HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-22 - Orange Coast PilotI
Clue to Death
Miller?
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 22,, 2971 "°'" 1f, NO. -I ICCTIONI, a ,.AMI
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Court Delay
°'"',.... ...:..."' ~r¥~
Murder conspiracy defendant AleJCander Kulik (seated)
and his attorney, Philip DeMassa, wait 01"t8ide Orange
County Superior C9urt where Kulik's arraii'J)ment .on
charges Involving the death of Stephen .Johp Bovan of
Fountain Valley was delayed Monday, Judge Robert E .
Ricki~ put the arraignment over to Nov. 28 after
KuUk's attorney challenged the arand jury indictment of
his client. The judge said he will rule on the cballence
at that time and expects Kulik to enter a plea on the
same date.
Gl,e~ Mil~r Death Clue?
NEWHA VEN, England CAP) -Fishermen here
say they have &seovered aircraft wreckage that may
pr()Vjde a elut to the disappearance in 1944 of
American dailce band leader Glenn.Miller. ·
Miller disappeared over the Qlglish Channel
while flying from England to France during World
War n. Radio contact suddenly was lost with the
plane as it flew over the sea near this southern
English port. ,
The plane tailed to arrive at its destination. No
wreckage was found at the time and Miller's body
was never discovered.
MiUer was a captain in the U.S. armed forces at
the time .. The concerts given by him and bis band
were great morale boosters for Allied troops fighting
in Europe.
Brian Hills, captain of the trawler Wildflower
said Monday the wreckage was accidentally hauled
up in his nets about two miles out· to sea from
• "'Newhaven.
Arraignment Todag
.
a fistfight over the music aelec·
tion on the jute box at the Capri
Cocktail Loun1e, ~06 Pacific
Coast Hhthway.
One of the men waved a l\lft, witnesses said. Aa the iunman
ran toward the door. Kina re·
a»iortedly tollowed and was
gunned doWn, 1>9lice said.
Frailer, now ln Huntlnston
Beach pOlic!e cuatOd~ In lieu Of
$100,000 b&U. was arteated Frl·
day by Friano 1betiff'1 depuUea.
J
No Bail
Set· for
87 UBEllT BASKBB -Oi .. ...., .......
A 4'5·year-old unemployed
painter was arTested Monday in
connection with the murder ol
Huntington Beach resident
Robert Myen ln Bantow Nov.
11. The suspect, Nathan L. Hen·
deraon, was arrested at bls home
in Fontana Monday afternoon
fQllowlng an anonymous
telephone can earlier 1D the d~
to the San Bernardino County
Sherlff's Department.
Hendersm ia being held tn San
Bernardino County Jail. No ball bas been set.
Myers' 1970 van. which was
mlaslne since the mut'der, also
was fowtd Monday in the rear ol a parkiJJS lot of a VJetonille
hotel, aboUt 35 miles ffOm the
scene of the sbo0tin1.
San BemUdino CoUnty Sb8riff
detective DennlS O'Bourke said that the informant ai.o told of·
ficera the location of the van.
' 1
O'Rourfte uld today that •
Myen, a 57·year~ld speciallst bi
the treatment of iildustrlal water
and former lona·Ume Daruna
Beach resfden~ waa shot twice in '
tb' back by a .18 caliber
automatic ptst.ol.
O'Rourke said that Myen was
in the b•ck of tbe van at ttie time.
of the mUrder, lndlcatliig that he;
probably was tryin1 to aet away'
from bls waua~t.
The forc:e of the cun blastit .
drofe the victim outside the vehl·
cle, O'Rourlcesald.
(See PAINTER. ••ae A2) •
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Getting It On
Margaret Trudeau . estranged wife of the Canadian
prime minister , d ances with t ennis star Vitas Gerulaitis
al a pa rty in his honor in a New York discotheque.
<Related s tory Page B7. >
f",.._P~AJ
SNOW ...
tru('ks were "having to run llke
fullba cks" to get through.
''not her commented he bad not
-.t•c n that much s now "in 30
\ t·.1rs "
Downtown Portland, normally
bustling at 7 a.m .. was nearly de·
'>t'rlcd as workers took an un·
-.chcdult.'<i holiday. What traffic
there was was at a virtual
s tandstill a s unp repa r ed
motorists found their vehicles
cou ldn't make 1t up the s hghesl
inc II nrs.
Others rushed to buy snow tires
and chains while those who took
1t in stride were waxing cross-
country skis and getting out the
sled for fun in the parks and
neig hborhoods.
A spokesman at Portland
I ntern a taonal Ai rporl said
... nowplows were able to keep one
run way open but he said it was
taking some taxicabs up to three
hours to make ll a few miles to
the terminal.
Freezing rain and ice snapped
tree limbs and power lines near
Eu~ene, Ore., caused electrical
o utages. Radio s t ations in
western Oregon south to the
~orthern California m ountains
urged motorists to stay al home
as the forecast called for freezing
rain ondmore snow.
The advisories, warning of
heavy snow In some a reas,
l'Xtended into Idaho, Montana,
Utah , Wyom ing and the
mountains or northern Colorado.
In ne ighboring Idaho, all
schools near Twin Falls were
closed and the airport remained
closed this morning.
One record for the date was
broken early today when the
temperature dipped to 14 below
zero at International Falls, MiM.
The previous record was 9 below.
set in l956.
Havre, Mont .. recorded a low
of 20 below this morning, tying
the record low temperature for
the date, set in 1931.
Heavy precipitation in the
form of rain or snow also fell in
drought-stricken Colorado and
Callfornia.
ln Colorado, a harid!ul of the
two dozen or so akl resorts wtre
open, but a state cllmatologlst
said the tnountaln droueht that
plummeted bU$lness last season
was not necessarUy over. .
''One month, a wtnt~r does no~
make,'' said State Cllmttoloaist
Tom M'cKff.
Thieves Hit
Two Irvine
Businesses
Irvine burglars carried away
an estimated $7 ,800 in goods In
two crimes reported Monday to
police.
Officials of a medical products
manufacturer, J erry Smith and
Sons Inc., told police someone en-
tered unlocked offices at 1782
Langley Ave. and stoic a copying
machine, which they valued at
$5.500.
Auto leaser Roy H. Newhouse,
36. reported t h a t his con·
dominiu m at 31 Rana was broken
into and two television sets, and
stereo and camera equipment he
valued at $2,300 we re taken from
it.
Police said the thief cut
through a screen and forced open
a den window to get in
Energy Hopes Dim
WASlilNGTON <AP ) The
Carter administration may have
torpedoed hopes of enacting an
energy bill this year by refusing
to make bigger concessions on
natural 9as pricing, Assistant
Senate Republican Leader Ted
Stevens said today.
S t e ve ns, R·A l ask a, said
statements made by Energy
Secretary James R. Schlesinger
will m ake reconciling energy
d iffe rences bet ween the two
chambers almost impossible.
In Valley
Burglary''
A man who poliee alle1e fied a
Fountain Valley discount house
with $2,100 In dlamoDd rings on
hls fingers was arrested Monday
nig,ht along wllh an asserted
purtner.
Mu nuel Lopez, 27, a carpenter.
of 2218 S. Maple St .. Santa Ana
and Victor Lopez, 22. of Artesia,
were each booked into Oran1•
Co\tnty Jatl on suspicion or cont·
merclal burglary following lheir
capture.
Investigators collared the
Lopezes not far from lhe Gemco
mem bership de~ment store,
17099 Brookhurst St., after wit·
nesses obtained a de1uiption of
tne getaway car. .
They remain6<1 in county jail
today, held in lieu of $5,000 ball
on tt1'e felony charges.
A jailer said today the pair will
be arraigned in West Orange
County Judicial District Court
Wednes(tay.
The Lopezes were attested by
Fountain Valley officers Jerry
Rllschel, Chris Kielich and Kent
Knobelauch on Brookhurst Street
south ot La Alameda Avenue
following lhe lhe!t incident.
Ge mco jewelry department
clerk Kenneth M. Desper , 29, al·
leged one or them tried on three
yellow gold and diamond rings.
claiming he was shopplng for a
luxury item.
Removinf one. the suspect
then sprinted from the store with
Desper in hot pursuit, jumped in·
to a wailing car and sped away
with two of the costb' rings,
Police said.
From Page Al
SADAT •••
Badran and Palestinian leader
Y a s lr Arafat arri ved in
Damascus. capital of Syri a, to
confer after Sadat's visit.
While neither Badran nor
Jordan's King Hussein bas com·
mented on lhe visit, Jordanian
sym pathy was expressed by In·
forma tion Minister Adnau Abu
Ode h who said the trip "brokethe
psychological barrier and pro·
vided fresh hopes for the recon-
vening of the Geneva con·
Cere nce."
Syria accused Sadat today of
"surrendering to the Zionist
butchers" and "stabbing the
fellow Arabs ln the back" by
traveling to Israel.
"A s a res ult of this
diver sionary, tragic comedy, the
Middle East bas become a
theater of the absurd," Syrian .
Ambassador Mowaffak Allaftold
the General Assembly.
"We are so confused that we
are no longer able to tell an ally
from an enemy," be said. "We
don't know whether we should
weep or laugh, feel shame or
pity.''
But foreten ministers from the
nine European Common Market
countries today praised "the ,
courageous initiative" of Sadat
and called for.a peace that would
include the Arabe or Paleatine.
Fl"09IPageAJ
TAXI •••
bus and train companiu she
could not carry her dog.
Mrs. Bernal s aid a priest
talked with Mrs. Caren on Sun·
day nl&ht in JacklOD and that he
was told she planned to go to
Belgium to visit her mother.
Mr s . Bernal s aid her
erandmother died three years
ago and there were no relatives
left in Belgtuin.
Mrs. cateiil, who sald she ls not
Uvlns with her busband and that
1he has another dau1ht4'r In New
York, deetlneCt ~o dlscua her reasont for the trip or her current
· finances. ••rm just trying to get to New
''Yp»k ~ now," she said. "I
.. don't wantJt tn the newspaper. l
Just bave to get to New Yorlt. ,
0 Jverythin& will turo out all
rJaht, I'm 'Pretty sure, .. she sald.
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FRENCH, BRITISH CONCOAOIS TAXI TOGE1ffER AFTER TOUCHDOWN AT JFK AIRPORT
New.man Walt•.' Cronkite Jotna Paaaeno-ra on 3~hour TrenHtlantlc Flight 1 Co~cordes Land at ~K.j.
Conunercial Aviation Enten Supenoni.c Age J
· NEW YOl~ (AP> "'P"' French and BriU.h Cor)corde Jets each
carrying 100 passengers landed
at Kennedy Airport today, brlng·
int commercial aviation here in·
lo ihe supersonic aae and signal·
101 another defeat for lhose who
vowed to bar the fut but noisy
plane.
Under 1ray skies, the ,swept·
wing jets carrying crews of nine
and capacity loads set down on
runway 31 Right t-Just Jlh hours .. .
Chavez to Aid
Onion Pieken
PHOE NIX . Ariz. <AP) -
Cesar "Chavez, president of the
United Farm Workers, AFL-CIO.
has pled&ed financial aid to strik-
in& onion pickers here and posed
the threat of a union boycott of
onions
Stand.Ina on the back of a truck.
Chavn Q>Oke in Spanish Mol\day
to about 500 men, women and
children at a strikers' camp in a
field northwest of Phoenix
•'I Invited myself to ofCer
solida rity to these strikers,''
Cha vez told news men at the
scene afterward.
arter leaving Pim fill ~ The fUahts marked tbe effee· j
on their first r~gµlarly ~~heel eel • tlve end or a J.O.montb court bat· 1
fllahu on the lu~t ve N~w ortt tle to k~ the Concorde from u.s-
run. he French craft landed at Ing Kennedy Airport, who••1
5:50 a.m. PST, fol1o'4Ved about nel«hbo claim noise from the
two minutes later by the British. supersonic Jet is louder than that 1 Both flew et a arutslbi a peed ot !tom regular jets.
1,340 mUes j)et hour across lhe Demonstrators had jammed 1
3,500 miles ot ocean. beaUn1 the the irport several times dwing l sun aoroo the Atlantic. the ban by Sl'\arllng traffic withe • Among the pas11en1er1 .on the slow-rnovtng catJ. 1 Alr France ™ wu CBS News ReauJar Concorde passenaer ,
anchonnan Walter Cl'C)l'\klte, re-•ervlce belwten Europe and 1 tut'ning from Oafro after tbe his· .?.Washington's Dulles Jntertna· I torit visit b)' Egyptian prwdont tional AJrport started l"i May
Anwa r Sadat to Israel. 1976. '
"It's • very beautiful Today's twin landings -~1n·
ait'plani." Ch>Dkite commented, cldenta lly coming exacu;i 14
'lt'sasmallpJane.t?Qutltotourtst yeara after the aaaassinalion or 1
class , but the setvlce Is first· the president for whom the
class. There iii no question about airport is na med -were a finely 1
it, it's half the time" . timed operation worked out for ,
·'This means Concorde has the 3,500-mile route over the
made its bigge1t breakthroueh Atlantic 1
ye t .·' said Norman Lornie,
spokesman for British Airways.
.. This is a prime airline bus iness
market. London and New York
I",.... Page Al
are the two busmesa capitals of PAINTER the Westena world." • • •
A small band of pickets wu on
band from various anti·SST
groups. bUt their protesll have
diminished considerably since
the first test landinP, of the plan'
proved less noisy than many rest·
dentt of nearby areas feared.
.
Myers was known to carry a .32
caliber pistol for s elf protection
and he may have been trying to 1
get to it, although he had oo am· 1
munltJon at the time, accordinc to the detective.
O'Rourke said lhat Informants I
told officers that lbe motive
behind the sbooUng was robbery.
M)'efl, however. was not robbed. j' o•Rourke theorized that things
happened toe> Cast and the IW>·
man ~parently didn't have Umel
·to take the 965 in cash from .
Myers' wallet or credit cards.
The 1hootlnt occurred alOlftl •
the aide of Interstate 15 our
Ban tow. ' The suspect was believed to 1
have driven the van to Victorville 1
after dUDJping Myers' body UD·
derneath a tumbleweed.
O'Rourke said the suspect then
rode a bus back to Fontana.
O'Rourke said he had no doubt
at all that Myers bad picked QP a
hitchhiker although Myers• rel-
atives said that this would be out of character for Myers.
The detective also said that on-
ly one person is believed to be in-
volved in the •laying.
A motorist who witnessed the
body being thrown from the v~
ldentlfied the s us pect as a
CaucaalJn with a mustache.
Tbe jaile d s u s pe ct was
deacribed as a black wilh short
hair and a mustache. O'Rourke
Hid lhat lhe Witness motorist
would be contacted again for
tdentificaUoo.
Still unexplained was a sen~·
or numbers that Myers bad writ.
ten on the palm of his hand
with a ballpoint pen before hi
death.
O'Rourke bad earlier s aid the
numl>ers represented a possible
clue as to a suspect vehicle.
That theory has now apparent-
ly ftllen through.
"We may never know what the
numbers meant or why he wrote
lhem," O'Rourkesaid.
lnvesUgators also said earlier
that Myers was shot by two <lif·
fer&nt weapons. O'Rourke said
that bullets entering the body
from different angles may have
been responsible ror that im.
preaslon. . ..
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By ~fY CLANCY °' ..... , ..........
One.fourth of those who rely on
thrir autos Instead ot Oran1e
County Transit Dlatrlct bu1
servlee don't kno" tbe name or
the bua compan)'. transit dlatrict
otac!ala were told Monday.
And 60 ~rcent of the •o·called
non·rlders don't know where the
buaes go or how much lt coat.a to
ride, according to a survey oC
2,108 county residents.
Transit officials with the help
•• :f}
O( COns\lltRtl lOOk lbe $il0.000
tur"•Y of Ht reaular bua p111fn1e?J arid J,738 reeldents
who ael~ it ev•rboard th• bua.
They plan tc> use Ill r.sulta tn
developln1 iavert11ln1 and
promotloaal c1mpata111 H well as con1ldertn1 bu1 1ervloo
cban9ee.
The survey showed, for
example, that both riders a.ad n~n ·rldera would want more
direct routes, !ewer tranatera
and taster trtpa tor carrylnr
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'OLD LADY' MEIR MEETS OLD ENEMY SADAT
Llghtenlng the Tension Between Netlona
Foes Banter
Sadat Informal in l1rael
TEL AVIV C{\P> -There were afewlightmomentsthatotfset
the high drama and often deep emotion in the visit of Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat to Israel
Sadat himself helped set a tone or easy mtormallty shortly
after he got off the plane Saturday night when he greeted such old
foes as Moshe Dayan and Golda Meir
HE ALSO ASKED, "IS Anel Sharon here'' Some thouaht he
was joking since the hard-driving General Sharon dashed across
the Suez Canal In the 1973waranddrovetowithin60mllesofCalro
Sharon, now agriculture minister. was there and he and Sadat
soon were engaged in a brief, animated conversation
During a joint Sadat-Begin news conference, the first quesUon
was addressed to "Mr. President" and asked 'Will you be invited
to Cairo?"
Begin and Sadat sat there They looked al each ot}Jer as lt e•cb
ex peeled the other to answer
FINALLY A SMILING BEGIN said "The quesllon was to the
president and I'm prime minister •·The news conference wuoffto
a halting but good-humored start
The most laughter came from the exchange between Sadat
and 79 year-old Golda Meir when the Egyptian president met
public figures in parliament Sunday.
Sadat presented Mrs. Meir -a heavy smoker -with a velvet
case containing a cigarette box encased 1n silver with tµs
autograph engraved In Arabic on the cover.
When Mrs. Meir spoke passionately of Israel's desire for peace
and secure borders she said there must be peace 0 so that even an
old lady like me ... "
SADAT AND THE REST of the crrowded room laughed
interrupting her. '
·'I have always said this." Sadat replied, a reference to 1973
when he called her ••an old lady.''
Mrs. Meir said, "Yea, you always called me an old lady."
Sadat rocked with laughter andahejolnedill.
Then. Mrs. Meir produced a small packaae for Sadat•s new
granddaughter saying, "as a arandmother to a trandlatber ... "
Again, Sadat'sdeeplau1hteraounded.
"Marvelous, marveloua, "Sadat murmured.
··wreelcafle ln Wake
Wild North Storm
Worst in 3 Years
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them to and from tbelr Jobs.
ln addiUoo, resultl •bowed 90
percent of those who do ride tile
bus find the 1eata comfortable
and particularly like OCfD'a bus
driven. •
Slxty.elcht percent ot thoee
lnt.rvlewed said they f'ety most
heavily on the telephone to obtain
bua information, but most
recalled various OCTD
advertisement• from
newspapers, radio and
blllboards.
Elrhty percent of the regular
* * * Dial Lift
Service
Troubled
The Orange County Transit
District's troubled Dlal·a·Lift
service recently left a mute
wheelchair·bound student
stranded for three hours. ocro
directors were told Monday.
And Robert Shorb, director or
Santa Ana's Carl Harvey Work
Trainine Center for the
Physically Handicapped, said It
hasn't been uncommon Cor his
students to be left stranded for an
hour at transfer points waiting
for Dial-a-Lift
Shorb's comment.a and other
complaints prompted directors
Monday to seek a new contractor
to operate the 12·vehicle Dial·a·UA
Paramed, Inc., a subsidiary of
Schaefer Ambulance Service,
wiU be terminated effective Dec.
21, directors decided
While Paramed's permanent
replacement is sought. Yellow
Cab of North Oranae Count)' will
be hired to operate the system at
a rate oC $14.97 an hour or about
$29,940 a month
Curt Stewart, OCTD's
government aft airs officer, said
Paramed'a servrce since the
countywide system started Aug.
1 has been W)satlslactory to both
handicapped users and OCTD.
In addition, be said, OCfO
olficlala believe ••remedies to
these problems are beyond the
capabilitlesof Paramed
Dial-a·Lift ls designed as a
door-t.o-deatinatlon bus service
for the handicapped For 2S cents
the handicapped are transported
in lift-equipped minibuses Their
able·bodlU companions are
charged SO cents
The service was deslaned to
permit the handicapped to phone
In advance for transportation
appointments as well as
malntain reeutar appointments
for transportation to school or
work
But Shorb saJd administrators
at the sheltered workshop he
operates had much better
success when usfn1 their own
vans before DiaJ-a.LJ(t became
avallable.
He crlticl1ed ParaJned •s JtafC
for f alUna to unde.r'ltand how the
buses• lift equipment operates.
"Your equipment Is poorly
maintained because lt is
abused/' Sbo'rb ii.id. "This is
ridiculous."
He alao crttJclzed Paramed work~rs for thelr t.reatment of
handicapped pusen1era. •
"They treat them ea ii they
were mentalJy retarded .. be
aald. ''They don't deserve this."
A Lasuna fWJs realdent. who ls contlned to a wheelchair, related
her difficulties in makfna
arran1ementa to travel to Mon-
day 'a meetme.
