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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-02-15 - Orange Coast Pilot• '• • • on ammg IX • . DAILY PILOT Marvin's Wife, E~·lover -* ·* * 1oc * * * 1ff eet in Dramatie Seene THURSDAY AFTERNOON. F EBRUARY 15, l979 I v-n ..._ -. • san-14*"1. • llAOEI • • • Cop Critic F a~es Drug ~ap Daree Aboard g For Lost Boat By TOM BARLEY Ol tlle o.11-. lltt.t Sutt Hopes for the safety of two men and a woman who left San 0 1eeo in the 45-foot cr a ft, "Armistice" bej(an to dim today when the Coast Guard withdrew Its ships and a ircraft from further search operations . The decision was taken after heavy clouds moved into the search area and shortly after a fishing vessel picked up a lire ring bearin g th e n a m e. "Armistice." "We're suspending any search activity unless and until some- thing else turns up." Coast Guard P.O. Steve Disbro explained. "In 10 days we have covered more tha n 266,000 square miles of ocean and we have found no trace of these missing persons " STOLEN CROWN ONLY REPUC.4 ROLLING HI~ <AP> -A gold Korean crown, inlaid with rubies and jade. reported stolen from a home here, was only a $700 replica, not the $1 million real tb1ng, sheriff's deputies have been told. The home of Harva rd Yee was burgled Tuesday night, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office was notified Wednesday by Yee's Uve·lnbuUer. In addition to the crown, $4,000 ln stereo equipment was taken, the sheriff's office was told. Disbro said reports that debris ha d been spotted southwest or the Mexican island of Guadalupe have been thorouj(bly checked by sea.rching ships and planes. "We found nothing," Disbro s aid. •And when the weather c lear s we intend lo confine search operations to an Army U-2 spotter plane which will go over the area we have already covered." Disbro said the U ·2 will COD· tlnue to seek the boat that bad Dennis Vowell, 22. his wlfe, Deb- bie, 21, and friend Gary Newton, 22, on board when it left San Diego Jan. 22. Vowell and Newton went to high .school together in Costa Mesa . Debbie Vowe ll is the daughter of Mrs. Bunny Scott, 201 Calle Dorado, Sao Clemente. Mrs. Scott said today that she and the families of Vowell and Newton "are shocked al this de· cision by the Coast Guard. "We are all going up to Long Beach tonight to try to persuade the Coast Guard to change their mind," Mrs. Scott said. "It is not true to say that there has been a lo.day search. There was thick fog in the area for six days and no searching was done in that time." Mrs. Scott said she and the mothers o( Vowell and Newton are not disturbed by the dis· covery of the life ring. "It could have been blown off the 'AnnisUce' in the storm that came up while they were out the re ns~:· she said. '1'hen <See SEAllCJI, Page Ai> They're All George These varied visages appearing in the c urre nt issue of American He ritage magazine are all portraits of George Washington in 18th century .European en· AllW~ gravings. The visual dispar ities must have lain with the artists since the father of our country, like the camera. could neve r Ue. Big ($7 Million) F ix European Roulette Wheels Doctored PARIS IAP ) -An a udacious b a nd o f croo k s . u s in g screwdrivers and bits of rubber to doctor roulette wheels. has collected about $7 million in one of the most ingenious interna· lional gambling capers ever un· covered. Police sources say about 20 suspects have been ar rested, but dozens more could be at large judgin.c by the scope of the racket which is believed to have been golng on for up to three years . Twelve casinos In France, the rabled Monte Carlo ga ming house in Monaco, and others in Yug os l a via, Italy , Sooth America and Africa have suf. fered losses, Fteneh press re· ports say. · Sources clcSse to the investiga. tlon say the crooks operated by loo1ening the screws that hold in place-.the tiny wall s between e ach number on t he roulette wheel. The slightest loosening of those walls i nc r eased the "elasticity" of the number picked fo r doct oriog . and heightened the odds on it win· ning. Pizza Operato r Arrest ed Downtown Huntington Beach piu a parlor owner Douglas Stevenson Jobson. 47. an out- spoken police critic. was arrest ed Wednesday on cha rges • selling cocaine and marijuana IO youngsters. Police Lt. Bruce Young said J obson and David Ramos. a 22·year-old transient. were ar· rested al the Pier Pizza Palace, 118 Main St., at 6 p.m . where they said $1,500 in illegal drugs were seized. Jobson had filed a civil rights l a w suit again s t several policemen. City Manager Bud Belsito and Police Chief Earle Robitaille charging them with harassment and trying to drive him out or business. The lawsuit has reportedly been dropped. Jobson and his at· torney could not be reached for comment today. Jobson posted $5.000 bond to obtain his release Wednesday rught. Jobson appeared before the Huntington Beach City Council July 3 and charged local police with the unnecessary beating or two local youths al a restaurant. The officers involved we re later cleared or wrongdoing in <See CRITlC, Page A%) Rain Heads North By The Associated Press A weak Pacific weather front m oved to ward Califo rnia's northern coast carrying a threat or showers late today, the Na· tional Weather Service reported. Skies were expected to clear Fr iday. Coast Marvin Trial Testimony Tense Another trick lnvolved insert· ing a sliver of rubber under plaques bearing undesirable numbers so that the ball would bounce off the m and favor num· be rs with the loose screws . Police and the French gam· bling control office are being dis· creel about the affair. still hoping to catch t.be masterminds behind the racket. Weather LOS ANGELES (APl =~ two women in Lee Marvin's life -bla wife and his former Jover -confronted each other ln a dramatic courtroom scene with Pamela Marvin calling Michelle Triola Marvin a kept woman. "Sbe (Michelle Marvin) saJd to me, 'You may be married to Mr. Marvin, but don't forset be •1 atW keeping me,• • Mrs. Marvin t.estifled Wednesday as Illa• Marvin gazed dire<:Uy at 'ber. Tbe tenae moment came juat before Ml•• Marvin's lawyer rated blt cue in the landmark pro1*1J MUlement trial involv· ln• tbe rl1ht1 or unmarried eouplt11'bo live toltther. The ector'a attorneys were to be1ln tbelr cue today. lllll llenln'a l1wyel', Marvlll llltcbelaon. called Pamela llama to tbe allDd u hit 17th ud ftDal wltnell. Mrs. Marvin, 48, clad in a gray s uit and clutching a handkerchief, sat within four feet of Miss Marvin, 46, who was seated at the counael t.ble 1n front bf ber Tbe two women's exes met aa the attorney asked tbe wife U her husband was supporting another woman when they got married. "I believe so. yes, Mn. Marvin said. "He told me ... I also knew because Michelle told me ouiay times on tbe telephone." M rt, Marvin 'a voace roM to a blab p6tdl 11 she accused 11111 M&rvln ol placulnc ber wttb coa· atant pbone calla durlDI ber newlyW9d daJI. "T~y started the nitbt .,. were married and they eon· Unued ror about a year and a ball," lbe 1ald of tbe calla. She laid \hat K1u MllTV\n's 4 • comments about belng kept by the actor were repeated many times. "The phraseol o g y . the terminoloO disturbed me," she testified. "But not that be was aivin1 her the money .•• M arvto bas said he broke up with the former showgirl in May 1970, five months before b1s marrtace. He began aendln& her monthly support payments or $1 ,050, which were to cOntinue for five years. But the actor cut o(f the al· · lowanc:e ln November 1971, an action Illas Marvin •a lawyer aaid wM lnttl1a..S by Marvin's wile. But Mn. Marvin aatd tbey barely dilculHd it. "I don't remember wben be told me." the said. "It wa1 no bt1 tblnl. It was eomet.blq Me loDI before we married. Jl wu bit unqemeat wtu. ...... n bad notbtDa to do with me. "It clidn't shock me. It didn't bother me," sbe said In clipped tones. However, at Mltcbelaon's proddin=she remembered another call in wb1cb Miss Marvin mplored her to resume sendinc cbecu. "1 think the conversation was when she told me she could not exist wttbout a man to support her.'' said Mn. Marvin. "And I iaid, maybe it would be best to eet another man." Outalde court, Mias Marvin dented the accuaatlona by the actor's wile. "I nner called m)'Mlf a kept woman bffaUM I never felt I waa a UP' womu," 1be Hid. · •v... I called Uaem," 1be aald, tears we1Un1 tn ber eyes. "I eau.d ~ ftnt CllrtltmM we were aput. I waa alone and I wanted to wilb Lee a Merry Cbrtftmaa." But with the affair being dis- cussed in French newspapers. and a judge in Nice preparing to bear evidence, there appears to be little hope left for more major arrests. The press reports say the ringleader is a Czechoslovak liv· ln& in West Germany. He bas not been caught. Gambling authorities estimate the crooks' total haul at 30 million francs. or $7.0S million. Suspicions arose ln January 1176 when several French casinos informed Roger Saulnier. director of the 1amin1 service iq France's Interior M lnlltry. that they bad not.Iced "unuaual 1amblln1 patterns" Mine med by certain cllenta. Tbe 1amblers would play oo only one particular roulette wbeel. They would bet on only certain numbera, which won <See CASINO, Pa1e Al> Ch a nce of fe w light showers 20 percent Friday m o rnin g . W e s t t o northwest winds 20 to 25 mph Friday afternoon. Lows tonight 44 to SO. Hlghs Friday 58 to'63. INSIDE TODA~ Charle• B. Whccl«r Jr .• ma11or of KOM(U City, Mo .. is an unconumtionol politician who "gtvt• ·em hell" m the 1 trodUioft of Hany S. Tromon. Sto,..,, photo on Page ,Hf. l•tlex .. ,.,_~ (6 A4111L...-n ,,....~ CJ .... .... L M....,. M ..... ... =::. ~=-~ c--. a~ ..... ~ ~ DMl h""te....., c--kt • = ..... o..-· .. ..... ...... -~ .... ................. , ......... ........... ,. cw TIINtWI ,,._.... Ct .. ....._ .... -................. '"'"""'""" a .. . , .. _ ... --··.i-.---.. ,.___ ...... ~ .... ._ . . 1t% DAILY PILOT s fhu~ex. f9bru•!) ''· 1119 'Citizen of Year' Laguna1u to Honor 0. W. Pric , 83 Mlretl LL °' -0..11\P ,... t t.611 I hr. hfN1m motto l Setvt to ont" • fcllo~ m;an ts lbe ttn\ "' .. p y for uur plare on ur\h," l.aaun fl.f!arh'• O w. Price hu bt-t'ft a ttood ttn nl And !'aturdav thf to"'n v.111 turu out tl1 honor tht' "3 Yt>.,-old fu1 llh'I \ t'h'r.tn '.\ Ad mini tra tton afflrt•• dur1n1i1 th~ l3tb an nu .. l Pntn ut:. Day 1• nack> llu'~ ~·n named "('1Uzen ol lht> Ye•u ' b> lh p ra~·, or .:.anau•r:.. lht• lut t in a Iona. long '\t'rh''\ or honor. tx·:i.to-. t-d un lhl' I 1·.:ao1111 • .11n M1111:1on, ~hranrr Jn11 formt•r V ad n11n1~tralur ·· 1 lovt• 11." Pncl' bumtd 'The pht)cw ' ~n nn111og o(f lhl• hoot.. ~inct.' thtty .innounced my M'ltthon • Rut not uJI tbr caJl~ tu Pnre'is home O\t>rlookm.g Bluebird Can- ' on a re t·o ngralulat1ons lrom friends h(''S made the past 18 y~c.1rs in l..ugu.na 8eac.•h tie still ~l'ls eight lo 10 calls a !Iii)' from Vl'tl'f801', WldOWS or '\t1r v1remt>n and others :.eeking his expert :.idv1cc on veteran af- fairs Price, who go~s by the 1n.ilials 0 W." to a void the use or his first name. Ogle, is still in the H'leran affairs gume. despite his r ellrcmcnt in 1961 as head or the Buffalo regional oCficc or the VA. "When Elizabeth this wife> and I moved up here l brought J!ong my golf c lubs. fishing tackle and bowhng shoes. "Haven't used any of that stuH." he chuckles. "Been too busy" , ··Got a letter today Crom a San Clem ente woman who wants help with ht>r widow's benefits." he said. Frot1tPageAI SEARCH .... again, 1t could have been thrown into the sea by our loved ones in the hope that it might be picked up by searching vessels." She said the three families, rel· al1ves and friends intend to go down to Baja, California, Mexico. this weekend lo search the shoreline in that area. "We're having posters made that depict the 'Armistice' and Debbie. Gary and De nnis." she said. "We 're going to tack them up at every likely point and we are offering a reward of $1.000 t.o anyone who can give us lnlonna- tton about our children." Mrs. Sc ott sai d th e "A rmist1ce " carried enough food and wate r for two weeks when ~he left San Diego 24 days aii?o. "They could still be out there in the oceun eking out their sup· plies and hoping Cor rescue," she said. "And while we are grateful to the Coast Guard, the Navy and the Air 1-'orce for what has been done. we foci that the de· cision to s uspend the search is premature." Shah Moves To New Home MARRAKECH. Morocco (AP> Deposed Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi of Iran and t;m- prcss Farah left their temporary home an exile here today for the capital of Rabal where they will move into a new residence Th(' shah and his wife arrin>d here .Jan. 22, six days after they Ot!d Iran. and have remained in virtual seclusion in a govern- ment guest house i.n the palm groves on the outskirts of the ci· ty 200 miles from Rabat. Sources in the former Iranian ruler's ento4rage said the Im- perial couple planned to move into the Dar es Salaam CHouse of peace! Palace reserved for vi siting foreign chiefs or slate in Rabat. •~• ()f...,.. (N"ot 0-Hw PtWK wtlf'I #f\+1" •' •,..... t•fW'd~ Nt'fn<Pr-_. rl\owtti••twP<tD•I"' f~~ ' .. tPvbf~"'Q(~y *.rPil'tH· r'tit~\•H • ~f>ll"u,, Nlt•flid .. v lPw~ I ud•v fot <r.•• M'4\A ~ ....... t ~h HUif'll~ftf' ftrfoMft f -- 1"'•" V•t .. V .,.,.,._ lAQW\.l.,...._h..f.OWlft.._ .. \t A •"'11" r'""")"""'4flol't41~t\OVbfl~ ..... tvtW'l\#WJ tr...~1An lftif ,.,,,._ li~t OUbft\lhftt f'tanl t\ Al llO Wt •tGfl""4•"'1 C"'-IAIM4 t •llt0f"N••1't.. .......... _ "'t"°""' ~"" -j-Jo011 (-y \11 fl Ptf'IUOll'llt .net (/ttfth-MillftitO' f "-"•-• (O<tO< '"-••Ill ......... M.t"4o•'"t r "'''..,, c:Mri.tM Leo>\ lll<....._1' N4R .. ,,,,,..,, M.>MQlllQ l Oiton Taltpf!Ollt (114)~ Cl•••m.ct Adwtttlllnt 142>567' ,,...,_r~- 4M.oNOO '·--1110.-t.-•C-.....oilo\ 640-1220 '-•i:::..,. °' ..... ON••,.,..., .... C-:':f,,, .,~"~:t:t'.::.-~~ ~ ropredwcM ••I-•..C••• ""'llHI°" .. ••v•IOM- ~-<Ito M>t•p: N•~ ot Gt\t• ..... ~~:=::·· ... '~:.·. · ,~·a~,,:,.~:-;:"'~.r.~ ·-'""'",._.~ ... - ~,.....,..,.,_ FRIEND OF VETS Laguna'• Prtce And he had an appointment later m the day witb a Bluebird landslide victim who wanted help filling out similar forms for aid. So, while unpaid, Price re- mains a full-time VA worker, writing editorials about disabled vets. working with the Presi- dent's Commission on Employ. menl of the Handicapped, and visiting patients and conferring with members of the staff at the Veteran's Hos pital in Long Beach. It all beats the beck out or teaching al a country school in the Ozarks. he'll telJ you. That's what the former Navy man had to look forward to after h11 br1..t •tint •• • mualrl•n (nf th• ('omm•nli•J1I • tu.nil 141 lhu t'tld nt WWI lnate.d, ht look • joh with theii Army E4JunU0011 "4rrvlf11 ln fthrC'h uf JfUll, u1tn• h._. flnl P•)li'l\4'tk t.o buy • 1u;t of cikllhft ·'I bud to w al my <>Id unlforrl1 tor tour month• 1mUI I roultt M'r•~ ull tmuu~h to buy aom., r tvlllan l' oth., · he lauih• thrvlcemen didn 't htvr b ntflt.• followln1& that ffral world war. rrtce rtl<'all1 "The av4'ratee ~dueatlon of WWI vet.a wa jtut p111t lhe alxth &ndc." Pnce Hid. "And •n awful IOl of them couldn't even rc•d or wntc " So at wu orf to Manhattan. Kan., with the l''ederal Voca llOnll Training 8oMrd (Of the younc Pnee, to ''help about 200 disabled veterans who were ralslng bell." Slnce t.beo, Price beld ex. ecuUve poeitioaa in the VA and the former Veterans Bureau as division chier. assistant manager , chief domiciliary, chief of vocational rehabilitation and education, manager, and. following WWII , director ol the GI Bill program for three western states and the territory of Hawaii. His 42-year career officially ended in 1961 when be and his wife moved to Laguna Beach. But next month marks bis 60lh anniversary as a friend of tbe veteran. So that will be O.W. perched on the back seat of a Cadillac convertible during Saturday's parade through the downtown street of Laguna Beach. If you see him, give him a smile and a wave. He's a good citizen. POW to Return 15 Ot,hers in Vietnam LOUISVILLE, Ky . tAP> -An Indiana man seeking to return to the United States from Vietnam where he was taken prisoner 14 years ago. said in ~ note that he had been held in a labor camp with 15 other Americans, the Louisville Courter-Journal re- ported today. But a State Department spokesman cautioned against interpretigg the message as firm evidence that Vietnam nf'ay still be holding American prisoners of war. ''It could be that he was talking about a labor ca~p he was held in many years ago, .. said Deputy Assistant Secretary of St:ate Frank Sieverts. "We just don't know yet. Right now, we 're most con - cerned with getting Garwood out. Then we'll deal with this other information." ' Marine Pvt. Robert Garwood, 33, of Greensburg, Ind .. was taken prisoner in September 1965. He re- mained in Vietnam voluntarily after his capture, ac- cording to other POWs. Worker Seriously Hurt in Explosion A maintenance employee for the MK Development Company in Irvine was in serious condi· lion today alter undergoing sur- gery required when an oxygen tank exploded in his face. OrficiaJs at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital said Dennis L. Correl. 39, of Harbor City, was in stable coodjtion in the in- tensive care ward. Correl had just accepted de· livery of an oxygen tank, used to fuel construction equipment, at a job site on Fairchild Street, near Jamboree Boulevard. He was loading it in a s torage locker when lhe lank 's pressure valve exploded. The terrific force or escaping compressed gas drove pieces of the valve in· to bjs forehead and nose. When police and paramedics Tuv Visitors RoblJed, W~ll RetwnHome A pair of disenchanted )'OWll Ohioans will be leavtn• for Cin· cinnati this w~kend. Fountain Valley police say t.be two, who had bus tickets sent from home. don't think mucb of California. "I'm going back to where peo. ple are people," an oltice:r quot. ed Fred Weyler, 21, as saying after he had been relieved ol $63 ln cash by a trio or youn1 CaliromJans wilb a knife. Weyler and bta companion, 18.year-old Auburn Wilson, were hitcbhik1nc on MapoUa Street near Slater Avenue late Tuelday night. Three youtbs In a red car picked them up. The two Ctncln· natt reeldent.s were puabed from tbe car -mlnu.s their amall bankroll-three blocks north. lnveat11atora 11ld tbe two have decided CaUfornla'a weather lan't too bad but t.he people are awrw. . . . • arrived. Corn~as writhing on the floor in pain. Fellow workers had pressed towels against his forehead and nose. Police said the towels were s aturated in blood. A delivery man reported that be had dropped the oxygen tank on a cement floor just before handing it over to Correl, but in- sisted that the force of the im- pact should not have been enough to cause it to explode. F,....PageA·J CRITIC ••. that July 1 incident. Jobson, who has operated Pier Pina for tbe put two yean, has been the target of a two-montb investigation by Huntington a .each narcotics policemen, Lieutenant Young said. Young said narcotics officers, armed with a search warrant, found the ille1aJ drugs in the rear room or lhe pizza parlor while aeveral youngsters were plaYinc pool lo the f ronl of tbe buatnesa. 5()() Families Evacuated INDIANAPOUS CAP) -An eattmaled 500 families were evacuated from their homes tor about three houn today after a railroad tank car overturned, cau11n1 • volaWe chemical to Leak, ftrt otnclall Mid. No tnJw1ea we,. reported. Tbe atU in the tank car was ptuatd about three boun after the car OHrherned durln1 1wUcbln1 operatlona at a railroad 1ard •Ht of la· dJao~, aad naouaa.d Nii· denta u NtW'nlnl, Hkt Didt Lamb, •YD• Town1blp fire chief. A-..s"' .... "• An urn cont.ammg ashes of opera star Maria Callas has disap~ared from a Paris cemetery, her ex-husband Giovanni Battista Meneghini said today in Veroria, Italy. The city of Paris said the um had been removed som etime in January 1978 at request or the Callas family. . MetoriSt'• Death 'Hero' Could Face Charges llAD180N. Wll. <AP> -A You.DI tow truck operator. COG· 1ldered • tocAJ hero tor orcarus· ln1 • tearch party and ftDdJq an l.Qjund motoritt '""&b:ac lD a 1nowb&U, may face erimlDa.l charges for f ailin1 to tell police what be knew about the l.nddeat. Jame1 Hellenbrand, It, could face a 9&00n...andayear1n jall If cbar1ed with obstructinc of· flcers, aa rei:ommended by a Dane County coroner's Jury, and found CUiJt.y. According to U.timony at tbe coroner's ioqueat Wednesd.fY, Hellenbrand towed the drivfr's damaged pickuptnack but oever told two inveati,atln1 police of. tlcen be knew wbo tbe driver was Ud that he had been drink· ing wtth bim ooly moments before. Hellenbrand testified be was afra\d the motori.ft would be ar- rested for drunk driving lf police found him. Thomas Julien, 36, died of ex· poture Feb. 5, two bouu after be was found moanlnt in • snowy ravine. The temperature was 20 below zero. He had crashed his pickup on a bridge lets than a quarter-mile from bis rural home at Manhall, a village of 1,000 about 10 miles east of Madi.IOn. Julien, a National Guard helicopter night instructor and a father of two, was cited for bravery last year fot pulling a motomt from a naming car. The police officers searched in vain ror the missing driver; He bad been thrown 117 feet from the wreck and landed 21 feet below the bridge. Hellenbrand testified he towed Julien's truck home then or- ganized a search after telling friends police ignored his claim of hearing the victim's groans. Nixon OKs Most Of Access Rulings Madison General Hospital emergency room personnel said Joe Me rrick. a friend and rescuer who brought Julien in 2~ hours after the crash. at first s aid there had been a snowmobile accident. Merrick and He llenbrand testified lhey had been drinking at a Marshall bar with Julien. all of them leaving only minutes. before his accident Dr. Fatima Ahmed. who con- ducted the autopsy. testified that Julien's blood alcohol level was more than twice Wisconsin's legal minimum for intoxication. She added that Julien's only in· juries were superficial race cuL<> WASHINGTON <AP> -After a year of negotiations. Richard Nixon agreed today to all but two proJ)()Sed regulations gov- erning public access to his presidential materials. He will let a court decide the disputed issues, which concern his tapes and taped "diaries." The agreement, which brings public access to the tapes and papers just a tiny step closer. was submitted to U S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. If he approves. an existing lawsuit challenging the govern· ment 's access regulations will be dropped. Under the settlement. the ad- ministrator of general services will submit a modified set of regulations to Congress and no ac- cess to lhe materials would be permitted until Congress accepts the new rules. But archivists may continue to review and classify the materials in lhe meantime. in the meantime. If. as in the past. Congress dis- approves the roles, the settle- ment will be voided. ''In that case. we wouJd go back to square one," one lawyer said. Nixon is not completely satisfied with the rules, negotiat- ed by his lawyers, the govern- ment and lawyers for historians and journalists who intervened in the suit. He wanted more than 30 days I ~-r ,,~ .~. UP 10 to challenge decisions by the various review panels that will decide wbether materials should be public or private. ''We believe those time limits are unnecessarily short." Nixon lawyer R. Stan Mortenson wrote la~yers for the GSA. Frota Page AJ CASINO •.. with a regularity that defied the law of averages. If the wheel was closed, the mys te rious gamblers would leave. It took investigators more than a year lo discover the secret. Only in July 1m did the loose screws come to light, when the Casino de la Siesta in An· Ubes, on the French Riviera. conducted a thorough examina- tion or its rouJeUe wheels. A number of suspects are employees of the caainos hit by the ring. In Monaco, a 44-year-· old carpenter and two security men have been arrested on SUS· picion of helping to doctor the wheels. ·'The change caused by the loosened ~rews and the rubber was almost imperceptible, .. one source said. "But a good r oulette wheel is so finely balanced that the s lightes t change can alter the odds." The jury deliberated for two hours following seven hours of testimony from 16 witnesses. The Jury decided the two of ficers -Dennis Antolec of the Marshall police department and Frank Hol zman of t he Dane County Traffic Department had been negligent in failing lo conduct a more thorou~h s~an·h for Julien. but found them inno cent of criminal mh1conducl. The Jury then rerommench>d that criminal charges be filed against Hellenbrand for not tell ing police he knew Julien had been dnving the truck. Richard Langer. the attorney r1presenting widow Nancy Jtilien, said she did not want criminal charges filed against Hellenbrand, who was not am mediately available for com ment. Brown in Sinai TEL AVIV. Israel CAPI U.S. Defense Secretary Harolrl Brown flew by heliCOf?ler toda> t.o the Sinai Peninsula and to the Israeli Negev Desert. where the United St.ates will finance the estimated $1.5 billion cost of two new bases for the Israeli air force 550 ~ Free Delivery Free Delivery FULL BED RECLINING .... __ 6!-____________ _. ~Showcase , ... .. 7 ; \ f Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 72. NO. 46, • SECTIONS. «> PAGES Today's Cleslag, N.Y. Stoeks ' N TEN CENT~ Gene Kelly Rebuts Michelle 's C-l aiin l.OS ANG El.ts <AP 1 Dane tr utor Gt'n• Ke ll)' took tht' wltn al4nd at ~ LM Marvtn lrlal today and contradicted te tlmony ti"en by Michelle Triola Marvin about a abow buslMU contact He denied that he ever talked to her about a chance for her 1.o gel a role ~n lbe ata1e play, "Flower Drum Sona .. in tlM. .. Miu Triola ta very eonlUffd about dat.es.'' Hid Kelly "I bad nolbln« IO do with 'Plower Orum Sons ' aft.er 1951 .. KeOy1 who directed "Flower Onam Sonc" on Broadway. aa.ld he has known Ml11 Marvin "very well" tor nearly 30 yean. "I 've known her quite a while,•· he said. "It wu purely aodat. She baa vtalted my house onMcuion." He aaid be ~ knows Lee Marvin and has worked with him on television shows. "In short, I know both these people and l Uke them both," the movie star said. Kelly was summoned l.o the stand as Marvin 's attorney opened the defense case in the landmark property rights trial. The dancer was called to re· fule Mias Marvin ·s testimony lbat she Jtave up a chance to ap. pear in the Broadway show so she could stay with her tben- lover. Marvin. That was in 1964. She told of more than one phone conversation with Kelly in which be referred her to a choreographer who could give her a job in the show. But Kelly said the show was probably closed by then. He said he did not know whether she might have been re- rerring to a road company or "Flower Drum Song ... On cross examination. Miss Marvin's attorney sought to show that the actor's memory was faulty and be bad forgotten the conversaUon. "In lbe year 1964. you 're ask- ing me if 1 saw her"" Kelly said incredulously. "I don't remember. Can I ask Mr. Mitchelson. would he re- member if he saw her in 1964?" Spectators laughed. The judge said Kelly could not ask Miss Marvin 's attorney. Mar vin Mitchelson. a question. M itcbebon bad rested his case late Wednesday alter setting up a dr11matic scene between Miss Marvin, and Pamela Marvin, whom the actor married in 1970. As Miss Marvin gazed directly <See MARVIN, Page A2' Hope Dims for 3 on Lost Boat Expanded Center Planned By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of 1919 O ... y ,., ... SUtt The Segerstrom Development Company has told Costa Mesa city officials it plans a major ex- pansion of its South Coast Plaza Shopping Center and adjacent business and commerciaJ area over the next three years. Plans call for a 200-room ex- pansion of the South Coast Plaza Hotel, construction of two 14- story office towers and the addi- tion of 250,000 square feet or re- tail and office space at the shop- pin" cent.er. Greg Butcher, Segerstrom Company development direct.or. said he expects the projects to be build by 1982. The projects make up the latest phase or the city-approved master plan for the South Coast Plaza area. Mayor Ed McFarla nd, who bas reviewed the plans along with other City Council mem- bers. said today he is concerned about a 164-acre undeveloped parcel adjacent to ·'One Town Center." The owner of property is ex- pected to come before the coun- cil in June to ask for a combina- tion or commercial. industrial aud r eside ntial use o n the agricultural land. McFarland said he believes ·the council should have "evaluated" how this develop. ment would affect the Town Center project. Last year , city otricials grant- ed the Segerstrom firm a 750,000 square foot expans ion to the original One Town Center plan, bringing the total square footage to slightly less than three million. ($tt PLAZA, Page AZ> Youths Held In Burg laries Four Udo Isle teen-agers have been arrested in connection with five recent late afternoon burglaries, Newport Beach PoUce said today. They said two boys, 16 and 17, were arrested on suspicion of burglary and two otaer boys, also 16 and 17. were taken into custody for lack of parental con- trol. Tiie latter palr observed, but dldn 't participate in the burglaries, police said. Del.e(!'Uve John Furrow sald officers recovered electronic games and a tape recorder valued at $100, but lbat about $400 in caah from the burglaries is stUJ missing. Sorry About -That, FollaJ We goofed Wednesday and got a story about the CoaetaJ Commluion '• re· action to plans for tbe future of the Irvine cout mixed wttb a 1t.ory about how the Irvine City Coun· ell II lookln• ukanee at aluminum wU1lll in new homes. We won't bore YoU w1tb tbe 1ory «Walla of bow tbl1 mistake was made. We are re-runnln1 tbe Irvine Cout 1torJ ln Ill entirety on P11e At In tod91'1 Newport Beach edttton. OR a Clear Dag ••• This was the view Wednesday aaftemoon from a bluff overlooking Corona del Mar State Beach looking toward Laguna Beach. Tuesday ni ght's rainst-0rm had c.leared the air and the visibility was -well , as you see it. The view through a 500 mm telephoto lens takes the eye past the tidepools near Little Corona Beach and Cameo Shores toward the hills of the Art Colony . Waddill Jury Quer ied o n Merc y D e aths By KATHY CLANCY .., Of .. DllllY ,., ... Swtt Prospective jurors in the retrial of Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill were being asked today about their views of a doctor's role in cases of terminally ill and hopelessly incapacitated patients. The question.log came as jury selection wound into Its third day in Orange County Superior Court. Or. Waddill is accused of strangling a ne wborn girl after an abortion attempt by injection of saline solution failed at Westminster Comm unity Hospital in March of 1977. Waddill's flrat trial ended last May in a mistrial when jurors said after 16 weeks or testimony and 11 days of deliberaUoo they were hopelessly deadlocked 7 to ~ in favor of acquittal. • Waddill's attorney, Charles Weedman, predicted Wednesday jury select.ion may be completed within a week and testimony can begin in what is expected to be a tbcee to four-month trial. Both Weedman and proeecutor Robert Chatterton have been focusing oo iaaues of •bQrtion and ~alled right to life u &bey question prospective Jurors. Much of their interro1auon centen on the que1Uoa of pro· lonllne Ille by macblae in • caned hopele11 cases venu1 "pulllna the pluc." One proepec:tlve Juror today IAtd it WU diffic:.ult.Jo..relate bil own feelln_,. ln ··a rray area." .. , cloa't know where you NJ tbl1 ll no loqer a buman beln8 and now ls • or1amam , '1 tbl prospective j8"0I' 1ald. Weedman Hid Wednesday that be bu stopped focualn1 In on quesllonl concemln1 t.be •· lenatve publicity tb at aur· rounded WeddOl'1 murder lrtaJ <See WADDILL, .... J) ) ... Worker Seriously Hurt in Explosion A maintenance employee for the MK Development Company in Irvine was in serious condi- tion today after undergoing sur- gery required when an oxygen tank exploded in bis race. Officials at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital said Dennis L. Correl, 39, of Harbor City. was in stable condition in the in- tensive care ward. Correl had just accepted de- livery of an oxygen tank, used to fuel construction equipment, at a job slte on Fairchild Street, near Jamboree Boulevard. He was loading it in a storage locker when the tank's pressure valve exploded . The terrific force o( escaping compressed gas drove pieces or the valve in- to bis forehead and nose. When police and paramedics arrived, Correl was writhing on the floor in pain Fellow workers had pressed towels against his forehead and nose. Police said the towels were saturated in blood. A delivery man reported-that he had dropped the oxygen tank on a cement floor just before banding it over to Correl, but in· sisted that the force of the Im· pac t should not ha ve been enough to cause It to explode. At Neteport Beach Oil Spill Residue Fouls Shoreline An oil spill that tainted four miles or the Huntington Beach coastline Tuesday bas begun w11bin1 ashore at Newport Beach. U .S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Skip Onstad said brown colored 1lobulet about the slse of baU atones were detected as far south aa Neweort Pier today. He wd cleanln1 operaUoas, -whtch tbul fa have been ~ cenlratecl ln areas north of Hunt· lnaton Beach pier. are scheduled to belln at Newport Friday. OMtad l8ld that Ute spill ap- parently occuned Sundiay from a tanker ln Loa& Beach harbor. He lald the sticky subetaace which appean to be crude oll la betas aalyaed ln l•bol'atoriel ln an attempt to track down lta source • "But that's going to be awfully hard to do. because there were about 19 tankers.in the harbor at the time." The spill was detected in heavy foe early Sunday but didn't waab uhore until Tues· day. Onatad, who bu set up a com- mand poet near the Hunttncton Beach city pier to direct cleanup operationl, saJd lbe only vlcUm of the 1plll appean to be one West.em 1rebe. He laid the bird WAI found in Hunttncton Beach and cleaned by flab and wtldlifeolOclats. A Cout Guard 1poke1man earlier Mid that patcbea of oil tavolved tn the apUI covered an area 2.4QO yards long and 800 yards wide. Fire Damages Newport Beach Home A fire of undetermined ongin gutted an upstairs bedroom at a New1>0rt Beach home today and inflicted heavy smoke damage throughout the two-story struc- tun~. Newport Beach firemen said the activation or a smoke detec- tor undou btedly prevented heavier damage at the home or Jack Burthe. 1601 Port Abbey Place. Damage to the master bedroom and fum1shings at the home was estimated at about $30,000. Firemen said Burthe's teen· age son. Brian. discovered the blaze aft.er he heard the alarm gene rated by the smoke detec- tor. They said he tried to fight tbe fire with a garden hose but then called firemen as lbe blaze resisted his efforts. Firemen said it took three to four minutes to extineu1sh the blaze. t ·our uruts res ponded to the call. No one was hurt ln the incident. Oil Rule Awaited SACRAMENTO <AP) -Stand ard Oil of Ohio will have to wait for the state Supreme Court to rule before it can expect Legislative help ln building a contr oversial Al askan oll terminal and pipeUne in Long Beach, Assembly leaders say. B4TfLE IUGING Within a quiet residential Newport S.a~h neighborhood. two factions are fighting a fierce battle. One side rues the color white. the olber 1reen. To ftnd out what It's alJ about. see Page A9. , . ~ ......... Sea Hunt For Craft Cancele d By TOM BARLEY ot ,.,. o.11, "'lets~ Hopes for the safety of tw9_, men and a woman who left San U1 ego 1n 'the 45-foot craft, "Armtst1ce·· beJlan to dim today when the Coast Guard Wkhdrew its ships and airc raft from further search operations. The decision was taken after heavy clouds moved into the search area and shortly after a fishing vessel picked up a life ring beari ng the name, .. Armistice." "We're suspending any search activity unless and until some- thing else turns up.·· Coast Guard P .O. Steve Disbro explained. ··1n 10 days we have covered more than 266.000 square miles of ocean and we have found no trace or these missing persons ... Disbro said reports that debris had beeJl spotted southwest of the MexJcan island of Guadalupe have been thoroul{bly checked by searching ships and planes. "We found nothing." Disbro said. "And when the weather clears we intend to confine search operations to an Army u .2 spotter plane which will go over the area we have already covered." Disbro said the U-2 will con- tinue to seek the boat that had Dennis Vowell. 22, his wife, Deb- bie. 21. and friend Gary Newton, 22, on board when it left San Diego Jan. 22 Vowell and Newton went to high school together in Costa Mesa. Debbie Vowell is the daughter of Mrs Bunny Scott. 201 Calle Dorado, San Clemente. Mrs Scott said today that she and the families or Vowell and Newton "are shocked at this de· cision by the Coast Guard. "We are all going up to Long Beach tonight to try to persuade the Coast Guard to change their mind.·· Mrs Scott said "It is not true to say that there has been a 10-day search There was thick fog m the area for six days and no searching was done in that time " Mrs. Scott said she and the mothe~ of Vowell and Newton are not disturbed by the dis· covery of the life ring. "'lt could have been blown off the ·Armistice· in the storm that came up while they were out there fishinJZ ... she said. "Then <See SEARCH, Page AZ> Coast ft' eat.h er Ch arlCf' of few light shower 20 percent Friday morning W est to northwest winds 20 to 25 mph Friday afternoon Lows tonight 44 to 50. Highs Frtday S8 to'63. I NSIDE T ODAY Chorltt 8 Wheeler Jr • mo11or of KOMOI Cit11. Mo , 1$ on vnconvenhmaal poUticion who "gives 'em hell" m the trodtuon ot Ho"1/ S Tr1'mon Story. phoeo on Pogc Al4 la•ex ... .,_ ..... c. .... Utllllft ,,_........ C1 ,.,.., ... Cl ., LM a.,. AA M9'flet •lnlllH• • .., ...... ,_.... ~' .. c....... • ......... ..... ~ Cj Or ..... C..., 0."'_. OMt lfl'M ~ C:-k t al I . Cat • .._ CreM.... af ...... O.t•lllMk9' AH llNll~ ... _...,._. M ,...., ... 1"'9f'el a 1 U.I ~ ,..._ C1..J tJll..-W .._... .. ...... ..._ ...... ,.... CJ M "" ., a ··~ " C4 c.s ... •• u OM.Y PtLOT N Thyrtcftx. F!Ofm 16. tm ~tB•la•ee Brown Pushes 'Frugal' Line SACRAM NTO <AP> -Gov. drnul'.'d Bro~n Jr .. ln the ftnt t 11ilatlv eommtttee ap· pt-•run~ b a Rttnt co~·emor. autd today a balan eel r.,..J budael wo'1ld h4'1p •·chance t~ ch~m•etry" or th~ tnflatlon plasuf'd rountry f Earh r lOfY P11w AS > If • t'On\-t'nUoo ~e~ b~kt lo 1dopt baU.necld red raJ apeod •na . lbe rouotry'11 att ntion WpterFinn Pulling Out TEHRAN, Iran <AP) The ch.let of Bell HeUcop· ter's operations in Iran said today the U.S. firm will pull out almost all the 1. 700 employees and de· pendents still in Lhis strife· torn nation following a U.S . Embassy warning that it can no lonqer pro- tect Americans in Iran. <Related storv. Pue A4 > Robert MacKinnon. vice president and general manager of Bell Helicopter International said employees would ~ sent to "staging areas" in nearby countries to await word oo whether the new · revolutionary government wants them to return. woukl be fonased on tho lHut ol 1ovemment apendln1. Brown wld Lbe Al embly Way and Muna Commtt~ "The balanced bud1et la a db clpUn~. It u not the soluUon, bul It puu the con.stralnta on.'' the ~mottaUt governor aald. It -.·u a rcf~rence lo 11 pro posal bef0tt committee calUng lor a conatltullonal convent.ton to requlre Coo1ress to balflnce lhc federal bud&~. . 'The re1f issue, H I lee lt, IS ho ~ is the problem of lb f rowlng naUooal debt and what call the fiscal exceaae1 of the federal govemmenl," be said. · · lf you lhink as I do that t.bere ts something that I.I rundam n tall)' ~ with the drill o( our public policy. then you have to agree that we have lo do something.'' Brown testified immediately after rormer U.S. Sen. Sam Ervin answered committee members' questions through an electronic telephone hookup to his law office in Morganton. N.C. Veteran Capitol observers could nol recall any time in re· cent history. dating back through the 1943·53 administra· lion or Republican Earl WJllTen, when a governor testified before a standing legislative commit· tee. A resolution that would make California the 27th state calling for a constitutional convention is pending before the committee for a vote by the end or the month. County Solons Vie On Fire Question Members of Orange County's legislative d e legation were choosing up sides this week in Sa<'ramento in the growing con· troversy over the future of the joint county.state fire service. FroaPageAJ SEAR CH ••• again, it could have been thrown jnlo the sea by our loved ones in the hope that it might be picked op by search.ing vessels." ·she said the three families, rel· atives and friends intend to go down to Baja, California. Mexico, this weekend to search the shoreline in that area. "We're having posters made thal depict the 'Armistice' and Debbie. Gary and Dennis." she said. "We're going to tack them up at every likely point and we a re offering a reward of $1,000 to anyone who can give us informa- tion about our children." Mr s . Scott sai d l he "Armistice" carried enough food and water for two weeks when she left San Diego 24 days a~o. "They could still be out there in the ocean eking out their sup· plies and hoping for rescue," sbe said. "And while we are grateful to the Coast Guard, the Navy and the Air Force for what has bttn done. we feel that the de· cision to suspend the search is premature." Children Aide d WASHINGTON <AP> -The Children's Derense Fund says it is planning a nationwide pro- gram in behalf of the estimated 64 million Americans under vol· ing age. "As long as children go hungry and homeless and neglected, we must push for sensible, realistic and cost· e rrective public responses," Marian Wright Edelman s aid Wednesday. OftANOE COAST H DAILY PILOT t~ O<•notCOMl o.lty-, wtlll-1111<-IM....., ,._._~l ..... IW4.,,t ... 0r- (°"\I Pvl>ll"""OC-• ~et~t011._ • .,. po,1>41\McO __, llwOUOll FriNf lot (O\le MtW H-f1Hc1> -iftq!Oft &tact1tl'- t41n Y•fte,. l,vH"t. l40Wf"ll fJeo•'-kYtf\(M't A ""Ol~•~td<l.,,,l•-•-S.•,..<lfn­......,.0 nw .,, .... ,.,.. 1Mt1•"""9 p1...i h et 2JO w .... 1 B•• SI ...... r~ ...... .Cet._•._ J«• •.C4ifttJ Vo<e Pr .. -.... 0.-elMl- ~nll ...... Cfl•or ,_ ... _.,...... MtMtl"O Editor CMr ... K,'-"' -· ... H ,., .. .i.fttM.t ........ ~ .... Tel•PMft• (7H)~ CIHlfltH Mfe ....... I01111 The issue was tossed into the Sacramento arena earlier this week by Orange County supervisors. They asked the state Legislature to intervene. Members or the adminislra· tion of Gov. Edmund Brown, Jr. said they would stick by their boss' budget plan. It would re· quire the county to assume con· trot or the 550-man fire depart· ment that is currently state .run. State Sen. Paul Carpenter, D· Garden Grove, said he ag~ees wilb the governor and predicted there would be little legislative iDt.ere1Jt in the issue. But Assemblyman Dennis Mangers, D·Huntington Beach and Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson, R-Newport Beach. said they agree with county or. ficials Lbat the proposed move may prove to be more costly to both the st.ate and county. Mangers said h e a nd Supervisor Harriett Wieder would host a press conrerence n ext week to discuss the legislative plan or attack on the issue. Mrs. Bergeson said she has of· fered her help to the county. "I had hoped there could be a negotiated settlement to this without going to legislation," she said. Blast Rips Savings Bank WARSAW, Poland <APl An explosion ripped through a crowded savings bank in the center of Warsaw around noon today, and Lbe official state·run radio said at least 10 persons were killed and 30 injured. About 200 people reportedly were in the building at the time of the blast. The source of the explosion in the three-story aluminum and glass structure, known as the PKO building, was not im· mediately known. There were no gas installations in the building. E',....Page A J WADDILL •. "It seems in the main as though while people read about .tb.e cue, ~Y didn't come away with any oplllion about Dr. Wad- dUJ 's guilt or innocence," Weed· man explained. "We are speoding more time now talking about how the Juro~ feel about the role of the pbys1clan where there Is a termlnally ill or Incapacitated patient ." Waddlll contended in the first trial that the lnfant born to an 18·year·old unwed mother never was alive. ~ ... P,,.eAJ MARVIN ••• at· her, Mn. Marvin *1.ifled, "She said to me, 'You may be married to Mr. 11.,vin, bu\ don't fcqet be'• 1UU keeplne me·.·· .. 'Ille B e a t Goes On Members of Newport Harbor High School Band were up early today, getting in some practice for an appearance Satur· day in Laguna Beach's Patriot's Day Parade. They marched a few blocks from the ca mpus, in the ·residential neighborhood where their regular leader. Harbor High music 'teacher Richard England lives. Substitute band director Don Anderson said there was notbinl un· usual about the route of the pre.parade practice. England has been relieved of hJs teaching duties pending the outcome of a hearing into his dispute with Harbor High Principal Tom Jacobson. McN ally Gets Reprieve School Site to Go on Sale This Summer The McNaJly School site in downtown Costa Mesa wiJJ go up for sale again this summer at a minimum bid of $3 million, Newport·Mesa Unified School District trustees have decided. It means continuation high school and evening students will remain at the campus through the l~ school year. However, there is now some doubt whether McNal1y opera· tions will eventually be moved to Monte Vista Elementary School in the fall or 1980. The Monte Vista campus still will be closed at the e•d or lb.is school ye.ar because of declining student enrollment, trustees said~. A citiz.ens advisory committee will bold a public bearing at Monte Vista School March 12, to discuss bow the campus should be used during the next school year . The one.year delay in moving McNally came about aft.er no bids were received by diatrietof· ficiala (or the 7.5 acre site late last year. Bids will be accepted on Aug. 16th. said district business manger Ray Schnierer, with a one year escrow to follow. He said some potential bt.lyers have shown interest in rest.wing the early·Callfornla style McNally building ror a busiMss operation. Nixon Accepts Rufus WASlllNGTON <AP> -After a year or negotiations, Richard Nixon agreed today to all but two propased regulations gov· erning public access to bis presidential materials. He will Jet a court decide the disputed issues, which concern bis tapes and taped "diaries." The agreement, which brings public access to the tapes and papers just a tiny step closer, was· submitted to U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. If he approves, an existing lawsuit challenging the govern- ment's access regulations will be dropped. Under the settlement. the ad- ministrator of general services Frot11 Page Al PLAZA .•• The completed town center, including the 16 -story Segerstrom/Prudential building now going up along Bristol Street, will generate about 25,000 more cars per day in the city, of· ficials said. Butcher said the two new of· fice towers wiJJ be built on the company's fifteen acres of land east or Downey Savings near the San Diego Freeway. The 14-story towers wiJJ be raced with green glass and mar- ble and will enclose 520,000 square feet. Development plans caJJ for the hotel to become an L-shaped building with the addition of a 17·story, 200-room addition. The expansion wiU bring the hotel's capacity to about 400 rooms and double its ballroom and meeting space. Butcher said additional parking will be in· eluded. At the shopping center, a 150,000 square-foot department store and accompanying office building would be built on the east parkinR Jot. A pedestrian bridge over Bristol Street will link the retail and office s pace to the Town Center. Butcher said. "We knew this was coming, but time seems lo pass qu1ckly," noted Councilwoman Norma Hertzog. will submit a modified set of regulations t.o Congress and no ac· cess t.o the materials would be permitted until Congress accepts the new rules. But archivists may continue to review and classify the materials in the meantime. in the meantime. If, as in the past, Congress dis· approves the rules, the settle- ment wiU be voided. "In that easer we would go back to square one," one lawyer said. Nixon is not completely satisfied with the rules. negotial· ed by his lawyers. the govern· ment and lawyers for historians and journalists who intervened • ii) !l!.e suit. UP 10 He wanted more lba.n 30 days to challenge decisions bJ the various review panels that wilt decide whether materials should be public or private. "We believe those time limits are unnecessarily short.•• Nixon lawyer R. Stan Mortenson wrote lawyers for the GSA.. But, he added, the two sides have cooperated in the past and that he bad been assured "the same spirit of accommodation" will continue. Under lbe new rules, anyone who is mentioned in materials about to be made public will be ooti.fied in advance, thus having the opportunity to challenge the disclosure in advance. s50 TVVIEWING ~ Free Delivery Full BED RecuN1NG Scouting Fallout Feared Orange County's Glrl Scouts cattied on their cookie ulel to· day lo lb bOJHt that recent publlcil)' will oot put a dent in what wu. last year, a $373,668 fund raising effort. ·'We want orange County peo. pie to understand that the problems beeetUng the Angeles Girl Scout Councll do not acrect us and webopetheyneverwilJ,"Girl Scou.t coordinator JacQueUne Schaarsald. She said the Angeles group in Los Angeles is the only one of 10 Southern California councils racked by dissension that led to appearances by rival fact.ions oo television. Mrs. Schaar said feuding between union and non·union memben or the Angeles coun· cil's administrative staff led to one member urging resideJlts in the area to boycott cookie sales. "No such dispute exists in Orange ounty and we are not un· ionized," s he explained. "But we are deeply concerned because cookie sales are vital to the maintenance of our pro- grams." Mrs. Schaar s aid Orange County Girl Scouts will be seek- ing $1.25 for each package of cookies. or that sum, she said. 57 cents represents the cost or the prod· ucl. A further 10 cents covers the cost or . .$ales licenses, incen· lives ror the sellers and promo- tional mat.eriala. She sajd a further 20 cents goes to the seller's Scout troop to maintain proRrama. The balance of 38 cents goes to the Gtrl Scout organization at C'OUD· cil level and helps to defray the cost of camps. training and ad· · ministration. Mrs . Schaar said proceeds from cookie sales provide about 34 percent of an annual budget Lbat is slighUy over Sl million. "It is our major fund raising effort or tbe year." she said. "Our girls are supporting their program by their own achieve· nent and it would be tragic if a misconception was allowed to ih· t.erfere with this worthy effort." Newport Woman's Jewelry S tolen A Newport Beach woma n whose jewelry was stolen two years ago found herself in for an unwelcome return performance Wednesday, police reported. They said someone forced open a garage door, headed directly ror lbe bedroom and took $.1.150 ln rings, bracelets and necklaces at the home of Jocelyn Margaret Fox on Vista Umbrosa. UP TO 550 Free Delivery Because the office space will house corporate headquarters instead of a series of smaller businesses, Mrs. Hertzog said she was not fearful of serious conl(estioo problems. ~Showcase She nid Segerstrom officials are allowing 470 square feet or office apace per employee. The development firm is COD· stdering s taggered worltln1 hours, improved bus service~ perhap1 a new freeway exit rarnp off the San Diego Freeway, to reduce tratnc lm· pact.a, 1he said. Tbe firm a.llO will ~Y for the extension of South Coast Drive between Harbor Boulevard and Fairview Road for a dlrect link to the~ e.nter. The com· plet.d roadway wtll be 11x lanes •ide. ... . COITAMllA Ut I . 17th IT. (M:lfoll "°"' RolpN. next to Marte Colet ldarl) 642 ... 17 Mon.-~ 1().4 sat. l<M Ooeed~ NEW LOCATION LA8UNA HILU 2IOU Lake folelt Dr. (COftW 0( to. fOl9lt ~ and M• *9a 0. ta Coflota) 770-6161 Mew\. • ftt. 1().6 lat.106 -.n.1M ( .. ' -........ ... ·~ ""' --... -... ._....... .... .... ... -,... ._ Thurldlv. Fel>r\WY 15. 11t79 DAILY PILOT .4:1 GanafJllllfl Fb Nets Crooks $7 lffilliod PARIS CAP> -An audedcMll band of crooka, 1ula1 acre•drivua and b•ll ot nabbet' lO doctor roulett.e wbeela. bu C'Oll~tAld •bout S7 ro.llMolt in .. of the most lnaeniou lnt.tntia· tloul 1ambbnc capers ever an· tovered. hU<!e IOUttel la.>' •bout ., IUlpeda ha\I bffn arret&ed, b4lll do ... more t"C>U1d be at ..,.. Jvd1ln1 b)' the •co~ of t.6e racket ~ kl ved to have been IOl on for up to three Tffrt'; Poli e Critic Arrested Oowat.own Huntlftlton Beaeh pizza parlor own r Doualas •tevemoo Jobeoft, 47, an out· s poho J)Olice critic. wu &nal· ed Wednesday on charees or selling cocaine and marijuana to younpters. · Police Lt. Bruce Youn& said Jobson and David Ram06. a 22·yearw0ld transient. were ar- rested at the Pier Piua Palace lJ8 Main St., al 6 p.m. wt.ere they said $1,500 in illegal drugs were seized. Jobson had filed a civil rights l awsuit against several policemen. Ci ty Manager Bud Belsito and Police CbJef Earle Robitaille charging them with harassment and trying to drive him out of business. The lawsuit bas reportedly been dropl)t!d. Jobson and bis at- torney could oot be reached for comment today. Jobson posted SS.000 bond to obtain bis release Wednesday nighL Jobson appeared before the Huntington Beach City Council Jul) 3 and charg~ local . police with the unnecessary beaung or tv.o local youths al a restauranL The orficers involved were later cleared of wrongdoing in that July 1 incident. Jobson, who has operated Pier Pizza for lbe past two years, has been lbe target. of a two-month invesllgation by Huntington Beach narcotics policemen. Lieutenant Young said. Vakntine,'s Gift: Death JACKSONVILLE, Fla. <AP> ·· On Valentine's Day, Prentice Murphy went to the downtown bank where his wife worked, presented her with a delicate, ~agrant while rose and then shot. her in the bead, police said. Thirty-year-old Candice M u rphy di e d later Wednesday and Murphy was charged with murder, police said. .. He and his wife ap- parently had an argument over domestic problems Tuesday night," said Homicide Lt. J .L. Suber bul did not. elaborate. ,.,....,. t.._ l• P'rance, U\e fabl" lfoate Carlo 1amln1 ..... la lloeaco and othtta tn Y•1oalawt1. haty , oulh A..nta and Alric• have aul· t.nd -.. French preu re· port.lay. Soutt9 ~--lo tb• lnva\!11. ti• IQ I.be croob openled by ~ tJw ICf' _., that hold In plaee the llny ••II• between eub aumbtt oo th roulett -bftl. Tbt llJ1btHt Joosenlna oC lloae walla ltacreaucj tbe "ela1tlcU1" of the number p'ck•d for doctoring, and- h l1htenfd lhe odds on tl win· Rina Another trick Involved insert· 101 • 1Uver or rubber under plaq_uH bearlng undesirable numben to that t.be ball would boun~ olf lbem and favor num· bere wttblbelOOHacrews. PoUN 1od tbe French gam· blinJ control omce ire bcln& di.a· crril about the allalr, stJJI hoping lo catch the mHtermlnds behind tie racket. l'alentine l'eterans Solomon and Fannie Rapaport. who met in Warsaw. Poland. a nd married in the United States in 1909. c~lebrated their 7oth wedding anniversary Valentine's Day at the Villa Valencia retirement hotel in Laguna Hills at a party attended by west coast relatives. The cou- ple -he's 90 and she's 88 -are visiting the Orange Coast for several months from Chicago where Rapaport operat- ed a grocery store laborer Beaten A 22-year-okl Mexican laborer was sevnely beaten on the head with a baseball bat during a pre- dawn attack at a Huntington Beach field workers' camp to- day. David Escobar Torres, who resides at· 18291 Gothard St .. was reported In stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center after being transported from Huntington Jntercommunity Hospital. • Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa said three other laborers, Roberto Cbererio, 23, Antonio Reyes, 18, and Jose Rodriquez, 19, have been arrested and charged with assault with a deadly weapon in connection with Torres' beating that reportedly occurred at 3 a.m. The three men charged with the beating do not speak English and refused to give police in· formation during questioning lo· day. Ochoa said no motive has yet been determined for the attack. Torres was reportedly asleep when be was beaten. 'Taxpa9er Ripoff' Trash Fee-Fight Seen A proposal by county officials to raise about S8 million a year lo pay for trash disposal by charging fees is running into sUf( opposition from the Orange • County Leque of Cities. LeaJue Presid ent Alice MacLain, a Cypress city COUD· cilwoman, says the plan is "a ripoff of taxpayers that will re- s ult lo windfall revenue for the county.•• The league, a loose knit con- federation of representatives of the 26 cities in Oran1Ze Countv. says trash disposal is a prop-. erty-related expense that: should be paid with property taxes, as it is now. The County Board of Supervisors Is expected to dis· cuss implementing the new traab diapoul fees al ils meet· ing next Tuesday. Jn a position pa pe r, the Lea1ue ol Cit.iet cooleads tboee lees ultimately would be puaed Oft to property ownen and that coanty tax funds tradJUoaally &&led to Pl~ &rash dilpoNI costs would be diYerted to oUaer ues by county government. T.he fe«> proposal, aaya leap Preaideat MacLain, ii merely a me._ devbed to lncreue c:oun· ty revenues. The trab fee proposal bu nm 1.nto &DOtber bW"41le ln the form of the ll"rioe Company, from which the count)' ...... two of It.a four duaas*te.. TboM lulel, wbicb currmUJ brlDI tbe company about $15,GOO • year, c:oata1n provllioDa that .......... ~,_ ... o1 any (ef'!fll levied by tile county ror use of those dumps. County officials want to re- negotiate the Irvine Company leases becau.w, if a fee schedule is implemented, the current leaseJ would mean the county would have to pay the land com- pany between $600,000 and $800,000 annually. A company spokesman said the firm is willing to discuss the matter lo see what kind of a lradeofftbe county has in mind. At present the county doesn't charge cities or individuals to use its four dumps, or landf1Us, and its three trash transrer sta-tions. Us cusposaJ operations. are fmanced out oC the county general fund dertved from prop· ~'1Ytaxes. The subject ol instituting an additional fee rarst came up last summer foUowi.ng t.be passage or Proposition 13, the tu reform initiative that limits property uxea. At that time, county aupervllors appointed a revenue sea«h committee and told It to find some new tources of rev· ~nue for county 1overnmenl Tbe traeb dispolal fee was one of the tlrat notions the commit· tee c1me up with. A report, prepafe(I last "N() .. vember by Ronld Bates, assi1 ... tant director or ine county General Se"lcee Agency. whlcb .-dmlnlaten tbe county tta1b = ays&.em, su11ested two In oae, Ole feet would ralle •. 3 million to cover "nearly all oper1Unc cost.a. depred1Uon, o•erHacl •114 ,.,.rn1 for "' ---,,- capital improvements and equipment.·• The second option woold raise about $7.5 million which would pay operating expenses, but would not include capital im- provement funds. The impact on the average Orange County ho meowner, Bates calculated, would be $6.40 a year or 53 cents a month for the $9.3 million option. The lesser option would cost the average homeowner $4.99 a year or 42 cents a month, be said. But the League of Cities sees some problems in those figures. The league notes that the cur- rent average cost per household annually for trash collection and disposal is $30. The fee estimates made by Bales would be in addition to the existing cost, the league claims. In addition, the league position paper notes the current budget for the solid waste disposal system ls S8 million, yet the pro- jected cost ls $9.3 million. The difference between the two budgets. according to the league position paper, includes $700,000 that would go lo the county general fund for "over· head" and $500,000 ln additional personnel expenses. The league report also claims . that the ree plan contains pro- visions for repayment to the general fund of the county's original investment In the S2 milUon worth of equipment now used by the county's solid waate dlapotal divttlon plus acquisiUon or acalu for the dumps and lranarer stations at an e4Umaled '*' ol .-0,000 ..u . But with the affalr &Ina dis· cuaaed ln French newspapers, 1nd 1 Judge ln Nice prepatlna to hear evidence. l~re ap~an to be JitUe hope left for more major arrests. The press reports say the ringleader la a .Czechotlovak Uv- ln1 io West f.ferma&ny. n. bas not been cau,bt. Gambllna author1Uet ettimete tbe crooks' total haul at 30 mUUon francs, or $7.05 million. Suspicions arose in January 1916 when several French Abortion l••ue casinos i nformed Roger SaulnJer, dlrector of the aamlng service ln France's Interior Ministry. that they bad notlced "unusual gambling patterns" being taled by certain clients. The gamblers would play on only one particular roulette wheel. They would bet on only certain numbers, which won with a regularity that defied the law of averages. JC the wheel was closed , the mysterious gamblers would leave. ll took Investigators more Supreme Court Hearing Sought T h e a ttorney who will represent the 12 demonstrators arrested Wednesday a t a Santa Ana abortion clinic says the ar- rests are part of a plan to take 2Ernployee the tsSue to the U.S. Supreme Court again. ··Frankly, we want to lose our case in the lower courts," said Robert Sassone. He will defend tbe members of the Committee for the Defense of the Unborn who are facing cbarges of tres- pass after Wednesday's dem· onstratioo at the Family Plan- ning Associates Medical Group. Gro S t Sassone, who said he filed uns e friend of the ~Ourt briefs OD the r . three a bortion cases beard • earlier in tbis decade by the Vor lleanng Supreme Court, said he knew in L' l advance that some or the de m· onstrators planned lo be ar- A dispute by two employee or-rested. gaoizations over the rigbl to represent 51 1 Orange County government maintenance and operations workers will be the subject of a Feb. 26 bearing in Superior Court. Judge Alicemarie Stouer re- fused Tuesday to grant an order that temporarily would have blocked county officials from rec- ognizing results of a recent representation elect.Ion won by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees <AFSCMEL Instead, she ordered attorneys back to her courtroom Feb. 26 to present additional evidence. T he 8,000-membe r Orange County Employees Association <OCEA), whlch lost the election to AFSCME. filed suit Tuesday seeking to have the vote results overturned. OCEA officials charged that A FSCME organizers violated terms or an e lection agreement when one county employee aJ. legedJy campaigned al a polling place al Mason Regional Park in Irvine. Among those arrested in the clinic's offices at 1600 N . Broadway was Edward Allen. the retired police chief or Santa Ana. He was arreste d In the same rocauon otlrang a dem- onstration a year ago. Sassone said defense of the 12 people arrested would hinge on the question of legality of abor· lion and that issue, be said, re- quires a court determination as to when life begiiis. According to the attorney that subject has never been addressed by the high court. He said his services and the cost of preparing lhe case for hearings by higher courts would be donated. Sassone. who s aid he is a member of the political action committee of the national Right to Life, said be expects other at· tomeys across the country lo join bim in his effort to bring the issue back to the Supreme Court. tban a year lo discover the secret. Only in July 1977 did t.be loose screws come lo Ugbt, when th Casino de la S1est.a tn An·i tlbes. on the French Rlvtera. conducted a lhorougb examina- tion of it.I roulette wheels. ~ A number of suspecla are"' employees or the cnainos hit by the ring. In Monaco, a 44-ye&r· old carpenter and two security , men have been arrested on llUS·; piclon of helping to doctor tbe wheels. A.din Mun.9 ,.,..,,.,..... An um containing ashes Qf opera star Maria Callas has disappeared from a Paris cemetery. her ex-husband Giovanni B attis ta Meneghini s aid today in Verona. Italy. 3 Arrested In Santa Ana Bar Robbery Three people were arrested Wednesday night by Santa J\pa police investigating the robbel:;y of a local bar in which the establishment was stripped of equipment as well as cash and supplies. Booked into Orange County Jail were Frank Rundell, 34, of Cucamonga and Lynne Riley, 19. of Westminster. Police also arrested a 16-year-old girl in connection with the case and booked her into Orange County Juvenile Hall. Officers alleged they found some of the equipment and tbe two pool tables taken in the Feb. 4, robbery of the Orbit lnn. 3601 W. First Street. Two .more suspects are being sought. police said. 20% Off on Schafer Bros. Top Grain Leather Sofas and Chairs Visft Our Leather Gallery -30 pieces on display to choose from. Styled and crafted by Schafer Bros .. of course. Your Favor1te Designer Wiii Be Happy To Aeal1t You H.J.GARREIT fU~M-TU~E . PROF"ESStON"L INTERIOR DlSIGNERS . 2215 HAltlOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 646w0275 ...... -. I A4 ONLY PILOT Ttiur.oay, 'ebtuatV 1&, 1811 Dav P aJOft • DEn. One of ow-central county aponlna IOOdl ltofa bu a ~U·Pat a<.l,venJaement colni 10 lbe pa~n up there today on lta GIHL ll•ndaun lear--.S&M. You are solDI to fuld m rtaMy porty models avallable at barsaln Pf1 for revolvers and automallu While )'OU ml•bt debalt' the Lasue, ther 11 no que Uon that came bunUn1 la a blt spe>rt in Arnenca Taf'8et 1bool las ll allo a sport and b e~· n locllMSed an the Olympic Oamf't. Some ol Ow aporty 1un model• on H ie today, howc:ver. 38 Special 2" BARREL SA L Ult~ Sale Model Revolt¥1' /or the Sparling Lafe do leave you somewhat puuled as to the sporting event they would be involved in. I WM. f!A.SCINATED, for example, by the .25 caliber automatic with a three·inch barrel that you can pick up for the bargain price tag of just $39.99. For forty bucks, you 're into the sporting life. And for a little more firepower in a compact model, you can get a .38 caliber revolver with only a two·incb bar· rel for $59.99, or just sixty clackers tt you like to round things out. The short·barreled sporty guns certalnlv would fit easily into any pocket or purse. MOST GUN EXPERTS, however, would agree that the longer the barrel, the more accurate the weapon. This is because the barrels h ave spirals lo them (known technically as lands and grooves> that make the bullet spin like a top when the slug is discharged. This gyro action keeps the bullet on an accurate course. Thus, lbe shorter the barrel, the less spin on the bullet. resultinl in loss or accuracy al any real range. In other words, with a two·incb barrel. you might be able to hit the broad side of a barn U you're only six feet away. 1be slug might be toppling end-over-end, but you might hit the barn anyway. AT A.NY REAL DISTANCE at all, only the Lord ltnows what you're going to bit with a bullet from a two·inch bar· rel So for our s porty models on sale today. you can pretty much rule out target shooting. Very few sportsmen like to stand just six feet from a larget while they're blazing away. AND YOU CAN PROBABLY rule out game hunting, too. Very few game bunters head for the woods w1th a pistol in the first place. They like rifles or shotguns. Ir the sportsmen did go into the field with a pistol, il sure wouldn't be one with just a two-inch barrel. So that's your quiz for the day. folks. Just what is the sport where they use these little guns? Rocky Kin Speak on Death NEW YORK <AP> -The four eldest children or Nelson Rockefeller say they believe "nothin.I? could be done to save father." despite conflicting accounts of the circumstances surrounding his death. The children -Rodman and Steven Rockefeller. Ann Roberts and Mary R. Morgan --said in a stat.ement Wednesday night they are satisfied that .. all the people who tried to help acted responsibly." MEGAN MAllSHACK A.ND others did everything possible to save Rockefeller's life when be suffered a fatal heart attack, they said · Iran Airlift Set Evacuation of A mericans D ue • TEHRAN, Iran <AP> -Tbe U S. &mbauy admltted today it "cannot protect American lives In Tehran" and anoounced p&ana for •1Mr1enc1 evacuation rliahta Saturday ., heavy t11hUn1 was repon.d for the lh1rd day 1n tbe nortbwettcltyofTabrl1. lraolan Journaltats reported hundred.a killed in factional flgbt· tna Tuetday and Wednesday in Tabrl1, Iran's fourth lar1eatclty Radio Tehran said 42 more were killed In three southern cities Wednesday as the ne.w aovern· ment installed by AyatoUah RuboUah Khomeini'• revolution 11truggled to establish control over the country. of the embuly wu killed and two U.S. Marinelwerewounded. The deputy prtme mlnlater of the new Kbomeln! 1ovemment, Ibrahim Yudl, said the attackers were "communlata, ultra· rl1hliata and military personnel·' try Int to dltcrecUt Khomelnl 's an· ti·ahahgovemmenL Ambassador Sulllvan advised an American telephone caller to· day to stay indoors and off the street.a. "I wouldn't go out If l were you," he added. The em· bas1y resumed only limited operaUoaatoday. The anti·Amerlcani.sm of many in the anli·shab movement bu grown more virulent lo recent weeks, and since last weekend thousands of lranlan civilians have been roaming city streets with weapons distributed or stolen from mJUtary armoriel. U.S. oftlclals in Wasblqton aald 1.700 of the nearly 7,000 Americana atlll In Iran were ready to leave lmmediatelv. MEANWlllLE, John CoMally says the United States was cau1ht off luard by the lranlaa revoJu. tlon because of a weakenlqolt.be CIA 'a international apy networ\:. A candidate fortbe Republican prealdential nomlnaUon, CoanaJ. ly told reporters Wednetday at Atlanta the United States ''should have been aware" or the ilnpendinc revolution H early as 18 months ago. WORLD I NATION AP ...... U.S. BLASTED John Conn•lly ··w e are in phase three of emercency evacuation,·• an em- bassy stat.ement read to anxious U S. citizens said. "We cannot protect Americiui Uves in Tehran. You are allowed one suitcase per person. Evacuation planes will beginflying17February." Mexico Talks Tense ''PHASETll&EE'' appeared to refer to the recommended evacuation of virtually all Americans In the country. The embassy cannol order Americans to leave unless they are employed by the U.S. government or are government dependents . Lopez Portillo Chides U.S. in W e lcome The evacuation was ordered because of Wednesday's storm· ing of the U S. Embassy by heavi· ly armed guerrillas who held Am· basaador William Sullivao and lO!_qther Americans hostage until Knomeanl's "Is lamic police" freed them An Iranian employee MEXICO CITY <AP> -Presi· dent Carter and Mexican Presi· dent Jose Lopez Port.Ulo began a second round of talks today following a public scolding of the United Slat.es by Lopez Portillo. The two leaders met today in "Los Pinos," the Mexican presi· dent's elaborate otflclar res-idence, for a dlacuaslon of oil, illegal aliens, trade and other is· s ues which are puUin,g a strain on relations between the United States and lta neilbbor aouth of the border After today'• talk Carter and wife Rosalynn were scheduled to fly by helicopter to lxtUlco el Grande, a showcase pig.farming village 100 miles south of Kexlco City. The Mexican government made preparaUons to show tbe village as an example of de· velopmeot efforta aimed at re· ducing rural poverty that is Dubs' Death Upsetting Caner Orders Full Report on Reds WASHINGTON <AP> -The State Department, acting on the orders of a "very angry" Presi- dent Carter. want.a a full report from the Soviet Unlon on the "actions by the Soviet advisers involved in" the death of the U .S . a otbas sa dor t o Afghanistan. <Related story, PageAlO.) State Department sl>Okesman Hodding Ca rter duclosed Wednesday that Soviet advisers were at the scene or vlolence in Afg~anistan earlier in the day which claimed the Ufe of Am· bassador Adolph "Spike" Dubs. "We are angry and upset," said spokes man Carter. He added that the department was trying lo find out exactly what happened before deciding bow to proceed. DEPUTY Secretary of State Warren M. Christopher , acting at the direction of the president, who is In Mexico, summoned Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Oobrynin to the State Depart· ment to discuss the matter . The State Department a lso filed a protest with the Afghan government about its handling of the affair Wednesday. In Mexico City, officials with the president said he was "very · angry'' about the incident. JODY POWELL, Carter's press secretary, said. "The more you read about thls, the more out· rageous it becomes.'' Spokesman Carte r said Chris t oph er express-ed to Dobrynin "in the strongest terms the shock of tht> U.S. gov- ernment" over Soviet actions during the lncident. According to witnesses, Dubs was shot and killed as Afghan police stormed the hotel room where he was being held by a group or Islamic terrorists. So- viet advisers were on the scene but the extent or their involve· ment in the actual assault was not clear. Carter confirmed that reports from American diplomats who witnessed the incident indicated Soviet advisers were involved in the assault Following a pro.Soviet coup in Kabul last April, Soviet advisers have been asslsting the police, military and other branches or the Afghan government. Informed sources said that while Dubs was being held, U.S. officials in contact with Soviet officials asked that efforts be made to negotiate Dubs' release a nd that the hote l not be stormed. Carter said Christopher "was not accusing the Soviet advisers of responsiblllty for the am- bassado r 's death. He did. however, charge t hem with failure to heed repeated re· quests by U.S. embassy offlcials that the assault not be un- dertaken." Carter added, "The refusal to consult by the Soviet advisers on the spot is lmposs1bJe lo Justify, given the fact that the life of the Ame rican ambassador was in jeopardy." driving hundred& of thousands of peasants each year Into Mex· lco'a urban s lums or into illegal emigration to tbe United Stat.es. After a cordial but restrained welcome for Carter on Wednes· day, Lopez Portillo surprised and irritated U.S. offldals by c riticizin« the U oiled Stat.es in remarks at a luncheon meeting which was televised in Mexico. Lopez Portillo asked that tbe United Stat.es give his country "reapectful, fair and worthy t reatment," and warned against "sudden deceit," an apparent reference to a nJtural.gas deal canceled by Washington last year. U.S. Emoassy ortlcials ex- pressed surprise at PortilJo's sharp langua1e. Even stronger reaction came from a high White House official, who asked not to be identified. BIS objections seemed directed less at Lopez PorUllo's call for fair and equitable treatment and more to other sections of his toast at a luncheon for the Carters. For example. Lopes Portillo seemed to refer to last year's Energy Department veto of a privately negotiated U .S . purchase of Mexican natural gas when he told Carter: ··Among permanent, not casual nei1hbor1, aurpriae moves and sudden deceit or abuse are poiaoooualruita tbat sooner or later have a revene effect.'• Floods Free Ice Jams Highldalw Water Leaves 125 Homeless Te.per•••re• ...................... ----------...' :::.:: ::: ::=;:: ~~!~,,': :~: "' •~o h• ,..-.llAlj~!ll!!!!~ ... .,.. _, M1'61u'9PI 111110. C•Ufertd• •1w..., I sell .... ,, .. Atl..,tl< Ctly 81111mo,. 80·~ 8o~ton Buffalo c ... rtuton. w 11 Clll< ... Ci"c:lllN(I c•-1-eo111m11u• o.,, ... , 0e1rott O\llwt" lftOlllMtlOllS J4Kll-llle IC•nMSOty LHV ... Llltt• ltoell MllWIUMe Ml-_.1,.M, Pawl NHIYOfll NO"°I• Ofll .... ............ PllOeftl• --i.1<~ St LO<lis S.llUbOtor .. ., 12 • ti , 3' J3 .30 1J t • s .07 >t I• " ,. u ,. ,, s ,. 1 ,, )0 n S OS n ' ·" 14 11 .. » ,. » '4 SS SS :n ta " '' n 1) , ,. " H 20 ,. ' " 41 .. " ,. 1 ,. JO )0 .,. " .IS .......... ..., ........ ,4 M ...i...,r,..,.,, II'°"" W "(.I I\.; .. """'-II) \:IQpm < .... OO>t.:.<• I plll "''° _ _., .... o. ... __ 6.fl·"O"' -~ II .,0.. 00 ftOt ,~.... "°"' '"°' 0. 9 • I'll (JM! o.t .... o 11 a111 -'°"''°°""""Ile O.h•llf<IO Sillttle 42 11 ScleUfle • ,. Wnlllfllteft U 1 CAI.I '°°IUUA • .... lfltld ., ., •• lltytt>e 1' .. FrHflO •? <10 .01 Llft<•st.f .U <IO L°'Af9lft .0 ft Mtry!tYlhe S9 3' ~ S.4' ...... '" ,, ., 0.111-,. 44 OS ... ,. R0411et » 11 Ot ltM llvtt J' .ea ... .. ...... Cl.., JI ., ... Sect•"*ll6 .. • .... _ .. "' .. , -..io.... ~ •.•• .... ''-** .. ., .• Sellt•e....-1 ., "° Stockte11 ... •I Ot Ulllell SJ M ,OJ .. ,....... .. ,. Cli .. lfte ., • .., Ullt .. Kii .. .. .1i Mt.Wit-" 1' ,IO .....,.,. 9Mclt .. ., Ol!tene .. ., " itol"' ""1• 7t St .............. ti .. ·" ' A 1t-r~ '*"def' <tH't .. '"' to • ctlft uo IHI •lloW ,,,. Peclflc OllHI Ht9ftW•Y ••• 10 oe 1111Clgeo trom lh nl<M 1ode y es _.._.,. too-ecrv•nteve 01 • o•o ...._ relMIOmlS,•1111\orlliesuld. Tiie -"°''"~ 01 more r•111 ts fOHC~I IOtl""4 -Fr•oo H . -· -•t Uorm moves Into Sowtllern C•lllO•lll•. , ... N•tloll•t WHtller Service H IO. •10119 '"• <OHi, llOw.ver. ti•_...., llu,..., l'NCll<t· eel onty e 1!19'11 <Nlnee ot l"""rl t0ftl9M""' ,,...y fletr -11\er •11d 011str •Inell t llowld M tlle r11te t11towello111 '""""'Qllflffll• by ,,..,., ..... -wflll lllfl\I ~ tMClliftt • lfttotMllw• lor9Ces~Mlld. c ... i.1 we.111er , ..... ., (lWdy ......,,. -,, ... , "'°"""' ....... 20 ~ <llM!Ce .. _.. llfM IMwe". MosUy WIV'Y .,,....,...,_, WlllO• .... 10 ~ 20 tt ts mtlfl f'rltlOy ...,_, Hltllt Allley ... ..,. CM t'-' toMlller•turft ••II ,.,.._ ...... ft •1 efMI .. tnl•M '•"'· .., .... """ ,.,,.. .._,, 4 -... TM....., ...._retwre •llt 1111 S1, 8-,1'1 .. -.Ttfle• T"UltlOAY SK-IOw • ~II "'· o t SOC-l\ltll 10 ff pm, 4J , ...... " ""'!Ow •. ,,. "'· 1, ""' "'°" 10.au "'· • • SK-'-S.Olt.l'f\, OS le<tftel l\ltll 11 :,. p "'· •.J 51111 , ........ "'··Mb J.'111"' S•rfR~en """""""' 9Mcll w ..... -" nw... IMt. OIMllllM folr,....,.., tffell: w-twe" fell• '-'· Olft. CllllOftt fllOd wllfl tle1' tlll'tlllf ftHf Not only do I sell a product, I sell myself. 1 f I don 't. my clients go elsewhere. A salesperson must know and understand peo- ple in the communi ty he serves. I read the Orange Coast's community newspaper-the Daily Pilot. . The Daily Pilot keeps me informed about sports and events around town, so I can disc uss them with my clients. · The ads help me keep tabs on my competition and I advertise my products in th e Daily Pilot. My produc t sells better and so do I because of the Daily Pilot. .. DAILY PILOT 642-4321 lefttoAMi.lwet~~. -----------------------------~....,..__...""!"".._ __ _... ..... ~.-..----------....... --__, J '• ,A. --. ---··~---·- 'Rights' For Gays Rejected IACJlAMEN'rO CAP) -Th riNt .. allvo t or botDOIU· uaa llnl'f' tat@ \ ot " l"e• Jeclt 1n 1nll·homo1uu at t•Hher baitJatlve b "ded lo a rtlCM"""" d r at f()f' t•Y·ri•b1.a $QPPCllUn. • ~4Wll.b 'C>t>POftt•nts tllln1 lbe B1 bl• ••d a r 1 u ln1 for an erDploy~r ·1 r lgbt t o dis· l'i1Mi•M•. the ate lndustrtal RtlaU.. Committ ~J ctt'd ._ bill to ban j()b d• crlminauon ,.&1ln1t hom uuals Wedne . d y oo a 2·3 \'Ole Four vote · were~forpa 1 . P.c w •-..lt#cf 'W1LL HONOR IT' Tom Bet•• BIU. 'S AUTHOR Sen. Jemea Miiia A~WI,.,..... 'SO INFANTILE' John VHconc:elloa Thuradly.februery 15. 1979 ~Ally PILOT A• Budget Defirits Constitution Battle Looms~ SACRAMENTO (AP) -Former U.S. S.. Sam Ervin says federa budget deficits are ''fundamentally dishonest," and it will take constitutional convention lo force Congress to balance the budget. The 82-year-old Ervln, who served 20 years in the Senate an chaired lhe Watergate investigating committee before bis retire m~nt ':n 1974, endorsed the con· 1 s~atuttonal convention in a "I think it ts not only impor1 videotaped message today to the tant but absolutely essential rod Assembly Ways and Means the United States to bave J Committee. . balanced federal budget. Defici( He was t_o answer questions flnanclni is fundamentally dis. from committee me~bers via a honest .. Ervin said. f lelephooe hookup to his Morgan· ' l<?o, N.C., law office. A resolu-· lJreakthro••Hh , hon that couJd maJte t:autornia "-'e, I the 27th state calling for a con· J slitiational convention is pending before the committee for a vote SACRAMENTO (AP 1 -Man Juan eouJd be prescribed ror help ln ll't'ating dtseases mclud uig caottr under a blU wtnnlng Senate Stiffens Code by tb-e end of the month. CONGRESS MUST call such a convention if 34 states request one. Swfaces in lettuce Strike ! • CALEXICO (AP) -In th~ first breakthrough in a four{ week-old strike that bas stop~ harvesting of 40 percent or thq nation's lettuce crop, a majo~ grower broke with other farm owners and began negoliallog. separately with United Fa.nit Workers leader Cesar Chavez; the union said. t ( STATE J 'Casual' Assemblymen to Be Barred? Foes and supporters or the constitutional convention were rolling out their big guns today -Ervin in favor and Proposi· lion 13 coauthor Howard Jarvis in oppositioo. its first legislative victory after emotional testimony from a t'ancer victim. Wednesday's 5-1 vote by the Senate Health and Welfare Com· mllt.ee approved SB 184 by Sen. Robert Presley. 0 -Riverside, al· lowing doctors to participate in a four-year pilot marijuana treatment program Rdtates Med~ LOS ANGEL~ CAP > -The slate Public Utilities Com- mission says it is studying whether thous ands or residents were overcharged for electricity this winter and are e ntitled to rebata of $100 or more Since so many customers and so much money is involved, the PUC may have to step in and settle the overcharging issue,' Michael A. Doyle. P UC con- s umer affairs manager for Southern Ca lifornia, said Wednesday. flua.ke• Re~orded SANTA BARBARA <AP> -A pair of identical offshore earth· quakes that measured 3.6 on the Richter scale and occurred within 15 minutes or each other went largely unnoticed . authorities said today. Both quakes were centered nine miles south or here ln the Santa Barbara Channel, SACRAMENTO <AP> The California Legislature is into another coat-and-tie flap pitting the rule-conscious Senate against the more casual As· sembly. The Senate Rules Committee sent a message Wednesday to casually dressed assemblymen: no coat, no tie. no admission. THE COMMJTl'EE'S resolu· lion would prohibit men from coming onto the Senate floor during sessions without wearing a coat and tie. The resolution 's author, Senate President Pro Tem James Mills. refused to s ay that the resolution was aimed at as- se mblymen . But be acknowledged some lower house members have come onto the Senate floor without a coat and tie. "IT IS RELATED to the fact members of the Senate like to be sure there's an appearance or dignity in the stale Senate," the San Diego Democrat said. "It's not aimed at anybody." Reaction in the Assembly ranged from bitterness to ac- quiescence. ''It's sad senators find themselves still caught up in ap- pearances, which usually means they're not committed to sub- stance," said Assemblyman Sun ·'Upset' Seething Gases Reported PASADENA <AP> -A California astronomer has re- ported the discovery or mammoth solar disturbances in which seething gases rise from deep within the sun and spill acros~ the surface. The solar upwellings offer potentially valuable clues to understanding and perhaps someday predicting such phenomena as sunspots and solar flares. which can play havoc with radio communications on earth, said Robert F. Howard of the California Institute or Technology's Hale Observatories. "We really don't know much about what's going on below the surface of the sun and this will help by giving us something else to look at," he said. "It's a large aspect or solar activity that was not known before.'' ashlnyton's lflitrthday -- ELL!BBATION Tlllle edv11M9e of 111 .. e l"lt 'elvt1 lr0111 ylllf loc1I h1dep111- det1t llenlw11e MtelllM wldl 111tit111I cll1ill-ffylftl power. All Items Sobtect To SIOCk On Hand 8-w1tt pencil-type Iron weighs only 4 oz. 9% In. long with %-In. di1meter coppet·plated tip SP80 s749s QT. ~~ROtl 64~ • This mulh·viscosily mo- t or on Is perlect 10< voo• car In all climates 10W40 11MN. CHAIN SAW UgMw9ight ~---+i1t 7.2 lbs. without ber MMf dleln. CUta.,...., 20" kl dlemelef. prun8I. CIJ'9 fit• wood. '"°'9. ~ oltfng. 2 hendln for poeitlYe con- tro4, ~ s.fl T·Tlp. 44/XL PRESTO FRY BABY deep fryer '1699 Deep lriet 1 to 2 servings In minutes, In just 2 cups ot 0<1. Pl11tlc cover. FB0-1 CROCK PLATE Coolr1 1lmoat every foodl Stonewere Hits off for 111y Hrvlng ind 1111 cle1nup. ~ ) .fflll?il' WARING ICE CREAM PARLOR M•Ut %..g1tlon Ice ~Hm. frozen yogYf'I. aherWI. etc. In aboui 30 minutes. Fr" l'IClPI booL Cf.520-1 STORE' HOURS: Mon. thru Fr.I. 9.9 Sat. 9·6, Sa I 0-4 .. ,_, .. - John Vasconcellos. THE SAN JOSE Democrat. who often wears slacks and open-neeked shirts, added: ''I have no need to go on the Senate floor and I assume no senator will have a need to talk about a bill with me anywhere. "It's so infantile to think that a necktie ls a sign or anything." But another assemblyman who often shuns a tie and coat, Tom Bates, D·Berkeley, said be would abide by the rule, if adopted by the full Senate. "I'm oot going to let the ques- tion of a dress code interfere with my ability to be effeetlve, ·' he said. ··As long as the rule is passed, I will honor it, even though I don't think it bas any bearing on issues we're dealing with." "I think it's necessary for the state to cau for a konslitulional convention to submit an ameod· ment to balance the budget"• because there are too many pre-1 ssuresonCongresstocontinuede· ficit speoding, Ervin said in the message recorded earlier this week. "THERE ARE too many de· mands from too many conslit· uents that enjoy deficit financing because it enables them to get a wholelotofmoneyoutofanempty federal treasury for nothing.'' Ervin also said he Is con· vinced that a cooslitulional coo· vention can be limited to budget issues so it would not stray into amendments that might limit civil liberties. Meantime, farm workers re{ tum to the picket Unes today, oF3 day after a funeral for sl · striker Rufino Contreras, and six-member private panel wa!l to begin its iniestigation Into the slaying. • , UFW SPOKESMAN Maro( Gross man declined to identify the company that broke th~ growers' united front, but be in4 dicated the union was hopeful o' a quick settlement. , ·'The separate tallcs certainly indicate they are willing td bargain," Grossman said. He added that Chavez was conducl1 ing the oegotiations personally. 1 IUUlw111llll,t!D!llll1ll\'lM1l Neighborhood Independent Liquor Stores Prices Good Feb. 15 Throuqh Feb. 20, 1979 SCORESBY SCOTCH RefJ. $6.95 s599 Qt. BAtARDI RUM POPOY VODKA RefJ.$6.99 s599 Qt. RefJ. $4.99 s3'! BLACK VELVET RefJ. $13.36 s 1 ·~~ IORDON'S llN RefJ. $6.49 s52t Cl)t. t .ALMAi>.EH •• MILLER® CELLA LAMBRUSCO . M-t•WIMs HIGH $13,., sr• 750"" $199 LIFE 1.5 Ltrs. MR. & MRS. T s5" SUNKIST SODA 99c ,.·12oz. 99c ,.. Case of 24 9'lart .. ..., ...... U RS 2200 Newport llvd. MR. I CK'S Ll9UORS 29n Fal"lew Rd. CostaMna J.1.f.:73 IJ IA YCREST LIQUOR & DELI 333 E. l)tti St. . . CostaMna 646-8262 ............................. Costa Mesa 5!Z:!9!2 FISHER'S tl9UOR 3135 Hm bor ltvcl. CostaMna 549-1405- ....... Mc •••• .. . -........ • • 4 # ............. "' •• 4"'1t_ ~··---..· ...,._ ... , .. , ,..., ..... , E :..• ri I p RobOrtN ~1Pubh her Thomes Keev11 1Ed1tor Or1tnt]P Cort .t Daily PtlOI u tto a ag.e ________ Th·u·r·ld···"·· F.•.b.ru·•·ry-1& ••• '8·7'9·---------S.·r·ba-ra_K.re·i·b·lc·h·'·E·d·ltor-1a.1·P·*-·E·d·lt·O·'-- . Council Man euver A im d a t Election 'rhi~ Wt't'k th,• Nr~pon Aeurh Cit Counrll npprovt•d .1 rt•\ l ion to the c it)· munacapal cnmpaagn ordinance Th Y Urrutl'd 1nd1\·idual contribution to candid h's or • ballot i~11ut• rommlth.'t' to $200, prohlb1tod aH unonymous cuntrlbuhons . pl ccd a Hmit on cash donation and r~qmrt'd "r1lten con nt nf nyont" "ho e name.' ts USL"Ci as t•ndors1JlR or oppo ln~ n t"andadutt* or measure 'rht-r •vas 1on~ art-1mcd at keep•ng tht> cost or cu mp~1gmna within r\!urh They 41CNn rca5onuble Whut re adcnu. should ~ awan> of however. b lhut the campaign l"<>nlribution rt-\'tMons ure only part or a Jt><'k\'ym.-: for pos1llon bv differ nt mh1rt!Sts in the c ity in µn·pnrnllon for th~ pri1. 1980. Ctl) CouncJl elections Thul l'lecuon hould be u hot one Mayor Poul Ryckoff •rnd Mayor Pro-tem Ran ' Wilham.\. ht>th membt.~ of the <-'OUO('ll s slow-growth m.lJ<mly, '"U be up for re election either has made a formal deelaratton bul both have indicated they nre "ons1dl•rin~ running Dis. tmlin~ Councilman Don Mcinnis, whose term will c.1lso expir!' in 1980, hns indicated he won't run. On one side or n t!x l s prmg's battle Jines will be the <.'urrent council majority. who have held up almost all major development in the city since lust April. That's when enOUJ!h nt!W s low-growth members were elected to Up the vote scale in their favor Call t~em a nd their followers Group A. These slow·growth advorates have something going for U1em in municipal elections a political machine of environmentalists and community protectors who can and do bring out the vote. Then there's Group B. On this side are.thos,. who feel the city is b eing misled and throttled by ~conomic roadblocks brought on by the no-growth philosophy. What this group may lac k in numbers is made up in financial s upport from busmess and development firms. Group A, for obvious reasons. would like to limit campaign financing and de pend on shoe leather to persuade voters. Group B supports a proposal advanced by the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce for combining City Council e lections with general elections. The idea presumably is that broad voter turnout in a general e lection might counteract the effectiveness of a campaign gem•rated by slow-growth workers keyed to a cause. Vote rs in the city of Irvine last spring approved such a meas ure . They voted to combine city elections with general primary balloting. But Group /\ argues that local issues might be s wamped by more impressive statewide campaigns if the elections were combined. · 1'he lines between Group A and Group B were drawn some time ago. As they grow more and more definable. expect more a nd more stiffening on both sides. Most certainly. expect an interesting election next spring. Questionable T a ctic /\ h.•al'hl·rs · un10n group at Golden Wl·st Collcgl· in J 1untinglon Bcarh hus l'harged the Coast Community College District with a S2.9 milhon e rror in its $67.5 million budgN. Citing a statt• gu1dchne that requ1r~s a t least 50 pcr- t<•n l of the district 'i-~ea rly budget go to teac her salaries. t tw union leaders "·•Y the S2.9 million has improperly ht•t•n put to u!-.c in non-tl'aching areas. The l<.•achcrs, members of the American Feder a tion of T eachers, haVl' demanded a public hearing with col- ll'ge trustees on the issul·. That seems fair enough, until one looks deeper into I :1('t1cs tx>in~ c mploy<.'d by the union to maintain an upper hand <incl sustain media interest. The union reportedly h as refused lo turn over the doc uments that arc supposed to prove the mis appropria· lio n of funds to district officials. A district SPokes man notes that t he union is now in- \'Olvt>d in a campaign with another teachers ' group for lhL· right lo represent the teachers in the next round of •collective bargaining. · tndePd, it might be a scheme la~ a dis trict spokes man contends l to "dribble out" the inform~tion of the district's alleged misdeed to achieve maximum effect in the recruitiQg drive. Ttlis is a well-tested tactic, but one that does little to sus tain the general view of teachers a s profession als who h ave the best interests of the community in mind. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on 1h1s page are those ol their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. e ox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boy d/ Sa/ ety T ip ByL.M. BOYD Am advised that a bull fi e rce enough lo attack a person who ve ntures onto said beast's turf will not do so 1r that per son has no clothes on Claim 1s lhl' hull ev ide nlly thinks a naked human is just another harm- les& animal. Quite so ll's logical. J ntriguing. isn't it? Ev<.'n mor(' Intriguing, I think. is how this fancy fact 4:8me to be found out. An horologist Is somebody who sludl~ time measure .• ~ar Gloon1y Gu Huvc you t.tv<'r seen uch a blundering mess H the Harbor Shoppfna Ct'ntl'r parkln& area., It 's been going on for month and -cu worse In teod of better. MJR me nts. and an accurate timPpiece to an horologist. It 's claimed, is one that neither loses nor gains more than one second every 6,000 years. The atom clocks do that. Q ''Whal's the most diI- ficult tongue twister or all? .. /\. Debatable. But some or the best voices in radio an<t television claim it's Impossi- ble to repeat al top speed three times thi s : "Rt>d lea ther . yellow leather ." Persona lly, though. none seems harder than · · 'Tbe c lo lhcs moth 's 'mouth closed." Q "Whal docs it signify when a mockercl stays still tn lbe waler?," A. That said mackerel I~ dead. A mackerel has to swim to live. Q. "What kind or Income do l's the 'Peanut~· comic strip with all it~ s plnorrs bring in ?" A F1Q\Jre u bout USO mllhon a Yt•ar fo'rom movies. theatPr.1, TV. hooks. so on Why doe. an ordinance in hrcvcport. La .• make lt II legal for ca funeraJ director lO ¥1ve oway matt'hbook!'J? Jack Anderson Shah Blames Carter and CIA WASutNGTON President rarter nnd the Central In lt'illlt1tincc Agency have been act lln1 thclr lumps Crom just about everybody ror not knowlng what WH aolng on in Iran, supporting the t huh until it wus too late and fulllniJ to cultivate contact.ls with the t•icll~d Mu ~llm leader Ayatollah Khomeini. Rut there is one man. perhaps the only mon in the world, who bClil'VCll JUSt the opposite : S h u h Mo h.lmm e d H t· i n P:-ihlevi. Em- bittered and rnc n•asmgly paranoid since he was fo r ced las t month to nee the nation he had ruled <.1nd loot- ed. the shah believes Carter and the CIA knew all too well what was happening in Iran. In fact. he actually believes the CIA engineered his fall from power und the ascendancy of Kho · meinl. THIS ASTONISHING in- terpretation of recent events. which flies in the face of conven· tionally accepted reality. was expressed just hours after the s hah fled into "temporary" ex· He. He had a private talk with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat at Aswan on Jan. 16; in· telligence sources have provided us with a detailed report of this top-secret conversation. While Carter's critics have faulted him for blindly support- ing the shah in the face or mounting evidence that he was losing hls grip on Iran, the shah himself credits Carter with the most astute diplomatic double- dealing since Talleyrand. And while the CIA 's detractors have Mailbox custlgated the agency ror ignor· ing Khonelna, the s hah told Sadat that a s early a s last ~pring he had undeniable in· formation "thut American agenlc; arc flirting with the opposition." THE ll.S. EMBASSY in Tehran convinced him. said the shah. thut a prerequisite for bet· ter understanding of President Carter was the dismissal or Gen. Nemalollah Nasslri, head of Iran 's secret police. When he fired Nassiri on June 6. 1978, Un· . der U S. pressure. he told the Egyptian president that left· wing Moscow-led groups in Iran interpreted this as a s ign of weakness and stepped up their opposition with massive strikes. The pres ident later hailed Nassiri's ouster a s evidence of the shah's concern for ttuman rights. said the shah. He told Sadat that "the biggest double- c ros sing took place" whe n Carter reaffirmed his support for Iran. knowing Cull well that American agents already had ··open channels" to Khomeini. If that was the biggest. what the shah described as "the most disgusting double-crossing and treason ls1c l wus carried out .. in the final days or the January crisis in Tehran. The s hah. act- ing on o\merican advice, decided lo leave Iran temporarily to ena· ble the military and his other s upporters lo keep Khomeini from returning and pave the way for the shah's eventual re turn to power ACTUALLY. according lo the shah ·s unique view of cvcnl.s, the Americans we re warning the Iranian military that if they tried to seize control and bring the shah back, the United States would cut off all supplies and as- sis tance This warning was de· livered, the shah told Sadat. to lop Iranian brass by Gen Robert E . Huyser. second in command of American forces in Europe, and word of the warn- lng was passed on to Khomeini in Paris. lt was this sneaky power play. the shah said. that made it possi- ble for Khomeini to return from exile and which thwarted the l)hOh 's plan lo regain his throne . Tn llght or his oxperiPnce, the Rhah told Sadat, the Egyptian president should not trust the Carter administration or take its advice. Footnote: I\ CIA s pokesman said the agency could not com- ment on the shah's int<?rprctu- tion of events . Parents Responsible for Grade Inflation? To.the Editor : The Daily Pilot's negative position on public employees. and teachers specifically. has become quite obvious to anyone reading the editorials of l/29 con· ceming striking teachers and 2/6 concerning· •grade inflation.'· I disagree with you.r position. Effective teachers are very similar lo e ffective parents. Respect for others. self confidence and pride in themselves and their family <or school in the case of teachers l are vital ingredients of an) suc- cessful adult ,guida nce. Good parents and teachers have a way or passing these traits on to young people. Some teachers never have these attributes and that is too bad. Those of us who do have them are slowly losing them ever y lime we read editorials like yours. That is really too bad. Grade inflation occurs because the public demands that their son or daughter be pam· pered so he/she can go on to col· lege. Many students need to be disciplined but teachers are a fraid to act in fear of an irate parent going to the school board claiming. "This teacher is not being nice to my little child." CONCERNED parents should let their child's teacher know they approve or discipline. If au parents did this. you would see the end of grade inflation. It is not the fault of the teachers. but rathe r or parents and public pressure to "look better" than other students and schools . In regard to striking teachers In the high schools. you are wrong. Respect, self-confidence and pride cannot be passed on to students by a teacher who is consistently having his pride and dignity dimmlshed by the Howard Jarvises. school boards ond public. Almost every teacher l know who teaches sub- ject matter in a s uperior man- ner and also instills pride. res pect, and confidence in stu· dents was on strike . They knew they could not ins till these positive altitudes in students if they felt aa if they were being made th& tar1et. of consistent de· Rradlng acllon and attitudes oI thb public. The enthusiasm and concern teachets have for education and students is the determin\ng fa c- tor which separates a class of reaular graduates from a cta11s of young adults prepared to live f ulfllling and productive livei>, Fewer and fewer teachers arc 3ble to create thJ type or en vlronment because they ore made to feel llkt overpaid. un· der -worked second ·class c1tl1 ns. Help us' NORMAN HALL "'•' 8 .. tem Werle To O\e Edltor: A1 one, parenl who has bad children ln lbe marcblnc band at NewPorl Harbor High School • and who has served on the PT A board for three years as PTA communications vice president <conducting dialogue with the parents and stafll. ways and means chairman <reins tating the donkey basketball game and raising money for scholarships for many deserving senior stu· dents l, and P"esently serving as h onorary se rvi ce award ~hairman, I urge all parents and teachers of NHHS students to do the following with regard to the board of education action toward Richard England: 1. PRESENT pertinent facts that have not been heard !omit· Ung emotionalism) lo the Board of Education. 2. Recognize that laking sides on e motional "issues" Is destructive not constructive. 3. Let the established system or the school district's hearing procedure operate in an environ- ment or order and objectivity. 4. Teach the students by tbjs example that the system will work justly. Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson s tated at a CTA· sponsored teachers· rally on Feb. 1 that. geoeralJy, teachers today do not have public sup- port. It is my view that the teachers using petitions against the board of education and/or attacklnf the integrity of their principa will reduce pub1i<: sup- port for themselves. CAROLG .BLANCHARD It' rit er llfg•t To the Editor: Eileen Dover was so right in her observations about current Newport Beach values In her Thursday. Feb. 8 letter. l would go a step further by stating that things or cultural value art. music, Uterature. etc. are little prized in the city of sybarJtes. We have the specter of foot- ball versus the arts in the ca~e or Mr Richard England and the Newport lllU'bor High School ad- m in 1 str allOn . As a rormer Hllrbor High student. I know that the administr ation would almost always give the advan· ·tagc to football. Undoubtedly, they would cite the popularity or football with the public. In Newport Buch. we have no culturAJ tradition that couJd ap proach the pre-eminence of m e dia·product-d popular culture. Therefore, it takes a publit' shOw·down to gel 1ny sort of recog_nlllon ~o the art&. MARK ST'tVEN PRAIGG 1'fl••n 8e•e•••••1 To the Editor In his letter lo the editor dated Feb. 4, L. Arthur Wom r . Jr •. Ph D. demonstral d thAt h mlsscdsom tducat on onhl!lway to bccomln& a Ph. O t"ortunntcly. he's one of the few teachers lbat r am Htant or who donn't unde"'tRnd th free cntcrpriM sy tcm. moral richts. legal rights. day's pay for a day's work. democracy. majority ruJe with minority rights. and what the largest single cost is in most local governments. Maybe he missed pre-school ' JIM de BOOM Mallh~Ftdl To the Editor · Last year the colleges an nounced ~Y wouldn't m ail out their catalog schedules to re. duce costs . Well. I received t.hree this spring : one from Golden West. one from Orange Coast and one from Coastline Community College. Also, l noticed they were sent to my place of employment. Apparently, Proposition 13 didn't hurt t.he colleges as much as they feart>d, or else they just don't believe in cutting costs. MRS. A. J . S MITH Teted01t Tl•• To the Editor: I have just discovered. tonight, why we Americans are becoming ·rnore and more filled with anxiety. Let me trace tonight's happenings in my home Cand probably repeated in many other" throughout the country1. I 'm fixing dinne r while mv children are watching Captain Kirk of Star Trek fi ght it out with a big monster . Then the Bionic Man chases and fights with a man driven made by some kind of rays. We eat dinner and receive an obscene phone call. We hurry to finis h dinner so we can see "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest·• which I am sure. with a name like that. will give a comical re- lief to my already drooping even mg AFTER THE bloody s uicide. frontal lobotomy. murder and victory or the really sick nurse showing Ol\Ce again the rutillty or the good and normal (if there Is s uch a thing us normal 1 I flipped to Channe l 2 's • 60 Minutes" and learned. in detail, how our country is being taken over by r3t.s whose fleds carry the "Black Death " During Lhe breaks we were ke pt up to dale on the earth quake that 1ust happened an<f the overthrow or the govern ment or Iran. with speculat1on on the premiere's suicide. Along with this I was told that gas for my guzzling station wagon wou.ld soon be over $1 a gallon. And now for the 11 o'clock news .. \IRS. WALTER CORMEY Parle Po••••~ To the Editor: fl is surprising to read the editorial of Feb. 5, where the Daily Pilot is completely on the side or the landowner of the open s pace between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. the Irvine Company, and seems to ignore the latest development of the drive to have a national urban park created with federal money (actually our lax money l. The Irvine Company has been through all the years more lhan cooperative and bas always stat- ed that the land in question is for s ale. None or the groups in- terested in keeping this open space for us and future genera- tions has ever intended lo have this land confiscated. but they are trying lO have state. county, federal money and from the Land and Conservancy Agen~y <which was created for this purpose > to buy open space. THE DEDICATION of some land in exchange for the permlt to build with higher density is a usual procedure and benefits all parties involved; the future resi· de nts who have open space around or nearby and also the landowner. who produces res- idences in a nicer environment. Al the time w.hen it is actually well known that Rep. Patterson s ucceeded to gel in Lhe omnibus bill $10.000 for a study. that tbe study team has already toured the property in ques tion and that the study will be finished in May, il is hard lo understand that the Daily Pilot does not know the landowne r will not. have lo face a "financial lick· Ing." Rep. Patterson has a very · good reason to ask the federal government ror financial help to creat~ a larae national urban park ln Orange County. Orange County is park-poor and our res- idents have to drive many mll~a to Mammoth end the na· tlooal p arka In northern Catlromla. 