HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-17 - Orange Coast PilotI I
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Mistake Praetie~ Target .
II •
Coast Death
Sospeets Ask
For Transfer
·• PARAPHERNALIA ASSEMBl..ED -Collection of narcotics
and preparation goods seized •by Irvine police Wednes·
.! day. Shown afe balloons of heroin (foreground>, Jar of
,.: lactose used to mix with· heroin, peyote buttons (top)
.. spoons, syringes'1tnd extra balloons.
«:east Marder €ase
Bid for· Tram/er 0-J
Mulled b,; ./iitl;ge
WitnesS Reealls .
'Seein.g Flames'
On Marine Boot
ust
rom
Firm Formed
Fonner Envoy AU& lranituu
W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Richard M. Helms,
former ambassador to Iran, has established a con·
suiting fa.rm to help Iranian companies find business
ln the United States, the Washington Post reported to-
day.
Helms' downtown Washingtoh firm ls called the
Safeer Co., because Safeer means "ambassador" in
the Persian language of Farsi, Helms told the Post.
The story quoted the former CIA director as say•
ing, ''I might be a go-between or represent Iranian in·
terests who would want to do something in this coun· try. t t
Helms was fmed $2,000 and given a suspended
sentence Nov. 4 after he pleaded no contest in federal
court to failing to testify fully and accurately before a
Senate committee. The testimony involved U.S. operations in Chile.
I
Wrong Target
Marine Jets Fire
On Salvage Ship
KEY WEST, Fla. fAP> -'l\1fo.
Marine attae~ jeta apparenUy mistook a aalvqe ablp as a prac.
tlce tarset md opened fire with
rocketa tbat narrowb' missed a
diver.
Div.er Doll DeNalrlt was ooty
1twmed by the concu.sal&i trom
.ets
Marine's ..
~orehing
Recalled
SAN DIEGO CAP) - A
Universitf of Colorado midship.
man ~ be saw namee "the
size of ashoe box" on th• clotblnf
of a Marine rec:nalt alleaedJ.Y set
afire by a drill instructor.
. The testlmoQY was 1lven bJ
Stanley Auatln, 20, of Grand
JunoUon. Colo., in a pretrial bearing Wednesday. Another
former recruit, Marine PFC
Richard Hilmer, 18, of Wood·
brld1e, Va.. said be never ID'
the flames. Hllmerteltlfted, however, that
h• saw Pvt. V.N. Aldas of East
Chicago, Ind., pattlna hu
clothing thatda11 July t .
Sgt. 1obn B. l'!orria1 22, of Sa.a
Bemardlno ls charged with bu-
ing Aldaz, ref en1ng to him U•
"torch," maltrJatina the 21·
year·old recruit by spraying
Ushter Ouid on his trousers and
tantUna it.
A aeneral court.mtrtlal was
sebeduled to begin before a Jury
and a Marin• colonel Wednesday
but ti. start wu delayed to allow
the defense attorney to questlaQ another wttneu In Boulder, Oolo.
<See aECB1Jrr, Paae AJ)
Co as&
t
•
Z DAILY PILOT s Thur.clay, Novemb9f 17 1977
Israel Visit Firm
For Egypt's Sadat
By Tbe Aaaoela~ Pre11s
President Anwa1 Sadat of
Egypt will visit Jerusalem for 36
hours starting Saturday pight
and will address the Israeli
parliament Sunday, Israeli
Prime Minister Menahem Begin
announced today.
But Sadat will make the visit,
Irvine Man
Third Air
Crash Victim
An Irvine resident has been
identified as the third victim of
Tuesday's m1da1r collision off
Crystal Cove, Orange County
coroner's officials said Wednes-
dav. ~1.1sMng and presumed dead is
Thomas A. Glass, 34, of 3741
Avenue Sausalito in Irvine.
Coron<'r's offac1als said body
parts Jocatt.'<.I at the crash scene
three and one·half miles south of
the Newport Beach harbor en-
trance belonged to a second vic-
tim, J ames Tibbott, 38, of 9312
Comstock Drive in Huntin&ton
Beach.
A third victim, also listed as
missing and presumed dead, is
Robert Baker, 41 , of 22842 Fox-
borough Way an El Toro.
FAA officials said today Tab-
bott held commcr<'1al instrument
and instructor ratings. Baker
had received his private pilot's
license Aug. 24.
The three victims were co-
workers at VTN, an engineering
and land planning company
localed near Orange County
Airport.
A VTN spokes man, Judy
llaselhoef, said the trio was not
flyin~ on company business. She
said Tibbott gave fl ying lessons
during his off time, which was
usually during the noon hour.
A N alional Transportation and
Safely Board investigator said
today it was unknown who was
piloting the ill-fated Cessna 182 at
the time of the collis1on. He also
said al was unknown if Tibbott
was giving lessons on the flight.
The Cessna was rented from
Newport Air Associates.
A second aircraft, a Piper
PA28, limped back to Orange
County Airport and landed safely
with its two occupants following
the midair crash.
Tibbott is survived by his wife,
Linda, and three children, Baker
1s survived by has ware, J anice,
and two children; and Glass as
survived by his wife, Kathryn,
and three children.
State Stilary
Raise kked
· SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
California State Employees M·
sociation is plugcing for a 12.S
percent wage increase nex.t year.
The labor .1troup told the Slate
Pe rsonnel Board Wednesday
that 10 percent is needed to keep
up with cogts, and 2.5 percent is
needed J..to make up for cutbacks
in the b77 railles.
The· bonrd recommends pay
scales to the eovernor and
Legislature. It recommended
a nd the Legislature approved
10.l percent raiaes this year, but
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. cut that.
to 7 .5 percent.
Power Failure
LOMPOC (AP> -Authorllies
say a blown Pacific Gu and
Electric Co. insulator was
responsible for a power faUure
that left this• Santa Barbara
County town \ftthout electricity
for four hours.
which he has described as a
"sacred duty," without the sup
port of Syria and !lpparentJy with
major oppOsitloo within his own
country. Hia foreign mlnister re-
signed today.
In Beirut, Pal~stinian leader
Yasir Arafat condemned the
planned visit and urged Sadat to
Honing
Around?
PHILADELPHIA <AP>
-Some might call it
horseplay. Others might
say it was rustling. But
Michael Afanador, 25, has
been charged with theft or
city property and criminal
mischief for allegedly tak
ing a ride on a police
mount.
Officer Leroy Patterson
said he tied up his horse,
Melba Quazor , outside a
restaurant, went in for a
cup of coffee and came
back out just as Afanador
was riding off.
"I couldn't believe my
eyes," Patterson said.
Afanador told police he
was only feeding peanuts
to the horse.
FrotaPCJfleAJ
HEROIN •••
charges of burglary with intent to
possess heroin (police allege he
broke into the home), Hinojosa
on a charge of being under them-
fluence of an opiate.
Brown was held on $10,000 bail.
Bail for Hinojosa was set al
$1,000.
Seized in the search were
twelve balloons of heroin, four
dozen peyote buttons and a small
quantity of marijuana. Poli ce
also confiscated 16 hypodermic
syringes, empty balloons an
which heroin as packed, and ajar
of lactose, a powder used to max
withh&oin.
One Irvine police officer was
injured while storm ing the
house. Elliott Nemerson broke
bis left eloow whell a fence he
was climbing collap5ed. He was
treated at Tustin Community
Hospital.
Girl Killed
Fleeing Rape
LANCASTER (AP) -A 22·
year·old Lancaster man has been
booked for investigation of
murder following the death early
today of a 16·year-old girl.
Police said she was injured
Tuesday when she jumped out of
a moving pickup truck while al
legedly trying to resist the
driver's sexual advances.
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
deputies saitt the girl was Liza
Kozee of Redondo Beach.
cancel It.
In has address to the Israeli
parliament, Sadat is expected to
call for Israeli evacuation of -11
lands captured in the 196'7 war
and establishment of a Palest.in·
man state -standard Ar•b de-
mands that Israel previously ro-
Jected.
But the visit itself wltl
represent unprecedented rec·
ognation by an Arab leader of
the state of Israel.
Began announced the vis.it
shortly after Sadat returned
from Damascus, where Sadat
failed to win President Hafez M·
sad 's support for the visit.
Assad called the visit a source
of "deep sorrow." The trip has
also come under fire from Iraq
and Libya . •
Egypt's offiC.al Middle East
News Agency said that when
Sadat returned to Ismailia, he re·
ccived the official Begin invita-
tion for the visit through U.S.
Ambassador Hermann Ilts. It
was accompanied by a message
from President Carter, the con-
tents or which were not disclosed.
Sadat accepted. The U.S. a~
bassador lo Israel, Samuel
Lewis, then called Begin, who
made the announcement to visit-
ing U.S. congressmen.
At the same time, Egypt's of·
ficial Middle East News Agency
announced that Sadat's foreign
minister and key aide since the
1973 war, 13mail Fahmy, bad re-
signed , a move that could in-
dicate deep opposition within the
country to the Jerusalem visit.
The agency said Fahmy 's let-
ter of reaienation cited "oew ele·
menls which affected the 11lua.
tion," an apparent referenc~ to
Sadat's trip. "I feel that I cannot
continue in my post and that I
cannot continue to share in
shouldering responsibilities in
these conditions," Fahmy wrote.
In Jerusalem, Begin told a
group of American congressmen
in the presence of reporters that
Sadat would pray in the Al Aqsa
Mosque in on Sunday before ad-
dressine the Israeli Parliament.
Tbe announcement came as a
surprise to most Israelis who had
not expected the Egyptian visitor
before Nov. 24.
Begin said he hoped Sadat
would also visit Yad Vashem,
Is rael's national monument to
Nazi victims and a regular stop
on all visits of foreign
dignitaries. The prime minister
said he expected to converse with
Sadat in English.
In Damascus, Sadat assmed
Assad that he did not intend to
seek a separate peace with the
Israelis, with whom the Arabs
have fought four wars. But his
unprecedented visit lo speak
before the Israeli parliament
would be the closest any Arab
government has come to re·
cognizmg the state of Israel.
Although Sadat said he bad not
a!lked to meet Begin, but only lo
address the Israeli parliament,
the timetable announc din
Jerusalem said the two leaders
would hold private talks before
Sadat addresses the parllamenL
Begin said he would personally
receive Sadat. at the airport.
l sareli pollce prepared one of the
largest securit7 operations of
Israel's history, canceling vaca-·
taons and mobllUini thousands of
men.
'Thousands Mag Die'
Scientists Fear
ReaCtor Safety
WASHINGTON (AP> -A
group of scientists opposing
nuclear power plants said today
the government's basic 1afety
estima~ are far too opUmiatlc
and that reactor accidents may
kill thousands of people by the
year2000.
The Union of Concerned. Scien·
ti4ts, a~ frequenUJ involved
in cballt!DIH of Nuclear
Reeulatory Commltslon policy,.
issued • detailed eriticlJm ol the
NRC'• U'f.4 "Rasmussen
Report." the 1overoment'1 chief
safety uaeument.
prevailing winds mi?.t carry
radioactivity 1 fnto. heavily
populated 81'1e81. tbe casualties
could be up to 1,000 tlmes hlCber
than the ltatm~Nll estimates,
the group daid. ·
Highs and LOU"S
Five-foot lsabella Cannon, 73, mayor-elect of Raleigh,
N.C., greets new city council member Smedes York,
who stands six feet. four inches. Mrs. Cannon, a widow
and retired librarian, was an upset winner in the elec-
tion.
WHITTIER CAP) -Damage is
estimated al $5.1 milliol\ from a
fire that swept through Calcor
Space Facility, Inc., accordin& to
the firm's president, Ron Brown.
No injuries were reported in
the blaze Wednesday, which ap-
parently started in a palm tree
outalde the facility and spread onto the grounds wher e It
destroyed three buildings and
heavily damaged machinery and
metal stored' in the yard.
County Fl.re Department of-
ficials said it took 13 fire com-
panies hearly an hour to control
the aftemoonblaze.
RECRUIT •.•
Afttr the pretrial hearing, a
base arc>kc~man aaid a d cislon
would be m d on whether .a
court·m•rt1a1 is h Id anil wbri.
Auatln md I Ulm ar attending
college under pr ·commh;sion
t>roirams. ..
Auatln said Albz was not a
regular membf'r ot the platoon led
by Norris. He had been sent from
the correctional platoon wbtre
problem recruits are put for
special training or confinement.
There was no cxpl!kll&Uon w~
Aldaz was confined to the corre~
llonal unal where Pvt, LYrut
McClure was ~ssigned 'n 19l,5
before being knocked Ult·
conscious an forced pu1U st1*
drills. That recruit from Lufkhi,
Tex., dJed Wlthout fecalnJng con-
sciousness In a Houston vet
hospital.
Although Hilmer said hen
uw Aldaz afire. he sai
turned to see what was hap
1ng that day after hearing No
tell Aldaz four or five limes
st and at attention. He said AldllZ
had refus<.'<1.
Fro. Page AJ
BOVAN •••
tectlve measures instituted ta
county jail amount lo solit.att
confinement and said their
clients would be both safer ana
more comfortable in federal
custody.
There have been some indicllr
tions , howevet, that if the tw4
men are released to federal of-
ficials, that their whereabout.a
wall remain a secret of tbe
M arshaJ 's Sel'Vlce.
Jn henrl41g the motion on lb
transfer. Judge Franklin said be
would have to discuss the matter
with tlle Los Angeles Marshal's
Office before mak.in.q hls Mllloi.
Resco, Marone and Flori 8re
accused or murder conspiracy.in
the shooting dea\h or Steph9n
,John Bovan who died Oct. 22 out-
side a Newport. Beach.
restaurant.
Poll<:e allege the tb~ee min
were hired by tour local bl.isl·
neasmen lo kidnap and kill
Bovan. '
'6Ntrtt CHIOMA(Ol()(II WITH
~-
13"' .. -
The MATISSE• Jf320W
S11m-11ne po11abte llnlal'ted In Wnula ted grained Amtrk:an
Walnut on IOp and
ends wtll\ SUver
color t>ue
23·-
The •"9UE . J2322E
Trant!UOW'e.1 11yled fUlf bUa conaole wl"'-"be«utllul
AntlQU•Oak wood· or1t11 flnllh. ConcHled cute,.
17~-
The RU8EHS • Jl140W
Ultr1modem clecotalcx
compact.tabla TV llnlthecl In s1mulatecl
gr11nec1 .Americ1n Walnut. 0111( Brown
j)lldlSlll bate Wtlh
Gold color arlm.
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1
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VOL. 70, NO. 321, ~ SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES
Bero in
·.Traffic
CraCked'
By PIDl.JP ROSMARIN
oe t• O.lfr "*" IU!H
Irvine and Santa Ana police
claim to have cracked a major
heJoin trafficking operation with
the arrest Wednesday of three
Irvine residents and the seizure
of a small quantity of heroin and
peyote.
Police said they arrested two
other persons after oUicers ,in-
tercepted telephone calls to the
lrvine home, at 14811 HlgbCT'est
Circle, while making the first ar-
rests.
Police said more than a dozen
callers were trying to purchase
tieroln. Narcotics investigators
answered the calls and arranged
to meet as many as they could.
More arrests may stem from the
telephone traffic, police said.
The arrests culminated a-
months-long investigation, police
said, beaded by the Irvine depart-
ment, with Santa Ana police as-
sisting in setting up narcotics
purchases.
The raid on the Highcrest Cir-
cle house was made on the
strength ot a sear'ch warrant. ·
The arrested were identified
as:.
-Tony Gomez, 45, booked at
Orange County Jail on charges of
possession or heroin for sale, and
processing of peyote. Bail was
$5,000.
-Aurora Noble, 43. booked at
Orange County women's Jail on
('tlarges or processing peyote,
~ossession or heroin and
possession of manjuana. Ball
was $2,500.
-A 17-year-olct male juvenile
whose name was withheld,
booked into juvenile hall on
Cbaraes ol processing peyote and
possession of marijuana. .f uvenile hall officials would not
teJease ball information.
• ; ~U ~ lia~ the Hiihcrest hOQJe as their address.
· Arrested. W.r pojlce arrange4 t;J meet telephone callers at the
louse were Richard Brown and
Galo Hinojosa, 22, both of Santa
Ana.
Both were booked at Newport
Beach city jail, Brown on
dlarges of burglary with intent to
possess heroin (police alleae be
broke into the home>, Hinojosa
on a charge of being under tht!in·
lluence ol an opiate.
Brown was beld on $10,000 bail. aan for Hinojosa was set at
$1,000.
·• Seized in \he search were
Gvelve balloons of heroin, four
dozen peyote buttons and a small
.quanttty of marijuana. * * * -~ Arrested;
·PruP Seized
:!M. CM ilotel
Out in the In Bo~
For Fredi Filipponi of the Daily Pilot's Classified Ad-
vertising Department it was business as usual today
despite the distraction of the cat that has adopted the
newspaper napping on her desk. The cat visits most de-
partments in the Daily Pilot's Costa Mesa plant on a
daily basis, begging snacks and catnapping as it goes.
By MICHAEL PASKEVICll Ol•DMIY ,..., ....
Chris Steel, a Costa Mesa cit)'
council candidate, said tod•y be
would submit his resignation
from a school district advisory
committee following a request
Tuesday from fellow cornmittee
members.
"Some of the members felt I
should step down and I didn't
want to create any mtsun-
derstandin• at.nee I am runnl.nf for counctl, ., said Steel.
The 36-year-old bachelor said
"a few of the eirls (on the com-
mi ltee > were very up tight'•
about his recent speech before
the Newport-Mesa Board of
Education.
Jn his speech, speaking both as
a private citizen and a member
of the citizen •s adviSOl'J commit·
tee, Steel said hedid not support
the committe.e's recommenda-
tion to cloee Vista School for re-
location~ McNally Continuation
School.
This prompted some members
of the committee to claim Steel
was bi{cking the Monte Vista
parents only to further his
chances in the March 7 coun-
Oelfr ..............
QUITTlNO AS ASKED
School Commttt .. •• Steel
Will Spend 36 Hours on I
Visit
By 'Jbe ~lated Press
President Anwar Sadat or
Egypt will visit Jerusalem for 36
hours startinr Saturday night
and will address lb~ Israeli
parliament Sunday. Israeli
Prime Minister Men.iiem Beetn
announced today.
But Sadat will make the vilit.
which be has described as a
"sacred duty," witboClt the sup.
port of Syria and apparenUy with
mejor om>ositlon wjlbJn his own cauntry.-ltis torelp minister re-
signed today and was followed by
his deputy.
Irvine Mnn
Third Air
Crash Victi~
Ao Jrvme resident has been
identlfi~ as the third victim ~
Tuesday's midair colfiaion off
Ccystal Ceve, Orange County
coroner's officials sald Wednes-~ay. -
Milsing>and presumed dead is
Thomas A. Glass, 34, of 374.l.
Avenue Sausalito in Irvine.
Coroner's officials said body
parts located at the era.sh scene
thHe and one-half miles south of
the Newport Beach harbor en·
trance belonged to a second vie·
tim, James Tibbott, 88, of 9312
Comstock Drive in Huntington
Beach.
A third victim, also listed as
missing and presumed dead, ii
Robert Baker, '1, of 22842 Fox·
boroueh W•Y El TGrQ. ~AA officll aaid 1oda 1\
bott held commercial instrument
and Instructor ratings. Ba•
had received his private pilot's
liCeQHAug. 24.
The three vicUms were co.
workers at VTN, an engineerini
and land planning company
located near Orance County
Airport.
A VTN spoJtesman, Jud
Haselhoel, said the trio was
flying on company business. Sh
said Tibbott gave fiying 1
during bis off time, which w
usually during the noon hour.
A Natiooal Transportation
Safety Board investigator 1
today lt was unknown who as
pllotine the ill-fated Cessna 182 at
the time of the c:pWsion. He also
said it was unkbown if Tlbbott
was giving lessons on the fiieht.
The Cessna was rented from
Newport Air Associates.
A second aircraft, a Piper
PA28, limped back to Orange
County Airport and landed safely
with its .two occupants following
the midair crash.
Tlbbott ii 1urvived by his wife,
Linda, and three cbild(ea; Baker
is survived by bis wlfe. Janice.
and two children: and Glass ls
survived by his Wife, Kathfyil.
and three children.
In Beirut, Palestinian leader
Yasir Arilfal condemned the
planned visit and ursed Sadat to
cancel it.
Jn bis address to the Israeli
parliament. Sadat ls eJ(J)eeted to
call for Iaraell evacuation ol. all
landf ca~ in the 1967 war
and establ.Ls.hment of a Palestin-ruan state ~ standard Arab de-
mands that brael previously re-
jected. , ,
But the visit itself will
represent unprecedented rec·
ognltlon by ·an Arab Jeader of
the atat.e <if JSiael.
Begin announced tbe vislt
shortly after Sadat returned
from Damascus, where Sadat
failed to win President Hafez M·
sad 's SIJPPOrt for the vislt.
Assad called the visit a source
oC "deep sorrow." Tho trip bas
also come under fire from Iraq
and Libya. .
Egypt's official 1tfjddle East
News Aieocy said' that when
Sadat returned to Jsmailla, he l'e'
ceived the official BeJin invita• I lion for the Tislt through U.S.
Ambassador Hermann llts. ll
. <See SADAT, Paie A2)
As neighborhood kids watch from the fence, Tony
Sanchez. 14, an eighth grader at Rea School in Costa
Mesa, demonstrates his prowess on homemade.
backyard skateboard ramp. The kids were out of school
Wednesday because teachers were busy meeting with
parents all day. Some of the Oak street kids used their
·time constructively by collStrllctlng the ramp out of old
plywOOd.
County Campaign
Limits ~ropose<J,
In contrast to Clark'• prol)OSed
$500 Umitatlon, contrlbuUons to
ccmnty supervisor campaJcns
have nm as high as $5,000 and
donations ol $2,500 are common.
Not COYeNd by the Clark pro-
posal are loans to candidates. a
device used by heavy backers to
help feed dollars into candida&e
coffers that are later recovered.
tbrou1h cocktail and dJnner fund-:
raisers.
DAILY PILOT
~EY WEST, Fla. CAP> 'Two
Maripe attack jets apparenUy
mistook a salvace shlp as a prac.
tlce target and opened fire with
rockets that narrowly missed a
diver.
Diver Don DcNRirie was only
stunned by the concm1lon from·
the exploslona. · ·
The jets new out of the Naval '
Air Station at Key West, FJa.1 but
their home field was not im· mediately known.
The incide nt , confirmed
Wednesday by the Navy, oc·
MESA SENIORS
SUTE BAZAAR
The Needle Crafters Christmas
Bazaar, at which &ift Items made
by senior citizens wm be sold, is
soheduled from 10 a:m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday at the Downtown Com·,
munity Center, 594 Center St.,
Costa Mesa
The Costa Mesa Senior CitlieM
Club Needlccrafters have made
the items. ranging from
hlankcLo;, toys and purses to pre-
'S<'l'VC'l> and jclltcs.
He was working alone on the
engineless shJp, whJcb servet u
a base ot operations for salv8'e
being done on a 'unken SpJnilh treasure ahlp. A crew retumed
for DeNalrie Mond•Y, eisbt days
after the.incident.
·'You could bear the e,q>loslons
first,'• the diver s.ald W edoeactay.
"Then Y°'4 could aee the aircraft
and then hear the jeta. •'
DeNairie said he manaJed t.o
cUmb back aboard the 1h1p and
raised an Aplerican fia• ln an ef-
fort t.o stop the rocket attaclc. But
the plane!l made other passes and
fired again, be said.
Fortunately their pllota were
having an off day. None of the
rockets Dlade a direct hit.
Marine Capt. Hal Cullip in New
Orleans said the target ship the
two A-4 Sky Hawk1 were 1up-
posed to have fired at was 10 miles
to the north.
Cullip called the attack a mis-
.take and said an inyaU&allQll
was underway.
"I would say lbe ab1p I.Ad the
captaJn and the cr.,w would bo
duo an apology.'' he sald.
H~esAides
To Testify
RENO, Nev. (AP> -U.S. Dis·
tr!ct Judge Btuce Thompson
Wednesday denJed an attempt by
two former Howard Hughes
aides to avoid testifying Thurs-
day before federal grand jury
probing possible drug abuse by
t.M late recluse.
The judge denied without com·
meot. motions by George Fran·
com and John M. Holmes Jr. to
quash subpoenas to appear
before the jury meeting ill Las
Vegas.
By WILLIAM HODGE
OI ... DMly 'ilet JtafJ
The only way to make certain
government s1>9nds leas is to give
Witness Tara Haddad responds to the
questions of prosecutor. Mike Zamora as
Jury listens. If the participants seem
young; it's because they are. Students
from St. Joachim's Catltolic School in
Costa Mesa toured Ha'r\>or Judicial Dis-
trict Court facilitie& Wednesday and con-
ducted a mock trial in a real courtroom.
It's all part of educational program
sponsored by the Lawyers· Wives of
Orange County. ~
..
Transfe.r Bid Delayed
A bid by two of the suspects In
lhe Bovan rnurder Cllf to be
transferred into the custody ot
the U .S Marshal remains un.
decided today
A i;pokesrnan for Municipal
Court Judge Selim Franklin safd
the Judae has not yet made a de-
cision on the 11\otion made before .
btm Tuesday. There have been
indications the j\ldgc wlll deny
the transfer propolal.
William Sheffield, the attorney
reprKenting Jailed murder con·
aplracy suspect Anthony Marone
Jr. and Tom Crosby, attorney for
,tlaymoM ltffco, also Jailed in
t)te case, tole\ Juda• Franklin
their clients are. be.ln1 held in ·
what amounts to solitary conOne·
menl in Orange County Jail.
The two men, and the third
Jailed suspect, Jerry Fiori, are
i/lvolved ln the federal wltn'5s
program which is used to protect
c
the Jives Of people who testify in
cases Involving organJud crime.
. In an earlier court &ppearance,
Resco's attorney said his client,
who bas been idenUtted 11 a re·
located federal wttoO:ll, fears for
his life In county jail.
In the Tuesday motlon. Crosby
and Shemeld argued that t.be pro·
tecllve measures Instituted In
county jail am~~ to soliLary
confinement aod said tbelr
clients woul<t be l>oth .safe.-and more cornforta.ble in fedetal
custody.
There have been some hidlca·
t1on1, however, that l! tbe two
men are released to federal Of-
ficials, tbal their whereabouts
wlll rell1ain ? tecret ot the Marshal'$ Service.
In .beattng the motlon oh the
tran1ter, Judge Pranklln laid he
would have to d1scus1 the matter
wttb the Loe Ancelet Marahal's
Office before making hfa rultni. . . .... Reaco, Marono .and .Flori are
accused of murder C.Or\1Plrac1 In
lbo shoe>tJAt de.a"' ol Stepnen
Jobo BoVan wt>o ~~ Qct. 22 ®t-
1 l~c; a N•WfP.ft B•ach rea ~ , •
Police allege the three men
were hJred by four local busl-
ne,s men to kidnap and kill
Bovan
'
it leas, a proponent of taxpayer
revolt told an audienc, in El Toro
this week.
"Government lo(,Say ls tinllmll·
ed," Howiu-d Jarvis, chairman of
California's UnJted Or1anilaUon
of Taxpayers, told a 1ath'erlng ol
concerned resldenta. ••Nowhere.
is there any llg!Jt on what •ov· enunent can a pend.
''We'n trying to obliterate the
idea of sovernment by, for and.of
the aovemment... l
· Jarvis wu .1n El Toro Tueiday
seeking support f o-r bu CalUomia
con1tituUonal amendmHt ta-
lttaUve to limit the properly talc
to one percent 'of usesJed valua-
Uon.
'1You are not aoln1 to 1et.tax
reform out ol your elected oC·
flclal1 In our lifetime," he ad·
monished lhe disgruntled
homeowners. "You the peopfe
have no right to say what goes on
in this government-that'• their
attitude.
'
l' ..... Page.4'
SADAT •••. .
was accompanied by a mesuie
from Preeldent. Cal'Wr, the con-
tenta of which were not dlscloted.
Sadat accepted. The U.S. am-
ba 11astor to luael, Samuel
Lewil, then called Begin, who
made the announcement to visit-
inl U.S. congressmen.
r
l
I ,,
·'
,
~ ..............
ROGER HANKS WITH ONE OF HIS RESTORED BIKES
But Hra 1940 Schwinn Panther la Mlaalng
Costly Bike Stolen
From Newport Youth
Fourteen.year.old Roger
Hanks spent a recent evening at
bis parents• Newport Beach
borne polishing and re ·
assembling the 1940 classic
Schwinn Panther bicycle he'd
epent slx mont.M building from tpare parts.
The next morning, he bopped
6n the Panther, in which he'd in· t.resie.s '500 he'd earned himself.
and rode it d°"1J to hla favorite
Dike pbol> to show lt to his friend
Tdib wotked there.
Then Roeet parked the bike ln i.aok for a few m1nutes while he helped them with some work.
When be came out, the Panther
wugone.
"It was complete. Everything
was there," Roger said of the
bicycle stolen this week. He said
J bike shop owner estimated the
Panther's value at between S850
and $1,000.
Tb• onty tblnga lacking were
aome chrome on the fenders and
a final paint job in red and
~ream. The Newport Harbor High
fre1bman said be became in·
. terested 1n restoring bikes about
• year ago wbeo his grandfather
Girl Admits
~laying/Boss .
VAN NUYS (AP) -A lf·year·
old 1irl bu pleaded guilty to
inanalaugbter in the ahootint
death of her 78-year·old partially
blind boss.
Terri Eppenon of Pacolma,
1i'bo bu been cbarJed with
murder, entered the plea to tbe
Jeuer char•e WedQ'eaday before
iul>'rlor Court Jud8e Jotepb
DtGlwseppe. He Ht a Dec. If 8e0·
tencfn•dat.. •. The b0d1:1of Day Elian
Varney, • SUtt Vftley 1ecood-Z.aad·1bop, o•Atr. waa found
Jn'•Ppecl to a blahk~ lnalde Uie
More J'unef1. Ht had been •hot In •lie ad tWtco.
ove him a stripped-down 1950
bike. He restored it and a .19SS
bfke for his parents. 'rbomu and
JoleeneHanlcsotBayahol'es.
Roger said a neighbor, John
Andresoo. spent hours teachlnc
him how to piece the bikes
toeether and allowed him to uae
his garage as a workabop.
Babyslttinc and 1ard jo
helped provide Roeer wttb-the
funds for the 1940 Pant.her, which
he and Andreson assembled from
scratch after seeing a friend's
restored Panther. Ro1er also
sold for $200 a sabot be 'd boaght
with money earned as a Daily
Pilot carrier.
Mrs. Hanks saJd t.be theft has
been reported to police, but that
they said Roger baa only one
chance in 100 of recoverioi Jt.
They warned lt may bave
already been dlsauembled for
parts. '
I i' The family fl also drculaUU
plctures ~tbe blke to aehoola and
offering a rewal\\ but baa bad no
luckaofar.
Roger ts uPSet ata«>ut ~· tbett. but he's not livtn& ap. If tbe
faa1Uy'a Jnsuraoee P•>'• for the
Pant.her, be said htt'll use the
money to assemble a slmllar 1940
bike.
He added>. ''I~ never at.eat
anythJng because l wOuld never
want anybocly to feel the way I
feel about loeinc that bike."
Abercrombie
r
AndFireh
CloseSIWp
Vertlcll mlrr0r Rtg. 1110.
a.tel 189. .
• Hlll i*oe. Reg: S329. Sale! 1299.
Coastal
Reservoir •
Poshed
South Cout Count'/ Water Dis-trict offlclall say they will push
ahead with early c:cmttuctial ol
a new aevm-mlllloo Callon wata
reservotr. after sett.In• tile to-:· ahead f~ the project from db~
µ-let voten last week.
Raymond Mlller, general
man••• ol the diatrlct, said pre.
Umlnary deatin work baa
already been done co the project.
and with $2.7$ million tn bond fund• now available, be says
work should start early next
1prin1. · .
The new storage reservoir will
be located oo a live.acre site
which ls currently occupied b)' a
$2 mllllon 1allon steel water
tank. Tbe new reservoir wm be
constructed Just north of Dana
Hilla Hi&b School. .
Miller said the structure will
be built below ll'OWld Jevel, aod
said the diatrict la 1oOldng into
construction ol tennl8 coutta, a
public park« playground atop
the raervolr at some future
date. .a.
PrOof Required
• CONOORD, N.H. (AP) -The New Hampeblre &ipreme ~
rolecl Wec:IDfSday that~le can..
110\ be forcibly comtliltted to tbe
state mental hospital uDleu their
danaer to 1ocittt1 lii proven beyoud reaeoaabledoubt.
NI tldrlOfdl'*Y~•tyt YOU'D88Ye
~tlally on our holdaY MlecCk>n Of
BookcaM, 1>18ck--fh'lllh wtth c:hJnolter1e,
Reg. 11149. s.Jel 1919.
•
-
1
I l
1 · j
l :
Keep On
Truckin'
FOOTNOTES: Only yesterday
in this space. t paaaed on a
personal tale of fear and dismay,
which is cau1ed every lime I am
forced to report to the Depart·
ment of Motor Vehicles office.
Later ddpat.ches usually prove
I'm not alone.
Every time I o((er one of these
reports, several readers come up
with toppers on how they got
snarled up in the wheels and cogs
of vehicular bureaucracy. Today
1s no exception.
Thus I was offered this footnote
which demonstrates the com·
passion that can be exhibited by
your loclll OMV people.
This reader has a lady rnend
who could fairly be described as
middle-aged. She is somewh#t
unusual In that she rides a motorcycle to work.
AND, AS FOR all of us, the
lime came for her driver's
license renewal. She reported to
the DMV office
Calling for the motorcycle
license lest. this customer was
handed an examination which
she carried over to the test table
and began to ponder the ques·
lions.
The questions dJd not seem at
all famWar to her. There were ln·
quiries about what you do with
double-axle rigs and how many
pounds you may carry on a semi·
trailer unit.
Funny, she thoufht to herself,
this test reads ike a truck
driver's examination.
But once you've ground your
way through one of those lone
lines al the DMV Office, you
don't usually go back and start
over.
GRIMLY, SHE continued tak-
ing the test, ponderina each
truck-like question and answer-
ing as best she could.
Finally she finished and got in·
to line to have her examinat.ion
graded.
She reached the window where
the OMV clerk took one look at
the test and then inquh: ,
"Weren't yQlll.lldi)poeed to bo •
ing a motorcycle examlnaUo
"That's right," the 18.dj
replied.
"This Is a truck driver's ex·
amination," the clerk informed
her in dismay.
But thi4, dear reader, wu the
time where the motor vehicle
pepple showed their love of
human kind and compassion for
the customer.
They graded the lady rnotorey.
cle rider's truck test anyway.
SHE PASSED.
So the DMV people juat went
aboad anc! issued her motorcycle
license. She ne\'.er did tak• th•
raotorcycle teat.
You have to admit that •bowl a
larae measureohDOJtamanablp.
The DMV peop1e muat have
figured if she could pass a test on
veblcles with 18 wheels. sbe mat
be 4ble to handle a vehicle wttb
only two. .
So folks, OM of these days out
on th• highways and byways of
the Orange coast, you may drive
up behind this middle-a1ed lady
motorcycle rider who Is handllaa
he little machine like it's a
atktruck.
You 'Jl know who you juat met.
W ASJUNGTON CAP> -POOd
prices will continue their "leoQ'l·
in1ly Inexorable rile .. next year,
wtth the avera1e famUy'1 food
bud1et lncreaslns lour percent to
six percent, a go\lernment
economist says.
Kenneth. R. Farrell, act1n1
chief of tbe Eccmomlc Resevch
Servlce In the A1rtculture
Department, aald moat of the In·
creau wW be duo to l'llchor coejJ
for tranaportin,, Ptoeelr.lal ~
aelllnt food after tt Jeav., the
farm.
t
WASHINGTON (AP> -U.S. Roman Catholic bishop• are reil· ~
firmlnf their •WMS that sexual ldtercourae 11 morall)' rilht only
within marriage and llway1 wronr outakte It.
At the same llr,tte. their doctrinal committee has denounced a
Catholic theoJogical sludy favoring more flexible standards. The
two actions came Wednesday at a meeting of the National Con-
ference of Catholic Bishops. <Related story, A12>
THEY APPROVED a section of a new national teachlnc cuide
condemning contraception and s~erfllzatlon, declaring that sexual
intercourse is a "moral and humah aood only within marriage.·· .
The bishops added that, "for a Chrtatian, therefore. premantal
sex extramarital sex. adultery, homotexual behavior or other acts
of i:..ipurtty are forbidden."
SIMULTANEOUSLY, the bishops' doctrinal comtni!tee as-
sailed as contrary to church tea~bing and moralty unaound a recent
theological study saying the ethics of sex acta binge not on absolute
rules but on the particular circumstances. r.:
This "departs from the teaching of the churCh," ellmjnat~ ' Ob·
jectlve criteria" for eva4laUns sex act.a ud undermines the "cl•
manda fA sound morality," the commlttee aald.
THE BOOJ(.LENGTH study, "Human Sexuality; New Diree-
tiou In American Catholic Thought," wu made by a five-member
committee of the C.tbollc Theological Society of America and is·
sued by it, an>alln8 wlde lntereat and vll')'inC reactions.
It aaya ~ moraUtt or all sexual acta, lncludinl the church· ·
condemned extramarlt-1 and premarttal aex, milturbat.ion and
bomosexual behavior, ar& ta be Judaed not by flxed rules but by
higher ethical standatd1 .,Ubln the contm of particular situations.
cmNG THOSE stalardl, the study sayJ sex acu are moral if
they contribute "creali e growth" and "inte atloa ol ,human
personality" and are honest, faithful, 1euftberatln1, other-
enrlcblng, socially respo lble, Ufe-aervtna and Joyous." ..
Such criteria "are too vacue to apply with any kind of prec1s1on
or usurance," the bishops cominittee 1Ud. tn evaluating aexual morality, t.be bl.shops said, "It is not
enough to take only the gopd intention and mottv• Uito account; ob·
Jeet.ive criteria muat be used. . .drawn from the nalw'• ot the
bu111an person and ••. tb9'total meantu of mutual self·tl~ and
bum an procreation in the context oftnae love." •
Jewels . W ortli 825,ooo Taken
LA JOIJ..A (AP) -Police are searcbina for a pllr of anned
robben wbo.beld up a La Jolla
jewelry lhoD and escaped with
an estimated as.ooo Ill unmount·
ed diamonds and bracelets.
"COl"F" PRICES ~JOn• wUI
accoulltf« abOut half Of tbe aht
~rcent rise ln averqe 1rocery
store pricea in 1977," Farrell
sald. 0 Tbe enUre lmported foods
and fl.sh 1roup will contribute
oyer thr~ftfths of the total."
But for 19'll, bt Hid,, "It ap·
i;eara thai moat or the prnsure
osi food prices will be derived CrQ~ lncl'eHed coats in the
mar.kettn1 sector and relaUvely
less from Imported foods and
fish.''
GN~ 6r.owa
4.7Percent ~
WASIUNGTON CAP> -
Tb• oaUon 's output of
1ood1 oriel eervlces 1rew at
an annual rate or 4. 7 pe""
cent in the $bird quarter.•
much .,_onger 1howln1
than pr•Vioualy calcuJat-
ed, the Co111merce Oepan;.
ment said today.
The revised ficures of
the Gross National
Product were well ahead of
the 4 percent rate needed
to keep the \lnemployment
rate from &etlina worae.
However, they were well
below the unusually stron1
increases of 7.5 percent ln
the first quarter and e.2
percent in the second
quarter.
In a preliminary report
last month, the depart·
ment had estimated the
GNP tor. LISY. Aueut and ~i.mbm".ifiad • lr'OWQ at. l.imUaJ ate of, J.t .,. ... art.
.
·Police Chief
I .. 1Cleared of
:Wrongdoing
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Embat·
• tied Police Chief Charles R. Gain has
, been cleared of wrongdoing In connec-
tion with a published photograph of
'the chief at the cit y's infamous
Hookers' Ball.
But in clearing GJlin Wednesday,
the Police Commission ordered him to
answer further charges that he used
,taxpayer money to track down the
photograph and similar ones taken at
the Oct. 28 affair.
The pi cture, published in the San
1 Francisco Examiner, showed Gain
,happily poslng with Hookers· Ball or·
ganizer Margo St. James and a
woman identified only as "Wonder
Whore."
Commission President Richard Sig-
gins determined "there's nothing
wrong" witlr the photoer-aphs after
·1.he commission examined them m a
lengthy closed-door meeting.
1 But comml"ioners did suggest to
.Gain that hi:o; presence at the affair
was "unwii.e "Gain conceded.
the rugced Sant• Monlca MOWltaina t:;&ll~
30 mtlea west of downtown LOa An&eles. were eapecled to be ex~ -·"__.....
Un1utabed bytodaY, Relael aald •
.. The wea~ UJ on oor aide,·· be
sald. •'Today was falrly wann~ but the
humldlt)t ca.met up~"
The eJflier blue w a.s COQtained
Tuesday after burning 1,200 aorea ln
Topansa Canyon about 15 mlle1$ t.o th•
east. That f"ire burned down s~ build·
ings and forced evacuation r4 hun-
dreds of residents.
THE HUMIDITY BAO been an ex·
lremel)' dry, 18 percent during the
latest fire's first day. when 200 acres
an hour were blaclltened by the wall of
names as sparks leaped from rldee to
ridge and ignited the tinder-dry
brush. Most of the 700 firefighters who
s topped the blaze had gone home by
Wednesday night, leaving fewer than
200 manning the fire camp aod
patrolling the hills to watch for flar&-up~i·x fll'efigltters were injured. In· flaig hs the .Lf talt
eluding 25-year-old Mike Eubanks, Sculptor Tanya Wolf wiu, was com-
who !Jnderwest ~urgerr at Westlake missioned for a special "tmbute to tbe laie
Hospital for multiple aDJuriea 1uffered Elvis Presley on NBC-TV's ••Se th An when a tractor rolled over bim. He 1 L V . ven · was reported ln critical condition ear· nua as egas ~n~e~.Kmt Awards,"
ly today. The other firemen suffered !?e~. 4 put~. the f1~1~ touebes C>D b~r
minor injuries. thigh!> up creation. "The seu!pture is
THE BLAZE -STARTEDTuesday from the ~gh~ up," she said. ••Jlow can
by embers from a smoldering fire in YO~ do ElvJS without doing his bod)!"
an illegal dump and fanned by dry,
g"'61Y desen wlnda -was halted
about tbref ~es from the well-~o
Malibu oceanfront area.
Helsel said the only s truct11res
damaged were a studio dwelllna and
several small billside aheils. A boat
bei11g stm-ed out«-doora and a car
also wett destroyed.
He said about 180 youths evacuated
from two juvenile detention camps
were expected to return today to the
facilities. which were unbanned.
.
Nor:th Califoniia
Temps Cooling
87TheAasoclnt1 (~
Stock Cli1nbs
. A mQair n•::s in air~ la expected to
whm a WMl tf kan nllf rir over the state's
northern hllf ..a41rep tempe~res by u much as
20 degrem, t11e Pbiti.enal lhetber Service said to· da:r.
The a.pest dill over th~ regioG should be felt d».riAI tbe wo ...... the ww4.her service said. But
tempeabnie& 111 aewval l~.ations were forecut to
becins~t c ...... ard IYttoday. Disney Merger Denied
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Walt
Disney Productions and
American Express Co. have de-
nied Wall Street rumors that
they're planning to merae.
In a joint communique issued
before the market opened
Wednesday, the two firms
declared: ''Reports of a possible
tender offer are completely un·
true.,
THE STATEMENT admit·
ted that American Express of-
ficers had va:o;ited Disney last
week and brought up the subject
of a merger. But it stressed that
no t erms were discussed. no
further meetings are scheduled.
and the two sides have agreed to
drop the matter.
A Disney spokesman. JamesL.
Stewart, said that wben the
American Express represen·
tatives brought the mereer topic
up, "We aaid we were oot in-
terested."
STEW ART ADDED that the in-
cident would not have been
worthy of any comment if the
rumors bad not reached Wall
Street and triggered a $1.50 rise
in lWe price of Disney st()(k Tues ·
day.
Following Wednesday's joint
announcement, Disney stoek
rose another 87~ cents, wbile
American Express stock fell 12~
cents.
We will transfer funds from your savings to
your checking account with e phone call. This
and other services have the effect of earning
you an even sir-tu retum on your money.
Com• and see u. today. W• • tiere to advls•
and hclf>.
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Ttle
Democratic speaker of the Asaembly
~ a "spectal ael8iol: ea taes. as
SQl&ested by JI a..-•-· ~ COil $300,000 -a.M i*A My~ to ootAina. Sen. Leo ~ el S.. ~d.lleo told repGrien,. • ..._ ii &M
Llclalature recaaveaes ~ ...
t:i.x relief can possibly reaeh
~1Dmeowners or rent.en Wl November
U71" snder a biD acceptable to the
Bepubllcam, McCarthynid.
Jleth 8Wa '&....,
BERKELEY <AP) -Both !rides fn
the challenge of minority admissions
programs at the University of
Callf orllia have told the U.S. Supreme
Court the 196' CivU IU,p\s Ad
stnrngtllens their c.e.
In briefs forwarded to t!te high court
Wednelday, UC &Uaraeli$ sai4 Tit.16
VJ ot the act penDi&a "dools i. aiQpl
raelallJ ortente« lctmlssiou pro·
1Hms.
Aud att.omeJS for Allan lhltke. the
white eagineer dl~ldsdenid
admiuion at 00 D*Yia lf~
Scbool, claim the same act makes u
e~en-more "forcefaJ" -ialnelll acamst •tiny 41scri llliae. ••
~····""' SAN FRANCISOO (AP~ --GM. Eld·
mund G. Brown Jr. led about 500
Democrats in h~ Wi fa&Mr,
former Gov. Pat Brown., at a $1QG.a-
plate testimonial dinner bere.
L/SC DAILY f'ILOT ..
" .&a•••a••n._.,_
. SACBA"EN't'O (AP) -nw ' Lsutennaa. a cruat.Y TS-,..r·o1d
Repobfinn who m 1"ft a pi'olle.er ill ..... , ..... ,.)t t.,ntattoe •ldd ........... , .. .....,,..... ,..at
after 28 years ln the A.ssemblY. ~. tM st.te1S oldest
te&blaw. •• .... -.a1~ .ct frustr..-~ ~..,.... 841· •aist....._.,.... ... .._ .. ~eclde
not &.Met n•'edke ill 111&. . .. ,, ....... .
SA~ CAP> -n. state .. Htlb•o Onnmbision 1s ~ ,... •. ..,
ooe moath a Teqaest ~7 So.ab · •
hsadefta t& tDIWe "'9 Nale fll 1'e ' ,
northern end of the Lo• Beach heew..,.
It ..-c1 s a a1111 et• W I DlY '° •• .n .. w a.. Allll•• • · ~ Ptiw1111e111 acree•• Nl!W.
eo.ndl t• Ihde
LOS ANGELES CAP>.._ A renewed
proposal (or commercial oil an4 IU 1 t: drll.liQr int the Padfiit PaMs1•1s ks ' ,
~Jent tD ~ fd at1 Oome• b1tls
Plannlnt Committee.
Tbe cemml1*4t ae.... ,._ llllurs of , ' testimQllY on t:M ~ W re-,j
ferred ft i. the fUll coUDdl QA a N tAe f ~without~
..... e,.~'
SAN MEGO <AP> -A receat rah
of Mnt Mn JllrJ' -.ed ftelenil when 1
.. ..... lwe CMf1 G) -fll a f Paclfie Ceast. .._ were ,._l •
wtaipJ>eC 4urin& a robba7 iii •hll* u 1'
wwlise\alld ..oat .t ~ was I•
taken, pollcesaid. 1
Three m.ea uwecl ta. bank '' Wedo~ carryil\l 1LaD41um ...S •
sawed4 sb<qun. poUce aaJ.4. ·
" 11n1 J I .,,f\t.
i , • j
•
.,
Orange Coast Dally Piiot
Orange County's first seven freeway ramp metera aur·
vived their initial week of service on the Santa Ana
Freeway without creating problems for motoriata or Jaw
erif orcement officlall .
.J The meters really are on·ramp stop.and-go li&hts
that permit only one auto at a Ume onto the freeway durtna
rush hours. CalTrans officials hope in that way rush hour
traffic will flow more smoothly at a pace ol at least ~
miles an hour. This seems unduly optimistic, but the
ramps may reduce some of the hang-ups.
They also say such meters discourage free~ use by
lhe short-haul traveler, keeping the freeways more clear
for the longer-distance traveler freeways were designed. to
serve.
This is all very well, but it's little more than a gesture
when it comes to coping with Orange County's growing
freeway traffic congestion.
The county's critical need is for frt!eWay building pro·
jects. Ramp meters may discourage the use of freeways
by some drivers, but they don't really alleviate the
crushing travel burden.
' Orange County, with 8 percent of the state's population
is slated to receive only 2.4 percent of state highway
dollars according to CalTrans' proposed new six-year
budget.
Ramp meters may not be a bad idea, but CalTrans of-
ficials should be giving closer aU.ention to the county's real
freeway needs, among them improving the Newport-Santa
Ana Freeway interchange and completion of the Corona
del Mar and Newport Freeways, along with a whole list of
others.
Fanners Find Weapon
Embattled farmers threatened by a law passed in 1902
may find some help in a much newer edict -the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969.
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus has announced that
the Administration intends to revive long.forgotten en-
forcement of a 1902 law which limits the size off arms US·
ing federally ~'=1PPlied water to 160 acres.
The law, designed to protect family farms from being
swallowed up by land speculators, also requires that
owners live within a SO-mile radius of the irrigated land.
And Andrus' edict would require sale of excess land
through a lottery, with prices approved by the Department
of Interior.
Enf or~ment of the outdated law would affect some 12
million acr'es of farmland in 17 Western states, with the
owners of large parcels in California's productive Im-
perial Valley among the hardest-hit victims. "
Now the California Farm Bureau Federation and the
American Farm Bureau Federation have found a weapon
that may delay the enforcement action until their demand
that the law be changed. is given a full hearing.
( The bureaus have filed a suit against the Secretary
charging violation of the 1969 Environmental Policy Act by
failure to prepare and circulate the req'1ired environmen·
tal impact statement.
., They contend enforcement of the 16C>·acre limit and
residence requirettJents would impact the environment by
increas1ng populatlon, thus reciuli'tnl more homes, roads,
sheds and equipment; wouldincreue~ofdOmesticwater
and create sewage and waste dllposw prableina; would
take fertile uoplands out of producUon; an4 would result
in less effiden,t p,rQCJUllon of agricultural products and
higher consumer prtces.
At lates~ wofd, Secretary Andr1is is au,.esttna that
perhaps the 1902 law should be .made more flexible
i since the 100.acre figure may not be a "magic number.··
Indeed it is not. ·
t , • ,
. <· Helping Themselves !-\,
If the gods help them that help themselves, the folks
over at Goodwill Industries dhould be in line for some extra
assistance. .
At U>.is ~of y~' donatJbns to the organization that
helps disabled men and women to become self..g~
are at their lowest.
Faced with the probabillty of reduced working hours
and loss of pay, the 500 employees of Goodwill of Orange
County have inlUated their own lilCentlve program. Their'
goal is to achieve $'n8.000 tn revenue in the laat three
months Of the. year lD order to maintain the level of
, employment and rebabWtation Services.
1 1 The handicapped ~DlWoYed are personally collecting
. repairable itelJ)!J, ape~ up their own producUon lines
F and staging sales campaignS lri their 13 thrift abops.
For 75 years, Goodwill hai taken a load off the coun-
ty's taxpayers by provtdltia-}Obs, occupaUonaJ tralnln&
v· and counsellna th•t give the handicapped the Pride of self· Q support.
This is a good time to remember them With donatiol'l.S
• aadpatrooa_geofth~ 81Ul1~ouueta. .
WASHINGTON -The murder
ol Steve b1 bis captors in a
Soutb African prt.oe on SeDt:
12th wu tbe 4Sth: auch oiurder
•ince um which we bow about.
The kllllb• ot Ulla mu, wbo •a.a trJlna to lead. tho black people of lrl1 coWJ~ to political power
througb aon-mlent meam, ii
Mpecially devaatatlnf lo a eltua·
tton in which 10 many have
already died and so many more
wm die by violence.
To that extent Uae unusual at·
tentlon paid Biko'• death by the
American
mus media ta explicatile.
Nevertheless
this sudden
inte,rest is almo1t as
t h 0 u • h
someone had
turned a
spigot on.
When the
school children were aunned
down in Soweto, a wone atrocity,
the fact waa reported, but scarce-
ly dwelled on.
The determination to solilo-
quize the murders of courageous
Africans is, alas, less out of ad-
miration for their heroism than
as a consequence of \he
W aahington foreign policy de·
cisJon to make a thing out ot
South Africa. .
Henceforth and until the wind
•wishes from another direetion.
the inhumanities practiced
against black South Africans,
which bad gone unremarked up-
on in the United States, will 1et the full treatment. If be is not
already standing on the tarmac
in Johannesburg, Geraldo Rivera ls on bis way. and you
know that when this Feckless
Frisbee takes up a cause it has
been certified as sate for am·
bilious careerists.
TBIS 18 NOT to say that all the
lovers ol liberty, who (ll'e step.
ping on each other's Guccis to
elbow their way to the forefront
of the tight tor human rights,
don't meaD it. But, as they take
up every passing fashion, in
clothes and in politics, with the
same sincere, vapJd tnt.e~ity, we
Nick Thimmesch
W ASlnNGfON M-Tbe ln·
VMtiJlltklft ol bow COOC1'9S11DeD
acceptid f avora aocr PoSs1bly
bribes trom South KorMn acents
I• Ukit a tlow-motlon movie
:whicb baa no value fOI' belne slow
motlon. Sto(1$1lng the aetkm il·
lustrates nothing except the
aversion the Carter Adm1nistra· lion and C.OOgresa s)lare ln pw;IU Ing thla scandal.
The strategy.· seems to be for
the House Ethics Commit~ a group atvm tb .
dozing, and
the Justice
Department,
a model of
restraint
wben lt com11
to •inning
Democrats, to
gently apply
the tarbru.sh
to a retired
coo1resaman or two and blame evel'Ythinl elaeoo Kozlea.
One ot the lfaven commud· mentl cl tb.la wt.Ole epilode ts:
THOU SHALT NOT UTTER
THE NAME OF ·A SITTING
CONGRESSMAN.
So Prelldmt JliDUll' Carter an.
nouno..t that tbCi South JCOl'e&ll
1wermnent bN lJDpeded justice
and acted lib an uncooper&Uvt
alb' ln not ·~ Tonpun Part to teiltlty.
Toupun. Pa,tr. a rciUred ind
8110 lndlc;tid IQerthant. u• once
a sreat favorite amonc u>•
l •
conir.~ mctud.IU )ls old
school Chum DelDOCraile Bouse
Wbtp Job1t Bnclemu. But
DOWadQs • con,.._.man would rather be cau,ht in tbe company
ol Richard Nbton thari old buddy
Ton11un. Sucb traUtUde.
.. Robert N. -/Pub~shtt T-K~vll/1'41'°"1
Barbera Krtlblch/Edltorlal P11ge Editor
. . ,
...
..
'•
~·
I l
,,
'•' ·'
.,
•
N Comins
Film Ratings BiifJkfire~
Soma years ago, the mot.ion
picture industry established its
own ratint system ln order to
alert the public to films that dt .t
ftpllctUy with sexual themes.
Hollywood had been under
severe attack from those who felt
it had gone beyond the boun·
darles of good taate. There was
considerable concern for the
miJUonsofyouag American mov-
iegoers.
The mot.ion picture industry
for estal I ed government censorship by
cla1min1 It
was capable
of self ·
policing. A
rating system
was offered
as a labeling
device so lhal
p eople who
might be Of·
fended by cer
tain kinds of movies would stay
away.
For example, the rating "G"
meant that a certain f1lrn was
considered suitable for all ages.
''PG" meant t hat parental
guidance was suggested for
youngsters who wished to see a
specific movie. ''R" meant that a
film contained scenes that might
be C0"6idered objectionable in
some quarters. And the "X" was
supposed to indicate candid
treatment of sex as well as the
use ot four-letter words. After
that came "XX" and "XXX" to
denote a prog ression in open pornography
How has the rating system
worked out in actual practice?
WHAT HAS happened is exact·
Jy the opposite from what was m·
tended. What waa offered u a de·
vice for protectin& the public
acainst salacious filma bas ac-
tually become the meLU tor pro.
motlng those films. Theater
owners have little interest lo
showing films that are labeled as
being suitable for~ audiences.
They believe tnat moat mov-
iegoers are deterred by a .. G ..
rating, which is generally re-
garded aa being shorthand for
"goody-goody." Pictures wJtb
"R" and "X" ratings have nodJt.
ficulty geWna theater booklnc•.
"PG" films manage to eet ex-
hibited. The "G" !Ums, on the
other hand, have a tough time
finding movie houses.
In other words, the sexy and
violent films come into the
market with a natural advan-
tage-, while the unobjectionable
films wind up with few or no 8U·
diences at all.
Contrary to assurances, the
general level of film-makioa baa
not been raised by th~ rauna
system. The average American
motion picture today ~rt.rays
more raw sex and violence th.an
before the rating system went in·
to effect.