"You have to be awfully touah
lo try a1ain," ahe said. •
mrdSlain-
ToFeed Croc
bu pa.ssen,.rs aaJd they know
how frequently buaea travel
while Only o.ne-thlrd of thoa• wbo ...
don•t ndo mow tho fr~ency.
lo addlt.lonlQf those whO doo'i
travel by .}6. 13 percent bad
ne11Uve attitudes aboUt tho bua
comp&Jl1 while M p,rcent 11.ld
they lacked lnformaUon to make adeclalon.
On the other .han<L the
majority of both rldera and
non·ridel'I said they believe the
transit district provides enoueb
lnformaUon about its servicea to
tboipubUc. ..
Xranstt ~trtc11l1 au.,e1ted
promOtion eampatans that wot.lid
provide more lntormatlon to
potentiil pa!!set11era.
They suaeeted the cami>Jlalil
point out~1that there are e.ooo
deatloattona, or bus atop,, In
Orange ~t1, a welt H(:f..Us
on bpf. fares and frequency bl schedules.
The survey showed that ne.lrly
three·foU.rtha or the non-riders
.beJteve tn&les are the solution to
Ghurch Ekler TeatifU!
Porno 'a S@rviee~
By TOM BARLEY Of .. Diii• ~, ........ accredited school and the only Judge Marvin G. Weeki'
such tactUty in the nation tb&t coart.room.themtnl,ttrsald.
gi vu doctorate deareea ID McJlveMt told the jury Ulat he
human sexuality and pro¥tdes felt the rW\ta Of tbe•ter owners
traiqlng for sexoloalat.a, an wt\o exlilblt ntms on the Unes ot
counselors and aex lnatructlon jhoae alioWn at the Hontr P!ut
teachers. theaterahOuld bt protec:ted.
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An elder In the Methodist
Ch"rcb testified Monday In
Orange County Superior Court
th,.t people who watch
pornographic movies are nb
different sexually than stamp
collectors.
. The Rev. Robe.rt McllveMa
called as the first defense witnesa
in the city of Santa Ana's lawsuit
againt the Mitchell Brothers
theater, told a jury that he did not
consider movies shown at the
Honer Plaza theater to be
obscene.
And the witness li1dlcated tblt • '1What we mus\ do tr; Amen can
more wtrestrlcted viewing of societ1 ts take care of the rigflts
such movies as t.hoae recently ot lndlvtduala, ••he 8fld. "I think
screened before the Jury might it Is wropg for you to take away If
heJp cut the crl01e rate fn so far anot~er's riehU aa Iona a1 no one as it relates to s~ual offenders. ... b belne hurt.•·
The min.i5ter, who told the jury
that be is also president of the
Institute for Advance Study or
Human Sexuality, tesUfied that
be Celt the label "obscenity"
woul~ be l\etter applied to
movies that specialize in
savagery, brutality and the
degradaUon of children.
Reminded of what city
attorney James Clancy
described as an "acrobatic
scene" in the Marllyn Chambers
movie "Behind tbe Green Door"
the witness decltned to label lt
moral or immoral.
But he testified that he saw
nothlna harmful ln the "Green
Door" scene, a aeimerit of the
movie that graphically depicts a
\"Ide va~tety of sexual
actlvitlea.
The movl~ was one of 17
2C-rated mms viewed by the jury ot seven women and ftve men.
The jury ls being asked by the
city to declare a total of 41
movies to be obscene and to
furtller declare the Uleater to b4t
a public nuisance, a decision that
co~Jd lead~ 1~ cloaure.
}I t~e Jurbrs~teacb those
verdicts, they will be asked by
the city to assess damaaes
against brothers James and
Artie Mitchell.
Mcllvenna, described as a
"traveUng elder and sexoloetst ..
in the &Jethodist Church, teaUfied
that movi~ Qf the type shown at
the Mitchell Brothers theater are
more of a public Hr\'lce than a
public metaace..
He told the jury that aexu&II¥
explicit films solve problem•
rather than create them.
•'Anyone who h sexually
ignorant is StUJ>ld, 1' he said.
And he described the theory
that people who watch X·rated
f,ilms tend to become 1ex
o!ft:nders as "a lot of nonsense.••
Mcllvenna 1ald his l11st!tute
distributes sex nJma to medical
scbool1. unlveralUea, colleges,
boipltala and individual•
throuehout the United States.
He a&ICI thtt lnsUtute Is an
Many people who have been Lawyers tor lhe Mitchell
Jailed for sex crimes have h,.O bro\htl'J tald Mcllvenna Is one of
less exposure to sex films than . ftye sexologists wbo will testily the jury in acting Superior Court •
Birth Defeet Eaase
WASHINGTON CAP) -: The
Food and ~ Admlnlltratloo
bas faked tbe Trea•ury Departm~nt to require labels ou
alcoholic beveras~f to wato
pre~?:;l womeu \Jl•t J>.eavy drib can cause blrf.h c!ef ec:ts.
FDA Co111ml11loner Donal~
Kennedy, it:t a let~r to tho head or
the Treaauri's Bureau of AICOhOl
Tobacco .a Firearms rele&Hd
today, satd:
''Tbls ls a· problem not only tor.
women wbo babituall1 abUk
alcobol but also for thOff ~
consume alcohol in moderaUon
but mllht occaaloD8lly Imbibe
more than two drink• a day.••
The NaUonal Jnatltut• on.
Alcohol Abuse and AJcohoUsrn
warned last June that wo~
who take mort?" than two dtinb a
County Man
Killed by Car ·
A 40·year·old Santa Ana man
died , at Fountain Valley Com·
munlty Hospital Monday evening
shortly after he was struck by a
car, pollcesai.dtodaf,
Ausencio Villela DomJDl\lH
was croeatng Euc;Ud Street al 6th
Slret?t Lo Santa Ana when he was
struck by a northbound vehicle.
officers said.
Police said they aresee.lclnatwo
witnesses for questioning. The
driver of the car was releued
pendln1 further investtgaUon.
poll ce said.
ONLY PR.OT
OFF 6 BUNNING: Near as
you could tell, things were fairly
normal along our Oranse Coast
today. Folks were going to work
as usual. There wore no o~ert
signals of new ain in our streets.
The ciilienry had not abandoned
industry for a life of idleness.
Yet, with all the fuss we've
suffered over a new scheme to
titillate the populace, you misht
have suspected we would be it:
trouble.
What has happened, you see, is
that a new sport known as
thoroughbred horse racing has
come toOrangeCounty.
In fact, under auspices of the
Orange County Fair, we only
yesterday concluded a 12-day
meet wherein these blue-blooded
'hayburners raced around the
track at Los Alamitos.
I MUSt''CONFESS I am not a
horse racing fan. But from those
knowledgeable, I have learned
that citizens do not simply
deliver themselves to the track to
watch these nags run.
,.,. . ..._....
'NEW ARMY' -About 2,000 delegates ranging in age
from 16 to 85 ended the National Women's Conference in
Houston.with linked arms and some propspects of unity.
"People came here and listened and that changed their
minds," said New York Lt. Gov. Mary Anne Krupsa.k.
WASHINGT.ON CAP) -A
small :rise iil lood co5ts held tho
overall rise in 9onsumer prices to
0.3 percent In October for the
third consecutive month, tbe &OV•
ernment re,orted taday.
T.be relatlvely small rate of ln·
crease, about 3.8 percent at an
annual rate, reflected the
declines ln wholesale farm prices
last summer that have continued
to exert a moderating eff eet on
retail food prices.
GltOCERY PRICES rose ority
0.1 pereent in October, the same
as In September, and have been
la~ely responsible for brin&ing
down the nation's lnflat.ion rate
since mid-Year. Food costa com·
prise about one·fourth of the
Consumer Price Index.
Consumer prices have risen at
an annual rate of only 3.81>41rcent
over Ul81>45t thrq months. This
is a mar'lced improvement over
the 10 percent rate durin1 the
first three months ot the year.
when the effecu of cold weather
and fuel shortagu pushed up the
price of food and other soods at a
rapid pace. •
Wholesale farm prices had
fallen nearly 13 percent in May
through September before jump-
ing 2.4 percent last month.
HOWEVER, GOVE~NMENT
economists sQ!d riot .i1 of the
decline had been ren cted al the
retail level and predicted that
proces,sors and other middlemen
would be able to absorb eome of
the Octobtt increase In whqlesale prices. .,.
In October, the Labor Depart·
mftlt said, th\' Con,umer Pnce
Index stood at 184.S, meanlnC
that goo<IS and services selling
ror $100 in the 1967 base Period
now cost SlM.50.
The Index also showed that
consumer prices in October were
6.5 percent higher than thosO"of a
year ago.
TB E PUllCRASING power of
the average worker's paycheck
increased 1.1 percent last month,
the largest gain this year. The
gov rmment said this wu due to a 1.8 percent increase in average
hourly eamings comb ed with t'
4'
WEATHER I NATION
0.1 percent riBe lo the work week,
which more than off et the pace
of lnfiation last month.
Over the year, re-.1 earnlnp-
take·home pay adJuated for lnfla·
lion and taxes -. have increased
4.6 percent. The over-the-year
gain was due lareely to the ln·
crease In the federal tax deduc·
tlon that reduced withboldint
taxes in June.
Non-food prices also continued
to moderate laat month, rlsint by
only 0.3 percent, about the same
as in the lour previous months.
This came despite the fact that
hicher prices for the new l9U
model cars were Introduced intO
the index for the first Ume in: Oc·
tober-
Ptices for gasoline and motQr
oll Jumped 1.4 percent last
month, considerably more t.ban
each of the precedln• two
months.
There is more to it than
watching. Those of sporting
blood actually place wa1ers upon
which animal will win the races.
With your cash on the line, this
puts a lot more pizzazz into the
thrill of victory or the agony of de-
f eat.
Work Will Continue
GAMBUNG IS considered an
awful sin in some quarters and
downright illegal in California
everywhere except at a ~e
racing track.
Women Plan Follow-up Conference Activiti.ea
At the track, howev~. you
may line up .at the 6"ettlng
window and indulge younel.( in
gambnn, all }'OU want until )"dur
Wflllet pocket loses ,all its
padding.
There is little question this is a
popular sin. On the first day of
thoroughbred horse racing at Los
Ah~mitoe, more than 8,000 horse
lovers tw-ned ollt -.nd passed
more than one million bucks
throuah the bettinl windows.
IT'S NO WONDER that
interests fl'()m elsewbere, where
they have suffered vast
experience with e•mbllne lust.
wanted to save us from our&elWll
in this new lure toward a
wayward lifestyle.
HOUSTON CAP> -Delegates
to the National Women's Con-
ference said "yes " to 25
aomeUmes controversial recom-
mendations on how to achieve
equality of the sexes biit ''no" to
a 26th proposal that might have
helped implement them -a
Cabinet-level women's depart-
Il}ent. Inste~d ol such a department
to arg~ for their rights, the del-
egates called for a folfow-up
conter.ence and asked President
Carter to name a national
comnH:ision lo carry out the
meeting's recommendations.
and city councilwoman from
Philadelphia, has set. up a re-
g 1on al network of minority
women to monitor the plank they
worked on.
-Presidential assistant Midge
Costanza said she will call
together the more than 40 pres-
idential appointees who attended
the conference to discus& their
impressions. She said she'wants
to include in the meeting
Rosalynn Carter and Judy
Carter, the President's wife and
daughter-in-law, both of whom
spoke to the delegates.
After all, the horse Hclng
interests of Los Angeles County
have bad long experience and
they know how awful it can be to
have all these fans betting real /
money on horse races.
ONCE THOSE recommenda·
tions are,forwarded to the presi·
dent, be will have 120 days to
report on tl>.m to Congress,
Sevetahpecific actions are ex-
pected to follow the conference:
-Dr. Ethel Allen, a surgeon
-DELEGATES ARE expect-
ed to organize around the Plan of
Action in their own cities. Bever-
ly LaCorbiniere of Providence,
R.l., said she wants to make
women back home "aware of all
the issues that Pi!SSed, not just
the controversial ones."
So, when the 12 days or
thoroughbred racing were
proposed for Los Alamitos, the
Los Angeles County racing
people opposed It violently. They
were really trying to help us.
•'Keep that awful 1amblln1 out of
friendly litUe old neishboring
Orange County," was surely
their motto.
DESPITE TBIS, the approvals
went through. And tn a last-ditch
e(fort to save us, the outside
horse racing interests even went
to court in a falling try to block
the Los Alamitos races.
You have to admit that's ec>lng
beyond the call of duty in tr)'tng
to save a neighboring county.
Admittedly, some Wrong
Thinkers have su11Hted that all
these interests wanted to do was
keep all the horse race belling
money in Loe An1eles County.
But surely they know that the
Los Alamitos races will probably
net a quarter of a million dollars
.t.oward improvements of the
county fairground• In Costa
Mesa.
You just know the Loi Angeles
intereata dido 't mind aeeina us
get. this money. n was sin they
ytere worried about.
Police Bring Home
CB 'Death Notice'
NEWTON, Mass. (AP) -John and Nancy Donahue heard about the
~rawl.and a young man's death on their citizens band radios. But notun·
t1l pobce came to their home did they learn that the victim. was their
18-year-oldsonRobert. 1
John Don~ue said he was towing a car to his service station, monitor Ing ·a radio, when he heard
police calls reporting a fight in· volving nine people. At home, stood there. I asked him, 'Is he
Nancy Donahue also bad a dead?' and Gordie said 'Yes '
radio tuned tothe police.
Donahue recalled he and his
wife spoke by CB
t1NANCY CALLED ME and
said 'Did you hearth at?' I said I
bad and then, as I was getting lnto
Newton. I heard that one or the
boys bad been killed.
"When I got home, we were slt·
ting at the table when there was a
knock atthedoor. I feltsomethlng
bad happened. 'lbere wu Gordie
, McM uUeo. a pollce officer -and
theonlyoneoutwasBobby.
.. Nancy said, 'It's Bobby• and
Gordie1aid 'Yes.•
"Isaid 'Is he hurt.rand heJust
"IT WAS WHAT WE bad heard
on the pOlice calls "
Police satd ROtiert Donahue,
captain of the Newton North Hig:b
School football te~m. was stabbed
in the heart and neck when two
groups of students got into a fiaht
late Saturday night after leaving
separate parties
Murder charges were filed
asalnst Peter J Grealy, 2S, of
Duxbury. Grealy, a student at
Massachusetts M aritlme
Academy. was released on $1.000
bail after pteadlne Innocent In
Newton District Court.
-Conservatives will mount
their own lobbyin8 ~ampaigns
against the movement, capitiJiz.
inR on the contacts tJ\ey made and
the literature they picked up,
especially on abortion and
homosexual rights.
Debbie Harrell of Hooker,
Okla., said she was eager to dis·
play the literature she collected
"because I don't think the men
realize the feminist movement
has gone this far."
NEW YORK LT. GOV\ Mary
Anne Krupsak said the effect of
the conference may be an ln·
tangible: "A new determination
to reach equality, a new spirit
that is eoing to carry the issues.
"People came here and
listened and that changed their
minds. Women responded to
each other. Out of tbi6 comes a
new respect and a new coalJUon,
a new army,'' she said.
A COAST GUAJU) rescue boat
plucked tbe child troin Ute water-
nlne minutes latn. Coast
Guardsmaa Keith Roberts, Ul,
jumpedintotheriyertorescuethe
child, who had stayed afloat_ by
thrashing and padclling.
Two other guardsmen, Jobn
Johnson and William Cooper,
administered mouth-to-mouth
and cardlo-pulmonary
resuscitatlononthechild.
Meanwhile, dock workers
chased the man in thelr can.
They ran him offtbel'Oad, and hJs
car was snaeged on rallro•d
tracks.
ASHTABULA POLlCJ: aald they had to take Uie man away
quickly because the crowd was so
hostile.
LOVE 'C4YIVRES
FlJUi A'ITENTION
LAKE ORION, Mlch. (AP) -
When the J\ev. John Alrecht
livered his ~rmon, the coo1reaa·
lion didn't have time to even think
aboutfid&eUng,
"Love,•• said Alrecbt. Then be
sat down.
The congregation of St. Mary's
In-the·Hllls Episcopal Church
turned out ln pouring rain to heat
that word, blUed as the world's
shortestsennon.
Alrecht alild tie got the idea a
year a10 wtien a Unitarian; •
minlat,er set the record for Ute
world'• loniest sermon -60
hours and3l mlriutes.
CHRISTMAS GJ{EE'l'lNGS
...
' . . . and. mailed any·where in ~he U.S.
Our Claeaffled aectlon wlll feature
a special Chrt•tma• Card greeth1g
p~ge on Pfc•mber 6th. Write, type
• or draw ~ur card or we will set It
In ptlnt for you. Samples are
shown below. Actual etzea are:
1%"x3° at $10, 1%"x6" at $20,
3V4"X3" at $20. Add $1.00
addltlonal for malling a complete
paper to your loved ones "
' anywhete In the United States. F.or
more Information or to order your
car~ t>y phone pleas• call our
Chrlatrn•• Card Ad-Viser at
642·5678. You may bring or mall
your card to the Dally Piiot at 330
W. Bay St.r P.O. Box 1580, Costa
Mesa, Qlif. 92626. Charge it or
use Your Master Charge or
BankAmericard.
J
..............
GIRLS' DEATHS RELATED TO SIX OTHERS?
Delore• C.peda, left, and Sonja Johnaon
:Two Slain Girls
:.f ,inked to 6?
LOS ANGELES <AP> ..-The• deaths of two
Highland Park eirls may be re1-ted t.o at least six
other deaths which have occurred in the last month. · police say.
In a press con(erence Monday, Lt. Ron Lewis
said the deaths of Sonja Johnson. 14, and Delores
Cepeda. 12, have "some common denominators"
w1lh those of six other young women found In re-
mote areas of Lot Angeles.
THE BODIES of the two g1rls were found Sun-
<tay in an Elysian Park ravine by a youngster play-
ing in the area, Lewis said.
The lieutenant declined lo say whelh~r the girls
had been se,icually molested or if they were found
fully clothed. He also gave no clues on the cause of
death pendutg autopsies by the coroner.
TH.E TWO GIRLS were last seen Nov. 13 get·
ting on a bus at tln Eagle Rook shopping mall. They
' were reportedly on their way bome, LewUI said. Homidld~ investigators handled \be 8se from
the day the girls were reported missing. Lewis said,
because there was no indication that they were
runaways.
The other victims. all women, include: U55a
Castin, 21, found Nov. 6 in a Glendale ta"\'ine; Judith
Lynn Miller. 15, round nude on a La'Crescenta la._,n
Oct. 31 by a man picking up his mornin1 paper;
Christina Wecklcr, 20, found Sunday on a hillside
residential area or Highland Park; and an uniden,
tificd woman about 20 years old found Nov. 10 int~
Franklin Canyon area of West Los Angeles.
Ski Resorts
Set to t!Jpen
By the Auoclatecl Pre11
Callfomla ski resorts wlll be open Thanksltvlnl
Day for the Clrst Ume in thrM years, 1Mn1 tho
state's skiers somethlne to be thankful Cor.
And the National Weather Service says the
1nowstorm could last throueh Thursday.
"Areas around Lake
Tahoe are reportine l to
2 Ceet of snow." Bob
Roberts of the Sierra Ski
Areas Association said
Monday
INCUNE WILL open
Wednesday, while
Heavenly Valley, Squaw
Valley, Alpine Meadows,
Si.erra Ski Ranch and
Boreal plan t.o open on
Thursday, he said.
A mantle of snow also
was falling on Mam-
moth, t.o the south.
"We expect the ma-
jority of our lower lifts to
be operable by
Thanksgiving ... about
14 lifts," sald Pam
Clayson of Mammoth
Mountain Sk1 Area.
THE SAN Ber -
nardino County re·
sort of Snow Valley said
It will open Wednesday
using artificial snow,
since no real snow has
fallen in that area.
The mountain
snowfalls will translate
Into cloudy, possibly
rainy skies at lower
elevations or northern
and north·central
California, said Pat
Rowe of the National
Weather Service.
Marine Innocent
In 'Torch' Case
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A Marine Corps drill in·
struetor accused oC setting fire to a recruit last July
9 has been acquitted by a general court-martial jury
at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot. Sgt. John B.
Norris, 22, of San Bernardino, was found iDJlocent of
all charges stemming ---------
from the alleged hazing at Camp Pendleton.
and maltreatment of Norris was accused of
Pvt. Victor N. Aldaz, 19, dousing the recruit's
of Granite City, Ill., a trousers with lighter
spokesman said. fluid, setting it atlame
A jury of four officer• and referring t.o him as
and four enlisted men ~e· •'torch•• after Aldaz re-
11 berated about three t ported1y refused orders
hqurs Monday before de· to stand at attention.
clding Norris was lnno-If convicted, Norris
cent in connection with could have faced a max-
the incident, which aJ. lmum penalty of five
legedly occurred durinJ yeir. in prison, officials
a recruit. tralnlni phase said.
