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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-02-08 - Orange Coast Pilotf , • I I Coast Fog 'Cliiinu TwO .. - ' Valley Police Carew Means $2. 7 Million Lurking in Bush (See Sports, Page 81) · To the Angels THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 8, 1979 VOL. 11, NO. Jt, 4 SECTIOMS, 51 ,.AOl!S Cops Surpri,se Hiding Gunman A gunman lurking in the bushes outside a Coco's Restaurant in· Fountain Valley was surprised and captured by a police officer early today Police believe he is the same gunman responsible for seven robberies over the past eight months at Coco's restaurants in Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. P atrolman John Quinzio said Donald Melvin Butler, 25, of Santa Ana . was carrying a pellet gun in his waistband and a semi-automatic pistol in his sock when he was arrested lo· day outside the Coco's al 18280 Brookhurst St. It is the same Coco's that re- cently was robbed twice in one day. Police believe Butler is responsible for one of thooe rob· beries. In addition, Fountain Valley detectives believe Butler held up the same Coco's on another OC· casion, and also robbed the Coco's Restaurant on Adams A venue near Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. And. police said, they suspect Butler is the man who held up the Coco's on Mac Arthur Boulevard in Newport Beach, near Orange County Airport, on three separate occasions. Patrolman Quimio bad been sent lo the ort·roltbed restaurant in Fountain Valley at about Dimension Added 12: 50 this morning to provide an escort for the manager and the day's receipts. Quinzio said be s potted BuUer hiding in the bushes outside the restaurant and stepped back to watch Crom behind a corner. As the manager left the build-· ing, Butler allegedly moved from the bushes toward him. Quinzio moved in and arrested Butler, who was to be booked lo· day at Orange County Jail on s usplcion or armed robbery. Fog Expected To Continue In County Fog made many Orange Coun- ty motorists late for work today and played a part in two deadly traffic accidents. T he California Highway Patrol said inland Orange Coun- ty appeared to get most or the fog with Orange, Santa Ana, Placentia and Anaheim report- ing traffic tie·ups and a rash or minor collisions. And there will be m ore of the s ame tonight, the National Weather Service warned today. · •'These are classic fog condi· lions and we expect the situation to persist at least through Fri· day,'' a forecaster said. Traffic officers said foggy con- ditions this morning were a def. iJlite factor in two south county collisions that cost the lives of <See FOGGY, Page A2) • • • no on 1ssmg Boat WEST COVINA WOMAN KILLED AS PICKUP TRUCK SLAMS INTO OVERTURNED SEMI-TRAILER One Accident Lead• to Another on Fog-shrouded San Diego Freeway Woman Killed in Crash W~ng-way Driver Causes Freeway Havoc A wrong.way driver was blamed by officers today ror a serie& or coUisions on a fog. bound San Diego Freeway in La(Cuna Hills this morning that claimed the life or a West Co· vlnawoman. * * * Her pickup truck slammed in· to the rear of an overturned tractor.trailer . tided with and stopped Falken- berg, officers said. Vessel 4Days -Overdue A Santa Barbara to the Mex- ican Border sea search con· linued today ror three former Orange Coast res idents whose commercial fishing boat is over· due after leaving San Diego Jan. 22 Coast guard officials said the vessel was due to return to port Sunday after completing a two .. week fishing trip or the banks near the Channel Islands. Gary Newton. 22, and Dennis Vowell, 23, former Costa Mesa residents. and Vowell 's wife, Debbie, a former south county resident. were aboard the boat. "We're used to him being out a long time, but nothing like this has happened before," Newton's mother, Eleanor, said today. "We 're just hoping and pray· ing," the Costa Mesa resident added. She said her son was an ex- pe rienced seaman and that there was enough food on board the 40-foot craft for two weeks Coast Guard orricials said there was no indication the boat, "The Armistice." was in trou· ble. It was equipped with two- way radios. a direction finder (See SEARCH, Page A2) Coast "1eather WASHINGTON <AP) -A State Department finding that some Arab prisoners probably h ave s uUe red inhumane trea tment in Israeli jails is add· ing a new dtulension to U.S.- israeU relatiqps. It was unclear what impact the finding would have on Congress, -Which has strongly supported Israel on the one hand, but on the other has pressed for a loosening of U.S. ties with counlriea that violate human rights. S4 Woman Killed California Highway Patrol spokesman Tom Sapp said 44· year-old Barbara Throop, a Los Angeles Times delivery truck driver, was killed when she cras hed Into the overturned semi truck. Officers said the series of acci- dents began a.U.:55 a.m. when Frank Falkenberg, 66, of Laguna Hills, entered the San Diego Freeway at Alicia Parkway travetJog northbound Another tractor-trailer, dnven by George More y , 40, of Diamond Bar. became involved when the driver's attention was diverted by the last collision and slammed into Perez' stopped vehicle at the sce ne or the original accident. Miraculously, Falkenberg and Duarte suffered only minor in· juries and Duarte was treated al the scene. Falkenberg was transported to Saddleback Com- mnunity Hospital. Night and morning fog and low clouds. Otherwise fair with hig h c louds through Friday. Lows tonight 40 to 46. Highs Fri- day near 60 at beaches to upper 60s inland. IUrE A HEART -ONE OF OURS It's lime Cor spring lovin' and Valentine's Day. The Dally Pilot celebrates this 1pecial seuon with words and pictures detamng gilts for Valentines ID a 20·pa1e magazine, "Lovin•." Loot for this s~lal matulne in today's Dally Pllot. In _Canyon Crash A 29-year-old Santa Ana woman was killed early today oa foggy Laguna Canyon Road when bet car apparently drifted Into northbound lanes, slam· ming bead-on lnto a lar1e van. She wu the fourth f atallly In the last 12 days on La1una Canyon Road. Califomfa Highway Patrol Of. fJcer Bill Blerer aaid a mixture of dense fog and 1Uck roadway ml1ht have caused the woman's car to drift Into oncomina lanes at a curve In the aeven-mUe roadway a mlle aouth or the San Die10 Freeway at. about 8:30 a .m. Van driver Joseph Chazan, 45, of 201 Cypress Drive, Laguna Beach, waa sU1bt1y hurt in the 40·mile-per bollr cotUsion that left both vehlcle1 mangled. The entire stretch or roadway between El Toro Road and the freeway wu closed to throuab tramc Immediately followlnt t.be collision, wit.b northbouncl motorists diverted t.o El Toro Road. ·'Her ll1htwel1tU sport.I car drifted into the other lane aa abe <Ste FATALITY' Pase AJ) • in the southbound Janes. Eduardo Duarte, 31, of Long Beach, who was driving the traclor·lrailer, swerved to miss Falkenberg's car, sldeswiplng the car and ntpplng bis truck on it.a side. Shortly afterward, Mrs. Throop came out of the fog and slammed into the1.ractor·t.railer, killing her lnstantly. Falkenberg continued north· bound while a fourth car. driven by Tom Perez, 51, of Or~se. mana1ed to stop before •lrikinl the overturned semi. Two more vehicle• became ln· "-Olved. however. when Alan Cook. 21. of Stanton. finally col· 'I Perez. Cook and Morey were uninjured. The fatality. however , coupled with one later this morning on Laguna Canyon Road. brings to 12 the number o r traffic fatalities ln South Orange Ooun· ty since Jan. 1. No Idle Standbr WASHINGTON CAP > Thailand's Prime Minister Krlangsak Chomanao says the United Slates has assured him it wUl not "stand Idly by" If his country ls invaded by roreicn troops. . . - INSIDE TODA V il trilateral commission on foreign affairs gaoe Jimmy Carter some valuable ad· vance ~ of intema· tumal politic• before he en- tertd the White Howe. See Page AJB. .,. --· C1 ... . .. " .. M ... ., .," ., .. .,.,, A4 A4 , .-... It's Dell on Venus Infants' BOdies · tpace Picture Show Fires; Lightning Fo11nd .. ••••nrtl Ell1abeth T uylor Wo r nt•r ht1' u Pt'n.sh ·t• loolo. for the.· t'.HOl'nt Ill Hu~ photo takt•n "! N l.'w Yori-We d n4.•itda~ n1 ~ht wht-re lhl' J<·tn·~-. was honort>d with l hl• A Ph11tµ H:rndol ph llumJnltJrWll \w..trd MOUNfAIN VIEW f i\P) - Nt•w d a ta f rom P io n •r I P e cr•lt l h O\W Vl'!OU• ••• b IU b planet of hot cloud11, 1ul· pburlc alee\, t'rashln1i1 llllhln.il'\I , 1wtrhn• s urf•ce wh1d1 and tran•t'. 1Jowtrw 0 N'1!, <'hmti!ih . ) Th4' mi.tu.re of Euth ' forbid dln1 n<>llhbor . n " r elos••r lh~n M m1UJon mtl away , tM:cum c u lltt It" I my lf:nou Wedn~uy u caenu.t.a da1c:us ed the find 1nit" of Plont't'r Ve nuis I und II , a h1<'h n.oaC'hed th bitabt pl&nt>t IHI Ottt-mbcr · lt'fJ all pr.-itty compUcuk>d .' 11d Or t..awren~ Colin of the l\ ,,twnal t•rontiulln und Spuc.-c Af1m1n1~trut1on 'Then· 11 no t>nt" spect..cular r.• .. ult Hut 11 u ll help:. Ub un dN'itand mon.· a bout Venu<; und 1h1 Jtm<M>phctl' f<'rom thut we lt!o r n ttbout whut CU Ubt!.!t tht• Enrth ', wec1th ... r " R efugee Says Boat Trip Cost $10,000 llON<; KONG 1AP> A Viet na mesc refugee fr om th e freighter Huey Fong said loday he a11d his family paid govern. m ent off1 ciaJs in Ho Chi Minh Ci- ty $10,000 for passage from their hom eland aboard a Junk . police sci1d P olJ ce inves tigating the possibility of a refugee sm ug- gling ring a re questioning the crew and passengers of both the Hue} Fong, which a rrived here Dl•c 23 with 3,318 refugees. and t he Skyluck . whic h arr ived One Million March in Tehran Show TEHRAN . Ira n 1A P 1 An esti mated one million people, in· rludmg hundreds or uniformed ~old 1 ers. m a r c hed t hroug h Tehran today m support of holy man Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho m cm1 's revolution. T he demonslral1on hne was peaceful but nine people were reported killed in a protest in the provincial town of Gorgan. T he turnout of military men wa!) the biggest yet m an anti· government demonstration in Tehran. giving Prime Minister Sh ci hpour Bakhliu r furthe r cause to question whether Jower· ranking soldiers would back his s.?ovemment in a ~howdown with Kh omeini Ba khtia r re ma ined dehant, howe ve r, vowing not to sur· render to the Moslem religious leader and accusing him of de- pending on the "mob" rather than democracy. The new political viole nce was reported in the Cas pian Sea town of Gorgan. State radio said security forces opened fire when prot este rs set fire to s hops, ba nks and other buildings. Nine pe rsons were reported killed and 26injured. Khomeini had ca lled for a massive turnout in the streets today to keep up the pressure on the prime minister to give way to MebdJ Bazargan, a lontrtime political foe of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. named by the ayatollah on Monday to head a new provisional government A stream of Iranians two miles long flowed through cen· tral Tehran. waving pictures of Khomeini and Bazargan, chant- ing "Bazargan, Bazargan, you are our prime minister," and .. Bakhtiar, Bakhtiar, you take orders from the U.S. A." Organizers had mus tered thousands of volunteer marshals to control the crowds. The dem· o n s trato r s marc h.cd from Tehran University to Shahyad Square, which they have re- named Liberty Square ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT tP,. Q, ~O'f (Oit\I °'8t,'I' ,,,~, WitrtwftKf't t,(t'tm bl"f'lf\ tl'W N~ Pf-f"\\ t\DU"ftl)"N'd bf' tht (}t~ (O*\I P\lbli~l'O(~ $rHt.t ... H •I'°""•• l>·'hlt\ .. td Ml>NMr owouOh ~'lct~Y tor (O\fA M•'-N"""'°" 8'-Mh H..m111o<<Ht -h ,_ t1111n YAll•y. ltvtnr, L~ A•.cf'l/~ff\ ( .. \t It 1 ... Ql4' I f'O>on.ti tdUa()f' -·~·vw-o \.tfvt'OIW'i-"" 'whlt"v\ T~ Ot•ftC.•N t f'"bh"'tf'IO f\'t""1 h _, '~ W• I U..f~lt ..... GOUA Mo ... C•ll1Mn1,..,.,. 11-rHI,._ Pth'11o~t •Od ,.,,.,.,_ I.tit' 11 Cow"-? Y•lt ...... ,.,,,,, • ...,c;.nff.o!Mon..,.. ,,..,,.1\ IC•'t'VH [OH .. TM~~-"'~ IWl"•'1111Q E<111or W tl••H U.• lll<IW,..~ ,.._If ·"~''•flt .... "•tl"t(Ot'°"' Telephone (114jtq-4U1 CIHtllled AdHrtlelng eq.5111 P'rom'-"•Ct.-4tweoo ,,.,,.,...,.,o._c;.u..rv~1 ... M0-1220 ~~,~ :.::. °'.: .. or. .. ~::~=:~~ ~;~·:;"r .. ~·~r=·.~,"~~~.:~ ~ <IP~ll0"1-~··M tie" llO•IH • 9'11. Al oMl• Mt••· C•l•lorft•• \w•H 11•11•" •• urrltr U M .... l\lllff 9Y "'•II '4 l\'l!Wlthlt l!l!lllH• -'""''-" '°-'"'' Wc dnesdoy with al)oul 3,000. Both are Taiwanese ships. Tran Ahuu A1 , a 23-year-old student from the Huey Fong, said he left Vietna m because "I don 'l like socialist government. You can't do anything you want to do." Tran saJd most othe r refugee families on the Huey Fong paid similar amounts to the secunty department of Ho Chi Minh City, forme rly Saigon. before they were allowed to leave the coun- try He said the authorities let g roups or 300 refugees leave on fishing junks. Investigators said Wedne5'lay they found thin leaves or gold valued at $1 million hidden in the Huey Fong's en~ine T ran said he and others on the sa me junk were rescued by the Huey Fong late in December when their boat was damaged by a st.or,m. He said he had paid nothing to the captain of the Huey Fong, who faces stiff fines on a charge o f ca rr yi n g "excess ive passengers." Tra n was among the first 30(} passengers of the Huey Fong lo be turned over to the U. N. High Commission for Refugees for possible resettlement. The Huey Fong was first re· fused entry because its port or call was Taiwan, but was al· lowed to land here Jan. 19 after its captain refused to sail on. Some Southeast Asian COUO· tries have refused to allow Viet· nam's so-called ''boat people" refugees to land, complaining they already have taken all the refugees they can and saying Vietnamese who-bribe their way out of their homeland are not "true" refugees. Authorities have ordered the Skyluck refugees to remain aboard the freighter off Lamma Island, saying they are better off afloat than in Hong Kong's teeming resettlement caJnps. The 3,SOO-ton ship is guarded by a flotilla or marine police launches. Folk Singer's Dad Found Dead at Home BRIDGEWATER, Conn. <AP> Charles Seeger, Cather of folk s inger and composer Pete Seeger. was touno oead at h1s home on Sarah Sanford Road. He was 92. Seeger, a musicologist, ap. parently died of natural causes, said a spokesman for Dr. Jobn Street, medical examiner. Authorities were unsure when Seeger died but said he was last seen alive Saturday. His body was found Wednesday. The composer and author was a visiting professor al Yale University from UN9 lo 1950, a lecturer al UCLA in 1957, and a lecturer at Harvard in 1972. Seeger. who received a bachelor's degree from Harvard in 1908, was a muslc professor at the University of California from 1912 to 1933 and the Ne\\ School for Social Research in New York City from 1931 to 1935. He was technical adviser in the s pecial skills division of the Resettlement AdministraUon in Washington from 1935 lo 1938 and was assistant to the director of the Federal Music Project of the Works Progress Adminlstra· tion from 1938 to 1940. Women P .. otest PUEBLA, Mexico <AP) Mllltant Roman Catholic women are demandinl the rtaht of each mother to pJan the 1lie of her family In a letter beln1 dt· Uvered today to blahope chart!n1 the future of chutth policy ln Latln America. ~/ - The Venus I orb ter detected hahtn1ng that apparently occurs dfl often M.S 100 Umes 1.o five m rn ul Sclenl u aay stmdar flui.het we re r ecorded by ltWiSUUl JPaCec:ran that arrived .u VN\U.S alter th • U S crAft Tht> fiery glow:, we re detected by two of Vcnui, 11 's probeit on lhl' atde of the planet faclng uwuy from the sun Scientists celled tht.tm my1teriottS and un· uxpectcd, uylne they could como from "chemical fires" on the isurface or in the very hot und tknsc lower atmosphere ne ar lht> ~urfac:e. Tbe blaie. t'ould be fueled by reactions Involving sulphur com- pounds or from the heatt..'CI or electrically cha rged surfaces of the probe craft themselves, they said The solar wind, an extremely thin g as of ionized pa r ticles flowtng from the sun. kicks up turbule nce in the upper at- mosphere. The particles may be travel· 1ng at speeds or a million miles an hour and rei•ch te mperatures of 1.8 million degrees when they reach Venus' ionosphere. Below are three distinct layers of sulphuric clouds, 12 miles tbick. Scientists say the tem· perature there ranges from 55 to 39Sdegrees. Sulphuric acid droplets form below the clouds, vaporizing and splitting up as they sink, form- ing what scientis t s call "chemical stew." Farther down, the atmosphere is cle,ar before it reaches the c.ed murk and 847- degree Fahrenheit temperature of the surface. Despite the ne w findings, scientists said they are unable to explain. why there a re more argon and neon gases on Venus than on Earth. The presence of the gases could mean earlier theories that tb isun and the planetl were formed about the same time were tncorrect. The reaults also showed Venus' intenae heat aeem1 to be best explained as the r~ault of a greenhouse effect that allows heat to get into the atmosphere but does not allow it to escape at the same rate. Parents OK Test/or Ailing Boy PLYMOUTH, Mass. I AP> Chad Green's parents, ordered arrested by a Massachusetts judge. have agreed to new blood tests for their Jeu.kemia-stricken son that could cause them to question their theory of Laetrile treatment, their attorney said today. Attorney George Donovan said Diana and Ge rald Green have sent samples of their son's blood to Ohio State University trom Ti· juana, whe re they remained following the Massachusetts or· der for their arrest. Donovan said he arranged for the tests after learning that be was given an erroneous result of another test 10 days ago and that the level of cyanide in 3-year-old Chad's blood could be 10 times what he originally was told. Donovan said that if the new tests show the higher level of cya nide, he would ask the Greens to stop or drastically curtail the Laetrile doses Chad's receiving. But be said he did not know whether they would agree. ROCHESTER. N.Y. <AP> Two lov~ligatora for a welfare agency, trying to flnd out wben a woman's baby was due, found th a t s he wasn't pregnant anymore -and that there was an inranl's bodJl In tbe base· ment. Another lolant.'s body wu In the attic. . The woman, 34·year·old ... ~ Ge raldJoe Temple, was charged Wednesday night wlt.h two The Justice Department has refused to waive a $40,000 fine l e vi e d again s t Wate rgate burglar G . Gordon Liddy, who says he is a pauper after his release from prison last fall. counts of second-degree murder, Detective U . Louis Campanoni said. She was held overnight without bail. Autol)6ies were scheduled for today. but police said the babies apparently had been strangled. The infant found in the attic. a · girl, had been dead for about a year. police s aid. F,.... Pflfle AJ FOGGY ••• two women motorists . '> Campano1zi, h e ad or Rochester's Physical Crime Squad. said he went to the home after two investigators from the Monroe County district at• A 44-year-old newspaper dis- tributor died behind the wh~I of her light pickup truck after it collided with an overturned truck on the San Diego Freeway south of El Toro Road. And a 29-year-old woman died in the wreckage or her sports car when it struck a van on Laguna Canyon Road . about one mile south or the San Diego Freeway,. Weather forecasters said fog conditions tonight may be more extensive and may involve coas tal c ommunities mo re heavily than was the case earlv today. Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and San Clem ente reported s lightly foggy conditions today with traf· fie moving well on Pacific Coast Highway. torney's office telephoned him to say a woma n told them there was a body 10 the basement. He said he found the "semir buried" body of a male infant with pressure marks on Its neck: Arter detectives spoke witb Ms. Te mple at police head. quarters. they returned to dis- cover the g irl 's decomposed body. partially hidden in rags and papers in the attic. be said. <.:ampanozz1 said a county medical examiner decided the male·s birthdate and ruled that the infant had lived only a few minutes. The female had lived long enough to be given the name "Anita," he said. Ms. Temple had, long been ln contact with the welfare agency. Kurlander said, but he did not say why. Bergland Meets Fa17nen Kurlander said the a gency became concerned and contact· e d his offi ce when Anita vanished not long after heT birth. Ms. Temple told investigator'$ she bad given away the child, but later said the little girl was being kept by r e latives in Florida. the district attorne\• s aid. · Tractorcade Rumbles Through Capital WASHINGTON <AP> -A tra c torcad e o r protesting farme r s rumbled through downtown Washington today .as Ag riculture Secr etary Bob Be rgland m et privately with demonstrators demanding higher crop support prices. City officials allowed up to 100 tractors to leave the.Ir police cor· ral on the Mall and parade on a designated route through city streets after morning rush hour traffic subsided. The tractorcade route in· eluded the Washington offices or the American Farm Bureau Federation, the largest old-line farm organization, and back past the Agriculture Depart· m ent to the farmers' encamp- ment on the grassy open space between the Capitol and the Lin· coin Memorial. Leaders or the American Agriculture Movement com· plained that the Farm Bureau is just an io.surance company that works against small farmers. ~t the same time, Bergland met with a half-dozen represen- tati ves or tbe deQtonstrators at the Eitecutive Office Building adjacent to the White House. Bergland already bad rejected the farmers' demand for an in· crease in federal crop subsidies. Overnight the protesters claimed a few smaU victories: fresh water and propane for their campers. new House and Senate bearings on their com· plalots and a qualified apology from Bergland. Be rgland stood by his state- NB Man Faces liquor Charge A 22-year'"()ld Newport Beach man was arrested Wednesday on charges that he provided liq· uor to two Huntington Beach teen-agers. pollce satd tOClay. William Young Lane of 1531 E . Oeean Blvd., who works as a district circulation manager for the Daily Pilot, has been re· leased on $250 bail, Newport Beach police said. He faces a charge or furnishing Uquor to minors. Police said Lane allegedly orovlded Uquor to two deJlvery boJS, age 14 and 15, on one oc- casion and that one of the boys was subsequently lnvolved in a traffic accident. r,...r~AJ FATALITY. • made the tum," Officer Blerer said. "The roadway was rather wet due lo the foa and she slammed head-on Into the van." A coroner's deputy arrived al the scene within a half.hour and was coof'dinallnt the 1nm taslc ot Hlractinl the woman's body trom the destroyed apona car. Tht woman's name waa not reltaaed pendln1 ootlficatJ.on or next of kin. - menl of Tuesday that some of the 3.500 protesting farmers here are motivated by s impl e greed, but said he didn't mean tG- Guilty in Killing SAN BERNARDINO <AP> A Sao Bernardino Superior Court jury has round Elliot David Shohan, 18. of Devore. guilty or second-degree murder and child abuse in the death or an infant last September. Juanita, Moran 18 months old. died Sept. 12 of a skull injury. Sbohan was caring for the baby at the time. insult anyone Several con- gress men had criticized hls re- marks as irresponsible · ··He just felt it was un· rortunate that it was taken . . . to include innocent farmers." department press chief J oseph T. McDavid said. Although security remained light today at the Capitol, a dis· tinct sense of relief showed on the faces of police and pro· testers alike. More than five inches of snow were on the ground. but the sun was shining. the sky was clear and farmers went about their lobbying at a leisurely pace. WHITE'S GLEllATE !A . Of their 51h Ill STORE SALE PIKES •l•rt fr•• F ro.Page AJ SEARCH ••• and other safety equipment. A preliminary search has been expanded to cover a 3,600· square-mile area that exteods .120 miles out to sea. Mrs. Newton said her son and Vowell both attended high school in Costa Mesa. Vowell was mar· ried last June. The three miss- ing seagoers now list addresses in San Diego. REGISTER NOW CBetore March 1. 19791 for FREE LA·Z·BOY® I COITAMllA J69 •• 17th IT. (Actoel "°"' ~ ... to Marte Calendan) 6'2•1617 Mon.·M '~ Sat. lo.I Ooeedbday I . FREE DELIVERY NEW LOCATION LA8UNAHIW 2S02• Lak• Porelt Dr. (eon-of lair• rorwt Drfwie. and A~ De LO catoto) 770-6161 Mon. • Fft. 10-4 Sat. 10-6 M.l2~ MllllON VllJO 211t2Mcquern. Pltwy .. (Comer ol A.Wtty and VIO llcokJr) •••8902 Mon. -M. lo.4 Sal106 CIOled~ \. • r VOL. 72, NO 39,' SECTIONS1 S8 PAGES 0 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . \· -: -1 -1 T•••y'sCle8lilg N.Y. 8'9eks.,.,,.. __ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1979 N TEN CENTS ,,,,__--------FBI, Officials Confer----------e: Coast Firms Alerted to Espionage 87 JOA E a YNOLDS Of .. .,....~·-More than 100 sttw1ty ofncen and executiv~ of Orang County dt ftru conlrac.-tors met in Santa ADI to day wath <'OUnt r t.nt W1eo<-e aients from the FBI. Her~rt Clouah. peclaJ agent in charge of counter-in telhgence for thtt FBI ln Southern Callforrua sa1d today'i seminar w h~ Id to acquaint the busmessmen with "the very real lhre t" posed l<K'aJ busmess by lorelgn spies. CLOUGH SAID he was unable to supply any specific informalloo reearding the extent or espiona1e activity locally, but be said that the acti vity bad increased drastically in the past year Foggy Chain Reaction Today's semloar was the second ln a series for about 250 firms ln Orange County that supply classified technology products for the govemmenL Firms participating in today's seminar included Hughes Aircraft Microelectronic Division and Ford Aerospace and Communication Corp. 's Aeronutronic Division, both based in Newport Beach and McDonnell Douglas. FBI officials said. LIIE THE FlllST session held ln November, today's meeting was to acquaint the businessmen with the scope or the problem as well as teaching them bow to spot penetra- tion by spies ol their firms. ln most cases. according to Agent Clough, the e9-- pionage activity takes the form of a forelp aaent befriend· ing an employee and eventually persuad.inc the employee to steal classified material from his company. "We need for these people, as well as the public. to become believers," said Clough. He acknowledged that bis inability to cite specific numbers and cases wouJd c.reate a "credibility gap" and agreed that "it couJd lead to paranoia" on the subject or espionage in Orange County. "WE DON'T WANT people looldng under beds or over their shoulders," be said. "We want them to be ~ell enough informed that they know what to look for and to <See FOREIGN SPIES, Page AZ> Woman Killed in Freeway Crash Faces More Kulik GiVen 5-year Term o.11' f'l191 SUff ...... ODIO.la Corona del Mar High School coed Beth Newbro and her friend, "Fred the chicken," made a colorful duo today as the school 's senior class ob· served "spirit week" with a western theme. ' Alexander Kulik was told to· day be must spend a maximum five-year term in prison for transporting heroin. The criminal trou~les of the 28-year-old Kulik didn't eod this morning with the prison term or~ dered by acting Superior Court Judge PauJ MasL The onetime, blgb livlnc, world traveling Kulik faces trial next month on murder and con- s piracy charges for his alleged role in the shooting death of Fountain Valley drug de(ller John Stephen Bovan. - He also faces a four-year prison term for a San Diego COD· viction for possession of heroin. The former Newport Beach res· ident was behind the wheel of a $60,000 Stutz auto when be was arrested in a Mission Viejo park· ing lot in October 1977. just hours after nine bullets were pumped into Bovan outside a Newport Beach nightery. The borrowed auto contained 1.1 pounds or rare china white heroin valued by wlice at $1 million. · At that time the Hare Krishna religious devotee al.so bad been in the process or buy· ing a $600,000 Linda Isle home and testified in court be had donated S2 million to the lndia- based religious cuJt. It was a different Kulik who sat in Judge Mast's court today. Dressed in jail clothes-a wrinkled gray T-shirt and baggy blue jeans-Kulik sat calmly as Mast ordered tbe maximum five-year sentence and that the prison term be served coo· ·coastline Searched For Missing Boat A Santa Barbara to tbe Mex· ican Border sea search con· tlnued today for three former Orange Coast residents whose commercial fishing boat is over· due after leaving San Diego Jan. 22. Coast guard omcaals said the vessel was due to return to port Sunday after completing a two· week ftshing trip of the banks near the Channel Islands. Gary Newton, 22, and Dennis Vowell, 23, former Costa Mesa residents. and Vowell's wife, Debb1e, a former south county resident, were aboard the boat. "We're used to blm beln& out a long time, but nothing like this bas happened before," Newton's mother, Eleanor, aald today. "We're Just hoping aod pray. lng," the Costa Mesa resident added. 4 She said ber son was an ex Bain, Snow Mix ay 'l1le Aa«la&ed Preu A string of storm• moved over lbe Pacific brewinl a weather mixture of snow and ram for s ome area• of northern Calltomla today wltb fo1 and cloudy skits-on tap elsewhere. perienced seaman and that there was enough food on board the 40·foot craft for two weeks. Coast Guard officials said there was no indication the boat, "The Armistice " was in trou- ble. It was equipped with two- way radios. a direction finder a nd other safety equipment. A preliminary search bas been expanded to cover a 3,600· square-mile area that extends 120 mUes out to sea. Mrs. Newton said her son and Vowdl both attended blgb school in Costa Mesa. Vowell was mar- ried last June. The three m.lsa. ing seagoers now UJt addreaaea in San Diego. 114.J'E A HEART -ONE OF OURS It's time for s1>fin1 lovtn• and Valentine'• Day. Tbe Dally Pilot celebnt.es thla speclal seuoo with words and pictures detamne lifts for Valeotlnea lo a 20·pace magazine, "Lovin'." Loot f« t.h1I •Pfflat IJ\aa""81 tn today'• Omly Pilot. sec utively to the four-year federal term. In imposing sentence Mast responded to what be called a uniq\le declaration from defense attorney Philip DeMusa COD· ceralq tM ~ fOC' tbe jUQ'I euuty verdict lut month. Mast said he disagreed wtt.b tbe jury's purported oplnioo that Ku lik was transporting the beroill ID an effort to "tel up for conviction aome members of tbe Mafia" who bad been attempt- ing to extort cash from the de- fendant. , "The court believes that that <See KULl1', Page AZ> Hearings On Irvine Coast End BJ .JACKIE HYMAN oe .. De1tr """'SWtt The last ln a series or local public hearings on the future of the Irvine Coast wound up Wednesday with more pleas to save the environment, a few sur-prise suggestions and regrets by coastal commissioners ~~t they must hurry through a decision. "It seems to me we now have the heart or what the Coastal Act. ls all about," said Donald Wilson, chairman of the South Coast regional coastal com· mission at the meeting in Hunt· ington Beach City Council cbam· bers. He said be regrets that com· mlsaloners spend most of their time on such minor matters as bow high a house can be built, while the local coastal plan for the ·10,000..acre Irvine Coast has occupied only a few weeks or bearings. Wilson said commissioners will try to reach a decision to forward to the stale Coast.al Commissioo at 1 p.m. Wednes· day in the same Huntington Beach chambers. The bearing once again focused on concerns by numeroua environmental and citizen groups about the future of the area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, valued for both ece>loeical and aesthetic reuou. The Irvine Company. wb.lcb OWOI the land. ii aeeklna a plan that wlll enable lt to build recreational f,cWtles, includi.DC a bot.el, alon1 the cout and res· ldentlal property Inland eapedally on view sites such u r1d1es. The local coastal plan sub- mitted by tbe Oranae Count)' Environmental Managemen' A1ency concara w{tb Irvine (8ee JaVINE. Pa1e A!> More Newe Today More news about Newport Beaeb appears today oa Pace AlT. o.ltf ...... SUff ..... PLASTIC SURGEON LOADED WITH DOCUMENTS Dr. Ralph W. Small (left). With Attorney Terry Giie• Plastic Surgeon Testifies on Death A Santa Ana plastic surgeon was ln Orange County Superior Court today to defend himself against charges that bis practice is a danger to public health, safety and welfare. Dr. Ralph W. Small arrived In court with attorney Ten')' Giles carrying a bundle or papers be hopes will prove that t.he death or a 33-year-old woman last No- vember was nothing more than a so-called medical misadventure. The woman. Kim Plock. died Nov. 28: five days after undergo· ing a· breast implant in Small's The Final Indignity cm~GO (AP)-SOme- on e bas been lifting credit cards from corpses brought to the Cook Coun· ty morgue, police say. State 's Attorney Jhrnard Carey ls ln· veatigatlng four alleged thefts of credit cards from the pockets and purses of people taken to the morgue slnce December, the Chicago Tl'ibune re· ported Wednesday. The cues involve people killed ln accident.a or who otherwise died unexpec· teeny and were taken to the mor1ue wltb their belorrstncs. lnvesU1aton aald. office at 3620 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana. According to the complaint filed by the state attomey general's office on behalf or the board of Medical Quality As- surance, Mrs. Plock went. Into respiratory arrest while un- dergoing the surgery at about 9:5S a.m. It wasn't until nine hours later that e mergency care was called to the office and the stricken woman transferred to Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital where she died without regain- ing comclousness. Giles indicated today that be wilt attempt to s how Judge William S. Lee that the woman's death was a tragic incident that couldn't be foreseen by any practitioner. And, Giles said, be bas dePOSi· Uons ·from other patients whose surgical experience with Small was successful and without problem. Dimemion Added WASHINGTON (AP) -A State Department findlng that some Arab prisoners probably have suffered Inhumane treatment In Israeli jails ls add· 101 a new dimension to U.S.· Israeli relations. It wu unclear what impact. the finclinl would have on Congress, wblcb bu strongly supported Israel oa the one band, but on the otber bu pressed for a loosenlna of U.S. ties .tth countries that violate human rtghts. '-----------~-·, .. t • I Accident Sparks Others By WIU.IAM HODGE Of tM o.lly f'l191 Si.ti A wrong-way driver on the freeway set orr a chain reaction or accidents in foggy Laguna Hills this morning. One woman died Barbara Throop, 44. of West Corina. a Los Angeles Times truck driver, was killed by one of the crasbes. Tom Sapp, California B1'b•ay Patrol spokesman, aald Ille was unable to stop tbe UCbt pkkup truck sbe was driv· ing when she came to an over- turned tractor-trailer rig. The series or accidents began at 4:M a.m., Sapp said, when Fno.k Falkenberg, 66 , or ~iWia Hills, entered the San Diego Freeway at Alicia Parkway. He was traveling northbound in the southbound lanes. 1be reason was not. im- mediately known. Eduardo Duarte, 31, of Long Beach, swerved the tractor· trailer to miss Falkenberg's northbound car. But the massive semi sideswiped the car and overturned. Mrs. Throop's light pickup came through the fog and slammed into the overturned tractor-trailer. She d ied in· stanUy. Falkenberg's wrong-way car <See CB.ASH, Page AZ> <:arew Lures Cash The acquisition or Rod Carew could put an additional $2. 7 million into the California Angels' coffers this season, making Carew's $800,000·a-year salary a bargain. See the Daily Pilot's exclusive story on Page Bl. Coast Weather Night and morning fog and low clouds. Otherwise rah· with high clouds through Friday. Lows tonight 40 to 46. Highs Fri· day near 60 at beaches to upper eos inland. INSIDE TODAY A trilateral commission on lordfln affofn ~ Jimmy Carter .amt valuable ad· t>OftCC ~of intemc· tional politM:• ~lore he en· tned Ute WhiU Howe. See ~A18. latlex .,. ,, CJ ... ... ,. .. ,.. "' ., 8M ., .. ... ,. ... ... •• # Oelly Pllol P-by lll<Mrd ltMlllor MiChelle Gave Up Career? LOS ANGELES CAP> -The personal man.ger who groomed Mic he lle Triola-Ma r vin for stardom testified today that the singer dropped her career alter Lee Marvin told her : 'T U always take care or you, • baby " Mimi Marleaux. who handled Mias Marvin's career in 1965 and 1966. aald she believed the singer had ta.lent. and "something very good could happen for her in show business.' Testifying at a trial on the is- sue or property rights ol unmar· r~ed couples. MiH Marleaux said Miss Marvin's chance for. a big break was lost wben her ac- tor boyfriend demanded she join bim in London. where he was filming "1be Dirty Doi.en ." Skate Trip SaUJ,Rough WEST COVl~A ~P> - "Geei, It waJ rOllgb," said Davld McDonnal after be and two friends traveled 260 miles by rollersJcate rrom Las Vega& to raise money for the March of Olm es. The road to West Covina was rough and there was some ice and snow as McOonnal. Bobby Little .. 20. and Rieb Kirchder, 21 , skated night and day since lO a .m. Sunday. McDoonal said. "We were doing about SO mpb down a grade and I got a little wobbly... he said Wednesday. recalling on e spill. .. The s kates came out rrom under me and I landed on my back and scraped a lot or hair off the back or my bead ... Million Support Kh .. ome1n1 TEKRAN. Iran <AP> -An estimated one mtrlion people, in· eluding hundreds of uniformed soldie rs. marched through Teh ran today in support or holy man Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho· meinJ 's revolution. The demonstration here was peaceful but nine people were reported killed in a protes t in the prov1odaJ town ol Gorgan. The turnout or mlUtary men was the biggest yet tn an antt- govemment demonstration io Tehran. giving Prime Minister Shahpour BakhUar furthe r cause to question whether lower- ra oking soldiers would back his government 1n a showdown with Khomeini. WEST COVINA WOMAN KILLED AS PICKUP TRUCK SLAMS INTO OVERTURNED SEMI· TRAILER One Ac~nt Leecn to Another on F09-•hrouded San Otego Freeway She said the demand came when Mias Marvin bad traveled LO Hawaii for a 1966 singing engagement. coupled with re· lease ol her record ·'Promise Me Your Love." Fog Hits County; More Due ltakbtiar remained defiant, however. vowing not lo sur· render to the Moslem religious leade r and accusing him of de- pending on the "mob'" rather than democracy. New Photos S how l~'s Hell o n Venus MOUNTAIN \'11',W 1AP 1 ,\t·w data from Pioneer -.pacecralt show Ve nus rs a ht>ll1sh planet of bot clouds, sul µhuric sleet. crashing hghtrung. ""' 1rl1n~ s ur(Jcc wand~ a nd tran~P. glow1n~ firt>i-, sc1ent1sts ~J\ • The naturc of Earth's forh1d ding nt:ighbor. never closer than 21; million mjles away, became a little l<>ss mysterious Wednesday U!> ..,,•wnllsts d1scuss('d the h.nd 111g:-of P10hcer Venu1> I and II . \\-hwh rt'ached the bright pl anet lct.,t u .. ,.t•mbc.'r It ·.., all prt'tt} t·omplJcalt.>d." .,11(1 Dr Lawrence Cohn of the "\at111n.1l Aeronautics and Space Ad m1n1stratwn. ·'There ts no one spectacular result. But It all helps us un- derstand more about Venus and its atm~phere. From that we learn about what causes the Earth's weat her " The Venus I orbite r detected lightrung that apparently occurs as often as 100 times in five minutes Scientists s ay similar flashes were recorded b y Ruaaiao spacecraft that arrived at Venus alter the U.S. craft. The fiery glows were detected by two of Venus U's probes on the side of the planet facing away from the s un Fro• P age A J FOREIGN SPIES. • • 1·11mt' to U!> We want them to let us. the professionals. JnJlyLc· lht· 1>1luut1on ' · Part of the blame for the growth of espionagP locally WJS placed by Clough on US. foreign policy . ·'Smee detente , the number of communist bl~k coun- Lr.} offu:111ls in the U.S has doubled." he noted. Based on ll J Sl experience, he said, 40 percent of those people are es- pionage agents "WE'RE PARTl,V to blame, too," Clough added. · The FBI over the years has kept such information pretty mut'h to ourselvl's We've been pretty much an ivory tower ~roup " Rut he &aid that publtc exposure of genera~zed .tn· formation about the nature and extent of foreign in- h:lhgence gathering within t he United States has proved to bt• bent>frc1al E'ro• P age A l IRVINE CO AST ••. Company wis he s i n many respects, mcluding the "fingers M development" on r idges which cit izens have opposed as da m agjng to canyon flora and fauna Several speakers urged that lk velopmcnl be limited to a compact area Some unexpected suggestions wcrl! also presented by two citizens at Wednesday's heanng. Newport Re ac h Planning Cnmm 1~s1on1:r Alla n Beek said he bchl'vcs the Irvine Company ~hould ronslruc•t a ~elf-contained t•n mmuntt)' within the s 1t1.• to 1•ilm10alc• prnblems with com- mut 1ng on already congested rnad1> Beek proposed tha t the plan 'limit ingress and egress lo three roads, l·ach having only two lanes Three roads is ade quatc to brin~ in food and sup- plies.·· he said Another unusuul proposal was m ade by Laguna Reach and ~t·w1wrt Beach a'ct1visl Gene Ath~rton lh• proposed that the ~t at<· Coastal Commission en· tfr>r-.l' .l "late lottery. th<' pro- OAA~OE COAST " DAILY PILOT ,,. ... 1>i•l'l\ll.•i,.·.tr~o,•'•'"' .,.,'""""' ,,,.. '-~ f t _,.Kl f't ,. t••tlf1 !'W"O"t t~ 01,.. ·~ "t t f• 1N•~""'tt °""f•....,.• '-~•"•'"''""' ''°""'~"'" I 0 ~ r, 11 Mio ,,.., IPlfft•liltft ~ '•O•t tt)i (O't• Y ',..,.,..."'-'' r\fM" ••vt~tl"'oton f\f1tot"I r~-' lf11ttV"'ll'\' lr\'IM I.,,"""" ... "'~ ,,.,..,If\(°""' A ,f\.Ot. ,, .... ...,,.,., rththn•,~·~.,_..IH'dotn•M ·~· ., ,,..,,. v.tW1~• f·"'4f\"•"'a e>t4'fti ,, "' no Wt ttt4'¥\trfft (O't•Mr<-w (•hf«f"i•••1' 111 ........ _ p,. ~ •• ,.,•!ltd~,.,...,. ,~' • c:.rtrr :;.,, ...... ,dlf"t1•""°~"·..,..""'6Qk ,_,,..,. .......... ~~ ....... (11. u ....... ~· -~ ...... ., .. , ......... _ .... t ...... Otfk•• r,...,,. ~· • uow. ~\a.,.,.,""' LA~~ft>~9\ tt .. ~-r•'Mr .. • """''""J•ti'l"'tM•f" 'tl"k•!'\~...,, Telephc111e (7U)~t CIHtlflM Advet1lllft9 '42>M11 ceeds of which would be used to purchase coastal lands. Among the key topics dis· cussed at Wednesday's hearing were· . EL MORRO TRAILER PARK: Residents urged that low-cost howiing continue to be provided in the area Friends of the Irvine Coast spokesman J eff Georgev1ch proposed that resi- dents be given a "life estate" to re main on the property until they die ('Ir choose ., WILDLIFE CORRIDORS. A state Department of Fish and Game s pokesman urned that quarter·mile wide corridors con- nect all conservation areas to al· low wildlife to move from region to rec1on. Richard Munsell of the Orange County Environmental Manage- ment Agency disagreed, saying he believes much narrower cor- ridors wouJd s uffice. TRAFFI C : Sev e r a l speakers urged establishment of a shuttle bus syste m within the proposed d ('velopment. and com m1ssion<'rs Indicated theif\ concern for the e ffect of traffic on neighboring cities. RUNOFF: A spoke~woman for CalTerh's Kerkhoff Marine Laboratory in Corona dcl Mar asked for protection of valuable kelp beds at Cameo Shores and Monar ch Bay from polluUon. A coastal commission staff me mber noted that, because or runoff problems, the number of acres dedicated as o~n space Is less tmportanl than that whole ecosystems -canyons and ridges be kept intact. He pointed out that some or tbe t'nvironmentally sensitive areas ln question can't be pre- served even if left undeveloped· as tong as they bear the brunt of runoff and other contamination from adjacent developed areas. DENSITY: The county plan for the Irvine Coast calla for 12,000 housing unlta and a popul1tion of about 30,000. with as much aa three-quart.era of the area left for public aod private open 1pace. Comml11ioner1 aak•d staff members to look lnto the denaity per acre and comp.re ll with denaltlea permitted on otb•r sitea of ecological slpificancc. t E'roM Psge A J CRASH ... continued north for a short dis· ta nee It was stopped by collid· ing with a car driven by Alan Cook. 21. of Stanton. Tha t collision caught the al· tention or George Morey. 40, of Diamond Bar. He was driving another tractor-trailer. It struck a car that had been braked to a sto p by Tom Pe r ez, 51, of Orange. Falkenberg, who had entered the freeway going the wrong way. received Injuries that ap- peared minor to officers at the scene. He and Duarte. believed a lso to have mlnor Injuries. were taken to Saddleback Community Hospital. Pe rez, Cook and Morey were not hurt. Sapp said . The fatality and another on Laguna Can yon Roa d today1 brought the South County traffic tolls already this year to 12. F ,.._Page A J KULIK ••• Miss Marleaux s aid s he watched Miss Marvin talk to the actor during an agitated phone conversation between England and Hawaii. and it ended with Miss Marvin agreeing to join him. After the phone call, the wit· ness said, Mlss Marvin bung up lhe phone and declared: •"What can you do? I love the guy." After Miss Marvin lefl for England. disc jockeys ii\ Hawaii decided against playing the rec· ord If thev. couldn't meet Che singer, Miss Ma rleaux s aid. Miss Marleaux testified that sometime later. sbe was invited for dinne r to the Malibu home Marvin shared with the singer. Ragtinw Out In Front as Finish Nears Fog made many Orange Coun· ty motorists tale for work today and played a part in two deadly traffic accidents. T he CaJtforni a Hig hway P a tr ol said inland Orange Coun- ty appeared to get most or the fog with Orange, Santa Ana. PlacenUa and Anaheim report- ing traffic tieups and a rash or minor cotUs1ons. And there will be more of the s ame tonight. t he National Weather Service warned today. "These are cla.asic fog condi- tions and we expect the situation to persist at least through Fri· day," a forecaster said. Traffic officers said foggy con- ditions lh1s morning were a def- inite factor in two south county collisions that cost the lives or The new political violence was r eported in t he Caspian Sea town of Gorgan. State radio said security forces opened fire when protesters set fire to shops. banks and other bwldings . Nine persons were reported killed and 26inJured. Khomeini had called for a massive turnout an the streets today to keep up the pressure on the pnme auruster to give way to Mehdi Bazar~an, a tomrtlme political foe or Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, named by the ayatollah on Monday to head a new provisional government. Ski-masked Bandits Rob Newport Pair two women motorists Two ski-masked bandits wield-A 44-year-old newspaper dis· ing a pellet gun burst into a trlbutor died behjnd the wheel or Newport ~ach home Wednes- her light pickup truck afte r it day. struck the two residents collided with a n overturned and robbed them of $540, police truck on the San Diego Freeway reported today. T h e s loops Ragti m e and south or El Toro Road . They said the incide nt oc· Drifter were near ing the finish And a 29-year-old woman died c urred at 9:40 p.m. at 125 E. Bay line -and first-to-finish honors in the wreckage of her sports Ave .. the home of Steven George today in the 1.125-mlle Marina car when it struck a van on Avors. 22, and Thomas Bordon story about setting up the Malia del Rey to Puerto ValJarta yacht Laguna Canyon Road. about one Allen, 21. members and mos t or the race. mile south or t he San Diego The masked men reportedly testimony involving that is just Al the 8 a.m . roll call, the 65-Freeway. ente red through an unlocked simply a fairy story," said root Ragtime reported a posit.ion door. ordered Avors and Allen to Mast. 83 mUes from the finis h with an Guilty in Killing get down on the floor, struck "The court believes that Mr. estimated tlme of arrival at both of them with the guns and Kulik wilfully and knowingly about 51>.m. <PST>. The 69-foot SAN BERNARDINO <AP > ransacked the house, according transported heroin. knowing it Drifter was 103 miles out with an A San Bernardino Superior to Detective Robert Hardy. was there not for any purpose of ETA of 7 p.m. Court jury b as found Elliot ·Hardy said apparently neither planting it but for means or Weather condmons in the neet David Sboban. 18, of Devore, or the victims was seriously in· normal narcotics trafflc," the we re not reported from tbe guilty of second-degree murder Jijl"ed in the attack. judge continued. escort vessel. and child abuse in the death of The robbers were described as De Massa had attempted to Most of the other 21 yachts in an infant last Se ptember. in their 20s, one about five feet convince jurors that Kulik's as-the race have cleared Cabo San Juanita Moran 18 months old, eight mches tall and weighmg soctates had masterminded the Lucas and were sailing across died Sept. 1,2 of a skull injury. 150 pounds. the othe r about five plant to lead to the jailing of the Gulf of California toward the Shohan was caring for the baby feet rune inches and weighing people with t:ast <:oast mobster _'_in_is_h_._ ....... __________ a_t_lb_e_ti_m_e_. __________ 1_60_. __________ _ ties. He attempted to show that Kulik was mtstakenJ y found with the drugs after he borrowed the Stutz from a business partner. The defense attorney objected repeat.edly to Mast making bis own interpretation or evidence in the case when imposing the sentence arguing the sentence should be based only upon the jury's findings. Mast contended he bad to ex- p lain bis own thinking in impos· ing the sentence, adding .. you can take that reasoning and ap- peal to your heart's content.·· Mast dismissed a second chur~e of possesslnR heroin for s ale . a charge the Jury deadlocked on with a 10·2 vote favoring acquittal. Jle also refused to free Kuhk on bail while OcMassa appeal6 the verdict NB Man Faces liquor ,Charge A 22-year-old Newport Beach man was arrested Wednesday on charges that he provided liq . uor to two Huntington Beach teen-aRers, police satcJ tO<Jay. Willfam Young Lane of lS3l E Ocean Blvd., who works as a district circuJaUon manager for the Daily Pilot. has been re leased on S250 bail, Newport Beach police snid. He faces a charge or lurnis hlng liquor lo minors. Police said Lane allegedly provided liquor to two del1very boys, age 14 and 15. on one oc- casloa and that ooe or the boys was subsequently involved in a traffic accident. OUna Warned MOSCOW <AP> -A Soviet magulne said today China s hould be careful lo keep the trool>' tt has massed on Vi et· nam ·s border lrom "overatcp- ptn1 tM forbidden line." The weekly New Times uld the route of Premier Pol Pot 'a tOV· emment ln C1mbodla b~ Viet· nameae troopt and Vletnameae· backed rebels was a blow to• PeklD8 and '"nOw the 1oubbed dragon wa nts to show l t a claw1'." Of their 51h Ill STORE SALE PIKES 1t•rt fr•• I REGISTER NOW for FREE LA-Z-BOY® I I I I I • (Before March f. t979J COITAMllA J69 I. 11th IT. (Acfoll from~ nut to Marte Colef ldafl) M2-1617 Mon..~ l().6 sat. 1().6 Ooeed~ FREE DELIVERY NEWLOCAnoN LAGUNA HILLS 2302• Lak•PoreltDr. (COtr'lef d LaQ Forwt DrM. and A¥9rido O. l.o ec.toea) 770-6161 Mon. • Ftt. 1().6 Sot. 10-6 U-12~ MISSION VllJO 21192 Morguertte Pkwy. (Comet d AY9f\' and Via bcdot) •tl·l902 Mon. • fft. '().6 sat. 1().6 Qoeed~ .... ---- •' , 'Thut!d!x. Februa& 8, 1QZ! DAIL V PILOT Al Brown Flays Metropolitan Busing Plan LOS ANGELF.S cAP l -C.ov Edmund CT Brnw.1 Jr h& launcb.-d his . u ona""' cr1U('1!tm of a so callt"d mctropol1t.a11 bu.-. Ina plan, "hlk an Oran e C'oun ly onti bu•in& Rr<»l P b un moblUuna tu put lbl' brake~ un II rurn:nt «ourt ordt·re-<1 bu.,\nic prot(rtu~ And tht' l~ An&el • · So•rd of Edurauon I c~d "'itb f't•b 28 rourt appe mtnr lo outbnt1 h11 dt•-.t•«tt'JUHlun pluna (or lht- 1979 80 Bl'htlOI ye r conflrm :d w dncsday th0 lou or 30,000 "'tilt tudt>n~ d1mna the Clr•l year <>f 1U. intepatJon plan Brown uld Wcdne.sdoy he didn't Mll..-vr tbe.-propo14!d mctropobl n plan, "'hich \\'Ould e~p nd lh currl'nl Loa An11~1 ·~ pl n lo inrlud~ nt .. rby chool diatnrt'I would ltl'Htly orr ct In ltjri.aUon Of Cll)' 1cbools All )Ou've don I mov th m from o™' point to another Wl' h vrn•t chanacd the basic netturt' and character or thin&•.· Brown Hid in n televlslon in· tcrvh:w Thl' aovemor hH crltlcl1ed busing In the post but hu not takrn &Jm aperlfically on the mctropolHan plan. which he churacterbed as "the old f~sll fut-I a lteimauvc. "II you can't aoJvc a problem. put l n on wh-.-cls ." he said. • • W e ·rt• tu k I n ~ th a t s a me phlloi\Ophy and we're applying 1t to kids." In Sant Ana . an Orange POLICE SURVEY GRIM SCENE ON LAGUNA CANYON ROAD IN LAGUNA BEACH TODAY Santa Ana Woman Becomes Fourth Fataltty In· Last 12 Daya on Winding Thoroughfare Man Seized On Holdup Oiarges SA Woman Killed , In Canyon Crash \ gunm Jn lur ~an g in the 1u-.he~ outs ide a Coco ·~ 1e!>taurant in f'ounta1n V<Jlll'y \i<I!> surprised arid captured by 1 police officer early lodc.y Police beheve ht• is the same ,unman re::.pQns1ble for seven obhenC's ov<•r the p <ts t eight 10nths at Coco's reslaurant.s an 'ounlaan Valley. Co~t<t Mesa nd l'lewport Beach Patrolman John Qu1nz10 .said >onald Melvin Buller. 25. of a nl a Ana. was carry10g a ·ellel gun in his waistband and 1 sema·automalic pistol in his ock when he was arrested to· 'av outside the Coco's at 18280 Jr(1okhu~l St. 1t i:,, the :.ame Coco's that re· ·eotb wa:. robbed twice an o~e lay Police believe Butler is ·espons1blc for one or tho!.e roh· >~nes In addition, Fountain Valley letecllves belie\'C Butler held up the same Coco's on another <><:· ca sion. and al::.o robbed the Coco's Restaurant on Adams Avenue near Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa And. Police :-aid. they suspec-t Bullt.>r 1s lhf> man "'ho held up the Coco's on Ma cArthu r Bouk\ard in Newport Beach. near Oran~e County Airport, on three ~t·parnte 1wcasions Patmlm:in Quinzio had been sent to the oft .robbed rcs(aurant in Fountain Valley a t about 12·so this morrung to provide an escort for the ma nager and the day's receipts Quumo said he spotted Butler hiding in the bushes outside the r estaurant and stepped back to watch from behind a corner. As the manager left tbe build· Ing. Buller all ~gcdly moved from the bushes toward him . Quinz10 moved in and arrested Butler, who was to be booked to· d ay at OranRC C'ounty Jail on suspicion or armed robbery. A 29-yc•a r ·old Santa An a Ii' om an was killed early today op,_ foggy Laguna C;rnyon Road when her car apparently drifted into northbound la nes, slam· ming head-on into a large van. She was the fourth fatahty m the last 12 days on Laguna Canyon Road California Hj,i;thway Patrol Of· Diab A-Ride Program Troubled By JOANNE R EYNOLDS OI tfle o,,oy rll<n St.tff In spite of a pe nding $2.S million investment, Orange County Transit District's Dial-A· Ride appears to have a bleak future . The Program operates in the north county a nd Saddleback Valley where the population is growing but there is ins ufficient demand to j~tify a bus route. Launched in 1977, the federal· ly funded program enables the OCTD to offer what amounts to door-to.door service. The $2.5 million about to be pumped into Dial-A· Ride - again on a (ederal grant from the Urban Ma ss Trans it Ad· ministration would provide computerized dispatching for all areas served by Dial·A-Ride. Al present the contractors who pro· vide the service dispatch for their own geographical areas without computers . Use of the computer system ls expected lo save $1.4 million during the first three years of operation. OCTD directors have ordered the grant application passed lo the Orange County Transporta· tion Commission for a pproval. They also set aside $10,000 for architects and engineers fees for design of the computerized dls· patch area in OCTD's Garden Grove headquarters. Pair Missing Rock Group Manager Hunted NASSAU, Bahamas CAP > Rock star Mick Jag- ~er and other members of the Rolling Stones are helping search for the group's road manager and a woman companion, last seen in a rubber dinghy off a Nassau beach, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman said today. The search wa'i t:<'i'1~ hampered by winds up to 20 knolc; a nd seas 1'1\'f.' to t.:•1i;tht feet. said Coast Guard l:>pokesman Bill \an V:il'<t.:1burg. Two Coast Gu;:in.J r·l.1nM. joined by three private aircraft officials s&.1·1 "'..'t·c thartered by members of the popuJar s inging . :-1 .• :..,, were searching an ap-· proximatelY. 1,SOO·square·mile area northwest of Nassau. about 170 miles east of Miami. Missin~ were 33-year-old Allan Dunn, boyhood friend of Jagger, and Romona Herman, 26, ot West Chicago, Jll., said Van VaJkenburg. ficer Bill Bierer said a mixture of dense fog and s lick roadway might have caused the woman's car to drift into oncoming lanes a t a curve In the seven·miJe roadway a mile south of the San Diego Freeway at about 8:30 a .m . Van driver Joseph Ch azan. 45, of 201 Cypress Drive, Laguna Beach. was s lightly hurt in the 40·mile·per hour collis ion that left both vehicles mangled. The entire stretch of roadway bet ween E l Toro Road and the freeway was closed to through t raHic immediately following the collision , with northbound motorists diverted lo El Toro Road. "Her lightweight sports car drifted into the other lane as sbe made the turn," Officer Bierer said. "The roadway was rather wet due lo the fog a nd she slammed head-on into tbe van." 1981 Income Tax Reduction 'Necessary' WASHINGTON <AP) -In· com e tax cuts may be necessary in 1981, which would further de· lay President Carte r 's goal of a balanced budget, Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumel'I· thal said today. But, Blume othal t old the Senate Budget Committee. a tax c ul n ext year would be dangerous to the economy because it would set off a new round of Inflation. In future years, he added, the administration is committed to using tax c uts rather than spending increases to s timulate the economy. BlumenthaJ reiterated that it would be a serious mistake to amend the Constitution or pass a l aw r equiring a balan'Ced budget. This, be said, would "re· quire very frequent and highly disruptive changes in l ax laws and in federal program levels.'' !Related story, Page A5.) ·'The reaJ task before us is not to write new statutes and con· stltutional amendments about the need for budget balance but to use the exis ting legal macblnery to achieve balance,"· he said. ·'The test of fiscal restraint is not what we say but what we do.·• Another Cabinet member, Labor Secretary Ray Marshall, :says the admnlnialraUon will have to consider loosening its wage guide line if inflallon worsens and Congress rejects a proposed tax credit for workers who comply with the guideline. But Marshall said Wednesday be ls confident tnflaUon will ebb a nd be hopes Congress will ap. prove the .. real wage In- surance" tax credit, making it unnecessary to rein the volun- tary 7 percent celling on &Mu.al wage and fringe benefit In· creases. ., - County group caJled Dus·Bloc announced It has 1t.arted a statewide lnltlatlve campaign aimed al halUng both current in· tegratlon of fltudenls by busing a nd devcloplJHnt o f the metropolitan plan. A petition approved Wednes· day by the sl ate attorney eeneraJ's office for circulation would change the state constitu· hon by laking away redistrlcUng power from school boards and giving lt to the Legislature. PbflUp B. Jordan. assistant s uperintendent ln charge or the Los Angeles board's integration program, told a news conference the mid-year integration status report shows fllilpan1c students increased by 12,000 during tbe first year of the current plan. The only board member to at· tend the news conference, bus- mg roe Bobbi Fiedler, s aid the data "confirms my position that we should end the mandatory bu1in1 program. It ts self· destructive." Tbe report's data indicated that. a lthough the number or white students is half of what it was In 1969, dropping from 352,000 to 165,000, Hispanics have increased from 117,000 in 1969 to 214,000 last October when tbe new survey was taken. Black enrollments, on the other hand. rose from 134.000 ln 1969 lo 156,000 in 1971 but dipped back to 137.000 last October. Tractorcade Rolls Bergland, Fm·:mers Confer in · Capital WASHINGTON <AP l -A tractorcade o f protes ting farmers rumble d through downtown Washington today as Agriculture Secretary Bob Be rgland met privately with demonstrators demanding higher crop support prices. City officials allowed up to 100 tractors to leave their police cor· ral on the Mall and parad, on a designated route through city streets after morning rush hour traffic subsided. The traclorcade route in· eluded the Washington offi ces of the American ft'a rm Bureau Federation, the largest old·line farm organization. and back past the Agriculture Depart· menl to the farmers' e ncamp· menl on the grassy open space between the Capitol a nd the Lin· coln Memorial. Leaders of the American Ag riculture Movement com· plained that the Farm Bureau is j ust an insurance company that works against small farmers. At ttte same time, Bergland met with a half.dozen represen· tatives of the demons trators at the Executive Office Jlullding adjacent lo the While House. Bergland already had rejected the farmers' demand for an in· crease in federaJ crop subsidies. Overn ight the protes t e rs claimed a few s mall victories fresh water a nd propane for their campers, new House and Senate hearings on their com· plaints and a qualified a pology from Bergland. Be rgland stood by his state· ment of Tuesday that some of the 3,500 protesting farmers here are motivated by s impl e greed, but sajd he dJdn'l mean to ins ult anyone. Seve ral con· gressmen had crilic\ied his re· marks as irresponsible. "He JUSl fe lt it wa:. un· fortunate that it .vas taken ... to include mnocent farmers," department press chief Jose1,1h T . McDav1d said. \ /nine Co. lnndTalks Still Open I' , . .\. I An attack on the Irvine Com- pany by Oran ge County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich led a company spokesman Wednes- day to.stress that the firm is on· l y t oo willing lo continue negotitations with the county over the future o r Pe lt!rS Canyon. Irvine Company spokesman Jer ry Collins said the company welcomes the decision by the county to delay any possible • land acquis1tion action for the ,.P w•~· next three months. E lizabe th Taylor W arne r h as a pens ive look for the camera in this photo. taken rn New York We dnesd a y night where the actress was honored with the A. Philip Randolph Hum anitarian Award. ··This will give u s the OP· portunity to discuss this issue in depth with Supervisor Diedrich a nd ot he r m ember s or the board," be said. Diedrich said Wednesday that he "plans to get in the trenches a nd fight" the Irvine Company over the firm's plans for Peters Canyon. ' Special Purchase! ~q, Save S 170 . on o ur magnificent Drexel so fa and love seat grouping $689 R eg. 8 789 - Save 8 100 58 .. Lo\'c Scut $549 Reg. 8619 - Save 8 70 Veil-ct ann ~ Reg~ 1319 Ea Sale 1269 Ea By very special arrangement with the manufacturer. here's the Drexel"' UP· holstery value of the season• You're 1nv1ted ro take advantage ot the remarkable sav· 1ngs on this lasht0nable roll arm tuxedo sol a ano matching love seat. The 2 ·piece groop1ng -or either untt -is yours in a classic bocder pnnt Your chotce ol colors Treated tor soil resistance. ol course And you'll appreciate Drexel's tamous quahty throughout. graceful roll arm S1yl1ng, luxurious mullt·ptllow back. tufted single seat cushion. kick pleat skirts anCI arm covers • Come discover the sa11stact1on of owning Drexel -ar substantial savings• Complete your selling with a pair of tufted loonge chairs uphOlstereCI in your .chOtee of fabnc Winter Sale In Progress Prlt'H RM•t'M ..... 20'fo 'Wt"J be caut>OUs? At these prices, you can onll prom• Onlllel end HerHege up to 20% of , Sus*t> se1eetlons ol dining room. bedroom · end oocaslonal furniture (signiflcentty) , .. duced. Come be tempted . . . and create a '°"9lier home. your lovelier homel Yoor favonre °'1$tgn.K Will Be 1-fappy ro Ass1sr You H~J.GAl\RETf fU~NITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OESIONERS °"" ........ ,,....., & M . l•H. 2215 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 646·0275 ••I _ __......, • A4 DAIL V PILOT Tl'lurad1y, r •bru1ry I, t879 lli or D ath Mat t r NtrVD·NEV • LA 0 DErr. -Ttlt> Lacuna Beach City ('ou.n(-ll took • ~uim •<'UOo J~I the other ruaiht Pu ht'd by Councilman Kc-ll)' Boyd, lhl' Clt)J lawm•keN f'n do~t'd lhe v.•deruna of Laguna C'•n>·on Road I m not holdtni m) brt'alh unlll thtt '41de-nto1 Job hllp pen.'1 Back 1n the t .• tht.•t\' w~re numeroua cheme to muk~ the twbung, ""1nd1ng two-tant' r<>adway safer betwtto our cou\al Art Colony and the Sim Dieao Freeway Not.b.ln& happt"n~ Funds for a widening project were then approved by state hjghway authorities in 1973. But Lagana Beach opposition killed the project. . . THAT ISN'T ALL that has been killed on this seven· ma le long former wa~on trail that is now traveled by 26.000 vehicles every day Cons1derlherecord: INmE PAST THREE l'EAJlSalone, 21 motorists have been killed on Laguna Canyon Road. -Obe-tblrd of au the fatalities on Laguna Canyon Road have been head-on crashes. -One hundred and eighty-five people have been in· jured in Laguna Canyon Road crashes just since 1975. -Just last Jan. 27, three motorists were killed on Lag una Canyon Road in two separate crashes just hours apart -A Santa Ana woman was killed on the road this mom· ing. It was another head-on crash. All of thls happened, mind you, despite accelerated police enforcement wherein 16,650 traffic citations were is· sued last year alone . Councilman Boyd lost a fnend in the Jan. 27 cras h on Laguna Canyon Road. He asked the council to act now on his proposal for a four.Jane road with a center divider while memory of the latest fatalities is still fresh. California T ransportation officials have estimated this job will cost more than $1 million. THE P RICE SEEMS little enough when compared to the grim death toll that has been extracted by Laguna Canyon Road. · But still, I'm not holding my breath until the project gets under way. · Laguna Canyon Road is one of the last bucolic. rural roadways in our entire coastal region. It's a pleasant drive if you aren't sharing it with 25,999 other vehicles. So you can anticipate howls of protest from the tree· huggers. the greenics and other dreamy environmen- talists. They seem to be oblivious to cold statistics. Dead cold. Locomntive s Hit Sclwol Bus; 2 Killed CHICAGO CAP) -Bus driver Lester Moody says be didn't see the coupled locomotives that slammed into his bus at a rallroad crossing and dragged it about 60 feel, killing two children and in· juring 17 people Police said the collision occurred Wednesday as the bus s tart· ed through the crossing after a freight train passed. The bus was hit by two coupled locomotives traveling in the opposite direction. Moody. 29, a music teacher at Roseland Christian School on the South Side, was charged with falling to yield the right-of-way BE SUFFERE D MINOR injuries in the crash. Authorities identified the dead as Faith Alexander, 6, and An· tbony 'Thompson, 5. One of the injured, Randolph Small. 5. was in critical cond.i· lion, and Patricia Jolly, 5, was in serious condition. The. other children sustained minor injuries, mostly cuts, attendants said. WORLD / ._ATION 1 Egypt to A"ttend Talks CAIRO. E&Ypt (AP) -Egypt. accepted an American invitaUon todey to Ultff·way m1n11ten 1Mevcl talks aimed at brealdoa the lmpaue lo Mldeut peace tallca wlth JsraeJ. Tbe lnvlt1Uon was given to Prealdeol Anwar Sadat by American Ambassador Hermann Elita durtna a 40-mloute meet.log al the ptttl~ntial palace. A Ml1All INVITATION was given to Israeli Prime Mlniater Menachem 8ea1n on Wednesday. The Israeli Cabinet met today to conatder the lnvitaUon but postponed a decision unUl its reaulkr meeU1141 oo Swiday. llraell otficiaJa said the Cabinet almost certainly would agree to send Forel1n Minister M06he Dayan to the talks with Egyptian Foreign Mlni ter Mustafa Khalil and Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vttnc~ The talks are expected to be at Camp David, Md., later this month Elita soJd the dale and place of the meetlng would not be an· nounced until Israel had been beard from. Pn.-sident Carter Issued the invitations even though roving Amba~»dor Alfred Atherton was unable to bring the two sides t.o&et.ber oo tbe unresolved issues on bis Mideast shuttle last month. Stumbling blocks include the question or whether the treaty Naples Plague I L-. Influenza Cause Of Infant Deaths? NAPLES, Italy <AP) -It's aggressive, strikes swiftly and doesn't discriminate between rich and poor. But Naples' so-called myst.ety disease has become a killer of infants in the city's teeming slums. Doctors say thousands ot children have been atflicted with the ail· m ent. and at least 60 have died since it was first detected a year ago. All but one of the dead ha ve . been from the dank alleys of w1th garbage, but nobody does Na pl es or the s tree t s or a nything to cle~ this place up." Ercolano, a poor suburb first So~e 500 chU~ren have been settled by the ancient Greeks at hospitalized tb1s winter with the foot or Mount Vesuvius. symptoms of the malady. Or. sboltld be linked to progress toward Palestinian aut.ooomy ln the West Bank and Gaza Strip and over the question of whether the treaty wou.ia aupersede prevaous EIYJ)Uan defense pacts wJth Arab nations. ,. Eilta told repprten be could not say ii the minlJterlal meetlJlg could lead to a a&ammlt of t.be type held at Camp David last Sep· tember by Carter, Belin and Sadat. Brother's Helper A Texas Court of Appeals in San Antonio ruled Wednes- day that Anne Little, 15, mentally retarded, can legally donate a kidney to her critically ill brother, Steve. 14 .. An attorney appointed to represent Anne's legal rights had argued Texas laws provided no legal means for men- tally incompetent persons to donate organs. But Dr. Giulio Tarro. once a n Berni Carnl estim~ted ~s many associate or poliovaccine de· as 18,000 children lD the Nap!es veloper Albert Sabin, said the area !118Y have come do~ Wlth poor children weren't victims or the ailment, but for most it was Teacher to De~end ffyp ... ~s.;Q a "racist virus no worse than a common cold. .I. 4 • 941 -.o · Tarro said similar types or ''TUE RICH and the middle respiratory outbreaks have been BRADENTON. Fla. f AP1 -A professor facing dismissal for class go to their own doctors," reported lo recen t years in practicing hypnos is on campus will try it one more lime Friday he said. "The poor are brought northern Europe and the United before the trustees of Manatee Junior College as they consider his into public hospitals -in Naples States. case.W usua lly whe n it's too late... "In civilized countries the " e're going to re.create the dastardly offense," attorney Don1 Doctors emphatically reject death rate has been about 1 per Hadsock said after a dismissal hearing Wednesday for his client, the term "mys tery disease" cent. Here it bas been as hig.h as suspended Professor Arlie Lincks ... We are going to do 1t so the used to describe the ailment. ~4...tpe::!:!.r!:.ce~n~t:.:..· ·_· ___________ bo_a_r_d_c_an_see __ e_xa_c_tl..:..y_h_o_w_n_· di_._cul_o_us_the_s_e_w_ho_l_e...:p:...c_eed __ in....:g:...s_a_re_. ·_·_ They say they are fairly certain it is caused by an influenza-type virus, perhaps of a strain en- demic to Naples. .. "There's nothing mysteriolls about this disease," said Dr. Mario Berni Cami, a pediatri- cian al Santobono. "Naples has not been hit with something un- known a nywhe re e lse in the world.'' DR. TARRO, the b e ad or . virology at the Cotugno Hospital for Communicable Diseases, believes it is a form of viral pneumonia. "But it's a little peculiar, and very aggressive among the youngest children,·· he said. Tbe parents and relatives of tiny Sara Barone sat huddled on wooden benches Wednesday in a s hed-like waiting room of San. tobono Hospital, watching a television monitor as their 8- m onth-0ld girl lay in a coma in the intensive care ward. She was one or three children in critical condition in the hospital with the symptoms com m on to the mys tery disease -breathing dlf· ficulties, bJgb fever, vomiting, a coma. Death comes quickly - within a day or two after those symptoms -from suffocation. AS THE child's 19-year-old mother sobbed on the shoulder or her husband, a bottled gas de.- live ryman. an uncle said: "The city's fi.llby, the streets are filled ' (Paid Advertisement) TO THE MEMBERS OF THE NEWPORT-MESA DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD FROM MEMBERS OF THE NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL FACULTY PETITION TO RESCIND CHARGES AGAINST CERTIFICATEP EMPLOYEE Th ~....,. of "'-feailfy of M.H.H.S. mrTION THE loard of ~affoR to ...sclRd tt. ~ ag•st _. coleag191. aJdtard fll9•d, 9'ld ltOt to pww fwtller actfoft . agahtst hhn wNch wOllld IMP•...., Mt H1plor-t i. "-dlstrtct CllMt ow scltool for tMw recnoM; (aJ Tiie dlmtt• ..... d • tlle 1..-d •c•• .. ,..._ 51 .,,,., fo M of a RCMMCodttMc, noMN.:oMi 9 •arMfy wWch do not ....... Mr. •!ll•lts ....... • • teadttr. CbJ The dNrgH we frt ... •"'1 trMal (rr. ..._ ,, ltJ .... ..,_.., M qltCllty. Thy_.. too oft8 .... type of 1Mkl1 .. i. wWdt _, ,...._ ....... *'-d ......, M•ot.ed. If taket1 CM1t of cOltfeat. tMy..,........,. ...,._-.Ill ocW feet, tMy .,.. New Storm Kills Six lcJ TllecN'fll.,.....,lle...d• .. •t:H•at•wltlt-.-.Mr.no...Jocobl-. ow p11Mlpal. _.. W.W '""'to,.,.,...,• c-'lct hihl ... ....._two wMclt cOllW 9tn• .,... -~ cOllld -........... .., •••d• ............. d9priYIRg • llt.loftg hocher of .... 1Me1ofl••oodforhhwHtf...tMsfwlllty. CdJ Mr. •!ll•d Is a lopl colu.,1 mid a ••oftd ttadlfto wllo INK Nll1tt fM hntrwwtnt .. Mnk P"MJI-frOlft a •fW'( tow poW to• hhJlt of 91111.e NCOCJ111Hoa for ex.eel.tic•. TM1 tooll a stroRg ... of MCJll P9pote who ft ....,.chd t., Ms 1fDdlRl1 -.d colu.,u as well as hf1 a:t:• ••• L W,... ftM w..er of....._ c ..... M wn ...... • •xc.._. ........ tty Otltyl"IWO .... wy h ....... , Yllftt11.,f~ If ir"",, ~· • ~.t' •[JU't~b;,lOOf'I• O..'Ot•I r "" el'1d "'°"' °'""• •·• Ott ot •v9ffl0 •._..1.,.ru.,.,_,,~, ... u,..,._."'°"" '' f j.,. ·,-Vf ttis·1 ti; 0 I"" f •• t,.•f -',. 11 .. ~ ttnr1 "f'V U>C't w1d t°"I t)f l•Y .. f"C'I lo 11n(J ~ lnoOtcl doWft l>ft'#t• 11~ to "'°'9 ""'" "S 000 -· Ill O•OtOlll ~ SOull• C.,.111'1• et • "''"'" •t~m rolltd llP tho IHI C••••· tonlrlblltlno to •'• d .. ,,., btfof'9 reU!flt M to ... Tho tlWftl tte lln1 IMIOI' wallocl tor tftll<fl ef tM rotlOll ltll• wlfll.,. THU•SOAY ~one! tow I s• p m .0 4 Se<Oftf h!P • 2t p"' " ""'°"" Flrll IOw I 10• m I' Flr)llllf!I t ?I II 11'1. h S.tOlldlow t ,,.,11'1, '°' k<OllO hiOh 1 ·J311 m 4 0 $1111 r1Mt6 dll tft , WI\ S JOp m. Mooll rl'" t S4 p tft •• Nit 4 I•• "' 8•rt•q•rt M\lflt~ 9MO\• W--tit t• .... CINllllM ,,.., "'"""' tt.e ldtool ............. ff ..._ lltcOftCJ"IC*I ._. .. tlw ..-thM. IM w«*ld be ~ incH ... t...t t., tMM c._..! ••• w .............. "'°" ~,.. .... of .... dlarcJn wfl flftd .... loft ............ . """ ...... of .... faalty, .... ,.,.. ..... of ... ~ ............. nt of ow,......, wtl M bnt Hf'ftCI by •opplHg flte cMr9JI 9ld ftM 8'0tlce to ....... ... hkh. W11Vw1e-... 1.Condft•t ... lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .. lll .......................... .. ,,,, \ ... CALIFORNIA---------------------- . .. .... ,,_ -DAH.Y PllOT Brown to Address Committee? 'Dmmatic Action' Nee•d to Save Convention Proposal 4 Die Lon g est R i d e .............. Ernest O'Guffney, 41, of Hemet . mounts his motorcycle for the final leg of the longest-ever cycle ride. He de· p~rt~ Wednesday Crom Los Angeles for New York in ~ls bid to complete his 21.000-mile, world-wide journey in 79 days He started his roun1-the-world trek in New York Nov . 27 . Psychic A ids. Hunt For Girl's Killer FRESNO lAP> A Cupertino psychic visited the spot where the battered and mutilated body of an 8-year·old Fresno girl was found. authonties reported. Police here would not reveal Wednesday what M. Kethlyn Rhea saw or felt at tht! s pot northeast of here where the body of Vlctona Anne Desantiago was found Monday. The girl's bead bad '<' Qeen battered and she had been sexually assaulted. I \ " ~:...I HAVE AN IMAGE. lf I ever saw this ooe particular man. I. would know him." Ms. Rhea said Tuesday of the girl's klller. Police said Ms . Rhea provided general details Monday morn- ing that-matt'hed the area wh ere the girl's body was later found. She said the girl would be found dead and nude near plowed fiP.lds, a chirken ranch and mountains. all of which were true "I KNEW THE CHILD had been physically beaten," Ms. Rhea said. "l felt she was in the lrunk of a car before s he was placed in a field." Ms. Rhea said she could even "see" flashes or the fata l beat in!! Deputy Police Chief Ji.mes Packard said the department also may use hypnosis on some witnesses to see il they can provide more information. Meanwhile. police are combing the area where the girl's body was found. checking cars that could have been involved in the girl's kidnap Saturday and sorting through telephone tips. Reward and memorial funds established In the girl's name by several local radio stations and public employee groups have raised more than S2S,000 m cash and pledges slnce Tuesday. An anonymous donation or SS,000 was made Wednesday "on behalf of the children of Fresno." SACRAMENTO CJ\PI -Gov. Edmund Brown J r must do aomcthlng dramatic, Ilk u m~dh1-airabblns lcail,lulive com· mitttt appearance, to save tus propotal for 1 ~onslltutlontl con· vention to balance the federal budaet. the l\sseJDbly's GOP lender say~ Anemblymun Paul Pnolo. nl10 a strong supporter of the concept, says the Legislature will ~iect the convention resolu· tlon unless t.he Democratic gov· t>rnor does something hke speak· ln1 before the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. PRIOLO AID Brown could thereby increase pressure on members of the committee, where the resolution is awaiting action. Brown's cb1ef of staff, Gray Davis, dld not rule out the possibility Brown would testify but added: "The governor's views are well known to mem· hers of the committee." Brown called in his inaugural speech for a convention to draft a constitutional amendment re· quiring a balanced budget. say- ing federal deficits are a major cause of inflation. IT TAKES ACTION by 34 states to force Cor.gress to call a convention. So far, 25 of 27 states legisla tors Seek Change In Gun Law SACRAMENTO CAP> -As· sembly Speake r Leo McCarthy and nine other legislators have joined an appeal to the state Supreme Court to reconsider its decision on the "use a gun, go to prison" law. Backers or the appeal said Wednesday that, so far, 75 of the 119 legislators, including the Democratic a nd Republican leaders oC both houses, have signed the petition. They inclu~~ 52 of the 80 Assembly me!n~FS and 23 or the 39 senators. "' '.',~ The court's Dec. 22 Tanner de· cision h~ld tf!a.l ,p. 1975 man· datory-pn son taw di~n ·t prohiblt judges from granting probation to gun-using felons in excep-tional cases. The court has given oppo- nents. including s tate Attorney General George , Deukmejian. unUl Feb. 20 to ask for a rehear· ing. In the meantime, action on legislation to reverse the ruling bas been delayed. Borrow ers To Receive Refuruls Of Interest have done so. depending oo di!· the votes to kill the resolution i.11 th• Ways aod Means Colll!Dit· ferent counts and lnterpretatlo~ committee or on the noor. tee," McCArtby said at hls press or resolutions conferenc,e Wednesday. Priolo. from Malibu, also said McCARTIIY, A CLOSE ally or "If it were to receive the Wtdnesdoy that Brown has not the governor during Brown's necessary majority there, It will been personally lobbying com-first tenn, opposes a convention, not receive lhe necessary ma· mlttee members on the resolu-contendlng there could be no jorit.y on the Ooor.'' tio n . but 8 row n 's pre ss way to prevent it from proposing secretary. Barbara Metzger. a mendments weakening key said it was "her understanding" civil Ubertles. · ASSEMBLYMAN Tom Bane, D-Van ~uys, said he would in· troduce a resolution Mooday calling for a balanced fdral budget and a federal spending limit. but without a convention. that Brown had been doing so. "Indications are that a resolu· Assembly S peake r Leo tion that contains a constitu· McCarthy, o ,san Francisco, re· lional convention will not re- peated his prediction that he has ceive the necessary majority in , .~{~ ,\\~ .. '· I ·1'' I , 1111 INSTANT.COWR ICELAND POPPIES Another gorgeous background of bright color in reds. yellows. orange., and pastel ... Rogers hybrid varieties will bloom through late spring. -----~PRIMROSE SALE· PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabulous garden color in beds. baskets or pots-blues, yellows. oranges and whites. BANDINI #2 A February feeding i!> very important for a healthy attractive lawn. Bandini_ *2 is ideal for feeding' establish ed dlchrondra and blade grass lawns. Start your feeding cycle now. Buy four 4"' plan~ a nd get one FREE Roger's has both English and Fairy varieties-th ~ foundation or any spring garden-available in white, yellow. red, pinks, orange and blues, in bloom for easy selection. limited to stock on hand through 2/25/79. CAMEU.IAS Showy 6owering evergreen shrubs In colors ranging from red to pink to white and even some variegated types. SeJec:t from many old favorites or unusual collector varieties. S.in Joaquin Hills Road at MacArthur Blvd .. Newport ~ach. (714) 640-5800 Open Daily 9 am . 5pm -Florist 640-6n4 LOS ANGELE S (AP ) - Americans, who borrowed money from more than 1,500 national banks since Ocl. 28. 1974, and were chargt>d too much interest. will be refunded millions of dollars, the Los Angeles Times reported today. than has been done in the past, and J think frankly that has to be our general thrust." he said Wednesday. ~B .. t.Fo-d Velcom es You To Th ree Deliciou s Values The office of comptroller or the currency, which recently completed a detailed examination of all 4,700 national banks. found inadvertent violations of the truth-in·lending law in interest calcule1tions on auto. home ( __ sT._'A.Ti_E ___ J improvement and other consumer loans of less than $25,000. ·'These were inadvertent mis- takes," said John J . Chipouras, director of consumer examinations tor the comptroller of the currency. Federal officials said the compledty of the lending law caused most of the errors because .bank loan officers ap- parently did n ot know bow to calc ulate annual interest rates properly. S•Dfl Tni• Slat e d LOS ANGELES t AP l California's latest effort to reduce auto exhaust pollution begins March 10 when used-car buyers in the Los Angeles area can have their vehicles checked at smog control stations. The testing program -dem· onstrated in a dry run at one of the 17 Los Angeles area testing stations Wednesday -ls expected to be ex· panded within three years to require the annual tesUn1 of all cars in California's five largest metropolitan areas. Currently, testing ls required only when a car ls sold. Ne Tfla Bib Seftl SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state AssembL¥'s Democratic leader says he, unUke the former legislative analyst. does not thJnk a state tax Jn. crease in the wake or Proposition 13 ts inevitable. Speaker Leo McCarthy, 0 -San FrancLtco, said there is no support for any tax lncreue ln the current Le1l1lature and tbe need bas not beenlbown. ''There Ja a clear mood qalnst tu increues and fOJ' Mliverlftl aovem- m•nt Mnlcet rar more ettlclently OXNARD CAP) -A bomb squad was called in to remove two practice military bombs found in a garbage dumpster outside a south Oxnard apartment building. One ol the 26·incb by six inches. long bombs found Wednesday was live, according to Police Lt. Robert Kelly. However. he said it was an ex· plosive that gives off a lot of smoke as at burns. but is not considered very dangerous. Kelly said the Explosive Ordnance Disposal team from the Point Mugu naval base disposed of the bombs. Many military people live in that area, but Kelly said it would be difficult to track down the person who brought the bombbome. Selttettee Vplteld BAKERSF1ELD <AP> -The de· fense attorney says he will appeal a death sentence agains t a Los Angeles-area man convicted or murdering three student film makers in the Mojave Desert last April. Superior Court Judge John D. Jelletlch upheld a jury's death penal· ty verdict Wednesday after bearing defense arguments against Imposing the death sentence and prosecuUon . argument.a for it. Defense counsel James Faulkner contended the jury failed to consider tbe lack of a prior criminal record for David Murtisbaw, 20, of Santa Ye Sprlop. Faul.JaMr al.so charged that a psycboloctat was unqualified to s tate that Murtlsbaw would be I vlolent the rest or bis Ille. I •les'S..t•R- OAKLAND CAP> -Wilson RJles Jr .• aon of the state school superln· tendent1 aays be wlU run for tho Oaklana ctty Council against incum· bent Fred ~l~Orl. Riles, ad straUve asslatant for Alameda County Supervisor John Georce 11.Me tt?t, bu been eodoned by Mayor Uonel Wllaon. He an· nounced bit council candidacy Wed· nesd . He ~an bJI PoUtJcaJ career by worltlnc oa b1I father'• campalfn ln 1170. Simply present each coupon at the participating Denny's most convenient to you and you'll receive the delicious meal described for the special coupon price. We know you'll be pleased with the food and with the very hospitable people who are looking forward to serving you. Denny's is the favorite restaurant of millions of Americans. With more than 100 menu Items available 24 hours a day, we're certain you'll find the kind of food to fit your mood. So, .sit back, relax and enjoy. A DENNY'S BREAKFAST VALUE! ~ A DENNY'S LUNCHEON VALUE! A DENNY'S DINNER VALUE! Huntington Beach 7490 Edinger -... . ' -- oranoecoastoa11vP••~dltorial P~e ' ........................... liiiiiiililiiill ... -. ........ _. ............ Thul'MSay, February 8, 1979 Rober! N Weecl Publ•~l'ler Thomu Keevll 'Eidltor Barbara Krelbich1Ed1torlal P19e editor Merits Attention A d1spuh: th t t one Point threat ned lo Oare to ftUlJOr proportion ha 1ppar nUy been Uled amic:rably for the Umt-tx>mg betw n N -.-port Beach par1mcdtc und the ,•,ty 'I h i•ur~\mC'dl l'~ pparent ronc rn lh t th y wer not bt1n.: ra ft'm'd to. und {h(\ \mprt> ion b)• city omc1 ls th t param."(JJC• JU'-t w ntcd more money. were resolved qu1l'klv tan informal m tins C'1ty oCflc ml!t hove IJtt"r.d to tudy the paramedlci:.' rcqut-~t that th~~ be gav n ~eparate class1hcaU011 wtthm tht• 1-'ltt> Dt·partm nL Pendtng completion or that ~tudy latC'rthts month, th •~~u ha cooled. Cur~ntly porJmed1~ ore classed as nremen ··the lowt.• t r n.k in the department hierarchy assigned to a ra med c duty. They receive a 10 percent pay upplcmc·nl Their rt>quc~t lo huve a ~parale clo~iftcauon seems on the face or 1t to ha\'C some ment As they point out, paramedic are given special t~aming al conside ra ble expense, and then frequently mubl uperVise other persoMel t.it an emergency scene. 1l d<Ws seem odd that an engineer in the .lire department would have to accept a demotion to fireman rank m ordttr to become a paramedic. especially since th i~ ~crvice 1s so highlr valued by res idents . Thl' c la~~• f1 cat1on problem merits a careful rc-e>.amination by city offic1c.h,. Candidates' Duty :-...-With the cold. rainy weather of recent weeks, June may seem far off. But it's not too soon to look ahead to the expiration of three Newport Beach planning commissioner terms. Members of the e<>mmission, the most powerful of the city's non-elected boards, are appointed by the City Council as a whole, not by individual e<>uncil persons. The commission serves as an advisory body on major matters concerning planning, and has jurisdiction , s ubject to appeal. on many s maller matters. Residents with talent. time and community spirit might well make use of the months between now and June to attenrt commission and council meetings and become familiar with the city's major topics a nd procedures. With the complexity of current planning matters, new com mi~sioners should be as well acquainted with the issues as possible to prevcn.t confusion and delay after June's ap· poinlmels ~ Wrong Approach .. • . • A chained and bolted e mergency escape door in the Costa Mesa High School gym came to public attention last wee~ when it was spotted during a girls' basketball g ame and reported t o the Fire Department. Chainin~ panic bars during public assembly is illegal. and fire ins pectors quickly responded. The school pnncipal acknowledged he knew that two emergency doors, one on each side of the gym, were kept locked. He cited the need to keep out fate-crashe rs. a nd said the gym has an unus ual number<> exits so he believed no safelydangerwas presented. In that case. the proper course o f action would have been to ask the fire department to verify that the doors were not needed, then have them clearly marked as non-exits. It was. of course. an unintentional error, but it could have proved a dangerous one. Other schools would do well to check their public exits to make certain they also ha vcn 't c rcated potentia l hazards. • Op1n1ons expressed 1n the s pace above are those of the Darty Piiot Other views expressed on this page are those of therr authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phooe(7l4) 642-4321. BoydJTi~el Town ByL. M. BOYD Q. Wasn't it Oscar Levant who firsl labeled Hollywood as 'Tinsel Town'?" A. That's right. What he actually said was, "Strip the phony tinsel off Hollywood and you'll find the real tinsel underneath." Q. "ls water the only sub- stance that expands when frozen?" A. Yes, with one eiceptioo, bismuth. Sea sail is said to have the same r atio of salt to other m\nerals as is round in human blood. First person to get U.S. Social Security benefits was Ida May Fuller. She'd paid $22 in the fund before she re· ceived her first check on Jan. 31. 1940. By the Ume she died on Jan. 30, 1975. she'd coiled· cd$20,000. How fut can you say "lwo Dear Gloomy Gus Why are the ICU nurses so unhappy at Hoag? Could lt be the new great honor of working two of three weekend.s? Is the unlon their answer? S.A.D. a1l-beef patties, s pecial s auce, lelluce, cheese, pickles, onions, on a sesame seed bun"? Mc Donald's employees are supposed to say it in four seconds . Took a couple of years for an Iowa man to convince the authorities he should have his mo niker on his own personalized car license plate. His na me: Stolen. Was only six years ago th al Uganda's l)oss ldi Amin got all shook up over the amount of catUe rusUingthaL was go- i ng on there. He finally figured out what the problem was. The exceedingly high price at the time of a Ugan· dan bride. About 65 head of cattle. Am advised the most popular calculating device in the Soviet Union is the abacus. A st.eel ship is lighter than a wooden ship of the same dlmenak>ns. T~ t ,000 yard.I of linen to wrap one of thole Egyptian mummie.. Oo th<l6e pickers up around Wenatachee wear gloves \n the orchar\b? 1f not . why not? Moisture from human hands speedS the decay of apples. according to the science boys. Q. "Any truth to the c1aJm tbal abort people tend to Uve 1on1er than tall people?" ..\. None. It'• one-of thoM phony notions that persist, tbou1b. Why ls a mystery. In fact, recent naUon•lde •WdJ• IDdicate tbere'1 DO re· 1aUonablp between belpt anCt toaaev\t.y. jack And rson President's Load Too Heavy? WASHINGTON -Jimmy Carler, beslued by a balky Congr u . an uncontrollable tconomy Mnd a critical press, has had <'au e to retJect ruefull y upon Mark Twain's frustratMw\s 1n a11kmic dtreeUons to a friend'~ farm in New Hampshire "How fa_r Is It to Henderson's place .. '' Twain inquired The former said it wai. '"about a mile und a half." Twain contin u t d a l o ne the road until he met another farmer and again asked the distance to the Hen· derson farm. "About a mile and a half." replied the second farmer. Still farther down the road, Twoin asked another passing farmer the distance and was told . "about a mile and a half." Mark Twain replied: "Thank God. I am holding my own." THE PRESIDENT IS begin- ning to wonder whether he is holding his own. He puts in about two working days every 24 ho1.1rs. He is usually al his desk by 6:30 a.m. Often he doesn't put aside his wor..k. except for meals and ceremonial fundions, until midnight. He keeps plugging away not merely from dawn to dark but, in times of crisis, from dawn to dawn. Carter has an extraordinary energy that exhausts ordinary men who try to keep up with him. Associates say he thrives on wo rk . He spf!ed -r eads through stacks or presidenUul papers . The Carter technique. according to those who know him. is lo commit to memory the key facts a nd fig ures he needs to understand a problem. These becom e guideposts. which he uses in his discussions with subordinates . Frequently Mailbox he has nabbergasted them by remembtrina some detail -a uuideposl he had picked out of the Cine print --that they had forgotten. CARTER IS A determined man who desperately wants to be a good president. But the strain is beginning to show. The race is more gaunt, the famous smile waning. weary lines ap. pearing under the eyes. "What th&s coU,ntry needs," commented a n asaoclate who has tried to keep up with Carter's multiply· ing problems a nd exhauatlng pace, "is a good nlght's sleep." or course. there can be no eight-hour day for the president, no laytng aside tht awesome responsiblUues. no set~ing down the overwhelming burdens. A move on his chessboard could cause war or btlng peace. A chance rema rk from him could start an economic downsUde. He sit.$ at the cente r of.govern· ment with a thousand hands, pulling strings. controlling movements. touc hing every. thing, He directs the preparation or figures he is expected to 'un· derstand ln detail. He sets foreign policy. guides leglslatioQ, makes domestic decisions. controls the government news output. plans political stJ"ategy. AaCRAJC LAWS and tradi· itt fil'Bt.glance this may seem confusing t-0 you . tions also impose upon hJm a thousand and one mlnor chores, many of them requiring his personal signature. He ts sup· posed to bo the nation's chief greeter. civic pitchman and father-confessor. He has to serve as host at ban· quets for kings, queens and potentates. And he is also ex· peeled to greet pickle queens. poster girls and Bo)' ~ut del- egations. Nobody knows how manynands a president shakes In a year, but Carter's hand has often gone limp from tbe ex· ercise. The presiden t's g rueling schedule raises an ureent ques- tion: has the world's biggest. job become teo big for any single person to handle? Not only Is Carter expected to comp.rehend the full signifi~@nce or the thousands of words and figures that pour across his desk each day; not only must he de- cide immediate issues and cope with each new crisis; but he must also give constant thought to the future and chart a reliable course for the s hip or st.ate to follow. WHEN DOES the man in the White House find the lime to ponder'? How can future presi· dents with normal exhaustion points be expected to hold down the job? The lesser post or de- fense secretary drove J ames ForrestaJ to suicide. Many his· torians believe exhaustion and illness adversely affected the de· cis1ons of Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt during their declining years. The conclusion is inescapable. The presidency is too over· powering for any one human be· ang. The most modem country in the world 1s at the same time saddled with one of the most archaic political structures. The presidency s h o uld b e streamlined. perhaps with the vice president picking up more or the load. Mandatory Sentencing lnh.ihits Justice To the Editor: I was disturbed to read the Feb. 3 Comment Page article re- garding People v. Tanner and mandatory sentencing. The notion that the Legislature is confronting "a court lmposed threat to its independence" is misguided. Rather, as Chief Justice Bird recognJzed. rigfdJn· flexible sentencing s tandards cannot be determined by the Legislature without threatening the judicial latitude essential to justiceandraimess. Mandatory sentences eliminate the most crucial participants in the criminal justice system : the Impartial judges. Removi'lg the discretion lradmonally reserved for them, especially in the un- usual case like Tanner <a sham robbery intended to demonstrate an empJoyer's need for additional security> ultimately leaves a dis- proportionate and diatorbhtg amount of power to the police and prosecutors. .. Whether an Individual is ar· rested ; whether he or she Is booked; whether the district al· torney decides lo prosecute, and upon whk h charge; the crowd, ing of the court calendar: the pressure to plea bargain; dlscre· lion is everywher~. PRECLUDING the impartial trial judge, most familiar with the crime and criminal, from impos· Ina the most appropriate sentence only adds to the prosecutor's - the state's partial advocate -in· creasing power. and what Justice Black called ''the WU'eviewable control of one lndi vldual." Each criminal case, its ad· Judlcatlon and disposition, is a dilemma by itself. Guidelines providing suggested sentencing ranges help guard against dis- parity',-arbitrariness and uncer- tainty. Senten cing cannot, however , be based upon a strict legislative schedule or rule or thumb. if j ustice is lo be done. The ln11exlbillty or the "use a gun. go to prison" Jaw is rarely the answer to problems as in· describably complex as crime 1nd punishment. Rigidity cannot meet the irrationality of most crime. Mitigating and unco«n· mon circwnstances muat be let\ to judicial discretion and evalua· lion, subject, of .course. to •P· pel1ate review. Meanwhile. persistent ques· lions as to the nature of crime. the purpose of punishment. must be confronted by both our courts and Legislature. Hurried legislation and court rulings. enacted and decided amldat political co~lroversy, ts piecemeal and panacean. Beth fall lo grapple wlth crlminal Ju1Uce in tbe compre9'eulve and thoughtful manner required. EU.ENROWNS I • - Df••l•••I Slaoela To the Edit.or: As a teacher a nd a parent wHhln the Newport -Mesa Unified School District, I wish to express my shock and outrage' at the board's action to begin dismissal proceedings against Newport Harbor Band Direct.or, Richard England. Primarily, I want to speak on behalf of a truly valued friend and colleague of many years. Richard England's competence and integrity are above· reproach. One has but to check the record to find evidence of his many outstanding contributions to school. community and the development of.young people. As one who has known both Dick England and Tom J acobson, it is my opinion that, once the facts are known and the half truths dismissed, Mr. Engl.and will be vindicated. I ~ wish to express my displeasure with the "public" hearing afforded by the board on the 2Sth and the pro ronna vote which resulted. It was obvious to all that the board voted accord· lng to some predetermined un· derstanding without one word of discussion re lating to the charges against Mr. England. All of this. mind you. in the guise of a public hearing. One would think that this board, with the NMIRI travesty so fresh in mind. would exa&nine more carefully the actions of the district's administration rather than merely serving aa a rubber stamp. MICHAEL A. MARINO s .. .waeP•rk To the Editor: The coast of California chokes with development. The Irvine Coast is a welcome sight In Orange County. The alr is clean and the ocean off lhe coast thrives with fish and vegetation. Kelp beds support a wide varjt· ty m ocean life ort the lrvlnc Coast. Wild anim als make lbelt homes in the Irvine Hills along thecouL The Irvine Company plans de· velopment of the trvine Coal Hotels and apartments "'®1d be more than an ucb blight. Development would be a source or pollution. Alr polluUon would Increase wtth a heavier traffic now on Pactrlc Coast Hlghw•y. Cltles like Newport Beach would be lhe moll alf ected by heavy tr a me. THE OllANGE County plan· nln1 acency, the Environmental Manal(ement Aaency, has 1liven their aupport to the development or the Jnlne Cout. The ataff of the SKA nieocnmended to . the C1Htomia CoMta1 Comdll11lon a_t a ~ heartns on the Irvine Coast. that the mouth of the coastal canyons ;>hould be paved and berome parking lots for the coast. Tourists are more lmpor· tanl than wildlife to the county planners. Money makes the world go around. Greed kills the world at the same time. The Irvine Coast needs to become an urban park. If the federal government preserves it as a park the coast can be en· joyed by everyone. The re· sources of the area will be saved if the coast becomes a park. Southern Orange County will continue to. grow. Open space won't be left anywhere if it 1sn "t protect«.>d now for the future. DAVE HALL Lost O•r 'C'laa•' To the Editor: The decision of the Newport· Mesa School Board to consider the dismissal or Mr. England of Newport Harbor High School was only to be expected : for the action reflects the change whlch has swept over Newport Beach in the 12 year s since Mr. England was employed as band director. We have lost our sense or community. our sense of pride. While iL was most prob· ably an Illusion, we have lost our illusion of "class." Our elected representatives and their appointees re flect that loss. Superintendents shuffle an and out: Roy Andersen retires a.ft.er signing a contract which greaUy increases his salary <and retire- m en t b enefits>; Leland Newcom e r s torms off lo LaVeme after railing to pass a bond i.ssue: Bill Cunningham is now "executive secretary" of a union of school superintendents and has the gall to include -himself as he speaks in a recent interview of "we in education." The Marian Bergesons or this world spend years on the local scbool board, approve the build· Ing of Olympic swimming pools and the expenditure or over $l5 m'illion of taxpayers• m oney up· on a school district computer capability which monitors at· tendance, grind., out class lists, produces ttport cards a month late, and perform• other vital functions, then move on to grander arenas whe rein they now bray their concern for "responsible school finance." TR£ RICHARD ENGLANDS or this world remain, produclng a part of that contlnuint ex· cell~nce ln a school system to which ti?al estate developers and hucksters have Iona referred when advertising their jerry. buJIL wares. Newport ~ach hu become a city wttb very Jillie shl'me: an Ill-assorted collecUon of cuual drunk• and en•t.t (•yachumen." We fancy OW"Hlvea ln the lmaae c:onJured by alick .periodicals .. like New World distributed by the Irvine Company. lolling about in Jacuzzis and dining in s upposedl y fa s hio nabl e restaurants lull of under-sized lobs ter a n d s wap-mee t nostalgia. We ogle photographs of pretentious parties and drape ourselves In gold chains. We "economite" upon our city's need while reveling in face.Jifts. Sunday brunches and re nted Mercedes. Even if the charges against Mr. England arc dismissed, as I a m sure they will be. the truth of what has become or us stands revealed. F'or-how could such a stupid, destructive action have come to be considered in the first place? Does the colleetion of boors which makes up the present school administration <hired by our elected officials> really reflect the temper of the city? I can't believe thal aU or the people who once Jived here and shared a sense of communi· ty have sold their homes al a "profit" and skulked out or town. EILEEN DOVER C•laaDrea• To t he Editor: Vice Premier Teng Hsiao· ping's nine-day visit to the U.S. provides him and a lmost a billion Chinese <via satellite T . V. I excellent opportunity lo learn that t heir dream of moderni:Jing China can come true by quickly adopting in Mainland China a framework of American free enterprise system. MORE THAN 30 ~ears or Communism and Ma rxism in ·Mainland China resulted only constanl social and political strife that rurned chances of real progress there. T he sam e "is ms'' mu.st now be abandoned to allow requisite social and political stability of unlnterrupl· ed modernization program yet to be developed is to have any chances in succeeding. Adopt.ion or American free en· terprise sysCem and a bandon- ment of Comrnunism and Marx· ism can lead lo a possibility o.f a break-through for China· Taiwan reunification. Should this become a ttaUty,. reclonaJ stability in the Pacific 11 assured ·a nd chances ro( world peace wut be gttatJy enhanced. CJ 'm a U.S. naUve born Chinese·Amencan l. HENRY YEE • • • ., : O• Cc tb (>\ hi .. d m in a( F .. G p v d d e I I i • I .. .. -· Saud· Losing Faith . in --u.s. WASlUNGTON A hl1h V.S otficlal rettnlly N'turnf'd rrom ~audi Arabia with t.h1& prlva warnlna : a boc lt e d by tbe calamltoua U S re verael ln Iran. Seuell Arabla•s royal f1m1· 11 lt lo&lna coefidence In J lnuny Carter's We "JQCtoe. T hia di• .1'bla1 word from Am ntra's mosl l11dispenaablc oil I lly t'<· plal n 1 th e p ruld eol 's d echlon t o aend Def~nst S<'cret ry H arol d Brown t o Riyudb, the l l r s t P e n · tagon ch ief ever to visit the des.en. kingdom. At '"-ke in lbe confidence· building trip by the Inscrutable U.S. defense bo8I b DOtb1na J..s than arreslln& preciphous e ve nts that threaten Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf. J ran to the north, Sovlet - controlled Ethiopia to lbe west a n d S oviet -dominate d Afghanistan to the east now all but surround SaudJ Arabia with hostile regimes. ~ u,. the diNlt.r in tran bu e n ' complacen cy lo tbe C tr admlalatraUon and be ocll1 rivet.cl attentlon oo th eaktnlol tout.hem nank ol Arabia. Brown'• talk la to lnce UHi aktpUcal Studta Ult unlit' C..Ur'a peree.lved tre-nt of lbe 1hab of Iran anot the NaUooallat Cb1DeM on T twan , C art e r wlll no t •hfchance Saudi Arabia. 1AT IS no taay deal. Por mo M .. the S~udla have been bei l\& Carter and Brown to eel ser us about bu.lldln1 mWlary str\gth In the small couo\.ry ol Noll Yemen which. alon• with M ocow controlle d South Y qen. bordera touthern Sludi Arfla. Until Iran blew up, the C ate r a dm i n ia lratloo eq~.=~~vidence, not yet u-oo , of U.S. inteotJoaa la th Brown will take to Rlyldb w amounts to about $200 ml n in military aid for North Ye~n. including an eventual sq\dron of F·Ss. air-dereme, lani, howitzers and other de· fenwe weapons. American and Sad advisers will share the traing chore in North Yemen. That seem• llttle enoucb' for defeoae aaalnst possible at· tack from South Yel1)en, whole ucly aubwrslve warfart! cauaed the mwder ol North Yemea'a Prealdlot Al-Obuhml tut year. Arm.-d ud ltalned by agents from tbe Soviet Uoioo. Eut Germany and Cuba, Soutb Yemen bu pc>led a mountma threat to Saudi Arabia. Tbe threat was under control while the ahah refined ln Tehran. No longer. Although opuuons here differ, a direct invasion of North Yemen by its communl.st nameaue ii no& wholly ruled out aod would thre aten to entrap Saudi Arabia ln a giant pincers. That explains why Saudi leaders have been srpoot.hing di!fereoces with mllltant Arab states like Iraq, on tbe nor:then~ Saudi border, ud mllllant Palestln· lau (an effort which, for inex· pllcable reuoaa, U>e 1oquac10US Sen. Frank Cbun:b and other Saudi critlct naively condemn). With intentional overstate· meat. ooe U.S. official told us that Saudi Arabia bas become so vulnerable that "ten smart guys with matchsticks could put them out of commission ... Today's oversutement could be tomor· . row 's prophecy whlell: ii luJIWed, couJd lead to a world war. TBB&S Ill rl1ta1 dlvlalon within tile Saudi royal famu, u . to bow to baDdle Moeeow•1 move to eltablilb diplomatic relltioal tor tbe ~ Ume 1D 4" ,ean. Prince Saud, tbe forel1n miD.ister, •nnouneed last IDODtb tbere would be no cban1e. Others dl.sacree • Llkewlse. with the West olead· lng for bigber oil production to take up tbe loss of Iranian crude, differences have cropped up between Prince Fahd, the heir apparent, and Abm1d Zaki Yamanl. the oil minllter. ' But tbese differences are slight ~mpared to the basic queat.ioo ot tru.at and COQfldeoce lo America. Tbe royal family was stiakeq by Carter's am· bigulty over the shah Of lru and by obvious feudine between DI· Uonal security aide Zbiplew Bnednsld and Secretary of SUte CyruaVance •. To s ubtle. sopblsticated Saudis, these were signs of sopbomopc naivete in the lead· lng anti-Soviet country. AT HARBOR VIEW CENTER -N {~ \\ 5 l.• .,~ - NE~PORT ST A'"IONERS BolCed Valntines For The~ids. He4rf Shaed Frames & Gifldeas. Val01tine arty Goods. I 1/2 Price On Corduroy, Wool. Velvet & Knits. Many Fabrics 59-yd. Patchwork & ·craft Classes. New Gift Items, Gift Certificates & Gift Wrapping. 644-5080 (. II \IW\\ 'Ht- 10% Off All Kitchen Appliances. Expires: Feb. 15 644-8570 COAST HWY • OM. y PILOT A 7 '' Desprk the Ve4rd, I Am no ~f4 <14vs." •"' Imported Baskets. Candles. Accessories. Miniatures . 644-0515 Remember Someone Special This Valentine's Day With A Gift Of Flowers. CALIFORNIA I FIRST BANK Stop By & Discuss Your Banking Needs Wrth Brian Rennie . Manager & Meet The Friendly Staff Ready To Personally Serve You. 644-8511 \\'111i-ru:·s H1-;AI.1'JIY FOODS 10% Off On Entire line Of Natureade Cosmetics. Eye Shadow. Mascara . Lipstick & Much More. Expires Feb. 15 ~ . . AND OUR OTHER FINE MERCHANTS --·--·------·· ~ SAN MIGUEL DRIVE •AT SAN JOAQUIN HltLS. RD. NEWPORT BEACH I . . • Magic Mirror • Gelson 's Markets •Macnab/Irvine Realty • Cameo Cleaners •Children Unlimited . •The Guild Drug • Harbor View Shell ' • • \ l . TOP PAY Stev. McOueen HtGHPAICED P•ulNewman WE.LPAID Jane Fonda· A .. Wlflpt II I RUNNER UP Merton Brando '3 Million for Movie ~en Pmses Brando in Salary ~ace HOLLYWOOD <AP> lo a ain&le bound, Steve McQueeo baa overtaken Marlon Brando's ''Superman" salary with a $3 million one-mm contract that is probably the biggest in movie history. "McQueen's salary will be bigger than Brando's." s aid Arthur Canton. publicist for "Tai Pan." · ''TAI PAN" IS a $40 million two-part epic based on James Clavell's best-selling novel about an adventurer who marries a Cblnese woman in Hong Kong. Industry sources say McQueen's cootract calls for $3 million plus a percentage of the profits. Brando received $2.8 million for playing Jor-el, the father of S up erman on th e planet Faces Suit ,.,. ........... Flip Wilson is being sued by a 27-year-0ld dental assis· tant and model for half of his income and property ac- quisitions during four years she said they lived together. Kayatana Harrison filed the s uit in Los Angeles. Krypton. Brando also will gel a ~rcentage of the profits. M cQueen and Brando are not the only Hollywood s tars recei vlng-seven-digit s alaries. Paul Newman, Robert Redford. ~ane Fonda, Dustin Hofrman, C l int Eastwood , B arbr a Streisand , Al Pa clno, Burl Reynolds and Robert DeNiro are able to command St million per picture. JOHN TRAVOLTA may also be in that category because or the success of "Saturday Night Fever" and "Grease," but his status bas been tarnished by "Moment by Moment." a nop. While McQueen's new contract may be the biggest ever, Brando's role actually paid better because it tpok just three weeks of work. McQueen is acbeduled for slx months of shooting. Brando's salary evoked wonder from his fellow workers at the London s tudio where "Superman" was made. They calculated his fee al $245,000 per nine-hour day, or $27,000 an hour, or $450 a minute. That's $8 a second. PART OF THAT work will s h o w up in a se quel to .. Superman" already under way Huge salaries are nothing new lo Hollywood. In 1918, supentars Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford were each paid million a year by National Pictures. Cut Funeral Cost? Rent Casket Cover • OAKLAND CAP> -Rent-a-casket is against the law ln California, but an OakJand funeral home has come up with what it says is the next best thing -rent-a-casket-cover. Under the two-week-old plan. families can bury their loved ones in inexpensive fiberboard boxes, but use an elegant cover, simulating the mos t expensive oak or bronze casket, during .Public viewing at the funeral home. Deception? .,PEOPLE MAY FEEL they're deceiving their friends and family, but it's a wonderful deception.'' said Oliver Lind- quist, general manager or the Chapel or the Chimes here. It's a matt.er or money. To bury a loved one in an oak or simulated bronze ca~ket would cost $1,200 to $1,500. J)ut to buy a fi berboard inner box, then rent an oak or simulat· ed bronze cover, costs only $248 to $287, Undquist said. CHAPEL OF THE Chimes is the firs t funeral home In California to offer such a plan, he said, and three famlJies already have used it. Here's bow It works. The embalmed body is la.id on a mattress and pillow lnslde a fiberboard "box" that Lindquist said is "very plain and certainly not for vieWing." THE RENTED cover, which amounts to an expensive casket with the bottom sliced ocr. is placed over the fiberboard box, and cloth drapings are added. Mourners, he said, "sit there looking at a $1,500 casket" and no one but the person who's pay. lng knows the difference. Once the viewing and funeral home service are over, the cover is removed aod reused a.nd the body ta sent to the cemetery or crematorium in fiberboard. $Invest A Buck$ SAVE THE PARA k --~~(~~ ( •• There Won't Be A 1979 FOURTH OF JULY PARADE Without YOur Helpl When your water bill comea thiR month look for the red rard whkh a11lui you to support the t'ourth of July Celebration by adding SI to. lhe amount of your water bill. Your contribution c:.1n make tht. celebration polll!ible without uae of ta.x dollars. If you do not receive a waltt bill, tiend along a dollar or more anyway to Parade, 2000 M1ln St .. Huntifliton Duch, 92648. ..I' TIUI EFFORT TO RAISE MONEY FOR THE 1m PARADE II .