS. neceuar--=y~. Apply In wanting to supplerqent . bor. Anaheim . · f·-11v income oo Ptr Xbeor)'-Ablde-FOUND : Came in you'll be glad . Proudly An.noUnc99 Our AUrOMOTIYI penon Peaayaaver lNO ~~.~~pU•}.oNropaponpte. PiecrnEA~E'¥,w-~br~1~PL-~h. ~~t. 1oam to 2am. ~lovealt tou, •1..arA·t,eOr·~·ffiNceaew· LOTPBSOM P1acentia,C.ll. .,....,,,.. ....., • b~ Iuoderslandtballhe • 873-1828. " .. FuUtimepoeiUonavaila· Busboys, Dllbls. Call ln&«views.67$-3083 .. _ 1 ped ytve Frt.Ull3:30·3:30am. LocaUoo. ble rot kllpenoo. Must between 9AM·12PM. -ve o a compu er , -•· , _ .. bair mulU clr COLDWE'' BANKER .. _ ood dri·-'-$41-'l(ll IMut ht .t wHb s o much In· ~f · ~M Uy"b S ·w BARKSDALE SELF· ,..,u ... ve •I •illB re· · Cl.ERIS . UTOTEM U.S. DIVllS . 33Z'JW. Warner Santa Ana, CA 9'2'102 (714) 54<MIO l 0 <Between Harbor and Fairview> OadlaB now available fOr luff or part/tlm~ clerh on 2nd • 3rd shifts. No experience neceuary. we train. St.art S3 per br. ANiatapt ~to 13.60 per br. Muajers to sue per hr. EQua1 Opportunity Advancem ent op· f;mployerM/F portun.ltJes to tboM who t---------.. quallly. For lalormaUon --------- IO to our nurest market COOKll MAllR ot coot.act Ute Penocutel Mature b o u 1 e wife orb at: w/aome cooltle baking lJU2 Lampson Street exp. j :30 to z :30 f' tr. GardeilGrove,537-4840 SoCout VIiiage Equal Oppor Employer 557.al. ojpi......., 5015 telligence and it's so emcaL O& ~ L I ESTEEM PROGRAMS ~!fg~ cord •ad valid Catlf.i-------- -··••••••••••••••••• humanWle. Last April it KB.Reward. 2010 49'7-tBOl 2333NBROADWAY ~~71~~~pp~lnf~ CAMPUSSUPEJlVJSOR ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Local builder needs filed a 1040 form and Loil: 2 dog•: Ma le Would the aenUeman who SANTA ANA penoa. -Hilb Scbool, &hr day. CLllKS ---------C OOIC S Expr 'd . Sma ll restaurant, Corona del Mar. Daya & evenings'. ' SS0.000 iaterim financ· CHEATEDooit.. blk/gey Great Dane " gave me a ride to We have an lncreasin $l21.Jbr. Lapoa Beach Wed locaJ. Temporary (ng, iecured. Call Carrool 5150 fem St .. Bernard. Vic Newport Crest around demand tbrouahou Scboola,4MIG44. t!D!MCll•tework. • -..o.1eves. •••••••••••••n•••••••• dowolownH..BS3&-l.S38 midnight, Wed. nlte, Otqe County for e Ctl~.........__ Mort1111e. Trwt CAR POOL ride wanted LOST 10 mo old Male ~~all Lhe mag1wbo perienced accounUna 4' LAG BEACH Af••I MIMTod9r Oei4ii 5035 Crom 32Dd 4' Nep\ to blond, Cocker Spaniel. _, .... u!...e~.:.'!!t em bookkffplDC persoonel. ua. Qier .. -.S.aU&..-b . ~...,.61_ ----------· -MMelm~nMr-M••U& -AmrA" .-s ._,,, __ .yow. ·~1:tldl!Y~ Mn'OllO'nVE---Sdlock t75-11D 'Wl-VV ....-io LuU>erHoep • Isabella. REWARD. leCUrity ii~. Uc H.$4 are Jooklng forward to LOT A'"84DAMT ' · ~8~ office • 673-3118. ~ ~~8:.!:~nd :;.~ =you iD OW' new Must be llyean "'•(e& CA.Sii•~• overload-------- Loltlr Fomd HOO l.oltGermansbortbalnd res'.JLm.WuaoO. ,714Jl3MIOl · have valid C.Ufonua's ...aAl.OfACL LOWEST ............. 'stT.D.~s.aho WT.D.Loms. f'ali'eat Tenna sin~ 1M9 Wtllr' Mf9. Co. '4Z.217l 545-0611 •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• pointer Sunday l 28 driven UceaH. Prefer mature person Equaf Oppor Employer 5pcD. AdUlt female. whit~ SUFFERlNG from aebor· FREE PARKING '1'IW 25 for OW' llJ.aakJa w/ bm. apota. No tags. rt\ea1 ~asls, or dan· VleJo braocb •'ore. fouND ADS Near Upper Newport clnl17 . .Aak about Perle ACCTGQ.RK lliolmum _j ,,... exp. ~TYPtST Ba)' Reward 1$1·2204 or de JoJOl>a Hair " 5t!ff. ProceM invoices, ba.Ddle aubier. ~ • ol· Newport 8 eac h m-m. wayrie t'reatmenla. Pb La • -u. ti•· ~ina. ···•·t 6oe reql.i Good ~b lmuruce Company ol· ._--.-.. -.. ,_..---.--~-n-.,-e ARE FREE feur,842....a« .... ... ., -filurel. Part·Ume. $3.25 ri _._ level .._, _._. .... Prtv.partywantasmaller Sl.500Reward. RetW"Dof w/~ d ea. Irvine. perbr.Anb'TheEarl'1 J:9!,'b1tilnl ci;'k: 1ml ·bu1lnen . I • =:rn::\eT.~i:c::~:t , Cal~ · ~ ~~~c: * * * :.erU~=~0'!cretarial AUTOPAITS ~~':::::1~~=fid:!!~ =~=0C.:: '80;;;;;;1JM;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; m.mT 642-1611 1.Glt in Lag. Bcb. Dec. HAPPY AHl1\an~J tempo ry COUMTIAMAM M.V . .-.otO\ Hount-4:15.mMiO CUSTootAM ~bue good locomt 7»ll»11ft 5 pceition. Must ha own Mlnlmum 3 11'1· jobber e11c•• A ... ftM tte.d eu.tod.lu UJ"left•tu 2nd TD Ja HunUn«ton Found ldtt.en. pure black cv. Call experience. Muat be well ....,_ • '"'" C1tldll W....._ 1~ Beacb. Call Andy ·--·-·-amTcall mtle Mau. Vic. santa · &roomed Ir penoaal>le. Clal S-.. :=,.ed~:.·8~ ~ S.'lm ......__ "~ r...ii-3 okl BIRTHDAY ADv. salea. LeadinC re· Bard 9"JC'k • good pay "1111.tme ~ltlon for !'.ant up to,_, per wk. -Aalmal Au ahoce Ana ........... e. mos. ponaJtradepublicaUona with srowtAI c:_ompany. circ:ulaUma dect .. Must Low...tWtka. P1ace.ent ~11087 per_mo~. ~ti MON1Y AVA&AU Lea8ue.53'f.22'f3,nof". Fleacollar.a.416G3 Mellinl aurwlve aetr Call 5"·2100 for ln· ~4IWPID •use t,O tey .-Ill. 75l·tlM a.t TD LOANS lAJst: i c!ocs. Irv area 1 FOtlDd female Red Setter. NANA GA.~LE ~au on local fr teniew appt. llddiQI macblM. SocD• im::;;:;;_.:iiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9~~!!!!KB~.~~· ~---~~1·~-SWlNO LOANS ~rem Shef1a1:b mfx, Browft ~ It choker aetioaal accoanta. For ••-p~ dsk.ialPlri9"Ja.de· ·• i.;; • IQUJPllENT w . '°lie • 1 Rd· cbata collar. Vlc. h~~~l e" ·c • 11 -.;&.vay• slrable ~·~~~ .. a $111 OAJ CUSTODIAN ~~ ~~C::.~ =/Br\ookhr1t. lm, APTM'ANAGER W•llJ.roomtd female =--~T.-.o • per :.:".!c:i~~ DevtdP,C.t"11tAalot. IAKR.ewlldeveoll/l1. FOUND · Schwinn Di.RM M••t.. Por 55 u'l• io Costa (1llfllt .Gooddrtv\ft&:; ~Ooodcoaapaau Th•t'•ALLIOU.,.Y faabltltut.ee>.SU4prbr. R.E. ln*er,eeo.1957 ~-3UI. 1·74'-'1444 RoadlW", ·boy'a. broken "'I....., ~ Mesa. Ellper'd c~t.. eonL ._ IY• U, C · baMll&a. baclUlllbltlwkt. fote ApplJ Wutmluter b r_.,. 5tAtM Huaband must bave Mela Uff. C.ll sse-2500 vsauoaaft«'lYr .. com• ~~)'ad Scbool DI ..4 • z:r:4 Y1ELD£D Would tbe geaUeman wbo brake ca It, 2 tou ... _, wrv, alnL exp. Wlfe bkllN for~appt.. fHJ pald aroup la• au tbe · •tnc:t.. 1U21 'ts7.5002Dcl TI>on 1.Sacre J_ave me a ride to browa. vtc. s.t.u~ .. a Dllllil & LJ.a • x P . ca 11 • v e 1 b 1 R ... !.~· ctedll ustloa. n.auy P.ILOT ~e0d~r.r1,.ood We• t. )llDlop \'MW. Vitt.a CA. ~ Cr•t around Ave., ·Saa&a A'Da ....... -·-•J ys tter/ outeaffptr _ lllllL ............. . -8eld It tlJ,GQO per a~. midnl1ht, Wed. n lte 161175 _,_ • · Ifft--~ 1nt1M l lDtlJlt, AoDbat. :;:a~~ zr~~om:s\!: r:r.1~c~p':'!;1~': PWSI 11 IJIO .. * * * :;!1'~~:~=~-r:· dr1~~i ~COAST SEIVICE -t. 7l41/751·41H or •/'/fl.k:lw""'" .. ar 1.n--"..................... .... , ..... ~ ... ·-'-'-•-re.551 ·TM-tU. DAl.YPILOT llmn'JOIJ 00-.uuen. MNil.)'taJUd. iief4M UMDA&Vtcll "'nl1S.•lce11J60 ·---r-•· · llOW.leJk.CM llllKV \1LOl(an'tflndU..car. OullllllM -···••••••••••••••• ~TA~CO. ...... m Toro area. ~---DO rr Nowr "!.."t~y,:~~ ·:!~w::!t Ma·MM Pwn.f:'9"" --=~•wtt~•=: "°"'lt2Mf111& =~cl!;.,'= ·0e11~:...111 642-1671 Truet DM4. <Broker> , 8'mal•llOnaltCo. --. ~boot. •:•. Cal-e for lafut. ,_,I' 14·-. ,._. .. ._.. ••• .. 1111 a.um• .. • _.... ... .,....,..,... .o.E. ___ ,...,. SM ow ac1 In toda1'• pa9er UDder COll- Ptn'Sll OPERATOR, U& IJIYSlla. - .. _,,._ ~ . -----:.;;J g OM:Ye»lOT ~-.u_,.t~tF!tifunt1•!?! • ...... W..eff 7'00~W ...... 7100 ~W..... 1100._.,W... 1t00 ...... W..eM . JlOO. -~~. w ·-:."'T . • -~o ~ "' r '! ---....... ................... .................. • •• ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ........................................ 1;.-.; -~; ~...... 1100 te. w...-71 00 Mllp w-.... 71 00 • ~ ~~·UP ART18T. PIT. ft.!X;~PTfONIST!TYPl81 . SA' IMfaL SICY P /TIMI ... -~--Alenndu dolla, -............. ., ~~ .................. ·---•••••••••u•.. MOY•MM >"1&\. Eilper'd. Apply ~BlatbAdAc•· for' TENNIS SHOP lo Newpwt Ctr ,.."'•tale old ft new. Alao antique Df;LIVERY/DRIVER ' --_, --_ S.SIXftAS P~aver , lUO cybalentlylcvel.oeen· OdM rtr.apu.Aa.k1or ofc. Ooo·d pbon• doll,a. Jo'rl/Sa. t ooly P/bmc!, Mon &hru rn: · •••u Oflflel~::-·-t<tct.. ~AduJl.a f!JC• Pl c.11. bw for detail minded, ~.14Ml'12. ......Ut7,tYP'Dt•SU. io-•.ao. Casb pleaae. •S: II.IS la.r + .,_., -_ cwp.iaNJopportunltyfor liwc aelr·atarter wltb •ood Uova a ·JO.s·30 Mon P.P.21mw~cir, mcai ' ::!dont~ dfa&rlbutor tNlll8 wt5h~o b,,_olt Aniwerloc urvlu pbooe ~&lily, xlnt l.._.SIDE tbrufl'rl • • · •Umllton/Bu1bard. tn INtne 0... ... ._,,. ,_, ...... err "-II typloa skill• • food " ~ WTA.VLORCO FoUowa1tnJ.~ Dm.IVERY PERSO. 3:1 llrl_ fur orftc-• d\&ti••· Urto MOVl • ~""per optrtt.u. .... -• -11l*ilin1 to handle ront s••Es "~· '~ . hrs. No ~ ro Good ~t Pl1&1 ~ ~ ~ <114> 'Jt;\ 1~4 tm-at office. £xcelleo\. op-"'-. ReaJt.on 644-49lO •-------· C .M . Pbarmac ;~ ~-~~b--hl•.; ~rivrci.~,:c!,T~~~ ,.., OPa. "'::,~ ... !.!L!.!~ ad· STODYNA.MJRAG<lMcoO'llNPAG..,lty SILUMCOMI gsTATE SALZ·Flne' AG-010&: """....,-. Bob i..-acy, "' ) Patt Ume or full time v~ ....__.. IN ~ • '" PllOPBTY qualit7 Mdq--. pa.int. Mon thru P'rldl1, f'b )'Ml "' ~ Ot' evenlnp Muat TbeSa.DbomCompany HUNT. 8CH NEEDS with 11'1 miltloo I lap.lurnil.ure. lacludloa ,._,, Ma.a 11\aU llcnt ~ ~JA('Mcy ......... -able to work' aomo Advertllbaa6 -T E L g P ff 0 N t ··•-~ 1_ ofn pertoenb.lp cte.ll, Curio• LotaJ lrt"a dt-llvtrlea. •t:l'n.tt.ec.u.¥-. NP:WPOllT B~ACff I~ · ""....ina l klll.a PubticAela&loai SALESPf;RSON --11 -Year1auourt 11• u bloet.a, Oalt tablet, llMt-b St.aUo.w,.. ~ 23'6 1421410. It. ... • ....... 714M08H• S ALARY + COM · ee. our .. e• • • drMNn •of• cbatrs .. -~~,.,.~-~~8'~N.;~~·::>il~ O.o. omu G rowla1 j ---MORTOAOf! uANKlnO required. lllatl)' COin• MISSION -FULL •venaH 12 cnlllloa eacb _.,__.,......: ,j ' ~ --• ' · lntne baKd ~ nyr~ -~ --f'lRM H~ lMM...,!~ P..•~)' benef!i•-:.. lft ~Ollptl' ___ ._,.,.. wttll T Ull-.,.. ,.,.. DViewr _ .......... , .. Ul'lllil.~'1.""if.r:"l';i: 'iNu•iftoM1na CJf;-. .._. ----·wl~ rott-rnr. f'1rlllbl.ooli1i0du.a.Ci11, · ~ ~ery attractive com· «c.de.IMCaD.10D iew ' ,. .... .some , '"'· buc he• !)alar)' C'Ort'I • ~-....... •'OU.O No. 640-u~oEOE. Recep~·001·st CALLeoaoR.EGOav mit••oo aput. " •UP· ~=i ~·0~:u:~ ·. wtll mun. Sharp, ~n· mnnut~ w llbllHy. lll40l "' terwa)l<..'ir: &oAN PROCESSOR PBX OPERATOR 5'a6-'JtU portlve but unstructured 1'baliat \.W"D left t.o Tem· tbu~Ul t P•rion .. ..., A*farJ_ill.~ H1Mi~8t h •WllbttXJ'l("rtt'UCO lD aov't Qnna• Co Arprt atta, Cl k/T . t •s.tt.~ =a~e&r&Wac,:; plellilllDr.tunuigbUo --IGtw , .. ns-r ~ya_tom Youarethew~Pl Joana. Prior t•xp. re· Inter bu.ay_ aiwllcbbrd, er yp1s s#'\1.U' IG ~ Vf..P!JIJ~ Q(:. ~ Vlew DID ldl. • o..tal ~'!\ ..,,. ""~' ~·"·_top J>•J . Two fltM Tlc.l&ett [~quir~~d prf!ff'raf>I In Ftr & Ptr day ahlfta-. ~near Ora.op Cowl· ""Pri~.1~'. ---~?!!~Ua Co.&.. -~u ..,.., r'1hOl'lt al.t baalddlni' ,.,... r.-v.r.. ottn,,--· We.,.~ • penon lY ,.,_ U _...~~--~.,..-i.!:M ·~~~~~~~!!'!!!!·--,;:.~ ·~a.-• =-l"'h ·~A··-• ,_, .... it'ld P1')' accoftllng t.o cxo. ........... • , _.. J..... t-,....... ·• 10. .. 2J....::_,,(. ... .... ---~.,,-~ .. ~·~I~-·~ -~:: =-·~-T --t.eM.W. .... cw-'"":;-... ~ .S ERVIC-t; ----~ -: ;;tlon"::::rti:~~·~;;::ce:~ood ~vebeeo~~~ai:t !:!!!~~~ ....... ~~.·.~ I • .. da}' ~J"lt Wtt\ \a1) SAU$ J O I .. OW ltODIO COUNSELOR· Prior PllotoDri...U. -uh strong typing 5~~~ :::!1 ::use .:ales, you c~o FREIGHT DAllAG£D Newport BIYd. t Ill . Dr ()fl9t ~~~~b.~3~0001. g~:~ ~ loan ~lcin& exp. de· Part Time Job AM i PM. abWOes. Requ.lrementa Demoe available, profit .::: ~!, ~~ HOl'POINT SALE •. 3308 ~~"* _ W\ld., Looa 8'•ad1. To 1irable, prererably In sbift.sav&ilforCdM,Call ~~U::0r>;:~0~~~~;; sharlng, expensive todobouae~~wedo W. Wamer nr Har'*', DIMY Al; 000 0 f' AV . G 0 0 0 clmm JOQrttcteu. call ~ft& baokin& or n:• ~J.140, · and a neal appearance. ~ ~ 144 bonus' ·both>. To a.rranJie an ln· Sula Ana. '79-2921 Froot oUlce. PJUmo ~~NCOl>~ f~ G«i~uim. 1 Plaol Shop Manag~r· Salary ls S700 PLUS de-. ~act BobB bette terview please w rlte BARGAJNS.UMctrefrtgs. tnioee Cll.Udttn'• pral!' a.·a1NOE Di.:N~FI TS • • * , LOAN lNSURANCE must have eatens1ve ='~~ experiecc~ s.t.ctsAZa.c. · Donald C. Berman, wsbrs, ctryn. guar. bftt U<"e. NotHmobr som~ FAST OltOWJNG COM· ,__ CLEltK: To monitor knowledge of interior President. Quall Plac:e ~. ftserY. aool Beat booluti r l'A. v PROMOTV.S Llve-ia co:npanloo. t plants & have a strong . • IUI M.t......,•d. ~~.:..HOO Quail A&>Pl$36..08U.53k:Do uPr or IK: IC Ptt J.'HOM WJTJON TNAJN mutl.ltt to ekkrty lleml· =~ :J :~~~ re tail back,1round. We are a powtn.1 rom· tnd111M 77J..tl00 ~-cri:; Beach, Ca. • ~ uU&f~l IC coUI p o n T o 1• invalid lod.Y tnSA.aru 1.n insurance covl'rage. Salary open. Dirt Cbeap. .(>II~}' locate-d near ~ Ive work and CASH PAID tofWJUme &14~ MAN AG P. M EN T n&w mublle bom". Prior exp. desirable. 64.S-4M3 C05TAMESAandoffer· salespenoo, Fasbloa bl. _.mngbistory. WsbrfDryra/Refriga. IO ' _. --s TART s .. r M • mocm Part tunervwilJoo: hours Pool C'eaner L re-Ing the successful appli· Womens apparel sbop. Service SlatlOD Atten· wortdngoroOt957-8133 n... tat ...... U t r .,. ..-• • cant an ex c e I lent Exp.qtief'25yrs.640-N83 , ~a ." ... ep oo11 or P.t r. D l AT F. L Y • , negotiable. palrman. Experienced. benefits package and dant, exper d .. Day & WASHER DRYER SALE ~ ~~~~elal~ ~:PYE~?lNRC~ LOAH LOAN FILE PURGER; ·968-8009 pleasant working en -SALES.TEXAS OU.CO. Eves.ll\dl&~ose.Ap.. deluxe multl·cycle "'ft la~ co-mt1n'"urate tlELPFUl .. ur..-HAV"" COUHSEl.Qa "' fiJ f . --r-L--t virooment. Please apply ~ma~pet"IOO. We ~l Shell St.a •17th" models. Completely re-.,.. ., ... • ~ "c. IC'> .o purge t es or micro '"~~ inpef'S()Oorcall train. Wnt.6 A.U. Dick, lrrioe.NB. ~ retiniabed, 1 year ~perieoH. Call OUR OWN TRAINING ~or':5~~~ris...,=~~ fUmi.og. Temporary poe\. Ttadttn Hee~ PATRICIA ~~ 789, Fl. Worth, Tx. Service Station attend, gu.uaotee. Your cboieti ---------• PROGRAM PUT ON RV .--I.Joo. ~ent lo last danbury Cross pre· IEWlaE •v1.vL able to work days, apply Peach. Delivery . Sale DENTAL A S ST · ~~G~u:r~~SL'W~ ~~~m~:f~a;: ~~~e'!':a~~P~~~ School.Martlyn.84'7·5284 (714)54&-S60l Sandwkb maker M/F at Manna Shell, lse22 ends.l-LS-19. So. Cout Periodcmdst ods Ftr H · PEOPLE. CALL AT loa n com p~ny doing tr81tl. or842-2948.H8area. 5602,5603 Super sandwich 675 Pac Ort Hwy, K.B. (213) ApptiUC"tUf-2542 s&.. Elcpe.nded duUe$ opp-0 N C E F C1 R business in So. Orange Prioting·Be•ch Area; Paul,arloo. Clrl Call att. 2 Sl2-1S71 Priva&.e party will pick up &y. X·ray ~ reqd. Exp INTERVIEW. ORGAN County. A C&lifornia real Salary for all tbe above o.-~rnao: 3-S ,.._ exper ~c 5'5-&7 or b 111 y Id pref'd.~n.Reply to EXCJIAN.GE. STAN estate hcense is -re· positioq.s Is c om -.-.=o 3 "" ~ ~• ServSt.aHelpoeededlm· o u r. 0 U71. er. sy Pilot. P.O. NUNN714/586-7302 quired. Preference will menSllptle with ex-~a~':nf!Tcs:~; :.IT[!~~ CarDra M•1lls Seamstresses. u -med. Full or p/t. Apply ~t;f!tgc' c~/ard Box 1S60. Cost.a Mesa, . -be given to appbcants. penence. Please contact fokler etc.-Typesetter: 11.S.-SUCT perienced, Moo·Tburs, SlllOE.CstHwy,N.B. 88'7~ CA.92626. fob •• GUARDS t:wbo"~~e.nb~~epn,,oerldeo"r· ~~ ~."" ~~EerOinE· Co3-5.yt"ll expeHr--ODdl~BM 3201J.m.~~~t ~~:, Nr o.c. airport. s~~~nde1eryarSnt~-elxn·'c"-~-D-R_YE ___ R_w_·_/f_ull_6_m_o • Oeotal Assistant · 1'ull &p/Ume.AU nteas. ... ....... u• • formativu . .............., · mposer. ea iner EQUalOpport · ..--M ..,....... ~ary / part lime. Uni-Corms furnished. 1M.Dce, real estate, or Gt'aphic Design, paste-£ loy MFt)' per'd aa.ies lady. FuU· serv poUcy guar. Xlnt front & back exp. Ages 21 or over. Retired ~nosmumralnssc~o·n Esxccheeldieunlet NGoodW'SeswaAlgesdesLo. 7w-3p'au~elnlt. up & stripApdin~:,~nDd ~·::; mp er I SIC ~IPT. . time.I Sooddays,.;'~l worill I&. cood.. $ISO. 675-7485. bul would tram an out· welcome. No expenence .. • · swne to ..,_ w.., 1--ng c. s . .,...pee a Y-AmtV-_ 1015 d . A 1 U 1 permits uoll mite d load. lmmac. 41 bed p·i l p 0 Box 1560 Fw busy real estate of· .:...;,...,._._._ .... "'lOlO -s tan •ng, mature oec. ,PP Y n1vers a pe"""'"alf"~·•'-&im· Coov.K~.20362Santa 10, · • • ficeloNewportBeach. ......,~.v .. ,. • •••-••••••••••••"•••• woman. Good opportuni· Protection Servtce, ~ ....... """"'' A-·A M a:-3061 Costa Mesa.Ca.~ · UCEPTIOHtST E ll t t.y for bousewite·mO\her W. StbSlroet, Santa Ana. mediate ncome. Send .nua ve. . ......... Executive search Firm xce en company STOCKMAN·DRIVER togetbacktodenUstry2 lntttviews boors 9-12 & N~toC:eLnteBlrue,Dri620ve, OFFICE PE.RSON FOR PROCESSING inNewport'Centerseeks beoefitl.~OI' app'L LeeFuU·!_l°1!.!_ma~0·,!· da""' per wuk. Costa 1 ... Mon thru Fri. ~-...-· M F G R E p c O .. .a. ....... .:a ,.,._ · of Ftr • ~. <o1•v ICU' "'~ S it 211 N t · · · r-~ · ....., services a RED BILL REALTY 1 •• Bcb. CM-0717 Mesa.~ 11 e • ewpor Husband·Wlfe sales or-Ptr Recept t.o work: ~ • _ _,_ft_,._ __ . ______ , Read bousdteeper: part Beach. CA 92660. ganiutioo <Office in So. TRAIMH days a week from 2PM t.o ---. SURVEY DENTAL ASST. tllne stock boy & IJ\IUds. Laguna home) needs ' 5::.>PM. This pos pays ~ARY-Abilit,y t.a •--:~ • Qialrside. X·Ray lie. The Inn At.,L.aguna, 211 Macbints t , m 11 Hn g sharp person for phone, Steel fastener maoufac· $3.50 per hr with saJa..., .... rform tecboical It Ii~~~ ~M.!,f" M6-300<I N. Csl Hwy, Lagun~ , ... _ · . "' r-i · ri I ~...,.,.,.., .... _ v•-Beacb machine alrcran. Top misc. office work. Ap· turet ~opening m pro-review in 3 mo. Please respooa ble aecreta a J2toi · Dial A Ride pay, paid medical. 50 br. prox. 20·30 hrs/week. ~ dept. for plan· contact: E)l:ECUTIVE work of a com_P.lU 1---------Dri ... n HELP!! wk. . seeady employment. ning trainee. Neat print· S E A R C H It. nature. MIA qualifica· '[elepbone contact for Operate modern equip.. URGENTLY NEEDED ACRO TRACE CORP. Pbooe 714/66l:.12S3. Mon· ing, good basic ma lb PLACEMENT, Leslie or ticlns, typing 60wpm, lk ser vice club benefit meQt & door lp door J7592Golb.ardSt. H.B. ™· backgrow>d & ability to Ted Bavly.644-9174. SH 90wpm. $'180-$1M8 per abaw. Call~Ul93. traMp. Calif. drivers he Household inlA?rviewers 847-4748 reed bl \le pr i n t s mo. Apply lo penon to req'd. No prior exper for au areas in CM/NB •OFflCE ASST. I necessary. Good s~arting Fciuntain Valley Scbool Telephon e aolielt or· nee. Good drivang rec 8 area. Work J 40 wk pr mo MACHINIST •STEHO II salary. I.I. SALES Dist, comer Talbert & tnau ra'D ce,evenlngs, 'Pu&uc FURNITURE • *AllTIONS . FRlDAY7:30P M 1De•11Welcwt CONSIGNM Di'I' & STOCK UQUJDATJON lWTERS AIETION 317$¥.iNewport Bl. C.M. must. No Sunday work. on a permanent basis. 4 Doy 40 Hr W ffk 1 Applicatiorfs must be We have a 'position Newtand, 'Ftn Vly. Filing Tustin. Sl br. No selJiog. Orange Coast Yellow Paid training in mid· EDlER . med prior to Feb. 10. to ROSAN av a 1 I able r or a. deadtiJ\e,2/S/19. E.O.E. DonWoodlS.9230 _ Cab. 17300 Mt. Her -Feb. Mus t be U .S . INDUSTRtESINC. be eligible for upcoming 2901W.Coastffwy. salesperson that enjoys r~11rr.a.11y • ~--....~e .-.,-_......-----.... ,,,-0-2-0 &3M62S 648 11186 rmann. F. Vly. c1t1 zen. high school CivilServlceTests. S48-SS33 being m this crazy busi· ~·~ 1......-nvn.. r-• gradwite or eq\livalent. 2101 Dove Street, NB ness; comm. split to to the president. Invest-SOLICITORS "·-•••••••••••••••••• --.DISPATCHER -18yrs-oroJd~l' wltli own ~!~gR~AIR 00%.CallSmili.n' Melvyn meot banking firm. NB Experlenced()Qly Sell • SPECIA.LBJCVCLE c.onstruclioo equipment car.St02 pr hr,17•prm1 MACHINIST 751.FAJR PROPERTY MGMNT at6464463 , area.~ledgeofword DrailyPUot..11.iaheslcom· ~~~=e:s ~r~~~ in8J~U::.: ~7g'!'" :~~~~ w~~~·~ For P~~~!chine OTHE!~:lONS = J,~t~1J:3T;~ .vpw*i?!D_; ~~Staa~n~drS!Ca!dlrb~d: ::=':~~!~0v~ro~l~ 3323E~=Hwy. Good benefits. Call Please reply immediate· shoo m the instrument •SECURITY ing, pb, A/P & A/R. ~-'"!!llP swne teW1 e 1 • LD. Carel. CaU ~.t---------Crane Rental Service, ly to U.S. Bureau of .divfs100 oHhe oil tool In· •SUVICE COLDWELL BANKER. co. p _o. Bos 2736. t-31>.M. -• lOspeed boys2t" l.oc.997·3103 VC~nsut-B11177d7 SLan ·dustry. Worklng from ............ .....-... ....... CE NB. ofc. Ph 752-8080, ask u•HY'S Newport Beach, CA. VarsilyS7S . teen e v • OS blueprints, sketches & -"''"""~" r Mrs Lest _,.-92863Ph675-8030 Tow Truck Drivers ex· M>-1665 DnYtt, errands, etc. for ~eles, Ca. 90049. At· erbaJ des·gns d ctl '°' :-er. RISTAUIAMT per'd. Top pay. Apply---------working couple. Mus\ tent.ion : OC /REC. v . 1 .• ire Y OmceManager-Sales Haspositlonopenfor Secretary PIT G"W TowlnJ, HOBFORSALEBYOWNER. live in Or. Co. & have Include phone number with. eng.aneenng, to as· Good op~rtwlity for ad· Real Est.ate Eicperieoced HOSTESSE&HOSTS &ecreta.rial. Office exp. aum Way, c.M. sa.1252 Braod new road racing perfect driving rec:ord. Equal Opportunity !1:to:mn:~ ~~u;~:I~ vancemenL Will train/no individual to coordinate WAITRESSES nee. Pay oego. 6'5-4170, 10 speed. Hand b ulll Apply Mrs . Green Emp&oyer wide weU bore oaviga-experience neceasary. all onsile multi·lenant WAITERS 9am-5pm. ~·Word proceuor. frame. tr:lclt par1S, 19~ P.~.Box C, Downey, Hospitals lioo eqwpmeut. Lathe Must be 2S Yrs ~Id or lessing activities for a COOKSDISHWASRERS Lime. aroac ~g a.. Call .Joo at CyCJe Ir c.Ji(.903tl Nurws Aidff experience helpfu~ for older & be avail. on large commercial /in· PaJd weekly, company SEX:RETARY· Property aldlls, goodoec•~1:1f 0~ Co. at70 Newport Blvd, more vanety of pro•ects Saturdays. 5~7-0824 or dustrial park in Orange benefits. Apply in person u.._ .. t 1_3 .,.,... exp in ~ --~m Apply C.lrL 642-7910 . Driver needed lo deliver Above averafe wages & ~ · 774·6090. 1525 Mes a · Cty.114/639-6700 9amto4pmdal)_y. ~l f . ld~·WT . LexitloD "I"--plumbing filrtu.res. Must health ~ne its. Apply = open, excellent Verde #206, Cost.a Mesa. AJph.Ys's Restaurant com •e · yp1ng, in penoo to Mr. Fuentes "''dllrJ ~· 1025 be 21orover,.Sruppiog, Newport Conv. Center. itspack~g~.E.O.E. Real Estate Sal-es. l&l7SHarboratEdinger phone, bktpg . atRobertBein.Willlam -•-•••••••••••••-•• receiving exp. belprur. JSSS Superior Ave. ScJe:oUfic Dnllln& Con· OtlDst CLsttc fUll/pt.time. Lic/unlic. Fountain Valley COLDWELL BANKER. Ftost&As&oc. 1401Quail :i~ Ton Overhead Chaln Call67$.4830 Newport Beach. trol. Corporate Head· Alert. capa\lle person for Earn while you learn. An Equal Npt Bcb o.f c . Pb : St.Ne!IPOrtBe•cb Hoist. D» Call 531-3440 t':crg~·c7f.)~f.~~ busy order desk in small Farm & ranl"tr'broker. Opportwiity ~mployer. 752-8080, ask ror Mn . ·~----'eocecf aft. DOOft _ Ho6less, AM shift. exp. offtce. lleQUl.l'es phone & Call for appt. 675-2207. Jf Lester ..,.....,.._..~ .,..._, DRl'Yst ft /T Top Pay. Blue Dolphin, ask Cor Mr. MoU or Mr math aptitude, type 60 no ans. call agam. RESTAURANT HELP • . oa.ly CU!llOm sbop. Top ~ .. PARTICAL BOARD From· Newport to 673-1803. Adams. wpm. Experience Real& Breakfast& ltwcb buffet m and beoe. }'ft or Somesheets 121t4' sO'me Wes twood. Retai l H El T , helpful. Medical, Dental late style. O.C. Airport area. Secfttary, loterested in C.ll.S..US6 w&fl»ed, aome broten. dothinl store receiving oatess • or. to benefits. · -Part le Cull time needed. learning group in· · lo 8IDOWt avail lla.ke dept. Good drtvlng re· resta,urant, NB, n~ ac· Maid needed• ex .· Fabricated Plastics Inc. INSTANT INCOME Cook, dishwashe r. auran ce. Excellent Vete,ran a ry Recep· dr. Call Harold ~l cord&refsreqd.Mustbe ceptmg a ppllc at1ons. perlenced, honest & 81.SW.181.bSt.,C.M. ~g esta.bliahed real counterhelp.CallRonor ~eo.'t.atrv. Fr. Caed11S~~~. UP~!~:!stp.r:c!~r~;~ ttwp8AM&3::.>PM. Zl. HOurs. are 8:3().l. Call Will train. Apply in clean. Mus. t know bow to 646-3279 estate olfice needs caJes Omer "Sp I p t ... ·-----Nancy 644-5070 ~erson. 2·4PM. Mon· cook. L1ve·in. Call . . associates, Exle;sive ~ m. ior a p . Maurine Brad ley . 964-1805 C-r•&: ' · · c-.1!_.urs. 4221 Dolphin 673-1703 _ft£a DE#tu rental business' brings E.O.E. Waitn!sses. exper. food, 'S 'A Rt 1010 ~nker Way. ---f~ earninJs. ·as well as · cocttalls Otr IW>Ch. ApJ>lY ........ •••••.•••••••••• DRIVHS 1fCYl'EL Accepting appl in MAIDS Jrv. window mfr. ~-constant, 111·deplb ex· Rest.aw-ant ~ e:~: !J-2:» daily. Beamanla. Canon FTB w/1.Srnm l .8 For light del~very Ir all depts. Front Desk, Experienced, rall ttme, per'd woman pref'd. for posure to poledtial NEWJ.R.rastfoodoper, ing, individual. Must 3201 E. Coast Rwy., "120mmUQanonleos,& messengerserva~ . .Must Hskp' Kitch Coff aJsopartUme.6'2·3030. respoo, tu·preas desk, ~ers and sellers. Full-needs respoo adlt to bave excellent skills QironadeUlar CJ15e. ~. c.aooa Petix be over 21, with good g, . en, ee xtraabaJl) math apt, bv(. time on)y, but rental ac-work days, may toe aflt. • w/50mm 1.4 3Smm 2.S & driving record" SbofiaiDloing Room. MAIMTIHAMCE ss.customerser.bU · tivlty optional . wkends. Counter help. type SOwp • kDOWWeidef'esp'cf witharelr 120mm2.51eues&case ' knowtedge or So. CaUf. Coe 1 Lounge, Ban· Eitperienced. Clean /Invoicing, 4 dy work Prestigious beach area. Apply tJ.a lO·ke~ " otber office mg cO,. crane manul. la $1'15.606880 ' f'rwys. SS7·1435 For quet. Apply at the froot facilities In & out. Ex· b •f Refa o.->;esconfi~enUaJ. . machines. Lite book· FouDta.lo Valley Approx "ppl. de8k. San Clf?Mente lnn, c:elleot benefits. Apply in ' c:o eow ' . ·Burr~Whit aJto Inc keeping experieoce a+. SMO.-wt. 7sUm Ceh IOJS _.. ~ W. Avemda &plan· person. ~ 546-8>. e e r, · R Must be neat Ir non• r-·--• .. •••••••••••••• Driver, Stock Clerk. diao.SanQemente. THEAHT19U1G-UILD 290lNewportBlvd. NB ·~-... amoking. For appt. call Wood Worker oeeded. ·~ • , __ pick or litter Chance ror advanc~-U<YI'EL Front desk clrk, 1101 E.~Rd. OR11IODONTIC ASSIST. 67M6lO ... Debonli..55&G28 lloacgomery Marine. lOwbo&d. ' meot.. must know O.C. all sbift.t all Call t r-a.-RDA. Part·Ume. 1 year c.... ...... _, f··" 0. ~ Exp. tiefp(ul. lrfust be I.a· SIDO 646-8257. area Pac. Ind. Supply, av · or -e:iq>erience. Send resume ~..,_.3, "" m'ii.mus dustr:lous & willing tot---------- 2167S.Hatbaway,SA. 88.~30to~SPM5000,Mooe~Fr·1 .. 520• ,..A•-·-.. ~ man fop u toCla.ss:ifiedAdiM38DaJ-RealDtateSales 16,_bh•'*-d be able to type. lboa learo. Call for appt. Dlr9' 1040 ......,,...........,.., • o#ol ~Pilot. 330 West Bay Sl. Y-OU'reinvlted Newport Beach 1a1and. 813-mC se.NSt. M·'Jbur. -•••••••••••••••••••• unitaptcompJexinC.M. ....~ ... -d ~ Id DIUVBS ~·Motel (213)~38Sl .lrf.92626 CAIEllMIGHT SICUTAIY"'"" WOllATHOMf ;.;:..~~ moa 0 • Meo or womea,2S )TS or MIGHT' AUOrrOtt MANAGEMENT No eo&t or obligation. Restaurant Pff person ror partner, NewPOrt PboeeSaJes 9'7$4160 older. Know the coast 11 pm to 7 am, e x· PACKERS, warebouse, ~about. real estatA? needed t.o take fOod or· Beach Law Firm Top sao..S220 cities. Net $180 a week or Perienced NCR 4200. Im· Waoted..3 families desi.r· Assem. With or without as a career. Learn about den & help prepare cold ~ ror ~ person. Xlat One black male Pelt· more. Orange Coast medialeopeoiog. Full inganextra$1000+/mo. experience.Allshifts.No ~ntury 21tralnlnc. foods.Exper.lonmnint skills,mi1Umum5yrsex·Mli 1••• Jnaieee!Owaold.Has Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt. time. Must be am bltious. f~. Paid. weekly. Im· Learn how to get started a eaab regists' helpful. pr, geoenD pnctice. Call -·• .. ••••••••••••• J:.'Te:f7S.S3CdaJ'S, uk Herrmann, Fountain .......... ,... ~d°e~l.et~n~S:-~f!~ P~ med/jobs near your 6.'as_:·30TuesdayUFebruafry APP1.Yln.per900 Lauran4f158-QZ34 W•H 1005 ~551-953'1eves. Valley. <No of Slater CottoMeta : pm. Ca now or TREANTIQUEGUILD ..._.•-••••••••••••• .,_loY I04S bet WO Newbope •-(714\aa ..... ,. <)Wred.~59'll home. )'OUl'reservatioo. 1801 E. Dyer Rd. Saota. SECRETARY-Good typ. • ... ,..,,,..,_ No II ~ 21 Wnt Ana ing skills. abortband cte. --·•••••••-•••••• ~lld) l'P'. HOUSECLEANERS Medi~ ·• fre _ 55Ma4o --TSl-3211 ·slrable , comp a n y =:::eBowl !Ji Oat. Joag baJr. Fem c.arnee Ptr Top$ -E~enced hffk olfitt TemporaryServ ces benefits. Salary com· Slot ICJockal abortllalr 1payed cat. B.lC ASSIMIUlt Gi.ngham'Girl:MS-5123 ass tant '!'l': limited X· 99921 EOE Real Estate RESTAURANT roenaurat e with ell· HUG~~ON Goodw/tida ...... DiYenifted wort load in ray pernut ~ b~y or· ~T~ .a-. IN'..d_ellC#-.2.Juu... u,ll ..--'•l' -~.... -· .c'ue-. ·c-.-u-t-m-ale, l·o -·-~A4-ti®~ ~c ~(1~.-JILNJl. ---· -Br-eMnt ~mee!"'We -;;w taking appJicaUons n.:..:.----m.'7811 "'°' """' ·-ced 1231 4aays wk 4 hrs day. ats""C; 'MOl}.ffi-S:S'."JSfeaies~<l Part Time newspaper de· have an opening an OW' (or _ to traia u ••rte• &IOOd home •lcblldreo. an • • al llOO k resume to Box 47a, Dally live"" coln machines 0 -Jdenti·' Div 'or an rv•~ CaUm.o719 Vldoria. C.M. 646-nes. prepare l me . /W . P 'lol p 0 Boic 1560 •;r • ....,., • ... • ,, -~~· FAit food U· Open Wed thruSaL . E.O.E. APPlY Mrs. Greeo. P .O. ~taMeSa .Ca92626 • 631-0'l1'8/6'5-2591. experienced man or pr. helpful, but not nee. *l'r"Dn1Dlf$* llaZICeu.eri.Dg,lrv. Ger mao S h eph erd -BOiC,Dowoey,CA90UO • woman possessing en· Apply ln pets00 only, .XWU.llUUr. (7U)75f-117'7 femaleN red/brown, 7 FACTORY HELP·Shoii u...--"' ,.__ Medical Front Offa·ce· p11ny TIME tbusiascn and integrity. McJ1i tbru Sat M.. 7120 0.0./Cooatru.Several _ _..._ 1_ 1--traanee lmmed. ,__, ... ._....ves, ..,.,..,..les, de· .... _ N 8 0 _.. G ...1· Aft liYOU-at'e lat.erested~' ----1._..., _.,._Range --· .,_.. ... • .... forl'i&ht female Lr'~ slre supplemental In-.,..y · · .·0 • YD·.,.. beautiful oCCice In lbe ._.._, .......... -~a,y AIJ Fees ANTIQUESBOWJSALE ,..fN5.Gl ___ . _____ _ plog_ dept Xlnl co. come in spare ·time. ~ ExpenPiced onl~ EVENINGS fioeet location, working SAILBOATSALESJlAN UaReiadenAaency fftmtioCtGGCelder, Jl\"ee toiood~to.able bfmCata • mt.bly re: 96S-'1225 apply. ease sen Adults with outstanding, wltb congenial as· Experience preferred 4020 ~bSt..Ste lOC : BeacbBl/ 4 yr Auatr. S llltle. views. Call ror appt. H 0 u s e " 1 v e s •. ~M':.~;0~ ~ attractive persooailtiea soclat.es, we are interest-Koaa Marine ITS:t403 Newport Beacb, 83M190 San Diego Fwy. m.-. ft..>o-1cr-cc,._.._.,,... "' wbo-inv worltln° w1Lb ed In ~g· you. In· caJlFor,&-/Qtab 'N Feb.1.z.3-4.. ,,_ _______ _ -.-u vw ...... ,..._...._. ~lcanen. We have 423. ldds.~Q';~ 21. ~rt at. t.ervtewbyappolnlmenl. ~ .. _... 8050 Female live·in compa. P /T work for iou. MedicalSecTetary,exp'd, $3.50 per bour. Phone .WM¥tlT.,WCo. SALES · ' THl•sttow ·-•••!•••••••••••••••• nlon. Prefer {>emioner ~2839.968-211lO mature. HeavydiclaUon, 642·4321 Ext. 2SO , REALTORS v.llllff-4,.._.. 90FAlsLOVESEAT forbandlcapped.mao.No &frontdesk.Busyoffice. BETWF.EN 4:00·5:00 2tu San Joaquin ffills PartorfullUmesales. SICllToff~YJa. Amer. office style $171. Cenlu ry Model nursin&. Small sal~17. tMSNCTOlt Salaryopen.MS-7112 PM. Rd Sales&Success GenenJ ice ~~ mabo«anJ roll top d~k. Homefl\ana. n 4 549-301'7 May have put-time Job. A.ti& for......_ -,.._.AP ~...11010 Seminars. Commlaaioo. Cl\lirinl aood lYpiq ~-lnchades chair. 64x44, 67M8llS PrtdM.Medtaftlcal MOOMJGH11HG7 F,qualOpportunlty .-. .. ,..,. .. -.,q&\C& ~ DeaftRowa.nl.631-3353 4c light dic:t.UOO. Will be .-io.e2140 lffide.a-beda S17t Olsen Sct·up It petfOTm line & 963-'1225 Employer ReceptJon.ist, Dr. 's·office. trained for relief of PBX lrlodd Hoene Fum Aoriat!Manaser wanted. fl'bal loapectioo of ~rt_ Beach hea~ s.Sm _ • c.._ OJ!lr&\Or. ExcelleQ& op-,...Deb SUpper c-lralr , (114>51W077 Ellcdl. 1'0l'laq cond.1· machine pa,na. Mwlt bci p•l'JI np phooe•. Exper reqrd. Bee Urie Puldon8 ha POl'twD\JiDaaleadrepait· Pem. wood &a.aa1d Mell. aom . .-..a. proOcier\t.ln the use of IW ~ Mature, slable. 8:»5. ,.. __ m:! fl\IU0r meat -...V·~a&ed Seit eownd wtU. •Uk TWl40IPUU ---------1 precisioo meuurlnl In· MOO'O.R ·"\ Bearer.ta &M-1037 __.. .... .._ · l.a4Mctuld.. OM. Vat• UIO&. Sell ~or boa•Qrtnp FraatOfftceGirl stnanentt ldbe read.ing ROUTE l~l'CllDI £1 · pert tlme. No vestment Coat.act lrln. White now.SO. -.SLM $18. e.c:ta pc. <eeu only). ·....., or blueprints. 2 Yr~. IW&IWDI. Recleptiooistlorbusycon· or dell very. Earn ForhllenMwAppt. ~---KlllCMU _Bet __ ween __ e_:ao_•_s_:30_. _.. macbinlats ·ex per & The l)ally P110\ hu a with el leut l year ex· lt. ocr. C.M. Must bave wardrobe 4'r lllllt. proftLs. n-a n..a.... * * * M . &iJmpt• ~u .. t be Gardener needed in _, macbt!f:itooll a larie route ta N4"fl)Of1 perteis:e· preterably pleasant. phone voice. Callao.tm f"-~-S.._..le, sold hnmedl.t.11 from' " .... .,..... 0 ·acb ar'"'a Mon"'ay news "-r. •Excellent ~ .. ..,. .. •ate a-.•u -. ..._ .. _ ,.._ i..-·-01 Lasuna Beach. Ex . requirement. pply nt .uo: .., • u -.. .. !'benefits. A'~ ......... · -r..,. Sa I ea : B E A UT Y A .w I •-~ u.awu "'..-. our ware--e. 1eo penenced.C&llln-1?03 Paul 0 thru Frid•)' afternoon• ·w·•...-.. Box 11998, P.O. CAREER Top roana1e-~SICMillS. I& ~Beacb Model Bocne h mkwe osier efurt S.turctay and Sun· between 9A~ & 6 • 8c1x tS&O, C.M. caur. meat poeltioo• • dl•·COSTA-M'isA Youretbewtnnerof · o.u: stNCm wtcl. t.Jani, Putld ~~me. good typing &....Neta• Inc =" eerlf. 2"· .. ~i;:r•.dAayP.· ~ ~&~T .._ lributorshlpe nail. Ill 556-7071 Twe ""Tldltts ~' a.-l~Avall. ~ a 1 .. small properly ~-~ .... -~n REC EPT /TY P l ST new • ypcomlq coj. tot.he av-., ,.., --· mmaiement office. 4-& 30S01tedb111Me =-boodreq net. AP· DAILYPILOT lmmed oPenins. Fl\. All meuc c:omp any. Aloe F.quaJOppor!:mp1o)'•r 11\hAnnual bookutet, pe, •n4 ~r.~~~~~&re 0.UMHa,CAl:M26 ' per ~~a~f*'h= fla.568a maJ ~. 214 E Alton. Ver• pt'Oduc:ta, DOH· r~ ~MACH ,..U*. __ ek_._) ____ __.. 17149 156-7071 dependable auto and 330W. 0.yS\. s.A.CalU&7.oN1. pcrlence needed. Seeretart/Dlct atiOD, • IODIO GENERAL OFFiC~· Equa)OpporEm'ployer IOOdd"'l'IOINCOf'd. ""-~·~-'l'I UC ..... -....IST •7867. tkilltd Opla t ea· at tbe Lons Buch **I IUY•• Excdleonl \.ypb&. able ~~~~~~~~ -. Di>Jon_., ..,.-""" Sale9clertr -• dnC S*ienc.d iD __. pro. Area•. '°° E. Oct•n " ht.odle heavy J>re&aUH Pleuuppl)'inpenon _£mp >'•r Newport. Beach L•• awre. Nt>racl~ FIT ce11tn1. ltaulfent Blvd., Loa& Beacb. To Good -.ecl hrnitan • ~:'!...?:~~Hour -lnllnactional Ai*I hr 3JO w. t.r I!~· re not ~I the nnn. SiOOt• _per mo. ,........ Some wlmd' $;~ ~ .. · .. !~ 'tll&al_roar Ucteu. can ~=-:~J.. ,rm 0-~ .......... _·__... ... a ·day, $3.84/br. LWe°a C....MM ;::.',..~':":e:; =--~~c:~~~: ~u. .• ,. IUwoocl v--ui: ...._~,:7! AUC1'0M ~ ~~~~~ ... IWbldlooll.• . Q A_n...... --v lnf r-llo• at w n..-.. ..-......... ,. -~ ••••••••1•M .. -.._,.-.-~-. · ;;.i~..,..:p:.t~.· ~"°'~m:Mi1 WaatMI CaUMN171 a rd"ltdMI *-"-'-...... .._ ...,. • • -.. 1 \ t II l ~I II I -.·~ ..,,, BARWIC K OAT ~UM '~ ' '' i I 1 I, I I ' 8 31·1375 493.3375 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR for t.cp used cars· foreign, domestics or classic&. If your car is extra clean, -.-.~, #I I~ °"-9e C....ty ~ COHHRL CHEVROLET .~ 11.trl••r fll, ol '"'-1"\VI~:-..\ . 546-1200 AMiii 9707 ' ······················' 1001.S. 4 dr, aut.o, air. 43..~ ml. $2000/or bst. 645--'TW IOI McLAREM's 850 N. Beach Blvd. LAH.ABRA (At Beach A Whittier > t714llZ2·5U3 cio.ed Sw>dap CREVIER ,, •• , • ..i.• -• . • II AR WIC K DA T\UN 8 3 I · I :; I ') H 3 · 1 J ! '• ----- '78 2llOZ; 8,'700 mi. In wa.r- rant,y, air, am/fm stereo, $10,000. 645-2821 9 1 Sl. HOAOWAY '73 240Z. Moving, must SAHfA AHA sell. Good cond. $3800. 835·3 I 7 t , ___ cai_i_n_o._S896_~~ TH( U\l!MATE OtllVIMG lolACHIHf RGI 9725 . •USID IMWs• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73BavS/R CS671UP> '752002~p <68.JNJM> '75 2002 Auto. air (2236) '7620024sp (76.SPQR> '775.l>; 4 spS/R (0179) ·n S»:si 4 sp <TR.5962> '7863.1csiStR (0045> CloHdS..~ aama · Fantastic Closeout on 1978 Models 19'19Models now·arnving MUST SELL DICK MILLER ''74 8.MW' 2002 Tll blu MOTORS mel., sun.rooC will\ tinted 120 W. Warner. S.t\ vsr A/C, Blau. AM/FM 557·2132 • stereo cass. w /Dictation 1!116 Flat 131 4--dr. sedan. 4 sprkrs. new d1r£e~ent1al radio, s spd. less t.ban 2. 3201 raclJ\g mirrors. 2SK IJU Xlnl cond P.P. cstm exhaust system, nu Ca.II 955.-0oo1 CS :JO.Spm ) brakes, raclllg bra. n.u SS1 ·1673 ev es. & ractory trans. all repair weekends bill avwl. $7495. 957-06111..::.:::::::..:.::..:::::....·----- dys. 640-7066 eves. ·16 Fiat X19, lo ma's, '73BMW 2002 Sunroof Xlntcc;;g:i:::.tolfer. $4700 or bes t offer.1.----=-;__ ___ _ 559-6321 '7612& convert. S-sa>d, xlnt cood. S2000 & take over payments. 646·5574 .. . . ~ Hf,,...lre-lch 43Cll Fiws1de Car IJ"Cime · Yoo are the winner or TWO RlH TICIC ETS t.olhc 17th Annual LO.-.GllACH RODIO . at the Long Beach Arena. 300 E . Ocean Blvd., Long Beach. To chum your tickets • call 642·5678, Ext 2'72. ••• HoMla 9727 •••••••••••••••••••••••• lrancl Mew •79 HONDA Cars -MANY To Choose Ft'OMl UHIVERSITY OldlMObtt. ~ Cws • GMC TMICb 2850 Harbor Blvd. Co8ta M esa :>4()..9640 '77 BMW 320i. sunrf. Honda, '70. Good AM/FM cass, Anthracite Body, Needs trans work Grey, lo mi, xlnl cond. Make offer. Call 642·8462 IJ.100 833-2144 aft.S. ~2. afc, sunroof, -..,_.-------:9:::7:::3:-:0 am /fm stereo. New ••••••••••••••••••••••• brakes, clutch. 10.000 on •XJfi Repairs & Service• eng. S5500496-9836 Joe Hennessey/Jaguar ' '77 5301. 4 s pd. s n r (. UDO Plac .. C.M. 631·2742 AM/FM cass Burgundy ·73 Jaguar XJ12. black Sll.900 or assume lse. lea~r int. Fully equip. SZ71 mo. 673-3707 thome> Chrome wire wheels. or833-0U3 <olc. l Michelin tires. Im mac. '74. 