\
State, Coast Guar-d C.lcish ·
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The Coast Guard and Oil of Ohio's proposedLon1 Beach (acility. "It's an
state Air Resour~es Board have clashed over who enormous monkey wrench and It could throw the re·
should regulate'" air pollution from a proposed view int.o a grinding halt "
Alaskan oil lanker terminal at Long Beach. The Sohio terminal would be a major tr•nsship·
Coast Guard Commander Jonathon Ide lndicat-ment facility for up to 700,000 barrels a day or
ed at an ARB hearing Monday that his a.gene¥ h"1 Alaskan crude oil. and federal ener1y orficlala have
decided t.o exercise authority 0ver emissions th>m presse<l the-ARB in 'feeent months for speedy
,supertankers unloading near San Clemente Island. resolution or the project's air pollution regulation
ARB Chairman Tom Qwnn then asked him problem
~ whether his state~ent meant the Coast Guard ~ ARB officials said their rerulations would con· I which had been telling the ARB for two years that 1t trol 95 percent of the terminal's emissldns
I lacked authority to regulate air pollution in coastal But Rear Admiral Robert Price said the Coast
! waters -had changed its position, and Ide aaid yes Guard has authority to rt1ulate tanker emissions,
I ·'This may delay the entire prooeeding, 11 Quinn although only to meet standards set by the federal ~ warned, noting that his agency had invested two Environmental Protection A1ency The EPA has
{ years'workindrawingup~re_s_u_ia_u_o_~~fo-r_s_tan~d-a_rd~~n-ot_s_e_t_~_y_s_t_a_nd_a_r_d_s_fo_r_s_u_ch~em~iss~~-n_s~~~~
I
I . FILE ERROR
FREES FOUR
LOS ANGELES <AP>
1 -Four men arrested
when police seized a "dt· ! partment store" or dru(a ~ worth an est.Unated $6,6
I million last August have
been released because
the search warrant lead·
: ing to the seizure was in·
• correctly filed, offlclall
• said.
j Los Angeles Municipal
i Court Judge Antonio
I Chavez dismissed
possession of narcotics
1 for sale charges against
, Allen A. Robinson, 33,
and Willie Barnes, 25,
! both of Los Angeles; Vic·
tor Ramirez, 34, of South
• Gate and Billie Alex·
I a oder, 27, of Rancho
1 Palos Verdes.
Cunent Term
Annual Rate
8.06% 6-10 ears
7.79% 4-10 ears
6.98% 21/2-10 ears
6.72% 1-10 ears
5.92% 3 months
5.39%
We will transfer funds from your savings to
your chec~lng account with a phone cell. This
and other servlcff have the eff act of earning
you an even greater return on your money.
Come and see us today. We're here to advise
encl help
Sl,000
..
SEVERELY BURNED
Actor Den Haggerty •
1V Actor
Haggerty
Burned
POLICE SAID Wolf
apparenUy came upon
the burglars in hh
hallway. He w1.4 found
by his sirlfriend lyine on
the living room fioor and
dled2'hhounlater. men fleeing from
Nel1hbora said they Wolf's Sherman Oaks
DAILY PILOT
LOS ANGELES <AP> heard shots and saw two Muse in a nearly new -Act.or Dan Haggerty,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---star of the NBC
television series "The
Life and Times of Grlzz.
ly Adams,'' ia recovering
in a hospital from burns
received during a birth·
day celebration, an NBC
spokesman said Mon·
day.
Haggerty was
celebrating hl.s 36tb
birthday wit.b his family
and friends at a Los
Angeles restaul'ant
Saturday wben people at.
another table sent over a
flaming cocktail, said
the spokesman, Bud
Tenerani.
TUE COCKTAl.L'S
rtamina conteota spilled
accidentally as it was be·
in• servecj, burning the
star on his wrists,
forearms and han~
Teneranl said Hagger·
ty was being treated for
second-and lhird·deiree
burns. He could not say
at which ~pital the ac-
tor was sta)'lni.
HAGGERTY'S physi·
clan, Dr. Richard•
Grossman said in a
statement that the actor
w a a •'resting com·
fortably and Improving
gradually.''
"He Is out of any
seriou1 dan~er,•·
Grossman 9aid. • He'• a
iough teUow and should
recover quicJ:cly,"
..
..
H .
E ..
' I
A Wise Delay on
I
HOspital Changes
State Department of Heilth officials announced this
week they're shelving fOf' four months plans to set up new
supervi.aory positions in the•tate hospitals.
. The new positions were, to say the Jeast, controversial.
Chae! objection was again.st a requirement that the new
positions be filled by regi1tered nurses only.
The positions would have replaced 108 current
supervisory posts, almost hall of which are filled by
psychiatric technicians .
Durtne the four-month hiatus, state officials wtll
meet with psych techs and others ln the hospital system, as
well as federal officials, to evaluate the proposed re·
organization.
It's all part ot an effort to regain federal certification
for tour state hospitals, includin1 Fairview in Costa Mesa.
The health department acted correctly in reviewing
the psych techs' objections to an arbitrary decision to bar
them from the new positions.
However, wouldn't it have been easier to have held
conferences and sought an acceptable solution in the first
place?
Mideast Maneuvers
The two leaders whose dramatic meeting in
Jerusalem captured weekend headlines are old hands at
the art of tuking the big gamble when conventional
methods bog down.
Egypt's President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menuhcm Begin, both one-time revolutionaries,
have taken pl enty of personal chan<'es in their time.
This time they chose to lay the future of their power on
the line and, in so doing, generated the first faint ray of
hope for an eventual settlement of the past three decades
of Middle East turmoil.
In the initial round, neither side showed any inclina··
tion to make concessions tn the specific areas of dispute.
llut merely making their public commitment to negotiate
for peace was concession enough for a start.
It was a far cry from the earlier-Geneva conference,
recalled later by Henry Kissinger, when Arab and Israeli
delegates flatly refused to even to sit next to one another to
begin the talks
Sadat had most to lose if his gamble failed. In addition
to exposing himself to physical danger on and after his
journey, he inevitably earned the bitter enmity of almost
all of the rest of the Arab world and.surely stands to see his
own government topple if some benefit for Egypt does not
emerge.
But if the qoor to peace can be kept open, Sadat will
have gained the great advantage of being able to focus his
~overnment 's attention and funds less on the potential
time bomb to the east and more on the shaky Egyptian
economy that bas generated food riots and oth'er
manifestations of unrest.
For Begin, too, the release of Israel from decades of
living as an armed camp would be a splendid accomplish-ment ·
, Whatever comes of the meeting, the best news for the
United States is that at long last shuttle diplomacy can be
::losed down as the opponents meet face to face with the ap-
;>arent intention of trying to settle their differences without
the intervention of the great powers. That is the giant step.
An Ugly Performance
Demonstrations of all kinds and sizes and in behalf of
many causes are an old story in Washington, D.C.
The one that erupted during the recent visit of the Shah
·if Iran would not rank among the biggest, the most signtfi.
ant or most violent, though it did result in injury to 107
iersons, including 15 qJficers of the National Park Service.
But the clash between supporters and opponents of the
.hah and his domestic policies had one unusual and
particularly ugly twist.
The brick-tossing, club·wielding masked dem·
onstrato~ were, to a large extent, Iranian students and
1>thers who are here as guests with the blessing of the Unit-
-!d States government.
It is asking a little too much when our police have to
.·isk their nec,ks to quell a battle over an 1ssue which has lit·
Je to do with the United States.
The government would be eminently justifled in lifting
..he visas of all those troublemakers who can be identified
and inviting them to continue their demonstrating at home
or in someone else's backyard. And in notifyini future vls-
iors that this type of behavior does not warrant continued
oospitaUty on these shores.
• 1 )pinions expressed In the space above are those of the Delly Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are thoae of their authore and
·rtl1ts. Reader comment Is invited. Addreu The Delly Piiot. P.O.
lox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (71<4) 842•4321.
Boydl.Conversa~ion .
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON -Tbe Soviet
Union and China ere secreUf
1hlppln1 weapon1 to blect
Rhodesian suerrtuaa in an eftort
to gain new lftllu.ence In wartom
Alric a.
The tenacloua 1uerrlUas are
fi1htin1 Rhodeala's white
minority 1ov-
ernment from
base s ln
Mozatnblque,
across the
c ountr y's
ea s tl.!rn
border. and
Zambia , to
th e north
They are wag. ·
ing their hit
and·run war wilh light weapons,
such as nnes: mines and plasU-
que bombs, whlch, according to
U.S. Government sources, are
being provided by the Soviets
and Chlnese.
The communist weapons are
shipped by freighter to the of·
ficial military forces of Mozam-
bique and nearby Tanzania.
Some of lhe arms are siphoned
orr by those countries, according
to competent sources, and lhe
rest arc trucked to the guerrilla
bases.
THE NATIONALISTS, split by
a power struggle, nevertheless
fight for lhe united cause of dis-
placing the white Rhodesian te·
glme. The two main factions
don't receive the same weapons,
our sources said. Peking sends
the bulk of It.a support to the Zim·
babwe African National Union
<ZANU>. wtule the Kremlin ships
its arms to both the Zimbabwe
African People's Union <ZAPU >
and the ZANU.
Ne ither group wants to be
beholden to lhe superpowers. But
the United States, the Soviet
Union and Red China are In hOl
pursuit of African allies.
However, government sources
told us that the United States is
not sending mllltary supplies to
either faction in Rhodesia. The
Carter adn-.1nlstrallon doesn't
want to get caught up in an
African arms.race with the com-
munists.
BUT NEITHER can the United
State s afford the diplomatic
losses that would follow a bloody
racial war in Rhodesia that is
fought and won with communist
weapons. The administration.
Earl Waters
•
therefore, is desperately trying to
persuade the obstinate Rhodeslan
prime mlnlster, Ian Smith, to
transfer power peacefully from
Rhodesia 's270,000 whites to Its six·
million blacks.
Meanwhile, the Sovlets have
concluded that providing
weapons ls the way to win friends
and influence countries in Africa.
The Kremlln has enjoyed recent
successes in Angola, where It
backed the winning side In a civil
war. and in Moumblque, where
it has displaced Pektn1 as the
major communlat mentor.
But if our peace-keeping ef·
.. forts fall and a full.scale war
does break out In Rhodesia, the
United States will not become In·
vol ved militarily, accordin1 to
reliable sources.
SOME WHITE Rhodesians.
Pt., er an escalated war, naively
bilievln& that the United States
and Britain would come to their
rescue against a communist·
supported conflict. But U.S.
analysts consider this an unlikely
posslblUty.
Moscow, also, would ~refer a
..
I..
Robttt N. WHd/Publlther Thomes K"Vtl/Edltor. ..
destructive war, fou1ht wltl\
Ruuian tanks and MIO Jet
flsbters. The Chinese tould not
match the quallcy of tht Sovltt
weapQna; therefore, the Kremlin
would likely emerae as tbe
closest ally of the black guer-
rilla•, 1ho\.lld they be victorious.
Footnote: Our sources warned
that Cuban troops are atandlna
by to support the auerrUlu, u
they dldinAngola.
GEOl\GIA GIRL: Despite
compla..inta that he is nlling his
administration with too many
Georgians, President Carter
plans to bring still another resi·
dent of his bome atate tcJ the
Capital. This time, Carter wants
Oml Walden, the head of the
Georgia Eneru Depa.rtmeot. to
become the new Department ol
Enerty's assistant secretary for
conaervaUon and solar appllct·
lions.
Some energy experts are
groanlna that Carter ihoutd find
someone with more experience ·
than Walden. But solar energy
advocates say she wouUl be an
excellent choice because she
. . .. . . ' .
i
orked ror Carter when ~ was
1overpor and 11 cloae lo him. ,
They hopo this relaUonsbip WW ,
htle produce more dollart for • aolar re.seUOh .
Carter reportedly plcked
Walden In order to eeee the
crlijcJsm that he haan 't appoint·
ed .,nouah womel) to bis ad-.
mlnl1traUon. But he certaln.ly !
can't be f ault.ed for not plckini \
enough Georgians. ·
Footnote: Walden confirmed .
lbat she's been offered the job.
As for her experience, she says
she is proud of Georgia's record
on conservation and solar
enerey.
WASffiNGTON WHIRL:
TransportaUon Secretary Brock
Adasqa retently dt.patcbed a
five.man deleaaUon to Tokyo to
aslc' the Japanese to Install alt
hAH ln U\e Toyotu, Datsuns and Other cars tliey export to the
United SU.tea. Adams reportedly
hopes the Japanese wlll set an
example ror U.S. manufacturers
by install.ins tt>e alr bags before Uu 1981 deadline set by
Con cress.
I
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I
~egislfttors Igllore Costly Legat Advice
Can you imagine a business
payin& $S mtllion a year for legal
advice and then not heeding it?
The answer appears to be "yea"
if it happena to be the California
Legislature.
Recent disclosures of major
bills being passed by the
Jaw makers
despite rul-
ings of the
Le1hlatlve
Counsel
that such m•aaures
were un-
constituUonal
sunest tbat
the practice of
acting con-
trary to the advice of their
lawyenl1becomtn1commctn.
The situatton \vas hl1b1l1hted
In a release by Senato..r Alfred Al·
quist wbo revealed that both con-
fltcts with federal law and the
state's constltutlon were ln·
votved in nucldr ~wer p~t
lerlslation he authored laat yeat.
Tbe measures had J>een hastily
passed in a succe3sful effort to
head off passase of Proposltlon
15, the nuclear safety loltlatlve
which was defeat.eel hi the Junes,
1976 primary by a2-l majority.'
ALQUIST had off •red the bill
a1 a more reasonable approach
to nuclear s&tety t.han contained'
in the lnlUatlve. It wu contended
at the time, and rrobably IC•
<:urately ao, lha the ballot
proPoaltion· wotald hne halt.eel further nuclear: power conatruc-
tion and closed dowq existina
pJants.
It was also probable that the
same oonstltutional def ecla and
confilcta,.with federal law found in th• Alquist bill were exlatent tn
the inltlative.
tn any event. Alqullt now pys
he has raervaUons abouC ·the
provl1lona of hi• bllls and will
seek advice from the attomey
general as to Po1slb~ action to be
taken.
Earlier this yur Senator
Ruben Ayala obtained a
Leelalatlve Counsel 9Pl,;lon
which held thai the Wlld Rivett
Act passed ln 1972 is unconstitu-
tional. SubsequentlY it wu dis·
cover~ that the author of that
leaislaUon, Senator feter Behr
had been so advised by the
counsel back In $71 but bad s~ured passaie of the bill, the
advice notWithatandlns.
IUST BOW much legtstatlon la
· puafted throUlb contrary to Miil
advice u tot~stltutlonalt.Y.bY
authors, more lnterated ln ga1n·
lrig credit for .. aolVliil" some
pollttcal issue-Utan In securtns
sound tesiili.tion, ii not euy to
determine. TbJa is because the Letla~atJve
Counsel maint&ins a confidential
"lawyer-client .. relationshlp
between itself and the lndlvldual
membei'I. Thus evh though a
request for ttie drafting of a bill
may result to advice to a
lawmaker that such a measure
would be unconstitutional, that
advice is not d.laclosed to the
public or to other members ot the
Letl!lature.
Any member. or course, may
¥ek an opinion as to the consUtu·
tionality or any bill, but again
that Is confidential and would on·
ly be disclosed by the member if
he h4ppened tO be in opposlUOI' to ;
t.heproposedleglslatlon: ~
4 IT JS arC\led that su,h oplnJOl\5
represent only the view of one ~
lawyer and Ina)' not be upheld by (
tbe courts. Bot the J.tgtslative
Coun el ln ts effect one of the
lar1e1t law firms in the state and
ill track record of be1n1 in the
ri1ht has been remarkable over ~
the years. Besides. any Ume the
lawmakers commence bavlng
mls1lvln1s about the quality of
the advice it gets from its
lawyers it is within their power to
replace them with whomever
lhey choose.
In the meantime, spending in \
exceaa of $4.S million annually
for their battery of attomeys to
furnish them advice, maybe they
should start llstenfna to tham
more carefully.
door on the shower room. '
Farmer Joe w1nted to know .
.. Who needs a screen door on a
ahower room? ..
I
l '
APWI .......
i\ctress Mel ina
Mercoud has been
swept into Greece's
parliament by voters
of Athens where her
hit movie "Never on
_SUnday" was made.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drue Ad·
muuatrat.lanhas approvid a vuclne that ldentlata HY can prevent moet ~..., or pneumococcal
pneumonia, which kllla thousands of AmericaDI
each year.
The vaccine, called Pneumovax, wlll be avalla·
ble Feb.1.
THE FDA AVTHOJllZED TOE manufacturer.
Merck Sharp & Dohme, to recommend the vaccine
for all people 50 or older; anyone with a chronic Ill·
ness; anyone livin1 tn a nPr11ng home or other
chronic care facility where pneumonia could
spread easily, and anyone convalescing from
serious illness.
Despite the use of pel1ic1Wn and other an·
tibiotics, pneumonia ls the nation's fifth leading
cause of death, killing at least 25,000 Americans an·
nualiy. Some &clentists say the death toll may run
as high as 66,000.
The FDA said pneumococcal pneumonia, a bac·
tertal infection that strikes the lungs, causes a ma ·
JOr r ortion Of these deaths. The estimates Of the
tota number of cases of pneunococcal pneumonia
I 06 and FrlSky
Annie Finally Meet,s a Presitknt
'
. THERE ARE 81 KNOWN strains of the
pneumococcua or1anl1m, but the 14 that
Pneumovu proteeta •fain.It are rtapona1ble for 80 percentolallpneuinococcalpneuJDon.la.
The vaccine is not effective aaalnat viral
pneumooia, which d.ruas cannot prevent or cu.re.
But scientists say most viral pneumopla cases do
not become as seve~ as poewnococcal pneumonia.
, The FDA said the
(
-------]va c cine may b e MEDICINE particularly UlfJf\ll for the _ _ nation's 50,000 sickle cell
anemia paUenta, who nm
a hicb risk of severe
pneumonia infections. The blood cell ;disease
strikes two in every 500 black infJnt.s, and. an
estimated 2 percent of these victims die from
pneumonia before age 10.
BUT SO PAil, RESEAJlCBERS have not found
a vaccine use!\ll for children u:n4er 3. Tile Infants
!ail to develop the antibodies that older children and
adults develop when vaccinated to prevent
poeumoeoccal lnfectlon. .
Scientists also say the vacc-wlll aide persons
•with dama,ed or missme spleens, a bacteria·
1ngbtinc ore~. ·
Th• FJ)A also noted that studies are under way
to determine whether the vaccine can prevent mid·
die ear infections in infants, which can be caused by
the pnewnococcus.
WASHINGTON CAP> President
Carter learned the risk of trying to
flatter a 106-year-old woman.
, The object or his praise. Annie
. Duitscher, wisecracked : "Now he's
spreading it "
But when abe stuck out her hand to
s hake Cleveland's, her father told her THE PNEUMOCOCCUS IS a bacteria normally·
she couldn't because, as she recalls it, found in the no5e and throat of healthy persona. It
be told her: "We're little poor people can invade the ·l)mgs and cause pneumonia when
and we have no right to." the body's defel1Se mechanisma falter.
1188. DUITSCHER, a native or
Baltimore who lives in Olen Burnie,
Md., fulfilled a nearly lifelong ambi·
tion when she shook the president's
hand, after unsuccessful attempts to
meet Richard M. Nixon and Gerald R.
Ford while they lived in the White
House.
"How old are you?" the president
asked during a fi ve-minute Oval Of-
fice cet·together on Monday.
'Tm 106," said Mrs. Duitscher ,
aoundin&: incredulous that the presi·
dent dldn 't know.
"YOU LOOK SO young and
vigorous ... '' Carter said, prompt·
lng Mrs. 11uitscher 's wisecrack.
Mrs. Duitscher remarked that lhe
president, who stands five feet, 10 in·
ches tall, was taller than she ex·
peeled.
"I was taller before I got to be presi-
dent,•' Carter told her.
When Mrs. Duitscher was born
Sept. 13, 1871 , the daughter of a
German immigrant, Ulysses S. Grant
was in his first White House term.
When s he was 13, she attended
the inauguration of Grover Cleveland.
"I've always bad it in my mind," The vaccine cannot cause pneum.onla, the FDA
she said recenUy, asking: "Am 'I go-said. It I! ent!rely derived from lnactiH or kWed
ing to go to the grave without shaking bacteria. Merck Hid the only side effects in tests on
the president's hand?" more than 12,900 persons have been soreness at the
She was halfway through the chat _:ln~je:c:Uon=~•i::t.e:and=::_· :m~s:o:m:e~c=as=es=, low=~fev=en~·---_!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~!. with the president before someone
s uggested that she shouldn't forget
the handshake.
"l'M VEBY PBOUD to have you
here," Carter told her.
"I'm grateful," Mn. Duitscher
said.
"It's an honor for me," the pres.i·
dent replied.
"I'll never forget you," Mrs.
Duitscher said. "I feel in my heart.
you '11 be last president that I ever
vote for. The day or th• election I had
a terrible cold. I was supposed to stay
in bed. But I said, "I've got to 10 ud'
vote for Jimmy Carter even if Uiey ·
carry me out.' "
MRS. DUITSCHER, dresnd in J
blue print frock. wore a necklace wltb
a medalllon featu~tng Carter's
portrait.