-OlllOREO IY TMI ·sAVE THE PARADE"' CAMPAIGN COMMm11 CITY OF HUNT1HTOI IEACH • FOR ADDrTIOIAL llFOMIATIOI .CALL 536-5511 .... .. We Started in GOOD COMP A • • . We Will Continue with OOD SERVICE! OUR lOOth r A STRONG® DESIGNER SOLARIAN® oor Faahlon Center Solarian Y04X c::holce of 3 quelttlea: mede of 100% Ultron Nylon® wtth *"tenced generaUOn nyk>n fib« by Montanto. ChooM from a Wide u.ortment of California decorator c;o6cnl s of cofors and patterns to choose II no wax . . . all Armstrong -all with lrabond® wear surface. Check this 1WIJTE SAll>CASnE price! . $}079~ $}} 79~ ( *INSTALLED wttlt....., peddlng fAme see what tht' world of distinr ti vt' homf' furni~hing ii. all about ••. Now at b&vingi. ( rom 10 to 50"( .. Takt> advantage of unbelievable i.ovings on current and diM:ontinued lint·i. throughout our t>ntire store ... in all departments. You 'II bet' room after room of distincti ve h ome fumit;hin~s all completely decorated~ all •~rizcd. Yes. a vit.it to our i.tore can be the &tart of a whole new life-t1tylc for you . Pl...,..l lnteflof Daig!1"""' Oblg.don ~ Pwklng . eonw..t FlMndng 1514 NORJlf l\IN SANTA ANA • 544391 TlM!s. 'AA!d Thur\,,, ond Sat. <l to 5:30 Moo 12 to 9 • Fn .. 9..30 000 LM.BOYD J INFORMI In the DAILY PIOT \ l I · ORANGE COUNTY I POLmcs I OBITUARIES . Signups Contilllle Tax Belief_ Ey:ed R e1ht ration a t Bero-. Oran1e Coast Co1Je1 In • ~, Coate Neu will con tlnu throuah F b 18, even lbou1h c l a61 ~ on Bill Aicb 'MidLHe Incomes: havt-•tarted Tb campus i usinJC a C'Omputt-r lh11\ enabt s a 1tudent co enroll tn le 1 than a minute, accord Int to K f'n o eth E Mowr•1. dean of •d· mlHkl..-and l"ttOt'dl. Cl111 achNulH ire avalhblo without ch•r1 la UM OCC Ad· mi11lon1 Offlc . More lnlormallon lJ avel\abte ot556-T~. BvO •• H ·0.-.01111, " A semblvwo man M a r ton B•r1 • R Newport B ach. ha. In lroduced a b 11 ah pud1cu tll pro \'id · ~ middle neome la. rt!Uef" tfiU1 . Her blD. AB 216, calls ror income tax ande .. ll\I. m uro would Ue tnC'Qnw tu 'braf \tts tl> th '°"5UJJU!r Price lDde1t '° lh l tbo "ho rte Iv cost of Uvans fftc~aa 1 ar not clevatfd tnto a Maher tax bracket. A noc.htt lk'rc blU, A 8 ._ pro. poses dim.lnation of lbe at.ate'• l>usl· neu lnnntor)' tu by 1980. The a uthor said It will ofter m~r finan· cial ~lief to Caliromta '1 a mall busl m--ocr d ncu comrnuruty If paased •:fur "18 tu y · co NTY LEGIS LATORS ~nd SAN FRANC IS 0 county SUJ)tr\lsor11 hav(' betm urt;t-d ( A P ) -The Army by tbt-Ora nae County Chamber of Corps of EnM1neera ls Commerce to support the estabhi.h about to study floodJJ\C ou~nt of a parate CalTraf\b dlnnct in lowlandl around San for Orange County. ' Ft>anclaeo 8-y. The I& The ch mber araue• that rorma· veatisatioo known aa &be San Francisco Ba1 Ch---L Ta B' ck Shoreline Study wtu con-un:n p s 1a alder f1oodinc fl"Om Udal attioo and overflowing WASHINGTON CA P ) -The streams Seventh-day Adventist Cbw-cb has elected the ftrSt black man to bead its North American Division. In that post. Charles E. Bradford. 53, Wlll lead the SS0,000 members in the U.S. and Canada. tlon of Or ntit-County Into a separate CaJTran• dlatrlct would make ll po"albl ror th.: county to aet Its "f ak 11hnr .. or lillt funds for h1ahway1. • • • UTHUA IAN REFUGEE Villus Bro nu will be t.be featured •P<.'tbr Wednelday at a South Coast Plata lt~l. C08l3 Mt1H, meeting 1pon.ort'd by lo(al cba~ten ol the John 8ltth Sc>cl~t.y Brf\zeou .aid he w1U eoodemn the rttenl UnltH States thtente with Chlna and what he calls "the finaoc .. Inti of CommunJst dictators." The m~ Una I scheduled for 7. 4.5 p.m. • • • f'ountaln Vall~y attorney Samuel Cubete bwi been elected as chairman of the Orange County Coordinating Hl•pubhcan Assembly <OCCRA > for 1979. Servang with Cubete will be Costa Mesa busjnessr:oan Jim Meehan, vice c hai rman; Mrs. J .D . Tur ner, Newport Beach, treasurer ••• REP. ROBERT E. Badham, R· Ne wport Beach, bas been elected vice chairman of the RepubUcan Study Committee on lbe House of Representatives. The committee analyzes present a nd pending legislatlon and perpares background information for mem· bers of Congress. °"" .............. TAX BILL AUTHOR M•rtan &erveeon Libraries Have Heart Two Orange Coast branches or the Orange County public libr ary have scheduled pro· grams wilb a valentine theme. In Cost a Mesa, the program is scheduled at 3:30 p.m .. Feb. 13 and at University Park, Irvine, andat3p.m., Feb.14. Uee•HJ Deale• Bingo lsSue Goes to Court Orange County Supervisors handed off a con· troveniaJ bingo license application to the Orange County Superior Court Wednesday. The appUcatlon by Franklin Delano ROie of Colonial Manor Half Way Houses, Inc. for a license to operate a bl.D&o parlor lD tbe UQin. corporated territory near Garden Grove wu de· nJed last fall by SberUf Brad Gates. aOSE, Tll&OtJGB BVNTINGTON •acb at· tomey I.any Anderson. appealed to supervisors who decided to let a bearing officer appointed by the court take a tirstcrack at the case. Anderson, who appeared before supervisors with four me cabinets and a five.root bi~b stac'\ of documents, said he was "quite irritated. ' Anderson said the m aterials wen su~naed by the county counsel and accused the coiinty's legal ~dvtser or being on "a fishing expedition" for evidence co substantiate lbe license denial. SUPERVISOR PHILIP ANTHONY, who aug. geated turning the case over to a beartq otncer, told Anderson the process abould take about 20 days before the matter returns CO supervtaors for actJon. Ant.bony said the point of involving a hearing officer would be t.o let the judge establish tbe racta in the controvers~ before it comes before the supervisors for action. MOSCOW 'AP> Gen. Issa Aleubdrovld1 PIJev. a prominent So· viet a rmy commander during World War II, is dead· at 75. Tass report ed Wednesday Lueo JJICIC I. LU80. resident ol Len Afl9ei.,, C.. P'"* ewey Feon-y S. lt7' Ht' ti survl....S bV 11.s lister~. C•ertrude l lchlenleld •nd S•r•ll Lesiov. bani ot G•"*> Gr11,... Ce. •nd Ocwothv A, WMM!r'ma,. of St lou". M•~wuri S..rvke. _,. h('lo on Tllur\· d~Y F~!Yuarv •• 1'7' al 11 Noon., TIW Har110r L-Mount Ohvf' Mortuary Ct'lao•t tnter"1 .. nt s,.,,,.c•s 1m medlatelv lollowino Harl>or L•wn· Mou,.t Ollw Mortu.ry o• Co-t• Mew. SA0-5\!14 IT'S' l!ALUETIME JAC:XSOIW NANCY L. JACl<SON, ~..,.._t of lAgune 8tec11. Ce Passed awev l'tbru1ry I. Im. Arr1"09mf'"1S are ~"°"'9 •t Pac•llc Vl•w Memo.lat P~rll , Peclflc Vftw Morluery ..,_por1 llMctl ........ noo. WIELl..S l YNDON A. WELLS. Sit • Pilised •••Y ., nie • Of n ...... n RHl<lt'nl 01 Huntf"9t0fl &Hell, c.. l"assed •••Y Feoniery 6. 1Wt •I Hoao M•morl•I HOSPllel, Newport 8 .. cll, C. Mr Wtlls llad llMfl • wff•"'Plond N fnt· l"'I (Oft~-.... -.0 ........ ilf>d metftber Of the Huntlll9f0t'o Be«ll City "°""'II trom 1960 to 1964. s.,,...,......, bl' 1\11 wllt. HelM Craven W•lls; two O•"'lftlers....,.,... "°"· 01ane Wtlls of HuntlncrtOft flt'lKh. Ca ; •nd "Buclr" Wtlls ot L-a..<11. Ca : end Helen Allen ol Hou5ton. Teaas; tn••• 9 rane1cnlldren, 11\rt• great· 9r•nckll•10r...,. !WO Sl\ler\, E~I lib· b• of Of"' CA.: •"" lnM Oot>l<in of Hun1oncr1on 8e11tll, Ca Fdenos may call from N-. to' PM on Tllur\011y, Ftbruary II. 191'1 at Piere• 8rotht'r~· ~m1trt\* Mortuary wh~r• funeral 'PfYICM Wfll be Con<IUCled on Frf01y, tt>ruary •. 1"1'1 111 II AM. lntern1ent ""'" lit' in i.... FalrMv"n Cemtterv Pteru 8rotller\.Smlllls' Mortu.-y Clortctors ~SJ' 8AICElt JINN 8 AIC E R Pasud a wa y February a. 197' '" N--1 Bea<h, C • ~,...lcrs .,. .,..,.,in9 at Plffu 8r otl\er,..Sm1t11s• Mo'1u•rv. Hunt. 1n910ft 8Hdl ~53' MclCIH DOROTHY M M<.KEE. I0"9 1itne rnutenl of Or~ <:ountv. PH!ioed •••Y In Heme t Survived by I tl•U<J!lt"" ~ av.rton ot um. "'Hat, Ttll•t, 9'lt Rk l\ard MclCe. 01 L499u.-. 8Ncll ~awslde memorlal ~•Y•<H Mafldav. Februa<v 11, 1..,. t PM wltll Rew."'° E~nore Ja<llson P••s•d•nQ, Pa<lllr View Cemetery N•wport fleKll. In lieu ol !lowers CI0<1.tlions may blr m-to the City ol l"OIMt l"AltltlS S.AAAH !!ONA F.ARRIS , paued ~way el Ille eoe of~ Vf!&rs, Saturdn, F tbtU<1rv J. tm A•s!M<tt ol S.nl• c lar•. Ce end tor mer ro>d•nt 01 NewPOrt lle«ll .,,., Sffl B .. <h, C• lltlovHI n.olller ot Fran•lln P. Ferri$ o t Sen•• Clare , C•.: l our qra,.dcnl/dr•n: two \hlers. M ri Cllllerl"" Zln>mer"""' of SHI Bt'«ll •~d Rutn C-of Atuuctero, C. Funer" senrlcn will~ concllKll'CI •t 7 PM on ~Y. ~f'Y 10, '"'at Ille Cl\<lpet of P«nk Vlr<tr Memorl•I P•rto.. Wlttl \tie Rev. Jotlf' A. Llndvall ollltlttl"9. Interment wlll be •t PKlflc View ~Ill Patti Plerte Bro""'•~SMittls' ~. S3t-4~. ...ct•ont•s SMlM'S WOITUAIY 627 MalnSt Huntington Beach 536-6539 ,_FAMILY COl.OMl.wiut•A.L HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westmtnster 893-3525 PACIACYllW MIMOll4L , .... Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Paclhc View Onve Newport Beach 64+2700 tikCOltMM:S MOITUA•S Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguoa Hills 788-0933 San Mn c.pistrano 495-1778 l&L llOADW A Y ~y 110 B<oedway Costa Mesa 842-9160 Mnt-1VIM&U.A.MI MOITUAIY 'WllTUWCH.,. Crematory • Flower Shc)p 427 E. 17tti Sl Cotf•Metl 84&-4888 • $1each ~~~ YOUR CHOICE PLASTIC HOUSECLEANING ACCESSORIES ' 11 Y2 qt. pail: bowl brush and holder; laundry basket, Handl basket: 15 qt. dish pan or 11 qt. waste basket Reg. 1. 79 each ASSORTED FLOWER AND VEGETABLE PLANTS 4" pots. Req. 69c each fJJOW LEVITON DIMMER Model #6600-BP. Aeg.4.99 $80 Approximate exterior dimensions: 75o/•''Wx63o/•"Dx70Y2"H . 6'x5' GREENBRIAR STORAGE SHED Reg. 109.99 Shopping on a budget? Then we have good news for lllillWl!W!:~ you during Dollar Days at our store. Everything from plants to storage sheds are yours at truly economical prices. Now's the time -and this is the place -to stock up on household and workshop necessities, too. You11 find exciting Dollar Day vaJl.A?S throughout our store. Take advantage of them now! Ward & Harrington Another *lONESfAR Home Care Center · $2 STANDARD DOUGLAS FIR STUDS 2'x4'x8'. Reg. 2.56 COITA MUA 1275 Bristol 556-1500 • Open Mon. thru Frt. 9 to 9 Set. 9 to 7 Sun. 9 to 6 GARDEN GROVE 7707 Garden Grove Blvd. 537·9571 or 893·6523 • Open Mon. tl"lru Fri. 7:3010 9 Sat. 9 to 7 Sun. 9 to 6 FUUERTON 301 So. State College 870·0050 • Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 7 Sun. 9 to 6 Sale datM February 8 through February 13. ---- * ....... .... DAIL.\' P1LC1T A• TearG•Uee CIU&Slated A ·one.clay course in the use of tear gas tor civUian self defense will begin Feb. 24 at Golden W ei t Co ll ege, Huntington Beach. For more information. call the administration of Just lce off ice on campus at 892·1711. PUIWC NOTICE SUN•M>tt COURT CW TM• ITATSOfl CAIJPOllNJA POtt Ttta COUMTY OP Ott.-.e ..,_........., \ - MOTtC• OP tt•A•t •O O f' • NTITM*...,. .... Te OI' Wtt.L 1 AMD Pott L•TTSH THTAMllll• TA•V ... 0 P04l AUTMOttlLITIOM TO ADMlllllST•• u•o•• TMI IMDaPIMOelfT ADMUOST•.ntOM OP HTATUACT. Ellal• ol F R£0 A M UfLLElt IAAOFOAO, O.C-. NOTICE IS HEREBV GllfEN thel WILLIAM A. MUfLLflt Mt HIM llerelll t petition tor ~le Of Will end fw lul;enc• of Let*' Tftl_,._ llry to Ille Delllloner and tor Au1Mrlu1Uon to Adl'lll11lttw ~ the lndl1N11d111I Admll'lslr .. lon of Esteles Act, ret.nnc. t• -ici. I• rnitde tor ll>rtfltr !*11cu1¥$, .net,.,., the ti,... -DIKe Of llNrlftO tl\e -.... llftflwtW.....,_.,2'7, ''"·el 10 .• em.,lfl tlle~Of~t HO. > of MIG CO\lf1 .. 1 700 Clvk c... .. r Ori" ~ '" .. Cltv .. ~ AIWI, (aflfDnh. OetM~S.tt'19 l.EE A.. 8flANCM, County Qef1I DOte a. AO«IMSOlll NAltWOOO & MMCINIC* P.O .... ,.., .._..,, ...0. CA t2Mi . .......,,, .... :~ Pve>lltlled OrMQll C.O.sl O.Hy Piiot. F~ I, 9, IS.''" 4'1;'9 PtJBUC NOTICE SUNltlOlll ClOUlfT 0 1" TMIE ST ATC Of' CAUPOtlNIA POt9 TNIE COUMTY 0' OflAlllOIE NO.A ....... MO TICIE OP NIE AltlNO OF, Pl:TITK* P04' l"ttOUTE OP WILi. A"O POa LEnlltS TUTAMfN· TAltY. Estel• "' EMILY •• eunNEA. Oe<e..a. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tti.t AltGUEAITE E. IUTTNElt llH lied ....... pt41ttoft tor ........ "" Ill and f9' luu•nc• ol L•ll••• HlatNfilt.,., to IM """'-'• '-" ... ""*" b ....... for ~ rtkllltn. Olld ~ ttle u-•lld pie« of '-'iftt"" --........ !of F__., 27, ""· ot 10:00 •.m .. '" llle c~of~No J oi Mid ~. ot JIOO Ovlc Otmd onv.t Wnt. In 11>41 City ot S•nl• An• C..Honlla. o.ted ~ 7, tm LEE A. 81tANCH. (.aunty 0"1I LH*IEL P. MUNMOLM, J lt. ONT-C*ICO ...... 271S e...,_at. lA Solo 0ttti9, CA mtt T .. :~W) A*""'Yfer. ............ Published Or.,. C.O.sl O•llY Pltol. ... ~,..,•.•. 1s, 1m _,. PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE ..,.., ~c:ou.T-TWC ST'I Te W CAUl'Otttlt'I f'IOtl TMa COUWTY Of' OltAHIE MO.A"""4 O•Delt TO SM9W CAUSa POlt CNANOe OJI IMMC In rt OAVIO WILl.IAM 1VO"V1 MATTHEW RO&eAT IVOltY •- JAl'IALEA IVORY. Ml..ors. bY CAROL LOUISE ENGEN. Wlltrees. Ille pellllOl'I of Carol Loulw l:tlgtfl ~ 9le par'eftt of Appl .. <...ts l)evld Wiii ..... ,_.,, Mil- ltol>ert lvOf'V •ltd Jan•••• 1 .. ory. 'l\lnon, lies -flled .,.ltl the cien. of tllls <-' tor .. ordtt' <twMlliftO All'PI•· cants' ~ trom O.vld Wllllam 1,,...., to On4d WIHlatn E"91J11, Mal• I-ltoeiM '"°"'"' ~ ...... IE"'"" Olld ~ ,_., to J_... E"9tf'. IT IS HEltEBY OAOEltEO tNt Mt .. ~ 1-.sted "' Mid """""" •t>-i.t•r bMo<-. INS COU<'I .. 1 I :00 a.m • .,._ Mart ll 20. ""· ....... court-of [)epet1'Mnt , to ,_ ~ .,,., ""' et!Plk af-tot c'*'Oe of-~ .aot be or an~. IT IS l"UltTHEA OROEREO t~ • COPY Of tl\ls -to show <.UM be l)Vbllslled OM• e _.. 1W tour suc- CH$lve WWl<s prior to ttle dily of WHI ll••rlng In Tll• Oelly P iiot , ,. newspeper of gtner•I clrcul•t1011 .,. lnt.o lf't tfle °"""" of Or~. OATfO· ,,_._.., •• 197' 8Ntt w. Sumnff Judqtoflllt ~COU'1 CA•OL U>UISE eNOUI .,._....., ~ 9Mdl, CA '26.St , .. : '1141.....,.,., IM PttOP!ttA PC"'°" A PvlllltMd ~ QMt Oreily Piiot, 1""""9rYe. U,tz#d~ I, lf1' .... ,. PVllUC NOTICE PICT1TIOUS •USIMHS MAMe STAHM .. IT Tiie followlet ~· •re Hf"9 .......... : TYPIMUGHT 1'046 Fret1<ot Mt'Ml, Wil!lflNoMr, c.lltornla ,_, • 8o"nnle Sue Hoe111n9, 1636' "•~n L-. H1H1tl"910ft lkKfl. c.1"'"1>1•.,... c:iw.r-"""111!1 Denlel" ltOS2 Ari• Clrcle, Huntingto n 8uc11. CAllHornl•.,... T 1115 bu$.1~!1 Is <Oftdu<tM by A l"lff•l P*l llM\l'Sfllp. 8omle s. HOcll lflg TMs s~ wes llfod wllll Ille C-IY Cler'lt Of 0r""9t County Ofl "........, .. "" """" Pv«141.....S 0r""9t c;oe~ Otlly Pllof, Feb.I. U.2:tandMer. I, 1'1t .... ,, PtJBUC NOTICE I . . A l . • ".! ..... .. 9 . ., .. . I ) ·} I '· t J . ' ' • •• I A._J8 DAA.Y PlLOT Artifact Idelltity Aids Viking Claim A\JotJSTA, Main<' CAI'> -A chip* coin found lo 1n-JndJ1n ruJn 01) the Matn\" cout man c-•~ 10 h.~ n poelUvely kter«.lned *• the ol t Euro~an artJfact t'H'r tound In UHs \Jnlt~ Slates "Tb •r l oo doubt . . tN.s ls a 1enu1ne Nors penny. atruck b'Omewhere 'n Norwa)' dlU'tf'lC tbe perk>d ot tOU to 1090, mott pro· bably dun~ lhe Nh&n or Kina Ola f Ill." Norwt-ti1an coln t'Xpert Kolbjom Skaal"t'I tald ttlle>rter. booaU the t.Mory that tlw Vlt· Wedut~ 1011. known navlJtator~ and Thl" roan h.1 lhc nrst datable trtd ra. reach d tho Umtcd Vlkln1 urttru t round 1n North Staka lone b<>fore Christopher Amerlcll, and its d1 co\lc>ry Columbus Layt,o11 Face . ;. "TllF. QUESTION IS how fur sou\b did the Norse gel," Maine • tat Museum archeologtst Or 8rutt Bourque said , WASHINGTON CAP> -The present embasay of Taiwan in Wa shington s hould be turned o ver to Pekinf alter futl diplomatic re aU on 1 are est.abliahed with mainland China on March l, the State Depart. mentsays. D eputy Secretary ol State Warren Cb.riatopber predicted a Ukely court fight over the pro. perty, but said the U!'!!'! States NATION I AT YOUR SERVICE would support China in any claim to ownership. "WE WOULD TAKE the posi- tion in liUgatioo that the em- bassy beloo.(A . CO the People's Republic ol ~." Christopher teelifled before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wed~. The United States will drop formal recognition of Taiwan on March 1, In fa~of an Informal, uno(ficial relationsbJp with the Taipei government. As of that date, Chriltophe1' said, "We would re1ard it u ln· appropriate for the Talwanete to have an embassy here." THE TAIWANESE govern· m ent bas sold the embu1y, called Twin Oaks, for a nomlul fee to ao organizaUon eallecl the American Friends of Pree China. Trial i11 T he coln wtu1 found an 19&1 by an amateur archeolog~t digging in Blue Hill Bay, not far from th s ummer resort or Bar Ha rbor "The Sugarland Express.'.' a comedy about -a prison escc.ipc. screened a t the women 's reder al prison in Alderson, W. Va .• a day before Sara J ane Moore escaped and was recap- tured. But a spokeswoman s ai d s he doubted Ms . Moore, found guilty of at- tempting tu assassinate then President Ford, at- tended the film . Spires Dinner Specials.. And excellent food value. RyanDeatJi are what family restau- rants are all about. Conve- Every evening a complete dinner priced very affordably. GEORGETOWN , Guyana CAP 1 Peoples T e mple me mber Larry Layton will go on trial Monday for conspiracy to murder Rep. Leo J . Ryan Other Norse artifacts less easy to date than talns have been found at Viking ruins in Labrador and Newfoundland. nience. Good service. ~~e~~ PIERCED SO IT could be worn as an ornament, the dime- sized disc of corroded silver and copper has a cross on one side a nd the fatnt outline of an a mmal·like figure and a scepter on the other Spires Dinner Specials The 32·year-old Sao Fran- l'Jsran also is charged with con- sp iring lo murder fo ur other people and with three counts o( a ttPmpted murder WITNESSES SAID Layton posed as a Temple defector and boarded the s malle r of two planes Ryao·s party planned to leaveinonNov. 18. -. As the .plane was preparing lo take off. Peoples Temple mem· bers o pened fire on tbe Califorrua Democrat and other members of his party who were at the other end of the airstrip, killing Ryan. three reporters and a Temple member. Witnesses said Layton then pulled out a revolver and started shooting at other passengers in the s maller pla ne, wounding two of them. He also attempted to s hoot a third passenger but the g un mis fired. witn esses lt>st1f1cd Layton has nol~n accused of k1lhng anyone but under G uayanan Jaw bo murder and conspiracy to commit murder a re punishable by death Jl is now encased in plexiglass at the Maine Stale Museum. S kaare. who arrived here Monday from the University of Oslo, ls considered the world's .leading authority on· Viking coins. His ftnl·baod opinion was eagerly awaited by British and American arcbeologists who last year identified the find through photographs SKAARE SAID THE thickness and design provided clues to the coin's orlgln. Thousands of similar coins minted during the reign or Olaf were yanked out or circulation following the king's death because they were of poor quality, he said. Tho ugh the coin is rare, Skaare continued. some 3,000 similar ones can be found in Norway Teen Suicide On Increase In California SAN DIEGO (A.P> -:.Suicides by Callforilia teen-agers doubled in tbe 1960s and are sWJ on the· climb, says Charlotte Rosa of the San Mateo Suicide Prevention Center. • She told a national conference on juvenile justice tbat such suicides among youths 15 to 19 increased from 5.5 per 100,000 to 12 in that decade. "ADULTS MUST listen to and understand what children sar." she said. "Young people do not ltnow that their feelings are the same as adults' and often they are isolated from informa tion they need to Mlp themselves. "Adults should look to see what is hurting and what can be done for them.'' New York Steak Top Sirloin Steak 1/2 Chicken Served 3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday soup and salad. choice ot potato or rice p11a1. roll and butter INCLUDES BEVERAGE Sunday (noon to 10:00 p.m.) soup and salad. ch0tee of potato or rice o 11. roll and t>uller. INCLUDES BEVERAGE Monday soup and salad. choice of potato or nee p1fal. roH and btlner INCLUDES BEVERAGE $3.65 $3.35 S2.35 "Got a problem~ Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve meqwtif's m government and business Mail your questions to Pat Dunn, At Your Service. Orange Coast Datly Pilot . P.O Box ISfJ(), Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many Letters as pt>ssitu will be answered. but phoned .mqumes or letters not mcludmg the reader's full name. address and bwmess hours' phone number cannot beconside~ed. Th1scolumnappearsdat- ly ezcept Sa1urdays " Carpet Town·s President•s Birthda &Jr Crecue Sip ot Tro•hk-1 DEAR PAT: I've heard that a diagonal crease in the ear lobe can indicate heart disease. Is there any truth to this? K.L., Costa Mesa Possibly. Blue Cron report. &ha& la oae a&ady, the crease showed ap In 82 pereen\ of sllJ'&lcal pa- tients with coronary artery disease, but In only 38.5 percent of those without heart disease. Researchers have concluded &ha& &be ear lobe sign could be a useful warning for possible heart com· plicaUons during and after surgery. Stolen ~lu Not a Prohleta DEAR PAT: I've arranged to have my Social Security Aheck deposited directly in the bank because r~ been told that some checks have been stolen out of mail boxes and cashed. How is ll possible for a stranger to lake a Social Security check io the bank and gel il cashed? G.M., Costa Mesa False idenUflcatlon and a forged al&nataft a. bow it's done. AJtboap Ute V.S. Treuuy Depart· ment encouages au Soelal Sec:arltJ redpleata &o use the dlrect·deposlt option. a Cotta Meaa Sodal Security office spokesman told A YS dlere are not many reports of theft and forgery of clleeu la &Illa area. He adds tbat tbe Treuary Department en· coauges dlrect·deposlt btt.tae ll cllta down on proceNinJI( chores, bat problems cu arlle II tbe recipient changes address and doesn't notlly bis foul Social Security office. Abo. If a ~•I office wanJ.s Co coa&ut tbe reclpleat wttb pel"IOllar {n. tormaUon regarding payments, Ill only source ts tbe recipient's financial Institution. Carpet'• Not Bffl Eftergw Sa1'er. DEAR PAT: l remember aeelng advertise· menta some time Jaat year for a certain kind of Mohawk carpet that waa supposed to save energy some way or other. I'm carpet ahOpplnt, but can't find any Information about this particular kind of carpeting from any of the dealers l've_contacted. Will you find out what kind of carpet.this la? H. W., Huntlnlton Beach SAVE $4.00 •q· yet. Saxony plush with today'• look at • apeclal low price. Seven 90fld cofomlona to c:hooM from, In 100% nylon d.Slaned to look lowty, longer. Reg. M.19 aq. yd. SAVE $3.00 sq. yd. Nylon plush In bHutlful neMat multl-c:oloratlona to enhance any room. 11 cteer color• In heat .. et y1m1 for extra wear and buuty. Reg. S1o.tt aq. yd. You bavea't seen recent ads for tMs carpet because lbe natlon1I adverUalag dlYlslon of .._-================-=======::::r::===-==--==--==-==--r.\\V MollHCO Corp. Co drop dill lUte of adnrtialD&. Ads r .......c..__7r--.J WESTMINSTER 15338 Beech Blvd. K·Meft Center et Mc:FIMlden Mon. 6 'rt. tlll I • T11t1L, Wed., TIHn. Cll I lac. tJll I • lun. 11-15 893-7546 for "8 "Energy Sher Mobawk Carpet" said It makea aJr condJttonlnc last loqer, beatlDI fuel to fllrtber ••. becaue air pockets la &lie carpel's plletrap cooled alr and lnaalate tbe roona tn>m 09Ulde lteat." It clalmedUaat hlel con111m~ C!09ld beftdfted ap M» 13 pertent. NAO did aot a1ree .. at a 1t1Kly clte«ll b1 Mohasco a&• "le1c1Ja1 ulvenky" ••bltutla&ed &Jae clalns, udno«.ed U.at aaa 1'"4iuds for carpetued r•&• afftle acalut ......... IMt a e..,. wUI ef· fed 1 .. w.plD •Ml'IJ•r 1 rtftclllalahlel ~.,. '-....;~~;;.;;..-.;._,;,....;...~_._-~.:;_-.;;;..._.;.....;_..J caahaeeclfortn1al1Uollpa"'°'"." ----------~-------_. ' \ 'AOOIHO AHO PAOf"ESSIONAl. IMSTAl.LAT!Oft AV41Ua.9 SANTAANA 2911 So. Brtatol 1 ""· Notth ot ao. eo .. t Ptw ee .... ,....,.. WMtldep ttll I• ltn. ttw I• tuft. t1 .. 556-8287 WICJCOjl YI '11.L t • &,I, T f Ill • • l\jfj()A \I I I I • FMt U TllllA Tll .. "°"" ~ tAIY CMDIT TEllM • //0 eo.to OA\I NO '"TCllllT ~T~ ~•MA.ITlllCfWllOE ~1.--......... , . .. . ' . OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS . --. . . l.'ld11.'CI 111 jull lt'CJd <'f)"Srtll. 7~11t• C. j,,-11/1m1:<" (J11t• 11f llJI..• I\")' '{>l~''"' 0J/Jc.-c:t1'11<.'!(faH11 I loll11Ntr(•\ /Jfl/1• < "'lk·ri· c;l}r """"'· J'"' S!"i PAPER UNLIMITED 1112 l"ille A•ew Mlwport •ac:h 541-7921 It) 1979 Hallma•ll C.ros. t1>e • THEAE'f A lOT TO BE !AID FOR TRADITIOn ... Today's Weeiuns for men are making fashion news! IOUtm.eA••· ..... ,.. .... I 54M614 . ... l!SC President Will Retire in '80 Deni s Mideast Pre s ure; F luor Heads Search for Succe8sor LOS ANGELES <Aftl -• Pra~d(>nt John R. Hubbard, de ~m. that controversy over ~ tnnuence of Mlddl Ea t •n· tere•t5 al w •rhool tnnUf'nct'd bl• plans. bu announcf'd hts planned tttll'\'m nt on Aue 3, JllO. Tbti date mnks the 10th an· . nlver ary of Hubbard s .ippo nl· mont to tht' po5t TH EWS confC"rt'n('C an· nounct>rnt•nt wu. m df' W day afttr a C'l~NJ door m wlth ttw-use· Bo~rd ot ThM~ lrao and the unaveraily appeal"ed,"1habbardu1d " • "'l'be fact ol m1 t.n~nUon.a bas 'bfen known OD lhb eampU3 for aome Um now." tM aclded A 23 member p anel wu namtd lo ~gin a Harch for a n w uniwralty pruldent llud ln& t.b4t IH.rtb 1roup will be USC Boar"d Cbalrmarn J Robert F•luor. The shah re~lved bi• delJ'M n th royal p•lace ln Tehran, with ooly Hubbard, two •d· mlnlatrators and the Un · 1ven1ity'1 intematJonal Pl'Oll'am direct.or preteot. Carter Sends Education Bill ToCo~ess • Since 1-912, unJveratty records showed, honorary d egrees almotl alwaya were awarded during ~ommencement ceremonies. J N lt35, P R ES IDENT Franklin D. Roosevelt, crippled by polio, bad to drive up lo the steps or the univer1lty'a ad· ministration buildinl to tteeive hil degree. Hubbard, a native of Texaa, succeeded Dr. Norman Topplng •to tbe post or president in 1.970. 'i.f?pping is now chancellor of lbe .-um.umty. WA~G-'PON <AP) -f>resj. Before be WU named presi-)lubbnrd · announ-,c ent eoh1caded with l'on/arm•U "by u n h • e r si t y o ff 1 l' 1 a I ~ t h It honorary dear~~s had b~en handN to the shah of lran and the former ehiurman or th'-' Na- li on a I lrun1un 011 Co . Manoutt-ht-hr l':l(hbal, in ~eru1· secret ceremonih Jl'LVOa AJ..80 fS chsurman and pruldtof ol Fluor Corp . an lrvlne bas~d petrochemlcul ~nalnet-rlng firm th•l doeb milUona or dollaNi In bu:ililess with Iran and Saudi Arabia each )'Ur . Fluor and Hubbard were cen-' tr•l fleurei in several or tha Mtddlc East and Jranlan ln- nueoce controversies at the un- lvtrslty. dent Carter sent to Con1ress to-dent, Hubbard served as vie& day a trimmed down bill t<tcreate president and provost ol the un-QUITS USC HELM H~rd SEAChalRrmCaHnPFIAuorNEL a new Department or Education • .......:i:_v.:.er:..:s:_lt:::.y_. ____________ Joh.:_._n_A_._Hu_bb_a_r_d _____ DVtr _________ _ Wh11e no cr1tena for bestow· In& honorary degrees existed when the awards were made in 197!>, USC has usually conferred the degrees dunng regular com- mencement ce~morues ''I CAN ONLY say that It Ii> pure roinc1dence that r should announce my res1J?nation tbe day more news stories about $264,tHHJ Esta te Fluor -was tnatrumental lo establlsb log a Middle East studies chair at the u.n.lverslty last yeu. lareely financed by American firms dolng bualness with Saudi Arabia. FLUOR ALSO WAS present when the honorary degree for Eghbal wu awarded by Hub- bard in tbe university presi- dent·s office. Leo Ryan Will Give s Beliefs REDWOOD CITY <AP) -The will of slain Rep. Leo J . Ryan includes statements of bls philosophy of life and love and his regret& that be caused pain to his friends. ·'While I hope there ls some sadness at my passing, remember that I envy those who are left to see whether or not we will win the ra~ in sav- ing the human· race from its own greed,·• wroa Ryan TKE WILL WAS MADE public Wednesday. Ryan was killed Nov. 18 by Peoples Temple cultists in the Guyana jungle The will, filed In San Mateo County Superior Court Wednesday, said Ryan's estate was worth $264 ,000. including $200,000 in real estate and $50,000 personal property The original typewritten will, written in 1965, left his estate to his first wile, Margaret. The cou- ple were divorced in 1972 alter 23 years of mar· riage LATER AMENDMENTS TO the wHI, scrawled on lined legal paper and dated Dee. lS, 1973, and Dec. 27, 1977, specify that bis estate be equally divided among bis five children. Bul be also bequeathed various political mementos, furniture and imported rugs to seven friends. as well as hb first wife and his second wife. Florence Stevens, a former aide from whom he was divorced after five months of marriage in 1977. with high hopes it will be passed • and signed into law by June. A stn>Oier measure passed the Senate last year but died in the House after att.racUng consldera· ble opposition from farm groups, American lodlans and minority groups opposed to transferring their pet programs to the new de· partment. . "This year we think we 're going to have the department of educa- tion established. We 're very. very optimistic," Vi ce President Walter Mondale told reporters at a momlngbriefinl(. LL,U WANTED DIA MONDS • GEMSTONES ._ K, LE Other friends listed include his chief aide Joe Holsinger and legislative aide Jackie Speier. Ms. Speier a'Ccompanied Ryan and concerned relalives of Temple members to Guyana ,and was woW>ded in the ambush that killed her bosS. BOTH HOLSINGER AND Speier are running for Ryan's empty congressional seat. ••• ONLY Mutual Savings gets them all together. Of his friends, Ryan said, "my greatest regret is that l caused pain to all those that loved me. 1 only hope on balance there was more Joy than pain. in retrospect .'' Ryan said in the will that Holsinger, who managed many of his campaigns, could have his choice of any political souvenirs. "WITHOUT HIM, THERE would have been fewer souvenirs~ rewards for me and the lack or a most rewardmg friendship for which I was always gr ateful." the will said. Ms. Speier was given a 1().by-12-foot Oriental rug from India. Ryan said in one hand-written addition that he believed relationships amount lo "planetary or- bits. "not "paralleltracks." "WE E NTER EACH OTHER'S g ravitational pull for a time and then arc wrenched away -by de· ath, or more often by force of circumstances and changing ))t.'rsonality. . . " He said his friends could recount98 percenlof hls lire and said it "should make for some inte~tin.& re· velations." "The last 2 percent I take with me and that 2 per. cent is the greatest residual or joy -and of terrible pain, "be wrote. Raising Speed To Cost Sta~es WASHINGTON (AP ) -Any state raising the speed limit higher than SS mph will lose its federal highways funds, says Transportation Secretary Brock Adams. Adama said be has informed the governors of several states: .. We will cut off highway fund.a to states that raise the speed limit past SS. Testifying before a House appropriaUona sub- committee. Adams satd: ... WILL FULLY CAR RY tbaL out. That 's without exception." Legislators and governors in at least 14 atates are diacuaslng bow to get around the M mpb 1peed Umlt imposed OD them by the t•ral IOYernment. The Transportation Department ldentlfied them H Wyoming, Washington, Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Utah, North Dakota. Colorado, Montana. Calt/omJa, Nevada, Arl'ZOna, Oregon and ldabo. aS ••1 ROPE WE CAN Avom • controataUon," / Adams said, add.in& that he doeln 'l like th• idea of 1 culling oil federal highway money and la tryin1 to work with the governors. Adema ..Um ated that ll tbe 55 mph •P"d Umtt were removed# the couumption ol oU lo WI aa- Uon would ao up 250,000 barnll •day. Only at Mutual Savings will you find all of these special services and high in~erest accounts for savers. Now there are more reasons than ever before for bringing your savings to Mutual Savings. FREE tax preparatlo~ by H&R BLOClt THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE Telephone Transfer Now Ma Bell ... your telephone ... becomes a vavable financial asset. Wrth Mutual Savings· telephone transfer service you can earn interest on funds which would otherwise be idle 1n a non·produchve checking aoc:ount 0< brokers account. If you have a minimum balance of $1.000 1n a Mutual Savings 5.25~o passboc)I( I . account. you can have lhe el(tra earnings the telephone transfer service makes possible. You designate t'IOW and where transfers are to be made and who 1s author1zed to make transactions on your accoont. From lhere on. a quid< telephone call to us ~:-will transfer cleared funds to your checking _ ac<;0unt or broke< whenever you.need them. The number of telephone transfer transacflOns you can make Is unlimited. the mmlmum amount of each transaction is $t00. We'll mail you a written receipt for each transactK>n. Call 0< v1s1t a Mutual Savings ornce and let us show you hOw your funds can be made more productive. ' 6-month Money ~arket Account Effective 2J8/79 thru 2/14179. Annualized Vl&ld assumes funds remain on depOSlt for 12·months. Rates are subject to d'lange at renewaf based on the U.S. Treasury BiU rate at that time. $10.000 or more accepted. No tees or saf9Meplng charges. • Savings accounts at Mutual Saviogs am lneured to $40,000 by an agency ot the federal gcwemment. There is a substantial penalty f(I( early wlthdrawll ot C9f'1lfate ecoounts. ' , .. CALIFORNIA I MISCELLANY .~ ' P~l Backs Prop. 13 Relief Tax Bill SACRAMENTO 1AP 1 A $150 mllhon Prope>,1Uon 13 t\'l lf bill for lhf' thou aD<b of pettal dJ trkt.s Lb t run n •ct11 Wut 11wers, ~t control nd llbran ha n appro\lf'd by 1n A~ atmbly romm1tt . 9ut the ch lrman or lht mbJy Local GO\ernmt"ot Commltl~t' rr1tk1zt'd th mt>uul't'!, SB 31 by Sen John NeJt'dl), R Walnut C~. and pre· * * uit Hit Pensio11 Fund Ta * dieted it would bt· t.caled down dra llC'ally " Tht> bill I "wtdl· open The people uld. 'Cut: " Au..,.mblymao Eu1ene Chapp t>, R·Ro tvtlle. told reporters aftu ablll••nlna from • l-0 vote Wed· n day that l#'nt "'''J\.'dly'a blU to the Aakmbbt Waya and Mc ns Comm.tu Chapplt' pr dlN d I he money. In· ltodtid to mt.-M deflclt1t In the c1.trrent haul year. would be c ut. about. in half and restrictions would be placed on tbe types ol districts that. could receive at.at.e aJd. Many special dl1t.rlct1 depended almo1l cotnpJetely on property tu fundt and thUI were among the blsgest l0ters ln Propoeltion 13's S7 percent pro. perty tax cul. .~.L.~~~~~~~~~'i~~~ ~ ~ STARTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARV 9th clathiln.:\tl\\}t a '1)¥r~I FOR CAPITAL SA~NGS property lll'< ltrul' fjeltl"lf 12 l'lllt"S m Lo~ An1otl•le-. Count)> $64 rrulhon rur SHO 0 0 30 M ., ~.February 8. 11m1 DAIL y PILOT A J 3 Fiedler Invited Maestro Arthur Fielder has been invit· ed to be one of four conductors who will lead Boston Pops-style free concerts on the wes t l a wn of the Capitol in Washington this summer. Others slated to d irect the National Symphony Orchestra include Aaron Copland. Matislav Rostropovich a nd Erich Leinsdorf. ~~~~t~E~;~;!~::.·; ~ ... !2~~~~.~~!:.,.::. Superior Court '>Ult l'On a_ ......... _. __________________________________ ll!!m ________________ _ tends that the ~pec1al tax111g d11>tr1 ct aeuted by San Gahnel to fund the pension program does not rail under Propos1t1on 13's pro· vision allowing for pro· pe rty tax surcharges above 1 perct'nl to pay for voter approved bonded indebtedness. THE SUIT names the county and several San Gabriel officials as de· fendants. but Carmen, who 1s representing himself, said he 1s trying to amend the complamt to bring m 11 other c1t1es with similar t<1x1n~ dis tricts The l<tX rates ror the pens ion contrit :lion::. range from 8 cents per SlOO of assessed valua- tion charged by Glen· dora Lo 93 cents charged by Compton. The other cities and their rates for the pension fwtd a re Bell. 69 cents: Beverly Hills, 13 cents; El Monte, 43 cents: Huntington Park, 20 cents: Lynwood, 46 cents; Monrovia .. 42 cents'; Montebello. 64 cents, Monterey Park, 33 cents: San Fernando, 45 cen t s: and San Gabriel, 48 cents. Valentine Program Planned A heart health fair 1s planned Feb 14 at St. Jose ph Hospital in Oran~e. featurin g American Heart As· sociation fi lm s. speakers and historical displays. Former heart surgery patients from th e hospital are invited to attend the Valentine's Day program. The health heart fair 1s one of many events markm~ the hospital's year-lo ng 50tb an- niversary celebration. More information is available al 633·9111, ex· tension 7475. J/ ollUlleers Needed Volunteer help is be· ing sought for day, even· ing and weekend shifts at the UC trvtne Medical Center gift shop at 101 South Ci t y Drive, Orange. Operated by the Medical Center Aux· 1liary. the shop is staffed entirely by volunteers . Proceeds from sales go to help buy m edica l e quipment for the bospitaJ. More information 1s available from Volun· teer Services, 634·5541. CORRECTION In the Seara edvertlelng HctJon1 of Feb. 4th end 7th there 11 an adYertlH· ment for Regulu $1.27 Super Glu. tor 19c. The regular and Sele prfce 1re correct, hoW9Yer th• amount deecriptlon 11 In• correct. The correct emount etto"-ld be 1/1oth of en ounce. We 1lnqerety regret tftla error. ' I Sears I WOMEN 'S SAVINGS Ml~s· raincoats Poplin and texturized polyestex. 99 sizes 8-18, were $60-$70 LJ9. ml$ses' coots 426 Save 1 /3 on separates Polyester skirts. pants, jackets, shirts, 8-18, were $16-$28 boulevard sportswear 187 10.99-18.99 Bright gauze tops Cotton and polyester In sizes S-M-L many styles, special bouleVOfd sportswear 158 Misses' sportswear separates Polyester blazers, pants, shirts, 12.99 skirts, 8-16. were $20-$46 women's sportswear 422 12.99-29.99 Misses' gabardine pants Polyester gabardine, elastic waists, 8-18. reg. $20 misses· sportswear 101 141< gold chains, bracelets 7" bracelets, 15". 18". 20", 24". 14.99 30 " chains. reg. $18-$464 fe»hlon jewelry 13 12.61-324.81 "Marty'' full vamp sandal Mid stacked heel, quarter straQ. 99 White, colors, reg. $18 14. women's shoes 112 Footworks® "Century'' Cross-over straps. mid stackec.t.9 99 heel, reg. 530 I . women's shoes 431 Easy street® "Nield" City sandal with cork wrappeq19 99 heel, reg. $26 • women's shoes 524 Cobbles® "Sunllner" Low heel open toe sting In asst. colors, reg. $26 women's shoes 524 19.99 CHILDREN'S WEAR save 1/3: Aileen® for girts Sizes 7-14 tops, skirts, pants;99 9 99 were $9-$15 · b . -. cHldren's 77 save 1/3: Al1een® for children Separates In sizes 2T-4T aw._ girls' 4-6X, were$7-$13 4.W-8.99 chltdrens' n Biiiy the Kid® jeans, vests Polyester/ cotton brushed twill, 4-7 reg/slim, were 8.50-$11 children's 421 5.99-8.49 • 0 No Frills® " boys' jeans Polyester /cotton twtU or denim, 4-7 reg./sllm, comp. val. $8 6.99 ci'tien's 52 LINGERIE Kabuki robes, float gowns Assorted fabrics in past~ colors, reg. $18-$28 Y.99-19.99 lingerie 10. 53 Tailored nylon briefs Adorta Antron® Ill nylon, 5-8. white.colors, l.85ea. 4/5.99 lingerie 28 Assortment of bras Some lace trimmed, white or 3 99 beige special • Rngefie 44 HOUSEWARES Latch hook rug kits Deluxe famous name sty~s-_27 99 reg. S1Q..S35 b.W , art needlewof1< 40 except crenshaw. breO. cerrttos. thousand oaks "Celestial" sheets, coses By Burlington® . CottonLP.Ql~e~!§I percale, S97SJ9·if pert. J,W-IU.99 linens and domestics 195 Martex® "lnvttatton" towels Cotton/pofyester velour r~Vj)_lseS 79 to terry, 2.20-$9 If pert. l.4Y-4 . linens and domestics 35 Colorful furniture throws Mutttcolor Herculon® Qklfl..D ln 3 sizes. reg. $30-$46 14.99-37.99 draperies TI3 Contemporary area rugs "Bouquet' or "Contempo:.JG 3 sizes, reg. $69-$189 ~9-$129 area rugs l37. Martext> Vellux® blankets Nylon flocked onto ~!Mfl§, T/F/Q/K reg. $25-$45 IJ.W-~b.99 linens and domestics 41 Confemporary queen sleeper Herculontolefin. plaid earth 5399 shades. reg. $559 f\srif\Ke 140 Multiple pillow queen sleeper Cotton print, reversing plllows, 5499 roll arm. reg. $699 fl.mt\6e l40 Wood ladder arm queen sleeper Colorful patchwork cotton prln1 .. cover, reg. $649 ::;499 f\srlt\Jre-140 MEN'S & BOYS Vested men's suits Wools and polyester /wools. J.lz»s 99 38-46 reg/~/l, reg. $165 L / $1 men's clottill"Q 21 ' Gentlemen's flt Jeans Cotton/polyester brushed denim, sizes 32-42, reg. Sl5 10.99 men's sportswear 168 Qla~ nylon dress shirts By Van Heusen. Long ~ves in 14V2-17, 32/33-34/35, reg.18.50 13.99 men's f\srishings 492 BrtttankJe polyester ttes Fine line s1rtpes In 7 color c~nations. reg. 7.50 3.99 men's funstWlgs 8 Cotton denim jeans Assorted colors. styles fn sizes 28-36. we~ $20 14. 99 mike's ploce 450 Short sleeve knit shirts Cotton/polyester available In sizes S-M-L-Xl, were $16 9.99 mike's ploce 409 \ Light color knit shirts Pofyester /cotton terry In sizes S-M-L-XL, were $15-$16 9.99 mike's place 450 Boys' Elderado® "Britches" Polyester/cotton cord sl~k.s.._ asst. sizes. reg. $10-$12 /.W-9.99 boy$' CIOttilng 41 Boys' acrylic sweater-shirts Choose from blues or browns, sizes 8-20, were $14-$15 8.99 boys' clothing 23. 164 Boys' llghtwelght jackets Polyurethane In many sty1es and sizes, were $18-$19 11. 99 boya' dotting 164 BUDGET STORE Western style men's jeans Variety of styles In asst. fabrics and sizes, reg. 12.99 9.99 bud men's 817 except cerrttos. thousand oaks Budget men's knit shirts Polyester/cotton. sizes S-M-L-XL for young men. reg.10.99 6.99 bud. men's 809 except cemtos. thOusond oal<s Budget boys' knit shirts Polyester /cotton pullovers In colors, 8-18, reg. 7.99 5.99 bYd. bOVt' 837 except Ceflltos. bfeo. thousand ~s company capital savings '. costa mesa -south coast plaza -3333 so. bristol -546-9321 westmlntter -westmfnster mall -goldenwe1t at san dlego fwy. -89&-2521 . ~ •• « ........... . -.... AJ4 ~v Ptt.0r PAID ADVERTISEMENT AN oaEN ' ~EIITIO~ TO THE MEMBERS OF THE NEWPORT -MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Carol J. Martin, Pres. Barbara Skilling, V. Pres. Betty Jo Bailey Tom Henderson~ Jr. Roderick·MacNUllia n, We, the undersigned, reside In the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. 'We hereby petition and strongly urge the Board of Education to rescind its dismissal proceedings against Richard England and to refrain from any further action which would jeopardize his employment In this school district and his position as Music Director of Newport Harbor High School for the following reasons: · 1. 2. W F T•.,-. !•~"o=r S•llvHvf-r (llrl\ Bartodull W•ller C<1c* Pnttlo G Co1v1n O.lm•r OYf'r~lrt'f"t WflOOn L SN-110<\ ._O•HI L Toll"' ArO.n K Cott>y H•tOllC~ r .. r,,.Mo_.,,..11 W<1ll MOV"""' M Holl•nd le,. Ann~" M-tr1or1f"A TrM'I E<lwlr<I J Tr.-cy c. ... 11 M •lldQto R•tf\lrd MllldqiP • M •'Y W1ll30t NO.I Lanct Mllf'G NorTI\ !>amuel l No"" RObPr1Wllll~Y HM¥f'V A. Sl\dW Hf•ten 5haw #1.rnol<I a.cicor 06nal<I R ~auo•~ V•c•or Goo<,...., ~" M J.,,.._\ M.art,,. L. Ft-M\lr .. ~00...r~e Edward.I> ROY' Patricia AttClllt'lll J•ff'HA~01 511.,i.y*F'' Mttrry f 06nn• (l>S rom C•sh Jon 0 .,.,,, 1<•111' 0 ~ry Jbe••"L""' Ht!rl>l'rl I( H~tl'r M4tf~f'e J .,..,.,,,, Svtann~ L 1mo\ Oav1d LlrN\ 0 D Ao"<!V "llu M RoMy Je"f 8 . Cdl4er 5o<Oll F Galcll>r c 11ar!Pfl• #1... l(etl-War,...n IC. l(~llOOQ AntJelA Stoll\le'""" Jol'ln f Stoll1te1""" JoM f err MO Moln)Uef'I~ OIS~osl<IO Joseph DISl...,sl;io o. ... 11e~n Jean Al1>¥l1Jn JOhnAlbllrlan Jo#l.nne Per1<"'s JaM!ic~ Rolle rt Sc_,.,. ::~u.~ JeN"y L. Dalft>o\ll Merv 4 . Mee 1,,,..s Oof"lsL ~lier w111ar<1 #1.. Mei.<,,.., C.arotlne L. Hirai» ~:'::; J ~~: ... Scott ;._,, F ler BollSc,,_I.., ~~~: J~•rev MIC ..... Fler 8or1)ara J . Sho'o.tr<IWI" 01111~1 w . sr-eo.ro50" [Clllf\M•llS Jlol)o!rtot F1er 8dr1Mr• J. Han•tn l u<v A. FletclW'r Lt•lif' A Fl{"IC""' C lvde Barr F IPIOW'r Tom flt'IC~r (;aol·M,,• If' l lnc:IY>y 8r1>u L P Salvdll JudY J Woocl ~p ...... , AnlOl\la !>.Jivaro l •'l' c11..-r111 Jo. Cot!! ~:~~/ Sa~gve• ~"Jk'~•<1111s ICt' rm It Jolln'IOrl ~rantt Kno• J -C.OlhM (C>IHnBUfn\IM f( W 8 u""""' Mlle Burm!Oe Pat Bumsl<ll! Alvln Sal•all l(a~n Va" Ol"lml"1! Oo!Mi• 8 ""-" < arol s.tv.itl \._,--.. Mr. England has dedicated his llfe for the past 12 years to serving Newport Harbor High School and Its surrounding communities by developing a music program of the highest quality and by making his students better citizens; 3 . He has the support of the overwhelming majority of the mem- bers of the faculty of Newport Harbor High School; 4. He la respected and supported by the great majority of his present and past students, their parents, and other members of the community; He has the full and public support of his former principal, Dr. Charles Godshall. Dr. Godshall has stated that he and Mr. England experienced 9 years of excellent working condi- tlo n a. He further stated that Mr. England '• dedicated services had resulted In raising the school 's Instrumental music program "from a status of mediocrity to one of ex- cellence''; 5. The charges against Mr. England primarlly stem from dis- agreements between him and Newport Harbor High School's new princlpal, Tom Jacobson. These disagreements should be, and can be, resolved In a manner which does not deprive him of his professional career and his means of livelihood for himself and his family. We agree that our names may be publicly used in support of this petition. LeouF-!>.t•• o·-~-·· Mr). W E Wt'~I D••N IC. Sn-iOPr ~"N 8¥1odUll s.,...., J Sllv• Dorothy Do\t.i fl.,...kl II. Lowe £.-.rifts. • Mo<."'.,..,, Cllrv 6~11t Su'"" D SlMt•r Mr W £. W.0\1 M11ry 8rvyneel E II nor &.99ett Bein~ Mot•" M Do\141 O W H•llt!I HOW_._ de Moc\llO<yl T•rrt MMWn.t 1100.n • c. Bro-n JA,..I I(. H ....... tt M11~rlle8~I Jll"e C41dWell M••lo<l'!-~lfr 61tt1eR~ Pw18-Doft11ld E v_, Mery L YIW'f' O...well ~::!;1:T1>1n A•-Att~n G HaMiell B•rt>llre 1..l<hmen O•vkl ca-n II ut 11 Sc""-' M••v O•ttmen Le<>80W1er F rot r ReY"OIO\ e .. 11. eo_.. Ntn< Y l(IOOtr Jay Lo<.....,.n Bruce C..ldWell "•"·Sc~· ~;~~r~" M II ton C Col1ot> G+eM R~ LOU•• F SalvW11 fCl.,41nlA S..~ RutllM.Meclt"r Rut!! 611rtllf'e Ger1rUM H. (i.elly ~~.~lr:.\, E,.,...,,. G eotton Clr•l<fleft Br<ll<r,,-" Dorothy S..•vbtl 06rot....,.8.wM'lt Qotl M~ Judy Folk H•r'rlet M Perry K .,.,. G•lllnQtr Loyf J~ 011vt<1E 8rlllot_.., llllCl'M llr..<1 £ <l•••<I G 8M•Plt Je>"n H. Sl\.8ro Roger A Fol' 8obble Clark,. Jo~~" F Uri-fr~ A Glllf11 Gell•tJ ~ton H Newell Sh<k~ Pttut K PW'O 0<1nof'I P llar"'tt Pr.,rl A s.-.trp Cll'OfYft JlllWI" WOOdrow J CIM'l\\'"'Y"' Pf!ylll\A Uft),tft Vrf'<l MCVf'l(ll\ J ... 1\1(~ A-rt• ~l<-lt'r WIU14tm fl Fr..,...fl~ Clllllf'rl,... C HOl1a"4 JO"n E Bu<n\ Marq•N'I ~"" K YI• Slaughter 8art:>.ira J MM. ""°'non J B<><•oncl ~OW>'"•rv Cr~tQ O• JO~ Wlfto<ur G•t'IC~ H Fr,:lft~lln 0Avod M H()ll<)Nt Do<>at<I E 8ur"' Murlev,..L. M1TICOCk Tlf'IS<ll.,.. Ml~t>W l_,, Nd"C"t T S-1.,,.,r l •UN'I 81 ..... 0tl R-rl 4 Witt!,. Wlll.tr<I Brown t.::.~o~ :"J::ior OoMl<I E E 00.r N.tncv o<1m1>1t• Marlly,._n 06rot,,.,, C G•l<rt>SI ...... ,. l Sf,-· HPl@M 5of'Ol'I llt<llllrcl W Leif•" Rf'•"•Cf' v B•Dwll Ooa"f' W EICll'r r,.e:;,: t•'=•<k 8rl'nlCAldwt!ll R.irl><lr• G•~ R.,1>.ira ~•n W"ootoro JucJY Brown carot•-• LOte<\ f!"rl>d'" H ')mttfl (tMdlt~ MMQatf'I E l l'<l<ly r .. ,,., Sl\aro Gt orQ<" H G•l>O'> c..1oroa A Jotw.on c..>rv G 9,_,, l•Olf' R--.r ~•<hard H Fr.tn•tlf' flota.,..thll,... W C Wuncto:rllrh Phyllo\ II O•••S Mlc""I OeM<ttfy lPO All .. n 8f'rn<ictc;tte Oulwor111 .-1rm•M MonH a tanM A_, Ruth P ~f\.tw C.•orQI' A Y dDIOI'\• f ( '"' < H0<!1<>n Merrill Oun<..., Laura E. Gf1'(';1"' Bl:llY All"'1 JN>n H W~tt Tl10Ml\8 Ku<l"r G•aoY•maqucho Brvltn Sf'\AI# t -l•h" v~blon~ti:v J4'nn1ffH ( M•<Ot Patric •ll °""<"" Mlcf\aH F C.re«"" Mlch .. Pt c, l•""l'man Wonifr~d Sm1111 06ro\ I Af'<'<) MerJe Vtlldif-1 lloy<I E !.II.ow V1rq1nlA A.. Cletk II fl Wh•IP""•<I S•<l""Y L HA\1n .. ,,.,,,,.Sharp JA,.,.., E C..ttl""'' fl~Al'O< Mc(o-n J Lvnn Futk.r ""ye v .. 1<1r1 N•n<Y A W1l<XI Jf .,,,.\' w </"'" R M Sll.)w T al>llllll M H~\ln R ICf\dr<IC Sharp vc111or,,l-r~"""" flu\'\.tH J Sfrctt1Ufd AnMll~ J (!Wt<lv ll1t'91,.oa l KIOOtr Wtlh~m l WQOCI W1fhAmO 1.,,~ ttarf'nSMw 8~ftHC• •ftl'Wn Ml<M"I M-Shol~ll ll•llH" C MllC""ll .>ran M Slr.011u11• Ectw•r\d !. p,,,_, Sl.os11nV O.,....n Ann Cor1•,,,,. \uJi\ftfW' M (1.-,-_. l tr+orfll Wunck'f'llt-tl Ml\WMa"n JO•tOft•ftt' H Woll! ll•CllM(l l !Awt'lfflC" Ru\Wll A Oro""' ol.ary E .Hn~n Mar,.n5m1fll e .. n.~ L £111-. l ttU"4' R\119' ~-Mf'tvyn KtOd'•'" r,uv~-o ..... ~'"" 'no~' Jol1tN>n I Pt£rf\a A Gol<N'\I F"rn.ttO Mu""' Ii Brown .iol'ln roro.,. Rollow M<O.•t"" EvPlvnR T-\ M·l'11ri Ci.M<N •~tf'lrvn Pf'"H'ft~rd II. LflO" 'if'l\1111 JoanM JGM\Oll O.>vo<I E l'l'fMl<I £r0<. P !>trutt Emma TOflan ~. //lo M<C1t11on 8r1.tn R ()i .. nn M1'ry GUf"fT"I•'"' (Jouqo,., R Procnotr<I R"""" !>mom Molllt W Mart•n Ann• G Brown lo" Ja"f'Slni" Su~an '°'""' ,.,_,,, PlinQbal"" l1ftd.l L. Fr.-tf\td hl (lltl\hna J••...,.. rtdllly OW!w.<fl"' Mochel C fl>oml>'l()n J11mcs H. M<Cun111tf O D '> ll•rOOr.1 L Art ~•'ttnShttA a"""''"'"•• LMI P11tw;IOOr11 Artr.ur Ml'ltO Jl>~n T~ll01&n Wllllam Ll"• Prlcn.ircl ~.\~r:;i~~~·'"'" Andrei! J McCunnoll MM• Karyl,,,,,..,.. lotra1n~ Pttrry Or Ro~l<a• Cun 1s Hfftltm John" llUIM C nar It·' w Proctor l(nur B 5kf(l<lbero Lt·\tr1cin R Tarypw\~o fv~rvn Fl-'1v lloctor L Qf'ny Jiit And<U\ JollnMe~\ I' l\le C llulan Oorolhv J P.«lor Monoc.J S~/O"t>"'<I Linda Smltll K alhlf>~n A. Woltt Maritn ,.,.,.,..'1Y Pt'QQV Gui< llOft l .,U(llftl'f'r Oofls M~ft\ Janf'I Foti'! R(ll>'>rl p '°"'''O<~ ln.i. P•eO C.all Smlfll H<1rv••y (. M<CIUl1/ Mar<on R P<>aru• ~~~ri~~-£ •rlene MO.es Hiide #1. Ht'lwog BMl>M" J N~rN'f MollyM ,,,.,.II, r,req Pat>U CY11!h1.J,P""lM N~lt McClure P.tul A Hll"M c tall>!' S ltnl\Off Oorl•R ~' s:lobt'rt W N.-rr .. 1 Wtm \mlt" \ut"'rtndf'\ Ant1ntr w1111 .. mJ v.,wooc1 'i'tm F~ Harriet J H""na Do<' L• Mar Jt'•" E Oet~ C..raldCole 't,":.J.:'1 \c~'Z;," Oor'l•"• ~t'tl"'\ ~•an<•DUCI"" ClrldyA-\ JoanOe1kf' Do10111y I. O•ddl~v ~"'""'"La-1-..~11 //lo Wroq.-1 .. alati.. SWC,,rttlr1t> Mttrv Otitvt'\ M•~,. Alte""I 6rl11n L~ad Ja,...s Cray JOYCf l Bfadlry 8Ml><lrll l WTlql\t f)lobf.t I( """"'' &rwraV•w G~9oa l..-.tYf"10<\ Oav10 Saft.,o 1unt-All<i-. Jofl" 8 L~lrom Joaft Gray Vauoh" T Bf-C'l' Roy Cr-~ri:ic':-' ~J:...~ WIH>vr W l t,_.•~'90tl Minn,. 84'11M<I Jo Anro o.:nn; ~l>C>le J Eltos 11111<11 Gray ~!,~J'"e,.,1e• ~st~1c1a, J.an1<e L PetintCW't I vn" 8.il¥d f ht Ira M O'An!Of't-Donald M Lo,..v Shlrl"Y (Lr~ Manton O Pr11tt Tro\IMI ·~ Joan L. c .. rottt wlllt•m H H.Jtlld"V Wllllam M O'A~e l Y"" LC!'W!Y EHtet>etllJ. Co• f-r•n<ttl~<I l(art>n V•tltlV Bfotty Oto~ Mer.clith S. OlurctttH John J M< o<.,rr" MonaM ~aro wan<l.t 8la1Kk1 Nancy F. F~rd• C E. Coy Pat SMler .!Ofln Vatlf>IY MPll"CU ~IO<IOctrct Heoen~rl\ V1r9ini3 L McK~rN'n Vtril M TttJf'T\dn v•<'9 Ancle"°n Mr. Jam~ G C"-nller ~·.r:~ Nelle MIU f'IWI" Jilt Hatlt'tt N&dlnl'.'~11 Grau S.""• p,.r< If LfllAvM'tOn Harv@v ~~ Mi~t! Link Mrs JArM•Clllll"O('rot"-'r J<tm"' L. 51\.llf"r l ond Br11nnon P•ulettf' BM<••• AA••Y N 8&M'IO Pobfor1 G1rort• 8&'1Mlra L Som\ (,tMI' Ltn.,; Patrlc1l1 M ~ How arO WIQ!1I St.,111'19 Croll Gtorqlane Br..,.1,e<I Jfn••C ~I C•rol A Hoele\ N .. n<'I P Gol~ Roi.rt r WoH C.r..c .-1. l 11"1• Rot>er1 P Cfllllt Gl<Wla 51ew¥d 8Pvtrly L Croll 1-•lvnct\ 1(11 Gobel W Gr""1 LOOtnl\, M 0 NO<tnA" J Col<IM C..•ol• 0 Or1e<M Don MOHOW i>onna 0 SlauqlltPr A"" e1e11e s.ntore Arlln4' ) PMV < EO••rO L.,..Cl'I Joy l(ont.,. S.raf\L_..,\ ""'"Y M<lmo<11 )0\~11 J Or1"0d QonHd.cl C.N Sl•~r MorllY~ T~sR P.t,.,.t• P1<1\a<d M ~r lr~t l l<Oilfo)n Cary" loomt\ Arie""' Mtlrtc'>'\" (dtvln L r a<m<>r Norm Hi>l<I J ananftt' Crallf' P•UIOft . Pwtlt f P Herm.tn M 0 ::..~~~· Hnw rtl.itsc11 Je11n M Loomis o ........ Bo<b<l l 1lt1t)n I JohMOn Ooro\ Hal(! gr~~~,,... Ned Parwn• PO,ylll\4 ~ ( MtJrrll'f llotie•·h ~net,. !>Niro Manll"'I A Bri<IM Ero< II _,_,n Vic tori• l(alt sw11no fl\1' Parr1e1a 8 Thomoson <;1,.C>Mn N OMNrO lM 6 Aotiert\ ~!,'!{i~~:" Lyn Ou-l't Oa v 1<1 J°""'°" (ornt>hu\J LCM'..,r Roti..rt A K-&H M•rl Y" o~ Jane~ Nlil\C y l<fvf,,_ ~ K ,.ncte<'son Oallot!I M JorCMn P411rtC I• L Felcle 8tlle L°".er l(~r•n J o<eno.sn CMrtes s. LH'I(' Ktn s.tnct\ A-rt Be.rd ,, I( .. _.. Rot.rt•~ ,,.,,. .. J Jof'da<\ TNr.a M Frldtr M11ro11 Maro"° Mary "'""McGrath SG U~k! Rlcllllrq SMl<IS Mary """" 8Mrd Bruce£ A'fll", Sr JOM A, g::re111<1 "LO V-141 David A Hio. r1unor A FUll('r AlltnO.~t.M.0 Ma•1orie H. Coffl11s 6-nlce J Madlev llo"4!T.ButM Hc1relM.KMIM Antonio rl'lli.t Paul N Dl11enllclltr ~~~~ ~lm,M O C•I M FUiier Cat M•lne Unve rt l ,.., 'M. Lucouo. Jr WOOdr-W H..cttey M9'• Panrs \llf'9tt1l11 A 011i II W Pk k41f1S Mar!Of' W 0111~1,, Jol'I" M Fun~· Marllyn T~ C.rHr MoorP llOl>trt W N~son Joan P. Part:s ·"''"""'~ Devfl G R;ty l(eyWlf">I c•-tte Mocun T lloml\ N """"'· Jr v.,,,,,,. I-tiff R0<. llanl W &l<'ttley ~·" Mc0.11..-tnerW..bO Ml'liSw E l(lfct<t>fr 8r11<P #1. Pl.tl\f' 8•'1Ml,.~r T nom•• 11 M«kett (Otl\lan<f' ~.., Mar<y Reldl JtmM«'ns M<0.11.,, A-r1 P McCowen 0-.. 8 Jollnsorl ,,,.., ....... """1_~ lor• I(. Lea ... r10t1 8 •11 Moc•ett .,,.,..,.~ Ole•le Tall = ~-. i•,=-5'. Tl\etm•E ~~ Lore tu #1... 6Ncl> Mtrrl 8 Jol\Moft JfonnlfffJo--.td Jettrev H C>aftot>cr Ma • I ne c Brocwo ~mo ll.~ C•tllyP'-FranclsH Ma<Mlll11n Aollf'ru CalllllllO Pe;;IE Jofwlsoft Pe1tt v WY!!_.., g~~r:.~~~ 6Mn1~Srv••l<'w O•••d K-L«na '°'°""" Jori;"""·.,_,,_.,, OletaM~ Plltllp G. 8¥kdutt ~·""f L n...,_ Jofln W ,..... "An ,,,,,, StY•OI"• Molle KtodOe Bar-tiara Rotltwell Fe la A. 8eauf't9&r<I l UC II .. l ind>O'Y Geo<-oe t.ack<!y ron F a.rtiorn (.len F Nel!Oft Anita F Malltt r l<alhleen L.ovvler Jonn H a~ln'IOn T P"' 51\eefS ~:~,~~ Laverne M. lvt's 0..-iwM l.MUV .,,,,.. CastaM4 SN•Oft 8..cNnmt loutseNotilnd Merk LOW!f>r MaryM,.~y l<.tllllM" #1... HN\ Ooftf\a l. •~ 8oOCIW!lt KtnMlllN °""""' 0.Ykl 8\ICN""" Mlthaet O..nehH Brue~ Louvier J<\MU F B•-r MiCll .. I 0. Tall ~r,.Sue r,_.. Doftat<I #1.. I ~s M N.CIWI< T rud\' E. Nurun. t:lev CurttsA Price ~~~i= Ectwar<IA LOU<f-Jolln W B•auer Oonnal(-&!rd ROlloert• Ami>!<• Heatllf'r Gr°M~" Vale•leE~ ""'' Curt!\ A. Prt<e Slltrl•Y8r~ L ouo \41 E Man< tllH Soni•• l. "'"'"' Vlf'9lnla Bfflrd Bun AmOIP Mr.l<ur1~ Ao., G "'°"" Art v a ""'line Merli P&tt~ lOI\ S.t,...,,.. HC"nrtene P L•W\ Waner E I( ol\Ur Merllvn J. <>st....,. c..tvR~ Mn. Kurt U: Slllir"Oft E Wat~ Su$<1-Q.ltt C..r1<'r G Foro M•r• Ann04trQC>pe Perey F BaiftM •toWelltt Douqtau L. OW'I,.,, (Mr10n•ll-Sflorley M. _. Ptolronelt&~ Kelf\lfff!Sulll•IJl'I Cvnllll• H Fn<(I M•r111•A Go~ s,~·e:ai: rlsl(lmfnel C M Huntlv $1\a.-L. Crott At<hanl L. Wll'IOn M.irtl\a s-....r9 Peter S..0111•.,. LyrldeL_... Pat•l<ll W Gia-~oy Wetter eev St_.... Juclltll A l.ortort Pau44.Cuomo ·-~ A ~no~ lltM.e'I Tl\Oma\R ~ AllU I ~ Mr' Sr.enn.nA. Gulla t~·.t:::::= 8~•-ef' Gt'llkl Fl~ ~l.~ ~~T,~-,.., Ca 1""' lne E 0.VIC!"S Ma•Y G 0e<>1q41n Jo~pl\ M A.-r s .... rman #1... Gullcl l.M.~ 0•-°°""" Jov<""'·~ P•I M DavtH c;....,._.,.on• F••nos E l°""l"r T W Po•t..-\ , ..... , OutlO\ J .O. Alleti ~nd H= Gerald E ~11f' LH Dou9"1y O,.v"' o .... ~ Geor9ia Ann Orrter ;.~i~~~~~~· Andre.. M<Ciowef> >ouqCarwn /llotwy Le.Taylor Arie\ u<l<l'I' Jaftl.AndSlrom Wiim• ANSlrom .le<'""! M Muto ll1ct1ar<1 Boyer Mary anne Rol>in'IOfl 3er:T_ Oubb\ ~!...,_ c....dlte r Albert G. Pluo 11-ldE.Oehl Menry L Muto ~~"l::;r Alb41r1 L. HKre. Jr '"°"'"' E. G.lMI )~f H Oou<Jes M.. wa11.,,., Joan 't· Pino M 0 MOrri. Kati.rt~ v ~· Judllll ... ~"1! Wiiiiam s Har110t'<I fOfty (uomo llt1• LOt"9e Vf'lurlll 8"ugf> HOiiy Ill"""' ~taren<eJ ~ CotrotVft c. Garntt Lauro!!"'""""°" Cvntlll• l\lnQ Mn Ale,,.,., H let _::~rer AM.~ VIOlaM SI•-C ~.T-• arol S LoYf'tt Slanfrod l Mrn!>e" we;.,.,~ R'1dOll C. '"n<I Mr Rk,..,..<IH Lee C. F. Ale•..., ~t•n G WllWI" D•-J OIWI" Cit"'°" "4 Mos..s LtKolle E 8rl.......,11 ~~"" M Mcl au<1"1in TOftvSr;raiew Janel J Bal<e< Rk O.-""'ryAle-r o..t>Ole T Jtr"69tl Jfan LIMl<y M•l'1'0e s.t"t<ISSol"" Mplen G a-n1 Ooft•l<I R. ~tl>y At Coo> llOber1 F Bal! ... Dalf' Ott\lt"' M 5. Oa51fva Ger a lclone OurSton Mr\ J II e.l\Ot' H•rokf Sar1<1ui... .. lller!L ~1 Doftatd II S..ll>v Jr Pa19e Warnk• C..orw Self<::ir L4<1 F.-o 51\eldor\ Al>Cott LOUIWl-4 COit J A 8et10n. M. D a.tie M DoOrott C""rytEU1"'9t·r Slla.-t HA'l>('r John Pawu•• v Doftilld e...i Jane-.., Steve Lii Pffle GavScM~ Pat l(fndrtc11 J11nC.,.,,... E•oe ~\ Oav1<1 Lev••IY l(en""'" J Madden, Sr D Je&n-redl O••id 8r-lreel, M 0 Ntll 0 '0.11 MMllynJ llUClll\n Cllrl• Slrvn Del>Or•ll c. ~<t AF 8o~ Pel•r Gr11y ~~i~:~~vert• c11ar••• s c;oroon Relph Fr-tin. M 0 . 11.nne Del Monie Neata I( 11.,, s..nu, M"rttl.i Ptle'10f"I Tlnaf""-SutanM N Po"Cl'I\ P•9ciy Lf'Yerty O~llv SMplro Frank T. 0'8rltm, M.0 Marie Har-rl& Oorotlly J Niemi Oalle\ (i. L1>n9. M D Krl' Tllom5on LlnctaEnll-..-a rt1an<1 l(e11I C Jac•ot UYY JlH~~\ l&tnt W J .C-.... M.O. Evtlv"~ Ann OovlP Slegtoc,.s Barl><I• a loroq EO•lllC.rver Marty En1l.-r Kall>y !C .... o 2:::~·:.~~&.,,ip Tom Lima• a.,l_,~t~~ ti 0 . K itlltrlM N. °'"" Grover C 5~, Marta Cralq 5 K l(olt'ta J1mrn1e M Ll"ll' Jf'aMe o Gll>'.O<\ Pel,.<•a L. C.U'11S Vlr91,.1a GniPe ~ .. i'c;.?..., Frllr w..s1""'°"1 WR l<OIMll t<i1rll'n A Lift!<" Hel"n L Sf>y<lfor R-r1 II. £tll"91'r 0.vld A. 8411tff\by MICllfflSHr.M 0 MH Rol>tns Mad 4 Pele<"IOn P•lrlto• C H-" N Scon Busl! Roo.r1 I( ~<IP' Call•••'"" Etttnqer Nlf\a a...,.,... F OtF'°"' M D ~;r .. ~~-, Et•-W Mllltt JoyP A\f\!ey EttlYn M. Young Jt•n T YOUfl<I Ellen M P11 laur<1 8HCI Juctv S<ll•elllef' David 8 K-.o1t6 M 0 c1111r1esG Wllltf' Jofln M Astllt'Y T!loma~ll Y~ ~~~= ""'"nuo. Loren• Flt'" Slt'Yt Wllllam;on PF.~.M . -f •mes M. Rollin• Te.,tL~"' Ref"' A. Joro.n Mff S M1r1l'r E•a l•a~ Alc ... r<I c. FllU Je~n F0<br• Orin J Aod<lfll. M 0 lleOdOre Aol>lt>s, Jr Wlttl11m V SCtwnK!I Oavf'BUNWll Goy E Mfnpr L•-· .. Menc!•ll c s•~•• fv,.rell S ~rrln Monty c; F_, Cl\•rtene L. Mull•Y Gtret<I H. Nol-R-rtaSctwnkll Cvnlnl•BunMll E<lan Stmll.,.s l Odell Burton 51an wa11acp Marian Perri" J A 5oranille JOh" Sjj I"'*. M D CelllerlneM. Lewis Petrl<la I Courtl•ll """'nett-. Pf<IC»' II. O'Oett Ma,.,,,. Pine MotMet I( 1<aytor #1.n"" "''' S..aron M<Erta~ ~~.~~.~.~.o Sheron 0.,.1<11 811rt>ar• /lm Bl~lloC> ~:::t::'M,"i'~ Fran~ We111...-~~~~!,~~" Lyte E =v Normanl ~nl 8111 Cl••k Jc>ME.Maller Joan l(•lfte Donf\e MM\11 ,,..le Ma n Gerrie L We11ze1 Laur• H i.-0-.rtel A llffrclen. M 0 . s.tnmu.! P. IAftenv PalrlO~ I tN>ra War-ryn Akllanl8 Swett C ti Hord Woolfoll M< a nd Mn. \I W. Hl<,ey ~sw.,..on A IC llllrcl 0, Lani! Law~O e.turn.J r ,M.0 Lorett11 M.. L.aml>er1 Artl\urM NU ~~~'V.!c~t'rleix'-" FrN A Ao. 8arbir• Woollo4' Janelle H¥1 Llflda Nel\Ot' Ste-.nP Aamwy J Wl-.MO ~L..-OavldA-1• Lois !>I-OM WllHem.,1 Fucok E IC.W..,,.... Ot-0.il!'Y !>lePl'ff!~ JV Watt, M.0 JoanWaoonwl~ ~'lf~:_,rnm•o Mr-s A""~IMO Wtllt..,.. E L'tfld Krlsll" ~'°" NM>< y 4 Bour an• J ...... , F BaileY M" Alkt! F ICI""" Moms ftet, M 0 . f!l<lo Samlal• KtnMtr\G fl9llif Torn w~""' ""''"~ Charles M. Bour ns.i C,,.,,., D Hefatd Mr Rocert 8or<left ~!4:z:......,.. Ja<l $(-..rtr Don E Jullll,., M 0 Rav,_ Ge"9 Doi"' Mary'#. Bo&SIHI #1.llteA ..._aid S..WI> L. Barnett Aalphll.~ Tom W "*"'°"· M 0 Janet.-Rolle~OoP1oe 0w111i...c:-Bobl WllMlf' Oavi<IMuk&I M" ...... """°"°' Marlly" (NII f."::.;Je =tine David S-11. M.O. Pi!rl< .. H W!Wte Joef>Dot1oe Wllllaf'r'I L. GoOlr Nadl,.. L Wiison Rl<llerdMultlli M~ Annett" ~tOfl June!<-• Dorothy J Co• J-\A.WNI" OonN f.o.k Dorotlle• J Clartc Mary A. Wiison vurl /llolAal Mr~Vt~ia~ &,:•w•mur11 M•f"9" SlaY!n Wl,.11'9<1 H AU5teft ~~~':,!tt,El<llter Alt.rt L El<hler Werr"' H. 0-Judltll M GlelOW Ettanor F. Prk,,.,.d Car1er IC r'lflt' alcl C. Tllomou "TO"' Sle'<ln BelllH LMlet' Pl!vlh 11. Bowler Judltll~I Tll()mes A Ole low JOhn PrlcllllrO l~rTV 0 . GfM'll fF. T'-'M Eclwanl Austlft ~Otll'(A Sltve Ros.ille wr!QM Sllell•O.~ VlrQl,.l•~\ l't\Jlljp W SMIOI R.J . Sb•.., !>!iMI\' !.<Oii Snydff verett Gus1, Jr These names were gathered In onty 3 (very rainy) daya by a group of dedicated 1upporters of Richard England. IT IS IMPORTANT that community citizens are aware that pursuant to Callfornla Education Code Section 44943 the School Board has the option to RESCIND Its dismissal action against Richard England. ARE YOU CONCERNE!D ? HOW CAN YOU HELP? 1) WAITE or CALL your School Board members. 2) ATTEND the School Board meeting next Tuesday evening, February 13, 7:30 p.m. at Estancia High School located at 2323 Placentia Ave. Oust North of Wiison), Costa Mesa. It has been requested that this matter will be an agenda Item to be discussed at this meeting. Supporters of Richard England STEERING COMMITTEE em •nd A~• Schmidt 1105 E. B•lboe llVd. Newport 8Hch, Ce. t2M1 17&..7115 Dr. D•~ •nd OfffVle BradttrHt 20U Commodore Road .........,., .. Kii. Ca. 92610 5*6142 Pa ul end~ Cuomo 531 Allao Avenue Newport Beach, Ca. 12MO M2"°33S C•rter Ford 1531 CUmberfand Newport Beach, Ce. t2MO Ml-2U1 Allee Kirven 1215 Oldord U M Newport hach, Ca. t2MO 54N7IO Jan L•nd9tfom 2207 Fr•ncleco Drtve Newpoft heoh, C•. t2tlO .... 8111 and Oeoftle Leaverton 2t11 P•par a..ne N9WPO't .. ach. Ca. t 2"0 142·7913 Joyce Md Devtd Lyon• 1t•TWC1nAve. Co• ...... Ceo '"27 145-1271 L.4u and~ Satvatl 22IO Senta Ana Ave. Cotta MeN, Ca. t2t27 831-1830 fony and lonnle Slyret-w 2mHottya..na Newpott .. ach, Ca. IH&O 145-815 Dr. Mont• & Rc>Mrta Flar 2045 Hottdey .. d . = hactl, Ca. t2MO This Is a paid polttlcal advertisement paid for bv Suppot'ters of Ric hard E nol1nd. Spokesman: Wllllam '\/.Schmidt, 180S E. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. 9'~1 . Phone 67S·768S ' -• t - CAREERS I NATION Professional-Resume Service Could Help &)' JOYC L. ' N DY Dt-u Joyft: J rt<f'•t11 let • of tM Anny. I llM• IB)' tulf &«lulkal· I • bu• I am ao Cuo4 '' •n&lq a ru· um~. To mf'. k'a a •irlk* u nu. ln1 out H fnftHDf' tn for.. r Mid ~f'ft Wnkiq ot ll IDlll ... ,....~ wrltlna 1tt•ftt, IMll t•u I re .. ct.a( a Pf'rton shoeJd wrM. IU o.. ~ l)u ) OU IJlrw •i*" till\! • L \ S • ~ Ana . Calif \ t-i. und no In )'Oul ~--..tth t•eruun ~er\ aUuM. l would ~ti • quuhty l'\':.ume i.t•rvln• t;fft"Cllvt>I)' pudtatelng )Oll~l'lf on P~•1wr l$ oot u n lu.rall) Ul'quired ub1l11y, but u ktll you purf)Olely .must set our tu learn Chuoglng rimt>:i. rnasa11nu mention:. a poll wh11:b reporu thrtt of (our taxpayer. gt'l someone ~lbtt to do their rt>turns SO WHY SHOULDN'T you set another kind ot spttlabst to ltnd ff gu1drng hand tn lurnlng out a tt:.ume that :;tre:..ses your :;eWng point:, Ill concrete. mea uruble terms, points 1n a format easJly comprehended by 11 potential employer' The rhlef reason to avoid pro fes:,1onall> "nllen resumes 1:; th4l they may look like a n assembly-line presentation . \ 1rtually 1ndisling uishable from thousands oC olherit r reat t>d by the resume s ervice "Canned" is the reaction uf e mp~oyer!:I \\ho tend to d1:r.rounl rookie-cutter resumes Sample:, s~nt to me periodlcally by resume servtccs are usually superior lo the home-grown variety I recetve Crom readers. The trouble ts the pro lcssionaJ versions often are' so over produr ed that visions of Madison A venue puffery may come to mind, [ __ <ARE_~Ew._s __ ) tau lnR Oil• r('. um1• n •udn to \\.Ondt•r why 11pphcanl n~s •uch heavy pacb1ini 1f ht or 1h~ "' o IJl'Cat. On bwane •. ht'rl• " my utlvlc ,._ 00 TtlF. INITI L work·up 'uur df Thf' xerch1c ot or1111ru•&ng 'our bnrkpmund and trengths wllJ prt•p rt' you LO dlbt'Ult!i th_.m fiuently 111 lb 11U Important .)Ob Interview. Go to a hbrary aand revl~w book.i. or aampl r1•sumt1 to grusp the tien~flta of vunous rormats You may, by now, feel able to do • rant hed rnumt yourself. But lf you UU need beJp In polisblng the final pa~r, shop aev~ral resume services ~lore dttldlng which to choose. Their work ranges from exceUent to incompetent, so ask for samples and l he names of satislfed customers other than the owner 's brother-in· Ja w A final point No type of resume '-'Ill .tppt.>al to every potential t.•rnployer Rt>-.ume writing 1s an art. not a '.'>C1cnce RE\DER • ERVICE: "Marketing Yourself" is not an in-depth dts-cu~s1on of res':'mes, but an overview of JOb search tips for the experienc~d executJve For a copy of this reprint from Management World. enclose a stamped, self-addressed, Jong white e nvelope with your request to Joyce Lain Kennedy, care of the Orange Coast Daily PiJot, P. O. Box 1560 Costa J\!esa 92626. This offer e nds Mar ch J.. Injustice Cited Wife, Mom ]aikd lwDrog CWJe LOWELL, Pia. <AP) -Alma Ryan 1s in Jail because she didn't turn an her husband and son after she heard they were smuggUng marijuana. "The morf> you dig into it. the more it's an injustice." her lawyer says. THE HUSBAND AND son s he sought to protect are mlssing. Fred Ingraham. 26. fled more than a year I ago. William Ryan, 47, jumped bail I on .a marijuana charge last August. Neither has been heard from since "'l Jove my son. If this would make him chaoge bis lire. it's worth it " said Mrs. Ryan, 59. She bas filed for divorce from her husband The mother: of four is serving a sent~e of six months to three years in the Florida Correctional Institu- tion here on her on contest plea to a t'harge of conspiracy to import mari- JUana SHE SAID SHE didn't have the heart to turn in her husband and son wllen s he discovered t hey were sm ugghng. "Sometimes I feel that there is no justice," she said He r husband. a lawyer a nd a former Judge, failed to appear at two hea rtnf?S on marijuana charges stem- ming from the seizure of the family :.:iilboat in January 1978. Ingraham disappeared the night the sailboat "'as seized. and Mrs. Ryan·s attorney believes he 1s named in a scaled in dictment in the cus~. C IRCU IT JUDGE William Edwards told Mrs . Ryan she shomld have told authorities what she knew or the s muggling operation. "I realize and feel very sorry for you. because you have sort of been left holding lhe bag." he said at her sentencing hearing. "If your son desires to com e forwa rd _and substantiate your story, then 1 wtll not send you to the st.ate penitentiary if he substantiates it. .. "I DON'T KNOW where they are, .. Mrs. Ryan says of her son and ~usband. "K~pin~ me here isn't go- mg to change that. ' Her lawyer, G. Robert Schultz, says there was n<> justice in the jail- lng or his client. "'His <Edwards') punishment. was imposed on the wrong person. It's un- fair. The bad people either split or made a better arrangement " MKS. RYAN SAID she agreed a rew years ago to put a 45-foOl sailboat in her name for her son, a yacht broker. S he said s he sensed something was amiss, and lngraham told her he was smuggling. She later learned her husband was involved. Mrs. Ryan said. SAVERS LOVE LAGUNA FED short-term T-Plus money market certificates • BECAUSE these $10,000 Certificates top weekly discount rates by 1/4%. 4f eECAUSE interest is compounded daily to build up the yield still higher.· 4f BECAUSE these high-earning money•makers mature in just six months. • BECAUSE yo4 can reinvest your funds at maturity, at the prevailing T-Plus rate. • provided no Interest penalties are Incurred by premature wllhdrawals .1 • Thurlldey. February 8. 1979 • DAILY PILOT A fl PRESIDENTS' -BIRTH DA~ Afl 010 I-TRACK RECORDING TAPE HURRY! IT'S TIME TOcSTOCK UP ON BLANK TAPES! by Reall1tk:9 40 MINUTES 80 MINUTES 2 :FOR I?! 2FOR2?.'1 Reg. 1" E•. Reg. 25' Ea. Our special formula oxide coating improves high frequency response. s1gnal- to-noise ratio, resists breaking and stretching. IO-DIGIT CALCULATOR EC-2001 by Radio Shack & 21~~-29'~ SAVE 26°/o PRINTING CALCULATOR EC-3003 by Radio Shack SAVE 9995 110 Reg. 1Q9tS Bright green display, I Item c ount. 4 -key memory, gross profit margins and percent. Wrrh baneries. 65·660 AC Adapter, U.l. listed 14-854 S'\ paper tape printout. Auto-rounding. 4 -key mem- ory, percent key. Wrth paper UL listed 65·646 3-Pack Thermal Paper 2W'x90· Ea. 65 ·706 2~ TRAVEL SAFELY WITH A MOBILE CB! 9995 Wu d:~:i;9 SAVE s70 TRC-424 by Realfstic Keep loved ones feeling secure. close to help while driving• Noise blanker and ANL cut s tatic. de lta tune brrngs 1n oft frequency stations 21.1522 COMPACT AM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO Chronomallc--114 by Reallst lc 2195 Reg. 29'~ SAVE 26°/o CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) Arse 'n shrne to mus1c/bozzer alarm! Only 3 Y2x11 1h x4" With sleep/snooze controls. 12·1507 FANTASTIC VIDEO GAME BARGAINS! TV Scoreboard & by Radio Shack ~;;;;;;:;;:~ .. ~(·~2395 1795 ' l·~~ ~~~ ':~; er i .• ; I f ~ .. .. -1.--I :~ ., ..... 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Battery extra. 22.199 [fjJJ . . . . ., . .. . -... .,_... .gi_ -"· " PORTABLE CASSETTE RECORDER CTR-42 by AHllstic 2995 Reg. 39'~ SAVE 25°/o Stylish. fun and a real bargarnl Worlts on batteries or AC. Burlt-in condenser mike Batteries extra. 14-842 ELECTRONIC INDOOR/OUTDOOR THERMOMETER by Mlcront. 21'!. 29H CUT 26°/o It's electronic! Just push a butto n for indoor/outdoor readings. 4 W' scefe reads Fahrenheit and Centigrade. With remote sensor. Requires 9V battery. •l·H' PHOTOELECTllC SlllOKE AlARlll SAVEt Jft95 b-"Aldler--,.,.. 28% .:I~· Escape danger-de· tects smoke fest! W ith battery. 271-453 ltADIO SHACK HAS OVER 7f# STQtlfS AND DEAUltS IN THE USA ANO CMWM I Most 11ema _._ ___ _._ FOUNTAIN VALLEY HUNTINGTON IEACH ••11•........ '"' ·-... ... ............ .:=.~I 9"1 ......... .. ,.:::"..._...._ L~GU~AJEACH CORONA DEL MAR ,.,, ~lflc CllJll ""' '•HI< c... ""' SAN CLEMENTE IM Se. II C..... 11N1 I A ONrolON 0, TANDY COAPORAllOH MISSION VllJO m•~rllWr. NEWPORT HACH 11• "· c:.... ..... IMlfllwa ... ~I LAGUNA NIOUll. ... oew...,...., SAN JUAN (APtSTltA..0 "*~~­ COSTA MISA , .............. .,.....,., .... '''° 1v11llble 11 AtdlO Snteti OHien l.C>Oli lor lh•S a19n '" vour oaALa'9 1\-clhbOlhood .. _____ .. ~ICES MAY VAri.Y Af INDf\llOUAL STORE . . . ' l J . ( Thul"lday. Fttt>ruary I , 117' .~Vletna•n ~et_ Finally Gets Pension JACKSONVILLE. I' la. tAP) A Vietnam Ja1 la accua~ oC hold1n• Malcolm Young, representing Jamt' , said he was notified b y the VA office in St . Petersburg that James has been uwardcd a $.JOO.a.month disablllty pension and may get o lump sum Cor back payments. '<'trrun who h('ld l"lt) otfktaJ ho t11t ¥l IUD· point I l Octob<-1 lo dramaUi bla probltms In .iettln~ n mlhlarv di~abUlty ~ruuon baa lrarned that the pcmnon h s be n approved theo city'• v t rana st-rvlce ocncer, a hostaae tn Youna'a om ce at city hall for Hverul hours on Oct. 11 lt look thl·m loo Ion . "said F'rank Jtmr,, 29. '-'hO b dut• to be trwd March~ on ch1arce1 or kid napp111K. ~1ggr.wah'<i nr. .. aull and pos Ion of a !\hort barrt'le•d hota:,un 'the 1<round Ooor aru was cleared and pollce finally tulkf'd J m'' anto freelni h~ ho11tage and 1Jivina up on a prom• t• Uual tw could te ll the ncwi. me-d "ol hl!J troubll• "rt substantiates that they must have been giving him the runaround Cor severa l years," Stapp said .L\M 1::.s. ~ :\ \RM\ v E .:a.\ • aaad he tt • .auu .man ab\ml tht• th•hy h) \ht' Vf'tf'ran Admln 1trn tmn lk ,1pplwd fo1 th• pt·n,ion tn 1973 H~ lurnt'd thl5 \lo Wk that tt h .ut hc•t•n J'pmvf'd J AMf .. ~ SAID Ht; HAD t'onstanUy been put off ·by VA 0 H1 r 1al1i and ropealt'dly sent t o pi.ychi at r1t1 t 11 . llt.' s u\d he th<'n decided to dram11llzt• hli. frw.tratlon Officials said James had a metal Fragment in his left wrist from wounds sustained while In Viet· nam ilnd later was injured in an auto~ccident while in lhe service in West Germany. He com· plained or frequent headaches. Aa"ll11lm1l Pubhc O.ireodt>r Frank Sl1&pp. who is . UC Irvin A etivitie chedul d T h e s t' a ,. l I \ 1 t 1 e ' sponsort"tl by l 'C lrvtnt• are designed for adult~ and open to lht> genl'ral publH.' Formal ad mlsswn to lht> univer~1 ty 1s not requ1rt.>d More information 1s a\ a1lnble at the unl\ en.1ty ~ Ex tension offiet>. 8.13 5414 '"'°"" ...... ~·-Pf'f\(IH'flY~\ ,.,, Q~·~•IOO ~ flf\t • J r.nt 0 J:c.ttOf• wn'°"' vt(f' Df~!»tdll>M W1t•nwrtQht A Pttm\ol''f '"< •nd °""" ~d .. , .... A U( lfY•rte' F •tens•°" OM c14y "•m1nar 8 lO tt m 4 a,.,, Tr41D\.l~n A'" Si8d cl1eo.c ~ Im 1..0 £ r ,, 1 "' '•"'• •N f!,... M0 1n<tUOP\tuntn s.ATUllOAY. ~•II 10 OyMmoc ~l•"on Ka'"' C:. Wtl\on pr•\ldtint Wil\nn & A\ \OC.l.11f"\ A U( t'°"tt'P f "llPn\101" OIW• O•Y wmtn•' Cf JO d m • lO o m Am 170. So<l•I Sc-• To-UCI <•m1><1S f'tf' JS~ "'<I~\ hlf•<h D.trk11'<1 -mal•"•'' 'ChanqlnCI Bthavlor I P"v•nllt>Q Aolstance to CllanQf' I," Ho.,••cl Wlhon. pr~ICHnl. Aclmlnl11ra11v4! A~s••nh A~\Octa••'· '"< A UC try1n~ E'1tM.~ onP.-CS.V i..m•n.tt". • JO ,, m • )I) p m Go•cl Room, M~~ Common~. UCI um~ FH US 1nc1uci.~ lune~. o.ir~lnQ, and c 1.t\\ matPf'•11I\ MOHOAY, t<etl 11 '>tit<• 11ftd -·cal eu11c11r19" .. J t•tf p,.nc~ •'1i0e1et~ •1inc• ptts10.n• rntclw•ll Ran••• ~ Co PM1 ol a UC I tv•nft E ''tn\JOn ,,., turf" ,,.,.,,..\, VITAMIN C 1000 MG Easy to swallow. protein coated Vitamin C tablets, with naturaJ rose hips, one of the best s ources o f nat'ural Vit amin C Ti m e disintegrating formula IEG. SALi NICE NICE 100 Tabs. $ 3.49 s 2.95 250 Tabs. $ 8.25 s 6.95 500 Tabs. $15.50 SJ2.95 A•<ll f'"'" ln•~\lmt>n! t--------------------1 Pr'op~rf1fl' 1 10 O,fn A,,, tll. ..,.uman1tw .. t-t&lt. UCI CAmO\J' S•nnt,. "'dm1c,.,1on •• tnt> door 1t \"dtt [M"rmtt i lO TUESDAY Foll IJ, lO, •"° 27 M.rc II 6, lJ, •ncl 10 ~Mdk W11" £ tt<# Ct , • ., ~r.1anv v M & mftrrlt1Q# t~r1"1ttv Ch •ld 'Oun.,ptor 1n(1U'l'•illl ,,,,,,ulld,,t t•AC.r'IPr WntnPn ' Oooortun•t y (#'f'frr U< ''"'"'~ (tnt1 ""'¥ Jru, ... , M A 'Pf"l'•(t\ dnd ( nall\M , .. .,{ hf't Orano.-. (°"' t (nltPO: A UC lt"V•N £ • IPn\lbft ''" '"f""''"'1 wOrl ,f'tOD ii\ ·~·tO pm Am \<>\. Mumbf"thl'' HAii, U(t <Amc>u'i F~ \\\ WEOHESOAY, t<tb U C.trtuM"d"•Qillf•Of\ Jof\n 0 PoP'ttmann PP\ 0 '0"< ••t•\t 1n (.ltttornt•\ tH\tOf'V Part ot a UC Ir Vint' E .-t""Mtof\ tK tun•,,_.,,, .. , ·ltw- Aoe of °'""~ 110 om Am U7 l'h~\•UI '-ctf'nc"' 81<1<1 UCI cdm 11u\ '>•hQlf' Mlmt\\OOn al .,,. door 1! \l) .. (P l)f>rmll\, JS S0 WEOH£SDAY. ,..., "· 11. ~tlcl 11 -f"tfl 7 •nd,. A.Cf0ut1tf"O tor t"" Non ( 'n6nt1a1 Manaot-r, • I,.~,,., lort1f't were h /llo 9 A~ C PA 6. IJ( lrvlnP ( • tttn'°1on flvf' n"W>t'-t1nq rour".t 1 10 D m "'" 100 Hun"Mn•I ,.., ~·" U( I (dMOU\. fo.f'tfl M '.t Badham T o Sp e ak Congressman Robert NATURAL DOLOMITE TABLETS A good natural source of calcium ( 153 mg.) amd magnesium (75 mg.) 1n twelve-grain tablets. · 250 Tabs. Reg. St.75 Now S 1.39 500 Tabs. Reg. $2.~ Now 52.50 1 000 Tabs. Reg. ss.so . Now S 4. 7 5 Badham 1s scheduled to t---------------------t s peak l''eb. 9 ul the an· nual installation dinner of the Orange County Coast Association in Newport Beach. VITAMIN E-400 IU In a base natural vegetabl e oil. 100% biologically active. VITAMIN SIORES OPEN 1 DAYS Monday thru Saturday 9 :30 am to 6 pm Fridays Open till 7:00 pm Sundays 11 :00 am to 5:00 pm Master Charge BankAmericard Visa VITAMINS .. "" ******************* WHAT Will YOU FIND IN A GREAT EARTH VITAMIN STORE? * * complete selection * * * * free samples * * * * low prices * * * * friendly, knowledgable salespeople * * NATION /.LOCAL 111 ~ftltfolt T eld Gov . Ja m e s Thompson of II· I inois says he won 't actively see k t he 1980 Re publican pre· si d e ntia l nomination but has left open the possibility or c hangi ng h i s mind. • GREAT EARTH PROTEIN POWDER 95 16 oz. SALE r RICI $3.95 3/SlO ACIDOPHILUS CAfSULES WITH PECTIN Two good natural supplements combined in a culture of lactobacrlh that aids digestion by re- establishing and re1nforc1ng favorable in- testinal flora } l 00 Tabs. Reg. S2.49 Now S 1 . 7 5 250 Tabs. Reg. $4.95 Now s3_99 500 Tabs. Reg. $8.95 Now s7 .so LECITHIN CAPSULES 19 GRAIN Ora n ge Cou n ty S upervisor Thom as Riley wlll install the of. ficers. who will include Air Cahfornia president Robert Clifford as as- i.ociat1on president. Necessary for the health rn very cell in the .,_ ________________________ __. body. Each caosule supplies 1200 mg. of liquid lecithin; hermetically sealed for freshness and .. . Thl' e vent begins at 6.30 p.m. at the Irvine Coast Count ry Cl ub. Dinner 1s $12 SO More inform a tion a nd r e· servataons available al 962·6661 Seniors' J obs Due The Orange Coun t y Senior Citizen Program 100 Cops Reg. $2.49 N~SJ .98 250 cops. Reg. $5.95 NowS4.95 500 cops. Reg. $11 .95 NowS9.90 1 000 caps. Reg. $Zl50 Now s 1 s. 90 AMERICAN . potency GOURMET FOOD PROCESSOR 100 tabs. Reg. S2.49 Now S 1 . 95 $49.95 Shreds, mixes, chops, slices, kneads! . 250 tabs. Reg. SS.75 Now S4.77 500 tabs. Reg. s10.so Now SS.50 office and the local Unit· t--------------------------------------------------------------_, cd Way chapter are of· fering 20-bour a week part·tlme community service JObs at $3.25 an hour for residents 55 and over on limjted incomes. Interested people may call Sam Randall or Eve Porter at 634· 1641 or write to the Senior Com· munit y Employme n t Pr ogr a m , 3903 MetropoTitan Drive, Orange. Trial Vie wed A panel discussion on the Pacific Crest TraJI wlJl be presented al Sad· dleback High School io Santa Ana Feb. 19 at 7 : 30 p.m . under t he auspices. or the Orange County Sierra Club. ''QUALITY VITAMINS AT DOWN TO EARii PRICES'' OUR CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Costa Mesa Store 370 E. 17th Street 646-0534 (next to Ralphs Market) 0 w . > > w _J <( > CD W <( • I-" <( ct: z z 0 <( <( Cl. ct: <( ~--0----~ z <( 11'1 w > RALPHS < MARKET Z I ·D § E . 17th ST. Tatln Store 522 E. First Street (i n Larwin Square) (714) 838-8970 .. Hun~ Beach Store 10044 Adams Avenue at Brookhurst next to Albe rtsons Market• 963-5694 ____ t; A DAMS ~ l-o ct: 0 w ~a.Jo~ a:. CD ATLANTA co -J B Toro Store .. 24346 Rockfield Blvd. (next to Von's Market) (714) 770-3079 -. ~ Weshninster Store on Goldenwest between Botsa and Edinger• (71 4) 894-0519 (next to Albertsons Market) BOLSA Ga1 den Gro•e Store 9747 Chapman Avenue at BrOOkhurst. in front of J.C. Penney 'in the Garden Grove Mall •638-1041 . . . . --- ' LOCAL / NATION. DAILY PM.OT AJ 1 P~per-Not 'Kid Stuff' 9y JACICI RY AN Ot .. ~ ...... , ... Newport. M a hoot t tud ~nt l Mr. and tv n j admlnl•lr•tora hav been Jab~ by Coron drl Mu JU1h School's Tnd nt Corona del Mar Jouma/Uta Keep Check· on Official. which was lh point of coming to acbool anyway," abe aaid. The Trident editors. Uke tboee at any newspaper, frequently h•ve to balance good news re· Potting with the demands of apecial interest croups, Mn. Mookaald. "Wt' try not to l b pcoplt' Wr do prod lht·m 01.'\' 1onally, Uld Lindi\ Mook. Mdv1 r lO lM newspaper lh1tt draw• \a name from t~ lhr""·c>ron1t-d of the lit' .. KOO Nt'J>hittt• I N Tit E Y t:A II. t lO t'f' Wtttt'r,.att-. ~em s~mJ , lhal r hos 1r1rown roni.11.h•rably itha~r "I thrnk··th.-tn h·r~5t 1n JOurnaltsm muybe h re cht'd its l>t' k m lht' po:sl Waterutt- tira," Mrs Mook ald "And a lot of the> tudent.s r~1 their rol a. 1t JOUrnaU11t " to kup an eyt' on f(Ov.rnmt'nt and school offmal ·• Amons the topic' they'•• lukltd -TUE OOL dilllrict '1 COO· ltovtralal e tabhabmunt or a · data~'"" rorpotallon Allefed vlolatJon3 or l lU· d~nt.a ' riJhta ln a drug nld Apathy among i.ludent tu den -THE DI TIUM'S pllytna for athletic buatoa deaptte Propo tuon 13 cutbacks that tthm1nated recular hlth sc~I bUSIOI · 'Studcnlt are more issue · Diiiy""' S..eff ,.... ADVISER LINDA MOOK, CENTER, co.EDtTOAS CONFER Nina Van Hoven, left, Mary Dem. rtght, Sh•re Edlonhlp oriented." 1a.id Mrs. Mook. "It's not what·, happenlna wltb the elubl. Now it's news briefs. Kids feel more freedom to pursue mat~nJ.'' • TH NEWSPAPER. which haa • .wr of about 35, ls llmlted only by a district publications code. Mra Mook said. Tbe code problbftt ct'MOrship and prior restraint e•cept ln ca,es of libel, obacenlty. lnvuk>n di privacy OI' clear lndtemenl to unlawful or c:Uarupt1ve act.a The Trident's eo·editors, seniors Mal'1 Dern and Nina Van Hoven. said staff members are ins tructed to contact numerous IOUfces to ensure fair- ness wheo"'Writing a story. "I know when I started writ· mg, somebody bad to lead me by the band and tell me you have to talk to live people and look in the Ubrary," Miss Van Hoveo said. ' SUE SAID SHE passes on that type of in f ormation to uro SAY OUR biggest pro· blem II girls'. sports," she said. ''Tbey feel they should have equal coverage wltb boys ' sports. "We try to take Into co11sldera· tton how many people are fn· volved In a sport, bow many fans they have and bow sue· ceasful they are." sbe said. Tbe eo-editors cred1t their ad- viser wilb keeping standards high, in put by inalsting that the s tudent staff m embers take responsibility for their own paper. MISS DEllN SAID sbe at· tended a student newspaper con· fere nce in San Diego and was s urprised at the "despotism" of some advisers. "The Trident's not a teacher publication," she said. "ll 's de· fmitely student·run." newcomers and rinds them will· Principal Dennis Evans said in1 to put in the footwofk. he agrees that students sboulcl Miss Van Hoven pointed to a have tbe freedom to print what recent article on the results of the1 want. s ubject only to sophomore testing as "calling a l guidance concerning such mat- spade a spade." r ters as libel and rairness. The non·byli.ned article, which she said was written by ~er . ..TREV HAVE WRITTEN Mark Evans, says that while 12 som e hard·bittlng stuff " be percent of the students passed said. "We haven't had ~Y re- the graduation exam, 88 percent percussions we couldn't live fai~. with." THE ARTICLE includes quotes rrom a diatrict official and the school principal analyz- ing the results. Mrs. Mook pointed to another case of careful research. Because of concern about He said be believes pubUc opi· Dion helps keep student writers fair and is the only censor needed, libel, a recented1torial about the Abused K.i-'-scbool district's data processing U8 corporation was checked and re· checked by the swr. T v· ? The editorial details the facts urD tO JCe • or a grand jury investigation of alleged wasteful spending, and conclu d es by saying, "Thousands or dollars were squandered that. .. could better have been spent on the educa lion or the students in t he Newport-Mesa School District." THE DISTRICT was rapped once before ln an editorial by Mlss Van Hoven criticizing the uae of school fWKls for athletic busing when reg ular school bus- ing had been canceled. "We felt they could use the money to help educate students, SAN DIEGO CAP) -About a half-million boys and girls under age 16 are Involved in child Pl'Ofi· titution, and many started out as victims of sexual abuse ln the home. a counseling agency of- ficial says. Stephen F. Hutchinson, vice president of Odyssey Institute ot New Yock, told the Sixth Na· Uonal Conference on Juvenile Justice that the problem crosses all racial, cultural and economic lines, with incest slightly more common in rural areas. Seaweed Supper Composer-conductor Leonard Bern stein samples a plate of seaweed at the Benihana Palace in New York City. He was among tSO quests who dined this week on sushi. tempura and saki at a party preceding "The Grand Kabuki·· show at the Beacon Theater. • laguna Beach Asks 4-lane Canyon Road Construct.ion of a four-lane divided roadway extending the full seven-mile length of Laguna Cuyon Road bas been endorsed by Lagun·a Beach council members in a resolution authored by Coun- cilman Kelly Boyd. Only Councilwoman Sally Bellerue abstained from voting on the resolution, which calls for immediate planning and con- struction of a four-lane highway through the winding bills or . Laguna Canyon to the San Diego Freeway. BOYD'S R~LUTJON was prompted by the latest fatalities on the narrow two-l a ne roadway. including a bead.on collision and a motorcycle death Jan. Zl. Two motorists in one vehicle. and a motorcyclist were killed -within hours of each other on the stret ch thal runs through the cities of Laguna Beach, Irvine and county territory. Boyd said more than 26,000 vehicles traverse the canyon road daily. adding that stepped up traffic enforcement on the stretch bas not resulted in fewer fteatbs. MORE THAN t,'59 citations were issued within the city por- tion or the roadway during 1978 alone; Boyd said, but nine head- on collisions have occurred in the past three years. 1he Day the Sun Goes Dark Once More He saad tbat despite heavy traffic enforcement tbe number of deaths did not decline, although the number of injury accidents was cut nearly in half from 1977 to 1978. By The Associated P~s The two Chinese astronomers who got drunk 4, 116 years ago and forgot to scare oH tbe ser- penl swallowmg the sun would get a kick out of Russ Cox's knockout cockta1J, the "Total Eclipse." The y a l so mi g hl en joy. watching the sun go black on a champagne.sipping "Flight to s loe gin and orange juice, for armchair astronomers who want to celebr ate the first such eclipse visible in the United States since March 7, 1970. Hi and Ho won't be there, of course. since their names ap- pear in the earliest surviving written record of a total eclipse of the S1lll. · Totality" high above the Colum-IT SAYS TUEY lost their bia River gorge. beads to the royal executioner in I F T 8 E C B I N E S E 2137 B.C. for partaking of strong astronomers, named Hi and Ho. spirits and neglecting to bang were still around, they could be drums and shoot arrows at the at. Cox's bar in Richland, Wash.. offending serpent, which the an- on Feb. 26. when this country's cient Chinese blamed for an final total echpse or the century eclipse of the sun. occurs Americans have more scien· Cox. manager of the Hanover tific explanations ror an eclipse, House. invented the "Total-but some of their rituals seem Eclipse," a mlxlurc or rum, gin. almost as strange. Tonight at 7:30 Newport Planners Face Heavy Agenda There'll be a taste of everything for Newport Beacb planning com- missioners al their meetiQg tonight· a proposed condominium con· version, several office buildings and construction on boatyard sites. Commissioners also will tackle two items concerning tralfic pbas· ing plans. The meeting will begin at 7: 30 p.m . an City Council chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd. Some key items on the agenda include: TRAFFIC PHASING -The city's first traffic phasing plan will be submitted for remaining development in Newport Place. The plans are required for areas zoned as planned communities that are exempted from tbe traf- fic phasing ordinance. In addition, commlssloners will consider a proposal by the city to.require a tram c phasing plan for Clvic Plaza in tbe Newport Center area. The de· velopment' was previously ex- Me88D Honored Manha Stewart of Costa Mesa is one of 817 student. who have been named to the tall semester honor roll at RJcka Collele. Rex· burs. Idaho. All thole named achieved a 3.5 grade point average or better. • cepted from the traffic pheing ordinance. CO NDOMINIUM CONVEBSION -Discussion is slated oo a final map to convert 6.8 acTeS of the Venalllea apart.· ments near Hoag Me morial Hospital to condominiums. BOATYARD SITES -Con· tinued public bearings will be held on a proposed ortice build· ing OD the Paclfic Tidea Marine site and a proposed multi-use com merclal buildln1 on tbe Larson's Shipyard site. Among the applicants on the Pacific Tidea Marine site at 220 20th St. la planning com- missioner Paul Batalla, who ia· expected to disqualify bhmelf from voting on the item. OFFICE BUlLt>INGS -Two proJectl by owner·developer Ernest Georp, OM·•torJ office bulJdiql at _. and 2800 E. Coa1t illPWQ witb IUbterran· ean J*IDnl, will be tbe 1ulh jeetl of public hearin(I . Indeed, a kind of solar mania grips humankind when the moon blocks our view ol the sun, and everybody wants a front·row seat, even if it means scores will perma nently damage their eyesight, as 121 did in 1970, by looking directly at the sun. THOtJSAND8 AJlE jockeying for a good position when the moon's s hadow touches land first at 8 :12 a.m. a t Agate Beach, Ore., just west of Portland, then sweeps a path 180 miles wide up tbe Columbia River and across much of Oregon, Wash!ngt.oo, northern Idaho and North Dakota into Canada. Jn other areas of the United States. it will be seen as only a pa rlial eclipse of varying degree. For those who want a view above the clouds, tbe Seattle Science Center bas chartered an Alaska Airlines 727 jetliner to take observers -at $115 to $135 each -on a champagne Oigbt 40,000 feet above the Columbia River gorge. A TOURIST AG ENCY in Berkeley bu already sold out tta .. Moonahadow Expeditions.•• which wtll leave San Francisco and Los Angeles on Feb. 23 for a r esort on Hecla Island off Canada. Ms. Wendy Weaver. tbe tour coordinator. said 60 people have paid $M5 to $475.50 for the trip, but she could have sold many more tickets. ·'The response has been UD· believable," she said. "We are already making plans for next year 's eclipse 1n Africa.'' But the biggest hubbub is in Goldendale, Wash., a farming communH.y of about 3,300. wbicb haa the oa1y public: observator)t in the patb of tbe eclipse. TllOlMND8 OF visitors are expected, tbe town 's four motels have been lully booked for week.a, and the mayor ii allow· Ing campers to park on tbe school grounds. Not to be outdone, tbe ml)'Or of Helena, Mont., is lnviUng everyone in the United States to her city, ''the Queen of the Rockies," to witnesa tbe event which won't have a rerun until lbe year a11. Mayor Kathleen Ramey said tbe ecliPM will bave tta _,_ duraUoa ID U.leu, toulnl oft tbe fl1ure M minutes and • ~ wttb a ·~ 1mlle. Sdee· U.ta ..,, bowewr, It •dualb' •lll lm onl.J 2 mlautu, • aecondL . . - WHILE MAYOR Ramey says she can't promise cloudless skies. sbe saJd, "I'm guarantee- ing we won't have smog." The total eclipse will be nothing new to a few Goldendale residents, who were there when it happened the last time, on June 8, 1918. Mrs. Wilma Spalding, now 85, is one of them. She remembers bow she smoked some glass to look through and took a chair out on the sidewalk with her son, Howard, who was 2 at the time. .. THE CHICKENS went to roost a nd . when the moon passed over the s un. the c hickens came out and the rooster crowed." Mrs. Spalding recalls. Mrs. Zola Brooks. now 87. re- calls that she and mosl of UM' other townspeople watched the eclipse Crom atop a butte, a fl at- top hill. "A weird feeling came over me when it happened." Mrs. Brooks recaJls, "something l 'd never experienced be fore or since.•• IN WASIONGTON'S tri-cities of Richland, Kennewick and Pasco, hotel reservations also are going fast . Scieotist.9 say that area is one of th~ few metropolitan regions along the eclipse path in the U.S . with a reasonably good chance of clear weather on eclipse day, a SO percent chance as com- p a red with 20 percent in Portland. The weather out.side may have been frightful, but this Sbangbal youngster stUl found the taste of ice cre•m de· U1btf\d on a street in China's lar1eat clty. ... . . Statistics provided by the t hree government age rrcies overseeing the canyon l'oad show 21 people have been killed on the road smce 1975 and another 185 injury accidents have occured in th al period. "ONE THIRD OF the fatal ac· cidents were the result of bead- on collisions," Boyd said, adding a four -lane divided highway might have prevented many of those deaths. He said copies or the resolu- tion stiouJd be sent to the Irvine Cily Council . the county. CalTrans officials and local representatives. Councilwoman Bellerue said she abstamed from voting on Boyd's resolution because she felt there m 1ght be other a lle rna t1ves to a four-lane highway. "l 'M VERY CONCERNED about safely on that road. but I don't want to jump into one solu- -tion." she said today. Mrs. Bellerue said tbe Laguna Lakes Task Force is Laking the canyon road into its planning consideration, "and they should be the ones coming up with the solution." Kids' Hean DUplaySet Children in Newport Beach can see their designs displayed at the city's Corona del Mar branch library on Valentine's Day. library officials say. All that's necessary is to pick up a blank valentine al the branch. 420 Marigold Ave., color it at home and-then bring it back before Feb. 14. Every cbild who participates wllJ get to see his or her masterpiece hung in the children's section, library of. fictals said. The library is open' from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. Etchings Displayed Etchings by artist ~ancy Swan an on exhibit now t.b.rOugh March 25 at the Mariners Branch of the Newport Beach Publlc Library. The library, 2005 Dover Drive. la oPeD from 10 a .m . tot p.m. Monday through Tburtda)'s and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday. • A l• OAIL!.,Ptt.OT Thul"llday, ffebfu.ty I, 1171 NATION -· 'F-rilateral Commission Has Cfuut NEW Y ORK t AP > -Ewr ~r bow a Geortta peanut fa rmer and U prof ed oulllder to Walb.l.nttoo'a powt'r came Jot to 'know lht> ln· lldera who now run Am rica'a fonisn affalra• Ht Malt with many ol !Mm when tM wu 1 mem~r of a llttle·known comm la •CU> th•t d 1crlbet ltaelt modHUy as "a prtvate~orlh .Ar:Mncan·Eurol)f'ao Japa ln.IUabve on mil· ura ot common C'Oncero · • F0 ND 0 NK RL \' IX \'EA&S q o by banhr David Rock ff'll r, th body called lbe TrllatttaJ Comml ion bu lu~ l7 wbJt.e papera on 1ub~ll Uk t>nt>r y , F.ut·W rdaUom aod waya to doubl n~ produrUoo ln AIJa. ltl membfn htp '"1Q ta that Lhll lh't 1-t enotb r mJ-annwal lunch cha~ Jimmy Cart r. new lo Waahfnitoo two )' n •to and aov mor of G~rl(la at ~ Um tM Joined the comml ion, marted tht' top rea~ or bla ad· mlnlatrataon hf'avlly with Pf'OC>f M kn w u a tnf'mbfor ot t.blJ com masslon orte r , com - misslon m ember until sho rtly before his elec- Uon in 1976, became ac· quainted wttb othe r m e mbera he was l o make ~bold names durlng bis presidency. Tre a s ury Sec retary Michael Blumenthal, Defense Sec r e tary Ha ro ld Browa, Vice President Walter Mon· ..... ,....... dale and Secretary of CARTER State Cyr us Vance, among others. United Nations Ambassador An· drew Young. an old Carter friend, also was on the commassion. CARTER'S N.('ffONAL SECURITY adviser, Zbigruew Brze2msk1, was the director of tbe ci>m· mission from 1973 through 1976. Other names on the commission may also ring a bell: Henry Ki ssinger, West Virginia Gov. John D. Rockefeller IV, Illinois Gov. James Thompson, 10 members of Congress -in au. about 250 or the most powerful government, business, labor and in· tellectual leaders in North America , Western .Europe and Japan. The commission's aims reflect Rockefeller's reasons for rounding the group in 1973. At that time, the Nixon administration strained U.S. rela- tions with Japan and Europe with a series of sud· den changes : placing quotas on certain imports, devaluing the dollar, 1 and his trip to China in 1972. Rockefe ller's idea, s ay s co mmi ss i o n s pokesm a n F r a nco is Sauzey, ·•was tha t a g ro up of i nflue ntia l t private citizens might improve the climate between Weste r n na t&ons." IN SHORT, Rockefeller convinced some of the world's most powerful in· dividuals that relations .,. W""'"9 w i t h i n t h e n o n • BRZEZINSKI communist world were in bad repair. He hoped the Trilateral Commission would provide a forum for discussing and solving Ute free world's common problems -or, as one observer puts it, "to make. the world sr.:e for Coca-Cola." In recent months. the commission has stirred bitte rness among Southwestern farmers. Some in the Texas panhandle have posted anti-commission slogans on their tractors be<:ause. as a s pokesman for the American Agriculture Movement puts it, the body "seems to be part of an urban and in· duslrial est.ablishment attitude that doesn't un· derstand the problems of the family farmer .'' TUE COMMISSION'S BUDGET is drawn from private contributions about $1 million every three years. from foundations like the Lilly Endowment Fuod and the Ford Foundation, individuals loclud- log the Rockefellers and corporate grants from Exxon and others The commissioo'6 lmpact on world affairs is tricky to measure Sauuy says tbat a few of the commlssion's re· ports made recommendations that were later adopted by world bodies. A 1973 report on the world monetary system urged the International Monetary Fund to sell some of its gold and use the proceeds to aid poorer nations to develop. That proposal was eventually implemented. A 1915 COMMl~ION report on North-South • e comomic relations helped prod the World Bank into opening the so- called "third window" to lend money to poorer Third World naUona. Bu t the commission's extraordinary • membership is its true power, according to Sa uzey. It bas no problem getting top policymakers to read its reports. ·'It makes its VA.,.CE . prestige felt. informally. ·~ We have the ear or world leaders. We don't want to have a direct . influence, but rathe r we hope to promote a percolation of ideas." he says He admits that the sharp difrerences in the Sun Drink Eclipse Celebrmed RICHLAND, Wash. <AP) -The Richland area ii getting ready for a total eclipse of the 1un later thla month and one lounge ls serving a drink that will let any customer enjoy the solar spec· tacular even lf the weather is cloudy. The Hanford House has concocted a drink for chair-borne astronomers. Made of rum, gin, sloe gin and orange Juice, lt'a called the "Total Eclipse." Tbe drtnlt might not have the immediate im· pact ot an eclipse, but the glow will conUnue long alter tbe 1un'1 bu stopped, said Hanford House manaqs: Ruas Cox. The Feb. 218 eclipse wm be the last total eclipse of tbe 1un vlsJble anywhere in the continental Ul'lit· ed States this century. ·Jl ls acbeduled to occur al approximately 8: 17 a.m. PST and Jut 2 minutes, 19 aecondl. . Weate rn "'orld th•t led lo the commiHlon' foundana 1Ull exist "But the chmal ha1 improved. God knows th r art hut1e problems between Japan and the V • but trade laauci h&vo now bffn addressed In a very different uod mor• c ndjd way than before the comm kw\" was decentralized to ctve the headquarters in J apan and France a more equal policy voice with the U.S. headQuarten located in New York. "We tend to be more piecemeal now. There is no longtr the kind ot tnteUectuaJ framework as UO· der BrzezJna~i." besald. BUT 8AUZ Y RA YR THEltE are stron& doubt.a that th('I cqmmla Ion will exl!!t beyond 1982, whtn ltt lat<>st thr ·ytar lnlluslo~ of about $1 mllhon runs o uL Tbt1re I a feellng, be says, that the comrul 11lon·a "1eneral cobeslon" suffered whtin Bntlln•kl abandoned the commission to work for thf' Carter •dmin1strMtlon THOE IS A POSSIBllJT\', be says, that the commisaloo's work may be assumed by the Allan· Uc JnsUlute tor International Affairs in Paris. Executive Ott1ces • 7812 Edinger Avo .. Hun11no1on Beach. CA 92647 Sovtttfi"' C4it•le<n•11 Rl'<?tOl'lal 0111ces 8955 VilllC'V View Sr Ovcna Pdrl\. CA ?0620 -Gt 20715 S Avalon Blvd CarsOf't CA 90746 22821 laku I O•i!~I °'' (l.81\fl For&il), (I Toro CA 92630 • 1001 E: 1mpe11a1 llwy la Habr.o CA 9063 t • •1CO l~ Beaeh Blvd , long 6f<)Ch. CA 90807 IOOlt 1095 l11t1M 811/d Tu•hn CA 92080 ~OU$1NG In 1971 Aller Brieilnaki left. the commission Al any rate, the commlsslon expects to issue Its next report thls spring on oU exporters. Later reports will include a look at trade between North and South countries, and an examination of world pToductlvlty and technological change. 235N C•1t1<1 Avo Wt1ICOv1na CAll1793 lfNOI • Ille hot water works Gu water ,.,..-. with glaea lined tankt to realtt oon'Ollon ptua hot water recovery eyatem to eeve energy and hlg~tempetature thut-oft for ~ 7911,.....· ............ 94.BS ............ 104.95 ............ 114.95 SANTA ANA kids can't knock It Kid-teated Glidden Spred Latex aeml..gloaa enamel gives you a non·yetlowlng Improved durablllty enamel finish. Reg. 15.25 10!!. keep your top In Up-top shape DuPont'a 'Rally' Ylnyt top cleaner cieena and putt protectllle coating on Vlnyt to add yeera to 119 llfet Reg. 2.29 1•• stretch your llghtlng tel2 lamp oord tn t>rown, white °' blee*. Ae-wtre and tbl old d~ lampe todeYI Reg. 11' foot 7! lasUng finish In ftylng colors Glidden'• Spred Satin latex Wall Paint ... goes on smoott'lly and leave. a long· lasting, QOOCl·IOOklng finish. 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Plue lo_ng _t!.•rdwood ha"d'•· f8814C8.Reg.l.88 411 m~s_lf>r charqp ' ..... .. .. ---, I : INSIDE > •Comics •Stocks •Television •Entertainment DAIL V Pll.Ol $2,748,13 • • 6~ Bonanza for AngelsJ Car w Acquisition Could Increase Attendance by 344,000 8 D VE N I Gll.Alltl OI •~ o.11,. '°'* IC.olf At a al1n or saoo,ooo (W'r year Rod ('Dr\'lw i1 • bar1a1n for th~ C hf orni• Mi I . 8 raain he-ck he'~ dov. nrtti bl &.ll' I ' · A <'O~t·rvaUH• Cudy hov. tbAt l'artw'is P" t>nte v. ill ~rncra~ an ud1hUoouJ S2 1 m•lhon for th l"lub 1n lt>rms O( titkt't , par king l'OO \'t•s1>1orus, proaram11 and road uttend anre OU t'a30o alonl' IN OORT, CAR•~W 1. -Qold mine No wo1ldt'r Gtntral Manager Buz11r 81avusi agre~ to Cartw'.s dt•mand for fi\•e.year. $4 mtlhon contract ~o quickly Tht• dt!al took l!» minute:, Jn the hrst four days after Care" i. trndt" rrom Mlnnf.'\Olft lo California, lht An~ •I old !>'10 i.e111'on ticket.ts 'fht•) .. ve. Ir udy to1>P d the 7 ,000 mttrk 1n total ..,~awn tick t sales, set \JnJe u club record . I.Ind th nn t .i11m1• i till two month» away 'We'N' putllnR 1n :i lot of overtime a nd ll hows no '>t~n o ( leU.mg up y •t . ·UY• Susan Weiss of tht> An&elB' lt<'kt>t dt•partm\•11t. ··1n fact., the sal1:s havc bct!n eVl'O h1ght>r In the last day cu I WO WEIS SAVS tht> Ut•kel-buying pace Is extr-emely unus uul and Carew 1:. the obvious reason. J.'orml'r President Richard Nixon may have been speaking for hun- dreds of fans when he explained his I reason for buying a pair of seaso\f iieats: "Now that the Ange11' have ob· tamed Carew. 1t 's obvious they are trying to put a winning team on the field. and l want to SUJ>PQrt them," Nlxonsaid. California ticket director Carl Gordon says he was expecting the Angels to exceed 2 -million in at- tendance ror 1979 even before th~ Carew trade, based on the team's perrormance in Jast year's pennant race. SO THE EXACT IMPACT of Carew on ticket sales can't be pin- pointed. But il 's pretty easy to estimate. -Last year on thls date California , had sold 3,52!! Sef.Son tickets. By the eod of the season they showed 6,530 season ticket holders. T hat's an Increase of 3,007 between Feb. 8 and the end of the season. As- s uming the Angels can only duplicate that feat ta ridiculously conservative assumption l, they will finish 1979 with 10,000 season ticket sales. Tack on an increase in the daily sale of individual tickets, and you get a projected attendance or 2.1 million fans this season. That estimate was given by two club officials who wis h to remain anonymous. IF THE ANGELS -R EACH that projected plateau, it will represent , . #r ~ti 1J an increase or 344,614 fans through • the Anaheim StadW-01 turns tiles.,.• That means: ! -$1.530,086.10 in additional ticket sales, based on on average price or t $4.44 per ticket . -$895,996.40 in addJtlonal con· cession sales. based on an average expenditure of $2.60 per person for food. drinks and souvenirs. Last year's per capita spending was $2.53, and the previous season was S2.ll, so a $2.60 guess for 1979 is conservative. -$172,306.99 in additional parking fees, based on one car per every three fans in attendance. -$28.717.83 in additional program sales, based on one SO-cent scorecard See ANGELS, Page 82 Messersmith 's ~ Troubles . Over? By J OHN SEV ANO Olt,_OallyPllOCSt.tff • LOS ANGELES A pioneer in the history of major leaeue baseball has returned to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Andy Messer s mith, who engineered and led the free - agent revolution in baseball in 1975. rejoined his former team- mates after signing ,.a two-year contract Wednesday morQing at Dodger Stadium. Terms of the pact were oot revealed. "IT'S NICE TO BE employed again." said Messersmith. who •was released in November by the New York Yankees. "It's great to be back," con- tinued the 32-year-old Corona del Mar resident. "The Dodgers have the finest organization in baseball. There's no com- parison." Messers mith's r eunion with his former employers answered some questions and brought up others, principally whether the right-hander would be able to re-- discover the form which pro- duced a 53.JO record in his three • seasons with the club. Yankees where he separated his shoulder duMng spring training. He returned .in July but was used sparingly the rest of the season. "I have been working out at my home in Corona del Mar with a fri e nd ." s aid Messersmith. who fashioned a 3.64 ERA and \6· 18 record dur- ing his three-year exodus. "l feel good. The last two years have-been terrible ror me and the teams l 've played with." Messersmith said that he had been in contact with many clubs since his release but that. the Dodgers were his No. 1 choice. "I really enjoyed the guys when I was here," he said. ··1 really didn't knowhow much until I left." MESSERSMITH TRIED out for the club two weeks ago under the watchful eyes or general manager Al C ampani s. pitching coach Keo Adams, Kon Perranoskt and Dodger scout. Ben Wade Unanimously, they d ecided he was s tilJ maJor league material. Followi"g the Bouncing Ball SINCE IUS TURBULENT de- parture from the Dodgers in 1975, Messersmith has been beset with injuries. He suffered arm problems in July of 1977 a nd spent his last three months with the Atlanta Braves on the disabled list. After undergoing surgery on his right elbow, he was sold to ~e New York "He was very impressive dur- ing the workout." said Cam- panis. "The shoulder separaUon he incurred is one or those things that hurts immediately but there are no after effects. All it needs ts time to strengthen." Cindy Young c center l of University High goes after the ball as teammate Bunny Freud calls out instructions from the right during a field hockey game Wednesday. An unidentified Corona del Mar girl at the left moves in lo defend. University won the Sea View League game, 5-0. The Dodgers are hoping Messersmith will be able to fill the void left in the pitching rota- tion since the departure of Tom- m y John to the Yankees this past summer. Utah State Invades UC Irvine By ERNIE CASTILLO Of IN O•llY f'llol SU.ti Tim Tift hopes the difference of playing in Logan, Utah and at Crawford Hall is worth at least a dozen points for UC Irvine's basketball team The Anteaters. who lost to Utah State. 65·54, on the road Saturday, host the same Aggies tonight (7:30 1 with the memory of still another well-played set- back fresh in their mind!> "WE KNOW WHERE WE fell s hort up there and should be able to make the necessary ad- justments easier than if we were to play them two or three weeks from now." sa.ys Tift. "I 'm confident that we can make the adjustments and beat them in our gym." In Saturday's game against the high-scoring Aggies . UCI jumped out to a <luick 12-4 lead , fell behind 57-42 and made one final run that pared the deficit to 59-54 with t -wo minutes remain- ing. Utah Stale then went into its · four comer offense to seal the victory. UTAH STATE COACH Dutch Belnap certainly won't be taking the Anteaters lightly. Though the Aggies lead the PCAA with a 7-2 record. they are 1-2 on lhe road. UCI, meanwhile. has been playing good basketball recently and won 'its first conference game of the season last Thurs· day at San Jose State. The same Spartans sandwtched the defeat between home upsets over Utah State and CaJ Stale Fullerton. A potent and balanced offense has rocketed \Jtah State to the top. The Aggies are shooting .516 as a team in PCAA play, averaging 79.e points an outing and feature two of the con- ference's top four scorers. DEAN HUNGER. e 0-8 Junior rorward·center, ls second on the Sff ANTEATEllf. P••e m Neumann Keeps Pirates on Top By JOHN SEVANO Of IM D•llY P'llot SIAlll Consistency. No matter what the sport. it's something every athlete tries to achieve sistency prevailed as Neumann led a second baJf surge than enabled the Pirates to win a come-from-behind 72-62 decision over visiting Mt. San Antonio in a South Coast Conference basketball contesL Neumann scored lS of his 17 points in the pivotal second half, tutting a six of six from the floor in the process. also contributed 10 assists), and Steve Timmons grabbed 10 rebounds although he s pent much of the second half on the bench with four fouls. · TU..E PIRATES n eeded all their performances to offset a horrendous 10 of 36 128 percent l s howing from the floor Lll the first half. It was amating, considering the display. that Coast found itself down only 29-ZT at the half. Orange Coast College forward Pete Neumann is a perfect model or the art. Game in and game out he gives the same unyielding performance, always adds 100 percent and uncannily finishes with the same totals. He ls neither flashy nor spec- facular, and, us ually more often than not, his showings go unnoticed. "Neumann did just a s uper job for us tonight," praised his coach, Tandy Gillis. ''He screened off the boards well and got some points when we needed it." Of course Neumann wasn't without SUP· port as the Dynamic Duo of Ray Orgill and Paul Akin added 13 and 12 points <Orgill Capitalizing on their fortunes. the Pirates took command in the second half scoring 12 or the first 16 points to build a See COAST, Pal(e BZ WEDNESDAY NIGHT, though, con- Dantley the Difference Lakers Now One Game Behind Seattle OAKLAND <AP) -There's no doubt that Adrian Dantley is back at (ull strength. Just ask the Golden Slate Warriors .