1'tle envisioned park here would serve about to m lllk>n people from Loi Aqeles County and Oran1e County. BETTY AECKEL • ~tt•r• Jrom ~ore wlcome T~ rigid lO "°"*"9e ~·~· to fit rpoct (Jr"',,.,.,,. *' .. t'fM'tlfd Utftt• of JOO taOrde or ,._ euill bC! ~ ~ AU~ "*If mcllllN mid nlCdUftg ad· dreu but~"'°' t. dNwicf on requert ., ruf l*C*ftl rtolOll " Of> portflf Pwtrt1 ~u not t. publl.lhed -4•··-.... -.... -....... -~ ft, •• ---.. ...... ... • ...... ~·' , ... MORE OPINION McCabe Money Magic In Hong Kong ....... TIM cJ'OWdt of Roq Kone OdMM •boa.mu.. acrambl and arurry onto tho low r d k of lbe Star FaTY for lbe trip from Kowloon to i-. K.ooa bJad act .. ll tbeJ baa Just..._,.. leaaed trom on.on. Tbelr drive •'f :~d ~mesa to move ll palpa, ~ Durtna t.be IJCVf'D·mlnule rCJT)' r\dt <l'Ol5llna au rent.I> lb y set ti lo to t.belr t'Oftf1oement on tbe ll or staJ>ding up c~ majority > as II they Wetre ln prison kest.Jve , bead-swlvelln&, wantlna to get out. Busin• is on their minds. And when the ride ii over and lbe laJ\ll>lank up and they scurry again ooto the b land. in rroot of t.be towen.na Coonaugbt Center building, the 1ma1e ii repeated aod tneluctaltle: The men and women are a1ain released from a prison and are targetine like bullet.I to lbear out bit of business. I've never seen anytblo1 Uke it. This is possibly' the most money-centered place in the world. lt'our million people -98 percent Chinese - live In an area of 391 s quare miles. The competitioll it brutal. You have to be good to make it here. One out. or 20 students who want. to set into one of tbe two local universities can be accepted. The otben go to the States or Eng.land. PBYSICALL Y, IT'S EASY to get to the top of this place. You take a funi cular ride up 1300 feet on the Peak Tram. You get off near the top of the peak. What you see is rather like first looking into Chapman's Homer. On the island skyscrapers are almost entwined. For want of space, dwelling and office buildings trace the clouds above the harbor. A pulaating economy accounted in 1976 for $3 billion in exports to the United States alone. This miracle bas occurred since 1945. Before World War II this Crown Colony was a sleepy place heavily dependent on the opium trade. Indeed, it was founded as a result of the Opium Wars. Theo came the t errible Japanese occupation, when the population dropped from 1.6 million to batr a million. The Hong Kong you see today bas grown from that. THE OPIUM TRADE was ouUawed by the British when they reoccupied the area. With the return lo stability under the British, Chinese refugees and immigrants swarmed in at the rate or 100,000 monthly and soon surpassed the prewar population. The Communist revolution of 1949 gave direct.loo to the economy: Industrialization. The big laipans <bosses> came in from Shanghai and built up a huge textile industry. Today tourism is the second largest industry. The place is a political anomaly. The Chinese Reds could have overthrown it at almost any moment since 1945, but they chose not to. The Hong Kong Chinese could easily have routed the British white devils, but they chose not to. Hong Kong remains a British Crown Colony. On the day.to-day leveJ, British rule is felt here more strongly than any place in the world, including, I fear, the United Kinedom. BAN SUYIN, the distinguished writer, nailed down the curious political structure of this place in o much-quoted sentence: "Squeezed between giant a ntagonists crunching huge bones of contention, Hong Kong bas achieved within its own narrow territories a co·existence which is baffling, i nfuriating, incompre hens ible, and works splendidly on borrowed lime in a borrowed place." A newspaperman who bas lived here for 40 years eocapsulat.es the miracle of this place, for miracle it is. The influx of people after World War 11 strained the economy, but the solution to this life-or-death problem came from the very people who were flooding it to swell the population. These Chinese immigrants brought with them industrial skills, imagination and, most important or all, a determination to work hard for their living." One ride on the Star Ferry will persuade you forever of those words about hard work. These folk a re loaded for bear. Pamch ••.NJust admit these wall posters .. getting a bit out hand." E•.curw• Ott/c.1: 7812 Edinger Ave .. Huntington Beach, CA 92647 Sol~n Cal110t11i. R«}IOfllJf O/lices 8956 Valley Vi w SI ~ Pant CA l'I06<0 20715 S Avaion O~ Carson CA 90746 Gl' 22821 laho FOlf'~I Or . (llhf' Forest). El To10 CA 92630 • 1001 E lml)(l1l1tl Hwy. La H11b111, CA 90631 • 140 Long O<'nch BIVd , l onq OcM'h. CA 90807 .,W'-l c; 1096 lrvtne 8111(1 . luthft, CA 92680 u:• 235 H Citrus A~ West CcMna CA 91793 . ~. Febru.ry 15, 1979 DAILY ptLOT A 7 • IDENTS' -.. BIRTHDAY SALE Four-piece suit gives you Iota of fashion looks In one handsome package! For the man who wants to get his wardrobe together with a minimum of guesswork, effort and expense, this four-piece sui t should be part of his game plan. When the tailoring and detailing are first-rate. why hesitate? Start with the jacket. vest. slacks and contrasting slacks and have several finished looks immediately. Distinctive polyester weave. Light denim, light grey. wheat. Regularly 195.00 169.90 silverwoods 45 FASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT BEACH Carpet Town·s ·,Presidents irthda SO. YOS. SAt.E PRtCe SAVE luxurious 1nd thick.• Saxony plush In beautttul eolld eerthtones, and you SAVE $6.00 sq. yd.I Here's the elegance you want. with the features you want ••• REGULAR PRICE 40sq. yda. a 599IO 50 sa. yds. 74950 '359'° •24000 44910 300" 100% nylon, continuous heet-eet yarns to kffp thllt new look, longer .•• all at the savings you've been looking for! SAVE $4.00 aq. yd. Saxony plu1h with today'• s5se look 1t a 1peclal low price. Srlen eolld ~Uont to moo.. from, In 100% nylon deelg~ to SQ. YD. loc* lowly, long«. Reg ...... eq. yd. WESTMINSTER 15338 Beech Blvd. K-lleft Ce"'9t .. Mc1Padcl9ft Mon. a frt. tll t • T-., w.d., """9. • t .... "". • lun.11 .. 893-7548 --,. - ,. 60 sq. yds. 89940 53940 36()00 75aq. yds. 1, 12425 67421 45000 100 sq. yds. 1,499°«> 899°0 6000° SAVE 13.00 aq. yd. sees Ulan and luxury lrl 1peclal • Nlepricft.100%nytonfieet...C yama tor extra IOrtO ...,, ....,. SO. YD. lta new loc* ~. CMoM frOM I ~ .......... eq..... . Town SAVE $3.00 sq. yd. Nylon plu1h In bHUtlful s7ee MWelt muttk:o10r1t1on1 to entMlnC9 any room. 11 c!Mr cotcw.. In Nllt-..t yame f0t SO. YO. •ll1nl ... end bHuty. Reg. S10M eq. yd. ~...,sxm1ttrAY&UkL 2111 So. Bltetol 1 ml ..... of lo. co..,.... .......... .. ....... , ................ 11 .. W'(CllDllYI Til~ t • lllf ,§'-~llJ .. : U-fUI flt ...... MOlllt tAIY CMOIT Ulltill • 30.0 M Dll't NO INlt.,_,, ACCfe ---...cMIO •lllUflllQWIOI a..-'11.._ __ . .... • • • use CALIFORNIA NEW Ma.ER Of PIEDMONT'I D!BOL T fAMtL Y CHECKS IN Mra. Dorothy 0.80ft, Cent9r, Introduce• Newcomer Reynaldo, 13, Rltht DeBolts Add to Family Adoptive Couple Now Hqve 20 Youngsters PIEDMONT, Calif. <AP> -A week ago 13-year-old Reynaldo had never heard of the DeBotts. Now be is one, the 20th child in a most tmusual family. The new adoptive parents of '!_ tile beaming Mexican -born " youngs te r are Robert and Dorothy De Bo lt, known to m illions around the world through a book, "19 Steps Up the 1• Mountain," and a n Academy Award -winning film called. "Who are the DeBolts? And where did they get 19 kids?" THE COUPLE IS dedicated t.o • raising c hildren, especially youngsters who are so han- dicapped that m ost people wouldn't take them in. Reynaldo is in that category. He bas a leg paralyzed by polio, •nd was a victim of chitd abuse 'before t;.eing placed in a series of foster homes. · With the DeBolts. he hu a permanent home. The DeBolts, · each in their second mal'riage, 'h ave six biologic4l children; Reynaldo is their 14th adopted youngster. THERE ARE Korean and • Vietnamese war orphans -crip- pled. blind. abused. Two or the • children survived the Air Force CSA Galaxy plane crash in Viet- nam in 1975 that killed nearly 200 persons, mostly orphans be· inc airlifted to America before the Communist takeover. There's a black girl born with nt> arms or legs. There are two pa raplegic Korean boys, one who stepped on a land mine, another wounded by an artillery shell. There's also a severely crippled Caucasian boy, "just to show we're not prejudiced," Mrs. DeBolt, SS, has said. The DeBolts invited reporters to their home to introduce their latest family member. "WE SWORE FOR the past four years that we wouldn't adopt any more children, and then we found out about Reynaldo. and be needed a home badly and he needed it right away," said Robert DeBolt. 48, who quit his work as a civil engineer in 1975 to run the adop- tion agency for handicapped childre n that tbe DeBolts founded the year before. He said the -family gets no covemtnent help and is support- ed by royalties from their book a nd fees for lectures given across the nation. The adoption agency runs on donated money. "There's no such thing as an unadoj)t.able kid, but that's the way some adoption agencies think," saJd DeBolt. "Through our agency -Aid to Adoption of Special Kids -we have placed over 500 children.·· NINE OF THE 20 DeBolt children still live at the family's seven-bedroom, six-bath home in this commun it y next to Oakland. They s hare the house with three goldfish. a dog named Yup Yup and a cat named Lokelanl. Six DeBolts are in college and three have married, and the f a mil y i n c lud es two grandchildren. The DeBolt movie, televised nationally last year , brought 20,000 letters, about 2,000 of them from people who ex- pressed an interest in adopting homeless handicapped children. Why do the De Bolts do It? .. BECAUSE WE'RE getting much more out or it than we put into it. We're not saints. We're doing what we want to do, and having a hell of a lot of fun doing it," said DeBolt. Mrs. De Bolt said she ano her first husband, who died in 1963 ol a brain tumor, started adopt.inc handicapped children "out of gratitude. We bad so much to be happy about, and it j~t didn't seem to be enough to jWst say, 'Thank you, God.' "We looked around and saw so m any children who needed help. There's an incredible sense of satisfaction." On lbe De Bolt's kitchen bulletin board ls Wa poem from one of the children: Ye tdlo have no home; Ye 1Mo hooe no Jove : Ye 1Mo hove no laght: Unto thia ~ COTM; And ye ahall have. f 'Readers • DENNIS THE MENACE MARMADUKE THE FAMILY CIRCUS DR. SMOCK ' Your Top Five Camie Favorites More t han 1,600 Daily Pilot readers responded to the annual favorite comics poll The five favorite strips, in or- der of number of votes cast, are: PEANUTS, DENNIS THE MENAC E , -~M'A RMADUKE , FAMILY C IRCUS AND DR. SMOCK. We Took A Poll • • On four successive days in J anuary .. the Daily Pilot invited readers to list their five favorite comic strips from a choice of 18 presented on the mail-in ballot. cast was 7 ,000. Ba llots were sort- ed by age group a nd the favorites are shown below. All 18 co mic strips are ranked by total votes each received . The total number of votes How They Ranked Peanuts Dennis the Menace Marmaduke Family Circus Dr. Smock Motley's Crew Tumbleweeds Gordo Funky Wiakerbean Nancy Shoe Judge Parker Moon Mullins Agatha Crumm Miss Peach Queenie Geriatrix Superheroes By Age Groups Under 16 Peanuts Family Circus Dennis the Menace Marmaduke Nancy 35-44 Peanuts Dr. Smock Gordo Tumbleweeds Motley's Crew 16-24 25-34 Peanuts Peanuts Funky Winkerbean Dennis the Menace Dennis the Menace Marmaduke Tumbleweeds Tumbleweeds Marmaduke Family Circus 45-64 Over 64 Peanuts Dennis the Menace Dennis the Menace Peanuts Marmaduke Family Circus Dr. Smock Marmaduke Gordo Nancy iHE COMICS ••• ONE MORE REASON PEOPLE ALL ALONG THE ORANGE COAST ENJOY READING TME DAILY PILOT 642-4321 _.-i ............... -.. ~ _A_8 ___ o_~_L_v_~_L_o_r ____ ~s ____ ___;T~h~urec1:.:::,:a~y~,,~et>~r~u~1~!..!:'~~t1~n!... __ ~------~--~---C.:::,A~L~l~F~O~R~N:.:!!:IA::_1t------------------------------------------------------------------------ -~.~------ NEW MEMBER OF PIEDMONT'S OEBOL T FAMILY CHECKS IN Mra. Dorothy DeBolt, Center, Introduce• Newcomer Reynaldo, 13, Right DeBolts Add t o Family Adoptive Couple Now Have 20 Youngsters P IEDM ONT, Calif (AP> -A week ago l3·year-old Reynaldo had never heard or the DeBolts. Now he is one, the 20th child m a most unusual family. The new adoptive parents of the beaming Mexican-born youngster a re Robert and Dorothy DeBoll, known to millions aroun d the world through a book, "19 Steps Up the Mountam," and an Academy Aw a rd-winning film called, "Who are the De Bolts? And where did they gel 19 kids'!" THE COU PLE IS dedicated lo raising children, especially youngsters who are so han· dicapped that mos t people wouldn't take the m m. Reynaldo is in that category. He has a leg paralyzed by polio. and was a victim or child abuse before being placed an a senPs or foster homes. With. the DeBolts, be has a permanent home. The DeBolts. each in their second marnage. have six biological children; Reynaldo is their 14th adopted youngster THE RE ARE Korean and Vietnamese war orphans crip· pied. blind, abused . Two of the children survived the Air Force CSA Galaxy plane crash in Viel· nam in 1975 that killed nearly 200 persons, J1HM\Lly orphans be· ing airlifted-'fo Alnerica before the Communist takeover There's a black girl born with no arms or legs. There are two paraplegic Korean boys, one who stepped on a land mine, another wounded by an artillery shell. There's also a severely crippled Caucasian boy, "just lo show we're not prejudiced," Mrs . De Bolt, 55, has said. The OeBolts invited reporters to their home to introduce their latest famil)' member "WE SWOtlE FOR the past fou r years that we wouldn't adopt any more children, and t hen we found out about Rt>ynaldo, and he needed a home badly and he needed it right away." said Robert De Boll, 48, who quit has work as a civil engineer in 1975 to run the adop- t aon agency for handicapped c hildre n that the DeBolls founded the year before He said the family gets no government help and is support- ed by royalties from their book and fees for lectu res given across the natjon. The adoption agency runs on donated money "There's no such thing as an unadoptable kid, but that's the way some adoption agencies thank," said De Bolt. "Through our agency -Aid to Adoption of Special Kids -we have placed over 500 children." NI NE OF THE 20 DeBolt children still live at the family's seven-bedroom, six-bath home in this community next to Oakland. ... They sbare the house with three goldfish. a dog named Yup Yup and a cat named Lokelani. Six DeBolts a re in college and thr ee have married. and the family in c lud es two grandchildren. The DeBoll movie, televised nationally last year, brought 20,000 letters. about 2,000 of them from people who ex· pressed an interest in adopting homeless handicapped children. Why do the De Bolts do it? "BECAUSE WE'R E etetting much more out of at than we put into it. We're not sainls. We're doing what we want lo do. and having a hell of a lot of fun doing it," said De Bolt. Mrs. DeBolt said she and her first husband. who died in 1963 or a brain tumor. started adopting handicapped children "out of gratitude. We had so much lo be happy about. and it just didn't see~ to be enough to just say, 'Thank you, God.' "We looked around and saw so many children who needed help. There's an incredible sense of satisfaction." On the De Bolt's kitchen bulletin board is this poem from one of the children: Ye who hove no home; Ye who hove no love ; Ye who have no light: Unto thu house come. And ye aholl hove. . l/4" PARTICLE BOARD 4 99 4x8 SH EET Hey. wait a minute. Who was that that JUSt lau9hed? We a ll agreed sp-0nding and savin9 m oney wu serious business. No horsing around now. 30" WIDE CONOFLEX Very tough surface. nice looking. easy to put down, l\asy to cut with a pair of utility shears even. See 1t done DEMO ALL STORES SAT. 10 • 2 P.M NORELCO 8 FOOT FLUORESCENT TUBE 1~?. Ha. h a, hoo. ha . l just thou9ht of somethin9 funny. You see there was this traveUn9 saleaper•on .•• BLACK & DECKER BELT SANDER 37?4~ Extra good price, but subject to stock on hand. The new load is goin9 to be hiqher. so think it over. THOMPSON'S WATER SEAL 2~~ 6~A~ You know I've read about t h is in Sunset magazine for years. T h ey tell me it wor ks real well. KELLER ALUMINUM PATIO DOORS WITH SCREEN 5'x6'8" 99.88 6'x6'8" 117 .88 8'x6'8" 127 .88 . . . -.............. DOOR MIRROR -3?.!a .. It has a wa lnut finish frame. J remember they used t o have mirrors like the fun house, good for a lotta la ughs. SENTRY FLOOR SAFE 77 7 ~s-2 The fire protection quality isn·t to be sneezed at (ah. ah .... no gethn9 c razy now!) Keep tcu stuff an it and deduct it. RUFF-IT WALL TEXTURE 9 77 2 GAL. PAIL N ow you ean make a p lain dry wall really t extured. Follow -~ t radittonal strokes or create something of your own, ready t o use. HOMTEK 18" UNDER COUNTER LIGHT · 4 44 #}51 15 Tor a 15 wat t bulb. included. it sure 91ves plenty of light. Ruru; on very little energy, prednlled for m ounting. NAILS 50 LB. CARTON BRIGHT BOX 18. 97 COMMON BRITE 18.97 VINYL SINKERS 19 • 97 EG BOX 21.97 EG ROOflNG 23.97 BUG-GETA SNAIL PELLETS 88C 212LBS. The snails or the p lants. Whlch sh all it be? No peaceful coexi.tence here. SULPHATE OF AMMONIA I 3~0 LBS. For fast g~n-up you can't bea t it. but do read the ba9 a nd do like they eay, it's potent. . .... Thuraday, February 15, 1979 s DAILY PILOT A9 WYNN'S PRODUCTS 15 OZ. SPITFIRE GAS TREATMENT 15 OZ. ENGINE TUNE-UP 11 314 OZ. CARBURETOR CLEANER Which do you prefer? A smiling YOUR CHOICE high price or• grouchy low price? 8 I can tell by your frown what the 7 C answer is. EA. SPARKOMATIC CAR STEREO SPEAKER SETS •• •• The pnces aren't too scarey. in fact very nice. (With your tin ear a couple of mevaphones would be enough.) Come hear the display. IN-DOOR SET ,,,._. WITH 10 OZ. MAGNETS No. SK-610 HANG-ON OR IN-DOOR SET WITH 12" 4'4' 10.2 oz. MAGNETS IDJ No. SK-510 II) 6x9 REAR DECK ---~cl.llo•AXIA~oLz.s~~24" ~ G PRESTONE II AHTI ·FREEZE/SUMMER COOLANT 2aa Hey. thU is lower than the last time I saw it at our place. Okay. CASTROL 20/50 WT . GTX MOTOR OIL 63C Ot. This has to be the greatest . Price isn't bad either. ARMOR ALL 4 OZ. SPRAY 8 OZ SPRAY lti OZ SPRAY WITH TRIGGER 32 OZ. REnLL 77c 1.37 2.87 4.47 Who knew 1t would be 'iuch a hit? Renewo; the life in leather. and vinyl. Actually comb ines to give protection. IDEAL SECURITY HOOD OR TRUNK LOCK Hobby1'>t or ju'lt need ,1 little-around· the-house fiiung, this may be all you need or need to pay Eve.rythino I or J'OU to auemblearnce WMtAel'A\ug 1u.tal buildinv with •lidin9 · lockabU. doc:>.n cm yow: slab or deck! The lliM9 &N , nominal .o it they're off a ....,.....~...,...-~1-IJ...J.P> ALLISON STRAW ·HAT FOAM CUSHION 3~s!.9900 Read where some people go around steahnq ba tteries. distributors. etc. Lock ·em out. )Ust lock 'em out. ASHFLASH . POWER HOUSE LANTERN wmi 6 VOLT BATTERY Boy. this 1s really less than you"d expect to pay for a hght lake this. (Who 1s this ashflash and what·s his ~ame?) 2ss EASY DRIVER RATCHET 4?s?.1 You grip 1t hke a baseball and the ratchet device gives you tremendouB turning power. reversible, snap in bits. ORTHO SYSTEMIC ROSE & FLOWER CARE 1 ~!.SHAKER CAN You shalte it around the plant. dig it in s lightly. it's absorbed through the r oots and when t he bug bates the plant ••. gotcha! t:i'A-~ ....... ..,_ __________________________ ..;;;;;. __ ~ SCOTTS BONUS D FH<is dichondra and does something aWful to sneaky crabgrass and spotted spurge (spotted what?). 777 COVERS 2000 SQ. FT. BORDOIL DORMANT SPRAY Spray your roMS and all dormant plants. Gets thoM bugs before they get strong and mean. ( Good.bye Terri is:;:=:;;;aii White alias George. -.·u mia you.) litti. don't ~· G.E. BATTERY BURGLAR ALARM ~ 597 Hey. when this goea off everybody starts to confess all at once. Make a cat burglar a "mo~" burglar. Batteries e•tra. TORO TRIMMERS The string trimmers, actually nylon cord, that do such a nice job without' metal blades that go dull. No. 900 TRIMMER 'I 5'7 ' 9" Cutting Widtil! No . 1100 TRIMMER/EDGER 12" Cutting Width No. 1200 TRIMMER/EDGER 12" Cutting Width Heavy Duty SCOTTS SPREADER You can really apJ'e&d it around with this. Any Scotts fertilizer or anybody's dry formula. 24aa This is the stuff you can look out thru and they can't s" you inside making faces at everybody. Or get the tinted stuff so you cut down 366 Cool oH, let the air circulate all around you. Gives a httle , more back support too. .. · [·::~ EVEREADY CORD BATTERIES YOUR CHOICE 17C No. 935 No. 950 EA. Get enough for all the hghts and the gadgets. At thLs price the pain 1s very little. PRE-HUNG 1 3/s " SLAB HOLLOW CORE DOORS Hinges mounted to one 1amb s ide. sufficient jamb and door stop to finis h the installation . HARDBOARD 2·G"x6'8 .. 2377 LAU AN 2'6"x6'8'' 2577 2'8"x6'8" 24 77 3'0"x6'8" 25 77 2'8"x6'8" 2677 3'0"x6'8" 2777 I If _) II " ~·~ ~r CALIFORNIA CLIPPER GAS MOWERS You ought to do a little feature and price comparing h ere. And make a note of the horsepowers, the safety drag, the side discharge, many, many features. Think you'll vet a warm smile around your wallet. 19" 3 H.P. 20" 3.S H.P. 22" 4H.P. 22" 3.5 H.P . REAR BAGGER No. 2278 22" 4 H.P . POWER PROPELLED No. 9722 ROTARY No. 1719 ROTARY No. 2720 No. 2822V4 7P. 89'8 99'8 13988 149" WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SAT-SUN 9 TO 6 •VISA • MASTER CHARGE e NATIONAL CARD AD GOOD TIDIU ........ • t-.... I J ------~-- LOCAL I NATION ~. Februaly 15, 1171 c OM. Y PtlAT ,4. Bluffs Battle Line Green and White IT ' ALL ABO T • homeo • beU.I ovtr • blkt \n u mf'nt due WhUt" 11 ltM" l•olor ol ~'Ott' prouM 5f'nt out by the reMl•d Ad Hot Commllt _ and ar n l• th rolor of th Bluffs flom<> Owners Assoc1 uon prox1ea a rl1ld T pt"rct>nt per rear Umlt on blkea would "destroy the quality or llf " In 'he Bluffs. What haPs>tned nu t ls, to put lt mildly, debatable. AD HOC COMMITTEE It 11tartC'd v.h~n m~moora or 1poke1men uld they asked for a tht> Ad II ('ommltt obj ttd TH£ AO llOC Committee. on meet~ date of Feb. 22 a nd ...... l .... m•nl .. ~ f att.a the other hand. h., s•ld the ... o 1.n .. • :-. ..-'' rom _.. noun lt in •t.-Jr wh1'le pro-'~. to •130 .. _,_ .... -•in 01 J..... 1 hmllatk>n could be waived by a u"' ,._ • ..... ., ... lO \I'S ... vote of homeowners and la the wbJcb they aay were sent first. The mont•y is u.td for auth ooly way lo keep the bud1et AJmette LMngst.on. secretary nricd thin&• u m11ntatnln1 within reason of tbe homeowners uaociaUoo, 1re>und•, rttrHClon facllHlh Hid a letter rrom the aasoda· ud pnvatt llN • painting the But tbe real battle or the Uoo wu sent earlier, setting a 1ter1on of howtea, Hd provld· whiles vs. the greens didn't aet meetlnt date or Feb. 20. • antt homfl>wn na· ln~uranct>. aoing until an associaUon meet· Ing last month al which Ad Hoc So the 620 members of t.be U · A850C'i•tlon offlci Is say th 1r Co mmittee members demanded ~ia&ion have received notices St million budl(l't wus carefully a special meeting for an election or two meetings and been mailed st~nd trlmm_ed_'_l'_he_,y.___s_ay __ o_n_th_e_bu_d_g._r_t _res_t_n_c_ti_on_. _____ tw_o_se_ts_of_p_ro_x_i_e_s. ____ _ Sunset Along the Oran9e Coast A checkered bank o( clouds stretches over 1Qr>sJ' Mesa's South Coast Plaza and the San Diego Freeway in this view. looking toward the ocean, at s unset. For weather • # watchers1 it's a break in the. pa~tern of gloomy skies which may return to the area today,, . ' ' ,,,,,, ee11eu .. 5678 . Put • few words to work f r o Panel Raps ·coast Plftn By JACKI E HYMAN OllMDally l"llotsi.tt So uth Coast regional coastal commissioners combed through the proposed coastal plan for the Irvine Coast Tuesday. criticized both their own staff and Orange County for failing to provide more alternatives , the n postponed their final vote until today. Commissioners said they are delaying the matter until today at 11 a.m. al Torra nce City Hall because only ei~ht of the 12 com· missioners were present Tues· day. By law the plan must be ap- proved or denied by Feb. 20 or the plan submitted by Onmgc County will be forw arded intact to the state Coastal Commission. Al Tuesday's meeting in Hunt· ington Beach City Council cham· bers. comm1ss1oners took ad- visory votes on a number of h y issues. from the El Morro Trailer Park to the Cameo Shores extension, and told their staff members to revise the plan accordingly. Newly appointed commission alternate J a ckie Heather. a Ne wport Beach cit y coun· cilwoman. sat on the com- miss ion for an hour until member Ele rth Erickson a r- rived. However, no votes were taken during that time. When he got there, Erickson read a statement saying he can't support either the county's or the commiss ion !>lafrs plans because he belito>ves both fail to deal adequately with the issues o f dens ity, lraU1c. and archaeology and paleonotology "Quite frankly. tbe overall at- titude of the county has ~n such as to make me wonder if all of these. meetings are nothing more than window dressing on an al r ead y built hous e," Er ic kson said. Among the preliminary de· cisions made Tuesday ~·ere· -EL MORRO TRAILER PARK. Comm1ssion<'rs rejected the idea of a "life estate .. for current residents but said they would like to see the •park gradually phased out over a fiv e to 10 year period. or PoS~ibly as long as 20 y,ars. -LOW AND MOD.ERATE IN· COME HOUSING. No less than 20 percent of the housing within the coasta~ f<>Oe· should be available lo low and moderate income persons, commissioners s aid. They noted that 600 of the 10,000 acres in tbe Irvine Com· pany-owned downcoast area is ' outside the coastal zone and said they wouldn't agree to seeing low·cost housing' centered in that ar ea. -C AMEO SJIORES EXTENSION. This "mirror" of Cameo Shor• s. below Coast Highway, was proposed by the Boats to Parade Salute to Wayne Has Two Pulposes county at a higher density than Ole current Corona del Mar de· velopment. Commissioners said they wouJd like to eliminate the extension en ti rely . -WILDLU'E CORRIDORS. Commissioners agreed with a state Department of Fish and Game r ecommenda tion that q uarter·mHe·wid e corridors con· nect conservation areas to allow wildlire to migra te from one , a rea to another. -TRAFFIC. Commissioners cr iticized staff members for · having failed to consider com- muter traffic in recommen<1mg road widths. They noted strong opposition by the city of Irvine to extending Culver Drive to Coast Hlgbway and were unable to agr ee on how wid e Sand Canyon Road should be. Plans for the lrvine Coast area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach ha ve been controversial fo r ma ny years, both beeause of the environmen· tal and aesthetic value of the open . land and because orthe impacts development would have on the adjacent cities. Coastal commissioners said their decision. whlch is subject to approv~I al the State level, is particuJarly difficult because or several factors over which they have no control. One Is whether or not the state o r fe<leral government will purchase part or the land for a park. Th,. locaJ coastal plan cur- rently being considered clusters development in the part of the area closest to Corona del Mar. The result, everybody a1rees. ls conlusJon. Mlt8. UVINGSTON said the auoclation 'a lawyer has In· formed them that, accordtoc to their by·laws. the meeting date set by their president ls t.be only leaal one. Sbe called the Ad Hoc meetlnC "a koffeeklatacb." However, DeUwyler said bis leaal counsel diaatrees. Tbe argument. be said, ll over a phrase in t.be by·lawa that COD· taina an "and/or" clause u to whether members other than the anodation pres1deot can tecally call a meeting. He said bis group has received proxies representing more. than 60 perce nt or the homeowners. so he believes his meetingtstJ.levalldone. ON THE OTHER hand, Mrs. Livingston said that, according to her cn>UP'• attorney. lf tMn Isn't a quorum or 311 pel'IC9 or proxies at the Feb. 20 meelial .. We've all wasted a lot oi money." She put the asaoda· lion's cost of boldln1 tbe eleeUOD at SZ,000. ••we•re prayiDI for a quorwu," abe said. , "They will never baH a quorum, .. said Dettwlfler. "Tbeae people, I tbink. \'fUll don't get the meuace. T.be meuqe la the majorit7 ot tM abarebolden want a aua.raawe of budget control." P?th agreed they're not .Ute sure what will happen ii ~two e lections reach different con· clusions ..:.. and that looks like <be ' only thing they're Ukel)' &o agreeoo. 'Ratting' 'Program Seeks Crime Halt CINCINNATI <AP> -Ratting on a fellow student ls encourapd at Walnut Hills High School. In fact, a student task force bas started a program to slow crime both in and out of their school. It's called Operation "RATS," which stands for "Report AO Things Swiftly." "We're trying to deal with two kinds of proble m s." s aH1 Elizabeth Stauderman. a member of the student congress. "ONE IS CRIME outside the school. the violent crimes, kids from other schools preying on Walnut Hills students. "The other kind is inside," sbe said. "We've had a rash of locker break·ins and we're try. ing to get kids to stop ignoring it. Students tend to be apathetic and also scared. "They're not used to it -they haven't encountered violence past 'Starsky and Hutch' and 'Charlie's Angels.'" A CENTRAL locatio n bas been estAblished to report inci· dents a nd s tude nts have established a fund to pay for in· formation. The school is setting up seminars on crime with the aid of the Cincinnati Police Depart· menl. "Wbat we're attempting to do is give kids strategies on bow to prp}ect theuiselves and their property: to make them more streetwise," said Principal David Sl;Jepberd. ,Stlepberd said, however, that despite several publicized incl· dents. the school ls safe. Walnut Hills is considered one or the top schools academic.ally in the district a nd students generally come from middle· and upper.class neighborhoods and attend by choice. Newsletter To Accompany Water Bills Newport Beach residents will soon be getting a new item in their water bills -a city-edited newsletter. The newsletter, suggested by Councilman Dona ld Strauss, takes up both sides of a sheet of pape r and briefly itemizes c.ur· rent issues, with phone numbers to call for further information. The publication, which will be issued bi·monthly, is est.imaled to cost $588 per year. according to City Manager Robert W)'!)n, whose stair will draw up each is· s ue . City Council members will re· view each newslette r in t,he hopes or keeping the items ob-jecti ve. · A salute planned to welcome John Wayne home from cancer sur. gery will have two purposes: To greet lhe Duke and to raise funds for cancer research. That's the word from Dan Rogers, executive director of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber or Commerce, who said bis group has been involved In getting the wbeela -or sajls -in motion. He said Great Western Sav· Commissioners admitted they don't know the legalities of the plan ·s provision lo require that the Irvine Company dedicate the park.area land to the public as a tradeoff for development. The dedications would be phased, un- der the plan, as buildin1 on the other areu is approved. Another variable Is whether or not the proposed San Joaquin fiills Transportation Corridor to connect MacArthur Boulevud In Newport Beach witb the San Diego Freeway near Saddleback Colleae will ever be built. The Daily Pilot brings you the world, na- tion, state and especially your hometown -all for less than 12C a day. All delivered to your door for less than the price of a cup of coffee. BC SAID THE Newport HarbcW-Co1t11 Mesa Board or R~aJ-and tbe Newport Beach Jaycee. are 1pearheadiog the or1anlzatioo or a boat parade paat the Dl*e'a Newport Beach bome od Jllarch 25. The aoal will be to obtain pledaes based on the number or boat.I that participate, Roters said, with all money 1olna to cUHr re1earch. tn11, "'°9e ads feature Wayne, baa orrtrec1 $1,000 to kiek off the rund driye. • aOG£1l SA11) T81: or. aanliert hope lo Involve a1 many organlaaUons and bUll· ne1se1 u pouible. Anyone Int erested In participating may leave his or her name and phone number at the chamber. 64-4-821 J. Rogers 11ld he'll rwturn tbe caJla. Commission Chalrrnao Donald Wilson noted that, if the plan as revised by staff me•bers Is ap· proved today. envlronmenta.Uata and other opponent.I can take anoffier crack at It at the stat.e level. tr the plan is rejecttd, he said. the county can either appcaJ lo the state commission or revise the plan. You get It all In the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 . , .... __ ...,_~I!'-... . . Je lWLY PILOT American Describes Death by U.S. ·Envoy EDITOR'S NO'T'E -TM foll.otDrnQ •11ewt1ne• Nport on th« Jolbn'1 o/ U S. Ambcwodor Du~ soa. tonUn bfl ftl.,- StieMl. o vocouonmg Amencon buft. ~'""°" /rcnn Highland Park, IU., and delivered to TM Aasocaoted Press on ht.! omool m New DeUn from KatM. • By MAY ER STIEBEL ,.or Tfle Auec~llM Pr•• KABUL. Afghanistan -Our room In the Kabul Hotel was two doors from the one under siege. Alter a 60-second shootout. the corridor was bloodied and gunsmoke filled Room 121 where. we learne d later, American Ambassador Adolph Dubs had just been fatally shot. <Related story, page Al2). Moslem gunmen demanding the re- lease of three jailed Sbille clergymen ,,,ollution Rise Feared if Car Fue/,s Misused LOS ANGELES IAP > -Twenty yea rs or smog fighting may go down the drain unless city drivers use the nght fuel and stop tampering with pollution control devices, an air quality expert says. had held the ambassador boetage lo the hotel until national security police attacked, an Afghan radio broadcast said. AFGHAN GOVERNMENT ot- ficials said they did not know whether the ambassador was killed by his kidnapper s or by police bullets. Room lZl was a shambles. The wooden door was demolished. The windows had been shot out. A water pipe had been hit and water covered the floor, along with pieces or buman flesh. When we left that morning ror our sightseeing tour, we bad passed 10 soldiers with submacblne guns and plainclothes men with drawn re· volvers ln the corridor. We bad DO idea what was happening but my wife. Sandy, remarked, "This isn't the usual thing you 'd see In a Chicago hotel." WHEN WE RETURNED at about 12: 15 p.m. we encountered police roadblocks near the hotel and about 100 armed men ringing the building. We had a plane to catch so we talk.ed our way into the lobby and were promptly herded together with other foreign tourists. Within minutes. we heard a volley or gunfire -possibly 15 to JO shots - and all in less than a minute. Medics rush ed past us with two e mpty stretchers. .. NATION I CALIFORNIA Pope Visit Upstaged f;arter By RANK CORMl£a .................... M EXJCO CITY -PreparaUona ror President Carter's current vlllt to Mtx· lco wtre auspeoded once because or tremors that hit OU. crowded but lnvll- lnl capital clty. Not the tremors ftom tbe two eartb· quaket lbat have bit here Ulla year. They were lnalplllcant compared to the tremors occuiooed by tbe recent vtait ot Pope John PauJ JI. • ON TIU EV£ Of' the pope'a arrival, chief White House advance man Ellia Woodward beaded back to WubJ.ncton. Aa 1001 aa the pontiff or Roman Catbollclam was in the country. Woodward reported. there wu no pro- spect ol eaiacine Me~cao olDclala 1D plaonJ.nc Carter's viait. Once tbe pope returned to tbe Vatican. Woodward returned to Mexico City. SPEAKING OF ceuac&•SN, Arcbb61bop Fulton J . SbeeG told Carter and 3,000 othen at W ubiDctoa 'a umual White Houle prayer breaJdut that be round lt remarkable DO president a1nee Abraham Llncolo bad talked publlcq aboutaiD. Perbapt someone should aead Ule elo- quent cleric a ~y or .. Tbe Ssl'rltual Journey ot Jlmmy Carter," a juat- publllbed compilation ot ~Ual apeeebes. lnterviewa and Sunday school letlo• oo rellaiom themes. For eumple, at tbe fUMral ot Hubert H. Humphrey lut year, Carter neca.Ued a vlslt to tbe Mabatma Gandh1 memorial in New Deihl where be read a Gandhi It.ate· menton "TbeSevenSlm." "Accordlne to Gaodb.1, .. aald Carter. ''tbe aeveo tins are wealth wltbout worka, ple11ure without conadenee, knowled1e without character. com- merce wltbout morality, science wltboat bumaolty, wonbip without ucriftce and poUUca wltbout pd.Del· pie." Carter concluded that, by Gandhi's detlnltiooa, Humphrey wu 0 wttbout aln." H.D. LEE INNSBRUCK JEAN ON SALEI BNAhed cotton aat.Hn jeen featuring the popular uddle 1eel 1t.at.ching. Available in &111.Wted colon. Reg. $22.00 NOW coonfinat.ing jackel lllo available Reg. SJ0.00 $1599 NOW $1999 Kood (M IOdava onlv. to hurrv! A slide back to the air pollution problems of the 1950s was lnd.icated Jast summer when oz-0ne levels were the highest in a decade. Dr. Thomas Heinshetmer, vice chairman of the South Coast Air QuaUly Management District, told a federal air pollution cum mission STUDIES SHOWED up...to lS per· cent of the cars e quipped with catalytic converters were being ruin· ed because leaded gasoline. instead or the required unleaded gas, was be- ing used. he said. A MINUTE LATER, two bloodied bodies were brought down. Then a third, a smaller one, was caniul out in the arms of a plainclothes man. A fourth man, apparently not ~;;=::~ wounded. was led into the lobby, kicking violently at the lS security Also. Heinsheime r said federal st\Jdles s howed that pollution control devices an 19 percent of 1973·78 cars had been tampered with, causing thS!m to be ineffective. Tam- pe r ing causes emissions to be about four times the normal rate, he said . California Air Resources Board Executive Direct.or Thomas Austin, however. blamed the smoggy sum· m er of 1978 on meteorological condl· tions men arowld him. The bolel manager interceded in our behalf and we were permitted to go to our room for our luggage. THE EXTENT OF THE violence became more obvious as we ap- proached the room. Blood was aU over the corridor. It appeared that the security men had fired from the street below. shooting out the win· dows. and from the corridor throuah the door. We packed our bags lo a hurry and dashed out the back door to our wait· ingcar. SAVERS. LOVE •AGUNA FED short..:term T-Plus money market certificates • BECAUSE these $10,000 Certificates top weekly discount rates by 1/4% . • BECAUSE interest is compounded daily to build up the yield still higher.• • BECAUSE these high-earning monermakers mature in just six months. • BECAUSE / you can reinvest your funds at maturity, at the prevailing T-Plus rate. •provided no interest penalties are Incurred by premoture w1thdrav.a1a. Big bonus! Your T-Plus certificate makes you ellglble for a moner.·savlng Savers Club membersh p. al90 coordinating -~__,,,,,~ blazer & veil 1 /3 off Limited siu and colors Yovngmen's Kennington WOVEN JEAN SHIRT SALE Wid ~ assortment of western yoke jean shirt styles. Reg. $17.00.22.SO ~~w $1199 , ; ~ J SAVE ON WOMEN'S ADOIAllE CROSSOVEI TM WAIST PANT in ueorted poplin colon lit.el (>. 13. '99· $2.C.00 NOW SALE ON CAUF. FAMOUS MAKER KNIT SHIRTS LEVI'S MOVIN' ON SALE Fuhton jeans in bruahed cotton, corduroy & pre·wuhed denim. reg. $20.00.$21 .00 NOW only$1449 Good fof I 0 days Ol>ly, eo hwryt YOUR CALIFORNIA CLOTHING STORE CERRITOS/ ARTESIA 'l&bOO~IT UJ·Q24·e&OJ Al:fott F!Otl'I l'aob!rwnt ~ d LOI Cenb 0--•• .. --. .... • AN EXQUSIVE FROM WILD WEST, a great cCllUCll shoe in tan calf or sand suede. Reg. $39.95 NOW $29" ·-~criy) Sftlmt w J4JO Jo.Drt1'0t ,.,. TM Comef Of Dn1tol And ln.c At1t'M WESTMltSTER •I• t ,._ h • .. ... ... NATION lhutlday. F9bruary 15. 1979 DAIL'( PILOT A J J ~ef elifte Bo•M11g 2 Cubans Guilty of Murder Release Approved ~ 49"/D IJack Patty's Commutation Traffic D aths Up 4.7% WA HJ nroN tAPl -Traffic d at.ha In lhe Unit~ SUles ln tm ex. ceeded ttw> ~.000 le\el ror the rin.t lame lO th·c years. ucrordlng to the T ransportation Depart- ment. An estimated 50,145 died. in traffic accidents last year. an mcrta!>e of 4. 7 percent over the 1977 toll of 47 ,876, the depart- ment said THE LA ST ti m e fataliUes exceeded 50.000 was in 1973. when the figure was 54,052. The fatality rate also r ose for the second straight year. from 3.24 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles of travel in J977 to 3.27 deaths last year. To reverse the trend, J oan Claybrook, ad- ministrator of the Na- tiona l H.i~hway Trame Safety Administration, urged motorists to fasten seal bells and comply with the 55 mi le- an-hour speed limit. S H E SA ID motorcyclis ts s hould we a r helmets an d backed stricter safety standards for vans and light trucks. M s. Claybrook noted that when the 55 mph national speed limit took effect In 1974, highway fa talities d ropped by about 9,000 deaths to 45.196 and 11tayt'd at a reduced level for the next two yeaN\. The Department of Transportation remains firmly committed to this law because it not only saves lives but also makes a vital cootribu- li o n to Pre s ade nl Carter's ener gy con- servation program," she said. SOME W ESTERN states have indicated r e- cently that they want to raise thP1r speed limit. Carter has calle d th ese moves "i ll - adv1sed" and said that any state boosting limits beyond 55 mph would be subject to loss of federal highway funds. l2i DIED IN FUXJDS WASHINGTON CAP) The government says 125 people died in floods in the United Slates last yt'ar. compared with an average of about 200 in recent year s. Rut the 1978 fi gure for property dama~e from noods was mor e than $1 btllioo, slightly above the recent average, the National W eather Service reported. 35 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 8 JN ORANGE COUNTY GARDEN GROVE -(714) 638-1041 9747 CHAPMAN AVENUE IN FRONT OF J.C. PENNEY'S IN THE GARDEN GROVE MALL LA HAIRA-(213) 694-3765 1435W. WHITTIER BLVD. IN THE ALBERTSONs-LONGS CENTER TUSTIM-(714) 838-8970 522 E. FIRST STREET IN LARWIN SQUARE EL TOR0-(714) 770-3079 24346 ROCKFIELD Bl VD. NEXT TO VONS ON EL TORO ROAD HACIENDA HEIGHTS-(213) 912-4554 1637 AZUSA AVENUE IN THE VONS-LONGS CENTER LOCATIONS NEAREST YOU: Costa Mesa Store 370 E. 17th Street 646-0534 (next to Ralphs Market) ci w > > w w > ...J <( > cc w <( RALPHS <( I-C> <( a::: z z 0 <( <( c.. a::: <( ~ 0 1-w---z z <( I/') MARKET Z '·D ~ E. 17th ST. Huntington Beach Store 10044 Adams Avenue at Brookhurst next to Albertsons Market• 963-5694 ___ !n ADAMS ~~o~ 0 l-o Q:'. Q:'. w ATLANTA CC ~ W eslt1dnster Store on Goldenwest between Balsa and Edinger• (714) 894-0519 -1-97-9-C_A_R_S___ (next to Albertsons Market) and TRUCKS• All MAKES! 833-0555 Ask for Our LWl SP£QMJST at HOWARD Chevrolet r.o.-ol 00.. e<'ll o,. 'I•• NEWPORT BEACH ·. BO LS A Coming Soon To: LA MIRADA-LA MIRADA BLVD. IN THE GEMCO CENTER ON IMPERIAL HIGHWAY COSTA MISA-BRISTOL STREET NEAR SUNFLOWER OIAMGE-1507 E. KATELLA AT TUSTIN BETWEEN VONS AND SAV-ON Celebrating 6 New Stores Here are six great coupon values on popular Great Earth vitamins to celebrate the opening of six new stores in Southern California. We have one of the largest selections of vitamins anywhere. OPEN7DAYS Mon. thru Sat: 9 :30 am to 6:00 pm Fridays: open till 7:00 pm Sundays: 11:00 am to 5:00 pm VITAMIN STORES MASTER CHARGE. BANKAMERICARD. VISA QUAUIY VITAMINS AT DOWN TO EAR1H PRICES . . ~J.Z DAILY PILOT Thutld1y, r1bru1ry 16. 1119 hulldo.: w 1rs mournful rrown 86 he )It'!> the dos beat dog '-'Orld frum h1" c 1;1 durtns compelll on ln Nt'w Yol'k or the W\.'l'>t~ter K nnel lub' 103rd annu I dog show in Madison Squurc Gurd •n It all adds up to a good year. \I A 1 LMl·N I OF-CONDll lON 1Cu1Jdc~-J t-011nJ• Dcccntbcer 31, I 978 l J,h, US <JO\-ernmcn1 Uond' Jnd Other Sccunucs Kcol c\l:.tll I t1bflS < ontra~h lor the SJlc of Reul Gt"lc 1 oan) 10 f-J~1htJlc ~uk of Real [\t.ilc l OJO'> on Savmgs Accounl\ !\tod. m hder JI Home UJnl. llrcpJ1d 5ccom.1Jr}' R~-<,cr\c -FSLIC <>thci: Du11Jmg Jilli £ 4u1pmLnt OthLr ''''LI\ I O IAI LJABILI I 11::~ ~J"lllll\ A ccounh Rc,crvi.:' Jilt.I !>urphl\ Ad\>JllCC\ from r edcr;il Home Loan Oant.. Dcfl'rrcd I nc0t111; (JI her L •:ih1h11~' I< >r 1\I s 12,839,754 193,669,238 261,999 285,863 2.097,961 1,825,300 946,176 3,702,818 494,296 ~2 1 6, 123,405 Sl72,315,042 20,806,276 19,903,000 143,562 2,9'i'i,52'i S2 I 6, I 2J,40'i \1 l flllllh .111· 111\lll• d "I' t 0 .... ~11.ttflCl •Complete finoncial ~tOlt'.mcnb dVl11IDble for IO)J>l.lChon. PERPE!TUAL H ofthe SAVINGS e~": earpetlreatment NATION I MEDICINE Drug Effective Against Acne BOSTON CAPl -Researchers uy an expertmt'nta! cancer drua hu proven "hl1h1Y dftttlve" tn treatln1 acne, that e mbarraulnt. dl1fl1urtn1 plasue that atrlk~I ~ percent. 0( America's teen ... ,. ·rh dottor1 aay the drug. 1 synthetic derlv1Uve of Vitamin A. will clear ur. even the mott tevere forms of the el • m nl by dlminlehtng lhe actMty or oil s tands that Ue beneath the skin. THE EXPEafMENTEas at the Na· tlonal Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md., taY th mecUclne, called 13-cls· r~lnok ncld, probably wiU be approved by the l''ood and Drug Administration for general use wltbln three years. A report on the research wa s pubUabed in Thursday's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Teats were• conducted on voluntffrs whose acne nad resisted all other known Line of Dutg tr.eatments. locludln& a ntibiotics. Vitamin A. peroxide. X-rays and sex hormOOd. "ll wortcs." Dr. Gary L. Peck. who directed the research. aaJd in an in· tervlew "It's hlgbly effective. What's unusual and exciting la lbe continued healing arter we stopped the medication and al~o the prolonged remission." IN nlE NEAR future, at least, the doctors say, the medicine will probably be given only to youngsters who have bad cases of acne. Peck said researchers still bad to find out whether the drug bad any signifi· cant "long-term toxicity." He also said that two minor side effects of the medicine, chapped lips and dry skin. probably will help Umit It.a use to lhose with severe acne. Studies show that about 8S percent of all AIMrican Uleft • .,.,. bave acae, aod 2 perceot bave a seven form ol the akin diaeue. IN THE 8TVDY, H pats.ta rib ex· treme cues or acne tool!: cAPIWM of 13-cls·retlnolc acid dally for four ,mont.ba. Jn 13, every 1l1n of acne disappeared, wblle the skin or the remalnlna paUent became 75 percent clearer. Tbe effects of tbe medicine continued long after treatment ended, the researchers said. After ftnilblng the study that was re- ported ln tbe Journal, Peck aald he tried out the ctruc on 33 other acne victims while givins a comparlaoo CJ'OUI) toac- tlve pills cailed lacebos. / "Tbe people who 1ot the placebo woraeoed by 57 percent., 8Dd the ones who got the drul Improved by M per· ceot, · • be said. Dllhs the 5th adidaS Envoy Killed WASlDNGTON <AP> -Adolph Dubs. the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, was the fifth American envoy killed ln line of duty ln little more than a decade. There have been numerous other slaylngs, kid· napplngs and at.lacks directed at U.S. govern· on Aug. 1.9, 1974. Cypriot m e nt. personnel and authorities arrested six facilities overseas by men in early 1977 on terrorists, guerrillas murder charges. and demonstrators, ac· After trial, two were cording to State Depart-a c q u I tt e d , a th i rd ment figures. pleaded guilty to rioting. AMBASSADOR Fran· a fourth was found guil· cis E. Meloy Jr. and ty of rioting a nd tbe other two, against whom economic counselor murder char ges bad Robert 0 . Waring were been dropped. were con· murdered after being vi c led 0 f i 11 e g a I kidnapped from t.heir possession of firearms. car in Beirut, Lebanon on June 16, 1976. There have been several un· verified reports as to who was responsible. Rodger Davies. am· bassador to Cyprus, was killed a fter d e · monstrators besieged his embassy in Nicosia U.S. SIXTH INS4FETY LONDON <AP > Australian airlines are the world's safest, the weekly Flight loteroa· lional reports. Next in line come the CLEO NOEL, the a m- bassador to the Sudan. and his deputy chief of' mission, George Moore, were seized by Palest!· nian g uerrillas In Khartoum on March t . 1973, and later killed wit.b Belgian c ha rge d'affaires Guy Eid. The terrorists s urrendered and arter trial were turned over to Egyptian authorities. J . Gordon Mein, am· bassador to Guatemala. was killed Aug. 28, 1968, while attempting lo avoid k:idnapplng by re- volutionaries. AF I 021 St9I Wtel/Hllllft Soft leather uooers Durable adldas rnulll·9r10 sole T1nv rubber nubs A dtus tabl e orthooaedtc arch 1742~· Canvas shoe built on narrow wornen·s last Blue sole HundredS of rubber nubs Ankle collar oadd1nQ Arch support Terrycloth hn1no 2b FoV.10n lslond Newport Beech Phone 640-44 23 - •IS 0 111c1al tracksuit or tho ATP M a de 1n K ey r o t an41' rpo1yester1tnacetate 1 airlines of W es t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Germany, Japan. &an· dinavia, Britain and the United States, editor J.M. Ramsden said in his annual analysis of airline safety In the authoritative magazine. H&R , MA 0€11,UNCLE SAM ... ONLY Mutual Savings gets them all tog&-ther. Only at Mutual Savings will you hnd all of these special services and high interest accounts lor savers. Now !here a<e moro masons than evo< t>efOfll '"'~:===~·• S""'ng:. ~"'""'~~· Now Ma Ben ... your telephone .. becomes a valuable financial asset. 0 transfer service you can eam .lfl Interest on funds whtch would ocher - We have to sell $150,000 worth o f inventory by February 28. or pay a big floor taxi Frankly, we· d rather hdVe you pocket the savings. than Uncle Sam pocket our money. Now through month's end. you'll save like never before on everything in our warehouse. Select from the most popular decorator colors. FREE tax preparation by With Mutual Savtngs· telephone 1 0 • 59 itL. ~ wise be idle In a-non-product!Ve 9 checking account or brc>Mlf's account. • If you have a minimum balance ot $1,000 in a Mutual Saw)QS 5.25% passboel4< account. you can have the extra earnings the lelephone transfer service makes possible. You designate how and where transfers are to be made and who is authonzed to make transac11ons on 6-month Mon•y Mart..t Account Buy At Cost Plus 10°/o! Conveniently located at Edinger and Newport Freeway In Santo Ana . (714)558-.3921 . Open Monday thru Friday 9 to 6. Saturday 9 to 5. WAl'Nl Shop like the builders do-warehouse direct at factory prtces ..... H&R BLOCK THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE We II arrange for H&R Block 10 prepare your lederal and Ca~fom1a 1ndMdoal Income tax returns, and all normal sehedules that accompany them, at no Charge if you have never used our serVICe and deposrt $5,000 or more 1n a Mutual Savings cerhficate account. Otfferenl quahfytng balances are requtreCI f()( customers Who prevlously used this serVIC&. 1118 also available at a modest/ fee f()( lesser dePOSltS and balances. Ask lof details. II you have a t8f'm account In anochef 1nst1tutlon lhat wtM be matunng by March 31, 1979, you can take advantage of this offer by gw1n,g us an au1honza11on {' to transler those funds to an account al Mutual Savings on the date of maturity But whether you're opening a new account or au1honz1ng a transfer you must act soon A hm11ed number ot appo1n1- ments are available TAX SERl/TCE NOT your account. From there on. a qulc11 lelephonc can to us Wlll transfer cleared funds to your checking ac:coont or broker whenever you need them The number of telephone transfer transacttonS you can make is unfimtted. the mmimum amount of each transaction is SlOO We II mall you a wntten recetpt for each transactJon. caM or visit a Mutual Savings office and let us shOw you how yaur funds can be made more produtiive. Effective 2/15f79 thtu 2/21/79 Ant1'.lal· 1zed yield assumes funds remain on deposrt tor 12-months Rates ate sut>,ect to change 81 renewal based on the U.S. 1teasurv &I rate• thll tme. stO.ooo or more~. No-OI satekeeplng c:hlrgel. SMigs accountl. Mutual Savtnga are lreured to $40.000 by an agency d the federal govemmenr. Thefe Is a sub9tlndal penalty tor eafty wlthdrawal ot oertlfieato ~. AVAILABLE IN SAN DIEGO COUNTY " Corona dot Mar· 2867 East Coast H19hway/675·6010 Downtown San11An1.631 North Mairl/54Mm& 1 Fou(ltaln Vartor t 7900 MOQnoha St /963·8396 Cep111r1no·San Oemento•: 570 Camino cto Eslrella/4'93·6651 y '0oi 11 Sc lllf dJY\ 10 AM IQ F'-4 --...... .,. . - • J NATION I CALIFORNIA Neef& lflilk Mary Sullivan is shown with son Joey, 14, who is in desperate need of colostrum - the earliest form of mother's milk, to ward off infection. Joey, who lives in Rumson, N J . suffers from a dlsease in which the body cannot fight infection. Harris Name Causes Woe VISALIA <AP)-Robert Harris wants . every- body to know lh'1t he's not "that" Robert Harris. The former Vlsalian ~ently saw his name and that of h\s younger brother. Danny, in newspaper headlines in San Diego where be now lives ••1 JUST PICKED UP TBE paper one morning and saw 'Robert and Danny Harris of Visalia, Calif . arrested for murder, "'besays. He round out that the other Robert Harris was 26 years old, the same age as he. Then he read that the man once lived in nearby FarmersviJle. the same place his family lived until last year. BOTH LIVED IN THE AR EA in the Jale 1960s but never knew each other. Harris says. But the last straw was when he read that a woman named Barbara Harris testified at the San Diego murder tMal. "I have a sister named Barbara," Harris said, shaking his head. THE ROBERT HARRIS IN the newspaper headlines was ordered to die in the gas chamber on a conviction of murderiJ:lg two 16-year-old San Diego boys. His brother, Danny, was convicted of kidnap- ping but murder charges were dropped in ex- change for his testimony at the murdei: trial. Harris stopped by the office or the Visalia Times-Delta here to t.ell his story and clear up lbe name he shares with the convicted man . .. l'M A U.S. IMMIGR ATION officer," be told a reporter, flashing his badge and identification card. He says the mixup has been a problem to him in recent weeks. F,riends have asked Danny, a high school student here, why Robert would murder anyone. "It just embarrasses me," says Robert, who left here in 1971. HE RECENTLY RECEIVED some strange looks when he wont Into an office to have bis in· come tax return prepared. "l had a W-2 form ·from the department of justice that saved me." he says. f\esa Verde ~qoor SALE! SALE! SALE! SAVI $2.00! PO POV VODKA Reg. $1.99 1.711.Jtre SAVI $2.00 SUAmAN CHEN IN BLANC ~,.O E•.2 7IOMI SAYE 21 o/o! HllSHEYIAIS HERSHEY ALMONDS WIESE P-HUT CUPS •-.. 2s· 1a. 3 for 59¢ ,.. WMS ratCID SS & UM09t w ............................. .. .................... w ........... ., ......... , .. ... ......... ...., ................. .. .................... w ......... ..... ... _ ... ~.·-~··'"'" ..... Mew ............. ~=~:-... IU01 Or -...... w11.11 • ... ... U.I07 w ..... .._. .... _ ..... ...,"" ..... 11hdl•1 ......... c..t. s.,..,. ·-""· .......... ..... 4-Kv ~'/~ thru Sun. 2/18/79 549-4044 ~...,,,KER AT HARBOR!"""""' DAILY PtLOT A J~ Family Life Brighter u nsus R eport Says Marriages Stabilizing SIMPBIT WASIUNGTON <AP> ~ 'Mie American famll)'. pla1'*9 for tbt IHl two d1tadt1 by a mrrlad ol IOC al problem1. facet a rotNr l\Jture, t.he 1ovemment 11)'1. A new Centut Bureau report HYI marrt11e rates are •tablU1- ln1. divorce rate •re expected to decllne and t.he blrth rate haa decllned about aa far as It can TODAY'S YOVNG family hu two cbJ~. on the average, compared with their 1randparent1' four offsprins. As a re.Ult, parents can be expect· ed to apend more lime wlt.h each other u well u with each or their klda, the report aays. It waa reteued Wednesday. ··The Judcment presented here 11 that most of the changes ln family life over the next two de· cades will be small compared with those during the last two de- eade1," Dr. Paul C. Glick, the bureau's senior demographer in the population divlalon. wrote ln the report. OUck aald that dutlna the last decade. social pre11urea for youn1 people to marry have dlmlniahed. as bu the expecta- tion that theee couplet abou.ld re· TRIO CONf'ICTED OF BE.4TINGS COLUMBU$. Kan. <APl The parenta and older brother of a former West Mineral fourth· gra~r have been convicted of attacking a teacher whom they accused ot paddling the boy. Colvin Cutshall Sr., 43 ; his wife, Mary, 42; and their 26- year-old son, Erie, were found guilty of battery. Teacher Chloeann Schultz wa s hospitalized following the inci· dent. officials said . West Mineral is ln southeast Kansas. LONG-WEARING VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE •TAKES THE ROUSH & TUMIU WUR Of DOii. klTCHEllS • IUUTIFULLYI •DECORATOR PATIEJlN! •FASMIONAILE CGLORS! 1~ 3C . 13a-:r • PRINTS, STIUPU, SOUOI, GEOMmucs, SCENICS! • MILD OR WILD COLORS TO 'JULO~u COMPUMOO ANY DfCOI! main married and have children. "DUIUNG THE next decade or two, IOCiaJ presaure may also be expected to djmlnish for f>oth a working mchher and her husband to be employed on a fullUme baala." Glick said. "Relaxation of pressures In these ways would be expected to increase the quality of the mar· riages that are Initialed and of those that remain Intact. .. The Census Bureau report said that despite substantial in- creases in divorce and living ar· rangements in the last decade. 77 percent of American adults still live in husband-wife households: 10 percent were in one-parent households; 7 per· cent were living alone : l percent were living in households of UD· married couples, and the rest were in vaMous other living ar- rangements, such as lnstilu· lions. M-301 T•xfflehlted ..... .. ........ t.C5S R10 VTT B·TBL 1558Rt2 VTT B·TBL 145SRt3 VTT 8 -TBL t55SR13 VTT 9-T9L 165SRt3 VTT 9-TBL t75$Rt:t VTT 9·TBL 1-esSR1' VTT 9·TBL 175SR14 VTT B-T9L t85SR14 VTT 9-T9L 155SR15 VTT 9·TBL 165$R15 VTT 9-TBL ASIC AIOUT oua IOAD HADUD AMO MILIACH WMIANT'Y ... 35 01 40 74 3756 .. , 80 4350 4647 46 68 49 65 5263 4688 4965 _....._ ..... II.ft JUf 24.tt U .tt Z7.9t H.tt 21.ff 2Ut JUt 26.tt HUGE SELECTION ALWAYS IN STOCK- READY TO GO! SPECTACULAR MOSAIC TILE • 80"8EOUS CHOICE OF DESIGNS, COLORS! •HARD GLAZE FINISHI •MOUNTED ON MESH FOR EASY MANDUNI!. ar,.OX.Sf.fT.SNlllS • SETI YOU Fii& RIOM-T .... CllOIQ! Olll 340 ........... , C8111111 COAIT lt CUIT '·"'· 1 05 1.3• 1.32 1.49 1.65 1.85 1 78 1.96 2.13 1.65 1.85 COSTA MESA 2221 H• bor II. IMMrW..t Ph. 645-1126 Santa Ana 322 w. 17th 547-7781 Dair 9.9 -Sat./S... 9-5:30 P .M. •. .... ,. . .... ,,,,,., - AJ<I DAILY PILOT QUEENIE "' ou'rl' rtl(ht, P•rk1111i1h•n' t\t.>oluld) r 1ght Uut kt rnt• n•nund )'OU lht>re'i; room for cml\ OOt' l..Oo\4. ·II .ill 10 lhl'i uutht • Coast Stutknts Aivarded Degre~ Seven graduate btudents from the Orange Coast area have been awarded advanced degrees by the Claremont College graduate school. Sandra LaFave received a doct.orale In philosophy wh1l<> David Delany received a masters in cconom1cc.. Both are from Costa Mesa. From tht' Newport Beuch area. business ad· mimstrat1on ma1or Robert Grand Bise and Judy B. Rosener. studym~· government. received doc· to rates Carol W. Holder of San Clemente received a doctorate in education. Education maJor Grace Blagdon of San Juan Capistrano and Thomas J . Clasby, studying management. were awarded master's degrees. Finn Cools Claim For Heater-ti~r W ASHINGTON IAPl The Federal Trade Commission says an flhnois manufacturer has agreed not to misrepresent potential savings con- sumers might obtain from an electric water-beater timer The FTC said lntermatic Inc. of Spring Grove. Ill.. agreed to the consent order covering its produ<'t, "Little Gray Box," in a settlement of a dts· pule with the commission. lnlermatic admitted to no v1olationoflaw in signing the agreement. The FTC said lnlermatic promised to advise potent1al cu s tome r:. in future promotional literature that thc use of a water-heater timer will result in subst.<Jntial savings to consumers only if there is a s1gnif1cant reduction in the temperature i r quantity of hot water used UOOICS lllllAH 04A1$TINE BAOOICS, ,._ loent of S."t• An.t. puMO •••'f ~.bf' ... ,., ll. '"'"' t ... eqe ol 13 $ .... \ SUf'YI-11'1' brot.,..,...,. .. ,.. Or A,.. r.ony G<•uo •Ito Oy 1 co1nlni, 11<"-n:t s.win-. Honn• Sperr-er.cl ,....., $tllft F.-r•I se"'i<tt will be •Id Frto.y, Fetwwry I&. 1'19 •t 11 1M •t ~ Wa-.n~ 0.Ur<h In $4Nlte lne lntitnnenl Will be •I Falm-n Aemorl•I P•r-. Smith ...., Tuth•ll ~n ... ry Oll"e<lor'\, ~1 E 17111 SI, ..cKla ~ ...... MAYElt Cl AAA H MAYfA. rtt..,..nt OI S.... uan C~o\lr•no, CAI POM'O &way el>r""ry 13, 1'7'1 In G.l•Mn (;rov•. A s.,,,,,_ by ,,.,, \Of' Wllll•m Holl IO Prlvatt \elVtCI!\ WIH• !Wld <II 1•rbor i.-Mounl Ollv• Mof1Ui>t"Y OI ~I• Mhtl l141HSW "'"'"°" Poreupine BolUlly Off CONCORD. N.H. IAP> -Relief is in store for hunted porcupines under legislation in New Hampshire Lawmakers noted the declining porcupine population and agreed with the Fish and Game Department that the 50-cent bounty on a dead porcupine had outlived its usefulness. The porcupine bounty E WALTEll Cl<N,..ON. ••tl<Wnl ol •oun• Htlh, Ca P&•••d away WaS established in 1903, .._ ... ,., IJ. lffl S.Wvl...O Cly wll• b (' C a U S e 0 f t h e >ori• C--. _, T•rrv Cennoo ilfld 1eUQ,,...,.,,....., L1n0e c;...,,_o1 s.tnt• creature's penchant for -.1.,1 •. C.., two orendchlldren, chewing on trees. ln 1960 nmotlty _., 8111 C-non RtttOHtt o1 • • __. Hiii> \lnc9 1•13. re11red dirt<· the Slate paid $6,000 In ~ ot c~ ~ otf•u m~ bounties . Las t year, nenl •I t.oc:im..oci Alrcratl Corpor• h ed nJ $ S '°"· ..,,.... ""-""' '°' 1s YN"-unters nett o y 11 . .,.emO.r Of the Ul\il•d M4!lllodl\t PUBUC NOTICE :""''" ot ~"• Hiit,, C• • the -Wklllon IC_, Clut> J1nd ~ff ~-end• siw1,..,. F...,.,., wr•i<t'\ .. 111 lie lwld on Frldey, Fet>r,..ry ••. ----------- "" •11 PM .. P.K1h< View Moflvery NOTIQ[ 01" 8Uut TIIANSl"Elt ~pet wltfl Or i..twnon<e F H-lt'y NOT ... IS HEREBY Gt\IEN TO 1'11cle11"4. Entomom.nt •t P•<lll< THE CREOITOAS OF Rolend L. "'--l•t P•n . _ _, BeKll W•ck , di>• "Aol•nd't Colleclor '" hw ol 1-.,, conlrlliu1IOI\\ me~ G etlery", Tre,.\feror, th•t • bulk »,,,_..,ti. fl<•ll~ lmlllulP.,.. s.. lr•nsler Is •t>ouf to ~ maci. Oy tfl9 e.,., Inc Paull< Vito• Mof'lvery Trens'-, ""'-~s-s Is dlre<IO<"t,.,.._71VO U O E OIMt HIQltw•y, <:«one dtt Mer, In h OIY of HewllOf't BHCll. ----------~County ol Dr.-.. Slete Of C..lltOf'l\ie, ,..---------.... -ltil Of""-olNtr busltlftS ... ....,, PlafAMILY CO&.OMIAL. FUHIUL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 89~2~ PAQACYtlW t•C'"LPAU Cemetety Mortuary Chapel 3500 Paclhc View Onve Newport Beach • 6«-2700 McCCMtMICI MOtt'TIIAIUH Laguna Beach 494-9-4 IS Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan cap.s1rano 49S-1776 -.&. lm04DW ., MOITUAaY 110 Bro.dway O>etaMesa 642-8150 • -~ uwd wtl"'" ltlrM ye•rs test p•st, so fer •s known 10 Tr•"''-· .,.. "Aotlllld's Coll«t~ Gell«V". to 81H O. W?\11,.,... -8-nle J . Whffnw" H.,,_ Mid WIN, H J<Hm TtnMb. Tr-fene. wlloM bvtl- ,,." .OOIWS& Is •S3 Vh .. Bonlle, In tfte cu, 01 Newpon e .. c11. C-ntv ot On~. stet• ot Cllilfoml•, ot the tooowlno Clet<rlbeel ll9f1'0NI property ol Tr-twnor, to-It· Alt Sbletl In Ir.,., t~ .. eQvlp. "'9f'lt -good wOI of • UNlll Art 4Mld Anti-Gellert boislNn k-H "RolenCl's Colle<tCK' O•llery" ~ IO<Alled et 3545 E. Co.st HIQl'IW•y, In Ille Clt'f ol ~ llekll, OOunt'f ot ~ ..... S4.9te ot Callfomle, -IN1 IN fontOolno !Nik lrMPitr will lie c-wm,,,_lt!d on or .._.. w_....., n.e atll -.Y of .......... Y. 1m, lfw'9utl\ EKrow No. '*141S, .. -ettrow .. pert ....... of !fie~~ Oflk • ol IK""tt PcHIC riq1~ 8etlll .. !JO.,..._,~ Ortw In tt. City Of NewPof1 BNdl, ~ of OfMIOt, SI.Ce Of~ O•tecl ~ 1m. 81H0.WllitfNft llOlwlle J . Whltnwn Tr~ ~ ............ .... P.0 .... 0ttl '"°'"""' e.dl. CA 9*a ~blwd Or-c:o.. o.llV ..... F-.15,"" ,...,. PUBLIC NOTICE MOTtcacw.,......,._..•iun Noll« " """" .. --... -Gen ......... -.. ,..... .... fW fifty dttlts • tlMlllllH c;entrKteel '°Y lftV-.......... mvtett. Oii Of ...... 1111•~. O.McttNt•.,•vo1r:eew-y,1m, T~H.~ tMO f'Mf•I A\1911W C.... MIM. CA "'71 ..,,.,.,....., Or .... COHt o.lly Pltot, '•llniefY .... ts, "" *'" NATION I OBITUARIES Mayor 'Gives 'em Hell' Kansas City's Chief Makes Job Count KANSAS ("ITY. Mo CAP> Kan1u City' mayor i. a bit of llllrr) Truman. • bit of J1ack Klugman, \'l'r)' unconvrnUonaJ and ttw proud uwn rot 400 halt Muyor l'tuarl 8 0 Wheeler Jr. kll\I on unprt.-ced nt d third t~rm. c.mc wtt llcd a tx-ar ln Cl· I)' tlall, rodt> .1 donkuy, un ttlanhunt .ind a bull. and one llmt" i1ron1I e d lo p rachute from a plunl' durlnti an Ir how lk wo tillked out of that atunt. I NCE IUS START ln politics u a county corom1r. he bas bct!n glVlng 'em hl'll llke It rry. "Tht>o1" I frt.-quenUy pubtlc emplo)t"f' umon!t, and cspeclJ y thl' International As O<'h1Uon of l 'lrl' t'1ahttN He-accuses the union!\ or lrymg lo bankrupt lhe city. und poinb to New Yori< as a plare where strong mun1c1pa1 un1onc. caused f1nanc1al prob· km~ On a recent morning, Wheeler arrived ut has 29th-floor City Hall office at 9 currying 50 pounds of paper. his homework. He had ~n up since s·JO. ")(I Jog. I Jtet up at 5 a m • " be declared. ON 1108 DAY, be was feeling a bit under the we ather and 11tayed In bed an extra half-hour, so he didn't arrive at his place of business. a pathology lab, untU 7 a.m . After working two hours. he came to City Hall for an in· tervlew. The mayor likes pubhc1ty. He once found attendance lacking at his weekly news conference and filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Com· mission in an effort to get more broadcast reporters to attend. He losL During the inte rview, the mayor sported a hat recently given him by a traveling German band. He has a collec· tion of hats. given to h1m by citizens and foreign visit.ors. BUT PEOPLE WHO know Wheeler well know his clown im· age is only for show. Arter earn· ing his medical degree, he al· tended night school for six years to get his law degree. four while taking his medical residency. His energy enables him to make more or the mayor's job than some predecessors. Kansas City's mayor is technically only first among equals on the City Council, but the post gives Wheeler a podjum for his powers of oersuasion. Wheeler 's pro udest ac· complishment is promoting Kansas City as a convention center. When the Republicans were threatening to pull their convention out or Kansas City in 1976 because or a shortage of hotel rooms, Wheeler rounded up the city's hotel owners1 and in the fashion of a revivalist preacher. harangued them until the pledged enough rooms to save the convention. "THE MAYOR CAN act as a convenor and .a head-knocker." _p.....,.... PUBUCNOncE "ic:nnoul eul*•H NMIC lfAff .. Wf PUBUC NOTICE Tiie ......... _._ I\ ~ ~ PICTl'nOUI 8UllNH$ .... ,.,. NAM•STAT1!MeNT TIM'$ fLOWEltS, >0612 Soult\ ni. ~ --Is dOifl9 DuSl C...sl Nwy , s..1111 ~. ~ MUH m u AMER ICA N PIPIN G Tlmotfly s. Rk ll¥dSOft, 11101 fOVIPMENT, 1116 P-1uc~et, ...... , ()('"" Vltle, A#A. E, 5outll ~. ""'°"llMdl,c..tlfoml•~ Cal~...SI $!even Ool>Ol•s Welter, 811& ''"' MIMtS Is~"' ... lft.. P••IU<ket, Hunlln•tOn B••<h di,,.., Cellfonlle'7M6 T..,_,., S. ltlC~ Tiii\ ~s I\ t~ bv en In Tflk """"9llt Wet flied Wllfl -div~ C-tY 0eA of Or•..-(.ouMy on S. ~We~' F..,_., ll. 1919. Tiiis tlat~ w•' llko<I wllto ,,,.. .• ,.... CoufttY Cieri! ol 0••"9e COUftty on P""4t_Or..,.. <:Nit o..l!Y Piiot. FeOr ... 'Y6,"" ,.._ u.n-MM. '·'-"" ,.,.,. ,,,_}I Publl"*' Or-(O;J\1 OeHy Piiot ----------hll t, n, 12...0IMr l, 1'7' SO'H1 PUBLIC NOTICE PU8UC NOTICE Plc:n'nOUS 8UllNl!U MAM« STATI!,...lfT Cf'-1111 Tl'le ·~ --" dOiflO W.1-""'""' """'' · PICT1TUMIS 8USINESS J 0 AVTOMOltllE. ,._, McFM-NAMl!STATI!MENT den. Hulltl"91on Beecfl, C..lltornl• The lOl-.0 .,..._, h doifl9 O..si .,.., ... ".' Oewld MICllHI Hell•"· .. II GARV COMPTON & CO. Ll,,.erl<k, Hu,.tln9lol\ 8••<11. CltEATE. 161' Weslcllll Orl•e (:91tton\le "'° "'-1 ...,., Clollfor'lll• "* Tiiis butfts" <~..,.,. ~ Gery ~-?Ottl o.trn.••" tlM4uel l-. H""'tnoton 8Hcfl, Celllonwe Oe¥ICI M. H..... .,._ Tlllt ~ ~ llll'f -tM Tll1\ ~It c-.Cted bv en"' ,_,., ~ of Or ..... c-n ... -.. J.-ry JD, "" GWy CAlonpton ( KANSASCITYMAYORISAMANOFMANYHATS Charles B. Wheeler: Clown Image Only for Show ,._..,U Thh ~ ., .. filed """' I~ --0r..,. C-1 o.lfy Piiot c...HlfY Oen ot 0r.,_. C-ty on F.-. l.I. IS, tt."" ._ ,,_.,., 2". "°" Wl!JTEltN llilUTUAL ESCltOW -----------COllP. Wheeler sajd. "It's not much or a trick to stand up and say, 'The city needs your total cooper&· tion. Is there anybody who is not willing to give it?· " Besides the firemen, Wheeler displeased the policemen's union when he cast the deciding vote to oust Police Chief Marvin Van Kirk as "mediocre ." He was also sharply critical during a seven-week teachers· strike. "I think the main image the voters have of me is somebody who isn't going to be con· trolled." Wheeler said . "I'm a product of the Harry Truman School of Politics. I'm proud of it. .. NO MATl'ER whether some· one supports Wheeler or op- poses him. they can still call him at home. The mayor or this city or 500,000 has his home number liste d in the phone directory. Someone once asked Wheeler after a number or gangland· style killings if there was or· ganized crime in Kansas City. "As a forensic pathologist.• I'm convinced they did not die of natural causes." he said or the victims. While workmg as director or the labs at City Hospital. Wheeler exposed the coroner 's office }>l'actice of sending bodies to favored funeral homes. PUBUC NOTICE MHH' PAUii w•mfGS PEfU'UME AHO COSMETIC CXIMPAHV ~ UIGUHA 8E AC~. * FOf'•\t A.,.llUe, llU ,,,.IE, ma St., see. o 1-.~ ... l!tc ........ ~-1.a PUBUC NOTICE ~ llMOI, ~mil l"ICTIT10US BUSINESS ~ ... T..,_ lHtv. 1170 Ouedt NAME s.TATEfllllEMT W•'f, LAl9Wflit e..dl. c.tllfOmle ms1 Tiit 1011ow11>11 oerson~ •r• dotftg Tiii\ ~ " c..-.d 11'1 en .... OU\IM\\ .n ~. T H 0 M A S & 8 A 0 0 I( S HE WAS ENCOURAGED to ~ellT~Lllty WOOOWORl(ING.tnl~lflelW•Y. run for coroner and then woo a ~' ~ O:;.!led~ ':: Ct»'to':·t'=:.~1:.1 eorn.u seat on the Jackson County ,,..,._..,s, ""· P1ec.•.c.osi.Mew,c..1ff0rn;•m26 C he Id . ll'IMJI G•ry w Broou. 7SSU e.,....,t ourt. t o county govefDlng Pv41411Mt1 0r_,. °'"' o.t1v Pli°'· d • l~ "'"'· c.111o<ni11 ms.:i body on which Truman started "'"' u.n ... M« •.•."" ,.._" ""' ovs•nes•" ,_cted o• .. his political career. .. PUBLIC NOTICE 9'.,.,.,~Brook• He J05t a 1970 race for the top Tltis $let.....m w .. 11..., w•"' ,,.., Spot on the COUOty board before t---... -teft-ftOUS--aUSHe--~-S-5--C-ty CMrt of 0<e"9e C-1Y on launching his successful race ror MMCnan ... WT J-..rv 23· 1'" f'l9MI mayor. n.e........,. ~ •s ~ .,.,,._ Pullll1Nd0r.,. COHt ~uv 1>1to1. On ventures lnto national and ::s10N CA•E cENTu. un ~ » _. ....... 1·•· u."" JD.n state politics. Whee ler hasn't 8''"°' S4Twt. ~ 1MM. CMHoml• Pl18LIC NOTICE rared well. He launched a cam· paign for vice president in 1976 and announced his support for Sen. Henry Jackson. D-Wash. Jackson wasn't noticeably excit· ed about his self-appointed run· ning mate. So Wheeler switched to the U.S. Senate race. picking up his only defeat since his failure to win the top county post in 1970. Bu1nble Hostelry Balled Greenbrier Refuge From Snowstonn By JULES LOH AP s.e<t.t C-111n •a•I WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. -The snow storm swept in from the south, chilling, blind· ing, the worst to hit the West Virginian mountains so far UUs winter. Precipitous mountain roads quickly became impassable. Travelers, in their desperation~ had to take s helter where thet could find it. "WEI.COME TO OUR humble hostelry tucked away here in these impoverished hills," said Jack Lanahan, lowly inkeeper. Inside, a fire awaited. No, a confl agration: seven large logs ablaze In a huge marble flreplace. A heroic portrait of George Washington, llfeslze. hung above the mantle. Fresh nowers decorated every table. G real c rystal chandeliers twinkled in the fire glow. Jack Lanahan 's humble ho11tclry Is the Greenbrier. and if GRl'INMf!R QREl!TER Wllef M BUfSMr ) still here but is just for decora· A.MERIC.4 guest, no fewer than nine pbysi· ( tion. If something ails today's clans are on band at lhe Green· ------------brier's own clinic. there is poverty in these hills, 1t sure ain't here. THE GREENBRIER, at one time in its 200-year history a prison or sorts, at other times a hospital. is toda) one or the most opulent resorts anywhere. lt is a great while edifice with columns and porches and lob- bies. 10 or them, and parlors. 68 or the&!, situated on 6,500 rolling acres. which is room enough for its stables and s wimming pools, plural. and tennis cobrts. in· doors and out, and golf courses. three of them. and gardena and greenhouses and 200 miles of riding trails and a movie theater and exclusive shops and, well, it's juat not a bad place at all to be snowbound. Fortunately. Lanahan doean 't have to take care of his humble hostelry all by himself. He hu a staff or 1.200 to help him. That ought to be enough: 1.100 guests are all the place will hold. ..WE DO TRY TO make everyone comfortable." Lanahan said. That's bow the Greenbrier got started. u a place to 10 to &et ~mfortable, or at least to eaae your aches end pains. The story ts that Uae first guest , as it were, was a rhe umatic old dame named Armanda Andenon who came to tM mln6al 1prtq here that sbe had beard about from some In· di ans. SHE SIPPED THE water, eased her creuln1 bone• into the water, soaked, and JumDed up sho\lttns. "I'm cured, l 'in cured.'' Tbat WU in 1778. The 1prin1 ls Cottages began appearing around the spring. later a hotel, a nd before long the place became a gathering spot of tbe gentry throughout the South. It was Robert E. Lee·~ summer home. Tmmel Cloaed OAKLAND CAP) -The fire. scarred BART tunnel bene•Lh San Francteco Bay, already closed ror 1 month, probably won't reopen tor anotb•r three weeks. la)' ornclals ol the Bay Area Rapld Transit ayslem . .. .. _._......,_.._,... ................ _ I • ' . ORANGE COUNTY ~. februwy 16, 1979 Bealtla Care l••ue County Asks R e view Of Alien Decision ....,a...ftl To m Chr hstaansen of Westminister won honorable mention for lhis photograph at the 63rd National Orange Show photo contest last year. Compelllton for the 64th show wtU be Saturday, March 31. Westminster Hires Five New Officers Five police officers were blred this week in Westminster to fill vacancies in the patrol division. a spokesman said today. The new officers include Mark Frank, 23; Michael Reynolds, 21 ; Ronald Weber, 26 ; Kevin Pape, 21 and Steven Judith, 28. Or...a• Coutr ,.,."..,. t a1W Wedneldat .... a ,,..._. of a lilat4I AnonieJ CleW.l'I ,,.,..... ..,.. ....-r IOVem· .., ..... doe't ....... ,., '°" DOil• eaaer~ Mlltla can f« wt· don ................ At 0•• tu11e1t l on of Surpervbor Ralph Clark, Ooun· ty Counael Adrian Kuyper will review 1\M"tday'1 oplnJon rrom Attoto•>' Oeneral Oeor1e DeukmtJian Nl•Un• to a con-trovuaial ttudy on bealtb care ln Loa Ana~let County. CLAD AS&ED that KU1P8r'a re-por1 oo county ftnaaetM of treatment for indi1ent Ulefal aliens be brouabt baek to aupervilorl t»y Feb. 2L DeukruJlan'a opinion 11ld that toUDUes are not required to provide free non-e mergency service to undocumented resi· dents and ma:y require them to apply for Medi-Cal before offer· tng care. Supervisors in 1977 adopted a poUoy to force suspected illegal residents to sign up for Medi-Cal before being treated at UCI Medical Cent.er. IN THE WAKE of controversy and recommendations of a coun· ty task force. supervisors later ·County Backs New Ca l Trans District Orange County supervisors have joined the ranks of local officials calling for formation of a new CalTrans district exclusively for Orange County. The unanimous vote to seek the change came at the close of the board of supervisors meeting at the urging of Supervisor Ralph Clark. At present Orange County is in the same CalTrans district with Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Last month, members of the Orange County Transportation Commission, including Clark, were told that CalTrans plans to spend $30 million on road projects in Orange County over lhe next four years. If Orange County were lta own diatrtct, accord- ing to the report to the commiaaioo, that figure would be $84 million under t)\e formula CalTrana uses for spending gas tax money In recommending that supervisors join the list of agencies asking for a separate district, Clark noted that durin1 that same four.year period, Orange County residents will pay about '150 million in gas taxes. Brother~ Guilt y Of Heroin Charge Three brothers who police believe beaded a 20-year-old Orange County Heroin operation have been convicted after a three.month jury trial. The conviction& ror the sale of heroin could re· suit in prison terms ot more than el1hl yean 41acb for Tony Sandoval, 36, J esua "Chuey" Sandoval, 30. and Pele Sandoval, 32. A fourth brother Fr ank, 24, was acquitted of two felony counts against him. Superior Court Judge Lloyd Blanpled Jr. ordered Tony and Jea\11 Sandoval into custody peodiJll aentepclng March 8. Pete Sandoval was allowed to reni•ln free after his attorney said he had an eye problem and must have access to a h<>1plt.al or rtsll: loeln1 hla sight. The four men were arrested in Februuy 1978. Three men convicted of acting as middle men for the Sandoval brothers already are servin1 state sentences. 1. Al ways use \ dry string, wood and paper in yo ur kite. 2. Never use wire or any metallic material. J. Don•t fly your kite in the rain . 4. Don't cross streets or highways when kite flying. 5. Always fl y your kite away from TV and radio antennas. 6. Always fly your kite far from power lines! Don•t try to retrieve kites caught in power lines! Southern California EdJ1on An EciuM ~ E"'lll0\4t .. IOftMed tbt polclai ... .,......., fMtW'tl laid to~ ... ln- dll••t =·· fro• tHlliDC ...... al C&N becaUM of .... ,..,. of dlliortaUoe. A._. Wune 1trtell1a •• a requirement -.at eu,tbW\1 worken at &M medlcal oeetlr' report 1uapeeted undocumented people to the U.S. lmmlcration and N atw-a.lbatlon Service. Tbe county task force reported at UM time that w.111 aliens pay more ol tu• ta vartoua Jd.Ddt &ban they c:ouwne la fOV· •nament aervlcea. Tei.Law Back ln~mtion Tel·Law is back on the line. The telephone inrormatlon service co-sponsored by tbe Orange County Bar Auociation and the Legal Aid Society of Orange County is operating again after a three-week break because of mechanical pro· 1,145. m,1.d /,om CJ..icago, !Jlf;noid tu.t /ia,.J_,. lo /inJ/ blema. Residents seeking free advice .___!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L-, on a basic legal problem are directed to the appropriate tape by calling 834·1760. The service expects to add six Spanish ( L. M. BOYD J INFORMS In t he DAILY PILOT languagetapesioJune. Save as much as 55% up to one week before you leave. nme Is money. During February and March. Continental is introducing the first Super Saver fare with just a 7 day advance purchase requirement. (Other airlines make you wait 14 days or more.) We've deepened our discounts across the board, too. Now you can save up to 55% depending on when and where you fly. And you can stay ~ long as 45 days. or as short as a weekend. In an even bigger hurry? Continental has the only system-wide Economy fare with no restrictions at all. Fly anywhere and save 10% during the day. 20% or more at night. and you can buy and fly today. Kids are free. Any fare paying adult can take along two children under 12 for free from February 10 to March 31. And it doesn't matter if the adu lt flies full fare or discount. Just think of the possibilities. A family of 6 could travel for less than the price of one regular Coach fare. 50% off for the second pauenger. If you 're travelling full fare or Economy. any adult travelling with you can fly at half fare from February 20 to March 31. The only requirements are that round trip tickets be purchased together. you travel togeth er and stay at least over Saturday night and no more than 7 days. These fares apply only on the mainland. Also. sea ts are limited and there are some restrictions. so call your travel agent or Conti· nental Airlines. And stop wai ting around. We really move our tail for you. CONTINENTAL AIRUNES 9 The Proud Btrd with the Golden Tail. , ~-..... .,....._,_ ......... .-. ..-............ ..-.-.. .. ....-.--.._. .... --__ .. .... .. _.. ... ........ - ....... ~· " ... - AJ• OM. V "LOT I OURNBW~aiml LESSTOUSB With a Home Federal Viu 1.~<~~'lft annual percentage rate on credit ~ .. ~ .•• or cash advances. .. Most other credit cards charae up to t• There is a difference in tlie wq int4Net la charged. · OUR interest charges start from the date we receive notice of your transaction. Moat othere provide a grace period, before interest i8 charired. H you now pay eacb bill in full as it i1 recefVed, you're not paying any charges at all, eo fou may not be concerned with a lower rate on creCUt. But, if you keep a credit balance and epread your payment.a over time, oun COllta op to a f\111 third lees to use. Up to a full thifd! IT SAVES YOU MONEY -EVEN WHEN YOU DON'T USE IT Saving up to a full third ~ the fbiance chargee you n<>Vt'_pay is a pretty~ incentive to change. The Home Federal Visa offers a lot more than that. Becauee you'll save money· on oun, even when you don't use it. The Home Federal Viea is secured by a $1,000 minimum balance savings account. The chart shows the choices available. The savings portion of your Visa account, whether you use the card or not, will quietly earn a minim9m of W~ more interest, compounded daily, than you can earn at any bank. I 8.00% 8.~ 7.75'*, 8.~ 7.50% 7.791> 6.75% 6.98'1> 6.50% 6.~ 5.25% YOU CAN SET:YOUR OWN CJUB>rl'IJlllT The .-mmam c:ndl& limit GD Hmm Pedenl'a VIia i9 always balf the amount cl tbe • ._. you pfedle • ..curity. , .. to aG.000). 'lbe liUnlmum craCllt limit. ia al1f_QI 1200. Your Penonal ~t can be any amount 1n w ... M80an4 1n •100 tacremeati1. You_.,... ••• lhlait, dependb~I en tlHt =f;~,a ~put. tlMt cantrol ~~G:f'Jf~ RB RD KEEPING You may want to .....,. ,_, "'-'nem and penonal apenw for accurate l'eCOld keepi111 . . At Home Federal, yoa caa epen two Visa account.. Each, of couree, requires a aeparate'tl,000 min· imum balance. Two separate accounts ••• both With the same great Visa benefits. TAKE CREDIT FOR SAVING Now, you can pey lea for credit and earn more on avings. To get ~our 12'> V~isa .;.it any Home Federal Gftlc:e. We re open Sa for your convenience. You'll be furniahed th oompl~ Truth-in· IAncling DiaclQeure inf'ormatlen. And, your Home Federal Savinia Visa carde wtll be mailed aa aoon aa your application is approved. Huntington •••ch Office: 2111 M9ln 8beet -Ill 1111 Westmtneter omce: 1eoe1 Golden West Street-881-01M Irvine Office: 4543 C8mpul Drive-752-e111 San Juan CIPl*ano Olb: 32039 Cemino C..-..ano-488-0801 Senta Ana Olllce: 171h and Main StlMt-135-4311 Seel Beach Office: 1360 P9Clftc Coeet Hwy-(714) .. 8411 (113) 598-5578 Home f«llNI S.W11t Md LOM AMocllr-on of Sen Dt9go •• ---··------· ._._ .... _ .... _____ ., .... _, __ ..,, ___ ...__ .. .._ __ ·--- I•• "-'I t • ..... -- --------------- ··N·s··~o·e·: .. :~.:~0~.k~·~~s .... :a~H·:~~~ne~c:~~ .................................................. ~ ... ~~O~ts ThYnldey, February t5. 1979 DAILY PILOT r-• ' Campy Finally Makes It. to California ~-~~y Roy ~Qa w a hWDMI mu ud one who pkllMet his ra~ tn tM· m-.Jor lt'MIUH i ODI •Uh teamm•te J•eile Robin.son on~ BrGoltlyn Dodi n . 1948 Rob nson came up In UM7. CampaoeUa ln L()., Anc I~ ran wtro d rued an op· portunlty ol watching ham perform wb n a tr111c automobllt acctd nt cut ahort his career with ~ Dodgers tn the wlnter or 1957·S8, on tJKI eve or tbe Dodeers' move to the Lo Anael Col l um CAMPANELLA 1 AGAIN in the employ or the Dod1ers in the community relations departrMnt aod says: "I finally made ll to California alter 21 years ft.he Dodgers moved lo the West Coast in 1958>." One or the big disappointments to him and many or ·6ls Dod&er teammates of the 50s was the loss of Campanella before the team played its first game lo the Coliseum. A s hort left field fence that was eventual· ly known for its Moon Shots when Wally Moon, a left-handed hitter. kept peppering the ball over the screen for home runs, was ideally suited to Campanella according to ma ny baseball experts of that day. Campanella agrees with this theory. ''THAT COLISEUM WAS RIGHT DOWN m y alley for hitting," he said Wednesday I while visiting Anaheim Stadium. I If things hadn't turned out as they did, 1 causing him lo spend the rest of his life in a I wheelchair because of the accident, bow long l would he have played? "l had promised Mr. <Walter > O'Malley I The hl-"lllM of his carter, Ol\e that is 1l eped with wtalala ud eap\>ed with a paete lo the Hall ot Fame. la a almple thins to mott people. '"l'ha Dodeera glvln1 me the opportunity to play In the mtjor leagues bas to be the hl1hll1ht or my career." be says . "Mr. <Branch) Rkkey, Mr. O'Malley and this man r1gbt here, Bu111e Uavas1, are the ones 1 owe ill all lo "8 UZllE WAS THE GENERAL manager or our te am In Nashua, New Ha mpshire In the New England League and Walter Alston was flrat baseman and manager." Bavasl, DOW a vice president with the CalHorn\a Angels who make Anaheim Stadium their home, paid Campanella a high tribute : "You couldn't keep me away from here today when 1 beard that Roy was going lo be here . He was and Is a 1reat personallt)' and lbe big salaries of today don't mean a thing t« bim. "He lived like a millionaire and made $32,000 a rear as the Most Valuable Player in the National League. "He bought a home in Glen Cove for $52,000 and he also bought a boat called the Princess. He told m e he paid $56,000 for it and he didn't have 14 cents in the bank. He w as a great player ani:l a good busi- nessman.·· IN RECALLING THE DAYS he was the Dodgers' catcher in Brooklyn, be said: ·'That was a pretty good team I played on. We would go to the ball park and we knew we bad seven guys who would be playing every day. "Carl Furillo in right field, Duke Snider BACK WITH DODGERS -Roy Cam - panella <center) a nd Sandy Koufax Cle ft > have r ecently rejoi ned the in center field a nd it didn't make any dif- ference about left field. We had GiJ Hodges at first, Robinson at second, Pee Wee Reese at s hort and Billy Cox al third. And I was the catcher. "The only thing we didn't know was where we would bat in the lineup. And the on- ly weakness was the day we didn't score enough runs. Ar WI,.,.... Dodgers . They're shown with Dodger President Peter O'Ma lley at a recent luncheon in Los Angeles. • ·•People felt the Dodgers were kidding when they bad Robinson and Campanella on the same team. But we had a winning team .. "WHEN THE DODGERS BROUGHT Sandy Koufax up, be couldn't pitch then but later he was really something. "I remember a game in St. Louis before <See CAMPY, Page BZ> f• would play as long as I could.·• ~-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------' Dionne Does It Again Dream Mile No Nightmare I oE'!!::!::P~ta;.,~e':.d~~~~~ ·=~~.,~~~:.~~. ?r:~~:~.d Toa!:!~~~~~rs Dionne stuck it lo his former Detroit's goals. the opportunity to practice for 0ttt1e 01111, r11.cs1.e1t l teamonceagaln. ··1 was afraid that after we five daysandeverybodyworked SAN DIEGO-The long · The National Hockey League won our last two games before hard. I felt tonight we were awaited "dream mile" has been All -star center broke a 2·2 lie the break that there was a r eady and I can't knock the rudely interrupted-once again. with a power-play goal at 13 :20 chance that we might lose players for their effort, mentally Promoter s, however. aren't of the third period Wednesday momentum," s aid Los Angeles or physically." . worried about having a night. It gave Los Angeles a 3·2 Coach Bob Berry, referring to Nedomansky opened the scor-nightmare field on their hands victory over the Detroit Red the 10-day break when the NHL ing by blasting a 30-(oot shot after John Walker and Wilson Wings -who traded him lo the AU -stars played and lost the past goalie Mario Lessard at Waigwa pulled out of the Sao Kings four seasons ago three.game series afl&iost the 12: Sl of the first period. Diego Invitational track meet. -The goal was Dionne's 4ls t -Soviet national team. * * * Chances are, the world indoor a nd ninth against the Red _ mile recordwillfallaoyway. Wings Only Sl·x Red wa·ngs have "AS A WEST COAST team sc_,,rwlffs Walker, the world outdoor l scored more than nine goals all we travel so mucb," Berry said'. ~,:C,~'" ~ ~ ~~ record bolder <3 :49.4> from New year against all teams •·c ombined with so many in· i:1rs1 l'ef'lod -1, o.1ro11. Ne<Som'"'u ' 2• ZeaJand, scratched because of an J·urles in our lineup, it looked as IMcCourt. Thom910nl, 11 51• 2• Los A'9its. illness. Waigwa, who ran 3:53.2 ' M~ It CH......,1. ll:M .... Mlt'" -Ha#. d l • bd I "THE ONLY REASON this if the time off was not so good LA. 1:s1: PMn1<11, o.t, 1 s1: a. w u-. LA. out oors ast year, wtt r ew goal meant anything was that it for us. But toni"ht my players u ·SA:HU11a•.o.t1c1Dut11em1,_1,1•:s.. becau~ofafootinjury. D S.C-Pll<lod -l. LO\ Af>9elts, Trtlor l1 was the winning one," Dionne showed that the rest had helped CGo•1"9. Maneryl, 2:,1 '· 0etn>11, N~y That leaves Ireland's Ea monn said. "It doesn't matter what and I was qwle pleased at how 25 <Huller, '"°"'P--.I, 1•:os. P•11•111es Cog hlan as the f avorite. I team 1 score against, as long as fresh they were for the full 60 ~:'as.Del. i·a1: Murptly, LA, s:21; simmer. Cog hla n, k n own as th e we win... minutes... Third Period -s. LO$ AnotlH, OloMe" IGor· "Chairman or the Boards ... ran Mike Murphy and Dave Coach Bobby Krom m of ~3;,i,:..i~~.\3i~ ,.. ... iues -Mlllff, 11:": 3:55 flat in the Milrose Games Taylor scored the other Los Detroit had opposed the long s110tsonoo-1.-1.os •nvetes.w.1-2J. eetrou last week, one tenth of a second 1 Angeles goals, also on power break. But he said, "Maybe It •·~:;.~:~ _ Los Ano•••s. Lm ard. Detroit. off the world indoor record held l p I a y s , w h l-1 e V a~ I a v helped. Evecybody. seemed in a VKllon.A-1a,..... · · -by Dick Buerkle. ,~-~~-----------~--~-~------------------J~~~ghlanooooe~the , world's fastest indoor tracks will be I rvin e's Steve Scott, Tanzania's Filbert Bayi, front· runner Paul Cummings and No. 2 ranked U.S. miler Steve Lacy. Scott. the two-time AA U champion from UC Irvine, has run his best indoor races at the San Diego Games. ft was here in 1977 that he first burst upon the international scene with a 3:56.5 lime and a third place finish. Last year,bewassecondin3:57.S. , Scott's best races come when he runs in the middle of the pack and uses a long kick. Bayt, lbe rormer outdoor rec· ord holder <3 :51.0> and current l ,SOO ·m e ter record holde r (3:32.21 prefers to run in the back of the pack, saving his strength for his kick. But the class or the field is still Coghlan, who has lost only one indoor race in seven years. He beat Scott in this meet last year in 3:56.0. "I'm looking for a very good lime," he says. "If the pace is the s ame as New York throughout the early stages or the race. I think, certainly, I can grab the world record ... Ar ........ TRACY AUSTIN IS A PICTURE OF CONCENTRATION. Ocean View Higb's Tom Antonopolous (45 ) shoots between Katella's Roaer Lemons (32 ) and Rick Lopez as OV'1 Wayne Carlander (52) looks on . Ocean View fell, 65·52, ln the Empire League showdown. See story. page 83. . , ...... --- Traey 'Close to Best' ~t~ Navratilova Have It Easy INGLEWOOD CAP> -LucreUve tournament pots put up by American capitalists are dra I a growing number of top women tennis pl a yen m the socialist countries of Eastem Europe. d the sport sometimes seems dominated by tbe ccent.s of the Danube. . For example, six or tbe 32 playe at the Los Angeles championship townament l amed tennis in their native Eastern European tries. Other than the American players, they are largest re- gionaJ group lo the tournament. IN A SECOND-ROUND match Wednesday, No. 1 seed Martina NavnUlova, a naUve of Czechoslovakia wbo has applied ror U.S. citizenship, shut out Marita Redondo, 8.0, 8-0, in 30 minutes. ,In a rirst·round doubles match, Renata Tomanova tumed with fellow Ciecb Hana Mandllkova to upset Kerry Reid and Wendy Turnbull of Australia, former doubles champs at Wimbledon, 8-3, 4~. 8·3. Yueoelav1a's Mlma J1uaovec, however, didn't I fare u well u her (ellow eastern Europeans. los· ,..,.. ing, 6-2, 6-0, to American teen-ager Tr11cy Austin, the No. 3 seed. TRE"OTHEa 'tWO Eastti'D Europeans in the tournament are Regi. .. a Maraikova of C1ecboslovalda and Virginia h..uaci of Romania. Austin said her performance against Jauaovec was "close to my best." Her best she said, came last year when she beat Navraufov•, 6·1, 6-1, in Tokyo. ~ Jausovec appeared dedicated to the strategy that you can't beat Austin from the baRline because the 16-year-old American cen bit all man· ner of winners from there all day. .. BUT WREN JAtJSOVEC tried to come to the net, Austin scored with savage passlne shots. When Jausovec repeatedly tried soft drop shots, Austin charged and bl1Sted winners from the net. ln other matches Wednesday, Kay McDaniel downed Kate Latham, 2-6, 6-1, W : Jeanne Duvall defeated Renee Richards, 2-t, 7-8, •~. 1-1: Ano Ktyomura topped Kathy Jordan, $.8, 3-6, 6·3, and Barbua Potter upset Reid, Ole No. 7 seed. ft DAILY Pit.OT A C.01ule Repon From th• World of 8port1 az ill Until H it and Gt Mor Fr.•AP._.tc.._ BO TON Vtttran 11u11er Carl • Va1ln rnakl, ttbulf~ by the Boaton Rtd , In eirtorts to eou1te baa r-ootrut a 11 .um tun, retunwd lo hl1 Ftor•da homr today, d~termlntd tu "1it1ndfi b "unlllhl ular)d mand artmc& Captain Carl. who has ptont II of hi• N•re Ith tho Red '·took thtl h al Wt"dncsday nl'ht al\t'r mfflln• with Rtd Sox CrnHal Manaatr Ila wuod Sulllv'*'' In "n 111par nl t1fforl to p < k up Mlmt• mom) h•rt over l from thto r lub rl'<'t•11t •l11n1n1 uf ttlC't1 to• n ~ ~" n ~•r rontr .. rl "otth •bout I.\ million "lt'a UI> tu lht'm h• makr the1 nci111 move-now." \'a tnc-m•ll• hlld Tho 1\11 CX'iated Pr.-, "I'm fl)lh\I bar~ h• Florida ind .,111 watt'h mr •on, Miian. playM btih~c~ltiornr 1'tk>1'1'1toftht' tlmt1l'II11t and fl h ll lon1c1 llkr I 'II bfi Jo 1n1 ~lot of watC'hlnJC, 1tlllln1 and fl11hlna " ,..1 SuJllvan, ~ho t'arU .. r hatl .aid ~ dido 't «'XP4'Ct any "!t«'lrlt>u t•robl•m•" from stan1 dmwruntkd by tht' bta multt y,., P•)·otr to IHr., 1111 the Amf'rkan Lfa.cur's \978 nlOllt valu1ablt1 i1l•yt<r, llt'C'lln«I romment when askt'd hout V • · e<>mment1t ,.--------t:i. .. fr •I dw ••w----- Nt•w York Yankt•t•, ownt•r Georat1 Sce1lnbr.inn«1r, t•om mt'ftUn~ oo his lhrN~ favorite top1c1c .. Ullly M 11rt111 w1ll rilhl•r monaah' tht• Y tmkN• in 1980 or flttht Wooll>· llJ)'t'S for the world rh&mpltinshtp " "If lt<'<I t.:artw nt~"(bi World St-rit>R Uckt.1l!s, I'll iit•t thttm for him." . . . "Thu Los Angclt>R Dodgers Jul'!l s1l\lnd too much time around the swimming pool.·' Atl ... ta f'atU Not 011 Bor11rr•• S hir If it's any consolation. Atlanta baseball fans ii are apparently on the Braves' side in the contract dispute with third baseman Bob Horner. Of 1,647 persons responding to questionnaires printed in the Atlanta Constitution. t,~-95 percent said they agreed with the Braves thal Homer, the National League's Rookie of lhe Year in 1978, isn't worth $300,000 a year. Homer hit 23 homers in 89 games last season after joining the Braves straightoutofcollege .. BobBalloragreedtoatwo-yearcon- tract with the Toronto Blue Jays while waiting for an arbitrator to show up ... The Major League Baseball Players Assn. filed a grievance against the Milwaukee Brewers after the club rerusect to enter arbitration in con- tract negotiations with BUI Travers. . . The Montreal Expos placed pitcher Wayne Twitchell on waivers for the purpose of giving him hls outright release . 8~a11, lo,_••• Sp•rk B~lc• Junior Bridgeman scored 19 of his 29 points m and MarqDet .Jollnson 15 or his 23 in the second half, rallying the Milwaukee Bucks to a 115·94 NBA victory over the New Jersey Nets ... Seat- tle's Gas WUHams and Dellllis .lokuoa each scored 22 points as the SuperSonics snapped a four-game losing streak with a 116-104 victory over the Atlanta Hawks ... Kicky Sobers. held scoreless in the first half, scored 10 tbird-quarler points within six minutes. sparking Indiana to a 106-97 victory over the New York Knicks ... Rookie John Long scored 27 points and veteran M.L Carr· adCied 24 as Detroit turned back Denver. 111-107, to snap a five-game losing streak ... OU~ Blrdsoal's 26 points and Bob Nash's season-high 24 helped Kansas City snap Philadelpl\ia 's three-game winning streak; 108-106 ... San Antonio rode a 32-point performance by George GervlD to a 149-119 rout over Boston. Newly-acquired Bob McAdoo, who came to the Celtics from New York, paced Boston with 21 points, 19 of them in the fourttJ period ... Guard Bill Smith scored 34 points and Golden State snapped a four-game losing streak by routing New Orleans, 113-101 . Flauan Get a Kea Slaet Ed Kea rifled in a 10-foot goal to lift the Atlan-m ta Flames into a 4-4 tie with the Chicago Black , llawl<:s in NHL action ... Mel Bridgman's goal with 4:51 remaining gavetbe Philadelphia Flyers a 2-2 tie with the Toronto Maple Leafs ... Two goals each by Kris Manery and J.P. Parise ignited the Minnesota North Stars to an 8-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks . TefeNl0tt, Radio Following are the major sports events on televlslon tonight. Ratings are: / 11 1 excellent; / / 1 worth watching; 1 1 fair; 1 forget It. [el 6 p.m., Chennel 9 I I I HOCKEY: Kings at Montreal. Announcers: Bob Miller and Pete Weber. The Kings hope to move up a notch on front-running Mon· treal In tonight's game In the Norris Division. Los Angeles Is In second place in the standings while the Canadlensare on top, 26 points In front of the K lngs. OTHER TV Horse Racing -Today at Santa Anita, 7:30 p.m., Chan· nel 52 ; Basketball -Arizona State at UCLA, 10 p.m .• Channel 5; Arizona at USC, 11 p.m .. Channel 9. RADIO Hockey -Kings at Montreal, S:SS p.m .• KRLA (11101; Basketball -Cal State Fullerton at Pacific, 7:30 p.m .. KWRM (1370); Arizona State at UCLA, 8 p.m ., KMPC <7101; Arizona at USC, 8 p.m., K Fl C640l ; Utah State at Long Beach State, 8:05 p.m ., KFOX 193.5 FMl. Karate Meet Set for OCC Orange Coast College wlll host its eijJhth an· nual JnvitationaJ Karate Championships and Oriental Arts Competl· lion Saturday, Morch 3 in Peterson l(ymna1Jium. The competlLlon which features adult and j unior flthters from throu1hout California, will run from 10 a .m . to 5 p.m. Tickets wlll be sold at the door and ad· mlsslon 111 $3.50 for udults ond $2 .~0 for juniors tages six to 14 ). ChllderTn under six wW be admitted fr t . Volleyball ,..... ~ ....... ~rl•IM,IM .... " - ,... o.. ........... .. \Jnivt•rs lty lllgh 's Harry Ulllup:c xays he will sign a lt•tlt'r or lnh•nl wlth the nh•ers lly or Oregon . tUllup .. u 5 11. 170·pound ruunlntt buck, carried the bull 103 tlmt-s for 592 yards ml fivt• lou<'hdowns in 1978. 1·,....ra,,eBJ CAMPY •.• ti 1111rkt"(t hous•1 of 32,000 at old Svorh1mfin'1' Pltrk. There was one ~uy hollt'rln.r and you t·ould hear him 11bovc-all thf'others. "lie kt.11>t yelling. 'You Dodgers Ahould win. You have all the nig- 11crA ond Jews on your team.• •'That night Sandy was pitching ond I was catching. "We bad to hear this in every town in lhe league but we were winning. We won five pennants, finished second four· times and third once." CAMPANt;LLA concurred that 1 r Robinson had played on a losing team, it might have set the move- ment back. Campanella was asked how many of his seven-man team in Brooklyn s hould be in the Hall or Fame. "If it was up to me, they'd au be there. Duke will get there and so will Pee Wee," he said. Campanella is proud of the fact he made it to the Hall of Fame the same year as Stan Musial-1969. And except for a cruel turn of fate. he could have been a .400 biller in the Coliseum. There are many who attest to this fact and his hitting prowess of drilling line drives to left field. A pioneer. a Hall of Famer and a gentleman. That's Roy Campanella, again with the Dodgers. the team be-played for and loves as much as anyone in this world. UCI Duels Fresno State FRESNO-Having jelled as a team. UC Irvine's basketball s quad takes on Fresno State here tonight, hoping the magic or winning two straight at home doesn't evaporate on the road. The Anteaters, 3-7 in the PCAA after winning three of' their last four games. take on a Fresno State club that has won Its last four games and is in third place with a 7-4 record. The Bulldogs are 4-1 at home. Jn last month 's meeting between the two teams. Fresno State rallied In the final minute to pull out a 64-63 victory. At the time. the Bulldogs were 1-3 and seemingly headed nowhere. Now, they find themselves in the running for the conference title, l 1h games behind Pacific C8-2). . Girls' GymnastiC8 We,,.... Oe ..... WHI 1U.U, Ltlftl •ff<lt lff,29 Veul11~-1. comer IGWCI 7.