2002 Tu. Xlnt cond.1_in_&_out __ 64S-_ _.47_4_3. __ _ Many xtras. Must see. '61 XK·l50 Jag Rdstr. Has 957-0611days.640-7066 an cbansma ! Bm/lan, lugg 6. rk. -302 boss Ford Must '75 Super Clean 2002 eng, dmrl feed Hlly. Esk bm/tan. AMtF'M cass. Cam. Must. C·4 trims. m 3282 B&M hyd. shit kit, new ..;ai.r=..:•...:16.:..;·.;..300..:...__· ---::-:-::-::-1 Plrellls. AM /FM stereo C.,. 9715 cass & rec'dr. Tn Ax ••••••••••••••••••••••• spkr. $13,500. 1714 > '73 ca'pra V6. 4 :ld. 9&H8C8; <213) 533-0666 AM/FM ster. $1700. usl Jag, '73\.; XKE, V12 conv seU. 752-01.84, 497·291B red/blk, 4.<!p. a/c, P/'15. DcltllM 9720 p/b. am/fJQ stereo, 16Mi ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mull $13.000962·8069 __ •DA TSUNS * Masda • 9738 • Larcp w.ctloft Of A.It Modeh SALES·LEASlNG PARTS.SERVlCE COSTA MESA DATSUM ~HARBOR BLVD ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21 SO H..tMtr llYd. Coste MeM '645·5700 540-U I 0 540-0213 Mercedn lea 974C ---------. ...................... . 77 MB 3000. only 26K ma. Mtch. tares. xlnt fuel nuleage, smooth pos1t1vc ' handling, a r~al va lue P.P.640-8010 1978~L. 3M, Milan brn. stereo. al)solu.t.e.lY minL $29,500 . t:ves (2131 947·3301, dys (213 I or("Tt415Sr<ro38:- AMtos, Mew 9100 589 MOMTHLY . 1971 TOYOTA COIONA coun-· Sport 2 Door. 5 speed trans.. vinyl top and rallye wheels. (894MP1). · 1971 VOl.KSWA6 1M lilllT 4 spe8'f trans.. radio and air conditioning. (445MJB). 1975DATSUM1210 FASTIACI '4 speed trans .. ~M/FM and vinyl roof. (180MOK). lt72 TOTOTA c ..... 20..- Hardtop. • speed. AM/FM ~ trad<. V1ny1 roof & low mileage. (287SLS) lt73 CHEYY . v.,.w.,. Automatic trans.. air cond ., rack & less than 24.000 mites (659lGJ). 4t77 HOMDA CMc W..-. • speed transmtsslOn and air concMlonmQ. (771VBL). 1975 TOTOTA'L c ..... 20... Sedan. 4 soeed . radio & rallye whMls. (663MLOJ. lt7STOTOTA c ...... zDoor Sedan. Automatic transmlss.on & 1111'\yl '?Of. (641MKF) lt74VWIUS ,,.._,.,. 4 speed transm1~n '8nd radlo. A clean van! (727ll<T). '74C.rrera. Unique Show l'OOllll ('()bd1 '20.000 211·»-1111 "II ...... bul. ~II/FM, Hc•llHl eoacUUoa, ..... tvtl. eo• B roadster convert. '75 TRT1 MQOO. Pt rlect anc Mint cond., $8500/offer cand. 7Sa>i211 dayt •M A _-....i 750 -6'2-88U • call 7:Jt oaao ~ .. 'Vim ~ ~pperT Met•llollc d!~I y0 .. •-• tni tMI ~11e1dnl11 b .. ~." I v ot ...... che arga, a ..,... ..... •••••••••••••••••'-•~· 11 ,..,w u saddle leather lnl., air Y.00. ..,~ Rabbk awa' fVH'!J._JUll4 Uarbor etc. $19,0llOtall incld. of. root, 111'1/fm, ra'dl'al1, Jllyd,: ~M 8'r10fl2_ fer. 29K ml .• 7S2·M01 , u ,ooo m l. Im nu« 751·2186 .-0/flrrn. dt 7 .............. _. '77 924 : slJverI A/C •59 vw ou1 run1 Jd stereo. 22,000 m · Must S500Jbeat ofter. C•li seU·Best offer. Call daya _.. 979-2333 eves & wkncb -------- llh1Jl 8arrHll'w I ltl7~ Votvp. 1&HC. 4 dr. a14to, 11\/rf •m/tm c-11101 air, n w llrti11 41J,OOO ml. 4Mfll)tn:J~ 768-~ "J6 V'fl Bwt, llHSM!r Dkl. ~ UMd • 67 9 .. c 5 Xlnt Cond l&en!O cau, alurn. rim1. •.-••••••••••••••••••••• ~ sp. · · •-~c *"""" .............. ,..,,,.,,,,. t t05 No rust-Moving must ........ · -""• _._ - sell S6500. 734·68901 '75 RABBfT. Ulaupun-t ....... , .... ••••••••••• 53()..()900. Casa stereo. 1uriroot MUST 5aL •67 Porsche 911 43,000 ml. Xlnt cond. All '74 ttornet lfalchllack XG Gd.Cond. PP S3 750 records. S2600 . .wl·~. cyl, Auto tran11 .. Pow. · · · • · 4117.Jm -Str. le Braku. Air. ___ E_v_e_. 63 __ 1·_3091 ____ '73 S .. : ti ._ 000 Bucket.I, am/fm stereo & '68 912 Targa. blue. h.ard uper uve e, -· more. Golden tan with lO find soft rear window. ong. mJ. air, new brakn. tan Interior. Low mil~. $7,000 Or beat offer . tires. battery. S2500. One Owner. Askin}: 495-l.M3 640-43.SS S2.100. Call 963·1121 '73 Gbl C K ti weekdays 6· 10P M . '77 Blk on Blk 9115. • onv. ~euy weekends9AM-&PM. Leather Int. A/C, pwr green, lo/mi. Xlnt. cond. r---------windows, snrl, lo ml. Dy. 6'2-067l eve. 840-5158 For sale 1914 Gremlin. Xlnl d M t Sell '72 vw B R ood buc k et seals, air, coo · us · ug. uns I · AM/FM, pwr steering, 661-6473. Needs ~ work $1,000. new rrool brakes, low .......... ---9-755 63l·Ml7. · 5· leage,-$1800;-{;all afl •••••••••••••••-•••••• '69 Sq bk, runs great. 5:00, 964·1761. TlST DRIVE OUR Looks good. Dependable. '62 RAMBLER 6 cyl. auto, 'U CAR Eves. 2u1438-4318 runs gd. S300. OF THE YEAR.. '71 Super Beetle convert. 64.H297 Good inventory in stock. ~~e~~~2210 dys • -... ------9-9_1_0 HWTY wllfle they last! ---------•••••••••••••••••••••-MIRACLE '65 VW. All new eng brka '77 Electra, all extras, good, clean cond. $.S,9951 MAD>A/llHAULT paint. etc. $1600 or beat. 2150 Harbor Blvd. 67~3587 COSTA MF.SA 645-5700 Rolh... 975' ••••••••••••••••••••••• #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ROY CARVER ROUS·ROYCE ,.,u.....,.. ... wper\ .. Ha \..._ ___ .,...... '59SUver Cloud l $19,000 1185-4144 w..·. 9162 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CaJIArt 1976 VW Duber w /Air .875-1080 673-9187 Pi()() Private Party. Call 55l·M45 for ~ppolnt· men&. . New perfect '58 VW witb®t en1. Bargain! Sl50558-7625days bef6 . 1914 VW bus, 1unroor. AJi/f'Jf stereo 8 track. xlnt cood. Asking $3450, 5.16-9854 or (2.13)6.54-5445 '61 LeSabre 50% restored. Beautiful body. tired engine. Many xtrs. Best offer. 548--0455 '16BUlCK air, cruise, auto, tih wbJ $3300. Call 962-1178 '68 Buick. A/C, PS. New tires. Good cond . flJOO/ofr. CaJl art 5 .pm •• Square"back: auto. 979-3'28 · Prv. Ply. moo. c ••c 991 s 213--5367 ••.!>•••••• •••••••••••••• '67 .Bug1 good cond.ltlon. '71 Cpe de VIUe. Engine & S800 or best offer. accessories xlnl cond. 963-~ $1200. Ph 548·9842 • PUICHASI OllLIAll " .10UltllW' ~ ' .,,, CADIU.AC NOWI '18CAOU.J.AC OVJo!HA COUPti; l.ooded with flflul(mwntl White w/rfld IHthtr In· l4trlor. Orta rt'l•il tt!lhru/ Pfi<'• $41,000/0ur vrtr • fU,OOU . Or l uo. (~UDO) . ~JIF.R JONY~ <.:llt'!VllOU;'f fllJ33 W•tmhuic-r Avft. WWllmlN\er IS3Q 3773 Ctdi'lh1c '12 -;;;;,wood 8'<>UMharn. lint <'ond, new llleh•llo Orea. 0484440 ------7 1 cov $1600 --~-/&4$.t23$ '74 l.:ldora<So converllbtc: low mJ. Showroom Cond. ~8'7M642 ip Cadllltc conv't, 51,000 mA, new top, xlnt cond. ·~pty.~ '75 Sed De Ville, SOK m l1 loaded w /xtras, dcpeno fam car. 15285. 644·6842. WANTED '16Seville. Have Cash. Pvt Pty 831·9829. f 920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 CHEVROLn IMPALA SEDAM Automatic, pwr. steer· Ing, factory air cond .. tirited glass, wsw tires. !.~rcovers-& LOW ~: Uc. 8S7RLD Stk. $4778 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR Bl VO COSTA Mf'>A 642 0010 '51 FORD CUSTOM 11111 ls the One. 2 d.r wide white walls. Ali ortglnal, mohair int. SOver on Blk, AM /P'M Col... ... tt~o stereo. xsoo1bst ofr. r "" • '""'".-6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,..,..,,..., pm. . i 4 Marl( lV. Go&d Jubilee. U.C. tt45 Moon roof. c rul1e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lea.lber. full power. 8e11t '77 Versaflle1, low mi. mint c:ond. • "'500/make Xlot cond. t8700/Make ()Ir 714/W-3188~ ol'fer'4t·2212 Cort.... ttl Z Meocwy '950 ....................... . ..................... . "18 Corvette Indy Pace ORANGECOUNTV'S cw. 800 mUet. loaded. · MIWIST SZ2,000. S7SC29 UNcoLN·MERCU R\' '11 ~. 4 1pd. T .le>P. ~bipisoowOPEN »mlfm CB cutette, Uh RAY R.ADllOI n l' w I 9. 0 0 0 m -t . UNCOLN·MERClJRY S1 0d50 /Beat orrer. 16-llAuloCentert>r. 13J-wl1 SDFwY·La.ke Forest exit IRVINE 130.7000 "N Vet. Yellow. Loaded + rnoon r oof 4r a poke whf!els. Mullt see to ap----------• precla!A!. Bit Oft. Eves '72 Col. Part 9 pau . wag . trm.2750. While. fully loade d ! Xlntl $2.000. 675-fl61 . c:o.,.-. ff ll . ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Marqw: 20,000. ml, '7'1' XR71, excell. cond.. :e b:~rv~~~~~~r~ 31.IC ml. air. mag wbls, atereo. radials, loaded. $0>0. 9&2·9657 S1n9<>tb driving. Mint ·70 Cougar XR7. A·M/FM cond. Must sell. Take stereo cass. blk llhr Int, best offer. 548·2393 days 70 series wide oval tires. l«M:30. 9118-4118 eves ~ whl w/blk vinyl lop. Just _Sun __ . -------• tuned. Xlnl running "16 Monarch Ghia: vs, 4 cond. Must see & drive ! S1750 964-l848 dr. pis. p/db. p/W. auto. .,.,. 9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a/c, fm stereo tape. hu trUn. Xlra Clean. 39,000 mi. P .P. SU25 752-27:11 562-tC 1971 Dodge Polara, 383 mgine. Needs repair. t Mil..j $300. 644·9190. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Coll 4·dr slk, radio '78 Mustang II. P/S. P /B, good mile age. $995'.. ~~M1 s.tereo, $41 00. 548·125J ............. f.ord 9940 '68 Fastback. Orig. •••. ••••• ••••• •• •••• ••. owner. Good cond. S2 ,000 213 / 333--0141 1979 Turbo Musiang. 3-dr . 2 mos . o ld , compl.:., OW.•Wle loade d , must· se ll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1000/lake over pmts . '78 Delta 8&. BeauUlul & .s?-4300. Loeded. 14,000 mi. $6300 69-stati o n W'gn . 429 ~osc7~ automatic. great eng .. 71OldsDelta88, 2 dr, HT, A/C. P/s, .needs a C-6 nmsgood. $850. trans, '650631·24~ 964·1848 1970 Torino Squire Wgn, '72 Olds Delta 88 4-dr. all 900 So. C:O.t HWy. orig ownr. 66.000 ml. xlnt extras, orig owner . good ...... •odl cond. $1.250. 644·2681 cond. $1200. 673-2595 494-1131 '16 Granada· GbJa. Dove '75 St.arllre V-6. auto, --------grey, 37 .ooo m i. All ~. 43M, xlnl cond. power, loaded. V8 351. $2750/olr .uo """"" 71 Moote Carlo A/C P /S, S31100 Xlnl cond. 559-6788 ----· --·----- P /B, P/W, P /Locks . aft.5 7 1 Dihll AM/FM 8 lrack; swivel 1---------Sml enc W/2 barrel carb. buckets, T·Top, immac. '61 Ford, good lransp. U blu w/Wht vinyl top. low I milg . $5. 800 $295.Seeat 7S2Sbabmar, AMI FM s tereo 8·lrk. 642-31.32. Apt 8 · 00.5717. Runs great! Good radial 1976 4 X 4 st~tion wgn. '67 El Dorado, full power, '72 CHEV. 350 engine "Tl LTD. 4 dr._auto. Pl~: wllb ever y extra . MEIDHn-A/C, good Urd, $990. Comp., lo miles. Firm at P~. air, vnyl toot, 781\. tires. Clean. $1075 . .. 18C8 AM/FM Cassette deck. _.,. ~1312 $350. 642-5075 aft 5PM mi. XJnt cond. Sl 195/80. A/C, • skid plates, push Help yourself to a 545-2509 bar. moon roof. luggage HapingselecUonbf 71 Seville. U Blue/Blue 73Chevylmpala.4dr,alr, --------- rack, lo miles, ideal for QuallfiedHol>efuls int. l.8',000 mi. All xtras. .\Al/FM, PS, good cond . '72 Rancbero: new eng. skiers. $4250/besl ofr. lathe DAILY PILOT Sl0,500. PP. 751·~344/ good tires. $1700 or best good oond. $1800. ~70 56$-1360 HELP WANTED ADS ~.26S9. cir. 751-4419evs/wkods after3pm, ---------...... Mew tllO ......_Mew tlN Mloi. Mew tlOO ...0.. M•w · 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7S Pinto Wagon V-6. auto trans, 210mpg, low miles. $2900 /offer . (714> ~ after s p.rri. & w~ekends . or (1 \4) 498-1000, ~ wkdays . ~ PmlO 2000cc 4~pd. 8 ll'acLrrn stereo SBBS. Call aft.5 957 .2805 '74 Pinto. $800. Mag Wheels 6'2.«J86 'P. Volai.re •-<.tr Premier, V·8, all power. A/C. ale{eo. xlnt. Must sell. &.ml eves. '73 Fury. Grand Sedan, '900/Mate offer._ 6"-2212 ---497 .2292 ~Fun> I 4-dr nu ·iiiintaViDYT tAP-~ it'uns :xlnL Must see 4' drivel $1475. 964-1848 ,...... ........ ~ ............. . '7S Pontiac Ventura Good trans. car. Loan pay off. n4/846-3628 or 811&-ZM3. '86 Pontiac Wagon. Ru.na xlnl. Ve ry cle a n . $5/Ftrm. P.P. 751-4107 eves .. 71 Grand Prix LJ. Has all opt.iom la T-roor. Like new.-.1008 flrebird l.B9 M lnl Cond. Red W/bik inter. $1.800. IU-19819llM030 "T7 nrebi.rd v.a. sTvr/blk t5&'50. lluy· xtru. Lo mL 1'.P. 541-594 'f7 V•tun. Xlnt l"ODCI. NewU... -/batolr. MUST SEE Can be aeen al: &Tl 0...-I& C.111. ore.all Ml tal aft. s. Gnat faml.lycar. • .. . .. .. ..,...... WAVlNG PAESIDENTIA~ COMMlJ!ATION ORDER, PATRICIA HEARST LEAVES PRISON With Her la Her Flance and t=ormer Bodyguard Bernard Shaw, Whom She'll Wed Soon :tHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1t..-1979 ~ Applaus~ Greets .ff er at Hom,e • I HlLLSBOROUGH ~AP) -.A smiling ·Patricia Hearst. walked out of prilon into bright sunshine today and was driven directly.to her mother's plush suburban San Francisco home, a free woman after a five-year odyssey of kid.nap, crime and punish· ment. She was met at. the HlJlsborough bome by her mot.her and a large group of other family m e mbers and friends wbo burst into applause as ber car entered the driveway. Her father ·was not in the group outside the home. But be • j oinedthegrouplater . Mtu He~t-wenlinside brief- ly, and then came out to chat with reporters, ha ving donned a T-shirt with lettering that said: "Pardon Me." Asked whether she felt her or- deal bad cut five yea r$ from her life, Miss Hearst said, "I agree in a way. It's just been five years that I woUkt rather have .spent in another way. and I ju.st hope thatl've gotten more out of Lt than bas been taken away.•• Earlier, al the prison ·in Ple a s anton , Miss Hea rst etnerge4 holding her commuta- tion papers high over her bead. .She was met by attorney George Martinez and her fiance, police· officer Bernard Shaw, while a s trengthened security force p a trolled the are a and a California Highway P a trol helicopter hovered overhead. rushed mto prison, re(Usi.ng to· talk. · Her release from the prbon about 30 miles southeast of San Francisco across San Francisco Bay was televised locally. "I want to thank my parents. my s laters and George and Bernie and all the people on the comJnittee, •: Mtu llearst .said, smiling broadly a.s the sun rose behind her. She was referring to a group formed to pressur;e President Carter to commute her sentence for bank robbery. As she walked through the en· Sba.w had b een quoted try area, sbe"\l.ssed Shaw on the Wednesday as saying hls fiancee left cheek. • might wear a bulletproof vest ·'This is quite a difference when she Jeft prison, but she did from last time, and thank you not. ilnd Shaw said today he had a ll ," she told reporte rs who been joking. gathe~ at the gates. apparent-She was dressed in pale blue ly meaning the day she arrived slacks, a navy blue parka, at the prison last May. brown leathe r platform shoes. On that day about 100 re-• and wote a gold band on her left. p0rters cro)Vded around and she band. Violellt· Weather Assails . . . ... . Coast -°"" ........... " OMy ......... HAILSTONES COVER SANO ALONG THE OCEAN FRO.Jr IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Lffeguerd Tow.r and Edl80ft Company Power Plant (background) Part of A•re SC.ne Teachers SaitJ .~Unfllir' Westminster Elemintary School Diatrictofncla.la have med a charge rA untair labor pradice against the local teachers as- aoclatlon. . A diltrkt spokesman claims· that the Westmimter Teachers Aaaoclation la "deHberately avoiding and fru1trat1n1" neiot•ationa· Di1trtd olflclals cbar1e tbat teacher repreeea&ativea failed to •. transmit a written proposal from the cllatr1d '° tbe teacben' 1roup. Teacblr repr .. autives ai.o were aecaMCI ol m'*1nc a pro- posal at a board of tr\l9&ff meet. lna . .w..& prior eoaauhMlaa with the ctilt.rlct'1 Dtlott;t'DI team Cll' tlMt medlMol'. Superintendent Kenneth Ric ketts said tod.ay that teachers made a -lower offer at the public meetina Utan tltey-<lid the fol.lowtng day at a regular ne~otiaUoa session. Am Bi~bi. esecuUve direc· tor of tbe West Or&nf.e County Teachers, aald di.trict s charsea are "bulcally ridicukM&s.'' He laid tbat tile reported Offer tbat was not conveyed to teachen •as ln fact a clariftca- Uon of terms and not a eolid pro- potal. Teacben ftled a similar uafalr practice dwle qalDat tbe dis· trlct in ~mber "for failure to move Dl'OIDD&lr • ne1oUaU.." BlaDcbt Mid" aa lllformal bear· tna aa die teacben' ebarp ll acbeduled before tbe Publlc ' • • • . •..•.• .f: Employees ReJatiOnl Board Feb. •• • ~upt. Rlcbttt clatmed today the dlstrict'1 offer was a m.tor movement that wuo't received byteacben. He aald tbe proposal lncJuded an Increase ln fringe benefits, modification of dependent ln· surance covera1e and an ex- tentiOll rA penonal leave Ume 1rana.d teaCben. 'l'be dlltnct aDCl t.eaebtln are 1cbeduled to eater f1ct-f1Ddina proc:ectur. ln attemptl to re· solve tbe liqertna dlapute. Teacben struck for one d,ay earller ln Januaey to protMt atalled DllGti•Uoaa. About 400 le--. bave beee WOrtinl wtt.boai a aaatrad--Dec. St. I TOM)ado; Hail Rip -County Wet, cold January ended Wednesday in a burst of freak wea\beraloqtbeOruceCoaat Torrential ralb, ball, sleet, snow ' and high winds bit an Orange Coast that bad basked for much of the mornirig under a - b:rigbhun and a cloudless sky. Santa Ana added a tornado to the astonishing Ust. A ferocious twister screamed along ·south Main Street leaving toppled trees, shattered homes and shops =--but no injuri~ -in its wake. <Relat- ed story. pictures, Page A3 > . Then the the rain came back Wednesday night .and early to- day to binder mopping up opera· lions and add more traffic problems to a Main Street that was already' jammed with rush hour traffic and cars filled with sightseers. By contrast; the Nationa l Weatber"Ser vice said tod ay, February is coming in Like a lamb. ' The forecast calls for showers tonig'bt with the possibility ofbigb winds early Friday. "Butthen," a forecast~r said, "thing~ will begin to clear up.•' The long range forecast calls for a weekend of sunny days and warming te mperatures. "And not a storm in sight ," the weatherman pre dicted. "Put your umbrella a way.'' Huntington Beach residents (See STORM, Page AZ > ""~ ACTOR RETURNS TO TESTIFY IN $1 Mil.LION SUIT Lee M•rvln. Wife Pamela, Enter Loe Angele• Court 'Suicide Threat' Stated by Marvin LOS ANGELES <APl _:_Actor complete the job." Pho Thr t Lee Marvin says be kept his six· The actor said he took her De ea year affair with Michelle Triola back ''because of the hum an ele- Mar vin going because be was ment -the torture she m ust ·Ne.-o-$5-,,...""----afraid..sbe...mlght k!!J herseU..oi:. :ba...e....gone_tugh_ancube rear ~ tell the news media about his that must have accompanied an drinting habits, her a bortions act like that." · untmgton--~!~"'at~: ~·dra~u~·~~~-·--··-· ---•• ••• ·-.... ---- from the witness stand Wednes· For the second time in a week, day, after testifying as a hostile Orange Coast a mysterious telephone caller witness' for Miss Marvin who is · hel~ up a fqt food rest~uran~ by suing the actor for a s1' million telhng the employees a high-property settleme nt for the powered rifle was aimed at years they lived together. them. Marvin said hJs former lover Police Sgt. Lula Ochoa said a took a drug overdose after a female voice ordered a clerk al fierce argument ln 1967 and that Burger King, 16331 Beach Blvd., s h e r e peatedly threate ne d to throw a paper bag filled with suicide during their a!f'air cash Oftr a fence behind a wall Tb cto aid al · near an acljacent building at u e 8 r s ter an argu. p.m. Tuesday. The loss wu ~. meot in 1967. Miss Marvin con· The clerk complied with the fronted him with • .. gun and two demand since the caller said the shells and 8'ked, Hot.-do you employees would be shot it the 10~~ ~!.~?~te· _........ .. . order waa not met. .. ,I ..._., naarva.n Employees called police but said. . . . I m telling you this by tbe time officers arrived the WI.I a sbo!l\lll j:apalile of blow· money bq bad been scooped up, ing eomeone away.'' U n d e r n ea r 1 d e n t l c a 1 Followtn1 the episode. Marvin circumstances worllen at th~ Hld be f'80lved to break off the Jaclt-in-tbe-Box r est aurant, relationshJp. He rented an apart. acrou the · street· from the ment tor Miss Marvin, but she Burier fOnc , Mire ordered by a never used It becauae a drug male &elepllone mce to atve up overdose landed be r in the tbeU: recepu on the nfibt of boapltaJ, be said. Miss Marvin Jan. 21. spent t.o weeks wtth a friend But ln Jui week's incl~t, after h er r e1eue from t he pollce found the money ba• lb bo1pital, tbef\ returaed to bis a footpriat on it appa.reatJy e:ft Malibu Beach bouae, be aatd. bJ tbe txtcnion11t. Tbe f'50 ln "When I eatM home 1be waa loot•• NCO•ered. U.ere and I Juat did not know Polin say they do not toow at •bat to do," be said. • •t wu at.LU Udl ttme-tf U. two tDctdeaU are trria1 to ... out Of um •k11etlon nlalel llllll iad&eated the aame but I felt 1tymled _ .~ I was JDetlDlwu\lled. 1frald the would fO out and ... • ' ' • Weather Chance of rain 70 pef'. cent tonight, 20 percent Friday. Brief heavy rain. thunderstorms and gusty 'W inds at tim e·s.· Lows tonight 38 to 4.S. Partly cloudy and breezy. Friday . with blgb& S4 to 59. INSIDE TODA" Gov. Edmvnd G. Brovm Jr . 1011• he'• gfoing a lot o/ thovght to challftgfng Prtti· dent Corter in the 1930 primaries. So1M o/ hu OC· t~. though, teem beyond tM "thfnkmo" .toge. Story on AJ3, ' ' • • , ' •• .... • ForDiedr.kll Backers Pay • '.> ~,._,,,,·-$61,00() Fees By GUY GRANVILLE Of .. o.tty ...... , .... Oran1• -County Supervisor Ralph DMdricb 'a courtroom bat· ties bave-coet ht. supporters ... ~~~-eM~llNa• lllt089• fe ln.}qal fees paid to four lawyers. . The money h4I been collected dl political IOW'cea at a series . fundraiaen lochading a lunch· the Villa . Fontana restaurant Orange· last December that raised $40,700. At flbe December fundraiser the guests consumed $1 ,110 worth of Villa Fontana vittles and competed for $900 worth or door prizes, gold coins converted to jewelry. Included among the paying guests were a lar~e number of firms and i.ndiviauals who reg- ularly contribute to county s upervtaorial campaigns and who frequently have an interest in declslons by the board ol supervisors. · As things stand now, Diedrich and co-defendant LeR.oy Rose are scheduled to stand"'trial next week ln -sin "Diego Superior Court on the bribery allegations .bro~liolt. . 15 1977. . · Morgan, the recipient of the $50,000 ~ated by Dledrich's poutlcal suppoden, will not be at his side. · He bowed out or the-case in December after declaring a con- flict of interest. Expel U.S. Says l'ran ~s · Khom,eini 'TEHRAN , Iran <AP) Ayatu)}ab Rubollah Khomeini came home from exne today to a wildly enthusiastic welcome and declared bis anli·shah revolution will not be complete untll U.S. influence is expelled from Iran. ~ ~~~~ HUGE HAILSTONES DEMOLISHED PATIO oF THIS HOME IN HUNTINGTON BEACH DURING WILD WEATHER Among tboff who paid s1.100 for luncheon «tickets were the Irvine Company, Shappell In- dustries, restaurateur Brad Per· rin, Hon Development Company, Pacesetter Homes, Orange County Steel Salvage Company and lobbyists Frank Michelena and Sandy Sandling. ·'I . . . beg the Ahpigbty to ~the hands or foreigners.. to loosen their grip on Iran. the 78-year-old bearded Shiite Moslem patriarch prayed before throngs of followers. Bobalee Myers of 21341 Antigua Surveys the Damage to Her Property After the Sun Came Back Out Among ·lesser donors were FroM Pag~ AJ STORM .•.. said-a suit Or armor would have been better protection than an umbrella Wednesday against huge haiLc;t.ones that drummed on the roofs of houses and cars and covered local beacf1es. Hail and high winds hil Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. An estimated 5,000 residents of those cities were without power during the afternoon until e mergency crews replaced downed power lines. · r.Jembers of the sheriff's Harbor Patrol clocked the winds at 70 miles an hour. Several small boats and yachts were ripped from their~moorin~s by the gusts. Floodin~ caused roblems in many .communltres. Beach Boule•td b.etween Adams Avenue and Memphis Street in Huntington Beach was awash at the height of the storm and city crews had to pump water from several homes. Authorities in Orange Coun· ty's Environmental Manage· ment Ag~ncy said p\Jblic facilities ~urvived the heavy rain and high winds with rel- ali vely little damage~ Southern California Gas of· ficials said today that the con- tinu\ng cold weather has m~aot record leveli; in the supply of natural gas to homes and busi- nesses. A total of 3.3 billion cubic feet of gas was supplied Tuesday to establish a new record. The eompany aaid emergency sup- plies of ~as from · Texas and Oklahoma will insure continued supplies for Orange County. And custodians of rain gauges were kept busy Wednc:c;day as the new downpour gave them fresh statistics for their log books. The Moulton.Niguel Water District gauge shows a total of U .04 inches of rain thus fat this season. Last year at this lime ~he utility h ad logged 14 .17 lnches. Del,.,l'llMle.fl,_ PALM TREES AND HAIL ON THE LAWN IN HUNTINGTON .The Foffts Seek East Wlll Nev•r Behv• H Sunday Ban on Gas Sales to Be-Miilled WASHJNGTON <AP > -;-Gov· The most optimistic estimates ernmenl officials. faced with . say production In lraa will not continuing shortages of Iranian resume for at least several crude oil, are considering a ban weeks. It would take six months on Sunday gasoline sales and a for J.he country's production to variety of other measures rem· return to acceptable le,vels. ex. Orange County Harbor Dis· in.iscent of the 1973-74 Arab oil perts say ... trict has lugged 10.02. the embar~ -,. -· __ Orange County Flood Control Energy Secretary James R. · V al,l,ey Arson Sus~tedtU StOrage Bums Fountain Valley firemen sus· peel ars0o as the possible cause of a Wednesday morning blaze that gutted a two-story rent.a¥ storage racllily and caused $300,000 in damage. No one was hurt. . Fire Chief Tom Feierabend said the fire began at 10:39 a.m. a t The Storage Place, 18305 Mount Langley St., and took 40 firefighters fro,n Fouptain Valley.~ Huntlngt.Qn Beacli and Westminster about 30 minutes to contain. "The c'use is or a very sus- picious natun? and is still under investigation," Feierabend said today. Antiques, pinball machines, coin collections and other items were destroyed in the blaze that sent black smoke billowing 100 feet in the air above the scene. Feierabend noted . that the property loss may be higher than "-orifinally estimated when an in· ~t.ory is taken. Fire~en ~oofined the blaze to the st.Orage area -and prevented •ffnljor damage to nearby lo· dustrial buildings, be said. Philip J . Reilly,p'resident of the Mission Viejo Company, VTN, AVCO Community o,velopers and the Baldwin Company. Included in payments to at- tOroeys' made either through the Ralph Diedrich Birthday Party Com mittee or the Ralph Diedrich Defense Fund is the S3SO it cost to unsuccessfully de· fend Diedrich against a parking ticket. -· But the bulk of the money has gone to Diedrich 's former law,Yer, Marshall Morgan. According to records of the two fundraisiQg organizations. Morgan bas ~n paid $50,000 for his role in defending Diedrich against criminal charges brought against him in two coun· ty grand jury indictments. One of those indictments c harged the 53-year -o ld Fullerton supervisor with violat· ing state campaign !Jnance retulations. The second indictment in· volves bribery cha~ges related ta. a 1973 Board oJ Supervisors land use decision. Charges involved in the first indictment are now in limbo. They are awut1.Dg a decision from the state Attorney General's Office after an ap- pellate court recently upheld a lower court decision to quash all but. one charge lodged against Diedrich and bis co-defendants in mid-1977. I oo·~ OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY Khomeini's first goal is to replace Prime Minister Sbabpour Bakhtiat's govern· ment with an Islamic republic. Bµt. tiar again defied the · rel ~r in a broadcast ' esday night, sai)'ing he o d "~lst chaos and doubtful elements" and "will not permit the reins or the country to be held by anyone except the cen· tral eovemment." · Kb.o.meini, railing against "desPOUsm and colonialism" that be said have perverted Ira· nian cuJture, said in an arrival speech that Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi "bas made the army follow the orders or another country." · The anti-shah movement will be succbsful only "when the ioots of colonialism are pulled out," he said. · He did not mention the United States by name, but there was no doubt what count.ry he was talking about. . · ... During· the flight from Parii. the ascetic religio~ leader slept on the floor of the upstairs bar on his cbartered Air France jumbo jet. The jeUiner circled three times and landed at 9.a.m. as a million jubilant followers lined the ll·mile route be 'took from the airport to the capital's largest cemetery. Come See Our Fantastic , Buys in la-Z-Boys ·-·------~-~- Dis~lct chart shows 10.86 and Schlesinger said W~nesd.ay the ~-bile llo...n~e .n l3U]e a ·i:>r~an e Tcoasr --cml!rwm1ntstntt0n wiU-de--J..'J..IU ____ .....1..1.! -•~ •• College stands at 12.75 inches for' cide by April 1 whether to im· the season. pose mandatory conservation Park Tenants measures. But he said such ac· The rain eased today and pro-lions would not be needed tr the vided some relier for crews try-public voluntarily saves fuel. ~ile Lawsw· t ing to mop up Oooding on some A m 0 n g the m a n d at o r y r J San Juan Capistrano streets. measures that might be "taken °"AMOE COAST "r DAILY PILOT T9-0r-.c .. u OA~t• PO« •• ,,..Wtftt(;..,(Of'n.. blfW'd th.e HrftW\'>p,. .. ,,.1,, ... .0.h\,..dby ,,.., Ot~ ,_, __ ,_ ~~ ...• .., .. _, .... piut,ft\Nd """"""'"' tN'~ f'rlNy to• (O'\tA ...._., N.._, tiff( ..... __ llP«tUf'°"" l-V1llt'l,l<WW',l_ll .. tftl5'Mllf>C.,.\I A ,_,....,.....,.l_l\_t_SMU<doy'°"" _,, """IW"'<~l'l>u!Ml>f>ll'q Pl-I\ ti )JO -I ll•t $1reot. C .. 1.1 ~ c.i-...1 .,.,_ •.-nil. ...... f'tt\leltftl -"""''- JMll It. Cllil'ttf Vlt'• Pr-ft·-o.-•--. .,_ ........ l:O!IOf -···---~ .. ,-. C»rlt•M.UM llk"""'·-Aul~IM ~ ......... Ui.t .. _ ....... Wot 0rMlft CelifttV E4'1i.r .......... ... ~ 1·istfa..c11-Mal ..... -+fl l'O _,..._.,... Office• L-Ct."'.: ~M~=;l:' T111,1111w (1141tu..ua1 Cl•••·•~tltletoet71 ,,_ '"'11>0<..,..C.-•~·~ ..... ,220 • • are allocating gasoline from re- fineries to diatributors and sus· pending evening and S'unday sales, eovemment officials said. Also under consideration Is . :·lirnitiqg motpr;i!lta' purchaseos .~o altemat.e days. Direct rat loninl bas been ;uled out, officials said. So far, Scbleslnger said, "the posltkJn of the u .s. bas "Mt been dramatically affected" by the • upheaval in 1ran t.bat for~ the ab ah to leave that country. The virtual shutoff of oil exports from Iran "ls just beginnln« to bind ·now," he said. Tb~ United States normally geta about 5 percent or ita crude oil from Iran . .other oiJ.producln1 coan\rles, moat notably Saudi Arabia, have made up for much of tbe tranian loss. But there have been re- ports tbe Saud.11 would produce an average or only 9.5 mlllloo b•rrela a day in the flnt four montba ~ 1t7t. The normal dal· ly av•aie la nearly 10.5 mUUon barrell. SehJellnler 1ald be bad seen notbtna from lru that would ln· dicate a r«urn to normality l• Jmm.ineat. A lawsuit was filed Wednes· day by tenanta at a Huntington Beach Mobile home park aDeg· Ing "deplorable and unsafe" conditions at the park. . T.be suit was filed on behalf or about "300 ,resldenta against the owners ol the Hunt.ington·bY·the-Sea Mobile Home park on the beball of about 300 residents. A spokesman for the tenants' attorney satd alle1ations in· eluded "deplorable" etreet con· dJtJona, •1basudoua lilbtia& con· ditlona, faulty rest room plumb- Ing t inadequate parldn1. and proolema with electric, sewer and drainqe systems. F r ank Novarro, one of the park'• co-owners declined com· ment today. He aald be bad not been Mned with le1al papen. AboUl 90 of the tenants at tbe park near tbe Southern Callrornla Edison Company gefterattnc plant have proteated r•nt inqeuet by wltbho_Jdlnt a PortlOft ot lbeir January pay- ments. A bout 90 tenanll put uide money equal to · tlMlr rent in· creaH into a aepante truat fund. 1'be1 H)' the mooey 11 earlJflO'ad for repalr wort at tbe part. ....., .. a...z la,e S..wc .. S...,,. -...-ef: • IEST 58.ECTION • llST SERVICE • IESTrRICES SAVE ON THE FAMOUS SWIVEL RECLINER ROCKER ChooJe·Your Seathlg Comfort With LA·Z.:.IOY® COITAMllA 369 I. 17th IT. (Acfoll from~ Mid to Marte Calef ldorl) 642-1617 Mon.-~ 1().4 SOt. 10-e OoeedSWdaV ······. -~· -~ . ~~ NEW LOCATION LA..,NA HILU 2JOU LakePoMatDr. <Comer Of lake foNlt OIM, and Awnldo De la Cartota) 77CMl6I Man. ·M 10-6 Sat. lo.& M.12~ MllllON VllJO 2 ... 2 ........... • Pkwy. (Comer°' A.llefl( and Vkl bcdm) 491-8902 Mon.· M 1().6 lot. 1().8 Oaled .... J CALAFORNlA .Co~ege ~id ~yed Sehools Face Tough ~e -exarninatio~ • 4 alao uld W'dooaday thal lt WllAT AJD THE state gave - "m•7 .,.,_.,_.~~:· w. .uw.-.w banly lO perCftlt of t~ by• amall .mount thu pro~ aupport for the University of ... , blnton In Proposition 13 . 4 California or the state coUeees b•llout fUndl for lO<'al aoveni • 1• ume with UtUe r e view, mcnl ln the 1979 80 at le budle\ Hamm aa1d . RA•• ,..WA adllreuln1 • •tale COGttttnct orft"malt! eletl· .......... -----------..J~~-.COUAl.Y.Ollicll ~ 1~ CL-·.ges He aad It la .. untiillst c" to Tb la was becau.ae it was -as· •'-'med that locally"' elected ot~ ficl•ls, spend.log primarily local· ty-ni•echetenae, •e1 e dbectty accountable to tbe taxpayers and had a ti&ht rein. ,. llAi,•. , hope for anY mojor tncre~ bf>cause'tM only ways to finance · major lncttases are throu1h tax v·led A~t r · in creases. which ha ve no C L e. po11tkal suppart, or by cutting other forms of State aJd to local A k gov~mment. tlllC Already. $13 7 bllhon or Gov Edmund G Brown Jr.'s $20.3 btllton s·p eiidlng plan 1s SAN DIEGO CAP > A freckle-faced teen·age girl has been charged wltb 12 crim.anaJ counts. including murder. in connection with a sniper •ttack in the parld.ng lot of Cleveland Elementary School. • · earmarked for loc•I govern· meat, either in shared pro· grams, subventions or bailout funds, Hamm said. But now, the community col- teg~s &et more state money than either UC or the state university and college system. THEY ARE IN line for $852 million -from tbe state in Brown·s ,1979·80 budget, an amount equal to 70l>U,Cent of all or their revenues. ' ·'Community colleges more than any other type of govern· ment are going to be subj~t to an increasing level or review," Hamm said. -- Once a Road An unoccupied c;ir is awash· in Spring Valley after Wednesda~·s storm dumped more t!tan two inches of rain on the San DAILV PILOT ..... ,..,...,. .. Diego area. Dozens of.. roads ,were report- ed closed in the area and many houses were evacuated. \ \ The attack kiUed the principal and bead c u stod ian and wounded eight pupils and a police officer. A PETITION filed Wednesday in Juvenile Court by the district attorney's offiee accuses Brenda Ann Spencer, 16, of tbe shoot· ings. THE COMMUNITY colleges, whl~b are get.Ung $817 million th~ year, are the only e lement or local government receiving s uch massive state funds with- out extensive state review. And Hamm said .the\ relative lKk of contf()l is undoubtedly going to change, because both the governor's office and Legislature are 'looking for places where controls are· lax. More·FtJrm Workers Leave Jobs ' lo the petition, Deputy District Attorney Charles L. Patrick re· quested that Miss Spencer., who police say bas a history o( petty theft and drug abuse, be tried as a.n adult. Tb~ petition also alleges ••special ·circumstances," which means that ii she is tried as an adult and convicted of murder, she could be sentenced to life in state prison without parole. I F THE CASE IS handled in Juvenile Court, the girl could be free in =ieven years. In addition to murder, the red· haired jtdlior at Patrick Henry High School was charged with nine counts or assault with intent to kill and one of assault with a deadly weapon oo a police of· ficer . Juvenile Court Judge William L. Todd J.r. said he will probably set a date next week fo"r a bear· ing on whether Miss Spe_J)Cer will be tried as an adult. Until the early 1970s, com- munity colleges received all but a small fraction of thT support from local property typa~rs. · I . Team Policing·. Plan to Stop . LOS ANGELES (AP ) -On Feb. ll, the team policing ·ex- periment initia~ed by former Polic~ Chief Ed Davis will be terminated, says Police Chief Daryl Gates. lnst~ad, Gates said Wednes- day. detectives and patrolmen wiJI again go their sepanite ways. Under the team policing policy, detectives a1'd patrolmen worked together in 65 teams, each unlt r esponi;lble ·ror one geographical are~ and all the crimes within it. I · \ °By Tbe Associated Press A bout ·1 ,200 more farm workers have .walked. off. their jobs to protest stri.ke-breaking ef- forts of lettuce grower s on the eve of a rally with United Farm Workers Union founder Cesar Chavez. The rally was scheduled this afternoon. when Chavez is to arrive in Calexico. · Other than the walkof( by ex· tra field hands at six farms, the lettuce fields of the Imperial Valley were relatively peaceful on Wednesday. 