• ·'They almosl ran us out or the game in the first quarter," Norm Nixon of the Los Angeles Lakers admitted after Wednes· day n ight's 106·104 National Basketball Ass n. victory over the WarHors. DANTLEV MADE SUllE they didn't. The Lakers' 6·foot-S forward scored his team 's first 11 points and had 15 in the quarter which ended with Golden State ahead 34-25. Nixon and center Kareem Ab· dul-Jabbar carried most or the scoring load the rest of the way. but Dantley made the game· winning shot with six seconds re· mainlng, grabbing an off enslve rebound after a missed shot by Jamaal Wilkes and scoring from underneath. • "I Just. worried about getting position to that situaUon," said Dantrey, who totaled 23 points and totaled nine rebounds in his ·31 minutes of playing lime. knee if\.lury, and he declared af- terward, ·•t feel at full strength again now." . With Dantley back, guard Nix· on believes, "We could be the best team in the league. But we've got to adjust to his game on offense." Nixon scored 27 points and Jab bar had 26 berore fouling out with 35 seconds re maining. The victor ', the Lakers' fourth straight, moved them to within one game of leading Seat- tle in the Pacific Division. The Super sonics Jos t to Boston Wednesday. THE WARRIORS, in last place lO'h games behind SeatUe, have dropped 10 or their 13 de· clsions. They haven't beaten lbe Lakers in their last elg~ tries, Anderson Honored Southern California College guard Paul Anderson is the win· ne r of the Miller Southern Calt/omia basketball player of the week award. going back almost two years. Phil Smith, the game's lead- l n g scorer with 31 points Wednesday rught, noted that all three games with the Lakers this season have been close. "I guess that 's nice for some people to talk about. but as far as I'm concerned, the only thjng that matters Is the wins and losses." he said. Coach Al Attles said. ''l'm very pleased with the way we played, but it was a matter of one mistake here, one mistake there." And also a matter of missed free throws. The Warriors out- re bounded Los Angeles a nd made five more field goals, but they were 12 or 21 from the rour line compared to the Lakers' 2' or 28. LetA,...,llt61 Oentl"V Wll•"~ AllOul JMlf' Hll(llOll Nixon e.on. rord ltotllt<ll Trio C••••• I• II Ip • s s 1) ...... ,, ,_, ,. 0 0-0 0 •._II t7 1 H 4 I 't 4 I Hf I 0-4 ) o H 0 Gel~ St.W lttO .... ~ .. S-t P'arhh Lucas \mitt> A~r11a111y oNtllt• wm••m' R•Y CooPt• .. It .. j 0 I 10 l .... ..... '' S O'f 10 u N 31 S M 6 .. , . l M ' t °'° • 0 .., 1 "Tommy John is a g reat pitcher and I don't look al 1t hke stepping m to do his JOb , ·· said Messersmith. ·Tm just going to do my Job. although we're going lo miss a pitcher Hke Tommy." CA MPANIS CLEARED any 'lpeculat1on as to the use of Messersmith when he declared the Dod1ters' intention was to use him as a starter. ·'I 've talke d to Tom m y Lasorda end he's fully aware of the situation." said Campanis. "We had the radar gun on him the other day and he was throw· 1ng 84 miles per hour. That's CK· See ANDY, Page 82 A NJGHr EARLIER. he went 43 minutes ln a victory over San Antonio. Anderson, who attended Corona del Mar High, scored 114 points ln four vlctorles last week, ahot 82 percent from the field, 88 percent from the free throw llne, bed 21 ualata and 18 reboundl. Toi al~ 41,..,,10. TOUll\ 44It11104 S<_.., ... neot Lo•·~ " " ti '2-10. ""'~· BACK IN THE FOLD -Corona del Mar resident Andy MesaersmJlh <right> amd Dodgers vice president Al Campanis display Messcrsm\th's jersey during a press conference Wednesday. Wednesday nl1ht'1 1ame wu his 12th since recovert.n1 from a GotC1111 Stal• J4 11 " 11 104 Tolel ~· \.Oft AllOltlfl 18, Ooldeft Slille U l"O\llH OU\ Abellll.Je!M)olr Cl•k.,-\I. Tecllnl(111 '°"''Wllk-,ILo••llOt .. 11 •tt~Ntance IH31 . _,. --- ' • 82 DAILY PlLOT f huraday, Fee»ruaty 9, 1179 ' A C•o1ute Report From lho Workt of Spon1 Flor . to Raid u c dMadd H ad Coa h n t'rom AP Dt&pat.-i.ea OAKLAND 1 he Oakland RaJd ,... •.u:re s t''(pt\'ted to nn tJwir hod coartuni varancy lo ·•· du). ~Ith aasLM.ant coac:h Tom Flo~ ranklnH _.Ii Uw leldina candidate for (bl.' )Oh J ohn Muddt>n 42 rc:-Ured J;an 4 after comp•bna it \O\J 32 7 l"t'\.'Ord o' 1•r tu 11C'af>on "" h •.id coacl) 1 he team w&'\ ~ 7 •11 Uw l971h,t-ai.on Flore . u. 1~ " formtr Ha.1dui. uu'4rtf'rb11('k who h•:i twt·n an ,, 11 .. tant <'ou<·h ~Ith th • team 'lllH't' 19 1.:? Olhl.'r mt•n tnlt'r\ ll'IA t•d for lht' Job b) Al 0 '' u,, 111.i11.1.im1t gen~tw partn r uf tht> H o1d~r... 1nc:-Iuded u:t lstant 1:<1acht.·~ Rud Car .. on ot Los Ang(llts itod ft ay Pt-rklns of Sun Die~o Flore~. whl} ha!> be~n with the Raiders (or lJ > t-ars. was an Oakland quurterb:iek from 1960 to 1966 and sUU r. nks nl' th\•1r No. 3 passer behind Keo Stabler und Duryl Lamomci with 11,635 arlous yards and 92 touchdowns After two ~eabons each with the Buffalo Bllls and the Kansas City Chiefs and a year at his alma mater. University of Pacific, he returned to Oakland in 1972 as coach of the receivers. a Job he held under Madden untH Madden rellred at the end of lilsl season ~----QMote uf flt# Day------. Pepperdine basketball coach Gary Colson, after announcing he will quit al the end of the: season: "I a m not bei ng press ured by anyone to hang it up. 1 have been coaching 23 straight years and J just want to see if I cen live without it.'' McA._'• 37 Pef•t• Not EaoMfllt Although Bob McAdoo scored 37 points, It m wasn 't enough as Spencer Haywood le. d a ba lanced New Orleans attack with 26 as the Jaz:a defeated the New York Knicks, 125·123, in · overtime Wednesday in a National Basketball Assn. game . . . Chris Ford scored 31 points, including 20 in the second half, to spark the tsoston t:etucs to a 107-100 victory over the Seattle SuperSonlcs . . . Julius Ervln11: collected 37 . points and Darryl Dawkins a career· high 25 as the Phlladelphia 76ers held orr the Detroit Pistons to post a 114-103 win ... Rookie Winford Boynes scored 10 points in the fourth quarter to give the New J ersey Nets a 90·84 win over the Indiana Pacers ... F.lvtn Hayes sparked the Was hington Bullets to a 96 -90 triumph over the Milwaukee Bucks wi th 33 points . . Otis Birdsong scored 30 points to lead Kansas City to a 124·108 win over the Atlanta Hawks. It Muooo was the Kings' ninth st raight home vic- tory . . . George Genin scored 20 of his 28 points iti the third quarter to lead the San Antonio Spurs to a 126-lll vie· tory over the San Diego Clippers . . . Dan lssel scored 25 points to help Denver give new Coach Doll.Ille Walsh a vic- tory In his first borne game as the Nuggets scored a 120·105 win over Cleveland. Troubled Boston Celtics forward Marvin Barnes was waived by the team. making him available t.o other clubs for the price of $1,000 ... The New Jersey Nets traded guards Eric Money and Al Skinner to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for center Harvey Catchings, guard Ralph Simpson and future considerations ... Reserve forward Bob Bigelow of San Diegq announced tha t he is re· I ir ing from the game for personal reasons c.o&on Qui a 11 at Pepperdlne Gary Colson, Pepperdine University basket· m ball coach for the past 11 years. announced Wedne!)day that he will retire at the end of this season ... Wayne Yates, who a season ago boasted h\S team wlis ··a year away rom the NCAA," has quJt as coach of the Me mphts State basketball team And Coach Dave Benaderet, whose Loyola University basketball team has won just f\)ur of 20 games this season, also resigned Wednesday ... All-American Larry Bird's 33 points against Drake moved him into 10\b place among all-time NCAA major college scorers with 2,513 career points. 11p Fro.a DMrr Help• Barriagten A Francoise Durr tip helped JWJe Bar· • rin11;ton upset Betsy Nagelsen, 6-2. 6·4 in the ~~\ second round of a women ·s professional tennis ~ ~· tournament In Seattle. Harrington used a lob liberally to dispose of tier foe. Durr, meanwhile, lost a 3·6, 6-3. 6-2 decision to Marita Redondo, while Kerry Reid turned back Barbara Potter 6·4, 6·4. Wendy Turnbull out- lasted Sharon Wals h, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6. VlrglnJa Rudel beat Maria Fernandez 6·4. 6·4 and No. 1 seed Chris Evert dis· posed of Peanut Louie 6-l , 6·0 in 37 minutes. No. 2 seed Ann Klyomur a eummated Ku&a Gerulaltls 6·4, 6·2. Also. Newport Beach's Renee Rlchtrrds defeated LesUe Hant 6-3, 6-'4 ; Sherry Acker downed Sandy Stap 6-1, 6-1: Betty S&ove dumped Usa Doherty 6-3, 6-2 ; and Jeanne Duvall ousted Rosie Casals 3~. 6-4, ff'..4. Te~.,f•lo•, Radio TV: Horse Racing -Today at Santa Anita, 7:30 p.m .• Channel52. RAIJIO: Basketball -Athletes in Action at East Ten- nessee Slate, 4:30 p.m .. KYMS U06 FM ); San Jose State at Cal State Fullerton, 7: 30 p.m .• KWRN ( 1370); Long Beach State at Fresno State, 7: 35 p. m .• KFOX (93.5 FM L INSURANCE MOWIH MIWPOITIUCH AUTO -NOMI IJl'l-IUllMISS 2700 W. C ... Hwy. WteJIO .................... 645-8220 FOf' qulac '"ults'-'~•• r.our wHs for tM DNt· ng CIHtUltd HI of tlM Delly Pttot. 642-.5671 I ,,,... P9flf! aJ COAST ..• ~ 31l 33 ~vimtagt-The MounU •s countered with two bHkets to c lost-the gap. but then Neumano took control ·rhc 6 G S<>phornore proceeded to S<·ON'd 12 ol his teum 's next 2! points. thwarting any comeback try by the Mounties and «lving th1• Ptrntu an insurmountable 61 49 l,•ud with eight minutes re· m11nang "Every .cumc t a must for us now." elCJ)fouwd Neumunn. who ('Urtently ranks eighth in the South Coast scortoa d erby with a U 3 averu1cc "They've a ll been toujfh up to now and they'll all l'OntinlW being tough." THE WIN IMPROVED the Pirates' rt><·ord to 6·1 in con· fcreoce pl.iy I 19·4 overall) and moved them 1 "2 games in front l)( Idle ,.~ullerton in the stand· mg~ "There's a lot of pressure on us to wm." added the E stancia Higb grad who finished the night 7 of 10 from the noor with IJve re bounds <all in the sec'Snd half l. "If we can keep on win- ning we won't have to worry about what the other teams do. "As for my consistency? Well . It's nice. but every once In awhile you like to have a big game. Jt just looks good," he said with a smile. Neumann got his big game Wednesday night. .1111.b11"'"'-'"' t• It '" l 0 • Or•...-CM" 1111 Hawkin• Lebron ICnlQlll HUllQ'9<1<Pr Loll on ll•nl" Ftrnender TOl•I• ' J 1 ' I • • Jn • I 13 > 0 • 0 0 0 11 a tZ Orolll Gtrrllv Tl""'"on• llelf Vtll HOfl'I Wltfl "'kin Prke ..... "'.""' M<CO<mk k Totals Hafltlme· Mt. San Antol'llo. 1'•11. ,, ft t• s l 13 0 0 0 ' 1 • 0 1 , 1 1 • 3 1 • • 0 12 ' 0 1 1 l 11 4 , 10 28 ,. 11 Tout ,,,.,,,. Mt. S.n AmoNcl ''· o.-.... oe COHI "· "°"'"°"'' TlmmOM IOr~COHll. * * * SOUTH COAST CO..l'IUll!NC• LHe.,. Owf'•ll w l w l Oranq• Coast • 1 19 • Fullt11on • 1 '' • ( Mrllc>\ 3 14 10 Ml S•n Antonio l IS 11 !Hin Olf'go Mes. 3 • u 10 \dnt• AN l I~ I) Gro•i\monl 1 II 17 WMn"4•y's S<•••• Oranqe (Oa\I n. Ml S..n ... ,,,o,,io 61 Cerr11os 18. S<ln141An•11 Sen O,.oo M~WJ 9S. Croomont oO Ex-USC Star Baker Dies S ACRAMENTO CAP > Johnny Baker, a guard whose last·second 35-yard field goal gave Southern California a 16·14 come·from-behind victory over Notre Dame in 1931 . has died of c:rncer. He was 72. Baker kicked his decisive field goal to wipe out the last vestige of Notre Dame 's 14·0 lead, snap the Fighting lrish's 26-game un· beaten streak and help raise the prestige of West Coast football. Southe rn Cal fans cite the game as the most dramatic of the Tro· Jans' many come-from-behind victories against Notre Dame. most recently a 27-25 t hriller at PETE NEUMANN f'l"OMPafl#BJ ANDY ••• cellent for this time of year." Don Sutton. the dean of the Dodger sta!C, praised the ac- quisition. "He's just one more guy wbo knows how to win," be said. "He 's the kind of guy that will hang hls guts out there for you. lje has a good attitude and it's ~ood to have hlm back. l know he 'II make me better " BY CAM P ANIS' own ad- mission, Messersmith 's return was an unusual recontract sign. Ing. especially in light of prior dealings with the club. H he bad the choice, would Messersmith have done things differenUy concerning bis free: agency·? "Well, I believed in what I did as for playing out the op.tion." he s aid, choosing his words careful- ly. "I helped with the players' rights. I just wished 1 had signed again with the Dodgers at the time ." Messersmith got his wish- only it was three years in the mak- ing. From Page BJ ANGELS ••• program for each six fans in at- tendance. On lop of that. the Angels re- ceive a 20 percent cul of their road attendance. IN 'nlE PAST TWO seasons Angels' road attendance has in· creased an average of 136,291 per year. Assuming that in· crease is realized again in 1979 c again a ridiculous assu~pUon. since Carew·s presence will cer· tainly add morel. the Angels' cut i~ an additfonal $121.026.40 a bov~·la.st year 's talce Adp'them all together and you get $2,748. 133.60 flowing into the Angels' coffers in 1979. That's $2. 7 million more than last year. And since Carew is obviously respoMible for most of it. it's easy to see why a salary of BASK=:TBALL /BASEBALL Irish Bold On Tripucka Keys Victory From AP Diapatcbes RALEIGH. N.C. Kelly 'J'npucka <'Blmly sank two clutch tree throws with s ix seconds le ft to lead too·ranked Notre Dame to a 53·52 basketball vic- tory over North CaroUna State Wednes· day night. Hawkeye Whitney scored a bucket for N.C. Slate with three seconds remain- ing. but Notre Dame let the clock expire to boost its season record t.o 17·2 and hand the Wolfpac k its first non· conference loss at home In 11 years N .C. State la st d rol11)ed a non· conference decision to Georgia ln 1968 The Fighting Iris h . paced by Tripucka's PQints . led by as m any as nine points in the second half Kenny Mathews kept N.C. St~te within striking distance with four baskets to narrow the Wolfpa&·s de fi cit to 47·46 with 8 ·26to go Former Marina High star Rich Branning 'had six points for the Irish. Nortlt CaroU"a.. 76-87 C HAPEL HILL. N.C. -Al Wood scored 23 points to lead sixth-ranked North Carolina to a 76·67 over Maryland Wednesday night. Teammate Mike O'Koren added 19 as the Tar Heels extended their conference record to 7·2. and 17-4 overaU. wl'lile Maryland dropped to 3·5 and 14-8 North Carolina led most of the game. but never by more than eight polnts until the final minute of play w he n North Carolina iced the game behind clutch free throw shooting. The game was tied nine times. Karolyn Rose Mourns Giles PHILADELPHIA <AP> -Karolyn Rose. wife of the Philade lphia Phillies' Pete Rose. went to Cincin· nati this week to visit the other man in her life -former National League president Warren Giles. She ..,..as able to visit the 82·year- old Giles Tuesday. a day before the man she called "my buddy . my sidekick," died at Cincinnati's Christ Hospital. Giles· son. Bill, executive vice president of the Pttillies. was at his father 's bedside as the elder Giles lay in a coma, dying of cancer "The love Bill bas for his father is j ust, Just unbearable." Mrs. Rose said after her VlSJl ... Jt ·s so sad to see a man stand there day and night by bis father's side. What a beautifCd love." Of her dying friend. Mrs. Rose said. "He reminds me of Fred Hutchinson (former Cincinnati Reds manager > when he had cancer He never acted like it hurt him . l went ln today and it just choked me up to see him like that . Last time we talked. l told him, ·c ·mon partner. you've got to get out of here You and I have to go to spnng tram· Ing. We'll go discoing. We'll ny down at different times . I '11 meet you at the airport so nobody will know f'm your girlfriend." "He said. ·1 love you. ~~rolyn.' I said.· floveyou too. Warren .. College llAlt •fST l•V•rlll>ll (al, ... ,. .. O< r '"""'•I Mi "°""'"" P•U•r Ml (l•f .. ,,_ M4l("1 If /4/UW p_, If'( &1 l"w" • n..r• "' M~rv <ott'Cl'I •• ("'"tfAtW"~ •? '' Mar1r"''•' Puo.t ~ .. l>o<tf-~I U Ort90f1lk~110 RVU .. tw•ll 11 MIOWfST 8 ow1lfl0 c;,..,,. •\ IC•Af '!11•1•" C•nlrof M1tll 100 A.ill 'il•t• 1' (In< lnNll 11 O•vton I• r Mi<,,_., w M1ct110<1n '• I( t n\ .. , Stall' \I N•t><-•u • 4t °"'" U 75. Miom1 Ol>to flO O• l•llO-14. OlllAN>m• Sllol•., Or t i Pat>trt• • 0-YI'• U •oieoou N 1111no•\44> SOUTH •00•1 .......... .,, \• ,,,,.,.,. ... " A rl•n~\Sln!• 11, NW Lo~1<1on•&O r•nteruorv 110 C.to•Q••SO" (;•o w~v ... >ei1on m N,w. &l C.l'O•Olf 7• ,-..,,..,,. M ... t'".:ttt)tlf'll't , .. """'''rt"",,,, Nolr" o...,,.. )l N Ctrnl•n" \I \1 P1(hmond t01 \l~t_,,., 1111 "*"""'",..., 1l AutM.rn Ii? ll•noer·11<11tt lol ic...,1uc•v ~ V• '"""'""' ..... "''" E c .. rOI•"" .. toll lll•Oln•• Tech OI Old Dom1mon U EAST 0.l•w•"' "' 8u0~11 Pl>O \now C,..o•(lt40Wf". 0 C 61. SI PolP' ' N J~ Ion• M, Hohl Ct Ch\ u ,_,.., H•"""hl'" 17 Vf'rmont 10 P•l"t>urQhM,<;t Fr .. n<l\PA \1 Pro••""1>cl'll LOn<l 1•1•"'1 It "ivre(uY II s CA•01•N M ~~~~;'.::t: .. ~~ .. ·!c,., "'""' W Vlrq'"'" <17 DU<I~""~ U Junior College SOUTH COAST ~F£ltENCE Orar1~ Co.t•I 11 Ml Sen An10,,10 ., C"'r"tO'\ ,,_ ~ .. Ana 1J ... " 0-,,.,. .... •) C.•<W'-1 00 MIHIC>ff CONllE1t£HCE S..octl•IWIO 114. ~1hWl'\l•rn •S '>dn 8 trn<trdl"O llO ll•vers•ch! 1• 1 P it to,,_ 11 t. Clltlf•• '• S..n 0-CC•I. C1trus111 High School ANGl!l.USLl!AOUE Mtltr 0.1 ... Se"'11e S6 81\1100 Motl190fl'lli''• ... 8111100 Amel SS PIU\ x ... SI, Paul ~ fol' C&NTUllY Ll!AOU£ Tu1Un ~. c.,,_ 51 VIiie P-10 El ~ 't Fool?llll ... $M1t• AM Vtll~y •J 1011 5.tnla Aflll Sot. OroflQe <16 £MPlllE \.l!AGUf O<ttn vi.-s1, L.,,,, ... I( ... -.. 14. C'to<•" 11 LO\Al-U IC•ttll~~ Fll£EWAV LEAGUI! A,.,..,..,,.. S\, W~\l,.rn •\ T rov IC> Buen.. P"'" •1 '>•vanM 11 ~ll<UI ~unn_. H h'\ l1 ':..addt..~• '\) GA•OENGltOVF LE•GUE 80".-Gr~ •t. P1tf'1f•c111 n C"''°"'" (,,.~ '' ~4'nt1.!oo '' lo• Am•QO'l 17 lA O..•nl• \\ OPANOE L£AGUf FI OOUdO.. 11••11 )<I E~rMVa n VJ'l•nc• .. ~' Sonor~ ll'I. Full•rton bO LOWC'll \~ l • Hotbr" SO Sl:A VIEW LIEACUt Co\1•~4' CcYOnedel M•r•! El f Of'O ... lrvt""U Eil<1n<•• 4 . UnfY<'n•tv" $0UTHCOA:'1LEAGUE M•UIO•.Vwlo'1 L_8,.A<llU O•n•Hlll,71. s.tnClflmenl~ •& C•CH•t....0 Velr.y 10. L"9Uf\4I """ S1 SUNHT LEAOUe £Cllson a. __. HertlO< ,. •1 oil M•r•n••• F-ount••n v.11,,., •\ Hut1tlncnon ~M"" ~ "'~''"''"''~' '3 JC Golf O•-W.11 Ht, Cffrlles •u (;o104tn ~t '\<Ot'1f"lq ~'"'~"' • 1 I T"°r-""''" ill' Ma<'~ 11 M,...,.,, /rf W"•f•""Mflt (ttrrttO'\ '\CDr'nq A11~un 1• L ,,,.,,,, 11 Ptrl \ ~. J&"°"'"" 81 0ouul4\\ ,,. Or.tftqe Cont>". Col-West •0. fl!l lf&H1t1 ....... 54'.tehfl I 0,.nQP '°"'' JuPll I~ l>•v•n 11 Ao'-"'m Al L"'"C'fl'f '•· M iiier IO <•nldfl" Wt.,, ~rP(jf-r ;,• 11 ~ell-11 9,.,.,. U . Tflornl'\111 I\. $800,000 is a steal. theendofthe l on. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==:;::========================::::_~~~~~~~~~ Baker remained in athletics ~Vfrll a fter leaving Souther al, reUr· ing as athletic direc;tor a t Sacramento State in 1967 after holding lhe job for 10 years. He also was the school's football coach. fi'roaPageBJ ANTEATERS PCAA scoring list at 18.1 with Keith McDonald, a 6-3 senior guard, fourth at 17.2. UCJ's Steve McGuire ranks sixth with a 15.6 average but the Anteaters as a team are averag· ing just 60.1 points on the year. Defensively. UCI ranks second (66.6 ). McGulr• Oolcl<'n JON\ (OnV•" AoOqr.- flrtmol'IO l\rown 8Hft 8•11 Jurk Mtduro SulJlvtn J~rnn T<11ll" UC tltVffU! SC01t1NO • .. ft ,., 1' 113 SI Jn ti IOI n ta 1' .. " 160 i• ... n '°' ,. .tO " 10) ,. lO ,. ,. ,, " , 118 " • ' 1 , , s " .. ,, .. ., • a o ' • 1 ~ 1 u • 1 • •n 1v "'' Motorcraft Battery GN SERIES 36 MONTHS 6 volt 12 vott 259~ 30~~ eitcnange exctranQe CN1 0 .Q Signal Flasher For 2 prong sockets most U.S. cars llgtlttrucks NO. Sf552 . Fram 22 FC 24C 24F 29NF Oil Filter PHSA, PH13, PH16, PH25, ~30.PH43 P. Transmission Oil Whe ndldvou1ast 69 cneck transmission C Oii ievei? NOW #341or•347 ONLY Qt. MOP EX voltage Reaulator fOrVW F<>r generator eQulppeo vet11c1es. NOW ONLY 8'~ Your tnOICJ3 NOW ONLY MACHINE SHOP SERVICE AVAILABLE South Coast Auto. Supply 688 West Baker (at Bristol }, (714) 545-8408 United Auto Parts 2902 W. Coast HiQhwav. (714) 646 -1647 Mo\I lftrts open 1day'1 wee~·call the loctlhon near you lor l!Utl houn. ~.1 ....... , 1.m·••• '•••••I"'"•• h••t . .. BASKETBALL Ed. on Jolts Tars; Yikes Win NC"\\ J)(lcl llacbor ·a hosw of upt ur1n1 lbt Sun t Lt•:aJU\' baa.kf'tbull t'hamp1on hJp sulrer~ • Hf'\ t·n· JOit Wt•1Jnt•11dtty niaht whtn Ed1<1on tturh ,·aplurt'(J a \6 34 th>ubh.• ov .. rt1me dt>cl11on on l ht.• 10"1'1 "t'OUtt utra • ion £at'h team h1l a pair of free throwis \n the (Ir t l'Xlra ,.on, tht'n Edbon 'a Lar ry llr\t modt• two 1n lhe second overtime and Nt•Yt port 11 Hrlun l<'rc min lied It with two from the rhJrlty hnt• * * * l!tfhefl IMI •• " eC•f\tf"n•ru I 0 .. .,,,, J 80-11 In tttlwr ~unt'll'l Lt•agu • action, Manne's Vt· ldnr.<1 had n b1a fourth Qutrtntotoppleho t Fountain Vulh•). tll 45 ~nd l\unttn .. ton Be1Hh ddf'aH•d \\ t l 111111 ... tc•r. ~ l 13 Donn Uowc•n mad the winnln11 s hot unde r the ti 'tkl'l w1lh ll•N than a minute to ao and Newport couh1n't l'Omt' bock thl:J lime as lht: Chargers ran out tht• dot·k • O•vlt 1 I ....... 0 1 Mt Ooll•ld 1 0 Tol•I\ .. • ,,...,...." ...... ,,., .. " ~• \\PO"T's 1.0~' knockt'd thf' Tt•r• out of 1t rui..• vl."•' \14,1 m the sun.tl l.(<aJl1W&laodlnRllJ1nd 11u1 I ht•111 11 .:anw hMk uf M<trlnA I he• 1 ..r twld tht> It itd m lhf' f1 rtt half, t.,-ic•n frll ht•h1111I oillll h.ul tn c-atch Ill' an lh1• fln1I "tanut f''mmt1un V illt•y bottled lhe Marina Vikings on 1•v1•n IN m ... for thr"" pc.-rlods before wllllng in the hmil from•• f-1urlna held 1t 33 31 edge going Into th•• fourth Pt·• •od. lht>n took command wltb fre- qut•nt h 11>b h> !ht• r1,•t• throw line , ..... -tlr""'•" Cald•tll Ooodv llM~\I Sl• .. I fol•I\ • 0 J • 1 0 J 0 1 0 1 0 I) 4 Wuh .1 m1n1111• tn plM\ 1n ri•)!ulauon the-i.ron• \\,1 .. 111·J a111f '\n~fJu11 h .1cl lht• hull. v.orktng for tr11 1111 • .I 'hot \\1th tht• l'l111'1o, run do"'n to !ht> f1ru1I "''''!"''' .1 'hot att~mpt I .11h-il ind th~ l(Amt• v. r.nl cntu tt\ 1•1 t11111• M RlNI\ HIT 14 of 1t:; 28 points in the fourth 1H•11111t tit thf' lint• lo wm going away W1• "'·•>•·d In j mun to man defense and our kid:. •·11t·rt('ff tht'm t·lve!. 1n the fourth Quarter ." M J nn.1 ('oul·h Sll'Vt> l>o1X>v 1ch bald. k .... IJY~'1tn Edl\011 S t 13 S l 4 Ht,.port t I I • 1 1 TOl•I touh ~.WPOf1 ... ~ 1S £dhon 11 Fouled oul Fretm•n IHt woort M•fbOr I Ir \\ '' \ c· \ T .irul muu.,,• affo1r tn lht• l1r.,t Jam t:ldr1d1it~"· 13 points paced Huntington H1·•H h with l'wrn· A\ Jla Rrubbmg ll rebounds for the• 01lt'r., H-""'8ftkatl>IWI ,, '" } 0 WOOff'f\ An•• Cil•nn P~IMIH Elllrt~ , __ • I I 0 Mesa Shocks Sea Kings Ocea11 Vieiv, Estancia, MD Roll On C'o,ta Mt•,,1 kl}Ot'kN1 l 'orona dC'I 1\1 ,tr tv.11 ~Jmt•' olf thl' p.it't' Ill thl• !-wJ V1t•'>' Lt a~UP with an llJIM!l Hi 4~ 'H tory and 0l'l•an \ 1t•w mon•<l into ;.1 f1r \t pl11C'e tll' tn the l·'mp1n· L1·ague w1lh a 51 49 \\.Jn ovrr Loan> lo h1~hl1~ht Orangl' Coa::.t art.>a prep basket ball at'tion Wt'dnt•,tlay night. In oth<'r gamt•i. in thi> Sea View l.Ra,C:u<·. Estancia 's lt•udmg EaJ.?ICs gamed a btt of breathing room with a 48·41 triumph over University a nd E l T oro's Chargers remained an conten· ' t1on for a playoff berth with a 64-62 wm O\Cr In me • MATER DEl 'S Monarchs held onto a ue for first 1n the An,t?elus League v.1th a 68 56 win uver host Sen 1te and 1 n the South Coast c1rcu11, l>ana Hill<; W<1n u low-scomw :!I 16 lriumµh O\.C'r ~an Cll'nwntl' and La~una ih'a l h drnpp1.<I .J 91 !'12 ilt•t1s1on to M 1 ... ~wn \ 11·.111 "I don't know what hap- pt•nl'd, .. Co.,ta ~h·::.a Coach Joe n om1nar !.:wJ. "Chm> Beasley ~tolt' lht.• bull w 1th 44 second::. le ft and Corona drl Mar in the lead. 4:i·44. We ran the t•l(lck down to five ~<'cond~ <1nct Steve Lux hit an J8·fooler from the left side for the winnm,I? bac;k<'t " Costa MC'sa trailed by nine points at one point in thc final quartC'r but came back strnng at the firush. then put a (ull C'CIUrt press on the Sea Kings in thP wamni? seconds to force a shot frt>m 41) reet at lht' bun<·r •:STANC'IA ·s VICTOR v may hJve been a Co!>tly une Ton)( Cotmp 1nJurt>d an unkle and could be out for two to three \\eeks. Tim Kroh nfcldt missed the game with a neck tnJury but may return Friday agamst El Toro Brian Yamaml had e ight steals. Danny Maddock hit nine or 10 free throw attempts and Steve Van Horn was seven for 12 from the floor for the Eagles. Irvine's Vaqueros came close· to puHing anothe r upset. The score with El Toro was tied al 62 late •n the game but the Chargers came roar ing back to score and grab the decision. Ron Holmes had 30 points for the vie· tors while Jim Rudv had 22 for the Vaqueros. OCEAN VIEW held a two point lead going into the·'courth quarter and went to a passing game and a patient defense. As a n•suJl, each team scored only two points in the final period. Ocean View hit a free throw to gain a threP-pomt edge a nd added another late in the game for the marginofdifference. Wayne Carlander hit 22 points for the Seahawks and Tom An· tonopoulos d id an outstanding job on the boards Mater Dei scored 12 points al the free throw line in the final quarter lo break open a tight game that saw the Monarchs enter the final period with a two- pointedge Gauchos Run Wild Saddleback Romps, 114-65 T hey us(>d cv<'rybody but the cheerlt".:1dt•1., nnd might have JO· scrted them 1f they had cleared ehg1bililv WPdn1•Mlay night as CO:.il'h Bill Mulligan's Sad cl I e b a <: k C 1> l I 1· g t· G a u c hos r o m p "' d o v t• r v 1 s i t i n g Southwc~ll'rn College, 114·65, in M 1sslon Conferenn• bask"tball <tCllOn and scored 13 points as 14 players hit at least four points. leav1ng the Gauchos a lone al the top Ernie Handley had nine as- s ists and the Gauchos shot at a 55 percentage figure from the floor So1111>• .. 1e"' IHI S•tlCllftKll 1110 The Gauchos breezl'd to a 22 O k ad anrt wh<'n Southwestern finally h1t a ba~ket, Mulli~an put h1c; ~t'<.'Ond team On the Ooor. The margin m<:reased and the third team came on to further humiliate the visitors with the halftime ~core• r<'admg 57·15. ll"mg W<tS prov1drd elseY.hf're ab San Bern:.ird1no knocked Jlivers1de out of first place. tq " tp o.,.,, • t ' P.tlrlck ~lo,-,_\ 3 1 1 wru~taon Fo\!. 4 1 l4 ldVelltt Maroni!' 3 0 4 8&eon O'Kl'de 3 , a ""•""" <;"""' J 1 1 ... ~tlf'I w .. 11 1 0 • H\'lllf\98 l•• 4 1 10 Ho.,.,•ro Gall• .... ,,.,, ... 8errwot1 ,.muol SIOVAll w .. u .. , Total• 11 'I &S TOl•I• Halm-S.0.Slf-b&<k. s1.15 19 n IP J I 1 & 1 14 1 ~ ,~ .. 1 & I I) • 0 11 1 I ~ 1 0 I• I 1 • 1 0 • 7 0 • 3 0 & 7 0 • J 0 " u 10 '" KC\'IO f!Jai!l'C. plaving only Sp;1rmi:ly. totally int1m1dated Soulh"e~tt.'rn I It• picked off t2 rebound::; lo tie with teammate Ted ffellin~a rn this department. Totlll IOul• Soutllwl''l•m 16. Saddlet>M~ u Fouled oul Mont' * * M ISSION CONFE RENCE Girls' Basketball ~ WMI ff, S.11 Ole.-M•W IO c.nlctPn w .. it c CiBQf' B. I( CillO'l s flMk\ 12, E +<•nNr1 a. RobPrt\ 11 e111no 11. LftUI .. 10. Saddleba<-Rlver\ICIP Patomar SM 8e~rdlno Sall Diego CC Cllrus Soll~wUll!rn Challtcv LH9V. W L • 1 1 7 & J s • s • • s I I 0 ' """ OltQO M•\11 IMdintll 10. Sttroer 76. f•llow• a. l-••d 14. Holm•< S, l<rel<"1Q!!r 6. !.~•n• 6, Ilk"°"'°"" I, N••h~n 4. W~atr'tSc.,.. Saddlel>Kk 114. Soulhwttlem U San 8enljlnlino90, ~l"f!l'\lde16 Pelom&r Ill, ChafttV ,. ~a1mmoo Goolelf'llW•\t.•t>-0 Ora..,. CN1' 7', LA H•rbor U LA ~-~ W•thlnQIOll It, Wll..on s, F'le<""r 1 O~•I' I> UI"""°"° •. 8fruly 11 Or•n9" COll\1-81tr•I 12 S•lo 13 Ctlnllfl't> rd '1 ">•mM•"" 14 l'lln"'' ~ L •-rr S, l'o""' HAif!•-°'""' l><lll 41 I• S.11 OleqoCC'1. C11ru181 s.tlerNy'l Gamu $<111 OH!QO at South~lem Cllrus •t San e.<nardlno '~ddle«lecketPatomer Cl>•ll•v al Rive"'~ Injury Sidelines Surf Star Moyers A freak Injury has sidelined Steve Moyers, one of the Califorrua Surf's budding s<><:cer players. Moyers was Injured In a workout Wednesday when be tried to stop a ball with his chest. A rib collapsed a lung a nd though surgery was not needed. Moyers will be out of adton (or about two weeks. • A 22-year-0ld American player who Joined the team as a walk-on. Moyers was the club's second leading scorer with seven goaJs and lour assJst.s last year. After earning a s pot in the starting lineup late in the season, be had a string of six goals Jn five games. Goalkeeper Dave Jokersl Is being credited with 1u1ving Moyers' Ufe with quick lbinklng and mouth-to-mouth r csuscltaUon prior to the arrival of para medJcs. The Surf l1 currently working out at La Palma P ark before moving lo Palm Desert next week. ' * Ov.rall W L II I 10 s IJ ' 1 17 ,. ' 17 " I 70 0 11 SAN CLEMENTE attempted to play a ball control game against Dana Hills but failed in the se(•ond quarter when Ron Kraft made three steals and the Dolphins scored nine points to move in front 9·6 and never look back in a 21-16 decision. One of the fe w bright spots for Laguna Beach was the defensive play of Ke lly Curran off the bench. El T°"' (~I ltvlM IU I HOlmt'\ Walker S1mPM>n W1/t0tt Heu Tolals ft ft IP Wlvlolt 14 1 lO RudV S O 10 Wei~• I O 1 Mo11l•veroe • 7 '° Marrll 1 0 1 8ttll JO 4 ... T Ola I!, S<on lrY o..an.n tq tt ti> 1 s • 10 t,, 3 0 6 1 s • s 1 12 7 0 • 1• ,. •t El Toto t6 16 ,. II-64 lrvl11t 1S IS IJ 1•-e7 To1e1 '°"'' ln.IM IJ, El Toro ti. Foul@d OU1 Monle•erdl! fl••lne I Coro11e .. , Mar IOI CHU l'MW (46) . ,,.,.," Jo11n,1on Klndorl KOtllln Pl<kflll 8r~hm•n Solnn Jon~' Tnt•ls l'I" Ip • 0 • ~ 1 11 • 1 • J • 10 1 0 ? 0 0 0 , 0 • 0 0 0 eawr BP•,ltY Oom1n{t 8 lu• S Lu• Mllltor Sulterfltld " I •S To1a1, Scoro by Ou<IM•rs 19 "'" , l 6 • • 11 1 ' • 1 1 s l " 0 6 0 ' 11 " 46 CoronA <A MM e 17 11 8-4S Co•ta M"" 11 1 13 1S .. To1 .. 1 lo<JI\ CO<'Oll<I del M ar 19 C<M.1<1 Mew 11>. Fouled out None Ml lff Del 1611 s ....... tte •s.1 Saurtders Sn•nnOfl G•v••n Coo' PPabodv 8•tlllu<s Total\ '• " "' 10 • ,. I 1 J • 1 " I 0 7 6 J IS 2 I S 8UCM1f J Slneto Kunu Wl\fcman Lel.,.,..helner S Sine- Sc-by 0...rff" ,, It "' 11 < n ' 1 1S I 0 2 • 0 • 1 l " I 0 1 0 t I 23 10 SI> M•tfr 0.1 n e ta 20-111 S.rvlle 70 17 14 10-56 Tot•I louli Maltr oet 1'. ~rvii. IS. Fouled oul Whom•n 1Str¥1lel. Tec1>nk•I: St•v• O.tenev !Maler Dl'tl 0<H01Vlew ISll L-.14'1 llnlono-.~ c •r•enoer Na•~IQfcborHI Andr.._,. NO Relnl>olU 9,.ower l'llll>UQll w.,,.,. Tot•ls Ocunvirw lo11ra Total '°'"' out None. It ft II> • 0 • •• 11 0 2 1 3 3 • I I ) 0 0 0 I t l 0 0 0 ' 0 • 10 11 SI McFarl-8Hle "·'-Johnso,. O<tvlchon OIM!n COull11r Total• kot• by Ouar1trt ,, '"" 4 1 10 • 7 10 ' 0 ' s 0 10 4 J II t 1 • 0 0 0 10 • '" 19 U 16 t -SI IS 16 16 2-4q Oct!>an lllew 17, Lo•ra IS. l'ouled Un!Yffslty 1411 EstMt<la IC.a SIOllOll Tl>omo\Ot' MCL•tJllMln Bryl\-1 eonu-Alllson Mo\ley Cottman Tol•h It n Ip 4 2 10 I 0 7 1 0 • • 0 • I 0 1 ' 0 • 3 0 6 7 1 s MalldO<k \/an Horn K•uo Price C•mp Vamaml Autry Tole I• " 3 41 S<-bVOIMlr1trs 19 n Ip 1 ' ti 7 7 21 t 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 4 7 3 1 0 I 1 " 20 41 Unlver\ltY 10 • 11 10-41 E'1an<•• 8 1S 14 11- Totel touls· Estancia 12. U11l~n1tv 10; Fou~ OU1 St0410ff, 8ry1\lll IUnlwnltyl; Tec.hnlcels: Slotrollc:C'•tv I Se11 t 11•1 DaM Hiiis 011 Mulll<Un SIPvenson ~""°" Wadt! Hiii Tol•ts l•tt tp 19tttD 2 7 • S..mutfs 1 2 6 1 0 7 Andrews I l I 0 7 O 'Oot>nell 3 S 3 0 • !(raft 1 S 0 0 Cl M<1thl~u 0 7 7 1 9' Totlls 7 11 S<on by OtMmn sa11c1t-..~ 1 4 1 1-t6 OanaH1111 o • 1 )-n lot•I foul\ S... ci~ ..... nt• 10. Dana Hiiis • Fouled OU1 N-TKhnk<ll louls· S.n Clfc..-t• COACI>. Dana HlllHO«I> La911..., llea<ll ISJI Lipson Smit II Jaunl Evan1 Frlesr Curran 11••-•r Godtrtt'f 'fola11 ,, ft Ip • s 1J t " • 4 0 • 2 0 4 2 0 4 7 4 • I 0 7 2 , 6 ti 17 " MIHloft Vkllo "" Roberts DeCetu F•lclll 8enedl• Hamenn Buhler Occlplnll vanLletde Tot•ls ,, "tp II 8 30 • s ?t l 0 6 • 0 • l 3 • 2 1 s 0 2 , , 6 10 33 2S 91 sc-•ro...rten l•9Una 8ffell 13 12 ti 17-Sl Mluton llltfo 31 17 n 11-..1 Total touls• L89UM e .. ch 26, Mluloll Viejo V. F ouled 0111 · Huffman !M ission Vlejol. Te<hlllOls Hllffmen, Benedh1 (MIHIOn Vt.jol J • ) 0 I I 0 1 , K1rto11I NOff'\ Go<IHI«-\ 01v1, 0 t I 1 TOlll\ n 10 W.ttmh"'-' IU I ,, fl Ooml~r o 1 Mt Wiiiie"" 6 I P1rld0 l 0 IN•l-f!r 1 1 Fosttt 0 llolon o Grlllllll 0 S1undt'' 0 Totals It s kon by OliaMer\ Munll"'llon Beacr. 10 II IJ N"'lmln5ter I> 14 • 14 -43 folal IOUI\ We\111\lllS!tr IS. Hunl· 1r>1jlon 8•11<1> 11 Fouled out Mont Tf•Ut '01\0n Hfldenrfll(P\ Marine Ill) o~wion ' Hallon 1 5Dl¥eV 1 ..... 11o • G•ll<•tl 0 Nrl\On 4 0 r ot•I\ II ?S " 11'~\lalt.yl•U l!eul•nd Cowan Eooe1i.e1mer Ffflds Har tow Hubbard S1011 Atlrn•re1 Poll-rplt\ Tol•I' S<-oy 0..•11•" ,. tt .. 4 l II I 0 1 0 1 t .... ) 0 • 0 I t I 0 1 0 I I 7 I S 11 II 4S Marl11<1 10 11 17 79 •t Founltt•" \lallev •O 10 ti 14 4S Total louls M ........ IS, FOUlll&•" V<1ll~yll Foull'doul Nont' Wrestlers Vie Friday The Sunset Le ague wrestling championship finals are on tap Friday at Edison High School with competition beginning at 1 p.m .. culminated by the c hampionship matches at 8. Among the standouts vying for individual crowns are Huntington B e a c h 's Mik e P r ovenzano ClOS >. Edison's Frank Curry c 130 l, Wes tmins ter's Wally Clause U22> and Newport Harbor's Tony Pomo C178 ). Wes tmins t e r . the defendin g m eet c h a mpion and c urrent dual m eet kingpin. is con s ide r e d a s light favorite Friday with the most serious challenge co.J!ling from Edison. Pro Scores N~ aasntMll Al$11. Los A•les t06, GolcHfl St•I• llM BoSIOn t01, Sffttle tOO Pllllede!Cll'lla 114, Oecrolt 103 N•w _,.,.,_Y~. INll-8' Wetl'll"91<W' '6, Mltw-ee 'Cl New OtlMns US. Ht • Ye>'-10( I Kaf>US City U4, Allanla 109 0.n¥er 110, Cle"'°l911d IOS San AntonlO ,,., S.n Oifc9o 113 W ...... H•OtYA•-"'· Wlnnloe113, Blrml"91>&m 1 Edmonton e. Cln<•nnau s JC Tennis MEN'S TIENIOI OH• Cea" 1, SHdleNclr J llfltfeS Feddllr111' IOI dtt. Var-oat 1 ... 6-1: Tom.I COi dtf. Alba , .. , ...i, t.-J; Morris IS> def. Smit II •·1. 1·S: S.lauir IOI dtt. 8urrk19t t.-2. H . 7-4; Se1lti ISi def, CllUWr 6-4, t•. f>-4: JollMIOn IOI dtt. Jones .... t.-1, , .. 0.... FHOtrl.,.T~ IOI def. Vero-,. Alba 6-l. M , $mllf>,S.larar (0 I Clef, eurrl~ .. U•ll• i..1, 1·S· Jo1>nst0fl· CllHser IOSI def.~··~ t.-4, , .. ANNUAL MID-SEASON Ski & Accessory SALE 25%0FF MARKED RETAIL PRICES POLYESTER JACKETS tifAD. ROFFE. BOGNER, fDH WEISS. KITEX. HUMBER I SUH ••tortJ •so-to •135• NOW 25% OFF NOW 25%0FF DOWN·POLARGUARD VESTS NOW 25% OFF HEAD. ROFFE. EDELWEISS, NUMBER 1 SUN, SECOHTA. FERA. KITEX, IHNSSRUCK. ANBA, GERRY t19«1lorty '35" ro '85 .. NYLON BIBS HEAD, ROFfE, EDELWEISS. GERRY. MOTHER KAREN. HUMBER 1 SUN. BECONTA R1911lot1y '5'" to '100" NOW 25% OFF DOWN-POLARGUARD JACKETS NOW 25% OFF ROFFE. HEAD. GERRY. BOGNER, SHOWOUT EDELWEISS. BECONTA. HUMBER I SUN Regula tty '70M 10 '175• SWEATERS DEMETRE. H.C C .• HfAD. KITEX. SPORTif, BECOHTA. F1tA EIR. ANBA Regulorty '30" to '7'" KIDS CLOTHING HOT GEAR. HOT DOG. ROFFE. EDELWEISS. BECONTA NOW 25%0FF NOW25%0FF ~~-~~~~--~--~-~~~~~~ ••••••••••••COUPON •••••••••••• • • tr 81tlNG IN THIS COUPON FOR YOUR « FREE HOT WAX : WITH ANY PURCHASE .. ! • • : SKUl&nl I I I ~ '700 .... <-• ........ , -f : -New,.rt ... cfl1 •M2·UJI « ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2700 W. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT IEACH 1332 .... 2tld St. llLMOM1' SHOIES 24lll L1pt• Hiit Mal LAGUHA HILLS ·----· . .. z • 642-8335 846-4748 581-4557 .. . fl4 DAILY Pn.OT Skiing ConJitiom Best Since 1969 8J DAV 1 NlNGllAM ... ~ ....... l'••n rM ol •now In W ri,lbt woocl? Teroperat\lttS dropph\I to l~ 1lr1u·t' UU.OW ZEBO Jll 8~ ~ar ! Can t..b1s n· lh bt• ut.hern Citltrortll• we're Lalkinl about, and not t.bo Jo H'rlt'h '\IJ>b • ',., ~ounloln Hirh ski aru tn Wrllhlwoocl "'PQrta up tel lZU llWht ' mi.t ,n•lually ha' more anow on lbe-jlround than dll\ utht•r -.Ir.I n "'rt ln the-&u lc Mu nmotb Mount1un amt Su)!.1r Bo<A I t> l }Our ~art out ~'utht•m Co1hforn1a ~ '"' now e•Pf"rlrnrlng lht•11 .:rt'.tk'l kiln.: cond1l1on~ iunce 19S9," i.ays u liptlkt'"tnun ol \he ar We t A n f'OR fH ~ WHO COl LO t?~t \0 and from tht ~lopes "1th rt•lall\l' f'WM!', at was a sber's p radile But. u with •oY mu1ur torm, lht.'rt''-' t•rc problems Roadt'I rtngtttv. didn'thave ~bMM>wplows toto arouod, und tv.o .' n C•bnel ran'-e rt:M>1'11, kraUca Rldce und Mt Waterman, were clOK'd for more than four duys whtlt-I llgbway 2 w ~llll d14out. Tod ay all the Sout.bern C.utornla re- .sort.c1 a~ in full opera-SKJ JNG tion. with skiers enjoy - ing powder and packed powder at depths rang . rng from Ml. Baldy's 48 tncbes to Wrigbtwood's 10 feet . Warmin~ tcmper:itures m the past two days have pro· duced a spn ni skiing effect, and the lure of lbe locals is so strongthatSnowSummllissuesthiswaming: "It is a MUST now to reserve lift tickets many days in ad vance." says Snow Summit's Jo Alexander. "We're sold out every weekend." • *. IT'S ALSO A GOOD IDEA to call ahead to the ski area or your choice to check road conditions. Don't believe everything you bear . •'This past Tuesday, Channel 7 and 4 both reported all roads closed to Big Bear," says Alexander. "It wun't true.. All we re open with chains required. There was a slip. up somewhere between a so-called official source and the media." With that Jn mind, here are the numbers to caU for up- lo·lhe-minute reports at the Southern Califontia resorts: Goldmine '714 l 585-2517; Kratka Ridge C213> 842·1051: Holiday Jltll (7)4 ) 249-3256; Ml. Baldy 1714) 982-4208; Mountain H1gh 17 14 l 249-3228; Ski Sunrise 1414 > 249-61SO: Snow Summit (714 > 866-4621; Green Valley CTI4) 867-2338; Mt. Watcrmun <213) 790-2002; Snow Valley C714 l 867-3677. * * * SKI REPORTS FOR MANY AREAS of the nation, up- dated weekly, are available from lbe Newport Beach PubliC' Library. The free hotline is offered by the reference des k at each branch Data can be obtained by calling 640-2'241 . 640-2192 or 640-2141 between 10 a .m. and 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday or between 10 a m and 5 p.m. on F riday and Saturduy * • • HOW WOULD VOU UKE a poster picture of yourself taken on the slopes or Alpine Meadows? A private com - pany at Alptnl' Meadows will photograph you, your k ids or your fnt'nds on the mountain and have a finished poster ready lhl' same da~ Other resorts o r similar poster or photo de als, some np('rat(•d in rnn1un<'t on with the ski re:.ort and some by an oub1d<> firm l nfor m:.it1on booths can direct you to the pholo- J?rapher , ifyou'rcanteresled. PS If vou'rc figurine on saving a few bucks by ta king J C'ainera and l(etlin~ your own snapshots to be blown up p.,stcr !>1zc. don't fnq.:rt to bring film. Some resorts don't .. c·ll C"amcra r11m . others ~arry only one or lwo kinds . Top Conditions Roads Ope1i to Resorts r-;.,lf'f'1' wrrf'n'I lhl' only nm·~ J•mml11g 1111111111 11111 rmul c; IH11t wet>kf'nll Wilh ,, hPRVV whttf' MnnkPt r1r ".,.,.,... '1c:i hie fnr hundrf'dc; 11f m i If' c;. I hr rn 111111 l111 n ~ d r 1· w " i ~ h I c; f' P r c: " I 1• 11 ii ,. r '! 11 " rl 11oo"man huilrlf>rc; 111 1Hl1Jit1on t'' it ~I 111 11( <;I( inc: I\ I I p c;c; I 1111 f I"· !"out hrr n (''11if11rn111 •'Pl" 1•lr~ffl cl11f> to I,, ''''"I• "lo r1<111irf~ fruft11• Niii jlPc:tinn \,\;hi IP 11ll11•r r 11111,.• ,,.,,.. Prep SOf'Ce r .,,.. ......... ' ..... ,."".' U"tY•,•Ov "'"''~ w.-t~ ., OMlthr ~'ten••• ... -.whtf'J M ""''""'""'"' °"'-" ""h 4 '•" rt,m-."1 .. t f'\IM"• ••4tl• ~ "' lf'W\ "~"'"• " vw .... m""" t ...... ~ ... ~·· .............. " ..... , .. .. .. -.,.. .... , ... ,....,,,., .. ,"O n . '"" Rhut down OOCOURC tht' tmtn¥fntl hart madto thl'm lmpo~sobl But today ull roac:hi wel'f' OIJ"O antJ the sk.ilng was 1eportc>d t>X c P llP rtl 1111 powrlf'r and P•<'kNf vowrJPr flRRf>" up to 10 fof't ar•· c;airl 111 hf> lhP 1h•ti>J11•4't In 10 Vf>Ar"I l.4•11'"•'" ....... 10 .... , "'-"" ··~ ,,,.. •""l P"'_,,,~, ,..,... ~ h•h. l'l'f't#,.,..,.. llolfOt Hiii ""U '"' ""'"' ,.., ...... , """ tM• • ,,.,,~~, ~,. ... ,.,,_."'""' 01 ,........ "" •• '"' h•• ... ,,., ••ti ~ 't ,,.,, •1thop•u~t1r·1t Ml 9-llft 11,.t• "' fJ Ill lrt• h•t """"°' "M ,. .. , ••If ,,.,..ol•r tllr,... lflh ,.,..., atlt>q r., .... ,.....,. " ... .,. "" wll•• _.,, ,.,,rt fl,~• ,.,,. '"' n~r 1tthu1 ,.,.,., •..vmmtt UAf11t •I 1'nt1 "'"" '"*'" rftllttttn ,,.,,1t"'1 hfPffl '" fft 11 j;1rftfl'• ,..,,,,. t'ftlAlf •f'Wi fltitfl. tl"Vlll .. 1i..ol1• ••·,..,.··"~" '"-Vlfl'ty Ill"°• "ll u <It 11111"'' ..-. """ ' r .,.,,.,, p&~t, ff.,_ r-h11tlr ~ 'ln•,11tttnt1 ,,.,....... ,, ,,,.,, ,. • .,, ~· , .... 11 •• •1'111)411 ·~" ,,_...,,, ,...,., ..... """""'"• M ........... ,._,,,.... "••• •A '"""'' IOI! II lfltt It>,,,.. ... ,,,,, ........ ..-r•• mll ,.,,. --f'f1•fft f'111t•P .,f ') '"' .,... f'• .. ·-~ _..., ,_ IHI•,.....,.,,,,, Ba k tball tan din AJamitos, ~ anta Anita R ult loeAJamttot ...... -.. tt.W•-.---........... ''"' ••• C• °'""' CTru\Utel l tO 1 IO. I.ti • ....., ... CAMI•• \IO '"° Luo •• "• o•i. '"-••••to Ut•M•• 11 \10••0 ""1 .. ~t«t'IG••• W_...,_, tP•,,,.rl l lO , ... ) 00 ·-H \will IM•t I I \ t0 f t0 !K•I T f• (flllllt,...11 . 00 ffm9 ~ Mr A-8uQ tA•tdl U 00. •<Ill, \ 10 ~··-C,,_•9f CMll~Mftl • .0.) 00 lll•-!11.,e\ IA ....... I \ 10 u .. ..wt• 1110\pMtt\nt ~ I °'""'..... C••OI• rrcwbl• IMvi.\t, 00 11'0 J llO 10-ICaroat•I )00 7 .. f"oj)UIWW l•t1n•• Ow•1t •to 1 "'" ,... t.w1u Go • l'••t>tr 1 11 oo \ -0 l llO -· ltlft IT•••'"'•' I 00 •to Cl>+U 0o M .. e (l fOf\eMI 4 .0 U •••<tf l'HI CM1t1 ,, .. " ''"" r•• Mr Tw (Nm 111.~I U iO , )I) 110 I •-It( ,ltql'lt IMyk\1 ) IO 1 t0 OM Mt cut• Guy , ,......,, .. , 1 to •nd UH 8 •"41 Wbll• tAd•lrtJ• \eonlb ••• No< f 11.00 t AouQl\I • 00 • 10 I 00 .,,,_ Wt91 llpl\""'I I'° • 00 ~r C-• ,,_,, I Hetti t .0 U •& ... It •• I• Pflld U1\ 00 l t91tCb , .. ffvn '"" Aar ¥ .. 1\ont 4 IO. l .O 1 10 ~ ITr .. ...,.el 4 to • 00 S.-Nf* "~~::::','.;: M.t••no PYoorn• fl ,.,...,.,, •• oo tl .. ~ 1t M-l u<•Y IMyle\1 •• 00 \ llO •"11 .... _..,...., IHarll 1 .0 U na(i. t•ll ... 0,,.,,. AIC•...s.ftt• !99J SantaA nHa ,..,.w-Mlev (JtM .. 7_,,,_....,...,..d mt•ll,_.I Flral 1«• S-111 Sho"' CC•m,,.,<I 7190, 1200 S IO. Fldellto COllv•r•\I • 00. J 11>. Bold O.•• "'-""""° S«ondr.C1t Smll• On~ tPtf'<•VI 1140,1 . .0 •.00. ~d Girl (McH8rll"f'I S 10 J 40, C.litt~ ISl>Oem ... ., I l .IO U O.llv doubt# (6-71 !Mid '35110 Third race Flo11roo" CPlnc•vl 13 00, 10 60 1 oo; s1ree1111> 0eor-1 .. r~n•I es"" 33 eo. Not>t• l"ti91'1 (M-1•Y14A0 Fourth rollC• Ol-11• 1Plncavl960,600.SOO Mar lborouoft Set ITorol 4 60, J IO. Tlvv Cllodfl9Wrl S IO fJ!ll"' r«» Vlkln<1'• Joy 1Cor<1ero I 10 80, S 60. ., .... Flkll y-Bick IHttwl•vl I oo. s 00. Jee- _.,,.. IM<He~I 4 60 U ""-'<I• 1 .. 101 ,,..., u u.oo. \lattuece Pf'ocl~ ITorol 37 00. II 90. 190. Hobel Ev 1$...,.m•k•rl e •O. • 80. Galfero (M< CM-reft) ' 00 Sevff•lh ••ce H•llO Mo\leu tS-mak••I n 40 • ......,_ '00. Clr<t~ ,,.... Oo ITOtol 1S IO. IJ 60, Mell-' .... !Hawi.vl 3 60 SS UIKI• ... s, ~"""'°° E~tfl ran Flylno Pnler I Pluol 710. 2 10: o.t\ -Corn IMawittvl J 70, lnfuslv• !McCltr· ronl no -w_.1no U uacl• l•·l l ,,.IO "'00 Hln111 raa S.IQI""' s1 ... 1 llllnc11vl 10 70 4 40, S .0, Fa-Duffy ICaull\enl ll 70. I> llO ~r IM<Gern111l8 00 lS"IUKI~ 1,,_t I lpdld\S11 '° All•ndoonc• 71 '" Almnitos Racing Entries TMll..-rs ~l'W E"trlH l"lrst .... 1· 7.4S "I llST ••cf: ''° V•rtk. ) YHf ot<K. Flllin Pur"' n.-Ct&lmlno P<I<• ss,ooo c..r.- Got f.-bl4' IW•rdl , 0 1.,1 PeSKI IRouolll 0.. .... 1 Winne< CClert<wt. ~ Comtno-. IMltcl>eftl; ,_ Kip CKn'911ll ..... Ulf'O ....,., ll.lp1taml. Cttl 80ll'fO CFre1lon l, Llmll\ B&r<hlta C8r-oo .. I S.ny Com<' Hom• IM•rtl All h Vanity IMy!MI SE CC>f'O llAC& JSO yl!rd\ J v••• 010 "'•"cH ni PvrY ". 100 Ct• Im •no "'cc .. u ooo T•ulv CW! l('let'IH"' ~ Me&r lCMOololll S.nor ,,,.,,,., M.>cl>o tl'lpr-1 L~l~I fkn'Qhll Ju\I ll-• DP<•• llrHWN>I. At&O n.. Wind 1Wart11, (111"1 Sh CAO.,lr l WlnM.11~ IHM11 lrtum.-,i M-IM11, .... 111 Mt~\ l°"" H~ IPrHIOfl) TMIRO ttACt! -SSO v&r°' J Y"•" olc!s &. ._., Al._,.,.,u, ,..,,..,. u JOO Mu\!~ 8'-Mlt l(••OOra I 1 5clo<1 Al<!rt IW•rt11· 11 .. 111,. Him ll lplt"m I Lucllv 1S ITN'flSUf«'I Wln\o"'" Fo1 /oM> •Bud I Cindy RoOllm•I• IA<l••rl, 0u0P 8 511\ff C(,..rltYI Ch11rgpr Go R111 t Frf'\IC>nl 8•111;,h'• Charo• t Perner l. !if><Ond Cl>oru\ CKn19hl I l'OUaT-M RACE -350 yard\, 3 vur old m~ldfln\ Pu•'-f' U. •00 (telmlnQ price U .000 no My LOvf' CKnlQMI. !.Qt•Oy a .. 11 reroo~<I, llr ... N Bov L~ Cf>t!merl: Ftk-• -11 IMArtl; P•nnv A"ur•O rcardo1 .. 1, G lory\ Alc~v IT•"A'urflt Wh""" Kip fl lphamt Tyne! I 8Ard I: 51\t~r ~rOfl 11.,utllte I, Got<Hn 5e'wn 8 Af\ (CIM'I\..,.) ""'T" ttACI' 400 v••d• 3 ""'" old• " \ID. rr111 .. , f. ,...,,., Pur'WI H .000 C:ltlmlno prlct ''~.ooo I Oii• l1tny"11 !('1.,rl""'' nlrly lhlrlv IW"hOfll ..,,,.,,,' Ile.em Cllf)f>t>ml, MIN A"" (,o llCl\ .... I l • OIOUI n.tl<" llrM•Ut'91; Un '""''"" IMYl"\I n~ MIMl!e 1Mat1l, Wllt1 I A\ft l8anfl .. 1,...,..... Vlrk"' IMl!t'i."I Llh M~ fne i(.l't1tc\r1t• \I. TM llA("f' 400 vtt•<h 1 •""' !lld 11111•" Al , .... ~nt• ""'""'' 000 \•••t r HUH"'' t ,,_., "~' t .._. 1'1,.Ut•~• " '".,"mt Ml"' A~I ft•t) f Ttfl'IJ\l.,.~ Wtn , ,.,. .... , f(.JIHtntAI wt..• A Wftf'P' .. ft ((',,.,.,,.,., h w .,,...,_,, tn,.trtl "'ftf"'' f.f•t .. _.,..,, ~llVt'lnM llArr 1\0 ''""' ...... , ftld• ,. 'lf1 ftut••l t .. t ffAIPllft<tlfUl~••4W "'"'"~ tri.-,,,,_, I "''"' f yn•1t1.tl'' 4W llt "' '" 1, \tr••., it h•""'.,' ~·•m11> ~in~• r l••h '' f•tlt•t r-tnAlf1P1yn••"' '"'"''' 14'1 Awltv fhtf "''111tJht ~' ._ trtnM• '-""" t( .,,,,,,., At.fl'" n ''~''" fTt•~•11•,.l ~ 1"nntt tMlt,.,..lt t • .-1 • h·t M~ fMf'l•~t .-inHTM '""" o n'"'"' , '""' 11,,,,,. oo """'" ... '"' 1•.,. ... ,. lllft•lt'ffOCJI"' l'f1\!Mt11 ,.,.....,, 111,.rfl Ai.,,.. I" 11 ••tlnJlll VI--""·~ IM•""I Mt('o '' """ "''"""I f •II Mo "'1118 If r"'""'"'': -'~ntf'fl\lliftHIAI u .. ,......,, NllOM "A(I' 41111 Y•,,., 1 yNt ~ f. uo "''""' U ,1"" l lalf.,lne1"1t•U OOll IJv plhhl•• '""''""''' r1 ... 1 '•M•n• 1 Miit ,..,II 1 .. ,,. '11v11nn1>11 n.•.. fl r11••ur., 1 r•Y• ""' llt!lolf!fll Fft P•IMfl.,y 11·-1 l'l•t fln•ft ,-..,....-,.. IPA"ll f\h·• t m ltm• tlff<fl-1 ,.,~_ .. , ,,., • ., .. ,, • ..,, '.,,.,, ,,... ir ..... _1 fl•lpf•~ lllfW•"'"'CI \llH'\•T If AOUe e~Rfl I •AO\I• 01,..111\ I llA!J"" l -Owu11 ,._ n ...... w I w I ........... ' ·-' ..... ~·· •• ,...tww' u • ..... ._~ .. . ' " , ··-" • ~Al~VtlO•-• " ~'""''",,.... I ' • ,, ........ "''~ ..... _ ' ..._, ··~ ... 0 ... •••-•1 ~v,.,...,., ~''"""'.....,. ~ --.... •• ......,..6- -·-41-.... £41-"' '°'"""''" ......... ..:;"""' .... """'' .. ._ ...... ,_.A V1S"W l llAOUf (« • c.-...... """" "' '"""' ,... .. ., ... ""'-"" ._ l ._ Owffll . \. . , . " . ' . .. , . ' ' " J • • ' . ' . , ' ·~ ...... ~k- (' " .. ••¥M •\ F\l-•••~41 .,,_..._, ...... .. ,.,.. ..... ._.. ··~· ,_ ,..._..... .. c.-.... l~-e.r. ..... w I ... I O<•efl VI#• • I ti • IC ..... a • ' " • l-• ' • • ,, IC_..,. t • " t \..-.a..Mltll!I t ' • t' <-......• \ • ' • ,, ....... t«-. ~-.,.._. .. l•A ..... tl\ll ....... ·--~~~ ~~9'~-~-,_ •• er.-,. ·~•CW"• 8a8 ball C'CK.\.116 .. NCMil COMflll •I .. c:. ~ ..... All ''""' • 11~ •••• ,,,.,. ll•l U<'t.A A~ll l~ ~ IAI• \\ I al ,, .... M6tllltl,,_. \ 0 lt1.,lf\•\ Hiii" NC•v\<t046..,,flll>H\ 4U.IOa C:OU .llOC ··~h:ue•lft l ......... cr1 c.,....,U1........,..t ' VC\.AJVt ....... Ovullfl .. ' ... l ....... , .. , • ' " • , ...... ......._...... ... I " • . .. ,, ... ' ' n • ,,_. I • ti II ... ,....,." ..... 1 • I ., ,, ..... 1 It ' • It •• ••1 ..._ M•, .. Oe4 _.,.,..._ .. llh "-._..._._., M Ith~ Al'Mt )\ ..... ...... " hi!! .. oR "'::"--flj\•• 1'91.. ....,.. •-c ••-.••w••t'f .. ,• P•wt a.; .. , .... ~. • SKIING I HORSE RACING I OUTDOORS ROCKET SHOTS f0~~?,~,,~~'?M ~~R PUBLIC NOTICE P 8UC NOTICE (-.. .; ArAI LV )1"C' tr/ft.&-ttllv{ fr' / Fl !CK Y()(JK ##Riff. lllfUI 'f(JU tit r CALl6NT" ll'I THAT Ol'I P (JAIJ. 11flfr ~ r:> tJU'ltNP '/()<), (011 MVSr R~~~T fD nfl ~ll>N n.A'ft'RS'5NOT Atf/O fl~lt<:.H lfAC.1:-M'O Ft IC~ T/1£ (UU-8i'CI(. I Al 7D P/,11 'I O••,.v~t.o ,, .. .., .• s .. ~1• 1• ll-Pti6\ tuNa10tt ClOUllT o .. THr ITATeo11ca.u..-o•HtA ~OA TMI! COUNTY 011 OllANOI HO.A~ MOllC( 01' M ollltt Hr. 0' lll TITIOft flOtt "lt09ATI Ofl WILL CAHO C:OOICJL.SI, Ill AlfY AMO P'OR Ll'.TTl a l 0 1' AOMIHIOttAl ION CT A CWITM Wll.l AM .. £1111'.0I. AHO NMl AUT~llATIOtl TO AO M I N1 $T l!ll llMOfll THf INOl!ll'I HOl!HT AOMIH1$TllATIOM Of' lllTATfl ACT E\lete 04 OCNNIS t ~!CWAM ! •~• OE"INIS CMAlllll!''i 'ilrWAltT 0.<••~ NOTICE 15 MfltE'8V GlllCN t!WI JOHN I! STtWART h"\ lllH1 h<>r•tn • PttlllOt> fo r P•OD<tlt ot Wiii ••rtd Codl<ll•I. 11.,,v Md'°' l 4111 .. ,. OI •o rnlnlatrellon, C.. T A lwllh Wiii An· nutell. •nd lor AVt-f1at1on 10 Ad ml"l'C"r ,,,..,., tn. '"""°"'~nl Ad mtnlllrat1on ot r ''"'"A< 1 ttl•rl'R< • t o wltl<ll I• m•d• lo( tu•lll•• P•rtlt ""''''· And th•t th• tlmtt 4'ntt 01•<• ~ ~·rtt'l(I llw ..,_ "'°' 1>1••" ...,I tor r etwuetv 11 ,.,, .,, 10 OU .. ,,. "' IM court"""" of 0.,:...rt"""" N<> 1 "' \-.10 <«kit'!, ti 100 CtvlC t rnl., 011v• w •••. '" .... (lty (If ~ .. ,,, .. Arie C.•lllornta DelAO F«ir....,v 6, ftl'I Lf:f: A BRANCH c.o..n1v ,, .. ~ VlllTUIE a sc-i.cctc.IH( \1 ~-ll'f.au o.I•• ... o .... ,.. M"'""tM<.11,CAtl-11141.......,., An-ysi.r ~,-...., Publl\lled Or-Cou l 0 .. 11., Pilot F.otutrrt,t, IS, lt'9 •U I• Cll'UM ... lQ) STATl!Ml!NT 0' AtANOOMM•NT Ofl u'r QfJ! fllCTITIOU' AU.llN \NAMF TIW •vii"'"'"'? poorv.n M• •~ ti.. U!o» f)l ti.. IW-llll<lU\ -~ ... ,,... IHI FtltH FACTORY, ,..0 S "'••• Cir \tilt• Ant ra t716f T"" n c111""" 8u>IM'ls ... ,.,.. '" •• ,,td 10 -'"ff llltd "' o...,. (°""IV <"~ IJ "11 \a1'd•• l l alr'1. 1114 \ P•rk Or., S.t>l•A,.. <..A'2101 Tit" boJ-11t-." •>H fondUCl.tO by '"' lndtvlO...,I ~•l •••rct 1111' \IAl ... tlelll WH fl~ Wtll\ lhe ( nunt I fl•t1c c>I O"l"Of C-.0..lllY On I tb 2. ,,,., Oro~tr •w,... cor~niiOfl ,_, ... .,_....,._ h•lht,CAntee •Mrow He ~107' .. 11 Putill"..O Dt~ U..\I O•llY Piiot. Foh • f) 7' M•trh I lt79 P UBLIC NOTICE 111rr-1nous austHEn •A.Mf' STATIMl'.NT l h" tot1ow1na ""''°"' •t• oo•no bY 1n.,, ., ttf II.HUM PltOPEltTtES ?SO Npwocut (f'nt•r Orh'"· ~u1t• l01 .. N~"'OC'•rt "+<ICl\,(•lllOfll••~ lltun S H•ll )~ &tt<h Rd C•Pl\ttAno ~.o<" C411110tnt&~•H IC"" A Ovt•ll l'1~1 R....., Ill, VI\ •"• 1 •"'°'"'• mn Anfl-V It ""°'"' 14900 OtrlWf>. I• Ml\\!Ot> Y .. IO.C..lllom1&9't1S RAC Banquet ·----------- PUBLIC NOTJC E r "" bu,11\f•U Is tol>Clu<l.C l>Y • Q<ltwor•I~ llrv""1. H•ll Thi' '\1•tf'fftlli"nt 1#-'\ ft~ w ith lftip Top Anglers Gain Honors A ntM rou.,tv ti••-ot Or•nQOt (ountv <>n MOTICI' TO ClllOtTOllS ~ •btuarv • 191'1 01"9UU< TRAMSfll!ll f'l- 1-. •i.t-4•07 U C C I Publt\Nod 0.anQ!' (OA\I 0411ly Pll()t NOllCP i. "~r•by Qtv•n tn th• r•b ~ I\ 17 •nd MA• I !ti• 'oOI 1' P UBLIC NOTICE C ••dtto1\ o l (~i'AN O A >l AAISSOANAI TrM\lf'fe>r wh(lw bu•• lltt\ eddnP\S I\ 7llOO H•t1>0• l<lvO "' A.<li•ms. Co~t• M~\4 fount., ot OrtnQ• Sta11 otC8lllorn 1" IMl~bulk OllAMGf COUNlY SUPERIOR lr•M l•r I' •bOul to b0t •n•O• to 7 .. CIVIC ~~~~=~lllVE WEST-AVEOIS ASYAN lran\IH_. whOW' business -r't!\\ It '100 HMllor !llvd \ANTA AMA. CALIFOAHIA '2701 CO\llt M~, County of Or"n?' Sl<>I• VJ Pl AINllH SUSAN MORGA"I The Balboa Angling Club held its 32nd annual a wa rds b anque t r ecently, r ecognizi ng achievements during 1978. Here a re the awa rds : C<ffltor·nta. O rF-£NOANT RIC ICl'Y LEE S<lkl pr-rty I< °"'"'"b<'d In II"""''"' ~.~:.!:LL. -OOE~ I ""OUOl'I X ,,._ ... All <100 '" ,,_ "•'U"" ~oulo SUMMONS ment 11nd QOO(I will ot lh"I .-,,..,,. CASI! NUMllEll ,..._.. ~~,,~~1::n.::a::'!,':;n ~·:,::, NOTIC[' y.., twve "'"" ._, Tb• * * * F 1111 Of llM Metltll J•nuary Mlelle•I W~H. •S·POuno btu• iharil' ~v Chuck"-· JS·pound blUf! \!lark M•rcll Ml~• LOCU , 1'-PGund bl.,. \hark, Aprll ,,_,,,,. .. , w .. 11. t'k!Ound, .,_,. c,,.. cod. M•Y PllUI w..-11er. 10.--POUf'd lhresl>er '"•rt... June M tthe•I Welt.,,. POUf'd-Hw·..-\Nrk. July GecrQtJ NPl.en 111 pound bro•Ot>lll. Aur:tU\I Jim BrldOH, 175-POulWI broadblll. ~O'•m.,.r Norrn G•ent. Ml POUncl bro•dblll October -Stoll Sllverm•n :1-48 POU..c1 llr1Mldb(ll NovHnDer Al <••llon 76/o·pouno oroadblll O•<•mb•r D•v• 'iP••lh, lwo-pound. -.oun<• bor!llO OU-• Aw ... n Jof' 8•h"" for t•11o l"o ""o •f'IH \lrtq u f1\/I o......-flw ""'•"whiff' 3) 11\h _ .. t;tqql'd •"" ,., .. ,.., 01> Iii\ bo•• ·L•dv M••')A•l'I" 11' lhf' """" 11 mf' \l)ltn Sl•v• °""'fn\, l"•~I corl>tn.o on \h pou nd IP\I llnf', S pound\ t O OUl'CU 8••ndv l'llrtcl>er, l•r9e\I mMlln on 80-POund 11'\I llnf'. 714 pnu,.Os .soaonot &tncn.... tnO'\t C,.q ;ind ····~ Mllrlln by wom11n, '°"" Jlor> Blrltht'r, '""'lleSI mar fin or thr year. 101 ~ Mariorlf' flrMken. llHQe•I atb"'or• on 10 POUnd Ui<t II"•• 31 ~. U O..n(P\, laroHl alba<OIP on ,, pound le\I 11111'. tt poundl I oun<P<, l•rOf'\l bluefln lur>a on 70-POOfl(I tl'\I fine, ?S """'°' Jim OrldOf'\, •••11"\I "'llrlln on 11 OC>Und IMI 11111', 11l C>Quneh Id .. Buehi.r, larqHI martin or> SO POurtd IP\I fin,., 167 POund\ Lorr,.lnf' C11•llor> ''"llP'll t>rOMll>lll on 90 oovnd 1tt\t """· JOI oounds Jon" ~1"""'"· 1.-r,.,,.\t m.Jtrlln on JO.-ooun<t ftt\t """· in pout>d\ And¥ Cr••n. lar~\I dlbACOft' ,,,. 11 POUnd ,,.,1 lfne. 3• pouftd\, ~WJh1 ounc ... " ~Pf<l81 """~'o lor •n -c_.,. on .,._,,.., tt'sl """'· 1n .........,.._ Jotln c.-.an. lnO\I IMIQed •ncl .-.r.aY'd marltn '".....,.," bVl>Otl 10 M.1rl< 0 -wl\, la~\I v•1towf1n l\Hl.O "" n ---""" n _,,..,, 1 ouf"l(f'\ lctrQit\t Aftd world rf>t ord v~flowl•ll on 11 ~ I"'' fin.. 11 PoUfl()\ 11 oun<~s C rcc """"rid '"" M•rftn b'/ 'C)OrlVT\M\ OUJOf' Jfl'rrV (,.,,,.,,. ••rQ~\t Alb•cor,. on \l•·poUnd IO I llM, JO POund\, • OUftCI"\ W11fl•r (ii,,_.,, llf\1 brOAdblll Ol l hl" v,.l!r Vin<,. Gorrtlt1t. tarQ•\f 1>lb"C"'" or> '10 Potlnd l••I fllll' 13 DOU""' 7 llUl>(f'\ Norm G••nC lnrc,.\l ~l\delll on 80 pound '"'' fin• 3•1 POUnd\ J.on HMQ•8VI'\, •~·~•I mArlln on :lt).po\lnd 1•.i fin" ?13 DOURO\ SIU ... fOl\IH , IM(j"\I oonlto on 11-oounct ,,.., """· _......, oounds, ''"' oun<t-\ Bob Hin< klt V, l.OrOMI """owlln IUf\41 rm 10-(IC)Und '~'' fin". n 1iound• four oun< .. ~ Jean H1n<k,..y, lttro.\I mAnln M 70-POUnd l"\I llM, 1•? "°""°'· IMO<'\I Y"llOWl•lf on JO._.,,a l••t lln,., 11 POUftd\, IUQ<l\I IMllO"'lln tun• "" 70-f>ound ,,.,, """· 14 PoUnd\. •lolll ounc•\, f&roe'' yttlowtfn tuna on * * * 81vo •I Adetn• C:O-.te MH" Coun1v """ mey Otc!Oe '""•ift•t Y.., wll!lovt Wvr INIMj ~ -· .,_ r"4IOtld IJ·POUnd IUI fin•. 2 I pou • ..S\, 1 ol Ort-SLtfp of Calttorn•~ wt ... I ft 3' u p llMd ..... 1,., _ _...,. oun<H. worlO •r<Otd ¥'!11<>••'1•11 on fl•• bu!~ lrant~r '"111 "" '"""'"' Mlow »-9ound ,.,, ...... 10 """"°'· lwo m41t .. d on or .. 11" '"" '~Ch ddV ot AYISOI u-... --· ...... OUt>CI'\ Jee" Ml,.~kfpy was •IMI February 1'7' •I 8 OO q m •1 l!I Tr1-.c _.. -· ~u Utl . '"<C>Qnlt4'd ••Ille Ouls1-"'9Al\<l>e• FMm•n .net Mtt<1>.'lnt\ 8<1n" ot lonll tll\ •...SI-It• --Q,.. Utl r._ ot 1,,. ,.,,. for CAl<J>lno "'°''button 8••<h 100 ? C.ard•tt C.rov• Blvd . •• ..,.1,.. fe • .i., Le• I•..,,..,.,..._ awero 1191. 'KOO'""! I l>IO pOlms. ~1~;~:~ ~~~~ •• 6ounly ot O••n9'1 <IMI .... ~ ~fly Jotwown, i..,,..i ..... , ..... on So ••• '"known •o ,,... T, .... ,, .. ,~ I TO lHE OEFENOAHT A CIVIi ~-~I llM JI "°"""' Ml'rl> romp••1nt ......, llHn !lied by thp P'ttA- k •JT\eOf\. WOf'W;I "Mord rOMtl\r ft~tt CH'I :1~ t;;~~~:-';!',:c' "'~--:;~;\ "'1::! lift 4Qdin-.t 'f'OU 11 OOUf\d Int llrw, U -PHI •nJ ...,_ " II VOU Wl\h 10 O.ff'"" tlll\ &ob KlllQ. l1rs1 marlin ol '"" vur Otl•O J,,,....rv JO.,.,. l•w""' you'"'"' w11111n lO ~v• •fl•• J.,"-Mt<Oonl!IO. l&r~ m"'11n on AVf'Oj\ A VM llu •um~ I\ .,..,_ on vou "'" SO _,l>CI Int llM, 151 PoUndS t••~\l 'I ramt•r"' ••th Chi• toun " .. ,,,,..., p~.olno •n OWf!\h~ ~ on ~PoUn<S tP\t l•M. '"'Ooo'~ f(> trw. rompl1unt U t ct ,,. DOU"d\ F'""" Mdn\UV Jr • ~:~~~~:;:~c:.~HANT\ tAHI( '""'<" <l)urt YOU """' "'• Wiii\ '"" t•...-~t m i11r11n on 10-pound ,..,~, 11n.. < ourt ,. M ttl..n pit-M:tlnq M <-•uw "" tlJ POIJfl<h Jtm Mlt'f. IMQtO\I c•..,.k•• C.erden a.. ... CA flMJ Ot"I 01•.0•~o 10 "" ,..,,.,.d 1n '"" on t7 DOUftd tMI llM'. sl• pounch flv.. EK,..,, He. •JJ20l..l nM illf"t 1 Uni""'\ ¥OU do"° Yt>uf" Otl'••un ounos Pubh•....., O<At>QIO (04\f 0•••• Pilot "''" ,,., f'ftlf'<f'd upon •Olllot•llOfl"' '"" Oon M<Ad<tm. t&rQMI v•ltowt•ll "" Fet><u•rv 1' im ••s I• "'•"'''" ,.,,., ""' cOU<1 m•v •"'"' " 11 _.no ~I ,,.,. '' POUnd•. ••O'lt '"11<l"'"'" ...,..1"'' vou iw '"" r•hf'f.,. oun rn. '"'ll"" vellowl41I on P UBLIC NOTICE """"""rl '" '"" '""'«>'"'"'· w1>1<n cou10 \I•~ •~'' u~ u DGufld\, tou.. ;; ~~~=.,'~';:;~~t0~'0~=~P::~1;.,q ounv• K•v M<G""'"· \PC'<l•t .. ward FICTITIOUS IU~INE )S 0.,..,,..., '" thot tompl1tlnl tor " POUnd 4'1Qht ~4' .,.,.h on NAME STATEMENT • If -Wtt!l IO -I ... """IU Of 50 ()Ound lfl\I Ii"" Tll• tollow•no ~''°" " 001n11 """ "" •ttor....,, In "'" """•• ,.., sllo•ld M&f\Mll Moro.,,, 11...i blu.t1n tun~ n•u .,\ Of th• Yf!•t Harry Olluda. lar.,.<I A M E II J C A N p I p I N C de lO ~IV M llUl1 .r-wrlttet1 •ll>&COf4' on :»-POU"" lt \I tin• J1 EOUIPMFNT 8116 P .. w1u<VI Mu"' '"o':'~o !:i1~~~ IM•nt1m1> p0und\, • ovn<P\ JoyCf Rdc-n lnQlon ll~Mh Calltorn• .. "'It.£• WILLIAM E ST JOMH, le tQe\I b<oMlblll on SQ.pound lr't Stt¥tn Oouqt•• w .. 11., ''" 11••> lint', 160 00\lf\d\ Ernl4' '>cllOtttr't Jr.. P••lUC-•I Hul'l•nQIOn &"'"' h !Iv l\l"lleM Tumu 111\I mulln or Ille\<'&'°" ("lilor"le 91-Of-outy Nie~ Se""'· lnO\I l•QCl<!d and Thi\ bu'>lnH\ "c0f"1utl~d ,,. •n ,,, £LLIS AMO MOlllllSOH r.Ce.\l'd tndrltn bv " m11n, l1v~ Scoll dtvidu•I 17409.,__..151 Stlv•rmen. lll•Of'•I b•O&dO•ll on 5 Onuqlllt Wlllf*' \•Ill• ti• so pound 1 .. \1 tine. l'll POUnd\. I Thi\ stat.....wnt WA\ '''"" "'"" I"" ""n'"'" Vellrl. CA moe Oun< .. , (athy SpMth, IMQf'Sl oonlto (ountv Cl•r-Of O••n!J" (OU"'" on Tel 17Hl t6> 1411 on•••~ tnl llne lhrtt -· F•bru•rv• 19" AnOf'M ylot P1itlfltitf lour ounc4'\ 1"1... A-1,.,. 8111 s.i.1ch l.orQMI ~loWl•ll on Publt\lltl>d 0.-C°"" Odtl• Po1nt Publt<,..., CK-Coa\I D•1lv Pttot ?O·OOU"d lf'\I ...... 13 POu,.dS. 17 Ff'b •.H.77anc!M<lr 1,1•1• W?I roo . IS ,,_Mt• l,1'1't _,. our.c,., Tom ~"~· larCM""t crM .. rr <>n \11-oout'ld lP'I II"" \I• OOUM\ U ounc"'° P•tft' Tarou•too. lctt'QtSt thr~\Mr on IO-oouno '"'' """· 110 oouno' c.,.,,.. Thoma\on '"'0f''\t m4'rt1n by ~OOt'"tirn-"n OUic.1"' 1tCf OOUftO'\ 8t11 Uor> ........... lllt~\I br°"'dblll CAUql>I t>v 'OOf't"""'"o"-· 1•1 POUnd' Mot hul W•ll '"~' OOfltlo on ., •. 004if'td t~I llnfll> \1'1' ODUnd\ ldr0-'1 '"'•'"''" 11\Ar., f')n 30-POUnO '''' llnf> l?<I ~ world rttord lhr~r ,.,,.,_ m PQUnd\ Mike WDodw¥d '"'' 11l1Mcor" 01 th,. .~.,. Harold WOOO\ ,~ .. <J"'' c t>rt>m• on 121JOVnd t,.\t hftf" ••"'" POund\, lour ou"o' OouQ WrfQhl 1arc1"1 l"'llowl•ll on 30-_...a '"'' llM, n OOUftd\. ~1.,111 .,.,.,..,.,, rom Vo ••ll•. Jr IMQ .. \I m.trltn by • junior membf'•. I'll PoU"<h Ed Zlt'mer, llr\I mem~ to -.,k club ,,.cord threshttr ~h_,r .. oo flO POU"" '"'' """· 761 """""' Field Hockey u .. 1 ..... 11y s, CerONI ... , M••• U"lv~HY \.COnno Morr111i.ev 1. VOUf>Q t Oehl .. P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE Comptroller of the Curr ency Administrator of National Banks RE PORT OF CONDITION Consolidatlnq dom<-st1c and foreign subsidiaries of thP Irvine Nclt1ona1 Bclnk of Irvine io the state of California, a t the rtosr> of bu.-.me<;.-, on Decf'm~r 31 , 19 78 publ1shr>d 1n rPsponc,p to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, u'lder t11te 12, Unitf'd States Cod4>. Sec Iron 161 Charter numbPr 16168 3. Ncll1on<J I Bank ReQ ion Number t4. Statem ent of Resources and Liabilities ASSETS Thousands of Dollars Cash and due from df'Po'>1lory 1nst1lullons .•... 3,293 U.S. Treasury SNunt1t>s 816 Obligations of olhPr u S. Gov't agencies and corparal1ons . Obliqations of StatPc; and polilfc<11 707 subdivisions in the Un1tPd Stcltes .......... 1,258 All other secur1t1Ps . . ...... 78 Federal tunds sold and sec unties purchased under aqreements lo resell . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.900 Loans, Total lt>xcludinq Fishing Show Set unearned income) . . . . .. t8,817 Less· Allowance for Possible loan losses . . . . . . . ................ 200 Loans, Net. ........... 18,617 t.OS ANGELES The a nnual Wcs'crn Flahtng Tackle & t~lshang Roal Show Feb 28 Mar"h 4 at thl' <:r(lat Wci.tC'm Exh1b1t Center will pn•M•nl Ill(' lat<>i.t In fishin.c equipment. Thf' flv<'-d ay ~how will enable anglers to prf'\'lf'w l hc hatt•i,ti in rod~. t"H'ls and lures. A wide urroy (l( w:itcr craft and displays by bout (lcalN'tl ore nl,o porl of t.hc show. SC'mt nnr-c on oil l~ll of fb1hrn1' wiJI reature a 1 ofttt'r or roaionwl. nntlono1 nnd world champion on~lt•r.-whk h lnr1uclc Pl'rkins. /\1110 fll'\.)Jlrnmmlid lo l>l'f'Sld«' nt seminars arc <'hnma>lon tulRl<'ni 'Hobby Murray. Jim Stokes end 1Hr k Onumcr . They will toll whe re and how to fi sh In th., rno mile orNt 11urrounding Los Angeles. The Ort>nt Wt~stcrn Exhibit Centt-r ls located nl tht• Atlnntk Blvd north off ramp of the Santa Ann 1-'l"C'('W"Y tn l..011 A~olcs. Show hours are 3 to 10 :10 p m .. \•b 28 Mar ch 2. noon to 11 p.m. M11rch :i nm1 noon to 8 p .m . March 4. Admission 111 $3 for actull'I, St ~ for under 16 Bank prrmises, furniture and fixtures, and other ac;spts reprPseollng bank premises . Real ec;tale ownf'd other than bank premises All other a.-.c;e1c; TOTAL A SSETS. LIABI LITIES 0Pmr1nd dPPo<.it.., of md1v1duals, par lnNc;h1r.-. .• 1nd corpor ations.. . Time and .-.av1nq1, dPPoSits of lodividualt, partnPrc;h1ps, ,1n<1 corporntionc; .. 1,1'2d 93 .C75 31 .361 14,239 11,237 .. 81 DPPO'>ttS of Untted s t,1tf'C-, Government .. OPpoc;1tc; of Stille'> and pol1t1cal subdivisions tn ltlt' United States..... • . . . . . . . . . . ........ 100 Ct•rtttiPd and otftcers' chcckc; .. 996 TOlr'll ()epoc;1ts .. '... .. . . .. . . . . . ... 26,653 Tot.11 demand df'poslts ............ 15,316 ..... Total tlmt> and c;avloqs d eposits .. 11,337 lnteresl-bearlnq dPmand notPs <note balances> Issued to l he U 5. Trr.1.-.ury and other liabilities for borrow<>d money .... ........ 795 ... 270 All olhl>r liabllilif>c; ............ . TOTAL LIABILITI ES lrxcludlnQ subOrdlnated notP<; .ind del:X'nturt>s l EQUIT Y CAP ITAL \omm on c;tock ,1 No <.hMf'C, authon1Pd 7M),000 b No .-.narr.., ou1c.t.1nd1nQ 646 536 !par val u p l Surplus. . Undlv1d<'d protltc, and r po;ervt> for cootmq1'11cit>., and otnPr <nr•tal re~erv.-, TOTAL fQUITY CAPITAL TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO EQUITY CAPITAL M EM ORAN DA Amouotc; oolsMndlng as of report date· Standby lc:>tters of credit. total ..... 27,718 1,616 .. 975 . 1.052 . 3,643 31 ,361 187 Time cc>rltficates of dr poslt m denomination<; of $100 oooor more ••..•.... 4,271 Other linw d posits In amounts of $100,000 or mor'-' . . . . . . . . .......... 100 Avt'r-'Qt' for 30 calendar days <or cal~ar month ) C'ndlnq with rt'Port da te Total depo<;ltc; . .. 27 ,335 t. R~rt Klhm, VicP President-Cashier of the i'\bovc.-oamt'tt hl'lnk do hert"bV dt>clare that this Rt'port of Conditions Is true and c ort'f'Ct l o the best of my knowll"QP and belief. !S 1 Robt'rt Klhm w~. the under'>ICJnf'd dl rt<1'0~ attest the correct- nf"lo; of tht' '>t3tl"m('nt of rf'~oorces and llabllltles. We declare th.lt II h."~ bN'n f'x11mlned by u~. and to the best of our knowl~ and belief ls trvct a nd correct. ~ Paul E Brandt s Ron PfahlE>r ' Lton G Nel500 FC'bt'U ry 1 197q Directors Publls~ Or nc,Jf' (Oll\I O•llY Piiot FtbNary 8, , , 7'9 4'61-79 . . ' • COMICS / CROSS.WORD MARMADU KE 'Whot seems to be your problem?'. SUPERHEROES MOON MULLINS wm. wm·· SMALL WORLD . Pl.ANNIN(j ON A HVNTIN<: 7R1P, NE1~>4ee>~ ? ' 'I "It's gonna snow tonight. Do I have to do my homework 'cause moybe they'll dose the schools tomorrow?'' DENNIS THE MENACE •I ••• f . " . . f by Tom Batluk Thuradey, fet>ru.,Y 8. 1979 , OAILV PILOT If> A GOOD FOR ~l~ ! PEANUTS by Charles M. SChulz I~, M(Ntl 00 'fOt,A iJtASTFY a>P'/IN6 ~we~• F«OM ~ w.<J WOR'lc:ED ANO ~TUOllO ID l.EA~ THEM? J ' l l OR.SMOCK by Ferd and Tom Johnson -fR.. PERH.A?S w~ 'SHOl.Jt.DN'r PL.,AY IT So t.out:>, SMJv4,A. .. ~',J , . ~ ~~\\\ ~~-~6 =- fVERV DA"f WMfN I \&lAl.J( TO SCUOOL. I MEET THIS ST™6E CREAilJ~E ... TMAiS Ml/ SROTH£g'S DOG ... HE'S WEIRO ... l·" by Bill Hont by George Lemont Y~AH ... IHeY've eeeN GIG61...ING AN' CRASHING> A ROUNP F"OR IHRee PAYS NOW ... AND -rHeY''Re Sl/t,..t,... IN OUR GARAGI!!!.' by Tempfeton and Forman by Gus Arriola TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS ment 1 Gap 62 Immerse UNITED Feature Syndicate 5 City of Peru 64 Aun away Wtc1M10•~'sPuuleSo•\l9CI g Shtrit 85 Unmoving 1• Vert1<:al: ffl SWUes Prefuc 70 Young ox IS loon 71 Cedar. e.g. 16 Piebald n Tk1y 17 Sensational 73 FUdge hlst0<y: 14 Barit 2 wOfds 75 Annoys 19 -Pofe DOWN 20 Straighten 1 -bear 21 - o'shanter 2 As - -: Z3 Mlsplace Nonnally 24 Denies 3 Legume: 27 Mature 2 words 29 Cedes 4 Slack eye: 31 Astaire, e g. Slang granmoa 35 Massage S Aim 26 Bare 37 Classifies 8 Crete moun-28 Step 39 Frighten 11m 30 Sharpen .a USSR city 1 Gre1teS1 32 Neared: 42 Begets 8 Church area 2 words 44 Release 9 Relevant E' '5 Anew 10 Seventy 33 ire '7 fleihy fru1ta 11 Hep 3" Soab flax 49 Nav. rank 12 Natf¥es: Suf. : :~~ 50 Te.tehef' fill n rea . 52 Outing 13 Cupola 38 Roman coin .a Scott 51 Free SJ Champaign students 55 Obscure 57 Held verti· cally ~Relaxes SI Palen SJ Wall pier 61 Youth preflll 63 Clean TUMBLEWEEDS 1'llG'S A 110( --~"'N&IN ... Ml~OF by Tom K. Ryan r----------~ TO S,.AIN, 51lJf'U1 l YOO KNOW WAT s.e Neat 18 Remove air 41 Cluttered 56 l.Qdlno 22 In me center '3 Cult 59 Appoint· 25 Adam's 46 Eur. Nlion 86 Test 68 Elect. unit 811 EnefVy MAIN 61Rf!erl ~·B NANCY AUNT FRITZI, (M WORRIED--· I MU5T BE BELOW AVERAGE--· ' TH IS ARTICLE SAYS THAT THE AVERAGE CHILD--· COWPOKE: J HASN"f A Cl'~NT J 1V HIS NAME:! ~~ • by Emie BUS;hmiller ---SPEN05 t 37 A YEAR FOR CANOY . -... - • • I . . ' . DAILY PILOT Thuraday, F.abruary a. 1979 Investors Canny Foreigner, Like U. • Real E tate . By JOHN ( ll IFF • they wan\ Th •y llt'll••v • and Whitt' 1u• ms to •haru Vl's, aid John.Wh«;:;::.,nen art\ ncn~· ~ll the vii"~" thnt • lht• llnll<'d St lea 11Ull provlduis by 1remt•ly lnl\'H' tt'<l ln u s rt ,1 l Out n<>. ht! tar thl' bt·'!\t rt'al ""' lt· opport.unlU1J8 " aid. th~y haven't beC'Omt' tM dominant for<' • Hlah 11r1c,• ., ''.l'bt' l>ell~Vl' V. prices and they al'\'n't evt'n ttu• main,, M>n for ht oh "ncH N'nh h11v1•n't cauf(ht 01> with lnll'mallonal levets." Wtu " ., ••d Whit" 1 ht•v know tnOutlon "1'hey're bred on t 'a farm h I ln\I ed more than $200 at No muller what udminlstrul1on 1s In power , he mUUon for foN'tA:n <'llf'nh met l • h lptna In • •u•d. lht·v h·l·I thti Uo1tw SU..tc:s cannot keep l.o!la· small way to \Wt>ll to $3(1 bllhon the amount of li<>n twlo\\ 7 JH'tl't'lll foreign Uplt;1l lnvt•:.tmt'nl in 1~ Unit d l•l<'!l 1 h•·y buy 111 onllt·tp.ilt0n of ri!tlnat prices, BUT S3t 81LLIO • h o~nH~. •~ It thian I Whah' rnnllnut>ti, a1nc<• tht•y h~el rcul estate 1~ pcrrent of lhe lJ S rap11 I m rkl.'l of $3 ~ tnlhon, t'•l>t'l 1olly t•n.-.1llH· to r&Slng lnfhal1on pre&sures Domestic bank11 ttlono t'ontnbutto ~ h1lhon llfo The.•> pn•ft'f hu.11tnt''l'4 to rtlbldontltJI propt>rt1es lnaurt•ni. $23~ b1lhon , anti pt•nswtt funth $40~ · l1'on•1~n 1nvc.•1itOn tt>nd lo be morti selective blllion thun Anwrlc un 1nv1•"tor . " White bt!hevt>l> " They What foreign rs h vt I.kin ... he aut 11> .. to ~ unt lht· bt-11t lo<'atlon:, Th •y witnt buildings of teach their Amert(' n counlcrparti-. to rci.pcrt In i1u~rlor <fuahty, tn"C of built In obsolesence." flatlon. to streb11 IO('allon , to look bt'yond thti ne1&r term, and nevt'r to compromulf• qu11hty " Tlft:v UK)K ASKAN('E AT property lnvolv Whit(I 11re1>1des over Lunda1.wr All&e){'lalet1, 00 hlK u lonu term h•1Hw ul fllc:cd terms, because it of the natlori '11 I r~t· t real t' t.atc.• advl~l·ri., '* fl rm l.-1.1 vt•& th,•m without inflation pr oteclion. Leases U1•l appral:ft'S, buy), i.ell:., dl'vdop!!, luse~. thut 11wludc lndl'xjng, such Ub m i.hopping malls, manages, and finance!) mulum1ll1on dollar rt·11I ure mori• UC<'l'ptable tstote deals In fu<'t . tht>tr prl'fcrred purchases, says While, As such, he dt>nls with t•xtrt'mt>ly wealthy peo :.irf' •·ndost·d rl'f(1onnl i,hoppang centers or malls, pie. with blue chip corpor»lJon!t, and mt reas1ngly und urbun iwd !>uburllan office buildings, in that with forei~n chenlS, mainly penMon funds . and order Hut only the vt•ry best. most of them based ln tlollcind, Switzerland and They a~ree wtlh American <'henls that apart· West Germany. ment hous(·~ tt'nd to be accompanied by man.age· Fott'1gner s. he obiservc:.. know exartly whut mcnl h<'t.11laches ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ Last 3 Offices {"' Lido Peniniula Office space available Optional amenities include: answering service. zerox. telecop1er. coffee bar. word processing, and computer. Call for information or reservation Johll Neiswender 6 75-8030 Ca1tforn1a Business & Industrial Deve1npmen1 Corpcrat1on 20 I Shlpyord Woy Hewpori hoch "Most Wanted" Sae the new-very reliable-A B Dick 990 PLAIN paper copier. The 990 nas all the "Most Wanted" featuros • Supenor Copy Ouallly •Transparencies • 6 in 10 l l x t 7 copies • Gummed labels • Copy both sides • Offset Masters and more Call us today tor a "Most Wanted" Oemons1rat1on AB Diel< Company 1380 S Anano1m Blvd Anaheirn. Calif 92805 (213) 426·8315 ·LA. (7t4) 635·3601 -Orange WE'VE COME A LONG WA.Y SINCE GEORGE'S WOOO£N TI:ETH By Terry Grant. R. Ph. Colkge Slates SenUnar ··eu sin ess Com · munications: Getting Your Message Across." a one-day workshj)P. will be offered by coastline It SN'ms to Ix· u \\('II Community College do1·umt•nt<'(I ru ct thut the from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 1"uthcr or the United Feb. 24, at the Holiday S t a t t• ., , (; c C> r Jo! l' C WJi.hini.:tori, had 10 m.ike Inn in osla Meli,a. do \\1th .in unromfurtahlc Anthony Tebels kis, a -.1·t or \\oodl·n tt·l"th nut. Coasllme instructor in 10 tlH>:-.1• l'lyi;tone rluy•;. g roup dynamics a nd mol>t all clt·nt1"try ~"' a behavior modification, l11t and nH:-.s pmpo-.1111111 will lead the workshop. und a tnp to the.' d1•n1"1 The workshop is de· "as trulv an unv.1 kurn1• s igned to educate bus t· l''<tll.'fll'Ol't' Mo1kr1•n ctrnu .. 11 > " ne1ois people in the com· ~omt•thu1~ t'l:w, and dur munlcalion process, to 1 n g th,. m u n th u r teach' techniques for im· f ebru.irv the 11uhl1c proving communication -.pothJ(ht1'>1111lhl'ntJ111 s kills a nd f o r un · ll•nant•<· 111 l!ood d1·nt..,1 ders tanding the com . ht«~lth Sd1f'dull' an a11 municatiansof ot.hers. po111lmt>11t today und y•1u , m1A ht not haw to worrv TOPICS lo be covered uboutf:tlwll~th 1ofi.1n} include ''Sen din g matC'rrnl ' in thl' fllturt· Messages Efreclively" YOUH OOCT<Ht l'A~ .. Receiving Messages PllONf-: es Whl•n you Effectively," "Com · n<·ed a m<·d1 d ne P1<'k up munlcation Within a n your pn.,.,rnptwn 1( 'ihop Authority Hier archy," PlnR ncarhy. or"''' \\Ill ··Non·vcrhal Com -dehH!r promptly wi.thout extra charge/\ nr~at mun1 cat1on ," a nd many fX'Opli-t'ntrust u5 "Manipulation and Hid- with th,•ir prescription~ de.,v Agenda." M a y w l• t' om p nun tJ Registration by Feb. yours" 16 1s advised and may be PAUUDOPHAllMACY made by mail or in Fne M•erf pe r son at the college. lSI "°'fMtGI load 10231 Slater Ave., Foun· ..._,_. h«h ta in Valley. 92708. ~==='=•=2·='=sa=o===~ Registration may also .:: be made at the door. Call 642-S678. Put a few words to work for ou. Fee for the workshop is $20 whi c h Include s )unfh. I nform a tion . 963·uBl 1, ext. 256. Your money never had it so good. 9.557°/o Interest Rate = I 0.027°/o Annual Yield* Republic's Money Market Certificates This Republic High· Performance Money account pays'/.'.\'.. more than any commerciJI bank. There are no brokerage fees or other charge!.. Call us. We II arrange for transfer of funds from your bank or other ~dvlngs institution Abon rat. a.oilabfe F.t». 8 thnt Feb. 14 $tO,OOO MJnimum Deposit 6-Month Term (26 weeks) • ..,11nual v1t"kt 11 lunch .. ..,t to 1tm.s1n .rt wmt l<tlt' lor Olll" y .. a1 lnlt•re ,, pr111>Uy Int r111ly w1lhd1111t1~I .......... Every time the Rooster Crows your Money Grows Rf~ REPUBLIC ~~o~~~o~L SAVINGS SANTA ANA 17th St Wtst ol Newport frcew.iy ( 114) 541·5286 ANAHEllW\ 202 Anaheim Pl¥"· !>00 N Euchd St (714) 956-8290 11111111 l.AOUNA NIOUEL 302J2 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 495·0850 WESTMINSTER IJ4 Wc~tm1nster Me1ll/Bol&o f, S11n Diego Fwy (71 4) 694·.5347 Hud Ornce: .-.LTADlNA 2246 N Lake Ave. (213) 791 ·1261 /661·661 I (fsfle 26-Week Certificates % A"HUAl lATf For certificates issued during 2/8 thru 2/14/79. Minimum $10,000 lntere•t compounded-doily. No fees. Earn more than ony bank. Not•r •ate I• ,,SS high.ff tllo.t U.S. ,, ...... , 1111 dlKovnl ,., •• •hkh It onn-.-1 ••~ly. Tl1•••f0t•, rot• '' •11\>Jed 10 <hoflt• OI ,..,_.1, wltltll ,..,Id eff .. 1 "P""°I y19lcl r..i .. 01 ,.,..1011..,. tttq~I ...... 11.10111101 1"1••••• p_lt., fot eorlr wllhdrowel ,,.,.. dfllllcot••· Santo Ana I 979.7 seo S.A.Faahlon Sq: 83-4-0717 Newport Boa ch 1 631 -2611 HuntlnQton 6each'1 898·9666 ~~· -- II·: ,t :. ~ 'i _ GIBRALTAR SAVINGS . 1\ ,, -. ,\\~ . i/ \'\.11I11\'\ , ............. 1\111>\. -- .. ' A/tlC Board Names 1t'et11an Pat ricia Shontz Longe. second Crom right sits with American Motors Corp. directors_ during annua l shareholders meeting in Detroit. The professor of Business Ad · ministration at the University of. ~ichigan is the first woman to be elected to the AMC board. Others from left are Roy D. Chapin Jr .• Stephen A . Girard. M Frederik Smith and Robert B. Evans. Ashland Sales Slated 5 Finns'-to Acquire Oil,, Giis Properties ASHLAND, Ky. <APl -Five companJcs bave agr;eed in prtn· clple to acquire oil and gas pro· pertles of Ashland Exploration Inc .• a unit or Ashland Oil Joe., in transactions tota ling $744 million. Dan Lacey, an Ashland s pokesman, said today. Lacey said the a greements had been announced in recent duys by the other companies. ASHLAND, the nation 's l5lh largest oil firm, has been divest· mg itself in recent months of its less profitable operations. In Houston , Tenneco Inc. said its Tenneco Oil Co. unit and Mesa Petroleum Co. ·-acting as equal partners -had agreed to acquire Ashland Exploration's Midcontment Region oil and gas properlles for SiWO million. Tenneco said the acquisition involved both producing ar.d ex· ploration properties --includmg 350,000 undeveloped acres Ul Oklahoma, Kansa s and Texas and net prove n r eser ves es timated last Ort l al 2 million barrels of oil and 740 billion cubic feet or gas Tenneco s aid the agreemt'nl was subJect to negotiation of a definitive accord anct receipt of all requisite governme ntal rul· Ovt•r Th~ Counh·r MASO Lhtinq1 """"''". mgi, and approvals. In Los Angeles, Getty Oil Ql. said it agreed m principle to ac· quire interests in 15 011 and gas properties and support fac11it1es from Ashland E xploration for $267 million. The properties -offs hore of Louisiana and T exas currently produce 6.500 barrels of Oii and about 25.6 million cubic feet of gas a day. INCLUDED IN the :,upport facilities are four natural ga:. plants m Louisiana and p1pchnt:s connected to the various pro· perties being sold. 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At St. Vlncent's Hospital, New York City, patients in the intermediate coronary care unit meet with the hoapltal's post-myocardial group to ask questions about their heart attacks, their recover,Y and bow to prevent further attack11. AT AN ABIZONA HOSPITAL, WHILE waiting for their prescriptions to be filled, patients watch a film aboul proper use of the medication, possible reactions, what to do if they have a reaction. These are among 6,SOO hospitals belonging to the American Hospital Association who are undertaking pa tient information programs. Evidence suggests that the well·inlormed patient recovers faster, suffers less pain and anxiety. u.<Jes the right kind of care at the right ti mt and stays healthier. "NOl only do you have a right to ask quesUons con· cerning your treatment, but owe it to yourself to do so," says Alex McMahon, president of the AHA. "Tht' priestly physician Is disappearing," says Paul C Bruckner, chairman of ' the Departme nt of Family Med icine at Philadelphia's Thomas J efferson University. ··Pati e nt s w an t answers." The new programs are 36 diverse as the patients they serve. Money's Worth A program to help tell young children what a hospital • !ltay will be like and lessen their fears is going on in to'' Conneeticut hospitals. Video casettes. wall posters and • pamphlets tell children what to expect when they have an ope ration. wear a cast or have tests taken. Pre-admission tours allow children to 'examine instruments and put on surgical clothing. , Parents are getting cbiJdbirth information through family·centercd maternity care programs in hundreds of hospitals. Then may decide in some cases whether to use a physician or midwife, have the birth take place in a I bedroom·like "birthing room" or the delivery room and have their husbands present at the dt!livery and particlpat· ing in the care of the newborn. ~1 CANCER PATIENTS AT WILLIAM Beaumont . Hospital, Royal Oak, Mich., have regular question·answer sessions with a team of doctors, nurses, pharmacists. , dietitians and discharge planners. Patient and team work together. sharing the patient's anxieties and exchanging information. Before discharge, the patient and his family can (ind out what to expect during recovery. At Stanford University Medical Center , a new course introduces physicians-to-be to patient care through the eyes of the patient. Students meet with patients and families to discuss the e motional and financial aspects of iJJness. Hospitals often encourage people to help answer the questions of other patients if they have been involved lo a similar illness. Mastectomy patienb often are visited by a volunteer who, from her own experience, will answer questions. Parents of children with heart defects have formed an association at Johns Hopkins Children's Center Hospital They meet with hospital specialists to get answers on how to prepare their cblldren for surgery and hospitalization. 'Bargains' Inspire Rally for Market NEW YORK CAP l Stock pnces "'taged their first ad· vance in a week toduy in light boying attributed to technical market forces. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which had fallen 43.74 points over the last eight sessions, managed a 2.86 gain to 818.87 today. Gainers held a 7.5 lead over losers a mong New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. S1ork11 111 r ht- Spol llglu NEW Y°"I( IAPI ~"°'• 4 pm prt<' ar>d net chilngP ol ,.,. lift"n mo•t -'t tlv@ New YO'!< Sto<.lt EllCll8~ ·~'""'· ~~l'(!\1NtioMlty at ~.~n 1;., , 'lo StReors Ptt0 n<l.000 30'" '• B.,.lnq 111 !iOO 11"' conu c;~ 111,aoo u·~ CIOtO• Co • 100.aoo 10!o ••• NltCrw Hill 1<18.t<!O ~ •,,.. .------------------• Citicorp 1'9,soo n·~ •. ~~OL;.-b • • ~:::: ~"" :-~ Itel COfJ> t11AOO 171, " Coln* EOll ,,.,000 71t"' COion Penn 111 AOO 77'1• • Kennecott 111,000 7•'• • '4 Wol ... t WW 1'1,500 U • '"' se11rsRO"I> • 110,roo 1ov, NEW Y°"K IAP>· Sa1f1. • p.m. price er><! Mt tlwlnOe ol tllf ltn "'°'' active Amerle41ft Stoct< E•~ ''wn. tredM n.wtloNtlly at more tl\611 JI. HouOlfM . .. . . . 1 .. ,AIOO 19tr, • .Ii. 11u run1 A • 10'..IOO 37"" • -.. Synto COrP 10lo,500 :IJ'* • "' tutlo!. Nie•. ..,800 161-\ • ~ No rtek Inc. 611,.00 "" _,..., Te•lnlAlr . ...000 11"" • '"" Hu11ty 011 • SO,'llO 3'._. +I ~ Amini Pict .S,500 816 • ''-~Th w1 '6.600 ,. -... Cotnpolncl "· 40,100 ·~., • ·~ M1ta 1 S fo«-k• Did NEW VOA IC •API IAPI WMAl AMEJC DID NEW YOIU( IAPI I Ptev TOO•y Gay l ll "' ,., ... 7~ 7~ ta1 Ni .. I • • • NEW Y()fll( IAPI -Tiie New Yo•-Stoo EacMnoe rf'"°"4ld ""'w OOd lot 1r<1nM<.· llon' by Pf'lnci1>81 O.alen for Wf!d1•nclay Pvrcfl•Mll Of n •.110 sll11re1: -.ate<. ot 7~ •• 10 $Nll'H. lntlu<lonq 1,lla SMh!\ llOlcl '"°rt . _, .... ' • 1111! .. ... . . . "' ' -DAILY PILOT Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS lftNING uol • Nlwe ote1 A •tw qu«t41fba\ C.OI· ••it••• tot 11n~11ow11 r-ont G .,,oei•ct An entlfe ~ 1ebult• Oet 9town • lltlorU to ...,.,. • .,. ...... IMlhond tl'oe 0..111 l)f • r .... ., i>Olk• Off~ • THe llAAO'f ~ T""' et.uya Of PI PIO• ... , tgllll\Jt '""' to 11 .... • COl.ltt~ ~ on IM pell! .... _,,,_~ •• .,....,.. Ol IAH ~ .,,_ wni>no...,~ d1ti.. It 1111 WOtl'Jlf\ • OYUEAIY 011••t •ctgr O~·u• ~....,.....,. ~ lll• conc:•Pllon and ~ bi•tll ot' ,,.. WOtld·a flo .. IWHIJl>e O.tly .,. doc""*1teo Plaglng Doctor CMNIWI MC~ UO I I.OW UJCV &.\ICY ~ E~ tr, t..i ,_.... 1 mom.ine> Of c.it1orn .. bKi. 10 ,._ 'l'OOI. -II '"*" • W04Aa JM)(80H 0veet ~eno ~oe Allgl&. M ag~1c Cooper slurs as u pathml whose unconventional llf estyle entrances a young doctor Clloward McGllUn > in the flr t part of "Women in White." a three part miniseries beginning tortight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. (l)~WrTI g.....,GNmN 8-119 f 0 COlunloi. Plc:- IU,.. And HOfl~ooa • Cl) ~AHDIJOH Tho! Ill-SOive 11"11r 0totlletrt by ottenno 1111 Sanl0<01 a tr• trip to Hew411 (Part 21 tD MACHEJl. / LEHAER REPORT '1i) TO IE ANN0UHC£D I f:OOln~~-7.30 8 Ol8CO MMJtC 1 (I) JC>KEA"S WIU> I soc MIUJOH OOUAA I MAH St-ii una~ to 1top " tuooornaut'a PfoOtH• 111 deatroylng a Qty (Pin 21 Hott Hot. Guett lho lremmps 0 IN SEARCH Of' •.. "'Noah 1 FIOOd'' A aramat- IC tnqu")' Into Iha llC!enlltlc trullla behlna Ille Blbhc&J legend of Noah.1 llOOd. Oa•1tel £1•t Ing• e KNXT (CBS) Los Angelelo D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTWlnd I Los Angeles KASC-TV (ABC) Los Angelos Cl) l<FMB (CBS) San Otego D )<HJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angules 9 'KCST (ABC} San Diego I KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles • l<CET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles C!) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntmgtoo Beach I DATIHO GAME THE 00HG 8HOW TIC TAO OOUGH At>iW-12 A COllfegeC>UI tMnlgef c;omea lorwerd u • wit· nes.1 ag&1n11 hoodlums.- only to be abductec:t. tD 21 TONtOHT • l .. Pllf= A Wrap-Up" ' t t.91 &EAllTY SHOW MATQtGAME P,M. 8:008 (I) THEWALTOHS &In becomes tlle lown·s llrst pin-up girl as JoM 111es 10 <:ope '41'tlh ~a1S1ng 1111 lamlty alone Q um.EWOMEH !Premiere) Mllic;IOUI OOS· 11p about Jo (Jeulca· Hllf'l*I aod !let flanoe Friedrich 811-(Davia Actlrayd) P<0111Pll Aunt Match (MM<lfecl Nlltwidl) lo sti.,e IOMe troubleeome memoriea wttll lier niece. 8 MOVIE • • • •.t "The Thornes ~own Alfelr" (1"81 St..,. ~. Faye Ouneway. An lnaurance lnveltlgalor f1M1 In ~ wl111 e weelttly crooll 12 l'tfA.J 8 QI MOM I MtNOV MOtll brMkl ~ MWI 10 Mlody llllt he Ma bOlln 0t0«~ 10 ... .,. Centt • MOYll • • • .. Walll Don't R;Jn" f t06el Cwy Otani S~­ ltta £og1t A rftlddlt-eo-d rnttn .,... 10 play CUjlllc:I 1><11"""" 1ne tl'IO yoong ~ lie II tOfc:ecl 10 ii-.. ~-Wtlll (21'tf• I • CAAOt. ll.WllTT ANOMlHOe Slo•I• .. Kldn•PO•no. "1111 ,am~~ • UOVll • • • "lnVtt•llOn ro A OunllQlllet" ( '"•) Yul Brynnet. Oeo<~ Segel A pf1V"ler ts l'tlt9c:l IO llt• lln OUICMI r-'urnlnO 10 1111 W..1~ town 12 hf1) fD NOVA .. Pi111.,na ~rom Thi P11r· The world 01 1111 o·t11os Indiana of tl'te Peruvian An«Ma It pettemed on 111a1 of t'*t ~'°'' 6!) AHVOHE F<>f' 1'£HNY80H? "TIMI OIOtlOUI AO<T\l/ltlc:S • • Pan Ill Percy 8ysahe Shelley" Leigh Hunt's trlendahlp with PfKC/ ~ Mary s11e119y and Ille •tla- uonstltp be'-0 Shelley !Ind Lord Byron UO 8 0 ANOIE (Pt•~•) Angie Falco (Donna P..c:c>w), I Willi• r ... from Ille "''°llO side of the trecka. INrne lier new boyfriend la lrom ono ol Ptllledfllphia'• wealtl'ti· Ml lemllies. tD THE 000 00<.lfl'LE o.cet enc:! Felix leam I 1111 111ey each •equlre minor surgery '1i) TVANASOUT .. Encores" Artist Oor11 CllUe's career ls traced; a Colorado Knool tor the pertorrnmg arta lounaed by CllltflOlle POtry 1$ v1511· ed t:o0 8 (I) HAW/JI FIVE-0 McOa1Tett 1rtn to w11m a ICOl"ntul young soclaHte that ane la Ille PfOl()eCtive ~Im ol a jewel theft 0 WOMEN IN WHITE (Premiefe) Or. Rebecca Delton (Soean Rennef'j). Ille ,_iy appolnled CNef ot Stott at a Aorlc:la l'IOIPl- tal, tries to coc>e wttll the problems of lier atalf an<1 deal wtth lier own marl!., problem• With her ~aband (Slulll'I TUBE TOPPERS NBC B 8:00 -"Little Women." The premiere or a new s rles based on tho Louisa May Alcott novel. KTLA 8 8 :00 -"The Thomas Crown Af(air." Insurance investigator Faye Dunaway purs ues holdup man Steve McQueen in this 1968 movie that features the song "Windmills of Your Mind." KOCE 9 9 :30 -Americana. The oldest all·black town in the United Stales. Boley, Okla., is the subject of this special. Wl'tllmen) (Part 1 ol 31 8 0 MIMY tA.1.P TIMI detectivw of Ille 12111 preclnci are t>etregec:t by a --of b<>gu• bllla. • MEJllV GAlmH ··salUte To Columbl• P1c;- 1urea And Hollywood's 1~1h AnniY19'MrY .. • WOAU> .. 60Uhenlt•yn'1 Chllc:lren Art M ... lng A lot Of Notse In Patl1" A portrait ot a· dlvic:lec:I French Left and e group of Sollhenltayn· In~ l!TtelleCtuala. G.9 l.AHGtTON The bleck e .. perlence In Alrlca enc:t Amenca Is por • !rayed ll'tfough the poelry ollangaton~ t-.ao8 1J1l IOAP Jeulca btlngs her loYef Detective eon--home tor brealcfaat, ·and 11 con- 1rontec:t by cn.tfK. CD AMEA1CAHA "Bo4ey. Oft~ Altve And wen·• The Oldest a11- bl11C11 town In the u.s 10:00. (I) IAANA8Y JONES BeUy t>ecOmM emotlonally lnYotvec:I with a marrlod dlent. 8 1'7'~ BuCIOy la lntroduoec:I to the die(;() acerie by a lfoubled girt (PrieclM• lc>pei) 5119 mel In dance dau. fl) NtOHT GAU.SW .. Ole Now. Pay I.lier" An undertaller runs 11 Januery aale. "'ONc:I Weight'" An under world figure trte. 10 189¥9 the country. 9 PIHNIE8 FAOM HEAVlH ··00wn Sunnytlde 1.ane·· The adlrtlntvt .. ol Anlwr Pll'll~. a travailing tong· sheet paddler, are ~·ec:I. 1~1~ "WhO II Sylvla?" Cllrllll· 111'1 uncle ahowl Ille lam!· ty 11\at TV can bl a !fiend atw«laaatoe. 11:001 • 8 (I) IJ1l HEWS MAKE ME L.AUOH MOVIE • • ·~ "Paris Wiien II Slulet" ( 1964) Wllllam Holclen, Audfey H~ A writer negleel• ht1 WOfk wlllfe chasing hts aec:retary around Parla. (2 hrs I Ga THE 000 COUf:'LE Fail!JI l\elps ~ Ian<! Ille third men spot on Howard CoseH'1 Monday nlglll toott>ell game. g) THE OOOOIE8 A wttcn ~to the Goo- dies lof help and sets them olt on a 1emlylng trip through the aupernetural 11:1581) T08EANNOONCED tt:IOGCI) M•J.•s•tc Payday bringl 1 wlndfell to Hewkeye. a bftt>e to Henry. ond • pearl neoklace to Ho! Lipe (Al 8 TOHIOHT Holl: Johnny Carson G~tr Or Paul Elll'llCtl. McLean Stel!Ohson. Herve llllleef\alze. Art Grall.am Trio, 8 1WIUOHT ZONE "Tiie Montier$ Ate O\Je On Mec>le Street" Strange ()()Clffr ancea In e small town 1aaa people lo belleve they 8fe belnO lnvldec:I. 8 9 STAASKY& HUTCt4 Stlll'Sky Ind Hlltc:l't poee as dl'\IO ~ to na~ a big· ll"'9 l'teroln tc.1PPll&r (A) ~~'s _Mindy: On the Team --•,ii. · t\. .J ~ • 8y TOM JORY up, though I must admit. to explain audience. Wi th 'Mork and Mindy:;,· To !'lake a long storr short. she NEW YORK CAP > -Ever wonder the concept, it sounds really stupid." it's different," Miss Oa~ber says. read in ·a trade ~aper. 1n .. June that 1ow much one man -say a guy like Indeed. Mork, from the planet Ork, ·'Here you've got Robin, a r eal sh.e would play Mindy in Mortc....and tobio Williams, star of ABC's hit is l.o Boulder, Coto., on a mission -crazy, and besides . that. people !ire Mmdy." ··~.was flattered . and I was ·om~dy, "Mork and Mindy" -can to explore the earth as a possible new given something different to think pertur:bed. says the actress frof!J oean to the success of a TV series. home for his people. Mindy is bis about. Detroit. "I was upset because 1t Ask Pam Dawber. Williams' co-human friend, th4're to protect him. "GARRY MARSHALL the pro-sounded stupid, really stupid." tar. to guide him through all kinds of ducer Jets us be ourselv~ and we She met with Marshall, she says. "He's the ball of energy that drives hilarious situations. don't 'always stick with the script. "and be insisted be would allow us to ie show.'' says Miss Dawber. who "A Jot of people in television, And It works." improvise. He said this show could lays Mindy to Williams' Mork. they're so used to writing down to the "Mork and Mindy" is the most suc-revolutionize the situation comedy Robin is the most positive force I've cessful of the current season's new format. So with that in mind, I de- ver worked with · shows. consistenUy near the top in cided I would do it." .. Rl~HT NOW. WE'VE got a 7J7 Conuneric;al the ratings. But Miss Dawber says PAM DAWBER RAD little pre· · Jfmula that works . Anything that .,. the cast and the show's producers vlous experience -modeling, some :obin does is funny." must work to keep it that way. commercial work, a part in Robert Yes, but ~&.-! 1--Settl d "Robin's got so many facets to his Altman's film, "The Wedding," a "And I'm the one who calms things ~'~ e character, everything he does is Cun-role in a pilot for a series caJled "Sts- e>wn," the actress says. "I think NEW YORK <AP> _ Television ny. But the character has to be de· ter Terri." She caught on quickly. e're an essential team." i J ill h veJoped, and we need more Crom the "We do it before a live audience The ins tantaneous s uccess of ~.~~S~~h~I~ the :;~~ar~~ s upporting characters. and for me, the first scene ls alway~ Mork and Mindy," introduced this obstacle as he rushes to rent a car or "You can't build a show on jokes the shaky one. I usually have to optn lll and broadcast Thursday nights J G k alone." the show, and J 'm a little nervous. t 8 on Channel 7, caught most TV a! ':::~::i;;; a'::f n:..ai::te c!=~a~rin ~AM DAWBER came by he r part "Once you screw up a line, then the ·atcbers by surprise. ABC, to be About 70,000 other performers quite unexpectedly. a_udience is on your side. 'OK, I've .lre, saw a bit in the improbable ranging from big-name stars to part· She was under contract to ABC, blown it, we're all friends, let's get Jncept, and, says Miss Dawber. "I time extras were able to return to tbouffh she ~ad ~? real desire ro~ a on with it.• at THI OOHG SHOW G) OITIMAlfT Mlll end H Ml c:ap1Ufec:I ""'*' tfley go 10 ... ,ell fOf a ,_ KAOS WI* weap- on • OAPT10H£O A8C W#I MOANING 12:008 ~ ZOHE "Tiie M.an In Tiie Bonte~ An lme>Ovetltllec:I p1wnbto- ke< buyl • bottle lrom an old woman out ol p.ty tor ...., • AlSMD Hn'QHCOCt< PAQINTI A woman 11 11.eert b<olten to MY9 to and ,,., 111a1r .... 1111 e h•nd'°'1'141 OOIGMI. 41) OETSMART ~ KAOS agent, wtll't a Maxlffll 8m1r1 mull. lhOOll I banll guard and Mui.blamed. flD DICK CAVETT Gueat: Cllrlslop/181' tiller· wooc:I 12:06 9 Cl) C88 LA Tl MOVIE •*'It "COlumbO Now You See Hirn" ( 19781 ~tar Falk. Jade cauidy. LI Columbo matehea w11S w1111 1 cnarm1ng nlghtc:lub entertalnet suspected of kllllng • bllllnen affOCI· ate 12:a0 0 MOVIE ••*'ill "lite With Father .. ( 1947) Wlltlam Powell. ,,_ O\Jnne A woman and 118' tour eons manage 10 mentpulate 111etr Olhefwl&e tyrannlcat patrl1tch. (2 !Ira , 2S min ) • MOVIE • • • ··fhe t/.ien Mofl)an Story" (19571 Ann Blyth. Paul ~. A IOtCll aino-IUtler• per son II and prot11S1ional iou u •118 fight• e l>3ttle ag11ns1 alGohollsm (2 hrs I Q) MOVIE • * • .. Marines. Let s Go • ( 19611 Tom lryon. Davia He<11aon Foor Martnes turn TOkyo upside aown Wl\1141 on llJrlough 1n Japan 12 l'trt I 12:318 al MAHNIX Manno• t$ lll'lld 10 1nveatt- ga1e Ille SUPC>OSQClly ac:ct- clenlll deltl't ot a raoe car a"ver t:OO 0 TOMOAAOW GuMll: Geoffrey Holc:let. cl\ofeogr1pner and Broad· way dkec:tor. en.Id 1111 018nna S.ra Cary C"S•bY Peggy") 8 LOVE IEXP£ATS 1:i0 WANTED: OE.AD OR AUVI "11 Elour• To Cruzy HOtU' 1:'61..W• 2:00 HEWS . MOVll * • • ··A Wom•,;·, Venge1nce" ( 1948) CIW ... Boye<. Ano Blyth a:'°I NlW8 2:.30 MOVll. • • ··Green Sudalla" I t9M) Wayne Mom&. May Qermaone • NEW8 2~408 MOVIE * • * ' AdlM Hid l'our Soni'. ( 1941) Ingrid Ber"° men, w .. ner ea.tar. 2:551 NEWS S:OO MOVIE • • "t "In Our Time" (1944) lc:la Uipfno. Poul HenrleO •:OO CJ 'MOVIE • • • "The Ftgllllng O'f'tynn.. ( 19•U) Oouglaa Fatrb1nk1. Jr • Helene Caner Ga MOVIE * • .. The lady And The Banal!.. 1111s 11 Lou11 Havwerd. P1tr1C1a Medina. ~ t5 8 STEVt E.0WAA8S f'ridart• Dar1•i•~ Mo.,ie• AFTERNOON 12:00 0 * • • .. The PmlOe Wl'IO Wu A Tiiier' (10511 Tony Cur115. Piper Laurie. A a1raet girt falta In IO,,. W1tl't a pnnce wno was r a1sea by thleYes. 11 hr . 30 mini • • •• .. TheSnop Around The Corner" I 19•01 James Stewart. Maroo1e1 Sullavan. Two lonely peop1e-11n0 eaen oltter tl'trougl't ll'telr lellllfl. (1 l'tr • 50 min I - • 3:00 ®J. •.•.'"··say Gooc:lbye. ~ago•• core.. ( 19121 ~san Hayward. Darren McGavln. A recently wid· ~ ooetor 1oroe1s hat rroot>lel ana grief wtten the t>econ>tlS JnYofvec:I with • young girl ~ to b9 a doctor. ( 1 l'tr., 30 min I S;30 8 •••;,"The Trac:1u1r1" (19711 Sammy 081111 Jr., Ernest Borgnlne A cocky man takes Charge of • traclllng 099'8tlon. enden- gering 111e 11ves ot the men 1n tl'te pcsse. ( t "'·· 30 rn1n.1 ·~wi ....... ·a sn 't that surprised by it, to tell the work Wednesday. as two unions role lll a senes. They kept sending "There Is one thing: In my next .1Jth. d d ~ .a scripts, ~ t:ttey ~ere aU so bad, l ~ontract. I want a thousand dollars .. WE HAD NOWHERE to go but en e 8 ..v-uay strike against the ad-just ~~dn t 1denltfy with any or the for each time I say, '.Mork, what are vert1slng Industry. parts. you doing?' .. 'l'M THE ONE WHO CALMS THINGS DOWN ' Pam Dawber of TV'• 'Mort( •nd Mindy' DuPont Awards Given NEW YORK <AP> - \n NBC report on South ~!ricao apartheJd and 1n Associated Press ladio feature on ''Shade Jehind the Sunbelt" ¥ere among the winning mtries in the 1977·78 \trre d l. duPo nt· ·;oJumbia Univers ity \wards in Broadcast Journalism. A wards for documen- aries. investigative re- iorting and other special >rogramtning also went ·o 10 broadcasters. In lddition, the jurors vot. !d four c itations, a ipeclal citation and a ipecial award. ~ CBS Trying to Bonnee Back By PETER J . BOYER last" and "We'll be back" could be beard or weaker shows in its schedule and win LOS ANGELES <AP > -ll's tough on at CBS. But the kingdom-In-exile routine points on audience carryover. CBS. this matter of being second. The began to wear thin this year when it For example, the successful "AJI 1n The network that once smilingly accepted tbe became apparent that ABC was no mere Family" and "Alice." which used to air tag. "Tilfanyfletwork,"ls havingtomauiit pretender. that it had found things quite back-to-bac k on Sunday nights, will .out with NBC to stay out or the bottom or comfortable at the top. sandwich the new shows "Onward and television's ratings. So, what ls CBS doing about it? Upward" and "The Stockard Channing It's tough. "Our main job is to come up wttb new, Show." This lead-in tactic has made hits of Thal big CBS eye was on top of the rat. successful hit series," says CBS program-mediocre series, which. tr the ploy works. togs tussles for 20 years. "I Love Lucy," ming executive Bud Grant. "That's tbe can be used as lead-in grabbers in their . "Gunsmoke." "Dick Van Dyke Show,'' name of the game." own right next season. "Beverly llillbllUes," ''All in the Family," The network bas begun an intense cam- "Mary Tyler Moore.'' palgn l.o program development, an area ON MONDAYS. CBS split the ve ry CBS neglected before its descendency. Its popular "M-A-S·H" and "One Day Al A CBS WAS ALWAYS NO. 1. Its New York Jaat few years at the front of the ratings Time" wtth the once-cancelled "WKRP In executives. according to an old saw, used race were years in which CB.5 depended on Cincinnati," which is now giving a respec· to walk on patrician Fifth Avenue to get to its strong series, "All in the Family" and table performance. their o((ices on plebian Sixth. "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." and the With th.is building-block approach, says That ABC surge three years ago, from spinorr children of those shows, like Grant, "We are trying to build bit.a for the television's discount basement to pent-"Maude" and "Rhoda." future." 1be network wHI try to do it with house, hurt CBS in prestige and it hurt the series, eschewing the miniseries approach network in dollars. "AT mAT TIME. WE were not very employed by NBC and, Jess extensively, It's no fun not being able to do fall successful at ~reaUng new shows,'' Grant by ABC. · seasQP promotions boasting of being No. 1. says. "We just weren't successful at creat-"For years. CBS had the strongest But it's worse watching amllated stations lng new series." This was partly because series and for years CBS was No. 1," jump ship to ABC <as 17 have done ln lbe CBS depended too heavily on its bits and Grant says. "For the last several years, lasttbreeyears). spl.ooffs, and partly because the network ABC bas had the strongest series and now ELIE ABEL, outgoing Transfo ..... ati.... And ABC, once the lowly "balf·network" inexplicably cut back its-development lbey·re No. t. We believe lo the series dean of Columbia's • • .,.. ...... In the days of CBS' domlnaUoo, hu been budget. form ot television as being the backbone of Graduate School or picking up those lost CBS raUnp points, In tu effort to make aalns this a successful schedule." Journalism, said the six From waitress to PhUadelphia's high society at the rate of SZT million per-pOlnl each mldaeMOO, though, CBS seems LO have a juron conaidered more is the transiUon of Donna Pescow in the new season. good shot With some or its new develop-CBS MAY ONCE again breathe that than 1.000 entries. comedy series "Angle," premiering tonight men ta. such as t.be succeuful "Dallas" rarefied air, but Grant thlnks tbe days or Tbe special citation at 8::.> on ABC, Channel 7. FOR mE nit.ST VEAR or so of ABC's and .. Incredible Hulk.·· And unlike NBC. ratlnas dom1natlon by any network are weat to NaUonaJ Public .-------------------__ n_e_w_do_mln __ ao_ce_._m_u_tt_e_rin_g_s_o1_·_·1_t_woo __ ·t_c_a_s_h_as_e_noug __ h_s_troo, __ 1_s_bo_ws_to_p_lao_t_ne_w __ 1_o_ne_. ____________ _ RadJo for its 37 days of 'S da ' s d llve coverage of the atur y ue Senate debate on the Panama Canal treaUes .. The award was ac· cepted by NPR Presi- dent Frank Manklewlcz and Linda We rtheimer, the flrat 1'1Porter &l· lowed lnslde the Senato chamber with 3 llv~ microphone during a noor debate. NEW YORK <AP) -A musical parody on NBC television's popular ''Saturday Nlghl Live" program haa prompted a $350,000 damage suit, cJaimtng copyright lnfrlogemtot. Elsmere Muslc Inc., publisher of the song "I Love New York," filed suit, claiming the words "l Love Sodom" were aubsUtuted ln unauthorlied performances of the tune on tbe pro1ram 's May 30 show, which wq later rerun. Ou™~slg~AT£!g~--- January thru Karch. :Boau will luve the Ba.Ibo& Pavilion at 10 a.m. on weekdays and 9 a.m. uid 1 p.m. on WHmds. 714) 673al434 • mmmatloD 1 merntions Adults $6.00 Child $3.00 - .. __ .. . ,. • • ENTERTAINMENT I HY GARDNER ~. Flbtuery 8. 1979 DAIL V PILOT .. """"'·~ Geor~t> Sel-!ill wrestles wlth Natahe Wood for a rootlJall durm~ a gaml' ~taged for the film· ang of the m ovte "The Last Married Couple in Ame rica Lana Injures Her Back HOLL \'WOOD (A p I A bark IOJUry has caused actres!> Lana Turner to cancel a play tour Her manui::er reported Miss Turner hurt her back last week while tryrng t-0 lrft her mother after a fall. Doctors advised rest for e110?hl to ten weeks. ehm1natang engageml'nts in .. Murder Among Friends" to Allanta and Palm Beach, Fla . STARTS TOMORROW MAH SOUTM COAIT PWA BREA PWA Costa Mesa 546·2711 Brea 529·5339 HARBOR BLVD. DRIVE-IN Santa Ana 53 H271 Q: llo• l~f do you 1u rct our fnortte TV laow. "MASH,' wUI 10 on -Tbe Franldlns. ColumbQ, Olllo. A For ver' Al thu momtnt. it's lonaevlty 1s ntaurfd by CBS renewlna It for ·79. '80. And by <>han.:l'?-(1 Its nume to "Th New Adventures of MASH • 1 Wt auppoee thal makf's more sense than "Thf' Son or MASH.··> Thls la not the same thing as whton a """' chan11t1 ldentltlcaUon tor syndic•· Uon rt-r\11\5, 1ucb as "Bona.nu" Cwblch became "PonderuH" l, "Jronaide" cnow "The Raymond Burr Show">. "Marcus Welby, M.D.," C~ually PoPular "Robe.rt Young, Family Doctor') - and m1ny others Whit's that they said about <'•veat emptor• Q: What Ir.Ind of root• did Ethel Walen come from? -Madellne C., Tulu, Okla. f\ Root1 thul 11he w s never ashamed lo talk ubout ··Somf' pcoplt• t.hsclaim their natural hub1tut," Sht.' ·aid. "I ulways named my origin. It dldn t hold mt.' back and neither has my color, I wu born In pov~rty My rather raJ>4Xi my mother "hen sht-was 12 Now tt\ey 've named a park for me in Ches ter. Pe " Q: My gtrl and I have a bet on what Mute 0 11mood weights. I say It's ln lbe Na. Site aays M ... Je ml&lt be doser to 110 or so. What does site wel,Cb? -Harl')' D., Lubbock, Tex. A : wpen the petite star weighed in for this season. she tipped the scales al around 100 pounds. Brother Donny hovers between 128 and 132..Jlounds. Sort or depends on wha t kind or a cook his bride is. A: A rew moat It• aio, rock star Alice Cooper WJS bospltallud. What for? And la Ile all dglat now? -Wendy and Cindy F., Shreveport, La. A· Cooper entered a mental hospital to help him kick the habit of drmking two quarts of liquor a day. He has since released a new album <the first in over a yean called. "From the Inside." And following a promotional tour. plans to make a motion picture reflecting his s tay at the mental in· slitution. Q: With hu well.earned success the l•st few years in "All in t.he Family," Jean &apleM)n's Ille must be nry different &bese days. What does sbe get the biggest kick out of? -Mrs. Brenda Rex· ley, Waterbury, Conn. A: No "dingbat·· in real life, one of the things she 's enjoying is being able to come home at night and eat a meal somebody else has cooked. She never did like having to cook all the meals in the family. Q: Didn't Burt Reynolds (wbo starred in "Seml·Tough" and "The Longest Yard") once 'nnt to be a football pro more than any&blng else? -Mickey T., Seame. A· Burt aJways knew his limitations. ''I would have been a great football pro," he says, "but I wasn't big enough, fast enough -or good enough.'' Q: On the TV series. "The Fugitive," I nc-ver did find out who really murdered Richard Kimble's wife. Was it the one·armed man Was U Lt. Gerard who hounded Kimble for years? Or did it turn out t-0 be the husband himsetr? -Mrs. An· netle Camacho, Queens, N.Y. A: The writers decided the murderer was lhe onc·armed man. Fred Johnson. Though it turned out to be an unpopular decision. at least the Teng Trophies 110 Denver Albums 'Glad You Asked That' IMCOMC.-r THI • STEVE HOOKS BAMD s .... ,. 10. "" .. THI wo••rs CWI L .... .... C:Of'Mt' ...... fY" ... st ....... l :JO.tltOO,. Tlctieh • S4.00 • .. .t lte«dSMd. ...... ~ •• , ...... 5-11 Spect1 -viewers weren't left hanging In m•d ·air. "The Fugitive." whkh grossed some $30 million for ABC 1not countinJ? reruns!. won an Emmy for its-;::::::;;:::::=:;::::::::;::::;:;::=:;:=:;;:::=::;;::=====:;:::::::; 11tar . David Janssen Q : Because Truman CaJ*e pDnlet me, I'd Uke a few f1cts about him. Wun't be born ln Monrovia, Ga.? Is he a happy mu! As an avid reader of his works I can •t stand JOme cri&lcsfut· ting down his lifestyle. Does It bo&Mr hlm -B.G.H., Athens. Ga. · A: No. The mi Ley man-about· I.own -;ays he never pays any attent!on to what people write about him . . that It takes a lot lo make his pulse skip a beat. Truman's barbs at other people pro· bably com~nsate for what they say about him. Capote was born in New Orleans on Sept· 30, 1924. rs he happy? "I don't know anybody l could honestly consider to be entirely happy." he says. ·'Anybody who is totally ha ppy would have to be incredibly stupid." About sex styles. we find only one jmpersonaJ comment: ··1 find at extraordinary that so many men I know consider lesbian women exciting a nd attractive. Among their most t reasured erotic dreams is the idea of going to bed with two lesbians." Some or our most famous and glamorous women consider the intellectual to be one of the wittiest and most sou1tht-after dates. Q: After not seeing her on TV or ln the movies ror a while, Dyan Cannon is now starring simultaneously in two movtes, "Heaven Can Wait," and the new Pete r Sellers "Return of the Pink Panther" mm . What was s he bu~y with bt-forc this flurry of activity? -Mrs. Sandra G .. Milwaukee. Wis. A: The rx-Mrs. Car~· Grant had decided she was being usrd not permitted to show her full capabilities as :.in actr('ss. Thu, 1mpress1on was t hanged m 1975 after shl• wrot('. produeed. d1r('t'l· ed. edited and scored her first film short titled. "Dyan Cannon's Number One." It won an Academy Award nomination as best live _;ictaon short film of 1976. Dyan's come a long way srnce her first screen test at 20th Century Fox .: They were am· pressed -but decided that Diane Frieson needed a more explosive name -so they changed at to Cannon. q: Aft.er doing bis shows from PblladelpbJa ror years, bow does Mike Douglas reel about movlog to Hollywood? -D. Brown, Philadelphia. A: Mike unwillingly expressed his feelings in his autobiography when he said: .. , don't think I'd ever be happy as a resident of Hollywood ." Send your queshons to Hy Gardner. "Glad You Ask~d That." care of this nttDSpaper. P.O Bor 11148. Chicago, Ill. 6()611. Manlyn and Hy Gardner Wtll answer as many questions as they can m their column. but the volume of matl makes personal replies impossible The Oorrows of B1rederick Special low·priced 'Previews this Weekend!! Fri. & S.t •• 8 oo pm Ticketi: $5 & S6 at the door Sun .• 2:30 & 8 :00""" Advance Sales: 957-4033 ,,... (eredlt cuds onlvl 'I -U. Tim. IBT.YUI': SAME lAIBIS, MY YURI A...., llld ...... ........ _.. ....... I •two•ldRI .... ..,.... ....... .. -~C-.lAt- Ellen Alan Burstyn Alda ~'lime, ~t~" NOW PLAYING C--awMOl' lfWPOltT Orange 634·2553 Newport Beach 644·0760 M )\\ PIA~INC, ~'!w~~~!!!~eertorJ) ~ LOS ANGELES CAP > ·-Vice Premier Teng (7141 957-4033 Hs aio-ping of China was so Impressed with a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CHll MA WOT UDO Never haw so few taken 'I so much from so many. I ~ ht"ll l\·mcr l'rc....:ni.1111111-. AMERICAN BALLEITI-IEATRE Three performances in the TERRACE THEATRE, LONG BEACH performance by singer John Denver, he reportedly - requested 110 of Denver''s albums to share with mem bers of the visiting delegation. The singer was among the performers at a gala Kennedy Cente r program held for the visiting Chinese delegation during their Washington. D.C. stay. At the request of Teng. State Depa rtment liaison Ke. !'I, H a Y. es ob t a i n e d t h e 1 l 0 D en v e r albums to distribute to members of the delegation, according to Lee Sollers, who represents Denver. MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ~l am AHO au~ ~CEM. n<E StAL Of nlE MOTlOH l"ICTUllE COO£ Of Sflr llEOUV. TION When this 12yearoid rnaste.nnind aoes to wotk .. ~atchOut LAST DAY SAT. FEB. 10, 2:30 & 8:30 .. , .... ORSON WELl.(S ............. HAL LINDSEY-... ID• &fl(.ll( lllll,"41lOllll (Nnmt!l.VlllA!l • Conov~r COPPELJA I MOW SHOW1~1Ml'Tm ... AHMIMT PAS DE DEUX f II 1 h Mete u.A. s..-. c...e u... Cly a... lchtno/Rado1cv1c ( 11 • cn~t ) I c..te Mete S... AM 0...... LA SYLPHIDE (Act II) Matinee, 2:30 646-SOZI 54Ml94 . '34-Jfl I T~hcrk., .. !'ky/ PcrcN'n Tchcrka<.Sky/Rndojcvic jt--,-.... -.-,-...,--+-u.A.--Mll--C-..... ---t--S-.-.-,-,-.-c.--t THJME & VARIATIONS Evening, 1:30 1 Twta wue 1 1.., a.- '.m Hnmd /B1 ~ell van HJmd/Mechan Fuue• Ylley "J.0546 • ,.,. IJf.ISOO It f.sao TICKETS lllOW 1l Mutu&I Allencles, Terroce Theatre, J-~;...;._;;.;;.;;.~-.i.-------'-_.;.....----t l.onQ Reach Bo• office. f'or credit c:urd purchuea. tall (213) 4J6,.J661. (C••ltwb~ttocMnge.) ' .. CALL THEATRE FOA SHOWTIM!S NO PASSES ACC!PTED WtstminSlef (714) 892-4493 Newpor18each(714)673·83~ . Pilot Carrier Wins Bicycle Daily Pilot carriers learn to be... winners by being in business for t hemselves. "I feel good about being in business for myself. ''It really fe e ls like I own somethi.ng." said carrier Tim Kosi. 12. of Costa Mesa. Recently. Tim won a 10 -speed bicycle in a drawing for Daily Pilot carriers. To qualify for . the drawing, he sold a subscription. "It's pretty hard work. but I'm starting to get the system down,'' he said. Tim 's di s trict manager , Conrad Trigilio. said. ''for a new carrie r . h e's r ea ll y coming along.'' If you are a t least 10 years old and want to be a carrier. calJ 642 -4321 and ask for circulation or mail the coupon below. --------------------------------' I I I I Mall To: Orange Coast D ally Pilot P .0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa California 92626 I Yes! I'd like to find out more about being a Oa1ly : Pilot newspaper carrier. : Namt> I Address : ru, Ace •.. • --------------------~---------~- ,. I DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ., MATINEES SATUIDAY & SUNDAY "KING OF TH__E GYPSIES" trn 'LOOKING FOR MR G0008AR" (R) "MAGIC'(R) "PARADISE ALLEY" (R) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" CPG> IN\IASION Of Tt-lE DOOY SNAT~H RS"fPGI COMA. "ICE CASTLES .. (PG) MOMENT BY MOM NI lHt FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE. 'PINOCCHIO ' 10) . REVE::NC.E OF' THE PINK PANTHER' (Pvt .... .. 'FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE' 'MIOl\41G~T EXPRESS (R) · NA 1 IONAI lAMPOON S ANIMAL HOUSE AMERICAN GRAFITTI tR) "MOMENT BY MOMENT" MIDNIGHT EXPRESS 'UP IN SMOKE ' . A BOY & HIS DOG '(R) "CALIFORNIA SUITE .. "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PG) A~I. ORl\/E·INS OPEN 6:)0,.M.HIGHTLY Cnllo Und•• 11 F1ee un1en • K100•• l'l•Yt•ouno OfotOC c. Kon MOVff MOYll IPOI PlUI NICKILODIOH IJ>OI A&AN A1DA IO\UI AU lfAI CUT• CAllPOINIA su1n '"°' l21J09)t-1IO->Oell.JO & IOtlO CllHl IAlTWOOO Mil W)flOf WAY 1111 lOOSI (POI ,LUI Tif( OUT\AW JOSO' WAUS tl'OI ..,,,_~------.,. _.UI SUMI~ I UOMotllO Nll'IOY , c~!.. INVASICIH Of fll :!' SMAJOlllS tPOJ 71l'~3•·9SIO ,AUDtSI AUIY fl'Ol 't .... . .,..., ..... .. 494·1:>14 Al.AN ALDA "US ALL &YU CAST CALllO•NIA SUITI CPO> 12.JOel:> ... a>OMeJ09t >t I IO >O OIOICM (. KOn MOVll MOVll 11001 "UJ NICKILODIOH 11101 ClltolT IUTWOOO Mlf WHICN WU 1111 lOOSl fl'OI 1iooei 1>0e•:OOel1H & 1o:io ~c.scon WMOYll MOVlfM t~I -.....,, __ S4Y·,__l .... k~1:A'°;1r-" • •• "SLOW DAHCIHG IM THlllGCITY"' I.-----' "U ... cu JOl SH~ INI 1.&.L IOlltMWI 1. LO.O Of llHOS I"> 2. nCI 1118 --l'OI i . llNIUCl'f lllD MCM1 111 AH AU ITAll C&lt IN - CAUf<MtttlA sum (NI "us IYIS Of LAutlA MAIS 111 C\INT IUTWOOO mrr WHICH WAY 1111 lOOlf(N I 'LUS OAUHTUT1t1 CUNT IUTWOOO Mil WMIOt WAY lllT lOOH ll'OI l'llll OAUNTUT111 wan......,., TM LOYI IUO 191 ,,,. "YI TNI ONI a ONl YIN ·.' t .... eNTERTAINMENT I INTl::H"'11SSION I MOVIES • edwards cinemas • WHERE THE BEST PICTURES PLAY .A Eine ·Farce at UCI edward~ NEWPORT · .._,.N tl•A\t ••11t1 "'-Al•Mru11H 644•07LO .... l#l'ONI t I "'f h (J "" ...... of tht.: ...... .,. It lw-.Ys 1ec>m 1 1 pity when a coll ae or university drarna de· {l•rtm nt put.. a r al cracker· J•t'k 1how on the boards (or a m lou1cult run Btifore a rf'· vi w r can lert lh playgoer, th Onal curtainlha11 de. ccnded Such W'14 th cuse with lust Wt'tilc '• produrt on or "A Flea In Jl r Ear .. at C trvlne. wher a c rowded 1rhedul do 11n'l ullow for longl'r t-n1tatcetnent If you mlut-d ll, which you prob1&bly did. you houldn't have. ' ll.£Y CABll'' rcnd1Uoo of tht' frantic farce by the French mu tcr Georgt>s f'eydt'au wa~ one of th me>lil t'nJoyable eve· ninR of theatergoing this column has &ttt In on in some time. ~'he play IS ronstantly m motion, even when tts characters are sta- Uonary, and expl<"des m tts IH'COnd act lnto a . ft•enzy Of h1I r1ty The cast Is uniformly ex· cellent, but the standout of the troupe lS Allen Harrison in a dual role or a noble man and a h o tel port e r who is th e aristocrat's exact double. The confusion that results from this situation is enough to carry the show through two full acts. The funniest role in the show, how e ver , i s th a t o f th e nobleman's brother possessed of (Q._·=-s;_.._~_:n_m_~_t_us __ ]' 11 •Pttth lmpedlmenlt.JlplencUdly handl~d by Scott r rlcdland. CIOSt" be!\lnd Is the hot-blooded Span! rd who's convinced his wlfe ls deceiving him, a plum role (or J'oree Galv11n . ALSO IMPRESSIVE are Nela l..tl11t hton as Harrison 's wife. Darbara Passoll as her friend and ft'llow coosprralor, David Gidley as an over-Camlliar ser- vant, Patricia Chamberlain as his i.exy spause and Christopher fo'r acchiolla as a domineering hotel honcho. UC I guest lecturer WiJlia m Needles, a seasoned S h akespearean actor, con- tributes a splendid cameo. Rtchard Triplett's huge, plush setting -which converts from a home to a hotel and back again comes in for a nne round of applause. With productions as impressive as "A Flea in Her Ear," UCI should consider al- 1 owing a s econd week 's engagement. * U P COMING THIS weekend are two other collegiate produc- tiona. a children's s how at Golden West College a nd a pair ol one-acts at UC Irvi ne. "Mother Goose Revue," a stage adaptation or the fairy taJe classics, will be presented this weekend only in the Actors Playbox a t GWC under the direction of Charles Mitchell. Cast members include Nancy Andrews, Jenny Adams, Renata Florin, Kelley Arne Franklin. James and Bunny Harryman. Mark Haselleld, Sander Kebre and Jerry Us rey. Performance limes a r e tonight al i p.m . Friday at 6 and 7 :30 p.m .. Saturday at 10, 2. 