•s; 2. Fredrick'°" (GWC) 7..S; l .Andt'ews ILBI 1.l. Uftevtfl ll•n I. Thomas (GWCI •• ls; 2, l'rlbUO ILBl 1.6S; J. l'red<ldttofl IGWCI U . "oor Eftl"Cl-1, Fr1M'9 (L81 U ; t. Tl'IOn'lel (QWCI a.is. J. Fredl'kbOfl CGWCI ,,as. ll•l•tt<• lle•m 1. f'rlberv ILBI 7.7; , L. Smllll IGWCI 74S! ). l'f"'1cltson IGWCI 1..t'I. l'>ll·Around I Frlberq IL81 JO.SS; t. Thomas IGWtl JO 00;) f'rPdrlcltson <GWCI tt 00. , BASKETBALL /BASEBALL Nips Eagles Brockman Sparks Overtime Win By ROGER CAaL80N oe-. o.llY "'"'4 IUff Corona del Iii ar Hl•b '• Sta Kina• got off the floor to record a 82-61 overtime decision over Sea View League bHketball champion Estancia Wednesday nlfht with four pl•Yert scorin1 In double fl.iures before a home crowd of 1,400. with 1:05 left in the overtime to Overall CdM rtnlshed with provide tbe Sea Kings with tbelr 28-of.55 for 50.9 percent. blHeast marcto (0!1>. But It wasn't ony or the Sea Kina starters thDl came ln for the lion's ~ha,., or tho credit hnnded out by CdM Coach Jack Errion and he didn't even scort a point. "K\JllT BROCKMAN won the game for us," said Errton, whose team salvaged some pride and moved to within one game or sharing the cham· plooshlp the Eagles have already clinched with ooe game ( F'riday) remaining. ESTANCIA HAD one last chance t-0 tum it around, as Corona del Mar blew a one·&nd· one at the free throw line with 13 seconds to go, but two hurried s hots misfired and Corona del Mar hung on for the victory. · ''This just makes our came Friday night with Costa Mesa the championship game for us 1r we 're going to win it outright." said Estancia Coach Larry Sun- derman. Corona del Mar's consistency was reflected in the shooting percentages as the Sea Kings canned 7-0f·13 in the firs t. second and fourth quarters, and 6·of-13 in the third stanza. MOST WERE from the perlmet,er as Estancia 's nuc· tuatlne zone proved tough to penetrate. "We'd be a better ball club If we'd learn to penetrate with the pass.•• mused Errion. Estancia. taking better percentage shots. connected on 23·of-44 <52.3 percent). Van Hom led all scorers with 22 points and Dan Maddock. with another s terUng effort. totaled 15. Klndorf was Corona del Mar's leading scorer with 18 and Koehler. Shawn Ahearn and Cbria Johnston bad a dozen each. But it was Brockman who did not score a point, who drew b1a coach's praise for the Dip· and-tuck victory. "Brockman shut down every- one he pla~d against and ended up givmt up two points to his man. He never made a bad pass and when we needed the sub. he did the job. Brockman has been on the bench a lot, but he never dogs it and when the time came. he came through like a champion." McEnroe IJpset Teltscher Gaim Third Round Corona del Mar. which fell behind by a 16-6 count early, got back Into the game at 23·23 in the second period and from there out it was a dogfight. RICO KJNDORF got Corona del Mar even at 59 with nine seconds left in reguJatlon with a pair or pressure free throws after Estancia had appeared to get a handle on the victory when Steve Van Horn connected on a three-point play and Mike Price added a Cree throw with 34 seconds to go to turn a 57-55 de- fict into a 59-57 advantage. In the overtime period it was Dave Koehler coming up with a key play as he stole the ball and went in for a layup to give the winners a 61-59 edge, only the fourth time in the game the Sea Kings were to enjoy the lead. Kindorf added a free throw * * * EtlaMle 1•11 , Ce,_ tlel Mer IU I MlclC!OO V•t1 HOf'ft Keup ICroMfeldl Price Vameml To1el'l ,, "Ip 6 J IS • 'n • 0 • 4 3 II I ) 5 0 0 0 ICoelller PIOett A1Wert1 John~IOtl Klt\Oorl ScNM II roe km.,, 7l ~ti Tole!\ Sc•r• "' ~erl6d1 ,, " Ip s 2 n 0 0 0 • on • 0 " 1 • 11 • 0 • 0 0 0 11 6 67 E'llancl• It 10 U 10 1 •• CorOl'•Clet~r U IS U 1• 1 •1 Tolel louh E\l.wt<•• u . Coron. del ~' It; F0<1l.OOU1· J-..IOfl ICorONdelMerl. RANCHO MIRAGE (API - Third·seeded John McEnroe became the second major upset loser in the Tennis Games at Mis- sion Hills Country Club Wednes· day. falling to unseeded Eliot Teltscber. The scores in the second-round match were 6-7, 7·5, 7-6 as Teltscher, a former UCLA pl ayer. won the third-set tiebreaker 10·8 on a windy af. temooon. On Tuesday. second seeded Bjorn Borg of Sweden was beaten by unseeded Bruce Mansoo, a former USC star. The 19-year-old McEnroe missed an overhead and then his forehand cross-court went long to end the match . ·'The wind affected us both a lit- tle." said Teltscber. The tournament's top seed. Jimmy Connors. has had little trouble thus far. He took bis second slraight·set victor y when he beat Switzerland's Heinz Guntbardt6--0,6-4 Wednesday. In other matches Wednesday. Manson advanced with a 6-3. 5-7. Prep Soccer eer-. .. Met',, If ICMCi.t 1 Coroneo.I MMK¥"'9· LAw~2, H-. EU•rteleKorlftQ· 0¥<1• Ullf~ J, 1,.,1,.. 1 U"IVer\llY scorl"Q (ojt19_., WU-~ 1.-.1,.. s<Onf19' Price. 6-3 victory over Charlie Pasarell: Jose Higueras dereated Bob Carmichael. 7·6. 6 -1; Dick Stockton downed Pat Dupre. 7-6, 6-4; San Clemente's Bob Lutz topped Alvaro Ftllol 6-1. 6-3, and Gene Mayer defeat.ed John Sadri 6-1,6-2. Anteaters Rally, 7-4 The UC Irvine baseball team started the 1979 season on a hap- py note Wednesday with a come- from-behind 7-4 victory over visit- ing Azusa-Pacific. The Anteaters overcame a 4·2 deficit in pulling out the win. scoring twice in the fifth and seventh innings to regain the lead. Pilcher Rick Somers started the game for UCJ and was sail- ing along with a 1-0 lead until three errors in the fourth brought about four unearned runs. The Anteaters bounced back though with two in the fifth and two more in the seventh, the lat- ter coming on a double by Mike Hirano. Sc_..,,~ •llda-PecHk 000 <IOO ~ 11 0 UC lrvlM 100 110 21a-r ll J 1111<....,, Nietfteft 01, Mel10 Cit enO AIOftro SofMn, ~ UI end H-. NealSKI SALEI SPORTING GOODS SUPER SPORT SHOPS I 0 FEET OF SNOW AND WE ARE ON SALE • 24 HOUR SNOW REPORT - PHONE 547-2545 CLOTHING SAVE 25°/o Pants * Partcas Bibs* Sweaters Jr. Clothes Heed -.... -lloffe . Sprite ...... J. C. ICiiy • SwllMJwelf • Slryr • AITf.LMAlg .... llMDIM&S SALOMOM-155 With INllt LOOI SALi 75.00 Hl7 • "·" ........................... .MOW 67.10 6T. • If.fl ............................. NOW 44.21 a.tH · 110.IO ......................... .MOWll.tl HEXCa IMl"IEX® HEX~ii~Lm ........... .SALi S ltl.10 .... na.oo ......•.•.......•...... .SALi 171.10 DYNAST.U LAS& ~ ...................... .SALi 135.50 .... 160.oo ....................... .SALE 120.10 POLYSOFT a.,.. t H.oo ......•................ SALi 146.10 DYMASOF'.I' a-..211.00 ••...••................ SALi 161.10 OMICM.ASS .... JH.00 ...............•....... .SALi 191.10 HEAD. SPIC'ftUM .... 110.00 •••••••••.•............ .SALE 127.IO HEADS&. SUPER SPECIALS .... z10.oo ....................... .SALi 111.10 SPORTCASTll LSC WAIM-Un OLl~h 1 as.oo .................•..... .SALi 1 H.10 1-. 21.00 •.•.........•.....•.•••.•...• SAU It .OO a--110 oo S "'LI I JS.10 ttfAD T..-CkS .,,,.. . .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . .. . . .. .. --. SC~~ ~~AM Sif ';QUS' ........ SAU 14'91 =~ms SUPRUGNT .... tt.t1 ......................... SAU 14.00 a.._ tt0.oo ....................... SALi I 42.10 ............................. MOllMCA 1/J Prk• .... 12.10 TUMl-UP Mow Jmt OmoM A~.00 ......................... SALi 71.00. OME Wiii OML Y621 .... ••.oo ...... , .................. .s~u 41.00 COMI ii if ION ea {.sPORTIH •. GOODS l~J~M ....................... .SAU 176.10 MISUM. 10.n~;:·oo ......................... .W.I tl.IO ~·························.SA&.167.10 .... "M ......................... .IAU74.71 NEWPORT IEACH , .............. 644-2121 M-.tlnMt .. , W . IM.S-. IJ.I .......... DOWNTOWN SANTAANA Zltl.• 547-5723 ....... MftJM W.t!lN.S-.IM CERRITOS #16J Mii 12131 924-1625 .,._,..,.Ml .. 9 Set.'""' ... 11-1 . ... BASKETBALL I HORSE RACING Dally ...... f'llOt9 bY LM POM OCEAN VIEW'S JEFF ANDRADE SOARS TO SCORE AGAINST KATELLA. Thuttday, February 15, 1979 Katella Wins Se&hawks Short At Charity Line ... BJ DAVE CUNN1NG8AM Of ... o.lty ...... '"'" There was nothing free about the free throws that Ocean View was •hootl.nS Wednesday night. They were very expensive. Ocean View shot a dismal 4. for-13 from the free throw line in the fourth Quarter and Jet a close game slip away to visiting Katella. 65·52. SO EXPENSlVE were those missed free throws that they almost certainly cost Ocean View the Empire League cbam· pionsbip. With one game left to play, Katella holds a one-game lead over the Seahawks and bas clinched no worse than a tie for the crown. Katella won without starting 6·5 center Jeff Eberhard, who was sitting on the bench with a cast on his left arm, the result of a fracture during last week's game against Cypress. And the Knights also bad to overcome an eight-point lead that Ocean View extended in the second quarter. In fact, Ocean View led for most or the game and didn't fall behind until sophomore Wayne Carlander got into foul trouble. CARLANDER LEFT the game with 28 seconds left in the third quarter after picking up bis fourth foul, and by the lime be returned early in the fourth period, Katella bad blitzed Ocean View. 10-2. "There's no doubt about it. They didn't want Wayne to have the ball," said Ocean View Coach Jim Harris. "and when he came out they started to take control." But even when Ocean View's 6.-6 center returned. the momen· tum had swung so much ln Katella's favor that it couldn't be revened. THE KNIGHTS gave Ocean View ample opportunity to catch up by committing numerous rouJs, but the Seahawks could only shoot 31 percent rrom the free throw line in the final period. .. I'd bate to say we choked, but tbe kids felt a lot of pres· sure," Harris said. "I guess you can chalk it up to the team being so young." Ocean View starts four juniors and a sophomore. There are no seniors in the school. Katella, in boosting its record to 14·8 over· all, started three seniors, a junior and a sophomore. "WE SHOT AS well as they did (53 percent l and we outre· bounded them by one,"' Harris said. "We won the game in every department except at the line and on the scoreboard. It's frustrating. "But you gotta give Katella all the credit," Harris continued. "Tbey bad to play without their starting center and they did a good job.'' Roger Lemons. moving from forward to center to take up the slack for bis injured teammate, scored 2ll points and was ably s upported by Rick Lopez. who shifted from guard to forward and scored 16. DAILY PILOT Jl3 Saddleback Ooses In On Title Saddleback College•s bas~ ball team virtually assured iteelf of a third stral&bt Mlislon Coo· fereoce title Wednesday ni8ht with a U0-95 victory over vtalt· ing Riverside. The victory, the Gauchos· 2'.11 in a row at home, gave them a two-game lead over the Tigers io tbe MiJsslon race. Saddleback played almost-a flawless game as it jumped to1an 8·2 lead at the outset and never looked back. As a team, the Gauchos bit a sizzling 61 percent from the floor, led by Randy Wbieldon's 31 points on 14 of l6 from the field. .. Center~ Kevin Magee of sad· dleback was the game's secoild leading scorer with 26 points on 10 of 20 from the field. The Gauchos also bad three otlter players in double figures -l:d Patrick (13), Ben Bacon (13) and Ted Hettinga (10). Riverside was led by Tom Wight, Eddie Roberson and Ken Copeland who scored 25, 22 and 20 points, respectively. The victory was the Gauch(>s' seventh straight in Mission Con· ference play. Not coincidentalJy, Magee transferred to Sad- dleback and became eligible seven games ago. The Gauchos' magic number is now two (any combination of Riverside losses and/or Sad· dleback wins > before they WTilP up their third title. ··~('5) S11 .. 1•ctr 11Ml Copeltflel AelCI w19111 A-'°" M<Gllee.c M<Gllff. C.. LloyCI .. " .. ' J JO s 1 11 ' 1 JS I • n • 1 10 0 1 1 l 0 • Petrk.ll Wlll..00.. uVellee BIGOft MIQff He<ltle Hen11'9• How1rC1 B1men Am•ral Tot1I• 31 1' '5 ToUll H11tll'"" s.Clellebl<lt,*41 f9 It ... 4 S I) 1• l 31 1 I S s l 13 10 • ,. 1 0 • l • 10 1 0 • 1 0 1 I 0 1 ... 22 110 Toll! IOUI• Alwersidf'JO, s.ddlel>lcll10. FOUied Olli R-'IOfl.M<~C Alvcrsloel Marina Clinches Sunset Crown Although an outright league championship is now an im· possibility. Ocean Vie w 1s playoff.bound as a runnerup. And its 18-S record speaks well for a seniorless team m its first year of varsity competition. 'Tm pround of what they've done and bow far they've come," Harris said. * * * MISSIC* COHPEaUICE Le ..... ~ ... By LEE MILLER Ot -Deity ~I ... S\ilff Marina and Huntington Beach high schools engaged in civilized warfare Wednesday night, with Marina throwing a bombshell in· to the Oilers· title hopes, 57·56, on the VilUngs' battleground. IN A ROUGH contest that Marina Coach Steve Popovich classified as an "intense battle", the outcome was in doubt until the final buzzer. With one second remaining, Golden West Women Notch · Fifth Straight The Golden West College women's basketball team keeps right on rolling .. Receiving strong performances from Kim Eisenhart. Pam Banks and Meledey Bland, the Rustlers cakewalked to their fifth s traight victory Wednesday night. a 93.53 triumph over Cal Poly Pomona JV. In other area action, Orange Coast won its second game or the year with a 62...0 beating or visiting Chaffey. At Golden West. the Rustlers could do no wrong, racing to a 6·0 lead to start the game and in· creasing it to 12, 36·2-4, by the half. Eisenhart. a 6·3 freshman center from the state of Hawaii, led all scorers with 22 points. She was supported by Bland's 21 and Banks' 19. o.-w.st tl, Cit ~efy ~JV" (Al POIV ,,,,.,_. J V-Pertoer 10, Clll..-11. Woelllt S. Gou!lll 11, Kn~lll II. Boyd l. Flennl9an '· ooioe11 ~-Rooent t , .,_, 1t, IC. G.tOt 2, c . G•o• •• KHINf 4, 811"41 21. MerU "· EIMnll1rt22. M•lnllN! Goldlfl W.St, »-l•. 0... CMlt U. Clllff9Y .. CIMlfflrf-JtmllOll 1. $1n<lw1 u. Mk llto11 t, lttV•nole 7 • .._...,.12, D•klft 4. Ortrl09 C0es1-Semollse11 11. ClllltltNitt..-d tt, e1ne1e1 >.Ult~ 1, Rkco •. Oleue4 3, s.10 2. M11n1..,.: Or•noe c.oes1, zt.o the Oilers had the ball out of bounds for one last attempt to win before an overflow crowd. Popovi'!h and Huntington Beach Coach Roy Miller then set up strategy that would have made General George Patt.on proud. Marina put 6-5 Kevin Olson on Rick Glenn, who was in bound· ing tbe ball. Glenn got the ball to Curt Wooten but several VUdngs knocked the ball loose to se<:ure ~he~ictory. "WE WANTED to zone up and force them outside," said Popovich of tbe last-second play. "We didn't want to let them have a cheap shot. It's tough to get a. sbotoffthatquick." Miller bad drilled his squad on a situation like this in case the gamewentdowntothewire. "We worked on a sideline play during the week. It worked but Curt had trouble getting the han- d le. In tbat situation it's a desperation shot, anyway." CM Tops El Toro; Monarchs, Uni Win Steve Lux came up with his best effort of the season Wednes· day night and led the Costa Mesa Mustangs to a 70·68 Sea View League basketball victory at El Toro to go a game up on the latter in the race for third place and a CIF 3-A playoffs berth. Also Wednesday, Mater Dei's Monarchs captured a 65-59 de· cision over visiting Bishop Montgomery to take a one-game lead in the Angelus League race, and University dealt invading Irvine a 45-41 Sea View League setback. LUX DID IT ALL for Coach Joe Dominic's Mustangs, con· necting on 10 of 14 from the field. adding four assists and finished t he night with the winning bucket, a lS·foot basellne shot with three seconds remaining. With a five -f or-five performance from the line, Lux finished with a season high 25 points to go with Chris Beasley•s 20 points and 10 rebounds. BUI Lux also played a stellar role in the victory, holding El Toro's Cory Wilson to one field goal. Steve Lux's winning shot gave Costa Mesa its only lead in the game. C..t• Mew (701 !El T-14el 8euer 8HSltV Dominic B. Lu• S.LU• Miiier Sul11rf le1C1 Tot1h '" "~ 1 0 2 e 4 JO 0 s s l 0 7 10 S 1S s • u 0 , 2 Holrnu Walker C. Wiison M . Wll.on Sim~ Htu Gibbs McFaCIClen a 10 70 T ot•I• kontlyQvemrs t9" tp 9 • n • 2 ,. 1 4 6 1 I l s 1 11 2 7 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 ,. 10 68 C.Osl• Mew 13 IS n ~TO El Toro 10 19 IS i. 68 Totel fou41. Costa M<tw n. El Toro n. Fouled out Welllff. Hftl IEI Torol Oomrnk 1~1• ~wl. Ted1nk•l fouf; Miiier ICosta Mewl. • lrvlM 1411 .. "t. l 0 J Unl....,;ty IUI Wlvloll Audy Mor11ev- H1rrls Foringer &em Tot•is ' 1 .. l , • I 0 2 I 0 1 l , • SlotlDtt TllO<TIP10n Mc l1"91>fln 8r\'1Skl eo .. ull Allison Mo•ley .. "tp • on 1 0 2 0 2 2 0 0 0 , 1 s I 2 ' S 0 IO • , 10 " 1 u Coffm•n U 11 41 Total• s.c .... 11, Ouem" lrvlne I 10 12 11_.1 Unlvt,.11'1' 10 12 • l'-4S Totel louh: 1,.,,,,,.,, University IS, Fouledou1 -· lla"ep Mellt .. Mery "" M•twl>fllUI Sew•ld Orebo llCk "°""'" 81tem1n Tolell It ft U1 Cool! • s 13 c;,,'(1•11 3 0 6 PHbody n s 2t Seunders S 1 II Sft1nr1011 o o o 8reltfuss 14 H )• Totals SC-"' Olill,,.... '9 ft tp 0 2 , 1 II ts s 3 u ' ' " , 0 • 1 0 , ,, 17 u 81SlloPMonl90mHY 6 1S 1S tt-!lt Meter 0.1 13 12 " 11.....s Tot•I touls· 81""°P Mon~ 17. M111tr Def "· Foui..tout. 8ltlemen C81$110C> Montgomery> Two-hitter Santa Anita Results Aids GWC WALNUT -Golden West College began de· fense of its national wDmen•s IOftbaU crown on tbe rt1bt foot Wedne9day, beating Mt. Sau AnlOnio College, 1·1, in a non-league aeuoa opener, here. Pitcher Cindee Secrist f ave Mt. San Anton lo ust two bits. while Helen Gilligan provlded the offensive tbruat. Gl11lgan 1ot an RBI single tn the second in· nlng, then u,ed • five· run outbunl ln the th.I.rd wltb a two-run trlple. ~.., ..... ~--oas • ._,,, t Mt t.ft,.,.,... tlO -t t S '9c "111 ... YMll; CAlulfl, Gvn-1 ,., ....... . ' 7 .lO, 3 to, S.00; 81emellonbvrCly 1011,...r'Hl 7 60. 4 40; Red Oeser1 IMc:Ce'""'l UO. S$ Eocw IH l ~Id 1117 !O. Alt~".D0. Buketball IOUTM CW.IT c:otf PR••fK8 l• ... Baseball W L 1 t • 1 4 4 4 • 4 J ~ . 2 , -- . ' commented Miller, beads o( sweat dripping down bis face. .. EVERYTHING WENT the way I wanted down the stretch." said Miller. "l wanted them to foul us but we didn't make our free throws and we came away with nothing." The Oilers led most of the night but Marina stayed close and made its move whe n the Oilers missed three free throws. "They missed some one·and· ones and that kept us close." said Popovich, whose team became the undisputed league champion with the win. Popovich was very pleased with the Vikings' performance and hopes they will carry some momentum into th e CIF playoffs. "We'd like to finish as the No. l team in the county and go into the playoffs with some momentum," said Popovich. He will not experiment in his last regular season contest, either. "We have to go with what got us here," added Popovich. WHAT GOT ms team this far is a balanced attack and that is what the Vikings beat the Oilers with. "It was a team effort." sa1d Popovich. "Randy Heidenreich. Dave TiezzJ and Olson did a job inside and Truielt Hatton gave us some outside scoring punch." M!Mtl..,._ hlcll IMI M.tr!ow CS71 Wooten ,.,.1. C.lenn Eldrldqe TllOnlp$0n Pevn•ne1f1 Tote ls "" .. • 2 11 l 0 • 1 0 4 s • ,, , 0 " 0 0 0 Tl<!nl Olson H•IO•Melcll Oew~n Helton !>Plvey Aiello lS 6 S. Toltt\ k .... llyOuerten ft ft UI 3 0 It , 0 • 6 l IS l I 1 1 1 "' , 0 • ' J ' 2• ' \1 Huntington Bff<t'I 'o '' IO ~s. Mar In• 11 16 12 ll 51 Foulectout N-. Katell•IUI O<e..iV-Ull Pr~mer Lem011• Lopez Furumoto O•ntey W1'11comti W"'90flff TotAls ,. ., i. s • " ' , ?O T 2 I& 1 • • 1 0 1 0 • • 0 I 0 '" ft q, Anlonopolo!A 0 S S C1rl1nci.< I 0 I• N .. klqebo<""' I 0 1 Anelr-10 s n HQ 0 0 0 FllZllUQll 0 0 0 2• I) 67 Totel" S<_11,0u1mn 11 10 S> •• 12 ,. 1• Foul•CI oul. 01r1l•v •K•l•ll•I. l•mon •lf1te1t•l Atonopotou• 10 c•1n V•••I l•chn1ca1s none 'Mldcl lebKll Rl .. rslele P•IOmer S.n Oie90 CC Cltn.i• S.nBel"Nnllno Soulll-•tem Cllllffy W L 10 1 • l 1 • 1 • • s s • 1 10 0 11 ..... _.,.,k_ S.CICl'-lt 110, IUotenlele tt S.n 01..,o CC"· S... Benwtrdlflo 71 P110,.,,.. .. ~em~ Cllru• ... c...ttey 4S ~•'•G•""" S.001-11 11 Cllru• Riven• •t P•- Sovt-twn •I Sift &em.re11no s.11 o~ cc •1 Owttey W L 10 • 21 6 u 10 16 • " 11 1 " I n 1 14 Tars Belt Barons Edison Cruises P<UJt Lions The Newport Harbor High basketball team 1s s ilting all alone in second place in the Sunset League standings after its lopsided 77-53 victory over host Fountain Valley Wednesday night. In other Sunset play, Edison kept its hopes alive for a playoff berth with a 79.54 drubbing or Westminster. The Charger s meet Huntington Beach Friday in a must-win game in order to be playoff bound. At Fountain Valley, the host Barons never really got into the flow of things. shooting a poor 30 percent (21-69) for the contest. The Sailors. behind the shoot· ing or Jon Sweek C30 points> and Brian Freeman c 17 ). made 1t look easy as they led by 10 at the half and 15 after three quarters. Westminster. meanwhile, didn't have it easy with Edison. Edison's Dann Bowen poured in 26 points to pace the attack with Mike Hale adding 12 and Rex McDonald 10. The Chargers blew open a close game in the second quarter to lead by 10 at the half and coasted the rest or the way. WH"'"""9r IS..I E.._17'1 ft"'" s 0 10 Oomltwl\Jf!t M<Wllllem~ Parloo Wal~er Park••. L. Fo\ler P~O.•r, tC. Tipton (;rlttltll C.r•n Sau rider. S11ncll Tol•h .. "q, 0 0 0 6 1 1J 1 0 1 J , 8 l 1 b l 0 • 0 I 1 • 0 • 3 1 • 0 , , 0 0 0 0 0 0 l3 I Sol McOoneld Odger\ Lotlloan Bowen R .. Q•n ICaMmen.i Ol>YI\ Hl-.l Hatr N1or9an S<llr~r Harker Tot•I• Scon 11'1' 0...rtff'I 1 0 1 3 0 b 4 8 76 I I l 1 0 l J 0 b ? ? b s , 11 1 7 • l 0 7 0 0 0 31 IS 79 WO\lm1r1ster 13 ,, 11 16-5" Ea•'°" IS n 16 ,._,. Tolll louts· Wtoi1m1nstff 14, EClliOll It; F- out -N•~tMfW m1 """' 11 6 30 f'_lft .... y lSJI Swee'k Frttm•n C•ldwtll GICICll\ Ooodit ltn\•Y s1 .... 1 81Kk Olly Taylor s 1 11 ' s 1 I 0 7 l , • • 0 • 0 2 2 I 0 1 0 7 1 0 l l Reul•nd Cow•n E-IMlmtt Fields H•r•ow Hu bell rel Stoll C-m R•m1ru Pollllrel" LtV•lltV Fry 2S 21 11 Tol•ls S< .... '" O;aerten .. " .. 1 0 4 1 0 7 0 1 I l • 6 0 • 4 • 0 2 l ? • 3 0 6 0 J 1 2 0 • 0 7 1 21 11 Sl N•wPO<t Hert>or 11 16 19 :»-n Founleln Valley T 11 11 ?•-il l ot•I touh Newport H•rbor IS, Founlein V•ll•v 1), Foul•CI OUI HubberCI (Founl•ln V•ll•yl; Tec:f>nluls FlelCIS IFO<'"'''""•lleYI. Hockey, Basketball Scores Nett.el MecQy &.....,. Loi Angeles 3, Oetroll l Htw Yorto Rln99n S, 8osl0fl 1 Pllllldel~ 2. Tot,,,,lo 1, tit eutteto 2, ,....., von I slender\ 1 All1r1t• 4, Olic:l'IO 4. lie Mlnr1esal.ll l. VlllCOUYer 1 ....................... "' ICIMIS Clly IOI. PftllldelptM1 10. O.troll 111, Denver 107 lndla,,.10., ,.._ voni '1 S.n AMolllo '"·Boston llt MllwlUllll!e llS, New WWV t4 Golden Stele Ill,,....., Ot'leens 10\ 5Ht11e 1 i.. Alllnll 104 ........... , •• 111. 81rml"lfNrn 7, -E"911rld • WIMIPtQ s. Clnclnnell ' JOHN T's BIG FOOT 1rs A WILD & CRAZY SALE! .a )/. OFF CJ.. r-~~ "/ 2 SALE ' • ley OM ..... .t OW rlglli• price HM •KOftd tt... of' ............. h••Wf o#f. Cit ··r .... b• • .............. AfllWka.....1-..+I• I• Ip LI If, ..... Sltotfs. ltc. STOCK UP NOW! w • ..., ....... to flRd. ..... we•,.. wortlt loalrllMJ for. JOHN T'S BIG FOOT Atheltlc Foot~ Sir• 2·17 Racqu•tball EqulprMnr •nd AP1»rel 011 lrlstol et AINI Hil ComMesa,(1t•)l57.ZH1 4 Next to W11rd/Henlng1on • 1().7 Mon thN Fri 1().5 Set t:2 ·3(Hi Sun 'Wt Go To Gf'Nt unft/11 To s.tw You .. - ........... _ . ·-·· t r • \ . . ' • ltlrAdoo in Debut Al'WI ....... • Boston 's Boh McAdoo t right> encounters a little drnmatics from San Antonio's Mark Olberding Wednes- day night as McAdoo made his first appearance in a Celtic uniform c.tfter being traded from New York. .M cAdoo scored 21 points. but the Celtics bowed. 149-119. Branyan Stars l.nnghorn Hits 41 Points From AP Dispatches AUSTIN. T<'x The old gag used to go that there were only two sports at the ni versity of Texas football and sphng football. Well. 1t 's l1me to make room for basketball. and Texas mav be playing that this spring · The 12th-ranked Longhorns, led by Tyrone Branyan's career·bigb 41 points. played the game the way it was meant to be played Wednesday night. thras hing Baylor 102·83. Branyan is a former Cypress College student. Texas captured the National Invita- tion Tournament last spring but Baylor Couch Jim Haller sees bigger and bet- -ter things in the Longhorns ' future. "If they keep playing this well. they writ win tht' national championship." he raved Well, perhaps, but if they beat Texas Tech and Southern Methodist in their next two outings they will at least win the Southwest Conference crown. Texas Coach Abl' Lemons. who once called the 6-foot-7 Uranyan too slow to play major colle~e basketball, oow te rms him an "amazing individual He's like a white buffalo very, very rare. He's the rarest of them all There will never be another like him .. Branyan may be slow. but he can't Jump, either. "Well. he tried a httle." Lemons Joked. "He JUmped from the waist up. But then he did get l>omc rebounds Any guy who gets 41 points IS a friend Of mine Dulw .. 66-.,B DURHAM, N C Mike Gmanski scored 21 points to lead fifth-ranked Duke to a 6'l·4R victory over Atlantic Coast Conference rival North Carolina State and tighten the Blue Devi Is· grip on the conference lead. The victory boosted Duke to 8·1 in the ACC and 18-4 overall Last place NC State fell to 1-8 and 15-10. Gene Banl<s drilled In 13 points and Jim Spnnarkel added 12 for Duke in the regionally televised game . The Wolfpack was led by Clyde Austin with 14 points and Charles "llawkeye" Whitney with 12 Although the game was close for the first 30 minutes, the Blue Devils look advantage or a late Wolfpack scoring- drought to pull away to their 18·point margin of victory. Duke held the largest lead of the first period, l!;-10, but N.C. State battled back to take an 18-17 lead on a pair or free throws by Austin. The Biue Devils ran orr riv"" consecutive points however. and regained the lead. ' Norflt C'•reUaa, 85-M CHAPEL HlLL, N .C. -Al Wood scored 16 points and teammate Dave Colescott tossed lo 14 to lead fourth- ranked North CaroJina to an SS.00 vie· toryoverWllliam & Mary. Mike O'Koren added 13 points for the Tu Heels, 19-4. Wood bad 14 of his total by intermission and O'Koren contribut· ed hi• mtire offensive output dur1n1 the first half The Tar Heels juqiped to a 31-18 ad· vant.ase l•te in the first half. After lead· ins 45-2'7 at the lntermiaston, North Carolina et.aced a three-minute bUU to open lbe second half and scored 10 W · aD1wered polni.., * College EAST (•lllorno~t? ShDPt'rv Poo /6 Ion• H. Armv S3 1.e1u9ll 41. 0..law•r• 4' Pt1h1>Ur9)1 Sol P•NI SI •S Prov11to••o•l. 8rown60 OT P~r ,. 8uone11n SI Fr41<1CI\." Y 10. 8•t11mor~ 66 SI Fran<•) Pa 90. J •lflH Nt.,Ot\On80 w (<"'""<h<ut St Coa•I GU<llrd SO SOUTH AooAla<lltan SI 61 Cll-11>4 Ou•• Ill>. N CA•ot1n• St •I ~rQl>IOWf>. 0 C. ••. Ston.11111 S9 M"'511<tll •• VMI .. N C•rottna IS, Willi•"'" M••v 60 s C•rot1na 66. Funn.t111 .i \llrq•n·• n c.._ .. MIDWEST D•vton "· T_ .. o. Pau1 as. ean st 1• O•P•vw 11, Valoar•ISO 15. OT Detroit 106 St 8oneventure 101 OT 1ow .. s1 68.ICa,...H .. IC dn'lds St 59. Ol<lallome St SO Loyola. 111 . 91. w Mi<hlQ&n llO Ma,,•tt• 14, Mount Union 6'I M1~sour1 81. Coloraoo., Oklal'tc>m.t 19 "e1>ra\l\A .se SOUTHWl!ST Ar~•n'ld\ /I, SMV SS L <1mM •s. Mc""~ St. ,. l en• 102. £\•vtor 83 T• .. u 4&M 61 Te••\ Cllriitl•n So Junior College s-11c:.nteet1M-• S.n11AM83,Al\I Sa11AnlOnlo11 Fullerton'4,S...OeeooMeu'3 lot I C•rrltos 102. GroumonllJ • Mlssloft c ........ 110 S<>Ctll~l>K• 110. Alveulcie•s S.nO~C.C".San8ern.,cli"011 Pal°""''"· Southwflltni sa C•lru•61,0wlffey6S _,_.ltMCeft,.,_• El C•m•noSll. P!H<f'SS Lonq llff(" I IS. EHi LA 10. Pas.-17,LAMIU-I• High School StMWtLe..- Ma,,n•S7. Hunhng1on Ba.ell S4 Eolson1',WHtm.nsterS4 "ewport H•rl>o< 77. Fou1111ln V•lltv S7 S..VlewL•ltlW Coro11eclelM•r6?. E•lan<le•l lotl Co•te ~M 70, EI Tor"061 Un1vtrSllyO. l.-.lne.i 5"111 C.st Lff1JW S;anCl-1•46.MIHIOllVleloO OanaHllllAl,(Alj)OVatley~O L19un118elKllS2,L•OUNHllls'8 A,,....,.L ..... PIUJ )( 68. 81"'°9Am<tl l>I Mater Oet 6S, Bls11011Mcm11111.,,.ry st S.rvlte72,SI. P<1Ul60 Catit....,u ..... SA vanev60, Canyon Sii Or•noe10. E•~•• F 0011111160, T uslln S2 S3nt•ANl7. VlllaParllU .. ,,..,.L•atW Kattll116S,O<eanV1twSJ loara ... CvP<H•OIOO LO\ Alamitos 72. Kenneclv .. ....... ,~ '>unny HlllSl4, AN~m 61 B~neP.,...J7 Savanna:.. Troy 71 liMOllOfl• H W••l•l'fl6t,s.ocllebl<ll60 G-0..WLff.-GantenGrovo'1. P.clflc.62 La O..lnta IOol AancllOAl-lto• 1• LosAmlQO! .. $anll~76 C>nfltit ........ 8 rnSl,Sono<•U E I Dof'41do IA. Fullef'tofl S1 La Habr•7',E~rart Lowell70, Valeflci.~ DH Preview Set Saturday Dana ltills High wlll preview its baseball pro· gram Saturday Mter- nooo with a trio of ln- trasquad games lnvolv· Ing the frosh-11oph, JV nod varsity teams on the Do lph ins ' home diamond. The frosb·SOPh game starll at 11 a .m .. followed by the JV et 12: 15 and th vanity at l '30. For a $1 donaUon rans will g t a free hot dot. Coke and prosram. . ' ·. ' . 'A Boot • ID Titne Skiing Fith Right Equipment Key By DAY CUNNINGHAM °' .. .,..., ........... What Is the moet Important piece ol equipment a skier mes? 5..,.., )'O'I need (Jood 1kis. A re- 11 oble b&ndlnl ls Important, too. A ('omfe>rUble pair of eoctles? A aturdy palr of poles? Also lm- portant But none Is as e!l&enllal a.s the ski boot. A bad pa.Ir of boots can t1Jrn Jun-Claude Kiiiy Into Charlie Brown · • 1 pt>nt a whole season with ~nklei. that hurt," uys one in- structor at Anabelm 's Port-a- Slope "I wasn't skiing well and my fec!l never stopped hwtine until I rmaUy got a new pair or boots ... THOSE WHO RENT their equipment understand what It's like to have a skiing weekend ruined by boots that don't fit well. 1be pain can last for days. For some, the answer ls sim· pie. Get boots that fit. But that only works for skiers with average feet. "The missing element is that equjpment is designed ror the average skier, and there Is no average," says Dr. Albe rt Perelsteln, a Costa Mesa root specialist. '·Persons with structural ab· normalities in bones, muscles and ligaments, such as bad arch es, bowlegs and knock knees perform dilfereolly from the theoretical average," Dr. Perelsteio says. AS YOU MIGHT have suspect· ed. root specialists have an answer. It's called an orthotic. It ·s a plastic insert for the boot, made from a mold of the in- dividual's foot after a complete medical examination. T he CaJjfornia Podiatry Assn. is calling the ort.botic "the most revolutionary step forward in ski equipment since the develop- ment or the short ski " Orthotics have been used in the past by boxers, runners, football players and other athletes with root problems. The devices are available from almost any podiatrist. A REC~ PRESS announce- ment from the CPA about or· thotics quot.es Dr. Perelstein ex- tensively. • · 1 don't know why the CPA mentions me specifically when they talk about orthotlcs for s kiers." says the Costa Mesa podiatrist. "Other doctors can prescribe them. I'm certainly Prep Basketball Standings SUNSET LEAOUIE 'Merine "'l!'Woort HlrbO• -.11nlln91on 8t~" EcllMll' Founteln V"41fly N~ltmlMltt • c llnO•«I cllampoonshlp LHtW W L I 1 • 3 s 4 s • • --...., •• 1ar .. Newoort HarDOr n. Fountain Valley S3 Marina S7. Huntlng1on Be.cl\ S6 fcll\On 7', WH1miM!ff S4 .. l'IN.,.~~ Hunllnvton 8Mcll •I Edison Fountain V•llfly 11 WHtmln1tt• Mar IN •t Hewoort HMtlM SEA VIEW LEAGUE 'Ellanc1• COfOfll Cltl ,,_., Coil• MaM El Toro Unl~enlty trvlnt • ( llftClled (O<~mplon>l'tlp L• ..... W L • I I 1 s 4 4 s l • 0 • ........ ., .. ,"~" CorOM Cit!""-' 62. E1l.n<I• 61 Cott Coil• MeW 70, El Toro 68 Unlvtl"llly ..S, INIM 41 ,.,....,.,o•me• Co•on•Clel Marat I rv1'Mt Co1ta Mtiaet btan<I• El Toro et Unlvenlt-t SOUTH COAST LIEAGUIE Lt ..... 'Minion viero Dena Hltll !>lnClelflenle Uplslr-V"41ty l 8(1UN 81«11 L~\11\8 Hiiis 'Cllll<ntcl ce><llamplonif\lp W L I t 7 , • l • $ 1 1 0 • ....... .,.,Sc .. " san C~• 4'. Mt111ort vi.io d l•QUN BM<ll n. L...-H Ills 41 D•n• Hiits .. ~r-Vallt'I' 40 ,.,....,.,o_ Oan.t HlllittMlsaloft 'ViejO CtPlll,_ Vall•Y et L-.i-llct.cto San OttNMe 9t L..,,._ Hllll IEM .. l•I L•AGUI '"••"• 0<t4H1 Vlew ICtllftffV ~oar• lOSAllf!lllOI ~prtU •c11~c.~t1110 L ..... " L I t 1 t . ) 4 ) a • t • " ... ...., •• le:_ tcatell• u, oc .. 11 View n LNre4.~U L .. A~ n. KtMtev .. .. .....,. . ._, CYllf'tMMOC:Hll Vltw l<•telle et K""*"f ~ot Alalllltot el Loera ANOILUILIAGUI L...- -)u1er Oel llitlett MonlfO<Nry Sar<rlt• l'hlt lC lltllePA~ ., ...... • <llM'llM c.<Nn'l1161M.'llll w L e I 1 J . , } 4 I I 0 • WI ftf'sac- Maa.t o-1 U. •"'-Moot..,...,., M 1'1111 JC ........ AINI .. $t,....1 .. n.s1 "wttt "'*'"--~" JC .. Mtttr 0.1 Sen.lie .. ..,,.. Mii• .... •••' ",_ ... .,..,._ 0-aH w L 10 l 14 • IS 7 ll 10 10 ., • u °"'•" w L 11 S 11 l lt • • I• 7 " • 17 O..a• W L 20 4 IS • ll • It tO 4 17 J " o.w• W L 14 • " J 14 • • 14 1 M 6 H 0-MI W L 11 4 11 , 14 , tJ IO J J ,. not a pro alder. I onlr, do in· tercnedlate bllla myself. • · Perelltetn auueated that be may have been 1lngled out because he's been in the busl· nen 15 years, he's done a tot of work with skiers. he's a member or the CPA board or directors ind he'.s a skier himself. ''An orthollc ls the ultimate piece of akl equipment," Perel· stein says ... A skier would do well to have his 'personal' equip- ment. his reet and legs, checked for top performance and safely." A SICIER WITH an ill-lilting bool is subject to excessive fatigue, decreased performance, poor edging and canting, and possible borie, leg or fool injury, according to the CPA. The ortbotlc is custom-made to realign the foot. thereby re- moving the strain from muscles and ligaments of the entire weight-bearing structure. No Pienie Tbe key, says J>erellteln. ii to reduce excessive motioa of the foot within the boot. That would .provide treater comfort and control. A GOOD ANALOGY, says the CPA. is that ortbotics are like contact lenses. Contact lenses realign vision to correct eye im· balances; orthotics realign feet to correct booe, muscle and liga- ment imbalances. And just as contact lenses are prescribed lor each individual according to the type of correc- tion be or she needs, so the or- tbotic is individually prescribed and made for specific correc- tions. "Many skiers, no matter bow well instructed, are unable to turn properly because or the structural weaknesses in their feet and legs," says Perelstein. ··Drastic improvement bas been shown in thousands or skiers whose podiatrists have prescribed ortbotics'" be says. Of Ragged Rum And Long Waits By DAVE CVNNINGBAM Of .... DMty ...... lttff Any skier who bas been lured tothe slopes more lban on- ce knows that not every run will be perfect, and that once in a while you will have a disappointing \fip. Sometimes the weather is to blame. sometimes it's a bad pair of boots and sometimes it's the snotty attitude or ski resort operators. FOLLOWING AR E TWO STORIES of less-thao- perfect ski trips· From Mrs. Donald Cluck of Laguna Beach: "We arrived at the parking lot at 8:30 a.m. By lbe ti me we had waited in line to buy our tickets and waited in line for the chair to gel up to the base area. and waited in line for the other chairs to take us to the t-0p, it was 11 a .m . SKIING 'We were told there were three routes down. including one beginner run one mile long . . . . "It took us an hour and a half lo pick our . . . way down this 'de-hghtful mile beginner run.· The run was 10 <tlsgracerul condition .... The four-foot ruts and mounds lbat ran in a continual series every few yards continued until tbe last few hundred feet of the entire run. "fl was apparent this run bad not been groomed for a long period or time. There were fallen bodies strewn the length ol the run evidencing the difficulty to cope with im- possible conditions. Nor did l see one ski patrol to ad- monish the 'hot shots' who were jumping from the tall mounds, making the impossible trail even more hazardous. "Completely unnerved and very disappointed. at lbe end of the run we took the chair down and came home." The site or Mrs. Cluck'c; bummer trip? Mt. Baldy. She has written lo ask for a refund of her lift tickets. We 'll let you know if she gel'> it. I WISH I COULD TELL YOU this second story hap- pened to John Doe of Costa \fesa, but it didn't. ll happened to me. On the first trip of the season. I was driving through the Sierras toward Northstar-at-Tahoe in a bowling blizzard. Up ahead were a couple of Cal-Trans workers in yellow storm coats, offering to put chains on your car for $5. I ignored them, confident I could put my own chains on as soon as signs said they were 'required. I didn't know that my rented car was carrying trick chains that could only be solved by Cal-Trans workers. When I finally came to the chains-required station. I carefully laid the chains in the snow and began the pro- cess. Three-quarters of an hour later. I was still on my back, muddy. slushy and freezing, and the chains were hopelessly tangled around the axle. · Now I'm no novice at putting on chains. The fault. I was certain, lay in the chains themselves. They were too small. 1bey needed adjustment. Something. l cornered a Cal-Trans wofker and asked for as- sistance, but he wouldn't touch the mess ror less than SlO. l mumbled something about highway robbery and told him I'd do it myself. Eventually I gave up and paid him his $10. He whipped the chains on in about six minutes, probablY by adding a few links to make them fit. I '11 never know. because I was shivering in.side the car. I rot to the s lopes two hours be.hind schedule. The moraJ of the stories is not that siding is a drag, but that one cannot expect fresh powder, uncrowded slopes and a perfect run every time. Once in a while you bit a mogul that sits you down. Skiing Conditions ~ Hltll -hw U-41 In cllu, tr11<1 of MW snow, mo\tly lier~ two t1•1alrs ()flef.tllftt. ......, ""' -... »40 lnc,lln INKkM ~ -~. four ""~ -rettne. 1111 .__ -8.,. '140 Hl<M' llef'ONtlt tnCI -·-· Hlr• llfl) ............ ,..., ...,. -CJoMd WMl\Hdey for 9r00fl\llll ettef T""4MY't rain enf wet tnOW. """"""' pl4ill"fCI IOOty. .,... ..... ·-1111 to .. 111 <"-. llal'dlNKk. 10 111 toOtJ, -1111 opwatlnq. Mt. w..-. Btlt rt IOI fl\· <lltt IMltdll«ll elld Mt WIO'lf, IW9 nns tMretlftt. (~ .. -.... ». ... IMl'IH tof1 9MW, -•lft ..., .. ,no ... '-"' -... •" lll(lle• peOef ~r. th•t Clolilllt 11111 ooer•llllO. MOllO wltll -ttlltCI <lwtlr ,a-V....., ll•W ... 11 11\CllH, "'11" ..-r. 11 .. 11n1 Olltf•tl"9 O.WllllM l•M U .. IM"°"'· ,.o"' '"""'· -10 Ullfl ''-"· """llrtt ...... lllO ~-..... hw•tt JO lllCllH, .. lllcMt --· ·-lifts ............ .l•M MeeMala 1111• " In t•.,. ~., -"'""· 1"91111• ,..., .. ""' . . . ... ,.. . - BASKETBALL I SKIING Tri tons Stagger Diablos Using lbeir patented slowdown game to perfection, the San Clemente High Trilons stag- gered South Coast League basketball leader Mlssion VieJc>i 48·'3, on the wanner 's coun Wednesday nig.bt. Also in South Coast League ac- tion, Laguna Beach dealt visit- ing Laguna Hills a 52..S loss. The Tritons or Coach Rich Skelton handed Mission Viejo its first league loss and only fowtb of the season as opposed to 20 wins. AND THEY DID IT with a slowed tempo game after falling behind by eight points in the first half, keyed by the 88 per- cent shooting ol 6-1 senior Ross Sutton <9 or 11 >. key rebounding by freshman James Hill, sophomore Jack Steven.son and senior Mike Wade and tbe free throws of Brian Mulligan. Sutton finished with 21 points. M ulllgan •s three ... ror.rour at • · tbe line upped his season stats to • a sparkling 53 for 58 (91.4 per-• -.. cent I. · Hill. who turned lS Wednes- day. had two vital tips to help San Clemente control the ball and t.he tempo. "WE DID AN excellent job with aggressive rebounding in the second half." said Skelton .. Stefan Lipson ol Laguna Beach led all scorers with 26 points. Peter Barker added six points and nine rebounds for the winners. Mtulellvoe .. 1a1 f.""" I 0 , 5-C......(4') 8•11si< AoClert~ O.C•W• Ftl<lll Huff""'n Vlft Llefctt , 0 4 • 0 I? • 0 • J s " J 0 • Toltb II S 4l su ... "' 0...r1.e" ACS8m• C•tr Hiii Mulll ... ft Steven'°" Sutton W•OO -foul• ftftftt 1 1 s 1 0 1 2 0 • 0 l l 0 1 I " l 11 l • IQ 11 11 .. MlulonV .. IO 17 9 I 14-&l ~nCIP,,,.1111' I 11 • 1.__ Tol•I IOUll MtUIOfl vi.10 I•. S.I\ Cltt,......te 11 l"OUlf'<!OUI Nonfo. 1....-HMhl .. 1 Ut4IM euctl Im lee 81•ncl( Coombs 8•11e, f r i\101\" Swendf!r TotAll .. ft •• s 4 14 LISl\On l , • Smltfl b l 11 Jaussi Evan• earlier McDona1c1 l 0 ' 1 1 l ' 0 4 ,. 10 . Total\ Sc.ert 'Y O...m,.. ""'• " • 16 2 , 6 1 0 • 3 2 8 l 0 fl I 0 1 20 12 S7 l"un• Hills • 10 IS IS-. l"UM llff<ll 10 14 11 14-S2 Tolal IOulS L"9U"4 8H<ll I) LIQUN Hiii\ .. Fouled OUI - Cycle Action Set for CM Speedway motorcycle action will return to the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa Fri- day night, March 2, when the first of a series or five m eetings between a team of world speedway champions and the cream of the U.S. crop tangle in head-to·head competition. Leading the world team will be multi-world champion (van Mauger from New Zealand. Others will include Kiwi col- league Larry Ross; Peter Collins and Malcolm Simmons from England; Anders Mlchanek of Sweden · and perhaps Dave Jessup of England. Alternates in- clude Rudy Muts of Holland and Tony BrtggsoCNewZealand. The team manager ls Barry Briggs. a four-time world speedway champion who says the invaders will have their strongest team after losing to the U.S. last year.4-1. College Tennis Men LA Pier'ce 7, o.lcle Wm 1 s ....... Bclnolt IP) Clef Elem .. 1 •.. I. Barba IP I ,,., Newlln W . , 6; LaMart CP ' dlil. Lynott Ml, 1 ... H•rcllno CGWCI def. ~a .. ,, ~1 •... ,. MHtr IPI dtt. llerO.trd ~. W , S.ttlH tPI Ootl. All"0 .. 4 ... 7 Deto41191 8enolM.aMlrt IPI del. Lrnott·Newlln J.S ... 1. Barb•·Wooclllouse I P I cle f, Et•m·Htrclln9 •>J, 6·1, Ber,,.rcl•Sllver IGWCI clef. Setlle\· Oockwot<n 6-2, ,.s ·-Ari-•, UC lrflM 1 • !ti"'"' f\Pt'IU IAI dM. A"'"'t ... I, •·I; $tDc""'°' (UCI I def C141rY W . 6-0; Sieglff IAI def. CM10il ...... 1{· Olton IA I def StNtH-t. , ... SoulNtl..,., IAI de Nh!Ol'IW,6-1. 0..-. Es.,.rat•Soulllierlencl IAl Clel. Ar-t·Stoc:ll;ton • J, M , Slt!vlef•O..ry CAI dlil CMIOll4fl.-.. t. 1>3 .. t .. -•, ... .... ... .,, ........... . __ .,...,... ,._, ... COMICS I CROSSWORD ,MARMADUKE "Oh, oh, it must be my dav to feed Marmaduke I" SUPERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS ~RE.AT GIRL • · SHE DOES THt: WORK OF TWO MEN! THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane "It's OK. He landed butter-side up." DENNIS THE MENACE J FUNKY WINKER BEAN MISS PEACH by Pasko, TUska & Colletta JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS -- . . • .. . I ; I 1 AGATHA CRUMM MOT LEV'S CREW 1.151e1-1, ~ ,..E'Aa AND 1 Wlt.t. '5TAY Amw·nns ~WHIUS YOUCMA~ ... by Tom Batluk by Mell I Ni'~O E'MOTlONAL. FoRT'IFYING, WIN~. by Gus Arriola by Harold l e Ooux . ~Y Emit Busttmllltr HI, SLCJGGO ... HOW ABOUT -_ _,., A CHEESE $ANI>WICH . ""~ ,._ .,_, \,111, ' . -.. -. -..... .. ---~ ,,. ... -. . ... . DAILY PflOT U : PEANUTS I CAN'T 8EUEVE THAT '(00'~ MRWE16f.IT by C"arlts M. 5chul1 NO. I iMfNK '(OU SHOULO FOR6ET ™E OIET I -WHO ARE PARTICOLARLV I AOEPT AT I W'OWllfa! ' l ' .. t I TOD4Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE i. ACROSS t Val 6 Talc 10 Helictine 14 Weight unit 15 Persia . 16 Persian Poel 17 House are;a 18 Off.tey: lwords 20Booled 21-pat1y 22 Relaxes 23 Travel 25 Speediest 27 Stress 30 For now: 2words 31 Crowded 32 Showers 33 High note 36 Rave 37Tomato- 38 Catcti 39 Adjecttve sutfhr 40Seasons 41 Dull finish 42 LMge hawk 44 Wlltlefm, e.g. '5 Explor8f Jacques - '1 Telephone 48 On the move 49 Sever SOOutoome 54 D.ggers 57Hoarder 58 lnstrurnenl S'9 Orient 60 F1owef 81 Sea eagfes S2 Function 63Sllms DOWN I Sefpents 2 Boaz's wife 3 Preposition 4 Crucial examina- tion: 2 words S Part of yr. &Coal-• 7 Labrador ore 8 5'amese 9Cuckoo 10 Spin 11 01"9ralons 12 Tresses 13 Advance on wages 19 Dens 21 Shack . ........ -·-.~-..... UNITED feature Sync:heate Wednesdav·s Puule Solved , l rl11•., 0. • 1 • r .,.., • l ' Ill"-" '"!A I a l I 'It • c • I r •11 ( s A Nllt!lll I I r •rl(., •• c .. 0 II f ' ' llW A ll~f 0" II- -NI IA 1..:.l•H• , u • I t • I 0 I l I , U II E :c • A t•r'Tu • 11' I II 1 ISIS C!G 111•1• If I TIAI• l(A •l ll ll:S S 011- -· u. ( c u I f IA I l U N I f ( D f II 0 N f -• o a S A l I N l ( N D-Nlf N S II I l l ( I [(I f A -All ' ' ~..!!~ ( s • c s ,_,I( A $ 24 Single 43 Snapshots 25 French -44 Set 26 Top.drawer '5 Class 27 Alea unit 411 Pacific Fur 28 Tribe Co. VIP 29 Deforma-47 Powdery lion 49 Price 30 Person 51 Italian city 32 Sovereign 52 Number suf- ,. Oilatort lhc 35 Ripener S3 Stumbfes 37 Slcin 55 Man's nlcll· 38 So denl?en name 40 Steeple ~ Greek letter 41 Sheep cry 57 Pact I : -DNlYPllOT Business · Ballooonist Raps Restrieti•ns 87.IORN .... ................ Wbeo Mo WU lt, Max An- denoo proaptttt'd I« un.ntum otar the Arcllci lr rle Two )'t' an lat r b e huind d • unnJum C'UCr\SNlDY that ts now put ol Ktrr·Mt t< Corp Now be b Mb ~1' rom~ny. Ht took ov r lbe lop ;ob ln U,. lalltr. Raor bers F:xploratlon aod Oc-v lopmt'Ol Corp • tn t , •ben ht w At th um • the tomp.ny hAd Hlf uf •bout $1 mllllon. Now It 1rc>u • a $.U milll()O y •ar LATE L T aummrr, you mt1bl rwaU Ma 11k! AndM'llOI\ and bu rnt'ocla, 8 a Abruuo and Larry wman. all r Albu· querqUtl, all~ ~ a•r t'Urn'OLI arrou UM' AO Olll' In • sm•ll 1oodol1 buq from a b11 balloon. '1'be auumpUoa that r•n attain wU.hout ttal f'lfon LI ool conallt~t 1 r you want to do somet.hlnJt raght y o u bavt' to work a t at ." An · derson auad. Seventy hours a w ee k . maybe even 80 B u t c "'"" sometimes, be said, be wonde~ ll tllort alone ta aulttt l ot You oeed lrtoc'dom t.oo, h 11 d When b opmrd bla Ont mln ~ toOk C>'Ut no I wb n h aaJlfd t b balloon to t'ranc. b hltd none 1tht!r. B T I NCaEA81NGLY, bl! 11d Juat b fore a cc:eplln• tbtt (;.oppf:r Club'• m a n of lb·. Y«'•r awar d , lrttd Om • •re rHlrlctfd To open a mine t.o- day. he u d . you have lo wade through t~o ye rs of 1ovcrn· mt-nt pa~r ··ao~mmt'Ot mtnfertn~ in bu t ts gttttiD& to affttt even companies our size," bu H Jd imftly "We cannot tolerate It. .. E vtrythlna government does. ht ronlmuetl. is wl\b a broad bru h, ol De(:eMlty. Applied, be uid , t hoH rceulatloos can tyrannlw "WHAT·s GOOD for Phelps l><>dge la minlng giant> as not ro r us. and vice versa." be said. Anderson, a quiet. reflective J)Cf$OO, ian't ordinarily given to oratory, but In the evening be w11 to address bis fellow metals mto. and he bad thought deeply about lbc mesaage he wished to convey. G roeers Plan C o 1111ter Attaek ••1 didn't ale~p mur h hut nltbt." ~said . It wes partly Uw nolH of the cily. partly *•use be •Pft't Um dilcuaaln,g with tus wUe . Patty. lhe thouaht.s be bad ~o developing for yeara. "IN 1'RE LAST asix, seven )'tars." be said. "I've tried to look (ll &.M country and bow I rat lnto tt, and try to undera~nd wha t m•kea It operate . And whut caused It to not operate <'Orrcctly." Somehow, be s~ud, we seemed to gel things done fairly weU l>t!fore "81g Government.'' "The J(Ovt1rument ls not aJl bad, but lt hH a ~nchant for screwing up on a regular basis," be said. He suid be understood wby. ·'They begin wllb good int.en· tion11." be conceded, "but the power to regulate ls the power t.o destroy. It's the very question or beaog a free man. We cannot re· 1inqulsh freedom." ANOTHER PAUSE to con· sider, a trait underlying the methodical approach his wlle says be brings to any challenge and which. she said, relieves her fc a rs and t e n s ions when Fast F o od Profits Grow WASJUNGTON <AP> -Sales at fast food restaurant chains may expand by 20 percent this year as more people stop for quick hamburgers, pin~. steaks and chicken, tbe government says. Mo~e of the nation's grocery chal.na are coun· tering the threat by installing their own carry-out operations, including de~icat.esseo counters. the Commerce Departmenlsatd. ••WITH 31 CENTS OF every food dollar goint to food eaten out.side the home, grocery chaina are planning extensive sales campaJgns lo fight the fast food encroachment," it said. "A number or supermarkets a.re even install· tng sit-down restaurants in their stores while others are opening restaurant chains of their own." In a report on business franchises, the depart· m ent said, "The franchised fast food restaurant con\inues its success and popularity ead more dramatically than ever has 1hade a ma;or impact on the food service Industry.·· THESE R ESTAU RANTS ABE expanding their menus t.o get more breakfast and dlnoor busi· ness, the department said. It said s ales o f franchised fast food restaurants reached $21 billion in 1978, up 17 per- cent over a year earlier . That ls about $100 for ~very adult and child in the United States. Sales a.re expeeted lo jump about 20 percent lo $25 billion in 1979, tbe report s aid. Part or the in· creases may reflect higher prices. THE NUMBER OF FRANCBISED fast food restaurants increased from Sl,972 in 1977 to 57 ,878 last year. There will be about 66,000 units this year '"Ibe highest cooceotration. . .continues to be in California, Texas and Ohio," the department said. Employment in fast rood franchising was 1.23 million in 1977. Although many chains are offering wider fare. m~ concentrate on s pecific areas, such as ham· ---------------------burgers. frencb fries and milk shakes, pizza and beer . bot dogs, barbecued beef, roast beef, fried cbk ken, submarine sandwiches and steaks. the re· port said. WE SPEQAUZE IN CUSTOMER CARE Your Dally Pilot can t>q Recycled 'L!m: R. Ph. °'-eo .. 1°""'"'1'1 .... """ .... ~,.,... ""'co. .. .., .... ~!>981 The bigge6t operators sell hamburger's, hot dogs and roast beef, but the fastest gaJns are being made by seafood and pizza restaurants, the de· partmeot said. We know that It Iii re - 1 a ti vc I:; easy t o $:~t MERCURY SAVINGS AND LOAN c u :.t omer s into our ASSOCIATION AND SUBSIDIARY pharmJl'Y at least onrf' But. 1f we expert to holct CONSOUDATlD STAT£MOO OF CONDITION you as loyal customer . (CONDENSED)• you mui;t be sa tii.hed D'·'CEMBER 3 970 with the J)t'rsonal lrt'lll· D '' 1, 1 ° Business SerrUnars Slated m ent you rereave and th1 merrhandllle that we of· ASSEIJ'S A s eries of four fe r . Cash nnd Secu r 1tlt•1:1 •••••.••.•.••.•. $ ·10,1&4,()69 semtn"-that of'er ad To "take <>ood care" of Lo 0 -I E 483 57., ru"' .... '" ,, • ,, una on n.o::3 litutA· . . . . . . • . . • • . . . • w,"'1U V1. for small bus'-ess our customers we tr v Loana to Facilitate Sulc•s of Real Elllate • 7f>3,400 ce w very hard to c reate a lriwrellt R.cceivoble . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.406.836 sdrv~vaJ ;t" be pr~senti warm ond sali&fyin~ rOJl· Jnvl'tllmPnt. Real Estate .. ~ . . . . . . . . . . . 21,376.813 e 11 y • r acnge oals port between you ond all A11JOCiation Premil('ll Co ege s ommun ty the pharmacy per!!Onnet. d E 1 l N t 9 Gsn 003 Serv1'ce Office. an qu pmen , " . . . . . . . . . . • • . . , "• lo addition to satisfyinJ! Federal Rome Lonn Bank Stock . • • . . • G,129,900 The opening seminar, y our basic pha rmar v l S . A l 7 281 9<13 titled "How lo S•a_. a need. we ~o all out to ..oans on aVJnl{S croun -' . . , • • wu" giv(' you that extra hiR h Otlwr All!!el.8 . . . . . . . 3,37t.11fl Small Business," ls slal· quality profession :d TOTAL ASSETS .................. $675,685,976 ed for Fe b. 28 . The service. second, "Financial YO UR DOCTOH CAN LIADILJTIES A ND STOCKHOLDErtS' EQUITY Planning for a Small PHON~ US when you SavinKtt Account8 ................. $367,22U,881 Business," will mee\ o t.>ed a medicine. 1'1c-k up Advunc:e11 from Fed~rnl Home March 28. The third. your prescnpllon 1r :.hop. Loon Bank · • • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • ·.. 6l,5&8,t07 "How lo Survive and ping nearby, or we will Other Borrowin~'11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40,616,057 Build for Success,.. Is deliver promptly without Loons an Pl"OC:C811 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 57.237,'104 slated ror May 16, extra charge. A great Accrued Taxes . . . . . . . • . . . • • • . • • . • • • . . 7,'1!>!>,530 The finaJ seminar ln many people entrust UK Other Llablliliea •....•• , , • . . • • • • • • • • • 11 ,2'11,4 lfi G l wtth their prescnpllons. Deferred Income . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . • . . 4,4'17,073 the ser ies, " ell ng May we compo und Regulatory &eservea .................. !il,.131 Result• wltb Time yours? Capital, SWl>lua and ~ . .. .. . . . . . 26.896,118 Management," may be PAllL90PMAIMACY TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO taken OD March 29 or ,,....,.._, STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY ••..• 1575,630,976 May 23. All seminars 311 ....,.._...., run lrom 6 to 10 p.m. .......,. .._. •Compll.>t.e ftnandal etet.ement. will be '42·1SIO furnillhed UPon reque1t. •Fee i s $I S p e r ._ ________ • '--------------------seminar. 26-Week Certificates .o % ANNUAL tfffCTIVI Y11U> • ... NUAL IATI for certificates iHued during 2/ 15 thru 2/21 /79. .. ' -. --.,,. ____ ......... Minimum $10,000 lntereat compounded dolly. No fffS. Earn more than any bank. ..... , .... I• .15t 111.i-theft U.S. ,,.. .. ,,., 1111 44-• ..... ~ .. _.. .......... ll••••f-. ,... I• awl>\«1 .. ~ ....... et t-.4. wt.Id• ,wu eff.i _, , ..... ....... ·~·'-"· .. eqvlt• ........... .... 1 .. 1-11 ~11., ftlf -•• wl!Mntwol ,.,._ ,..,uic.. ••. Santo Ano19h·7580 S.A.fashlon Sq1 83•·071 7 Newport 8eoch1631·2611 Hun1ln9ton hoch1 898·9666 watcbin1 him go ulort in a balloon. People have to be rree, be said : they have to be In· divlduab. "We au talk collec· Uvely about doing things," he sald. "But the bard part is for Individuals to do It.·· To do lt It! aodivlduals, not as a group. As you might expect, An· dersoo doesn't believe. as some secretly do, that the nation's, the world's, dilficulties are lnsur· mountable. The problems, be .-;aid. "are deftnable ... The reaJ problem. he suggested, is that "people don't want to make the (bard> choices.' ANDEQON RAS considered the condition of modern man. A reasooio,g man. be said, "l search (or the signllicance or • thlnas. •• There are thinkers and there are people of acUon, he said. "I try to be both." No ucelic. he still s1.11pec:t.a the alleged Mnefits of some lux· uriet. ''There are things we once didn't have a nd I'm not sure we 're better ofl having them,•· be said. Luxuries. he mu.led, •·can steal a peraon'a freedo01. •• Of more Immediate concern to ham is t he enc umbering bureaucracy. He wonders If be could have achieved his early s uccess under current re· gulalory conditions. He won· ders, be sald, when eovironmen· lal official s are going lo challenge the good Lord's ti&nd· ling of things. "I've bad to think it through,"' he said. "I love my country, but I tolerate my government," said Maxie L. Anderson. Cree man. ............. FREEDOM STRESSED lhxteAnder.on Airline Boss Resigns Harmo n Ends Reign at Golden W est J ames M. Harmon. 50, presi· dent of Golden West Airlines. bas resigned bis post, citing "personal reasons." Harmon said be would take an admhutrative position "almost Immediately" with another Southern CalUomia airline. but declined to name the airline un· tit negotiations were concluded today. A VICE PRESIDENT of tbe company said tbe resignation was abrupt. ''When I weal to lunch to- day he was president," tbe ex· ecutive said Tuesday. "When l cam• back he had quit." Harmon said his decision ac· tually wasn't that abrupt, that chairman of the board Hollis Roberts, 63, wbo assumes tbe presidency, knew Harmon was looking elsewhere for months. . A company spokesman said Henry Voss. 49, executive vice president or Golden West Airlines. will be chief operating officer and handle most of lbe Amoord lncr ea8e8 Quarterly Dividend Directors of Amcord Inc .. Newport Beach, have voted to increase tbe qua rterly cash dividend on the company's com· mon stock because of record 1978 earnings and the outlook for 1979. T be divideod will increase 9 percent. to 30 cents a share. This is the 14th time in the past 20 quarters that the cash dividend has been increased. The dividend is payable April 2 lo shareholders of record on March 9. Over The Counter MASO U.tiftqs day-to-day operations or the firm. HARMON, AN EL Toro resa· dent, joined the company in 1969 as executive vice president and vice president. His sister Is the wife of San Diego financier C. Arnholt Smith, original owner oC Golden West Airlines Inc. Smilb formed the airline in 1968. He also was lo control or various surface transportation interests at the same llme, in· eluding the Yellow Cab Co. of Los Angeles. THE CIVIL Aeronautics Board asserted that the relallonsblpcon· slituted an illegal transportation monopoly and ordered Smith to sell bi.a Golden West holdings. Roberta. a San Joaquin VaUey rancher, acquired the airline. 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I~. 21 s 11 ~\o-~ StOPSlll> 1.10 • J ,.~ • ~ ~l'l!efJ I 11 l 'O l 1, ew .. c.o 1 IO • 76 ,.\lo• ~ · · • • ' H11r.1111 Cl ' ' Uh • I~ Ml-'' • It• "'--"' pf I 2 ~· ,,_ Storltc IS l'll :M • "• Wll EP 11• I 7 16 .. • 6 wnF'tr toO 10 ,., " • \\ el: Pi m ~ ,: • HUtlllec • 1' '°"'. "" MltM l.J.W ' •• 3~-.... I I '·a., lf74 + t I Storer I I 30 • 21 J'l>"1 .... WtE pl t'° , '" "'" '1\ Brll\Wk 70 • 102 ,,.... "" ·" 11 4~ , ...•• :'. Ht>O\ .J• I 113 jO + v. ,,.f!f I 13,s ·~ .... ,.. . • s "--" SlrfdRll 1...:. • I l~\oi . §tOe ., $ 211'•. • 8rn$W pl? Cl 1 21'> J t fJ 2t .. _ 11, H41<1•M . . 1111 1~..... ~ I I.. · 0 ~i\ ¥t \II 4 • 14S 1111'> + "-$1\1Wor US S 11 1'"-t "' IO~ SS , 2 2t'~-"'> eru~ltW 140 • u ,...., '• t 11 20 , M•llMB 110 1 JO )1'-• \II ,..._~ .J: 4 .! ·· y; l'\fFI 20 t n il .... S.UvSllO 1012 • 31~+ I'> ltC~ 1lf' st It~•+~ _ 1, 1 «> 9 ~ .. H•t..,,~C S 11 nit..... _, iU •'+-Vt Otlef .92 t a ~ • w S\lflC!lm 60 S 1 :It"• ''I -"' • 2 trlo. B8vuc110E•1.J! 611m1 ,",'• • "' :.o ~ 11 12.,. ~ .,) M•'"'H 1 • S6 «>'~ Vt == :n~ 7 ;; ~ ~ ~lttll'y l·" • 1~ ~ ... ,_. SullPrO 1.n • : 1'W•~ ,., 1~ 11 .... '• !41 192'.\t •• , 8 u'o .. • 1 ... 410 ._I I• Y'• 1 ...... 11""' 1111 a IO ,._" .,, · cnrEI 4 ~. \\ ~·-El tel 14 I 2f ~ .ID:! i ,a 1111-.o+ 1, ~ " -,·;; 'i 11 ' "•-"' l4;1mrP ~ 10 " 4' .. "' M.,os 1 • • •• n \> ..... 1 t0 12> n -"' s;;;;,.._ UD 1 11~ "'~. ,,. --~~ llllflCIY •• S ll 111' .... e 1 -•t .. Mtm,.·-7 , ... , \'t MayU W 4 • 411t. l\lthu 1.20 2710 20.... '4t ""' I ~ , ''~" • l o ::.:!~H I ~ ·7 11~ ;~ .... ,; ·~ ·•j 1 ii· ;;.,...:·v.; tfff(~ ! i ~ "~. V) ~· uo. • ~ '~ .. i:1111ttu S5 .,,.= .... ~~,Uh ,.., g::. ·-::r..w; 1'40 1 i..ff'° ~~ '• ll"lo.Rpll.SO . n ,. Vt ~·B 1.41 ... 15.i..-\, """'• 1:111 , n to • "Mc ""\I s , lO'll • .... -.i,,, .12 14 ll """'" Sullditr .al 1 .... t2 '· =1 ''°· I 7' -• "'"""d I 40 1 '° ,,... ~ ,,,. 1 • ,. • Ht\\IOfl . 7 ~ • • M< "' .JO . "' t1 + tit ~ .:!~ t6 •s 17 Ill $worVal S4 • n• 17 • ... , ... I , ..... '• 8 IMO Pl SS 4 1 llf4~ S. . • . . lffll~llll 1.b 10 I" 2t'h-_, NICOii t1 1IJ 41" + ~ I tt 2• 24 ~ ~ $Ullmk0 ~ S fA I~ \'t .-1 "' -~•No .... 115 ., ': ,.~ .. ;.. i'° 1 211 1•'".. '" "-"P• . .o l' ,. ...,._ "' M<m ·" • 1m l"llH --.• 200 a&S """-"' SUllKrsr . • ,.... . .,.. • 1 l 10 ... Burt No 1 to s "' '° "" I ,. •. ''t tJ:J • 1... "'"'" pf 1 "° 1 1~. .. M< !u o · "' .__ "' 1 • .,. • 2 '°" + "' SlrPtOll uo n it S)4t1t + 111 ltt ....... -, MVt I 8 lld .... .. • )H l'f ,,, 1S .. ·~ 19'1'1-" M~Vll IO,, 52 ,.,.,, • M< ,,.,. $ J ".. 1-'t ~ teO so-. .. ~ Sutl'Oj -10 ~, •••• 14 tO J: 1•2~: : ; I 11)'..';ml :ICI , ,. 4 l.\t II! 10 • 11 •1v. .. 1t 11 1tl\Cld1.:. : s '°" "' tll< d IM• 21 ll...,_" I • '• ITV>+ " Sw 1,0 ' n n-. 1~ wy.y " ~ .~. "• 3~:::~111 IO~f .; 1f':.:: 1:"'U J 52~7 .. ~ H~~ 11:',; mt:.": =n: , .. '!'~ 11"! ~ ·1 f 11..=-i.. $yttron :10 I 10 ''I" !t'!! Poii -• s..-. ..... """"' ) 1l IJD3 W t • Vt QO ft4 -H tton I J"'l n +1 ~Gf'M 1•11 W J\lp-~ .. I } l tt"+ t? S~ -~I , 1' " X y iH ll ilt :l::11<S •. tql 17 • h M<Lout 6 P l~I\ ~ t 't Jilolt• '--TT ~JtA-..4 .04 11 cil:''"-t; CH Ht e '1 -JVI fW " , ... • HIMO llfl 10 1• IO't McMOfO .Illa 5' 1'"1 \'t C !.~ -':! TR£ ..14 11 44 IS '• Y.,,_.. ~ S 11'41 "" ~'.,,~ty 1-•• n ~ --·~ el ,;:::~ 1111-.... =:· !~:;ia :;en~~·:~ :!:111 ,: t 11t ~(· ·i ~~:cw .,,, l;v.: t~ l:: pl ::: ' • ., m'! .. 5 ~ ,, m :~~~ ~ .. ·1!: .. .. ... ·' ., 1 .... "911•11 uo ...... ~ Mtnn .JOU ,, .. ,,, .. '""" , .... 4 J•"-• flllW pt 00 • ., • ..,. '· Na ) SI 11'• (LC .1416 77 U\11-~ ·~.~7 -6 • I\ Mt9VU f 14 1 l1 ,.,._ • 11'> ,,_.\lft<O 40 9 66 IS~• '' ~ J tt ,; IJ::.:_ ~ Tett8td .0 SI 11-..-.... 1ridt 1 'j I .. 131oti '~ t:NA F11 • ., 111\.... I0&4 i ,, 'f n --. Horlro11 .• "" ~· " M•crt1m • 1~ ..? !17~ t1t E" io i ~ 12~. ~. r •1u11 10 ,_ "' n.m•nG '° 12 1~ CH.A fJf 1,lt , 14 I~ It , 11 ,.., .• , • HotpCO ,SI) !J 1J1 ti -1"' MtlW lie UO ' -• .,.. ~ ' 19 I U 'H ... CHAI Ullt IS f I -V. I, 7 U'4 (i. :t't111ll .to • 103 IS .. Mtml)'U ~ 114 »'°' • VI P.5 UO 10 1 "'-·. CPC t.11 • tit '"'" .. I ~ f .. .. OVOlt 1.20. 11 ,,. U"-• " "'"\'" ,. • ' ~·')-\>. ""10 i ti'•-•• g"sN•t '_:·'4 '• ,j Ht::?.:.:·;.: 1, -" "°"'"' 1 ! 1 a " !IMr a 14 • " u~, 1, , i Ii t ., ~ 1,. ,.., ,._,. r t "'Hou,,11 t .t a .~. Merell. 1 '617 AJ4 '1-..... as 1.1J f10d71 -~ CHolC I 1 S -~ r on:! 1• I 2 ..... H&u,!IF I. • .. 1114 '-' ~rd~llll Mi •1 _.! 2'11• "'t:' Ill 9A4 •1 1 ~ ICl'lY, .. ·-no s s "• w tOf , .,, 1 .,.,., \\ Ho\KI" 216 1 ut "' It .... ,, Y IY• , • ...,. 1.11 • ,.... re;;." 22 ; • Ill Utl I I I~• '-~•NC I t 1°" » • ltti oMeM .4 1• * '1* + 7J 11(10 J'' 1-\II f.;11M _.h 1S-• ~ a.1 ff' • 1l MowdJ11 44; ~ "" , .... ,.,.,. 01 I~.• ) } 11 '''""' t<• I Jt, t..2J ,._ "' HutlOrd '~ 1 f. "' MH11 Mtf! ' gv..... :1 ) :l lh •• l'L ... 1 § IE' ·~ chlln .... 1 \;!.... HuolllT1 • • " MGM ,..1 ] . \4 • V> 1111. Ii.. .. '' I.Iii• , ~. • " II~ 1 1~ + ~ Hume11 . u ISi , • •• *1fl" t It . jltf• r1 , _ "' _ 1. <JO •• -Hum• on'° ti 1.1i Ml!" ota ". ,,., . r~ v. 1 ~ 1. t ''"' "' ~ !t:!-'• 1111111~ 40 iJ lot 14 '' M<llC• 1.-e s u1-. ,,._ tt ,... ,. c '°" 1 H~-t Hu1111 R t n•• 1,,. MllWI pfUt 101 '74 • -. .. '' .. hi la 1 21 '914, •• -f ~I "utl!I-, Al• It n·~-'1t Ml\W irftl2-. l 4 '' 1 ''o ·• CeoCln 10 11 •t 40'+ .. h 1, •• . H11yd n • 11 ~ • • llMSl•!.l.ACI • t ~ :J!' •;13 1 "':-,,. ~c~~,::.l !1 ff ;f!: ~ I ~·:z1~1s l::"ttf ii '. .. Jf !t~ .. ~ il~T1 ,·,, ~ ij:f.~ Jn • 7. i~·! .. •vCO .. ,, ~ n ~ •• , !CH '" "'• " ~~1: Clf'ft f t 41 • 11 ~ .... O I .. 1 J~ 2~~ +. ~ ,. ,, INAtll tlO > llJll 'fh-l't ='1l~I,_ tt 1J 161~. ~ I Jt •1 .,~ • 1\ 1' '' INAlft U) I ,... M llfl~ I .. 7 1 Jl)n. 'lll'rl IAO 11) 3 .. _ I'\ OU Prices Increased DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (APl The United Arab Emlra~a and Qatar announced oU prtee hllces of about 7 percent today for various grade.a ~ ·b.1ab..qualily lltbt crude, oU lndllltr)' aour~s reporWd. 'l1Ml sour~ ••Id Sa\.tdl Ar:ibla ls expeict· td lo take slmnar action . , ... Thunldey. F•bruaiy 15, 1979 N DAILY PILOT 87 80-day Li ... lt 'Free' Loan Has Its Drawbacks By SYLVIA PORTER tr you Wl'rC offered an Interest -free loan or $1.500 ror three months -90 days during which you could Invest the money at well over 9 percenl would you grab it ? Dia.I Finance Co., a consumer finance fir m heacJ. Quartered in Des Moines, Iowo, has been da ngling this hna ncial goodu: before nl'W CU.'ltOmers orf and On (Or six months. Dial opcrutcs in about 3S i;tatt's, is a respectabl\o and savvy company, <.ind hai. attracted thousands with ads promi1>ing th<' loun. A FREE J,OAN IS T EMPTING ANY lime. Today, with thl' cost of borrowing int'r<'asing, it is c lose to ir rcsisl1bll•. Evl'n the nataoo's ·-·pnme" borrowers :ire of· hcially charged a lmost 12 percent by banks and much stiffer intcrl'!>l rotes under the counter. How can t>rnl Finance extend interest free loans? He re's lhe talc behind s uch consumer financP ad cam- paigns· 11) Dial's "interest-free" loan is available only to new and "qualified" custome rs. The compa ny retains the right to determine who is "qualified." lls goal is the customer "'ho in the past has rarely even thought or visiting a finance comp<my. It is seeking proressaonal. whit <:·co ll a r an d .. managerial individuab wh o ea rn above - averagc salaries. hav\• well-established credit records and plenty of Money's Worth s uch collatera l as houses. t'ars, boats :.ind rurnbhing~ (2> The short·t(•rm loun I!> truly "fre<>" only to the bor rowe r who can repay it 111 thrt'c months. Thus. the terms of the offc'r help to h m1t the lo:.ms to borrowers who usuall) don't nPf"d thl'm 13 > If a Oial cu:.tomcr f~i ls Lo repay the intercst-frcc loan in the 90 day!>, t he rinance company levies rinanct- cha rges on the full am1Junt or the loan from day one. The Dia l program is structurC'd so that participants sign in- stallment loan contracts when they accept the "interest free" money. In effect. they a re paying a fina nce c hargt' each month along with a portion or the principal. At the end of the 90 days, whl.'n they repay the full amount or their loans . the fi nance charges are refunded. F ROl'l 15 P ERCENT TO 25 PERCENT OF THE 15.000 customl'rs \\ho obtained tnlt'rl'st-frcl' loans during thas last holtdav M~ason will not rt· pay I hern in full an three month...,, Dial exPcut1v<·s est1m.-.itc. These borrowers will become reg ular finance cornp•tnY t'u..,tomt•rs. paying rrom 18 pe~ent to more th:.in 2J percent annual tntcrest. Thl' rates vary. <.kp<·ndmg on thl' ~tace A Californian, for tn:-.tanCt.', who borrows $1,500 from a 0 1.11 offtct· ;.md discover!) he needs 24 months to repay. could end up t umtng over a total of $1,896 ror hts "free" loan or $1,500 Bt'cause thl'y customarily cater lo higher-risk bor· rowers than other financial mstituttons, fi nance companie~ U!>ually chargl' higher rates. They a lso frequently impose higher charges on the individual seeking a small loan than on the borrower obtaining a big sum of money. • Turmoil in World Reflected in Dow NEW YORK <AP > da)' on worries over turmoil in Iran. The stock market retreated to- higher oil prices a nd contfoued The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed off by 0.69 at 829 09. Losers led gain ers by about 3·2 among New York Stock Exchan~e-listed issues. As the United States prepared to evacuate thousanas of Americans from lr n , Arab petroleum producers Abu Dha bi and Qatar said they increased crude oil prices by about 1 percent. The boost came in the wake of the virtual cessation of Iranian petroleum production. .ftito("k# 111 The .ftipotll9ht NEW YORK IAPI Selrs f pm Pllff ~nCI net '""""' ol •~ ht1f't'11 mo•I a cllvf' Ntw Yori< '>toe• C:•<"""9"' •h""' l••d•nQ n•llO'lelly •I '"°'" than SI El P•\O (o ,.S,000 II'"• ... '"~•co Inc Jtl.'00 H • " P11tston Co 111 000 10 • " AmTT 2.0'IOO .. Tt•~l\ Intl '17~.tOO 4'1• DoarJone111t t•erage• Nt .. VOt'•CAPI Ftnal Oow J~ ••e••9•" HOCKS OPIPfl HIQll low Cto~ Cl)g JO Ind $21 01 IJ1 1S 122 te 119 0t 0 M 70 Trn 711 )6 213 S8 210 11 212 OJ I 60 I\ Ult 10316 104'.16 IQ> 3S IQ.t 0t • OOJ 6S st-191 oe ltlHO 11• JI 281 'J 0 WI Indus I SS3 100 Tr An llOS,900 VIII> ~.600 h~ SI• U7S.100 lutltV Sir 711,SOO 14•1 .., ,----------------Ludlow (4> l•S 800 II'• '' Nw" Alff loO 300 h"" " UAL lnr 140 000 H' I 01\•U fdl""' 187.SOO 16' • 1• OowCt..m •~• 000 1) • •, B~lnQ 1U 100 II(!>. • '-• V• EIPow tSI 400 U • '• f::i~0~, ~~·~ ~r ~ . ~~ NEW YORI( IA.Pt Seto, • Om orl<t •no net c~ ot 1~ ''" '""'' 11cttw Amerlc.., StoO Et<llanot! 1u~" 1rao1119 netloNlllv ~I more IMn ll Atsrttnl A 181,600 311"' • '• lubos Me• ... •OO II'• • .. "°"°""' . n aoo 11 ..., 8row"Co w1 If 600 • • •"' RHVel Tel. Mo,JtlO St. • .. Oor'll• ,...,, .~.000 4fo • , • m!1~P::. !~ = n~ . "' Amd•lll , 4l,JOO <01 11 S.cMtQ Inv. J6.600 • • " .... tnaat Sto<'k:rc Did NEW YORK tAt'1 ACl .. n(rocl 0..<llMC! IJ nc 11111 nQl'(I Jol•I h>~) NC'W '"9'"° Nf'W 10•" ~ALES Nf W YORK IAPI Appro , lin•I Prtvlou~ On w .... ~ ""'°"'" ~ Y••• aQO Two y•an -+ •n I to Olllt ltll lo O•lt 1911 to OoMe WHAT .AMfll O•D NEW YORK CAPI AOvencrocl o.c llN"CI u nt "•"9"0 r<>t•t ")Uf\ Nt .. !\IQ!\\ New !Ow• Odd Lot• NC:W YORI( !Af'I The Ntw Yor• .. lo<• E•<"•ft9!' rtOOl't"' l11e.e oCld 1111 lr•"w.. "°"'by orlntl!Wll clffM!rs '°'~~ton Purcltu~t ot 116,112 •ll••n ••Its 01 , .. ,7S7 stwwu, lnclUOlllO 1 1'1 slt•rts •~ '"°" .. .... _ ......... DAILY PILOT Thumey. Februery tS. 1179 AqUBrlus: Your Ideas Cbunt FtlO V, F B. 11, ll'lt Cycl 111 "&ood" for mon~y. flndan jt 8 • VONt;v OMAAll "'''"lrlll urlll'lt·~. ohtutntn.i v1·nuln1· ARI ' IMurch :.?1 · prtl 10 1 1''1n1 h h.ar11a1n ratht-r thain tx-am b ~u ... ~1vc an u aaA cS.·pl 2:1 Oct 2.' I ( ytlt• hlQh. li&H•rt1n1 r lt h l~. tt'rrilo r l•I •nd bt dlre<-1. 1nd1·11t•ndt•nt . l'1111t11h•nt 111k1· Olht'r"1bl' lcud. rt'fU I' lo ,,.. •lth•tr CkC'd br nnt• TA RlS lApril 20 hy ZO > New Mp "ho 13 tmvtou' und dt•vmu You'I lund pro 11ch to b ''" t1.111k.1 1~ n('~.,~ary B l· on your f•·~·t cmamal, conf1dt·nt, lndc·J)t'ndt•nt l..c.>vf' '' S<'Oll P IO (()ct 2J No v 2 1 ; In p1ctu.rt' ond )OU wlU a:c-t to heart of Sf'chhnon , quJl'l lllOn1t•n1~,. th c ¥rt1 moth'" \'ou auln ully Important ror your Wl'lf n• Tt.•tn()()rll ry GEMINI •Muy 21 Junt 20 1 t:motlor\,. conllnc>rtw nt miaiht bt• 1 lilt•"'"" In (111 lt'nd to dom 1n.1tc> t mpuhu'. r hana•'. gutllt' Spt•ci.11c·onfrri·ntt•11111r ll duh•d ' 41 r I\• t y u n d I o ' ~ u r l' rt• u t u r t> d Aqu.iriu,, c~•n<'\'r . I t'CI pt'r'\OO& pht)' 8AGl1Ti\RlllN <Nov i'2 Ul·C :n I fl•ntul'C'd l"(lll''> 111 ,~1·11..rw Jo:rnvhco1IA .in d1•s1n•, frh•1HJ!lhlp, (lllUll (' \ <'KR IJunl" :!I Julv 22 l E m 1'lal baC'klnM for bur.lnt•i." 1•nlt>rpr11w ph."'" 1111 h."ll' ,111d •• n•mJorrCJmt•nt \, Ont• you took fo r f(rl.l nl d d o1•11 "'' t•ot111 > '1111 1•.111 A:t'l un mor\• \uhd 1toml•tl11nu to mu kt• you frl'l 111 oud fooltni f1n.uw1.1 lh iJnd t•mouunJll)' ('J\PRI< ORN 1lk1• 22 .l.iu lU ' l'ut LEO !Jul\ :!:J \UI{ .!21 \OU &t.'l In rin111htnj.1 tout•h1· .. Clll proJN'l /\\ ('IHll 1111 formullon "htl'h ~I\,., "dout · to )Our JC'<'om11llsh11wr11, vt•rthn1ll11n, 11•lltnl( po,111on or ikm.inih Somi~lnl' 1., lrylnl .:n•t•n lta:ht from I h11~1· 1n uuthorily to tt•ll )'OU ~mdhrn.: Ht• Olh.•rt • You 11 lmproH· tlt1'1 r1 hullon u11d dl11pl1.1y VIRGO c \ui.: 2J S..·pt 221 You mukt• AQUARll S IJ.tn 20 Ft'I> 114 1 1111 Slf;nlflt'Ulll rrn.1m·1.il gain 1( }OU wrl' "'II print 1d y lt• your O"ll WOJl.b , thuuphli., 1ng lo Jt't't•pl 'mill \'hJlltJ1 i-., rt-\ 1Moni. 1deu, m1•Jn mon· th1111 1111111 ul IUnb fron1 the m08l revered pundlll. Open Uoes or communlcut1on PISCES C1''eb. 19·March 20L Piece together bits or lnformallon; you will come up with complete story. Accenl on the hlddt:on, lbe delayed, time and mo· lion, basic costs. Partner or mate talks about budget and how lt sets that way. ~MBLYLE.4DER EYES SENATE RUN SAN DIEGO <AP) -Paul Prtolo, re· elected Republican mloority leader or the Asaembly earlier thia year, says he muy run for the state Senate or the U.S. Senate In 1880. T he Malibu legislator. in bis 13th year ut S•cramento, said he has $54,000 left in campaign funds. But none or that. 11uld Priolo, was raised under federal guldellnes limiting individual contribu· hons to $1,000 and banning corporation glrLa. HOROSCOPE/LOCAL INVESTMENT GUARANTEE $360 PER WEEK PART•TIME Our program featurH th• new pop.top hot foods. All are n•· tlonally known brands such as Heinz, Campbell, Chef Boy Ar Dee, 1nd Hormel. All accCM.1nt1 ere MCured In office bulldlnga. schools, Industrial plants and ho1pltal1. We need reliable PfOPI• to N rvlc. thH• account&. WE PROVIDE SECURED LOCATIONS IN YOUR AR•A, INVESTMENT GUARANTEE, COMPANY FINANCING, WHOLESALE OUTLETS, ONE YEAR FACTORY WARRANTY, PARTS AND SERVICE. You provide 8·10 hourt your choice weekly, Hr· viceable automobile, be ready to 1t1rt In 30 days, minimum Investment $4800. PhoM TolMr .. 1·800·821 ·7700. Ask for••· tension 536. ~ED I INTERNATIONAL ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Officials, Voters To Mingle 6 mg. "ta('. 0.6 mg. nicotine ~· per cigarette by FTC method. / 0 r a n g 1' C o u n l y S up e r vii-.o r !> Halph Ott-dric h <ind Thomas Riky will be umon!( d1gn1tan cs attending a reception Saturday 1n La g un a N1g ul•I , s p o n so r e d b y th l' Capis tra no Bay Art>a L ea gu e or Wo m e n Voters. .. ·'The reception 1s de· signed so that vote rs may m~t their elected r epresentatives fa ce to face on an inform a l basis." stud Jen Hum· ph rey or the leagUl' 1 :'11 AD DITION t o D1 ~dric h a nd Riley, othe r Orange County or. h c1als expected to tit· te nd the reception tn· e lude Distnct Attornt.'y C'ec1I Hicks, County As· ~cssor Brad Jacobs a nd County Tax Collector Robert Citron. J e rry S h a w of the Orange County school board also is expected at the reception. San Clem ente Coun· <.'i lw o m a n M y rti s Wagner will be availa· hie to talk w1th constil· u e n t s a I t h <.· I e a g u l' func t ion, Mrs ll11m phrcy said R EPR ESENTI NG San Jua n Capistrano Cl· t y government will be Co un ci lm a n Ph i l Schwa rtz and City Cle rk Ma ry Ann Hanover. Ca pis tra no u nifie d School Dis trict board president George White o f San Cle m ente and trustee Robert Bachelor of Laguna Niguel also will a ttend the r cccp· lion S aturday 's le ague E"vent is scheduled from S to 7 p.m. at the Crown V a ll ey Co mmunity Rec reat1on Center. ofr Crown Valley Parkway. between N1gu<.•I and La • Paz Roads ' TICKETS ARE $2 and "'ill be ava1lablt• a l the door Mo r e informution a bo ut the reception is available at 496 5131 or 496-1915 Free Film In Laguna "Face To Face," star- ring LI\. Ullman, will be shown free at 7 p .m . Tu esday In the auditorium of South Coast Medical Center, 31872 Coast Hig hway, South Laguna. Dr Charles Head, a clinical ps)rhologist and Mental Jl c allh-Hope Unit program director, will o ffer comments and lead ,a discussion afler the film. More Information is available at the Mental H ealth -Hope Unit . 499·1311. Your DIMiy Pt!ot CaftM .. .cycled. Of"•• CH\I COllf'Q'! Is tt.. ollltlel rl't y< 11no ( tnl ~ ror Co\ta Mt•\ 1 Warning: The Surgeon General Has Oeterm1nodl That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh. I ... ... ,_.,.-.... ·-·---·-. .. REGULAR AND MENTHOL ONIY5MOTAA Get what you never had before: · Satisfaction with ultra-low tar.· •h-..... ~ ....... --......... ' I l ,. '* 1 j 1 f ' t ..... ,. INSIDE : •Erma Bombecl< •Entertainment •Ann Landers •Singles Ca le ndar 1 ' , • , • •J ·'~ I lfjn:" f \ , ' . CJ* Thuiredey, 'ttbruaty 15, 1919 OAILV PILOT • A Million Dollar Idea- At the 5 & IO ·-. ....,.,-.-·- lShe Fir.st S ~ lOc. .State.s·. Opened by F. Store in the Vnited ~ W. Woolworth. June 21.st, 1879, at Lanca.ste r, 'Pa. - • Eleanor CA»lditz In an award-winning essay, which follows below, the multiple sclercsis victim credits her family for love and help. ByCHERY LROMO OflMDllly"tlotSC.11 A green and white Open Road molorhomc with a Good NeiC}lbor Sam sticker in the back window is parked in front of the Huntington Beach tract home. But it 's ready for a quick getaway to a campground. bound and has been the victim or multiple sclerosis since the age of 21. Now 50. Eleanor Coldllz -despite her handicap and with the aid of a lovin g family and individual de- termination -is a proresslonal poet and writer who le :His ao almost norm al life which includes family camping trips in the motorhomc every other weekend. She was stricken by M.S. in 1949 after the birth of her first child. Soon after . the progressively crippling dis· ease appeared to go into remission and she gave birth to three more children. Then M.S. struck again with such paralyzing force there were times, she r ecalls. when she couldn't even move her eyes. And the basketball net affixed to the garage seems to suggest that the residents of this walk-to-the-ocean re- sidence are active and recreation- oriented. Such an assumption would be cor- rect -e ven t hough the central figure in the scene ls wheelchair- A RECENT WINNER of a national contest sponsored by Family Weekly Magazine, Mrs. Coldltz Is the mother of four grown children and has two grandchildren. "The body goes." said the woman dressed in bright coral. "But the brain just keeps going altmg ... Without the lovt· :ind support of her <See ELEANOR. Page CJI Why I Like Hy Fo1nily 87 ELEANO&COLDITZ My lt•ltaad, Geae, l• u.e bes& '1tnrtldsll•'' driver lD lbe worN. lie pallet lu&ead el pdlq my wlleekltalr, &ea.el. So•eUmes Ute ••• 1e&a h.-oroa, aloal wtUa lklaaed aUJet. c...,._. lteela, or llDdlng myself faclD1 a bl ... wall or a e...mer of peua&a. From tills calm treatmeal, I 1et tM kllll, lte woUl llke to 10 llome or be Is DOt a Mt Interested lD wltaU1plqoa. 81riq coqled all lite pleats la Ill)' 4lrapea aad knots In my lmeUJplae celU.1~ •decided lite world wllJ DOta&opon my •ceea&. Wily• l9op •the merTJ·IO·roud aad go In circles like tltereteol&M world? TM M.8. YIUala ldt me at&MteMer 11eofZl. We already ltad oae eldld. a daa11t&e~1 blt1I H arht1aa1 momlq. I as,. t ared &M Loni tl••t tbls IUMM coUI not b1ppen to me ... I lladodlerthln1sth1tl wentedtedo! A remls loo occv ed for •bout 15 )'H rs, la which we b•d &llree boys co111e to ble11 oar bome. The vlJlalD 1111& ••al• end a&ayed. M~t wotlhl I do with af1mUy to can fert Flnt of an. I ltave ell Wq1 101n& for me In my loving hultududfaaily. VH,ltw11laanlfornayllub11HU00.But &ele&Mr we •dde4 Mt &o Sin ••· Wlla&et•r postuoa we .. -.. were lo, together we would tackle It and make the be11t of thln&s. Theo there were times when I didn't have the energy to move my eyeb1Us. My cblldren we re now 12, 18, 8 and 5. Even as young as they were, they were told whet was 1olD1 on end hlppealng . ...A11arcd that my love for them wooJd neve r change, one sekt, "We loveyouM1m1." The gtrl Immediately took the le•d In getting her bro&bers not to be so bUnd to the mess ln the house. One boy shook bls b•lry bead and shrugged hlu boalders and welltout to finish bl!1 g1meoflootball. , The youngest boy went to tell the neighborhood •bout tM new wheelchair we were getting at oar house. This creal.ed more comp1ny In nnd out otthebousetban hevlng &be fln t TV selln the block. The second boy wanted to know If we cou.ld u t oat every oJ~ht ..• Grouching •boat my condJtlon would be no can . People certd,battbey cotdcl not glveapUviD1bffaueof me. Flnal· b. I decided to do the beat I co.Id, always llevlD1 a amUe ••• Yes, &Mtt wen Umea of tean too, btlt havln1 a posl&lve H t · look end• •ood HD.le of bamorsare works also! 1 ao&Olllylike my famUy ••• l t uedolovetlaem. - . .. ... . Cent Store What is the state of the dime store 100 years after its birth? By DENNIS McLELLAN Of -Diiiy "llot SC." One hundred years ago this month a 27-year-old former upstate New York rarm boy opened what fellow mer chants denounced as a "fly-by- night" operation. "The Great Five Cent Store ... boasted the sign outside the tiny store on Bleeker Street. in Utica. N. Y . And what did the young proprietor. Frank Winfield Woolworth, sell that was so great? Dust pans. drinking cups. tin scoops. biscuit cutters. baseballs. police whis tles. candlesticks. baubles and assorted other novelties. The initial horde of customers at· t racted by the five-cent bargains quickly dwindled. But the tenacious young F.W. was not one to be kept down by railure. He was convinced a store that sold only inexpensive items was a million- dollar idea. All he needed to do. he reasoned. was find a heller location and offer a wider variety. That meant he would have to raise his limit to a dime. FOU R MONTHS LAT E R 1''.W. Woolworth launched a new store in Lancaster. N.Y. The sign outside now said "Woolworth's 5 and 10 Cent Store." The young merchant did not ad· vertise. He didn't need to. Penny- p inch ing Pennsyl vania Dutch housewives went wi Id buying up tinware, washbasins. wash towels. handkerchiefs. ribbons and toys. F.W. Woolworth was on his way to creating a multi-million dollar em- pire and the term F ive and Dime or. more 8imply, the Dime Store. en· tered the American vernacular As wo·o~lwo rth 's dime s tores multiplied across the land. other now-familiar names followed suit: Newberry, Grant. Kress. Kresge .. But what of the state of the dime store 100 years arter its birth? How have these resplendent emporiums or gewgaws. gimcracks and doodads fared the economic highs and lows of the past century'' Is there. in other words. anything at all stiU sellin g for a dime? A trip down the aisles or the great American dime stores of 1979 obvious· ly wouldn't please old F .W. The true Five and Di me. it seems. ha s gone the way of di~e novels and nickelodeons. T HER E AR E A few re mnants from the past that can still be had for a dime or less: a nickel postcard sells ror a dime. pencils are six cents apiece and a plastic pea shooter and a single plastic flower each sell for a dime. Although most candy is now 3() or 35 cents, you can get a Tootsie Roll Pop for a nickel and Bazooka bub- blegum for two cents apiece. And you can still buy inexpensive bulk cand y at Woolwor th's (a Woolworth innovation I even if it is priced at more than a dollar per pound That's admittedly s lim pickings considering all the glorious goods that once could be bought for one thin dime. But the results of the Great Dime Store Survey obviously come as no surprise. F EW STORES ACTUALLY bill themselves as dime stores anymore. Even Woolworth's has n 't thought of itself as a dime store in 40 years. It now refers to itself as a general merchandise chain, a more accurate but decidedly less picturesque description. In fact. Woolworth's brok~ tf\r()ugh the dime barrier out or-necessity as rar back as 1932 when it let a few items creep up to 20 cents. By World War ll the price limit bad worked its way up to $1. Today Woolworth's, a nd many other former dime stores, carry merchan· dise ranging from nickel candy to S500 television sets. <A businessman as practical as F.W. Woolworth, no doubt. would approve I. "We still carry the thread. pencils and s tationery items -really the items tht> bus iness was built on." s ays Richard Eichler. assistant ma nuger at Woolworth's in South Coast Plaza. "Of course. we'd all starve if.we werestillon that basis.'' T H E COST A MESA store, like many of the company's other large stores. carries men's and women's <See THE 5 & 10. Page CZ> Oeff, .......... ..,.~ ....... Eleanor Colditz: ·1 have s lot of knots on the end of my rope. But I refuse to fall into the pitty p ot. ' .. ..... .... .. .... ... -........ " . . ... .. ... ..... .. .. .. ... . -........... ................ . (2 CAil. V Pfl.Of Thul'9day, Ft bruaty 15, 1911 ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK • • • The 5 & I 0 Cent Store E ..... tt'rom P11• 11 u, aportlnat t"Qulpm~nt. 1tttt0 and even a SZ98 Mo ped £1chl r ay that 11t bou1h tbr. rompany ~s not rall ltM"lf u dlmt' to rt' the lma(le U1J pcpnlatl "ll'a not t'U<'t1Y dl'trim •nt•I. but under tht• dimr atort• 1m RC th,•y (('UStOmt'"°') don't think or gMUn«i t heir alc"-o t1r n~w dn:-t.a ht rt' Thl"Y think. 'Ob, Wool rth's , It a • dlmt- sto~ '" Llkl' callln11 a n>(rl1Prator an Ice box or ll mobtl(• ho mt• a tr1u.J r . Mltlll' v~rted back Lo lbo world of rour Iona· Iott youth Tht •maU abop on M rmt• Avenoo I" about u clol 11 you can "ct to tt dime store amoll town Amt>rica •l )'le tn the lu t qu rter or lbtl 20th <:<'ntury M ny older custoDlen, YI owner Allee flat~. are over com with a w a Vt' ofnostalgi 1 -hen thc-y C'OfT\ In ''Tht•y Hy, 'Gt.'<!, you don 't see many ~tort' Ukl· thUI nnymon: ·,"she 11ay'I anymon-, ... she aays. h bill! un• hard to kick. To mo.t peo-",\ LOT OF PEO.PLE.'' a dds pit-o dlnu• hit'\' by any ot.bt'r namt-Robert Bah~s. ..H Y, 'I love this 111 atJll o dim<' .. to~ p l art• -a n o ld -f u hlon t d d lmt' · "Tht.• "ont dunt• doe's not mt•an 10 ,tort• · · c~ntl'." :.••> Mury Jo MC'Q\K n. ai.· Port or ttw rt-a5<>n tht> hop has ii s1i.tant mun.t•Wr u( Gllbt•l1 'l\ ~ 10 2.' real d lmt· btorc atmoi.phere l b C~ot Store ln Cotta Mt>"> "Ru lly. bc<'uu.w MB . Bates l4!arned the bW>&· t he word dime atoN> as a term that ·~ neat. while worldna tor Kress and :.ynonymous wilb 'ilnety store. Jt -Woolworth ln Los Angeles dunng the doesn't mean YoU're goma Lo wallnn '.OS ..ind hnd l'verythan&: Curd dlm~ " "ThL'i ._., set up JUSt like your old dime store." she s ays, showing her MRS. M<'QUEEN BE LIEVES the counters w1lh part1lJoned glass trays term "dim~ store" eventually Wlll "And 1 have notio ns back bere disappear altogether. "l rerer to at elastic. thread, yam . embroidery tha t way, but my daughte r 's children thread." probably won't " One of the popular sections of the As Amen ca rul>hes anto the 21st store -al least with the island kids <'entury, Gilbert's 5-10·25 Cent Store -is toys. All of the paraphernalia of ls one of the fe w shops that retains childhood ts there: yo-yos, bubble the old dime store flavor. pipes. squirt guns, crayons, sheriff ll is filled with rows of counters badges. Old Maid de<: ks ... displaying a variety of inexpensive Most or the toys cost more than 30 items from 23-cent metal ball point cents alt.hough toy corncob pipes and pens and 15--cent e mbroidery thread balloons are still a ba rgain ut a dime to 59-cenl checker games and 29-cenl apiece Powder puffs. "E ven the t oys a r e n't cheap Nylon scarves Cthree for a dolla r >. anymore," observes Bates. "We've llair nets (three for 39 cents), plastic still got the concept of the dime store flowers < 10 cents), candy and yam though. We call it a variety store are big sellers. because by having a va riety you can Sales clerk Kathie P ayne says she cover a mu.Jtitude of sins." remembers her entire ramily shop- ping at dime stores in Maine when MRS. BATES NOTES that few of she was growing up two decades ago. today's wholesale houses even carry inexpensive items . S he describes "VOU SPEND YOUR whole dollar most o f the low-priced toys as and come back wit h a lot of things. "carnival stuff--it's garbage." You could a l way s buy che ap Not that children who make after · perfume. Remember when you dJdn't noon forays into the shop· ·the school have money for Christmas presents? buses stop nearby would want the "That's why I like working here. cheap stuff anyway. It's fun. You see things that wUJ re· mind you of your grandmother · you Mrs. Bates says, for e xample, that EMiiy .. Met ....... rt .. atr"IQ 0 '0-11 B...t.eelc Dinner Is Served In looklng over a rack or greeting cards the other day I was Impressed with the fact that there was a message for every occasion from "Happy Birthday lo My First Daughter-In· Law" to "Congratula tions on Your Trial Separation." Not finding what I wanted, I asked a salesperson behind the cash ttglster. "Do you have a card inviting your husband to dinner?" "Do you mean the standard creeling simply s taling that dinner Is on the table and would he pleue drop whatever be ls dolng and make an appearance?" ''That's the one,•• l nodded. "No, but we get a lot of calls for them," she said. The engraved invitation ls woman's last re· sort. Man·s resistance to come to the table has always been a mystery to me. Sometimes I say, "Dinner's ready!" just to watch his feet tum mechanically and go away from lhe table. You would think one would run out of lhings to do while the food is cooling down but they never seem to. They clean out the medicine cabinet, go to the bathroom, check their faces for growth of beard, tum television channels, check the car to see l! they left the lights on, get the paper, have a discussion with the children in their rooms on "What ls life?" and (this ls my favorite> change their clothes when they have been sitting around In them for three hours. Al.so peculiar to the Deaf Lo Dinner Syn- drome Is the no-response. For years, I have stood in the doorway of lbe kitchen and courted varicose veins or Che neck by yelling, "DlllWN- NN NNNAAAAAAHHHH ! " Wllen there is no response the rant time . it becom~ a chant. With each no-response, l give it another shot. Finally, like an apparition, the husband appears and says in a quiet voice, '1'here is no need to shout. l heard you the first time." associate with thrift." they s hun plastic jacks for 19 cents Anyone over 30 who enters the and instead buy m etal j acks for $1.29. BaJboalslandVa rietyShopgetsadis· "The kids ," s ays Mrs . Bates . tlnct sense of deja vu, as if you've re-"won 't buy lbal cheap stuff." Anne Decker shops for goodies at Balboa Island Variety Shop. I frankly think greeting card companies are missing the boat on this one. There are con- servatively 85 million husbands in this country just sitting there like Scarlet on her veranda wailing lo be invited to dinner. Mu.Jtiply this by five dinners a week plus six weekend meals and you have a little moneymaker in invitations there. ~::..::..=.::::.:::..::..:::....::.::!:::....:..::.:_::.:...:.;:...=..:;..:;...;;..:..:..::_~~~~~ 000 A1ITY LAMPSHADES Harbor lites 20°/oOFF (With This Ad) Teachers Have Had It Until th e n ... O llt llN N NN · NAAAJDIHHHH}{! RUFFELL'S IM~O.,lld.S..-, I 1Zl1'1....,..m.4. Cott......_ LAt.tP PARTS Harbor lites IM'"'7D.,lllCl.S.., llUVi....,_.-.4.. c .......... RJPAIR Harbor lites I CM t....,.,O.,lld. S.-., 11221/J ....,.,. .... c ........... 645-7301 .. a.lam & .. ttocll LAMPSHADES '-""' ....... ........ ~,... ... Tilhoffwpod .. ~.F.ll.21.lt79 Of'IM IYllY DAY ~SUNDAY DEAR ANN LANDERS: I 'd like to respond to "I've Had Jl," who is disgruntled with the school situation. I am now in my 37th yea r of teaching in elementary schools and it wiJJ be my last. l ha ve witnessed m a ny changes in my long teaching career, but t he most startling changes have occurred in the children. I wou.Jd like to tell "IHI" that children to- day a re not the same as they were in 1953 when she was a first grader . Why are they different? Because parents a re different. Many parents have no control over their children, nor are they interested in their chHdren 's progress In school. This is reflected in the attitude of the little ones I see. Children today a re ovcrstimu.Jated by TV and movies Cmonsters. crime, etc.> and they have too many possessions. In 1953 most teachers were single . They could make home visits after school hours. To· day many teachers have families o( their own and part of the 24 hours must be devoted to them. It is true that parents are losing control of the schools. Why? Because lhe administrations a nd school boards have given state and federa l governments lhe right lo control by accepting federal and st.ate funding for special programs. We, as teachers, must follow the state and federal directives or "lost state and federal moneys ." And now Un California > s ince P roposition 13 has come in, parents are going to have even less to sa y. Sign me -AFTER 37 YEARS, I'VE HAD IT DEAR AFTER 37: Thanks for an interest· Ing letter. You've got plenty of company. Thousands of teachers wrote to say tbe same things. Thanks to all or you. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 17-year-old boy who reads your column every day. Hardly a -:::::::::::=:;::~;=:~-----------day goes by that I don't see someone with a mar- STIMULATES young minds riage problem. This doesn't make sense Lo me. When I m arTY, I wUI be prepared to give up all Saturday• habits, bobbles, etc., If they annoy my wile in any DAILY PILOT ~~~ In the 1way. I will trust her completely. If she wants me GARDEN GROVE 7461 GARDEN 6ROVE BLVD wm ~VE CENTER. (714-) 894-3960 .. -.. home nidits. 1 '11 BE home oigbts, even il it means OP•N TOTMe PUii.i( . . .. . - . -- ffl IS,16, 17, 181 "- -tlA.IRS Tit-S.S. fiL .o-7 1'WI SAT.~ S\IN. •O~ -a A1111 La11clft-s cha nging )obs. o r course. it would be nice if the girl I marry wouJd do the same for me, but if she wasn't willing, it would be OK. t might sound like a dumb kid shooting orr his mouth with no experience to back him up. but it's really the way I feel, Ann. I'm going to do my best to m ake my wife the happiest person in the world. -GOING TO GIVE HE R MY BEST DEAR BEST: Keep this letter and read it again a week berore you marry. Jr you still feel the same way, please tell the bride for me she's got herself a ooe·ln·a·mUUon guy. <P.S. Make that one ln tea mlUJon. > UPHOLSTERY wtM'llY•W..t .... .... 1122 Herbof Btvd. Com Meaa -541-1 156 DO WE HAVE PRIZES FOR YOU' AT HARBOR CENTER Watch For Our Ad In Friday, Fe b. 16th Edition o f the Daily Pilot 1eauty parlour -··•"••·· I , ' . , ' ... ..;(..1 • An International Beauty Center for Ladies and Gentlemen Cordially Invites You to Our Animal Show/ Pony Rides A weekend for t he kids at tne Huntington Center Mall Pony ndes onty 35• ror Youth Fund benefit dally 12 to 5. Fri thru Mon Also free animal show on Fri at 4:30 and 7. on Sat at t. 3 & 5 and Sun at 2 & 4 Beach Blvd & 405 Fwy. <,t·r.1nq '"" lr•on • Nt WJ>Ort U•·dcn. Co~td Me~ 14,. ..• , GRAND OPENING FESTIVITIES February 26th thru March 2nd Your Beauty Center off era: • European Hair Stytlno •For Men & Women • Permanent Waving • Hair Analysis • Custom Colorl119 • Individual Lashes • Manlcurlnq • Pedecurtn9 • Sculptured Nails • The Finest Products Used For eppolntmtnt cell (714) 557-2234 MARCH 3rd T hrou<Jh 1he cour1esv of Chez Oa1'11'5 ol N 11wfl0rt lnternatlonelly acclelmed Singing Star HERB JEFFRIES will be appearing -from 4 to 8 p.m . ~ 270 So. Bristol -Suite 102 -The Cro11roada of Redhill and Bristol -.. ,. -I" • . . .............. ...... --... ··~·. . ... ' ... I ., SINGLES CALENDAR I ANAL VSIS I CAREERS Invasion of Flu Bugs It ~ 1 If ulmo•t ~H•r)'ont" you met·l -.UI'(• .......... ,,_,... c-.. , .......... ,, __ ..... --J ... __ .. _ ,._, .. _ -........-... , , .. _'" ......... , __ _ tl't'i.1._,. ~., ..... "-'~•ntr ORAHOE COUNTY .S TOWN & COUNlAY ORAHGC (714) 547-1221 Put some red sails in yCM.1r sunsets. Buy one of tM dream bNts list· ed In the Boating clt1ssltled t1ds ot the Daily Pilot. 642-5678 ~Uher t\h u cold. l3 Kt•tt1n.a 1 cold, or just 1ot 11~ t•r ont• Wt"ather cbanat al "A'&)'• M'f'm t.o do at to nn " thumbul& Southl'MI r .ilifomJans We art 10 u tod Lo tMlm) wt.·~tht•r th.it th<• sl11bb:1t dip In th~ Uwrrn1X1lul throv. ou1 bod1t· Into an tdrnll l) t"rl!ll 1 ·~C' 'JK•nt mo .. 1 11( lht· ho1l wet·k fl t on my huk ""llh lhr Ou I know It 'A U.:. th\• Ou und not r.omt• h rd.Jn 1r)' cold twraun lht• doctor tHild, '«h1•r)l, )OU h.tH• lht• flu ' IN ·,\D 08'' MUlA("LE ('U~· treatment. I ii:ot tht• boring standard ordtl"5 al»)' tn b6!d, """P * rm. dnnk ph•nt)' of hquids, ond so oo. I w de"vutatt:d v.-hen ~ lokt me rt.'COvery "'ould t,1lce 7 or 8 dot)'s llow <'OUld tha Macho \loth\•r tW! eJq.>t:ctNI to Vt'&l'taw for u w~k" I dJdn'1 flelf~ll)' throul(h Lht: lllnen I came hl ""ork ;ind found my t'O workers b1itcktn1 off in drn' "'' I ~ti~ gret.•h'd with tht-sort of mn11lvt> nun enthu,1.a. .. m u .. u.111)' n~t'rv<>d for h:Vt'rs or lhObl' ''.ttljlng ('(11\lamtntillll~ gt•rmlS <tnd sncci· int: .• 11 0\ t•r Jll.'OJ)ll· Lt.•J\ ing in bhbntt', 1 drti\.\' homt: lo Sewt•r lh-aC'h wondt•rinR ~hethl'r r would ~ able to m1·t'I Uw t'h,1llt>ngl' tu do noth.mg while nu bugs ~orml'<i th,·1r \\<ay thrnugh my body. I NOT ONl,V met th'· challenge but learned 'nmettun~ In the proce:.s Do you know how in· tt•n •istlng it lb to watch u white spider ensnare a fly " Have you ever watched a heater vent blow cobwebf." How long hab at been since you reaJly looked Jt a ft.once ? When was the last time you listened to an l'ar3t'he" An <-aruche sounds a nd feels like a goldm1ner moving slowly through a tunnel and occasionally striking ha~ pick in a place where )OU wish he wouldn 't And I now know for certain the only things. of ment on daytJmC' t('levis1on are portions or REGISTRATION NOW OPEN. Now IS lhC lrmt to Sl<1" t)fl IOI !Cf' c.k:atiog l(.~M)n!> at the l(P C..X'ldeS Chalf'I Whell'lt·r you·vc tee ~llalf'(j befOle Of l'lCV!.'f ic~ sl<ah {i 1n '/O'J' lih·. OOf' (II lnt-s1: cla-.st->5 ,., tor you 0·1c.ses "" up t.ic;t so< .Jll 10lJ. (tor ,111 lht! 1nlorrnlll('(l tor tnc ~11· f.irr111y BE SURE TO SEE COLUMBIA PICTURES ICE @ST'LFB AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU IU CAPADESCHALET 2701 Harbor Blvd. Harbor & Adams Costa Mesa 979-8880 Fme S/,,,1:< Smet! I 903 --------- e;\~ .. Sandal• Sleel. low ltylt"ll l.eo1» yov c.omfo,,oblo oll I~• ""'"Y do)" Bloc~ PutMt o< NOYY Coif Sonulor iryloH on .. Comol, Bon• °' Whtt• Colt ~ #-"'t~ SHOES SS 6·10 s S1' .. • 10 N 5·10 M 4·10 99 Fashion Island ... Newpon Beach .•• 759-9551 All that fat hard to ace? Take it off at the Girts' Place. w. hmte Y°" to ha•e ,_ch, & ltors croet1•1 es with .. & •fsff ow MW & exclffftg fl98 e IClloft. TI9en Is 110 ollllgatloR. * A THREE MONTH MEMBERSHIP EVERYTHING INCLUDED IN ONE LOW PRICE _J ~ • ..,.Na L ,_ ' 11111 '°' ] [ ITllASUnl MOYI( MA.lolS DIK I LTOltOW'f , i'OflC "'* 41HDC0Uhln I I 111\1°' 11 $33 • Dltco DmceA-Sbe 11 Me'-tT.,,.. Cat••h .... .-. ..... Caa 11 ... • M••:wlxwdM Ee ff iwt 3716 SO. lllSTOL lmSTOI. TOWH & COUMftY I SANTAANA HOURS: I A.M. to I P.M. MON.-FRI. I A.M.·1 P.M. SAT. 556-0720 the Otnah Shore Show and the news. 1 also know mint t.ea ~not taste good with honey in it. When l was feverish and unable to concen· tr ate on more Important ~s. I listened to the radio and came t.o the realization all popular songs say the same tbing: somebody left ~mebody and now somebody has a broken heart. OlJRJNG MOMENTS when I was cognizant or my surroundings, I firushed three books I :started reading at Christmas. devoured every magazine m the house <including Popular Mccharucs >. and, when desperate, even read the junk mail My appetite ranged Crom wanting only 7 -up with ice cubes lo craving peanut butler and sardines with mustard. I found table -napkins will sulfice when you have run out or tissue - but t~y·re hard on the nose. Some nights I had the most fantastic nightmares ever, with intricate pk>ts and sub· plots. On more than one 0ttasion I considered calling Alfred Hitchcock with the material. Now I am almost back t.o normal with the exception or the standard stulfy head -and be· mg back to work should bring sparks to my eyes and nimbleness to my fingers . Instead, I feel like I need a vacation. J"d like to watch a Cly catch a spider. ••• Eleanor (F1'0m PageCU husband, Eugene, an engineer with Kaiser who spends bis spare time scouting campgrounds to find places where a wheelchair can be pushed. and children, Mrs. Coldltz says she couldn't have made iL "YOlJ GET TO THE point when you're ilJ that you do give up," said the woman in the wheelchalr. "I would say if I just went to bed and stayed there for a week. I would go downhill fast. The prodding of my family keeps me going." Eleanor Colditz ·s a ward·winning essay. titled "Wh) I Like My Family," is about how their love and caring helped her to find life pre· cious again. The pretty, dark·haired woman whose home is filled with framed family pictures and a sign over the fireplace that reads: ''CoJditz Castle" -admits that although she has had previous articles published, the Family Weekly story was her first exposure in a national· magazine. REACl10N FROM friends and family? "I was overwhelmed." she said. "People called that I didn't even know. I enjoyed picking up the rose petals. "And, yeah, it gives me a good feeling just to say I did it." Her S25 cash prize was a bonus she hadn't counted on. said Mrs. Colditz, but _!L!!as...>"bet her appetite for completing and su~ittlng more essays and st.ones to other publications. Though she says she can write "tear.jerkers if I have to, .. she prefers making people smile. As a handicapped wife and mother, how did she initially adjust t.o her life? Eleanor Colditz replied softly : "Slowly. You JUSt have to take it a day at a time. A lot of things go wrong. You can't walk and things fall over but they work out . _ . "I think handicapped people are doing more with their lives now. I don't think of myself as handicapped anymore because it's been so Ion~." She summed up her feelings with her personal credo: "I have a lot of knots on the end or my rope. Bull refuse t.o fall int.o the pi tty pot." I/ you have an item /or the Singtes Calendar. und it to Cheryl Romo. ,.~eaturmg Department. Orange Coo.rt Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. Please include your name. addreu and phone number. Club Calendar runs each Wednesday m the Dolly Pilot and contains nnhces of women's and service club meetmgs and t>Vents for the followmg week -Thurs· day through Wednesday. Send nohces to Club Colen· dar. DaUy Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 lJe mire to mclude your name and phone number 'Notices mu.st be an our hands two weeks m advorir.e To request a picture. wnte or roU the Features Dc?pOTtment. 642-4321. Pictures are bm&led to fund· ra13e1s open to the public WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY HAIRCUT SPECIAL c ...... 15 & u..r Y2oFF M-.. Feb. 19 For App•l:w.t 545-7197 2300 I.I. HllTOL MIWN•T•IACH ( .... Ollf"9~-...i ~ "-, ............ .,....,1} Thur8cMry, Febf'*'f 15. tm DAILY PILOT Q .............. ORDEAED REHIRED A6cherd Ascher Blind Teacher Backed MADISON. Wi s. <AP l Richard Fischer lost his sight du e t o a diabetic complication in 1971. and it cost him his job as high sc hool teacher. A judge has ordered the school board to re· instate him. "This case is more than one blind teacher getting his job back." Fischer. 42. said after Circuit Judge P. Charles Jones ruled. "It sets a precedent for the whole country that a blind person can do a job." Fischer taught biology. physical education. outdoor liv· ing and driver's educa- tion. Singles Calendar S I N G L E EXPERIENCE : "Individual Issues -An Open Discussion" is the topic for this week's discussion at 8 p .m. Friday. Feb. 16, at the Self Center. Call 997·9600 for information. ORANGE COAST SINGLES: A trip to tbe Date Festival in Indio will beglll at 9:30 a.m . Saturday, Feb. 24. If you're interested in going with tbe over 39 singles group, caJI Jack Scott. 847-0637. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS: Orange County West Chapter is having conversation and spirits at 8 p.m . Friday. Feb. 16. For details, call Peggy at 772-3422. BALBOA SKI CLUB: For information about trips and other activities. call Wayne Hoover, 645-7979. FINANCIAL PLANNING FOR S I NGLES: Coastline Community College is o ffering a rour·part lecture series beginning Thursday, Mar. 1. Call 963·0811, ext. 256 for details. Statewide Concena Action Lags On Farmland By THOMAS O. ElJAS Coastal conservation made it. but farmland preservation has not caught on as a ist.atewtde cause an Catuorma. Each year since 1973. lawmakers made pro- pos a ls to prevent further eating away at California's apparently dwindling agri,cultural re· sources. Each year they have failed and this year there appears to be no major pressure for such a move. NOW COMES A STUDY that suggests one reason the preservation attempts have raUed ls because there was no pressing statewide need for them. No one disputes the well·publlcized statistic that shows the s late losing 25,000 acres or farmland lo residential development every year. But the study. s ponsored by the federal Department or Housing and Urban Development, reveals that at the same time farmers are putting 50.000 new acres into agricultural production each SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCU year. Since 1967. in ract. California farmlands have increased from 19 mill ion to 22 million because or new water sources and more ad· vanced machinery. As a result. farm production has climbed 28.9 percent in the last decade wtuJe poputauoo 1s up only 12.7 percent. California has only about 3.5 per~ cent or U.S. farmland , but it leads the nation in 20 crops. OFFICIALS OF THE STATE'S Farm Bureau estimate 1t will be about 700 years before urban de· velopment makes a serious dent in California farm production. New wate r projects like the proposed Peripheral Canal would push the danger of dwlod· ling food production even Carther back by allowing production on more and more land that is now idle. These figures indicate there is no serious statewide crisis threatening agricultural lands.. Still, anyone familiar with the outskirts or either the Los Angeles area or the San Francisco 8a.y area knows that urban sprawl is a serious problem even if agricultural production 1s not. BUT THE PROBLEM APPEARS to be local. not statewide. and that is probably why no suffi· cient pressure ever built up for statewide land use controls. There have. however, been several novel ap- proaches to open space preservation in local area~ that feel most threatened by continuing urban' sprawl. In Santa Clara County. for example, ioniq and annexation policies set by county superviSOh assure that new development. is funneled t.o ex~ ing cities and kept away from unincorpora~ areas. • . NAPA COUNTY ALSO USES zoning to k~ large areas exclusively agriculturaJ. In Tulare County, minimum lot sizes t~ agricultural zones equal tbe minimum acreac' needed for a successful orchard or strawbertf farm . And the city of Riverside is still considering • plan for the city to buy up existing citrUs orchU. and run them on a profit basis to prevent tbec6 from being developed. ' PROPOSITION 13 ALSO MAKES it more lucrative for farmers to leave their land a" agricultural production. Under the Jarvis·Gann initiative, taxes on farmland are lower than ever. About JS million acres already were underassessed because of Williamson Act contracts allowing low taxes in re· turn for a IO.year commitment t.o keep them in farm use. Now that land is taxed at 1 per~nt or its already lowered value. EVEN THAT KIND OF TAX benefit won 't be enough to hold ore the bulldozers in s uburban coun- ties like Orange. But in many other areas, it wul be a big help. So the pressure for statewide land use controls will be still less than before. That will leave the ls· sue in the hands or local officials. who are becom· ing ever more sensitive to their own needs for open space. 