WHAT IS worse, perhaps, is
the tendency lo lnject fo~I
langjlage and sexual excbanaes
into decent films even thouah U'e author's original script does.
not can for them.
The other day I saw the pre·
view of a remarkable film abort·
ly to be released by United,
Artists, ''Three Warriors."
It is the story of an American
Indian family in Oregon. The
main character in the film is an
Indian boy who has been
thoroughly _!tmericanlied by his
upbHntlnf ou Ide the reserva-
tion. He la brou1ht back to the re· ·
1ervation by his mother to vialt
bis rrandfatber. Tile boy resents
anythtng haYinC to do wttb 111·
dtan tradltlon and can hatdly
wait to aet back to h18 non-Indian
friends. He h ates his .
irandfather's adherence to the old customs.
The ~ stutl slo-..ly but de-
velops fnto one of the most 6ctt.
jof and compeUtnc dramatic
screen productions I bavo seen ib
recent years. A ec:ene deallng
with the ~'• ~ncounter with
horse rustlers hu tbe kick of a wild must.:ii;; ·
THE P1LM is written by Sy
Gomber1 and produced by Gom-
ber11 and Saul Zaentz. But Gom-
berg has a serious problem. The
r.lct.ure bas been given a "G" rat-"I· which is quite accurate. But
comparatively few people are
likely to see it because too many
theater owners ate reluctant to
$how a "G" film.
Gomberg baa been advised to
put a few inserts in the movie,
seasoning it with some four·
letter words and an obscene shot
or two. Thia would be easy
enough to do, but Gomberg has
too much integrity to take the low
road. Therefore, if the film is go-
ing io be seen, a lot of people '\re
goina to have to phone or write to
the owners ot local theaters and
demand that "Three Warriors"
be shown.
rt is absurd that decent films
are Ji mited to such a small mar~ft because objectiooable-
matenal seema to attract larger
audiences. Clearly, this is
somethin,.mQy American mov·
ie1oers will want to do something
about.
· 'nlunUj, NM/nb« 11, 1tT7
savings throughout the store on· selected
clearance items! quantities, colors and sizes limited
to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection!
women's sportswear
WERE
3081CTOPS ................. 3.98
:l.:;Jt:~K>RTI>J>:, .............. 4.98
2.1Jt:\IORIJl.Ol.Sl:.:; ............ 5.98
~ Jl'\IOR TOPS • • .. • .. . . . .. . . . 7 96
200 ~II~ lUPS • .. . .. . .. . .. . . 1 96
50P..\\TTOPS ................. 2.98
30 \ll:o\\'BWl'St:'i ............. 3.98
i5H".TERTOPS ............. 98c
:JOJE.\\S .............. . .... 7.98
2.1 t".\SHIO\P.\\TS ............. 5.98
:JOCOORl>l\.\TES .••........... 7.98-9.98
25COOHl>l\..\TES .............• 4.98-5.96
J.SOE~mn:sTS ........•....•• 2.98
2.10E~f\l\"t:STS ............... 4.96
50CORl>lRO\" HCKl::-r.-. ...•...•• 11 . 98
100..\SST'l>SU"J\l\\'E.\H ......... 1.98·3.98
50Tl!RTl.I..\f£KS ....••.••••••• 5.98
40SLE£\"ELES.5 K.'dn\ ....••...• 96c
i5Jt.:\IORP\!U.O\t:R!> .......... 7.98
30Jr:\IOR ~'d'JS .............. 1.98
251\:~rTTOPS ................. 2.96
-10 Jt.:\IOR K.\rTTOPS •••••••••.• 3.9&-4.98
2.H1.:IU1CtRE TOPS .......... 3. 98
50\llSSY11:.\ITTOPS .•..••.•... 3.98
i5 \llSSY Pl'UO\'EJlS •••••••••• 9.98 J
40 \llSS\'TOPS ................ 4.98
dresse·s. pantsuits
WERE
34 Jft. l>REssF.S ....•••••••••••• S.~8
2.l JR.JL~IPSl:IT.) ..........•.•• 14.98
28P:\\TSlJ-r.i ................. 14.98
J4 ORt:."iS\'SEP:\R . .\Tf:S ....•...• 9.98
20Jl'\IP!-iUTS ................. 14.98
35 HALFSIZE DRESSES •.•.•••••• 9.~
NOW
2.98
3.98
4.98
4.~
98c
1.98
2.98
48c
4.98
3.98
6.98
3.93
1.98
3.98
7.98
98c
3.98w
<48c
4.98
98c
1.98
~.98
2.98
2.98
6.98
3.98
NOW
2.98 ,,98
9.98
5.98
'9.98
S.98
lingerie, loungewear
WERE
88tUl.SLIPS ................. 1.98
i4PA\TU~ERS ............... 1.98
CU BRID~ •.•••••••••••••••••• 98c
i0081Kl~IS ................... 98c
MU:"lfOR\tS ............. -., •• 3.98
81 BR.\S ••••••••••••• ,, ••• ·•·•• 2.48
3.1 BRAS ••••••••• , • • •••••••••• 3.98
~1i A$..')TOS\f"f1'£AR ......... 1.98
llf> Pt.A YBRAS ••• : ............ 98c
44 Pl..\,. 8ftA,S •••••• , •••••••••• 2. 98
t; fUl;(SllOBf.S • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • 6. 98
21 t\'tRAoSJZtLOU~;EU.AR ••• S.98
ll8ariA-Sl1.EROIES .••••••••• 8.98
M>tKOS'l'tSSlOO~E\\'EAR ••••• 4.98
• 6UOOSCEW£."lt •••••••••••••• 6.96 &)COTro~PfS-.1 ............. 4.98
41);\~PJ'S ••••••••••••••••• 3.98 ~ -
1i>~'YLOXCOI'~ •••••••••••••• 8.98
NOW
98c
98c
68c:
68C
2.98
1A8
2.98
98c
48c
1.98
4.98
l .98
4.91
2.98 :s.98
2.98
~~ (>,ga
infants and toddlers
· WERE
82 o(, PER SETS • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • 98c
12.STOOOU'.RCIRlK.'iJTS .•••••• 98c
i21000UR BOY K.'trTS. • • • • • • . • 98c
32TOOOLEBBOYPA .. \"IS •••.•.•. J.98
savings for girls
WRE
364-fiX DRESSES ............... 3.98
4l14-6XP.\\1SE1S •• ,. ......... 6.98
:12 i-14DRESSFS .••••••••.••••• 3.98
45:\~DSWf)J'l'..U •••••••.•• 2.98
19 JACKETS ................... 3.98
46SHOR1SETS ................ 2.98
23 i·14Jl:~IPStlTS ............. 6.98
52 i-140\'ER . .\US ............. 6.98
48 i-14JEA.~ ................. 3.98
86i.14JEA.~ •••••••••••••••• ; S.98
40i·14CIRLS PA~TS • • • • • • • • • • • 1.98 ·39~11>TOP$ ••••••••••••••• 2.98
28 Sl'E." ttRS . . . • • • • • • • • • • . • • • 98c::
100 i·14Bl.OUSES .............. 3.98
NOW .
48c
48c
48c
1.98
NOW
1.98
4.91
2.91
1.91
2.91
l.98
4.98
4.98
2.98
4.AI
98c
1.98
48c
2.4a
1.41
3.91
2.48
1.91
98c 1.91 .
1.98
2.98
1.98 .
3.98
8.98
NOW
2..91
1A8
1..98
3.9S
11.98
S.98
6.98
3.68
9.98
S.98
3.98
'
•
..
..
THE SPIRITUAL
leader or the ashram is
••
Distraught Mom Free
Yogi Amr it Des al.,.,....--------------------------....
Known as "Amriljl" or
.. Guruji" to his
followers, Desai has
taught yoga in the
Pbi.l,adellh':: area aince J.MO. At time he was
ltudying tatiledeaip at
• ~e Philadelphia Collea•
di Art. ti.. L •. i He f~ t.h..-.1 aca..
Sociely of PennAylvaftiJl
in1967.
L19UIDA TION AUCTION SALE
UNITB> STATES ENTRY 1.D. #3347926
HAM»MADI
ORIENT AL CARPETS AND RUGS
SHipment, #CX603 ordered bi/ phone ex London watehoUM 5/t/n. 23 exceta bal ..
ertived Lo• Angeles 7/19177. ExceH refuMd by Importer. We heve been
comml.moned to eUcilon the~ 23 belee ID a.olill ~to London Ind reallze cesh to cover various cNr-oea lnc.Jrr9d .,, route.
• Auctioneers note: we have .xamlned the Ml• Md blld ttMI ruge-to be of fine QUlllty
, and In excellent condition. 'they very in alze from 3'JC2' to 11'x12' In vatloua makM and 'IHIEF HJ'lS ~lg1na. This it a great opportunity to obtain fine N9' 8M lhould not be~
AUCTIOH WILL T di PLACE fOO CLOSE l'llDAYMOYIMIR 11
COLUMBIA, Mo .. (AP> AT I PM
-Membinoftbelk>One VllW DAY OP.AUCl'IOM 7 PM AT
county Grand Ju_~ HOUDAY INM didn't have to look VtsTT 3131 lllSTOL A ft.
far to fibd crlmlaal COSTA MISA Uvity.
Whlle jurors were re-,...,
turning tndlct.ments In · ·~•ca.... · ..
Ol>en court, someonp WU CAT~ AVA&•• AT AUC110M ~ing throu1b ,punea,1"--llliiiiii._ _________________ ..... _...._...., _ _.~:
jackets and briefcases
ltCt. in the erand j\U')' room. A total of S2S w u
t.ken.
Aleemblyman DeJ1Qlj
Manaen. J).ffuntlnirtOQ.
B~ach, says be plans to
vlslt all of t,be b0$pUala
and other health c-r• faclltUes in hla dJJtrtct bef or,e the ••lature re· conV'enes to January.
The pwpoee of hls Vls· it.a, the~eniblyman ex-plelns, ts to ~r un·
aeretand how they
operate. ·
"As a .Ute leeislator.
I don't want to hn~se
new laws on the people of
the district that &bow lit·
tle 1en.altivi1¥ to the local .
practitioner," be said •
•••
•
• ,,. ., ..........
NEW ROLE
Peter Frampton
Rock Stars
./ Sign for
!VewRok
NEW YORK (AP> -
Slngera Mick Jacaer.
Peter Frampton and P~QI Simon are among-a
eroup of 20 persona
awarded a francb.lae for
Philadelphia in tbe
North American SOccer
Lejl1ue.
In addJtion to Jaiger,
Frampton and Simon,
t h e P b ii a d e .. P b f a
francb.iae owners include
Rtck Wakeman of the
.. Yes" rock band and
Peter Budge, mana1er
of the Rolling Stonu,
which Jaaer leads.
HOUSTON (AP> -Slippery Wev .. an run·
ntn1 a slick new racket stellinf uted cooktn1
1reue from fast-food restauranta and aelllnc lt to
rendering plants at fat protlts, industry olflctala
HY.
Vernon Stewart. director of the Texu Ren·
deren Association in Auatin, says a blc·clty IJ'MU
thief can make *200 a n11ht and u much u S50,000 a
~ear. .
A R011S1'0N •ENDEREB SAYS areue thefts.
cost her comp8'\f $60,000 a year, and she estimates
losses among Tnas • ~ renderin1 firma run to
"several million dollars" annually.
These and other tales w.ere spread before law
enforcement repra~ntatlves wbo attended a
seminar on grease theft problema sponaored by the
association.
The restaurants put Jdtcben drlpplnia tbat have
been uaed in deep-frying into »-callon dnama
stored behind their bu11diites. 'l1le d.nuna are aup.
po1ed to be purchased .and picked up by renderiq
plant route trucks. Theplanta then resell tbe areaae
to brokera who forward it. to refiners for proceaa!ns
Jnto additives for p.roducts raQ&ini from soap to
plutlca to animal food.
BUT INSTEAD, •ESTAUUNT o~ aay
thieves are cart.ins away the loaded druma, aeWna
the ireue for $30 a bajJTel -often to out-of-1tate
renderers -a.ad sellta' the empty druJDs for $20 apiece. ·
Gary Blum of Wosnma£k G~ue Service ln
Fort Worth said thlevt!S have an euy Ume Hlltna
the grease to r~derUui firms whoH manqera .. are
greedy !or money.'' Jto said those firms undercut
the nortnal pe, barrel price by about $10, and tbat
hurts tbelegttimate renderers.
BUT LT. J. D. PBYTON of Houston's Harris Countr Sheriff's Department said, "We're too abort
on men to check every truck at.every restaurant."
Prosecutor Richard Trevathan o! the eouftty
district attorney's office said the restaurateurs
should build protective sheds for the drwns. Then
taking ,rease would become burglary -the act of
breaking into a building -ia.steed of simple theft
and would be easier to prosecute, he aaid.
... . ' Pre-Holiday Savings:
Pure, luxurious
camel hair
sport coats
Reo.'111&t171
' 139.90 .
Nothln~do!J1Piit•' wit(l parmtl
hs.rftorfft tHf ltf comfort. Us
good IOo>ci. Traditional blazer
sty11ngwllfl flap/patch poci<etS
and leather btlUOrtS fot that
tlmeleae look. At thla llmlted
Ume pr1ce, a camel hair blazer
la a souod fashion lnvestment-
Eweaf'lng now or
lltm~ 61fting.
' ral camel color
6rpearf grey.
• Shuggle Bear. Sweet. soft.
and cuddly stuffed animals and
dolls, with Gibbet Frog, 8 . 8.
Rabbit, and KeySto"e Cop,
~,i gifts tor little ones. all 6.50.
Plua, Jennifer, 12.85 and
Soartet, 22.95 ~
• Cloltonn6 Jewelry. Rare.
Beaullfully handcrafted. lntrl·
cate deelgna In gold. with color-
ful enamel Inlays. Dating ba4k
500 years to the Ming Dynasty,
Chinese Clolsonne has ever
since been one of the wor1d's
most treasured art forms.
• Heart pendant with chain, 4.95
• Lady Bug pendant with chain.
3.95
•Bracelet. flat. 11 mm, 7.85
' • 5 ,.._Wok Set. The wok
• • pen II 1"4f tftaln utet1eil In tradi-
tional~ coofdng. ~u·u
1 find rt veraatlle ~lo.cook,
try, and..,.,, all kind& of foods.
Sft 13.99 Mlle
• o~ Set. Creative •
coolcWat• ~p yotJ l'1)8ke more tae&ygaumM(ttQodll f4.0Cf ~touftleaet. ,o.po, Soup
.-t, with 4 bQwls. 1&00. H«b
Mt, 8.00-d lnctude C:oOk-
~ bodel. Plue, Sploe a Cennl• -
ter L8bel• 1.00 .......,.
' .
• 12 Karat S.t. The '1ChneM of
gold and thatredltlonal excel·
lence of Cross crattemanshlp In
clalSlc pen and pencil seL
Reg.27.00
&\Le, Mt 20.H
Reg. lnctvldually 13.50
SALE. lndMdually · 10.4t
A. tc-.-
• Pie Phofofllp. A highly at·
trlCtive diapl4y place for your
~vorlte photot, holds 16
~.3W' x 3~" or3W' x 5",
wJllnut look base, 8.85
Polus, R.olpe Fllp, 3 Va'' x 5",
24 card copacity, 14.85 DlllP~
• Pharaoh of the Niie
Stationery. Add a touch of an-
cient Egyptian beauty to )'OUr
personal letters and hot'5.
Stationery, w1ui erwe1opes, a50
Notet, 1.50, FoJd. &Ml, ~
-.-x .. ln1trumenta qu1llty
olfculatora
.. • 11-1026, 4 memory keys,
f to• 9Ubtract, recall .. ~ without Jnlenuptlng your calcu.
rations, % key, automatic con-
stant. change llgn k9y. 10.95
• Tf.1850, dm, ttreamlned,
only&'1CY' Jblck. yeUlaablg.
tUIHfroM keyt.' memot)'
keyt. lncludts cue and AC
• adi!ptor/oha.rger at no extra -.1 .
cost. .,.....~~' . -
! Thurldet. No*'lber 17, 1911
• Cat Caa.ndar. 12 new~
extravaganzas from the~
brain cells of author/artist 8. Kfi..
ban. You may Just laugh thla
calendar right off the walll 3.IS WOt""'9rl
• 'l\stantmemun. Acdalmed a
rnasterpicql A tplendid gift
ahoWlng the treasures-now on
U,S. tour-from the ancient
Egyptl'1l tomb of the bo)' King
1ut, CNer 200 photos, Incl. 100
color plates. 35.00 ......
• Afl Th Inga WI .. end Won-
derful. Touching! Heertwann-
lngl Joyous! Constant reading
pleascJra.ot the peopta and fi..
mals of YOl1clhlre, by James
Herriot, the~ Mllng author
of AU Tblnoe Bright and
Beautiful. • 10.00
t .......
a.ILY PILOT :0
•The KttoMn Book. A WOif(.
bed( exir.otdlnalrel Utera!ly
lhot.liands ot Ideas for mal<Jng
kl~ more attltieUve and
funetionel, by the author of the
The HouM 8ook. 500 cOlot
photoe. 30.00
0...
• t •The HouM Book. 0Yer 1000
cok>t piOtures of fabulous
room&, ptus IOUnd advice on
hOme planning, decorating, ,...
modlllng, and do4t.yourself
prQjecta, <:OV«• .very room tn
the hOUsel A gotd mlnel ~ •
• Ko~et'a Anttqu. .. lndl,..
pensat>let One of the molt prao-
tical WOt1dng guldee to the --quee market .,., &>Ubbhed.
10th edtlon, Updafed, ntlff • •
trends and latelt 5)r1oM. paperbed<
Thur~~. November 17, 11177
By Phil lnterlandi
-11-17 ~~· o..,.,, ......... ~ ....... ••7' • ...._,..,............,
, what do you expect? Buying a lift ticket from
aorpeone in a bar ... "
-. ~For the Record
Births
MISSION COMMUNITY Mr. end Mrs. Jeffrey Smith, MlulOn
HOSPITAL ll1e10,boy. •
~·. 1'77 Mr •ncl MrS. CNrlH Tey!O<, S.n Mr. encl Mr .. .JO>e C.O.lello, lr•one, Clemenle,lloy.
gorl. Odatl9r:U, 1f17 Oc~ 1%, 1'77 Mr. end Mn. Roger Ziemer, MlulOn
Mr. •n<l Mr•. Pnillp c.. .... M"''°" 111e10, boy. ll1e10, boY OcWMt2l, 1'77
Mr. •ncl Mrs. l.-e Ro1>1mon. LAii-PR Mr •ndMn.J ..... ~ru .. 1,MI•·.
1'1Quel, Qorl ''°" 111e10, bOy.
Oc-U,1'77 ~24,1'77
Mr. end Ml .. M>c/Wel C..rr, MoUIOtl Mr. •nd Mrs. RICNrCI Umpflur,
Vt•JO, bOy. MIUlon v .. ,o,01rl.
October 1', 1'17 ~ zt, 1'77
Mr. •nd Mrs. V.olham eunn1n11n•m, Mr. end Mrs. AtthlH BllllllQton, $ett
MIH•on 111e10. boy Ju•n t•Pl•lr-,boy.
Mr. •no Mrs. Ron.kl LAro, MoulOtl Mr. •no Mis. R_,., Cllrllten, U
VlejQ, gorl. 1 oro, Qorl.
Mr. eno Mrt. Edward Menning, Mr. ano MrS. -.Ir N•JCI. MIMlon
~une Hiii•, boy 111e10, gor1.
Mr. •nd Mis. Denni• Woll, MIHIOn 0c-n.1m
Viejo, boy, Mr. encl Mrs. TnomH HollM, MoHlon
Oc-1S. lt/1 111•10. boy.
Mr. and Mr .. LArry ~rl, MIHIOll Mr. end Mrs. Ric.nerd 'Olornel, Mii·
llle10. boy. lion II lejo, boy.
Mr. •no MIS. L.onnle W.lls, M1UIOn
llle)O, bOy, OctoOlr16, 1ffl
Mf. and Mis. W•rren Fox, Sen J~n
!$1r•no, gll1.
end Mn. Gebrltl Loy•, E.1 Toro,
u ~17,1ffl
Mr. •nd Mrs. R_,., Gr .. n. LAgURll
Holli, boy.
Oc-.r 1•. 1'77
Mr. encl Mr .. Rigo L.oe>ez. Ml"lon Ille·
10,glrl.
Oc ...... 1',1'77
end Mrio C..rl Felr-0, MIUlon
II o,boy
•nd Mrs. R~ lull>burn, MIS-
~.,, 111e10. oirl. ~end Mrs..AlenTep1e, 1,.1ne. boy.
Oci.1Mw20, 1'77
~ and Mr'>. Mlcneel Ulerpentier.
~ Ju•n C..pl.tr-. boy. ~end Mrs. Oo<lgl• LeQ9r.,, Mil·
..... v1eio,gorl Octo1Mr21. 1m w. •ncl Mrs. E.llMO Rlffr, El lero,
91rt. ...
n PACIACY•W
MIMOIWPAIK
Cemetery MortUllY
Chapel
S500 Pacific View Drfve Newport,
California
f' 844-2700
W.COINICK
MOITUAlllS
Laguna S.ach
49'-9415
Laguna Hills
788-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495;-1ne
,OUNTAINVA&.L&Y
COMMUN.ITV HOS .. ITAL
~11.1'77 Mr. •nd Mrs. Mltlwel Selnt, Hunl··
lngton BMCll. boy. .....,...,,tf7l
Mr. •nd Mn. Wllll•m •••to,
""•"m1n.iw.oort. --•.1m Mr. •nd Mn. RUSMll Fullrrwtf', Hunt·
lngton Buen, glrl.
Mr. •nd Mn. ~nOft emerlck, v.e~tmln•ltr, g<rl. -.-r•,1tn
Mr •nd Mn !>t ... .., AIUCAI Jr., "-'•
l••n \/elley, girl.
-r7,1'77
Mr. •ncl Mrs. Oougl• M«tln, Hunt•
lngton e .. , ... boy,
--1,1'77
Mr. end MTS. Richard Pyle, HUlll·
1ngton 8..cn,glrt •
........,..t,1'17
Mr. •nd Mrl. Eelwerel Heredl•,
lllrUlmlMl«,;111.
By ANNE COOPER CMIM Delly NeeMMf
We women may have come a loni way. u .
one oft.quoted ad tells us, but we're not there
yet, and betna atranded one cold, dark Dlcht
Qn the Santa Ana Freeway made me wish that
I, personally, bad never strayed from my knit·
Ung. Being sufficiently liberated to bold down
a job which requires atten·
dance at nl1bt meetlnas, I
was whlzzin& down the
freeway toward home,
clad my meeting wu out
in time for me to see the
family before bedtime,
when two red lights lit up
on the dashboard.
lt took me a minute to
realiie the car wu coast·
mg.Noen&inepurredun·
der the hood -it had mysteriously died.
I eased the car to the shoulder, put on the
blinkers and tried to restart the engine. It
roared, which to a liberated lady like myself
means that the battery iso 't dead.
UNFORTUNATELY, THAT BIT of m·
form a ti on is about the extent of my
mechanical know·how, so after grind.ln& the
engme a few times more and announcing
firmly that the baU«y wu not dead, I cried.
Here I was, rt .5 miles from home (liberat-
ed women keep mileage records) -helpless
and terrified. I looked up and down the
freeway and could see nothini but strtn1s of
car lights. No gas station signs, no fut food
signs, not evep an overpass wu to be seen.
I thought of a lecture I'd beard a sheriff's
deputy gtve to a group of senior citizens, ad·
vising them to sit tight if they had car trouble
at night and wait for help.
Sol waited. AFTER AN HOUR, I WAS shivering
.violently. After two hours, I lost. all feeling in
my feet and the blinkers stopped blinking.
After three hours, I honed at pasainJ cars,
hopmg a driver might stop on down the road
·and send patrolmen to investigate the Honk·
'ing Freeway Looney.
Four houn after my ordeal of waiting
began, I steeled myself and set off on foot. I l
couldn't picture jwst where I was and had no'
idea how far I'd have to walk for help.
As I walked, I tried not to think of the
murder I'd beard was committed in the fields
around here. The victim wu a woman, a
teacher, who had been driving home alqoe on
tne freeway .
A small pickup truck slowed and pulled to
a stop behind me.
I froze.
"YOU JN SOME KIND of trouble? .. a
m"n'a voicecalledout. "My car broke down," I called back.
He looked like a Dice man, so after a brief
chat, I aereed to dcle With him 1n hia truck to
an aU·night lal station.
"1 don't. make i~a practice te plck "'I>
riders," he said; u we rode almlg.
"I don't make lt a pracdee t'7 accept
rides." I said. "hra boptna a-cop •Cklld come
atoo1.0
''You're looldlii at him,•• be said. He was
a sheriff's deputy, Oil b1a way home from the
evenmg shift.
A lothaschangeclin my lifetime. I'm just
as glad l don't hltVe to stay beme, baldq
cookies and crocheting af &balll, unleta I
choose to.
But I'm glad a cop can st:Ul be a hero -to
a little girl lost in her own neighborhood or to a
liberated lady stranded and frightcmed on tbe
freeway.
CB'S lUTE IN Sl'A.'l'B
Accordfnl-to a Hanaen •
pre11 release, u,stt
OBITUARIES I LOGBOOK
...
THE FAMILY CIRCUS . By Bil Ke•ne
I
'Too Far?'
Man Hiu Search Policy
SANI'A CRUZ (AP) -Equal treatment for
women is going too far when females take part in
"skin searches" of male prisoneTS, according to in·
mates olthe Santa Cruz County jail
Twenty-three prisoners and two 1herm·a de·
puties.sfgned a Jetter or protest presented io the
county Board or Supervisors, which is looking Into
·Ule comp}aint.
SHERIFF AL NOREN said he has no choice in
the matter because affirmative action rulings bar
dllcrimination in hirine guards and usicning them
t.odutles.
0 1 wu shocked to experience thls," said the let·
ter 1friUen by Tim McKenna, 19, jailed on charges
of~· stolen property.
He said on two occasions women jailers were
present wben ho was forced to strip nude for a
tborou4b search or body openings.
RABBl:IUPS
C.4YUFE
NEW YORK CAP ) -
The president of an or-
thodox Jewish body, the
Rabbinical Alliance, haa
appealed to Americans to return to ther
.. biblical roots" and op.
Pote homosexuality.
Rabbi Abraham B.
Hect of Brooklyn said
homosexuality u rlalnf'
in the country, that it threatens the family
basis of civilization and.
that bo~als need
"spiritual and
psychiatrie help."
Traditional Thanksgiving Dinner..:ro Go ' ...
Whole roasted turkey, whipped mashed potatoes, giblet gravy, •
apple chestnut dressing, cranberry sauce, traditional vegetables, ~
pumpkin pie and a selected white wine, specially packaged for ,.
you to pick up.
. " The supply is limited so reserve your turkey early by callingt 1 :
l714) 540-2~, Ext. 258 •
Orders will be accepted through November 21.
Thureda)'. Nowmw t7, ttn
( Piiot Logbook )
,, This Car~NO
Polish Joke
By JACKIE HYMAN OUMO.lfy , .... ,._.
[was very glad I didn't live in Poland on
Monday. Not that Poland doean 't have some things
to recommend it. Like artbta Anna and
Waldek Zamorske, wbom my motber and I
• visited there two year• aao.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-A 'htrd Soutbon
Cali!omia manufacturer
has been fined $1,0C)O for
unsafe use of a cancer·
causlna chemical used ln
the manufacture of skate board wbeela, the state
Health Department .. td.
SafgOll
•~Iced
Retired Army
Gen. William C!.
Westmoreland
told an audience
in Ole~ N.Y.,
that. the
American rpress u n f a .I r 1 y
criticized the
govel'ilment of
South· Vietnam
during the war in southeast
Asia.
1A ·-Loa~uo" I N ... u ....... .:. -
Anna and Waldek llve in the cily of
I' Wroclaw formerly Brealau, Germany (the
Arnco, a South Gate
producer ot liquid
urethane r~~; •a1t
cited for fail use a---;~;;;~==~;;~;;;;;;.;~~;;;~~~$;;;;;;:;=;;~=:;~;;;;;;:;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~~;] closed syst~m to procet11J
Poles pronounce it
Vrotawahv). Unlike many
American arliats, they
are able to earn a middJe-
clasa living pursuing their
c r e ati ve talents in
ceramics and s culpture,
respectively,
THERE'S A LARGE park in the middle of
HYMAN Wroclaw that's grown up
around the ruins or World War II, when
·· Wroclaw was directly on the German·
' Russian front for about a year.
In the midst of the park are large pieces of
wood from which Waldek carves bis
. sculptures, right there in the open. And
the(re still there) dahv alter day~-un..van· dahzed, until be rinis ea and car\.3 them
away.
It's the carting that's the problem.
YOU SEE, IN WROCLAW, there aren't
very many cars. Anna and Waldek want one,
and they've saved up for one. But in Poland,
you pay for your car and you get a choice of
models: small or medium. Then you wait two
years for delivery.
This brings me to my point. On Monday,
the old clunker died with hlstrionlca that
would make Ethel Barrymore jealous. A sym-
phony of wheezes and clankinl. Sighs, moans
and then the deep silence of a flat ca.msbaft,
broken crankshaft and zonked-out valves.
Dead.
And, in the space ol one day, I found
myself the owner of a brand new mini-car.
Paid for, serviced and driven ottthe lot.
I DONT WANT TO make my old dead·
clunker feel aey worae. 111 just mention that
my new lltUe car sets 1ucb great mllease that
when I back up the tank oyerflowa.
Back to Poland. Anita and Waldek should
be getting thelr car about now. The one they
paid for when I waa there two years aao.
Man doth not live by wheels aloae, and I
guess they're happy wtth their country as It ia.
And, especially after Monday, I'm pretty hap •
. PY with my country as lt 11, too.
the dry pelietJorm ot the
cbemiciu' 4'4"methylene
bia (2 cbloroanlli ne),
known by the trade name
MOCA.
IT WAS also accused
of failing to pos,t warning
signs, falling to establish
a medical surveillance
program for employees
and failing to maintain
an employee roster.
M OCA has been found
to induce breast cancer
in laboratory animals,
but no human cases have
been reported, the de·
partment said.
AR~CO produces h ·
quid urethane rubber,
which other manufac·
turers use in making
skate board wheels and
other abrasion-resistant
products.
Earlier, the state fined
firms in Santa Fe
Springs and Irwindale for
the same offense.
After the atate lnapec-
tors fowld unsafe condi-
tions in the Arnco plant,
the plant waa ordered
closed.
BOSl'ON (AP) .-Researeben la)' tbeJ bav• : •
discovered a dtaeaae inherited by some male
children that can tum a common virus mto a cauae ·
of cancer to make a lllller out or mononucleo.t..
· Tbe d.ilea.ae, tdenUll.cl at the University of
Muaacbuaetta Medical School, la a deflcleney that
leaves the body open to a fatal attack by the Epe·
tein·Barr vtrua. That ierm ln.fectl up to 90 percent
of the population, \llually wltb m114 flu-like
symJ!: It also causes moamucleosls, the "kiss-
ing "or young adultB.
TSE DOCl'OU SAY that victlma of the disease who a.re infected by the vlrul can develoJ> cancer of
tbe lymph glands, suffer • fatal form ofl monon~eosla or bave a breakdown ol tie body's
Immune defenses. The disease also can caun birth
dtfects, UlcludJ.Da mallormed bnrta. •
Over ftve 1enerationa ln one famllt' ~.: mcot, reMerCben fOUD4 20 cues or tbe •
UJOng trotberl, coualn.I and uncl11. Of ~. an u
but flve'dled from the dilol'der. Tbedileue. reported in today'1 ilalMlottlle New
England Journal of Medici.De, ll callW 0 X·llnked uc ... lve l)'mpboprollferatlve l)'Ddrome. •• The re-
searcben believe •t la rare. but tbet baveJdeotltMd
td'it15 ln12famlllea. ·
, . "ft'8 A NEW l)'Q• · MEDICINI drome," Dr. David T. Purtlto, who d1reCted the • reaeare!_l, •tld in. .an tn· ~ew. t•Ubauottaerdlteuea,lt abetnth~fora w • Itw•Juata maU.rottielDI abletorecop!H-
l
Open 7 Day. at JO AM.
1100 ~o. Coast~~.
Laguna ~each~ CB.
.. -
......... .-.-...c....mp...,
P.-C...a•\tfa~
• ... ,,.. .. .,
AT YOUR SERVICE I ST ATE
··cot a pr<>Mmt' Then tDtite to Pat Dwm Pat tDill
cwt Rd ttJPe, getting the answers and.action you Med
tf IOlw iMquttk• in go11em~ and bu.tmeu. Mcul
,_,, qwatiorw to Pat Dunn, At Your~'· Orange
. Coad Da1IJI PUot. P.O. Bor 1580, Ca.ta Mua, CA
'2Qf . .b mo1111 l1tt1r1 a.1 poalibU will be <JILIWn'ed, ~ f'horatJd 1nqulrle1 or letten not including tM
rfoder'• lull D(UM. addreaa. and buarneu houra' phone
ambtrCGJJnOt ~confide-red. ThUeolumnoppeor1doi-
1¥&zcq111 Stat~·· ..
Writer C'a't C.U.r SMrt ,,,...
DEAR PAT: This ls the finst Ume a company h~ not responded when I 've written a letter. I con··
tae!ted the Manhattan Shirt Co. tn July regarding a
defective shirt, and pinned the Jetter to the shirt
luelf. In late July, J received a Jetter from a
Manhattan customer service representative aayJog
that my letter bad been received and asking me to ·
send the shJrt to the flrm for tesUni. I bad already
malled the shirt, and I wrote and told them so. I bad
hoped for some sort of setUemeot by now, but I
can't aeem to get a response ol any kind.
P.C .. Laguna Beacn
MUlbaUan cheeked its reeotda, and eou..lda't
locate uy laformactoa about tlle retaroed ablrt.
The cuiomer NrVke represea*8Uve wbo contacted
yoa prevtoaa17 la ltO Joa1er wltll th firm. Tbe prob·
able esplanatJoa for tb1s mlX!IP la tbat yoa may have
aent tbe lhlrUo Manbattan 's l>atenon, N.J. addreu,
rather than to Glen Rock. Mrs. Arlene
Starn. Manhattan customer servlte representative.
ukl you to repeat the facts lavohed and descrtbe
tbe sbht (color, size. atyle) so sbe can laud.le a
.. better late tbaa never" adJustment for yo11. Mall
your letter to her at Manhattan Shirt Co •• ZS DeBoer
Drive, Glen Rock. N.J. 0745!.
Jrook Ott Probate
DEAR PAT: I am a senior citizen who wants to
find out about inheritance taxes and whether pro.
bate court would be necessary for my es~. If it is,
where can I find out about the procedure and cost
involved?
H.G., Costa Mesa
Yoar best soaree of lnformatloa woaJd be u at· tonaey. Redaced fee coasattatloa ean be arraqed
by pboalng tbe Lawyers Referral Sen1ce of Orange
Coan&y ac US-3811. U yoa wtsb to n.earc• tlda
yourself. coauuJt .. Probate And Taxes, Phlervtai
Yoar Estate For Your Hein.,. by la.a McPbalJ. Thia
$5.ts book la dlatrlbuted by Nolo Prea, Boz 5'4. Oc:·
cldental, CaW. t54M. It coatabls deWJed 1Dfor1na·
tlq,u on siate and federal laherttance &.ues wttb
b1aM for savlni. It also includes all major revtsloaa
of\be Tax Reform Act of 1171. /
~ lleaat MbHfl ll9flefl
DEAR PAT: I know you had a recent AYS item.
a ut the long delay in processing the potato chip
r unds. I want to find out about the antibiotic re·
f ds that were proplised at least two years ago. I
n ver got mine. We lived in Whittier when we filed
claim, but now live in Oranae County. Dld we
g t missed or was this refund never issued?
I t J .A., Newport Beach
• The anUbloUc refunds were completed la 11'15,
·• cord.IDJ to a California AUomey Geoeral•a Offtee I s keamu. U you dJdn •t set yoar refaad &Ma.
y 'll never get Jt. Tlte otnee wtdc:ll llaadled refuDcl
eutq no Joaier exists. Yov cllaa1e ol addrea
• p babb'•ceoantafortbe}>~em.
_.er w .. 't tleree u ~ ·
DEAR PAT: l .. e beard thalfood can be cooked
s wly or thawed in a dishwasher set on the drying
c cle. Is this posait>le?
E.S., Newport Beach It'• ~ble. bat lmpraedcal and a wane of
e er1Y. A dlsbwuber la hoUeA dutq tbe dr)'tn1
c cle. ane1 tbea die teaperatue811Jy reaebes aboal
1 deirees F., and that•a very slow eoolda1?. TCJ
la&a.la this temperat•re lite maclalae bu to be
t et •faba ud aiat.. a1t npenslve Idea. Qulck-
t wln1 ean be accompllshed Just as fut aDd more
nomkally by lmme111la1 a watertlpt pacble
warm water.
~Ottered tor Clal•oll'are
DEAR PAT: How can I get in touch with the
atlonal Taxpayers Union? I've looked every ..
here, but can 'lfind an address. .
J.E., Costa Meaa
• Wrtte to ID E. Capital St. S.E., W ............ . zeoes. Tbls orgulutloll's etfon.a H•ter on W..
1 to cat deftclt flnaaclag ud wutefal spead.laa
tlae 1overnment aceordtn1 to •• NTU
ff mu.
..
229 Marine Ave.
Balboa tst•nd
I • 673-4280
THEBESTIN .
TOWN, RESORT
& SWIMWEAR
FrH bikini drewlnt
each leturdey ·
tlll Chr1ttm••
Cillll_ ...._YIM~
Delly 10-7 SUri. I H
321 Merine Ave:
llelboa. lll•nd 175-7MO
174401ntl It.
· : Tusttn1'1·1310.
I -m ·N. Cenpn Dr.
.Pel"!_ Spttngt_32M12t
Come In . and... ,
tMmost excruatve dte~
collect Ion
.... ........ :.
Physicist
Edward Teller.
father of America's
bydroien bomb.
said C«Jitomta
may face elec·
triclt,. rationint
next summer if
the winter is.
dry. He made .
the comment
this week in San
Diego.
712 E. B•lboa Blvd.
Balboa Ptnlnsute
•673-7073
' I
• PALM SPJUNGS (AP) -11te
fam.ed ~utt a~b, wbicla bu ~ad mQYie Jtara u 1l\.nsbe111
•Ince lt was fou.Mfid In ltM by
CbarlH Farrell and Jlalpb
Bellamy. b• been IOld.
A al)Okesman aal4 the bu,... are lt:" Larry Ltwfenee,
cbalrman ot ~Del Coroftadc>,
and Los Angele. lnv•tm' Staliley
Rappaport.
. TllB SALB WAS atUtoiinCW
by JUclwd JIDlen. p"'ldont of:
tbe .c~ub repre~~ntlna
'Thutaday, ~mbet 17, 1tn
~tockboller1, and Carleton
Llcbt7, president of Hotel .Del
COroJUMIO In .COronado. No prke
WU Onounc:ed.
. 1'he club c:Gnailtl ol UO rooms
altd suites. 12 tenn.11 courts and
four 1wtmmln1 poola. Sbermtn
Hull wtll ecint:lQUe u manacer
att.r 80 yean, IJcbt.y 1aid.
A IJ'OUP ot Racquet Club rdem-
ben had ~ tilt resort since.
1987. Farrell boqbt ~llamy's
lntereit lhortly after the club·
opened and aold hls Interest in 195Q.
DAILY Pt&.OT ~J3
,-
. At leul thr.-US: presldenti, J
Harry Truman, Dwt1bt D.
Eiaenhonr and John F. Ken-
nedy. visited the cbab.
' Lawrence la a former Southern
CaUforala chairman of the De~~auc party.. •
30t Marine Ave.
Contemporary European Men's c.;10thin9
Custom TaJJorlng .
Balboa I1land
615-7700
·-· _ -~::. . 319 Marine Ave'., Balboa Island llJ McFadden P1.
Newport Pier
6'1J-30.11 --675-5004
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:eGl,j'" CAD SW& STADsi " Erftr with..,., pUrCheM tor the ..
SPOJtT:IWE.Ut . . . 1 OC)IO gift C9t1fflcate dttwtno
each l'ftOrrth
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Olitindive Gifts.• Antiques
·Do Your Christmas Shos:>?,lng Early
·The bright, new look
in spcrtswear and dresses .
216 M..,.,ne Avenue ' ·Balboa Island ..;
. -. . FINE .JEWElR~ •SPECIAL OROERS
& MNIJf ACTURING
WHClESAlE • REPAIR
Pt.Me (7U) tn • 2'51
~&OA ISLAff~·bJS·0322
IQO~· ART•A«f.SSORIES
WE . QUIT! !·
Ladies Sportswear
fqr relllOfllble I
ptf Oet
'1'.4'NOUnd
twlmWfat ,.
I
\
ONSAtE
H.D. LEE'S ST.
THOMAS
KHAKI
3 piece
Separ~tes
• f ash1oned of
Poly /Cotton
tw•U fabric.
Blazer
(38-44)
Reg. '50.00
wbw'31 95
Vests (38-44)
Reg. '2C1.00
?fowsl299
Jeans <28-40>
Reg. '20.00
Now 5l299
Organicaily Grown.
8Y~
3 Tierred Gauze
SKirt Witli.satin
trim,
Sizes 5-13
in yellow or pink
at s1500
•hared t
J.Ne. waUun
a Worl I 1quad -were belare tile was opened.
The !:table waa alter • coordlna Harvey Reinert sdlct.
because you.oieat of the)'~
mainlng ~'Pe!Dbers ii '1t aJ\d "We
just. dee~ to have the Part.Y now ." , 1 Every~e who beloaefX! to Post'
68 in ~ wu autoraatleallY a
member the Lut Squad. The
l2·year· whllkey went Into a
local b vault, $15 wu put
EMS SPORTSWEAR
WOVEN FASHION
SIURTS.
Shown solid tone window pane
plaid shirt. Just one Qf a
collection of styles &colors
to choose trom. I Reg. $20.00 to S2l.OO
S.M.L.XL SJ 199 Now ALL
the peasatat
dteSs wiU.little
bolero Jao)et in
as1prted kints.
.~ .. ~.2~
SlaffS.lf
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PVBUC NO'l'ICS
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dick ====;= =-Vernon's
sportswear
Come See
What's Nevv ·
For
JtmRI\ The ~olidays ·
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ThanksglVing
I Cards &
Rartyware '
'Ihurs., Nov. 24
Pre-Thanksgiving
SlliE
Weltclfff Plaza onrv .
1* lt'YIM 8Mf.. '*'Port 8eech
a. Hocn'10:00 &m. to 8:00 p.m. ThUrt. 1118:00 p.m.
H
Inc . a Newport Beach
ceme )'toducer. has announced
plan.a t9'more than double its coal
miotnc .f&pacity in the next two
yeara at,.a totaJ estimated c08t o(
$12mlll~n.
The capiUil will be provided
•rom t~emally generated funds.
Wilham T Pascoe III,
·hairmaD and chief execultve of.
1cer. said the Amcoal mine near
}aUup. N M . with a capacity ol
'50,000 fbns a year, would be
more t.h.n doubled to 400,ooe \ons
o1C capa~ty.
Supplying the fuel needs Cot the
·ompany's Phoenix cement plant
BVSINESS
BRIEFS
in Arizona. the increased New
Mexicb produclton will be
'>hi pp~d to the company's
R 1 versldc cement Di vision in
Southel'n C'ahforma
Lucas Coal Co .. Amcord's coal
operati,un in Grove City, Pa,
"hich '5uppht•!-i coal to nearby ullhlle~. has a current proouc-
t 10n capacity or 230,000 lhtS year.
fly 1979 tlw t·apac1ly is cx~.!cted
lo reaoh G'I0,000 tons, or more
than ~1 2 times the present
t·apac1iy Ao.; a result of ex·
pansion. Amcord's Ens.tern ce·
ment ~ants will use coal from
Luc as Ci>mmencing nex.t year.
Am~r1 can Pa-cesetter,
"lewport Beach, has reported net
income of S3.70.1.4l'5, or S9 cents a
l'Ommon :-.hare, ~\ revenues of
C\32, 754,:J:lO for U·.e nine months
1·nded Sept. 30
This compar~.s with net income
of $2,066,779. o.r 30 cents a share,
on revenues 'J S25,283,044 for the
l'Omparablc ;>eriod last year.
Amer1rau Pacesetter's sub-
~1diary, P;,cesettcr Homes. Inc.,
t·onducls (and development and
residential home construction,
and its subsidiary, Pacesetter
Escrolw Co ., Inc., provides
escrow agency service.
American Electronics, In~ ..
manufactures rotating eleetro-
mecbanical equipment such as
1 precision resolvers, stepper
I rnotors. scrvor motors. motor
t.acbometers. frequency con·
verters, and motor generators. It
..ilso b~c; precisio~ mach.ines Jn·
tricate hydraulic fuel and liquid
oxyg\n valves, and lofted
.iircrafl !itructural components. ·
E'antas11 Designer
Costa Mesa High School student Leslie Van Scoyok is
shown with panel from the 90·bY·20 foot mural she de-
siened for the school's front wall. The imaginative work
was painted by students. Its completion will be celebrat-
ed from 11 a.m. to 2 p .m . Tuesday.
State English Text
Gets F in Spelling
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP>
-A state-issued booklet de-
signed to help teachers prepare
students for Enalish tests is earn-
ing an Ffor spelling and syntax.
The o!ficals who put lt out
spelled "aerosol" incorrectly at
leaat. four times -in two <fir.
ferent w8)'1 -and Clubbed their
sentence construction at least
twiee.
·~1 CAN'T FOR the Ufe of me
explain it," said Arthur J .
Mallory. Missouri's com·
misaloner of education. "We £~1
very aotTy tt happened."
"Believe me, we do know how
discovered m1stakes, but soon
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. got
wmd of it and the story was out.
IN WEDNESDAY EDmONS.
the newspaper cited tbese
bloopers: --••Aerosol'' is one spelled
. "aeresol" and at least three
times spelled "aerosal." Both
are wrong.
-The authors could not decide
in one sentence whether they
were talking about one student or
many: "Ask students to Ust ways
that the dictionary and index
from his book are alike."
0Jte•o Revetaue-'l'iii.-..~• i o spell 'aerosol,"' said an em· ~ barrassed Grace McReynolds, Similarly, in another sen·
tcnce. they coutdn 't decide
whether they were talking about
one item or many: "The student
will demonstrate the ability lo
1dent1fy and interpret items
labeled with consumer
vocabulary b1 selectinc its use
for a spedflcpurpose. ••
OxQco, an indepen.Clent
Newpdrt Beach oll and iJll pro-
ducer, has reported net income
for the nine months ended Sept.
:10 or -,17,408, compared *Ith
c;;so,957', or 1 cent, lor t}Wj like 1976
period.
Revenues for lbe rjf ne months
were $1.,677,778, compared wtth
$1.326,is.1 for the 1976 period.
For \.he three months net in-
come was $56,190, or 1 cent, com·
pared -..1th $33, 1<0, or 1 cent, for
the t~rce m()nlhs of 1976.
Revenues were W73.787 for im,
compared with, '358,462.
coi..11 ltUttJfUft
Colod,y Foods Inc., Newport
Beacb 'h~ announced net sales
for its'flnlt quarter ended Sept. 30
o( $11 b48.00G, compared with
$10.2:2if;WO a year aao.
Col'¥'Y Foods operatu 93
familJtigtyle restaurants in eight
Wes~stat.es.
A~~ted
• AlcJ.,acillc has named ~)';leQ •
and J-Ohntton AdvertisinfJ
New Beach, to develop cor-
por•t denUty and new product
in trod Uon for its newly formed
subsl ary, Alco Battery Co.,
Costa esa.
the educational official under
whose direction the book was
prepared.
Last w~k. word of the errors
began circulating at a conventJon
1>f educators, to whom it became
a mini-scandal. State orfJclals
promptly assigned three
Crad\Ulte students to pick the
pamphlet apart to find un -
Hero's Name
'Too Long'
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-If your name is
Kosciuszko, you might
as well forget about see-
ing it on a. Los Anaeles
·street sign.
That's what the City
Coµncil ha~ de~i~ed ln
the case of Gen. Thad·
deus Kosciuszko. •
Poli.ah Revolutionary
War hero.
ln a unanimous· de.
cision, the council voted
against naming a street
after the generaJ
because the Public
Works Committee said
the ci\y's street signs
were too small to carry
hlsname.
"IF A STUDENT presented a
handwritten paper with those
kinds of mistakes, he'd be in for a
lot of trouble." said state testinC
director Charles F03ter.
The booklet is a primer to help
teachers prepare students for the
English section of the state's new
Basic Essential Skills Test.
It has been a minor best seller.
Missouri ))aa been gaining a na·
lional reputation tor prep~
students for the basic sklUt ~
and at teat 12,boo copies have
been mailed acrosa tbe cowttrY
and abroad.
MARTINEZ (AP) -a pro-
posal to \ncorporate a ne.,.. city in
Coptra COit& Counlf bu been
squuhed b-a aecond tlane in slX
years by the Contra Costa Local
Agency Fc:nnatloo Commlaalon.
Under tbe plan, the cltyot Mulr
would have tieen est.bltahed with
a populaUon ol 13,000 and an In·
dustrial tax bale ol '1" IDIWOA.
...
NEWPORT BEACH I COSTA MESA I NATIONAL
Planners Study ISsue
Newport Restaurant to Lose License?
Rockwell
Gets AF '
Contract
The Elect.tonic Systems Group
of Rockwell International has
been awarded a $32.08 million
contract by the Air Force for
airborne and ground terminal.a to
be used ln the Air Force's
satellite communications system.
The multl·milUon dollar con·
tract II an option to an initial
$74.2 million contract awariied
earlier this year for similar
equlpmeots.
TllE SPACE and Secure
Telecommunications division in
Newport Beach bas begun pro·
duetion of hardware under the
ori1tnal contract awarded by the
electronic systems division oft.he
Air Force systems command.
Under the contract, Rockwell wm continue to build, test and de-
liver both airborne and ground
terminal equipment f<'r the
system, data and aerospace
ground equipRJent and spares.
Delivery of the 160 additional
equlpmeots will be&in late 1978.
with completion scheduled for
mid·1979.
IN 19'13. ROCKWELL became
the single contractor to combine
development of systems and
equipment for the system.
Rockwell'• system efforts will
be managed by t.he Space and
Secure Telecommunicattons
Division in Newport Beach with
additional manufacturing in·
volnd at Dallas, Texu and
Cedar Rapids, Ia.
IO Face Drug Rap
In San Diego
SAN DIEGO ((\P > -Ten peo-
ple. were arrested on a variety of
c:true..-elated charges including
possession of heroin and ~elv·
ing stolen property at a Golden
Hills apartment th~t in·
vestigators said Tuesday also
was being used as a "shooting
gallery" for heroin adcUcta.
He said areas of non-
compliance with the use permit
lGclude exceeding lhe maxhuum
~'!atomers,. fal_lure
PAULA SCBOEPE, owner d
tb• restaurant, said she it
circulatin& a petition in favor ol
her faclllty.
The planning commission ..W
meet al 7 p.m. in city council
cbatnbers.
Proteetton tor Presefaoelers
Erin Russell, not (\uite 3 years old. models a pre-school
identification bracelet that could help her get home safe-
ly in case .$he gets lost. The bracelet, and a similar
necklace, is available for $1.15 by <calling 646-7184. The
identification drive is sponsored by the Junior Ebell
Club of Newport Beach and the Costa Mesa Women·s
Club. Erin is the daughter or Dr. and M.1'$. Denis Russell
of Costa Mesa.
Local Businesses
Promote Countians
John Cole, Newport Beach, has joined NaUoaal Alrlnes as a
marketing representative in Orange County. He will call on travel
agencies and commercial accounts in Anaheim, Fullerton, Buena
Perk, Orange, Garden Grove and SeaJ Beach.
lie bas worked as an instructor in both water and snow skiing at re-
sorts in the Caribbean and
Colorado respectively.
• The Pinskeeker Corp., Pacific
Grove. bas announced the eale cl
the capital stock of the corpora-
0tiQn to Michael Met.lgar of Costa
Mesa.
Pinseeker manufacturers a
line of custom woods. irons and.
utillty clubs.
He will supervise concept, de-
sign, layout. photography and re-
lated artwork. Befo're joining tbe
agency in May 1976, he was art •
director for two agencies in
Miami.
Richard, L. KoeUl bas joined·
the aeency as vice president and
account manarer. . .
He is former president of the
Something Good Is Goint To Hap.;
pen advertising a1eacy fti
Fu.llerton.
)
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NATIONAL
Arw1,._..
JAMI! LEADS WITH HIS RIOHT; POP SUFFERS
Mary Ann Bruening Declare• Her Ion The Fa"."lly Champ
., Angel' Bops •op
Broken Jaw Tes~ifiea to Might
CLEVELAND (AP> -Edward
Bruening'• jaw bu been wired
shut for alx week.a while the frac·
ture he suffered during a playful
match with his son beala. He was
alruck in the jaw by a puncb from
Jam ea Bruening.
Although sons often grow biuer
than their fathers, Jamie bun't
reached that stafe yet. He's 17 months· old and, a 23 poundJ, wu
outwe!Jbed by W pounds iD the
Auction
To Aid
Center
An art auction to
benefit the Oranie Coun·
ty M uaic Center l1
scheduled at 2 p.m. Sun·
day 1n the multipurpose
room of University Hilb
School in Irvine.
Tbe rropoted music center a 1outb coast
chapter is 1ponaoring the
tUnd railer, part of the proceeds ~ wbicb also
go to a tund f~ summer maslc IChola.rsbipa for
hilb acbool atudenta.
AdmiNiaa to the aUC·
tion it free. Pa1ntin1s
t may be previewed at i· p.m. There will be 175 to
• 2SO workl-41thograpba,
aeri1rapbs, oUa, putela
and water colors.
MUrOr
May .Cut
Ane.18
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-Potential drunk
driven IDaf 1et a late warntn1 on bathroom mlrrore at their water-
lnc holel.
tickling match with his father.
"Every morning he goes to wake
his daddy up," Jamie's mother,
Mary Ann. explained. "They were
on the bed tick.Ung each other. Both
of them relaxed on the pillow for a
moment, then Eddy tickled him
again. Jamie came around with a
quick right and hit him on the left
side of the jaw ... Jamie looks
like a little angel, with blond hair
and blue eyes. He's just a tiny, lit·
tle1quirt."
• I
NO lJl an effort to curb drunk drivlnf, sips .. ,. tns, "Are you lookinl at
a clrunk driver?" are be-
inl dJ1tributed so bar
mana1era may paate
them to bathroom mir·
PAYMENTS
rort.
The measa1• cloH• With tbe~: .. I'm
concensed about your
dri•lnt sat-, -l'd ute io keep you aa a
. catomer. The Manaae· ment!'
OltJ Attorne1 Burt Pili•• aald he auaested th• alps to' th• 1tate
Atcobollc Beved&e Con·
trol Board, which baa· ""'°. pn>IN1'D totden· t1ly blJ'I that~
ten'e CUltoln411'1 caucbt
drlvln1 under tb• Jn-
nuenceof ~.
Till
JANUARY
'78
Where's Bike?
IJOUSTON CAP) -HalT)' CUiwell t!al>Ulbt tt waa ~ beJn1 chief Of tbe Houatoe PGUc. 'De!)art-
ment UDW he faced 180 kiliderian. and ftrit lnde
puplla at Brlar1ate Ele1Dentarr School.
Cald1'eJ.l aald be aareed to w•ar bll 1pllfy
cbl•f'• Wil.(.orm -tradltlonalb' wore Oftly at
ceremcmlea ~ and wu feellnf pretty Im~
when the c~ be1an·ptlli,QI bhn.
The flrit few questions wen mUd. Jlad be'ever ahot allyone? DO pol&cewomen ban to so to school?
Then came the zin1v. ·
·'How come~ ain't fcNDd my blcycle? •• uked
onepupU t ·
"He ).mt didn't Wldentand my manpower
shortaco. • 111d Caldwell .
•
AnUque1 from England. Ireland and France
Minton. Spode, Ridgeway and Paris China
Fine Selet'llon of Country Pine
l nusuals in Bras~ and Silver
Jewel Cw;kets and Jewelry
Special Feature
Exhibition of Watercolors
by Walter H. Tyler
Oscar Winner
Thru December
1831 Weth:llff Drive. Newport Beielt tzMO
831·4111
1•s MOllday·Saturday
\
. NATION /.BOATI~~
Locals ·Something for Everyone
Oil F:reeze
WASHINGTON (AP) .:.. The shah~ Im
who earlier thla weelt •aid hll ~ -~J
''remain silent" on tht tltlt~~~ on
prices, now lays the on eQOrt cut.el iabOald ~ive a break" to conaumer eountrin and for~o any increase for atleaatayear.
The shah said Prealdent Carter talked
him lnto changing hls potltlon from one of
neutrality to openly op,sln1 a price increase.
Su1U.,a11 l'lle S~t
SUGAR lULL, N.H. (AP> -A man ldenli·
fying himself as an inveati1ator for the House
l'Ommittce on assassinations has tried unauc-
('essfully to obtain papers and files ol the late
William C. SuUivan, former No. 8 man in the
f"Bl, police said today.