4 and 7:30 p.m . and Sunday at 11 a.m., noon. 2 and 4 p.m. Ad· mission is $2 for all ages. AT VCJ, LANFORD Wilson's • "The Great Nebula in Orion" shares the bill with Terrence McNaJly 's "Dunelawn" in a pro. cram presented by the uni· versily's dra ma workshop. Performances are Friday and Saturday only al 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Little Theater. "Nebula" is being directed by graduate student Bob Weiner, while Frank Oliva. also a grad s tudent. s tages "Dune lawn. ·• Tickets are $1 and are available al the Fine Arts box office. SuQlllct.M..~ ....4lflllllllllt.,, AA• ~~..a--~1 l•~ ~. Ptu• Clleecll & Ctlong • "UP IN SMOKE" Film On for ~Old USC Movie Sclwol Observes 50th Anniversary HOVlf .:. T. H E GREAT HOVlf f'~ ~RAIN l'f.j \. • Jimmy OsmoNl 0 By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP > -The academic world sniffed in 1929 when the University of Southern California offered the country's fi rst coll ege course in the motion picture. "The nickers a n art? Preposterous !" the pe dants said. Today. according t o the American Film Institute's latest s urvey, 40,590 s tude nts ar e see king d egr ees in fi lm. television and related subjects at 1 ,5 13 colleges a nd universities. A total of 200,000 young Americans are enrolled in the 9.228 courses in those fields. - THE USC FILM school. now ca ll ed th e divi s ion o f Cine m a -Te l e vi s i o n. i s celebrating its 50th anniversary Friday with a gala dinner at the Century Plaza Hotel. The event is the start or a $15-million drive· for a building lo replace the ancient bungalows wher,e the school has bee n located since 1940. Significantly, co-chairing the dinner are Ted Ashley. Barry Diller, Alan Ladd Jr, and Sidney Sheinberg, all top bosses of major studios. That testifies to Hollywood's opinion of the USC school. And no wonder. Graduates include George Lucas ("Star Wars") and bis producer Gary Kurtz, John Milius <"The Wind An THEATRES c AJWllM AflQ ) CINEMALAND m16l~ 1601 1414 Ht<OO< 11•0 f •te P1o •no ''WATBSHI' DOWN" •:.>• '"THl IBMUDA TllAHGLr ko4 ....... .. CIRCLf OF tRON* ,,..,, .. n "'FORClTB4" t4t ''OEAT14 Ot4T14l Hllr ,.,,. "THI otiet AHO om Y" -'"' C COSTAMESl So. CoHt 71' •\4f1 ,, .. )11n 811\IOI '•t~ Pt•••no 70MM DOUY STHIO "SUPBMAN" l:IAl .. 111 .. 1 .... "OUYB'S S"{ORY" ..... ..... lHAU" ... ~.. ,,.., "THE IBMUDA TllAMGLa-._... ''Vt ATBSHtP DOWH" ...... .,.. ..... Amusing observations of life along the Orange Coast , penned by a native son, In the DAILY PILOT and the Lion">, Randal Kleiser <"Grease"), Hal . Barwood and' Matt Robbins <"Corvette Su mmer"). David Wolper <executive producer : "Roots"), Irvin Kirschner <''Eyes or Laui:a Mars">. Curlis H a rrington <"Games">. cinematographers William Fraker and Conrad Hall, and many other achievers. IT ALL STARTED with a course called "Introduction to the Phot.oplay," originated by USC with the newly founded Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scien ces. Among the lecturers were D.W. Griffith, I rving Thal ber g, Milton Sills, Douglas Fair banks, Erns t Lubitsch and William de Mille. The latter, brother of Cecil B. de Mille. beaded the university's film d epartment for many years. lo 1932, USC began offering the first cinema bachelor or arts d egree in t he country. The mas ter 's degree came four years later, and the Ph.D. in 1958. George Lucas' first movie, "THX-1138," and las t year's "Fraternity Row" originated as campus films. Oscars have been a warde d t o "The Race or Lincoln" and "The Resurrection of Bronco Billy," shorts made at the university. With such a record. you can imagine that use is flooded with -r-••••.. I .j' applicants seeking a sure route ,..., , ... ''° "oo MON-THU~s to ta e HolJywood studios. ._.~:'i:0~;.00,!.°'t~· 1 30. t .1s "WE CAN ACCEPT only 0~'·111;:1:::===::::;:;;:::: ol every 10 applicants." says E, Russell McGregor. co-chairman with Morton Zarcoff or the Cinema.T e levision Division . "We can handle a maximum of 40 students at any time.·· What does the school look for in applicants? A high grade point average -"with so many applicants we can settle for 3. 7 and strength in olher s ubjects, though we will accept 2.8 or 2. 7 in special cases." Films made by applicants arc not necessary and in fact can be a drawback, said McGregor. FILM SCHOOL g ra duates have long complained that the industry ls closed to them after they graduate, Not true of USC students. says McGregor. "Eighty.five percent of our graduates find work on films - not only in theatr ical films which are only 20 percent of the market, but in other areas as well. We are fortunate in that we are pretty good al what we do. "We ha ve the a dde d advantage o r proximity to Hollywood and four to five tho u sand of o ur a l umni, including heads or studios and television s tations . Geor ge Lucas calls it 'the USC Mafia.· " ._. -. - ..,_,. ~" QU)eC "°"'"At.0. ....... :; 19RO "1/J . r. ~x .. !3i?~~ , ...... ., ""' SAT tJ 4' > tt ••t •I H 'I IUN1 ... •4.$ t• 11-00 litOM T-171' t II f llUI• •• 10 .. ~Af~UM JOO •• • •> • .JO ,.-. WOOO.,AllEN li ·1vn:RI< >HS AMAZIHCl Y SRILUANT"' Plus (R) "THE BOYS FROM BRAZIL" Sean Connery "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" _,_,,.,,., ,.,.. '·~ ... ,.,. "''"'"' ... , ... ., ....... ~1 ...... ~HOVlf * "THE LATE GREAT PLANET EARTH" (PQ) ""HOVlf ll'Qf Owff l&llTWIDOI .. Wtu.tw.'fPU . .,..., 'MllCNW. 8u'f Looll' MOK-THUAS 7:15, 1:30 • 4 • - -, We Have &.imt'<>ne once told me that tl • person tan rnunt his trut-frlt-nds on unc hand whf'n h~ dies, he as t1 lucky man. It 'i. hurd to mukt> u relataon.c;hlp work today ~bl>t'<'ially when things eem to be moving so quickly Ont·e in a while you meet someone you thank is Spl'ctal and you thln.k you have a lot in common and :.o much t().J.ell eacb other and you ran 't talk fast e nough because you want desperately to understa nd each other and while you· re talking hours pass M thoul notice. Then comes the moment to say goodbye and you're suddenly aware of how vulnerable you've made yourself. and you realize it will take a certa in amount or courage and faith to see that person again Often the second conversation ls full or retractions and cla rifications about what you "really meant " when ·ou said you didn't like your Aunt Carolyn and how you .. really feel" about the love relationship you had when you were 22.and still idealistic. Suddenly you begin to place conditions on every gesture the other person makes, every nuance. And then comes the inevitable moment when the two or you who thought you had .. so much lr1 common and "really understood each othe r's bead .. and couldn't talk fas t enough trying to verbalize the similarities - a re afraid or each other . And then you are alone again. standing in the crowd, where people a re laughing and mak· mg noise and saying nothing. You are unsure whether you'll ever make it to counting five rriends on your fingers. Now you and your almost friend call each other on Tuesday afternoons saying things like: "See you again real soon, okay?" and "Le\'s have lunch someday." You mean it -maybe. or course you're too busy lo give it much thought, because, after all. there are potential friends everywhere a nd there's no Ume to think about things that dldn 't work out. So you close the walls around you and the next time you hope you won't spend words with such abandon without carefully pre·selectlng the co-com municator ; or. maybe, you decide not to share at alJ. It's much easier t o talk about nothing. The elevator man wllJ listen while you talk about the weather, football and why you can't exis t without three cups of coffee in the mom· mg. What else do you need? Years later you wa ke up and find yourself without bridges to the outside. You're safe only c1n your is land where you can r ationalize why others are not important to your lite and why you don't have time. Unfortunately. ladies and gentlemen. I think those or us who beUeve we can exist without s upporting and nourishing each other are guilty of making a gross error. And if we don't risk the possib ility o f making our ~ometimes miscommunication less profound - we lo~e Ht>cause we are a ll we have. .. . . . . . ·". Lisa Hatton and Christian Baker with diving suit, part of the Bowers Museum mobile oceanography exhibit. The I ' l l ' t Briny Deep • t The Bowers Museum oceanography exhibit is a visual display of mans use of the ocean. By DENNIS McLELLAN Of flW O•llY 1>1i.. SUH Did you know that man's deepest ocean dive-to a depth or l-5,000 r~t-was made in }960? It took J acques Piccard and Lt. Don Walsh four hours and 48 minutes to reach the ocean floor in their subma rine Trieste. The pair stayed down only 20 minutes. but it was long enough to observe one shrimp and one flatfish. thus proving that life does exist In the dee~st part of the ocean. nus is Just one of the racts students will learn this year when the Bowers Museum mobile oceanography exhibit visits Orange County schools. The "Oceans ... the Other World" exhibit is a visual display of man's use of the ocean for food; r ecre ation. tra ns porta tion, petroleum and minera ls. AS VISITORS WALK through the 40.foot· long van they will see a history of man's ex- ploration of the ocean depths. A simulated trip seven miles below the surface will reveal oce.an life at each sea level. 1Recorded sounds of humpback whales and dolphins add a sense of Uf\derwater drama). On display are m a rine life specimens, from sponge and coral to a whale vertebra and a shark jaw. ·'This e xhibition is an introduction to oceanography." s ays Peter Bartlett, euretor of natural history at the museum. "We have a ·representative section which deals with the lowest to the highest Corms of sea life ... The oceanography exhibit is Bowe rs Museum's second tra veling display. Last year's mobile museum or Orange County's citrus in- dustry J>l'OVed more popular than expet'ted. More than 60.000 people passed through the van, which made 120 stops in eight months. PROPOSmON 13'S IMPACT on planned school field trips was one factor behind the suc- cess o( the van. "The school dis tricts a re s hort on funds and can't afford field trips, so we bring <Sff BRINY, Page C2> There 's something new going on at school The N ew 'Old' Mathematics these days. It's old math, math as mom and dad knew it, ·with emphasis on results, not the how and why of new math, which was often shrouded in indecipherable language. 0 k UNIT 11 Estimating Sden11$ts utl.,,.tf that a space colony could be built In 6 yean by 2000 ~le and would CO$t about 25 bUJion dollars. &tlmata help us plan future project•. £.itlmaca also help m check our calculations. To atlma1e the sum of 604 and 207, we !MY round the aumben. Calcut.ted 604 +207 -811 600 +200 -800 0 \ By DANIEL Q. HANEY "~"''" ll"reuWrftw BOSTON -Remember new math? That vogue of the 1960s that encouraged moppets to bewilder their elders with talk of compact numerals and the commutative property? The idea behind it was simple enough: Bring up kids to do more than remember that 9 times51s45. Teach them WHYit's45. But it was all dressed up in bighlalulin' lingo that dis mayed old·line teachers. befuddled parents and. worst of all, created a corps or youn gsters who could ba rely add or subtract. So after more than a decade of trying, new math was denounced as a failure. There's no upbeat name for the way m ath is taught these days. It could be called the • • .. • new old math. Teachers hope i\'s better math. The dense jargon , baffling symbols and wordy eJtplanations or new math have disap· pea red from thls faJl's math books. But some or those ideas linger on, dlsguised in the no- nonsense drill of back-to·basics style, the newest classroom rage. .. SOME PEOPLE WOULD say that in the era beyond modem math, meaning is gone out of mathem atics." says Mary Ann Haubner, of Mount Sa int Joseph's College near Cincinnati and co-author of a new elementary math series published by Houghton Mifflin. But she says the why of mathematics is still there. Only its presen· talion has bei!n changed. 0 0 • 0 ~ ,,., Estimation and Statistics El Is the Cdlculdted answeT reasonable? Use the estimate to check I . sq 90 2. 110 100 3. 6892 7000 t72 +70 +295 +300 +3015 +3000 1(>1 160 605 400 9<J07 10.000 •• 4q !JO s . 673 700 6 47<11 5000 -23 -20 -215 -200 -3956 -4000 2b 30 248 500 oJ5 1000 7. 63 60 8. 604 bOO ~. 89 90 x4 x4 ~ "'4 XIS x8 252 240 506 2400 712 720 28 20 19 20 21 200 10. 4}16 4}'M 11. 5}95 s)"IW 11.4~ 4}'MO This reproduction from 'MtHtJemattcs, ·a 1978 text, f!mphasfze~simpNclty fe mathematics teaching. • .~4 •u .... - • .. . ,. 'It's pre~ented Kl a much more subtle way," she says. "It doesn't demand a lot of words . It isn't as theoretical." THE NEW BOOKS use examples instead of explanations. pictures instead of verbiage . Multiplication is illustrated by .rows of windows in an apartment buildmg. Shaded boxes prove a half is more than a third. Perhaps this use or words is the biggest dif· fe rence now. Houghton Mi(flin 's 1967 book for ifth graders read · "Subtraction is the renaming of a sum and an addend as an addend." "Division m ay be the renaming of a product and factor as the missing !aclor ... New math books labored over sets. Texts for e very grade began with an explanation. A set is simply a collection or things --desks. riverboats. lert-handed trombone play~rs. But in elementary books, the notion took on_mysUf~­ ing complexities. "mE INTERSECTION or sets A and B is the set that contains all the objects that are In both A and B," the 1967 book explairied. "The union of sets B is the §.Cl that contains all the ob· jects 1.hat are either in A Or in B, or both." · Experts now admit this didn't teach math. More often. it obscured it. So how did this gob· bledygook become part of the Thr~ R's? Gerald Rising of the Center for New Direc· tions in Mathem atics Education at the State University or New York in Buffalo says: ·'The new math was largely material that w as d e v e lope d by serious university mathematicians. There was a great deal or stress on definiJ.ions and uloms, proofs and structures. This wasn 'l fitted into the kind of program that was useful for classroom instruc· tion, especially in the lower grades. Some things were presented almost in the way they would be in a college textbook. "Those ide,.s are still there, but are more carefully presented." SET THEORY, ONCE the domain or kin· dergarten pupils, seems to have disappeared completely. Gone. too, are nearly all the squigg- ly symbols and mind-numbing phrases of new math. Jn new math days, Rising says, "when you wanted to talk about an equation, you didn't Juat talk about X plus 3 equals 5. You talked about the set of all X among the integers for wbicb X plus 3 equaJs s. You had all this extra languaae and notation that was hooked onto the tbioi that often was ve"ry s imply expressed in tbe old days." The books of the late 1980s, for instance, taught kids to multiply 4 times 3 with: "4 seta of 3 form 1set.of12." Today, thls klnd of tbinl ls translated as: ''3 times 5 ls l~" Thia doesn't necessarily mean math ls be· (See MATH. P .. e Q) . . I ' DAILY PllOT ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE .... Brin~ The ~ittle Fingernail NOTt(m INVlflN• a10\ •• ,.,. Mollo ,, ... ,.oy ....... "'•' .... NOTt~.,., Cltl:OITOllS IM¥4 94 '""*°' .. IN CN\I C.... NO.A~tllt1 ct'rom P1ce cu th~ fi\'ld trtp to tht' i>chool," H)'I O.bbt Kaw. ri t.tbit coordlnator We c1n Dd more kid throuah lhtr\' than ~ould be •ble l.O 10 on 1 fl ld trtp " ~IUM" th t'ahlblt I J U l.O any pad lt .. el. tl'1PI to htah 1('hooll a1.ao an planood And on \li't kend5 lb v.n ~m ~ at abot>PlnlC ~·ntt'I" and hbrarl • - fh,· moblll' mu!\ um l• llatftd by federally aub~lth•C'd CF.TA tCompl' hensl\'e Employment nnd Trulrun~ AcU emplo) ~ ten th mu5t•um \:1 provld4"d by a IMpartmeot ol Labor acranl t Kt•" '"> tht"' van •\JI~ on the road by nt·~I "t~k IM'u rh ru srhoob •tt 'IC'hf'dult-d twgmmh"'! m \i,rll •nd 1 t'•~tl"d to operate i1 II )'t-ur Sht• i.ay~ lhul 1 qut Uonn.altt-filled out by \ 1~1lors lai.\ )'t•ar mdlcatt.td t.bat an oce.aDO a raph)' t•'1.hlh1t .... '4. Pol)UlardlOICf' 8 t'fort• jtUHlM \hrout;h t M f~ exb1b1l 1 lour t:uidt• "'" "" ,. a u mmutt· Lalk on tht oc~an. which C0\1l'rs about 71 Pt''Cf'nl ol t.M earth"s &ur· fa ce Schedule lnformatloo •~ vaUable rrom Bowers Museum. a12 1900 O~R ANN LANDER , R.ettnUy aomfCIOI wn>l and u ked "-b1 a man would lfl the nail of bis llttlo fln1n arow muc.b lonier than the ot.ber1. You aald. " m e>tOP&I uu tbt '°"' moe nna~rn.an u a coop lor C'OCalM ·• I kMw aevcral men wbo -..eel an l"Xtr• lon1 (and aharp > lltlle fln1emall u a knlle to cul oe>en their cl11rett.e pacb DOTHAN, ALA. DEAR ANN. I know wby Urastllan m e o 11row • 1tn1 Jo v~ry Ion~ nn1~mall on 0 0 hand. It's to i :t. pt()· pie know tht'y re upper class and doo'l havt-to "II-Ork with lb ir hands ACAPULCO. MEXICO DEAR ANN ()on 'l )'OU koow lbat mtin Vw-ho repAir wotcb s and clocks oft n let OM flngt n1ail grow m~h lonscr lb.an ~ olh~ni "° lbey can plC'k up prlnp and Uny parta of the watch work.I " LOUISVILLE LOU DEAR ANN My husband's father ''' the nails on both little ftncers grow long 110 ~could clean the other fingernail! with the long ones. I used to w•tch hJm do It and it was utterly fasclnall.ng. PROVIDENCE. RJ. -M\lfllW Cot .... Ol\ltie-1 Al O••"Ot t UNllttOtt COUlt'I Ofl T'Ml' (.Wftlv. (M!~N.t. wilt ,_,.I.,. -"'4 ITATSO-CM.IP'Oltl!ll&f'Qft rtDseraalla e•• pead•n &M ear !Mdi ,.. to, .•• ,.. ... ,....,. llMn", , .. ,cou .. t•o•CHtH01-- cl _ _.. •• -....• ~--·-,.,. 411 "'° l'llrlM'lllO OoOI of '411d '" '""' ~ °' 11-£•1._ ol E l.Sf; h• -ti .. per -•• ---• \<-fl*ltt ......... 11n AhMl M llAAV. tlle ClSI! lllAHOl!l.I AUM If ............. of ear WU•· Avtftue. Co\I• .,., Qll~ftl•. •1 MAV.~. led, .. &o aD ear doctor. ,._ UUy •'"<" tl"'O w.o ~ •'" ... DU041(ty Notlco i. ~ tlwn i. credit«~ _ _.. a. .. ...._. _....stlld....O* ""'vlftt c1.i-.. ,.., tho wlCI *'" ear 11.y&'.llM ... -· •• en... fllUNTlHO ANO llNOINO °" tloM to .... Mid cltlm•.,, lllO ofllo Of <twl~) Uld ... "& 10 ID U1J deeper ,..,.. .. O'IAHG• co,ut co1.1.f!OE "-cion. o1 ,.,. ..__Id -er to ._....._ CA TALOO. ~ -to IN llMlnftN4 •I, ... Lia•• .. _ All Dkb-• .. lllK<erNnt••ll" olftce •' UNION IANIC, LO~ DEAJ\ ANN: ltty butband and l '"° 81d ,._Ill~ ..... Ol'll C::-1• ANOfll.H. c.Al.IFOltNIA, ""'I<" lilt· b.ve ..__~~ver IOIDethin8 tl<Ho'..,. S.Cffk,.leN-'<" ... -If' Mfi(• ~ _,,. IM-llt•., llWMn °' '"° .,...,..,.. fllo elld,,..., IN~ !ft"'° olflc• "'""'''"'"' 11'1 •II ~ Def'telnmq i ince ft ed n ye•n •IO· .... P\n,..,,......,. of Mid ""'°' lo ..... Ht-"•· 5uc:" <I• mt ....... Ed b from a family or etlbt boys lslr~I M<HMrV ~ """' .,. fli.d °" ' 15~11 biedtt ~t W0...11 llfltll hh ll"HelllM ., •f«f'Mld wlllll11 four and one girt. HI • mother was 1enm1111r1:.-----,~d •<~•('MCll,CM1lllecl <M<ll, mon111, ~ tlllt fln.t out>llUlk>tl of wJdowed and want.a. lo llve with ua 1>~·\ OOl'td ~ HVNll to ttw tt.i. none.. '·d bo lJ fcM• 01 1t19 ON1t ~1¥ COii~ Oel4ijl ..__...., S. 1'17' and brinl ber ~year~ .. son w 0,,,,,<1 &o••ll 01 ''"•'"" l 11 ... ui.10HaAN1C emotionally unst..ble. fie Can't WOJ1r, mour1l nott.\tlNllfl¥tperc...t tJ'l!il E-utOf'ottho 1th h be •-i e"'celleot .J. ... lcal IP• " .,o.11 dlllO 11.1s " c.cm· 1 '"" W"" w r1 •9'W""'" ,.,., ,.,. wi11., M44I 0ec~1 a OUg ~ D ,. t'U.1• • 0f9tiell$!0n p!oblem mere tS ldcko< wltl fnt~f Into '"' P<'OCIOUO MtC••Y &NtEUUINO condition. onlyOMl)UeltataQ hlm~1~ sto °"''.c1 11 ...., , • .,,. '• ••••OHi 10 A_.,.ML.N Ed travels ln his job. If bls mother ' a POWlll\..tNE AOONG CllNlC ''" '"' '" 1tw """1 Of •eitvr• ,._,,.., 1 ... ,,.., ~ strwt ........ A l I'll be .... _,_ ~ r.-. ~-·u·,,,-·,., 0 •UC:" ccont••(I ""'prcwtl!Oeh of lflO ,.... .. and b"""""r move n , "'-"'..-._,, ..... ~ -tw<11w111 0t'-l1".or1 .. 111ecateof ••T-.~ maid and chauffeur. Also, We wouJd boftd, llllt lutt wm ~,.,_ wlll l)e Tef: IPWIHt-7* "'-.... _ ... so'e support. Ed's mother rf••IMloWlelsc-dl\lrl<t. Putlllsi.HOr~ Co.~ O.lty Piiot. uo; Ul'l;u ~ NO ~ mav -'llldr-l\I' b1c1 ~ Feil I , IS, tt Mid Mer 1. "" "1 ,. aod brother have an apartment but oe•lod "' lortv41w 1411 ~ .ottirr my husband thinks it 1s b1a duty to ~J.:uo ~S r~:·~~";-~=;.,.. take them in. l 've told blm it would 'w~ •lvll-Of telKll"G ... v...., •II 1>lct\ "'CTI"°"' evsu•US break up OUT marriage. (My mother• lo ...... _, wniqutwillff or ,.,. MAM«STAUMaMT io·law is ve"' strong-minded and ha.a .i"~~'t9:~~bidcltftt '"° ...._.. s--"doinO bu~ •<1 r.~r-<>-..... '"""" MHH" to run everything_) ._,..._. • .__ltHfle ... _.., 5KTY.8NnfofTnlt-VISIOfil C,\ltE CENTEtt. ~Jl We have two young children and =.::,::~ :;,;'i>11of, 8'1"ot s-,...., C.IA ""-· c.1"°"''" are trying to get on our feet fmancial-THE BEST Ft t>rverv •. •J. 1m .. .," m~,_.. ~ o.o .. tmTllN9t' ly. Edsayslamselfisb. EPT Ot'No,Oiot~-...~~ I insist that each of the nine K EUROPEAN PUBLIC NOTICE di!=.~ 1s ~by.., ,,._ PUBLIC NOTICE ••• Math DEAR ANN : Kow come a woman w\th your sophistication didn't know that the reason some people let their Uttle fingernails grow longer than the re11t is because they are very handy for removing wax from the ears? ON LONDON, ONTARlO children should contribute toward an BEAUTY-SECRETS 1«Nrc1S1mono.o. t r th l th d "'279 TlllS ~ WiH OIOCI wfttl -apartmen or e r mo er an N""" c co""t" ~ ot Of'-eou"'" o" . r .. . • . • ff'rom P1ge Cl ) inc taught again the way the over-30 people re· member at. Many older math haters paln· f\allY recall memorizing mulUpllcation tables. learning to solve proble ms by rote, neither un· derstanding oor caring why 4 times 6 is 24. THERE'S STILL NO way to avoid learning tables. but teachers now try to show bow those numbers are arrived at. A cWTent math book might show kids how 3 times 4 equals 12 with a picture of an apartment house. The building is four stories high and has three windows on each noor so the child can figure out bow this adds up to 12: Fractions are illustrated with shaded boxes. It's easy to see lhis way that one-quarter is the 8ame as two-eighths. The new books a re filled with pages of ex- ercises. numbers and fractions. "ll's berome very drill oriented," s aid Mrs. Haubner. "Teachers were begging for more drill." WHILE SET TIIEORY and fancy names for old ideas are gone. a few other new math changes have been saJvaged. Like new math books. today's texts have extensive sections on geometry and measurements. Teachers hope the changes will mean that children will learn to do simple math as quickly and accurately as an older generation. They are abandonin~ the attitude or new math advocates. who assumed that if kids knew how math worked. they could figure out the answers. In the mid· 1960s, school systems embraced new malh with abandon. Like a conquering army. the method took over classrooms":· BY 1974, IT was used in an estimated 85 percent or school systems. And about the same time. education offi cials in New York. California. New Hampshire and other states were discovering a steady decline in children's performance on standardized math tests. Though some school systems are sticking with new math. the new old math is quickly making inroads. Houghton Mifflin says its up· dated math series has been adopted this year in more than half the schools in Arkansas. Oklahoma. Kentucky and North Dakota. Educators say comparisons with t.be ability of kids of the 1950s may be unfair. because children's ideas about school are changing. All the blame cannot be put on textbooks. DEAR LONDON AND ALL OTHERS WHO WROTE: Tbub for edauttng me. I bad no ldee that the Uttle ftogemaU could serve so maay purposes. P.S. I bope those folks out there who att cleaning their ears with long flogernaJJa wUJ qwt It. Sharp objects 1boald never be Qsed to remove ear w1x. Halrplos, pencils and yes, long .... _ b rd ill not fall vn HOTKl!TOC••OtTOltS ... ~~ _.,... brother so uri:: u en w on INTROOUClD TO oP •uUl '""NS" .. ' F•~•. ""· F ...... one. I love my bas band and do not cs.a. •le'_.,., u.c.c.1 b NEWPORT BEAQi Mollo " """'ti" qlv•" to 1.,. PCIOllPwd Or-CNll o.11¥ Pltot. want to divorce him, ut I cannot go c,..01t~ o1 JAMES M FOSTER ..,., ""· •· •s. n _ ,.,.,. •. "" ~1• along with his notion that we accept Juov s. ORAv, ,,_,_, ... ~ ... ...,'-- all the responsibul.ty. °"''~' eddr'H• '' t>o M<Cot,..1t k, PUBLIC NOTICE ""'' -..-.... No Ill. City ol Co<rta ~ ... eovnty Of Please settle this. He-says he will ••MM<I"""-~· O•a<>gt,S1ateofCa1ito....1e11>eu11U•k •• 1~ •Skifl -""II Uli<'O ,_ -• I I-ff I t00Ut lo fl I _.. a b j de by y 0 u r 0 pin i 0 n. -•Fac1111 """" Ille ... , ... E<1r-•t> ,.,,, ' !bot rneM to'· ... MOTICl!O" .. ~l!O CHANGES DESPERATE IN TEXAS -.... • .....,.,. dU\lrlU. a C•lltorftle <C>rPO<••lo... '"'THI! ltlGUlATIONS OP'"" •M&ll<t ~ -~<I Tr.n\ltrM ,,,,_ t>uo<I~\ eddren I\ FISK AMDGAMtE COMMISSIC>tf DEAR D. INT.: My "cleelaloa'" ap-OICIEu.-~ dOO C•"''''" °'·· ... oo. Cit'(.. NOTICE IS HERE8V GIVEN t"8t pears in your letter. "Each cblld :~~=-....=.:..~., ~.~~::.'~~i..c.ountY °' 0 '-· 111• "1'11 •no a ...... c ommll\lor1. sboQld eoatrlbate &ow a rd BD apart· -TM .,,._.,.. to '-1'--'" '' ~:;,:•,:ntt;e _:1,'::, :;'~eoFi~~ I _......... d b-•-•L.-dnctlbtd lft ~el .,. All "O<ll '" -Ga-~ wolt "-'on M• f\ 1 ment .or muw;l"l;r an •VWl'l:"r IO ......, ._.... •·-· """""''· -~ •"!' 9000 tt1• ... ~ ,;311 of tt.e 5, .... ~ •• 0: ba.rden will DO& fall on one person." •H111r.....----•111 of ..-...""""' ""9ftUfocturi..o 0;n1. '"<1 101 s. ero.ctw.y 1.os AO'Qeltt •W.,1ng !\ill bocl'f ~' 11-••MA~,,,... -tcK•t· c.1itomia 91 • un to' ~elw ~.,.,;. •Eyetull-t..ow O'f••r>q .. ••c:111nq ec1 .. 110 McConNcll. Ho. 111, City 01 ,...,,0.,ioj,, •s ,0 .. ..,,.1 ·f'e9Ul•liotl\ Freebies: Long Gone ::='~ -de9ogrl by Hew-1 8Ncll. C-ly ol Ot ..... , •llould lie ~ rel•tl"9 t o 9am" • ~·...... State of c..iHomta. m•"'lftalS -fW11HN!<s lot t11t 191"1 oM....,,.ge TM ~ ~ wlM ltt (Ori_... "°"'11"9 -s. ¥n1n.n l"M-· .... led °" or -, ... 2'111 day of 001-S ......... i. f'Ke4vecl If\ Ille FIS!\ F@tlruerv. 1<11• •t '0 C10 • "' •• ..,. G...,.. Qwnn>ts~ office betoN! s GROVER £SCltOW COtlPOltATION. pm Ot1~111,..,.,, -w ~t. k team lrvlM llvCI . Envl--.ttf o1-. n _, as'"" My son came home f rom coll e ge on semester break this week and asked me for a road map of the stale. I went to our safety deposit boll, took out a worn copy, and cau - tioned, "Be carefuJ with this. It's the only map we have." He handled it with rev· erence as he placed it on the table. "Tell me how you got it again?" he asked. "Well," 1 said settling down to rec:it.e a familiar story that I had told a nd b e had heard many times before, "Once up· oo a time. businessmen in the country used to court consumers. They wanted their business, and to remind them of this they would give them presents. Not big ones, but little re - minders you couJd use. ''For example, this road map was on a rack in a service station and you could take as many as you liked. .. Dry cleaners used to give out hanger s and sewing kits, banks gave out rain bonnets and candy, and there wasn't a year we didn't get hu.n· dreds or calendars free from insurance com- panies, stor es a nd garages. I used lo have a whole drawerful of keyrings and address books and fans . . . the funeral homes always passed out fans ." "Tell me again about the phone books,•· be chided. "Well. there was a time when you got a phone book for each of th e phones i n your house. You didn't have to call or anything. I know you're too young to remember. but you u sed to go into a restaurant and not have to ask for water or a toothpick." "You're kidding," he said . "l asked for a toothpick the other night and the cashier .asked, 'How man y do you need?'" "Whal did you tell her?" I asked. "I told her I bad 28 teeth, but I could double up." "All that is new." I sighed. "Do you know that your father once bought a pair of boots and they came with a penknife in the side? 1714167).0611 A~Aeooe••lded ~-...... )-4Y1110,...'4 ....,.. ..... c.,uo 7~AW"" AOOtl'lflCf """"•Ill Paise ~ .. lllnt •< """' ............. _ ~· ..... -ol -~~°"'-""°""' l'owtts ''"""'I kit .,... 5C ...c<r<llli' ~·s C.. ·~ '°' '°"'~ rO"W•-...., 0'09'/1111 CllKllUIOI' Al t!lt ""°°' "°"'~ yOll Tustkl. CA'2tell. c..t""'"'4a -•odn,..116 ~by ti.e ~rt. Cl•l"'s "'""Ila tuDmllled .,., -ntolFIS1>Mda.m..w1110.•va1l.t· F~ 1'. ""· II'-too P\lblk review °" arid alter So ler HI\ ll-to IN Tt_I_. 1111\ar(ll 7. IU• ell llU~-\ ~ ....S ~~used NOTICE IS AlSO GIV£N ttM1 11\f' W Ille Tr~ f« "'4 HSI '"'" Flsn •tlCI a..... Gomfnl1&-. ~uant .,.,,."ore·~ 10 Ille 11111...,,11., w\l!Pd b'( S«tkln> Oalff ,,..,_,, S. I~ 100-711 llNI ~ o1 t11e Fish ....... 1.11!1. I~~ G•,... C:-, will .,._. on March JO • c..tHoml•<"'-•loon ""''"Ille Cl1v Cour<ll Ch.t~\. llll ltv: W ... lo 8 1Hlel\1. Calllor"4a Slrfft, Ro(Jdlng. Callf0f'no6. Tr~ree •• • • m • for POAll< Ofscuulotl of ot"<I GltOValt UC:.ltOWC:Olt". P<'eWl\lll11on ol oble<llons lo ti.. oro-,. 0 .... Jn ~" -lee! 10 ti.. ConwnfUiOn on Tmhl. CA,_ Mort" 7. ,.,-.. '"'"'lw lo ll>e ~m~ EKAW .... l-MtlH .... m ... •l -1vr111Met" ~,.,..,.,.tor P\11111"""' Oranve C:OHI Oert'f Piiot. ttw ,.,. w.-.s. Written c""''"""'' Fel>rutl'Y •• 1'1't .... " "'"'' lie •Kelv.CI In '"" Fl\n dNI PUBUC NOTICE C.•-Conwniu lOro ottl<• lletor" So m on Marc II 7', ,.,.., COP!el of'"" Comffllulon's '"'''""<' _,over, wm lie av111a1>1e fOr oubl•( . review on end ettt< AC>fll S, 1•7'. NOTICE OF HOff..ltU9'0HSl81LfTY NOTICE 15 AL.SO GIVEN 1 ... 1 11\<' Noll<• ,, "-"""" 9lwft INI t!>e ..... l'l\11 &fod c.-Cll"'"""-·°"''"d"' df'n klMd wtll "°' lie rt~IDlf' lot lo '"" Wl'-llY W1.t<'d by 5«110t1, anv dtb" or llaOUltlH <onl•lt<i.<I 11v )00.711 -·~ o1 the Fl"' AN! 0,..,_ -,_ ,..,,_1,. on or att.r Gem"~. wilt"*'' Of\ "P"lt 1', 1••• 111•\dM•· lr1 I~ Aual~lum of ~ R,,_,rc .. , O.te<I ftltSMll Grt of F.tlr\lafv, "" 8 ulldi"'I. ••16 Month Sir.eel, s.c,.,....,.. Tani• H Qstotoo lo. ~·"'-•· at •. "·"'·· to """' .. ...i 7100 ,,_..A-<Ot11.itlfl ..,.., ~hOM lo ob '"""'""n c.a ~ CA~ t oo•ovali. encl lo "°°91 11\t! <I""'" P\11111,Nd Or .. CNtt 0011., Pttot. m•"'"'•' -,.,._ff reoqulatlofts •or Fttlr\lary ... IS "" SQ)." .... ,.,. ~.~ .... Wrillen ,.,,,..,,,...., .. • • "'"'I M ...c••-'" '"" Fosl\ •r10 ------------1Go"" ~slonolfkt....,... J p .... Oft Aorlt ,.. 1•1<1. ,.,. Fl\11 erld ~ Cornmluloft II<" __________ 1dtterrnlned -ttie -P<'~• NO'TIQ TO Clt•OtTOtts will llOVO "° lftc_._ °" -C:O\I to J>tJBlJC NOTICE SU .. ElttOlt C:OU!nOf' THE 14'Cle••I. \I•~ or local QOVtm mfllt. ST A TE Ott CAlll'OtlHIA POlt llUf\U ... t M Sf<11on 1141• ot llle Gov· .,,,,.,..., c-. T"I! C:OUffTY O" ottANOI! All do<~ rpfffnd lo llen ln drl' .... ~ ... alla~ Iron> Lnt"' F EdQe~. £ ,. of;~';~•~~~ CE<>f'OtA RAN· ..cuttvt ~rttarv. Fltll ano Camp HO'ftCE IS HER£8Y GIVEN to tf>e CO"'"'"slon. 1416 Nof\tll Strei''. c rffotor\ of ,,... -,._OK-:f~-=· Cat110rnoi1 •st11. pl\On<' INI "'·' --""""'11 Claims ao.olllst oared. J.,,.,.ry 11. 1t7', I .... Wicl oe<.-it et• ,_.irect IO tit• l'ISH ANO GAME '"""'· wllll the nK••-v -"""· In CQMM1SSION '""office of"" clenl ot ""·-er1 LESLIE F EDGER TON tllteo court. or lo llN!W<>I "'4!m, w1111 E•Kut•WSP<f'f'ta•v '"" r1ectu•rv -.c....,s, 10 ,.,. .,,,. PUOllsNd Orat191 Co.st 0.11., P"o' Ot'r\IQM<I •I l4W offlco o1 Jo"" ""· Feoruery e 197<1 0 9·19 ··Attendance bas gone down so much that students don't think in terms or going to school five days a week." says Rising. "It's not a mat· ter or playing hooky .anymore. It's sort of generally understood that parents can keep the youngsters home. ( ''The whole attitude toward school ls cbang-] ing. and hard things like calculation and Sing~s English WTiling and punctuation severely suffer l'fa•--dar from this." "'' sc:-•a . "Aw c'mon," he said. "Yes, it's goodbye loafers with pennies In them. -goodbye f r ee catalogs from m ail· order houses. and so long cardboards i n shirts. We're Uving in a ti me of inflation." ·'Speaking of inflation. Mom. I used your car and you owe me $2 for ORANGE COUNTY 3 TOWN & COUNTRY ORANGE (71•) 547-1221 PoOtMll. 7\1 s. L•~~ Avf' l1'613, ---·------PasMkn•. CA " 101' _ .. I\, ... Dl<Kt of °""""'' ot ttle ~\l<Jned ...... "'•lie•• ""'1•i"'"!I lo Ille> nl•I~ ol "Wicl PUBUC NOTICE decedent, witllil\ lout~'"' dltw-(,..._ '"'' P\lllllclll-of tnl~llOllC•. NOTICE TOCllliDtT'OltS D•ted OK 1 .. l<nl OfO •Ul.K TllANS"IElt Ant,,.,.,., W. l.eVi.r CS.0. 41f1-1111 U.C.C. I E WKutor ol ttie Wiit of Noll<• Is 11eret1y QI Yen to 1110 FRmA Y, FEB. t By SYDNEY OMAU ARIES <March 21-Aprtl 19 ). Build for security -avoid the superficial, eschew sub- stitutes. Cancer, Capricorn individuals figure prominenUy. TAURUS <AprU 20-May 20): Emphasis on getting around, putting ideas to work, arranging social event for close neighbor or relative. Gemini, Sagittarius figure promineoUy. GEMINI <May 21.June 20>: Check cash re- serves. Be conservative where your financial security is concerned. CANCER (June 21-Jul.Y 22): Be indepen· dent, original, put creative forces into action. Ne readY for change, travel, special written materiaf. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Wbat seems a deep, dark secret could be a myth Know it and respond accordingly. Temporary confmement, to home, hospital, need not be cause for depressk>n. VUlGO <Aug. 23-Sept . 22): Accent on de· terminlng "friendly territory." Refuse lo be lured into trap. UBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Emphasis on power p lay , c areer, p ress ure, added responsiblltty, promotion. SCORPIO COct. 23-Nov. 21 >: You perceive trends, cycles, t.be future. You're Ukely to be on target. Know U, act accordingly. SAGl'M'AJUUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You'll get green Ugbt regarding rmanclal support. Remember, however, tb•t you 1et not.hing for nothing. CA.PalOORN <Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Be posiUve concernine partnership, jotnt efforts, legal pro· posala. Cbeck rigbte, permiaaiooa. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Study Capricorn messa1e; go slow, become f1mWar wltb basic procedures, material. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20>: Creative energies n.nd a.o outlet. Imprint style, tech· nique. Love ls very much a part or scenario-tlO ls variety, cbaoge, speculation and the number 4. SINGLES RAP: Jerry Cohen. Ph. 0 . of the Tustin Co un seling Center, is hosting a rap session on Monday, Feb. 12. Enrollment is Umil· ed. Call 832-1353 for in- formation. ..... ~~OK~t er.Olton ol ()()HAl.0 F. MAI.ENA JOHNM.l'OOl.ECH eftd LA OOHNA I(, MALENA. ~~~~~~~~~~~ UtS.LaMAw.••U Tr_._.__~S.od<•SS •S -------.-----------------l fl-a,CA•Htl 1663 -~re OriV"e. City of r": au1........ Cost•_,,._°"""" ot Ol'anoe. State of gas. Cheer up! You can have the free balloon." :.~~ ·····.:~····"·~®.~ ··~·· A==~=-C.OUI Oohty Piiot. ~~:~,;_'!:!•c:v~~~:'.~~,j~ ~d: "Q:..? ..... : ...... ·.·~·· .......... · ........... :· ....... ·~~~;:-J_ ... _· 1_•._i_J·._""-__ •• _ •• _ .. _,.. __ __,,, ... =" =· .:·.=::.: ~'~.~ :.)~.:~ Suggestions for your Sete.tief \~. -~.-.~ PUBLIC NOTICE ~:r:-:.5·:::::.,~~ ~ -lt·Sl• to<etecl at IKI ._.... .. _,..,.. Orlve. ... ·: • &!per slicic.ers and ralnjackets. for the :Q,: NOTICE TO C•l"OITOllS CilY of Costa Ml'M. C-ty of OrM>Oe. ·.. .:· rans to come. In bnght cherry colors. from -~. · .: suflut::-~: 0, '"" st;!.~: .;:.~:eescrlllfod "'~'"' •. : ; $7.CJO '.. ; S'IATE OP CAl.IFO•NIA "Ott es· All \!Dell In tr.cle, fltrtu<M. eou<0· ··: \ 9 14k gold • a beautiful selection of ·. /-'i·. '"IE COUHTTO, ottANGE .....,, alld 9llOd wll1 o1 tt.et ti.<1rOt11c : t'""i: ciwme and chains. from S 12.00 ~· ..,...,1"'1 O.t• ""''""~J ~ 4H "4¥0!\Ces Oeiigns ·.~:. • Give a really unique gilt -a leaded glass ~· :· J-v••. ",. Un""''™' -toceled 111 1663 NPW .:\2· • .. : ~I °' chOo•• from a won .. -rtul array of .. : ·.. '" 111e M•ll•• or 111t Esl•lt o t Hemp~,,. ~. Cit-, ot Costa M4'w. .... UV HOMER H MATTISO .... OK .. ..o. Co• ... 1votOr-.!llo!eotC:•ttfOn11a ·. -:. custom glass Ofnamenta, to brjghten any ·.. Notice ts ....--. .... .,..,. 1o u .011ors TIW! t1ut1• trllftSler "'" 11e cOt1wm· \'Y'°\( ~' from $7.50. .· ·: nevltlQ ct•I~·;;,~, tl!P .alO elf< .. ,...,.,o °" « .atltr tlle ?1111 d ay of ;:::'.'t 'b.· dHll to Ill• \lltd <t.Mms kl Ille office ol F~br.,.,.,, ""· •• 10 ·00 a.lft. ctl fl you have an item for :.~.··. ..:= UZJ,· ~ ... .n ff!,., :.. ·:.. 111e ti••• Of 111e aloreMIO court or to Wtll•'" MllNlll £tcrow CMoor•11on ~ f:» a~(f~ ~ l)f'eltfllllle<nto lllll-SIQIMOetl1-wllose .OOrus IC ••? Ee'I Co"'· thc1 Singles Calendar, send · -Bll)rft.QU£ ·• · olllce ot SECURITY PACIFI C "'011•••1111 A¥er1ue . Fu1terto r1. j C I Ro f' .. i~· ~---'ll i ·•·•. :.·.· NAflONAL BAN K, w111c11 taller otlk• C•llfOrnl• ~. -an c1111ms mev t to hery mo. eatur· ~ 1, t11e DI•• o1 ""''"'"' °' '"° "". 11e 111ei1 """'.,,. ~ llO!d« At 1he ing Depa rt ment . Orange ·: •· 1 3 AS l 0 · : d•nl<IMCI "' 1111 """''" 119rt•"'ln9 10 adelftii .,...""" FetlrV4lr., 16, 1t1'9. Club c·-'-"-r ru"· each Coast Doily Pilot, P.O. :~· Via lido -Newport Beach 67 ... · .... o:· s•IO euatt. Suell c telmS with .... Sofer.sls-tjlttltlt <t!!sfertt. U<CTIUU ,.., M C · Lot E 1 ·MA.· Mcttwr'Y _.c:11ett must ,,. llled °" •II busll'IHI-elld ~ u$ecl Wedne"1ay m the Daily Box 1560. Costa eso. a. :·. . Paf'king n ranee tr ..,-: oru1111ee " .t«M•kl "'""'" '°"' 11¥ the Tr.,-. tcw..,. o.ts1 '""" Ptlot and contains nonces 92626. Please tnclude your :~··· .............. ·c"'"\a···· ... ·~·· ··().··· ·~·····~·· .. ··· ...... ·()~" .°Qdi(···. montlls after tho tint puC>llUllon ol ... " ... '-· add and hon ~ tllh notke. O•teCI: ~ 6. Hn of1 bwoment1·s an.dndserv1c,e ::~~r. ress P e . .. ~~.'?.·· ... ~ .... .-·· ... ········"·· .......... :·· ... •· .. · ... _:.. = ::,~i< ~..,!.wll9"0' c u mee nu• a even s Emecutorofl ... Wllt W•STl!ltH MUTUAL l!SClltOW /or thl! foUoWlng week ----------------------------------! o1 Ml4' OKeC1en1 co•~· Thur..1,... through Wednes· JAMHWOL' fl.o .... ,., ~JI Atto<My .. ._... ,_,__CA~ day. Send not tees to Club ._. ... .,... 9IW stat lte,... -. ... Df,., Cal -"-r Daily p1•-t p o Fmt• Sho~·f Si""' 1903 ""~CA.... 1>v1111S11ee10r.....-. co." 0.11" Puot. t"nuu , w • . · PllOll$1'11d °'"""' CNS! o.t111-PllOt, Febt~ry a. t<11<1 443-lt Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA J•" u-Fee. 1. 1. •s ... ,. 310-,. P VBLIC NOTICE 92626. Be rure to include your• name a nd phone number. Notices must be 111 our ha1ld4 two llH!tks 111 advance. To requt st a p1cturt, write or coll the Features Otpartment. 642-4321. P1C· turea are limited to fund- rouers open to the public. Vovr D•llY Pltot canb9 Aecyd.cl. 0r•"99 Cc>t~I Cotle9f i\ tilt ofllcl•I rt'CVCllllO <enlt'• tor co,te Mew It fvdilon 01 If'• beol. &on• 01 White Colt with Stoclt HHh. PUBUC NOTICE SUflEltlOll COUltTOP TI41 STATI Of'CAUl'<MtNIA FO• TMli COUNTY Of' 0ttAH08 O•O«•"'*CMIM! C"'«117 SUN•IOlt C::OUltT OP 1'ME S'IAT• Of' CAl.ll'OtlNIA "Olt TH• COUNTY Of' OttANGfi HO.a.-.. HOflC:I! 0" Ha A•IHO O" l'Ot!CMAMG«Of'MAMS PITIT!Otl flOlt •llOUT• 0" WILL 11• Ille ,.....,. Of Ille ""°41UllOl'I of AMO eootetL TMa•tTO AMO F01t PATlttCtASUSAN 'I'll.LEY &.•TT••• nnAM•NTAltY AHO wi..tH\, tlw petlt'-' Of Pelrk le AUfMCMlltATIOtt TO ADMIHISTtElt SuMn Tllfwv Ms llff<I lllPd Wftll tllt UNO«ll Tifff llilC>el'CMOEfff AO• ,,.,. "' ..... ,_,for ... or•,...,,.. •l lM•n•&TIOMOfl ISTAT•SACT l"lf f'ttol'-1"A ,..,... tnwn P•trt<i. Estele of MAU OE 8 . llAA ltOH, ~Tll1t1y10PMrtc.S..W..S.-. O.a•Wd. tT IS HE1tl8Y OltOflllEO tMt ell N0TIC1! IS MliltEl8Y OIVEN ttw11 ""°"' lnlerHIOd In MIO ,,..., ... •e>-MERLI! eAAltOH .._ tried ...,..,,. " peer lttfef'e llllt <OUrl at 11:00 AM, _..ltlofl fel ~·of Wiii 11114' Codt<tt l'oOtlHlrv t7, tt1t, !ft IN <-1,_ Of tllerol9 f//flld for l•ltlf>s Test-1\tarv OtOI. J 10 tNw <NW wllV llllt ..,Pit .. •net ..,.._ll<!lllOll to oom+,,rftt?' 111e llOf\ IOr U... et NI-\l\OutG llOl 119 Ulllt ufldotf Ille lftOt1Mlt1d<tftl AO· fl'•nted • mlnl,1•9'10n "' e~ .. ,., AU. ,.,.,""'• tf tS fUltThl!lt ORO!Al::O INt a to wlll~ll h meoe tor tu•tll•• <Ol>Y et Ciiis °'*' ,, tllOw (llU~ ,,. O••ll<ul•n. 4lfld , .... , , ... .,,... •fld puOll\lltd 9"<4' e ~· tor IOur •UC· pltco et l!Nf~ tl\t N!M l'lff C>Hf\ S4tt <eOl'I'• _., fll'IOt to lllo NI' ol Mid IOr ,..,_.I' 21, .. .,., 8110100 e "'. lit 11to1no 111 Tiit Delly 1>1101, • t11t coun-ot()o!Hf1~N<1 )ot ...,..\,,.Off 9tflt'"' clrcut<111on Pflftll'CI Mid <OV!1, .t 100 Clvk Otf\IOf Ortw '"Ille Countyol()reflOI' Wo t. In .... CllY ot s ..... Alie. 0.IK J_., It! t<ll<I C..ll!Oml•. 1..r llff'Vel' fa~ OalH ~J. l<ltt J""9 .. nw 1..EIE A. HANO!; RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTllY S.H.L IHTRPRISES it'6 ~~SHOES 5-l'IOr C»lin COurrly Otrti flAT•tCIA WU.H ltl.l..IY JAMaS •· WILM•LM Jll S.,_.y U-IUMO•L a AMK•toti 1714t IJMZU ,.....,.w .. ...... , ...... ....... ",.. ... •p ........ , ... ~ .. w ..................... w - ., I It ................... IJC.&fwlllt.••ltn ............ ,.. .............. ~~ ..... -... 11• ", .... ~ ...... ..,.. ....... 7ff.flll Clttt• ~ c..11. '9W Im...,... ....... , '"41...... .....AM.CAft?W IH "ltO~ttlA ""°"" , ... fJMI_,,,, ""'41.,. Ortftllt ONtl o.lly ., ... A*"'-"twt ,...._ Jatll. '*' tS. ......... ,.,. ~ °' ..... CMtt Delly "9t, .,. ~ .... ·~"" ~ . I • -· .. f.tcnn~au.u• ~ AMef'JAT•MtlWY Hw roll~.,.,_ M• 001to9 Ml ,.. ... 01.INNFY" A~SO('IATI lJJ F•r•tl Aw-. kit• U, l•tu11• 9HC'•, CA tM I ,...,..._ "-"-Jr. tt.I O..lt,.., ......... ~ 9M( c•m)1 · .J-..._.~. nu AreJ•• ~f-~~c..-.. 11111 M--1 I• ~1-M IJy ~ ...,w.-_,,....,.,.. £. Jet!'f\,,.,,., ...,_... fllh ........... -tti.. wfWI ... c-ty C""'-• Or-c-ty ., -·"'It."" n9\ ~.,,_.Or .... ClloMI "'-II• ,_ #111f.n,,1-.1a..il'1 ,.,en nous aus11t1u NAMI UATIMllO '"• IOllQWlnq l"'r'°" •• OollnQ 1111>1 l'eH i\ VIC'TOl!IA M08tl S(l!VICf ~:;,P1--.. '°'1• ,,.,,,,. C•HfO<JI•• PICT1nous ausr1111u Oe,.lt! Mltll .. I H uQllH '01) NAM STATl'MI NT 11 R 11 i. 8 T11~ lollow1no 11er..on1 •r,. 001119 ~:.~.:,:., •• ~~ • •ouna uc11 b<>\t.-.u~ f•us ~l k (-t~ l>Y.., Ill I( .. E PARK HilROWARE 400S CllvlOuel AO•"'• Av ....... HUf'lh"9•on &.•tll 0.Vl«I M H~ c..llf0,.,.l.l m4' Tiiis \lal-w.n rti.d will\ .,_. J•me\ T Koury, 1JM !> Oe•Mv•n (OIHltV Ci.tk of 0.fnQt Counly o., Orlv•. A-m. C.lltonlt;t •190' J..,...,._ IS ,.,, P..tro K.wl, Utl Al>C>fl"' C.lf<~. • p: 1 .. Ut l'funllnvtOfl llff<'ll. c.tltorni,; Pvc111-Or ... COf\I 0.0y Piiot Tiii\ """""' 1• <OftOutfff l>Y • Jert II 11-ht>.I I 191' .,.,; ._, .. _._\ll<p • • ' ' ---.1amet T It°""" PUBLIC NOTICE Tllll ilat-w•• lllecl will\ 11\e County CMll ot O,.ftile Cou111v on -------------J~ue,-,111.1m FICTITIOUS aUSINIU P1ft11J NAMI ITAT£M(NT Publlv.d Or-Coes1 o.11\1 Piiot, '"-tol-"9 P"f\Oft Is 00.nq ~l fet> 1,1. U, n . 1m ~1' M\\H lll<>Ol & ASSOCIATES, • C.t,,,_ P<IM•O West. ltvlnt, CA '7714 P UBLIC NOTICE ~Iv-l'f1rry Bloch. t C.tm • -· W.st, ,,..,,,..,Clo '7114 NOTICE TO C•llotTC>n su,.1•1o.i C:OUltT 01' THI STATE OP CAl.IP'OltMIA fl()._ THE COUtfTYCW~AlfOI! Tf\k ~·I• <-.CIOCI by M ,,._ OtvlOU•I s..lv-H. lllod> T 111\ sl•t""""' was lllec! """ Ill« CO<Hll'f CIHll ol Or•nge County °" 0.<en>~• "· ,..,. ,.,,,,.. Publ•M>ed 0raft91! ,.,..,, 0.lly Pilol J.tn 18. 2l f'tO I, I. 1914 11'1 IQ ---------- PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTlTIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT l ltt loll-lnq oerwn Is 40'"9 11<1~'""" a \ LAH.AINA PETROlEU COAAPANY, S...te D. lllO Glen...,yre s1rMt. ~ 8Nch, c.i11°""'• m11 Oon•ld Euoef'lt 8uooenl>•um, C..ner•I P«tJWr, Suite O. t90 Glen- n 1 v •• Stre•t. legun• 811c11, C•ll~fHJI TlllS bUSl.,.n h condu<lff 111 • llmlted---jt Ooo..icl E. 8-- ~ll Part.,... 'flllS •~'-f -· filed Wltll I"" CMIY cuoni of O.•~ c-1, on J•'IU¥Y 29 1m MO......,, hlllt of lllCTOA AZGAPETIAN O • Al'flAT V A lGAPEflAN, Dt<leMIO. NOTICE IS HERE8V GIVEN to tM (,....,,.,,of !he ................ .,.....,..,, llWI tll ~'''"""II cl<tims aQllftSI ltw ,..Id <le«dl!nl .,., ._.ire<! 10 fl(• IPwm, wlllt !ht neatJMY -i.n. '" ttw olflce of l1W <ten of llw •bo.,. ..,.. lllleCI to..r"I. or lo ...-i ,,,...., wtlh IM ne<US¥y VOU<......._ to tl'W un· ~M'llM<I <OI n> -01 AO.O, Co.t• l!Mw, Olllorlllt. """en i. the Die<• of i...wneu of Ille _ ... gneci 1n 111 ,....,. ,.,, _-t••ntnQ to nw ~tit of wld de· c-1.wll!WI lolK ..-tt>s .,.,., tne ftnt outMkAlior> of'"''-"• O.t.o J_., '~ ,..,.. ALICE M. AZGAPE'TIAN E .aitr1• of ttw Will of Ille-"""*' 0.-nl AMCIE M. AZOA ... TIAN mA,,......._, CMta-,CAtM» , .......... EIM<oitrill .. ~ ,..._ J.~:.':r.:r:t'::~~..,~·., :::~ PUBLIC NOTICE F·lfttlt ·-----PU1>1t~ Orenve Cout O.i1y Ptlcl\ NOTICE TO C'llOITOllS !!!_!:.I, IS, 12. 1~-___ ~ SUPE•ICHt COURT OF THE PUBUC NOTICE .. ,,,. l"ICTinous aUSINUS N.,.. STATEM&NT l11e tol-1"9 per_,, •rt ooino b<l\1neUt~ Wl K DEllElOPMENT COM· PAHY. llO ~ c.nw !Hive, Ne--1 8"0\, (llilomlatlMO T !lorn•-l.eCkl, llO N•wi>0rt Ctllter Ori.,., Newport 8••<fl, G-'ttoml• '*° Joh11 F. l(e1St1, llO Htwport Certt., Ori,,., Newport B•.c"· C..l~t..o Slew.tit C. WDodtfd, 1IO N~ C•rtl•r Drive, Ne•porl Be.cl\, C.tll torn!• t2!MO J.tmu l.tHtn, 110 Newpon Centef Orio, Newpo•t Bt•<ll, C.tl lfornl• ""'° Tiiis b<Nneu ts c-..Cted l>Y • venera1 pertnenNp. wuc0e.....-~ By: ,_on l..tOd TlllJ ii_..,.. -~ filed wllll Ille (OUlll Y Cieri< of Or •not COvnt V Oii J -ryt,1'79. alCMAaD I. KMECHT, 1$0. PU LOP, ltOL.STOf«. aultMl & MdllTT•ICK tMIMM',._.,.,._, ...... ~litNIUtt ~ llMdl. CA flMJ 1'·1077 .. PuOli1Nd Ortn91t Coe'1 Detty Pltot, .J~. u-,._ '· •. 1m ,,.,, STATE Of' CALIP:OllNIA FOlt THE COUNTY OP: OllANOE ,, .... ~ ESlale ol LOIS EONA CRAWFOlllD, DK•aWd. NOTICI' IS HEREBY GIVEN to ti.. c reollors of the .tt>ove ,..,~ oe<f'Oent thet •II ...,_ hf•tnca clalm• "9'1lnsl ti. w ld ""'-••• rt<N4rld to fife lhem, wl111 h ~......,--\.In uw Office ol tlW <..,.. °' iM .i.o... e..-lltlld court. or to ~ 11Wfn. with ltw ntCH~ -..Che<\, to -un- dersloMil .i 301 Eest Co4or41do Blvd , Suitt 600. P~. Cil, wlll<ll Is tlW p!.tU of ~S of ltw -\IQned In tit "'tllto ...,,..,,...., to tl'W ~tal• ol u td de<_,,t, w1tllin tour montfls titer Ille lfr'1 pybtl<tllon Of 1111'- notke n•l#d J..,. 2. t'7t 5-M.Mlli.r E qcllfrl• 01 llW Wiii of llw-~oe<to..nl ltOaEltT W. ANOUISON JOI I!., __ 9lvd. SM. 600 PHadt ... , CA tlt01 ,.,. (21J)~1'4 Attorney fer EM< wl'r1 • PublisMCI Or-vor Coast 0.lly Pllol, J6n. II ZS, Feo. 1. I, 197' SEAAANOAEa>fo!llEYANCE COMPANY ••sucll T~tw !2131 ll5-lnt 81 J.E. COANWAll. ~· AUINlrlncl Oflk.., Put>ll.,..., Or .... CNst O.Oy Piiot JI" 2S. Feo. I, f, lt1' 191-1' PUBLIC NOTICE C1"4t16 "_,. ... ,...,. P 11blls"'4 Orllfl9t ~· 0.lly Ptlot, f'tmnous •UStMESS J.,.. U -~ 1, I, U, "" 2l1·1' HAMI STATEMENT TM IOl-"9 per,oft' are doing P UBLIC NOTICE tMlsJ,..., ff: Tl'fltlFTY WASH. lt2S Vl<10fl• .... -.Costa MtY, c.ltfoml• nu? f'ICTITIOUS aUSINISS GerMO R. McF-. 2961 Olen- NAMI! STATEME•n cairn l•"•· Hunlln9to11 8H<ll, Tlte 1011ow1f'l9 persons ••• dolnv C.lltoml1'16ol6 tMISlMU a•: JU" A. Mel' .. "· 211161 0- C AST l E W 000 IN COM E c1lrn l e11e. Hu11t1,.oton 81•,ll. PROPERTIES, 'Clt1 Talbert AVe<l..e, C1tltoml1'1M6 No s, Fount•tn Vallo. C•lllor11l.t Tiiis t>uslneu ts c~ b'( Ml un- '770I l11<orPo<.i.O assod•tkWI ot~ ~ • St tttn J Sher.,.OOll. 16781 Mt P41'1"'"111P. AOerm.,. Clrc:ll, Fountain V•lley, Glr'MO R.McF~ ce11torm1 '7108 Tiits s~ wH flled wtttl tt.e B\l•Oll l . w 1111..,., 1tt1• Sarti• County O.•ll of 0<fft9e c-f'f Oii Cit 1111 Circle, Fou111111n Velley, J..,...ry29, 1979. CllllOf"rtll '110I I' ._ 0 F E SS I 0 M AL E S C • 0 W J•""'' L Cleylon. I lt01 Paseo Sl!:.-VICU &Oflll•. los Al&mttos. CA111orn"' t0no '"' M. Tintlw •-t 111s buil~S h <OncluUttl l>t .. s.ilt.e AM, Cal~• '27t1 gener•IP«1M"111P lb<....,..._ 1'1tS).M,. SlewnJ~ Tllh stat-.,., fllecl wlf'I n.e PuC>llshld 0r-. Coest Delly Piiot, c-1.., O.r• o1 0••"09 County on FM>. 1. a. 1s, n , 1m l.,._19 J•llu.tf\I JO. 1m. PtJBUC NOTICE ... , .. , .. ~llShld Or..-. CoMt 0..IV Pilot, ,,_., 1, I, 1S, %2, lf1' _,.1-----C-P-G'l--l----- PUBUC NOTICE "ICTITlOUS a&nlNHS NAME STATEMENT The loOowif'19 per50ns •re dol"9 tluil~•ei. THOMAS & 8ROOl<S WOOOW()RICING, 1n tndvnll•I W•y. co,,. Mew,°'"'°""' •:r.11 Jo~ E. Tllom.ts. IM7 C.Wnlu 1"110 . Cosle Mew. Cll•fwnil ,,.~ G•f\I W. 8r_,, ZU!l E•rllart Ad , l~ Hills, C.ltfoml• ,,.» l his bllslrwu h conOu<ted by • oener•1 PM'tnef'Slllp GaryW. 8f'OQ4fs ThlS "alwnfftl W•\ llled Wltll Ille Cou"'" Gier., of Of•nve CovfttY on ~ ... ,, ll. ""· .. , ..... Pul>llsflec! 0r....,. C:O.\t 0.lly Piiot. .,.. H -Ro. 1, I, IS, 197' tt3 19 PUBLIC NOTICE ,."'"7 FICTITIOUS aUSIMEU NAMI! STATEMENT Tiit 1o1io.1no per'°"' •rt 00lt19 tMlsln.nM · AEAOWRITE EDUCATIONAL P'tOORAMS. 1lD3 Avoc.00 •-. Suitt llO, Ntwpor1 Bff411. c.tlfortll• Tommy Wtl "'*'Ho,* Soun. C..nielllt Sll'ft't, "'"""'""· c.tlfon>la Wll'°" o.i.rt. 70. S. C.."'ellle St""1. A......,.., c.tH6mt• Tiiis ~ Is conoucled tw 4W! In dlY!Ovel. T°""""'WelYuenHo Tiits ttat-i wu llled wttll lftt '°""'' o.r11 ot o'""" CcHMty on J._,..,,.,,,.,,, WISTIEIUf MUTUAL l!SC:ltOW COtlP. 1,_E, '"915t., ,._ D Tmllt,~n.et E.K,..W .... tJ>M'JoM l"vbltSNd 0r-. coeu o.i,., Piiot. Fltt.1,1,IS,?2,"" •• ._,, PUBLIC NOTICE Pllbll"'90 Oranot Coe'1 o.ily l"llCll, ""· 1.1. u.n.1m m ·n PUBLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 .. DAILY PILOT The Btggeat Marketplace on Hte Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can SeU It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (842-5878 ] One Call Servfce Fa•t Credit Approver ~!.~.~ ....... ~~.~.~ ....... ~~~.~~ ....... ~!.~.~-~ .. G ... ,.. IOOJ G•••• 1002 Ge.r• IOOZ Gwr.e 1002 ....................... ·····•··•·············· ···············~·--···· ........•.............. ~LURl~&YYRLLRLt '--LP REAL ESTATE, INC. I\ lOl'AllY OWNfO COMPANY SlRVING fHl SOlllH COl\Sl l\RU\ "I NU l'ltil GIT HADY fOll SUMaial Lovely 3 Bdrm home with heated and filtered pool. Close to shops. located on quiet street. Best value in area. Priced at only $77.950. c• S4Ml4t Scn11ng Costa Mesa-Irvine Hun!ing!on Beac h -N ewport Beach REDIEED ·~ WFSl.LY '\ TAYLOR CO. IU:A l.TOH.S ~.tlil't' l~HH ltG CANYON-'nl.000 Fabulous 4 bdrm custom built home with great view of B.C. golf course. f'amily room w/wet bar. recreation room. formal dining room. 3 baths + luxury pwd. rm. Lge private pool in enclosed patio. Located on quiet street. Call us today to see! WESLEY M. TAYLOI CO., IEALTOIS 211 I S.. Joa .... 11 Hlh Road NEWPORT CENTEA, tU. 644-4910 ~!~~e and ""'~•--111111-•--""'-•--""'-•--""',w...•_...._._lll _______ _ 9%% luxury plus! 4 glorious bdrms. 3 gracious baths. st.unmng step.down liv- ing room w/crackling **U.S.** *VETERANS* EQUAL HOUSING fplc. Formal dining. OPPORTUNITY =e area. Be first! Recent changes in V.A 3 Bdrm 2 bath. 3 car garage. Fenced yard. patio, $23,500 down. Pay- ments, SS68.63 PJT1 Wiher's Hoffer. regs may enable you to All real estate advertised qualify for $100.000 home Call: • 645-9161 to this newspaper is sub· loans with absolutely NO ject w the Federal fair DOWN PAYMENT. Housing Act of 1968 World Real Estate which makes it Illegal to ~ ·~-'-an Orange County firm .. OPEN HOUSE . REALTY advertise "anr pre· COMFORT ... •LE speclabung ln VA home ference. hmitauoo. or -lc>llm. We're the VETSi..--------• z · v dlacriminatloo based on LIVING that help the VETS. race. ~or. religion, sex. ln this open spacious For more info. call: or national origin, or an 3br. 2ba famUy home'. .. ......., Aqt. SOUTH OF HWY. int.enLloo to make any Gu BBQ 10 kit chen. 541.0800 New listing, just 3 blks. surb preference, limit a· Fam rmJcfin. rm. Lg well from the beach on 40 It. tion,Ol'discrimlnaUoo." lndscpd lol. Quiet, pre-1 .. ,...-__.. .. _ .. __ .. ___ .-.. .. _._.,-.... -. .. -1111111111....-.-R-2 lot. in Corona del stigious neighborhood. ---------•I Mar; single story 2 Thia newspaper will oot See to •t>prec1ate & bdrm. home with large, lmowin,11 accept any you'll love 1t! Owner will ..wPOl'T IUCH enclosed paUo; priced advertlSIDC for real belpfmance.979-S370 Cot90-Sl2,500 rigbtaUl.9S,000 estate which ls ln viola-A Olarmi.ag large 2 BR 2 6 p ...... 00 _tloo_. _ot_the_la_w_. ---• LLSTATE . ~":1:::S~'t!~~'. HARBOR AEA.LTORS Faces park. Plans for direct street to beach! Invest now! ! 1m..•s lest luy Woodbridge 3 Bedroom with large r oom s . CUstom decor w1lh plush carpet. and all for onb' S99.000. You won't beat this bargain! 540-3666 'Nltelan Real Estate Inc. OPENSUNDAY 1·5 115 Big Dipper (end of W. 19th St. turn nght> 400E.17"8 FOR AU c.M. :• RN-..... MW =~~ " 1>w1!\ion or llttrhor lnH..,lml'nl (.'o LOYas RETREAT Huge master swte isolat-ed (or i.oUmate pnvacy, with sttluded slunny dip- ping pool, huge family room. Excellent location ··················iaO'i 1~~~~~~~~~~~ Tl.ft.EX near beach and golr Gnatl.c-!! ~.;:,;· S85,900. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA $76,SOO 4 Bedrms, 2 baths in North Cost.a Mesa. New ~inside and out. W\U consider 2nd TD. Call DOW 556-2660. «;:SELECT T' PROPERTIES CHOICE LOTS tiiEAR-MEWPORT IEACH Two lge adjoining parceluooed R-2 w/over am sq ft of baildable land. Rare ~rtwiity. Won't last! Open Eves. ~ TURn.BOCK IEAUTY By pool & park. S Bdrms, 3 bath,,, Piao Ill Broad· moor. Asking $155,000, fee sim:ple. ~ 1.c. TA no• co. 640-5112 Sinlle storY owner unit K'"Y wrtli 2 townhouse dea1gn cc••·~--~~~~-­rear units. All wilb ~ P.E:ALTOP.Sli private paUo, W ID book up & iDdlVidual enclosed,_ _______ _ garages . Call now WAlBROMT ~9 • 11 s It.JN TOAi Met• Pier/Ooal; duplex on . legal R-2 lol; close to leJIMMI ~~Ef~'" Prol c~ geared ror * 675-7060 • Realtors, Developers,_ ________ _ who have vacant bomes, 1----------bldgs, Ofcs that need to 4 BR + den look···sood ror future DELIGHTFUL owners. rent.en. etc. Ca II ""·-br 2 ba condo Pool $69 5001 &&S-78S7 ror more info. for • ...., • · · this service. Reasonable Many ameb.ities. Close to Sunk I 'J . ' ...,.._ -•-t _,1 I ..... everytbmg. Only $71,500. en 1v1ng room. .__, m ...... av ... • r"""' A home that you can r e-Brick fareplace. All re-est. o llu -"' ........ C:.'>'70 modeled kitchen. Ex-•---------aAq ""'"IVY· J,.,..,.,, · =·tie1~~o~i ~':u CAREER ALLSTATE fast to take advantage! IHUALESTATI _ ~~~·"HUt·.roNN... Atta.in your real estate REALTORS license oow ... start the ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; [91fit<lnl ~~~z:·t~ . -gram. the fasl and easy NEWPORT HTS. 315 SIGNAi. RD. 2 Bdrms .. 2 baths. frplc., spacious family rm., de- tadled 2 car garage: on large lot. Vacant; cl~ w schools, churches & priced at$149.SOO. Call to C _...to W ....... , way w pass the state ex· OI ,anu _..-. ams. Call ror an appt to-'Ibe lut 2 sales In this day. area. 2 BR + huge bonus Sall Real Estate rm. pool, teruliS. nr S. D r _....__, , Frwy. Priced below last ~ 2sales.$63,SOO, AsubsJdjary of Southlanders Sail Properties see! 613-3663 00-2253 Eves JoaoHowe 548·57741•--------associated SlllC & '1Nlf C I I l 0 S T E S T H S C 0 P E 0 C S S H V 0 H 0 K U J T E G R S T P U T M PS IWRHLRAI E T 0 E E E N W E I E T £ T T 0 R C C C R B C 8 P 0 P S P T P H R 8 E A l R T U 0 V E L 0 S 0 f 0 A A 0 M P 0 K 0 R M R S R t L C L C L R S A S 0 I Z S 0 E T 0 S E S 0 S M T C C T P C Q U C S N S Z R 0 U 0 0 0 0 X C T R S 0 £ 0 C T A T R R T S S P R P A U I E L P P 0 S U 0 S 0 C A E A R T V A C L Y 0 E P 8 U N E 0 G E Y T R 0 S R l E P 0 Y E L l E P 0 C S 0 R C t M A R T l U T FLUESCOSPECTROGRAPK H H H P A R 6 0 I l E H 0 R T C E P S .. .. -... BROKE AS-llEAl TORS 4,};1 "" a~1b<'o c.'1 ~bb' CEMTRAI. Ir EXCmMG 2 BR, Den, condo in Big Canyon. View of golf course from deck. walk to pool and tennis court. Owner will lease. lease option. trade or sell. Occupy immediately. $175,000. A COUMIU. ..... CO. 644·9060 21'1 SANJOAOUINHIU.SRD. IN~ct'.~ S@\totllA-2' £trs • Tlial lntri911ing Wore/ Gam• llfitli a Chuckf e r~ "1 CUT •• '°"" .. ------olt-"111 .._.cl .... '°"' ....r-bled ~ ti.. low 10 tor... lovr tillople -cb If J E D 0 J SYR UL I .__._I ..... I' ..... r ....... I ..... t C I M,. A I l Oo~1Mllnlf'9u1,...._ ___ __, .. __ ... had •tan.ct tile•~ tide 1n II I I r .. Det1011, hall way thfougfl "'' ..._....__..._.._ .... _.. .. 11o1M 1110Ul<i IWWe bHn - ---------. ~CIUH Of f1ulty hor .. VIDLER lltloM? I I I I' l'•~:-~;-=t l'Ott .-.q, "-..... ,_ below. I I I I I I I l scaAM-llTS AMwef1hiCffttlffcoffollSI00 -- ' ti ... .. . . . · . ,;fl DAii.. V PILOT ................•...... ·•········•···•··•····· ...•••................. ······················-·•·······••·•·•·•····· ,....,,_w. •••••••••••••••••••• ....... ,_ w. ........ ,.,. Wt-........ 1wJ-. CHMr.. I OOZ C.... MtM I 014 tWIMI• •ech I 040 &..,... ._. I 04' .. _. I 041 ....................... ·······••··•······••·· ················-······ ........................................•.••.. ._,,.. 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.. 100 .._.... IOOJ G...,... 1002 IACICIAY ...................... . .................................................. , .................................. -.-. u-.............................. ..., c.a.• br + frnll' nnlndJl· alr.bfo llaclt Dar. area ~ 3 yn oJd Cl.l -de·HC lout1on . Zone d for honlel Pnetd to a 111 Ht at S\C.~ 646-TT ti IUMDMIW TIJWMKOMIS TWO STOllY-POOL -.. twi Odu... eack~ libmtt...ce. to huie Uv Inc room •lth crackUn1 fireplace. s parkUnc kJLcbed • aeparate din· Inc. Private patio & Olympic t lzed pool Maufve 1talrway to rmster auU.e • chUdr~n 'a wine· Ml.Dut.ee to beach. Walk to achooU • •hop-~.• I I n o w : . UDO ISLI 'Bay ~•ew from 2 p lio d b <'nh nres t-ustclm fi P clou. 5 bdrm .. 4 bath • Jradmonal hom • lilce n w. ld el tor ~ntcrt4lnfn Com r lot. , \ . OCUMRONT O ~u lity croft man hip In m hot. tr•m & oak n n t rr th landmark ~ 4 ftR, 3 ba home tn rlnet\t locatlon tstablbhed tT ~. & I wn~. SfM. . IACI IAY ,..Im.> 4 bdrm . ~' b<.1th r. mlly hnm on q ull'l ,·ul dl· 'a <' 0\ •r •11.'<t µool, plJ)'hOUM'. Mora~~ sum. . Tt•rm IAYNOMT S.•\ ~·ral fJml h t)'f root hom<'' ' Ith Pll'r . hp AVALON Wt•ll l'OOblfUl'h-d. 3 AR. I hn oak fJoor. purtrnl ba emcnt. t-oncrete , (oundahon. Flnts DN! • S120.000-F . Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR 11 M( y .dt l) •' •4 I ti'"> f'llt>1 :U!ttJ~1 J.!tq11 , 4150 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 7St-Ol1l WINDOW SHOPPING? Come see this lovt-ly single level home in CA MEO SHORES. with PICTURE :WINDOWS. over lookinf:! th e •CANYON; a ll r ooms are sparious. : incl. 3 bdrms. & 2 baths; oversized 2 car garage with exceptional cabinet buil1-ins. You have a key to privat e beach PLUS a luxurious pool in your own front yard. $269,500 Lew& 'f UDO Nte• MHT· D<'autlfuUy remodcl d 4 bedroom. 4 bath, 2 s tory wath bt.• m.~. brkk und • f I ss! Spacwu., ma~tcr bedroom. rec &nd nnd <>los to l nnis, bay and hoJtm~ Pr1rc•d propt•rly at $270 000 IJ I lli M fAL TOHS'. ti7~ G000 :1143 Eau Co,1\1 H1qh~;sv, Comno1 dP.I Mar .iltn 111 M1 V•·rtlf• 11 !J lb !>!)(JO OWNER WILL CARRY-10°/o on this beautiful 4 Bcdrm. 2~ bath home in Lake Forest. Featured in L.A. Times Home Secuon. Home has deck with bench scatinJ?. $109.500. Call Cr aig, r .. 11-1266 Rf/MAX of costo ft'IHO, f"IM, Mwport beoch. l..c. 234 E. t7fh SfrHt, Costa Mne Ul·IZ66 Nuti<>n"' idl' Nl'I work of Jndlvidu:illy 01An<'t1 .ind Opt•rnl<'d Rt':il F.state Ofrtr1·~ •3 UNITS* . PRIME E'SIDE COSTA MESA A very attractive 2 bedroom front cottage with cozy warm fireplace in front. A BRAND NEW DUPLEX is ~ Walker 1: I uo R aJ Dtate ........... 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .,.tt.vw ..... cf.uW«M eo.tta Mesa) 2'32Sant.a An1 Ave £niU.b TUCSor W Br ap{h level , Ur3 car aarage. frpl cs. mkrowavn, 1reeAhouse wlndowa. pool. spa. TENNIS court . Fromlat.950 Oll'UX Mf.0081or955-1920 Two 2 bd rro. uolta Deve&opedby CUSTOM +own r .' b I de• way ; ' iiiiiiiiiWiiioodtiiiiteeiiiiiiiiiDeiiiviii.iiCo_. -I I >.CU IST A Tl aellt"r wil l finance.•• S~xrt'fpin circuJar driv~ 1249 ooo Uuttc• e...-. to · 6 Bedroom, 3 ~lrTllACH Uh new. 1park!lng 3 mwioo. Home b AIM.TY '''" "42 Bdrm. w/new carpets. situated oo onr tacre of drl,Pt'S and appliances rambhn1t gro und s . 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltEAN VIEW JASMIHI CIHtC Pt.AMY A!l95'6J454, 759-0361 t'Teshly painted, vacant. Separate 4-car sarage ready to move ln and "bt.mlc house''. SUn PO«'h st.art f11JOY11>il Offered commands sweeplna aitn.ooo. CaUS<I0-1151 N\ew of towering trees. ICrOUnd.s " rah pond Old fub1oned wood st.alrcase leads to maat~ aulte & guest room with pnvate entrance& to upper ... ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS lWO At..J .a. LOT verandas. Owner will "'"~ ccnsider finandna. Call 1 3 BR 1 2 BR. good roe appointment. Eaatskfe lotaUoo. owner UTR.LA ltAL TY anxiom. $125,000. 147-604 I 54._.9 36' ___ €HIG€ 3 Bdrm + pooa, ssa.ooo. Pt.AH I ..,... _ __. __ .__HOPI€~ Super lrg family rm. JASMIHt CIHtC Xlnt fUW>Clng avail. Get VIEW read.y for summer now. AcJt95S.l•S4, Star Real £s tate . 759-0363 --------•L7S4-62162 ______ _ EASTSIDE 2br l ll'lba f11>lc. new t rpt Gt-eat Oc,.. View l BR older home. R-2 k>t. Nr. ahopptng. A.s1uma bte JatmlDe Cre~Townhse. cl06e 111. $69,000. Owner loart.$57.~9113-1242 IS THiii ANYPLACE OM IEAaTH YOU,, RATH& LIVI THAM LASUMA IEACH? -A..,.....,......,oc .. ~co.do h• ••~H• c4NNHtlff wm. ottec'-4 gar .... n. ........ OWW' ........... 2 bedr.... close to b•eclte• ••d lllopplla9" Sl49,tt9 -Artfth wm ao •• *• l ......... ,._. wltlt • .ttochecl shfdfo. 1-...., •. co .......................... ""1 .... lwkk patio. s ... ..., ~ SISt,500 -, • ., .... c oc ................. ) be• n•, MW roof, c.,.. 9d ,-... Wood..._ ua.g.. Z ftr1pl.c ... _... Hd ,..fos. F .. tHtlc oceu •few. Slft.500 • bllJ.gO ·497.m1 On the C>ange CoasHook 10 lingo first .l(Ualded entrance. 3 BR. will provide financing. BY OWNER 1 BR CON· I~ I 044 ,_ ______ _ 2'1"J ba, family room . loyMcC ..... lltr. DO. Nr ocean & shop·g. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~AaCH ~~~~~e~{~~~w~w~~~ 54'·7729 Re!ng&stv.kS,000 Call WOOOIRIOG£S&S UYTlllACI land. Pool. jacuni. ten· _____ _...__ 963-1242 LE AS E I 0 PT N e w Sem&Uooal family home nis. Pr1nc1pals only, DOH1"WAIT · Townbome28r.2ba,gar. on a large v6ew lot 3 Ownr/agenl 640 l l27, •MOVE-IN• Open Sat/Sun 1 2.:, 8dmui. family room. ""°3974. 5141er sharp 3 bedroom 3 Br l YI Ba, clean. Good Owna-. ~2'.258/~1·38'1'7 lute.hen with fireplace, .-r wrthatra large lot. alley •~ -..,.... Pho C'm" 3 2 IORM COTTAGE .......~u... Pegged hordwood floors. beamed celling.s, 2 bnck fireplaces and nice coun· ti)' latchen -PLUS - a--· for RV Lots or ..,.;&tJon ••o·"""· ne ........ ~eK to-c~! ... garsaaoooe. """"" for terms. 848-0767 Eves ,_,.._""' ....... 12? fruit trees. Excellent !163-9077 BROADMOOR Plan 8 12 . U ' location. Terrtr1c buy al --------3 8R. A.Uumabfe k>1n l~l;.lili~i. ljSllljllllillli':illir!P.'liillimiil $81.~ Must Sell: S"5 J\ome In O.W.C 2nd TD. Quick _ • ••• • • • HEWPOIT CEHTSt HB wJPOOI & RV space. 4 eecTOW. Red to Sl 10.500. 3 Monarch Bay Plaza REALTY Br21,\ba.963-9233 ·Att.975-0616 Lag\IDaNiguel 640-1112 By Owner 1 year old 496-7U2 ll1-0ll6 Dttam Kome. 2630sq. ft. Tw llerock IHDIVIOUALITY &CHAAACTSl Trtmendous curb appeal r1unily borne on Balboa Island. Two-story 3 bedroom borne with large brick fireplace & hmJwood l1oors in Ii vlng room and room to ex· p11nd. Two-car garage pl~ boat storage area. s:.!S5.000 ~.a. DB. M "'R nestled amongst mature trees on the ~~ ~ s ame 55 by 173' site. The duplex 2 Bdrm. 2 bath income unit with pn vale patio and yard. Red. to S I 85,000 fo'OR INFORMATION CAU644-721 a FIXRUPHR 4bdrm.3ba 3frpk.wet· le~ ....... 1052 3'31Sa.ntaAnaAve.CM bar 3 car fa r age . o-..i Pl 1 . 1 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S95,000. Only $5000 down. Be au t 1 r u I n d 11 c p . , vv-ar an . n ce Y Assume 9't\% loan . No fl7S,000 714-840·S4Sl 6812 landscaped with wood Laguna Niguel points, no credit checks Car~k Dr. deck aDd pitJos. Lovely Lvb'' clean & neat home contains 2 Bdrm. 2 bath and 3 BR. 2 ;;.:i~~ ~e~;t~:!. ba units PLUS 4 car endosed garages. Kitchen remodeled last Great income property with a realisti c year. No wax kitchen investor's price of $205.000. Y 3 ~~· H'• bath, fncd -Older--3-B-r-. -2-.. -.,. _X_ln_t mt.enor. Parquet Ooor m R lty • "'" Od (a m . rm. & lntchen. ea Gallery or Homes cond. Steps to· blutrs. AdUlt occupied Be sure KirkLamb,631-0900 surf.2lot.s 644·1004 t o s ee th1 .. befon~ UEC:.a. v-oE lrW. 1044 dec1d1ng on anything RIADY&WAmNG -2 S•T.=Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• else' Impressive Iron gates & "" chamung redwood deck Spo<.'loos 4 bdrm. 3 ba. WOODBRIDGE wekomes you to th1i. J ,.. 5oC ~7'dca~~'7~~':~~ ROGBS REALTY 675-2311 see.Open Eves. 54S·9491 ~~DDCPJ..~ WAT'-RfRONl HOMU, REAL ESTATE 631-1400 OPPORTUNITY (pr experienced lnv~t! ~t counselors & re· s1dential . specialists PrestigiOU! location. t~resslve compensa · lion. WAnttFROHT vr/42° boat slip. 81g 2 BR & den. 2 frpks . bltns. 2 cov paUOli. 3 car gar. Owner will ht!IP BIG on ~~ing . $350,000. JACOIS RI.ALTY 9.20/o IMTllEST Englis h Tudor s t yle spacious 3 bdrm. 3 ba 2 story 11dult condo. Pool · j acuzzi • sauna · clubhouse & rec rm. Take over subject to ex- isting loan at 9.2%. ~m1. THI Pt.USSIS ADO UPt 4 B Rs + family rm + rormal dining + alarm system+ safe ! ALSO, add tasteful cpts & drps + oversize com er lot ready for adding pool, jacuzzi, spa or ? $395,000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. <S·l21) auffS IOMAMIA Front row Upper Bay view! 3 BR. ~~ bath, split-level Trina model ·w I dramatic contemporary decor +daizllng view. BeauUful parquet floorlng in entry & Jdtcfien +private patio w/lg. overhang & fire ring. $220,000 incl. land. Sandle Fix 644-6200. (S.92) UDO ISLI CHAlMB 4 Bdrm. + den near club & tennis courts. $389,500. Open Fri. 10 to 2 P.M. 200 Via San Remo. (S.122l 6424235 '°1 Dover Drive lrvl"' •t C."'PU$ Vallty CMlttt 752·1414 .,. . WESTSIDE C.M. CUte 3 bdrm home with lnrlte yard All re furbished 1n11de. plus new ruor Hoom for all the hobbies-car collcc· tJOns. boats, farm s1Lud ~W'den& !almost>. All for $70,000. PETE BARRETT REALTY 6•2·5200 10°/o DOWN $81,000 3 Bdrm. formal dlnmg r oo m, l ge yard . sprinklers. d etach ed garage. au cood1llorung. EaslS1de Costo Mesa. Call. 64~91 l>I J. OPEN HOUSE REALTY · z > ~ "'\ OCEANFRONT CAMEO SHORES S000,000. Pool, 4br, 31/.ba ~~ formal dmmg. tom rm Beauuful com er 2 Bdrm Bdrm. den ~ family rm Ne w I y d e c o r a t e d + den Coodo. Choice loc home. Ftencb doors & throughout Close to 2 Warnungton Pl D Up TerTa Cotla enhance the golf rour seis . Only graded.A/C AskS99.SOO. ambtentt. Close to park $1.33.000 Call962·1464 or 5S2·0673 &4:~9J9~·50C!9r 5220 David Bourke, RJtr. 9J.1.. .. .. ~ 546·9950 IMMIDIATE 496-24 fl 130.5050 Muri.r Reyttofds 640.5390 Turner AsSO<' OCCUPAHCY -Sw~d~c~!:~:%riis~1 ~:~ ~!~ 3pj!~ 8-:1~r:::l. .'t5Z3~MPU,Da•IR'ltflE ~e~~~ ~t ~,~!; IY OWNQ cpts. drps, spilt level LR. bndge Estates by Jrvme home. Assume Isl .,1 QUIET 1.lSIOENTIAL Ideal loc. nr. schts. A col· Pacific. 8~% owe.2nd. st39,SOO EHYllOHMIMT lef(e ... lrg lot. ThtS is a 3 Br . den. 21/t bath, Owner/Agt. 495-6119 Twolarge tx:.>drooms.two ~am!·VA assumable $118,SOO. lnc lodes air LArJ-a•odt 1041 · bathli, huge entertain· _t.o_v_c_ts_._556-0525 __ . ___ cond. Call Geor((e at ••u••••••••••••••••••• BY OWNER· Highly up· mcnt deck. View or bills. !)52.3700 between 10 & 5 • .._ graded home on golf pnvate beach access. daily. cour.ie wit.tun 't\ block or "'176,500 1 771·045" or UNIQUE lt'VIM Pac1rac tennis club. $27S,OOO • " Decorator 's mdl. sur· •---------~ 495-4959 549-9595 rounded by streams, 2 Br WOODBRIDGE PLACE 1---·------llG HOME JClllftiM Ctk Pl• I or 1 w/den.2 Da. vaulted FURNISHED MODEL ... .,.... leCIClt I 069 Su .a.1 • $$$ ceilings, mirrored wood C•--·---' near the lake ••••••••••••••••••••• •• R.E. SALES If you think the ren I estate buslnl'SS Is fun. calJ Smilln' Melvyn for a ron/1dent1al interview. Comnmslon split to 90"i-. 646-4463. --BY OW NER. Ocean $ b & f J l .....,...;wvuu LARGE 4 br w /lvly view. Landsca p ed , ar rp c. srpara e 3 bd. 2 ba +family rm. $5000 DOWN added rmly rm. Ma ny spnnklers hall upgrades. mirrored D.R .· step Professionally decoral· * * xt.ros. Very clean. Very 1235,000 P 759.0049 down llv rm. By Owner. e d . be a u t i r u 1 1 'I Ca 3 Br. pool Npt Ht.s. As· motivated. O riginal ~eves.$92.soo. landscaped. Price in· qsey sumes bal. of Sl50,000. ~ have pnced forl._.,,.....,...._,,.._... ..... ,,.....,.._,~ 10 .. , crease of onJf S2000. ~-11200/mo. Approx w ; immewatesale. llurry & SHORECUFFS :::': •• ':':" •••••••••• :.. $139,500. Cal Le roy \311.. 111t. No credit needed call now! 8!M-06ll Immac ula te cu stom Pearsoo, Irvine Pactl1c, C<>rnpanv Owner will carry, v., bui It 3 bdrm s +den Magniliceotocean view. 5.52-4101 . '1 cant. Call645-S399. New 3 bd, lge rms. <3rd --------OW ... B home. Pvt. Mstr /BR bd sep. s uite). Agt LAKE FRONT IN " OPIMHOUSE wine has 1t 's own 833-<1623; 644·S7-42. MUSTS&l ... 0 ~..a. fireplace " view deck. --------WOODIRJDGE SpaetOUS 2 story home 1-r.._....-Lft MINI RANCH O.W.C hnancl.ng. Aski.ng Luxurious ocean view New Woodbridge Estates w1 tb s undeclcs . u n . Smashi.n& 4 BR & Den WHY PAY RlHT? $2SJ,OOO slngle family homes or WasbingtOo Plan ready obstruct.able view. Big 3 +$20.000IOTCHEN Call o.-ft Rkbth Rffr the harbor. 2012 to 3206 for move ln. 3 bed & den. BR. family room. 2 ~ Cleothelr •Ital: Buyers market, favora· 95r " .. 97 64 .. 326 ~ sa~ ft. comloi soon! 2~ ba. fl66,000. Special baW Arwoc1S $135 000 Uruted Broters ble terms! Homes from --;, ~Ul u~de package 10· · · ' &t&-74H 548-2739 ~.ooo. no down or low ~ ---------• cl~ QiU George at • down. Call today 11G • llAUTI <71A)55.i-3700 between i o IMMACULA Tl lf ll00@:1jQ!llf1fltta ~/$ ~·.0:: 4 ~~rad·d· 3 bTab. ulmnd~arcb. lurpd· _"_s_daily_l_rvm_._e_P_a_c_ifi_<'__ CHARM 962-44111~546-8'103 To7Gdde•od Home': Splendid~ view· TurtJe Rock Gleo s Br. 3 ~~~e wO:o~ l~~s~ MEWPOIT OUPUJI $139.500 Stesis to beach. Thas as a Newport Classic al an af· fordable prke . Good sunune-/wlnter ln~me polmt.laJ Investors bet· lt't' buny I Call ~US l ./ JOIH SUCCESS Expr'dsalesmen: llere·s a chance lo Join anllcllve beach office with more clients than associates. Beach area buyers ure more afflue nt. sal<'s lar ger, loans eas1ef 70/~ split. Rental U<'· lMlles opuonal. J<cply11 coof1denUaJ. BURR WHITE REALTOR . INC. 67~4630 CALI.MOW 3 Bdrm family home w/frplc . $64,SOO a II lA.'rtn.". MULHEARN Realty R~1ter 754-7100 SHB.PS 'rransrerred, vacnnl. Owner pays bu;yer 's cos ta. 812 4 br. 8 yrs new. At tr a<'llv e r a m neirhborhood. $98,900 Cal now! HALPINCHlN REALTORS 67~392 Selling anythlng with a Owly Pilot Closslflcd Ad is o simple matter ... Just roll 642·5678. cae: 110181 ILllNS aa. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE CAPISTRANO IEACH Delightful Duplex On The Most Beautiful Sandy Deach In The En· lire Arca. Each Unit Has 3 Br & F.R. W/F.P. Winter/Summer Ren· tals. Price. $650,000. NEW ILUFFS IE4UTY In Great Locotion ln Newport Beach Bluffs. Fabulous End Uni\ On Huge Green Be lt. 3 Br W/2 Ba. Lrge Master Bdrm Suite. Putting Green Plus Largest Pool Jn Btutrs. Better Hurry On This Llsting. Only $155.000. A "Joy Of Newport" List· Ing. 631·1• II I DOV8 DllYI . --... Two sep.2 Bdrmurutson hills. Choice are a . ba.3cargar.,A/C,apace great pnvaey on qwet full Jot. Laundry, pallos. Motivated seller. <>Peo for RV. Owner/agt. street.38R.Z8ASU bm1t GoodcondiUon. House daily. $127.900. Phone645-077&.evs oiler. SJ•.soo Lou Brechtel & Assoc. 33128 Sea Br11bt Dr. Z!9 Manne Ave. 675-3331 Dana PL POa'S TOWMHOME Beu.er Homes Realty Sharp & lmmac. 4 DR. TitelfgOM 66l·a.a7 496·9788 Fam rm. dm'g rm OneBldg·1lll blockoff , ________ _, Taster1.tllY decorated P.CHwy 7'-'1% loan-no JUSTRIOUCED Outstanding value. • 1104 So. Coast HI way ln Vlll•ll~ t 'alr l..AOUNA Bt:ACH 497-2457 ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS fees-.5tenants·1real Audrey Kapelua, Agent. ~~~~~~~~ income-super umt.s ..._... • ...,for 640-1812 ::: •llST IUY• Chas. Quintard, Rllr. E-t 5.-a-*Al..,. aw* ""-~•blul( "-~o Vie~" 613·82:i0 rua ..,.. Orangetree Condo, by .,.,.-WEA lAIM """"' • ..... C-..Mesa 1024 $120.000 owner. Pla n 3. 1 br, ~:!,~ccc:.!'7/a;.~:~ ;::::.·many cuatom 4 y ... _,.. ........ vault.... Multaon\y. Tenn.Lt , pool, "'---'· -·'-• m'--r"· Sl"c,ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••..,.. 6 "1 eu .. etc •c1 000 ""'"1818 1~ .,.u..,.. """'. "" lN --------•I ceiling11 3 Bdrm, 2\'I .. pa • -• ·'""' · Pllln; ideal r~ home Al tm.tnclalConsuJt.ane u_ .. y--..a....a--...x bath. 1am rm. Lge Vfll IPf income. Hurry, only MS-25C» --~~""' backyardw/Jacuui. L&.M SJ.5e.900 •--------- Spec"-l ta ZIA <t; S-., I to l M1Mioa Realt.Y 41M -<r131 i-------Owner 's unit w Ith o•zr s of BEST Oreplaee + llu'ff 2 BR 2 • noro t. OPENSUN.12·3 Bit Ullll8. Call 546-~ for 1bos.J.r;J1R·~xtrE3 NORTHWOOD tOOCHIQUITA v··ue mo{edet.alJs. SUPER ~harmlna 2 BR. N. Tradillooal atyllng 10 2 ba., lge. Liv .• frpl .. Spacious s bedroom Irvine's neweat.-v11J11gt>. 4 hdwd. pegged floors. home tn famJly oriented bedrooms. (amity room. w ood p a n e 11 n g . ~ty. Call ror Info anddinl.n1room.Ccnlral bookshelvu. patio; onbU,YertncenUve. ~HERITAGE ·-· REALTORS alr, Span.lab tile roof and ocean side hwy . Ft>w rnaattt bedroom re treat. st.eps to beach. N. end ~ Showplace: No'#as1t1n1S13$,000 Probate sale. Askln11 N Onlvthep'11108teesdt 3 . s:no.ooo-subm1t . . ~ .. e~i-/ !? BDRM. home. N. end, ~· .... bedroom home with din· f t• Veley I 034 R·2 lot, can add unit. ...,,,.,. e....,. In g, f a m I I y r o.o m , ••••••••• ... •••••••••••• SW,.500 640-515? fireplace and builUne. PLUSH PEGA.LL£N i--------· Patlo. $123,950. OK R. ls the word tor thi& !I --------,_R_EAL_ro_R ___ ._M_·'7_5_7ll ________ _ CaJ.1540-1720 Bdrm h ome w Ith ~Aile Bl& 21t1. newer 4br. 3ba. 91R•"ll!!L l«ie<MM family room 'lbe best floor plao In 0 Back Bay. Huie lot. 11 ~ ...S tbe oew eartbtooe park ltlle aettlna. Sbr. Horses OK. Sl$4,9SO. --· =~.t/ rare find UI tb• 2~b•. 2 rrplc, s uper Prin.Ollly.MS-7783P.M. W .. ~,.u••M? P.B.l.~Ct='~ilea~: v6ew. Slat.900. Owner YOUIHOMI "'"I _,,_ wUI flDan« at f"4 ~ C.11 c~m MM740orl1Mll1P•ter week days or evet. advertlaedhttcanava.3 1lMn make an appoint-"5J.S '71U62-~. ~~ wttlon. Prof. serv•c• ~ mmt to see thl• beautiful llullt• IHde I CMO -cat to marketing c'*«A home. near lhe -•••~••••••••••••••• Eaecant T\artlttodt Olt'D • UtlJMITID your propert~. Please Meu Verd• Country -.a.TH.I. ~ve home. 4 bdrm Poulbtllllu for 4 cdt4MiZS8 Qub. ll fo.turet 4 Bdrm, -3 ba. hbrary, dracnaUc BDRM. bOOst w/mOl.lD· ~ 3 bath with separate LOCATIOM central fir place. m'r· taln view. that need• , ~~n. fami.11 toOf'I\ and dlnlol BeeUL 3br 2'hba home. rortd wet bar. roman won. CloM to tchool 4' ..,V room. Qill ~for an witblo •IWAI dial. to t u b • m a r r Q r c d located on corur lot. R E A T y appolntmt11tto1ee. aandorcnuy. clb Loada wardrobu. waHa of $12'1.000 DOUDP ol cut . .V., akylllet, bookcaau, air <-ond lo/ta, llll•ld tile tin, wood deck 4c palloe with microwave ov + t'M lecu_nl. Decorat ed In RM. Drive by 622 20lh taateful Urlh tones. St., H.B . Then call BeautUuU.r landtca~ ;,• ,_ HERITAGE . . REALTORS Kathleen al STATE Pool tlud lot with IYOWMR FARM RltALTY INC . .,nnklen.outdoofU•ht.1 llt)r 2ba MeH del Mar 7 1 • I a t I • 2 7 • l o r • xtru plorf. fi2 ll,O'OO •• IGO ~ r~ZU-flll.Olt ___ o____ 8y~'7$1.&111 tOO lhnefV't k u,.. ..... • •• •t'( I I I .~.~~ ....... t~.~~ ....... ~~.~~ ...... ~~~~.!'!~ ...... ~~~~-~!~ ...... ~~.~~.~!~...... !lu!d!r· February': 1979 • ONLY P\OJ I _A Ml: ... IMdt ltff Ml .,..t lMCI INt MIWle"-t ...... ..._, .._,...,...., 2000 ..._hap1rty 2000 ott..rlfflllshltt HH1"U.."8W_hd Uwfu_'•1• ~ •• .. 1•••••••••••••••••• -·•••••••••••••••••••• ,_,,. 1110 ~S. 1100 ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••v ••••••• ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••••• .......... --'---................... ~ ... !...................... ..._ ,.,..,...., 2000 C....tltt w.r 1222 r1 a 'iii. • .., aaa l' -------------..-.······ .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ... •••••• ... ••••••• lll:'lil HI ur.WNT ..a.: LWE.LLLWL'.!WLU.SS._ MHe&.••m ~ twe1r>r .. 0tean a aoo acz, n ... bclna. tam •11 "' flKI Jiii" MIW MODIL HOMES Vearo&d D\q>l.x. 2 BR. 2 c~ ~. 3 Bdrm• .. 3 nn. b0auu10. 3ba. ~car INCOME PROPERTY bath IUliU. tlreplacee. ba., playr11~;1 a deck&. aaraie. Pool prlv. " ...,:-C.T..a.rcrnta '' ly'9 ...... .._. SHE P!Ut )Uca. .......... .. ..... 1 I h ••ff.. z.a wM prt.-... ~ .... Z'la ......_:a, 14 w•a11. Re dy to move lnto Last 7 modt'ls Complete with mn onry, awnlng pack & I nd C'Rplog In _ ............ " ..... ·-J-11 ... f Ope.s.t/S.._ ··-,....& , .. ............. s.. N1W N lsn.IOUS ADULT MOM.I HOMI PAD c .......... w, th ;ti._......, ... , llOI •!1k•1_.~•Ul..oot4 ( Mlssl n Vil\ Jo oren) 6 MC>tffHS R• UNT 71 4/U7-ot71 SOtlRN•t a SPICW IN DOY• SHCMtfS/IA YCbST Ofla. ,.IDAT l·I 1 IZO ftADfWlMOS LA.NI .....,....,. .... ,.,.aMl-1?~ ----.... CH_H_ous-·.~ Tenru.s Villas Bluf(s. 3 br. -zi,., ba. Century 21 lblocttobeacb. Asaoc, Ntwport Ce ot er, ~ ~ crts. 1aaoon ~S3S7 Information HOT LINE! Exclusive! BANK REPOSSESSIONS NO DOWN PAYMENT •FREE BUS • * TOUIS DAILY* .... 61).1419 BEACH 1·2·3 BEDROOM }J!fil!qJ!ti. ~~:~~~~·;,,;:: ,:;~:~s 1osc:r. ltoO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4PLEX Choir~ Huotln1rton B each location . SchtduJed frowt.b $1380 per mo. May carry small 2nd . Sl99 ,950 ~·r/ Br<*tt 842· 740'1 DUPLEX ~aatsldc Costa Mesa. Ownt-r may carry small 2 nd . $11 9.950 Owoer/Broll:er 842· 740'1 ~ .... .,...., 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THUi DIUCIS 3 ~rate 2 Br units on la Westside lot. Enclosed garages. beJow market al $12IO,OOO. /('-p€HIG€ HOM€S J333W. Coast Hwy, NB 645-6646 w/pool, iac, fam rm, Brick frplr. Net!da work All ARW C<!mpletely remodeled bul you Save. llUl'r)'. call C .u 1 'IJA.W *!50081 DOWN* Btg lot-much f!'Ore. oowl645-7221 _._"" .,._ __ _ Owner wm financ·e. Na °"'* MOllLIHOME Inc prop, assume bal or credit needed. $155,f\OO STottES $120,000. at Sl.070 mo. balance. Ask for Ed 21 E. Anaheim 956-4500 Gross inc $700/mo. Two Chemow964·2'SS -Westminster 848-8895 on lot. No credit needed. DUPLEX ~ m g C. Anaheim 956-1011 owner will carry. Npt Santa Ana SS4-7070 area.~. By owner. reduced to Wntclff Realty on approval o< credit S17S.OOO. Both 2 BR units. l.tside Trt,..x 1 blk t.o ocean. Good in· MUST SELL 11;', BLOCKS TO BEACH 2 Three 1 Br units on flag ~area. 675-0475 OCEAN VIEW starBR ~.~~line. 4 lot. Good East.aide loca- SPACIOUS 2BR. den DR. _.. • lion. $750 mo income. LR. Vlew+ t BR apt over SI 05,000 "The Meadows" Mobile FUllpriceSllO,OOO. gar+6 car prk'g. 215 St. 2 bdrm. 2'tt ba. den. lol8 home 24"85, upgraded. ~ f R€STIG€ Andrews Rd. See by or eitlras. Best oUcr. Byowner 714/552·3880 --- appt. Agt Crane 5'0.0608 Phon e 642-9361 or ' HOME:S (213)358-7417 . <.omer °"!!~!~'i!amcd .... -H-_..,...----•EXCITING• ll3.1W6~66~6Y· NB retbngs, Crplcs & floor to Npt. Shores 3 br. Steal •l M9wporf •ocll 7 UHJTs-C..M reiling windows that ar for$9SK. 4 • .AcWt,mil .• ford a view or a secluded Manna R~alty 642 8R50 DEL u x E Mo 81 LE ~aut. new but Id 1.ng. patio & garden Features EAST 11.UffS HOME flreplaces, xlnt location. that maJce 1300 Sussex VIEW W/expando liv. rm .. lg TSLlovmts 642·1603 Lane a desirable home. . ecnclosed add on, lg FOUR UHITS $167,500. W1ggenhorn Sbr 3ba expanded hving lotchen king size bdrm Rltrs.675·6160. nn. den, marble frpk .. LDwRmL ·· All 3 Br 2 Ba units. --------•DR. Low down. Assum C4fonM , ifi Owner will carry 2nd IEAGlE-S HEST loan. 8Y owner. Prinr ~Ha acs~~-T.D . 9.2 x gross at ,.....,... Only.640-T178 --~ $1S5,000. RARE OPPORTUNITY S.Cll•• 1076 r--Z7<J6 Har~/lvd. '206 ~ p \ € TO ACQUIRE FROM ....................... 540.5937 I ~E:HOTIMGL'"f ESTATE OF ORIGINAL 1HRJFTY7 _ _ ~> OWNE R. THIS "UN· . W O H NB COMMON" & SCARCE 3 Spacious 3 BR ra"'!1ly EXCITING 3333 . oast wy, 8 R . E N D U N I T • castle In need of paint. e e 645-6646 UNEQUAL LEO S89.950.TryVAterms. - PRIVACY, COMMAN· BERTIIAHENRY UdoHewpcrilc.11 NEAKEVEH DING BAY VlEWS & REALTORS Smacltdabiothemiddle 150/o DOWH UNLIMITED POT EN· 215Del Mar 492-4121 of beautiful Newport 4-Plex & Sngl Family. TIAL V .. LUE A • H a r bor . A gard e n Assume. Seller wi ll ~u. " • gen. Ocean Hills condo. By P d . ,_,.5000 ara tse + pets. carry paper. Mngmt owner. 2 Br 2'h Ba. Fan· Marvelous pvt. beach. avail. Agent. Gary D. OCEAN VIEW Wtic view, new carpets. Walk to s hopping In Bosler IN Cl.IFFHAVEH =t & paneling S79,000 Newport Harbor's most 900-4988 or 536-2498 Lave on qwet presUgious ~ Pnng 1st ~J4~~e exclusive area. (KZ0757) Prlnclpals only Kings Rd .• 3 Bdrm i :11. • CAL IF 0 a HI A 1---------8a. Motivated seller. s-ta.AM 1010 PACIFIC Long Beach: as l_ow as Askiog$249,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MO I I L I H OM I 10% dn. 5 to 20 uruts. Of· ,6 ... 26 1 1 nee 714-644-0377 586-3966, ,... 3 Bdrm, $74,950. Very SALES (2U)435-a7l sharp.greatlorlrgtam1· -u bor St 206-A ly, easy t.o buy & easy on .,...., s4 g93} SACRIFICE . your purse. Star Real ~ Two duplexes on adjoin· &tale, 754-6262 _ Ing large lots n ear M:nal)tforSale 1200 Newpor t H el ghts . $59, 000: ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER MUST SELL. o sun Realcy ---------· Fruit T 16 ACIES Financial ConsuJtant llG .. IEAUTIFUL rees 8 E L A J R E 0 F 645-25()9 &EAGY TOGO Galore FALLBROOK PRIME ------- 5 BR, a Ba, Somerset. Built ins In this lovely 2 AVOCADO LAND JN •UflMllDATIOM• kitchen knook, Cam lly bedroom bome~ dining. PREST I G l 0 US 490HOMES-wtwetbar, dining rm, 2 fireplace and huge yard. KELEAH ESTATE CAN -.. fplc's, view ot Newport BKR. Call 5'0-1720 BE SPLIT 29% balance LOW DOWH Cent.er. A potting shed. 9ftAllB I down OWC. $368.000. Ho ~f}4119 privacy & a price you I~'-"• Prine. Only. Mike Wink Owner t.o carry. Low low can't beat. Owner has -· _.qs7-0SMAgnl. negative. Principals bought another home, ----------• onl s ubmit all oH ers. OlwltHIEstcrte 'WHATTO DO y, sz11,ooo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-7991 Htlh:t. Afl. 1801 Portcartow ....a.H-1 WITH • !'!':~ •.••••... !~~~ $20,000 675-3411 $16,900 STB'S TO IEACH Dbl wide '61 trallerama (0N5186) 3 pvt bcb & pier. Sub letting allowed. TODAY??? ~ ......... Dolars --------111 Located ln Traeasure la. Xlnt short term retum & own the on11 sensible commodity le ft, Real FM.tel.and. ---------1 mil Pacific Coast Hwy. WEST HEWPOllT Lag. Bcb. Offered by 2 Bedroom beach cot-Reo•ha aoce M.P . tage. Well maintained oo n....._.16. FMlGO 1/617·5691 l/52~20IO R-2 lot. 1 bk>ck t.o bay --Cesta--MeM--Fb-er-- ANDbeacb. 11ss,ooo. •---5-~-_.-•• -,5---Spac. added 12 X 29 room ,,__ onlOX SO Crusader 1962. Tie a yellow ribbon Law park rent lncl. some 'round these oak trees on liil. Slashed to $12,940. tbls sorgeous s acre Flexible fina ncing. parcel just waiting for Own e r w ii l c a r r y you t.o build your new mor1gage.(1516) home FOUR UHfTS.C..M. Near new, 3 Br owners unit, 2 ba, frpl, 2-car gar., 3-2 Br, 2 ba, units. TSL lnvstml.9 64.2· 1603 ***** ,,,_~ .. By owner. rices ex· lremely low. Seller will cany all financing al 9~~. W.C ... Aow Low Dow. P-ww...t •. 714/542·367' CALL FOR SETUP ***** FMlGO '71 HOMATI' 1/676-5717 112 loter~t m 12 units S 16,950 l/5JM462 $31.~ no mgml .. oo COMDO IY OWHEI 3br 2}AJba $99.500 Near ffoaa 54.5--3639 12 X «> Paptlar front &1---------negatives, tu sbltr., rear bdrm. plan. S star $250,000 value $63,000 park. <NB~78U CI rcld equity644-0377 ,, .. ,., 16001-------- NtCI SL.ASHii> ••-••••-••••••••••••• .APMlTMIMTS WATBROMT U ,000 -------1 Exeellent out rA state tn-~ooo ~ auumable Owner leavlnr area. DOWNJOW"' vestment for s mart ·-w c ... BR ... Must ml NOW! I Dbl n bu;yera. SS, 80. 100, 140. -. . paper. • • .. _ ..... _ ·-0""' s·-~ i• .. Jarter unit com· ba. a-ry i.ake wtdoc1t. ..._ ... v ..,.. .... am, •JUSTIN• p1ues avauab1e. c .. b PM. OQlY &U-1121 days star pregt. park. lmmac. required $300,000 to or 875-0516 eveniop & $20.9115. (Gz.8591-8) Forleut,aprinklered LD· $1.000,000. Cash now It _wtaida __ • -----M 0 I IL I H 0 MI d..uial/wa.re.boule un· blCb upeide. Prln. only. .l&a. R«IJ.1 OK. Clate to Call Venture Really. WESTCUff STOii maP"treewa11. 714/7SMm SHOWPLACE I06=~•1' AlldenOrl.J~ksooltCo. -Corona--d-e_l _M_ar_t_rl_·p-ie-x, ·~~~~~~~~~1 1031 excb1. s1u,ooo Gor~ Weatcurr 3 br HMIOO 1: Pline. Only t?s.H18 eve. home. Spaclou.s living ... -... &-• LA.uHAalfAR. orwtmd. rm. Warm CQ roe r ~-111..u..11 ... ln th beart cA --------fireplace. F•ml\y rm. LMIUMACHAIU• ~~a. cor· lWO I •STUCCO Giant ldtcbcn-loads of J'* liated, hurry 001 uu. Der loc•Uon. excellent HOUHI on l lot. c~r. Huce ma1ater one. $140 tpace rent \Del. property ror art 1at&ery, FR20B11LOCKOC .. sAN w fn I . B' a u w n I · I.CU. W•lk to town 6 bch. fwoiture ltort, or any .,. laundry rm. Maaslve Saclwtde5pu1oe.tot.1· ret&ll Mlnn1. Ownel' ONLVm#JOOO. C«ltn.lpaUo. Mlntcondl· Jy .,...cond. New cptt .. inonq" want.I t.o ae.ll. Call me ·~~f.~!fft1ic~~~ ... (;.J.~~)'Y 112,tso ~c!~oo . scm,,~n --1 1•111~· M 011 t.. I H 0 MI• • •• Cl propert, at ~' 1111111u:i... ,:r::. ... Newport Blvd, Cotta ..... Apnl '7Mlll. P\nd what )'OU want In o.111 Pilot Clu1illec,. AnJdoua Sllt.500. Vacanl ft aouam, . .-iardener. H7' mo. tf you're a i;eriou!I buyer. seller. or BERnlAHENRY Mo MO-J.21.'Jor.Wf.17 .. cicchanger for units. rommerclal. REALTORS ,~ '-' H HUGE N-E·""' .. __ ., l •-' zu n...1 M.... ..-"121 'twuma da. v nai .... ..,.,... ---ndusuial. or land, please call for an -~ -_., <1A,.L ,...L. with RV aettsa. PreaUao appointment with one of our sales 4-ft.IX UNOB -~1r"' "'1.v ... ~ nefpbociaood. ClOM' to stuff. ff you 're a professional agent or COMSftUCTIOH 19!!1' 6.,,3_8~9~ ~R. 3 ba. $750/mo. broker and a re inter ested In the townhom · · f \ fastest growing prof esslonal operation %"T Bdrml, 3 :a:::": 2'35 L eo.tt Hwy .. OdM · ~ IMdt U 40 in Orange County. we have a few ti~... Flrat clan Sh9r'D 3br Jbe w/blt·ln • ·--·-...... -........ openings on our sales staff. Please t'!tco oie':'\th8l~~i~°:!~ ~~1=~~ Steve~:!?~~ .. caJJ for an interview. &•races w th storaie S.S7S. Cedar " window rooms. ceramic Hie _.__._u__ ...... bome. Five bloeka to • VISTA DUPLEX shopping. $115,000. -Wa lk t o ldtdam fc baths. Forced ---~~ ~•ch. Private 2-car alrbeat, buUt-ln kitchen ........................ f~e. Fully malo· • $79.000 DUPLEX -Orange County. Patios and garages. • BALBOA ISLAND DUPLEX. Trade down only. $230.000. • COSTA MESA DUPLEX -Each unit 2,000 sq. ft. $15~.soo. • 2 HOUSES ON LOT -Costa Mesa. $129.500. • 3 BDRM. + 2 BDRM. -Costa Mesa. $163.900. • ORANGE TRIPLEXES -Got two! $114.500 and $115.500. * COVINGTON 4-PLEX -Pride of ownership. $200.000. • 4 HOUSES/ONE LOT -yards $170.000 . • 4-PLEX-PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP -3 bed. 2 bath owner's unit with fireplace. $225.000. • COSTA MESA pride of ownership 4-plex on s pice streets. $215,000. • 4-PLEX. Costa Mesa. $155,500. * 4 HOUSES/L'ARGE LOT -Costa Mesa. $242,000. • 4 UNITS -Costa Mesa. $180,000. • 2 DUPLEXES, 4 units. $135,000. Costa Mesa. • 2 DUPLEXES, 4 units each with fireplace. Huntington Beach. $175,000. * COSTA MESA 4-PLEX -two 3bdr m. two 2bdrm. $154,000. * 4 SPACIOUS units . $169.000. • 6 ORANGE COUNTY uni t s. s210:000. • 8 ORANGE COUNTY units. $19~.ooo. • 8 ORANGE COUN•TY units $205,000. • 8 UNITS, 2 4-plexes. pride of o wnership , Huntington Beach . $450.000. • 12 UNITS. 3 4-plexes. Orange County. pride or ownership. 3 bdrm. owner 's unit with fireplace. $675.000. • 14 UNlTS -Ora nge County, one year old. $597,000. • 16 UNITS (4 4-plexes), Orange County. $650.000. • 16 UNITS -Orange County . $400,000. • 16 UNITS -Pride of owners hip - Huntington Beac.h. $900.000. • 17 UNITS on ocean. $760,000. • 19 UN1TS -Orange County - Spanish a rchitecture . $410.000. • 20 HARD TO FIND pride of ownership units. Costa Mesa. $850,000. • 20 PRJDE OF OWNERSHI P UNITS -Huntington Beach -..townhouse style owne r 's unit. $1.125.000. • 22 UNITS -Anaheim. $535,000. * 24 UNITS -Orange County -All units have fireplaces a nd enclosed gar age. $1 ,350.000. . • 24 UNITS -Orange County. $605.000. • 26 UNITS -Hollywood -pool & air conditioned. $880,000. * 27 UNITS -H o llywood - subterranean p arking . $1.430.000. * 28 PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP UNITS ~ Huntington Beach -l 'h miles to beach. $1,575,000. • 29 UNITS -balconies & wet bars in each unit -Hollywood. $1,070.000. • 32 ORANGE COUNTY pride of ownership units. Owner's unit with ceramtl? tile a nd wood-burning fireplace. $1,800,000. • 34 UNITS -Huntington Beach - fireplaces & patios. $1,300.000. • 36 UNITS -Huntington Beach - Own your own str eet ! Pride of ownership -3 bdrm, 2 bath owner's unit with fireplace. $2.025.000 . * 40 UN ITS -H ollywoo d - subterranean parking and security features. $2,800.000. * 46 UNITS -Hollywood -all electric units. 2.200.000. * 62 UNITS -W. Hollywood - subterranean parking $3,380,000. • 62 UNITS -W. Hollywood -pool - elevator. $3.380, 000. • 85+ UNITS -W. Hollywood - security guards. $2.000tOOO. * 112 UNITS -exchange. $2.800.000. • 125 UNITS -4 ~ years o ld . $2,375,000. * RETIREMENT HOME to be built. $4,418,000. * SHOPPING CENTER SITE PACKAGE -next to regional center. $4,450,000. * SHOPPING CENTER -Orange County. $640,000. • OFFICE BUILDING -Orange County. $1,700,000. • R.V. PARK. 283 sites. $1,500,000. *MOBILE HOME PARK. $2,800,000. • 4 INDUSTRIAL BtnLDJNGS for $2,000.000. • INDUSTRIAL BUILDINGS. $280.000, $312.500. $1,925,000. • INDUSTRIAL SITES in Riverside. • LOTS in Orange County. Riverside and San Diego County. No 'drive -bys' please. tr you're. ser ious about property, call for an appoi11tmcnt. If you're serious about a position on our sales staff. call for an interview. 9UAIL PLACE PROPERTIES, INC. 1714) 752-1920 -- F\nl wset' lax beoeftt.1. New 2•3 bdnn, frplc. ya.rd. AdulU, :No Fordetalla caJJ 751-3191. bHna. 2 car aarage. ~ pets. lnqulre at m dt.b lu.tp. M5-l5137. Street. (71') MM3Sl . C: SELECT New 3 ar condo 2~ Ba. New 2500 aq ft 4 8d home T'PROPERTIES Avail approx 371. Frplc, above Hunt. Harbour. •••• •••••••••• ••• trub compactor, dis· many xtras, S"/'95. Call bwasber, at.ove w/oveo Ir Mike960-2358 •WILL TRADE• =~ l:o'ii'f fc~u~,~~ 3 er 2 ea. ga.raae. nl«lY DIAMONDS pets OK. Shown by appt decorated 1475. for equity in income pro· only. 5'SB-2922. S&:JO pr mo 962·8571 • perty. G.S.A for M.A.1 . w/re!erences. GWP E ff " '--3 value. Min '600,•JOO sec ome ... en;, Luxury 2 br, 1'1\ ba, Con· ba. 3.000 sq n. grdnr-~ -CONTACT-do, DOie gar., fp, pool, pets. $795. 493-9'31 · • Moftoll Worid Agt ja c u 11 i , S 45 O I m o. MG-G03 eves. 541.0100 6GS2ll0 Laree 3BR ~ condo 912 •••••••••••••••• Eutlide 2 br, nice yard. car gar . ~/per iiili. bitas. Kids o&. No pets. 8221 Wildwood Dr. ~mi Lohfor-S. 2200 Days 646-06.2; eves co bcb...213/GM180·afrir ••••••••••••• ••• • •• • ••• s.:>9543 lpal. - 2vf1C::~!uo~u~0~Jw1~: · 2 br, l ba. Patio, blt·ins, Garden vieW from ~ (former partdn' lot.a for carpet. No pets. room. 3 br, 2 ba, p~e models). Plans mcluded, 1325 ~-~ home, family roo1n. ~.oooeach. •--ft-·• te 3 bdr 2 ba trp&c, dsh•hr.:._~ru~x-64().5U2 Broker ........... .ua ·• • tras. Prof. llUIWtca • new paint. drps, ~rpts. 2 Incl. gardener. E on COM, ready to build, aJl car gar. cov patio. encl HS. K.ids ok, no pets. approved plans ro r yd. schools. countryUke S625. Agt. no fee . duplex. 646-3627. Agt. lid.ting, avail now. PI P. 964-2:566. 973·2971 • $525/mo. 714·645-6156. Corner Rt lot in scenk ca· --------Very special 3 bedroo~ 2 nyon. Minut es from Mesa Verde~ 2 ~R. den. ba. frplc, dshwhr, fncd downtown Ia Angeles. covered paliO. ruc:e yard. yd., covered patio. gar. F'or Sale or t rade. 006e t.o school & shops. l>rol. landscaped. Avail. 83'1-61ZJ. Nice. SSOO. 644·5187 or in a weeks. SS.Omo. incl. ~19 gardener. Yrly lease. ~~/ 2300 ~ ~ ..... pool jac ...... ; Agt. no fee. 96-4-2566 : I...-.,-ng •""' \,VUUU, • .......,. fn3.29'Jl •••••••••••••••••••••• • Nr. 'S. Csl Plaza $350. DeAma Bay Side VUlage. Chi ld ok · No pets. BEAUT. 2 sty 4Br. l~ba 3bc" Mobile Home. Newly 833-3974. Twnbae. Pool, tennis, decorated. $27,500 urms. 4 Br" den, 2Y.a ba. ~ blk soo. 213 /870-1889. Boal Dock. Pvt Bch. from Nwpt Back Bay. TI4/964-41S5 P o o I · J a c u z z 1 · O\ympic sw: pool, tennis _New_·_Se_as_p_r-ay-con--do-.-2-B"""r Clu bhouses. Broker/ cts. jacuzzi & sauna. 2 Ba. incl. heating, pool 0 w n e r . 6 3 l 4 9 2 0 I ~. CaU 646-92.51. SZ Jae, tenrus, rec rm• nr 6?5-8458. EastsldeabdrmZba,fam beach. SSOO pr m o. Ma••• Offeri, & din rm. frplc. new rrpt ,_zu_t'SJJ&._S45_7 ____ _ Rnort 2400 & drps, bit-Ins, fncd Bolsa/Springdale 4 br. 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••yard . Block rrom ba,fncdyd,garage.Kids Condo 2br 2V,ba furn. schools. Gardener No & pets ok. $455. Agt. No Heart o( Palm Desert. pets. Lease $625. mo. fee. 964-?.5$i; 973-2971 Walking distanre to 566-1737. everything. S85.000. --------Gatfield/Busbard 3 br. ~ 640-5147or537-6363. 6-SIDE LUXURY ba, patio, fn cd yd,. ~ ....,.,.~ 3 Br. 3 ba & den, 2200 sq. garage. kJds & pets GI/.. -VY ~·r ft I h ard )I $40. Agt . l'fo f ' .........., 2550 · + us g ens. poo • 964-2586; 973-2971 ••••••••••••• •• •• ••••• • patios. $650. mo. 673-6336 -------~ ASSUME7~%noqualify· _or_&t2-0082 _______ Meadowlark 3 br. 2 ba: mg $52.000 condo. 2 Br. 2 Avatl. now. rucest Mesa Crpk, cov'd patio, tno\d., Ba. tplc. Pool. jac, nr Verde home. 3 Br 2 Ba yd, gar. Kids & pets · golf course . Ownr. +ramnn.~.644-5757 $425 . Agt. No C&a . Oceanside. 1-757-4035 •---------_964-_2586 ___ :_97_3-_297_1_. __ .... Ettah MIWEASTSIOI , •• i L..dl 2100 Large townhouse type. 2 .......... ... J24! l!Ol(m-qge br l'-'I ba. bu everything iCU .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• + +. Small pet ok. $395 -•••••••••••••••••••• TRADE WANTED mo. Drive by'Z536 Santa <:.c:ndo 2br 2ba bltia, poof, RAVE: l200,000 ocean· Ana Ave. then call. UMia. beach. N9.Saa~ M · Cod d 642-0282. lst/Lsl. Dock xtr. tront aw n o an day7J4/894 -l7l7 eve. a ,ooo ScottsdaJe Condo. • ..... w ANT : w a l e r ( r 0 n t LGE 2 br bome, cpta, st v. 1..:...213_1_592_·Z!IT7 __ . ----111-.. house or condo. south or ref rig. fnC'd y~. gar· MEW LUXUllOUS ! Huntington Bch. Will adlts. S290/mo. 644-9806. • trade l ~r ~th/up or 2 br, t ba. S390 mo. Yd & IEACH CONDOT s. down. Pnnc;1pals only. garage. Bil-ins. 646-7378 l·2·3 Bedrooms. enms. Call or •nte v. An· a.wn&-7PM. P':fa·teTro:rr,.~· rties dersoo. 1l17 Vegas --------Valley Dr, Las Vegas. 3 bdrm.. 2 baths. Mesa 213/592·2813 714 846-6608 . Nevada 89109 , ph Ve rde hom e . S525 2 er 21,; Ba 1700 sg ft 702/733·6273 or call mo.incl 1rdnr. 3281 t.ownbome ui prestigla.JS~ 714/673-7921. C.oloradO Lo. Ownr/agt. Broadmoor. Brand new. Trade ror HAWAIJ Con· 559-622t ; ~ security gate, tennis do/House. Have 2 Irvine 38R, l \.'J ba. Extra lge crts. pool & ~lubbouse. Townhouses. Owner bac:kyrd, clo6e to scbls. SSlO mo. Tobin Realty. 9155-2258 Cpt/drps , NO DOGS. _M6-_l37_1 _____ _ $485/mo. 1·879·9166 or ....._ 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~IHdt 3141 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 2BR semi turn. 190 ca- nyoa Acres Dr. $395. Pb 213/3119-2501 or645-8899 ... ...,.... ..... l 16' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waterfront 2 bdrm home ~ private island. Encl. garage. modem kitchen It fireplace. Available with oc without 30' boat dock. Mature adults, ~ear\y lease required. mo per mo. with dock. 1625 house only. 645-8146 days 673·3531 eves & weekends. ....~ 3116 ....................... Old French NorU'andy Oc. frt. Z..ty. Sm. lbr .2ba Git.. hie. Garg. pat. pvt. commUDily . Fu m . or Unrum. $57Swtn. S650yr· ly.~. SIJ...4'7t& ••••••••••••••••••••••• WXUlY DWI.IX Willows. 3 br, 2 ba., frplc, dshwbt. patio, fncd yd, 2 br • .2~ ba. 1800 sq. ft. gar. k>ds & pets ot. $445. catb ceilings, dbl gar. Agt. no fee. 964·2566: CJi>lc. big yd w/room for 973-2971 boat. etc. $495. 673-6336 or ---· ----- 6'2·9666. NEW HOUSE. 2 br, 2 ba, . Cplc, garden pat .. A!C, 4br tba Dbl. garg. w/b•ll elec. oar. dr. No ma1nt.· extra room. Huge fenced "' I N .,.... S425673.Q36 Tennis, poo. 1460. o 1 •w . last mo. rent req'd . E-aide, nice 3 Br, 1 ba hm. _67_~_J.JR _____ _ frpl, lg rncd yard " grmr. $500/mo. 646-2391 , R~ m-~1. l BR. l ba. . ..... S3SO 3BR.2b ..... SS2S/6:11Q, 1 Br. pets o&. S32S. mo. 3 BR. 2~ b .... S600/650 S200. security. Call 48R.2~b ..... $585/850 ~a.n.s:30. 48R,21;',ba .. N.8 . SlOOO FIREPLACE. 2 Br. sgl ~ ~~Ri~~;:s~~: /!£;_ -- immo. 7'f.Ot97. . ~· .. ~~ F.ASJ'SJDE 3 Bdrma, 2 ~~"J-; bet.b&, huge fami\y room. eoclsunroom,cpta,drp11, ~8600l!!W ._ elec kltchen. refrlg.. 1. ·MW.. W/D rrdnJ' inc. S600 mo. u. -•,. Avail Mar. 10, submit on 11.51t2 ,., ... .,;.;;;.ft:.~leu .. E t' children or pets. Call ,. ,., '-"!!"'"'.,..,.· "• ~am agt. a...-lffdl 3Z4l "-"' ............ " ...................... I ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• 0-,., 3226 1 Br uniQue qu&et ~ ac, G_a... 1202 _ ..................... Frplc, "\lds/pets okt. ••••••••••••••••• •••••• 2 BR Coftdo, ocean vu. Rouch. "50. -.2286. ; UASI W /OPTION tftmis, pool, 1425. Call .......... 3211 D BR. 1'41 ba, in Orange. 714/833-4669 Mr. Red· •••••••••••••••••••••• frplc, patio, lrg yard, dick. s bdrm, 2 ba., frplc baa corner ho'f~e . 13500 •T.. 3232 d1sbwaabtr, focd Jd down, S51S mo. 49$-C!I?, •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• patio 1trae abed, S-50 ..JJllO. aa.e to frwy. ' br' 2 ba, mo.-.-..... w.d 3206 fl'Pk', paUo. fncd yd, 1ar. t-New---Sbad--ow_8_\a_D_4B-11,.. "••••••••••••••••••••• t<kka&petao&'."5$. Agt, 2~. tam-rm 1750/mc 48lt a.. deft, diD1nt rm. oofee ..... 2:iel. tn-2971. .-sor•·7S30a.fU. ~ v:::~,:~: ~=-r Ill ¥6y 1234 &Atlt,..... 3211 ~1442 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..................... . --------Clolet.oelem. Kbool. 3br, -. 130' OD the Wal.er! C.-.. Mw 3222 J ba w/lce dea. Frplc, bdrm, 2 ba. witJ1 PriHt ••••••••1;~•••••••••••• dlbwt.r, covel"ed patio dock, wet bar Ir A/C Llk.e new Broadmoor wlbbq.Kidtok.nopet.1. Avail. now USO S.avlew home. Vlew, $H5. A1t. No fee . ~?M-,.. security le privacy. ~;man U SO/mo lncludea .............. U~ ca rd en er . Owner Mlle Sq. Park. 2br, deo, "••'••••••••••••••••• m-N30 1~ be. uzs. Encld IUI· WALITOTHlllAQ ..Ul 7il...O. Natz., Beaut decorated I br IRVINETERl\ACE Green Vllltf 4 Bdrm '*. fGnnal dine rm, r;.k 4 Br a 8a, new u~ta. TowobouH. Clo1e to wet bar, pool, Jacaal drapes. paint thruout. ac.blt It s::c::~·~ Pvt t4Dala. •tmo. ~ Great rate for ri1ht1 a.ml· • lY! Rtf1. Loni t.rm P,.._ ~.I Dl 8htfl ICll,._. I 8r2 Bl (erred. •nlPfl\, ..... ,CUiiom ~.we! DUNG ER 6 ASSOC. 'M,leftl pool bome, •Br S blr .......... DOOi, m.cnoi ~ ea. 111t ...... noo .... ....., SSJ~ ext Aun April l. -.1-d , I • • 4 0 . 2 4 I • Jtll ldi. ltMU 142-$678 t\'91. ..., ........ -·---....... ..._ -. • ... ... . . . . ... . - • i II • ~ . .. .. . . .,.... ..... ~ ·-.,..._ ••• ~ .,..,_..;;·u....,-Ap. ...... ~ ....... $Mn 4300 .............. -4410 ••..•.•.....•.•••••.••••.....••.•..•..•....... ··················u··· ...................... . ............................................ . c;.s )t:J l 4U !! .. ~~-~.:.~~~ .. ~~ ...... ~!~ !! .. ! .. ~:!~.~!~ ~~~ ....... ~ ~~~ ... ~~ ~~~~. ~MU ,:f!:!lltiili 116' ---·-.. ••••Ml,.,. ..... n •t l8rl'Oltap.ff1tlt:. am SHA.RP.beuhl.U1SBR. OCEANJ'RONTt&ratlu· 2 88. lJ1Mc~AO Ptaat. mat\&re. rupoaalbJ PRHf~LOOA'"°" 4' •• .. •••••••••• Lit a 1r, JM, WC-.. air. ·--··-•••••-••••••• HtUq1L pa&lo. r lOHd '"*· dWtw.ar. 1ara,. UIY IJOO' 2 br. Z ba.1750. SJ15 GM>. na/...._tlTI. male to sltr expenset1 OCI ON WATER. Avalloble IOllLJM-·t. .. -.a .. r.&t1 Ot...,,..._.u.ter reot a pr Ad\llUcinly NoMU ft pa\lot. No pita. tno.l.ULU.~. 2U/-.e7Jl di.Unctlve ocean vaew forTet&llorl>l'Oft'Pional ~.W: Olt-=-~. 'llHl'M-6'\ bcli avaH. S. mlU l3•0 lf.11dt' &423l02 ~ 2 8R+.deoapt.FaUr0atZ81t.,2ba,allhlt.l.na.a bUtt bomew/aUa..metUtJttJa ~.Tcltalot3000tq -bdnD. ''°' ba P.A. 2 4Pmorwt... U I/mo Call JU Mlltr7pto ~ean H 75/mo Call lo bc:h. 1375/mo Ph ~!:.u:~t!ct~\~;~· ft. <an I>. divlded into atpy ~no. pool • Nfw Wt hilltop Casado .OS7' 2 ridrm •· unfum. faml Sawind f-1 *·T.!f7or4M-012 f1S.ZS71 deal unlnc umbered aa.Ue:rUD.\ts · 900tll).1.J211 Pwnmit ~ e..1 vt ... tyrampr""· ne>Pf"ll, ~ Nf!W W bdrm 1'1aUT)' Elm-a lat' z er. 1 ba "2$. Welklan Areal BR, pool, Fem. nec:utive. Call WuhwfwOlllHwa 111 BLUPll ;_o ~ i~ 2 1~·. \::Ht,4 ~97-:' 3. olle1 Me. ,•!!!.l .~~ ;o/:°1415~~~': Cozy fbr. 1 ba S3lO. Both RuUud Anna. Nr 11:1op. :!l~PM or wknda, 6J f.f400 -.. --............. a •~ -• -'"'" -i5 incl. uul 831-0300 plna. Avail now S325. ......,,.,, - -·~· "1'111<1, La-1. fK, Ml~v. 2 •-•••••••••••••••••••• 0.11, waterf'al , pond11! w..-. Al#~ frpL •llll ..... W.. 1106 2 l\r, 'ha, ull t'IN' Utirnd l''rom SIU> O\eao Frwy Ocean view, "Uo, cov· Roommate beeded, CDM llcaa·•ff!X 1400 --------• --•••••-••••••••• ••• ••• • tw-w tlf1 >; llth St *3)4) dnve North oo Uucb to ~ park inc. l ! BR, 2 l Dekaxe4 8Jl. 2 DA, gar. no 2 8R home. Call Marc'°' IQ ft otti~ b~ Patk· IA) J.cW ~ 841 ••&\STSJOE 11.t> i BA, Jbr I ~b • uoduli mo A&t 541 ~ M(Jl'addftl t.bt'n West on BR. SOOO·S425 Wik lo pets. steps to bC'b $575 detatla.'31-ao22dya lac. 'NllSW. *" •1)r ~ LIDO ~ dee. adult, pool Dbl w/wl.,, Ad~lu oDI)' Cllmforubl nfnr 2 br. 2 M<'f'addefl to Se1wmd bcl\. 5'9-1186557~0 1J1y IN ..... 1103 . Female rmmate to wni,1-"--~..;._G_1 ____ _ ,,~.,08.m nll~u . fttml'n. Ut·•sta. •~ a1dkZ5eto ba. k1d1 ~. ao peu VULaae m4>•U198 Jbdrm YJblocktobeech. ..._1asno •BR8alboat11.Dupw111.i--------• UIQ~ ..... , ... 1111111111 1101 M'I s-.mo ~ lo¥elY. 1pac. l.lSO Call btwn&-a&7Wll08 Sl.50 mo.+ uW. m-t.5C FOR LEASE 2BA Npt.. Terr. ~ ·-•• .. ••••••••••••••• .. R n -,., 1 t,... ., home-like Z br wtth 494.3253 eva. West.ern P'ed Blda. ' •• d Wl.lt ~ ma r.•~ .. N z" 'c>U. ow., pan..... ..,.. 2 tr-a • "'•1• --------E ,..~A-• ' ..... l..."'..' ...... -•,~, w lll.'IJdt-41 out Sl2S mo pvt. eat""' ffttranc<1 + ,.._,.,,_ -llH -V e.ry nice home overlook· Z"T+t • '-""Ut llw1 :_: oq ..,.ppn-.,.mt• ('plla. I._. bl~ to Call P1Dl ur Larry, patiOI. Some wlt.b att Dehae ,,__, 2 bdnn. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••• .. a.., ••ta' lo "NewPot1 3M09C1ft.Av1ill/JS. --------~f'Ul'n 541-58!!0 IAU"8P-S..unauna pool be. poot Fant4uUc view. flOOMOVEIN Beach, t.o sh.are. Well f7S.OleG .\aaal UIXUI Jacuz.tl Ttdalll eo«uU 1 2 houses from ocean ALLOWANCE fumistied all bltos. park· '·-c,.!_ ~b'!>'a C'~hleu:}tbtrl "1 nb~~ldt.o i br, z ba TWliM Pool. blk t.o HUDUn(luon .. !~~ ~7'"""'50. Avail. 2-U. 1 ~. ut1l pd. Lee IUD· J".~.:.. .'!!Fem a le,'+ ,....,.__._. 4500 ~ -.rv "" v • J~".tf<ftt'CHm Nr Coaat s*ll~ma ,,_,.. ... ._... ~ deck. overlooks 1oir 11 .. .-......... • ..... -_...... tu> M too V~Jo I br SD)1mo 17~ ~ n~• rl\aia CtuldOk. No Pt..U No-~ta. From $435 J bdrm.I ba. 1 blk to ~. 1265. 41-4 Calle ........... -.. •••••••• ru.5 loft.. 2 ba. frplc, ear or "'tndl $ 4 o o m o . ~awind VlUsge. lS555 beadl.some vu,~ Campua, <&12-1517. Fc..-male roommate want· lndll'Jlrial UnJt, 1.200 sq.rt. ~. !WUo. All de:Lwt• 14 811 f %b zb Ge l!X*lf17H78J rft.titl.ngton VIUage Lane. 4.tt---41%7 ed t.o shr charming 3 BR. oo Logan St., CM. FOC' t•urw No pet& CaH frpk.1~ 1.~ lil'•b· K.8.(714)1188-Ml. If ~ .... ,,_II wid~d 0 2babouseiaC.M.,ctos.e immed OttPY· #79 per marDillO •• Ut lffO Vrly ~ Adul&.a only. Nl-wpo.rt lfo1aihlf 2br. den. 2 bdrm. st.ove It refrlg. Cls oruwu I I .nO '°beaches. tennis" rac· roo. 751·2717 llACH UYIMG oopet&.llSO mr1c pt1U O Nr shopping •Wallttothebuch• to bcb " s hps. Older _ ••••• , ••••••••••••••• quetball Crt.I ",)oegmg•---W---L..9 ____ 0_0_ M.w J&l•Hw• ta twllh'-.... d -t-t'ntff No pets '400mo Ccno .. Sol .Adult.only Nopeta S350 1HEaCJTING tract. No peta please ._.. _,_ 4• WJdeu, I,. R • tam rm, -~••••••••••u•••••••• C.-.. ...,. Jl22 m 721.3 BcauUful 496-es · · PALM~ APTS RA!ot 1160 + v.a util. Call ... •••••••••••••••••••• ct1i\ U.-ck. pat. fr11k11 ...... ,,, l ... I "l707 ........................ AdultApts MIN\JTESTONP'rBCH 9-5;~:177.askforPatRcs~nsible , working ~" car open~t. Bulb ·-·•••••••••••••••••• 11.aV't! cozy 28R w/frplc, mle81iBllU 2Ul6l Brookhunt. HB ~H• 3850 S.cb. WBR orLJ.sa. '::!drtoeor-sceoetktasgeo "1ne fk!Jl .lonally df'oCOrat l. front uN1. Gat •laundry 96~53 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fromS2SS&t up. "" ... C!d. MOO Al $700 Cal 8&\Cl IM'r. prlt&. lbc rm No ptta, oo r h11dren N~ twautlful farden Adults.. 52 year minimum. Respoo. person, easy go-Corona del Mar or Costa M.a.rltnt" 11\ 631 3644 1375. Adib, utJ pd JO.J £. ~ ~Z311 apiutmooti, pool spa -2 lk. 2~ ba townbowle NEW apt. Leisure Work!, ~ .. ::~· Ing 23·33. 28r, l t,;Ba, Mesa. Quietaeas essen- ..,..-£dcewat.er Clllll28 }'tbeb' c=g a pt . Spac:aous & Top·O·lllll, Montecilo <581bEutofNewport twnbse, avallable 3·1 2 uaJ. WriteClasaified Ad OPENSAT/SUNlS bomellke. Dix k.1tch VaJJ,2BR.2ba,gorgeous Blvd> -m1 from bch CM . di&, Daily Pilol. P.O. Luur)' 3 br. 3 be l'OOdo, C.-.. Mw 1722 t.«edlx 2 Br, 2 Ba Plush ~t'-:;::J::.1 w/blt.os. lncl. refng & oorth 180 deg. vlew. 9em-Spm 546-l880 $150/mo + laat, ut.11 and Boll 1S60, Costa Mesa f1« sar opnr, lrplc ........................ cpt, d.n>e , patio, fplc. (atNewportBlvdJ trash masher. Encl gar s5 oo t mo . Ow n e r SlOOcm dep.642-4278 131126. dshwbr, Lru h comp\r, Co&1 amall 1tuc1lo, no llitnt. ti~wshr. UIJ I pd 540-9626 & patio. Small pet ok. 114/~UZ1.568-lt7-4. MOllLIHOMI Fem to abT' 2br apt12--Br-uDf-· -W'Q--apt-.-w-ocna--n-+- Newport Crest 0 R. knchea. 1225 Uul incl. Adutta. DO pets. SS25 mo. S'10. mo. I ...,.,,,, ln Ids UI I child Abl l pool.tm.n.LI Kldsok.n ::&er.I'd pt'r•on, no "5-3779 Qt 6•09714 or 3 .... 2 b -clJar ....... CieminlReaJ\y 839-6623 Adults,52yearmJnlmwn. l•OIMATIOM waame_ • ...., c: u · e o pay pet.i ~ Ao• No foe r..... " MG-lnS '"'• 8 ·"""' ,..,,.,. NEWapt,LeisureWorld, & Po()l. Nr bcb & OCC. S2S0·$27S. Have re · -~. mliii -'MMM. ~~.~~OCC. o p ets Adult. Apta. nr bcb. New Top-0.llill, Monlecito ~t!:!'::i. ~m:l 53&-980& ferences. 99CM463. CM Sml bal"h, non s mkr, ~db28r,2Ba . Plush 2br llplc, patios. pool. Vill.2BR.2bantbrgeous Information. Easy b r-a.rea_. ______ _ --------111 mawre person 122011.ncl cpt, drps, patio, fprlc. S32S. 2 br, 1'4 ba, balcooy, Sec. gate. 1702 Florida, north 180 deg. view. fi nancing OAC. Trade ~=~~.4 PS::· ;lk [0 *UDOISU• wl67~~/6'73-4841 liltns. dshwhr. UlJI pd. laWld.ry rm. Adult.a, no 900-6610 SSOO /mo . Owner anythingvaluabl.e. bch.Hoktlna .UJIFri.9th . .-...u/h1vn t/ S 8R. 2 b». Lrg. Sunny !'!ul~7•9°00rpet6~·615259714m0or. pets. ' California Apts. 1&2 Br 71A/640-UZ1, 568-3.974. Santa AM · 554·7070 Call now Jill 752 4000/ Ar• • o.. .. ~ ,.__,,._ ~--2'" ....,..,, " TSL Mgmt 642-1603 w--•---·-""""' .. .,.25•·0. •••••-•••••••••••••••• ... ......, Access to letUUS. _...,,..... .,,, ~ M0.9'335 Close to bch & sbops .... .,. • .._. 3169 ~ _._.. ..._ ~ heh & dub. Call f"rank .... -................. · S200 1 Br, mce, quiet Frol:n$295. 9S8-7176 ....................... C. Anaheim 956-1011 ....._ . l<JU'l 121.3Jfi53..7900 ·-"·-• u ••• ,..-L. ..... ~-JIZ4 E Anaheim 956--4500 Fem. roommate t.o sh.r 3 °rpa,.._.ty SOOS • · 18ru:&UCJ•l75+u I._-..--area.Ya.rd.Non-amoker. dr r 1 PAIUCMEWPORT · Br2 Baaptoa8alboa81. ••::?'•••••••••••••••••• --------• E. 16Lb Street., C.M. ••-••••••••••••••••••• Rels.req'd.Nopets. 3br.3b.crpJ· :f:· frp c. Bach elor •. 1 or 2 •-M 6 67$-503$ -La-ln-T-ow-nhouse El 642-9193, .~~~~ 'rSLMgmt 642"1603 C:·~.0days 536-=. Bedrooma•Tow-ohouaes ~ ............ !!~~.._a:...,. ang ~u=::nt8:e Dorado Model,· gotr S2SO. l8DRM. NEAR :.pJ.0 lctults. o:hwber~ 1 brUft1265· refrig., CI D. 536-8705eve.840-5949 Spect~.:3:;? t.otatl•-lllilllllllllli____ for._. 4350 family income. r~u or ~,~e;'i ::Owp~~· SH~W~· bh.ns, encl. gar. gu bbq. ~St.':f~ 73l·O W. New2br,2bacoodo, pool. r ecreation proaram, *' .. mud"._* ~·· .. •••••••••••00 .. ~ tu:oe~.or an in· ~.840-~7· HwtlL4••odt 3740 ~M2?~3r:.S.~1Scott $375. 2 ba townhouse. ~~ ~· gs~•:r~ :::!=.!.~t7~ Loveb'=Broob GJn,::.~~B:.~h.>' =~three ~ey peo. I.;g. Npt Crest condo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc, s undeck, patio, <213)685·6033; eves lalaod. Jamboir'ft •San •KitdlmFacll.avaJJ. ~Tues.-Sat. ~for expanding busi-er. 3 ba, + rnstr ste llv' w..-... v-.,. adulta. no pets. 2656 F ~ Joaqlin Hilla Road. •Jacuzzi, heated pool Single ga.rqes $40 1110 neu. FuU or par1 t.Jme. itrea. frpl, 2 car + en SMALL BEACH HOTEL Beautiful br1nd new Orange. Ave. &40-7905 (7141644-ttOO itWklYor dai.I.)' mald arv. 195& Map&e Ave. Costa Call for an mterview. o-, pool, tennis. walk ROO ... "' -50 w~i. adult apta. No peta. Pool, NEW 2 B~-~ BAbe, enchcl *'IV' pbcae available ,,_.__ """' ........... bdi.SGSO.SS9·74.56. ApU l;'t;;,:536-3007 jacuui.<>Pendaily. New 2BR. 2ba, no kids or garage, c......., to a · $550. 3 br, 2 ba, ba)cooy, Low•$7J.SOWL .._.. ,_v_,....._ ______ _ ~ --9S5W.19lhSt. pets.SJM.lmoreollree. S360permo.9M--2937 eocJ.. garage. All bltos, 2277H.arbor Office..._. 4400 PLANT SHOP. id~al Seaview, 4 BR. 2""i ba .• formal d in .. ra m. rm ' frpl., view. guarde 11ate. pool & tennis S Mo A,genl 631 J44!1644·S403 3br 2.,,ba Bluffs T-plan ~aut. Back Bay Vu Clos e l o pool S67 673-3359 2Br I bath Cottage. Lg yard, patio. Redw decb. Concrete walks planters. $485/mo. 232'1 Margaret Dr.~. llGC~YOH DEAHECONDO Vur lease, avail. now. Bdrms.. 3 baths, wit spaoous liv. area. Love ly yard & entry are1t SJ.aJOMo. incl. gardener EIL&H HUDSON REALTOR &44-032 NO FEE! Apt. & COod ~tal.,. Rental Pav1ll tl75-C912 Bkr Tues-Sat. W='XR...&-.. Ba18cb.r~~ 528-0820 3 BDRM. 2 bath, 2 story blktobeac:h. Yrly. a.t.aWesa ~ •••••--•••••-•••••••• setup for lady. exclW11ve llliin"C'~ __......... Br b "''ds TownhollseApl.$450/mo TSLM&ml 642-1603 SQ ft. om ~.seUJ.ncbelowset.up Spac ludios & 2Br13:J5.,$3SO 2 , 1 a, gar. n.1 , pets S13 b·l ice spat-e to coet Try $7000 full prict. lBedroomSultes TSLMgmt 645-8122 ok.S32Smo. 964-1.S07 IACHILOlUHIT'S Roomwfklt.cbeoette sub· eaae In Lag~na Act.7SH400 ...i .,. • ..~ "-"0 "'"'"' ,,.,,, ""16 • ., 5 deposit .,,,. ~ .. •· Hill.~. La Paz Rd.o/,uat Com.,.et.e n..1tC1n:a• ........,......, or.........., 3 Br, n ..... """"do, l mile to -2 + · ...., w.,.,,. .. up P ~1•HD ,.,...S .... """" ~97S5 . south of the Sao ego COCKTAILS, Newport Beaut . Patio/ ool .,._,,.,, " .w-' Mesa Verde 2 BR. 2 bu. beach . Tot a I r ec 201 E.lalboa. NI. _. Freeway. S308 month. Beac:b, stones throw MaidService-TV l Bdrm & loft $340. l 11.SO sq ft . Frplc, encl package. lncl. tennis c.1Jt...ta556-7707 Elegant, Fa.shloo l., golf. AvaiJ.oow.830-6030 from water, partners J Milet.oocean Bdrm S300. Bach '250Pool. gar, OW, gar dspl. S37S. lmmed occupy. avail maid ser v . Mature fighting. EJ1ceUenllease R~alSuihs l'Tplc., rec room • Cats OK. 754·6216 or <213>919-Mtl. BAYFRONTbig,deluxe2 empl'd man . $2 85. Deluxe medical suile. Thnns.Agt.751-1400 JaCUUI, closed garages. 957 1.568 br. frp)c, dock privgs . ~ ground nr .. Conina del 7 0 _ orhkt8ow1 ndat Ga.s & wt.r pd. Adult.s. no · Bro. new. 2 bdrm. 2 ba Huge patio. elec. gar. ---------Mar. RealononucaCorp. lllA1L ORDER mfg, ell· ...,ac v peta.393Hamilt.on,C.M. 4:e2bdrm,withblt-lns, bll·in.s,jacuz.zi,pool,ten $595 mo . 673·6336; Room & bath 10 prvt ~ elusive ~uct (yacbt- 536-CMllw 645-4411. encl. gu. call cives. nis.garage.SSSOper.mo 642-9666 home,llOO+litecborea. rr 1.0l>.unllautAldPotenli~. 54J.ZOOO 974-'1n47 IsUdasl + clean up & Musl be r-espons1ble, 250-500 sq. fl. o . ices. Seller under capttalized. SUPEllNICE security.840-2778 ~blktobeach.3br,2ba, non·smok e r pref'd, FromS14S.lncl uuJ.779 Brang o ff er. Agl. a..,..leectl 3741 •Locked gar. w/lg st.or. 3 BR 2 Ba twnbse, air 2 Br. 2 ba. new palot & ~t, t>U.os, frpl, pal.lo. lotcbell & lauodry pnv'!S. W. l.9UISL540-2200. 751-1400. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •D/W, patio, lndry rm. cond , patio, gar, less bocolate brown F. t.ease $500. 1Z7 44\h 644-5636 ------.. •---------h-UGUNA BEACH MTR *5pec1alcabinelspace than l yr old. Nr. i9lh & new c St.640-61-4-0 ---------r--~""• Bus. foe sale or exc . INN. $75/wk & up. Maid .Oas beat, gas cooking, Placentl.a. Only $425. J · crptS, One at S300 ~ Room for Rent. SUS mo. s.ites lrvme. Ora. Co.9yrs. old. col 1V h at.eel gas bot wattt all free. D · Property M gt. avail now. One at ..,"" Promontory Point, l.enn. Kitchen privileges. Private 11.11\.e with recep· 6 employee•. H m . =r·utiL°r714)4ti52M. •Aduhs,nopets. 