50,000 Openings Summer Jobs Listed Dear Joyce: I know tJme hi sbort. bat can yoa tell me where I might find infonn•Uoo aboat smnmer job opportanllles working lo resorts, mo&els, at beaches, etc.1 I bad a book on aammer employment for col· lege l&adetlu but lost It. It was a cou· pie of years a10 bat I tboagbt maybe yoa have beard of It. -8 . 8., Corry, Pa. "Summer Employment Diredory or the U.S. 1979" lists 50,000 summer job openings at resorts, camps, amusement parks, hotels, nalionaJ parks. conference and training cen· ters, ranches. restaurants and other eatabllabments. Irs available for $5.95 from Writer's Digest ~$, 9933 Alliance Rold, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242. The same firm published annual editions of "Summer Jobs tn Brl· tain," $5.95, and "The Directory of Overseas Summer Jobs." $6.95. Many college career planning and placement offices, as well as libraries, have these books. Dear Joyce: Wltere uo I Id in· formation abotlt becomlag a poly· 1r1pla rue detedOr> examlaerT -W. B., Eal&oa, Pa. Try the American Polygraph As· sociaUon. P. 0 . Box '151 LinUUcum Helg.hts~d.21090. Dear Joyce: Do Yott kaow of col· le1e1 wllkb bave 1ood dance def•rt· memtaf I am a talala acltoot Jlllllor and we.Id like to apply early In •Y tealor~ar. -V. M., OverlalHI Park. Ka • .. -. , .. • ( CONSUMER J You'll get a private reply because I 'm using your letter to alert high school counselors to a new service Cor questions like this. The National As· sociation or College admissions Counselors. a non·profit professional society, has begun operating a com· puterized college search service. The data base has current facts on more than 3,000 postsecondary iD· stltutions nationwide wilb a cross·reference to more than 700 characteristics on each in.stituUon. These characterlsl.ics include ma· jors, size, cost, location and other factors that lonu.cnce a student.'s choice. The counselor doesn't need spedal equipment but calls or writes with a list or the required characterbUes. The service is called NAC Action Center; for details. counselors should contact the center at 9933 Lawler Ave .. Skokie, Ill. 60077. READER SERVICE: Career Shop· pint? For a slngle free copy of the U.S. Labor Department's 16·P•ce booklet. "Matching Personal and Job Characteristics," enclose a gummed. stlf·addressed matlln1 label wttb your request to Joyce Lam KeMecly, care ol lhe Orange Coast Daily PUot, P . O. Bo" 1560, Costa Mesa 12628. Of· rer ends March 1. /. (;j DAILY PILOT Thutlday, ftOruary 16 1179 Television TONIGHT'S LATES1 LISTINGS EVlNING MO, ....... • 1'....aYOte ,..,~o.io.. ... flMtt .. 11QM' lo • f!IQnt •114ln041nl •o(llnQ • ,_.. all-C" vt..Hm G ~HOOKIY lOa ~ !<Ing• ... ~,..,~...,. • ™II MADY MJNCM Marcia 1 Min; catt In tM Kl\oof'I ptoclUC'llOfl Of ~ 9"0 Jollltl oi- .. ••WO!teneQO • .,,.,.. 0/1 IAH JflANOl9CO A hutbana r•tu1n1 "°"' ho• hoo•vM<><><• .. nn mu.- .,_ onnt•n""'1 • ~IAIY 0-1 C-Oll•~ • O.teGNIHO HOMI ~NON OctlMa Ano "4M1• CMNIWI AKNIWI I* llOVllUCY wi-tMry '•IUtfl\ Ir Oll'I ~ Aidoy • 11..-o ·~~,., Bork's a Dadd9? • flCHA.lt. IAQ(8()N .(Met TheoOorw ..... • ..,..GANma ' 5o419•• (Plln I) (I) °"°'' wrra Ql....VONmH OuUll Juttua Erving s 1-0-..,. &uctcy Deni When Mork cR ob'1n W11l1ams > t!X · a>t>rnmcel> the joy of holding a baby. he 11nmed1ately want:, one of h11> own on "Mo rk and Mindy" tonight at 8 on ABC. <'hannel 7 ,_, IT~a~ OAME A8CNEWS 8lX Mfl.LIOH DOU.AA MAH St•11e·a f1anc:ee. the lirtt Dton1c woman. mlls1s on halptng Steve break up ii coun1ert81tong 11ng (P••• 21 • SANfOAO ANO SOH Frad and Urnont -tolO tllat tNle mlghl be oil 1n ll*r own t>ecllyard • MACNEll. / lfHAEA MPORT ftD "UMANn'IU THROUQH THI AATS Film 201h Cen1ury Legacy ()) .o<P'I WILD 7:30 9 ·n GAAMMV HOPE1\JlS: SUP°' STAM, SUKi. 80UN08 Critic David Slleellan IOOks a• lhe 2111 Annua.I Gram- my Awaros wllh 1n1ervrews Wllh Ille pr1nc.lpal9 anO cltpe Of ltlelf perlonnanc-.. 8 IHSEAACH~ ... "The Diamond Curse" Myalety and tragedy pla- Claa••~I Lbtl•fl• l'l l<NXT !CBS) Los Al'lgeles 11 KNBC fNBC) Los Angeles e KTL.A find I Los Angeles • KABC· TV IABCI Los Angelei. ()) ~FMB (CBS) San Drago G KHJ· TV (Ind ) Los Angele:. "Im KCS T (ABC) San Oit>go 1D KTlV (Ind l Los Angelo:. e KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles 89 KCET·TV tpBSI Los Angel11s 81> KOCE·TV (PBS) Hun11ng1on Beacn gue Che ownora or Qrffl g«n• llke 1he "Hope" dlamolld I OATINGGAME THI GONG IHOW ADA»-12 Cttrl1tmaa Eve 1>11ng1 m1.ed blasllngs to Malloy and Reed wtten they havo to atrell S•n1a Claua • HTONIGHT i .. 11~8M1u10n · 11 ... IEAVTY SHOW MATCt4 OAMf P.M. ~ Cl) THEWA1.TON8 Mee Oodaey'1 wl19 Cof• bettl bl.-hef'Mlf when Ille 19 llrlcitWI by a heel'! allac:tt • UTT1.f WOME.N The WTlval ot • Soutl'tem cousin fEw Plumb) who C>Nfl • 11r!lclng ,._ blence to '*" ..... up painful rnemo<IM • MOVlf ••• '\"A Man Could Get Kiiied" (11166) James Gamer. Melina Mtlfoourl A 1>ank1tt. mistaken tor • secret egen1. becomes entangMld '" a wet> ot -cMOnaoe end """OGflnU (~ IW_lj • QI MOM & MINCY Mont llw-.-. 8"tin0" to w, • ~ tot a 10.000 ... ~-'°' MlndY • CMOl. IURNl'TT AND,,_.. 81tllt "Tiie Hot Dog llMd," "Tiie Mcwntng AIW H eWON • • • "Rut\ Sllenl, Aun Deep" ( 1t5t) Clark Gable. Butl l el'CMllt A Wbml · rlna craw It divided °"'-' bOY9 Md men MlnQ a batlte olf tlMI 22_1tt ot J~ (2 hra ) • *WA "Memonaa "'°"' E«Mn" Tha ·~ rotee and ·~llC>ill&i.a Ol tooa are •tuclled (A) GD AHYOHE FOR TENNIONt "lf'I Pf'alM Of The Lord ' The Ar11 Poetry Ouan• obMrWI Hoty Week wtth poen\11 Of fllllfl and Oevo- uon In • c:twtah aaoing Salactlon• lnC:tude wort!• by Wiiiiam en-t Henly end JoM MlllOft. .-e O ANGIE &tad'• nwltt.-mlll!Of'•W. f lther Otdar'a Brad. Angle 111\4 Angle'• mom to ny 10 Palm 8aacfl IO lhel Ila can ln•pect them e THtOOOCOUPll Felhl Nlaeta a gr..,. Ille and entruall Olcat with Illa mooay for • down l!,!Ymllllt .W TUAHABOUT ··stt•••no" The problem• o1 alngle parent• are explored t:OO IJ Cl) GRAMMY AWAA08 John Oenvtlf "°"' . the 21st ennual edlllon of 1hese award• honoring exc:ellenca in the record.Ing 1ndu11ry, llve from the Shrine Auditorium In Los AnQMt • QUlHCY Oulnc:y allempta to clMr • ...i...an POiice offtC« ol murw dllltgal llemrnlng from the daefll ol • drvg- u a.ted ,_..eger 8 @J THRE.E'S CXJM/PNl'f J•nel return• home with e dale 10 find Jedi and Chrltty alone In th• bedroom I JOt<ER'8 Wl\.O MEAV GAIFAN Oueat& Jullus Erving. Sieve Gat11ey, Bucky Deni. TUBE TOPPERS KCOP cm 8:00 -·"Run Sllent. Run Deep " Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster head the cast of thl~ t9S8 subma rine movie. KOCE 9 8:30 -Turnabout. The pro- ble ms faced by s ingle parents are out· lined in this segment. CBS 8 9 :00 - Grammy Awards. Recording artists arc honored in this annual awnrds show hosted by singer John Denver Cscc photo below ). TO!ftmy John, Fred Dlyar. T recy Auttln, Jeff L~ • WON..O "Oenlng Elected In Papua. Haw Outnae" WMtem- •tyle pollllca .,. pllyed out In • Third World Mtllng CO THE A8CEHT OF MAH "lOM< Than The Angttll" Man't~CN«lhe .,,.,,.... wottd .. 8llamiMd llWougll tne ... ~ ~ llcaled COfn9\118f lac:fl. nlquee. a-rayt end llow motton phetograplly .. .aoe O TAXI Boe>Oy'• ,_ role If\ a IOllP opera promp11 him 10 thfow Ill• corn-up callble lloenM at Loult , who vowt revenge I TIC T~ DOUGH tO:OO WOMIN IN WHITE A grief-torn nurM IP•tly Duk• Allln) eontemp1a1e1 1ermln1Ung Che Ille ol het lelally Ill fall'ter, and a young Intern (Kathryn Harrald) lallfnt lier doctor- boytrien<l 11 married. (Pat1 2of 3) e COUEOE ~ Attziona Ste .. ¥L UCLA 8 0UMEV~ 8amey and Illa d.iacttv. find tneo•........ playing hoet to • horde of panllan- dlet• ""*' they hOld an aper\ hOUM •I the 1211'1 l"'TNtw8 NIGHT GAU.EAY ··Logoela's Heade·· A -- an accu-a witch doctOt otmureler 9 PENNtE8 AAOM HEAVEN "The Swealesl Thinlf a..., 1e11a tter e1eN tnew t•YOf•t• fairy llOry .. '* Prince Cll.,mlng. Arthur. la Oft IM wwy bectl lo make Nt lft .,,.,_. tO'.IO . 0 SOAP JMaica tell ChM\., IN II rornantlcelly lrtvolved with Oetect!Ye OoNllue. and e.1. Mery and 5.oy haw • flMO.on eftCIOUl'itet IL~EN "And We Ware Sad, Refl'lamt>ar?" Amoe, Jean. le. Allison and CMstopllet' IHm to eeoec>t "'41 f1na!tty of daettl. 11:00 I~ 91 HEWS IASKIT8AU. Arliona 111 USC • n4f 000 COUf'LE Oscar mekM • bet WJ(h hlS nttWspeper's Oram/ crllk; tl\91 he ean wnte reviews tor tile 111e11re. ., THE GOODIES The Goodlet beeom• lnvollled In • banlt robbery H:t6. TOBfANNOUHCEO t1:301J Cl) M0 A•t•H • plOt ""'* Willl aw-ii u~ wMl'I a ttllal is ceught aMellng peniclltln from ttie 111PP1Y tent. IA) • tOMGHT .... Jofttwrt Carson e O 8TAMKY& H\IT'CH Two ttrlpptn -mu<· dered after getting w•m- 1 n g notice• of lhe1t Impending deatlla. IA) I THE GONG IHOW GET SMART Mb and 99 join I hlPQle group when the latt8' 11<e suepecllld of kk11'1119Ptng an 1mpot1an1 lor111gn m1n- 111er for KAOS ·~MC ..... MOR NINO wme TWIUGKT ~ "Mr Ba¥ie" Mr. 8alllt, 1 ~y lnd4Yldua4 • io... hi• Job. II«• evlGted end wredc1 Me c.r. au In -day. ·MJIMD~ ,....,.,.. eon~ l<A06 fruatrltn CONTROL'• every attempt 10 protect U.S. 1111111a1 wlllle at ttlalr meata . • DOCCAYITT Ou.ta: Twyla Thatp end o.nca eomp.ny (Perl 2 of ttM ~Cl) C9I l.Aft MOVIE • • ~ "COlumbO: Troubled Wet.,..·· ( 1976) Pel., Falk. Aotlert Vaughn Lt. Colum· bo, V.cllJQnlng aboerd I CtulM ahlp, It uttecl to ao1ve the rnurw o1 lhe boet'a teaturlld antllftllln• ... tl:IO . MOYIE •• ·~ ··erot"8r Orchid" ( 1"40) EOWWd Q. Robin- son, ~ey Bogatt Aft., I period of ref\.ge In a rnone.stwy, an ••-<:on returM to tlle unOerwo<1d 10 light the r~a. • MOVIE • ~ "Valanllno'· ( 1951) ~ Pllllet. AnltlOny Delft .. The flf'nOUS ,,..,,. llltob of the allent -· ..... '4vt01) pot1ttyed 12 "'--' • MOV~ • • "F1v11 Golden Dragons" ( 19671 Robert Cumrn1ng1, Oeor0& Ralt An Arnerk:an In Hong Kono becomea involvecl wtlh an 1nternattona1 smuggling nng (2 tin I 12:37 8 9 MANNIX Mann4ll dleoovera 1tta1 a • ~ eo-«S " lnYOIYed In the murder ol • baalcetoau stw. 1•D TOMOMOW 0-.U. ,,.,. Algnlll and attorney Fred Alehman ClllCull ~Md mu1 murderer Jonn Gecy I LOVE °""'8 1:IO WANTED: OEM> OR AlM "The TN!" JOlh bnngs in a UniOn oNicar llQC\IMd ol desertion 1:461 NlW8 2:00 NEWS • MOVIE • • • Shool Flrsl. Ole Later" 119731 R1ch.,d Conte 2;091 .... t:tO .... t:1' ...,. • ... ··Odden a...* ( 1MO) Jamee Ceper • AlaNrd °""*10· All ..... --~~· "rif'tOlt'' Wfllte °" the --to the Goldall ~ (1 lw~26 1Nn.) l:IO. flil(Wll • ·~ "The Happy Time" (19521 aw..~ ..... c:i. Hunt. Ewntt Ill .. llwe d a Frendl ......, Ill 1120·1 Ottowa ate nioountad. (2 hrl.) ,...1: • • • ··Att Mine To Olll9" (t05e) Olynlt JoMt. c.- aron Mllehell. 1;401 NEWS Ml MOW • • "Ravoll Of Tfle Batbatlana'' ( 1084) SwM Sullivan. Aaland Carey. 4:00. MOY!( • • ··A .,.,. Ill Vle4fW!I'• ( tN4) MetWlalt ThaMc>- aan. Enrique Megalona. 4:30. MOVIE • * ··c.ou Cftannel" ( 1948) Wayne Morrie • Yvonne Fwna~• 4:44 8 STEVt EDWAROI l'rida11'• Da,,i I~ ·"•.,w• AFTERNOON 1.2:00 fl • • W ··1<11e Of Fire" ( tg55) Jacll Pelance, 8af. b9' a Rush A beautiful Spenleh pr""-a rejace• roy•llY In favor ot rem•ln· Ing In Am¥1ca with lier new•tound IO\l8r. 11 hr., 30 min.I ••••"0-8ee" I 1gss1.1oan Crawford. Bat- ry Sulivan. A cs~ Southern lady W:tlmizas ~ •ound her with her strof\g-willed 0emtn0s ( I hr , 50 min.> 3:00 9 + • ·~ .. The PiOnetr Woman·· (1973) Joanna Penal. WW8l'll Sllalnef. A womtn m ult decide ....... to •ey etwl .. OI ralurt\ ,_ .... heir hoab~ .. -.... "" Iha wtlelamaN. f1Iv~30 min.) 3:30 U • • "GhOlt In The lnvltlbla 8'k1ru" (19661 OeC>Ot9h Walley. Tommy K11k A man In a coif•!' is given a c"•nee to enter ttea11an by doing a good deed ( t hr • 30 min ) Nobody Laughs at 'Half Network' ...... fJ John Denver emcees the annual Grammy Awards show tonight a l 9 on CBS, Ch<.anncl 2. By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES CAP I ABC used to be like~ gaudy Christm as necktie; it was there, but you never used it. The other net works lo\·ed A BC . they could d e m olis h the "ha lf network" without even having to ·bow their best punch And then they would joke about it. "Know how to end the Vietnam Wa r?" they used to snicker, "put 1t on ABC. It'll be canceled in 13 weeks .·· ABC'S SCHEDULE WAS harder to follow than James Joyce. But you never had to worry a bout your favorite show getting canceled at A BC because A BC n ever h a d anybody's favorite show At ABC. ne w shows came in swarms , and they left in s warms. Which brings us lo this new TV l.eason. the midterm season Times have changed , the last is first. ABC has lots of favorite s hows now. In fact. they own the Neilsen ratings. CBS and NBC. which used to con- sider Amencan TV a two·me mber pr ivate club, are the ones doing the scrambling a nd s hufning. NJSC, VIEWING THE pa rade Crom the c heap scats formerly occupied by ABC. is trying 11 new shows in its new schedule of regular program- ming. CBS has had to come up with seven, eight if you count "Coed Fever." which made its debut a cou- ple of weeks a~o and then vanished from the schedule. And ADC. which used to practical- 1 y s tart fr o m s c r atc h at the mid::scason. is introducing only four new s hows . The network has so much strength from its rull schedule that there arc few shows t hat could be re placed. Cavett Quips Candidly Dick Cavett fee ls the pressure : "Sometimes 1 ·m encouraged to be m ore 'intellectual' -· a word 1 can •t stand because it's been applied to m e e r- ro neously over the ycarl> and also to be more commerci:Jl So finally you have to end up doing wha t you thrnk 1!:. <1 pleasing balance without quota~ " tavett candidly comments on his two.year stint as a PBS talk show host as well as on such topics as te levision's ruture, comedy writing. and censorship in a special two-part con versation on "Mi chael Jackson." Monday and Tuesd ay al 6:30 on KCET. Channe l 28. \ JN TIIE FIRS T HALF -HOUR of his discussion with Jackson, the E mmy-winning Cavett offers his opinion of censorship ("Something basic in me is JUSl r~volted by censorship ... the idea that there ar e words that people a re allowed to hear pnd som e tha t you are not a llowed to hear"); first brother Billy Carter <"Behind that porcine face is a sort of caginess">: guests he cannot get f"Greta G arbo accepted once but J had to gel a h aircut that day and couJdn·t switch the tapinw.tchedule"): the advantages of being on PBS C"I can do shows with Pulitzer Prize-winning novelists without having lo apologize to the powers that be fo r wasting a ha lf- hour" l; and what he regrets about his youth (''The brevity of it ... I'd love to do it over again know- ing what I know now">. Part two of the Cavett/J ackson dialogue finds Cave tt focusing on t he Nielsen ratings C"I never really did take It serious ly or belle\•e that other people did. You can even read the ratings book a nd it's so full or disclaimers that if you read all of them . you wouldn't t ake the ratings book serious- ly .. ); g uests who tell you more about themselves than you r eally wa nt lo know C"Jt 's another version of 'Let's talk about you for awhile. Whal do you think of m e'?"); and prevalence of "happy t~lk " news (''Local newscasts are disaste rs . Most or the news Is over by six minutes in and then you're on to the rhumba lesson or to so and so cov- e ring the opening or a manicure parlor ... ll bas nothing to do with news" 1 TO JACKSON'S QUESTJO:"li, ''Is lelev1lo1on getting bette r?.·· Cavett rel.pondll, "( haven·t seen today's papers but I doubt 1l. Have you heard som etlting? · · J ackson also asks Cavett. who once wrote m aterial for Johnny Carson. Jerry Lewis and Jack Paar. among others, whether it's easie r to write ror otb~rs. or for yourself. "Writing for yourself is the hardest thing to do:· says Cavett. "l know what they arc. I don •t know what I a m ." ..._.Tim, ETYUI': SIME LAUMS, lll'f YUiii A..., ... ........................ •two ...... )Ult.., ............ -Cl\ll'IN °'"'Olofl. L " ,...,.. Ellen Alan Burstyn Alda ~~me, 6Next~" NOW PL AYING -I _ ..... , AIANllMHIYI·• Orange 834·2653· Newoon leacll 644-0760 Ana11e1m 879·98~ a!ZM~Esig~~;r£!~~ ... January thru Karch. Bo&~ wlll ~eave the Balboa Pavilion at 10 a.m. on weekd&ys wl 9 a.m. and l p.m. on weekends. l 14) 673-1434 -mfonnatioll & NSGT&uODS Adults S6.00 Child $3.00 . . , I -. . T his furthe r dims any hopes the other networks had that ABc·s sur ge in the last three seasons was a Clash- i n ·the-p an . A l ook at A BC 's m ids eason schedule s uggests the network is as stron g as 1t was in th!! fall, perhaps stronger . ON MONDAYS, ABC cs going with, ··salvage I ... a pretty dumb show about a junkman with big ideas. and "How the West Was Won," which A BC hopes will hold on to some or the men who wer e used to tuning in ABC for Mondar Night Football This 1s one or ABc·s few weak spots, but it may still fare better than CBS, which leads into the evening with two weak ne wcomer sitcoms l"Flatbus h" a nd "Billy") likely lo hurt the strong . "M·A-S-H." Tuesday night has been ABC's foothold in its climb up r atings moun- tain, with "Happy Days,·· "Laverne and Shirley." "Three ·s Company." "Taxi" and "Starsky and Hutch .·· Still a strong ABC night. We dnesday is another night likely to keep ABC executives happy. The popular "Eight is Enough" leads into "Ch a rlie's Angels," a nd enoug h CEUOfl •-•"n FOICITIH ,,.. THI CHOlllOYS .... 1 .. ,. rAAAOtSI ALLIY 111 I:!! 'MOYll MOVtl NI ovn.AW llUH -·~· C CRTAMESI So. Coasl ;u '4~ ,,,, )•II) 8•,\101 1.,, Pi"•~O '"' 70MM DOUY ITIHO 11~:..tNI OUYIR"SITOIY -AHMI HAU. l :la..t.41 THI WARRIOH '"' 181 viewers us ually h a ng a round lo wa tch "Vegas" to m ake 1t another good evening at ABC. THURSDAY MIGHT BE ABC's s trongest night. ··Mork and Mindy." o ne of the most popular s hows on TV. leads into a ne w s how , ··Angie," which is the bes t way or giving a new series a shot at s us tained hfe After that comes "Barney Miller." ··Soap" and "FamHy." a ll big hits Friday is ABC's othe r weak s pot. with the ne w and awful "Makin' It" starting the evening. followed by the o ld and equally awful "What's Hap. pening?" a nd a movie. The network concedes here . Saturday. it ·s bark to A BC with the new "Delta House." which is falte r· ing. but followed by ··w e lcome Back. Kotter." "Love Boat" and "F antasy Is land ." ON SUNDAY. ABC has at lcos t <il> good a shot as anybody with ·'The Os m ond Family Hour " and "Bal- llestar Galactica." followed b y a movie One of the factors that ke pt ABC at the top since its n se wa~ its l.ucccl.s 1n coming up with new hlll>. \ l.- Nuni•g Pally Duke Astin s t a r s as a nurs e f ig h ting for h e r terminally ill father on .. W o men i n Wh it~" tonight at 10 on NBC. Channel 4. S T ·\ R T S T 0\1ORR0 \\ aw ... · ctllMA cuna Mc.Mii MU PW"''" .. Cosu Mesa ~6·3102 Westminster (7141893·0~8 8utna P~tk a2i-4070 . .. .. , ......... ,-. .. ---. ........ - .. e • t • • ~ ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION I HY GARONER "KING OF THE GYpSIES" (R1 'LOOKING FOA MR G0006A.R (R) WAJ.. T OtSNEY PR()OUCTl()HS "HOAn. AVENUE tRR GUl.AAS.. to) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" tPO> INVASION TH BOOY SNA rCHrns -1P01 CO-.-A "ICE CASTLES" (PG) ~CALIFORNIA SUITE" "MOMENT BY MOMENT .. (R) 'QUINTET" LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE .. (R) "NATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE'" "MONTY PYTHON" (R .. MOMENT BY MOMENT " "MIDNIGHT EXPRESS" lRl "UP IN SMOKE" "A BOY & HI$ DOG" (R) "CALIFORNIA SUITE" "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE .. (PG) ALL D R IVIE·INS OPEN 6:J0r.M.HIGHT\.Y C"h4 Unoer 12 ,., •• Vnlen e ~IOa .. Pla'l'troun4' BARGAI N MA TI NE ES DAILY yu ~is MAM AUijl -Au. nu (AU CAUfOllNIA S&lfTltNI ., ... ,.... ............ . -lu~,=I :.!:F.:-= I •• ,;~) :n=:t:.::::. ,,_ .......... ,, 494-1514 \ .,,..HtfT IXPllSS" Clt .,..__,,,.a.,., U.f • .__ ,,.~ ....... J.l.a. TOU11N'S "LOH Of ntl llHCtS• INI ~-JI ,.,.~_...1_,. .. H UT IUIM" ... .,,.....,,,... -... , .... .oM ._,__,,..... ''•''~ I '•~~ "°'.&Sift ---~ .... .., .1.•M111nou .,.. a.u•auwt amOt•-....... .-... ........... .. _......,, .... B ari u l n Co med y 'Dirty M~n' Clean Fun Ev r bear lho on about tbc amaU town movjt ceo1e>r woo.e t00 tuma out to be a producer of porno nicb? ll '1 cot • tbouund punch lint's, but at Uroes lt plays more like a nJght club rouUM than a atage comedy lo the ltadllion of Nell Simon Nevertheless, "'J"ht) Mind With the Dirty MMn" I.al a vt-ry fu_nny everuns or theater. l'\ .. n on the third Ytl'wlng The latest stOJ> for Jules Tasca's raunchy astault on mJd· die clau cnorallty is the Huie· quln O\a.ner PlayhoUH, where it opened a five-week engagement Tuesday. And its most notable aspect is that its star, Al Checco, seems t.o have found the key to his role that bas eluded his local predecessors. THE CHERUBIC Cbecco is capable o f being irascible without being abrasive, thus rendering his stodgy character more likeable in bis trench warfare scenes with his let·it-all· hang-out son. Checco never makes the mistake of taking his assignment too seriously. and as a result his audience has fun with him. When the flip side of his personality surfaces after a few glasses of wine in Act Three, it s easier to acce pt the transformation. If Checco does the best job to date with the part of the censor, certainly Fritzi Burr also hits the highest mark yet as bis long· frustrated wife who yearns for a chance t.o exercise a Utlle weak· ness of the flesh. Miss Burr sparkles in ooe par\icular scene. } Presented by the La1una -.:: Intermission Showcase Theater, the mustcaJ ... TI ls directed by EUeeo Flsbbach •Oil" itua and features Mark Clark, Paul -----------"' Prelltz. Sandy Soelgrooes and wb~reln she reveata ber hilarious secret to ber disbellev· lng son. Tbla latter role. steeped in the generation gap cllcbes of the SlxUes, l5 firmly and honestly handled by Kevin Scott Allen. Bets~ Finlee as his voluptuous wife and star or bis X-rated flicks has a tougher row to hoe with her deeply stereotyped character, but her throaty cute· ness becomes infectious. THE THBEE OTHER mem· be rs of the toe a I movie massacre society are capably performed by Annabelle Quigley, Peter Macpherson and Florence Ehlers. Miss Qulgley's rasping evangelist is the fun· niest of the trio. Director Harvey Levine bas staged the production with an emphasis on laying the gag directly in the audience's lap, thus sacrificing some character relationships in tbe process. but this technique may be the only way of attacking so blatant a script. lo any even t, it 's hilarious, particularly in the third act when the old man finds out he's human after all. ''The Mind With the Dirty Man" may do a brisk business on lta title alone. a nd the overall edginess evident on opening night should be smoothed out with subsequent performances. It continues nightly except Mon· days through March 18 at the Harlequin, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .• just north of Costa Mesa . • .. BYE BYE BIRDIE," the musical comedy inspired by the induction of Elvis Presley lnt.o the Army. opens Friday for a three-weekend run al the Forum Theater on the Laguna Beach F estival of Arts Grounds. Bil Gekas. Keri Keaney ls the choreographer and Geor1e Ar· r1ngtoo ls musical directer for the sbow. ''Bye Bye Birdie" will be on the Forum stage Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. with matinees tb1.s Sunday and March 4 at 4 p.m. Ticketa are available at the Laguna Music Company, 310 Forest Ave .• or by calling 494·1018. Miss Bergen Cea Tribute CAMBRIDGE, Mass CAP> - Insisting It was "not clear" why s h e was the r e, act ress- photographer Candice Bergen ended up joining the irreverence at the "1979 Wo man or the Year " award ceremonies held by Harvard's Hasty Pudding Club. "Not bad for a ventriloquist's daughter who got 300 on her College Board exams," JOked Miss Bergen in brief re marks upon receiving the traditional eng raved pudding pot and roses, alo n g with a R a d c liffe sweatshirt al the Hasty Pudding Theatricals clubhouse Tuesday. The daughter of the late Edgar Bergen is the 29th redp- 1 e n t o f the award by the Theatricals. the oldest thespian or ganization i n the United States. The honor. bestowed for "gr eat a r tist ic s kills and feminine qua llties." has gone t.o Katharine Hepburn. Lauren Bacall, Liza Minnelli. J ane Fon· da , Elizabeth Taylor. Be lle Midler. Faye Dunaway and Beverly Sills. Promotion From 'Bllko' Q : I beard that George Kennedy, one of our most anderrated actors, once acted as tecbn.Jcal a dviser on tbe Phil Silvers "Sp. Bllko" series. Did be act in any of tbem? -Candy Lee. Buffalo. A: He did, Silvers remembers. "George, all s ix-foot-six of him, played ln several segments of the series. Now he's gr aduated t.o playing General Patton. "Bilko," the comedian added, "made me very happy when it went lnt.o syndication. By then my teen-aged daughters were very impressed see· Ing their father on TV and I gained new respect from them!" Asked what he was doing these days, Phil told us he's had many offers to do another series but "I will not do just any show!" He's also returning to films in •·Racquet," a comedy about a tennis champ, co-starring Edie Adams and Lynda Day ~rge. Q: We read a lot about Bob Hope. but an oldtimer tells us ooe thing we never beard about before in bis early career -that Bob, vtntage 1924, worlted on tbe road with lbe Siamese Twins. Can tbls be true? -M.T.B., Denver. A : Yes! Hope even recalls he wanted to date one of them but she kept saying she couldn't get away from the other! Bob's newest project is or· ganizing a Bob Hope "Museum of Memories" con· taiding memorabilia of his career. It would be located in the heart of Hollywood. Q: How old was Freddie "Cbko" Prinie when be dedded to leave u? -Priscilla Ryan. New Orleans. A. Chico was only 22. Biographer Richard Meyers reported the scene most dramatically: "On the morning of Friday, J an. 28, 1977, bis ex- wife's birthday, Freddie Prime took the .32 re· volver out of his pocket, put it up t.o bis head and ,pulled the trigger." Q: Settle a heavy bet. I say Imogene Cocoa and Sid Caesar, who played a married couple on tbe old but very fanny "Show or Showa," never Married each other. My friends say lbey did. Wbo's correct? -Mn. Majorie Fry, Unton, Ind. A: You are. But the two comedians were 'Glad You Asked That' by Mwityft .cl Hy GarclMr closer than most married couples. Professionally that is. not socially. Q: A sell-styled movie crttk ID my clau ID· slats Robert Blake once aded in a blblkal movie. Isn't that fa rfdcbed for a fUY w19o plays "Bare&· t.a "? What's the lowdown? -Johnny Cooper, Pittsburgh. A: Not far.fetched at all. Blake is one of our most versaWe act.ors who can go from tragedy and violence to comedy at the crackle or a contract. He played Simon the Zealot in the 1965 movie of the story of Christ -•'The Greatest Story Ever Told.·· Q: Who popularbed a kooky old-time song, ''Stick Out Yo11r Can, Here Comes the Garbage Man"? -Andy Gross, PbUadelphla. A: The .. E mpe ror of HI -De-Ho." Cab Calloway. sang it with many verses at the original Cotton Club in Harlem in the '30s, later doing a reprise when the club moved downtown to the site or the Hollywood Cafe on Broadway. Before that, in tbe '20s, those lines were recorded by the Luis Russell band on "Call of the Freaks." Q : SlDce Greu Alimo aad Cher d.lslolved their marriage, yoa llaven't betrd a word aboat the Allman Brothers band. Have they retired! - L.R., Trentoo, N.J. A: No. They regrouped in Miami {fast becom· Ing a recording center > and recently cul a reunion album. One of the songs headed for the charts is the classic ··~rgia On My Mind," made famous by Ray Charles. Gregg unofficially dedicated it to Cher. Q : Way back when Edward R. Murrow was dolng "Person &o Person" on TV, Rarpo Man was Ills gaest. Is there any record of wbat Barpo bad to say to Murrow? -John Dooley, St. Louis. A: Nothing. Harpo was smart enough to stay ·-----------with his image, that or the leading comedy mime MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND Wh.eft w. YOUNG PEOPLE D re&rold ""~"' ......... •IO-maatumlnd __ ,_ _ __,,"' \• ...i. Ce>eato W'Oftl __ ,.,,..._,,c.,.,,.r- ••:Watch Out! ~ ~=s .. ~o in films, and "answered" questions in pantomime. Send JIOUr queaflons lo Hy GordneT, "Glad You A•ked Thal," core of thta newspaper. P.O. Boz 11741, Chicago. IU. 60611. MarilJln and H11 Gordner'°"' anl1«T GI ma1111 queltion.t 08 IMS/ can in thftT column, but tM oolum~ of mml ~· ptrsonol ~s impouibl.t. MUI ICMfTI COU1 PUZ.A .aA PUll Costa Meu 546·2711 8ru 529-5339 MARIO" BLVD. D"JYl·IN Sant.a Ana 531-1271 run cm CH• ORANGE e3+9282 M• ..... n•nMW¥0U l lMSTOL CINEMAS IAOOUIACW Cotta Mesa S40.744-4 fUZA CIMPIA HUNTINITOtt CINEMA El Toro MI ·!>880 =:Ion e.ac11848•0389 ITAOIUM DIUYl·lfll MAL-L Ofanot 839-8770 Orlngt637.0340 .. .............. ,.,, ...................... .. . . . . .. -. --.. , -QOl.DUICIUIM-TIOM ....... If 19Rd ~J/J~s ~~ '"C.6(J' ~· T\lfS."4U'tl' ..... ,, ..... -"'" u .• ,. ,, ,. M.ltMllOHJ• .... ......... _. SUPERMAN MA!t\,ON••AotOO COtl 11.&CllMMI niu.,_, ....... ............ "" .... _,,_. .... ._ .... ,.,. llllOflllt >o.•Jl.1.JO.IOtt, WALT OISMFf'S "NORTH AVE~ IRREGULARS" (0) ITARRINO KAREN VALENTINI ~ ..... .. ... ,..,.. ... , ... ..,. ,. ... .,. DAIL.V PILOT ~AUlN!WMAN 8181 ANDERSSON "QUINTET" --5•·· .... . ,. ....... ·~ .. .... ... ,-.•. , .... ... . ...... .. -111. ti ,., , ........... u ... ,_ 12 •.1 u .... . lltON tJ )0. 1 fl. t• BENS.ON .. ROSSY'"·.,'~.-• a.~ICE. \D}:J TL f.sS SHnConnery "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" WALT DISNEY'S "NORTH AVENUE IRREGULARS" 101 STAAAINO KAREN VALENTINE ~-1-..­,,. .... , ........ a.&N10N1..M,J•,.,Jt ....... . "' ~al~ 'i.!..-~·w~ °"ION WIU.H .,THE LATE OR EAT PLANET EARTH" (flat _..ue ''WILDP .... r AMILV ~Aftf 2" "QUINTET" (fl) . ... ' -. • . ! I . ' I . . I .. . . ... . t ' . () I ~ t n .e 'S it ,n h ik od ., I -w l:t (. tt! • lt· :a ) - CW OAll..Y Pit.Of Thurlday. February HI . t179 'Col o Jirot>lt"m" Tht"n u ntr fo l~I l~"" Pal will rut rt'<.f IQJX'. getting lhf' ""''""" u~ oc-rwn 11u1o1 n•nl hi lultlf! 11\4"qtlltt 1n v••t'f'mmml o"'1 btmrtf'U Mtlll "our qu.r tl(Jft.f to l'ut l>unn, M \ 1111r St-n•1rt e>rangf" Coeur OoJly l"tlof, J• (J Hor IS60 CNta Moo. C -4 iZ6t6 "'' rnan.11 ltttn1 01 ro bk tt'ill ~ 01t~rtd ~ut phon.-d t"')lltnf'' ur lntrn "°' in<'lu<b thl' r eodn 1 tull oam• oddrflt nnd bu.tJMu fwur•' phonf' nu m btoT canJ"ltTt ttt> roiuldn«'d Thu rolumn opptOrs dcu IJI fl.r1·cp1 So.lurdau.s " Malftdesf'"ft~ '1'11ne• SWtr. .. l>to:AR PAT ,, }OU C'an '"(' by nil the> l'nt•lowd t'l.lfrl''lk11111t·nrt•, I \t.' n<1t ht.·t•n tdlt' in try 111.i lo Wl't .1 n.·fund from t\ah·1clo,C'opc lflc . un Atlllnta. <i.1 . m.11l t1rdl'r ftrm l cnl u $118 ~ <'h1.·l·k a .. full p..i) m,•nt for l'llrnni · to thu• company IJ't &•pt 2 .• ind '""'' nollfwd m hill' Ortotx•r thut tit\') "''rl' h'mpt1rJr1h out or .. tock That' the htllt I '\ l' hl•Jrd 111 'l>tk or followup lttter~ and long d1:-t.1nl'l' t'Jll~ I\ l'umphunt kttl'r to the Georgia Attorney Gt>nl·rul "J'> not answrn.'<1 I rt·1&lly wunt J rdt.md ut th1:. point irnd hoPt' )'OU can help B J • Balboa tsland Bf'tty llayei., Kalt"ldo t'Opt''8 ca &omer H"rvlc-e managu, a~urH AYS t.bat yoer l"t"haod wooJd ~ Issued Jan. 4. \' ou r~ported your cbttk dido 'l arrln, but a lt>Ut>r did promlsln• thf' rf'fund .. within tht> next lwo to three wttks." Wh l'n no re· fund came, A\'S tried to follow up, but tbt firm' phont> was "temporarily" dlseof\ot'cted. I\ clwck with the Atlanta Better Buslnc~ Bul't'au lc-d to contact with Bob Rontck or tht AUanta Fcdf'nl Trade Commisi.lon office, woo i.ays KaMdoscoptl has f'ntt'rt>d Into an "Informal a1reem .. nt " with thl" FTC' c.o cease currt'nt business actlvlllf's. This is due to "scve~ legal proble ms" caused by M•u•ral/rh ate ly filed legal actions -one of which r f'!lultt' lo thl' firm's t>ntlre Inventory beio1 garnls~. Tbt> ups.hoe is that you shouldn't hold your breath "ailing ror a refund. Thf' ame bad news goes ror K.A., Costa Mei.a, who ls awalting dtUvery or refund on mHchandise ordered last Oct. 3. RonJck says re· ruads Lo cust.omf'rs may be a long time in coming. \ \'S adds that situations such as thls orten result in the firm filing rorbankruptcy Bllfl Bnt Blade• for Bott~• DEAR PAT: I plan to make a project that re- quires cutllng some bottles. Someone told me I can UM' a hacksaw for makmg these c uts. Will this work '' J.L., Huntington Beach Y t'S, ii you use one or the various blades made ror such purposes. i\ YS was told that a hacksaw blade with a tungsten carbide cutting edge works we ll. \'ou can buy blades at almost any hardware store, lumbl'r yard or seller of do·lt·yourself m aterials. Ask the deale r's advice regarding your particular project, especially about the kind of bot· ties you intend to cut. Oaair Firm Sit ting on Clae~lc! DEAR PAT· I ordered three personalized plastic anima l chairs from J ay Nor ns Corp. on Ne,\ 7 as Christmas gifts for my niece and m•pht-ws. My check was cashed 10 days later, but the chairs still haven't arrived. Can you find out what happened., I'd still like to gel this merchan· d1i.c L.W .. Balboa Jay Norris Corp. reports these chairs were s hipped to everyone who ordered them in late J anuary. Apparently the manu.facturer reU behind in processing orders due to lbe extra time requited for "personaUzln&" c.ach chair. If you don't re· eeive your order by t'arly February, let AYS know. This firm has a 1-0nl(, undlstlnguished record or s low merchandise delivery. A dd Benelf~iarie• a • Need e d DEAR PAT: Who would get my lifc insurance money if my bt•ncf1ciary dies before I do and 1 don 't know about hi!> death '! M. W ., Dana Point , .. _ In that case all money from your Ille in· surance policy would go to your estate when you die. If you want to make sure your money goes directly t-0 someone In particular, you can name a contingent bt'nerlciary (a second person) to re· cc•ive all or part or your tire insurance should the firs t person you name die before you do. You also are free lo name a nt:w beneOciary any time, un· ll'ss the beneficiary i!. Irrevocable or U a divorce bt>tllement precludeb changes. Pak Bau ter /tlafl Get T o uch up DEAR PAT. h food color added to butter ? I'm c urious about this because sometlmes the butter we buy is bright yt'llow and it's very pale yellow oth('r times. L.L., Newport Eeach Butter made In the wintertime Is ordinarily light In color, while butter made during the sum· me r is bright yf'llow. Tbls Is explained by the amount or carotene (a red substance found in plants) available to cows in their diet. Cows eat more green foliage In the summer months, which contains high amoants or carotene and vitamin A, than they do daring winter. Due to color inconsistencies, the Agriculture Department allows butter processors to add natural coloring, s uch as annatto or beta carotene, to butter. A label check will show that some processors say, "color added seasonally." Beldbtfl Pole H eld Vp ,,_ f'lrM DEAR PAT: I ordered a television holder pole from Holiday Gifts last Nov. 10, but it's never ar· raved. My $16 check was cashed. but my three let· ters of inquiry remain unanswer~. Hope you can help. G.S., Huntington Beach Holiday GJftl customer service repreaenaUlve aay1 tile TV poles are no longer belag maaafac- tared by tbe New York supplier. Sbe doubts pro- d•ctloa will be resamed, and wlll lstH an Im· mediate refund t o you. Correspondence to customen is running beblnd because the firm waa closed for a two-week Inventory after Christmas. •IMllONDS • GE/flS'l'ONES Jewels by joeephs Is searching for diamonds and gemstones from private lnd1v1dual1 and estates, Careful eitamlnatlon and evaluattOn by our experts HlgheSt pnces paid Call 540-9066 10.-9 daily, Saturday HMI, Sunday cl05Gd Asll loi Belty Grace or Frank Vanderw .. 1 iewels by ioseph South eo.t Plaza • 3333 Brlslol COtta Mesa • 540-9066 • • r Evel in Australia irmtman Give11 Travel Perm it IAll NIOll .. TMIU FU. 21, 1111 ......... ,..i.ic. ,,,...,...... ... ~ ... ,,...... "...., ... ~· .. (eff9' .... .. """ ..... -Witoc• .. , ... ~ ... ...... the heat's on water's hot Glusllned. gas water heaters for efficient water heating fHt hol·water recovery system and high· temperature tafety shut-off. 79~"" ............... 94.95 40-tellaft ••••.•• 104.95 50-tallatt ••••••• 114.95 lock your door slngle-handed Single cylinder deadlock by KwlkHt•. Pollce teated. heaVy·duty keylock. 1" dead· bolt. all eMI. #teO or x3 Of x5. ~· 17.90 Of 18.90. 10~~ .......... SANTA ANA Son Diego frwy COSTA MESA D ~ bl one good turn deserves another Delta deck faucet with 8" centereet and right chrome· plating. Swlvela for water control. #100WF. Reg. 29.95 vegetable vitamins 19.2J.e formula. Scott'• vegetable Garden Fertlllzer. Increases yield usually with one application. 5·1b. box. Reg. 3.95 241 decorative practical 12M aquares of dar11. natural cork fOf bulletin boards. wall. accent•. Easy to lnatall. Sound abwblng. Reg. 1.59 99~.lf 4 El time for plants to eat Ralnblrd's Tlmed·ReCeaae In· door Plant Food tablets t· year of continuous feeding . . 4-oz. size Plant Food. In· door Plant Food or Vegetable Food. Reg. 99' Each your choice 77° .. for all your hang-ups Choice of pegboard or muonlte panel• eech 2'x4'•· 1/8" thldt. UMful anywhere. ~· 89" shMt. 89!. .. -: ................ _,__ __ .............. -.. , AT VOUR SERVICE I MISG1:LLANY AF SMET¥ IMPROVED All ·@·.,_ E ~c , ....... ~ INSURANCE ..OWIM MEWPOltT IEAC H I ·\ single handed water control Control flow and temperature of water with Just one hand. Gleaming chrome-plated bathroom fauoet Mt with pop.up auembly, #S20WF. Reg. 31.95 join the •bar' the wet bar! Handsome bar slnk set 1n· eludes sparkling chrome- plated faucet assembly and PVC plastic 11nk Cho1ee of colors Reg. 29.95 19aa hang it up & wrap It-around Heavy gauge steel hose hanger. ribbed for extra strength. Rustproof green finish. #10. Reg. 1 69 dig this pointed deal Pointed garden ahovel With relnlorc:ed featuree and long, smooth fln11hed hardWood handle. ISCOCS. Reg. U~ I • 311 ~~~:!iii~ double smoothie Black & Decker 112 .. hfft dual-ectlon flnlthlng sander. 113-hp motor wtth orbital .C· lion. 10-ft. cord. Quality featurea. f 745e. Reg. 44.89. 3411 I I • I ,. ( l l' f • I I - I , ... Is There Really a Lazy Man's Way to Riches? by Wiiiiam Reed FrHl1nce Investigative Reporter Here 's f he true story behind this ad: the quest ions you might. ask If you had the chance -and answers that will surpris e you J'n bml 1old all my life th11 th..: "''Y to sue· cccd ·~ 10 "'orl bard. ~\( )'OUr money, and bf pallcnt Wttl, I ba~-e fo admit that so far it hasn't paid off. But here's this IU) who claims that he u s not only broke, but SS0.000 in debt -and lO days later was seootin& around tQwn in a new Thunderbird. What 's more, h~ noc only paid off the SO grand, but today he's a millionaire. And he says the secret is not working harder -but working less. Wbich, 1f true, means that Mr. Karbo has dii.covered the greatest thing since the Money Tree. 'I think anyone can get rich' So I decided to check out the Lazy Millionaire. Firs1. I called the newspaper's Credi1 Dcpanment and the local Better Business Bureau. The report: He pays his bills prompcly and honors his guaranted. But I had to find out for myself. And guess where I started looking? Jn the phone boo~ -and he was listed: Joe Karbo, Sunset Beach, California. I phoned, got past his secretary with a minimum of fuss, and ar- ranged an appointment. So far, so good. There really is a Joe Karbo. t-A lazy man works smart. He's always looking for a shortcut' My first surpnse was when I arrived at his office. Ir's a handsome three-story building, and all the "landscaping" has been done by the Almighty. The "front yard" is a dazzling white sand beach and the Pacific Ocean. The "bade yard" (and entrance) faces a well· manicured public park. O.K., I thought, ar least part of what the man says i.s true: he is lazy (and lucky). He enjoys a perfect setting and doesn't have to lift a finger or lay out a dime to maintain it. My second surprise came as I was shown to his private office on the ch ird floor. ll measures about 20 by 40 •.. roughly the size of my whole apartment. Wbcn you get over your shock at the size of the room, you take in the casteful. masculine furnishings: thick carpeting, a massive fireplace with a band- c:arved wood mantelpiece, furniture covered in rcaJ suede and rich leather, an antique de5k, library table and armoire ... and, of course, from the window, a sweeping view of che deserted beach and sparkling ocean below. 'Most people are too busy earning a li ving to make, any money ' Bw my biggesa surprise was Joe Katbo himsdf. He's a friendly bear of a man ••. eyes that arc a startling bltte in a deeply tan· ned race ... a sensitive mouth that easily frames a warm smile or 1 hearty laugh. ff is clothing could charitably be described as "casual." The day I was there, he was wear- il\I faded blue walking shorts, an old T·shirt, and battered tennis shoes. (Later, his secretary assured me that "he docsn 't always dress like that. If che weather's cold or rainy, he wears an old jogging suit.") Well, I d\OUjht, how else would you dress for the bcacb? So I took out D\Y pad and ptncll and set up my tape rtc:0rder. Herc are the highlights or chll inteniew: Qmldotl: To get right down to II: Did you get rich simply by telling other pcopfc how to 4tft rid\? AM..: No. And here art the facts: The year Mf orc I decided to share my ideas, I paid rues on a net i.ncomc or $216,646. I took in many Limes that amount, but that's wtiac I had td1 after paying all my overhead and expmses -and taking advantage or every legal •tax dodge, "shelter" and lg:!>Pholt that a high-priced accountant could dig up for me. The material I sell for S 10 tell$ exactly bow I meek more money than the Pmident of tilt Unked States -and bow others can do tilt same thing ... step by step -and in plain Enalish. QI M YoU tryina to ten me thlt you haven't ialdr 1 lot of money orf "The Luy Man's Wa110 RJchcs"? , __ A: Yo" can bct your ~wctt p&tOOlie that I've made a bundle 6.harina my mfonna11on. And why not? I invested a lo< more time and money 1.0 my "cduwion" than most doc· tors or lawyers. "The Lazy Man's Way to Riches" is the rcsuh of I I years of research and prac11cc. II also represents the invest· ment of hundreds of thousands of dollars m proving what started out as "cheories." Q: You admit -and I'm quoting you - that you made a bundle. sharing your ap- proach 10 making mom:y. May 1 ask how much? A: I won't give you an exacc figure, because it's none of your business, but I'll tell you this: Last year, only 11•!• of my income came from that !.Ource. The rest -830ft - came from conlinuing to do exactly what I invite other people to do. And, with the benefit or my advice and experience. they can avoid making che dumb mistakes I made along the way. (Incidentally, the reason I know the exact figure is because a reporter from the Boston Globe asked me that ques- tion. and my accouncant checked ic out.) 'The year before I decided to share my ideas, I paid taxes on a net income of $2 16,646' UuoUctted Ltttm: "At the time I read it I wasfeellflg guilty for spending the SJO .•• I was broke, my hus· band was in prison, my car was broken down, I had S7 to my name, and wt Were $25,000 in debt -possibly more ... It is now 18 months later. I am not a millionaire ~t. but I am rich beyond my expectations. I have my own little business ... and have received offers beyond my wildest drtams -in- cluding national and international distribu- tion." -BarbaraA. "If it hadn't happenrd to me, I wouldn't have believed it. • A /tw years ago, I had nothing to lose. I was unemployed and broke. I didn't nen own a car and I lived in a cheap apartment. My total assets wert half of a Ducati motorcycle, and my liabilities could be read on my BankAmerlcarct state- ment." "Now, thanks to you and the 'Llrzy Man's' pro1ram, I have made enough money (at "8e 'I) to retire in style. Ut me assure you that I have not ·come into' any money by in· heritant% or marriage or by any other means except th.rough the practicing of your pr<>- gram •• " -Roatt AJtdmoa llH tlngton Beach, California •·r won/ you to know JUSt how great I think It is. My only regret is that I held olf ordering ii so long bttause I thought if was Just another ad. -W.B. Hamilton, Ontario, Caollda "Last May ... I was fired from my S6Q,000 a yttn" }ob as president because busiMSS was so bod ... I rlrtn Marted my own firm despite everyone's 0$lWllon that I was 'nuts.• Results- /. Smallntmonth -I 7;000netl 2. Largestmonth -SJ/,OOOttttl J. Awragtmonth -Sl9,{)()()nttl But wlltrt does the lazy come In? I con't handle an !ht business! .. -R.B. Dllla,Teus Q: Because you've shown me the original let· tcrs, I know chey're genuine -bur I notice that most of the writers are identified only by !heir initials. Why7 A: BecaUJe they don't want stranam calling them in the middle of lht nlaht to verify 1he f1cts oc ask for help. I only •names~ I have permisa -or the penon ls a public fiaurc. ln that case. they -llkc mt -have P.,. IP IOGIC of thcfr ri,tlU ol privacy. But e¥ery letter is In our files and can be checked . .,. ,. . . . . ' ' I • out by any publicarion, R.adio or TV Sca- tion. or government agency -and have been verified time and time again. Q: Do you know of anyone , beside you. who's become a millionaire by following your program? A: Yes, Mark 0 . Haroldsen of Salt Lake City is one. When Mark first got my material, he was a stock broker, dabbling in real estate. When l met him a few month s ago, he told me that he bad gotten fired from his job -but had enjoyed a nee income of around a million dollars a year for the past couple of years. Q: Did the p!}>il pass up the reacher? A: You bet -but my goal has always becn 10 make "enough" money, not "lhe most." Ntwspapm and Magazines Rtport: TIM: Ht only works Mlf 111c ~ m h11 51unlUlll omce on c.abfomla's SllMCI lktm. IDCI C""1I w11cn he's Ihm ht puu m lhon "°"'} .. In Olher WOl'lft. Joe Kartlo, 43, is HI< pnllOl)1lt '°'\.· "Tiie LMy Man's Way to Rachel." Sr9l*T'119e: h It aft lioncll! A man wllo llti clone bll1lnm wilh him MJ\ Katbc". rrpu1111on i' t:Mldlml. and •II• ht ha 11111n~ 10 COl!duct muil&llly 1>entrim1 deals wilh him Wll h llOI htng bUI 1 lw1dshak and an ORI llgtm'llClll. w1111 10 bf 1'1(1\? Tue my adVici-and ro11ow hb. ~°" Htnld·Alltffkt!n The boo\ has drawn hulldreds or k'ltt'n ''°'" P"TIO!ll who llavr pt Of ~cd b)' ~ •• Loll ACllM 1"'1old·~ An unptnCfll l()\j\ m1lhooai!'f, Jot IC11rbo o< Hunc~on Harbor ii• .it-r1111. 11'111& ttStunon..i 10 hi\ 1111t11<~1111. prapna11c COlllK'hon. ~: Afll'f bo\111C1f11 ttOllnd lho• "'1 • .cf>ft'IWfll. wl mJ Oll4t, II< macX hi\ fOll-t~ll ~·I 119721 he mack wo.<n>. ,,._,~~ Maybe Jot ICarbo ha\'"'~ Doil'• )OU •hill•'°" ~ M 10 }OU!Xlrco fin.JOlll wNi • "111 lboul? ... I )• r111dllcd R -and I'm ort on a •llC'll!Oa m)'ftlf. Ge rht ... ,,._,~; .lot Kllltlo k) Soulhcm CWllOOMl's II»~ IO Pllill~ 11o111. Tiit d1rll'fC11«, '°'tel'~ '"111111 .. ,w. b •"-' IOf ~ lllOlt t h.\11 d""fll Oft pmoNI ptoblati: llf IOIYft 1htm .. 1\t ..... Clew. l•Y II~~ of Cinco. C'lll. ~id the l)t1> all In "Tiit Lazy M~n·l Way 10 lhcltn" hu "cl\q~ my hf•," MW ul"(JC'd hi\ frttl.tncf Jrapltc clt-o1gnn Income !tom~ 10 \.10.<XX> annually "I'm ltOI nch yn, sa.ld-HaWJ, 'buc It« the 111111., cltt fOO ol 11\f 1unlltl Jt ~w mt 111( ,,.,,, kK'k In chf panu lhatl~." &Allalntll~I! Hc·l Pfoarammw •M l*h 10 rirM '°' cht luy man. 1llf .__ °" seer. Ht pl'llln 1111cmmu lib "Motl !*'flt art too IM1 •nrt11 ~ hvin1 10 cnair any money," He lhollkt ti.wt llddtd 111at too 111111y Pfoplt cw~ art 100 bvlJ Nl'1l> Ina • h.ma 10 4o My ltflllt. Ht libo siecmly bcfic,on 11111 I P"10ll CM bt la:J l9d make 11tc llllllM. "II )'Ol'tt t!Olt111t ba'd. ,...It ~ tt rht "TIWIS job." ltt tekl • -. ,. ... , ··-------- ' llllndlr. F*'*'f ''· tf1t DAil Y N.OT •I . Q: Who else has put your principles 10 wort and made a million dollars? A: Howard Ruff, wbo lives in tbc Sao Francisco area. I met him just after he'd filed bankruptcy -and still owed $4SOO to friends and $$00> to the t.R.S. Today bis publishing f lrlll bas sales in excess of S.20,000,000 per year -and his TV show is Q: C.rt yoo gjYC mt' a tlaumbnail sketch of "The Lazy Man'~ Way to llic:hcs"? A: No-it wou.ldn't be fair. II took me IS6 pages to explain it in areat detail .,... and rvery word is important. Q: Bui what if I'm not pleased with wblt yo•scndmd ; :;::· 'If I'm wrong, aU you've lost is a couple of minutes and a postage stamp' A: Let me see. There's Mike Wancn in Baltimore; MJrylaod. Mike says his income last year was Sl,248,166 ..• aod tbcrc's 8. A. in Indianapolis. He scarted a business with a SI investment. He so4d out recently for thir· 1cen million ••. and there's also Sam H .• in Beverly Hills. He increased bis net wonh by more than three million dollars in five years. And lhctt arc more. Plus, I'm sure, a foe more that I haven't beard from . · Q: Pretty impressive. But, look, are you say· ing that everyone who sends for your material will get rich? A: or course not. But I think anyone can get rich. Let me givt you an example; I bdong to a gym, but my membership doan't do anything for my physical conditioo. The gym furnishes the equipment. It's up to me as to whether I pu1 it to work or not. How much I get our or it depends on how much I put into it. 'The material I sell /or $10 tells exactly how I made more money than tht Prmdent' Q: Gotcha! I tbou&bt )OU said t1w th.is was "lbe Lazy Mu's Way to Ricbes"? A: It is. Anyone can wort hard -and lots of people do. What's the result? "The harder they work, the bebindcr they gtt." But a luy man works SrfW1. He's always looking for a shoncut, an easier way to act a job done, a bctlcr way to get from here to there. My auess is thac n-ery invention, every scien· tiOc discovery, every improvement in lht human condition was made b«ause some luy man or woman wun't satisfied with the old, accepted, laborious ways -and did somechina •bout it. But the plain tnath Is thlt mosc people AR too busy a.min& a IMn• to make any mor'IC')'. A: No probltm. Like I said, 111 bold your. check or money order for JI days after I've put it in the mail. If you return my material within chat 31 days, l'U send yow payment -uocashcd -by mum awl. And if yoa'D fed sarcr. you can postdate your cbcct by .n days. Q: Then doesn't t«m to be •Y way I c:19 lose. But it's still hard to bdicvc. A: I'm not asting you to ''bcfJeYe" me. Jost try it. If 1•1n wrong, all you've lost is a cou. pie of minutes and a postage stamp. Bui what if I'm right? 11w prtttdini infttWtw-111'-(tltMt/~-ts rvprodl«Yd wit/I tlw IX"'fUSIOn of Mr. Willwm Rttd. Mr. Rttrl was /omwrly Wat Orart~ Coll11ty Editor qJ tltt ·•DtJ111 Pilot" tmd ltlllftllllllf E:dltor oJ flw "HUlltinfton 8t«ll ttldtptltdtnr." The coupon has bctn rcl)rintcd for your con· vcnicnct: leeKutle i ==... I : Swetleld. Cl.mu• ma •1 ! Joe. Y<>'l IMY be full or tans. llm ...._ lline , 1 Ft 10 1osc1 Send• 111t Luy M111'1 w! I i 10 llldla. But doft'I deposit my died ~ i ;~;,~;;;;;; 1· 1 or money OfdC'r 10 me. On tllll bub. hcrc's i my ten dollan. ~------------------~ Mdrn. _______________ _ , C\IJ------------Sl•e _____ z., ____ _ : Sorry -No c.o.o .• , I C°"7"Wt1 mt-Jot ltN. lllQJ So.Ill ... s.. ~ eawor... '°'41 ..... . ... -· . I I . - \ C> e ~ n .e 'S .. I -ew na y ; De et· It a ew 'ou for I • ) J. It e & r .h te ·g m er ly ·" . I n 'I I .. ~. ,.'*Y "· .• .,. .... .....,...,.. Strict Laws Sought for Pet.Birds WASTUNGTON <AP> Ex· otk birda are becom1n1 more and mons popular aa pets ln t.be United Stat.et. brtnalng pleuu.re to many but. the Agriculture Departmtnt 11aya, also increas· 1n1 Ow threat of lmporUog bird dlH llM'« So. the department bas pro- post'd strick new rules govern· Ing Import.Ing privately owned pet blrdq Ot;P RTMENT OFFICIALS recall the epidemic of exotic Ne wcastle d.Lsease that erupted In Southern Calllornia in 1971·'13. The disease. which atrect.s most bard species. was in· troduced by pe t b irds from South America. Before the plague was eradicat· ORCHESTRAL MUSIC AVAILABLE FOR LOAN Curator Edwin A. Flel aher, left, With Eugene Ormandy ·ed by the Animal and Plant Healtb inspection Service more than 12 million birds, mostly c hickens. had died or been destroyed. The cost came to $56 million. Music Scores Total CURRENTLY, IMPORTING of pers onally-owned birds operates under a gentleman's agree ment. under which the owne r promises to keep the bird in Isolation al home for 30 days. .. 13,000 in Library But George Pierson of the animal heaJth service says this just isn't working. PHILA DELPHIA <AP > -When conductors of 3,000 American or· c hestras and hundreds more abroad need music scores, they tum to what may be the world's largest lender of music -tlM! Edwin A fo~le1sher Collection. "Too often the address given as the bird's final destination turns out to be an empty lot. Or the owner has sold the ~ird or reports it has literally 'flown the coop.' The worst thing we bear ts that the bird has died and been disposed of," Pierson said. And to make things simpler, a new directory of 13,000.work collec· t1on a CumulaUve Catalog, 1929· 19'T7 -has been published. It includes the S,000 works ob- tained SIOCC publication or the collect1on 's :second catalog 10 1945 THE COLLECTION was f.'Stabill.bed at the Free Library of Ph1ladelph1a an 1929 with Fle1:.her·s contribution of 4,000 works. each with a score and <.'omplete set of parts. The late Phjladelphia phHan· throp1st began collecting the music in 1909 for the Symphony Club. a local a m ateur orchestra that he founded and patrornzed. F leisher also lert a sizable trust ior m aintenance of the collee- llon. .. By using the cat a log, or- <'hestraa of any size. a nywhere m the world. m ay select a score. and borrow it for a nominal ha ndling fe-e," t he collection's curator and catalog editor, Sam Dennison. said in an interview. THE FEE IS $10 plus postage. a bargain compared with rental l ees. Oennison said rental of ~cores and parts for Gustav Ma hler 's Second Sym p hony would amount to about $90 for each performance. "In that sense. Fleisher plays an active role in sustaining hun· dreds of orchestras in the United States and around the world," Dennison said. The collection not only makes music a vailable to orchestras plagued by limited budgets, it provides scores for some pieces a vailable nowhere else. "THE AMY BEACH Concerto, r crt.'ntlv rediscove red, is to be found OOly in the Fleisher collec· h on. as is the hltle-known Victor Herbert cello Concerto No. 1." Denruson said. The $75 -catalog was compiled a nd edited over the last five years by researche rs headed by Dennison. Work on the 1,000· page volume was funded in part with a Ford Foundation grant. It is published by G. K. Hall & Co. of Boston. The catalog lists composers. titles in the original language and English, publishers, instru- m ents covered in the scores, number of players required, ap- proximate length of each piece, composition dat es. and, in the case of concertos, solo instru- ments. IT ALSO INCLUDES a subject index that classifies music by type and indicates the accompa- nying mediums for various solo instruments. In addition t o th e more fa miliar c lassical European com posers. the Fleisher Colle<:- tion offers music from the Unit- ed States' Colonial. Federal, Vi ctorian and modem penods. com posed by blacks and wtutes. as well as long-neglected pieces by the nation's women com- posers. The collection has been culled by the Society for the Preserva· tion of the American Musical Heritage for much or its re- corded series, and its extensive South American s ection was utilized by the State Department in the 1930s for short-wave broadcasts to that continent. The collection also has a file of tape a nd disc recordings. IF A DISEASE like Newcastle s truck today the cos t could amount to $280 million. Pierson said, and the price of chicken and eggs would skyrocket. Attempting to reduce this threat, the rules will require travelers bringing a bird into the country to leave it with a de- partment ins pector a t one or nine ports of entry for a JO.day quarantine. . They will have to make re· s ervations in advance for quarantine space and obtajn a veterinary health certificate from the country of origin. THE IMPORT limit would re- main at two birds per family, and there would be a fee of $80 for one bird, $100 for two. to cov· e r cost s of tra nsport. feed . health inspection and laboratory work. People interested in this pro-I posed rule may send in com· , ments and suggestions until Mar ch 6. Letters should be sent to the deputy administrator for ve te rina r y ser vices. APHIS, U.S. Department of Agriculture. 6505 Belcrest Road, Hyattsville, lft d. 20782. Wages Restudied WASlilNGTON CAP ) -The Labor Department is consider - ing changes in rules that exempt employers or the blind from pay- ing the federal minimum wage ~r $2.90 an hour. Killer Still at Large Wichita Police Check Out 200 Suspects WICHITA , Kan . CAP > - Police have checked 200 sus· peels since the "Bind, Torture a nd Kill Strangler " claimed his t1eventh victim a year ago. But no one bas been arrested and authorities think the killer is still in the city. "We're working constanUy," said Lt. Bernie Drowatzlcy, who directs two detectives working fulllime on the case "IT'S OUR HOP E that som ewhere down the line we can come up with this man before he can do something again." A ye ar a go last week a Wichita television s tation re- ceived a letter from a man iden- tifying himself as the "Bind, Torture and Kill Strangler." He look responsibility for tlM! slaying of four members of the Joseph Otero family In January 1974 and three other murders. The lale8t was ln 1977. .. BE WENT THREE years one lime without doing anyth.lna, between the Oteros and Shirley Vian." said Deputy Chief Bill Cornwell. ·'The doctors tell us as Jong as he's being able to fantasize wbat he's done. he might not do it a~aln. But the fantasy may wear off." · Police h a v e c all e d In psychologists to profile the killer based on evide nce in the murders and letters he sent to the Wichita Eagle and Beacon ln October 1974 and to KAKE·TV in February 1978. IN TUE FlllST Jetter. wtuch contained many ml11pelttna1 -·· .. ' . and grammatical errors, be said said they could not d isclose a .. monster" entered his bead other investigative methods be· that he could not stop. Ing used. Both s ay they are con· "It a bit compicat.ed game my vinced the strangler remains in friend of the monster play put· the city even though he has not ting victims num~er down, written in a year. follow them, checking up on them waiting ln the dark, wait· Cornwell said the killer won't I ing, waiting ... the pressure is • ~caught un.Ul ~h~re Is "either a great and sometimes be run the tlp from .an md1~1dual or a mis· game to his liking. Maybe you take on his part. can stop him, I can't," the letter Besides the murders of Mr. said. and Mrs. Otero and two or their Police have used hy pnosis children. Jan. 15. 1974, the killer without s uccess on several claimed responsibility for the persons who said they saw a car s trangulation deaths of Shirley leaving the home whe re the Vian, 26. in March 1977, and Oteros were killed. Nancy Jo Fox, 25. fo December CORNWELL AND Drowatiky 1977 • 'Waker•upper' Man, 86, Snou:hathes Daily SHELL.5BURG, Iowa CAP>-·"ln the morning for waker·upper, there's nothing like tt." says retired farmer Warren Pangborn . "It" is snowbalbing. And Pangborn, 86, says be does ll every morning. He strips to the buff and walks out.aide, then rolls around ln the snow. "IT MAY NOT sound like something you'd want lo do, but I get a great reaction from ll," Pangborn said. "It makes you start brealhlna deep. It :;ort of gives me a feel- ing like 1 'm on top or the world." It's not Just a passlng fancy, either. Pangborn has been dolnt It for 40 years -e very winter day, he says, that It's not windy and not much colder than 15 below zero. PANGBORN SA VS there are ., <A"' • -,. •• 11ome trtcks to snowbatbing, though. · "What you want to do Is rub your skin and get It warmed up before you go outside." he ad. vises. "I don't stay out long enough to Invite frostbite. you know, You klhd of want to get lt over wlth quJckly." And he adda: "Since I don't have an)'lhlni on, I like to aet out.aide before U get.a dayll1ht and loo many people gel movln1 around." NATION You need the DAILY PILOT to keep up with AI .. L that's happening in your eom1nunity EVERY day. Here Are 4 Reasons Why ... Ji? Keep an eye on local gover•••ent No other newspaper brings you more news of your city council, planning commission, school and college districts and county government. ~Save Dtoney and W shopping tiDte Real values on items from apple sauce to zippers are advertised every day in the Daily Pilot. Because the ads are from firms in this area, you save time, effort and money. W Follow Your Team The sports action at 15 Orange Coast high schools, { three community colleges, UC Irvine and Cal State campuses is regularly reported by the Daily Pilot sports staff. Keep up with nationally ranked college and pro teams, too! ~Bead all TODAY'S L'S news, EVERY day Local, county, state, national and international events come to your doorstep in the bright, light and lively Daily Pilot. Get into the Daily Pilot for only $3.50 per month. We deliver seven days a week DAILY PILOT 642-4321 . ~ . ·-. ---. -.. , . I\ l • PUBLIC NOTIC PUBUC NOTICE •·TUU ,ICTITIOUS I USINESS NAME iTATl "'ENT The fOl-.no __, t\ d0o1>9 bu\,. N U H PACIFIC COAST Pl.ASllCS CO a"41 NOlllOtWEST PLASTICS CO 7111 Elotf\ $11'Mt, ""' •• ~IA M<IW, C.llfof'nl•tztn "'~ W S-y. 1111 EIO<tn Stt'HI. Ail(. I. CMt• M6A, C.Olltorflt• m n llll\ ~\I\<_._ oY"" In Olv1ci...1 --w Swewy llll\ ,_,,. ... , llled '"'"' ,,.. County Cler• ol 0••~ '"""'' on -'-Ary "· t'l1' ntEOOOttE M(MUllTI' Att-y 1M N. MMI, ~ f"IO S......A.M,CAnltt PUBUC' NOTI E PUBLIC NOTICE MUNICIPAL CC>Ylll OllAMGIE COUNl'f HAlllOll JUOICIAL OIST llllCT , .. , JAMeOllEE IOULIVAllO NEW~IT l lEAOI, CALlllOlllNIA PLAINT IFF 1 BANK OF NEWPORT.• c..tltorni.c.~•llOfl. DEFENDANT. RAYMOND F JANIS, -DOES I tllfOUQI\ i, 1,.. CIU.ttVf' SUMMONS CASIE NU"'ll!lll itttt NOTIC·IEI YMI M"9 ...... MIN. T1'e ... ,.. ....., _._ ......... -wltlleort ,...r wi ......... -·"" ""-' •llt>ltt JI 8"-II-Uoe -.!left _._, AVllOI ~ M ai... ......._ ..... lrt Tr1-.e _.. -.Ca.tr , .. r• tH. WR • .--:a.• ---IH. -lll<t ~tre *JI ... ~ LH I• ,....,._ ( ............... I TO THE OEFENOANT A <tvtl <ornl)lalnt hAS !>ffn toled Dy Ill«' l)lfln 1111 A<}Al~I YoU P\JBUC NOTICE I' IMlS' I II you wl\11 to d•lel\d 1111\ p.,.,.,..,,.... 0r""91' C.0.\1 D<Jlly Pilot, l••\u•I YoU mu\I., wlth<n JO <MY' •lier J ... ?iMICll'el>. l,t. IS,.,. ..,_,. 1111\ •u.._., ~~Oft.,.... Iii. PUBLIC NOTICE C"871• 11.,...,. lllCTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME STATUUNT Tll• tot-i~ pe<M>fl\ •r• Ooln9 bu~~ •• , TMRIF'TY WASW, 1115 Vklor•• A..-. ~I•~. CAl"ornl• ~ ~-R. Mr.F-n. lCIMI Gie~ <•lrn L•n•. H•llllft9to" B1t.cll, c:..111om1 ..... .lol>ft A. Mr.F.odeft. ,_, Giit~ c•l•n Lan•. """''"oton Be•<h. e;.111o ...... ~ ™' IMllNs\ ,, Cll»ftdllc1e0.,., .... - IMO"'llO<-atodMIOfl otflH Ill ... A part...,g,ip. Got< A1C1 Ill Mr. F.odtft Tiits \-WM .. ..., """' ,,.,. C-ty Cl<trk ol Or.angit County on .,_,.,,.,Im PI O llE SSIONAL ESC I O W SUI VICES 1'9n N,T-.iA-~A-.~ft:WI EK ........ ~11 Pvtlllt.hed Or" ... CN\I O.alty Pllo4. FeD 1.1. n.n t9" ~" PUBLIC NOTICE CP>G.M STATEMUtTOll ABANDON.~ENT O" USE O" FICTITIOUS I USINESS NAME T"" lol!Owtflo !».._, P1.tS ~ "'• 11~ Oft~ llctll"'"' bvsl,,..n Mme THE F'FRN FACTORY lllAO S Pl•1,. Or • Sdnl• ~. CA 97704 Tl>e Fkllhou' B~1,,,.., N"""' .,,. •~r""' to M>ow -~ lllecl '" °'"-Countv Oft s..>I 1J. 1m S.flelr• L LAlrd. 1111 S P~"' ~ S...l•A,...CA971W Tiit\ .,.,.,,,..., ..... COl\(IU(IMI .,, - "'Glvld""I Soiw>Ora l tAlrO Tiii\ --win ,..._, •tlll ~ Covl\ty Cl~rll of Or•~ C0<11•ty on Feo, 2. l'J1' ~EK.-c.._.ci... tMJ lrvlM 8tvd. TIHtlA,CA.,_ IEK,_ .... ~M171.o319 P11Dll""'4 o ... noe Coll\! Dolly PllOI, FeD •• Ii. n. MM'l:ll '· 1•19 PUBLIC NOTICE c_, .. NOTICE TO ClllEOITOIS SUP•lltOtt COUIT OF TNE STATIE OFCAl l l"OltNIA 1'011 THIE COUNTY OF OllANOE NO.A.-_. Ul•te ol FRANCES E .IOROAN. Ot<••-NOT 1 CE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo -c.recll~ ol IN -"'11med oec-... l ... t •II ~,....Ing CIAirfl' -ln\I the "'0 ~ •rt re<Nl..O to Iii. •-. with IN nec~wry -~''· In ~ omceo1 me clt!r1lo1 ~•Dow~ 1111ec1 c_,_ cw to ...-1 '""'"· •llh .... MC.HW<'Y ¥OVC ... n . to O>e ..... Oen~ .. ~ I-otf•u of PAC,._ NE• ANO BUNT. Wt E•~ Fourtll StrMt, Sul .. 121, s.nl• Ana. C.llloml• 9'1'01, wNOl I• -~·of Dv\•fle1" ot , ..... ~'"All INltlen pert•ln ll'lf to the H IA!e of wld cll><-nt, within '-"""''"' •fl•r lhe llUI OUDtlc•Oqn ol ltll\ not te.e. 0.-: .1-V "'· "" Wry A. Jonlln EH<U'ICW OI tlw Wiii Of me*"" Mml'd Oe<~nt P•IEN ... IANOIUNT 1•tt IE.,,_."'°"' '91M ltl S_...._CAtml Teh CM41...U A.-.,, fer: l!RCWf '"'*"'*' 0r-. Coesl o.lty Pilot, J .... 7S -l'eb. 1, •• u ... ,. ,...,. P1JBUC NOTICE IUNlttOll COUIT 011 TME STAnlOllCALlrottNIA llOtl TMI COUNTY 01' OllANOE llfO ......... NOT tCI 0 11 HaAllllNO 0 1' PIEYITIOM ~ '1t09AYIE 011 WILl ANO l'Ott LETTIEIS TIESTAMC ... , .. .,. lh lAtt ol EMILY II. 8 UTTNl:l•. 0.U.wcL N0 TIC£ IS Hlillll!8Y GIVl!N ,,,., MA•GUfltlTl! Et BUTTNER lies 11 ... .......,. e ""'"*' few Pn1Mt9 ol '#Ill el\O tor luuen<:t of lell•rt Teue.......,.,., to ,,,. ~lll•••er. ,.., ~· ID Wfll(h f\ ,,...,. * f~ ........ wllll 11\1\ covrt • written PIUCl•"O '" rt\l>OflU 10 '"" comp•••nt tit • .111\110 Court • .,.... rnvSI Ill• wlllt tr.e court • _,"'°" ~no Of <..,w an orel 1>IN<li"9 to IMI entereo In Ille CIOC••t I ~s.,.... oo "'· .,....r dotlllUtt ,.,11 IM --._ 4ll>Pft<•lion Of tr. P'••ntlfl, -"'" <ourt m•v ~nter • 11'°9"'.,., -'"" YoU tor '"" ....... 0.. rn•-tn 0.. e«nl>l<lint, _.ell COUid rll'\1111 ffl 9""'1"""1MI ol W"91tS, 1.,.,1"9 ol ,_...,, °' ..-ri,, °' -relief te O .... i.CI lntMCOITICll .. l'll. ... If.,.. ..... -...... k ... ... _.,.., ... t11h -· .,.. -.. .. ,....,.." ....... -.. ,~ --· "-· -••IMlll ... 11-. O•led 4'CWN M, .. ,. M-lfl. ,..,.. By A. ElltOt\. Decivtv SOllE NSMlllE & AllMSTllOftG ,,,. ......... ~Or . $¥1teA, .... ,_,.. 9Ndl, CA..,_.. Tet· 11141-Jll ""_.,,. •. _,ff Pvbll\Md Or-C:O.\I 0.lly Piiot, JM . 2S, "90. I, I , I}, 1'79 J11 79 PUBUC NOTICE NOTI(;e INVITING at OS Nollet Is MreDT otven 11\at ttw l!lo.trd Of Tn.l>tl'ft Of the Coast Cam munlty Coll~ Dh lrict ol Or•nve COUnty. C.lllonM•. wm r«e1ve M•led btcl• i;p to 2 00 11 m , Frkl<'ty, ~rcll 7. ""· •t the Pv<'Cf\M•nc;i 0.111 ot ..alo K -1 district lo<.tled at IJ70 AO.m\ Avf'nUf'. CO'\IO ~--. C•llfo<111a. ilt whlcll lime Mid Dlds win De l>Ut>h<ly ---...ator PAINTING AHO BIHOtHG OR 197'..0 ORANOE COl'ST COLLEGE c•TAlOG.. lt·11'4t SU~ElllOlll COUllT O" THE STATEOFCAllFOtlNIA llOtl MOii ~II lllJOAM ,lOl"MI TMECOUNTYO~~ANOE f ... rVlt'W 'JI.tit HO'>C>'l"I NO. A.-.. FIOyd HowMd NOTICE M MEAIUIO 0~ P ET· S-'Sh.,hid• TITION FOii ~lt09ATE 01' WIU. Clltelol Plant0Pf'ral'°"' AttO 'Olt LETTEltS TESTAMEN· Pvbll!olW'd Or~ CoA•t 0.l•IY J>olot TAlllY ANO FOtt AllTHOlllUTIC>fl Febrv•••ns.tt. I.,. ~\1·1• TO A DMINISTER UNOEtt THE All -.att to be In o1C <Ord•flC1t wlltt the Bid Form ln5tructloft\ <11\d Conell· ' tlOfts •nO SC>o<lfk•t~ -i<" .,.. now on hie •nO....,., O... wcvrf'd '"the ollke Of ~ Pvrtl!MlnQ Al,)erll of .. t<I S<llOOI dl\lrlct PUBLIC NOTICE 11.nu1 SUP ElllOtt COURT 01' THE STATIEO"CALIFOllNIA FO!t THE COUHTY 0 .. OltANGE NO.A·._... INDl~ENOIHT AOMINISTlllATION OF ESTATES ACT E\101" OI LOUIS 8 SILVCA, 0.<UW'd NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that SOPHIE SILVER ha\ llleO llerltll'l e si.tllio<> lor l>rot>o!lf' ot Wiii end 1or I\ w•r><f' Of Vf1en Tnt-•rv """ lor AvthOl'118llofl to "°"'1,.1s11r u~< I~ 1no.~1 AOrnlntslr.ttlon of Eslatu A<t, '"'"'ltft<f' 10 which I\ m•oe !or further partlc11111rs, MIO 111111 Ell<ll blclOt< "'11'11 '"""''' With "'' bid 4 <a\hler'\ <heO. <•rtlllt'd CM<~. or ~' l>Ond ..._ payt\DW lo ~ °""'r 01 I'-~1 Conimuntty Colle<}'! DIUrlct Bo<1rd of Tru•l~es on '"" •rno""t not~' 1'-11¥e i:»r<...,I li .. .I ot tt.e """ .. , • Cl""r ... ,~ ,,,.., ..... blclder wllt l•r Into '"" 1><01>0...a ConlrKt It Is a wMOed 10 lllm In I'-1&1111,,. to ent .. r ,.,. lo well <Ol'llract , -ot the C'fl«•wllll>lt~"t'd, 19'o!Cll~ot A -· I'-fvH Wrfl lhe~lll ~ IO .... llNI lo -.Id KllOOI dl•lrl<I No ~ mAY wllN!ra.ot hi' Did tor • PltrlOO OI lor1Y·lltt l•Sl d.tn aller IN' oate \et tor the OOHll"Q tl'lereot Th., 8-'ll o1 TnNtt\ ~ lftt" prlvllt9' OI r•jtttltw;I """ ""° all Dids e>r 10 we<-. Afll' INW91Jl&rlllu or ,,.. IOf'rnalltltt 111 .,..,, Did or i.. '"" l>iddl1>9- NOAMAN E. WATSON Secty Bo8rdot lru,t..s ~.. MoW(ll 2. '"" 2 00 p "' Publl\llf(I Or""Of' Cofft O.tily PllOI. ~tbt'Ullr, a. n ,.,, ._,.,.. PUBLIC NOTICE OlllAllGE COUNTY SU ~E ll lO ll COUlllT rtt CIVIC CENT•I OlllYIE WIEST SANTA ANA. CALlllOlllNIA H'm P LAINTIFF· SUSAN MORGAN OEJ'EkDANT RICKEY LEE RU~SEll, -DOES I lllr'Ou9fl ;JC tn <lull•• OltOElll TO SHOW CAUSE 'OR CMANOE 011 N~E In rt D"YtD WILLll'M IVORY Ml'TTHEW ROBERT IVORY """ JANAlEA IYOflY, Mu>0n,.,., CAROl LOUISE ENGEN Wh<tr<ta\. Ill• otlt110" of ~ Lovlilt E"9"fl '" 1114' "'"~"' of C&flh 0.vld WllhArn l•OfY Mal "Offrl tvor-. And Jtln•••• Ivory minor~ . ...,, _n 111..0 ''"'" tM c••rl< o1 I~ II,.,. """ pl~ ol hearing '"'" "''"" ""' Dfffl 1e1 tor Fl"l>rWrf 21, 1'1', •I tO·OO 11.rn.. In the court-of o..,.n. ,.,..,, No. , Of s.tkl court •• , 100 CM< c ... ier Drlvt w.,1, In lttt Clrv 01 Safll• AM CAI lfcwn•e DolMI Ftt>ru.tr'V ~. '"" LEE .... BRANCH, '"'' cour1 tor"" ora.r <M"<!•no .t\ppll (Olll\IY Clt!rll cants' ,,...,,.., from D•••d Wllll"m MAltTIN I GOU >M.AN Ivory lo Davit! Wllllam [IVJltn, M.tt GOLDMAN. STOflE A FllE'l'TAO thew A~ tvorv to M"U""w Aobt'rt >ti E c--BtYd., El'Oe" ...0 J......,lf'• IVO<V to J""""'" S..lle JZO E"~ PH.tOeM,CAI ......... IT tS HEREBY OAOER£D '""'all Tel 7tt-47J•Of'...,·'160 llel'Wn\ lnt.,...ted In "°'0 """""' •O An«NY\ tw· -ff~ pear ~ IN\ coon 111 t I 00 a m on PubhslW'O O<aflCIOI! c:.o,," Da•lv Piiot March 20. 1•7' In ttw <our1•·nom Of Ff'Dnulr'VI, •. 1s. 1m •'11-1 0.part,,,...i J to "'°"" <-"'"' "'"• '"'' epplic AllOn lor C"""W ot Mrflf"\ \hovl<l l\01 l>f' orAnlf'CI PUBLIC NOTICE IT IS FURTHER ORDFRED '"°"I" coo• of ""' -· to ~-<•II~ .,. "ICT1TIOUS I USINESS l>Ubll\lled ()fl(f' a w-tor 10u1 we NAME STATl'Ml!NT <tnlv• __ , °''°' 10 ""' °"" ot "5•<l TM IOllOwf119 pe,_, 15 dolfl9 .,.,,, llt'arlno In Th• OAllY Piiot, """'"' new•1>•~r OI oe"er"t clrcul•llOI\ CINNAMON SOUND, 7U S COH1 printed lfl the c-ty ol Or-Hwy • L~ lk«h. C.lttom•• m1t DI' TEO Fitl>rWrv 6, 1'7' l.-P 5.\no Jr .. 2"3 Allt• Bnl(• w S<imner -.. ~ 8e<Kll, CAllloml• ms1 JUOOf'Ol Ir. Tiiis ~'I\ <-led Dy •n 1,.. Suoltrtor Court OMO;i•I. CAttOL LOUISE EMOEN L-..0 P S.no Jr. 41 Ii-Aid .. ,, Tllll 51.tlffntfll WM fllecl •1111 1"9 Letun• hKll, CA .,Ot County Clerti ol Orenoe County on h t · 111fl .,..rtn F•Druarv 13, 1m Ill l'lllOPlllA HltSOfjA 11,.._ PubH•t>ed Or<!nQI<! C~I °""" Pllot, Pvbll"*I Or-Coa" OAltv Piiot, l'.o<v•ryl. u . 71•1\Cl Marc" t "" F.c> u .n-Mar 1,1, 1m U.-7' .... ,. PUBU C NOTICE . -..... 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 a- D A I L y p I L 0 T c he610Vt"\I Markelplac On The Or<tnQi•Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Oft. t.u W"'<t 642•5678 l'e\l C..a.t •-o••• ......... Ho.lw1ForS. ....................... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY .......... Hoffer. Al.I ~al tel.ate advertl3ed ln this newspaper Is sub· jert lo the Federal Fair Housrng Act o r 1968 which maltes 1t illegal to advertise "any pre· rerence. llm1tallon, or dl!K'nmmat.100 base4 on race, color. re1Jg1on. sex. or oauonaJ onga.n. or an intention to make any such preference. 1Jm1ta· uon. or dlscnminataon:· nu.a oewspaper WlU not k.oowto.ly accept a ny advert111og for r eal estate wtucb Is m viola· boooftbe law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 .. e-.. 111.too llnJJftsslve l 1tory, sur· rounded by bnck. 4 huie Bdrma. ~acious hvlnl( room. ele~ant d101nc room. spac10\LI kitchen + b r eak f tut b{lr . Wbi1Ptrlng t rees' " privacy cau MS-4303 FOREST E OLSON .,,,. "' ....... Lo vas RETaEAT Huge master swte ts0lal· ed for tnl.lmat.e pnvacy, With secluded skinny dip· ptng pool. huie family room. Excellent location near beach a nd golf course. $8S.900. Call 962·Tl88 i.Q.. K€Y V R.€Al TORS A DBJGHTFUL Two br. 2 ba coodo. Pool Many amerutaes. Close to everytlung. Onl,y S7l .500 A home that you can re· allyeQjoy. m.5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS EASTSIDE SPECIAL ..-..SforSale Th 1 s i s a r ca I ••••••••••••••••••••••• b eautyw /front tile GIMU.. 1002 courty rd. New ap. •-••••••••••••••••••• • p h a n c es . A rt i t 1 c ~., VBDE skylight creates a bright --fmly rm & kitchen Crisp le clean 3 Bedroom w /garden window, New wtth new plush eartbtone earthtooe crpts & copper carpeting. Localed in plumbing. Open Eves. Costa Mesa's finest Call today. S45·9491. neighborhood. Coove· o>enl loscbool, shopping (~1w:1 1;rn1it uu1 & parks . Th is home , -.. ·-·------- reflecta meticulous care ReaJ Estate & it's ready ror you to ---------- move right an ! Full price. $82.900. Call 7Sl..Jl.91. «=SELECT I PROPERTIES PRIME EASTSIDE AREA-POOL Unique. unusual pool home. ~e lot. s~t to alley. Guest rm & bath olf lhe garage by pool. Lge separate panelled family rm w tfrplc Plen· ty rm to expand. Don't bes.it.ate! Call now! Open EYes. 545-9491. -rt Heights 3 BR-AXFRI, Prit'e JU!<l re duced' Giant lot. Walk lO beach. One year home warran· ty, t.oo' Call rast, 752 1700 t4"fl llt l,/•I! 1111 If t f"'' ' SOUTH P •CIFtC LOCATION Yo u won't fin d any coconut trees or wild ammals. but you will hnd a cute 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, situated oo a large lot. nus home offers the warmth or a h replace and converuence o( a 2· 481 +den ~~~~~~~~; $69 500! S56-ai60 Sunke n i?vin g r oom. C:::SELECT Bnck firep~ace. All re-T'PROPERTIES modeled kitchen. Ex· 1---------- celleot location. Im · ls ttPossible? macuJate bargain! Call lhur!dlry. F!b!u!!y "· ,..,.. ONLY PILQI N G....,... 100 ., .. ,,.. aooz •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~COATS & WALLACE CLP REAL ESTATE, INC. !I lOCAllY UWNID COMl'!INY ',lffVING THl SOIJI H CO~\I AHI A SINCt I'll.\ LOYI ., MST StMfT -You'll have run in this well planned clean spacious 4 Bdrm 2 bath home ln fantastic area of Costa Mesa. TM warmth of the fire place is enjoyed from living, f ami· ly and djning rooms. Island kitchen with eating area. Patio has wood deck with builtin BBQ. RV area. Close to s hopping and freeways , just Usted . $94,500. C.il 146-4141 Ser ving Costa Mesa-Irvine Huntingto n Beac h ·Newport B each OWNB WILL CAIRY-1~ on this beautiful 4 Bedrm, 2~ bath home in Lake Forest. Featured in L.A. Times Home Section. Home has deck with bench seating. $109,500. Call Craig. 631-1266 RE/MAX of coda w. lmM ................ illc. 234 l. 17th Stn.t, Costa Me1C1 6J 1-1 ZH Nationwide Network of Individually Owned and Operated Real Estate Offices ......,.., . .., 3br. 2ba. Ready t.o move tn All new copper pl umbing. roof. carpel, kitchen. & both balhs. A real doll house in great area Close to S<:hools. shopping. Won't Last! WATaFltOKJ w/42' boat slip. Big 2 BR & den. 2 frplcs. blw. 2 cov. patios, 3 car gar . Owner will help BIG on finan cing . SJS0 .0 00. 6'1S-a)70 JACOIS REAL TY SM.000. 979-5370. •---------~__......,.....~ ALLSTATE REALTORS l Hotults u..det- $70,000 and all a re 10 Costa Mesa. 3 Bedroom, 4 Bedroom. No down pay. ment to Vets. These will go fast.. call now. 540-3666 f.Afltelan Real Estate Inc. I JOIH SUCCESS Expr'd salesmen: Here's a chaDce to join an active beec.h office with more clJeots than a.uociates. Beach area buyers are more a Ulue ot, s ales larger , loans easier. 70f.ll% spilt. Rental ac· tivitJes optiooaJ. Replys cmftdenllaJ. BURR WHITE REALTOR. INC. 67S.4630 **U.S.** *VETERANS* Recent cba.oges in V.A regs ~ enable you to qualify for $100,000 home loam with absolutely NO DOWN PAYMENT. WortdRHIEahM ao Orange County farm specializing in VA home loans. We're the VETS that help the VETS. For more info. call: lilMorto.,Af#. 541-GIOO talUX -..et..cowm!! Single story owner unit with 2 townhouse design rear units. All with pnvate patio. W /D book up & lndlvidual enclosed gar ages . Call n o w 673-85.50 Qi'fN Ill 9 • H ~ IUN ICIHl f.11( I L fast lo t.ake advantage! OLD CORONA DEL '7!\2.1700 MAR Qol N fH"'q • II \llJN 10 11 •I" I • 4.000 sq. ft . , __________ _ f0f I Yes!!! Tnple A, double ASSUME DIStUIU Newly listed ocean view home in secured Corona del Mar community; s pacJOUS 4 bdrm. home wrth thick. new carpet· tng, 2 frplcs., wet bar & a spectacular ocean view mstr. bdrm. swte. You can't find more value for 1299.000 · Fee simple! A ~ IUIH;f ~!~r~\J~~F:~~ Sm~J~2~.~ner s large bedr ms, each :ransrerr ed. S4 l ·042S COHO<> WITH A with 1t ·s own bath 3 Bkr S secluded pnvate patios. PRIVATE YARD Spt.ra1 sta1rrase reading Oarting4yrold3br. l'':z to 2nd level 4 car ba decorator wallpaper, enclosed garage All this earthtone crpts, frplc. Wider one roof on corner S Wet bar. 2 eatios & lge lot Don't let tlus one gel fenced yrd. Only $69,900. away! Call 673-8550 Open Eves.S4S-9491. ,.,,,,"I• IO" • '•'' I (Qo'!}!4!Jt§tl [ ~ lfi&Hil F Tha1 §f !~~:m~ J;/t~:cHe ------l-... C\AY l l'OUctoH ------ 1 ·~ .. "!"..i.~ ... :..,.~. ~(~ """" IO '"'"' fov• ""'l>le ....,.d, \ 'e I s I L H A D I ( ··:.·:.· E . I' 1 r 1 1 \ D. I ,~ IrT to I '· 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 I T 0 R 0 8 I YOtJ know me11 Is Y8fY .,.. s I I' I I : ponslve, espee1111y In Eng11n0. . • _ . _ . -To save money, Parliament haa 1ugge1tecs that Ille ~n I D A W l l R I wear a c rown ol --. I' I I r I e ,.,...,,~ .............. i .• ._ ••. j hy loll°"lj "' '~'' "''"'r) ,., t(I. .___.__.__.__..__.__ Y'Oll ..... ICC> fr-'""' No l bttluw r r 14 r r I' 1· 1 1 •11111 SCl.U4-LETS AMwen iut Classffication 5 1 00 macnab I Irvine realtg UDO ISU Luxuriou.t; Mediterranean! New 2· story, custom.built home -ex- quis itely detailed & decorated. 4 BRs (master suite>. 3 baths. ra mily rm. 2 fplcs & 3-car l(arage. Ex· tensive use or imported til~ - gourmet kitchen -bricked entry patlo -observation deck on roof -strcet-~street location. A MUST SEE -OP EN FRIDAY 1-5 P .M. US VIA WA21ERS. (T·108> -....... CLOSE to e veryt hi ng Transferred seller will pay buyer 's costs on this executive jewel: 3 Br. den/fam /hu~c recrea· Uon rm. J.car garage. Now ooly $98.900. HAL P INCH IN REALTORS f)7s.4.J92 673-4400 HARBOR ,\ ll1v1~1on of ll.1rhor lnn':'ttm1«nt ('o VIEW-SAN LUIS REY Beautiful 3 BR condo in Rancho San Joaquin. Great view of city lights, back bay. park. etc. Quiet location. l'Onvenient to pool. golf & tennis. $168.000 A COUMILL IAl«ll CO. 644-9060 2111 SANJOAOUINHll.l.S .. O. IN NEWPORT aNTER CE IBDllB ILlllS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE CAPISTRANO IEA~H De li ~htrul Duplex On The Most Beautiful Sa ndy Beach In T he Entire Area. Each Unit Has 3 BR & F .R . W/F.P . Winte r /Summe r Rentals. Price. $650.000. MEW ILUFFS IEAUTY In Great Location In Newport Bch Blurrs . Fabulous End Unit On Huge Green Belt. 3 BR Wt 2· Ba . Lrg Ma ster Bdrm Suite. Putting Green + Largest Pool In Bluffs. Bette r Hurry On This L ist in g . Only SlSS,000 . A .. J oy Of Newport" Listing. &31-1• •• ' DOfftftllf'I,... DllYI ... .. .. , ... OAA.V PILOT Thu'8day, ,.,~ t5, t!?! J .... !!~!.~~.~~••••••• ~~~ ........ ~!.~.~ ........ ~ •. :.~ ... w... ~~!.~~-~~ ....... ~.~~ ... !~.~~ • ••••••••• ,.,.. I 00 .... ,... I 00 .... ,.. I 00 ., .. ,... I OOJ 1-------- •••• • •• ·•• · · ··••····• · · · · ·· ·· · · • · · · ·•• ·• ·•·•· ·· ··. .. . . . . . . .. ... . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-.M con Ae.t ~:.~c:i:.~ ... ~ ... ~!!!.~.~ ........ ~~· ~~: ........... ,~~!!~.~.~···o~ <:-......,. t014 t"'ll o;t•leoch 1040 ....... ~~•••• !~.~ ~~ ..... ~ .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• •• • • --------Beaut exec 3br. 2ba. pool. LOOI( Halt! crtyd, atrm. la m:Jlr •tt'. Nice up1r1tded 3 Bdrm opn hsc S•l/Sun 1 s hOrnt. fe.turet lamll)' IBch/Carfteld> Slat.900. room, with flrtPl•CC' 31....;..983-4 __ 77_8_. -----cu ,.,,, and • lar«e .,.,._ t 044 UDO 1511 Bay '1ew from 2 polio d ks ttth nee ruatom s paraou s bdrm.. 4 bath \rudiUonul home. hkl" sww. N eal fot ~ntertairunJ: Cornl'r lot $.S00,000 OCIAHFllONT Quuhty l'rur m n~hlp in m ho'1 mm & ouk noor:. ~l'tb orr lhl. landmurk • 8 R. 3 b_. honw In fmt• t JnuUon i-:stnbh'>hl'<f tn~~ & lo\\n!I S4& c • IACK IAY Ftnl' 4 bdrm 21 • h •lh fam1h homl• on qui l c.-ul dt> 'nc.• 0\ ~rsaied pool, plo)'house stor;1tce Sl69.000 T('rm~ IAYFllOMT S<>wral ftnt.> bu\'front honw-. \t Uh fllt•r & ~hp J AVALON Well cOMtrut•lt'<I. :1 UH. I ba, oak floor. purtl,al ba:,ement. roncrell' roundalton Fltttl'I ,1r~ Sl20. Fee BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1 I 1 rl , • ·. d. [1, • , r-. h (, '> b I t> I Htrzi~, mter1 450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 719-0811 DEERFIELD TOWNHOUSE P r ime location on beautiful greenbelt. with view of lovely pool. Ji'eatures in- clude 3 bdrms .. 21'2 baths. brick frplr. & private patio -corner location & you own the land ! Price only $89.900 f1ch o(flu 11\Ckpendently owned •ltd opet1teo. TURnfROCK IROADMOOR By pool & park. P lan III with pro- fe ssional add-on !';th Bdrm. Fee land. R.C. TAYLOR CO. 640·5112 ' Begin Spring! GOUll"S TOWMHOMI Be on <lhe> cour~c·' You will wlth this 2 bedroom and d~n toWtthome tor un· der 1200.000 1 Set·urlty guurdcd de· ,,ctopm nt wUh pool. Jacuzia a nd ten- nis focilltlt'S Sup<'r horntt for enter· tainm1-: with vaultt-d t•Plllng it, wt'l bar. MJnkc.'n hvm~ room ond formal dining room Tht\ Un1qut' ~olfrr '~ townhome. "llh uno~trueteti vlt'w 1s $176.~ l J I I Jl l i()~f h[AL TOl~S bib 600<1 ='·'.lJ l JU Cnci~I H 11t1w.1 v, Co11111.1 rh I M.ir Jl!.CJ Ill Mc!.a V• ""' "' ~ lu !/l!JO Wl·.~1 .1· Y ".J TAYLOR CO. HE A 1.T< >HS ~illl t ' l!HI> llGKJ UMm PEHl .. SULA POINT AltU! QuaJi(y-bullt. bNtutifully maintained. 4 Units in each building with lge c· <' n t r a 1 c o u r t v d f i I l t! d w i t h magnifi cent m a'turr d s p('ci men plants. These two 4-unit bldgs are in the best location. right at the entrance to Peninsula Point. jus t steps from the beach. Each 4-plex has two 2-bdrm. 2-bath and two 2·bdrm. l·bath units. Each front unit has a wood-burning fireplace. 2 Apts have great ocean view! For qua lified buyer . owner will carry lst T.D. with 29'1-down. Be early! Both bldgs for S7SO.OOO WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO.. REALTORS Z I 11 Smt Jooquin Hillt Rood NEWPORT CENTER. H.I . 644-4910 •VETERANS• COSTA MESA Attention but Ide rs. in· vestors . eve r yon e ' Large R-2 Jot with cute 2 bdrm. home on rear ; on Jy~.000! lalboa lay Prop. RHltors * 675-7060 * Why rent when you r an 1 ________ _ buy. No down up lo $100.000. Do at now! Call Veterans Counseling Agent. 968-7482 CAR HR IN REAL EST ATE • OHEFttH * W.odMctory Leston All.am your real e!>tate license now .. start the year with a new pro fess1on .. featunn(( exc1t· Ing Telecourse 2000 Pro· gram. the fast nnd easy way to pa."8 the state ex· ams Cnll for an appt. to· day Sail Real Estat. School -------1 67S.4890 675-4890 COHVEHIEHCE MARKET excellent Cos ta Mesa location. 10 limes gross-major tenant on long term lease. $76.000. Call Pele LUNT TILL YOURS 3 ~ I J/4 bottt, faMfy homt. CoHred c::.· $71 ,000 oll .~ l"efUc~b~ ~rs. bUnwd r~lllna•. 2 brtck rireJ)la~'S •rid nice t'OUn uy kltr hc-n l'L\Jli 2 Bdrm. z b•lh Income unit with pnv1tA1 patio und yard llecl. to Slll,000 t'OR INl''ORMATION CAU644-721 I /Jn Nl[.l l nAI LLY f.. l\'!J5UCIA 11 "> OCEAHFROHT CAMEO SHORES t»0.000 tee. Pool. 4br. 3"-ba Ouen Sat /Sun 2 s ~ Bnttht.On R<J 'dM Misrief ••YHlcb 640.SjfO l'Umer Al.SOC' SPYGLASS RIDGE •POOLHOMI • SHl,OOOfff l5t umc on m1rket a besuufully d~1ated 3 Bdrm. fomlJy rm homl' wilh spet'l.acular view of rolhnl( lulls, 1mprt:ulve pool area 3 car g11r. Tastefully decorated In pale bluet. & white~ For lnform1.1t1on Cul I 644-721 I SHORECLIFFS VIEW lmpe>slng stone facade gives way to impressive e.nlr)' hall featuring Sl>U'al staircase leading to magnificent master slDte. Fabulous country kitchen shares ocean & canyon views. Large lot room for pool. lnrred1blc family h ome F o r pn vate showing call ()nu); iffi hi 21~ MewportC...ter 640-5357 TWIHS? ~ely Goldenrod, near historic bridge, two about to start duplexes. 3 BR, P!itiO, 2 BA home, large 2 BR, 2 BA view un· 1t.s. $298.000each. 'f.~n1ma de/ Jllm $f!lu/w1{ieJ 6/.J-8~9'l 2435 E. Coast Hwy .. CdM IYOWHER QUIET IESIDEHTIAL EHVIROMMEHT Two large bedrooms. t ~o baths, huge entertam · menl deck. View of hills. pnvate beach access $176,500. 1·771·0456 or 549·9595 LOWEST ltRICE Jasmine Creek End Unit Easy Terms -$199.500 Owner/Agent. 759--0046 &ot lu.rry on lh la one ' ••••• • •• • • • • • • • • •••• • •• Call ~48·~880 A$k1na swoo &REA T BUY · · ".~ HERITAGE REALTORS F.nalu1h Tudor Z"3 Br aplil le vel. ztra car Moat J>Qpular Plan 5 OEERl"l~LO Park Home w1lh llOOl and s pa JUST REl>UCED to $148,900. Move In cond1 -t1ori · Creat house for en· tttta.lnment. Don't pass t.hiaopPortu.nity BUY -Hl\NC H ~ 1<1 l\L I Y ~ ~ >~J I 2000 gor•gc. frpl cs. ---=;;;;; mkrowaves. g~nhouae BUOY wlnduwM, pool. s po WOOOaalDGE ·r~Nl!:icourt RICl.,.TIOM F'rom 189.1150 ._ 641Hl00l or 9M 1920 Grand award "1nnlnrc Developed by Achuns Plan at Wood Woodtt('<' Dev Co bndge Estates by frv1nt-Partl1c. ~w:!ai!~t N e-wJ./ pa In t e d 3 bedroom homo with din· 1ng , Camlly room . llttplare and bu• I tins P•llo 1123.950 liKR Call 540 1720 TAAU1. 3 Br. den. 2 1, bat h SU7.500 Call George at M2·3700 between LO & 5 dail)' Irvine Pac1f1r WOODBRIDGE PLACt.: ,A.MP& YOUISILF WITH THIH AaCH IAY OH of s.Ho L....-'• ...._, prl•• COi i olUtt ~ a ,..... .. Med, """"· r•c:r•otloft c••hr ••41 ~/IOlllllO/ jocvnl. -OCEAM VttW CHAIMa w• 2 IMdr>OOMi ftOW bvt loh of r00M fw ._.,....._. To '" It Is to b11y It. O.'t wolt. Sln.370 -TWO IEAUTIFUL CUSTOM HOMIS fut recutly co ... plete.d wfth l .,,~ 3 bofltt. fGMly ,... md oceoft •iew. Each o•oltoltle for $249.000 9 king o 499-4551 On the Orange Coasr-took 10 Lingo first -· --- FURNISHED MODEL Stonewood near the lake 3 bd. 2 ba +family rm. l'rofost.1onally dccorat- c d . beautif u ll y landscaped Prrre 1n crealle of only S2000 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ S1:19,SOO Call Luoy '.'.: F4XB UPrat Pearson. Irvine P<ic1f1r 2431 Snntu Anu Av ... ('M ~ 4101. 9'$,1.(X) Onl)' S:MlO down ------ Assu.me !Wr';< loon No LAl<EFtlOKT IM PoU\ts, no m .'<lll cht-ckK WOOOIRIDGE J bdrm. I~• bath. fncd New Woodbndge Et.talc)> yard. Wwstu.nRton Plan ready Gallery or Homt>~ for move in J bed & den. Kirk Lamb. 631-0900 2"'2 ba $166.000 Special Architect remo d eled upgrade par kage tn wood. glass. hrdwd duded. Call George at noo~. decks. skyll•ht (714lS52-3700 between 10 " &SdaJly atrium U\ master swte. Irvine P ac1f1c lrg. lol. Owner Sll9.500 ------- 642.7817 Turtle Rock Glen 5 lir. 3 EASTS.DE ..a. 3 car gar . A tC. spare for RV Owner/agl 3 Bdrm. borne on 1 arge Phone 645-0776. evs. R-2 corner lot; good --------- Newport Heights area. PETER'S TOWHHOME OnlyS89.500 Sharp & 1mmar . 4 BR. CALL646-4463 Fam rm, din ·~ rm £1· rn*i:m1wa 6~~t::~~~ I ~=C~raalt~~· '-.JI_!!...... Audrey Kapelus. Agent, 664-7707 MESA VMDE Or.angctree Condo. by RM-ICHSTYLE owner Plan J l br. Beauuful 4 Bdrm. dming AdUlt£only. Tennis. pool. room. family room. J car spa etc. SSl.000. 640·11Hll garage, 1111 1mmacul11te $159 ,900 . Jackie Handle man. Unique Homes. 546·5990 ELEGANT but comfort.a· ble. tastefuUy decorated in warm earth tones. 2 story, S bdrm . 3 bu home. Compl. upgraded. Mesa del Mar. $129.000 Prine. only. Owner / Agent~ BAO< BAY VILLAGE 3 br. 21,Az ba, wet bar By owner. $106.500. 644-4646. Eves/Wk.ods. ATTENTION BUILDERS Super E's1de Costa Mesa location. Older 4 bdrm on large cul-de-sac lot wllh room to bwld 2 or maybe 3 more uruts . Listed at $125.000 FULlstRULTY <:4546·0814 WOODBRIDGE SPECIALS Desirous of living in the beauufuJ lakeside com mwuty of Woodbridge? We have homes ava1la· ble in the price range from $72,900 to S145,000 Please raJI for details. Jr WOOlllJRIOGf RE ALTY 551-3000 NEW OFFERING Smartt)' laid out 3 bedroom home in the award wuuti.ng Deerfield development Thts Plan lA Park Home has sun ken l1v1ng room wrlh fireplace. dinmg room and vaulted ceilings Your choice or TWO I Call toda)'. = RANCH ~ HEAL.T Y ~ 551 2000 lr"¥iM I 04 4 t._,.... litoch I 041 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Tlrilerock Hills 4 Bdrm. home 1n ,., ecuttve ne1ghborl\ood Privacy aboundi.. Short walk to romm pool and tenrus. elementary and tugh schools. L-.,..a Beach I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lot for s afe /Own e r . $l.2SK. Secluded. Spcl· ('08Sl81 Vlf'W W /ll!.l w/Brkr. 2 20 al $135K 494-3645 eves. REAL ESTATE •DUPLEX* Orean side of hwy, level lot. easy nr~ss t.o beach Needs paint, minor re· paU"S; ideal for home & income. Hurry. only $145,000 MW1on Realty 494-0731 a..,..tas 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUHSET PLACE 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. atnum. AJC. J\.'J .YTS old. S86.500 Ph~0617 L..,.a Mic)Mtl I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAY AIOVEPAR 1lus 2 Bdrm. 2 bath up per Condo front:. l!:I N11{UCI Goll Course. Im· prove YoW' life w /an all bullt-m kitchen, vaulted reiJing w/Sk)'litcs. Prvl <.-ommuruty pool & spa $89,000 493-9494 495-5220 496-.24 t3 830-5050 BY OWNER· Highly up- J(raded ho me on golf course withm ~ block of tennis club. S27S,!JOO •WOODS COVE ~. 495-4959 New 2 BR lor quality Missiolt VMfo I 06 7 coosclous buyer Close to •••••••••••• •• ••••• •••• bearh but has out.stand· mg ocean view Spacious New on market. 3 bdrm. room~ elegant master 2'"'2 ba den. Upgraded Sl.89 sOo BOlSDP lhruout. 1 year old. End • · Of heavily wooded cul.de· !'lac By Owner. Sl 19.500 714-837. 7479 too~,. St. L..,_._och Mewpon leach I 0'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPEN HOUSE 1820 TrodewiRcb Ln Sm~hing 4 BR & Den +Sl0.000 KlTCHEN. ~;ill aoo their agt at: Uruled Brokers 646-7414 548·2739 ~g~q .!~~' ' PETE BARRETT ~~~ RE.ALTY ~glster 642-5200 . Moftffcelo Cottdo Like new, sparkling 3 Bdrm. w /new carpets. drapes and appliances. Freshly paint.ed. vacant. ready to move in and start enjoying Offered at $71,000. Call 540 1151 ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS T...tlerock Gt.ft Single family Plan Ill on cu.l·de·sac. 4 Br. 2"'1 ba, 2 frplcs. Redwood derk 1ng, jar . pool sz lol. $209.SOO by owner ~15 Causey & Company w/pool, Jar. fam rm. completely remodeled Big lot muc h more . ()wn(>r will finance . No l'rt>d11 needed. $155,000 balance. A11 k for Ed Chernow 964-24~ tO i'2.20i'2 "" 1ff"" i ..... 1ff f..ot T.- Mom Ano baby """ lol'!' tne 3 d1mrns1onal Plt1•tt ot th•~ Qu•ll Ad<l·a bl«k ~n~lope Qu•ll 1~ tun to make d l~•1n11nR g111 101 .i newt>o•n bdbl 01 ~ 1odclle1 rat lt•n 7~90 PclllP•n p1Pces <.hJ•ls wdaRl"I and d11et11on~ IOI IPdd1 s~ar Quilt 1nlluded SI.SO IOI tilCh Pllltrn Adi! 40C Bea1n a new day ntw season e«h p1nern fo1 t.rs1-c1u s "" "ew romante w11h this soh ~hap I mail anci handling Send to: me 11 s a ~'"~l>On on lht Al!Ct 8'oola p11nc~s theme topped by tht Needlecrdft Dept. lOS alwa~ f1ane11ng cowl collar Dally Pllol Punted Panem 9389 Hall In liJ Ol4 ~ St., "" S•m 101;. 12',, Wi. 16'1 '°" 1n' 10011 1'11111 "-e. 18~. 20'7 Sm 1•11 (bust 31) M*-. z-., ,.a..,. ,._bw raMs 3 J 18 111oi •s inch NCWt NOW' Our 1979 NHCllc: ~ St.SO ._ ucll Pttt.m. CRAfl CATALOG-<M1 200 POPu- AcW 40t fOf utll patttni fol lat <1eS11ns. 3 fltt Plttetn hnt-das lin1111f. llM411ftc. pnnted 1nsi4e Send 7~C s.114 s lno.kW(llJ T~.$1.SO MMtd MMTlll 1~'*'"'-' o.llta .•. $1.SO lZJ-AtaNM .... Olilia .. $1.50 De t .. 2 12'-Cftfb n...n ..... Sl.50 :>attern P · ... lzs.Pftlf o..at. ..... $1.H )allv Piiot 12'-'tfb ·~-~iH. l.H m West 11111 St.. lltw Yor\ llY 12l·Slftdl '11' Pltdl . 1.ZS 1001 l. Prillt NAM[. ADOlllSS. lU•StllH '11' l'•H Olli ti. $1.ZS l,,, Sill Md STYl.E llUMIH. Ul., ... ~· • SI.SO An 11\f ntw Clothe1 JOU nttd IQI 117.W, ........ !It ••• Sl.00 rour busy hit att 1n our SPRING UC.Witty Flf'tJ Qllllts .... $1.00 SIJMM(R PATT(RN CATALOCI 115·'!CIK11tt ..... Sl.00 01esses 10~ \~111~. panl\ vr\t\ 1 ll.t Gifts .•.•.•• Sl.00 !"~ts Plu' SI SO f1tt pattt1n 110.1 Mffl bp •••...... 75' COUpOll Sflld /~t lot.Sew ( llllit. • · · • • • • $1)5 1»s .. 1en-sim 31.51 suo 1 .. 1Mta11t 11 ...... · · ·tt.• l~d/C., lrwltn SI.SO IM-flllllllt , ........ •. l.Ot 12'1-fJa!PwM 0.itb SI SO l~hlUlt c:.Mt .. ·. · UI 127AI~ '11' Ootlttt SI 50 104..l-..t ...... . Sl.01 ' lOJ..U Qtllltl fw l_, 75' 102'!11-• °""" . 75' 101.q.itt c.ii.r. 154 JUST USTB>l 11 Mewort hoc:h DUPLEX Hard to find 3 bdrm 2 baths each unit. good rond . Xlnt su m · mer /Winter area. Steps to the beach. Priced at $212.000 associated BRO l<.fllS IHlll TOR S 21 . j ' """ !<Jlt. <) ,.. , l l ,t. ti \ •THERAHCH• Brand new rarpets, in llUffS HST 0-.,_, 1026 this beaut. exe<'. 4br 2, I 65 SQ.FT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• home over 2.500sq fl ONDO Magnificent ocean view. Pool size lot Move an C iJJ New 3 bd, lge rms <3rd rond Jus t reduced ' Pnr1!<1 nghl at $147,950 bd sep. s u1 te ). Agt $1.12,900 Red Hill. Mary Poss1bllttles l(alore in 833-0623 ; 644-5742. Ann Kay, Brok. Assoc Uus laroe mast.er i.wte 0a 552 7500eve 552 l24S <mcludfng round bed. Luxurious ocean view >' • • - spread and drapes to ----single family homes nr UHIVBlSITY PARK match). 2 other bdrm1; DUftLEXU;CdM the harbor. 2012 to 3206 Elegant 3br Stanford SHINGLED CHAAMEft Spbt level on qwet h1lllop Wlth wtutewater views Spacious ltv1n~ room. fireplace. wood panell mg J big bcdroomi.. 2 '" baths. $l24.500 Adjarent bul ldublc lot only $72.500 • with adjominl( full balll .,_....._of ~~ sq. fl. coming soon! Townhome. Fee Land. + ex t r a '"' b a th -...,..... ~s111 E At•-"-Investors. a11 ·-.:..::..~..;._~----ORANGE TR E 2br ,1 downstelr1'. Nice entry '""'UVI' •-0 UOCSo Coast~ 1way andspacioushvlntt/dln· forlnfOl'matlononlhese ltGlrllAUTIFUL patio home. $7l.9o ' inV1llage Fa1r Ing. Cozy converstalon SIX UNITS located just s Bdrm 3 ba. lmmac. up Agent!>.5l-4682eve. LAGUNA BEACH pit. Room for rear polio. one b lor k from Big graded Thunderbird The Ranch, 4 Br2 Bu, ram 497.2457 Larrcc doubl.e J(arag~. Corona Beach. Custom home. f'amlJy rm & hob rm. pool. lg roroer tot 1~!1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!~~~~!! Steps to NB tennis rlub. bwlt-four 2 bedroom by rm. hU$!e used brfck w1RV parking. Up · i: No ••• No welkt.o store1rnr srhools. urut.s. two one bedroom frplr . Chnlrc are a . graded lhruout. $117.500. --------• vacant. 1mmc.'<1111l~ <>c· uruta; bwlt in k1lchens. motivated 11eller . Open ~1·3051 ...,.,.....ARCH cupunry fireplaces. decks and/or hOuse dally . $1 27.900 -----------'""""" C§I Coldwell Bon~r NO PAlNTfNG...... OUR BUSIN E.58 private patios ; seven 33126 Sea Bright Dr. Family living atlts finest . SUMMIT I NO CLEANING ... ·.. ISVOURHUSINt;S.$ garages . Interestingly Dana Pl. Large Woodbridge &autiful 8 Pion un11 Well localed 3 br on• COOEJ""~cnalU a:>ticedal5'60.000. Pte&cott s bdrm. 3 ba wilh panoramic v1f'w or pretty street. l''ormal •' • nmarus COLEOF .. EWPORT 2l61.Ssq. ft home. Quahty Saddleback mtns & diDU>R room. corner C.M._4i._....:_.._.:_..~ IE.Al.TOI • SANCU!fllENTf amenities include up· ocean & roasthne. ~x bnck fireplace, & proud ......rrr, ~ H1·2407 graded rarpets. custom qwsitely decorated & patio. 2 blks lo NewpQrt 675-55 I I >rte_ .. •-.. drapes, air conditioning p r 0 f e s s 1 0 n a 1 1 )' Harbor High Srhool redwood deck, spa & 1---'--ped Co 1 I'\...--II ... ~a . mm. poo • vwno:r anXIOUfi !10 l'U COfMMne 1024 much much more OWC jacuzii & c lubhou1>e oow'64S-7221 -...,.,1.,._.0 I007 ....................... FA:lat v..., 1034 small 2nd. Pnr edto sell SJ.29~ .. ••••••••••••••••••••• at $192,500. By Owner ' VA MO DOWH 1_56----l~'-------••••••••••••••••••••••• •AMDMEW "HUllY" EAGLE'S .. EST lMIWfs RARE OPPORTUNITY TO ACQUJRE FROM f.sTATE OF ORIGINAL OWNER, THIS "UN OOMMON" & SCARCE 3 BR END UN IT . UN EQUALLED PRIVACY. COMMAN - DING, BAY VIE WS & UNLIMITED POTEN· TIAL VALUE. Agent 64()..5..W) COMOO IY OWMH 3br 21~ba S99.500 Near Hoag 54$-3639 WESTCLIFF SHOWPLACE G<lcJte<>u5 WeslcUff 3 br home Spacious I 1vlos rm Warm corner fireplure f'am lly rm. Giant k1trhen·loads of l'Upboard~' Huge master wcng. Big sewing - laundry rm. Mas11ve central patio. Mint rondi· !Jon! Call fut 752-1700 Ot1"' •t I • II I C.IN 101" ft I ['11!11 Wntclff l•affy *** Jwo1 H. Moddow Custom bwlt c RR. den. 3 ba. wet bar· Ready for occupancy $2t~.ooo. COAST PROPERTIES 00 .• 673 5410. A very attractive Mesa Verde home on a s pacious lot . Heated ixd. covered pat.lo, gas b.BQ with 3 Bdrm, 2 balh and many other added fe.llU'eS for pleasant llY• ing. Call 548·$880 for ~dettilla. ~?ir!!:5iiah~~; LEVERAGE 3 M~~~ ~i)' ~\aia room. Has assumable ....,,,,72•• I 1.0136 tat. Priced to sell at ,...,... 66 Have )'OU read today's $98 ooo. Call P .8 .1. Motivated owner will Classified Ad.st ar not. eor... .. Mw 9022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7871 Rapids Or. • _.,.. con•Ge. Huntington Beach 6 _....... ~ 5 Vou at'C'the wlnocr of 1 ye Ar old drum cot-Two,..... Tickets ~e. vaulted beam cell· ~>,. HERITAGE to lnga rti<lwood deck • Tennessee Wlllloma garden patio. By llP· I~~~~~~~~~ THI polr>tmcntonJy.11~.ooo. 1: . • REALTORS ECCIMfttCITllS 0 OF A ~·u StarnQf S.ndy Dennis at lhe t.oa« Beach Conven ~, .o t.ion Center, 300 E. Ocean Blvd, LonJ e..arb. Tl' WTSIDI I BR older borne. R·2 lot. c&QM ln.. • 000. Owner w\IJ provide nnanclna. loy McC-*, affr. 141-7729 N4-M31 /W-02ll pager help finance with a , .. .,,.......... 106' 100're missing the best Mii minlmaJ down payment. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t>a.raalnslntownl • 3 bedroom. 2~ bath$ in 19~...;...; ____ _.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil tk~• leac.lo I 040 l.Mne Orovea. Call Now! ·o;a.·t4ousi· w!~t:-1~~2 BV--OWNf:R 2 WEEKS ONLY ,,. S Slit sun l·& or call for IMVISTOI : appt. Save 93,000 each 2 Upended COf'.ldo. 149.950. lmmac. 3 bdrrn. homes Oran&e Tree Xlnt tt · Belt So. Hunl . lkh. loc. n&rM will stay. 9.3~ 311· Proleulooally decor•t· aum loan. Own t attt ed. Nove In condition ~ UtT2 Sa I u d a . H. O i.,~_ ... _...:....;.. . .;...• -9-R-~---.. -T-h-ts • 8 8 • s 0 0 . 2 I 8 8 ' u YUIJll: ....... * * LIDO ISLE * * Exceptional 4 BR, 2 BA on wide strect·to-street lot. French doors & beam ceilings t hru-out, hardwood floors, used brick frplc.. & extra l arge So. patio. Completely remodeled. By owner 67).1421 claim your tlckeu. C.11 Balboa IM6nd Rtah)' •..... -.......................... " ~ .. ~x-t272. \'thl'i\t'-, ... .,~.,,, • • • 673•1700 Harborbreeu. H.8 Wf!ekoruy..,,900 After .... 000 2/18 wllh rultor al Want Ad Relu.JLS &42·Sf71 7t ... t6'·fll7 aD. ).51.-zt $460,000 -,,. .. ,,,. . -,.. ... ,.., ~. .. . ' J . . ~.;~ .. iOff• ~.:;;!!~ ...... ;.;~ ...... =·;'·!:~~·;Offj~·:;:::•jffi~l;;~;r;\;;; Qk-.:=·· .. ~·~:70fslolo OAM.YPIL!)T ft ........................ ,_.s. a aoo '9rS. 11ot .......... ~.......... ....................... .. ..................................................................................... . ~ ....................... ......................... Co•doMl"l~lowR· LohforS. 2200 eo.t......_ UZ4 By OWDf'r, redured •-..._..fw 1700 •• ... •••••••••••••••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ... ..,ooo 1.11 2 BR unii. £aat11d t Coat a M ~u L£MON ffEJGHTS beamed cellla1, feac. ...... Bo•'--J ....................... 2bt lba hardwood nr . 1 bilk to ot'e&I\ Gwd LD NEW MOOR HOMES GET 'INVOLVED <ALTA VISTA MANOR> R·l apprOll. "t acre yrd, Blt·lo.a. Sm ch.lid cocnt .,...a m0·&7~ 3 br. 2 be. prol. decor at· buulllul view. p_re · OK. No Peta. $380, llC-8 SPAQOUS Ulll. .... OR, R dy t.o mov tnlo. w t 1 mod~•· • d l • l 0 r '!I u n I I . liOUDllll")' plans fOC' ~. Meyer' Pl.~ •tad. l..R. ..._..._ BR P' ov r Complel! W1th masonry, wnln.: p ck .. P'lrepl.aee. lutd)en blt.ns. Tudor Owner M0>7020 oral\. $:30. &*':ti tat prti·· 211 St & lul'Klsc pin in SOLAJl HOT WATER Udo laJfo Lota5' llrfft to _MIWPOltT ______ TS __ AndNl•t lid. ee b) HEATLNC. Uvma rm & s\l'eet. Wuiera (714) 9* AllCra 540 MIW PllSMK>VS ADULT .-nw~r bdrm Wft;lnted •i4&4<n,>888-6755 ARIA 2 br t'hlnD&q beyv,.; M01aLJ HOWi PAD wu.iowa ~n to pnvacy MEW LG TWMHSI MobJle bom~ ctn Lido . wailled outdoor carpeted Ma • •• Deteti, 3 BR 2'41 BA, lrplc'a, ~t Pellll c Usatoo V ejoarn> Tokmll the first atep ls Often the haniest one. If you're t.:=;1~rc~ 0~~~e btort 2400 bars , lndry rma. sn,OOO S7J.U.UI . f II ,_ ,.... . ••••-•••••M•••••••••• garage1, lat'd yrd.s & 6 MONTHS AH llNT rvady to move up or sUlrt your investment program. but Pnce lM~. · u• garage. $51( llLOW MARJCff dec ks. corne r Knox SACAJFtCIH 114/IJ7.o97' have berom~ confused with aJl the aspects of today's Owner leaving area 11 A&sum 814 loon Palm St/Orange Ave. CM. lllO C~NVO c-ondo mnrkct.. then come lo lbe experts at Quall Place will ronalder sale of Desert. CompletA!b' turn. sm. 631·1388, l ·7Str2908 JOK bfllow marht PropeJ1ies for solid . profesak>llal counseling. Pyramid harnnure. For a.ppt. t.o 2br 21.Ai ba S.ndR oc1 erpct.."ok.$325mo.$200 UH~~ ~Jr~t '•r~~· your cqulllcs with a n exchange a nd/or purchase with an !fee, plea.se phone Nelson 1'owobse tennil era. jac, sec'unty. C1tll 6"65-S29S MOO-~,.,.S-. •EXCITING• eye towards h1°h future returns for "OUr golden years. Robins on, Broke r . Ii pool. waUu.ag,cli8l. Lo Afl.5::M> • •••••••••••••-••••••.. ,.. ~ 548-5647. everything. Fee Land.1----------~ s.a..... 1076 Ae'"1"S • •OtCMS -We have a few positions open for S'7SOOO 568--6805 640-5147 3br house w 1sodort. ........................ LWo Mtw,.,.. ldt llcc11sed prof P.Ssionals who would Uke to affiliate with --. ,.,.rty 2000 537~ • • fenced yrd. Terrific for VllWAlOMTHITOf' Snarkdabmlhl"ml<id!v Oraos.tc County 's fastest growing professional Real -.. ·•••••••••••••••••• =9~fT.:!.t~m~. ==~~~=. ff a ~!urllt~ ~!