2 In• ColSde SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The crewmen or an F-4 Phantom fighter were hospitfllized in sta. ble condition today as a search went oh for two other fliers miss- ing after two Navy jets collided 64 mil~ south of San Diego, the Navy said. Lt. Cmdr. James McNair, 32, of Cantonment, Fla .. pilot of the "Charles Dickens" -..) ' unique exhibit of 25 life-sized figures from fiivorite Dickem' novels at. F~fiion Island Qn~ Th~rsclay, FebrOOry 1 ~ thru Friday, Februa.ry 12 in, #3 Fashion Island I Characters from ~ Chris'tmas Carol" "[)avid Copperfield,,,. "Oliver Twist" and many more I • Created especialJy for th is prem iere tour of the United States by Bermans & Nathans Ltd ., of London F-4, and bis radar interce pt of· ficer. Lt. Ted Dewald, 29, of Point St. Lucie, Fla., wer e plucked from the sea by a Coast Guard helicopte r Wednesday. eir jet collided with an A·4 yhawk during a routine train· g1. flight, a spokesman said. The Skyhawk crew was missing. &a.la Kfl& 4 AZUSA (AP l -Four Covina teen-agers were killed when ~ c0mpact car plunged 350 . reel. ~WO a mountainside and landed upside down in a stream, California Highway Patrol of· ficers said. • The· victims. all 17, were iden· tifie d today a s James J . · Muraca, Ronald D. Cleary, Scott Spencer and Charles Robert Stickley, said CHP Officer Jim Cox. · B"*"' Tops lleeerd LOS ANGELES (AP> -Gov. Edm'Und G. Brown Jr.'s 1978 re- erection expenditures totaled $3.26 million and be outspent his Republican oppenent, former Attorney 'GeQeral Evelle J . Younger, by more than Sl~ million, according to campaign reports. Brown's expenditures between July 1 and Dec. 31 were the h ighest ever reported by a gubernatorial candidate in the general election. state campaign experts told the San Francisco Chronicle on Wednesday. · \'aa Botdett to W' alt FRONTERA; Calif. <AP>- For mer Charles Manson follower Leslie Van Houten has been denied parole despite good evaluations from prison psychologists and s taff mem- ber:s. ·'Society has oo defense . . . in this ~ype of crime, except to isolate the orrencter •.• Comaru.ni· (_ SIA.TE J ty Release Board c hairma n Ruth Rushen said Wednesday. "We feel we must observe you longer before we can proJecl your parole da.te." D..46., Cops Sued SACRAMENTO <AP I Michael D. Small, a San Rafael attorney, has flied a $2.4 mmion damage suit in federal court here accusing Solano County. District Attorney N ea l McCasUn, sheriff's deputies and Vacaville and Vallejo police of battery. false arrest and false im prisonment. The suit stems trom an inci- dent in front of a Valle10 home. reportedly used as headquarters by the Hell's Angels motoreycle gang. 'Making Room for Spring ... IS NOW IN PROGRESS 503·--10 75% ofl on FALL -HOLIDAY and EARLY SPRING ... , CLOTHING ~SHOES 'aiKI ACCESSORIES · .. W..11 Store 65Fa•••·• ..... 64--6500 \ .. , . Ww11'1 Store 33Falhlonl.._.. 644-2400 '• B /F Orang El~~ ..1· • .. Aooert N. WeedJ PubU~her Thomas K"'ltl/Edltor Coa .. t Daily Pilot u ·.to·raafl ..-. ag.e ________ T·h·urwct.y·-· F.•.bru.•.ry.t •.• 1.979 __________ Ba_r.ba.·r·a·l(·r·&·ib·l·ch·/·E·d·it·or-la.• ·P·age·E·d·l·to·r-- TV o e iay ar Enou gh Rowland Evan /Robert Novak. ~ . ~ Brown· ID.tends t~ ·Lead Change. for Uft\htfl tmiAStetJuas been on lh -;-•,-~....,.~--.. ... ..-..t.. S ACRAMENTO ' Gov. Cd· ... . ,.. . Pb.O.'s" WK1 the "timid souls" who defend red·lok spending even at the peak or today's re· covery cycle. At the end, de- regates in the nation's most liberal Democratic party gave .him_ a~ng ovation. . ' Lona coosJdered a poUUcal force an end of deficit spending .... Jttt.U. . .M:lDS:S..:' .\\' •• . ..... But hoJ>('s "'ttre d !iht.'d each tim by d~I ys. pnmar1 ly bl'Caust• of th~ inubil ty or Oicldn.son to fl(>cure flnu.nr' ing throu1th lhe ~nil• of to ex mpt mumc1 pal bond · 1'lK>~h somP or the dt>ln~ s appear to be Jusllf iabh•. Uw malt(•r h .. s dra Jlt.'d on mu<'h too Jon~ Offictuls ~ y that compt>Ung tl•h,•v1 ton ~crv1ces <.\lreudy have cut. anto t~ murket. costing the cat1es poten· t1ul int'Ome . · · Public Cubit• Tewv1s10J'I Aulhortly direct.ors who ovl'r ce the fruuctuse operauon have now given DickinSon a 90-day deadline to come up with financing and an accept a- ble package. The syi:item \\ould oCCer public service and education progrums, local news cov~rage , eRtertainmcnt und ports. It's timE> to get on with the program. No more h1tchel:> or delays should be tolerated ·Accounting Due Last July, Fountain Valley' City Council members de· ctded to scrap City Manager Jim Neal's automatically re - newable. two-year contract and replace it with a day-to- day working agreement this month. Until just a few months ago. controversy switled <.1 round City Hall with revelations that Neal was involved in some practices that upset council members. These included overweight notices given to chunky desk job worker~ the storage of employee psychological files and questions about an employee retirement fund's use. _ •Neal was cleared of any wrongdoing but some of his innovative personnel-practices were scrapped. About 200 city residents told ·the council on Sept. 19 they wanted to see.some type of resolution to the tempest in City Hall. The council promised periodic reviews of the problem. At that time. many petition signers felt the council "'puld present a full report of Neal's status after the first • of the year. :rhe first month of the year has ended and the report is overdue. Without trying lo stir up a new tempest. isn't it time the council makes a full public accounting or last year's problems·' . ·- ProbleID for Council -City offi cials have launched into efforts to rid Hunt· ington Beach stores of smoking paraphernalia that they believe is related to drug use. Jn a Jetter to nine establishments. Mayor Ron Pat- tinson said he find s the sale of the it~ms. whkh include roach-elips and water pipes. to be objectionable. Pattinson asked the business people to prohltUt dis- plays where minors can see-them . , . He warned if there is not voluntary compliance, the city may draft an ordinance restricting sales of the paraphernalia. ~ The efforts of Pattinson and other officials are un- derstandable. They show a concern for the communit y's young people who could assume from the displays that dope is an accepted way or life. But one has reason to believe that the control of s uch devices by legislation may ~impossible. · One of the prdblems is that the paraphernalia can be used for both lawful a nd unlawful purposes. Another is that similar items can be obtained in many other businesses in addition to the nine singled out. l t 's a problem that can't be resolved by the City Council. no matter how well-intentioned t he motives. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Sox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321. B o yd/Walk ing By·L. M. BOYD .What may be most s1gmlt· cant about the fact that the a~ag.e woman walks 10 mHes-a day is that it's one mil e farthe r than th e average man walks a day. No doubt the drinkers of ..,.___~· c~ ea--wittrl-emon-tn · won 'l buy the claim that the best thirst quencher known to the scientis ts is grape juice. Antonio Roig of Majorca died a few weeks ago with exactly S50 In his passession. only enough to pay burial costs In 1950 he inherited 10 acres of land from an aunt, but was obliged to sell it, because he didn't have the $50 then that ~t would have taken to build a fence around Dear # Gl~rny Gus _, Q. "How fast can a house mouse run?" A. Four miles an hour 1s tops. the property as required by law. Only five years later, tfre building boom was on, an<! the new owner sold the jaod far $20 miJl!oo. Q . "Wh r is a za n y character sorneUmes called a screwba ll ? Why that word?" A. Best guess is it goes back to horse talk. A blend· ing or the word "ske~ald .. which is the correct term for n horse that's white and bay, roan, brown or chestnut. Please note, "piebald" only alludes to a white and black horse. ~ Q. "Why's a quarter called two-bits?" A. That Medcan coin known as ~ real was re- ferred ta by cowboys I.I a bit. Two of lbern were about the equal of 2S cents. .cOent asks iC Lowell T homas invented the newsre~l. No, sir. tbe Russi~ did that thine . ln 1918. To the anoaymous 20- ye a r teache r who crossed picket Unes and doesn't expect a word of praise (Pilot, Ja=n=._....-Q. "Abe Llncoi;;~ u;-- flrst to say ... government ()f 28 >: We think you 're great! 'lbanlls for ~ut· Un& our children'• educationtll'lt. ARATEFUL PARENT ' the people, by the people and tor the pE!Ople ••• ,' waa he?" A. No, sir, John W)"'CUHe put that set or ·significant syllables Jn.to the introduc· tlon or bts Bible tra.nalaUon' wblch waa published in £qlandlllim. I • \ mu_nd G. Brown Jr'., tar from n nch oa at the rld.tcule or Jim- my Carte-r's W111hington over hb d\)mand for a consutu· Uonally tmposfd b a lanced oddball, Brown n.od.s that h1a Qf. and halt wnat be calls ''thJs fensin hat auddenly .made)dm a perverse government money fixture at podiums he uSed lo macblne." The decline of the ebun, He showed up~q\ewhat UD· U .S.1 be told us. is directly Ued expectedb' at...tbe San'Fra.ociaco t.o toe ded.i.oe oC lta ~~Y fod ral budaet. is convloced the co.nventJoa ot the NaUonal Food which in turn is directly in· . ProeeHon J.o....»-a.IMl-tt.t•ttlkllr<edM.1ffflor--tf\fltttte~r.rec@ledl.H!by-,.,..·~tmmtmft "n!d·tnk dnm~ntal , inflation-connected pohtirul' chanRl'S that b intends lo 11Mpe and lead. THAT IS the quintessential Brown today: explain. then at- taek fl"Of1) what he feels is a secure position of political strength. Brown, an original roe of California's Proposition 13. had his eyes opened to reality when voters here approved it by a huge majority last year. As ooe or his top aides told us: "He ~els he experienced something very personally aboul the voter mood today thnl few other politi· cians have felt.•· 4S minutes, l\Jghly unusual for s pending of the pas t doien Brown. Four daya carUer he in· years. Poli~ans in Washingt.on • 1n the (t'w day!) of his ~ecood tt>rm . Brown h a s already ~lated op a4dre11JIOI the top brass may have trouble understanding of t.he Bilr l''our outo comparues that, be says, but voters have no wrought ' <gucstaottbc Cullfomla Chamber trouble at all. o( Commerce> ot the C~ntury Brown is acutely sensitive tG p ol 1t1 ca l change hl'rc that has spht him from conventional party leaders nod delivered 11tunn1ng help from both t• I e c l e d Republicans Plaza llolel. Out-or-state lnvlta-charges that heJs a political op· Uons tor Brown are piling up in portunist who has undergone recordnumbers. frequent conversions -now from a liberal Democrat (who IN IDS Interview with us al managed Euge ne ·McCarthy's the s t a t e capltol . Brown 1968 pres identiaJ campaign ridiculed opposition t.o his call here > to a conservative for a constilutional convention to Republican. What has cbang~ and influential busioe~smen. But H is the nationa l Democtadc party· and (be l~ presidential .nomlnat'\on, wh.ich Brown clearly wants. that will reel the full force of Brown's political conversion. BTown is hurling his challenge directly at President Carter. Sen. Edward • Kennedy ?nd the party's tradi· t1ooal constituencies. As he told us in his office here : "America is running on panic today" and voters want basic fiscal changes to end the horror of in- nalion ·and make Am erica com· petitive again. BOTH BROWN'S principal legislative lead.er, Assembly Speaker vo McCarthy, and the s tate 's t'Op Democ r at in Washington, Sen. Aran Cranston. have publid.Y broken with Brown on his Jan. 8 inaugural demand for a constitutional ban on federal red ink. Indeed. Brown is-probably the first jus·t- elected governor t(} be booed by his own state pa~y. as he was at the Democratic convention here Jan. 20 when he first ,appeared at the podium. Instead of backing down with apologies. Brown carefully built his ease in a tightly "reasoned ex· planation of riscar .. reality," then attacked "experts," "the be insists, a re objective circum.stanees aod the voters. ''Before Franklin Roosevelt, no one could 1magine the New Deal." l\e told us. "Now what ls coming in lhe '80s no one can begin 1o appreciate. We are moving into a new cycle" -a cycle that will change the m ap of today's .politics in unpredicta-ble ways. • · TO REPUBLICANS and con· servative Democrats, this Is like catnip. Fre d L . H a rtley ,. ehalrman of Ur>lon OU, r~used to give Brown a nickel ror his re· ele~Uoo campaJgn: be recenUy sent $'20,000 to help llquJdate Brown's $800,000 campaign debt. Repubttcan Assembly leader Paul Priolo...tbe No. J opposition tegtslator, ~informed his par- ty he will dO nothing to blunt Brown's balanced budget cam:· p ~l~n . O n.a or S peake r M cCarthy'!t trusted Assembly I e a de r s . a De m o c r a li-c powerhouse on the Ways and Means Committee, wa rned McCarthy to e xpect no anti· Brawn help from him, saying: "I'm sticking with Br:own and the balanced budget right into the White House." . Brown himself is a m an possessed o( an idea and entirely ·convinced of his rectitude. U he cao convince his party and. his c0untry, the world will be hear - ing more lrom Jen:y Brown. Tax payers R~llning Out of Generosity . To tbe Editor: responsive to the people they are We have just been treated to a paid to represent; they' musl not glimpse or what is described as continue their allegiance to an ·•a lean and austere budget:" a idea whose time is past. this fine man recei.ved from lhe Orange County bar and lhat bis re-appointment was richly de· served" (end quote). budget With a deficit of a stupe· This country's representatives fying $29.000,000,000! are this republic's first· line of NOW, dear voters, your dis·· The huge federal agencies that d efeose. However . if those claimers al the pol~ wiod up as have been created over the representatives cannot or .will accolades for tbe judge, and years remain basicalJy intact. no t sense that the winds of your many, many votes agains~ The ,weight o f their fat and change are blowing, the Constitu-him. fo r whateve r reason, are as fossilized bone will continue to tion wisely made provision for a nothing compared to the "over· be borne by the working class. · second line of defense -the in· whelming" support gendered by Not only have no significant itiative process. It's a drast.Jc the vastly fewer in numbers of cuts been made. but we .now cure ... but we're in desperate his associates. Thus we view a must witness the efforts of a times . judge's determination of the large segment of Congress lo in· STEVEG.CHRlSTMAN democratic process. crease social programs, sub-Also, her CQncem to have the sidies, and welfare. We are told 'Bit ol Cllu•, public know bow wrong they . that the enormous sums we have' were. is touching indeed. And we s pent over the last 30 years are To the FA.itor: a ll know how practiced Gov. inadequate. We are chastised for The only one with any sense Brown Is at nullifying results at being sellish and are reminded in that UCI newspaper episode the polls. A sure way• at times, thal we have a moral duty to was Miss Bjomeby (student of.. to gain a lucrative> spot , even an those less fortunate. ficer who confiscated issue5 of "elevation," is to tose at the I wish to stand toe-to-toe with the student paper): polls and get overwhelming sup. those who accuse the working She showed a "bit of class." port from one's cronies. as wit- d ness the national scene also. Ame ricans of greedy disregard Hooray for her attilu e! 1 do not bring into question lhe for the old, the needy and the l realize that It's very dlfncult "integrity or the judge. but it minorities, and state a position for young people to know whom d h they seem unable lo grasp. to Imitate in our sick society, but brings to min that t ere are too that's not so mucb their fault as many losers al the polls that are THE AVERAGE taxpayer bas it is the rautt of their forebears. kept alive. on the political and been effusive in his generosity ~ 1 vote for ,..,8s BJ·omeby to be public scenes. by being re·-he bas backed his words with the ~'" w .. rded powerful posa'tlon"' by appointed editor of the UCI s tu· .. ~ sweat of his brow Jo help those S d vldue of being rejected by lbe unable to help themselves. fie dent newspaper. oun s as voter s and havlng friends in bas given until it hurts and then though she ~as enough sense to high places. oue..on...to..double and tcipJ&-4'the--~-".<?)j-~~Lt\te.~~tl~Y 15!1:. ~----· -Fttrthennor~. whiiepwe-haft" contribution. Tbe New Deal, the ueve op g cu lure. ~ frustrations enough from those New Frontier and the Great MRS. Louts D. MARKEL we duly elect to office, many of Soclely have been supported to our greatest frustrations are tbe the hllt by the guy with a l'e t n l ... r efl work of those appolnled <not paycheck. " To the Editor: e lected > to unbe lie vably We have seen th( massive 1 was spalled -when 1 rea'd powerful and despotic posts. growth of government and have Judge ~re_aux' apologia On What this adds 'ttp lo is that been told that that growth. is 3 'letter to ~ally Pilot of Jan. "Government ol the people. by necessary. We have seen the 24 > reg3 rding Judge Leo'bard the people and for the people" is working rllhlcs thinned by the al· Goldstein's rejection a t the peJishing from the earth. But lure of "something for nothing" polls. Surely, her idea to justify our untampere<i with franchise ~rare programs and been told circumvenUng the people's de. 1s stlll our best hope. · tha~ it is unfortunately inevita· cision, is cause ror great alarm. · B. F. BORCOMAN ble. We have seen our economy l do not know either Judge. .,.. manipulated a nd altered and Lamoreaux or the object of her _ T ...... C.-dl been told the problem is too defense, Judge Goldstein, so I do To the FAit.or: ,. complex for us to understand. not allude. lo either's qualifica· . The Huntl)l&ton Beac.h Clty We have watched a.s our educa· lions; but J am concerned over Council bas listened to the con· tJonal system has been tinkered the tbw.rtlng of the people's and fussed with and been told it francbl&e. ts the dawn of a new age. <Quoting from her Jetter to the SOCIAL SECURITY ts a dia· editor, lti wblch abe aJ.ao quotes astel' ln the face of rampant, from her letter to Oo\r. Brown>: fed~raUy cre ated ln.flatlon. ..As can be seen, tbe loss o! Welfare programs are abused in thete Jud1ea was not baled on direct relation to the toss of dllnl· any pU'BOOaJ dilquallflcatlonl or tt forced on it.a parllclpantl. In· activities, but was more a cenUves to mdivldual to.terprbe blanket vote aaraimt Jncumbent.s are 1W>ed at. th~ ur1 Ume ""*' and in no way reOeets acainat thelribUity t°' ~reate jot. {a Judge Goldstel.n. I am the rtlore needed m<>1t. The attempt to wrlUng this letter to ask lt there Jetlal~ ,-ood wUl amon1 ua bu is anyWnc you can do to k"p condemned our children to blm ln lbe judiciary, either by become namelep faces starlnf re·appotntmeot elsewhere from the windows of palllna tbrou1hout the state, ot a.n buiea. e levation to the Appell•te QW" lelMlers must realise tbet Court. "-''l trult that you wlll their charter is not to create a share thil letter wilb \be public ·plaiJoeopbka.1 &lilt mm in wbleb to help them undentaad mon we all malt labor. 1'bq m\111 be hall1 die onrwbelaftaa 1apport , • • ). . cerns of citiz.ens and ha ve takea prompt action on the s ubject of m arijua n a s moking paraphernalia in local record stores and other places of busi· ness. Mayor Ron Pattinson has writ: ten letters to the merchants ob- jecting to the merchandise and asks voluntary re moval of it. In the letter, be stated that if they do not comply. the city would conside..-actiob s imilar to Lakewood's ordinance banning such items. The Mayor also wrote to state Seo. John Schmitz and Assembly m e n Dennis Mangers and Chet Wray asking them to coo.sidat-the possibility of introducing a bill which would regulate lbe use of "cont.rolled substance" paraphernalia. It is encouraging to know that citizens can voice an objection and opinion to their city leaders and find thal they really are listenlrig. Thank you Huntington Beach City Council BLANCH M. THODE Cb airman Sts. Simon & Jude Family·Life Committee •.u,,..,.... .. To the FAit0r: ~l'edlto~ ~··­ ing Jolin Tbom.11s.' atteb4ince rec· ord at Huntington Beach City Council meetings deserves com~ ment. Wblle I have not always approved of Mr. Thomas' ac- tions. in this case I must ap. plaud him. He had demonstrated that lea.s goverome n\ in· • terference in our lives is better. The real message is that we may ba coming to a time ln our development when no city coun· .. cil is necessary or even desira- ble. lf other council members would follow Mr. Thomas' ex· a mple the real business of this cily could be cond&&cted in • mor:e orderly f asblon. Bud Belalto it a ~mpeteat person, capable ot rdakl.q lbe day to cky ded&6ons neceua.ry for running tbe elty. io 11*1 cues the aame is tnae of otber department beads. If we live tbem the cbuce to do their Jot)e, coal dftdePt. or at· leasl break· • ~ven government may become a reaJity. SUSIE NEWllAN -............ . I • ' LOCAL ~nch ··t-:,,erybody ia< here DO•. Mu. Ml you ~ bfi111 011t lhe C\>ft\/UUlaoe pMt't." Sanitation Dltitri~t Mesa Bridge Woe Looms By MICHAEL PASKEVJCB Ol ttw DMlf ...... SMlff The Orange County Surutllt.ion District looms as a road block to what Costa Mesa officials say is one of their city's major traffic priorities the ex - tPnsion of 19th s\reet across the Santa Ana River to Huntington Beach The sarut.,ation district owns 100 acres of land on the Huntington Beach side of the river, and Ray Lewis. cb..ief engineer for the district, doesn't want the property "severed" by the proposed bridge link of 19th and Banning A venue. "WHERE AllE WE GOING to find additional land?" Lewis asked. • He said the 'sewage treatment plant .now operating at the site serves one million people, an.d is planned ror expansion to meet additfonal sewage needs to the year,2000. · . "With the new Cede~! .4Mld st.ate eovironmen· t al la ws. we are obligated to install new facilities," Lewis said. "We need the land:" · · · He added lhµt \he riverside operation already is "really .swamped" to meet present sewage needs COSTA MESA C1TY OFFlCIALS are aware of the conflict. but· Lewis said he has not heard from them. . However. Lt'wis said the .county "has been made awar~ or the sanitation district's reluctance · t.o give up any land for a bridge right-of-way. This view is expected to become part of a county environmental impact study on the pro- posed bridge. The report is projected for comple- tion later this year. Depending on the outcome or the EIR. the county could begin bridge construction as early as Ma rch. 1980. if sufficient funds are available, ac· cording to city Public services Director Bruce Mat.tern. ' IF 11IE PROTESTS FROM tbe sanitation dis· · tricl prevent the bridge t rosslng, both Costa Mesa and Huntington Beacti could be left with no future east·we5t Unks over the Santa Ana River. In response lO' community pressure, Costa Mesa council members voted receol.\y to remove proposed extensions or Wilson Street and Gisler Avenue to Huntington Beach from the city roadway plan "The needs or the c<>unty are going to have to be assessed ... Lewis said of the conflict between the 19th Street crossing and expanded sewage facilities "Which has the highest priority?" Hilltop Prope_rty Auxirded to City By WILLIAM RODGE 04 tlw o.ll't l'I ... St.If San Juan Capistrano wiJl re~elve nearly 700 acres of prime hilltop land under a court ..agree- m~nt announced' witb Glendale Federal Savings and Loan, the city's largest single landowner. · · The tradeoff will allow the city to p'reserve, valued Mdgeline and guarantee the financial in· stitution the right to build 1.200 d.welUl'lgs~ · TJIE..AGREEMENT' BRINGS to an end two years of legal mitneuvering by the city and the Los Angeles-based firm which filed an $11 million ---dltft'.t•~.,_.~lfi~y~1ht-te bel'"ft-- asonable development or the la.¢. Glendale Federal's 1,200 acres of land ls locat- ed in the southeast portion of the. Mission city, east of Interstate s. It encompasses the broad hlllslde vista above San Juan Hills golf course, south of Sao Juan Creek Road. The rolling hillside is presenUy used for cattle grazing and ope~pace. . The agreement, approved Monday in Judge Laughlin Waters' Los Angelos Federal District Court, was announced at a San Juan Capistrano press conference Wednesday by Mayor ~enneth Friess. . FRI~ PRAISED THE ,AGREt;MENT, but indicated it would mean "substantial grading" of a large portion 9f the lower hillside above the l~lf course. "There's going to be subelaotial grading, but berore it <the area> gets bullt, we're eolng tb have extensive public bearings," he Indicated. · "lt wai going to have buUdinp on it before the lawsuit and we know it's goinc to bave bWJdinas oo It after the agreement.:' . Friess said, however. now the city knows bow many homes will be built and what area will re- main as open apace. HE DESClllBED THE ADJSIDE develop.\ nient u pyramld·ab:aped, exumding up tbe hillside,. to within 2'lC> feet of the ridJeline at lta highest point. FrieH acknowJed1ed that t0me raidenta would not be pleased •ttt1 iradlnt operations on I the bUllide -visible from practically everywhere lo tbe clty -but indicated "it (t.be project) will be veey 1uractlve wben jt'a built out. "Tw,nty yean rram now •hen no one remem· ben _.., the area w.. open, tt wUI Joe* ver1I beauWul." be lald · · RUBBERMAID WASTEBASKET 29.!. They sure do make them good, don't they? U I knew someone who w-9etting married, I'd give them one. (Weird statement). DEWALT 10'' POWERSBOP ~229~!. We really don't have many left so if you need a dozen. fof'CJet it. (Little slick ~holOCJY there). Rip. crosscut . mitre, perfectly. Leqs e.tra. LEHIGH · BINDER TWINE 1~!. 'What do you do with 5 lbs. of ·twine? Do you macrame. do you t ie thing• up, fly a k ite, or what? 2x4x8' DOUGLAS FIR -l~t. STADW Ol llTTD Love lumber. it amell.e ao good. looka so qood, and. jf you're handy. makes rnto nice thinqa. SLIDING. PATIO DOOR REPLACEMENT SCREENS ALUMINUM OR BRONZE .. .. ,. Front office says to.cut the price and clear out th• stuff in a Pre-Season Smash. Sub· ect to atock on hand bec:auu w• are getting ready for new m e . ow come n is soun e a-TV'c:a C'Omnt•e71rd1"411m14.,...~•""'"--·~---..~ .All fitt1~. no seconds, ·all complete with ,1ilent closer and hardw~. TWO BAR TURKEY .. .SCREEN DOOR • FOUi BAI. I 097 SILVER TURKEY EAGLE HAWK 1497 GOLDEH EAGLE .2597 2997 SUPER RAWI · SPARROW 17~7 1897 AVALON GOLD PEACOCK . 3197 . . . 3397 GOLDEN FALCON 1897 ~ 3797 CALIFOUIAM · BRONZE FALCON • 1897 FIESTA CLEAR TBROUCR DWN CLEANER OT. 129 ·229 3•• We a.re really he..y on this. Ia .v.ryone'a drei n stopping up tha time of the year? (Maybe it'a the pull of the moon.) HAPPY GRASS . , 1•7 LIN. FT. 6 FT. WIDE W&JT111ntffd for 2 years. great for d.Cx.,porch. patio, or pool area. (No smart nimarks about that name now you quys.) SNAROL SNAIL &: SLUG PELLETS. 97~~J ~. ·3797 FORMICA 66 ~0.rr. Got a yen to reeover that top. or to make your own bar, or any ot dozens of thinqs. Tlunk about formica surfae.s.. . ·~ . . CASTROL GTX . I Ii '' · 20/50 WT.--l ' I • • MOTOR OIL ~· 63c '"·iii . <n'. This is the creme de la creme of motor oils . Madi for today's hot. touqh. high rpm enqines. Won't bl'itak down like leaser oils. .. ·~oo ~ ~ . GEllE ELE~TllC GARAGE . DOOR OPEIERS IA B.P. CllAll DllVI 30" People t.11 me their alidin9 36 .. ecreena are on the lari 1419. Isn't it cut• how they darn near eat an entire plant in a day? Oh. you don't think ao, 1599 then let me sell you aome of this. .,_ ________________________________ __ Hope they are reading this week's ad. 48" 60" ·1699 1a·~ ·21" -----~-........ ~ ____ ..,. BAIDlll YOUR CHOICE . CITRUS FOOD ROSE FOOD . SUPER BLOOM 99~~- About time l~r the fint f-.di.nv. Do your job now and the plant will Htu.rn the faYW later. ' . STANDARD BARE ROOT FRUIT TREES -·2~~~ Chooee from Peach. Apricot, Apple. Plum. Fi9. or Nectarine. V"arietin may vary from store to stoN. AZALW 3 33 2GAL. Asal .... 9row with auc:h little care, a little f.-cimv vi.,.. h.ck tona of 1'~mL ~\H.P. 8CRl:W DRIVE 137 .. as.404 ~H:P.~~,--.X .. '1111 480 "-ft button con...u.n.o.. -.t.tf, U\d a .sec:\U"9 ... Un •• N.gM and da,., rain 01' 111\in .. NODIAL JHSTALLATIOll IS" OF OUR UNIT FOX CRAFT AUTO RAMtS . Steel and lltt'oft9. ( U I u.id, "paPer and ....... WO\lld yo\& be rn.d a t me?) Plenty to\avh.. ' I • I.,' A•• OAILY PfLOT . . Ill CLOllES . 1a·c 1Mt ..... Wt"-.W Olt Ottifed ••• MT 1JD Ofl 1;HI MAJOmY Ofl OUI PllSIMf S1'0CI ...... P 1 rW ,....._ n.t .· .. UTTB1Y IKUOUSS Ofl COST OI LOSS IMQllllDtt We,._ T• W. Sw • .._ ..,._. IYllnNM& GOISI TWt h A~ .. .,_. ........ .-, n. T11••••• lduf1• lttlect Ow Del• • ra Te ....... 11111 .... Met dtir111 MOW- c...,.. .. o......,,••« "L!:'t···c• 1111'WC...,leAcc1.,1•~ Ulttll Miit Of Olr ......... W.. Md T__. .... W.W., C ....... Coen¢ C), IYllY rnM If OUI STOM HAS 111M IUTHUSSLY NJcl Liil DAY l90ll YISTllDAY! M Cect ••• ..._ C... ...... Celt ••• Mahl.No DlfftHllCe. We .... 1W DTllMI LOW PltCI kn. Olly Ni19 1W W11 I••" SWIFT t POsm¥I SB.LIN AC110M1 Cw .. Md ~ Witt! '"'1 .,.._. Y• C• S,... Y• M-_, Met S.. ._.. '"OW,n.. ..... a. TMse A .. &r A L9i n.. To CJllM! SUSIB fOl_qutCI DISPOUL! ................... ·-......... Held ledl .•. ALL PRlcES ? .. S.l.ASHED · • To tostl Near Cost!-Below Costl • ' ~' '' ' " . I \ " ' ·." .• , • ~ I • MEN'S JACKETS & COATS .. PACIFIC TIAIL" "LEVIS" .. IENHIHGTON" "LOVE N STUFF" "• •h!dr .,.., doW11 fin fedreh. ....... -tfclli• ........ jtdth. .... feck.+s, I OOo/o wool facW1, IMd _, ...._, .,W. jocleh. c~y• _, ...,,., Ilg •-"'Y of colon la tbes 5-M.&,..XL J .,_.. =~~~~:~~ .. ; s9 .a '"aEG.Tosu.so $18··· ~prtc. ......... ' • < 11G. ro "~~.$24 88 .... prke...... .. • •·ott.n • .,. SIS.OD to sas.oo llOW Yl·Y20FF MEN'S BELTS "LEVIS" "HICKOK" ll4J •sWy of dylet _, colon. ... 21 to 54 . ...,. fJ"'OIP· . V20RMORE OFF ·• MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS •AHOW" ~ ...... ltellt, ............. '-' .... .... ............ ,... ..... .. .... abs ..... 14/141/J to 17/171/z. l ... ...... MEN'S-MEN'S LADIES SPORT SHIRTS PAJAMAS BLOUSES & TOPS "PURITAN" "HNHIHGTOM" D•n pnw... pre11 la a Wldt "WILD CHHRT" "DlnOS" "SPllE" "LANCER" "LEVIS" urlety of colors. Shu "WIAMGUI .. "GUDIAGS" ·w1LDAU" .. Off SHORE"... ·s.M-&.-XL OUR ENTIRE STOCK. "CHESnfUTS" "ACTION r ·otllen. Tiie .....,. ttyln M -~, • "LEVIS .. -4 ottten. htcledH colors la ftofynt.n. cottoa, IEG SllOO ~ *'CJ ..t .._. .a...e W..... lllettds, 1-i _. tllort tlH'f9d la Ide'""'·........ • T-sllirll. ...,. ta,t. disco tMril, ...n.~41Mg-9f'CMIPS. Wff ....... ...t .... Men. DrellJ $6 • 1-----------1 mtd c..al, PloM _, F.cy • =~~~~.~~... • MEN'S SUITS =--5-M-l. ~to is. 5 ... =~~·.~·~ .. ~8.88 -.•. ~s~!.~.~A~ l =~~~·~ .... 53.a s10 88 ... 4 ,. ..... • '°"....... s5 a :!;:!~~~:~ ~ '= ::=e.::; ~-: =~~I-~ .. ~... . s 12 a ahn u to.,. •f9111cn. s..ts s7 a :!~.~~~'.~. • ~~REsTocrsum =~~'.~·.~... • =~~~~.~~~14.• UG.Stlt.50toSl60.00 =~~~~·~ ... st.• ............. 559.a HG. TOSJ0.00$12.88 MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS & . T SHiRTS "PUllTAH" "HAHG TlH" "HOlll" "DJTTOSn .. JAMTZBr ..t ott..n. w\I tw..I i.w, a Wg .... c'ffolt la ICMMJ ............... c .... ... OUR ENTIRE STOCK SPOITCOATS ·HG. $55.00 to S6S.OO ~+price ..... 518.88 10 538.88 ... prtc:. .••.•• LADIES COORDINATED SPORTSWEAR coland. Terrific 11fedl01t of coton. la lliet s.M-&.-XL 4 big CJr011P1-. LADIES "FllE ISLANDH~ lacf•dt1 jochts, ,_... tWrttf W-... ... ...-----------nah.1....,., tkirfs. top, etc. =~~~ ..... s2.aa D-.Pt~.~~'1! ..... Al ..... :Mt I or COCM6111ftd ht Mllt-••n .....te....._ ~us 5 to 15, 6 to .J 6, SoM-L . OUI INTlll STOCK · HG. SI ~00 to SlS.00 Yi PRICE BIG & TALL DRESS SHIRTS ,_ "MAMHATI AN" "AllOW" "GINO" "INIO".-lo•! ad ....................... diem of ........... colors. "" ....,, styte.. .. "'"' '7 to zo. XLtoXXXLJW.,.,_.. =~~~~-~ .. ~3.e& IM. TOSl4.00 s5 • .. price ......... • '!:~~l·~-~ ... '7. BIG & TALL . DRESS PANTS .. "HASGAI" "DAYS" "THE ICMACIC" "llYfS PANAlB.LAS .. "PUlfTAN" I 00% ,otyHters I• • 1ll9 • ....., of .... ~ .... colon,ct.db.pWdt.,....... ........ 40to54.J ,.....,. BIG & TALL SPORT SHIRTS "PURrTMC" "SPIRr "1.AHCr "CAiia C&.Ur....,., A tn rm•• Mtec"-of .. MW. ltylft Ira ,..,.If!". cotfw. ..... CJM-e. etc. ....... tltort ""•ed I• mH XL to XXXL 4 CJr011Pt RIG. TO Sit.OD s7 • -.pr&ce........ • =~~~~·-~~ ... 59.• RIG: TO $25.~ -r-: ...... -.~ HG.TOSJO.oos14 • Mk~....... • -BIG & TALL SWEATERS "'-PUlrTAH• ht o ... ......, of C .. gmRS, ""'°"""' er••• ••d V0Hch. I 00% wool, weol ....... trerylcs. Al .. .................. ....... HW colon, wl• Ywfefy of ._..._. ............ Slut XL· to XXXL. OUR IMTIH STOCK. llG. $11.00 to $30.00 'IM.TOSll.00 s5 • .. price ........ • IN. TOSll.00 $6 • .... price ........ • =~~'.~.~----~··· ;::i..:::£?.;!f.f, =~~'.~~----:i·: =~~ .. su.a =~~.~.... ~ t------.,-.~---1 PLEA-SE NOlE MEN'S DRESS & CASUAL PANTS s999 ¥201 . LADies PANTS. ..... •,, ..... Md en.,., ~~~~~~~··· • MORE OFF "DlnOS" "FADED GLORY" a lciMp "9 fro• o•r s 12 • IK.loSI 00 $8 • ...e,nc... .... • "HAGGAI• "UYIS.. "MOYIM ON" .. FADID GLOIY" u.......-"WlAMGLB"' 11--------+------t olfMrs. ll1w1d• sto« Im tflle ,. MEN'S L IS "" ... ..,..._ ....t am "WIAHGLH" "LOVE M t.g. dock. EYEIY ITEM llG TO Ut.00 STUFF" "LAMDLUHH" -IM THE STORE IS ON .. Pnce....... • REG.-llG-T ALL ~..::•.;: ::•: ~~~· ,::.:•..:;.•::.,:. HG.Tosu.soSJ~ • LBSURE SUITS .. .· · . •' ... -c.....-....._ ..,...... ""' 111 app•rel, •1tderw•ar: .... prlcf ... ·" ~ ,_.. ..t _, Id i fwclltk .. • Hd l•w rlHrs, etc. •••· bHJ •.,tety of~ colen .W ·.-m•fd-dfilliit, .W\l:.;•1:c:.;i..-1+•...,.wnale•1th..-.micli1!" l"1·0CRCCtetlmllOl' .. lt9:'1; ~1;=--a---=~~=t-~ wMtfoC~ .... ~-------lfJel.IMl•d• llLS.-IUl. __ -·=~l'~~=:~·s:'::-IELLS, MUYO FLAllS. ..... dladll. -ck. Im STIAJ&HI' U.S. SHIM TO FIT. COIDUROYS. All •• lilft JI to 44• 4 Wt CJNIPl- ft-, ...... etc. "'" l to WOMIMlp ...... lltorh, llG & T ·LL JI •• 54. ••••• 1 .. ,. -4 11, 25toJI.41n11Jt .,,..._ ttc. lfc. SHOP IAILY A n.p. ._. ...... .tw ulln la . lM TOSIUO $ r -~ .............. ()l•··-~. .......:..... ..,..Sl~---~~· -r- llG. TO $21 .00 IN.TO~U.oo $ FOR UST SUCT10M. CASUAL PANTS w -1-.,.. 1•1 vtrtt!.cf ~-:; UG. TO $24.00 •••lftr °" 9-d .ct to .. pric.t ....... 12·. ' prior ... ....,. Frfdcly, RM. TO $26.00 ~.b. 2nd. at .I 0 A.M. .-,nu...... • FIRST COME-FIRST RM. TO SJO.o0$14 ·• SEIYID. .. ...... . . .. .. . --------------- THE CLOTHES UCK m ElS1 17th SREn. COSTA MESA ... -•••llf.Ht.-Sff.to 0 •• • , A ..... __ -' ... ,,,,,,,_ ,.-c:Wc.t ....... • &510.M llG & TALL LEATHR JACKETS . Mm..-....., ....... 21 ..., ....... I0-12·14 ..., • ... s121.11$.LA8 .......... ~ I I ' • • l -· --- . . I --,.-~-·---,,..~-:-.::r.....:1 "Yoar Be•e!ow• ~ " Dally ~ews paper VOL. 72, NO. 32, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNT.Y, CALI FORNI!\ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1979 .. ·.• y lleai-st Freed ===~e= r;-~fler_a_i llo ... 1: HJLLSB.OROUGH t AP > -"It's-the most wonderful party Patricia Hearst walked -out of or my Ute," llra .. Heanl told a priaoa into brilbt aunshine today group ol •bout so friends, re- a n d went directly to b~r · porters and police offi~rs invit· mother's plush suburban San ed Inside to a catered welcome- Francisco home, a free woman home brunch or champagne and aner a five-year odyueY ot kid-ecgs Benedict. . nap, crime and punishment. Among I those present were "I think that I've gotten a lot Janey Jimenei:, a former federal stronger, a lot more sell confi-·marshal who walke d Mi ss dent. J lake a Jot of things "in Hearst into the rourtroom ewery stride that make other people day during her two-month bank fall apart," Misa Hearst told re-robbery trial and shed tears for porters during a celebrStlon in-her new friend, and .the Rey, side the tastefully furnished E d w a rd Du m le e , w b o home in~ wealthy San Fran-spearheaded a national cam. cisco suburb. paign for the presidential com- H er .b"Om ecomi ng was mutation which came Monday·. sweetened. by a large crowd "of Miss Hearst's father, Ran. a medlilllon with .ereen rhinestones lbat spelled out Survivor, and the number U7f. the date ol her ltidnappin&. She said she wOuld add the dale 2·1-78 to the piece of jewelry, a gilt froin fiance Bernard Shaw. Miu Hearst-said her German shepherd. Arrow, was so excited to see her he -st.arted "crying and running all around." · MW Hearst said-that after her marriag~ she would be known as either Patricia Hearst or Mrs. Shaw. ' family and frieDds who burst in-dolph, arrived shortly after she 'T-~"'n:' applause as her car entered did" and said lbtit his daughter le1Jri¥6'ay. . ----bad ~e!.[kle back and I "l don't anticipate anyone calling me Patricia Shaw because It seems so foreign to me alMI 'my name has always beeo-fatricia-Hean~t :-"~o-o-~ J ............ W/'VING PRESIDENTIAL COMMUTATION ORDER, PATRICIA HEARST LEAVES PRISON With Her Is Her Rance end Former Bod'yguerd Bern•rd Shaw, Whom She'll Wed Soon . . . . • Her mother,· Catherine, em· thi.nk she'll be okay. braced her, and later "lbld re. Miss Hearst, who continued porters she "marveled" at Pat· smiling lhroug1l9ut her party, Ly 's "sparkle ." wore a "Pardon Me" T·shirl and ~~ Miss Hearst let\ the Federal Co rrectional Institution at Pleasanton al 7 :29 a._m • Violent Weather Assails· Coast· ' . ' 'llareatens U.S. ~. , Tornado, Hail Rip Cou.nty Khomein'i Gets Wet, cold January ended Wednesda)t in a burst of freak weather aJong the Orange Coast. ~wild Welcome Torrential rain, hail, sleet, s now and high winds hit an Orange C.0.St that. bad basked for much of the morning under a brigbtsunandacloudlesssky. lh~~i~.4A~~ twister screamed along south MaJnStreelluvingtoppledtrees, shattered homes and shOps-but no injuries -in its wake. (Relat- ed story, pictures, Page A3) Then the the fain came back Wednesday. night and early to· day lo hinder mopping up opera. tions and add more traffic problems to a Main Street that was already jammed with rush hour traffic and cars filled with sightseers. By contrast, tbe National Weather Service said. today, February is coming in like a Jamb. The forecast calls for showers tonight with the possibility of high winds early Friday. ''But then,'' a ·forecaster said , -"things will begintoclearup. '' The long range forecast calls for a o,veekend of sunny days and warming temperatures. "And not a s torm in sight," the weatherman predicted. "Put your umbrella away." Huntington Beach residents <See Sl'ORM, P•ge A.2) Legal Costs Hit $61,000 For Diedrich TEHRAN,· !rag. l AP ) - Ayatullah R'Uhollah Khomeini came home from exile today to a wildly entbU1iaslic welcome and declared bis anti-shah revolution will not be complete 1Ultil U.S. influence is expelled from Iran. ''I . . beg the Almighty to cut the haods or foreign.ers" to loosen their grip on lru, the 78·year·old bearded Shiite Moslem patriarch prayed before throngs of followers. Khomeini's first goal is to replace Prime Minist'er Shahpour Bakhtlai'a .. go.vern· meot with an Islamic republic. But Bakbtiar again defied the religious leader in a broadcast Wednesday night, saying he would "resist chaos and doubtful elements" and ·"will not permit the reins of the country to be held by an)'Doe except lbie cen. tral government." _ K-h-omeini,-ralling .against "d espotism and colonialism" that be said have perverted Ira. 'Open Space' ' Issue Tops Land Hearing By STEVE MITCHELL Of 1111 DMty """·sUff Guarantees that at least three· quarters of the 10,000 acre Irvine Coast be kept in open space was the biggest bone of contention among regional. coastal com- mission officiaJa and county and Irvine Company planners. • That issue ts a Piimary u._Nvtt.J,J:; problem to the commission staff Ol.,.Dlltr,........, lo · al plan for the pristine land between , • _..'". -~-.Ro-'Olrb~~_gobu'nty S~~m:~or..-Corona del Mar and Laguna H _ .: -.... ' a p 1 U1eui-1c s courtl'OO a -Beach. . -~.::!.:?G 7 ~VER SAND ALONG THE OCEAN FRONT IN HUNTINGTON BEACH ties have cost his supporters Coastal commissioners met nian culture, said in an arrival speech that Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi "'has made the army follow the orde rs of another country." The anli·shah movement will 'be successful onJy ''when the roota of colonialism are pulled out,·• he said. fSee IRAN, Pa1e AZ) * * * Fluor Eyes Evacuation From Iran By P BIUP ROSMARIN Ol_OOitty,.... ....... Fluor Corp. executives, con· cerned about the precise mean- in& qf Jru's Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini's prayer, ··1 .•. beg the Almighty to cut the hands of foreigners," today were decid- ing whether to evacuate a score or their fmn's employees in the Middle Eastcquntry. Khomeini railed today against "despotism and colonialism" whicb be said has perverted the lranian culture. The Irvine-based Fluor Corp. maintains offices.in the Iranian capital, Tehran, and has several employee& supervising a n,_atu,aJ gas project in the south or Iran, in Puanan. A Fluor s pokes man em · phasized that "it's not a panic situation." but hi.1h·leve1 of- <See n.UOR, Page A.%) Co ast , ltteguard ower a nd ~dl10n Company Power P'tllnt (beckground, Part of Rare Scene . more u;.an $61,000 so far in JegaJ for nearly four houra3l.edno4u_. Weath e r feespaidtofourlaWJ"eB.. •.. night in HUntington Beach to f--.:1t·anee~o ... pe,_-1·---f The ~Y has been collected bear iesumony from· county en--cent tonitbt, 20 percent Prop. 13 ·view· Gloomy • from political IOU.1'ces at a series vlronmental agency offici1ls Friday. Brief hea·vy rain,· of fundraisers Including a lunch the lnlne · Comp1ny and th~ thunderstorms and gusty ~t the VUla Fontana restaurant publicinoneofaseriesofpubllc winds at times. Lows tr Orana:e last December that hearings on ... the development tonight 38 to 45. Partly raised fl0,700. ... .program f• one of the most cloudy and breezy Friday At the J>ecember fund.raiser valuable chunks of land remain-with biCbs 54 to .59. ~t.'~ S "ScJwol Aid p ble Se • the guests consumed $1,110 in'g in Soulberp California. . ~r ays ro m rwus worth of Villa Font•n•-vitUes O!her key Issues discussed INSIDE TODA v ;;-----JI----::--;==~ and competed for ~ worth of before a room. packed with ' Gov. Edtrukl C. Braum Jr. By JE&aY CLAUSEN -\:endent of the-N•w-po.rt..M:es"-'-<>O;f!.<Jell~;-educ•tt!'·" door prizes, gold coiM converted citl1ens, included low-cost bous· 10111 M '1 giving a lot of • ' --.-°'•-Dllltf·""'"""-_ K h®l s~m. Cunnlftitiem l.rd--.cbool-dis---~je~elry. . . 101 'on 90llle of the hi&h·priced thotlgld to~ Preli· Pare~ con«~ed and COD· State legislatOn;ne-sald, face lrict.I won'&.know__UDUJ late July IiftJuded-1mon1-lha-payqit_1.a.n d:..aad_tt.1!l!.P.9.!_t'atlon de"t Corter in the 1910 fused Wl~ •h;at Propo11tioa 13 ls possibly "the most dlffi•ult as-of Au1ust bow niucli'lnoner-n'....urms .:C.ett~i~~bea..: :P_!01_~1~ ~~-~~ iftbe. -prtmorin;-5onw-o/ Im ac· doing to public schools 1ot Uttle sigoment ln the history of dem· tbev'IJ U.ve for fiscal 1979-80 ve opmim11.U1 J.¥.,_...,_ . .,._,.. tioN· ~ ~ bfWol'd solac~ Wednesday nlg~t: from. 1 octat-tc governme.nt'' in •t· bec'ause of the confusion In ulirly contribute to county IrvineemPanY.' · :-the ~~,. "itagt:-StOf'V school administrators lobb)'ilt tempting to ·sbore . up puollc Sacr•mento over three bills and_ supervisori1I tampaigns •od Tbe coqnly pl1n, termed , 01J A.J~. who spoke In Newport Beach. services following passage of the th~ Jegislative processes. re· wbol d•''""c'·~~{be anJ~ ''b1i~1~•· ~ onale;~' 1bY ~~ l atlex W~nia~ Cunningham, ex· lax-relief lJIJ.liative last June. quired lo ewntuaJ comproDlJ8' n .. ,, . com-suu1, .c .. Oli.""' ecutive director for the Auoda· Cummincbam indicated there • • Meanwblle the dlstrl-ct auperviaon. velopmt!nt ol • w~munity of• ~:!.~ \': · =~ ·~ tlon of C1ltrornla School Ad· is only one bright spot resulttna superlllteadent bat the )ob "bf ~ tbme:. who Hid 11,100 80,000 petlOftl bouled ln' Dearly ~ .:: =:-.. ~ minlstratora, laid it on tbe Hoe . from Proposition 13_ i flgurlq: expenditures wi\bout for l.uncbeon lie!keta weN the 12,000 untts-ln return for reserv· ~-.,. ...... ......., .. early la bis IO·mh1uteJ.resenta-He said public educ.tion wtll any idee al i.ncOme," he Aid. I"lne Compo)', Shappell In· tq three-quart.en of tbe 10,000 a.tc• c:.: :.='C:. .. ~ Uon to the Newport-esa dis· cease beina "all things to "lll "Busiwlmen would lau&b at d111triea, 1'tlltlurateur BrM Per-ac.re e~paue for public and =.=.::_ ..,-: ..,....=...., .f:: trict'a School Commuol ty Ad:--people, ''-because boarda ot auch an idea •• • rta, Hon DtYeAopment. Compeny, pnvateopen apace. .....,..,... ....., .... ., vl~r~ Councll. , education and superintendents The Clitr1buuon . of s u.rpl... Paeeaetter Home1, Oran1e But dts111reement •rose l•IP ... " ~ •M NObody knows whit~. ha~ will have to aay "no ." • Ja1t year a11d Gov . Edanmd Count; '9teel Sal•qe COmptny RlbQ& tbe three (actions oa a :;-:::.,. 9: = .,~ peato1 111 Sacramento, 1aid •·JJe ln educ:aUon cU .... Mdc , Bron Jt ., lreeee oa te.cber and IObbytlll rr-m llliche~• t tatt NCOCD.mtDdatioa tbal there ---a ...,..... M CUlllllolfWn, • fo.,,,.r superb>. ta U.-thine• we know bow ta ~Poll .UI -llliiMl(,11, Pap-All (!lee COAftAL,.1' .... AIL_~~===:==:::::=~:;::__:j . . ... _ ,--·~· ~-..v ' -~ ---. I .t .. ........... __ --. 1 ---.:r -. . ,. .. . , . . I • --.:_ • • · d ~l ol armor would b.ave ~ bett.r protecUon than an u•bnlla Wedneeday. a1aiut has• ballet~ that driam .... on the l'OOfa ot boutes arid cars and t'0\1.t'~ local beach . Hall and hlah winch hit Newport ~ ch and COila M a. Ao utlmaLtd 5.000 ~ ot thos c•U w tf' witb®\ Po,.er _during lhf' alleraoOA-uaOt ---•m~qitnt'y crewa replar d do-Md po~r ll • Member• of th• aheriU'a Harbor Patrol l'IOt'ked tbe wind.a at 10 mil an hour 54!•tral bJJlall boatJ. and ya ht1 ~ ·----ri·lft·Pt'd lht>I moor1n.rs lhft~ "-----··1"100cll'n• cau prob em · In muny ('emmun1llts Ot ech 8oultHard h\•lween Adama Avea~ and Mftmphls treet In lfuntlnctoo ~ach wu awash at the height ot th~ tonn and city crews had to pump water from several homes. Not alf'l nan -Kym;Ia Jobs R~p DrOpped .Charaes that Cart Kymla. and other foiu: emplo~s bu _..._.,~~..._-..-i~raf'fna'ftafer onJre'"lfoilJtol\ remained OJ\ duty with the dts Niauel Water Dlatrlct, uaed dl.s· trict aince their indictment an• trict employees to perform the s ubsequent filing of personal taaka have been dis· criminal complaint whtr ml1aed ln Central Orange Cou.n-replace d the grand JUr ty Mun.lei 1 Court. ch1r1e.s.. . ~-......:""81Wo:~~UA..Hid to.du_.d1-· The mdlon uuliami.u l:.IMI.~ m ual came Wednesday a1aios Kymla was made b 1i--..JD.id.l ...... ~llllll!M11Ltthe..~~tb~i~rdll.Jlda~~~ol.11-_;Dll.4•~PUU~t~~~-~l).i~'~ A-..,_,_.. a closed door preliminary bear-William Evans who also was un-tna· into aiJt charaea of embeule-available for comment this morn ment and misappropriation of ing. . public property that faced · the Six charges against KymJa in- form er Newport Beach city volvedthreeaUegedlncidents. councilman. They included allegations that A )treliminary hearing is two district employees lnstallool scheduled to begin today for four tile in Kym la's Newport Beach other district employees who home. one worker used distnct were indicted along with Kymla equipment to plow Kym la's laWl' ~ by an Orange County grand jury and two employee5 dug a AulhorlU~ m Orance Coun ty' Environmental Menafe· ment Age ncy sald pub 1c facilities survived the heavy rain and hiah windsa walh rel aUvely l.itUedemage~ Soutbem Calllomi• Gas of· ricials said today lhat the con· tinuing cold weather bas meant record levels ln the supply' of natural gas. to homes and busi-nesses. Despite the "first prize" ribbons lying on the_ pavement, this Orange Coty:aty. Fair- grou~ds trash truck won no awards for its performance Wednesday afternoon. The truck nipped on University Drive near the Newport Beach/Irvine city line, on its. way to the county Coyote Canyon dump. Driver David De Arcos. 29, of Santa Ana, escaped '1,miojured, police said. la~;:a· could not be reached g~~~~e ditch at _the Kymla for comment this morning. "I know l have done nothing Court officials said the dis· wrong and t am confident l can missal "Was read into the court clear myself," Kymfa said the record wit.bout any reference be· day after his indictment. ing made to Kymla 's employ-Still facing charges in the....,... menl future. vo111tpr district case are John A total or 3.'3 billion cubic feet of gas.was supplied Tuesday to establish a new record. The ec>mpany said-emergency ~up­ pues ot gas trom Texas and Oklahoma will insure continued · supplies for Orange County. And custodians of rain gauges were kept busy Wednesday as the new downpour gave them fresh statistics ror their log books. · The Moulton-Niguel Water District gauge .shows a total or 11.<M inches of rain thus far this season. Last year at this time the utility had Jogged 14.17 inch~s. Orange County HarbOr Dis- trict has logged 10.02. the Orange County Flood Control District chart shOws 10.86 an<t the gauge at Orange Coast College ~ands at 12.75 inches for the season Biker Struck 1n·m1, Run Irvine Mishap f'ro•Pap A J COAST AL HEARING. • • be a guarantee of sorts the open space land will remain open space. . Any development by the· Irvine Company. the · staff sug- gests, should be predicated with a guaranteed phased dedication of open space. But Richard Munsell of the co unty 's Environmental Management Agency. said that recommendation Is unaccepta- ble, a feeling echoed by lrvine Company officials. He said t.be county Is not able to justify a company dedication of nearly 4,000 acres required under the commission staff's recommendations. And he ques- tioned the staff's legal right to re- quire sucn a dedication of open space. Irvine Company plann\ng director Donald Cameron agreed with the county. saying it would not be reasonable for the company to dedicate lands without assurances of fair com- pensation. He suggested that '-'any de- velopment that does occur be phased with construction of : roadways," offering the coastal commjsslon access to results of that city's new traffic model. And sf::veral residents of El Morro Mobile Home Park ad- dressed the commissioners, say- ing talk of low cost housing in the coastal zone conflicts with plans to oust residents or the mobile home park and adjacent Crystal Cove. EH Morro resident Galen Colwell said tax doUars (for land acquisition> should go to buy land rather than relocating low and moderate income families from the t\vo neighborhoods. Commissioners will meet in Huntington Be ach again next Wednesday night at 7 p.m. lo continue the public hearings on the local coastal plan. They can vote to accept or deny the plan al that lime or at a meeting Feb. 13. . F,....Ptage A J • An El Toro bicyclist pedall'ng through l(vioe Wednesday Oighl was struck by a car whose d r iver ·sped from the scene without attempting to help the injured man, police said. As far as public acquisition of open space. Cameron said that cannot be guaranteed. "for the same reason the· building or 11,600 dwelling uni(s <by the company) cannot be gua.ran- leed." SCHOOLS. • Richard Norwood, 29, of 24122 Birdrock Drive. was listed in fair condition today al Tustin Community Hospital, where he was undergoing examination for a Possible concussion, and lreat- m ent of numerous ·cuts and bruises from bis fall. Norwood was d iscovered bleeding but conscious at the in- tersection or Culver Drive and Barranca Road, by an unin- volved motorist who called police for help. No witnesses to the 10:45 p.m. _ accident we re reported, and Nor wood had yet to f ully describe what happened to him. llack Engineer s Set Meet at U CI An organizational meeting or the Society of Black Engineers is scheduled tonight al 7 o'clock in room 331 of the Engineering Buil4ing at UC Irvine. Th e meeting, open to the public, includes a talk about career opportunities, by Les Powell, president of the Los Angeles Counrj) of Black Profe5sional Eng\Mers. He said the company would be happy to make open space lands available for public acquisition. as long as it lakes place within a • reasonable amount or time, and as long as the company bas the right to build on the land should no public funds be forthcoming. . But members of the audience appeared uncomfortable with the apparent lack of permanence of any open space land. UC Irvine professor Wesley Marx, said a commitment ror phased dedication is a must in the coastal plan. He said a legal opinion on the staff's recommen- dation for dedication is un- necessary, adding, "This (local coastal plan> is a major test of the Coastal Act. " Huntington Beac h student Dave Hall said guaranteed open space was essential, considering the "finger -like development along the ridgelines in the Irvine Coast." He said small segments ot de· velopmenl will encourage ex· panded development, and sug- gested the company place all its housing in one area. He charged the county with giving too many concessions to the Irvine Company, saying, "The county and the ll'\line Corppany ~ul~ ~ave ha,il a joint ~ Coversaae presentation tonight. They said ~ the same thing." Additional south Orang~,!e:..;C~o~un:;:!.t-..,,-.,T~ha;:;:t~dr:.;e:::;:w.;,r.a;f'~.;.;la:':iu~s:f.e;;;f:;;r;o.-mr.;;th;;:;e _ 1---~.....-V<""t""l"."1Qi'1llllf"""1\l)Jelii'sl6Cf'ay·on age au aenc as a commen ~m AlS. Newport Beach environmen- ...._. . . . I OftAMOE COAST -1j1;jltfQl(•JI Tl•• 0<•-CMtl (l.ily Pho! •flll wfll<ll l\C°"" e>_...__ ...... "-'-"''""°'""" toul Pvlllt\lt'l!OC_..,., St-N<•,.od<•-••• PVblh l\<HI ~. ""°""' irr~f >0< (O\I• IMU. Nt""°'1 llHcPI. Hunll~Ofl ~O<;h/hun t•11'\V•llfy,l,.ffte,l~S..C.P'I lovtnCNtt A ....... ~--i.-s.-~-~:.:.~=~"::'='.~~~;!:: lJO ·-··-Pr t\tOtfllf eftd Pw1111~ '"" " c.ir>or Yiu t're\IOtftl •"" 0.-11""'- T-•• •-Ee•lot ,._ .. .....,..... _,....... .... , .. OM1t1•.LM1 -I' Mell •1trJl"'1 ""N9"'9""" Offlo•• <>-•• Ml>A" >JOW..t 9"rltrett 1....-...... ,, .. Git-"'"'"' -·-kO<ll 11t1$tlH (l\loNk.....S If . ,...,._. ... fN•)M2>432t CteeltftM M~~....,. ,....,~c"'- •...-O ~'t: =. °"..:%, cr,.::a,';r"..;.~ .... r .. zu'' ........... -.............. , .. a:::.~:.:J.' ..... ' MM<••• "'"''"'~ " ~-CleU l>Otl• .. 'o-14 •I CD\t• Motf, tatller•I• h•H•lt H,o '' O~ ll,. elf U II ft'Wf'ltMf t ""''U•t• ..... _ talist Sue Ficker who said EMA means "Environmental Mis- ma...,.ment A,eney." Otben in the audience object- ed to a county and company con· tention that hangs the plan on development of the San Joaquin Transportation Corridor and ex· tension of Culver Drive in Irvine to the coast . Several speakers said the transportation corridor running along the ridgeline above the Irvine Coast is not a certainly due to the cost of constructlon;- estimaled at between $50 and $'75 mllUon. · .1 And Irvine City Counca man Larey: Agran said all lhr~ plans !'assume Culver Drive will go tbtougb to the pcean. · • ~ He aaid the city's Genel'al Plan does not sbow such ~~ex.­ tension addln1 he sees n6 l>f'OS·' pect of 1ucb an extension. ''It would be poUllcal Insanity for anyone to 1u.aett lt," he said. "Ho• can any plan you mJght conllder be predicated on aucb a notion," be u ked. ' Newp0rt Beach councilman Paul Hamme• alao expretffd conceru of traffic woes that ,.ould be brou•ht to bla cit&::' ........... tbelntllt salaries savejl public; education last year. Cunningham opined. "I! those two things bad not oc· curred, 40 percent Qf the school districts would be bankrupt by this March." This year. he said. the gov- ernor will "unfreeze" salaries. Teacher union leaders wiJl seek 20 percent bilCe~ he estimated. "I've been .aying to the gov- ernor and to the legislators . . . you have lo unfreeze salaries . . . but if you are going to un- freeze them, stipulate how much ... and pay it directly out of, the state surplus." Citing the local tax hole left by Proposition 13 , Cunningham declared, "There is nothing left to negotiate with. IC you negotiate <over teacher salaries> you negotiate away what's good ror the students (education pro- grams)." he claimed. Questioned by parents, Cun- ningham said he doubts the metropolitan plan tpr man- datory busing of Los Angeles and Orange County children to achieve racial balances in schools will be implemented as now proposed. He said' he believes com- promise eventually will lead to inter-county "voluntary" inte· gration programs. f',...P11pAJ IRAN •.. 'i ,otention the United States by name, but theTe was no doubt what country he was talking about. During the flight from Paris. the ascetic r~ligi9\1$ leader slept or. the floor .of the upstairs bar on his chartered Air France. jumbo jet. The jetliner circled three times and landed at 9 a.m. as a million jubilant roUowers lined the 11-mile route be took from the airport to the capital's largest cemetery. Some 50,000 "Islamic police" maintained order all along the route, and more than 100,000 s upporters jammed lhe cemetery. Shouts of \'God is great" and "Welcome Khomeini" greeted the ayatullah, an eldle for mon titan 14 -tears.. as be rode through the throng \n The back~ a blue Mercedes. Occasionally, the chauffeur accelerated to force the car tbroucb the swarm.inc crowd. . Near Teh ran Unlvenlty. where oiore lban 40 penons have been killed the past week tn clubM between Kbome:lnl's 1uppol"terl and tbe army, •ban· ner read: "When evil goes out. ua.U11teome1m.·· • p Play Mudball; It's Not Good Clean Fun Here's mud in your eye-and ear~. nose and throat if you're a part\cipant in the city of Irvine's damp new game that 'li all the rage of the off-season: Mudball. Six teams of teen-agen square off on an undeveloped football field o yard lines. no goal posts. no grass; just a lot of dirt. Water is poured onto the field until it's good and squishy. A whistle is blown and every· body goes at it, using most t>f the rules of touch football, in· eluding a ball. Part of the fun is figuring out which or the rules to use. The five -week league starts Saturday at 1 p.m. at Mason Regional Park in the un- developed portion of the park. Entry fee Is S3 per player. Referees, ball and mud are fi1rni shed by the city youth services department Auto Club ~pens The Southern California Automobile Club will be opening its new two-story office building at 3880 Birch St.. Newport Beach, Monday. The new district .office will serve 24,000 club members re- s iding in Newport Beach. Corona del Mar, and Irvine. The water district manager Perry. 37, the district's director F,...P-.AJ FLUOR •.. ficers of lhe company have been meeting for two days in the Irvi ne headquarters to decide what to do, and when to do it. The Fluor spokesman said the company is in constant com· munication with the U.S. State Department for advice. Tuesday. the U.S. Embassy in Tehran urged American com· panies to evacuate non·essential personnel and dependents of employees as soon as possible. One Fluor executive said com- pany officials are trying lo de· termine whether the Ayatullah's st,Jl t e menls reported~ today literaUy meant that the hands or foreign advisors should be cul off as a warning against in· terference in the Iranian govern- ment. Fluor officials said its American employees probably will be evacuated "very soon." ''We're not going to keep peo- ple where there is danger." one said . "They will no~ left if the local assessment is that there is serious danger. . ··People are not stuck. It's just a matter of planning. "We'll either stay· or go, as.the situation requires." The company is completing work on a $300 million natural gas liquids turbo-expander plant at Paza:nan. The job has been accepted as mechanically com- plete, bait final inspection work remains. Fluor also built an oil refinery at Isfahan. of administrative operation!>. rt· Perry's brother. Charles. 28 . ..t es mainten ance yard foremar . Vernon McKown, 34, inventory control clerk. and Kennett! -- Krieger . 37. a maintenance yard supervisor. 8 ~~f!!!!Ctl. · l_) Among lesser donor<i werr Philip J. Reilly. president of the Missiin Viejo Company. VTN. nan A vco Commu01ty Devclopers day and the Baldwin Company. you lpcluded in payments lo at· · ect torneys made either through lhe J Ralph Diedrich Birthday Party Commi\tee or the R alph Diedrich Defense Fund is the $350 it cost lo unsuccessfully de fend Diedrich against a parking - ticket. fael But the bulk of the money hai-Uon gone to Diedrich 's fo rme :-iurt lawyer. Marshall Morgan. nty. •a I ud Irvine District tJ.s°! Weighed for Award1ci- The Irvine Unified School D15-~:~ lrict is one or four in the nation cle being considered for a ss.ooo award for outstandihg achieve-_ ment in elementary school · library programs. The competition is s ponsored by the Encyclopaedia Britanruca Company and the American As· sociation of School Librarians TM awards will be announced during National Library Week. April 1 through 7. · Come See Our Fantastic Buys in la-Z-Boys ........ &......,.. a.we .. ~ _...y..ef: ~·-~--itT-sltlCTH"M.t--~-­ • llST SERVICE • IEST PRICES SA VE OM THE FAMOUS SWIVB. REC LINER IOCKER Choose Your SeatllMJ COll,fort Vflth LA·Z·IOY® COITAMllA 369 I. 11th IT. (Acfoet fra'l'I Ralphs. . next to Marte CClllef ldaf1) 6'2•1617 Mon. .rft.1~ Sat. 1().6 OoMd Sunday ~~ ~~ MllllON VtlJO 21192 MClt'guerfte Pkwy. (Comer cl AYflfV and Via flootar) •tl--8902 Mon.-Fn. l~ Sot. 1().6 Ooled~ ·~ 1, t I - ---= --~ --·----\ _ ...... ------~==-~-l _______ -<- -----------·~----·~-,,,.... .... ~-"=---··---- ' · CALIFORNIA c.,llege Aid Eyed . .. SACRAMENT <~P , ~ al10 uld Wedn t day lh t It WHAT AID TllE state gave - 1 I ii la\ tv e a o 1 l Y.I t 11 y I ·•may be poealbl " to lncre&Ae barely 10 percent of the state Cihronua' tos rommunily col· by a amaU amount the proposed support ror the Univensity of leaH ano. faclna the to\llhest. $4.C billion. ln Propoalllon 13 Callfomia or tht: state colleges ·~ ~. FebfllatY 1. 1979 DAI\. Y PILOT :A,S . . . .. . ,; PropoaiUoo u ~xamln•UOl'I of batlout. tund1 ror too l aov~m-cam wU.h. lit.ti ~e-view, w•• el-el&l ----~ ..... ~stwte1nldlft ummJl·-- ._ ___ m"'i-nlltitM" ..... nrb'lt. WttttwnrHrmm;-· ~ et1'lfila a ----ol!tlflt1t-.'9ft"-tJei~~"-··;,,;;:.:;::~ll..i~-~~~~--~--~~~~..-.~~~~~ ttate cooftreoco of female elect.-a urned that locally elected of· td clly and county oWclals ficlals. spending primarily local· Jd J I Hi l • ly raised revenue, were directly He aa t • "unrtf l c• to accoW\table to the taxpayers hope ror any m.,or increases and bad a li0 ht rein, becau.e the only way• to rtnance " major lncttues arc through tax Buf now, the community col- l nc reasea, whic h have no leceoeetmorestatemoneylban 12 _Charges · ·Filed After Gun Attack polltlcaJ support, or by cutUne either UC or the state university other forms of state aid to local and college system. ~ SAN DIEGO CAP > A freclde-raced teen-aae girl has been charged wltb 12 criminal counts, including murder. an connection with a sniper attack in the parking lot of Cleveland ·Elementary School. gonrnment -: Already, Sl3.7 billion of Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s $20.S billion spending plan is earmarked for local govern· ment, either in shared pro- grams, subventions or bailout runds, Hamm .said. . THEY ARE IN line for $852 million from the state in Brown's 1979-80 budget, an amount equal to 70 percent of all of their r-evenues. • ·'Community ~olleges more than any other type of govern- ment are going lo be s ubject to ah increasing level or review ... Hamm srud. ~eaRoa_d · An unoccupied ca'f is awash in Spring Valley after Wednesday's storm d.umped more than two inches of r~in on the San Oiego area. Dozens of roads were report· ed closed in the area and many houses were evacuated.· -The attack killed the principal and head c u s t o dian and wounded eight pupils and a police officer . . _ A PETITION filed Wednesday in Juvenile Court by the district attorney's office accuses Brenda Ann Spencer, 16, or the shoot· mgs. TUE COMMUNITY colreges, which are getting $817 million this year, are the only element of local government receivlnf( SJJctr" masstve nate funds with· out extensive stale review . . And Hamm said the relative lack of control is undoubtedly going to change, because both the governor's office apd Legislature are looking for places where controls are lax. More Farm Workers Leave ·Jo~ In the petition. Deputy District Attorney Charles L. Patrick re· quested that Miss Spencer, who police say has a history of petty theft and drug abuse. be tri~ as an adult. The petition also a lleges "special circumstances," which means that if she is tried as an adult and convicted of murder, she-could be sentenced to life in state prison without parole. IF 'tllE CASE IS handled in Juvenile Court, the girl could be free in seven years. In addition to murder, the red- haired junior at Patrick Henry High School was charged with nine counts of assault with intent to kill and one of assault with a deadly weapon on a police ol- ticer. Juvenile Court Judge WJtltam L. Todd Jr. said he will probably set a date next week for a hear· ing on whether Miss Spencer will be tried as an adult Until the eal"ly 1970s. com· munity colleges received all but a small fraction of their support from local property taxpayers. Teain Policing Plan to Stop ' LOS ANGELES CAP> -On Feb. 11, the team policing ex· periment initiated by former Police Chief Ed Davis will be terminated. says Police Chief Dar)'I Gates. Instead, Gates said Wednes· day, detectives and patrolmen will again go their separate' way~. Under the team policing policy, detectives and patrolmen worked together in 65 teams. each unit responsible for one geographical area and all the cr'imes within it. By Tbe Associated Press About 1,200 more farm workers have walked off their jobs to protest strike-breaking ef. rorts or lettuce growers op the eve of a rally with UnUed Farm Workers Union founder Cesar Chavez. The rally was scbeduled this afternoon, when Chavez is to arrlveinCalexico. · Other than the walkoff by ex- tra Cield bands at six farms, the lettuce fields of the Imperial Valley were relatively peaceful on Wednesday. % In• Col&de SAN DIEGO CAP ) -The c rewmen of a n F -4 P hantom fighter were hospitalized in sta· ble condition today as a search went on for two other fliers miss- ing after two Navy Jets collided 64 miles south of San Diego, the . Navy srud. Lt. Cmdr. James McNair, 32, of Cantonment , Fla .• pilot or the "Charles Dickens" A~unique exhibit of 25 life-sized figures from f al!orite Dickens' novels . at F~hion island on Th~rsday~ F~bruary 1 thru F1!'1~~, ~~!.'~!!_ 12 in #3 Fashi~s.~an<l: Char.actersfrom ~Christmas Carol" • "David Copperfield," "Oliver Twist ~ . and ritanY ·more Created especially for this premiere tour of '!be · United States by Bermans & Nathans Ltd :, of L~~don .. • F-4. and bis radar intercept of· ficer, Lt. Ted Dewald, 29. of Point St .. Lucie. Fla .. were plucked from the sea by a Coasl Guard helicopter Wednesday. Their jet collided with an A·4 Skyhawk during a routine train- ing mght, a spokesman said. The Skyhawk crew was missing. CradaKH&4 AZUSA <AP > Four Covina teen-agers were killed when their compact car plunged 350 feet down a mountainside and landed upsidt down in a stream. California Highway Patrol of· Cicers said, The victims, all 17. 'were iden· tirted today as J ames J . Muraca, Ronald D. Cleary, Scott . Spencer and Charles Robert Stickley, said CHP Officer Jim Cox. election expenditures totaled S3.26 million and be outspent his Republican oppenent. former Attorney General Evelle J , ,Younger, by more than $1 million, according to campaign reports. Brown's expenditures between July l and Dec. 31 were the highest ever r eported by a gubernatorial candidate in the general election. state campaign experts told the San Francisco Chronicle on Wednesday. Van Bouten to 1t' aft FRONTERA. Calif. <APl- Fo r mer Charles Mans on follower Leslie Van Houten has been denied parole despite good e v a I u at ions r r o m p r is o n psychologists and staff mem· be rs. B.....,.. Top• R ecord "Society has no defense . . m LOS ANGELES CAP> -Gov. . this type of crime. except to Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s 1978 re· isolate the offender.'' Commuru- ( SI'A.TE J ty Release Bo.ard chairman Ruth Rushen saad Wednesday "We feel we must observe you longer before we can project your parole date." D.A.., Cop• S..ed SACRA MENTO <AP > - Michael D. Small, a San Rafael attorney, has (iled a $2.4 million damage suit in federal court here accusing Solano County, Di s tri ct Attorney Neal Mccaslin, sheriff's deputies and Vacaville and Vallejo police o! battery, false arrest and false impnsonment. The suit ste ms from an mc1· dent in front or a Vallejo home. reportedly used as headquarters by the Hell's Angels motorcycle gang. Making Room for Spring IS NOW IN .PROGRESS . . . . -. 50% to 75% off· on FALL -HOLIDAY and EARLY $PRING CLOTHING -SHOES and ACCESSORIES Meft'I Sfon. 6l F111d• lll•d 644-6500 . . , J t , Orang 1lyP1lo1 Eiftto--~.,. Pag.:.e __ _.._ __ •Th•~·-"l·..11:.-_ .. ,u ....... ~·.' ....... ______ •R•ooer-t•N•.•w•eed-'.Pu.·t>·tt•she_, -·T•ho•m•a•1•K•~•.,•u•1e•d·"·°' .• _... • ~ .. ., -• .. ,.. Btrbara Kre1blch1Edltorlal Page Editor I . . af ty First on . ..,· ...... 1111"1..-f)eeision Jl~own IRtends~to-Lead· €hang Aluminum ele(trlcal "'1nn , Judam by th Oran& SACRAMENTO Gov •• Ed· County fires and n ar.fl Ith ~en b am d Cor 1n past mund G. Rl'Own Jr .• tar Jtom Y an, apP4rcntly ' • fe u its Atu.rdler COWl· nln'hln& at the rfdkul_, or Jim· t rpart. coepe...!'.,. my Carter'• WasbJnrton-over CQWl.t.y, .. 'L.&:6 r4"""9t emer-t._,___,,,_"'"ft'!r-""tm1tnd tor a · l!onrtitu· hu\1(.'n't already to ban lumlnum warln.g from their bulld-ta opaHy imposed balanced an <."Qd • federal budget. ia eonvlnted the ln trvan now 1 u pro al to pcrmtt the so·call~d U S as on the verge or fun- "new tecttnolog ,.. luminum "Iran thnt ltt> promoters damt'nta1, inrlittion-connected c laim is as ~r~ ~ lhe pro\•NI ropper product. · f:~~~;! ~~~:~.that he intends Though the •·n ,. •· lumlnum hu the opproval of tht! In the rew days of his second p.decwnlen l.nboratoi;. Jt I· th c<>mpUcated mstallo· tcrmp Brown bas already lion proc dure to makt! al bale lhot has r1remenworried. w r 0 u g h t One fire mur hul ~ays there slmply arcn 't enou~h in· p o I 1 t i c u I 'P<"~lors '" utublc to be ~ure aluminum wiring ts in · change here stult(\(t pl'\•P<'rl~ . that bas split An improper'ly "tr d cOMecuon can make the new. h I m fr 0 m ·· afc" technolo~y JUSt as risky as Its poorer quality pre-conventional decessor .,..,,rsc even. because the expectation ls that it :~dt~el~~!~~ i!. sar(' tunning help Oth~r c1ltcs. hk<' c\\ port Beach uod Huntington r r om both llcach. already have bunned aluminum wiring in res· e I e c t e d 1dcnces. Irvine . too, should have no reason to gamble Republicans human lives lo test a new lt.'·chnology' it can't afford to and influential businessmen police But H is the nation a 1 Democrirtic pa rty and the 1980 Parking H;ead~che We may only have imagined that Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart cringed when the suggestion came up. But when it was proposed at a recent City Council m eeting that residents of West Yale Loop homes simply call p6lice for permission for guests to park along the no· parking avenue. we do believe he mnched a bit. The homeown ers were riled because since their houses front the s treet; and parking isn't allowed.except in back alleyways. they felt like servants entering their own homes from the rear. They pleaded the additional indignity of having to stand out front. sometimes in the dark waving nas hlights. to flag down confused guests who couldn 't rind their hosts . The c~ncil fudged its no·parking rule on the busy 'street to allow residents and others to park overnight. from 6 p.m . to 7:30 a.m . · That lc rt the street unparked on during heavy traffic hours when city officials said parking would be most dangerous to persons usinll the bicycle and jogging lanes. On weeken~. council members said, afternoon partygiver~ still could .call poHce for special permission to park on the street. We can we ll imagine. as Chief P eart no doubt is, the tnaffic officer s busy on their radios. running license plate checks lo determine if tbe owner or that car on West Yale Loop is just the g uy invited-over lo watch the Sunday af. ternoon basketball game. or your, ordinary no-parking violator Traffic Here to Stay presidential nominalioJ'. wnlch Brown clearllf wants. that will reel the full rorcc or Brown's political conversion. Brown is hurling his challenge directly at President Carter. Sen. Edward Kennedy and the party's tradi· tional constituencies. As he told us in his office h~re : "America is running on panic today" a nd voters want basic fiscal changes to end the horror of ln· n ation and make America com- petitive again. BOTR BROWN'S principal legislative leader, Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, and the s tate 's t o p Democrat in Washington. Sen. Alan Cranstnn, have publicly broken with Brown on his Jan. 8· inaugural demand for a constitutional ban on rede r al re d ink. Indeed. Brown is probably the first just- elected governor to be booed by r his own state party, as he was at the Democratic convention here Jan. 20 when he first appeared at the podiurp Instead of backing down with apologies. Brown carefully built his case in a tightly reasoned ex- planation of fiscal "reality," then attacked "experts," ''the Mailbox Ph.D. ·a" and the "timid soull" who dofcnd red·lnk apendln• even at the peak of \oday's re- covePy cycle. At 1he end. de· lep~s-itr'ttre n'8th>n•s17rosr liberal Democratic purty gave him a standing ovation. THAT IS the quintessential Brown today: explain, then at- tack from what be feels is a secure position of political stre~ Brown, an orlglnal toe or California's Proposition 13. had his eyes. opened to reality when voters tlere approved it by a huge majority last year. As ooe or 1¥s top aides told us: "He feels he experienced something very personally about the voter mood today that rew other politi- cians have reJt. ... Lona consJderfd a poUUcal force an end or deficit apendln,..J oddball, Brown find.a tbot h1a or-and hall what he caUs "t.bb fenaive hat suddenJy'made him n peI.vene government money fIX\ure at ~l .A3eL!!