Sugar Hm Police Chief Gary Youns said a
man who ldentifi:vd himself as Clifford A. Fen-
lon Jr . went to Sugar Hlll last Friday, two
cla ys after Sulhvan, 65, was fatally shot ln an
apparent hunllJlg accident.
In Washington. O.C., a spokesman for the
t·omm1ttee on assassinations said it bu a
i.taffcr by tho name or Clifford A, Fenton Jt.
Hut the spokesman .would not dlscuss the
nature of Fenton's work nor comment on there·
port that Fenton bad gone to Sugar Hill to get
Sulhvan'spapersandQles.
Wome1t s.,,ap 1'~•
HOUsrON CAP) -Women from all over
tht• world are exchanging views on the prob.:'
lt·m s they race in achieving equality on the
l'Ve of the U.S. National Women's Conference.
The gathering today brints together
\\om t•n from at least 24 natlops. It was
:-.ponsor<'d by the Slate Department's Agency
for Intcrnataonal Development.
llmtte Rule J'ote Seea
LONDON <AP> Political comme~tators
11rcd1cted today that the home rule bllls for
Scotland and Wales will ve voted on In the two
rPg1ons by next fall. following the govern-
ment's victory in the House of Commons to
.,peed up action on the legislation.
Leading
Hobies
' O.ranie County Hobte
Cat skippers 4omtnated
tbe first day o!!\cinc f<>r
the Hoble·16 national
cbanmpionshlp' at Yort
.Lauderdale, Fla. Wed·
nesday.
Leader after tbe first
four races was John
Ward of Newport Beach
with 2~ polnb. Jte waa
followed by Hobie Alter
of Capistrano Beach who
won one race and had a
breakdown In another
and will be awarded
breakdown points.
In third place was
W ayne Schafer.
Capistrano Beach;
fourth was Russ Ed·
dington, Newport Beach.
and fourth was John
Hauaer,. Huntiniton
Beach.
·-'Racucoringa:
fll"IT ltAGE -.i.11 Semmon. I.like Peril. ~la.; i, .. RMvy, Fon
L.eull9rdli., l'la.; ~ S-ScNl•r.
UMle,Fi..
$£COHO RACE -1, Jeff c..nep., S.nta CNI; 2, .i.1111 w.,., H __ ,
8-<ll, J, Al.It& EddfnolOo\, Htwpotl
lkecl\.
THIRD RA(;I! -Hobie "'"•« GtltM" reno lleKll: t, IMO o.tie. f. on
La11derclele; ), Clift "'''Y'Y· ·-fleld,CAIM. r.
POURTH RACE -Jonn Wlrd,
N .. fl0f1 llNdl; %, Jeff'-• Santa Ctw; ), Pllll ~l. St. Petar..,.,,e. Pi..
BOARD TOLL:
3,000.PLUS
Setting Sail
Eighteen legally blind youngsters from
Braille Institute ·s Orange County Com-
munity Center got the feel of sailing in
Newport Harbor during the annual Lido
Regatta, co-sponsored by the Balboa Yacht
Club, Balboa. Hoisting sails in preparation
of one of the three races are Jerry Scovel
18 <left), and skipper Roger Fryer of Santa
Ana.
Six Die in Cold
The Coait Guard Auxtllary, clYillan arm cl the United Stat.a Cout Guard.
baa 1omethiJlt for everyone lnterelt·
ed ln boaUng -whether they are old
1alt1 or novices. CGA members or
non-members.
· AuxUlary members ln southern
Callfornla and Al'hon, aa1l1t
tbousandl of bc>Jt operawn In trouble
each year, and flotlllu ohhe awidllary
preaent a wide varlety of boatiiia •Ai •
ty courses to tbe1en«aJ public, ch&rg·
lng only a oomlnalfee f ormatenala.
For inexperienced boaterl and for
those who wish to firm up their
knowledge of the bew federal letal re-
q uirements, tbree different
motorboat courses are available.
THE SIX-LESSON (l2·bour> Boat,
ing Skills and Seamamblp course pro-
vides practical knowledge in boat
handling and safe boatm1 t.ecbnlquea
covering rules of 1he road. aids to
navigation, and nautical termlnoloey.
The three-lesson (six hour> Safe
Boatfnt course is a more basic, ab·
brevlated form of the •bove C()W'Se
and includes lnstruction in knot·tyiag.
The SOS Skippers Outboard Special
course ls a one-lesson (two-hour> ln·
troductJon to the rudirnenta of safe
boating, intended for the novice.
THERE ARl? TWO 'AUXJUAaY
courses available for those interested
in sailing. Tbe one· lesson lntroducUoo
to Saillnc deals witb handJJ.n1 small
sailboat.a in calm and protected
waters. It acts u a primer for the
seven-lesson Principles of Saill.q.
The lqer course provides a com-
LOS ANGELES (AP> NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -Six persons fl'OZe to prehenslve treatment of the subject
-A t l e a 8 t 3 , 0 0 0 death on a mountain while tr)ing to amuate Utan· Including baste sail practices, Sate
skateboard·related In· dan cQ/tee across the border into Kenya, Uaanda bandlin1 In both tair and foul
:(
Una, 1alllii1 tal.ty, Hd. pr'Oe«IUNi
for band!Uia em rJet1c1 tltuatlonl. .,
• 1'he CGA alaO provides liiitructtol
for kids. There is a Water .nd Kl
. coune !or tlndqarten thioalb thlra
a.rade employlni a 1peei&l nautlcal
coloring book. The.re fs • one-hou.r
"show and teu•• iYouth Course nt
qes 10-15. For Boy and Girl ~
aaes lt.17 Project One MlW~.Pl1f
Videa a one·bour acUon presentation! ..
'AN ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT
co'1rae for everyone concerned with
boating 15 First Aid for Boatmen, a
compact one le11on deaUn1 with
emergency treatment of shock, bleed·
lng, burns and artiflcial resplrat!on.,.
All of these courses are pveo Oil•
regular baills by Coat Guard Au1f:
lliary flotillas everywhere. Special ar·
rangementa can be made for ooe-balf
to two-hour safety progra:=;• f
clubs. clvie otp.ailations, CMe
ment, Industrial and buainesa .
The CGA also bu a lot to otter the
experienced boatman. Active mem·
bera can get much needed tiine and
expertlM in a variety of programs -
from teaching the s ale boating classes
to conducting Courtesy Motorboat El<·
aminations, regatta patrols and u-
sisUne boaters in dlatres1.
MEMBEBSWP IS OPEN to all
men and women who are U .s. clUr.ens
over 17 years ol age and .-ho own at
least a 25 percent interes~ in _a
motorboat, yacht, aircraft or
amat.eur radio staUon. ·
The lower house Q( Parliament voted
313·287 Wednesday night to limit debate on the
Scott1i.h bill to 17 days and 314·287 to debate
lhe Welsh blll for 11 days.
juries were reported in RadloaaicL weather, sail terJDJnol~, bots and
Los Ang~es County tn~-=::::::=:::::=::!::::::::::::=::==:'.:::::2:;:'~2::==::::;;=:-::::--~~.!l:--~....,......:....~--~~~~~....:..-:--.:--~---,-!-...--:-~ the year ending Oct. 1.
says officials of the local
National Security Coun·
Inlormation about memberab.fp or
boating safety classes may bie'hld by
calling or writ.inc: Director ol A
lllary. llt.b Coast Guard DJ.stziet.
Oce•niate, Long Beacb.
telephone <W> ao-2211.
3 Meta Pr~•uaaed Dead
ASTORrA. Ore. CAP) -Three Coast
Guardsmen were presumed Wd Wednesday
as the Guard called off an ah: and sea search
for a missing training boat that had capsized
al the mouth of the Columbia River.
t;il chapter.
Council president
Robert A. FiMegan said
many elementary
schools reported that at
least two pupils ln every
class have suffered
serious skateboard in·
Seven of the 10 men on the training 19ls·
sion escaped from the overturned vessel by
leaving a trapped bubble of air for a lon1 UD·
derwater swim through a narrow passageway
run o( icy water. juries.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS8USfNliU
NAMllSTATBMl!NT
, no· •011-•no .,.,_ la dolno o.i ...
n•~'° •~ ,.,.. Ll<l\.AN HOI 1 lJll A~·
SOCli\ l ION, 4JO 2lna Strffl, flo•wPOrl • u ... cn, c..111orr\119Ml
<, ~l ... r1 11.¥1 Jr~ 4.lO .nnci ~''"'· ,.. ... ...,,, U.ath, Clllforn••'MJ
1 n1• b.,.,,_, Is conou<r..o Dy..., •~
01¥I01J\ll
(,, ~llAflrl Kiri Jr
ln" •'-~1 '"•'> toled wlln the
t.ovn1y C.lu• OI Or•\911 '°"114¥ °" N.,,•
t•lflbt't ••• ,,, ,
HA7•
f.luOI• •'-OrMlllO (OHi Diiiy Plle4,
hov 11,24,0.C. l.t.1'77 w~n
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
4"1 STATEMINTOF AIAHOO..MU4T
NOTICEO.CMSIO&.UTION OHISl.OF
Hol\U 1, ,,.,..by ~ ... n '"-' ---"CTITIOUSlllllHRHNAME
purPcit(eclper1NnlliC111ef"°'«'texltt· Tne 1011-lnO per-s ti.we -n·
lno bel-CARY P. POOELL end ea U.. UU el Ille llClll'-bUS>""I JEARE W.ALLIHdolng~-•·
der IM flrm-eftd 1tr1tot JERRE. SCHUYLER·OCIUGL.AS FINA"·
ALLliH JEWEU!llS •I 7SU Edl1119r, IAL SERVICES, 11SC 8"<11 blVO.,
City ef HllftUnggn -..U., Stale Of unli!>otc1n ~II, C..t11orn1a t»-te
c:.llfwnla, -M ttll ft NY Of JvAy, TIW f"kt/tiold 8vSlneu N...,. ••· .,,.,,,dl6.....,_.lllt(tllewttlldr-•lf,_, ••red lo .000.. w•• tti.o In 0r.,. uldtlrmotUJtYP. POOEU.. tyonM«e11 ... 1'1• r
S.ldbullN611\M,llncaltslnc.,clelt, Oouolai Hiii Pennoo, ~S2
llld"' Ille flll"'9 win lie condllcMd llY reasvre Ure le, HuntlftQ1on S.acll,
JERRE W. ALLEN, ..tioalwll lluolely OIOrnla,,._
,_sll:IM tor all t,_tlons of a.Id Stanley 5<11vyler Sfttldon, It O. Wl!neu, the wrllldr ..... P«!tlef' ,..... i: I, Pomlrel c.t>ter, Conn. O.Ut
lnglermlne'9Cl.-...t~tlleA!n. ,.,,, bus.,.u wn <on011etecl by a
T H I 5 P II R P 0 R T E 0 r•l -tne™'°p PAltlNEA~IP HAS Nl~lt COME Oo..oi.•Hllll-ennoo
INTO BEING ANO THE GIVING OF 111" •ta1•,,....,t wn llleo with lhl
TH Is NOTICE DOES HOT ly C1 .. •o10r-.eoun1yonNO¥•
(; 0 N S T I T U T E A N lier 10, IYIJ.
ACl(HOWLEOGEMEHT TO HU!
COHTRARY. OIWCl~ll,1'77.
C.ry '· Podtll
FR9t2 Publlsneo Oranoe c.o.u Detty Poot.
Nov. 11, 24, Dec:. 1,t, 1'77 >ltit-17
Publlslled Or111ti1 Cont o.lly Plitt ·-----------I Nov. 11, 19n '.
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITlOUllUllltUS
NAMAITATeMaNT
l,,. 1o1 iow1ng ""sen 11dOlne111n1. 1----------~Ml•: LIDO OP'TICAL. Ut Hospll»I RO.,
St• 10., Newport S.acll, t.tllf~nl• ~ C.mllo Bu110 ,,,_,., •Ifs c;
fltDta
F-l<blls-Oraft99 (Ont o.ll't' Pl!tt
"'-"· 11, z•. o.c.. 1,1, 1m ~n
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS IUIO•I" ~aTATaMaNT
Tiit fOllOwlng P«Mll I• dolno IMIN~ _ .. ,
l&tta PAO COMPA .. '1', 21 .. 1
Pot Decillion Delayed,
Medical Treatment V aloe Weighed Again
sovernrnent advtaory panel bu ~n•ci·:iuE WASHINGTON <AP) -A ' ( .., J
~oted to pc>Apone a deca.loa on ,~.,., , ,.
wbetber to allow marijuca to be ~reacrlbed for peraona wlth _________ ..._. ___ _
.tJaucoma or aatbma or ·drui·abu•• laws. Phy1lclan1 ~der1ot.n1 chemotherapy for cannot procdbe it except under
~ncer. tJahtly controlled experiments. u. The action by the Food and On• committee member. ~r u I Adm l n ls tr a t~o• 'a Cbarles R. Sebuster, a professor t ntrolled Substances AdtUc>ry of psychiatry and pbarmacoloo
mmittee will delay for at least at the University ot Chicago, said
ree monlhl any decisioQ 011' Wednesday the federal law is whet~er to Joo,,en reatrictloni..tn inhibiting research on medical
·rnariJuana. uses of marijuana.
(. Schuster was in a 4·2 minority
It, MARIJUANA IS. T:flEATED when lbepanel voted to study the
µ,.ke LSD and heroin in federal il'sue further.
.•
f oung Marines Plan
)• .
'Organization Meet
.,
West Orange County youngsters interested ln enrollment l.n the
IJJeach Cities Young Marines program, sponsored by the Huntlncton
Beach detachment of the Marine Corps League, m~ au.end an or-
·~anliational meeting Saturday.
The session will be at l : 30 p.m. in build1nf" 20 at the Armed
Forces Reserve Training Center, Los Alamitos, which was former)}'
known as Los Alamitos Naval Air Station. .
Youths aged 10 to 17, boys and girls, are eligible for the Young
'Marines, which includes a period of boot camp and exposure to
1JSMCllte. .
Despite the military emphasis, Young Marines encourage
~cholarship, athletic excellence, patriotism, community service
and high moral standards, accOl'ding to spokesmen Ron Seymore
and Norm Scott.
They are available at 868-2463 and 897.ar79 for information.
AMONG TBS WITNESSES
arauloa for me(ltcu use of
.marijuana wu Robert Randall,
a 29-year-old alaucoma tuff erer
who seta • ~ IQ,pply of pot
fn>m tbe~Un a ~of.
tu elfect Oil e:Je Pl'ellUR.
Alao teaUfylnf •as a represmtatlv• ~; Uie National
OJ-ean.llattoo ffW' the Reform of
Marijuana L•••. which
peUtioned the government five
years ago to allow medlcal uae of
marijuana.
NORML also favors
decrimloal.batlon of mariju,ana
for social use, but tbe l'DA panel
bu no juriadlction ewer that ii·
sue. .
.. THIS IS OU. shot. This is the
ball game for us, .. said NORML
lawyer Peter lleyen, :wbo woo a
federal court battle last spring to
force the iovenunent to coaskler
recluaitJiai marijuana.
. Tbe Juttlce Department's
Drue Enforcement
Admtnia=tlon opposed any change ln law, but an appeals
.court aal secretary of health,
education and welfare must de·
clde whether marijuana baa
medical value.
The panel, composed of
ex p erts frbm outside the
government, will make a recommendation for HEW
Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr.
CASHMERE
LEATHER LOOK
JACKEtS
WITH oa WITHOUT
'FUR TRIMMED
GOLL.AR
IASY~
LAllMASSOITMIMT
~ S1'YUS • COLOIS
SPORT ~
COATS
SP.ORT
SHIRIS ... . .
SPORT
COATS
JA~RUIY'S
UMSAm.TS
DRESS
SLACKS
....... $400
Doolaed 1'149 Reealled
Children in Nazi concentraUon camps, doomed to death,
left behind drawings of their captors. The drawing.,, on
permanent display in Prague, CzecboelovaJda, are tn
San Francisco for a two-week showing at City Hall. The
art and some children's poetry bas been compiled ln a .
book, "I Never Saw Another Butterfly."
DAILY fttLOT ~:J•
Children in cndes lbree
through eltbt are lnvlled to
partlclpat. in the foot races,
whlcb wlll be beld Dee. 10 at
WestmlnsteJ' Hltb Scbool, ac-cord l n g to Recreation
Coordinator si.ve Ensel.
Contestants muat report by
.9:80 a.m., brlnjln1 alona a
,parent GI' leCal '1&atdlan to lign
oeceuu:y papen to enter th8
race, wtdch wW rant• from a
half-mlletotwomlla4
Turkey n.,t wlnnen will re-
cel ve froaen holiday dlnn~r
turkeys a;s prizes. . ,
LFA 7600 SUPREME waslJ81'
gives you top featUres
at a rode bottOiJJ price
You'd expect to pay a lot morefort,,...terriflc •
features: 2 wash and spin IPMd• •"' atitomatlc cycles:
Normal, Gentle, Permt. Press and Knit• Energy.
saving water temp selector with 4 pushbutton
wash/r1nae combinations• MAGIC CLEAN•
ONLY
S269CJS
self-cleaning lint filter• • Super
SURGILATO~ agitator• 3 water-
aavlng load41ze eelectlons •
B1each and r1nse dispensers
• Choice of deco'-'or colOr9
•Sao-Pak Lalllldry Information
Cen• and mum rnonrt
•If yout Washer drains Into a •
laundry tub, pel1odlcafty chec~ the
drain stralntr, since lint accumulation
could clog laun"drytub draCn.
CHOOSE A MATCHING DRYER FOR EXTRA SAVINGS
BURKE'S APPLIANCE. w.s.r.-.. ...
1145 IAlll. COSTA MBA
PH.146 1672 • t7M734
'We Sell The Best I ServlCe The Rtlf"
Cntlf Aftlalll9 Ql1 ~ .•.
STIMULATES JOU8'SI mind•
HOUUC
MOK. fNllS. • '• -. tlW9P.N.
TUU..W..· .... ,.
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Th\ndaf. ~ 17, 1171 • •
FRIDAY SATURDAY SlJND,~Y
New heights in ceiling beauty · I did it myself!
Reach new heights with a ceiling of Armstrong tHe. Grenoble Now you can install a beautiful Armstrong floor
is a white textured tile with a clean, classic look. lnstalla-and take pride in saying 111 did it myself." It's
• tion is a breeze, tongue and groove ed~ogether easy and economlcal'wlth Armstrong Stylistic
smoothly. Install with cement or staples. 1 " 12". Place 'N Press tiles. Lots of exciting colors
Model #258. and patterns. Each tile is 12"x 12".
ARMSTRONG GRENOBLE CEILING TILE, ARMSTRONG STYLISTIC PLACE 'N PRESS TILE,
Reg . 35c sq. ft Reg. 69c sq. ft. .,
28c sq. ft. .. .... C) •. 48c sa. ft.
High .. flylng plane
This line quehty plane has a metal otloy
body with impact-resistant black
composition '1and le .. Comes
wllh regular cul Uat blade. Model#29~ ..
STANLEY PLANE,
Reg. 9.49
4.99
Enjoy wonderwalls In your home
J
-~ ~-.·
A measure of quality·
A 12' Stanley tape mo&Sure that le•tures a
1, • wide blade and powtt lock to hold the
tape at any dostred length. A Quality tape
measure that will De aoprec1aled by anyone
who uses 11 Model =P-312
STANLEY 12' TAPE MEASURE, Reg 8.99
4.88
For tacking around the house
A sturdy ta cker for all household }Obs -tacking,
upholstery work, eic. All eteel conatruetlon.
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STANLEY SCREWDRIVER SET,
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INSIDE: •Television
•Comics
~ittens
Thurlday, November 17, 1977
Boston Celtics star Dave Cowens couldn't
latch on to a puss from a teammate as the
ball goes free. Atlanta's John Drew (22)
and Wayne RoUins were defending in the
National Basketball Association tiff, won
by the host Celtics, 131·105.
UCI Cagers Begin Play
Anteaters 11angle With AWJtralian Team
-UC Irvine'& you-ng bal'lketball
team opens the season tonight,
faciog Australia's Melbourne
Victoria team at 7 30 in
Crawford Hall.
The Melbourne team dropped a
94·64 decision to UCLA Monday
night and fell to Cal State
(Fullerton>. 87-70, Wednesday.
Top players for Australia in
elude 7-0 center Peter Walsh and
6·1 'guard John Maddock, both
members of the 1976 Australian
Olympic team
Also on the roster are two pro·
ducts of California collegiate
ball -Brian Goor jlan (Pep·
perdineJ and Bruce Palmer
CUniversily of Pacltic). Both al·
tended Cresccnta Valley High.
UCI has ilc; leadinR scorer back
Sports in Brief
in senior Louis Stephens, but he
has been bothered by an ankle tn
Jury and may only play on u
limited basis tonight.
Seniors Kirk Christ (6·6J and
Wayne Smith (6·5), junior Steve
McGuire C6-5) and sophomores
Steve Rodgers (6-7 >. Brad
Carson C6-0> or Jack Sapp (6-0J
figure to be starters.
And freshmen Quentin Brown
C6-6) and Rick Jurk <6-4) will see
a lot of play, says UCI coach Tim
Tift.
Christ, Rodgers and Carson
saw a lot of playing Ume last
season with UCI while Smith is a
transfer from Portland State.
McGuire played at Rio Hondo
College last year. Brown IS rrom
Ba,slwre Returns;
Kings in 1-1 Tie
LOS ANGELF.S -No decision
has been made on whether UCLA
quarterback Rick Bashore, who
aurtered a broken rib and a col·
lapsed lung earlier thit "20llth,
wUl be able to play for the Brulnl
aaatnslUSC Nov. 2$.
Bob Lutz, 7·5, 6-3; and John
Lloyd ousted Mark Cox, 7·5, 6·1.
Also, FAdie Dibbs overcame
Jan Kodes, 6-0, 6·3, BUly Mart.lb
deteated Roeer Taylor, 7·6, 2-8,
8-3: and vtjay AmritraJ stopped
Keith ltichardsoo, 8·2, 4.e, 6-4.
~v.-et
Roosevelt High in Fresno and
Jurk is from Mira Costa High.
"We'll have a more ta•ented
team than we did last year <UCI
was 10·17 last season), but we've
also got a much tougher
schedule," says Tilt.
"We've been shooting the bail
well in practice, which is a major
improvement over the last two
years. Rebounding wJll be a ma-
jor weakness in relation to tb6'
people we're playing,'' adds the
UCI coach.
And the defense hasn't epme
along as well as Tift has hoped It
would.
"I'm disappointed with the de-
fense at this point. We're work -
ing more with the defense than
any other area. But this team has
the capability to play good de·
fense
"We have three general goals
we're striving for," says Tift.
"One, we want to establish
credibility, we want lo be able to
compete in 'our conference on a
credible level--epecially on our
own court.
"Two, we have the luxury of a
conference where seven of the
el&ht teams will gain the post-
season tournament at Anaheim
Convention Center. That's our
second goal, to set in the tourna-
ment.
"And three, we want to shoot
tor a winning season. And that
may be the hardest or our goals,"
says Tift.
The Anteaters open the c:o)·
leglate schedule Sunday night,
Nov. 27 at Portland U.
DAILY PILOT
Willie Gittens, the 17~-pound Fountain Val~y Hleh tailback who
has led the Barons to an undefeated. regular season with 2S
touchdowns, has been chosen Orange County back of the year by the
Orange County Sportswriters A.ssocia\ion.
Gittens leads a parade of five ttdt tea~ choices by the Barona
as tb~ domlnate tbf All-county selections as they did nine victims
durlllR the year.
Also selected on the first team from Fountain Valley are-
standout linemen Bryan Caldwell. Larry ,Budten and Al KOtAit, ln
addiUontoacereceiverTlmHolmes.
A hall dozen other Oranee Coaal area stars cleaned first team
honors-led by three·year, two-way at~t Bill GQtnpf of Laauna
Beach. Gompf, a candidate as a que~t;aclt and.linebacker, ~ade
it as a linebacker.
Mike Camp of Estancia <Costa Mesa) atgh wa.s picked at re·
ce1 ver. Newport Harbor High defensive end Jttff Bitetti ft'u honored t
and two Mater Dei <Santa Ana) lfiSh atars,nmnib,I bad Davtd
Gonzales and defensive 1ua.rd John Gleason wer• tabbed.
Greg Karman of Marina (Huntington tteach) was a1ao a first
team selection as a running back. . .
Lineman of the year is George Kenton of Servile <Anaheim>
High, while coach of the year laurels so to Herb Hill of Loara
(Anaheim) High , who coached his Saxons to the Empire Leaiue ti·
th•.
AU-Orange Couty
First Team Offense Rec Mike Camp, Estancia 195 Sr: T -Jim Donovan, Servile 215 Sr.
G -Larry Budgen, Fountain Valley 180 Sr. c -Steve Martin, Vllla Park 185 Sr. G -Chris Loftus, Troy 208 St-. T -Al Koenig, Fountain Valley 235 Sr. Rec -Tim Holmes, Ft>untain VaJley 20S Sr.
QB-Andrew Palee. Santa Ana Valley 200 Sr.
B -Willie Gittens, FO\llllain Valley 175 Sr. B -David Gonzales, Mater Dei 175 Sr.
B -Greg Karman, Mar10a ~ Sr.
Flnt Team Defense
DE-George Kenton. Servite 215 Sr. OT-Bryan Caldwell. Fountain Valley 210 Sr.
NG-John Gleason, Mater Del 205 Sr. OT-Dave Zeller, Villa Park 115 Sr.
OE-Jeff Bitetti, Newport Harbor 201 Sr. LB-Mark Ferguson, Santa Ana Valley 210 Sr. LB-Bill Gompf, Laguna Beach 198 Sr.
LB-Steve Longo, Loar a 215 Sr. OB-Ed Hollins, Santa Ana Valley 170 Sr.
DB-Grant Parker, Savanna 176 Sr. DB Tim Coleman, Servile 185 Sr.
Second Team Offense
Rec Paul Felix, Loara 207 Sr.
T -Terry Static, Troy 245 Sr.
G -Jim Ingram, Mater Dei 220 Sr. c -Je!!Heikes, Edison 205 Sr.
G -·Don Ediger, Sunny Hills 180 Sr.
T -Kent Tucker, Marina 205 Sr.
Rec-Brad Pedersen, Santiago 200 Sr.
QB-Marco Pagnanelll, Huntington Beach 193 Sr.
B -Robert Powell, Santa Ana Valley 190 Sr.
B -Kevin West, Sunny Hills 186 Jr.
B -St.eve Selvig, Brea 205 Sr.
Second Team Defense
DE-Jon Thorsen. Tustin 210 Jr.
OT-Lynn Jenkins, Los Alamitos 180 Sr
NG-Mike Brunner, Savanna 201 Sr.
DT-Jtm Hawn, El Dorado 225 Jr.
D E-Mit.ch Siemens, W eatminster 195 Sr.
LB-Jeff Bieller, VUla Park 222 Sr" LB-Rick Senteno, Los Alamitos 205 Sr.
LB-BrettHttnsaker, Sunny Hills 190 Sr.
DB"-StanShibala, Fountain Valley -180 Sr. l DB-Scott Forbes, Buena Park 180 Sr.
DB-Jeff Hyder, Edison 170 Sr.
Third Team Offense
Rec-Chns Dressel, El Dorado 205 Jr.
T -Bill Haley, Anaheim 205 Sr.
G -Doue Brockmeyer, Newport Harbor 201 Sr. c JohnS~ancik, Lowell 100 Sr.
G -Kevin Obymako, Estancia 205 Sr.
T Tom Hughes, University 201 Sr.
Rec Norm Johnson, Pacific a 190 Sr.
QB"·Chris Gratnano. Cypress 190 Sr
B -Robin Feeney, Lowell 170 Sr.
B Tracy Gordon, Sunny Hills 220 Sr
B -Mark Kahn, Villa Park 175 Sr
Third Team Defnse o'I"-Pat McKenna, Lowell 180 Jr. DT-EricJibUts, KateUa 220 Sr.
LB-John Botdan. Ed.lion 1: Sr.
LB-Bob Wood, Esperanza St.
LB-Ken Faul, Anaheim 195 Sr. LB--Don Barker, Newport Harbor 195 Sr. LB-Dan Chamitskl, Mission Viejo () 19!, Sr. LB-OavtdFaamausUe, SanUa10 lto Sr.
DB-Terry French, Los Alamlt.os 115 Sr.
DB-WayneKuparek, Newport Harbor 170 Sr.
DB -Bill McNurney, Pacifica 16$ Sr.
But the former Edison High
(Huntington Beach> star prac·
tlced with the Bruins Wednesday
for the first time since being in·
jured.
Bashore participated in a non·
contact practice and "threw the
ball w~ll." said a spokesman.
Bashore won't participate in
any contact drills until next
week.
LAS VEGAS -Dick Stockton
upset Jimmy Connors for the
third time this year, 6-5, 6·5
Wednesday in lhe WCT
Challenge CUp tennis match.
Also Vltas GeruJ<is downed
Roscoe Tanner. 5·6, M, 6-4 and
llie Nastase b~at Corona del
Ma.r's Rod J,.aver, 6·5, 6-'.
Miehigan's BJg 8 Game
Wolverine. to Make $5'151,000 Saturday
Bashore was replaced by
junior Steve 8ulclch or Newport
Beach a1a1nlt Oreaon State lut
Saturday. BuJd~h completed 10
ot 15 p tor. 1'0 yarda and on•
touchdown 1n a 48· ll victory . • ..,..~fi&NI ..
c.IHIN r.-fl~ ,
Griffith's -·}·
Decision l
Due Frida~
Gene Mauch has one year rj. I mal.ning on bis three.year coi..
nesota Twins, and while be • tract as the manager of the ~-~
mlu be'• legally obligated,.· •
leaves little doubt that be w out, ~
1 r l Tbe cautoroJa. A.gels are ip-
terested tn obtairting the servlCfS
or Mauch to manaie them tn
1978. His late rest.sin the hands of
Twins' owner Calvin Griffith.
"My position is DO dill•eat
than tt wu when the seasOn
ended," sald Mauch WednesdJy
from his home ln nearby Ranclto
Mlrage. "I told Calvfn th~t
while I waa lecallY bound to t.be
Twins for a.nothe!' season, I feltl
had fulfilled my moral obligi'·
lion.
"The premise on which I w.i
to Minnesota was that here wl
club ready to win, that eve ,
thine would be done to ens
that obj.olive," added MauCifl.
"The club hu now been decirt ed by the Joss of good players
in m)""'JOind the premise ts o
longer operable." '~·:
Maucb. ref(!rred to outfidcHh
Lyman B06tock and Larry His~.
who are free agents negot.iatiJ' g
with several teams.
Mauch and the Angels ll
probabl,y learn soon if the,. cE
get together in 1978. Griffith ·
formed the Angels Wedne&4~ e
would bold a staff meeting (odly
to discuss Mauch 's stat.us. 8e
will aet back to tbe An.eels •1
Friday with a final decision ~
whether Mauch will be aUo* out of the final year of bis
tract so that he can be~
Callfomia's manager. •
Mauch earlier told An
owner Gene Autry he unde •
that Co.lltomlo was consideri
managerial change atftl w
to discuss that situation lf A
first obtained permiaaion
•
Griffith.
The Minnesota o~ r air~
at first. then chanced h1I .
Perhaps h 's about to cha · s
mindaiain.
The Ante15 have oft~
trad a secood·line pttcber
alto lncJude some cuh in a lr
for Mauch .
.D OAllY PILOT
CdM's
Hubbard
Returns
Marttn Hubbard has returned
to the Corona del Mar backfield,
and .aot a ~t too soon.
The talented tailback Ls suffi·
ciently recovered from bis hip-
pointer injury to rejoin the start-
ing lineup for Friday night's 7:30
CIF playoff game against El
Dorado al Valencia High's
stadium.
Thul9d.tlf, N~ t7, tf77.
ROBIN CHARLES BRAD PARKER
.
Since Hubbard was injured in
the Laguna Beach game a month
ago, he has been replaced by
Arata HamawaJU, who took ad-
vantage of the opportunity to
average 5.1 yards per carry,
score t.wo touchdowns and roll up
238 )'•rd! on 48 carries.
Parker, Cba~les
But Hamawaki injured bis
knee. on the seeond play of last
week's loss to Costa Mesa. He un-
derwent surgery on Tuesday and
is lost tor the season.
CJl's ~Dynamic Duo
I •
Hubbard returns to the Hoeup
with some of the most impressive
statistics in the South Coast
League . He bas seven
touchdowns, a 7.1 average per
carry and 539 yards on 76 runs.
Far From ·ordinary
Corona del Mar's leading re·
celver, Clark H:wes, will miss
Friday 's game with a con-
cussion. He'll be replaced by
Craig Johnston, who moves over
from his flanker position to split
end. Bruce Batcheller will fill the
void at flanker.
Defensive. safety and backup
quarterback Rick Starnes is also
out with an injury. A season-Jong
starter on defense and one of
coadflt. Dick Morris' stalwarts,
Starne~ is suffering from a dis-
located shoulder.
He'll be replaced by Kurt
Brockman. the starting
quarterback Brockman played
defense last season. but hasn't
:-.een any action there this year.
Morrio;' philosophy 1s not to
dwell on 1nJurie-; and bad
forlune, but to concentrate on the
athletes who remain healthy.
"We can't fret about it,"
Morris suys "We Just tell our
kids we'll take up the slack with
who we have in there "
The Sea Kings, 6·3 on the
season, are e1g ht·polnt un-
derdogs against El Dorado. 7·1-1.
"El Dorado is al its best on de-
fense. It's line 1s big and tough,"
says Morris "They shut down
<'Verythi"¥s1de and penetrate
well. We k we can get outside
on them. th gh," ,.
Only one senior will be in the
starting lineup for Capistrano
Valley High Friday night when
the Cougars take on Mission Vie-
jo in the openjng game of the ClF
football playoffs
But of those underclassmen at
least two ~uartcrback Brad
Parker and halfhack Robin
Charles would probably be
starling for just about any varsi·
ty squad.
This dynamic duo has account-
ed for 18 of the Cougars' 28
touchdowns. Without them. the
Capistrano Valley offense looks
ordinary.
Friday's playoff skirmish a
cross-town rivalry since many of
Capistrano Valley's students live
within former M1s.s1on VieJO dis·
trlct boundaries 1s scheduled
for 7·30at the MV stadium.
A first-year ::.chool, Capistrano
Valley's varsity lists only 11
seniors and most arc reserves.
Thal means a lot or juniors arc
playing who might have found it
d lff1cult to crack the startin~
lineup at a school with a full
senior class.
But Parker and Charles don't
belong to that category.
Charles ha s sco red JO
touchdowns, seven on runs or
various distances. His 39-yard
and 33·yard scoring jaunts in-
dicate he's capable of breaking a
game open.
Charles also has an 82-yard
kickoff return to his credit and
two pass receptions for
touchdowns.
"He's an explosive runner and
overall, a fine athlete," says
Capistrano Valley coach Bill
Cunerty. "He can do a lot of dif.
ferent things for us."
Charles is a transfer from El
Toro, where his brother. Bob,
was a standout football and
basketball player. Bob hasn't
played football for Capistrano
Valley because he required knee
surgery at the outset of the
season, but he intends to play
basketball for the Cougars.
Robin ls a backup quarterback
to Parker, in addition to his
duties aa a running back. wide
receiv~r and defensive back.
But Parker hasn 'l needed any
assistance, except for a brief
span during the first game of the
season when he was shaken up.
The 6-0, 180-pound transfer
from San Clemente has made a
smooth transition from the
wishbone system of the Trttons to
the veer offenBe or the Cougars.
Parker has rushed for six
touchdowns and passed for two
others. On the season he has com-
pleted 32 of 80 passes for 304
yards, a .400percentage.
On the ground, Parker
averages 4.4 yards per carry.
That ranks second on the team
behind Charles, who averages 7.5
yards every time be takes the
ball. Charles has accumulated
428 yards on 57 carries.
"Mission Viejo has to be
favored in this game, .. Cunerty
says. ··But if Parker and Charles
have good games and we play
mistake.free football .. well, who
knows?''
No Changes for Sailors
We'll Do the Same ThingB-Pizzica
For their first CI F football be the passing of Craig Lyons to a
playoff game in three years, flcel of swift receivers, headed
Newport Harbor High's Sailors by flanker Wayne Kasparek and
will rely on the two main lngre-wide receiver Larry Higby.
dlents that got them there -a "I feel if we play our game,
stingy defense and an op·\ which is defensive·orlented,
portunisttc offense. '#we are explosive enough or-
"We're going to do the things fensively that we'll score
that have won for us so far." somewhere," Pizzica said.
~.ead coa~h Bill Pizzica said Newport lost to Servile
We wont make any changes (A naheim> 24-0 in a pre-league
because of CIF or anything " game that Lyons sat out due to an
That means the Sailors will be injury. The other loss came to
embroiled in a low-scoring batUe Sunset League champion Foun-
when they host Del Rey League tain Valley, 18-7. The SaJJors
runner-up St. Francis <La haven't had any breathers to
what we did or didn't want to
do," Plzzica said. ''We decided
we wanted to give it our best shot
and that's what we're doing."
St. Francis, Pizzica says, will
have a definite size advantage
over Newport but little else Is
known about the Knights.
"We saw some films and they
look big and fast," he says.
"They run a 5·2 de(ense
which is what we've been run-
ning against all year, but
nobody's done too much scoring
on them."
FOOTBALL
GWC in Low-scoring Tilt?
We Can't A.Hord MiAtakea-Shaekleford
When two 1ood football teems
clash, \he result 15 usually a low·
scoring game.
And Golden West College
coach Ray Shackleford fleures
that's what. will happened Satw'·
day ni&ht wbeh hi• RusUera
ballle Santa Monica Collea• for
the Southern C.llfornla Con·
ference tiUe atul a trip to next
week's Avocado Bowl .aaairult
Fullerton.
Both teams come into the Ult
with 5-0 circuit record1. II lbe
game ends In a tie, the bowl
represent.alive will be de·
termineli by a coin flip.
But Shackleford lsn't thinkinc
about a tie, although be does
believe it will be a low-scorin& at·
fair.
"I thlnk this game wlll be·
similar to o u r game· w1tb
Fullerton (a 13-3 Fullerton ft).
But we can't afford to malce the
mistakes Saturday nieht like we
did against Fullerton because
Santa Monica has .done a super
job of caplUUzina on offensive
mistakes," says Shackleford.
''.We've sot to do two thlnp.·
We've got to•eUminate mistakes
and we've cot to mak'e a con~
ed effort to run t.he ball,•• adds
the G WC coach.
Shackleford says Santa
Monica's orrense haa been very
conservative, but he qulcldy
points out the Corsair• have
some topak.llled athletes.
"Santa Monica really hasn't
opened up. They get ahead early
and they sit on the ball. But they
have a great quarterback, two
outstanding running backs and
some very good receivers. Their
offense is very capable."
Buhols Golden West's.
The RuaUen have scored 275
points um season, including 199
<n.s av rq•> In the last five
•ame1.
Golden West have five runnJng
bacu that have ruahed for more
than 200 yards-lncludlog
1tarters Steve Fo1e1 (7'8) and
Loren Micklln <•>·
And Jend tna balance ii
quarterback Blll Holst, who run.a
the option and puses equally
well. Hollt baa puaed tor 1,14'
yard• (5 TDa>. completing 79 ot
153 aeriab. >.nd he bu run for 2S>
more.
And what 'a more important,
11y1 Shackleford. ts the fact that
the RuaUers now have stabtuty in
the backfield. In.Juries have ham·
pered the GWC backa con·
slderably this seaaon, but the re·
turn or Mfcldin (ankle injury)
and the emercence ol Fo1eJ <•
freshman) I\&$ upgraded GWC's
runnlnc attack.
"And Holst has been outstand-
ing. Ue's completed about es per.
cent of his passes and be bun't
thrown an interception to COil·
ference play. He looaena up tho
defenae, whJcb ·ba&.-belped our
runnin11ame. •'
Pickford Recalls
'76 Embarrassment
Top-seeded team s in any
playofl aydttm uaually llnd
themselves ln a position of ta.n·
glin1 witb a patfle tn the flrst
round, buf Fo\lntaln Valley
Hl1b •s undefeated Barona find
themselves tn a po<lon o£meet.-
ing ,the laat team to defeat a
. Fountain Valley vanity. .
Coacth Bruce PlcUord 's
Bar ons clash with Fontana
High 's Steelers Friday ni&ht <8>
at Ora.nee Cout Collece .ad the
Steelers bout another tou1b de·
fenslve unit. Fontana eliminated
the Barons in the '76 playoffs.
But PicJctord says the Barons
have no qualms about the draw.
"We're clad we drew Fontana,"
says Pickford. "We might have!
drawn a Crespi or another team
from out of the area that we know
little about.
''But we have some knowl~ce
about Fontana and a bit ot a
rivalry going. They hurt us Jut
year to the polnl ot embarra55·
ment. .
• 'l would have bet you $1,000 to
a nickel that we bad the game
won when we punted out of
bounds on the ForJtana 4-yard
line with three minutes left. But
Fontana marched the lencth of
the field on t.he ground. We had
one ol the finest defeMlve teams
around, but in lhai drive we col-
Japs~.
''We bad two def~lve failures
all year long and that wu one of
them."
Fontana prevailed, 1'·10, and
Pickford says be expects Foo·
tana to field another defeMlve.
oriented club.
GWC Gains Polo Playoffs
"Fontana b very similar to
last year with Its wishbone of.
tense, whlcb we haven't 1een all
year. The ~ec~t to wiDnln1 Fri·
day nt1ht la that we have to get
three touchdowns on the board. t
think we 're capable of doln1 that,
but 1 thought we were capable of
doing that last year and Fontana
held us to 10 points.
LOS ANGELES-(';olden West
College will face San Diego Mes@
in the opening round of the
Southern California JC water
polo playoffs Tuesday at East LA
College, here.
G WC's Rustlers. seeded third in
the eight-team tourney, will meet
Mesa at 10:30 a.m. Mesa Is the
second place team from the
South Coast Conference.
Golden West and Ventura lied
for the championship of the
Southern Cal circuit.
M ctropohtan champion Long
Reach CC ha.'1 been seeded No. 1
"'1th Fullerton seeded second.
Fullerton captured the South
Coast title.
A second round will be played
Tueaday afternoon with the
championship set for Wednesday.
Only the top two teams will ad·
vance to the state tourney Dec.
2-3 al DeAnza College in
Cupertino.
.....,.C.111 ..... PMrllil9J ...... LAc.._I "'"9M,.,..._
9•.m.-1'111*"°""'" PIMOtf\A.
10:>0-Golo.n w.s. "''· s... oi.oo MeM. Hoon-\1.,.tw•YL P•lomM
1. lO uw. a..u. cc va. IUvenlo..
J-f.11li.11on-P~ '-' vt. Golwn WHlo s.n Olt90Mfta'-'· 4:JO-Ful_P __ -~ va. ~
WHI·~ OleQOMIM wlnntf.
•-\lenlll••PMomllr IONr "''· LonQ llM<ll-
IUveolCle'-·
7 ,JO--Vetltw•Petom# wi-va. Lone IHci..
lllvttnlcllt~.
.........., •• 0......
Cr•,.,.t will• pl•l'9Cf•I If, ll:JO. t, 2;20end II
ne<ttr.wrvS.lO.
''.Fontana doesn't throw much
and you have to overplay the run
a little bll because they are going
to try to shove the ball down your
throat. And Dell Cannady is an
excellent. quarterback for Fon·
lana."
Tim Holmes bas been sidelined
with a shoulder injury, but the
play ot Kevin Margerum and
Stan Shibata in the Sunset
League finale at Westminster
took the sting out of Holmes·
absence. "We knew we had five
~lltnl teceivers at the out-s~~~· say!I Pickford. ''But we
weren't counting on losinii Mike
Empting and Holmes ...
CIF VICTORY CIF VICTORY CIF VICTORY
->
l.L -u
>-D: ·o
Good Luck
.....
n -,,
< -!l
0 ~ -<
n -'ft
Caf\ada> Friday night at 8. IPe•k of, a !actor Pizzica feels
Newport hM allowed less than will be an advantage in the
nlae polnta a game, reglatering playoffs.
two shutout.a, giving up only a "You naturally feel more corn-
field goal in one game and allow· lortable goLng against a weak
lnc one touchdown In three learn but we haven't played any
others. ol those," he said. "I think we've
This Week's U
F o41tball Odds > EAGLES
< -n ~
0
~
~
But while the defense has been played as tough of competltlon as
the dominant factor in the Tars' any t.eam around."
7 ·2 season and second place Though they are only a second
floish in the rugged Sunset place entry, the Sailors expect to
League, the ofrense has been do well in the playoffs.
cominaaroundlateJy. "We bad a team meetlnf
jibe major weapon appears to Saturday and we talked about
Tritons to Pass? .
It May Be Necea1ary-Schalf
IL -u
>-c.=
0 u ->
IL -u
Love,
Pep SqD.ad &
n --n
< -a
:Ir -<
h ..
I.
CL I WATER POLO I HORSE RACING
Goal:
op Foe's
owerPla~·
"'-
When tile Mater Del Rich t!ODarcbs <Sanla Ana) face the i edlands Hllb Terrien Friday , gbt ('f:IO) al the VD.lvenlty ot
'tedlandl ln a first round CIF i Ol•yoff game, two teams of $ ~imilar stature will be setUlna ~their differences on the football ~feld.
•
•
' "We concluded the season by ~ f)lay!ng the way we thouaht we ~were capable ot playina. •• Mat.er
U>el coach Wayne Coch.run aays. ~•'Until the league be&an, we ~ dldn 't know for sure what had
J tone wrong.
' i' .. We haven't done anytbinc dif· S rerent but the kids have prac· c c.iced harder and the coaches
I ~ave done a lot better."
Alamitos Mes""' Edison Triumpfi
Racing In €11? PolO ·..4ctioft
: • Mater Del bas had a stingy de-
: tense, especlally in league
~ cames. All four league outin&s
~~ere decided by lesa than two
~ ~uchdowns and in none of the
$.1tames did either team score
., .pore than twice.
' Redlands has five shutouts and
I after its opener wlth Fountain ~ Valley, limited the next eight op. f ponents to 28 points total.
1 "We were really lucky to get
~ all of our injured players back in
t;ime for league play," Cochrun
, says. "We are·~ healthy as any
> team around at this tlroe of the
, season."
: The Monarchs will have to stop
• tailback Rick Tyler, a 165·
: pounder who has carried 152
: I times for 933 yards and bas
~1.f'cored 72 polnts.
(• Gene Larson at quarterback is
1 aJso an outstanding athlete, ac·
' cording to Cochrun. "He's a 9.8 ~ ~printer. a aood ball handler and
f throws well."
Cochruo aays the Terriers run
1 a lot of power plays at the tackle t positions, but also have the fake t power with the quarterback go-
• ing to.theoutatde. . ~ "We will have to commit a lot
~ of people to stop the power and
: ~his presents a problem in other
areas." Cochrun says.
Will the Monarchs try anything
new?
·'This is a reward for the kids
to be able to play in the
• playoffs," the coach says. "We
: 1always try to put in a new
: wrinkleortwoforevery game." . . . ..
Results
EDISON'S CHUCK CRAWFORD STARTS AT QUART!RBACK.
21-17 Predletion
Mater Dei Coach
Picks St. ·Paul l'OUllTif llACll -M ~, a ~ ..... a--.. ...... -.
Edison (Huntington Beach>
High'• Chargers enter the CIF
<Big Five Conference> playoffs
as 7\',-point underdogs Friday
night (8) when they travel to San-
ta Fe Springs to duel Angelus
League co-cbampton St. Paul.
Edison, however, bas the type
of team capable of putUng the
stops to the Swordsmen. Mater
* * *
f'IBtkM
Dei (Santa An") Hl1h coach =1..,.1 ....... : ... ::: t:
Way1net Cocbothbrunf lhsenttehia teamd ~""M:_~~' MO aga ns o eae ams an A1WrM-$lrll!llF•,R._...., offerstbefollowiniviewa: · ow.,..,.,._...om.,~
"Edison baa a cood ctiance to · , 8 tu$111t!-ow.H11t1e\..,.... win because of the way lt plays ta •._CTA ..,.,.. ,die A,....., ..
defense. To beat St. Paul you A91mt.,.._-...
have to play accre11lvely Uke ~:=~~a=Ed.itoo and you have to keep field ....,_POGO. position ln mind all the Ume. orn.M r,.,.
"Our game plan wu to keep . =:c,. ~' .,.. ~ !:::
! : Ruglf ed Challenge
St. Paul away from our territory. w;:::~:,~ u•
We had a goal of maklnf at least Amr•-.._.._r.~nw
two first downs on each a-,~0t'ftie~.v01W1~ ttflt, Tlllllll\ T..U,~lle1ft. possession.
"And you can not let St. Paul
intimidate you. The inUmldation
factor la somewhat of a myth. It
1s a decent stadium with /ood
turf. The fans are real lou but
you 're still pla.Jine a buncb ol lt
and 17-year-olda Wteanyooeelse.
Sc:.r•Klwel-l'Ntk l!dlo. -~ Edhon/s Defense on the Spot
• ' ' • ..
St. Paul <Santa Fe Springs>
Fligh is a 7'A.t-pol nt favorite to
in ake the V111 edJUon of Edison
• (Huntington Beach> High fool·
: ball theflrat non·wlnnlng team ln
! Chargers hlltory Friday night
· <&>. and considerine the facts,
maybe the spread should be
more.
Tbf Swordsmen of St. Paul are
Angelus Lea1ue champions,
boast an 8-1 record including a
victoJ')' over Hawaii's No. 1 team
(St. Lout. Hiah> and enter with a
history of awesome defense.
BB Girls Wm
Seeded Oranae Coast area
1&lrl1 volleyball teams Newport
. Harbor, Corona de\ Mu and
• ·Laguna Beacb will have home
.. aialgnmenta Saturday even1ne
followlnc CIF ftrlt round acuon
that found Camarlllo. Huntinston
Beach and l.<Jft& Beach Mllllkan
wlnnlna at home.
Camarillo took San Gabriel,
15·12, J.5.U, thus invades idle
NEpartHarbor. · Un"°'1 Be~h was at bome . . an 4.alt Saddletfack Hlab (San· · ta Atta) a tJ..C, IM setback and
'tnvades Ocrooa del 14u.
And LaJUDa Beach will bolt
. .MlWkananer the lati. bocked
• . M•~ Del <Santa An•> oU In . 'Uiri• tet.t.15-tt, 9·15, U.9. . •
Edison? With a 5-4 record and
48 juniors on the aquad, a lot of
attention is being focuaed on 1878.
And the Chargen must play
without starting quarterback
Frank Seurer, who wu lost for
t.be rest of the season wltb an in-
jury against Huntington Beach.
Without a potent running game
to keep some of the pre.sure olf,
the Cbargen enter with Chuck
Crawford at the controls.
On top of all tbil the came ii at
St. Paul where the Swordsmen,
with talent and intimldatton. ran
up a 39·came 1'tnnin1 streak
before it was enapped by
powerful LA Banntns in "16.
"We're just fOinl to have to
play our beat and let the pl~
fall," says Edison coach Bill
Workman. "I hope our ktda are
not too afraid and keep their
mlnds cm the aame.
''When you flnllh third in a
lea.sue YoU deserve whoever ~
1et In the draw, but 1 don't know
if enybody dHUVea St. Pw at
St. Paul."
Workman HY• his defense may find it.a ~ahest cballenae
of tho year d~ to St. Paul'• •bill· ty to use IO many ,Pla)'t.
''St. hulnmsJuataboutevery
otten•e 1n the book. They can 1wltcb to ao many dlff erent
thlD11. They art VU)' venatlle, ..
aa11w~.
''Rick Valensuela cu break
the long one, but you can't key on
hJm ioo much, or they'll kllJ you
with the fullback. St. Paul's de·
fense slanta a little more than in
the past and St. Paul def eodera
are bard to knock down, they
stay OD their feet eAd keep IDOV•
in1. "Nut to Slrvit.e tbeY have the
best secondary ln tbe Jupe and
lt 11 very MO'tllive. Tbey Uketo
lllUmldate tlie receivers wltb ai·
sret•lve b1U1na. '' II there a weak link In the
Swordtmen's armor? .. Yes, ..
1ay1 Codinm ... St. Pauh tick·
inc game ts not too 10od. But
watch out for lta punt reblm
team. They are super on punt re-
tura.. They returned, tbree acawt LCJi1I Beach Poly and
tbey 1et tlP a are.at picket, usual. b' toward st. Paid'I bench. Ont
of the Udnp youdc>nttwanttodo
U P,UDt.
'I thlnt st. Paul wtll wtn, 21·11.
because Ecllloo'• runnlnc aame s. .not th:!f,oOd· Baal If Ed1lon c• nm the ltcanwtn.''
Coebnm aod b1I llon&rcbl.
wbo are at Redlalldl la the ftnt
• round ol the playoftt. loat to
EdUoD ('2-Zt) fQ -a·leacue K· Uon and at St.; Paul (14.f),
Costa Mesa Hl&h and
Ediaon CHunthlctoo
Beach> Hieb elimina*l
tbe Jtmptre Leaaue en·
tries from the CIF 4·.A water poloJ)!ayoUs lo the
first round ot action
Weclnesday.
Overcoming sloppy
passing, the Costa Mesa
Mustangs overwhelmed
Los Alamitos, 14..C, with
a 6.() surge in the HCObd
quarter at Newport
Harbor Jliab.
Edison, meanwhile,
won a di.rtller at Loara,
14·12, with a four·1oat
outburst In ttio eeeond
overUme period.
Colt& M ... runner-up
f n the South Coast
League and ranked ninth
in CIF, t1layed un-
lDlpired polo and atruc· elect to a z.z ftnt quarter
a1alntt a Los Alamltoe
team that flnlahed
aecond ln the weak Etn·
plre Leacue.
But after betn1 chewed
out by bead eoacb Terry Bowen, the Mustan11
pulled their act toaether,
boldln1 the Griffins
scoreless for lOIAI
minutes and •corlna
ei&ht &oats in that spu to turn tbe game into a
rout.
ud It w• IW4to1et dl> for them.
"But •• be •ulckly ,J added, •1w1lbeructyto •11
play Saturd•1· 1•11 1-.• parantee )'OU t.bat." I "I
The Muadenf: b8d bet· ter be. The~ Hcond"11 ,
round same la at Cbaf· 1 fey. rankedllxUi1n ClF. '
Edison'• TllP Sp•eth •
fired in seven &oa.11. lh·
cludln& tl\ree ln over· time, to had the
Cbargera to tticlr flnt~
ever CIFplayoft victory. .
Spa•tb matched a .. _. ..
Loar• ..... the first ..• .. We dldn't get up for Oftl'Ume,PldodUdthen .:.
them and we played like to11ed lD two tn the '' •
lt... Bowen said af· aecond extra tbree-• · terward1. "We knew mlnuteltama. DaaHo(f:
they weren't tOo good ~an and Doaa Pl~ord, )>
. each licMed a ~ ID tb4I , •«
Alamitos Entries
fblaJ frame, I f Ed1iOo driWi UM No.1 • 1 aeecl lD the pla1ort1.
Mira CGetaClf M~ , :; Beach. for lta second ''4 'roundmatcha.t. ......... 11• -..-,
122 ,,. ,,.
"' llf
. •W W:reeding , 4~
• Reem ts ...
Sf OMLVPfU>T
1111 ~ ... l}\'i
IMNINO
1:001~0 NEWS
c;u~A~
"Who'•Who'' .
I MIOICEY MOl U Q.U9
==r"&TMEEr
V1UAALEOAE
&:30 m BEWJTOHm
"Bu11neea, 1ta11en s~··
• ADAM-12
"EuyRap"
tlD FREEHAND SKETCHING
"Emphufe Of Size"
'1:00 9 CBS NEWS I t.::8EHCY ONE1 Gagef~fsfMan tme*'covM
policewoman. 8 MOVIE ** . ..,..,. Secret World Of
RepUie."Oocumentary Narrat-
ed by BIU Bum.Id. (2 hrs.)
• THE BRADY BUNCH
"Amateur Night"
«!) THE ROOf<JEB
Time la runntng out '°' a sld< llttte boy who will die eoon wttt>-
out a bone marrow traneptant.
9ZOOM
Qt!) NJ MAN BEHAVES
"lnterp9rton•l Communlca-•
tlon" Ill ABCNEW8
8:301J MOVIE ***in "The Son• Of Katie
Elder'' (Part 2) (1965) John
Wayne, Dean Martin. Four
brothera delve Into the deeth•
of their perent• and the loea of
their ranch. ( 1 hr .. 30 min.)
• MY THREE 80H8
"M..nege And Stun'' 9 OVEREASY
Miltotl Berte; streee: eupermw-
~et shopping; the Senior
Gteanera of Secramento.
Qt!) GROWING YEARS
•• Preec::hoOI Experteooe"
Cl) CBSNEW8
9 MERVORIFFIH
Guests; Tony Bennett. Ronnie
Schell.
7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 UARSCLUB
fJ ABCNEWS
0) ILOVELUCY
"Theotet"
CD ADAM--12
The offlclta c:owr the wa\er-
front.
• MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT
8!> EARTH, SEA AND SKY
''Earthquakee''
()) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 D $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE 9 NEWLYWEDGAME D THE GONG SHOW
THE 8AAD't' BUNCH
Jan beoofw • vtctlm ot her
own pr8CIJcel jotte when she
tel<• Oreg'• pet mouae and
loete "-• LET'8 MAJ<l?AWL
• 21TONIQHT
~~ ()) IN 8EAACH OF-
··~ Secreta'' al MATO.GAMEP.M.