751·2788 mo.avail.3/l .Adult.son crt. pool. club bse. Prefer male under 2S lion• secreta rial 71t/839--9828 98SN.CoutHwy. ~ ':ir,!;;;ffl: 2 bdrm. l ba. No ch.Udmi ~~Jt~ea collect. =~~i.91 br $MO. yrs.CaJl§4..5676 ~'c.l1• r!:J!t.:!.e~ Comi ___ gn_men_t_c_loth_in_g_+ ... , ,.,.._. 17'9 M lht.omonlh or pets. $275 per mo. Y~._.. 4250 Mic helson. I rvine. ~· 64S..Q66 or ·-.. ••••••••••••••• Eldon A C M 646-1947 Ne. apts now renting. 3 Near Lido. 2BR. 2ba lwt· ••••••••••••••••••••••• """' .. ..,,,..~ --· ZJ23 e.o ve. · · bdrms. 2 ba & encl. gar. ury Waterfront apt. ,...,._ --------•·Y-MT N2-7605 ''11IEV1CTORIAN" St.art at $495. Located ~ Garage, bal,.....y, frplc. llG llAA -rtll" 2 Br ... ·""' l ' .... b I .... ..-a. f Be h Bl d ... ~. cabin for rent. fpk 3 room cffice. Carprts. air n, ' ..... , Condo,Z BR.2 ba.,"year. Jmmac. Quiet 2BR .a ...... o. n aw gar. uouur. rom ac v • $750/mo.559-1802 mEAP 548-2S86 oood. ~Y Park C1ttle. -.P•-11 lu S67S mo townhouse. PaUo, pool. adlta. cpts, drys, range. corner o r Te r r y 59-m ·--•••••••••••••••••• >v·~T.OIR•CH wad.'!1~.:Ss:nst . 646.~. 7S5 fncd yd w/pauo. wtr pd Or.IVW?wpoint Ln. Open Lovely & Spacious 2br. Old French Normandy IftYeetoneam~orpro-~·...-~ -.LOU• $290 667 Victorf a house Sat &Swl. Ca.JI for 2ba apt., with ma~· 0:. frt. 2.stySm. lbr 2ba Oe:gant offices up to 760 hts. A successful builder ~t1:i_~t;!:!::i::= 2BR2Baupper,allbltns, 631Hl20,l·S. Wo.&47~1. =': ~r'u~ ~k ifr: ~o!:kiy~~~~=:: C\.~~f:~l .. =:~bo',1~·~r':~ 2BR.lba,""'ll'.$435 1...-. encclgar no pets 2br lba Encl. garg. & 3 Br. 2ba. hpl, patio, sm 673-3.102. __ __, ,. ;;&S~~ " · patio. $265mo 22 10 yrd, no dogs. Call . 4.'JIM439 Downtown Huntington ;.f;~sss.ac6' 5015 Rutgers #8 846-7129 aft. 675-6670: 96().SJT6. WE>'OCUFF 2 br, DOW til House r • B' 0 Bear Beach. 210~ Mai, St. . THE COVE Eutalde 2 bdrm $300. 6p.m. Jame 1. AcUts. no pets. or ren., 1" One 2-rm office avail. ..... f 1 .. LuJuuycoodol br&den New c r pl~/drapea . 2br2ba Nice condo. Pool. lge home-llke2br,2"'iba, S300. 673·6640. 1700 g;Y sl'f:ly6; ~ r~j suo.•1558. Wmhd 5020 associated !POKER S 1111" •011-; ( •A ~ l 63l·lMiaJU.JO•wk.nda J·ac. Close to O .C . townbome apt, encl. pvt Westc.JiffDr. A.,._m3 £!:. ~!.;, ... •••••••••••••••••••• rp..,. • Jacu.z.z · P patio & garage. Dix ... ""' p.m .• _.POO'. ~ ~E beac . & $gourme 9UlaC tM College/SC. Plaui. Fwy. kite.hen w/bllns, incl. IAYFltOMT 3 Bdrm Cabin for reoL 6 ~ ·•n n vestor need ed : New , ''; w fl) .. •) ,. '' ~, kitc hen 850 mo Bachelor utll pd $235 Lge 2 br, l "'i ba $42S838-9UO refne.Smallpetok.S410. SIJPAVAIL.Spac.2br, miJesfromSnowVatley. W""'TER! =':!~t~~=~g ~ICB2_ ---' --monthly. Nr bcb al 50lb lOWDhouae $3SS mo. 1100 3br 2~banewduple.x, d~· mo.~7~10CameronSt. den, 2 ba apt w/apec· s.tll60 wltnds86T·2220 A management· ex . S.a....nh 327 & R i ver. 645·4166, sq. ft.. Hu everything. bw. patio, garg. GemuuRlly 839-6623 tacular view. Lwcurlous __ __:•______ P'LUSHSUITES h ·-••••••••••••••••••• 642-31150. Small pet ok Drive by Child OK $47Smo apPointmen ts, beal.\1. Palm Desert Deep C.· 350\01300~. ft. ~~~~.:..f~~~ers 1P Cozy 1 lt'vel. 2/ 3 bdrm -----------• 19'Zl Anabei,;, St. then 2l68Mi:rSt. 55'7...s79 · i;:e,, 2 g~ge ~d~?t!· gardens wltb undy QfOQ Temm CJub, 2 Br. F_.mlc YMws ,.._ ........ _.._. Condo. 1''1replace, poo 1 &~~&!:a~up. call 64S·465S evea & . Nopets $375 6'>t6S2 • beach. Overloob Balboa furn condo. LUed teruus Wet Ban Mol~S. Trwt view, tennis, garage Agent67S-8l70 wtc:nd.s. ~EOPTJON · · · Island Adults, ao pets. iDcL$6000yrty.S73-4407 IJclo....-Deidi 5035 S495492-073t ____ -1;::==-======•IJ Br + loft.. 2 ba rd ::S,2ba :eesa G" llwlW• l7l4)6'13-84t4. ....toSltwe 4300 .i--V-... 67 ,.....,,., •••••••••·-·-•••••• ... -STYLE . TU•~-stove pool, adulta, n"o mo. ,SOO . ....... 3842 NOWISlHETIME ._................... ............. ............ LOWEST ·~ l....:::.: ..... 290 ...................... . Large 2 sty. 4br 3ba. uv pet.a,~ • ....,. 1. Luxurloua above 1uage. for job seekers to check 1~u ... ·ns .----. l d w:--..1. gent. Muat be lm-Ocean view condo. 1 Br & th D ·1 Pit t H I ~ ..._,,.,, ~ WawllaleS mg rm. w/g ass oor LIVING Ur. lba. $240mo. No peta. ma"""'"~ ouo.7197 ktl S4.10. $t.eiJ8 to Sunset e 81 Y 0 e P 3 lg btaDd oew ollica cobble stone patio. , _,_,._,.cil. fWS.7096or ...... . D-'-('"") ...... 51U Wanted clusificaUon. H s• .... M-SGY• . I f II lttT.o: .... Formal DR, breakras ,__, ~ " .... .--the job YoU want. la not EQjoymore.Payless! airport area. w u z.dT.0 a..-_ rm. w/french doors Apartments. ~ , .. bMISb ~~1 8 -.... am. 3844 there you might cooside AUA&ea& L.llestyles. ~~l~ce, good Fairest ~sioce l9t9 Qak firs. Huge mstr Entertainment. CLEAN-QUIET ~e ac -""· r_,.,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• offering your services WeCbeckRef'erences ..:.,._._. __ . ______ , s.ttlcl-Mto... Co. slAte w/calhedral ceil lb Frplc, pool, jacuu.i: gas New condo Woodbrtd with an ad ln the Jo CGll 54•··42•2 Airport elf' ~ as d · g rm Recreation... 2 8edrm. 1 ba • 0 0 pets, bbq, closed gar. Aaulta, • ge Wanted categol"). Phone -----~al ace s)Mlce, 642-2171 545-0611 m.. • res s1n · ~s no c:hildren, 1981 Maple, 00 ........ 2650 Harla Ave, 3br, 1"4 ba. Bus. h rs. .,..,_.,.,.,.. no>l'4-.• serv. on pre. balcony. J ust r ewall Yours-o1v S2'751mo. &31·12166 Craig, .,......, 640-4450 eve/ wkn . ,_....,,,. Female w anta to share rmtel5.S140.957·9331. MOHIEY AYAILAILE P41pered. Custom drapes dcrya a ye01I RE/MAX. M9-2K7. 673-6680 Ask for Doug lnN 3144 house at beach. Male or 2Dd TD LOANS llPIJ'8ded carpets. AIC. FIREPLACE 2Brsgl ...... Ammerman female. Non smoker. QUI Gmd flr. ~sq.ft. ~ LO NS ow garg. common pool, • lecnltitW Si119ie, Beaut.. brand oew adult garage, d.iah~as~r. ;tc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Age 25-40. GOO per mo. Jdea1 f« int des1gn. 2SSS ~ ........ G A Jae. sauna . Some ocea I 6 2 B.droom a pts. Spac. 1 & 2 br ReallY nice. No pets. $t2S Alt8.171-1194 E. Cllt Hwy. EQUlPllENT VM!W. teoo lsR. S625 ren r~& w /townhse s tyle . mo.759-0t97. & •-d l -1-=--r-'OOll.l--wbl--cb-can_be_ OR<X>~RPUUCTJRPOSONE S5CIO move in allowaoc OnJumillbed Scheduled mov e-lo ---------oommate ••n-o """• pol&ible. 64045a> ex. A,pai1meota Fcb.10. New deluxe 3 Bdrm. 2 = ;:::_~~i :rivat~t'.~!.:: DlrvidP.C.reyA Auoc. or-.7284 •AUUlililiNPoid 18t',18a ~ bath w/frplc. $400 loci orM6-1S.31 5'cnge. $250 per mo.1_..;.R.,._.E;;;_.Bro&el' __ _;,,,.•880-__ 1957 __ S-.._-----1 •No1-&eqWncS ~·ifi:t ~= gas. Roommate M/I' Ju ~-~~I ~sn ... ~~TD~..:a ...................... ·~T..... also Bachelor $205/rno. ~:; Home: P ref. ---------1 ~ ............, 3bdrm.ssoo-. mo. 00 ... ...,_.... St1m1nglg.3br2ba1arn. 81.......,,La.,-"e. F'_._ 1,._Pri .,_,_ from $2$,000. C • ..i...1..-.... ...... --Pool <rue. "°'' .-u • •tralCbt. over """'...,, ee--..: Sa Ila bar y I 0 w n e" --&o moolh. Horses, • Aa&.tiiee ov.c... • ·rec. area. -6'73-3900 548·5186 25: Pcm. aha.re unique 3.moe Y.r price on 1 yr eeo-8155 d o g•. kid $ 0 K · ,.,..,_.., ..._... 710W.18lhSt. buslneat if lnveator. lie. lmmed. move-In. --------- 9 ~6 ,....c:::i......... C 1 ~ 0-PoW 1116 ~L Farn.w/CODlecenn. •tN•SuTu .. h • · · ·• t -••••••••••••••••••••• ----'aJ--ice, .., 2 a..i 2 Ba Cando ~ _..., .... .,....~ ·-E ..,._. __ , C I ~· -• ~ft 1 R~al Eatate, uu.. • • • ... ......... wvn ...,,,...... MN ·~· •100 .. 0 VEIN T'----"s a d'ff e ....... ~--n Oceuuront. IP rtrano .a.~---..1-. ............ I air coodiUoo. $32S mo. ,.,._ __ ... _ 2 .._.a. .. _ aplit • • • •l':loc: ' er '"-"" ~9":"C -.... • .. "..... F 1 · • .-.....---busioes•, or persona "-1.. ood ...,.\MOK! ... • \KIJ Al.J.OWANCE ild nd atJ MAJ + ~ ....... em.a e .• ~ ___ .-._7_+41 ___ 1 .__.,_ we•H succeeded pbasec.dep.5S1-~IS. vaaw Jeve.I. Frp lc. d eck, 2 br,lba$36St.o$38S.2 bu1 ingapartme~a ere nga QaldOK . .m-53'3. •• :f:.eotJMnbavefailed. s.a • -l2 Garden Apcn1menta ~lbt. all extra•. $420 br, 2 bl + den k2.S. Eocl. commu~ It's a dHference you <:on .......--mo No chl' .. --or -· cd • Woodb"""" n."'et fem. to 1bare 2 ,,,. ........ -----... .... ••••••••••••••••••• Newpon B.och/Nolth Days 646~U2 ; ;;;4 garage, pvt. fn gTasa feel at RJng Brothers ·~e l;m,, 2 ba c.o.Mlo nr So. -~-DW'll FioaadaJCoasultaata 880 1rvln• 64S-95Q. {vard. 33'11 Cbeltam Meodowsin lrvine,wherethe great Qt.Plaza.S200/mo+ ~ Av..... MS-.aso9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TADOVla PAYMINT INFORMATION OAC ..:-.. Wf Ol'TIOMS 1v1UY 400 HOMIS AU.MIAS (a1l61h1 ay,496-1097. outdoorsh8sthesame ~mpered util. 968·2963/751·7788 75• pe r ll a nd up.---------(714) 64) o~~ 3 Bdrm t.ownbouse apt. •100 MOVE lN r-eva1 ~ cf Coeat Hwy NEWPORT PACIFIC Newpon hacb/Sou\h Adult.s, l~ ba. SU:S mo. ~WANCE charm you like to have inside your · w/tona or o ld Cd M FUNDING 1....., 1•·'-G-pakf 6'2 5073 • ..a. ft hom• 3 bdrm. RB. $150/mo. + charro. M:/ amt lit, Zbd. Jtd. ,..,., urn SI -. . . 3 br, 2~ ba, .._, 1q. . "'· J ao~--.&• ·n __,. n..-6CC:\AU: -ftAn.a u d h ~utJ .• ...... _ ,.., s . .,..., ... ~ ,,_ .... roo-otl6thl F.aac.!Jde 2 br, bttng, tao pvt med patio, encl. Woodb.~r·1ea ows as 848·~ 675-ZJU ~ ·;,,;.;...;:.,;;..... _____ _ (714) 642-8170 pet.a. s.m mo. 640-1278; garqe. Lots or grus. sparkling streams, rustic wooden - Adultt O<l)y. no s>e1• ~1 eves ans. $485. 33552 Blue Lantern. bridges. ond fragrant e~-fo'emaJe to share house A : c ~a/ MocMI• open dolly 1~1 _41J6._9230_______ .~, r bul ~......i ~ r ~ Hwalin&loa Sia) Up. Offtce.store, 480 4 J:j1 f111 · =======~12Br,2ba,ll.50aq.ft.Fpk, ~"'--all~ .... ma a ous;)'l;wng. ---.. Alt l'nDl Beach Bl •--=--..... • BR t l ... _ b enc car, D/W, $375. 2 bl' .. l~ ba. t .... .llt'lll pvt ,_ _ __...two bed rtrnents • .., • . Leif .._ " • 1 epa 0 ....,ac Mele Verde. ,..., or car ., lge patio, new '-"f'C' 0 '"'" room ape F. t.o tlaare wtaame 4 br., H.&. LEASIC8'1-28M. __ ........ --·-- w/paUo. ThnlJune. 4IM'l21 ~ ept," dnpes and furnished executtYe singles are 2 bl hoafie. JIMa Verde. OCEAN VIEW • w c 1m1lll1 SIM $48.5194 No pets • $ 3 3 5 I M o . availabte for lmmedlot.e occupancy. $300 + ~ u t I. J a o EXECUTJVE OFFICE _ .... _ ........ . Feb l at to .June 15. 3Br.2biu ipper.r..11etadel 6n-711N SeeWoodbr1dgeMeadows S46-07IS. 1'¥h5oo laLu4 lD hutUl'1 l'PDIUI~ ""'---W/D -"··'"-Mar, '350. reo pets. ---------·"t.e .,_ .... ,, le••e of ~·· ~ M09R.I NOMI .._._. ........ • .......... 54&4ID6. Ocean view lge 2 be', 2 b•, today. It's a community wtth a Prat. woman &edta pe:noo .... m JU ...... ... • --.a1r only. UUI pd, no pet.a, l5 2balc:ooM9. met. d bl ear. ..... ' ..........a.. ho l'k t '° sbr Lac Nia'~ 2 lice lkJ.5 tumished or 1MrW£IS s.a ··--•l•P• t o bc b. $425. MOWTAIRMG Very private. $375. mo. w11erence-1or r-~ w I e 0 er 811 E ~--4",.. unt\lrnbbed. Secretary, NW E. .. --~~m ~'!!!2 m.ma --AnoMS _64().,_l().,_50'18______ geto lift from looking out the window 2 • v • kitchen available. MOO lodlne -Dri~'- nDlll.ICI .............., --· M/F fum room. h 40 + ~ per mo. Cati Gabriele Ma11c. --va -C Anaheim 95f.JOJ1 !Up 10 beKh. • br. + Brad new deluxe 2 BR. Hilltop 2 Br I Ba 2 sty omo ~n dally h .m. lo 6 p.m. utll. Cotti Mesa. No11 n4-640-Mm RECALLED w..imwie M8a95 dell.$Sl5winter. S67S.1r· 2 8a •J>b. X.lnt Coeta qtiet, mJoJ view Ac yud: Telephone: (714) 551-6800 llllkn.Avt2Jts,MMU4 1• .. -.._-.. -.-__._.---4-45-.0-1 ~..!!' ~d~-~!.!~~~ -------_ly,_._AJ#. __ <7_1A_)C1_5'990 ____ , ~h·~~~.·~voamn:~! $325. Lesa for 1 pertOQ. _ _.. -....., ...... ™" •wuwu u.. _" ..,,,,,., .-~ .... ,, Cut Living Expenses! ••••••••••••••••••••••• cainous rlde in Detrott. c=:::C l425 4V:,,250~to'C°h.'=~ ~:,0tea~C.:ft~ your =~1gue1 coedo 3 ~''Me'.:'~= :r.~er~a !!!:: :::!. ~tb~bt!:: •-••• .. ••••••••••••• nn. ~. Winter $5.25. bdrm. 2 ba. light4'd t~n· PIOl'M'n in Aoomtno1ie 2 I J 0 ( C ) A ., o o • RECALLED beca"" of RIO CANYON Ml-4l00ar2U/ 441·25'2 [i] nl.a. pool, jacuui, sauna. """"'"O t•f\Ctl •97• m.41'1-'7001 faul\1bcneahoellT NEWPORT BEAClt 2 ....._ 2 ba. o-"t \.au SG5 per mo. No smold ng, f~llluf..O on TV snows 1-Coodo only .~ ... •--•· ·-. V&1 nopets.Phooelll·l816 wrmllflup•n f«Mm.t"8l1he r-.--...•otfk:ieapec:o•t Uttl9h.....,.t ~Br...doew,2\a• f&e:im:.l:Ji.:.~•· LC.TATI.OaCO .,.. JIJJ r,r~~'ft rettOltW.rat•. Oasa'&dAda~tt~ bctrma,lba&.M, fpl.c, ....,, __________ , ,,_,_rm.-.... _..w..... •.._. .... -= mall.--...... to ' bllr, to -A1. 4 OCEANFRONT '4M I t Z •••••••••••••-•••••••• 50 Eastthore ~ -... --. __..,.... '--'-cal.1'1Sll0l .... 2br Jba. eompl l.Amlri°"1newaptl.Hear Q)mpJetelJ' tom. 2 br ... caua r9' fwa. 17 Wet or Mo. S BR. eear So. Coa1t •veryt.hln1. 1 •1 • 2'a. l'Wn Entrencc e.tt v.fe Loop duplex.. l a.o.&1• from _.. ft.AZA .....,... and"'-! Rell&al P•vlll• 17$.491.J Plaza.MO~o. !!.1!:..~au . CU·Hll, WoodbrldgcVlllgeoflMne buch l o Newpo r t 1525M_.V.,.E,C.M. To place~ llcr.1\aea.Sat. Mt-22: ._. c.9clmll 92714 • $11$/mo.tm>••n MMIJJ Id.call to. ~ \\'alkr.r r, l 1m . .. .... -- \ : ---, • I I~ • _I ~ ,) 4'. ' !---~· ........ ~. ~ ,._ ...... ... ,... ~ ~ _-,~'C= -• -, ~.,;;;;. !,&6 , • ' -· · I ---rw ' U ll st,, "" r _ ,;-_ -:_~....,. _ ." '................. lat .. .._,... .......................................... ..._. ........................................................................................................... !.~ ............ _ ................... . ~~ Lou'a Ca~.• 1r1 ~N ·Pn_, _~ 3Wllfnl 1,_tnxk •dJ.....,._,cukNMn. a.a.t Mna~o·. Pllttot, w.u.PMI? '1e PAI NTERS N EBD lR.tpatr Ir R'erOOl ... 4tl ~~£ -r-u!:'; a, Doore. wao4"'•, ,_ •Jt.ltoalAt on 1'rub. tl't'e tnm. llclft 11'" Nfw.1 1&JM PtftOll :=.: ~tfl•Cff. R•· a.faa«..d: Eve1. I WOllK : 10 Jn up. t)• P • • ·•It• •' '• 1 • •Llc: B ~;.oa lrS .--t'k.S&t..-. -..Ot"9IDllllJullll ·1 98'103.MZ·m. ~----· Jou T ,..l'Ha. 10011 o/ tllo30&S.9'S.IJl6 _ Int/tic It Acc. cln11. roebbake1-fftn~· -.:.·-~ ,_ . ._ IM ,._.., ~ Jou refuencu. Work 1uar. '4'·5116/ J)oee •t. 6U"'830 n. ~---~~·-_.. __ ... __ _,-r--• ....... a.--r. ... 12. P~ualnc. StMUolit '7W50&. M'aU. I*.. ~-.......... . .... ca... •••••••• ............... ~ ••.GO per ~le rO&f. -• 1'.Hanmt.,;.;;.;..;;;.;..._' ___ ~--will-. --wort-.-• ...!.-2.1.-•••-••• ~ -"......~ diee••'' •• b11 -··--·······•••ueee J.INDA'S ......_ W , ~'~t' ..... Aa&f«Bob . ~-(-...--forti L ~l A..U ~ ~ -........--.; w1U •-•u •••M••••••• 'l'AXISRVICt.:. .-~. a.b . ..,. · ·-................. lftt•m_.. ... ~ = ::..~11. ~ --·-a.. K•a doi ti:.t !Vltn-. U ,._,..., '-nl ... le~e Tax ....... ~Wallpe~~ Nftll_..adlellrt.aturtt .O.ve;__, 'l eo.mr >'I oot,,. h ,dlann.,MUlll.A"I a..•~~tr ~~•t ate~~n::a OiUMMmfcwM>t. Brt•llwork £ma.ti~ AJWon::=r-. t. ... IST. nJ.14Jt S,. ~ ________ ,,. •_,..Ill, dlr ~'~ Hewpon. Co... Meea it 151 -••••••••••••••••• 9lahre woa .. wl U QUI m ,_ alw. _ _ 8aywood,HB911610 PROP'OiSlONAL lrvtDe as.sns ....__ ~-P-'-••-b PA'IDIPLAnUlNG s.i. la..-i.taUed ~ •nr·dfl9/"-tte ""1"111*, It 1!1 ~,~ tt ti ·.-INCOMETAXSUV. · ews. n111: __. •. -& Y All typet . Fret ·1;_; ~ I Q1 • u...._,l'r,...,. ~~ __,,..,, JLW~..::: .. .:•·-·~t::"".,-.... ·••. :. ..... ! ..... !.......... vou.ri.o.eoraryomce . ....._ !:_S:::c!;!c.:.:..w .• Tey Uldue-.eauMl425 .::..:i.JCct.9.,:r.::r•· _._ ';'1llPll"" ... ....... " R081N., ROUSE Fw-.,t.,oall~--•••••••"·-•-••t.l.!-~-~~-!-~-~1111~·-~ = ........... .._ • <'lD , 1.,,.,. •O.. Looi• • 0 · • QUAUTYPAJNTING Pluter Patt~ie1 · rta. ...... ,, ... -..m~~C'ar1*~ o.W-..-~--~ 1~.~VIJ1~. lto•l ng " haultng. _,..._ u__, o-·--•· Plaiter. 1tucco ii--.. ••••••••••••••• 1 Dttawan. H li --Ma:e AJao • -• °' a. _ __.y c 'Ulll ......................... floeil't. bldg matmilUI, ......, °"'"'' ·-... .--ov·. drywall, lotJ/Ext. Fr-c £It AM Jc T.l LE . CV.Wt na'Dllaw.,..l 1-l•&crJ Wor• tu•r Ge:* U I : tiio..M.MCM1$7 8J)C!Clalhlrtg In a.o\o & ~hou~bOld toods et<:1. ble. Wape OX E > .t.w .. u1u 1 . · ~ lDOllM Wlft .... --••••••• bom9ownercovtr*'9i. IAwelt rttea in town. l4&G26 IQt.cbena. baths, ...,.._ ......-'-1eans,. ar S. Clll.ru.&. ralts -.m1 Gerdadnc • ....,..,. 41 WH~,: .. RECAY.'~~-~AN ll0bert9od'tna.Aa.oc. Jdln.~lll54 ~-'·'"'"It w·•~----g " 'th) !!'!!...tlle or mine . a..c rtm. All ~ -., lande.C•Pll'tl Oeora~ UUO>a:.., au ~·°' 67$--0682 ·~ ---·b)/ ........... ·-··-·· --· J4 Jft. m -..,, C1 n wlw ~ 6&S1Wn Oll'I Fn-e~t 645-51.23 Morris Moving: Lac'd 4t ~ · R..1 :,~1 a e PhJmbiu repair. Spec. l" -C-DAN--l-C_Tl_L_E_tr_Al_I -·-.. ····-·-·-· _ ~ ~~ ... ••u •' J Insured. Tll5886. ,...ce. ,..,,.,,.,._ remodeie " r re·• ••IHH W.lc.e ~_._Jlr'baul -• ..,.._. W•nl tmmac lltom41 ....................... Profeasioo..I snvlce. lat/ext Reasonable lpe Goel P~ 'toP t,ypes. Reas .... Les. n-ee -.. --::: .... -........ tq P'ast • otre<'tt'Tlt .. -;;;.::: .. --...... , =1t:h ~'oT~ Europeen Landscaper. MC/Vwuc~t.962-4242 De,.ada~e. Ftee est'. ft'::i>tumtNQl.537.itt4 flllt,l.Jcensed..us.*2. lJltciodee-•~ ~ •Ma. FIXIT• · 1W work Fair price. •M Out It Aboot'" J~.MS-TllS Trft5enlc• ~~,._ "' d-c ti Cull J.JUU«t'a &auedv Rffs.-...ndya/-eves. "Don~t n...'-Call T. Plumbteg repalr 1. -·••••••••••••••••••• ACTION .. OQn S\\ocn. ret•luin(t ar~oun-. pain 11~. , bousecte . 1 "I __,y o-G & M P~mfg Int & waet>eaters remodels Laadec c lo p; • UX&AL 1TP&NC waµa. block&. pat101 Reu ,. ts m "' ~~Cb re~~ ~ J.,,_... Wncllcaper day" Local & statc-wtde tlltt. Cabb>et · 0 1Uag, & ,ReMonable ~ates. Cali -:._"':v.}g'e. a~,'!~ .. S ~;;;--~w~ia~.16:;;~~~'*:;:::;10l.k;;;id;;l.W;t;WU~,~--.. _°";.;.:...-. .,. .... n:rl 0 • • 0 Spdakler. Low pnces, serv. Z4 lars. 7 days. ·~ ~· 7St4448/ Ingram p l umbing r.::.:. .. -·'I .... ::.~r· ... _ _ • -cour.<>ous 1erv1ce. Wark it&aJ' ~yrs ~ ~ 87S4&57 ~ _.,.remova .v•-. MAlllNA MONEY MGM --~ ·~ MS-llOO • Uc~/Boocied. NoburO: . . IDs. =~bill .. -..... ·-···--• ···--0 •••--•• .. • ac:.ema . 1 ~ 531~•-1812 , Hard worlung men.I EXCEL. LENT PAIN· ffOMi:SAVERS. Plumb-11'Rl ___ M_M_I_NC __ A_LL_KJ_•_DS~ s.ibas'& fte'M<kl, repatr. ~o l.Wil~ald er. dwl!J~ Ill&. a::s reuoo.'o:; • ~u:SM~l:i/~~s. TING.Reuooablerates. ing & Heating. Free Topping.' rert'o~al. m.11a1 ra!'P~Dtty , o ld um~ Dt, . . t.ne wd<., trw.O.M0.1~ •Dool be fooled witll · · Fl'eeeatUMU!:s-."8-2106 estimat.es.Nbr.Honesl eleanups Lie/I ns ---------• ~musb111 16 yn ln Lii1nsetc. Pl·l.25'1 • Mll8CIDS. AD.ytime I.a.CM & reli•ble .. urvtce. • C.p1 lsr area.Lic'd. Mr Palom-..... Ut"3.dolbeb&&'obs1ik~ perfe c t time tor P ... lm;/P .. rlNJ PalntlGC·lower •int,er BAJMCOK.l'JM965 _-._1.MS _____ __._ • •' i 1' •" ,... .......... bo. 9SZ-8314 tt i! l1oors wiodows. ~ cpt,'g. Jl)rinklen IOd "'plant• ....................... r1ltel bl\erlor. Neat. Ref. . • Stomp&tree removal. Oarpemer. PrM Dt. AflY -·--• .. •••••••••• Dutch MalnLeoa1ie.t leg. ,Qig.it·Land•~l>e· PETERSPAJNTINO Free eat. Greg Riley Beach .City s fUumblng P'i'tef!lltJrnates. w.e ..._Can Allan or~.Utype15. No Reralrs. Ua11dy man, m -UM ,. 646-1070 E.xpr'd . Reas Ra(es. 66f>.5631 Wlll beatanyestb110%. 6*362? 1-.y.MMMi )Ob teo sa:Wl ucmsed p ~ m b ln e • e I e c ' . Free Kat. C•ll Gene AlJ Kinds. Free estimate . G\&U'.:atbr.MS:Ol93 Spu-o. 751.-r! ~. p&lllt.cq. 4:~. The MoppeLS in bosuae8s AHY & au types or ex· ~ T~ ct1STOM 11.esier AQy bshld repau. Tioy. a1nce 1~4 •Honest de· teriardelilb'&coealruc· Ucensed. $10.00 per roll Drain:SlOGuara.nteedre-.... •••••••••••••••••- lnle11ol'Carpentry a1i ~t. Gill ConU',' 00-1492 af\4. peodable, 0eff1clenl: Of-tioo. Uc. 314419. ~6716 Palming. Elllr/l ntr. Ex· avera.ge. 64S..Q880 · sul\s.. Drain Speciahsl3. Tutoring: Credentialed by Jay •.6'2-aaot ~-~-lD ~altos. ~ fices homes vacancies •• prld, honest. neat, reas. ~BS.540-8'184 exp'd reading/math lab -.. a.o .... caping " .._, Llc'd0 546-2393 'll9')f Lic'd9"-*S Dave •'=-•..-11 • • ....., .. _ ....., ""30 CUSTO M woodworking, borM improvement.a. -·••••-•••••••••••• · -·-••••••••••••••••• Pfloplewhoneedpeople ----· • ...-teacuic·• ..... ._ • re.sade-ntta I • com · ~l.a5itorSS1·1'110 Lite hauling.m oving. Eltp. rt!Uable woman. ex. Briclrwork. Small jobs. Pro( paintiog. Elrt & int. 3hooldaJways chcdc the ••••••••••••••••• ... ••• Sell with EA'tE! mercial. Call Wsyae. w d Oarqe\'ard clearung. CfllJ ref's. $UUiO week. Newport, Costa Mesa•& Low rates. Refs. Free Service Oirectorymthe Dech•AJllHoeH ll'saBREEZE SC'7·92611 ant A Help• "2·567l Reas. rates. 642·0'105 55M011 Irvine. 675-317Seves. eet..53S-4780, 53&4383 DAILY PILOT Reoaassa.Dce'll4/499-3816 Classified Ad~M2•S618" -· RElAXJHG MASSAGE I•-------AET MANAGER Al1l'OlilOTlVE 8 0 0 K K__& E P E R Clerk: Good 'Mith figures .Bob\Juwes·L&c-Massev Companion-Hultbl eare. For 55 Wliits in Costa "MAM AUDAY!.. PULLIOIAAGE f:mrJ tevef positJoo CUSTOOW.._AIMT Substitute <'uatod tal mamt help needed~ $4.56 per hr. H.B. City School Distnct, 735 14th St. HB. (714) S3&-8851. SBl8I ClflZEllS Oatcall9<~.494~W Oultd .mat. wom : 1c lo lle5a. £¥per'd cou~le. 'fo,llUlstneW'-&ueedear For rapidly expanding 84CMS80 · 1 Hsbd aClt&-alaiatce etc. Huabaad m.ast have tna"•-•-vu1ed. in· construction company. --------- PREG>JANT? Caring , Exe rook, drive, shop. mainl exp. WUe bkkpg tere"';Uig tasks & t o Salary commens urate•i--------- aJDfidenllalcounaeling-& 1 Jt ....... lad ex p Ca 11 eves ~rvilek>lotderllneea. with ex~rtence. For rJ.EllS SPECIAL referral. ~. adQP· mmac -Y car. ~ • .....a.._ .... 1 a-.....,.. .Hru lloo&ltet!pmg Sdaliv&in..AS'da."Jlet. s _,_ ..... ..;..,._,. _____ . ----e to work around _..:.~_;,_·-~------ CW !o DtSCOUHTJ - APCARE 547·2563 YTref4i4().8883. AS$1MILER cars?-nils wttl-please MECH ...... ,C ... L you! Ideal for semi· Spint.l.._... ~ "' retired. Salal')' open. See JBUSo . .EICanunoReal Very good bometleaner, Position in electral KenPierce. SmClemeate; f'ullY hr. eood ref's. Call aft Spm; mecbanlcal assembly HOW.ARD (:Mn•t "'""-..,.., ..-.. 646-20t7. area for mecllarucal as· Do •-Qu ·1sts __ ,.w_a...;.p..;...pt._ .. _-.._._,_""" __ ----------• sembler . S t a ndard ~;JEACH MICHRI E'S PERMANENT LIVE IN ~~~t\et~f 't:,ndr~~ AUTOPMlTS •o.tcell• COMPANIONS/ mechalca.i . assembly COUM!aMAM OurinJi: the month of Febnl.arv. $gnaor Citizens 11AM·2AM 1135-3749 HSKPRS prints a mast. Min. 6 receive 25% off on UJeir pnvaLe party ads for --PRACTIC" 1NURSES ,,.,.. EOE "'"'7 9051 Mimmum 3 yrs. Jobber merchaodlse for ~le in the Classified .Section of UHDA & YfCKI WELLSGREENED ::rC:~ Gilm;;; · experience. Must b& well tJae IWty Pilot CfteaJ E.si.ate 1s not Included> a.tc:.al~ EllPLOYERPAYS groomed & pel'3008ble. 8l'ilag your ad into oae of our ofllces listed E---.-a. tt• FBE A S S E H B L Y & Hard -work & good P•Y below between 8 AM •5 PM any day dunng the ~ ..,...T"'mlVT • H WARBH&E. Sm elec with growing compa.ny. week and we wW st.art your ad the oexl day Serving all Orange Co. DYNA SURC prts, lstshlft. no exp nee. Call SSS-2500 for in· CostD W... -3 30 W • .., 6trM 83.5-7313 Personnel Services ~t friage bent. Nr. O.C. lerview.appt. Lat-e •-* -1116 GIH••J~ Physical massage by 2021 Emf. S.A. Airport. Anet Elec· AUOOM<YnVE he'd. masseur techni-83S-l4'9 trcnics. ~l. * r--YICE •IOOIOCllP!R * FUii charge thru trial balance·reta ll store mu.ltJ loc. 4 yrs. exper. nee. 833-9961 Bookkeeper F1C toS1500 Exper pen wllns .. agen· cy bkgd in personnel It com'l llnes forsuccuaful firm. Good toe & bens for someone seek1ng a challeoge. Call J ea n. $tt as Coastal Penoft. oel Agency. 2790 Harbor. CM ,. AU.JOBS l'ft'EE UTOTEM <>Penmgs 'ftOW available f0r tufl or part/tame clerks on 2nd & 3rd shlfla. No experience necessary. we train. Start S3 per hr . l\Ss)jtant CUSTOIM.AL AJ>pliratfons now belna taken fOf' sub6tltute night sweeper s. 4 hr 11bifts. S3.S7 per hr. H .B. City ScbOltl Oi&trict, 735 14~ Street, H 8 ( 1H ) 636-88$1. Managers lo S3.eo per hr.•------- Managers to$S.SO per hr. i--------A d va n c e m e o l op - ~ to t.hoR who qualify. For information go t.o our oeerest market or contact l.bt! P.ereoonel omceal : CUSToot•H Full time, 1'leeded im· medllitdY atimneQ»m. paay 'Apartment Cbm· plex. Xlnt btnelits. App- ly at · l'HEaVIMatO 1071 Camelbaek !!~·;•;;•;s1~·;;•;··;~~-~·~'~'-'~'~'~·=·;··~·~!!!!.I -! _ clan . 4·8PM Appl.---------Assemblers. Maa ufac-WAT'CH!R _5M-_!81_7 ______ 1Uve-1n aituaUan as N.an· turer"'Of prea.iOn elec· Expel'i.need .iy. Busy • ci•nt• SleCI a...t&F...t &IOO ny. PTevious ex.,er. tromec.beaical devices Ohevro.let 'dealer near J..a&Z2Lalall90d Street Carden Grov~ 537-tMO l'.q::l=: ElDptoyer •M«1•-u " Experleaced ecwnee.r in -- lrvine '44-9010 0 ....................... ...................... . w/children. Beach •rea. bas immediate openings. Orange Ooanty Alrport . NICOLE'S ._.2M2. lv-rnessage. No ex p e r i e n c e i'.Kcellebt. pay. pleaunt oper:alioo of ffaD1f'N8al -owlf'J'Ypnt toM?O . retril'er.ctoo machines~ 9ecrttaty tclf'IO Data Prdcessing PfJllY PllDI IDS LOST" Sm. wht. shaggy Fem. dog. Answers to Sake. Reward Lost Thurs. 2·1. Npt Crest area. 631-1164 ...W ii.0-.~llllllo Practicat.orbousekeepe1'. neceaaary. Muat have 111.rroandings. Penna. , -· w Id good winuaJ deaterlll· nent. Opp. for advance· 8eaa.1Uful girls.private ..,.,1sure or exP4fr . Co111pldUve w~. SR • · RM Sdyswlt 494 1536 ..._..,. __ ... _ 0.,~ meat.See Mr. Trevino. & bMIJd iog eq1.1tpemnt Aase Call Pdr Appt . need~. Mug t h ave fJ'viMPft'soanelA~~cy knowledge or alr• d is· 481E1'1lh.Oolrt8Mesa EDP rooms. . . . . .. ..... 6""'""''Ulg.,... UC· HOWA.IDCM•rol.t 531-95aD Companion Secretary lion Pl. NplBcb. Call tor Dove&QuilSts. trlbu&ioft It calibra1Jon oC SUM~ &42· t470 ciontrols. Good beaellts. ___..,__.._....__ -~fttfttlCO ~;.;..7 OPidTOR We are lobklat ror a pro- feHlona I an4 llighJy motivated IJidiVidual to process crilfcal com. pute r output lo e n OS/MVT. HASP. IBM :no environ.ment. Posl· lion requires rolating 3-day wor k week in vattous l2 hour shirts: prevtou,, data processiag experien.ce/educalion pref~rred. Comp.aoy benefits include LUiUon refund and a w ell · defined career past in EDP. Please apply at: FOUND 'Brown Hu.aky. Call us you won't be Good drive r n o n _a~ppt-=--·-80_"'4_____ NEWPORT BEACH 111.YSZ Vic Brookhursl It Adams 9684.!03. sorry. ..... smoker, xlot t"eferences. •--------- 621So Harbor. An .. 11e1m ll&l380 ... cr11• .. ILllS Bab)isitter·before & after Come m you'll be glad __;_;.,._;..;,.;,_______ ·-4 _ s cbool. Ha rborview 1071 cam~tback s... Irvine 644-9010 F.&rn up to $300 pet' wk. ------- Sell an> at~m °' com Ulsl· Greylbtack stnped youdid. Prdctical nurse w /excell. flBCISfOH . School area. 752.0211 :~e': <!l:':":is :eu~ !'!.,~co~b r.20J ~~i~~~~~c:,,~am. ~er:s ~!~lro~~ ~~::,~sn ~~~itl:~::e~ -~---~-__ e_ves ___ Busy 'PT Office eeeds ex· 'Pln~r M 3 lms for 2 St., .M. 548 4900 aft ---------• companion. sboopiug . shop. Applicants must Babyalller, dependable. perienced aide. Fu ll eoosttullve da)'S Each 8pm. w ANTED: Own tuns Refta bte. enjoy the challenge or needed for u mos girl. time. ii oeces.ary will ~ ~ISflCY Jor -FO-'-UND--:-~-i-x_breed ___ d-og-. DiY~Womm _~_7_526 _______ troubles.lrooting & 9-~.twicewk1Y~OOM . lnln. Salary cRpecM!lng the!days.Oiarg~rt' near Marie Callender's ....._W..e.d 1f00 c u s tom fitti ng of 673-a56 oo-experi]. l!Dee. call Dee Nocommerc1alads 7th ._ CM .,.,, LetS.H.'E.helpyoo •-w merbanlral assemblies. 644-8600. Yor mor,. 1nJo rmat1on ~aJ>M'_. __ .... _.-839 __ 3 ~~r:'.0:3~!~ti~~~f1~: ::C•••C••OU-•••:;;::..:~ =~:ia~~~~~t~! ~~R~:1:re~ J..i_ C.SHtER md ioplace your ad rull Found bJ.ack & sUveT' Ter· SetnllUU'S & workshops l4l "1•1..w per 8 must. Min. 6 mos. Mar. Have your own ;s-.!Jlouni pet' wk, eXl)er. ner nux. F'emale. Vic. ~~_!e~ scheduled. CLERK exper req. E.O.E. Call tramportatJon.875-0232 ~Sa·t~onSu & AToesl • 642·5678 !!,1son9Ll7& Republic, C.M. -"'""-'--------Growing company has 557·9051 , ask for Ray BABYSJTl'ER wuted for .:.-... • n. PP Y _.. cpaiag for a 1troog .ar· GUman. 2~ yr.boy CdM 'Or Npt. ~=: ~mH::=:. TIFFANY'S PJUVA"'" Found : S ml Golden ~~~corts* romlblg clerk ln \be l.n·i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Bch area. Flexible or Bl c M 1 i:. Cocke F M N • ... .,. \'story control/cost ac.1, permanent ·hr . Call --· -·-·------DfSCO, CORPORATE r em uc . r. Ma&e-Female ~area. ExceUent 9~30-lZ:CIOam&W-S347 CJIDllCAL REFINERY MEMBERSHIP. $900.00. Wes&moot Sehl an H;B, Ann,DesUn.y. Mandy. b e n ef it s. Ca I I d9• HS WO'RKERS·Sl. 7S to CALL KAREN ( 714 ) 8'2·20t4 _ Heat.ber. Brenda. Cissy c714)979-38001or appt. B.ICTIOMIC Babysitter.El Toro area. start, day & night ehil\s. ~Ext..29. FOUND: Lg. Malemix.ed ;Mbna.rvingO.C. .....,.MDLD,CO.P Position Hailable for Maturewocnan. stal'Uag HS. chemistry or work •--"&£..._.... s-Shep H eav.y Ve ry Asltabc>Qupec.rat.es l18alVonK&rman pers on experien ced hD2Dciwk.days7amt.o exp. with cher.n1r als -~ .-.vv frie nftly . Brnt .Blk 7'r4' a....09 lntbe.Cal92714 PCB, wire assembly .!=.~· care ror infant. beJplw.CaUS.S..549-3281. -····---··-•••••• w/aborttall.644·7122 ~,6,11\0T Equalopptyeroployer wtrebunetsaseembJy& nQ.req.768-7446 10% increase for rugbl 90IDC'minol' mechanical. o~ .. 1.1.... shift EOE Founcl male Collie Vi c Happy .32nd. Anniversary CompllJJY ls -looking for ....... ~ --·--·----- Razar41Beact\. W~stm. :''K~ ~/~f1/'fg: ACCOUDUng person interested in long ~!~;:~7e~~:~ed. OD.ldcate wded. Mesa f811NO ADS ARE FIEE Call: m.4267 you. t erm em ploy m e n l. Salary commensurate Verde area. in our home R .Dm•ll'T.....,... E.O.E. ~II 557·9051, ask w/exper. Please apply at Prr. Student or retired Found: Blklwht Fem. Puppy, ~1c. 19Lh St. 64~5671 64.S-ZD7 lfa111~·=-.. = ... F'OU NO male Pug. ••••••••••••--••••••• Balboa. Lt brown. has SdlDah Ir -------•I NB lie. Cllll673-SD6. lllltrstlo. 7.005 Lost or Found a pet! Cell FOUND Gilnllan Shep F .. -··-• .. •••••••• •••• Animal Assis tance puptt~Gn»-1Gnat P"---""' l.ellpe. $37.zz73, 110 fee. ~/548-!!53. , j ' LaIT: 4 Gold charms, on charm hold ef'. 2 w/cliamoDds. BaJboa. Nwpt area, 21'/'lt. I or au. call collfct. 2J3B11i4. REW ARD. Reward lost ma I e Samoyed Feb. S. being lreaMld for virus Ans . tu Kimba. Edincerllleal l.ollt: 3 riqp; wedcfurg band. srull diemoad, " lrg blue stone dinner Ting. No questions, re· ward. 114/ 8C2-IOC5. Lost· 4 keys on ring. Vic: trvine /fve. 'flt Ogle St, CM. Rewa.rd. 681Jlt!ll8. The : ~ """" _ .. _ 4"'M Lost Feb. a. Vic. 120 .29rd area......--.... -... r ,, · 9l C.M. <Loog ladles wble lnst mix fem. Wbt face & abeeptlkm coat. a.2·4116 Ca asey 1 Real Estate Sctwol chest. Brown collar. San LOST; Yellow Jab _puppy THE MOST Juan Area 496·6508 Vic W17thlt1'1onrovla. SENSJBLE -.ol.10 131-5016/ 64S·8178/ REAL ESTATE LOST Btowo & wtitle pup _J48..82CM ___ • ------1 •COURSE pr, looks like St Bernard. tn;T: 2 six moctld .. •tit 1•1'l'u .. L""'1·ClONOEIV ED: Vic 22nd Ir Newport white ptq»JU,e. w/zed 'l'EUBCOURSE Btvc!. Answers t o IPOta. 2-s Vlc WUsoo le hl.iaft. JlZWAftD. 8arbor : RgWABl>. --. 9'2-011'1lrft5. I • FOUND: m Ill. lriJllb Set· llOUND NptRlvlen. CM UNIQUE tA;r'· ~ ~ Ban· Wk. 101 pqpp1 w/wM VTD'!!O nmg. JD.am Waa • chest. Aft. lpm. EDUCATION FOUND : Sunoyed 1418--111'81·121$..Cn't PROGRAM DeacrilM. _MieJ>--'--· ------i DESLONED BY ___ M)a21 ____ _.. dlEWARD• L<* 'ftear AWARD· WINNING B£WAJU). _ y~ 1be re-W'tlloo Scb. sm grey/wht FACULTY wr. or k.Dowa wbcre •ha gg y S h I b • T 1 u . lf\1ltlCili RehDld ......., ,,_. A.kka.. ~ Pr;olr•m &M 4t a.Uver. w/~Ut ... limit. '.IHI -.. ,J ~~~~----......... anfwtlellll I lMl wn .wr ....., 1ad1 "II wouJG ~ • • I .. v.w... ar.ea Wed. to meet tbsp, alM,le,•••.,~·-··~, J a D . 11 . 0 ~ • e r acb man. He mutt . like JaOVNA B:EACB .....-en! .... « ~fbe'\:.":f.· r.::; ..._,, •x 411 ~ Dally Pilot, ... ......, P.O. Box 15a0, COi~ ,_ °'"'°'"" -..oa.m 4W1~57 · . . forRayG1lman. s.ik of California. lAOl ..:penon:......... __ .s.su __ 1_1_1 __ _ account8"JS AUl'OllO'l1VE ~.NB 92660. ~11. Proud)y ·Anrloum:e6 Our '* l'Anl Move to Larger Offices. Beauty Operator wanted Visit Us At 01tr Ne.w ~t Ju1t gradHted from S.y c.!MvrOlet dealer scbOot OK. •llo P/tnne ~~ELL BANK.ER neaT Oraawe County manlcurf:!lt.'540-:M74 Al rpor t nc.e'da parts BUllJ>INO counter men with GM BeWty operators, PIT, SU!l'E200 parts experience. Good Pick your own hours. 2333 N BltOADW AY pay. e 0 v I r 0 0 me 0 t. Great opportUll.lty for ad· SANTAANA PermanenL Opp. tor ad· vanrement. Call Mr . We have an •tncre•lini vancemeot. See Bob J obnaon. 978·0230 or demend U>rou3bo.ut Cook m.oll08 for appt. Tues· 0r8Qle CounLY for ex-HOWlm)C .... Nlet daytbnlThunctay. perienced accowaliag 4' Doff.4LQuail8ts. Beauty sak>o needs recep· booldc~g personnel. NEWPORT BEACH tionisl. 111anlc'ur1st 4t CaJlorris1tua&oday--we Atrl'OMOTIVE saioo us't Call ~l842. are looking forward to ... -t.s. Mon·Fri. greeting' YOU in our -new rlllll.IU" locaUoo. COUR!ll.PaSOM C714>-•1MI03 BMW or foreign ex· FREE PARKJH'G perience preferred. Con· tactGleMat ... ~•-....•y ROY CARVll IMW -----1540JamboreeRoad Qty ot Leguna lleaeb, MllWPOR't 8&ACH 115.1to 11088 ~r '1110 . ... •444 Cballengtug 1"-respon ---------PGllticln ~ to the Auto route driver needed. aneton OI TiDeee It Hunt. Bcb. Fountain PeTsoon•l: re~i:.~H Valley, Newport areas. &'OQ111ee:rd&rta1 4' Excellenl P /T lncome. abWtJr Jo work.U*pen• Call Herald Examiner. d en l l.Y I n • a d · S4'7-0301 ml"Dls\.rat.lve a t · moaplm-e. Apply .sos lrOC'flat AYe. Lag Deb, prior to 2/20179. Ph l.4r1'·1bl ex[217. Ap. lbn, 18 wilt.a. Santa Ana. iletu.re cpl . ..1 l'8D WOl'koat.Al)l +util. Fay • '1$2.aw& ftel'll i'ake tJme to r.iu and .lhopatt.ome. ll'aalmpl~ wltb D•HY Plhtt a-i...., .... Md., you ..,.. • »' I Co •JI. u ll a friendly a..fftild Ad·Yiaor •t ea.sen l• Ail Action l*lt Diiiy fillt ·-842.SIJI llAUTY OPaA TOI Hair atylitL for eleg salon. xlnt oPPtY for the ript pets w/a ctientele. Must be t11111htomable. Al8c> tooldD.a for tbe '"°" per ,..... to t"llt mtn'a 111111Pcid'y1*5t.t.oh .. e l!Meneete. All atetvtew'I ..trlcUy eooUdt nUal. RRhlrd ~u.tte Salen. 810Newportt?tr Dr. N.8 . CLERICAL lletome a .,.mber ol 4W' ~Newport Ceeter ~ Fi.rm. 'We are expanding & there are a.a:y ~Ues for ad•ancem•nl. T h e fOUowlllg • poaiUons aTe °"" evallable. ....... _, We haw entrY level posi-tion open in the flies dept. for 2Dd. lhilt. (Spm to 1:30am) " 3rd. shift (12:3>amto9am). Ge1t1ralC..,. We ba•e ent ry level cleric•• poetuons opeo oo day sbltl <lam to Spm >. 2nd. shift CS pm to 1:3011m), & :trd. shi ft U2:30am to 9am> math ablllly ,. cftrlce ex· ie1mte belplul. Low tui<loo. Plecemeot at8ilt.151·9194 CONTROLLER/ A<X:OUNTANT COMlfERClAL PERSONNEL DE'PA'RTMENT OONSTat.fCTION l m111ed. ope1nng wit h major es tablis hed Orange Co. ~veJopcr/ General Contrartor. Must have OOl\.1tnK'lJOn & !DP. eipetienre & be capable of assumin g complete arrountln~ raa~lbl!ltfforseveral tolltles. Qualified In· P •ct•ic dhtctual will be in· A r novative, 'Well <>1ganl1~ ,Ma.#U "'L & capable of implement-U I .- tog an io·houae dataJ>ro-7o0Ney.iport ~nter Dr ceasing system. Pel"m a· Newpot\ Beach. CA \12660 nent pos1Uon with ex· cellent salary & benefits, F.qua1 OPl)Ortunlty Submit your coolidenl1al £mployer M /F mNme to Ad '460. Daily~~~~~~~~~ P\lot. 330 W. Bay S t. ______ ... __ Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 CooU. days or eveetngs, Interviews be tween J.SPM, Mon·l"r i. The Rusty Pellcan. 213S Pac. CoastHwy, NB. OF.LIVERY & PICK UP driver to d'ellver auto partstn 'C.M. area. Mflst have valid CA lie & gd dri9tng record. Appry Hub Auto Supply, Zl20 COOKS :.:.~r Blvd .. Co~ta Exp, trained prof. ton·~~~~~~~ thleftt.al C\4aifte. Medi· ~" ._. tall TV •-pension plan. Apply ~ver •!JUI .,. ap-t-Spm. Cro•n Ho'lise ptiance. Mechanical ex· ftl*laur..L. 3n02 s. Cst peti•n-ce necessar.)'.. Htry, LS Ngl. • Davis· Brown Co. 846-1684, CootrSHl&.'8 DENTAL A SS T / Cbll'Wde. P /ttme. ~ • ~ food prttparatioo. personality " skills fot' F.arly ltHH"n tlrs. PIT· people onenled practic9. Made F'Mah Catenng 1 Min 1 yr exp Llg Ngl 892·6466 aft lOAM . 1~ • ' ~86. eves. 1....:..--·------De ntal 6ffJ ce. Ex -COOK. WOMAN TO pe rienced chalrsid8 .• COOK RDA x·ray license. 4-daily 3 simple meals for handled. 86tY otnce. Top, eldel'l1 man. Possibly salary. benefit.s. Hunt-4 live-an . Need caf . iorton Deb. 962·7797, • 673-6406 alt$ pm. -.....:i -· •• 'O .. ~-- ,; I I I • t ii f t I e • It • . . .. . . , 'a -DAILYP"-OT Thu~,F~L 1119 ....,W..tecf 1100 ... W~ 7100 HefpW~ 7 .... W..tecl OG ~Wm.llN 7100~ ......_w~ 7to•" Helpw ••••••••••••••••••••••• .;;r-••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• too. . 11 w.... 1111 • ...,. --... ~ 111 ~ ~w~ 11 o •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••• , •• ,,,,, •• ••• ········-········· • ••aa••uuaa••••'"' ''" --O Marul1& ~l r f'MlDLale Salel • •·-avl .. • PuU • ••••• •••••• ..................... ,. ••• •••••••• ••••• • ••••• · .. ~.""' .... -. Ho~ -Prr ~ ... T.r .. · .. •· SICY/•v-MWmYI~ '= --Jlamalat Mala f'aal An1-weria1 1erv&c1 -~-,,_, .. ·-".. <>ob..,• -~ DENTAL . FACTORY HF.LP-Shop l~lt1nrr N wport, lnPPf'CJ tu nc~.lun1 JOb! opct'atoc" full & PIT Call llAl.ISTAllMICT Enaravln.g Co. 162 t . bpaadlo1. dynamic:, ~MfOI' ~,C Olm:rskte. X·ftQ lJr. tn.lftN Lm.ft'Md open1n1 Mllllt ~ t~h. "9ll•· Bruit out now to a ••t Hl1NTINOTO • Jab St. at Superior, CM. coa.tuJ&J.n1 u1joetno1 -Ult .,... -••uc: t 5*-3000 IOI' rilht I cnai. tn lhlP bW Own trao RC'lt ,,,.. rhalleniiq • rcwardlnl( ---------w N BEACH ~3141 plannlna firm In Oraneo and have a pleuul "'· .......__.~, plna dapl. nallenl QliNd~700I r ln r\'talJ manoio PBX OPERATOR or1t •here UM average Coreqalbeservicaolu Pf'raonality to beadle 1 UU1W11 company benlf1t1 • t s ........... Oran"e Co •-rt r la.le once ii •100.000 for SA.LES -Exec S«y for a SI'. cuat.omer relatiou. So ;1 ORTllODOH rt e AS· mMthb re"I"~' Call HOU t\ .F.PEH, ror :.':r'"1 ~Qf~:m~.:!:l<.~ ant~r° busy ·;:uc:b~:: ~e laste1t arowln1 & Eltsant rtne Jewelery \;(;Pres. Thepoareqsa OraneeCo.491-1291 iP SIS'1 RDA Part Um • l for app{. Otlt.r tr CO«ll <UIV boap Gd bcm•f I. on aelf perlorrnanrc ftr & l'/T day thlfu £IShnt payln1 Real Salo~\. baa lntere1tln1 n:Un ol 5 yra ex~r In yen e.xpcrri ~od ~ wort:# t'OOd 01y shift, Stuck purch11 " ai ' Y E 0 ~ Many benefit• ,ala le Company tn Ptt.une I w companbl.-work alonR 1'&.IPHOMIULIS ~ ~~~ ~·llD> ~d P'artory ..,0,., smal-l ~!~f.~d"~P':'rirph •WI •ni11 iove•tm nt plan Pay .ccordlnf to exp ~°".:'~id' olflce at resp. ;:;a:rw'raai: wlHUafactory ~ts from Work pl time In our ~ "' c·v ,...._• ' ~ ,. .n llapld 11dv1tnc,.men1 _S4&-__ 3.\.\1_._833_3333 __ • ___ BOO~G Oetenlnw~tlh1! txp. Cem knJd& helpful recent emP,IOJt'rs. Xlnt te<elepi~!!e) andal!!&,.rhoom ' 70 -lr<Wtl.O C'OIDp.i.mt nur potcno~I. 01>f'nln1 for .nJ "-1·1 ''" " NB 673-4734 sa.laty 4' fnnge bentflts AM IN:w' • .,...... ave .. n.aJ .. KJ.. Sa. rlua 4 d1y I 4'1 Uou1tk e pu II • In . INnUjfl'I lrlllneft ruu ,.. era. r on. -our a. hour ' . . are &1ao offered. Submit p 1 e as u re um e 'er "' " .. ht wlc &ood bt.ndU.a ~P•nlab ape k'14 '" I &pMrtUme.alei •le Oper's for ltlepbone ecorded message for Sales Marketin1 Mar. resume to Per1oooel youraeJf . Wa1e s Dthen &U-7lOlAAlforD•n 1603 t hlld uJc. "I IHO! ur kAOIOSllA~J> 1n.swerin1 &trvlee. Must more~4z.J4o~ Several division bead Director, Jack O Raub +comro.Callfordeltlla. Os •t mod ro iwp ~· 8anti ~n•= t2:ll8 MJ..'7 ti ~1t Hwy COM btt •ble to work some 4' opta.lnp, possible share Co. P.O. Box li019, Co.ta L.~T~ES =J> "c.~u''dJ:rra ~~ Fat:1ory b•W.. ~ramie" HOOSl-:Kli~f.PP.k MAnai~ ·r'l'ratnee • weekend1. 1'yplng <15 -RW--~-ta-te_____ in profit/ownership. Age M~ Ca. 9211121S. E.O.E. __,1 r.q'd No pnor e~per ~mt ~ppt1 Crtam at convale64•t'nt hotpllal MuJU n•tlOfl"I "0"' with :!~~ncreeqpur~rre•rdr.••dl'.:oxr HAVE OPENlNG for ao. npKt am, P~ .. r9t!2'!.~·. ~r . M/F/ I. "l'ejephone contact wor-k. '* Oood drhtn« rer • ·-s.tlW, lllhSa CM Oay1h1ft WllJtrain .Sto Ub ral bon~rit11 .• " aood Wiii""train. Many "com· 1ruslve, rnotlvated ~~~-· ... r . Benefit show tickets. rnust No 'nd~ •Ot"k, Y MAL FiNo rv ble t1mploymcnt, «'X 6l&rt1111 ••htr)', ext~p PWlY ben~C1-b. Full time sales aaent who haa the 1. sreRETARY Full·tlme. Pa.Yiagood.495-1893 Oranu C'oul '•llo• wor\cn ~ ..,... hr 1~ «llf'nl b4"n '"" Apply t.iOOAlas>purtwutyfor•ll orpi;.rtllme.day&even· df&lre lo aucceed with Jims.tto.•s Attrac ti ve, mature .... ~. C•b. 11.30,0 Mt U~r iJtart •ral";~1 ,,.~ Park Superior, HO 1r~1vt' n llstart.u 2 i.naituf\aavallable unlimited opportunities s.tedAlltoS.. penon watb office ex· ,__...""'" rmann. ~ \ly ~1.1.\. LU7 Monmvia ~or. Npt Uch y.-.artrlltrun~ Proaram to Irvine Airport area call in Million Dollar loca· # 1 Aaf Dealer perlence. Accuratt' SOUCITOl:S l.Mta.l')'~h t.lf"lh"t'n.t•-d A\e R Hou•tlttt('Jh'r I.i v.-In 11•,n..i~~ Sovmt>lcollt'>te ~3333. tloo.CalJAJSlellatofor '-So.~_.-&tyeprs1osnt'a1gtoyo.d Copnhtoancet E>cpmftleedOnly.Sell food ..,. t-A\abi!h •l>l'illtlll Lldv pt\' ~r.,..,, e~ raining f .. "lt\lon laland area call conlldenllal interview. "' -l1 DaiJ Pilot Kf•h t Uanl'u~t-nl:~ ,., f1onat1Mima11"JT.Ssldf' 11 bak' Mi8'7)2ZJJ uppro \ed Adk tor 640-1110 New Agent.a Welcomed. illookin&forafewgood obb1e at 8•'6·2864 mi s~lo n pard~Y~; (."C . 11 ary ~e 1 U w11n1Ald Xlnt 'Irk 1 rond ' rruna.il•r Costa Mesa a rea call 963.:i6'71 meo. Experieoced retail btwn9-S. phooe at home. Over 21 , ~;.~cJ~ :e~ 11c; ... ~~ ~~ ~ pocmt ... (&!$ ·~ ~:t M0~~1.~~~~.. ~lk'fl<'~: :.~~!net• <:o 673-U66. E .O.E. c~•~'Mfa5iifai =e: ... :ila:l~~ ~:£.i _S_il:R __ ET_A_R_Y_T_R_l\J_N_E_E_1 r.o. Card. Call 83S-6453. CM S'8 ~ f'ood Sandwtc h i hu p m Ultt'n•.m~,. Mual hu .. t' lo;IToro NX OPEtt. --··-···--·--s haring, ex pensive TypinJl & shorthand re-,_1·_3_P_M_. _____ _ Dhe~ w1ott!d an Nt•~po"";; n~ ... h m•tur" •om<1n rel.Jab!" traMprot.itaon ---Will {ram F-T. 2:30pm· Real F.Btat.e medical plan and bonus' ?clired: Call 714·499-13S7 TELEX OPER. H•rbor Mu Nl bt •n.>buncr l 'nloo '1)1"'700 MANICURIST·Ellp. To Upm.Maturelady.Con·---------galore. ortntervtewappt. Exper'donly.SmaUN.B. ttrtlf1l'd " t'X''"'nt'nC't"d Xlnt ~•cal bendits t~ over e.111Sllng d1en tad Mau.nae, Newporter R-....1 Estate Cmtact Bob Brochette. SFCRETARV·Full time. Exparting t1rrn needs N .,... ~ monu.n•:t only, no tbfie Plant t~ctuuctan Lele m to N B. salon •--u07 J bo Rd C'UI ~ S ... ......._ .__ "6 P"" s d c:ptunt' Dt vante l'u 'ohone c. 11: pl'I, F.I Exp wiutt<ld fOf t-vr an Pl~roll673-.0JJ u.o.. am ree . Brokers&Salesmen. We ----. for Manufa ct urers person v ... ays a 646-m2 h u It N.B.6"-1700E.0 .E . have an~-•-.. in our llllH.H.tMwltYd. A"ents. 2 persons m of· wlt .• S.1.liOperhr. Please -anc o mar t't, 2555 lt'rtor Plunt ma an --------------WDe r.·~ II ., .. 0 63l3 k f .. •a~ .. 11' M-....1·raJ ·--------•I ResldeoU Div. 'or an •1.+i'-• · 77"9100 u:e. Take orders, pre· ca .,.. · . as or DRM'TS~t "N ....,1.. f DI'. Npt IJrh tmanc.· rout<' &fun thru ""' ' -R••• -'· ho o.... ""' N'""""•rt l'sych trl f" S experlencecf man or pare uleratw-e. p ne & • .,,.gy To w o r" on Op t o "'ull ta--: nart ti me Fri 11 !tlk 30 Benefllli _ .. ,.... ta co, . 200'8WEH e'.••---s-.../~ some t lD" M st b t-....;...;;;;,;,_ _____ _ "" h 1 d r ..,,.. .. Call Bab u:7 01.,. w/plants,. antqs & p woman possessing en· _._ vn YP ... u e TELEXOPER/ ... ec: an1r a l'\ ice:. 1'elt-phone contact for r ara...,. "" stamed gJass needs OFC art time, no experience thuslasm aod integrity. Clothing store. Mus be able to organize office MAJLCLERK ~!~.':;c: Yc:~:.d:r lot-aJ benefit Xlnt eun· HSKPl/C~mioft MGR to match. ~·9~4f:~~~~ ~f~! Uyou are interested in a neat w/gd personality.1_7»_uso __ . ------ror Newpor t Beach formal tr&1nao11: in heu of ~ ~ Pvt. Room~ 6oatd & p R I C E S M I T H W 0 R L D W I D E beautiful o_rrice in the Full or PIT. Apply 2233 SECRETARY Reneral of. wholesale tour co. Call t-XJ>t!neorc Hours 8 S GENER AL 0FF'1 CE. salary. Care ol elderly 714/631·3800 PU BL I SH ING 113 3 f~t location, working W. Balboa Bl,/iewp0rt. fice sktlls. s.'.3PM Mon-Nona 645-9800. S650 to S'100 h oouple 4948287 .,.,_ __ Rd with congenial as -Jori • t---------. p1•r our 'l'yput accurate 45 wpm. -· _ _: __ ---------1 ,..,....,., ·Schaumberg, sociates, we are Interest· Sal.esperson! entry level, 88 · rreu Rlt ., • ., .. """' Call for uppt 962 7701 CaJI before Sam or aft. ----..----•I MGMT TRAINEE ILl.60195. ed in meeting you. In· w1tb leading appUan· y,,_ . .,,,..,., TElLERS ext ~ •~1•_·54_9_·_394~ insurance Oppty to grow w/in. terviewby aepoi.ntmenl. ce/electronlcs mfg: Must SECllTARY ()perung for commercial Onvt-r, errantls. etc for GENERAt.OFFICE ll.'mal'I chain of retail PRODUCTION Wnlty M Taylor Co be intelli~ent, ambitious. 'art TI teller. Expenence pre· ;ork1n~ ro~ple& Must Whol~ale Lumber Co ACCOUNT stores. We ofr full salary TRAIMH Realtors • 644-4910 ~-:1:)~~~t EEOC. 9am·lpm Real':tale of. rerred. tve in r. 0 hnve Balling eicp. 70 wpm. 10 _...ft ..a T lraing P!'Og, mgmt Rubber hose products, RE.SALES . ficeneeds sha11pfront of· UNITED perfect drlvmg record key, good with figures -Ml"IS RATOR bonus,pdvac .. ins .. sav. lrvine area. must pass"--.·,. Sales-Part time direct. ftce Sec'y/Recept CAUFORNlABANK Apply Mrs Grl'f'n Mature. dependable & Need experaencett ad ingsplan.Retatl exf)<'ror company physical incl. ..,.,..,rungsl no~ ava1 . 1 1 n 1 wholesale. retail. No wt good typing & or 6 MonarchBay ~~i.~1 c. Down ey. -;:).~~~.~~Wri~~~ ~pl~;~rbe~~fits~~~!I~ ~lt'ne;~~~0c:~~l~ backX-ray.5'0·7639 r~~~~~~:;.~·&a~h =~'re°[~!:~~~.~~ r;utatt~nul s kills . 831·197~.Laguna EOf; .. --,v--... lervaew. Weekdays. experience. Posiuon •n· expense. Call 636·248l ____ E_.o_._E_. ___ ol'f1ce,forexper.ornew-m-a&oo · e~t roperta es .... _______ _. .,.. "'"'... 675-5823 volves maintenance or w for Sandee. 540-7337 Production Worker .Cut ty UcefUed, enthus1ast1c · 7s1. l Expanding co. looking,---------all accounttng records ask for Marsha, Mon -OUt & some sewing. Full salespeople. Xlnt com· Sales I& 0 M 0 R R 0 W S ~P~~~!e w1~lln1toodto GENBlALOFFtCE coordmaung with bank lhruFr1.9:3CM. time.~ miss1 ionsc1 h~uJe4'atru USALES '""n'r"REJARIESS fl'ACl!f.!Y TODAY Get · a8pe r .C Expenence necessary, and brokeraRe firm. rlEllllMPORTS ygrealocatlononCoast Wehaveafewopenings ~ 1nonu..:groundOooron· ~~~-90velfr :8·h~~ IJte typing, prof1c1ency ~ilowledge or invest· EqualOpp0r Employer Project lndscp arcbitecl. Hwy., 2 blks. from the on our sales 'stair ror G O./Coostru..t.Several ly the best need apply. wlflgures, 10 key by ments desirable. Please Palm Springs firm Land beach, Wllb ample off. bceosed, professional re-S8C»S1400 Hanie LVN'S & Nurs"1g Asst. mcentives C<IJ Mark touch. Opportunity ror applyat: ---------pl.anning&Indscpan:h. stttetpartdng al est ate agenls or EmployersPayAUFces Allstuhsava1l.Apply1n _7S_J·!686__ advancement. Xlnt com· Li~ not nee. Salary SIA UOH REAL TY brokers. Ir interested. Lu; Reulde.rs Agency person. Sant.a Ana Com DRIVERS pany benefits. Informal PERSONNEL MOVllFllM open. 32S·0937 ofc.. 497·llll ~send reswnetoJ. 4000BtrchSt,StetGc murutyConv.Ce:nter.600 ~ew~pa per de 11 v er Y, ol'fice CM Call Mil.lie art DEPARTMENT SEBCS EXTRAS 323-4572 res. l<rembas, Quall Place Newport Beach, 83J.3190 E Washington. Santa Permanent part-t1mP JOb 9a m. S.S.SllOO Kids Teerut·AdulL'l. Ex-lllCllVIHG Properties, 1400 Qua1 I Call For ApPl/ Ea tab '64 Ana, Ca. delivenng early mornan° --~----PACIFIC cept.aonal opportunity for REAL~ATESALES & IHSPICTIOH St., StAJte 13S, Newport i'I'. T k D · "" tbo5e ishln b k Beach92660 Se 11ow rac nvers ex-LA 1\mes lo homes an General MUTUAL w f: to rea personnel for garment cretary. recept1on1st per'd. Top pay. Apply lrv!ne/N8area. Mu~t be FULL TIME Into movies. 2().$200 per mf~. Plenty of work Sales Service Mgr. Fast ~ typmg, shorthand G&W Towing. 7409 bre11lable & have dt:~nda , 700 NeWJ>Ort Center Dr ear~~ <g~> S7~1 il~~ avail. So. Orange Co. growing Packaging Co.. ~v~'=5 for busy of. Ohms Way, C.M. 642-l2S2 •' transportation. No •:;:.~~'"JS Newport Beach, Ct\ 92660 SERVICE, <Now in 4'th 496-1291 need.s sharp. intelligent · collecting Salary SJSO year) person. Duties include Secunty OCflcer-armcd mo. ;>46-02JS GROUHDS KWH EQwil Opport unil.} Re<:epllonist/Sec'y l m p u r.c has 1 o g . s a I es Exp fo'/time. 3 30PM 12 Traine. Positi0tt GENERAL LABORER Employer Mt fo' mediate opening for ex-service. inventory con· AM Perm. Position. Switchboard oper. Musl THE IRVIME co ------~~----Noon-aides wanted for Own penenced. well groomed trol. Will train right 549-3281 EOE be rellable/ava1l. most DRIVERS Me11 or woml'n 25 yrlo or oldt>r. Know the cOa!>l r1t1es Net SlllO a Wl't'k or 1(171 t:amelback r ,.,..._ COftfrol Rea Middle School. & personable recep. person. Start at ssoo. s hirts. Call tor appt lrvme 644·9010 o...: '"-· .. -,.h 1 556-3437 lionist. Must type 55wpm 751·2788 SERVICE STATION AT· ~7565 rncmg, s 1pplng & rec accurately & have good TENDANT. Cit . cxper. ""---------- more Oranl'tl.' Cot1'>l i---------Ydlow Cab 17300 Mt He1rmann. fo'ounta1n Valley (No or Slater betwn Nl.'whope & Euclid> DRIVERS! Roy Carver Rolls Hoyce Lb llilcutg appl.icauon~ for qua It fled drivers fur pickup & rleh vcry or Rolls Royces. o\pply 10 Darrell S1rkle al ltOYCARVER ROUS ROYCE 1.S40Jamboree Road NEWPORT BEACH 640..6444 EXE CU TIVE AS - SISTANT for Statewide Trade Assoc. near OC airport Should have M.oeretarial skills (d1<:. laphonl'). Will handle f1nanc1al and mem . bcrslup records and he rl.'SPonsible for smooth runrung of office As · sociallon expen ence de s1rable Salary Open >'WC.A., INC 714 / ~ral Off ace TRAINEE Clerk t ypist needed Variely .or duties in eludes f1lrng, typing, 4.5wpm. Some expenen~e m general omce & good figure &PtJlude helpful. Excellent working cond1· Uons & benefits. 1\pply Dryman SrhooJs. 200 McCormick Avenue. Costa Mesa. Equal Op· Porturuty Employer. G-R-E-A-T SALES JOI NOW OPEN COOD PAV. GOOD HOURS, GOOD CON· DITION S . MANY FRINGE BENEFITS . FAST GROWING COM· PANY PROMOTES FROM WITHIN TRAIN F 0 R T 0 P MANAGEMENT STAR T S ''J M . MEDIATELY ". KEYBOARD EXPER I ENCE _ ------_ HELPFUL WE HAVE --------1 OUR OWN TRAINING 83.l-3131 DPEOlla PROGRAM PUT ON BY Procl.ll'e all mat->rials & 1lfE COUNTRY'S TOP ... ORGAN S ALE S Some lypang, many de· NURSE AID, ll\·e in y references. Non·s mkr Sales Women-Girt Shop. notnecesssary Call Carl 1•1 avel la.tis. NB area. 64S.7Gc0 needed tn Cdm home. OU r llrs : Tues-Sat, 9-5· 30 Costa Mesa-Newport 495--0121 SJC ACCTG CLERK LE ADER s H 1 p EamS35perday,prov1d· Call Barbara Davis, F\JU&parttime.838-2643 Travel co needs acctg ing personal care for wtcdys,642-1626 ----'-------Service Statton Allen-clerk Call Ruthann, POSITIONS-College elderly lady. Mon AM lo ---------Seam s tresses. ex· dant. e.xper'd Day & 6'1.S-9800 Semors / grads, MI F • Sat AM Refs nee. Up· o Receptionist/Secretary penenced, Mon-Thurs. Eves. Full & plume AP· m-.-------- I.&.Z7 years Sat.,-plus JOhn Il e a Ith Care wn for busy contractors off. 6-4:30. Nr 0 .C. airport ply,Sbe11Stauon.17th& •YPISl·Word processor. benefits from first day 01 Ser v 1 c es. 7 S2. 099 2 C.M. Must have pleasant ln9-l483 lrvlne. NB FUii lime. strong typing »weeks traminn penod E O.E. phone voice 4Swpm slolls. good spelling & Learn leadership skills 0 accurate.S48-Ss.3 · SEAMSTRESS wanted Service Sta attend for grammar nee. Wortc on to use in business world HutlSES AIDES tti•ce our~ or yours. Com-nigtitg & wkends. Exper lex.Itron system. Apply after service. Technical u 7 Full lime. 3.11.11.7 RECEPTIONIST: 11 le mer c 1 al exp . on Apply Kings Arco. 3600 1n person to Mr. Fuentes training, combat arms part llm Good 1 typing. Yacht Bkr. & mac h 1 nes . Gray bo Npt Bl NB Call L3rry or at Robert &in. Wtlliam ava.tlable. Invest m your tmmac. im con/~,!.,~: Boat distributor on the Onginals, 831-2630 or Nonnml023. 1-To8t& Assoc. 1401 Quail ruture. Call fl OW for 20062 Santa Ana Ave. A y Bay. Part lime incl. 49.5-5386 St. Newport Beach Army OCflcer Candidate c M 549-306! s OU wknds. W/yachung As-. Serv1ceStauon Mechanic. School tOCS>. · · soc. Corp. 646-0551 Seamstress, canvas & up-& attendant Fil Apply I'---------· Costa Mesa540-J026 OHicel Take·in Person holstery prod u cts. Chevron, 1.251 N Coast TYPISTS Hwitmgtoo8ch962·8821 Will train /many E Recept ion ist/Sec'y Permanent pos ition. Hwy,LagBch STAT-GENa.L LEGAL SECRETARY ""'a1·1ta1 1M"'u' n .. soorn. 3 6P4P4t.1c3 8 80 Oenter. Excellent typing pre(erl"ed. 645-2247 Serv Sta Help needed 1m· or ""'a · emporary ..__, •~ "" 11 arn needed in Newport Company benefits, exp. --W k •~ I T La Hiu & med. Full ,.., pit. Apply Immediate work. ~~. ·s:H2 tr:w;~: ~'o'Eick Jeweler 's. e}l~':;°!~:sr~~~e:t~~~ SECRETARY ME.CstH;y,NB. C-1ForA1t t.Ypel!Owpm, salary com -·-· -·------Commissions St.art S700. Call Kathy, needed ror Newport SHEET METAL '\ppM9hwetTodcry mensurate with abilJty 0 F' Ff CE ff EL PER . 644-5000 Bt;lch Law Firm. Good .. .. 557-0061 Call Mr s Winslow. Thurs.-Sun.Mesa Verde typing skills req. Call .M.dlallk/Class A ~Q~ ff " • 837-1060 Conv. Hospital, 661 19fl'ALCEHTER Kerryat540-S400 Expr'd.Mustdoownsct-O ice Center St. C.M. 548·5585 New tool rental center in Sec ups. 0 OVe rload Legal Sec'y, PIT, S-10 hrs , El Toro has pos1'tlons retary nc:HMICIAN/Expr'd wk n lb' Do ti ()Cr. M l T,.,..,.. S~ Newport Center law pr • ex c. mes c ice anager-Sa es -._,,, •• available. Requires neat flnn. Intelligence, good 549·242~ F.qual Oppor Employer relations exper. w/abili· Good opportunity for ad· Stn.: hand writing •70 & ap· skills •. 1 ly lo handle dlsso from vancement. win train/no . "' pnor. egal ex· SHOE SALES p e a r a n c e • s o m e ed c 11 start to finish w/m1n. experience necessary. ~1.--• l A 1 penence reqwr · a Waiters or waitresses. supervision. Non-smkr Mu.st be 2.5 yrs old or '"''''"•wCa exper. PP Y Ruth Brazer759-3800 P/tJme. eves & Sundays pnvate country club. onJ.y.NwprtCtr.640.8971 older & be avail. on Thurs .. Frl.&Sat .. .22600 Aw~lnperson PaulAI Part tame. 11·3. fn · ---------1 ·Saturdays. ss1.o824 or Lambert, Suite 120 El SECIETAR! Ian Shoes. 119 fashion rreased hrly wages in Live-lo Housekeeper. 774·6090. 1525 Mesa Toro. !"fust ~sell motwated. Island.NB. li e u or gralu1t1es . English speaking. Lido Verde #206, Costa Mesa. Restaurant 1ntelhgent, fast. ac· 644-SC<M . Isle, NB. 675-2233. Waitress & Kitchen Man curate lyPing skills. 10 Shop help wanted. no ex· -------- Lot AUandent must be 18. Full or Part-lime 558-7454 or 848·22 t2 ORDER CLERIC No ln1·t1·a1 Apply btwn 3-S Ancient keyexpeneoce.Frootof. penencenecessary. Call Waitresses needed. Mr Alert.capabler;rsonror Manner, 2607 W. Csl f1ce appearance . 833-0033 D'sCoUeeShop. 3050 E. r..~y ,.....e d · II "'""' N B ,. .. "'0201 Pleasant phone voice. r·--·1 Hwy COM i.chedule work for bu.ild ·PEOPLE. CALL AT 111g maintenance depart· o N c E F o R rnent Must have some INTERVIEW. ORGAN 1---------•I NnStrucuon knowlcdl!e. EXCHANGE ST MACHIHIST """ "'" r es in sma .. ", .. .,...... . Salary commensurate Sitter, after school , -~--"'--·-----ol'fice. Reqwres phone & RESTAURANT with experience. Send re· 2:»6.JOPM 7 & 8 yr W-fad- math aplltude, type 60 lnvesbnent lo-.dT.W.,iua sumewith saJary history olds. Weekdays Own _,, nl< w Pm. Ex Per 1 c n c e to P.O. Box 2195• Costa trans Some l'Xtl.'ndcd WOftderlul Waitr.ss helpful. Medjral. Dental R • d now l.aJdng app!Jcataons u...,a.....,..... eves. Dys S51·29S3, eves Newpon·s M06t Elegant benefits. equ1re for person lo train as "'"'° "'""""° .,. h B d R F b man.~er. Fast 'ood ex ---------567-6434 . .., 00 pr r ays1 e es laurant 1s a ncatcdPlast1cs lnc. • SECRETARY/EXEC seek ing specia lly 81S W. t8th St .. C.M. pr. he pful. but not nee need sharp woman to do SCeno w/good shorthand qua it fled help for lhe 646-3279. Apply in person only· vanety of duties incl. + typing. Publts hlng lun<'heon hour. Grand Mon thru Sat. 9-<t. 7120 Cbenl relations. L1gbt fll1ll near 0 C airport. lips obvious. Will require F.d.inger, Hunt. Bch. bookl<eepmg, typmg re· Good ::r.porturuty · Ca II J 3 years dlnlni< room ex- clerical skills & be ablt! ' AN MlLLHAND to deal with users Two NUNN7l4/586-7302· For proto-type marhtne years college necessary Guard sf:top In the instrument Apply SECURITY OFFICER division or the 011 tool in-THE llVIHE CO PlantSarg. F.T perm. dustry. Working from llm Camelbark Must have 3 yrs. mm. ex-blueprints, sketches & ---------l.Nlne 644-9010 per in lndustnal Securi· verbal designs, directly OIDEtl OESk .t;qual Oppor Employer ly Work. Phone & ~ar with engineering. to as req. Irvine Comple>x. s:ist in new product de· Irv. window mfr. Ex· ---------Call 83J..3000 ext. 191 for velopmenl for world per'd woman prefd. for d u bo respon, hi-press desk. IF YOU WANT TO TAKEADVANTAGEOF 'IRE FANT~TIC POTENTIAL OFnt E ORANGE COUNTY REAL F.STAT E MARKET RFSTAlJRANT HELP ports etc. Good oppty for Tldwel · S46-4370__ pr Interviews 3 to 5 pm, Breakfast• lunch buffet advancement, salary to STOCK Cl.ERK Mon thru Ft1day. ..... le OC Airport ea startS800.T51·2788 22il1WCoastHwy,NB -1 • . • ar · Some Uf\ing or rum & ~;;;;;-------, I BLUE JEAN : : JOBS I t : Urgent Need I : WOMEN& MEN I I T .. RAINHS : ASSEMILERS I i PACKAGERS tG E N E R A Lt I LAIOR I I I appt. Eq. Op. Emp. Wl e we re nav1ga. ....p sh th h ---lion equ.i pmeot. La the Aw a arp ma apt, vr. GUARDS .experience helpful for ph'11 customer ser, bil · F\Jll & /ti All more variety of projects. mg/invoking, 4 dy work U . P me. areas. Sala~ open. excellent wk, co bencf. Refs . n1forms Curnis hed. bene 546-9890. Ages 21 or over. Retired f ts package. E.O.E. ---------welcome. No experience Scientific Drilling Con. nee. Apply Universal trol, Corporate Head· ---------Protection Service, 1226 quarters, Newport PACKERS, wrhse, As· W. Sth Street, Santa Ana. Beach. Call (714) 557·90~1 sem. With or without ex· Interviews hours 9·12 & w for Mr. MoU or Mr per. All shifts. No fee. l-4MonthruFri. Adams. Paid weekly, lmmed l~keeper: part jobsnrnearyourhome. tame stock boy & maids. MAtOS Norrell The Inn At Laguna, 211 Experienced, full time, N. Csl Hwy, Laguna alsopartUme.642·3030 1'emporaryServices Beach ~9021 E.O.E Maintenance man for SS urut apt complex lD C. M. {2l3 )865-3851 HOST~ 21orover $nites. ~?tl8 ---------1 Maintenance supervisor· small privat e Hot~l-Motel eycbiatrlc ttospltal In MIGHT AUDITOR Orange County. Must ll pm to 1 am ex . ve some knowledge oJ periencoed NCR 4zo0. 1·m· building maintenance, mediate o~nlng, Full lncludln1 plumbing, umo. eJ«tricaJ Minor equip. ...._...,.,_ mmt repalrs. 496·57021 Cost.~ _&'n~·l_n_•_·~~~-~ ( 714 )645-4840 PART TIME EVENINGS Adults W1lb OUtalanding, llttractlve personaUlies who etVoY working with kkia. Over 21. Start al 13.50 per hour. Phone 6•2 ·021 Ext. 2SO, BETWEEN 4:00·5:00 PM. : INSP MOl.DEtlS I I I IOay.Week-Month orl llon1ter -It's you rl fd ec ts inn. A II • h lftsl ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j 9a v a 11 n h I e . P 11 I d f 1v3('1tlions You don't l 1pey u~. we pny v()u. I HOTEL MAINTIMAMCI! MICHANIC Needed for full time. multi-family \ulils. Must have some ex~ntncc, carpentry, electrlcalt plumbing• other relaleo tradft. Appliance repair experience necessary . Excellent benefit• AP· ply: Allrfor~ F.qual Ol>J>ortllnfiy · Emplo)'er : IELL~•hi·: ftH.'"l \/IC 9 f : Call nr comt' In loda~ : f 2102 Busln~~ Ctr Dr I I Sult•~ I I I ~In • Ca 92'71~ t 1 "33·1441 t ! F.qoaJ OpJ)Ortunlty 1 f I fo;mplo~('r M f' ·------------ HHMfT AUDfTC&.HIC Good oPPOrtunlty for re. IJ11ble persoo W/lln IP· Utudc for numbert & ra'culator 3kllu. NCR 4200 experience .pre· fcm.d. ~)'good com- pany benefits . Apply hm·Noon, Mon/ Fr Pe'wonae.l. MAm0TT HOTB. IOO~t Cnter Dr Newport Buch EQl&al QDoor-Employer l*•YMCO 1<7T1 CameJbaclc Irvine 864-9010 Ji.qu:I °Ee Employer SEU. Idle Items with a o.uy Pilot Cl•:sslOed Ad P~TE-UP ~SEMBLER with at leut l year ex· pericnce, preferably oewapaper. Excellent company bentfata. ApJ>ly between tAM ~ tPAf, Monday t.hru Friday. Ol4Mel COAST DMYN.OT eu.sm 330W. 8aySl. Cott.a Meaa f,quJ <>PPortwllty & tni:>loyer CALL NOW 975-0541 OWNAMERICA NEW OR EXPERIENCED FINO ABOUT THIS U'N\JSUAL OPPORTUNITY - - Part & full Ume needed. SECRETARY eq..Sp req'd. Purchasing 6JJ.l3SI Cook, dishwas her· for Newport Beach or mawt exp. helpful flS Warehouse Man-Some counter help. Call Ron or wholesale tour co. Call well as ~n ability to construct.ion knowledge. Omer 2-Spm. for appt. Oiane.645-9944. perform rmnor repairs & Irvine area. S days . ~ typmg. can for appt. 534·1014 Rellree·Wrap around SECRETARY WESTLANDSBANK -------- social security. Part Legal depl of Newport ~ E.O.E WOltkATHOME time custodian. Mesa Beach trade assn needs Stock girla: 6-4 :30 Mon.· PhoneSales Verde area . 847·9696 atty .. Mag Card .II or Thurs. Near O .C . 53().5220 Mon·Fri. 9am·Spm. slmiliar exper deslt'able. Airport 97'9-1483 SH helpful. Reqs typing -----·-----SAILBOAT SALESMAN 60wpm, salary S7SO lo Student PIT for boat & Experience preferred Uoo p e r m o . X l n t gen. maintenance. Call K~ Marlne 6'1S-1403 benefits It wort.Ing cond. bewtn. s & 6 pm only S.....,+ lewtt.a CaJI Personnel for appt_ 646-2625 F\JlJ time & part Ume. _833-MM ___ 833-1384 __ . -·---S --t u_d_e_n_t_s-·A_g_e_s_l 3--1-6 Exp. helpful, excellent needed for Part Time H.B. loc:allon. Good Peoplewhoneedpeople work . Aft school & salary. For appt. ca 11 should always check the Saturdays. Good earn 521-8541 Service Directory m the ings. For mto c:all: J eff Uttt. ,, l&c)fl Classified Ads are reallr, small "people to people · SAies calls with big re· adership and big result.a ! To place your classlfied ad, call today 642·~8. DAILY PILOT at5C'M7"17. Sales Personnel w ............ s ...... , •• ,... n. ....... c .... 11111 Severa r fu ll·ti m e positions Immediately available In our sales depart m ent. Experience desirable, but any sales aptitude wi ll be cons idered. F-or an Interview. please contact Lourie at f7141644·70lO ·-I ALSGAAAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BE>CH (714) 644-7030 !~t ~~O~~i1iT BEACH is now 3<'CCPUng application s for e.11 - pcrleoced office staff: MANAGER ASST. MANAGER SALES PEOPLE OFFICE GIRL Call 714-633·3894, 6PM. 9PM for an Interview or leave message days at 540-7430 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Antique Music Box.eat Slot Machines! Clocltat HUGE SELECTION 4-rlc• ............. G1111ff n Opm Wed. t.hru Sa\, lll02 Kettering. Irv. (7l4) 7$4-1777 C>neotal acreen, carved Cblnt!M Temple polf't, 9'X12' Petln1 rue. o.k tJa.u abowcaae, c:offee ~ P\lnJ &11.k kJmooot. ·ane Purple Plum D S. C~at fflabway ~na Bcb 494·9281 i ........ IOOS .,.. IOJO "-dwt IOIO Mlc1I••-IOIO ........................................... , .................................. , ..........•.. fTr~lltoad Sale, Sat 8PP:CIA1. BJCVCL& lmiwiCout c-allJ CJ~b 2'10/71 •s. Ou fplc ETYatEQ(llt~ W.tdiiq PN~lGcl•I .ala "Ooar M•mbenhip" ~~ e,balra.-rockers Coro.a4ei fifer 1J k • ~~ •L XIDl eood. aYIUI' S700 +~ trana! clreqton, •te At Th ~E eoa.tHwy. 661 14 •~•JI Tom Turnur ~~~ &b 0 ns ,_ R$ll twtn 11 matt 11 m JJ021crdetatlt sip.a d P'o&lo ..... I040 • hill k\ Stcnl l•ottrrf wboel ~ hp --~......t •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• t~ H\ ':· ~llJS4..,Mk.J:'/. mQtor ~ ~ 8owUn& ~:..emo~ ~~~~· 0 · A.kcnH!~a•u S p r..!_o•b•r ~-,., tat ~. bllJ __ •1_o_ea-____ _ m.ora. •· '° ' • • l; SA Ml Ny&on ah .. cpt-100 yd1 ------1 U50tolta ..,...., ---~· 1J )'di lime ad AnUqUCt diolJ roocn Uaua ~ -Mull • II, ne~•t been cmdtz')'d. •sro:s ' 10 Pl•tH ua& au Ir 0 IHIP.P 1 UM\f ed tr11t1 rol t>4l *4 AA•ria l'M . w • ot AKC.U U , tbl w/m1tcb1111 lamr 0 'Ntt1J Su~nulL Taped ------.;..._--4 Bea~ ~ 19 _ t.bL Solid pine tolfet tb ••'-ma U u d one• Buutl!w Patr HU!lue Lall""" M C uttUe.nt Dtntaa rm <bt Corn r ""-io't.nuuo $41<0254 Brau fs Iron hln bed.a P"dlP°"' ·,., old tht Ca II any ti m• a rt -, l:500. m. atur ;11.._ u 00~11541 s:ia 111' 'ANY'S rnvat~ Club _......:_. _ --M e rnb a r11blJ\. Antique Otlr M<'ttt•J)'. Ocldta rf1.11•\ltr PllPJ>lea UookuH dCllr combo. S250 • tran afer. C all chlpPft\~I~ M"Cn l•rJ. s..o. Avatl t n, brand nttw, mu&t at>ll. 813-ml um b re 11.a •ta ad ' 7GZ auorbllotr. 4 -0'114 -_Ca ____ l _M_ll_l _D_i~--- ~. chopp na b&o.k ·"" tAbko. ~ print.I. de-............... '! P'IS>,4 Q)OI.. AKC. CASll l'AIO l'll•h ayloo rolta $4.50 ~ lwms. bou.wbold ,_.. a &ood bamt. S\$0 F'ot td WK'd turn. anU )'d ~l8tl6'7~'808 ·~·DJ003) orS«MIOOlai29 cpwlrrlrTV'1~78133 • • * ..... c" 10 t O "-to Y• a045 OUQ(nl•r"~ C'Witom 7 Coot C.t LGlrd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-••••••••••••••••••• 11\\X'Odo lrt'lvl'l llO(u lit 18884 Sima Ylt&JO llT l>AMAOt;D Gcnuao ~puppy brown P•lt·hwurk IO\'t.' tlunUnatoo Beach »Ol'POlNT SALE. I~ to eood bome. l wb I. l.ikt-NA" OG2 ~ You llre I.he wtnner ol "!· Wazwr n.r Hatbcw. old Jal ihot"' Larry Safa. z match.Ins cbalr1>, "-"-nc..t. S...AQa ~ml ~~SPM , lln Call tolhe BAROAJNS-Uaed nrfnit. Iii. ~l. kct hair. Fem ~ 3411 ~Anaual •f'-Mt•w. •t:;:,t,./ · ~.February 8. 1979 DAILY PILOT .,.. •• ~,.... 1011 9070 ~----~--~----~~--~--:;.;.;:.;:.;..:..:.::.:..:.-~ •••• •1•••••••••••••••• ....................... T-.._ •R•O ... ......__ I .... S t b ..._.. T• -... or.,... ..._l•••rW ecre ary c alr1 St5 . 34' 1Up avaUable. Im· "••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••:-••••••-" •• Mital" wood daka m. INldi•l.fott~ncy NB. "11 £1 Catnino. bke new. Aid '701 .........._ 91•0 Storaie cabfne tt SllS tn.22211 l>avld. wfaJr AM/FM cus nc-w ·-• .... •••••••••••••• -• Bladcboards SU Aatort· • r.si.ai. • brakes. Must $120.26 W ••••••••••••••••••••••• td ehaJn It m11c. C E NEED •bp 3t ft .J.slandf'r s.u. NJ50. ns.asez rea: . DO N Ofllce Pumllure. 2044 aide tie OK. wall share 9'J'S.03153olc. $120.26 P£R MO Ptacmc.la. C.M. u.e. Hurey! 842-1331 or ---------• 54Hlllhves '74 POID • 1Mr::~81Jt.u'fnm!~~ Trs Jlrt...... COUUI 76~00LS eood. Al10 2 de1lu. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lla1•. flarea, •hell Ii 4 cyl. Automatic, air 30xeo/dbl pe d utal. c~.,._ "*/ mucbmorei .... 291 rood .• AM/f'M·lleroo. lllll""'""l!'Pll!'W!Wll'P.111111 NUlU.87M400. .... 9120 ~-(Cap. cos t SHOO . l'ractlclllY new deak & ••••••••••••••••••••••• PIUV~ E PARTY Residual 12292.92. Tax dWn cooference uble ~camper Hale. w/o '40-6371 per mo. f6.44 . 3e mo. •t i~~~~~~~~~ M2·ta.io • truck. $150. Stove & 77 a.ev Blazer ,. h d Sl13.82. Total required to · rdl'I&. MG-2700 • .. w r. dti.ve away 1120.26 on ap-Nt 1017 ~ru. Beat offer. prov.-d c:r tdlt ) ....................... tfot•flfdll&.t tl40 Call '4&-1752. (481PXQ> ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 11Ac::tt•••c111..11.t. Kot F\ah Sa.le. Sat & Sun TiiE MO.PEDDLER M OoWre Pickup w/cmpr .._ "-Wu 411 202:5.2 Bayview. New PEUGEOT MO abell. Xlnt nanning cond. 401.9WMterly,S\iite 203 SAsaMQ20. PEDS Rel S4Ge N • SJ,700/best offer 646-3511 N~ Beach Pair of Finches, tall cage 129!U31-3830 ' ow aft. 5 Chris. I l-9150 on stand. S20 00. '74 ~ T Chevy, lo mlles • ..W 9712 631-3474 '78 Yamaha Chappy, 900 P IS. rams, VB auto. ••••••••••••••••••••••• flnnbes Amaz.oa tor sale StOO or beet off e r . ~1·2989Squawk ! mi. '300 or beat orrer. 714-673-rnt _486-_m_o_. ------• Motorcyc'"I '68 Cllevy ~T. ahortbed. Scootwn 9150 shell. RV wbls. rblt ••••••••••••••••••••••• trans, many xtraa. $1600. LI 631-3:9. "-&°"Pt 1090 ve·ln Housekeeper. -------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eng.liab speaking. Lido 75 G.M.C. Sierra ~ too •DRIVEA * *UTI'l.L* SAVE A LOT -"We need to~ clean Datsun U8ed cars" S Wiil Pay TOP Dollar S COSTA MES A DATSUN fllllbn, dry,., «~r. btott ~a~L!~!~~-ul z pc au/a, 9 n. ~utd pnot . IODIOllACH ~.we a«v. •PS>J Beat ...._,"' -.... _._ vdour. XW cood $7~ HAllY D. OOUIST ~m-0911.~ BtuOJ11l L.ab pupplea 96t~al\~r4 ·30 ~~~~ i:0f . 1bec~~~ Planorepalr, rebuilding, lsJe. NB. 675-2233. pjck·uP. 350, a\llo. P /S, ........ Sa P/B. FM stereo, mags. WT CHAMCiFOI lt71530I'• SAVI! 2.84SHARBOR BLVD\ 540-6410 540.02 'l Commercial Jeoe Crc-am Bladt ar black w/wb.ite ~l.Y Dre---;;i-bdrm tf'l, BJ\'d., Lona Beach. To refuliahi'lf. Bank Fin. 8 o Jt I F r e • 'I • r . mb.&44-0163. wood fr brass com pl daim )'OW' ticltets, call 8llOOH&cuihccAve. H.B. ''Mobawil'' ~e, I bolc-r ,__,_. 1050 wt"•·a u . ma'ttrQSa & ~.w71.extm. $.16'877PIANS OS U Ile dd i -.u.~ FINI! PIA •••••••••••• ••• •• • • • • • • new w a lllooa ••••••••••••••••••••••• boupnoes. Neaollable • • • FOR SALE. 'IS Yamaha 400 Enduro im n..-4 .. e v..s. 200 seri-!..~~ e z e r PI a te I . SOFA & LOVESEAT 67$-974'1 low miles. Xlnt. cond. .. ... !"""6 . t '"'" ... ..,,. c. '79 Yamaha 7SO SOJO. 551-3410 Spec., UIOO ml. Sells ror S3l.8s Wlll lleU for S2llOO. 64.S-&slM • v-9570 IUYOltLUSE NOW! 79'• New 79 Z80ZX A/T, P /S. 4 pass. a1lver Lie. pd $11,347~ '77 Fl 0 $2800 Runs Good 536-6389 _.,58:2-3Q2 s11a. Century Uod•I -------CREMIN DE FER &.einway Grand 7'. Ex· 631·1349 I nuau, new pam • tues. u~-.,.. ,. ftAtta.n H&1t.an cotton so<a &SaasoooJeans pt·o l lit 8 ---------S2'7SO best offer 557.91..54 C.ASllPAID rtumefi'Um 7lU49-307i & c h air, tub le & 1be spring clothes arr· Meod;l.nNe:ul~.YBlk '15~Hoodanewlyrblt 527.a795 DATSUN mech30IC now Wahr/Dryrs/Refrl9s. Hide·•·beds s179 Olsen rmltclung lamp.Negota· lived. Adult & cbJldren Ebony. A beautiful eng. Must seU. Best of. -70-3-spd--ab.ilt,-.-6--1---Also hmited number of at Ivan's. 1995 Harbor HOW .URIVtMG! wortingor oot 957-8133 Model Home Furn ble.67S.9147 sir.es. 633-7319, 997·1986 piano. $7800/bst ofr. fer.496-0714. Jooa bed. ......,.,cy custom ms 320i's Is st.Jll availa· Blvd. C.M. 645-1982 Ca I (71 ~" """"' 642-7387 • ._,., ble. Call ~today! n ster vacuum, SSO. 4>.nr.JU11 Moving• all kinds ot For Sale: Tllfany's or ---·------72Kawaaaki500 ~ 831·2040495-4949 '78 Dat11un 8210. Xlnl Oslff kn.lie sharpener, MUST SELL d tbl furniture s t e reos N . 8 . Co r~·o rate Sid'-8093 Fast.$500. cond.Only7000m1, ~.Oster can opener SS ·en s. h • • ..., DAC.1130 '74 Font Van Conversion. .,.. .,,.,, H.tml.lton ~uch Mixer Im Cs . rec 1i n er5 • couc ea, lamps etc. Mmbrshp. Ca Debby B, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,.. Auto. PS/PB. Xlnt cood. 19761MW 2002 7_....,,s S25. Japanese Ri ce boo cases. ett'. Olsen RA!asooable.57s..t900 _6'4-__ 9030_______ '74Suzuki18S, S7SOO.Ph:&46-810S ~E. 4 s~ trans .. '76 610 Datsun Wagon. cooker. S20. GE Hair ModeJUf4~~~:~h Anl.iques table & chairs. PAINT I NG : L .R . loml.S3SO. 78 Chevy~ ton, l"'b, :iescoodlllomng & LOW AMIFMcass.4 spd.L!'&· DryerS25.All only5mos hand carevd sofa. rual Neiman: "Ali Frazer", 675·7444 .. .<446NYE>. s;age rack. S32SO/bsl okf.495-Sl.94. TWI .... OR FULL anf.l ru•. solld maple "X·Rated Movies" + blact van. fulJ pwr, tiJt Ofil.Y S6195 ~783or770-2682. " " 74 CZ 2SO & 400 moved up wbl. ruu conversion. SEARS ELEC TRI C J\1attressor boxsprings ~est table & chairs, other s. Best otrer. sbox,eiectroruc i"""•tioo, 14,000mi,Sl2,000i.ovest· HOWARl>CMYf'Old DRYER. wtute-excelleAt S28. each pc. <sets ooly). DJlSC. 548-l290. 67$-J7S3aASPM. Muk'uoJ carbs. ~acb. ed. $8995 for fa.st sale. Dove&QuailSts. -:.,_~afio~e=~~~~~; CODdiUon SS0 962-M37 aft Queer!~ S89. King Set! Game set. S piet>e 1925 S,000 BTU portable air 982-8228. &.Ql36 NEWPORT BEACH Sl!IZ501bstofr. 840-5078. Spin evestwlmd.s 6'2-4321 $99. ~amples must be mahogany bedroom set, conditioner . less than 2 ---------eJl-0555 ex12:50dys8am·Spm. sold 1mmt;-d1ately from refrig .. box sprang & yraokt . used litUe. pald Men's Scott Boots. size 1, '16 Yamaha 2SO Eodllf'O. '73 914 2.0 Xlnt. cond. ---------Raf 9725 our warehouse. f?lsen matL Elec. frplc, fazy over $200. wiJJ sell ror good cood. $50 or best XJnt t>ond. Must Sell. S4,900/best offer. Dy. OIAMGICOUMTY'S .................... .-.. WeatJnghouse Relrag, Model Home FUnuture. boy c hair. Stereo. SlOO. Call after 4PM ofr. Call Laurie aft sszs.~. !!6...:!!41 eve./Sun Cl.DIST & &ood eond. $8.5 Call: 549-3017 Wed. thru vacwm 4 teak chairs wkdays, au day wkends. 6.00pm. Pb 642·9136 · _._ enmore dryer 2yrs Sun Credit Avail. (Also 60-4610' · 548-8095. 1V R-... Honda Super 90. Needs '71 ,...,._ W,_...__ V aaaa '"°.646-2391. avad .. bving rm, bdrm,------------------1:-.-,c.___ workS75. ......::vy """"'"' an. ....,... I n---~ .. ,_,_ ·er .J•-,_.. --1098 642-03&C alter4PM A/C, aux gas tank, New Sears Kenmore W/D . .,.,.,..cases, amps, end ~t .......... g-set. pedes. . vuc spice cpt. •ar ---------vat--~--. Ph"" .. ~ Fantastic Closeout on 1978 ltlodels - 1979 Models now arrivmg MUST SF.LL Good '"''·.~-.) .... ~. _ _... .. ~-.. +4 arm o d ( \ h 'I ) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ~ ....,.......,, dlt. • 00 "'ID "'"' .....,.., .... '""""" • DO pe l ·C I '78 H ....... -ex""". I -•ma. both. 67~ utn. •1 chairs caneback uph. Match.Ing couches 5, 8 ft . STEREOXLNT BUY Br:;'; n e ;" c~n d . SaJes.&rvice.Leas me RcwC.-.er.htc. · casters' antique ash. like X l n l con d . 3 p t' s Call betweenS-8pm. 714/973-11499am tospm . ~ W..W 9590 ~ 10.1 S **I BUY** new. Orig. $1 ,lSO. Of· Samsonite luggage. 6 6'2·3585 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RcllS Aoyce BMW DICK MII.LER MOTORS 120W. Wamer ,S.A M7·2132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good used '''"rna·ture •. ferecUsso. 6U--0479pm. rolduig Samsorute chrs. -Be-. ..,-,.uJ--.. --1-TV--Motor.._s. S•I -wlU IUY .-u "' Ladles clothes 12 & 14. a..... 25 co or . • 2 lltM/Storege 9160 "'" lS40Jambo~e Newport Beach 640-6444 ~c!!.s"£ilr~~o~. will Gcng.ScH IOSS IM2·28>5or997-3480 ~~~ee delivery ... •••••••••••••••••••• YOUIDATSUM PUBLIC FURNITURE MASTERS AUCTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• •lstSUPERMANCOMIC ---------'76 SPACE ARROW 25'. PAJDFORORNOT CREVIER * A'llf'TIQNS 646-1616 Ir 833-9625 Wicker ~h $250. W#. 6/:11 & Patty Hearst FBI 23" color console 4.way UJts of extras. $15,500. TOP DOU.AR "" i--------~ ~c~q~~r~b~~o.u: wtd.poster.673-8279. ~~e, ilnt. s21s. Call21.3/S82-3422 FORTOPCARS & I ST & H OAOWAY SAMTA AMA '78 l.31S. S spd. JSOO ml, S yr trans warranty. wm. b'. Xtras. AM/FM t ..... ~. 673-18581673-5030. '78 1315. 5 spd. 1.500 mi.,S yr transferable w rl\\)'. Xtras. AMIFM t a pe . ~. 673-l858/ 6'lJ.5030, FRIDAY l :30 PM $STOPS SU Jasmine. CdM. Irvine Family ---------1 RENT '78 Luxury Motor ll>eders WekOMt) Golf MembersbJp 7.enith transoceanic solid Home 22· sleeps 6. S2SO BARWICK DATSUN "·''' J, J ·"I t ·II ~. l . ·' 'I 1 CONSIGNMENT & Read no more! We have Garage Sale; Waterbed, $600 979-063! wkds. state radio <AM·FM, AC· wk+&' rm. 640-8585 STOCK all sue mattresses froth Sda. Dinmg set & stuff. DC)ll baads including 831·1375 493.3375 835·3171 n.e uu ..... re 0111\llHO lolACHIHI . LIQUIDATION S56 set, sora/lovcseat Sal. Feb lot.b, 8am-4pm. New English riding hat, weather, seldom used. RENT. 23' Fireball. Self WEPAYTOPOOLLAR $178 new. S Pt' Bedroom 34 Woodland Dr, lrvl.oe b>. New German Steel Pb 673-6685 q cootal.oed. for top used can-foreign. . •USEDIMWs• '73BavS/R <S67HJPl '7320021\i 1187JJL) '7S2002Auto. air (2236> '76 2002 4s pd, SI R (49'1PHJ) M~JERS $147, sleepers, bunkbeds. (Woodbndge) Stirrups. $60. <We re loafs&.._._,__ 645-2283 domeatit'S or clus1u. U end tables, etc. Why pay $140> 495-Sl.94. --·--T -• )'OW' car is extra clean. $12016 DOWN· $120.26 PER MO: llM'JIQN store pnees? Call Cen· Sat. Only 6 ft. sll~lng ---------~,...t n~ ,...,... 9170 see ~FIRST! """ tu:ry Modt'I Home Furn dass dr .. lo boy toilet, Newport Beach Tennis ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• :m5\'J Newport Bl. C.M. Wed lhru Sun for dlrec'. a~ dr .• UIO Skia Ii bin· Club membersb.ip, $1000 G-1 al 90 I 0 21' 1.962 Kenskill with 8xl6 ~ 833-9825 646-31;86 tlons to Wareho use/ dinp. Mens sk.1 boots sz. 494·1.342. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cabana in sr. aduJt park. ---------•storage a rea. Instant 10~ wtr htr, Oak chair. ---------1 s:llOO.~J73or63MMl65 .... '77 ~: 4spSI R 10179) '77~t4sp (TR5962> '78833cslS/R <~> '76 FIAT SPYDB Roadster. 4 t>yl. 5 spd AM/FM·atereo-eassette Red with black vinyl tnm. {Cap. cost $4200 Residual $2299.92. Tax per mo. S6.44. 36 mo. at '113.12. Total requirecfto drive away Sl.20.26 on •P· proved c redit. 1 C894RSK) •--------credit avail. 549.3077. bdrm cupboard tandem Mesa Verde Countzy Club ,......._ c-k ... , p~ A b i ke 846 2247 1200 Swin & Tennis mem· ---.-.. .-... , .· SA/CM area · • & & •--~---..i...... 9 .. 00 Closed S• days ' WestclilfDr.N.B. bHs h l p For Sale. ___.. ... ~ #I tllOr.l)itc-ty 7' natural colored sofa + . 545-3176 ~IA~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '11.m 4 spd wlcn.uae air, AM /FM, Jmm ac .. 613-3441 For Ad Action pillows uso. 2 uphol. Clean Sweep, bikes .• good Frigidare wuber & f:: AT.ING AMERICAN MAGS ~~:Xd. print chairs. become t.oys" aola bed, din~lle. dryer SJ7S. Chn'st an 10 X 1S Polished. Chevy 979-2500 love seat + matc h. chlJd s saddle. anuque &Pontlac patt.em.M&ff Call a Daily Pilot AO.VISOR 642-5678 pillows $ISO ea. Oak cof· wagon wheel, muc h Science & Gardening ...ce masters l200 Sl30. ---------* * • fee tbl s·x 2~· Sl60 more. Sal 10th. 16335 _t>oma __ ._~_9_189_. ___ , * * * 4M-43l3 Wll! BUY TilftTnlfH'o &ICMl.5.5 • Mi a D tic c Ir c I e. H . ~-ooo IC-.Ll....a... .. 1592 Redlands Pl. --------r Harbour. rwu:...., ---r.=~ Two/L 60's OD lS" XJO Cl1£NCARS CoslaMesa IEACHUASIN& 4019 Westerly. Su ile 203 N~rtBeach 133-9850 Twan bed & chest or Har ---... -----'---Whla&e. price. 2Slbs. $2 50A8oxw0od Cralet rim. Two E 60's · &.._UCKS Youarethe wmner of drawers w /detached 1060 Will delvr. 2S bags or Irvine on a 14"x7" Crager nm. '" TWO RH TICKETS mirro r. White w/gold ••••••••••••••••••••••• more548-1932aller6PM Youarethewinoero( lncludeschromeVALVE tn m. Sturdy mattress, Teenage owner busy ski· MOVl..aa S .a. 1 Ill!. Two free Tic•ets stem covers aDd chrome J7th to~ual Sl!iO. 548-4879. iog & skating. Mom says ... .., ~ to the knock offk. Fits all five ---------1 havetoseUborse. Beaut. •AllQualityltems • t7thAnnual lug GM cars or trucks . LOHGIEACH HOllda 9721 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trade your old stuff for wh1 Appy filly, 21 mos 661 Bayside Dr. NB. SAT LONG IEACH All for ~IN best offer. RODEO ...... Mew •79 new goodi es with a 963-8454$850. ONLY AM to 4PM. IODEO Call 549-7038 After 4PM al the Long Beac h HONDA Cars ·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Classifledad.642·5678 Home•a6c1Goods&06S Cordoory hlde·a ·bed. at the Long Beach _Only __ . _______ ---------Arena. 300 F. Ocean M* ... Y wicker settee. oak hall Arena, 300 E. Ocean Want t •· d I r IS" WE BUY Blvd .• Loog Beach. To "'" Lree, oak chr, 2 countr' 0 .... a e pa r 0 dalm your tickets • call •o ci...~--£---.• Wea~ of CLove This Valentine's Day send your love a greeting all the world can share with a Daily Pilot Heart of Love. I t's easy. c ompo se your personalized greeting & we'll set your message in type to fit the border of your choice or your own handwritten thoug hts may appear in the border you select Borders come in 3 sizes. $15. $10. & a special child's stze tor $2 . (You must be under 12 to qualify for this one). If you wish to create your own greeting. use a black pen & write your message in the heart below or draw your own Valentine of this size \\ For help with your ad. Just call 642•5678 & a friendly alentlne ad-vlser wlll be happy to assist you. And, If you Ilka, you can charge your Valentine ad or use your Mastor Charge or Bank Amerlcard. DAILY PILOT 842-5878 Mall to Dally Piiot Claaslfled Department. Box 1560 Costa M ... 92628 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rugs : l yr old. 12 X12 Burnt Orange $60. 8 X 10 Burnt orange S40 or both ~. S3M238 or 962-4914. Blvd., toog Beach. To wide <sand Urel wheels '' -~ fr.' uphol chrs. oak d~ claim YOW' tickets. call for 10" or 11 " Wide, s bole USED c •Rs 642-56'7S, Ext 272· u111.11VERSITY chr. oak tbl&, Neccb.i sew 642-5678 v w -"' • *' * " rmch, lamps, oil paint· ':t!7! . . wheels. &42·33'19. CALL PAPPY a.lllDIMW 1Jl81, Navaho & Persian Used Car Mgr '79 BMW 633CSJ. a uto, .... _ ..... _ ,._ • GMC rug. Oak tnmlt, nower loab. Mmil ~ Alllos fOf' ScH silver w/bl.k & wht in· .,_ ~ Elec. Dryer. xlnt cond. Used. Call all 6pm 496-1378 days 742·0707 ext. 313 boxes, scuba le ski c.-...t--••ce020 "••••••••••••••••••••• 540·5630 tenor.sWll'OOf. air, PI W, J,_ks . L M'--_,,_ G ..... •s' 0 log lat t CBC 28.50 Harbor Blvd. eq\8pm WK. -••••• .. •••••••••••·••• • T b es. a ereo, Costa Mesa 54()..~0 Ai--rco--22S--a-m_p_._W_e_ld_e_r_1 Profe1alooal boat clean· ... •••••••••••••••••••• w eels. 10 ma 's. Call SllO. Assorted welding lng, waxing & bright 74 Travel trailer 16~ n. 26-.... ABOR BLVD eves: 67~. '78At'cord CVCC LX. SIR. rod. 4or per lb. Heayy du· wort. Weekly, bi·weekly semi sell cootained. m .::v f"V' • •-.. -----•I A/C, PIS, amtrm stereo U•fttodl eon ty 7" grinder m . Seoco or per voyage basis Cbevelle stal1on wgn COSTA MESA BOB Me' ADEN'S cassette. Must give up IAIYGOATS nailer model SN3 saoo. available. Guaranteed wt hltcb. PS.PB.AC ---Wl-"-1-UY~;..;;_--~ leasepayoffto thebank. ••••••••••••••••••••••• N~~~lies mode l Ml sns. Call ~Calhy963-0258 ::.-~=&c. s USIDCARS! $ S6778.42 Call642·084'6 Ask for Kris 875-3'784 We're the new Chevrolet ....,_.. 97)0 ---------Ladys blke SlS. Power loah. MmiM AllM••I/ de.tlenhip ln the Irvine _ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wmdmill & Tower, 614 S. mower $40. Xlot cood. ~....... 9010 aa..ks 9520 Auto Center. We need 7l XJ<E 2+2. Vl2, blue, Cleveland, Oceanside. 548·3'29al\ uam. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• your used ear! '76 IMW SlOI auto, air, stereo, 49M M·F.BtoS. 714·722·5010 ---------'Your boat tuned for less. '76 PO~SCHE Tur~o JOE Ant.braclte, beige vinyl. _xin __ t_ISB00 __ ._968._3296 __ _ i.."--1.. WIMOOWSHADES Inboard/ outboard & 8odyw/76911Sentc. 77 1 ... u.CPHERSO.._. Automatic. AM /PM· '7lv""'2 +2.62.000ml -.i '"Y I071 Wooden s butters, other mechanical works loterlor. 7+8. Reg as '72. ~ " cas.sette, 44M mites. al· ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mlniblinda, woven woods ~ EX\.20 ORT.h 7,500. CHrvaOLET loys,sunroor. {474RLX I V·12· AC. Very go~ Small Cr&flsman metal &window Unlio '""" <'Ond. f'' ai r pri ce . cutting band saw. $200. ofhll items. g. 20-40% 1.enlth tranaoceanlc solid Kell1IOnl Astra J6 w 1'66 2l A"'f ?~i Dn ve S9795 2J.3.436.9066 919-1658 ASPEN 645-8951 sl~le radio <AM IFM. Vette 366 H.P eng. Very 7.L.7222 ua..--· AC.DC) 11 bands Inch.ad· fut.& unique. SSGOO. <22) .,... ~ ••-8010 10.<nl Frozen Food din· ing weather, s eldom ALSO J4 coupe, set up--------- '111MW 630CSI •XJ6Repairs&Service•1 Fjord blue, blue leather . JoeHcnnessey/Jaguar ! ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ne r 11 : 10 varieties uaed.673-e685 for Chev eng. $1200. w• ...... Eo.• Automatic. AM / FM· 1E80Ptac .. C.M. 631·2742 LUGGAGITAGS Sacrifice! (21.3)2:55-4400 -........ _ _ .. 0 Consider trades . "'"' fl'omyour business card. TV --. ... ..........-TV~ 963-4377/IS:J-7653. Late model Toyotas, cauette. DM miltts, al· 70 XKE 2+2. 6 cyl. a~to.1 . loys,sunroof. <294UOQ) 60,000 orig. mUes. Showl Send ooe card for each . . equl/,ment -••• .. •••••••••••• ----------Voivoe, Pickups & Vans. I.ti pl .. oce spare. We For ale 195S2S'TwtnengtneCbrls 19118 Rambler, ori11 cood, c.JJuatoday! return permanently Pbooe54IH395 Craft apeed boat rtdiolbtr4-dr,60K +ml, '74 IA V ARIA CODd. 18.'lOO. PP 586·9m I Automatlc, air eond .. J ag '1l SJ XJ12L. lmml/t.1 Sahara betJe. {"31MVD) cond .. lo mi .. Sl6,000.f seaJed attractive tag • CARPET <claas.lc). Xlnt 673-rnt. aW> trans, 88$-2525 at.rap, mee\lng airline Seoaatlonal closeout. Ski~ack: M ft. Oybridge, '41 Ford Coupe, aound l.D. requirements. Pre· Red, green, rust. plush. t w 1 n 1 7 o v 0 I y 0 8 • cood .. 56,000 orig ml's, vent '°8s It theft! For a S3yd. Tbe Shores In· sw1.matep ·VHF.sumlog. 2nd ownr. $2500 or make SH50 P.P. 642-1290, 544-7660 I ....... t1:t2~ penonalhed tag enclose terlora 642·2210 o r plusmore.Jobo67S·4229 atfer.-.~. 781MWSJOI wa llpaper. ra brl c or StB-1568 "Day Olo" paper & we --------....._ -.../ ·s. Road muter. ext. ~==~=~~=~ wUJ back & trim your Mtc•-w Clwrht 9050 clean, nds eog. work. will 'Milot. ... oried DIMONSTRATOR Polans SUver. 4 speed, sunroof, AM/FM at.er~. &Jr cood .. alloys. llM miles.(~) lagS. Or try two cardg W..t.d IOI I ...... ••••••••••• •••••• aacrlfice '500. Anytime ••••••••••••••••••••••• back to back. • •••••••••••••••••••••• Ouuter Luxury 60' or 75' s.6-9591 Moa-. 9705 PRICES: N E E D E D I M · motor yacht. Reasono. lecrt9"•Mll ..................... .. S2eaor3/S.S MEDlATELY One eltt· b1e. Hr dally weekly 2 AJ! R s · GTV 850 N. Beach Blvd. 4/S .. "•Sl.80ea. trlc wheelt'hair tor 72 ' ' · VtWdes 9530 a omeo s I • -61>21 or67S-32S6. ••••••••••••'•••••••••• lSp)'der. La ff a bra <Al Beach & Wbllticrl 6/9tagsS1.SOea. boepltalized teenager . .___ c-_60 VWS--.. -atl 04.2932 10ormoreSl.40ea. Muat rent NOW al a re· --.. -"' '"""' 17 •• , 52.Z..53Jl Closed Sundays SaJe. Tax locluded aeooable price. 540-5721 ...... ••••••••••••••••• Sl300 NO CARD? MllkGI Sidney Sabot. Good cond. 8a-934-4 =· .v.:r.:: ~:o: IMIY & .. , 1013 ~~~~~oily, $300. 4 W..... D•t." tllO w.'U cn&Jte one card per •"•••••••••••••••••••• , · ••••••••••••••••••• •••• tag.Add25Ceach. SpcRutberdJ'wnMtcym. 13 CYO.ONE. Fast, fuo Seild check or money or· ba.la "ataDd, new. black boat. Good cond. New derto: dol bMdl. $:iOO or beat cvr. llOO. D1I f75-3'7l2, PILOTPMmMG oft'.~. eveem.1081. p .0. Box J.SeO Office ... 41we a If. ft •loop..t. '88 '·keel Costa Me.a, Ca. 91626 ... , ~ IOIS Lapworth uladlator. 8 4' Hilb backed decorator ••••••••••••••••••••••• =. '::/' ~ =::l pew '15. Matchint t.able JC1rK new 4' llted ale furn, Ownr/Bkr e~l·IW d)'1 · SU. Eerly American S>lan fUea..t wk benches •TWOevt. ' 1t1•• drk wood rocker t.E.SURl"L\JS831·2777 · .._ 5 drawer cbes\ or Beaut clMelc 21 · ctrbrd. draweu uo. M:/:le 3: dry ~:rr:.;,to·cf!: 1loop •ltrlr. Faat. Wm =~S20ap~: a:~~ ~order. 16i.1uo m~ct;a&~ t hapo. WlllllUltt4!Ptb .. t.ao .. cb. :31r AUTY .... ._, SaUdnrrc,,..Ul.5.Slat T--n ~~ 9010 bmcb•Wr.lroeTowo ... _ - f 707 •••••••••••••••••••••• • 1~~!!!!!!~~~~ $78.62 DOWN ~ •••••••••••• !!.'.~ $Jl&2 PER MO. ~pri V-6 aUc\ Billi· 7JAUDI IOOLS m..ftmvery dean. •300· ~,.:C.~.u;:,1:~: 'TT Ghf•. f\allY equipPtd, Blue with black vinyl hf. Lo mJ. Call 540-0454 trim. (C"Ap. coet S2500. orS9M8afUPM. Rci9idual-.88. Tax per .,..._ '720 mo. M.45. 36 mo. nl ••••••••••••••••••••••• '14,17. Toe.al required to drive awa.y S78.'62 on •P· *DA TSUNS * proved cre di t .) ~s.e.ct .... (741Ufl1Z). Of Al......_ llACH LUS~NG SA.La-L!A.9JNO 4019~&e8:~i:203 PA.RTs.81:RVlCE 1150 C OST/\ MESA OA T\UN HO. llLae. furnltllrt --...1-a•--,.._ ev~·M.1 or · · 'n Audi ,..,.., to. SW. D' CO.try di.Htte Ht ~··--••••••••••••••••••• -... --,.-d-~-nrt-0--0-d- _..,.,...., ...., _...., ...... _ ,..___ ...,.,. h,110aDI014 all. W, atkt. R·H. radiaJI. JNIHAJllOR 8'.YD Mlm2 •~ 5040. YAc.NewpoltMM&Jt f w......U. 144M4101~111 i ...•...•............... , '74 Whit• w/blk top. Conv. C XJn1 rood. 14 ,000 ma. S7500. 673-2906. ec.w... GMo 9715 .......••••.•.•........ -·ee Coovertiblt'. Many eic· ' traa. l2800 or or r. 675-0736. ........ 9711 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••• lf1tMAZDA GlC HATCHIACK. : SIOODOWN': plus cu le license · i I •.t$ per mOQth for 4' 1 montb1 on approved 1 credit. APR· 12.55%: I Deterred paymeni prtce·S5000.40. Equip· I men\ loch.Ides 4 speed I t.rahll.. carpetlni at fol 1 down "ar aeat. (~10t I caahpncelS $3680 ( phatufJUceme I ....... I Mele/ ...... I ZUIDffartlor Blvd .. C.M. I Ml-17to I -· .. . . .. . . . -. . . . . . ' . . I ' .. TIM~•)'. fllebtua:y •. 117' ....... ••• ....... ........ u .. d AMfot, Uaed ~. UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .• aARGAlll pRl(ID t 1e. MOD£\. L~ 5 •1,,, , •••• ~~--t l t 1974 OPEL WAGON Melall1c green & au1cmwl1c: 1,.n1m1&11on Low ,_il-·QOO<l tral"SUOrhtl•on t986Ulll .... ~,,. ... 1970 FORD RANCHERO White w11h Brown Int f'actory rallye wheels. auto trans air cond radio • use as car or truck 13~9Hl A Qood value at only 1975 tOYOT A. COlt6LU COU"E Sport 2 Door. 5 speed trans .. vinyl top and rallye wheels (894MPI). 1975 VOLkSW A.GEM RAllfT 4 speed trans . radio and air conditioning (44 5MJB). 1975 DATSUN 12 I 0 FASTIACK 4 speed trans .. AM/FM and vinyl roof. {180NOK). ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST SELECTION OF LA TE MODEL GAS SA VER SPECIALS! 1974 YOUCSWAGEN 7 "ASS. VAN 4 spd . AM radio. red • with white int A clel'n s3199 car -oood maint record I 72 7LKT) Low lo w once of 1976 TOYOTA COROLLA WAGOH Silver w ith blac k interior. Super economy s3399 and a very clean car f918PPN) 1976 VOLKSWAGEN RAAfT Sunroof, stereo tape, 4 SPd & CUStOm Whf'el'l • s3399 pretty hnle yellow car (869V0Dl 1977 HONDA CIVIC WAGON Dark met brown with 4 sod . air cond . luggaae rack and low mileage 1771VBLl 1978 HONDA CVCC 2 Or Car has only 4.325 m11ps1 Silver with black interior 4 spd end radio (610WCRl 1973 DATSUN 1971 DATSUN 240'Z 4 'led transmission. radio. mag wheels & suoer clean -do yourself a favor & look before you buy elsewhere C262CPL I 53999 240'Z 245 WA.ot4 Air cond . super Lite blue with dark sounding AM/FM blue interior Auto stereo 4 spd & mag lrans . atr cond . pwr. wheels Musi see to steering luggage a p P r e c I a t e I rack & a nice car (115HGMl 1074NCTI 54999 s4999· Earle lice ' TOYOTA-VOLVO 1966 HARllO R ILVO . COST A Mf\A 646-9303 5 40-946 7 IA.lltM,l,..orW ...... '75' Nell ttlO O..n•t t UO Fwd t940 ..••.•.............•...................••....•........ , ...............•.......••••••••••...• ···········~··········· W.. t1H /1 l OULCR IN US A. 67 Riviera full power. • • • n f>otd F ·250 P/U w/77 ROUS ROYCl r . ll=on Beach .• LTD. Runs 1ood, Must mirac le mazd a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ROY AJC. 1ood cood $475 • ....._W eQline. ~st olfu. Call lrm CARVE It ~oe,3.5 d•Y•· '4'4Z3 11381 Newl•~ RQn~n~ ::!!:.';'t'::.. ==e&al.bllt,xlnt ~'};EE TI1a{~ .ee ~?. •--·. ....... *·'1187 17th'°~ual "-Mlicat ttlO •••••••lillliiil•••••I T, -1 ~ao WNOAYS "1'6 Skylark (Ol.lpe, L•n· &.o.. IUCH ••••••••••• .. ••••••• •• ·~~lverCloud 1 dau top. 3SO Vfl. air. IOOIO ~ISUNTYT 'S i'9 RX7 OS, 11,000 mt 1111,000 am/(m radio. 36,000 OU A th L 8 .._.,,... f'ully loaded 1unroof 8IS5 4144 Xl.n1 Cond 13"100 or bellt \ • o n1 each LlNCOLN·lll ERCURY ~ust ..-1~~:,;;•~ =n Ul6l ROi14 Ruy~ Sedan, o«tt. 41M 3177 ~ve:,~· .!°: La~h~e~~ Oe&lenbip ls now OPEN --flnMood Elt·aanl whit~. "16 Dulek RJvera silver. claim )'OW' llckeu. call RAY FLADllOI t740 C.~,:IOO 6404999 ~. all power. AM/F M 6G5'78ExtZ72. UNCOLN·MERCURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..._ 97,5 tape <..'Nae & Ult. $3,950 ~ • • UH8AutoCenter Dr. 68 2'0. 1WU'VO(, muat 11011 • .-1.•.;•••••••••• •••••• or best offer 714/498-3758 SD-Fw>'·Lake FOl'eat ull (I( or714/t161.QJ.2 '78CHEVETTE. IRVINE mx>1 fr, Call Manha W74 Corona Station w11n 31,000ml1$329$. 110.7000 1 llfllor~ 1a 49,000 mil • Auto, •Ir: '738utckRegaJ,40,800ml. Ml-2&09ana673·Sl38 ~ t4.'IC-.:f, bf ... 1, ,un 1111 rck , $2400"2 7637_ 8.\1', power. auto, $2000. rl •v "' ~aft 6PM '73 Cap · XlDt coDd . rool Llkt• nrw 14,000 Auto Meotunl cs '68 ------·-9-9-1-5 Map -custom paint,pln '76 Mo narch . blac k. Sbaro. 26,000 mi. A l e, am/(m radio. black lot. vnyl top $41.50 963-1112 alt.6. MO 1217 Corona Clnn body, CuM1c strlpmg. V6 stick. $2450. 'fB ~ M Ill. (id rond OClCdl maJur repair ~ •••••• ••••••••••• ••• ••• 642-3379. l3500or li..,.t offt:r ~ fi0'12 ~7 ls&ff TOYOTA rnttha1uc now li76 MB ~l. bnlhunl at 11; 11'•· \995 Harbor "~I w por1 hmenl Looi Blvd C M ~ 1982 41 I Owner ftbkl" offttr llfOIE OU b4-17ll2 SB.L YC>Ua MBZTUR80Dtt,SE1. I 11m Takllla fa~ory de livery ol 30(60 m Apnl Must sell You buy & save S i.t-ro m1 524 8409 71 Midget new top, new clutch good cond. $2000. 962-9742 after 6PM TOYOTA. SEEUS f MAllOUtS TOYOTA MlSslON VIEJO u 1-2110 491-12 10 ~ back Easl, roust sell 72 Toyota, dnt cond. 540-9703: eves, ~6-0532 Kathy MGI 9744 1961 VW pickup runs xlnt., ••••••••• • •••••• ••••• • 0 body good $149S '79 MGB. Moving must 642-7590 sacnfice. Incredible sav-1971 vw convert. orange lngs. 831-7114 w/bUt lop. Runs & looks PClf"ldle 9 7 50 good. S2m. 6'4-1059 • • PURCHASE ORI.EASE YOUR NEW 1979 C.ADll.UC NOW! • '77 Seville while w /blk leather interior. All xtra. meld. Michelin tlres. OD· ly l8,000m1. SU,000. P.P. 646-9797 evenings Sat/ SUn. '76 Monte Car lo. Xlnl '77 Merc ury Marqu e1 cond. Air , $4150. Brougham 4dr , loaded. 642-~or 751-9918 New tires . SS,l9S '78 Moote Carlo. $6000 TI4/83H~2 Xlatcoodlntr&extr.dys ttlltWCJ 9952 11().,3266, eves 831-0949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 C h evy Ca price '85Must.aog V8, P/8 ,P/S. Oaaslc. 9 pass. wagon. air. $12100. 548.J.10S or aft. 17,000 miles. All extras. 5pm. rn.S488. Xlnt cond. Asking 16447 . '67 Mustang Mr. Gilmore 547 ·9151 Contact JobG Mon·f'rl8toS. 581-3893aft.6 '71 ElCaminoSS4S4. Xlnt IS Grua II. P/8 . P/S, cood., very low males. auto, AJC. S279S Air pwr brakes & steer· 968-0689 ing, AM-FM 8 track iD ---------dash, custom body & ·a; C.OOvertible, red/blk, 6 painl 2 sets of wheels. cyl, 3 spd. xlnt cond . High perf. suspn. Must S2750/0ffer.4.94-61SS see t.o appreciate. $4500. ---------Call ~278Sor S36·840S. '67 Must, good trans car, will be collector's item S6..'i0/or best. 546· 7708 '66 lmpala . Blown engine. body very gd cond. Ask· log $900. Rm art 6pm, S4.S-0031 wrk SSl-7384. ask for Dave. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······-················· CUTI.ASS COUPE 1978 Supreme model. Just hke NEW wit h ONLY 6260 miles. a ir cood .• c ruise control. v inyl l o p . etc . (536\JZV) .• ftY IT-IUY IT! COMMRL CHEVROLET ''I.'>< 11.•rl•.r 11 . • I 'r.-. I \ ,, t->' S4 6-I 200 '71 Olds Delta 88. $900 Runs great, xlnt cood. 847-8878 '74 Ma r k I V gold. '78 Olds 98 Regency, moonroof, excell. cond. loaded. $7600. P .P . ~/offer.P.P.833·3899 7 l 9 VDN . 968-6416, ~ 9932' _213_1923-_7_164 ____ _ ---------· ...................... . '78"'2 Cutless Suprem e Brougham. lo/mi -ex· ceptional. S6350. Days 547-:>832 Eves. 1·661·1666 1970CpedeVllle. Clean inside & out $1.500. 494-7439 '77 Seville. Loaded. Take over lease. S296 mo. Ask for Lee. 770-1709. '76 CDV lo mi, mint cond, loaded, lthr, tape. ext. warr. Must sell. SGK>O. P.P. 54$-:i925 '77 auto, T lop, am /fm cassette, 29,000 mi. lthr u p b . Loaded . $10,000/ Firm S48·3967 Leaving counl.ry m ust sett. "73 Cutlass Supreme, air p/b1 WUldows, steering, buuet.s & cnsl, bl.k on • 7 6 . T Ba r roof. blk $2395646-6745 Slvr/Pllnm inl. Fully eqpd. Auto. $8995. PP. S3M068. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 VW Bus, good condi· 1972 911T S6K ma, alloys. lion. tinted windows, 5-spd. stereo. xlnt. Call must sell $2200. :>36-7315 •67 El Dorado. $750. Good r-9933 Martha . 661· 1161 or ._._,.. $140.95 DOWN $140.95 PER Mlt. 494-3672 ·73 Super Beetle gd. cond. tires, nms good. Good in· •••••••••••••••••••••• • ----------t Needs brakes. Sl600. t.erior.646-1312. '74 XR7, n ew paint, 7 7Cun.ASS '7311'J 914. Clean. s spd. 968--0371 loaded. clean. $2700/or AM/FM cass. Lom1. App ---------75 Coupe de Ville. Mint bestoffet.631·2683 s .. ,. ...... i.- 2 dr. h a rdtop. V -8. autom atic, AM-FM. stereo/8 tr ack. power seat. air cond., tilt wheel. cruise contr ol. powe r door locks, vinyl roof. (Ca p . cost SSI OO. Residual $2699.88. T ax per mo. $7.98. 36 mo. at Sl.32.97. Total required to drive away SJ40.95 on ap- proved credil. > <383SLS > Gp. Alloys. Pvt Ply. '72VW Bus AM/FM c ass. cood.. Loaded Musl sell! --------- 642-19S4 eves. Carpeting & curtains. S5al0. 96S4150aft 6. Ford 9940 71.000 mi. S2,700. Call -Ca-dill-.-------1-1 •111u 11111111111•u••• '73 Porscbe914, perf. con· 714/SS2·8440. ac see rust oo m ne .PHIL dlt1on . SS900. Eves ---------before you buy. 16S8 s.-B-5667 'S7 BUG. Completely re· Iowa. Costa M~a LC>l\IG W IL $1500. See lo ap· ,.._ 9917 FORD 00 3S6 B roadster convert. prec:late 642-2278 ......., O Minl cood., $9500/offer ....;;....________ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-B683 '76 VW Bus, Jo mi, sleeper CAMAROs :'.._ . ·pkg, A M/ FM stereo \.~ 73 Porsche 914, t.7 white cass. Im mac $5200. Choice of 1.2. In all colors ~~.,.. ~~d~~~~~· _499-4»4 _________ & all have automatic '"o0,...,: '74 V W bug AM /FM 8 trans .. air cond .. pwr. ~,. IEACH UASIHG «>19West.erly, Suite 203 Newport Beach 133-9150 BUY OR LEASE trk, ~ef.y low' miles. New steering & ALL have OMWPonct..924 tires, Xlnt cond. S3100. LOWmlles. Cl67VAU). ""'° 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f or approxl ... at•ly S3&-278S. S36-840S. SA VE S $I 500 to $2000 VW•DATSUN•TOYOT A stfcbr pric•. Any cood. · Top cash q • a " t i t/ . C a I 631-8 7 paid 673-3465 644-2526, to 5. ---------1 Yoho 9772 COHHELL CHEVRO LET 'X'l ll.1rt••• 11 .. 1 n IST \ \H :-. \ SU-1 200 71POUWAGON ..,.. .... 5q11,..·· V8, aut omatic, pwr. 73 Pinto Wagon. x.lnl cood. Lo ml. Auto trans . $1fll0/best ofr. 962-31.30. 66 911. Must see to ap· ••••••••••••••••••••••• preoate. Xlnt a.n & out. VOLVO --------Ma.keolfer. :i81·9153 "73. V-3, air. Runs treat. $3050/bsl ofr. Gr~al steering, fact ory air ~Pinto Wagon V-6. a uto cood .. AM/FM stereo. tram. 20mpg. low miles. luuaa~ rack & ONLY S2900 /offer . (7 14 > a,ooomilesl (107VOZ>. ~ after s p.m. & we ekends. o r (714> GHOOO, ext. 307 wkdayS. .t Porsche 1965 Cpe Con· SALES, SEttVICE Cond. Call Kathy aft cours. Compl restored. t AMOLEASIHCi 1:00,546-1281 THEODORE ROBINS onJy4000ml, Blk/Blk int. OVERSE~ DELIVERY Must see $10,950 <BBi EXPERTS PP aft 7 pm. 714·6'4-so39 ·75 Porsche 914 1 8. Cop- per Appear grp. 1-'m FM stero cass. Mags. Top cond. P .P . $7 ,000. ~ Porsche 1965 356SC. Super clean. super fast black beauty w/super 90 cng, disk brks. AM/F M cass & all papers. Bsl orr over $7500. Afl6 pm. 498·3427 ~ 9755 IEARLE llCE VOLVO 1966Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 646-9303 540.9467 ORANGE COUMTY VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO 1..a11test Volvo Dealer ln Orange County I BUY or LEA.SE DIRECT ···:~iif.~ .. l .... ~,-.. ;-~-:-~-L-~--~-~- Good inventory in stock. A hei 750 2011 Hurry while they lasl! na m - MtlAClE M.UDA/IEMAULT 2150 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 645-5700 Mus t Sacri fi ce ! 197S Volvo. 164 E. 4 d r. auto. sn/rf. amf(m cass. air , new llres. 46,000 ml. $.S400 673-6.S22 76 LeCar : 16,000 miles. 7S Volvo Slalion Wgn. $3200/best ofr., SD. rf.1 31,000 ml, loadf:d. $4,750. :>42·3973 days 4t4· 16la 714-646-0381 eves. ....._-Usecl""'------ 1978 llHAULT ••••••••••••••••••••••• GTI. DILUXE AMC 9905 SI 00 DOWN ·······i;;6·;;.c······ pluatadrbcense MATADOIZDI. SLOUJ per month for 48 u---. A· .. -Uc, fac· months on a pproved ...... ..,.. ,....,.._ credit . APR -12.98%. lory a ir cond., pwr. Oeler r e d p ay m e nt steertn& f& brakett, radio, ~-.... ~ .... oo <'""""'..,.") beater f& ONLY 32,000 .. ~.. · .,.,_.... · mi1tt on th.la JH Saver. sh price ls <seaNlO). 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOVAI FORD 10b0 HARSOA BLVD (O~IA M(<,A b-17 0010 '73 Wagon . 4 spd. Top shape. Real Gas Saver. SJZ7S. 64U327 '74 Wagon. 4 spd. 2 car. Xlnt cond. 76.000 mi. Oloice of 10. All colors, 2 ....., Ml M4llle offw. Sl6SO. 49f-3280. doors or 4 doors. AJI with 75 Torlno 4 dr. 49M ml. ~ 9960 automaUc, pwr. steer· _Sbarp __ oo __ -4127 _____ ••••••••••••••••••••••• log., radios & most have air cood. An example : (913RDB>. Now only $3696 COHMHL C HEVROLET 'K.':'i 11."'••r II' I •IS i\\!~'>\ 546-1 200 im Ford Country Squi 77,000 Miies. 1 owner, rack, air . I pasaenge 80. Cal 1752-0080 bet. 8-S JS78 R.ancbero GT. Fully '64 Plymouth va Fury. RIH. RuDI great. $350. Call 615-4834 'S Fury Ill, 84000 mt Very clean. good transp. S87S. Pvt pty. 846-2U9 k>aded. AM /FM 8 \rack stereo, Ult wheel, cruise control. 8 w ay power '67 St.aUoo Wagoo. Good seals, power windows. tra ns portation. good Br ougha m Inter ior , tires. Needs body work_, c limatic control AM. GX>.2179 Rura1 Pl.C.M. Low mileage. Priced to ~ 9965 ---------1 sell. PP7Sl-8967 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '61CORTINA. '86 PonUac Wagon. Runs Ruoning cood. $2SO. x I n l . V e r y c I e a n . 642--0886 S58S/Firm. P.P. 751·4107 eves. New 1979 Ford T urbo --------- 900 So. Coast Hwy. Muataq. all extras, 3 '61 Catalina. Ruoa great. •-leech mo. ol<t . Must sell. 56,000~. !!!ow~. bat---.--ReflD&DCe or take over tel')'·-~ • .._.__,.. ---49•4--l•l•l•l--•I pa,ymenu . 11000 down. tn __ V_eo_t_ur_a-xln-t.-cond--.• P.P.«""300 new Ures, runs a real, CANICEW,AGOH '58 Ford Faltlaoe Vic-M.50/beat olr.seeatmB 1916 model-9 passenger . toria, Gd cond. runs well. Qmer St. C.M. MUST V8. automatic, air coOd.. 2 dr. es.ooo mt Beat oCr. SEE or call U S-H 21 Cg 1teerin~, fc:· win--.nd Grutfa_mib'car. b....:.'""·u1r. ll:s; Ult ..,. LTD Pwr 1leerin1 n I ,..., tt70 w .,..,.1 er se con.ro • -brakes AC Mint ••••••••••••••••••••••• rack 1r radio-Loaded &r ..-• • : read)'~aot <SUNXMJ l"Clftd. Huny woo t lu t. '7.11.p/b, pis, air cond. PtUCm TO Sa&. SMSO. 75Hlt2. 1\111/FM stereo. runs Id. COMH~ll CH EVRO LET '"'.,.,., 11 111"•1 I\, ' . $1&'1S. 640-9099 alt. 12PM ·• Waion, auto, air cond. Great f.29 en«lne .. Need-~Clean " loaded wtth lnl C'S trana. lltnor body extras. S4.tCIO or best of. 'Mlrll. '450. 831-3'08 fet. 5ill..311!16 -~~~~~~~-· DUT SP<>nCOUf'l ully f ac t o ry UIOoed 1736REVl '75 BUICK S«Yl.AH Hatchback. V·6. air. powe r steering & brakes. AM/FM. row miles 1980MBYl SUINtY.AH V-8 . automatic. carpet. parie11ng, mags. hi back seats. Port hQles C 1114581 rtCICW .ct CAMf'lll SHB.L R o t ary engine, AM /FM s t e reo f826"0Xl 52295 173 FORD COUIUH •d CAMl'H SHB.l Fu ll y fa c t o r y eau1ooed (54376S> $3972 plus tu &c license Miracle THEODORE • I • I . ,, I - \ 546-1 200 ..,. 2 Cir. Graoida. 8 C)'I. .... 9974 ~W111i,c,;::::::;;::~ low ml. reclinlnl bucket •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ~· ....... 2.CiOHarbor Blvd .. C.M. 645-1700 ROBIN S FORD ,'1 t,rl tt/\Pf\f )I-./ l\l V(l (f)'.J1'. N'f\A ,, L 1 IH1't) ....... 97H .,_ HIO ······················· ...................... . '71Shadow, wl\lte, low ml. 'TT Electra, all exlraa, IWJtOC)(, vnyl top, Extra .,ad. clean cond. '5,"51 aharp. $27,000 6Sl·12M CallArt days m-4940 eves. ~.,_, 673-1181 A • • # -.~ •• c-llMtl, amtrm, $3750. Call "'T1 VEOA Wagon. Auto. """" own!r_. r.llate .._ JI.Int cond. aoo mi under Wap. \jQ Urea, trans, WIT A steal at SSS50 body,btallesf&paiot. Re· '17 nrebird va, Sliver, eo.ai7ae.. · ceet partial eea over -man y e atr a1. PP. halll.f100.59-G85. 5*5414 alter 5. Let'• '72 Wacon. N•• Urea, 119 Olevell 350 2 cir ai ..,, brat•. Ruot " . lo«*• All/FM, :ew brake~: 11'75 Ford LTD. atereo • ...-.suoo1otr.MMNC. ve r y 1ood ce>nd . AC, 1ood condition ,~ IOOd ruoai.lll $1U O/m a ke p fle r . '2700, 751·1515 daya, $5K ml N:IO. 552-J'IJ7 after6PM -.....--.iaaftSPll. . . '\ -.... --~ -.-... .. . .... . .. ' February 7 and 8, 1979 j' I ' 2 LOVIN' -Supplement to Coat LIFE, Febru1ry 7, 1979 1nd Dilly Pilot. Febru.ry I , 1979 .. Sunshine Company NB Boutique Reducei Gift Prices Up to 50 Percent Sunshine Company# boutique in Newport Beach is bavinl a Valentine's Day sale witb prices reduced up to 50 percenL "We want men to come down and buy our fashions for their sweethearts. ••we ge t a lot of male customers, even though we have only women's clothing,,. said owner Brynn Enevoldaen. Sunshine Co. ls a boutique featuring junior ana contem· porary sportswear. The shop also carries II.ft and household items and· antique furniture at 2630 Avon St., Newport Beach. Brands on sale for Valentine's Day include: Young Edwardian dresses and Chemin De Fer and Bis pants. .. Lots and lots of tops also will be on sale," she said. Most customers at Sunshine Co. are young ladies or mothers buying for their daughters. .. Even though we 're off the beaten track, we sell a lot of spring and summer casual fashions because people are so active in sports and health," she aaid. Sunsblne Co. is near the post office and Mariner 's Mile in Newport Beach. Magic Carpet Creates Romance Sunshine Company in Newport Beach includes dolll fn a Valentine's Day sale, with items reduced up to 50 percent Lovin' Flower• The mysterious, romantic at· mosphere of the Orient la available at The Magic Carpet. The Magic Carpet, at 1128 South Coast Highway ln the Village Faire, Laguna Beach, la "built around" Oriental-Geslgn rugs imported from Europe. Ta~tries. pillows 8Dd wall hangings are offered. Owner Josepn Benjoya said all rugs are made of wool, a fa bric known for its vibfant col· ors and long wear. The rugs have an advantage over carpeting in that they are ~t nailed to the floor and can be kept in the family, even after moving. "The designs are timeless," Benjoya said. •'They are works of a rt that can be bung on the wall." E= from Wti.,!'°"' to 'mothera ~jQJI V=t flowert. Ro~'s Ga~ ol.Ne"!I'°"! l.• .B ~,~~~··~~~.~~'./~ ..... ~·J , . . ,.., __ ,,,. ·-·~·· • iW '' .......... Rugs are available in. a number of shapes and sizes. The value of these rugs bas appreciated in the past years and prices are exp ected to elimb. Beltjoya said he still is able to off er tremendous discounts all year round. For more imformation call 494-1643. -$. ••• , •... DAILY PILOT Februery 7 I I, 1t1't Robert N. Weed l"rftldtnt o9lld f'uell$11ff George A. Lektel ,.,._lon~r 8pedel Secflon1 Steff: JoM Dodd, Jim Pond Ind Leny SHvldr• Pttotoer•ph• bJ Berber• Cery, Virginie Perk• Ind John Dodd ..... " " • 11 t? • " .. • • ,. • u a n • , .... .. , . • a ti • ' It ,. "· I ( .. * Supplement to Coast LIFE , February 7, 1979 and Daily Pilot. February 8, 1979-LOVIN' 3 Dodo Bird Stands Ready To Be Romanced In Gallery By JIM POND SM<lal ~ti-Wrltff A scven·foo( dodo stands ready to be romanced in a Laguna Beach art gallery. · Sher wood Gallery, at 1118 South Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, carries only original art pieces, inc ludin g t he soft sculpture dodo bird and other "whimsical" art. . "We're a gallery that em· pbasizcs original works of art," 'Enagcr Donna ·Gourley said. rwood Gallery is attempt· ing t eestablish the reputation for original artwork for which Laguna Bea ch once was famous. Original art by several promi· nent artists is displayed. Pen.and-ink watercolors by Scott Sutton and airbr ush space scenes by Peter Herr are a few examples of the offerings, Life-size Pnimal Ttgures made from sculptured macrame by Judy Dudourdlea{ are available. Sherwdod Galleries also has pottery. Artwork prices range from $8 to $2,000. Call 497 ·2668. l '-.•, .. -~-~ Oriental rugs from Magic Carpet in Laguna Beach provide a romantk and mysterious atmosphere. See related story on page 2. FOR YOUR VALENTINE a. DWrOrtd HfHJJf $361.SO b. OienOnd Studs $155.00 0. Rne .... ction"' dlMDttd~ d. .41tOllllweiotrt '*""""' '6f 0.00 & 14K~gold ONQt ... dietrOrtd bel'fll I 1360.00 Give her your love. And a beautiful time. .. - ..... 'I 4 LOVIN'..:... Supplement tp Coast LIFE, F..,ary 7, :1979 and Dally Piiot, February e. 1979 * Home Shown Cures Lovers' Nightmare Decorating for romance in the home should be a dream - or, at least, not a nightmare . "A room may look perfect in a magazine, but sometimes your dream room can turn into a nightmare when you try to de- corate it yourself. • "Somehow, the fabrics lOok so much better in the store than they do in your room," said a spokesperson for Home Shown Inc. Home Sbown has the answer tor lhal nightmare. , With the firm's special house call service, a homeowner chooses fabrics, wall cover- ings, floor treatments and dr~ries in the hc>me. '''These materials olend beauUfully to make your home the showplace of your dreams. •'No more going from store to store searching for home decorating needs,'' she said. Vice president and decorator for Home Shown, Virginia . Hanley. comes to a home 'in her van. · She carefully selects samples from all major designers and manuf'acturers "to help make' your dream come true." She alao works with builders to coordinate decoration of a new or remodeled home. Call 752-2775 for an appoint- ment with •'the decorator at your door." f I - -.--1 ( .Garment District Thinks -·~ ,~ Lovers 'Should Have Time' The Garment District thinks lovers should have more time to spend together. The Garment District can save the buyer time and trouble when looking for wholesale clothes. "People drive all the way to L.A. for the exact discounts we h ave here,·· owner Yvonne Hellyer said. · The Garment Di strict is at • 1927 Harbor Blvd., between Bay Street and 19th Street in Costa M,~ "My garments aren't second hand," she said. "All 3,000 items are first rate.'' Merchandise at the Garment District includes: -Red fox and fur jackets. -Dresses. pants and blouses. -One of a kind suits. There are five Garment Dis· trict locations throughout Orange County. . Call 642-0051 for further m:- formation. ~ ~ppl~':flenl to Coast L~FE, Feblu~ry 7, 1979 and f?ally Pilot, Ffbruaty 8, 1979 -1.0VIN' S . . - Gifts for Him· arid Her F.ree engraving with purchase of any engrava.ble merchandise from our Fine Jewelry Department.' 24 in. 14K Gold Serpentine Chain 14K Gold Charm Holder Norell -The Romantics • Cologne concentrate spray and 32.95 s32 scented sachet pillow .................................. $10. • Perfume bath powder ..................................... $15. • Cologne spray . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....................... 13.50 -; Perfume body Lustre .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . . . $10. Nini Ricci -L' Air du Temps -Perfume V4 oz ..................... 18.50 'h oz. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .$32. 1 oz...... . ............... $60. Women's Tri-Coior Pastel Sleepwear Four fashion selections. Long and short gowns, short sleeve and sleeveless. S $ Baby doJJ s. 100>/o nyJ.Q.n_ ..................... 8 to 12 Clairol® One Road . Compact · Dryer Only 21.99 Clairol® Deluxe Dry Hairsetter Only 21.99 Only 34.99 C~ Foot Fbc9f9 Hydro-therapy foot bath to retax thoH tired, overworked teett Feeturee twde f« easy carrying. • 5032 10:::::,~'"· ir~CPenne~' FASHION ISLAND ......... , ., STOREONLY "•·~ p.m. I:) fiA9tON 15t.ANO 144-H1S 12 Nooft to ( P·"'· fZ'.1 NEWPORT CENTER , 't ·-. .. "~ 111& Scailti Cool!~• l(9r0 hoc;tl C.A • ~tie V1llOgo r°" • (71A) 497.2668 "'~ ............. ...._._............... .. ... .. I 8 LOVIN' -Supplement to Coast LIFE. February 7, 1979 and Oalty Pilot, February 8. 1979 Couples Find Valentine Gifts at Nettle Creek Sho Nettle Creek Shop features gifts for couples. King· and queen -size be ds preads are on sale in February. The large selection, regularly priced up to $260, is marked down to $99.95. "We also have a fabric for couples," said Martha Kaylor, decorator for the Fashion 1sland, Newport Beach, shop. Eyelet, a fabric which used to be considered a "little girl's .. fabric, now is bought by men and women. Eyelet also is used in many popular fashions. "Home fabrics are very much related to personal fabrics. ••Eyelet used to be hard to get because of fashions. It still is used by the fashion industry, but American production ls catching up," she said. Nettle Creek Shop features .. nine st yles of Valentine's Day pillows in interesting heart de· signs." "They're fun," said owner Brue~ Anderson. Although 95 percent of customers at Nettle Creek are female, many gifts for men are stocked. These gifts include : -Beach towels . .. -Highball glasses -Bedroom items with a nautical theme . Decorator Martha Kaylor expreases the Valentine's apirit with pillowa from Nettle Creek Shop in Fashion Island. MOON RAKER Tllttt •• """ le Ille """" .. .... "" -Jilt "" ,......,. .. .... ., ,,.,... ..... Tlln\ .................. "" ........ ....., lltlplllllty, Ille caalll ....... If 1111 """· tM ,.._.,, dlfltM ..met -tllt ....,. ~ "' ,.. Cllftfwt tllCI total •1111111. e GORDA LIZ e llEUHlfl 90o Baysldt Dr . Newpon BNch ?51 E Coast Hwy Newpoi1 Buen 675-5111 673·1505 e BAXTER'S STIIEE'T 1555 Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa ~7 MacArthur BIV<t . HtwPQtl Beach . ~9672 S4l>-2475 e MOONIWCEll e 11£UIEN E. LIE 185-42 MacArtllur BMI 11~111t 151 E Coast Hwy • Newpoil '*'h 833•91'1 675·5790 'Y Flf Wltl ........ l111. .. ltlll • - a11J 1111.tt a 1250 gl/t C.r1/l1:al• R.J...,,..11. •' .,., W.11c/JIP/...S,.,. ~wC>t-• Loo11ra 8eodl CA 0 1n tievi1io;.r0tt , (7WJAW2008 ..... .._................ . .......... • ~Tiffany-style Lamps Add ,,. Romance and Are On ·sale ''Our Tiffany-style lamps are very romantic," said Anne Annesaddington, spokeswoman for the Tiff any House in Santa Ana. A Valentine's Day sale on "virtually everything" means 35· to SO.percent savings at Ti!