~~~r~ }o;state or~anizatlon. We now have available .. • Huo=Beach ~=~ 2900 Db:.z Bdrm, Z'-2 bath Coo- lltoJ•bu Nc-w 1.,1101. f'1r1dhr + p~u 4!0%Dn.80%fw.ancmg. ••••••••••••••••••••••• do. w/encl backyard. 2 IUCHHOMI Comfan.able 38R, l\'J ba newlY ttmodt-lrd hom• 4 houaea from oc~•n $180.Ul)O Ow.n1 Aal 631.-:1or642 33;)1 arar ~ Z BR COOdo ori Mar.,..~IOOI JIV\ btach No Points, last escrow DUPL£X or 2 on lot for car gar $425. Ph 673-2282 l;lln Walk lU ~hopp1n1 In Own/Bk.r.84.2·7407 self & moth~r . Im · ~~~~~~~~~I Br.R'nlA HENRY ~ llarlior'• mocn mediately Must h ive lbr home. frplc, I.iv r m . RP \LTORS adw.•~~UC"• cKZ0757 J 2BR each Qwck escrow. Completely fncd , $295 $79,toO, S.A lkt&bta Counlr) atmo.pbere · -..twporl achoob. 3 BR, 2 b.a, hug•· )ard, OWDU/agt Call Lyu 9'19-&M112, ~2600 WATaFttOMT CONDO lbr 2bu Vie~ slip l.se/opt $159.SOO. 545-3638 DANDYIUY Sharp 3 Bedroom Cool.lo for only $79,900 Lolli of wallP¥J)er. bt1ck Palio Pool, 1acuul & view NEWPORT CENTER REALTY 640-111 z LARGE LOT IN NWPT BEACH lncludmg 1 2 Bdrm & I 3 Bdrm, own the land too' Walle totbe beach. Call 645-9161 .: OPEN HOUSE REALTY /. NEWPORT HEIGHTS TRlPLEXOR FIVEPLEX" Unique oppty to buy un its that r arely become avail in Newport Beach's finest nRhbrhds. All three hnve 2 BR. I BA. attb11.ttt plans for 2 more BR's. Own front urul +plans for 2 more 2 BR's Sl89.~0 Owner 494-3223cves or wkends. Excellent Financing K.V H 4 br. 2 ba. fam rm. desirable toe. As· sum., 2Dd avail. $166.900 IW0-1440-551-656 l llG & IEAUT1RJL &EAGBTOGO 5 BR . 2 Ua Somerset. kltt'hcn n ook r:lmily w wetbar. d1n10J: rm. 2 fpl<'''I. Vll'W II !'llewport Ccnt••r A pot ti n ~ s h rd , privary & a pr1rc vou ran 't he111 Own<'r has houithl another h om t• S ubmit ull oHers S217.000 1801 Port Carlow 9lJS~ GREALTY Udo IBie Lot JS' streN W s treet Wailers 714 883·1434 714 888·5755· *~000* 3 Br, pool Npt Hts As· sumea bal. or suo,ooo. $1200/mo. Approx 10% Int. No crediV needed. Owner will Q(irry, va· cant. Call ~5399 SOLD!-SOLDll Our Z ~an hating ln The Bhifa. Now lcl us sell your X,W.Z.L.D.G.~. model. We give t•omplete prof. serVJce. Please call ~ cf{~1 ASwHflM.t Bea Qceanlront M&nlt whde water. A Quintard Rlly $fecla1 only $647M. 9~, oo loan feM. Make SlOOM prom HURRY 673-ctlD '4IWPOl1' PIX& $122.500 3 Bdrm home Is atepe rrom U>e beach. oo the ~a. It def\nltcty • oeed1 TLC, but has t.Nmendou1 potential. 8rh11 ~ toolt and Im· ........ Call 540-1151 -·s~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS 1 %U°"4Nar "24121 CA l t f o IM J A • $79,000 DUPLEX -* 20 HARD TO FIND 7UHITS-C.M. Max. 18SK. CM owners .JuJpd.S2.8-62l7aft8PM. _..._ -PA~AC Orange County -Patios pride of ownership units. Beaut. new building. ~ repty9splease• Call Null 2 br, 2~ ba condo. CG!fl•-t O'tt M 0 I I LI HOM I and garages. -Costa Mesa. $850.000. ~,::S xlnt 1~~~~ 213-7-0056. w /2 f'rplcea, d s bwbr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAL.ES • BALBOA I SLAND • 2 0 P R I D E () F was.her/dryer. Sorry. no 8UlU>ERSCLOSEOU1 Z106Harbor Ste206 A OU PLEX. Trade down OWNERSHIP UNITS -MEARIUAIC EYEH ....... s~s~ ~-.~~e°!: ~-aa.Dl•br,2~b&,3r11r 540-5917 only.$230.000. Hunting ton Beach -IS%00WM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~2566:973.2971. .:ariia~. d1n101 rm , * C 0 ST A M E SA townhouse s tyle owoer's 4-Plex. Assume. Seller ~.~~-••••• •---------P111Mled tamrm,Urplc:., 1978 Klogston Mob1lt DUPLEX E h 't . $ 125000 will carry paper . ly3bt.2 ba,lamrm~ WI bar, la undry rrn. Jlol"M 20XS2,2bdr.2ba -ac Unt unit. 1. • • Management avail. c:or... .. Mw 3122 d.J.nrm,F.P.doublegar .. pr~m1um c arpeting Reasonable park rent. 2,000 sq. ft. $159.SOO. * 2 0 U N I T S Ageat.Gacy D. Busler ••••••••••••••••••••••• cplS & drps, elec B.Ls Take over c-x.isting loan Xlnt c'Olld. Must see to * 2 houses on lot -Costa RIVERSIDE _ 2 s tory ~or536-2498 Jasnu.oe Creek. Plan J . 0. W · S500 mo ioc. at 9W~ 1199,500 26!Hll belte"e 775-0305540-3894 M $129 500 d t 1 $382 000 Pnnclpalsonly Jae. It frplc. J or 6 mo. gardener. 549-2644 Vial.a Mlrad:t&al 2443. esa. • · gar en s Ye. • · lse. $900mo. 759·1413 O..OPcMltt 3226 5-ha Ma I OIO EXCITING * 3 BDRM. + 2 BDRM. -* 2 2 U N ( T S TWO OM A LOT eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ • • Costa Mesa. $163.900. ANAHEIM. $535.000. 1 3 BR 1 2 BR. good LalJ-a leoch 3141 Delt.IJ(e 1 br. 1 ba, yaro. SAND POINT • H 0 U S E -l-• 23 UNITS -SANTA Easwde location. owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• pello. no pets. UUJ. paJd. 4br lanta:Hle f amily MewportlHch duplex-Ontario. $86,500. MONICA. Subterranean aiwous. Sl2S.OOO 2BR serru rum. 190 Ca· $32.S. J-661·38'19. home /\gent S5H682 DE~~x~'rai LE * ORANGE TRIPLEXES parking. $1.590.000. A fR€HIG£ ~~~~~Ph Oc.e.Vieweo.doto eve HOME -Got two! $114,SOO and * 23 UNITS -SANTA /-I--_ HOM€~ o 1 x 2 ad r rn s, $59 000 Wtexpando IJv. rm .• lg $115.500. MONICA -Ba lconies . l333W Csl Hwy ..._..Unflr:li*d Wa..'\her/d.rYer incl. Ten- • : ecnclosed add on, lg • COVINGTON 4-plex -$1,650,000. 645-4646 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• rus. pool, Jac, From $39S. Fruit Trees lutchen. It.Ing sire bdrm · P r i d e of own e r s h i p . • 23 UN ITS -SA NT A Ge..trd 3202 496-SlllO A.gt· low Rent. Galore C:C.forNoPaclfic $200.000. MONICA -Elevator and &.oltJns m uus lovely 2 ...._...._Sales * 4 HOUSES ON LOT - s ubterranean parking . bedroom home, di.rung, 2706 Harbor Blvd. 11206 yard. $170,000. $1.800.000. fireplace and huge yard. &-A • 4-PLEX -pride of * 24 UNITS -ORANGE BKR.. Call 540-1120 540-5937 ownership -3 bdrm, 2 COUNTY. All units have TARBEil. Wx4S Mobue Home with bath owner's unit with fi replaces a nd enc losed -· lOx.31 add on r oom & fireplace. $225.000. garages. $1.350.000. Attn: Vets no down & no closing costs on this beautiful 4 bdrm house 1n a very good residential urea. Near Honer Plai,a, Santa Ana College & ~ways Whelan Real Estate ~40 ·3666 or 545-8221 res porch. El Morro Beach m * COSTA MESA PRIDE • 24 UNITS -ORANGE ~:fil'~jy r~~:~ed~~l~t OF OWNERSHIP 4-plex COUNTY. $605.000. coodll1on $27,000. Prv on spice streets. $215.000. • 2 S U N I T S Pty.213·919-2977 * 4 -PLEX . recentl y RIVERSIDE -Close to VIkmg rox10 expando hv r e furbished. Beautiful college. SSS0.000. rm. 1mmac. cond1t1on. 1n golf course view. $155.500. • 2 6 U N I T S good CMpark.Lowrent. * 4 HOUSES/LARGE HOLLYWOOD -pool and fum.$13.S00.548·1665 LOT -Cos t a Mesa. air conditioned. $880.000. Tusfin I 090 DeAnza Bay Side Village. $242.000. * 2 7 U N l T S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jbr Mobile Home, Newly * 4 UNITS -Costa Mesa. H O L L y W O O D AMAZINGLY LOW • m pncc. but rugh on a bill Is Uus spectacular 3 BR + FR home. Looking for t.bal custom home wilh a sweep10g view of far away mountains and genUe rollmg slopes for Wlder $200,000? Then caU us. we've got it! SlW.000. cia'orated $'l7.SOO terms. Boat Dork. rvt Bch. $180.000. s ubterranean parking. P o o 1 . J a <' u z z i . • 2 DUPLEXES, 4 units, $1,430.000. I Clubhouses. Brokt!r/ $135,000. Costa Mesa . • 2 8 PR I D E 0 F Own er. 6 3 1·492 o1 * 2 DUPLEXES. 4 units OWNERSHIP UNITS - S75-8458. each with fireplace -Huntington Beach -1112 Mobile Home Huntin g ton Be a c h . miles to beach $1.575.000. Laguna Beach, By S 75 000 29 UNITS b 1 · & owner. 11;.iBR. 2bo. New · 1 · · • -a comes RUMAR REAL TY 558-7977 luxunous carpeting. 180 * COSTA MESA 4·PLEX wet bars in each unit - degree ocean view. Adult -two 3bdrm, two 2bdrm. Hollywood. $1.070.000. bvmg. No Pets. S34.000. $154.000. • 32 ORANGE COUNTY ~~~.t Hwy. F-lO. • 4 SPACIOUS UNI'l'S -pride of ownership units. L1v1ng situated on a wooded knoll. Oak trees and orchards surround tl\ls 5 BR home. Soanng cedar ceilings, grare formal d.uu.ng and 1Jv1og room with generous use ol used brick archways and Wed nooring. Equal· ly spacious master swle is accenled by a Roman hath and rustic fireplace. Other quahty touches tn· dude Oak cabinetr y, stained leaded glass and country kitchen. A pool with Redwood decking loolts to night light view. ~.M. RUMAR REAL TY ssa.1911 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......_Ho.es De Anz.a Bays ide Village. N<nb side nr Bay. 2 Br. 2 ba. f'rplc. patio. cvd carport. 675--0390 A.cnap for Selle 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnflation hedge! 40 ac. or more, $UiO per ac. E. of Reno, Nev. TRADE for cars, R.E .. o r ? M·A Corp. 646-3949; sn.t>156 WHAT $20,000 WILL DO FOR YOU TODAY Call for further Inf or ma • lion & investigate the still best commodity "land· real es late" LOW INTEREST We sull have 1t on la nd. Cal l now. B r o k er, l/677·5ml. l /522·2080 f.orS. 1100 ... •••••••••••••• •••••. SWISS CHALET $16,900 tudden itl lbe pines, this great get.away. All wood STBtS TO IEACH & newly decorated with Dbl wide '61 trailerama fant.asuc Vlew ol 1400 sq (DN5186) 3 pvt bch & ft house. 2 stall barn witb per. Sub letting allowed. bunkhouse OD 1 \4 acres. Located ID Treeasure Is. Brok er. l /67 6· 5717. :o!Ol Pacific Coast Hwy. l/52J-4462 Lag Bch. Offered by 1-------- . Ren a1 ssance M . P . t6 ACRES TI4-499-3816 B E L A 1 R E 0 F FALLBROOK PRIME '78 Skyline 2 bdrm .. 2 ba • AVOCA DO LAND IN ~.<m. 4 star park, pool, P R E S T J G I 0 U S r lubhouse, l 'n blk to HELEAH ESTATE CAN beach Hu rat. beach. BE SPLlT 29% balance 900-5022 down owe. $368,000. Walk be b 12, E Prine. Only. Mlke Wlnk to ac • xpan· 957 tw:.u Agnl do. need to sell. 1 BR. I .......... . ba, ~rg porch. 34202 Del AP..ari!=nh ObisPo. #27, Dana Pt. for ScM 1300 Information HOT LINE! Exclusive! BANK REPOSSESSIONS NO DOWN PAYMENT •FIEEBUS• * 1DUIS DAILY* 1·2·3 BEDIJOM HOMES IN PARIS ALLAIW C.AU.MOW MOllLIHOMI STO.IS E.. AD&Mim 9SMSOO w.t.mlaat.u 841""9$ C.Aoabeim 956-1011 SllMAoa 5&4·1070 OD approval ol credit ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mtenlioo lnv .. stors 2 choice 4-Plexes 0041" So Cst.Plua. $205.000 each oo 1031 exchange. Prin- crpals ooly. Hm 494-0536 bw.~1Zl9. Ccc:aarcial ~ 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGUNA llET AIL Build.mg ln the heart or the downtown area. cor- ner local.Ion, excellent property ror art gallery. fW1llture st.ore, or any retail business. Owner lllOYlng • wao\S to sell. Aakln1 $290 ,000. Realooo • 675-6700 llAteMIW 1600 aq ft t'Ommerrlal proreaalonal bulldlng, NW coroer Eurlld .ti Talbert. Fountain Valley. $1'2,AOO. 848·2655 d ys. 536 ·487 3 wlcodsteves. Prtn. only. IM'T MACH C· I Six rctall atorta for sale. Sll0,000 w /terms. Al).. Tri Rlly MS-0621 U you're-not readlt..' the bttle Ida ln Class1fied1 you'tt 1111 a lot °' newsy ormatlon as ftlJ u aome 1re1l buys, $169.000. Ow ner 's uni t with * 6 ORANGE COUNTY c e r a m i c t i I e & UNITS. $210.000. wood·burning fireplace.· • 8 ORANGE COUNTY $1 ,800,000. UNITS. $195.000. • 3 4 U N I T S * 8 ORANGE COUNTY HUNTINGTON BEACH - UNITS.$205.000. firepl aces & patios . * 8 UNITS. 2 4-plexes, $1,300.000. p rid e of owne rs h ip. • 3 s U N r TS Huntin g ton Bea c h . HOLLYWOOD ·-pool. $450.000. $1.650.000. • 12 UNITS. 3 4-plexes. • 3 5 U N r T S Orange County. pride of HUNTINGTON BEACH - o w n ers h i p . 3 bdrm . Own your own s treet! o w n e r 's u n i t w i th Pride of ownership -3 fireplace. $675,000. bdrms. 2 ba th owner's * 14 UNITS -Orange uni t with firepla ce. County -One year old. $2,025.000. $597.000. • 4 O U N I T S • 15 UNITS -Santa H 0 LL Y W 0 0 D Monica -Close to beach. subterranean parking and $775.000. s e c u r i t y f e a t u r es • 16 UNITS <4 4·plexes) $2.800.000. Orange County. $650,000. * 85 + UNlTS -W * 16 UNITS -Orange HOLLYWOOD -security County. $400.000. guards. $2,000.000. • 16 UNITS -Pride of • 112 UNITS -exchange. ownership -Huntington $2.800.000. Beach. $900.000. • 112 UNlTS -Hollywood • 17 UNITS on ocean. -n ea r fr ee wa y. $760.000. $3.400.000. * 19 UNITS -Ordnge • 125 UNlTS -4~ ~ears Co u n t y -Sp a n i s h old. $2.375.000. ar c hitecture. $410.000. No drlve by's please. In deference to tLe wishes or our property owners. please do not ask for addresses. If you are a sincere buyer. selle r , or exchanger please call for . a n appointment or visit our office. Open daily and weekends for your convenience . • ll4 UNIT. DISNEYLAND area motel, now under ronstruction. Turnkey at $4.275,000 *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 buildings for $2,000,000. *INDUSTRIAL buildings. $280.000. $312.SOO. $1,925,000. •INDUSTRIAL sites in Riverslde. Call one of our professional staff of over 40. Large enough to serve, s mall enough to care. Aeen'S • •ot111S We have a few positions open for licensed pro(eulon&ls who would like to affiliate with Orange County's futelt growing professional Real ~tate Organiz.atJon. Call for ' QUAIL PlACE PROPERTIES, INC. (714) 752-lftO ***** I 9 FourDlexes By owner f;nces ex. tremely low Seller will <'&J'TY all flnanc1ng al 9w:b. l.cs'9f Cash Row Low Dowa Pa,_:.t lllr. 714/S0-3676 CALI.. FOR SETUP ***** ••eriy Hiiis Atta 25 acre est.ate qualifies as income property with 2 houses. Beverly Hills a ddress. Vi e w s of downtown & ocean! Ad· jacent t.o $l million & up homes ' ATTENTION BUILDERS &OEVEWPERS $3.950.000. <4.1.S> 93>4840. Agt. Two 3 Br.fou.r2Brhse. + 1 br apt, E.Slde C.M. Seller will cal'ry loan. $290.000 YEAGER REAL TY. 556-6171 . lRVl.NF.TERRACE BolsatSl>nogdale 4 br, 2 4 Br 2 Ba. ~w carpels. ba. foci) yd. garage. Kids drapes, paint thr uout. & pets ok. $4.55. Agt. No Great rate foe· nght ram1· fee. 964-2566; 973-2971 ly at S700 mo• Refs. Loog •--------- term preferred. Garfield/Bushard 3 br, Z DUNGER&ASSOC ba. patio, lnrd y d, 957-0701 968·$$6.S garage. luds & pets ok HARBOR VIEW HIU.S 2 :::~:Asfi2:Jt 0 f ee . br, 2 ba w/conv. den. -------- Vault. clg, sbady Cncd Luxury townhOu.se 3 Br 2 yrd w1guebo. 3 car gar . Ba. att. 2 car gar, len· 3 Br. 2 ba. C.M home. ~mo .. mcl gardeMr. rus/pool /j ac. Close to Hrdwd flrs, frpl. rm to AvaiJ3/1.673-8:M3. beach. ~be.644-8086 add unit oo lg R-2 lot. As· sm~% tst TD. Tenants 4 blJa to ocean. Newer BeauUfuJ • br. home, nr. will stay. $84,900. Owner 3br. 3b3, 2 frpk . $775. Ed 1 s o n H S . 9 0 2 2 ..... ..,,..,9666..,..3-·6331t 67~or675-5930 Rhodesia, $565/mo. _ .. ..._ /Ur 675"!)464. ~ Tw~ 3 BR. ram.iJy rm. jacuu1. 1-------- Two houses large lot above Big Corona. great Warner/Beach 4 br, 2 ba, .,_, 11 1 a3" PIN r~ VJew. $1800mo. 75&-8930 dshwhr, covr'd patio. <M'l<'e · oc on u fncd yd, garage. Kids & perfect 2 BR I BA wf al· 2 BT. 2 ba, flvmg rm. dm pet.sole. $465. /\gt. No fee tached garai,?e f-ull rm + den. 2 car gar 964-2566:973-2971 pnce SU>.000 s 5 7 5 6 4 4 · o 5 9 8 • 1-------- 213/434· 7660 Adams/Mui:nol.Ja 4 br, 2 f ~€HIG€ ,. __ ._Me 3224 ba. frplc, ds hwhr. i;>alio. ~ _ HOM€~ oWVMU ICI fncd yd, garage. Kids & . ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets ok. EdlSOn H.S. $465. 3333W.Cooastffwy,NB Lwcury 2 br, I ~ ba, Con· Agt. no 'e~ 964-2566. 645-6646 do. Obie gar .. fp. pool. 97J.2971 1a<'uu1, $450 /mo .:---------*~OOO* 00 · 5290 ~"'e' 3242 3 Br pool Npt Hts As· Eastslde 2 br n.ice Jard. ••••••••••••••••••••••• swnes baJ. of $ls0.000. bttns. Kids ok. ~O PeL~. c.ondo 2br 2ba bll.Ul, pool. $1200/mo. Approx JO~ Days 646-4262. eves tenDJs, beach. $600mo. 10t. No credit needed. 64&9S43 lst/Lst .Dock xtr. day Owner will carry. \'3· 4 Br & den. 21.<a ba • ...., blk 7 J 4 /8 94 l 7 17 eve. can\. Call 645·:>399 from Nwpt Back Bay. _213_r.B2_·_'l!1n ____ _ COM TIUPLEX Olympic siz..e pool. tenms SUNSET BEACH 2 Bd. cts. Jacuul & sauna. Ste 1 nd T r All 2 BR townhouse type $550 Call 646-92Sl P5 o sa em 1c o w n e r · s u 0 1 t · Vlew. Rfgtwasber. $400. w/firt'placc Great loca· MEW DUPLEX A f? l II 4 6 · 4 4 5 9 . uon. Don't miss lh1s one 2 br. 2~ ba. 1600 SQ. ft.1-213_1_592_·287_3 ____ _ al $205.000 calh ce11.ulgs. dbl gar . Irvine 1244 frplc. big yd w /room for •o••••••••••••••••••• • PR€STIG€ boat.etc. $49S.673-6336or Willows · 3 br. 2 ba, frplc. _ ~ HOME:~ s.2·9666. dshwhr, pauo, toed yd, 3333W. Coast Hwy, NB New home, 3 br. 2 ba near gar, kids & pets ok. S44S N Agt. no 'ff. 964-2566, 645-6646 Baker /Bear ever O<' 97J.2971. cup. lllt.. last & Sec. $SOO. -------- CMtt.O 54().1414 REMTALS E/side Cost.a Met1a. 20% New W bdrm condos, down, 80% flnaocing, no ftplc, bllns. 2 rar garal(c. points. last escrow. ~-& up. 1076 Canyon Own/Bkt. 84i!>7407 Or. 645-5637. llACH CMtt.IX Prlce reduced to only t96.960. Mu~uell. SCOTT REAL TY 536-7533 ------~-East.side 3 BR. 2~ba , family & din rm Gardener 1ocl. Rettntly redecor Nr parks & sch ools. S575 Bob ~musson 964·2455 1 BR.1 ba.. . ..... $350 3 BR. 2 ba ...... $5.ZS/660 3 8R. 2...., ba ..•• $6001625 4 BR.. 21.AJ ba ...•• t::185/850 4 BR. 2"" ba .. N.8 . $1000 2 Br. carpel.S, drapes. I 833·8600 6 OH LOT car garage. oo pets. All Z BR l BA with Must have refs. $295 mo ~le yards. Great Lsl le last + $100 dep. 't523"u•fM .. n....l-Eutaidec.-.... ......,-locaUoo. Owner ~ '-"""'"',,,.,.-; ... -. ... w;. aaidoul. $320,000 3br 2b• dbl.gar. Lge Noodbri dg'e Cr ouln g etTfGL: bildcyard ln CoUege Prlt Tuwnhome 2 Br + den, __.-....... ~• ,.. Nof>aa.~.MZ-91567. · 2~ Ba, 2 car 1ar. .,..._.._~_HOM€S w/Opener. Aaaoc. due1 W ,..___ NB • S br, h'plt', dna rm. iodllded. ~ pr m o . mJ . \.OUt Hwy, 4!IDclolled yard, 1.,, Ill'. ~ 645-4646 so. Coul Plua t'12·905a•-------~ patio home. a..ttfwS. 2200 New 2 atoey S br, 2 be. ......... •••••••••••••• •Ji:A8I'SIDE 2 br, l ~· Ph.mh crpta A drps. AJC. 2 coot11voua R· I Iott cpea, drapes, fncd 7"• fl-pk. pool, Jac\&Ul t.en· Vllla1e of Northwood: ear. k.lda OK. No peu nil. 2 t'ar gar. w Jelec. <former parkiJ:Uc 1ou ror smtmo675'32e8S7S.Ole& opeoer. $:io25,000.MWM8 modell). Plana lncludcd. E'aide. New 3Br, 21,\ ba, ii}' JMIUo home 2 br. 2 M.\OOOuch . ....__,_ gar. encl y rd, patio, b&, ~ dr, all up 1rades 640-5112 uruacr ~/drpe, Crplc, bltms. lo adulta oo pela '460 Ocean.Croot &ot w /beach Ind cardener. $56S/mo ...... _._11 _____ _ aback ll all approved + szooaec. 646-7085 olalll Lo Wld beautllUI a 381", l~ ba, frplc II bacll BO per mo,. Wood· lJr • Ba bome. 1289,500. ..-, ao.e eo ~. new ~. spec 4ib£, 2.~ba. Owner ~13 NB. p°aint. 966 Joann, NO ::i;.!l'Pk..:C:J:.c.."'i'!k! f"\nd wt.al you want an DOOS . '485 /mo . pool, tcoo, pnl1'1. Dally Ptlot Ctaulfieds. l"1'Mlll.Ml-4'19 · •1111.JSMm .. _...,_. __ , ... . . . . ·. I • .,. fww ••• Ul1ufwlt. .,.. .... tsu..w.. v-..... ..... 4250 .. OM. V l'tlOT Thu!'!d!y, '*""" If. •t1t ~ ........ tiMcl .,. e.i: ... t1 ...... d ..... lwo.tt u.t.., -..&.....-..... --..;.;.;=.;..... _____ _..;.:.=::.;:::£l..:..:=.::::.cz...:.:.:..:. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ... • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • H11 "U.fw J•ur .._.. """-•tlte4 Al• ••••1111111.i•.e e.. ....._ •H C11111i1.... JIH .._,_. JIU •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......................................................................................................................................... U.-.._.. J241 -= ... .,.,. .. _.. J16t LAMANCHAUTS ew 3 BR apt, $4$0 DOOMOVEIN -................... C w ll71 ... .__................. fM19 1.2113 bd Jllrden Chlldf'f'n •t1ltcunr, no ALLOWANCE · a.nr:u., ) BR. Z ba , ••-••••••••••••••••••• apt• t\dul\1 D1hwhr pt'tlJ WO W lt1tm1ll-On. 2 br, I ba $3IS lo S38S 2 ao 'Y'W • •P· • J bdrm + d n Rtt blw, t-IWI ic•r. MUI bbq 1°' 2917 br. 2 ba +den 142$ En<' I aDt"et . ~ortb aid• fee ClOM lO Dau ~ G Pd m &oil 1ar•. pvt l'n<-d f rus Moe&Ja"' puttti. PL Pl &IZ~l.M).5811 28rl8a,sitW cpla yard 3301 Ch tam .... Aull 3/l 4N-41T4 ~ 3._.. • W>mo Way,49S-t08'7. r.. llOIPM ·-UV w .. --.v.... ~..82(Mot64623111_ 0 ~--••••••••••••••••••••••• !Wautsrul brand n t'w llOOM VE IN &..flle... lHO 11-r~. La Coli.Ga 6 Apartm•nta. M!ultapta NOJ>et.t Poul. qufQ(MOVll.. ALLOWANCE ....................... Ne-.l)<lrl OC'd tom EntertainroenL Ope dal Nt>w &utaldt' twnh11('. 2 3 br. 2"t ba, ~sq n Hew 51\adow Run H•r, rnunit) z br 6 d•n JM'W.l.IW W ~~·~~ bt t i., ba. ovtr 1100 Q fl. pvt (ned patio, "ncl ~.ram rm S'750 rrno A\'aU Mattb a Nn r:u ft.creation... 0..<'h ~ S!~ hu tVt'l")'thlntl • •. 11ml icaraae Lot.I of ira&s. 11Mmorm1saoant T•nn1• 1 w1nam~. Youra -:llS l Brfl90 ~ tOK ~. Onva 14116. 33.5S2 Blue Lantern. ~· 0"'"1 ,..._.. daya a yecut Z81'$335-$ri0 ~Sant• Ana l\vt. .l &mm.11:\a,oaUOhomo ~·-•ll:rrct ,~.M .. -t ....... ,.... nl'•lle4:0232 ~ b XI •altt .. ,,, Jbl IU ~ an 8 • 9..naulul 5in01e. ..,., ""' '"'"" o .,. Vl·tao view lge 2 r, 2 be, db II.Al'. \tnola pool 1 6 2 Dedtoom 'ltUMlllg lg 3br 2bo (o!arn 2 bt w l•ar S29t>. N<'w Zbaitconles. encl dbl gar • " O t 3 3 l " ~ t , ....... ,..._.a.ct Of' .... _...,,._ ... i llPI roo1 rt'"· ...... ,8 • ..,... crpb. (t1K'd yrd. wet~r VCf'Y pnvale '37~. mo. bUll 6Uil u. .. -.... uoo u' ·-n ..... = .. ~-~ to ~ .... ....... pd 22.:;lJ "O" Placenua ~8 ~·••••••••••••••••••••• ,...,_,_ '1 O}!/ 18th St s..-.....lA.10, l~. -------~ J b.'<inlUm, : ba i--------·I Apo"111en11 C• lrw S•~ ...,....._. •---h ~·40 .. ._ • 1 .,. a ~ HOMI • All uuu.. ,_, UtO E illit St.rt'f 11tov,., pool. •du Its. no ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ........ .., ... , n"'ll<>. tnt;.ii• u P-·-' , Barbelor Iott. rc frlg, 1iiW4+N_...., .-tu Kidi. • Pl'lM o ~A TION •No i...oa.. Reqw,i.d ~tde Z br & den 11pbt pet.'I ~ 646·2001 SllARP. beach l,2 & 3 HR. ·2:>elJ~9,j /;0 ft-t' J Mlf\S, buy op •l•ommJnqhMI& 1 .. val t-•rplc , d er k , frplc. dishWSl\r, garage t.aoos.uu ~rrpayment 1\11.._. t!.kyb1i1hL. nUt-icl.ra"I $'20 HU\•pt,tpl3.drps,very & patios. No pets . , ~...... J21J •nlorm•t1on £•AY •Artin~Dlt-mo No C'hlldrt>n or pell clean Avall 1mmed. $325 !la).2358 ....... •••••••••••••••• fin•{'<'ln& OJ\C Traih• r,_.........,.,_.._ 011y!I 64114 262, ~vl'11 mo-49&113411 --------- 'BR. dt-o, 2 R•. (ftlr, IU'\YUUQ&"alu.able •H.calll>Chob&. ..__ 6U-llM3 Ncw2br2~NoK1ds/Pels ~\~· ~t~~· ;:,~ bhm, p\lt alnum 3 r11r :,anu. Ana M4 70'10 PLUS MUCH NOR£1 3 &!rm townhouse apt ~mo. lmo rent free Sec. gate. l702 Flonda · aar. Tuai,, pool ti ~tm&Ntu S Adult.a, 1'1 ba ~ rdo Nil for Mgr 528.()820 or ~O beech. Pvt romm 9100 C Mahrtm ~IOU Oakwood G 1>&1d 642 5073 ~38UI -------- 1' 1f&\ E. Ana.hrtm ~~ Seawind v1·11a e Garden Apanrn.nta Ea.\-UK1e 2 br, bltn.'f. no lBR 11pl. Take over lse or f a BR Z BA. den. luaur10WI ---N•wpon &.acb/Noc1h pec.s 132:5 mo r,.w.1m. 1175 mo Sarrll1ce on "llew 1&2 bdrm l~xury ll:ome, mountain v10• 1.bP btar b' 2br, 2006 W • 880 lrvtn• ~-43>1 eve11 aft S. fur o u bl n gs 1 n c Id . adult apts tn 14 plans U H I u 4 U 6 l l 9 Anfront. F\irn ot uni llll l&th> 6312102. from $31S. + pools, ten· ~-.!Wkods. 7:0-l6'n, 631 0900 (114) M~ O!I~ z Br. 2 ba. LUO sq. n. Fplc, nls, waterfalls. ponds! ....._ .. v-w "BR .... ft d Cu Jc 1 ' ii enr gar. O/W, $375 2 BR 2 Ba encl gar, avail From San Diego Frwy ~ ''" ......... ttn •L• lli~d 3425 N•W1M>ft1._.Beocb/South1 ... hSt Mesa Verde 831H912lor 1mmed. Dys . ca ll driveNorthonBeachlO hmne Community pool. _.. -'"" "' 499-4721 fi4S.9161 ; evs 631-4888 M F-.... ~ .... _ w aardeoer S595 l ~t: ... •••••••••••••••••••• tDuv.ro1 lfr1h) c ....ucn .. ..::n est on 4111Hllhves LUXURY (11411.428110 3Br.2baupper.Mesadel Sh arp 3 BR. 21,; ba McFadden lO Seawaod • •"ECO ... DO Ma r. $350. No pets duplex. Fplc. dsh wsr. Villait (714 )893-5198 a..Forftt 3255 .,_ " Aduh• only"° pe1• S46-6036. Air cond, encl gar . $495 •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • li50 M li.llllln v II' JO 2 br Model• open doJly 10. 7 p """ •392 P'USlol 2 b r I mo. eggy . .....,.... · .... t , o, rp c. air z Br. 1 ba, all elec Brand $5815. ~· oo tbe watt>r' J bdrm. 2 ba. withlnvote dock, we\ bar A 1C Ava il now 24 306 ~hartrain 754 7900 Mks'-Vleio 126 7 ....................... t8drm home with pool & Jacuzzi. Patio, d1n1n~ rm. fam rm & hv1ng rm ~/mo lst & i.ec dep ~· 581· 1473 ___ _ .... ,.,,. '-ach 3269 ....................... Nlnd., pal.Jo. All ~luxe Steps to beach 4 br + new 187 E. 18th St. ~. features No pets C<ill den $59S winter S67S ·yr· mo. Agt. S41·5032. monungs 9-l . 644.9470' ly. ,\gt m4>G7s-00oo . Comfortable new 2 br. 2 * * * 2 brfumorunf. SZ75.Yrly. ba, kids ok, no pets. Robert J. Scwon Adlts. no pets. 2421 E 16th 567.ai.5 S.165. mo. 9'4Sandcastle Dr N. Hts646-5438 Corona De-I M nr YouarethcwtMerof OCEANFRONT. Lrg de· Two FrH Tidtets luxe 1 Br, 2 car gar .• to adlts, no pets. $375/mo. •-------- TennesSff Wllliams' Avail till June 14 · BR2Batwnhse,l yrold. THE 673-6640. Next to S. Cst Plaza ten· lCCEHTIUCITIES 2 BR. s teps to beach nls. pool. S495 mo. OFA wJpatio, TllruJune. 640-6395art5wkdys HIGHTIHGALE 546-5684 3 br. 2'h ba. air cond .. wash/dry. rerri,. frplc. 2 car gar. tennis crt & pool. C.M. $525/m o . 640-2747 eves & wknds. t-IEWPORT HGTS AREA MEW LG. TWNHSE 3 BR 2~ BA. (rplc 's wet bars. lndry rms , garages, fncd yrds & decks . Corne r Knox St/Or ange /\ve. CM . $595. 631-1388. 1·756-2908 Townhouse, lovely, spac. & home·llke. 2 br with pvt, 1ated entrance + 2 paU06. Some w:th att. garage. Swimming pool. Jacuzzi. Tennis ~urts. l blk to Huntington shop· pmg cent« mall. Adults. No pets. From $435. Seawand VIiiage, 15SS5 Huntington Village LaJ>e. H.B. <n4)898-9961. •Walle to the beach• CosadelSol Beautiful AdultApts 21661 Brookhurst, HB 962-6653 WAUC TO THE IEACH Beaut. decorated, 3 br. 3 ba. rormal dine rm. rplc, wet bar, pool, JaCUlll, tennis. 9650/mo. 7~ 0811 Stamng Sandy Dennis at the Long Beach Conven· ~..ts New beautlrul garde n tJOnCeoter. 300 E. Ocean ~ apartments. pool&spa. Blvd. Long Beach. To ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Bachelor $260 me81iB.AU Coodo, reot/lease w /opt NEW 2 BR 2 BA. encl 2br 2ba gar. opn. pat, garage, close to beach pool & jac. $425 vac ....,.,per mo. 964_2937 Blufrs gorgeous 2 Br 2 Ba cl8.Jm your tickets. rail -..O. lsa..d 3106 1 Br $305 838-9110 _,., \lleW.custom dttor. wet 642-5678. ext 272. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 er S360 bar. gardener. pool, 55237125 * • • 1 bdrm. or. new cpts, Adults, no pets 3 BR. 2 BA. frplc. renc yrd. encl. gar .. adults, nr S.A. Country Club. $425. 673-8139/631·1886 oo.62Se. 557-4700 ext drapes. blt-Ln k1l., lse. ~Vanguard Way d y s • 6 4 O · 2 4 2 6 Condo 2br. l~~ba .. blt-10s. S375ref's. 673-5477 (at Newport Blvd> eves/Wlmds AC. s auna , pool & 646-QJ16orS40-9626 jacu1.zi New carpet. Nr &>at owning couple l BR . SF..AVIEW. 4 Br 3 Ba. lg So Coa&t Plaza. $425. Rear apt. NeaL Yrly lse. 1 br .. S265. rerng .. C/D. ~·J~.'~tmni:.. ~aft6PM. Avail. now . ~ Adults No pets. 731·D W. Lr g pr vt Bdrm w /balcony , townhse. frplc, pool, jac .. laundry. $205 or $195 If have furniture. 645-9564 before Jpm. IEACHUVING Hew 2&3 IR Ho._s Widen, L.R , fam rm. din. deck, pat. frp1c·s, elec gar -opener Both professionally decor al· ed. $600 & $700. Ca 11 Marlene at 631 ·3444 or 644-8889 •UDO ISLE• 3 BR. 2 ba. Lrg. Sunny Patio. Access to tennis. bcb It club. Call Fra nk Karl. <213) 6SJ. 7900. Towtthouw -..0.Pe•_,o 3807 lSlhSt.673-7787 u..fw-nisMd 3525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $375. 2 ba townhouse, •••··~·•••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 1 ba, stv. cpt, 1 car frplc. s undeck. patto. BeauUful3br.2 ba.vault· garw/elecopnr +lprk'g adults, no pet.s. 2656 F ed rlnl(s •. new cpt, D~. spc. 1 Yr lse. $395/mo. Orange. Ave. 640·7905 2br, lba. 269 "C" E. 16th Pl. Ldry rac, cpts. d rps. central air. f~nced patio $200 cln 'g de p . Call "ntEVlCTORlAN" fpk, 3 pools, JUl'uzzi. rec 64.S-7386. 2 B tud' l '"" ba /gar .__ • 1 ' .. ba stud1·0 apt. Bit· nn. walk to S. Cst Plaza. rs 10, ·~ w . °"' ~, n r s c h 1 s , r r w y . Capistrano a.ach 3818 adlts. cpts, new drJ>S, ins, ref rig. dsh ws hr . Pvt ~as/waterpd. kids /pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• range. fncd yd w /pat10, patio. New carpets. OK. $495. Call collect N<>w 2 Br 2 93 duplex. v.1r pd. $305. 667 Victoria. Adults only. Nr sboppan~ No pets. $280 644·0452. 2L3'98l-2882betwn 9·5. s undeck. garage, no 1_63&-4 __ t20_. _1·_5._____ & bus line. $360 w/closed ~ntsF.anlished pets. Adults $425 mo. 2br lba Encl. garg. & gar g . A vail 3 /10 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 496-7324 patio. S265mo . 2210 1- 642 __ -8528 __ • ------ lalloo hlond 37 06 eoni..a .. Mar 3822 Rutgers II B 846-7129 aft. Dana PoW ........... ••••• ••• •• • • ••••••••••••••••• •• • • •• i-6p-'-.m_. -------3826 Bach /\pt. Parking, uul. Have oozy 28R w/frplc. MESA rlNES • •••••••••••••••••••••• Point Niguel Condo 3 bdrm. 2 ba. lighted ten· nis, pool, jacuzzi, sauna. 3 Br. new condo. I mile to beach . Total r ec. package. Incl. tennis lmmed. occupy . avail. (213)919-5541 New apts now rentJng . 3 bdrms. 2 ba & encl. gar. Start at $495. Located l,'1 block fro'm Beach Blvd, corne r or Te rry Or.N 1ewpoint Ln, Open house Sat & Sun. Call for Info. 848·3133. 3 Br, 2 ba, rrpl, patio. sm yrd, no dogs. $450/mo, 67~0: 960-s.:r76 Beach 2 blks, 2br, 2ba. Patao. garage. Adults. No pets. $315. 645-1682 Lge home-Uke 2 br, 2"'2 ba, townbome apt. encl. pvt pat.Jo & garage. Dix kitchen w /b ltns. inc I. rerng. Small pet ok $410. mo.17610CameronSt. Gemuu Rily 839.6623 ~~~~~~~~~ pd.. $325/Mo Available front urut. Gar+laundry Lge bach $265. I Br $305. <!Br J bath Cottage. Lge now 4!H-6766 or 4SS.5122 rm. No pets. 00 chLldren. Frplc. pool, jacuzzi, gas yard, patio. Re dwood afler6 Pm $450. 67S.2:Jll bbq, closed gar . Adults. decks. Concrete walks & -..0. Pt .... JUilo 3707 Lge dlx 2 Br. 2 Ba. Plush no peta. 2650 Harla Ave, planters. $485/mo. 23271 2 ••••••••••••• ••• ••• •••. cpl. drps pa tao f prlc. 549-2447 S42Sper mo. No smoking, Ready for you• 2 bd, den, no pets. Pbone831·2816 Crplc, gar. $350. 962·7788 ask for Mack. Margaret Dr 645-662S Bearhlront, I.BR. paneled Bltns, dsh;,..br. Adults. no•Ne--w-ly_d_e_co-ra_t_ed_3_b_r-. 2-b-a llG CA .. YO.. llv rm. waterbed, pool, pets. 5475 mo. 645-3779 or to wnhouse. Spacious OEAHE CONDO lemporarmy only. $400 640-9714 or 640-9335. fireplace & pool. Qwet For lease; avail. now 3 ~ 540-7202 Dr Levy. area. Adults . no pets. Bdrms .. ~ baths, with &lb-let. 4 mo. 3 bdrm. 2 Spacious bay vi~w. 3 BR, $400. 845-33111 : 675·5949. spac:ous hv. area Love · ba. freshly decorated. 2 ba. upper unit; large 2 Bdrm l~ ba patio sml Jy yard & entry aren CAii afl 6. t>7J.4586 s~ndeck. ~rp~c .. blt·ln dog ok: 00 children. ·$325. $1200Mo.mcl.gardent'r r~-..a-•M 37 kitchen : hgh & airy ; permo 645.9100 EILHH HUDSON -.-uin or 22 dbl. garage. $1000 Mo., · · REALTOR 644-0322 ••••••••••••••••••••••• yearly 2 Br. 2 ba condo, country _ Bach Apt. $175 UUI includ. 67J.nil 548·5313eves. setting. pvt chldms park, lbr Clean. Close in. $2501--------- incld. utiJ. Call Martha 661·ll6l or 494·3672 Deluxe 2 br apt an 4-plex. Bltm, enc. gar. No pets. Studio a.pt. Clean. Close 1-s:ns_._963_·_7524 ____ _ in. $?2Smo. incld. util. Call Martha 661·1161 or 494-3672 H11nffngfore Beach 3840 3br ,;Ibo, crpt. drapes. Crplc, pnv. patio. Hunt· ington Harbor area. days 536·6663. 536·8705 eve. 84().594.<J ................. .. .... , ________ _ ............. Jl40 ....................... O.ch. 6 mos old. lftcd yard. bltlns. no pets 1275. Ph M8·26SS. 534-2306 l Bd , 2 b1, bltens . cpta/drpa. 2 blks from ocean, no pets. $300 8G-03SS or 5.36-8229 L« 2 Br. entl 1ar & back f:Uo. carpeta~s. & ·Ins Call ASlc («Mike. 2 BR. 2 ba, frplc. garg. sm yd, no dogs. 5360/mo ~. 960•51f16. Immaculate 2 Br 2 ba w/pvt deck. Newly de· C'Ol'ated & c~ted. $350 mo. /\dulta p ease. Call eves co ll ec t (213)524.26. Beach area, 2 Br. lg enr l pabo, newly de<'Orated. AdWts, no pets. 960-3689 atlllPM BEAUT. 2 sty 4Br, tlltba Twnbse. Pool. tennis . $450, 213 /870-1880 , TI4 ,1164.-4 LS.S ....... 3144 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oraogetree Condo. 2 bt. I ba. t.enrus. pool. adlts. call 646-3686. 3br 2V.ba Brand New Woodbridge, S700mo cargarg.213/~1 2 New Condo lbr. w/up. grades. pool, jac. tenoas. S350mo. 838-3842 o r 832·5801 L.,..IHclt 3848 ....................... OCEANFRONT large ha · ury 1200' 2 br. 2 ba. S7SO. U>CI. ut.il. ~- Ocean view. patio. cov· ered parlung. 1 2 BR, 2 1 BR, $350-$475. Wik. to bch. 549-1186557-5870 Z bdrm, 2 people max. :IMi'h 3rd S\. $475 plus security depos it IHI SU.~ (W> 634-6548 for apphcatJon ... wpcwtlffch 3869 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAIK .. EWPORT Bachel ors. l or 2 Bedrooms & Townhouses From $349.50 Spectacular spa. total r ecreation program, social program. 7 pools. 8 t.eruus courts. At Fashion Island. Jamboree & San Joa?UlD Hills Road. 714J 644-1900 $:'J60. 3 br. 2 ba. balcony. encl. ~arage. All bltns, blkto ach. Yrly. TSL Mgmt 642-1603 IACHB.OR UNITS SZ25 +~sit. 201 E.lo ... HI. Cal R.....ta 556-7707 BAYFRONT bag, deluxe 2 br. frplc, dock privgs. Huge patio. elec. gar. $595 mo. 673-6336. 642.9666 Near Lido. 2BR. 2ba lux- ury Wateclronl apt. Garage, balcony. frplc. $750/mo. 559-1802 IAYFttONT SUP AVAIL. Spac. 2 br. den. 2 ba a pt w /s~c· tacular view. Luxunous appointme nt s, beaut gardens with sandy beach. Overlooks Balboa Island. Adults. no pets (714)673-&114 HatfMlon l.ach 3140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t".,.. I .._h 3169 Palm De9ttt. Try ., ror •••••••• •• •••• ••• •• •• •• a ~It or more. I BR ~ely Ir Spac 1wa Zbr. condo. l200 wk, _. mo 2ba apt.. with magn1r1. Top loeai100. CIOH to rent view o( tht• Bay. evttYtbing. TV. m-1821 =~~ Lldu Park Or. ··O<S·~;t:~ Delwt" 4 BR. 2 BA. ur no MMA ·~ pt'U swpa to bch. ~7S S'-toM-S... YTlYlae 644-1103 . ~y more. Pa.yt.M! SbAr1> 3 ~m. 2 ba. Age&frLllut)'b, 11Jte carpeting. bltn1, We Clwek Rerercnce• cov'd patio deck & Qtl54MUJ gar age. SS25, y rly . 61$-88'10Jacobs Rnlty LIDO 8AVFRO NT Superb view. s:indy beach, frplc. 2 HR $650, ~or49'·1681 All adult. no pets, 2 br. 2 ~. from ~-Jacu:m , Cut Living Expenses! SMro a hOmt> Of apt House-Ma• Unlllnh9d poot. rec bldg. Shown by Prot strail(ht male look· api)t. only. 545-4855. ~ to shr apt in HB or STEPS TO OCEAN Vlf'w SB. 213·967.0016, Ive msg. 3Br. 2ba. 2 ~ar gar , Share larse 4br bouae on bltms.1675/mo. 675-1906 Penn. Responsible, euy &Olnl M /F w /job. Ca II Near Hoag, attract 2 BR Dan or J im 6'13·953'7 aft twnhse. 2 BA. cpta. drps, s·~PM W/D hkup Adlts. no -·--·------pels. $315 mo 548 2005 M. roommate to sbr apt, NB. $108 mo. Occupy im· 2 Bdrm w/pat10. W/O, med. 646-9917, 752·1780 carport. St2S \hru June. Roger S725 yrty 675-ns& ---------~_,.._......._ 3176 House to shr. 2 a dJ. -----rooms, good location . ••••••••••••••••••••••• COM. S2S(lmo. 673-7359 SlOOMOVE IN ALLOWANCE Roommate wanted to I Br. uUI pd Lge sun share new 2 bdrm. 2 ba. deck, overlooks gotr Dana Pl. Coado. 496.2661 course $265. 614 Ca lle or644-95:11 Campana. 492 1567 · N-.-B-. -see-k-str-al_g_h_t _p_ro_f_/ · 5cMta AM 3880 bus man to s hare lux ••••••••••••••• •••••••• ocean vu home w /same. Coodo 3br. garg, Kids, I pet OK. $400 Nr. Mam & MacArthur. 962-884-0 9·5 Lg pool. 1285/mo. lncid utll. Gar avail. 644-0484. Femalet.oshare2 BR Dix 2 Br, 2 Ba . in 4·plcx. borne. Beach view. nr So. Cst Plaza qwel 1 ____ 4_99-_W_l __ _ c ul·de-sac. bit in s . M/F to sbr ts Newport gar~ge, no pets. S335. Beachrront apt, frplc, 644-6421 gar, immed . avail. T..tM 3890 213167~367334 hr pbooe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will share my 2br. 2ba apt Dlx 2 Bdrm wtth garage, wtstudent or responsible patio. $360 . 140 11 worklngwoman. Frplc, Pinebr ook, Apt 8 pool. beautiruJly furn. l-493-4631 NB area. 642-8971. W~t.r l898 Resp Fem over 21 Share •••••••••••••••• •• •••• • large furn. condo. Laura LUXURY LIYIMG 7S4.Q37 Aft. 6PM Spac1ous apt 1n :i lovfly Lov 1 ,A p adult envi r onment . eymas .... rswte. vt. Features open beam ccil· enl. Non smoker· S.W · mg. patio k1tC'hen. walk CM, S16S. 646-l03S in closet. wall or glass Unfum. or will furnish for operung to park like E>et· you. Pvt. bdr. & bath. ting. Complete Rec Rm. plus gar . Floe loc. ad· facil with lrg pool & }01nlng golf course & JllCUlll. Great locauon. swimming pool nearby. Near f ounta in Vly & Must be over S2 & single. Frwys. Sorry no pets 'TT0-4140 15200 Magnol.Ja. So or 22 --------- Frwy 893-0519 WANTED: Prof. e x· ecutive, unincumbercd. ~ntsfttl"ftished m atur e, respon s ible OI' lMftntished 3900 male to shr expenses on ••••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• dJstJnctwe ocean view llfEEXCITING home w/all ameruties in PALM MESA APTS C OM w /ou t go1 n g. MlNUTESTONPT BCH sophisticated , indepen- Bach. l&28R dent un1 nc umbered from$2SS& up. f'em. executive. Call Adull.s. No pets 644-9787. lS61Mesa Dr --------- (s Blks East or Newport Resp, qwet M IF' to sbr lg clean hse nr bch in CM. Blvdl Approx Sl6S. Avail im· 9am·5pm 546·9860__ med. Bill. 642-3593 eves Wanted Female to share 3 bdrm. Condo with 2 other girls. Washer /Dryer . garage. 549-8642 Fem roomate, 21 yrs +to share ruce N.B. hse. S130 mo. Avail 2125 642-7618. TAICEOVEll PAYMENT INFORMATION OAC RBfTC>rTIOHS TO IUY 400 HOMES ALL AREAS MOllLEHOME STORES ~:... 4350 Santa Ana 554· 7070 ••••••••••••. •••• • ••••• E.Anaheam 956-4500 Garage for storage, Can· C. Anaheim 956 1011 nery Village. Newport Westmmste r 841Hl895 Beach. 675-4912 Tues Sat. BAYCREST-G agantic Refr\8· l s t. & las t+ piC'nlc BBQ, 3 pools, jac, back yrd. warm. 1mmric clearun1t Call 673·8909 clbhse, gar storage. nr. home. 3 br. 2 ba. $005 mo Costa Mno 3724 Cst Plaza . Chld ok. no I yr lease r eq. 640 5112 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. $390. 544-2300 ; associated APARTMENT HOMES liarage. E ·s•de single, aoo.. 4000 perlect for storage, S3S ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. lmmed vacancy. --------•1545-()1()1 wkdys, 1·456-5284 * Alleossodor '""* Lovely gardens-Brooks wknds&eves. · Agl 642-1~: 673-5781. Weeklv Rates Spaci00s'stu<11os & BRO KERS R EAL TOii'; l01"i 'W Bolbo11 • 1 · r•ll I ' Lido Isle CottaRe 3br 2ba frplc. patio. No Pets. 9600. 549-7976 Nr lkh-L.ge 2 story fam1 ly home. Furn or unrurn. Owner I Ag\. 545-8628 Newport Heights houw Spacioos 1 BR w 1garal(t! •,, blk to E. 17th shoppintt & bus. 1 "':i blks to Wcstd1ff s hoppinit. New crpts. llle, paint & drps Mature ad lts . No duldren. No pets. $325 mo. Ca II 955-1178 1 Bedroom Stlates Complete Kitchens Maid Service ·TV Close to all major freeways and Irvine ?llewport Bca<'h arell&. Roval Suites 2(8)~ewport Blvd 642-2611 or 543-2000 Mesa Verde· 3 bdrm, quiet cul-d -s ac. Rer. Sim.shine filled 2 br. 2 ba, PlO/mo 498-1936 after 5 upstau'S apt. w /rooftop PM. pal.Jo, frplc • bll·Ul kit & 2 2-B-R-. 2-b-a-.-poo-1-. -ad_u_l_ts_o_n_· car gar. $450/mo 673-4329 ly Stove & refng. wtr pd. 2 BR. frplc, s undeck , SJX> :55&1795 ocean s ide. Avail 3/1. SO>. Refs. 675-9431aft 6. Jbr. 2ba. encl. gar, S.175. Near OCC, No pe t s Newer 3 BR. 2 ba .• sun-751.2156 deck. Crpl.. bltns. 2N --1--d---d-2-R-R garages. $625. Agt. ew Y ecoratc l Br I $10<. u·1 133 571:.cn'>n W/Pvt yard. Nice c M. trru er ""'+ u · --"-"""""-------1 location. Children OK. I:: t 6lh S treet , C.M. &\2 9193 3BR, 2ba, 2 car garg, 640-5112· agent. NO FEE! Apt. & Condo frplc, blt·ins. dsbwshr, Lovely location l mi Crom rentals. Rental Pavilion :k::Jb~~~r8lis 7191-'l Iris. 640-2800 So. eoas 1 tj Plaza. 1 BrN 1 £!"K. -12 Bkr "'"·"s Sat 1223 F . b 1 Ba, poo I ac. S32S mo. o o•,,...,, . au". . ____ 645-______ a ntas t1 c ay v e w pets or children, cplson· 3br, 2'-'aba, pool, & jac. Female, n o s moking. spac:ous w/gar., 573-8893 ly. Call 644·5654, 546-1330 Overlooking 15 ac. green-Bachelor a pL Very nice. 640-1232 (ofc). be lt. Be a ut. decor. $140 .,.,, Encld. bric k pat. Agent /mo . .,. .... 5954 · 2 bdrm.1 ba. patio. bit-Ins. 1 Br cottage l y p e DO fee. Rob Mc Donald HMllewgtOft•oc:h 3740 shutters, garage. $395 w/garage. Patio. Util In· 982-5521 ••••••••••••••••••••••• per mo. R efs. r e q . cl.Nopets.New carpets. 675-3446or644-0997 $280. 2042 B Meyer Pl. 2BR. lBa Oceanfront. SM~~M\E~c~~~!:L CostaMesct 3124 _64()._236S __ or_6_1_a._m_1 __ ru rn. Av a 11 Apr:: I /\pt Sl6S/mo. 536-3037 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EaslSide 2 bdrm Trl-Plex. J.lllOO/mo yrd. Child OK . Near 38R 1 "t ba Penins ula. LorJ-•och 37 48 HEW llEID APTS park. school. Newly de- trplc '900/mo lse •••••••••••••••• • •••• • • l Bdrm & Ion $340. t corated. $325. 752-8060 W ...... rORt Ho1Ms LAGUNA BEACH MTR Bdrm $300. Bach $250. 631·1 400 CNN. $75/Wk & up. Maid Frplc., rec room. Pool, 3br2~banewduplex,dls· •--------•I serv .. color TV. heated jacuzzj, cl06ed garages b w .d p atio, g a r g . pool. Ulll. (714) 494.5294. Gas It wtr pd. Adults, no Chil re n OK. $475mo. N u ...... 3 b lb L """' N Co II pets. :l}3 Hamilton, C.M. 219' MLOCr St. 557-4579 wpt."6"'"" r, a. ge ....., . ast wy. llv rm w /frplc & dining 64.5-44ll. So. Coas\ Plaza area. dlx 3 area, hUI~ kJ\chen & gar. Mlwport •ach 37 69 Br 2 Ba 4-plex, end . gar, 1 blk to High School. $400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ci)Uta IH drapes, carpets, bit-ms . mo. + SlSO d e posl\. -..... -----•I Lge 2 br, 1 ~ b a $US.768-7336aft5PM 548-331'7 S.,-.S TO IUCH ~ ~ mo. uoo ,...;_ ______ _ • Bn Sba sq. fl. Has everylhlog. ..-..IO""""M•TH 9-1> 3 br. Npt Shores n , ·• wntr. $600 Small pet ok. Drive by .,_, '" ""' .,_ bm.. frpl, pool, teo.nls. re· 3 BR, 2 ba, wntr. S42S 1821 Anaheim St. lben .......... Aph 8d:y for l'f!lpon tenanL 2 BR. 1 ba, yrly. $43S call 645· .. 37 nes • MOW Bn1MG SttS/mo. To sea call, ,_•_rlal_-_:tts_._____ llAMDMIW 'l»IZZZ. mmac. Quiet ZB R 2 BJl. 2 ba apta. Ptrf ct 3 bf, J .,_, dsbwhr, new townhoule. Patio. pool, f« 2. Oreat C.M. loca· arpt. acrou from bay. t adufta. $315. ~. 755 llaol Available March blktobcb.1ar.752·S.S ________ ,1_w_.18th=;;.;;St;.;._ ____ itt. P75 4r $395. Call 0 l B wblJeaelecUonlaats! LIASIOPTIOH cean r oot 1 drm . Q.llsM-OVllT *50CreditToltl Month lllr Ibo wa,.rfronl co•· ~122:1. Yearlyl325. 2-... obalh.nopota. a.a-a Ad do. •smo. St59,500. .DO c:blldren, 1981 Maple,. ~ t bdrm. WintA!r Rental, IZ75/mo. f3\.1Jee Cral1. pra1• partlna. stA>pe to ._R_EE ...... i!M_AX. _____ _ HARBOR VIEW beach. $300 per mo. Incl. Beaut. braod new adult PORTOFlNO Wl.~OC'ff33tS8 apu. S pat. 1 It 2 br l.C.TAnotCO. 4 bdrm 2""ba. F .R. 2 w 1townhae sty le . 640-1111 *'1 booua rm. pool • Short term rentals. 2 • 3 Scheduled move ·l n Sp&. tlOO. M0-1S28 BR. from 1375 up. Aaent, Ftb.lO. 1be faatat draw tn lhc 87S-8l70 I Br, 1 Ba West. • .a Dally Pilot P\nd What you want in 2 Br.,~ Ba a-1nect Ad. 64.2-5878. Daily Pa lot Clualtledl . • TSL •amt Xlllt cood.. 2 BR t Ba. sszs,saa,, t:C:,· ao peta. UU ~ S ', Apt. B '300. Aft IG-.IMl2 4.•Jaf -.... HUNTINGTON BEACH All Apts Feature: Fenced Yard Enclosed Garage Fireplace Laundry Facility Deluxe Kitchen Plu sh Carpet Fully Draped 1 Block off Beach Blvd. Corner of Terry & Vtcwpolnt 3 Bedroom 2 Bath UndcrSSOO. Rental Information CJll • 147-6001 2 Car Garage .. 7921 MOON HA DOW CIRCLE 1\ JARRARD DEVELOPMENT PIOJEC"" '48·3133 , wtr fall •Kitchen Facal. avail. •JaclJUI. heated pool •Wklyorda1ly maid s rv •1V & phone available.' Low as S72.50 Wk 2ZT7 Harbor c.osta Mesa 64S·4840 Sf(I car garage m Costa Mesa. xlnt for storage ~pr mo. Aft 2. 751 ·5266 R...tal 4400 • •••••••••••••••••••••• SQ. rt. office space to sub-lease in Lag una Hills, La Paz Rd. just south of lhe San Diego Freeway. S308 month. Aval I now. 8»-6030 Room w1k11cbenette S60 week & up. 548·9755 Deluxe medical s uite. ground nr.. Corona del BeauWul Laguna Mote l Mar Realonom1cs Corp. apts By week or month 67H700 41M-2494 Room & ba m pvt home $100/mo, hie chore~. non s m oker pr e f . Kltch/laund pnv. Fem desired. 644·SS36 Elegant, Fashion l .. ROii Mature empl'd m:in $!65. 64().6594 . 250·500 sq . ft. offices. From SH5. lncl. util. 779 W. 19th St. 540·2200. -rtazo heciiifYe S.ltfl Private suite with rccep· tton & secretari a I service. conference room. <111 fucilltles. 2082 Mi c h e lson, Irv ine . 752-0234 Hous e to s hare, non smoker. Neat & <'lean $140 per mo 1st & lust Elegant offices up to 760 for appt 548-8300 sq rt. on Newport Bl.. C.M 645-211 1 i 646-8303. Bdrm. stttmg room and bath. Use of kitchen Gay male or prof rem pref S250 /mo. Located 1n 8h4fs 752·0722 . Downtown Hunlioglon Beach. 2101'! Main St. One 2-rm offi~e avail. Sl 10 960-l558 area office space, ••••••••••••••••••••••• secretanat serv. on pre· &ard care needed ror 89 mu1es. SHO 9!>7-9331. ... &loard 4050 yr old lady in whet'I Gmd nr 600 sq.ft. chair 873-4680 Ideal for Int design. 28SS Vac..-1..tak 4250 i-E_Cs_t_H_w_y_. ___ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Up. Offtce·store, t80 Houle fOC' rent. Big Bear n. A!C..i.. .•1~1 Beach Bl, City alps 8: linens fum H.B. i...tJ\.'jE~283t. 12$ rutely pr cpl. Call -.. Ofc -... atttr 3 p.m. 548-19'9. miNm.iGTON BEACH Palm Sprloi• ttlttat: 4 Central loc. JuU off BR Sba. f:ouH In tho Beach Blvd. al ala St. LaQu°inta E.ttates; by nJEMAINOFFlCE wk. or mo No peL' or 8''7~ c b II d r e n . 8 o b •---------RasmuMOO 964>MS5 IN.IOA ISLAND Kawai.I. New 3 Br condo. Overioo.ina Marloe Ave. cmplUy furn . 20 Min ~Mo. kea'-omks , rrom W•kikl, loc In , ____ .m_s-6700 _____ _ Makao.l KaJ Manna on MU DIC. MM. O.'lbu lnq. 833.oG\8 or OMCIS an.ma. Retptll'ete. ~Coot. 0nien Valley Lak 3 bdrm nn. Amp&. "°" .-la. I cablo. 6 ml. from now ml. from BHch. "'II Valley $40 ~r ni&ht.. Seer . 6. Buahaeu 5S2•1tGO Weehnda tenkea avaiL lmmed. 8'1&2220 Ott. Reuonable .... 744' , DAILY PD.qr et IE~· I~ I ~I ~ I • ~ ~ tJ I - "U .. '~ . ~ ~· ) ,,,_ ..... ~~ I I" I JT ~I ·~ ,9' , ..... 11 !) ~ ..... ...... ) •• ·~ I ·~ I) ~j ~ ._ -·' .. ' ,, , tMAaai• • .-... s.n-. Cu, ... --.... Gt .__, tti.Mc...... -& <1c1fMI ...... ~ ..... ......... ' . ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• All~ Of~"°" 'l'YPl.NG AJl purpo.w pro ' K1modrl, r pair, lt'R !lalli ~k~loader. dump ~&Mtr. woman wlll do Roto-nu servlte. aou coo· Movtni • JfauUnc. f~. EXCELLENT PAINT · IOt.. baths, comp. room RI .... Mctiuoea. L c f rk can)l'olr)'. old llm1• 11'~11 ""' Utt Wl'll:. b ouaecloa n l n g dltlocllq. aod Install • = maten1l1. hsb d EXCLNT PAINTING dh. Carpeotr)', elect. lllMdld. ,..,150 ~~· rraftam• tut t6 vn 10 de tionutc 83H"7 ~~. Own tran1 weed cootrot Free eat. etc. Lowest rat.es CALLS48·2706 e•c Constru cllon . t .-... ,. ..... c.,. .... , an-a l.h 'd r l'•luin 642-2$.16 673-7GI town John. 95$-2CM lot. ext.. 11er v1og area for 1 ~12 I 1112111• ....... iM-TP ....... ...................... ....................... --~ a....~ rt·· Prof. quat work. -Ba W, M:CllOiey-IOarpeatn. f'Te. ti.Ml An) wuoo all l) .,.._ Nu ....................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ~,,..,.rt.g esld /Apts/Co mm . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ™~•ya•Puk•n• "" .. joba 0.11 Allan (Ir ~too •mall 1.1 ,.U«:(I I~ st~nt 1 Ton trUC'll lNCX>METAX RETURNS ~ Ree,lr ~rvlce. Reas. Dave . 586.M2:; Rep1lr & Re roof. All 1'-aab. tree lt1m, Dan .. ..••...•.•••........ •a.p.lf'9 •S.akHll~' """"~ mwn 60mf, Roa 14: :>703 PY'Ompt. reasonable. " &t. w prices PETE.AS PAINTING ....... ft .. ty~ea ·s hlngle ~· •LtC'. NS, CM • • -Newport. Bcb. m-8199 Xlnt Worllmansblp. Expr'd . Reas Rates. roe shakes·co::,o·tar. CU!:il'OM O..,Gno• I ••••••••••••••••••••••• l')-ee est 541· l''jn. ~~a. 7S4-0837 Free Eat. Call Oene =atches It teXlUteli I Mor C~ntry ••••••••••••••••••••••• lh 1de•ln1 -....c.. ~ Av.U. ...... ~Jay • Do• O roomln• Your ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... Mii~ • BT. 191·109 ....................... --l'h1ceOr Mir"" J'lrk u11 & • ROBIN'S llOUSt: Speclahzlng In uuto & . .... : •.............. Prof painUnc. Ext & Int Rooring. resasonabh" Mal111te •om•o ••II 141 C.~nlly 3U ~r·• l~lh1•r 1 (Jay• l\t•al CLEANING St:RVICE. ~rco~ra~ea Srickwork Sm•ll JOba Low rates. Refs. Free PATCH PLASTERING Reside ntial && Mobil ~ nt lkh P1an·n HP l>Mr' wlndowa, Pt-I""'" M m~ fol' 11 ~hly clean ........ Newport, Costa Me1111 & est. 53&-4780. 536-4383 All t ypes . Fr ee homc.i.. F r ee est . pstw.c ret 3'51 m\oC esbrna t.es. Ca 11 S4C).6825 Rll'ha rd Marshall. f'r~ 8edrictit huur.c MO.w IM.AllOC.,l.C. Irvine. 675-3175 eves. c.,.t S4it-Yk• -Floe Exler. Painung by P l aster Palrhlng · 646-042S MlltUrt •VfCW\ lJN-tic'l.l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wan! a HEAU.Y CLEAN 615-0542 Snckwork. Srnsll Jobs . R. Stoor. St. be .• ins. Try 1111 h ome Call balh ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.:l.l'XTRJCIAN J•ncNl HOUSE• Call Otnaham Newport, Costa Mesa & me sssss.s 24 hrs Plaster. stucco & Roof's done r.:asooabl~ ..,... Shampoo • •tum rl .. •n l"\Mbl ttt~ 1••l11nutt' QO Gl.rl fo'rt'(' es\ &tS-Sl23 ~ ... J.rvme. 675-:U 7S eves. :r;alt Int. /Ext. f.'ree Ask for JI m. 636-8284 or l\'llot' bf1 i blf'f\C'r w b 1 l&tlC\' or a mall ju~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAUPAPRIMG es 546-t&n 893-5105 •m~m}hocn"' ~ 10 m111 bit·•• h Cir on Lil ... f\kod ti73 Ol$9 Wunt linmac. home. European Landscaper All types of masonry. Rdsolfered. t;ves. ~ s,. E&riJ tloun to f , 30 ""· dUl rm ball SU A\ I! LhorouahJY C'ln Cell Ttw T~ work. Fair prtce. lilal. iraUU6, patio COV• 631·~. 675-1266 __lilontft"l 'Dt nn [{. $0. rouch sin. t'hr lfwc'-J Penionat Touch s.S2 OU~ Re s. 646 4871 dys/eve11. ers, b wuils. S48·9tSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plumbuig repe1r. Spet' in Spas, bot tubs lnstalJed. ~ •rll babys:lt ln CM l'ii 1Uat rll m Pt l c1tk>r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ja~ Landscaper QUALITY PAlNTlNG "iJt ~pair 1~ )'rs npt 1\ ll li t't•nrUlN C.11 Jan1ce'i. Raggedy n&stom Masonry, Patios. Int/Ext. Neat. Reasona· remodeling & corn>er re Oas. elect. plumbing hclcne. day or r111ht Man D> WWk M ·l'lf Rt'f• 1\1111'11 tiousecleanmr, for ~nnltler, Low pnces Walls, Firefilaces. Re· ble Wayne <IXOYE) ptpe. Good pnces Top Freeest. l.Jcd. 1$1·9872 Pnm..-. Gut.n & ftuc~ r:•r thuruul(h. reltab ~ & Ork car. 9 yrs exp uwung Wal s. IOO's of Hat Plumb10~. SJ1 ·3194 ~l tllOl ~ .... ~ 644)..8226 ... ---c ouriuous s~rv1ce . l.Jc'd/ nded. Noburo loca I references . BABYSITI'ER l.lr'd M> ~'e Catt ea,,,.t l"lt-11 n•·rs Ge•nlng ~U!OO S3Hll62, 897-2862 64$-8Sl2. PaUllUlg & wallpaperin~, HOMESAVERS . Plumb· ••••••••••••••••••••••• boint-Hoc lune~ Lo\ Steam C'lu11 Alto up -qual work. reasooab e an~ & Heating. l''r ee CERAMIC T lt.E . in1 fare M ••••••••••••••••••••••• Let us do the big jobs like Don't be fooled witb arr• hol:uery Work 2uoar Gllf(k!ruo11. t'lun ups & F\repla~lanters. etc. pnce. Refs. 547-4281 esumates. Sl5 hr. Honest latcbens. baths, ent.rys. MMal l'ruc'll mount unrt f'r floonl, WUldoWll & cpt 'g. seasons. AnytJme ls the New·re I Rers. E,,t. & reliable service Your tile or mine . -eat.ITU file:! 00 3716 litnd11c•p1na Gl!ur11c Dutch Maintenance perrect t1 me for 646-0464 PAINT ERS NEED BA/MC OK. 979-8065 962·3>'19 ........,.~. -lbmhl ~ 7((12 Im 1154 spnn.klers, sod & plant· WORK : 30 yrs exp. -~ "=·-"' ....................... c-tlt/C-Cnte G •• , .. 5«-Ykff ift8 Dig-It-Landscape. lnt1u & Acc. clngs. • CERAMIC TILE • 1\11 ~dlVCJttt~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··JUST US" houseclean 646-'1070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Work guar. 847·5186/ types. Reas rates Frw ~bankruptcy SM ••••••••••••••••••••••• tng We're honest & effi· Morrls Mov\n\~ Lic'd & t'o«lt'rete h~akm~ & haul •MR. FtXIT• Comp Desl,ns & Prof m -1.504. • •••••••••••••••••••••• est . l.Jc'd. 835-7775 ext ACTION Ulg Fast & e h Clt'nl cient Call 67l-016J Ins ured . 11 588 6 . 1f you don't like Tenant ' • 221. LEGAJ. TY Pr NC Curpl!nl.-r. painlln~ -Serv-rotol111ing, lawn Proress1onal service. lnl/ext. Reasonable. ~AS 64S.as l2 lbtl Mogpets in business Problems. Collections. Ellropean craftsman .ull ilG0-5419. 64S 2946 ---Rea!! nu.es 15 yrs n extractions, cln-ups, nu MCNisa accept. 962-4.242 Dependable. Free es t EVJt'llons. etr-We do! f"oundattoni. reta1n1ni: area S41M 752 s~ lt'14. Honest. de· lawn, sod. sprinklers. J ay. 645-7965 lnqlD~ now 2'1 yrs ~x p kinds or l1lc installed. M.AIUNA MONEY MGRS wall:.. blocki., patio& --~able. efficient. Of. ~lanls. railroad ties. "Moving Out & About?'' Meyer Mgmt-549 1366 Uct Booded. 548-31.50 ~· budgcllng, bill Uc'd S36-S013. s.\84300 lMMEDJATESERVJCE ces. homes, ''acancles. ighhng. reas "'Vtc"' •·0on·t Delay Call TO· G & M Pa101ln~. lnl & -pa)'Ul8 Sml bus. Ir ---------lrv area All maJor appl uc'd. 546-2393 963-0688 day" Local & state·wide ElCl. Cabmet finishing. & .._ .. Ir Repair Ceramic tile installed · flrs. shwrs, tubs. 547-~ lndiv1duals fi73.. 7831 Q>mple~ concrew JOb OR A.0 &G . Appl. Repr HOUSEKEEPERS serv 24 hrs 7 days slUl'co repa.tr. 751·3448/ ....................... -84."t your forms. save &11 7~ ANY & all types of ex ~ 67J.34S7. Oedl:s & Addffiofts dys. 54S-7097 eve. TJl>mg ServlCe. Prof typ money ~ 645-9926 __ -2 energeuc young ladies tenor design & co11struc· ln1. Business or SEU. idle Items with a will give your home a one lion. Lie. 364419 645-6716 Hard working men./ All Kinds. Free estimate. Reftaiasan~ 714 /499-3816 SEU. idle items with u personal. Aslt ror Vickie Find what tou want in Dally Pilot Cla!>s1f1ed /\d. shot cleaning ror one r~. Lowest tegaJ rales. ins. Licensed. $10.00 per roll Daily Pt lot Classified Ad 7!9-WO Daily P!Jot lasslfieds 642·5678. 631·22\9 aft 5. Want Ad Results 642-5678 Stllc #TU9230. 548-7453. average. MS--0880 . Oasslfled Ads 642·5618 &&Z-5678. \... - ~R...tal 4400 Rentah W-.hd 4600 ..,....,.. 5100~emenh 5100 ,.. ....... 5350 JobsW..ted, 7075 HllpW.ted 7100 HetpW•ted 71 00 H.fpW-.ct 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ON THE R~ h ardworkln~ ,,,~ RELAXING MASSAGE Individual wanting to IOOIUCES'ER F /C r & 10 yr old girl ·t:~l~ BobJames·Lic Masseur learn drain & sewer ASSIMILERS l\UTOM ()'MV E Fash Isl invstmnt rirm. WATER! seek house rent/lsc un-Outcall 9·9, 494·51 l l cleaning business or NECISIOM •SBVICE xlnl oppty Ex p & der $300 Dependable. plumbers assist. I am Openings avallablf' in WARaA.HTY CLERIC maturity r eqd. Call ruJSH SUITES PREGNANT? Caring, ma~ed . bondable & 350 to 1300 aq rt. ~ ~ :~ ~ conlldenUal counseling & have ood driving record prec1s1on instrument Some auto. ex/:rr1enl'e 640-0123 faRtottk Viewa liaNujlnv"t/ ,, -referral. AbortJon. adop· Xlnl ref's Very hard shop. Applicants must reqwred. Ideal or semi· BOOKKEEPER Wet Bars tion&keeping. worker & learn fast. Lasl enJOy the challenge of retired service mgr. or 1Comm1ss1ons> Lido Marino .-..c. ' APCARE S41·2S63 Position held 10 years troubleshooting & mechanic. We will 1n Newport Beach Invest ••••••••••••••••••••••• f 49'2-~ cus t o m f1tt1ng o f struct ! Pleasant sput F'trm full charge com VHI• ~s SpirihlolRHder mech.an.tcaJ assemblies near Orange County rruss1ons bookkeeper reQ Newport 675-8662 ~ SOOS ~· l.81SSo. El Camlno Real HllpW-.d 7100 Good manual dextenty & Airport. Permanent, exp In pegboard ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Clemente: FUiiy Ile ••••••••••••••••••••••• mechruucal aptitude ex-vaned, anterestmg Opp systems. knowledge '" Office space for rent. A9-.. F:or appt. 492·7296 ACCTSPAYABLE per a must. Min. 6 mos ror advancement. s~e prox 432 sq.ft. New cpts. BURGERS & beer on the SENIOR CITIZENS Bkkpr for Const. Co. exper req. E.0 .E. Call Mark Trevmo. reading computer n :· pa.int & bghting system sand NewPorl Beach MICHELLE'S Newport area. I BM SS7·9051. ask for Ray HOWARD Che'n'Ot~ ports. Cati 640-0123 Agl. 751-1400 -Pd Ultl. S250/mo. 64S.2SSO System 32. Ask for Mrs Gtlmao. Dove &QuailSts. Bookkeeper. P /T, for or 833-2124 SPECIAL •Outcall• SKATE Rf;lljTAL sales & UAM·2AM 835-3749 Pe<iler. 833-3150. NEWPORT BEACH service station. Morn service. Outstandtnl! net ings. Apply 2590 NewPort OCEAN VIEW l\CCOWltmg Assoc. Rep tramee. New Babys itter. mature Exec. olf1tt Fashion Isle Only Sl9.000 full pnc~ (25°/o DISCOUNT) UHDA & VICKI Co. ln O.C. area needs woman. my home. Day:.. 81,CM m luxury swte. furn or ~. 751-1400 Dunn~ t~:f month of F~bru4ry l Senior Citizens Outcal Mcn:fii men & women or couples -----PAYROLL Call eves. 673-6261 IOOICICEEPEllS unfum. Secy avail Call re<'c1ve '"? orr on their pnva e party ads for for n.. Fwft of t! for PIT work-Many ••• MHDB> Gabnele. 1714 )640-1633 CdYht E. V Oft Gortunn mel"t'handise for sale in the Classified Section or Serving aJI Oraoge Co. benefits for nght people Babys1tt.er 4 mo. infant. --the Daily Pilot. I Real &-;tale is not included>. Cati for appt S41·0863. M h m e IMMB>IA TEL Y Office s pace avail 400 sq 835-7313 y 0 5051 Barkwood Bnn~ your ad into one of our offices listed Take charge of hourly Harbol'/Baker. Mon . We have openings for ex ft . pvt restroom & lrvtne '~-~MANAGER below between 8 AM & 5 PM anh day during the Phys ical massage by admiruslralioo. Wedns. Fri. 8-5. Prefer p'd bkprs & acctg clerks. stora~e r m Crpts & You are the winner or week and we will start your ad t e next day. he'd. masseur techn1· W /ex per in fast foods. own trans portation. Work near your home d.rlJs, elec. & water pd Two fTff Tickets Costa M•sa -330 W. loy Str.•t cian. 4·8PM Appl. ROSAMIHC. appty Picnic N Chicken 545-91.$ aft 5 Jl 1gh rates . Call Years lease. $200 mo. to Loguno Beach -I 186 Glet.Myr• 548-2817 ~ Bc:h S48·SS33 131 E. 11th St. C.M. 714 ·634 ·2063 . Account 54S-:lr78 Tennessee W1lhams' Hmtlnc)toft IHCh -17175 hoch ... Equal OJ>Por Employer Auto lot person · immed. Babysitter needed ror 14 Abilities Accountin~ THE NICOLE'S mo old Mon. Wed. Thurs Personnel 100% free. Small otr1ce 300 sq ft. near ACCOUNT AHTS ~m~s. M V. area & Fri. 642·9264. KO.E. Bnst.ol & Baker. Sl6S ECCENTIUCITIES rr1 nl o~r. ror ad· Agl 548·'T129 OF A Model & D•u Studio NHDB> van. Must dependa· BABYSITTER·llskpr . Bookkeeper.f'ull charge HIGHTINGALE Beautiful girls·prl vate IMMB>IATELY ble, meet public well and L1ve·1n. mature. refs. full time. Responsible Dix l ·rm 0H1ce adJ Stamng Sandy Dennis al ~t,Tn"t rooms. We have many ~nings hove Calif drivers non smoker. l 1nrant. ~ wanted for bu:.y A1rporter Hotel. No the Long Beach Conven. DMdi 5035 Lost&F'CMM S300 531 -9530 for exp'd geoer accts, llt'ftlSe & good dnv1ng Dana Pt. area. 499-4597 p lstering Co. in lease. 833-3223. 9· 12 uon Center. 300 E. Ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call us you won't be roet accts. & tax accts . record Call Mr. Zamora Costa Mesa. 642-8400 Blvd. LonR Beach. To NEWPORT PACIFIC sorry. Call 714·634·2063. Ac· 49.S-6330. BABYSITTING. Loving lnd 1v1dual orr1ce s "grandmother o r w 1rec eptlonist. cla1m your tickets. call FUNDING 621So. Harbor, Anaheim counts AbililJes At'count· Alil'OMOTJVE BUSBOY Any amt Jst. 2nd, 3rd, Come in you'll be glad ~Personnel. lOO"k rree. grandfather .. needed to secreta ry. conference 642-5678, ext 272. m ·s. Doys, 955-1055 cv FOUND ADS you did. .E. * f'AITS babysit lwo boys. Mom & Interviewing betwee n room, xerox, lunc h ••• Moo-Sat. IOam to 2am. COUNTHMEH! dad travel and need 3::J>.5pm, Mon lhru Fn . 67>SS35 room. San Diego F'r)' ac ..._.1 ARE FREE f)-i. till 3:30 ·3:30am Bus> Chevrolet dealer some overrule & wk n1te App~ Rusty Pelican. cess & exposure. fly • DISCOUNTED * ACCOWlUng help. F1ex hrs Excellent 273S CstHwy,NB. Vly. Mo to Mo. rental. to ....,_ss SO I 0 near Or ange County Small TD Income Not.es Call: LOSING YOUR HAIR' Airport needs parts pay. Please call 968·6288 Cashier· Receptionist beg1nn1ng at S:WO.mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• FROM S2SOO Ask about Perla de Jo· RO&ERT~'S countermen with GM local offices of national 714~5 Business C.SALISBURY /OWN 642·5678 joba Hair & Scalp Treat a~unlerq>S parts expenence. Good Babysitter.El Toro area, company have openings 640-8755 ments. Ph La Coiffeur at pay, environment. Mature woman. starting for people who like to 842-8244 Jan 2nd. wk. days 1 am lo CdMSUITES ~nts/ Permanent. Op~. ror ad· 4.30. Care for infanl. work with the public, Ta Proodly Announces Our vancement. ee Bob cashiering, credit rn 2 Story detached and Personals/ •SEQUIN• Ref req 768-7446 shingled "Hansel & Lott& FoURd Found. Small Female Move to Larger Off1~es Cool<. V\lSllgallon and generJI Gretel" s tyle orrice Business ••••••••••••••••••••••• German Shepherd. miss-Models & ~corts V1s1l Us At Our New HOWARD Chevrolet Ban.lung office work Competitive suites Wall to wall cpl, ..,.__.,,.,.+s SIOO mg collar. J t.2·2 yrs old ., Male-Female Location Dove & Quail SLS TELLER l>3.lanes. Type 3SWPM . warm paneling, beamed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found in vie Adams & Ann. Destiny. Sonny. COLDWELL BANKER NEWPORT BEACH EO.E. A MARKETPLACE for Magnolia H.B. Afler s. Erica, Marsha. Cissy BUILDING For our Costa Mesa of· Public Fm a nee Corp. ceilings plus rct-belhed Alil'OMOTIVE f1ce Experience pre · 1118 East 17th St. frpk in exec or 1c:e. 710 sq Purchasing Agents and PENNY ~-24 hrs serving 0 C. SUlTE200 ft at 7Y a sq ft equahng New 8us111eues Ask about spec. rates 2333N BROADWAY •LOT DETAIL ferred Call Mr. Wagner Costa Mesa. Ca. 92627 ~.50permo. Th rs is a new f>AJL Y PINCHER Lost: Basenj1, M. bark· 752-8708 SANTAANA Part·time. 8 AM to 1 PM atS4&ZJO(>. ~-4841 PLUS PILOT clussificalion to less. blktwhl & bm. 2/10. We have an inl'reasing Moo. thru Fr1. at one or Cafff.Federol CASHIER Oiarming 32S sq rt omce jlet buyer and seller ADS 494.QlJ. demand lhroughoul Orange County's leadinK S..W)s&loon. spare with very attrac· lof?elhcr Sell your LOST: Cat grey male vie. DRIVE ANEW Orange County for ex· new car agencies localed 2700Harbor Blvd C.M. Qown Hardware. Apply tlve new wallpaper & surrlus. oven>lCX'kl!'d or 22nd&Santa Ana. CM. penenced accounting & in Costa Mesa. Mus t An F.qual Oppor Emplyr at 3107 E. Coast Hwy. no nm?er nttded llt>ms ONLY fl .AUTOMOllLE have valid Calif. dnvers CdM. white shutters. Must sec or sunnlles of any kind REWARD! 642-8833. every year for boolckeepmg personnel bcense. Call ror appt. lo Ban)ang -to~lut.e. $275/mo. Call or v1s1t u.s today-wr Cashier I fioodJ BS REALTY For more 111form11hoo or FOUND Mix breed about SSOO • SlOOO Chock Cozart or Paul TELLER to place yoor ud, call St-II any Item or com Shep/Husky /Setter. very Most Makes are looking forward to DeFabi1s Newport Center branch Ptr. night shirt. exp. 675-2311 butal100 of items for S'7S 644-2526 greetmg you 1n our new 540.'640 preferred. Newporlcr 64Z..5671 or less with a Penny lg. male, vie. Brookhurst location. seeks personable tn · Inn. 644·1700 x 525. between 8A M a nd Pull·her Ad. 3 Unes for 2 & Adams. HB. 968-3580. UNIVERSITY dlvidual w /6 mos Teller 300 sq n 3 rm suite. Nr :>·30PM. Monday thru consecutive dayi; Each l714t 835-4 I 03 SALES&SERVlCE exp. to do paying & re· l\11ckeyZemek E.O.E. 0 .C. Alport. NB. l\va1I Friday for ({our ad to ap-additional ltne rs 00' for REWARD: for the return RREFLIES FREE PARKING re1vuig & related opera· CHILDCARE·Aflernoons Mar 1. Cont.act 752-8263 pear the fo lowing day or the 2 day:. Charl{e 1l' ol large Female Akita LRP loves EAC more AlJJ'OMOTIVE tions work Sal com · 2·S::r>, 2 to 5 days per call between 8AM and 12 No c-ommercral ads dog. Brindle color Ptf"IOMI Set-Ykea 5360 ADMIN SECRET ARY "MAMFfUOAY!" mcnsurate w /exp Con· week. Turtlerock arcu. ~ .... 4450 noon on Saturday ror w;wh1te chest, legs & tip To assist oew & used car tact C Bruton, French ~3l!i0 eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sunday's pub!Jcauon for mon: 111format1on d tail. Black mask. Loest ••••••••••••••••••••••• City of Laguna Beach. managers ID van ed. ID Bank or Cahrornia. 500 Newport Mariner's Mile. ond to plucc your ad cull 1·31 Mesa Verde. 549-8677 ~p0nslble leocher on S8SJ to St089 per mo teresting tas ks & to Newport Center Dr.NB CHIROPRACTIC ASST. sabbatical will houses1l Challenging & respon Modem 502 sq rt store. 10,CXX> Frown Food din· Losl : Golden crowned supervLSe lot orderhness. P /T . I nsuran ce ex· 2630(C) Av on . ners : 10 varieties 642-5678 Conure, grn w /yel. wtule t'Ompleting book. position report.Jog to the Like lo work a round 8ankmg perience preferred. .au.m.1001 Sacrifice! (213) 255-4400 breast. or crown. Ans. -~ directors of Fmanre & cars? This will please TtU.SlS 642--4532 Personnel : re~1res you! Ideal ror semi· Jmmedlate o~n1ng for Caesar Vic. CD M ~=:.! Foutore &olfice space al two desks 30 X 60 twn SCRAM-l.ETS good secretarial s ills & retired. Salary open. Sec experienced ull time & CLERlCAL reasoaable rates. ped. 6 drwr. IBM 759 ·1130. 548 ·0498 ability to work indepen· Keo P»ert-e. · part time comsnerc1al Deputy Clerk wantt!d. S00.5000 ~Ft mag card auto Reward. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dent l y I n a ad · HOWARD CS..'n'Olet teUers. Clencal ~lt1on availu· MISAYllDE typewnter. Call Dick ANSWERS Lost: 2 blk dogs: Rocit{.· 6 Jobi W..ted. 7075 mtnl st rat lve at · Dove & Quail St.s. UNITED CALIF ble immediately. Re-lrw\n 673-4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mosphere. Aeply SOS q1.11res l yr. clerical ex-DIUYI Pl.All Island -Stoic -wks Doble/Shep 1x. Fores t Ave. ag Bch. NEWPORT BEACH IANK peneoce 40 wpm typing. 1.52SNesa Verde E, C.M. Meta.I de3k w/3 drwr file Robot -Wiuud -The other: 1 yr Shep/· AUTOl'Ati's Collie mix. fem "Missy". Companioo·Health Care prior to 2/20/79. Ph 261.Sl La Paz Road '600·$86S. 833-04 \ l, ext. 545-4123 $45, Kroehler 3 way vinyl RlBROAST H. 8 area Reward. Adults: Ref Educ Wom .fl1 3311 ext 217 DIUVBY M1ss1on V1e10 260 for appt. ,,Crange recliner brown $4S, Weal You know meat ls very 1Jl8bouse Roaster oven expensive, especially m 96J.9350or 2131863-9681 Home Mngm't lnteitt'r MY. COfttlllt•ts Well groomed female 837-0066 County H arbor Equal Oppor Emplyr Municipal Court. E.O. E. M~'SMILI $44. 6'2·5633 England To s11ve Found: Brn/wtlt Fem. Lite Hskg Ldy Exr Cook, 15 over 18. Good drivltlg re · PRIME LOCATION 3-M copier Model 107 S200. money. Parliament has Husk1e. Vic. S. Costa Onve, shop, own traru1p. cord. Must live in Costa BAR MAIO-Short order CLERICllL ON WATER. Available suggested that lhe Quttn Mesa. 631-4944 $day LV·lN S3S da Nel Mesa area. Call 556-2500 cook. FUll & Part time. C.pable person for office r()t' retalJ ,,:.rroresslonal 559-84.51 or 559-8476 after wear a crown of RIB Exc Ref~3 for intervtew appt. Call or apply to Bay 6PM *PEOPLE* po111tion requiring phone offices. or 3000 sq ROAST. Found: Shcpherdllluskic Street Saloon. C.M llam & math a,gpitude, ~pin~ .......... mix~ shortha1r. yng, to3pm. 631-9779 tl. Can be divided Into ••• Vic. I Sq Prk. 96-1 2993 Very good housel'leaner. AUTOMOTIVE 6Swpm. edical, ental srmller W'.lil.a. OppOft.ity 5015 Nancy Ward good refs. Call alt Spm ; Needed •AUTO SALIS Beauty HAIR STYLIST LM. Fabricated Plastlcli w .. trf••tto.• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 726 W Ocean Front Found Small black Lab 64&3M7. OPPOttTUMITY! needed. Regis Hair Stl:· Inf. 81.S W 18th St, CM . 611-1400 lnvestors earn 50'k or rcro-8a1boa puppy w /choker & whl Busy Chovrolet dealer In ing, So, Cst Plua. C . 64&-3279 tits. A successful bui der You are lbe winner of spol on chest C.2·1660. PERMANENT LIVE IN Immediately t he Orange Counly APP()' iti person, 540-8888. Q.ERJCAI. seeks funds. $15.000 ~r )e82 Newport Blvd. Ap. Two Free Tlckth LOST · Small b l a~,, COMPANIONS/ ~rt romplu must ILWTY OHRAfOR Coeltal ,.,....,, house. Short t e r m, salesmen for EZ r:-~ aq. rt. $375. mo. aec:ured. to r~ ~, ~ r '"'f.· HSKPRS ~,89 Hair •tyli1t tor eleg U. loc.s =Yallablf' Mr Gordon 95&.24&4. Tennessee Williams' 642· 81 cves/631·33 4 !!CAI.NURSES stralghl sell & lease. THE da SCREENED Generous pay. Opp, for salon. xlat oppty for tb• Qlilta Mtaa·•m:•· HOO MMt,i;91s. Trwt LOYER PAYS ~sorGals adv~meot. Auto. ex· right pen w I• cl.lentele. wtlb 011lQY fine, aupc:r aq. ft. otnce l Park· ECCIHftlCITllS ~1 Centurion bike. perieoce not required but Must be ruhion.abte. ~ and they're ~ W. 19t.b SO< pr Dlidi SOJS OFA ldenur~ by make, FEE =line. No e11 · = aeUlng help(uJ. A.Wo looltloc for the pro-.it F. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIAICH . , MMMnlMALE cofor. sl)ffd. frame " & ·nee. Com~any ~rce . Cftpenoo to cul men's 140-6051 LOWEST Stan1ntc Saody .Dennla al rn"· date Iott. Call ; Servlcu Ina to train.• art HOWAIDC...•1•t only. Must alao have c ...... , ...... 1 ...... 4HO I.be Long Burb Conveo· P.O. 538-5C2 20Zi~S.A . time or full Ume. C.11 Dow. Quall Sta. ~-All Interviews ....................... ............. lion Center. 300 E. Ocean l45f • Mrs. Collins 83'·1317 N~lrrBEACH at~ contlde otlal. 2mj$.cM Double • 1lqle 1ara1ea. htT.O!s. tlho ~-shell Male cat, R.I Ouellette Saloo, Blvd. Lona Beach. To ~ wal~f!d toto Coet.a Anawerlo« Servlco Mn'OrUTS *»Newport Ctr Dr. N 8. ALLJ FREE lot m:uoo· l250. WT.D ........ clal~ t1cke1.a, call eaa Ubrary. S66Center fence builder nuds Operator, relief shift, la•HIO. ft'a1rtst Terms sloee 19'9 642-ht272. Sl. Hu collar. Short hr • worlt, 11 yrs. eJ1per1eoce. wW train. 54(). 75$5. COUMTllMAM ... ts-« •• ..., Clerk (LOAN SALES> 4606 W..-~Co. ••• Mlnlmum 3~s. Jobber XJnl o~rtunlty now ..... w. .... blaclt " brown w /llf'Hk ••15' ror Ntwpo rt Beach A.PT MAN AGER ....................... MJ.2 I 7 I 45-0611 Loetlr'-d uoo downnoee.~ PLUMBER <Uc'd> ~· For ~ UDlla lo Costa ~. Ul t tie well Architectl.ln Ftrm. Ex· avail. ewport Center RcariulbJ•. worltlog Meta. .Exper 'd couple. ~ • rinonable, pr. Pft{. 14$-9444 Morta•1e 8uk1ng firm MONIY AVAii.AiU ••••••••••••••••••••••• in« for work In new con· nH!dS lridlvidu•l for con. wr t~r seek s one ,. ....... USO work good pay LiJlt or l'ound a r:'? Call IU'UCUOo. Marv. 646-9807 Huaband must ha vt with pvwiftJ company. Boat Hardware Sales Ya1&loMl loam. WUllnit bedroom cotta•e In 2nd TD LOA.NS Anlmal Au stance ••••••••••••••••••••••• aftS maim. et'. Wife bkkpa can 55e.2soo l(tr 'ID· Pulon. Ptr2d•Y• a wt. to train. Must t ype Olr'OOll •I Mar or Cotta SWING LOANS t.earue. G3H273, no ree. ~s..., ex p . all eves tetv\ew ape>t.. Shoctl Bardwa~ Oiirpm. Good comp.ny Meaa. ~etnna -.en· =M ENT ALL• Mm.Uact~ Seve· We (%13,..31$1. 2900 Lalal:tte btoeflta. Cootact~· cJaJ. Write a ... 11i....1 .... 00 UCTION REWARD Hu1ky/Shep Male fr female ~act aatembly or ~ en)'t.hinl with a ~.•ch Dt.l.~.EO ... Delly P1loc., p 0. OR ANY PURPOS£ ml•, slvr. H11 Aluknn ~ ot rnech it elttt ff.ave aom= yoo wariC D11J.Y Piao. Cluamtct Ad I:...'*· Cotta Mesa DeVldP.Carey~, tap, ans to "S•ncbo". IFe<' ratet COlilllCJDeDll ~l.$30 9-12 '°sell• Class! ed •di do lt a slmlt: mattctr ••. Claealfied Ads, your one• R.£. Braker, 11$7 Cl-3332 ar m.taz.. l•·IJtJ AM it ~II. 642,5678 )\Ill calt M?a. Wam.AdlltJp? MUl71 ttopaboppinig cent.r. I . -.. ...... ~· ... ~ ... ' -t l . . t I W.. Wsabd 7 t 00 tw. WallfH 7 t 00 .,.... W...., 1100 Olrt WanCtd Work for ~ ........... •••••• ~;;:-••••••••••••••••••• ~;;T••••••••••••••••••• In uranre A111nt, So. Qerb 1 11 Soles. All DILIYmlY MAH DIC rle1 <>rant• Oo Mlilt havw abifta. Good P•>'· Wiii wanted ror furnltur• ~ \'Olnt" bit l oud on lnWl 151501.Jler,C.M. atcn. P'n'fcr m•rclf>d, CH£CK[D rthunt' 1tf'llablr. un --------•I Iota.I man wrbo ta b ody Ul _ wutk 1tt hllmt> 4113-~ CLEllS UTOTEM Qal(fYPtST NeW'pOrl 8~a ~·h ~,. l'ompa.o) ot fen ao entry lti "el pos.a t..loo H blllan' cltrlt lllnlmrd t yp1n1 SSQO Good Company be-nef1ts, Houn~• u~ a. .. TYPIST .,...-OURY aod knowa tht •r~11 Salar)i, ~-t4 hr wk. Call OW.. (M •11"4. ah 2flM . ~ ------DllJVBY *** lOSA.M. IMC. ~1"' lkh )41 ~ l'~uaJ ()i1por f.mp!yr r.xt('utlv• SerHtlarJ lM C1mwolf'r ('u 1n I.a.a H.alla ntqlllrr• "n'\'tary w 11.h uutata nJ tn.c akill'I & an t'nlrrpr111 &nil altitude •;xc.illl' tH "11 I a r y lJe nett t' & fulurt-C~llf. Uu11100b11 S)"' ti' Ill' lJo b Gr oh ·. :Ml U:.00 )>.,eculH t· ~ca .. tary Small f11 m Dl'l'd11 c iwrlt10<'4'd ind1v1du.al wnh uctill~nt bkt11 6 Mwit tyJ~ 80 wpm+ &: knuw dlttaphooe le other olli~ mach.lne11 IA&al ~Xptort eoc:e preferred Muat ~ neat 41 non :.molun~ Salory $1000 Clll Deburah M6 6328 G-R·E-A·T SALIS JOI HOW OflH 0 000 l'AY. GOOD HOURS , 0000 CON OlTIONS MANY f''RlNOK O!N&FITS FAST GROWlNO COM PANV l"ROMOT•:s FROM wmn.N TRAIN 1-·ort Tor MAN/\OF.Mt:NT S ·r ARTS ' f M MF.DIATELY " KE VH OAHU to: X P R I E N C .. : w.:L.Pio\JL WIC UAVJ.o; OUK OWN ·rRAININC: PROGRAM PUT ON DV 'l"ltF. COUNTRY'S TOP 0 K 0 A N ~ A J ... : S PEOPU: (.;ALl, A1' 0 N' C t-; 1'' 0 R lNTt.:Rva :w ORGAN F.X Cll ANG l!:. STAN NUNN714/586 7302 GUARDS !o\IU & p /llnw All areas. Uo1Corm!i furntsbed Aites 2l or over. Retired wt•k-onw No expeneo('(' nee Apply Universal Prola11on St•r v1ce. 1226 W. 5th Street. SontA Ana 1.menlews hours 9·12 " 1-4 Mon thru Fri. ~t t!Otr)' level op-Ocuual As1t1X R.Ay he porturuty for 11harp detail e.ck ok . Will Lr.un I' T un ented p~r11on w nh hnt neA. Im med open personnel dept of ~ 847 3501 f;.xeculJveSecreury tlOHBYISTS: Earn an ex· arowtb orie nted 01. . -----ftt'11I &!tale Develop tra 15-$11 per hr teachinjct uonwide mortRa(te bank· Omtal A.ssLStaot, fXJ)('r d mc.•nl f o ln Anaheim re· bobby (')asses With Tri· ingf11111's11>e 1A>m r,•s1on RDA, pro~ess1ve prt> q' Exp & top ~kills Che m L1qu1d Em corporate hudquarters \<E'ntaUveoff1ce 7~ 1~ t)pe70WPM.Shorthand b ro1dery . 498·0609 tn Newport Q-nter. Now 4 day week, lrvl.M In 100 WPM .(Gregg pref I 498-2674 tunng on a temporary dl.!MnaJ Com plt'x. Good benefi ts . Sala ry --------- basls <~mo). May lead 0 ENT AL AS 8 T $1100 If qualified call HDMylak~Ham &No permaoeot position Cb.rside/RDA 0 mu-;t . GJC..4741 1118'Won kh Ston with future For details, Gl'\.'at oCc, ranlasuc sal Olympus Pacific lot'I HJ RI NG : C ounter coot act pusoonel, Gd hrs. 847.3507 or FACIA.LJST for exclusive Oens, 5 days. Ham Cut· ~ext.230 962·3724 skincaresalon ter. P JUme. For ID· ""'-~ ---------642""912 te rvaew call 848·8575 ---wattrns DENTAL ASSISTANT begirwngWed.Feb.lst. ScMol with chW' side and front Fast food opener want.cd , HOSTESS/HOST we are Earn up t.o S300 per wk. olf1ce capabihues. Flex•· Ftr. Sat & Sun off If looking for socne special Low t.uiUoo. Placement ble F ff schedule In our wanted. $3.25 hr. people t.o be part of our assist. 7Sl·91.!M Newport Beach office . * * * lroiitst.a!f. Attractive ap· MHit196 calJ eves. HOUSEWIVES Coostroction Superinten· 1---------· pearance. fri e n dly dant for $250.000 com· 0 ES K C L E R K STUDENTS. personalll)' are pre mer c 1al r e mode l in Expenenced preferred. Deeded for PIT lunch {erred. No exp e r . Laguna Beach. calif. B· 1 Apply rroot desk. San employment. 3-5 days. necessary. 25·35 age Lie. Local ref's 494·9421. Clemente Inn. 125 W. fleXJble scheduling. $3.2~ bracket ~referred. Full Averuda Esplandian hr. Apply at NEW Der or partl1me. Days or COOK Wiener Schnitr.el, 2SO S. eves. 1'1ex1ble schedule. * * Dial A Ride Bnstol. C.M. <next to S42Sbr + bonuses. Ap· ~be:fi~o&v~o~~J>g Orinn Ward H a rn ngton ) plkataons beLng accept· cond Apply Flags hip Operate modern eqwp-957·0593. ed. Sat. l<M. Moo.·Thurs Conv. Center. 4ti6 mcot & door t o door F r o n t d e s k 3-5. F1agshlpRd .. N.B transp. Calif. drivers lit' Cle rk /Cas hier. Ex-NoPhooecallsPlease. req'd . No pnor exper Pe rie n c e d 0 0 I y . El Tonto. Npl. Bch. COOIC~B.IEF nee. Good driving re<' a Newpor ter Inn. 1107 4221 Dolphin-Striker Wy 3Day,6am-2pm,2days must.NoSunday work. Jamboree Kd . NB (Offof MacArthurBlvd> 10am·6:JOpm, Sat lhru Orange Coast Yellow 644·1700 Cal l Mary Hotel~M GR. Union Wed. Coovl exp pref'd. Cab. 17300 Mt. Her· Carlson E.O.E benefits, 7:»4 Mon thru Call(714)646-7764orapn. rmann.F.Vly. F C 11 f t " General Office: Interstate ra. a o r a p p • lyat: lSSSSuperior Ave, DIETARY AIDES at trucking Co. Costa Mesa _M.S-_5000 __ ._c_x_t520 ____ _ NB. Conv. Hosp. Days /PM 5'$-l.982 ---------1 sb1ft, stable employ-1---------~HSKPR COOKS ment. Jqnt benefits. Free GENER.Al. OFFICE Lt Apply Roy Fraser. San Expandfog restaurant health 105· Apply 1445 typing & bkkpg. Call Clemente lon, 125 ~penor Newport F1oor Covenng , chain with over 50 units _ ___.:__ ---67S-lli36forappt. Aven1da Esplandian, Family-owned organba· DOCK MASTER San Clem. lion ~Hers pl ~~sa nt Pvt Yacht Club, Balboa GENEJtALOFFlCE --------- working cond1.t1ons . J>enn.67J.77JO Stock brokerage hrm in HOTEL Good opportun1t1e11 for N e w po r t C e "! t e r Gentleman for combJoa· advancement. Excellent Draftsman switchboard recept'ODl'lt lion desk clerk & hte company benefits. Ex· Meeharucal exp Must be rel1er. good typing, fll· maintenance. Live on peneoced desired. Apply c&pable orfigunng bill of 1 n g, l' t c. Ne at a p. premises. 499-2227 mpersont.o· matenals. Knowledge or pea.ranre. $600 pr mo. --------- cabmel ronstru<'lloo oec. Call Manon e 644-2442 Housecleaner needed, 2 ~ ... A1't• ftNlfr He~~9 ~31nc. days a week. hourly ~V-"i7 N"D ..... ~ Gt>neral office help for wage. Wiii need own DRIVER 3333 W. Coast Hwy Young expaod1ng com· .-wportleoch pany in need of ag· ---------1 gres.slve oerson for dl' livery and various CORPORATE Communica· tion warehouse work. Call 549-8043 Greg •DRIVER• Expandlllg co. lookm~ for people willing to. work. Neal appear. Good dnvmg rec. Over 18. Co. vehicles. SZ.90 per hr+ Incentives Call Mark 751-2686 32 yr. publishing firm specializing in graphic matenal for busmess & IOdustry seeking sharp, aggressive sales person for this area. c;i111--------- C.."hnsl1an School. 16835 trans. ~l. Brookbursl. Ftn. Vly. 963-7831 Housecleaoers t.o work for Janice's Raggedy Ann . General omc-e. lite book· Tues-Fri. S.3 645-1800 keeping. good phone Housekeepe r live-in personalily.645-6525 Spanish speak 'g or 1 G&fERAL OFFICE child ok. 963·9lOS or 'Ille Jolly Roger Inc has 9fil.2286 ____ _ an operung for a General HOUSEKEEPER Office Clerk 1n our Purchasing & Oistrlbu· Expenenced sitter for tion DepL The position single father. 1 s chool llsf II aged child. Lovely ca or cxce ent typi.ng Balboa home. 8: 15 to 6 s kills & a pleasing daily. Refs req . Mr pcrsonalil). Duties wall also anclude riling & Hayes673-7643art6da1I) 58l-OOM. general office work. Xlnl _an_)'ti_·me __ w_k_nd_s_. __ _ DRIVEAS benefits & workmg con· HOUSEKPPG SERVICE Men or women 2S yrs or dluons with a growing needs help, Xlot pay. older. Know the coast compan y . Apply in Easy wo rk . G r eat COUNTER WOMAN T o write contract in rental cent.er, must be avail wkeods Apply 1930 Newport Bl. C.M. cltJes. Net $180 a week or person at: customers. Choose your more. O r ange Coast h~ROC)ef'htc o wo t ime. Mickie Yellow Cab, 17300 ML 1700GilletwAve 673-4417 COUNTER HEJ.P Part time. Herrmann , Fountain l rvme.CA Valley. (No of Slater (714) 546-0331 Housekeeper, rem .. hv(" betwn Newh o pe &I•--------in.coolt&drlve for l&dy Eucl1d) Pvt Rm/Ba . Npt .Bch. Call~ bef 11 or al\2 pm. Couater Gui/Lady to nice 1--------• dry cleaning store an DRIVER P fT _C_M_. 546-__ 9643-__ P_a_u_I_. __ 1 fr o m N e w po r t t o DATA INPUT Wes twood R etai l OPERATOR clottung st.ore, receiviog IBM System 34. other dept.. Good driving re· duties include receptaoo cord & refs. required. relief. accounts payable Must be 21. Hours are &flling.Call714-634-4741, 8 :30·1. Call Nancy , Olympus Pacific lnU. in 644-5070. Anabetmforappt. ------------------iii--•IDnc Clerk-Manager for DataProceuing Coametlca, gHts & Hallmark. Exp. Pref 640-7373. EDP B.EC ASSEMBLER OPERA TOR Diversified work load an ~are k>oking for a pro. electronics & opUcs. Ad· fessional and h ighly vMced Kinetics, 1231 motivated lndlvidual to Victona, CM. 646·7165. process c:rltlcal com· £.0.E. General Office Tnd of WorilillCJ Weekends& Holidop? lmmed iat.e openln"s ex- ist for: RLECl.EAK MAIL CLERKS CJ lea v y 11 f\.i.og req) ln large Newport Beach compan,y. Hours 8:30arn.. 4pm. Mon. lbru Fri. Ex· cellent fringe benefits & working conditions. For appoiotment, coot.act: Lynn Stansfield (71•) 7$-7853 (.l:lelween8am-llam ) AVCO AR.cial SerYlce1 6a> Newport Q!ntcr Or Newport Beach Equal Oppor Employer puter output in a n ---------OS/MVT, HASP. IBM ENGINEER-Asst Bldg & 370 ellviroomeot. Posl-Grad 1 n g . s a I a r y : tioo requires r otatina $1587·$19351mo . Asst 3-day work week in Sllpervlsor or Bldg & GENL OFCJShl -variOUI 12 bour sblft.s· Safety Div, Oe pl. of ppiog previous dJlta processing Publk Works. Grad Civil ~on Mfr. Handle all uperience/educatloo f)ig. RegistraUoo <CE or ship g aspects. gent of(' preferred. Company CEIT> desirable,., 4 yrs duties. somelyplng (714 ) benefits 1.nclude tuit.ton exp. W'tll mana&e ofc & 1_494-«157 ___ • ------ refund and a well· auperviae plan checking. GIRLfltlDAY defined career past tn Apply: City H&U, 32400 EDP. PleaeapJ>l>' at: Paeao Adelanto, Sao PAITT1ME Ju.an ~~· CA. 92675 by Mornings and aftciroooo 3/2/79. E.0 .E./A.A.E. shifts. Fronl desk for busy tu ofrice. Pt.,a~e write stating quallflca- PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT PACIFIC MUTUAL For Ad Action 1.lona t.o Allen Hammond, CPA 20'1 Busineu Ctr. Or. No. 103, Irvine. CA 92'115 642..m33 Housekeeper. general Mature woman. Eng speaJung. 5 dys. 9-3. $125. COM Ref & exper. nee Ph640-6710 Ins. Moil Clffk Beginner 's spot for blight person. process· Ing ingomg & oot.golllg mall. OJ>portun1ty for training & advancement. Must work we ll with others. Excellent benefits. 37~ hr wk. Call Andrea, S..7-4900 ext 275. E.O E. ACCOUNT ADMIMISTRA TOR Need experienced 11d· ministra t o r w i th employee benefits trust experience. Position in· volves maintenance of all ac~ting records coorcbnaUng wllb bank aod broker.aye farm. Knowled1e o invest· meot.s dealrable. Please apply al: Pl!."'RSONNEL DEPARTMENT PACIFIC MUTUAL 'JOO Newport Center Or Newport Be IC h, CA 92'&00 700 NeWJ>Ort Cent.er Or Newport beach. CA 9261'.0 Call a Dai~ Pilot AB-VISOR 642·5678 ls Your Profession Equal ()pportunlty HOME REPAIRS? £mp4oytr M/fo' F.aoal OpponunJty tmplo1er M /F ~who occd pooplt' sboUldalWl)'lcheck~e ,_ ................. . Service DlreclOI)' lo the 1------- DAIL y PlLOT Stll idll' Items &42.-5618 ' Old you know you can 1~~~~~~~~~ place a classitled ad In I· °'" Dally Pilot Service Directory for a whole month tor as lltUc aa S1 77 per day? For more WormaUon. call 14.2-5818 ~ .... ,.. INSURANCE SF.cRETARY Casualty Ina. peraoaal " commercial lines exp. Xln& work:lq coad. Call MZ.-00 .. ....,, .. -- r . . . JNSURMolCt E~pr'd commercial Uabillty aqd ~ penon lo hen dllo acrounta and market thrir l.MW'anc• Salary open Olli 844· l.530 PRODUCTION S A l LB 0 AT. m a\ n • Sl:Cal'TAaY fUtel MOVIE EXTRA~ CONTROL ~nance. uod clu n.lnfl, f\all lime. Expr'd for Ail TR A IN ~ E l o h o Ip Ml lime. m\ISt havt-m in. N O Office. S48·223S soug ht by Hollywood aupervllor. VaMe<I., In knowtcdae or 9allboata, -----IOOV\e fltm. SZ0.$200 per W:rwtlna•ork Room for mel'hanlul ' t'lec Secre tary /Recepllonlat day poll. Look101 for adv•ncemC'nt E 0 E 1,YS.lA!ma Call 00-1100 F\tll tune. two alrl offJtt. out.couit 18 TO yr olds febretex Corp M7·7"3 4 cS.y worlt wetk. Co wantlna to bruk Into --IS A I L 8 0 A T paid benefit&. Salary --movl\1~. <714> 761-1244. 1--------• MA l NT 1'; N A N C E nca<>tlablc. lNSRNCEFll.ECLERK VIDEO C ASTING ~HoftPenon P1t1mr. no eitpt'r re Lanc:erVachtCorp. £1tol(lnne.rs ,pot for brliht SERVlCI::. Coow In 4th & quared. Call 645 7100 751 7220. pmiOll Pt aunt work· ~ar> Art Asth._. lf\I condllk>DI General Must bevc l'llpenent'f' In orflc• ul)t'rlenct prl'· Need re1ponalbl• In· type, •s>ttk1nl & produc rerrt'(l Opportunlb for dMduaJ foe PT cunoloy In« clean. weU-Oealgoed ~ •.ctv•octment. munl ror maid fl noral finl.ahed art. Apply In 31~ hr. week. tllOC> per aervlcr. Pott"ntlal to peraon b<ttwcen Sam· mo to 5 ta rt Ca' I movt 1nt.o maoa11eri•I ~or aeod rftume> to ~ CTOO. ask ror Andrea. poelUOn Must have own n. Joly Roget' lttc r.o F. traoaporlllll'un. Cal' 1704ZGllltffeA•• S "'LES S«rtt.ar)'. ttceptlooln. A tYJlllli. heavy pboM11 for ART 18.ATED lJo11y con1enl1l omcie. Oyn am 1 c. res pon11 bit 1~1iirvineiiiiiiiiiiareiiiiaiii. 919.iii·iiilWiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii p e r so n 11o u)(ht .. Knowledxe of cootcm Pof&ey . art De('. J.'U II or vrr Phone 114~3221, Nkfcwdll"l!<'tor S SECRET ARIES $ lwnatwy C11t.:.a m.1K17. '"'-·Ca 9%714 Pnca.ac. ahlppana & n•c . M&llSIS AIDU l714J S4MJJ I Salct Sonw typlnj. many de · M.00 per hr. State «rt.,______ l'IU1 GET IN G 0 IR E./Acctc tlJOO.Sl.500 Ra.o,e Dnpioyen1 P•Y All P'HS LU Rdoden Aaency 4(QI) Birch Sl. Ste HM Newport Beach, 833-8190 t.a1.ls NBarea.&65 7040 only. Xlot benc f1t 1. ,_________ ~ JAN 1T0 R 1 AL Site &yvltw Conv. Hosp. '"9 wtk Typf1t THE llRUNES? CaJI fl'or Appt/l'l\lab ·e. .upcrvbOI'. t.op pay. fr 20SS Thurin. C.M 2201 fi'l ex ewrl&er N l.nge ~fX'f1l5 Must have 6'2-~£ O.E. machln,. up deiilrt'd Publllhen rep will h1rt" 5 •--------3 yrsexp m supervl1lon. MURSIS AIDIS ~ de:'lt.red 00 2201 not t.o tnvrl w /group to S.C.1ta r /Ctlrtl 833-1015 S.ll,ll·1 part Ume Good n.'Qd Must ty~ :iOWpm Vegas, NY , Miami Ir To handle reaf ealall' In. I c...11~7639. other l'1t1t>S &l resort.I on vestor account•. Com-K1trhen Supervi1or sa ary. lmm ac s m 1~~~~~~~~~ r aodom llln.-rary No murucatJ.ona, typing 1tnd CK.'<'4ed Must have ex Conv. Hosp. 20362 San~ 1-exp. nee: AJI ul)C"nMA, buaJneu math 1kllla tt11 l>('MCO('(' with develop ~Ave C.M.$49J08l PIT fil1ni Wit nr bomC' peld tratnlJ\Jc Cash ad l t'ntla l Prefe r ex mt'Dtally di.sabled. Call --n· o.....-.... ,~8 p 1 flex bra No up nee vatl('ed. lransp rurn. re· pf'rltnced, rn•lure ~l. Ask for 1.inda or V II oe rlVUOUUUll eop c c 11 F " 3 0 0--..11 Sue: I!: 0 E needed for p /T ore-:.i r 1 • "' 4 · • tum guaranwed Must ~l"IOO ..;.:.,.. .. ta and ex · · · P r omotion w o rk for 213-6SI 5!64 be 18oroveT, 1m1<le unal· Uent location Pbc>M Laboratory packaging. Sheraton New(IOrt Ho~I. Real E'Jllate t.ached ., re&dy t.o 1l1trt ~. Xlnt w or k cood . ~tBperhr.No cxpnec. HAVE OPENINO(oraa· F ort-11n lanicuaae ~~~~~~~~~ .......... n•· r.......e ray. Ap~· fh uvaU . 9-1. 1-5. or 5.9 1 d be.lpluJ See Mr Moun. . """''"" '° VV<N ..... f I gn•u 1ve, mot vat.-llam "'om. ~a"e A~· Service Stall.on Allen ly Doit • 989 <' /o Dal Y """ or Ma Layton, ront --•-l ho h t .. _ "' ... " d d D •-......... PO Box 1~ CM desk. morninaa only . ~ a&cn w as '"' ~e. 1176 Kat.el a ant, uper •Y • m · ..-. · please do oot phone 4S4!1 ~ t.o succeed with Ave Anabetm t."vel (l\iU le p/tlmo Ap MacArthW' Bl Cat Birth wilirruted opPortunitlH ' 77~0140 ply. Shell Stal.oft. 17th Ir L E A o E R S H I p NB. in Million Dollar loca Irvine, NB POS1T l ONS-Collcgc Oon. Call Al Stclh1t.o for -------Seniors/gr ads. M / Jo'. Ofnct & Sales girl Deeded. c·onfldcot1al 1ntcrv 1t~w iSales C.1crk ResPon111ble ~rv'lce st.lion alU!nd11nt. 13-27 years. Salary plus Kirk Jewelers New Agents Welcomed prnoo l'IL't'dtd to tum ~·tr. available eveninit.<> benefitsfromfirstdayof 2200Harbor81vd .. CM. ~5671 olflce supply hus 1neS!t II wkods N.:lt ap ric 54.5-9485 Rusy & pleaunt won pearancf' Ir t\a.ndwriun.i ~'?e~~~rp~km1s (~lj'nl!aHJtJf'ITTI Beach Statioru-n. 4020 A~'b.:S" Newpo r t t.o use io busi.oeu world Omce Man.ager-Sa.le11 C.mpus Dr N 8 ,_Bh __ . -'-------. Good opportunity ror ad Real &,tat.e after service. Techrucal va.ocemeot. Will train/no Sales· Me n " Women ~Sta fltlp t.eeded Im t.rnlning. combat arms experience necenary direct 5a.les whole!\ale re· med fl\all Qr Pit Apply available. lnvest In your Must be 25 yrs old or w.I. pa.rt time full time ~ E Cst Hwy, N 8. future . Call now for older & be avail. on ~ -No dooc'todoor 35to40'f Sll.J<.SC:REEN_E_RS __ ~=Candidate Saturdays. SS7·0824 or ,......--/~----...ii P'F sale +llberal bonus WANTED for t..cuoa Cost.C' Mesa 540-l026 774·6090. 1525 Mesa ~~. • plan Care r~ home & Hlllaue:a TnMJal3 Verde #206, Costa Mesa. ~ penonal carf!, Vitamin · Hunb..DitOO Bcb 962-8821 Products. CurTent 01s· STOQ( aa" LEGALSF.c.Nplbcbatty Office Help P.tr 12·4p.m. ~~ tnbUt.ors for other lines Some tlfttog of furniture apecializuig in Bus. Law ~curate typist. ten·key, ~..... should check our offer. &equip req. PurchaJung & Est.ate planning needs lite phones & expeneoce 9'19-3866noon t.o5pm. & ma1ntenen ce exp secretary w /at least 5 helpful. $3.2Shr 642-6506 The helpful as well a.s the yrs. exp., Sal. Comm. -----------• * SALES abtlaty to perlonn mtnOC' wfexp .. Mag ll exp. PACKERS. wrb.se. As· Causey rea~. &typtng ca11 1or dsrbl. Mr. Jones97S-0708 sem. With or without ex· .,,., per. All sbilta. No ree. Real Estate Wettl~ la .. Paid weekly . Im med School & Equal 0ppor Employer jobs nr oear your home. LEGAL SEC'Y /RECEPT Newport ~ach law ore. Xlnl typUlg, d1ctapbooe and desire to accept res(IOnsibility required. Cootact Pal644·9190. Norrell Temporary Services 558-0021 E.0 .E. LIQUOR CLERK. Apply PARENTStrEACHERS between 8am-5pm, Bl Um&Sual opportunity for Broadway Liquor. 278 interesting educallonal _Broadw __ ._a...;.y_. _L_ag""-B_ch ___ 1 sales work. Pos1t1on ID· U>t attendant. Must be 18. volves coot.act w /parents FUll or p tr. Company of pre.school & school benefits. 558-7454 , aae children . Excep · M?-0520 liooal income op· . port.Unities. Call ror Ill· terv1ew w 1 s al es imnager. Bill Helmuth. 770-06S1. <T·30l E.0 .E. THE MOST SENSIBLE REAL ESTATE COURSE YET CONCEIVED· TELECOURSE • UNIQUE VlDEO EDUCATION PROGRAM STOCK CLERK. move ............... GEM~ and arrange furniture ~ 5"' and producuoo aod i;ales a r eas . A ss i st ....._ ,.1_......._sTI--wtcustom er pickups, '"" ~ ....... Full time/ part time. 3 New locauons avatJ. Apply in person. Dan a Po 1 n t . Sao ANTIQU-E GUILD 1801 Oement.e. lrvtoe. E Dyer Rd Sa Ana. Immediate opemngs. Must have exp. & over 20 Stock Man: 6-4: 30 Mon.· yrs Old. Thurs . Near 0. C 1-871·2394 ask for Dawn. Airport. 979-1483 Sales Ptr help wanted. feacbeT', .,re-school. part approxJSh.rsweek. ume. mornings. Some 1lleTobacco01st Inc college nee. 556·2676: F~on Island. N B. M2·1l80 1---------~ MACHINISTS Diversified work load mfr electroni c ins tru· meat. Modern workshop. Advanced Kinetics. 12Jl Victoria, CM. 646-7165. E.O.E. TEACHER DESIGNED BY AWARD·WlNNING FACULTY Tuition Refund Program SALES·RETAIL Offic(' PART JIM£ ~ppl.Jes & Printing. Full Pollitioo now 11va1lable, & part time pos itions S EVENINGS available Phone for B . A. Mont essori • appt. SSi-9212 aslt for Mr. ~O?_rtll_i_ca_t_e_. 997 __ -8333 __ _ --------•I Adults with outstanding. Surf and Sand West. TEACHER'S AIDE MACHINIST attractive personahtaes Shopping Village Newport Stationers Inc Mll.L HAND wtio enjoy working with 1465 So. Coast Hwy. l'Ull llme & part tame ex- For proto-type machine kids. Over 21. Start al LAGUNA BEACH ~ ~-d_a_y_c_a_re_._997_.83J3 __ shop m the instrument $3.SO per hour. Phone TRAJMHS TB.EPHO ... E divisioooflbeoil t.oolin· 642·4321 E xt. 250. 497 2 Han.Wholesale~ " dustry. Working from BETWEEN 4:00·5 00 -457 Hardware&Tools SOLICITORS bluepnnts. sketches & PM. ti.. .... HOW HIRING Expenenced Only. Sell verbal designs. directly Ask for ...._;a W'illTtaJD, XJnt BeoeCits Da.lly Pllot. Highest com - wilb engineering. to as· Equal()pportwuty •SZOOTo $500 Wk.• m1 ss1on paid. Yo ur sisl III new product de· Employer c.11957.uso phone at home. Over 21. velopmeot for world•-----'--""--------------f.0 Card. Call SJS..6453. wide well boN! oavlga-PA.STE-UP ARTIST. P rr. R I Est te •• rr:.cr 'PEll 1taHO ... E 1 JP M t100 equipment. Lathe & F.T. Exper 'd. Apply eG G s~,~ " ,__· __ . ____ _ expenenre helpful for Pennysave r . 1660 ~&Sale1111tn Salary&Cornm .. Moving liELE SALES w/exp, more vanety or proJects. Placentia, C.M. We have an openlllg an & Storage Co. m Hunt sharp. guarantee NOW! Salary open. excellent p yroll our ResadcnUal Div. for Bch. Call Bob Gregc.ry Com m 8 3 5 . 9 6 9 2 · benefits package. E .O. E. a an expen eoced man or 534-'19ll ~7296. · • Sc1eotific Drilling Con· PAYROLL woman possessing en· TELEX OPER. lrol. Corporate Head· Utl.niasm and integnty. Sales quarters. Newport Tfllu: charg,e oC hourly Uyouaremterestedin a Exper'donly.Small N.8 Beach. Call (714) SS7·905l administrauon. beautiful office in the WINDOW MFG. ExpQrting firm needs ask for Mr. Moll or Mr ROSAH IMC. ti.nest location. working INSIDE SALIS person 2~ PM. 5 days a Adams. Newport Bch 549.5533 w Ith c 0 n ee 0 i a I a:.. otlDSt DESK wk .. $3.50 per hr. Please EqualOppor Employer social.es, we are interes t· Irv. wmdow mfr. exper'd call 640·6313 . ask for ed U\ meet.mg you. In· woman prefd for respon, ~Pe__.f!_g_y ______ _ '1,~~uii!~PJ~ 1 ~~ le~.:~ PBX Am service, Im med terview by a~intment. tu-press desk. xtra sha~p rrow Truck Ort vers ex- Hwy, Laguna Beach obrspeo~~.le~!"..o.rkPdva~ae:. Wnley M. oykw Co. math apt.. hvy P~ s per'd. Top pay. Apply "'wa....... Rea.It.ors 644-4910 ~mer ser . blll.u:lg/UI· G&W Towing. 740B M • •os med ins & ·pd training. '\'OIClng. 4 dy work wk, co no.~ Wav c M 642-1252 "" (71~)""'"' ""'c.n RECEPTIONIST lite ~.Refs cd'·9890 Vlwo .,. • Experienced. full time., __ .. _....,.. _ _. __ -----• • v ht Bk •· 1~~""""""'~~~~,,...,~~~~ "'---' P T also "~" 3030 BX ,.ypmg. ac r. "' .• ,......,...t. exp .. prem. I . partume.""'· · P Boat dislnbutor on the S t AIM eql'hp. Irvine. Maintenance man for 55 Answering se r vice Ba y. Part time incl. ea ms resses. ex · SG-3&66 urutaptcomplexinC.M. operat.ocfuU&Ptr.Call wlmds. Yachtmg Assoc. penenced, Mon·Thurs.i---------- (213>86S-38Sl ~l O.,,Orallon.646-0SSl 6-4·~. Nr O.C. airport.•-------• m.1483 TYPIST MAINTENANCE MAN· PIX orst. Receptio nist /Sec . Y Newport Real Est a te l::xp. pref. Newporter Oper's for t ele phone needed 1n Newport SEAMSTRESS brokerage office needs Inn Hotel. 1107 Jam· answenngserv1ce. Must Center Excellenltypmg for s mall s hop. ex · t>xpe r M ag Card boree. N.B 644·1700Con· be able lo work some & grammar skills. 2 yrs peneoced. full or Ptr. Operator. for dally ror· tact Dennis. E o.E. weekends . Typing 35 expenence reque~ted. 962·15900r898·199l. respoodcnce & general wpm requi r ed Ex· Start $700. Call Kalhy, 'typtng.Xlnltypiog&dic- Meat sl.JcerforPortaoniog. perience preferred or 644--5000 SEARCHER ta phooe re qd. Com· Approx 6-8 hrs. daily. will train. Many com----------Eltper'donJy need apply. petJhvesalary & beaefils Mon-Thurs Must be P8llY benefits. Full time RECS'TfTYPIST Top pay & beoehts Call package. Co ldwe ll. available llam or 12 or part time. day & even· Challenging full time Joe al Stewart Title, Banker. 752-1111. noon. Xlnt. atartiq pay. lngshl.tt$available. posatioo with growing MB·lll4 Equal Oppty •--------979-0747 ror appt Irvine Airport area call Orange Co. Real &<!late Employer ~u• ... IC S46-3333or833-3333. firm headquartered m · rJ'yp1st-Word proc:essor . ~~ Fashloo Island area call lrvine. Good telephone Secretary part time In F\Jll time, stroog typing Experi~ preferred. 640-1110 typing 60w]>m. clencal Laguna C.P .A. office. skills, good speJUne & Mustbavet.ools. Call for Costa Mes a a rea call skills req. Contact Noo s moker. must ty-pe grammar nee. Work on appt. Bring resume. 673-U66. E.O.E. Man.bam-0888 well & be Inquisitive. Leiut.roo system. Apply E.0.E. by cl10ice. Valley ---------.__......,_.~~.,....,...,....ltl $3.50 pe r hr. Chery l In person to Mr. Fuentes Crest Landscape In<'. • PLUMIRS& ~ KinsmanC.P .A.494--0212 at Robert Bein. William 54& 7975 DltAIM M,,EM. RECEPTlONIST Fr08t. Assoe. l401 Quail Top pay. Medical in· Yucht Bkrneedssharp ·-•n•RY St.NewportBeach ME 0 I C AL ASST. I I peniont.obaodleclients ~ ~ Urology. Genl ofc & sura.nce, pad vacat oos Lighttyping FREE TO TRAVEL. WYP IST-G EN ERAL medicalexpreqd. Others & must have own truck. Irvine Personnel Agency Must be 18 or over. See OFC 8·3PM, Moo.Fri. need not apply. Call W'ill train. call 488E171.h, Costa Mes u Mr Moran. llam-5pm. Newport Beach. 642·S200 $48-2247. Npt Bch. 751-6942 &11te224 642· M70 Si>ace Age Lodge, ms,_ ... ______ _ M-·"'cal Front Office -~ W · K a 1e 11 a Ave · • TYPISTS .:uJ 1--------• Anaheim. Girl Friday. Two omces, PRINTING Restaurant TIG·Ol.O Work local. Tem(IOrary Npt & Hunt. Bch. Filing, l.mmedlate open.Loa& U · Nighl Porter-4 hr. per ·~~~~~~~~~I lmmedJateworlt. mlsc. typing etc. Will Lit for• nidlt 6 dJly week, Union 1: CGI for All train fe>t receptloo desk. PltlSS OPaAToa beneftt¥ Call for appt. SECaETAllY ..,,ol :t• .. TocllrJ &C-0603 d ~Mon/Friext. . 520. 8.30 5 Good lYPIDI sk.Uls. work 557 "061 E•perleo ce press vaned. Electroo.lcs firm. -v M e d I <' ' a I per10CI t.o operate multi· Advanced KlDellcs, 123l ~o~ Off i Ce • ~ /RocepUonlst. lathe, 1250. 1850 presses. Bd.ail tal• VI"""--' c M "'""' 7l6S 1-: ic per 1 e n c e d I n Salary commensurate CUITAIM & E.o.E'.a. · · _,. 0 overload Imuraoce bookkeeping. wttb cxperteoce. AA .._ -y Salary S.S.OO.ts,00 per ht UIUV"lliR Secretary. Sales olc. CRT I F.qual()ppor Employer Q>rnmenaW'ate with exp. •.-V PaSOH Experience preferred fi rm. Heavy phones.---------...... _,.., ....__. __ ore!. but not but we ~I t.raln )'OU for " •nu Nr O C • 1r(IOrl ~ ,,,.,.._ ;.;ticfeal worklo1 • ~t position In ;;J;.o, ~." · ~aatreaa lunch 1~3. Apply Medlwomce helplnSan-wartdQI coocllUona., ex· our Lasuna Hill• Shop· ---------:In person at 8Pltl . La Ana. Fam. Pla.n. AA· eel)ent frtnao bentlita. plnJ Ceftte_r store. Ex· WANTED: gd typist/ re. IC ha r I es D I r k e n s aoc. Med. Orp. 835·4628 ~: cellent worklna condl· ce,> for \gt R E /~vel. j Restaurant. 3344 So. tttodela, Fem. Sharp tlons 4s e mployee CO.Salarycommesurato o.stHwy.CdM. h LfMSt...,n Id bentfits tncludlnll Bonus W/eXP nd resume to:,..,, __ ~ _ ..-fllw'e only. 116 per r c7l4)7S918SS Plan. Apply t o Stort l.Ul Quall St S N.8 . ~-.--.-..w.- 6C2.Q82,64$-Sl228ob. Betweenkm·llam Manaaer. Monica 99),Att.aKatle WANTTOWOl\KIN H I 00 SANCLEMEN"r&? MQOHUGHTIHG7 AVCO 01 away. 770·1 1• sa:BETARY· rw1 time. HaYC 2GoodPoelt.loGs 963·1225 A•~W s.r.lces Moran Drapery Stotts. ad ~In~ ~kills. work Avalla'"•-Our ti.i. year. .. uw havuomcthlnl you want 820 Newport Center Dr van . E /Develpm 't Irvine Ptrt0nnel Al8DC!1 t.o aeu? Clualntd ads do Newport Buch ROOF'ERSShlnalen. tUo omce. 6*8250. • E l'flb, Colla Meaa It well -Cell NOW, Equal()pll()r£mp1oyer IDf'll·sdJ>aY,c:allG.K. t &akeZ:M IG·1C10 6GS18. Roonftl, MS-7887 Want Ada Call SU.5678 --_ --_ -... ... t1 .,. 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lltd • • ~· f l19 IJI ~n Mudtl H aw l'\arn 1'1141Mt --~-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'w lM.lt• Solu llt'd, r hr11. Um. ptctur 11. z1· B1W M11 1(n11vox , m1 11 r ~ ~I H.cbullt twin m11llt't'b & box 11pnq ~. lull ~ ~Ill • IOVt'lll'11I $1 MI li&J Mullr K:!Kt-. l11t Mn< ~A M1~ 1 win bttdroom u-t d1~r ctwal. ·~'nn.ci.. nrnttr1•tt•'li, 111u1•a1h. wlllnu1 Harmuny llou11t• ~um ....................... W;wa IOOS TWIHOIRllL M.u,..... or bc>11 1prlJll(• ~ HC'h pc (II"~ (Inly I ~ 11t·t11 W9 Kina •<'I• ~ San1ph.•11 mun b(• IJ(lld lmm«'dh•ltlt frnrn OUI wart'hOUI(' Ol"•n Modid llumt 1''\Jt111lurt-(.111>tro~Ut'\'n 1u ... urat~d & ( .,11 M<J 31m Wi·d thni nllll<'IWl.i cbt11r H'ry Ill ...... • ··•11 .. I \I tJI· U.."><', look11 new t:2SO ....... 1 lll'V n \<tll ,, •;u ·1~1w AnUq"" Muo;.tr l\nr)• w\llll u~m~ rm. bdrm. 1 ....................... SiOllltlt(·bint''>'U ud,,.. t.ll.lllt •>t'=>, l1rnl1>), t11d ~AC ttlf'I C'~ p e rf~cl lfOOl'!. ELU ·1 h.>!>< thl' tot• l n.Hlll ronlents or ~ br Am.rte• ,., hou..w Let> Modt>I Hom~· We:•tkM **I BUY•* 1-'um S49:J077. Wed Sun ....,. :-;t'w ttopt>r "' 11 rt r lnt.lcredJl avail As.It for " ......... Woa on T\ Beat Good UM.'(! i''\Jr ruturt' & l''WTah <>Dee Wed lbni ~•l • -... ~ t.Ao3K~t'ni\Jl Ir~ rr unnablf" nrri:r Appbane('a OR I "'-Ill r-Sde--8055 <714> 754 am ~J ~ Ol'SJ::U. f~ You :;.:r. ............... . --------W~lfo:IL'-; tlr:h" u..,,ed MASTMS AUCTIOH ~Sale SeWUlg m.al'htne ~llque ouk r"""'~t' ~ lloranrt•. & Rep a 1r 64'-16a6 & lll-9625 relng. stereo. rurrulure. ct.sir. 19~ ~:! 2 1~ ur St'f'\1l ... br .. t ;\µuhancel•--------• mBny misc items GOOD ~ .).t)~ CA.\ll PAID PnC"eS _Ca_ll ~1_64_7_2 __ For :..;le t910 0 Jlt Sid~· lk-,dH 8020 t'or &d u!>ed furn. 11nll &ard $750 ti75 7671 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ques&clr1V s9.s7 8133 da""' M'tiCI \l Bil \"t"U. _,,..::.__ SAn .. "TY Cllf"l I\ $I~ 95 t.1qwdi.llng lfoullehuld F.nttre rooms mw.t go FRENCH ANTIQtl F ... ~ U>ron11 del Mar Hike:. Qwll piec.'ei. & anttqu~s ~ shipmt•nt JUSl ¥r· J32:3 1-. C0<t~l Hwy at 1ncred1 ble tr' ces n~ to be w ld ut aut· 1>'75 76ti6 tion Sundu)' Feb llllh JI 19531 Sierra 'anon . t2 noon Preview Sut l:Sr<1nd nt-w Suf>l'r Le Trtlrk,9•b.Sat.fo'ebl7. Garage S:.tle Many uo1· que Items 3596 Windspun Ln. Huot Harbor. near Tnn1dad bland Fr1·Sun 9AM· 6PM 846-4461 IOIO ••••••••••••••••••••••• WCIGAGI TAGS from yow bw11n•111 card Send one card for ut'h WI! plu., Oflt' 1pare We rdurn permanently wa.k<d •llractlve taa ai lltnp, m~t1n1 airline I O rtqwrements Pr.-~t ~ & thdt' for 11 pt>tMnalJ14·d toil( enclose wallpaper. fabrir or "O-y Glo" paper & we will bock & tl'lm your u..ca Or try two cards ho<'k lObnrk PRJCES: $21.'•M3/S5 &/5 tags Sl 600 ti/9 u.ga SUO ea lOor more S1 40 ea Sales Tax lnduded NO CARD? Draw your own or send nomc. _.<Jdress, phone & we'U make orw card per ~ Add 25' .iach . &·nd c~k or money or dcrto fttlOT PRINTING P 0 Box 1560 Ccsta Mesa. Ca 92626 Irvine Coast Country Club "Golr Membership" avllll! S100 + $500 transl fee-call Tom Turner. 7S4-~for det.a1ls O'Neill Superswt. Taped :.eams Used onl'c doesn 'lfll S110 ~.0256 Carpet Mill Direct Pl~h nylon rolls $4.50 yd 549-8181 /675-S906 wt.aluale Carpet Salesman has 3200 yrds of 32 oz nylon plus h, brown. beige. o r r ust. $4 tM> yrd. Call 675·9144 or •r· •• . . ' 1011 lhl.lr!c!8y, .. ebruaiy 15, 197i DAILY PILOT •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• w .. tlfl Wanted flhont• unawer· ....._ Mar* T........_ UffUty 9110 riatc I hi h .. ,_... tOJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• .... ••••••••••••••• 0 ¥ mac 0 • ~:t 8 re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uutlty Trailer WI WU. IUY ':t:IRte Dav~. a pm· Your boat tuned for ltaa sx.s. Cl~ YOUI OATIUH Inboard/ o utboard & l4IMI045 PAlDPOROltNOT EXER-CYCLE WANTED VITHBS oa.cYCll fORKHEE WOlllCOUTS Please call and ask for Otck. 644-1126 ~1737 642 7604 Before I AM al.her ~hanlcaJ worki. ...-5en1ce P..+t TOP OOLLM 646-327'7 En. 20 Ir Acce11ori.. 9400 k>ll TOP CAllS Sul.zuld 2:5 bp motor. new ••• .. ••••••••• ••••••••• In '77, less than 30hrs. Wata CC> trade pall' of 1.5" ISXl Pb &L.S-7276. Wide <und lire> wheell BAR W ICK OJ\ T\l..lt-4 1n1 1u•,4'h ,_ . ., 110 Ch.rys manne rblt engine. After 6. S4S.S734 Make offer. ror to .. or ll" wide. s bo1e v.w whttlS.&42-3379 nPAY roP DOu..AR Rear Bench seats form lortopueedcan-foreilJI.. V W. Van. $35 Ca I I doamtics or cluak:a. If 9040 i;u.3379 your car ls extra clean. ----------1 lf!e\11 P'lRST! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19662:5' Twin engine Cbns 4 Sport rims with chrom • C raft speed b o at 1n.serts for Vea• $3~ <classic). Xlnl 673-7771. _49& __ t>iB7 ______ _ 12' fiberglass boat <over wood> with 16"1 H P motor. Lrlr & accsor'!:I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~: ~ $250. 842·076S #• .. 0r-.c:..- 2lllZ511arbor 8lvd. 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 006TA MESA ... .,,....... 8013 . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Classic Mere Sabre l6 Xtra lrg Cameo Concert bay crws~r Incl. trlr drums Double deep. Sl<XX>. Eves 548·296S l65tO /off er 646-37 44. ---Offke~lr fiql8pMt.t 8015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt new & used ore furn. plan files. wk benches CE SUR PLUS 631 2777 BeauUluJ hke·nt'W office funulure Imported teak execuuve desk:. Metal i.ecretary desks Mt.>tal armchaU'S, beaut pamt mgs, grapluci. Electric portable typewriter. mtsc 1lem.s 979·4666 MahoRany cxec ut1v~ desk, Sl}S. 2 dra er le):al rile cab. S65 9 1 Thr~ 60" wal. d one 28' BaJa boat (Shawn E l F\illy eqwpped for sword h s h & :.port rtshing Diesel. VHI<'. RDF. meter. tower. plank. fish box & more. 631·2227 / 6315043 ------- '76 PORSCH E Turbo 979·2500 Body w /'76 911.S eng, ·77 •--WE--B-U_Y __ mtcnoc. 7 •8. Reg ai. '72 ORT Sl.6.500. CLIAM CARS Kellisoo/Astra J 6 w /'6G & 1RUCIS Vett.e 365 H P eng Very r ast & uruque $4900 ( 22) ALSO J4 coupe. set up ror Chev eng. $1200 Trades OK 963-8377, 963-7653. CONNHL CHEVIOLET ....... ,. H.1r '•. ·4. ' I I:'> I \ \~ ~ '- 546-1 200 JAG '61. Beaut ong, :.porl i---------- ~000. rbll eog, 1.nvest $'SS(JO. 714/552·6379 '46 FORD WOOD! t: f\alty relllOred I SJ 3,000 675-6161 '64 Datsun l-'a1rlad)' Con· verllble Rbll eng. S1300 541J.3795 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAPPY Used Car Mgr 540·5630 1011\SO\ ,\ ~0\ • ltNCOlN M [fhLtH\ Feb 17l.h, 12 7PM Thur scurlctt red Xlnt Spnnger & While ·\Ul' t·nnd $l!Kl1He..,t offer. t.ionoors. 