I Vef• Mllff pl•ya •Widow who begfna rehtng Mr
pHt when hw nlec•'• boyfrtend provea ~en ....
act do&lbl• of her long.d•ld hvlbancl on Bwnllbr
JonH, tonight •t 10 on Ch•nnel 2.
1:008(1) THEWALTONS
The tranquUlty of Walton's
Mountain Is abrUptty shattered
when Grandpa lnvtt .. a U.S.
Army unit to camp there while
the soldiers are on maneuvers. D SUPERSTUNT
Lee Marvin wtll hoet a dlaplay
by Hotlywood's top stunt peo-
pfe and guest appearances of:
Emeet Borgnlne, James Cean,
James Cobum, Robert Contad;
MfJJta Ok:t<lnson. Jene Fonda.
James Gerner, Boddy H8dcett.
Lee Ma)ort, Burt Reynolda.
Robert Wagner.
8 MOVIE * * "Territory Of Others" ( 1970) Adwntur• Story. Story
of the ltttle-«.nown deeert wtld-
llfe found In the SoothWestern
corner of the U.S. (2 hrs.)
8 0 WELCOME BACK.
KOTTER
"Kobr For Vice PrlncJpal" Mr.
Woodman'• oontrect u vloe
principal Is up for renewal, but
the SW..thOgs want Mr. Kotter
to have the Job. G JOKER'S WILD
• CARO\. BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Gueete: Ruth Buzzi, Richard
Crenna.
ti) MOVIE **1n "The Wrong Man" (1957)
Henry Fonda, Vera Miies. A
married couple suffer great
Ratings Guide
<Movies •re ret.O ~eordlnQ to bo•
ottlc• ettendence. Mowie. tor TV ,,. ludOld by• critic.>
* * * • -Excellent • * • -Very Good ** -Good
·~ -Fair * -Poor
hardahlpe when the man ... .,,....
taken tor a thief who ,_,,btee
him. (2 hrs.) e ONCE UPON A CL.A88tC
"Robin Hood" Robin end hi•
men encounter a ~ In
which the Shertfre hMY)' tu•
foroe the chMdren to atarve.
(Part 7 of 12)
G WOMAN'TIME ANO CO.
Women Who•• bfeeklng bar-n.a to Jobe once conelder'9d
"for men only" are lnteNlewed.
8:308 (!) WHAT'8 HAPPENINGll
G CONCENTRATION «D NEW TRUTH OR
CON8EOUEHCES e THE BEST OF ERNlE KOVACS
Percy OoYetonalll: the gtr1 In
the tub: U.S. apace program
and TV westeme.
Qt!) OVERE>SV
,,... Mftford: ...... auper-
mart<et ehopplng; the Senior
Gleanerl ot 8acramento. (R)
9:00 8 (I) HAWAII FlV&O
Steve It thrust ln1o an lntema-'
tion8I .ttu.tlon when • tennis
ew enncunc. her Intention to
defect to the U.8. and a staff
member of an eatem Europe-
an teem Is murdered.
fJO BAANEYMtUE.R ·
"The Chase" Whll• Wojo
careens around Fun City In e
commanct..ed cab, the detec-
tlvee back at the precinct houee
have to cope wtttl an underco\'.
81' lnveetig9tkJn by internal I
attalr8.
G IRONSIDE
''love Me In o.c..nber .. «D MERV GRIFFlH
Gueits; Tony Bennett, Ronnie
Schell. Keely Smtth, Sam
Butera And The Wltne1111,
Rk:t<Moea
• 8E8'T OFFAMIUE8
"AmbltJon" After Jam••
Lathrop_..,. • dellga ceaipeti.-
Dad's Tribute Revived
1Y ID Air the Immortal,ity of Mary Whit,e
W ASIDNGTON (AP)-"Mary
Wblte, • • a two-hour television
special about an efferv~ girl
who died in a riding accident in
. 1921, l• baed en ooe of the most
widely read editorials in U.S.
journalism.
-Miry White was the daughter
of WiWam Alleo White, editor «
the Emporia. Kan.. Gazette for
49 years, from 1895 until h1I death
in!Mt.
A TELEVISION SPECIAL
about the relaUoaaJUp ol I ather
and 0uPter and about Mary
White's J&.year life will be broed·
cast on the ABO·TV network
from 9 to Up.in. Friday OD Chan-
nel 7. White. lmown u the Sate ~ Emporia. wu one ot tbe m~
fluent1.al edilon of bis Ume. The
day aft« bfs daQl.bter WU killed
while riding her borM. he wrote
an edUclri81 about her for th
Gazette.
Tbe Anodltal PnflS picked it
up, and it wa1 prl~ttcl la JlewlJ)apeis acroes the country.
Wblt.wratea friend:
• ..
·.
121>0a 1W1UGHTZONE
"S~Play'' m FOREVER FEANWOOO eMCMe ** "The Men Who Lqha"
ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION '
NBC 8 8:00 -Supentunt. Lee Marvin boats tlil 'ntriguln1
look at Hollywood •1
mo1t dangerous rrofession. Guests·
11clude Ernest
BOrlDIDe. James Caan.
J•mes Coburn; Robert Conrad, Angie Dickinson, Jane Fonda,
~ Majors and Burt
Reynolds.
KTLA 8:00 -0 Terrtt.ory of Others ...
A documentary
exploriD1 the desert
wildlife in the Southwestern United States.
NBC Unhappy
With Ratings
Of f,pdfather
\
I
I
by Brad Anderson
,
~
> ' I I ..
Record Roundup-
When buying speak-
ers ...
I , CASEY
i
I !
t
I l t ' il .. • , • • •
•MOON MULLINS
• . .
" . •
,,
11
GERIATRIX
we w~ 'OJ
AND THE= L..ITl'L.E:
l.ADY 10 ~ CUil
suesr~ R)R DIN~
AT THS TREE ltlP
fli:)OM1 O\..D SUWY!
~
ll·r7
= .C .
it's always best to
choose what appea1s
to you .
byTom~tiuk
Personally ,I prefer
brown ones.
by Ftrd and Tom Johnson
•:i.::=-WJtf, SWNfL? I'M TRYIN' --
GORDO
10 REF~·· IT W>f>JUST
A LITTLE 8,AO(SLtt>tNG •
SUOOON
YOORC1t/N
SACK181JSTZR.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
11·(1
MOTLEY'S CREW
•
' You MEAN "SHE DRoVE
1t> iH£ SUPERMARKET"
L ...
DAILY f'ILOT ••
t t
by Roger Bradfield!
~la.utJ'
1HATTOTHE
tNSUmJCE
COMPANY!
bV Templeton and Forman·
by G&IS Arriola ·r·aDAY'S GIDSSIDID 'VIZLI
by Harold Lt DoUx.
.
ACROS&
1 Lifting
device 8Sklndi... .... , () OrMll ieu.t , ....... font
arnee ...
15t<lndot
aprlng
19Anctent .....
lllOftflt 11 "Whlt't lft • .. "~°" lhe-·--20--·~
21 Gamble
22 Engraved •IOn• 23San···
OblaPo 25Crop 27.Aftnoy
30 FOf ,,,_I !or
Julie 3t Corpulent
31Plant
33G•nnem ll*p 3'Un'-wl\ tlmt>er• 31Move
laterally
381iwtnltd
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land 401araeti danoe•
• DOWN
I
I
-DAILY PILOT Thur.ciay,Ncwember17,1971
'Close Encounters'
Dick Cavett and Teri Garr, one of the stars of "Close Encounters of
the Third Kind," attend premiere of the movie at the Zieglield
Theater in New York. Proceeds from the premiere of the science
fiction film will go to the Cancer Research Foundation,
~ ar Coming Closer
For Walton Family
By JAY SHARBUT't
LOS ANGELES (AP> -It's an odd
thing about "The Waltons," that gen-
tle clan of the Virginia hills. If you
don't watch the show much, you tend
to think they 're still In the Depression
era.
But last week's episode had them
pausing to hear the war news from
Europe, had one Walton boy home
from National Guard training and
another wishing he could become a
'Royal Air Force fighter pilot. •
AND TONIGHT, a family crisis OC·
curs when Grandpa Walton invites
Army units on maneuvers t.o bivouac
on his land. (Channel 2, 8 p.m. >
In short, that distant war in Europe
is coming closer and closer for mem·
bers of the durable CBS family series
creat~ by Earl Hamner, who grew·
up in the rural town of Schuyler, Va.
Last season, he says, the series
combined the years 1937-38 "because
we'd just about used up every aspect
of the Depression and we didn't want
t.o start repeating things.
"AND SINCE THE Depression
always had been the villain, we felt
we needed a new villain in the form of
World War II, which would be
especially threatening to a family
with that many (four) boys."
As mott viewers know, ltlchard
Thomas, wbo plved the oldest son,
John-Boy, left the series Cler Jut
seuon. But be still ls mentitoed by
the famllJ in various episodes this
year, Han:mer saya.
At last..nport, John-Boy wu In New
York, wotldng for The Associated
Pr.eu, 0( .all thlnga, and wriUng his second ~~!.
• ' RAtlNElr, 54, WHOSE hit series is .,
based on hia memories of growing up
in rural Virginia, says he's keeping
this season's shows in a period just
before the start of the draft for
American men in 1940.
"This is because we don't want to
lose any of the remaining boys quite
yet," he said. "And when they're
drafted, we'll work the stories around
them -.vben they 're home on luve. ''
11 "The Waltons" is renewed for a
seventh ~n. It would then dnl ~th the Pe l Harbor attack and
.\lDerl.ca's Into the war.
BUT HAMNER SAYS the focus will
~m aln on the family, on the impact of
the war on the Walt.ons who stay bonie
in Virginia, and won't directly follow
the young Walton men through
military service.
"No, we won't do that," be said. "I
think the l'eason people like this show
is the famlly unlt, the atreaith they
sense in this family in that particular place."
He grin.Qed when it wu suggested
the series may well keep rolline along
unlll another generation of Waltona
faces the Korean war.
"l'M NOT SURE we'll ever get
there," Hamner said. "Someone once
asked me, 'Could we keep it goins to
the time John-Boy becontes a writer
in Hollywood?'"
Perhaps John-Boy might~ven write
a series about a family called the
Hamners?
"Yes, and set it in the bills ot Studio
City,'' chuckled the writer, who's
lived there with his family since 1961.
"But I don't think I'm physically
strong enough t.o keep 'The Wellons'
going that lonr."
'Serious Flaw'
In NBC News
Do_cumenttµy .
CHICAGO CAP) -The National
News Council haa ruled that an hour·
long NBC Newa documentary on
radtoacttvt waste was "seriously
flawed" in reportint two instances of
possible radloacUve harm to persons
and animals.
The council said presentation ol the
material in question showed .. no
evidence of cause and effect. . . " and
"would seem t.o be an indication of
scare tactlcs, beyond the limits or
sound journalism."
HOWEVER, THE COUNW. "ap-
plauded the intention of NBC in bring-
ing this substantial controversy to the
attention of its televtalon audience"
and found unw81'Tanted otber tOIU·
plaints that the program lacked
balance and perspective and "resort-
ed to emotionalism and show-bl& ,Sm·.
micks.''
The program entiUed, "Dancer!
Radfoactive Waste" was aired 1an.
26.
I
\
..
1.75 L. (59.2fl. oz.)
REGUlAR PRICE
•13.%5
REDUaOTO ·~D.99
Stagram:s V.O.
1.75 L., (59.2fl.oz.)
REGULAR PRICE
$18.49
REDUCED TO .
~·-750ml.
(25:4 ff. oz.) ~
REGULAR PRICE
$7.99
REDUCED TO
S6.99
Benchnmlt<
BoUlllOn
$Z6Q750ml.
(25.4fl. oz.)
(25.4 fl. oz.}
ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION
QUART .
REGULAR PltfCE $J~50
REDUCED TO
S6.99
Seagmn:s &trn
~tlin·
1.75 L. (S9.2fl. oz.)
REGULAR PRICE
s10.99
REDUCED TO
""
sg,99 SCI' 1.75l.
(59.2 fl. oz.) •
"wcwrnt.~•·uaulLlll.tTWIOlt. ..... WGWl'U CIO'fl'l~ic;\l -A IUll.IOflGOf.RAWnf.m• tnca. IONOOf.D!llUCtortc. 11Sll1ll,....
• Wl'llft rworro • IDTTUI "NG t. ll'l'!M. .. , .... .,. • ,.,,, 1W IUllMT CtCll, 11 ruu IU.. PIOOf. IMPOfflt rr ~All lllTlWll COWlolf.
"wllnCDIOT mA. MW ROii IO .... W8Hll'I lfllClllall mfuc:.,y STIAIC1IJ IOUltlJI 111' mt. • PNOf WOW! llGllllln '1Wllltt, If C .
' I ,
l
INSID : •Ann Lander:s
Spike Africa: 'It's strictly non-political.'
lStanding Room Only . .
OCC President Bob Moore has taken the open office
to heart. As a matter of fact, he doesn't have a desk.
By DENNIS McLELLAN
00llll!~il,l'lletS.-C
• A visitor entering Orange Coast College
President Bob Moore's ofttce once was complete·
ly taken aback~ven more so than most.
"Wbere•s your office?·: he said.
"Thia," replied Moore, "is lt."
Moore smiles at such seemingly M1<le re·
marks about bis offJce decor. It is, admittedly~
not what one expect.I tn the w~ of colleg& PffS\•
• dents'offtces. · /
Absent is a ma.salve, ostentatious desk.!:.':be
· • has an inconapicUOQS stand·up desk. There i• a
.• couch and chair for wben he waots to sil or chat .
with vlsitorl.
Nearly absent, in fact, are walls-th& sD\,all
office is nestled in a corner.of the administration
building near the entrance. '
ANYONE INTERESTED IN knowint wbat
the colleee preaident is up to merely bas to lQOk
into his omce through one of two large, ground-
level windows.
Bob Moore bas really taken the open office
idea lo heart.
"I Uke this arrangement," says MOore, seat·
ed on the couch. "I don't want a desk. I do think
they are a barrier in conversaUons."
Moore be,an using a atand·Up desk-
actually a type'9'riter demonstratfon platform-
years aio when be was worldna on hLs doctorate
at Stanford .
When he b«ame OCC prestdent in 1964 hls
office lo the old adminJstratlon bUilaing bad "a
rather pretentious desk in a very small room. I
felt lf we just didn't have that desk in th.-e we
could have a more telaxed atmosphere."
Re-enter thestand·UP desk.
THBEE YEARS 0AGO the new adinliilitia·
lion buildingwubwlt.
<SeeOFFICE. Pacea)
His title, says Spil}<e Africa, is strictly non-political. 'I'm
in charge of sea serpents, mermaids, tides, cu"ents. '
By DENNIS McLEUAN 0t 1.11e o.11r l'Helt4aft
The ruddy.faced old salt sport:lni a -bite
goatee and blue Nprtb Sea pilot's cap was
perched on a stool outside the bayf~ont
restaurant in Newport Beach.
Hls hands worked expertly. tylnl the strands
of fish net twine that were formlne into a
macrame belt.
"I'm Spike Africa. the P.resident of the·
PiJcific Ocean," he tells a curious vts!tor. The u.
tie, be explains, has been handed down in his
family since 1749.
"It's strictly non-political. I'm in charge of
sea serpents. mermaids. tides anct currents. U
you want to make a good trip to sea you've got to
see me and get a permit ...
Spike Africa cracked a faint smile, lodied .
another pinch of Copenhagan snuff behind bis
lower lip, and continued his work in front or the
Rusty Pelican Restaurant.
The Seattle man, who is "enjoying the last
quarter of my 72nd year," did all the macrame
decorations inside. He also made all the
macrame for the other restaurants in tbe West
Coast chain owned by Pete Siracusa of
Capistrano Beach.
WBEN NOT DOING odd iof]in Seattle or playing bit parts in movies-1•1 wu a wino lo
'Cinderella Liberty' "-he travels the different,
restaurants where be works for a eek or two.
'•A Jot of people stop and talk to me,·· he
says, not1n1 be learned to tie 1mota as a youth
~w4>11klhg on sailing ships.
e.flshed an aced black-and-white snapshot
tjve-tPast schooner out ot hts wallet. e's the first ship I went to sea in m 1924."
He spent most or his life at sea and lo logging
camps, he says. He also fished in Alaska in the
early days, was manager ot the Seattle Yacht • •
Club, an inspector for the ~asury Departinen ...
and anavalofflcer
' 'T "IT HASN'T BEEN dull,'' be aa~ in sutn-
mation. "I can't stand that. There's two woi\b
we don't -Uow ln our house. One is retirement 1.....
and the other ls $enior citizen.••
Spike a<Uusted the pieces of twtne. wbicb ·
were nailed to the wooden railing and fastened to'
a "belly~" a device atta~ed to his belt. It-»,
he says. his ''third" hand. · • 1':·
"Now we're goint to make a llWe 1~
run." he says. "We're iolng to hook it up and tie •
three knots." •
His fingers work quickly, forming knot r i
knot. j "Yeah, It's an art P.racUced by.seamen ·
me see, what's my speech-6eamen, priS()nen'.
and lWlatics. I do it t.o keep from losing my llrlrul. J .. I have-a spiel: This may look like a mocl.eni
synthetic. But it's actually shrunken umbWc~
cords of dancine maidens from the headwatei
of the Nile, rafted down river on a raft of &old
crowbars that comes to me at great cost
human life and treasure ... •• · •"
SPIKE AFRICA SHAKES bis bead. ''OnJ.Y.
I've got a million ~ them. That's why 1
hoarse. I ·v~ been entertalnlng for two weeks.
"One guy asked me where I Uve. l wd I 1i
so far out the mailman stays overnight...•• ,
Having warmed to bis visitor, Spllte ad~--~-.
be ·s not really President ot the Pacific Oceuf'\i
His brother-"he was a fun lover"-used to aench
him large letters festooned with seals. ribbon$
and stamps and addressed to the President of th•
Patific Ocean. Thenamestuck: . •·u·s a fun thing," he says ... It doesn't buri
anybody and nobody was taking care Qf the-
oeean. I've been working on banning oil tanker&.
~ <See PRESIDENT, Page a) 111
\
·~"',. .....
. " . .,
LtFESTYLE I ANN LANDERS
Coru.puter .Mlbut to Move In
-. , . a VI g COOK thouaaJid.i .of c&Jc\&lattona PtJ' ffcODd, •1t·a wltb UM computer souiet.hlnu>eople can do ~ ..... ~.,.. Utce an automauc pUot," says UridamOod. without IOpblaUc ted knowl.clg~ thlro'a
Oetrelidylortbieraoft.befrteijclljtom. 0 Vou n1uro out Abead of ttmo what You not,oln1tobeanyrev0Juuon;•Undamood
puter. want done lri4 )'OU make thlt up into a at· 1at • ''That'1reallytl\emaJorproblem." •
A computer that turns your Upte on and quence o( 1tep1 ••• Tbat-.couUtutft a pro· · Joseph'and.oUler expertll 1ay the band·
off. protects your home, balf.DHS your aram. You feed it lnto tbe compu\OI' and held c&lcufatt>T bu done a lot to help people
checkbook, takes your pulse and h.,_ pre· pre11 th• co button and lt goet and it doel (et over thelr fear of comput.en u "'Bil
pare your break.fut. A computer you tan what. ,-ou tohllUodo ••• " Brother" machinea. "Wo've really totered
learn from or play games wlth. A cpmpuw Ead c. Joaeph. a futurl•t tor SPtlTY • the era of tho friendly computer:· saya
you may not even knOIV is the,... Univac Computer Sy1t•m•. ••1'1 ''What Joteph. "People tru1t them.••
You may own a computer al~•dY in your we're 1~ at 11 ·eaibclddlna oomput.n Llndalriood aays chUdren -who have no
pocket calculator; °"you may bave o~e ln into tbtna1 ••• to make tl)ose devlces pr~onceived opln1ona about com~en
your microwave oven. Or your HwinJ .1man:• often are more ready to fCCei>l ,,;them.
machine. Or your autocnobile. You au1y be able to tell the device what to ''Thln11 that u. alraoJ• to me an com-
To many people, computere are huge, do simply.by talldn& to tt. Votce-eontrol of monplaco to my kids,· be says. "lt just
mulli·million dollar devices used to send comput..a already la belnl tested In some takes tho culture a whUe to aaaimUate. You
men to the moon. The computer is the thine oreas such u prison security and Joeeph may not be able t~ teach an old dol new
that fouls up your bill. But the recent de· 1a1d lt coull2 be in the home wlthln the tricks, so you wall until the new do1 ~omes velopment or the microproeesaor -a tiny • deeade. along."
low·cost computer with the capability of a "You could awaken some mominC five or Rlcbard F. Brown, president of the Com·
room·size machine -has chan1ed that pie· 10 yean hence, speak a few simple imlr\lc· puter Store Inc. of Cambridte. Mass.,
ture. The microprocessor is replacin1 elec-Uons rt0m your bed to your toastei-. coffee whldh caters to computer hobbyists, aays,
tronic and mechanical parts of dozens or pot and frylq pan end walk into the kJtcbe.n "Anybody over 35 is stJU petrified by com·
objects, paving the way for the com-minutes later to a fuJly prepared putera. It's a foreian tecbnolOfY because
puterizedhome. breakfut,''Josephwroteinarecentpaper. people weren't brou1ht op wtth it. It'• a
In less than 10 years. you1l find some "The HJl\e computer that's wired into han1over of when we presented tbe com·
limited·use computers costina under $10; the walla Of YoW' house and built to rec·, put.er u a maaic brain."
m ore complex systems w111 cost little more ognize only your voice will turn on Utbta A 1rowtng number of people apparently
than a good stereo set does today. when you walk into the ldtcben and tum are overcoming t.bls type oUeu, however.,
Computers will be used in the home in them off when you leave. It alao will tum and are buyin1 full-fledged computer
two ways -first, as part of another device the refrt1erator off wben YC>U leave for 1y1tema for personal uae. Storea Uke
and second, as an independentaystem that work and tum lt back on before anytbln1 Brown's are multiplying. Thero are ·
can be programmed to do any one of a defrosts. Your furnace and &Jr condJUoner magadnes for computer buffa and special
variety of things. will respond to tbosame computer. . . " eichlbltlons. A recent "Computermanla ..
"You 'll find computers in everyday ure Joseph said that by the early part of the show ln Bolton drew thousands to a thrff.
within two years in that there will be com· next decade, apeclal·P\ll'POSO comput.en, day dJapJay ol computer equipment, boou
puters in things that you have in your designed to carry out only one function, wQl and lnfoonation.
home,·• s ays George E. Lindamood of the cost ln the area ot $5. A more complicated Wayne Green, a Peterborou&b, N.H.,
National Bureau of Standards. "You may system to perform several tasks, wlll run maeazlne publisher who or1antzed the
not recognize it as such. You may not in· from $100to$1,000. sbow, says lt was deslcned to appeal to the
teract wtth them in the sense of a computer The development of voice-control or eeneral public as well as to the hobbyist.
because they11 be part of another device, some other simple method ol telllna the Tbe show was advertis" in 1enenl
but they will affect how you treat that other computer what to do could be a key 1D de-circulation newap~rs and ma1utnea.
device." ., termining how fast tM~omputers move in· GrQt.) predicts that the computer will
Jeff Leff tries out a personal computer as salesman watches. A computer ts basically a machine that to the home. "Until they (the desipers and have "i veey profound effect on the home,
. follo1'_~ human instructions, ~akin• engineers> learn to mate the lnterae~ buainess and partlc~arly women."
··Be Careful Driving in DlinOjs · . ••• Carole Renick.
<From P~eCl) M lss Renick 'a other lnteresta in·
elude pl•Y1nl the &Ulta.r and thrte,
backpacklng, racquetball, ftcure ·
skating and sewing. At. El Toro
Hlth Scboo11 abe ls president ol the
Chamber Choir, senior class
treasurer and tecretary of Glrls
League. She has worked ln eom,
munlty theater, and last year she
played Eltaa DooUWe for a b1lh
acbool pr:oductloo.
DE AR ANN
LANDERS: Since you
live in llllnois you will
probably be ashamed to
print this letter, but I'm
going to give il a try.
According to the Na·
J llonal Safety Council , IJ.
hnois drivers are very
Aaia
Lallclers
nearly the worst in the dangerous state to drive
U n i t ed States. i n. Ne w Mexi~o I s
'Massachusetts gets first second. The reason for
• place -or last, depend· this is that people tend to
:ing on how you. look at it. drive faster in rural
A Boston driver has to states because there are
, pay ~ a y~ar to lns~re '.more wide-open spaces.
a medium s1z~ car with Guess wtucb city bu
. a $200 deductible clause. the most accidents? It'$
<That means the owner Houston, with Detroit
o( th~ car ha~ to pay for se cond and Chicago
the f1 ~st S200 in repairs.> th t "d . The mos t
A Chicago driver pays dangerous time or day
,a'?<>ut $526 for a po~lcy fo r driving is between 4
with a $100 deductible p.m. and 7 p.m. The most
cla use. hazardous months are
Wyoming is the most December and January.
<From Page CU
ow a couple of them who like to drop in around
'nner time wtth a bottle of Red Mountain. A bol·
-tie of wine I can afford -it's the dinner that
wipes me out.
And have you noticed lately, that instead of a min Inviting a woman out to dinner on the ftnt
date, he uks instead to meet her after work for a
drink? Times are tough.
Of course. there are always the l\lYI with tho
expense accounts who ask you who you want to
be when they sign the check. I 1enerally reply,
"Cleopatra or Napoleon." Napoleon usui)ly
throws them off for a minute wblle l decide ~ wheth4'dtey have enou1h lnteartty for someone
·who ls used to eattn1 bu mt spaghetti and drink·
:tng cheap burgundy.
: But there are some things that at. atlll free; ~ike walking on the beach. listenln• to the
01bom. rldin'" a blc)'cle and read.lnl. l've bffn
vi1Jtlng the local library a loUately and theothe.r d~ 1 even met another •lnale wbo wu lootiq
tor "War and Peace." Anyone loold.na for 0 War and Pe~•" can't be all bad.
So, may~ someday, I'll walk in to aff my
taxman wltb someone dangling qd my arm and
he '11 •mil• at me for taking bis advl~o . • . . But
ldoubtlt::
add, "Seventy·nlne per· wives. They may be sur· Renick, "brou&ht home \ti• •P-
cent of the accidents are prised at the re,uJta. -plicltlon from the mall.' Miss
what traffic police FORGOTrENWOMAN Renick was tecor\d runner up last
call 'fender benders'-DEAR WOMAN: \'oa year and .. had so much tun that l
and only 0.3 lnvolie loss dlda't uk for advice but decldedtodolt acain ...
of IHe." (Tbat's en-you're 1oln1 to 1et l' She feels that paitfclpatlon b\ cquraging!) anyway. SADce being re· this type of event "helps build self
D E A R A N N membered OD your blrtb· confidence, and It sure lookl nice
LANDERS: Today is my day means IO mucb c.o on a college application." Sbe says
birthday and as usual, you wily oot ''"" tbe py abe likes belnl ebaltenaed, ind the
Most accidents occu r the clod ha~ to nan over a break aJld remind ltlm competltlon "maket you be the
becauseadriverrefused to the neighborhood aweek .. ldvueeTYOU bestpenonthat)'OUare.'' -drugstore to buy me a ml&bt be tarprlled at &he Mias Renick carries a 4.0 arade
to yield th«? right of way· card. He forgot. You can reaaltl. Or woald yoa point avera1e and plans to major in T~e number two cause -trnagine bow mu.ell I'll ratber keep quiet and let music therapy. She has applied at ta¥~!t~~eft drivers in enjoy t~e card under him forget so yoa cu put the Unlvepily of the Pactflc, USC
the countryarelnKeene, su ~h. c1rcumstanc.es. blmoathedeleulveand and Calllomia State Univeraity,
N.H. and Sioux Falls This 1s the fifth year ma make him sweat? I bow Long Beach .
• row be "f<>f&O~" I'm loiAC c.o be called a "It'• a new field over the put 10 S.~he reason 1 am writ· I hope every husband traitor c.o my sex for Ws years," she says. "The therapist · · who reads this will re aotwer. but It'• exactly uses music as a medium to help the ing thaa letter is because • · mentally and physically ban-
She and her parents, Mr. and.
Mrs. Wllllam E . Renlct, anH her
slater, Brenda, 14, mov~ to El
Toro a year and a halt a10 from
Raleigh, N.C.
A YOUf Dally Ptlot
c.nbe
Recycled.
o.c.c ........
Oflld1tt cent.,
fot COct• ...... i happen to be a statistics abillzthed tb~t {a woman s tlle way I feel. dicapped and ·" ... urbed ...
buff and thought maybe r 8;Y as mportant to __________ _:=~=-=:\l<=~==::....-----~~~~~~~~~~=~ others who read iou her. Its the one day ln
might like to know it the year that 11 hers and r· au' tte Knit • Debby of California • Fred Rothch.11 pays t.o be careful it they hers alone.
plan on driving through I k n o w m y
I l 11 i M knucklehead will never
llO 8. or assa· cbanoe. butmaybelcaa R ' F hi The store with the ~H1b~Nfx 4j,~ s • -get the messa1e over to
DEAR PHAN: It pays other husbands wbo do ae s as ODS fashionable labels
Co be carefal no matter want to please tbeir ._ ..
wbereyoadrlve. Q) ~~e b.l~LI sa~J;11~ :a:=e~ ----------... '.~ ~~ -r-1...,1 11111*4r..-...
yoar atatbtSc. and they n.611D Jiii · •
are rll1I& OD. I WU told to .......... ..........
RllAlllEUS
0
Come enjoy a
fabuloua brunch
tit The Regiatry
every S y!
ERMA BOMBECK J HOROSCOPE
W ASIUNGTON (AP)
-Esther Peterson a·a1s
she la coaVi.Dced that tbe.
drive ror an lndopendent
consumer frotecUon
agency wil succeed,
despite recent setbacks.
"I'm not aotnc to HY
when,'' she adds, "but I
certainly think in tbia·
Congress that decisions
will be made."
Mrs. Peterson ls Presl·
dent Carter's special as·
sistant for consumer af.
fairs. Her mission, she
explained in a recent in·
terview, "is ... to help
get this bill (establishing
f a consumer agency)
through Congress."
That job is proving
more difficult tban most
people expected earlier
m the year. Both houses
of Congress passed
similar bUls last year,
but, in the face of a
threatened veto by
President Ford, failed to
produce compromise
legislation.
lbat the coneumer'a she baa been In
voice ia import.ant and a W aahlnaW>n alnce the
growina realization in late 19309, ~ wu •llll·
bu1ln•t1 that con· tilDt director of ecluca-
sumeriam can be proftta· tion for the Amalaamat·
ble. ed Clothlne Workers of
Comparing the con· America. served u the
awn.er movement to the union's lobbytat, wu an
drives tor orgaf\laed assistant secretary of
labor, civil Tights and labor under President
women, Mn. Peterson Kennedy and was vice
satd, "My feelln& now ls chairman ot the Preal·
the consumer movement dent'• Commission on
is tbe next of the popular the Status of Women.
movements . . . People When, ln 1964, Presl·
who s~ that the con· dent Johnson created the
sumer movement is on post or special advtnr
its way down, I think, are for consumer affairs, be
missing the slfOS on tbe named Mrs. Peterson to
wall. I thJnklt'a quite the the job. She held the post
opposite. I think we're for three years, later
just beginning to sur· served for seven years a.a
face ... Change takes a vice president for con-
time. You have to have sumer affairs of Giant
patience." Foods in Washlnaton
Mrs. Peterson, 70, bas and in April, was back
plenty of experience in in h'er old job at tbe ap·
change and time. A polntmentofCarter.
native of Provo, Utah. Leaning b_~ck in a
Writing is lonely.
•
chair tn ber office ln ttio tnf and that•• what I
Old Executive Offtee wantedtoprow ... Bulldln« next to tbe Conawnera alto have
WbUe House, Mra. cbanaed. Mrs. Petenon
P.etenoo reflected on tbo eatd. "Tbey •re asklot
chaoses that have come m u c h m o r e 1 o -phl1tlcated ques-
w .. Just, 'Get away.• It
wu, '1bat bad woman.•
It was always, •Defeat
•••~. Deny every-thhis'.'' Acceptance of con·
aumerlam did not come
"until we be&an bringi.ba
industry 1o and •howtnt
that there was a com·
monallty of problems
and it could be helpful
for them to understand."
Later, she said, her ex-
perience at Giant Foods
helped show "that con·
aumerlam could be good
mark~ and wu com· patible with profit mak·
..
an elevator where a re· and yell your order into a me. . . ! "
With Carter's support,
backers of the concept
predicted victory in 1977.
They now concede they
would lose if the issue
came to a vote today.
Mrs. Peterson said the
reason for the problem is
twofold.
"Number one. it was a
very safe vote for people
in the other admlnistra·
lion because many peo·
pie who voted for it knew
that the president would
veto it ... and a lot of
those people changed
when it became a reali·
ty. · · They changed, she
said, "because of the
second reason, which is
the extremely strong OP·
position that has come
from part or the business
community ... ·•
l guess I never re·
alized how much until I
found myself saying to
my tropical fish yester·
day, ·'Whatya wanta talk
about, Lester. the
Panama Canal or Liz
Taylor's Avon lady?"
E .....
... Welc
cording told me to please clown '1 mouth. That nia ht as my
stand clear of the door I drove ~ and waited husband dialed the doc·
and face the front. I said for Jack to ape• to me. tor, tse cot a recording
"thank you" and a man Nothing happened. I from the medical
moved nervously to the opened my car c:tOOr and answering service that
other side of the car. kicked him, fiaurtnr h' said my doctor was not
Wedding and ~ooo•·
mtnt cnnmmcemtnt• nm
on Sundal/ in the Do1ly
Pflot. ForrM are QVCltloble
at all Dm111 Pilot o/fjeH or .
by catl1ng lhe Features
IHparl~. 842-4321.
To ovoid diaoppotnt·
rnent. prospective Wide•
are remindld to hove their
wedding atones, with o
biack-ond·whUe olourl o/
the bl'ide or o/ tM C91£ple.
to tM Feature• Depoz;t,; mm OM week ~/or•wlj'
~.
She believes the trend
will tum around before
the end or 1978. She said
there is a growing re·
<.11izalion in government
When the fish surfaced
and blew a couple of bub·
bles, I said, "I( you're
going to talk dirty. I'll
call Estelle."
The phone rang twice
and Estelle said,
"Thanks for calling ... "
"So, what's happen·
ing?' ' I asked.
"At the tone will you
please leave your name
and phone number and
I'll return your call."
·'This is a crisis
center," I said angrily.
"Your crisis is ready."
I dialed the number of
another friend. "I'm
so rry," said the
operator, "but that
number is no longer in
service. If you wish as·
slstance, please remain
on the line. . . •'
"Thank you," I said,
"but my mother doesn't
like me to talk to strange
recordings.··
I got on a bus and went
into town. "Hello there,··
CAN YOU SPARE
60 MINUTES
\ ... a week to clecr
your skin problems?
11'
• ACME • WRINKLES
• DRY SKIN • • LINES
• OILY SKIN 1 • BLEMISHE.'
MOM-SURGICAL
muscle toning and contouring
will start with your first visit!
d/ Cj/ott ~eJi12e '(Jlro~
t!Yaluuzl1!! 6/Joulhfi<I fJliin
C .. llor .. f• ...... TOOAY
Yamily
SKIN CARE CENTEB
It was the same all had a •bort in bis mouut. · on .call but it we wlahed
day. lfltwasn'tarecord-Nothine. Flnally, l threw to leaft our namt and
in& telling me what to do my arms around bis· number bis associate
I said to the bua driver. it was a person saying throat and yelled, "You ·would call us.
He pointed to the slan somethin& mechanical. litUe creep. You think J fixed him. I put
tb•l aaid, "No talk.inf It was late when I aot you 're better tban Lesterontheline.
permitted lo the bus home so I climbed into
driver." the car a_nd drove
When I arrived at the. through a drive·ln where -:iiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiii~~~iiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=~
department store. 1 took you bane out the window
(.___H_o_r_o_s_c_~_p_e _ __,}
FRIDAY• NOV. IS
By SYDNEY OMAR&
ABIES (March 2l·Aprll 19): Situation that
bas been "banging on" wUI be finished. Lll)ra ls
in picture. Aries ls impatient. Look bebind
scenes for answers.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20): Friends bold
serious discussions. Remain cool, interested and
neutral. Those who argue today can be bosom
close tomorrow.
.GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Listen and ob·
serve; gather and analyze data. Refu.se to be
rushed, cajoled into decision. Aquarius, Cancer
perlOllS figure ln scenario. Accent on prestiae,
civic duty, bow you relate to those in authority.
CANCER (June 21.July 22): Htabll&ht
versatWty, sense of fun, abillty to enlarge, to
shake otr shackles. Gemini, s.,tttarlus fieure
prominenlb'.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Tie loose ends, at·
tend to detail5, be tbol"OUlb. check fine print,
read bet9.'een the lines. You aet valid information
concerntngrentals, rates, lease!!.
vtaGO (Aui. 23-Sept. 22): Be perceptive
enough to know wben to be quiet. Accent on
partnerablp. contrad, marriage. Gemini, Saclt·
tarlus figure prominently.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-bct. 22) ~ Low·lleJ approach
brings best results. Obtain hint from Vlr10
mesaaae. Make adjuatments at home, correct
safety hazards, cbeck electrical outlets. Your
health and bulc Issues dominate.
1 ffQ)U'IO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Abltert. in· trlpe dominate. Romance ls In picture. but.o ta
wilbfJ&l tblnklDJ. Be realiaUc about people,
places. Piacel. Vireo indlviduala oommud at·
teQtlon.
8AGm'AJUt18 (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): PracUcal aft.its. bard·DOled attitudes prnall. You aet
more for l)X'(fduct. goods -and there also ls addl·
tion&l ~ aDd responslblllt.y. Older In· dhi4u ~ally on yoar aide, appean gruff.
CAPBJ.ca.N (Dec. n.Jan. lt): Movement. chane~ 4eeltlona, Ylslta. calla and u.n.tque meuagea dommate. Arlee, Ubre ftpre prom-
lnontlY. Stirk to nvmber 9. Refuse to be sad·
died wlth problem• not•ri&htly)'OUI' own.
AQUAUVS (,Ju. 2C).Feb. 18): You tnake
1lcnified~covery. Thia could involve contact.
contract, affair of beart. Accent on wbat 10'J •
own, valuables, mOQe)'. Partner or mat. appllell
pressure. · · •
• Pl8C£8 (Feb. U.~b2>): l'ollowt!u"oqlr
on ''lntultlve teellna ... ~ abOv• pettJ detalli. office Polltlca. Aciuarhd~ ~t_.,F Leo hi·
divlduals eiou1d be mvolved. Stick tO DWDber U.
It HW.18 Ii JOU bb1MM,·yoca are CStdicat-, •
ed. fttJ')t. paa~ tn~ ctnmatlct. Mti&,. lJbra .,.._ plat IDiPona:nt rolet m your life. , You bav~,gone lntO bulineu or uaum.ed added
reaponslbtllb', ·Md BeP~ber lndkat.ed U 70\lt moet~mcimb.
AAA SV. • 10
M5· 10
A 5'h • 10
• 3lh . 10 c 5. 9
Every man's f avoritel Hend·sewn, gen-
uine piocc.eain conatrudlon • .'. made by
the f amcMJs Ba JS hand a • : • lhey er• light
... comfortable end
long wearing ••• M 9lh • 11-13
A 8Yt • 12·13
• '7lh . 12·13 c 7 • 12·13
0 6 • 12·13
E.7 . 11'h
Weejun Brown •
or Black
33.96
HOUSTON,(AP> -The price
increue expected to be approved
next month by the Organl11Uon
ol Petrol.,._m Exporting Coun-
tries will boost the cost of U.S.
gasoline and beating oil by 1
to 3 cents a aallon, oil Industry ot. ficlala say.
A.a OPEC prepares for a Dec.
20 meeting in Caracas,
Venezuela, reports from lhe Mid·
dle East Indicate that the a.
~aUon cartel is planning to im-
J)OSe a price Increase ranCiol
from 5percentto15 percent.
Business -
MOST AtrrHORITIES believe
the Increase will be s percent.
reflectlng lhe recent decline in
the worth of the dollar, the cur-
rency with which OPEC mem-
bers are paid. Claukar Meets Deadline
J .C. Burton, general manager
for crude oil supply for Standard
Oil Co. of Indiana, said Wednes-
day that the U.S. price of
gasoline and other r e fined
petroleum products would in-
creue by 1 cent a gallon for
every 5 percent increase im-
posed by OPEC.
The 3,oooth unit in the series of MQM-74
Chukar target aircraft has been delivered
on time to the U.S. Navy by Northrop Corp,
Los Angeles. Two Orange COunty com-
panies provide eqµipment in support of the
Cbukar program : Parks Electronics Co.,
·Irvine,.manufactures electronic converters
and Supreine Catting• & Patterns Co.;
Anaheim, makes the castings. • ' , . ' '
•'The Increase should work its
way through the supply system
in 45 to 60 days," said Burton,
here for lhe annual convention of
the Ameri can Petroleum
J.nstitute.
"BUT THE HEAVY supply
situation right now might delay it
a bit more," he said.
Appeal to Strike Appears to Ga~er ~ore:e
Inventories of crude oil and re-
fined products are at record
levels, resulting in a short-term
glut in the midst of the nation's
long-term energy problems.
By Tbe Auocla&ed Preas
A call to unite and strike has
gone out to the traditionally in-
dependent American farmer -
and there is evidence he ls U.sten-
ing.
Hake It Water
Unhappy Driller ~ts · GaJJ
WALNUT CREEK, Callf. -<AP> -George and Gayle Chlngas
discovered a sizable pocket of natural gas beneath their backyard
the other day, but "l have a hunch this may make me a poor man,•·
Chingu 1ays.
Chingas, an orthodontist, and his family becan digging a water
well after growing Ured of coping with the 200-gallon-a-day raUon
here in the drought-weary San Francisco Bay Area.
Not a drop of water was fowid. "
BUT A WORKER WHO l.JGHl'ED a cigarette toucbed off an ex·
plosion that sent names shooting 40 feet in the fir-the gu was dls-
tovered and the worker 's hair was siniect.
Mud cascaded onto the family's yard, home, driveway and
' sealed the garage shut. The family moved into a neighbors' home
for a night and a day for fear that even a spark could ignite another
explosioo. • ~
The ct* ot drll1lnt tor Wff was "up in the t.hod:Sands," but
with the discovery of gas. lhat cost went up even higher, Mrs.
Cblngas said, because of special precautions that bad to be taken -
llie sticking a 30-foqt pipe J.n~e drilled bole IO that gas fumes
~ waft over the Chinaaa f\ome Instead of into it.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -When possible ~ farmtq projects
the 1ovemor ol Oallfornla meets off theCallfornlaeout.
"1th Japanese bUllnesamen and 'l'he governor said be wu in·
Ruslan olftclals, what do ~ _, terested 1n tedmlquet denloptd
alk abou\! . · by the Japeneee to utiltie waste lt wu crayfish and raisins materlals in the raising of
this week, part of what Gov. Ed-crayfish and other commercial ~und G. Brown Jr. said wu a seafQOda.
tont1nuing effort to ''stimulate Secretary ot Buatnes1 Dd
Ute state's economy to provide Transportation Rlch,trd obi.;' Silberman aatd later there-was a
• "hisb pl'Obabilit:y" thi lappeae ROWN AND A aroup of would locate ocean far~ pro-
apan11e lndaatrlalllt1 met here jects 1n tb state.
diJCUN, amoas other tb.ln.p, -•
Th• appeal comes from
American A&rlcultlll'e, a group
of disgruntled farmers in
Colorado who say they are tired
of selling their milo, wheat and
com for leas than it costs to pro-duce.
"WE'RE WOllKJNG for one
common goal -100 perceot of.
parity fOl' all products ~at we
produce," said Dale Schroder, a
spokesman for the fied1Ung
Jl'OUp.
"We ask for no sub&idles;
we 're wtlling to take our chances
with the elements. But we waat a
contract from the govemment as
.to bow much any individual
farmer ls expected to produce," ~esaid.
The movement to unite
farmers appean to be spreaclini.
F•rmer1 in Washington,
N'ebraska, Kansas and Georgia
have staged marches and "trac-
torcades" to call attenUon to
their pllahl.
••WE'RE GETrlNG really
strong in about 30 states," said
Schroder.
"And I think we'll ban a really
good turnout on this thing. I feel
we 're going to come out of tbla
with support like ~ou wouldn't
believe."
American Agriculture bas
'Damed Dec. H Utltrike· day.
Farmers have been aall:ed to
withhold all produce troin the
market and to boJcott all but•·
aential soodl after that date.
"WE'RE NOT GOING to buy a
damned tblng," Schroder said. -. .
_.. ~....-.--P .,., _____ ...._.......,. ......... ¥-r-
WASIDNGTON (AP) -CoiiatrlicUon. of ftft' boui• Jumped J.t I*·
ceni iu Oc:tober as the houstnc ind~ ~ytid lta bUt montb In lour
nara. tho Conim~ee Depart.men\ lias reported. •
N6w house8 were at.erted at an a.nnu81 ra~ ot2.tl mlWoa unttt. the
btsJ\est rate aln(e 8.27 mUUon fn new homes In M11 im
Building pe1_tn1b tor tho month
' roae 9.3 percent to an aiulual rate
of 1,85 mUUon bociSet, th• mo1t stnc~ a t .05 million rate fn June
1973.
n&E llOVSING Industry said
October con.1trucUon was
pJrticUlarly ~ for • month
when building usu .. y begtna
tralllni olf for the winter. The
Na Uonal A11ociatlon of
Homebuilders previously ba
forecan a slowdon in bo\WJllll
at the end of the year but,e
lta predtctions for 1977 hou.slng
1.95 million houses, the biH~
year slqce 1972, wben !.38 millloo
bulldln,p were constructed.
The houstni report was one ol
two economic hldleatora re·
leased Wednesday that showed
stron1 economic activity. The
Commerce Department al.lo said ·
personal income of Americans
rose 1.3 percent ln OctobeJ', the
biggest increase ln aeven
months. A 7 percent federal pay
increase and an increue ID bow'·
ly earnings of man~f acturtni ·
workers contributed most to the
increase.
HOWBV.,a; covernm.eni ~Jll~et ~ue to give out con-llkUDI eeooomic aymboll while
retail ule1 l'Ole a atrone 1.1 per-
cent in Octoba. Tbe .F~eral
ReServe Board announced T\.tes..
day that industrial output WU Up
a sluQiab 0.3 petcent. T'1e ad·
minlltration is counUn1 on a
1U1ht upturn in the •conOD:l)'
after a dlaappointing 1uinmerr.
Homebuilders wer•
particularly encouraced by a re-
cord UilS mllUon starta la one-r amlly homes. an lnerean tram 1.52 mUlion ln September.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe
Civil A•ronauUcs Bo•rd hu
given Western Alrilnea approval
to off~ cllacciUnts of U to 31 per.
cent on coach Iara on certain
fHehts between Ancboraae,
Al11ka, and U c:IUJS In weatern states.
Tbe cltiea are Seattle;
PortJalid, OH.; LOI Anaelea, SU\
Francsico, San Dle10, Palm
Spdpaa and Ontario In
Callfomla; Rerio and t;u V4111u
ln Nevada; Salt Leko City, and
PboWi.
STOCKS/ BUSI ESS
Thur ay'•
Clo in« Prices
NYSE COMPOSI'fE
~ lilt! P-l~ 0.. 0.0. "'"'·· . ._ ... ........... p.a.•"" 1.a. n -4'I
"''" .. • lot nv .. a 121111 ••••• ,.. '·:T·· , , ........ =~ J:f::. ~ ~~·~ =-A 1 II 12._+ Ml
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. . (
TRANSACTIONS •
.
DAILY PtLOT • llu'ldlY. Nowmber 17. 1977
Wmela Wallet
Se&son Head.8
For New Boom
B1 JORN CUNNIFF AP ...... ,...,.
Hold onto your wallet. 'Tb the seaaon to be merry 1n ~~ • • · stores abd all the ln1enuity of the merchaDdlaSn1 tratwnl~ · • · ·'
la designed to make you and )'OW' dollar welcome. -· 1
Late report.a auaeeat that WI may be an exceedlnaly •·1
• •
1pendthritt Cbri.stmu. Rotan sales for the year are toint to · " · ·
top $100 billioo, and somethlna like S'1!S bUUon of that la lilt~· ~~ "1
ly to be added up ln Decembor alone. Joi' :.•'
INDICATING TUE TAEND, OCTOBER sales leaped
1.8 percent over the previoua month, one of the 1lroncest
sbowlnp of the year. Unlike ln some years, merchants
don't have to set a spendlne mood, but merely prolona it.
Conaumers seem to be in an ebullient mood. Credit is
the mixer for the holiday cocktail, and consumers have
been adding to their wtaiment borrowing al a rate ol $2.S
blllion a month, bringinc'\be tot.al to about aoo billion.
Does that fiaure frilbten you? It
fri1ht.ens more than a few relallers, and
some bankers too, but the truth ls lt
amounts to just 17 percent of disposable
personal income, or l percent below the
record set in 1973.
Should a sharp economic downturn
occur it seems likely that some or those
bllls might be late in being repaid, but
f~w economists expect such an event to
take place. Meanwhile, repayments are ..... k"".
said to be satisfactory.
Despite the complications, retailers eeneratty are
pleued to assist in the accumulation of consumer credit
because, as they are ever aware, they have ln the Christmas
selµng season about30of lhe bestsale$daysofthe year.
THE OONSUMER, ON THE OTHEll band, has six
times that number or days durlnt the next year In which to
work toward repaying the bills. To retailers, this adds up to
a good deal, especially aince many or them sell the recelva·
'ble account. Again using last year as a measure, almost all types of
retail outleta except automaUvt dealers, who have their
own special sellinl season, and bulldin1 materials and
ba.r4ware stores wlll sbare In the spendinl spree.
, Sales of home fumishln1s and household appliance
st-0res soared last Christmas Muon. So did aales in apparel
and accessory stores, toy stores, jewlery stores. book
stores, grocery stores, variety stores and liquor stores.
FOR SOME MERCHANTS, DIE month of December ls
a make or break perldd during which they either earn prom ror the year or sutrer for another 11 months, durtns which
they must diapose of their stock at vast price cuts.
Tb.is ia especially true of stores speclallzln1 ln toys and
doUa, which to some extent have developed"\he concept of a
fresh model every year, forcing the merchant to restock no
matter how large his Inventory.
Otherwise, his sales would refiect the old merchandlae .
Think of lt: Would you want your child to find last year·s
doll under the tree on Christmas momln1?
WJDLE SUCH MERCHANTS PACE a worrisome,
ten1lon·fllled season, for one famous merchant, Abercrom-
bie & Fit.ch C:O., there wUJ probably be no Cbriatmas at all. It
hu been clearing out its merchandise, preparlnt to close
down.
What irony. The exemplification of big spendtn1 and ex-
pensive gifts as Cbristmasy as an old fireplace,
Abercrombe & Fit.ch ls pbulnt out during the year's big-
gest spending apree. It couldn't raise &QY more credit.
(Related story, photo, A~). 11 • \
.., , ....
t• ••
. ,
I . I
•,.I
IJ; t
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•'
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T~ I WH Newtf71 ...... .._ ,,,, ....
T ... Y •Y , .• us ,. 1• , ..
47• 411 1'11 11tl , u
OAILV PILOT Thur9CUy. Nov.tnbtr 17, 1971"'
1929E
Movie Star
Now Grandma
CO RON ADO <AP) Anita Page was a co-star or
4'Broadway Melody,'' the first musical of Metro ~dwyn Mayer and in 1929 the first sound mo•le to
f in an Academy Award.
The blonde actress appeared in 32 motion pictures
1 in all -one of them
It on.Stadt
• 1 To Appear
In Movie
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-Linda Ronstadt will
make her movie debut in
tb e up com i n g fll m ,
"FM," a him whos e
qia~ers promise 1t will
dO for rock rad10 what
''Network" did for
television
The film will 111clude
live scenes from an up
cft>ming appearance by
~i ss H ons !Jrlt 111
\
l:fous ton. and she will ht:
gf ven several lrnes in the
film .
, "FM" stars Martin
!'dull, Clcavon Little and
Alex Karras
.. ---....~ ALL CINOo\Al •llAaOAINMAfL l\IUTDAT'fll2 JO~M.•ll U
SAD0Llt8~K .. LAZ'A f ,,_.,...,A I '1 lfl
ft fo-, ............. H • ••-
"THI CHICl(IH
CRHOHICLIS" INI
~II Uf Mh<-1 IS.I M.tclt
"THE HARUO
D,HIMIHT' I aJ
71tSAT W-J ... 71t
"THE UST
REM.AKE OF
BEAU GESTE" (PG}
I 4H 11 ~AT SUN 1 41 l 11 4 41 • I) 14H U
"THI USCUHS"
f U ~AT SUN
1a1u•11
"MO DlrOSIT. MO anuaw
I 11 ~Al SUN
J •H U
FOUNT& ... vau.aY ...... ., ..... ,.It ........ _,., ......... ,. .,. ... .
MSMOHY&
n41 UICMT' .. 11 .. ,. __
1 J .. 14 .. f'M '"n41 sn..o·
1 "'•' ..,.._ l 1 .. 1 It
"THeCHtc.llH
CH•O.-CW" 1'01
'"'"' w ........... u •• , "t¥1..PAGrU ~
TIMlfO•~ 1 .. ,., MIM-J , .. , ••
''ST.AR WARS" IPGI
.AL rACINO (PO)
"IOllY DEHRILD"
A.I. PA.CIMO (PG)
"IOHY DlUftlt.D"
THE CITY SHOf'PING CENTRE
ORANGE •532 5721 .
• CITY CENTH CINEMAS
~.A. F"WY IMAlllCHEITO EX.I
C.G. fRWY ICITY OR. EX.I
A "Pttct °'nu .t.CTIOM" ·V Lat RtlMllt flf ... ..
""ii. "CHA.nB IOX" (R) ~'KlNTUCICY f.RllD MOVlr
• "llLITIS" till
Scltclll Prlc. 12130 IO 2100 p.m.
, .. .,.,. • .....,. ... .21
(AT cm CINTll CIHIMAll
ltscept S.. A HeN.p; SI ,JI
Open Daily 12:30 pm ~
made in Coronado in
which she fell in love
with a young naval of·
ricer played by Ramon
Navarro. Since 1936, she
has lived out that role
but never made another
movie.
In a vacation in
Coron ado, she and a
young Navy pilot met
and were married 19
days later. Herschel A.
House, then a lieutenant
and later a rear admiral,
took his wlfe on duly as·
slgnments around the
world.
Today they still live 10
Co ronado and are
grandparenLs.
"We haven't been able
to take our eyes off each
other from the start,·
Mrs. House said in an in·
terview.
~ ..........
.. LA~RAHDI
IOURGEOISF' f RJ
"E.ASY RIDER"
7:00-10:45
P'LUS
.. THE GRADUATE" ,.,
1:4S OHLY
m MANN 1 THIA DIS
"BILITIS" CR)
WKOAYS 1 .... *-10 U
SAT1SUN·J 00-l *S lll
1.•1.-.11 IS
-e SO. COAST PLAZA...,,~
)410t1•ll"SI S!l1lll 1t11 ru""'
'"TM RISCUHS" IGI f;~o-t.JO SAT I SVN
l;J~WW;:ll
"R.IDI A WKJ) POMY" •:4M.4S SAT I SUN
I 1:4~J:4"6<4 .... .4&
,.IOl111ltlSI ~11111111m110'
"IF YOU DOH'T STOP IT,
YOU'U GO IU..0" IR)
1:40 SAT I SUN · 2:•t:io-t:4'
"CRY u.te:LI"
SAT I sJ~~;~1:eo-1t:\t
, I
SAT I SUN ,.,..., ............. ,.,,
-• •· CINEMAlAND • •
UIHe llllMf .... us llOI
1111-•
"ARST \OYr Ill
•;•M:U
SAT I SIJH ·•:~:a
'"YAUMT1M0·
t .M5AT l lUN i:tM:U•lt:lt
Thefl're Bad Gags
Actors Gregory Peck. left, and Ja111es
Mason pose near Lisbon. Portugal, where
they arc on location for the filmfog of ''(fhe
Boys from Brazil." The film provides Peck
with his first role as a movie bad guy.
Wolllen' s Prison
1V Movie Planned
LOS ANGELES CAP) "Wild and Wooly, .. a
Western about four women who break out of Yuma
Pnson, will be made for ABC ay Aaron Spelling
Productions.
The two-hour film follows the women as their
adventures lead them to prevent the assassination
or President Theodore Roosevelt. No cast has been
set for lhe film, which goes Into production next
month m Ariiona and Southern California.
Oally 7:00, 9:15
Fn 6:00. 8;30. 10;45 ..
SAT 1:J0..3:4S
6:00.8:J0..10:4S
SUN 2:00.4:30-
7 ·
Locef playwrlabta have been tnYltect to dust off
their old. unpetfor~ed manuscript.a l.nd enter them in a one-act playwtttm1 contest spon.soreCS b)' the
newest commUnity theater croup on Uie Orange
Coast. -r
The Mission Viejo Repertory Theater Is so new, in
fact, that it hasn 'l yet presented ita first production.