A widow for more than 40 years, she
lives with her 74·year-old son, Elmer1.
and his family. She was accompaniea
by her son, his wile and a niece.
'
T~. November 22, 1tT7
by Brld Andenon
"Must he check for loose floorboards at
2:00 In the morRlng?"
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
110VER21~
WON'T ()0,
l.;\DY P. .. /T15
FOR SOC/AL.
-secURITY
PtJRpoSt;S
II 1.l.
,..,. ... -........ . ..,... . ....._....
GERIATRIX
MISS PEACH
by Tom Batiuk
1/•ZZ
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
wrn., SLOWf'ol'E, HtJRRY <JP --
AND PUT IT DoWN BE~ IT
~ETS ANY WfJP.SE ~
GORDO
by Wm. F. Brown •nd Mel Casson
WMA'f A~t Wf. VOi L.A I euPP05eo -ro oo
IN ~ Me.At./11M~ ?
,,
: ·. --: · ... . ,
I'
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
SAY, CHIE:F,
ISN'i"' i"HE!RE: A Re1"1 RE:.MeN.,..
PL.AN FOR US
NURSE!S ?"
MOTLEY'S CREW
l.UM\E Eief 11415 6'TRAI~,.
YOU MAD A Mil: WtrM ~
Be.AUTIFU\. etRl. WHO~
A PA65 kt° YOU ,, •
• ~
by Mell
by Gus Arriola
PEANUTS
-11-21
DIDN'T see AJN
rot.AA 8~ HUH?
by Roger Bradfletd
by Gtorae Lemont
TIDAT'S ClllSlllD RllLI ;:
'
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Tu.My. November 22, 1911 DAILY Pll.OT A•
OCTD Lefto.vers on the Block
.REU'lJONS
~PROPOSED
: KANSAS CITY Mo.
: <AP> -The gene~-.L as-: sembly o( the ChrHsUan
l Church <Disciples of
\_ ~hnst ) urged normaliza-
-uon or U.S. diplomatic
relations with Com-~tnuni st China, after
!ieveral delegates who
bad once lived in China
advocated such a stand.
Want ID buy •S3 used
rims with 700-by-l.8 ailed
used tlrea't Or how about a
pne1.1matu• ereue gun,
16 toot metal work bench
ora one-ton chain hoist!
It °'°'e Items up for
sale by the Oran1e Coun· ty Transit District
(OCTO) don't au.it your
Caney, would you be m-
As OranJe Coast families complete plans for
the Thanksgiving holiday, County Department of
Social Services officials are ask.Ing that they thlnk
ahead about less fortunate f amllies.
In particular. they suggest that families
w1shmg to do so might make holiday donations to:
-Operation Santa Claus. a Department of
Social Services project, which attempts lo provide
more than 1,200 foster children with new Christmas
gifts. •
-A DEC. l SKATE·A·THON at South Coast Ice
Capades Ice Arena to raise funds tor sports equip·
ment for youngsters at the county-operated Albert
Sitton Home.
The many Orange County families who are
on welfare or who have financial difficulties that
will make holiday extras hard to come f,y.
Information about Operation Santa Ciaos and
the skate-a-thon may be obtained by dialing county
oCflcials al 834-4700.
UIF GEO:~~~~TAO. rm1en1 ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENTS wilbinl to
of Laguna Hiiis, po>ed .,..ay aid needy families may phone the above Q\Ql)ber Or
~•••mber 21• "17• H• is '""'1•ee1 l>'f the county informa:tlon and r efe"'"al serva·ce, r,Js w lte L ydle, -GaYQhW< Merleroe J. •• Hff1ero1*1•AA•.onuon~1.on1evG 834-7451, to obtaiJ\ the names of organizations
qtemuad of Oanvllle, Ca lour coordinating holiday oivfng. QtencklUldfWI, lour -.. •"4 0"9 &• >Ill••· c.reve.idt .. ,.,.,.. a1 Pac111c Sharon Esterley, county volunteer program
111e w M•mor1e1 P•rir. Wednno•y supervisor, said county officials aren't even a November ll at 1 00 PM. Oifklellnt f wtll be Or. Artll•" J, T_er,ley from quarter 0 the Way J1ear being ablti lo provide ilftS
Ille C-ommuntly l'rftbYWrl.on Cnurchol fOr the COUnty 'S ln1afe \tUlD 1,200 f95ter Children.
lerested in some wooden
school desks, a collah, or
a:;1orted oltlce chain?
THEY ALL were
amone usecJ ltems
declared or no.further
use by OCTD direct.on
Monday and placed up
for sale to the highest
bidder.
OCTD directors were
left hol~ the 4s,, rims
and tires last January
after the California
Highway Patrol
declared them the wrong
size for the district's
minl-bu5es.
CHP safety inspectors
said the OCTD had to
purchase new rims and
tires of an 8.50-by-18 size
instead, at a cost of about
$20,000.
JIM REI CHE RT,
OCTO assistant
manager, said Monday
he didn't know how much
the sale or the used tires
aod r itns might bring
back intoOCTD coffers.
Directors suggested
that in t.be future OCTD
otrlciats ask highway
patrol safety inspectors
to review district
specifications before
purchasing.new buses.
The other surplus
items came from the
South Coast Transit Dis-lr i c t, which OCTD
purchased when it was
formed.
OCTD officials · ~~~:ut:SK~/;. ~:_ ~! ,::~!~i The IS.year-old Operation Santa Claus otters
Fllnd Pacific View Mortuary roster parents and workers from the Albert Sitton ~1'•'10" COllAY Home a chance lo shop for donated items in a free ·
FRANCIS M. COR"Y· rffldenl Of holiday store at the City Shopping Center lo Oran1e. . Off1·ce Eyed Bell Gtrdtm -f0<mer re•IOenl of
Coil• Mew, Ca Pas .. o •wey on
1110 .. m1>er 21, 1'77. Funer•I .... ico • MISS ESTERLEV SAID there is a particular
•re 119""1nv .t Smuh 1"111111 L•mti need for teenage gilt items es,......lally record W ASIDNGTON <Ai») Goi.taMett~ry.-...... • ..-~ -The National Labor oao11nl' albums, posters, tee-shirts, skateboards and other Relations Board will
ELSIE A. OE.C5REEF, •II• 71. gifts.
fO<fTl•• rftldtfll of Hurtll"""on lie.ell, . establish an office ln San ce. pu-i ..... 1 on ~-;'November Donations of unwrapped eifts may be left al
20, 1t11 •n c:.or-. s.trv1veo bf four Operation Santa Claus 1629 W. 17th St. Santa Ana. Diego, the resident office
dauellltrl, Manoon Mc Neil ol C "b · ' be ·1 ' Will Open in early 1978,
Hunt1n1iion Buell, ca .. M•rsen• ash conlri utions may maJ ed to P.O. Box 1944, taking over those casee
llrown of C«ON. c.. M<txlne Flll•n Santa Ana.
•"4 M•ri•• H\lnt botn o• HU11111191on A t' th th S t Cl from San Diego and Im· a .. c11. c... Ele..,, 11rano<.1111aran -SSIS sng WI e an 8 aus project are be"
uuu 11rul·11••nacnt1dren, a1.o • volunteers from the Irvine Junior Ebell Club, San peraal County now m& ~1~i::i· .. •,,Jo;"~c~~:11!7:1,0,' ~~::i Clemente Juniors. Costa Mesa Juniors, as well as med in Los Angeles.
eurohon Ot !>el\ O•-· c. 1-uner•I clubs in Fullerton and Garden Grove .
.... "" ...... be h•10 ""'"11••0•Y The star of the Dec 3 skate-a-thon will be h ovember ll. 1911 •1 1 00 PM •I . • . •
said the eqwpment no
lonaer 11> bein& \lSed and
takes up a considerable
amount of storaee space.
Anyone interested in
biddm1 on a desk, areaae
1un. locker, chair or
other equipment tnay
contact OCl'l> Pu.rchaa·
lng Aaent Ray Rakun••·
--.--------
YOUTH SKI CAMP
Snow$....,... & lelow1 Lodae
wam r.o. 1ox 11. 11• 1ua L4ICI. C....-tl111
OI CALL t714186'·176' Ol 166-4171
Rapes Rise
SAN FRANCISCO
CAP> -There were 11
percent more-rapes here
last month tbao in Oc·
tober 1978, wtth a rapes
reported u compared to
st durlnc the same
month last year, police
fi1ures ahow.
COMPLETE
local
a port•
"Qellvered
dally"
In the
DAILY PILOT
Lifeline is a telephone lielvice for resl-
dence customers of Paclflc Telephone. It
allows the customer to make up to 30 local
calls for •2.50 a month. Each additional
call coats 5~. In addition to the monthly me. instaJJation or other cbaqtes w01 appl)t
U Lifeline fits your needs. call )'OU!'
Pacific Telephone Service Representative
Pl•ru Br-rs !>mllhs' CMs-1 wlln Michael Finton, a 19-year-old Santa Ana College
Rev Chui .. sm11n 01 111e Calvery student and empJoyee at Westminster Community
Chapel Of11C1tllnQ tnlermtnl Good }( • al
IA\epnerd C.rnetery. Pierce 8'otfttra OSpll •
SmilM. MOr.._y a"oclon F•mlly
•UVOHI• -..Clom be m-lo you< 1 .. 0<nec1wr11y
MOllA
RAFAEL ORl ll MORA, rHIOenl of
~tl'I• Ant , Ce Paned ewey on
November 11. 1917 •1 U.. eo-Of 42 beloved nu.r..no of Eva MMt, son of
GullltrlTlO tnO P•1 Orll1 Mort Of Mw••co, fllhllfr of Jimmy MOr•, Es le II•
MOra, f-ra<i<t$CO MM• •ncl Rou More ROM!ry Monday NovelTlber 11, 1'11 el
• lO I'. M ti llle lmnwcuMll• HHr1 of
Mery CelhOltc Church 111 S<tnl• .An•, C.o. Mus of Cl1rl"lan 8urlal held
1-y November tt, t9n a1 9 lO
A.M el The lmrnec:\lla4e He¥1 of Mary
C•lflOll' Church In Santa An•, Ca
1ntermen1 w111 be et Tiit C111nu•llu•
MuAICIP•I C.mtl•"f In Ch•hu•nu•,
cn1nuellua, Mulco. Smllh Tu1n111
1.•mb !>enlAI AA• MMW.ry director>
FINTON WILL COLLECT pledges for each lap
he completes between 8 p.m. and midnitht at the
see arena. 665 Paularino Ave .. Costa Mesa.
Proceeds will help purchase ._.ble ea.mes, ping
pong tables, bicyc:les and tricycles for the abused,
abandoned and neglected children at the Albert Sit·
ton Home.
Isn't it time we took
Plymouth Rock out of. its cage? ,,
S.l~UI
MOllA DIANA MORA, •Hklenl of Sen!•
Ane, <.• P .. \ed awey on No11tmber 11,
•'1 I •I Ille -of l Lo111119 deuQh1er ol I:•• Mou .11rendOtuQhlero1 Guillermo •no Pu Orta-· Of M<t•ICO. 'lsterot
J.n1my Mtora. ~'~'*• Ntrof'•, Francis.co
Mo•• •no ROM Mew•. Ro,.,., Mid
Monaey November 71, 1971ti6 lO PM.
•' 1 ne I mm.4ttUl•l• H••rt of M•ry Ce1not1< Cllurcn In SMiie Ana, Ct . Mast
County officials said Finton volunteered for the
proj~ct because he has seen abused children being
treated at the Westminster Hospital and wanted to
show the Sitton younest.ers that people care for
them.
AS FOR OTHERS needing holiday help alone
the coast, Miss Esterley said, county officials are
unable to disclose the names or needy families
bee a use of rules ·governing confidentiality of
welfare lists.
However, county officials will refer those
wishing to help with the names of various communi-
ty organizations who offer assistance to the needy
m their areas.
ol Chr,.uen Burt el held 1 uesday -:=:;:=;::;::;;::=======;;;:;;=:;:===::;;--No•tmber 21, 1911 at' lO AM. •I The 1 SMI' I!.
lmmacul•I• H .. 11 of Mary C<tthollc -Cllurch In Sen1<t Ana, C... lnterrnenl wlll
be al 1 he Oil....._. ClllhU<tflU.t, Mt•·
•<o smith ruin111 umo Santa An•
_ ........ ~ ....... --' __ .,_.., ...... ._ .,...,_.., .. ...,.. ........ -................ -.. ---MOrlU•rydlrKlon S.l~UI ........ ,...--.. ........... _,
JOH PH ":CO,!~~:MI CK, JR. DENTREX EMPLOYEE BENEFIT ASSOC.
Beloved son of Mr ...., M" JoMPfl P. 000 C...-.,..,., ~ ....... CA 92660
McCormick Sr., Ototfler of Mrs. .Allred •• (714., 979-2700
C•tn, Mrt.. Leonerd FrillOl'e Jr., M11. '==~=====~~============-Jofln L•ve, Pe99Y. C.,1hlff11, TllTlOlhf,..: • • "
RICflud, P•trltll end Mich••'-------~-------------.. McCormick; grtnebml of Mra. Wllllem
A. McCOtMICll, ,,...,,. .. of w1111 .... A.
McCormlclt., MO •n• llol>erl P
MtCormllk, MO Rosary HrvlcH
l ueMl<IV a·OO PM end -of Cllrl1llen
Burl•I \lllaoneW.y lO•Oll AM. 8olh wrvlus .,. al Our Laci'( Oue«I 01
Antth Chun:ll llO>it MM Vlt.IAI, Cor"ona
delM•r>. c.11-MortueryellrKlorl
SWANSON
KELl.Y S\lllANSON,ruldentot CA>slAI
Mew, Ce. Peuao .,., • .,on Howmber
21, ltll el U.. age of 2 ,..,.,. funer•I
•rv1us ere pending •1 Smith Tuthlll
La mb COt.leMeM Mortu.ry, ..........
,.Ill ,AMtLY
COl.OHeAL FUMHAL
NOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westnunster
893-3525
PACtAC YllW
MIMO•tA&. PAU
Cemetery ~ortultY Che~I
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport. C.hfornra
844;2700 .. .
RAD&IW
o~
Ti.ere is a high fence
guarding Plymouth Rock. It
was erected to deter tourists
who chip away piece• for
souvenirs. During this
Thanksgiving holiday, isn't it
time to reconaider the way we
abuse the land which was so
hard-won by our ancestors.
Isn't it time to
reconsider the way we abuse
our environment. Litter our
roads. Pollute our water and
air. Write sraffiti on our
buildings. Squander our
resources.
The plain truth ii this:
today we take o\lr natural
resource• for granted.
Cmainly, it would be bard to
imagine the Pilgrims chipping
away at Plymouth Rock as
they landed ... juat so they
could pocket a souvenir.
Their dedication to deeper
values can terve as an
inepiratlon to us. And this
Thanbgiving Day ls an
appropriate time to fortify
our raolve and eave Our • / :1#
Lari({ for Out' childfen.
&id their children.
·~
-
' I
'
AJ•OAtLV PtLOT T"9ed9Y. Nowm~ 22. 1117 NATIONAL!
Survey: Law Ignored . IF VoU think there'•
nothing new In
Christmas Condv and
Pood Gifts, then ' WASHINGTON <AP) -
Federal re1ulatln1 ar.eoclu
have been natranUy ltnorlnc a
new Sunshine Law requirin1 that
most of tMlr meetings be open to
lbe public, accordina lo the
Llbrary of Coneress.
At the request or Sen. Lawton
Chiles, D-Fla., Library of
Congress researchers surveyed
32 agencies lo assess their
performance from Much
lhrou1h September.
1AMONG l,HS MEETINGS
held by the agencies, 527 were
completely or r•rtially closed.
For only 193 o those meetings
did the agencies meet a require·
meol that specific reasons be
publicly cited for holding a
closed sesa\on.
. a APWI ........
Po•ter Nlzed
Trade Printing Co.,
Los Angeles, has
b een ordered in
Superior Court to
stop selling posters
depicting Lindsay
Wagner, TV's
"Bionic Woman," as
"Rio Baby"
Universal Studios
has sole distribution
right lo bionic items,
and the photo was
made in 1968, before
the actress became a
st:.ir.
Buttock
Pinching
Gets Jail
NEW YORK CAP) -A
judge has ruled that the
bullock is an "intimate
part" and pinching or
touching it without con·
sent is a crime that can
send you to jail.
The ruling by Manhal·
ta n Cr i min a I Coar t
Judge Benjamin Allman
last month passed un·
noticed at the time, but
was excerpted by United
Slates Law Week.
Allman ruled In the
case of a man charged
with touching the but·· . '
tocks of a woman
without her consent as
she was traveling on the
subway during rush
hour.
The defendant claimed
he had not committed a
crime, but Altman re·
fused to dismiss the
charies, ruling that if
the "alleged occur-
rence'' had taken place
in an area of the world
where pinching of the
buttocks was socially ac·
ceptable perhaps the de·
fendant's position could
be sustained.
"However, here the
touching of a woman's
buttocks without her con·
sent ls not treated so
cavalierly as in some en·
vlrons."
Twentv regulal9ry a1encles
CGQlpletely ignored the reqwr"e".
ment for stating exemption.a to
the general rule that meetinp be
op~n.
Among the aeenclea covued
by the new law are the Interstate
Commerce Commiuion, the
Securil,ies and Exchanse Com-
mission and the Federal Energy
Reaulatory Commission.
IN ONE CASE. last April, ac-
cording to a Chiles spokesman,
the Federal .Reserve Board held
a secret meeting on how lts office
!urni:>hings should be deio:igned
by citing an exemption permit-
ting a closed meeting if sensitlv~
information about the national
economy is to be discussed.
Agencies may also close meet-
1ng1 Cor dlscussiODJ about na·
tlonal securlty, employee person·
net matters and trade secrets.
.. YOU'D BJ: SUBPBISBD what getl discussed under the
l•bd of national aecurlty and
personnel," aald ChllOI
spokesman Jack Pridgen.
Chiles has summoned officum ot some aeencles to testify on the
closed meeting isaue at a Nov. 29
meetin& of a Senate Ge>vernmen·
tal Affalrs subtommittee.
As 'a member of the Florida
state Senate, Chiles aulbored
one of the nation's fint Sunshine
laws. He ran for the U.S. Senate
on a.n open govemment theme
and was 1uccessful in ur&Ing
passase of feder ... lectslaUon
modeled on the Florida law.
'*
.. yoo haven't been to
The /Vut Kettle vet.
Open ev.ry day
Wed.·Sat. ttll 9 pm
-And,yes,wedo~
(JACK ANDERSON)
REVeALS In th•
...
DAILY PILOT
Verdug() Street
At the Tracks
496-8111
....... _
..
While some banks give you· a choi€e of one card or the other, qualified
customers at California First can take advantage of both cards.
"The reason we off er both Master Charge .arid Visa is tl\at it ·
· gives a customer a separate line of credit
for each card:' . ~ : ·
Meet the people
~FtrSt.
Maybe you want to use one
card for everYday living, ~he other
~ ... ,_· for business, large purchases,
~ ~ ~
"' ....... c"·-· ·, ~hatever.
r!@"iil~~~ "'There are hundreds of reasons
for having two cards:'
Full service. Just one reason why
California First 1s one of the fastest
l
growing banks CAUFORNIA
in the state.
. ...
J_
..
1 {.OS A?iYZL <APJ -UCLA
co•ch Terry Doo&bue "never
th9'1ght for a second that we
copld go to the Rose Bowl without
be,aling Southern CaUtornla."
Aqd that's preclsely wbat the
B~uins must clo to get to
P,11adena. i •There's no dlsappplntment or
, letdown ln my mind over
Wasbine~on'a beatina
Was bington State.•• aaid
Donahue Monday at bis weekly
~
meetioa wi4h reporters. • 'Ooce
again we're aoina to have our
backstothewall."
If UCLA beat1 the favored
Trojaos ln their annual colll1ion
at the Coli.aeum Friday night, 1t
will oppose Mlchl&an 1n the Rose
Bowl Jan. 2. If they lose, the
Bruins will spend the holidays at
home.
If USC triumphs, it wlll (ace
either Texas or Texas A&M in
the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl New
Year'• Eve. And U tbeaicijans
are beaten. it wt.ll mark the .ad
or one of thetr most disappointing
seasons in years.
The Bruins wtll brtna a 5-1
Paclllc·8 Conference record And
a 7.3 overall mark Into the tame,
to be viewed Ii)' a sellout crowd
and a nationwide televl1~n
audience. USC is 4·2 and 64.
Washington bas cllnched et
least a tie for th~ Pac.a title with
a 6·1 record. The Husltles will
play ln the ito.. Bowl lf use wins
or th& •lltmt ends in • tte. 11 the Brutna prevail, Washlneton will
play in the Astro·Bluebonnet
Bowl.
The Bruins will eet a berth in
the Rose Bowl lf they tie with
W ashtneton because they
defeated the Huskies last month
20-12. "'You never know in football
where you'll be, but I didn't
expect to be 5-1 five weeks ago,"
Af' .......
GREEN BAY'S BARTY SMITH (33) LEAPS OVER HIS TEAMMATES AFTER TAKING HANDOFF FRO.M DAVID WHITEHURST (17).