· fany House. Tiff any House has been in Santa Ana for 20 years, three of them at 2218 N. Main St. Most business at Tiffany House is wholesale. "Sometimes we over-order for restaurants such as Swensen's Ice Cream Parlor . .. We take the extra merchan dise and sell it to the public at reduced rates," she said. A decorator service is one of the "main attractions" of Tif· !any House. "We have custom coloring and, because we manufacture the lamps, we off er prompt service and good quality," she said All lamps at Tiff any House are hand-crafted "They are very Intricate -some take 40 hours to make," she said. Ken Townsend and Anne Annesaddtngton take advantage of the ro~nttc atmosphere ot the Tilfany Home tn Santa Ana. '23800 'I 6800 MICROWAVE OVENS SALE co ... IAILY FOi , A COMPLITI ..-.&. ILICTllC LAUMHY 1M ASunLIAS4141o ... s493 .... ,.... . . v111age t-aire ~noppes •'494-2071 MOile tt o <»'I ~ 'lf1oJ &..OVE w.11 ~ roroei W'" N moat ~<Pt bm roeo °' :i'Ht.k\NOOO C..AlilRY 1114 !loolt'I C.00.11"'1w0f • lCIOJ"O 8ecxh CA • In Ille V11toge for • (714) 4Q7~ ~ ~.-..--. p;g • ,.,, • -•• I' • .· .. 8 LOVIN' -Supplement to Coast LIFE, February 7. 1979 and Daily Piiot: Febru.ry 8, 1979 * ~ . . ... Hope Chests From Dicker and Wicker Make Great Presents Hope chests m ake great pres· ents for ma r riage-bound women. But they're even nicer when they also can be used as a coffee table. And they're nicer still when they are on sale. ··our rattan chests can be used as hope chests or coffee tables. and they 're on sulc," said owner Holly Habcrm.ehl of Dicker and Wicker in Tustin. \ Dicker and Wicker features :·al~ kinds of goodies," includ· ing : Potpourri Vanity mirror!> Doll furniture Sofas -Spring purses and hats . "We ha ve ever ything -we're m aking Dicker a nd Wicker into a one -stop-s hoP.ping place like a coul)try store, ·she said. Dicker and Wi cker is .. hard to find , but worth the trip." The store is at 1622 Moulton Parkway. Customers s hould park in front and wa lk to the back ot the industrial complex. ''C us t o m e r s s ho uld call 731 -4636 for ~)>eci fic directions ... :,he said. Much of the business done by Dicker and Wicker comes from wom en who host wicker pa rties. Interested women should call for details. Apparel Shop 'Wants to b e Valentine ' By LARRY SAAV E DRA S-1~1 Se< hot" Wtlt•• ·'Candie<' Lee wants to be vour Valentine .. · The women 's apparel shop 1~ m a rking prices down 30 to 70 percent for the occasion . "We havC' spring fashions in pa s t e ls and light , cotton dresses." s ~id m anager Ginger Creswell. Candice Lee covers a wide va riety of s tyles in dresses. skirts and pants at the store at 1825 Newport Blvd. in Costa "Our s traight·lcg pant~ go well with high-heel shoes.'· she said. Store hours arc from 10 a m to 6 p.m. Monda~ through Satur-day . · CHIC Edition of Orange County Living Magazine coming M ar ch 14 and 15 Young lover s enjoy the comfort of a wicker chair from Dicker and Wicker in 'fustin. • · Mesa. in the DAILY PILOT I CASUAL JUNIOR CLOTHING * QFTS FDR HtM AND HE.R LARGE SELECTION OF TOPS * AMERICAN OAK ANTIQUES PEWTER * PANTS AND SKIRTS • HOME AND GOURMET ITEMS VALENTINE ~ale Now in Progress -GREAT SAVINGS on dresses. tops and pants -come see the Selection. * .. * • VILl.A~E IA TH $2.00 wo rth of Village Bath Products ,.. with any purchase of S 10.00 or more as long as supp- ly lasts. (Sale items not included) v111age t-aire :;noppes ··•9'4·2071 ' • " -- Wtnd6or Wand~or Wtnd6or W1ndaor W•nd6 (IA -............ Windsor J .... Presents i\ ()1\ 1~1011 of lu di h1'. Slaotc"n f•• a Seti. Oftlrat~. ff•rel ,..r'"' - Mf"ft ••tr. e -= a. $ Q ., . . Andrma TharolcUon models Duco Doti top and Sanseam pants from J. C. Penney Co. in FCJlhion Island. •I J. C~ Penney Says '/ Love You' With Spring Sportswear Style J . C. PeMey Co. has a Cashion that says "I love you." "Qpr Duco Dots Cashion gives JO'fl. sweetheart. a new look' ln aportawear. "It brings her out of every. day humdrum and into spring," aald llJrtb Mauvals, general merchandise mana1er of the P'uhlon Island shop. Duco Doti feature• .. sheer I eminlnlty Ill tops with ttnJ dots to dreaa up San1eam1 tailored panta.'' The f ashlon also Includes long-lleeVed shJrts "trimmed In whlte to be reminiscent of " ~retta voun1... 1 • •< . .. Duco Dota colors are Wac and aqua watercolor shades, cl111lc black with white dots, or red with black dots. •'The flair of fa1blon1 sprinkled with dots says •11ove you' In tbe nattering way they fit," lbe said. Flowen from J. C. Penney also "will please a lady for ValenUne'1 Day." "We have s&>rini dre11e1 wkb bouqueu ot ftoral prlata, ID a variety ol llzet, for Jwtion. "Our border prints rill au. over flower dealam allo em· pb11l ze tbe color of , ~!'!!!m•J.t• ~· b1---~~.!!!ll ' .. ~ * Suppfement to CoMt LIFE, February 7, 1979 and Delly Piiot, ~ry •• 1979 -LOVIN' 9 'Woven 4fury <;Ja,brics by 13arbizon "ROSEMARY" ~.~.l ' $20.00 \. ! ., ... .; i ~~ "RENEE" Shift Gown Slzee P. S. M. l. $18.00 Slze XL $19.00 ..... .,., ...... .. "ROBIN" Short Coat Stzes~.M.L $21.00 Perfection of the ttmeleet beluty of hand made madlera embroidery ii the Blrblzon llgnlture on the vokee of thft lovetv 1leepw91r group. - February lingerie Sale St8r1I Frfday .. . .... " ... -- Ill& Sovtn Cooll HQnwov • l~ Beocll CA • It\ lie Vllloge ro.1 • (11A) 497 2068 . .._ ....... _ ............ . , .... e . .. 10 LOVIN' -Supplement to Cont LIFE, February 7, '1979 and Dally Pilot, February 8. 1979 Kevin"Barnes performs an Original Singing Telegram at an office party. nEttL€)1':cR€€k S H 0 P King and Queen DECORATOR QUALITY BEDSPREADS VALENTINE flLLOW "LOVE" appliqued to lemon, slate, blush, chocolate, lime, camel navy whit•'°' ecoent 110.00 ' . Lovers Give Belly Dancer By JOHN DODD -lalS.CU....•dlter Most people don't do a "pseudo strip·teasing belly dance" for their Valentine. Most don't even go as far as writing and singing a song, or even playing the banjo. Many. however. send these gifis to their lovers for Valen· .tine's Day. Original Singing Telegrams of Newport Beach offers all these services. .. Our specialty ls the belly gram," owner Kevin Barnes said. ''This takes two people -a drummer and a professional belly dancer. •'The drummer dresses in a messenger's red cap and coat with a caftan gown and turban underneath. "He goes toa restaurant or par- ty. plays his drum and sings a song. and he guides in the dancer. "After the song, sne <foes a pseudo strip-tease, unravel! from a tapestry, and does 811 eight-to ten.:.minute belly dance. ---"She wraps her scarves around the neck of the recipient of the present, and tries to 'rib' him a little bit," be said. The "ribbing" is funny but in good taste, he added. Free flowers and a specially. written song greet ValenUne'1 Day singing telegram recip- ients. ··If our songs don 't befit an oc · casion. we have a staff of pro· f essional song writers," he said. Original Singing Telegrams is open every day, all day. "Peo· pie can call us at 642·2697 any time. ··A lot of our business is last minute people looking for panic gifts,·· he said. A banjo gram includes one person who su:igs and 1;>lays ba~· jo, and a magic gram 1s a magi- cian and his assistant. A personallze\d telegram always comes with the singing_, gram. "They can say anything ' you want them to. . "Sometimes the people don't want them read out loud because they are too personal or mushy," he said. A mechanical monkey chat- ters and applauds at every performance as a trademark of Original Singing Telegrams. "We 're into doing crazy things -we 're thinking about usin~ real monkies. .. , even sang to a goose. "It was a pet the Huntington Beach City Council threatened to take away from someone. "The Daily Pilot, channel two news and the New York Times covered the event," he said. DIAMOND SPECIALS 0 ' WHOLESALE Ll MART "PRICES OR BffiER-NOW IN ORANGE COUNTY ILUE DIAMOND CTR. STONE 11..- ·~~ 6'4 ct. Baguette Diamonds .___,~ 6'4 ct. Brilllant Diamonds l lUI PIAI SHAN eoc:l.,... DIAMOND CTI. 1 • iow wt 13000001~1 11175 150 s24so !Co-.1 U•& '129 l~l 11300 '675 l~l •m 1 120 (~) 1375 1 175 l~l . B STORE HOURS • W-' Mon.-Fri. M "' Sat.10-5 SmollDeolor JEWELRY lnqulrlts ln~lltd MANUFACTURER'S OUTLET 11,1 BLOCKS !!!9 • WEST OF TUSTIN POST OFFICE -101 Wtlt flnt Stnet .. UC.... IHI IU·4072 > \ 111& Scull'I Coast~ • l(91r'O hoctl CA• In ltle l/llklge fOf • (114) 497-2668 ~ ............. ~· ........... -~ ( "Amira,, bril1htens an office party with a "belly gram" from Origtnal Singing Telegrnms. . . $250 Will Sweeten a Valentine At Westcliff Plaza Tuesday A $250 gift certlllcate '"11 sweeten the Valentine's glft·bayinl eKperlence of one of the muy who .rely on WeskUff Plaza merchants for shopplag selection and convenience. Taeeclay, Feb. 13 tile Westcllff Piasa Merchants A11oclatloa will coadud a drawln1 for a $251 1Ut eertlllcate redeemable at any ~re In .the center at lnlne Avenue and 17th Street, Newport Beach. Sboppen may re1lster for tbe drawing at any Westcllff Plaza store, untU Feb. 13. ' .. Supplement to Coast LIFE, February 7, 1979 and Dally Piiot, February 8, 1979 -LOVIN' 11 You Can't Miss with these Specials from DICKER & WICKER ~ RA TT AN TRUNKS Victorian Headboard Major·catalog price: ....... '5911, Double t7911 a...._t7911 Dicker 'n Wicker'• Speca.18• ....... 124" Double831 11 OUMnl64" Heart Side Chair Major catalog price $64.95 Dicker 'n Wicker'• Speclal Sale s249s . .. ~ .,,,., -j~r' .. . . · .• ..--- Medium 21x10x17 s7500 mall and large sizes available 111& Soul!\ Com! Hq\wOy • l~.ll'IO 8tMXn CA • In ~Vt log(t For • (714) 497 ~ .... • \ .. I ' • _ .. • ti LOVIN' -Supplement to CoMt I.WE. PebrUatY 7, 1879 and Dally Pltot. FebrUatY I , 1179 *. Precious People \ · Kirk JeWelerS F8C.f ur~ Gifts to Express Love Love is precious . .. Precious stones and metals are a heavy thing to give as a present. because it means a person is precious to someone. "Valentine's Day .h~s been around a long time, bot jewelry bas been around even longer,·· Kirk Jewelers' manager Ken Smith said. Wedding sets, pendants and ruby hearts will be popular for Valeotine•s Day. Watches also will be popular. "But a watch says you like . . someone -a diamond says you love someone," he s aid. Most cus tomers a t Kirk Jew e l e r s are from the neighborhoods near the Harbor Center, Costa Mesa sto,e. "It never ceases to amaze m<' how many local c ustom er~ come here -they don't want to go to a major shopping center "We've been here for 20 years, and we have second generation customers," be said Kirk J ewel ers is open 10 a.m to 5:45 p.m. Monday through Saturday and to 8:45 p.m. Fri day. Young gentleman uptases hi3 love with a white gold, diamond and sapphire pendant from Kirk Jeweler• in Harbor Center. Costa Mesa. "We also do minor repairs . and we send out major repairs." he said. Say., low you" with an elegant Roger's ere· atlon, our epedal -~ .. touch teDs ~· really care. Phone YG'.8' order now, that way VoU'll get aactly what lhe likes and 90'.I won't < fcqed VALENTINE FLOWERS . ' I . •BODY Ill •BODY MEETS OUR LOW PRICES ---. . OM I 000/o PURE WOOL AREA RUGS fi4's39 cow. OUI SAU IAU ra4' '" s 39 4'd' ... " ••·•r 14' 179 ............ 4tt 349 rr.t'-. Ut " r.._. 14' 179 .. •••lliAc:..ttfwr . .. ,.. .... ,. I pl .... 4f4olMI •• ....... 1113 Soull'I Coosr 1"11r~-<>; • IOguno ~ CA • In ltie Vllloge rair • (714) l.07 2668 I ., l -. • I I ' I 1 * Supplement to Coast LIFE. February 7, 1979 and Dally Pilot, February 8, 1979-LOVIN' 13 Racquetball outfits and equipment from Woolworth's in South Coast Plaza make excellent Valentine gifts for bo th sexes. Woolworth's Celetlrates Having Served Lovers For 100 Years Woolworth's has ser\'Cd lovers for 100 years. Frank W. Woolworth opened the first Woolworth 's, then known as the "Great 5¢ Store .. ,. in Utica. New York on Feb. 22. 1879 ~ Wa~hington's birthday. Woolworth's in South Coast Plaza will be celebrating its centennial, along with the 5,600 othl'r stores around the globe. The store continues to puss a long the sa m e va lu es lo customers that it has since opening. "Woolworth was one of the first retail merchants to prac· lice volume buying directl y from manufacturers and pass the savings on to his customers . ·'The prc~ctice. helps ser ve the needs of todii¥'s Woolworth's customers ," a s pok espe r son said . ADDRESS, TILES .. I. A VALENTINE GIFT FOR THEIR NEW HOME OR FOR YOUR HOME • 5STYLES fdwn-~1es 1150 So. Coast Hwy.• Laguna Beach Village Faire Shoppes •'4'94-2071 Vein Connects Ring, Heart "Lovers wear rings on the left ring finger because a vein travels Crom there to the heart," owner J . C. Humphries of J . C. Humphries Jewelers in Costa Mesa said. "Most of our business is in dia monds and gold," he said, adding "we have a nice assort· ment of diamond and gold hearts for Valentine's Day." J . C. Humphries has been at 1823 Newport Blvd. for 33 years. ·'I reeently sold a wedding set to a woman whose mother bought her wedding set here. "We're· a family store -our kind of store slowly is disap- pearing from the American market," he said. All jewelry at J . C. Hum- phries is quality -none is cos-tume. 1 " We £e at u t e a 11 p r i c e categories, from $20 to ~.ooo. ·· he said. .. Prices aren't '·exorbitant" at the store because, not bein~ in a shopping center, "theres no real high overhead." "We a re certified by the American Gem Society, so we maini,in very high standards. •"I'm a certified gemologist and 1 have a full-time jeweler and watch maker,'' he said. Investment diamonds attract customers to J .C. Humphries. Humphries considers any large stone an investment. "We offer fri endly and sincere service six days a week, from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m .," he said. This heart from_.!. C. Humphries Jewelers in Costa Mesa con- tains more than t~o karats in diamonds. ... .... t'I Scnl9 OICiQl(t Med 0 ~Whal f«:>. 141'1 Isl Molle 11 o aa., IQf1'1eCne yOAJ lOVf ""'k never ~ With ll'lt tnOS1 uni~ Gd! Idea Of SH{R'WOOO ~UERV 1118 Scull'I Coca! ~l!QtlwO't • l(91no eeocn CA • tn tie VIII~'°'' • (114) 497 ·2668 ............. ..... . ._....,,.,,,... . \ • - 14 LOVIN -Supplement to Coast LIFE. February 7 1979 and D11ly Pilot. February 8. 1979 * Lovers' Needs Still Filled When Reinert 's Department Store opened in 194~, young couples in love found what they needed there. Now their grandchildren shop at Reinert's, which is celebrat· ing its 30th anniversary in Costa Mesa. Reinert 's, at 1816 Newport Blvd ., carries men's and women's fashions. "Our sp~ing fa shions are light, bright and feminine." said co-owner Peggy Reinert. Jn women's fashions name brands carried include: Graff ·Callfornlawear, Koret, Donavon-Galvani, Jo Hardir and Pendleton. Men's labels in clude: Arrow, Munsingwear, Lancers, Mr. CalUornla, Pacific Trails and Pendleton. Women 's ling erie by Vassarette and Gossard also is available. Reinert 's gift shop carries china, crystal, dishes and cos· tu me jewelry. Convenient parking ls available behind the downtown Costa Mesa store on Newport Blvd. Store hours are 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday Reinert's is closed Sunday. ' Love Doesn't End at Age 30· Love docsn 't stop at 30. Patricia's is a garment shop designed for people around 30 years old, according to owner Al Heller. •'When Patricia's started 30 years ago,'' Heller said, "every Marlene Bergdahl models an <1111 ultra suede jumper by Abe Schrader from Patricia's in Santa Ana. shop had great service, like the old days.'' The personnel are geared to -g ive advice and he lp the customer in any way. Sizes in suits, coats, dresses and gowns run from 6 to 20. ''Women tire of wearing pants during the spring season. This season will see many pastel de· signs on dresses." Patricia's is at 1401 N. Main St. in Santa Ana. Store hours are 9:30 a.rn. to 5:30 p .m. Tuesday through Saturday. Call 543-9449 for information. Reinert's Department Store pleases Valentines with lingerie by Gilead. Tunta Cordial Occasion ••• into a Loving Affair. Add silky smoo1hncs\ and molsrurc 10 your skin \\hh a loving massagt. Body Liqueur' For Lovtrs tnhancc rhc stnsalions Of a rtlB\lng massa&t by adding cklicious oi" 10 1hc a~c old an. $8.95 ~· ..... VALLEY~ · card & gift store 38 FASHK>N l~LAND •OPPOSITE PENNY'S • 844·2014 • Supplement to Coast LIFE, February 7, 1979 and Dally Piiot, February 8, 1979 -LOVIN' 15 • Customers Become Friends ·But Jeweler Wants Lovers Customers at A and B West Jewelers becom e "good friends." But for Valentine's Day, the store wants lovers. . .. I invite lovers from all walks of life to examine our Valentine specials," co·owner Edward Beran said. The store s pecializes ln custom·made jewelry at 108 W. First St. ln Tustin. Many of the pieces are de· signed by co-owner Edward An· don Ian. .. Because of that, A and B West lowers the price of, Jewelry, and many of the customers become good friends . "I have a wide variety of rings, both unmounted and mounted, and I off er the perfect gift for someone's love on Valentine's Day," Beran said. Store })ours are from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. Dunlap 'Adds Personal Touch' •'We add a personal touch to the low prices on our major ap- pliances and televisions," said Bill Mallory. owner of Dunlap Ap- pliances in Fountain Valley. Dunlap gave this personal touch to customers for 31 rears in Costa Mesa, before moving to '10960 Talbert Ave. in im. "We offer the local neighborhood service of a small operation, but with the values of a big discount store. .. We're a family.operated store with competetive prices," he said. Mallory moved Dunlap Ap· pliances·to create more parking and merchandise space . .. "We've expanded with a new built·in department. "Built-in appliances include ovens, ranges and dishwashers, and I have a tip for interested customers. ''They should bring the exact measurements of the space they allocate for a new appliance, because appliances come in many different sizes," he said. Many customers like to put microwave ovens with a new standard oven in the space of the old standard oven. Dunlap offers prompt delivery on all such appliances. Thia· rmg from A and B West J~ in Tuatfn contains a blue cUamond center stone surround«f by brilliant diamonds. 16 LOVIN' -Supplement to Coast LIFE, February 7, 1979 and Dally Pilot. February 8, 1979 * Find Heart-shaped Wicker For Valentine's Day, Fawn Memories has heart-shaped baskets. · • . The Colombian baskets are made from straw and sell for $2 each. Owne r George Nelson said Fawn Memories is more than a decorator store ·because ol its broad selection of baskets, plants and seashells "My 'mom and pop' store has about 1,700 baskets. ·'The majority arrive from Spain, Mexico, HaiU, Hong Kong and Philippines. ~ >'Scuba divers occasionally · bting us unusual shells that are fo un d off the Ca li fornia coastline," Nelson said. "I have eve rything nec- essary to decorate a home. esp eciall y if it's a lready adorned with earthy coloring and wicker furniture'" he said. Fawn Memories is at 1150 S. Coa st High wa y i n Laguna Beach next to the Pottery Shack. Shop hours are 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. seven day~. Call 494-2071 for further in formation. Anything Goes Caters to Travelers Anything Goes is for lovers on the move. Owners Tom and Beth Carney cater to people who travel a lot. "We excel in resort, easy-to· pack, lightweight, and natural fabric clothing," Mrs. Carney said. Bring in a favorite paUern and Anything Goes will stit.~ it together. Clothing alterations also are done on the premises. Anything Goes features a selec· lion of brand names including · -Pucci -Mark-PhUlipe slacks ---Qey-1' --Barbara-Barbara The Carneys· s hops are at 17440 17th St., Tustin; 272 Palm Canyon, Palm Springs and 326 Marine Ave., Balboa Island. Call 675-7860 for information . This heart-shaped Columbian straw jewelry case. mirror and wicker vase attract Valenti ne's Day customers to Fawn M emorles in Laguna Beach. ''My Deaaah - -Even rich people like to (V)A aave money! That'• why I 0Q (11J buy from Home Shown, Inc. t,") Special 1avinga now with f 6 20o/c ~ff cwtom draperies., { and J'irginia comes to ( r·;,A _my howe!" / f C>esigner Wallpaper, Dra~erles. Woven Woods, and Mini Blinds Shown In yo1,.1r home at Builders Prices. f!li~ J_, I ~ •· So convenient! Virginia ttaneer Home Shown, Inc. 1127·A We*'"' Dr., Newport .. ICh featuring Unit Fabrics (714) 752·2771 ,\_ . ' '\ * Su~t If Coait LR. f'eb"*Y 1' 1f7t Md Del~ ~!Of. ~I, 1979-;. L:OvlN' 17 . . . _ Lov•ri."G-·Needs ,Fllled at Mariners.Pharmacy . "" -Mtriners Ph~ In the.. · Mariners bu a coemetlclan lcllocOlate ·browa-.p'.l :;.a ~ · Oii duly~four days a week. Ap.. aq at 355 PIMea .. a Aye. aa -~tment is preferred Mar1aer1 Medical 1'l.a1a. '":°'Pree Valentlne•a 0Day gift Newport Beacll la fllletl wltb . wrapptQs la available glfta for lovers. · Mariners bas a 1lft sbop with Free delivery of gifts an;:,rure- dreuea from Mazatlan boar· ~ptiou.Js available wi a bristled hair bru1bel · f,rom . few ~bf lbe pharmacy. Encland and 1reet1n• .,_rda Pbonec-' are accepted. with av~yQ[U......z-:J ·: . Sto~~ are I a.m. to 8 A eomplete Une " CUOIDes p.m. _-..., throulh Fridal( and CGllDetlca. &Jona'~•• and 10 a.m. tO 2 p.m. Saturday. aortmtnt of CC!ltwne 'e~, Is Marlnert..p.vm•ey .18 closed offelJll--~ • • 4 •_, ', ~~·>': • t · ~ppliances Make Lffe: Romance Easy Romance often means making life eaaler for a partner. · ••Appliances. belp frft tbe bouseWlfe -and, nowadays,, even a man," aald Stan BroWn. general mana1e.-of Davis-Brown appliances ·in Costa Mesa. He expects alcrowave ovens to be ar for ValentJne'a slv auae of their time· U-ll~ value. _...__,,. alien and dryen also make good gifts for lovers because .they can be bought ln pairs," be added. . Appllancea are a lastinc lift value because they are usta· hie," he said. ''Comoared to other merchan- !lffmt1' JI08I! 2211M.Mm-..t S-.Am.CAtt716 ... 541-3751 dise. a.Ppllancea almos t haven't beeD hltby lnllatlon and prlee lncrease1h • .. You Bet· a lot more for the price. . .. Far example, lf you buy a ref rtgerator, you. 1et more features and quality than 11 you paid the same price for one ln the 1'50's or 80'1," be laid. Browsa. speaks frqm el· perlence. beCauae Davia-Brown has been a "family bualneaa" at 411 E. 17th St. for 17 years. After 32 years In bualneaa .. we have second and third 1enera· tion. customers and we keep pleasing them all aloq," ,_ :;aid. .. , • I . , H .. 18 LOVIN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Februa,Y 7, 1979 end Dally Pilot, February 8. 1979 * Mark R. SUnson, O.D. tries a pair of glasses on Vicky Brown at his Fountain Valley office. ·Dr. Stinson Melps lovers See Each Other' 1 Beauty Beauty is in the eye ol the span decreases with increased beholder and it helps if the activity. beholder can see. Stress also is re la ted with ''People assume their 20/20 focusing ability. vision is healthy -that's not "Reading is a stressful act - always the case. especially when the eyes don't "It really means theJr vision focus correctly," he said. is the same as a monkey's. If reading material is held ''It's defined as being abJe to further than 14 inches away sec a lcttef measuring one·third from the eyes, the resulting of an inch high at a distance or stress causes heart rate in 20 feet," Mark R. Stinson, O.D. creases and muscle tightening. said. -TelevJsion also affects read· Dr. Stinson owns and operates Ing skills. an optometry practice at 11057 ''TV II bad from the staM, Warner Ave. in Fountain point that it reduces visual Valley. memory and imagination. A major problem with un-1'Wlth radio, you had to use healthy vision is the effect lt baa )'Qur Imagination to visualize, for on reading skiJls. !'X&mple, the Lone Ranger. ··u a child can't read weir, he "Now, TV does all the work or she is in trouble in our socie· for you and, 11 you don't have ty," he said. proper room UahtlJlg, TV can Common eye problems with even be stressfuf," he said. children include the following : Dr. Stinaon 11 an optometrist. Many can't aim their eyes, ff~ prescribes glasses and or one eye wanta to tum out diagnoses eye diseases, but he while the other 1tay1 straight doesn't treat diseases with sur· -Many can't track, or they gery and drugs. can't follow a ball when l>l&Ylrur .. ll taket an ophthaJmolofiat. -Many lack focusing-skills it someone trained at medtcal ·ooth ahort and lo~g distances. school in eye dlaeasea, to treat · .aeeeat reeearell reveal• patients with druas and sur "many facet.a" of eye focualna ge_r_y;• he said . , skills, he !~r.· l His practice Is open rrofu 8 *11/~Hillf 'MJI.., JlnV\11/iM.'r 'Ad f'lr:IPJ' * luppftmlnt to CoMt LIFE. February 7. 1971 and Dally PMot, Februery I , 1979-LOvlH' 19 Fl~wers Portray the Valentlne Spirit .--/' r "' In Fashions From Windsor Sport Shop "Flowers portray the Valen· tine spirit," said Pat Boggs, manager of Wlndaor Sport Shop Inc. in Harbor Center, Costa Mesa.i She lneans tbe fiowers em· broidered on a new spring line at Wlndsor -Strawberry Plant. ••Stra~ Plant Is a local line, dell to natter women with a feminine look. "It's just one of the many favorite lines Windsor Sport ShOP carries," she said. The line features a abort· sleeve jacket, a full skirt, a print Bldrt, waJkinl shorts and pants. Wlndllor is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. dally and Saturday to I Owner Stephen Handler ot Hau llalwllera in Westcliff Plaza, Newpon Beach, conaultl 1Dith .ICeUi Kester regarding makeup and hair styling. teether ICCHloMs -jewefry ooemetice- men'al women·• cologne Russell Stover Val1nti11 loxed ~ "Yourown~ with super aervtcef" 351 Plac..tla. M.I. 641-7200 p.m. Monday and Friday, and from noon to 5 p.m. Sunda1. Harbor Center 11 at 2300 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Wincllor Sport Shop Inc. also is at Laguna Hilla Mall. Perms Done For All The Hair Handlers, Ill 1l2D .Irvine Ave. in Westclitf Piasa. ii a fuD service salon for men ad . women. Lana Brunella, manager of . The Hair Handlers, uld maD1 men come to the salon for permetric styling-perms and cu ta. Manicures, pediCW'el, faelala, makeup and all phases ol sty. ing are offered. Since owners Steve and Sue Handler opened The Hair Handlers in June of 1977, customer response bas been "fantastic," Ma. Brunell& said. Permanents at The Hair Hflndlen last from three to four months and .start at $40. • A full Hne of make-up· and skin care products by Aida Grey cosmetics iti carried. Store boun are 9 •·m. 1D ~ p.m. Monday through Saturday. 8Dd Thursday tlll 8 p.m . MaftG{ler Pat Boggs models UN Strawberry Plant line at Windlor Sport Shop lnc. in Harbor Center, Coata Mesa. .. ...,. lllew.,..... ...._, .. M11..y .-wwmc ..... y_., ,, ..... -.. .... ................. SUITS. 4K>WMS. D11SS1S. PANT SUITS .......... ................. ........... ....., CLEAIANCI SALE! ,... ........ ............. ... .. . ·~· 3> LOVIN' -Supplement to Coast LIFE, February 7, 1979 and Dally Piiot. February 8, 1979 HIGHLANDER COLOR COORDINATED MIX AMD MATCH SPORTSWEAR ":C-~,.... .......... 7.99 .......................... 7.99 ......... ............................ 10.99 mocll llrlrl •••.•••.•••••••••• 5. 9 9 ... ..... .. M-40 ............................... 3.1.9 .......... ... .., .................... 3.99 tllets.M-1. Qom from our mix and match In the aH new Spring 1979 feahlon eden. All .. •MY ewe polyeater Ind .. IT'echine wuhable. .... c ......... DOUILl •••••••••• 11.11 ~ ••.•• , .... It.II .. • •• .. •••• ... JI.II ill ...... w.a. ... It.ti 1688 ' .. TheHwe1t In falhlonllble IOCJ wew for men TERRYCLOTH MIX AMD MATCH r sip frollt fackel • • • • • • • .1688 L.......r::ll!!~~ ,..1t.t6 .... ,.... .......... 1 Q88 ,.. ll.t6 ..................... 1~~ Ol008e from navy an~ white ex tan or blue. In stzes S-M-L. • , .... ... I' ... ...... 399 ~ aa ... ·~= r~···········I." ~ .......... .... ...... ~ .......... .... TM ....... wef by ltt¥toft -CcHc•••• . . - Villillya.lr, . ....... l•Sloal 1688 ....... ' ( J7 VOL 72, NO. 39, .. SECTtONS, S8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNtA Your Hometown Dally Newspaper THURSOAY,FEBRUARY8,1~9 TEN CENTSi .. . ~--------FBI, Officia& Confer ---~----~----~ Coast 8)' JOANNE aEYNOLDS Of .... o.ltY ---More than 100 •~unt.y omcers and executives of Orange County defense contractors met In Santa Ana to- day with rounler·lntelli1ent'e aaenta from the FBI. Herbert Clough, special agent in charge of counter-in· te111gence for lbe FBI in Southern Callfomia said today's seminar was held to acquamt the businessmen with "the' very real threat" posed local business by forelp spies. ('LOtJGH SAID be was unable to supply any specific information regarding the extent of espionage activity locally, but he said that the activity had increased drastically in the past year. Pickup Rams Semi Woman Suspect Held in Holdups A gunman lurking in tbe bush es o utsid e a Coco 's Re-staurant in Fountain Valley was s urprised and captured by a police officer early today. Police believe be is the same gunman responsible for seven robberies over the past eight months at Coco's restaurants in Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Newport Beaeh. Patrolman John Qulnzio said , Donald Melvin Butler, 25, of Santa Ana, was carrying a pellet gun in bis waistband and a semi-automatic pistol in bis sock when be was arrested to- day outside the Coco's at 18280 Brookhurst St It is the same Coco's that re· cently was robbed twice in one day Police believe Butler is responsible for one or those rob- beries In additlon. Fountain Valley detectives believe Buller held up the same Coco's on another oc- casion, and also robbed the Coco's Restaurant on Adams A venue near Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa And, police said, they suspect Butl~r is the man who held up the Coco's on MacArthur Boulevard ln Newport Beach, near Orange County Airport, on three separate occasions. Patrolman Quinzio bad been sent to the oft-robbed restaurant in Fountain Valley at about l?.:50 this morning to provide an escort for the manager and the day's receipts Quioz:io said be spotted BuUer hiding in the bushes outside the restaurant and stepped back to watch from behind a corner. As the manager left the build· ing, Butler alle"'edly moved from the bushes toward him. Quioz.io moved in and arNSted ButJer, who was lo be booked to- day at Orange County Jail on 1uapicion of armed robbery. Coast Weather Night and morning fog and low clouds. Otherwise fair with high clouds through Friday. Lows tonicbt 40 to 46. Highs Fri· day near 80 at beaches to upper 60l lnland. INSIDE TODA"° A t""*1ol c:ommWioft on /oMfft a/tam QOv. Jimrnv Carter tMM voluabi. ad· ~ .,....,. of WdmlO· ''°"°' ~ ~ -,,.. tcn'H Uie Wisk HOU#. SH P•AJI ... a ... ..... .. .. ... ., I ..... ... ... SUCCUMBS AT 71 Lyndon 'Pinky' Welle 'Pinky' Welh, ~imeHB Citizen, Dies Lyndon A. "Pidky" Wells, a longtime Huntington Beach resi- dent who served on the City Council Crom 1960 to 1964, died Tuesday in a Newport Beach Hospital. Relatives say that Mr. We~lls1 77, bad been in poor health ana suffered from a stroke and a heart ailment. Funeral services will be held Friday at 11 a.m. ,at Pierce Brothers Smiths' Mdrtuary at 627 Main St. Visitation is scheduled at the mortuary tmW the time of the funeral. Mr. Wells came lo the coast city as a young boy and attended schools In Huntington Beach. Friends remember him as a standout hurdler on the Oiler track team. He was a painting contract.or for about 40 years and painted many of the city's residences and civic buildings during the four decades he wu active. Mr.Wells alao was a landscape artist of note, according to Delbert "Bud" Higgins. the city's unofficial historian. Higgins said Mr. Wells' paint· ings were displayed in banlcs, tbe old civic center and in Huntington Beach Company offices. He also farmed blueberries and other crops in what now bas become Fountain Valley. He sold the berries lo Walter Knott when Knott's Berry Farm was a roadside stand in Buena Park. Associates remember Mr. Wells as a man ot strona coovic· lions wbo didn't hesitate to apeat bis mind about ell)' al· fain. Vince MoorboUle. dlreetor of the city's barbon and beacbel. laid Mr. Wells WU aD outapokea champion ol individual rilbta aa <See WELLS, Pal• AZ> ll4J'E .,4 H£4Bl' -ONE OF OURS Jt'a Ume for aprtni lovln' and Valentine'• o_, . The Delly Pilot celebntel um 1pecial 1U10D wtth wordl ad plctur .. detailla1 1Uu for Valentlae1 la a 20·pa1• ma181ine, ••Lovta'." LoN for um qeelal mqul• ID todQ'I Delly Pilot. Alerted to I Toda,y's seminar was the second in • series for about 2SO firms in Oran1e County that supply classified technology products for the government. ' Firms participating in today's seminar included Hughes Aircraft Microelectronic Division and Ford Aerospace and Communication Corp. 's Aeronutronic Division, both based in 'Ne'*P.)rt Beach and McDonnell Douglas, FBI officials said. LIKE THE FiasT session held in November, today's meeting was to 'lcquaint tbe businessmen with the scope of the problem as well as teaching them bow lo spot penelra· lion by spies of their firms . In most cases, according to Agent Clough, the es· I Espionage plonage activity takes the form of a foreign agent befriend· Ing an employee and eventually persuading tbe employee to steal classified material from bis company. "We need for these people, as well as the public, to become believers,·· said Clough. He acknowledged that bis inability to cite specific numbers and cases would create a "credibility gap" and agreed that "It could lead to paranoia" on the subject of espionage in Orange County. "WE DON'T WANT people looking under beds or over their shoulders," be said. "We want them to be well enough informed that they know what to look for and lo <See FOREIGN SPIES, Pace AZ> . I ed in Freeway Crash Salary Delays Assailed By ROBERT BARKER Ot tM CMlty Hiit SWff H untiogton Beach City Treasurer Warren Hall lashed out at City CoUllcll ofricials to- day llftel' ~Y pUHd '1'e buck for two weeka on a salary relm· bursement for 11 department directors. Hall, tbe Jowe9t.pald ot all top Huatbllton Beedl eaecuU••· .said that a deca.toa to delay ap- proval for tbe five percent reim· bursement illustrated a lack ol faith by tbe COUDCil. "I'm tired of \II getUng pushed around," Hall said. "The council bas chipped away at department heads and they don 'l believe us. "If we tell them the sun ls up lo the mo~. they bave to go look out the window w see for themselves." Hall, who makes $28, 728 an· nual salary, said that similar five percent increases were pre- viously given to about 30 other mana1ement employees wbo make more money than be does. He said be WU drafting a let· ter to council officials today to ask rortbeincrease. City Administrator Bud Belsito said be too was disap. pointed in the failure of the council lo act. Others said it was a slap in the face of the depart· mentheads. The City Councn previously has added five percent to the take-home pay for employees in the Mianagement Employees Organization and the Firemen's Association. The same offer, plus a seven percent pay increase next July, also bas been given to tbe Municipal Employees Asaocia· lion ancl city police officers. Because ot a statewide lreeae on salary increases, the offer comes ln tbe form of increased clty ontrlbutions to employee r. tirement systems by five per. cent. Council officials decided Mon· day night to bold off reimburse- ment for department beads until individual performances could be reviewed. The proposal also was stalled because of a request for in· creases for tbe positions or aaais· tant city administrator and the director of development services wbicbare not filed. Councilwoman Rutb Bailey said tbe lDcrepes amounted to automatic ralMs and tbat ln· cUvtdul Del'formaacee lbould be evaluatecl. In a leUel' to dlneton, lbe aald ~1 were doba1 an ex· eelletlt JOI) ••espee1a11y under &be man'/ eomtndlltl JM are wort· .... under '' !be lldded, bowe.er, tbat lo. Crea .. lbould be based OD ID· dividual performance and not be 1raated acrou tbe board. Sbe laid tbat then are IOIDe wbo an underpaid and a PoUl· ble IOludon coUld be Ume off ID· stead ol a Mlaey taere .... Coltl for tM five _percent N · lmbunement for department directon are ..UIDllted betWMD ............ Carnal ....a aalari• for cllrectan laeludl: -CltJ M•l•lnra .. r Bud (llie MIAaY, Pap AJ> .............. Defty ,..._. StMt ~ PLASTIC SURGEON LOADED WITH DOCUMENTS Dr. Ralph w. Small (left). wtth Attorney Terry Gile• Plastic Surgeon Testifies on Death A Santa Ana• plastic surgeon was In Orange Councy. Superior Court today to defend himself against char1es that bis practice la a danger lo public health, safety and wella~. Dr. Ralph W . SmaU arrived in court with attorney Terry Giles carrying a bundle of papers be hopes will prove that the death of a 33-year-old woman last No- vem ber was nothing more than a so-called medical misadventure. Tbe woman, Kim Plock, died Nov. 28, five days after undergo- ing a breast implant In Small's office al 8620 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana. William S. Lee that the -Noman s death was a tragic incident that couldn't be foreseen by any practitioner. And, Giles said, he bas deposi· lions frbm other patients whose surgical experience witb Small was successful and without problem. Giles bas insisted that the 29-year-old plastic surgeon ~as been signalled out for discipline by other medical professionals at odds with his practice of ad· vertlslng the wonders of COS· metlc surgery. . Tbe youthful appearing at· tomey also said t.bat Small has forced the prices for plastic sur· gery downward and that, too, is resented by other plastic sur- 1eooa. Accident Sparks Others By WILLIAM HODGE Ot tM o.lty Pl"4 Staff ~ng-way driver on the freeway set orr a chain reaction of accidents in foggy Laguna Hills this morning. One woman died. Barbara Throop, 44, of West Covina. a Los Angeles Times truck driver, was killed by one of the crashes. Tom Sapp, Californaa Highway Patrol spokesman. said she was unabl., to stop the light pickup truck 1be was driv· ing when she came t.o an over· turned tractor-trailer rig. The series or accidents began at 4:S5 a.m .. Sapp said, when Frank Falke nbe r g, 66, or Laguna Hills. e ntered the San Diego Freeway at Alicia Parkway. He was traveling northbound in the southbound lanes. The reason was not im· mediately known. Eduardo Duarte. 31, of Long Beach, swerved the tractor· trailer to miss Falkenberg's northbound car. But the massive semi sideswiped the car and overturned. Mrs. T.broop's tight pickup came through the fpg and slammed into the overturned tractor·trailer. She died in· stantly. Falkenberg's wrong-way car continued north ror a short dis· t10ce. It was stopped by collid· iog with a car driven by Alan Cook. 21, or Stanton. Thal collision caught the at· tention of George Morey. 40, of Diamond Bar. He was driving another tractor-trailer. It struck a car that bad been braked to a stop by Tom Perez, 51 of Orange. Falkenberg, who bad entered tbe freeway going the wrong way, received iltjuries that ap- peared minor to officers at the scene. He and Duarte, believed also to have minor injuries, were taken lo Saddleback Community Hospital. Perez, Cook and Morey were not hurt, Sapp said. The fatality and another on Laguna Canyon Road today brought the South County traffic tolls already this year to 12. * * * According to the complaint liled by the state attorney general's office on behalf of the board of Medical Quality As· 1uruce. Mrs. Plock went into respiratory arrest while un· dergoing tbe •urc•r'1 at about 9:55 a.m. It wun 't until nine boun later that emefleDCY care wu called to tbe otnce and tbe 1tridten woman transferred to Santa Ana·Tultln Community Hospital where she died without re1ain· lnc consclouaness. S4 Woman Killed In Canyon Crash GUee lndicated today that he will attempt to show Judie Cirew Lure8 Cub The acquilltJon ol Rod Carew could put an. addltloaal $2. 7 million Into tbe Catlfornl• !'!fi.!:' coffers tbla HUOD, Carew'• ........ year .... !"-a baqaJn. See the Dally Pl.lot 1 aelu.lve 1tory Clft P8'• Bt.• A 2t·year-old Santa Ana woman wu killed early today on fog1y La1una .canyon Road wben ber car apparently drifted Into nortbbound lanes, slam· mint bead-on Into a lar1e van. She WU tbe fourth fatality lo tbe laat 12 daya on Lapna Caa'JOll Boed. Calllonia ffllbwa1 Paa.I Of. ftcer Bill Bierer said a mixture of den1e tee and lllck roadway ml1bt have caUMd the woman's car to dr1ft into ~llll laMI : .-:. ' . ' . . .. ,... . at a curve In the aeven·mlle roadway a mile south of lhe San Dieco Freeway at about 8:30 a.m . . Van driver Joeeph Cbuan, 4$, of 201 Cypreu Drive, ~ Beacb, waa 1UabUy hurt tn tfie 40·mlle-per bour colll1lon that Wt botb Yeldclel maaaled. Tbe ...... stretcb of l'MdwaJ between ltl Toro Ro.cl ... tM fNewaJ WU Cloled to tbrwp traffic Immediately followlnc tbe coWaloD .. ; ' Ttw Jilltt tn' l)epJrtmc nt hai, rdut1t•d lo wat\'l' u $40,000 r 1 n l' I t.' v 1 e d a g 1 n t. t W .tl e r ga h • bu rglu r G. <iordon Liddy, \\ho !)a s h~ tb a pauper afte r hu. r ell'a:;e · from prison las t fall f',.._P~AI WELLS •.• oppost'd lo J{Ovt•romenl control Others say tll' w;1ged hii. su(' cessful counrll campa ign of 1960 ai. :J critic or increac;cd 10<.'al govt:rnml'nt s p e nding a n d h1~her taxei.. II•• was (•allt•d Pinky a~ long as anyone can rt:member. ap pe1 rt-nlly bct·e1use of h 1& redd1&h 'lair as u youth and ruddy com· olexion Mr. Wells is survived by his wid ow He len Craven Wells, daughters Dianne WeJJs of Hunt· ington Beach a nd Helen Allen of Houston, T<'x .. etnd son Lyndon Wells Jr of Long Beach He .. 1so leaves s isters Irene Dobkm o f Huntington Beach, Ethel Libby of Ojf#J and three grandduldren and three greal· grnndch1ldren. . In t e r ment .,l F a irhaven C.c melt:ry tn Sa nta Ana will fnllow &crv1ces Gold Soars To Record LON DON (AP > Go ld Jumped to a record price today fo r the second day in succession as the dollar dropped in Tokyo, rose slightly on some European markets and dropped slightly on others. London's five major bullion de;.&l ers fixed the price of gold at midmorning at $254 an ounce, $3 50 above the previous closing pr ice in London and $2.2S above the previous record. set in Zurich• Wednesday. The pn cc al midday In Zurich was $253.50, up 51.75. Transit Unit Eyes Lobbyist Uirectors of the Orange Coun- ty T r ansit Dis trict may add their money to the $100,000 being put up by county officials lo hire a lobbyist in the nation's capital. Monday. directors ordered their staff to look al the plan ap- proved by county s upervisors last week "to see if il is ger-mane to lhe OCTD." Two of the OCTD board mem· bers a re county supervisors. One . Ralph Clark, who authored the plan approved by county s u pe rvisors. s u gge s t e d the OCT O study. Junior Football Coaches Sought North Huntington Beac h Jun ior All-American Football League officials are seeking coaching applicants who will beg in re cruiting players for teams in lbe fall. Coaches are needed for boys . who will play at the clinic Cages 7 ·8 years) and junior pee wee 1 ages 10·11 yea rs> levels or com· petition. For information call Henry Lewis, 894-1751 or Les Elder . 846-8743. °"ANOE COAST M•I' DAILY PILOT ft'Jt 011nQl"C~t 0.•1¥ P1..,..wltt\~'4'"h'°"' ...... ,~-........ 1\-lv.db'tl ... 0.-th•'' Pti1b4t~(~f' k f'lft .. wftfttkw\\•'f l'41blt\MCI MOftd•• throuor-I , • .,., fo. c.t.I.• ....... N--1>H""t ........ -.. -lA1nV•U•'f I••..,._ l~~1H:toi~~fO.\t A '"''•'· r•OIOf'ltt Hhf~ .. oubU\M(j ""'""ll•'f\ ... ~--·· ,,.. ..... l'llltCMll PVDl•\ft•~ --1 ., .. 1• "1-f' , .... , .... , ...... , (4'\IA~ C•••fOffU•".,.. "_" .. -,., ........ ,-~.- J"··~ v,.,,.,,......,,_o._~_..., -.. ...... Utt .. '-·-~ ""'-·~l .... Clo••~:: .. ~:-M.o-~<t;-,:, .... --·-""'''°'••C-•Cdlter Hvntl~Of't l•lldl~ ,,.,se ... ~ao111e-• .... ll""J AH•t"• I> 0 fie• 1'0 .,.... Offk•• l•l:t,:.~ ;•-..::~7.:-!~~ ... PLYMOUTH, Mau. <APl - Chad Grttn'• parent.a. otdt'Mt rre1h-d by a MHHt'hu ett. Jud&f!, tulv a r ~ to n w blood t •la for th4-•r ltd O\la·•lrlcken M>n that rould O Wlt" them lo qut>•Uon rJK-1r thl'Ory of l.aeltil~ tru tmt'tlt, th tr 11tlorn y u lcJ today A tl~)' Gt'<>ra&e Oonov n Hld Diana and Gerald Oreen ham: ac:ot .. mpl~ ol tht"lr aon'• blood to Ohl() Stat Uruvennty from TI JU»nu wher lht'y r t'm a1ned follow1n1J thtl Mu•nchu11elt.s or· d\•r for thelr arreat Donovan satd h arranaed tor tbt! te-ste afte r learning thut he was given an erroneout. result of a nother ~t 10 d y11 ugo and that the level of cyanide ln 3-year-old Chad 's blood could be JO time11 wh t he onginally was \Old. Donovan said that Ir the new te11ts show the higher level of cy anide, b e would ask the Gr eem1 to stop or drastically c urtail the Laetrile dose~ Chad's receiving But he said he did not know whether they would agree. The first result, caused by a clerica l e rror. wa:. given to Donovan Jan 29, four days after the Greens Ocd Ma ssachu.«>etts with their son to avoid a court order banmng Laetrile treat- ments, saJd J onathan Brant, an assis ta nt Massachusetts a l · torney general. L aetrile. whi c h contains cyanide, is derived from the pits of apricots and peaches or from bitter altn<>nds Advocates claim Laetrile is an effective cance'r treatment, but t he U.S. Food and Drug Ad· ministration and the medical esta blishment in this country have said the re is no proof it is of a ny value an treating cancer. The FDA has banned Laetrile from interstate transportation, but the U.S. Supreme Court has agr eed to review that ban Rock Group Manager Hunted NASSAU. Bahamas <AP> -Rock star Mick Jag". a r and other members of the Rolllnl Stones are h Ip "I aeattb for the aroup's road manager and a woman companion. last seen In a rubber dinghy off a No sau beach, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman sold today The arch was being hampered b,y winds up to 20 knots and sea~ five to eight feet, said Coast Guard spokesman BUJ Van Valkenburg. Two Coast Guard planes. jotn.ed by three private u1rcr uft officials said we re chartered by members of tht-popuJar smging group, were searching an ap· proximately l ,500·square-m1le area northwest of N assau, about 170miles eastof Miami. Mlsslng were 33-year-oJd Allan Dunn. boyhood friend of J agger. and Romona Herman, 26, of West Chicago. lll .. s aid Va n Valkenburg. B IDlting t o a Claa•~ 'Spirit of Prop. 13' Support Sought Huntlnglon Beach Chamber of Comme r ce m e mbers have launched a n areawide petition · ca mpaign ln s upport or the "Spi rit of 13" governmental spending limitation Initiative headed by Paul Gann. R a lph Kiser, chamber ex· eculive manager, said Wednes- day his organization has 500 petitions, each with space for 10 sign4tures, circulating in the Huntington Beach v1c.lnity. locally because "In the past 20 years , the growth of government has been 20 times greater than the growth of Inflation." Kiser added that "one of every s ix job·holde rs In California works either for slate or local government. This is 13 percent above the national average. "Wages in the private sector went up 160 percent ind the average wage of a government employee went up 290 percait" between 1952and1973. Three On Boat Sought A Santa Barbara to the Mex· lean Border aea search eon· tlnued today for three former Orange Cout residents wfK>se commerdal fishing boat ls over· due after leaving San Diego J1lrr.. 22. Coast guard officials said the vessel was due lo return to port Sunday alt4!r completing a two. week fiahlng trip of the banlca near t..be Channel Islands. Gary Newton. 22. and Dennis Vowell. 23, former Costa Mesa residents. and Vowell's wire Debbie. a former south oountY resident, were aboard the boat. "We're uaed to him beln1 out a long time, but nothlng like this has bappened before,'' Newton's mother, Eleanor, said today :·w~;re Just hoping and pray: mg, the Coeta Mesa resident added. She sald her son was an ex· pe rienced seaman and that there was enough food on board the 40-foot craft ror two weeks . Coas t Guard officials s a id there was oo indication the boat. ..The Armistice." was in trou- ble. It was equipped with two. way radios. a dfrection finder and other safely equipment. A preliminary search has been expanded lo cover a 3,600· square-mile area that extends L20 miles out lo sea . Mrs. Newton said her son and Vowell both attended high school in Cost.a Mesa. Kiser said the chamber board, which endorsed the initiative las t August. expects to put 1,000 petitions In circulation before the stat.e's signature.g athering deadline ol March 1. p,.... P-.e A J The iniUative. wbicb would establish tax and fee limits on slate and local governments based on the prior year's ap- propriations. will go on the June. 1980 general election ballot if it qualifies. . Approx ima t e l y SH,000 signatures or registered voters are requi red , s tatewide, to qualify the measure, Kiser said. He said the chamber is sponsoring the petition drive FOREIGN SPIES. • • come lo us. We wa nt them lo let us, the professionals a na lyze the situation." ' Part of the blame ror the growth of espionage locally was placed by Clough on U.S. foreign policy. "Since detente, the number of communist block coun- try officials in the U.S. has doubled," he noted. Baaed on past experience, he said, 40 percent of those people are es· plonage agents. "WE'RE PARTLY lo blame, too." Clough added. "The FBI over the ye ars has kept such information pretty much lo ourselves. We 've been pretty much an ivory tower group." Refugee Says-Boat Trip Cost $10,000 But he said thal public exposure or generalized in· formaUon about the nature and extent of foreign in· teHigence gathering witbln tbe Un.ited Stat.es bu proved to be beneficial. The agent said that, since launching the aeries ot securi· ty seminars in Los Angeles last spring, several subetantial cases have been developed. ..,,, (.;tough, when asked about the lack ot arrests to back his contention, explained that arrest and prosecution isn't always the aim of an FBI count.er·lnt.elligence probe. HONG KONG <AP) -A Viet· n a m ese rt>fugee from the f reigbter Huey Fong said today he and his famiJy paid govern· me nl officials ln Ho Chi Minh Ci· ty $10,000 for passage from their homeland aboard a junk, police said You can't do anything you want to do." Tran said most other refugee families on the Huey Fong paid similar amounts lo the seeurity department or Ho Chi Minh City. formerly Saigon, before they were allowed lo leave the coun- try. "WE'D llAnlEll control the situation than arrest and proseeute," be said. "We want to find out who all the players are. "You have lo understand that the number of hostile agents-from Communist block and mid-eastern COUD· tries -working in the U.S. exceeds the number of counter· int.eJllgence agents. '"l'bat's one or the reasons we do the seminars." •••re~ Elizabeth Taylor Wa rne r has a pensive look for the camera tn this photo, t aken in New York Wednesda y night where the actress was honored with the A. Philip Randolph Huma nita ria n Award. 2 o/3 Robbery Tries Fail Armed robberies were report- ed at three Huntington ~ach locations Wednesday but only one was successful , poUce said. Olficers said a stocky gunman identfied as the owner of a blue knit cap and mustache took $500 from the Casa Ma ria restaurant, 16060 Beach Blvd., after showing t.he cashier what appeared to be a h a ndg un s tu c k in hu wa istband. Police said the intruder fled on foot aft.er ordering lhe cashier to place the night's receipts on the counter. Earher . a ~unman who was described as ~porting a handlebar mustache, pointed a silver· colored hand gun at the clerk at Royale Cleaners. 9927 Hamilton Ave .. and told her : "Tb1s lS a stickup " The clerk ran to the rear of the store to get the m anager . Wh<'n they returned, the gunman bad fled. A wouJd·be robber was foiled by a fast thinking employee Wednesday night afte r he leaped over the counte r at Burger King. 16331 Beach Blvd., ordering lbe cashier to hand over the contents orthesafe . P o lice s aid the cas hie r s lammed the door of tbe safe shut and then told the gunman that she did not have the com· bination. The intrude r. described as having a frizzy po nytal I hairs tyle and a mustache and carrying a gun in his wais tband. the n left in frustration. No one was hurt in the three incidents. pol.J ee said. P oJl ce in vestig ating the possibility of a refu gee smug· gling ring are quesUoniog the crew and pauengers or both the Huey Fong, which arrived here Dec. 23 wilb 3,318 refugees, and the Skyluck, which arrived Wednesday with about 3,000. Both are Taiwanese ships. He said the authorities let -------------------------------------- Tran Abuu Ai, a 23-year-old student from the Huey Fong, said be left Vietnam because "I don't like socialist &overnment. groups of 300 refugees leave on fishing jun.Its. Investigators said Wednesday they found thin leaves of gold valued al $1 million bidden in the Huey Fong's engine. Tran said be and otben on the same Junk were rescued by the Huey Fong late in December when their boat was damaged by a .storm. Tax F orms Nixed Marvin's Finances Probed in. Trial LOS ANGELES (AP·) -The complex financial aUairs of Lee Mar vin have become a kerfocus or testimony. with his former lover seeking lo show he became a mllllonaire while they ll\'ed together:. , Marvi n Mitchelson. attorney tor Michelle Triola Marvin. lost a battle Wednesday lo place In evidence the actor's Income tax returns for the six years of their love affair. Superior Court Judge Arthur M arsh a ll , upholdin1 the privileged status of lax returns, said be might change hh mind later . M itchelson, urging the judge to make "a rirst-Ume ruUnc In this flrst·time case of Marvin vs. Marvin.'' llrtued that the ln· comf> tu figures could show ~ actor 's true earnings du.rtni the period from 198'·1970. Mltcbelson saJd the ftaures, whtch include $1 million·•· picture deals, would prove that Mila Marvin had reason to ex- pect lifetime support from her lormer lover. ·'We have to show that she kne w the defendant wu able to supPort her for her lifetime," the attorney aald. "The court will refuse the plalntltr the returns at thla tlme, •• MarabaU aaJd. "But lf it develope there 11 a contract here or any share entitled to the plalndrt, the cowt will come back to th.ti na.Uq and conaider lt at that Ume." M ltcbelaon 1ald he would call wltMaMt to prove hia contendoa lbat Marvin's fortune 1rew from $40,000 to $3.6 million while he lived with .Mlss Marvin. The former ·showgirl la swng the actor for $1 million share or his asset$ during their lial.aon. The landmark case, which has ins pired simllar lawsuits, ls e x· peeled to affect future property settlements between unmarried cohabitants. The financial m a tter arose during testimony by Marvin's a ccounlanl and bus iness manager. Edward Silver , who outlined a complex bookkeeping system that translated support payments from the actor to his 1lrlfrlend as businesa expenses of his corporation. ,.....P.,,eAJ SALARY ••.• Bel1t~ '531218. -UIJ'eftOI' of PaltUe Worb BUI Hartce. $&5,482. -Flaaau Dhee&or Boo ArcueUo, $.17,718. -........ Pl•Dnhta Dtreeou Jlm Palin, '32.m . -Per1omael Director Ed Thompeoa, S3S,M . -Ubral'J Director Wa lter JobnlOft, $83,360. -Cl&J AaoneJ Gail Hutt.en, SU.372. -P olleJ Clllef Earle Robltalllo, '41,962. -Pin ct.let Ray Picard, sat.ooe. -.................... and 8eacbe1 Vince Moorbo.H, '40,tol. I I REGISTER NOW for FREE LA-I-BOY® (Befot'e March 1. 1G79) FREE DELIVRY NEW LOCATION LA.UNA MILLI 210U Lalc•PoreltDr. (Cornlf °'ta. fONllt °'"' and lw•llda 0. la Coltaea) 770n•NI Man.·M 10. lat. )O.I a.n.12~ I I I . . . . . .. . • • . . .. . • . . • -------:----- CALIFORNIA 'Dllnd9y, Febfuary 8, 1979 1lAIL v PILOT AS Brown to Address Committee? Dramatic Action' Needed to Save Convention Proposal 'Ille Longest Ride Ernest O'Gaffney, 41, of Hemet, mounts his motorcycle for the final leg of the longest-ever cycle ride. He de- parted Wednesday from Los Angeles for New York in his bid to complete his 21,000-mile, world-wide journey in 79 days. He sta rted his roun1-the-world trek in New York Nov. 27. Psychic Aids Hunt For Girl's Killer FRESNO tAP J A Cupertino psychic visited the spot where the battered a nd mutilated body of an 8-year-old Fresno girl was found , authontics reported. Police here would not reveal Wednesday what M. Kathlyn Rhea saw or felt at the spot northeast of here where the body of Victon a Anne Desantiago was found Monday. The girl's bead bad been battered and she had been sexuallY assaulted. •·1 HAVE AN IMAGE. If I ever saw this one particular man, I. would know him, .. Ms. Rhea said Tuesday or the girl's killer. Police said Ms. Rhea provided general details Monday morn- ing that-matc-hed the area where the girl's body was later found . She said the girl would be found dead and nude near plowed fiP.lds, a chirken r anch and mountains, all of which were true "I KNEW THE CHILD had been physically beaten," Ms. Rhea said. '"I foll she was in the trunk of a car before she was placed in a field ·· Ms. Rhea said she could even "see" flashes of the fatal beating Deputy Police Chief James Packard said the department also may use hypnosis on some witnesses to see if they can provide more information. Meanwhile. police are combing the area where the girl's body was found. checking cars that could have been involved in the girl's kidnap Saturday and sorting through telephone Ups. Reward and memorial funds established in the girl's name by several local radio stations and public employee groups have raised more than $25,000 in cash and pledges since Tuesday. An anonymous donation of SS,000 was made Wednesday "on behalf of the children of Fresno ... SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. must do 1omethlng dramatic, like a1 m.ctla·arabblna le1lalative com- mittee appearance, to save bis propoul for a ~onatltutlonal con- vention to balance the federal bud1et, the Assembly's GOP leader says. A11emblyman Paul Priolo, also a strong supporter of the concept, says the Legislature will reject the convention resolu- Uoo unless the Democratic gov· ernor does something Uke speak- ing before the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. PRIOLO SAID Brown could thereby increase pressure on members of the committee, where the resolution is awaiting action. Brown's chief of staff. Gray Davis, did not rule out the possibility Brown would testify but added: "The governor's views are well known to mem- bers of the committee.'' Brown called in his inaugural speech for a convention to draft a conatitutional amendment re- quiring a balanced budget, say- ing federal deficits are a major cause of inflation. ITT AKES ACl'ION by 34 stales to force Congress to call a convention. So far, 25 of 27 states Legislators Seek Change In Gun Law SACRAMENTO <AP> -As- sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy and nine other legislators have joined an appeal to the slate Supreme Court to reconsider its decision on the "use a gun, go to prison" law. Backers of the appeal said Wednesday that, so far, 75 of the 119 legislators, including the Democratic and Republican leaders of both houses, have signed the petition.' They include 52 of the 80 Assembly members and 23 of the 39 senators. The court's Dec. 22 Tanner de- cision held that a 1975 man- datory-prison law didn't prohibit judges from granting probation to gun.using lelons in excep- tional cases. The court bas given oppo- nents. including state Attorney General George Deukmejian, until Feb. 20 to ask for a rehear- ing. Jn the meantime, action on legislation to reverse tbe ruling has been delayed. Borrowers To Receive Refuruls Of Interest have done IO, depending on dif- ferent counts and lnterpretationA or resolutions. the votes to kill the re1<>lution in committee or on the floor. • the Waya and Means CoP\IDit- tee." McCarthy said at his ptess conference Wednesday. Priolo, from Malibu, also said Wednesday that Brown bas not been penonally-lobbying com- mlllee members on the resolu· tlon. but Brown 's press secretary, Barbara Metzger, said it wa~ "her understanding" that Brown had been doing so. McCARTHY, A CLOSE ally or the governor during Brown's first term, opposes a convention, contending there could be no way to prevent it from proposing amendments weakening key civil liberties. "If it were to receive the necessary majority there, it will not receive the necessary ma- jority on the noor ... ASSEMBLYMAN Tom Bane, D-Van Nuys, said he would in- troduce a resolution Monday calling for a balanced lederal budget and a federal spending limit. but without a convention. As sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, D-San Francisco, re- peated his prediction that he has "Indications are that a resolu· tion that contains a constitu- tional convention will not re- ceive the necessary majority in INSTANT COLOR ICELAND POPPIES Another gorgeous background of bright color in reds, yellows, oranges and pastels. Rogers hybrid varieties will bloom through late spring. _____ ___,PRIMROSE SALE PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabulous garden color in beds. baskets or I pots -blues, yellows, oranges and whites. BANDINI #2 A February feeding Is very Important for a healthy attractive lawn. Bandlnl #2 is ideal for feeding established dichrondra and blade grass lawns. Start your , feeding cycle now. Buy four 4" plants and get one FREE Roger's has both English and Fairy varieties-th~ foundation of any spring garden-available in white. yellow. red. pinks. orange and blues. in bloom for easy selection. Limited to stock on hand through 2/25 /79. CAMEllIAS Showy Bowering evergreen shrubs in colors ranging from red to pink to white and even some variegated types. Select from many old favorites or unusual collector varieties. San Joaquin HJUs Road at MacArthur Blvd .• Newpon Beach. (714) 640-5800 Open Daily 9 am -Sp~ -FloriR 64CU>774 LO S ANGELES CAP ) - Americans. who borrowed money from more than 1,500 national banks since Oct. 28. 1974, and were charged too much interest, will be refunded millions of dollars. the Los Angeles Times reported today. than has been done in the pa.st, and I think frankly that has to be our general thrust.·· he said Wednesday. U1'e.._. f"o-d Welcomes You To Three Delicious Values The office or comptrolJer of the currency, which recently completed a detailed examination of all 4,700 national banks, round inadvertent violations or the lruth·in-lending law in interest calculations on auto, home ( __ sT._'AT._E_J improvement and other consumer loans of less than $25,000. "These were inadvertent mis- takes," said John J . Chlpouras, director of consumer exarninaUons for the comptroller or the currency. Federal officials said the complexity of the lending law caused most of tbe e rrors because bank loan officers ap- p a re ntl y did not know how lo calculate annual Interest rates properly. S.11 •g Te•t• S'41ted, LOS ANGELES CAP ) CalifornJa 's latest effort to reduce auto exhaust pollution begins March 10 when used-car buyers in the Los Angeles area can have their vehicles checked at smog control stations. The tes ting prog ram -dem- onstrated in a dry run at one or the 17 Los Angeles area testing stations Wednesday -ls -expected to be ex- panded within three years to reqUlre the annual testing of all cars in California's five largest metropolitan areas . Currently, teatlnt Is required only when a car ls sold . Ne T~ BU. 8eeta SACRAMENTO <AP> -The st.ate Assembly's Democratic leader says he, unlike the former legislative analyst, does not think a state tax in- crease in the wake of Proposition 13 Is inevitable. Speaker Leo McCarthy. D-San Francl.seo, said there is no aupport lor any tax lncnaae In the current Le1i1lature and the need bu not beeatbown. .,,_. ia a clear mood acalmt tax tncn .. and for dfllvertnc aovern· meat eentce. far snore etlldeatl1 OXNARD <AP> -A bomb squad was called in to remove two practice military bombs found In a garbage dumpster outside a south Oxnard apartment building. One of the 26-inch by six inches- long bombs found Wednesday was live, according to Police U. Robert Kelly. However, be said il was an ex: plosive that gives off a lot of smoke as it bu.ms. but is not considered very dangerous. Kelly said the Explosive Ordnance Disposal team from the Point Mugu naval base disposed of the bo~_b6. Many military people Uve ln that area. but Kelly said it would be difficult to track down the person who brought tbe bomb home. ~IJ..-W BAKERSFIELD (AP> -The de· fense attorney says he will appeal a deatb sentence against a Los Angeles-area man convicted or murdering~ student film makers in lhe Mojave Desert last April. Superior Court Judge John D. Jelleticb upheld a jury's death penal- ty verdict Wednesday alter bt!arlng defense arguments against Imposing the death sentence and prosecution . argument.a for it. Defense cou,nseJ James Faulkner contended the jury failed to consider the lack ol a prior crtmlnal record for David Murtlabaw, 20, ol Santa Fe Sprinp. Faulkner al.lo cbarsed that a paycbololi•t was .. .-quaUned to state that llurti1baw would be I violent the rest of hia life. 1 •la'S..t••- OAKLAND CAP) -WUaon 1RUes Jr., son ol the state school 1uperin· tendent1 says be wm run for the Oaklana City Council a1alnll lncwn· bent Fred Mauiora. Riles, admliilatraUve aulltant lor Alameda Count1 Supervllor Jobn Oeorse since lt'N, bu been IDdoned by Ma1or Lionel Wllson. He H · nounced hia ~u cand.ldaCJ W9d· netd91. . He belaa hll Polltltal caner by wontq" on hll falber'1 eUllP&lln In 1970. • Simply present each coupon at the participating Denny's most convenient to you and you'll receive the delicious meal described for the special coupon price. We know you'll be pleased with the food and with the very hospitable people who are looking forward to serving you. Denny's is the favorite restaurant of ml II ions of Americans. With more than 100 menu Items available 24 hours a day, we're certain you'll find the kind of food to flt your mood. So, sit back, relax and enjoy . .. A DENNY'S BREAKFAST VALUE! ~ A DENNY'S LUNCHEON VALUE! A DENNY'S DINNER VALUE! \ Thurlday, FebNety I , 1871 llobert N. Wffd/Publfshtr Thomas Kewlt/Edftor Bfrbara l(relbfch/EdltMl•I P~ EdltM ~ 0tangeeoas•oa11vP•k>1 EdltiJrial ~ge ..................................................... Senior Housing Project R escued Huntinaton Beach o(f aciala have Just completed ome cUff·banaan1 n Sod•Uonil for a propoeed •~n•or c iUt n ht&h-r ' re denllaJ romplu. e-lti)tlauons ror the 185-untt romplex at Maln and Florido treet almost fl'll throufh twice but wer r scued each Um • by th Jty Councl ln the rtrst instance, the ale or the land to SPC>ru!Ofa • or the proJ · •t ('Olltlp · :d fter nearly a year in escrow. The city t pped an Md mad arran1ements to buy the lund with Hou tnl llM Community Development ~ funds At that Umc. omc'als placed strict restrictions on terms and reluctantly approved the purchase after U · 1urances that there v.·ould be no ac:kUUonal cost.s. But when It cam time to close tbe sale. the city waa hit. by an unexpected dd.luonal bill for $1,800 tor escrow losing l'()St.s. -; The deal cam periously close to goinl down foe a o nd Ume at this point Officials believed that they •I.ready had gone far enough. • • ' However, the council narrowtriawroved the extra _tharHe• which also will be fmanced by Housina and Com· umly Development funds. : The city look unprecedented steps lo save the com· alex ·project. But. as maddening as the hang-ups proved ~\o be, it still would have been foolish to abandon the project. The city did well to overcome irritation and close the deal. School Closures r.. Fountain Valley <elementary> school board m embers last week decided to close two schools in June due to. ~eclining stude nt enrollm ents. Many parents in the McDowell School area were dis· turbed at the board's decision to close the campus. . •. Some or the parents raised valid concerns regarding 11 • the makeup of an 11-member citizens• school closure ad- , visory committee and the criteria it u sed to close .~ McDowell instead of Tamura School. · Last year the school board approved a master plan that indicated either Tamura or McDowell would be closed depending on which school had the least number of students. But the advisory committee's r eport to the board dealt largely with a lleged noise. air pollution and safety problems due to McDowell's location near the San Diego Freeway. Why 1s McDowell School considered noisy, polluted and unsafe after 11 years of regular operation? • Could it be that there were four Tamura School-area parents on the c losure committee who felt their more ,.; residentially located school was s uperior? Or that there !; was only o ne McDowell-area parent on the committee to speak in favor of keeping her neighborhood school open? ~ $ .. ' • • With continuing enrollment declines predicted for at least the next three)lears. it would be a good idea U' the •chool board handles the closure procedure with more sensitivity. · life-saving Gift The City of Huntington Beach is giving away 2.500 smoke detector alarms to residents in low incom e brackets. Officials s ay the alarms can s ave lives and the city's role in giving them to residents who may not be able to afford them is laudatory. The need for s uc h alarms was tragically pointed out pnly Monday when a Huntington Beach woman perished tn a fire in her house. She had no alarm. The smoke detectors are paid for out of federal funds . ~here can be no better use of the money than saving hves Para d e S upport The Fourth of July Par ade has bee n an ins titution in Huntington Beach for more tha6"''70 years. But if the event 1s to come off this year. it appears tha~ it will have to be with stronger support from local residents. Citizens are being asked to make $1 donations in their' water bills to help ·cover parade costs that have escalated jn recent years. Businesses also are e xpected to contribute. The idea of asking residents to make contributions is a good one. If they want the parade, they should be will- ing to help support it with a modest contribution. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those or the Daily Pilot. Pther views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ,artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642~4321. Boyd/Tinsel Town BJLM.BOYD Q. Wun'~ U Oscar Levant wbo first latieled Hollywood as ~nse1Town'?" A. '!bat's right. Wbat be •ctually said was, "Strip the phony tinsel off Hollywood and you'll find the real tinsel underneath." Q. "la water the only 1ub- 1tance that expands when frozen?" " A. Y•, with one exceptloa, blamuth. Dear· Gloomy GU8 So take that San Clememel You only re· tailed One city coun· cllmen. We're 1otnc to set them all! HBRE81DENT ~, ... c_..,_ .... ==.::.=;:.~~= =:L.=.~..-· ' •or t Sea salt la aald to have t.be same ratio of salt to other minerals as is found ln human blood. Ftrsl i>enon lo get U.S. Sodal Security benefits was Ida May Fuller. She'd paid S22 in the fund before she re- ceived her rtrst check on Jan. 31 . UMO. By the time she died on Jan. 30, 1975, she'd collect· ed$20,000. How fut can you aay "two all-bed pattles, s pecial sauce. lettuce, cheese, pickles. onklm, on a Htame aeed b"n"? McDonald'• em~ are MDPONd to ••i it In fOW' MCOadl. Took a couple of Jean for an Iowa man to conrinee the autborlUet be lboulcl have bl• moniker on bl• own personalized car llcenae plate. Hll name: Stolen. Credit the late Adlal Stevenaon wltb th• line: "Suceeu ll all rlCht -if 10U don't labale ... . •• .... --.-.. A., Jack And l"80D Pr~ident's Load Too Heavy? WASHINGTON -J immy Carter. Male1ed by a balky Con1re11, an uncontrollable conomy and • cnUcal preq. hH h9d eawte to rellect ruefully upon Mark Twain's frustrations In ••klo& dJrectloru to a friend's farm ln New Humpshlre . "How rar Is It to Hendenion's pl1tce?" Twalo inquired. The f arm~r Hlu it waa "about a mile and .a half." Tw•in con tinued alon1 th e road unUI he met another farmer and acatn aait_ed the diatance to the Hen- dtrson rarm. "About a mile and ~ h alf." replied the second farmer. Still farther down lhe road, Twain asked apother passlng farmer the distance and was told , "about a mile and a half." Mark Twain replied : "Thank God . I am holding my own." THE PRESiDENT IS begin· nlng to wonder whether he is holding his own. He puts in about two working days every 24 holfl"S. He is usually at his desk by 6:30 a.m. Often he doesn't put aside his work, except for meals ancl ceremonial functions. unt11 midnJght. He keeps plugging away not merely from dawn to dark but, In times of crisis, from dawn lo dawn. Carter has an extraordinary energy t.hat exhausts ordinary men who try to keep up with him . Associates say he thrives o n work . He s pee d ·reads through stacks of presidential papers. The Carter technique, accordfog to those who know him, is to commit to memory the key facts and figures he needs to understand a problem. T hese become guidepostY. which he uses in his discussions with subordinates. Frequently Mailbox be hu ftabbtrfUted them by remembertna aome detail -a c utdepolt. he had picked out or the fine print -that they l)ad lorgottfn. CAllTEll IS A determined man who desperately wants lo ~ a aood president. But the strain ls beglnnl.ng to sfiow. The race Is more 1au.nt. the famous smlle waning. weary Jines ap- pearing w>der the eyes. "Whal 'this country needs," commented an anociat.e who bas tried to keep up with Carter's multipl)- ing problems and exbau.sUng pace, "la 11 aood night's sleep.'' Of coune. there can be no d1bt-bour day Cot I.be president. no la)'ina aside the awet0me retpoaslbUltiel. no Mtting down the ovfN'helmlng burdens. A move QR his chesaboard could cause war or bring peace. A chance remark from him could start an economic downsUde. He slts at the center of govern- ment with a thousand bands. pulling strings, controlllng movements. touching every- lhing. He direct& the preparaUon or figures he la expected to un· dent.and in detail. He sets forelp policy. guides leglslaUon, makes domestic dedsM>bs. controls the 1ovemmenl news output. plans pollUcal strategy. AaCBMC uws and tradl· ~t rU'Bt glance this mlOf seem confusing to you • • • • Uons a1Jo lmpoee upon blm a tbouaand and one minor cbons, many or them requiring his personal slpature. He 1s sup- posed to be lhe nation's chief g reeter , civic pitchman and Cather-confessor . He has lo serve as host at ban· quets for kings, queens and potentates. And he is also ex· peeled to greet. pickle queens, poster girls and Boy Scout del· e1ations. Nobody knows bow many hands a president shakes In a year, bltt Carter's hand bas often gone limp from tbe ex· ercise. The pres ident •s grµellng schedule raise5 an u.r1en\ ~ lion: has the world's blcceat~job become too bil for any single person to handle ? Not only ls Carter expected to comprehend the full significance of the thousands of wotds and figures that po\lr across his desk each day: not only must he de- cide immediate issues and cope with each new ~risls ; but he must also give constant thought to the future and chart a reliable course !or the ship of stale to follow. WHEN DOES the man in lhe White House find the lime to ponder? How can future presi- dents with normal exhaustion points be expected to bold down the job? The lesser post of de· rense secretary drove J ames Forrestal to suicide. Many hill· torians believe exhauslioa and illness adversely a trected \be de- <!isions of Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt during their dedirung years . The conclusion is inescapable. The presidency is too over· powering for any one human be· ang. The most modem country in the world is at the same time saddled wtlh one of the most archaic political structures. The presidency s h ould b e streamlined, perhaps with the vice president picking up more of the load. 1 Mandatory Sentencing Inhibits Justice To the Editor: • Mere l •r £•• paraphemalra-1n the same issue and become parking lots ror the J was disturbed to r ead lhe· To the F.ditor: really chilled my heart! The city coast. Tounsts are more f&npor· 'eb. 3 Comment Pase article re· council now wishes to play the tant than wi ldlife to t.he county garding People v. Tanner and T6is is in reply t o the role of moral arbiter. and decree planners. Money makes the mandatory sentencing. editorial. "Strike· Rights what may or may not be sold ln world go around. Greed kills the The notion that the Legislature Shaded" which appeared ln the local stores in total disregard ol world at the same time. Jan. 29 i.saue of the Pilot. the results or prohibition in this The Irvine Coast needs lo la conlrontlng "a court imposed You stated or implied in your country. become an urban park. If the threat to its independence" is editorial that teachers should federal government preserves it misf,ulded. Rather. as Chief not strike, but should pre· IT MAY WELL be true that Jut ce Bird recognlud, r igid, in· as a park the coast can be en· sumably use other means lo set· snarijuana paraphernalia is a joyed by everyone. The re-flexible sentencing standards tie disputes . Unfortunately. pernicious evil . but I suggest sources ol the area wlU be saved cannot be determined by the teacben are now ln a position lhe displays or shotguns . pistols, it the coast beCQmes a park. Leglslature without threatenine whereby a strike is the only cigarettes. sex magazines. Soul.hem Orange County will the judicial latitude essential to means that we have to resolve booze, etc., is equally potentially continue to grow. Open space Juatice and fairness. issues. Teachers statewide have damaging to all of us. Shall we won't be left anywhere If it isn't M andalory sentences eliminate been aeeldna bindlne arbitration ban them all? protected now for the future. the most crucial participants in to settle disputes, but no school Ms . Thobe's contention that DAVE HALL the criminal justice syste m: the board ln the state has as yet ac· citizen's may voice an opinion impartial judges. Removing the cepted it. In my school district and objection, and that our city C'laf•• Dre•• discretion traditionally reserved (Garden Grove Unified School leaders are really listening and To the Editor: ror them, especially in the un-District) we go through an will act on our behalf. prompts Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-usual case like Tanner <a sham arbltraUon process to settle dis· me to respectfully ask the cou.n- robbery intended to demonstrate pules. Then the board makes a cil to keep "hands off" this ping's nine-day visit to the U.S. potentially litigious situation, crovides him and almost a a n employer's~ fotaddJtional decision whlcb la final and bind· illlon Chinese <via satellite security> ultimately Jea\'es a dis· ing. <i.e. tbii9 vbltration process simply ~ause religious com· T . V. > excellent opportunity to mittees not withstanding, it is proportionate and disturbing is binding upon the teachers, but not their job to l egislate learn that their dream or a mount or power to the police and 1IOt UPOD the board.> morality. modernizing China can come prosecutors. MY TEACHER salary makes STAN KNIGHT true by quickly adopting in Whether an indlvid"al Is ar· Mainland China a framework of rested; whettier be or she is friends wonder how I Pt by. Tbe 8 .. ..W•e P•rfc Ame rican free enterprise booked: whether the district at· minimum wage is now almost To lhe F.ditor: system. tomey decides to prosecute, and f:-t.000• and after fiie years of col· T he same free e ntetprise upon which charge; t.he crowd· ge a teacher be ins al Sl0,000. The coast or Calitomia chokes sysle'1 bas been used by lhe My nephew recently srad\lated with development. The Irvine Republic ot China 'ROC > on Ing of the court calendar: the from high school and Jal 18 earns Coast , ls a welcopie sight in Taiwan since 19'9 and produced pressure to plea bargain: discre· $12,000 a year. thoofih be has no Oran• County. The air is clean a miracle or economic success lion is everywhere. 1pecial skills or tra Dini and Dd and the ocean o(f tbe coast tMre. ln 1978. the l"o-way trade PRECLUDING ' the impartial Job resi>on.sibllity. M~ wile i• a thrives with ftsb and vegetation. between the U.S and ROC was $8 teacher making $12-'00 a year Kelp beds support a wide varie· billion, almoet 10 times g:eater trial judge, mostramiliarwtthlhe after five years of colle1e .aad 'ty or ocean life off Ole Irvine than the trade between t U.S. crime and crimlnal, from impos· five years el(perience and bav-Coast. Wild animals make their anfi the Peoples' Republic of lo~ the moe\ appropriate sentence i n g trem.en d ou s Job homes in the Irvine Hills along Ch na which was less than Sl on y adds to the prosecutor's -reepomlblll~es. · thecoast. . · · blllion in spite or the fact that the slate's partial advocate -in· SeUUng for a Jower·tban-The Irvine Company plans de· the popalalion on Mainland creaalngJiectwer, and what Justice average salary lo exc=e for velopment of the Irvine Coast. China ls !iO &Imes &l'eMer than Black c "the unreviewable Job aecuHty ls ll'tce le lo Hot.eta and apartments would be thatonTaJwaill controloloneindividual." . m01t tea~ben. But acceptinc a s more than an "81Y blight. Each criminal case, its ad· to 10 percent paJ cut each year Development would be a source MOaE TRAN 30 years or JudlcaUon and dilposition. is a due to lnlJaUoa :ri;: too much of pollution. Air polluUon would Communislll .and Marxism in dlle111ma by Itself. Guidelines lo ask. I -have I 2' to 30 per-Increase with a heavier traffic Mainland China· resulted only providing suggested sentencing cent ln purcb.ulDI PoWer lo the Oow on Pacific Coast Highway. consrant s oclal and political ranftes help auard asainst dis· seventies. Cities like Newport Beach would strife that ruined chances ol real par\¥. arblt.rariness and uocer-Tenure does not protect a be the most affected by heavy t>rog reas there. The sam e t•lnty. Sent encing cannot. teacher's job tr he '8 not Dteded tramc. "isms" mu.st now be abandoned bow.ever. be based upon a strict or ii bis work is not HtlsfectorY. to allow requisite social and le1i&lative schedule or rule of Tenure ensures ~ue prO<!tll for THE ORANGE County plan· poUticlt stability or unJntenupt· thulh b, ii justice is to be done. tiring, as oppoeed to firinl a nine agency. the Environmental ed moderniiatlon procra m yet to The lnllextbllity of the • 'uae a teacher for acUvitJea unrelated ManaJitement Agency, h'ls .Oven be developed b to have any to bi• dut.lel u a teacher. their support to the development chances in s1o1eceedlng. l "n, go to prison'' law ls rarely Teachen have.been put lnto of tbe Irvine Coast. The staff ol AdoptJon or American free en~ -~the answer to problems as lq· an lmpoulble 1iluaUon. 'l'M1 the EllA recommended to \be terpriae system and abandon· 'describably com~e>c as crlme CaUlonda CoutaJ ·eommllatoo ment of CotnmunJsm and Marx· a nd punilbment. ~ldily cannot are stvea reapomlbWtJ fw ~ tJm tan lead to a poeel~ o1 meet the irraUon ty of IDOlt aucceaa of ~Jlcles and pro-at a ~ llntlGI oa tbe Irvine a break·throu1h ror Cb na· crime. lllU,aua, and unc:om· ~am• wbJc tbey bave not Coaat. that tbe mouth of the Taiwan reuntrfoatlon. Should moo drcumat.ancea mut be left lped to formulllte. Thq an coutal ~ lboald be paved lbla become a reality Nllooal to J~ dileret.lon and evalu· &."° ~ rwpoulbWtJ, .... qot Quote8 stabiUt.y In the Pacific la auured Uon. ~. of coune, to ap-autbortt.y. '('bey an uked to and cbanees for world peace will pellate revtew. be more and mon l'Mpoaalble M ~reatly .ahanced. Meaawhlle, penlatent ~uet· for leal and a.. moae~. ''RtpreMntaUve 1overnment ( 'm a U.S . naU!fe born t10n1 •to the natun or c me, ' JERR PARTIN on CapMol mu i1 ln the wont Chlneae·Amertcan >. the~ of punlahment, muat abape I have eeen It In my 16 HENRY YEE be ted by both our courts •••• .,..,Mll91. year• In the Senate. The heart ot • and =••ture. To the Editor: lbe probl•m ll that the Senate 1Att-::J::: nodfrt ON akomf. Hu te1talatlon and court Suale Newman's letter t2·1·'1t> and the Houle are awuh ln • ,.,.. lo c.'OftdlnlN ,....,. lo ,., rulln11, enatlM and decided warmed tM cockln of my heart aea ol apedal intel"Ql campaip .... or'""'*'°" Mbfl u ,..,-. •mldtt political ~ wbea lbe stated, '•we may be ~ontrlbutlona -aad special in· IACNrl ot • IOOrde or Int toW I» r.efflMal • peuceu. = to a Ume wben no elty terea\ lo~b"'1i• • -Sea. ~"'= ::. :., "': au to fi'•lf!• wit.b crlmlnal la nec.aaary Dor even de· Uwaril •·Kew in remarb JuUoe a eompnbeDalve llrabl9'' and ._ P"•rameat in Cpand tor a lfeffh at Lake .... ,,.., ...... =,,. ..,.,. .. , .. and tbouOU\11 • 1r ~ owMMlll....._ .• perlor State Colle1e ln a.Lat ltO ' ft•.•~~martJ....._ lllcbl1an. =A.::::;~:-.. ~~ • • • •• Drive Mapped By Bos -Bloc 8)' K THV Cl V °'.,,. 0.11; ....... A pt>ttUon drtve lo place '"'o anU·bUJlnc o· iU11th 1.'I on tht.' 1980 ballot wdl ~ICm out k. IC· <'Ordt"' lo or~ani1tl'j or OtaJ\C CoW\ty Bus· Bloc. OM or the Pftltlon would bt nearly 1dtnUcal to a propo.-.t'd r.lale conrutaltcmal amendment pendulj '" the &..ew1 l•lur that would b&n rorced dl'hOOI bustn& to •<'hl~ve recl•l balantf', Hunt· tngton Bt'ach rt'Sldl'nt Don~ End •rl• aid at a prcsr. ronlcrl'ncl' th1a mo rmnJt TR£. F.C'O 0 WO LO MEND th state COft· stttut1on lo give the Leg1. lature alone the power to provide for school reor1aruuUon or realiinntent of d.istnct bound1.rtt!'S If Bus· Bloc m e mbe rs can gather s~. 795 signatures on lhetr petitions by June 29, Mn . .En· derle explaJnl.'d, tbe measur would be placed before voters 1n 1980 Mrs Enderle said Bus-Bloc, which claims between 2.000 a nd 3,000 members, chose to offer its own 1rutialive despite the (act that one authored by s tale Sen. Alan Robbins, D·San Fernando Valley, also would probJbit forced school busing. ROBBINS' MEASURE ALREADY has passed the state senate in a 31·5 vote and is headed for As· ·sem bly hearmgs this month. If passed by the Legis lature, the measure also would go to voters in 1980. Mrs Enderle said there is a chance the Legislature wouldn't pass the Robbins measure, or it could be "a mended or watered down " before it gets to the ballot. "We hope it does pass. but we still are going through wtlh ours so that the Legislature will re· cognize this really is the will of the people,•· she explained. THE REASON FOR THE second initiative, Mrs . Enderle continued. wUl be to.take decisions about school organization matters away from courts and vest them in the Legislature. Bus-Bloc was organized by Mrs. Enderle a nd Huntington Beach Union High School District Trustee Doris Allen to. combat the so·called metropolitan plan, a school busing blueprint that would join Orange County with the three neighbor· ing counties for purposes of achieving a racial balance in public schools. The plan was outlined by a panel or experts appointed during court proceedings in the lengthy Los Angeles Unified School District busing case. MRS. ENDERLE SAIUus-Bloc expects to be joined in gathering petition signatures statewide by various boards o( realtors, pro-family and pro· lire organizations. She said she doesn't know if the Los Angeles-based Bus Stop will join the effort. She s'aid her organization has collected $18,000 in donations so far. but expenses for brochures, newsletters and other items bas totaled $18,500. Pun~h "I My there's something wrong with frff aemoe ... tic electioni; when a bolahle radical set• In. w Name Game Muscle Slwah Shift K.NOXVJLLE. Tenn. <AP) -A fede ral judge wants the Tennessee Valley Authority to have its headquarters in Muscle Shoals, Ala., and Mayor Randy Tyree says he can accomplish that ju.at by renaming the block on which the agency stands. An ordinance renaming the Knoxville block .. Muscle Shoals, Ala." was on the agenda for tbis week's city council meeting, which was postponed because of snow. Tyiee said the ordinance. written by the city's legal department, is in response to a Jan. 2S ruling by J udge Frank Mc Fadden of U.S. District Court in Birmingham, Ala ., ordering TVA lo move its headquarters lO Muscle Shoals. "It really makes as much sense as moving the headquarters out of Knoxville,•• Tyree said. TVA lawyers said they asked McFadden to suspend his injunction prohibiting TV A from operating out of KnoxvUJe until ~~can file an appeal and lbe case i.s beard by a · r court. Birth Defect E xhibit Models, slides, pbotognpbs and printed material dealing in the cause and prevenUon of blrtb defects are on exhibit at Golden West CoUe1e from 8toS p.m. Group tours may be arranged by callln1 Can· dace Donnelly at the Huntington Beach campus, m .nu. N••• • ••••• .. •···· '~~:."'"' . --..... -, ... ~,,. ~ ! ri J_H .. ..... io I I I I I " I I - 000 000 000 000 000 ~ Thundey. February 8. 1P79 --,.--~- G.E. DOOi CRIMES Get 80ft\.e chimM you can heu hut that don't 9T•t. yoW' l\en!M, Rea.U:r •moot.h lookil'\g dniqn.s and n ice aou.ncl. (F,... bell button? How would you rinv th.m without one? Would you nab two wiN9 ~or what?) s DAIL v PILOT A J 7 WITH FREE BUTTOI HERALD 3" ALLEGRO 4" R ONDO 5" TAllERY CLEAID BEATILATOR 36" ZEIO · CLEARANCE ftREPLACE ci..n. and condltiona S..th• or vinyl. UM on oolf ~. e&r or bcwat interiorw, aho.e. •inyl tope.. etc. 1 2~04 TERRA COTI'A RED. BANDl-BRICI Co.en 4 to 5 square feet. Demonstration all storea Feb. 10 Sat unlay 10 to 3. OLDTOWN USED, ANTIQUE WHITE. OR 5" TAWNY BROWN, BX. INTERMATIC TIMERS CORDLESS 497 l!>lllB SUPER Wltl\ •vtablt M'ttin<J 80 on :nJ of( tirnt will vary to tum li9hta COP on and oU ln a natural ••Y· s•7 •07118 BOWARD BARD TIP PLYWOOD SAW BLADES 1" • 0 1~" 1.87 1.97 A guy t.eU.. me that th ... cost 1 ... than it would to take your old blade to be shar nec:l. Check that out. 41NCB AFRICAN VIOLETS 127 EA. Undenta.nd the viol.ta took one look at the hail last week and hid under the pot. You know how stori• go. 21 PC. SOCKET SET YOUR 5ss SAE OR CHOICE METRIC ' .PEERLESS WASBERLESS 4'' UVATORY FAUCET Lea ~ to ..,..r out. no waaher to replace. Super c hrome with multi· facet plastic knobe. , , .• '9600 92 1~" Zx4 STUDS 13?,._ ~!~!.!~a ~~S 2.99 C - l ALL PURPOSE 20" 10 PT. OR 26" 8 PT. s.ss 9.99 D-23 PROFESSIONAL 26" 8 PT. OR 10 PT. 6" BOSTON FEDS 2·~ Dumb me, I thought th ... thinp grew wild. I've got toru of it around my hOUM. SUPERIOR SPORT GRIP STANDARD SUPER 1•' 2" .... . ;;;· {. . ..t'~ ~, One Ic)g does i~ .::\?~ 1'l fact they ~~ uy don't use any ~. mor.thanone at a. time .. that's pnrtty 'hot. Just light and it bUJln.S completely in approxim.at.l y 3 hours. INSTAPURE WATER llLTER By WATEl 'Pll --.:by~Wl;;rter=PJC~~= 17~~ Water taste. better, Wters out Md.iment, bad~· old car tirM. rowboats, and such. 4x8 SANDED SHOP PLYWOOD ~.. 5.97 3At" ~.97 ~.. 9 .97 ~.. 12.97 Smooth dne side and the other one ian 't too bad either. ~;;;o14 =<II PRUNING SAW A little judicious u.e pruning now and you'll be p leaM<i with the new growth in the spring. 4 66 t2108H SCOTTS TURF BUILDER 2000 SO. FT. 4000 SO. FT. 6000 SO. FT. •.77 .... 11.99 ThOM fo)Jg with n ic. la""'8 didn't get them by not feed.in the gr ... , :r'k..now. ) ~ _., ODOR SHIELD 55c Stick it b:r the aahtJ0a7 C\d lt goee to work on odon lmmec:liatelJ (a lltti. guy inside th. th.ina eats nnob?). NATION .r;~================:::::::..:--.. Trifutiral Commi-ssion -Has ClOut NEW YORK «AP> -E r wc>oder bow a G~raia pHnul rarm r and ll·PtOI oullkM-r lo Wuhlngton'• power same sot lo know the Jn· •ld •ta v..ho now run Am• n<'a'a fore1an atralra" ll dt•alt with m ny or them •~n ht ~• a m m~r or 1 UUl«"·known tomm1 alon th1l dt•<'rl 1Llt'lf mod ally u ''a priv.le North Am rtcan 'uru~an Jap n ln1Uative on mal tera of common con"'rn " FO ND .D N .AIU.V . I 'Y .,\ If<> by bttnker Dav1d RO<'kf'ft!ller, lhis body <'llled the TrUateriaJ Commluton baa w \lf'd 1'T wbll! papers on ubJ•'\'U llkl' l'ntraiy. Ea t W . t rtlaUon aod waya lO doubt n produt'lion tn Aala Ill membt!l"'lhlp I Ullf" ta lbal lhb lan't Juat another ml annual lunrh t'lub Jimmy arttr, new to uh ncton t.a yea"' atco and ~nrnor of Of'Or•ct• at t Ume he Jolntd th romm •on. •t•frtd th<' top r ach of hb ad m1nl1tr1tlon hravlly "1\h Pt'OJ)lc h knC'w aa a m mber of th11 com m11aion Cart r . a com ml111on m m~r unllJ 1bortly before hla dee· lion ln 1978, btcame '"' qualntcd with olhn memb ra ht' was lo make howsehold namtiH durlnic hus pr ldency Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal, Ocrenar Secret ury Harold 8rown, Vlc'' Preald nt Waltt.1r Mon ... _,,......_d l c .. CARTER 8 e ond ~-ert.•ttary or State Cyrus V1rnce. amon1e oth<>rs Unllc>d Nat on11 Amba1111ador An drew Young, un old Curter friend, ah10 wu::. on the commission. CARTER'S NATIONAL SECVIUTV adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski. was lhe director or the com· mission from J973 through 1976. Olber names on the commission may also ring a bell: Henry Kissinger, West Virginia Gov. John D. Rockefeller IV, Illinois Gov. James Thompson, 10 members or Congress in all. about 250 or the most powerful government, business. labor and in· telle('tual lehders m North America, Western Europe and Japan. The commission's aims reflect Rockefeller's reasons ror rounding the group in 1973. Al thal time, lhe Nixon administration strained U.S. rela· tJons with J apan and Europe wilh a series of s ud· den changes. placing quotas on certain imports~ devaluing the dollar. • and his trip lO China in 1972. l Rockefeller 's idea, sa ys commi ss ion s pokesman Francois Sauzey, "was that a g roup of influential private citizens might improve the c limate between Western na- tions ... IN S HORT , Rockereller convinced some of the world's most powerrul in·• dividuals thal relations aPw1,....... w i t h i n t h e n o n . BRZEZJNSKI communist world were in bad repair. He hoped the Trilateral Commission would provide a forum for discussing and solving the free world's common problems or, as'°oe observer puts it, "Lo make the world sc.:e for Coca·Cola." In recent months, the commission bas stirred bitterness among Southwestern farmers. Some in the Texas panhandle have posted anti-commission slogans on their tractors because, as a spokesman for the American Agriculture Movement puts it, the body "seems lo be part of an urban and in· duslriaJ establishment attitude that doesn't un· derstand the problems or the family farmer ... THE COMMISSION'S BUDGET is drawn from private contributions. about Sl million every three years. from foundations like t.he Lilly Endowment Fund and lhe Ford Foundation, individuals includ- ing the Rockefellers, and corporate grants from Exxon and others The commission's impact on world affairs is tricky lO measure. Sauzey says that a few of the commission's re· ports made recommendations that were later adopted by world bodies. A 1973 report on the world monetary system urged the International Monetary Fund to sell some of its gold and use the proceeds to aid poorer nations to develop. Thal proposal was eventually implemented. A 1975 COMMISSION report on North-South ecomomic relations helped prod the World Bank in lo opening the so- cal led "third window" to lend money lo poorer Third World nations. But the commission's •extraordinary ' membership is its true power. according to Sauzey. It has no problem getting top policymakers to read its reports. "It makes its VANCE prestige felt informally. . We have the ear of world leaders. We don't wanl to have a direct influence, bul rather we hope lo promote a percolation of ideas,·· he says. He admits thal the sharp differences in the Sun Drink Eclipse Celebrated RICHLAND, Wash. (APl -The Richland area la Celling ready for a total eclipse of the sun later thlt month and one lounge la serving a drink that wlll let any customer enjoy the solar spec· llcular even if lhe weather la cloudy. The Hanlord House hu concocted a drink for ch1lr·bome astronomers. Made of rum, gin, sloe gin and orange Juice, lt's called the "Total Ecll ." ~drink m"-ht not have the Immediate lm· pact ol an ec:Upee, but the glow will continue lone alter tbe sun '1 bu stopped, aald Hanford Rouse IOU.,. Ruu Cox. Tbe Feb. as ecllPM will b9 the 1ut total ecUpae of lbe ,_ Yislble anywhere la tbe COfttlneDtal Unit· ed Statea thla cefttW'J. It la acbedu.14!d to occur at approximately l :lT a .m . PST and lut 2 minutes, llaecoods . • WHlern world that I d to the comml11lon's foundlqat ll HI t "&It the climal hH •mproved. Ood knows tlu.•r• ar hUl(tl ptohl m• bt·tiw n Japan and the U • but trade• lit ura. have now ~n adtJr 11ed In a YMY dlff rent &1nd mor., candid way than betore the comm Ion." waa deffntrallied lo 1ive the headquart.en In Japan and France• mott equal pollc)' voice witb tho U.S headquartera located ln New York. ''We Uond to be more piecemeal now. There la no lon1tr OW' kind of lnteUeduaJ framework as un· der Bruilnakl," heaald. · E•tCultve Oll1ces 7812 Ed1ngor Avo .. Huntington Beach. CA 92647 SoutllNn C1llll01n•a n1'fll0flil/ OllO('OS 8'1~5 Villlf'y V•f'W ';1 UuMa Pa·~ CA 1)()620 BUT AUZt:V AV TH Eat: are atron1 doubt.a that th" cQmmaulon will exiat ~yond 1982. wh n lta lalnl thn• year lnlluaion of ab®t SI mllUon runt out Ther Ii. a feelln1. he says, lh•l the c:ommh11tlon'1 "atneral cohe11lon" sufler&d1 when 8n 11n1kl abundontld the ~'Ommlsaion to work tor thl• C'artt.•r adm1ni1traUon THl!aE 18 A P0881BILITY, he says, that the <'Ol'l'mlulon'• work may be uaumed by the AUan· Uc: ln1Ulut4l for lntemaUonal Alfalra ln Parla. At any r1l , the commlHlon expects to issue It.a nut re_port thl• sprlna on oll exporters. Later repom wm ln«'lude a look at trade between North and South t'Ounlrl •. and an examination of world 20715S Avillonfflvd C ,,on CA00746 Gl 22821 La~e FOfflGI Or (l.8~• ro10\ll. Cl To10 CA92630 • 1001 ( •moo11JI Hwy , La llabra CA 90631 In urn aftt'r On"'''" ki letl, the commlHl<>n producllvlly trnd l chnolo.iicaJ change. SAll NtCft toot mu fQ. If, tt7t Ml ,. • •• O f ~ ;'I <. dettmf ... ,........,._......., .. ~ .. w. .... -~ ... .......... the hot water worlls Gu water heater• with gl ... lined tank• to realet corrosion plua hot water recovery system to aave energy and hlgh-tempereture shut.off for safety 79111 ~ ............. 94.95 ...... ...... 104.91 so ........... 114.95 SANTA ANA Son ,Otego Frwy kids cani knock It Kld-tetted Glidden Spred Latex aeml-i31osa enamel glvee you a non·yellowtng Improved durablllty enamel flnlah. Reg. 15.25 10!! keep your top In Up-top shape OuPont'a 'Rally' Ylnyt top cleaner cleans and puta protective ooetlng on vinyl to add yeara to tta llfel Reg. 2.29 1•• stretch your llghtlng 19/2 lemp cord In brown • white or btec:k. R9-wfre and tilt old danget'oua i.mpe today! Reg. 11" loot. 7~ lasting ftnlsh In ftylng colors Glldden'a Spred Satin Latex Wall Paint ..• goea on amoothly and leaves a long· luting, good-k>oklng flnlah. Reg. 9.99 7~ Ctlecil the condition of your battery with thla handy hydrometer. 1653C. Reg. 2.18 111 '\ testing, testllMI 1-2-3 ... Clrcutt teet« rMda and '9lta electrlcal dtcutta from 90 to IOO Mlfta. AC or DC ..... ..,.., Reg. 1.21 11° • 4 I 4.0 Lllllg Bcac;b (]lvd • Long ai:. ch. CA 90807 'o()flAI I 095 l1v1r>e 8tvd T Ui lon CA 92680 ~ >fl\ IN!r Z3S N C•l•US Ave WOii Covina CA 91793 If ~01 It ~ ~ ·~_.) ·aat a real chain reaction Hometlie-12-lnch electric chain uw, the one that etarted the llghtwelght chain MW revolutlonl Makea ahort work of the t>lggMt )Ob91 Powerful wtth an the newest .. fety t•tur .... #XEL-12". Reg. 59.95 roll-on the color Made to Kerm'a rigi d apeclflcationa. Deep well plastic tray with ladder ho<>ka. 9" roller frame and aff-purpoH cover. 11 & #2. Reg. 3.49 2·~ cleaner runs belts . . · UM 'Gumout' carburetOf end fuel •)'Item ~ to remove gum. varnish, moisture from system. Add to gae tank. 1·pint. Reg. 1.85 111 bubble Ille things that grow Ratnbird.. bubble aoeicer doea neevy lrrtgatlon Jobe ~ aptey. No aphtahlng or equtr11no. 18·20C. Aeg.1.71 .11• hoe and row Sturdy, euy to handle hoe mak• your gardening chorea go a lot...-. Sharp 8W'x4W' bled9. Long hardwood handle. 311 .... S~ I rail• In the ........ a.den bow '9ke with eturdy ... ---and nm.. Ptu• tone _h1rdwood hU1dle. "8814C8. ........ 411 f"1.f\'1'/ I h.J/ Jf> .. ....... I ' I . I ' . . I •• l• • paper I VOL. 72, NO. 39 ~ ~ CTIONS, S8 PAG s ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1979 TEN CENTS ' .,_~---------FBI, Officials Confer ---------....... ~ Coast &y .IOANNF. REYNOLDS Ot-.OMty~ .... More than 100 s cunty officers and executlva of Orange County defense contractors met ln Sanla Ana to- day with counter-antelliaence agents ltom the FBI. Herbert Clouab, special aeent lo charfe of counter·in· telligence for the FBI in Sout.hem Callfomla said today's seminar was held to acquaint the buslneasmeo with "tbf. very real Ch re at·· posed local business by foreign spies. CLOUGH s'AID he was unable to supply any specific information regarding the extent or espionage activity locally, but ht\ said that the activity bad increased drastically in the past year Foggy Chain Reaction Alerted to Today'& emi.nar was the second in a series for about 250 firms In Orange County that supply classified technology products ror the government. Firms participating in today's seminar included Hughes Aircraft Microelectronic Division and Ford Aerospace and Communication Corp. 's Aeronutronlc Division. both based in Newport Beach and McDonnell Douglas, FBI officials said. LIKE THE nasr session held in November, today's meeting was lO acquaint lhe businessmen with the scope or the problem as well as teaching them bow lO spot penetra· lion by spies of their firms. Io most cases, according to Agent Clough. the es· ,.., . Espionage piooage activity takes the form of a foreian aeent befriend· Ing an employee and eventually persuading the employee to steal classified material from his company. "We need for these people. as weU as the public. to become believers," said Clough. He acknowledged that his Inability to cite specific numbers and cases would create a "credibility gap" and agreed that "it could lead to paranoia" on the subject of espionage ln Orange County. .. WE DON'T WANT people looking under beds or over their shoulders," he said. "We want them to be well enough informed that they know what to look for and to <See FORE IGN SPIES. Pa&e AU Woman Ki11ed in Freeway Crash Well are ProfJe Infants Found • Dead in Home ROCH~TER. N.Y. (AP> - Two investigators for a welfare agency, trymg to find out when a woman's baby was due, found that s he wasn't pregnant anymore -and that there was an Infant's body in tbe base· ment. Another infant's body was in the attic'. The woman, 34-year-old Geraldine Temple, was charged ·Hearings ()n Irvine Coa3t End By JACKJE HYMAN Ol tlle D.llllY ,., ... St.H The last in a series or local public hearings on the future or the Irvine Coast wound up Wednesday with more pleas to save the environment. a few sur· prise suggestions and regrets by coastal commissioners that they must hurry through a decision. ·;Jl seems to me we now have the 1ieSrt of what the Coastal Act is all about," said Donald Wilson, chairman or. the South Coast regional coastal com· mission, at the meeting in Hunt- ington Beach City Council cham· be rs He said be regrets that com· missioners spend most of their time on such minor matters as how high a house can be built, while the local coastal plan for the 10,000-acre Irvine Coast has occupied only a few weeks of bearings. · Wilson said commissioners will try to reach a decision to (See IRVJNE, Page A%) Wednesday night with two counts of serond-degree murder, Detective Lt. Louis Campanou:i said. Sbe was held overnight without bail. Autopsies were scheduled for today, but police said the babies apparently bad been stran11ed. Tbe inf ant found in the attic, a girl, bad been dead for about a year, police said. Cam p anoul, head of Rochester's Physical Crime Squad, said he went to the home after two investigators from the Monroe County district at· tomey's office telephoned him to say a woman told them there ' was a body in the basement. He said he found the ''semi· buried" body of a male infant with pressure marks on its neck. After detectives spoke with Ms. Temple at police bead· quarters, they returned to dis· cover the girl's deco01posed body, partially hidden in rags and papers in the attic, he said. Campanozzi said a county medical examiner decided the male's birthdate and ru*1 that the infant had lived only a few (See INFANTS, Pa&e A%) Irvine Burglar Gets Costly Rings A blue star sapphire ring and a wedding set of two diamond rings were taken in the burglary of an Irvine home at 12 Ensueno Wesl, it was reported lO police Wednesday. The owner of the house Fran· els Sampieri, 32, valued the loss at $2,500. Police said lt was possible the burglar useo a key. 1he rings were kept in a measuring cup atop the kitchen sink of Sampieri 's home. School Architect : Hiring Postponed Plans to hire an architect to decide wbeJ'e schools should be built in propoeed Irvine Com· pany residential developments along Culv.er Drive lo lrvine were put off indefinitely Wednesday by school board trustees. The trustees said it wouJd be futile to p~ with plannlna for achooll wltbout knowin1 wbat Jevel ol st.ate hancla la IOlDI to be available to build them. With only about $10 million in achoo) buUd.lq bonds left in the dlatrtct fUnd, Truatee Elisabeth SlcoU aald, "I'm hysterical" about bow ICboola will be built when tbl moeey ruu out. Tbe latest price tac for an elementary eehool was more tbH $2 mlllioa. Hilb ICbooll come in at about '1 mUlloo t1-e da~·· ne .,...,. o1 PropaetUaa u tut , .... ~ tebool 41Ae. trlcll frcim7 calf in• new bond elections lo get money for build· ing. The district currently ia rely· ing on a statewide lobbying el· fort-called the Coalition for Adequate School Housing <CASH> and organized by Irvine administrators-to persuade the state legislature to approve a state aebool buildiq bond elec· tlon. It would take two-third• of the legislators to approve aucb a measure. The Irvine Company plans to beiio construction of some 10,000 homes alona Culver Drive, between lbe San DMso and Santa Ana freeways, ln .-. It ii eltimated tbat up to 1.400 ~bOOl•qe cbUdren will oceapy tbote l'elkleneel. Unleaa bulldiaa montya an acquired, district ad· mialatnton ..,, tbeN woal\ be acboola ln which to put t.bem. O.lly ...... ..,._.., ltkN,.. IC .... lef WEST COVINA WOMAN KIUED AS PICKUP TRUCK SLAMS INTO OVERTURNED SEMI· TRAILER 0 !'8 Accident leads to Another on Fog-ahrouded San Diego Freeway Fog Expected \ To Continue In County Fog made many Orange Coun· ty motorists late for work today and played a part in two deadly traffic accidents. The California Highway Patrol said inland Orange Coun- ty appeared to get most or the fog with Orange, Santa Ana, Placentia and Anaheim report. ing traffic tieups and a rash or minor co1Jls1ons. And there will be more or the same tonight, the National Weather Service warned today. ·'These are classic (og coodi· lions and we expect the situation to persist at least through Fri· day,·' a forecaster said. Traffic officers said foggy con· ditions t.bb morning were a def· inite factor in two south county collisions that cost the lives of two women moiorists. A 44-year--0ld newspaper dis· tribufor died behind the wheel or her llgbt pickup truck after it collided with an overturned truck on the San Diego Freeway south of El Toro Road. And a 29-year-old woman died in the wreckage of her sports car when it struck a van on Laguna Canyon Road, about one mile south ot tbe San • Dieeo Freeway. Weather forecasters said foe concHtiom tonight may be more e1tten1ive and may involve coastal communillea more heavUy than wu the case earlY today. ll.4J'E A HEAKr -ONE OF OURS · It's Ume for •Print lovin' ud Valentine'• Da1. The Dally Pilot celebrates tbil apeclal Muon with wo'rda Md pictures detalllnf 1itt1 for Valentines ln a ZO·pa1e mafaaint, • 'Lovtn •." Loot for tbil 1eeelal ma1111ine ln todaJ'• Dally Piiot. .. Job Tractor Thefts Lucrative Racket By PIDUP ROSMARIN Of ... o.lly ...... Si.ft The theft of a construction ·tractor from an Irvine job site this week was one of a half· dozen over the past year, police say. What do thieves do with them? According to Irvine detective Paul Jessup, just about anything and everything. · ·~·~metimes they use parts of them for their own tractors," Jessup said. "Sometimes they ship them to Midwest farms, or. sometimes, ju.st into the next county to another construction area." Jessup said the thieves may steal several tractors and, mix· iog up the parts from all, rebuild hybrid tractors and resell them locally-possibly even to the same company from which they were stolen. The oarts of the tractors alone are valuable, Jessup said, and sometimes the vehicles are dis· mantled and end up as parts or a hundred other machines. To an increasing number of crooks. Jessup said. construe· lion tractors .. are a super com· modity. They're just like cars. "A lot of people, that's all they deal in: Construction tractors." The big constn1ction equip· ment--which can be modltled for either construction or farm work. is worth an average of $80,000 per tractor. The crime has become so com· mon lo construction areas-i>Ot just in Irvine but all over Southern Californla-tbat tbe Loa Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles County Sber1ff1s Office and the California Highway Patrol all have special (See TREfTS, Page ~Z> Coastline Searched For MisSing Boat A Santa Barbara to the Mex· lean Border sea search con· Unued today for three former Oran1e Coast realdenta whose commercial filhin& boat 11 over· due after leaving San Die10 Jan. 22. Cout ,uard offtciala said the • vetael wu due to return to port Sunday after complellna a two· week ftlblnC trip of the banks near the Channel Islands. ' Gary Newton, 22, and Dennia Vowell. II, former Costa Mesa reaidentl, and Vowell'• wife, Debble. a former south eounty realdent, were aboud lbe boat. ·•we•n Uled '° lt.lm betnc out a lpQa time. but .Wq HM Ulil baa h~ befon," N•wton'1 motber. Eleanor, aat41 today. "We're Jun boP,lnc and Pf1.Y· .. ' .. ing," the Costa Mesa resident added. She said ~r son was an ex· perlenced seaman and that there was enouch food on board tbe 40-foot craft for two weeks. Coast Guard officials said there was no Indication the boat. "The Annlatice," was In trou· ble: It was equipped with two. way radios. a direction finder and other aalety equipment. A preliminary Harch bu been expanded to cover a 3,IOO· squire-mile area that extada 120 milee out to aea. Mn. Newt.on aald ber IOD and Vowell both au.cled blp ICMol lD c-. Meea. Vowell wu ...,.. ried tut June. Tbe three ..... I inl M8IOUI DOW Ult addnllM ' In San J)leao. • ' Accident Sparks Others By WILLIAM HODGE OltM o.lty ,..._.St." A wrong-way driver on the freeway set off a chain reaction of accidents in foggy Laguna Hills this morning. One woman died. Barbara Throop, 44, of West Covina. a Lo& Angeles Times truck driver. was killed by one of tbe crashes. Tom Sapp. California Hi1bway Patrol' spokesman, said she wu unable to stop the light pickup truck she was driv· ing wben she came to an over· turned tractor-trailer rig. The series of accidents began at 4 :55 a.m .. Sapp s~id, when Frank Falkenberg, 66, of Laguna Hills, entered the San Diego Free way at Alicia Parkway. He was traveling northbound in the southbound lanes. The reason was not lm· mediately known. Eduardo Duarte, 31, or Long Beach, swerved the tractor· trailer to miss Falkenberg's northbound car. But the massive semi sideswiped the car and overturned. Mrs. Throop's light pickup came through the fog and slammed into the overturned tractor-trailer. She died !n· stantly. Falkenberg's wrong-way car <See CRASH, Page AZ> Carew Lores Cash The acquisition of Rod Carew couhl put an additional $2.7 million into the California Angels' coffers this season, makin& Carew's $800,000-a-year salary a bargain. See the Daily Pilot's exclusive story on Page Bl. Co ast W eather Night and morning fog and low clouds. Otherwise fair with high clouds through Friday. Lows tonight 40 to 46. Highs-Fri· day near 80 at beaches to upper IOI lDland. I N81DB TODAY A t1'ilaNnll commudoft on Jordgn a/fain gov. Jimm~ Corter JOtne ooluabk ad· aatW~Of~· tioftGl poWb btfore he ftl• tntd tltt W1dU HOUie. ~ PQflC All. .. •. { HoJDes Site Mulled· Tiro New Runs Set ByOCTD ycamore Hills Area 1\ • MITCHI'! N .. o.lf• ....... tY!t l. 1wia &-ach C:ounl'tl~man a lly 8 ltt r ue •• uue tins hnm ~ bf. built In Lhe city' "' ly acqwr~ S ca mono HUia art'a to pay ocr a ts. 7~ ml Woo d bt on the land du J un• 15 Aod hc-r ft>llow t'Ouncil mt m· beri. JVinl-d ht•r Lht!I wttll 1n h\"r n ·qul."i.t to ut lea1:1t con tder pm- r.