TMs will come in two weeks when ''Barffoot in the
Park" mounts the El Toro High School stage.
Looking ahead to February. and a pro;ected one·
act play fct1tival, the Mission Viejo troupe has an·
nounced a contest to 11elect
plays for the tourney. "We're
looking for a one·act play with a
reasonable settin.ii and a
moderate-sized cast." says Jay
Rayl, co-founder of the theater
who's also directing
·Barefoot.··
HEADING TUE JUDGING
MOVIEG I THEATER ...
f
CALLBOARD -Audltlon11 have been called at
Ute Cost• Mesa Civic Playhouse tor tbe mystery.
comedy "Catch Me Ir You Can... . . .guest direct.or 1
Fred Owen will hold tryouts Monday at 8 o'clock in ,
the .Community Center auditorium on the Oranae
County f'alrgrounds tor u cast or five men aod two
women. . .the play wllJ open An. 20 tor a three· weekend run .. •
BACKSTAGB Wtth the opening of the '
musical "She Loves Me" at the Harlequin Dinner ~
playtiouse next Tuesday, the theater also will unveil
its Celebrity Terrace. which offers private boot.Jui "
for two to eight people. . . . .this choice seatlnr ls
available only on a season ticket buls. and in-
qul ries may be directed to the Harlequin at
979·7550 ..
committee is Jack Sharkey, a ~
ororess1onal writer tor over U ;.A SH•"lln
'years whose comedies C"Here Lies Jeremy Troy,"
"Kiss or Make Up,") have been produced by local
theater eroups. Sharkey has become a member of iii ... iiiiifij;j;iiii~ii!iiii!ii!iiii'-~iiiiiiiii~iii', the M lssion VieJO Jtepertory.
Entries should be sent to One-Act Playwritlng
Con test, c lo Mission Viejo Repertory Theater.
25211 N. Stockport Drive #201. Laguna Hills 92653.
Entries must be postmarked by midnight, Dec. 1.
and include a name. address and phone number
where the author may be contacted. Winners will be
notified by Jan. 1. •
SADDLEBACK COLLEGE'S Theater Deparl-
·ment is presenting Mark MedoCC'a Obie Award-
winning drama "When You Comln' Back. Red
Ryder'' at 8 tonight through Saturday night in the
Studio Theater or the college's new Fine Arts
Complex.
A matinee also will be presented at 5 p.m. Sun·
day.
Tickets are on sale between 10 a.m . and 2 p.m.
through Friday In the Fine Art& box office. Prices '
are $2 for the general public and $1.:SO for ASB card
holders. Admission is free to Gold Card bolders. •
THI S,UJ>o!G WOILD'S
"MUSS IUMMU"
l~w fU YIHoJ
UC IRVlNE'S DRAMA Workshop will present
Harold Pinter's sinister comedy.drama "The
Homecoming" tonight throucb Saturday at 8
o'clock m UCI 's Fine Arts Little Theater. .........,~....._.,,,,..._..,._.,.....,llli!'lill.,,..~--.._..__.~-~~~
Jon McDonald, a UCl 1raduate student. lJ -----~~--~-=--:-:-~~---:~-:-~-7---~
directing tbe show as his master's thesis project.
Ticket information is available al833-6617.
I.A M"'ADA 4 • LAKEWOOO 4 WALIWI ... llOAiH ~·ti ..
lllONOAY Ill<~ l!Afllll°"Y th..,i .......,el 12,'lt le hlO
LA MlllAOA 4 DNL\' CVNOAYI a HOLIDAY• 1t II t. a*I
•
' .
CUSTOM
CHllSTMAS
WUATHS
ltdan 8oNts • RllQI
Acrol ~ Ir At1tiquet
1;u•i',9~01a1a•1u11 \ . .
1114-f NE~T BLVD., COSTA MESA, CA t2'27
ENTRANCE ON REAR PARKING AREA ••• OFF BROAOWAV
MA~Y KOEHLU• :uw11•. ROBERT MORSE
•SPECIAL
GIFT ITEMS •FESTIVE CANDLE ARRANGEMENTS
HOLIDAY PARTY PAPER G000S
¥M.J.l.lt.llJ
We Rent
Coffee Makers
Punch Bowls
Centerpleees
Party Hats
Serpentine
Noice-makers
Horna-COnfettl
Table Covert
'Pl1tes
CuP9-fllapklns
Invitations
PARTY SHOP. IMC.
10115 ADAMS
962·1910 ,.., lllOOl!lull
rn S.Y-On "--HOU RS
.·
Mon. thru Thurs. 9:00 a mAi:OO p.m.
fnday 9 00 a.m.·8 00 P·~·
Sat 9 00 a .m. e·oo p.m.. Sun 11:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
TRAIN SET·N GA\7GE,
layout oo 21Atx6' board.
Nailed tracka1e, 12 elec
awttebea, 10 locomotives,
25 box ears, transformer,
all new in '78's'77. Value or 11000, priced $300.
m.f6S6
THE KINC bJ
A1tt11tet -C1h1
6 c,nnr
3S3E.17Ulll
Coata Mesa '42·9908 ·c---..·--) STORE12
11.9 E. llt!I St., C.M.
642-3~~__....
. .
HIMA~YAN
KITTENS
CPA. Rlcadoro line, wUl be 9 wka at Quiatsnaa.
Wtll hold for Cbriatmas. 54()..1760 •
We'll
-sell you
a fitting
bicycle.
11 a noc 1no...e9h fot 'f :t\.t
•Gifts •. Jewelry, .Furniture, Lamps, Mirrors, Paintings, Silver
ni.ca .. I,..
o...-tSMfl
'7J.J444
3429 I. COC11t Hwy
COl"ON .. M_.
p ~le 9"' de• ,, '"' ot'e-f W()f\d
'""' .,.., R•"-'11" b<yc,.. He
Wlf\t' ~o mu-e '"'' 1"11 tM R•101g1> you got ~ e•a~lly
rlgl>f lo• yov So ,,. "-·~ ,., .. _._IO,...you
"'&II• • ~co,. •no 1~ ........ , ... 11...,eRa~ Cu.r-s11.-· lo tvtt.nr .. •
pettec:t <y<lfllg "I. Tty one
IWWllaltogfl -
RAUMW ¢!(.
3323 East Coast Rwy
Corona del Mar
1714)675•766' I
*HOME VIDEO*
CATCH ALL THE ACTION
AND EXCITEMENT
OF THE HOLIDAY SEASON
on the ADVENT VtDEOBEAM
large screen television
and SANYO V-CORD II
home video recorder.
Cal for ow LOW PRICISl
Mashr Charcp, ... of 4-rka. Vha
PACIFIC VIDEO PRODUCTS
(7141 547-8134
I 121W. Ches._.. S....Aaa
f!j
LAYAWAY
YOUlllCYC:U
·MOWIH ::=:.=. (
,_ .. of Mope•
MISSION CYCLERY .
'/7-672 CrO'#n Vly Plcwy
Mission Viejo
'495-Sn I 831-2861
Tourmellne Mlnlt Cape·
New Gold & Ruby Rlnf, :.'!°~Uow Topaz rinl, de QWlta, huge
HO Train Set, mao)
:rtru. Antique miniature steam eqine. "2-4039
AMTl9UI CLOCIS • "'
BQ)t, ..U, el~i. OU & re-
peir ~ aaa restore
ca111. l'ree work estimates 1u.,-a.nteed.
Ceftt« ot '1'1me, Ltd. 1780 MOnnvt., Suite A..a, CM Mf.allO
~
MOVING TO LARGER 9U4RT!RS .
F4HT4STIC Pll-CHllSTMAS SAU
I Sl/o • 2So/o OfF
OPEN MOM-S4T 9:30,. 1:30
'•
AMTIQUIS
forCllrist.as
OAKO()MMODE siSS
BeauttfulCoadiUott
WICK!:ft PEBN STAND
bJ'·LovelY Gift ts5
Call 84$-2982
CHalSTMAS
LAYAWAY
Vu&Camper Access
VanConveniona 4 RV
Service. Jnaurance work
Fonda's RV Service
.21'77Harbor Blvd ea.ta. Kesa 8'5-1967
;
" OM AHY SERVICE ,
~ ....
M.rcur.t/Pedlc... ......... ly ......
HAPPY HANDS
I 194Va H.t»or II Yd
COSTA MESA
642-62.4.S
,.._ DNCIOUl-$135.oo..
Cont""'-tMdout In
hocln. mlnutn •nd
MCondl. ln1Unt cll5P11y ot month end d•tt. St•lrtlfft 1tMI, blue dl•I frtrne.
H.. YJOlfM-•ltS.00.
Yellow top/tt•lnleu al ... ti.ctr, &IH dl1I, HAltOLfX
ma""'l•t c,,..1,
GIVE HIM OR HER A
SEIKO WATGi FOR
CHRISTMAS. -All have outwtandln1 elegance and supetb
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quarttwatches. Th• Lady Stika Quartz llnt
Is exquisite and superbly accurate. For
men, S.Jko Quartz models come In both Analot
and 0111ta1 atylt1, chronographs. wortd-
tlmers, month/date models, and many mote.
All have• blttery lift of owr on• YMr. and
renowned Seiko quality. Seiko Quartz. ea
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llAMI "ATUO .. n
1 ne 101_.,.. -_. " -.I'll ~" -· •• :.."' IW.N Ht.<.dl!IJ•, 011 .......... C-,..._, Will'N .. _.,.,
Ulll .. ••·~· ._ ..... J>. l•t1y Jt , 10-Dv••
fll~•. L. ....... lltt<Ch, (.oltfOffti• t ,., I
lh" ~ .. •• c.11no1 ... "'° i.w &n 1t1 fl••-··
PUBUC NOTICE
'U•aatOll UXllT 0,. T"I
iTAT•Of CAl.ll'CMINU•-O•
Ttte c.cM.INTY o• O•AJIOI _ ........
llOl ICI 01" MIAalNO O'
l'«fltlOH ..0. nQIATa OP WIL.1. .... Llna1u TllTAMINT41tY
ANO AUTHOallATION TO t.D
"•llNl•TIR UMOllll THI INDIPINOINT AOllUll1$TUTIOM
O•IUATUACT
R-10 fl, tOOO'rly Jr
1 "'' •lllllfT*'I we• 11100 w•lh tr.. ~IY Clerk QI Cll't11g9 '-""'•IY tn NOV•
U••ltolAL.ICl SPfl!llt. O.culolf,
HOTIC.I I\ HllltBV C.IVEN llwl
DO•Ol HY JANI. IROWN aM Al.tel
lVlL.YN BECK ..... liled heralft a
'NJIJ ,atlUOll IOr ,_,_ Of Will ••ocl 1.-ember 14, ltn
J'ubli•hff 0r..,.. U>•ll t>•••v l'llal, , ... nee Of 1.•llen T••l•!Nlnt•rv to UW ~ 11,l•,.nau.< • •~ 1•11 ••1111 Pet1t1one~•ndl0t'1Yl'-t1•llonl•MI·
PUBlJC NOTICE
mlnUttr un<ler Ille ,,,.,,,,...-n1 Acl
1n111111r1llon Of E11alH Act, reler...c•
10 .,,.,,,. It m•O• tor 1 .. r1111r
--;,-o"""f-.c-.-0-,-,.-u-.-Ll_C_"-.-.. -,.,-.. -o-1 ~HICYllfl, llnd tNI 0'1111-... o P4«•
l'11r .. 1•111 lo orotr of the (Al1forn11 Of hearl119 thf .. ,... hat bffn ••I tor
C.ool• I lone C.on•urv•llon C.om· H41C>tmller 29, 1911, et 10 00 • m •In the minion, notice 01 Pllbllc h<llttnQ 11 <OYrlroom of Oetwlr1rnent No J of .. 10
hereoy given ~fCI P<IDl•t n.,.r1no 1, <oYrt, •t IOOOvlc Center Orlv• WoL In
Klledultld on llW Nov•nil>er JI 1.,7 011 CllY of WM Ana, C..lltorn11. ' 0•1•0 Ho .......... I, 1971 Ag•nOa IOt' opptlcotoon t11r "'"""'· WILU-• MJO.,N number P·~>-17·111/ •• "'on.1tl•d by c.uncvC.llr~ '
!.oYlh EHi lj1g1on•I f<o.l•n•0110n JACKSON KIDO&R &MITC"ELL
AulhOtllV l$EAR;.1 ' I ne 1Ub1ec1 reQunl " lo pen•••t • .....,., .. u..
C.on11ruct 1 1.11411\et Do• ., ••"""II ... Mw,.n ~ Drl.,.,
ttHlmenl tlla, C•IV ot l><on C:••n·tnle, ~4'11"~11HcJ1,CAnMI
110«1 lhe ljlllll•lt llO•, a rww '""' hne •P ew,aCrt•> ·-·-P<O• 1t00·1111....,nwou100.tufl\ltU<I Tel --ea 0<1t Of ii. lrulmont •••• tn.,>ce •n.r .. yiw: C. ............ •tong Ave. Pi<o ID• iunction 1,,,. •tine PubllUlecl <lrel\Qt Cottll Oeoly Pilot
1nt1t.-cllon ot A.,. f oto •nO U>ltt Ho•ember I0, 11, 11, 1'11 .,SJ.II
t1wy ; from U• tunc.t+on t.io.-• M•
pipeline •PP'O• 1¥ • .tOO 1n len-vtn •O\,llO PUBUC NOTICE
be ton,lruclecl •loncl lne "°"" •••v to -----------PICTITIOUI IUllNISS
NAMI STATaMRHT • IY"'I-bOA IOUlld •I tn• )l;kf<A
OCHn olltl•ll • ., .. P'DelllW' """'O i..
cun~tru<:t.ea Cl"I tr. ()(.r•n t ..,.,.. 01 tht1
P•v•m•nl rrom ~•n (.tr n1rt1I• 1u
J'•ll~•• Or. -lnl n<~ on tne r oeo \hOulOtr from flalt ... ,.,• \ (Jt to thl:i
oc.•an owtt.,.I ue·ln •• :....n Jv•n ... , .....
lh• pf pelf,. WOUllJf'MH tt•(•'\ tJJ4J 1fl<twt.
ina1ttmet.r
~•1CJ •94fnc>.41 publt I 1 •I H•IJ\ ~Jll corn,...1•nc.e .-t.00 c1 n1 011 ho .. ~n't"'r
1¥. l'OI~ " Hun1111~1<m hr.u.n l 1h Lounc1I Crwmbfor\, ,CM) M•1n -,.,,._,,
Hunt1119ton b<-ec.n, U
O~rlnQ Wf'U\.h tmit •II ~r\.On\ t ltf" ,
tavorlnQ '1r OfJQO\lnQ l"-1 •lii,11c .. t1on
wllt ~Naro lr-.un1ony \hUulU tw ,_,
ltttttO to uw rtM,JIOUll dfH1 \l4tt WiOl' I\
<tt.Ut\ •ddrt\)\ld ov 1hr t..etltor n••
Lo•\t•I Act<•• NI• uno tt\dl h-\t1n1onv
rtttot1n9 iielt'l'f co nc1vh&>ortlOOCJ eno
10(.•I <.01Ku1n. 1i not rttltv•nl •n<J w111
not ~ penmtted by tht1 <..n41lrpt,..on
Any Wfltlt1t lOH•'WC)n<M-·nc.• r~tCSIMQ
thri 1tPPllt.•t1c.in \hiU4..lltJ IJt· dlfl"<ttcl lo
ltH' Otl IC~ pt!<>< 10 l/>I r. lt•llQ O<lle
Alt 1nt1r1Ut'd lndh!OUJh who ¥1111'\
•D<Ullon•I 1n•oro·•llon m•v <ont•tt
1ru-.oft1(\'
M J (..tlr~nt.,
L -t t.uttv\' Uon l<-r
f<'t.ibl•'"""° C..•not C.Ocht lJ411y '"•1ot
r.ov •• .. ll. ti, 1'i11 ••ell,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Thi loliOWl"ll pet\O\I er• 0<!1"9 t>usl-
MM•S. $AMO, lAIJI WI...-. Et Toro.
\.A'nUO Robert J . Oown>, ZUOI Win· ..... ooa. f.I Toro, CA 9lUl
Olg• Down>. lAIOI Wlnlffwood, El
Toro. CA •»»
Tiii\ bustneu 11 condu<t•d by •
O'fllltll 11ertners,,lp
ROber1 J Oown•
I Ill\ ll•IM'Wnl W•t fllt!d Wllll IN
l.ounty Clltk GI Or•nae Cou,,ly on Oc·
loo.tr 12, 1~17 ,au.ti
Pobll•hl<I O<enoe CoHI 0•11¥ Piiot, °'' 2/, NOY 3, 10, 1/, 1971
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 9USIHEU
KAM£ ST&TaMUH
T ne 1011owlng s-non IS 001119 bull· ,.,,."
f ICO S PLUMBING, Hlll Vo• Vll-
jO, l IT oro, ~l•lornl• 92630
LOUIS c. Fico. Jr 2)31/ VI• ..... ,o.
El 1 oro C•llfomoe, 926.JO
Th .. bu"""' II c.onouct~ l>Y ... In
d•1t1d1.1••·
LOU'•C FKo.Jr T'"' )t4Wment w•\ fltt<I *''n thrt COYnly C.l•r1l ol O<anc;ie County on NH
·---------tmlMJr 1, 1911 ~UPERIOll COUllTOf' THl
SlATEOF CALIFORNIA FOii
1 HE C.OUHTY Of OllANGli
No A·•-
"lstM
Publl\Md °'-U>l<f O••ly Pilot
'<ov 10, t/. ZA,11"' Dec. I 1911 -.s-11
N OTICE Of HI.ARING 0,
Pl 1 ITION ,OA PA08•1L Of 'llllLL PUBLIC NOTICE
AHO Ll TT&llSTlSTAMliNTAllY 1-----------
l >1•11 ot HAH(JLCI MA,,Olll, f'ICTITIOUSIUSINlSS l>~u••4'd NAME STATEMENT
.. 011ct.: 1~ ttlRlb'I' C.1Vl.N tll•I in~ 10110•1ng """on" -ng .,...,.
f'AM LLA ALINL MANOlLL .ono ....... ~IMON AVklJMMA"l>lLL n•vt toled ALAN MAGNON PONTIAC BODY
•• ro1n ll pullllon lor hOO.I• ol ~Ill •no SHOP. 2'811 Hllr1l0t Blvd., ~i. Meao,
1\\M.-ot1 Of l~tk-n lt'>t.,.,1ent.erv lo (.4t11orn1a~t>3'
'"" pttoll<IM•• •••tr•"'-• lo which " Robert O.vld Brewer, .on JeOt m•cJ• tor 1""1her p.t'1Kul•r1, and \Nil Clrclw, H\#\l1ngton Beach, (.AHtor1tl• Ir•· tome""" pllk• ot ,..ring ltwt .. ,,,. v7'47
""' i..on Ml tor l>e<. •, t~ll. •• to·oo I"" bu""'" I• c.onouctl<I by •n In
ti m., 1n ttw c.outlroom Of C>epertm..il CllYldu•I t<o J ol wld court, .ol 100 c.1,j1t C..nl•• ROiler! O. Brewer
l.lro•• Y.~••, 1n the cav ol i..n11 An•. Tll" stal.llr'nenl w•• 11100 wun the
<.dl1torn1<1, Counly Clar'll ol Dr-County on O<
U•l•o ,..owmbe< 14, !~II tooer •. tt/1, FIJUl
Pu.btlshed OrenQt C:.0.11 D•ltv Pilot, WILLIAMl.5tJOHN
l.ountvU•rk
JDt4N A. DUNCAN
'AllO<MY •I Uw
•II HewllO't Cettltr Dr Sullel~
Hovttmb41rl, l0, II, Z•.1'77 '1S0.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
Hew,.,.i &.!kit, CA tt..-Te4; 11141 ... nle f'ICTITIOUSIUSIHESS
A_,.ey lw: C. "•llti-n 11-IE STATaMaHT
l'llbtl"*I Or-C.o"'I Dally l'llot Tiit lollOWlllll petsorl II Going l>Utl ,..., •• i . Nov, I•, ti, ll, 1'11 COMPUTER SYSTEMS DESIGN,
----------•KlallMICI .~e..<h,CA.'nMa
PUBU C NOTICE T "'' ...... ,... • , C-11< led lly ........
, c1tv1du•t. -------~--Merk Dlvld C-rsleln, 4 l(lflol S.-tJ* Ct .. H•wpor1 Beoc.11, (.A '2~
SU,.llllOftCOUATOf' T"l fhlS bv$1t'llll h c-uci.d by ari lft•
HAJI! 0' CAU,ORNIA "011 01v111uOI.
Tkl. COUll1Y O'OltAllGt Mar'llO.V1d'-r\lt1n -'""'1• ln1;. "•'-1 -hied •Ith tlll ... or IC& 0, HlA•tNG o .. LountyCllO.otOr"'ICl'ICo<HltyonNa...
Pl.TITl()tj 'OR ,..Ol•Tl OF "'11.L 4 1tll
AHO "011 LaTTt.ltS TISTAMEN· ........ TA•Y UD FOR AUTHORtIATIOfll Pybll\ll<'d Or~ Coelf Defir lltlot,
TO ADMIMl$Tlll UNDIA 1Hl Nov t0,ll,2•.-0«.l,t'77 IHOl.Pl~DINT AOMINIUAATIO"
0' ISlAlllACT.
dff.11
1:11•1• OI TH\'RA l.Sbl1., oa
1 .EUl)l.,~•MO PUBU C NOTICE
"OllC.t IS Hl:kt.OY '11V~N tNll-----------~tC.Okl lY J'Atl,.IC BAM•., .... lllM "CTIT10USI U51NIU
""rein a pellllon lor Probllte ot Wiil .lr>O JllAMIE ITATIMRNT
lor IUu•M• ot L..-tter1 1 tt\llmentorv Tne tol'-1111 PH-•r• dol"9 bu1I .. no tor Aut-ll•lllon 10A<Jmlrt1tterun· ,..1H: oor lhtlnot~ntAomlnhtr•tlonot TA8 PUBLISHING, TAB
L•l•ttSACt,r•leren<ttowl!lt ht1n.-PUBLICATIONS, '712 S.lmon Ave.,
tor turttwr lllltrflcul•"· ono lhll 1111 POl.lnl•lnV•llev,CA9270I
time ..,a Ill«• 0111eor1no 111e .-m• I>•• Tlmotlly Joseph McC.rtt>y, em
l>ffn Mt lor h011Ctn1oer 19, 1v/l,•t IO.OO ~lmon A•• .. Founllln Y•llay, CA
1.m .. In u... courtroom ol u..,.r1n ent '270I
No, 3 ot WIG court, It 100 (.!vie C..nttr M••lhl UI• Prl~ UH Goftdw
urlve Y.•il, 1n Iha (.lly 01 l>Onl• Alto, AW.,LOf\QllNCh,CA.,..U C..lllCH'nlo. Thll bull!Mtl 11 CotldlKtN by e
O•t•a hovemoer•, 1'11 ..,.,., ~P WILLIAM•· 51.IOHN, Tlmottry J.M<Carttty C.ounly c.1erk Tllll sllll.,.,..,. w.s fltlld wt9' ,._
JDt4N "f. l.R,.•LDtltG C-IY Oerl< cl Or-c:.unt\' on()(.
A LAW CORP'OllATI°" laber 24, 1917
11 .. tk11Yl«fttlll .... ,lt•MI 1'14211 1.111A.,..t•,Ulll•n1t1te04t Pobll"*' 0r"1Qe Coesl o.lly Pllet
Alt«MY lat:,_..._ Oct 21, Nov J, 10, t1, 1'11
PubllWllcl Or ... CAMlll l>•llY follOI.
No•tmbertli,t1,1J,ltll "111·71 -------------! PUBUC NOTICE PtJBIJC NOTICE
NOTlalTOC1'9101TO•t W,.lltlOllCOU.TOPTHR
5TAT&Of' CAUl'OllNIA 'OR T"ICOUlfTYOl"Otl""'GI Na.A.nlll
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
Thi.a newspaper wlll not
knowlnflY accepl any
advert sin& for real
•lat.a wbtch ls lo viola·
tioD of the law.
...... for We •••••••••••••••••••••••
GtMr.. 1002 •..••.•.•............•. '
IHCIEDllLE
VALUE
OCIAMFROMT
By owner, duplex, 2 Br 1
Ba ea unit. W. Nwpt.
548-7219; 559-4221
TRl·PLEX
2266 MINER ST
~COATS & WALLACE
Cc:P REAL ESTATE, INC.
I\ lOl'AllY OWNED COMPANY SI HVING
fHl SOUTH COASI Al'I I\ SINCI 1% I
PltCI S&.ASHED -could you enjoy a
miniature farm and orchard wlth
the comforts or Corona del Mar?
You Cf:V now! Would you enjoy en
tertainiilg on your used brick patio,
around !thlmmerine pool and
fir epit. Best of all the price on this S
bedrm bas been slashed to $239,500.
Cal 640.4161
Serving Cos l a M•~' .. J Ir ••nc
Huntinqlon Bc.-ach N l'WJ.IOrl Br>ac.h
IALIOA ISLAHD -Sttt.IOO
Best buy on the island! Charmlng 3
bdrm 3 bath with inviting comer
frplc in living rm. Spacious study
off upstairs mstr suite. Oversized
dbl garage. Walk to beach &ahops.
WESLEY M. TAYLOI CO. UALTOIS
2111 -~Hmslloed
MIWPOIT CEHT'St. N.I. 644-4910
~:.~~ ....... ~.~~·······1~-~!~ ...... .
t002 0•••" IOOJ GtMHI 1002 .....................................................................
J
DCHAMGI
or trilyl Prime Eastaide co.ta Mesa duplex a l sue,aoo. :s Yaars o\d.
Spaclou1 three
bedroom-two bath UP·
ptr unit <Ju1t like a
home). Let.the lower iwo
bedroom unit belp make
your pa)'meo\&. C1.11tom
quality bullt, klnl size
bedrooms. electr ic
ldtcbens. wood burning
t\Npjacet. Need tour to
t\x U Dlla In SalD
OleintrQ.
COLI Of MEWPOIT
REALTORS
675-551 I
llAUTIFUL
HIWPOIT DUPLEX
Two Ice 3 bdrm. 3 ba un· tu lo very rare condition
~COATS & WALLACE
CI:// REAL ESTATE. INC.
A lOl'All Y OWNlO COMPAhY Sf RVING
rHf SOU I H C ASI A Rf A $tNCf 1%3
DUA GUIST IOOM . '
with deto.Clied double aarage and
separate guest room. Lovely 3
bedrm home shows "I Care"
thruout. Young couple moving and
must sell. Just '67 ,500. Call Wday
'and see at 14'-4141
LIVIMG AS YOU UK.I fT Do you enjoy
a lovely sunset I rom a balcony
overlooking the ocean'! Do you want
to be on vacation 52 weeks a year?
Would you like additional income?
Call about what wo I eel is the finest
oceanfront duplex available at
$3'76,500 Call 64CMl61
$Nv1nq C ostn M csa·lrvtn••
Hunt1ng1on Beach-Newport Oe.tch
ll looks new. Pnvalelli!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! pat.IOI for each unit. lwor=
car 1ara1e rouach wilt, G....... I OOz°Gwer• I 001
'wood bl.U'1UD& fireplaces, • ••••••• •• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mexica.nUJeentry.Much(•llilll ................... -. .......... .
more. Call us ror details.
848-'7171
Ol'f"4 l•I ~•II S llfl''10PI I< I' IWINll
FANTASTIC
4..PLEX
A unique income prope,.,
ty with room to add eddl·
Uonal unita. Two l bdrm
units, one 2 bdrm unit.
one 3 bdrm unit. Tolal
scheduled income $1135.
Th.it ls • wilmer. Call
846-n71
<:1'(H fll 9 • 11 S FUfol 10 Ill tJ'<f' 1~1111
\ EXCWSIYE IRVINE TERRACE
0,... l ·S D ty
1839 Salwffta T.,.._.
FAMTAmc VllWS .......... MW ···-
v "'9 • ..._ Terrac. locatt.. a..; &
0c .. .,... frOM spoc5oul 4 ....... f-.
,.. ...., w/.,,.. -*•· Spa ...... pool.
mid lge paKo. C....,... locatloL ._y
walk to l pdtt dllbt. $.42'.000 "-cl'g
Imel.
Waterfroat Ho••• 2633W.CoastHwy.
Newport Beach
a1-1400. Gd C.M. loc., xlnl inc. &
tax shelter. Open dally.
Own /act. $155,000.
548-5m !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
OCEAMFaOMT GeMrol I 00
By ownr, dplx Ba!boa, 4 •••••••,••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Br 2 Ba, & 2 Br 1 Ba. • SA ... DIEGO F.e..&V .. ! 548·7219; 559-4221
31R-21A
OCEANFRONT
Rl&ht on the Bluffs,
watching crasbln&
waves, Cutolina & an oc·
cu1onal pa11ing whale.
Prof. decorated "Model''
condo in San Clemente
w/all lhe bltna. "prlvnt.e
slalrwny to beach.
$184,500
JACOIS REALTY
675-6670
CA,ECOD
$53,000 /$2, I SO
TOTALDOWM
Wlndin& roedway to
soaring 2 1tory retreat! Pnvate grounds protect
i;ecluded entry to lavish
li ving rm. Gourm~t
kitchen overloou sun
slune courtyard' Wind·
Ing 11tairway leads lo
s wc c pln1 master
bedroom plus child's retreat! Hurry, seller ls
anJtiOUI. 847--04)10
•l'j '• 111 ti • II ~ fu'/ roll tll(r I
l•'IMI'
4PLEX
WITHVllW
Spacloua uolta w /btfi J.n..
terlors. Low m aill.· tenance . Dito aP·
plianc:a1. Redwood U·
tertor & attractive cedar
lntertDn, Offad VIEW rl'04M W11t.. 846-mt
~ Walker 1: lrrn
PDIMSUU POIMI'
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities.
Lovely area, few steps to beach .
$189,500
UDO ISU
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4
baths, living rm. w/catbedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm~suite. $224.~
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boysod•· Orov•· NI~ 67S til61
'GeMt'GI IOOZ ········-·············· ...................... .
•
" Goraeoua ' br w /super COUNTY 11. 11pst•'ra 1uite
IN VlSTA. North San w/frplc. I full baths. r..... t BR Beaut. yd. w/many lg. Dieso """'un Y· 2 • 1.. Lreu but e.Hy maint. Ba boru ol outstandlnl Look.I like a mdL home.
quality. Pully air cond .. Only $U,HO. Call: frplc, oew crpt, lot.J or 11tora1e1pace, 2 car aar,1..;..957;__.om;..;.:.;:..Own;;._;..;r..;./;...A.::;st_. __
heate4 awim'g pooi.1 ... -.... --.. -cloee Into town If& lrwy's. ADULT COMM. IM
On a~prox. 10,000 sq. ft. OCIAMSIDI
view Jot. &,500. M a an Ulcent. •2 b r
IN CARLSBAD-1191 ~c:· ... •-m ln•--'or. Great than l mil• to ocean. a yr _.., ""'' old, 4 BR, 2 Ba, llv·rm, ew! Super lndlcpd. &
fam·rm, attach. aar. fenced yd. Only $42,500.
frplc, l&e view lot .on Co~ •• 1 AC·IACo.·
quiet cul~Hc of fine "~-homes. Walk to Gram· llALTORS
Q)ar. Jr. lli&h It. Hi&b 71.i11.•2•st.L.L
I '$)~~~!!!!!!!~I Sch ls . A•• um ab J e·~~~.,..~·,~r~-~~ t~ $50.000. 30 yr am·•~
mortlzed loan buttne 1.1 ... -------. mmual perc:eot.aae rate. BLUFFS
-~,.~ HERlfAGE
•.~. IN CARLSBAD-on BEST scenic blahway 1 blk to
b e a u t • b c h . BUY
RESTAURANT O R For that spacious leel-
MOTEL SlTE. 29.500 Sq. ang, ue tbls 4 bdrm. end
fl. $180,000. unJt In the presUgious
All above properties. ace ''fiolden cll'cle". Walking Owner ·Aaent. Poul b I Wopacball at W.R.H . d stance to ac oo • & I~~~~~~~~ Real~, ;124$ Carlshd shopplna. Our belt Bluffs • ..._........ o-a.. 9 b'-1)' At S1'(i5()0. Price In--... ew ....-• I 9 • • C •r 1 t b • d • chides 1 )'ear AmUican
. . REAlTORS
Spacious 3 bedrm, 2 ba A IOU• .. .-..LY 714/729-6821 & 2 br, 2 ba. huae lncd -••••vn 1----------Home Shield Home
yard, 8 car aar., ocean COMDO i--.... ------t ProtectlonPlan.
view & abort wal~ to Gated community two CRY ·aPPRAISED '7M .OO :
beach. Primeresldentlal blocb fr'O~ the beach. 1' HARBOR
ueai. attend at S185,(J()(). Ideal two bedfoom tot $78;000
I
l
PHASI! 0 PAI.HMO
, Price reduct"<! -o nor motivated!
2 story HARBOR VIEW home
With open-beamed cathedral ceilings
lut5 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal dining
room, family room, and T WO
fireplaces • luscious landscaping.
Owner will help hn~rncc !
A II& CANYON STIAL
This luxurious 2 story townhome has 2
bedrooms, 2 buths, mirrored
wardrobes, fireplace, formal dining
room, lush carpeting, huge master
bedroom with sitling room. and JS
close to pool, tennis and golf. A real
steal at a reduced $139,000
HARIOR VIEW ·MONACO
MAS5aYI SYCA~
IMTal..UIHG blCOR
This is a f amlly home with flair :
huge sycamore almost hides the
house; 3 bdrm, 2 story looks like a
cottage; lives like a villa; rear yard
has tall trees and much privacy and
a pool that looks hke a pond. The
entire experience 1s exciting. The
7000 sq.ft. lot and 2100 sq.Ct home
are offered at just $137,900. ·
UNl()U~ liVM~S
RFAL TORS'. 546·5990
1525 Mosa Vl'rde Drrve, East, Coua Mesa
also 111 Coron., dcl M.ir, ill 615 6000
•••••••••••••••••••••••
CDM HOM! Real Elltute
BuiJdable R 2 lol with New Condoe. 2 Br.;; Bo, nl~.e 2 bedroom home. 2 lrplc ·s. ceramic Hie
10 , down Full price lotchena & bath. Pool & n=::~TAYLOI CO. spa. 67Hi12 n_ro_k_er __ •
955-0350 DEC roOL HOME
..
.--7 -----------, ·Fresh new llstina Meea ..LUu£V.a4 x.w4 J.VJ.V...... Woods. Nr So. Coast
l!J I• to Ocean Plaza. Fanwlic pool, 4 TRRllU.
/\ .. Queen For A Day'' and forever
home, where pr1vucy 1s King, reigns
this ''Monaco" and a Princess she
is' This ~rac1ously appointed 3
bedroom, 2 bath home with fireplace &
covered patio in stately area awaits
your pleasure!
YOU WON'T NEED SHERLOCK
to track down lhe lowest price in
SPYGLASS we've got it' NEVER-
LlVED-lN ! /\ magnificent Spanish
courtyard with lountum 1s surrounded
by a skyhghted II\ ing room, den &
family room 1r1 th1:, ·I bedroom luxury
home with TWO <.'nll•rtainment ureas!
Professionally bndseapcd with city
I i g h t s & w a t l' r \ I c w ' Q u I c K
POSSESSION Ownt•r wtll heJp
lmam·l' S244.500
CompleteJ.y remodeled bdrm 2 story fmly rm & on an oversized lot. A frml dfo rm. Xlnt. noor .
G...,... 1002 GeMr.., 1002 smashlAg 4 BR plu.a den plan tor executive enter "#I lwc:.lferoMa ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pil.&.'I (onnal dining plus talnlni. 545·9491
SWEEPING HILLSIDE VIEW
1::. only part oi this 4 bedroom retreat
wrapped in lovely wrought iron fenc-
ing perched in homey hillside area!
Enjoy gorgeous pool & jacuzzi too! VA
ASSUMABLE l'HICE REDUCED
TO $96.500
THIS IS LIVIN&!
Helax on your l:Jrge patio overlooking
the bay & 10· boat slip! This rare on-
thc-watcr home has 3 bedrooms. 2
baths and 1s close to schools'
FRESH CONDO -
$55,900
Recently pamtcd & l·a£peted. 2
bdrm D· Plan . a1r-cond New
redwood porch. Close to recreation
area, in Walnut Square. Irvine
759-081 I
Hut 6bert
G'lul Wuuu 1Hdg.
4!">0NrWN>HJC:{r~JEHDnlV( /~00811
1002 ·············•········· ...................... .
NEWHOUSE
REMTTILL
YOU OWN
' I P.E:ALTOP.Sft
MESA WOODS
This ls one of Costa
Mesa's lavishly decorat-
ed 3 bedroom homes with
antiqued, hardwood
paoelinc. decorat.or
drapes, expensive
wallcover1nas. plush,
phnh carpeting & a great
neighborhood. The yard
._, apaclom fl beauU!ully
landscaped The proper·
ty ls vacant & ready for a
quick sale at S9~.900. --------i CALL751·31.91.
HIW L•STIHG! f: SELECT
UDO SAHDS T PROPERTIES
llGllG • 51EDROOt4
. wttb a low, lo\\ prr n• 2
Story, 3 baLh plush
carpets , d l' c: or a lo r
drapes. In onr ol Costa
Mesa 's rrncst an•as
Below market al S911.900
CALL 556·2000
C:SELECT
TPROPERTIES
IEACH ltETUAT huge family room wrth SPAMKIM' MEWi
$56,SOO open bt!ams. nalurol Now under COMtruction, rAHORA.MIC VllW
Slc"" to Poundlno surf wood lexture11 und ocean thb; ..... tom 3 ......... room, 2 ,.... ., d · tl t ........ ucu Ownr. below appralaal. 4 and crystal sand. an Je Y view rom bathbomewitbflreplace I
Backyard is bay area master suite & sundeck. PRICE IS RIGHT "fenced yard Is In lovely ~ri tr: ~~, ~ ~ r 1~
playground Winding Just slCJ>6 lO Ocean Bl\'d. Pvt party, must sell one East.side area! BUYERS 1113,950. Bkr. Co·OP
wooden walkways to $227,000 or two properties on CHOICE OF COLORS! ~6
seek' l~ed11lntryd1 gourmet CaU644-7211 FlowerSt.ml'~&1tC.M .l HW"l")'! _L_l_F_E_B_E_G_JN-SAT•O+
1lcn•:n, s cp own con· duplex or l lot w 12
versation area plus holll!es 673&372 IA• jGuall l. Superupgradcdadullon fireplace Sun sh In e Iy Condo. 3Br. 28u, 3 yrs
breukfusl patio. pool. Place new, tennis. aotr. clbhse.
Jacuzzi, volleybull. IARGAIN Prap...tlea etc 171,500. Ask for
Garden llvinl( ul It's -~~ HU.....,ERS 7S2·l'20 • llargle847-3584Aat. finest 84Hl010 --. "I 1400 QUAIL St. HlW.0.t l&A<M S92.SOO 'I• ,.,. • EASYTOOWH R-ZLOT UKIYAIDWOIK?
Will buy a duplex. I blk [®•I House plus two apts. an lt4YESTM84T + Besw-etoseethlslg.cor· Crom the ocean. u 3 ' Corona del Mar. Walk to Great 3 bedrm. 1 bath. 3 br home w/famlly rm nerlot, 4 br bncb home.
bdrm & a bachelor. with . • beach. gardcni., parks & QuaUty built home wit on R-2 lot, lg . enough for Couolr)l ldtch, spac. llv
a dbl car age Leasehold shopping. Easy !inane-~ ~oors. c~c;ee t 1 more unit. Prime reo· llll rm" !rplc. Cls to 1cbl 673-3663 833-0523Eves icAoallland 1006 ing with low down. 8
11-UJTY,O er tal area! UobeUevabb' "sboppln1. Priced to RAHCHlllALTY
associated
BllOKER S--11 EAL TOR !i
102~ W l ,\lboo a 11 JU I
JUMP
••••••••••••••••••••••• HAY VlEW rixer-upper.
xtra l11c lot 3 Br 11'» Ba.
Ry owner S169.000
673·SOOll
HOME & Income rental. 4
YI"\ old. beaut owner oc·
CUPIL'<l. .j hr. 2 ba, all
cle<'. h1 beam cc1hn2s +
and call to i.cc Lh1s rm 3 br 2 ba n•ntal lmmuc
press1vc 2 story home in t on d li y O w n c r
a private. quiet t:osla $315,000 6i~ 1387
Mesa area 4 Bcdrm5 Sep. family room. und lal>oa Penintula 1007
dining room with •••••••••••••••••••••••
beautiful pool Loaded EASY IH
with pride at SI 15,000
Cull now 645·7221
A CONVENIENT StiOPPINC ANO
SIWl"° CUIOC FOii TH(
CAlON THE GO
BraathtUng!
$175.000. • ~" ousn 11 pnced at t152,&00. sell. $78,500. SS I ·2000
NORINS ·aEAL TY .,.,.,. 75 .. 7IOO * 494-8057 * Wal.out Square Condo a Br 2Ba,163.000
Real Estate 551·33114 or 552-3861
SPECTACULAR QUALITY DUPLEX Th9 To Ch•IJ' PllrnY COHDO
An exceptional custom CM Triplex Yow UfHtyle7 2 Bdrm.s., 2 ba .• dining
built home with vaulted 2 Br each, xlnt'mcome " VocClftt-ff't ready If an all adult comm uni· rm. <can be llrd bdrm.>.
I "'--Ill' s u opens onto very private cei Ing. beautiful solid locallon S120.000 Bkr .--you ty, a m ion recrea on covered patio. While
onk cabinets Lhru·out. 645-26321752-9023 Sharp Jbr, New paint fac1I w/planned •c· c ll r p M A N y
r1replaces m hvm~ room 1.-.-.-. -_;; ____ •I lhruout, remodeled kll. Uvllles, a 24 hr sec. gate, UPGl\AOES! Washer "
and mnsltr bedroom. MAGNIFfCEHTI! Lrg tot. Only $62,500. less than a mile from the dryer lncl. at $66,200•
leaded glnss windows Tolllr Rily. 1·956·3940 ocean• + 8 2 Br Walle to Heritage Park & and a t cram 1 c tr I e Green brook 3 br home. Townhome for as little as Jacuur an the ma11ter prof decor'd lhruout. MESA VERDE BEAUTY 963.000 sounds 1ood to Irvine Hi1h. Poot & rec. ti.Jlh. Fine *allpapers. plush 4 Br 2 Ba, lge Fam Rm. 2 you, call area nearby.
cpts & cstm drpe. Priced lily. boat or RV storage, Jodi Ack& Anoe IYaYH COrB.AHD PLUS
a l·harmlng 2 bedroom
RENTAL with fireplace
and a separate patio and
deck.
How reduced
to $234,500.
Call 6.44-7211
~NIGEL
ll/\I LEY &
ASSOCIATES
under mkt 11t $96,500. REDUCED $114,500. 9'3-0926 RIAi.TOi SSZ..0434
You must sec to really Conv or Assume VA.1---------1
11ppreclat.e! Open H.se 11120. t-sPM. IB.OWM•RJCIT! OHMYGOSM 754-7800 by owner. 556·6048 ~ Fee land. New carpeting
l IR + IONUS t.~"i'o ~o':~~:: just lnstalled. Well locat-Colleae " shopping cen-ed. 4 BR., 2~ ba., family $67 .SOO nn. home, only Sl09,950.
Thls is ll ! 3 Spacious ~CAUFORNlA RLTY Wow! bdrms, lge couotry kitchen. h1.1ge pool site 1 ____ 544_-5605 ____ 1 •MUST SELL• lot. t>on•t miss this one Swlmmlnl pool, jacuz1-1, VA or l~ down Opn Call7S2-l700, sauna. 2 BR, 2 Ba,, ________ _
8 AS'l"AA ~ Real h •o t r Inc fllJI 833-9781 ~ Hester-8'-own I llAllO•~
Hae Oaaly J 5:30. 675 Ot1'""'1"H vtrc.Niwtr· w/frplc,1ee.1aLe,xtras. CORNEILOT 4so:E!?~:;~.~" ~~t1iAu~ ~·:~i l~~•RNI EF:::r::l•~; SU:a~me
le"et, swimming pool,1---------.._.W• featurioc l larae oversized. loL with Polen Wldenflnnston 0..0,.oW 1026 H.ti..-1042 bedrooms, formal dlninr
llaJ t.o bwld large add1 Ea,talde Costa H•a. s.2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• room. inside laundry lion al unll. SI 67 ,500. -·cm TO siu •. raclllliea. Hlghly UP· 644-7270 bed.rm hOm• Is room ror EXIC. COHOO l"llU --. gaded th(ouc.bout. Prof. more unlta. 300' deep lot. H bo " Whl t !br, 3 ba, 40' dock, cstm landscaped. Close to Hurry·lols or potenUaJ ar r tewa er decor. Ownr. 940-3'32 scboola "~w park. Call
here! Call54e-SSO. View. 3 Bdrm, ~ ba, i------------t tor add1tiooa1 informa-ram rm, frplc. End unlL lion.
Prof. landscaped Ii ca. lougllt tWw HOim ~HERITAGE corated. Gas BBQ, wet Mmt sell tblaJBr, 2ba on r-~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~1 bar, v. mile beach. J&c)Oloreveryt,htai. Of· Comm pool, jac, sauna, fere4 at lllOOO I•• than
...,. clubhouse. $129,500. tastoompsale.
• • REALTORS
QUAUTY wUPLD Mesa Verde, Zltry, 4/5 br, Tr a o 1 fer. quick
3 Lrg Bdrms + 2 ba & 2 2~ ba. Only Sl2,SOO do. posaeuloo. Owner
lrg bdrma + 2 ba. OWn/Agt..831-1257 493-81C7 V..tM9t1tWI
Redllced $24,SOO Complete pvcy, vaulted
beamed cellinga, Crplcs, RI 11:09 IANCHllALTY over look.a park. Priced """"" Choi~ R·l Lot $52,500 Seuatl>deel)water. a Br, SS 1·2000 to sell. 644·7461 or ff' A Che • I Wont last Network, 2~6aTwnhae.Lcedcck,•-----------644-7509 S ap1e. Point Rily. 498-5600 30'dodt, z car 1•r. H.AMG YOUR !ny~ceHb: :'ct~ :~u~ Fc•t• v.a.y I 034 ,_CB.I. ULTY ~1 Stoc11M9
townhome. New carpet.a, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 16501 PacUlc Cit. Rwy
3 bedroolnll, dlnJn1 area. UM19U£& SHARP SUmetBc:b (114)848-2848 lo this auper family
Forced alr beatlog, 4 Br, llt4 ba. Oriental home In Turller~k. KR Pool alae lot wltb paUo,B ,caU540-1120 landscape. 4 •aterfalls, S.1ples-.fMcl sprinklers. Center
H w m a i ~ t X.• r d · Of ,.,M 9t $60,000 atrium. Like new carpet. Greenhouse. S5000 below .. •~ _... Ma.rlrel. Owner anxious. .... -· 9* .-. lttital aettini. Don't de·
$95,000. Pb 963·16'7 or ._...., lay, woo't lat.
..#I ln·CalfoiWO,. 54$41883 f'UICB.l.llALTY. VALLEY 640.ftOO ·
CHATUUILAHC '7141846-2141 im &l Im.it t OC4 \ ~Ql~
2 br, 2 ba w /tare• bonus ...... ••••••••••••••• ••
4llDIMIEAUTY OPIMRIOAY 1-4
NEXT TO IEACH
VACANT
Hop. skip or Jump to1 ________ .C
ocean; llke new 3
bdrms., 2 bath•, used
brick frplc., new kitchen
& all applJances-carpota,
drapes. Only S1'5,000I
This spacious s unny
home features 5 larce
bedroom• each with
private bath. Family
room with wet bar •
super cuatom kitchen.
The paint i.s rresh Jn &
out. New ca.rpeU, drapes
& shutters. Spectacular
fireplaces " ahljo doort.
Also feature1 4 car gar.
Air C9D6L. bot water clrc. pwnp 4i all on double lot.
Home offered at $330.000. llVIMI 1 Eccelstooe Street
This bl' 2 lt.ory home ti 'Bedroom wltb pool
lolMNI .. , Prop. ...... * 671-7060 * -----------1
Find what you want In DaJIY Pilot Cla11lfled1
IAYSHORES
DESI' B\JY I Completely
redecor. s bdrma,, 2
bathl; cootemporary de-
1lgn. Quiet. jnslde loca·
UOJl. Reduced for lm·
medJaLe Hie • Sl.55,950.
Call fordetalla.
C. F. ColesWartllY
UM.TORS 64Mofo
iii~~~ In mint cclldJtlon ·a r••l aizecameroom. steal· 4 lC• bdtmt, J bat, fr1ced To Sall lm11 rm. bit frplc, nl~ Dou&tu C(lnea Realtor
&bed lot· comm. poot. • &W-&U5
teM.la crta. Newl~ot· tend atJ105,000. 7Wl501 WOODlllDGI
1-~-------~~.-1
209 t4AlClSSU$
By owner.
..
I ..
....... P., We ' Housn ,_. W. . °"*'IHI..... OttMr Rffl •t.te . ..••••••.......••.....• •........ , ...........•• ···•·•••·•············•········•·······•···•·· ••..•.............•.•......................... M~11",_W. HOMJnforWt Me.,....le_. IG""-wparf'"'* 1o•tCwt9!JLoh/ ,...,...., 2000~.._.. ll'9c:.t.Mtte 3224 ······~·············· ......................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c:rypti 1100······················· .... , ........................................ . ~leeclt 10 ................ 1"2 • IXICHOMIWJPOOL •••• .. •••••••••••••••••st UNIT PrHh of OMTHISAHD Br• n d a e w a o d
Tlaur.ctay. NO'llltf'l'lber 17. 1171
••••• .... •••••• •••••••• -••••••••••••• ••••••• Lovely 3 Br 2 Ba family PACIFIC Vl!:W own tr 1 h I p • Clo 1 t Beautllu.l 3br, Iba, dplx, baullfw-2 BR. Z\~ ba ---!'lllll!llllJl!ll---...... -----1.DLLVlEWNEAJtl.AK.£ BIG FAMILY tune,w/pool"privacyln Muoruc Sec:<100. 2 Iota. ll/Slm. Top OC. loc. patio. MW crpb, 4rpa. Oorido 2l'plet,DW.wtd,
Ocean, soil , tenni1, 81' boweb~ lot! 5 bt, 3 prest11lou1 Baycreat ~II ror SSSOlbotb, 1pUt Prloc. onl~. Own/bkr. Avail lmmedlately •tu prime beacb JO<'. $39$,
Lingo
Aua&t.n
OLD TOP OF THE WOILD - c ......... , ....... 1 .. 41•1•• .. ,_......_., btewler of ......._ ...t
....,,_ of c.-.. 1-.cul• " nwy
d•t•U. 111 a wood•'f, uclltded Ht•
....... Sllt,500.
SOUTH
LAGlil\.A ·
4ff-4S51
497-2489
LAGLNA
r-;1Gt.:J;:L
495 l 7j!,lj
l>ANA
POINT
~93-8812
tebool,Uv rm, frplc, fam ~ 'f;or t ~':':~.~~: N:'rrt Beach IJvlna transfer cos t r C•ll llHJM • 1/71. 1U·7410 dy1 , 11a-4"il7 Afl'nt.nofee.
nn. kit, 2Ba, J8r, IAdry HVHomu , Under Rm ••amiJy am. each 960-5M4 4 llACH 41M85l*VS/wkndl 4 br l 1>a Colle1e Park t:st:i;J~fue:~ SitO.ooo. Open daJb' 1-4, ~iJ~~~n~~: C:O.•••rclol St'5.000 =lum3Brt:utb1wr raailtyhome.$450.
Newly ~orated In • Rolfr Bro•n. )l, E. Open ffoUH Sat. 1-4PM. ,......, 1600 2 Xtr• abarp Covlnston · Nr park, 1cb0oll f40.0009
out. PP sat, too. f73.lazo=2£.. ltaf Skylark Ln. Full ....................... •·Pf•x''· P rime Hunl. Ir ahopa . USO itio. Condo, very clean. 3br. n~ brkrcoo~ratton. Z.lACIU lkh lof.. Jmmaculat.! ~or2U-~CMOO n.; z car aar, 2 ooo.lt, UDOISU AGll..o'41AL C·lzooed,lronUn1UWY. N .. 4 CHt ule. By clubhou.e. S1&bin1t ... oa ' PRIVACY I Co.mer location on one of PaOf'EITIES. IMC. lOl south of Paso Roble•, ownr/ast. IIU,000 each. ON BEACH, VIEW of ttdl. 1.ll •Jut anoe rent.