~Uli'--"'6t\1Wi"lo\MJ~· .... • ~m....¥Jedia&-at....Uae.__...,--~ .. • slmn71feaooweoupsomew atun· . .. a to us. Ii directly.lied expectedly at the San Franci.sco to the decline or its c urrency convention of lbe NatJonal Food which in turn i11 dlrectlt in· Processors Jan. 23 and talked for nuenccd by the immense reCl·lnk 45 minutes, highly unusual for s pending of the pas t dozen Brown. Four days earlier he In· years. Politicians in Washington sisted on addressing \he top brass may have trouble understanding of tbe Big Four uuto companies that, he says, but voters have no (guestsoftheCa1Uornla Chamber trouble at all. of Commerce) at ~entu:ry Brown la.,.acutely sensitive Lo Plaza Hotel. Out-0f-Siate lnvita· charge~ that be ls a political op. lions for Brown are plllng \u> \n portunist wbo has undergone record numbers . frequen"'9conversions now from a liberal Democrat twho IN IDS interview with us at manaJ(ed Eugene McCarthy's the state capitol, Brown l9Ci8 presidential campaign ridipuled opposition to his call here> to a co nservative for a constitutlooaJ convention to Republican. What has changed, he insists, arc objectlve circumstances and the voters. "Before Franklin Roosevelt, no one could imagine the New Deal," he told us. "Now what is coming in the '80s no one ~an bt:g in to appreciate·. We are moving into a new cycle" -a cycle that will change the map of today's politics in unpredlcta· ble ways. TO REPUBLICANS and con· servatlve Democrats. this is like ca tnip. Fred L . Hartley. chairman of Union Oit, refused to give Brown a nickel ror bjs re· election campaign; he rccentJy sent $20.000 lo help llquidat~ Brown's $800,000 campaign debt. Republican Assembly leader Paul Priolo. the No. 1 opposition tegislatnr, bas informed his par. ty he will do nothing to blunt Brown's balanced budget cam- paign. One or Speaker McCarthy's trusted Assembly l e· a d e r s . a 0 e m o c r a t i c powerhouse on the Ways and Means Committee, warned McCarthy to expect no anti· Brown help from him. s11ying: 'Tm sticking with Brown and the balanced budget right into the While House." Brown himself is a man possessed or an idea and entirely convinced or his re<.'titude. Jr he can convince his party and his country. the world wiJI be -hear· ing more rrom Jerry Brown. Annual dinners sponsored by sucb groups as the Newport Harbor Area Chamber or Commerce frequenUy are viewed by a fter.-dinner speakers as occasions for µt- tering bland and cheery remarks of little or no substance. Taxpayers Runiiing Out of Generosity Such was not the case·Jast week with Irvine Company President Peter Kre mer. Kremer chose to speak on what has become a highly controv~rsial topic in Newport Beach -traffic. And he Rlade some good points. ln his straightforward remarks, Krem e r noted that even if all development were to halt in Newport, tra(fic problems would continue to grow because of regional growth. . - And he pointed out that if development continues to be blocked i.n Newport Beach buildings probably will be· gin springing up a ro und the city's penphery, dumping their ts:affic ontb city streets without contributing tax or otherdoHars toward solving the city's problems. While it would be unlikely that the head of the area's biggest land development flrm would take anything hut a pro·development stance, his remarks should be taken seriously by the Newport City Council's environmentalist majority. Continued city inaction on untangling the snarls is self-defeating. All the "thou shalt not'' tralfic and build· ing ordinances are too little -and 20 years to late. We'll 'have lo add traffic movement capacity just to stay ev.en. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this. page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Bolil 1560. Costa Meaa. CA92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 . To the Editor: We have Just been treated to a glimpse of what is described as "a lean and austere budget:" a budget with a deficit oC a stupe- fying $29,000,000,000! The huge federal agencies tl-at have been created over the years remain basically intact. The weight ·or their<lfat and fossiHzed bone will continue to be borne by the working class. Not only have no significant cuts been made, but we now must witness the efforts of a large segment of Congress Lo in· crease social programs, sub· sid'ies. and welfare. We are tnld that the enormous sums we have spent over ttu! last 30 years are inadequate. We ure chastised for being selfish and a rc reminded that we have a moral duty lD those less fortunate. I wish to stand toe·to·toe with those who accuse the working Americans of greedy Wsregard for the old, the needy and the minorities. and stale a position they seem unable to grasp. res'ponsive to the people they are paid to represent; they must not continue their allegiance to an idea whose time is past. This country's representatives arc this republic's firsl line 'of d e rense. However, If those representatives cannot' or will not sense that the winds of change are blowing, the Constilu· lion wisely made provision for a second line or defense -the in· itiative process. It's a drastic cure ... but we're in desperate limes, STEVEG.CHRISTMAN •Bft Of Cf .. s' To the Editor: The only one with any sense in that UCI newspaper episode was Miss Bjorneby <student of· ficeT who confiscated iss~ of the student paper). She showed a "blt of class." Hooray ror her attitude I I reaUze that It's very difficult for young peopJe to know whoni to imitate in our al ck -society1 but that's not so much I.heir lautt as it is the fault or their forebears. this fine man received from the Orange County bar and that his re-appointment was richly de· served" <end quoteJ. perishing from the earth. Bu't our untampered with franchise is stilJ our·best hope. B. f . BORCOMAN NOW. dear voters. your dis· LI Hf f f-• claimers at the polls wind up as ~••e ea• •g ... accolades for the judge, and To tbe F.d.itor : your many,. many votes against In your Jan. 15 editorial, him. for»wtiatever reason, are as ''License Boards Due · for Cut- nothing compared fo the "over· back" you expressed a partiality whelmlng .. support gendered by for mab1tainjng those licensing4 the vastly fewer in numbers of boards which affect public safe. his associates. Thus we view a ty. Unquestionably. each licens- judgc's determination of the log board must be able to stand democratic process. up to public scrutiny. But there . Also. her concern lo have the is far more to be measured than public know ltow wrong they just public safety to justify the were. is touching· indeed. And we existence of a board. all know how practiced Gov . In the case of the Certified Brown is at nullifying results at Shorthand Reporte rs Board, the polls, A sure way. at times. there are a number of cogent rea· to gain a lucrative spot. even an sons for its m aintenance. .. elevation, .. Is to Jose at the Unlicensed a nd incompetent polls and get overwhelming sup· people acting as court reporters port from .one's cronies, as wit-have caused difficult problems ness the national scene also. and legal entanglements, plac- 1 do not bring into question the ing the litigants on both sides or integrity of the· judge. but it a case in jeopardy and resulting brings to mind that there arc too in great expense to the tax-many losers at the JlQlls that are payers kept alive. oo the political and · public scenes, by be!ng re-AS A result of a recent case ~-~oyd/Walking-- THE AVERAGE laxpayef'has been effusive In bis J(~neroslty; he has backed his words with the --tweaH>fwhi brow-tO'"ltelp those unable to help themselves. He has given until it hurts arutthen gon .. on to-double aoa triple the con_trjbution. The New Deal, the New Frontier a nd the Great Society havt9be.en supported lo the hilt by lhe guy with a . 1 vote ror Miss BJorneby to be ppoialed edlto .oL:Ula~UCL.W.. dent newspaper. Sounds as though she has enough sense to know what l!l newsworthy for a developing culture. warde~e!f.~sit19ns_bY ........... i tt-vo t-+--11·-"' "b o-t'~lf v1 ue o n>eing reJec eel by the ri9 • :: 6 d · b lh voters and having friends ln ~ansc pt, as escnbed Y e bigh places. JUd~e. prepared recently by one By L. M. BOYD What-may r>e most s1gnrt1· cant about the fact that the average woman walks 10 miles a day is that it's one mlle farther than the average man walks a day. No doubl the drinkers or iced tea with lemon in it won't buy the claim that the best thirst quencher known to the scientists is grape Jul<'e. Dear Gloomy Gu I wish people.like F.W. O. who run arount) HY· Ing, "I Jove wel 1 weat.ber" «Gus, Jan. %4) would drown In 1 downpour of "character" -or re· move the two r~t or mud. from.,~ Job•lte. P.H. The word "sermon" isn't ~n the Bible. I'm lDld. Q . "Wh y i s a iany ctrarncter sometimes called a screwba ll'? Wh y that word?" A. Best guess is it goes back Lo horse talk. A blend· lng of the word "s.kewballl" which is the correct term ror a horse that's white and bay, rodn, brown or chest.out. Please note, "piebald" only alludes to a wblte and black horse. Q. "Why's a quarter called two· bits?" A . That Mexican coin known u the real wu re· ferred to by cowboy• u a bit. Two of them were about the equal ol 2S cent.. Q. "How r11t can • boUJe mouse nm?" A.· Four miles an hour la lops.\ .I 1 f you know anybody named O'Connor, you· might mtnUon tbll: Claim ta t.he O'Connor ramlty tree or Ireland cao be traced back farther than any other ln lhe Western World. Accounted lor so rar are e1 aeneratlons an tbe •8.Y to ~· Fmedacb lllo luot, tiam I ,,· D. 1S. paycheck. . We have seen the massive growth of government and have been told that that growth Is necessary. We have seen the working ranks thinned by the al· lure or "something for nothing" welrare programs and been told that it ls unfortunately inevita- ble. We havJ? seen our economy manipulated and altered and been told the problem is too complex for us to understand. We have watched as our .educa· Uonal system bas been tinkered and fussed with And been loJd It is the dawn of a new age. SOCIAL SEC\JlllTY is a dia· aster ln the ·face of rampant, federally created inflatlon. Welrare programs are abused.In direct relation to the loss or dip!· ty forced on its-participants. ln- centi ves to Individual enterprile are atlf1ed at the very time wben their ,abl.Uty to crea\e ~ ia needed mott. The attempt to legi1l1\e aood wlll amon' ua bu coademaecl our daUclrea to become nameleu facet atarlnl from lbe wl ndow1 of paglq bu .. e1. Our leaders mUJt realize tbal their charter \a not to creat. a pbjl~al...et mm lD '#bicb we all mf,1 • Tbey IDUlt be . MRS. LOUIS D. MARKEL t'ote•l ... ~d To the Editor: I was apalled when l read ·Judge Lamoreaux• apologia <in . a letter to the DaUy Pilot or Ja.n. 24 > regarding Judge Leonard Goldstein's rejection at tbe polls. Surely, her idea to justify circumvenUng the people's de- cision. is cause for great alarm. ' J do not know either Judge Lamoreaux or lhe object of her defense, Judge Goldstein, so I do not allude to ellhcr·s quallfica· lions: but r am concerned over lhe thwartinlJ or the people's franchise. <Quoting from her letter to the ed.Jtor, In wb.lch 1he ,also quotes from her letter lo Gov. Brown>: ''As can be seen, the Jou or these Judie1 wu not based on any peraonal dlaquaUncatiocll 6r actlvltles, ~ut waa more a blanket vote against incumbents and ln no way renecu agalnat Judg• Goldateln. 1 am thereloro wrltlna tbla Jetter to ask II there l• anything you can do to 'keep Wm hi thci Judiciary. elU.. by re-appointment elaewbere throuahoul the state, or an. elevation to tbe Appellale Court. "-"I truat th•t you wm 1bare UU. Jewa-with tbe pubUc• to hel \MIQ UndeJ'ltaDd more rw_ay ovenrhelmlta& tuppst Furthermore, while we have unhcense~ perso~ d~ring a fru5tralions enough from tho~ lengthy cnramal trial m Santa we duly elect to office. many ol Clara County, ~th parties ex. our great.est frustrations are the peel lo have to retry the matter work or those appointed <not -at a cost or.~.ooo. e lecte d> to unbe li evably The C~rhf1ed Sl)~rt hend powerliit and deapot.ic posts. Report.en. Boar~. an mdepen· What this adds up to is that dent and 1mpart1al state llcens· "Government of the people, by ing board, has not excluded the people and for the people" is potential licensees. As a matter or fact, there is now an over- abundance of court reporters in tfie 11tate of CaJifomJa. Your sug- 1estlon that professional and W'lefa trade orga.niuUons administer examinations for competency certainly would be open to critidam, since those groups ob- viously bave a self.serving in· t.erest In obll\ining rnore di.tel· paying membcra. The best protectlon for the cC)Dawnen of our services -at- tomeys, Judges, llUtants,. and taxp"Yers -can be provided by the Certified Shorthand Reporters Board through Ill Ucenalnl ~ures. GARY M'. CRAMER, CSR President CaJllornia Court ..Jlaport.en AMOC,laUon • l.Att•r1 from ,.....,., .._ eoekolM. Tfw rifM to condrw l«Urt '9 /ti fPOCf <>r etitnftde W.l b ~~ Ltdtn• o/ Ml IOOrdl or kn dU t. giNft pvt/er.,.,.., AU ldt.a•.,..., _. dude~ and~ Qddr.., bllt "°'"" maw t. tlWilwld °" ,.. itf.f~rmbOAiGf-. ,, ... -....... • • ' . .. .. • f ... Classes Sta rt Carla Kandel. a San Clemen,te High School student. models a s part of fashion merchandising course offered by Capistrano-La~una Beach Regional Occupational Program. Registration for spring semester courses for high school students and adults is available from 9 a .m .. to 8 p.m. Friday at 31522 El Camino Real in San Juan Capistrano. Additional information is avaJlable by call- ing 496-3Il8. C lemente ff Qspital ' . Selec·ts. New Head . Malcolm L Johnson has tK>en named administrator of San Clemente General Hospital. sue· ceeding R .. H'<lnnan "Bob'' Jon es; who r es ign ed in December, after a disagreement with the hOSP.ital'S board of directors Johnsoll. 47, was formerly vice president in thmge of opera- tions for. Human Ex Cotp., the - firm which manages t ffc San. Clemente.. hospital and olhers:. Jo.nnson said he rook over tenf- por;1rily from Jones. until a · perm1lnent administrator could he found, but enJoyed the San . Clemente Ho!'pilal so much. it was agreed he sf\ould stay as ad- ministrator. "THERE IS a tremendous op· portunily here for growth and de· velopment," said Johnson, "and lhat 'st.hekind oOituation where l feel I am at my best." The n ew San Clemente General admini strator had worked in hospital management in 1't'xas and North ern Califorrua before 1oimng Human Ex with corporate headquarters in Orange in· 1977. JOHNSON SAID he expects San Clemente General to expand its outpatient facilities tn corning months. as an atte mpt lo avoid costly inpatient hospitalization wh enever possible. Sayln~ he believt.>s hospital ad- ministrators should be involved Food Bids Olril' ~IMt Staff~ TO HEAD HOSPITAL Malcolm Johnson in the local community. Johnson said he and his wife plan to m ove f rom Oran ge to a Shorecliffs home i n San Clemente within the coming weeks. The Johnsons have two J?rown sons, one 'in the Coast Guard and the other in college. Court Work · Postponed • • P'lrld SaD a.mente city parka employee Gary 8UmS' bas filed a la wault a1alnat. the city In Oruae County Superior Court. atkiAt t.hat b1a dilmissal be set ulde. 8uTna waa fired by City M anaaer ~raid Weeks on Sept. 28 for -hat aid were hia ln· a8equacles as a city em· .,loyee and for his part ln placing a 'newspaper r advertise - ment which "'\ ., .; m a y b a v e • •u1tN1 cost a city eounciJman his job. ' Burns appealed Weeks' action before lbe city planning com- mission, sitting as a city person- nel board. in November. M er more than eigh t hours of t~stimony and 10 days of de· liberation. the board upheld Weeks' dismissal of BW'ns. Since he was fired, Burns has been operating bis own landscaping business. San Clement~ Deputy City At- torney Michael Bartlett said to- day he expects the Superiof Court judge to review the record and either overturn or affum the ·city's dismissal of Burns. The judge could also order addi· tional hearings, said Bartlett. Sout.h Coast YMCA. Sets $30,000 Goal The South Coast YMCA's board of director s has established a fund-raising goal of $30,000 lo supwt activities in the souther~ange County area. . ' Over 32 percent of the YMCA's total anticipated incom..--w;11 come from this fund-raising campaign, a spokeswom an noted. Over 90 volunteers will be con- tacting area businesses and in- dividuals to secure donations. . . .... The South Coast YMCA seeks $20,000 from ma)or area con- tributors such as businesses and corporations. The group is hop. ing to raise $10;000 from area families and individuals. For further information.!. con· tact the South Coast YMt;A at 831-YMCA or 495-0453. Sewer Lin·e Work SeJ In Laguna A sewer Jine being instaJled under South Coast Highway neHr Victoria Beat'h wiJI provide so m e inconvenience f or motorists the next two months. Aliso Water Management Agency officials say construe· lion crews will, on occasion, close the highway to one lane in Deadline. Set Orange County Supervisors order to move equipment. agreed lo a 50·day. delay in a That means traffic wllJ back Deadline for bids on the food South Orange County Municipal up on Coast Highway on oc· and equipmrnt concession at Court remodeling project casion. AWMA omcials say. The Aliso Beach Park has been set at because it may be t.oo costly. agency ts constructing a sewer 2 p.m. Feb. 26. County ofCicials had set aside line to connect with a treatmimt The concession stand is local-$70.000 to have the room now plant in Aliso Canyon. ed on the pier in South Laguna used as the sheriff 's substation at Aliso Canyon and Pacific rem-Odeled into a courtroom. Pipe laying along the Victoria Coast HJghway However, only one contractor Beach section is slow, officials .. 'Tluld9y. i=.t>ruary t, 1979 l/SC OAILY PILOT A kts Art Center . • By STEVE MITCHELL comrrtan\Ues 1lnce th~ late 19tb OfUlt~ ...... llMf ceOt\.lrJ, .ad<ilni the migration la oot as much d.isewssion and in· tellectualizJng among artists about tbelr work ... La1upa Beach ba$ beeo· baa sometimes dven the tnwn111 featured in a t.aree circulation natlonaJ lf1d international rep· art ma•~•ine and a-National ut•liom•t.\aff()lforariiata. WlllCll APPAaBNTb¥ sits Geographlc Society publlcaUon well wtth the well·known local In recent artleles that should Aa 'l'IS'IS ,WERE interviewed artist who adds, "I love the peo. h ave mosL chamber of com· in fl~of the.\ e art communities, pie here because they leave me me.rce m e mb e rs doing lncludlng ir.ockport, Mass.: alone." cartwheels. p r o· v l n c et o w n , M a ss . ; "America's Sunset Coast," a Woodstoc , !ILY.; Taos, N.M. Sassone terms lia1 aunha Bet~bclh book. ,..,bu-a....f by·National Geo-and Lam•na n~•, .. cb. "a paradise. an nex aus' e t r aph1 k•tffe9-1-.-IHMH~------"--~-u.c __ .. ~--:-----4"1.~apiratiott. '' - b ... _ F t1 t r A d The magaziJJ&e's writers con-eac , "'~ es va o rt.s an t~ted Lag'*4' 's own Marco · He ~aid there ls a current ~~:~ ai::;a::1=:.rs among S•sone, a Me.\•-impression.ist ~rend tn Laguna ~ach ht.ol whahrd and nature pajntll,. who has lived . artist-<>wned gallenes1 w c e A\JTBO& M ERRIL Windsor in LafW\8 Beach .since 1970, tor says leads~ better presentation .and pbotographef' James A. comment on Lagw~ a's art scene. of an artists wotk.. Sugar spent several days in the The· Florence., 1Ualy native .. There are few places that Art Colony gatbertng material say.s Laguna Beach differs from compare to it," be says in the for a full-color spread on the other art colonies m that "there article, "even in Europe .• , Pageant's livine versiqn or Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Sup- per ," as we ll as photos of models and vol unteers backstage at Irvine Bowl. The aut hor also go.es into great detail describing Laguna Beach as an artist colony. The book will be distributed wordwide, according to Festival publicist Sally Reeve, who was Interviewed for the Laguna seg- fl)ent. AND LAGUNA Beach lives up . to Its reputation as an Art Colony in the latest edition o( American Artist magazine, MoulttJ''" Playlwuse To EleL"!t Directors Four seats 00 the Lagun.\ Moulton Community Pl~ybous~ board or directors wiU be fill ed dun.ti g an annual membership m eeting of the organization Feb. 12. Board president Jacquie l\•orrett has announced she wUI not seek anothet three-year tttm '"' the-12·member panel, and bo&Fd member Nick Williams said ,he . . also will decline to run. auditorium beginning at 7t30 which describes the. local art I NCU MBENT S SEEKIN'i:.· ·populace as "crazy but nice." new terms .are Ruth Scbryvel" OTHER NOMINATIONS for p.m. • The New York-based monthly and Richard A. Stepp. OtJlel' board seats may be from the circulates to 136,000 subscribers nominees are former Lagulla floor, according to Playhouse of- n..ationwide, and the February Beach High School PT A activist ficials the meeting is open to the edition features an article on Barbara Painter. and R. Stoney . 230 members or the Playhouse, fi ve so·called art communities, Mayock II, owner of Mayock 1md a champagne reception wiJl including Laguna Beach. Corp .. a real estate brokerage. \\ lllow. The article says groups or The annual membership meet· For more information, call the American artists have gravitat-ing will be held in the Ptayhou_se Playhouse at dll-8021 . ed lo small ruraJ and ...:S~e;.::a.::;si:..::d~e-------------·'---------------- College's Emeritus Day Set Folk and Polynesian dance shows, art and health exhibits and con- s um e r counseling sessions will highlight· Friday's Saddle back College Emeritus Day for ~oµth Orange Cqunty seniors. Activities get un- derwa)"'at 10 a.m. al the Emeritus Centec"s ·Quad, near building M on the Missio n Viejo school's lower campus. MORNING festivities will include campus, t o urs, academic counseling, exhibits on crllne prevention and exercise tecbnlques for the elderly. Lunch will be availa- b I c in the campus cafeteria or seniors ma w ish to brin g their lunch. T H E AFTER NOON program begins at I in the 'Fine Arts Theater. The sessio n w i l l feat•re ente rtainment by the Emeritus String ~mphony and a talk by Laguna Beach writers Lee and Leland Cooley. Trans portation to Emeritus Day is a\laila· ble from various senior centers throughout the South County Orange area. For further informa- tion, phone 831-9700 or 495-4950, ext. 207. 'Shipmates' Slate Dance South Orange Cpun- U-install 1 M GARAGE DOOR C>PeNER ... Deluxe Digital Model has all the best fea11.u·es! -S<>1 your o"'n trPQUPncy '" Sl'COlld~ 10?1 P<l"oVblP C(lffl· b•n<111ons P•ov1de' the grPcil f'~I 11 C'iJSlllC OI Su<.U•oty • D •Q tat ConltoH; 13~~ 9 9 ., l /J HP M )IOr • S11tt•ly A!'V• •St.' REG. . '• L•Qht T "'" Oe!Jy 169.99 • • E:.nv· To·IMlillf l • F115 Any Typo Qverheao Dooi YOU SAWIT ON NETWORK TV. ~UBJl!CTTO STOCK ON HANO· SALE INOS 2/11 /7f STANLEY Mini Storage System ..A-::_.;,~~~~~O----'lt'°1'11Dt::==:::~SP8312 4 Hooks - 16" (406mm) Bar Solves Your Storage Problems • 0.111111ze ~our 11•••oe. betemont. c1osots • Anecnea 10 atuo' or wallbOard • Hoo~' slide lo any poGllion • Safety 1 .. 1u1e P••Yf!nt» hOOk• from l>e•"Q ~nockoel on • Hang hQlll welgfll IOOla, mop9, brooma. dUJl pana and work clothes • Hold up to 5 lbl ~ hOoll 01 20 lbs i>er 11;• Pet Pendipg Only Bid P<!Ckages for the lO·ycar bid on the work and the bid was say, because the must avoid a --leaw-ar&.oiiWaileble-et-the·coun-·-4l1·~cent'h1gherthun--wttaCwas--:mg eorW\Oe'rgrounau th esTn ty's.Real Estate office. 400 Civic budgeted. the area. Construction crews are _t,y;. Sblpmat.c.s...Square ·Dance Club will hold it." monthly dance Feb. 10 at San Clemente's Com- munity Center, Avenida Del Mar at Calle Seville . ~'° llOAD.,WAJ ~A~llACH --OPll -J-DAYS - ,, • Center Drive Wesl. Santa Ana. Tuesday county supervisors also tunneling under the street For £urther lnformalion contact agreed to the delay while new instead of trenching as in other Tom Galvan, 834-2550. bids are sought for the work. areas of Laguna Bea~h. 497-4403 :• •.• .a. - . . FROM Fash ion Islan d Newport Beach STEREO SOUN.OS OF .TH.E HARB_Q~ ----.. .. ; ' I -227Emt c •. .. • ..• , .. s •• •. oda esa Tllh ~Wt .... Jlnt 0.. ~ ...• ,, llO °'THI MAJOIHTY OF OUI nam... GOES! Tllh ... s.i ............... "-""' T1 ••••••• PIUIMT STOCI ••• 11 n. ...._,,,...... n.. ... UJ"Tm.Y ••.llDUSs t•••• a..ct 0w D•t• ' •11 Te.,....,.. Mam•••• MOW- Of COST OI LOSS IMCUlllDJI Wt,._ Te~ S.. • .._ DN1tk Ull DAY l90ll n5T8DAYt A.t e..t ... Mew e..t ... ..._ C... •.. C~lli~NN tee b1SeMJp ... Cllr1 ,..,..,c.-tltAcc114l•d M-..MoDIH918Ct. Wt .... TWIXTUMICOWPllClhftt0..,'1'1119t . ..... .... Of Ow,,...... ...... Wd A-' r...... .... w .... c= ,.... .......... SWIFT a POSmYI WINI 4CTIOftt c-.. A-'~ C'Oll91Q ·,, IYBY ITIM IH CAii STOii HAS ... IVT'HLISSlY I Wiit....., Dolw Y .. c;. s,.t. Y• W., Net S.. ..... '"OW Tt.t SUSte FOii CiMCI DtSPOSIAJ ....... llNmld ........... HtW ha ... ._,.._..._ TiltM ..._,_.A &...,T1-To Cwt MEN'S JACKET$"l ·&COATS "PACIFIC TIAIL" "LfJ VIS" "HMHIMC.TOM" "LO' IE M STU.,.. . 119 ttodl IHW.1 do wtt flH = ......... Wlf: ....... .... ftlckeh " loo-lo .... fedllh. .... Al ...... .,._ foc•ets, corcb woys .ct -.. 119 •sMty oil coton la tbes ~XL J gro,_.s =~~~~ .. ~~ .... 59.88 =~~~.~~ .. ~11.• IN.T0$6S.f.s24 • ~ J:: -~~·ti s.oo to s:s.oo , •• Y, .. YJ OFF W,EN'S BELTS "LE'llS" "HICKOK" lh) •• ....., of ttyln -c .... shes 21 .. 54 ...... .,..,.. v~oRMORE OFF MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS ... AllOW" styta a.cw. l...t, tri ..... .tc. LCllllJ .ct._.. ..... " ....... ,... ...... tk. ..... colon ..... 14/141/J to I 7/171/>. J .... tJ"O'PI IEG. TO SIJ.00 s5 •. .. prka ·-· -···· •, RK. TO SIJ.00 $6 • .. price........ • =~~·.~·.~~-· sa.• MEN'S LEVIS StylH l11cl1de HLLS, llC. IELLS, NUYO FLAIES, SflitGHr LIGS. SHRJMl TO FIT, CORDUIOYS. All etre ......., .......... coaonllt li-.-ourlNTIU - HUSISTOCI. ~TORT 59.88 MEN'S MEN'S LADIES SPORT SHIRTS PAJAMAS BLOUSES & TOPS "PURITAN" "KIMHIMC.TON" Dttn• ,... .. prtu ... • ... "WILD CHHIY" "DlnOS" "SPiil" "LAHCH" "LIYIS.. •qrlety of colors. Shu "WIAMGLH" "GLAD~GS"· '"WIU>Ale' ~OFF SHORr.... s.M-l-XL OUR EHTIRE STOCK. "CHESTNUTS" "ACTION r °"'""" 1'9. wwfft tfytes .ct $ "LEYIS .. .ct otti.n. l11e .... colon lit polyHhn, cott.M. IEG Sil 00 6 • loeg .ct *ri llN•t W...S. ...., la.g-'...,. ._.la ..a. f.ric.·........ • T-sMrtl. W tops. •sco llllrts, ... ~XL 4 .......... WH .... -.-cJt ..,... Dnuy $6 • 1----------~ •d cCIMd, Plollt 9d F.cy. =~~'.~.~... 0 MEt~'S SUITS ~ s-. 1 to ~s3. 5 ... ,, :~~'.~:~ .. sa.a Al~~R.!..~.~.!!.1 =~~-~.... . 510 U •. ,. ........ pot,....... 55 U =~~~~-.~ . = :=-~· !'~-: =~~~~·.~~... . s12 a ... 36 ... ,. •'911an. SMtts SJ U =~~~~ .. ~~. e ~~RESTOCKSUm =~•~1.~'.~ .... e =~~~~~~14;U 1EG.;.1t.so$5si,9o.oo 88 :~~~~·.~ ... s9.a 111e price.... • 1EG. TO no.ooS.12~• MEN'S DRESS & CASUAL PANTS •HA"Ar' 'UYIS" .. MOYIM OM" "FADED GLOIY" "lAMDWUB• '"WIANGl.8" oflMn, tf I• Ida II tfod Ill ... • .., .... ..,.... ~ ... ulort ........... lnllted .... c:orchtroy1, polyedtrt, ttc. ..... cMds, ,....,..., t\C-... ailn 21to44. 4 b1t "°"" ::-:..~ .. -'& IN.TOSZl.oos10 • .. ,nc....... • U .G.TOS24.00 ~12 •. .. price ....... • OUR EHTllE SlOCK Mhpriu ...... SPORTCOATS Mleprb ..... 18.88 REG. SSS.00 ~65.00 to 38.88 LADIES COORDH-tA TED SPORTSWEAR "FllE ISLAMDH" lttel1dta jock.ts. ,.ts. t111rts. W..... >----------4 'fHh., IWl .. 111, tldrf5, tops, tk. LADIES PANTS "Dinos·· "FADED .,LO~Y" "WIAMGUR" "LOVE H STUFF" "LAHDLUllH" met ........ IOO't .,_ IOO't of .. ""' ...... ..,.,. ......... cotonlllcWttstNiglltft91.W .. d low rbert, etc. fHltt, ltr11 .. d dtttl••· pre-we1htd ,._., etc.. etc.. tk. SIDI 3 to ll,25toll.41111p ..... =~~~ .. ~ ... IM.TOU4.00$1 I • .. price...... • ~EG.TOS26,00~12 • .. price ...... • Al ... Nlc"'-g or cw•• lt1d ill tWs •• 1111 MWfft colon. Slut 5 to 15, 6 to 16, ~ .. OUR EMTIIE STOCK llG. s1•.oo to ns.oo V2 PRICE PLEASENOlE ffHl1 od¥ertfMCI en W .ci santpll•g front o•r t.ge stod. EVBY ITEM IM THE STOIE IS OM SALE. loy1 le•ls I .Wrts. ........... a~::;•'· •1tderwtar, w mdoccnsoriH. war..., .. 111, 11M>rts. etc, etc. SHOP. . EAIL Y FOR IEST. SB.ECTIOM. ltt••. •cl prJctt ad! •ntlMCI _.. Mb{tct to ••"tr -'-cl .... to prior ... .thr Fridaf, Ftlt. 211d. • I 0 A.M. . . . :t=~ ... s14.U 11e:10sio.oos.14 U ............. . . FIRST COME·FllST SHVID • e IRE CLOTHES RACK . -. " . 227 EAST 17th SREEI • (ISi.A MESA 1N·1•MESA. CEMTER"-171h Strttl At OrmMJI A•tW ·Ill 1 ·1AL BIG & TALL DRESS SHIRTS "MAMHATTAM" "ARROW" "C.IMO" "EMIO" lo., •d ....................... c .... of ............ ~"" West -.,., • ...., -11 to-zo~ XL to XXXL J We).,..,. BIG & TALL DRESS PANTS BIG& TALL SPORT SHIRTS "PUllT IUf" "SPiil" .. uMca· "CAIBCWrottMn. A tu I II d-Mlectto. of al ... ..,.... .. polyfftan. c:otfofts, Wettds. 9fcmo. etc. LCMCJ CMd .a.ort .a..•ed "' 1&.es XL to XXXL.4~ , l~.TOSlt.~O s7 88 ... price ......... • HG.TOUl.50 SA 88 Mlhprice ......... -'7. REG. TO $25.00$12 • •price ...... • IEG. TO $30.00 s1 :41 88 ..a.price....... •• BIG & TALL SWEATERS "'-'-MIT AM" fft a _.. "HAC.&AI" "DAYS" "THE •.mty of c.d9mt1, fl'llo~ ICM AC IC•• • • L f y f S crews Hd Y·ttub. 100~ rAMATB.US""?VlrTAM"' wool, woof ..... ecryfks. Al wW. ......... Al en brGRd I 00,.o ,olyntert l• • 191• ••• colon. wl• .. r1ety of •siety of • MW tfyta _. ,....... ..t W wriqlth. Slift colen. dllcts. ...... .......... XL to XXXL. OUR ENTIRE .ct'_.., Sbet 40 to 54. J STOCK. ,,...,. RIG. s I e.oo to SJ0.00 :;i.~~.~: .. $9 •• .lit:,, =~~~.~~12.• t---REG-.--l-IG---TA-LL---1 R .. ·~-'.1·2···50· _ s 14.a LEISURE SUITS ,.._ ,_..-' _,chl19 f-U.+s lit• llG & TALL CASUAL PANTS "LIYIS.. "HA••At" •'LH" '"WIAMeUr St,tte 9cWt IA.ts for W.. ............ Ml a...... .... .................. ~ ... •try ....... 1tyl11 9.4 ...... c-.. ht ..... 54. 2 ...... ,/ 1•.TOUt.OOs12 • .............. . &514.U Mt •9'Mfy of stytes, colon _. ftirics. 56 .,, ill tlock .... JI to 54. Regs, lo.91 •d ..... ~-~.so .. $15 00 ywrcWc. ...... ~5.00 ·& 510.00.' BIG & TALL LEATHER JACKETS .,..... ..... ~ofc ...... 2' ..., ...... S0.12-14 Olly. .... ,.~ .•• .......... . .· . \ ... I • . .. . - .. . ~- ' THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1979 TEN CENTS • ·earst'-·F-ree . . 4 Appla~e G:~ets !ler at . A,, ........ WAVING PRESIDENTIAL COMMUTATION ORDER, PATRlCIA ttEARST LEAVES PRISON -:-wrttt Herl• Her Ffitnce end Former -guard Bern•rd Shew, Whom She'll Wed Soon Hll..LSllOROUGH (AP)..--~ amllhig Patricia Hearst walked out of prtaon into bright sunshine today and was driven directly to her mother's plush suburban San Francisco home., a free woman after a five-year odyssey of kidnap, crime and punish· ment. S he wa s met at lbe Hillsborough home by her mother and a large group of other family members and •friends who burst fnto applause as her car entered the driveway. Her father was not in tbe joined tbe group late... The Hearsts are separated. Ml.as Hearst went inside brief- ly, and then came out to chat with reporters, having donned a T-shirt with lettering that said : "Pardon Me." Asked whether she felt her or· deal badfcut five-years from her life. Miss Hearst said. "I agree in a way. It's iust been five NH au.-1 weald ntherbrfe "'ftnhed Into prl~ ·spent in another way, and 1 Just tallt. bopethatl'vegottenmoreoutoflt Her release from the prison than baa been taken away." . about 30 miles southeaat. of San Earlier al lhe prison in Francllco ac~ San Francisco P l ' . Bay was televised locally. euanton, Mtss Hears t .• 1 want to thllnk my parents, ~merged hol~ing her commuta· my sisters and George and Uon pa~n high over her bead. Bernie and all Uie people on the She '!u"met by a~mey George commit~ " Miss Hearst said. M~rt10e2 and her 1ance, ~lice smiling broadly as the sun rose officer Bernard w, while a behind her strengthened sec rity force She was· referring to a group patrolled the area and a p id California Hjgbway Patrol formed to pressure res ent helicopter hovefed OYerbead Carter to commute her sentence · for bank robbery. • As she walked through the en· Shaw had been quoted try area. she kissed Shaw on the Wednesday as saying his fiancee left cheek. migbl wear a bulletproof vest ·'This is quite a difference when she left prison, but she did from last time, and thank you not. and Shaw said today be bad all," she told reporters who been joking. · gathered at the·gates, apparent-. She was dressed in pale blue ly meaning the day she arrived slacks, a navy blue pana,. atthe pri!On last May. brown leather platform shoes On that day about 100 re-and' wore a gold band on her left porters crowded around and she band. Violent Weather Assails Coast • Tornado, Hail Rip County Wet, cold January ended Wednesday lo a burst of freak weather along the Orange Coast. Torrential rain, bail, sleet, snow and blgb winds bit an Orange Coast that bad basked for much of the morning under a bright sun and a cloudless sky. Sant.a Aria added a tornado to the astooiahins list. A ferocious twister screamed along south M•ln Street.leaving-toppled trees, shattered homes and shops -but no Injuries -in its wake. <Relat- ed story. pictures, Page A3> . Then the the rain came back Wednesday nJgbt and early to- day to hinder moppin& up opera- tions and add more traffic problems to a Main Street ibat was already jammed with rush hour traffic and cars filled with sightseers. By c.ontrast, the National Weather Service s aid today, February is coming in like a lamb. The forecast calls for showers tonight with the possibility of high winds early Friday. "But then," a forecaster said. "things wilJ begin toc.lear up." The long range forecast calls for a weekend of sunny days and warming temperatures. "And not a s torm in sight," the we a therm an predicted. "Put your umbrella away." Huntington Beach residents (See STORM, Page A?> Qoor11m Lack Halts Council In Clement~ The first ·San Clemente City Council meeting art.er three council members were recalled HAILSTONES COVER SANO ALONG THE OCEAN FRONT IN HUNTl .. GTON·BEACH Lifeguard Tower ·~ Edison Company Power Plant (background) Part of Rare Scene , _ _.._....,""'y=-c:lly o(eri"ln spe-Cia ec- K ymla Charge Dropp~d Mozdton Niguel Case Continues /or Others . Charges that Carl Kymla, generai manager of the Moulton Niguel Water District, used dis- tti ct employees to perform personal tub have l>een dis· missed in"Central Orange Coun- ty M oniclpal Court. · Court olnclals sa1d today db· missal came We dnesday midway through the third day of a closed door preliminaty bear- ing into 11rchar1et or embeule- ment and misappropriation of public property that faced the for mer Newport Beach city councilman. A prellmtnary beartn~ 11 scheduled to beCin today for four -other district employees who were indicted aJona with Kymla by an Orange County erand jury last June. Kymla could not be reached for comment this morning. Court ofricials said the dis· missal was read Into the court record without any reference be- ing ma"de \o K,ymla's· employ. ment future. The water district manaaer and other four employees ba\le remained on duty with the dta- trict since tbeJr indictment and the aubaequent filing of a criminal complalnt wblcb replaced the arand Jury charges. The motion to d11mlas charaes a;alnst Kymla was made by Deputy Dlltrlct A.t_to~rney William Evans who alao wu un-a vaUable for comment thls mom· ing. Six c.hargea against Kymla iP· vol ved three alleged iDcldenta. They included allegaUodl tbaf two district employtt{ lhltalled. tile lo Ky mt a ·a NeWlK»rt Beach home, one worker ~ district eq\lipinent to plow Kymla's lawn and two employees du1 a dralna1e ditch al the Kymla 'home. "I know J have done nothinC wrong and I am tonlldent I can clear lll)'lelf," Kymla said the day after bJa indictment. SUJI f acin1 charaea in the waler dQtrict ca1e are John (lee ltYllLA. Pate Al) tion last week lasted only two minutes Wednesday. About 40 people in the au- dience watched Councilwoman Myrtia Wagner open the meeting promptly at 7:30 p.m., only to announce that no business could be conducted because three councll members were unable to attend. State law requires that at least three of the five city councilmen be on hand to con- stitute the quorum required to conduct business. . "One councilman· is sick, another is snowed in in Palm Springs and anOther is snowed in )in Ari&OOa," said Mrs. Wagner. adjo~ the meetinc with • tap of the mayor's avel. The only other City Co\Dlcll member to attend Wedneaday's meetlnl was Howard Mushett. one of tbe three council mem- (8ee Q\JO&tJM, Pa1e AJ) More Coverage AddJUonal IOU\h Oranae Count covera1e appean today on Pa1e AU. . - MaeawTreed P~t Won't Heed Plea A RF.SOLUTE MACAW, valued at $2,500 was still holding out today against recapture ip the"top- most branches of a 50-f oot eucalyptus ti:.ee on the San Clemente municipal golf course, after escaping from its owner Tuesday. . City firemen said they were called out twice Wednesday by t he bird's distraught owner, Dorothy Petecs. of 235 Ave. Lobiero. to try to blast the bird out of the tree with a stream of water from a fire hose. But fire Capt. Jerry Galati said the force of the water at 50 feet was not strong enough to dislodge the determined pet. The-bird's owner was advised that the 10-inch military macaw "will come down when it4 gets b~ngry e_nougb_._::Jiremen said. - THE EXOTIC BIRD bad reportedly accom- panied its owner to the Bay Marie Restaurant, 2371 El Camino Real, Tuesday night, riding on her shoulder. During the evening it escaped to the top of the golf course tree. dir~cUy behind the restaurant. 