>Ot-uls tor re td ·ottal de~tlO(> ma>nt •dJ•ct'nt to lA'I u~ World M ri. ~Uen.MI sa d lb Ta.st 1-'or rc charged wnh plannJna the l)rtbltoe SS2·acre parcf'I out Laguna Cunyon Rood I c urrt?nt ty retrtncted from look1ne Into rt•1:11df'nUal developm •nt on any of thelund Rut tht rouncllwoman sald thut perhap:. tbt 156 house1 al· lowed In lh areu an the city' Specific Phan would enabl lM ('tty to pay orr lb debt Iler proposnl 11:1 to sell enou~h land near Leaaure World to pi,y otr l.be debt. whlle lt1vlnt the m a,tonty ot Sycamore tlllla ln It.A n1tur.i state "It may be' b(ltter to devf lop a tilth~ oC Sycamof'('t ttlll1 In order to aav~ UM! canyon and Hve the 0 rf'enbelt." M n1 8 lloru<' aald "It's urely much btllter thun wh ut 'Ii !<.'u r rently > on t h\' hor1loo. ·· 11h added. H YIQ& the Task Force ts cun~ntly looluna at development of 2,000 to •.ooo untu acrou the can1on ro d, u slatem .. nt adamanUf denled by Councllm n Howard Ouwaon he said the Ta k Force b pursuin& a plan to develop a golf eoune, re!'!Ort area and 2.000 to 4 .000 bom lining the proposed aol! creen.s to pay for the land. "The Southern California Oolf Associal.lon wanu. to purchase the land for $5,000 an a cre. The Irvine Company say the land 1s worth $180.000 un acre . a nd E',...P.,,eAJ ffiVINE COAST •.. forward to the state Coastal Comm1ss1on at 1 p.m Wednes- d ay m the same Huntington Bea<.'h chambers. T he hearing o nce again focus e d o n c o ncerns by nume rous environmental and cifizen groups about Lhe future or the area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, valued fo r both ecological and aesthetic reasons. The Irvine Company, which owns the land, is s~ing a plan that will e nable it to build recreat.tonaJ racililies, including a hotel. along the coast and res- 1 d e nt i a I pro pert y inla nd, especially on vie~ sites such as ridges The local coastal plan sub- mitted by the Orange County Environmental Ma nagement Agency concur:. with Irvine Company wishes tn many respects, including the "fingers of developme nt " on ridges which citizens have opposed as damaging to canyon flora and fauna. Several speakers urged that development be limited to a compact area. Some unexpected suggest.ions were also presented by two citizens at Wednesday's hearing low-cost housing continue to be provided in the area. Friends of the Irvine Coast spokesman Jeff Georgevich proposed that resi- dents be given a "life estate" to re main on the property until ·they die or choose · -WJLDLJFE CORRIDORS: A state Department of Fish and Game spokesman urged that quarter-mile-wide corridors con nect all conservation areas to al- low wildlife to move from region to reg100. Richard Munsell of the Orange County Environmental Manage- ment Agency disagreed, saying he believes much narrower cor-ridors would suffice. TRAFFIC · S e veral speakers urged establishment or a shuttle bus system within the proposed deve lopment, and commissioners mdicated their concern for the effect of traffic on neighboring cities. -RUNOFF: A spokeswoman for CalTech 's Kerkhoff Marine Laboratory lo Corona del Mar a sked for protection or valuable kelp beds at Cameo Shores and Monarch Bay from pollution A coastal commission staff member noted that, because of runoff problems, the number of acres dedicale4 as open space ls less important than that whole ecosystems -canyons and ridges -be kept intact. uggested naturally wutt to abow • proftt ol $171,000 ao acre," abe aid ''That prof al Is hom~~... s he l llld Sbt aJd annexation ts the key to Lhe Tuk ft'orce plan, saying '·apparently the &rvtne Company wlll pay the city if we annex their property and permit de· Y(.•lopment ·on Lheir s ide Tb.is is caallcd trade-Orf. ' T he councilwoman proposed the city manager be able to coo- 11ider development of 156 bomes Instead Sul Councilman Dawson termed Mrs Bellerue·s state- ments "a raft or rumors. half· truths and £actual inconsisten- cies." ·'She sJts on the Task Force and absolutely no mention bas ever·been made or any finalized home development in that quan- taly <2.000 to 4.000>." pawson said "She is talking rancy and pre senting it as fact." He says her proposal to sell off 1ust enough la nd near Leisure . World on El Toro Road to pay off the debt is not well thought out. "The la nd next to Leisure World Is virtually useless for home development," he said. ·'It's located directly under the Edison lines and you just don't deve lop expensive homes unde r millions of lines and poles." He said the councilwoman's proposal would force develop- m e nt o n the El Toro side 1 ·'which amounts to a proposw for residential development in the heart of the Greenbelt." ''From a praetical standpoint, the idea or (Laguna Beach> serving 1S6 home11 isolated four m Iles from our center i s economically Impractical and would be a true drain on the tax· payers. "We will entertain <her idea> but we want {he <funding) alternative that is most suitable for the bulk of re$idents " Dawson said. ' The counc il vote was un· anlmous to allow Mayor Jack Mc Dowell and Councilman Wayne Baglin to present the alternative of selling orr land to pay orr the d e bt to county supervisors. E'....,P.ageAJ CRASH ••• ~ .. , ~ ... 5'-fl ~ PLASTIC SURGEON LOADED WITH DOCUMENTS Dr', Relph W. Small (left), With Attorney Terry Gile• Plastic Surgeon Testifies on De-ath A Santa Ana plastic surgeon was in Oranie County Superior Court today to defend himself against charges that his practice is a danger to public health, s afety and welfare. Dr. Ralph W. Small arrived in court with attorney Terry Giles carrying a bundle of papers he hopes will prove that the death or a 33-year-otd woman last No- vember was nothing more than a SO·called medical misadventure. The woman. Kim Plock died Nov. 28. fi ve days afte r undergo. ing a breast implant in Small"s office at 3620 S. Bristol St.. Santa Ana. According to the complamt filed by the stat e a ttorney generars office on behalf of the board of Medical Quality As surance. Mrs. Plock went into respiratory a rrest whtle un· dergoing the surgery at about The Oranee County Transit District will inaugurate two new west and central county routes next week a nd will chaniie s erv ice to the Lagun a Niguel Federal building next month. The new routes. 66 and 141, will begin hourly service Mon· day. Route 66 starts on McFadden Avenue at lhe Westminster Mall a nd roughly follows McFad<ko to Tustm, with stops at Golden _ West College and Huntingtob Center. The Tustin end of the route is a loop around LarwiD Mall. Route 141 will run from l'ltb Street on Newhope Street to S later Avenue in Fountaht Va lley. The route goes east Oii th e r o ad th-at becomes Segerstrom Avenue In Santa Ana before running into Oyer Roaa which cha nges to Barrart- ca S\oad in Irvine. ,. t the Irvine end of the route. the line goes down Jamboree Road to the city hall at McGaw Avenue. The change for the Laguna Niguel federal building mvolves expansion of the Saddleba<!k Va lley Di al·A-Ride to include the building formerly outside the service's territory. In addttion, route 85 on La Paa Road will be changed so that buses dtive into the building's parkmg lot Transit distr ict spokes ma" Tom Echorn said those two changes. which go into effect or) March 23 were made to accom .. modate the growm~ number of people employed a t the building. OCTO directors approved the new systems Monday after a brief debate about getting some of the businesses t hat will benefit from the routes to help o ut 1n promot ing the 'lew serviC'e. E'ro111 l"flfle Al INFANTS ••• lroine Plans Hobo Cookout 9 :55 a.m. . It wasn't until nine hours later minutes. -The female had lived th t gene aJI d long enough to be given the An old·fash1·oned hobo cookout a emer Y care wa s c e t th ffi d tb t · k name "Anita," he said. is scheduled from 6 p.m. Feb. 16 o e o ice an e s n c en woma n transfe rre d to Santa T to 8 a m. Feb. 17 at University Ana·T~· Community Hospital Ms. emple had long been in Commw"Uty PaJ'k, 1 Beech Tree where s died without regam-contact with the we lfa re agency, Lane, in Irvine. ing co ·ou5ness. Kurlarader said, but he did not The city recreation program say why. to which ,there is a $3.SO ad: Giles indi ated today that he Newport Beach P.laoning Com missioner Allan Beek said he believes the Irvine Company should construct a self-contained community within the site to ..:liminale problems with com- muting on already congested roads He pointed out lbat some of the environmentally sena.itlve areas in question can't be pre· served even it left undeveloped a s long as they bear the brunt of runoff and other contaminaUon from adjacent developed areas. mission, includes dinner. an will atte mpt to show Judge Kurlander s aid the agency Contin.-.-.11 north ~ h rt dis " .. a. st became concerned and contact-~ 1or a s o · eas,, Ul&e, ar gazing a movie. William S. Lee that the woman's tan-It to ped b lli ood '' e d his oH ice whe n Anita Beek proposed that the plan "'hmit ingress and egress to three roads, each having only two lanes Three roads is ade ~uale lo bring in food a nd sup- plies," he said. Another unusual proposal was made by Laguna Be ach and ...... e wport Beach activist Gene .\therton. He proposed that the ;tale Coastal Commission en- torse a state lottery, the pro- ·eeds of which would be used to >urchase coastal lands. Among the key topics dis :lissed at Wednesday's hearing vere: E L MORRO TRAILER •ARK: Residents urged that -DENSITY: The county plan for the Irvine Coast calls for 12,000 housing units and a population of about 30.000, with as much as three-quarte rs of the area left for public and private open space Commissioners asked staff members to look into the density per acre and com.pare it with densities permitted on other s ites o! ecological signifJcance F,...PflfleAJ FOREIGN SPIES. • • come to us. We want Lhem to let us, the professionals a nalyze the situation." ' Part or the blame for the growth or espionage locally was .~l~ced br qougb on U.S. foreign policy. Smee ae\ente, the number of communist block coun- try officials in the U.S. has doubled," he noted . .Based on p~st experience, he said, 40 percent of those people are es- pionage agents "WE'RE PARTLY to blame, too," Clough added. .. The FBI over the years has kept such information pretty much to ourselves. We've been pretty much an ivory tower group." But he said that public exposure of generalized in· formation about the nature and extent of foreign in· telligence gathering within the United States has proved to · be beneficial °"ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ltw0r•ftttC~l ~lf P1!04 •tf"-"l<t\hcem- b• .... IM _..._,,,,_l_»tlwO.-Cot•l,.,,1111-..~ 5"1et ... ..,.,...,..,, ouot11Md Mlfto.ty ·~ ~,tcM, •or CO"tA WW Ht""°"llN<~.~ ... 9-ltl"- l•ln ll•U ... tr_ l_ llHC~f-( .. Sl A ·""'9· .. --.... ,,,.....,_$at.., .. ,,._ ~n n..""",... __ .,..,..,,.,1111 -"a., St.-. c:.I•-, c.ltM-ftle.,._ ............. ~--~ -•11.c.trp Vko ........... 1-0.-et,,...... ""-'•-Efller ,,,..,.. .•. __.. ~ ........ , .... 0...lftM,i.-....... , ...... AH"ltftl W .... 11'19 lbliW. T ... pttone (1t4)MM321 Cl•Mlfted M¥9"'91nt ..... n ''-'-'Clo-....., =·'C :::. ~ (=··=-~ ..... ~ .. -:r.:•••-ftit ........ _, ';; =·==--· _, ........... .. ~~~~-..::m . .:. .. .,,*' J::::, ":':. =~·:; :~,. ---MllllM'f ,.,,.._ P-.e Al TIIEFTS ... investlgative details assigned to the problem. About the best police now can .l)ppe to do, short of catching the criminals i.n tbe act, Jessup said, is to PfOll'atn into a com· puter the known serial numbers of every part of each stolen trac· tor, "and hope it will tum up.'' The tractors are difficult to trace. "We haven't found one yet ," JeSaup said. "The lut lead we got on one was that lt mlcht be o n some body's farm In Texas." Even the actull t.bef't, ong~inl, Is tough to detect sometimes, Jess up said. The tractors oormaJly are re· paired at odd bours of the early morning, and so wor-men around them draw no 1pec:ial al· tentlon. '''lbe croob pall ap at l, 2, 3 tn the momm,," J ... up said, •·or eYeO In the afterboon, wttb a bit flatbed truck, bot win tbe tractor, drive it up a ramp OMo the truck, and drive It awu " . ..... was s P Y co ·d· g ~versauon but not great death was a tragfc incident that I ng with a car d · b Al ti d va nished not long arter her nven y an conversa on, an a continental could_n_'t be foreseen by any birth. Cook, 21, or Stanton. breakfast. practitioner. That collision caught the at· C h I Id re n 8 to 12 may Ms. Temple told investigator, te.ntion of George Morey, 40, of participate. Registration is be-And, Giles said. he has deposi-she had given a way the child D•amond Bar. He was driving ing accepted at the city recrea-lions from other patients whose but later said the little girl w~ ·a nother tractor-trailer. It struck lion d~P'li rtment, 17200 Ja m-surgical experience with Small be ing ke pt by r e la tives in a car that had been braked to a boree Boulevard. More informa-was s uccessful and without Florida, the district attorney s top by Tom Perez. 51, of tion is available at 559-0851. problem. said. Orange ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Falkenberg. who had entered the freeway going the wrong way, received htjurles that ap- pe&red minor to.officers at the scene He and Duarte, believed also to have minor injuries, were taken to Sadd.Jeback Community Ho1p1tal Perez. Cook and Morey were not hurt, Sapp said. The fatality and another on Laguna Canyon Road today brousht the Soutl\ County traffic tolls already this year to 12. Capistrano Hits Area Busing Plan San Juan Capis trano City councilmen voiced opposition Wednesday to.. a controversial school busing desegregation plan proposed for the gre.ater Los Angeles areas. <Related story Page A3.) · The so-called ''Metropolitan Plan," touted by school de- segregation experts in Superior Court J udge Paul Egly's Los Angeles courtroom, would in- volve school districts in Los Angeles, Orange and Ventura counties. The plan would not, bowe~r. force busing in the Saddleback Valley , Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School Dis- tricts. San Juan is located in the Capi1trano district. But councllmen"'Were clearly' concerned Wednesday wit.b the impUcationa of lb4t plan, a move they saw as no aolutioa to educa· Uon problems. ''It's a dangerous precedent," Councilman Oary Hauadorfer asserted. ·'I would like to find some way to oppose this plan." Several councilmen a1reed, but Councilman James Thorpe, an educator, asserted that I.be ctty abould favor quality educa· lion for all people. ·'We certainly s upport the bl1be1t quality education for everyone but we clop 't think this (plan> la tbe anaw•r," Coun· eumu n.o.,.. 1ald. co.mctl.meD voted ' to o. wltb Larry Bucbbeim abHDt, to di.reet cttr ltalf me.mbera to pre- pare • r11at.M• .,,.,..., the lletnpoUtaD Plu. WITE'S CELEBRATE ~ Of their 51h BIG STORE SALE PIKES •••rt fr•• - REGISTER NOW for (Before March 1 1979> FREE LA-Z-BOY® '1 I I I I : I I I COITAMllA S69 I . 17th IT. (Aical fKwn---. '*Ct'° Mclte Calll ldorl) MZ .... 7 Man, ..... ·,~ tat 1().6 ai:.t .... FREE DELIVERY NEW lOCATION LA8UNA MILLI. 2IOM Lake Porell Dr. (Cotner d .... '°""' OfW. and~~ De lo Caftota) , 770-6161 Mon.·M 1~ lal lo.I -.n.1M MllllONVll..10 21192 .......... Pkwy. (eom. cl IWWf and V1o (toab) 4 .. 9'02 Man.-M I~ Sat. 1().6 OoledUdclr ·. '· •. I .. • • •' .. CALIFORNIA ~. '-bruary 8. 1979 1>AILY PILOT A5 Brown to Address Committee? . Dramatic Action' Needed to Save Convention Proposal Die Longest R i de • Ernest O'Gartney. 41, of Hemet, mounts his motorcycle for the finaJ leg of the longest-ever cycle ride. He de· parted Wednesday from Los Angeles for New York in his bid to complete his 21.000-mile, world-wide journey in 79 days. He started his roun1-the-world trek in New York Nov. 'l:T. Psychic Aids Hunt For 'Girl's Killer FRESNO IAP> -A Cupertino psychic visited the spot where the battered and mutilated body of an 8-year-old Fresno girl was found. authorities reported. Police here would not reveal Wednesday what M. Kathlyn Rhea saw or felt at th~ spot northeast of here where tbe body of Victoria Anne Desantiago was round Monday. The girl's bead bad been battered and she had been sexually assaulted. "I HAVE AN IMAGE. If I ever saw this one particular man, I. would know him." Ms. Rhea said Tuesday of the girl's kilJer. PolicE' said Ms. Rhea provided general details Monday morn· ing that-matched the area where the girl's body was later found. She said the ~irl would be found dead and nude near plowed fiP.lds. a cru<'ken ranch and mountains. all of which were true "I KNEW THE CHILD had been physically beaten," Ms. Rhea said. "1 felt she was in the trunk of a car before she was placed in a field " Ms. Rhea said she could even "see" flashes of the fatal beating Deputy Police Chief James Packard said the department also may use hypnosis on some witnesses to see if they can provide more mformation. Meanwhile, police a re combing the area where the girl's body was found, checking cars that could have been involved in tbe ~irl's kidnap Saturday and sortlng tbroulh telephone tips. Reward and memorial funds established in the girl's name by several local radio stations and public employee gro.,aps have raised more than $25,000 in cash and pledges since Tuesday. An anonymou!I donation of SS.000 was made Wednesday ''on behalf o' the children of Fresno." SACRAMENTO iAP > -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. must do aom ethlna dramatic. hke a medl•·&rabbina leeislative com· tnlttee appearance, to save his proposal for a constitutional con· venUon to balance the federal budget. the Assembly's GOP h~ader says. Assemblyman Paul Priolo. also a strong supporter of the concept, says the Legislature will reject the convention resolu- tion unless the Democratic gov- ernor does something like speak- ing before the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. PaJOLO SAID Brown could thereby increase pressure on members of the committee, where tbe resolullon is awaiting action. Brown's chief of staff, Gray Davis. did not rule out the possibility Brown would testily but added : "The governor's views are well known to mem· be rs of tbe committee.·· Brown called in bis inaugural speech for a convention to draft. a constitutional amendment re- quiring a balanced budget. say- ing federal deficits are a major cause of inflation. ITT AKES ACTION by 34 states to force Congress to call a convention. So far, 25 of 27 states Ugislators Seek Change In Gun Law SACRAMENTO CAP> -As- sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy and nine other legislators have joined an appeal to the state Supreme Court to reconsider its decision on the "use a gun, go to prison" law. Backers of the appeal said Wednesday that. so far, 75 of the 119 legislators, including the Democratic and Republican leaders of both houses. have signed the petition. They include 52 of the 80 Assembly members and 23 of the 39 senators. The court's Dec. 22 Tanner de- cision held that a 1975 man· datory-prison law didn't prohibit judges from granting probation to gun-using felons in excep· tional cases. The court has given oppo· nents, including slate Attorney General George Deukmejian, until Feb. 20 to ask for a rehear- ing. In the meantime, action on legislation to reverse the ruling bas been delayed. . . Borrowers To Receive Refunds Of Interest have doqe so, depending oo diJ. the votes to kill the resoluUon in the Ways and Meana Cor$nlt- (erent counts and lnterpretations committee or on the floor. tee.'' McCarthy said at bis ~s or resolutions. conference Wednesday. Priolo. from Malibu. also said McCARmY, A CLOSE ally or "If it were to receive the Wednesday that Brow9 has not the governor during Brown's necessary majority there. i( will been personaUy Jobbyjog com· first term, opposes a convention, not receive the necessary ma- mlttee members on the resolu-contending there could be no jorlty on the noor." lion. but Brown 's press waytopreventitfromproposing secretary, Barbara Metzger. amendmenta weakening key said it was "her understand.Ing'' civil liberties. ASSEMBLYMAN Tom Bane, D-Van Nuys, said he would in- troduce a resolution Monday calling for a balanced federal budget and a federal spending limit. but without a convention. that Brown had been doing so. "Indications are that a resolu- A s s em bl y Soeaker Leo lion that contains a constitu- McCarthy, D-San Francisco. re· tional convention will not re- peated his prediction that be has celve the ·necessary majority in ~· ~I~~ .INSTANT COLOR 111 ~ ICELAND POPPIES Anorher gorgeous background of bright color in reds, yellows. oranges and pastels. Rogers hybrid varieties will bloom through _late~sprin_g. ---~PRIMROSE SALE PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabulous garden color In beds, baskers or pots-blues. yellows. oranges and whites. BANDINI #2 A February feeding is very important for a healthy attractive lawn. Bandin! #2 is ideal for feeding establis hed dkhrondra a nd blade grass lawns. Start your feeding cycle now. Buy four 4" plants and get one FREE Roger's has both English and Fairy varieties-th~ foundation of any spring garden-available in white, yellow, red. pinks, orange and blues. in bloom for easy selection. Limited to stock on hand through 2/25/79. CAMELLIAS Showy 8owering ewrgreen shrubs In colors ranging from red to pink to white and even some variegated rypes. SeJect from many old favorites or unusual coUector varieties. San Joaquin Hills Road at MacArthur Blvd .• Newport Beach. (714) 640-5800 Open Daily 9 am -Spm -Florist 640-6n4 LOS ANGELES CAP > - American!\, who borrowed money from more than 1,500 national banks since Oct. 28, 1974. and were charged too much interest. wiU be refunded millions of dollars, the Los Angeles Times reported today. than has been done in 'the past, and I think frankly that bas to be our general thrust," he said Wednesday. U1'e8 .. IJ Fo-d elcomes You To Th ree Deliciou s Values The office of comptroller of the currency, which recently completed a detailed examination of all 4,700 national banks. found inadvertent violations or t.he truth·in·lendlng law in interest calculations on auto, home ( SI'ATE J improvement and other consumer loans of less than $25,000. "These were rnadvertent mis- takes," said John J . Chlpouras, director of consumer examinations for the comptroller or the currency. Federal officials said the complexJty of the lending law caused most of the errors because bank loan officers ap. p a rently did not know bow to calculate annual interest rates properly. .S.11.•9 Tat• Slated LOS ANGELES CAP l California's latest effort to redu~ auto exhaust pollution begins March 10 when used-car buyers in the Los Angeles area can have their vehicles checked at smog ~ontrol stations. The testing program-dem - onstrated in a dry run at one of the 17 Los Angeles area testing stations Wednesday -ls expected to be ex- panded wit.bin three yean to require the annual tesUn1 of all cars ln Callfornia'a fiYe lar1est metropolitan areu. Currently{ testlng ls required only • when a car a iold. Ne T.a-Bllce Sena SACRAMENTO CAP> -The at.ate Assemb\y'a Democratic lellder aay, he, unllke tbe former legislative analyat, does not thlnlc a state tax In· creaae ln the wake or Propotltlon 13 la inevitable. Speaker L~o McCarthy, D-San Frucltco, ui4I &.here la no aupport tor •ftJ tu tncnue lD tbe eurrtnt Le1a.1atare and lbe need baa not bealbown. . .,,_.II • e...,. mood ., .... tu \acre .. and for deUHf'l8& pent. meat Mmce. far more ~ . . OXNARD CAP> -A bomb squad was called in to remove two practice military bombs found in a garbage dumpster outside a south Oxnard apartment building. One of the 26-incb by six lnches- Jong bombs found Wednesday was live. according to Police Lt. Robert Kelly. However , he said it was an ex· plosive that gives off a lot of smoke as it bums. but is not considered very dangerous . KeJly said the Explosive Ordnance Dispasal team from the Point Mugu naval base disposed of tbe bombs. Many military people live ln tbatarea, but Kelly said it would be difficult to track down the person who brought the bomb home. ~11,,-w BAKERSFIELD <AP) -The de· fense attorney says he will appeal a death sen tence agains t a Los Angeles-area man convicted or murdering three student film makers in tbe Mojave Desert last AprU. Superior Court Judie John D. JelleUch upheld a jury's death penal- ty verdict Wednesday aner hearing defense arguments again&t imposinc the death sentence and prosecution . argument.a for it. Defense counsel James Faulkner contended tbe jury failed to conaider the lack ol a prior criminal record for David Murt.labaw. 20, of Santa h Sprinp. Faulkner a1ao charted that a paycbolos.tat wu unqualified to atate that K urtlabaw would be I violent t.be rest of h1a JUe. 1 •. , ........ _ OAKLAND CAP> -Wllaon Rllet Jr., 1011 ol tbe t&ate acbool 1upertn. tendent1 aaya be wlU run for the Oaklana City CouncU a1atnat inc:um· bent Fred Maatora. Rlle1, .admlDlWatlve aulstant for AJam• Cou_t)' Supervlaor John Geor1e llnc. lm. bu been eedorMd bJ ... ,_ Uoeel WUaon. ff• U· DOWH!9d Ml eoaeU cud-'d8CJ Wed- M9Cllf • He _... blt poUtlcal c.,..... b,- wortlnl on bla fadler'• calQPAlp ln 1970 • Simply present each coupon at the participating Denny's most convenient'to you and. you'll receive the delicious meal descripeq for \he special coupon price. We know you'll be pleased with the food and with the very hospitable people who are looking forward to serving you. Denny's Is the favorite restaurant of mllllons of Americans. With more than 100 menu items available ~4 hours a day, we're certain you'll find the kind of food to fit your mood. So, sit back, relax and enjoy. A DENNY'S BREAKFASt VALUE! ~ A DENNY'S LUNCHEON VALUE! , ..... I •• Orang Coast Daily Pt lot Irvine Dis.trict Takes the Lead In O\' mber, I r"VJnc Unified Scbool District ad· mlnastrnton, called a t"''O-d•.Y rnfftin& In Anahtim to k ~luttOnS to tat wade pro~ems in flnancln& school con· trur llon and moinh•n nee of old bulldlngs So co"cem<'d ~Me bwld l"5, bankeJ"$, architects, t-ducutors and rh mbers of commerce from a~ross the sUlat~ th. t ttt\-orJ.!anl2ult00 coiled Coalitlon for Adequate School H u.sm~ t-\'olv d. On ~b. 1. more than 75 mem~rs o( CASH m l in Sncramento to package more than lwo months o( work on a poh•ntull pJun ror fundmg school construction. • 1'h~ work is now in CASH's leaiuaUve draft commit· " te~ ror t.r~ n!)formatton mto lt'ga laUve blU laniuaae and eventual ulhorship by a ~till unnamed ssemblyman or senator by March l . Jn esscnce,,the pion calls ror a statewide t.ax on all , \ new pnvate construction The funds collected m Sacramento would 10 tor con· structaon of new schoob in srowln, districtl where property tax funds for buildings have been curtailed by Proposition 13 The task of working \\1th more than 150 persons in six subcommittees located across the state was monumental. The (act that it was done in less than three months is re· markable. While many segments of the building and education communities have participated ln the CASH project, it no doubt will meet with objections and obstacles. But at a time when parents of school children, educators and legislators alike are tearing hair over the chaos'8cing public education as the result of Proposition 13, it is refrestung to see an Orange County school district Laking a leadership role toward solving problems that seemed insurmountable. ~ Price of 'Affluence' A traditional image of the affluent family is of a busi· nessman or woman wno goes out durmg the day and comes home. usually not till early evening, to the spouse who has been tending the home fires . Though as a class Irvine families certainly are af. fluent. in thousands of cases they match the tradmonal ' picture not al all. ln a significant proportion of the households, both marriage partners must work to maintain their modern: version of amuent society. A cost ot' this double duty has been to leave school· age children, 6 to 12 --too old for the kind of day care available for pre.schoolers, but not old enough to be on their own after school and during vacations.-nevertbe· less Wlattendt!d. The Orahge County Delinquency Prevention Com- mission is attempting to gauge the extent of the condi· · tion. and to see what parents would be willing to pay for by way of a remedy. Funds for needed surveys are short. ~ The Irvine Company, felt the problem impartant { enough to commit $1 ,000 of its own resources to pay for , the survey in Irvine. , ~ It may prove one way of easing a problem before it :, grows to major proportions . ~ ! Still a Winner It was warming news to hear last week that Irvine's He ritage Park has won the environmental award for community parks, of the California Parks and Recreation Society. The 45·acre park, located off Walnut Avenue near Culver Drive, certainly is a marvel of planning and de· sign. Besides an existing youth services center, bicycle trails and picnic areas, there are plans for a library, and an arts and crafts center is Wlder construction. :· And, of course. there is the million·dollar aquatics complex. the aesthetic focus of Heritage Park. the site of future national swim and diving championships. The central jewel is a $650,000 fifty-meter Olympic swimming pool. Well , it'salmostaSO·meterpool. Those who have been following the grand opening of the facility-a marvelous opening begun last July and still going strong, expected to culminate in actual use pf the pool this March -know its designers built it a fr '"'· tion short. "" Just a few silly millimeters still stand ~twien crimson.faced city officials and certification 1>y the· Amateur Athletic Union Cso they can hold those national meets>. But what are a few silly millimeters between friends, or the California Parks and Recreation Society" • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box l560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71'4) S..2-.432l - Boy dJTi 1Uel Town ByLM.BOYD Q. Wasn't it Oscar Levant who fint labeled Hollywood as 'Tinsel Town'?'' A. 1bal's rtg.bl. Wbat be actually said was, "Strip the phony tinsel off Hollywood and you'll find the real tinsel underneath." Q. "ls water the only sub- stance that expands when frozen?" A. Yes, wilb one exception. bismuth. Sea salt 1.s said to have the Dear Gloomy Gus So take that San Clemente! You only re· called three city COUD· cllmen. We're ,olng to get tbem aJI ! HBRSSIDENT G ... "''J Get t--..b -.... ,,,.... •\' ,...,,. ........ , ..w=,._, ........... .. =a:i..ta:.'=l" ..... . same ratio of salt to otber minerals aa is found in human blood. First person to get U.S. Social Security benents was Ida May Fuller. She'd paid $22 in the fund before she re· ceived her first check on Jan. 31 , 1940. By the Ume she died oo Jan. 30, 1975, she'd collect· ed$20,000. How fast can you say "two all·beef patties, spec\al aauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions, oo a 1e1ame seed bun"? McDonald's employees are auPPOHd to aay it lo four aeconc)I. Took a couple of years tor an Iowa man to coarince tbe authorttlee be 1bould have hi• moniker on bit own persoaaU&ed car Ucen11 plate. ma name: Stolen. Was only alx years 110 tbal uf anda'• boll ldi Amln got al lbook up over the amount of c:attte rustlln1 that waa f°' tn1 on there. He tlna ly fltured out what the problem WU. The Uceedinlty hlp price It the thne of a U1u· daD bride. About 15 beed of catUt. · Robert N. Wffd/Put>tisher Thurtctey, f"te)ruary 8, 1919 8art>art l(relblch/Edltorlat P• Editor ' Jack Anderson President's Load · Too Beayy? WASHINGTON -Jimmy C1r1er. be•i•c•d by a balky Cof'lereu. 10 uncontrollable ~conomy and • crittul press, has had eawm to r nect ruefully upon Mart 1'wtln's frustrations in uklt\i directions to a fclend'1 farm in New Hampshire. "How far l It to Henderson's place?" Twain lnqulred. The farm~r H ad It was "obout a male and a half " Twaan continued along tbe rood unUJ he met another farmer and again asked the distance to the Hen· dersOQ farm. "About a mile and a half." replied the second farmer. Still farther down the road, Twain asked another passing Carmer the distance and was told. "about a mile and a half." Mark Twain r eplied: .. Thank God, Jam holding my own." THE PRESIDENT IS begjn· ning to '4'Dnder whether he is holding his own. He puts in about two working days every 24 hours. He is usuaJly at his desk by 6:30 a .m. Often be doesn't put aside his work, except for meals and ceremonial functions, unUl midnight. He keeps plugging away 'oot merely from dawn to dark but, in times or crisis, from dawn to dawn. Carter has an extraordinary energy that exhausts ordinary men who try lo keep up with him. Associates say be thrives on work . He s peed·reads through stacks of presidential paJ><!rs. The Carter technique, according to those who know him. is to commit to memory the key facts and figures he needs to understand a problem. These become guideposts, which he uses in his discuss~ with subordinates. Frequently Mailbox _____ ...._ be hu flabbersHtfld them by rememberinc some detall -a 1uldepo1t he had picked out ol the fine print -that they had forcotlen. CARTER IS A determined •man who desperately wants lo be a good president. But tht: stra1n is begumine to show. The face is more .gaunt, the famous smUe wanlna, weary lines ap. pearing Wider the eyes. "What this countl"Y needs," commented an assodate who bas tried to -keep up with Carter's multiply. log problems and exhausting pace, •·is a good night's sleep." Of course, there can .be no eigbt·bour day for the president, , no la.yins aalde the awesome real)OhlibiUUes, no Htling down the overwhelmln1 burdens. A move on his chessboard could cause war or bring peace. A chance remark from him could start an economic downsllde. He sits at the center of govem· ment with a thousand hand1. pulling strings, controlling movements, touching every· thing. He directs the preparation of figures he is expected to W'I· de rs land in detail. He sets foreign policy, guides &eg.islation, makes domeatic dedsions, controls the government news output, plans political strategy. A8CllAJC LAWS and tradi· i4t rmt glance thi.s may seecn confusing to you • . • ' tlooa alto lmpese upoa him a thousand and ooe minor chores, many or them reQulring his peraonal aignature. He is sup~ po1ed lo be the nation's chief CrHter , civic pitchman and fatber·confessor. He ha.a to serve as host at ban- quets for kings, queens and potentates. And he is also ex· pected to greet pickle queens, poster girls and Boy Scout del· egatlon.a. Nobody knows how many bands a president shakes in a year, but Carter's hand has orten gone Ump from the ex- ercise. The president's grueling schedule raises an ur1ent ques- tion: has the world's bJ11est job become too big for any single person to handle? N'ot only is Carter expected to comprehend the full significance or the thousands of words and figures that pour across his desk each day: not only must he de· cide immedjate issues and cope with each new crisis; but he must also give constant thought to the future and chart a reliable course for the ship or state to follow. WHEN DOES the man in the White House find the time to ponder? How can future presi· dents with normal exhaustion points be expected to hofd down the job? The lesser post ol de· fense secretary drove James Forrest.al lo suicide. Many bis· torians believe exhaustion and illness adversely affected the de· cisions of Woodrow Wilson and Franklin 0 . Roosevelt during their declining years. The conclusion is inescaiaJe. The presidency is too -o7er. powering for any one human be· ing. The most modern countrJ in the world is al the same time saddled with one of the most archai<' political structures. The pre s ide ncy should b e streamlined. perhaps with the vice president picking up more of the load. . Mandatory Sentencing Inhibits. Justice To the Editor: I was disturbed to read the Feb. 3 Comment Page arUele re· garding People v. Tanner and mandatory sentencing. The notion that the Legislature is confronting "a court imposed threat to its inde'Pt!ndence" ls misguided. Rather, as Cbtef Justice Bird recognh.ed, rigid, in· flexible sentencing standards ·-cannot be determined by tbe Legislature without threatening the judicial latitude essential to justice and fairness. Mandatory sentences ehminate the most crucial participants ln the criminal justice system : the impartial judges. Removing the discretion tradiliona Uy .. reserved for lhem. especially In the un. usual case like Tanner <a sham robbery intended to demonstrate , an employer's need for addJllonal security> ultimately Jenes a d~ proportionate and diaturbln1 amount of power to the police and prosecutors. Whether an individual ls ar· rested; whether he or she Is booked; whether the district at· torney decides to prosecute, ud upon which charge; the crowd· ing of the court calendar; the pressure to plea bargain; discre· lion ls everywhere. P RECLUDING the impartial trill Judge, moslfamlliar withtbe crime and criminal. from impos· inc the most appropriate sentence only. add& to tbe proeecutor's ,.- the state's partial advocate -in- creasing power. and wbatJusUee Black called "the unreviewable controlofooelndividual." Each criminal case, its ad· Judication and dispoeltion, is a dilemma by Itself.· Guidelines providing suggested sentencing ranges help guard agaJnst dis· P&fitY. arbitrariness and uncer· taanty. Sentencing cannot, however, be based upon a strict legislative schedule or rule of thumb, II Justice is to t;e done. The inflexibUity ot the "use a gun, IO to prison" law ts rarely the answer to problems • in· deacrtbabl.i complex as cnme and punishment. RJcidity cannot meet the irr8Uonallty ot moet crime. Mttla•tlnl and uncom- mon clrcumatancea muat be left to Judicial dberetk>n and e.-lua· Uon, aabject, of coune, to ap. peUate review. .-unwtule, pensistent quet· tlont aa to the nature of crime, tbe purpoee of punishment, mutt be confronted by both our cowu and Legialature. Hurried letlalaUon and court rulina•. enacted and dec1ded amidst polJUul contto9eflf, ii pleceme1J and puaoean. 8otb fall to 1rapple wltb crimtnal jua&l~• tn Ille compreb•ut" and thouOtful manner~~_'. Eu.EN BOl..Llm5 • lt'eri• S•.,••• To tbe Editor: Any readers of your paper who enjoy the oatural wonder of nearby Cleveland National Forest, Trabuco District. as I, myself and many of my friends frequently do, would (ind it worthwhile to write lo the Orange County Board of Supervisors urging that this area should be preserved and not adversely affected in any way. Because of pressure belng put upon the supervisors they are considering changes from open-space-agricuJtural to res. idenlial zoning, for the areas near Trabuco and Llve Oak Canyon Roads. O'NEILL County Park dose by coutd be afft?cted adverseJy, as has been Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary and the Audubon Society Sanctuary al Starr Ranch, also nearby. The pockets or private property within the district should continue to be protectively zoned in order to preserve the forest environment, to permit the general public lo enjoy the natural mountain landscape. Wider roads. utility poles, con· struction noise, all of which necessarily follow residential zoning, would only drive the wildlife deeper into the forest, destroying their habitats and up. setting tbe natural balance or this beautiful area. ARntUR E. PALMER President, South Coast Audubon Society Slle•hl•e P•rlc To tbe Editor: . The coast of California chokes with development. Tbe Irvine Coast is a welcome sicht in Orange County. The alr is clean and the ocean oft the coast thrives with lish and vegetaUon. Kelp beds •upport a Wide varie· ly or oceatt life oft the lrvine Coast. Wild animals make their homes ln the Irvine HllJ1 along the coast. The Irvine ComP1D1 pla& •· velopme.nt ol tbe lntne Cout. Hotels Ind a,.rtmeata would be more than an u1ty bll1bt. Development -.ld be • IOurte of poUutioa. Aire would lncre... with a •ler ttalfk flow oa Padnc Hllbway, CtUes lilre Newport S.acb would be tbe moet alfeeted by heavy tralllc. TBE OllANOE County plan· nine afency. the Environmental Manaiement Asency, bu liven their support to tbe developtMnt of the fnine Coast. The staff ol the EMA reeommnded to tbe Cautonia Coulal CommlMJon al a DUblle _.,.. • the Irvine Cout. tbat lbe mouU-of the coMUI CllD1W lbould M peftd and become parking lqts for the coast. Tourists are more impor· Lant than wildlife to the county planners. Money makes the world go around. Greed kills lhe world al the same time. The Irvine Coast needs lo become an urban park. U lbe federal government preserves it as a park the coast can be en· joyed by everyone. The re· sources or the area will be saved if the coast becomes a park. Southern Orange County will continue to grow. Open spece won't be left anywhere if it isn't protected now for the future. DAVE HALL Mor e lor·Ln• To the Editor: This is in r eply to the editorial. "Strike Rights Shaded" which appeared in .the Jan. 29 issue of the Pilot. You stated or implied in Your editorial that teachers sbouJd not strike, but should pre- sumably use other means to set· tie disputes. Unfortunately, teachers are now in a position whereby a strike is the only means that we have to resolve issues. Teachers statewide have been seeking binding arbitraUon to settle disputes, but no school board in the state has as yet ac· cepled it. In my school district <Garden Grove Unified School District> we go through an arbitraUon process to settle dis- putes Then the board makes a decision which is final and bind· log. (i.e. the arbitration process is binding upon the teachers, but oot uPOO the board. > MY TEACBEll salary makes friends wonder bow I get by. The minimum w•ge is now almost $6,000. and after five years of col· lege a teacher begins at $10,000. My nephew recently graduated from high school and al 18 earns $12,000 a year, though he has no special skills or training and no job responsibility. My wife is a teacher making $12,500 a• year after five years of college and five years experience and hav· la1 tremendous Job respoastbUIUea. Seltltnc for a lower·tban· averqe salary ln e~cbange for Job aecuritJ ls acceptable lo moat teacblra. But ac~pUng a ~ to 10 pen.on PQ cut each year due to lnflatJon seema too much to ask. I ba" lolt 25 to ao per. cent ln puttbuinc power In the aeventies. Teaure does not protect a Quotes "We need 10meone '" cbarce wbo knows wbat be 11 doinl and why." -,, ... Coa•ally, an· nounct111 bU candid1e7 for Ule Republkan P"'tide•tlal nomlnl· Uoa ln1*. teacher's job if he is not needed or if bis work is not s atisfactory. Tenure ensures due process for firing, as opposed to firing a teacher for activities unrelated lo bis duties as a teacher. Teachers have been put into an impossible situation. They are gtven responsibility fOt' the success of policies and pro- grams which they have not helped to formulate. They are given the res~nsibility, but not the authority. They are asked to be more and more responsible for te.ss 3J¥1 less money. JERRY PARTIN Clll•a D re•• To the Editor: Vice Premier Teng Hs iao· ping's nine·day visit to the U.S. provides him and almost a billion Chinese <via s atellite T. V. > excellent opportunity to learn that their dream of modernizing China can come true by quickly adopting in Mainland China a framework of American free e nterprise system. The same free e nte rprise system hu been used by the Republic of China c ROC > on Taiwan since 1949 and produced a miracle or economic s uccess there ln l.W18, the two·way trade between the U.S and ROC was $8 billion, alm06t 10 times greater than the trade between-the U.S. and the Peoples' Republic or China whJch was less than Sl billion in spite or the fact that tbe popuJaUc>n on Mainland China is ~ times greater than that on Taiwan! MOaE TllAN JO years of Communism and Marxism to M ainlaad CbiDa resulted only constant social and political strife that ruined chances Of real progress then. The same "isms" must now be abandoned to allow requisite social and PQlllica1 stabUlty of uninterrupt· ~d modernfz8'ion proaram yet to be developed is to have any chances in succeedlog. Adoption of American free en- terprise system and abtndon· ment of Commun.lsm and llarx-1sm can Jead to a ~lbillt.Y o( a break·throuab for Chlna· Talwan reunJflcatlon. Sbould lb.la become a reaUty NCtoaaJ stabJUty in tbe Paclfte is aMUred and chancel for world peaoe wW be great.I)' enhanced. t I'm a U.S. native born Chlnete-American >. .. . • HENRY YEE J7 LOCAL She· Can't Stop Rubbing Mesa Woman Mauag s Br888 as Art Form By WlWA• HOOO °' ... Oeil'f P1"'4 ·~ Ruth Lab<-nsort '" enamnf'f'd with rubbtfll( But thf' Costa M esa bou wilt"'s reu h for frlt'tion iisn 't predtcatf'd upon • d trt' to becomt" a ma5 c-u f' or •d· mlnuth'r rub do~n to football play~n IT'S AN AllT rorm ba~ on Engllah bra monumf'nts dat mg to the l2 century "When I was on vacauoo in Eneland, I couJdn 't st()p rub- bing." the bubbly woman admit.a or her passion for brass rub- binas "When you &o oo vacallon, it costs you $3,000 -you·ve got to be crazy to stay and rub hke I did .. • JAat;N ART dt>clded otben rnJ'1ll c:>njoy th relauvely uy art.lltir recreauona, iO abe purcbuecl 15 racalmllu of Lhe oJd Enah h brass monument.a to brtna bom S'1e wtU conduct. o t.hree·hour clasa on bra..a rubb nas March 3 at 9 1 m In San Juan Capl&trano'1 tlot Sprangs Dance 11.11 Par11ctpanl6 wll] get a chance to trr. their hand1 at the art of rubb ni THE ••PICTURE" from a brass memorial la made on wblte or black paper that is taped across tbe face of the brass relief. Silver. gold, black or bronze-colored heeJbalJ wax is rubbed over the paper and a ,• ' .., .w. ·-... Delly ,.,... Matt ...... BRASS RUBBING AN ANCIENT ART Mrs. Labenurt With Product, Left 83,287~ite Judge Nips Dog Owner SAN ANTONIO. Texas.CAP> -A jury bas put the bite on a dog owner and his roommate-order· ing them to pay $3,287 in damages because their border collie bit a jogger on the fanny. "I had a tough time sitting down," the jogger, 31 -year-old Glenn E . Waymen, toJd the six· m ember county court·at-Jaw jury. WAYMEN SUED An'ER BEING bitten while jogging on Jan. 17, 1978, in his neighborhood in northeast San Antonio. According to his suit, Waymen "suffered severe injuries of two large puncture wounds, lacerations and abrasions on his left buttock, caus· mg loss of blood. immedi11te and continuing pain and sweJling. a nd damages due lo tearing and rip· ping of plaintiff's jogging pants." hlahty detailed, two-dimensional lmpresaion of the monument is lefl. Available racslmiles Include Kine Henry Vlll and Wtlliam Shaketpeare. The original awnunients. oo which the facsimiles a nd rub· b l nga are ba sed, w e re popular in the 12th through 1St.b centuries ln Great Britain. .. YOU DON'T BA VE to 10 to England to rub, you CID do it righ t ' here." Mra. Labensart says. Moat of ber classes have been well attended, sbe says, but she acknowledges that some pro· blems have occu~ when she's inquired about the possibility of holding classes in some places. "At first, Chapman College wasn't sure if they wanted to sponsor a class," she recalls. "They thought It was some kind of erotic thing with the rub· biog." Starting Young Classes are available for children begin· ning at nine months of age at the YMCA. 26076C Getty Drive in Laguna Niguel. Early age classes are designed for the parents to work with their children. For further information, phone 831-YMCA. Student Rolls Up 14% at Saddleback· SaddJeback College. enrollment figures sbow that the di.strict ls nearing 23,000 students -14 percent higher than one year ago and tbe largest increase in the state. Tbe relatively large upsurge in students was attributed great,part to the district's aaa~~~ respoosibillty ror numerous adult education erograms dropped ied school certainly a blg factor." Bosanko district.a after ProposlUon 13. speculated. He also indicated Dean of Adm1salons Robert the opening of the north campus ~sanko ~aid, bowevc;r. the dis-in Irvine probably provided in· tnct could expec~ continued S to 7 centive for some residents to percent increase lll students each take courses. yea_r . North campus e nrolJment "I 11DNK THE continuing in· figures show that 1.300 students flux of people into this area is laking classes only at that facili· ty with another 1,300 students El Toro Road Work Slated Construction work is expected to begin th.ls s ummer on lm· provem'ents to El Toro Road between Trabuco Canyon Road and Live Oak Canyon Road. The project will cost an estimated $895,000. Orange County s upervisors have accepted a $212,000 fedenl qrant and $100,000 i n state money to complete the funding. taking courses at both district campuses. San Juan Library Rent Boost Voted Orange County Supervisors will pay $780 a year in increased rent for the San Juan Library after agreeing to a lease ex· tension Tuesday. Under the new lease with Lds Rentadores Birtcher, the cost or the 1,700-"square foot building will go from $687 a month to $74~·. Defendants in the suit were Bill Bulmer, 26, identified as the owner of the large black and white border collie. and his roommate, Albert Garcia. The suit charged both Bulmer and Garcia, who was renting the house they shared, with allow· ing the dog to run loose. 32 GALLON NEITHER WAS IN THE courtroom after the verdict. Neither could be reached for comment Wednesday. "The dog is always being teased by school kids• so when the plaintiff was running back and forth in front of the house. tJie dog t.ook it as a tease,'' Bulmer said in a statement:entered into the court's file Sclwlarship Auxuded Susie Nadeau. a Dana Point resident and San Juan Capistrano recreation leader, has received a $200 undergraduate scholarsh ip from the California Parks and Recreation Societ y. The Long Beach State Coed works as a play· ground leader, coordinator of the mobile recre!l· tion program and teacher of a clasa in era.tu for 3- to 5-year olds for the city of San Juan Capistrano. DECO INTERIORS IMTlllOa PLAtl•• Ate COMSUL,,... c....-~ .. ....,..,. ........ ...,... ............................................ VISlt Our Design Stud+<> 211t2 Mu ,.rtte Plrw~nl• ..... cs-.,.... fwy .... .,.,, ..... s.11 .. T.,.e. ..... .......,...,......, ..... •Lab tested to 20°F. below •Rust-proof metal handles Lock top securely Ow ........ 15.99 , USC Aspiring gymnast Vesa Holle, 3~. limbers himself with a backbend in preparation for learning backward rolls while 3-year- old Nicole McDoweU is comforted by in· structor Suzanne Birdsall during a South Coast YMCA j?ymnastics class fol' tot~. A J8 OAA.. y Ptt.OT Thu'11dey. 'ebruW't I . tt1'1 Trflatera Commission Has Gtout L MERCURY SAVINGS NEW YORK IAP> -Ev r wonder how a Georg\a Pt'•nut farmer and setf-profe.qed outa der to WalNnctoo'a pow r ••me rot to know the ln· IJden who now run Am rtra '1 fore rn alfa rt., H dealt •llh man)' of ~m w~n he wa a m•mber of a Uttl•·known c.-om miaalon that desert l ll mod Uy "a pnvate North Ameriran Eurol)('an·Japa truUaUve oo m•t· l ra ol l"Omrnoo eonttrn." FOUNDED N AaLV dX l'EAas aco by baoll r Oavad Jl~ltt'fellu. th1a body called th Trilateral mml ton b la ued 17 wbJt.e papen on •ubj«ts Utt ~ rv. Eut W relations and waya lo doublet rt~ produrtton ln A.Ala Ill mt1m nblp UH' LI thal Ulb lan'l Jual another wml annual lunch rlub. Jimmy Carter. n w lo Wuhlncton two years •ao •nd covemor or Gtor1ta at lbe Ume be jolned tht' com1n1 Ion, tarted the top reacbet of hla ad mlnl11tration beavU y ••ilh peopl ~ knew as a member of thls com- m1sak>o. Carter. a com· mlulon member unlll shortly before his elec· lion m 1976, became ac· quainted with olher members he was to make household names during his presidency: Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal, D e fense Secret ary Harold Brown. Vice President Walt.er Mon· AP WI ......... dale and Secretary Of CARTER Stat e Cyrus Vance, among others. United Nations Ambassador An· dre w YoWlg, an old Carter friend, also was on the commission. CARTER'S NATIONAL SECURITY adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, was the direct.or of the cotn· mission from 1973 through 1976. Other names on the commission may also ring a bell: Henry Kissinger, West Virginia Gov. John D. Rockefeller IV, Illinois Gov. James Thompson, 10 members or Congress -in all. about 250 of the most powerful government. business. labor and in· tellectual leaders in North America, Western Europe and Japan. . The commission's aims reflect Rockefeller's reasons for founding the group in 1973. At that time. the Nixon administration strained U.S. rela· lions with Japan and Europe with a series of sud· den changes: placing quotas on certain imports, devaluing the dollar. - and his trip to China in 1972. Rockefeller's ide a, s ay s commissio n s pokes man Francois Sauzey, ·•was that a group or influential private citizens might improve the climate between Western na- tions." lN SHORT,· RockeleOer convinced sQJn e or the world's most powerful i n · dividuals that relations ... w,,...._ w i t h i n t h e n o n • BRZEZINSKI communist world were in bad repair. He hoped the TrilateraJ Commission would provide a forum for discussing and solving the free world's common problems -or, as one observer puts it, "lo make the world sC.:e for Coca-Cola." In recent months. the commission has stirred bitterness among Southwestern farmers. Some in the Texas panhandle have posted anti-commission slogans on their tractors because. as a spokesma n for the American Agriculture Movement puts it. the body "seems to be part of an urban and in· dustrial establishment attitude that doesn't un· derstand the problems of the family farmer." THE COMMISSION'S BUDGET is drawn from private contributions, about $1 million every three years, from foundations like the Lilly Endowment Fund and the Ford Foundation. individuals includ· ing the Rockefellers, and corporate grants from Exxon and others The commission's impact on world affairs is tricky lo measure. Sauzey says that a few of the commission's re· ports made recommendations that were later adopted by world bodies. A 1973 report oil the world monetary system urged the lot.ernalional Monetary Fund to sell some of its gold and use the proceeds to aid poorer nations to develop. That proposal was eventually implemented. A 1915 COMMISSION report on North-South ecomomic relations helped prod the World Bank into opening the so- called "third window" to lend money to poorer Third World nations. But the commission 's extraordinary membership is its true power. according to Sauzey. It has no pro blem getting top policymakers to read its reports. "It makes its VANCE prestige felt informally. 'We have the ear of world leaders. We don 'l want to have a direct influence, but rather we hope to promote a percolation or Ideas," he says. He admits that the sharp differences in the Sun Drink Eclipse Celebrated RICHLAND, Wash. (AP) -The Richland area ls getting ready ror a total eclipse or the sun later this month aod one lounae la serving a drink that will let any customer enjoy the solar spec- tacular even lf the weather is cloudy. The Hanford House bas concocted a drink for chair-borne astronomers. Made of rtlm, gin, sloe gin and orange juice, it 'a called the •'Total Eclipse." The drink might not have the lmmediate lm· pact o( an eclipse, but lbe ''°" will continue long alter the SWl'• bas slopped, said Hanford Route manqer Rma Cox. The Feb. • ecllpse wm be tbe last total eclipse or the aun vtalble anywhre ln the continent.al Unit- ed Statee lllil century. It ia acbeduled to occur at apprc»dmately 8: 17 a.rg. PSI' and lul 2 mllnai.a, 19 aeconda. Wutem world that led to tM commission's loundlnc .Ull xllt "But lhft cUmal ha Improved. God knows lht>re are hua problems bftwffn Japan and the US., but trad I •UH have now bffn addre sed fn a v ry dllf nt and mo,.. candid way than before the commluion •· was decentraUied to 11ive the headquarters in Japan and France a more equal policy voice with the U.S. headquarters located in New York. "We tend lo be more pieeemeal now. There is no longer the kind of Intellectual framework as un· de r Brzeainaki, "be said. B\JT HAUZEY SAYS TBEaE are atrong doubt.a th1t t~ CQ!DM&ltak>n will ex.lat beyond 1982, whtn ill Julttalt three.year h1f1usJon of about $1 malHon rW\S out There ls a feeling, M saya, that tbt ~ml1Jlon'1 "aeneral coheslon" suffered when 8riezlrwkl abandoned the commission lo work for th Carter administration. THERE IS A POSSIBILITY, he says that the commisaion's work may be assumed by the AUan· Uc Institute for lntematlonal Affairs in Parts. At any rate. the commission expects lo issue Its next report this spring on oil exporters. Later re]>Orta will include a look at trade between North and South countries, and an examination of world productivity and technolog!ca! change. E11ecut1v~ Ottices· 7812 Edinger Ave .. Hun1tng1on Beach. CA 92647 Solitilc1n CAl1I01tt•11 Rroiooal Ollico1 8965 Valtey Vtf!YI St BV"na P111i. CA 90620 20715S Aval()nBlvd C111son CA90746 G) 22821 ta~e Fo1ost 01 . CUl~~Forc$11. E• To10 CA92630 • I ()()I E tmpelllll llwy La Ho bf a CA 90631 • 4140 Long Beact> Blvd . Long (k>Jcti, CA 90807 lO'l•t 10951t111ne Blvd Tu11rn CA 92680 ~o"""c; 235 N Citrus Ave Wost Covina CA 91793 lllf!>ltr In 1977 otter Briezlnski left, the commission the hot 0 water works GM water heaters with glua llnecl tank• to reellt corroelon plut hot ·water recovery ayt1em to Mve energy and hlgh·temperature shut-off for tafety 7911-..... ............ 94.95 ...... " ...... 104.95 S111••• ...... 114.• SANTA ANA Son 01190 f;wy 111111 can1 llnocll It Kid-tested Glidden Sprecl Latex eeml-glosa enamel gtves you a non-yetlowlno Improved durabltlfy enamel finish. Reg. 15.25 10!! keep your top In tip-top shape DuPont'• 'Rally' vinyl top cleaner clean• and putt protective coetlng on vinyl to add years to tie llfel Reg. 2.29 1•• • stretcll your llgldlng 1812 temp cord In bnMn • white or blec*. Ae-wn and tbc okS dengetOUS lampe tod9yl Reg. t1" foot. 7~ llltlng ftnlsll In ftylng colors Glld<Mn's Sprecl Satin Latex Wall Paint .•. goH on tmOOthly and leavet a long- lutlng. goocMOOklno finish. Reg. 9.99 7~ Check the condition of your battery with thlt handy hydrometer. te&3C. Reg. 2.18 111 testing, testing 1 -2-3 ... Clrcvlt Nltet l'Mdt and ..... electrtc:al clfcutta from . 90 to eoo --. AC or oc ..... jftM. Reg. 1.21 88° get a real aha In reaction Homellt .. 12~nch electric chain uw. the one that started the lightweight chain uw revotutlonl Make• et\ort wortc of the biggest jobll Powerful wtth alt the NW11 utety feeturM .. #XEL-12". Reg. 59.95 roll-on the .color Made to Kerm's rigid specifications. Deep well plastic tray with ladder hOOks. 9" roll« Ira,,,. and all-purpoee OOV81'. #1 & #2. Reg. 3.•9 2's? ... ....,.. ........... "'" .. -"' cleans runs better Ute 'Gumout' carburetor and hHll 1Y9tem cteaMr to r emove gum, varnish, molltwe from system. Add to gu tank. 1·plnt. Reg. 1.85 111 floe and row Sturdy, euy to handle hoe makee your gardening c:horee go a tot Maler. Sharp SV."x•'I•" blade. long hardwOOd handle. ISGSCS. Reg. 5.39 311 tall• In Ille savings Garden bow ,.. with atutdy ..... tMlh and freme. Ptua tong hardwood hl ftdte. 18814C8 ......... 411 .. .. 17 • 1 Lag una /South Coast Ve ur Ho•etown , Dail y Newspaper E DITI O N VOL. n . NO. JC1, ~SECTIONS, S8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1979 TEN CENTS~ 0 i ,_,_-------~ .......... -......--FBI, Offic.ials Confer---___.-\'"'"',---------...,. Coast By .JOANNE REVNOLD8 °'-.,._.,~ .... More than too aecuraty officen and executives of Orange County detHse conU'acton met lo Santa Ao• to- day with counter-antelligence agents from the FBI. Herbert Clough, speoaal aaent ln char1e of counter·ln· telUgence ror the FBI in Southern California said today's seminar was held to acquaint the businessmen with "the very real threat" posed local business by foreign spies. _, CLOUGH SAID he was unable to supply any specific information regarding the extent of espionage activity locally, but he said that the activity had Increased drastically in the past year Foggy Chain Reaction Woman Oentente I ssue Ballot Slated QnLandBuy? By ANNE COOPER Of IN 0 .. ty ,., ... Staff San Clemente voters may be asked on the April 24 ballot whether they want to indebt city taJlpayers to the maximum al- lowed by law, in order to buy land zoned for open space on the city's undeveloped ranch lands. Hearings On Irvine './Coast End By JACK.IE HY MAN Ol tllt Delly ...... St.ff The last in a series of local public hearings on the future of the Irvine Coa st wound up Wednesday with more pleas to save the environment, a few sur· prise suggestions and jegrets by coastal commissioners that they must hurry through a decision "It seems to me we now have the heart of what the Coastal Act is all abouc.. ·• s aid Donald Wilson, chairman or the South Coast regional !!Oastal com· mission, at the meeting in Hunt- ington Beach City Council cham· be rs He said he regrets that com m issioners spend most of their time on surh minor matters as how high a house can be built, while the local coastal plaft for the 10,000.acre Irvine Coast has occupied only a few weeks or hearings Wilson said commissioners will try to reach a decision to <See IRVINE, Page A.2> Co ast • Weathe r Naght and morning fog and low clouds. Otherwise fair with high clouds through Friday. Lows torught 40 to 48. Highs Fri· day near 60 at beaches to upper 60a inland. · INSIDE TODA. Y A l~ commilaiotl on /ordgn offain QOtHt Jimmr Carter tome valuable ad· vonce ~ of ifttmtO· tional polUicl before M no lerd U. W1dt• HONf. Sec Page All. .... Mayor William Walker pro- posed the unusual ballot measUTe Wednesday night. He said that his recall from of· fice. along with the~call of two other councilmen approved by · voters Jan. 23. seemed a clear indication that San Clemente voters do not want development If they like the bills the way they are, said Walker, they should put the issue on the ballot and see if they want to buy the hills. measure on the April 24 ballot, along with names or candidates to fill the terms or the three re· called councilmen. was passed by the City Council 3-2, with council members Howard Mushett and Myrtis Wagner op. posed Clty Attorney Michael Bartlett said he was working today to de· termine whether the proposed ballot measure could be in· eluded in the April 24 election. ·'This ia a very complex mat- ter,·• be said. ••At this point I just don't know whether we can get it on the ballot for April 24. This proposal came at us like a shot out of the bfue. Among the questions Bartlett said would have to be resolved are the approximate value or the land to be acquired and the bonding capacity remaining to the city. A C'ity has a total bonding capacity allowed by law of 15 percent of toe.al assessed valua- tion. said Bartlett. But Sa6 Clemente has already indebted itsell for a portion of that amount with outstanding debts. Mrs Wagner called the mayor's proposal "the stupidest thing I've ever beard in my life." Why would anyone ask d · ty taxpayers to pay for open space, which is already zoned as open spa'"-e anyway, she said. Mushett said Walker's pro- posal amounted to an out.stand· ing example of why be was YOt· ed out of office. · Mushett, a political roe of Walker and recaJled coun- (Sef> BAU.OT, PaJe A.2> 'Fat' C-ouple Adoption OK MADISON, Wis. (AP) -A state olficlal sayw Gordon and Barbara Ray are not too fat to adopt a child and can betln tbe adoption study prouH next week. The Madilon couple ape plied for 8doptk>D two yean ace> but were told tbey were too obese. Donald Percy, secmary of tbe OepartmeM of Health and Soetal Servicee, reversed tbe dedaioa Wednesday and ordered a D8W adoption worller rrom a dll· fereat area aaaleaed to the cue to asaure tbat ne.at publidty doe• not IDflaanc• tbe a.,.• daanceafor~inl· lln. a., i9ve-feet·nlne 8lld wellba 210 .,.,..._, whlle ber lau1ba .. d II 1lx·feel·two and •ellbam,oada. Alerted to Today's seminar was the second in a series for about 250 firms in Orange County that supply classified technology products for the government. Firms participating in today's seminar included Hughes Aircraft Microelectronic Division and Ford Aerospace and Communication Corp. 's Aeronutronic Division, both based in Newport Beach and McDonnell Douglas, FJU ol(!clals said. ·~ LIKE THE flRST session held in November, today's meeting was to acquaint the businessmen with the scope of the problem as well as teaching them bow lo spot penetra- tion by spies or their firms. In most cases, according to Agent Clough, the es· Espionage pionage activity takes the Conn of a foreign agent befriend· ing an employee a.nd eventually persuading the employee to steal classified material from his company. "We need for these people, as well as the public. to become believers," said Clough. He acknowledged that bis Inability to cite specific • numbers and cases would create a "credibility gap" and agreed that "it could lead to paranoia" on the s ubject of espionage in Orange County. .. WE DON'T WANT people looking under beds or over their shoulders," he s aid. "We want them to be well enough informed that they know what to look for and lo (See FOREIGN SPIES, Page A%) ed in Freeway Crash ~Uy .. IMC ....... .., lt~K-fff WEST COVINA WOMAN KILLED AS PICKUP TRUCK SLAMS INTO OVERTURNED SEM I· TRAILER 0 !'9 Accident Leads to Another on Fog-ahrouded San Diego Freeway Fog E x pecte d To Continue In County Fog made many Orange Coun· ty motorists late for work today and played a part in two deadly traffic accidents. The California Highway Patrol said inland Orange Coun· ty appeared to get most of the fog with Orange, Santa Ana. Placentia and Anaheim report· ing traffic tie-ups and a rash of minor collisions. And there will be more of the same tonight, tbe National Weather Service warned today. "These are classic fog coodi- tJons and we expect the situation to persist at least through Fri• day," a forecaster said. Traffic officers said foggy con- ditions this morning were a def· inlte factor in lwo south c00nty .colll.sions that cost the lives or two women motorists . A 44-year-old newspaper dis- tributor died behind tbe wheel of her light pickup truck after it colllded with an overturned truck on the San Diego Freeway south of El Toro Roa6-· And a 29-year-old woman died in the wreckage or her sports car when it struck a '(an on Laguna Canyon Road, about one mile south of the San Dle10 Freeway. Weather forecasters said fog condJUons tonight may be more extensive a nd may lnvolye coastal comm unities more beavll,y than was the cue earlY today. BWE A ll£4KI' -ONE OF OURS lt'• time for 1prlD1 lovln' and Valentine'• Day. • TIM DallJ PUot celebrate. tbll lpKlal MUOQ wltb Words and plcture1 detallln1 1Ut1 for Valentine• ta a 20.pa1e SA Woman Killed In Canyon Crash A 29-year-old Santa Ana woman was killed early today on foggy Laguna Canyon Road when her car apparently drifted into northbound lanes, s lam- ming bead-on into a Jarge van. She was the fourth fatality in the last 12 oays on Laguna Canyon Road. California Highway Patrol Of- ficer Bill Bierer said a mixture or dense fog and slick roadway might ha~e caused the woman's .car. to drift into oncoming lanes at a curve in the seven-mile roadway a mile south of U)e San Diego Freeway at about -8:30 a.m. Van driver Joseph Cbazan, 45, of 201 Cypress Drive, Laguna Beach, was slightly hurt in the 40-mile-per hour collision that left both vehicles mangled. The entire stretch or roadway between El Toro Road and the freeway was closed to through traffic immediately following the collision, with northbound motorists diverted to El Toro Road. . "Her lightweight sports car drifted into the other lane as she made the turn." Officer Bierel' said. •'The. roadway was rather wet due to the foJ and she s lammed bead-on into the van." Accident Sparks Others By WILLIAM HODGE Of.,_ Oa!IY "'let Stl!H A wrong-way driver on the freeway set off a chain reaction or accidents in foggy Laguna Hills this morning. One woman died. Barbara Throop. 44, of West Covina .. a Los Angeles Times truck driver, was killed by bne of the crashes. · Tom Sapp, California Highway Patrol spokesman. said Ille was unable to stop the Jlgbt pickup truck sbe was driv· ing when she came to an over- turned tractor-trailer rig. The series of accidents began at 4 :SS a.m., Sapp sajd, when Frank Falke nberg, 66. of Laguna Hills, entered the San Diego Freeway at Alic ia Park Nay . He was traveling northbound in the southbound Janes. The reason was not im· medlateJy known. Eduardo Duarte, 31, of Long Beach, swerved the tractor· trailer to miss Falke nberg's northbound car. But the massive semi sideswiped the car and overturned. Mrs. Throop's light pickup came through tbe fog itnd slammed into the overturned tractor-traile r . She died in- stantly. Falkenberg's wrong-way car (See CRASH, Page A2) Carew Lures Cash The acquisition of Rod Carew could put an additional $2. 7 million into the California Angels' coffers this season, maklng Carew's $800.000·a·year salary a bargain. See the Daily Pilot's exclusive story on Page Bl. ··-"-"Lo...&-• " ma.--. •au . ...,,....._.,....,. ........ Looll lor tbi1 8"dal m.,.ane P.OLICm IURftY GRIM 1CaN1 ON LAGUNA CANYON MMD IN LAGUNA 91ACH TMll MORNtNG la ~·1 Dally Pilot. lenta AM Women ••••• rCMdl , ... .., ltt l.Mt 11 0.,. Oft W1ftc1ng ~ ..... . .. DAILY PILOT Sycamore Hills Area Suggested By iTt;VE MITCHEU. a.1 .. 0~ .. ~ ....... L Kun• lk•t'h CounriJW'Ol'llao s lly Bolleru aa 1uuutJ01 h\lm M built tn th tit)''• nc.-w ly .tcqutrt<d Sycemo~ Hills area t() puy off a $6 75 mllllon d bt on thl• land doo Junt• IS And hc-r ftllow tounc1l mtm bl•rti jolnt>d her this week in h•~r n:q UC l to Ot ltollSl CON Id r pro p0sals for re d nllal de~lop m~nt adJAct..nt to l..flsure World. Mn. BeUtrue uld the T .. ll ror«" char1f'd •1th plannlna the prJaitln• 552 acre parcel out Laguna Canyon Road a current h rt'"\nctt'd (rom looklni Into r ad •nUal developm •nt on any of tht I nd But the counctlwomao 11h.1 lhllt perhap:1 the.-l56 hout1e!I al lowed In tht> N'u lo lht' city'11 5pectnt' Pl•n "'ould en•blc lh r 1ty to pa.y off lU. debt Iler propoul t1 to tu~ll enowcb F,....p .... l IRVINE COA T. • • forward to lhe state Coa&tal Commission ut 1 1> m Wednes· day In the same llunttngton Beach chambers. The hearing once a1aln focu sed on co nc e rns by numerous environmental iuld c1ti1en groups aboul the future or the area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, valued for both e<.'Ological and aesthetic r easons. The Irvine Company, which owns the land. is seeking a plan that will enable it to build recreational facililies, including a hotel, along the coast and res- ide n ti a I property inland , especially on view sates such as ridges. The local coastal plan sub· milted by the Orange County Environmental Management Agency concurs with Irvine Company wishes in many respects. including the "fingers or development" on ridges wbi£h citizens have opposed as dhm bging to canyon nora and fauna. Several speakers urged that development be limited to a compact area. Some unexpected suggestions were also presented by two citizens at Wednesday's hearing. Newport Beach Planning Commissioner Allan Beek said he believes the Irvine Company should construct a self-contained community within the site to eliminate problems with com- muting on already congested roads. Beek proposed that the plan "Jimit ingress a nd egress to three roads, each having only two lanes. Three roads is ade- quate to bring in food and sup-plies," he said. Another unusual proposal was made by Laguna Beach a nd Newport Beach activist Gene Atherton. He proposed that the state Coastal Commission e n- dor se a state lottery, tbe pro- ceeds of which would be used to purchase coastal lands. Among the key topics dis· cussed at Wednesday's bearing were: to regJon Richard Munsell of the Orange County Env1ronmental Manage. ment Agency dasagreed, saying he beUeves much narrower cor- ridors would suffice. -TRAFFIC : Several speakers urged establishment or a shuttle bus system within the proposed development, and commissioners mdicated their concern for the etrect of traffic on neighboring cities. RUNOFF: A spokeswomah for CalTech's Kerkhoff Marine Laboratory in Corona del Mar asked for protection of valuable kelp beds at Cameo Shores and Monarch Bay Crom pollution. A coastal commission staff member noted that, because of runoCI problems, the numt>er'of acres dedicated as open space is less important than that whole ecosystem s -canyons a nd ridges be kept intact. He pointed out that some or the environmentally sensitive a reas Jn question can 'l be pre. served even if left undeveloped as Jong as they bear the brunt of runoff and other contaminaUon Crom adjacent developed areas. -DENSITY: The county plan for the Irvine Coast cans for 12,000 housing units and a population of about 30,000, with as much as three-<luarters of the area left for public and private open space. Com missioners asked staff members to look into the density' per acre and compare it with densities permitted on other sites of ecological significance. W. Klusmann Rites Friday Memorial services Cor Boy Scouts of America executive Wes H. Klusmann of Laguna Hills Leisure World have been scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at the United Methodist. Church in Laguna Hills. land near Lelture World to pay ofl the debt. whll leavlnc ~ majority or Sycamore Hilla lo lla nah&.nl stat . "I\ ma§~ butter to develop a ltlll of S}'camore Hills ln order to 11ave th~ canyon and save the Gr enbtlt," Mrs 8eUerue said. "ll '8 surely much better th~ what's tcu rrenlly ) on the horlz.on." e>he added, saying Lhe Tau1k Fore ls currently looking at dcvelopm nt of 2,000 to 4,000 unlt.a cross the canyon road, a statem •nt udamnntly denied by Councilman Howard Dawson. She said Lhe Task Force is pursuing a plan to develop a golf course, resort a rea and 2,000 to 4 ,000 homes lining the proposed golf greens to pay for the land. ·'The Southern California Golf Association wants to purchase the land Cor $5,000 an acre. The Irvine Company says the land is worth $180.000 an acre, and naturally wants to show a profit of $175,000 an acre," she said. "That profit ls homes," she said. She said annexation is the key to the Task Force plan, saying "apparently the Irvine Company will pay the city iJ we annex their property and permit de- velopment on their side. This is caUed trade-off." The counclJwoman proJ>OSed the city man11ger be able to con- s ider development of 156 homes jru1tead. But Councilman Dawson termed Mn. Bellerue's stale· ments "a raft of rumors, half. truths and factual inconsisten· cies." "She sits on the Task Force and absolutely no mention has ever been made of a ny finalized home development in that quan- tity "(2,000 to 4,000), '' Dawson said. "She is talking fancy and pre- senting it as fact." He says her proposal to sell off just enough land near Leisure World on El Toro Road to pay off the de bt is not well thought out. ''The land next t o Leisure World is virtually useless for home development," he said. "It's located directly under the Edison lines and you just don't develop expensive homes under millions or lines and poles." He said the councilwoman's proposal would force develop- ment on the El Toro side, "which amounts to a proposai for residential development in the heart of the Greenbelt." "From a practical standpoint, the idea of CLaguoa Beach) serving 156 homes isolated four miles from our center is economically impractical a nd would be a true drain on the tax-payers. Delly ...... , .... ,,_ PLASTIC SURGEON LOADED WITH DOCUMENTS Dr. ~tph W. Smalt (left), With Attorn.y Terry Ollea Plastic Surgeon Testifies on Death A Santa Ana plastic surgeon was in Orange County Superior Court today to defend himself against charges that bis practice is a danger to pubJlc health, safety and welfare. Dr. Ralph W. Small arrived in court with attorney Terry Giles carrying a bundle of papers he hopes will. prove that the death F...,..PageAl BAl,LOT ••• cilwoman Donna Wilkinson, was recalled along with his rivals. All three must remain seated until their successors are elect· ed on April 24. Mushett agr eed that San Clemente voters want controls on development. But he said a m ore appropriate ba Jlot measure would be to ask voters whether they want to limit de- velopment to 450 houses a year, as 1s the c urrent policy in neighboring San Juan Capistrano. Contacted at hi.s home today W alk~r refu~d to a nswer any questions on hls proposed ballot measure. or a 33-year-old woman last No· vember was nothing more than a so-called medical misadventure The woman. Kim Plock. died Nov 28, fi ve days arter undergo. mg a breast implant in Small's office al 3620 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana. According to t he complaint filed by the s tate attorney general's office on behalf of the board of Medical Quality As· su rance, Mrs. Plock went into respiratory a rrest while un- dergoing the surgery at about 9 :55 a .m. It wasn't until nine hours later that emergency care was called to the office and the stricken woman transferred t o Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital where she died without regain-inR consciousness. Giles indicated today that he wlll attempt to show Judge William S. Lee that the woman's death was a tragic incident that could.n,'t be foreseen by any pracUlioner. And, Giles said, he bas deposi· tions Crom other patients whose surgical experience with Small was successful and without problem. Tr4'h Pickup Fee Up ' San Juan Capistrano busi- nessmen and residents will pay more for trastt coUection begin- ning April 1 and July 1 reapec- ""~· -Councilmen unanimously ap- proved new rates Wednesday for Solag Disposa! Company balecl on salary hikes, increases in the • Consumer Price Index a nd higher costs for usine the coun- ty's Prima Deshecha dump. • Residents face a. 25 cents per· month increase that will drive the cost of trash collection up t.o $3.25 per month, a 7 .6 percent lo. crease. Fee hikes for businesses ran1e from S3 per month to $14.25 per month, depending upon the Ire· quenty of trash pickup. Once.per-week pickup will in: crease from $19.50 to $22.50 per month while six times weekly trash collection will go up to $66.25 per month Crom $52. The increases for commercial trash collection range Crom 1J to· 21.5 percent, all well above Pres ident Jimmy Carter's voluntary wage-price guidelines that request a seven pe rcent ceiling on rate increases. ' That was pointed out by Mayor Kenneth Friess during discussion of the new rates. "It seems uke a smaJI item but at keeps inOation going and going," Fries!> said. "We're looking here at significant in· creaset1." San Clemente Girl Injured In Crosswalk A nine-year-old San Clemente girl was injured Wednesdaf af. lernoon when she apparently walked into the side or a "10ving car. as she and her younger sis· ler crossed El Camino Real at the in_tersection of Mariposa. Pohce Sgt. William Trudeau said Nicola Hauck, 9, of U7 E. Escalones, Apt. I, was knocked to the ground in a pedestrian crosswalk, when she walked into a northbound car driven by John WiJJlam Perreault, 19, of 105 Boca de la Playa. Nicola was take n to San Clemente General Hos pital wher e s he was treated for scraped and bruised Jegs and re- leased. "That's a goofed up corner " 'iaid Sgt. Trudeau or the stag. gered Ma r iposa-El Camino Real intersection. "There's no way to redo the intersection - the buildings are already there But. the new traffic signal~ c which are currently being 10. stalled l should help." EL MORRO TRAILER PARK: Residents urged that low-cost housing continue to be provided in the area. Friends or the Irvine Coast spokesman Jeff Georgevich proposed that resi· dents be given a "life estate" to remain on the property until they die or choose ~r. KJusma~n. who was also acttye ~ Amencan camping or· gamza!-ions and in Rotary Jn· ternattonal, died s uddenly at home Feb. 4. He was 81. "We will entertain Cher idea> but we wan't (he (funding) alternative that is most suitable ---------------------------------------- -WILDLIFE CORRIDORS: A state Department or Fish and Gam e spokesman urged that quarter-mile-wide corridors con· nect all conservation areas to al· low wildlife to move from region He is survived by his wiJe, ~ertrude, two daughters, a son, five grandchildren a nd two great-grandchildren. The family has asked that donations be made. to the Orange County ~oun<:il, Boy Scouts of America ·~ which Mr. Klusmann held the Sliver Beaver award. P,...P-.eAJ FOREIGN SPIES. • • come to us .. we ~ant them to let us, the professionals analyze the s1tuahon." ' Part of the blame for the growth or espionage locally was .~laced by Clough on U.S. foreign policy. · s~.ce d~tente, the number of communist block coun-try 0Cftc1a~ m the U.S. h as doubled," he noted. Based on P!ISt expenence, he said, 40 percent or those people are es· p1onage agents. .. WE'RE PARTLY to blame, too," Clough added. "The FBI over the years has kept such information pretty much to ourselves. We 've been pretty much an ivory tower group." But he said that public exposure or generalized in· formation about the nature and extent of foreign in· telligence gathering within the United States bas proved to · be beneficial. DAILY PILOT 1,..0<-C-.o.ll,Plltl,wll .. _ltlte- "°f't<I"'-~ ... llP••l1li-by llttO.-Ca.\I ""4lli~~. s.io-•ttodllio...,_ publlt•~d -wt I~ r•~ 'O< Cetl• ,_.. .. , N--' llHcl'I HUllli"f!Olt 0.oclVF'- 1•1" V•lle,, I,_,"'-llt.oc1>1'°"1i.(AleM A ··~~-k~5-n­"' .... '' TM ........... -i\Nnq ....... "•I JlD W•\181fSlr'"4.C:.WMnA.C•Olor"oa~ ·~ ....... PfHi.tftl Mid,...,_ '"''"·~ V>ttPff'l..,._c;.,,..,.~ "'-atKM"" E'41l~ ,..._,AM~ llMMOl...-W-- 0..rlet "· LMt llldle!w ....... AUl\19'11 OM~ ... C4119" """"• h8°"0Moa n.~ .... ona. CM .. looltM.»llV....IOIY ...... Hlinl ...... .._~, 11'11SIMdl.........,. T ......... i.(11•)MM1h a.t1M9dMwM1a410t11'1 ue--'l.••"o ....... .. Te..,._. ... ....... "-~~ ....... ~fl-=:. °!!'.'P.',,C: ~~ ,.,.rltJ flf' -.ll;;f....,r,'11t~.,..., ~ I ,.,.. ....... ...,,_ -1•1 ""''"' .... el ,_....,._ S.CM\4 \Int Miltr. ,. •• t1 C:..I• Mo .. C..lllt111la S11••<' ••left Ill' 4artter ft' N =~ls:~~ -'hi¥: mll lllfY p,.._ P.,,e Al CRASH ••• continued north for a short dis· tance. It was stopped by colUd· ing with a car driven by Alan Cook, 21, of Stanton. That collision caught the at· tention of George Morey, 40, of Diamond Bar. He was driving a nother tractor-trailer. It at.ruck a car that bad been braked to a atop by Tom Perez, 51, of Oraqe. Falkenberf, who bad entered the freeway IOlDg the W1011C way, received lnJ\lriel that ap- peared minor to officers at tbe ace~. Re and Duarte, believed alto to have rninor lnJurlet, were taken to Saddleback Communlt)t Hoapltal. Perea, Cook and Morey wert not hurt, 8-pp said. The tataUty and another on Laauna Canyon Road today brouaht the South County tratnc tolla alnedy thla year to 12. • • for the bulk or residents," Dawson said. The council vote was un· animous to allow Mayor Jack M c Dowell and Councilm a n Wayne Baglin to present the alternative or seUing off land to pay off the debt lo county supervisors. TnJStees Eye Laguna High J)evelopment Laguna Beach school trustees will meetat6o 'clock tonight to re- view a coordinated development plan for cramped Laguna Beach High School. The master facilities plan de· signe d by South Lag~na architect Alvin Wi ehle, would be used to build a ny additional buildings or facilities on tbe 14-acre campus in an orderly fashion. It lntludes a new pool location. lecture balls, areas for parking and new classrooms should at· t.endance at the 1,100 student campus increase. The meeting will be held at district beadquanen at 550 Blu· moot St. and parenta, students a nd faculty members are invited to participate in the dlscussion. Clementeam Lose Power More than 1,000 south central San Clemente restdeni,, had no electrtcity from 7:55 to 10 p.m. Wedneeday, when fuses on an under1round power cable •P· parenUy tailed. Dennia Pacquin, mua1er ol the San Dteio Ga and Eledrfc Co. omcea in San Clemente, Rid repalrmen-wtU be workin1 today to determine what caUHd the fuae• to r.n. Homes affected by the power failure were on South La Eaperansa, Avelllda Arlena, Calle Elmatt1, Calle Patricia Via Robina, EHt Avenlda R1mon1 and CerJ'lto Ciela. poUcel&ld. WHITE'S CELEIUIE !If .,-.. ,, 5th BIG STORE SAU PRICES •l•rl ,, •• REGISTER NOW (Before Man:h 1. 1979) for FREE DELIVERY COITAMllA J69 L 17th IT. (Acfall "°"' __,.. '*" fo Marte Cclef ICDI) 642 ... 17 Mon. .ffl. 1~ Sot. 10-6 ac.d~ FREE LA·Z-BOY® I r l!!ut!d!Y· ,..!f!\!!l)'I. l'79 s OAll Y'PIJ.OT A3 Brown '.Flays Mettopolitan-BusIDg Plan · t.OS ANG L.ES CAPl -G<>v. Edmund G. Urown Jr. bu l1rnndK'd hll troll t cr1t1<'I m of a t"allf'd lnt'lropobaan b sne plan, wh l an Oran•e C'oun t y anti bu ln1 sroup bttan mbbih:dnc to put the brat on all N1rn-nt rourt-ord red b~• pro1ra.rna. ·• And lht Lot AJtStil Board of Eduutlon -ta~f'd -.th a F•b 28 court • ..,.,.._ran(' nuUj ill d auoo plaas for tho J.,._ c I )ear -COC\flnn«I * • 1. SJC H its Fo rced Busing San Juun Capis trano City councilmen voiced opposition Wednesday to a controversial school busing des egregation plan proposed for the greater Los Angeles areas. The so-called "Metropohtan Plan.·· touted by school de- segregation experts in Superior Court Judge Paul Egly's Los Angeles courtroom. would in volve school districts in Los Angeles. Orange and Ventura counties The plan would not. however, force busing in the Saddleback Valley, Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School Dis- tricts. SWl Juan 1s located m the Capistrano district. But councilmen were clearly concerned Wednesday with the implications of the plan, a move they saw as no solution to educa- tion problems. "It's a dangerous precedent." Councilman Gary llausdorfer asserted. "I would like to find ~ome way to oppose this plan'." Several councilmen agreed, but Councilman Jamt's Thorpe. an educator, asserted that the city should favor quality educa - tion for all people. "We certuinly support the highest quality education for everyone but we don't think this <plan> is the ans wer.'' Coun· cilman Thorpe s aid. Councilmen voled 4 tO' O. with Larry Buchheim absent, to direct city staff merrfbers to pre· pare a resolution opposing the Metropolitan Plan. The resolution a lso will sup. port a constitutional amendment by State Senator Alan Robbin:;, D-Los Angeles. which alters state con:.titutional busing pro- visions in favor of lighter exist- ing federal requirements The Fi nal Indignity CHICAGO <AP l Some· one has been lifting credit cards from corpses brought to the Cook C'>un· ty morgue. police say. S t a t e 's Attorney Bernard Carey is in- vestigating four alleged thefts or credit cards from the pockets and purses of p eopl e t aken to th e morgue since December. the Chicago Tribune re- ported Wednesday. The cases involve people killed in accidents or who otherwise died unexpec· tedly and were taken to the morgue with the ir belongings, investigators said . ,-eters Cany on w dn d•> lh lo or 30 000 whit tud• nt dur1na th nnit yur ot It.I 1nh I• •It on plttn Brown •~id W•dnHday he d dn1t bt-ltf'vt• lb propoaed metf'Oil(>htan fll~n. whlrh would ~xpand th4.o curr nt Lo. An&l'l ~ phrn to lndudt' nearby rhool d 1trtrt • •ould rreaUy alt t In tt1rat.on or city ttchoola "All VOU'\le do 11 move I.Mm JNm OOf! 1.01nt to notMr W ·li'iV n•t ch nai d the b11ic natur and rbaracttor of UUnas." .A Brown 01d in a televl1lon In· tetvlt>W T he ,ovtmor has c rttlclied bu1lna Ut the pHt but. has not takt>n alm •oeclflcally on the m~tropolltan plan, which be rharacter,ied as "I.ho old rosslJ Cu I alternative. "It you can't aotve a problem. put In on wheels," he said. "We're taking that. same phllo&oP,hy and we 're applying It toklda. • In Santa Ana, an Orange Protest i n t h e S now County croup called Bua·Bloc announced It has aslarted a statewide lnltlatlve campaign aimed at haltlng both current in- tegraUon of students by busing and deve lopme nt of the metropolitan plan. A petition approved Wednes- day by lhe state attorney general's omce for circulation would change the state coDilitu· tlon by taking away redlatrkting power from school boards and giving It to the .Legislature. ,.,.~ Phillip 8. Jordan. assista nt superintendent in charge or the Loa Angeles board's integration progr•m. told a news conference the mkt-year integration status report ahows Hispanic students increased by 12,000 during lhe fin t year of the cWTent plan. The only board member to at- tend the oewa conlerence. bus· in&. f()j! Bobbi FiedJer, said the data "confirms my position that we should end the mandatory Begin l'llonda11 b uatn1 program. It. is seJf. destructive ... The report ·a data indicated that, although the number of white students is ball of what It was In 1969, dropplng from 352,000 to 185,000, His panics ha ve l.ocreued from 117,000 in 1969 to 214,000 last October when the new survey was taken. Black enrollments,, on Uwa other hand, rose from 134.000 in · 1969 to 156,000 in 1971 but dipped back to 131,000 last October. 2 New -·Routes Set by OCTD ' The OranJe· County Transit District will maugurate two new west and central county routes next week and will c hanee serv i ce t o th e La guna Niguel Federal building next month. The new routes. 66 a nd 141, wUI begin hourly service Mon- day. Route 66 starts on McFadden Avenue at the Westminster Mall and roughly follows McFadden to Tustin, with stops at Golden West College and Huntington Cent.er. The Tustin end of the route'"is a loop around Larwio Mall. Route 141 will run from 17th Street on Newhope Street. lo S later Ave nue in Fountain Valley. The route goes east on the road that becomes Segerstrom Avenue in Santa Ana before running into Dyer Road which changes to Barran- ca Road in Irvine. At the Irvine end of the route. the line goes down J amboree Road to I.he city ball a t McGaw Avenue. Road will be changed so that buses drive into the building's parking lot. Transit district spokesma n Tom Echorn said those t wo changes. which go into effect on March 23 were made to accom- modate the growing number oi people employed at t.he building. OCTD directors approved the n ew systems Monday after a brie{ debate about getting some o r the businesses that wilL benefit from the routes to help o ut in promoting the new service. Told that neither Westminster Mall nor Larwin Square were in- terested in s haring the estimat- ed $3S,OOO cost oC promotins Route 66, board member-Philip Anthony 'suggested that the pre,. motion be based on the route for .. home to school and work rather than emPbasiiing the stops at the s hopping centers. A line of tractors moves down a street near the Capitol in Washington as police allowed protesting farmers to· parade to tl')e Agriculture Department Wednesday in the third day of a continuing protest or farm prices. The change for the Laguna Niguel federal building involves expansion or the Saddleback Valley Dial-A-Ride to include the building formerly outside the service's territory. Board chairman Ralph Clark alsn suggested that after the routes have been established. the center s might be asked again to JOin in promotions aimedatpeakshoppingseasons Big Tractor Taken Al Building Site Dial-A-Ride • m By JOANNE R EYNOLDS OI tlle Dally Pilot Sl•lf In spite of a pending S2.S mi I Hon investme nt. Orange County Transit District's Dial-A- Ride appears to bave a bleak future. The Program operates in I.he north county and Saddleback Valley where the population is growing bul there is insulrit'ient demand to justify a bus route. Launched Jn 1977, the federal- ly funded program enables the OCTD to offer what amounts to door-to-door service. The $2.5 million about to be pumped into Dial-A-Ride - again on a federal grant from the Urban Mass T r ansit Ad - ministration -would provide computerized dispatch.ing for all areas served by Dial-A-Ride. At present the contractors who pro. vlde the service dispatch for their own geographical areas without computers. Use of the computer syst.em is expected to save $1.4 million during the first three years or operation. OCTD directors have ordered the grant application passed to the Orange County Transporta- tion Commission for approval. They also set aside $10,000 for architects and engineers fees for design of the computerized dis- patch a rea in OCTD's Garden Grove headquarters. But moments lat e r OCTD Director AJ Hollinden said he wants a comprehensive study or Dial-A-Ride and its future ex- pansion. He noted that post-Proposition 13 budget considerations have forced the district to scale down all of its expansion plans and it appeal'S" unlikely funds would be available to make Dial-A-Ride available In any other areas of the county. Hollinden also noted that the district has promised to even- tually offer tbe service coun- tywide He suggested the study con- sider doing away with the geo- graphical basis on which the service is offered and instead 1981 Income Tax.R eduction 'Necessa ry' WASHINGTON CAP > -In- come tax cuts may be necessary in 1981, which would further de- lay President Carter 's goal or a balan ced budget , Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumen- thal said today. But. Blumenthal told the Senate Budget Committee. a tax cut n ext year would b e dangerous l o the econom y because it would set orr a new round of Inflation. Trouble look at providing It for special groups. sucb as senior citizens. on a countywide basis. HolUnden. a Fountain Valley city councilman. said "it 's just become too expensive to do this for every city." In addition, route 85 on La Paz Temple Aid O ffered REDWOOD C ITY <API - Employees or a savings and loan have pledged $5,000 as the begin· ning or a fund to help rebuild the Temple Beth Jacob synagogue that was destroyed by an ap- pa rent arson fire in this San Franc~ Peninsula city. A construction boss for the Royer ~cape Construction company of fullerton told Irvine police somebody stole a big yellow tractor from a construc- tion site at 114 Eagle Point. m Woodbridge. The company valued the trac tor. which was driven or towed away, at $15,000. SJ)ecial · Purchase! ~q, Save S 170 . on o ur magnificent Drexel sofa and love seat grouping 58" Love Sent $689 $549 By very special arrangement with me manuracturer. here·s the Drexe,. up- holstery value ol the season• You're invited to take advantage of the remarkable sav- ings on this fashionable roll arm tuxedo sola and matching love seat County, Irvine Co. Vie on Property? In future years, be added, the administration is committed to u sing tax c uts rather t han spending Increases to stimulate the economy. Blumenthal reiterated that it would be a serious mistake to amend the Constitution or pass a 1 a w r equiring a balanced budget. ThisJ he said, would "re- quire very 1requent and highly disruptive changes in tax laws and in federal program levels." <Related story, Page AS.> Reg. 8 789 - Save SlOO Reg. 86 19 - Save 870 The 2-piece grouping-()( either unit -is yours in a classic border pnnt. Your choice of cotors. Treated tor soil resistance. ol course. And you'll appreciate Drexel's famous quality thfoughout graceful rOll arm styling. luxunous mu1t1-p1llow back. tufted s1ngfe seat cusn100. kick pleat skirts and arm covers. Come discover the satisfaction of owning Drexel -at substantial savings I Complete your 54!\hng with a pair of tufted lounge chairs upl'lO/stered in your_chOiceof fabric. An attack on the Irvine Com· 9any by Orange County Supervisor RaJph.Diedricb led a company spokesman Wednes- d ay to stress that the firm ls on- )y too willing to continue j)egolitallons with the county over the futu re or P e t ers ..Canyon. Irvine Company spokesm an Jerry Collins said the company welcomes the decision by the county to delay any possible Jand acquisition acUon for the next three months. "This wil) give us the op- portunity to discuss this laaue in depth with SUpe"lsor Dtedrich and other members of the board." be! said. Diedrich aaid Wednesda,y lhat he ·'pt ans to get in the lreoc:hes and fight the Irvine Company over tbe firm 's plant for Peters Canyon. Dlectricb made h1I alatement after poloUnt out that. the coun- t )' could not atford to pay an Ht ma&ed fl2 mlWon for the agricultural reservoir and sur- rounding land in the canyon located near Ne wport Boulevard and Chapman Avenue. The stretch or land lies in un- incorporated county t erritory between Tustin and Orange. Both cities have expressed in- terest In the future of the area. "We want to discuss lhe issue with both c ities a nd with homeowners In the a rea." Collins said. "And we want to assure all interested pafties that we have no plans for drainage of the reservoir." Diedrich sa\d be thought a trade ot land between the county and the lrvtne Company might enable the county to take over a 500·acre stretch centered on Peters Canyon for development ua a park. •'Our options are open,•• Coll\ns said while conflrmfnf that the lrvlne Company haa plans rer development. to the area. ••we wtU be only too happy todlgcu..lhla." "The real task before us is not to write new statutes and con- stitutional amendments about the need ror budget balance but to use the existing legal machinery to achieve balance,'' be said . "'the teat ot fiscal restraint is not what we say but what we do." Another Cabinet m ember, Labor Secretary Ray Marahall, s ays the admnlnlslrallon will have to consider looaenlng Its wage guldetlne It Inflation wonens and eoo,ress reJedl a propoeed tax credit. for worken who comply wtt.b ~ 1uldeUne. But Manball 1ald Wednesday he is confident inflation will ebb and be hopes Conaresa wm ap. prove the "real wa1e In· aurance" tax credit, ma.kine It u.nnecellat)I to relax the volun· tary 7 percent cellln1 on annual wa1e and fr1nae beHfll in· creaaea. Reg. 1 319 Ea Sale 1 269 Ea -1t'ittter Sale lnProg~• Prlee. R Mllt'ff •P t• 2~ Wtft/ be cautk>Ut? At theae prloea, you can onlY profit! DreJCel and Hentage up to 20% off. SUpertJ Mtectlons of dining room, bedto0rn end occ.ion•I furniture (1ignlfleantly) ,... duOed. Cof"9 be i.t'npi.d , , . and CrMte a lcMller "9m1, youf' lowllef hOmet YOCK F~ OtJtlgMr Wills. HflPPy To Awtt YOU PROF ESSlONAl. INTERIOR DESIGNERS UIS HARIOl ILYD. COSTA MIS.A '4•-0175 -~. fMlf'*Y .... ,. 4'a tiag Q ...... ~?. T .. ~~''· ....... lie or ·D ath Matter N SVD LA.ND Okn. -The 1ApDa Buch City t.ounc-11 took 1 upnM •t'Uon }usl the otber nlC)Jl Pu1Md by Councilman K•llY Boyd, t.be c:tty l1wmak•n en· dort11~ tht-wid nlna of l..aaun• Cuyoa Roed r am not hold•na my bre1lb Ufttll I.be •klenlnc Job h•P· ~n• Datt Jn tbc-1 • tbtm> wre nu.mom.a ldllemet to mike l~ tw1 tJn•. wlnchnt two·l•u ro1d•ay aafer t>t-tweea our couta l Art Col<>QY ind th• !-tan Ol•IO ~·re•way Notha~ happened f'und" for a widening proJed were then approved by slate highway authorities in 1973. But Laguna Beach opposition killed the project. THAT ISNT ALL that has been kllled on lhls seven· mile tong former wagon traH that ls now traveled by 218,000 vehicles everyday~ Considerthe record: IN mE PAST THREE VEAllS alone, 21 motorists have been klUed on Laguna Canyon Road. -0-.Wnl of all the fatalities on Laguna Canyon Road have been head-on cras hes. -One lnmdred and elghty-fjve people have been in· 1ured in Laguna Canyon Road crashes just since lf17S. -Jaa Ian Jan. 21, three motorists were killed on Laguna Canyon Road in two separate crashes just hours a pa rt -A SaDla Alla woman was kJJled on the road this mom· ing. It was another head-on crash. All of this happened. mind you, despite accelerated police enforcement wherein 16.~ tramc citations were is· sued last year alone. Councilman Boyd Jost a friend in the Jan. 27 crub on Laguna Canyon Road. He asked the council to act now on biB proposal for a rour-lane road with a center divider while memory of the latest fatalities is still fresh. California Transportation officials have estimated this JOb wiJI cost more tha n Sl million. THE PRICE SEEMS Utt le enough when compared to the gr im death toll that has been extracted by Laguna Canyon Road. · But sUll. I'm not holding my breath until the project gets under way. Laguna Canyon Road is one of the last bucolic, rural roadways in our entire coastal region. It's a pleasant drive if you aren't sharing it with 25,999other vehicles. So YoU can anticipate bowls of protest from the tree. buggers, the greenies and other dreamy environmen· ta lists They seem to be oblivious to cold statistics. Dead cold. Locomotives Hit School Bus; 2 Killed CHlCAGO <AP> -Bus driver Lester Moody says be didn't see the coupled locomotives that slammed into his bus at a railroad crossing and dragged it a bout 60 feet, killing two children and ln· JUnng 17 people Police saJd the collision occurred Wednesday as the bus start· ed through ~ crossing after a freight train paued. Tbe bus wa.a b1t by two coupled locomotives travelln1 ln tbe oppoelt.e direcUon. Moody. 29, a music teacher at Roseland ChriltJan School on thP South Sade. was cha rged with falling to yield the right-of ·way BE SUFFERE D MINOR ir\juries ln the crasb. Authorities ideoWled the dead u Faith Alexander, 6, and An· thony Tbompson. 5. One of the injured, Randolph SmaU, 5, waa In critJcal coadf. tton, and Patricia Jolly, 5, waa in serious condition. The other children sustained minor injuries, ma1tly cuts, attendants said. CAJllO, ECYPt (API -£cypt accepted an American invttaUoo loetay to UU"M-way mwttena1·1ev l t.alb auned at breaklnc the Imp .... to Mldeaat peace \alU witb llrael. TM tovtt.auoa waa 1h•n to Pr .. ldftt AAwar Sadat by Amerku Amba111dor Hermann £.lit.I dwin& a 40-mtnute mtetina at t.be ~ldtatl1I pas~ . A 111111.A& IN\'ITATION WU oven t.o llraeU Prime )(lniper MeeacMm &et10 oe WedDteclay. Tbe IBaeU Cabinet m« today to coukler tM lnvttat.Joa but poatpooed a dec:laion UDW lta replar m.-ms on 8unda:r.· l.....U offlcl • aakt the Cabinet almott certa1nly would acree to Mnd J'cnlp ~r Moabe Dayao to UM t.tlU wttb ~ 11o~lsn Minister Muaura KhaW and secretary of St.ate Cyrus R. Vance. The talk.a are t xpctetecl to be al Camp David, Md., later this montb. Elita aald the date and place of the meet.lb& would not be an· oouoeed witU brael had bffn beard from. Preeldont Carter .l11ued the lnvitaUons even thou&b rovlna AmbUMdor Alfred AtbertOQ wu unable to brt.ni tbe two sidff tot•tbet oa the unl"etO&Vecl lU&aeS oa b1a Mideut abuWe tut month. Slumbllnc blocks Include the quesUon of whether the tnaly Napln PIGflt1e Influenza Cause Of Infant Deaths? NAPLES. ltaJy (AP> -It's aggressive, strikes swU'Uy and doesn't diacrhninate between rich and poor. But Naples' so-called mystery disease baa become a k1Uer of Infants lD tbe city's teeming alums. Docton say thousands of >dilldren have been afnicted With the ail· ment, and at least 60 have died since lt was first detected a year ago. All but one of the dead have . been from the dank alleys or with garbage. but nobody does Naples or the s t reets of anythingtoclean~placeup." Ercolano, a poor suburb fll'Sl Some 500 children have been settled by the ancient Greeks at hospitalized t his winter with the foot of Mount Vesuvius. symptoms of the malady. Or. WORLD I ~TION Brothers Helper A Texas Court of Appeals in San Antonio ruled Wednes- day that Anne Little, 15, mentally retarded, can legaJly donate a kidney to her critically Ill brother, Steve, 14. An attorney appointed to represent Anne's legal n2hts bad argued Texas laws provided no legal means for men· tally incompetent perso~ to donate organs. But Dr. Glullo Tarro, once an Berni Cami estimated as many associate of pollovaccine de-as 18,000 children ln the Nap~es veloper Albert Sabin, said the area may have come do~ with poor cblldren weren't vlcUms o( the ailment, but for most ll was ,,,~~L.-r to Def.end Hyprw"•" a "rad.st virus no worse than a common cold. .I ~Jre o-.a · Tarro said similar types or .. THE RICH and the middle respiratory outbreaks have been BRADENTON, Fla. CAPl -A professor facing dismissal for class go to t.helr own doctors,.. reported in recent years in practicing hypnosis on campus will try it one more time Friday he saJd. ''The poor are brought northern Europe and the United before the trustees of Manatee Junior College as they consider his into public hospitals -in Naples States. case . usually when it's too late." •'In civilized countries the ''We're going to re -create the dastardly offense," attorney Dont Doctors emphatically reject death rate has been about l per-Hadsock said after a dismissal hearing Wednesday for his client. the term "mystery disease" cent. Here it bas been as high as suspended Professor Arlie Uncks. "We are going to do It so the u~d to describe the ~~~t. ~4zpe~re=~=d~."----------~-a_r_d_c_~_~ __ e_u_~_y~b_o_w_ri_~_c_~ __ ~ __ w_bo_~~~--·~-s_a_re_.·_·_ T hey say they are fairly certain it is caused by an influenza-type virus, perhaps of a s train en· demic to Naples. "There's nothing mysterious about this disease." said Dr. Mario Berni Carni, a pediatri· clan at Santobono. "Naples bas not been hit with something un- known anywhere else in the world." DR. TARRO, the bead of virology at lbe Cotugno Hospital for Communicable Diseases, believes it ls a form of viraJ pneumonia. "But it's a little peculiar. and very aggressive among lbe youngest children," he said. The parents and relatives of tiny Sara Barone sat huddled on wooden benches Wednesday in a shed·llke waiting room or San· t obono Hospital, watching a television monitor as their 8- month-old girl lay in a coma in the intensive care ward. She was one of three children in c ritical condiUo'n ln the hospital with the symptoms common to the mystery disease -breathin g dif· flculties, high fever, vomiting, a coma. Death comes quickly - wlthln a day or two after those symptoms -from suffocation. AS THE child's 19-year-old mother sobbed on the shoulder I Of, her buaband, 8 bottled gas de• liveryman. an uncle said: ''The city's filthy, the streets are filled <Paid Advertisement> TO THE MEMBERS OF THE NEWPORT-MESA DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD FROM MEMBERS OF THE NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL FA CUL n lPETITION TO RESCIND CHARGES AGAINST CERTIFICATED EMPLOYEE Tiie folo~-M111rs of ... fwailty of N.HJlS. mmoN THE lowd of ~ to reteW flle ~9H agailtsf OW coln911, llcMrd .. _.d. M llOt to,..... ......... ectto. ag•ll W. wMdt wo.lcl fupa •• Wt ... 1ar11M11t IR "' dhtrfet ..cl ow IClloof for...._ "°'OM: (al TM ~· _...d IB Ille INrd dac u ~.t ClhM 5) ..,..-to at. of • ROii ae1•llllc. •• tndmg •..W, wtiklt • llOf.......,. Nr. l•-•il'• ....... • o IHcMr. Cbl T1le ct.911 _.. fnqwatly ....... Irr. lhM 5, 19' _,ht__, .. waif¥, Tiiey .. too oftell ... .,,. of r.dd1.t "' .tildt .., ,.,.... ......... ........, ..... _if ..... °"' of c..tnf,.....,...,... "'°" .,._. ...._ • .cM11 fact, ttMy .... 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Alhw.r;,.., ·~ ....... ....... ....., ......... ......... w-.. ............ a. 1-.wm.. =:... ........... ........... ....... c ...... .... c ........ ,.. C..tcef.- Cec..._.."-ll c .... c:w, c lrjl 4 ....... .,..,., .... ...... ...., ........... .............. ~~ o;i;.: i.s. .,.,,.... ..... , ....... __ .... 111,J. :.::~..., .., ...... ...... ,.... ...._ .... ..... Mm ............ s l· ~. ,. y \I c " l ; .. . . .. . .. .. ~ ·~ ,_ ... . .. '• ~ . , .. • ,. " ... Ii! •• . ~ • • Brown to -Address -Committee?--- 'Dranuuic Action' Nee•d to Save Convention Proposal SACRAMENTO !AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. must do 1omethlng dramatic. like a m.cll•·crabbln1 ies 1latJvt com· mlttee appearance. to Hve his propotal tor a cooatltuUonaJ con- vtnllon to balance the fe<lel'al buda t, the Assembly's GOP leader aaya. have done ao. depeodin( on di!· the vote1 to kill the resolution ln ferent counts and Interpretations committee or on the noor. of resolutions. the Ways and Means Commit- tee." McCarthy said at his press conference Wednesday. Priolo. from MaUbu. also sald Wednesday that Brown has oot been personally lobbying com· mittee members on the resolu-tion. but Brown·~ press secretary. Barbara Metzger. said it was ''her understanding" that Brown had been doing so. McCARTHY, A CLOSE ally of the governor durlng Brown's first term, opposes a convention, contendJng there could be no way to prevent it from °'roposing amendments weakening key civil liberties. "If it were to receive the necessarr majority there, it will not recetve the necessary ma· jority on the floor." Auemblyman Paul Priolo. alt<> a strong aupporter of the concept., •IY• the Legislature wlll reject t.be convention resolu- tion urue.a the Democratic gov· ernor does somethlnatUke speak- ing before the Aasembly Ways and Means Committee. Assembly Sputker Leo McCarthy, D-san Francisco, re- peated hJs predJcUon that he bas "lndicaUoos are that a resolu- tion that contains a constitu- tional com-enUon will not re- ceive the necessary majority in ASSEJIBLYMAN Tom Bane, D-Van Nuys, said he would In- troduce a resolution Monday ealling for a balanced fe4eral budget anc1 a federal spendtng limit, but without a convenUoo. PalOLO SAID Brown could thereby lbcrease pressure on members of the committee, where the resolution is awaiti.pg actJon. Brown's ch.lef of staff, Gray Davis, did not r ule out the posslblllly 'Brown would testify but added: "The governor's vlews are well known to mem- beu of the committee." 'Ille Longest Ride Brown called in his inaugural speech for a convention lo draft a constitutional amendment re- quiring a balanced budget. say- ing federal deficits are a major cause of inflation. ''''•I INSTANT COLOR Ernest O'Gnffney. 