3000 ltcd tllll, t:l7~21ill Ask for Janice 77Q.8284 Goldenwest Park Home Owners Assoc. Sal Feb 24l.h. 9am 4pm. Choose Churn cabinet cost ~. b:.irguins fro m large sell t<heap, 2 sngl beds. 1 s elect ion of horn e 1~~~~~~~~~~1 twin. lad1e~ bike. <1 rurrushings. housewares. 1· 10 :;peed L.i lli~s lllue drawer dresser. 5 gnl c lothing, toys. baby 48" wal. di.k, 4 !Vt-I arm <.'hairs w /pa . 4 armed side d1a1rs $1250 value for $675. Call Holly ~2275 1977 Ww.ner, 19' clr con sole Powe red by ·77 Johnson 17Shp 0 /8 Oes~ than 60 hrs I With a 'i8 Johnson 25hp k1ck11r lncludl•S full cover. VHt' rdd10. compas~. dep th finder . tJchometer. bit-In bail tank. dual ball. system. outnggers. stam1ess rod holderi.. b1m1m top. 240 t·a n~ O t B moto r 011 +many other xtras. Also '78 Vanson Tandem trlr w1brakc.'S & guide rails $7500 Wkdys aft 6PM. wlmds all day 548·5062. John. 061 Jai; XK t50 2626 HARBOR BLVD. ___ 964_SJ~·~ ___ 1 __ C_O_S_T_A_M_E_S_A_ CM F or info ra i l 7141979-4123 SALE Walnut dbl bed. ()ale.youth chair. elecln r Coke clock, cotle<.'lllbles etc, etc. Fr1.-Sat 9·3, 31901 National Park Dr . Lq Niguel (Off Crown Valley> ••• GeMLRadet- 86Zl Martlnque HunUngtoo Be11ch You are the wmner of Two FrH Tickets to Tennessee Wilha ms' THE ECCEHTRICITIES OFA NIGHTINGALE stamng Sandy Dt-nn1s ut lhe Loog Beach Conven lion Center. JOu E Ocean Blvd, Long &· ... r h To cJaam your ticket,:,, rall 642-5678. ext 272 . * •• Restored Amencun Oak Slack bookcases, <'hrnu cabinets. secretary. ice box, mabogan} dental cabinet & much mis t'. small s . M C /V1i.J . Freelabds 864 w. 19th St. CM. 642·7331 Mtq. Wkk.r s• Ml pteCeS Cll"C8 1890· 1930. Chairs. tables, couch. etc Sat. only 10 4 . Windsor's. 130 E 17lh 11G. CM. &LS 8448 Ghane birydt'. ::.l•lrlom but<ine tank. patio tbl items etc Be earl)' for u:.ed StiO ti 10 t:294 1 '.\ iumbrella. 34202 Del best selection. Glenview 979 ~-------Obispo, 1127. Dana Pt. Park. corner or Glenn Cclmlras & CdM, Pool table. S250. Dr &Sweetbnar S.W. of f:ffiiP"lent 8030 glass top table. 4 chrs, Goldenwest & McFad· ••••••••••••••••••••••• $200, curved sectional, _de_n_.H_._B _____ _ Penlax ME automatic SZ.SO. 2 lamps, $10 ea .• 2 ~ 1070 <.'amerd with 2 h:nses. corree tables. $75 ea • ••••••••••••••••••••••• tnpod plus xtras. $475 gate legged table, SlS, Emerald t .52 crts, pear MG-Jn8 arm rhaJr. S15. lge pot. shape, cert USGS. appr "'--8040 $25, 2 chairs, $25 ca . $8238. s ac $4400/bst o!r. .._,.. 975-074 J RJck, 675-7460 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AK C ~og Sprtn Rer 9'gold velour couch. S17S 1---------• Sparuels. lJver & while. l.cruth console color TV SO't Of'F Enure Stock $12S-$1.50 5594489. $150 63l 2476 ___ Fine quality Jewelry Germ Shorthair; AKC reg1stl'rt'd 848 3939 ---!,prmgt'r Span1el11 mix. Fcmule. 10 wki> Arre"· llonal<' & adorable $25 Pleast.' responslble lov· m~ adults onl} 833 3206 2deskli 12() & $150. Ort'S~t.'r at fanlaSUC SaVIOjtS $7~ Framt' & box spring MACY JEWELRY. $SO. <'OUC h S2S Ba by ·~~Ll~do~V~1l~la~g~e~~ furn 536-3520 Sofa. 2 mat('hmg rhairi. En f! age me o l 0 ff . $175 Engagement rin g for Call494 241 7 ~e ~11559-7085. SOLID OAK bdrm ste Uvestoc:lt 8075 ------spool hdbrd1ftbrd qn si. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Am P1tbull pups. 5 wks & I •ay GO TS Champ purplt> ribbon. mans chst womens Inf! ,. A Hre<'d par('nls. Sire llO dresser. 2 .nghl <.'hsts, 6 Nannies & Billies mo old. solid oak bkcse 1-637~ lbs. Huge pups. 559·l336 w1enc bar 60x72, FF AskforKns M . 6PM. Fr1g1da1re side by side . M. blk AfJ?han, 11 mos. w /ice mkr. Weber BBQ Wmdrnill & Tower . 614 S. $7S. gnll. Sml.h-Corooa port Cleveland, Oceanside. 963-6596 t.ypwrtr misc. items & M·F 8to5. 714·722-5010 · m any qual plant:.. Mite._.ous 8080 Spnnger Spaniel pups. 64()..1925. • •••••••••••••••••••••• A S .LD DECORATOR MOVING-MUST SELL: SALE Custom rum1ture. OC<"BS t<hr SZS. gd cond. lnsh Seller. Fem .. AKC anuques & acces:.on es Med1t hang 'g la mp reg. champ ltoes, 6 mos. Fri.-Sat. 9-3. 31901 Na· tamber w /blk wrghl AKC. born Chris tmas morn $200 534-4491 ~ 642·7778 llooal Park Dr • Lag 1 ron l $1 O. assorted f'neto YOM 8045 Niguel (Off C r o wn drapes (misc colorsl •••••••••. •• •• ••• •••• •• _v_aJ_le_y_> ------SJ $10. 4 Dodge van n ms 4flpliWH 80 '0 M Cat. long hHlr f'em . Lg bureau. corrcc st.and, ••••••••••••••••••••••• shortha1r s payed cat. end table, lam~. Like FREIGHT DAM AG i-; D Good w/kicb 64&-8669 new $100tall. 846-3166 15". $1.2 for 4. misc bilte parts & frames. rcasona· ble. Metal rold'~ tbl. $2. card tbll. S3 SS Pis call betwn 8am·L2Pm on Sun or all Spm wkdy~. 645-7857 C.M H<Yl'POCNT SALE ~ 5 yr old S1lk1e Terner. Antique table & chairs W Warner nr lfarbor. C:all Maddyn. 973·1a9S ~. Hand Clll'~ed i.ofa Sant.a Ana. 979·2921 work, 631-0493 eves. $650. 646-1811 The Long Bea£hTheatre Festival Of'lHS tlB 14111 th1u MARCH I Ith Academy Award Winner• Tony Award W'nner SANDY DENNIS Perry King Nan Martin Harry Townes with Jocelyn Brando Directed tiy: Michael Flanagan 0 • j; ,.TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' ' • -Wlbe Eccentricities I Digbtingall! al p{RFORMANCES: Tues. thru sat. eves at 8:30 p.m. MaUnees on Wed., sat. & Sun. at 2:30 p.m . Tickets available at~ong Beach Box Office, 300 E. Ocean Btvd., Lon~ Beach, Ca. 90802. Call (213) 436-3661 for Info. Tickets also avatlable at Ticketron and Mutual Agencies and "Ask Mr. Foster" travel agencies at all Robinsons Department Stores. LONGDUCHCONWNTIONO· 6anaTAINM€NTCGna 300 t Ocun Blvd .. Lone Buch, CA 90802 - t'or Sale. Tiffany's or N .8 . Corporate Mmbrshp. ~II Debby 8 , 644·9030 WINDOW SHADES Wooden s hutters, miniblinds. woven woods & Wllldow l.Ulllllg. 20·40';. elf all items. ASPEN 645-8951 Burglar Alarms: Ideal for apts. small boats. & homes. Complete pnl'e $149 9S plus tax No 111 :.tallatton. Vac uum Cleaner Center 1572 Newpo rt 81 C. M 646-3107 DIAMOND & GOLD Trade for trust deeds Dane wkdys 752·1920 Eves & wk:nds ~ 7 .3534 JOHN WAYNE TENNIS CLUB. Regular Mem· bership. 542.2932 MoVlng boxes & expert packing assis. Comphcs state movng. standards 552·3"1 cYMBIDIUM ORCHID PLANTS. Pnv. grower. will sell a few selected flowenng div1s1ons from 5" 14" pots. $20-Sl20 pr plant By appl.. only, ph 64().0758 Deluxe ~ hp. Whirlpool bath with all attach meots. Paid $209. Used once. Sell for $150 645-2!175 New Custom Drapes & Match 'g floral Bedspread. Make ofr IBM model C standard 1.5' Slo Boat, totally com· elect. typewriter $200 plete Llke newS895 Also 6.'ll·22l.9 all 5 Cabtn Crwser 19' hull. $495 645-2.898 Execut1 ve de s k .---------- Mahogany, xlnt cond $75 19' Las Vegas 200 HP Chrysler Volvo 0 /D 1/0 w/lraaler $3600644 4545 '51 Chevy Pickup ...., Ton. All new parli.. new brake,,, clul<.'h A ll onginat Very clean , good ll~ $2000 /best ofr 535-WTB ~Roce, Rods 9540 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sand Ra.ii ror sale Large 4 waiting rm t<ha1rs. 2 12' Sluff with J ohnson 6 1200 Xlnt cood $1200 rf'ede.IWIS. 2end Wbles. 2 hp motor. trailer & 545-6261 rrusc chairs 842 0603 acres G<X>d cond $400 - ------- PiCMos & OnJoM 8090 caJl5.S1 96S8 ~.~~.~~ ••• !~.~~ •••••••••••••• ••••• • •• • SkJpJack. 20'. Oj)t"n. t975. Small upright p1dno lo hr... extras S89001orr_ Needs ref1n1s h1ng or 494-6b'71/837·4474. palllt. S375 Ca II 675 3284 eves. Mov ing ! Mu st S ell Lowery Organ, excellent coodillon. S49·1091 Costa Mei;a. '78 17' BaylJDer Mutiny. 120 hrs on 130 Volvo ente w!S>ouldr. under warr we Trall·nl trlr . lght 'd Ul.Slr panel. Xlnl for ski. bristol cond Must sell Skiillg 109 3 _S5_l95_._64S_·l27_l _. --- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEIUY USB>CAISf We're lhe new Chevrolet dealership in the Irvine Auto Center. We need your Wied car ! JOI MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Auto Center Dri'~ IRVINE 768-7222 WANTED! Lale model Toyotas. Volvos. Pickups • Van:;. CaJI us Wday' I tH HeriMlr 11•4 c""Mffe "Ul·tlOJ °" UO.t4'7 .... l"'PO"ffd ••••••••••••••••••••••• G1Meal 9701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chart.er Luxur)' 60' or 75' motor yachL R.:asona· ble. Hr. daily, weekly. 675-2172 or 675-3256. loah. Sail 90 60 Lancia Bela cpe, 31,000 74 Blaz.er, Loaded. CB. ml. air. leather . mint AM/FM 8 trk. AC. OH coad. Blue. $5200. St.eve, S ff Goods 8094 ....................... road :susp. Gas ~hocks. ~7172; evs 540-4420 .!.~~~ ............... Cape Class Kelch. 33'6". Tire:. & wb1te :.pokes Atf9ao..o 9705 F.ngbsb bwh, all wood. SSIQO. Bill 645-;Jl67. ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXER CYCLE ~~o~~s.te '74 Dodge. Club Cab 100 '74 ALFA ROMEO • 4x4 4 spd P 1S. P 1B. dlr, C1V. S speed. stereo, air Montgomery Sloop 3 ba!ls 499-5107 alt 6 cond & low miles. Ex· WANTED 6hp OB. Trlr pulpits. Trw:lts 9560 c( .. eJ.,NXlenVl) condit ion Mu:.l see to appreciate .....,. '6100. 631-4396 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SH!!! VET NEEDS '64DodgeP1l'kupw1shell. HOw••ocL---1-t Catalina27' Mamsail. 'tint b--'y & runn1n•• --"~ xlnl (.'OOdlllOn l' 0 n d\11J $ I . 7 0 0., Dove & QuaJI Sll.. C 640-9586 646-JSl I /549 2400 Chns NEWPORT BEACH * * * EX ER-Y Cl E ·15 16' Hobie RC'ad> to Will tradt-<.'u~tom 750, ___ l_l _l-O_S_S_S U.EYentt race 645·7353 l::vt>s Hooda$1250. rortru<.'kor ·74 GTV cpe. red/blk 64()..4038 702Avocado FOR ~Z703days van of equal 'alue Perfect c:ond. Make ofr. Corona Del Mar '74 HOBIE 14 GQOd cond SJ&.2148 ___:. ~-l~~~e:75·4ti0tl dayi. Youarelhewinnerof KNEE New rigg injl . CU!'lom ·77 ~.T .AM tFM,hd sus· .... -9707 Two Frtt Tidleh sml~ WUh Jib New tram pension. 18.000 m1, J> /S, - to ll0hn 9829 e $600. 645·1l38 or P /B $4500 /h s t ofr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tennessee Williams' WORKOUTS 645-9 SACRJFICE' 642·2995 1973 100 LS, 2 dr, 33,000 THE loots. sr I ml. clean. see to apprec. ECCEHTRICITIES Please call and ask Docks •ps 9070 '77 Toyota. 27,000 m1. AM /FM ste reo. 4 spd. OF A for C>1ck. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• shell. 5 spd Stcrl'O. CB. A/C. $1995. Ph: 548-8380. HIGHTIHGALE ~ g~ SUPS AVAILAiLE Som>. PP963-l730· il 100 LS 2 dr. all', snrf, Stamog Sandy Dennis at 642 7604 YAC Newport 646-0551 ·511 Chevy pickup. 1: ton. A M I F M s t e r e o . the Long Beach Conven Before 1 AM $100>/bst ofr Mkhelins. 25mpg $1999. Lico Cent.er. 300 E. Ocean ---------•I 1976 7-pass bus. lo m1. 893 5878 ~-4515. Blvd. Long Beach. To !lOOd <'Ond1t1nn. must ---------1---------- clatm your llckels. call TV, Rodio, sell M.500 675-3148 cvt•s. 511 Chevy tn.K'k m1ssan.: $120.26 DOWN ~5678. e'tt 272 ttfi, Stereo 8098 engine. sell as paru S250 646-~ * .,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trmup!M'iotion $120 26 PER MO BeauLuuJ 25" rolor TV. ::? ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ford Truck ~. 76 360 4 • • 2 Sngl bowl pullmans w )'T' wmly, free delivery ~.We/ ::.p run!\ good $3800 '76 AUDI I OOLS fixtures 6' & 7' In~. I $128 &it> 1786 Rent 9120 642-8766 4-DOOR glass L·shp'd s hwr --••••••••••••••••••••••• V-------9570 4 cyl. Automatic, air enclosure. 40'it33" 52 pc Sony 17'' Tnn1tron color Older cam""r 4.:,ule, w 10 -... cond AM /L'u t bamboo pattern r hina TV Xlol cond $350 ,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .. •~ s ereo 2 . ood d truck $150 S tovt' & <Cal. cos t $4200 set. ures. g trea . 631·1453 f 640 Z700 R I -29 9 T [)..70-14. 5574515. re ng · ----'SB Focd Van conversion esi ua -2· 2· all. ---------Coloc 1V. RCA.'CL IOO 19" Motoriz.ed likes 9140 Has pwr s teering & per mo. 16·44· 36 mo . al Invalid eqwpmenl. New 6 mos old, $28~ incl ••••••••••••••••••••••• brakes. air cond • radial S113.82. Total required lo elect. bed, electnc hfl stand 559-5014 11lE MO· PEDDLER ures. l'ruise control, dnve away $120.26 on ap· recli n er c ha i r , ---New PEUGEOT MO AMt FM 8 trac k & prov ed c r ed it.) wheek:hr .• crutch, cane. Combo record player & 8 custom mtcrior wtuch in· <GPXQ> walker. etc. Reasonable track, spkrs meld $150. Pt:DS Re~ $469, Now eludes icebox. table . MACH LEASING 847-6463 Good cood. Great for $299.631·3830 ..n19w te 1 Su' 203 teenager. Call btwn ~/ carpets, sw1Vel chairs ..,., es r y, 1te FIREWOOD Free dlvry. zs lbs, fl.00. 548-1932. aft 6PM. This ---uxe NEW' Pn. pty. A Newport Beach 8AM·noon, 833·042.3 91 SO sacrifice al $8995. Call 13)..9150 4140 Mara ntz Quadr1ld1al ••••.,•••••••••••••• ••• • <714 l 537 ·5659 or ( 714 I ._. 4, stereo 2. amp. 140 Must Sac ·79 Yamaha 750 _637_·_:&4 __ . ______ _ 2 h 1 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9709 walls. c anne • I Spec .. 1800 mt Sells ror ·n Ford E2SO LWB Win· 1 AusUn American. good Lawnmower.front throw. ~~~~~ c~neJ75~~:: ~ill sell for $2900 dow van w/beaut prac g.assavefssooorbeslof melalcatcher, prof. sioo. E.'ves Greg. t1cal ronvcrsion Full rer.6'5-4~all6. i\d Alwayg Good. heavy duty edger. tnm· ----'------'74Suzuk1 UIS. pwr, 460 V 8. all trim OP· i----~---9-7-1-2 mer.~ 640-5563 loah & MariM lo m1 $3SO l 1 on s, J11 any x tr 11 fiql8pMtnt 675-7444 features. uses reg ~a:o Chest ~. Humutor $20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Topeond 644-1848 Leather Uned gloves S3. GeMral 90 I 0 74 CZ 250. Men's shoes $5. 640-1275 •••••••••••••••• •• • •• •. $600 Must Sell. 673-5027 '73 DodRe PS, PB. AMtFM tape. CB. Air shocks. lrlr hllcb. $3750 559-1573. Uolversity Alhletic club membership, $350. Call 83J.8384. ask for Bill aft 6Pm. «>-0287. N.8 .T.C. family m e m · bersbip. Tennis/Swim. ~. 644-1757 or 644-0350 60 gal. Mela frame aquarium. H-20. L·60, w.12. No top, bght or leaks. 4 ft. high wood stand. 642·9542 *** v .............. 1087TuJare Dr. Cost.a Mesa '78 Hooda OLlOOO. Ukenew. 496-0167. ·79 Yamaha 650 Spec .. 1400 ml. still under warr. +extras. flOOO. 556-7560 or847-6778 ............ s.1 ltewtjStofogt 9160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 Ford ElOO. brand new motor, custom int & painl. new brakes & tires. Ca II Bil 1640-5984 '61 Corvalr window van x1nt oood. mechanically gd. body. lJres. $725 Firm or trade poss. 631 ·9500 Rl!:NT. 23' F\reball. Self '74 Chevy Van, AM /f'M ·~:.....o 8·track, maay xtru . SADDLE BACK 0 ~ ./ WT CHAHCI FOil 1971 SJOl's SAVI! IUYOILIASI MOW! 7''• MOW AlltmMG! LEROY NEIMAN SERAGRAPH, limited edition sign.!~J..A "The Hand Off". ~I will accept bst ofr. 964·1741 - 4M-2363Cbris You are tbe winner of Two frff Tkbts LO Tenneasee WUliams' THI !CCINTRICITllS OFA con ..... ..,..Ms-2283 S.·2638. ·----------------WANTED: P.P.1s looklog for an older motor home In good cond. w /Air cond. & generator .547·3182 '76 Ford cam per van. i.o.ded, Xlnt rood. Mu sl Sell. '7700. Call btwn 8-5, 540·3383. Aft 6P M , 64(). 1822 . Alto llmlt.ed number or 19'111 m •a la still avalla· < hie. C~ll UI todall lll-2040 495-4949 Antique Oak 2 door Ice box, $275. Oak Hoosie r type kitchen cabinet. ~. And a 3 tub stain· leaa steel rettaW'ant type Slftk, SlOO. C.11 af\er S:OO. 964-1761. Have aomethlni you want to HU? Claulfi~ ada do It well. MZ•56'78. MIGHT'IHGALI ltani.ngSa.ndy Denoia at RENT· LuxuJ')' '78 Motor '75 Dodge Van. Good the Lona Beat'h Conven. Home 22' Sleeps 6. cond. carpet, paneled, & Uon Cenl.er. 300 E. 0c .. n WI n t /S um rates bed. llMIOON2·5621 Blvd. Long Beach. To ~. claam )'OUt ticket.I. call ..___ ----T--.. --,-1-7-0 6'Z-5871,ext212. ·~ ,... • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •77 J ayco tentt.rlr. F\nd wltat you want In Sleesaa. Xlntcond. Dally Pilot Classlrleds. m.2029. Uise somelhlnJ valuable? Ptac~ an ad tn our Lost and l"ouod columns. That'• where people look when t.he1'v fouod an It.em ol value. OllAMCtl COUMJY•s OLDIST I I -- ......... ,,..... Alltol.UMCI ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l .. etted .... l•r•rW Pa 'h t 7IO V........ t 770 C 9 I ttll CINn•t tt20 ......................................................................................................................................... ~ '712 ..., t1JI IUY OI LIASI W VWW'ledow Van. Good ._ Impala Oood Coad . ....................... .... IJ ... ~iiii·.··· ,;-:,=:.:!:., ..... ~ .. ~ ~ abtbe~. CREVIER '" ··~· , .... , ........ 835·3'71 ••• .,.........., &llill Avt> fo'owrtaln Vala.y You are llw ••nner of '" Pree Tlcbts to ~Wtll11m1' THI ICC9"'1temts OFA ......,..NGA.LI Slamna Salldy Ot-nnts at w Loll& Beach Convcn boD ~nt.er. 300 E Ocean Blvd, t..oog Beach To chum your tickets, call 6'2 5678. ext 272. ••• UJ SllOO t.SZOOO ~ i.. "'l'1 dulmPllJoe edt ~ ••• f antatUcCto.eoul ......, ,....~ 'I Matt OOHV'tMUO.' m~.:~·:00,,";~ • ............ on 1171 Models ~·a ti •1. c • t t _., _,. = c: 1525 Placeetia 1171 .. odela -·-..... Be b nowarnvln(I Jl26. .. •. ~ i..orport a~ 11&\JSt SF.U. • YouanthewinDerot l>ICK MIU. R "73 tl• l 7 m111, appear * .. •cu•SI Tw,,...1'1dlett MOTOHS arp Blacli. Aaf /l"M r-Vll nA to lJO W Wamt'r,S A ~. OI UASI TeMmeeW1Wam1' __ »12!a.-~ m 0660 WHY WAIT YOUIMIW 1ee.:::Cmas 1'1tl f'at llU 4 dr IM'dan, 'TT lil'M, aJvr, k> mUeq!i 1979 OP A NMtio. ~ M:i lt!d I.ban A/C, AMJ l'M . MUST fQR PRICE gf, ~003ftce:'s:m~ :~ftua84d~~~fsFs~~a C~OWIC ~i!!°!sat ~ 5 1 la 7 i " "11 11 • • eves INCR£AS(7 " the LoN Beach Cooven· • UoaOeoler. 300 E. Ocean • ~ IJU.8 Taraa. 25K ml. • Blvd. Lone Beach. To 'II ta Xlnt cood. runs •ell J>.<XX> mUet. on a o•nt'r Stt111U t4 l~ ---...... 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... ·79 HONDA Cars MAMY To Cllioote frOM! UNIVERSITY OWl•ble ...... C... • GMC TN:b 218:1() Harbor Blvd. °'6U Mesa S40-9640 mlnt cood. Sll.900/besl IUY NOW! claim 10W Uckel.s, call clft.-r ~ l3!M -·--· MZ-5871,ext2'12. ca.." ..... -.: ••• . .._,' ' 77 0 n--n1er mo1 exempt yr, nu n-~ m a111 uru, am/fm AM /FM stereo . lertlO. webers. 5 1pd. Gree:otwhite. (286'J'Dl) MSl see fl drive to ap- prec 96500/bet 511·9l53 '13 914 2.0 Xlnt. cond. 76 7-Passenger 14.900/best offer. Dy AM /FM s tereo . fM&.77tl Eve/SUD ~ 64'2 Greeo/Wbite. (304PEJ) 9755 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THT DllVl oua ·ucAR OF~YEAA•• Cood lnveotory ln atotk. lfun'y while they lul! 16 7-hssenger Prial Camper Front tire mount. AMfFM stereo. Sunroof. <.lfaole/wbite. (128PUV) 2600 HM>Ot Bl'.ld. 'TT Nova. PS. PB, Alr. Must Seu. $3:5.50/blt otr. ......... C01d Meik\. S40-9 IOO 1L.....1 tt40 .!!~~~~~!!!!!!~ :::: .............. ..,, .. '78 El Dorado: retired ~· • PHIL G.M. Ellttutlve. Owner LONG driven only. Prime cond. FORD SU • .00483-1893 'TT Seville. Lt Bhae I Blue int. 18,000 ml. AH lltras. sio.soo. PP. 7SM344/ ~. 'i1 Seville. Loaded. Take ovet" leaae. 1298 mo. Aalt ror Lee. TICH708. ...... ,-.... ~-.."-" • .............. c.... ...... 6 c30 I d '71 Civic. AM /FM ca11s. 7 ., 1 mmac coo . 2l000nu $3500 MllAC&.E MilDA/RIMAULT 2150 Harbor BJvd. COSTA MESA 645-5700 16 7-hssenger AM/PM stereo CQsette. Redtwhlte. (S62NXN) 1979 Eldorado two tone blue & s ilver, fully loaded $1.9,800 8'0-1796 71FOADWAGOH xtras. /$89SO call 642·9900 ' ~n.t.7122· or s:D-361S ""'" · 77 ........ • dr ir f '74 Civic Hatchback a uto ,74 Rl2 Wgn. Good Co ,.. .....,., .. . a , sunroo • lo/ml., Sl,950. p p oa stereo cass. ma u.. l7m. 7141770.9295 Vel)'Clean. like new. Buy /assume Call 962·5957 super low lease pay. P vt ..,,,,,, 9730 party. Days, 831-3570. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19711BtAULT Eves581·708S. •XJ6Repairs &Service • Gn DB.UXf JoeHenoessey /Jaguar $100 DOW.._. '76 s:l>l. Stereo. air. new UllOPlac ,C.M. 631·2742 " tires. Spotless $10,000. plus tax & license Call 494-2536 aft 6 ,,..._ 9 732 SlOUl per month for 48 ••••••••••••••••••••••• months on approve d l••-----mi•(;4 Jensen Healey. White cre dit. APR·l 2.98%. IOIMcLAREM's w/blk top. Conv. Xlnl De fe rred p a yme nt $ Cood. 14,000 m1. $7500 price-$M27.00. (30258951. • 673-2006. Cash price LS Mada 9738 $3972 ••••••••••••••••••••••• plus tax & license Mirode 850N. Beach Blvd. Mcnda/R~ A1!J!~~~~. Creme /w h ite with special st.ripes. (52145) '737·Passenger AM /FM stereo . Orange/while with sp~dal stripes. Air con· ditioning. <297WCM) CHICK IYfASON VW·Porscbe-Audi 4'.5 E. Coast Hi way at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673--0900 * '73 Cpe de VIie. fully equipped, bl ml. ruos great. $1650. 493·5792. fm.fml Must sell '7S El Dorado fully equipped. Landau top. 770-9612 '79 Eldorado: Beautifully all black & fully loaded. with only 3500 m1. Only $1500 cash take over lease. No payment due till Marc h 14th . 714-848-1.866 Ask for Tony from t<Mldaily. '73CdV. Loaded. Black in· duding leather Stereo. tilt wh.l, vinyl roof, etc. 8-2·1<116 La Habra 2150 Harbor Blvd., C.M. '10 Bus: rebuilt engine. <At Beach"Whittier ) 645-5700 Good condition. $1125 '75 SDV Blue w /White C714t 52Z.533l Call963-3466 hard top. 37 ,000 m1. miracle mazda ClmedSundays 2150 tt.IMM ll•cl. Roh Royce 9756 --------$5000. Ex Cood. Aft SPM ..,._ ... s.m .. V8. aut omatic, pwr. steerinft.'actory air cond.. m /FM stereo, luggage rack 4r ONLY 8.000 miles! C107VOZ >. $5771 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 HA1180R Bl VO COSTA Mf~A 641 C•OlO '65 Ford. driven daily, needs mUlOr work. '300. 631-3476 '72GranTorioo. vinyl top. 2-dr. A/C, good malnl. record. S750. 552.4738 '7• Gal. 2 dr. hard top. $700 below Bluebook 644-S.598 l!!~~~~~~~~\~Cost.~~~W.~-sa~~6~4~5::·5~7~00~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '86 VAN. 2000 mi onb~ll 644-1080. 9715 73 Mazda truck, needs #}DEALER IN U.S.A. ~~n~T· ~~e w~r~ -'76-Sdn--de-VU-e,_s_p_U_t se-a-t. ~G~ J~ Sport $900 engine work. Make offer . IR ROY needed. $650 / bst ofr. cruise . s tereo, 1tlnt. 548-0978 '73 capri·V6: New custom 631-3768 D CARVER 962-2.596. .-,00/offer. 552--0528 Late ·77 Granada Spl Cpe, EJ~r!~J.~Pb'1a,i ~~.~~W.!ac r ~ ~!L}.s~~!~[ ~!:! ............ !??.~ Su~:~7 ~~~!~~:lly ~~:e~~. SM~n .. ~~: i3Capn V6. 4sd . sunroof. am/fm ster e o. Good cood. $1600 or make of· fer. Must sell! 752·0184 497·2918 $I 00 Dowlllo...I :,:' BH<ll VOLVO loaded w /extras. 2 tone 548·$556 ....,. silver w/grey inlr. Astro '69Station Wgn. Auto, plus tax & license CLOSlD SUNDAYS SALES, SEttYICE sunroof. new tires. 25,000 A/C. Great 429 eng. C·6 SSB.96 per month for 48 '59Silver Cloud 1 ulft 1 E•c.1o...1G orig mi. 1 owner. Sll.250. tra.M, minor body work. months on approved $19 ooo --~ " Pvt pty. Ph 6'2·4090· $400. 63l·2408 credit. APR-12.98"4 985-4l"4 OVERSEA.5DELIVERY Defe rred p ay m e nl1---------EXPERTS '78 SeviUe Pewter Gray U.:. 9720 price·SS151.48. Equi p· '71Shadow. wh.ite, low m1. Xtras. Xlnt. Must Sell! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• roent includes 4 speed sWll'OOf. vnyl top. Ex.tr" .EARLE llE $12.500eve .. wtm. 499·4958 n Mark Ill. immac cond, •DATSUHS* ~·r·ecar~att1.D.g("~38fo7l)d. s harp. s:n.ooo 631-1266 VOLVO '72 Eldorado convertible. loaded. $2500 0 .B.O. s.a.dlcMI ....,..." .... ....., days675-440evea. l.986Harbor Blvd. Bristol cood New tlres ~ '-Of"! ...... _..._.1 cashpricell 1.961 Roi'· Roy""' Sedan, COSTAVESA A real cla111c. u900 ---------..._.. $3790 "' ~~ l • ~ "76 Mark IV. Cartier addt· SAL£S.LEA.5ING fine cood. Elegant white. ~9 Ol 540.9467 483-t222 t.ton w/snrf. Good cond. PARTS-SERVICE plus tax & li cense $20,500. 640-4999. ORANGE COUMTY '72Coupe de ViUe new top. tll650. 846-lMS for appt. Miroct. s.bar'9 9762 VOLVO new paint. new tires. Mlmtrid& 9947 1974 SUIARU GL CourE Mileage & Ouahty• 4 sod radlO radial hres & only 3a 242 miles! l9 77NPEI 1974 OPEL WAGON 4 spd & air cond11ton1no /4 pretty little rect wagon (158RJ0) Mcado/Rettallff ••• •••• •••• •• ••........ $Ul9S. 631 ·3392 548 .5371 ••••••••••. •• • • • •• •• ••• 2lSOHarborBlvd.,C.M. L9764x4StationWag.with EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO '70 M k 2-dr p,c, 1976VW•"'lllT .,.,.5 HARBOR BLVD ,..., 5700 FM Larges!n':.oelvCoounDetayl!er '70 sedan De Ville. Good avenc . ,.,, - COSTA MESA DATSUM ..-.. :r every extra. Am / inOr_ cond. $1500 Pvt Ply. air. radio. good tires. Econo my and good $ 540-6410 540-0213 . Mlrcedn~M 9740 Cassette deck, A/C, skid BUYorLEA.5E 648-3215. Goodcood. SS00.64-4-9583 looks' 4 sod sunroof 31" plates, push bar. moon DIRECT stere o 1ape & low miles ....................... root, luggage rack, low t.41tcsy 9950 ~ ·~s:~d tond ;.,)::.~~~~~~· f!:ft'f., :;.··~;;;;::•:;.~•;:~•: ••~;;;;;~iiw;:;•• i•·l8l6l9IVIOIDll•············ """""E 3 EX Cod Toyota 9765 -----·-----lion , UK mi. bur g. LINCOLN·MERCURY lt77TOYOTACOIOLLADB.UX~ '1051 UNo»l .. s n ,· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2025 s. Manchester w /beige lnt. new radials. De-'-rship ·-now OPEN Exceptionally clean car s3399 vr c assic cpe, sun r · TOYrvroA mecharu·c now Q nu•o• headers ..,.,00/ f ....., ~ reblt eng. auto, air. blk at h.~n·s 1995 Harbor Anaheim 750-2 11 r~;.""'536-2148 '..,, 0 • RAY FLADEIOE ~~11.eA~j~~~v:i~ ~~;e i ~ ~:~:~~~.640-9260 _Bl_vd._C_.M_'. 64_5·_1982 __ . __ '78 2U, AC. stereo cass LINCOLN· MERCURY 29 427 miles (468TXll ~~ tape. Ta.ke'over lse. & gel '78 Z28. 9,000 ml. Auto, 16-18 Auto Center Dr. t:,;=i;:;~~~~;i;;i;i.;:lj .. 16 Mercedes 450 SL Milan IEFOIE YOU s~cial bonus. 775.1448 AJC. Adult driven only. SDFwy·Lak.e Foresl exit SEU YOUR $7.200. PP..963-1730. IRVINE brown. 30,000 miles. Wire 7PM. 130.7000 *DRIVE A * wbeets,$22.500.675-7280 TOYOTA. -.67-122S-.-v-o-lv-o-. -c-1e-a-n. * unLE ••• * For sale 1960 Mercedes SEE US! Runs good. Great car. '72Wh~l· Parfkl91 pa.SS. dwagi l!K>. Runs great. $2700 or $750. Pb 5S2·5l90 I e . u Y oa ed . SAVE A LOT bestoCr. Evs675-4672 MARqUIS TOYOTA Xlnt! 12.000. 675-6161 SHOP •~COMPARE MISSION VIEJO .a.~ •1...-.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9952 .,. 1975 280S. brn. ne w 831-281049S-1210 --....., BARWICK DATSUN Michelin tires. xlnl cond. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• --------•I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 523·2910 ·16 CoroUa liftback. 5 spd. .AMC 9905 '88 Fastback. V-8. AC. PS. auto. suas. ....... 11 lu.an ( ,q11-.t r 11111 831·1375 4C1J.3)75 "We need to buy clean Datsun use<! cars" $Will Pay Top Dollar S COSTA MESA . DATSUM New79280ZX Atr. P /S.-4 pass. s ilver Lie. pd. SU.347 530-6409 a m +8 t rack . d e tai l '76-45651.. beLgc. loaded. s tripes . m ags.n e w Becker AM/FM cass. radlals.644-0438 1976AMC 461< MJ, $21.500 Offer •---------673·3822 dys. 645·3051 '77 Celica ST. L9,000 mt. MATADOR 2 DR. eves. auto. new radials. 1tlnt Hardtop. Automatic, fac· cood $4495.49'·3962 tory air cond., pwr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• too s.. eoeat Hwy. LGIJ-..... 494-llJI '76 4SOSL Milan bro.•--~-'------steering&bra.kes,radio, w/Milan int .. 2 tops , '75 Celica GT S.spd. air. heater & ONLY 32,000 $1.9,900. 496-1656 '1150. mlles on this gas Save r. 1---------673-0749 alt 6 PM . <sa>NlG). Rare 1962 Mercedes Benz li~ 9767 $2971 '71 El Camloo SS4$4, Xlnt l90D Stat. wgn. $2,500 ,._..,,... cond .• very low miles, 673-3808 all. s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Air pwr brakes 4' steer· TR.e 73 red 48,000 miles. ,_., AM FM 8 •-k ln '?5 280 Metallic blue clean new top & lug.rte, Xlot ..... · .. ac mt. 64,000 males, xlnt ~ ... """3210497·3077 daah, custom body & DATSUN mechanic now ho 3210 .......... '""'" paint. 2 sets of wheels at Ivan's. 199S Harbor ~~ug ut 64S· Vol&swagltl 9770 High perf. suapn. Must Blvd. C. M. 645-1982 ••••••••••••••••••••••• see to •~late. $4.500. '711200: New clutch, bat· '74 280 Sedan. sunroof, '74 VW Super Bell. CallSJ6. or~. te ry. Good brakes & AC, stereo. all power . Yel/bllt 49,000ml 12 • .00. MUST SILL 71 Helaire auto,• dr., runs trans. Needs body work. drk bm, $8300. S33-9570· P.P. 7141556-2098 i4 Hornet Hatchback 6 ~· good Ures SSSO/ t650/0ffer. S40-8662 '74 Mercedes 4SOSE Only '73 Super Beetle gd. cond. cyt. Auto trans .• Pow Str t offer 645·7Z97 '77 8210. Perfect cond . 49,000mi. sunroof. New Needs brakes. $1600. " Braltes. Air. Buckets. 74 Vega Hatcbbaclc OT. Smells new 7000 on g. ttres. Fully equJ pped. 968-037l AM/FM stereo It more. Fire en(lioe red It cream . pd C 1 SU.995. 493-5050 Golden tan with tan in· lnterlor. Power steering, $3nu2. o4os o/'be··Mtusotfsfeelr!. ~--9744 i4 V W bug, AM JF M 8 t.erior. Low miles. Xlnl. auto trans, stereo, new " ....,.. trk, very low mllea. New ccnd. One Owner. Asking dl 1 3c 000 II 531-4428 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Ul'f'.:I, Xlnl cood $3100. $1,990. Call 963· l 121 ~r:,.'·~ltlon~ S:!t '71 :MOZL extras, $3295 or ~M~~ iJi. ~~s~~<; 531J.~ 53s.3405. weekda YS 6· 10 PM . Offer (714) 6'0-0798 best oner. 631·3625 art radials. 12700/bsl orr. '74~ VW Poptop camper . ~gAM-&PMt.tlO ._ c.'prtce. IOOd coodi· 1ipm. Call&epbanie873-lS23. AM/FM Iler CUI, A/C. -tion. 1 owner. All ort1. 499-4364. Mustang Ill. Clean 65-66, other good trans. cars. Mo v ing Must Sell. 968-4211 '65 Musu.ng Classic. Good Cond. AC, PS. PB. S!OOO/bll of r. 548-0234. a...ble 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Cutlaaa Supreme. l owner. 30,000 mi. Xl.nl cond. Xtras. 6•0·5984 before 9 AM or aft 6 P M. '77 Olds equp. Xlnt 41M-9875 aft. ,,57 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Pinto Wagon V-6. auto t.nam. 20mpg. low miles. $2900 /offer. (714 ) 548-8815 after 5 p.m . • wullends . or 17141 •1000. ext. :rn wkdays. '73 Waaon. 4 spd. Top abape. Real Gaa Saver. $1Z1S. IG..a27 '7• 280Z: 4 s pd. trans. ()pit 9746 ---orofr.'9'7-421M ••••••-••••••••••••••• •· ...so;8l alliPM am/fm radio. ate. Xlnt ·-····--•••••••••••• FOR c. ... • '17 Electra, all utraa, "12 PIMo. • Spd. radio. cood Must sell -CA ~ _.... cleancond $5 9951 '75 Nova• dr. auto trans. tape, 12 000 ml, o e• · ..,.,.,.,. "10 GT 4-1~ good mpti 1 'H VW Bua.• SllOO. -· • A/C crulae control. brb. Dlller fl clutc:h. 752·2761 days 645·9288 owner 1C: price p ,'p DMl"J0/17M.19evea. Call Art ·~·~ -.ima•-·k. C.B. Vnvl Rum--•l. Driver's side evea. ao. ...... :.evesrwtmd.. . . 87'5-7080 ..,. 673-9187 am/I. ..... , .. -·----------1'72 vw Bua. Curtala1. top. 111.nt cond. $.WIS. cWmce.sm.B -7229 ,._ t72S ,....,. t747 carpet, fold out bed. RMera full power. Eves. 175·1997 Oay1 '75 Pinto, slt, •1K ml, ••••• .. ••••• .. ••••••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• sodium valves. $2000. ~ood cond. "'5· 54781 $1750 or beat ofter. $120.26 DOWN ~!ft::'Jr. ~~:~a"' ore., ~. d•YI· 6'6-6423 '110..•.•aD,rebuUteq.,_-....rz __ s _____ _ $120.26 PEI Mo after I PM 1f72 vw Bua. food cood. • ~c;~ cc:°1'\ "/Cl •· Ml·'1MI ~~ ............ .. • '••o• t7 41 New Urea • brlca '2095 COD • w n . • 7, .. •T ••yo• · · .. -/bstofr 176-5053 '81 Corn.fr Lakewood 'M Valiant. B Slaot 8 c7I. "" ~ ••••••••• ••••••• •• • • • •. May tako VW b\C aa part ......., · 1 rt• .RoedlW. 4 c:yl. $ spd. '18 50' Del W1n. Auto. trade. 548-51St. tm &.dell Regal. Like •• 4 apd. Good cood. Au\o, X n& trana~ •· Alf/FM .. te~caaaette. Uoder warr. Xlnl cond • o-new. Under Wrnty. air, $IJOO firm. Strlout ln· tkncar .... 538-· Red with bl•ck vlnyl lo mf. A/C, AM 1FM ~::-!{ft.<::':f ::: amtfm cassette $5900 quirH o.-ly. 751·"23 •P\lry'Vl.l*·newrtar trlm. (Cap. cost "200. tape.call Lotan 644)..3156 u;;;-new palol Job' new ... ._ M>AM-CPlll tires. IOOd tr.n.aporta· Rellldul $2219.U . Tax d.aya.64N3'7iaft6 carP.•t • 6 drap .. •-----~---8-1-w-'7511omal+l4<yl,a•to. Uoacar . .-.fil5.M1 ~·,C:;:uln;:, ~ "1'JCMDll.•-4r,1nrf new am/fm. Beat offer: "Z, ~All pwr. Alr . .: alr, lo mlJ:~ P,P .. "7Uclr0... XlDtcond. ctriw i wa1 $120..2600 ap-Mkh, air, AJl/nl '5ii0. m.-tnck .......,, IMC rack. blltGff«. P¥lfi1. ft, proved cr•dll. > Mt-aeoo .......... l at ofr over $2000. Make tbue 1ood1---------- (8MRSX) r. • t7IO ae.. •11V1fC."'1.1._ ... _7"1_. _____ bol........, ltema yw're • "'' •CHLIAll... .. ..................... arom. -''-A•tn 'Tl----, .... _, not .., available to -·-.. ····-··-" «nt W..Wly. Suite 203 119 WT CbrolM Rimi, c-. 1111~. au ttr. ..._.....di.i::', ;i;. bi.k'b: ...-ollllr fatnUJ by ad· P\nbb'd. · uceU CC*l. NewportBlacb Brown..Qeaotl580/Pirm P¥t~.,.LOM.l'IS.•u -.,mr..Xlnlc.d. ~~1!.!:.~~ta ~~radio . iasoo . IJJ.fllO CaU9M-t1't OWi9 ... oa..Na·Dll '-'--......, --·· -•a ' ' \ lt7J VOLVO 145 WAGON 4 s pd t rans . a ir cond1llon1ng Pretty s33" white with blue inlenor & a neoe car 1222PCSJ I 971 HOHOA 2 DOOR SEDAM Only 4 320 miles on this 5389t e conomical gas saver•--; (610WCRJ 1976 TOYOTA CILICA en UFTl.ACI Pretty red with wtule inlerior Auto trans air cond . stereo & 3 t.8 00 mi tes (594PVKI 547ft 19741/J DATS&IN U O'I Court Silver with black interior 4 sod . air cond & AM/FM. A nice cart (0671 631. 54999 1977TOYOTA CILICA GT u m AC« Mags 5 sod stereo . air cond & beaultfU4 s ilver w/bla c k 1n1er1or (624TJM> 1975 DATSUN JHZCOUPI Dark metallic blue. Automatec. air oond .. AM /FM . rallye wheels & Oflly 29.623 miles! ( 1200NQ). ... -. I • .. I ' D11ntin ton Beach F o1•ntain Valley EDI TI ON . . .. You r Hometown Dally Newsp a p e r VOL n. NO. 46, 4 SECTIONS, .tO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA THURSOAY,FEBRUARY1~1W9 TEN CENTS . Park Stalling Tactics Anger Citizens Rf'sldl'nt. aosr&ly accu l"d Huotineton Bf ch officials o( stalhng Wt'Cint"sd.a)" mght '" lht.- devf'I pm~nt of a n 1ahbol'tloM park Homeowm-n ne rlhultf'oft.h phlpolkd par~ at Slakr Avenue and Graham Stret-t, Jso ex pres ed fears that a changt tn policy rrueht eliminate future smaU ~rks altogether "We've w1uttd hvt; years for tbe park 1.tter paytn1 a pre· mlum pt1tt for a vlew slt4!," Melody Chatterton told mem· ben of the Recreation and Parka Commlaslon. "My f lin• of fr05trat1on bu turned to anger over the clty'a stalUngtacUca." Land for the t.hree·acre park has been given by developers but plans for it.s development have been delayed pending a financial study on increasing malntenance costs. "We cannot develop any more neighborhood parks until we review maintenance costs or alternative methods of flnanc- in g," Vince Moorhouse. the city's director of harbors. beaches and recreation. said to- day. "The question," Moorhouse said, "ls why should the city build a perk •yatem that could bankrupt us?" "It is a whole new ball game after Proposition 13 because there's only a limited amount of money available and we have to compete with police. fire and pubbc works departments for it. •• Moorhouse said it costs the ci- ty $4,000 to maintain one acre of parkland each year. The city currently bas about 400 acres or developed parkland. including about 40 neighborhood parks. He said aJt.emative forms or fmancing could take the form of service or user fees. Gail Logan. a spokeswoman for homeowners. claims that the land or fees collected from builders must go into a park serving t.he specified subdivision and that the money must be committed within five years. Other representatives say there is a threat to sell the neighborhood park sites and plow the money into commerclal developments at the Central Park. Residents claim that in the meantime their park site has been allowed to deteriorate and is filled with beer cans and other <See PARK. Page AZ> Cop Critic Faces Drug Rap 'Daree A b o ard Hope Dimming For Lost Boat By TOM BARLEY Oft,_ Dlllly Pli.t Slaff Hopes for the safety of two men and a woman who left San u1ego in the 45 foot craft , "Armistice" be~an to dim today when the Coast Guard withdrew Its s hips and aircraft from further search operations. The decision was taken after Marvin Women •Battle' LOS ANGELES (APl -The two women in Lee Marvin's life his wife and his former lover confronted each other in a dramatic courtroom scene with Pamela Marvin calling Michelle Triola Marvin a kept woman. "She <Michelle Marvin> said to me. 'You may be married to Mr. Marvin, but don't forget he's still keeping me,' " Mrs. Marvin testified Wednesday as Miss Marvin gazed rurecUy at her. The tense moment came just before Miss Marvin's lawyer rested his case in the landmark property settlement trial involv· ing the rights of unmarried couples who live together. The actor's attorneys were to be gm their case today. Miss Marvin's lawyer, Marvin M itchelson, called Pamela Marvin to the stand as bis 17th and final witness. Mrs. Marvin, 48, clad in a gray s uit and clutching a handkerchief, sat within four feet of Miss Marvin, 46, who was seated at the counsel table in front of her The two women's eyes met as the attorney asked lhe wife if her husband was supporting another woman when they got married. "I believe so. yes." Mrs . Marvin said. "He told me ... I also knew because Michelle told me many limes on the telephone." Mrs Marvin's voice rose to a high pitch as she accused Miss Marvin of plaguing her with con· (SeeMAJlVIN, Page A?> heavy clouds moved into the search area and shortly aft.er a fishing vessel picked up a life ring bearing the name , · · Armistlce. •• "We're suspending any search activity unless and until some· thing else turns up,·· Coast Guard P.O. St.eve Disbro explained. "In 10 days we have covered more than 266.000 square miles of ocean and we have round no trace of these missing persons.·• Disbro said reports that debris had been spotted southwest or the Mexican island of Guadalupe have been lhoroudlly checked by searchini ships apd planes. "We found nothing," Disbro said. "And when the weather c lears we Intend to confine search operations to an Arrn.y U·2 spotter plane which will go over the area we have already covered." Disbro said the U-2 will con- tinue to seek the boat that bad Dennis Vowell, 22. his wife, Deb- bie, 21, and friend Gary Newton, 22, on board when it left San Diego Jan. 22. Vowell and Newton went to high school together in Costa Mesa. Debbie Vowell is the daughter of Mrs. Bunny Scott, . 201 Calle Dorado, San Clemente. Mrs. Scott said today that she and the families of Vowell and Newton "are shocked at this de· cision bytbeCoastGuard. .. We are all going up to Long Beach tonight to try to persuade the Coast Guard to change their mind," Mrs. Scott said. "It is not true to say that there bas been a 10-day search. There was thick fog in the area for six days and no searching was done in that time." Mrs. Scott said she and the mothers of Vowell and Newton are not disturbed by the dis- cqvery of the life ring. "It could have bffn blown off the ·Armistice• in t.he storm that came up while they were out there fishing," she said. "Then again, It could have been thrown into the sea by our loved ones in the hope that it might be picked up by searching vessels." She said the three families, rel- atives and friends intend to go down to Baja. California, Mexico, this weekend to search the shoreline in thatarea. .. We're having posters made that depict the 'Armistice' and <See SEAllCB, Page AZ> o.lly ............. .., ......... .,... fkean \'Jew A ntics Jimmy Stick, mascot for Huntington Beach's Ocean View High School, makes appearance at Sea Hawks basketball game Wednesday night. The outsized puppet was built a nd operated by Randy Kurihara, Scott Greenwood a nd Mike Lauchlan. Jimmy tried to outdo Sea Hawk cheerleaders <background), but had trouble matching performance of Peggy Conley, who did controlled, "confidence" fall into arms of her fellow cheerleaders. Some observers said Jimmy has the height, but lacks coordination. To find out about the basketball game. see Page B3. 1.aborer· Attacked; 0 Police Arrest Three A 22-year-old Mexican laborer was severely beaten on the head with a baseball bat during a pre· dawn attack at a Huntington Beach field workers' camp to- day. David Escobar Torres. who · resides at 18291 Gothard St.. was reported in stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center a fter being transported from Huntington lntercommunily . Hospital. Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa said three other laborers, Roberto Che rerio, 23. Antonio Reyes. 18, and Jose Rodriquez. 19. have been arrested and charged with assault wttb a deadly weapon-in connection with Torres' beating that reportedly occurred at 3 a .m. The three men charged with the beali.ng do not speak English and refused to give police in· formaUon during questioning. Pizza Operator Arrested Downtown Huntington Beach pizza parlor owner Douglas Steven.son Jobson. 47, an out· spoken police critic, was arrest· ed Wednesday on charges of selling cocaine and marijuana to youngsters. Police Lt. Bruce Young said Jobson and David Ramos. a 22-year-old transient, were ar- rested at the Pier Pizza Palace, 118 Main St., at 6 p.m . where they said $1 ,500 in illegal drugs were seized. Jobson had filed a civil rights laws uit against seve ral poli<!emen. City Manager Bud Belsito and Police Chief 'Earle Robitaille charging them with harassment and trying to drive him out of business. The lawsuit h as reportedly been dropped. Jobson and bis at· toroey could not be reached for comment today. Jobson posted $5,000 bond to obtain his release Wednesday night. Jobson appeared before the Huntington Beach City Council July 3 and charged local police with the unnecessary beating of two local youths at a restaurant. The officers involved were later cleared of wrongdoing in that July 1 incident. Jobson. who has operated Pier Pizza for the past two years. has been the target of a two-month investigation by Huntington Beach narcotics policemen, Lieutenant Young said. Young sa¥f narcotics officers, armed wit.h a search warrant. round the illegal drugs in the rear room of the pizza parlor while several youngsters were playing pool in the front of the business. Frmul Probe Bail R aiAed LOS ANGELES CAP> -A cromputer expert accused ofplot· ting to n eece a second bank through wire fraud while free on bond from a similar case bas bad his bail raised to $1 million. He was still in custody today. The attorney for Stanley Mark Rifkin. 32, did not oppose U.S. Magistrate Ralph Geffeen's de· cision Wednesday to increase RiJkin's bail from $200,000. His trial on the otiginal charge had been scheduled to begin today but was rescheduled Wednesday for Feb. 22 by U.S. District Judge Matt Byrne . Who Spilled OU on the Beaeh? An oil spill that tainted four miles of U1e Huntington Beach coastline Tuesday bas begun washing ashore at Newport Beach. U.S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Skip Onstad said brown colored globules about the size ol ball stones were detected as rar south u Newport Pier today. He said cleani.n8 operaUons, wblch thua far have been COD· centraled ln ln!U north o( Hunt- l.ntton Beach pier. an 1cbech1Jed to l>estn at Newport Friday. Onatad Mid that Lb• apUJ ap- parently occurred SuadlY from a tank« ln Loq Beach batbor. He Mid tbe sticky subltance wb1cb appears to.,, cNde oll ll belDf ....,_. lD laboratortet ln an attempt to track down lta 1CH1rce. "But that's going to be awfully hard to do, because there were about 19 tankers in the harbor At the lime." The spill was detected in heavy fog early Sunday but dido 't wash ashore until Tues· day. Onstad, who bas set up a com· mand post near the Huntincton Beach city pier to rurect cleanup operaUoos, said the only victim ot the spill appears to be one Westem arebe. He said tbe blrd was found ln Huntington Beach and cleaned by CIJband wildllfeomclall. A Coast Guard ~spokesman earlier said th.at patches ol oU involved In lbe spill covered an area 2.400 yards loni and 800 ya* wide. . I o.ity ...... 5\Mf .... FACES CHARGES Stevenson Jobson Police Sei ze Suspect in HB Shooting Police arrested a 22-year-old cars)enter Wednesday afternoon because. officers said, he al- 1 e g ed I y tried to shoot a downtown Huntington Beach Liq· uor store owner with a pistol earlierthatday. Phillip Peter KeseloH was held 10 Huntington Beach Jail an lieu of $25,000 bail on attempted murder charges stemming from a 7 a.m. shooting incident at Denhe's Liquor. 526 Main St. Store owner Gun Eun, 39, told police a gunman fired two pistol shots at him while he was in lhe back storeroom. Eun claims the gunman has harassed him in the past. said Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa. West Orange County Judicial Dtstnct court records indicate Keseloff is scheduled to appear Friday on assault. battery and petty theft charges in connection with an incident at Eun 's store last year ... Keseloff was arrested on those charges Dec. 27. but was later released from custody, records indicate. Keseloff was arrested again Wednesday at the home of some friends at 307 15th St. in Hunt· ington Beach. Police said he sur· rendered peacefully and that oo • -weapon was found at the scene. Co ast Weath er Chance of fe w light showers 20 percent Friday morning . We s t to northwest winds 20 to 2S mph Friday afternoon. Lows tonight 44 to SO. Highs Friday 58 t<t 63. INSIDE TODA 't' Char~• B. Wheeler Jr., ma11or of K~ City. Mo •• ii an v~ politidc:ua who "flftJe• ."" ,..u .. in the troditton o/ Ha"11 S. T"'man. Sto'I/. phoCo on Page Al4. l•tlex •• ., _ _..... c. A"'I ~ Cl • ...... ...._.Cl....... M L.M. -.,. A• ..... C"'I ~==-... , -....~ .. ..................... ~ Cl Of .... ei-ty Att ~ o .... ,~..._. SY c-in us.ca..,.. a a-... ......... .. .. 0... ....... AM Mlctt........ U ............. M T......._ a ...... ti • cu ,,....,.. C4-I .,...,_ C1.J ...._ A4 .......... . ........... ,_..",..._ a I \ DAILY PILOT Hlf • ~~Outing Fallout Fi aTi a O r•ru.;t' ('ount) ., Gu I Scout.' l'•rnN on lbe1r t'OOkt ••I lo cla> 10 lht• hope lh t ruent a>ubhClt) '4111 not put 11 dt"nl 1r1 '4hut "'""· I ~• H'ar, a 1373.668 lund r&.1"11~ Hort W \I.ant or nge Count\ Pt'<> J•k to u:ndt•r5tand lh1n lb~ pm bh•1w1 bt.':'.l•ttlnJ! lhl' ngt'h·:-Girl St' out < 'uum•1I do not 11ff,·l t u ... und "'t' hop.-the> th.'\'t>r wall, Girl ~l'OUI t'OOrtlan,,tor J lU.'tj IJt'ltlH Sl·ho..tr:.•od Sht' iud tht> ~\n~do 'l'O\I 1n Los A~:\•lc:!o I!> th,• uni) Ont: or l I ·outht•rn C'ullfornia t'Ounc1b r .u·kl'<i b) <ltM1l'OMOn lhal h'(i Ill JPPE'&trwin·~ b)' ri~·al facuoni. 1111 telev1:>1on . Mrs Schu 1.r it;ud ftoudtn!-! bt.•t ween uruon Jnd non union ml·mbers or lht.• An&elt>< l'llUn t·1l ' ;uJnurustrJt•~•· 'tarr led to ont.> mt>rnbt'r urJting tt-,ttknls in tht.• Jrt•a lo ho)'tull t:ookw ~alt·:. No sut•h dtsJJUte ex1sb 111 Orange ount) and we are not un 1on1ted." she t•xplained But w t• are deepl) co n cerned becaUS(' cookie ~alci; a re v1t<JI lo tht.• ma1nlcnanc·c of our pro grams." Mrs Schaar :.<11d Orange County Girl Scouts will be seek in g $1 25 ror each package of cookies. o r that sum. she said, 57 cents represents the cost or the prod uct .Ai fu rther 10 cents covers the t'Ost of sales licenses. incen· lives for the sellers and promo tional materu1ls She said a further 20 cents goes to the seller's Scout troop to m ain ta in program s The ba lance or 38 cents goes t.o th(• Girl Scout orcamzalion at coun· e ll level and helps to defray the cost of camps, trainjng and ad· ministration. Mrs. Schaar said proceeds from cookie sales provide about 34 percent of an annual t>udget that is slightly over $1 million. "It is our major fund raising effo rt or the year ... she said "Our girls are supJ>Ortmg their program by their own uch.ieve ment and it would be tragic 1f a misconrt>pllon was allowed to in· tcrft>re with this worthy cHort " Trustees OK $10 ,000 Plan For Project Huntington Beach Union Rtgh School 0 1str1rt trustees have ap proved u SI0.000 plan to begin the removal or a fool bridge over a flood rontrol c hannel at Manna m gh School T rustees indicated they arc hopin~ Huntington Bc·ach city officials will allocall! $20,000 to com plc•tc• the proJect Manna lh~h School Principal Robert Barbot said the planned br idge removal would he "a tremendous hl'lp in keeping the campus secure'." Tht• bridge 1s located al the i.c hool 's southwest cor ner Distnct offte1als hope to be~in n·moval of the bridge $fcck, .:uard ratls and fe ncing by Apnl 9 But A!.s1slanl Supt:rinlendent Charh:s H<'ss said other costs ror rt•building nC'arby sidewalks. gutters and curbs affc.ctcd by the hndge removal m ay be pau1 for "as funds .tre made av~1la ble" by city officials. Doctor'M Office Hit by Burglars A Fountain Valley physician told police We dnesday t hat somconl' look $4&1 worth or sur giC'a l instr uments from a n un locked cabinet in his om ce. Dr Matthew Szawlowski re· portJ'\i the instruments were t aken from his office at 11100 Warner Ave. sometime between noon Tuesday and 4 · 14 p.m. Wednesday • ORANGE COAST If 1 DAILY PILOT •~Ot•~foe,tO.uyPtk., •11"•",.."iunm I tdlf'w ·~P'f't I' Ct\bt'--"tftftt-lf\irO.il"Ol'" "'1"11 PutJit1~C~Y ko-r•t• .O·ltc1f'I• -'~ I .iDh '°'"" ~f'ltfJ•'f thf~ I tiftA~ fpf ( ""'-'' MA·• H• ......... -'" t•Wf\ttftql# f'f'IM r+ '"""°' •••" V•ll• • th•,.._ ' y~ u .. -., ft ~1lf\Ctw I 4 '•N>l4' rr•1ilf"INtt ...O•hOfll •• °'lb'h'"41rd \•turOA'f ,.,,., ... f'I,""' ,,.. ,..,,,. r•.11 '"'°''''°'•fttl 041tf"it •\ ·•• UO Wt tA.ft\frwit ( IAMt 4' t••U.O#fttA~~ ll-N-... ,h•M1'\t .,.. P\;tat ""'! J .... " c.w .. , "" ...... 1Jillf'\t .. fltd (; ........ -.M~t T-••ll-(Clltor '':':::.~.:tr.::- 0..rle• M, ~\ llK ..... , ... II 'I>>'>'•"' ,...,.•O"'O(Olton .. _ _......,., W.\I 0••"91 C:.UM• (Oilor Kumlnaton Beed! Ottlce trtr'fllt.-Cft ......,.,..,d Molllflt ""°'"' ,. 0 8o• 1'0..,... Office• l.4'r..":. ";::: ;~~·~\;~'WI Teleptlon• ('714)~ C:l .. Nfled Acherttllftg IG..atn '""'-lftO<•-~C-llft 640-1220 If• hot n arrow into th air and II I nd d h knew nae •hl-r< •• Bu t • ahrtl d S ao Clemen ~om ao k ne w wht•rr She luld pollc' th\ 1rrow h d tr ut k th rron( ff()()r crt l\t•r 11p•rtmrnt on W -st Murc1u1tu ll v. U'-uppart•nl ly •• Volenllm· It bon.· "' h ·un lo\ 11 h " SHll'm ur ~orl• "tluru l•f l(old, ht•urt. ''' l1•ad Cuµ1d "' rrow t.1 1 ut•k in h•ud Bui IO\lt' a hhml or ut leal'>I m111 •u1ded Poll1·~ 'uld th.-t C'up1d 'I arrow ••!JI' r nll) strut"'k thl' wroni,: door MARVIN •.. 'tant phonl' t·alb dur 1ng hl'r flt'WI~ v.t'<I dJY"> l'lwy :-.tarted thl· Dl~ht Wl' v. t>re m.!rrted and they con unued for about J year and a hall.·· she said of the calls. She srud that. Miss Marvin 's comments about being kept by lhe actor were repealed many times "The ph raseology, th e terminology disturbed me," she tesllf1ed •·But not that he was ~1 vmg her the money " M arvm has said he broke up with the former showgirl m May 1970. five months before his marriage. He began sending her monthly suppo rt payments of $1,050, which were to contmuc !or hve years But the aclor cut off the al· lowance in November 1971 , an action Miss Marvin's lawyer sJid was insllgated by Marvin's wife But Mrs. Marvin said they barely discussed 1t. "l don't remember when he told mt>," she i.a1d. ''It wru. no big thmg lt was something done long before Wt! married. It was hts arrangement with her. It had nothinl{ to do wi th me. "It didn't .sh()('k m e. It didn't bother me.·· she said m clipped tones However . at Mit c he lson 's p rodd rn ~. she reme mbered another phone caU in which Miss Ma rvin implored her to resume sending checks. "1 think the cooversatJOn was when she told me she could not exist without a man to support her," said Mrs. Marvin. "And I said. maybe it would be best to g~t another man.·· Outside court, Miss Marvin denied the accusat1ons by the actor's wife ··1 never caJled myself a kept woman be<:ause I never felt I was a kept woman." s he said. "'Yes. I called them : she said. tears welling m her eyes. "I called the first Christmas we were ~part.. I was alone and I wanted to wish Lee a Merry Christmas ·· Valley Sets School Guard Cutback Ta~ Fountam Va lley <elementary I School District trustees tonight will discuss cutbach m crossing guard pro,grams that have been funded by city government in the past. The school board ..'11'1' meet et 7 30 p.m m the district oCftccs near t he corne r o r Talbe rt Avenue and Newland Street "Fountain Valley C1ly Council members have adopted a policy that could cut back crosswalks on major a r teria l hi _g hw,ays <hroughout the city. Councilmen are also cons ide ring further crosswalk funding cuts. Huntington Beach City Council me mbers have decided not to fund the crossin~ guard pro· gram . Six Foun t a in Valley School District schools are local· ed within the Huntington Beach city Limits. Cycle Injures Valley Teen A l$-year-old Fountain Valley boy suHered a broke n leg Wednesday when the motorcycle he borrowed hit a car parked at th e curb i.. fro n t of 9420 Honeysuckle Ave. Listed in "good condition" this m orning at Fountain Valley Community Hospital is Joseph J . Juciejczyic Ill of 16429 Spruce St. Police said he apparenUy le>5t control or thl? motorcycle at about 3:05 p.m. and slammro in· to a car owned by Emily J . Romanowicz. Ski Life Closed MONTPELIER, Vt CAP) State officials have ordered Su11rbusb Ski Area to atop launc:binc ski lift. 1ondolH by band, after one car plun1ed 2S feet to the ground, lnJuring three pa11mael'1. 'l'.he order wu de· livered to lhc resort WedlMllday. Nixon's Papers Cleared WASHINGTON CAP> -Mer a yHr ot neaoUaUona, Richard Nixon "ten.~ today to all but lwo oror>cM~-d r~1tulaUons gov· t•rnana public access to his pni111denUul material_s. lie wUJ let a court decide the disputed lhul'S. which concern hie; t upes and t aped "diaries " Th~ agreement, which brings public accet.a l.o the Ulpes and 1>u1>crt1 Ju.st a tiny step closer. will ~ubmatted to U.S. District Judge Au brey E. Robinson Jr. If he approves . an existing lu ws wt challenging the govern· ment's access regulations will be dropped. Under the settlement. the ad- ministrator or general services will s ubmit a modified set of regulations to Congress and no ac· \'ess t.o the materials would be permitted until Congress accepts the new rules But archivists may continue lo review and classify the m atenals in the meantime. m the meantime. If, as In the past, Congress dis· approves the rules. the settle· mcnl will be voided. "In that case. we wc..Jld go back to square one, .. one lawyer said. Nixq,n is not complet ely satisfielt with the rules. negotiat· ed by his lawyers, the govern· ment and lawyers for historians and journalists who intervened m the suit. He wanted more than 30 days to challenge decisions by the various review panels that will decide whether materials should be public or private. "We believe those time limits are unnecessarily short," Nixon lawyer R. Stan Mortenson wrote lawyers for the GSA. f',,,_PageAJ PARK. • • debris and is a breeding place for mosquitoes. "We e ven found a dead skunk there," one protester said Tun Visitors Robbed, W~ll Retiun Honw A pair of disenchanted young Ohioans will be leaving for Cin· cinnati this weekend Fountain Valley police say the two, who had bus tickets sent from home, don't Uunk much of California. "I'm going back lo where peo· pie are people." an officer quot· ed Fred Weyler, 21. as saying after he had been relieved of $63 in cash by a trio of young Californians with a knife. Weyler a nd his companfon. 16·year-old Auburn Wilson, were hitchhiking on Magnolia Street near Slater Avenue lale Tuesday night. Thr~ youths in a red car pi cked them up. The two Cincin· natl residents were pus hed from the car minus their smaJI bankroll -three blocks north . Investigators s aid the two h a ve decide d Californ ia's weather isn 't too bad but the people are a wful. Oiess Class Set in Valley An intermediate chess class, l.o be taught by national master Robert Snyder, is scheduled to begin tonight in Fountain Valley as a Coastline College offering. A college spokesman s aid Snyder, a member or the Olym. pies chess team, wilt cover mid· die .ga m e pos ition s. in · termediate end games and offer de ta lled analysis o r opening systems. Registration is scheduled at Fountain Valley High School, room 8·19, when the class opens a t 7 p .m . Thursday, a spokesman said. The lee is $28. Copter Finn PWling Om TEHRAN, Iran <APl - The chief of Bell Hellcop. ter's operations in Iran said today the-U.S. firm will pull out alm0ttt au the t.700 employees and de· pendenta aUll in this strile· torn nation following a U.S. Embaaay warning that lt can no lonqer pro· tect Americans in Iran. <Related story, Page A4 >. Robert MacK.lnnon, vice president a nd aeneral mana ge r of Bell Helicopter International, Hid emplo)'"9 would be H nl to "staging area•" i_n nearby countrtea to await word on Whither tbe new revolutionary 1ovemment wanta them to return. ,, . . Rig Reflerted , ·' Tuesday night's rainfall m Huntington Beach left water standil'g beneath this 011 rig near Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue. And at 7 a.m Wednesday a passing photographer. reflectin~ upon t he m1rror ·clear attitude of the water. look this photo Juror Candidates Quizzed at Retrial By KATHY CLANCY Of ti. O.Uy "llol SI.ti Prospective jurors in th<: retrial of Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill were being asked today about their views of a doctor's role in cases ol terminally ill and hopelessly incapacitated patients. Tbe questioning came as Jury selection wound into its third day in Orange County Supenor Court. Dr. Waddill is accused of strangling a newborn girl after an abortion attem pt by inJecllon o( saline solution fa iled at We s tmins ter Community Hospital in March of 1977 Waddill's first trial ended last May in a mistrial whe n Jurors said after 16 weeks of testimony and 11 days of deliberation they UP 10 were hopelessly deadlocked 7 t.o 5 in favor of acquittal. Waddill'!' attorney. Cha rlei- Weedman. predicted Wednesday jury selection may be completed within a week and testimony can begin m what is expected to be a three l.o four-month trial. Both Weedman and proseeutor Robe rt Chatterton have been focusing on issues of abort.Jon . and so-caJled right to hfe as they question prospective jurors. Much of their interrogation centers on the question or pro· longjng life by machine in so· called hopeless cases versus "pulling tht.> plug ... One prospective juror today said it was difficult l.o relate his own feelings in "a gray area " s59 ·~~ Free Delivery FULL BED RECLINING ~--------------- Gambling Ripoff Revealed PARIS <APl -An audacious band of crooks . uslng scre wdrivers and bits of rubber lo doctDr roulette wbffla, bas collected about S7 million tn one of lbe motl tnaenJous tntema· lionaJ gambling upen ever un· covered. Police sources say about 20 suspects have, been arNSted, but doiens more could be at large judgin" by the scope of the racket Wtuch 1s belteved \o have been going on ror up to tlU'ee ye an Twelve casinos in Frantt. the fabled Monte Carlo gaming house in Monaco. and othet'S m Yugos lavia, Italy, South America and Africa have SW· fered losses. French press ._. ports say. Sources close to the investlga. tion say the crooks operated by looserung the screws that hold in place the tiny walls between each number on the roulette wheel. The slightes t loosening of t h ose walls Increased the "elasticity .. of the number picked for d oc t oring, and heightened the odds on it win- ning o Another trick involved insert· ing 9 sliver or rubber under pl aque~ bea rtn~ undesirable numbers so that the ball would bounce off them and favor num bers with the loose screws Police and the French gam- bling control office are bemg dis· creet about the affair. still hoping to catch~ masterminds behind the racket. But with the affair being dis· cussed m French newspapers. and a ;udge 1n Nice preparing to hear evtdence. there appears to bE: little hope left for more ma10r arrest:! f'rotft Pa~ A I SEARCH •.. De bbie. Cary and Dennis." she said 'WE" "rt-~omg to tack them up at every hkeiy point and we are offenng a reward or $1,000 to anyone who can glve us mforma· lion about our children " M,.s Sc ott s aid th e 'Arm1.ti<'e" carried enough food and water for two weeks when sht !eft San Diego 24 days ago ··They could still be out there m the ocean ekmf! out their sup· plte!l and hoping for rescue.·· she said .. And while we are grateful t-0 the Coast Guard. the Navy and tbe AJr Force for what has been don~. we feel that the de c1s1on to suspend the search 1s premature " S UP 10 , 550 Free Delivery WSltowcase COITAMllA 169 l.111h IT. CAcfoll "°"" RalpN. neoct '° Marte Colel Idols) 642-1617 Mon.·~ 1().6 ~. 10-6 Ooeed~ • NEW LOCATION LAGUNA HILU 2302• Lak•forMfDf. (Comer ol ldc• fOf9lt ~ ond Avenlda 0. Lo catoea) 770-6MI Mon. • ffl 1().6 Sat. 10-6 U\. 12~ . # ' . , 'Rig ht ' For Gays Rejected SACRAMENTO 1AP 1 Tiw hl'1l~1Uve l(."st ot bcunost'• ual tnc-e stat \-'Ole" ,,. J~c te en ota bomosraual le ('btt UUU•la~ ha~ •ndtd tft 1 re......tlna Ge(• l for l•Y nthb suPPOt\t'n, Wt~ oppoot>nl.'I cllln lh~ RI ble aod orgutna f o r an tmplo1~r ·s ri1bt to di~ rrtmloate. the ~nate IJ'\du:.tnal Rd1dool Commtttet-reJt<'U'd a ball lo ban JOb d1stnmtnauon aK•lnst bomoscxu•b Wedne:. day on a 2 3 vole fo'our \ot~ -. t•re needed ror passagl' Pef Aki B •.-kftf 'WILL HONOR IT' Tom Bates BILL'S AUTHOR Sen. James Miiis ... ,.w, ......... 'SO INFANTILE' John Vaaconcelloa Thurldey, FM>ruary 15. 1979 Badget Defirits DAIL y Pr~OT A a \ I I I ·constitution 1 Battle Looms SACRAM'l:NTO CAP I -Fonner U.S. Sen. Sam Ervin says federal budget deficits are "fundamentally dishonest," and ft will take a constitutionaJ convention lo force Congress to balance the budget. The 82·year-0Jd Ervin. who served 20 years in the Senate and chaired the Watergate investigating committee before his retire· ment in 1974. endorsed the con· ' s litutional convention in a videotaped message today to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. •·I think it is not only impor, tant but absolutely essential foe the United States to have ~ balanced federal budgeL Defici\ financing is fundamentally dis· honest," Ervin said. ' SACRAMENTO CAPl Man Juana could be prescribed for help in treating dlse~s 1nclud mg cancer under a bill wuuung Senate Stiff ens Code He was to answer questions from committee members via a telepbooe hookup to his Morgan- ton, N.C , Jaw office. A resolu· tion that coUJ<1 make t:aurorrua the 27th state calling for a con· sUlutional convention is pending before the ,committee for a vote by the end of the month. CONGR~ MUST call such a convention if 34 states request one. Bmakthrough Surfoces in Lettuce Strike CALEXICO CAP> -In lhq ( STATE J 'Casual' Asse mbly men to Be Barred? Foes and supporters of the constitutional convention were rolling out their big guns today -Ervin in favor and Proposi· tion 13 coauthor Howard Jarvis in opposition. first breakthrough in a~r. week-old strike that has s p~ harvesting of 40 percent ~~ . nation's lettuce crop, a maj~ grower broke with other farm owners and began negotiating separately with United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez, its first legislattve Vlctory after emotional testimony from a cancer victim. Wednesday's 5-t vote by the Senate Health and Welfare Com· mittee approved SB 184 by Sen. Robert. Presley, D-Riverside, al- lowing declors lo participate in a four-year pilot marijuana treatment program Rf:6atn 1'1..ued LOS ANGELES <APl -The stale Publi<' Utilities Com- mission says it is sludymg whether thousands or residents were overcharged for electricity this winter and .are entitled lo rebates or $100 or more Since so many customers and so much money is involved, the PUC may have to step in and settle the overcharging issue, Michael A. Doyle, PUC con· sumer affairs manager for Southern California, saicl W ednesd.ay. q.,akes Recorded SANTA BARBARA CAPl -A pair or identical offshore .earth· quakes that measured 3.6 on the Richter scale and occurred within LS minutes of each other went largel y unnotic ed . authorilJes said today. Both quakes were centered nine miles south of here in the Santa Barbara Channel. SACRAMENTO <APl -The Cahforn1a Legis lature 1s into another coat-and-tie flap pitting the rule ·conscious Senate against the more cas ual As- sembly. The Senate Rules Committee sent a message Wednesday lo <'asuaUy dressed assemblymen. no coat. no tie. no admission. THE COMM11TEE'S resolu· lion would prohibit men from coming onto the Senate noor during sessions without wearing a coat and tie. The resolution 's author, Senate President Pro Tem James Mills, refused to say that the resolution was aimed al as· se mbl y men . But h e acknowledged some lower house members have come onto the Senate noor without a coat and tie. "IT IS RELATED to the fact members of the Senate like to be sure there's an appearance of dignity in the slate Senate,., the San Diego Democrat said. "It's not aimed at anybody." Reaction &n the Assembly ranged from bitterness lo ac- quiescence. "It's s ad sen a lo rs find themselves still caught up in ap· pearances. which us ually means they're nol committed to sub- stance." said Assemblyman Sun 'Upset' Seething Gases Reported PASADENA <AP > -A California astronomer has re- ported the discovery of mammoth solar disturbances in which seething gases nse from deep within the sun and spill across the surface. The solar upwelHngs offer potentially valuable clues to understanding and perhaps someday predicting such phenomena as sunspots and solar n~es, which can play havoc with radio communications on larth, said Robert F. Howard of the California Institute of Technology's Hale Observatories. "We really don't know much about what's going on below the surface of the sun and this will help by giving us somelhlng else to look at." he sa1d. "It's a large aspect of solar activity that was not known before." . · ashlngton's ~lrlhday All Items $object To Stock On Hand ./ . .; ,,,- f ~ ,1 . [y QT ELLABRATIDN Telle edV111tet• ot 11\fte put vellln troM y-loc•I "'"11111- dem h111fw111 m11cJtM1 witll 111fitn.I cll1llHl11yi119 power PRESTO - FRY BABY deep fryer . 921 HEAVY-DUTY SOlDERING IRON 8·w•tt penc•l •type Iron weighs onlv 4 0t 9,.. '" long with ·~·on. diameter CoPl)llf-plilttld ltp SP80 10W40 64~ MOTOR Oil S1699 s749s 1<MN. CHAIN SAW This multi 1111oC.os1ty mo CO< 011 ·~ ourh!tl t0< your c11< 1n all c.l.m.rte5 10W40 UOh1We!ght gN.powered NW-futt 7 2 IOI. Wlll\OUI bol "1<I oNin. C:Uu n"' 10 20" In ditmel&f, prunes. cuts,,,,. WOOd. mote. .t.utomehc oiling, 2 handle• for P<>t•t•ve con· trol, PC:lutive ;... T •Tip. 44/XL Deep Ines \ to 2 servings on minutes. In 1us1 2 CUPS of 011. Plestic cowr FB0-1 CROCK PLATE Cooi.1 •lmost every 100<11 Stonow»to hl1s o" 10< easv aer111ng 1ncs Int cl11nup 29/JOOOH ."'? • WARING IC~ CREAM PARLOR M•ttes 'l.·gellon ice cream lro,en VO!Jutl. sherbet, etc 1n •bout 30 mtnutH free recipe book ,Cf·620· I STOil HOURS~ Mon. thru Fr.l 9·9 Sat. 9·6, Sa I 0.4 , ... J ohn Vasconcellos. THE SAN JOSE Democrat. who often wears slacks and open-necked shirts, added: "I have no need to go on the Senate floor and 1 assume no senator will have a need to talk about a bill with me anywhere "ll's so infantile lo think that a necktie is a sign of anything." But another assemblyman who often shuns a tie and coal. Tom Ba~. D-Berkeley, said be would a~de by the rule, if adopted by the full Senate. "I'm not going lo let the ques· tion of 4l dress code interfere with my ability lo be effective." be said. "As long as the rule is passed. I will honor it, even though I don't think it has any bearing on issues we're dealing with." "l think it's necessary for the >tale to call for a konslitutional convention lO submit an amend- ment to balance the budget"• because there are too many pre .. ss u res on Congress to conlin ue de- fi cil spending, Ervin said in the message recorded earlier thls week. "THERE ARE too many de· mands from too many conslil· uents that enjoy deficit financing because it enables them lo get a whole lot of money out of an empty federal treasury for nothing." Ervin also said he is con- vinced that a constitutional con- vention can be limited to budget issues so il would not stray into amendments that might limit dvil liberties. the union said. 1 Meantime, farm workers re, turn to tbe picket lines today. on~ day after a /pneral for slain striker Rufino Contreras, and a six·member private panel wai to begin its iniestigation into tb~ slaying. UFW SPOK ESMAN Mar~' Grossman declined to idenl1fy~ the company that broke the growers' united front, but he in J dicated the union was hopeful o( a quick settlement. : "The separate talks certainly! indicate they are willing to. bargain." Grossman said. H~ added that Chavez was conduct-~ ing the negotiations personally. I !l !I~ 1111111 't !II !I I 1111!\'lWl 'Jrf Neighborhood ~~·;~ j ~~I Independent Liquor Stores ~ Prices Good Feb. 15 Through Feb. 20, 1979 ..... f"l l'JliLJ SCORESBY SCOTCH BACARDI RUM POPOV ~ VODKA BLACK VELVET RecJ.$6.95 $ 5'! RecJ.$6.99 $5'9 Qt. RecJ. $4.99 s3'?. RecJ. $13.36 s 1 o~~ ~~ IORDO•'S rs~ 11• . RecJ. $6.49 $ 52! MR. & MRS. T MILLER® HIGH LIFE s5" 12 01. Case of 24 ... .,,., bottltt CELLA LAM BRUSCO 150"" Saft 55• $199 SUMKIST SODA 99c Mft. BUCK'S Ll9UORS 2989 Fairview Rd. Costa Mesa S!Z:,!!§2 BA YCREST Ll9UOW & DELI 333 E. 17th St. FISHER'S Ll9UOR 3 13 5 Harbor llYd. ·Costa M•sa 646-8262 .................... 41,_ Costa Mesa 549-1405-................ I 0, !VlQP-CO<l5t I) Edit • l p · Robl-rt N Weed Publls~r ily f>tlOl OMO age Thuraday. f'ebruary 15, 1979 Borbar.1 l<rt••b•ch Edtto IOI P~t> Editor H l l ' R TI1 II hould Be Lat R ort H thl'I•' 1s 11r" 1hanp. 11\ot'' dt f\JJlll\l' to ~lty aiovt•rn llll'lll ltum •1 r~ 1•u II mnH·m1·nt , 1l 1s l wo r t.' t .1l1 m o \,. lllt'lll~ ( I h t h t • t ( llunt "'"'"'' Ht uh l!i Ut'lllR I t' U<l It: urn 0 •. lll'r '"o n •..,uh·nh ... er\\1'1 n't' a ll i>••J:>i•r-. rt>rl·nlly t '''11'-"' ... R h rd s· ·•· ..... n '· .... , I Cth Cuum· 11 OH'tnbt•r.. 1r II .. u ut•11 , Ov ,.,a n .1 •• llll"' -·' ..... ... \ll ,, .. ,. i Hulh Hmh•\ .H\u .,)fl i•1 .IC'1 ' ' ' It · Th • P·•i~·r. "1•n· 1mr.n»1>c.•rh ftlll'<i out. but If t hl ~· :.irl• t' ··' ill l'•ltmt·1' 111t·mt1t·r,, •• .., \\t'll oi. th1,• t·1 t y at . I I It I \'l' l 'U . ' f l l • • 1ulJ tw ,•11:>11.1n'tl h\ th1• th rl•ul o n•cu turni ~ • (~'u.•rnlwa . n •r.ill pn•JKltH·nh l.tun t•ht·d :.i.ct w n I t a.11 \llr nun P•Jltl0,011, t '1t \ •\ttornt•)' Gatl Hulton .1..:.11n' i• • fh d R h • k . I t'uurwilnlt n John ,1111.t' 1n on t 11 m un • 1 "' ~ht ull.mJn. "ho hall annuu nt'l'd pubh rl> ht!> inten t i•Hl' ot "''IJ!tlln.: tn·f on · lhl' 1i.1Jk.•r'> \H'rt' 'll'r\ t><I, hu., sub w qtJt'lllh llUJl tlw l'll\111lll ll h.;, t>.,•,•n ,.ml 111 lht'''' u1lum11s ~·fort• and ll 1s be , 11-1 1,, 1111 lh 1l n ·l .1lls 'huuld bt• rt.>:.t·n cd for m1s Ill) .... u • ,., • d 1 rt'Jllh who art' J:Ul lt' nt ~rm .... "rung omg \ml thu.., lar both n •1·.11l i.:rnup ... h ,1\l foiled lo prov1dt: , \ 1tlt•nt•t.• of t hat l>i•wnt·hanl mt>nt "1th th(' r1ty pror~ss 1s und~rstand· hit'. but tlh' )Jll'4't dr I\ l' .... tll t•ont•t•tVt'<I. • • Tlw l\\•) propom·nt~ s,t) ltll') h uw not a tte nded (tty <:ounc:il mt•cl111gs. c,1u-.;m g some. to wond er a bout the ir :-im <.'t•nty and 1f tht•y m ay bl~ front!ng for other grou ps .. lktalb arc M.'n ous bus1m.•ss fhey have the P<?le ntrnl ol ..,preadrng mistrust ,rnd dist·ord throu gh out the city. . Th<.•v :-.hould bt• l••kl'n only us a last res ort and cond1 t 1ons don't ~1ppear to b(' th~t lwd yet. Assumption Premature Fountain Valley <eleme ntary > School Dist~1ct trustees' decision to close McDowel~ School h~s hit a s nag . City Counc il m e mbers have dec ided not to install a <'rosswalk tha t wo uld be needed to transfer students lo nearby Tamura School n ext rail. _ . Council members approved a resolution th at would s eem to doom tbe s chool dis trict's request to install a crosswalk on Magnolia Street near E s trella A venue. Followin g Counc ilman Ben Nielsen 's recommendation. the council members s ay they will not pay for installing any c rosswalks on busy .thoroughfares like Mag nolia Street. Not only do city officials say these crosswalks are incff ectual, but they also want lo stop pick in g up the cost fo r the s chool board's de cisions. The proposed Magnolia Street c rosswalk would cost the city a bout $13,000 plus th e salary of a crossing guard. While it may be necessary for s chool omcials to close campus es due to enrollment declines, the re is no reason for trustees to continue to believe that the city will pay for the cost of s uch a move. With the c losure of more schools predicte<Uturing the m·xt four years. t rus tees a ppa rently must find <lher ways of paying costs n•h1trd to t rans ferring students in the f utunr Questionable Taetic A teachers union group at Gulde n West College in I luntmgton Bc~1c:h has c h a rged the Coast Co mmunity ( 'ollrgc D istrict with a S2.9 mi Ilion erro r in its $67 .5 rrll 11 mn hudgct. Ctt111~ a state guulPhnt' tha t requires at le ast 50 per· c·t•nt of Uw district':-. } l'arly budget go to t eache r s alaries , I ht• union IC'.tdl•r s say t hl' $2.9 million has improperly been put to use m non kaching a reas The teachr r s. m e mbl'rs of the Ame rican Fede ration of Tt>ach1•rs , havr dcm~1ndcd a public h('aring with col- l1·gl' trustees on th(' issu<'. T hat seem s fair l'nough, until one looks de eper into l"l1t'l 1(·s hl'ing employl•d hy the unio n to m a intain a n uppe r twncl <md s ustain m t•d ia inll'rest T hl· union rl'po rlcdly h:.is rl'fll..,t.'d to turn over the doc·u mL·nts that arc s uppos1•d to prove the misappropria· 1 ion of funds to district offact<tls • i\ dist rict !-ip<>k<'sm ;111 notes tha t the unio n is no w in· \ ol\'pcl 111 a campa11 . .(n v.1th nnothl•r t t•ache rs' g roup for till' r1ghl to rr pn•M•nt till' lt•achc rs in the next round of <·11 1l1·c·t 1\ l' harg,11n111g I ndctcl, 1t might he a scht·m e 1 as a dis trict "'POkl'Sman contend s> to "drtbblc out" the info rmation of t ht• d istrict's a lleged m isd eed to achieve m aximum effect 111 !ht· rc·<·ruHmg drive. Tiu~,.., a wcll-testl•d l•11·t1c. b ut one that does little to :-.u::,l<.1111 llw genera l vit•Y. of teachers as professionals who ha\.\' tlw b~:i.t mtcn· ... b uf tht• c·om m u nity in mind • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ar11sts Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/ Sa/ ety Tip By L.M. BOVO m <'nls. a nd an accurate J\m advis<'d thut a bulr'f tim epiece to an horologis• fi e rce enough t c> alla<'k u it's claimed , is ona.A'Tiat person who venture:-ont o neither loses nor gains mor<' ~aid beast's turf \\111 not do than one ~cond every 6,000 so 1f that pl'rson ha, no years. Thl atom clocks do ctolhrs on Claim is lhe hu ll lhJt t•vidently think!> n n uke<t humun 1:-Just anothf'r harm· Q ··What's the most dir ll'S:-a nimal Quite SO. fl ·::. f1cult tongue.. twis ter Of all?" logical l ntri~uing, H;n 't 1t ., E\'cn mor e intr1 guin~. 1 think. is hC1w this fan<'v fact cumc to be found out. · i\n horologist ls somebody who , ludie time mcasur<' D•·ar Gloouay Gu Gee ll renlly I tough when the v.orsl th nf,l in llf" that happens lo u c hild is that sht• can't go l o n Valtnllnr d ance• t. F. Cj.l .. rtl'I f.vt Cff'llftWAU •t• tV' 11\tll•f ,, ..... ,. ......... . H«'w•llf letletl ...• ,,,_. .. Ille =T-..::~ ......... "' Suicide rate among Indian teen-agers is 100 t imes that or ter n-a ge whites. A. Debatable. But some or the best voices in radio and television claim it's imp0ssi· ble t o repeat at lop speed three times this : "R ed leather, yellow leather.'' Personally, though , non& seems harder than: ·'The cloth<'s moth 's mouth C'loscd." Q. "What kind or incom doe R lh" 'Peanul8' comlc litrlp with all lts a pinotfa brtni In?'" A F IRurt.> about USO million n year From movies. theaters. TV. books. so on. Why does an ordinan« In Shreiveport, La., make It II· legal for a funeral dlrector to Rive away matchbooks? --------------------------------..-..---Jack And rson Shah Blames Carter and CIA WASlllNGTON President C r l t•r l\ nd lh1: <.: c ntr al l n l •lhi <'DC\' J\lill'ncy have been g1..•t Unti their lumpis from Juisl about ~vcrybody tor nut knowing what Wlil t oing on in Ira n, ~upportin14 lhe 1huh until 1l wais too late and rantn.i to cultlvuk contacts with the l"l(ll e d Mui.lam leade r Ayatollah Khornt•ini But then • 1~ ont· m ain, perhap~ the only man 1n the wo rld, who belie ves J USI the oppo:.ih.• S h a h M o h ammt•d R e t J t••1hlev1 Em h11tc r c d a nd IM'r l'as1ngly p a r ano id since he was fo r ced la!>t m onth to nee thl' nation he had ruled a nd loot. Nt. the shah believes Carter and the CIA knew a ll loo well what was happening in Iran. ln fact. hr uctually b(•li ev<'s the CIA t•ngineered his fall from power und the as cendancy o f Kho ml•ini. T HI S ASTONI S HING 1n k rprct ation of r ecent events. which flies in the face of conven lionally accepted reality, was t'xpressed just hours after the s hah fled into "temporary" ex· ale. He had a private talk with Egyptian Presid e nt Anwa r Sadat at Aswan on J a n . 16: in- telligence sources have provided us with a deta iled report of this top-secret conversation. While Carter 's c ritics h ave faulted him for blindly s upport ing the s hah an the face o r mounting e vidence that he was losing his grip on Iran. the shah himst'lf credits Carter with the most astute diplomatic double- dealing s ince Talleyr and. J\nd while the CIA 's detractors have Mailbox c astigated the agency for 1gnor· in~ Khoneini, lhl· s ha h told Sadat that as e urly as ht!>l s pring he ht.Id undt•n1ablc in · formation '"thDl J\mcra can agents ure flirting with lh<:Oppos1lion." THE U .S . EMBASS\' tn Tehran convinced him, said the shah, that a prcrequ1s1tc for bet· ll'r unde rstanding of President Curter was the dism issal of Gen Ne maloll ah N assari. h ead of Iran's secret police. When he fired Nassiri on June 6. 1978, un de r U.S. press url'. ht• told th« E gyptia n president tha t I rt wini: Moscow.led group!. tn Iran lllll'rprcted lhlli a !> J Sl~n o( wt•akness and :.tcpped up the ir oppos1lton with masMve strakl'.., The president late r ha iled Nassiri 's ous t er as e vidence of the s hah ·s concl•rn fcir huma n rig hts. said thC' shah He told Sadat that "the baggesl double c rossing took place•·· whe n C'artcr reaffirmed llis s upport for Iran. knowm.: full we ll that American at(Cnts aln·ad y had "open channels" to Kho m <>ini Cf that was thl' biggest . what the shah described us "th<: mo:-.l disg usting double c rossing and treason lsic l was carried out" tn the final days of the Januar y c risis in Tehran. The s hah. act ing on American advice. decided to leave Iran tempor arily to cna - bl<' the military and his other supporters to keep Kho m eini fro m returnin~ and pave lhc way for the shah 's eventuaJ re- turn lo PQwer . ACTUALLY. accordmg to lh<: shah 's unique view of events, the Americans were wa rnmg the Iranian milita ry that if they tried to seize control and bnng the s hah back. the United St ate:, would cut off all s uppltcs and as· sistancc. This wa rning was d'· li vered. the sha h told Sadttl, to lo p Ira nian bru:.i. by Gl'n Ro be rt E Huyser . second in COJllmand of J\mn1can force:. an E urope. and word or the warn- ing was passed on to Khomc·mi in Paris. lt was this sneaky l)Owtl r play. the s hah said, that m ade 1t poss1 ble for Khomeini to return from exile and which thwarted the ) ;h.ih s Plun to rt•Jw1n his thronP n . light of ,his experience. the• !>hah. told Sadat, the Eicyptian president should not trust thl· Car~er udminislrat1on or take it:. advice . !"ootnotc: A CIA SPOkesman said th<' i.IJ;<>ncy could not com m ent on the shah's rntcrprcta· t ion of events Parents Responsible for Grade Inflation? To the Editor : The Da ily P1l ot 's ne gative position on public employees, and teacher s specifically. has become quite obvious to anyone reading the cd1tor1 als of 1129 con- cer ning striking teachers and 2/6 concerning "grade lnflation." • I disagree with your position. Effective te ach ers are very similar to e ffective parents . Res f e ct fo r o thers. self- c on idc n ce a nd pride in them selves and their family tor school in the case of teachers > are vital ingredients or any suc- cessful adult guidance. Good parents and teache r s have a way of passing these traits on to young people. Som e tea cher s never have these attributes and that is too bad. Thos e of us who do have them arc slowly losin~ the m e ver y ta me w e r e ad editorials like yours . That is really loo bad. Grade i nflatio n occ urs because the public de mands that their son or daughte r be pam· pered so he/she can go on to col· lege. Many s tudents need to be disciplined but t eac hers arc afraid to a ct in fea r of an irate parent going to the school board claiming, "This tf'::i cher is not ~cing nice to m y little child ... CONCERNED parents should let their child's teacher know they approve or disclplint..• )( all parents did this. you would sec the end of grade' mnatio n. It is not lhe fault of the teachers. but rather of parents a nd public pressure to "look better" than other students and school,;. In regard to striking lcuchers in the hi~h s chools. you are wrong. Respect, self.confidence and pride cannot be passed on to students by a t<'acher who is consistently having his pride and dignity diminished by the Howard Jurviscs. school boards a nd public Almos t e very te acher I know who teaches sub JCCl mattet,.Jn a superior man ner and also i ns tills pride. respect. and confidence In stu dents was on strike. They knew they could not instill these p011lllve attitudes in students i£ they felt as tr they. were belnR made the target or conslste-nt de· grading octions and attitudes of the public. The enthusiasm and concern teachers have for education and students ie the detcrmlnlnlf foc- tor whJch sel)arates a class of regular graduates from a class of young adults prepared to live fulfilling ond productive lives. Fewer and fewer teachers arc able to create th!JI type or en· vlronment becausl they arc made to f~I like overpaid. un· d e r .wo rked sec:ond·class dtlzen.,. Help us! NORMAN HALL ,.,...,,~A•..- To I be l:dltor: I was surprised ond appalled by the P'eb. 7 article Utled "Can't Dance ?" How can s uch lrivi a be headline news'> I would like lo point out to you some imPOrtanl facts concern 11'\g this situation. First , you failed to mention the form that the Kamphs signed prior to the s kating party. which slated the regulation about having lo pick up your child ten minutes follow- ing the close Of the student 3C· tivily. Secondly. the rule wets de signed and conce ived in hope that parents and students would no longer abuse the privilege of having extra activities Thirdly, you s peak or unfair· ncss towards students; what about the fairness towards educators, who give o f the ir free lime lo chaperone s uch ac- tivities. as skating parties and d a nces? THE QUESTIOl'i ar ises. 1f the t eache rs we r e lo leave lhe premises of the activity before all the students had been picked up by their parents. who the n would be responsible for the student s hould somethjng occur between the time or the t eachers' de· pa rture and the pa rents ' arrival'> Re m ember , tcachr rs are h umans and we loo have appointments and families who u pect us at ccr· l ain limes. Fourthly, we• were requested th rt.•c years ago by the com· mun1ty to once a~nln assume t he responsibility or tht•se activities. a ft er lh<' community had been responsible for tht• latter ror two year~: at that time the com· mun1Ly re alized the dif(icutty and tht• time that is involved s ponsoring the:-.c l'v<'nls History docs rcpea~ itself. d()('sn 'l ll ? As a professional educator. my concern is for the ~tudenlfl. Nin('ly nine percent of our stu- d t•nts and parents have com· plied with this regulation a nd a majority of these P<'Oplc feel that the r ('gul ation b not "oul· rngcous · · us st ated by some Perhaps the qu<'slion at hanCJ is. who 1s rellpons1blc for teachin~ t he students punctua lity . the parents. the communil}, the teachen;. or society in general? I am s pt>ttkln~ a s a pro ressional educator a nd as a con· cerned citizen o( this state. I do not s peak for the 11tarr, the 11chool. or the district or Ocean. View JOHN BAY~ESS r •• ,,.,,.,,.,.. To \ht' Editor: This Is in resp0nse to the de· m and5 o( Huntington Beach city departmtnl heeds. How would the oveTPald City Administrator Belsito <~.218 1. Public Works Director lbrtae <$45.432). City Attorney Hutton <$42.372 >. Police Chief Robitaille 1$41 .!W), Harbors le Beaches Dir ctor Moorhouae <$40,907l and fire Chltf Pi.card ls.it,008 1, like to "1et a&oo1" oo lbe limited in· comes of the KuntlnJton Beach taxpayers, who. unable to meet their own dire needs, still con· ,.. t r ibu te t o t ho ~e ob ~cene salarac!>'' There arc laxpuyl•rs in llunl ington Beach strug~hn,:: a long on one-tenth of the aver ag<' or I hose c;alaries posted above. who contribute to lhl' ;1fnuence of those employcl'" named I was certa inly dis turbed when a couple of and1 v1duals i.t'r ved not1n· of intent to r<'cull the balancE" of lhl· council mcm be rs. but. if the :-alary demand<.; of the arnuent and greedy depart ment ht•ad.s a re acceded to. I would place blame on !ht• ..c.ntm· council as bcang r1s1:alr) 11 responsible. and call fo r the· firing of thost' department ht:ad~ lhot are dissatisfied FUllmER. it takes either a colossal nerve or an abvs ma l 1g norance. for t host• "hc ..id!." lo demand morl' or th4' tuxpaver~· blood mon<'\' in th1• fitl'l' of the nve rwhc lin.g d t.>ma11d by tht· citizens to cut cit}. C'Ounly and s l a t e s pen d ing . ont• or lhl' greatest wastes be ing 10 the a reas of sala ries and bencf1L., No benefi ts should he pmd lo a pubhc official unless he• benefit!. thC' public demon:-lr<ibl) The stupid suggc•st1on. by a counc il ITil'mber. to givt• lht• heads of departmc•nl!> "time• off" in lieu of ra1st::-.. '" without rhymf' or reason A be tter 1d('a would be lo encouragl' them to add "or elsl'" to t heir demands and fin· lht' whol<• lot. st arting with the highest paid. Belsito The re ~Ur<'IY-.<I('(' ple nty of qua lified men and women to tak<· ovt•r the duttei. or the abovl' disg runlll'd ma lconte nts. at s alari<'s far below those re corded above 8 . F. BORCOMAN Qualltfl Re.af11s To 1h<' EdUor . Some cnticR or public educa- t ion used the recent teacher s trike in H untington Beach Union High Sehool District as a vehicle to forther condemn the quality or public education oind. 1n particula r . public s chool tenchers. r am not in a position to defend lhc quality of every district's education proJ?ram bot as the s uperintendent or the lluntington Beach Union lllgb School District I can support. with hard data. the high quahl> of cducalton Lhat ts occurring 1n our dastnct In the last four years the dis tncl 's state lest scores in read· ing. wntml{. mathe matics and spelling have significantly m creased. These scores. which h ave been re po rted in the m edia, arc among the highest m Orange County and are in thl· top quarter of those districts with which we are compared throughout ihe state. Our di~· t n et's new writing program ha:. rt!ce1ved nationa l rer·ognition ;md has been adoptt•cl by severa l d is tracts. both in and out ol slate. THE NUMBF.R of national mer it scholars has increased ~ has the number of students en lN 1ng the coll ege:-a nd uni vers ities. Voc:.1t1onal trainjng oppor t un1t1es a re n umerou~. both m the regular ... chool pro g r a m s a nd the Coastlin t> Regional Occupational P rogram <C HOP 1 lhstorically, the dis I rict has prov1dl'll excellent pro. g r a ms for, a ll ~lud ents With s pecial ne<'ds. inc luding the me ntally gifted a~ well as the educationally handicapped a nr1 disadvantu~ed. Tht• l lunlington lh'•1c·h Union High School 01st ric·t Board of Trustes. tc1u•ht•rs nn" s upport staff have never res ted on their past achievcmwnts: rather. they have constantly sought better ways of serving the.. students . Identifying problem s a nd CIR- gressivcly seeking solutions (or 1mprove~nt has always been and will continue to be part of the educational philosophy of this d1stn cl The recent strike was the re- s u ll ol a philosophical dis- B8reement regarding the ISSUe Of tnnding arb1tral1on of grievances. not re((a rding the quality of education The board of tr ustees a nd I an• very proud of the l\!t2cu- t1onal programs and th<' highly qua lified tea ch1•rs who carry lht'm out The strike did hove a tem p0rary impact on the education of students ond this ,letter is not meant to gloss over this fact. But quality education has been the cornerstone or the distrlct in the past and will continue to be in the future. lt la f mp0rtant that the RunllnRton Beach Union High School District and its staff arc analyzed tn Um ~rspectlve f'RANK J . ABBO'l'T Superintendtnt of Sctlools • LA'Utra from m*n art wlconw Tlw nghl to ~ lt1rn i ro f11 .,,ac• or tb~ labtl ii ~"'Wd. l.tf kr1 Of J(/() U»rda or la.I t0W be gson prrferrncc. AU "1tcn mu *'* ~uN aM "'°"""ad· :~ btlt nonw.-"'°¥ bs todMild on •t af ~ ,....,.. u ap-pomit Pof'rry .all no1 ~ publllhfd. ' ' r. I• e e ce a d st .n 11" \n a tte )D .an ns Jy ae t a c:2 .. M .,. ., .f.: ., ~ M l I Irvine . . Your Bometow• .Dally New8paper VOL. 72, NO 46, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU~SOAY,FEBRUARY1~1n9 TEN CENTS Gene Kelly Rebuts MiChelle'8 Claim ! LOS ANGELES CAP1 DeUK' er u~lor Gene Kelly took lht' wlto stand t the L.eoe Marvtn trial today and contradicted t e Umooy a'v"n by M •chell\' Triola Marvin about a show bu lJ\e · c.'On~ct He dented that he ever talked to her about • ch•nce for ht'r lO get a role an the "tage pla)', "Flo~r Drum Song" in 1964 "Mi.'l.S Triola t~ very confused about da , " 1• d Kc.>lly "1 had noOuna to do w1lb • f'lower Orum Sons' after 1958 " KeUy, who dlrec.'t<-d "Flower Drum Song" on Broadway, 1u&ld he haa known Miu Marvin "very w U" for nearly 30 yearn ·'I 've known her quite a •hlle." be iaad. "It was purely sorlal She has Vl8tled my house on occasion " He said he also knows Lee Marvin and bas worked with bjm on television shows. ''In short. l know both these people and I like them both," the movie star said. Kelly was summoned to the stand as Marvin 's attorney opened the defense case in the landmark property rights trial. The dancer was called to re- fute Miss Marvin's testimony that she 11tave up a chance to ap- 3 Lost at Sea? Wast Guard Suspends Search By TOM BAKLEY Of -OM,.,"'" Sa.ff Hopes for the safety ot two men and a woman who left San 01ego in the 45·foot craH. "Armistice" bel(an to dim today when the Coast Guard withdrew i ts ships and aircraft from further search operations. The decision was taken after heavy clouds moved into the search area and shortly after a fi shing vessel picked up a life ring bearin g th e name , "Armistice." "We're suspending any search activity unless and until some- thing else turns up." Coast Guard P.O. Steve Disbro explained. "In 10 days we have covered more than 266,000 square miles of ocean and we have found no trace of these missmg persons ... Dis bro said reports that debris had been spotted southwest or the Mexican island of Guadalupe have been thoroughly checked by searching ships and planes. "We found nothing," Disbro said. "And when the weather clears we intend to confine search operations to an Army U·2 spotter plane which will go over the area we have already covered." Disbro said the U-2 will con- tinue to seek the boat that had Dennis Vowell. 22. his wife. Deb- bie,' 21~ and friend Gary Newt~n. 22. on board when it left San Diego Jan. 22. Vowell and Newton went to bigb school together in Costa Mesa. Debbie Vowe ll is the daughter of Mrs. Bunny Scott. 201 Calle Dorado. San Clemente. Mrs. Scott said today that she ... and the families of Vowell and ~ Newton "are s hocked at this de- cision by theCoast Guard. "We are all going up to Long Beach tonight to try to persuade the Coast Guard to change their mind," Mrs. Scott said. "It is not true to say that there bas been a IO.day search. There was <See SEARCH, Page AZ> pear in fbe Broadway show so she could stay with her then· lover. Marvin. That was in 1964. She told or more than one phone conversation with Kelly in which he referred her to a choreographer who could give her a job in the show. But Kelly said the show was probablr closed by then. He said be did not know whether she might have been ~· rerring to a road company of "Flower Orum Song." On cross examination, Miss Marvin's attorney sought to show that the actor's memory was rauJty and he had forgotten the conversation. "In the year 1.964. you're ask· ing me ii 1 saw her?" Kelly said incredulously. "I don't remember. Can I ask Mr. Mitchelson. would be re- 4 . 'lif . tlf Not the ¥ear of Tlais Rana member \fbe saw her in 1964?" Spectators laughed. The Judce said KeUy could not ask Miss Marvin's attorney, Marvin Mitchelaoo, a question. Mitcbelsoo bad rested his case late Wednesday after setting up a dramatic scene between Miss Marvin, and Pamela Marvin, whom the act.or married in 1970. As Miss Marvin gazed directly (See MA&VIN. Page A%) .... ~ Gmtra~t Talks Set LegalFeesCuthack Ordered by Irvine Irvine Bus Services Nixed For Summer A Rocky Mountain bighorn ram paws through deep snow for scarce food near Grand Junction. Colo: The sheep are furth e r t hrea t e n e d by paras iti c lungworms which make them susceptible to pneumonia. The Irvine City Council, strug- gling to keep mounting legal fees below the $300,000-a-year mark, have directed city managers to renegotiate the city contract with the legal firm of Rutan and Tucker. The firm handles all city legal matters, under contract. It employs James Erickson. who is designated as the Irvine city at- torney. Monthly legal fees to the city have been averaging $20.000 to $22 ,000. according to Raul Brady, assistant city manager. Councilmen were shocked a month ago to receive a one- month's billing for $33.000. Brady said that was the result of a $10,000 billing error. making the actual fee $23,000, still the highest monthly legal bill in city history. Councilmen Tuesday ordered several actions to reduce costs. Brady was told to screen all requests for legal services. get cost estimates in advance and SfCure some assurance of a time limit !or a particular job. 'Three Arre8ted CHATIANOOGA; Tenn. CAPl -State and federal agents ar- rested three persons early today on charges of conspiring to hire an undercover policeman to kilt Moore County sheriff Ron Cun· niogbam. As proof the killing bad been accomplished, the gun- man was supposed to bring back the sheriff's gun, badge and ear, said Ron Eberhardt. a s pokesman for the state Safety Department. He will also schedule regular hours for legal conferences at City Hall with Erickson, and make periodic evaluations of legal work and its costs. Brady said the council allocat- ed $200.000 last June for legal ex- pe n ses, but \ncreased the amount by $95,000 last month to cover unexpected costs. Besides the routine legal work associated with representing a city. several major lawsuits are being fought, increasing costs, Brady said. Brady said he has "high ex· pectatlons" that he will be able to negotiate a contract for next year at a lower fee. 'TU tell you this.•• Brady said. "It's not going to get any higher than that." It's Stupid Of Cupid He shot an arrow into the air and it landed he knew not where . . . But a startled San Cle m ente woman knew where. She told police the arrow bad struck the rront door of her apartment on We!i! Marquita. It was a pparently a Valentine. It bore a heart with a poem of sorts : "Hearts of gold, hearts of le ad ; Cupid's a rrow struck instead." But love is blind or at least misguided . Police said that Cupid's arrow apparently s truck the wrong door. The sometime Irvine summer municipal bus Service looks, to its s upporters. like it's going to be mothballed again this year. Tbe City Council voted 3 to 2 Tuesday againsl committing $3,240 to cover costs of running the buses during the last two weeks in June, between the end or school and the beginning of the new fiscal vear in July. During upcoming budget hear· ings, the council will be asked whether it wants to contin~ the service at alJ. Councilwoman Ma r y Aon Gaido. who with Larry Agran was thumbs up for the free bus rides, normally offered 8 a.m. to S p.m. weekdays all summer, viewed the council vote as a "death sentence" for the pro· gram this year. It would cost taxpayers $17,000 to run the buses the full pro· gram. The vehicles and their drivers are leased from the Irvine Unified School District. The council maioritv-David Sills, Bill Vardfoulis and Arthur Anthony-has been critical of anemic use of the buses by res\· dents. Ridership figures were low last s ummer . when service didn't begin unUl July S. At limes there were only about seven or eight people aboard ror any particular looping trip through the city. Bus proponents blamed poor advance publicity: People didn't ride the buses, they asserted. because they d.idn 't know they were around lo ride. The summer bus has been io· termlttent and inconsistent since it started in 1973, some years operating only half the summer, and some, as in 1977, not at. all. ~ Waddill Jurors Quizzed By KATHY CLANCY °' ... Dell1 "*" s..., Prospective jurors in tbtt retrial of Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill were being asked today about their views ol a doctor's role io cases or terminally ill and hopelessly incapacitated patients. The questioning came as jury selection wound into its third day in Orange County Superior Court. Dr. Waddill is accused of strangling a newborn girl after an abortion attempt by injection or saline solution failed at Westmin s t er Community Hospital in March of urn. Wadd.iU's first trial ended last May in a mistrial when jurors nid after 16 weeks or testimony and 11 days of deliberation they were hopelessly deadlocked 7 to Sin (avor of acquittal. Waddlll's attorney, Charles Weedman. predicted Wednesday jury selection may be completed within a week and testimony can begin in what is expected to be a three to four-month trial. Both Weedman a nd prosecutor Robert Chatterton have been focusing on issues of abortion and so-called right to lire as they question prospective jurors. Much of their interrogation centers on the question or pro- longing life by machine in so· called hopeless cases versus "pulling tbe plug." Worker Seriously Hurt in Explosion A maintenance employee for the MK Development Company in Irvine was in serious condi· Uon today after undergoing sur- gery required when an oxygen tank exploded in his race. OHicials at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital said Dennis L. Correl. 39. of Harbor City. was in stable condiyon in the in· tensive care ward. Correl had just accepted de· livery or an oxygen tank. used to fuel construction equipment, at a job site on Fairchild Street. near Jamboree Boulevard. He was loading it in a storage locker when the tank's pressure valve exploded. The te rrific force of escaping compressed gas drove pieces or the valve in· to bis forehead and nose. When police and paramedics arrived, Correl was writhing on the floor in pain. Fellow workers had pressed towels against his forehead and nose. Police said the towels we re saturated in blood. A delivery man reported that he had dropped the oxygen tank on a cement floor just before handing it over to Correl, but in· sisted that the force of the im- pact s hould not have been enou1b to cause it lo explode. One prospective juror today said it was difficult to relate his own feelinRs in "a gray area." "I don't know where you say this is no longer a human bejng and now is an organis m ," the prospective juror said. Weedman s aid Wednesday that he bas. stopped rocusing in on questions concerning the ex- tensive publjcity that s ur- rounded Waddill's murder trial. "It seems io the main as though while people read about the case, they didn't come away with any opinion about Dr. Wad· dill's guilt or innocence," Weed- m an explained. "We are spending more time now talking about bow the jurors feel about the role of the physician where there is a terminally ill or incapacitated patient." Waddill contended in the first trial that the inf ant born to an 18·year-old unwed mother never was alive. Blast Rips Savings Bank· WARSAW, PoJand CAP) -An explos ion ripped through a crowded savings bank to lbe center of Warsaw around noon today, and the official slate-run radio said at least 10 persons were killed and 30 injured. A bout 200 people reportedly were in the building at the time of the blasL Coast Who Spilled Oil on the Beaeh? Weather Chance of few tight sltowers 20 percent Friday morning . We s t to northwest winds 20 to 2S mph Friday afternoon. Lows tonight U to so .. Highs Friday 58 td 63. """""' .......... HEAVY EQUSPMDn' ONRATOU 1CUP1 01. Y IAND fROll HUNTINGTON STAT! llACH A F~ lly .. ety! Who'a ...... Dftllall tof CMI Du ...... TINlt MB ftoulad CMlt ........ ? ( ( An oil spill that tainted four mlles of the Huntington Beach coastline Tuesday bas begun washing ashore at Newport Beach. U.S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Skip Onstad said brown colored 1lobut. about the size ol bail stones were detected as far south as Newport Pier today. He Uid cleanln1 operations, which thus far have been con· centrated in areas north ol Hunt- lnswn Buch pier, an acbeduled lo bestn at Newport Frida.y. Onstad said that the spill ap. parentl.y otcurred Sunday trom 1 tanker lD Lona Beacb harbor. He uld the 1tlcky 1ubt.tance which appean to be orude-.U ls belni ana1)'1ed lD laboratori•Ja. an attempt to Lrac:k don lta t0urce. . ( "But that's going to be awfUlly bard to do. because there were abo\jt 19 tankers In the harbor at the fime." The spill was detected in heavy fog early Sunday but dldn 't wash ashore until Tues· day. Oo1tad, who bas set up a com· mand poet near the Huntineton Beach city pier to direct cleanup orr•Uoos. aald the only victim o the spill appears to be one West.em p-ebe. - He laid the blrd was found in Huntincton Beach and cleaned by fltb and wild.Ute offlclall. A Coaat Guard s pokesman earlier said that patches ol oU involved tn the aplll covered an area 2,400 yards 1on1 and 800 yarda wide. J INSgE TODA W Claar1-1 8. Whee&.r Jr., rrtOf'O' of KOMQ.I Citr, Mo .• u Oft ~ potificioft wllo "~ 'm lwU" m the Crodttfoft of HGrf'fl S. Tnlmaft. SCOtJ, plto4o °"Pa.-Alf. .... Jl At\"_.._. Q A.aL.-n ... .,_...-. a_... Ai LM..... ._....,... CM ....... ..., ........... .. C:.......... Al ............. M ift "'i~ .l .._...-=:. ~ ., ......... a c-.. ""*"" J.: .......... Ct.I WMl9lllf M ::;::a ~ ......... .. t t ( AJ DAILY PILOT ., • Nixon's Paper Clar d w ·mNGTO 1 r ' Aftt'r • ear ot n~tcohuhun Rlt>bal'd Nlxon •I~ tod•y to ell but two oro&>OM'd l'1.'ttuletH>n1 sov l'rntni publh' fH't't''I to bl pre~ldentao l matc-nal~ llt• will lct • rourt d t tct. lh tt1i.vuted ls•~ • wbkh C"OOWm hie. tal)f':"' and tal)M "dhtrfn ·• Thl• u~r('t•tnt'nl. Yrhlrh bnng"i pubhl· lll'l't•ss to lht> tape and oupe~ h.utt a tiny tep tlokr. was submlttc.-d to US Dt llirl Judge Aubrt'y E Robln10n Jr II h~ appro\'ts, a n t'~11tJng luw~u11 r ballen,gtn thfo 10\' rn ment'1> Ml'<' rt' uletlons •Ill ~droppt'd llnd r tM ·ettlt'mf'nt. the ed manistrator or J:t'nl'ral ~t'rVI~ will submJl a mochr1f'd set of re1ruluUon!l lo C'onirt"~ and no ac cess \0 l.M materi•lt wouJd be pe rmitted un~I Congres:1 accepts the """ rult-Mui urch1v1sts may continue Lo review und classify the matenals in the meantime in the meanUme. H. ws ln the past, Congress dis· approves the rules, the settle· menl will be voided. "In that case, we would go back to square one," one lawyer said. Nixon is not completely satisfied with the rules, negoUal· ed by his lawyers, the govern· ment and lawyers for hls\Orians and journalists who intervened an the 11uit He wanted more than 30 days to challenge decisions by the various review panels that will decide whether materials should be public or private. "We believe those time limits are unnecessarily short." Nixon lawyer R. Stan Mortenson wrote lawyers for the GSA . But, he added, the two sides have cooperated in the past and that be had been assured "the same s pirit of accommodation" will continue. Under the new rules. anyone who ts mcntJoned in materials about to be made public will be notified in advance. thus having the opportunity to challenge the rlisclosure in advance. f 'ro111 Page A f SEARCH ••. thick fog m the area for six days and no searchang was done in that lime." Mrs. Scott said she and the mothers or Vowell and Newton a re not dis turbed by the dis· covcry or lhc life ring. .. It could have been blown orr the 'Armistice' in the storm that came up while they were out there hshing," she said. "Then <1gai n, it could have been thrown into the sea by our loved ones in the hope that it might be picked uo by searching vessels." . She said the three families, rel· atives and friends intend to go down to Baja, California, Mexico. this weekend to search the shoreline in that area. "We're having posters made that depict the •Armistice' and Debbie. Gary and Dennis," she said. "We're going to tack them up at every likely point and we are offering a reward of $1.