Redskins'
Pressure
Pays Off
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Washington Redskins threw
what coach George Allen termed
·•every dog blitz in our playbook,
including a couple or new ones."
at novice quarterback David
Whitehurst of Green Bay Mon-
day night.
The Packers countered by try-
ing the same tactics on scram-
ling Joe Theismann late in the-
fourth quarter, and it cost lhem
dearly. He found Mike Thomas
alone in lhe end zone for the
touchdown that produced a t().!>
victory and kept the Redskins
hanging by their fingertips in the
National Football League playoff
pi<;ture.
Thelsmann set up the
touchdown by scrambling away
from Green Bay's defensive rush
f-0r a key first down. then rolled
right moments later to hit
Thomas at the nag seven yards
away.
"They had a red dog on," said
Thomas. "I just tried to get loose
and Joe saw me in lime."
Whitehurst. maklng his first
pro start, had his chances late in
tbe game. But Washington kept
him pinned down by blitzing
safetles and linebackers.
"We doeged almost every
play," said Allen. "Still,
Whitehurst stayed cool. They
could have won it with a fourth
field goal. It seemed like we can't
play a game unless it 1oes down
to the final play."
In this case, the final play was
Joe Lavender's lnterceptlon of a
Whitehurst pass -literally as
the smoke was clearing Crom the
field. A smoke bomb thrown by a
spectator' had delaJed play for
several minutes.
Packen ~ch Bart Start' said
it woa Thetaoiann's scrambijng
"that Just broke our back.•·
MINJ•YOUAHHI ~··· • J • ·-· w..ai•ne• • a • 1-1t
Sports in Brief
O~oles' Murray
AL Rookie of Year
LOS ANGELES -The rookie-
laden Baltlmore Orioles made
the American League East
Division pennant race a lhree-
team affair in 1977, with des·
1stnated hitter Eddie Murray
among the young team's leaders.
The switch-hitting Murray was
chosen the 1977 AL Rookie of the
Year Monday by lhe Baseball
Writers Association of America.
Outfielder Mitchell Page of lhe
Oakland A's was second in the
voling, followed by second
baseman Bump Wills of the Tex·
as Rangers and pitcher Dave
Rozema of the Detroit Tigers.
Murray got 121h votes in ballot-
ing or the 28-man baseball
writers' awards committee.
Page bad 91h , Wills 4 and
Rozema 2 votes.
13,077 E%aeta
A pair of longshots, Bill Ledger
and Beau Folly, combined for the
largest $S exacta payoff of lhe
l~day Orange County Fall Fair
thoroughbred meeting at Los
Alamitos Monday.
Bill Ledger, an 18-1 longshot,
and Beau Folly (23-1) paid
$3,077.50.
There were four $10 exacta
tickets on the winning 2·10 com·
bination and28ofthe $5ducats.
Jonesi11IRB
,
e arned run average qf L62 was '
second ln the National League ~o
reliever Bruce Sutter of Chicago.
Anteaters
Place 15th
InNCAA
SPOKANE. Wash.-With only
two runnetS In th• top 100. UC
Irvine f'"misbed a dlsappoinlin& 15\.h at the NCAA cross country
championship meet here Mon·
day.
Kenyan Henry Rono of
Washington State was the in-
dividual wtnner for the second
straight year whlle the Universi-
ty of Oregon captured team
honors.
.Zbe 10,000.meter race was held iD 18 degree weather.
Ralph Serna was the first
member of UCI's Anteaters to
cro$a the finish line, placing 59th
in 30U7.8. Steve Scott was 84th in
30:38 wblle only one other UCI
runner, John Konlngh who was
llOth, broke 31 mlnutes. Konlngh
was Ualedin30:50.7.
Rono'1 winning time was 28:34
as he continued hts streak of dis·
t•nce running Utles. In addition
to back-to-back NCAA cross
~ountry crowps, he won the
NCAA indoortwo-mile last year.
The nearest runner to Rono
was Jobn t~cy of Providence, w'ho finlsbed 50 yards back.
ProvJdence'1 Jt!.{ard Deegan was•
thfrd, Clevelana State's Marc
ltunte.r fourth and Joel
Cheruiyot, J_lopo's Kenyan team·
D?•te, CiDisbed fifth.
After an early mix-up in the
team 1corin1, Oreaon was
declared the official team leader
with 100 Polnta, five less than de-
f eiiding champion Texas-El
Paso.
A total of 2$2 runne.rs
PartlclpAted. ttie rest ot UCI's runners ln·
c.haded l>o.tt M~aes, 142nd in
31:10.8; Dand Schrtver, u1st ln
31:18.7; ~ Ablmeyer, 194,th In 31:&a,(); a:ndCbarlleChriatenMn,,
Wh()WU timedJn82:11U.
I
said Donabue. "8\JUben, l didn't
expect to be 2·3 aher five sames,
either."
While a lot will be riding on the outcome of the pme, Donahue
feels that the tanrible reward is,
in a way, of secondary
importance.
"Both teams will have a great
deal at stake besides bowl bids,"
he said. "When you 1et down to
this game it's a matter of pride.
"Even if we were not pl~a
t
l wouldpl~
well," a b ••1 expect \ use to do the same.
"Jt'a a Y.ery intense, very •
competitive rivalry, but I don't
think lfs a bitter rivalry.••
Donahue aaJd hll team was
fortunate to bave nearly two
weeks off before playJng the
TN>Jans. UCLA's most recent •
outing was Nov. 12 when lt
trounced Oregon State 48·18 fol"
its nttb atralcbt victory.
Ge111 $3 Million .
·Yanks Offered
By HOWARD L. HANDY
°'*Delly ..... Steff
Lyman B06tock aiped a con-
tract with the California Al\aels
rather than the New York
Yankees desplte a higher
monetary offer because he felt
other circumstances and benefits
were greater in this area.
"New York <>rtered me more
money.•• Bostock admitted after
signing a five.year contract as a
free agent for a reported $3
million, making him lhe hiebest
paid player in tbe game.
He signed for more than the
$2.9 millioo reportedly ginn to
the Yankees' Reggie Jacbon
when he signed last year as a free
agent.
Bostock, an outfie,der,
becomes the fourth player to sign
with the Angels via the re-entry
draft. Last year the Angels
signed outfielders Don Baylor,
Joe Rudi and infielder Bobby
Grich. Injuries hampered the
trio muct~ of the season and the
Angels failed in their bid to win
the American League West.
"Money ls important, 11
Bostock said. "But it all bolls
down to my family and my
mother living in Inglewood
alone. I also feel I can do more
for the community where I &rew
up."
''Being a free agent is almost
like being arrested,'' Bostock
said. "But Larry Hisle (a Min·
n ota teammate who siped
~Che Milwaukee Brewers.u a
free agent) kept me going. He
was someone I could talk to and
cry on bis ahoulder. ''
Bostoclc received a salary of
$20,000 last season when he hit
.336 for the Twins, lncludlna 14
home runs. He bad 199 base hits,
stored 104 nms and drove in 90.
He has a lifetime batting average
of .319 abd gives the Angels an
imposlb~ outfield that also in·
eludes Rudi and Bobby Bonds.
Boitock is eitpected to take over
in center field.
Minnesota attempted to keep
him and Bostock told owner
Calvlh Griffith he would talk wWi
him it he came within $10,000 of
bis best offer.
"If he bad been more fair last
year, I still would have been
there," Bostock said. "But under
the circumstances I was playing
under, I felt I bad to make a
change.''
Bostock's oeent, Abdul Jalil,
said the Angela almost didn't
make it with Bostock.
"The first of(er the Angels J
made was so Insulting, l didn't _.
even tell Lyman about it."
Owner Gene Autry sa.ld be had
nothing aealnst free ageiits
despite hls dlsaPPointment' ot
last season.
"I was going to get all I could
as an actor and l don't blame
them for ptttng all they can as
baseball players.'• •
Autry Q.cbed on the manager
status of Dave Gnda: "I con· ' sider him a very capabl~
manaeer. He took the job with
the underataDclina that be bad it \
for the balance of laat season. He ~
still bas a three·year contract as.J
a coach." ;s
Oene Mauch, the Minnesota"
manaier who apparently will~:
turn to tbe Twins next season for
his final campaign there, was
mentioned by Autry.
"He is colorful and be lives in
this area," Autry said. "We felt
we could get more space with the
press from him."
Bavasl aald Bostock may '
become the greatest hitter in t.bft J
game in the nexttbree years.
He also reminded those pres-·
ent of his negotiations with I
Dodgers pitchers Sandy Koufax
and Don Drysdale who once held '
out for $100,000 each.'
"Remember, you are talldng to a
fellow who wouldn't sign
Drysdale and Koufax for
$100,000."
. -• i
I
,
J
I
I t
U DA.It. Y PILOT
OCC's Huge Rent Hike
Cr.lJ.lples High SchooJS·.
lly ROGER CAaLSON OfU.Mty~ ..... Innauoq aeem1 to bum every·
one al a 1airly ateady clip. but
how would you like an 82 pereent
rentincre8"?
Chances ar4' that aort of tab
would force you to make some
other ~ementa and that is
what lppean to be in order at
Costa Mesa and Estancia <Costa
Mesa) high schools.
Orange Coast College's foot·
ball stadium rental has been
boosted from $SSO per evenlnc to
$1,000.
Also affected are Foonlaln
Valley and Edison <Hunttnitoo
Beach) high schools, who use the
field often. The two Huntington
Beach district schools, however,
can recoup the tab easier with
bigger followings.
New lighting has made the
OCC facility the c1us football
site in the Orange Coast area. but
with the new tab, it appears
those lights will not be used aa
often in the future.
"It was approved June 1 that a
use charge should be de·
termined," says OC€'s Corry
Thompson, vice chancellor for
business affairs.
''Subsequent cost flgures from
the college showed an expense of
FV's OpponeJ1t
$1,083 to operate a game. Those
figures are based on 4¥1 hours of
lights at '58 per hour. $4 an hour
for the scoreboard and for the
m alntenance, guards and
cleanup required," says
Thomp&on.
"This office determined the
reQt ahould be $1,000 off those
figures and it made that decision
based on the authority of the col·
lege's board of trustees. This of-
fic!t~however, came up with the
$1,uoo figure, not the board."
As a comparison. the 10,500·
seat Santa Ana ~wl rents for
$575 (including security) or 12
percent of the gross, whichever is
higher.
Here are reactions from prin-
cipals at the four high schools
directly involved:
BOB PACKER, Coata Men mab -"It's a shame, we have
an economic squeeze to begin
with and if nothing can be
worked out, the only possibility
for us to play at OCC would be
our game with Estancia.
"Football pays the freight and
'¥e'lt bave to play our games at
--Newport Harbor High (where
lighting is very poor).
"We almost went crazy earUer
this year when we were informed
Cubs Are Running
Grid Foes Crazy
LOS ANGELES-Fountain
Valley High's Barons !ace their
most formidable task Saturday
right C8) In the second round of
the CIF (Big Five Conference>
playoffs where Loyola High
looms as a bona ride threat to
ruin the Barons' perfect season.
The two coltlde al Santa
Monica City College, and
Loyola's credentials are many,
topped by a smashing SS. 7 vie·
tory over highly regarded
Servile (Anaheim) High in the
Jirst round.
Touted as the No. 2 team in the
nation and No. 1 in 89uthern
California by a prep megaziM~
the Cubs stumbled early, but
Takata (200); center Dan Bren·
ton (210).
"We had a lot or publicity,"
says Grady, "and a lot or people
thought we'd be 10-0 at this point.
We made some mistakes against
Santa Monica in our first game
(the only loss, 22-19), but we're
extremely happy with our
Servile score."
at the Jut moment that thll
year's games would be $1,000
each. But they relented and al·
lowed us to continue unC!er the
regular format throuch thla re-
gular aeason."
BOB FRANCY. Enanela m,i.
-"This very deflnitely a!fecia
us. There ls probably no way we
can play at Orange Cout Colle1e
now. Stepping into a new le~e
with lesser attendance, we re
priced ri&htoutofthestadlum.
"We've enjoyed lt •t OCC, it's
really a nice place. It's possible
we might consider it for a blc
game, but we'd have been taken
lo the cleaners this year if we'd
played El Modena, Oranie or
Tustin at OCC.
"We'll be playing most of our
games at Newport Harbor where
there ls no rental fff to us ...
PAUL BERGEa. Fa.atalJl
Valley Hl&b -"This wUl affect
student body funds because the
source of our budget ls football.
basketball and student sales.
"It is their facillty, but it does
seem a liWe steep. Still, as long
as we 're drawing the crowds as
we are we'll probably stay. If
crowds drop off we might have to
move out. We won't raise our
ticket prices because of ll."
PHIL GROSS, Edlaoa <Hant·
lngton Beach) IDp -.. We real·
ly need Orange Coast Collete to
handle the crowd and thls is IC>
ang to cut into our profiL But we
will probably continue at OCC. ..
The result of the 82 percent in·
crease: Fountain Valley and
Edison will continue for the most
part, since each school bu an ~
enrollment in the neighborhood
of 4,000, wtule Costa Mesa and
Estancia (each at about 1,900)
are squeezed out, putting further
pressure on Newport's smaller
and dim field with four schools
<Ne wport Harbor, Corona del
Mar, Estancia and Costa Mesa)
involved.
Thompson, however, has .not
locked the gates yet. "We need
that much rental to break even,"
says Thompson. "But on the
other hand I'm not so sure the
board wouldn't want the field
used. •
1•1 hope we can work
something out, but whether or not
a change ii forthcoming, I cannot
address myself to right now."
FOOTBALL/BASKETBALL/VOLLEYBAL~-
.. ., ...................
QB SCOTT SPEAR (RIGHT) LEADS MV IN PLAYOFFS.
Nom;alk Does ·lt .
With Solid De/eme
NORWALK-A footblll team
that can do it all, Norwalk ~
will be aeekina Its 10th victory ol
the seuon Saturday night (7:30)
when It hosts Mission Viejo ID&h
in the second round of the CIF
<Centr81 Conference) playoffs at
Excelsior High here.
The Lancers of Chuck
McAninch, seeded third ln the
playoffs, have yet to be beaten
this year. Their only blemish.on
an otherwise perfect camp8.l&Jl
was a 7.7 tie with Neff (La
Mirada), the team seeded first in
the playoffs. The two squads
shared the Suburban League
championship.
"Our defense bas played weU
all year but we feel we have a
very balanced team," says
McAninch. "We've been able to
move the ball very well on of·
fense
0
and make few mlitates on
defenae.0 •
The Lancen have recorded
four shutout& thus far and have
allowed an averace of 8.3 polntl
an outing. Offensively, tbeybave
produced 23.1 points a game,
scoring with equal success pass-
ing and rushing.
Norwalk varies both lts offense
and defense. The Lancen' bulc
de!ensive formation is a 4·4
alignment which they shift out t'f
throughout the game. depending
upon opponent's formaUons.
Offensively, the Lancers are
very similar to Mission Viejo in
that they use multiple forma·
lions, employln1 pro set.a, slot
sets, split ba~ and I back.I.
"We're well rounded to the
p0int that the kids· know all the
systems," McAnincb 1aya. "We
don't have to 10 w1tb any ooe
particular thing. We co with
what works." ·
Pass-happy..,,,
tl Vaqs Await ·._,~
Saddlehack ··
GLENDALE-It bH been a ' .
Joni droUlbt since the Olelidil•;&;·.
College Vaquero& won their last·
football champlonablp tn 1183.
Glendale, winner of tbe
Western State Conference this i.o
seaaon, will face Mwlon Ccn-
f erence champion Saddleback
College in tbe Mt11lon Bowl
same Saturday n11ht (8) at Glen· .,.
dale High School'• 8,000-aeat ·•
atadlum. ,
The 1ame baa been delayed to
8 o'clock because of an aft~
CIP pla)'off encounter ln tb4 N,,
same faclllty. 11\Ve are exclt.ed about pla;,tni
an es.tr• same,•• coach Jim
Sartoris a&ya. "Wehavt tiad 1oo4 .,
crowds tb1' seuon aod I'm aunt
this one= diaw well. We'll be reacbto ... •
The queros boHt fan •t
record com.,....d to 9-1 tor tM
Saddleback Gauellol. Tbt V..is ft.nlabed the HalOl'l with ....
one·1lded vlctOrl• mcludlni ttie •
·clincher cny Ventura Saturcla,J,,
M-14. ltl
Glendale operates odt of an J •• ., ..
. formation and aoes to the alr a~ (\'
leasUOpercentoftbeUme. rJr·
Qqarterback Bob Gacliano. Jr.·
. (6-3, 185) baa completed Jaaof21t;--
: for 1,831 yards and ,l~ .;·
touchdowns. 1bis ls a 52 pe~ 0 · completion figure for tbe pall· :
oriented Vaqueroa. lie has bacS ,,,. ••
ooly fivelntercepted. J
Leadinc reeeivera lneluct. wlMn~ •
recelnr Bill Preu~h wltb ~n •
catches for 7'10 yards and seven .
touchdowns. He bu allo ca•
one for a two-Polnt convei'iiOG.
Blll Blakemore at flaDker HI
picked off 39 paate1forM1ard.t •'
and eleht touchdowns While ~"
nine back Bon Davenpol't baa
cau1ht 1'1 for 123 yard.a. D~
oort a1lo reversed the p a1almt Ventura, taling a hand-
off from Gagliano, then throw· ,
ing a ·touchdown pa111 to the J
quarterback. ~ >
Davenport is the leading•\ <11
rusher with 386 yards in 88 e&P ..,.,
ries andonetoucbdown. 1 JJ
But the sleeper may.be And.re
Jones (6-0, 190) who spa.riced the.
team lnltsflnallbreeouUnp.Ke. ,
was late l'ePOl'tlng for tile tea.Di -·''
and played lo only three cames. "°
He picked up 299 yardl in '7 car· •
rlea and scored ••••"'; touchdowns lncludlng 'One CIQ a...,.r
93·yard kickoff return. -
Sartoris aaya the Vaqueroe do-~
fenH bu been conailtent all
aeuon. Linebacker D .. e McRM
(6-0, 195) ta the defepalve captain.""';"
and leada the squad lo tackl•. , ·~ I
' ' t
l • l
have been pickin& up momentum
and are8-l-l .
"We played our finest game of
the year against Servile," says
coach Steve Grady, the former
Cl F player of the year in 1962
when he led the Cubs to the crown
with 35 touchdowns out of the
single wing formation.
Quarterback Andy Henderson,
a 200·pounder, directs the veer
and t.as rushed for 700 y arda and
passed for 600 in the ground·
oriented attack. Harry Bowser,
Mark Stockman and Greg Bren·
t.Qn alternate.at the two halfback
spots, each a 17().pounder. Larry
Wynn, the No. l Cubs runner, ls
out with a knee injury according
to Grady.
"Fountain Valley is a good
football team," says Grady.
"But we are, too. A lot is colng to
depend on breaks and intensity lo
tbl• one."
H b . F Senior Phil Davis (5-11, 175) is Newport ar Or Oe thekeytotheoffen.ae,pasalnffor
over 1,000 yards and rushiD& for
• 450 more. His favorite tarcet is
eLUDo\UIMl ,_,
1 SM .. _.. JI 16 S.....,_.. -'t '"'
11 Mt.5-......... 7 1S ~ 11 ..
)1 Mlr•C.. • .. Com.-1• I i6 HMCOC.k t at Welt~· t 1111•
L
l l l Loyola punched out 390 yards
• over the ground out of its Houston
T veer offense through the Servile l defense, without its best back,
G but behind a huge offensive line. l Here is how the Cubs Une up
• ·across the line : Adrian
: Hernandez (210) at tight end;
• tackles Joe Murray (6·5, 240) and
• Paul Pa.scale (6-2, 210): guards
Rich Cooney (200) and David
0 0
D
" L Bot Corner
The Cubs have plenty of de-
f ensi ve blue chips, loo, with
linebackers Mike Hernandez
(210) and Marlon Thompson,
tackles Ben Baca (230) and Steve
Sh•tyoki (225) and Jeff Thue in
the secondary.
1' S.nt•Monla
)4 St.GeMYt.....
1 Bl~AINt
14 S.nta a.ni.r•
14 St. Jotwl 8aKo u Clff!M
22 l2 Notl'90enwt501 I
13 1• S.nt-13
0 1 it. Fr-11 O
1l "" o lS Servile
22
L.1
L.
D 0
0 Reader Speaks Out
Mr. White:
In your "cheap wash" -er ub
-"white wash column of Mon·
day, October 31, I sadly note that
you fired another, and perhaps
the most biting, of your many un·
justi(ied bullel4 at the Barons as
a result of the fine FVHS win
over an inspired and gallant..
band of Ediaon Charcen.
determine U you mention FV8S
in someway.
I would like to further sucsest
that on behalf of the entire sport.a
community tbat Mr. Ro1er
Carlson, or someone of like
capabilities, cover the Baron
varsity &alJ\tS ln the future.