PoothUI paUo hOme. 2 UdO'• ftneat atreet.s; a 75J-6S73 Act. Gary Val· Callfornla. All level. ~ )f AHi CH ANNE L Avall. lmmfd $360. Aita
Bedrooms, totally am· lovely l\Omt"that tnUJ· buena ~~tl~ll tor further BJ0Fourpla,J99,500. DBdrtcorator ~_5tutlor11114 JoanltCbuck.5'0-l'Jio
macu.late, 1W'f1)W'lded by t: up to t~atlos " is _. _ Producet '8300/yr plus. m home. vaa u Y 2.8r, t'Ba Condo, w 1rerrt1,
1reenbelt, located oo Joy=f~ t~'::::;•:r i8~:6~~$ Ranch property&homet Wlll trade. Stott ReaJly t urnlab d with all 1tove, wahr/dryr, tar,
coma of quiet cul·de· it.Mt•t1. ~ Bdrrn1., 4~ 3 Br z Ba, F amUy Rm -alloav•U•ble. . sa&-7513. amen1u ... Beil Chlna paUo, r~ facll. P15 mo. !:~.·900Pr,60lced> to sell al at ha, It m ll y rm ., kit.ch den, new .kitchen, Edith W HestlQ Coveloc•t.lon $ISO/mo. Aat. (7lt) 8'5·1221 •'" • NEVER M OFFERED 7 ON WATER wllh boat formal dlnln1. br ldst. rem lnt/ext. 1121 Oxford RealtorlcAs,oclatea dock • Bdrm with Jbrcotta1e. i>09liJ1cuul, nook; intercom tbruout. Ln. $114,500. Ownr/brkr. 1MeSprin1Street newer •"11· Pr ide of VIEW .....,./mo dl.ahw"·"'•r,adu tsoolv, 548-0'391 p a-.. •~ Call/ owner'• ~t. Ea1t Co ta .,,,,, _..., , ~curtly alarm. 3 Car ,uo_,.,,_, · Meta, income $25,150 yr. ON L l DO. ~·ecant 2 -~·2491
1ara1e. Need we say IOIJ 231·5l50 ...... 512.5232 "'drm wit'-c lor TV, •CO_, C""""'AGE• more? Call for app't..to-OPEN12-4DA1LY ,... v •• ~• vu
day. S375,000 Z 7 9 Z C I r c l e Dr , Alie U. f1or C~ Oiolc:e R-l Dana Point Jot, view and pJ"lvate beach l Br , s ma 11 den,
UDO llAL TY Bayshorea P'ri• eom..rclot Four-plex lot, Tustin, S700/mo. breakCast. nook, fre1bly 673-7300 3 BR, 2 Ba. Completely In desirable Woodl Cove $52,SOOeacb. 4Sll-S600. OCEANFRONT 2 Bdrm palntlO., lncd yd. Wtr
........ 104 l.ogamaleach r--.:iOim:m;;;--·1~~~~~~~~~ r~done in/out in '77. area ll Unlta on Sou'" c:octap.WeetlyQSO pd,nodop.$275mo.~ ...................... ....................... MOITMVllW Reduced from S\79,500 Cout HW)', ln resto~ WGt"fr ... HoMt• move lo. 3231 Pomona
CAMDEN MODEL IASYLIVING :::i.~~rJiv~:~~~e~ LOVB.YHOMIU ~ie!'!~·~e~5T:ly Laauna La nd m ark Ctl6Jt·l400 rur ·980-3D89
· t b 2 WAmMG FOl YO '111 Seven beautiful r .. ldeo-New Brookview COndo, 3 TDlftlTIONAL ~.'.'2 b~~>(,.~~o.e An ~cede~ameacr lrcnatq~l~ Newly decorated 3 Bdrm ca..... I 076 ticoaJm~rt.c'·'t Wlro,~ s:ualrply ....__ __ • ._.._ ........... ~ Br. 2dli Ba.II air. cond, lllAUlll ea sy wa lk to Main home with all new ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... "" .... r .._._..._....~ cpt.s, rps, a maJorap· FIUILJ HOME Beach. Easy terms with ~i!~;u~r; carpetln&, wallpaper, INYISTMIHT ~ted. attractive lerme. 2-4UNITS ....................... pins. Pvt patio, tennis,
""" pnvate financtng, aud landscaped. Community lar1e country kitchen/· OPPORTUHrTY ~.ooo. Good cood. Beach & ill· GeMr.. 3202 poql, jacuni. No pets. WOODBRIDGE Jl's easy to aee th.ii va· center w/PoOl " play· family room Jnclud'e Three s uite Medical Jandareu. ••••••••••••••••'•••••• MSG mo. Nr. s. Coat
cant property. Ju1t around. $108,500 builtins It microwave. bldf. Reception room, ~Y~~ t7t .. 533 •I •A llNTALS Plaia.M0-8886
CROSSING S85.500. 1827 Mariners. A1C. Can be rented at 55t Wby pay 125-135 when Nwpt Hits, new 3 Br 2~ NORINSREALTY Don'tMJ11TW10ne! per sq Cl. Owner will IH OS.CHlfHwy. PrimeNpt Bcb tnc prop.Z youcaniettbebestror Ba. fplc, patio decks,
3Spaclouabdrms mclude $149,500 consldertrades "t.erms. ...._. .. Kii 4t4--t4JI Yrs old. f'OOK cash lees .. Open7d•YI $49S inc 1rdnr. 5'8·3365,
a lower level m aster * 494-1057 * 3MonarcbBayPlaia 6 z 0953 546-5243 $252500 4930233 ---------1 +l400KTD. OWT\er, Rep. .$1.253br haetosha eHB a.ft3
suite with lavish bath + 2 --------• Laauna Niguel 4 • ' · Cotta .Meaa R2. Suitable Jy ad 1981, Dally Pilot. $160 bacb w /pool :iu pd, --------
larae bdrms &bathon an 496-7222 131-0136 OCl!AH VllW ~ lot for Triplex. l Bld1 on P.O. Box 1560. Costa Sl75 un.ltutllpd, Spac 3Br. 2ba, cpts/drps.
upper noor. A charming TIIESEA WALL ·---------•I 0 UCED ~ pron.tty. By owner. No Mesa,CA921826 .. MlbrVlllaw/fncdyd Frplc, fncd yrd. $475. IMn1roomwithFrcnch Se parates tbe ocean•• COHD ,RED rlltl.., CO. a1Dts pleue. DaYI '200eott.uUlpdNrBch 549-0022,642-0550
doors & formal dining. from thui 2 BR. & den MlulonVlefo 10'7 THOUSAMDS J'lfJ ,._ -Slll-2800, oiahta 613-3»$5 HOMl&IMCOMI S2202brw/poc>lkldao.k. "Galleria" with hi«h, home: 3 baths. Priv. de· ....................... Reduced for a rast sale aftG 11ft.N'I ore7.uM'MI Own.er will carry a 7~% -~·2brfurn•-1 CM Meta Verde, 2stry, 4/5 br, " I t ( BI · -...,. Jl'\'tV.., ••4'iOJ' ....,._ Joan, 93JC300 comer lot -"'•P ex 2'-ii ba, lg patio. 1645/mo. vaulted ceilings + a ve opmen . 0 ue Barcelona 3 br , great Vacant. eeUer is anx· (• , .. , UlltMlaORT1··cH CODSllt or a 8 BR. 2 Ba, $3003brhae,kids&peta canA ... 831-1.257 huge family room with Laeoo1n , fine st 1n v~w. A/C, fenced yard. lous . .Beautiful 2 br end -"5"'r 10A 18216Newport81'C.M. •-·-----
fireplace & contem· 1..aguna.$285,000 188,000.ByO'#ner. unitw/frplc.Community IEACHl'ARGAIN Youns uecutlves lo :~:1:>TJ$2l~·J 8! SlS.ree 645·5990Newport Hit8 2 Br l Ba
porary open kitchen. Misalon Realty <CS.·0731 <n4)758·3629 pool, sauna Ajacunl. Al Super family "Can· commercial i-eal eatate study+ 2 Ba P LUS HOu EF'"""ERS encl aar. pvt yard. $325
!:o"!':ffr
8fto~~n~l~~it ~ s Br 2 Ba, carpet, drpe, ~~rgJ~~ last! ~=~ri,.8t!io~~!T~1~ ~.:ne~~~ t.:"ea:.0:!~:'.~ workshop bk!•. $50,000. no:.n~~tRentala +dep.6'2·57_22 ___ _
carpeting throughout. OCIAH&CITYVJIW patio, lndscpd, fncd, u 64 ,500 . Owner l YeareKperleneelnreal cub down1 as.kine AUareasaJlprices 1>9.PoW 3226
deluxe bua It In a p DUPLEX beaut view. 547·SSSO or u-ansferred, muatdeal. estate HlH required. 1225.000. Call JOr delaill, Sample . ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• pUances, enclosed dou Unbelievable! A 2 Br, & 113().3725 BERTHA HENRY P r l va t e o II Ice, K.enGader,8'75-8600 S125lbrbouae,hurry! Tennis, Swim mint. ble garace & rustic ex s !nale located in -------REALTORS secretary, draw, & WaLDowd&Co. S135Ct1~acreutilpd Sauna, pvt comm,2 Br2
terior or naturol woods La1uno's Cine1t view Mlwportleoch 106' 215 DeUl ar 492_.121 beoeflts.call 28115E.eoa.tHwy,Cdlil 8JJ03brhouserent/opt. Ba condo, D/W, W/D, Cl •-th I k · th loca•loo. Jus• lis'ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• , .. c--c..-o RealonomJ CO"' .. --rhouse._l .. ·/....t• ose "' e a e an e • • • .-.;oos, .,.. '.PL!! X ,.. Kou I i . =2b&.vr ho ..... ~,-~ds/~": s:m 831-1678 t.aUque lrvfne V11la1e of $210,000. Ali· Call colJec:< ---------iBEST BUY Harbor u,.....,, -~· .,... ...
Woodbridge! for detalla (213) 546-1752 Estates, sweeplncocean· ---------4 SlZS.000. Allnual income lJFETIMESERVICE Foul• Valey 3234
S 117,990 or <213) 545-11444 BLUFFS ' UDO SANDS view, prof. decor'd. 3 br, Proreu bid(. a~ro11 SU.•. 1ttwn Weabn. • 557·0122 ••-••••••••••••••••••• rt..:1714)559 1161 Nice 3 br home, 1 blk lo 2 ba. 1119,.500. 498-8033 or Crom N.B.P O. UIOO Sq. H.B. Uf"12TtlH'Tot S brGreenbrookGranada.
• • lllDUCB> I Ot( Reduced •.ooo bch. Lots or decorator ZJ.3..373-5109 -rt. Lie $900 mo., Hll Lds for S. 2200 lallOa ,., I •• 3207 Avail. lmmed. $550/mo.
CHE £PEST.'.' Ocean view 3 Bdrm .. 21
, Open Sunday l • S solarian &even your own r-L-$12S,OOO. Ail· 648·2414 ••••••••••••-•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll63-43IW ~ bath b om e w 1th 406Plata,NewportBch j •• 1 orreuad al _.,,_ °'Ct! / 3 Br, 2 ba, dbl 1ar. over·--------.c Bdrm l>lngle fom1ly •n family/d.Joing room & Exciting Trina end plan a c u •• · ·--.... C .. trano 1071 ... Lots&ACNOCJe sized lot. Jmm1c., no Beautllu.l·• bedrm, 2 bli,
lrvlne. "Wallows" Plan fireplace. Hurry on this wilb unusual secluded $11..S,OOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 1100 for the BF.ST BUYS'ln So pets. Lease q25 mo. lam rm. Cplc, DW, super
105 By owner $68,500. one;pncedtosell!!! entry.38r,21ri balh.Haa FULLEltltlAl.TY 3Br,l~Ba.lmitoDana ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call.l.Acreace8'1owu (213> 447·2410 wkn ds a rea.$435. 963·4567
Ph 64G-0088, 640·S400 OPEN HOUSE choice ereenbelt location _ 546-0114 Pt Harbor, uiumable FOR SALE BY OWNER $215 acre. Lota u low as (213) 614-50'70wkdar&. A&ent, no fee •
. IUDUCEDTOSELL SUNDAY·NOV.20 wilhBackBayview! Lfe toen. WU1 carry 2nd In NewconatrucUon 7unlta, $5000 I ~ 2870ZeUDr.,Laauna wrap ~round pat o llYIME the amount or $72,500. 13912 .Cherry St., CaJiMr.Fret~·a546 Corw .. M_. 3222WM9'•1eocll 3240 ~~7e~dr iw~~~~ ~~i Cauit'f & COMpmy featurea expenalve tiled TERRACE ()pen .Hae Sat/Sun. (714) Wealniliister Ben Hink.le R.E, ............................................. .
u<M"So C ~ HwY. jacunl. Special outdoor Spacious 2 BR +den, pvt 496-9619 6 UNlTS & REC HALL Large 2 BR, 2 Ba, 2 yr old 3 Br+cletl W/frple. Close garden pa lio, rom m LAGuNA;;'EAC{i· lighting effects & flrepil " custom. Im med poas. New construction 17091 Ocean ~lew ll·2 Jot in Dupleit, dbl attach 1ar, \0 aboppln1 cent.et, bUJ 1:t~i°113·=~YO~ 497.z457 makes this home a true Askln1 Slf4,SOO. Agt, Closetoprk&elemschl,4 Elm St .. H un tingto n Oceanslde.Sl.5,000. frpl . TlS Jaamln1, (A). ser v i ce. U 50 /m o.
Ho"•eSat !:rs .... 12 ~P .. M --------winnerforthebewtinen· 644·9513. Br28a,Famrmw/fplc, Beach 848·2655 or 494.-eves Sf15.mo.8J3.70N ~ ""' .,. .... .... tertainlng $159 500 1 reat cnlr y at moa. 896-MlSaaklor Bob --------JOGoldenbush,5S9·7219 MAGNIFICENT · ' · SIAVU!W 1116,500. Owner.493-2434 CHOICE VIEW LOT. Sban!clllfavl for a.s mo. 2 Executive honie near
VieTll from this all de· AESOP Realty New Bed.lord 4 br, un· e.c-Property 2000 Challa• ln plans forces br, 2~ ba, iar., 2Crplc'11, ocean : 4 bd, 3 ba, lam EMTIRTAIMMEHT ++ luxe 2 B R home. c.aUDonorHelen ob1t ructed ocea n , OMl/JACRE ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbeH.leofour .55acre, tee yard, 1rdnr. $400. no.dhlnnzwetbar,flre
TUaTl.EltOCk Separate, apacioua en· 0Cc731-491.1 Res835-0739 Fashion 111 view. 1919 UNITS UMITS hilltop, equestrian Jot . 644--0164 ~· outaoor BBQ &
Hard to find Plan 8. Im t er ta in me o t den . ~!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!.!!!I!!!!!~ Yach\ Collnta. $24S,OOO WITH POOL W ha , 1 'la ISxJ.85 &net area. Prin t;;/'c" S'150/rno; Cooaider
peccable thruoul. Lush $150,000. PAllll...IT BRUSH Owner~ Sharp 4 SR & family ~ ot~::ita af:eor:::~ ~Y.;..~!.~.$110,000. Ph ~ut.ao:.~'&':::·.·cop:i /CJC!t. MH707; 96MM7 croundl with 38 tree 7-ocbtl.,aealtor ,... room home. New cpta, C t / 1 ~ .. .., ... _ ,,,.,,.,.",..,. •L B Undl I I d __, ·--------·1 drps. • 2 fireplacea. oun Y w an x oua pall<>, encl au. $.'iiS/mo. """''uv 2 Br1n a, new !urro n aec u e 494-8111 SPECIAL ,. TRIP' mv Sl2S OOO owners. Calf one ot our OltofCautr 752-0617 Aat. , cpta, drps, refria, fplc ...
Jaam.i. It won't lul onl ...-~· · trade a bome for a "•rtJ JSIO Pool, clbhse. $29S mo.
$12')!50.CaU752·1700 REAT Ocean Views, 4 Brin(yourpalntbnt1h& to..1-wLit"--AHCHOUal fourplex SPECJALl.STS. ••• .. •••••• .. •••••••••• Nr beach.DeU&ht.ful2 1lr, lit, last + dep. No OPfN llt9•11 SIVNIO£H.•.t br,2ba,dlnrm.lg.patlo, Idea.a le tab advanta1e ~ ... ~ Call 1 Bad Ix t. / th [.. , I co.rtyd w/fount.ain. Seller oCaaruUnvestmentop· Steps lo sand 1n Newport '"'8TMIMTS $4o-36H FALtBROOK vu si&Jec.t~PN.: ':!:or peta.179-'7888 klJ.it*lfi\I may CUT'/ 2nd. 2705 pommity. 5 br. 3 ba, 2 Beach $150,000. Evea 1714f 49'97711 2~ a.c., JDC· avocados, w/wallpa per, drpa & Nice 3 bedrm, 2 bath, " ~JjlJiljF Temple Hllla, "94·9966, sty. m Eaatbluff. Mus 642-3338 i enU• slope in Morro paint. Retri1. atv, D/W, w/cpts, fenced yard. ~-~;;:~=~·!.,.~·~·~·::11~-~~494~4~44~4-----1 sell lh1a week. Red Pier Reohy ..... I Oto Hllls. 3 br house, bea ut. sha1 esiu, in. Ad Its. Cbildttn/pet OK. $385. UMIV. VIEW CHAIM! to$154,SOO.Makeolr. lllllii ••••••••••••••••••••••• v\ew. By ownr. Sl•.ooo. 1450 mo.~ 883-458'J A&ent.noCee.
P ~aK. 2 Br.1~ ba Beauty! ca. R.c. :~fa~ co. JadaatJIGfRmu Lab S77,777 11+-121-sm a BR, 2 ba, den, biama.
A nyon " limited ocean 2005 llelbN Btvd. One or lowest priced 5 Acres for HorMI AdlJlta pref. No pell,
3 B d .. m . • 2 b •. view on lar1e lot W/pool Private Party wlahea lo Na•peri Bch.673>-205& homes In Foothill HI ~--1-re Duplex Small bome "-le rote Month townhome. One or th in choice CQmmunlty. t rade S Br ' home on area. 3 Br, 1% ba. Im· ~IU • u., ' •BR 2 ba
more popular modela i Super value at $162,000 primepartofCoetaMeaa•--N-E_WPO __ R_T_B_A_Y __ , maOpwaEN~"TlrSUNl·S ~172,500. Vlllaae 11. Excellen (fee). Go 1 f Co u r 1 e lo r " ,.
locatloo overlooklng ma bJJ waterfront home w/pler TOWERSCONOO 179'1Ralnler Dr., Yearly Income 115,600.
;or creenbelt. Let u & allp. Linda, Lido, etc. On lbe Ba.y in Ba.lboa, ll North Tustm Bli ' bdrm. upper " 2 •show you thia home to ~57 l Br, a dults , pool , Aaent,Helen,T31-49U or bdrm. lower. Fantastic
da I -------~. Marina, boat 1Up, aecurl· -.o7J9
y 1--------c t y b Id I· U 9, 5 0 0. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;111 .. lisled.-.lililAiiltim· 8*-9898----J
RmtehoMi..IRJty SEAVIEW OwnrtA1t6'75-7520 OPIMDAlLY 1·1
CrownVatfeyMall Upgraded n ew Bar HAUOltVllWHOMI lOIUFURLONGDT.
495-2200 131-7010 Harbor . Beat view. Carmel, 3Br , 2Ba, nr s New Custom Homea
S2SO.OOO. 644""597 park & pool 644-?.841 With HUH f& jacuut. Fine Taste
A home 11elittln& t he ~~~
mo1t d1acr1mioaun g orru DAILY 15 t.aste. Features cuetom tn ..
Oriental land1caplng 24 Inverness Ln,
P'rom MOO to 3llOO gq ft.
Priced from $U9,000.
WalerfrOltt Hwt
631-1400
'ft'lt.h Utes. Jacunl and _____ , bla vu. SUll.soo. <382> 11~ c•uyoN
AHAflPOaDAIU a "" Desoerate!!
PRICl1
Brand new 2 BR 11aU 0 , -,
"' ' I r • •, f "'
11(/'' l ,1t 1 ''' ,,, 1 (tr•t J
·1 ,., ·•·1/ I •·l·• I' Ill•
. home -fireplace, up•
1raded carpet, 1ood
location, community
pool eourtt and Juu.ut.
AD Uni tor 111.&00 Ltilllle Hl I OIO ....................... --------·
red hi11 .....
S~2-/500
........
8 Br p0ol bome. New
roof. Approx ~ a c.
Footblll IU. -.,000 . OPEN SATURDAY 1-S
lln3Geraboo Place
a cbooh Ir Pal'ka.
538-2708: 112-mU lm
ADULT CONDO
t ..
" J
r
,
••
J
-.
P'AMILY HOME, tot.all)'
~ .• ··.u ""''·. '='w::-OOdbnd~...,...,...,-0-C.;;...:oodo __ ' 2-b,-. ~2 bdrm.I., 3 ba. (hUle hv·
ba, crpU/drpa, deck, lnl rm.). Model bom•
near all rec. rac:lliLlea. tand. V11cant Is avail. at
Avail. Nov. 30th. S'OO. f125/llo.
mo. 83.1-31'12; 833-8620 D E C 0 R A T 0 R ' S ....,_leach 3241
2.jb!•!~··t••••••••••••1 , <1& nouae, N. Eno.
close to bch, bua & 1bo
ping.49f.7079
2 br, den, 1 ~ ba, $950.
br, 2 ba, $450. Grea
ocean views. t97 -2370
2 Br l~ Ba, N. End, re
furbished cottaae.
per mo. 494·9S21
owner'•· 661-0741 eves.
LaUForelt •••••••••••••••••••••••
New execullvc condo
overlooklnl lake, leDJl.LI
& park. 2 Bdrms, 1 ~
baths, A/C. lake & club
membership mcl. $39~
B»-7898
BACHB.OR APT.
ALLUTil.SPD!
100' from \be ocean.
S.mHurnllhed. Avail
llOWI 301 E. Balboa blvd.
Ytty. SZ5C> pe.r mo. 110
FEE. Call: Sue at a.ncrr an)'\lme.
New Lake For~t Condo
overlooking lake. 2br v ·~ba. Mem~nsh1p. sail Ii tennla lncl'd. PIS mo.
-----1 PRIME LOCATIONS
770.2054, 546.864()
3 BR, 2 Ba, mount.a.In &
lake View. Monlb·tO·
month.~-mo. 770.2333
Mission vi.to 3267 ••••••••••••••••••••••• You won't believe-this
·one! It's loaded with the
works. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath,
2 BR, 1 Ha apta .
S29S-S400. 675·2311
Daya. AGT. NO FEE
frplc, dahW11br. rncd yd,1~~~~~~~~~ gorgeous· home • ai11Y1---=--------!
price. $375/mo. 1163-4567,1--------•I Agent, no fee.
'Entertainers de Iii bl I
Mini &tale w/privacy,
pool, jacuui, cent. air,
. MSO. mo. incld pool serv
Bill. 581·5.535 or 837·
Realtor.
New home, 3 BR, 2 Ba, up.
grades thru-out. $385.
mo. 768-3'$3or75'·3875
Newport leodl 326t •••••••••••••••••••••••
WA.LI( TO HACH
~
,,, ..... l<l\ll \
• I
7~1~ I Ccnl ~., ~1·•1l 1P llJ•
Br condo, encl 11r,
GREAT RECREATION:
SwimmlD1, eaunae, 2
beal&b clulls, blWa.,Y;
nlgbt·li1bted tennis courta. Pro la pro abop,
go11 drivtna ruae. party
room. FUN ACTIVITIES :
FQlltlme dtrecltar, free
8ubd&1 bnmeb. BBQ'I,
tripe, partiN, 1por
toumamenb Ir morel
BEAUTill'UL
APARTMENTS:
51.qJea. 1'12 bech'ooatl.
Furu. • unfurn. Modela
open daily 10 to 7. Room·
mate MrYice Hall. No
le ... req~. Sorn,
adult. only, DO pet&.
Bachelor $225-$245
1 Bdrm S211S5-112'7S '
2 Bdrm $29&-$325
845 Paularino
Hurry, make your
reeervationJI now~ 'l'~L Manaeem~nt
64.Z-1603
l Bdrm, den, elect,
*5!'fbl;. 11t • tut. ue w. l'.lcolaoel. --ot -..i.
ROM JOTO 1,00019.n.
anted: Small boue
w/Jard, bl Cll area f«
worldDI cpl w/ddld •
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Thur!d!(, Nov9mtlef 11. 1t17
SERVICE DIREC~
....... c..... C:.peattr eae .. ..., 8Ktrfc.e ..... HomtdeWncr ..-i.g ~-.....11...-.-, ..... .... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ........... ;•••········· .................................................................... .
B•.IAp~llanceServ. Ceo. Rep ir,fd11ol For the open air attalr. ELECTRICAL SERVICE Sldploadet. dump truck, IMMACULATE "Two Men Will MoveF&irPricei.Stateltc&dn EDR1DDL£REAL'TOR
T&IPCHABGESlO Carpentry-auiau. Any ocee1io1H>•rsonal CALL6$1Shr,&SMALL haulln1.t1"work.1rad• CLEANJ.NQ, YOU Yo\I ", W• bandl• bill aW'. Eatarior speelaUat. Satl•'11nl buy•U
311C15S.Main,S.A c1abln4't, panel'"· paUo .mice. Cabana Cater· JOBS~ in1. demolition, etc. DESERVE 0Ull·8EST. movu. Office " Tryrne-C.lleotd3&·66$$ .elluUl.nL-eie57.
N-Mrl 9~7 01 ~vers. etc. 8118·9001 1.na. 6'5-91$1 a.ctn 13M~7 7!J&.-0177 houaehold. Ol1ta11ce • Patnunr Extr 1 lt ElC . 846-8111
l.,.,ttlllg Doors, wlndow1, ca~neta, C-.. /C~ u:~...a N5~4 H " I B.J'1 Cle&nln1 service. ~~f; ~ f.i!"U~: »r'd, • t, ~t:t, 'rea1:iao"o1
1
"'"' ::::....-.:.c_.::-~,L ...... ,•••••••••••••••• 1helvo1. Rou&b /llnitb ............ ._ .. ••••••••• ••"•••••••• .. ••••••••• Bonded, •uara.nteed, cl/.intrd C.T T .~ Uc'd•touDave ... ••••••••••••-••••••
BabyalUtnc. my homt, Pickupwrk.142-6783 CEMENT WORK. All ELECTRICAL D'ESION OCC SLudent. Bl& '4 T llc'd/ ,Pb;-an.7m, . 'Jnt.erlot extutor paint· OOPST"ORL~
"'1111)' aae. day or nJ1hL ,.~Ser.Ice lunda. Reasonable. Fr" •INSTALLMENT. Time tl'Ul!k. Trub, tree trim, m-OMta. 019411 1 n 1 ' 8 u P r • m e A11 1ypes, nnan avalt .
Sl.25 per hr. Call Julie at 7..r;.. . ••••• ata. Call '150-6625 It ma"rt•l only. J im etc. Randy 8'2·5703, ftotemari , u 1 M.8\'tNG •HAULING worluunahip. Call Jack Free est, llc/bcmd'd, in· 6'2-3480 • ·M····ill··l·· .. \1eon---A k Bl k C6rlaly "Soo . 50-31188 .... n,., .. ••d·~ou.ecean· Locat•&on1diataitce .. .,.. $1".SenlotcltlJtMdltcnt. rpet anw ayyours"' .. ,.,..., wor . oc 71'/979-11UafU ..... ........,, C rataid:o -.-or838-5788 9'-0UJaaiytJm Babyalttln1 for worklna or mine. Repairs &s & brick, alume & coo· · t, big truck: Haul· tram."2·1403,6'5-. EXPt:RTPAlNTJNG mothers. My home. cleaning too! Guar work crete walls. Security Gcu•1meg tna. eleu·up, trees cut. W ... /P•""9 CmtomworUrmaterial. Re1>itn. Llc'd & J~urcd
Harbor/Bakerarea.CM. at bigger savings. Free Builders. 834·9118,••••••••••••••••••••••• Anyaiojob.4M·TS. ~blmoorJtJmefor••••••••••••••• .. •••••• Local refa. free eat, AJlt~.Fr•est:Call
DayaS.f&-7887 eat,645-3648 6'2-6894 WEEDINO·CLEANUPS tW ... &AlrC• t ~~Own trw, n-PETERSPAJNTING R1dwd96C).3381 ll.Q)'t.lme~l·59a«>Walt
Day Care. Near So. Coast ShamP<>Q..& steam clean. ChHd Care Weekly Mainunance .. ••••••••••••••••••••• er ~xpr't Re•• 1P.•tea. Acow!Ur Cid• abot, In· TUt ·
Plaza. Ages 2/up . Color bl'\ghteners; wht••••••••••••••••••••••• Freent 642'9907 Pumacea aervked, call Ueht~eclean.lqdone -~tt. Cal Gene 'tr/ExtrSlncfalrorDunn .. •••••••••••••••••H•• ~7~ cpts 10 min bleach. Clean Vac Mother exp. wkndl· DIC It Landlcape Main· anyUme. Do it now, eave by expr d German lady. Edwarda Prod. R.C. Con· Otram.lc Ttlu. 2S )'ts ex·
loot Sen-I liv, din rm, hall $15. Avg overnight, Own trans, tenance: Mow & Edie. eneru. l~ Yra Exper. Xlntrefa. tsbr. ~ PROFESSIONAL Paint· tr. 845-5388'151-1747 per, specialty entry
Cf rm $7.50, couch SlO. chr xlntre(era. 531·4207 Full malot, baullof, "93-9111 HOUSE MOUSI inc. lnter/Exter. Reas, PROFJ....-lONAL PREP Wa¥1, freeat. 982-1183. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $5. Guar elim pet odor. clean·\.IPI, rototllllna. work euar642·0388 ~
Newport Manne Entpr. Cpt repair. l~ yrs expr. eo..tractor Free Est.. 675·5516 u-..-a....-a.... QUALITY Serv. w /a & P A J N T l N GT'" S..IC9 II'-Ste-Clemt'CJ Do work myselC Refs ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.___.,, "Persona I Touch•• PAINTING. lntr/.Extr. EXTERIOR R.eaa/Jnar ••••••••••••••••••••••• "7" ... , · ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . E 'd b . . 673-2946 531.0101 MARK SILER CONST. Japanese garden Ina HOUSECLEANING 1 bfa. Call: Pam536·9522 xpr • oneet, neat. Llc. 238741 . Free Ht. Tree trlmmlna, removal"
lullntsa S.nlce w;c;;:-eCarpetCleaners ~~:~~~~:{~r;::;~ ~;.iH ~~~l~ri~, c;~~ Bualneu. R~n::i'! .._c11c,.a.g , ~;!:· Lic'd. 964•1°'5 ~JI--'• t!1e~~::,~~~71tkip
••••••••••••••••••••••• Steam clean or shampoo Lie contr. Call 979·4411 lndscp'g "2·1403 service, Janice s Ra1· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------ir_..... ....-. We lick, stick, & address also upholstery-all work 1edyAnmat6'5-1800 For discount Sod prices, YOUNG MAN. S yrs e.xpr •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• RUSTY'STREESERV. quick. Christmas Cards guar. Truck mount unit. P . D. I corp. LI c 'd ai..•ral Senlces callSOD&SOIL, · ln wallcoverina. Free VER'YNEATPATCH Good"'oi"k. Low price& , hand addressed. En· Fr est, reas rate s engineers & Gen'I Build·••••••••••••••••••••••• Alicea Houaecleanint. 881-0751 eata.ee.85'76Andy JOBSlcTEXTURE Freeest•a.53'1·5388
vel/labels typed. Mail 645·3716 in g Co n l r actor a . HANDYMAN Reas. reliable, refs. Own p Free at. 893·1'31 stamped stuffed & sort: Specializing resid/· NOJOBTOOSMALL t.rana.6'2·'1207or646-4871 Tree&plantlrlm,orre· rot Palniera. & PROFESSION~ll
ed Call • 1 S Your carpets & up· comm'! new or adds 548-0059 move. J\oto.toil, aprklr ~erban1era need ~ Treeworlr le Landtcap
d · da lyexcept un· holatery deserve pro· 6'0-7()2() · · '111ESUNSIUNEGIRLS r pr, lawn reno+/lost. ·Clean, neat, work ••• .. ••••••• .. ••••••••• inll Servlcea. 827·9581,
ay9tonoon. 646·1388 fessional care. CalifomJa Handyman homes & ren· LOCAL 5e-58S3 auar. Free est 9S7-oef1, HOMESAVERS. Plumb· 845--0674 •
C.ptnter Cleaning Technicians at Bectrfcaf lals. Ioatallaliona, re· HOli>SECL..J:tN™G 536-G83 ln& & Heat1n1. Free est,
....................... 768·7611. .. ..................... pairs&cleanJna. 751·2'162 8 ECI ~ . Mm an 1 SI.Ohr. Honest & reliable UpllokMry
--ELECTRICJAN·Priced Bonded, Insur d. Free ••••• .. ••H•••••••••••• , service. Bo/A, M/C OK. ••••n••••••••••••••••• Cprpentry ' any type, right-free estimate on Ulht haulina. gar clean· eat. 2' Hr serv. Taking Brickwork. Small Joba. ~?"don t n.~ a gun 751·31!0orl41-0383 eepera Pt, Std aofaSi
anel, doors, etc. Also lting anything with a 1 eorsmall 'obs Ing & exterior painting. bolidayreaervationa. Newport, eo.ta Mesa & draw fast when you $129, most chrs $'7$-·
Comm'I. lic/ei;t. Aft 5· Daily Pilot Classified Ad L%~ed J 673•0359 Reliable, reas. 536·7056 ~952.Sor 552.o245 Irvine. 6'75-11'15 eves. place ao ad lo the Dally REPAlllS It REMODELS tabor. Variety fabrics. 5411·2719 ___ ls a simple matter . ~WantAdslCallnow Reasonable. quaJity How ard'• Cstm
Classified Ads 642·5678 just call 642·5678. Clauified Ads 642·5671t Want Ads Call "2·5678 Sell idle items 642·56'7$ Want Ad Help? 6'2·5678 -~ work. Euger\e 536-3688 Upholatry 761·0106
Morlcpjet, Trust Lost&Fotand 530 Penonak 5350 HelpWmthd 7100 HefpW..ted 7100 HtlpW..ted 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HtlpWmhd 7100 W..e.cl 7100 hic:li 5035 ••••••••• •••••••••• ••• • ........................................................................................................................................ , •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••• ••••••••• FOUND : 4 Mo, fem., ECTURAL labytlthr W .... d . / COOK / Exper'd. DIN· DELIVERY PERSON
Retired couple has money golden lab mix. Vic. of S~UAL IM,.OTEHT ARfilPTAFTSMAN Por8&9)'earold.i. L1aht Clerical NU & BREAKFAST. STOPtU
toloanonlst&2ndTU's E/side CM. 11 /12/77 Weight loss .bbr~ast Young growing Hunt· houaekeepint, Tuea.· Day1lhlft. Jolly Roller •••
Agent. 496·0800 64.S-3824 enl areement Y YP· inaton Beach Firm Mln Weda.·Thurs .• 2:30 to CUSTOMER ORDER CLERK 172'7 E. Dyer"ltd, Irvine, Local co. needs cnr
Found·. Fem Ing haired nosls.531-0334(12·7) 4yearsex TypeVcoo: 6:30 in Misalon Viejo. applybtwn2and4PM. thu1iaallc peraon t!'
LOWEST M "'SS• '-E strucUon P.;14)536-8832 $S>/week. References re· pickup, dell ver, gen I Siamese vie Edward & " A9 · Ci quired. Call 837·9682. We have wi excellent opportunJty in our t:Ollla COOK hel~. No exp nee. Must
lm.r.st RatH Slater, HB. 842· 7839 FIGURE MODELS ARTIST /PASTEU' Mesa office f~ a versatile, poised person who l• have valid Callt. driv~·a
ht T.D.'t, also Lost: gold nugget type ESCORTS Draftl.ng, inking, ,Presa BabfiltUr for 18 mo. girl. good at dealing with the public. Your varied ~: (:U,':'::i~~.Pc:'J; ~~:.~117.,,Eft.1407 .. can: Mr.
2nd T.D. Lomtt. bracelet vie Npt Bch. preparation. Exper'd. I~ine area. Mon thru responsibilities will l.nclude; order processing, 21833 W. Coaat Hwy, N.B.,.~-----------·
Fairest Terms since 1949 673-3762 OUTCAU OHL y Interesting w or". Friday. 752-2209. price quoting, and. &~er al clerica~ ~~tiea. 8'24475 Delive..v pen10n, .Free•r"
631-3811 Be ns & d emei'at · • ~ ., ~ Sottter Mtg. Co. LOST· Calico cat, vie. net a vane Babyaltter Mon. Tues The successful applicant alloutd have 1ood' COOIC Auto Supply' Avery
642-217 l 545-0611 Harbor View Phase III, w/growtnaco. 979·7660 2Pro·6: aopm · Within typing skills. TWX experience helpful. Partway at San Diego i---------1 walking distan ce of For 11mall retirement Freeway, Mlaalon Viejo wE/'~uy F'IRST & 2ND NB. 644'1145 ~nt & r.:~· Vl•ta School. I d be AM •-home In Lag Bch. Call at•-Assemblers 86. App Y m penion Fri ay 8/18 tween 8 .,. An ... 94ro 'or de•ai*· ... DELIVERY man •or ear· TkUST DEEDS. AGT. Lost: 4 Mo old Dog, white repar tvt'IA B..ECTROMIC 4PM ,... "° 1• • 1a • "
714.4116.0800 W/brn head •· spots. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • .-. ~AM, LA Times home "' Trainees & evper'd. BABYSITTER Needed ,....,. li"'•""' ro•"'•. No col·' Short hair. Nr Estancia 5chooh & " y ... ,, u .... ll.S. Reward.S48·Sl96. ...,_Hon 7005 Rapidly growing co. baa from 2PM·5:30PM, Mon Air Produch Ir Chewticali Cobk for Hamburaer lectillg, economical.tar' Announce,..nh/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• immed. openings in t}\e thru Fri. Ref's. 6«·4641 Hamlet, exp pref'd. App· req'd. $350 mo net take
Personoh/ LOST : Brown German ARE y OU BORED following: aftS:30PM, 752·01.56daya 1771 Placttltl• Avt. CM. ly i'il:l'llOn btwn 2·5. home. Adlta only. 2\.11 hn
Lost&FoUnd Shorthalrw/lgbrwncol· SILLY?C t tDoothy ...... SolderilHJ BABYSITTER Aft . 15'5 amaCM day. Weatntlnater/HB •••••••••••• • • ••• •••• • • I 7 Id 847 1488 · on ac r SI rf111 'C ,,.. Eq aJ Opportunity Employer area 838.ot26 Amounc .... nts 5100 ~yl'1!o · · Shreve Prof. Modelingrl'llMJ School/sick days, perm. u COOL , ___ . ------
....................... FOUND: Bull Mastiff. S~hl & Agcy., Lido Wire WrapplRg lrvine.552·0317 Full It p/tlme. Xlnt Delivery Person, p/time'
AnORNEYATLAW medium s ize mate. y111age,67S.5580forseU CclWe&..._.Ms . .._...W..W 7100 Waies•Bendlta.Me .. farbuayNewporttravet Brown&wh1le.Harbor& i~provement & con· Successful a pplicants BABYSITTER, hve·lo, y .. ,.. u--a... r--. u-p. '""'1 agency. Muat have
K ( d t older child Rm as brd •••••••••••••••••••••• Yqv. ~· ~ vu BHI RUPTCJ $95 Gisler. 968-9108 1 ence-pu m?re ex· will have &ood manual , · · CenterSt CK548-558S motorcycle, able to M ---------1 cit.ementlnyourhfe! dexterity. Workbn8am· Ht g Bcb. Refs. 847..ot07 .....,..r.nnforon;lerprocesa· ' • trlvel frwys. Will work
DIVORCES95. Found: Male Ger~an JobtW.ted. 7075 4 :30pm . Co paid orfMI0.2666 BULLOCK$ tng.Busyolc•phona. •COOKS*· approx5hrsdaJJyMon· she Ph er d m • x. benefit.a. Sal open. Call Ba'--itter needed i'n my Ute calcua&ator, type, Fri. Hrly wa1e &
Basic OivorceOnJy. "' .,..... or apply lo person, home for 3 yr old boy. WILSHIRE · · ..... · ·~D .. ac· m eaae pa • eat, Easlbl . .lfs, NB. ,, .. ·9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111• ~ follaw up Fore•-trat =K ........ A no-ll ld N
640-2507 "°9ra.t D.ta lftc. Carta Mesa area. Own ~~~lne!pceorm. ~deaxlr.•~l.e·. applieatloht for clen appeaf'ance an --------Fowid, male adult Collie, ntvATEDUTY 16752 HaleAve trans.5'8·756hft.l2. Newport.._,. ... .... brea aat coou. F/T, abeolutedtuat.833-9817. Vic. Brookhurst & MUISE IXPU. w.c ., .. A ~ Apply, lMS ent, r'!'tartl"•pay Ar.~1 SCRAM-lETS Adams, H.B. 847·3168 Irvine 549-0335 .... urren...,. cee DI 2913 Daimler , Santa -• #' DentalLibDellve~. AJ.ao Quads ~ .. 11 .. a"-· or pcnoo 3-SOm, daa • ·"
557 L..... BANK · ., .... .._ Ana. NO obone calls .,lease. Part·Tlme. Goocl for AN~WERS ~~t~"a's~lk& VA1~':a~ _._. CONSUMER The o~oeitlooa SZURarbor,eo.taMeaa. boulewtvea.6464088.
Dw~f-Npi.se -Call 546-0072. Reward. Prac. nurse avail, part Assembly ~ LOAM Acceuories CLE:llC C.OOU. Moonraht> u hlr· o.ntal Aamt.CJ\ntde, 3~ ~dy -lncome -LOST: Brown Lab·Dobi time. Refs. . OFFICR Womeo'a Fine Apparel tq exp'd broiler eoou. days. Pref. CDA or RDA SUITCASE mhr, w /tan muzzle & 494-8541 Manufacturer of pre· Temporary AAocla.tes Immediate opentna for a P-.e apply lo person or min 2 yra exper. Overheard: ''I &tayed at stocking & white cross on c Isl on electro· Wlthcollectlon 1br11Chrtttmaa,Ndw Clerk lo our warranty re· btwn 1·5PM. USU _71_4 .... 1_833-_163_L ____ _
agreatbotel.Tbetowels chest. vie. Alton &Retired cpl would look mechanical swltchin& experience 'lbruJa.nuaryi.t. pa1r department, Kuat MacArthur Blvd, &.A.Dental
were·IJO big and fluffy, I Flower. SA. please call after house &/or doga ~,~:!:baa immed. MOM-sa&. type 65Wpm, tnspeetl.on met1l ~c Qffice need& 5V¥f.ci;E?.~¥ close my Tom. 751-2185 while owner vacations. ::i;~:.::i....Leocl UMITID Enetneer otiDcomlnlaftdout1oln1 CeobJ!t-Coob full• Ptr l\DA. FriDJlo
Xlntrefa. 644-7230. ........._.., CAUJOIMIA IAMIC Credlt/fasbier . item11, filing, phonea. o-~ /Y Y""r ...... -j beneflLt.tu·•
&-.. _ _. Losl young black Lab. in Requires exper. in (Bothrennlc . Please appty ta peraon oumo::~~ •• vu.•-Lost ~ 5300 CM 11114/77. Ca ll Debra Le1al Secretary. Free dlrect.lngworkofuptolO Seuonal) to: Important. Pleue ea,11 _ .... "'•SIST
.............. .... ... .. 642-8166 or 768-5888 lanoe, in your office 5 a.uemblers. Day ahitt. 7903 F.di.naer Ave Gift~• , Seuonal the Chef at Del Monico 1 ~':. P, VL y ofc Lo6torFoundapet?Call Y.r& expr 6'5·2982, •Alu .... ,. H~Beach M-uandll 11 752·8000 or appJy In , Animal Aas18tance LOST; grey Schnauze_r; itt·2Molvmsg _... ._ 0 • 2-511 a48J4art need• br11bt, en·
League537-2273nofee. w/blue collar. Vic. CdM Small component.a, ex· 1714)147·2511 ' · T.ai.lol' ~Wy :a · tbuaiaatte ehtralCf~1
--area. Boy owner very up· 14\k'pr. No lime to cln or per. pref'd. Dayshitl. RetumToStock b\ple' ' · w/expande<I dutiea to
Lost: Cockatlel. Albino, set. Reward. 673-2728, shop? Nd help at your STACOSWITCH IMC ' An Equal PleaeApplylnPenon COUNTER GIRL complete't.he team. Xlnt•
yellow/orange cheeks. 673-7245 part.les?Alsoht.ecook'i· 1139BakerCoataMeaa OpportlmitJEmployer fdoa..~aprn.spzn 'Parttlme889W.18tbSt. oPPQC".s.Jopen.~.2432. ''Milo". Newport Shores. Exp & refs. Andrea, 549·3041 13 .. lllH ..._ CM • ·
Reward. 894·5381 S/S, Lost: Siame,.e Sealpoint 551·2896. F.qualOpporEmployer P.q-1()pporEmpl01er
631·2878 wkdya female atyed cat, 8 mos ---------• old. "Su an''. Irv/Univ Housekeeper/Companion. Banldnl
FOUND: 9 mo. old lova-Dr, NB. eward. 548-8674 Ught bakkpg. s day w~. LO.AN Caftt•rla/laduetrlal
b I e re m a I e Do b i e rela. Nr bcb. 540-0857 AS51MIUIS "' Near Harbor Blvd le Sar
Shepherd mix. 547-2.533 ,.tnOll... 5350 Xbtt benefit.. Small co. OFFICR Dietl> Ftwy, C.M. Mon-
---------•••••••• .. •••••••••••••• Htlp W..e.d 7100 Small ti. Good Mln. 2 yn iDltallrnent " Fri, f:30J>m·Ul>JD, Sal ---------FOUND: ~usky approx 6 Drlnklngp;oblem? ••••••••••••••••••••••• manu~rlty 6 lltecomm'lbaJlklendlllt .tl•tri·IPm. GrUl
mo. old, vic Nwpt Blvd, · cau Alcohol Helpline eyeslabt. 1 YI' mln exp. e x p • r • r e q • d • undw•chH, 1alad1
Tll8tln. 832-0542 24 hn a day 835-3830· Acctng BkkpnJ caU Lillian, 581·8UO. =:ve lndependeat other jobt alto avail
FobND: Young Irish Set· PREGNANT? TIMPOUIY M. V. area. en xlnt beneftta. c.itl'1N3'73.
terMacArthur&Flower, Caring conUdentla Regisur Today lo work Callarapplyat: CARPETLAYEllS S.A. Call to ldedUfy counseling & referral. onvarlousaccountlng& ASSlST. APT 'MNGMT SANTIA.OIANIC ~.only. 646-9811 542-18'5 bookke)&ing assign· OuiJUan couple~. 132-5200 • Abortion, adoption & menta. ork close to Man to do maintenance, $2-&06 ka!ping. d m ork 535 E. lat St Tustin Found Sky Terrier, ap. APCARE 547.2563 your home. Fl•ure womanto oo cew · EqualOpporEmploye.r
prox2yrs. H.B./Fnt Vly. Clerks lo Sr. Accoun·84'1 ~~-9805~~--:~--=--I~~~~~~~~~~ 530-2101 ext 61: 836-13'78. uuD"' • Vl,.11I tants needed thruout -Siii MnSecarra. " "'• -OraneeCo. .. ... y•....-BanJdna Outccil Meuap Robert Balf'11 ~ .. i..persort T&L8l
Found; Black KiUen. FortMFwtoflt! Accounump,s neecled for new II used BankU)Mtl' reg'd
Looa hair, all black, ap· Servlng all Orange Co. 500 S. Main, S~ 501 Ponebe VW le RV sales. Coot8d &b Cnllabton
Pr<> x 2 111 o s o l d . &35·7813 No. Tower, Uoiqo Banlt Im1Hdiate opennlnt. Itvlne NaUoOal Bank ~~bo/Brl11J.Ol, CM. •MICHiLE·s· Jn~~J~~·nt• :e~~tt::.M~·nrlo!!'fn~ ~oo.
Found •· OWner ldent. Olltcal) 11..S.ae W'View: ••It for Salee Baotq
by denf:>mlnaUoa. da~" .:..10AM~~·IAM'=:.!..!!..-.:.78~1::::::""482::=~,,-...---..~~116111111'"-1fl· ..,qoo 4tM51 I ,..,.... ' ~~Q Iott. H.B.P.l>. 5......._..__._ . Acct.nc&iperv t.o'800 7 f/tirne Kon. Wedt , ~· --a ...... _..._..-Mat'1Cntr1Mcr taOlt Autornotln '°'out So. ~. Paa&• 18.,So. El Camino Real Louotflcer t.ollSK New Detail Sbop needa Ole. EQe.r. 1Pn1 d C.U San CleMCnte. F\llly Uc. ._ E ~ 80iiaka ~ For appt, 402-7296 Real Eat It Ban~ xper, help. · -. C.IUOf'Qla Fecteral ~-toSUK Topwq• paid. &tine &avtnO•Loan
• SHERI CEE * Bkkpr/Jt. Eatate to WK 8'eamet9, ant ·98lntera1 3133JlN~ St CM
Certltted.Ma,.eu • lrVtne Personnel Ageqc)' burfera Is 10tlabon, up. J:q\ltt()ppci smPlofer
HouseCaJll ·BY Appt. 48ll"El7thColtaMe1a holst.ery thampooeu, ~~--.-----....-~-....
838-a38 ~ZU , 642·1470 oiaeck out~ick·UP. de· ~~~;;;;:;;;;~'7e~~~~~~~I U~ry. A yat 2ClGO arbor Bl. CM
6'5-1(00
' . '
,
-
...
SECRETARIES
31410....Drhe
54"'4741
CAcrota From
Orange Co. Ail'pott)
F.qual Oppor Employer
IOJO
Affei:ti.Oo•te adlt fem Cfalico, bUl li mo., cray
male. Gdtlouie :SST-4435
( I
Germall $hep.herd
The lariest mOISt COJJ)• beaullf~\~ d.ls-posi.
prebensive ln•entoey of Uon, · • ovsng home
American Oak Antlq~ -~--•-..,-----
In Calif. We~ direct II l yr old Jern Golden
pus the ••vlngs on to &trlever piix dog, Liz
you. Also, Antique M1·2Sla
ReproducUons are avail. ---------
at the very loweat pricea. family Jl>C>vina. Mr.
Located at: Penon,Uty, shaggy dog. 750 E. Dyer Rd needs loving borne. 18
Santa An,. mo1. 6'5-7067
(At The Newport Frwy) F:ema l e Alaskan
Matamute, needs large yard.~ after6pm ••
1050
I
I
Da DAU. Y Pll.OT Thu"f!!!. Howmbet 17, 1117
IHOk•W. ................ -····--··-···
Comp) Stereo, Scuba
Gear Xlnl cond. must
Want Ads sell. 979-8903
~--~-----
Countfhe
blessiiags
you laav ...
.
Turn them into
Christmas Cash
by placing an ad under our
DAILY PILOT
CHRISTMAS T.REE
YOUR
UNUSED
ITEMS
COULD BE
SOMEONE'S
CHRISTMAS ·~
Thi11ize
ad only
$4.00
ANTIQ,UE PIANOS Stemway Uprtabt
New Flnlab/Sbarp '1895
Stelnwey Upr. "'15
Walworth Upr./O.ll '750
~mball Upr/Mah 1675
.PAUL'S PIANO
SHOPPE
SEA RAY~
Al tf71M*lt
11•.30·.
HAUl$0M1S
SEA RAY
2327 So. Main. S.A.
540.6555
I/B. so
JobnsonO/B, w/trlr.
751·9fDI
AUCTION
19781MW's
HERE HOW!
COMPUTI
IODYSHCW
HOWOP!H
EXCB.l.8ff
SB.IC110M °'
72124SPOlT
$1100
'72 Hard-top. Canary
yellow. Good cood.
All/Fii, mas wboels,
S-.Dd. he. rack. e1,ooo miles. Can't afford 2
car's. Call 646-3818
Desperate!
9570 . IMW llSAUS "3 Flat 128 Sedan, reblt ••••••••••••••••10•••••• We may have your neX\ en1, 1ood tires, xlnl 1973 POID VAM car lo our inventory. Call shape Sl500/be11t offer .
.---..._ ~ .. mtodayl ..... af\4PM "-w--.er Hl .. 204049M94t •-------3speed, va, ma1 •heeb11------===:-1 speclal exha111t It brano .... 9727
new, fully carpeted It ••••••••••••••••••••••• CREVIER cuatomlaed interior.
(7N51W).
SADDUl4C1C
VAWYIMPORTS
BARW ICK DATSUN
'-l, Ii''• .11, ' 1• •
831 ·137S -193-JJ?S
llrmMINew77
"'' s~.~:!°:~v HONDA Cars W 835·3171 MAMY
rH1 uu .. ,... OflMNO llllACHIJtl To CllOoM ""°"'!
•USED IMW'•* UNIVERSITY
'T1S3Ql41pd 288SEU Olcllm>blle
"11a:aataS/R171RSK "18200U1pdS/R40lPDP tt.do Cc:n • GMC
'T7SZOlOpOURTP TnlCb
CloMcl 0. S..d111s 28SO Harbor Blvd.
---------• Costa Mesa 540.9640 I '77 IMW J20I •speed. air coodlt.lonlne. '78 Honda CVCC wg~.
stereo cassette A Xlnt cood. 17,500 mi.
m e t a 1 I l c p a 1 n t . s:MOO. ~2.845. 548·21687
(H9RXll>. Like new· '76 wacoo. ' apd, radio,
mlllt ... toappreclatel air 23 ooo mi *"495. SADDUIAC1C ~iaoo· ' ...
V AWY IMl'OaTS Jclglm" 9730 111..2040 49M94f •••••••••••••••••••••••
~e COUNTY'S *' Xl6, '72, Bed, Blt in· OLDIST ter. '8500.
" 19&7 J~:~s::· 4 dr ·w Hdan, super cond.
Wires, radJo, A/C, orig.
Sala-serrice-Leulnl owner. '60()0. or best of-loY C..er,htc. fer. (213)466-3M4 ex. D-64
Rollt fl.oyce BMW "--Gh1a '735
1540Ja1Dboree .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Newpor\Beacb 840-6444 '74 Ghia. FM cut, air, •
B11W 531>-l .auto. Full clean. Xlnt cond. $3600.
elect incld'I aarf, 1e· 49'·2893
mne llb.r 1nL Llb' nu. 1988 Karsnann Ghia
Dys ~. wlmda or claulc cond. All/FK eves aA s. -.1595 rad.M>, S1985. 493-8117
'78 BllW 2002, 4 apd, SUD '88 Con•ert, Wbt/whC. root, D,000 mi, ........,. 0ien7 eond.. New rads. • 1..:..;:..:.....;:.;:..:;.:... ______ , ________ , S'7100/0fr. Jobn 84C)..IOOCl $2400 b. MS-0'185 WE BUY wkdy1, (213) 411·19'1 __ c_u ____ _
wblds "71. lJOO en1. DU pnt, AM·
Cl.IAM CAIS. •• BllW, auto, ed. cond. nts.trk, clean.
•DUCKS S200Q. 642.-00 an aPM 493-"22
CONNlll
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
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FAlllASDC SAVl•GS I Al MILE IKE lllPIRTS
Huntington Be eh .
Fountain ¥alley ·
EOITtON
VOL. 70, NO. 321, A SECTIONS, '2 PcAGES
,
Afteraeo•
·N.Y. Stoeks
'
\
Clark Asks CaIDpaign ·Spending Curb
By GARY GRANVILLE
OI ... OIMty Hee Ii.ff
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Clark has proposed a
county political campaign or·
d\nance that places a lid on can·
didate spending and limits the
amount individual donors can
contribute to a political cam·
paign.
Clark's proposJl .also provides
for the establishment of a county
Murder
fair campaign practices com·
mission to oversee campaipa
for county offices.
The commission suggested by
the Anaheim supervisor would
have subpoena power and be
fortified by a deputy di.strict al·
torney assianed to the com-
mission staff.
According to Clark, his pro-
posed ordinance can be enacted
this year and placed on next
year's ballot to bo either ratlfted
or rejected by county voters.
If enacted immediately as
Clark want•. tbe ordinance
would ptltce a 75-cent a voter
limit on campalen apendiJli ln
next June's prim~ elecUon.
In comparison, tn the HD)e
election in 1976, Supervisor
Thomu Riley spent more than S2
a voter to win a landslide victory.
Clark's proposed ordinance
would abo limit the amount In·
dlvidual donors can 1lve to a can-dlda~ to~ annually.
Elected officials who violate
the $500 limit would be lnell1lble
"from voting or rulln1 on mat·
ten lnvolvln&" the donon for an
wwpeclfied time.
Jn ~trast to Clark's proposed
$500 Umitat.ion, contributJons to
county supervisor campal1ns
have run as hiCb as SS,000 and
donations of '2,500 are common.
Not covered by the Clark pro-
posal are loans to candidates, a
devlce used by heavy backers to
help reed dollars into candidate
coffers that are later recovered
tihrou1h cocktail ind dinner fund·
raisers.
Clark, who will seek re-elecUon
in 1978, al.so looked at the role
lobbyist.a play in poliUcal cam·
palgns when be designed hls
f Wrong Target
campaicn reform proposal.
ln an effort to avert duplicatlOft
of the Ion, Hat of ao·ealled lob-
byists who now resister u 1ov· ernmental advocates with the
county, the two-term supervbor
arrived at a new definition tor
lobbyist.
It shall be those who report
spending more than *25 for ad·
vocacy in tbree consecutive re-<See LIMIT8, Pa1e AU
Probe
Stymied
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol IM 0.11, ...... SUft
A San Bernardino County
aheriH's deputy said today that
officers are stymied at this point
in the investigation of the murder
of Huntington Beach resident
Robert Myers near Barstow la.st
weekend.
t Marine Jets Fire
On Salvage .Vessel 1
Detective Dennis O'Rourke
said that the investigation hangs
on the discovery of Myers' miss-
ing 1974 gold.colored van that
was believed taken by the as-
sailants.
"We have reason to believe the
crime took place Inside the van
and that is where the clues would
be," O'Rourkesald.
He said police have been alert·
ed throughout the nation and that
a search is belng made for the
van at the international airports
in Los Angeles and Ontario.
O'Rourke said that the giant
'
7 parking lots are a prime place tor criminals to unload cars.
"The Iota are ao blg that
veblcle11 can 10 unnoticed for a
Jong time," he said.
The milsiq van 11 a U'14 Ford
Econollne with a Ueente aumber
or 3165SH. It had a wblte bubble
top over a gold-colored body.
Myers' widow, Rita, said today
: that sbe couldn't understand lb•
slaying of her husband.
"It Is Jlke he completely disap-
peared and it's not feasible.
There are no reasons.
"Bob was not in the hablt of
picking up hitchhikers, but be
would atop and help if a car was
broken down or If someone really
needed help," she said.
The 57-year-old Myers, a
apeclaUst in the treatment of in·
dustrlal water and a former
loo1time resident of Laguna
Bncb, was shot t.o death Friday
by two different weapons, ae·
cording to inveaueators.
The slayinC was first noticed
by a passing motorist who saw a
bldnd man throwing a body from
a van.
The victim was found the next
day.
llyers had cone to the desert
on a b.uslneas trip and was slaln
shortly after havlng lunch with
friends in Victorville.
Westminster
$tatue Plant .
Bltby Fire
KEY WESI', Fla. (AP) -Two
M arlne attack jets apparenUy
mistook a salvage ship as a prac-
tice target and opened fire with
rocket.a that narrowly missed a
diver.
Diver Don DeNalrie was only
stunned by the concussion from
' the explosions.
The Jets flew out or the Naval
Air Station at Key West , Fla. but
Mum's the Word
Princess Anne smiles and waves &Uter leaving a London
hospital holding her two-day-old baby son. The royal in·
fant is still unnamed.
Tr\lst~ d tbe Ocean View
School Diltrict are e~ted to
vote about $100,000 wwth ol Un·
provements Monday in an effort
to bring older sehools within
their district up to a par wttb
newer campuses.
SebOols amona UM> 24 operattnl
campne9 desltnated for im-
provemeiQ are primarily those
operattn1 on a kindergarten
throup iiah trade format.
Campuses catering to kin-
dergarten throulh ellhth grade
enrollments ceaerally have m«e
amenities, because tbey are
somewhat newer.
Tru1tee:a aareed at this week•a
1tudy aesaion that the character
of eacb Ocean View &bool Db·
trtct campus -many were de·
signed with a special educational
emphalll-abould bentalned.
Improvements under con·
slderaUon Involve such items as
the addition or handball courts
and asphalt play areu; storage
for kindercarten supplies; addl·
tlonal electrical outlets and out·
side atorace f acWUes.
Trustees are expected to de-lete a proposed educational
televlalon ~ecept.ton system in
favor d a modified TV plan to be
develop.ct at a later date.
(See 8Cl:IOOLS, Pa1e A!)
Shident8 Set
Swap Meet
HetdthyDay
For Smokers
By The Aaaoelated Presa
Smokers across the na·
tlon were urged today to
stop puffina -at least for
one day and possibly
forever -in support of the
''Great American Smoke Out,'• 1ponaored by the
American Cancer Society
and some local govern·
ment and health or1anlu·
tiODS.
A 1pokeaman for the
socletr uld the 1roup
hoped t.o set 10 mUUon or
the country's 54 million
smokers to 11ve up their
cigarettes fOI' the day.