(>00 to anyone who can give us'inrorma- tion about our children." Mr s Sc o tt s aid th e "Armistice" carried enough rood and water for two weeks when she left San D1ego 24 days 35?0. "They could still be out there in the ocean eking out their sup· plies and hoping for rescue," she said. ''And while we are grateful to the Coast Guard, tbe Navy and the Air Force for what bas been done, we feel that the de· cision to suspend the search is premature." ORAHOECOMT DAILY PILOT '"• Or•"'9"<__. 0..1• Puot. wttfl"""""''"°'"' bol'M-d '"""° HftW'-Pfn'i. t\C>vOftv.clb'fl tf'JIPOr~ C°" tPub4"""'9~'1 Sto.r .. ,.f'<ht ... \M- ftU•h " 0 ~ ... tfilirOUOf' "'"'"'' '°" (9't• Mf>W H•WOCW't INcft Hvf'lllf'GtOft &f-.C,.ff OWI t4'•f\V,_tf..., trv.-l~8'ech Sotirt1'Co.u A ........... -.... -.. -·-.s.·-.. -.,.," ... \. ,,_ 9'W'C."Nl °"°''""ftO .. eiM ., .. ~ Wt,t8•t't'"1 CO\I•~ (ft .. or"4a•,.1' ·-·-"'"*"'_.....,.,_ ,.C_ll ~ V •tP Ptntdll"t el'"9 r,,.f'IH~t'-'tfWVtr• , ........ , ...... ,.,,.., ,..._,._ MoN11i1>9 ltlol<W Cll•rlttll 1.M• 111-1' -.M •'""""' Mt"ff•"O re11...,, Teleptto.-. (714)~1 Cl1111fled Act.1rt1U,...,...,. On a Clear Dag ••• This was the view Wednesday aarternoon from a bluff overlooking Corona de l Mar State Beach looking toward Laguna Beach. Tuesday night's rainstorm had clE!ared the air and the visibility was well , as you see it. The view through a 500 mm telephoto lens takes the eye past the tidepools near Little Corona Beach and Cameo Shores toward the hJlls of the Art Colony. Charges Faced by 'Hero' MADISON, Wis. <AP> A young tow truck operator, con· sldered a local hero lor orcaruz. Ing a search party and finding an injured motorist fl'eedng in a imowbank, may face crtminal charges for faiUng to tell police what he knew about the Incident. James Hellenbrand, 19, could face a $500 fine and a year in jaiJ 1f charged with obstructing of· flcers, as recommended by a Dane County coroner's jury, and found guilty. According to testimony at the coroner's inquest Wednesday, Hellenbrand towed the driver's damaged pickup truck but never told two investigating police of· ricers he knew who the driver was and that he had been drink· ing with him only moments before. Hellenbrand testified he was afraid the motorist would be ar· rested for drunk driving if poUce round him. Thomas Julien, 36, died of ex· posure Feb. 5, two hours aft.er be ' waa found moaning in a snowy ravine. The temperature was 20 below zero. He had crashed h1s packup on a bridge-less than a quarter-mile from his rural home at Marshall, a village of l.000 about 10 miles east of MadillOll. Copter Firm Pul,ling Out TEHRAN, Iran !AP> The chief of Beu Helicop. ter's operations in Iran said today the U.S. firm will pull out almost all the 1,700 employees and de- pendents still in this strife. torn nation following a U.S. Embassy warning that it can no lonqer pro. tcct Americans in Iran. 1 Related slorv. Paee A4 1. UC Irvine Slates Engineering Week f',....P.geA! MARVIN ••• · at her, Mrs. Marvin testified. "She said lo me. ·vou may be married to Mr. Marvin, but don't forget he's still keeping Julien.· a National Guard helicopter Right Instructor and a rather of two, was cited for bravery last year ro .. pulling a motorist from a n aming car. The police officers searched in vam for lbe mussing driver; He had been thrown 117 feet from the wreck and landed 27 feet below the bridie. Robert MacKinnon. vice pres idt!nl and gene ral manag e r o r B e ll He licopter Inte rnational. said employees would be sent to "staging areas .. in nearby countries to await word on whether the new revolutionary government wants them to return. No Feud Here By PIULIP ROSMARIN °' n.e o~u, ~ ... si.tt Whal 's raster than a speeding high.tech tri cycle, more powerful than a balsa bridge, able \0 fall orr tall buildings in a single push? The answers are all contained in Engineering Week at UC Irvine Tuesday through Satur· day. The celebration in student creation in design and construc- tion of a variety or ite ms is dem· ons trated through compeli· lions: Faster than a s peeding trike? Super -trikes. a team event in which student engineers design and build tricycles for en- durance and speed; they'll race them in Campus Park Friday at noon . County Girl Scouts Open Cookie Sales Orange County's Girl Scoots carried on their cookie sales to· day in the hope that recent publicity will not put a dent in what was, last year, a $373,668 fund raising effort. "We want orange County peo. pie to understand that the pro· blems besetting the Angeles Girl Scout Council do not a ffect us and we hope they never will," Girl Scout coordinator J acquclioe Schaars aid. She said Jl)e Angeles group in Los Angeles is the only one of 10 Southern California councils racked by dissension that led \0 appearances by rival factions on television. Mrs. Schaar s aid feuding between union and non-union members or the Angeles COUO· cil's administrative staff led \0 one member urging residents i n the area to boycott cookie sales. ''No such dispute exists in Orange ounty and we are not un- ionized," she explained. ·•But we are deeply concerned because cookie sales are vital to the maintenance of our pro· grams." Mrs. Schaar said Orange County Girl Scouts will be seek- Irvine Backs Laguna on Canyon Road By Lmanimous vote, lbe Irvine City Council bas s upported the city or Laguna Beach in its peti· lion to the stale highways de· parlment to widen twisting Laguna Canyon Road. The highway consists of two winding lanes through rural and unlighted Laguna Canyon, rrom the San Diego Freeway to a point in Laguna Beach, near tbe Laeuna Beach School of Art. At that point the road widens Into fourrtnnes of divided highway. The two city councils are ask· in& CalTrans to widen the whole stretch in that manner. Accord.lnc to the reaoluUon or support passed Tuesday . . by the Irvine council, 21 peoptt were killed ln tramc accldenta on Laf\,ma Canyon Road since 197$, and there have been 185 total Injury accldenta. ing $1.25 for each package of cookies. Of that sum, she said, 57 cents represents the cost of the prod· uct. A further 10 cents covers the cost of sales licenses, incen- tives for the aelJers and promo- tional materials. She said a further 20 cents goes to the seller's Scout troop to maintain pro~r ams .' The balance or 38 cents goes to the Girl Scout organization at coun- cil level and helps to defray the cost of camps, training and ad· ministration. Mrs. Schaar s aid proceeds from cookie sales provide about 34 percent of an annual budget that is slightly over $1 million. "ll is our major fund raising effort or the year," she said. "Our girls are supporting their program by their own •£hleve- ment and il would be tragic ii a misconception was allowed to in· terfere with lhls worthy effort." Posse Hunts Two· Escapees In Illinois MARION, m. <AP) -A posse of law officers trudged through deruie underbru~ in a thick fog today hunting two convicted murderers and bank robbers who cut their way out or a federal prison at Marion . UU1cial1 al the U.S. Peniten· Uary southwest of Marion iden· Uried them as A1 Garia, 38, of El Paso, TeJlas, serving a life sen· tence plus 2S years for two bank robberies, murder and assault wlth a deadly weapon, and Howard Zumberge, 28, or Min- neapolis, serving Ure ror bank robbery and murder. State police at Du Quoin said the search was concentrated east ol lntet1late 57 near the Junction of 1·57 and Ullooia 148, some 10 miles eut of the prison. A MUcopter from the llJinoi1 Department of Transportation also waa combing the demely wooded reston. J .J . Clark or the prfaon staff said the two escaped prisoners apparently rorced. a door ln a kitchen area of the prison 1hort· ly aftel' dark Wednesday Dipt. • More powerful than a balsa bridge? Almost anything. but these are tested to withstand pressures many limes greater than their weight: the winner s upports the most weight; Wednesday al 10 a.m. m room 157 of the Engineering Building. Abl e to fall off tall build· ings? Raw eggs. and some of them nestled as they are in protective packages designed by the students survive. The stu· dent with the most survivors in the lea<>t packagin~ wins; Tues- day at i.1 a.m. in the Engineer- ing Plaza. The activities. sponsored by the UCI School of Engineering, ulso include: -Paper airplane contest. Stu· dents build a paper airplane they hope will stay m the air longest; Thursday at 1J a.m .. from orr the third flc;>or of the . Engineering Building. Aluminum can derby. Stu· dents des ign and build an aluminum can car to be the fastest rolling down an inclined ramp; Thursday at noon, m the Engineering Plaza. UP TO 550 Free Delivery COITAMllA H9 I.11th IT. (Acroel "°"' RafS>hl, next to Matte calendar•) ' 6'2 ... 17 Mon..~ 1().6 Sat. 10-6 OoeedSundav , , me' .. Plastic Bag Kills Tot SAN PEDRO CAP) -A 28· year·old woman has been booked for investigation of murder in the death of her 11 · month-old son, whose body was found With a plastic bag tied around his head. police said. Kathleen Marie Chamberlain was hospitalized Wednesday in the jail ward at County-USC Medical Center with self· inflicted knife wounds from an apparen.t suicide attem pt, authorities said. Los Angeles Police Lt. Gary Kamm said the body or Scott David Chamberlain was found by rescue teams summoned by a neighbor who saw Mrs. Cham· berlain bleeding. Hellenbrand testified he \Owed Julien 's truck home then or· geruzed a search after telling friends police ignored his claim or bearing the victim's groans. Madison General Hospital emergency room personnel said Joe Merrick. a friend and rescuer who brought Julien in 21/:a hours after the crash. at flrsl s aid th ere had been a snowmobile accident. Merrick and He llenbra nd testified they had been drinking at a Marshall bar with Julien. all of them leaving only minutes before his accident. Dr. Fatima Ahmed, who con- ducted the autopsy. testified that Julien's blood alcohol Level was more tban twice Wisconsin's legal minimum for intoxication . She added that Jullen's only in· Junes were suoerficial face cuts. The jury deliberated for two hours following seven hours of test.imony from 16 witnesses. FUU BED RECLINING Free Deli~ery ................................ - "Showcase NEW LOCATION LA9UNA HIU.S 2J014 Lake'°'91t~ (Comet of lalle FCNll ~ ond A¥enldo 0. La Catota) 77CMl61 Mon. -ftt. 1().6 Sat. 10-e Swl.12~ MllllON VILIO 211tl~ 111rw,. (COrner ol Avwt ond Via llcob) 4t•l901 Mon. -Ftt. 10-6 sot. 10-e ao.d~ .. ' Rights' For Gay Rej ct d SACRAMF.NTO IAP> Th nnt k1Cw•tht> t t of bomoM!ll ual "'"'° 11tnt-e atate vott>rs rt' J~ctt'd an anh bomoauual teacbtt Wth•tlvt' bu ·~ 1n a r..•10undinc deft>at fo r 1 ay rtahts • u-c;Ponc.•nt dllng tht-Bi ble and aq;utnc for an emplo er's rqtht t o di rt1mUU1te. the • nate lnduslrlal Relat&ooa C mmltlf't' reJC"<'ttd a blll to ban ) b d1 rrimlnaUOo agalnat bomostt1xuals Wedne day oa a 2 3 Volt' t-'our '\Oles ~t'rn O\.'f'dt.-d for PMM1a.ie id Bark#d 'Will HONOR IT' Tom Bate• BILL'S AUTHOR Sen. Jame• Miii• APWI ......... 'SO INFANTILE' John Vasconcellos .... -.. - Thunday. February 1S, 1979 DAil. v P .... OT At B11dget Deficits Constitution Battle Looms SACRAMENTO <AP) -Former U.S. Sen. Sam Ervin says federal budget deficits are "fundamentaJly dishonest," and it will take a constitutional convention to force Congress to balance the budget. Tbe 82-year-old Ervin, who served 20 years in the Senate and chaired the Watergate investigating committee before his retire• ment in l974, endonied tbe con-' s titulional convention in a videotaped message today to the Assembly Ways a nd Means Co mmittee. He was to answer questions from committee members via a telephone hookup to bis Morgan- ton, N.C .. law office. A resolu-· lion that couJci make ~allfornia the 27th state calling ror a con- stitutional convention is pending before the committee for a vote "I think it is not only imporr tant but absolutely essential for the United States to have a balanced federal budget. Deficit financing is fundamentally dis- honest ,'• Ervin said. SACRAMENTO tAP 1 -Man Juana could be prescribed for help in treating dJ..seases 1nclud 1ng cancer under a bill WUlD.U\g Senate Stiffens Code by the end of the month. CONGRESS MUST call such a convention if 34 states request one. Breakthrough .Surfaces in Lettuce Strike · ( __ sr._if_TE_] "Uuual' Assemblymen to Be Barred? Foes and supporters of the constitutional convention were rolling out their big guns today -Ervin in favor and Proposi- tion 13 coauthor Howard Jarvis 1n opposition. CALEXICO <AP ) -In the first breakthrough in a four· week-old strike that has stopped harvesting or 40 percent of th4) nation's lettuce crop, a major grower broke with other farm owners and began negotiating separately with United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez, the union said. its first legislative victory after emotional testimony from a cancer victim. Wednesday's S.1 vote by the Senate Health and Welfare Com- mittee approved SB 18' by Sen. Robert Presley, 0 -Riverside. aJ. lowing electors to participate in a four-year pilot marijuana treatment program RefJilltesMadled LOS ANGELES <AP> -The slate Public Utilities Com- mission says it is s tudying whether thousands of residents were overcharged for electricity thts winter and ~re entitled to rebates of $100 or more Since so many customers and so much money is involved. the PUC may have to step in and settle the overcharging issue, Michael A Doyle. P UC COD· sumer a ffairs ma nager for So uthern Californi a . said Wednesday ~Rerorded SANTA BARBARA (AP > -A pair of identical offshore earth· quakes that measured 3.6 on the Ri chter scale a nd occurred within 15 minutes of each other we nt largely unn o ticed . authorities said today Both quakes were centered nine miles south or here in the Santa Barbara Channel. All Items Sub1ect To Stock On Hand -~ "' ~3 ) SACRAMENTO <AP > The California Le gislature 1s into another coat-and-tie flap pittmg the ru le ·conscious Se nate against the more casual As- sembly. The Senate Rules Committee sent a message Wednesday to casually dressed assemblymen: no coat. no tie. no admission. THE COMMnTEE'S resolu- tion would prohibit men from coming onto the Senate floor durmg sessions without weanng a coat and tie. The r esolution's author, Senate President Pro Tern James Mills. refused to say that the resolution was aimed at as- s emblymen . But h e acknowledged some lower house members have come onto lhe Senate floor without a coal and tie. "IT IS RELATED to the fact members or the Senate like to be sure there's an appearance of dignity in the state Senate." the San Diego Democrat said. "It's not aimed at anybody." Reaction in the Assembly ranged from bitterness to ac· quiescence. "It's sad senators find themselves still caught up in ap-· pearances, which us ually meanS they're not committed to sub- s tance," said Assemblyman Sun 'Upset' Seething Gases Reported PASADENA <AP > -A California astronomer has re- ported the discovery of mammoth solar disturbances in which seething gases rise from deep within the sun and spill across the surface. The solar upwellrngs offer potentially valuable clues to understanding and perhaps someday predicting such phenom~na as sunspots a!"d ~lar flares~ which can play havoc with radio commumcations on eartn. said Robert F. Howard or the California Institute of Technology's Hale Observatories. "We really don't know much about what's going on below the surface of the sun a nd this will help by giving us something else to look at." he said. "It's a large aspect or solar activity that was not known before." QT, Tltl1 ad¥111t1g1 •f tlltH greet 'HhlH tr0111 your locel i11lllep111- dt11t hanlwtrt m1rch1nt witll 11111on•I ch1i11-b111i1t11 power PRESTO FRY BABY deep frJer r 921 HEAVY-DUTY SOLDERlNG IRON 8·wet\ pencil type Ir on weigh~ only 4 OL 9". 1n. long w 11h • 1 1n d1ame1er copoor plated 11p SP80 ~~01t 64C SJ699 s749s 10-IN. CHAIN SAW Th•• mull• VtSCOStlY mo- cor Otl 15 perfect lof your car 1n all cltmates 10W40 Llg~ht gee~ u-fuJt 7 2 lbs without ~r .ond ~In. eu .. tf9et to 20" In dlemeter, prunet. cuts fire wood, more. Aufometlc oiling, 2 hendle1 for po111ive con trvl, 811clut1V11 S1fe T·Tip. 44/Xl Deep l1tes 1 10 2 1orv1ng1 in minutes. In 1ust 2 cups of 011 Plastic cover FB0-1 CROCK PLATE Coolls almost every fooc:tl Stonewere lllta off for: 1111v serving •nd fu 1 c-leanup 2913900H WARING ICE CREAM PARLOR Mtkes '!.·gallon 1()41 cream. frozen yogurt. 1herbe1. e1c 1n ebou1 30 m1nu1u. Ffllll rec•P11 book CF 520· I STORE HOURS: Mon. tin Fr.I. 9.9 Sat. 9·6, S.. I 0.4 J ohn Vasconcellos. THE SAN JOSE Democrat. who often wears slacks and open-necked shirts. added: "I have no need to go on the Senate floor and I assume no senator will bave a need>l-o talk about a bill with me anywhere. "It's so infantile to think that a necktie is a sign or anything." But another assemblyman who often shuns a lie and coat, Tom Bates. D-Berkeley, said he wo uld abide by the rule, 1f adopted by the full Senate. "I'm not going to let the ques· tion or a dress code interfere with my ability to be effective." he said. "As long as the rule is passed, I will honor it. even though I doo·t think it bas any bearing on issues we're dealing with." ··I think it's necessary for the 3tate to catl for a konsUtutionaJ convention to submit an amend- ment to balance the budget . ., because there are too many pre .. ssuresonCoogress to continue de- ficit SJ>lndi:ng, Ervin said in the messaie recorded earlier this week. "THERE ARE too many de- mands from too many constit- uents that enjoy deficit fin ancmg because it enables them to get a whole lot of money out of an empty fede raJ treasury for nothing." Ervin also s aid he is con- vinced that a constitut1ooaJ con- vention can be Limited to budget issues so it would not stray into amendments that might limit civil liberties. Meantime, farm workers re· turn to the picket lines today, one day after a funeral for slal1 striker Rufino Contreras. and six-member private panel wa to begin its iniestigalion into the slaying. : I VFW SPOKESMAN Ma rq Grossman declined to identify the company that broke th~ growers' united front, but be im dicated the union was hopeful of a quick settlement. 1 ·'The separate talks certainly indicate they are willing td bargain." Grossman said. He added that Chavez was conduct1 ing the negotiations personally • I !l !I~~ I 11111 l!t !O ~11111 ll\'lM.tl ~r Neighborhood ~· { . J 1 ~' Independent Liquor Stores BACARDI RUM POPOV VODKA Req. $6.95 s599 Qt. ' Req. $6.99 $ 59'!. $ 99 R!_g. $4.99 3 Qt. BLACK VELVET Req. $13.36 s 1 o~~ IORDOll'S 1111 Req. $6.49 $ 52?. t•ALMAo·eN·· MILLER® CELLA LAMBRUSCO MomtfaMWIMs HIGH ~,., sr' $199 LIFE 750"" SciTe 55• 1.5 Ltrs. MR. & MRS. T s5" SUNKIST SODA 99c 12 01. 99c ,.. Case of 24 6 pair 9..-t not .... ., ....... ic.d UORS 2200 Newport llvd. MR. BUCK'S Ll9 ORS 2989 Fai"lew Rd. Costa Mesa 548-7311 ._....... - BA YCREST LIOUOR & DELI 333 E. 17th St. CostaMna 646-8262 ....... _...... ....... .._... ... . I • Costa Mesa 5!Z:.~U2 FISHER'S Ll9UOR 3135 Harbor llvd. Costa Mesa 549-1405-. ........... ~ - o.anorco. ,1oa1•v P1101 Editorial Page ..................................................................... 16 I Tttumav. Febtu1ry 15. t971 Aob«'r1 N WeMJ 'Publisher Tl'IOmu Keev11 1~dltor chool Vandalism Cot Ta pay r II st l'"'' .1 l'h• ll'• 1s tu a .... rnudt· b' l h1• mrmtwrs of t Ill' Ir um· C ll,\ c. "u u1w 1I .lh•ut th•• :•pf;tth ·nt mrn·,1 ~,. 111 'ollht.th'lll ht•tn,_: l''lll'1 ll'lll'l'41 In till' p.1rk1n~ lot of Cll) l huol' 1 ... 1~1 ,,, • ..,,, 'l'IU\Ctl C°h11lll\'l l ru,(1•t..' '-'t'U ' luld lhal 11th1lt !1. """ ,ffl nht tud11nl!> • l l' lo rrn1ni: lht• lw h1t or •Ill .1i..111~ onto lt11· lot:-fmm .tdJ."'t·nl ut\ 1111rk' u11d h1 ,•,1lo.111J.( 111l11 :-.t urlt·nl .uni f;u·uh ~ 11ut11m11h1l"1' ., , W•h'I'' f't'Jl'l"lt•1t ,, '"t-:~··--11011 th.11 j lull t1mt• "li'i'Urt I\ ):uant h1· hirt•lt In JMl r11l th1• \u>r,1 "'nil k 'l huul, Jn trll' t11.:h It h.lll tw1·n Jlf1IJH :wd 1h.1t 1h1• d1,trn•1 Jiii\ tu r ltll' gu.1rd. "'Ill~ 1•ctur .1t 11in lunds. ill li·.1 ... 1 unt1l lht• ,.·ntJ ur th\• I lJI I\ Ill 'H h1)\ll \ t•.tr \1111 lh,11 :·,n .luh nlf1t•1.1I' h.111 1h1· ,,,.,ur..tnct• from II\ HW Pt•IH'l' 1 h1t•f l.1·0 p,._Jtt thul ht• ''oultl µeullun tht• \ 1llllH al l\ll' lllllllll lp.11 lu11tl-. 111 .._h,11 t' th\. l'O!\l '41th ltll' "' h111 b I 111·...,d.1\ !ht• u1u1u·1I 111t.111•.111•d al n11ght support l11mt I'd 1 \p,111 .... 1\111 11! Jl"l111• p111ktl11111 ol ltw p a 1·kmg lot<. lt H,1., nut ·d th.it tull p.1tr11lhn~ .md sun·t•11lancl' \.vould no\ 111' 1>11'-'lhlt• "II h P fl''ot'rll li1rc•1•-. Ill lht· I 1dd Wlw1h1·r th1· .1dd1t1nn.1 I pn1t1·d10n l'Ollll'" trum t i\)' or '>t h11nl 1 unJ,. at 1 ... 111 u111 o ml11rtdblt· l.tl'I that tht! <.'ti)':, l.1''""1·r.., \\ould bt• 111f'pt•d .1~.11n bt.<cauM· tht• nJt10n · .. ht•:-.t plj1111ui t 11111111 un at\ h,1, hoodlum .. JU"t lJkc arl\. otht•r l'll ~ . Plan to Aid Churches For \ t•.ir ... tht• orgafllll'l's 11f c hurch groups an Irvine h :ivt• (•o mplai11t•d ahout tht• hanlship of nbtainin~ hind 'up on wh1d1 to hu1ld tht·1r {'hapeb Not only ha:-. th<.> lunct bt·t•n :-.cat·ct• 111 I rvme for or· g.in 11t•d rt·li~aous pr:.ic·ttct'. but m I hl' tt'n'>rly comp<.'t 1t i\'<' p rtl'(' m.1rkl•t of a ~rowi11(.{ urhun .1rc·a. at·~ bl•t•n µro- h1b1tl\d~ t'XIJt'OSl\I' Tht• lrnne ('ompony h.1~ producl•d a pion fo r the µurc·hust• of churc h land .. that may hnng the unhol~ price of lantl tl(nvn to earth or clo~t·r to within the re ach of s upplic:at mg congregat10ns . 11 t!-> a lease/purcht1sc· an·m1gt'm <•nt. It works like lhts A c·hurch group would ;.igrl'l' 10 a three-yea r lease. lts :111nual payment for th<> l:ind "-OUld a mount to 9 percent of th(• purch:ts{· prict• For (•xampl<'. J SlOO.UOO pro rwrt y rould bt.> obt ained h \ :i l'Oll~rl•gat 1011 <!bit• to r:ttM.' ,1 ~ little· C.ts $9,000 each of tht· thn•c· '<·ars . Follo" 111g llw t hn.•t• ~ ca1· IL•as<', the congregation '' ould hl1vt• to pa~ 1 hl1 remaining purchase price against '~ h1<'h th€' le:1s <.• pa~·mt.mts h <wt• been applied or forfeit t ht• il-UM'. Thl' lt'~hC wa ll have• allow<.•d the group not only the timt• lo r:11st· m nn<.'Y through its building fund. but also lo t•:11'1\ :a Jll'O\'t•d 111\ t•,tnwnt to M'<'Urc any nt•cd<.>d financ- ing Thi· pl.rn 'l'l'lll' .1 1t·.1 .. 011:1hl(' m<.•tnod to :..illow dlllrdll':. lo g.1111 -.um<.· twatlway ag:..ims l ~ teeming land rnarkt'I College Needs Unique Saddlt>h ack Collc•gt• officrnls a nnounced last week 1 tw 1 t·nrollmcnt was n<•aring 20,000 and they predictC'd it '' 0 11 ld r1•:1(•h nt-;.1rl:-2:tooo ht•fort• the sp r ing sem ester 's l'Ou nw off('nngs v. i'I t· comµll'lL•d Ttwt rnarks :i I I µt•rct·nt lll('rt.·a sc ovc.·r t•nrollment f1g11rc'' for one }e~r ago the fastest g rowth rate in Callforn1a's Communit~ Colll·gl· systc•m In fact. Saddl<.>~>ac·k " nnt• ol uni~ fin• college~ :-.talt.'\\Ult• that e>.pe r1e nccd ~nrollml'nt i ncrease~. <And the t1H·r1 •;1..,1• "a.s f • .ir :1hoH· any Others The college 1!, grow rng 111 lht' mids t of a s t att.•w1dc c nrollmt'nt decline. Co til-i.:t• offil'w Is <t rt.• <·oncerned. Because slat<.· of. l.1< 1:tl!'> .in: prl·senl ly organi.dng a state wide financing formula, S<Jddleback may he lumpL·d togethl!r v. ith col- IPges experiencing cnrollmt·nt declines. Whik the fin;.mcinA formula mi~ht be based on stu- d <.•nt allt'ndan cc which would cover day-to-day academic <>IH.•ral 111ns. it prohabl~ \\-Oil t ta kt• into account a \'ital nt'l'l''"'t~ of g rowth mon• tlJl)sroo ms . St.tll' of fil'ials h;n (' adm1ttt•d t here are no phms ;,it prt·:.ent Jot ti fo rmula covenng capital outl.H· building fund!-. for community colleg(•s. · This c·ould s pell doom for a college located in the fas tt· .. t grn\.\ing area of California s o uth Orange Coun- t ~ So mt• Sadd)('back ol I 1cwls havc s peculated that w.it h1>ut !Jui lciing fund~ tlusses could be increased t o g1gant ll' s tl.l's to ~1c:eommodt1t<.• drmand. State officials should bt· mindful of tht· unique Sad- d lebatk prC'dicaml'nt SomP allo"'ances s hould be made in st tiH• f ana ncing rormulas to accommodate g row1 h at <.'omm1111 1t y colle.g<•s "twrc lhe increas ingly anomalou:, ~•I uat1on '"' appan·nt • Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on lh1s page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O f3ox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (7.14) 642-4321 Boyd/Safety Tip By L.~I. 80\' I> i\m ath 1::.l1d that J hull f1er('e ,~nough to attack a pe rson who ventures onto said bc<1st ·s lurf will not <lo so 1 f that person has no clotht.>s on. Claim is the bull evidt.•ntly lhinks a nak('d hunwn 1s just unother harm less anima l. Quite so. It 's lol(ical. lntrijt\Jing, isn't it? 0f>ar GJoon1y Gus The "sc<'ntc· ('hOrm • · of LaJ?una Canyon Road Is becoming u bit too rem 1n1~ce nt of Forest l.c.1wn flow many more h<'fore wtt face re .1hty• .IM "' .. "" C.u• comme1>1\ •I• ,.,. m1U•• ay t••••n 4ftd do ftot M .. UHllV '"l«I llW ¥10•6 tf lllO MWllWPl'I ...... f01" .-t ,. • ., ... 01 .. my (.v\, 0.llf Pltet .. F.\ en mo re intriguing. I lhtnk, IS how this fancy ract (':lme to be found out An horologist is somebody \llho studies time m easure· ments . and an ifccuratc timepiece to an horologist. it 's claimed, is one that neither loses nor gains more than one second every 6,000 years. The atom clocks do th al Q "What does 11 s1grufy when a mackerel stays still in the water?" A That said mackerel iR dead. A markerel hus to swim lo live Q ''Wh al kind of income does the 'Peanuts ' comic strip with all its !IPlnoffs twina in?" A . F1gurc about $150 million a year fo'rom movic8. theaters. TV. books. so on Why dCM'l> un ordinance In Stm.'v<'port, L:i .. make It Il- legal for a funeral director to AIVC nway matchbooks? Jack And r on Shah Blames Carter and CIA WASH I NOTO Prellidenl Cart~r und lh~ Ccntn1l In telll.Jen~ Agency have bttn Rel tin1 tht11r lumpi; from just about 1•v rybody for nol knowing whul wos gv1ng on in t r;rn, upporlinM th.-.shah until ll was too late a_nd foallng to culhvotc contacts with l ht• ('JC I It• d M u :-. 11 m I cud I! r Ay .itolluh Khomt•hll But then· is one mun. p •rhar>'> lht• only mun m the world. who belte t•i. juNt tht• oppo .. 1t<' Shuh M u hummt•d n l' " .l Pahlt>v1 t-;m blltt•rt•d ~ind mcrt>a~1nuly paruno1d :-tlllCt.' he W!IS ror('cd la::.t month to nt'\.' thl' nnt1on h~ had ruled and loot t·d. tht• shuh believes Carter and tt1\' <:IA knew all loo well what wa::. happening m Iran. In facl. he ac tually believes the CIA t·ngmeered his fall from power and the ascenda ncy or Kho· meini. THIS ASTONISHING tn· lerprelation or rccenl events. which m es in the face of conven- tionally accepted reality. was expressed just hours after the shah fled into "temporary" l'X· ale . He had a private talk with Egyptian Prt!sidc nt Anwar Sada! at Aswan on J an. 16: in telligence sources have provided us with a detailed report of tbis top-secret conversalion. While Carter's critics havl' faulted him for blindly support· ing the shah in the face of mounting evidence lhat he was losing his grip on Ircm. the sbah himself credils CarlN with the most astute diplomatic doubl~ dealing sin('e Talleyrand. And while the CIA 's detractors have Mailbox cnsligoted lhe agency ror lgnor lflJl Khoncanl. the i;ha h told Sadat that as t.'arly a~ luiil spr1 n~ he h<td undenlahlc in form at ion ·'that Amer ican agenti> art' flirtimc with throppo8itlon " THE U .S. EMBASSY 111 Tehrun convinced him. said th(• shGh. that a prerequisite for bet ter understanding of President Carter was the dismissal of G~n Nt'matollah Nussiri, head of I ran 's secret Police When h<· fired Nasslr1 on June 6. 1978. un dc·r U S. pressure. he told lht• t-;~yplian president th11t lf'ft win.: Moscow-led groups in Iran interpreted this a:, •• sign or weukncss and stepped up lh<'1r opposition with massive strikes. The president luter hailed Nassiri's ouster as t•vidcncc of the shah'i. concern for humun rights. 1m1d thc s hah He told Sadat that "the biggest double c rossing took pl<tce " when Carlc•r reaffirmed his support for I ran. knowing full well that American agents alread:i had "open channels" to Khomeini. If that was the biggest. what tht• sh<ih described as "the most disgusting double-crossing and treason <sic > was carried out" in the final days or the January crisis in Tehran. The shah. act- ing on American advice. decided lo leave Iran temporarily to en<t blc the military and his other supporters to keep Khome1n1.. from returning and pave the way ror the shah's t:ventual re turn to power AC'TUAU..Y. according to the shah's Wliquc view of events, the Ame ricans we re warning the Jninia n military that if they tried to seize conlrol and bring th(• i.hah back, the United Stale::. .,.. ould cut off aU supplies aod as· s1stanc-c This warning was dt• ltvt'red. the s hah told Sadat. to top lrun1Jn hrn11s by Gen , ttobt•rt E Huyser. second 1n comm;.ind of Amt.'ncan forces In Europe, tind word of the warn loll waK pa1111cd on t<) Khomeini In Pam. ll walj thl!S Hmwky p<>wer piny, tht.> s hah 11aid. lhut made it poss1- bl<: for Khomeini t-0 return from <·x tll• Lind which thwarted \he shah s plan lo rngnin h1:-. throne In light of ht' cxpertC'nce. the !lhah told Sad;1t, th(! Egypt.Jan pre~1dcnt should not trust thl' Carter adminii.tra t1on o r lalte its advice fo'ootnote : A CIA spokesmun said the agency could not com- ment on the shah's 111lcrprela· lion of events Parents Responsible for Gr ade Inflation? To the Editor· The Daily Pilot's negative position on public e mployees. and teachers specifically, has become quilt· obvious to anyone reading the editorials of 1/29 con- cerning striking teachers and 2/6 concerning "grade inflation." 1 disagree with your position. Effective teachers a r e very s imilar lo errcctive parents . Res pect for oth e r s. self- con fide nce and pridt! in themsel\'es and their family tor school in the case or teachers> are vital ingredie nts or any suc- cessful adult guidance. Good parents and teachers have a way of passing these traits on to young people. Some teachers never have these :ittributes and that is too bad. Those of us who do have them arc slowly losing them everv lime we r ead edito rials like yours. That is really too bud. G r ade 1nflat1on occurs becauS(! the public demands that their son or daughter be pam pered so he/she can go on to col- lege. Many students need to be disciplined but teache rs are a fraid lo act in ft>ar of an irate parent going lo lhe school board cl aimin~. "This teacher is not being nice lo my lillle child ." CONCERNED parents should let their child's teacher know they approve of discipline If oll parents did this, you would see the end or grade inflallon. ll IS oot the fault of the teachers. but rathe r of parents and public pressure to "look better" than othe r students a nd schools. In regard to slriklng teachers in the high schools, you are wrong. Respect. selr-confidence a nd pride cannot be passed on lo s tudents by :i teacher who is ('Onsislenlly having his pride and dignity dim inished by the Howard Jarviscs, school boards a nd publi c . Almost every teacher I know who teaches sub- ject matter in a superior man· ner and a lso Instills prid e, respect, and confidence in stu· dents was on strike. They knew they could not ins till these Positive attitudes in s tudents If they felt as if they were being made the target of consistent de· grading actions and altitudes of the public. The enthusiasm \lnd concern teachers have for education and students is the determining fac· tor which separates a class ol regular graduates from a class or young adults prepared to live fulllllina a nd productive lives. Fewer and fewer teachers are able to create thl!'l type or en- vironment because they arc m ade to f~I like overpaid. un· der ·worked sccond ·class citizens. Help u111 NORMAN HAl,L 6ri•Ln••• To the Editor: Lasl nlght as 1 wa!' retumlng from work via Laguna Cany<>n road. J couldn't, help but reel 1111 g r y a nd upset as ty pically several vehicles passed ml! at the flrsl opportunity, even though l was traveling at the posted limit. I guess wbat I real- ly Celt was that if they had seen what I had seen that m orning maybe they would be 'Content to trave l within the speed limit and not puss ever ! On Thursduy morning. I was the second one to arrive on the scene of the accident between a van and a small sports car. As I a p(lroached the accident. the van was blo('king the north or eastbound lane and the sports car was-resting on lhe bike lane. Another man was already at· tempting to open tbe van door and help the driver to get out. I remember wondering how the van could have come all the way across the road to hit a parked car -because it was ob- vious that no one was in the sports car only a pile of old cloth~s in the front seat and pieces of glass. etc So I tried to help open the van door -with no success. The driver appear ed to be okay only a small cut on his face and a hurt leg. BY NOW, several others had arrived on the scene and as I was looking at the sports car I kept wondering -why would it be parked there and still have the lights on. Then I thought maybe someone had been in the vehicle and then thrown out when the Impact occurred. t took a quick look around and didn 't sec anything. Since we couldn't open the van door . the first man and l walked back to the s ports car <why, I don't know > :rnd were joi ned by another man who had also stopped. As we were looking in the car it suddenly became ap- pa rent that the pile or clothes was really a twisted. mangled body I started to feel sick Now l could make out a leg and a small hand as the fi rst man put his hand on her back and de- t e r mined that s he was not breuthJng Flares were out by now und the police had been called so I wandered back to my car and just sal Cor a while. What u. hor- rible feeling. r fell sick all duy . long and kept visualizing whot was in the sports car. These wer<' the thoughts that raced through m y mind a.11 c;in continued to pass me in the can· yon. M oybe I s hould have made all of those ""ho drove by the acci· dent stop get out -and look as I did Gt what death is all about. Why ls everyone ln such a hurry lo pass just one more car so we cnn all w:ilt together Al the 8top ll&ht? Think about lt 1 ROGER DAVIS C•rf•• Cep• To the Editor. • Dlauters teach many leS..'IOl'\!'I, re-arrange prio r ities, i nd r h an~t· . .1tl1tude~. and the Blue bird landslide victims. ap preciat1 ve of m ;.i ny , a r e especially grateful to our close friends. our own Laguna Beach Police Department. At Umes all of us are a bit cynical of a proress1onal cop. but all of us as individuals and a group. have s hared the other s ide of a cop few people can ex- perience as \\e have the la:.t four months THE LAGUNA Beach poltce were there and were one of u~ right from the early hour .. on Oct. 2 when they took chances getting our belongings from pre- t a r ious I y hanging hous es. through tears at demolition, and our hurts were obviously theirs also. The Command Center not only se rved security need s but human needs that even extend<.'d to our confust•d children They held us together and ne'er treat cd us just as "official disaster s tatis tics." This remarkable cooperation is still working in spite of an ongoing problem dis aster These sensitive. caring men and women have f<'lt human hurt deeply and were willing to give us so much more than re- quired. So the people you sec waving at pohct.' cars are not angry cynics IJul the "Blut!birders" snymg "thanks and we love you to our Laguna Police... · DOTTIE DELO Rluebird Knolls Community 'As sociation Ten•fo1t T t.w To thl' Editor· ( h ave JUSt dtSl'OVered . toni~hl . .,..•hy we Amt•r1cans an· becoming more and more filled with anxiety . Let me t r ace tonight 's ha ppe nings in my home land probably repealed in muny others throughout the country > I'm fixin~ dinner while mv children are watching Captuin Kirk of Star Trek fight it out with a big monster. Then the Bionic Man chuscs and fights with a man drive n made b)' som e kind of rays. We eat dinner and receive an obscene phone call We hurry to finish dinner so we c::in s~e "One f''lcw Over the Cuckoo's Nest'" which I am Sutt. with a name like thot. will give a comicoJ re- lief to my a lready drooping l'vening. AFTER ntE bloody sulctde, frontal lobotomy, murder and victory of the really sick nurse showing once again the fuUllty of the good and norm al ur there 11'1 !luch a thlna as normal> I rtipped to Channel 2's "60 Minutes" a nd learned. In detall. how our country ls being taken ovf'r by rats who c fleas carry th<' "Black Death." During tho breaks ~{1 were kept up to date on thl' '-'arth quake that JU!.t happened and the overthrow of the govern ment or Iran, wath speculation on the premiere'!> s u1 c1de. Along with lh1:, I was told lhal gas for my i.iu·zzlang s talion wagon would !loon bt• ov(•r SI a gallon. And now ror the• 11 o'clock ne ws. MRS. WALTER CORMEY Park Pos•lble To the Editor· It as surpris ing to read the editorial of Feb. 5, where the Daily Pilot is completely on the side of the landowner of the open space between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. the Irvine Company. and seems to ignore the latest development or the drive to have a national urban park created with federal money I actuall.> our lax mone} l The ll'Vlne Comp<my has been through all the years m ore than cooperative and has always stat· ed that the land in question is for sale None of the groups in- teres ted in keeping this open space for us and future genera- tions has ever intended to have this land confiscated. but they are trying to have• state. enunty, federal money and from the Land and Conservancy A~ency 1wh1ch was created for this purposel to buy open space THE DEDICATION of some land an exchange for th1• permit to build with higher density is a usual procedure and benefits all parties involved; the future resi· dents who have open spacP around or nearby and also the landowner. who produces res- idences in a niccrenvironment. At the time when it is actually well known that Rep. Patterson succeeded to get in the omnibus bill $10,000 for a study, that the study team has alrcadv toured the property in ques tion· and that the study will be finished in May. it is hard to understand that the Daily Pilot docs not know the landowner will not have to face 3 "financial lick· ing." Rep. Patterson has a very good reason to ask the federal government for financial help to create a large naUooal urban park in Orange County. Orange County is pnrk 1)()()r and our res· 1dents have to drive many miles to Mammoth •nd the na· tiooat p arka In northern California. Tht' envision d park here wo uld serve abou\ 10 million people from Los Angeles County and Orange County. BETTY llEC~l!:L • 1.AHtra from rtoden arc wtlco~. TM right to condm..M tdtna to /ti IJJOC• or dtminoi• bb«l u r~. Lflt.ra of n> toordl or I.tu will bl QfMt pttf.-rtnee. AU lftt~• mut lftchicU tigncdvre and mailmg ad· dr•u but~~ tna.¥ bl WUMeld on 1'fqw1t if .uffictml ""'°" ts ap- porCftt. PoetrJJ will ool be pi1blas~. I LOCAL Other Bale Mall ti Parking Fee Eyed At Viejo Campus • addll'barlt Colt tf' stud n and at.an m•mhl-r1 could be paylna $$ per at~ter for p1rkln1 at the Ml Ion Viejo campu as t'1rly a• July Trustff'S h •ard a rtport on pl\rldnl probltm1 and proposed 110lu llont UU. k that reC'Om~nc:k'd· __ _ -A Bl. ss .,.., ttrm ·Th<-matttr of u pztrluna fo\• · parllln& ftt l vied .. ainst both as not u k>ni rant.:t.' thing, lt'i. ti alafl mt'mbfore and stud nu pre~"lr\i problem nuw, ·· Truiilt" A ~:\Ible ~ pt•r trrm park ltobc:rt PrlC\' su1d "I '<.I hkt• tu lng fl"t• lt>vh'd uic:un~t both ._1 H 'it't' .i s pN'IUI rt'flOrt on wbul r"v mt•m ben; and l'llud<-nh '1 <>n u,· thut m ight bring in " n incrta"'' l!l p.1rk1nR C Ol.Ll-:G E Pltt:S IDENT v ao httaon ''"''" t o $25 fn r Robert t..omburd1 said the ft!t! phys ic Jly handacappcd zone~ could not be Initiated beforti July $1S for ttd zone11 und SlO fur r torr und load lna 10nr !> nd ftcv nuc brought an by such a »minute 1.oncs F'ant>~ art> nu~ ree can teaally be used for the SS. purchase. conslructaon, opera -More handicapped !ltudentb c t1on and maintenance of parking parking with t..•asaer ;access lo facilities. hillsld~. UJ)~r cam pus build Stale education code regula - inas. lions set a $20 per semester limit -CONSIDERATION OF only on parking fees, but r ecommen· one faculty/sta ff permit parlung dat1ons called fo r a SS per lot when more lots a re built. semester fee. Such a fee would The presentation bv student raise an estimated $55,000 per Hrvices dean J ack Swa rtsbaugh seme~tt'r sparked comments by trustees that centered on the possible parking fee and staff parking. BOARD CHAIRMAN Larry Taylor fumed that staff mem- bers were given prefe rential parking close to college build- ings. "We forget who our customers a r e her e a nd we m ove the e mployees u p to the front." Taylor argued. "T don 't say you have to put them lemploye<?s 1 way down at the bottom, but let's get some open lots.·• o.lly l'I ... SUtt ,_ ~y. F.t>ruary t5. 1979 L/SC 1J I -~ DAii. v Pit.OT A. In San Cletaeate Rape Crisis Center Hit by Fund Slash By ANNE COOPElt Ot ... o.i ............. Federal funding ror the San Clemente Rape Crisis Center has •P- parenUy been curtailed, forcing a reduction in the center's proaram at a time of planned expansion. Shirley Davis, project director, announced recently that the Orange County Cnmlnal Justice Council bad v~ to allocate the San Clemente program just $6,000, not the $30,000 for which it applied. geographical boundaries on ill services. THE CENTER WAS one or several Orange County pro- grams d i sap~ointed by the Criminal Justice Council's hefty allocation ($379,635 l in federal Law Enforcement Assistance Administration funds to the Golden West Police Training· Center in Huntington Beach. Ke ith Concannon, executive oCficer for the Criminal Justice Council, said the large allocation lo Golden West was not intended as a poor rertec tion on the smaller community programs. ·'Since 1969, the No. 1 priority or the council has been a re- gional criminal justice training program,'' said Concannon. "BUT THERE IS only so much money to go around, so funding the Golden West train- ing program meant other pro- grams just couldn't get all they'd applied for." Mrs. Davis said the reduction in anticipated funding will mean that the center will have lo be closed, unless alternative fund- ing can be found. THE CENTER ·s 1978 budget was $24,582. Of this amount, $10,000 was provided by federal Law Enforcement Assistance Administration funding , $10,000 through federal revenue sharing funds, $555 from the state and $556 from the city. T he remainder came Crom SJ)i'akers' fees and donations. Expenses have included rental of an office · at 312 Ave. de la Estrella, a telephone (used as a 24-hou.r crisis hoWne), films and other educational materials and s alaries for a professional counselor and two pa rt·time clerical employees. Mrs. Davis 'has worked full- time without pay since she start- ed the program in 1976, after s he was the victim of a rape at· tempt. Trustees a re expected to dis· cuss parking plans again at the Feb. 27 meeting. • STATELY PALMS NEED A FRIEND Darwtn lddlng• Planted Them 21 Years Ago Center statisttcs show that between March and December 1978, 31 rape victims were counseled by its staff. SAN CLEMENTE Police Chief Gary Brown said he would be s orry to s ee the program curtailed because or reduced funding. "We have utilized the services of the Rape Crisis Center," he said, "and they have been very helpful. Palm Tree Anybody? E IGHT VICTIMS of suicide or rape atte mpts . batte ries, molestations and incest also were counseled, as well as fami- ly members or the victims of these crimes. "The number or cases the~ handle is small, but the service they provide is specialized and not duplicated anywhere els~ in southern Orange County. City Giving 'Em Airoy But There's a Catch Resff1M They're giving them away! That 's right, San Juan Capistrano city ofCicials are looking for someone who can use up to six 25-foot-tall palm trees. said Public Works Director William Murphy. "TREY WILL BE on the City Council agenda again, so it's up to them what happens lo the trees if they aren't taken.'' Mission had an overabundance of trees so they asked people lo come and take tbe m if they wanted the m. Iddings said the trees don't have deep root systems and will survive transplanting. · A.nyone interested in obtaining the trees may call the city's Publi~ Works Department at 493-11?1. Although a number of those counseled were residents or San Clemente, others lived in Dana Point, Laguna Niguel, San Juan Capis trano and other south Orange County communities. The st.aff counseled three rape victims from Santa Ana. Anaheim and the San Fernando Va lley in December as part of the center's policy lo draw no Rec Panel to Meet The Recreation and Social Services Commmee of Laguna Beach will hold a meeting al 7 :30 p .m . Fe b . 26 in the Ame rican Legion Community Center, Legion St. between Calalin~ and Glenneyre. Joseph 'J a y' Durkin has res igned from the San Clemente Traffic and Park- ing Commission after a year and a half, saying Increased business commitments in- t erfere with his work a s commissioner. THE ONLY CATCH is the· estimated $1 ,000 per tree cost lo- remove the frond-studded ma- j es lies from Jheir Camino Capistrano resdhg place. They face destruction from a street widening and parking project. Darwin Iddings. propriesto r of the La Golondrina Motel. also has been working lo s ave the trees. He planted them ·on Ca mino Capistrano about 21 -------------------------------------- ... , • And they must be moved within~ city limits. "We're continuing to look for someooe who can use the trees," years ago. "Those trees are about 25 ye ars old and they all came from the old Miss ion grounds," Iddings said. "At that lime, the The Dally Pilot brings you the world, na· tlon, state and especially your hometown -all for less than 12c a day. All delivered to your door for less than the price of a cup of coffee. You get it all in the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 Paint-the creative way to decorate and at these prices, more economical than ever. Over 600 beautifully different colors. Colony · Satin Tone FLAT LATEX WALL PAll'lf THE EASY ENAMEL Latex easy to use. and wipe c lean easy to llve with. Soft satin finish is ~reat for trim and w alls. A special favorite tn ki tch- ens and baths. OUR REG. $14.99 THE ORIGINAL EASY PAINT It goes on smooth and easy and dries in minutes to a tr'uly beautiful flat f1n1sh. Ifs scrub brush tough. but doesn't look 1t. Tools wash In water. OUR REG. Sll.99 Colony Satin Tone LAnx SATIN 1NA11Afl ·ONI 7 DAYS 9·• 240 Broadway LAC•A llACH (iil!l!!- 497 •440 J ~ l ' AJ• DAIL y PILOT Thur'9day, Febru8fY 15. 111'9 NO SIN? HUMPHREY American Describes Death by U.S. Envoy EDITORS NOTE Tiu! 1CJllnwrrig 'Jlttm.IMa n>p0rl cm tM lnl.ltng o/ ll S Ambauador Dt.lbl woa wntttn bll Mayer Stae~I. a vacationing Amencan bu.$1- wumon J10m Hl{lhland Park, IU . and dehonnl to The AIS«&ated Press on his o rnual m New DeUn /rom Kabul By MAVER STIEBEL "-Ti. At-IAIN l'nta KABUL. Afghanistan -Our room in the Kabul Hotel was two doors from the one under siege. After a 60·second shootout. the corridor was bloodied and guns moke filled Room 121 where, we learned later, American Ambassador Adolph Dubs had just been fatally shot. <Related story, page Al2>. Moslem gunmen demanding the re- lease or three Jailed Shute clergymen Pollution Rise Feared if Car Fue/,s Misused LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Twenty year~ of smo~ f1~htmg may go down the drain unless <'ity drivers use the right fuel and stop tampering with pollul1on control devices, an air quality expert says. had held the ambassador·hostage in the hotel until national security police attacked, an Afghan radio broadcast said. AFGHAN GOVERNMENT of- ficials said they did not know whether the ambassador was killed by his kidnappers or by police bullets. Room 121' was a shambles. The wooden door was demolished. The windows bad been shot out. A water pipe bad been hit and waler covered the floor. along with pieces of human flesh. When we left that morning for our sightseeing tour, we had passed 10 soldiers with submachine guns and plainclothes me n with drawn re- volvers in the corridor. We bad no idea what was happening but my wife, Sandy, remarked, "This isn't the usual thing you'd see in a Chicago bot.el." WHEN WE RETURNED al about 12: 15 p.m. we encountered police roadblocks near the hotel and about 100 armed men ringing the building. We bad a plane to catch so we talked our way into the lobby and were promptly herded together with other foreign tourists. Within minutes. we heard a volley or gunfire -possibly 15 to 30 shots and all in less than a minute. Medics rushed past us with two empty stretchers. · A MINUTE LATER, two bloodied bodies were brought down. Then a third, a smaller one, was carried out NATION I CALIFORNIA Pope Visit Upstaged Carter By ntANK CO&MlE& ....,.....,..Wfttlr MEXICO CITY -PnparaUons for Prealdtnt Carter'• current rislt to Mex· lco were suspended once bec•IJM of tremors that hJt this crowded but lnvit- log capital city. Not Lbe Lrtlmon from t.be two earth· quakes that have hit bere th1a year. They were Insignificant compared to th., tremora occasioned by the recent vialt of Pope John Paul U. ON n1E EVE OF the pope's arrival, chief White House advance man Ellis Woodward beaded back to Wubingtoo. As long as tbe pontiff or Roman Cathohcism was in the country, Woodward reported, there wu no pro- spect of engaging Mexican officials i..o plannin.e Carter's visit. Once the pope returned to the Vatican, Woodward returned to Mexico City. SPEAKING OF CHtJ&CHMEN, Arcbblsbop Fulton J . Sheen told Carter and 3.000 others at Wasblngt.oo's annual White Houle prayer .breakfast that be round it remarkable no president since Abraham Lincoln bad talked publicly about sin. Perhaps someone should send the elo- quent cleric a copy or .. The Spiritual Journey or Jimmy Carter," a just- publiabed compilation or presidential speeches, l..ntA!rviewa and Sunday 1ebool lesaom on rel.Utioua U,.mes. For example, at the funeral of Hubert H . Humphrey last year. Ca~ recal_led. a visit to the Mahatma Gandhi memonal tn New Delhl where be read a Gandb.l state· meotoo "The Seven Sins." "According to Gandhi," saJd Carter. ..tbe seven slna are wealth without works, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without cbaract.er, com· merce without morality, science without humanity, wonbtp without aacrillce and politics wit.bout princi· pie." Cartel' concluded that, by Gandbl's definitions, Humphrey was .. wit.bout sin." WILD WEST DRESS SHIRTS ON SALE! H.D. LEE INNSBRUCK JEAN . ON SALE! • PANATELA OXFORD CLOTH SLACK SALE in solid colors. Machine washable poly 11lack. R~. $20.00 • NOW '13" Brwihed cotton aatftn jeen reeturing the popular saddle 1e11t a1.1tchina. Available in U1M>rted colot'L Reg. $22.00 NOW coonhnat.ing jacket al~ available Reg. $30.00 s1599 NOW s1999 iood rOI' lOdava onlv. ao hunv! A slide back to the air pollution problems or the 1950s was indicated last summer when owne levels were the highest in a decade, Dr. Thomas lieinsbeimer, vice chairman of the South Coast Air Quality Management District, told a federal air pollution commission in the arms or a plainclothes man. It=:;=::::;, A fourth man, apparently not wounded, was led into the lobby, kicking violently al the 1S security STUDIES SHOWED up to 1S per- ce n l or the cars equipped with catalytic converters were being ruin· ed because leaded gasoline, instead of the required unleaded gas, was be· ing used, be said Also. Heinshe1m er said federal s tudies s howe d that pollution control devices in 19 percent of 1973-78 cars had been tampered with, causing them to be ineffective. Tam- pering causes emissions to be about four times the normal rate, be said. California Air Resources Board Executive Director Thomas Austin, however, blamed the smoggy sum- mer of 1978 on meteorological condi· lions men around him. The hotel manager interceded in our behalf and we were permitted to go to our room for our luggage. THE EXTENT OF THE violence became more obvious as we ap- proached the room. Blood was all over the corridor. It appeared that the se<:urity men bad fired from the street below. shooting out the win- dows, and from the corridor through the door. We packed our bags in a hurry and dashed out the back door to our wait- ing car. SAVERS LOVE LACUNA FED short-term T ~Plus money market certificates • BECAUSE these $10,000 Certificates top weekly discount rates by 1/4%. • BECAUSE l interest is compounded daily to build up the yield still higher.· • BECAUSE these high-earning money•makers mature in just six months . • BECAUSE you can reinvest your funds at maturity. at the prevailing T-Plus rate. • provided no intera.1 penalhcs are Incurred by premature wtthdr11~a1s Big bonus! Your T-Plus certificate makes you eligible for a money-saving Savers Club membership. also coordinating t---r-"'11-::::::=-- blaur & vest 1 /3 off Lim1t.ed s ize and colors Young men's Kennington WOVEN JEAN SHIRT SALE Wide assortment of weste"rn yoke jean shirt styles. Reg. $17.00-22.50 ~~w s1199 ~ SAVE ON WOMEN'S AOORABlE CROSSOVER TABWAJST PANT in aSBOrted poplin colors ai:r.es ~ 13. reg. $24.00 NOW YOUR CALIFORNIA CLOTHING STORE CERRITOS/ ARTESIA !&600 Cfldley IT. JIJ•Ql4•eGOJ /loOlf From Robr°IJOnt E'ttlonce o/ lOI ~ 0.. • f TORRfltCE JolAh d Del M1o FOJtion ~ U7l4 HMttlOrM OIW. 21J·J1J-73Qie, tlORTHRIDGE lQJlO Hcwdhotl Jt 21J·QQJ·10Q7 Acron From ~tl'wldqe PlaH Tempe C Notdttoll .. -....... SALE ON CALIF. FAMOUS MAKER KNIT SHIRTS SIS oollar plackets a.n 8S80rted styles. Rt9. $18.00 NOW LEVI'S MOVIN' ON SALE Fashion ,eans in bn.18hed colton, corduroy & pre·wuhed denim. reg. $20.00-$21.00 NOW only $1449 Good 10< 10 d<1y\ only, so hutryl • AN EXQUSIVE FROM WllD WEST, a great casual shoe in tan calf or sand suede. Reg. $39.95 NOW $2999 <-~Ollly) I . -.. STOCKS I BUSINESS NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS T hur day" 2 p.m. (E T) Pri 0.."1•11""' 1iw11• If-•°" INN•"' "•' ~ ~.11., ... ,, l>•cltlt Pi1t, 60tion. r;.1ro11 and Cine IM•tl ••ex• •• -... ..... _.,Hl>• '"• .... ,~.I A\WKl•liM'OI \.t<11•IH0 0.•l••••M lntllnel .... ... " N· t •• I .. ,I", ~ ~ ~ P l "4 'I I , \f.I H r, , 1, Pf1t. .. I (.,_ (•• " " ~ Ha. I~ U o 1, Muir• t 'I 'f •1 1111--lft JtO 1 111 4'' Nte'.ltt eo I 10 u.. ~ Aub4ifm 16 • , .. 7311> • •· frtMJW 1 IO l u n•,, A.tr t lf • " ~ I\ ~~ 411 . ... • • • • • ,,..t.. t I • •• lntM11lt '" • H II t • NI0.11 ' .. t u )1 • -fly~~ .1 •• 1 !•7~,.. ,,. 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E1111rt 1.14 11 ,,._ .,.. lri ..,.,, t t I iJ .. •• • Nt1C.11 .n 1 11 1ei,,-llo<ttO •.&» • 2J2 ul4 1 D UBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -The United Arab Emirates and Qatar announced oil price"tlikes of a bout 7 percent today for various grades of high-quality light crude, oil industry sources reported. The sources said Saudi Arabia is expect· ed to take similar action. The increase would boost the cur· rent price of $14.10 per 42·gallon bar· rel for premium low sulphur crudes to $15.12. That rate went into effect Jan. 1 following the decision by the Organiiatlon of Petroleum Exporting Countries to raise the 1978 price for all types of oil by s percent. The lncreqe could hike American gasoline retaln prices by about a cent a gallon. Output Rises Slowly WASHINGTON <AP) -The na· tlon 's tndu~trial output rose by the smallest amount in a r ea r last month as stormy weather mterfered wtth production al the nntlon 's utilities. mines and factories. the government uid today. ll was unclear wht tber the 0.1 per· cent lncreue for January a lso reflected a slowing or economic ac· tlv l t.y. Econom iat s h ave been watchln1 aovernment Indicators to determine whethM a bualncu downturn t. lbead. The January h:u:reue wu the t mallest llntt a O.& perceat drop In January tm, eluting another barab winter. } .. \ lhu'9day, Fobruaiy 15, 1979 s OAIL.Y PILOT 87 90-dag Li•it 'Free' Loan Has Its Drawbacks By SYLVIA PORTER IC you were ottered a n lnttreat.free loan of $1,500 lor three months -90 days during whlcb you could invest the money at well over 9 percent would you grab lt? Dial Finance-Co., a consumer finance finn head· quarte red in Des Moines. Iowa, has been d a ngling this fi nancial goodit before now customers off and on for six months. Dial operates in about 35 states, is a respectable and savvy company. and has attracted thousands with ads promising the loan . A FREE LOAN IS TEMPTI NG ANV u me. Today. with the cost or bor rowing increasing, it lit close to ir· resistible. Even the nation's "primt-" borrowers are of . ficially charged a lmost 12 pty"<'ent by banki> and mu•h stiHer interest rates under the counter. How can Dial Finance extend interest free loans? Here's thl! tale behind such consumer finance ad cam- paigns : rt l Dial's "interest -free" loan is available only lo new und "qualified" customers. The company retains the right to determine who is "qualified." Its goal is the customer who in the past has rarely eve n thought of visiting a finance company. It Is seeking professional. w hile·co ll a r a n d managerial individuals Money's w h o ea r n a b o v e · W th average salaries. have or well-established credit records and plenty o( such coa ateral as houses, cars, boats and furnishings. <2 I The short-term loan is truly "free" only to the bor· rowe r who'tan rep-.y it in three months . T hus, the terms or the offer help to limit the loans to borrowers who usually don't need them. <3 > If a Dial customer fails to repay the interest.free loan in the 90 d ays, the finance company levies finance cha rges on the full amount of the loan from day one. Tbe Dia l program is structured so that participants sign in- stallment loan cont racts when they accept the "interest· free" money. In effect, they are paying a finance cha rge each month along with a portion of the principal. At th<· end of the 90 days, when they repay the full amount of their loans. the finance charges are refunded. F ROM 15 PERCENT TO 2S PERCENT OF THE 15,000 customers who obtained interest.free loans during this last holiday season will not repay them in full in three months. Dial ~·xecutives estimate. These borrowers will become reg- ular fi nance company customers, paying from 18 Jf~enl to more than 23 percent annual Interest. The rates vary. depending on the state. A Californian. for instance. who borrows $1,500 from a Dial orficc and discovn s he needs 24 months to repay. could end up turning O\Cr a total of $1,896 for h1s "free·· loan of $1.500 Recause lhL'Y customarily cat.er to highe r·risk bor· rowers thi:tn other financial institutions. finance companies usually charge higher r ates. They also frequently impose higher chargc·s on the individual seeking a small roan than on thl' borrower obtaining a big sum or money. The consumer finance company can help the higher· risk borrower. But there are few. if any, free lunches. The offer of a loan at no interest s hould arouse skepticism. ll should raise cynicism to a high notch. New Law Guides Fwul Trans/ ers WASl-ONGTON <A P ) t;seri; of 24-hour bank teller machines ha ve a new recourse to unauthorized use or their computer cards . but there's " catch. To take advl:lnlage of the new federal law limiting ltabi lity to $SO. a curd-holder must notify his bank within two business d <iys of discovering t he card's dis appearanct• ~ or misust'. Otherwist'. hl' cun lose up to $500. THE PROVlSIO!"<S ,\RF. P.\RT OF a law pusscd by Congress last year lo protect cusfomers in the age of clcc · lronic fund transft•n •. wh1C'h a llow various kinds of uutomated financial tra1\s~1ct1ons. The law took effect lust Wl't1 k. Whil" the mal'h1nt•s' widest use has been in allowing bank customers 24·h•iur acc~ss to their accounts. the new technology is ;.ilso used in systcmR t hat let customers pay bills by telephoning their bank :md ordering a payment from their account. While lhc com · [ J putcrized transfers arc <·o nvenient . a Ho use CONSVMER s ubcommittee chair<!d by Rep . Frank An · nunzio, 0 ·11 1.. found in stancrs last yf'11r of pco· pie losin~ !urge s ums of mont'Y through lm:Juthorizcd use or their cards The law allows financial institutidns to send cards to customers who don 't 1'1'<1uest tht•m In such cases. however , the customer must RSk for an identification number before he can use the curd. OTHER P RO\'ISIO~S, WIUCH tukc cfft!ct next year. will: -Requin.· n '<'c•ipts for transactions made through computer terminals. alt hough not for telephone transfer!!. Provide customt>rs Wlth monthly s tatemrnts when they m ake CIC'clronic tra nsfors and quarterly statements if there have been no tra nsfers. · Let commmers stop paymenl up to lhree days befon' scheduled lram;fors for such item~ as utility bills and in- surance premiums. J'HE FEDERAL R ESERVE BOARD. which is wr iting regulations to enforce.• th<' law, is concerned about dif· ferences between it and older laws li miting credit card liability to $50. "Consumers s hould not lrnvc to learn diffe rent rules for t he pieces of plas tic lying side·by·side in their waJJets,'' Nancy H. Teeters, hoad of the Fed's consumer affairs committee, said. Tamura Leaves SD SAN DIEGO CAP > Tamura Etecttic Work~ Ltd. of Tokyo hus shut down its U.S. marketing subsidy 1n San Olego after more thirn fi ve yeurs in operation. In tho.o;e yearR, Tamura cnptured 16 percent of the U.S. digltul clock r:narkd with annual sales of $5.4 million. It Is no longer profltublc to ~xport his company's finished products from J a pan, Hsistanl manager Vul Oya 831d. Oya blamed products m.adc ~ith cheaper labor In T aiwan and Hong Kong and·tho yen's sharp dc preciaUon against lM dollar, now one for about 200 yen. ' The Results Could Amaxe You )uat o few words In the right place ... Daily Pilot Classified Ads 642-5678 .. • t . f • • ' • . •••••••• •Ii ••• •••••• .. . . . . . U DAil V PILOT Thurtday, f'ebruary 1&. tt7G HOROSCOPE/LOCAL Aquarius: Your Ideas Count . - INVESfMENT GUARANTEE $360 PER WEEK PART-TIME FlllDAV, F .a. 11. am By 'VD F.Y OM Ill. ARI ~ tMorcb 2l·April l9l. F1nlllb nilh<'r th n bealn b • &prt.'1$1ve ln u t>rllna right , l rrltorlal and oth,•rv.1. t• T Rl ' !A1u·1t 20 May 10>. New aap µrouch lo hh1c ta .. k '" nt.•cc.-•r'Y Be> orl&anttl. <.•tmfolt'nl. indttp('nd nl. Lo\ie b IO plC'tllN' llld )OU w1U Rt'l to heurt or ml!ltl<'rt \OU &Min .ill) G MINI 1Ma 21 June 20 >: Emotions l~nd to t.1omin.;h' 1mpull\I", ch n1e. 'dr1ety ond lov(' ar<• f raturt>d A(tunrtlb, Cunct•r, l ... 4:0 JK-rwn) play f,•uturt.'<f ruk In "cl.'nnr10 CA C't-~R <.I unt"' :?l J ulv 22 1 1-:m ~tw '" un bu .. 1t• -.lO('k , n •mforct'mtnl\, 111vt•11tory \'uu coi n &t'l 011 mon.• 11<1hd (O(lllnll f11uim·1 II> und t•motlonully LEO 1Jul) ::?.1 \uw 2:t l \OU gl'l In form tton v.h14•h 11\t' 'dour to )'Our 1x1 1t1on vr dt.•mand!> Some-on.• ·~ try1n1 Lo tt.>11 )ou w mt•l.hmg Bt• alt-rt ' \11RGO 1.Au& 23 ~pl 22 • Yo u makt• i.1gn1f1t'Jlll fanJnc1ul gain,, )'OU un• ~•II 1ng lo a('l·,•pt :>Oml' l hungt· . rt•\ lblOni. Officials, Voters To Mingle Orang e County Supl'rv1sor s Ra l ph 01edr1ch and Thomas Riley will bt.' among dignitaries attending u rece ption Saturday in Laguna Nigue l . sponso red by the Capistrano Bay Arca League of W ome n \'oler-. .. The reception as de· signed i.o tha t voters ma~ meet their e lected n •preM•nlall' es face to facl' on a n 1nfo rml.ll bai.1i.," !>aid Jen Hum· phn·y of the league J:"i ADDITION lo Diedrich and Riley, other Orange County of· f•cia ls expe cted to ett· tend the reception in· elude District Attorney Cecil Hicks. County As· sessor Brad Jacobs and County Tax Collector Hobe rt Citron Jerry Sh:Jw of the Orange County school board a lso •s cxpt>clcd al the recept1<'n. San Cle mente Coun· r ilwoman M y rti s Wagner will be availa - ble to talk with constit- uents at the league function. Mrs . Hum · phrey s aid REPR ESEN TING San Juan Capistrano Cl· ly government will be Co un c ilm an Phil Schwartz and City Clerk Mary Ann Hanove r. Capistr ano Unified School District board , president George While of San Clemente and trustee Robert Bachelor of La~una Nigue l also ~ill alknd the recep- tion. Sa turd ay's leag ue t•vent is scheduled from 5 lo 7 p. m al the Crown Va ll ey Co mmun ity Rec rl'ation Center. off Crown Valley Parkway, -between Niguel and La Paz Roads TICKETS ARE $2 and will be available al the door Mo r e information about the reception is available al 49ti·5131 or 496-1915. Free Film In Laguna .. Face To Face," star· ring Liv Ullman, will be s hcJWn free at 7 p. m . Tuesday in th e auditorium of South Coast Medico I Center , 31872 Coast Hig hway, South Laguna. Dr Charles Head , a clinical psychologist and Me ntal Healt h -Hope Unit program director, will offer comments and lead a discussion after the mm. More information is available at the Mental H ealth-H ope U nit , 499-1311 . ..... ~ .. 's Pl.UMllNO HEATING AlltCONO !>I lt< 1116$1 '>Nv•lt lt1...,•\l••l,<tl Your Door 1C•ll ~ore Nt'<t1•.i Y-Arttl CO!tTAMISA642·1753 1si.~11v•. MIHl0.. vl1.10495-0401 ietn CMftlM Clplm-• .tt A ... Your D.tfy 'ht C•ftbe A.eyded. 0r•"9f Co.nl Colleoe I\ I~ olflctel rec:ychno ctnlor IOf C°'ll Mtw. ·& ; I Cyclt> •• ".iood .. for m om•y, r1ndln1 m1 slna urt1dt• obtalnlnt: ~enulnl· bar10ln LISI.A ISc•pl 2.1 (.kl ~~) ('ycle hl1h . bt-d1rttt. mdt-JH:ndi•nt. Ctlnrld nt Take< It•. d: rdua to hl' ldt•lrll'k<'d by orw ~ho Ill t>nv1ou .. •llld d(IVIOU· 'ou'll land on your kt•l 8("0RPIO <Ocl 23 Nov 21 l Sec lus1on. qu1t'l n\Omonl the ore tmporlanl for your we lfnrc 11rmpornry conrtnt·ment m1wht bt• .t bit• !ling In dls gu111c. Special t•nnfton•nct• Is HCht.'duJed. SACITl'AIUUH <Nov. 22 Dt•c. 21 1 Emphn111~ on dl"'-.m'. frlt·rHbhlp. ClntUl c1u l backing for bu111nc'1>b 1~nwrprh1c Ont• you l ook fo r Mrunlcd doh ~omcth1ni: to nwkt· you frt'I proud ('APRl('ORN <l>t•l' :l2 Jan llH Put Cm1o;hinti lour ht''> on l>rllJt.'l'l Accent on JC COmt>liahmt·nt. \'l' n (1c Jllon, &Cllllll( i: rt.>t>n Hahl from tho~•' In uuthor1ly You'll lmprovt• d1~tr1bullon und d11>pluy AQUAIUl S IJJn 20 1-'cb UI > Im pr1nl t>lylc. )our own words, thouRhb. 1d~a:. me.m m ort.• lhJn quotalloni. from Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your He~lth. I the most r vcred pundits. Open Unes of communJcatJon. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20 >: Piece loaethcr bits or Information; you will come up wtth comple te story. Accent on the hidden, the delayed, time and mo· tlon. ba1lc costs. Partne r or male talks ubout bud&el and how It ge~ that way. ASSEMBLY LEA.DER EllS SENATE RVN SAN DIEGO <AP> -Paul Priolo, re· "lcctcd Republlcan minority leader of the Assembly e arlier this year, aays be muy run for the state Senate or the U.S. Senate in 1980. The Malibu legislator, In h.is 13th year at Sacramento, said he has SM.000 left an campaign runds. But none or that, uld Priolo, was raised under federal guidelines Um1Ung individual contribu· lions lo $1 ,000 and banning corporation girt . Our program fHturea the new pop·top hot fooda. All are n•· tlonally known brand• such H Heinz, C1mpb9ll, Chef Boy Ar Dee. •nd Hormel. All accounts are secured In office buildings, schools, lndustrlal ptant• and hospltals. We need reliable people to service th••• accounts. WE PROVIDE SECURED LOCATIONS IN YOUR ARRA, INVESTMENT GUARANTEE, COMPANY FINANCING, WHOLESALE OUTLETS, ONE YEAR FACTORY WARRANTY, PARTS AND SERVICE. You provide a.10 hours your choice wHkly, aer· vlceable 1utomoblle, be ready to 1t1rt In 30 days, minimum Investment $4800. Phone Toll·free 1·800·121·7700. Aak for ex· tenalon 536. 6 mg. "tar'. 0.5 mg. nicotine w. per cigarette by FTC method. REGULAR ANO MENTHOL ONl.Y5MGTAA Get what you never had before: Satisfaction With ultra-low tar. " I r l .. .. Lag1•na/South Coast EDITI O N Your Hometown Dully ew pap r VOL. 72. NO. 46. 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF~RNIA . THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1979 TEN CENTS Cle1nente Candidates Rush to File 8)' ANN COOPU ... ~ ........ San C'lem~te C1ly Cl rk Mu Bera WI.II> seu•na u_p toda) for a rush ~ candidat t Ptttfd to m by Uw. s p m d adlin for the Apnl 24 &pt."'('tal Ctl)' Councll el~cllon T-.•eoty tven candid tt>S had already filed thetr nomanalJOn pa pers before eel) offtct- opened tbb mornang lo'lnH'n more would·~ candidates hMv t bn out pa)>4'n to run ln th AprH t>lt-ctioo, rutUnA th ~· ble numbt-r o nan1et on th t>.Hot at 42 T~ g igle or nndldoteis will bt' compelln6' ror unexpired term& or three City Council member recalled by San lemcotevoters 10 Junuary 811hteen or those who b•v · riled nomin.aOon papers have -. specahed thut they itre running ror two on yeur terms vacated by the recall ot Mayor William W Iller end Councilwoman Don· na Wilkinson. Nine mo re andidates are campa1grung ror the three years r.,mainlng to the term.or re- called counc ilma n Ho ward Mu$ht'tt Until their s uccessors are elected in April, Walker, 3 Lost at Sea? Coast Guard Suspemls Search By TOM BARLEY OI *Deity ~ ... Sutf Hopes for the safety of two m en and a woman who left San Oiego in the 45 -foot craft, "Arm istice" beJ?an to dim today when the Coast Guard withdrew its ships a nd aircraft from further search operations. The decision was ta ken after heavy clouds m oved into the search area and shortly after a fi shing vessel picked up a life ring b eari n g th e n a m e , "Armistice." "We're suspending any search activity unless and until some· thing else turns up,'• Coast Guard P .O. Steve Disbro explained. ''lrt :-v Gene Kelly I Testifies For Marvin t I 7 , LOS ANGELES <AP) Danc- er-actor Gene Ke lly took the witness stand at the Lee Marvin trial today and contradicted testimony given by Michelle Triola Marvin about a s bow business contact. He denied that he ever talked to her about a chance for her to get a role in the stage play, "Flowe r Drum Song" in 1964. "Miss Triola is very confused about dates," said Kelly. "I bad nothing to do with 'Flower Drum Song' after 1958." Kelly, who directed "Flower Drum Song" on Broadway, said he has known Miss Marvin •·vea·y well" for nearly 30 years. "I 've kno wn her q uite a while," he said. "It was purely social. She has visited my house on OCC8$iOn ... He said he also knows Lee Marvin und has worked wath him on television shows. "In short. I know both these people and J like them both," the movie star said. Kelly was s ummoned to t.he s t a nd as Mar vin's attorney opened t.he defense case in the landmark property nght.s trial. The dancer was called to re- fute Miss Marvin 's testimony that she gave up a chance to ap- pear in the Broadway show so she could stay with he r then· lover. Marvin. That was in 1964. She told of more than one phone conversation with Kelly in which be referr ed her to a choreogra pher who could give her a job in the show. But Kell) said the show was probably closed by then. He said he did not know whether she might have been re· CSeeMAllVIN, Page AZ> Coast Weather Chance or fe w lig ht showers 20 percent Friday m or nin g . W es t t o northwest winds 20 to 25 mph Friday a fte rnoon. Lo ws tonight 44 to so. Highs Friday 58 to 63. INSIDE TODA 't' Charle• 8 . Whe.lflr Jr . maf/Or of KOMO.t Cit11, Mo., ia °" ~'°111al poUtkiotl who "give• 'mt 1wU" in tht trodmon o/ l .IOfT'll S. Tnimon . Storv. phoCo on,,. Alf. btlex At Y-lwllk• Q AMI~ ,,_.....,.. Cl .... ... a M t...M,-..,_ 46 ... ..... ....... .., .... fl .. ~ .......... ..... cu .. M __,, a or-.. Cll9My ~ Of.ti lyMe ... CMtk• as 1. cae. ,.._ °""""' •• ...... .,... ..... ,., . .._. ......... .___...P ... Mr......-1 ....... 11 ,.... cw TllMWn ~ c • ., ...... ........ .., ............ 1-. 7 I Cl '"' ., a .,,. ., Cl' c.w M .. 10 days we have covered more than 266,000 square miles of ocean and we have round no trace or these missing persons ... Disbro said reports t.hat debris had been spotted southwest or the Mexican island or Guadalupe have been thoroughly checked by searching ships and planes. "We found nothing," Disbro said. "And when the weather clears we intend to confine sea rch operations to an Army U -2 spotter plane which will go over the area we have already covered.'' Disbro s aid the U-2 wi ll con· tinue to seek the boat that had Dennis Vowell, 22. bis wife, Deb- It's Stupid Of Cupid He shot an arrow into the air and it landed he knew not where . . But a s tar tled San Clemente woman knew where. She told police the arrow bad struck the front door of her apartment on West Marquita. It was a ppa r e ntly a Valentine. It bore a heart with a poem of sorts: "Hearts of gold, hearts or l ea d ; Cupid's arrow s truck instead." But love is blind or at le as t misguided. Police said that Cupid's arrow a pparently s truck the wrong door. Beach Club Architect Pick Slated San Clemente city councilmen · will be asked Wednesdav to select an architect for the ren- ovation of the city's his toric beach club from a list of eight architectural ftrms, ranked in order or preference by the city's parks and recreation com - m ission Wednesday.' Proposals from the eight firms were ranked without consider&· Uon of their estimated charges, s aid Stuart Fra m e, San Cle m e nte le is ure services coordinator. Jn order of the commissioners' preference the firms and their charges ar~. Davis-Duhaime a nd As· sociates of Anaheim, $45,502. -Drielsma -Boucher Architectural Associates of San Clemente, $20,235. -Ka mmye r, Lync h and Partners or Irvine, $32,880. McCulloch Architects of NewportBeacb, $44,100.f' -Don Greek and Associates or Orange, $52,500. -Stokes and Bojorguez or Irvine. $40,600. -Miralles and Associates of Los Angeles Cno pa:e liminary cost estimate), -Ralph Allen and Partners of Santa Ana, $65,000. Renovation of the 50->'ear-old beach club and swimming pool, located at 106 W. Ave. Pico, hu been delayed by City Council controvers y over b ow the architect for the project ehouJd be selected. The club's Olymplc-slze swim· ming pool. the only municipal pool tn San Clemente, has been clOHd (or two years, awa1tbl1 repairs. Frame ••id the pool would remain cloHd this •um· IJ)er u well. CompleUon of the renovation project la expeeted by May 1, 18'0, be aald. Tbe club and ewlmmlng pool were donated 6> I.be ctty by San Clemente founder Ole Haneon. . ' ' bie, 21, and friend Gary Newton, 22, on board when it left San Diego Jan. 22. Vowell and Newton went to high school together in Costa Mesa. Debbie Vowe ll is 1he daughter of ·Mrs. Bunny Scott, 201 Calle Dorado, San Clemente. Mrs. Scott said today that she and the families of Vowell and Newton "are shocked at this de- cision bytheCoastGuard. "We are aU going up to Long Beach tonight to try to persuade the Coast Guard to change their mind," Mrs. Scott said. "It is not true to say that there has been a lO·day search. T here was (See SEARCH, Page AZ) Oil Spill Remains A Mystery An oil s pill that tainted four miles of lhe Huntington Beach coastline Tuesday has begun washing a s hore al Newport Beach. U.S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Skip Onst ad s aid brown colored globules about the size of bail s tones were detected as far south as Newport Pier today. · Re said cleaning operations, which thus far have been con- centrated in areas north of Hunt- ington Beach pier, are scheduled to begin at Newport Friday Onstad said that the spill ap- parently occurred Sunday from a lanker in Long Beach harbor. He said the sticky s ubstance which appears to be crude oil is being analyzed in laboratories in an attempt to track down its source. "But that's going to be awfully hard, to do. because there were about 19 tankers in the harbor at the lime ... The spill was d etected in h~a ~Y rog early S unday but dtdn t wash ashore until Tues- day. Onstad, who has set up a com- mand post near the Huntington Beach city pier to direct cleanup operations, said the only victim of the spill appears to be one Western grebe. He said the bird was found in Huntington Beach and cleaned by fish and wildlife officials. A Coast Guard s pokesm an earlier said that patches of oil involved in the spill covered an area 2,400 yards long and 800 yards wide. Deity ................. FRIEND OF YETI Legune·.,.. M ushelt and Mrs. Wilkinson must remain seated on the City CouncU, in order to have the quorum required by law to con· duet the city's business. Among the most recent to rue for the two one.year terms are engineer Phil Mancini, of 104 Ave. Baja; deputy district al· tomey Mitchell Haddad, of 107 Calle Bella Loma; and retired auto dealer James As hbrook, of 3826CalleTiara. A late filing for the three-year term came from businessman Erik Perkowski, of 374 Plaza Eslival. Those who filed previously for the two terms which expire in 1980 include insurance agent Brian Ruff, 19 Ave. Junipero; retired Insurance executive Edward Kalsched, 2307 Calle las Palmas ; and ho m e make r Condo lJnits Going Vp Patricia Comstock, 239 Calle Neblina . Also filing for the one-year t e rm s we r e retired busi- nesswoman Elynor Wylde, 239 W. Marquita; retired broadcast- ing engineer Ed Died en. 234 Ave. Santa Ba rbara, Apt. 2: library clerk and homemaker Ca rol Carls on , 204 Calle Conchita; and managem ent con- lSee RUSH, Page A2> Steel girders have been erected as the fi rst stage or development of a three·unit condominium project at Sleepy Hollow in Laguna Beach. where a n old single-family home once stood. The project, under con- struction by Wood a nd Sheridan Construe· lion Company of Santa Monica, includes a three story structure, with decks and parking for six vehicles. The project is owned by Doug Ly nn and .John Postma II. of Newport Beach and is surrounded on three sides by the Vacation Village hotel, which fronts the popular body surfing and boogie board beach. Gambling Fix Revealed Oooks Collect $7 Million in Caper PARlS <APl An audacious band of c r ooks , u s i n g screwdrivers and bits of rubber to doctor roulette wheels, has collected about $7 million in one of the most ingenious interna ·. lional gambling capers ever un· cove red. Police sources say about 20 sus pects have been arrested. ,but dozens more could be at large j udging by the scope of the racket which ls believed to have been going on for up to three years. bounce off them and favor num- bers with the loose screws. Police and the French gam bling control office are being dis creel about the affair , still hoping to catch the masterminds behind the racket. But with the a ffair being dis- cussed in French newspapers. and a judge in Nice preparing to hear evidence. there appears to be little hope left for more major arrests. The pr ess reports say the ringleader 1s a Czechoslovak liv· mg in West Germany. He has not been caught. Gambling authorities estimate t he c rooks' total ha ul at 30 million francs. or $7.05 million. Suspicions arose in January 1976 w h e n seve r al Fre nch cas inos informed Roge r Saulnier. director of t he gaming service in France's Interior Ministry. that they had noticed "unusual gambling patterns" being used by certain clients. Twelve casinos in France, the fable d Monte Carlo gam ing house in Monaco. and others in Yugosl avia, Ita l y, South America and Africa have suf- fered losses. French press re- ports say. SoUTCes close to the investiga- tion say the crooks operated by loosening the screws that bold in place the tiny walls between each number on the roulette wheel. Joh Action Slated By Laguna Police The s lightest loosening of those walls Increased the ''elasticity" of the number picked for doctoring, and heightened the odds on it win- ning. Another trick involved insert· ing a sliver or rubber under plaques bearing undesirable numbers so that the ball would Falling just short of threaten- ing a work slowdown, Laguna Beach police officers say they a re "in committee" to consider some form of job action follow· ing a city ~nnouncement this week turning down requests ror more officers and a better re- tirement plan. La gu na B e a c h P o l ice Employees Association presi- dent Mark Miller s aid his group formed two committees follow- Service the Motto Of Lagu114's Price By STEVE MITCHELL Of-OMly ""' ..... His Ulettme motto Is "Service to one's fellow man ls the rent we pay for our place on earth.'' Laguna Beach's O.W. Pric~ baa been a good tenant. And Saturday the town will turn out to honor the 83·year-old' former Veteran's Adminlatra· lion omcer during the l3lb An· nual P atriota' Day Parade. He'e been named "Citizen of the Year" by the parade'• or· 1anilen, the latest in a lone. long aeriai ot honors bestowed on the Leslonnalre, Mason, Shriner and former VA ad· mia11trator. ''I lo"Ve it," Price beamed, "The phone'• been rinllne oll the book since t.hey announced my selection." But not all the calls to Price's home overlooking Blue bird Can- yon are congratulations rrom friends he 's made the past 18 years in Laguna Beach. He sUJI gets eight to 10 calls a day fro'm veterans, widows of servicemen snd others seeklng bhl expert advice on veteran af· fairs. Price, who goes by the lnlttals "0 .W." to avoid the use of his flrat name, Ogle, is s till ln the veteran affairs game, des pite his retJrement in 1961 as head or the Butfalq rt1ional office of the VA. "When EUubeth (hi~ wlrel <See PalCE, Pace AZ> ing the city's decision this week. One committee will look into de partment requests for next year's negotiations, a nd the other "will see what we can do in order to make the community a ware of our requirements." When asked if tha t could mean some form or work slowdown, Miller sajd, "That's why that second committee was formed." Police employees were seek- ing an additional fiv.e sworn and three non·sworn office rs be added to the city rolls. in addition to participation in the California Hi ghway P a trol r estirement plan. But negotiators for the city an· nounced earlier this week they saw no reason for additional of- ficers a nd would r etain t he Public Employees Retirement System <PERS > prpgram cur· <See POlJCE, Page AZ) CEIVI'ER F.4CES REDUCED FUNDS F e deral funding for Sam Cl emente's Rape Crisis Center has apparently been cwtalled, forcing a reduction In the center'3 program at a Umo of plann«! ex· pans Ion. The $30,000 for wblcb the proJ· eel bad appUed has been reduced to only $6,000, accordina to Sblrley Oavli. project direct.or. Seestoryoa Pa•e A9 . AZ DAIL v Pt Lot use Nixon's Pap r a · ar d WAStUN<tTON AP1 Allf'r a ear ot neiottaUoM, Rlcb.11'd Nixon •il'\"C'd today lo all bul two Dl"OPO.'lt'd l"('iulaUo aov ' rn1 n1 publlr arcea lo h1~ p s 1denllal m ten lt-. lie \\Ill let a c-ourt decl<k> tM d1 puttod i ucs. whlth r<>nN'm bis tap.• .ind tapt"(f "duarlC'~ T hti 11grt"t'mtnt. wh1rh hli~r. pubh~· BC<'hl> to the tapes and l>WD\'ll"S Just a l1ny ltp clC11Wr wa 11ubm1tted to S 01..ttntt Judie Aubrey E Robtnl!oOn Jr If be appro' ,.~. an e 1 tlna law ult cha.llengtng tht so~t>m ment 's al't't·~ · ~(lulauon. will be dropped Under the setllemt-nt t.M .td m1nt5lrator or General S~rvu.~ "Ill s ubmit a modtlled ~~t ol regul11llons toc.'on.g~ and noa<' c.·eai. to the material~ \\Ould bt· permitted unlll Congrei~ accept:. tbeJlew rules. But 11rchiv1sts may codtinue lo reVlew and classify the maten als10 the meantime. In the meantime. If. as in the past. Congress dJs approves the rules, the settle ment wilJ be voided. "In that case, we would go back to square one," one lawyer said. Nixon is n o t complet ely satisfied with the rules. negotlat· ed by his lawyers. the govern· ment and lawyers for historians and journalists who inte rvened in the "suit. He wanted more than 30 days to challenge decisions by the various review panels that will decide whether mate rials should be public or private. "We belie ve those time limits a re unnecessarily s hort." Nixon lawyer R. Stan Mortenson wrote la wyers for the GSA. But, he adtd . the two sid es h ave coo rated in the past and that he ad been assured ·'the same s pirit of accommodation " will continue. Under the new rules. anyone who is mentioned in materials ttbout to be made public will be notified in advance, thus having the opportunity to challenge the disclosure in advance. R obinson was told t h at Mortenson will file suit over the tapes and diaries by Feb. 28 FrowaP~AJ SEARCH .•. thick log in the area for six days and no searching was done in that lime" Mrs. Scott said she a nd the mothers of Vowell and Newton are not d isturbed by the dis- covery of the lire ring. · · Jt could have been blown off the 'Armistice' in the s torm that cam e up while they were out there fishin~." s he said. "Then again, it could have been thrown into the sea by our loved ones in the hope that it might be picked up by searching vessels." She said the three fa milies. rel- atives and friends intend to go down to Baja, California , Mexico, t his weekend to search the shoreline iJJ that a rea. "'We 're having posters made that depict the · Arm 1st1ce' and De bbie. Gary and Dennis." she said. "We're going to tack them up at every likely point and we <Jre offering a reward of Sl .000 to anyone who can give us informa- tton about our children." M rs . Scott said t h e ""Armistice'' carried enough food and water fo r two weeks when she left San Diego 24 days ago. ·'They could still be out there in the ocean eking out their sup. plies and hoping for rescue." she said. "And while we are grateful to the Coast Guard, the Navy and the Air Force for what has been done. we reel that the de- cision to suspend the search is pre mature." O"ANQE COAIT LI\( DAILY PILOT '""° 0tilf'9ll' Cil*t O.oy Poo1 wttfll •hetP\ •\tom l\•"'f'ld ff!ip~Pf~\ t\~i~··'"""°'"""9P Coe\.t PuUUVWNJ~ ... Sir""'•'f"fet•t9""1tfft g.wntt· ~ MOnd ... '""'ouo"' r ttdit• for '°''• N t..,.. H~....-t 6(-.t(t\ Hti#\hnQ10f't 0f'M Pt J°"'" ..... ,v ....... ·~ l~8f'o""''*'"(H'\1 & \l"'QI• r-r~lf'd1llO'\ h OUbt V'W'O "-'"''0""\41t"'1 "'-M•Y\ Ttwi fl'"•nc:•MI ovttifl"'-"'O rt .... I\ At »t ~· t &.\• ~ ........ (Ott•~ (•ht«'"' • .,.,. .. ....,........ . ....... ., .. ,,-""""'"' , ... ~. , .. .., Y(~"'°'"""nl<tft<IG9nof4M ... ,_. '-···-Ectllo-, ........... _f'r '-'•~'11"0 (Oltof' CM< ... " '""' ••< .... .,, """ A\\.,tAftt """'"•4•t'lt LOOCM"\ Tei.ptlo11• ('114)Ma-Ult Clatt#lect Adwel'tltlftl to.le71 Laguna .. acfl "" o..-wmt: T ... ptio,......._ ,, ....... ~a...... Surprised Medi~ Dally ,., ... M_.. ....... South County parar.-:ed1c Patrick McNeilly rolled up to lhc South Lag una fire station in his red eme rgency lr uck Thursday lo rind a tub of tulips. candy and cards from his wife, Candi, a l the entrance to the station. His 24 ·hour duty prcventcd t he para m edic fro m behing home Valentine's Day, so the Corona del Mar m an's wife brought the ht~a rts and flowers to him . Juror Candidates Quizzed at Retrial By KATHY CLANCY Of IM D•llY l'lltl S~ll P r ospective Jurors in the retrial of Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill were being asked today about their views of a doctor's role in cases of terminally ill and hopelessly in<'apacitated pat icnts The questioning came as Jury selection wound into · i~ third day in Orange County Superior Court Dr . Waddill is accused of strangling a n<'wborn girl after an abortion attempt by injection o f s a line solution failed at West m inster Community Hospital in March of 1977. WaddilJ's first trial ended last May in a mistrial whe n Jurors said after 16 weeks of testimony and 11 days of deliberation they were hopelessly deadlocked 7 to Talk Planned On Influence In Clemente S h1r le:v Grindle. formt·r Orange County Planning Com mission chairman, will addrc•ss a meeting of the San Clemente Homeowners Association tonight on the subject of special interest influence on county government. The meeting is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m in the auditorium of the San Diego Gas and Elec tru.• company bu1ldmg, 101 W El Portal. Mrs Grindlt' h:.i -. bl•<.·n :.i leade r of t he T1mf: Is ;'I.ow To Clean Cp Polil1t·<, ITIN CUP I or gamiat1on sine<· resigning from her po~t on the county pl~mnJllg comm1ss1on i\ddil10nCJl 1nformat1on on Thursday's meeting Js CJvt11h1blc by calling 492 2172 or 492-4957 ~ m favor of acquittal. Waddill's attorney, Charles Weedman. predicted Wednesday Jury selection may be completed within a week and testimony can begin in what is expected to be a three lo four.month tr ial. . f"ront Page ,11 RUSH ... sultant Max Ma lone, 5-01 E. Ave. San Juan. •. Others campaigning for one- yea r terms are public school teacher Daniel Gabel. 116 E. Ave. L uc ia : retire d bus i · nessman Wilmer Wood 201 Cer· rito C1elo: businessman Albert Popik, 115 Ave Dominguez; re- tired bank executive Bernard Bekerlegge, 322 W. Ave. Valen- cia : associate realto r J ack Brown, 3361 P asco Halcon ; crisis center director Shirley Davis, 707 Ave . Presidio ; retired Ma rine Corps o((icer and cor· porate executive Robert Lim· berg. 316 Vista Torito; a nd self. styled philosopher and politician Robert Rusin, 247 Ave. del Mar. Apt. 8 . Those filing fo r Mus hett ·s th r ee.year t er m inc lude homemaker Karoline Koester. 321 Calle Felicidad; student and pharmacy techni cian Mark Morales. 156 W. Escalones and retired school teacher Dorothy Hendricks. 132 W. Marquita. Others campaigning for the term wtuch expires in 1982 are businesswoman Wilma Bloom, 1O11 Buena Vis ta : certified public accoun tant Norman Ream, 511 E Ave. San Juan; dress shop owner Velma "Val" Nangreave Scott. 221 Ave. Granada . Apt. B; businessman Roy Hurlbut, 3902 Calle Ariana . and secretary Patricia Rousseve, 188-0 E. El Camino Real, Space 23 f 'ro .. Page A I PRICE HONOR SET. • • a nd I moved up here I brought a long my golf clubs, ris hing t ackle and bowling s hoes. ··Haven't used an y or that stuff." he cbuckJes. ''Been too busy." ··Got a letter today from a San Cle m ente woman who wants help with her widow's benefits.·· he said. And he had an appointment late r in Lbe day wilh a Bluebird la ndslide victim who wanted help filling out similar forms for 3 1d . So. while unpaid, Prjce re mains a fuJl-tjme V /\ worker. writing editorials about dlsabl •d vets, working with the Pr<'RI dent's Commission on Employ ment of the Handicaippcd, 1&nd visiting patients and conrer r1na with members of the start al th Veteran's Hospita l In Long Beach. It all beats the heck out of leaching at a country school in the Ozarks, he'll ten you. That's what the former Navy man had to look forward to after his brief stlnt aa a mu8ician lor the Commandant's band at the tndof WWI. civilian clothes, .. he laughs. Service men didn 't have bl•nefits following that first world war. Price recalls. "The average education or WW I vets was just past the sixth grade," Price said . "And an awful lot of them couJdn'l evt>n n•ad or write.·· So It was off to Manhattan. Kan • with the Federal Voca· tlonal Training Board for the younte Price. to ''help about 200 disabled vete r ans who we re raisin..-wt." Sln¥ben. Price held ex· ecuU ve positions ln the VA and the former Veterans Bureau as dlvlislon c h ief , ass is tant mana 1er , chle r domiciliary, chief ot vocaUonaJ rehabilitation and education, manager, and, tollowinr WWlJ, director or the 0 I 811 program tor thre e western atatet and the te rritory of Ha waii. His 42·year career officially ended tn 1961 when he and his wiff' moved to Laguna Beach. But next month mark1 bi.1 80th annlvenary as a friend ot the veteran. . ....., c.,,,'f.: ,.,, °'.,.. ~ ,.=:.,"":\, c-::1.. .. "':',~ .... ~ .. ·.: .• ,~ "'::i: •• ,~~ ............ ·-··· "'"''"'"' ti ·-··-$«-tl•U Do\I•~ ••lot al C:..l.a -.. -lrutead, be toolc 1 job wilb the Army EducaUonal Service In March ol l9l9. u.aln1 hi.a fin t paycheck to buy• set or clothes "I had to ~•r my old unifcwm ror four mont.b.s untJJ I could scrape W> enoucb to bu,v aome So that will be O.W. perched on the back aeat or • Cadillac convertible durln• Saturday's parade throu1b tht downtown 1trect ol Latuna Beach. c.tllt..-~lf hHUlel..., ., urtttr U t0 =~,t.,.~l) ;~:~:-_ _..,, ,,.. ....... - ' f ff you aee him, aJve hlm a 1mll a.nd a wave. He's a good cJUsen. , POLICE .•. rently ln effect.. •'Their announcement did not urprise me,•• Mtller said today. And. he said, he expecta little more lrom the cit y during neiotlatlon1 ror next year, which bealn ln April. "Franltly, so many offi cers h ave a pplfca tlon s o ut for e mployment In olher citiea, that I don't know who f 'II be negotiat ing for next year," he said. The committee looking into the •·community awa reness pro· gram " is expected to come back to the police e mployee mem· be r s hip in a month with a recommendation. The association voted last month to seek some form or job action in protest of negotiations which were closed by the city in November. The city met again with police spokesmen this week. butrailed to m eet any of the association's re· quests. Police officers say there is a need for more offi cers, claiming that al times there are only two patrol units on the streets of Laguna Beach And. they say, a better retire· ment plan in lieu of pay in· rreases prevented under state mandate due to passage of Prop. 13 would show "the city is in- terested in improving the lot of police officers." Top Teacher Award Slated In Clemente Nominations are currently be- ing accepted for Teacher or the Year. an annua l contest s ponsored by the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce for the bes t classroom teacher ser ving San Clemente students Chamber m<.ina~er /'\lex Good man said the winning teacher will be chosen on thl' basis of outstanding relationships with students, s pt.•cw l e ffectiveness as a lc<.ichcr. mar ked personal growth and commitment to the community. W~rFinn Pulling Out TEHRAN, Iran CAP> - The cbW ol Bell HeUcop-ter•a operaUone In Iran said today the U.S. firm will pull out almost au the t. 700 employees and de· pendents stlJl ln Ul1.s atrUe· toro nation f0Uowin1 a U.S. Embassy wurning that it can no lonqer pro· tect Americans in Iran. . <Related story. Page A4), Robert MacKlnnon, vice president and general manag e r ot B e ll Helicopter International, said employees would be sent to "staging a.rea.s" in nearby cou.ntr:ies to await word oo whether the new revolutionary government wants them to return. Suspect Held In Burglary Scouting Fallout Feared Ora.nae County's Girl Scouts carried on their cookie •ales to· da y in tbe hope that recent publlcity will not put a dent in what was, last year. a $373,668 fund raising elfort .. "We want orange County peo- ple to understand that the pro· blems besetting the Angeles Girl Scout Council do not affect us and we hope they never wUl," Girl Scout coordinator Jacqueline Schaar said. She said the Angeles group in Los Angeles ls the only one ot 10 So uthern California councils racked by dissension that led to a ppe arances by rival factions on television. · Mrs. Schaar said fe uding between union and non·union members of the Angeles COUD· cil 's administrative stalf led to one member urging residents in the a rea to boycott cookie sales. Of Bo • "No such dispute exists in UtJqUe Orange ounty and we are not un- ionized." she explained . ''But Lag~a Bea~b police arrestec1t w e are d eeply concerned a transient with . many nam~ because cookie sales are vital to late Wednesday night, on susp1 · the ma intenance of our pro-cion of burglary after .witnesses grams . 11 reported seeing a m~n break a Mrs. Schaar s aid Orange win~ow to a women s clothing County Girl Scouts wUI be seek· bouttque. . Ing Sl.25 for each package or James Lows Durand, 20. ~Jso cookies. known as Jame~ Wells, Billy Of that s um. she said , 57 cents Ha rt. James Bills and Tom represents the cost of tbe prod- Lace, was being held on SS.000 uct. A further 10 cents covers ba il ~ay following an alleged the cost of sales Licenses, incen- break·u;i attemJ?t at Feathers, a lives for the sellers and promo· women s clothing s hop at 212 tional materials. Nort~ Coast HJgb~ay. She said a further 20 cents Witnesses s a1~ the y s a w goes totheseUer·sScouttroopto Dur~nd break a window at the m ai ntai n p r o grams . boutique shortly before 11 p.m .. and called police who converged on the scene within minutes. Sgt. Terry Temple said two o(-Irvine Backs ficers pursued the s uspect and made the arrest. He said a dou- ble dead bolt lock prevented en- try into the store. f"rott1 Pag~ A I MARVIN .•. Laguna on Canyon Road Pust winners or the uward tn· ferring to a road company of elude Robert Bouman of Marco "Flower Drum Song." By unanimous vote. the Irvine City Council has supported the city of Laguna Beach in its peti· lion lo the slate hi ghways de- p a r t m enl t o widen twisting Laguna Canyon Road. For ster J unio r High School. On cross examination. Miss R u th Ka yser of P;.i lis ad cs Marvin's atto rney sought lo Elementar y School, Eugene show that the actor 's me mory O'Brien or Concordia Elemen· was faulty and be had forgotten Lary School and Tony Sisca and the conversation. Rubert Calhoun or San Clemente "'In the year 1964, you're ask· H1~h School. ing me if I saw her?" Kelly said mcredulously. Entries will be accepted from -"I don't remember. Can I ask any San .Clemente resident. m· Mr. Mitchelson, would he re- cluding students. said Goodman member if he saw her in 1984?'. Entries can be ~u bm1tted by let Spectators laughed. The judge ter or by entry forms <.ivailable said Kelly could not ask Miss at the Chamber offices. llOO N Ma r vin's auoroe y, Marvin El Camino Re<.il. 'Mitchelson. a question. M itcbelson had rested bjs case Additional inform11t1on on lht! late Wednesday after setting up contest. with a nomination a dramatic scene between Miss deadline of March 5, is avaih.1ble Marvin, and Pamela Marvin, by calling492·1131. whom the actor married in 1970. LOUNGING The highway consists of two winding lanes through ruraJ and unlighted Laguna Canyon, from the San Diego Freeway to a point in Laguna Beach, near the Laguna Beach School of Art. Al that point the road widens into fo ur Ja nes of divided highway. The two city councils a re ask- ing CalTrans to widen the whole stretch in that manner . According to the resolution or support passed Tuesday .. by the Irvine council, 21 people we re killed in tr affic accidents on Laguna Canyon Road since 1975, and there have been l8S tot al injury accidents. UP 10 S UP 10 550 550 Free Delivery Free Delivery .._ ________________ __ FULL BED RECLINING Whitesla.Z'61J ··sho'Ncase COITAMllA Ht I. 11th IT. (Acfoll "°'" ~ next lo Mart9 ~ 642..UI Mon..~ 1().6 Sat. 1().6 C1oMd SUndav NEWLOCAnoN LAGUNA HIU.S 2J024 Lake.....,Dr. (Comer d Lcic• fOf9lt °'"' and Averido De lo Coloeo) 77CMNI Mon. • fft. 1 ().6 Sot. 1().6 Sul'\ 12 ... MISSION VILIO 21192 .......... ~ (Conw d A.Yf/t'f and Via &caat) •tl-l902 Moft..ffl 104 lal 1().6 ao.cs~ - 1'alentine \leterans Solomon and Fannie RapaPort. who met in Warsaw. Poland. and married in the United States in 1909, celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary Valentine's D~y at the Villa Valencia retirement hotel in Laguna H11Js al a party atte~ed by west coast relatives. The cou- ple he's 90 and s hes 88 are visiting the Orange Coast ror several months from Chicago where RapaPort operat- ed a grocery store. County Solons Vie On Fire Question Members of Orange County's legis lative de legation were choosing up sades this week in Sacramento in the growing con lroversy over lhe future of the joint county-state fire service. V akmine 's I Gift: Death JACKSONVILLE. Fla. IAPl On Valentine's Day, Prentice Murphy went to the downtown bank whe r e his wife worked. presented he r with a delicate, fragrant while rose a nd then shot her in the head, police said Thirty-year-old Candice Murphy di ed later Wednesday and Murphy was charged with murder, police said. "He and his wife ap- parently had an argument over domestic problems Tuesday night," s aid Homicide Lt. J .L. Suber but did not elaborate. The issue was tossed into the Sacramento arena earlier thb week by Oran~e County s upervisors. They asked the state Legislature to intervene Members of the admmistra- tion of Gov. Edmund Brown, Jr. said they would stick by their boss' budget plan. It would re· quire the county lo assume con· trol of the 550-man fire depart- ment that is currently state run. State Sen. Paul Carpenter, D· Garden Grove, s aid he agrees with the governor and predicted there would be little legislative interest in the issue. But Assemblyman Dennts Mangers. D-Huntington Beach and Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson, R-Newport Beach. said they agree with county of· ficials that the proposed move may prove to be more costly lo both the state and county. M angers sa id he a nd Supervisor Harriett Wi eder would host a press conference next week to discuss the legislative plan or attack on the issue. Mrs. Bergeson said she has of- fered her help to the county. "I had hoped there could be a negotiated settlement to this without going to legis lation,·· she said. 'Taxpayer Ripoff' \ oort l o n I s s ue Supreme Court Hearing Sought The ultorney who will repre. nt the l2 d•monstrat.ors 1.1rn•1too Wednesday at a Santa Ant.I uborttoo cu01c says the ar· reau ur~ plirt of u plan to take th~ 1saue to tht' U .S Supreme Court a1uun "t'r~nkJy, we want to lose our '·use m the lower courts." said Robert Sassone. lie will defend lht• mi•mbers of the Comnuttee for the Deferuoe or the Unborn who arc facrng charges or tres· V<t!il> after Wednesday's dem- on11trul1on at the FamiJy Plan- ning Associates Medical Group Sasl>one, who said he filed friend of the court briefs on the three abortion cases beard t>3rlier an lh1s decade by the Supreme Court., l>aid he knew in advance that some of the dem- Employee Gro ups Set Fo r Hearing A dispute by two employee or· gan1zations over the right to represent Sll Orange County governme nt maintenance and operations workers will be the subject of a Feb. 26 hearing in Superior Court. Judge Alicemarie Stotler re- fused Tuesday lo grant an order that temporarily would have blocked county officials from rec· ognizing results of a recent representation election won by the American Fede ration of State. County and Municipal Employees IAFSCME>. Instead, she ordered a ttorneys back to her courtroom Feb. 26 to present.additional evidence. The 8,000·m embe r Orange County Employees Association 10CEA>. which lost the election to AFSCME. filed suit Tuesday seekmg to have the vote results overturned. OCEA officials charged that A FSCM E organizers violated terms or an election agreement when one county employee al· legedly campaigned at a polling place at Mason Regional Park in Irv me. Alaskan Oil ~'t Fill Gap NEW YORK <AP> -Despite reports last year of a possible glut, oil flowing through the Alaska Pipeline has been a l· located for U.S. use and cannot fill the gap created by the Ira- nian oil cutoff, industry analysts say. <Related' story, Page A4.) ·'Every bit of Alaska oil that could be produced has been marketed. ll's not sitting in tanks someplace.