'Suicide Threat' ' . ... Stated by Marvin LOS ANGELES <AP ) -Actor Lee Marvin says he kept his six- year affair with Michelle Triola Marvin going because he was 'Open Space' , Issue Tops land, Hearing By STEVE MITCHELL Of Uie Ody ...... Slaff Guarantees that at least three· quarters of the 10,000 acre Irvine Coast be kept in open space was the biggest bon4! of contention among regional coastal com- mission officials and "County and lrvine Company planners. That issue is a primary roble.m \o-Slle qmmiMhm..stafL m discussion of a local coast.al plan for the pristine land between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. . Coastal commissioners met for nearly four hours Wednesday nJgbt in Huntington Beach to bear testimony from county en- vironmental agency officials, the Irvine Company and the public in one of a series or public bearings on the development program for one of the most valuable chunks or land remain· ing in Southern California. Other key iuues discussed before a room packed with citizens, included low-c04t hous· ing on some of tbe btgti.priced land and transportation problems associated with de· velopment of 12,000 homes by the' Irvine Cmpany. The county plan. termed "baalcllly a good one," by-the commission awr. calla ror de· velopment of a ·community or 30,000 peraona housed in ~arty 12,000 amlta in return~ for resent· ln• three-quarters or the U>,000 acre expanse for publlc and private open apace. But disaireemeot •rose afraid she might le.ill herself or tell the news media about bis drinking habits, her abortions and other secrets. Marvin made a dramatic exit from the witness stand Wednes· day. after testifying as a hostile witnesa for Miss Marvin, who is suing the actor ror a $1 million property settlement for the years they lived together. Marvin said his former lover took a drug overdose after a fierce argument in 1967 and that she repeatedly threatened suicide during their affair. The actor said after an argu- ment in 1967, Miss Marvin con- (See MARVIN, Page A?> Coast Weather Ch~~ or rain 70 per· cent tonight, 20 percent Friday. Brief heavy rain, thunderstorms and gusty winds at times. Lows tonight 38 to 45. Partly • cloudy and breezy Friday \ with highs 54 to 59. INSIDE TOD~ 't" Gov. Edtmmd G. Brown.Jr. aar• M'• giufng a lot o/ thouglll to challengfng Prni· dent Carter h• the 1980 primaf'W•. Some of hu ac- tiou, Uloelgla, '""' ~ the "t~" tioge. Stott1 on AJJ. • . .... <See OOA.STAL, Pace AJ> •. ._:--....... ..,~. -.. -.-,-. ---- •• .. . .. \ . I Xrial t in Glemente fl op -K:illing A Jury will be a ktd to dee d next month wh lh r the man at"· cl&Hd o/. 1d11J11a San Cltmente polke otnt« fUdtard Steed 1 mentally tit to ta~d lt1al on murdtr r h tt Oraqt1 C'ounl) Supenor COW1 Judie Robert R <"k1H uld ,c;;;. __ W4MIM*My tw •X'PttU to Ht a U"Jal dMo OA t ol :J Rlt'hard Hoffor s m'ntal com- peten~on f" h g... t-;l,Yen San Clt rn t nie re ;. de nts h11 ve no w l11'e n o ua nomination p pcrs fo r the April 24 elecllon to tm tb r~e C111 Couf\clJ vucanclu created by last wttk 's ttt all or \hr t coun · cil members A poteaman tor Cttr Clerk Mu Ber-g said Dorothy N Hen· dr1c~s ot 132 W Marqult.a look out papers for the councl1 term or. recalled Councilman Howard Mushett. which expires in 1982 $hlrley Davis Q/ 707 Ave Presidio l ook out nomlnalJon papers for one ot the one-year terms vacated by recaJled coun· ctl members Wiiiiam Walker and Donna Wilkinson. _ Others to have t a ken out papers for Mushett 's three-year term include Karoline Koester of 321 Calle Felicidad; Mark Mora les of 156 W. Escalones Apt.-8 ; and Charles Fox of 213 W. Manposa. Nomination papers for the one-year terms of Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson have been issued to Patricia Comstock; 239 Calle N~blina; Robert Limberg, 316 Vista Torrito; J ames As hbrook, 3826 Calle Tiara: Robert Rusin, 247 Ave del !\far. Apt. B; lo.id Dleden. 234 Ave. Santa Barbara. * * * F,....PogeAJ ·QUORUM ••. bers recalled in last week's elec tion. The other two council mem- ben; recalled in the election - Mayor William Walker and· Cd\mcilwoman Donna Wilkinson -have been out of town since the day after the balloting oust- ed tbem from office. Mushett, Walker and Mrs . Wilkinson by law must remain seated on the City Council in or· der to provide a quorum, µntil their successors are chosen In an April 24 sped al election . A spokesman for City Clerk Max Berg said Walker was re· portedly unable to fly out of Palm Springs, due t.o the freak s now s torm the re . Mrs . Wilkinson was reportedly s tranded by a snowstorm in Aril\ona. No information was available today on the nature of the illness which kept Councilman Roy Hamm from a ttendin g Wednesday's City Council meet· ing. But observers s peculated tbat he may have stayed· away in order to prev·ent Mushett and """ Mrr. Wagner from conductin8 ci· ~sinesson a 2-t vole. Hamm had allied himself with Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson in the <'onUnuing 3-2 vote spUts. Mushett and Mrs. Wagner said Wednesday that if Hamm had attended Wednesday's meeting. providing the neceBsary quorum. they would have moved lo fire City Manager Gerald Weeks, who was also allied politically with Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson. No one answered th e telephone thJs momlniz at the Hamm residence to explain the coun cilman ·s illneu. A secrelary al his insurance office 1n downtown San Clemente said Hamm was ''out on appoint-ments." She said that a.s rar as she knew lbe councl1man was not sick. . l• &a..-~--. both., ..... and pro1etutJn1 altorney1 will ,..vltw rwporta rrom 1t leut nve p1ye hl•Jri1t1 who have ••· umln.-d Lht" 23 )'tar old rnurd r u ~ct Sttfd, 30, Wll awin d down In u al .. J at 15M N El Camino Re.l Nov • ~ n ho ~!f:bdtd to a c ll tor medk aJ u nee. He w round on tht tcround near hh1 patrol ur with th • Apt ~ ~ and Richard Lentz. 130 Ave. AJjOdon, Apt. A . -.u.. .... nmnUta· llotrer. of 1809 Calle L11 Rola1. wu arr.,ted &even houn afl•r the 1bo0Uq, a bloek from th murder scene. lie lat r und..-rw nt surgery tor w~t llce d ·scribed a& Ill' app& • U·Wllct.cl ulle wound lD t abdomen. If a Jury rules in March that Hoffer 15 mentally unfit for trial, he would. be sent t.o an Jnstltutlon tor trutment. Hla wnurder tJial wo1.1ld be de· J•yed until be la judged compe· tent to understand-the charges ~tore hfrn and asafat attorneys In bl• defense. ProHcutor David Carter uked Wednesday Ulal lhe men· ta.I question be determine~ by. a Jury. Defense Attoroey Michael P. Giannini, a deputy public de· fender, said be beUeves hb • client is mentally incompetent, TEHRAN, Iran <AP> - Ay•tullah J\uhoUab Khomelni came home from exile toda.y to a wUdJy eoth~utJc welcome and ---~ IMl.Uab revoJutloo wlll not be complete until U.S. lnnuence la expelled from Iran. "J ... beg the Almlabty to cut the bQda ot foreigners" to looaen thelr grip on Iran. the 79-year·old bearded Shllte Moslem patriarch prayed before . throap oJ followers. . Klrotneinl's first aoal is to t'eplac~ Prime Ministe r Sbahpou} Bakhliar's govern- ment with an Islamic republic. But Bakhtiar again defied the f'eltgloua leader lo a broadcast Wedneadar night, s~ying he would "resist chaos and doubtfuJ elem ents" and "will not permit the reins of the country to be taeld by anyone except the cen· tral government." WouJ(t.be candldatH mu11t hav" tbe1r nomlnatlo•· papers ••aned by t least 20 reglstered San Cle mente voters artd re· turnt'd to tbe city clerk by Feb. u at noon in order to qualify for the April 24 ballot. lnformaUon on the nomlnaUon procedure 1s avaalable by calling City Clerk Max Berg at City Hall. 492-s101. "When the conteol.9 ·of the re· ports are released there will be · n~queslion." Gianntnl said. ............. ACTOR RETURNS TO TESTIFY IN 11 MllllON SUIT Lee M8rvtn, Wife Pamela, Enter Loa Angele• Court Khomeini , railing against "despotism and colon ialism" that be said have perverted Ira- nian culture, sald In an arrival speech that Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi "has made the army follow the orders or •iw another country.'' Hoffer h as bee n held in Orange County Jail In lieu of $.500. 000 ball. Diedrich's Trial Fees Bit-$61~000 By GARY GRANVILLE <M -Oally l'llet St•lf O range County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's courtroom bat- tles have cost hls supporters more than $61.000 so far in legal fees paid to four lawyers. The money has been collected from political sources a t a series of rundraisers including a lunch at the Villa Fontana restaurant il Orange last December that raised $40,700. \. At the Decem&r fundra iser the g uests consume d Sl.110 worth of Villa Fontana vittles and compete d for S900 worth of door prizes, gold coins converted lo jewelry. . . Included among the paying guests were a Jarge number or firms and 1ndivisuaJs who reg. ularly contribute to county s upervisorial campaigns and who frequently have an interest in decisions by the ~Oard or _, . superv1sors. . Among those who paid $1,100 · ror luncheon tickets were the Irvine Company , Shappell ln· dustries, rest.aurateur Brad Per- rin. Hon Development Company. Pacesetter Homes. Orange County Steel Salvage Company apd lobbyists Frank Michelena and Sandy Sandling. Among lesser donors were Philip J . Reilly, president of the Mission Viejo Company, VTN. Avco Community De~eJopers and the Baldwin Company. Included in payments to at- torneys made either through the Ralph Died@lijch Birthday Party Committee or t h e Ralph Diedrich Defense Fund is the $350 it cost to unsuccessfully de· fend Diedrich against a parking ticket. But the bulk of the money has g one to . Diedric h 's forme r lawyer. Marshall Morgan. Fro•Pa,,eAJ ' CQAST AL HEARING. • • among the three factions on a staff recommendation that there be a guarantee or sorts the open apace land will remain open space. Any development by the lrvine Company. the staff sug- gests, shouJd be predjcated with a guaranteed phased dedication or open space. Dul-Richard Munsell or the co Qnty 's Environmental Management Agency, said that recommendation ls unaccepta- ble, a reeling echoed by Irvine Company officials. He said the county is not able lo justify a company dedication of nearly 4,000 acres required under the commission s taff's recpmmendations. And be ques- tioned the staff's legal right to re- qwre sucn a ae<11catioo or open space. Irvine Company planning dire ctor Donald Cameron agreed with the county, saying it would not be reasonable for the co m pany to dedicate lands without assurances of fair com- pensaUon. A'!I Car as public acquisition of open space, Cameron said that cannot be guaranteed, "for the same reason the building of 11,600 dwe1Jt ng units Cby the company) cannot be guaran- teed." dation for dedication . is un- necessary, adding, "This Clocal coastal plan) is a major test or the Coastal Act." · · Huntington Beach student Dave Hall said guaranteed open space was essential. considering the ''finger-like development along the ridgellnes in the Irvine Coast." He said small segments or de- velopment will encourage ex- panded development, and sug- ~ested the company place all its housing in one area. ~e charged the county with glvmg too many concessions to the Irvine Company. saying, ·'The county and the Irvine Company could have had a joint presentation tonight. They said the same thing.•• That drew applause from the audience as did a comment from Newport Beach environmen- talist Sue Ficker who said EMA means "EnYironmental Mis- management Agency." Others in the audience object· ed lo a county and company con· , tention that hanp the plan on development of the San Joaquin Transportation Corridor and ex· tension ol CUlver Drive in Irvine to the coast. San Clemente Clerk Foils Holdup.Try A clerk ln a 8an Cleme nte con- venience market apparently called the bluff of a man ·at- tempting t.o rob the store iate Wednesday and sent the would- be bandit packing. The 21-year-old clerk at .the 7-Eleven Food Store .. 1802 N. El Camino Real, t.old police. be saw . what looked like a starter pistol lo the coat of the man who de- mande d, "Give m e all the money." • So the clerk reached "Under the cot,J.nter and pulled out a dart gun. telling tbe oU!er man, "I've got one loo." Police said the robber, con- fronted with the dart gwi, ran out of the store and beaded· west on fool toward lhe beach. He was described as a brown-haired man abOut 30 years old, standing about five feet, 10 inches taJl and weighing about 145 pounds. He wQre his hair a medium length and had a two-day growth of beard, police said. His weapon was deseribed as a black metal blank-type revolver. Ttma Boat Freed SAN DIEGO (AP> -The U.S. Luna boat Uncle Louie has been released by CQsta Rica after be· ing fined $85,940 for fishing · within that nation's 200-mile coas tal zone, the American Tuoaboal Association said. - F,.._P~AJ MARVIN •.• fronted hlm With a gun and two shells and asked. "H<Jw d<J yojI toad this thing?" · · "I was frightened." Marvin said. " ... I'm t.elllng you this was a shotgun capable of blow· ing someone away." .Following the episode. Marvin said be resolved to break off.the r elationship. }Je rented an apart- ment for Mi ss Marvin, but she never used .it ·t>ecause a drug over.dose landed he r in the hospital, he said. Miss L91arvin spent two weeks with a friend after he r release from the hospital. then returned to hls Malibu Beach house. he said. · "When I came home she was there and I just did not know what to do." he said. "J was still trying to get out of this situation . but I felt stymied . . . I was a fraid she would go out and complete the job." The actor said be took her back "because of the human ele- ment -lhe torture she must have gone through and the fear that must have accompanied an act like that." Miss Marvin told a reporter later that the 1967 overdose was not a suicide attempt . She said she accidentally mixed some medicines. Under questioning by Marvin Mitchelson, attorney ror Miss Marvin, the actor said be fre- quently ordered her to leave his home. "Why did you deci,de to take her back?" asked MJtcbelson. • •. . . Sbe pleaded with me and apologized. I guess I had too much forgiveness." I 00 ~OF C HAIRS O N DISPLA"f The anti-shah movement will be successful only "when the - roots of colonialism are pulled out ." he said. · Laguna G&I . Arrested in :Knife Attack I(. A Laguna Beach girl was jailed f, sho rtl y afte r 8 p .m .' Wednesday after she allegedly at· tacked her roommate with a it knit._. ,_ Laura J . Hefner, 18, was ar-l restej! on i>usplcion of assault with a deadly weaJ)On at her home at UiO Cleo St. after police were called to the home. Allen Anderson, 23, who atso lives at the Cleo Street address. told officers the woman attempt- ed to st.a~ him after a disput,? in the home .. Police said they round a broken knife blade and handle inside the home. M Isa Hefner was released on $10,000 ba.iJ, officers said. F,.._ PGflt! A J ~LA.~ Perry, 37. the district•s direct.or of administrative operations· Perry's brother, Charles 28 ~ • maintenance yard forem~n ; Vernon McKown, 34, inventory control clerk, and Kenneth Kriege~. 37, a maintenance yard supervt50r. · ·Come See Our Fantastic Buys in lo-I-Boys ...... ~•er'" s.-c ... s...,,. -..y..ef: • IEST SELECTION -·-liUER.YJC He said the company would be happy to make open space lands available for public acquisition, as tong as it takes lace within a --r• •nr'll"'ftlllln""--r"l'a""' -~el!OM?)J OU l 0 Jme, an as long as the company has the right to build on the land should no public funds be forthcoming. Several speak ers said the transpcwtatiob corridor runnirlg along the ridgeltne above tbe Irvine Coast 15 not a certainty due to the cost of construction ftttnratah~tw~1l million. • IEST PRICES DAILY PILOT tttif' Ot•ftOI' CM\t G.tt•• Pttot. WIO,Whl(f'tt\(Ofn ... ...., ... -.......... _._.,., ... o.....,. (Q.t\I Pul>l1"""9 (-y ~-flt r<llllCM ••~ Pvbn•M"d ~.., OwouQf\ '''""' lcw Co..h1 _,, ...... ._.IN< ... "''''"""'°" ...... "~ tAlftV•••er h\llM LilOUftA 84P-Mh Sovtl't(.Ol\I A •lfl9t. ,...._ O<l•llOft 'I 11\11>11~-SAIUf'd•v. <tnd ~~¥\ l ... P.ontlp.ol D<A'41>toll'Q PIM>I I• •I U0 Wt\I llAf ~Oft'\ ( .... t. -· < Allfot"'• •11110 ·-··-Pro\IOonl •"" Pulll•- JK~•.~ v,..,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,,.,_.,""'""°"' , ....... , ...... EdOor , ... _'"·"'"""""' ...,..,..,. .. ,ahOt 0.-•M.L-...._ ...... A~,l,tAnt M.tft4'1•"'1 EOtlor-. L~I .. edl OfflCe fl-0-tt,..,._ <>Mc.1 Co\l•Mot8 • ..,...,,"'"""' _,i1191.., llt"°' lNU ~ '°""""'" Tet..,_ne (7141~ Cl1NHlecl Act'flftttlng 142•5171 ue-a ... di All Deplin-nce: Telepfl01t14 ....... '"""'-' .. _ ....... ~ =. 0:...1:. ~.!i~,.,.~ ;i.,; ..... Ti~'"' ... ~ "'•• ' ~;~iW=..:..• ·~··· ,.,fl>lt\I ... S.C-(I.th M\I ..... Id al CitJI• Mf"' c..111e111I• h l>\u\111 ... ..., '*"'•' '*,. =~T.l,.~ls.:~!° .-1111y· ......... . USC But members or the audJence appeared uncomfortable with t h e apparent ta ck or permanence or any open space land. UC Irvine professor Wesley Marx, said a ·commitment for phased dedication is a must ln the coutal plan. He said a legal opinion on the stall's recommeD· * * * fi',.... P"fle AJ STORM ••• said a suJL of armor would have been better protecUon than an umbrella Wednesday agajnst hu1e hailstones tbat drummed on tbe root1 of houses aod cars and covered locaJ beacbet. Hall and bilh wind• bit Newport Beach and Cott.a llesa. An etUmated 5,000 residents ot t.bou-c.Wea.....-. without power durlac the lfteraooa until em ergency crewa 're placed downed power linH. Just aS~p Of the Lip As eoon as he said it, he corrected himself. · But it was too late for red-faced Irvine Company pllnnin& director Don Cameron. The Jrvfne official was outllnin1 his company's position reaardin.1 open space, conservation . and recreational laodl before coastal commiuionera and a roomful of cUbeas in Huntln1ton Beac h Wedn~night "JI there is 1eaeral pu bile bene!Jt to be deprived . . .er, derived from MY lands-. . . ., After the laughter died down, C..el'Oft lbook bis head and u.ld, "A Freud· ian aUp-robably one of mqy eaUAa·" • SAVE ON THE FAMOUS SWIVEL RECLINER llOCIER Choose Yow SeaH.cJ COMfort WI• LA·UOY® .. COITAMllA 169 I . 17th IT. (AcfOll florn ~ nm to Moite Colendorl> 642·1617 Mon.· Fft.1~ Sot. 1().6 CloMd~ ~~~ ~~ • -· ... ... . . . :=· .· .. -.. .... OllfY Hiit ~~..., ,.....,_ Sl.EEPING BAG CAME TO REST ON LIGHT FIXTURE Pietuf'e Taken •t CYPf9U and Ocddental, hnta Ana No One lnjar~d 7 SlJnta A ·lla Hit . . . lJy Tornado By TOM BARLEY Of tM C>Mty rtt.e Steff Harol<t &yer ran to the ·front ·porch of his Pomona Street home in south Santa Ana Wednesday when he saw tree branches, garbage cans and a dis- play advertising sign sailing.past his front window. He reached the porch just in time to•see his flock of ctµckens plucked from his front yard by what seemed to be an . invisible hand and deposited, squawkingandclucking,inhisneighbor'syard .. .. .. MY GOD, IT WAS fantastic," Boyer said. "I -' got blown over twice doing it but 1 ran round there and brought them all back. They're all a little scared but okay." Boyer 's home was directly in the path of a tor!lado that cut a wide swath of damage as it blast" ed its way through south Santa Ana in a southwest to northeast path. • · The phenomenon, described by Boyer, 49, as being "a long, twisting cloud with a black tail," left a trail of shattered win~ows in shops and homes, torn and up- rooted trees. signs that were lifted from their base and dumped two blocks away and an overturned car turned car . FIREMEN ESTIMATED THE damage at $100,000. "But that's conservative," a fire captain said. "We haven't seen-the full extent of the damage yet.,, Twins Kim and Kerry McGrath, 15, ran to the door oUhe family stor:e on Main Street near Edinger when they heard "a whoosby, whining noise and we saw palm trees sailing past our front window " • Both ran for cover in the stt>re when the rear plate glass window erupted in a shower of glass and splintered wood and littered the nearby street for 500 yards. · -Both were unhurt. But both were reprill'landed by police and firemen for not seeking cover at the outset of w,lll!t\h~JUL.to._be.so,mething mOl'e iban-a s orm. SYLVIA ESPINOSA OF 3533 Calle La Quinta, San Clemente. swept up the broken glass from the front of the Sar)ta Ana Veterinary Hospital and described the lack of injuries in the 30-second tornado as "nothing less than a miracle." The veterinary assist.imt waltending animals in the building when, she said, the structure rocked un· der the impact of a tremendous wind. The hospital's sign was plucked from its stand and dumped two blocks away. As if in ironic com- pensation a sign from a store further down Main Street was dumped by the storm in its place: "OUll ANIMALS WU£ very very frightened Mn. Espinosa said. "But, thank GOd, they are un: harmed and w~ will soon have them calm again." R~ldenis sald the flnt warning of the iornado was when the sky over south Santa Ana ••turned black as ink." They said the first vtctilnl of the high· wind that followed appeared to be white doves that escaped from an Occidental Avenue yard when their aviarycoUap ed. • ''But they're 111 up ln the trees there. bllllng and c~lna." a po~ce iJUicer commented. •'Nothing and nobodY wu hUrt or killed and that haa to be the most fantastic feature of this tornado.'' o.il'f ...... ~ ... 1t1CMN•- ANIMAL HOSPITAL LIES IN PATH OF VICIOUS TO"NADO WHICH HIT SANTA ANA Heavy Structural Damage Reported at Vetertnary Faclltty on Main Street ~ . $to.rm Slams San DWgo Tornadoes, Hail, Floods Paralyze Area By Tlae Anocia&ed Press Elementary School in nearby Up lo two feet of ~now blocked By ALMON LOCKABEY o.lly l"tNt 9Nt"'9 Wrtw Tornadoes ripped off roofs and Bonita. the road Wednesday and ex- drove golfball-siied hailstones Water invaded dozens of tended into the Antelope Valley. through windows. floodwaters homes in Lakeside, Santee and where schools in Palmdale were paralyzed San Diego County. Leucadia. The overflowing ordered closed as a result. A crew member aboard one of a nd t be dese rt a r o u.n d Sweetwater River swept into A tornado struck the backlot the yachts in the St. Petersburg Palm Springs was glazed with homes in Bonita. al Uruversal City Studios. caus- to Fort Lauderdale race was snow for the first time in ,30 years The deluge dropped nearly 21,': mg SI million damage to two killed Wednesday when he was · asonevioJent storm moved east inches of rain at .San Diego's m ov ie s treets depicting struck in the bead by a swinging today,followedbyanother . Lindbergh Field. while National Chinatown and New York City. boom during a jibing maneuver One death was reported -City reported a whopping 4.82 For a time Wednesday Palm as a storm front crossed the that of a Mexican woman who inchesina24-bourperiod. Springs was virtually tsolated. course off Key West. fell into a Tljuana1 drainage Power outages hit Alpine. Roads into the city were covered · Authorities identified him as ditch and drowned Wednesday Julian. the Pacific Beach. Point by up lo two feet of snow, the Tom Curtis, 33, an employee of -and a San Diego man was Loma and Paradise Hills areas first since January 19'74 and the the Sparkman and Stephens missing and feared dead after of San Diego. Pa Io m a r first lo stay on the ground since yacht brokerage in New York he was swept' away by floodj.ng Observatory. National City. and 1949. City. The yacht was the 46-foot that entered dozens. of homes the desert communHy of Bor· By 3 a.m. today, however. all' sloop Obsession, owned and and several hotels. rego Springs where snow fell. the major roads in the area were skipper ed by Steve Nichols, Hardest hit was San Diego's Floodwaters broke loose clear. sald police Sgt. Jack Slan- Greenwich, Conn. Mission Valley, where the usual· several mobile homes in the La field . A Coast Guard helicopter dis-ly placid San Diego River over-Mesa Park east of 70th Street off Hundreds who fled the bad patched to the scene was ham-· flo~ed into Hotel Circle and.its Interstate 8, and police said the wea ther lined up ·at Palm pered in rescue efforts by the . ·adJ~cent golf courses .. parking big houses fl'oated down Springs Airport for lickeL<> Wed- storm and the wildly swinging · lots and at least one theater. Alvarado Canyon. nesday. only to find that all flights boom. Curtis was dead on ar-<Related photo. AS.) Interstate 5~ the main artery wetecanceled. rival at Key West Memorial At Cinema 21, three showings between Northern and Southern The airport expected to re-Hospital. or "Superman" were canceled California, was expected lo re-sume normal operations tfus af- The St. Pete to Fort Laudetale after patrons left to rescue cars main blocked by snow in the ternoon. Stanfield said. race, a 370-miler is the-secooo of from the torrent. Tehachapi Mountains all day In Baja. t e lephone com- lhe sis-race Southern 'Ocean About 100 residents or 8 Chula despite predictions the road munications, power and roads Racing Circuit series and is Vt'sta mobi'Je home park were would be opened. the California were cut in several areas and a usually'":tbystormyweathe HighwayPatrol said. numbe r or f amilie ~ we re •u r. rescued by volunteers with boats A rewrt to the Dally Pilot · "They had some more snow evacuated as heavy rains bat· from .St. Petersburg said the and taken to 8 Red Cross during· the night.·· one CHP of· tered Baja CaU!ornia. Mexican first race, over a triangular evacuation cente r at Allen ficef explained. officials say. -course out of.St. Petersburg· ta.st _______ __,_ _____ .:..:.::.::.:....:=:1:=::=.::~------===.:::~------ week. was struck by near dis-....; aster. Two well-know yachts, · · .the Desperado and the 12-meter Heritage went aground. The Desperado was badly damaged and the Heritage was believed destroyed. The crews of both boats escaped, however .. A number or local bOats and local sailors ate involved in the SORC. Latest report on the St'. Pete to Lauderdale rac~ was that the 78-foot sloop Condor oT Bermuda was the epparent'leader, about a half-mile ahead of Jim Kilroy's 79-foot sloop, Kialoa. Other leaders we re Circus Maximus and Ted Turner's Tenacious. Tenacious was the elapsed time· winner in the first race. 'Bilk Scheme Puts Lagunan ~hind Bars -~·i-A.'NG~--A~ Laguna Beach man bas been sent lo state prison for bilking 11 former Vietnam prisoners-of. war out or $130,000 in a phony to- vestment scheme. James Austin Beesley, 55. met his victims through a gt oup seeking backing for a book on POW We. said Deputy District Attoroey Kellog Chan. He told bi• victims be. wn a retired banker and promiJed them big returns on their money if they Invested in his firm. S&B Fund· Ing, Inc .• Chan sal!l. Later, Chan said, Beesley told the investors S&B had dis· banded. but they could place their mooey in a new firm - Guaranteed t.evenge"Systems. Cb-an uid Beesley paid dlvldendl through 1915, when' be dlaa~are4. In all, his inV'e8t.on received $50,000 back, he said. s ... 1,y, who pleaded no con- test to.,wo counts of grand theft .. on Dec. 1, was ordered Wednes· daytospendonelo lOyearainjall, make restitution to his vtctima and remain oa probation for five yeara. Tbe crimes be1an ln 19'73, when Callfon.la '• rouner ill· determinate sentencln1 law wu bi effect. Tbe at.ate Community ....... ...,,. Ml ... ,.... .... time Beelley mutt spend ill jal). ' \ Save 15.to 25o/o on Uphols,tered Chairs and Sofas In .a· W .ide .C·h~i~e of Fabric OVER 2000 FA 8 R l .C S T 0 CHOOSE FROM . i11cluding Velvets, Matlasse's, Tapestrys. CQtton Print s. Textures, Corduroys and ti,J Brocades. ~ ~w· 1 .. ~-~-mer ·~=-----Furniture Our sale events are eagerly awaited. and for very good reason. When we otter reductions. you save importantly on the very finest sofas. love seats and chairs made today. Upholstery fabrics. construction and cushioning ..are of the highest quality. Styling is imJ>4tccable. incfUded In the low sale prfce. Come choose 'today -the beautiful resolt Is f urnifure to - cherish, In everv. room in yo.ur home! .. '. ,· . PROFESSIONAL INTtAIOA DUIG._,EAS U 11 HA•lott I\. VD. COST A MISA '46°0275 .. ·. [ 1. , ~ TIRJS IF ANYTalNG drops oII to the pavement befow, it won't .,. larsely lmportant. Unleu it hlta you, m•ybe.. . Anyway, the whole S9 mllllon county buildlne seems to ... . .._ ...... ...:;;;; ............... ...,.._ ........ : / ~..:..h. Omnge County Mel'cllant's Temporory Dilf'lafl o/ Goods have survived yesterday's big blow in Santa Ana. There basn 't been thar much wind up there in years when a politician wasn't talking. Now the county brass bas announced they're going to bolt on some temporary braces lo keep the largely decorative beams from doing any more cracking or creak· ing. These bolt-on braces have been described by authorities as largely temporary. Ab, the county peopl~ could sure learn a lesson from me on that ~mporary installation business. JUST AWHILE BACK, my wife caught me out in the ,. garage, nailing some nails into the wall. ''Why are you putting those nails in there?'' she inquired sweetly. "These are just largely temporary bangers for equip. ment vital to our survival around here," I explained. "Things like our auto tow chpin and battery jumper cables." • 'jlow long will it be before you find a J)ermanent place to bidetbatjunk?'' she persisted. ''111AT WI~ DE P END on bow long we need these nails to be largel tempor8fY.," l explained clearly. "We'll have a permaneq place for this .stuff in the near future." Well, J ddn't need to tetJ bow far off the near future is and how Jong largely temporary has been doing the job. You are Jen hoping the people working on the county hall use attractive bol~ in those largely temporary braces. PolieemBn, Er'.' •• Cop's Sex Change OK'd . WASIUNGTON <AP) -Bon- ' nie Nora Davenport bas been ' certified fit to return to work ·with the District of Columbia police force as a policewoman. file used to be !.! policeman. Ml•• Devenport, SS, said Wednesday she was delighted to learn that city doctors issued a fit· ness certificate. She underwent sex-change surgery two monthsi. ago. The next' step is for police de· partment personnel officials to. decide whether to reinstate her. Police officials familiar with the personnel procedures .involved said her reinstatement W!lS ex .. pected to be approved routeinely .1 __ .,~Jl . re man. w 4'NIUll lila ..... "fA ·i Dll*. tbl• _.. _.. evldeDe• · Uiat 1moklJll ls 1DdMd •causal fact.or leadlnltodeatb." Tobacco Industry 1uppolten, amo~ otben, have ar1ued that 1moten ma1 bave a blaber deatb rate tbu non-smokers beeameol unideotifled tenetlc or environmental differences, not the cltarettea themselves. .. WE SET about to try to test that ldea by looking at as many characteristics as w,e could ol smokers as compared to-ooo- amoten," Friedman said. "We wanted to see tt they could ex- plain the relationship that we found between s moking and mortality, and they did not." A report on the research, con- d u c t e d a t t h·e K a i s e r~ Permanente Medis_al Care Pro- gr am in Oakland, Ca1lf., was publisMd in today's issue of the New England Journ al of Medicine. The study was funded by the Council for Tobacco Research· U.S.A., an organization financed by tobacco companies. THE researchers kept track' of 4,004 middle-aged men and women for 11 years. They found that overall, the death rate among the 'smokers was 2.6 times higher than among non- smoken. The researchers took into con· sideratloo 48 characteristics of the people's jobs, health and personalities. Among tbe'Se were atcobot consumption , blood pressure, occupational elposure to chemicals, use of sleeping pills and complaints or iDBOmnia and depression. ''None of them explained away the smoking-mortality re· latlonship," Friedman said in an interview. .......... This row of snow blanketed mailboxes white greeting. Recent winter storms in along a road in Oak Creek Canyon, north northern Arizona have dropped as much of Sedona, Ariz .• gave residents a Feb. l as a foot of snow on some areas. Reds Fire New Missile Soviet Backfire Bomber Used for Launch WASHINGTON CAP) -The Russians bave launched a new type of cruise missile from one of their Backfire bombers in a new 7:16-mlle test fir· ing, according to intelllgence sources. This suggests that the Russians m•y be work- ing along a simUar reseattb path as the United States in developing a new air-breathing missile that could be ftred from bombers or other aircratl at targets inside enemy territory. The United States is working on an air launch cruJse missile with a range of about 1,500. miles. Current plans are to deploy the first squadron or ·B52 bombe rs a r med with such missiles in December 1982. , between tbe United States ind tbe Soviet Union. Pentagon sourees said W~ that Brown believes any Soviet Jon1·fange cruise missile that may be under development is lell aopblstlcated than the Amerlc,.a weapon. The U.S. air-launched cruise missile would be• equipped with a uniq\&e terrain-following guidance system, permitting it to streak to its target at high subsonic speed.I ooly a few bundred feet above the Earth's surface. That low-flying ability, coupled with the swarms of cruise missiles that would be fired, from B-529 sta.ndlDg weU outside the rucb of So· .t vi et air defenses, is counted on to defeat any Soviet IN m s ANNUAL RE PORT to Congress, defenses that may be devised In the 1980s and Defense Secretary Harold Brown said last week: beyond. ''As yet, there ls no evidence that the Soviets have developed a cruise missile comparable to our air The Backfire boml>er is Russia's newest and launched missile, although they may be develop. has been a subject Of contention between the Unit· J"fvr11 All .-rm• •o ing a long-range cruise missile of \heir own de· ed States fllld the Soviet Union in the SALT ~.J.~ IJi ...., sign." negotiations. He provided no other details, but told question- ing congressmen any long-range Soviet cruise mis-The Ruaians claim the Backfire is intended IJrie S/iakeun sile that might be deployed would, like the U.S. only for use in its naval aviation foit:e and against T weapons, be subject to limitations under an im· peripher al medium-range targets in Western w AS~G TON CAP) _ The -;p;e:;n;:;;d;:in;;:g;;;s;;tr~a;:t;;;eg~i;;;c;;a;;;r~;'.;;s;;;ll;m;;;i;;;ta;;;t;lo;.;n;:;a~g;;;;r;;ee;m;:;en;:;t;;;:;;E;.;u;ro;:;;:pe;:;;and;;;As;;;i;;a;,;;, ;;;not;;;;;a;g;;•;;;;irn;;;;st;;;tbe;;;U;;;;ni;t;ted;;;;'Sta;;;~te-.s;;. ~ Labor Department t.oday an· _. nounced an over haul of its CETA public jobs and training program in a n a ttempt to eliminate shoddy management, fraud and other abuses that have plague<t the $10 billion pro-FIND YOUR NAME gram. ed w~:irs=f:rs~~p~~h~:si~ In today's Daily Pilot classi(i pag.es Employment and Training Act -include a shakeup of top · -o * 11 00 proved monitorin g or local management in Washington, im· TICKETS w'V ORTH • . • operations to spot fraud, and new rules that specifically ban ~-~~-....... ___.-----~""""~,,.,,..~~,,.,.~-,,.,,..~--.---_.._.-~~,,.,.~-~--....,..---, nepotism, political 'patronage and other abuses. Other changes set tighter eligibility requireme.nts geared more to poor, tong-term un· employed people; reduce wage rates; limit employment lo a public job to 18 montba, and en· ce>urage private indus t ry to participate more with the aov- ernment in creating new jobs. LONG. BEACH . New Snow Muffles East Hitt.er Cold Reported in Northern Plains Mndlw':. ......... a IMP poof Of -"" ...... to Die W.st .,.,, tlla .._,.. ~ CoMlnent to the ant, et<orllh11 to Dr. Jereme "-1• .. UC Saft Dle9o't Scripps Mllft"'IWiefOC 411iitf:"" ----''Ww llllve cold tut'flla ........ fn>m .,.. Gull al AlosU ..... lo .... llf> ot Ille Ba .. P9ftlftsulo," Momolt Mid. "In OKemllw, ltlot •Olw •n two ~ c«*er INll normal. '" -plo«1., ft WM ft l'llUCll H Sil< lliflltMS cOOfff (IMft "'""81. .. At Ille -time, fartllff out In Ille P11<ffk. Mamlol Mid lllHe fs a .. , .. pool of watff tl'let Is •llellt "'"" ~SWM'l'lltt'tlloftvwal ... Memtos s.old "" lllffeffnca '" the tWG OCliolnlng pool1c,..toe1 • rt-.m tflal WCllOll ....,. 91r fllf'Vler so;itll fl'IM _.,,,.., MNll...,1 ... tM .,..., air -" Ille ll"Gllkol .ir comlllM to ,,....~ ............ ~--... YoJJ..JDa JlbJjl~kets .