Local soclety volunteers
have been dJatributlne "I
Quit" pledae cards and
petitions fOl" people to sign
and rallies and spe(lal pro-
grams were oreanlzed 1n
many cities
H11ntington
Man Critical.
Mier Crash
Clyde Ivan Younkin of Runt.
lngtoo Beach was Hated In
critical eond.ltlon at HunUneton
Jntercommunlty Hospital today
after 1uflertn1 extenalve lnJUrtes
in a two-car, bead-on colllalon
Wednesday nlabt. offlclals re·
ported.
their ~me field was not lm·
mediately known.
The incident, confirmed
Wednesday by the Navy, oc-
curred Nov. 6 as DeNairle, a
diver for Treasure Salvora, Inc.,
was over the side of an 187-foot
World War II·vintage buoy
tender.
He was working alone on the
engineless ship, which serves u
a base of operations for aalvqe
being done on a sunken Spanish
treasure ship. A crew returned
for DeNairie Monday, eight days
after the incident.
"You could bear the explosions
first,•• the diver said Wednesday.
"Then you could see the aircraft
and then bear the jet.a.'•
DeNalrle said be manqed to
climb back aboard the ship and
Hlsed an American nag in an ef.
fort to stop the rocket attack. But
the planes made other passes and
fired again, be said.
Fortunately their pilots were
having an off day. None of the
rockets made a direct bit.
Marine Capt. Hal C\ltlip in New
Orleans said the target sblp the
two A-4 Sky Hawks were sup·
posed tobave fired at was 10 miles
to the north.
Cutlip called the attack a mls·
take and said an invesU1aUon
was underway.
"l would say the ship and the
captain and the crew would be
due an apology," besald.
Ceast Marder Case
BJ JOANNE aEYNOLDS Ol•.....,PllllMMt
A bid by two ot the suspects ln
the Bovan murder case to be
transferred into the custody of
the U .s. Marahal remains un·
decided today.
A spokesman for Municipal
Court Judge Selim Franklln tald
the judge has not yet made a de·
clslon on the motion made before
him Tuesday. ~ere have been
indications the judge will deQy
the transfer proposal.
William Sheffield, the attomey
representing Jailed murder COD·
spiracy suspect Anthony Marone
Jr. and Tom Crolby, attomey for
Raymoad Besco, also Jailed in
the case, told Judge Franklin
their client.a are being held in
what amounts to solitary confine·
ment in <>ranee County J all.
The two men and the third
jailed suspect. Jerry Flori, are
involved ln the federal witness
procram which II used to protect
the lives d people who telUfJ ln
caees lnvolvtni oraantzed crime.
Jn an earlier court appearance,
Reaco's attorney saJd hla client,
wbo has been ldentifl~ a• a re-
located federal wltneu, fears for
his llf e in county Jail.
Jn the Tuesday m9tion• Crolby
and Slleftleld ariued that the pro-
tectlve meaautes Instituted lD
county Jail &Mount to aoUta.ry
confinement and aald their
clients would be both safer and
more comfortable in federal
cu1tody. •
There ba•e been aome tndtca·
tlons, however, tbat if tho twO
men an relealed to federal of.
tlclalS, that ~ wbereabciutl
wlll remain a secret •of tbo
Manbal'1Senice. "
In helrlnl the motlon oa the
transfer, Judi• Pr&ilklin 111d be
would !Jave to cUscuss the matter
wl~ the Loi Aqeles Marshal's
Offfce befON makln& b1I ruling.
Resco, Marone and Fiori are
accused of murder conspiracy ln
the 1bootin.g death of S~hen
John Bovan who died Oct. 22 out·
side a Newport Beach
restaurant.
Police allece the three men
were hired by four local bosl·
nessmen to kidnap and kill
Bovan.
Nazi Captive
Sets Lecture
A lecture ls scheduled toaltbt
at the Buntin.ion Beach Central
Library by Mel Mermelstein. a
survivor of Naai Oerman1''•
World War II concentraUon
camps.
Mermelstein, a BunUnston
Beach businessman, allo will ex·
hiblt eoncentratlon canip
materials and wlll show movl~~
The free lecture will be be14
from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Pacific
Room ol the library, located at
the comer d Golden West Street
and T-1benAvenue.
-
DAil Y PILOT H/F
lrvlne
Victim
An Irviae resident has been
identified as the third victim of
Tuesday's m1da1r collision off
'Crystal Cove, Orange County
•coroner's officials said Wednes·
iday ·
Missing and presumed dead ls
Thomas A. Glass, 34, of 3741
Avenue Sausalito in Irvme.
Coroner's officials said body
part.a located al the crash scene
II three and one·haH miles south of
the Newport Beach harbor en-
trance belonged to a second vie·
tim, James Tibbott, 38, of 9312
Comstock Drive ID Huntington
Beach
A third v1ct1m, also listed as
missing and presumed dead. is
Robert Baker , 41 , of 22842 Fox-
borough Way in El Toro.
FAA officials said today Tib-
bott held commercial instrument
and instructor ratings Baker
had r eceived his private pilot's
Jtcense Aug 24
The three vi ch ms were co·
workers at VTN, an en$lmeering
and land pl a nning company
located near Orange County Airport.
A VTN spokes rn a n, Judy
Has elhoef, said the trio was not
nying on.eompany business. Site
said Tibbott gave fl ying lessons
during his off time, which was
usually during the noon hour.
A National Transportation and
Safely Board investigator said
today it was unknown who was
piloting the 111-futt.-d Cessna 182 at
the time of the colhs1on. He also
said 1l was unknown if Tibboll
was giving lessons on lb!> flight.
Y The Cessna was rented Crom
Newport Air Associates.
A second aircraft, a Piper
PA28, hmped back to Orange
County Alrport and landed safely
with its two occupants following
the midair crash.
T1bboll 1s survived by his wire.
Linda, and three children; Baker
1s survived by his wife, Janice,
and two children; and Glass is
:.urvived py his wife, Kathryn,
and lhr<..oc children.
fi'rOffl Pa~ A I
SCHOOLS. •
Co ns truction of a dditional
cabinets and bookshelves arthe
various schools also will prob·
• ably be tabled at Monday's reg.
ular school board meeline.
One concern regarding the
older schools has been lack of
multi-purpose room fac11ittes.
But addmg them at this point,
school officials said, the district
would be spendin( an eatimated
12 million at a lime when future
enrollment trends are in doubt.
Trustees have shut down
Rancho View School because of
decreasing enrollment. On the
other hand, Harbour View School
in the Huntington Harbour region
1s overcrowded.
A just-completed multi·
purpose room added to that cam-
pus is already being considered
for possibl~ conversion to
classroom space to handle the in·
nux of students there.
One concerned citizen. Dr.
Wayne Thompson of the star
View School area of north Hunt-
ington Beach, pointed out that 14
ditrerent organizations use the
campus for meetings.
Trustees acknowledged the
school's lack ot a multi-purpose
room caterine to such uses is a
problem, but pointed out the
same ·situation ex1sta at m08t
other schools in the district..
They said they can foresee no
immediate solution, because, un-
tl l the enrollment picture
becomes sufficiently clear, the
dJstrtct cannot JuatiCy building
facllitJes that might ao unused.
Power Failure
LOMPOC <AP> -Authoritlet say a blown Pacific Gas and
, Electric Co. Insulator was
responsible for a power failure
that left thl1 Santa, Barbara
Cbunty town wit.bout electrlclty
for four houra.
PARAPHERNALIA ASSEMBLED -Collection of narcotics
and preparation goods seized by Irvine police W~es·
day. Shown are balloo~s o! he~oin (foreground), Jar of
lactose used to mix w1lh herom, peyote buttons (top)
s poons, syringes and extra balloons.
Irvine Trio Held
In Drug Seizure
By PJDUP ROSMARIN
Of u. 0.11)' ..... sutt
Irvine and Santa Ana police
claim to have cracked a major
heroin trafficking oper alton with
the arrest Wednesday of three
Irvine residents and the seizure
of a small quantity of heroin and
peyote.
Police said they arrested two
other persons after officers in
tercepted telephone calls to the
* * *
2 Arrested;
Drugs Seized
At CM Hotel
Santa Ana police arrested two
men and seized cocaine and
marijuana worth an estimated
$106,000 Wednesday night in the
parking lot of a Costa Mesa hotel
Arrested were Gusta vo Diaz
Samanlego, 29, or Wilmington.
and Albert Valdez, 32, of Carson
Valdez faces charges of sefling
cocaine and marijuana and car·
r y ing a concealed we1tpoo.
Samaniego faces -charges of con-
spiracy to sell cocaine and marl·
juana.
Both men remained in Santa
Ana jail today.
Seized were six ounces of co-
caine worth about $80,000 and 40
kilos oC marijuana worth about
$26,000, police said.
Sgt. John Collins s aid the 8
p.m . arrests were made after
two undercover Santa Ana police
otficers and a police woman al-
legedly arranged to buy the
dru.cs Crom the pair.
Santa Ana police, assisted by
Costa Mesa police, arrested the
two without reaistanc•.
p,....pClfleAJ
UMITS •.•
will be.
J rvine home, at 14611 Higbcrest
Circle, while making the first ar·
rests.
Police said more than a dozen railers were trying to purchase
heroin. Narcotics investigators
answered the calls and arranged
to meet as many as they could .
More arrests may stem from the
telephone traffic, police said.
The arrests culminated 8 ·
months· long investigation, police
said, headed by the Irvine depart·
mcnt, with Santa Ana police as·
srs ting in setting up narcotics
purchases.
'I'hc raid on the HJghcrest Cir·
c lc house was made on the
strength of a search warrant.
The arrested were identified as.
Tony Gomez, 45, booked at
Orange CQunty Jail on charges of
possession or heroin for sale, and
processing of peyote. Ball was ss.ooo.
Aurora Noble . .CS, booked at
Orange County women~ Jail on
charges of processing peyote,
posseseion of heroin and
possession of marijuana. Bail was ~.500.
A 17-year-old male juvenile
whose name was withheld,
·booked into juvenile hall on
cbarges ofprocesslng peyote and
possession of marijuana.
Juventte hall ottlcials would not
rclHse bail information.
All three listed the Highcrest house as their address.
Arrested after police arranged
to meet telephone callers at the
house were Richard Brown and
Galo Hinojosa. 22, both of Santa Ana.
Both were booked at Newport
Beac h city Jail, Brown on
charges of burtlary with intent to possess heroin (police allege he
broke into the home), Hinojosa
on a char1e ol being under the in-
Oueoce of anopJate.
Brown was held on SJ.0,000 bail.
Bail for Hinojosa was aet at
$1,000.
Seized in the search were
twelve balloons of beroio, four
dozen peyote b\lttona and ••mall
quantity of marijuana. P~llce
also conftscated 16 hypodermic
s yrtngea, ~mpty balloon• in
which herqln ls packed. and ajar
of lactose, a powder uaed to m1x
with heroin.
One lrvlne po11ce officer was
inJured whil~ 1tormin1 the
house. Elliott Nemerson broke
his lert elbow wbtll a f eace be
was cUmbini colJaPMd. He waa
treated at TusUn Cooununlt,y ff0$plta1.
-
WASHINGTON (AP> -A
croup or •cientlsts opposing
nuclear power plants aa1cf toaay
the government's baste aatcty
eatlmates are far too opUmlltic
and that reactor accidents ~ay
kill lhQ\llaru.Ja of people by the
year2000.
The Union of Concerned Scien-
tists. a groupfrequenUy involved
in challenges of Nucle r
Regulatory Commlsalon Polley,'
issued a detailed crtUcism of the
NRC's 197" "Rasmusaen
Report," the government's chief
safety assessment.
The Raamuuen report con·
eluded that the chances of a
serious nuclear power plant acCi·
dent are almoet insianlficant -
smaller than the chance ot a
person's belng kllled by a falllng
meteorite.
But the Union of Concerned
Scientists charaed that this
much-debated analysts contains
serious mlslakee that un-
derestimate the danier to the public.
·The group said "correction" QI
the Rasmussen study 1how1 the
odds of a nucteaT reactor meltlna
and releuing radioactive sub·
stances may be 20 times greater
than the NRC estimated.
The early injuries and
fatalities from such an accident
may be 10 tJmes areatdr than
previously estJmated and, where
prevailing wJnds might carry
radioactivity into heavily
populated areas, the casualties
could be up to 1,000 times higher
th.an the Raamussen estimates,
the &rOUl> said.
It concluded that nuclear acci·
dents could cause some 14,400
fatal cancen by the year 2000.
In a large nuclear proaram,
there may be one chance in 100 of
a nuclear power plant accident
that would kill up lo 100,000 peo.
pie, the union study said, and un-
der the worst circumstances up
to 300,000 could die.
The union said it believes that
the hazards, as it estimates
them, "will prove unacceptable
to the public. · ·
"A aln&lo 1 e. but. '1 no
means th lart' • nuclear acel·
dent may well oecur wltbln a few
dee.des," the union study said.
"Should thia occur we Judie that
the public reaPonae would be
very great and could well
thl'eaten the continuod operatJon
of domest1c-n1.1eleati plants.·•
The 1roup ~ 1d lbe United
Statea 11houtd not commit itself
heaYlly to nuclear power ·unW It hu more reliable assurances o( safety.
Tho aroup recommended that
the NRC withdraw tfte
Raamuuen stuctf aod do ita aafo-
ty analysi3 ovt&' again. •· ,
Recruit's Flames ~ .~ ..
.
'S~z~ Of Shoe Bo~'
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A
University ot Colorado mldahlp·
man says he aa'N names "the
size ol ashoe box" OQ the clothine
of a Marine recruit 1Uqedly set
afire by a drill instructor.
Tbe tdtimocy wu given by
Stabley AuaUn, 20, of Grand
Junction, Colo., in a pretrial
hearin& Wedn~sday . Another
former recruit, Marine PFC
JUcbard IWmer, u, of Wood-
brldie, Va.. said he never saw
thelfames. ·
HJlmertestlfied, however, that
he'saw Pvt. V.N. AJdat or East
Chicago, Ind., patting his
clothing that day, July 9.
Sat. John B. Norrts, 23, of San
Bernardino is charge(S with bu-lne Aldaz, reterrt.ne to bim as·
"torch," maltreatln& tbe .. 21-
year·old recruit by aprayin1
liJhter fluid on bis trouaers and
ign1tin1it.
A ~eneraJ court-martial was acbeduJed to begin before a jury
and a Marine colonel Wednesday
but its start was delayed to allow·
the defense attorney to questJon
another witness in Boulder, Colo.
After the pretrial hearing, a
base spokesman said a declsion
would be made on whether a
court-martial is held and when. A~stln and Hilmer are attending
coUece under pre·commiaslon prograrm.
Au11t.in said Aldaz was not a
regularmemberottheplatooaled
by Nonis. He hadoeeri senl from•
the correcUonal Platoon where:
problem recruit• z. •re put for
special training or confinement. _
There was no exptanauon wb1
Aldaz was confined 'o the correco."
llona l unit when Pvt. Lyna
McClure was ~l«ned In 197$.
before being knocked un.
conscious in forced pugil st.ict,.
drills. That recn.Ut froco L"°'lnf
Tex., died withQ'1t reaalning con.
sciousness in-a Houston vetera04 hospital.
AlthoupJ-Jilmer aald he nevef
saw Aldas aftre, ho said he
turned to see what was hap~n!
ing that day after hearing Norris ..
tell Aid~ te>ur Ot fiv• times t4•
stand at attention. He aaJd Ald~
had refused. •
' .,
Fountain Valley Boys Club of.
fidals will hold a fundraising din-
ner and auction Friday al 6:30 p.m. at ~e Huntington Beacb
Jnn, 2Ul2 Pacific CoaSl Wghwar.
Huntington Beach.
Price of dinner and drinks is
$20. Auctlonjleou include a week·
Iona trip to Haw.Ul ror two, menr-
berahlp tn a hcket club, &
weekend on a yacht and other
vacations. For more information,
call 968-5252.
-
®QUALITY
Y.ELEVISION
17~
.,..,. ~s · Jmow
Ullfemodem dec0tator canpact table TV
lltlllhed In llrnUlaled gnilned Ameflcan Walnut. Dartc BrO'ffn
J)edertll baH Wtlll Gold ColOf 111/n.
djck ;. ve=r=n=o=n=;c::::'s
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Come See
What's New ·
For
~~ The Holidays ·
Wallclff,._ .,.. ..........
14Ml21 ........... ., .....
• •
Suits--Select from our
cof lecdon of comf ortabfe
blends fn duron/wool
that will give you a
<;001 feeling year round.
Halllclay's nuural
shouf~ styling is
always com~ct. Pre-.ThdnksgiVing
I •
SA&E
r. ·Givenchy
. • tn AICdaraof a.teld, ... ...._.~ltbt1111u~·
-velwt Clleck Blazers
Shetland Coble Sweaters LOfll--.. ow .....
beatilator· " ..
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Our deal ia good. includes the full
curved acreen and the baae. To be
really amug about the deal. compare
around. Red, Bittersweet and Black.
40" LO-CONE
257°0
You crre looking at this thing and
thln»ing, ,. at last1 I know ?there
the nugelhom went." Nqt so,
Twinkie• breath, thl• i• a g!eat
'Ii idea. It holds the logs anCI at the
same time draws in cold air, and
returns 1t to the room hot. Much
more efficient than a plain bar
grate, can we aell you one'f.(How ·---·
about a ledae?)
36" ZERO CLEARANCE
FIREPLACE
Th••• are th• pro•
ln fueplac .. , 1 complete unit ready
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23700
t
26"
32"
SHEPHERD'S
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ii FIREPLACE
'~ MATCHES Another heating Idea from the
people who know. (Know
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4900
Single knob temp control.
cool fold down hand.le. high
t•1nperotw• cord on.d plug.
DeMrt Tcm.•30H1S-Ol
Block been nlcJrel chroru•
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heat with 1250. 1500 watt•.
Oe .. rt Ton. #29H90·01
2100
HEAT
WILSHIRE CUSTOM
FIRESCREENS
li you will carefully m•a•ur• the
opening, we11 have p custom
screen made lust for you. up to
40 lucbea. Very nice quality. for
a lot leH than the apeclalty
a tor••·
.
~· 'I So t • J ·-~· a. no~ to ge yow r E_i ~ ~ fibgera burnt theH long ~ · ·1~~ ·,, match•• are excelln\ lo . t 1 get your\ilr• going.
. 77!x
~ Single Mat perimeter b.,.i., wttJa 1St0 waHa. Automo1k thel'ID09tat wtth posltfft .. off"
posltloo. Cam.a ba Me\aW.c hlge. 2ft00 •49JU0.41 .. --
750 or UOO watt•
puah button beat. Haaf~ tw •umJD• ~og. metal~
atond. be..n Tan.
·.
MAHOAJ. 91.ACI BAR-No. 6Z.203 ............. 2a.oo
MANtlALBBASS BAR-No. 62-205 ••.••••••.•• 26.00
PULL CIUWf BLACI BAR-No. 62-207 •••••••• ,2a.oo
PULL CHAii PASS JWWfo. 82-209 ••••••••• 29.00
PULL c~ ANTIQut BRASS.No. 62·2U • , • ,aa.oo
PULL CIWN 101' GLOW .. JCo. U.217 ••••••••• 3$.00
PULL CHAIN SATUf QASS-Mo. U.219 ••••••• aa.oo
PULL Cff4IN ANTIQUE COPJ'EIHto. si211 ... ~3.00
PULL CHAIM ANTIQUE PEWJER·lf o. 62-123 ••• aa.oo
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• . 1700
2500
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No bot apot•, •nn grill ::.to 'Wini·········•· 8800 dlaP,9ralon pattern (l BUILT IN THERMOSTAT •••••• can t think of a tblng 35.000 BTt1 WAU 9900 ..11M to say ex~pt 1f you MOUl1'1'11ERN06TAT •••••• need lt. wpy not buy lt?) 50,000 ITU WITH 12800 . IUD.T 11' THERMOSTAT •••
50.000 ITU WALL • 3900 MOUit TBERJIOITAI;... ·I ·
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Co1h. can't faee th• winfer
without one (Hal, Herl, open 1h•
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mowatatn ho~ lt'a a .tDOD•Y
aav•r. #4-4 or #2~T
3a" iit801' or 36" x 80"
YOUBCBOJCE
Go all die 1'C'f.CUt out
gara99 clicd1~ Dicer ln
tb.• wlzlter to work out tMM.
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP> -Two
Marine attack jets apparenUy
mistook a salvage sblp as a prac·
tice target and opened fire with
rockets that narrowly mlssed a
diver. Diver Don DeNairle was only
stunned by ~ concussion from
the explos•ons.
The jets flew out of the Naval
Air Station at Key West, Fla., but
their home field \ll&S not im·
mediately known.
The incidont, confirmed
Wednesday by thd Nayy, "'OC·
curred Nov. 8 as DeNalrie, a
diver for Treasure Salvors, Inc ..
wu over the tide of an 187·foot
World War ll·vlnta1e buoy
tender.
He was worklns alone on the
engineless ship, which serves u
a base ol operatlom for aalvqe
being done on a sunken Spanish
treasure abip. A crew returned
for DeNatrie Monday, elpt di1i
alter theincklent.
•'You could hear the exPlosioas
first, .. tbe diver said Wednesday.
"Then you could see the aircraft
and then heal' the jets.''
DeNairie said he managed to
climb bact aboard the sblp and
raised an American nag in an el·
.·
fort to atop tho rocket attack. But
the pla,nes made other passes and
rired again, be said.
Fortunatelx_ their pilots were ha..v~ an off day. t\fijbe of tho•
rockets mlde a di.reel bit. Marine Capt. Jlal CuWp in New.
Orleans eaid the tar1et ahlp tho
two A~ $¥ Hawks were sup.
poeed totiaVeflred at wu 10 miles
to the north.
CuUip canees the attack • mis·
take and said an tnvetttption
was under w~.
"I would say the ship and the captalli and the ore\lt would be "'
due an apOlogy." be said. "'
By PIDUP llOS:llASJN
Ol•o.itr .........
will compete for afe top c:eramlCs playe~
fcom hlcfi schools across the nat.lon. . The world'• only known varsity ceramics
athletic competition ls scheduled for Frida1
when two rugged 1outh Orwe County hllh
school teams square off at University Hl&ti
School in Irvine. Teams of 10 members each will be fielded by the ceramics classes of University Hi&h and Capistrano Valley High School of Mission
Viejo.
The first event gets under way. in' the
ceramics room with the starter's 1un
scheduled to go oil at 3:30 p.m . The public ii
invited.
CERAMICS IS THE well·known a.rt of
making pots and other objects of a.rt from
fired clay or porcelain.
w~ isn't 'ftlt known it u.et ~
tsob a demtQd'"· exclVDC sport;~'
tQ Mike Goixtb, UriiversilJ'• team~
GOoch hopes Uaai nramlca ~t will become recoeniied for iti•. athletlo
PoAlbillUea. One \lay, Jl• dreams. cotter•
Asforproceramics, well.. '
SEVEN TOUGH EV~NTS are planned
Friday, wltb tallest pot. most Pots. best pot,
beat 1mall object under three inches, best
band·bull1 project, mixed doubles and relay
competiUons.
Gooch explained that the mixed doubles
event ii the creation of a pot hall by hand, half
on a Potter''s wt.eel. In the relay, be said;
teams of three people make a pot, each team
member working three minutes, then passing
tbepot.
Gooch said there will be cheerleaders and
proper ceramic filbt soo1s. At1laU·t1m4:. a
Mud King and Queen of the Earth will be
crowzteel · .
TD£aB'8 NO llARClllNG baa4, G6och
said, but~ is a quite nice ensemble from
tult.r class to stNm pl.ven ~u,reme
-efforts d eeramic •J>Ot.t b.llwey.
Every erent 11 1ure to liit • 1'Cidd ..
record.
SaJatPlam
Israel Jlisit;
AriJb8 Grumble . .
Plane Crasb¥ietim -. B1 Tbe Astoelatecl Preu
President Anwar Sadat of
Egypt wtll visit Jerusalem for• ldeAnntifilrvineed. as tbresel~~ bvlasctlmbeenof hours start.inc Saturday niabt • i.uu-u •
and wlll address the Israeli iiuel4 Y & atlctalr collls1on off parliament Sundaf, llraell ys Cove. Orange County
Prime t.l1nister Menahem Belin '1 officials said Wed.Des·
annouttc-1 today. da
But Sadat will rnale the vi.sit. -. MlssiDS and :r:::umed dead Is Thomas A:. G • 34, of 87'1
-
............
Cripple to Chanap
Former San Diego vice mayor Vmce Godfrey shows
what he can do with his leg, once cripple..c:;l by de-
generative arthritis in his hip. With a special:!fliet, he is
now a national champion runner and defen1fing cham·
pion of the Senior Olympics.
Dr. Edward A. Hart Sad-
dle back Collete'• a111\1taot ·
superintendent for eeneral de.
velopment, bu been appolDtAlld
admtntstrator of lhe d.latrict'a
northern campus now l41lder con-
struction in Irvine.
College trustees •tpo led tne
49.y,ar-c>ld Lt\,Rna NJl'lel reti-
dent, who w~ rtt<>mmeoded by
Superinteodent President
Robert Lonlbardi, after an ex·
ecutlve aesaionearllerthls week. ·
While announcioa bis appo.in.t-rnent1 col.lei• officials cave the first ndlca&n that the aatelllte
campus may not be completed by
lts planned openinC lo August.
"W(th Ed Ha.rt and his fme
team, we'll have a fine school,"
Lombardi sajd, "but the building
trades are so busy down here tbat
I'm not sure we can get the crews
and pieces together in time.•·
The district superintendent ex-
pJaineC! that many conat.ructlOn
bltt. beint ~ ved on variOU$
campus project.a have been far
out of line with estlmated costs.
He said till• ls apparenUy
because th• construction in-
dustry ii so buay.
Lombardi aald )fart •nd ht.
n"w staff may have to be flexible
with respect to tbe opentns date
and may even have to ohan1e the
format of some cluses if th• flrat
day of school ii lat.er tban e• • pected.
Hart bu ~ rea~lble for
much ot tbe plannlnl oUbe north
campus and will continue to try
and keep the development on
schedule.
"I envtlton an opportunity fo\" ·
a great deal ol creaUvlty ln a new
setting," sald Hart. whose salary
will remain at *39,500.
"Spealdn& tor tOe board, we
think the J)eOple in the vast area
comprlalng the northern site will
State Stdary
RaiseA&ked
... benefit greatly from bis
leadership," laid Larry Taylor.
president of the Board of
Trustees.
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The
California State Etnployees As-
sociation ls pluggiQg fo'( a 12.s
percent wage 1ncre8.$e next yeiµ-.
Hart came to Saddleback in
1975 from a post u usoeiate
dean for student personnel
services at Chabot Colleae ln
Hayward. ·
The Saddleback district
purchased the lnttlal 20·acre
campus site from the Irvtne The labor ~roup told the State Company. for '800,000 and bolds
Personnel Board Wednesday an option 00 another 80 acres if
that ~o percent ls needed to keep the northern campus must be ex-
up with costs, and 2.5 percent is panded.
netded to make up for cutbacks Plans for the flrat phaae in-
Plans to build !Jn PPhalt a9d
concrete p1ant tn an Wldeveloped
area north 9f Ir•lDe woo
tbelDanlmoua ~al ot Oranc• County~Wedri..,.
Dual. Payoff
Offered in
lroine 'War'
~m rabe1. ~ cl~de facWUes for 3,000 student.a.
Tax Controls Pushed
O<fUlala ·of :·Blue Diamond
MaUtl8'1i o1. Loilt Beacti beUevt
the new plallt will belp reduce
truck traffic in saiita Ana arid
Irvine.
The firm now baa such
facilities near JambOree and
Barranca RoadWll Irvin• and in
south Santa Ana.
':I
. "Foil a burglar and win
a burger" ls the latest pro·
motional tactic of the
Irvine Police Depart·
ment's war against
housebreaking.
Orriccr Patrick Rodgers.
who heads the depart·
ment 's crime prevention
unit, said residents who
volunteer for home anti·
burglary inspections are
given certificates good for
a free meal at a local
eatery. Under the home security
inspection, an orricer
points out weak spots
where a burglar can easily
get in, and sunests bow to
correct the problems.
Inspections can be ar·
ranged by calling 7S4·3735.
1~~·
Girl Iruled
Fleeing Rape
I '· LANCASTER (AP) -A 22·
year-old Lancaster man has been
booked for investigation of
murder following the death early
today of a 16·year-old glrl.
Police said she was injured
Tuesday when she jumped out oC
a moving pickup truck while al·
legedly trying to resist the
driver's sexual advances.
Los Angeles County SberUC'a
deputiet-said the girl was Liza
Kozee of Redondo Beach.
Teem Threaten
Irvine Student
An Irvine Hlth School student
riding hia bicycle home acroa
the Yale Avenue pedestrian
railroad overcroelln1 W ednes-
day wu inl«'~e ted by two other teena1era 'and eauned with a
switchblade e, polio• laid to-
day.
The youth, 14, was released un·
harmed after the assallanta ter-
rified him by wavinc tile knlf e ~t
his eye1, and kicklnl In the front
wheel 1pokea of h!I bicycle.
•
Reform Advocate Speah i~ El Tor:o Once the new p1Qt 11 operal·
ing, traffic into tbOle locations
should decreue, company of-By WILUAM HODGE Of .. .,..,, PIMil St.ff
The only way to make certain
government spends less is to give
it less. a proponent of taxpayer
revolt told an audience in El Toro
this week.
"Government today is unllmit·
ed." Howard Jarvis, chairman of
California's United Organization
of Taxpayers, told a gathering of
concerned residents. "Nowhere
is there any limit on what gov·
ernment can spend.
"We're trying to obliterate the
idea or government by. for and of
the government."
Jarvis was in El ~esday seeking support for · alifornia
constltutionat am ndment in·
itiative to limit the property tax
to one percenl of assessed valua-
tion.
"Yon are not going to get 'tax
reform out of your elec\ed of·
ftclalt ln our lifetime," h6 ad·
monished the disgr~ntled
homeowners. "You the people
have no right to say what goes on
ln this govemment~at's their
attitude. "We want to make absolutely
certain that the government
operates on less money thart they
do now," Jarvis said. "The only
way to do that is not to give them
the money in tbe first place."
The newspaper columnist and
former Los Angeles mayoral
candidate lashed out at ·govern·
menl officials' salaries and
pensions.
"We are creating a very rich
and protected society and they're
all politicians," Jarvis asserted.
He attacked what he termed
"legislator favoritiam" toward
government employee unions.
"117 out of 120 state legislative
candidates got the major part of
their election funds from
employee untona," he claimed.
"I don•t•1htnk there's a worse
cancer on our free system than
elected officials being bought by
public employees."
J arvls claimed an allegedly
employee-controlled legislature
would never approve tax reform
because of potential job losses
Crom a dropping of tax funds .
The 15-year veteran of
California \ax reform fights was
optimistic ttaat his property tax
limitation. initiative would
quallfy for Uie June, 1978, ballot.
"We 're (oing to get 750,000
Froaa Page AJ
SADAT CONFIRMS.
shortly after Sadat returned
from l>amucus, where Sadat
failed to win President Hafn At,.
sad 's support for the vls.lt.
Assad called the viait. a source
of "deep sorrow." The trip haa
also come under fire from lraq
and Libya.
Egypt's official Middle East
News Atency said that when
Sadat returned to Jamailla, be re·
ceived the official Beein invlta·
tlon fot the vtllt through U.S.
Ambassador Hermann Jlta. It
wu ac~ by a mesaaae
from Pr~dent Carter, the con-tents of whim were not dlacloaed.
Sadat accepted. The U.S. am-
bassador to Israel, Samuel
Lewis, t.bm called. Betln. who
made tbe JMOWtCement to villt· ins u .s. eonarmtnen.
At the aanie Ume, Egn>t'a of.
• •
ficials said. •
sicnatures 8ncl we·re gotnc to put
this issue on the ballot," Jarvis
promiaed. "It will come down to
a contest betwffn the pe(,ple and
the government, and the pe<>1>le
are golne to win this time.•
The new plant is to be In Rat·
tleaatke Canyon west of the
·Hlckt C!anfOtl traul road ln the
central Irvine Ranch area.
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TE~EVISIPN
Available In a wide selection of 13",·17", 19", 23" and 25" diagonal models
13""-
'nle MATIUI • .11ntW
SllmwflM ~bl• nnllhed In •lmul•ted
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w11nu1 on I~ and lhdl with Sliver
CCIOfbue.
11·-...
• ...itte RUSINI • J1740W
Ultremodern dec«llor ~CtllbleTV Unlltled In 1lmull ltd
gr11ned Arnertcan W1tnut. Dirk Brew11
pe*lal baN With Gold colot 1r1m
19. CllAOOOW.
TM PMMTlll • .11•
Slim. Ulm, dtcor•tor compact '8~
T'/ ChOlce ol lll!IUll=td lned AIMfle•n,.Walnut (JI ftnlltl
Of tlftlliltted gqlned '" 26~ (.llll30P) finfltl.
TIM T"UlitaUl.L • J2U4M
~tly Ametlc1n 1ty1td contol• with m&lillv• oOff brecktt f .. L Conct•l•d c111era. a.1utlrvt
etmut11ed Mlpl• WOOd·gt•ln 11n1at1.
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Tburaday'a
Clo ing Price•
•
• ThUl'ldily. No'4mber 17. 1177
BJ JORN CUNNJrF
AP ............
DAILY Pl\.OT
Hold ooto yuur •all.t. '1'il the NUOft to be mert7 ln the
atol"ea and oil the lDaeiuill)' ot the metcb.odllhle tratendt1 t.dealpecl to make You ,and your dQllar weJcom•.
Late report.a suu.n that ttUt may be an exceediqly
apendthrift Ouiatmu. Retail 1al111 for the year are colnc to
top $700 bill.loo, and aomethlq Ukt f75 billloa of th•t 11 Uk• ly to be edded up lQ December aloce.
· INDICA'RNG Tll.B TREND, OCl'OBB& Nies leaped
1.8 percent over the pNvfous ~ti\. one ot the ·~ .. t
ahQwfnp ot the year. UnUke ln aome years, mercbanta
don'tbavetosetaspend1ngmood,butmerelyprolonclt ..
Couumera seem to be in an ebl.llUent mood. er.dlt la
the mixer for the holiday coclrtaU, and consumers have
been addlnc to their lnltalaaent bom>~lne at• nto of '3.5
billion a month, brln&inl the total to abOut. $al>O bUUcn
Does that fl1ure frf&bten you? It ·
frt•ht.eos more than a few retallen, and
tome bankers too, but the tnatb la it amounts to Just 17 percent ol dillX»abte
.,.J'IOPal income, or 1 percent below Uie
record set 1n im,
$bould a sharp economic downturn
occur it seems likely that some of ~
bills might be late in being repaid, bUt
few etonomiSt.t ~t such an evept to
take plac.e. Mean•blle, repaymenw are W•l.9
saidtobesatlsfactory. ' ,
Despite the complicaUona, retaUf!"S 8 erally are
pleased to assist in tbe accumulation of consumer credit
because, as they are ever aware, they have in the Chrlttmaa
sel~neseaaonaboul30ofthebestsales_da.Y1oltbeyear.
THE OONSUMEa, ON mE aresa band, bu •lx
times that number of days durlnc tbe next year in which to ~:
work toward repaying the blU.s. To ret.allera, Wa add.a up to .,., ,
a 1ood deal, eapeclally since m&QY of theaa sell the ree.tva-
ble account. ,..
Again ustni Jut year u a meuu.r.. alinOlt au l)tpea of
retail outlets except .utomaUve dealen, who have tbdr
own 1pecial 1ellln1 season, and batldin&. materlala and
hardware stores will ah are 1n the spendinc ipree. 1· ·,,
Sales of home fumiablnp and boulebold appliance • :1 • ...
stores soared last ChrfstrDu season. So dld aalea tii apparel , _;.
and accessory stores, toy stores, jewlery stores, book ~
stores, groceey stores, variety storea and Uquoratores. ,. • '
FOR SOME MERCHANTS, TBE mcmth of December is
a make or break perl9(l duriq Tt'b.lcb they either eam profit L
for the year or autfer for another 11 months, durtnc wblch
they mUlt dlapose of their •tock at vast price cuts.
This ls especially true of stocw apeclallllnC In toys and
doll1, which to some extent ba\'e developed the concept of a
fresh model every year, forcing tbe merchant to restock no
matter how large bis inventory.
Otherwise, hb aalet would reflect the old mereha.ncllae. Think of It: Would you want yoor child to find tut year·1 ·I'!'
doll under the tree on Cbriatmu IDOr'Dlft11
WHILE S\JCH MEBCIL\NTS PACE a worrisome,
tenslon·filled season, for one f amoua mercbl,Dt.Abercrom·. • ..:
ble 4' Fitch Co., there will probably be oo Christmas at all. n:..;....
baa been clearing out lta merchand11e. prepart.na to close~--,.
down. t ·
Whal lrony. The exempUficatlon of btc spendlni and ex·
pensive gifts aa Christmasy aa an old fireplace.
Abercrombe & Fitch is pbuint out durtai the year'• blJ-
1est spending spree. It couldn't raise &DJ mor. cred.lt.
(Related story, photo. A3 >.
SU.Cla llt Tlie s,,., .. ,,,.,
.. T.MI• CMD
ICIW YORK ~ill')
. .
DAil. Y PILOT Thuradav. Novemt. 11. 1'77
CORONADO CAP> Anita Pace 'NU a co-star of
!'Broadway Melody," the first musical of Metro
~ldwyn Mayer and In 1929 the first sound movie to \Vin an Academy Award.
• The blonde actress appeared ln 32 motion pictures
Ronstadt
To Appear
In Movie
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Linda Ronstadt wiU
rtiake her movie debut ln
the upcomin1 film,
'1FM," a ·rum whose
rh1tker1 promise it will ct> for rock radio what
'1Network" did for
~levlslon.
ln an -one of them
made in Coronado in
which she fell in love
with a young naval of·
ricer played by Ramon
Navarro. Since 1936.. she
has lived out that role
but never made another
movie.
In a vacation in
Coronado, she and a
young Navy pilot met
and were married 19
days later. Herschel A
House, then a lieutenant
and later a rear admiral,
took his wife on duty as-
slg nm ents around the
world.
Theg're Bad Guys
Actors Gregory Peck, left, and James
Mason pose near Lisbon, Portugal, where
they are on location for the filming of .. The
Boys from Brazil.·· The film provides Peck
4 The tum will include
l \le seen~ Crom an up·
ming appearance by
·iss Ronstadt in
puston, and she will be
with his first role as a movie bad guy.
Today they still live in -------------------Coron ado and are
en several lines m the ~·
"'FM" stars Marlin
ftull, Cleavon Lillie and
• lex Karrai;.
l
"THI CHICHM CltHOM1cw· ,,.., .... .,,,, __ .,,......,,,
1'HIHAIUO
UPUIMIKr' ,.,
J.Jt UTl-.U..1.H
"THE LAST
REMAKE OF
IEAU GESTF' {PS)
I 1 •S.t.U SAT SUH 1 O·J 1S 4 0 I 1S
IOtU
"'lffl USCUH I"
t USAT SUH
f 2 1S.I IS.t 11
.. HO Dlll'OSIT, HO UTUIH"
I · II SAT/SUH J:4S./ u
F~°!:~!'" 'f~~y ........ ~·····-.. . ....... ~
"SMOHY &
n411AHlll1" """'·--,, .... ,~ ....
'"THI STIMG"
JIUAT·--
U~1'Jt
"THICHIClllH
CH10.-C:W4 CNI
.... "'' --· ... u ...... '"THI noru n4AT
TIMI POIGOl"
1 It SAT/WK-.,._,. ..
AL PACIHO (PG)
"IOHT OIEUtlLD"
LA AL PAC1HO (PG) ~ "IONY DHlftlLD"
grandparents.
"We haven't been able
to lake our eyes off each
other from the start,·
Mrs. House said in ~in·
terview .
"EASY RIDER"
7:00.10:45
PLUS
''THE GRADUATE" 1
Ill '
1:45 ONLY
m ::.'rn1s 1
"B ILITI S" (R)
WKOAYS 1.ot-e • .0.10 U SA1'/SUN • 2 ot-l • .O.S.2t 7 0CM;.0.10.U
SO. COAST PLAZA
S . COAST PLAZA
WoIDen's Prison
1V Movie Planned -LOS ANGELES CAP> -"Wild and Wooly," a
Western about four women who break out of Yuma
Prison. will be made for ABC by Aaron Spellini
Productions.
The two-hour film follows the women as their
adventures lead them to prevent the assassfnalio~
of President Theodore Roosevelt. No cast has been
set for the film, which goes into production next
month in Arizona and Southern Callfomia.
Daily 7:00, t: 15
Fri 6:00. 1:30. 10:U
SAT 1 :30-3:45
6:00.1:30-10:45
SUN 2:0CM:30-
CALUloABD -Audillona hive been calle<I ai.
the Costa Mesa Civic Ptayh.ouse for the myatti)'·
comedy "Catch Me Ir You Can" ..•. auest dirfCtor
Fred Owen will hold tryouts Monday at 8o'cloct ln
the Community Center auditortum on the Orange Coubty Fa.trerounds tor a cast or five men and two /
women .... the 1>lay wlll open Jan. 20 for a tbree-
weekend run. . ..
'ESCAPE under
Sill;'
M S41UM• WO«lD'S "lt40UH S~•
(wow ~YWJ
I
i I
. ' . ~Israel
'Trip Set
,By Sadat
By The Associated Press
President Anwar Sadat or
~gypt will visit Jerusalem for 36
hours starting Saturday night
1lnd will address the Israeli
parliament Sunday. Is raeli
Prime Minister Menahem Begin
announced today.
But Sadat wlll make the visit.
which he has described as a
"sacred duty," without the sup-
port or Syria and app,arently with
major opposition within his own
country. His foreign minister re-
alaned today and was followed by
bls deputy.
Jn Beirut, Palestinian lea1er
Y11slr Arafat condemned the
planned visit and urged Sadat to
cancel it.
In his address to the Israeli
parliament, Sadat is expected to
call for lsraeh evacuation of all
lands captured an the 1967 war
and establishment of a Palestin-nian state standard Arab de·
mands that Israel previously re·
jecled.
But the visit itself will
represent unprecedented rec-
ognition by an Arab leader of
the stale or Israel.
Begin announced the visit
shortly after Sadat returned
from Damascus, where Sadat
failed to win President Ha fez As-sad ·a support for the visit.
PARAPHERNALIA ASSEMBLED -Cellection of narcotics
and preparation goods seized by Irvine police Wednes·
day. Shown are balloons of heroin (foreground), jar of
lactose used to mix with heroin. peyote buttons (top)
spoons, syringes and extra balloons.
Assad called the visit a source
of "deep sorrow." The trip has
also come under fire from Iraq
and Libya.
Egypt's official Middle East
News Agency said that when.
Sadat returned to lsmailia, he re-
ceived the official Be&in lnvita·.
tlon for the visit through U.S.
Ambassador Hermann llu. It
y.ras accompanied by a messaee
(tom President Carter, the con-
\ebts of which were not disclosed.
Irvine Trio Helil
In l1rug Seizure
• (See SADAT. Pa1e AZ)
/
1
Police Arrest
t Pair in Gas
Station Heists
By PIUUP BOSMABIN
OtU.o.lff ""'""'
Irvine and Santa Ana police
claim to have cracked a mljoT
heroin tr-"1~ n th
the attest Wednesda1 of three
Irvine residents and tb• seiture
of a small quantity ot herotD Ud
peyote.
Police said they arreated two
other persoos after officers in·
tercepted telephone ~allt to the
Irvine home, at 14'11 RlC)\crest
Circle, while m~ the first ar-
resll.
Police said more than a dozen
callers were trying to purc:base
heroin. Narcotics investigators
Sao Clemente police had two answered the calls and arnnaed
Los Angeles men behind bars to-lo meet as many u they could.
day after a series of service sta-More arrests may stem from the
tlon robberies alone the Oranae. telephone traffic. police said.
,Ci>ast. Tbe arrest$ culmb\ated •·
· Emmet Moore, 28, and James· .months·longinvestigatlon.pollce
:Polk 29 were being held in San -said, beaded by the Irvine depart.
Clement'e Jail on $5,000 bail aft.er ment, with Santa Ana police as-
.they were arrested by Oceanside al1Un1 1n settlnC up narcotte:s
police at about 3:40 a.m. purchues. Police believe the two men The raid on the Hlgbcrest ar-
:were responsible for robberies of cle house was made on the
"'rvice statiom in Jrvine, San atrenith of a search warrant.
were identified
Juan Capistrano and San
Clemente early this morning.
Tbe "till taps," in which one
suspect dlatracts the station at·
tehdaat while the other scoops up
£&•b from the drawer, a1te1edly
neUed the pair more than '200 in
San Clemente, Lt. Al Ehlow said
today.
San Juan -.Gii~I, 12,
. In that incident, an attendant
at Moon Chevron, 1729 South El
Camino Real, called pollce after
losing the cub and the dra.,er.
San Clemente officers alerted
Oceanside police to be on the
. Sookout for the two men and they
wel'e apprehended lo that city
,arty today.
Coast
•
·Raped; Man Hooted
also &uttered liiiil,or scrapes u a
result of be1nc 'knocked off the
bike. She wu released to her parents.
• TEN CENTS i
Wrong _Vessel
KEY WEST, Fla. <AP> -Two
Marine attack je~ apparenUy
mistook a salvage ship as a prac-
tice target and opened fire with
rockets that narrowly missed a
diver.
Diver Don DeNairie was only
stunned by the concuasion from
the explostons.
The jets new out or the Naval
Air Station at Key West, Fla. but
their bome field was not im-
mediately known.
The incident, confirmed
Wednesday by the Navy, oc-
curred Nov. 6 as DeNalrle, a
diver for Treasure Salvors. Inc.,
2 Recruits
Tell of Fire
In DI Trial
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A
Uni~rstty of Colorado midship-
man says he saw flames "the
siie of a shoe box" on the clothing
of a Marine reerult alle1edly set
afire by a drlll instructor.
The testimony was given by
. Stanley Austin, 20, of Grand
Junction, Colo., in a pretrial
hearing Wednesday. Another
former recna\t, Marine PFC
Richard Hilmer, 18 ... of WoocJ-
brldge, Va., said he never aaw
the flam~. ·
Hilmer testifled, however, that
he saw Pvt. V.N. Aldaz of East
Chica10, Ind., patting his aJothb:ac that day, JL&lr e. Sgt. John B. "Norrlt, 22, of san
Bernardine> ii charged Wltb bu-
ing Aldai, retenina_4o him u ·
"torch " maltreatm1 the 21·
year;.4i{4 recnllt by tpr•1lng
lighter nuld on hi.a trousers and
ignttID1 lt.: •
A ~eiteral court-martial was schedUfed to begin before a jury
and a Marine colonel Wednesday
but its start was delayed to allow•
the defense attorney to question
anotherwtt.n..bt Boulder, Colo.
After the pretrial bearing, a
base spokesman s.Ucl a decilioo
wquld be D)ade on wbetber a
<See RECRUIT, Pace AZ)
l.aP,ia Police
Investigate 2
'Morning Heiilts
was over' the slde of an 187-foot
World War II-vintage buoy
tender.
ff~ wu working alone on the
engineless ship, which serves as
a ~aae of operations for salvaie
bemJ done on • sunken Spanith treaaure ship. A crew returned
for DeNairie Monday. eipt days
after the incident.
''You could bear the explosions
first," thedlversaid Wednesday.
••Ttmi")'OU"COU.lct mt the-aircraft
and thenhearthejets.''
DeNairie said he mana1ed to
climb back aboard the sblp and
raised an American fiag in an ef.
fort to stop the rocket attack. But
the planes made other pa!!ea an4
fired a1aln, ho said.
Fortunately their pilots were
having an orr day. None of the
roc"ell made a direct hit.
Marine Capt. Hal Cullip in New
Orleans said the target ship the
two A-4 Sky Hawks were sup·
posed to have fired al was 10 miles
tothenQrth.
Cutlip called the attack a mis·
take and said an inveatigatlon
was underw~y.
"I would say the ship and the
capt.a.in and the crew would ~
due an apolo1y," be said.
'Couneil lgaores La..,s'
Angered Pl8n_ner
Leak Quits Post
By STEvE MITCllELL
Of .. DllltJ ...........
An angry Laguna Beach plan·
nlng commissioner stormed out
of a crowed meeting ball
Wednesday afternoon after tell·
ing the surprised City Council he
is resigning his city post.
William W. Leak, a planning
commiaaioner for the past three
and a half years, told councllma
they were Ignoring the laws ol
the city in allowtng a take-out
window to remaln at a restaurant
adjacent to the Malo Beach
Park.
Tb• wbldow at Jonatban'a
Restaurant toou out onto the
beach area. Ud Ltak contends a
clt7.ap~ exemption for the
window S. not lilted undtr en·
viroomental gwdellnes or the
Ca1lf omla Ebvir<inmental QUaU·
ty Act.
He claims cuatOmen walUq
at the window Ile 1tandtng oa
public property, thereby aHect.
ing the envh'On.meat of the par.Jc
area. ~ also claims a led1e at-
tached to the take-out window in·
frin1es into the park's air space a
few inches.
Councilmen took the side of the
city's environmental evaluator,
however, claiming the small wln·
dow would have little Impact on the environment.
Leak accuaed tbe councll~t1· noring the state environnaental
guidelines, and accused the city
manafer of issuing an oral permit for the window.
..And when the city manager
can band out oral permits, we
are In trouble," Leak 1ald an-frily.
Saying be found the altuation
intolerable. Leak submitted his
realgnatiQD to tbe council and
hurriedly ~ed from the bulld-
inc. •
"Fine, we accept your resltna·
tlon," Mayor Jon Brand lbouted
after the departinf com·
.miaalon«. "But Jt'• sad when a
three·indl Window ledge ca.usea you to decide to resign.••
Vice Mayor Sally Bellerue
°"" ............. aurrs IN PIQUE
Wlllam Leak
turned to Brand and said, .. I, for
one, am not &oing to accept the
resignation.••
But when reached by telephone
t.hia mominc, Leak said his de-
clalon la final, •
"I thfnk it was the principle ot
the tblni that prompted me to quit," he aa1d. ••we ,have laws in
the city •hkb I feel everyone
must obey, the Clty Council as
well u the people."
He said the city attorney nen
admitted the window use cannot
be allowed because cotnmercW
sales are not allowed ln an Rl
(reildentlal> zone.
(Park areas in Lapna Bdch
are currently desiinated Rl,
althouab Councilwoman Bellenae
asked after Leak'• resipation that the cUy look into a Part aooe
ordinance.> ••t tried to get them (the coun~
ell) to addreas the questioa of
(8eeQUITS,Pa•eA2)
Dr. Hart
To Bead
.~ampu~
Dr. Edward A. Hart, Sad-
dleback College's aaslstant ·
superintendent for general de-
velopment, has been appointed
administrator of the dlalrld's
northern campua now under con-
struction' in Irvine.
CoUege trustees appointed the
48-year·old Laguna Niguel resi-
dent, who was recommended by
Superintendent President
Robert Lombardi, after an ex-
ecutive session earlier tb1a week.
While announcing his appoint-
ment, college officials aave the
first indication that the satellite
campus may not be completed by
Its planned opening in August.
"With Ed Hart and bis fine
team, we'll have a fine school,··
Lombardi said, "but the building
trades are so busy down here that
I'm not sure we can aet the crews
and pieces together in lime."
The district superintendent ex-
plained that many construction
bids being received on various
campus projects have been far
out of line with estimated C06ls.
He said this is apparently
beca1.111e thbe construclion in· dustry is so usy.
Lombardi said Hart and his
new staff may have to be flexible
with respect to the openinc date
and may even have to change the
form at of some classes if the first
day of school 1s later than ex-
pected.
Hart has b<>cn responsible for
much of the planning of the north
campus and w11l conllnue to try
and keep the development on
schedule
"I env1s1on an opportunity for
a great deal of creativity m a new
selling," said Hart, whose salary
wtll remain at $39,500.
"Speaking for the board, we
think the people in the vast area
comprising the northern site will
benefit greatly from his
leadership,'' said Larry Taylor,
president of the Board of
Trustees.
Hart came to Saddleback in
1975 from a post as associate
dean for student personnel
services at Chabot College in
Hayward
The Saddleback district
purchased the initial 20 -acre
campus site from the Irvine
Company. for $000,000 and holds
an option on another 80 acres If
the northern campus must be ex-
panded.
Plans for the first phase in·
elude facilities for 3,000 students.
Cripp"le to Champ ·
Former San Diego vice mayor Whee Godfrey shows
what he can do with his leg, once crippled by de·
generative arthritis in his hip. With a specjal diet, he is
now a national champion runner and defending cham-
pion of the Senior Olympics.
S~ Project
Approved
For Center
An addition to an existing shop·
ping center in San Clemente,
valued at $260,000, is scheduled to
be built following plan approval
by the South Coast Regional Zone
Control Comm.ission.
The permit was approved for
the project at 360 to 390 Camino
de Estrella in a Coastal Com·
mission meeting this week.
Developers Steaven Jones and
Associates were granted·
permission for the project.
The new commercial building
which will also offer general of.
fice space includes 13,200 11quare
feet. . .
F,....P.,,e.4J.
QUITS •••
zoning, but they ref\.laed. They
simply Ignored it," Leak said to-
day.
"If they want to change the
law. they should do it, not justig-
nore it. By their inaction they
have simply done what is typical
in this town. They do whatever·
they please, noting that (ew.
citizens have the wherewitbal'to
contest it," Leak said.
Leak said he will send a formal
letter of resignation to the plan-
ning commission.
And as for the council?
"1 gave my oral resignation to
them al the meeting," he said.
·"They irusulUngty filed my letter
and ignored the point& I broucht up at the meeting.
"That's like a slap in tbe face.
Clemente Meet Set
Anyone wltb any gumption
doean 't stand there and take a
slap lo the face. They're thumb-
ing their nor;es at the cltlsem of
Laguna Beach. Not' just me but
the entire town." he said.·
lOn School Traffic
Tram6 control around three
San Clemente schools will be dis -
1cussed tonight at a reeular
•meeting or the city's tramc and
parking commission.
;Hughes Aides
To Testify
RENO, Nev. (AP> -U.S. Dis-
trict. Judge Bruce Thompson
Wednesday denied an attempt by
two former Howard Hughes
aides to avoid testifyini Thun·
day before federal grand jury
probing posaible druc abuse by
the late recluse.
The judge denied without com-
ment motions by George Fran-
com and John M. Holmes Jr. to
· quash subpoenas to appear
before the Jury meeUn& In IAs
Vegas.
, In the motions, the men said
they were approached Oct. 26 by
federal drug enforcement agents
'investigating possible misuse or
offenses aa a result of drua• al·
legedly provided Hushes. The
,motlons, flied last week, stated
further the asents were forerun-
ners of a 1rand jUJ')' lnvestJea·
•tion.
The meetins is planned2r 7:30 p.m. in council chambers t city
hall.100 Ave. Presidio.
No enforcement of rlting
restrictions around San
Clemente High· School bas been
recommended by City Counc!t
during dances, athletic contests
and other special events.
Installation of bicycle lanes on
A venida del Presidente from
Cyprus Shores to Lobos Marinos·
bas been requested by Corene
Barr, Concordia Elementary
School principal.
Mrs. Barr has also requested
caution signs al the Avenlda
Margarita, Avenida Ma&dalena
and El Camino Real overpus of
the San Diego Freeway.
The Capistrano Unified School
District bas requested a parldna
ban on the east side of Via
Socorro, from Via Cascadita to
Via Ballena. The diStrlct'a new
junior high school ls scheduled to
open this month at 240 Via
Socorro.
F,...PageAJ .
RECRUIT •••
court-mart,jal Is held and when.
Austin and Hilmer are alteftdlng
college under pre-commission
programs.
AusUn said Aldaz was not a
regular membeof the platoon led
by Norris. lte had been sent from
the correctional platoon where
problem recruits are put for
special tralnlng or confinement. T~ere was no exptuatton wny
Aldu was confined to the correc-
tion a I unit wbere Pvt. Lynn
McClure was aaalped tn 1975
before belns knocked un-
conscious ln forced pu1U stick
drills. Thar recruit from Lufkin,
Tex., died without regaJnlnc coa-
sclousneas 1n a Houston veterans
hospital.
· Althouah lll.lmer Hid be never
saw Alcfaz afire, be said be
turped to ._ What wu happen-.
ing that dar after hetirlna Norris
tell A,ldat four or fl~ Umea to
stand at attAintton. He aatd Aldaz
had refuaed:
A request for a 12-lot eub-
divi•loo to tho Portaflila arta in
tbe .bllla above Vtciorta Beach,
ended In debate over traffic woes
on NY418 PllAe tnd Summit Way WedneedQ'N,~t.
La1una .Beath councllmen re-
turned ~ 1ubdlvi.lloo pl'Qpo1&1
for the 2.8 acre 1ite to tbe plan·
ntns commlallon for revialona
after a lenathy discualioo of
hUlllde oohg..Uon. CouncUpian Jack McDowell
araued tUt the subdlvtaion re-
quest, by owner Mrs. M ,E. Lewis
of P aaedena, meets wltb the
aeneral plan requirements of the
city.