Tbey, at least have the mental
capacity and objectlvlty to report
f alrly. 1be trite, 11aut4ld1 and in·
accurate report.you ~aae of the FVHS -Ed1ac)(l aame WU, as
with rour white waah column, a
tota dluervice to. 1port1
joUJ'llaliam.
Ma11 flM111 •uas• tb~ ln· stead of reaamlns Fountain
Valley Hlah -Fumble ~alley Htib, that you rename yoWMlt
-from GJenn,Whlt• to ~•P
Sbot Whi~ arid l'm 1ure you m~ know what hap~• eYen· 1 tually to cheap 6hot art1.lta tn
aportJt. Sooner or later ttiot are bounc~. ll•Y Ulat soon bap})ell
Jrf,ith yota brand Of t'ePC)rtlntl
I remain u ever-Incensed,
JOHN M. CALDQLL
We1tmlnlter t-
14 CM,_ 11 • V911tw• t•
Riddled by Injuries· his twin brother Mike, who
mined the first half of tbe season
with a broken ankle but haa
caught six touchdown passea in
the lastftve games.
CdM, Laguna Girl&~
WEST COVINA-West Covina
High football coach Tim
Brancheau doesn't sound too op-
timistic when be talks aboUt bis
upcoming CIP' playoff game with
Newport Harbor.
Despite an 8-1·1 record t1ld an
explosive offense, West Covina
has been hit hard by injuries ud
Brancheau expreaaea great
respect for the Newport Harbor
defense. ·
The two tangle at Ori.nae Coast
College Saturdll7 ~t at ?:IO.
Newport Harbor brtnp In an •2
rec01'd.
"Ne*POrt Harbof . ._., a lot ~·
speed and 1"-..,, Sood ln the second~1 ' Braac1-ab HJI.
"We uauauy like to pus a1molt
as much as we run but I don't
know lt we'll be abie to do that
against them."
W eat Covina 111 multiple offenae
ill directed by quarterback nm
Stidham (6·1, 180), a ~apable
passer and adept ball bandier.
Starting in the b,ackfleld with
SUdham wlll be Steve Mitter (5-9,
170) and Terry Maclu (5-t, 180).
Mactu mlllled nve camea due to
Injury Uda aeuon, but tatned 188
yard• In Fliday'1 11·1• tlc:t.or1
ovtr Elsenbower Hieb of Rlalto.
Miller, however, 11 W•t Co.,
vtna '1 third •trina .tullbaek. IJl-
jv.rie• h~ altered the llDeup at
aeveral polltJons. aceordlnj to
Brancbeaq, West OoVlda•a top· nceiv• 11
Tom !lnmatf. •~.1.?A9:~ apUt end. Larry ~ (e.I,.
180) Is theugbtetid. "
AnchortD1 the offelil.l~e lln• ii
c.nter Phll Kochis • (~:t;. 180),
1uar4 Shawn l•Unyf:~man::r 200) and tac~e Da d M
(J.10, 1'5).
The defensl'fe atllldout la m.14·
die llDebacker John Samuelson
(6-2, 190). Brancheau bu several
of b11 pi'ayea 1oln& both ways,
includtna Madu at linebacker
and. Brunasky at a defenaive
baek slQt.
Desplt.e the rub of injuries,
West Covina bas rolled up some
lmpreulve vtctorles, tncludlog
shutouts of -.O over Covina High,
36-.o over WU.00 High of Hacienda
Heights andC.Oover Upland.
WtttOMM •1-d
t • Wli.t
" • c.twtM
u " """"" . -~ 14 rt a........,.
0
0 ,.
JO
14
John Fllbbert (S.11, 180) has
been the main ball carrier, gain·
ing '150 yardl, averaging over
five y~ a crack and scorine
eight t.Quchdowns.
Dirk Kemnetz (6·0, 185)
anchors the defensive line which
makes up for its lack of size with
quickness. Greg Anderson (5-11,
150) has been the workhorse in
the secondary with nine intercep-
tions.
~ At Home Tonight .. -
' l Corona det Mar will boa(!-
Blshop Montgomery (Torrance) ~
while Latuna Beach w.lll be at..: ,
home to Aviation (Redondo''
Beach) lo quarterfinal round CIF
4·A girls volleyball action tonlgb&z.-.,
(7 :30). ~:.;
Newport Harbor, tbe No. l.-.....>
seeded team in the playoff~;-:."
travela to San Marcos (Santa·~-~ ...,...., .... ,,
17 Mira._.
22 St..,._.,-.
42 he ..... 22 p.,..,..
0 a.t Mtytelt
u 1, """'-0 21 ....,.....,
1 1 ....,
Barbara) for It.a qua.rterfln..t~" ~ match. Glendale ls at Mlr1 Coe\£~
1• Hich <Manhattan Beach) lD lb& i! other ._A mat.chup. 14 GI-t ~ Awi.U.
Transfers Bolster Gaaehos
MuJ,ligan Lotukd With Cage Taknt .,ti
Other members of the team ln:;:,r.
elude freshmen Tim Dunb~.1():,.
(San Clemente). Mark and Miu \•tt••
Hlll (El Toro>. Frans Vanderaa ·I i-t
<Newport Harbor) an~~oo:
With three 1tartera returning
and some talented tranaf en and
freshmen oo band, Saddleback
CQUeae'laaln fipe1 to have one
of the better JC buketball teams
ill the atatAt.
Coach BUI Mulll1an'1 Gauchos
ea~ She Mllaion Confer~ce
cl'OWD lnt year, before loalna •
ftnt round 1tate pt.yoff 1ame to SUta Barbara. S•ddleback com•
plied a 25-9 reeOrd ID 187&-'1'1.
Back from that team are
ruarda Tim Shaw and Rtcb
McSlratb, both ol wbOm eU'DOd
all.eorit.-mce laurell. And 'nm
ltOltbt. (M), a ~·Umo tt.UUr lut HUCID, alJo ... tW'DI. Sba.w~ an. ••1rtuh• 1·3
lorwa"1·1u1rd, w11 tht con· leren~ pl~er ot the 1nr last 1u1on, averapq 18.1 polntl per lam~ He wu allo Saddleb&ek'•
IN4ln1nbouDdw.
McElrath, a 6-1 guard, scored
at a l3.3 clip a year ago.
The other Sadclleback starters
·figure to be Idaho Unlvenlty
transfer Cratr stah1 (6-7) and
freshman Artle Green (8-1).
Stahl was a staner at Idaho lut
seaaoo and prepped at Palm
Sp.rings ffiah. Green ta lrom tbe
Bronx, NY.
Others who figure pro~tneutly
for the Gauchos include Tom Uoy
(M), Rod Miller (5-10), Rick Pal·
tenon (S.?)andBeDBacon (6-5).
Lloy ~ at Orante Coast
two seuoos ago and la a formw
Edison Jlllh <Huntlnston Beach)
•tandout. MlUer la a transfer
from Cal State (Fullerton>. Pa~
t.enori was a start.er at Salita An• COlleao lut year and Bacon Ii a
freshman from t:.iiUD• Beacb
Hiab.
sophomore Marty Hein. l ;
'"Thia team has tood DOtelf. ,,.
tlal," aaya Mulligan. "We'n
deeper than we've ever been, b.t .,•~
the areal thing about tbll tealQla
that aeven of our top DiD• ... ~
1ophomores. And one of tile ... "
rrestJmen is Green, who we feel &a
aa1ooduasopbomore. "'~ ,
"We have more qulclm., tllll •
year, we board a little beu.r, but
we probably don't ahoOt u , ... _~~ ...
as we dld a year • aao,.. •an
Mumcan. Tbe Gauchos open tbe aeuoq
l"rldaY night (7:IO) at ~
ancl travel to IAat BUCb. f ca~
Sat\lrd~nllht ~8).
I '
l
J
f INISH 0~1' SHOTS
WITH CLUBF ACE
SKYWARD ;_:._4' 1,
One rc11on ao many aolfm ~ ,Jr~.~; .
muff 1hot1 Jround th• ar~n (~j.1 ~,}-._~ '.
1~ bee1use Ibey aet too wristy , . .
..in 1 hcse short •hot'-... notl1er
rc:a!>On ii because the~ fail to
11nlsh th~lr 1troke.
Doth of these problem~
lJn easily be aolved. Look 111
the illustration of me at the
f1n1sh or I Ghorl shot. Nolt
that the clubr.ce 11 lookh11 I
upward. It would not be 1n .-..i,....,.:.r~
this position if I h11d not l
extended my throuah·swlng l
out toward the llflel. j
I'm sure you will hll ~mpc:r ~hip 11nd p1lt.h ~hot) 11 i
you'll merely work on finishing Yrtth your clubface
lookm& skyward and -your left wmt still rirm
Cage Opener Nears
For Golden West
Golden West College the ball m the hole. Our
still haa a lot or question weakest point will be re-
marks aa it prepares for bounding. We don't have
the 19'7'1-78 basketball very much height."
season, but Rustlers The Rustlers are set at
coach Dick Stricklin is only two positions.
optimlatlc his club will ·'Todd Zirbel ~nd
have a winning season. Brian Rodgers will lJoth
GWC opens play Frl· start because we need
day night (7:30), hosting them for rebounding
LA ·lillsaion. Saturday purposes. After that f
night (7:30) the Rustlers don't know who will
travel toCenitos. start . We have about 12
"I think we'll have a guys that are pretty
good team,'• says· equal," says Stricklin.
Strickll6. "We have Zirbel (6-5) was GWC's
quickness and we've got second leading scorer
some kid.a who can put last year with an 11. 7
average. Rodgers (6-5)
scored at a 7 3 clip in
1976-77.
--·-. --~---~
\ Only Willie Gittens could set away
wltb lt. Every Ume lbe talented Foun·
tain Valley Blib t.ailback auit.s up for
a football came, he dol\I a Playtex
lon•UneClrdle. It 'a not tot his niure.
"Wlllle has over·developed th.libs
and th9're prone to muscle pulls. Tbe
glrj)e II a l>revenUve measure," ex·
plains aatudeottniner.
We didn't uk lf lt also Oattens his
tummy and makee blm look 10 pounds
lighter.
THE SCORING MACHINE-
Gittens scores a touchdown every 6.2
,J
times be carries the ball. That's one
more category in which he leads all of
Orange County.
Before a recent CIF playoff came,
in wblcb Uberty Christian High <Hun·
ting ton Beach) was blitzed br. Templeton 81-0 ln ei1ht-man footbal ,
Liberty Chrbtian nanninl back Dou1
Huntting was averaelng a ~chdown
every 7.9Umes he c:arried the ball.
OF VOLLEYBALL-The Orange
County;5tan pro volleyball franchise
wlll remain In Orange County next
season. but lt won't play its aames at
UnivenityHi1h (Irvine) anymore.
Owner David Whiting of Laguna
Beach says be needs a biaeer place.
Ori1inally be wu talking about Santa
Ana Colleee, but now the Stars are
looking ellewbere. Mission Viejo's
Saddleback Colle1e and Fountain
Valley High are the locatlona under
conaideratioo.
JUSTlFIEP NEPOTISM-The
Stars' pl~r~co•ch, Dodge Parker of
San Clemente. baa hired his wife,
Melody, aa a reserve back court player
for the coming season.
"I feel she's Potentially as eood as
any girl in the International
VolleybaU Association," says Parker.
· · Ri&ht now she '11 be one of the top re-
lief players."
Melody played for Cal State
(Fullerton) m 1972 and learned th4'
game's finer points from coach Gene
Selznick with the Sunsetters
volleyball club.
Sbe replaces the Stars' Beath
Donohoe, who asked to be released so
she could sign with a team closer to
her home in Texas
RAMS CITY-They all say it'a just
coincidence, but 10 member11 of the
Los Angeles Rams have made Html·
ington Beach their home. Four others
live next door in Fountain Valley. In
all, 20 Rams reside in Orange County.
BASEBALL, TOO-Major ~a,gue
baseball players also find Orance
County to their Ukine. A total of 32 Ur.e
here. The top names include Graig
NetUes of the New York Yankees (El
Toro), Frank Tanana of the Angela
(Corona del Mar) and Bert Blyleven
of the Texas Rangers (who just
moved from Mission Viejo to Villa
Park).
OF HALLOWEEN-Fountain
Valley quarterback Doug Thompson
wins this colwnn 's prize Ca simple nod
of recognition) for the moet original
Halloween costume. He attended a
party dressed as a Q-tip cotton swab.
Alamitos Race Results
N.C.rolllll
Clem..., Mef'/IMlll N.C.'9,11 = .... Wll, kr"1
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Coaches
Tab Gompf
Golden West also has
two guards returning in
Gary Sanders (6--0) and
RusJ Lazar (5-10). both of whom played
considerably last year.
Sanders averaged 9.3
points per game and
Lazar hit at a 4.1 clip.
....... y
O..,Tredlf'UI
AllO R•n NIU Giii, Pro f.d, My
Reo Knight, SN~ 8ux, L.e Monlne, Gt.O Do, Sc>yvllle.
Arl1"
... Ulel\
NtwMH.
J 3 • • • 0
240 J10 ' s • 4 1 0
Laguna Beach High 's
Blll Gompf was chosen
most valuable football
player in the South Coast
League u selected by
the circuit's coaches. Four freshmen -Ron
Garretson (5-10), Harold
Chamblis (5·9), Earl
Reed (6-2) and Dave
Pl ltlT llACll -6 fl.rloftga. J yNr
olcb '""· ,,..,... $3500. H•yforll Cl'Mlt
taenk1I l.00 2.40 J.10
A~m•r Wlltyroc 2 ISlelllngaJ uo 2.10
ltm .. -1.IJ
Alao Ren-Ml', P ... ro1. Prine• RH.
Scr•lcMG-Peym.w o All-s.lil CIMdLA ......
IAltMedM'f-•I l'tnt T-OHIMM
sr St r I c k 1 i n ( 8 • 2 ) , t b e
~· coach's son, also will see
Jr. plentyofplayingtime.
~. Garretson is from
sr Servile High (Anaheim),
sr. Ch am b Ii s is from ~· Denver and Reed
sr (Millikan) and Stricklin
(Los Amigos) both red·
sr shirted last season.
u •Qcte -.... .,.... CrMlll & ..
Alllmer Wllltwe t, '*'"·•·
HCOtfO UU -l10y ....... tyffr
o&Ot & 1111. Oelrnlnt. Purw uooo
• AWel Go Fi.t IKnleMI 17.JO UO 00 WfndJem,,_ OC.elty) SIAO I Ill
Knltlll Of GWy (Clll 1 a.JO
Tfme--.st.
AIM RM -Glclily'1 ~. l'lrll
Netlve, Tell!• H..-r, a.ta S11n,
JeU"mtn Me, Stelle Cleaa Min, .................
k,.tcllet -FR!tdl9, utltlfnt K eer.o. ... ,..., .. P .....
~ Others on the roster in-TM1ao uca -' tw..,. F<w
s. elude Richard Ogelsby ;:....~...., ,_....._ C1e1M1111
~~ (6·6 ) from Millikan. &..erL!:~ tAO ,.. 2•
s. Dave Gibbs (6-5) from lMY0tT11eMoa11c...._1uo 2.40 ~. M8 arihn)a iHuntinLgtedon ~~.:=-> 4.00
Jr. eac , ayne e s Atae .-. _ o.n.i•a Sona. s..
· s.. (6·3) from Fountain ,_St•,Mi.P__..tte,Meykll·
s.. Valley and Gary Brown tyOo, Denim ... Mlllll, o.a .. mer
kretc--Ftyl"ll Mel, Fel1ty
f.eol•, Atoll Of Wlndt, Knlttlll """'·
$5 llaade -.. VlcWy ...._ 6 ..
WtfWTrM...n.~.WSINAt.
SIXTH It/I.ta -GI yenla. 3 yNr
OklJ It up, PunolSI0,000.
Ol<uya 5Nl'9
IC.reloul ~~IHe<tl
Bou 'N ~ !Mlkllelll
Tlme--..01.
AllO Ren -He'a A Pl-un. 0.1 ..... •f',Sl•9ienk. Fl•tN' flcale.
I He krlltdlff
HVINTM uca -1 IW!tllp. a
YH< .. 0 """cllM. ""'-S 11,.000. HotP,.._.,y
IMeM) 7M UO 2..40
Pnnc.'1111'11 lllernlrul UO UO
EftertMl&ty CAolelell 1611
Tlme-1..Ml/S.
Also ""' -O••tonn• Tom, Holllat:er aletM, S~I. MOU AP·
prtelellve, U• R.eys, Crleket'• Biel.
RKorOPI..,....
Scr•tcMll -R .... Tlw Per-. El
MeCIUn> ..... T_OfMM
RK-Rkll A.,.,.._ CM (6-4) from Kansas. ~~kllM-,..,.. ~~: Golden West had ex· POUHM uca _ 6 •wi.nea. , is •1DCU -M..e ~ a 1-s.. peeled to get back its -rote11&wp.eno1i.c.111.a.1m1no ~..._ •• ....,,. .. ...._ ~: leading scorer Darrell :::~ a10MTM uca -one _, 1116
sr. Briggs (6-9), but he is in· <Mene> ,,. s.a uo ;-~~:1r_:..,.... o1dl. ci.iming.
,11\IM flen -........ H WIUMn, flMt N' Tumble, 9olel Start, Cet
S4evet1a, Fl..-Aefleet'-. llUclly ..
Luc:ky.
Scretc'* -H.,.PY Viki ... GfHl
W•ll,AckAdlW.
.. •aact1->• L.-..r & ...... ..... y,PeN~.&
TUeTM It/I.ca -1 fut..,._ Fer
t.o -r ol& P\lrM .... ----
TIW J----OurUICky ......
IAOMIMI 7 .. UO UI
HhA ltfllf l~I ..... •M
Pr1Mta.IS4elllf'lla> UM
Tkne-1.JM/S.
Ne Kr~ A-Celvfll...,_...,,,
T f.-Altttl Olcll. EI Toro T-TomHllllNS,Unl
T-~H.-ldllOtl,DH
~,. Daw, l.llllUM
G-Cllft Auerswald, OH
C-RICllGGIM, ~
&-Martin Hutil»ro. COM
B-Jetl GI*-El Tort
&-Kurt B~. GdM
8-Mllla Tweelt, CM
8-Alan PllrMr, MV
rr: eligible because Of Wof'klTr_,.(CMrllC.01 J.40 UO Aquldorl
Jr. scholastic problems. "4111N9tlltlAllerd)w> uo <Mtnel uo ..,. i.20 u •udl _,.....TM IN•• Jr Tlme-1.111~ G111t11n1ty ,.._,.., •5,40 UO. ...._,,....., ...
~T-Defef!M
OE-Jolln f.o-nb. SC
OE-Ktn 1k1ma, El Toro
OT-Otle AINlurVIY, CM
llG-tt•rl 9lttl, $C Ll-.JeMMlllW.~
L•~•lt WlmlftGllOlt, OH L~eul i..JOle, Ml/ O~Mw c..Jwrt. SC
08-IUdl Stemes, CdM
OB-Ric.II ... -. El TMt
Jr. ------------...... ----------------~---Sr.
Golden West
Rated Second
Fullerton and Golden
West colleges, who will
meet Saturday night ln
tbe third annual A VO·
cado Bowl at Cerritos
Colle1e.arerankedflrat
and second in the Dally
Pllot•s Southland JC
football poll.
SadcUeback is rated
No.a.
T•·•"• ..
QlllOSI
Mkbl .. n Mkll.St,
lntllllft' . Mlnhetote ~
low• Wlaconlln
lllfflttl .._,....,.trn
•t •t ltO ....... ~AllO.~ WL T ~ WLT
' e • t 1 0 SIO 120 -,,. 110
J J I 1 a I
JfO 470
t • 1 3 1 ' tso •10
010 1100
... T ..
~e AllO-..
WL T WLT
710 t!O
1 I t 10 I t
' 1 ' 1 J ' 4 J I S S I
• 4 0 7 • 0 .> s • s ' 0 aso 470
,,. 560
2'0 JIO 110 , ...
Ru.8tlen Picke
Golden West College's
Jeff DeMott, Tom
Gentacb and Tony
Wooten have been select·
ed to the All-Southern
California Conference
watel' polo team. ...... "-c;e ... n Wot-tten O•ll•Oll•r (eMlltf, .... o.Mttt, Twn Olflllltll.
Teny w..i; ~-Tlfn KlrcllOff
lt••ll•), Ktrl T•llmen, Clltwcll
&AIU.II; O.ldeM Oen (;a1w; ltlo
He11M-O.I' lly, Cy~H-Gle!l
OW.,; .. ~llPleru. ...... T-.w 0...... ..... ....... Ml""911, Mer·
tyWllltt.
I
'
.. ,
\ ..
~'B . r.
... RARE
SCOTCH
11(1 Pn1t1f Bk•nd~·J .5cmch Whi,ky • 1'>17 Pnd~linittt•n Q1rr. N. r . ,~
·~
' .
~
I
l
~LVPILOT . tueiectay. ~ za. 1177 Business
SadnesS Tinges Annual Mirack of Bay's GlO.,,;
!~'eLOff, • •
. WENONA, Md. -This la the
1lory season on Chesapeake Bay,
but ln th.ls Eastern Shore hamlet
t.bere la aho a aadneu.