~.L~-- 8:00 P.M. performances F riday, February 9th, or Saturday• February 10th. Or a Matinee pe rformance at 3:00 P .M . on Sunda y, February 11th, 1979. Long Beaclt ANNI, 300 E. Ocean Blvd. 'Long Beactt, tallf. Into. (213> 436-3661 It's easy. Look for your name In today's classified section. If you find your name , and address, call 642 ·5678, extension 272. We'll arrange for you io pick up yotirtlckets at tbe nearestofflce ofthe .. DAILY PILOT "FhcncMy,Tebruaty 1, 1979 DAILY PILOT A5 College -Aid ··Eyed ~.JWl~t~Ff1e~hJl~~-ftw -~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AC.RAMENTO (APl The 1\10 iaJd Wedneaday that lt lethlall'\'e 1n1ly1t ••Y• "may be poe1lble" to lncreue C1lifonlia•1 105 rommunJC;J col· by • 1maU amount th propc>Md adAi. tlul:.:UJ1Uldlllllt-tt..-f -bUHoa :lo Pt1)'J)Oa1UOA 13 ___ .. ..:::-p~=: re uamlnalk>a of bailout tund• for =~a:;;: mHf. • . Tb anal~t. Wllllarn Hamcn. HAllM WAS addre11ln1 a au.te tonlettnce of f male elecl· 12(,harges Filed After Gun Attack SAN DIEGO <AP > ...:.. A freclrle·faced teeo·age strl bas been charged with 12 criminal counts, including murder, in connedion with a snJ~ attack in the parking lot of Cleveland Elementary School.,, eel city and county official•. He aald It Is "WU'ealittlc" to hope for any major lncreuea beuuae the o.nly ways to finance major increues are tbrouah tu i ncreases, which have no p0UtkaJ s\U>l)Ort, or by_ cuttln1 other ronns ol stale ald to local government. Already, $13 7 billion -of Gov EdmUnd G. Brown Jr.'5 $20.3 billion s pending plan is earmarked for local govern· ment, either in shared pro- grams, subventions or bailout funds, Hamm said. WHAT AID THIE state gave - barely 10 percent or the state support for the University of Ca1KOl1Ua or 0..-etate eoUecet came wlth little review, ffamm .. t . 1'bi1 was becau.se it was as- sumed that locally elected of- lklals. spending .primarily local-. · ly raised revenue, were directly acco"ntable to the taxpayers and had a tight rein. Sul now, the community col· leges get more state money than either UC or the stale university and college system. • THEY MlE IN line' tor $852 million· from the state in Brown's 1979-80 budget, an- amount equal to 70 percent of all of their revenues. · ·'.Community colleges more tban any other type of govern- ment are going to be s ubject to an increasing level of review," Haaimsaid. ~ea Road An unoccupied car is awash in Spring° Valley after Wednesday's stprm dumped more than two inches of rain on the San Diego area. Dozens of roads were report· ed closed in the area and many houses were evacuated. , The attack killed the principal and bead c ustodian and wounded ·eight pupils and a police officer. . .. A PETITION flled Wednesday in Juvenile Court by the district attorney's office accuses Brenda Ann Spencer, 16, ot the shoot· TBE COMM\JNITY college.,, which are gettmg $817 million this year, are the only element Of local government receiving such mauive state funds with· out extensive state review. · And Hamai said the relative lack or control is undoubtedly going to change, because both the governor's office and Legislature are looking for places where controls are lax. More Farm Workers·LeaveJohs ings. · In the petition. Deputy District Attorney Charles L. Patrick re· quested that Miss Spencer, who police say has a history of petty theft and drug a~use, be tried as an adult. The petition also alleges "special circumstances," which means that if she is tried as an adult and convicted or murder, she could be sentenced to lile in state prison without parole. IF THE CASE IS handled in Juvenile Court, the girl could be free in seven years. In addition to murder, the red· haired junior at Patrick Henry High School was charged with nine counts of assault with intent to kill and one of assault with a deadly weapon on a 1>9lice of· ficer. Juvenile Court Judge William L. Todd Jr. said he will probably set a date next week for a bear- ing oo whether Miss Spencer will be tried as an adult. Until the early 1970s, com· munity colleges rece~ed all but a small fraction of their support from local property taxpayers. Team Policiffg PWntoStop LOS ANGELES <AP> -On Feb. ll, the team policing ex· periment initiated by former Police Chief Ed Davis will be terminated, says Police Chief Daryl Gates. Instead, Gates said Wednes· day, detectiv~s and patrolmen . will aga_in go their separate ways. Under the team policing policy, detectives and patrolmen worked together in 65 teams. each unit responsible for one geographical area and all the crimes .. within it. By TM Associated Press A bout 1,200 more farm workers have walked off their Jobs to protest strike.breaking ef· forU of lettuce growers on the eve of a rally with United Farm· Workers Union founder Cesar Chavez. The rally was scheduled this afternoon~ when Chavez is to arrive in Calexico. Other than the walkoff by ex- tra field hands at six farms, the lettuce fields of the Imperial Valley were relatively pe.aceful on Wednesday. · 21et•Co1Hde SAN DIEGO CAP) The crewmen of an F-4 Phantom fighter were hospitalized in sta- ble condition today as a search went on for two other fllers miss- ing after two Navy jets collided tJ-4 miles south of San Diego, the Navy said. Lt. Cmdr. James McNair, 32, of Cantonment, Fla., pUot of the "Charles Dickens" A unique exhibit of 25 life-sized figures from favorite Dickens' novels . \ · at Fas_hion Island on Th~riday, February 1 thru Friday, February 12 in #3 Fashion Island , Characters from~ Christmas Carol" I "David Copperfield," ~Oliver Twist" and many more \ . ·created especially for this premiere tour of the United States by Bermans & Nathans Ltd., of London ,., F-4, and bis radar lntercept of· ficer. Lt. Ted Dewald, 29, of Point St. Lucie, Fla., were plucked from the sea by a Coast Guard helicopter Wednesday. Their jet collided with an A-4 Skyhawk during a routine train· ing fight, a spokesman said. The Skyhawk crew was missing. CradaKIU.4 AZUSA CAP > -Four Covina teen-agers were killed when their compact car plunged 350 feet down a mountainside and landed upside down in a stream, Cali!ornJa Highway Patrol of· Ci<!'ers said. The victims, all 17, were iden· tified today as James J . Muraca, Ronald D. Cleary, Scott Spencer and Charles Robert Stickley. said CHP Officer Jim Cox . a,...,.. 'l'op• lleeord LOS ,ANGELES <AP> -Gov. Edmund G-Brown Jr. 's 1978 re- erection expenditures totaled $3.26 million and be outspent his Republican oppenent. former Attorney General Evelle J . Younger. by more than $1 million. according to campaign reports. Brown's expenditures between July 1 and Dec. 31 were the highest ever reported by a guf>ernatoriaJ candidate in the general election, state campaign experts told the San Francisco Chronicle on Wednesday. 't'an Boatna to Walt F.RONTERA. Calif. <AP>- Fo rm e r Charles Manson follower Leslie Van Houten has been denied parole despite good evaluations from prison psychologists and stare mem- bers. "Society has no defense . . . in this type of crime. except to isolate the offendeti." Communi· ( SI'ATE J ty Release Board chairman Ruth Rushen said Wednesday. "We feel we must observe you longer before we can project your parole date." D.A.., Cops Stted SACRAMENTO <AP> Michael D. Small, a San Rafael attorney, has filed a $2.4 million damage suit in federal court here accusing Solano County Di s trict AttQrney Ne a l Mccaslin, sheriff's deputies and Vacaville and Vallejo police of battery, false arrest and false imprisonment. The suit stems from an inci-dent in front of a· Vallejo home. reportedly used as headquarters by the Kell 's Angels motorcycle gang. Making Room for Spring ... IS· NOW IN PROGRESS SO%· to ·75% oft on FALL -HOLIDAY mtd EARL·Y SPRING .. -"""""""-CLOTHIH ...:-sHOEs and ~CCESSORIES· W.'a Stan --.......-·--~~ -~~~ 65 ,. ••• lll•d 644-6500 ... .RObert N. Weed/Publlther Barbara Krelblch /Edltorlal Page Editor Rowland E~ane/Robert Novak ~----Dte11ds ·to-:fjea -etraDge ,. I• ACRAM&.NTO _:.Gov. Ed· Pb.0 .'1" and the ''Umld IOUla'' LW couldert4' a poUt1cal rorce an end of delicit a))endta& airiJ h&ill what be calf• lllhla mWld O~ .Brown Jr .. far lrom who d&rcnd red-ink a,..ndh'I oddb1H. Brown ftndl that bl.a of. meu:hlnc at the ridicule of Jim· even at the peak or today's re-· lentlvebauuddeob' mad•hlm a ~~~-=;-••~~ C....?e.._. .... .._.Rf,_~~HY · . A ttte,~~eMnwtd~. '-fldi.e·r--'fi'W11"1"'11.-.i1r-PoC!JuYnJ-he Used. lO bl• domantJ ror a conatitu-legates in the nation's most shun. He showed upsomewhatun- llo-n ally-l mpoaed balanced Uberal DemoeralJc party gave expect.dly aL the San Fr•Milco -R C.x.AUC-&Ol'UUlUl o>oD•l' mochl.Do ...... Tho detilM of tbe U S., ht! told 1.11. ts dlreetly lied to . th • de<'hn. ol 1L1 currency which ln turn Is directly ln· nuenccd by the immense red-lnk KP('fHJlnr. or the po t doaen year1" PoUUciua. In WasbfAlt,On mu1 hav trouble underatandibl that. hC 1ay1, but vot ers have oo trouble at a ll < Dana Developinent County officials announced last week that 95 percent of Dana Point res idents surveyed wanted a forll)al ad- visory council that would make recommendations on de· velopment in the seaside co'mJnunJty. . The surveys were pa rt or a study geared at deve lop- ing a so-called Dana Point Specific Plan that will serve as a guideline for future building in the community. The apparent support for an advisory board that would monitor development in Dana Point is refreshing. The bea utiful coastal community has been fair game for high-density development for several years. Building has proceeded without benefit or an overall plan for the community, prompting traffic and parking proble ms and a sore lack of basic municipal services such as street s weeping. Residents' concern over the manner of such develop- ment and the evolution or problems high densities bring with them prompted the speciric plan discussions. As one official pointed· out. the plan will .only be wort hwhile lf lt's followed in the development approval process a t the <'ounty le vel. An advisory group ot Dana Point residents would study proposed developments tO ens ure they were com- patible with whatever speclflc pla n Is eventually settled upon. Council members' recommendations would be forwarde d to count y planning commiuioners a nd supervisors to assure that the community vlewpolnt ls represented in deve lop men~ decisions. And the advisory council would provide a better com- munication link ror residents with the only goy.emment Dana Point has the county government located 20 miles north.' Encouraging Sign Voter rejection of three San Clemente city coun- cilmen in last week's recall election apparently has not discouraged other city residents Crom running in the A,pril 24 special election to replace them. City Clerk Max Berg reports that \\!Ould-be can. didates are wa iting in line to ta ke out nomination papers. Nine already have taken out papers a nd more are expected to enter t he race. That is an encouraging sign. • San Clemente faces momentous decisions during the coming decade, particularly with regard to growth. Near- ly 5,000 acres of ranchland, where cattle still graze, are ~urrentfy planned for housing lracts. The quality and rate of development will depend to a great degree on city . policy esta blished by successful would-be candldatea . among those taking out nomination papers now. . City voters will be looking for qualified and ex· perlenced candidates, pledged to allowing developplent only as cit~ services can keep pace and only as it con· tributes to the city's currently s uccessful blend of bedroom community a nd beach town. • Optn1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views eJtpressed an this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment Is 1nv1ted. Addreas The Daily Pilot. P.O. 9ox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642•4321. Boyd/Walking· By L. M. BOYD-because he-didn't have the - - ---What may "be most sigmh· $50 then t~at it would have canl about the fact that the taken to build a rence around # --a-•eHge-woman--wirtttrio--4Ae-pNPeftY:' as•• eqab ed'"tJy - mUes a day is that it's one law. <>!tlz five years later, m i 1 ~ .b.J:.1.b e..t.....lb 1 n t be the bwJding boom was on, avera'ge man walk! a day and the new ~wner sold the . . land ror $2() m11Uon. No doubt the cb1nkers of iced lea with lemon in It won't buy the claim that the best thirst quencher known to the s Cientists is gr ape j1ake. Antonio Roig of Majorca ~ed a re w weeks ago with exactly $S0 in bis possession, only enough to pay burial costa. In 19501 he inher ited 10 acres of Jana from an aunt, ·but was obliged to sell it. Dear' -Gloomy l wisb people llke f'. W. D. who run around say. 1111, "l lov e w e t WHtber" (Gus, Jan. 24)' would drowo ln a do•dpour or "eh•racter" -or. re· move the two feet of mud from 1117 eollttr11ftton Job•lt.e. P.H. Q . "Why h a iany charactet someUmes called a s cre wball ? Why that word?'' A. Best guess is it goes back lo bone talk. A blend· ing of the word "skewbaJd" wbkb is lbe correct term for a horse that'• white and bay. roa n, brown or ch~stnut. Please note, "piebaJd" only aUudes to a whlte and black horse. Q. "Why's a quarter called two-bits?" A. That Mexie&4 coin known as the real •u re· ferred to by cowbo11 u a bit. Two of them were about the equal or~oem.a. · Client ukl If Lowell Thomas invented tbe ne•areel. No, air, Uae Rustl&NI did lbat lbinl-ln uns. Q. "Abe Uncoln waae•t the fl"t to qy ... govemment of the peop&e, by &M ~ ud for tlle People ... , wu b•?'• A. No, sir, John WycUtte put that •et of 1i1nlflcant · aylJabl.. into the lntroduc· llon of b.la Bible t.rantlatJon •blell w1~..!~.,ll1bt._ In r.a,, ...... ...., federal bud8•t, ts convinced the him a standing ovation. convent.ion of, UM 'National Food U.S. ts on t.hc verae of fan· Proceuora Jan. 23 and talked for damenlal, lnflaUon-connected THAT 18 the q1tlnte11enllal 45 mlnutee, hJ1bJy unuauaJ for poll\lcal chanse• that. he lntends Brown t4day: explaln1 then at· Brown. Four d•>'• earlier ae In· lo 1hape and lead. lack rrom what' be retla ls a si1ted on addretJln1 the top braas In ~few daya of his second s ecure position of political ot \he Bls FoUJ! aut.o companl t e rm. Bro wn haa al r eady strength. Brown, an original foe (fuestaoft.beCaUCornlaChamber w r o u g h t · ol California's Proposition 13. o CommeNe) al the Century Broe ii acutely aen•lUve to chars that he Is • polltlcal op- portuniat who bas undergone (requ't nt convc rstons -now from a llberal Democrat (-who managed Eugene McCarthy's p o ) I t 1 c u l had his eyes opened to reality Plaza Hotel. 0\ll-ol·state Lnvlta· change here when voters here approved it by lions for Brown are pltln& up In that ha.a split a huge majority last year. As recordnumbera. h I m f r o m one or hJs top aides told ua: "He con ventlonal feels be ~JJlei'ienc.,d somet.h.ina IN IDS interview with ua at party leaden very peraooally about the voter the state capitol , Brown and delivered mood today thal few other pollli· ridiculed oPPOSltion to bla call · 19&8 presidential c.ampaign h e re 1 lo a c ons ervative RepubUcan. Wbat ha. changed, he ins ists, Dre objective clrcumatances and the voter&. .. Before Franklin Roosevelt, no one could imagine lhe New Deal," be told ua. "'Wow what 1• coming in the '808 no one can begin to appreciate. We are moving into a new cycle" -a cycle that will change the map or today's poUlics in unpredict'a· ble ways. stunning help ciaos have felt." ror a coosUlullonaJ convenUon t.o f ro m bo th e 'lect.ed ~ Republicans " and lnfluentiat businessmen. But it ls the natton a l DemoeraUc party and tbe 1980 presiden\inl nomination, which Bro)Yn clearly wants, that will feel the full force of Brown's ·poliUcal conversion .. Bto•n., Is hurling hJ• challenge direc\)y at President Carter, Sen. Edward Kennedy and· th& party's tradi· tiona l constituencies. As be told us in hJs orfice here: "America l!I runnJng on panJc today" and voters want basic.. fiscal changes to end the horror or In· nation and make America com- petitive again. BOTH BROWN'S principa l legis lallve leade r . Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, and the s l ate's top De m oc rat in - W ashingtoA, Sen. Alan Cranston, h ave publicly brok e n with Brown on his J a n. 8 Inaugural demand for a constitutional bun on federal r e d Ink. Indeed. Brown Is proba bly the first just- elected governor to be booed by his O'f'n state parti. as he was at tbe Oem~ratlc c!bnvcntlon here Jan. 20 when he fi rst a ppeared at tht Podium. Instead or backing down with apologies, Brown carefully bUilt his case in a tightly reasoned ex- planation of fiscal "reality," then attacked "experts." "the Mailbox TO REPUBLICANS and con· servative Democrats, this is like catnip. Fred L. H a rlie')'. chairman oCUnion Oil, refused to aive Bro.wp a njckel for bis re· election campaign; he recently sent $20,000 to help Uquldate Brown's $800,000 ~ampalgn debt. Republican A:;~mbly Jeader Paul PriOJo. the .No. l opposlUon tegisJatoJ. lJ;!s Informed hls par- . ty h~'WilJ ifo nothing to blunt· Brown's balanced budget cam- p a i g n . O n e o t Speake r McCarthy's trusted Assembly l e ad e r s , a De m o cratic powerhouse on the Ways and Mean s Committee, warned McCarthy to expect no anti- Brown help from him, saying: "I'm sticking with Brown and the baJanced budget right into the White Rouse." Brown himself is a man posse5$ed of an Idea and entirely convinced of his rectitude. If he can convince h'ls /arty and bis country. the wort wHI be hear- ing more from Jerry Brown. • Taxpayers Running Out of Generosity To the Editor: We have just been treated to a glimpse or what ls described as "a lean and austere budget :" a budget with a deficit of a stupe- fyin~ $29.000,000.000 ! Tbe huge rederal agencies that bave been created ove r the years reme.ln basically intact. The ·weight or their fat and fos1llized bone will continue l'9 be borne by tbe working class . Not only have no significant cuts been made, but we now must witness the efforts of a large seement of Cone ress to ln· creHe social programs. sub- sid1es. and welfare. We are told that the enormous sums we have spent over the last 30 years are inadequate. We are chastised for belng aelfleb and are reminded that we have a moral du~ to those Jess fortunate. I wish t.o stand toe-to-toe with those who accuse the worldnJI Americans of greedy disregaril for the old, the needy and the minorities, and 'State a position they seem unable to grasp. ftEAVEaAGE taxpayer bas been e« .. lve ln hls generosity; -he-ftu beellecib~rch·~­ sweat ot bis brow to help those unable to help themselves. He bas given until it hurt.a and -then gone on to double and triple the contribution. The New Deal, the Ne w Frontier and the Great Society have been s upported to the bill by the guy with a paycheck. We have seeo the massive growth of 1overntnenl and have 'been told that •hat atowtb le necessary. ·we have seen the worklng rank• thlnned by the al· lure or "something for nolbin.I" welfare programs and been tOld that it 1a unfortunately inevita· ble. We have seen our economy mantpul1ttd Ind altered and Men told the problem is too complex for us lo undentand. We have wat~hed as OQl" eduea· ttonal system has beeo tinkered and fuaaed wilb and been told ll la the dawn ol a new age. SOCIAL St:CUalTY ts a dll· aster in the race ol rampant, federally created tnflatlon. WeUare pl"OIJ'ams are abused ln direct relation to \he lou of d1-i· ty forced on ill p1.rtlclpant.s. In· cenlivea io lndlvtdual enler'J)rtM are auned at the very Ume whln lbelr ability to create jobe II needed moet. The attempt te le1w.te..,.. wW amoaa • Ml eo•demaed our e•ntHn to betome namellll taoea •"rinl from UM wlndo•• ol pualai ~·leaden mml reaUae tMt UMtr cbar\er la not to creatt • pbl~ ll'lat mlll bl wide .. ia!f lallar. ,..., ·-.. responsive to the people they are paid to represent; they must not continue their a llegiance to an idea whose time is past. This country's representalives are this republic's fi rst Hne of defe nse. However , If those representatives cannot or will not sense that the winds of change are blowing, the Constitu- tion wisely made provlsion for a second line of defense -the in- itiative process. It's a drastic cure ... but we're in desperate this fine m an received from the 'Orange County bar and that his re-appointment wos richly de· served" lend quote l perishing from the earth. But our untampered with franchise is still our beat hope. R. F. BORCOMAN NOW, dear voters. your dis- claimers at the polls wind up as accolades for the judge, a;\d To the Editor : your many. many votes against In your Jan. 15 editorial, . times. him. for whatever reason, are as "License Boards Due for Cut- nothing compared to the "over· back" you expressed a partiality whelming" support gendered by ror maintaining those licensing the vastly fewer in numbers or boards which aCfect public safe- his associates. Thus we view a ty. Unquestionably. each Ucens· judge's determina tion o( the Ing board must be able to stand STEVEG. CHRISTMAN democraUc process. up to public scrutiny. But there Also, her concern to have the is far more to be measured than public know how wrong they ·just public safety to j ustiry the were, is touching indeed. And we existence or a board. 'To the Editor: all know how practiced Gov. In the case or the Certified The only one with ariy sense Brown is at nutufylng results at Shorthand Reporters Board, in that UCJ newipaper epl90de the polls. A sure way. at Umes. there are a number of cogent rea· was Miss Bjomeby <student of·· to galn a lucrative spot. even an son s for its mainte nance. - ficer who confiscated Issues of ''elevation," ts lo lose. at the UnJlcensed and incompetent the student paper). polls and get ~verwbelmma sup-people acting as court reporters She showed a "blt ·Of class."· port from one 1 cronies, as wit· have caused dlfficull problems Hooray for her attllude ! nesa the naUonaJ scene also. and legaJ entanglements. plac- 1 realize that it's very dltncult . I do .not btw.Jn~ 3uesU~nt\hl~ ing lbe litigant.a on both sides of for young people to know whom m~egrtty 0 . e JU ge, u a case in jeopardy and resulting to imitate! in ou.r a.Lek aoclet.y' wt.-bnngsllQ_ml.ndft.bthal thle.lrethjlrte ~in great-eirpense to t.he tar.- not --h .... 1 1 t many osers a e po s a are payers ~t s so muc 1.ue r au as kept alive, on the political and · it JS the fault Of their forebf-a.n. .JlUbJ.iC. • ..S.c4Ule&.-bJ-helDfJ-res ro a re cent cue- J ~f~lff-BjomebJ to warded powerful positions by appotnted editor of the UCI alu· virtue ol beinl reJectM by the i n v o l vi n g a ' · b o t c bed d~nt ne'!Vspape r . Sou.nds as yoters and having friends in transcript.'' as described by the though she ~as enough sense to l\igh places. Judge, prepared recently by one know wbal JS ne WllWOrtby for. Furthermore. wbJle we have rnllchensrld p~so~ ldri~t! deve loping cuJture. frustrations enough from those engt Y ,tnmin tna n. MRS. LOUIS D . .MARKEL we duly elect to offlce, many of Clara. County, both parties ex- To the &<lit.or: I was apalled when I read Judi e Lamoreaux' 1pologia (In a letter to the Dally Pllot of Jan. 24) r egarding Judge Leonard Goldstein's rejection at the polls. Surely, her idea to justify drcumvenUna the peQple's de· cision, is cause tor anat alarm. I do. not know· either Judae t:'amoreaux or th~ ol>ject of'her defense. Judge GoldsteiA, ao I do. not allude to eilher's ciuallfica· Uons; but I am concerned over · the thwartin1 of tbe people's franchise. <Quoting from her leUer to the editor, in •blcb .... allo qt.IOtel from her letter to Gov. Brown>: "As can be seen, the lou of these judpl wu not baled on HY per900al dllq"811ftcadonl ot activillea. but wae more a blanket vote B1alnal lncumbenta and In no way Nflfttl 11alnlt Judie Ooldateln. 11111 tMrefoN writlnc um a.u.er to uk if lben l1 aD.Ylblu 10! cu c)o io keep blm (n tM" )uclc\ary, either by re·•PPOlnlmont elsewhere t brouf)aout 'be atate, or an. •levallon to th Apptll~t• Court. "-"J tn11t lbat you ,nu • abaro tb11 I~ wHb ~ public• to bfl them uodtratud more lull1 ovenrbelm&o, •UJll»Ort r greatest frustrations are the pecYto have to retry the matter ou . . ed < -at a ooet or $200,000. work of those appoint not · The Certified Shorthand elected ) to unbelievably Reporters· Board an indepen-powerlul and despot.le posta. . a and . • 11 Wbat this add• up to is that , ent Impartial stale ceas- "Govemment of the people, by 1ng b?trd, has not excluded the people and for the people" is potential licensees .. As a matt.fr of ract. t.Mre is now an over- abund~f court reporters iD the state or Cali(Omia. Your su&· 1~1tlon that professional and trade otganisat.lons adminlater examinations lor ~ompeteney certainly would be open to crttlclsm, Ii.nee those groupe °"" viously have a self-servtnc la· lereat in obtaining more duea· Plllnl tMntberl. · 'Nie best prolecUon ror the coAHm«I of our tenkes -at• tomeya. judaes, Utlaa.nt.s, ud taxpayers -can be provided bJ' the Certified Shorthand R•Porter1 Botrd through Jtl Hee~ ~.rret. GARY M. CRAMER, csa Pr.iditnt Call!omia Court ·~rters AasoclaUoe • Liftin """' ............ a-. TIN! rlf1#d to ~ i.cUn Co fl lpOCt or 11lirrdldt libfl ii ,...,,..., IAttm °" • lllOnla or ,.., .a N otNft ptf1tt ,,.,. AD i.tma ~ .. da ....... ~~ b.ia ............... •.MW°" .... ~--~­,, ttrtlfltdrM,...,.. .. .,.,,._..... , .. .,, .. .,.,..,.. .... -. . . HILLSBOROUGH (AP) - Patricia Heant walked,. out of prilon into bri&bl aunshbie today and went directly to her mother's plu.sb suburban San Francisco home, a free woman after a five.year odyssey of kid- nap, crime and pr.nishment. "l t.blnt that I've gotten a lot stronger, a lot more self oonfi. dent. I take a lot of things ·in stride that make {>ther people fall apart," Miss H~arst told re· porters during a celebration in· side the tastefully furnished home in this wealthy San Fran· cisco suburb. . Iler homecoming wa s iJWeetened by a large crowd or i}y_and frien.da who burst in-~~to ....... applause as her ·car entered the driveway. .............. WAVING PRESIDENTIAL COMMUTATION ORDER, PATRICIA HEARST LEAVES PRISON . Her mother, Catherine, em- braced her, and ~ter told re- porters she "marvet!d" at Pat· ty's "'sparkle." With Her I• Her Rance and Former.Bodyguard Bern•rd Shaw, Whom She'll Wed Soon . YoarBomet••• Dally New8paper er at Home •'It's lbe D)ost wonderful party ·of -my life," Mrs. Hearst told a group of about 50 friends, re· porters and police officers invit· ed inside to a catered welcome· home brunch of champagne and eggs Benedict. Among those present were Janey Jimenez, a former federal marshal who walked Mi ss Hearst into the courtroom every day during her two-month bank robbery trial and shed tears for her new friend, and the Rev. Edward Dumte , who spearheaded a national cam- paign !or the presidential com· mutation which came Monday. Miss Hearst's father, Ran- dolph, arrlve(l-soortlyafler she did and said that his daughter had "her sparkle back and I think she'll be okl)'." Miss Hearst, who continued s miling throughout her party, wore a "Pardon Me" T·shlrt and a medallion with green rhinestones that spelled out Survivor, and the number 2-4-74, the date of her kidnapping. She said she would add the dale 2·1·79 to the piece of jewelry, a gift from fiance Bernard Shaw. Miss Heant said her German shepherd, Arrow, was se excited to see her be started "crying and running all around." . ,Miss Hearst said that after her marriage she would be known as either Patricia Heant or Mrs. Shaw. "I don't anticipate ~nyone calling me Patricia Shaw because it seems so foreign to ~ me and my name bas always been Patricia Hearst." Miss Heant left the Federal Correctional Institution at Pleasanton at 7:29 a.m. Violent Weather · Assails · C.last Tornado, Hail Rip County Wet, cold January e nded Wednesday in a burst of freak. weatberaJongtheQrange Coast. Torrential rain, hall, sleet, SllOW and high winds hit an Orange Coast that bad basked for much of the mominc upder a brtghtsun)Dd a cloudle11e sky. Santa ~ added a tornado to 1.be astonishing list. A ferocious twiate( scr4}amed ,alone south Main~Teavingtoppledtrees, shattered homes and shops -but no injuries -in ita, wake. (Reial· ed story, pictures, Page A3 > Then the the ram came-back Wednescjay night and early lo· day to binder mopping up opera. · lions and add more . traffic problems to a Main Street that· was already jamm~ with rush hour traffic and cars filled with sightseers. By contrast, the National Weather Service said today, February is coming in like a lamb. ·The forecast calls for showers tonight witb the possibility of high winds early Friday. "Buttben," a forecaster said, "things wiU begin to clear up." The long range forecast calls for ,. weekend of sunny days and warming temperatures. "And not a s torm in sight," the weatherman predicted. "Put your umbrella away." Huntington Beach residents <See STORM, Pace A.2) Dareatens ll.S. ..,,,. Khomeini .Gets Wild Welcome TEHRAN, Iran CAP> Ayatullah RuboUab Khomeini came home from exile today to a wildly entbuaiaatic welcome and dedared bi& aati-ab.8b r.evolation wilf not be complete until U.S. influence is e1pelled from Iran. "I ... bee the AJmigbty to cut the banda of foreigners" to loosen their grip on · rran, the 78·year·old bearded Shiite Moslem patriarch prayed before throqgs of followers. Khomeini's first goal is to rep I a-ce Pri in.C! Mltllister Shahpour Balthtiar's._ govern· ment with an Islllmic republic. But".~tiar aRain defied the * . * . * religious leader fn a broadcast W edneaday night, saying hf' would "resist chaos and doubtful element.a" and "'will not permit STRIFE IN IRAN AFFECTS ISRAEL-A15 the reinl of the country to be held by anyone except the cen· tral aovernment .•• Khomeini, railing against "despotism a nd colonialism" that be aaid have perverted Ira· Dian culture. said in an arrival speech that· Shah Mohammed <See IB.AN, Page AZ) * * * SundaY Ban .. on Gas . ' SaleS to Be Mulled W ASlllNGTON (AP.> -Gov· bind now," he said. ernment officials, faced wit& The United States normally continuing shortages of Iranian gets about s percent of its crude crude oil. are considering a ban oil from Iran. on Sunday gasoline sales and a Other oil-producing countries, variety of other measures rem· most notably Saudi Arabia, have iniscent of the 1973·74 Arab oil made up for much or the Iranian embargo. '---los~. But there have been re. Energy ~cretary James R. ports the Saudis would produce Schlesinger· said Wednesday the an average of only 9.S miWoo Carter administration will de. barrels a day in the first four cide by April 1 whether to im· months of 1979. The normal dai· pose mandatory conservation ly average is nearly 10.S million measures. But be said such ac· barrels. Schmitz Race For Senate tions would not be needed if the Schlesinger said be had seen public voluntarily saves fuel. nothing from Iran that would..::;in;:..·---_A mo n a lruL Jaan d a tor y clicate a return to nol'lll1illty 11 measures that might be taken imminent. Tab.-'-328~l4-r~,;~:~~-=~~.:-.::-·-:;:;iiiiiMo:cic=====:::::----1 u pending evening and Sunday By GARY GRANVILLE sales, govemmentomclalssaid .. Of .. Dlll.,,.. ... ,..., Also under consideration as o.lty ............... °"" ""*-Diacloeure atatementa filed in Santa Ana today show that by the time Republican Jt>bn G. HAILSTONES COVER SAND ALONG THE OCEAN FRONT IN HUNTINGTON BEACH LHegu.rd Tower and Edlaon Company Power Pltlnt (bllckground) '.•rt Qf Aa'9 Scene Shooting Vietl1n Dies · · Scbmlll won bis bid to return to the state senate last November bl• campaign. committee had Police $eek Clues in Mesa del Mqr Sla)'ing • I Fairview State Hospital cook. George Thomas Lovell died Wedn~ay even1n1 after .clin1· in& to a thin thread of life aince be. took a abcqun blast in the bead sometime Sunday. nlaht 1n Costa Mesa. Police say they have no more Idea today wtio killed him or why than they dld Monday lllOrnJ.na when Lovell . 38, WU found in bla car parked on a Mesa del llar street not far from St. John the Baptlat Catholic Church. They do kno• be bad been ,. leaHd ft'Om prilaa just tut ()c. tober and that tbe Loni Beaeb man had been 1n &Del out ol trou- ble wi\b the law Blnce be was 14 years old. That's as far as what now is a murder investigation baa Jed them. Lt. George Lorton, bead of the Costa' Mesa Police Department's inve1Uptive unit, said LoTell'a condition appeared t9 be "beyond hope" wben offlcen found him al\Ubped on \be froa\, aeat ol hi• car on Post Road Monday, • ~owever, he waa taken to Ro•• Memorial Hoa~al aad placed on life "*•In eqlilp- ment. Police bad hoped be mitbt be able t.o P" tbem a cl• u '° tlae .... ,, ol bl.a ......... But Lovell, who was bit by a shotgun blaal fired at close range tbroUgb the window oa the . driver•111de of bis car, never re- gained consdousneu and llDally succumbed at 5:45 p.m. Wednes· day after the life 1ustaiD1nc equipment wu ordered turned off. Lorton Hid tbe dead man's Ob· 1Y kDOWn aurYfvor ii a man wbo •dopted!dm wbeD be waa a boJ. 'Other Coverage Otlllft 11.aRor Area te••• ~.....,_,,...A.I.I. spenl$338,314. · Wben Schmitz turned bact Democrat Ron Cordova in the November general election, bis committee reported tbat the spending bad resulted In .a •nettof-5,488. Cordova'• campatin dis· cloaure llatetnent bad not reaclled the rep.trar's office late thilmomiq. Bu\ Cordova had reported apendtnr $155,087 ln h1I effort by Oct.M. Wben coupled wltb heavy. ~d.lftl ID the five-cand.ldlite Republican prlmar1, election laat June, the campaip wa1ed from eartJ lut 1prtn1 to the 1eaeral eleetioD to inherit tbe aeth diltrtd aeaate aeat, former· 11 held b Republican: DelialJ Ca~ wu repon.dly tbe moll eoetlJ ..... ID the doMa da,Ja of tbe cam· patp. Mmlta npG:l1ed reeelv· baa a --CGlllll'llMl&llla from (-•B•ttS, .... U> limiting motorists' purchases to alternate days. Direct r•tioning baa been ruled out, officlals said. So far, Scblesiqer said, "the position of the U.S. has ll'>l been dramatically affected" b)t the upheaval in Iran that forced the shah to leave that country. The virtual shutoff of oil exports from Iran "la just be&inninl to ~ofSlnoke But No Fire A column of smoke l'OH from the Oraqe County Sanitation Dis\rict's facm\y near tbe San Diego Freeway In Foun-,.Jn Valley t.bll IDOl'DlDI aa part of a 1lmutat.d d.llMter drill\ Oraqe County ud atate of· ftclala, a well a local em.,._. cy peraoanel, too"t part in "Operation Sbaker," a drill baaed on an lm•ll .. ,., wtb· qauelllare.. Tile amoke simulated tbe U • =°'•=U&• c!rt1l at nooa. . Coast Weather Chance of rain 70 per· cent tonight 20 percent Friday. Brid heavy rain, thunderstorms and 1usty winds at times. Lows toniaht 38 to 45. Partly cloudy and breezy Friday with highs 54 to 58. IN81DE.:JODA 't' G0t1. Edmtlftd G. Brottm Jr. •or• lac'• ~lot of C1to"91tt to c Prui· ·dot Carter '" the 1110 . primaries. &mM "bf Ida ac· "°"'. UtOMola. ~ beJIOftd the "~" lfage. Storr mt AU. ..... .. Fluor Go~E1e8 Iran Pniiout By PRIUP a08•ARI aJ •-"'---l t.__ I --• ·••? p ._...... ftt&Jn .... vwucel ft -r-aa ·-"""="= ~ ... Tehrap.. and Ma MVU t'luor ~rs> uttuU.... COib• employtea 1upuvl1lna • natural eerntd about UMo Prttite ...._. ,., projfct ln \M '°"°'of lrlft, ll\I ol lran·a Ayatullah ftubOUah In Paaanan. Khom•lnl'a pray•r, "I . hfl ~ A Fluor •f.OkHman e m· Alml.ttK)' to tul th• banda -d-ulaed &hat 'It'• not a panlc for l,-Qff'S," loci~ wtte ctttid· u tual on.•• but bJ1h level of· ln1 ·~le>-~vacuat~ • "'°"-tlcera"' u~ cu.:npany hav.a..been. oL u..w..n .. ·e .. , .. , ... t. ..,. mHliatL tor. Middle Eaat -country. Irv In~ lM-ec1q""u~a!.¥-..M!!!"l.Lt&o...lfJe'-c""'h~le Kho~lnJ ra.lted today aaainst what to do, •nd when to do It "dHpotism and colonlaU m" The ,,oor 1pok sman 1aJd the wh ch be aaid hH perv rted u.e company ·i1 in conatant com· lranlan cultun munlcat.ion with the U.S. Shte Tbe lrvlne-bued Fluor Corp Department for advtce. * * Tuada)', t.be U.S. f!mbuay ln * Tehran ur1ed American com· ,,,.... P .,,e J panles to evacuat. non-e11enUal personnel and dependents or employees u soon u poalble. One Fluor executive said com· pany officials are. trytn1 to de· Reza P ahlavi "bas made the tennine whether the Ayatullah's a rmy follow the ord ers of stat e ments reported today another country.