·· said Pitt Curtis. a s pokesman for Stand- ard Oil Co. of Ohio, which con· trots S3 percent of the oil re· serves at P r udhoe Bay, the pipeline's northe rn end. "There never was a crude oil g lut." onstrator plunned to be ar· rested. Among those arrested in the c linic's o ffices at 1600 N. Broadway was Edward Allen, the retired police chief or Santa Ana. He was arrested in the s ame rocauon ouriog a aem-' onstraUon a year ago. Sassone said defense or the l2 people arrested would hinge on the question of legaltty of abor· lion and that lSsue. he said re- quires a court determmatio~ as to when IJfe begUlS. According to the attorney that s ubject has never been addressed by tbe high court. He said his services and the cost or preparing the case for bearings by higher courts would be donated. Sassone. who said he 1s a member of the political action committee of the national Right to Lare. said he expects other at· torneys across the country to Join him in his effort to bring the issue back to t he Supreme Court. "[know it sounds harsh to say we want to lose in the lower courts. but there's no other way to .gel to the Supreme Court." he said. 3 Arr este d In Santa A na Bar R o b bery Three people were a rrested Wednesday night by Santa t\na police investigating the robbery of a local bar an which the establishment was s tripped of equipment as well as cash and supplies. Booked into Orange County Jail were Frank Rundell. 34, of Cucamonga and Lynne Riley, 19, of Westminster. Police also arrested a 16-year-old girl in connection with the case and booked her into Orange County Juvenile Hall. The three were picked up after Santa Ana detectives served a search warrant on Miss Riley's Westminster home a nd on Run· dell's bar in Cucamonga. Officers alleged they found some or the equipment and tbe two pool tables taken in the Feb 4, robbery of lhe Orbit Inn, 3601 W. First Street. Two more suspects are being sought. police said. ; Winter Scene T his photo was taken near Cisco Grove on Interstate 80 west of Truckee, Calif., and gives the area a picture postcard look as heavy snows hit the area. UC Irvine Slates Engineering Week By PIDLl.P ROSMAR IN Of tlle o.lty ~.._. Slllft What's faster than a speeding high -t ech tricycle , more powerful than a balsa bridge. able to Call off tall buildings in a single push" The answers are all contafned in Engineering Week at UC Irvine Tuesday through Satur- day. The celebration in student c reation in design and construe· tion of a variety of items is dem- o ns trated through compeli· lions: Faster than a s peeding trike? Super-trikes, a team event in which student engineers design and bu.ild tricycles for en- durance and speed; they 'll race them in Campus Park Priday at noon. -More powerful than a balsa bridge? Almost anything, but these are tested to withstand pressures many limes greater than their weight; the winner s upports the most weight: Wednesday at 10 a_m , in room 157 orthe Engineering Bu.ilding. -Able to fall off tall build· ings? Raw eggs, and some of them -nestled as they are in pr'otective packages designed by •h• dtvfPnt,; -survive. The stu- dent wttb the most s urvivors in the least packaging wins: Tues- day at 11 a.m. in the Engineer- ing Plaza. The activities. sponsored by the UCJ School of Engineering, also include : Paper rurplane contest. Stu- d ents build a paper airplane they hope will stay in the air longest: Thursday at 11 a.m .• from off the third floor or the Engineering Building. AJummum can derby. Stu- dents design and build an aluminum can car to be the fastest rolling down an inclined ramp; Thursday at noon. in the Engmeering Plaza. Pie eating contest; l p.m. We dnesday an Engioeecing Plaza. -Tug-o-war; an the mud pat l p . m . Friday be tween the E ngineering Building and park· ing lot 18. The fmal event is a banquet Saturday at 7 p.m ., at the Airport.er Inn in Newport Beach Tickets are SlO for general ad: mission, $6 for students. Reservations for the banqllet may be made by calling the School of Engineering at 833-6475 by Wednesday. 20% Off on Schafer Bros. Top Grain Leather Sofas and Chairs Visff Our Leather Gallery -30 pieces on display to choose from. Leather offers a total feeling of goodness and security that can be offered by no other material. of course. Leathers esthetic appeal, softness Styled and crafted by Schafer Bros. I of feel and brilliance of color now I lends itself for use in your more Trash Fee Fight Seen l~ formal living areas. , Lea thers feel to the touch is I buttery soft, warm and comfor- ~ table, never boardy or hot and fl sticky. By JOANNE REVNOLDS Of, ... o.lly Pi ... $la" A proposal by county officials to raise about $8 million a year to pay for trash dis posal by charging fees is running into stiff opposition from the Orange County League of Cities. League President Alice MacLain, a Cypress city coun· cilwoman. says the plan is "a ripoff of taxpayers that will re- sult in windfall revenue for the county." The league, a loose knit con- federation of tepresentatives of the 26 cities in Oranste Cou.ntv. says trash disposal is a prop.. erty -related expense that: should be paid with property taxes, as it is now. Th e Cou nt y Board of Supervisors is expected to dis· cuss impleme nting the new trash disposal rees at its meet· ing next Tuesday. In a position paper, the League of Cities contends those fees ultimately would be passed on to property owners and that county tax funds tradiUonally used to pay traeb dlapoul coata would be diverted to other uaea by county government. The fee proposal, aaya league President MacLain, ia merely a mearu1 devised to increase coun- ty revenues. The t.raeb fee proposal has run into another hurdle lo lhe form ol tt\e Irvine Company, from which the' county leases two of Ila four dumpeitH. TboM leues. wb1cb currenUy brin1 the compan~ about SSS,000 a year, COlllain provialoM tMt the finn 11 to get 25 per~ ol any fees levied by the county for use of those dumps. County officials want to re· negotiate the Irvine Company leases because, if a fee schedule is implemented, the current leases would mean the county would have to pay the land com pany between $600,000 and $800,000 annually. A company spokesman &aid the firm is willing to discuss the matter to see what kind of a tradeoff the county bas in mind. At present the county doesn't charge cities OT individuals to use its four dumps, or landfills, and its three trash transfer sta-tions. Jts 01sposa1 operations. are financed out of lhe count v general fund denved from prop. ertytaxes. The subject of instituting an additionaJ fee first came up last· s ummer following the passage or Proposition 13, the tax reform initiative that limits property taxes. At that lime, county s upervisors appointed a revenue search committee and told it t.o find some new sources or rev- enue fCJil' county government. The trash disposal fee was one of the fint notions the ~omm\t­ tee came UP with, A report, p repared )ast "No-· vember by Ron.Id Bat.es, assla .. t a nt director ot tne county General Services Agency, which ad mlnlaten the county trash dltposal syat.em, suggested two optJona. ln one, tbe fees woUJd ralle St.3 million to cover .. nearly all oper ati111 coats. deprectat!on. overhead end reserves for capital improvements and equipment." The second option would raise nbout $7.5 million which would pay operating expenses, but would not include capital i m· provement funds . The impact on the average Orange County homeown er, Bates calculated, would be $6.40 a year or S3 cents a month for the $9.3 million option. The lesser option would cost the average homeowner $4.99 a year or 42 cents a month, be • said. But the League or Cit ies sees some problems in those figures. The league notes that the cur· rent average cost per household annuaUy ror trash collection and di s posal Is $30 The fee estimates made by Bates would be in addnion to the existing cost. the league claims. In addition, the league position paper notes the current budget for the solid waste disposal system~ $8 million, yet the pro- jected cost Is $9.3 million. The difference between the two budgets, according to the league position paper, includes $700,000 that would go to lbe county general rund for "over · head" and $500,000 in addJUonal personnel expenses. Tbe league report also claims that the fee plan contains pro- visions for repayment to the generftl rund or the county's original investment In the $2 million worth or equipment now used by the county's solid waste dlsposaJ division plus acquL'llUon of 1calc1 ror the dumps and tnn1fer ataUons at an estimated cost of $800,000 each. I t( i;r.s.: ~ ' ' Your Favorite Designer Wiii Be Happy To Aaa1si, YOtl H.J.GAR~ETT fURNITU~E PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OESIGNE"S 2215 HAlltlOI IUD. COST.A MIS.A 64'·0275 •J' .44 DAll V PILOT Th"'-csay, Febfllal't 11, 1111 WORLD I NATION Iran Airlift Set Evacuation of Americans Due • Ha Gun, Will. • • l' RlGBT P D n . Ono of our central county •PortlN 1ood •to~~ ha• a helf paie advuUnment 1<>1A1 In the P•pt•nt up lht're today on 1ta GI nt Hand1un Clearanc:e S4ll You are a<Mna to f\nd 50m ,...ally &pOrty moch~lit avallabl •l baraam pn« for rttvolven and automallca. Whilt' you m1aht d bate lhe wue. there 1 no qu«iaUon lhat aame huntlna is b11 port 1n Amenu 1'arg.-t 11hoot Ina l• •l.so a sport and 1 e\len lntluded 1n the Olympic Oamh Somtt o( lhe porty 1un mod I on salt-tod11y . however, 38 Special 2" BARREL SA $ LE L.lltk• Sak MO<Ul Revolver for tM Sporting L1/e 'I' HR.AN. Iran IAP> Thu U S. Emboay odmlU d today It. "cannot protttt American lives In Tehran" and announced otam ror emeraen<'Y vacuatlon lf.l1htJs 1t.urd1y as h avy nahllng was reported for the lhlrd day In the notthw.-11tclt.y ofTabrb. l renlan journallsl11 report~d hundrt-'<la killed In fucUonal fight· Ing 'roosdoy and Wednesday in Tabr11, Iran's fourth largest city Radio Tchnan sad 42 more were killed in three soulhem citieJS W"dnHd11y us lbe new govern· ment lnatalled by Ayatollah R uhollah Khomeini 's revolution 11truagled to establish control over the country. "We are in phase three or emergency evacuation." an em· bnssy statement read lo anxious U S. c1tbens said. "We cannot protect American lives in Tehran. You are allowed one s uitcase per person. Evacuation planes will begin flying 17 February.'' "PHASE THREE" appeared to r e fer to the r ecommended evacuation o f virtually all Amerirans in the country. The embassy cannot order Americans to leave unJess they are employed by the U.S. government or are government dependents. The evacuation was ordered because of Wednesday's storm· ing of the U S. Embassy by heavi- ly armed guerrillas who held Am· bassador William Sullivan and 101 other Americans host age until Khomeini's "Islamic police" freed them An Iranian employee orthe embassy w1a11 killed and two U.S. Marines were wounded. The deputy prime minister of the new Khomeini government. Ibrahim Vai.dl. said the attackers were "communists, ultra· rightists and mllltary persoMel'' trying to discredit Khomeini's an· ti -shah government. Ambassador SuJUvan advh1ed an A~erlcan telephone caller to- day to stay indoors and off the streets. "I wouldo 't go out Ir I were you," he added. The em bassy resumed only limited operations today The anti-Americanism of many in the anti-shah movement has grown more virulent in ~enl weeks. and since last weekend thousands of Iranian civilians have bttn roaming city atreets with weapons distri buted or stolen f~m military armories. U.S. officials in Washington said 1,700 or the nearly 7,000 Americans still in Iran were ready to leave immediatelv. MEANWHILE. John Connally says the United States was caught off guard by the Iranian revolu· lion because of a weakening of lhe ClA 's international spy network. A candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, Connal· Jy told reporters Wednesday at Atlanta the Un ited Slates ··ahould have been aware" of the impending revolution as early as 18monlhsago. -~-........ U.S. BLASTED John Conn•lfy Mexico Talks Tense Lope z Portillo Chides U.S. in Welcome MEXICO CITY <AP) · Presi- dent Carter and Mexican Presi· dent Jose Lopez Portillo began a second round of talks today following a public scolding or lhe United Slates by Lopez Portillo. The two leaders met today in "Los Pinos," the Mexican presi dent's e laborate official res idence, tor a discussion or 011. illegal.aliens, trade and other is- sues which are putting a strain on relaltons between the United Stales and its neighbor south of the border After today's talk Carter and wife RosaJynn were scheduled lo ny by helicopter to lxtlilco el Grande, a s howcase pig-farmin~ village 100 miles south of Mexico City. The Mexican government made preparations to s how the village as an example or de velopment efforts aimed at re- ducinf! rural poverty that is driving hundreds of thousands ol peasants each year into Mex- ico ·s urban slums or into illegal ~migration to the United States. Arter a cordial but restrained welcome ror Carter on Wednes- da )'. Lopez Portillo surprised and irritated U.S. officials by criticizmg the United States in remarks at a luncheon meeting which was televised in Mexico do leave you somewhat puzzled as to the sporting event they would be involved in. I WAS FASCINATED, ror example, by the .25 caliber automalir with a three-inch barrel that you can pick up for the bargam price tag of just $39.99. Dubs' Death Upsetting Lopez Port11lo asked that lhe Untted States give his country "respectful. fair and worthy treatment ... and warned against "sudden deceit." an apparent reference to a natural-gas deal canceled by Washington last year U .S Emoassy oHicials ex· pressed surprise at PortiUo's !'harp language Even stronger reaction came from a high White House official. who asked not to be identified. For forty bucks, you're into the sporting lire. Carter Orders Full Report on Reds And for a hltle more firepower in a compact model, you c<an get a .38 caliber revolver with only a two-inch bar rel ror $.59.99, or just sixty clackers 1t you like to round things out. The short-barre led s porty guns certamlv would fit easily into any pocket or purse. MOST GUN EXPERTS, however, would agree that the lon~er the barrel. the more accurate the weapon. This is because the barrels ha\le spirals in them lknown technically as lands and grooves ) that make the bullet spin like a top when the slug is discharged. Thi!> gyro action keeps the bullet on an accurate course. Thus, the "horter the barrel, the less spin on ttie bullet, resulting in los~ of accuracy at any real range. In other words, with a two-inch barrel. you might be able to tut the broad side of a ham if you're only six feet away The slug might be toppling end-over-end, but you might hit the barn anyway AT ANV REAL DISTANCE at all, only the Lord knows ~hat you're going to hit with a bullet from a two·inch bar· rel So for our sporty models on sale today, you can pretty much rule out target shootmg. Very few sportsmen like lo stand ju.<;t six feet from a target while they're blazing away AND VOU CAN PROBABLY rule out game hunting, too. Very rew game hunters head for the woods With a pistol in the Cirst place. They like rifles or shotguns. If the sportsmen <lid go into the field with a pistol, it. sure wouldn't be one with just a two-inch barrel. So that's your quiz for the day, folk s. Just what is the s port where they use these little guns? Rocky Kin S peak on Death NEW YORK <AP> The four eldest children of Nelson Rockefeller say they believe "nothin~ could be done to save father." despite conflicting accounts of lhe circumstances s urrounding his death The children Rodman and Steven Rockefeller, Ann Roberts and Mary R. Morgan said in a statement Wednesday night they are satisfied that" all the people who tried to help acted responsibly " MEGAN MARSHACK AND others dad everythmg possible to save Rockercller's hre when he suffered a fatal heart attack, they said WASHINGTON (AP> -The Stale Department, acting on the orders of a •·very angry" Presi· dent Carter, wants a full report from the Soviet Union on the "aclion.1:1 by the Soviet advi~ers involved in" the death of the U .S . a mbas sa dor to Afghanistan. <Related s tory. Page A10.) Slate Department spokesman Hodding Carter disclosed Wednesday that Soviet advisers were at the scene or violence in Afghanistan earlier in the day which claimed the life of Am· bassador Adolph ··spike'' Dubs. "We are angry and upset." sa id spokesman Carter. He added that the department was trying to find out exactly what happened before deciding how to proceed. DEPUTY Secretary of State Warren M. Christopher, acting al the direction or the vresidenl, who is in Mexico. summoned Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin to the Slate Depart ment to discuss the matter The Slate Department also filed a protest with the Afghan govtlrnment about its handling of the affair Wednesday. In Mexico City, officials with the president said he was "very angry" about the incident. J O DV POW ELL, Carter's press secretary. said, "The more you read about this. the more out- rageous it becomes " Spokesman Carter s-aid Christopher expr essed lo Dobrynin "in the strongest terms the shock of thP U.S. gov· ernment" over Soviet actions during the incident. • According to witnesses. Dubs Floods Free Ice Jams High Idaho Water Leaves 125 Homeless Tt-•pt-rai urr• All>llny "1 .'-•,o "'' ....... _.~ ....... A.I. All•nle Atl•nll< (tty ll•ttlm0<~ 801\A ~Ion 8u•lelo '"•rtftlOft, ~ v C"l<-Cll'<l"neh Ct•~••no Cot um~ Oe>nve1 0.troll Ovl"'" ll\Ol•"•OOI" , ... ~ ........ lllft IC•llW\C1ty 1..e\Vt~ llltt~ltoO ... 11 ....... .., Ml11NeP011.-SI PMll New YOfll w. ., " . ,, , ,. l) JO u ' • ~ 07 ,. 1• 11 ,, Jj •• ,, ~ ,. ' " JO 1' S M n • t• M 17 •• l) . " ... u ss n u ,. 11 n II a ,. " SUit~ d 11 ~·~ . ,. Wetlll"O'Ofl '1 7 CALt,.OltNIA B•lltftllelcl •I •1 01 8tyllle 7~ .. 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T"e POUlll>•lll• 01 "'Or• r•1n I\ lor9<A>I lonl0/11 -f'rocl<ly es • 'OW lt.ey Uorm "'ovu lnlo Soullltrn Cet11or11le, IM h•tlona1 WHINr Su•lce H id l'1ono '"• coeu. -•ver. tl'lt Wfft"Pr burHu Pfedict· eel Ol\ty • •1'9M tll•no ot shower\ tonlg"' ...o Frlcley Fetr w .. tlltr •nO 9"''" •1110• tllewto ff Ille rule 111rou9llou1 ~111tr11 Gtlllornle by Frldey ., .. , -wltlt ~ ~1-n tff<lllllO MIO Ille -Ml!, f0f'9<Mleo WIO C•••tal It' ea deer ~•rtty c--, tonlO"I -Frld•y ~nlnt *""' • '9 ""'''" tf\en<• ot '°"'• llgllt tllowers MOstty s\Hlny f'rldo•f- Wll'd' -· lo fl0f111-I 10 lo H mf)ll "'Ide' etlltrnoon. HIQll• Frld•y Sito~. Conte! •-r•tures ••II ••110-D•lwHn 41 •no •t 1n1eno l•m .,.,.IUl'fl wilt r~ lltt-n 4t "'"° .... TM,._.,, l""f)llr.tl,.r• •lh l>t '1 S11ft,Mo•ft,Tlde• ntu••o•Y ~onc11-4·U11.m. 01 ~Ollcl "... lt!ff 11·"'· •I ,lllDAY ,.,,.., '°" •. ,, • "' t j "'"'"I"' 10 " .. "' 4 • l«Ollcl leW , OJ p m 0 S h<ClfHfllitlll 11 Mpm. •.I S<HI '''"·····"'·· ... ' ,.,. p"m s•rt•q•rt """""-' llMcll ·-· -... t1WM .... QMllNIM felr • .,._,,.,.. e...:11· ..... -.. ...,, .... Cefl. was shot and killed as Afghan police stormed the hotel room where he was being held by a group of Islamic terrorists So· viet advisers were on the scene but the extent of their involve· ment in the actual ussault was not clear. Carter confirmed that reports from American diplomats who witnessed the incident indicated Soviet advisers were involved in the assault Following a pro-Soviet coup in Kabul last April. Soviet advisers have been assisting the police, military and other branches or the Afghan government. Informed sources said that while Dubs was being held, U S. I sell officials in contact with Soviet officials as ked that efrorts be made to negotiate Dubs' releasf a nd that the hotel not bf stormed. Carter said Christopher .. was not accusing the Soviet advisers of responsibllity for the am- bassador·~ death He did. however. ch arge them with failure to heed repeated re <1uests by US. embassy off1c1als I hat the assault not be un dertaken. :·.., •. Carter added ... The refosal to consult by the Soviet advisers on the spot is impossible to JUSt1ry. given the ract that the life of the American ambassador was in Jeopardy " lllSob;eclions seemed directed less a t Lopez Porlillo's call for fair and equitable treatment and more to other sections of his toas t al a luncheon for the Carters. For example. Lopez Portillo ~eemed to refer to las ar's Energy Department v. to o a privalt:ly nt'gotial d US. purchase of Mexican na rat when he told Carter -...._-=---.;;.::;_.-- .·Among permanent, not cas ual neighbors, surprise moves and s udden deceit or abuse are poisonous fruits that sooner or taler have a reverse effect." Not only do 1 sell a product. I sell m.z1s<'lf. If I don 't. 1ny clients go elsewhere!. A salesperson rnust know and understand peo - ple in the co mrnunity he ser ves . I read the Orange Coast ·s community newspaper -the Daz ly Pilot . The Daily Pilot keeps rne m/ormed about sports and events aroun{i town. so I can discuss them with rny clients. The ads help 1ne keep tabs on my competition and I adve rt 1se my products in the Daily Pilot: My product sells better -and so do I because of the Daily Pilot . DAILY PILOT 642-432 1- I Nll'M ........ ~.Ml..,.... ,, ft S.n~ SI,. 1• •ecO<'CI tew ...,..,.,.,.ttt -r• tel .,.in tn ti. ••M ,,.. tOftt,.ff ........ .__..~ If! • ...,_,, Hy ' IW'lle Ille~ rKWCI .... ltm .... ,"" ~"" .... _...,..... "' '''•to". et to •••••· .,., ............. , ...... '' • -. • wlllter swm twHf lllllOM .......... ..,,...... ""' letlleA,..111-jMly '"------------------------------------------...J .. 'Right ' For Gay Rej t d SACRAM "NTO •AP , TM ftnl ~l•Uv.-h' t or bc>m • ual ri,cbta slnctt 'ltut vot-tn rt' JH'tf'd 1n 1 nt1 homo r u•I teather ln1tl1Uvt> bas ~ndf'd in a ~ deft-at tor a y n bt.i. 1upporten Witb opporwnt~ c1una tht" 81 ble aod ar wu•n ~ fo r an em ployer 's r ight to dt' «'rlalnaU-, lbe &·nulc lndu.,tnal Relaltonl Commlth.~· N"Jl'Cted a blll lo ban Job d1 .. ('rltntoat10n a1alnat bomonxuaa.. Wtiin ) day oo a :! :I voh• l"our \.Olt-s wtrt needed for pn~!IJ~t· P9' ld8ark#d 'WIU HONOR IT ' Tom 8etH BILL'S AUTHOR Sen. Jeme1 Miiia .,. . .,..._ .. 'SO INFANTILE' John Veaconcello• Thur9day. Febru1ty 15. t979 DAIL y Pl~OT A:; Budget Deficits Constitution Battle Looms SACRAMENTO <AP I -Former U.S. Sen. Sam Ervin says federal budget deficits are "fundamentally dishonest,'' a nd at will take a constitutional convention to force Congress to balance tbe ~udget. The 82-year-old Ervin, who served 20 years in the Senate an<l chaired the Watergate investigating committee before his retire. ment in 1974, endorsed the con· stitutional convention in a videotaped message today to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. "l think it Is riot only impol'- tant but absolutely essential for the United States lo have a balanced federal budget. Deficit financing is fundamentally dis- honest:• Ervin said. SACRAMENTO <AP l Man juana could be prei,crabed for help m t.reatmg di<Jeases incluu aog can~ Wlder a bill wuuung Senate Stiff ens Code He was to answer qut!Stions from committee members via a telephone hookup to bis Morgan- ton, N.C .• law office. A resolu- tion that couJd maxe t:allforn.ia the 27th state calling for a con- s titutional convention is pending before the committee for a vote by the end of the month. CONGRE~ MUST call such a con venlion il 34 states request one. Breakthrough Swfaces in uttuce Strike CALEXICO <AP> In the ( rTATE J "Cmual' Assemblymen to Be Barred? Foes and s upporters of the constatuliooaJ convention were rolling out their big gW'IS today Ervin in tavor and Propos1· tion 13 coaUtbor Howard Jarvis 10 opposition. fi rst breakthrough 1n a four· week-old strike that has stopped harvesting of 40 percent of lbe nation's lettuce crop. a ma.JOf grower broke with other farD} owners and began negotiating separately with United Far") Workers leader Cesar Chavez, the union said. ats rirst legislative victory after emotional testimony from a ~aocer victim. Wednesday's 5·1 vote by the Senate Health and Welfare Com mittee approved SB 184 by Sen. Robert Presley. D-Rivers1de. al· lowing dectors to participate in a four-year pilot marijuana treatment progTam RefJales/tftd~d LOS ANGELES <AP > -Tbe s tate Public Utilities Com- mission says it is s tudying whether thousands of residents were overcharged for electricity this winter and .are entitled to rebates of $100 or more Since so many customers and so much money is involved, lhe PUC may have to step in and settle the overcharging issue, Michael A. Doyle. P UC con· s umer affairs manager fo r Southern California . s aid Wednesday. ~Re~orded SANTA BARBARA <AP I A pair or identical offshore earth· quakes that measured 3.6 on the Ric hter scale a nd occurred w1lhm 15 minutes of each other went lar gely unnoticed , authorities s:ud today. Both quakes were centered nine miles south or here in lbe Santa Barbara Channel, SACRAMENTO <AP I The Caltfornia Legislature 1s into another coat-and·tie nap pitting t he rule-conscious Senate against the more casual As· sembly. The Senate Rules Committee sent a message Wednesday to t'asually dressed assemblymen: no coat. no tie. no admission. THE COMMJTl'EE'S resolu- tion would prohibit men from coming onto the Senate floor during sessions without wearing a coat and tie. The resolution 's author. S enate President Pro Tem James Mills, refused to say that the resolution was aimed at as- se mblymen . But he acknowledged some lower house members have come onto the Senale floor without a coat and tie. "IT IS RELATED to the fact members or the Senate like to be sure there 's an appearance of dignity in the ~t..ate Senate," the San Diego Democrat said. "It's not aimed at anybody." Reaction in the Assembly ranged from bitterness to ac- quiescence. .. It's sad senators find themselves still caught up in ap- pearances. which usually means they're not committed to sub- stance," said Assemblyman Son 'Upset' Seething Gases Reported PASADENA <AP> A California astronomer has re · vorted the discovery of mammoth solar disturbances in which seething gases rise from deep within the sun and spill across the s urface. The solar upwellings offer potentially valuable clues to understanding and perhaps someday predicting such phenom~na as _s unspots a.nd ~olar flar~s. which can play havoc with radio commun1callons on earth, said Robert F. Howard of the California Institute of Technology's Hale Observatories. "We really don't know much about what's going on below the surface of the sun and this will help by giving us something else to look at," he said. "It's a large aspect or solar activity that was not known before." ashin!Jlon's ~lrlhday ELLABRATIDN All Items Sub1ect To Stock On Hal'ld Welk!r~'J / .. & ~ 'J -· 921 HEAVY-DUTY SOLDERING IRON 8 wan pencll·type Iron W(ltgha ooly 4 ot. 9% in. long w ith '4. in. d1amo101 copper.plated hP SP80 1CMN. CHAIN SAW QT. ~~48R Oil 64¢ This mulh VISCOS•IY mo· tor 011 •S perfect tor your car on all chma1es iOW40 Lightweight g~ NW-fust 7.2 lbs. Without bar Atnd cNtn.. Cutt tr-to 20'. In dlemetM, prul'!ff. cuts firo- wood. more. AutomllJc olllng. 2 handle• for pos1t1ve con· trot. eJICkltlve Safe T-Tlp. "4/Xl Tiile edvuc.t• of tllese lfHt nl•H tro111 yovr loul 111.S.,.11· dent fllnlw111 marc"-tlt wilt! uuonal c;ll1itHttly1ne P°"""· PRESTO FRY BABY deep fry.er '1699 Deep fries t to 2 serving• rn minute•. In 1ust :1 cups ol 011. P1uttc cov,or FB0-1 CROCK PLATE Cooks 1lmo'1 every food! Stooew1re 11111 ott fo• HIV serving end 1111 ~h11nup. 29l3900H .rfF!l' • WARING ICE CREAM PARLOR Ma-es 'h·gellon tee cream, lrOlen yogurt. sherbet, etc. In eboul 30 mrnvles Free rec:1pe bOofl; CF·S20· t STORE HOURS: Mora. thru Fr.I. 9.9 Sat. 9·6. Sun. I 0.4 fj , John Vasconcellos. THE SAN JOSE Democrat. who often we ars slacks and open· necked shirts, added: "I have no need lo go on the Senate floor and I assume no senator will have a need to talk about a bill with me anywhere. "ll's so infantile to think that a necktie is a sign or anything.·· But another assemblyman who often shuns a lie and coat. Tom Bates. D·Berkeley, said he would abide by the rule, 1! adopted by the full Senate. "I'm not going to let the ques· lion of a dress code interfere with my ability to be effective.·· he said. "As long as the rule is passed, l will honor il. even though l don't think it bas any bearing on issues we 're dealing with." "I think it's necessary for the >late lo call for a konstitutionaJ convention to submit an amend- ment to balance the budget"· because there are too many pre- ssures onCongress to continue de- ficit spending, Ervin said m the message recorded earlier llus week. "THERE ARE too many de- mands from too many constit· uents that enjoy deficit financing becaw;e it enables them lo get a whole lot or money out of an empty federal treasury for nothing." Ervin also said he is con- vinced that a constitutional con- vention can be limited to budget issues so it would not stray into amendments that might limit civil liberties. Meantime. farm workers re~ turn to the picket lines today. one day after a funeral for slam striker Rulino Contreras. and a six-member private panel wa$ to begin its inlestigation into the slaying. UFW SPOKESMAN Maro Grossman declined lo identify the company that broke the growers' united front, but he to· dicated the union was hopeful ot a quick settlement. "The separate talks certaml.Y indicate they are willing to bargain." Grossman said. H~ added that Chavez was conduct- ing the negotiations personally. l!l!l,~llllllf;t!D!lllltn\'lM!l 'JI( Neighborhood ) :: ·-~~ J ~ i .;;, Independent Liquor Stores ~ , -Prices Good Feb. I 5 ThroucJh Feb. 20, 1979 ·· q ~ i SCORESBY SCOTCH BACARDI RUM POPOV VODKA Reg. $6.95 $ 5'! Reg. $6.99 $ 5'! Reg. $4.99 s399 9t. BLACK VELVET • Reg . $13.36 s 1 o~~ GORDON'S 1111 Reg. $6.49 $ 52?_ rALMAD.EN .. -MILLER® CELLA LAMBRUSCO Momtaill Wlwes HIGH $~,., sr• $199 LIFE 750"" s .. ~ ss· 1.5 Ltrs. .MR. & MRS. T s5" SUMKIST SODA 99c 12 OJ. 99c ,,. . Case of 24 'pak QMrt "°' ...., ....... Iced UORS 2200 Newport llvd. MR. BUCK'S LIQUORS !989 Fair.view Rd. Costa Mesa .!..~f.:73 lj IA YCREST LIOUOR & DELI 333 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 646-8262 _ .. _......, ..... .,,,_, Costa Mesa 5!Z:!C!!2 FISHER'S Ll9UOR 3135 H• bw llYd. Costa Mesa 549-1405-.................. . . l6 I .I.ft(' Robe-rt N W ·d Publisher Thomas Kcevll 'Editor o •• , , c'""' o"''v p,10 1 Editorial Page .................................................... -Thuradey, Februaty 1$, 1879 y amor Homes Could Cut Risks I .. u.:u11.1 Ht•," h t '11\ C'u11nl 11 nwmtwr~ l.1-.t "u•k ·••'• • .-..1 t11 ,,,._ 111Unl\ ~ul"'' \ ''"r~ t11 t·onrtldl•r oJddtnt( lh•nh-.. 111 cl•·\ 1 h1J1nu•n1 pl.111 .. Im S\ ('•&mor' 111111\, 11u1 l'h,1 .. t•ti l,1'4t ~ l J I' tn tht• ctt v tor , 1!1 million \nd "t11l1• I h H pri1t1m • .il m11o:ht r tttw t•vt·hrow ... am1111g I 1IJ!llll,lll' \\hn t•n\ l'>lllnt•cl "'' h 11t1 111~ tn lh1• pr1~1 11w 522 11 11 • p,11 t•d , 1 ltl· •'•llll't•pt h.1 ... m1 nt l'h1· pl.In ·"' o ul ll1w1I h\ ( 11 un r1 l"otnJl1 Sully U1•1l1•t'\1t \\llllld 11wl udt· wllm~ ull l'lt \ 1...intl tn S\ l'Umon· lflll, tll'.11 l ~·1,1u t• W1•r lcl \'Ith th1 p1i-. ... 1h1ht\ of u ... 1111( lh11l 1 ,., l'llUt' tn p.1, 11rr ttw t'll \ ' 1lt·ht tu th1· furmt·r u\\11l·r~. H.t1H'h111',1 !11'.'I \1 n.h'' Corp 'l'h1• t.i'k lt1r1 ·1· luoi..1111: mto rt'l'rl'~•twnal .ind opt•n "l'·H'1.' uw r"r ll11.· l:rnd "' t u1 lt·ntl\ n.·. trwtcd I rum ('O n '"lt•nn~ huusm.: \\ t' I l' l II\' l' t I ' 111 ... , •I I 1111 • ill o r fiU .1r n·~ for dl'Vl• lop "" 111 111 ltuu-.111..: .• 1:-. .llh•\H·d umll·r tlw l'lt~ s ~Pl'Ctflc pl.in . 1111· 11':--t 111 l,.1gun,1 "''" 11•,1l t•,t.1t1• h1>lding could bt.' ldt 1111l111Jl'h1 d .11ut 111 11'.'1 n.1tur .ii ..,t,1t1 Thi• prnpm •• 11 11H'a1ts till' < 1t~ h,1, ,1 "~•) o ut ul 1b I 111.1nl 1.1l \\Ill' ... houlcl ..,,1lt• ••I n·' t·nue bond!> or o ther 1111 ,111'.'I lo p.1, thl· 1.Jloht nol prnH• fl'd:o.1bll' Ttll' lull 1s clu<• Junt· 15 .• md the roun«•I n eeds a ll the .dtl•r11 .1t1' l's ... , .. uluhlt· to t'n'.'lur<.> thl' city taxpayer s ore 11111 hurtl1•11t«I \\Ith iJ rnulft m1lhon dolla-d<>bt Vote No olution San ('lt•m 1•nt<· Muyur William Wa lke r made good '''"M' wtlt'n h(• ~md c·1ty vott.•l's 1•xpresscd resistance to propO~l·d <l<·vl'loprtu•nl 111 n•c·ulhnl{ ham and two other city c·o u 11 ('ii mc•n But W;llhr's s uho.;equcml propo~al to ll·t city voters ckl'l<IP v.hc•th..r llu• <'ii)' should go dt•t.•p ly into debt to buy 01wn s p :H't• ... oundt•cl hkP sour grapt•s from a def ea led po Iii 1C' 1 an l'11l ortu11at1·l~ lul' thl' city. Wa lker and the o the r two r<'<"illt•d \\Ith h1111 will rt•mc.un seated until their s ue· l'l':-.sor ... :m· elP('tl·d on i\pr·1t 24. So Wa lker received ~UP· purl from Donna Wilkinson and Roy Hamm in voting to put th ts s tllyop<•n spac·e propos al lo a citywide vote. I 11 110 \\ .1 .\ clnl''-t ht• proposed L>allol mt• asure re flect t tw ('Olll'l'l'll ovt·r cl1·vl•lopmt.•nt cxpre~sl'd an the r ecall \olt• S.1n ('lt'mt.·llll' \Otcrs wc•n• demandin g well- 11ilorm1·d. hard wor king ('Olln('ilml·n \\lho will lake a long. h.1rd look at the t'onsl'qut·nci•s lo thC' tit~ befon · approv· Ill/.! n<'\\ hou~1ng t r:.icts Whtlt· swrn• paynwnt or tradt'·o l f s hould bt.• made for 111•(•d1•cl r>JH'll :O-.JKtl'l'. n·ducing a ll th<.• rc.1mifications of pro- poM·d d ('\'l•lllpml'llh! I n the open spact.• is~Ul'. and d c mand- rng a e1l y\\11l1• voll• :it this time· i~ a po1ntlei,s gesture . _ Wllege Needs Unique S.1dcJ l ph~1rk Culh·>-:l' oll H·ials ;1nnounl'ed last week 1 hat 1•11roll nwn1 "·" 1w:1nng 20,000 ml<l Lht-y predicted it \\11t1lcl l'l';wh m·arh 2:1.000 hdo n · the ~pring sem este r 's t 1111r sl' uffconng.., \\ l'I 1· l'0111pll'lt•d. · J That m :irb .1 1 l JH'rCl'nl 1ncrl'ase over cnrollmeyt f1 g 11n·"' for orw vN1r ago the fas test g rowth rat7 an (' •. d1l11rnt.1's ('omm untly Collt•gt· -.yskm. I 11 l.1<'1. S.1dd lch:ic.·k is om• of onl} fh·e colleges statf'\v1dc.· that l'>.pt·ru•m ·vd (•n rollml•nt increases. and the int·rt·a st· "'.as f111 :i bo\(• ;m} othet-; The colll'ge 1s grow- ing 111 till' midst ol a st.1tPw1d1• ('nrollment dec line. Colll'g<' olfi<:1:1b .1rt· eOOCl'rllC'd Bt•cuus<.' state of- I 1r1.tls .11 l' prt·~vnt I\' org;11111ing a :-.takwidl· fin:m cing l11rm11l.1, S:1ddl<·bm·k nwv bl• lum 1><'cl together w ith col- lt·gt·~ t'>.Pl'rwncmg <•nrollment dec lines . Whtll' lht· f111an(·mg lnrm11h1 m ight l>l' h<.1sed on stu· dt•nt att<.•ndance w h ich would covN d ay-to-day a c ademic opt·rt1l11ms . 11 prohah l~ won't t<Jke into al'count a vital llt't'(''s1t ~·of g r owth mon· ch.1~srooms St~11l' offiduls havt· :1dmittc.•d t ht·rt· an• no pl:ins at pn·,1·111 for :1 ft>rmula t•ovt·r'ing cap it;il outlay building fund... tor comrnumt y colkgt·s Thb could s 1wll d oom for :1 c:o llegl' loeated in the L 1 s1t·~t growing :.irc.•u of Cali fornia s outh Or<.1nP.e Coun- t' Somt· Saddh•lrnl'k offic1a b have spcc ulull'c1 thut \.\ 1t hout huild1ng funcb dasst·:-i could be mcrrascd to g1g;1r1l 1<· ~•lcs to ;1ecommodatt· dl·m:ind St;.llt· offidub should be.· m indful of lht• uniqu<.• Sad- dldiad .. prt•dicame nt. Some allowances ~hould bt· made in s tuk finun cm g formulas to accommodah• gro\\1h at t·ommunit v collt·~<·s "hNt.· ttw mcn·:..t!>ingly ,moma lou~ '1tu.1tmn 1s appan·nt • Opinions exprf'ssed 1n the <:;pace above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and dt11sb Reader comment is invited Address The Dally Piiot. P.O. UolC 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (7 14) 642·4321 Boyd/ Sa/ ety Tip "-' t .. M. sovn Am :111\.to,;l•cl that n hull fH.'H't' l'nough lo uttuC'k a 1wr:o.on whn n•nt u n•s onto s u1Ct twast ·~ turf will not 110 iii> if that Pl'rson h a ~ no ('folht•s on Claim 1~ thl' hull ev1tfl'llt ly t hinki. a naked humJn 1:-. 111:-.t unothc·r harm less ~m1m.1I Q111k so It s lo~it·;1I h1lnRulng, 1sn '\ 1t? 1-:H•n r011n• 1nlrigu 1n.:. I think . '" how lt11s fancy fact cam1• to lw fo und out An horolo~1sl 1-. som ebody who -.tud1cs time mt.•a:.un• m c-n t i... <.ind un nccurah• l1ml'pte<'e to an horoloJttl-ll, Dc·ur Gloon1y Gus The "i.ct•nic l'hurm" of Luguntt Cunyon rtoud l:s h<'comlna o bll too rem 1n1 sccnt or F o r e t l.Jwn How mony more bt'forc-w • fnce re ullt> '' .1 M. 1l 's l'l:Jimed . is one thut nl'ithl'r lo!'!es nor gains more lhun ont· second every 6,000 years Tht· utom clocks cfo lhi.tl. Cons1d,•r th!' countries of ~outheast Asia. Such as Viet num, Cambodia, The Philip· pinl.'s. Thailand, so on. Whut ~1 lot of outs iders don't suvvy 1~ the power within those na lions of the dis placed Chinese who live there . By head t•ounl. they o nly represent about 6 percent or the popuJa. t1on. Bul by Cinancial clout. lht•y'n• a formidable Corel! T hey livl' m tight little-com· munlt1cl'i bound by a ncient tradil.lons. Governments shift und cha nge. flut tht• in· · t e rlockin~ Chinntowns. opcr:lllng almost though not exactly llke secret isocietle , dominate much of the trade. 'The political p0wer thnt gets In troubl<' with the dis placed Chlnel\c wltlds Ul) In trouble ult over Southcust Asiu. Q "Whul doc11 it signify whe n n mackerel stays still in the water?" A. That said ma~kcrel Is Mad. A muckcrl'I h as lo swim to live. Th t exercise called jog ging iJJ really coming on ~trool(ly, vldcnlly . About hnlf of ull...t.Jw sporting s hoes sold nationwide. It'• now re. ported, are for ~unnlna • I Shah Blames Carter and CIA WASHINGTON Preside nt C'u rtt•r und lhc Ccrlltal I n tl'IH3tince Agency hove bt'en get llnM thdr lumvs fro m JU!lt about c•v"rybody for not knowtna whal w t111 going on In lr·un. i1upporttni.: lhl' shuh until ll was too late and foilhlK to t•ullivulc contacts with l h l' l'Xiil'd Mus lim leader t\y1ttolluh Khomeini. But th1.•re l.'i one man. perhaps the onJy man in the world, who bdll'Yl'll JU:O.l the· oppostll' S h ll h M o humml'd I( l' " u l'.1hll'VI F.m h1llcn•d untJ 1ncn•asinglv p J rau oi d ''"r<' he was forced l a~t month lo n l'l' Utt• n <•llon he had ruled and loot t•d. thl· shah bt'lit!vt!s Cartt!r and the ClA knt>w a ll too well what was happening in lrun. In f:.i<:t. ht• actually b<'li<'vcs Lhe CIA engineered his fall from power and the a scendancy or l\ho me ini. THIS ASTO NISHING in terpretation of recent events. which m es in the face of conven lion ally accepted reulity, was ('Xprcsscd just hours after th<: s hah Ocd into "tempora ry" t•x lie. He had •• private lalk with Eg y ptian P reside nt An'.\ ar Sadat at Aswan on Jan. 16; in teflig('nce sources have provided us with a detailed report of this t op-secret conversation. While Carter's cr itics have faulted him for blindly s upport· 1n g the s hah in the raCl' or mounting evidenc<' that he was losing his grip on lrun. the shah himself crediL4' Carte r with the most astute diplomatic doublt' d c:1 1ing since T alleyrand. And while the CIA 's detractors have Mailbox cosU.catcd lh<' agency for lgnor Ing Khonl'lni . the s h ah Lold Sadat thot u ~ early us last s pting he had undeniable in· form ulion ·'that American agents arc fllrtln)( with the opposition." THE U.S . E MBASSY 1n Te hran convinced him, said the s hah. lhut ll pre requisite ror bet- te r understanding or President Carter wus the dismissal of Gen Nematolluh Nasslri, head of I ran 'R secret police When he fi rl'd Nassiri on June 6, 1978. un- dc r U.S. pressure. he told the Egyptian president that ll'ft wing Moscow J('d groups 1n Ira n inte rpreted this as a s11(n or weakness und stepped up their opposition with m assive strikes The pres ident la ter hailed Nassiri'i.. ousl(~r as evide nce of lhe s hah'!> concern for hufn an right:.. said the s ha h . He told Sadat that "the biggest double· c r osstnj.l took plac(• .. when Car kr n ·uffirmed hi!> s upport for Iran, knowin~ full Wl'll that /\ml'rican a~cnts alr<'<tdy hat.I "opc•n c hannels" to Khomeini It lhut was thr biggest, what thc s ha h described us "the mosl disgusting double·cross1ng ••nd treason rsic l was carried out .. in the final days of the Ja nuary cr is is in Tehran The s ha h. act· ing on American advice. d<.'cldcd to leavt.• Iran tt:'mporurily to ena hie the military and h1l> other supporters lo keep Khomeini from n•lurn1ng :rnd pavl' tht.· way for the shah 's t•vt.•ntual rl· turn lo powl!r ACTUALLY, according to the sha h's unique view of events. Lhc• Americans we re "<-trnmg Lhe Iranian mihtury thal II they tnl·d to seize control und bring tht• ... hah back. the United States "ou Id cut off .1 II :-.1.1 pp hes and a'> s 1st;1 nc<' Thi:. warning was de hVl'l'l'd, Lhc shah told Sudal. lo t op Iranian brui;s by Gen. Robert E Huyser , 1sc.!cOnd in command or Amcricun rorces an Europe. and word or the warn· ing wus passed on to Khomeini in Paris. It wa~ lhls sneaky powe r' play, the shah said, that made It possl hlc for Khomeini to return from ex1l1• and which thwarted lhl' ~hah '11 J>lan to reguin bjs throne. In light of ha s ~xperiencc, th~ shah told Sudat. the Egyptian president s hould not trust tht• Carter administration or ta.ke its advice. f''oolnole · /\ <.:ti\ s pokesm au said the agency could nol com m ent on the shah's interprt:t .. lion of events Parents Responsible for Grade Inflation? To the Editor The Daily Pilot's negative position on public cmployct.•s, and tt:'ache rs spl'cifically, has bt•comt• quill' ohv1ous to anyone r eading the t·ditorwls or 1/29 con- cerning striking teachers and 2/6 concerning· ·grude inflation .. I disagree with your position. Effective leuchcrs url' vt"ry similar to t•rfC'ct1vc parents R l•sp C'c t for oth e r s. self- t:On fidc n ce and pride 1n the m selves and th1·1r fa mily for' School in th~ C'H!>ol' or teacht•rs ) ate vital ingredients of any sue· cessful adult g uidance. Good pare nts and t('achers have a way of 1>assing these traits on to young pcoplC'. Some teachers nt•vcr have th<'sc attributes und that is too bad. Those or .us who do have them arl' slo wly lol>ing them e very Lime w e rcad edltorluls likt· yours. That is real\ytoohud. l.tra oe 1nrtat1on occu r s because the· public demands that the ir son or daughte r be pa m - pered so h<.'/she can go on to col- lege. Many students need to be disciplined but tC'achers are afraid to act in fear or an irate µu rent going to the• school bo:.trd da1m1ng, "Thi!> k acht•r 1s not being nice lo my little child .. CONCERNED parents should let their child's teache r know ihey approvl· or discipline. tr ;,111 pnrents did this, you would see the end of grade infl ation. 1l ii> not the fault of th<' teachers. but rathe r of parents and public pressure to "look better" thun othl'r students and i;chools . In regard to striking teache rs In the high schools. you are wrong. Respect, self-confidence and pride !'annot be passed on lo s tude nts by a t<'acher who is cons istently having his pride and dignity diminished by the Howard J arvises, school boards and public Alm o~t eve ry teacher I know who teaches s ub· ject matter in a s uperior matt· ner a nd also insti lls pride. r <.'s pcct. and confidence in stu- dents wus on strike They knew they could not rn Rttl l these positive altitude tn students if they felt as tr they were being made the target of consistent de- ~radlng octlons and attitudes of the public. The enthusiasm and concern teachers have ro r NlucntJon :tnd students Is the determining tac· tor which separates a class ot regular graduates rrom a class or young udu1ts prepared to live tulfUllna end productive lives. Fewer and rewer teachers nrc able to ~ate this type or en· vlronmc nt because they arc m ode to feel llko overpaid. un · der·workcd aecond-clau cllliens. Help UJ 1 NORMAN HAL!. 6,.._£a•ete To the EdJtor: Laat nl1ht u I wu returning from work via Laguna Canyon road , t couJdn't tt Ip but fee.I llll· g r y a nd up!>l'l as l.>ptcall y sl'ver aJ vehicles passt•d mt• at th e firs t opportunity, even though I was travt:'linR at the Posted hmil I guess whul I rC'al· ly felt wa:. that if they had s~n what I hud seen that morning may be lhcy would be conltmt to travel within the SPl'l'd hmlt und not pass <''er ' On Thursd ay mornin~. I wus thl• second one lo arrive on thl· l)Cl'nc of tht• accident between u van :ind a smull s ports car /\~ I u pproached the occident. thl· V<Hl was blocking tht• north or l'a!:>tlJound I an{• and I h11 ~ports car was resting on the· hike lune. Another man was olrcudy at tempting to open th1• van door and help the driv('r to get out. l remember wondering how the van could have come ull the w :a,. across LhC' road to hit " purkf'd car bccaui.C' iL as ob· ";oui. that no one wu. in thl• sports t•ar onl y a p1 of old clothl'S 1n th<' front :-1: t and pieces of glass. etc. So I l ied to he lp open Lhe vun door · no success. The driver appcart:'d lo be okuy only a s mall rut on his fact' and a hurl leg B V NOW. sl'verc.i I others had urnHd on thl' sren<' and n~ I "'<1:-< ltlOkin~ ut lhUii sports car I kc•pt wonderln~ why would it be.• parked thert• and still hsve thl' ltghts on. Thl·n I lhought m ~1ybe someOl1l' h;1d been In lhc vehicle and then thrown out when lh<' impuct ocrurred. I look a quick look around and <llcfn 't sec· anything Since we · couldn't OJX'n thl' van door. the firi;t man and I wulkt•tl huck to th(• sports C'ar <why. I don 't know l and Wl'rt' Jo tnt>d hy anot he r m an who h ud also stopped. /\s wt• w 're looking in the cor it suddenly becamf' ap parent that the pilt• or clothes was really a twl:slt•d. manl(kd body I s turtc.•d lo rcl'I sick. Now I could m<.1kt1 out u leg und u small hand as th<' first rnan put his hund on her back and dt• le rmincd that s ht.> wus not brenthing. Flares were out by now lUld the poUce hod been called so I wandered back lo my cnr ond just sat for o while. Whal a hor· r iblc reeling. I rcll s ick all day Jong and kept viRualizing what wns in the sports car. These were the thoughts that raced throus.h my m ind 01 cara continued to pass me ln the can. yon. M llYbc l sho1dd hn vc m udo ""of those who drove by the ucci· de nt Rto'p gl't out ond IOOk os I did al what d eath l!!i oil about. Why ts evcryon~ In such a hurry to pass J~l one mor car so "'°e can all wait t<>aether al the :stop Ufht? Think about It 1 ROOER DAVIS c ...... c.,,. To the Editor: Olutters teach many lessons. re.arr1n1 priorities. and r h a ngt• atti t udes . a nd thl' Rluc bird landslide \ 1cllms. up pret•rnt1vc o f m u n y a r1• <•specially gra teful to nur clo!>t' rrn·nds. our O'-' n Laguna Hc..ith Police Department At times all of Ul> are a bit cynical of a professional cop. but a ll of us as individuals and a group. havl' share d the othvr s ide of a cop fl•w pt•opll' c·Jn t•i.. pe rience as \W h<" 1· the last four months. THE LAGUNA Beach poll<'<' wen .• there <tnlJ "t·n· onl· 1,f us ri~ht from tht• t•arly hours 1111 Oct. 2 when they took clwn<.l'S getting our belongings rrom pn· curiously h an~1ng h o uses. through tear:. at demolition. and our hurts Wl'rl' obviously theirs a lso. ThP Comma nd Ccnlvr nol only ser ved securit y lll.'<'ds b ut human needs that t•vcn 1·xlendl•d to our c:onfusl'd t•htldrcn Thl'Y lwld us togetht•r and m·vt>r trcut 11<1 us just as "official disaste r statistics." This r e marka ble coop1•rallon is s till working in s pite of an ongotnJ! problem d1~ asll'r Thl'~C' sen!-ttll\ <'. C'Jnni: men and womt·n hu\ <' ft•lt huma n hurt <1n•ply and \\t'rt' w1lhn~ to give U'i :-.o much mor(• than r<' quired So lt\l' pt'Ople you :-<•'l' wavinl( at poltc:t• rars art• not a ngr y cyn ic:-hut the "Bluchlrders" isuyiui.: "thanks and we love you to our Laguna Pohcl'." DOTTIE DELO Bluebi.rd Knolls Community /\ssociutlon Ten•-ion Tl•e To the Editor I h av~ JUSI discovered. lon1g ht. why wt· /\ml'ricans arc becoming morl' and more Hlled with anxll'ly. Let me trace t on 1~ht 's happe nings in m y homl' f~ind probably re pealed ln many othns throughout the country l l 'm fixinii d1nn(•r while m v children are watching Captain Kirk or Swr Trl•k fight 1t out with a big monster Then ttw Bionic Man chases a nd fighu. with a mnn driven mado by some kind of ruy~ We cnt dinner and r eceive a n obsc nc phone r:ill. We hurry to finish dinner ~ we can Ree "On · Flew Over the Cuckoo'~ Nest" which I am sure, with a nam e like that, will itlve a com lcul re- lief to m y 11lready drooping evening. Af'TER THE bloody 8ulcldo. front3I lobotomy. murder •nd victory of lhe really sick nurse showing once again the futiltly of the good and normal ur there ls ·such 3 thin& aa normal 1 l lllppcd to Channe l 2 •1 "60 Minutes" and learned. lo detaJl, how our country IR being taken over by rat.a whose n eas carry the "Black Ocoth " • During the break we were k11p\ up 10 ctah• on the eart h quukl' Lhnl 1u:.t har>Pl'nt'd and tht· ovl·rthro" of tht> govern ment o( I ran, with s pcculat11111 on t hl' prcmt<'rt• 's su1c1de Alonjl with this I was told lhal A:l$ lor rn~ ~u1.1 l ing $t :.tl H>t• \\-agon would :-.oon he U\'Cr SI J gallon Amt nm~ for lllt' 11 o'clock MRS . WALTER CORMEY Park Po••lbw To lhc Editor It 1s surpri~ing lo n •ad thv l'dttorial of Feb. 5, where the Daily Pilot is completPJy on the s ide of th<' landowne r of Lhc open s pace betwet•n Corona d cl Mar a nd Laguna Beach, the Irvine Company. and seems to ignore the latest devt:'lopmc nt of the drive to havl' a nalion:JI urban pnrk creat!'d with f(•<feral money (actually our tax money> The Irvine Compa ny has been through all tht-" years more than cooperat1vt-and has always stat- ed that the land in ques tion is for ~ale Non<' or tht• g roups in· tcrested an kt.•ep1ng thfs open s pace for us a nd fut ure genera- tions has ever intended to have this land conr1scated. but they :ire trying to have' state, county, redC'ral money a nd from the Land and Conservancy Agency (which was creakd for this purpose t to buy open sp~ce. THE DE DICATION of some land In exchange for the pennjt lo build with higher density is a Jsual procedure a nd benefits all parties involved: the future resi- den ts who have open space around or nearby and also the landowner. who produ<'es res· idences in a nic~r environment. At the time when it is a ctually w<>ll known that Rep. Patterson s ucceeded to get in lhe omnibus bill Sl0,000 for a study. that the s tudy team has ulready toured the property in question and that the study will be finished in M uy. it is hurd to unders tand thl11 thl' Daily Pilot docs nol kno w th!' landowne-r will not have to face a "rlnanclal Uck· in(:t " Rep. Puttcrson has a very good reason to nsk the recteral govc"lme nt ror financial help to create a large national urban PB rk in Orange County. Orange County is park·poor and our res· lden ta have to drive many miles to Mammoth and the no- tional parka fn northern CallComjo, The envisioned park h ere would aerve about 10 mllllon people from Los AnaclH Counly and OranRe County. BETTY HECKEL • Lftt•r• from MJdfrt ort Wflcome. Tlw '1gld lo condmN ldWn to /it IPQCe'or dmMo11 ,..,,, ii ,._,., l.AUm Ill JOO IOOrda or ..., dl bl! olww pt ......... AU kt,,,_ .,..., n.c1n ~ ond ~ od· ch• b.r ~· "-bf dMftl on ~,, ,, fU/1fdtefd rf'OtOl'I .. ap- por~flt Poft'JI ~l not bf~ J Or ange Coast EDI TION VOL. 72, NO. ~. 4 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES V our H ometown Daily Newspap r THURSDAY, F~BRUARY 15, 1979 c . TEN CENTS Hope Dims for Trio · on Missing Boat By TOM Mal. Y nsh l\C I picked up a lifo had bee1l apotted southwest of tinue to aeek the boat that bad °' .. °""IY,,_.._ rln1 b~arlnt the name, the Mex.lean lsland of Guadalupe Dennis Vowell, 22, hia wife, Deb- Hopes ror ~ H lel1 ol t.., "Armlatice " have been thorouably checked bie, 21, and friend Gary Newton, men and a womu1 'Wbo Id\ San .. We're sua~ndlnc any search by searchJns ships and planes. 22. on board when it left San Ote10 In the 4S foot craft, actlvlly 11nJe-s Md uotll some· "We found notbin1,'' Disbro Diego Jan. 22. "ArmllUcr'' ~an to d1m tod y lbansdseturnaup,"CoutGuard said. "And when tbe weather Vowell and Newton weal to •hen the Coalt Guard wllhdniw P 0 Steve Dbbro explained. "Jn clears we Intend to co~ high school together in Coeta its ablpa and a ir craft from 10 days we have covered more search operauons to an my Mesa. De bbie Vowell is the further 1earch operations than •ooo square miles of U·2 spotter plane which will go daughter of Mrs. Bunny Scott, The dedaion was taken after ocean and we have round no over the area we have already 201 Calle Dorado, San Clemente. heavy douda mov d an lo the lrace o( these mi inl ~rsons." covered." Mrs. Scott said today that she _se_a_r_c_b_are_...,.a ..,.and __ abo ____ rtJ_y=--a-~_er___;a.:___.;;:D;..:.1s;;.;bro;:;..;:..;;:•.:;ai;.:d:..::repo~;;.;rts:..:::...:;lh;;;.;a:.;:t:..::de~b;;..::ris;:__..;;D...;.l.;..;sb;;..;.ro..;;....;s;.;;ai;;;..d;;......;.th;;;..e;;.....;U;....·~2-w_i_ll--"-con;...._· and tbe families of Vowell and Newton ''are shocked at this de· cision by the Coast Guard. "We are all going up lo Long Beach tonight to try to persuade the Coast Guard to change their mind," Mrs. Scott said. "It is not true to say that there has been a lo.day search. There was thick fog in the area for six days and DO searching was done in that time." Mrs. Scott said she and the mothers of Vowell and Newton are not disturbed ~ the dis- covery of the"life ring. "It could have been blown off the •Armistice' In the storm that came up while they were out there ftshing," she said. "Then again. it could have been thrown into the sea by our loved ones in the hope that it might be picked up by searching vessels." <See SEAJlCH, Page AZl m S. Coast Plaza Expansion Eyed .. ,. . ....,.... A Beal Cliff B ang er Hanging by a rope attached to spikes driven into ice would be sheer terror for mos t people, but Don Gallagher of Lan· caster. Pa., does it for fun. Gallagher claims that the Norman Wood cliff near the Susquehanna River is one of tbe bes t vertical climbing spots in the eastern United States. Explosion Rips Savings Bank in Polana WARSAW, Poland (AP> -An explo111on ripped through a crowded savines bank In the center of Warsaw around noon today, and the official state.run radio said at least 10 persons were killed and 30 injured. About 200 people reportedly were in the building at the lime of the blast The source of the explosion in the tbree·Sl-Ory aluminum and g lass structure, known as the PKO building, was not im· mediately known. · By MICHAEL PASKEVJCB Of .. D.ity ,. .... S4Mf The Segerstrom De\!elopment Company has told Costa Mesa city officials it plans a major ex· pansion of its South Coast Plaza Shopping Center and adjacent business and commercial area over the next three years. Plans call for a 200-room ex · pansion or the South Coast Plaza Hotel, construction or two 14· Gene Kell y Testifies -For Marvin LOS ANGELES <AP>-Danc· er .actor Gene Kelly took the witness stand at the Lee Marvin trial today and contradicted testimony given by Michelle Triola Marvin about a show business contact. He denied that be ever talked to her about a chance for her to get a role in the stage play. "Flower Drum Song" ln 1964. "Miss Triola is very confused about dates," said Kelly. "I bad nothing to do with 'Flower Drum Song' after 1958." Kelly, who directed "Flower Drum Song" on Broadway, said he bas k nown Miss Marvin "very well " for nearly 30 years. "I 've known her quite a while," he said. "It was purely social. She has visited my house on occasion." He said he also knows Lee Marvin and bas worked with him on television shows. "In short, I know both these people and r like them both, .. the movie star said. Kelly was summoned to the stand as Marvin's attorney opened the defense case in the landmark property rights trial. The dancer was called to re· fute Miss Marvin's testimony that she gave up a chance to ap· pear in the Broadway show so she could stay with her then· lover, Marvin. That )\'as in 1964. She told of more than one phone conversation with Kelly in which he referred her to a choreographer who could give her a job in the show. But Kelly said the show was probably closed by then. He said be did not know whether she might have been re· rerring to a road company or "'Flower Drum Song." On cross examination, Miss Ma rvin's attorney sought to show that the actor's memory <See MAllVJN, Page AZ> story office towers and the addi· tion of 250,000 square feel of re· tail and office space at the shop· pini center. Greg Butcher, Segerstrom Company deve lopment director. said he expects the projects to be build by 1982. The projects make up the latest phase of the city.approved master plan for the South Coast Plaza area. It's Stupid Of Cupid He shot an arrow into the air and it landed be knew not where . . . But a s tartled San Cle mente woman knew where. She told police the arrow had struck the front door ol her apartment on West Marquita . It was apparently a Valentine. It bore a heart with a poem of sorts : "Hearts of gold, hearts of lead , Cupid 's arrow struck instead." But love is bli,Jld or at lea• misguided. Police said that Cupid's arrow apparently s truc k the wrong door. U.Sta Mesans Warned on Bike Permits Many bicyclists in Costa Mesa are riding around with Invalid bike licenses because of a new state law that requjres "renewal tabs." Costa Mesa p plice say a "grace period" will end soon and citations will be issued to bike riders without proper licenses. The law allows the city to charge a fee for the renewal tabs, but Costa Mesans can still obtain theirs free at weekend bicycle licensing clinics. New tabs can be picked up free this Saturday at Sonora or Pomona schools between 9 a.m. and noon. The clinic will reopen between l p.m. and 4 p.m. at Klllybrooke School a nd Balearic Center. On Sunday. tabs will be available during morning hours at Lindbergh and Mesa Verde schools. In the afternoon the clinic will be held at College Park and California schools. · .. Wh~ Spilled. Oil on the Beaeh? • '"" ..... "" ......... HIAYY EOUIPMeNT ONRATOU ICMPI OILY SAND f'ROM HUNTINGTON ITATI 81ACH L A Fog.elwouded ~-rr: Wllo'• Re111an1lal1 for OI °""""" TMt Hat 'outed Coeat .. KM•? . t An oil apill that tainted four miles df the Huntington Beach coastline Tuesday bas be1un washin& ashore at Newport Beach. U.S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Skip Onstad said brown colored 1lobuJes about the sl1e of hail )tones were detected aa far ~utb aa Newport Pier today. He said cleanint operation.II, which t.hua far have been COD· centrat.ed ln areaa north of Hunt- in1ton Beach pler, an tcbeduled to bectn at NeWPOrt Friday. Onttad aald that UJe QUI ap. panntly occuned &uaday from a tanker la Loni Beaeb llarbor. He eatd the ltiekJ ,....._. •hlch appean to be erucle otJ • betna analysed ta laboratonet tn an 1taempt to track down lta IOUfC. • "But that's going to be awfully hard to do, because there were about 19 tankers lo the harbor at the time.'' The spill was detected In heavy fog early Sunday but didn't wash ashore until Tues· day. Onalad, who has set up a com· mand poet near the Hunllnlton Beadl city pier to direct cleanup operations, said lbe only victim or the apill appears to be ooe Weatern arebe. He nkl the bird was found tn ff unttnaton Beach and cleaned byfllb..,.Swtldlifeofftciala. A Cout Guard •Pokeaman earUer laid that patchea of oU tnvolftd tn the-aplll covered an area 2,400 yarda long and 800 ,.,.~ Mayor Ed Mc Farland, who has reviewed the plans along with other City Council mem. bers. said today he is concerned about a 164·acre undeveloped parcel adjacent to "One Town Center." The owner of property is ex· peeled to come before the coun· ell in June to ask for a combina- tion or commercial. industrial tSee PLAZA, Page AZl Baby Death Jurors Quizzed By KATHY CLANCY Of .. o.lty ...... S!Mt Prospective jurors in the retrial or Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill were being asked today about their views of a doctor's role in cases of terminally m and hopelessly incapacitated patients. The questioning came as jury selection wound into its third day in Orange County Superior Court. Dr. Waddill is accused or strangling a newborn girl after an abortion attempt by, injection of s aline solution failed a l Westminster Co mmunity Hospital in March of 1m . Waddill's first trial ended last M.ay in a mistria l whenJurors said after 16 weeks of tes mony and ll days of deliberation they were hopelessly deadlocked 7 to !; in favor of acquittal. Waddill 's attorney. Charles Weedman, predicted Wednesday jury selection may be completed within a week and testimony can begin in what is expected to be a three to four-month trial. Both Weedman and prosecutor Robe rt Chatterton have been focusing oo issues of abortion and s~alled right to life as they question prospective jurors . Much of their interrogation centers on the question of pro- longang life by machine in so. ca li ed hopeless cases versus "pulling the plug." One prospective juror today said it was difficult to relate his own feelinJts ln •·a gray area.'' "I don't know where you say this ls oo longer a human being and DOW is an organism ," the prospective juror said. <See WADDILL, Page%) Coast Weath er Chance o r fe w light showers 20 percent Friday mornin1 . We s t lo northwest winds 20 to 25 mph Friday afternoon. Lows tonight 44 to SO. Highs Friday 58 ta63. I NSIDE TODA~ Charle• B. Whe•ln Jr .• mOJIO' of KClftlGI Cit11, Mo .. " an ~ional poW1c1an who •·gton 'em heU" C7t the tradffbt of Ho"11 S Truman St"'I/, photo on Page .414. l•tlex AtY-teMA 0 AMI~ .,_._... a,...._ a M LIA • ..,.. At ...... cw =. ~:..~ ~ Cl GI'-.. ca.e. ~ .............. c-kt .. I. c.e. ..... :::-r-11 .~ =: ....... ,,... ............ ......... I CM T1IMW'I ~ cw-.... ==·= :: ........ : "" ., Q IM ., Ct c;..J A4 ... ' ) 11.Z DAILY Plt.0 t ¥ ""' c Thuradax, fabf\11?' 1&, 1171 Budget Bala•~ Brown Pushes 'Frugal' ~ine ~ACtlAM ENTO IAP I Gov -.ould focustd on ttw lJ ue ol t;dmund 8ro,.n Jr , lO OW h rtt government 1peod1na. Brown ltq1 lalat1 e commlll•• p told the A• embly W1ay1 ttnd s~arance by a te~nt 1ovemor lharw Committee. 1rnld today a baJanNd federal "Tbe bal&Med b"d•el la a dla bud~l·t would ht•lp "<'hanae th~ ciplh~ ft ''not the soluho~: but l'henrn1tr)'' ur the 1nflataon It puw the rorulruanlll on, tht ~•·•ued country r t:arher UOf")' Dt•mouaUc 1overno1 u 1d. Paf(r A:> 1 It wu a reference to • pro If n C'Omenuon v.t-re held 10 ro-al bdore commltke-cfllllng ado11t blhm ~ r~raJ pt'nd tor a C'OllSUtutlonal c:onvenhon to mg. the counlr)"s attention rtqulno Conircss to ballince the federal budget • '"TlK' n-aJ '"~.,. £Ai. I -~ Jl, l!I Wpt,er Finn Pul,/ing Ow T t:llRAN. Iran IAPI The ctuef or !WU Heltcop lt•r 't. opcratton:. in Iran !\J1d today l.be 1J S. firm "'111 pull out almost all the I. 700 employtts and de· 1u.•ndents still In this strife torn nation followang a U S Em bassy warning that 1t can no lonqer pro- tect Americans in Iran. 1 Re htt.ed atorv. Pue A4 ). Robert MacKinnon, vice pre s ident and general manager of B e ll Helicopter International, said employees would be sent to ''staging areas" in nearby countries to await word on whether the new revolutionary government wants them to return. how 1enous ls th problem of the f rowi111 national debt 1and what call lhe fiscal excesses ol Ull' federal covemment," be aald ·If you t.b1llk as I do that there I someth.ins thal Is rundamen· tally wrong with tbe drift of our pubhc policy. then you have to agree that w~ have t o do something .. Brown tesufied immediately after former U.S. Sen. Sam E rvio ans wered committee members' questions through an elect ronjc telephone hookup lo his law orrice in Morgunton. N.C. Veteran Capitol obs e rvers could not recall any time in re· c e nt-history, dating back through the 1943·53 administra- tion of Republican Earl Warren. when a governor testified before a standing legislative commit· tee. A resolution that would make California the 27th state calling for a constitutional convention is pending before the committee for a vote by the end of the month. County Solons Vie On Fire Question Members of Orange County's Jegi ~lat1vc d e legation were choosing up sides this week in Sacra mento m the growing con· lroversy over the future or tbe 101nt county.state fire service. f'ro• Page A I SEARCH •.• She said the three families, rel· al1ves and friends intend to go down to 88Ja, California, Mexico, this weekend to search the shoreline in that area. "We're having posters made that depict the 'Armistice' and Debbie, Gary and Dennis," she said. "We're going to lack them up at every likely point and we are offering a reward of $1,000 to a nyone who can give us inlonna· tion about our children." M rs . Sco tt s aid the ''Armistice" carried enough food and water for two weeks when i;he left San Diego 24 days 8Ji?O. ., 'They could still be out there in the ocean eking out their sup· plies and hoping for rescue," she said. "And whiJe we are grateful to the Coast Guard, the Navy and the Air Force for what has been done. we feel that the de· cision to suspend the search is prem ature." · The issue was tossed into the Sacramento arena earUer th.ts week by Orange Count y s upervisors. They asked the state Legislature to intervege. Members of the administra· tion of Gov. Edmund Brown. Jr. s aid they would stick by their boss' budget plan. It would re· quire the county to a ssume con· trol of' the 550-qtan fire depart· ment that is currently state run Stale Sen. Paul Carpenter, D· Garden Grove, said he agrees with the governor and predicted there would be little legislative interest in the issue. But Assemblyman Dennis Mangers. D·Huntington Beach and Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson, R-Newport Beach, .iaid they agree with county of· ficials that the proposed move may prove to be more costly to both the state and county. Mang e rs said h e and Supervisor Harriett Wieder would host a press conference next wee k to discuss the legislative plan of attack on the issue . Mrs. Bergeson said she has of. fered her help to the county. "I had hoped there could be a negotiated settlement to this without going to legislation," s he said. 'Ille Beat Goes On Membersflbf Newport Harbor High School Band were up early today, getting in som e practice for an appearance Satur· day in Laguna Beach 's Patriot's Day Parade. They marched a few blocks from th e c ampus. in the residential neighborhood where th~ir regular leader. Harbor High mus ic teacher Richard England lives. Substitute baDd director Don Anderson said there was nothing un- usual about the route ot the pre.parade practice. En'land bas been relieved of his teaching duties pending the outcome of a hearing into his dispute with Harbor High Principal Tom .Jacobson. McN ally Gets Reprieve School Site to Go on Sale This Summer r The McNally School site in downtown C<>6ta Mesa will go up for sale again this summer at a minimum bid of $3 million, Newport.Mesa Unified School District trustees have decided. ft means continuation high school and evening s tudents will remain at the campus through the 1979-80 school year. However. there is now some doubt whether McNally opera· lions will eventually be moved to M ontc Vista Elementary School in the fall of U8>. The Monte Vista campus still will be closed at the end of this school year becauae of declining s tudent enrollment. trustees said Tuesday. A citizens advlsory committee will hold a public hearing al Monte Vista School March 12, to discuss bow the campus should be used during the next school year . The one.year delay lo moving McNally came about after no bids were received by district of· ficials for the 7.5 acre site late last year. Bids will be accepted on Aug. 16th, said district business manager Ray Sch.ruerer, with a one year escrow to follow. He said some potential buyers have shown intereat in restoring the early·Califernia style McNally building for a business operation. Worker Hurt • in Blast A maintenance employee for the MK Development Company in J rvine was In serious condi· tion today after undergoing sur- gery required when an oxygen tank exploded in his face. Offic ials at Costa Mesa Memorial Hos pital said Dennis L. Correl. 39, or Harbor City, was in stable condition in the in· f',....r~AJ PLAZA. • • and residential use on tbe agricultural land. Mc Farland said he believes the council s hould have "evaluated" how this develop· ment would affect the Town Ce~r project. Last year. city officials grant· ed the Segerstrom firm a 750,000 s quare foot expansion to the original One Town Center plan, bringing the total square footage to slightly less than three million. The completed town center, i n c ludin g th e 16 -s tor y Segerstrom/ Prudential building now going up along Bristol Street. will generate a bout 25,000 more cars per day in the city. of· ficials said. Butcher said the two new of· tensive care ward. Correl had just accepted de· livery of an oxygen tank, used to fuel construction equipment, at a job site on Fairchild Street, near Jamboree Boulevard. Oilldren Aided W ASHJNGTON <AP l -The Children's Defense Fund says it is planning ~ nationwide pro· gram in behalf of the estimated 64 million Americans under vot· ing age. "As long as children go hungry and homeless and neglected, we must push for sensible, realistic and cost· effective public responses," Marian Wright Edelman said Wednesday. He was loading it in a storage locker when the tank's pressure valve exploded. The terrific force of escaping compressed gas drove pieces or the valve in· to his forehead and 1¥>Se. When police and paramedics arrived. Correl was writhing on the floor in pain. Fellow workers had pressed towels against bis forehead and nose. Police said the towels were saturated in blood. A delivery man reported that he had dropped the oxygen tank on a cement Ooor just before handing it over to Correl, but in· sisted that the force of the im· pact s hould not have been enough to cause it to explode. Plastic Bag Kills Tot WADDILL. • fice towers will be built on the company~ fifteen acres of land east of Downey Savings near the San Diego Freeway. Weedman said Wednesday that be has stopped focusing in on quest.ions concerning the ex· tensive publicity that s ur- rounded Waddill's murder trial. SAN PEDRO CAP> --A 28- yc a r ·old wo m a n has been booked for investigation of' murder in the death of her 11· month-old son. whose body was found with a plastic bag tied around his head, police said. Kathleen Marie Chamberlain was hospitalized Wednesday in the jail ward at County-USC Me dical Center with self· mrncted knife wounds from an a pparent s uicide attempt, authorities said. ORA NOE COAST ' DAILY PILOT , .. Ott1f'IQl'Gattt o.ltf Pt10t., •m'"'""" ht Of" ''""""''"' ... *"""""' l\~tY!ifell>y lf"IC'"°'~ t U\.I Pv0it"'*'9(~¥ Sof-~•l•f'dtl...,. 111,. l •tbll'fWott ""'°""'•" IN-..... F'r'dr, .... (Mitt M rw lill6tWIC.Wt 9e'«ft, ... Wl-fM'lll't°" ~-f\ f-Wft t.t nVAttf'"¥ trv'~ l~f\f.C" iovtf\Co.t 1 A ,1 O•ft~td1'10ft•"ovbiH~S.tt1~""8 .i~n n. or•"<ll»t P'Wbfhn~ pt.,.. h .. lll .,.,,.. t b•• "'""' <.ott• ~ (•lttoffti• .,._,. . ...., .. ,,,_ .. ,.~.,_.,......,..,. "It 'aeems in the main as though while people read about the case, they didn't come away with any opinion about Dr. Wad· dill's guilt or Innocence." Weed. man explained. "We are spending more Ume now talking about how the jurors feel about the role of the physician where there Is a terminally ill or tncapaclt.ated patient." Waddill contended in the first trial that the infant born to an 18·year-old unwed mother never was alive. MARVIN .... The 14·story towers will be faced with green glass and mar· ble and will enclose 520,000 square feet. Development plans call for the hotel to become an L·shaped building with the addition of a J} ·story. 200-room addition. The expansion wtll bring the hotel's capacity to about 400 rooms and double its ballroom and meeting space. Butcher said additional parking wtlJ be in· eluded. At the s hopping center, a 150,000 square.foot department store and accompanying office building would be built on the east parldnl{ Jot. A pedestrian bridge over Bristol Street wUJ link the retail and office apace to the Town Center, Butcher said. ·'We knew this was coming, but time seems to pass quickly." noted Councilwoman Norma Hertzog . UP 10 550 ~ Free Delivery FUll BED RECLINING ._ ______________ ~ • Scouting Fallout Feared Oranae County's Girl Scouts carried on their cootie sales to- day in the hope that recent publicity will not put a dent In· what waa, last year, a S3'13,668 fund ral•in« effort. ·•we want orange County peo. pie to understand lbat the problems besetting the Angeles G lrl Scout CouncO do not af(ect us and webopetheyneverwill,"Girl Scout coordinator Jacqueline Schaar said. She said the Angeles group ln Loa Angeles ls the only one of 10 Southern California councils racked by di8sension that led to appearances by rival factions on television. Mrs. Schaar said feuding between union and noo·unloo members of the Angeles coun- cil's administrative staff led to one member urging residents in the area to boycott cookie sates. ''No such dispute exists in Orange ounty and we are not un· ionized," s he explained. "But we are deeply concerned because cookie sales are vital to the maintenance or our pro· grams." M ra. Schaar said Orange County Girl Scouts will be seek· ing $1.25 for each package of cookies. or that sum, she said, 57 cents represents the cost of the procf. uct. A further 10 cents covers the cost of sates licenses, incen· lives for the sellers and promo. tional material.a. She said a further 20 cents goes to the seller's Scout troop to maintain erol{rama. Tbe balance of 38 tenta goes to the Girl Scout or1aniiatlon at coun- cil level and helps to defray the cost of camps, training aod ad· ministration. Mrs . Schaar said proceeds from cookie sales provide about 34 percent of an annual budget that is slightly over $1 million. "It is our major rund raising effort of the year," she said. "Our girls are supporting their program by their own achieve· ment and it would be tragic if a misconception was aJlowed to in· terf'ere with this worthy effort." Seniors to Stage Valentine's Dance The Cos t a Mesa Senior Citizens' Club will hold a belated Valentine Tea Dance Saturday at the Downtown Community Center. 594 Center St. Live music and dancing will be offered from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. The cost is $1.50 per person, which Includes free refresh· ments. For more iJa(ormalioo call 754-5391. . s UP 10·-· 550 Free Delivery J--·~ 't/•(11 ~.,'°'"' •• ,..~ ... ~··~ ,,.._..~ lCltlfJ' WH faulty and be had forgotten the conversation. "Jn the year 1964, rou're Uk· tng me ll 1 saw ber?' Kelly Mid incr~ulously. Because the office apace will house corporal~ headquarters instead of a series of smaller bUlioeuet, Mn. Htrt101 said •ht wu not fearfUI of serious con~eatioo problems. ·showcase , ......... _..,. "' .......... .., .. a-..... ,_ Ill<-• -•n••l..,1 ljl••aq•"' l:dltao le~n• (7t•)~ Q ....... ~ ...... IOMTt ~~ .. ~::. °'.: ~ ~~= "' .... , ., .-W•r-fl\•f'ftiff'lh '.:.~ ,..., '= ~::,;~;:~U-1 •-1•1 "'MIU*' ~~~ ... '.~"\.:!!!1:11:0".:·.~::. -:i':. -tlllt tf 1'11•11 U M -lllf, Mitlt•y *"' __ ., ,._ .... "I don't remember. Can I aak Mr. Mttchelson, would be re· .member if be aaw her in 1984?" Speetaton lauabed. The Judie Hid Kelly could not ask Mlsa Marvin 's attorney, Marvin Mitcbellon, a qUMtion. MilchellOO had rated hla cue' late Wednaday after settlni up a dramatic scene between ll1li Marvin, and Pamela Marvtn, whom tbe actor married ln lt70. Al lliu llaniD 18* ctlnctJy at ber, Mn. llanin teturieci, "Sbe Mid to m•. 'You may be married to Mr. llarvln, but don't forset be'• atlll k...,.,., me'," , ·- She aald Se1erstrom officials are aUowtn1 470 aqaare feel of otrice space per employee. The development nrm ll con· 1iderln1 stauered working houri, improved bU! service and perhape a new freeway exit ramp off the San Otego Freeway. to reduce traffic Im· pactt, lbeaa.ld. Tbe ftrm allo wlU pay for the H .telllloD of Sou\b Cout Drive betw.._ Harbor BcMalevard and ratrvn Road ror a direet Unk to tbe lboppinf cea\19r. Tbe com· pleted ro.tid•.Y wUl be ai.Jl l8DM wide. • • • COITAMllA Ht I . 17th IT. (Acfoel "°"' "*"' next to ~ Calef ldclrl) 642 ... 17 Mon.·M 10.. lat. 1().6 ~~ MllllON VllJO 211t2 ......... ~ .. (Conw Cl /ltWlft( and Via floolal') •t1-lt02 Mon.·M. lo.6 lat 1o.a ~~ • 'Right ' For Gays Rej ted SACllAM ltN1'0 l AP> The nrat ltcialau lt!Sl or holl\QMx· uaJ ~ tJlO~ atato voten J et•i an antl bomoauual ttH• balUaUvt-hat endtd lo a retf1ill1 • c ~ft•t for 1•1 rftbu SUpPQRen. WlUf~4!nts t-itlnc th• B1 bl• and a r &:u l ntt for an «-'mp~o1 r ' rlaht to du cn.m.t•. ~ n le tnduslrial RetattGM Commltte-e ~J tll"d a bill to ban JOb disc:r1m1natJon aeaansl homo t-xual Wedne<t day on a 2·3 vote Four \otei. were offded ror passa1e. Poe AW 8CK"fc#d 'WILL HONOR IT' Tom 8atea BILL'S AUTHOR Sen. Jamea MUia ·~·~ 'SO INFANTILE' John Vasconcellos ll'lur9day, February 15, 1979 DAJ.Y Pl"-OT .41 Budget Deficits Constitution l Battle Looms • I I SACRAMENTO <AP> -Former U.S. Sen. Sam Ervin says federal budget deficits are "fundamentally dishonest," and it will take 4 constitutional convention t.o rorce Congress lo balance the budget. The 82-year-old Ervin, who served 20 years in the Senate and chaired the Watergate investigating committee before his retire ment in 1974, endorsed the con- s lit u lional convention In a videotaped message today t.o the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. ' "I think it is not only impor~ taot but absolutely essential fO\" the United States lo have a balanced federal budget. Deficit financing is fundamentally dis· honest," Ervin said. SACRAMENTO CAP> -Man Juana could be prescribed for help lo treaUng diseases lOClud 10g cancer under a bill wLDOJng Senate Stiffens Code He was lo answer questions from committee members via a telephone hookup to bis Morgan- ton. N.C .• law oflice. A resolu- tion that coUL<1 make (;al.lronua the 27th state calling for a con- stitutional convention is pending before the committee for a vote by the end or the month. CON~RESS MUST call such a convention if 34 stales request one. Breakthrough Sw:faces in Lettuce Strike ( __ sr._:4_TE_] 'C~ual' Assemblymen to Be Barred? Foes and supporters of the constitutional convention were rolling out their big guns today --Ervin in favor and Proposi· tion 13 coauthor Howard Jarvis in opposition. CALEXICO CAP> -In the first breakthrough in a four· week-old strike that has stopped harvesting of 40 percent of the nation's lettuce crop, a major grower broke with other farm owners and began negoliatin~ separately with United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez! the union said. lls first legislative victory after emotional testimon y from a cancer victim. Wednesday's 5·1 vole by the Senate Health and Welfare Com- mittee approved SB 184 by Sen. Robert Presley. D-Riverside, al- lowing dectors t.o participate in a four-year pilot marijuana treatment program Rl!f)atn /tltd~d LOS ANGELES <AP) -The state Public Utilities Com· mission says it is s tudying whether thousands or residents were overcharged for electricity this winter a nd are entitled to rebates of $100 or more Since so many customers and so much money is involved, the PUC may have lo step in and settle the overcharging issue, Michael A. Doyle, PUC con- s umer affairs manager for Southern California . said Wednesday. quakes Recorded SANTA BARBARA <AP> -A pair of identical offshore earth· quakes that measured 3.6 on the Richter scale and occurred within 15 minutes or each othe"r went largely unnoticed . authorities said today. Both quakes were cent.ered nine miles south of here in the Santa Barbara Channel, SACRAMENTO <APl The California Legislature is into another coat-and-tie nap pitting the rule-conscious Senate against the more casual As· sembly. The Senate Rules Committee sent a message Wednesday lo casually dressed assemblymen: no coat, no tie, no admission. THE COMMJ'ITEE'S resolu- tion would prohibit men from coming onto the Senate floor during sessions without wearing a coat and tie. The resolution's author. Senate President Pro Tem James Mills. refused to say that the resolution was aimed at as- --·- se mblymen . But h e acknowledged some lower house members have come onto the Senate floor without a coat and tie. "IT IS RELATED to the fact members of the Senate like to be sure there's an appearance of dignity in the state Senate," the San Diego Democrat said. "It's not aimed at anybody." Reaction in the Assembly ranged from bitterness to ac- quiescence. ·'It's sad senators rind themselv~ still caught up in ap- pearances, wb.Jcb usually means they're not committed to s ub- stance," said Assemblyman Sun 'Upset' Seething Gases Reported PASADENA <AP> -A California astronomer has re- ported the discovery or mammoth solar disturbances in which seething gases rise from deep within the sun and spill across the surface. The solar upwemngs ocrer potentially valuable clues to understanding and pe rhaps someday predicting such phenomena as sunspots and solar flares, wbich can play havoc with radio communications on earth. said Robert F. Howard of the California Institute of Technology's Ha}e Observatories. "We really don't know much about what's going on below the surface or the sun and this wUI help by giving us something else to look at," he said. "It's a large as~ct or solar activity that was not known before." ashlnglon's ~lrlhday ELLABBATION All Items Subject To S1octc On Hand ·. lr 921 HEAVY-OUlY SOLOERINfi IRON 8 well pencll·tvpe Iron weight only 4 Ol. 9% In. long with ¥e·ln. diameter COl)pet·ploted tip SP80 s749s QT. 10W40 64~ • MOTOR OIL This mult1·viscoslty mo· tor o•I is perlecl lor voor cer in ell climates 10W40 1CMN. CHAIN SAW ~ht V•llOWWed uw-fUat 7.2 lbe. without bar MMt ctwMn. QIU n.. to 20" In diameter, pninee, cut11 n,... wood, more.. AutomM\c oiling, 2 handle1 for positive con- lr'OI. elldveiw sm T·Tlc>-...ncl T1k11dv111t191 of thlff 91111 nluu from yCM locel i11Hptn· dent h1rdw111 mercllltlt whh n1tlon1I c1!1ln-buyi119 power. PRESTO FRY BABY deep fry.er $1699 Deep fries 1 10 2 soNlnga In mlnutea, tn 1u11 2 cups of oH. Pt11tlc COYef. FB0.1 CROCK PLATE Cook• elmo11 evorv food! StOMWlfl lttts off fOf HIV serving end fllt cletnup. 29l3900H • WARING ICt CREAM PARLOR M•ltn ~allOn ice cream, froz.en togurt. sherbet. elc. In •bout 30 mjnutes. Frt11 rec;1po booll. CF-520· 1 STORE HOURS: Mon. thru Fr.I. 9·9 Sat. 9·6, S.. I 0-4 I • ' John Vasconcellos. THE SAN JOSE Democrat. who often wears slacks and open-necked shirts. added: "I have no need t.o go on the Senate floor and I assume no senator will have a need to talk about a bill with me anywhere. "It's so infanWe to think that a necktie is a sign of anyt.bi.og." But another assemblyman who oft.en shuns a tie and coat, Tom Bates, D·Berkeley, s&d he would abide by the rule, if adopted by the full Senate. ·Tm not going to l~l the ques· tion of a dress code interfere with my ability lo be effective, .. he said ... As long as the rule is passed. I will honor it, even though I don 'l think it has any bearing on issues we're dealing with." "I think it's necessary for the state to call for a konstitutional convention t.o submit an amend· ment to balance the budget", because there are loo many preJ ssures on Congress t.ocontinuede- ficit spending, Ervin said in the message recorded earlier this week. "THERE ARE too many de· mands from too many constil· uents that enjoy deficit financing because it enables them to get a whole lot or money out or an empty federal treasury for nothing." Ervin also s aid be is con- vinced that a constitutional con· vention can be limited to budget issues so it would not stray into amendments that might Hmit civil liberties. Meantime, farm workers re- turn to the picket lines today. one day after a funeral for slam striker Rufi.no Contreras, and a six-member privat.e panel was to begin its iniesligation into the slaying. ' U FW SPOKESMAN Marq Grossman declined to identifY, the company that broke the growers' united front, but be in· dicated the union was hopeful ot a quick settlement. .. The separate talks certainl)I indicate they are willing ld bargain," Grossman said. He added that Chavez was conduct, ing the negotiations personally. 1 -~ Independent Liquor Stores ~ Prices Good Feb. 15 ThrotHJh Feb. 20, 1979 wt/ ~ SCORESBY SCOTCH RecJ. $6.95 $ 5'! BACARDI RUM RecJ.$6.99 s599 Qt. POPOV VODKA RecJ.$4.99 s3'! BLACK VELVET Recj. $13.36 s 1 O~! &ORION'S llN. RecJ. $6.49 $ 52! t•ALMAD.EN •• MILLER® CELLA LAMBRUSCO MomtfalllWIMI HIGH s~1.9 sr• s1" LIFE 150"" Sa.e 55c 1.5 Ltn.. MR. & MRS. T s5" SUN KIST SODA 99c 12 en. 99c Case of 24 6pak .... _.., ........ Iced RS 2200 Newport lt.d. MR. IUCK'S Ll9UORS 2989 Fol"lew Rd. Costa Mesa j_~f.:73 J IAYCREST LIOUOR & DELI " 333 E. l'lth St. CodaM ... 646-8262 _ ........... .._ .......... Costa Mesa S.IZ:.~!§2 FISHER'S Ll9UOR 3135 H•lw llYd. Costa Mesa 549-1405-..... .......... . - o, '"" .eoo .. 0 •• 1. P•lo• Editorial Page .................................................... tfl ,. Tt'luredey. February f5, 1919 Robert N Weed/Publl~her Thomas I( vii /Editor Borbara Krelblch/Edltorlal P~ Editor Chan to Look AtM a Futur Cosl41 fc. uns '-'·'" lc~rn •' •re t dl•al about where Lhc l'lt) lS hl'.tdlllg &n th\' rutUrl' h~ loo mg OVN tht-first t'hupter of u ne~ ~t·nerol pl n summorl1l'd copy of thi' hn1 chapter " nvjron ml'nt.tl Rl'i\OUrN~s Man gl•m(>nt Elemrnt" ta now J\'u1luW.-fr~ uC char~e at thl' plunnmr departnaent bl City Hull • It t·unl~Hlh 'Jh&Jblt' s tot1 .. t1cs on the city's l'O\'lronnwnt,11 n•sourct•s • nd porn~ out urea:, that are endan~cred b\ mr und nois.. µoJlutson .md potentlul Oood hulard The mformution. which \\Ill bt• re\'tewt"d ut public h~anng~ bclon.• thl' t·1t) Pl.mnrn1: l'ommtsMon and City l 'oum·11. prov1dt•s •' b lu('prmt Corthefuture Hackground knowledge of the city ·~ current s tatus s hould help city omc1al pr~par~ for upcoming decisions n·gardml( lund ust• and ~\\development Rcsldenlb or Costa Mt!!-.a should be equaU)' mrormed. They should takt! llmP to St' an thd1rst secllonofthe plan. Pubhc v1c\\~ on the plc.in will be heard by the Plannm~ Commission at a regu lar meetin g set ror Monday. f't:b 26. in tht• c·ounc1 I chambers Questionable Tactic A tl'at'hl·r~ · union group at Goldrn W()st College· in Huntingtoll Bl!ac·h hao charged the Coast Community College District with u S2.9 million error in its $67.5 m 1 Ilion budgl•t . Citing a statt• ~u1dclinr th~l requir es at least SO per- cent of the d1str1 cl ·~ yearly budget go to teache r salaries. lht> union lcudl•r!-> say the S2.9 million h as improperly l><.'c>n put to use in non teaching areas The teachers . members of the American F ed eration of Trachcrs, have demanded n public hearing with col· k gv trustC'l'S on thl· issue> That S('to'ms f<.11r enough. until one looks deeper into I .H·tics b<.·ing <.~mploy(•d by the union to maintain an upper hand and sustain mt•d1a inlen•st Tlll' union rcp<Jrlcdlv ha .... r<'fuscd to I urn O\'Cr the dm·umt•ntl'> that un.• supi)oscd to prov(.• the m1Mtppropria- l 1<111 of I 11ncb to d1str1ct officiab A d1s trwt spokesmttn not<•s th:.H the union 1s now in· 'olv<•d in a t•ampaign with w1othcr teachers' group for llw right tu r<•prcM·1ll. the kachcrs in the next round of <'Ollt•ctn·t-b:Jrg:tinin~ Innt•<'d. it might be• .a ~chl'm<· •as a district .... pokt·~man contend~> to "t.ir1bbh.• out .. the inform a tion of tht• d1str1C'l .... :illt·~ed misdeed to achieve maximum e ffect in thl' recruit mg drive This 1s a well-tested tactic. but one that does little to .... u!-.l:iin the ~ener:.t l view of teHchers as professionals who havf' the b<·sl intt•n•st~ of tht· community in mind School Site Use Declining ~tudent enrollment has led Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials to s hut down three 1•l(•mentary s C'hools in Costa Mesa. Mesa V<.'rdc. Monte Vista and Victoria s chools all will be t losed at the e nd or this school year The s tudenU. w ill go e lsewhere. but the fac ilities will rt•mam. What 1s the best way to put the vacant sites to u~e·' A rl'ccntly formed citizens advisory committee is asking the same question. The ~even-member committee has ~el a series of public hearings to get s uggestions from I ht• l'Ommumty A tentative plan to move the McNally Continuation School op<•ralion to the Monte Vista campus by the fall of 1980 1s stlll on th<· books. but that's about all. The first hearing will be he ld al Mesa Verde S chool on Monday. Feb. 26. The comm ittee will move to Monte Vis ta School on Monday. March 12. and then to Victoria ~c hool on Monday. March 26. All of the m eetings are s et for 7:30 pm. The school s ite utiliw l1on committee wa nts to hear <:ogcnt views bcf ore it s ends a recomme ndation r eport to th l· district. tr you h ttvc helpful id eas. pass the m on. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those or the1• authors and artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (7t4) 642·432t Boyd/Safety Tip By L.M. 80VO Am adviSt>d th;.it a bull r11~r<'C enoug h to attack <t pl'rson who ventur es onto :o;a1d bc-ast's turf will not d<> !-O if that person h as no d othc.•s on c1~11m is the hull ev1d1·ntly thinks a nak('d human is JUSl another harm 1css animal. Qu1k so. It's logical. Intriguing. isn't it? Even mort' intrig uing, I think, is how this fancy fact (':lnlt' to be round out l\n horolo"ist 1s somebody who studies time measure· m rnls. and an act'ur<it<' t 1mcp1ece to an horologist. 1t 's c la imed . is o ne that ne1th€.'r loses nor Jtnins more than one second cv •ry 6,000 yw1r-; The otom clocks db th;H Q "What ·s the m ost d1f· (icull tongue twister of all ?" f .... ~ar Gloomy Gu HovQ you •'VC!r seen such o blWlderin1 m CSI$ ~ · the Harbor Shopplni Center parklni area? It ·s been go n1 on for months and •eta worse in. tcad of b<'ttcr M J.R. ... A Debatable. But some of lhc best voices in rudio :md television claim it's impossi· bl<' to rc.•peat at lop speed lhrt'e times t his "Red leather . yellow leather." Persona lly. tho ugh, none seem s harder than: "Tho c l o lh<'S m o t h 's m o u th closed." Consider the countrie~ of Southl•ast Asia. Such as Viet· nam . Cambodia. The Philip· pines. Thailand, so on. What a lot or outsiders don't savvy 1s the power within those na· Uons or the displaced Chinese who live ther e . Ry head count. they only represent ;1bout 6 percent or the popula· 11on. Rut by financial clout. thl'y'rc a formidable force. They live in light little com- munltles bound by ancient • traditions. Governments shift ond change. Rut the In· t e r l o cking Chlnatow,ts. op<!ratlng almost though not exottly Ukc secret societies. domlnnte mucb of th trade. The political power that geL1 in trouble with the displaced Chinese winds up in trouble all over Southeast Asia. Q "Whal kind or income does th<' ·Peanuts· com ic s trip with all its splnofrs bring In''' A Figure obout $150 m tm on a year . From movies. theaters, TV. books. so on .. Why does lln ordinance Jn Shreveport, t.a., make ll 11· l~S•I for a runeral director lO give away ma~chbook1? '\ Shah Blames Carter and CIA WA HING TON President Corter and the Central rn lellictnce Aiency have been get uni their lumps from just about everybody ror not knowinR what w11 going on In Jrun. supporting the ahah until It was too late and railing to cultivate contacts with lht t•xilrd Mui.lim leader AyatoJlah Khomc1n1. But there lS one man, perhaps thl' only man in the world. who believes just the opposite: S h a h M o hammed k e l a Puhlevl Em· b1Llered and increasing!} paranoid since he was force d las t month to nee the nation he h:.id rull•d a nd loot ed. the s hah believes Carter and the CIA knew all t oo well what was happening in Iran. Jn fact. he actually believes the CIA <.•ngineered his full from power and t he ascendancy or Kho· melni. THIS ASTONISHING in lerpretation of r ecent events. which flies in the race or conven· t lonally accepted reality, was expressed just hours a fter the sha h fled into "temporary" u · ile. He had a private talk with Egyptia n President Anw;ir Sad at at Aswan on J an. 16: in telligence sources have provided us with a detailed report of th1!> lop·secret conversation. While Carter's critics h<tve raulted him for blindly s upport· 1ng the shah in the race of mounting evidence that he was losing his grip on Iran. the shah himself credits Curtc>r with thC' most astute diplomatic double. dealing since Talleyrand. And while the CIA 's detractors have Mailbox castigated the agency ror ignor· 1ng Khonein i. the shah told Sadat that ss early as last s pring he had undeniable in· formation ''that American agents are rtirting with the opposition.·' 1'U£ U .S. E MBASSY in Te hran convinced him. said the shah. that a prerequisite for bet· ter understanding of President Carter was the dis missal or Gen. Nematollah Nassiri, head of Iran 's' secret police. When he fired Nassiri on June 6. 1978, un· de r U.S. pressure, he told the Egyptian president that left. wing Moscow-led groups in Iran 1ntE.'rpreted this as a sign or weakness and stepped up their opposition with massive strikes. The president later hailed Nassiri ·s oust er as e vidence of the !Shah's concern for human righls. said the s hah. He told Sadat that "the biggest double- c ro ss i ng took place" when Carter reaffirmed his support for Iran. knowing Cull well that American agents already had "open channels" to Khomeini. If that was the biggest. what the s hah described as "the m ost disgusting double-crossing and treason lsic >was carried out" in the final days or the January crisis in Tehran. The shah. act- ing on American advice. decided lo leave Iran te mpora rily to ena· ble the military and his other s upporters lo keep Khomeini from returning and pave the way for the shah's eventual re· turn to power. ACTUALLY, according to the shah ·s unique view or events, the Amer icans were warning the Ira nian military that if they tried lo seize control and bring the s hah back. the United States would cut orr all supplies and as· s1~tanee. This warning was de livered. the s hah told Sadat. to lop Iranian bra~11 by Gen. Robert E. Huyser. second in command of Amer ican forces m Europe. and word or the warn. Ing was passed on to Khomeini ·in P aris. It was this sneaky power play, the shah said, that made It possi· ble for Khomeini to return from exile and which thwarted the s hah's plan to r egain his throne. In light of his expertence. the shah told Sadat, the Egyptian president should not trust the Carter administration ~lake its advice. F ootnote: A CIA s kesman said the agency could oot com- ment on the s hah's lntcrprcta- llon of events. Parents Responsible for Grade Inflation? To the Edjtor : The Daily Pilot's negative position on publi c .:mployees. and t eachers specifically. has become quite obvious to anyone reading the editorials of 1129 con- cerning striking teachers and 2/6 concerning "grade inflation ... 1 disagree with your position Effective teache rs a re very s imilar to e ffective parents . Re s pect fo r o the r s . self· co nfidence an d p rid e In themselves and their family ior school in the cas<.· or teachers l are vital ingredients of a ny suc- cessrul adult guidance. Good pa rents and teachers have a way or passing these traits on to young people. Some teachers never have these attributes and that is too bad. Those of us who do have the m are slowly losing th e m every t 1 m e we read editorials like yours . Thal is really too bad. Grade i nfl ation occurs because the public demands that their son or daughtt'r be pam· pered so he/she can ~o on to col lege. Many students need to be dis ciplined but teache rs are afraid to act in rear or an irate parent going to the school board claiming. '1'h1s teacher 1s not llleing nice to my little c hild " CONCERNED pa rents should let their child's teacher know t hey approve of discipline. If all par ents did this, you would see the end of grade infla tion. It is not the fault or the teachers. but rather or parents and public pressure to "look better" than other students and schools . Jn regard to striking teachers in the high schools, you are wrong. Respect. self-confidence and pride cannot be passed on to s tudents by a teache r who is consistently ha\fi ng h is pride a nd dignity d1minl~hed by the Howard Jarvises. school boards a nd public . Almos t eHr y teacher I know who teaches sub jecl matter in a 11upcrior ml:tn· nn a nd olso ins tills pride. respect. and confidence in stu dents was on strike . They kne w they could not ins till thesl' positive attitudes in students U they relt ai; lf they were being made the tarect or conaistent de· grading actions :uid attitudes of tbe public. The enthuslaam and concem teachen have for education and studenl4' ls the determining fac· tor which separ•tes a class of reaular graduates rrom a class or youmr adults prepared to live rutrllllng ond productive llvea. Fewer and f w r le»chers art able to create thll'I type of en· vlronmont bec11usc they are m ade to fttl IJkc overpaid. 11n· der -worked seco nd ·c lt ~s cilluM. Help us' NORMAfll HM.L £d S11te91 lt'erJc To the FA.ltor: A• one parent who has had children tn the m•tchln• band at Newpqrt. HarbOr Hlth Sch601 ,.. and who has served on the PTA board for three years us PTA communications vice president 1 conducting dialogue with lhe pa rents and staff), ways a nd mt'ans chairman (re instating the donkey basketball game and raising /llOney for scholarships for many deserving senior stu· dents l, a nd presently serving as hon or a r y se rvi ce ~wa rd chairma n. I ur~e all pa rents and teachers of NHHS students to do lhE.' following with regard to the board or e duca t ion action loward Richard Engla nd : I PRESENT pertinent facts that have not been h(?ard (omit· tin~ e motionalism l to th.e Board of Education. 2. Recognize that taking sides on e motional "issues" is de:.tructive not constructive. 3. Let the established system of the school district 's hearing procedure oper ate in an environ· m l•nt of order and objc>ctivity. 4. Teach the students by this example that the system will work justly. Assembl ywoma n Marian BC'rgeson stat ed at a CTA· sponsored teachers' rally on F eb. 1 that. generaHy. teachers today do not have public sup- port. It is my view that the teachers using petitions against lhe board of education and/or alt<icking the integrity or their principal will reduce public sup- port for themselves. CAROL G RLANCHARD 1t' rlf er Right · T o th<.' Editor: Eileen D<)\'cr was so right In her observations about current Newport Beach values In her Thursday. Feb. 8 le~ter. J would go a step further by slating that things of cultural value art. music. literature, etc arc little prized in the city of sybarites. We have the specter or foot · ba ll versus the a rts in the case or Mr Richard England and the Newport Har bor High School ad· m inistralio n As a former Harbor HiJth s tudent. I know that the administr ation would almo~t always give the udvan· tage to footba)J. UndoubtedJy, they would cite tM popularity or tootbrul with the J>ubllc. In Newport 8e1ch. we have no tultural tradition that could ap. proach the pre-em ine nce of modla-produced popular ~ultve. Therefore. tt takes a public sbow·down to get any sort of recognition to th arts. MARK STEVEN PRAIGO ,. .. UffSe•etM••" To the F.dltor: In hla letter to the edltol' dated Feb. 4, L. Arthur Wome-r, Jr .• Ph.D. demonstrated that hf mlssechomeeduca.tlonon hlsway t~minca Ph.D. Fortuuttty, he 's one or the r,.w teaeftef'I that I am ••are of who doet.n't undeFtl•nd the frM ~nterpriJe aystem, moral r1Jhts. I legal rights, day·s pay for a day's work. democracy. m ajority rule wi th minority rights. and what the largest single cost is in most local governments Maybe he missed pre-school' J IM de BOOM MaHhzFuH To the Editor: Last year the coll eRes an· nounced they wouldn 't mail Qut their catalog schedules to rl' duce costs . Well. I recl'1\ed three this s pring . one from Golden West . onl' from Oran~t.· Coas t und onl' from Coastltn<' Community College. Also. I noticed they wcrl· senl to m y place of employment. Appar ently. Proposition-13 didn 't hurt the colleges as much as they feared . or else they JUSl don't believe in cutting costs. MRS /\ J SMITH Te1 .. lon Tf Me To lhc Editor : I h a ve just di scover e d . tonight. why we Americans are becoming more and more fill<.'<! with anxiety. Let m e tr ace tonig ht's h appening!> in my home land probably repeated in m a ny others throuf?hout the country 1. l 'm fixing d inner while mv children are wal<'hmg Captain Kirk of Star Trek fight it out with a big monster. Then the Bionic Man chases and fights with a man driven made by some kind of rays. We eat dinner and receive an obscene phone tall. We hurry to finish dinner so we can see "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" which I a m sure. with a name like that. will give n com1c:ll re· lief to m y nlr<'ody drooping evening AFTER THE bloody suicide. frontal lobotom y. murder und victory of the really sick nurse showing once again the rutllity or the good and norm al <if there is such o thing as normal ) I rtlpp<'d to C ha nne l 2's• "60 Minutes" and learned. in detail ,· huw our country is bt•in1t taken over by rats whose Ocas car ry the "Block Death " During the breaks we were kept up to date on the-earth- quake that just happened and> the overthrow of lhl' govern. m ent or Iran. with speculation on the premiere's s uicide. Along with this I was told that. gas ro r my g uzzling s tation wagon would !->OOn be over Sl a gallon. And now for the 11 o'clock news . MRS. WALTER CORMEY Parle Pos•lllle To the Editor· lt 1s surprising to read the editorial or Feb. 5, where the Daily Pilot is completely on the s id<.' of the landowner of the open space between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, the Irvine Company. and seems to ignore the latest development of the drive to have a national urban pa rk created with federal money <actually our tax money L The Jrvine Company has been throu~h a ll the years more than cooperative and has a lways stat· ed that the land in question is for sale . None or the groups in· terested in keeping this open space for us and future genera- tions has <'Ver intended lo have this land C'onfiscated. but they are tryin~ to have stntc. county. fed e ral money and from the Land and Conservancy Agency <whiC'h was cre;.1te d ror this purpose> to buy open spaC'e. THE DEDICATION or some land m exchange for the perm it to build with higher density is a usual procedure and benefits all parties involved; the ruture resi- dents who h ave open space around or nearby and also the landowne r. who produces res- idences In a nicerenvironme nt. At the time when it is actually well known that Rep. Patterson succeeded to gel in the omnibus bi ll $10,000 for a study, that the study team has already toured the property in question and that the s tudy will be finished> in May. it is hard to understand that the Daily P ilot docs not know the landowner will not have to fuce a "rinaneial lick· Ing.·· Rep. Patte rson has a very good reason to ask the federal government for llnanclal help lo create a large naUonal urban P•rk In Oranie County. Orange County is parlt·poOr and our res· lde nts have to dtlve many mHea to Mammoth ind the na· llonal parks ln northern California. The envisioned park here would serve about 10 mllUon people from Los Ancelcs • County a nd Orao-e County. B~Y HECKEL • lAltfr~ from m*r• are wekome. Tl'w right to ~ ldtm to /it ~ <Yr~ tibef M NHroed lAlk1'• "' Joo .,,. or ,,,. au be t;r...,"'= :, t=., "':: dr.• bllf.,,.. =bf -Mdd °" ....,..,. 'I..,,.. ~ -~-ap-porftl. Pod'JI will not be~