.overhead, waterfowl necklace
the sky: Canada geeae by the
tens of thousands and whlsWne
swans and scoters and pintails
and eoldeneyes and dashing
canvasbacks swooping to a feast
of soft clams tossed upon the
sand, a magnificent lime, a.
pulse-quickening exaltation
unmatched anywhere to
celebrate the annual miracle of
migration.
ON mE WATEll, too, boats
return daily with deck1 piled
high with fat oysters and the
watermen say the price ls good.
Ashore, though, in a muaty loft,
a weathered old buildin& that
looks as if it might collapse at
any minute, Henry Brown sits at
his bench practicing a craft as
old as the sea and the sadness Is
that when he is gone there will be
no sailmaker to succeed him.
There will be sailma"ers, to be
sure, as long as wind blows
aqoas water, 'but Henry Brown
ia a special 1aUmaker in a
special place.
H.18 OAKEN BENCH la the
same one his father used, and bis
1randfatbeT, and so are most ol
the t.ooll be uaes. The venerable
loft i• the same that has served
all three generations. OQ tbe
front the sip remains: "Albert
• E. Brown & Bro. -sailmaken."
They are Henry'• father and
uncle. When Henry took over
from his father in 1956 be never
bothered to chance the sign.
"I doJl't know which will 10
first, me or this old bulldlna,"
Henry Brown aaid. "When one or
the other goes, that will be the
end or it. I'm 65 and the build.in&
Is 107 years old."
The Browns, Henry, his father
and grandfather, have since 1870
been sailmakers for the
Chesapeake's fleet of sklpjacb
whose main port is here on Deal
Island. About a dozen of those
lovely craft are moored in the
harbor behind Henry Brown's
sail loft.
SKIPJACKS ARE proud,
rakish wooded vessels, a design
( AMERIC4 )
k.Dowia only to the Cbe1&peake.
Tbe1 remaln, today, tbe tutneet ot workina aall ln America. 'Ibey
are med to dredge oysters, or, in
the salty tongue of the Eastern
Shore, todrudgearsters.
"When my father wu a youna
man there were hundreds of
aldpJack.s on the bay," Henry
Brown said. "I think we're down
to ff1Wer than 30 now, and only a
few of those aUll carry canvas
sails."
While acknowledaine that
modem dacron ls superior sail
matenal, Henry Brown has an
undiseulsed attachment to
canvu.
"ANYBODY CAN CUT a
dacron sail. It stays Just lllre you
cut it. With canvas you have to
allow for both shrink and st.retch.
It takes a sallmaker t.o cut a
canvas sail,"
Henry Bron says the word
sailmaker u if it were in italics
and sneers at less meticulous
1 24 Hours a Dag
Customers Can
'Say It' Now ....
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP> -People who like to say
it with flowers can make spur-of-the-moment
declarations of love, sympathy or remorse at any
hour of the day or night.
Florist Ken Wat.kins, tired of midnight calls at
his home from the desperate, the grieving or the
forgetful, has installed a vending machine at his
shop. It will trade flowers for cub any time.
WATKINS CONSULTED for a year with an
engineer over the design of bis brainchild, which
operates much like a conventional food vendini
machine. It has 14 doors, each opening on a booth in
which a flower arran1ement hu been placed.
Customers scan the glass doors, labeled with
prices and selection numbers. When they make
their choice, they deposit the purchase price In $1
and $5 bills and hit the rigbt button. The machine
gives them 60 seconds to open the door.
"Business is tremendous," says store manacer
Doug Jones. "It began operating the last week of
October. We've been real pleased and our
customers are overwhelmed. We're selllne four or
five or the designs each night."
TEN OF THE U compartments are
"'~ • ......._ refrigerated. The otber four are used for potted
FLOWER AUTOMAT STAYS OPEN plan~hl:~Tt::•b!~~· bonus for the whole
__ o_a_n_a_Sm_lt_h_C_•_rrt_•_•_V_e_nded __ Arr __ •_ng_e_me __ n_t _ industry if it catches on," said Watkins, who has
OCC Schedules
Se:minar'on Taxes
applied for a patent on bis idea. "A 24-bour fiower
shop could get people into the nower bu1tnl habit
around the clock.
"If a IUY gets locked out of bis house," Jones
chuckled, "I don't know what will soften a woman's
heart more than fiow,ers. •'
Current tax developments will be discussed
during a seven-boor seminar Dec. 3 at Orange
Coast College, Costa Mesa.
The seminar runs from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. In
OCC's fme arts hall 119.
Pre-registration fee is $10. Checks payable to
Orann Coast College may be sent to Business
.Manaaement Development Center, OCC, 2701
tairvlew Road, Costa Mesa 92828.
Grocers Abandon
Cutthroat Wars
LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -Bruised by falling profit
margins, Los Angeles au~rmarktltl apP.,ar to "
abandoning their cutthroat price wan and turninf
to more traditional, leu cqeUy 1Cbem11 to attract
customers. <Related columa, Pace BS> .
Upward trends in ---------....
------------------prtces of food and other for the company's ~a
supermarket lte~ can pel'eeut Increase ln --------------~----.be aeen by com~arln• profits for tbel thlrd
Registration will be conducted at the
c;loor at 8 a.m. on a space-available basis only.
RegistratiOll fee at the door is $12.SO.
More information is available at 556-5880.
DoesAmmc~-Dleed price surveys by ect.or quart•t of tbl1 year ___ _ Enterprlaeslnc.ofsanta compared to tM same
M o n t c a , w h t e h period last year. more ~Dment . Cfi~i:~c:~t t~ui\:~: ....... 1 ~ ... ,..4 e0r1 ..... o bou1ht by an averaee ..,~~r lllllDr tamllyorfour.
HOWEVER, LUCKY ,
chairman Wayne Ft.sher
aald lot.eme competition
lo the Los Anaeles
market, where none of
tbe chains normally
captures more t.b&n a 15
p.eTcent of weekly 1upermarket .ales, will
probably prevent m&Jot:
price blkes.
practitioners.
••1 use 18·lnch wide cloth.
<>then use 36 inch. Theira look
like bed&heeta. I hand-stitch my
rln11 and I hand·ropo my aalla.
Others use machine.. When you
hand-stitch you know every
stitch.
"THEY STARTED
machine-roping about 10 years
ago -sew a rope to a tape by
machine, sew the tape to the edee
of the sail by macbtne. I
considered it. It's faster and
easier . .But it doesn't look like a
aall that a salhnaker mad . l
rope by hand."
Henry Brown'a tr•ndlather. for who!'ll Heney wu named,
learned aailmaking in the BriU.h
navy. He came to America to
enUst in the Union nuy durtna
the Clvll War, MtUed on Deal
Island when the war" was over
and bouaht out the local
sallmaker.
1'My father took over the
business about 1918 and kept
working tmtil be was 80. I don't
know whether I can do that.
There's plenty of work. We lose a
couple of sldpJacks every year.
but tbere are plenty ot.p1ea1ure
boats. But J've cut back to aboUt
h< ltie worlC I dld a fw years
410. It's all I need.
··NEITllE& or MY IOJlS
wants to Ma n.llmaker. Tbat's
all ri1ht. they should do 1'hat
they want to do. It la kind ot ud,
tbouch, that the bualneu will eod
wltb mt. lt'1 been here a lone Ume."
Like the vanahin1 of thole
noble sldpJac:kl in the harbor, it
ls sad indeed, aailmaker.
'I DON'T KNOW WHICH WILL GO FIRST, ME OR THIS OLD BUILDING' -
Henry Brown, Speclal S•llm•k•r In • SpeclaJ Piece, I• the La•~ of Hf9 Une
I
I
Over The Counter
MASO UstftMJs
MUT~ALFUNDS
,!
' .
I
8rOCKS I BUSJNESS
Tueed.ay'e
Closing Prices
-....... .,. ........ ,.
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
N DAll.Y Pll.O'r ••
For High Costs
By ll(lLTON MOSKOWITZ
Althouah you would never pess n from the way the
resister tape mounta up at the 1upermarket cb~kout
counter, the naUon '• croeery cbalns ate oot bavlnt a ter· rificyear.
Sales are aluggilh, profit.a are nodWll to wrtte home
about.
SAFEWAY STORES, TllE LUGBST srocery dwn In
the country, reported a 5 percent cl9cUne lD proftt.11 for tbe
first nine months of 1977 -and that'• oa top of a 2tpercent
decline in 1918. A&P, lhe second·largest chain, reported a
horrendous 88 percent drop in profit.a for tho three months
ended last Aug. 31.
The grocery business has always been a low 111ar1in af.
fair, and the marslns are narrowiD •• The 76 lar1e1t chains,
those doing better than $100 mlWon a year. are aettlnc less
than a penny on every dollar of nlea.
Maney
Tree
Even the chains
that normaJlY out·
perform their ladu.stry
-Winn·Dlxlo · 1n the
SQutb and Jewel in the
Mldwest -have been
ca111ht up in the ' -malaise. Wlnn·Dlxle's
proflta in the three months ended &!))t. ao showed no sain
over 1'76. Jewel's most recent quarter earntn11 were down
19pereent.
Since the grocery industry Is ~upposed to be recession·
proof (after all, people always ha~ lo eat), what's &appen-
ing'•? Here are threeimswerr.
1. FAcED wnu WGHBa-cosTS on all aides, especial·
ly in ene~ and shelter. coMwners are being carefuJ about
bow mucfl they spend.
2. Since they are buytn1 fewer Items, consumers are
1bOPPinC more frequenUy at 7·lls and other convenience
stores.
3. More famWes, many of them Childless. are eating at
fast-food outlets or r.estaurants.
The sroce17 chains are reactloa to these tHDds in various ways.
SOME dt: •OVING DR'O a bare-bones wanbouse·
type, no-brand·name operation wbere the merebandiae ls
stacked tn Ute original 1blppiq earton.1 and prteu are
sfintficantq lower.
Others are jMltUn& microwave ovens lo stares to beat
the fJt8t·food operJktors at their o_wn_ lf~e. · BUU otbers, Just .a few. ¥"e ~'their bft:a by enter·
lna the ~urant field themaelves. Lucky St«ea, the rnost
diversified of the aupennaritet cbalJal. ls operating 140
Slrl.Qjo Stoc~ade restaurants. American St.oree, w~ ranks liftb ln l,J)e industry with it.a Acme and Super Saver &tores in
tbe East -.rut ltf Alpha Beta •'fl>etmarketl In the West, ls
running 33 AJpbyt.s family reatauranta and 12 Hardee1s fast·
food units.
Others, of coune, are IA a state ol 1bock and aa.i 't know
what to.&>.
THE VAWE LINE INVF.JJUIBNT Surve7 warned re-
cently that "the supermarket iJ:ldustry Will bave to take
strong steps to survive at anything appro&ahlnC .\,~resent size, lt ls beeo~ apparent tbat there wut bt a *>tit in 'ihe 'inCtmtry ..• 'l1k>8e srocery cbalos unabt'e to adapt
fast enough to the new lnduatey trends or unwUlln1 to think
in terms of dive:nltlcation will ~bly not. aumvoover the
long run."
'Good New&' Aids ·
Stock Market Rise
NEW YORK CAP> -A smaller-tban-upeeted lbcrease
In eonsumer prices and other favorable ~omlc news
helped the stock market. P<19t a broad gain today.
The Dow Jones average or 30 Industrial stocks was up
6.41 points tos.2.52. .
Gainers held a 2·1 edge over 10Hl'I amoni New York
Stock Dcbaqe·ll•~ lsaues.
BlgBoardvolumecameto28.30mOlionshares ..
St~la 111 T• OdM'l•..n~ l'erGflft .Spotllglll ,... ..,..,., ... , ANI ~.-. ....
NEW YORK c:f,>-$eln, • p.m. price • 1114 -.is~ MJ.S~+ Sloat• i! Hklll '-0.. t.!
:::. "'\.~._.u. ~m1~iw.-~ i;r f11. to nt: ritll: d
jlatlOnlll't .. -~ -u $tk •Jt 291.t2 Jl1.G2 ... tO+ "'° .. ~·· II ~ . ~ fflifMs • ..... .............. •• • ... .. ··::::.::. m· , : ,tn l~ :::~:::::::::::::::::: sJ~
,,..-..-.JJ, "'"' •••••••• tt •"' M •. ._ ······················• t-lii• ........... tat'""" ~ .. ------------wn Pllblt51t.. •• •• • 210 + t~ Ear.t rocllll..... 201 ~ • .. • • KA c ....... ;. 20', / -1\tl ""'' ......... ~ + \-1 ·='\dit:::::. ~ : t: IMT•ft:::. ;; ! '9 ~,.':.-~~::::· lit: : ::
Amerlea11~ =£W Y~ <A,>-s.i... • o.m. prla
net c~ Ille lell "'""' Kil,. '""ic.n ·~ " ,...,.., ~lllil Ml*-r .t men 11!1111 ti. .. .. 't·'°° 11.-.i + " 11 ..... ,•331'»+\14
)'l!MX "'"' i 10~ -~ r ne ..... S4 •YI ... ,,. e Pelellt. ... .. S2, 121-t • w ~..... .,i ·~· + .... ...... .. '"' +"' ..... ~ C~+Yo .. u 111111 ...... ii u1._+~
Sr-tltTI ane...... •• ~ -"
-.a.as
NEW ril( CAPI ·HY ~-". . ................ . =Oii• .................. . Mell• ................. ,,.. -Miif\lt -•••••••••••••••••••• ~ ' ...................... . -~"* ................. u; ,...., lte...a-........ ,., ••••.• ~ ".-................... I ttll
191St1Mtl •••••·········· 41,
.. DAIL. Y PILOT
.. . It 1.~U.\'
• EVENNG ~1··~(llN • BONANZA ! "A Matw of Clroumstanc9" . I THE AVENO!RI MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
SUPEAMMe 8ESAME8 ...... , R&---1
VILLA AU!GAE
5:30 CD BEWITCHED
"No Zip In My Zap''
g) ADAM-12
"A tMnage robber ctl•19nG•
the Adam-12 teem.
"1i) FREEHAND 81<ETCHINO
8:00 8 CBS NEWS OU NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONEJ
The paramed1ca respond to a
• aerl" of unusual ~
atter treating an Injured woman
at a1e&nce.
0 LYNN SHAKELFORD
• THE BRADY BUNCH
"Snow White And Th• Seven
Bredya"
Cl) THE ROOKIES
A manslaughter c:aM turn• Into
a conteat of credlblllty u the
only Wltneaa 11 retarded
fJl) ZOOM
~ AS MAN BEHAVES
"A Converatlon With Or. Wll-
llam Glaaaer"
(Jal ABC NEWS
8:308 MOVIE * * * "The UFO lnoldent"
(1975) Jame• E&fl Jones,
E1tell• Paraona. A hulband
and wife claJm they were
abducted by a apacectaft and
~ examined medlcally. (1 hr .. 30
min.) 0 BASKETBALL
Loa Angelea Laker• vs. Phoenll(
Suns CD MY THREE SONS
"What About Harry?" fm OVER EASY
Howard Faat; produce
bargains; dlecount aervlcee:
social security. m> GROWING YEARS
"The Chlld'a Mind" (Part 1)
(I) CBS NEWS
9 MERV GRIFFIN
• Guests: Prlnoe and PrlnOMt
Rainier of Monaco, Jack Paar,
Charlton HHton, Wayne Ao~Olna Merrill, Cliff
Robertson, Tom Laughlln, Carl
• Reiner, Doloree Taylor, Olde
• Van Patten, Vincent Van
Patten, Roy Emerson, Clark
Grabner, Don Budge.
7:000 NBCNEWS 8 LIARS CLUB 0 ABC NEWS CD I LOVE LUCY
"The s.ance"
(I) ADAM·12
The er.ah of a llght plane Inter-
rupt• Officer Reed'• teaalng of
Officer Malloy.
• flD MACNEIL I LEH,,ER
·REPORT
• Cl) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY
: "Structural Geology"
: (I) TO nil THE TRUTH
7:380 CANDIDCAMEM : 0 NEWLYWED GAME D 0 HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
L-eftl
John David Carson
guests as a lonely
young dreamer on
Mulligan 's Stew
tonight at 9 on NBC,
Channel 4.
m THE BRADY BUNCH Cf ndy ciev.IQP9 tonalllltl1. m LET'S MAKE A DEAL
• 28TONIGHT
19 NEWSCHECK
(I) THE THANKSOIVING
THAT ALMOST WMN'T
8:00 8 (I) THE FITZPATRICKS
Jack Fltzpetrtok tt1ea to keep
up wtth hla contemponll'f• by
amoklng ,,,..,Nine. bot finds
the reaunine trip a Ntti. too
rough to hendi.. 8 MAN FROM ATLANTl8
"Crystal Watw, Sudden DMth ..
Mark Hart1a flnda hlmHlf
thraatened by strange under-
sea belngt when the Wcwloua
Mr. Shubert trtok• him Into
penettattng the force fleld pro-
tecting thek' MJbmerged habf..
tat. 8 MOVIE
**"Molly And Lawi.te John"'
(1973) Ver• Miies, Sam Elliott.
A tmal1 town aherttf'a wife ta
natt..ect Into helpfng a young
prtaoner ncape the gallows. (2
hrs.) • t1I HAPPY DAYS
"My Fair FOf'ltie" Fonzie fella
for a pretty tociallt• whoM
ltlObblah brother t9kea one
IOok mt Fonzie Md dectdee It would be a greet gag to Invite
Nm to • high 80Glety party. e CAROL BURNETT AND
PAEM>I Guest: Paul Sand.
• MOV1E ***"'Whatever Happened To Baby Jane" (1862) Bette Davia,
Joan Crl!Wford. Two Mt.,.,
former atw.. ltve a psychopath-
ic exlltence In a terror-ridden
houM. (2 hra.)
Ratings Gulde
IMalVltlS -,_. KConllftl lo DGp
effl<e ~. MewlH tor TV en Juc19Ni.,ecnlk.>
• • * * -Excellent
• • • -Very Good •* -Good
• Yt -Fair * -Poor
'
•
IB COUSTEAU OOYSSSY
"CalyplO'I Search For The
Bt1tannlc" AA attempt to IOI~
the mystery of the Worid Wat I
llnklng of the H.M.S. Britannic. 8!> PARENT EFFECTIVENESS
"It's A DMJ" No-Lose Problem
Solving reaulta In a aolutlQn
negotiated by parent and chUd.
8:30 8 0 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY
''Laverne And Shlrtey Meet
Fabian" After trying un1uc-
oeufully to buy tloht1 for •
Fabian oonc:ert, the gh1e begfn
concoctJng a lct*'1e to meet
their Idol tao.to-teoe, Fabian
v._lJett at.,.. u hlmaelf.
UJ CR088-WIT8 fD OVEAEASY
Howard Fut; produce
b•na: discount MMcea;
social MCUrlty. (R)
8:008(1) M•A•s•H
A notabi. tendeoy toward
mldrtff flab prompt• an angry
• COIC>r* Potter to demand dally
caJlathenlca and luda to a
-4077th Olymplca. D MULLIGAN'S STEW
"Little Grey Bird" When
nowera, notes and constant
shadowing bec:orM a part of
hit pattern, the open admtra-
tlon of a lonely young man
(John David Carson) begin• to
frlghMn Jane Mulligan. D 0 THREE'S OOMPANY
• MERV GRlfFIN ;
Guella; Prince and Ptlnoeaa
Rainier of Moneco, Jack Paar,
Charlton HHton, Wayne
Roger•. Dina Merrlll, Cliff
Robert80n, Tom Laughlin, Car1
Rainer, Dolorea Taylor, Dick
Van Patten, Vincent Van
Petten, Roy Emeraon, Clark
Grabner, Don Budge. 8 PLEOOE BR2AK
Regular programming may be
delayed due to pledge breaka. ID MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"I, Claudius: Waiting In The
Wings" Julia conttnuea her
8CMdaloua 9f'glee white her
tlOn, Cllludil•, ~to be
half-witted becauH of a etarnm. and a limp.
9:15 8 IRONSIDE
trOMlde la called upon to pro-
tect a women'• llbber from •
would-be ...... in.
8:80. (I) ONE IMY AT A TIME
"The Ghost Writer" Undtr
pr9MUl'e to plelM her mother
and do well ti\ :ichoal, 8att)ara
fMCM'tt to dtepet-a ~
Anoe GhotUty g""98t ,..,._.
•&SOAP (~Ten) Whlle hoapltll-
a.d, Jodie lnak• a oructal
declalon: the Godfather~ on
Mary Campbell; J .. elca
decldea the Tat• and C8mp..
belle are cul"Md. (Networ1<
adw.t vaew.r dlKmlon.) e SPECIAL
"Steambath" BIH Bl~by. Valerie
PerrlM, Joae Perez. Bruce Jay
Friedman'• blurre comedy
abOut life after death.