41 . of Hemet, mounts his motorcycle for the final leg of the longest -ever cycle ride. He de- parted Wednesday from Los Angeles for New York in his bid to complete his 21.000-mile, world-wide journey in 79 days. He s tarted his roun1-the-world trek in New York Nov. 27. Psychic Aids Hunt For Girl's Killer FRESNO tAP> A Cupertino psychic visited the spot where the battered and mutilated body of an 8·year-old Fresno 1trl was found. authorities reported. Police here would not reveal Wednesday wbat M. Kathlyn Rhea saw or felt at tht! spot northeast of here where the body of Vi<'toria Anne DeSantiago was found Monday. The girl's head bad been battered and she had been sexually assaulted. · "I HAVE AN IMAGE. If l ever saw tht! one particular man, 1. would know him," Ms Rhea said Tuesday or the girl's killer. Police said Ms. Rhea provided general details Monday morn- ing that-matched the area where the girl's body was later found. She said the ~1rl would be found dead and nude near plowed fiP.lds, a chicken ranch and mountams, all of which were true "I KNEW 'fHE CHILD had been physically beaten," Ms. Rhea s aid. •·1 felt sh<' was in the trunk of a car before she was placed in a field .. Ms. Rhea said she t'OUld even "see" flashes or the ratal beating Deputy Police Chief James Packard said the department also may use hypnosis on some witnesses to see if they can provide more information ITT AKES AcrJON by 34 states lo for ce Congr ess to call a convention. So far, 25 of 27 states Legislators Seek Change . . In Gun Law SACRAMENTo (AP> -As- sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy and nine other legislators have joined an appeal to the state Supreme Court to reconsider Its decision on the "use a gun, go to prison" law. Backers of the appeal said Wednesday that, so far, 75 of the 119 legislators, including the Democratic and Re publican leaders of both houses. have signed the petition. They include 52 of the 80 Assembly members and 23 of tbe 39 senators. The court's Dec. 22 Tanner de· cision held that a 1975 man- datory-prison law didn't prohibit judges from granting probation to gun-using felons in excep· tional cases. ICELAND POPPIES Ano rher gorgeous background of bright color in reds, yellows, oranges and pastels. Rogers hybrid varieties will bloom through late spring. PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabulous garden color in beds. baskets or pots-blues, yellows, oranges and whites. BANDINI #2 A February feeding is very important for a healthy attractive lawn. Bandin! N2 is ideal for fee ding established dichrondra and blade grass lawns . Start your feeding cycle now. PRIMROSE SALE Buy four 4 " plants and get one FREE Rog,er's has both English and Fairy varieties-th e foundation of any spring garden-available in white, yellow, red, pinks, orange and blues, in bloom for easy selection. Limited to stock on hand through 2/25 /79. CAMELLIAS Showy Oowering evergTeen shrubs in colors ranging from red to pink to white and even some variegMed typeS. SeJect from many old favorites or unusual coUector varieties. Meanwhile. police are combing the area where the girl's body was found , checking cars that could have been involved in the girl's kidnap Saturday and sorting through telephone Ups. T he court has given oppo- nents. including state Attorney Gene ral George Oeukmejian, untiJ Feb. 20 to ask for a rehear- ing. Jn the meantime, action on legisJat.ieo to reverse the ruling has been delayed. San Joaquin Hills Road at MacArthur Blvd .• Newpon &ach. (714) 640-5800 Open Daily 9 am -Spm -Florist 640-6n4 Reward and memorial funds established in the girl's name by several )()('al radio stations and public employee groups have raised more than $25,000 in cash and pledges since Tuesday. l\n anonymous donation of S5,000 was made Wednesday-"on behalf o' the children of Fresno ... &Trowers To Receive Refumls Of Interest LO S ANGELES <AP > - A meri<'an!', who borrowed money from more than 1.500 national banks since Oct. 28. 1974, a nd were charged loo much interest, will be refunded millions of dollars. the Los Angeles Times reported today. The office of com pt roller or the currency. which recently completed a detailed examination of all 4,700 national banks, found inadvertent violations or the lrulh-ln·lending law in interest. calculations on auto. home f __ sr._'A~_E_J improvement and other consumer loan& or less than $25,000. "These were inadvertent mis· takes," said John J . Chipouras. director of consumer examinations for the comptroller of the currency. . Federal officials said the complexity of the le!¥iing law caused most of the errors because bank loan officers ap· parently did not knpw how to calculate annual in~rest rates properly. S.1109 Tat• Slatf!d LOS ANGELES t AP l California's latest. effort to reduce auto exhaust pollution begins March 10 when used-car buyers in tne Los Angeles area can have their vehicles checked at smog control stations. The testing progfam-d em - onslrated In a dry run at one of the 17 Los Angeles area testing stations Wednesday is expected to be ex· panded within three years to require the a nnual testing of all cars in California's five largest metropolitan areas. Currently, testing ls required only when a car is sold. N. T.z a.-8eete SACRAMENTO CAP> -The state Assembly's Democratic leader saya be, unlike the former legislative analyst., does not think a state l.ax ln· crease in the wake of Proposmon 13 la inevitable. Speaker Loo McCarthy, D·San Francisco, said there Is no support for any tax increase In the current. Legl1lat.ure and the need has not been1hown. ''There la a clear mood a1atnat. tax lacNate1 and for deUvenn, aovem- ment Mn'tca far more efflcieDU, than has been done in the past, and I think frankly that has to be our general thrust.·· he said Wednesday. UeeB ... F-d OXNARD CAP> -A bomb squad was called in to remove two practice military bombs found ln a garbage dumpster out.side a south Oxnard apartment building. One of the 26-inch by six incbes- long bombs found Wednesday was live, according to Police Lt. Robert Kelly. However, be said it was an ex- plosive that gives off a lot. of smoke as it bums. but. is not considered very dangerous. Kelly said the Explosive Ordnance Disposal team from the Point Mugu naval base disposed of the bombs . Many millt.ary people live in that area, but Kelly said it would be difficult to track down the person who brought the bomb home. Selteeteee IJplteW BAKERSFIELD <AP> -The de- fense attorney says he will appeal a death sentence against a Los Ange les-area man convicted of murdering three student film makers in the Mojave Desert last April. Superior Court Judge John D. JelleUcb upheld a jury's death penal- ty verdict Wednesday after heartnc defense argumenta against impoaine the death sentence and prosecution . a rgumenta for lt. Defense COWl4el James Faulkner contended the Jury failed to consider the lack ol a prior crlmlnal record for David Mt.trtJJhaw, 20, of Santa Fe Springs. Faulkner al.so charged that a psychologist was unqualified to state that Mur Uabaw would be ) violent lbe rest of his We. 1 . . .,, ... , .. _ OAKLAND <AP > -Wlllon Rllet Jr., IOD of the ltate tebool 9\Q)erln· tendent1 says be wUJ run for tbe OaJdaoa City Counc:U qalnat 1.ncum- beol Fred MauSora. Riles, ad.miDl.ltraUve ualatant for Alameda County Supervisor John George llnc:e tm, baa been eodoned by Mayor LlOIMI Wilson .. He an· nounc:ed b1a council candldaey Wed· neaday . He beaan h1J poUUcal career b1 wortina on bl.I fatMr'• campalp in 1970. ' Welcomes nu To_ Three Delicious Values Eat your way through the day with three popular Denny's meals at very special prices. During February and March, the Denny's Family Restaurants listed below are offering a breakfast, a hJneheon and a dinner item at reduced prices. Simply present each coupon at the participating Denny's most convenient to you and you'll receive the delicious meal described for the special coupon price. We know you'll be pleased with the food and with the very hospitable people who are looking forward to serving you. Denny's Is the favorite restaurant of millions of Americans. With more than 100 menu lt~ms available 24 hours a day, we're certain you'll find the kind of food to fit your mood. So, sit back, relax and enjoy. A DENNY'S BREAKFAST VALUE! .. A DENNY'S LUNCHEON VALUE! A DENNY'S DINNER VALUE! • Orange COast O~uly Pilot I.and Agreement Seems Reasonable :-San Juan p1 trano' mayor announ~ la1t week t>that councUmen had acreoed to a etUement In the ll 1 mllHon mv ~c condemnation la ujt hied by G&endaL Fcdt>r1d vtngs and Lo n. The t..o An el ·ba~ed ln•Ulution filed the sull claimma Ltw city wa d oylng il reasonable use of rta ma 51v San Ju n ncreage Th land ls tocal.ed aoulh or -San Juan CT'ttk Roud urnt'e t otthc S:a'n DteJU Freeway ' The D~lreto·ment means th mv tment firm wtll be abl to dev<.'lop up to 200 horn a year on the land. Th total number or dwelbng units allowed wm be 1,201 • about 400 1..-~ th m ~c\ti~ by lhe ctly'a 1eneraJ plan ; As a re ult of lhe ~Ucrneont, San Juan will receive nearly 700 ucNs or hilltop land overlookln1 lhe communi· ... ty and the Pacific t'eon That lund can be u ed for public recreation or left as 1 • open space and ll allow the city to pre erve a prominent :11dg~lme one 01 tnc t>1g oaJ.s or the city's general plan. The settlement appears to be a reasonable deal for all sides. Th" city 1s able to presel'"\lc land and the lnveet· ent firm geb> a guarantee of how many units can bei built. und assurnnt-es or building 200 per year. Now city oHacials must pre s for needed improve· ents in the community's traffic circulation system to commodate the increased automobile movement from ·the 1.201 homes coming on the market. Canyon Deathtrap The new year was not even a month old when two • :.;anotorists and a motorcycle rider were killed on twisting ' Laguna Canyon Road. t All three were killed within hours of each other in the ) J,an. 27 accident. lt was a painfuJ repetition in the grim I Ki story of fatal coll1s1ons on the seven.mile stretch of roadway that traverses Laguna Beach. the City of Irvine, and coWtty territory. :it And while statistics reduce human beings to mere ~ numbers, they cannot be 'ignored on a strip of highway which continues to kill motorists at a rate of two a year - just within the city limits of Laguna Beach. There. were two fatalities each year in the city sector io 1976, 1977, and 1978 --and. with the death of a motorcyclist last month, there is not much hope the series will be broken during 1979. In addition to deaths, there were 4S injury accidents in the city sector during 1976. 70 during 1977 and 40 last year ; The solution '? It's not issuing citations. obviously. ' 4'1though city officers have stepped up patrols along the ~ winding stretch. The answer is to widen the canyon road to four lanes. tbus reducing the number of often·f atal head-0n col- lisions. It's time for CalTrans. Irvine and Laguna Beach to rorm an aggressive program to make the road something better than a deathtrap. . .. • 1 l I • .. • • • s , -.. , ! ' ' Worthwhile Project A window opens in the ni&W.. and a knif ewielding rapist enters the bedroom or a Sleepin~ woman. Minutes later. he is gone, but the horror of rape has just begun (or his victim. · The San ·Clemente Rape Crisis Intervention Center was estabUshed by a victim of a rape attempt to heJo other women and their fa mill es recover from such assault. Police contact center counselors when they first receive rape reports. This means sympathetic supporters are available to accompany rape victims to hospital emergency rooms for treatment and documentation of their assuJts. The counselors continue to work with rape victims and family members in the aftermath of the attacks. helping the m to overcome feelin~s of fear. an~er and helplessness. which interfere with normal healthy living. But last month, $30.000 in federal funding was divert· ed from the Rape Crisis Intervention Center to a police training program. leaving the San Clemente center !!trapped for funds. · The value of the Rape Crisis Center extends beyond Ute several dozen victims and their families from throughout south Orange County who were counseled at the center last year. Its active campaign of rape prevention· and its staff of trained counselors provide a valuable resource for the $.outh county area. If government funding won't keep the Jfrogram alive, certainly this would be a very worthwhile project for area service organizations to support. • Opinions expressed in the space abo\le are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are thOse of their authors and an1sts. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Piiot. P.O. eox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd/Tinsel To wn ByL.M. BOYD Q. Wasn't it Oscar Levant •ho first labeled Hollywood as "'tinsel Town'?" A. That's right. What be fclually said was. "Strip the ,bony tinsel off Hollywood and you 'U find the real tinsel underneath.'' Q. "ls water the only sub- stance that expands when ffoien?" A. Yes, with one excepUon, _.smut.b. Sea salt is said to have the Dear Gloomy Gus So take that San Clemente! You only re· called three city COUD• cilmft. We're 1ot.o1 t(> 1et tMIJI all! HBRESIDENT same ratio of salt to other minerals as is round in human blood. First person to get U.S. Social Security benefit.s was Ida May Fuller. She'd paid $22 in the lu.od before she re- ceived her fll'Sl check on iaa. 31, 1040. By the ttme she died on Jan. 30, 1975, she'd collec:t· ed$20,000. How fast can you say "two all·beef pallid, special sau ce, lelluce, cheese, pickles. onions, on a sesame seed bun"? McDonald's employees are supposed to say it in four.seconds. Took a couple of years for an Jowa man t(> convtnce UJe autborttla be thou.Id bave hia moniker on bis own' p•raonalised car license plate. Kia name: stolen. W H only aix yean a10 tbat \Jf aada's boM ldl Am\n lot at shook up over the amount of cattle ruatllq that WH f°" lng on there. He fh,. ly fi1ured out what the problem waa. The exceedingly hilb price al the tJ~ ot a Ucan· daa bride. About 1$ be9d ot catUe. ~I • Rot>ert N Weed/Publl~htr Tttomn Ktevlt 'l!dltor Barbat"a Krtlblch/Edltorl•I P~ Editor Jack And •non P r esident's Load Too Heavy? WASHINGTON -Jlmmy Carter. ~aleaed by a balky CQn1re11, an uncontrollable tt0oomy and a crltlcal pre611, hu bad caUH to rene<:t ruefully upon Mark Twain's fruatralk>N in aaklna direeUons to a friend's rarm \n N w Hampshlre. "llow fllT rs it tO tlendenon's place?" Twain inquired. The farmer said It WH "about a mlJ~ and a half." Tw11n continued along the road until he met another farmer and again asked the distance lo the Hen· derson farm ... About a mile and a half," replh1d the second farmer. Still farther down the road, Twain asked another passing farmer the distance and was told, "about a mile and a half." Mac:k Twain replied: "Thank God. I am holding my own." THE PRESIDENT IS begin· ning to wonder whether he is holding his own. He puts in about two working days eyery 24 hours . He is usually at his desk by 6:30 a.m. Often he doesn't put aside his work. except ror meals and ceremonial runcllons, until midnight. He keeps plugging away not merely from dawn to dark but, In limes of crisis. from dawn to dawn. Carter has an extraordinary energy that exhausts ordinary men who try to keep up with him. Associates say ,he thrives on work. He s pee d -r ead s through stacks of presidential papers. The Carter technique, according to those who know him. is to commit lo memory the key facts and figures he needs to understand a problem. T hese become guideposts. which he uses in his dlscussJons with subordinates. Frequently Mailbox ~ bu nabbersuted them by r•mem.becinc some ctet.U -a ru&~ be h.cl plcked out of the flne print -that they had forgotten. CASTO IS A determJned man who desperately want& to be a rood preeident. But the strain Is beelnn.lng to sbow. The race is more cauot. the famous smUe waning, weary lines •P· pearing under the eyes. "Whal this country needs," commented an auociate who has tried to keep up with Carter's multiply· •DC problems aQd exhausting pace. "ls a 1ood night's sleep." Of course. there can be no eight·hour day for the president. no laY'lnl uide tho aweeome retpoDsJblUtJes. no tettlng down tbe overwhelmin1 burdens. A move on bis cbetaboard could cause war or brtn1 ~ace. A chance remark from him could rt•rt an economic down_aUde. He 1lta at the center of govern· ment with a lbouund hands. pulling strings. controlling movements. loucblng every. thing. He directs the preparation or figures be ia expected to un· derstand ln detail. He sets fonign policy. guides legislation. makes domestic decisions, controls the aovemment news output. plans politJcaJ strategy. ASCBAJC LAWS and tradi· ~t first glance this may seem conf u~btg to you . tiona alao tmpoee upon him a thousand and one minor ehofts, many of them requiring his J>etsonal signature. He iS sup· poaed to be the natlon's chief gr eeter . civic pitchman and father-confeuor. He has to 1erve as host at ban· quets for k.ings , ~ueens and potentates. And he ls also ex· peeled to 1reet pickle queens. poster girls and Boy Scout del· egalions. Nobody knows how many bancb a president shakes in a year. but Carter's hand has often gone limp Crom the ex· ercise. The president's grueling schedule raises an urgent ques. tion: has the world's biggest job become too big for any single person to handle? Not only is Carter expected to comprehend the full significance or the thousands of words and figures that pour across his desk each day; not only must he de· cide immediate issues and cope with each new crisis; but he must also give constant thought to the future and chart a reliable course for the ship of state to follow. WHEN DOES the man in the White House find lhe lime to ponder? How can future presi· dents with normal exhaustion points be expected to hold down the job? The lesser post of de· fense secretary drove James Forrestal lo suicide. Maf\Y his· torians believe exhaustion· and illness adversely affected the de· cisions of Woodrow Wilson and Franklin 0 . Roosevelt during their declining years. The conclusion 1s inescapable. The presidency is too over· powering for any one human be· ing. The most modern country in lhe world is at the sam~ time saddled with one of the most archaic politica l structures. The presidency s hould b e streamlined. perhaps with the vice president picking up more of the load Mandatory Sentencing Inhibit s Justice To the Editor: I was disturbed to read the Feb. 3 Comment Page artjcle re· .-rding People v. Tanner and mandatory sent~ocing. The notion that the Legislature is confronting "a court imposed threat to its independence~· is misguided. RatheJ', as Chief Justice Bird recognized. rigid. in· flexible sentencing standards cannot be determined by the Legislature without threatening lbe judicial latitude essential to justice and fairness. To the Editor: Any readers of yoiir paper who enjoy the natural wonder of ne arby Cleveland National Forest. Trabuco District. as I. myself and many of my friends frequently do. would find it wortbwh.ile lo write to the Orange County Board or Supervisors urging that this area should be preserved and not adveruly affected in any way. Because or pressure being put upon the supervisors they are considering changes from open-space-agricultural to res· identlal zoning. for the areas near Trabuco and Live Oak Canyon Roads . Mandatory sentences eliminate the most crucial participants in the criotlnal justice system: the impartial judges. Removing lhe discretion traditionally reserved for tliem. espe"cilllly in the un· usual case like Tanner <a sham O'NEIU. County Park close robbery intended to demonwate by could be affected adversely. aq employer's need for additional as has been T~ker 'Wildlife security) ultimately le.aves a dis· Sanctuary and the Audubon proportionate; and dlsturbio.g Society Sanctuary at Starr amount of poVle'r to the police andi. • Raoch. a1JO nearby. The pockets prosecQt.ors. • of private property within the . . . district should continpe to be Whether an md1vidual is a~-protectively ioned in order to r~sted ; whether he or ~he as preserve the forest environment. bo;<>ked: whether the distn ct at· to permit the general _public to torney ~ides to prosecute. and enjoy the natur al mountain upon wtuch charge: the crowd· landscape. · , ing of the court calendar.: lhe Wider roads. utility polea, con· ~!!M:. ure to plea bargain; discre· st ruction noise, all of whid1 on is erywhere. necessarily follow nsidential,. zoning. woula o·nly drive the wildlife deeper into the [OttSt. destroying their habit.ats and up- setting the natural balance of this beautilu1 area. ,. UDING the impartial e, mostramiliarwlthlhe crlm criminal, from impos· ing emostappropriate sentence o adds to the prosecutor's - e slate's partial advocate -in· creasing power. and what Justice Black called "the unreviewable control ofone individual." Each criminal case, its ad· judicalion a.id disposition. is a dilemma by itsel!. Guidelines providing suggested sentencing ran1ei help guard against dis· . parity, arbitrariness and uncer· tainty. Sentenci'ng cannot, however. be "'6sed upon a strict legislative schedule or rule o( thumb, if justice is to be done. The1nf1exlbility or the "use a gun, go to prison". law is rarely the answer to problem$ as lD• describably complex as crime and punishment. Rigidity cannot meet the irrationality or moet crime. Mitigating and uncom· mon circu.nulances must be left to judlclal dl.screUon and evalua· tlon, aubjecl, ot coune, to ap- pellate review. Meanwhile, persistent ques. tloal u to tbe nature ol crime, the pqrpoee ol punlahmHl. must be confronled by both our eowu and Le.u.a.ture. Hurried· 1est1tatlon and court rullocs. enacted aod dec:ided amld1t poUUc:al controvtn)', Is plftetnal and pJnacean. Both fall to 1r-pple wtth criminal Justice In the eomprebenalye and thouchtluJ manner ~utr.tt. ELLZN&OWNS • ARTHUR E. P ~LM}:R PreslMnt. South co'ast Audubon Soci~ty 8 .. ..WaeP•r k To the Editor: The coast of Califom;a chokes with development. T~e Irvine Coast is a welcome sl1ht ii\ Orange County. The air la clean and the ocean off the coast thrives with fish and vecetaUon. Kelp beds support a wide varie· ty of ocean ~life .orr the Irvine Coast. WUd animals ma~e their homes in the Irvine Hills alona tbecout. ~ The lrvine Company plana 4e· velopment or the lnlne Cout. Hotels and apartments would be more than an ualy blight. Development would be • source or pollution. Air polluUon would lncreAM with a heavier traffic now on Padllc Coast Hl1hway. Cities like Newport Beach would be tbe IDOi\ alfectM-~Y 11 .. v) tramc. THE iHANGE Comity plan· nlo1 •t«M:Y. the Envlronmn&aJ Mana.-ment Atency, bu itven their 1upport t(> the developmeGt of lbe Irvine Coaat. The st.tr ot the Ell.A reeommtftded to the CaUlomla Coaltal Commlploft et a public bearil\I on the Irvine Coast, that tbe mouth of lbe couta& c..,,_. 1bould be paved and become parking lots for the ~oast. Tourists are more impor· lanl than wildlife lo the county planne rs . Money· makes the world go around. Greed kills the world at the same lime. The Irvine Coast needs to become an urban park. If the federal government preserves It as a park the coast can be en· joyed by everyone. The re· sources of the area will be saved if the coast becomes a park. Southern Orange County wlll continue to grow. Open space won't be left anywhe re if it lsn 'l protected now for the future. DAVE HALL /flore tor Le•• To the Editor· This is in r eply to the editorial, "Strike Rights Shaded" which appeared In the Jan. 29 issue of the Pilot. You stated or implied In your editorial that teachers should not s trike. but should pre· sumably use other means to set· tie disputes. Unfortunately, teachers are now in a position whereby a strike is the only means that we have lo resolve issues. Teachers statewide have been seeking binding arbitration to settle disputes. but no school board tn the state has as yet ac· cepted it. ln my school dlst.rlct <Garden Grove Unified School District> we go through an arbitration process to settJe dis· pules. Then the board makes a decision which is final and blnd· ing. <t.e. the arbitration process is binding upon the teachers, but not ttPOn the board. ) MY TEACHER salary makes friends wonder how I gel by. The minimum wage Is now almost 16,000, and after five years or col· 1ege a teacher begins at Sl0,000. My nephew recenUy graduated from high school and aM8 eams $12.000 a year. lbouf h he has no special skills or training and no jOb responsibility. My wife is ·a teacher maklng Sl2.SOO a year after five years of college and fi'Ve yean experience and hav· tng trem ~ndo u a job responatblUUes, Settl\ns for a lowcr·than· avera1e salary In exchange for Job security la acceptable lo .most teachers. But accepUnf a 5 to 10 percent pay cut each year due to lnflaUon seems too much t(> aak. I have loll 2' to 30 per- cent la~ power ln the ff'fentlf:I. Ten~,. does not protect I! Quotes "We need ~meone tn charce wbo knows wh•t ht II doln1 'Uld why." -Jou C.Hall1. an· nounclng hi• cancMclacy <or the R.epubUean prealdeotlal oomlnt· lion ln 1980. teacher's job if he Is not needed or if his work is not satisfactory. Tenure ensures due process lor firing, as opposed to firing a teacher for activities unrelated to his dUties as a teacher. Teachers have been put into an impossible s ituation. They are given responsibility for the s uccess or policies and pro· grams which they have not helped to formulate. They are given the responsibility, but not the authority. They are asked t<> be more and more responsible for less and less money. JERRY PARTIN Clafa a B rea • To the Editor: Vice Premier Teng Hsiao· ·ping 's nfne-day visit to the U.S. provides him and almost a bi Ilion Chinese <via satellite T. V. I excellent opportunity to learn that their dream or modernizing China can come true by quickly adopting in Mainland Ctuna a framework of America n free enterpr ise system. The same free enterprise system has been used by the Republic of China < ROC l on Taiwan since 1949 and produced a miracle of economic success there. In 1978, the two-way trade between the U .S and ROC was $8 billion. almost to times greater than the trade between the U.S. and the Peoples· Republic of China whi ch was less J.bl.n $1 billion in spite of the f ct that the population on .Mainland China ls 50 times grea(er than that on Taiwan: MORE TRAN 30 years of Communism and Marxism in Mainland China te6ul~d only constant social and polllical strife that ruined chan'ces of real progress there. The same "isms" must now~ abandoned lo allow requisite social and political st.ability of uninterrupt. ed modernization program yet to be developed is to have any chances in succeeding. Adoption of American free en· terprise system and ab•ndoo· ment of Communism and Marx· ism can lead to a possibility ot a break·through for China· Taiwan reunification. Should this become a reality 1 reeiona.I stablUty in the Pacific as assured and chances for world ~ace wUI be greatly enhanced. fl 'm a U.S. na Uve born Chlnete·Amertcan J. JCENRYYE! I. : ....,_ . . . . .. • • .. . 7 .· . .. . ·' ·' ;I . . . Or ang e Coas t ED ITI O N Year Bo•eto wa Dally Ne•':'p a p e r VOL. 72, NO. 39, • SECTfONS, S8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1979 c '· I ' TEN CENTS f • ---------FBI, Officili& Confer-------------lliiiiiliiiiiii-----..-~ - Coast Firms Alerted· to Espionage 9y JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ""' o.lly ..... , .... More &.ban 100 ffCUrity officers and eucuUvea ot Orange County defense contractors met an Santa Ana to· day with counter·tntelligence agents from the FBI. H~rbert Clough, special agent lo charge of counter -in· telligence for the FBI in Southern California •aid today's seminar was held to acquamt the buslnessmen with "the very real threat" posed locat business by foreign spies. CLOUGH SAID be was unable to supply any specific information regarding the extent of espionage activity locally, but he said that the activity had increased drastically in the past year Foggy Chain R eaction Woman Welfare Probe Infants Found Dead in Home ROCH ESTER. N . Y. fAP> - Two investigators for a welfare agency, trying to find out when a woman's baby was due, found that sbe wasn 't pregnant anymore · and that there was an infant's body in the base· m ent. Another infant's body was in the attic. The woman, 3•-year-old Geraldine Temple, was charged Fog Hits Wunty; More Due Fog made many Orange Coun· ly motorists late for work today and played a part in two deadly traffic accidents The California Highway Patrol said inland Orange Coun· ty appeared to get most of the fog with Orange, Santa Ana, Placentia and Anaheim report- ing traffic tieups and a rash of minor co111s1ons And' there will be more of the s ame tonight, the Na tional Weather Service warned today. "These are classic fog condi· lions and we expect the situation to persist at least through Fri· day,'' a forecaster saJd. Traffic officers said foggy con- ditions this morning were a def· inlte factor in two south county collis1ons that cost ~e lives of two women motorists. A 44-year-old newspaper dis· lrihutor died behind the wheel of her light pickup truck after it collided with an overturned truck on the San Diego Freeway south of El Toro Road. And a 29-year-otd woman died in the wreckage or her sports car when it struck a van on Laguna Canyon Road, about one ,mlle south or the San Diego Freeway The Final lndi,gnity CHICAGO <AP>-·Some- on e bu been IUUng credit cards from corpses brought to the Cook Coun- ty morsue police aay. State 11 Attorney Bernard Cue)' Is in· vestigatin1 four alleeed theft.a ol credJt cards from the pockcta and punee of people taken to the morgue liDce December, the Chica=Tl1bune re· portedW . TM caeet volve people killed ln acddeata or who otberwtse died waexpec· ledly and were taken to the mor•u• with tbelr belo.......,, lDvHUfatora aakt. Wednesday nj_ght with two counts of second-<Jegree murder . Detective U . Louis Campanoul said. She was held overnight without bail Aut.opefes were scheduled for today, but police said the babies aP.parenUy had been strangled. The infant found in the attic, a 1lrl. bed beea dead for about a year, police said. Campano~zl, head or Rochester's Phys\cal Crime Squad, said he went to the home after two investigators from the Monroe County district al· t.omey's office telephoned him to say a woman told. them .there was a body in the basement. He said he found the "semi· buried" body of a male infant with pressure marks on its neck. After detectives spoke wtth Ms. Temple at police head- quarters, they returned to dis· cover the girl's decomposed body. partially hidden in rags and papers in the attic. he said. Campanozzi said a county medical examiner decided the male's bh1.hdale and ruled that the infant had lived only a few minutes. The female had 'lived long enough to be given the name "Anita," be said. <See INFANTS, Paae A2) Sea Searched F or 1bree on Missing Boat A Santa Barbara to the Mex· lean Border sea search con· tlnued today for three fortMr Orange Coast res\dents whose commercial fishing boat is over- due aft.er leaving San Diego Jan. 22. Coast guard officials said the vessel was due to return to port Sunday after completing a two. week fishing trip of the banks near the Channel Islam$s. Gary Newton, 22, and Dennis Vowell, 23, former Costa Mesa residents, and Vowell's W!(e, Debbie, a former south county resident, were aboard the boat. · ''We're uaed to hlm being out a long time, but nothing like thia baa happened before," Newton's mother, Eleanor, said today. "We're Just boplna and pray· lna1" the Costa Mesa re.sicteat adoed. · She •aid her son wu an ex- pe rlenced seaman aad that there wu enoup food on board lr lbe 40-foot craft for two w..U. Coaat Gu ard offi~lala aald there wu no lndicaUon the boat "The AnniaUce " waa in ~ ble. It WU eqUipped with two. way radiol, a direcUon finder abd other aafety equipment. A preliminary aeanh bu beta eapaaded to cover a a,eoo- squa,..mUe area lbat extends uo 1111.1-out to Ma. Mra. Newton Mid her eon ud Vowell both aueaded hlah acbool •• COlta ...... Vowell WU mar. rted .. "-· The tbnii ..... lnc••..-................ tnSan DMto. Today's seminar was the second in a series for about 250 firms in Orange County that supply classified technology products for the government. Firms participating in today's seminar included Hughes Aircraft Mlcroeledronic Division and Ford Aerospace and CommunicatJon Corp. 's Aeronutronlc Division. both based in Newport Beach and McDonnell Douglas, FBI officials said. LIKE mE FIRST session held in November, today's meeting was to acquaint the businessmen with the scope of the problem as well as teaching them bow to spot penelra· lion by spies of their firms. · lo most cases. according to Agent Clough. the es- r.ionage activity takes the form ~a forelen agent befriend· ng an employee and eventually persuading the employee to steal cla.sslfaed material from his company. "We need for these people, as weJJ as the public, to become believers," said Clough. He acknowledged that bis inability to cite specific numbers and cases would create a "credibility gap" and agreed that "it could lead to paranoia" on the subject of espionage in Oranae County. "WE DON'T WANT people looking under beds or over - -their shoulders,'" he said. "We want them to be well enough informed that they know what to look for and to <See FOREIGN SPIES, Paae A%) ed in Freeway Crash Indoor Pool Employees Robert Mercado <left > and tection equipment Wednesday afternoon, Gary Pavo man mops against flooded causing an estimated $250,000 damage to showroom at Gold Key Furniture in Costa the warehouse at 3200 Harbor Boulevard. It Mesa. 'Fire department officials said a took more than four hours to mop the mess water main broke during a test of fire pro-up. Job Tractor Thefts Lucrative Racket By PllllJP ROSMARIN OI -Deity ~li.t S~ The theft of a construction tractor from an Irvine job site this week was one of a half· doien over the paat year, police say. Whal do lbieves do with them? According to Irvine detective Paul Jessup, just about anything and everything. •'Sometimes they use parts of them for their own tractors," Jessup said. "Sometimes they ship them to Midwest farms, or, sometimes, just into the next county to another construction area." Jessup said the thieves may steal several tractors and, mix- ing up the parts from all, rebuild hybrid tractors and resell them locally-possibly even to tbe aame company from whlcb they were stolen. The pans of the tracton alone are valuable, Jessup aaid , and aometlmet the vehicles are dia· mantled and end up 11 parts ol a hundred otbe!"'m aeblnel. To an U.Creu&na number of ~rooks, Jessup 1afd, CO~· ll4J'E A HE4RT -ONE OF OURS· lt'a time tor 1pl1111 lovln' and Valentine'• Day. The Dally Pllot celebralel tam 1peclal 1ea10G wttb wordl ud plcture1 detalUna tlfta for ValtnUnu ID a 20·pa1e ma1aline. "LoYtn .... toatrort11111D1d&lma1utne lD toct.,·. DallJ 'l'llot. lion tractors "are a su~m· modity. They're just like c . "A lot of people. tbaf :ll they deal in: Construction tractors. 'j The big construction equip. ment-wbJch can be modified for either construction or f~ work, is worth an average or $80,000 per tractor. The crime has become so com· mdn in construction areas-not just in Ir vine but all over Southern Callrornla-that the Los Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Office and the California Highway Patrol all have spedal lnnsUgative details assigned to the problem. About the best police now can hope to do, short of catching the criminals in the act, Jessup said, ls to program into a com· puter the known serial numbers of every part ot each stolen trac· tor ... and hope lt will turn "-P·" The tract.on are diff\cult to trace. "We haven't found OM yet," Jessup said. "The la.at lead we sot on one wu that lt mllbt be on aomebody·s farm tn · Texa1." Even the actual theft, onaoln«. ta touch to detect sometlmel, Jeuupaaid. The tractors normally ue re- paired at odd boW'I of the early mornln1. and 10 workmen arou1'd tbem draw no special at· tenUon. ''The croob pull up at t, 21 3 ln tbe momlnl." Je11up aaid, "or ••• kl the afternoon, witb a bll fla&bed tnlek, bol "'" tM tract«, drive lt up a rasnp oll&o UM~. and drtff lt awQ." (See TID"8, Pa••~> ' . . . Bank Robbery Suspect Held In Costa Mesa Costa Mesa police said today they have captured a man they believe is responsible for at least three Orange County bank rob- beries since the flnt of tbe year. Robbery charges were filed T hursday against 28·yea~-old Gary Duane Pilsitz, wbo listed addresses in Costa Mesa and Santa Ana. said lnvesUgat.or Pbll McCormick. Pllsit.z was arwited Wednes· day night after police officers saw him standing next to a stolen vehicle near Baker and Bristol Streets. McCormick s aid Pllsiti matched descriptions and camera photos taken at the scel\e of two bank heists in Gat'Gen Grove and one in Costa Meta. Tbe Coeta Mesa rObbery OC· curred Jut Friday aftemoon at a Crocker Bank at 3400 BriatoC St. A man who said be bad a l'I" torced a teller to band over about $1,300, police Hid. McConnlck 11id tnve1Uaator1 have "poalUvely Ued" Pllalta to tbe three robberies based on detcriptionl and atmllarities 1n technique. Pollee a1lo are aeetlal tiab tbat could tie PUait1 a.o rour otber armed robberi• ba tbe co\IDty linee late O.C.mber. Pla.ats WM aeWuJect for •· ral1nment toda1 .before a federal mala.tnt4. Re ll ...._ beld wttboul ball. Accident Sparks Others By WIU.JAM RODGE 0ttt1e Mtv ~-s~ A wrong·way driver on the freeway set off a chain react.ion of accidents in foggy Laguna Hills this morning. One woman died. Ba rbara Throop. 44. of Weat Covina, a Los Angeles Times ~ruck driver, w~ kllled by one of the crashes. T om Sapp, California High way Patrol spokesman, said she was unable to stop the Jight pickup truck she was driv- ing when she came to an over- turned tractor-trailer rig. The series of accidents began al 4:55 a.m.k Sapp said. when Frank F a l e nbe rg , 66. of Laguna Hills, entered the San Diego Free way at Alicia Parkway. He was traveling northbound in the southbound Janes. The reason was not im- mediately known. Eduardo Duarte, 31, o( Long Beach, swerved the tractor· trailer to miss Falkenberg's northbound car. But the massive semi sideswiped the car and overturned. • 1f:• ~ Mrs. Throop's light pickup \.- came through the fog and s lammed into the overturned tractor:traile r . She died in· stantly. Falkenberg's wrong-way car c&e CRASH, Page A:> 1 Carew Lures Cash The acquisition ot Rod Carew could put an additional S2. 7 million into the California Anaels' coffers this season, making Carew's $800,000.a·year salary a bargain. See the Dally Ptlot 's exclusive story on Page Bl. Orange Co ast Weath er Night ana morning fog and row clouds. Otherwise fair with high clouds through Friday. Lows toni1bt 40 to 48. Highs Fri· day near 80 at beaches to upper• iDlaDd. INSIDE T8B" Y A ttilaU'rGI comrmmon °" fOrdp ofloir' IJOf1f Jfmm~ Carter .omc oalllGble od· VQttCC ~ o/ ftdtnlCl· UoMI JJO'U'C• be/orf lw lft· In" Ute WlaU" HOV#. Sft Page AJI. l•HX ) , ,. O.lly .. ,._ .....-1tv lli<Nnl 1( ...... , WEST COVINA WOMAN KILLED AS PICKUP TRUCK SLAMS INTO OVERTURNED SeMl-TRAILER One Accktent leads to Another o" Fog-ehrouded San Dtego Freew•y New P/iQtos Slww < It's Hell on Venus .M OUNTAIN VIEW tAP> !\e w d atu fr om Pioneer spacecraft show Venus Is a hellish planet or hot clouds, sul- phuric sleet, crashing hghtning, s w1rhng s urface winds and strange, glowing fires. scientists say The nature of Earth's forbid· dang neighbor. never closer than 26 mrUJon mUes away, beca me a little less mysterious Wednesday as scientists dJscussed the fJDd. lngs of Pioneer Venus J and D. which reached the bnght planet last December "It's all pretty complicated." said Dr Lawrence Colin of the National Aeronautics and Space Adm1mstratJon ·'There 1s no one spectacular result. But it all helps us un- derstand more a bout Venus and its atmosphere From that we learn about what c auses the Earth's weather " The Venus I orbiter detected lightmng that apparently occurs as often as 100 limes in five mmutes Scientists say similar fla sh es were r ecorded by Russian spacecraft that arrived at Vcnw. after the U.S. crllft -The fiery glows were detected by two of Venus U's probes on the side of the planet facing away Crom the sun Scientists called them my,terious IU'l<I un- expected. saying they could come from "chemical fires" on the surface or in the very DOl a nd dense lower atmosphere near the surface. The blazes could be "ueled by reactioos involving S\llphur com- pounds or Crom the heated or electricaµy charged surfaces of the probe craft themselves. they said. The solar wind, an extremely thin gas of ionized oartlcles nowing from the sun. kicks up turbulence in the upper al· mosphere. The particles may be travel- ing at speeds of a ll1illion mlles an hour and reach temperatures of 1.8 million degrees wnen they reach Venus' ionosobere. · Below are three distinct layers o( sulphuric clouds, 12 miles thick. Scientists say the tem- perature there ranges from SS to 395degrees F ... • PflfleAJ FOREIGN SPIES. • • come to us. We want them to let us, the professionals, analyze the situation." Part of the blame for the growth of espionage ·ocally was placed by Clough on U.S. foreign policy. Since detenle, the number of communist t>tock coun- try officials in the U.S. has doubled," he noted. Based on past experience, he said, 40 percent of those people 1re es· piona~e a~ents "WE'RE PARTLY lo blame, too," Clough ddded. "The FBI over the years has kept such information pretty much to ourselves. We've been pretty much an ivory tower group." Hut he said that public exposure of generalized in- formation about lhe nature and extent of foreign in- telligence gathering within the Un1ted States has proved lo be beneficial Parents O K Tests For Leukemia Boy PLYMOUTH. Mass <AP) Chad Green's parents, ordered arrested by a Massachusetts Judge. have agreed to new blood tcrsts for their leukemia-stricken son that could cause them to question their theory or Laetrile treatment. thcr attorney said today Attomev George Donovan said Diana an'd Gerald Green have ORANG£ COAST t DAILY PILOT '""' Or•f\.Ollf(CM't O..ty P1'9t •Ul'Urrl'\k.l'U\Corrti totfW'O ,,,.. f'feo#\. PrPi ., pYbll\hto • ., , .. Or~ 'Oft''""°'',,..,,.,,~ ~ ...... ..,....," w bh,,_.d MOnttrl ttJif(fWOtt Fridly tor (M1• ¥• • H--1 llHrll H""ll-llH<ft "°"" , .. ~Y•llff .,.,.,. l-lltt<ft Sooitll(M\I 4 ..... 't<l_..,._ ,,_,_s., ... .s. ....... -·· n.. ....... --·-•rt • .t!J>o VI• 11'••\lr'Mi c .. ,.,..,.. C•O-••- •*"lf -' ,.n tdltftf•f'fd~ ... '«••-,,~ ....... ""."°~-~ ,,,_.,I(_ UiW ,_,_~ M• ..... r>q~jtltor a. ...... " u.. ·-...... " "'"" ... ._.. ........ t. .. ltn Coal• M•H Offlce ~1•·~o•'c::~:• ~~;~·:~ •t.1• f•t•p1to11e (7f4)1G43:n Cle~ Ad-.rtlelnt~ sent samples or their iSon 's blood to Ohio St.ate University from Ti- juana, whe re they r emained following the Massachusetts or- der for their arrest Donovan said he arranged for tbe tests after learning tHat he was given a n erroneous result of another test 10 days ago and that the level of c~anide in 3-year·old Chad's blood could be 10 times what he origina lly was lold. Donovan said that if the new tests show the highe r level of cyan ide. he would a sk the Greens to stop or drasticall y curtail the Laetrile doses Chad's receiving. But he said he did not know whether they would agrff, The first resuJt. caused by a c le rical error, was given to Donovan, Jan. 29, four days after the Greens fled Masaacbusetts with tbelr son to avotd • court order banning Laetrile treat- ments, A.id Jonalban Brant.. an auiat .. nt Maasacbu1etL5 at- torney g.,eral. Laetrtle, which contains cyanide, ls derived f'rom the piLI of apricots and peaches or ftom bitter almonds. Advocates claim Laetrile ts an effecdve cancer treatrn~n\ but .. the U.S . .Food and Drug Ad· 1n1o ltt.raUon and tbe med1c1l eat.ablisbment in tbla country hav• said there la no l)roof lt la of any vah1e in ln!atin1 cancer. The FDA has banned Laetrile from interstate tranaport.aUon, but the U.S. SuPNIM Court U. •creed to re111ew lbat btn E',....PageAJ CRASH ••. continued north for a short dis· tance. lt was stopped by collid- ing with a car driven by Alan Cook, 21. of Stanton. Thal colhs1on caught the at· tention of George Morey, 40, of (Dia mond Bar. He was driving another tractor-trailer. It struck a car that had been braked to a stop by Tom Perez, 51, of Orange. Falkenberg, who had entered the freeway going tbe wrong way. received injuries that ap- peared minor to officers at the scene. He and Duarte, believed also to have minor injuries, were taken to Saddleback Community Hospital. Perez. Cook and Morey were not hurt. Sapp said. The fatality and another on Laguna Canyon Road today brought the South County traffic tolls already this year to 12. Ragtime Out lnFronf, as FiniAh Nears The s loops Ragtim e and Drifter were nearing the rmish Une -and first-~firush honors -today in the 1,125-mUe Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race. Al the 8 a .m roll call. the 65· foot Ragtime reported a position 83 miles from the finish with an estimated time of arrival at about S p.m. <PST>. The 69-foot Drifter was 103 miles out with an ETA ot1 p.m. Weather conditions in the fleet were not reported from the escort vessel. Most of the other 21 yachts in the race have cleared Cabo San Lucas and were sailing across the Gulf of California towa rd the finish. fi',....PageA~ INFANTS •.• Ms Temple had long been in contact with the welfare agency, Kurlander said. but he did not s ay why Kurlander said the agency became concerned and contact- ed his offic~ w·hen Anita vanished not long after her birth. Ms . Temple told investigators she had given away the child but later said the little girl wa~ being ke pt by r e latives in Florida, the district attorney said. Three weeks ago, the welfare agency learned that Ms. Temple was pregnant once more and asked Kurlander 's investigators , to find out when the baby was due. he said. T he two in· vestigators went to the res- 'dence Wednesday. Finding that she had de· livered. they quesUoned her and le arned that "there might be a dead child in the basement," be said. Campanozzi said. state ments the woman made while under gueslionJng Jed detectives to beHeve the female bad been strangled. Suit Filed In Sniping SAN DIEGO <AP> -A 18- year-old girl accused of a sniper attack on Cleveland Elementary School ia ooing sued for $300,000 by the I ather of Otte pr eight PUP.ii• who were wounded. Thf 1uit was filed Wedne.day 1gahwt Brenda Spenter and her father, Wallaee E . Spencer clalmJng •HauJt •fth a deadly weapon, 1roe1 neall«ence .and reckless cooduct. tt was ftled bf Lee W Selvi1, whole t-year-old dauahter Monlca wu hif ln tbe abdomen by • bullet ( Miche lle Gave Up Career? LOS ANGELES <APl -The personal manager who groomed Michelle Ttiola Marvin for stardom tetllfied today that the ainser dropped ber career after Lee Manin told her: 'TU always take care of you, baby. Mimi Marleaux. who handled Miss Marvin''J career In 196S and 1966, <Ja.id she believed the singer bad talent, aod "something very good could happen for her in show business.·· TesUJying at a tri~ on the is· sue of propertf risbta of unmar· ried couples. Miss Marleaux said Miss Marvin's chance for a big break was lost when her ac- tor boyf rieod demanded she join bim in lAndon. where be was filming "'tbe Dirty Dozen." 'She &aid the demand came wben Miss Marvin had traveled to Hawaii for a 1966 singing engagement coupled with re- lease of ber record "Let Me Love You.· Miss Marleaux said s he watched Miss Marvin talk to the actor during an agitated phone conversation between England and Hawaii. and It ended with Miss Marvin agreeing to join him. After the phone call, the wit- . ness said, Miss Marvin hung up the phone and declared : "What ca n you do'? I love the guy." After Miss Marvin left for England, disc jockeys ln Hawa.li decided agamst playing the rec- ord if the'i couldn't meet the singer, Miss Marleaux said. Miss Marleaux testified that sometime tater, she was invited for dinner to the Malibu home Marvin shared with the singer. Sbe said that while the two women were talking. Marvin in- terrupted and said: "I don't know what you're worrying about a singing career for. You've got me and I 'll always take care of you, baby." In Wednesday's testimony. the focus was on complex financial affairs of the actor in an ecrort to back up Miss Marvin's claim that the actor becam e a millionaire while they lived together. But Marvin Mitchelson. Miss Marvin's lawyer, lost a battle to place in evidence the actor's in- come tax returns for the six years of their love affair. · Guilty in· Killing SAN BERl'IARDINO (APl A San Bernardlno Superior Court jury has found ·Elliot David Shohan. LS, of Devore. guilty of seeond·degree murder and child a buse in the death of an i nfant last Septe mber. Juanita Moran 18 months old, died Sept. 12 of a skull injury. Shohan was caring for the baby at the time. Skme Trip Said Rough WEST COVINA <APl -"Gen. lt was rouah." 'laid David McDoonal after be and two frteods traveled 260 mJles by rollerskate from La.s Vegas to raise money for the March of Dimes. Tbe road to West Covina was rough and there was some lee and s now as Mc Donna!, Bobby Little .. 20. and .Rich Kirchder. 21, s kated night and day since 10 a.m. SUnday, ·McDonnal s aid. ··we were doing about so mpb down a g rade a nd I got a little wobbly." he said Wednesday. recalling one spill. "T he skates came out from under m e and I landed on my back and scraped a lot of hair off the back of my bead." Surgeon Opens Defense A Santa Ana plastic surgeon was in Orange County Superior Court today to defend himself against charges that his practice is a danger to public health. sarety and welfare. Dr. Ralph W Small arrived In court with• attorney Terry Giles carrying a bundle of papers be hopes will prove that lbe death of a 33-year-old woman last No- vem ber was nothing more than a so-called medicaJ misadventure. The woman. K.im Plock died Nov. 28. five days after undergo. ing a breast implant m Small's office at 3620 S. Bristol St. Santa Ana. According t() the complaint filed l:)y the state attorney gene ral's office on behalf of the board of Medical Quality As· surance. Mrs. Plock went into resp irato ry arrest while un- dergoing the surgery at about 9:55 a.m. ,. ll was n't until nine hours fater that emergency care was called to the office and the stricken woman transfe rred to Santa Ana-Tustin Community HospilaJ ~here sb.e died without regajn. m~ CODSCIOU.Sness. _{;ties indicfted today that he will attempt to show Judge William S. Lee that the woman s death was a tragic inctdent that could.n.'t be fores een by any pracllt.1oner. And. Giles said. be bas deposi-tions from other patients whose surgical experience with Small was s uccessful and without problem. •ITE'S CELEBRATE ~ Of their 51h BIG STORE SALE PRKES •••rt fr•• .Milli on ...... Support Kb .. ome1n1 TEHRAN, tran <AP> -An estimated one million people. in· eluding hundreds of uniformed soldiers. m a r ched through Tehran today in support of holy m an Ayatollah RuhoUab K~ melni 's revolution. ThP demonstration here was peacefu! but nine ?eOple were reported killed in a protest in the provtncial toWt'I of Gorglln. The turnout of military men was the biggest yet ln <tn anU· government de monstration n Tehran. giving Prime Minister Sh ahpour Bakhtiar further cause to question whether lower. raok\ng soldiers wouJd back 'sis government in a showdown wilb Khomeini. Bakbtiar remained defiant. however, vowing not to sur - rende r to the Moslem "'eligio111 leader and accusing him of de· pending on the "mob" rather than democracy. The new pohtical violence was r eported in the ·Caspian See town .of Gorgan. State radio tJaid ~ecurity forces opened fire when protesters set fire to ~hops, banks and other buildings . 'line persons were reported k.illed and 26injured. Khomeini had called "or , massive turnout in the streets tooay to keep up the pressure on the prime minister to give way to Mehdi Bazar~an. a lon.ztime political roe or Shah Mohammect Reia Pahlavi, 'lamed '>Y the ayatollah on Monday to bead a . ne9.' ')>rov1s1onal government. A stream of Iranians two miles long flowed through cen- tral Tehran. waving pictures of Khomemi and Bazargan chant- ing "'3azargan, Bazargan, you are our prime minister ·· and "Bakhtiar. Ba kbtiar, vou •ake orders fromtheU.S ~.' Organizer s haa mustered thousands of volunteer marshals to control the crowds. The dem· onstrator s mar c h ed from Tehran University to Shahyad Square, which they have ~e­ named t..1berty Square FroM Page t I THEFTS ..• He added, "lf you saw one of those natbeos with a tractor or top buzzing along the highway you might be suspicious.'' U.S. Bl88ted BANGKOK. Thailand CAP> - Vtelna m accused the United States today of using the Cambo- dian war as a "pretext to delay the normalization of relations with Vietnam " and of violating rts. s tated neutral stand on China-Vietnamese relations. I REGISTER NOW (Before March t t979) for , FREE LA-Z-BOY® I r I COSTA Mll A 16t I. 11th IT. -(Acloel "°'"...,,. ne.in fO ~ C.-.ldara) 641 ... 17 Mon.·M 10. '°'·to.a Ooeed~ t FREE DELIVERY MWlOCATION LA8UNAHILU 2IOU Lale• Poteat Dr. ceorner ol ldle knit DrM. ano A~ De \.a~) ' 770-6161 Mon..·M 10-6 lat. IQ.6 ¥12 ... MllllON VllJO . 21192 ........... Pkwy. CConw ol A_., anCI Via &coka) .ttl-l.902 Mon. • ftl JQ.6 lat. 10-6 am.ct..._ . . . . . . . . . . . :, . . . . . . . . . . ~ . . . • . • CALIFORNIA ~. Ftbfuery 8. 1979 ---OAJL Y PtlOT -AS- Brown .t o Address Committee? 'Dramatic Action' Needed to Save Co nvention Proposal SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edrnund Brown Jr. must do aomethln" dramatic. Uke a medla·erabbln& legtalative com· mlttee appearance, to save his proposal for ~ .:onstitulional con· venllon to bulance the federal budget, the Assembly's GOP leader soyis. have done to, dependinc on d.Jf. ferent count.a and interpretations or resolutions. the votes to kill the resolution lo committee or on the noor. the Ways and Means Commit· tee." McCarthy sald at bistress conference Wednesday. Priolo, from Malibu, also said Wednesday that Brown has not been personally lobbying com· mittee members on the resolu· lion, but Brown's press secretary, Barbara Metzger, said It was "her understanding" that Brown had been doing so. McCARTHY, A CLOSE ally of the governor dulling Brown's first term, opposes a convention, contending there could be no way to prevent it from proposln• ame~ments weakening ~ey ci vii -liberties. "H it were to receive the necessary majority there, il will not receive the necessary Lma· jority on the floor." ASSEMBLYMAN Tom Bane. A85ernbly man Paul Priolo. olao a stron& :supporter of the concept, says the Legislature wlll reject t,be convention resolu· hon uJ\less the Democratic gov· e rnor does something like speak· ing before the Assembly Ways aod Means Committee. Assembly Speak er Leo McCarthy, D·San Francisco, re· pealed his prediction that he has "Indications are that a resolu· lion that contains a consUtu· tlonal convention will not re- ceive the necessary majority in D· Van Nuys, said he would in· troduce a resolution Motlday caJUng for a balanced federal budget and a federal spending limit. but without a convention. 'Dae Longest Ride Ernest O'Gaffney. 41, of Hemet, mounts his motorcycle for the final leg of the longest-ever cycle ride. He de· parted Wednesday from Los Angeles for New York in his bid to complete his 21.000..mile, world-wide journey in 79 days. He started his roun1-the-w.orld trek in New PRIOLO SAID Brown could thereby Increase pressure on members or the committee, where the resoluUon is awaiting action. Brown's chief o!. stall. Gray Davis. did not rule out the possibUity Brown would testily but added: •'The governor's views are well known to mem· bers of the committee." Brown called in his inaugural speech for a convention to draft a conaUtutional amendment re- quiring a balanced budget. say- ing federal deficits are a major cause of inflation. IT TAKES ACTION by 34 states to force ConRress to call a convention. So far, 25 of 27 states INSTANT COLOR ICELANO POPPIES York Nov. 27. · ugi,slators Seek Change I n Gun Law Another gorgeous background o( bright color In reds, yellows, oranges and pastels. Rogers hybrid varieties will bloom through late spring. PRIMROSE SALE P sychic Aids Hunt For Girl's Killer FRESNO I AP) -A CupertitSo psychic visited' the spot where the battered and mutilated body of an S.year-old Fresno &irl was found, authorities reported. Police here would not reveal Wednesday what M. Kathlyn Rhea saw or felt at th~ spot northeast of bere where the body of Vlctona Anne OeSantiago was found Monday. The girl's bead had been battered and she had been sexually assaulted. "I HA VE AN IMAGE. Ir J ev~r saw this one particular man, I would know him," Ms. Rhea said Tuesday of the girl's ki1Jer. PollcE' said Ms. Rhea provided general details Monday morn- ing that-matched the area where the girl's body was later found. She said the girl would be found dead and nude near plowed flP.lds, a chirken ranch and mountains. all of which were true "I KN EW THE CHILD had been physically beaten," Ms. Rhea said . ··1 felt she was in the trunk of a car before she was placed in a field " Ms. Rhea said she could even "see" flashes of the fatal beating Deputy Police Chief James Packards.aid the department aJso may use hypnosis on some witnesses to see if they can provide more Ullormation. Meanwhile, police are combing the area where the girl's body was found, checking cars that could have been involved in the girl's kidnap Saturday and sorting through telephone Ups. Reward and memorial funds established in tbe glrl's name by several local radio stations and public employee 1roup1 have raised more than $25,000 in cash and pledges since Tuesday . An anonymous donation or SS,000 was made Wednesday "on behalf o' the children of Fresno." SACRAMENTO <AP> -As· sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy and n1ne other legislators have joined an appeaJ to the state Supreme Court to reconsider its decision on the "use a gun, go to prison" law. Backers of the appeal said Wednesday that, so rar, 75 of the 119 legislators, including the Democratic and Republican leaders of both houses. have signed the petition. They include 52 or the 80 Assembly members and 23 of the 39 senators. The court's Dec. 22 Tanner de· cision held that a 1975 man· datory-prison law didn't prohibit Judges from granting probation to gun-using felons in excep- tional cases. The court has given oppo. nents. including stale Attorney General George Deukmejian. until Feb. 20 to ask ror a rehear· ing. In the meantime. action on legislation to reverse the ruling baa been delayed. Borrowers To Receive Refunds Of Interest PANSIES ANO VIOLAS Fabulous garden color In beds. baskets or pots-blues, yellows. oranges and whites. BANDINI H2 A February feeding ls very important for a healthy attractive lawn . Bandini '2 is ideal for feeding established dlchroodra and blade grass lawns. Stan your feeding cycle now. Buy four 4"" plants and get one FREE Roger's has both English and Fairy varieties-th~ foundation of any spring garden -available in white. yellow, red, pinks. orange and blues, in bloom for easy selection. Limited to stock on hand through 2/25/79. CAMELUAS Showy Bowering evergreen shrubs In colors ranglng from red to pink to white and even some varlegated type&. Select from many old favorites or unusual col ector varieties. San Joaquin Hills Road at MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach, (714) 640-5800 Open OaiJy9am. Spm -.Aorist640-6n4 . LOS ANGELES CAP > - American!\, who borrowed money from more than 1,500 national banks since Oct. 28. 1974, and were charged too much interest , will be refunded milJions or dollars, the Los Angeles Times reported today. · than ba'i been done In the past. and I think frankly that has to be our general thrust,'' he said Wednesday. U M B ... , • .,.d Welcom es You To Th ree Deliciou s Values The office or comptroller of the curr ency, which recently completed a detailed examination or au 4,700 ~ nationat banks, found inadvertent violations of the truth-In-lending law in interest ealculations on auto. home [ __ STA_TE_] improvement and other COf\Sumer loans Of ICSS than $25,000. I ·'These were inadvertent mis· takes," said John J . Chlpouras, direct.or of consumer examinations for the comptroller of the currency . Federal officials said the complexity of the lending law caused most of tbe J?rrors because bank loan officers ap- par entl y did not know how to calculate annual interest rates properly. Sm•g Tat• Slated LOS ANGELES I AP ) California's latest effort to reduce a uto exhaust polluUon be&lns March 10 when used·car, buyers in the Los Anaeles area can have their vehicles checked at smo1 control 1tallons. The testing proaram-de m· onstrated in a dry run at one ot the 17 Los Ancelea area testine station.s Wednesday -Is expt!cted t.o be ex- panded wtthln three years to require the annual te1t1n1 of all cars In Calllornla'a five Jar1eat metropolitan areas. CurrenUy, tetUng la required only when a car la told. # lWe T~&UteS... SACRAMENTO CAP> -The ata\41 AssemblY'a t>emocrallc leader H)'I he, unlike the former legislative analyst, does not lhlJlk a stile tax la· crease ln the wake of Proposition 13 ll IM\'ft.able. Sp .. ker IAo McCartht, D·San FrandKo, tald there b no 1upport for aay tax lncreue In the cWTelll 1.A1lalatur. and th• need bu not -.-.a. ''Tblre b • clear moOd .,a1mt tu lael'Ulll and for dell ..... ..,. ... mm Mnicee far mon emc1eat11 OXNARD CAP> -A bomb squad was called In to remove two practice military bombs found in a garbage dumpster outside a south Oxnard apartment building. One or the 26-lnch by six inches· long bombs found Wednesday was live, according to Police Ll. Robert Kelly. However, he said It was an ex- plosive that gives off a lot or smoke as it bums. but ls not considered very dangerous . Kelly said the Explosive Ordnance Disposal team. from the Point Mugu naval base disposed of the bombs. Many military people live ln that area, but Kelly said it would be difficult to track down the person who brought tbe bomb home. ~llplleld BAKERSFIELD (AP> -The de· feDSe attorney says he will appeal a death sentence against a Los Angeles-area man convicted o! murdering three atudent mm makers in tbe Mojave Desert last April . Superior Court Judie John D. Jelletlcb upheld a Jury's death penal· ty verdict Wednesday after hearin1 defenae arauments against imposing the death aenteace and prosecution . argumenta for it. Defense COUDMI James Faulkner contended the jury failed to consJder Ute lack ot a ))riot' criminal record for David Murtilbaw, 20, ol Santa Fe Spriqt. Faulkner alto charged thai a paycbololiat was unqualified to atate tbat Murlltbaw would be ) violent the rMt of bls Ufe. 1 ····-···-OAKLAND CAP> -Wilson Rll~ Jr., eon ot the atat.e acbool l\apert~ tende~t1 aaya be wUl run tor the ' Oaklana City Council a11lnlt lncum· bent Fred Wautora. Rll•, ad.mnlltrauve uslltant for Alameda Count1 Supervltor John Geor1e Ii.nee 1m, bu •n eadoned bJ llayor Llonel Wlllon. He an· nonctd bl.a ~u candidaey Wect- Deldq. ~ He bllan hit polltteat c.aretr bJ 1'0l'kiDI OD bis f1tber'1 t&Dl_palp lD mo. Eat your way through the day with three popular Denny's meals at very special prices. During February and March, the Denny's Family Restaurants listed below are offering a breakfast, a luncheon and a dinner ite11J at reduced prices. Simply present each coupon at the participating Denny's most convenient to you and you'll receive the delicious meal described for the special coupon price. We know you'll be pleased with the food and w ith the very hospitable people who are looking forward to serving you. Denny's Is the favorite restaurant of mllllons of Americans. With more than 100 menu Items available 24 hours a day, we're certain you'll find the kind of food to flt your "' mood. So, sit back, relax and enjoy. • I A DENNY'S BREAKFAST VALUE! ~ A DENNY'S LUNCHEON VALUE! A DENNY'S DINNER VALUE! t , ' Orang Coast Oa11y Pilot Thurtdly, 'eb"'•l'Y 8, 1979 Robert N. Weed/Publisher ThofN5 tceevll/Edlt« Barba,.a Krelblch/Edltorial Page Editor Editorial P~e ................................................................ Zoning Baste Leads Nowhere ta M City Co\mdl has prove<t Uiat oveT· eagen to m ke r.oninl decllion pl a ln1 to r lde-nta can backfire The COUJlcil's rojecUon of their own ionlnt concept thl. w t>k mean · ert of public hearlnaa lhe past few months h , hcd little lltht on the future of the Ha rbor • R C"Quet Club proJ>("rty at 380 w Wll~ll St~t. The own r, Don Ward, h d requested hiab den Uy de· v lopmt'nl ron lng on hJ 2·acre parcel. fi1urln1 he was tnUtlcd to lht~ mP 1onmi granted for a d velopmenl on the eroperty n Jl:t door. But community pres ur led the council to lniUate a pubhc pa rkl nd zone for bis private commercial opera· lion. • Thi rather en-ant. thouab perhaps tecllnlcally reu· Ible. wning wa rightfully rejected by tbe city planning staff and planning c-ommlssloo. The council followed up Monday nlabt. Now. aa Mayor Ed McFarland pointed out, It's back to square one. The owner can submJt a residential development plan for con- sideration by the city. Any s uch plan no doubt will draw protests from nearby residents , ma ny of whom will have a feeling of frustration when the next pubbc hearing begins. Pe rhaps all ttu s will give the councll a lesson on the hazards of making hasty zoning decisions under pressure. Criine ProhleDl Grows Armed robbers struck 15 times at Costa Mesa .fr" ·businesses during the first month of the new year. '· Costa Mesa police officials have not tried to mislead the public into thinking there is some ready way to rid the city of this increasing problem. There are simply too many criminals around, and the proximity of the San Diego Freeway and other escape routes makes the city vulnerable to quick·movlng bandits. What can be hoped for is that such incidents will not result in injuries to local merchants. This, fortunately. has been the case so far. Police advise those faced by an armed thug to off er no resistance. Stay calm and try to provide police investigators with as detailed a description of the robber as possible. A license plate on the getaway vehicle is a valuable aid to police in apprehending a suspect. Merchants can cut losses by keeping a minimum of ca sh on hand during business hours, particularly on weekends. ':: It may seem a fataLstic approach, but as long as "· there are those who thrive on getting something for "· . ~· nothing, it is advisable to be prepared . . , ~: Wrong Appro ach j- . . ~ . . . • • • ' .. , . . . .. . , . . A chained and bolted emergency escape door in the Costa Mesa High School gym came to public attention las t week when it was spotted during a girls' basketball game and re ported to the Fire Department. Chaining panic bars during public assembly is illegal. and fire inspectors quickly responded. The school principaJ acknowledged be knew that two emergency doors, one on each side of the gym, were kept locked. He cited the need to keep out gate.crashers, and said the gym has an unusual number of exits so be believed no safety danger was pre~ented. In that case, the proper course of action would have been to ask the fire department to verify that the doors were not needed. then have them clearly marked as non·e xits . It was. of course, an unintentional error, but it could have proved a dangerous one. Other schools would do well to check their public exits to make certain they also haven't created potential hazards. • 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 Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd/Tinse l Town B7L M. BOYD Q. Wasn't it Oscar Levant who rirstlabeled Hollywood as 'Tinsel Town'?" A. That's right. Whal he actually said wa s, "Strip the phony tinsel orr Hollywood and you'll find the real tinsel underneath." 31, 1940. By tbe time abe died on Jan. 30, tm, she'd collect· ed$20,000. How fast can you say "two all·beef patties, special sa uce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions, on a sesame •ed bun"? McDonald's etbployees are supposed to. say it ill four~· Q. "Is water the only sub- stance that expands wben frozen?'' !'.. A. Yes, with one exception, ~ bismuth. Took a couple of yean for an Iowa man to convince the authorities be sbouJd have his moniker on bis own personalised car license plate. Bil name: Stolen. ~ Sea salt is said to have the ~ sa.me ratio of salt to other ~ minerals as is found in homan blood. :; 7. First person to eet U.S. ;;4 Social Security benefit& was ~ Ida May Fuller. She'd paid $22 in the fund before she re-•~ ceived her lint check on Jan. \.. Dear Gloomy Gus We homeowners who border tbe Adams Freeway consratulate th• Costa Mesa City Council (Of' votJ.ni down the Wlllon and Gi1ler bridges. We now bave six lanes al ~ mph. Anyone for ellbt 1 E.B. r Credit tbe late Adlai Stevenson with tbe line: "Success is all right -if you don't inhale." Was only six years ago that Ufanda's boss ldi Amin got al shook up onr the aroounl of cattle rustling that was go- 1 ng on there. He finally fi.1ured out wbat the problem was. The exceedinclY blcb price at tbe time of a Ulan· dan bride. About es bead ol caUle. Am advised Ute moat popular calculaU.., CS.vice in tbe Soviet Unioa Is tbe abacua. A steel tbii> iJ llpter than a wooden shlp of the same dimensions. Took 1,000 yards of linen to wrap one of those Egyptian mummJes. Am asked lf_ any animal ln tbe world baa bOtll horu ancl antlera. ~!L~ae. Tile r=ou ot Nortla '\ .. on President's Load Too HeBry? WASHINGTON -Jimmy Carter, t>esle1ed by a balkf Con1re11, an uncontrollable economy and a crltlcal preaa, hat had caw e to reflect ruefully upon Mark TwaJn's frustrations In aatdntr dJrectlons to a friend's farm ln New Hampshire. "How far la It to Henderson's place!" Twain Inquired. The rarmer aald It waa "about a mile and a half." Twain continued alon1 the road wrtll he met another farmer and aeain asked the dis ta nce tQ the Hen· derson farm. "About a mile and a half," replie-' the second farmer. sun farther down the road. Twain asked another passing farmer the distance and was told, "about a mil~ and a half." Mark Twain fe,plied: "Thank God, I am holding my own." THE PRESIDENT IS begin· rung to wonder whether be is holding his own. He puts in about two workiqg days every 24 hours. He is usUilly at bis desk by 6:30 a.m. Often be doesn't put aside his work. except for meals and ceremonial functions, until midnight. He keeps plugging away not merely from dawn to dark but. in times of crisis, from dawn to dawn. Carter has an extraordinary energy that exhausts ordinary men who try to keep up with him. Associates say he thrives on work. He s pee d -reads through stacks of presidential papers. The Carter technique. according to those who know him, is to commit to memory the ~ey racts and figures be needs t.o understand a problem. These become guideposts, which be uses in his discussions with subordinates. Frequently Mailbox he has nabberguted them by remembertnc some det.all -a culdepost he had picked out or the nne print -that they had forgotten. CAaTEK IS A determined man who desperately want& to be a good president.. But the strain ls beginning to show. The face ls more gaunt, the famous s mile wanin&, weary lines ap· pearing under the eyes. ·•Whal this country needs." commented an associate who bu tried to keep up with Carter's multiply· lng problems and exbauaUng pace. "is a eood night's sleep." Of course, there can be no eigbt·bour day for the president. no laying aslde the aweeo1ne ~•ponaibWties, no setlinJ down the overwhelming burdeM. A move on his chessboard could cause war or bring peace. A chance remark from him could start an economic downslide. He sit& at the center or govem· ment with a thousand hands. pulling strings. controlling movements. touching every· thing. He directs the preparatJon or figures be is expected t.o un· derstand in detail. Re sets foreian policy. guides legislation, makes domestic decisions, controls the government news output, plans political strategy. A&CBAIC LAWS and tradl· tlons also lmpoH upon blm a thousand and one minor cbotes, many of them requirfog his personal signature. He la sup. pased to. be tbe nation's chter greeter. civic pitchman and father-confessor . He has to 1'etve as bost at ban+ quets ror kings. queens and palentates. And he is also ex· peeled to greet pickle queens. poster girts and Boy Scout del· egatlons. Nobody knows how many bands a president shakes ln a year, but Carter's band bu orten gone Ump from the ex· ercise. The president's grueling schedule raises an ur1ent ques· lion: bas the world's bie&est job become too bl1 fo-r any single penon to handle! Nol only is Carter expected to comprehend the full significance of the thousands of words and figures that pour across hiS'desk each day ; not only must he de· cide immediate issues and cope with each -new crisis; but he must also give constant thought to the future and chart a reliable course for the ship ·of stale to follow. WHEN OOES the man in the White House find the time to ponder? How can future presi· dents with normal exhauation points be expected to bold down lbe job! The lesser post of de· rense secretary drove James Forrestal to suicide. Many bis· torians believe exhaustion and illness adversely affected the de· cisions or Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt during their declining years. The conclusion is inescapable. The pres idency is too over· powering for any one human be· ing. The most modem country in the world is al the same time saddled with one or the most archaic political structu.res. The pres iden cy s hould be streamlined, perhaps with the vice president picking up more of the load. Mandatory Sentencing Inhibits Justice To the Editor: I was disturbed to read the Feb. 3 Comment Page article re· garding People v. Tanner and mandatory sentencing. The notion that the Legislature is confronting "a court imposed threat to its independence" is misgulded. Rather. as Chief J uatlce Bird reeognbed, rigid, ill· fiexible sentencing standards cannot be determined by the Legislature wit.bout threatalng the judicial latitude essential to justice and fai~ess. Mandatory sentences eliminate the most crucial participants in the criminal justice system: the Impartial.judges. Removing the discretion traditionally reserved for them, espeelally in the UD· usual case like Tanner (a sham robbery intended to demonstrate an employer's need for additional security> ultimately leaves a dis- proportionate and disturbing amount or power to the pqliceaad prosecutors . Whether an individual is ar· rested; whether be or she is booked; whether the district at- torney <Wides t.o prosecute, and upon wtft'ch charge; the crowd· Ing of the court calendar; the pressure lo plea bargain; discre· lion is everywhere. PRECLUDING the impartial trial judge, most familiar wtththe crinte and criminal, from imJ)06· lnc the most appropriate sentence on1Y adds to the prosecutor's - the state's partial advocate -in- creasing power. and what Justice Black called "the unreviewable control of one individual ... Each criminal case, its ad· Judicatioo and disposition, ls a dilemma by itself. Guldelines providing suggested sentencing ranees help g\fafd· against dis- P!lrily. arbitrariness and uncer· lainly. Sentencing cannot, however, be based upon a strict Jeaislative schedule 9r rule of thumb, ii Justice ls to f>e done. Tbe lnllexibUJly of Uae "use a IUD, IO to prison" law ls rarely the amwer to problems -. in· describabl)' complex as crime and pwUbmeat. Rialdity eaaot meet tbe lrratioDallty ot IDOlt crime. llltli•tine ud uncem· mon ctttamltancea muat be left to Judklal dilcretlon and-enlua· Uoa,IUbject,ofcoune.toa~ peUate review. MeanwlUle, pertist~nt ques- tions as to the nature of crime. the PW"POM ol punishment, must be conlront.ed by both our courts and Lea11lature. Hurried lelislaUon and court rulings, enacted ,tlt\d decided amidst political controv .. y, 1s piecemeal and puac.an. Both tall t.o anpple wltb ertmlnal ju1Uce In tJae tomPrebeulve and tbouPCful mawr NQalnd. ELLENROUtlNS • • Db•u••l8Nela To the Editor: As a teacher and a parent within the Newport·Mesa Unified School District, I wish t.o express my shock and out.rage at the board's action to begin dismissal proceedings against Newport Harbor Band Direct.or, Richard England. Primarily, I want to speak OD behalf of a truly valued friend and colleague of many years. Richard England's competence and integrity are above reproach. One has but to check the record to find evidence of hls many outstanding contributions to school, community and the development of young people. As one who has known both Dick England and Tom Jacobson, it is my oplnioo that, once the facts are known and the ball truths dismissed, Mr. England will be vindicated . I ALSO wish to express my dJspleuure with the "public" bearing afforded by the board on the 2St:& and tbe proforma vote which resulted. It was obvious to all that the board voted accord· ing to some predetermined un· dent.anding without one word of discussion relating to the charges against Mr. Fmgland. All of this, mind you, in the guise of a public beutng. One wouhl think that this board, with the. NlllRI travesty so fresh in mind, would examine more oaNfally the acitlon.s of' tbe district's admlnlltratlon ratber than menly·Nrving aa a rubber st.amp. MICHAEL A. MARINO S•••W•eP..,, To the Editor: The coast of California chokes with development. The Irvine Coast is a welcome sight in Orange County. The air Is clean and the ocean off the coast thrives with flab and veaetation. Kelp beds support a wide varie· ty of ocean life off the J.rv1De Coast. Wild animals make their bomes in the lrvtne Billi .._, tbecoat. Tbe JniDe eom,_, plam de- •eloommt ot tbe lnme Coat. Hotela aad aputmeatl would be more tban an a1l1 blitbt. Developmeal would be a aouree of pollution. Air pollution would lacreue with a heavier traffic Oow on Padfic Coast m.inray. CitJes like Newport Beach would be the moet aff ect.ed by heavy traffic. TBE ORANGE County plan· nJn1 .,ency, the Environmental Manaaement Acency, has itvea tllelr aupport to the development oft.be lntDe Coaat. TM staff ot t.be E1IA nc:ommended to the Callfonla eo.tal Commllak>D at a P'fllc lleartq OD lite lMDe . . Coast. that the mouth or the coastaJ canyons should be paved and become parking lots ror the coast. Tourists are more impor· tant than wildlife to the county planners. Money makes lbe world go around. Greed kills the world al the same time. The Irvine Coast needs to become an urban park. If the ~eral government preserves it as a park the coast can be en· joyed by everyone. The re· sources of the area will be saved if the coast becomes a park. Southern Orange County will continue t~ grow. Open space won't be left anywhere if it isn't protected now ror the future. DAVE HALL ~••t 0 11r 'C,..s' To the Edit.or: The decision of the Newport. Mesa School Board to consider the dism.lssal of Mr. England or Newport Harbor Hlgb School was only to be expected; ror the action reflects tbe change which bas swept over Newport Be4cb in the 12 years since Mr. England w~ employed as band director. We have lost our sense or community. our sense of pride. While it was most prob- ably an illusion, we have lost our illusion of "class." Our elected representatives and their appointees reflect that loss. Superintendents shufne in and out: Roy Andersen retires after signing a contract which greatly increases bis salary <and retire- men t benefits): Leland Newcomer storms off to LaVerne after falling to pass a bond iaue; Bill Cunningham is now "executive secretary" of a union of school superintendents and bas the gall to include himself as be speaks in a recent interview or "we ill education ... The Marian Bergesons or this world spend years on the local school board, approve the build· Ing of Olympic swimming pools and tbe expenditure of over $15 mllllon of tupayen' money up. on a school district computer capability which monitors at· teDdance, grinds out clua u.ts, producea report cards a momb late, .S perlwma Cl&JMI" Yitai funetlou. tben move on to 1raDder annaa wherein they now bray_ tbelr concern for "reapamlble acbool finance. •1 THE UCBAaD ENGLANDS o( thi& world remain, proc:luelna a part ol that continuing ex- cellence in a 1cbool system to which real .. tate developers and bucltsten bave Iona referred wben a_dverti1in1 tbelr Jerry. builtwana. Newport Beacb has become a ell)' wlth very UUle shame: an lU·auorted collecUon of cuual dnualr• and enata ••yacbtamea. • • We fuq ourseltea lD the I.malt conjured b7 slick periodical.I like New World distributed by the l rvine Company. lolling about in Jacuzzis and dining in supposedly fashionable restaurants full of under·siied lobster a nd swa p ·meet nostalgia. We ogle photographs of prefeatious parties and drape ourselves in gold chains. We "economize" upon our city's need while reveling in faee-lifts, Sunday brunches and rented Mercedes . Even if the charges against Mr. England are dismissed, as I am sure they will be, the truth of what has become or us stands revealed. For how could such a stupid, destructive action have come to be considered in the first place? Does the collection or boors which makes up the present school administration <hired by our elected officials) really rdlect the temper of the cit)'? I can't believe that all of the people wbo once lived here and shared a sense of communi· ty have sold their 1 homes at a "profit" and skulked out of town. EILEEN DOVER Of•••re•• To the Editor: Vice Ptemitr Teng Hsiao· ping's nine-day visit to the U.S. provides h im •and almost a · billion Chinese <via sateJUte T. V. > excellent opportunity to learn that their dream of modernizing China can come true by quickly idoptfag in Mainland China la framework of Amer ican frff enterprise system. 110 &£ TflAN 30 years of CommWlism and Marxit111 in M alnland CbJna resulted only constant social and political strife that ruined chances or real progress there. The same "Isms" must now be ,abandoned to allow requisite social and political stabWty of uninterrupt· ed moderntulion program yet lo be developed is to have any cballces in succeeding. Adoption of American free en· terpriae sfltem and abandon· meat of Comaumilm ud Man· 11m can IMd to -~bilkY of a break-through for Cblna. Taiwan reulflcaUoa. DouJd tb1t become • reaUt1 ,..... .. 1tabW\J In tbe Padftc l. MMU'ecl and cb.lneel for world peace wW be greaU, enhanced. <I'm a U.S. natl•• born Chinese-American>. HENRY YEE STOCKS I BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS """' ~ ... , ~ .... ~ .... ,, •1 "'""l • .. ,.. "' • c1 . ~ .. ,,,.C\.o.o o.ci t •· 1w,.•-, ...... /111111-"' I I t lit\#~''> ltUMltf t tt. I Jl ~ T-•t<Pn Ito + ti? ~~· ... " ~"' r • ~ ,;..,::, ;; .. /llllll~ I~ • "'" .... "ollfl'IH I n • If :w-. fl\IO~OI I JO , ),' .._. "' t II l •llf'fl_ 1 ~ t , t"1n.w t ll<o ' a Mn"I. 40 r l t0"'-"" lt4"\rlllCI 6 IJ 16"' ~ T=•I I tt 1S t ~ • l''o ,,. : ·~, :t:: iii' n f\'O I I"~" 'H'' ... H ": .,_ ·-lltcufhos •.! 1'"~ m.?· ~ Tr .. _J!:: 15?! ? • ,•,!: ~ • c '"'"' ,, -, " .. "'~~... ' '9 ll ... HC.. .. ' .... H -.. Aolm •• ·~:..! ·~ .,...., ....... , .-::. A:\ ', t!H ... • ·~· ~ I" ,, ll i1... .. .. '"" HO ,,, ... ,,. \' ltOfl\Ofl -"" ll•lftv .u ,, jC) , ... -.... 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PS Ind C>f8 311 . zeooo dt3 llll 1 "'"' 11 m 1111 • "" lCTRA w1 • J d1.-.-"It 8or11W ' ' 61 27 • • • • Olvl'JMIO . ti() 3'41• "' HtSSIOll • 1 ' ..... t<A<-Onfcl ·"II 101 d'I"·-\ti PS11NH 212 " 71 'lOl'o. • T:•OGs .36b ' 3" 34"4 Y11tes ..,., i 1 1• • "" Borm•"' s SI • • ..,. OrPtppr ... " 214 " -.... Hesl11pf1.60 .. !I 16 -"• M<l>O'ID ,15 , JJ8 l!Ollt• ~ P$•NM 17• 1 17 '""· ...... T p Ld .a. 15 1 .,........ hle(p 1 1 10 ·~. 1, 8otEd JM I I 7Plt+ r" Oom~M .ao,, 11 '6 13:\ti-1•.io Heublrn l.J'210 12A 1'~ • IJll M(Oonll !.:IO S 1 '6"1 ... , PSVEG tl2 1 173 ,,.._ ... 1:.~111 't 52 I 40J 1tit'. .. .' Z.11111• .30b 15 1U I~., ~. Bosll!' pf .... 1'0 8'1/J-·1 oonLJ _.u 1J 1160 3'h ......... 11~ .60 .. 120 ..... _ MtGFd 1110 6 11 74t• • PSl!G on 11 . 1 ~-\·, h•S911 17011 m tt>J. ..... l11yreCp • 34 1o.14i-"' 8C1$E prl.17 70 1014-'" Oonnly I. IS" ··'"'HollVlt .1012 21, ........ McG,H12'111580,. -'lllPSE0Df7~3.. , 2S ""Tx11fpf 3 SS "1'41• .... Ztlllll!R 1:ntl9 """•\• &osE pr 14' 4 U V..... 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H~llllll AQ. • 14 1S''> • '• Me(h 1 411 • 1 ni., Ouestor 10 I 1 ,, .. • '• • • 8rnswpf7A>. 1 ,,.._.., \Oi 0111t8• UOU 171 i> + 1 H-i.t '81n0 ":w-.+ 4 Merck 1'011 "4 •1'.ft•" -.__. -lndustryex_ecuUvesaya. =~ •_:: .~ ~ ... ~ =~~ rn~,i:·h~: lZ ~"%~ ':: 'tri '=: ~: =~~ -:1~ JP. rr,z:,:; =~:pl ;;g 1 m ~! : Lewis B. Foy, chairman of ~';'.J:·,; ,:". ~&;:.\!.1:·sJ~ ~:t .. :•=:J.~~~r, ;; ..... _1·:;~41b 1~~ : ,~. ;::L~ tt~J; l!"'. BethlebemSteeJ,s~JdWed.oesd&,f,~ ~-.:. • 41 -.. -• -sr~G I • t•I u ..... "' MOM 60 • 194 '°' .... ••••Pvr " • Jell 11 • •• Carter adminiatrauon pro~am ~ llON\t • 5 ' 11 • • • t Gl.0 AO U ,. ,..._ "" n M • • ,,._. ~ M•lrm '170 a 51 U • ~ R•m.ta 1,. ll 42i 10"lt • lb E • to ellftlltH 19' ... ~ '~' "' fMt ,,,.,. 41 2~-llllWd u1 • 11 u-. ., Mc1>c;, uon • , 14"_"' "•l'l<o 1• • 33 1""• ~ 1tven e uropeans a cense lklMR tor •"711'•1 lSn UO 1 J '1\ttt \\ H~M111 t11S 10 ,. 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"'~-~ "m•ll 11111 ' •• tat.\-An• '"onv ~1omon iaid the pl'Oftd'l'am 11""" t If I '"' ''°" '" $ y f' ""· -1-4 -Mlflttl 1'4 't3.S ~· I,\ It llC'll 14 • 17 11••... WJ -'741 ...... c~s Ut r~r »Vt• "' IC~:!&,. := n ll'4 t!14'.;'f.o. 'S llld IAI ' ., '~-·..., =irroAI : .. ' ) 10"1o ...... 11fl I~ • 110 ~'h-ha.a reduced lmport.e froin 20 percent c~l ~ty •• ;, ,;:-•• :1:::~ '·!&? lll.m:~~l~'i';:.::, 1~ ~~=!.ii%''r 1f~ ~:~t:. !rl?'~.:~n~:~ .. to17percent. ~\F '.:71J :~' ff./·· 1~~;~,, ~}~! ~ 1~~~7 '.'b 1ol ~ ·:· =:: ... 'J:1~ 11 tr,:,·•. ;:~'!-,,..,.. 4 ~~ ?b-!, UPtlOURt~ .. ~uDe OvOr•er(APPlan, t T-:r' I "T ~....... • I ,.. .. 1u1ntf • 1 •• i..-~. ·'° ' tU 111111 ...... :n~. I ' 30 .,,,..--a'""'"' • v. ...v UN:, 10::1 '• i$!.~ t:iM•-, .a.•: 1~ '~~.""I~:::' HS I 'Gt::. •&~·"°,t ,!! t=·.·1. ;:i,~~1.W11 ~ g~: l: electric utlUUes have nled suit for ~f '.t! • ~l 5• '" u:~ uo' 7 '11,:....... ,~ .. , fl;., ·u ,;~~ = :·!! t 1 '''-;,"' =::.~!> ~ ! '1 m:: ~ $32.~ mJUJon 11a.lnlt the company -.c do 1 , ,. •1~ 11~.,, ' t• 4 '•· •·• \~~ "° ' 1 n Mo;j' 'H ' ~ ft"' ... 111 f'•vtel'l uo1i aiJ '°'h ' that 911 ..... rvtsed the dest1n and COil· o••• ~ ~ • f1tr• t,. t > ?f'"•"' mp!Co '° • -1' • ~ ,., u o t s• 0 111 ~. !!••"""' 60 • •l 11"• ' ...,,.... l ~!~ .... ': 'ti 1;1.. " '"" .... ''di tf m )(~. IE® .40,f ,.. """• \~ M4\t I tel ,. 17 • \ti .... ,.,~ la , •'; It,.~ strucUoo or the Trojan nuc ear power =L •" m a~~ "I :;:~ ,;o 'l 10 ~: ~ ll(a-' ·*.. • t:! '"' ~~ , .. • • ''lit :.: =·vr" '. ~ ~· : plant :::. p• ~ tt tt!:~ r = '1 I It m~ (,. 111411~ 11t'~ ,' ~ IOl._, "='.rv 1 I: t ~ ,... "' .:~J,r l°'a 'i IOI )!lit-". ~ federal 8on.ne:vllle Power Ad• d"•,c .. 1.~,: '~,,~·\Ii "ftM°r1..ttt; .~..,,.-~,.._ 1 1:::1:mii·· ~Jr.;. ;.:O~r~ ~ ,~, !J ! ~ =~~,.:-!! i .J ~;~; mlntttntlon:clt.wtUdowhawver • .. ... 1, "', .. n111111 j s .!J. m• . fld G.Ml• 1 J ,.._ i.. MotK.~~ 1 4 u ,,., "5£'1113 • • "'"' l ,, '" -=.1 ... ~'"! 4~····· ,..,,.<" ' J lJ !!"'" '""'"" • ,. n•.., ::r," .... • 11 ,. .... ~ I.. M .. • ~ u~ • ' 11 aee1Hary IA> pout. ' "t • ~-;· =~ . J I tr 4 li •:;" Jl ::~. • .... I : , ~.: : IE:' t I ;; :::: I Tbe IUll alalDlt Bechtel Corp ~ , .. '1 .... _·~ .W• u;: .... '' • ..._., • , , 02 •• ~ ~ t •• R:· CaJJfonlU ... IUed Wedlllldl)' UI « •t~·, t ~ ·· :ft, t t ,..,.· · ~ ':1'6 'J ~~ . ~J!l 11, ': -~: l: " '411 ..t .,... U .1. Dl9trid Court b1 Portland ,.: I ': ~' . =-1: ' ,, : ·~ IMll<• t=Js r-~~: "ar.~ i 1 : •• -.\41 ==·'~: ff m~: I G•ntral Eledrle Co. aacl Paelne ., • 4 1,...--~ nnOI · ' • 11 l,.."""'Tr u ~ ' • ' ' "IM'11-'1 s u 11'-Pow rand U....,t Co "1Haw I 't •" ,.,~," :;,111 t t Jf r : ~ "'"'" .... 1 • 1' , I 11 1111 41 .. • "-lto<kwl t 4' 1 .. )1\.0 • e ... • • s DAILY PILOT 87 n B iiipltali Patients Given More Answers B1SYLV1AP08TEll At Methodist HO$pital in lndfanapolis, patients turn on their 1V sets to team about tests and protedures they may encounter during thetr hospital stay. At St. Vincent's Hosi>ltal, New York City, patients in tbe iotermedlate coronaTy care unlt ·me.et wtth Ule hospital's post-my~ardia1 group to ask questions about tbefr bearl attacks, their recovery and how to prevent further attacks. AT AN ARIZONA HOSPITAL, WHJLE waiting fot their prescripllons to be filled, patients watch a llJm about proper use of the medicatlon, possible reactions, what t,o do ii they have a reaction. These are among 6.500 hospitals belonging to the American Hospital Ass~iatlon '!"ho are undertaking P.I} tient information programs. Evidence suggests that ~e well-informed patient recovers faster, suffers !ess P.'"1l and anxiety, uses the rjgbt kind or care at the nght tint~ and stays bealtbier. · ''Not only do you have a right to ask questions con· cerning your treatment, but owe it to yourself to do so." says Alex McMahon, president of the AHA. "Tli~ priestly physician is disappearing," says Paul C1 Bruckner. chairman of lbe Departme nt of Family Medicine at M ' Philadelphia's Thomas Oney S Je fferson University. Worth "Pati e nt s want answers." The new programs are as diverse as the patients they serve. . "!' A program to help tell young children what a hospital stay will be like and lessen their rears is going on in i Connecticut hospitals. Video casettes. wall posters a pamphlets tell children what to expect when they have. operation, wear a cast or have tests taken. Pre-admiss1ditl tours allow children to examine instruments and put °' surgical clothing. ....r. Parents are getting childbirth information tbroup family-centered maternity care programs in hundreds OI hospitals. Then may decide in some cases whether to use a physician or midwife. have the birth take place in ' bedroom-like "birthing room" or the delivery room _... have their husbands present at the delivery and partlcipat.- ing in the care of the newborn. CANCER PATI ENTS AT WILLIAM Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak. Mich .. have reguJar question-answer sessions with a team or doctors. nurses, pharmac~ d ietitians and discharge pla.Mers. Patient and team wor .. together. sharing the . patien,;s arucieli~s and ex~hangi!'I information. Before discharge, the patient and bis Cam1lt can find out what to expect during recovery. At Stanford University Medical Center. a new course introduces physicians-to-be to patient ~are lh!Ougb th' eyes of the patient. Students meet with patients and families to discuss the emotional and financial aspects of illness. Hospitals often encourage people to help answer the questions of other patients if they have been involved in a similar illness. Mastectomy patients often are visited by a volunteer who, Crom her own experience, will answer questions. Parents of children with heart defects have formed an association at Johns Hopklos Children's Center Hospital. They meet with hospital specialists to get answers on bow -~ to prepare thelr children for surgery and hospitalization. 't"- STROKE I NFORMATION hAssEs AT Wasb.ingtoh m.c. >Hospital Center· are held ror families and frien~s.qr patients who have had strokes. At weekly sessaons. families find out bow to meet the paUents' needs. One hospital evaluated the results or 1,400 questton na.ires in which patients' answers were 81 percent posilhl! and only 19 percEl!i1-had suggestions or complaint~ McMahon cites such results at surveyed hospitals a .. decrease in emergency room use by diabetics and asthmatics, cut in hospital days for hemophilas, im proved compliance by patients with medical regimen~~ and reduced post-operative complications . '· State Job Gaim Best Since 1960St. The largest jQb gains since the 1960s were recorded 'in Southem California during 1978, according to a report b~ Security Pacific National Bank's research department. Richard W. Ayer. vice president who beads the ban research publications section, said Southern Califomi unemployment rate fell below 6 percent in the last quart(!f' "TIOS WAS DVE TO THE fact that nonagricullut'fl employment in the region's metropolitan areas -Ij,: Angeles. Orange, Riverside-San Bernardino. San Die90 Santa Barbara and Ventura counties expanded 267,000jobsbetween Novemberl977 and November 1978. •· J Ayer based bis comments on data compiled for tilt Jan. 31 edition of the bank's publication. "Monthly Sa'l' mary or Business Conditions in Southern California. 1 He said that as a res-ult of the Job gains, the area to&fl' persooaJ iocome is estJmated to have lncreased at an an usually high 13 percent IA> 14 percent during 197. Bulldint activity in 1978 also was an Important sector ofm$ Southern California econoDl)', with 69.000 single-la ' homes authorized fot construction, he said. INFLATION RAT ES WERE AT high levels. with • consumer price index for Los Angeles and Orange Com ties estimated to have increased at an average of 7.3 Pit cent during the year, be said. Tbe hlghest price rises wet\ found in tbe food , housln1 and'medical care areas. The bank projects a seven percent average rate of in crease in the Los Angeles-Orange County price index ro 1979. ewn.r.a..-a... 81atefl Use or the pocket calculator as a basic mat.MmatJc aid ln business and at home will be taught in a ctus Dt feredbyCoastlincCommunltyCoUege. Registration tor "Elementary Tecbnkal Math" ts o~· through Tue!day. Tbe class meets from 6:30 to 9:30 P-F Tuesdays at Manna High School. 1S871 SpfinCdale Blvtl HuntJncton Beach. 1 Instructor P1'i Mtutello will cover'* J dament1\ arlthmet ( T Kl NG measurement and proximate numben1 TOCK troductlon to •l•eot.l i ntroductio n t -----------· 1eometry, quadrati equaUona and graphs An elcctronlc calculator. textboot and syllabus wiU required for lb course. Thl'ff umts of credit wtll awarded upon succ s ful completion. More lnformation it available at lbc colleae. M3 ............. 86£0,,..e• Home Federal SaYln•• and Loan A.uoclaUon ol Dle10 hu opened an office in the Vlll1ae C Wettmm.t. lllaU. Sudra SaUtb, former ~.r or Home F dow1l'°'4m lhlDUDctoa Beach omce, wUl mana.ae tbe oftlc • • DAILY PILOT Thur.day. f•bfuary I, 1m Television TONIGtt'f'·s LATEST LISTINGS A al• ~lt!i~ td flOtH for unknD•h ....... ,. O ~IDI All •olwtr lllilaOO r"bun b.o-' 9fll)lla 10 ...,," ''* r ... t. ~ ''"' 110.lh al • ""'"'° • oh~ G) THa MADY 1UNOH 'lie .. edV9 O!'OllNl• • !:'< .... I ~l•I Olen. lo P\I.., 1 t l1V1l'OW• Ml en 111tt p.Mll tllll IWM """' Pl()ii'I • IMUTI Of' IAN f.IWCllOC) SI .... 11'14'~~ 11 .. le • hll·wom.MI • ~IAaY Ouett •~•o• ••n•~• !( .. ,,.,., I!) TO MM MOWfll A Do\UOHTC" 1 h• tOlt4'11Pl•on •nil C_,IMI bOflh 01 lhW ..a.kl•'""'"' '"°" r ... DV .,.~lllO Playing Dortor f) CMNfwa · A.cN~ llOVlWCY Lucy end llMI lty IO ,.._. • memento ot Clll<loitu• l)Ac;ll 10 N-. 'l'O<l> ••lh tt>em tD M04AEl JM)(S()H GU81 Reverend ~O" Reot• Mngg1e Cooper ~tars as a patJ ent whose unt.'onventional lifestyle e ntrances a vounit doctor Clloward McGlllin > 10 the f 11 ~t part of "Women in White." a three part minisenes beginning tonight at 9 on NBC. Channel 4. CA088-WfT'8 MERV ORIF'FIH .. Sllull To Cotumlltcl Pie tures And Holl~ood ~ 7 ~I h AllfWt111Hl!)I .• 1~. C89NEW8 HBCN£W8 NEWLYWED GAM~ ABC NEWS Q Cl) JOt<ER'S WILD '8 SOC MILLION DOLLAR MAN Sieve Is unable 10 s1op u juggetfn&ut'S Pfog<MS In destroying a city (Part 21 Cl) ~AHOSOH T~ lh'811es SOl.e ll>tllf ptOblem by otlem19 !tit! Sanlords • hee 1rip 10 Hawa11 (Par1 21 fD MA~L I LEtlR£R REPORT al) TO 8E A.HNOUNCa> 7:30 f) DISCO MAGIC Host. HoL G1111s1: l T 116 Trnmmps CJ IN SEAACH ~ ... .. Noah s F'lood"' A dramar- '' 1nqu1ry Into the $OMIOllllC truths belllnd the 81bllcaJ logttnd of Noah· s tlOOd Channt>I l.l•f ing• 1J KNXT (CBSI Los Ange le s D KNBC INBC) Los Angelt>s O KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles D KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB !CBS) San Diego Q KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angttltts ®) KCST (ABC) San Diego G> KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles II> KOOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles fD KCET-TV \PBS) Los Angell's al> KOCE TV IPBS) Huntington Beach I DATINGGAME THf OOHO SHOW TIC TAC DOUGH AOAM-12 A cour agoous teenlt,ge( cornn I01Ward at • v.11. nesa agaln1t hOOdlums.-- only to be abducted. f:lj) 21 TONIGHT "Peren11ng. A Wrap-Up" al> NEWS Cl) S 1.M BEAUTY SHOW 9 MATCHGAMEP.M. l~IJ CI) THEWALTONS Erin beoomft lhe town's llfSI pifHfp girl 8' John trleS to cope With ra111ng hi• lamlly •lone Cl UTTl.E WOMEN IPremlefe) Mlllelout gos- llp about Jo (Jesalca HlfPllr) and h« llanoe Fnedrlch en-(David Adlroyd) prompt• Aunt Man:tt (Miidred Natwldc) 10 shtre some troubteeOme rnemooes with i... n1eee. "MOV>E • • *'h "The Thomll Crown Atl•lr" ( 1968) Sieve Mc:OuNn, Feye Dunaway An Insur•~ 1nves11ga1or tab In lo\fe Wllll a WM!thy ~ llh") • ~&MINOY MOO'" .,,...., ll't -10 Mindy t"81 ne lltt ~ orwed 10 ..... Llt1h -~ • • • w.ie.. Don't Run'. I tH&I C#y Or ant S~ Illa [goat A mldd ... l090 men trlM 10 play CVOid !Ml-lht !WO )'OU"9 oeoc>te he 11 fOfCiM to Mve wnn i7hf'•J • ~8UANETT ~f"NlN08 6klll 'ICldneDQlng:· "lhO f 111T1lly • • MOVll • t • .. Jn\fll'tl°" To A Ounf19hler" (196'1 I Yul ftrvn-. 0410fge Segal " OllrlflQl'llet 11 hlfecMo klU an outcatl teturnfflg 10 his WMtern town, (2 m) • NOVA ··panein• from The Past" The world ot the O'eto& Indians ol the ~Ulllan Andee II pettemed Of' that OI 1'-eneellOf"t. '1l) AHYOHE FOR T£HHYION? The Olorlout Aomanlle:S • • Part 111 Percy 8y$sh6 Shelley" Leigh Hunt's t11endlhlp with Perey and Maty Shelley and ttle reta- llOl'Sll/p be'-Stlelley and l.Ofd ByTon e<ao D O ~E (Premillf"e) Angle Falco (Donni Pltscowl, a Wait• reu from the wrong Side J)I the 1ractc1. leMns her new bOytriend Is from one of Ptlfladolphia'a wealt'"- eet famHles. '8 THE 000 COUPLE Oscar and Fell• learn that they each requite mlnOf SIKger}' U!> TURNA80UT "Enoores" Artist Doffs Chase's career IS tr-O; a C<>lofedo 5Ch0ol for Ille performing art 1 founded by Charlolte Perry is \flSlt· lld HO 8 Cl) HAWAII fflE.O McGatTett tries to warn a ICOmflll young soc:tallte Ulat lhe i. the prosoective -.ictlm of • jewel ll'lefl. G WOMEN 1H WHfTE (Prwnlerel °'. Aebec:c4I 08110!' !Susan Flannery). the r'lffWty appointed Cnief of StaH II • Aorlde ~ tal, , ..... 10 cope -.Ith !he ptobteml of her •tatf and dell with ,_ own marital problems with her aurgeon-husband (Stuart T UBE TOPPERS NBC 8 8:00 ''Little Women." T he premiere of a new series based on the Louisa May AJcott novel. • KTLA 8 8 :00 "The Thomas Crown Affair.'' Insurance investigator Faye Dunaway pursues holdup man Ste ve McQueen in this 1968 movie that features the song "Windmills of Your Mind." KOCE ~ 9:30 -Americana. The o ldest all-black town in the United Stat.es, BoJey, Okla., is the subject of this s pecial. Wtlhmen). (Part 1 of 31 • 111 IAMlY MIU.ER The detect~ of lhe•12lh Pf'9Clnci are barraged by a -·of bOgul bllls. • MEAVONmN "Salute To COlumbl• Pic- ture• And Hoftywoocf1 7Sth AnnlverMry" • WON.D "SotztlenltS)'ll'• Children A.re Making A lot Ol N01N In Parle" A pottralt of a • dllllded F'9ndl Lett end • oroup ol SOlzllenltsyn. lnllueneed lnteltec1uala. 81) LANGSTON The blade expetlenoe In Afrlc;a end Amenca II pol• treyed through the poetry of ~Slon Hugt!M. t-.ao a ®l &OAP Jeulc;a b<logl her lover Detective Donahue home lor b<Nokf11t, end ts oon- trorited by Cheat9'. '1l> AM£RICANA "Soley, Oldahoma: Alive And We«" The o4dest all· bllCk town 111 the U.S. 10:00. (J) 8AANA8V JOHE8 ~ty becon'4Mi emotionally Involved with a mettled Clleol. •Q 'll> NEWS OJ FAMILY Boddy It Introduced to the O•sco acer>e by • troubled girl IPnlQJla Lopez) she "'91 In dance Class • NIGHT OAU.EAY "Doe How, P'f t.ater·· An undertaker runt e Januaty sate ... ONd Weight" An ~ flgufa tflM IO leeYe the country 8 PEHHIE8 FAOM HEAVEN "Down Sunnyside L-" The act.enturee of Arthur Parker. a travelllng aono· Sh .. t peddler, olrO 11:1'.-led 10-.IO I foo~ EP8 "Who Is Syt111a?"' Chnatl- na 1 uncle ShOWi the faml· ly lhal TV c:.n Ile a triend uwallue loe. 11:001GDCI)®' t4W8 MAKE M'E LAUGH MOVle * * •; .. Paris Wnen It SJzlle•" (I~) Wllllam Holden, /Wdrwy Hepburn. A wtiter negtec:ts his work while dlaaing his secretary around Pans (2 h<$ I G) THE 000 COUPLE Fertx '*Pe Otear land the ttwd men lpol on Howard Coaell'• Monday mgnt fOOlbetl geme Cl) THE GOODIES A wltc:h comet to the Goo- dllll tor helP and sets them otf on a terrifying trlp through the supernatutat 11:15 S) TO 8E ANNOUNC£0 11~8 (1) M"A"S"H Payday brings a wtndfall to H&Wll.eye, a b<lbe to Henry. ano a pearl neck•-10 HOI UPI (A) D TOHIOHT HOii: Johnny Carson Guests· Of. Paul Enrtlen. MclNn Slever>son, H«ve VlllecfllllZfl. Art Gtaham Trio 0 1W1UOHT lON£ "The Monslen Are Due On Mapte Street" Sttange oocurrences In a sman town read people to l>elltMI they are betnQ irwaded ~8TARSfCYA St1taky and Hutell pose as drU9 delllera to nlll a big· time herom supplier (RI I n. OOHO IHOW OIT8MA"1 Mu and 99 at• caiptur.o wMfl they go to -ch tor e ,,.... ICAOS auper -0· on • CA"10N£D A8C HIWS MOR NINO 12;00 9 TWtUCJHT ZONE "The Man rn Tht Bottle" An lmpoyetlllled 1)8wnb<o- AUVE t2 Hour• To Crary HofM' • 1:'51 NEWS 2:00 HlW8 MOVIE • • • ·A Women's Vengunce" ( 1001 Charlee Boyef. Ann Blyth 2:101 NEWS ~ MOVIE k., t>uys a bottle from 1111 ~ • • "Orean 8uddll•" (1955) Wayne MOHll, May o""".'"° Old woman out of oiry t0r her. • Alf"AEO HfTCHOOCI< PM8EHT8 A woman Is htert b<Ollon to have 10 end he! 11tt11r wl1h a llandaorne colonel q) OET8MART A l<AOS •gent, wllh a Ma•well Srnarr meek . ltloota a bani! ouard and Mu It blanllld. SI DtCI< CAVETT Guest: Chllstopn.r llher· WOOd. 12:0S IJ Cl) C88 I.A Tt MOVIE • • 11\ .. ColumbO. Now Vou See Him" ( 197&1 Pe1er Falk. J8Ck c...ldy LI Gohlmbo rnatche• W11S wllll a Cllarmtrlg nlgtltclub 11111ettainer IU8pee:led ot kilting I bullMIS uaoc1- ate. 1:t.'30 D MOVIE * •*'I\ "Ule With Fllher" f 1947) Wlllllm Powell. ,,_ Dunne A "'°"'an and hef lour aon1 '""'-0-10 m&lllpulata lhetf OlhelWIM tyranmcal pa1r1a1ch (2 hrs .2sm1n I G) MOVIE • • • "The Helen Morgan Story" ( 19571 Ann 81ytit. Paul Newman. A IOl'Ch Singer auHets personal ano prolessiontll IOlt 8S She fights 0 battle ooain•• a!Collollsm f2 hrs I g) MOVIE • • • ··Marines, Let's Go • (19611 Tom Tryon. David Hed•son Four Ma11nes tutn Toi.yo upst<le OOWn Whtie Of' tvrlovgh 11"1 Ji>pan 12 hrs I 12:37 D QJl MANMX Mann•• Is htfed 10 inoresll· gele the supposedly ~· dental death of a race c;., dllYI< 1:00 Cl TOMOAAOW Gueits Geottrey ~. c;t101909raphet and Broad· way director. ctwld Slat Ooanne Serra Cary ( B•by Pegoy .. l. Q LOvt EXPERTS 1:30 0 WANTED: DEAD~ (I) NEWS 2:408 MOVIE • • • "Adam Had Four Sons" (19,.1) Ingrid 8eto- rnan. WetllGf Baxter. 1':&51 NEWS 1:00 MOVIE • • ,, •·1n Our Time" ( 1944) Ida Lupino. Paul Henrled 4:00Q MOVIE • • • '"The Fighting O Flynn" (1t>•9) ~· r11rban~1. Jr. Hele11e Carter '8 MOVIE 11 * "The Uldy Alld The 8andll"' 119~ I) LOUIS Haywllf"d, PatrlCI• Medina. t:1i 8 8TEVt EOWAROS f 'rid a,,·• Dayt il•t> ,tfocie• AFTERNOON 12."()0 0 * * * "The Pnnc:e WhO Was " "Thief'" ( t95 I) T O!'Y Curt IS, Piper L&une A street Ott1 fells •n !<Ml With a prince who was t•1sed by lhleveS (1 hr., 30 mm I G> ••• "l he$h0p Around l he Corner" 119401 Jamea Siewert. Margate! Sullavan. Two lonely peoole fond each other tnr~h thett lette<s. (ltlr,50m•n) 3:00 ®J • • 11\ • Say GOOdbye. Ma ggt8 Cole" ( 1972) Su-.an Heywatd, Darren Mc;Ge111n A '-'''Y wtd• -ed ooctor forgets '* troubles and g11ef wNi!l'I .,,. b4ICOmeS invollltld With a young gifl llSC)lnng 10 be •doctor ( t hr . 30 mm.I ~ D • • 01\ .. The Treckers" (1971) Sammy e>.llls Jr~ Emest 8orgn1ne A coc:lcy man takes dlllf"ge of • tradctno opora11on. endan- gering the llves of lhO men tn lhe po6S8 ( t fir., 30 min) ltlo r k's Mindy: On the Team • By TOM JORV NEW YORK IAP> -Ever wonder how much one man say a guy lake Robin Williams, star of ABC's tut comP.dy. ''Mork and Mindy" -can mean to the success of a TV series Ask Pam Dawber, Williams' co· star. "He's the ball of energy that drives the show." says Miss Dawber, who plays Mindy to Williams' Mork. .. Robin is the most positive force I've ever worked wtth '"RIGHT NOW, WE'VE got a formula that works. Anything that Robin does is funny." Yes. but .. And I"m the one who calms things down," the actress says. "I think we·re an essential team." up. though I must admit. to explain the concept. it sounds really"stupid." Indeed. Mork. from the planet Ork. is in Boulder, Colo., on a mission - to explore the earth as a possible new home for his people. Mindy is his human friend, there to protect him. to guide him through a ll kinds of hilarious situations. "A lot of people in television. they're so used to writing down to the audience. With ·Mork and Mindy.· it's different." Miss Dawber says. "Here you've got Robin. a real crazy, and besides that, people are given something different to think about. "GARRY MARSHALL, the pro- ducer , lets us be ourselves, and we don't always stick with the script. And It works." "Mork and Mindy" is the most suc- cessful of the current season's new shows, consistently near the top ln the ratings. But Miss Dawber says W Commercial Strike Settled • the cas t and the show 's producers must work to keep it that way. "Robin's got so many facets to his character, everything he does is fun- ny. But the character has to be de- veloped, and we need more from the s upporting characters. NEW YORK IAPJ -Television viewers no longer will have to watch 0 .J . Simpson hurdle the same airport obstacle as he rushes to rent a car or James Gamer make the same grin as he poses for an instant camera. "You can't build a show on jokes alone." PAI" DAWBER came by her part quite unexpectedly. To make a long story short, she read in a trade paper in June that she would play Mindy in "Mork and Mindy." ··1 was fl attered, and l was perturbed." says the actress from Detroit. "I was upset because it sounded stupid, really stupid." She met with Marshall, she says, ''add he insisted he would allow us to improvise. He said this show could revolutionize the situation comedy format. So with that in mind. I de- cided I would do it.·· PAM DAWBER HAD little pre- vious experience -modeling, some commercial work, a part in Robert Altman's film, "The Wedding." a role in a pilot for a series called "Sis· ter Terri." She caught on quickly. "We do it before a live aud ience, and for fDe. the fi rst scene is always the shaJty one. I usually have to open the s how. and I'm a little nervous. "Once you screw up a line, then the audience is on your side. 'OK, I've blown it, we're all friends, let's get OD with it.' Al"Wln&Mt• The ins tantaneous s uccess or "Mork and Mindy.'' introduced ttus fall and broadcast Thursday nights at 8 on Channel 7, caught most TV watchers by surprise. ABC, to be sure.' saw a hit in the improbable concept, and, says Miss Dawber. "I wasn 't that surprised by it, to tell the truth. "WE HAD NOWHERE to go but About 70,000 other performers r_anging from big·name stars to part.- tame extras were a ble to return to work Wednesday, as two unions ended a SO.day strike against the ad· vertising industry. She was under contract to ABC, though she had no real desire for a role in a series. "They kept sending scripts, but they were all so bad, I just couldn't identify With any of the parts." "There is one thing: In my next ~ntract, I want a thousand dollars for each time I say. 'Mork, what are you doing?'" 'l 'M THE ONE WHO CALMS THINGS DOWN' Pam Dawber of TV's 'Mork end Mindy' DuPon t Awards Given CBS Trying to Bonnee Back N EW YORK <AP) - An NBC report on South African apartheid a nd an Associated Press Radio feature on .. Shade Behind the Sunbe lt" were among the winning entries in the ·1977-78 A Ured I. du Pont- Columbia Unive r s ity Awards in Broadcast Journalism. Awards for documen- taries. lnvesUgalive re- porting and other special programming also went to 10 broadcasters. In addition. the Jurors vot. ed four citations, a special cU.aUon and a special award. -- By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES <AP> -It's tough OD CBS, this matter of being second. The network that once s milingly accepted lbe tag, "Tiffany Network," is having to maul it out with NBC to stay out of the bottom of television's ratings. It's tough. That big CBS eye was on top of tbe rat- ings tussles for 20 years. "I Love Lucy," "Gunsmoke," "Dick Van Dyke Show," "Beverly Hillbillies," "All in the Family," "Mary Tyler Moore." CBS WAS ALWAYS NO. J. Its New York executives, actording to an old saw, used to walk on patrician Fifth Avenue to get to their offices on pleblan Si>Ctb. That ABC surge three years ago, from te le vision's discount basement to pent· house, hurt CBS in prestige and it hurt the network in dollars. lt 's no fun not being able to do fall season promoUons boasting ol being No. 1. But it's worse watching aftlliated stations lump ship to ABC (as 17 have done .lo the aatlb.reeyean>. ELIE ABEL, outgoing Tra ... •fo ..... a'*iOll And ABC, ooce the lowly "ball·oetwork" dean of Columbia 's • .,. • ..,.. & In tbe days of CBS' domination, bu been Graduate School or L• • Phil. d 1 bi hi ·~picking up those loet CBS raUDis points, Journalism, said the six ~ rom waitress to a e P a's gb society at the rate of $27 mllllon per-point eac.h jurors considered more is the transition of Donna Pescow ln the new season. tban 1.000 entries. comedy series "Angie." premiering ~night The special citation _n_t _s_: ~_o_n_A_B_c_._C_h_a_nn_e_I_7_. ------- went to National Public · Radio for its :rt d ays of Hve coverage of the Senate debate on the Panama Canal treaties . The award was ac- cepted by NPR Presi- dent Frank Man.klewicz and Lind.a Wertheimer, the first reporter al· lowed inside the Seneto chamber •ltb • llve microphone durlnt a Door debate. • 'Saturday' Sued NEW YORK CAP) -A musical parody on NBC tel viBJon·s popular "Saturday Night Live" proeram ha!I prompted a $350,000 damage suit, claiming topyright infringement. Elsmere Music Inc .. publisher or the song "I Love New York," riled ndt, clalm1ng Lhe words "I Love Sodom" were subsUtuted ln una.utborlled performances of the t\111e on the prorram 'a May 30 show, which was later rerun . FOil THE Flll8T YEA& Or IO of ABC 's new doininance, mutterings of "It woo 't last" and "We'll be t>ack " tould be beard at CBS. But the kingdom-in-ex.ile routine began to wear thin this year when it became apparent that ABC was no mere pretender, that it had found things quite comfortable at lbe top. So, what is CBS doing about it? "Our main job is to come up with new, successful bit series," says CBS program- ming executive Bud Grant. "That's the name of·lhe game." The network bas begun an intense cam- paign in program development, an area CBS neglected before its descendency. Its last few years at the front of the ratings race were years in which CBS depended on its strong series, "AU in lbe Family" and "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," and the s ptnorf children or those shows. like "Maude" and "Rhoda.• ''AT THAT TIME, WE were not very successful at creating new shows," Grant says, "We Just weren't successful at creat- ing oew series.'' This was partly because CBS depended too heavily on its bits and spinoffs, and partly because the network inexplicably cut back its development budget. In lta etrort to make gains this mldHuon, though, CBS seems to have a good shot wttb aome of lta new develoP- ments. aucb u the aucceaaful "Dallas" and "lncredlble Hulk." And unlike NBC, CBS bu enough itrong shows to plant new or weaker shows in its schedule and wan points on audience carryover. For exa mple. the successful "All In The Family" and "Alice," which used to air back·to·back on Sunday nights, will sandwich the new shows "Onward and Upward" a nd "The Stockard Channing Show." This lead-in tactic has made bits of mediocre series, which, lf the ploy works, can be used as lead-in grabbers in their owo right next season. ON MONDA VS. CBS s plit the very popular .. M·A·S·H" and "One Day At A Time" with the once-cancelled "WKRP In Cincinnati." which Is now giving a respec- table performance. With Uus building-block approach, says Grant. ··we arc trying to build hits for the future ... The network will try to do it with series. eschewing the miniseries approach employed by NBC and, less extensively, by ABC. .. For years. CBS had the stron&est series and for years CBS was No. 1, ·• Grant says. "For the last several years, ABC has had the strongest series and now they're No. J We believe in lbe series form of television as being the backbone of a successful schedu.l e." I CBS MAY ONCE ag•ln breathe that rarefied air. but Grant thlnka the den of ratings domination by any network are gone.