·• literall,y meant that the ba~ or The anU-sh ah movement will foreign advisors should be ~ut be 1uccessrul only "when the off as a warning against in· root.a of colonialism are pulled terference in the Iranian govern· out," he said. ment. Re did not mention the Uhited Fluor officials said its SlA.tes by name, bul there was American employees probably · no...doubLw.hat counlcy .be_was __ will be ev.acuated. "very soon." tallting about. "We're not going to keep peo· During the nJghl from Paris, pie where there ls danger," one the ascetic religious leader slept said. ''1bey will not be left ii the on the floor of the upstairs bar local assessment is that there is on bis chartered Air France· serious danger. jumbo jet . The jetliner circled "People are not stuck. It's just l.hree time_s an~ l~ded at 9 a.m. a blatter of planning. as a million JUbtlant followers "We'll either stay or go as the lined the ll·mUe route he took situation requires ." ' from the airport to the capital's The company is completing largest cemetery. work on a $300 million natural Some !0,000 "Islamic police" gas liquids turbo-expander plant maintained order all along the at Pazanan. The job bas been ·route, and more than 100,000 accepted as mechanically com-s up p o rte r s jamme d the plete, but fm al inspection work cemetery. remains. Shouts. or "God is greal't and Fluor also built an oil refanery "Welcome Khomeini" greeted atlsfahan. IRAN. • • the ayatulla.b, an exile for more Not a R'in11~r Despite the "first prize" ribbons lying on the pavement, this Orange County Fair- grounds trash iruck won no awards for tts performance Wednesday afternoon. The truck flipped on Uni_versity Drive near the Newport Beac1i/Irvine city line, on its way to the . county Coyote Canyon dump. Driver Davtd De Arcos, 29. of Santa Ana escaped unµtjured, police said. ' f . Diedrich Tab $61,000 Supporters Chip Inf or Legal Expenses By GARY GRANVILLE OftlM O.lly ~lleC Staff Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's courtroom bat- tles have cost bis supporters more "than $61,000 so far m legal rees paid to four lawyers. The money h.as been collected from political sources at a series of fuodraisers including a lunch at the Villa Fontana restaurant it Orange last December that raised $40,700. At the December fundraiser the guests consumed Sl,lJO worth of Vill a Fontana vittles and competed ror '9()q worth or door pri~ gold coins converted to jewelry. According to recordit of the two rundraising organizations. Morgan bas been paid $50,000 for bis role in .defending Diedrich against c rimina l charges brought against him in two coun- ty grand jury indictments. One of those indictments c harged the 53-year-old .Fullerton supervisor with violal· ing slate campaign finance regulations. t han 14 years, as he rode t~ougb the throng in the back of . .a blue Mercedes. Occasionally . the chauffeur accelerated to force the car through the swarming crowd. Near Tehra n U nivers ity, where mor e than 40 persons have been killed the past week in clashes between Khomeini's supporters ~ the army, a ban· ner read: "When evil goes out the angel comes in." ' Newport Parents Hear 'Gloom' Talk Included among the paying guests were a large number -or firms and indivisuals who reg· ularly contribute to county supervisorial campaigns and who frequently have an interest in decisions by the board or supervisors. Among those who paid $1,100 for luncheon tickets were the Irvine Company. Shappell "In· dustries, restaurateur Brad Per· rin, Hon Development Company, Pacesetter Hom s , Orange County Steel Salva e. Compan The second indictment in· volves bribery charges related to a 1973 Board of Supervisors land use. decision Charges involved in the first indictment are now in limbo. They are a waiting a decision fro m the s tate Attorney General's Office after an ap· pellate court recently upheld a ower court decision to quash all Teng Greets Airport Mob In Atlanta ATLANTA <AP> -Chinese Vi ce Premier Teng Hsiao-ping, adapting quickly to the ways or American pe>Utics, plunged into an airport crowd aod pumped hands today upon his vnval in Georgia. Teng. on the first leg or an in· spection tour of American busi· ness and scientific facilities, was greeted by a bras& band and a small crowd waving Chinese flags when he stepped out of his presidential jet al Robbins Air Force Base outside Atlanta after his flight from Washington. Arter thanking Gov. George Busbee for his we lcoming re· marks . Teng s t ep)>ed past security guards and shook bands with members of the crowd as he walked to.bis limousine. When he arrived at hls hotel in downtown Atlanta. a ·group of about ~ demonstrators .. bearing signs like •'Better Dead than Red" and "No $ for Reds," stood across the litreel. Teng went stralgbt into it.be hotel .where be met witJi 1,400 busi: nessmen for lunch. · By JERRY CLAUSEN Oftlllt Deity f'lleC Staff P ar ents concerned a nd con· fused with what Proposition 13 is doing to public schools got little solace W«idnesday night from a scb,pol adminiatratof1' lobbyist wbo spoke in Newport Beach. William Cunnlngbam, ex· ecutive ~r for the Associa· tion .of California School Ad· mlnistrators, laid it on the line early in his 90-miilute present&· lion to the Newport-Mesa dis· trict's School Community Ad· visory Council. ···No~ knows wbat's hap- pening j n Sacramento." said Cunninpia,m, ~ for~er superin· Plane· Loses . . Poluh.Film - BUDAPEST. Hunear)' (AP > -The original film of a new Hungarian-Polish co-production titled "En Route" was lost en route from Warsaw to Budapest, a Hungarian new~paper reported. P-r o du c e r l s t v a n F <"g a, r a s t o 1 d t h e newspaper Hetfoel Hirek the film had been flown to Warsaw to be shown to CO· producers. It was to be re· turned to Budapest u registered luggage by a Polish airline, but nevet sbowedup. . . tendenl of the Newport-Mesa school system. State legislat.ors , be said, face possibly "the most difficult as- signment in the history or dem- ocratic government" in al· tempting to shore up puJ>Uc services following pa:asage of-the tax-relief initiative last June. Cummingham indicated there is only one bright spot resulting from Proposition 13. He said public education will cease being "all " things to all people," because boards of education a nd superintendents will have to say "no." "We in educaUon can get back· \o those things we know how to do well -educate ." Cunningham said school dis· tricts WOQ't know until late July or August how much money they'll have for fiscal 1979-80 because of the confusion in -Sacramento oyer three bills and the legislative processes re· quired in eventual compromise. '·Meanwhile, the district supe~ntendent h.as the job of .figuring expenditures without ~.ny ~ea or income," be said. Businessmen would laugh at such an idea.'' The distribution of surph~es last year and Gov. Edml!lld Brown Jr. 's freeze on teacher salaries saved public education last year, Cunningham opined. "If those two things bad oot oc· curred, 40 percent of the school districts would be bankrupt by this March." ,,,....P~AJ and lobbyists Fra Mich na and Sandy Sandling. Among lesser . donors were Philip J. Reilly, president of the Mission Viejo Company. Vl'N, Avco Community Developers and the Baldwin Company. Included in payments to at· torneys made either through the Ra lph Diedrich Birthday Party Com mittee o r the Ralph Diedrich Defense Fund is the $350 it cost to unsuccessfully de· fend Diedrich against a parklng ticket. Bu~ bulk or the money has gone to Diedrlch's former lawye r, Marshall Morgan. ut one charge lodged against iedrich and his ~·defendants n mid-1977. As things stand now, Diedrich and co-defendant LeRoy Rose are scheduled to st.and trial next week in San Diego Superior Court on the bribery allegations brought against them Dec. IS. 1977. Morgan. the recipient of the $50 ,000 donated by Diedrich's political supporters, will not be at hi~side. He bowed out or the case in December after declaring a con· met of interest. I oo·~ Of CHAIRS ON DISPlA Y .... STORM ••. said a suit of armor would have • been bet1er protection than an umbrella Wednesday against hue• baUdonel that drummed on lbe roots of boule• and cars and covered locaJ beaches. Hall a nd ' hilh wlnd3 hJ l Newport Beach and Costa r.tesa. -'? An e.Umated 5.000 residents or t.bou. cWea wer..e w.u.bQulJig'«L..... .. .. during the a fternoon unt il emergency crews replaced · downed power-lines. Members of the . s heriff's Harbor Patrol clocked the winds ·at '10 mlltf's an hour . Several 1ntall boats and yacht •ere ripped from their moorin.&s by the gusfs. Flood.in« caused problems ln many communities . Beach • Bcwlevard betwee n Adams " A venue and Memp'tM Street in II Huntington Beach was awash at ' the height of the storm and city 1• crews bad to pump water rrom t- severa1 hom~s. 1 Authorities in Orange Coun· r ty·s Environmental Manage ... · ment Agency said pub \j~ faclllties survived the heavy rain and high winds with rel. > atlvely llWedamage. · . ~uthern Calilomia Gas of-• facials said today that the con-~ tinulng cold weather has meant record levels in the supply of ' natural gas to homes and busi-nesses. A total or 3.3 billion cubic feet of gas was supplied Tu~sday to establish a new record. The company said emergency sup. Piles ot gas lrom Texas and Oklahoma wilt insure continued supplies for Orange Count.y. And custodians of rain gauges were kept busy Wednesday as the ~ew d~wnpour gave them fres h statistics for their log books. The Moulton-Niguel Water District gauge shows a total of 11.04 Inches of rairi thus far Uus season. Last year at this ltme the utility had logged \L\7 inches. Orange County Harbor Di.:. lrict has logged 10.02, the Orange County Flood Control District. chart shows 10.86 and the gauge at Ounge Coast College Stands al 12. 75 inc bes for the season. The rain eased today and pro· ylded some relief for crews try. mg to mop up Oooding on some ·san Juan Capistrano streets. Camino deJ Avion and Del O~i~po Street n~a r C :i mino Capistrano were aw a sh but neither street was closed. Rancho Viejo Road between Village Road in San Juan Capistrano a nd Vi a Escolar south of MJssion Viejo wa s closed for two hours lat ~ Wednesday while worker c cleared mud that bad moved onto the pavement rrom a nearby con· struction project. · The California Highway Patrol said traffic moved well on all roads tttroughout tbe storm with a number of minor collisions attribute<t to heavy rain and ra,in-slick pavement. <:ome See Our fantastic En route to Geo r gia, spokesmen for the Chinese and American governments issued a joint press communique in which the countries "reaffirmed The original' was to be used for makin_g·coples for nationwide distribution -nere. If it ii norlocited, anot her rour month s SCHMITZ •.• the Carpenter For Se;;-ate Com· Buys in La-Z-Boys. ....... a...z.a.,e sa.wc .. ~ ··--·····--tbt.\ \be.Y_U~UmP.OJ.e..<lJ.Q...eL(QN • by any country or group of coun· would be needed to piece mlttee aa well as a $15,000 doaa· or~nrn·11r rtntslrecr·· _uoo._fmm:tbe G,UD-OWDUl...J> product Calif omia Committee. ...... ,..et: m~m, ... ,,,_ __ - tries to establish hegemony or domination over others." ORANGI CO.AST ( DAILY PILOT ,,. Ofef'tOll C..tt O..ly ,.OM, wltft•~Clli ''<°"' IN-IMHotW\l"r"' l\_l ...... 11•1 ... 0._ c .. ,, .,~..,..,,,flCI,_• k P6•••••01t1en .. ,.. pwOth,..CI Mond•y tPw~ r,ld•Y fOf' (O\t• ~>I N.-1 f!et<ll. -·-°" l t t<fllf"-lalo Yollff, I•-l.-l'ltt<fl S....lflCeO\I " \.f~ .. ,.....,,... '°''..,_ ., P¥0ii1\N'O -...1110.-n •fllO ~~·~ ,,.. "''"' ,.,.. ""°''"'',.,, Pl•"' '' •• no Wnl e .. $1/'n! C0<I• ""'-· C•lll...-010 t it7t "-·-........... __ _ '"' •.c-t.. Y"•l"r-1 .... -.. ~ ~ ..... ... '"''°' ,_ ............ MaMtl'"' Colii.< 0-•Ml."t ~ ...... ""'~'·"' ....... 11 .. l!:dllOt\ Coat• MeH Offloe MAUlflO :.::::~· :aJ !l.:O~i.o. ~?t Te~e (11•)14Mat1 a......... Mhe"'91ftt MNtn · Also helping to fuel the one· tim e American Independent Party presidential candidate's Robert Fl8• her· closing election drive was a $7 ,000 contribution from the Republican oriented Lincoln Club as well as a $10,000 loan Dead at 83; Rites Friday from the Calirornia Republican Senate Campaign Committee. The Schmitz disclosure state- m e n t shows that he paid poUtlcal consultants Arnold Funeral serVices will be con· Forde and Blll Butcher-$35,000 ducted Friday for Robert C. for their services in hla cam· FUber, a resident of the Costa pat1n. Mesa area for more than 55 yean, •'Contested amount'• is written wbo diedTuetday at thea1eol83. alongside the listing of the Services are set for 10 a.m. at Butcher Forde ree paymenl Westmhwter Memorial Park. 1t wu not clear from the nota· Mr. Fbber. was a three-time lion whether it was Schmits or commander of the Costa Mesa Butcher and Forde who were American Letlon Poet and was contesting the amount. · active ln · t.be COila Mesa Hi•· The Schmiti disclo,ure state· totlcal Society. • ment shows that. ln the final two He wu an avid collector of wee kl of his victorious·· cam· oran,e crate label• and hl1 col· pai,n, •.•1 was received in lectlon ol barbed win ncenUy contributions and loans. wa1 donated to Cal Sta .. Lofte Tbat amount w._.n•t enough, Beach. . however, to avert the '85.• def· • Mr. Pllber worked for a local tell the Schmlll campatp com· marktt ud later opened b1I own mlttee roort4ld when It cloeed 1ardea IUIPPl1 company lD eo.ta the bookl on 'the tm electioo Mesa. He retired about 10 yean drive that n!lw ii¢d the funner a10. 1tate eenator and U .S. con· He ii IUrYINd bJ bla widDw 1"91 ... to elected offl~ after Mlklr9d. .:_._a .... ,., at11w1. • llSTSIRVICE • IEST PRICES SA VE OM THE FAM.OUS SWIVEL RECLINER IOCKER Choose Y w Seating Comfort With LA·'.Z·BOY~ · COITAMllA 369 I. 17th IT. (Acroll from Rolpt-. next to Marte CCllllQJrl) 642·'617 Mon. -Fft. 1~ Sot. 10-6 Ooled~ ~~ ~~ NEW LOCATION • LA•UNAHILU 2ao2• Lak•PorelfDr. <CorMr ot lalCe FOl9lt Dlt¥9. and A¥enlda De la CQl1ola) ·- 770-6161 Mon. -ffl T~ • Sot.1M lun. lM MllllON vtlJO 21192 ........... ~. (COmer cl A.,_., cm Via flCOD) .... 19()2 Mon. -M. 1().4 Sot. 10-6 -aa.d a.mv CALlFORN'A college l Schools Face Tough Re~examination ~ ...... ~"" ~aNTO·AA2>-.. •eal1lattv• analyat 1ay1 Calllonda'• 105 C'Omm\UUty col· 1•1 .. a.re faclq tb• to\atMll ~pcMUUon U tt .eumtnatloft of an branche1 of atat• iovem ment. Tb• analyal. WllllU\ IU.mmi o uld W•dDeJ4&¥ _-lhal it llAT:AI.~ ,tle. 4 A'm•1 ~iiiUlb' ·~"'tncr' o 6arefY ·t~:'Perten oCtb• ata; by a small amount t.b P~ aupport for the University of $4 ,4 bUllon lb Prol">•lllon 13 CaUfomla or the atate colleges bailout funda for k>cal 1ovem came with litfle re".iew, mnt lo the 197940 at.a\.e budJ t . Hamm aaid. ft~ 1f.& 'ddren1•• 8 Th• wu ·~ause It was as-, I state ront'f'tenc orremale el ct-aumfd that l~ally ele.c.ted o • ----------ed~Y ect toonty otfttohrtr -llclall. JpeQd.\Aa Prbtuu·i~Joctl:. He "akl lt \1 "unr~ah1Uc" to ly railed revenue, we re dl.rec:Uy 12Charges Fi.Wd A.fte~ Gun Attack SAN DIEGO <AP >. -A freckle-facecl teeo-a1e 1trl bas been e:bar&ed with 12 criminal counts, lnc1udio1 murder, in connectioo •i th a anlpe'r attftk in the parting ·lot ot Cleveland Elementary School. hope for any major lncreuea accountable t? the taxpayers bffauae the only waya to finance and bad a U&ht rein. m.Jor lnt-reues are throuah tu But now, the community col· tncreues, whtcb bave no le1ea eet more state money than polltit'al support, or by cutUn1 either ue or t.be state university other forms of state aid to local and college system. got/e"1Dlent Already, $13' billion of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's $20.3 billion spending plan i s earmarked for local govern· meot, either in s hared pro· grams. subventions or bailout lunch, Hamm said. THEY ARE IN line for $852 million from the state in Brown's 1979·80 budget, an amount equal lo 70 percent of all of their revenues. ·'Community colleges more than any other type of govern- ment are going to be subject to an increasing level of review," Hamm said. ' I ~ Thur9dey, ~ '· 191"t------ OneeaRoad An unoccupied car is awash in Spring Valley after Wednesday's storm dumped more than two inches of rain on the San Diego area. Dozens of roads were report· ed closed in the area and many houses were evacuated. The attack killed the principal a nd bead custodian and wounded eight pupils and a police officer. . A PE11TION filed Wednesday in Juvenile Court by tbe district attorney's office accuses Brenda ~ Ann Spencer, 16, of the shoot· i.Dgs. THE COMMUNITY colleges. wb1cb are getwlg $817 million this year, are the only element of local government receiving such massive state funds with· ou..t extensive state review. And Hamm said the relative lack of control· is undoubtedly going to change, because both the governor's o ffice a nd Legislature are looking for places where controls are lax. Mo~e Farm Workers L~ave Jobs In the petition, Deputy District Attorney Charles L. Patrick re· quested that Miss Spencer, who police say bas a history or petty theft and drug abuse, be tried as an•dult. The petition also alleges .. special circumstances," wbicb means that if she is tried as an adult and convicted of murder, she could be sentenced to life in state prison without parole. • IF THE CASE IS handled in Juvenile Court, the girl could be free in seven years. In addition to murder, the red· haired junior at Patrick Henry High School was charged with nine counts of assault with intent to kill and one of assault with a deadly weapon on a police of· ficer. Juvenile Court Judge William L. Todd Jr. said he will probably set a date next week for a bear· ing on whether Miss Spencer will be tried as an adult ~ Until the early 1970s, com· munity colleges received all but a small fraction of their support from local property taxpayers. Temii Policing PlonwStop LOS ANGELES (AP) -On Feb. 11, the team policing ex- periment initialed by former Police Chief Ed Davis will be terminated, says Police. Chief Daryl Gates. Instead. Gates said· Wednes· day, detectives and patrolmen "Will again go their separate ways. Under the team policing policy, detectives aad patrolmen worked together in 65 teams, each unit responsible for one geographical area and all the crimes within it. By Tiie Asaocla~ Press A bout 1,200 more farm workers have walked off their jobs to protest strike-breaking ef- forts of lettuce growers on the eve of a rally with United Farm· Workers Union founder Cesar Chavez. The rally was scheduled this afternoon,· when Chavez is to arrive in Calexico. Other than the walkoff by ex- tra field bands at six farms, the lettuce fields ·of the Imperial Valley were relatively peaceful on Wednesday. 21n.Colllde SAN DIEGO <AP) -The crewmen of ao F -4 Phantom fighter were hospitalized in sta· ble condition today as a search went on for two other fliers-miss- ing after two Navy jets collided 64 miles south of Sao Diego, the Navy said. Lt. Cmdr. James McNair, 32, of' Cantonment, Fla., pilot of the "Chafles Dickens" A umque exhibit of 25 life-sized figures from favorite Dickens' novels at F~hion 1sl(;ind Oti-Pn~~sday, February 1 thru Friday, February 12 in #3 Fashion Island I ~ • Characters from~ .Ch.ristmas Carol" "David Copperfield," ·"Oliver Twist" and many more -=-%~Created especially for this premiere toµr of the United States by Bermans & Nathans Ltd., of London .. F-4, and his r adar intercept of· ficer, U . Ted Dewald, 29, of Point St. Lucie, Fla .. were plucked from the sea by a Coast Guard helicopter Wednesday. Their jet collided with an A-4 Skyhawk during a routine train· ing flight, a spokesman said. The Skyhawk crew was missing. CrmlaK•U.4 AZUSA <AP) -Four Covina t een-agers were killed when their compact car plunged 350 feet down a mountainside and landed upside down in a stream, 'California Highway . Patrol of· ficers said. The victims, all 17, were iden· tified today as J ames J . Muraca, Ronald D. Cleary, Scott Spencer and Charles Robert Stickley, said CHP Officer Jim Cox. · .,...,.. Top• lle~ord LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's 1978 re· election expenditures totaled $3.26 inillion and he 4_utspent bis Republican oppenent, former Attorney General Evelle J . Younger, by more than Sl million, according to campaign reports. Brown's expenditures between July 1 and Dec. 31 were the highest ever reporte d by a gubernatoria) candidate in the general election, state campaign experts told the San Francisco Chronicle on Wednesday. ¥-Boat at to If a•t FRONTERA, Calif. <AP)- For m er Charles Ma n s on follower Leslie Van Houten bas been denied parole despite good eva luations from prison psychologists and staff mem- bers. • "Society bas no defense ... in this type of crime, except to isolate the offender," Communi· ( SF.4TE ) ty Release Board chairman Ruth Rushen said Wednesday. "We feel we must observe you longer befoti? we can· project your parole date." D.A., Cop• Stted S ACRAM ENTO CAP > Michael D. Small, a San Rafael attorney, bas filed a $2.4 million damage suit in federal court here accusing Solano County. District Attorney Neal Mccaslin, sheriff's deputies and Vacaville and Vallejo police of battery, false arrest and false imprisonment\ · The suit stems from an inci· dent in front of a Vallejo home. reportedly used as headquarters by the Hell's Angels motorcycle gang. · Making Reo111 for $prlng IS NOW IN PROGRESS 50% to 75% off on FALL -HOLIDAY and EARLY SPRING CLOTHING ~SHOES and ACCESSORIES Ma11Ston 6SFc1W•lllcmcl -6t~SOO-- . . Wo•1•'1Ston JJPa1ltl•hlcmcl ~~----644-2400 le ,, •• ~- 0 r & Robert N Weed/Publltl'ler Thomas KMvll /Editor Barbara I( relbf&h 1e(iftorUil P~ Editor ,,,p,,o, Editorial ~age ..... 11!111!!~------------------~ ................................. .. Keeping Track 9f Mesa' Prioritie Rowland Evan /Robert Novak. ~--~· ... A rnl)f~anrMj1&)n proving o an fl cUv way for C<>tita Mt!s city olfki 1 and clUz ns to k p on ACJtAMENTO Gov. Ed t')! on how th' tlly 1 Pl"Olll'ftliftl. mund 0 'Brown Jr • far from 'L t sprina. l"Oun ll·mcmbera " nt lhrouah a day'a lllnc:hlna at lbc ridicule or Jim· worth o( discuss on on what city projoc~_a mo t lmp0r-,. my Carter's Wuhina ton over r hl d mA.Ad {Jl,t 1' cunslilu· -UanL Uonally lmpo•cd balanc.od Numer1<·ul r nkin&" "~rt' giv by rat'h wuucil .... .t~.r"'1.~...,&.r*eonviaeed the ,--11ft~bt-t-. atttnc ttt~ ftnattist vf ltirotrb ttrbf.!' ~htl!V\!--·• u s 11 on the vera or lun- cor ~Uminot,,e<t l ln th • future 4' dumcnl l, intlation·connected ot ~urprt. 1ngly. tr Inc carcuJ \161 amprovemE"nt~ pollllcDI l'hlingc tbllt he intends bcuded the h8t' rollowcd by th procc or implementing • to shape nnd lt'ad. -n~w ~C.'fiJCrol plnn by t In' tht~ few days of his second th r council pr1ont.U.•!; mctud fin orden. 1gn or term, Urown has already din a nee c.-nforcemt>nl. rt.>dcvclopmcnt, community ap ; o'" 1 ~ ~;'c ~ ~ pearunc ood ionang policie ' change here Amona the lo"t•st pnontie ar con truction of u that hws $J1lit marina on lbc nla nn River and the estnbhshment of h J m rt 0 m JI visitor und louri t bureau · conventional What makes the prioritie hst important is that the pnty leaders council didn't simply come up with It and then Jet al lay. arft'I dellvel'Cd Last Wl'Ck, City Man ager Fred Sorsabal submitted a pro-1 stunning help i;trcss report on the status of ea~hof lhl! gofals. 1 ~ ra° :1 c ~ oct ~ 'ounc1l mem~n1 are now aware o progress. or ack Hepublicans or it, on the caty praorihes. It's a simple system that and influential businessmen. shOul<l tx>conw u tradition m Costa Mesa. But tt i s the n at i 0 n a I Bridge Con.flict Loo~. tt appears Costa Mesa cit..v oUicials m ay have Jumped the gun on the issue of future bridge crossings over the Santa Ana River to improve east /west traffic flow . Responding to community concerns over preserving neighborhood ide ntity. the council recently began the abandonment or rights-of -way for proposed extensions of Gisler Avenue and Wilson Street to Huntington Bea<:h . One of the m ajor reasons for this action, oCficials said, was that the county plans to extend 19th Street to Huntington Beach, perhaps as early as 1982.Jbis. it seem ed. made the the extensions ol Wilson ana Gisler lcb\ than necessary. · · It now turns out that the Orange County Sanitation District has som e strong points in opposition to the 19th Street bridge. ~ . The roadway would s lice through 100 acres of sewage treatment land now in use on the Huntingt.on Beach side o f the rive r. And sanitation district oHicials say they need a ll the room they can get to keep up with expande(j service needs. This conflict is far ·rrom being irreconcilable. but Cost a Mesa officials had better start discussing tne s itua- tion now. Otherwise. the city could be left with. no future road outlets to deal with ever.growing traffic CalTrans Is Watching Motoris ts who make use of Newport Boulevard 1 Route 5.5) over the next few days can't . be blamed for h aving the feeling they.' re being watched . DemO<.'ralic party and lhe. 1980 presidential nomlna\ion, which Brown clearly wants, that will feel the full force of Brown's political conversion. Brown is hurling his chaOenge di rectly at President Carter. Sen. Edward Kennedy and the party's tradi· tional constituencies. As be told us in h.is offi>e here· "America is running on panic today" and voters wa nt basic fis::al changes to end the horror of in !talion and make America com- petitive ogain. BOTH BROWN'S principal legislative leader. Assembly • Speaker Leo McCurthy. and the slate's to p Democrat 1n Washi'itgton. Sen. Alan Cranston. ha ve publicly broken with Brown on his J un 8 inaugural demand for a constitutional ban on federal re d ink . Indeed. Brown is probably the fi rst just· t'lected governor to be booed by his own state party. as he was at the Democratic .conventlo'b 'here Jan. 20 when he first appeared al the podium. Instead of backi'ng down with apologij,)6. Brown carefully built his case in a tightly reasoned ex- planation or fi scal "reality ... then attacked "experts." "the Pb.D.'s" and the "llmid souls" who defend rcd·lnk 1pendlng even at the peak of today's re- covery cycle. At the end, de· legale in th~ naUon•a rao·st iberaJ Demouatie party gave him a 9tanding ovation. THAT I the qulntesai!ntlal Brown today: explain. then at- tack from what he feels la a secure position of political stre ngth. Brown. an original foe of California's Proposition 13. had hls eyes opened· to reality when voters here approved it by a huge majorit y last year. As one of his top aide~ told .us : "He feels he experienced something very personally about the voter mood today that few other Politi- cians have fell." Loni conaidered a political oddball, Bl'OW'J\-linds tbat. his of- renelyt hu 1uddenly made him a fixture at podiuml' he used to shub. Heahowed upsomewbal un• expectedly at the ~Francisco convention of the National Food Proceuon Jan. 23 and talked for 45 minutes, highly unusual for Brown. Four days earlier he in- sisted on addressing t he t.op brass ol the Big Four auto companies (gueslsoftbe CaUforniaCbamber ol Commerce> at the Century Plaza Hotel .. Out-of-state invita- tions for' Brown are p Ung up in record numbers. _ · IN IDS ihterview with us al the s tate capitol, Brown ridiculed opposition to his call for a comtitutlonal convention to ~ __ , NiR ~~ TJ.1£.NPW WAV'£. • force an end ol deficit spending and halt what he calls "this perverse aovernment money machine." The decline ot 1be U.S., lte told us. is dlre.cUy tied to 'b decUne_ot u.a cm...oey whif!h in turn l~dlrectly in- fluenced by the immense red-ink s pending of the past dozen years. Politicians In Washington may have trouble understanding that. be says, but voters have no trouble at all. Brown ls acutely sensiUve lo charges that he ls a Political op- portunitt who has undergone rre·quent . conversions -now from a llberal Democrat <who managed Euge~McCarthy's 1988 preaide nlia campalgn here ) to a cons rvative Republican. What has changed, he insists, are objective ~ircumstances and the voters. ·'Before Franklin Roosevelt,, no one could imagine, the New Deal," he told us. "Now what is coming ln lbe '80s no one can begin to appreciate. We are moving into a new cycle" -a cycle that wilJ change the map of today's politics lo unprec:licta· ble ways. TO BEPUBLJCANS and con- se-rv-ative Democrats, thi~ is like" ca tnip. Fred L. Hartley, chairman of Union Oil, refused to give Brown a nickel for bis re- election campaign; he recently sent $20,000 to help liquidate Brown's $800,000 campaign debt. Republican Assembly leader Paul Priolo, the No. 1 oppasition le'gislator, has informed bls par- ty he will do nolbing to blunt Brown'k balanced budget cam- paign. One of Speaker McCarthy's trusted Assembly l ea ders. a De mocrati c powerhouse on the Ways and- Means Committee. warned Mcca·rthy to expect no anti- Brown help from him, saying: 'Tm sticking with Brown and the balanced budget right into the White House." Brown himself is a m an possessed of anJdea and entirely convinced of bis rectitude. U he can convince his party and h.is country, the world will be bear- ing more ~rom Jerry Brown. Those antenna -laden vans parked by the side or the road a re from the state Department of T ra nsportation. CaJTrans is taking traffic counts .to d etermine what to do in the . way of "operational improve me nts·' on the overcrowded roadway until' a decision finally is m ade on whether or not to build a freeway into downtown Costa Mesa. Taxp~yers Running Out ·of Generosity It's not the first ti m e that tra Hic tabulations have been attempted by CalTrans. In fast. officials did a count not long ago. Rut they blew it. Th e count was low. leading to the er· roneous conclusion that the re was no need fo r any im- provements to the busy boulevard. Costa Mesa officials cried foul a nd CalTrans is now giv- ing the study a nother go. That 's·nice of them. of course. but the mistake qualifies as fuel for the s lightly paranoid Costa Mesan who h as come to believe that the great ditch that bisects the roadway is a permanent landmark for the Ha r bor Area. • Opinions expressed m the space above ;;re those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those ot their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited Address The Dally Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 ~Boyd/Walking liy L. M. 80\'D What may he most s1go111 eant about the fact that the average woman walks 10 miles a day is lhat it's one mile far th er t h a n th e average man walks a day.I No doubt the drinkers of •---· 0-ed-~ ,w,~lh lemett-~i won't buy the claim lbat the best thirst quencher known to the S<'1ent1sts is grape JUiee. T he word "sermon" 11m't 1nthe Bible, l'mtold Q .. Why is a ia n y cbarllfU!r sometimes called a screwball'! Why that word '" A. Best guess is it goei; back to horse talk. A blend· Ing of lhe word "skewbald" Dar Gloorny Gu~ I with people like F'.W. O. who nan around HY· Ina . "l love wet weather'' <Ous, Jan.~)' ·wo u Id drown ln a d o w n p o ·u r o ( "'character'' -or re· move t.betwo feet or mud from my coutructlon Job1lte. which 1s the correct term for a horse that's white and bay, roan. brown or chestnut Plea11c nole, •'piebald" only alludes to a white and black horse. Q ... Why's a quarter called two-bits?'' lftat-Me?CtC'lm~ t"Oln" known as the real was re- f erred to by cowboys as a bil. Two of them were about the equal of 25 cents. Q. "How fast can a house mouse ru.n?" A. Four miles an hour is tops. AntonJo Roig of Mujorcn died a few weeks ago with exactly $50 In his possession( only enough to pal' burta costs. ln 1950, he inherited 10 acres of land from an aunt, hut was obllned to sell It, becaYB didn'.t. have-th&- $"50 tncn....t.ba[ it would hav~ taken to build a fence around the property H requfred by law. Only. five yeara later, the bulldin(l boom was on, and lhe new owner 101d the ' land for S20 mlllion. If you know a nybody named O'Connor, you might mentlon tbla: Claim lt the O'Connor family tree of I re land can be traced back rarth r than any other In the Wutern Wortd. Accounted for ao far are fJt generations all the way to Klng Fer dach th Just, born In A. O. 75. Client aaks if Lowell Thoma• Invented the newueel. No, 1lr the Jtuutarw did that thln1. In 1111. perishing from the earth. But our untampered with franchise is still our best hope. B. F. BORCOMAN Llee••e If eattb19f"' To the Editor. In your Jun. 15 editorial, ..License Boards Due for Cut· back'' you expressed a partiality for maintaining those licensing . boards which affect public safe- ly. Unquestionably. each Ucens- ing board must be able to stand ui> JO public scrutiny. But there is far more to be measured than Just public safely to justify the existence of a board. In the case of the Certified Shorthand Reporters Board , there are a number of cogent rea- so n s for Us mainte nance.· Unlicensed ttnd incompetent people acting as court reporters have caused dilncult problems and legal entanglements, plac· ing the Utig~nts on both sides of a case in jeopardy and reswtibg in great expense to the lax· payers. - f ~.F~1.1t79 s DAILY PtLOT •7 €arl1Uaraaee , ·UNLIKE 'J'WO OTHER LEADING companies queried, State Farm was candid about rat.es . on its 20 mUlioo policies. Its Tigures show Utat -theoretically _ .... typical'' premiums lJiigbt range from a low of less than SiOo a year in. Iowa to ni<>re than $4,000 annually in Manhattan for a "muscle" ~ar (high horse~wer to weight raUo> with a fibergtaas .~Y drh:en more than S,200 miles a year by a single male under 21.· ~, . . ~ost of the diff~ence ls ·attributed to the age; sex and mamage rac~rs that insurance regulators oppose. For in· st ance, the "standard" rate for Ames. Iowa. is $180 a year, for. Manhattan, $940 -for comp•rable minimum cov· •. , erage. · • . · . · Tolhe New Vork·fieltie for married persons over 30 al!d $658 for. the age factor; $470 for $ingle marital status;· and $1~081J:f.the insured is a male. ~SWELLS THE 'JOTAL FOR a com_parable car to $3,149 -a ·235 ~rceot surchar1e -for the a1e, sex and . • marita.J status differences. The other .ariations·are $188 roi-dri\tlng. more than 100 miles a week and commuting with the car, $470 for !i~rglass auto body and.S23S for high horsepower. Total surcba{ge: ;tltpercent. · · . ' From either basic rate, subtr.act 15 percent f(u-drivine less ~ 30 miles a week ~lhout commuting, about 20 percent for. a $500 deductible clause on collisiod"imurance, about.l.S percent for a $S0 deductible on comprehensive -coverage and 4 percent ln Ames because minimum iri· surance requirements there are less than for New York. · Nert: Cutting costs .... -•• • Oose Work A technician at Raytheon Marine Co., Manchester, N.H., works inside a radar transmitter housin1 ror the company's new .--=----.co=""•-Jon.'iVOldanc-~ radar. '1'11e system-can- tr~ck u many as 20 shipa at the same tlme and alert the ships' officen in advance of a collillon course. little J0.y Reported For Working Women .. z., I J I J L--~-, J ~! ·~e't• not going that way, Marinoduke. · You olwoys stop and gonlp with oll your friends I" SUltERHEROES -----..... , '#'/. ': .-NP~rT-N.J:IHS WITH H156TIJIUE$-lt4 SMPnY, allm< ~lllP.S OfF lflSWTk. A '10Cl(l1'tH ne ~ OF Hl6 ~ ... SHOE MOON MULLINS ' -~. by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta . .. "'6W~Tll.Af THe ~7t)lf WHlaf ~ CfF "™e rlf'IOSION IS . CCMt'EAlEP IH Tie ~ ~ C'AlllllES WITH HIM / by Jeff MacNelly ! MJ. l)..UE. CCf)l{J, arr 1r Wv Ha? 1F YOJ Dl[)JT HIRE A 1l<EE. ~10wr1r.. . • :i:a-.~---·' -.. .... - .AGATHA CRUMM D.R. SMOCK MOTLEY'S CREW WHAT 'KIND OF eueBLE GUM DID YOU vtVE ME ?··· t CAN'.T MAKE euee1..es by Tom Batiuk IKNOW, JCJNI~, AHO 1W &EfN WOH05i~ING- PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz ~E t«mCf SA ~IFl.t l((X.IN6 61RL AmOACHlN6 FROM THE Of'fOSITE DIRECTION .. J4E SPEAKS .. by Bill Hqest by George Lemont 'CALJSe MY -res-r -ruee wAS KePT wHeRe 1-r Ai-.WAYS CA<..ICSH-r "T'HA.,-e>Rt<SH"T"' M ORNINCS SLJN.1 by Gus Arriola TRY TAKINCt TME WRAPP!R OFP FIRST TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS •6 Aellnement UNITED Feature Syndicate 43 Tllrash WtOM.O.Y'• Puule Sol"4 I Nips 49 Su1pr1so 6 Side dish 50 Blacklhorn 11 Phthpptne 52 Frottc tree 5d U S mrl 14 "Gel - -group on•" 57 Scout 15 Insect stage 60 Article 16 Egg drink &1 Comme1ce f7 Juggler &2 Useful 19 Mineral 63 Econ adv•s- I• IMI• laf• lllA ·1 ~~[i[2 "'' i' , • l" ,,,. .. ..!..!!~..!! P A Plll MO ll [Y OJ!,!,,! S f A 11 A I 0 • 11 I ai tii II 5 I -.. I T f I -" . ·--" . • t .. ' I ' • I I ' r u \ . " "0 • r ' \ f 0 I II a , .... " D ll 1• IA 10 I rt l 11 " .. Oii• Cl II I II l Cir ' c p ( ' ( •• 0 II • I~ l '0 f ' -s I C I IA I ,, __ 20 Venly ers 21 l ion feature &I SWOfd 22 Massenet 66 T.ouchy I I ' ' t • .. '• • l 0 , • •IC illl 111111 • 1~1 ar1r11 ,.,. 110 I 0'" • I' 11 ' " I• I h'tl tr 'J fl I• g io I ~ " I & l ~ 1J i: "f ...__ .... opera 2c Chalices 26 Abilrty 27 Aloof DOWN 13 0c(Xlty ag Remorseful 30 Salty llu1ds 32 Rocklish 33 So.w 34 Machine 1 So state. In-18 lnterfecllon 41 Abandon!> foimal 23 Tap dnnk •2 Bev11ragu 25 Can 'l> 44 Gtrl s nlCk· 2 Moslem ne1ghbo1 nam6 Cll1el 26 Conlalners 45 Number _aul· 3 Sound 27 Spheres 1111 -""'."'."'"~--....:LSJlQ~ Z~QQ IQl!ltl§ ~11.QNuv ... a ____ _ 37 Icy hazard 5 Parte<JI · 29 Hearths •7 Nebraska 38 -foot oH Abbr. 30 Condemn clly 39 Castro's 8 Mr. Merner. Jt Rodents 48 Boo·boo land 7 East lndtan J3 lndlvldual: 50 Crust 40 Holy figure: 1tco Abbr. 51 Vein ol ore Abbr. 8 overdue 35 Man's nick· 63 EleYator C1 Campus 9 PHt . name man " • • l>ldgs. 10 Inactive 36 Common 64 Thaw •2 TIJeme 11 loeb(latecl: ScoUlsh p<e-~Quarry A3 Deuatlf 3 words li•es 58 Cyclti 45 ~xea 12 Elemerit ~ -Webster 59 Nol 1n I