Mrs. Lewis want.I to put 12
homes on the slte bounded by Gull Circle, MarUn Drive and
Kendall Drive. The ar&a la
aoned for reaic;tentlal uae wttb a
deusity ot frpm tbJ'ff to '1cht
untll per acre. Shell 1eek1n1 four
unlll per acre.
But tbree other ~ouncll mem-
bers o)>Jected to the tentative
tract map, ciUna tncreued traf· fie along Nyes Placo and Swnmlt
Way.
City planning director Dou1
Schmitz told CO\lllcilmen Nyes
Place has a capacity for 2,000 to
3,~ vehicle trips per day and la
currenllt carryln1 between 1,:SOO
and 1,900.
· Summlt Wa'/ carries 3,000
vehicles per day, wbtcb la the
maximum shown on land use
maps.
plan." He also said he wu upset
that t.b~p comm.iatoner who made e motl~ for dftlaJ
"lives •~•"•••··-... from tho project. I Utln'k: U:uit a
conruct ct ,Interest ••• .,.!.!P .. '!.* ottha\plannl~com· -~~ meetloi abow that e:om· mtssloner Neil 1"\ta:patrlc~ WhO lives on Kendall Drive, movect
for dtnlal of the aubdlvlalon.
But Mra. Bellerue countered
McDoweU'a arpmeot, 117lrif
"I tblnk the plannin1 ~om.: mils~ (Fltspatrick> iliOald have abetalned from votiilJ, but
'ven ii he Md, there would have
sUU been foar votes for denial.••
COttilcilm.an Carl JobMOD said
he allO tound lt very dlfflcult to
deny a 1u~vi11on that meets the
requlrfnttnta for density, .tot slie
and other cooaideraUon.a.
''lf you can't approve tbl1 one," heaald, .. then you ca.n't ap-
prove any on the hillside. lf we'r.
talktn,c about inad•ate ro da,
we ahould f1x tbOM roads but the
idea Of just sbuttlq oft thQe un.-
1ubdivtded IOU, I em 't see.'·
PhylU1 Sweeney countered,
•81inl, "With tb• other tract.a
comln8 up there, we have to look ~~!•full)' at the ones we approve waay."
Mayor Jon Brand •feed· uy. inc, "If ownen coul work out
acce~table densities It would be
fine. But we're atuck with areas
llje Arch Beach Heigbta that are overdeYeloped.
"Tratfic is a real problem up ''WfJ have to correct the errors
there," said Councilwoman ofthepastandwehavetobefalr-
Pbyllis Sweaney. "With coo-ly harsh aboutit." be said.
structioo on the vacant Iota alone "Usine that loiic," Johnson
up there we'd be pusnlne the responded, "we'dbavetoaayooe
maximum capacity on Nyes more residence up there is unac-
Place and Summit ls already sur-ceptable."
passing its limit." ' McDowell agreed, saying, "I
Councilwoman Sally Bellerue don't think we can have two
agreed with an earlier planning general plans. One published and
com mission d~aion denying the one we use hypothetically."
subdivision because of traffic The proposal "fill now 10 back
and density. to the plannJng commissron with
But McDowell said that panel changes, after a plea by a
"failed to understand the general spokesman ror the owner.
®QUALITY
TELEVISION
17.__
JARYIS ••.
optimiatle that his· property tu
Hmllallon lnltialive woulcl
q"allfy for t.M .lune, 1978, b~
"We're 1olni to get f'°,000
slenaturee and we 're 1oin1 to put
tbia issue on the ballot," JAl'Vil
promised. ''It will come down to
a contest between the J*>ple 8l'ld
the 1ovemment, ud the peo1>le
are 1oinic to win this time.•
TM INIENS • J17~
unrarnocs.m dtcOfalof compact table TV
flnllhed In llr'ntllaled gnilned Amelfoan
Walnut D11k Biown
Pfdtt•I bl .. With Oold COior trim.
.
23•.._..
TM IAAOUE • JU22I
Tranet11ona1 atyled
fUll WN CC)NC)lt
wit!} a o.aulllul Antique Oak wood•
grain llnlth. Collo•eltd Clltll'S
\
dick== =-vernon's
sportswear
C:Ome See
What's NeN ·
For
M~i\ The Holidays ·
Waaldlff,._ 1791 ......
..... JI ..........
'7i-ltN
. .
Suits-Select from-our
collection of comf ortible
blends In dac;ron/weol
that wfll aive you a
cool feellng year round.
HallJday's n.tural
shoulder styling Is
always correct. ·
;
Pre-Thanksgiving
SALE , . .
Givenchy
fnfllCdcflOf~
f'11hol111Ld&IMG1MV
1/3 Off
•
"The l!nitc·d Stutes vs. Susap B. An·
•hon)-:· o tH' of 10 fiJ.ms made by the
()range County Department of Education ~n American hr.,lidays, features fourth,
fth and i-1xth graders from Crown Valley
lc m cnt ;.1ry SC'hool. Filmed at the old
range County cou:thousc in Santa Ana,
Diiiy ...... $tall ""°'°' .. , .,,., ""*-
t.be scenes include Sherl Miraglia, 11, as
Susan B. Anthony (above) in a courtroom
filled with Laguna Niguel students. Actors
take a lunch break on the steps (below),
and showing her support in Miss An·
thony's cause is suffragette Nicola
McKenzi~ <bottom photo).
----~~~~~~--~~
LBTrwtees
Seek Feedback
On State Bill
By STEVE MITCHELL °' .. o.ltt ...... sc.tt
Laguna Beach school trustees
want lo get. feedback from the Ci-
ty Council on a new state bill that
might benefit the troubled dis·
lrict In future years.
Senate BOl 201, which becomes
effective Jan. l, would allow
school districts lo auesa de·
velopers a tee or land dedication
for new development projects
within the district.
THE CATCH rs. TRE school
district must be found to be ovel"· t
crowded.
The Laguna Beach Unified
School District is /ar from being
overcrowd~. with 'enrollment
figures for October showing at·
tendance at the di.alrict'a five
schools down bf ~bout UO ttu·
dents.
Di strict oinclal• suggest it
might be~ lood 14ea t.o look into
the bill, in the event enrollment
ever does reach the overflow
level in the dlltrict.
SUPEIUNT~NOENT Robert
Sanchis said future develop•
ments In the Irvine seCtor might
mean Increased students in
Laguna schools.
But tl'Ultee Bill Kentle said be
is opposed to penalizing one sea·
men t of the IOCiety (builders>.
Board preeldent Harry Bltbet
Raid the effect the bill would have
on s mall t>ullders ls what bot.Mrs
him.
THE Nd STAT!: Jepstitlcm
says an ~ce apitro9trlf ttie
aue11ment on builders mQlt
come from ~ public .,8llCY ln· •
volved, 11' the La1una district,
those aeenct would be the City
Council and the.~\.Y Boan! ol Supervlaon. <~o· of \be dtl'-
t rl ct. 's 1cboot1 are ln unin-corporated ~u.)
It apprbwd bt tJae eouneu and
supervl1«1, builders would be
required to dedlcdfl,la.nd to UH,
diJ\rlct dr f .. UHJl..a of~
dedication.
"IT'S IMPORTANT FIRST to
have an Idea of what kind ot
arthritis you're treatint," Lev.In
explained. "There are several
forms of treatment available and
all of them can b• h~lplng
through coordinaUnt 'With each
other.''
Levin, who is on Ute -awr at
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach, listed reatin&,
exercises, and hot and cold ap-
pUcaUons to in!Jamed Joints as
POtential arthritis treatments.
The phyaical rehabilitation
apeclallJt outlined benefits and
drawbacks to several dlrterent
therapy t)'pel.
· "THERE'S A FINE line
betwHn doing damage and 'help·
ing yourself wtth a heating pad,··
Levin explained. "Sometimes
you can burn )'Ourself without do-
ing any good to the lnnamtd
joint.
'1!'liCn111"e just u many prob.
I l~a JPbysicaJ method such
11 exercla· tnc." be con-
Unued ... Tb' out why a person can't -..
ts not. to s~ thelr arm and if It can be treated
exerclse .~n t 'and Improved first.
valuable. ,.. "'It may be that the stirtneM li
Levin sald permanent and the patient will
t b e r • are have to accept that and use the t o r m s o f devices.
arthritla that : 'IC you can't revise the pa.
"8VIH c 0 u i 4 b e tlent," Levin said, .. then yoq
worsened by have to revise the environment exercise programs. the patient must exist in " And there are some forms of ·
therapy that requlre a "trade· o _--a to "id off'' between their drawbacks .IUIC~ 4 apd benefit.. depeudlnt on the
patient's condltJoo.
"'A SPLINT CAN M very
benericial to someone with wrist
problems,.. Levin said. ..But
with a splint, there is a great risk or stiffness.
"We're fighting paln and stiff.
ness both, so sometimes we have
to de.clde which is the greater
factor."
Levin said there are many
speclalJy <lesigned home itema
that can be used by arthritics to
overcome handicaps in doin1
daily house chores.
Aa an example, there are
kitchen utensils with fatter
handles so they can be held by a
per•on unable to close bis hand.
HOWEVER, HE CAUTIONED
against reliance on these special
'Toys for To~'
Irvine apartment residents an ,
being urged to do the turkey trot
to benefit. the Marine Corp'a
''Toya for Tots" Christmas pro-
gram.
Park West Apartments ls or•
aanlzlng the three-mile job, tu
which contestants dooate a toy to
the Marine Corps Q a fee, and
vie for 'Ibanksgivlng turkey1
awarded to winners ln five aae
cat.e1ories. ·
The race start• and ends Sun·
day at the apartment complex..
Participants must register by
8:30 a.m. Races start at 9 by ace
group: 18 and under, 19 through
25. 26 through 35, 34 through '5, and At through over tbe hill.
'
: By JOANNE aEYNOLDS
• Ol .. Dettr ...........
Grant Howald Just can't help
chuckling when ho talks about ttie Thanksgivina dinner to be
served Sunday at the Newport
Beach senior citizens center.
''Right now we've got 263 peo·
pie corning," he said. "We've on-
ly got 200 chairs and I don't know
'-'here we'll put them all, but -e·n think or something." Then
be laughed.
Irvine
I
Man 3rd
Victim
An Irvine resident has been
Identified as the third victim of
Tuesday's midair collialon orr
Cry1ttal Cove, Orange County
coroner's orricials said Wedrtes·
day.
Missin& and presumed dead is
Thomas A. Glass, 34, or 3741
Avenue Sawialito in Irvine.
Coroner's officials said body
parta localed at the crash scene
three and one-hall miles south of the Newport Beach harbor en-
trance belonged to a second vic-
tim, James Tibbott, 38, of 9312
Comstock Drive in Huntington
Beach.
A third victim, also llated as
missing and presumed dead, is
R obert Baker, 41, or 22842 Fox·
borough Way In El Toro.
FAA officials said today 'l'ib·
bolt held commercial Instrument
and instructor ratings. Baker
}Jad received bis private pilot's
ljcen!le Aue. 24 •
• • The thrM victims were co-
""Orkers at VTN, an en1lneerib'
and land planoinf company
located near Oraase County
;Airport.
· A VTN spokesman, Judy
:tlaJelboef, said the trio wu nat
flyiOI OD COIDpeDY buliMU. Silt
·~ Tibbott 1ave Dylne le~ during bis olf time, which wu 1 µauallyduringthenoonhour.
A National Transportation and
Safety Board investigator said
today it was unknown who was
piloting the Ul-fated Cessna 182 at
·the time of the collision. He also
said it was unknown if TibboU
was giving lessons on the fll&bt.
; The Cessna was rented from lf ewport Air Alloctatea.
/. second aircraft, a Pl~r P~. limped back to Oran<•
C.Ounty Airport and landed safely
wltb its .two occupants followint
~e mic!air crash.
• Tibbott is aurvim bJ his wt.fe,
Unda, and three children; Baker S. survived by h1I wife, Janice,
and two children; and Gla11 is
IUl'vived by h1a wife, Kathryn,
and tbreecblldren.
€rash IDjuJ.es
Newport Man
· • A Newport Beach diamond cut·
ter remained 1n critlcal cqnd.ltioo
1-da7 at Costa Mesa Memorial
cffOllpltal !allowing a •Incle-car
etcideDltaO>ltl lie.a. :'Raymond Jolepb Beaudry. 71,
ot •70Ulllarta Way, suffered ma·
JOI' head injuries when hll small
torelp car skidded into ~ ·~ lltbt pole at Newport Boulevard ad Mesa DrlHna.day Di,itt.
He ,, .. alone in the car and no
tlber nhlclea were ln•olffd, cea~
Howald la prealde.nt of the
Frlendi ct the Oula C.,.ter. the
group whicl\ uses and aupporg
the tl~ sen19r cltlaens eetiter a\
Fifth and Marsuertte avenuf!l ln
Corona del Mar.
OASIS stands for Older Adults
Social, Informational and
Service Cen1-oTbe facllity bu
not often been the subject ol
mirth.
'fhe center opeoed ln the north
wing or the buildlnaa on the site
at tbe end ct August. The rest Of
the bUlldlnp are sWJ belrii used
by tl\e private school which bas
leased th9 site yurly slnce the
city l>90pt lt thtet )'eats ago.
The federal arant money used
to buy ~site for a tnlor center
adft tho conUouecl mo or the
facility by th6 private schbol
were tho 1ubject of a city coll·
trover1y that lasted more than a
year.
Howald and bis group vowed' to
For Fredi Filipponi of the Daily Pilot's ClassWed Ad·
vertising Department lt was busin~ as usual today
despite the dist.faction or the cat that has adopted the
newspaper napping on her desk. The cat visits most de·
partmeots in the Daily Pilot •s Costa Mesa plant on a
daily basis, begging snackS and catnapping as it ioes.
•
Coulit¥.'.·'Oampai:gn;
Limits Proposed
If enacted Immediately as
Clark wants, tbe ordinance
would place a 75-eent a votel'
limit oo campalp spendlna tn
next June'• prtmarv election.
ID compariaoQ, in the same
election in 1&76, SuperVisor
Thomas Riley spent more than $2
a voter to win a landslide victory.
Clark's proposed ordinance
woldd a1lo limit the amount tn-
<livtdual donon can give to a can-
didate to $500 UUlUaUy. .
Elected cilflcll.ls wbO vtotate
the $500 limit woUld be lnell~e
"from \totlnt « ruUna on mat· ten lnvolvln&'~ tlJie dooora.for u
unspeeitled time.
put that acrimony behind.them
wtien they moved in end the
events lead.ine to the Tllanklalv· ine dlnner may be an indication
of their IU~I.
The FrleAda initially planned "
for a dlrmer for 15 to 100 seniors
who would otherwise be alone on
ThanksgJvinj.
Howald said tbe Ralphs
supermarket at Ford and San
Joaquin Hills roads donated
three turkeys, but center sup.
porters weren't sure where
they'd Cook the birds.
The center eventually will
have a cafeteria-auc:Utorlum
where meals Ulre Suh"ay'.t can
be prepared, but this 1'•ar the
seniors are wltbo\lt such
facilities.
Howald said a couple of good
thlnas happened abbut that time.
He laughed some more telllna
about how the student.If at An·
dersen Elementary School ln.
Harbor View Homes decldOd to
adopt the seniors from tho center
as grandpaftnts.
As a result, school principal
Scott Pill.IJsen abo put Howald's groap·m contact with tho achOol
diatrlct's food service. They
agreed to prepar• aa mu~b
turkey and fhdftlS as the seniOrs
needed at a charge of $3 a penon.
That WU an offer th' seniors
could hardly refuse atnce their
(8eeGl1~ Pa1e A!)
Sadat to lsFael.
Will Spend 36 Hours
By Tk Auoclated Presa
President Anwar Sadat of
Enpt wW vt.it Jen¥alem for 36
hours slartlng Satu.rda)' 'night
and will address the taraell
parliament Sunday, Israeli
Prime Minister Meoabem Begin
announced today.
But Sadat will make the visit,
which he bas deacri~d aa a ·•sacred duty," without the sup-
port of Syria and apparently with
major opposition within his own
country. His foreign minister re-
signed today and waa followed by
his deputy.
Planners
To Study
Density
A'"~ a pt to ann~e wa1 Nf'WPOl't Be.Ch \llala
building dmsity in ~ bmfly
T l(Jenthd ~ents'.wfl bl
made tOnJ;b~ wb cit~ pt&Did.Da
,commw.tonm c~ cblD&
ln the clty'e ieneraliOlan.
Among the proposal• to bi dla·
cu11ed by commiulonera 'Are
two related ones wblcb would
alter future calculations of bu.Ud·
ing density from a gross acreage
system to a -net acreage system
and then would change density
designations for exlsttn1
neiehborboods.
Both proposals came from
Councilman Paul Ryckoff who
was unsuccessfUl in gettlnt the
changes approved in September.
If approvecJ by the commlaslon
they will be forwarded to the ctt.Y
counc ll for fmal action •
The first of the two proposals to
be heard by J>lanning com-
missioners would change the
definition of bulldable acreaae
used wbencalculaUn&deneity.
Currently. the city uses the
gross acruce of a parcel, but
Ryckoff wmts to deduct the land
to be uaed for streets, parka and
other ~bllc·facWties before the
density is fllured.
He says the chante wUl not
decrease the number of units de·
velopers wl1l be allowed to build.
but It wm more accurately
reflect what the denalty of a de·
vetopment ii.
The ~ P'r'OPC>lal to be COO·
atdered tOrilaht woUICl recluaif)t
exlat.lng n ihborhoods bued on
the net aqeqe system • .V.U
tbat are now~llated as mtaium
density would become blsh
In Bel.nit, Palestinian leader
Yaelr Arafat condemned the
planned visit and urged Sadat to
cancel it.
In hl1 address to tbe Israeli
par11ament, Sadat is expected to
call for Israeli evacuation ~ all
lands captured iD the 1967 war
and establishment ol a l>alestin·
nian state -standard Arab de·
mands that Israel prevlousl7 re.
jected.
But the vlslt llaelf wlll
represent unprecedented rec·
ognition by an Arab leader of
the state of Israel
• ~~Target
Begin announced the vlalt
abortly alter Sadat returned
f rorQ Damasc~. where Sadat
. filled to win President Hafez As-
sad's support for the visit.
Assad called the visit a IOUrCe of "deep JOm>W.'. Tbe trlp bas
alao come under Cire from Iraq
and Libya.
Eg.ypt•s official Middle East
News Agency aald that when
Sitdat returned to lsmallia, be re·
ceivecl th~clal Be1ln invita-
tion for the visit ~h U.S.
AmbaSJador aermann Jlts. It
(8" SADAt, Pa" A!)
Marine· I els Fi~e
•
On Salv~e Sliip
He was wcrldnc alone on the
enC!Peleas ablp, which sorva u
a base of operations for aabage ... behlc done on a sunken Sl>Ulsh treasure ablp. A crew retu.rn«l
f <Jt DeNaltio Monday, ellbt di.YI
attertheioctdent.
••You could hear the Upl.Oslons first.•• tbedlver aald Wednesday.
"Then you COUid see tho aircraft
and then bear the jets.'•
DeNallie said be menaced to
climb back aboard the sbip and
railed an Ametlcan fiag ln an ef.
fort to stop the rocket attact. But
the planes made other pastel and
fi~ .. , .. beuid
Fortunately their pilote ~
ha.inc an ott day. None of the
rockets made a direct bJt.
density and thQM listed u low
• density wOUld become medhun density. •
The changes apply only to
1ln1Je famllY. restdenttal
nel&bborhoOd.s. The commt11lon meetlDC
betlna at 7 p.m. at city hall.
• DAIL 't f'ILOT N
Ship
By JOANNE &EYNOLDS ...................
Newport Beach clty coun.
eilmen say they are willln& to let
the State Department of Fltb and
Game sink a ahJp oft t.helr beach,
provided tbe U.S. Arlby Corps of
Encineers 1ay1 the project won't
accelerate beach eroslop.
Councilman Don Mcinnis, who
bu led opposition to lhe project,
says be wants that. atalemenl in
writing before he votes approval
of the project.
Mcinnis, who lives on the West
Newport oceanfront which wu
hard bit by beach erosion from
lNS to 1969, says he wants
"someone in authority" from the
Corps to write the city a letter
which not only declares there wiU
be no future beach erosion pro-.
blems if the stup is sunk offshore,
but that ii there are problems, the
Corps is respons1 ble for 1t.
Hemthy Day
For Smokers
By The Associated Press
Hughes Aides
To Testify ·
RENO, Nev. (AP) -U.S. Dis·
tricl Judge Bruce Thompaon
Wednesday denied an attempt by
two former Howard Hu&hes
aides to avoid testifyln& Thurs·
day before federal grand jury
probing possible drug abuse by
the late recluse.
The judge denied without co m·
ment motions by George Fran-
com and John M. Holmes Jr. to
quash subpoenas to appear
before the jury meeting in Laa
Vegas.
In the motions, the men said
they were approached Oct. 26 by
federal drug enforcement agents investigating possible misuse ot'
offenses as a result of dru11 al-
legedly provided Hughes. The
motions, filed last week, stated
further the agents were forenm-
ners of a grand jury invesUga-
tion.
Froa Page Al
There bu OJHadY been an ex_ •
ten st ve exchao1e •f letters
amoni the city, tbe Corps and
Fdb and. Game .*!pee thls 1pri.ng
when couneUmen fint found out
about the PfOPQlal.
Ffah And Oaioe otnelall boupt
thrM old lJberty Shir to aln~ at thte locations ot Southern
Caltt9rnia to create artlficlalflsh· iQfreet..
The Orange CoUnty stt. wtU be
abCJUt hio mllet oft West
· NewpGrt.
City officials balked at irant-
lnc permtlllan for tM tlnklng on
city tldelaQC!a IMCauae no en·
vlro.omeoOO impact report was prepared for the project.
Monday, spoketiJ\en ,from the
stat~ and federal qency came to
Newport Beach to usure coun-
cilmen, the project would not ef.
feet the beaches in West Newport.
Collins, described u an expert
in sand transport. said tbat at the
120·foot depth wbere the thlp will
be sunk, it would take a much
larger VeUtl to have aDTeffecton
wave action on the beach. ,
''Either that or it would t'ake a
wave in excess of 100 -feet in
hei&ht to refract from the reer.
And If there's a wave tbat bll off
Newport, we've all got lots of
problems," Collini said.
..
PARAPHERNALIA ASSEMBLED -CollectiOn ~narcotics
and preparation goods seized .bY Irvine polibe Wednes·
day. Shown are balloons of heroin (foreground), jar or
lactose used to mix with heroin, peyote buttoM (top)
spoons, syringes and extra balloons.
Smokers across the na·
tion were urged today to
slop puffing al least for
one day and possibly
forever -ln support of the
"Great American Smoke
Out," sponsored by the
American Cancer Society
and some local &overn·
ment and health organiza·
hons.
A spokesman for the
society said the group
hoped to get 10 million of
the country's 54 milUon
smok ers lo give up their
cigarettes for the dat.
GUESS ••• Mesan Denies 'Political Motivation'
Local society volunteers
have been dlstrlbutin& "I Quit" pledge cards and
petitions for people to sign
and rallies and special pro·
grams were organized in
many cities.
Front Page Al
dinner for 75 bad grown lo dinner
for200.
The Friends decided they'd on-
ly charge $Ui0 per person and
they held a white elephant sale to
raise more than $400 to help
make up the difference.
When the r eservations hit 263
Howald said be had to cut them
off. "Anybody who wants to get
in now is going to have to pay the
full $3," he laughed.
By MICHAEL PAS&EVJCB Ol .. OMfr ,.......,,
Chris Steel, a Cotta Mesa city
council candidate, said toda)' he
would 1ubmit bit resicnaUon
from a school district advisory
committee following a request
Tuesday from fellow committee
members.
"Some or the members felt I
should step down and I didn't
want to create any misun-
derstanding since I am running
for council," said Steel.
CONTROL. •
Howald said plans are already
under way for a Cbrist~as din·
ner to be held at lhe cent~r on
Dec. 10, but for now , hi s attention
1s focused on Sunday's feast.
"You know, what we really
want to do is just get some of
these ~pie out or their houses
and bring 'em here and show 'em
a good lime," he said. Then he
chuckled a Ii We more.
The 36-year-old bachelor said
"a few pf the girls (on the com·
mittee) were very up light"
about his recent speech before
the Newport-Mesa Board of
Education. because or potential job losses
from a dropping o( tax runds.
The 15-year vetera n o r
-California tax reform fights was
optimistic that his property tax ·
limitation lnllialive would
qualify for the Jane, 1978, ballot.
"We're going to get 7~,000 .
signatures and we 're going to put
this issue on the ballot," Jarvis
)>romised. "Il will come down to
a contest between the people and
the government, and the people
are golnetowin this time."
Strikers Vote
In bis speech, speaking both as
a private citizen and a member
of the citizen's advisory commll·
tee, St.eel said he dld not support
the co~u..·.a recommenda-
tion to cloH Vlsta School for re·
location of McNally Continuation
School.
. I
1
I , I
I
SEA1TLE CAP> -The Boeing
Co. s ays it is ready to return to·
full production within 24 hours it
24,000 strikers ratify a tent..tive
contract with the aeroapace
firm. They are voting today.
This prompted some memt-· j
or the committee to clahn Sl~
was backin& the Monte Vista
parents only lo further his
chances in the March 7 cou.n·
ceramies Super Bowl
South ~ounty Pot M~rs Square Off
By PIRUP ROSMARIN
Ol IN 0.11, Piie« SYH The world's only known varsity ceramics
athletic competition is scheduled for Friday
when two rugged south Oranie County high
school teams square off at University High
School in Irvine.
Teams of 10 members each will be fielded
by the ceramics classes of University Hl&b
and Capistrano Valley High School of Mission Viejo.
The first event gets under way in the
ceramics room wlt.h the starter's 1un
scheduled to go off at 3:30 p.m. The public ls jnvited.
CERAMICS IS THE well·kno~ art of
making pots and other objects of art from
fired clay or porcelain.
What Im 't well kooWd la that ceramics
also ls a demandiag, excttlng sport, according
to Mike Gooch1 University'• team captain.
Gooch hopes that ceramics eventually
will become recognized for its •athletic
posslbililie~. One day, be dreams, colleges
N
DAILY PILOT
will compete for the top ceramics players
from high schools across the naUon.
As for pro ceramics, well. ..
SEVEN TOUGH EVENTS are planned
Friday, with talleat pot, most poll, best pot,
best small object under three inches, best
band·buill project, mixed doubles and relay
competitions.
Gooch explained that the mixed doubles
event. ts the creation of a pot hall by habd, hall
on a potter's wheel. In the relay, be 1ald,
teams of three people make a pot, each team
member working three minutes. then passlni the pot.
Gooch s~d there will be cbtetleadenr add
proper ceramic fight songs. At balf.tlme. a
Mud King and Queen ot the E~ will be crowned.
THERE'S NO MARCHING band, Gooch
said, but there ts l quJte nlcit edSOJ1lble. ftotn
guitar c"'5 to atqun Pl$yere to~ llU)remt
efforts of beramlc sport hlat~.
Every event 'rs aut'e ·10 set a world's
record
cilmanic election.
Steel denied that his speech
was pollticafly motivated, add·
·ding that he Wa,J already on rec·
ord as opposj.ng the sbirtinl of
McNally to the Monte Vlst• cam·
Hart is considering a run for tbe
Newport Beach City eoiincll and
another commlttee member,
Ann Beaupre, has said she will be
a candidate in the 11ext school
board election. School Loan OK'cl -
pus. Admitting be would prefer that
Steel noted that there are a lot the potential closure or Monte
of "special interests" among Vista be placed in the back-
PHJLADELPH1A (AP> -A judge gave his final approval
WednesctAy to a S50mllllon1~
needed to keep tchools open f«
255,000 student.a in Philadelpbi-.
the nation 'a fourth laraest city.
other committee members. ~ ground, Steel said he has devlsed· ·
bJs own timetable tor school Commiltee member EveJYn. closures.
®QUALITY
TELEVISION
11~-
TIM RUBENS • J1740W
Ullramodern decoralof
~ct table :rv
flnllfled In twnulated
••lned American Welnul Dark BI0"'11
pedHtal bale Wltft Gold COi()( 11 im
l
Saddlebaek
VOL 70, NO. 321, 'SECTtONS, 42 PAGES
ByWIUJAMHODGE
OI .. OellY N.eltMf
The only way to make certain
government spends less ls to give
tl less, a proponent or taxpayer
rtvolt. told an audience in El Toro.
"Government. today ls unlimit-
ed," Howard Jarvis, chairman or
California's United Organlaation
of Taxpayers, told a gathering of
eoncerned residents. ''Nowhere
l$ there any limit on what gov-
ernmenl can ipend.
"We're trylnl to obllt.erate the
idea of government by, for and or
the government."
Jarvis wa:i ln El Toro Tuesday
seeking support for his California
constitutional amendment in-
itiative to limit the property tu
to one percent of assessed valua·
lion.
"You are not going to 1et tax
reform out of your elected of.
Dunkin' on Donkeys
ficiala In our UfeUme," be ad·
monisbed tbe disgruntled
homeowners. "You ~~ people
have no right to llY what goes on
in this government-that's their
attitude.
"We want to make absolutely
certain that the government
operates on leu money than they
do now," Jarvis said ... The only
way to do thai ls n« Co 1ive them
the money int.be first place."
»earded science instructor Michael Cos-
griff shoots toward the basket during El
Toro High School's third annual Donkey
1 Basketball Game Wednesday. The faculty
won by scorini 30 points to the. students·
24 in the annual event sponsored by the
school's Key Club. The I acuity now leads
in the game series with two wins to one.
~eForest
B.ome Froject
! Gets Approval
Plans for a 106-unit. con·
dominium project on 4.7 lakeside
acres in Lake Forest won lhe
unanimous approval of· Orange
County supervisors Wednesday
despite objections from some
wat.erfrontbeighborts.
Lee Widrie Of 22732 Waterside
Lane had appealed a plannln& commission permit for the proj·
ect, saying he objected to plans
(or three·story condominium un· ~ ... The homes would be built at
the Northeast corner or Jlf ulrlands Boulevard and Murin
Ille Lane.
. Widrit came to Wednesday's
: meeting carryine petitions con·
:laiDlng 50 aignatures from resl·
• 4.ents be said also oppose the proJ·
eet. .... Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, in
. ~ommeodlna WJdrig's appeal
15e denied, noted tbe builder
tlready had made many con-
· :Ceaaions In working with the ·~ke Forest Commllnlty As·
• ~lation.
• 'AISC)ciaUon General Manager -:1>an Buckner aald bis board of
trectors support.a the project.
4 ::, Peter Templeton, a member of
the aaaoclaUon's architectural
ommittee, said the aaaocJatJoQ .
bild worked with the developer, S
(See FORES!', Pase .U)
Healfhy:Day
ForSmoken
By The Alloelltecl Preas
Smokers acrosa ~ na·
lion were urged today to
stop putflng -at Jeaat for
one day and posaibJy
forever -in support or the
"Great American Smoke
Out," sponsored by the
American Cab.cer Society
and some local govern·
ment and health organiza·
tions.
A apokesma\\ for the
society said the group
hoped to get 10 mllllon of
the country's 54 million
smokers to give up thelr
clgaJlettes for the day.
Local society volunteers
have been distributing "I
Quit·' pledge cards and
petitions for people to sign
and rallies and special pro·
grams were organized in
many cities.
'Smokeout'
Gets Smoke,
little Action
Smokers who somehow agreed
to participate ln tbe Great
American Smokeout Day today
may find aome comfort In the dia·
covery of one Saddleback Valley
Unifled School District tnaatee.
EL SEGUNDO (AP) -A
weldct's torcb sparked an ex·
ploalon and fire today at a
Chevron USA oU·water separa·
Uon C acillty, blowbq the covert
orr the 50-by·lOO-foot concrete-
block bunker but apparenUy
causing no injuries.
Firemen from In•lewood, Ha•thome, Manhattan Beach
and Redondo Beach Joinect forces
to battle the fire which broke out
ln the undercround tank, said
Capt. Robert llanb Of the El
Seeundo Fire Department.
Chevron USA spok~men Al
Swanson said welden had been.
doing maintenance work in
another part ol the reflnery when
the spark traveled through the
refinery's dralnqe system •
"Somehow -we don't know
how -that hot work 18nitecl
some vapor in tbe dralnage
system," he said. "It blew the
covers off and 1tarted a little
fire."
The separation unit waa Used
to remove oU trom waste water
beln1 discharged into the ee•er
hesl.4d. Swanson bad no Immediate
estimate ~ damage, but aakl
.. Jt'll be 1D the thousand• oi
dollara.n
The newspaper columnilt and
former Lot An1eles mayoral
candldate l bed out at aovem·
ment offlclala' aalarlea Hd
pensions.
"We are creatJng a very rfcb
•nd protec~ soc1ely and they're
all politlclans, .. Jarvia asserted.
He attacked what he termed
"le1islat.or favoritism." toward
government employee unions.
"117outOf120 at.ate lecJslative
candidates &ot the major part ol
tbeir election funds from
em])~ unions," be claimed.
"I don't think there's a wone
cancer on our free syst.em than
elected offlcials beinl boutbt by
public employees."
Jarvi1. claimed an alle&edly
employee-controlled legislature
would never approve tax reform
because of potential job losses
from a droppinl of tax funds.
The 1S·year veteran of
Calli ornla tax reform ftabta wu
opthnlatlc that his property tu
llmllation lnlUatlve would
quallfy for the .June, im. ballot.
"We 're 1olnC to ·''t 1$0,000 siJDatures and we're 10101 to pul
thll itsue on the ballot," Jarvb
promised. "It Will come doWn to
a contett between the people and
the 1ovmunent, and the people
are aotnc to win this Ume. ''
Marines -~ttack
Wrong Vessel
KEY WES!', Fla. (AP) -Two
Marine alt.cit jets apparently
mistook a salvage ship as a prac·
tice target and opened fire with
rockets that narrowly misMI a
diver.
Diver Don DeNairie WU only
stunned by t.be concussion !ro:u the explosions.
The Jets flew out of the Naval
Air Stat.ion at Key West, Fla., but
their home field was not lm· · rnediat.elylmown.
The incident, confirmed
Wedr,>esday by the Navy, oc-
curred Nov. ti as DeNalrie, a
diver for Treasure Salvors, Jnc .•
was over the side of an 187·foot
World War ll·vintage buoy
tender. ·
He was worltlng alone on the
englneless ship, 11rhich servei as
a bue ot operations for salvage
being dODe oo a sunken Spanish
treasure ahip. A crew returned
for DeNairie Mooday, eight days
alter the incident.
"You could hear the explosions
first,'' the diver said Wednesday.
"Then you could see the aircraft
and then hear the jets."
DeNairie said he managed to
climb back aboard the ship and
raised an American flae in an ef.
fort to atop the rocket attack. But
tho planes made otber puses and
fired again, bt Aid.
Fortunately their pilots were
having ao Off day. None of tbe
rock eta made a direct bit.
Marine Capt. Jfal CUWp in New
Orleans aaid the taraet ship tbe two A-t Sky Hawks were sup.
poeed tobavefired atwaalOmiles
t~thenortb.
CuWp called the attack a mis·
take and aaid an investigation
was underway.
"J would say the ship and t.be
captain and the crew would be
due an apology," he said.
Peace Visit Confirmed
81'0.aeAaodaced Presa
Pl'eal4ent An••r Sadai 'f>f
ECY"'-WW . t J~m !Or JS
bourt fiartWt ~ Dl&ht a11d wU( 'adcfrtt• th• Isratll
parUament Sunday, Israeli
Prime MJnlster Meoahem Beam
annountecl today.
But Sadat Will make the vl.ait,
which he hu described u a
•·sacred duty," without the aup.
port of Syria and apparently witb
major opposition within bla own
country. His foreip mlnls~ re·
signed today and waa followed by
blsdeputy.
In Beirut, . PalesUnlao leader
Y aalr Arafat condemned the
plan1_1ed visit and urted Sadat to
cancel it.
In h1I address t.O the I1raetl parliament, Sadat ta. expec'*I to
call for Israeli nacuatlori.of all
landt ca~ In tbe 1961 war
and estatilllhment of a PaJestin·
nlan state -standard Arab de-
mands that Israel prtvioualy re·
jected.
But the vlalt ltitelf wlll
represent unprect:dented rec·
ognltton by an Arab leader of
the state Of IaraeI.
Begin announced the vlalt
shortly after Sadat returned
from Damascus, where Sadat
failed to wln President ff af ei M-
aad •a support for the vialt.
Auad Called the Vialt a source
of "deep sorrow ... The trip bas
also come Wider nre fro~ kact aodLi~a. Eey~·a Oft'ltdil.Mlddle Eut
News Age cy aetd that wtieo
Sadat retUmed to ltmuua. tie no-
ceive<t tba om lat Beatu lnYt~·.
UOJ'l for the mii tliroqh U.S. Aiu~ Hermann nts. lt waa~Danied by a meaqa
frolri ?rmaeat Carter, the eon· tenti Of Wtileh were not dlscl~
Sadat •Cfft>ted; 'l'be u;s. Ul•
basudor to Israel, Samuel
Lewis, then called Belin, who ..
1Dade tbo aanoancemnt ~ 'tf:sit· ma u .s. c:ancressmen. At the 1ame time, Emt•a d·
fielal Klddl• Eui News ·Asency
announced that Sadat's fOrelp 'See SADAT, Pai• JU)
Trustees Divided .
·On School E11nds
If the atate allows them to
spend more ~I montf, Sad-
dleback Valley Unified School
l>lstrlct ~ wm award a $1.8 million contract tor the cooatntc• tion or their 18th elemeatary
schooL .
Trustees east a aplll vote
Wednesday to award UM contract
to Steed Brothers Cou.structlon
Company of Loe Angeles on the
eondition that the bid be approved
by the state 'a Office of Local M·
siatance.
The move was opposed by
Trustees Mary Pbillips and
George Henry.
Although Steed Brot!wn' blcl
was tht lowest of four aubmtued
for tbe Aegean Hills school, tt ls
almost -.ooo above the state al·
lowanee.
But two district admtnlsti'atora
and tbe school's arc:biteet are ao-
inf to ~mento Monday With
the h«>P9ot pttini state approval oltbebld.
JlObelt p~ tbe dlltrlct•1 . .,..
director of p1~ end develop-
ment, 1ald about J.5 ltema In tfie
contract can be nerotiated With
the state because they were
bated only on the arcb1tect's
eattma~ Mn. Pb1Ulps and Heney salct
they Wtte COllcerued that tbe bid
wu to muCh biiher thin the
atate allowance. ••t rally favar a
rebid JDJielf," Henry satd.
But F~ arped • ;elJltl
would actoml>lJab bOthJni other · thandelaytqtbeprojectaDdhn·
lnl to spend additional money
from tbe(\istiict 'a 'en er al fciDd. ••we think we have a cue for
setting the allowance to the low
bid amount," U'le adDW:Ultrator
said. He Wu.red the trustees.
.. They're not 10tnc to let us Jack up tho1e pricea ln·
dilcrtm,hlately !
If it 11 approved, tho school, in.
cludlna 12 : dusroom.a and .,.,.,
kinderfartm room. wlll be bailt
at Atclldlaia and Llbdley au.ea.
It b ICbechded to open ln Sep-
tember and boule •boat @ atu. ants. ·
• ByGAtYGaANVlt.LE °' .. .,..., ......... Orange Count)' Supervisor
Ralph Clark h•• proposed • county political campaign or-
dinance that places a lid on ean-
didate spending and llmlts the
mount lndh1dual donors can con rlbute to a J>6ll~cal cam·
P•ifn. ' Clatk's proposal also provides
for the establishment of a county
· A.d1'iinistrat0r ·Set
PARAPHERNALIA ASSEMBLED -Collection of narcotics
and preparation goods seized by Irvine police Wednes-
day. Shown are balloons of heroin (foreground), jar of
lactose used to mix with heroin, peyote buttons (top>
spoons, syringes and extra balloons.
Irvine Trio Held
In Drug Seizure
By PIDUP ROSMARIN Oltllt Oollly "11.t l~ff
Irvine and Santa Ana police
claim to have Cracked a m8JOr
heroin trafficking operation with
lhe arrest W<.'<inesday of three
Irvine residents and the seizure
of a small quantity of heroin and
peyote.
Pohce said they arrested two
other persons after officers in·
terceptcd telephone calls to the
Irvine home, at 14611 llighcrest
Circle, while making the first ar·
rests.
Police said more than a dozen
callers were trying to purchase
. heroin. Narcotics investigators
answered the caUs and arranged
,to meet as many as they could.
More arrests may stem from the
telephone traffic, police said.
The arrests culminated a·
months·long investigation, police
said, headed by tbe Irvine depart·
ment, with Santa Ana pollce as-
sisting in aettinc up narcoUcs
purchases.
The ra1d on the Highcrest Ctr·
cle house was made on the
strength of a search warrant.
* * *
l
2 Arrested;
. Drugs Seized
At CM Hotel
Santa Ana police arrested two
men and seized cocaine and
marijuana worth an estimated
$106,000 Wednesday night in the
parking lot of a Costa Mesa boCel.
Arrested were Gus~vo Diu
Samaniego, 29, oC Wllmlnaton,
and Albert Valdez, 32, or Carson.
Valdez faces charges of selling
cocaine and marijuana and car-
rying. a concealed weapon.
Samanleeo races chargea of con-
spiracy to se.11 cocaine and mari-
Juana.
Both men remained In Santa
Ana jail today.
Seized were six ounces of co-
caine worth about $80,000 and 40-
kilos of marijuana worth about
$'l6,000, police sald.
Sgt. Jobn Colllna eald the 8
p.m. arrests were inade after
two undercover S1uita A.pa police
omcers and a poltce woman al-
le1odlY arransed to buy th•. drUg• ~m the pair.
Santa Ana police, a11isted by
Costa Mesa police, arrested the
two without resiataaee.
The arrested were identified
as:.
-Tony Gomez, 45, booked at
Orange County jail on charges of
possession of heroin for sale, and
processing of peyote. Ball was
$.5,000.
-Aurora Noble, 43, booked at
Orange County women's jail on
charges of processing peyote,
possession of heroin and ·
possession of marijuana. Bail
was $2,500.
A 17-year-old male juveplle
whose name was withheld,
booked into juvenile hall on
charges of processing peyote and
possession of marijuana .
Juvemle hall officials would not
release bail information.
AU three listed the Highcrest
house as their address.
Arresled after police arran&ed
to meet telephone callers al the
house were Richard Brown and
Galo Jlinojoea, ~. bot.b of Santa
Ana.
Both were booked at Newport
Beach city jail, Brown on
charges or burglary with intent to
possess heroin (police allege he
broke into the home), HinoJOH
on a charge of being undw lhe in·
fluenceof an opiate.
Brown was held on $10,000 bail.
Bail for Hinojosa was set at
$1,000 .
Seized in tbe search were
twelve balloons of heroin, four
dozen peyote buttons and a small
quantity of marijuana. Police
also confiscated 16 hypodermic
:;yringes, empty balloons in
which heroin is packed, and ajar
of lactose, a powder used to mix
with heroin.
One Irvine police officer was
i)ljured while storming the
house. Elliott Nemenon broke
his left elbow when a fence he
was climbing collapsed. He was
treated at Tustin Community
Hospital.
F....,!9ageAJ
SADAT •••
. .
For N.Qrth Campus
Dr. Edward A. Hart. Sad-
dle back Collese's assistant·
superintendent !or 1eneral de-
velopment, bas been appointed
administrator of the dlstrict'a
northern campus now under COD·
atruction 1n lrvlne.
College trulteel •PPGlnted the
48-year·old Laguna Nlpel reti-
dent, who was recommended by
Superintendent President
Robert Lombardi, after an ex·
ecutive session earlier tJUs 'Week.
While announcjni his appotot.
m4'nt1 c.<?llete oUiclals gave the
rtrat lD<licaUon that the 11telllte
campua may not be completed by
Its P.lanned opening in August.
' With Ed Hart and bis fane
team, we'll have a fine school,"
Lombard.I &aid, "but the building
trades are so busy down here th.at
I'm not sure we can 1et the crewa
and pieces toeether iD time."
The district superintendent ex-
plained that many construction
bids bein& received on nrious
campu.s projects bave been far
out of line with eslimated costs.
He said thla is apparently
because the construction in·
dustry is so busy.
Lombardi said Hart and his
new staff may have to be fiexlble
with respect to the openins date
and may even have to change the
form at of some classes ii the first
day of school is later than ex-
pected.
Hart has been resppnsible for
much of the plannina of the north
campus and will continue to try
and keep the development on
schedule.
· ·1 envision an opportunity for
a g reat deal of creativity in a new
setting," said Hart, whose salary
will remain at S39,500.
"Speaking for the board, we
think the pqle in the vast area
comprjsing the northern site will
benefit ~really from hb leaderahip, ' said Larry Taylor,
president of the Board of
Trustees.
Hart came to Saddleback tn
1975 from Cl post as associate
dean for student· personnel
services at Qiabot College in·
Hayward.
$4,950 Fee
Assessed for
Late Park J·ob
Orange County supervisors
wlll withhold $4,950 of a $197,000
Lake Forelt park project con-
tract that wu completed one
year behind schedule.
Supervisors this week aireecf
to usess damaaea at tbe rate of
$50-a-day for a 99-day delay ln
complet.1.ng Mountain View Park,
off Lake Forest Drive on A.span
Lane.
SupervlSOl"I elcused the con-
tractor and bis bondlng company
for another UO day1 of delay
which were caused by Jnclement
weather. admtnlatt'atlve procesa-
lnt tnd unexpercted comtructlon
dUftcultles.
Tbe, park ~ntr&A:t ortrtnally
wal awarded' Ne(ef DevelOJ)ers
tn May md and "k tO bave bee!) conlpl~J.-tPlov•mJ>er. '
Ciltl Net.ob. an'Hsiitantdlrec-
tor of the ~Y Environmental
Management A1ency, sald the
contractor was ,ranted time ex~
U,qalona for vatiout teuona.
:aut Jut Mar~b. county oil
ftclal1 reported prosreas on the 'roject wu unaatlafactory and
evtdet.w&td Oil tbe cootraet
hortlJ: ifte at'd.
'
HEADS NEW CAMPUS
s.ddlebltCk'a Hart
The Saddleback district
purchased the Initial 20·acre
campus site from the Jrvlne
Company for llC>0.000 and bolds
an option on another 80 acre1 lf
the northern campus muat be ex·
panded.
Plans for tbe first phase ID·
elude facilities for 31000 students.
"S C~. for IOllle Ume
to obtain the ccacesslons.
S le S ~ Geor1e Put-
nam aald. for eumple, tbe de· veloper ~ to eUmtnate boat
dockl trom the ptoJect, to Shield
t•onll coutt ll1bt1 and to
·eUt0hlate om •wiin~ pool, at.
tbe ueoctatloo '• requeet. Jn 9ddition. be said, S &s S of-
ficials aireed to limit the helabt
of unit.a beside tbe Jake to two
stories rather than three.
UnW a pie chance wu ap-
proved by supervtaon Jut year,
the property could have been de-
veloped for nurly twice u many
unit.au the tot propoeed.
Current IOn1.ng would permit
up to 25 Units an acre, Putnam
said, but the developer plans to
build 22.5 per acre. ·
17~
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$9 .... .., 10\o't-"" '·'""·~ .,,q 3 !'"1.• Go ·" s ,, .................. All •. ..,._"' HV 2.12 6 t 2t ••• .. FrWA,fl IS ..... Fd .10e .. I 9\'11 ••••• Ferel\Mf .. ; ~ •••••
iM uo • m 2'..._ "' ,, ..... ,. • • 15= 111 T .. U 1 ........ FtOGo 1MIO -~ (Ml... .4012 21 1~. •• •• FclMoa I.AO S SS \lo ~In Ull22 Ot • • 'It f'WHMt I J, ~· V. OWnHV l ' 25 42 ..... + \11 F•PB .to 1 mot .. .,.
Cliff y flf 1.17 • • • ""-. • • • • f'dst9nt All i 2 " ••••• OIHVe 1.» 7 • ZS..t \II ~f'edCJSl IM1 271 41 -I'll CNM:f.n ... n 92 22111-.,.. .,..o 1... •. aYJ .... . Cllel • 2.ll I UI 32'!0.-~ lllreM • , 42 t ... ..
CN8rl I.Ille 1 I 50 + ~ Fldf'ln .30 • 2 ~ ,,.. g:jMIW • . I ~-,,.. FlclUnl UO 6 t 11'1 Olis.';!:! 2~~ :: 2!~:':.~ ~::=· l.40t f, v.::.~
CllrltCll 1 31 1"--14 Fllls.118 .n S 32 ••••• OICtlpf 1.40 .. 4 »~• + llo Hnll'9d AD 6 JV 11211\1t-+ 1 Owomer I 6 I I~• 'It P:lrfl1n 1.10' IM ~ 14 Olryaler 1 3 ..., I~-V. FIC!wt .*> • 121 17-\lo CllvrCll .to 10 II ll~ + "-l'tleftl< 1 1 110 llV.-I'll
ClnBell 1.92 7 • 2' + v. Ft.Inf• 1.u t 1 JO + 14
ClnnGE l.M 7 IS. ~-.... FllnBn 1.4010 ta 40'A+ "' ClnGDf 7.M .. &JOO 91v .. 1 f'11Mlu .AO• .s ~+I'll ClnMh 1.10• 1 10 JMli+ "' FMH8o 1.a 1 11 ZWa ..... Cllkrp 1,06 I 121 ~+ \lo FtHStBtl 2: 2 2A\lt+ ~ CltlHSw l 7 U1 SI-\lo F51Pe 1.32 1' ,._..__ \It Cllylnw .a S ft 11~ ..... Ft_P eMla 1. tt ,,. ... , ..
cuv1npt 1'' 1l 2•"'-Ill f'llUnRr 1 • 1 11.._ .. Cltyllpt 1. • , l2 11~ ... ., FiVellk A5 1 IS "°""'" Cl11rkE t 1 U JSO,,. •• • • Ftwl11< 1.7• 1 3 23. r \lo CIMkOll .jO t 11 UV.-I'll P:IKllM UO I 4 t7W-14 Cl~Clf 1.tOelO 2 $4-V. 1'1t11Fd1 AO 1 lid 1-I'll c1 ... u 2M 1 •s ......... .. ctvEl .... 7.A0 •• &100 • ...._ l<'J Clewpjt AO I I , .... _ \lo
Clorox MIO 6111 1~ • VJ Clu.tPH .50 S 111 '!ql/t• ~ Gt .JO • M.S 21""'+ \It pft.G.. 1 »va • '-'
pft.1'.. J ~. -CoceBtl .4013 "5 '"'+ ....
s ~LYPIL.O!
By JORN aJNNtFF ·:· .,. ...... ....,. ~·-
Rolclom.o~rwall~. 'TlltbeseasoatobemetrJtn\be ;. • storea and au the lncenult.y of the mercbQdlatn1 tra1ernttJ · . ~
la destped to mak• you and your dollar welcome. .. • • Late reeorta tuUest that. this ml)• be an exceedincly . ,,.
~tbrU't Qui.atmu • .Bet.all NI• for the year are 1otn1 to .. : :
top '100 blllloo, and 90methlng like f15 billion of that. la llk•· ·~~ ·
ly to be added up in December alon&. . ·" ; • ..
INDICATING 11IB TREND, OCl't>BEa aalea leaped :;·:
l.8 percent over the previous mopth, One of the ~eat .•!J
abowlnp ot the year. Unlike in 80me years, merchants ~ ~ ...
don'tbavetosetupendinamood,butmerelyprolonatt.' ·•• ~ Contumers seem to be in an ebullient mood. CNd.lt ia ••.
t.he mixer for lbe holiday ~ktall, and oonsumen have · · .
been •dd.lna to their lnst.abnent borrowlni at a rate ot s:u •
billlon a month, brtntl.u th• total to aboul l:20o blWon. · · Does that naure "lri1bten )'OU? lt . :•:I
frijhtena more than a few Mallen, and
some bankers too, bul Ute truth la It
amounta to JQt l'I percent ot dilPG1abM
penonal ineorQe. or 1 pereent below the ~v.iMl!IJ'!! record set l.D 197a. ., 1
Should a sha,rp economic dowatum occur it seems likely that some ot those
bills might be late in being repaid, but
few economtstt expect such an event to
take place. Meanwhile, repayments are Mll•MI said to be satisfactory. . WNNtni '.
Despite the complications, retailers generally are ·v.-
plea.ed to uaist in the accumulaUoo ol consumer ereclJt •
because, u they are ever aware. they have in the Christmas ... ael~lngaeUGOaboUt30ofthebeataalesdayaoftheyear. ~ ...
" . .. THE C01'SVMER, ON TUE &l'llER hand, hu six
times that number of clays dwinl the next year in whleb to ••
work toward~ the bUla. To ..-..1ers. tbia-= to a good deal. especlally alnce many ol tbem sell tile ••·
ble account. . / ·
A•ain ualng last year u a meuaitt alnlOlt all ~ ol
retai~ outlets ttcept automatlve dealers, who have their
own sped.al selling .season, aDd b<dldlnt mateitab and
bardwareatont will share IA \be ~inf Spree.
. Sales of home fumlahlnp and IK>Usebolcl appliance
stores IOared laat Christmas aeuon. Sq did sales lo apparel
and acceuory at.ores, toy stores. jewlery stores, book stores, grocel')' ato?u, variety stores aDd liquor 1tores.
FOR SOME •ERCRANTS. THE month of December ls a make or break period dut'inC wblch they either earn profit
for the year or suit er for another 1l months, dorlnc which
they must dispose of their stock at •a.si .Price cuts.
Thia ls especially tr-.• of stores speclalblna ln toys and
dolls, which to some exten\ h11ve developed the concept of a
fresh model every year. forclng the merchant to restock no t• matter how large bil inventory.
Otherwise, his sales would rdlec:t the old merchandise. ·~1
Tblnk of lt: Would you want your chQd to nnd lut year's r· '
ctotl under the tree on Cbristm¥ ~!
WmtE SU<JI ME&CllAN'll l'ACE a worrisome, •
tenalon·filled M&IOI. for ooe f Uiabit!j merellant. Abel'crom· ble It Fitch Co., then •llle~ bi no Christmas at ah. Jt
fl I been clearint OU\ ttl mere\~. preparine to close
down. •
What Irony. The O'lCempJlftc•UOO df bil spelldtnc and ex·
pensive 8fft .t• Cbrlstmur 11 an old fireplace.
!\bercrombe at FltoJ> ls pb_nlq out dUring the ,_ar·s bit· am 'Pencllna apree. It couldn't ntae any more endJt.
-<Related 1tory1 photo, A3). · . ,
DAil. 'I PILOT
929 Eple
CORONADO CAP) Anita Paie WU a CO·lla.r of ~roadway Melody." the lirst musical of Metro
oldwyn Mayer and in 1929 the first sound movie to
in an Academy Award. The blonde actress appeared ln 32 moUon pictures
ln all -one of them
made in Coronado lo
which she fell in Jove
with a Youn& naval of·
ficer played by Ramon
Navarro. Since 1936, she
has lived out that role
but never made another
;
Ronstadt ..
#
~o Appear ..
In Movie
. LOS ANGELES <APJ
-· Linda Ronstadt will
O\Jlke her movie debut in
the upcomine film , ~FM," a 'film whose
1Jl&kers promise it will
do for rock radio what
"Network" did for
Celevision.
The film will include
~ve scenes from an up·
eqming appearance by
Mi ss Ronstadt 1n
ffouston, and she will be
given several lines in the
f\,m.
'"FM" stars Martin
Mull, Cleavon 'Little and
.Alex Karras
"THI CHIC«et
Ci.HOMICW" INI
f II Ul/Wt<-l:IM. ..... 11
''THI H .. UO
EIPUIMINr' IRJ 1 H UT/S-..>. ... 7.Jt
''THE UST
REMAKE OF
HAU GESTE" (PC)
I 'j.t 11
SAT SUN I 'j.J IM.O 6111
/OtU
"'n4I uscuus·
f IS 5AT/5UN I 15-J;JJ.f IS
"HO DIPOMT, MO llfUllW
l :lllAT/SUN ll0 ·/111
•
1.., AL PAC:IMO (PQ)
"IOl~Y Dl:ltlR&D"
~ AL PACIMO (PO)
'V "IODY DUARIU)"
movie.
In a vacation in
Coronado, she and a
young Navy pilot met
and were married 19
days later. Herschel A.
House, then a lieutenant
and later a rear admiral,
took his wife on duty as·
signments around the
world.
"We haven't been able
to take our eyes off each
other from the start,·
Mrs House said in aq in·
terview.
.._.... ...........
"LAGRAHOE
IOUIGEOISE" C 1J
"EASY RIDER"
7:00.10:41
PLUS
''THE GRADUATE" ...
1:41 OMLY
S COAST PLAZA
Mllli•NISI ~2111 1•u.,.~ • "B ILITIS" (R)
\lrkOAYS 1 .. : ... 11.U
SAT/SUH· 2:•2:*S:Jt
Jc ... :•lt'U
.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -"Wild and Wooly," a
Western about four women who break out of Yuma
Prison, will be made !or ABC by Aaron Spelling
Productions .
The two-hour film follows the women as their
ad ventures lead them to prevent the assusinaUon
of President Theodore Roosevelt. No cut bas beeu
set for the mm. which 1oes lnto production next
month in Arizona and Southern Callfornla.
THI SAJLIM6 we>ttt.D·s "IHDUH~·
lwow P.:. ''*'l