10:00 8 (I) LOU OAANT
Lou feart tMt the preuute he'a
put on reporter Joe Roeal to
get mote lnv°"'8d In ht• atort.
hu foroed Aolel to tak• "n'*>-
~ ,,._ wtlle doing an tn-
depth fMture on ment.a hoepl-
tala. 0 POUOE WOMAN
"The ll\llde Connection" Pep.
per to. <Net for a 118M rookie
pollcewomm'I wf,o WU lnveatl-
gatlng • drug-rvnnlng oper~
tlon In the county Jall. Fernando
Lamaa, Jayne ·Kennedy Cluett
1tar.
0 NEWS DO FAMILY
"The Good Neighbor" The
lawr~ mMlt dectda What
action to take when they
beCOme ewer• thmt the eon of
an attorney In Doug'• law flnn
11 a child abuN VICtlm.
• QET8MART The atory apoota "I Spy" and
Robert CUip of that ......
~In aC*MQ role.
8 THE COUST!AU
OOYBSEY
"Calyp9o'e Seetch For The
Britannic" Th• mystery behind
the alnklng Of the Tltanlc'• lis-
ter ehlp 19 examined, along with
lta aubmerged remains.
10:158 NEWS
10:30 me NEWS 11:00fJDe(l)O NEWS e HOLLYWOOD
CONNECT10N llJ t.fO\'IE * * 1A1 "The Day Of The
Trlffl•" (1963) Howard KMI,
Nleote Malny. After a meteor-
ite lhower rend4n bllndnea to
the WOf1d'• population, 8trange
... turn Into man.eating
planta and attactc. (2 hra.) CD THE 000 COUPLE
Fellx'• new rom.ntlc lnt.,..t la
not the librarian he thtnk• the
Is.
Cl) HONEYMOONERI
Norton teachea Ralph hOW to
play gott so that Ralph can Join
hie boM In a foursome. ID MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
11:308(1) CBSLATE!MOVll **'-" "Cotumbo: Etude In Blactt" (1872) Peter Falk, John
Cuaavetea. The me.tro ot the
~ 8owC , .. acandat
~ tM l)C*lble loea of ,,.. Job
when hit mlatNM ttnat.na to
expoee their affair to Na wife.
(R)
I
G TONIGHT
Host: JOhnrw Caraon. Outatt:
Kel'lny Aogare; 8t•rllng
Heyden, Ca1 A...-. • LOVE.; AMl!.RICAN STYLE
11Love ~ The Pllln Truth I
Love Al'ld T"9 Ann~enary
Criafj"
8 Ill ABC MOVIE ••1n ''Wher9 Have All The ~ Gone?" (1174) Peter
• Or•V91, Verna Bloom. A famlly
atrugglfe to aurvtw. whlle Earth
le being deltaatated by a deedly
vlt'\18. (R) ·1 NEWS . GET SMART
• The Chief ualgna ee and 88 to
retrteve a deadly IOltntlflc t~
~from~
9 CAP110HEO A.,C NEWS
MPAHIHG
12.-00e 'TWILIGHT ZONE .. ~ewa-" e FOREVEA FEANWOOO
EIMnor lnvotv. Tom In her
vldoua p(Ot; Mefte t•ll• Charlie
about th• lottery: Wanda
dltoUINa Inc.at with Cathy;
• M«i. aweat• over a loan. e MOVIE * *""' "Riders Of Vengeance"
(1153) f'Jehard Conte. Vivace
Lindfors. ~fter hi• wtfe 11
mludered, a proapeotor
... rchel • for the kllleta and
teams up with • man Who wu
robbed of hta •tat• (1 hr .• 30
mint,)
• OICK CAVETT
Gueat: world renowned opera
figur9 SW Rudolf Bing,
1~• MOVIE **Wi "To The Victor" (1948)
Dennis Morgan, Vlveca Untora.
Collaborator• muat stand trial
aner the war tor their offenMa
against Franc.." (1 hr., M
mlna.) eMOVJE
**~"What A Women" (1V.3)
ROMlln~ RUSMll, Brt.n Aherne.
AA author'• pretty agent get•
Into tome romantic muddles
with her cllenta. (2 hrs.)
1:00 G TOMORROW
Gue.t: Mortimer Adler, phlloao-
pher and authOr. tJ ISPY
Kelly and Soott ar• ualgned to
reacue a young EngH1h girl, bot
ate 1tymled When the ratu ...
to leave.
1:071 NEWS
1:30 MOVIE * * "Low Of Three Oueena" (1953) Hedy Lamarr. A wealthy
not>i.tMn foltowe a beautiful
aot,... from city to olty. (1 hr.,
30mlnt.) 2:00D NEWS G MOVIE
** "Every Man II My Enemy"
(1970) Robert Webber, Elaa
Martlnelll. When a daring Jewel
robbery la fofled by the pollce,
the Amtrlean member of th•
gang tries to dlaoover who
Nttayed them. (2 h1'9.) 2:208 NEWS nee NEWS 2:308 MOVIE * "The HeadleU Ghoat"
(1859) Rlohard Lyon, Ullane
Scottane. Th,.. exchange atu-
denta In Btltatn vleft Ambroee
c..ue, euppoaed1y ~ by
·TELEVIStq~3
a headl .. ghoat. (1 hr ..
mlna.)
MOVIE • .'1'1
*** "Eight Iron Men'.' (10~
Bonar Colluno, LM MIMn. ~
hendlul of aotdlerl Ja fQfaed to"'
remain m a heavily bombm'ded
-.ctkln for seventeen d9Y9. (f 1
hr., SO min.) ·
2:8$8 MOVIE
•••• "Beat Of ~')
(1"2) David Niven, Mlchailt1
WHd~. 1'wo men on C)S>po.lng'
aldte ~· the opfnlOn ttt,l war la poinu.... (2 hrt.)
3:001 N~8 8:55 NEWS
•:OO MOVIE **~ ''Sleepera Weef' (1141)
&.ldyd Nolan, Lynn Batt. Mlk«I
Shayne run• "to a tralnloe4 ot
trouble, trytng to guard a wit,
neu In a murder tr"'. (1 hr., 30
mint.)
• MOVIE **'-" "Moving Tatget" (181'.
Harry Guardino, MOMI 0
The ~ Polnta to '
tlv• when a te»ow" o"'°9f
kilted at headquarters. (2 hta., ~
• MOVIE
··~ "The Juggler'' (19~) Kirt< Oougtu. Miily Wale. A
once-ramou1 Juoolat tetuma to
Israel after hi• wife and~,..,_.
perleh ln OM of Hltlel''a oon~~
tratlon camp•. (1 hr., 30 min.)
Wednesday'•
Daytime Mo.,les 0 1i
0:3011 MOVIE
**~ "The Greet Sioux U~
lng0 (1853) Jeff Chandler, J':alth• ii
Oomergue. A dllCMrged ~of l
Officer ltopa a band of ruat1ett (
from drMng the Sioux nation \0.
the warpath. (1hr .• 30 mfn.)
10:00 e MOVIE * * "A Time For Ev•ry
Seuon" (1972). A ~lte ' t
adv9ntut9 of a man and a boV l.
u tti.v explore the fOfblddlng : ({
Alaakan Tundre. (2 t\ra.)
AFTERNOON
12.-00. MOVIE *** "Woman Of The Ya!'' (1942) Katharine Hepburn1"'
Spencer Tracy. A 00atlA,.!
ootumnllt and her eponawrtt.w11r-
huabend apend much of th*
time In rneenlngJea Quatrela. <i
hra.. 20 min.)
2:00· G MOVIE ~ : * * * "'TM Camak.a., (1913)' •
Polly Bergen, Robert Stade. A
woman wtth hOmk:ldaf tenden-
elee le pteced In a maatal hc)e..
pltal folowlng a MM>UI bf'Uk·
dOWn. (2 hra.)
3:00 Ill MOVIE
*** "Minni• Moakowltz" ( 1872) Oen• •
Rowlands. &lymout C...... A
mlMnatched cou~ etrugg,te to
rem.in t<>gether ~ t
many dlfferenoee. (2 hta.)'
3:308 MOVIE **~ .. Hook, Una And Sinker"
(1H9) Jerry Lewi•., P-'et
Lawford. A woman .,,d tN : fwniJY dOctor try to get r1d of·
her flalWman husband. (1 hr ..
30mln.)
Still Tuning Up ' I Cousteau. Sea Special
Sammy Calm Shmm 18 New Ones
years, Cahn atilt malntalna an
•partment in his native New York, where he awl a pal, Saul Chaplin,
broke into lbe son& business aa a
team.
IT WAS THERE they ftn1t acurrtM .
about the halloed balls ot
tuaeamlthln1. the Brill Blllldlna ID
mld·ManbaUen, knockln1 on
publishers' doors, offerlnc tbel1'
wates and leamtng of rejectiOll. •
"We got t~ed down every day, but
that's bow we learned to write,"
laughed Cahn, who r.cently ended a
stlnt at New York's Rainbow Room ln
a abow that featured both his
anecedot.el and bts music.
When he began his career,
publisher• ran tbJngs. Cahn wu asked where he'd try today 1f be, at
kil current aae, waa atartlnc treab,
had no reputaUon and never had a aon1 recorded or published before.
'1l'D TRY TO find a recordinl artlat
wbo doelD•t Write bis own !Qaterlal,
Kristy McNichol~ Bild Gary Frank, the Em·
my·winning kids on Family, 1hare a quiet
time together during one of the Lawrences' •
mini·crises tonigtit et 10 on ABC, Channel 7.
1 .
Explores Brittanie
•
..
I
--.... . . '
~ERTAINMENT I THEATER I AT YOUR SERVICE DAIL. Y fltLOT 87-
Guys, Dol/,s' Excellent
The "Guya and Dolls" of Damon RWtyon'a
roadway are back, tbla time at Sebutian's West
inner Playhouse, and lbey 're doln1 nlcel)'·nl~ly. ~kyou.
A Strong individual performances mark the re·
ival ot this Frank Loeaaer "musical fable" which
as moved lnto the San Clemente dinner theater
here it will run through January. Director Dan
erre bu injected a healthy measure of adrenalin
lo tlliJ oldie but 1oodle without sacrificln& the ln·
ront flavor of lbe period.
WAYNE MADISON'S realiatlc-looklnt, yet
ootbly adaptable settin& allows maximum
Miss Quick ls especially lmpresaive in the aeene
wbere sbe Uvea it up In Havana, only to live it down
backbome.
'
DEAR PAT: I answered an 1dvertlJement in
MteaUs ma~ulne for a new type of •anina called
.. Alr·lllnes. • I ordered and pa1cl for ~wo aetl ot
these earrtn11. but to date I've only Netlved one
pair. J wrote to .McCaJla lri Ftbruat)', Ap~ aQd
June.Now I 'm tumlna to you.
S.M •• Corona c1el Mar e-ctom of movement for the well-stated enaomble
mben, which Wttold with aplomb under ~
illed band or choreographer Gary Glocomo. Yoa.r ml.AID& earr1acs are befal malled Im· ualcal director Nick Vendoo's three-piece or· --------.. -ou-v-,-,.-ico-oou.s--#-~.~. ----medla&ely. AYS e111tadec1 Diet a.m
1
, dlredor of
estra supplies fine accompaniment and advances ,. m11tiu1 bf "i uestoer, .)() ~-•1ne -AIM....,.,_., ...... • en•-rp-'a~ •or M..1>~11-, -•anllaa •oar Ions OTtr•
The rotund cra1>1booter Nlcely·Nlcely Jobnson
la ably interpreted by John Bernabei, whole "Sit
Down, You 're Rocklnf the Boat" number 11 a
musical bl1bll1ht.-o the show. Amon1 tbe
l esbow'ssnappypace. lttf'Y1>yo-R1111 ,4ll~lff 11yo.n11 .. ,.,~~H1<.av-.., • ._,, "'-lllY .... ,
Dolls . :"~"::i'.W::. i!:l..t°:."f::':'Pd.t:-~=~ dueorder.NoesplaaaUoDC..Wbe_.YHot!MrPtan Lighter musicals such as "Guys and ' .. ,...... ~ THCAIT ''problems wjtll &be •all." A.cMi' Madellvu,
ually are built around the talents of singers who SllY~ .................................................. .-...._. ~mplal.Dt laYOl.US a tac:e • .._Id erdered from can move uound on a stage and Ser••·-...................................... : ........... .,.,,..YCluid! McCalls ID late Awpat by M.l.B., Coil*a •en, alao remember their lt·nes, wltb Netlllfto..rwi ...................................... ~J-Colll,. wlll .. -~•l" .. aof··_..._.._.ay. MlvA9tladt ............................................ ..__M1<M1-1 U'IJ -... _._ strong acting ability a minor Hlu~l<Mt~ ........................................ Jotw111«,_1 • ".
h Seb t1 I 9-J~•••••oo oooo•,.••••••••••••••••"••••••.,•••• ...... ~ , criterion. T e u ans pro. A""Yo..tli. .......................................... Llttlf•'•...,••r ...
duction offers not only cood =~.!:i.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::t.!.i.-X:: Mar T d VOiCeS and production numbers, Lt. areMlgM · .. • ···· ·· · · · .. · · · ·" ..... · ••· · · ·········· .. · MlcMel ..._,. garet ru eau' b t 11 t e ting as c;.ner•ICM1'torlthl .......................................... ~Nee91e u some exce en mo 819 Jvl• ...................................................... ..-R~ well. ____ _.;.. _____________ _
A shining example is John Broadway Unhoms, Rusty Blitz stands out as the Signs ~or Movi··e Herzog 's Sky Masterson, gravel-voiced Harry the Horse, while Hal Richards .(i
perhaps the finest actor to SS· brings undisputed authority to the Chicago visitor.
AfJftlell Delp• Sltare Ytde Sjjfrlt
DEAR PAT: 1 would Uke-tho opPC>rtunlty to ln·
volVf m)'Nlf ln a Christmas proJ~i for dliadvan,
t11ed dllld.reft that my 1 year-old dauptu eould
participate tn a ton a wlth me. Our f amlb' ts
fortunate enouch to Jive quite comfortably. ancl we
would like to hdp otben at WI tlm of the ~ar. Do
you have~ auueaUonaf ·
· M.B., CorOriadcUlar
· Tbe Volutary Adtoll t'ftter Ol 8oaUa Oi'U•e
County bu made u appoa.tmea& to ln&enlew JM
and yoar daq.b&er re,1ardbi1 vOI &eeS' work for tu
Cluistmu p10jec&I pro1Ta ~ OIMr readers la·
&el'fftH In ellarttable Clutstmu projee&a ean
•olaateer bf eawn111~ntt.
B~ !'•le CaMelf C..t...a
DEAl\RAT: I'm enclostn, the latest collection
threat fl'Oin First National Aeceptance of
Philadelpb,JL My 19-year-otd dauahter slped a
CQntract few more than s.'500 for eome china and
eookware 'Jhen ~company sent a repreaentaUve-to her aorortty house at San Dlq6 State. She bun 't
received •ny merchandise and I've written
numerous Jetten tequeaUna cancellation ot this
contract. sume this role in a loeal produc· · Big Jule. tion. Herzog unders_cores his
oadway gambler character with a sense or in· ARVIDE ABERNATHY, TIIE mission drum
The company lnatsta that it will not release her
MONTREAL (AP) -Maraaret Trudeau bu from the contract because a request for cancella·
''enormous dignity and polae and amuina potential tion was not received wtthln the three-day llmtt. My
t nsity and authority to a degree which even beater, is an Arvida In the Sebastian's version, and
arlon Brando dido 't reach in the movie veralon. the role ls well done by Lonna Arklln, who shlnes ln
EQUALLY IMPRESSIVE IS Blanche
lckelson, back for her umpteenth role at S baslian 's, as the show stopping Miss Adelaide.
iss .Michelson bas little room for latitude in a role
sl indelibly identified with Vivian Blaine. but abe h ndles it at her brassy, breezy best.
Michael.James Collins is excellent aa t.be float·
i g crap game impressario Nathan Detroit. wbUe
J nny Qulck adds a gorgeous voice to a fine
ptrformance as the "mission doll," Sarah Brown.
••~1 • ........ IOllY ....... ,..
Nit ,......,,.. . I _ ..............
OMOOO&Nt ,_..
.--AU ULLY,.. ---·----MMMAJIOM M&IYCNt ~ -. l&UOMCNt· .......... • c'-. I LooaNI flCl8 .. 900GIU111t
113/UI·-ATI I e Iott e Ml e ... e , ...
ICl9l'f, MO ......
....................
OMtOltf"lt Nm
OOMIMl IALlYtNt
her 1010. "More l Cannot Wish You." The show's
cborua 1Utters in the ensemble numbers.
particularly the Haven a segment.
"Guys and Dolts'" follows an exceptionally fine
dinner at the San qemente showplace. 140 Avenlda
Pico. wbere Lt will be ln residence tbroutb January
Performances are elven ni&htly except Monday
with curtain at 8:40 Tuesday thrqqb Thursday,
9: 15 Friday and Saturday and 7·40onSunday
• BACKSTAGE -SebaaUan's West Dinner
Playhouse wtll inaugurate a "name" auest star
policy wtth the opentna of Its next production, the
original comedv "Wh~ Wanta Fat Hair•" starrtnc in the George Tibbles play wU1 be Mickey
Rooney, who has traded bis movie career for a life
of playing dinner theaters
0 8TAY HUNGRY0
t:IO
"FIVE EASY
PIECES0
7:il0It10:90
aa an actress," says a film dau1bU,. '»OW has left the sorority tor financial
producer who bas signed ber for reasons aindbu no Income other than what I eani to
a leading rote ln .. Kinas aqd help her~ d\18 • little spend.lq money sbo earns.
Dea per ate Men." ~ • Sbe should not have slptd tla. contract. but she
Alexia Kanner ot Klneverael .aave httO a hlah-pre.aure aal~tch. Will you see if
Inc. said Monday be bu btell "this flrmwW recoulder its tlon and cancel the
worldn1 cloael1 with Mn. contracl? ~ P.L., Balboa Trudeau and ls confldent her
debut as a screen aetreu wW be A YS eaa&ae&M Gleu ~et Wt eompuy•a
aucceutw. colleeUaa ....,... 'l'ov •waMer'• ~et
"Sbe abowa frMt J:inm11e." ... bu..._~ A ...... ,..ar penaaJ,.
• aaJd Kanner, ~ irifi ·~ '·•Hila ~mo adle9, AUl9 dam• tbt fbau-• and d.lrectttie feeture-lfllllhalm. etal ,.,.._.. k ahfaJI acce1*4 u a ,.... for
~..au ..... The eltraDled wife ot Piime Mlftlltef .Plene-=-._..;;~;;..:;........:~~+~~-----~~ Elliott Trudeau li cut in a lead role ~ Patrtek
McGoohan. '
..............
·LA~ IOUHIOtSI" ,.,
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.,
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.I ., .. ~t ...
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.. DAILY PILOT
f •
. =Only
111111 tar
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t
-INSID •Ann Land n •Erma Bombeck
•Horoscope •Cla1slfled /.
DAILY PILOT
The Kennedy assassination is unforgettable to,many.
But what does that infamous day mean to.those who
weren't even born 14 years ago?
By DENNIS Mc:LELLAN
OfllM Oaltr l'!Mtieatf
On Jan. 20, 1.961 John F. Kennedy was sworn
in as the~ President or the United States.
In bis inaugural address he sal(l that the
torch bas been passed to a new generation of
Americans. With that statement, Ute New Fr~n
tier and a perjod of ho)>e was born.
Two years and 10 months later the New Frontier lay dying in an open·alr limousine on the'
streeuorDallas.
For those who Uved through lt, Nov. 22, 1963
is probably forever etched in their memories. To-
day marks the 14th anniversary of the usasslna-.
tlon of President Kennedy.
But what do the children, not even born when
Kennedy was in office, know of Nov. 22? Whal, in
fact, dotheyknoworthe late president?
To get an idea, students in Unda Anderson's
sixth grade class at Santiago Elementary School
in El Toro were asked if they knew what an·
niversary Nov. 22 marks. Two out of the nine in·
terviewed did.
The following are their answers to the ques-
tion, "What do you know about President Ken·
nedy?"
Bill Tate: "Nothing much, except that be
was assassinated. Mrs. Anderson was telling us
about him having a pretty wile and daughter."
Beau Bramlett: "He was a good president.
He was assassinated by John, I mean, Lee
Harvey Oswald. And Lee Harvey Oswald wu put on death row.
"His <Kennedy's) brother Robert was in
another country running for something and he
was assassinated too."
Jennifer Cross: ''The assassination mostly
and how they're trying to find out who as-
sassinated him."
Edmund Miranda: "Well, when he was
young he rode in the PT 109. He used to swlm a. wt and, let's see, he had a ht of brothers.
•'He once said td'-i>h, what's bis name, some
guy in Russia-he told him to &et out of Cuba.
They had a lot or bombs and missiles pointing
toward the United States."
Anete Sanchez: "Well, I don't know mucti ·
about blm. He wu a 1ooc:t p.._ldellt; Jf '1 ~
now and I really don't 10 mu~ Jato b1i hlatoQ:
and stuff."
Tony Lakatosb: "He WU USl$Sinated by-
wait, I know his name, by this IU)im some story
house, a school house, in Dallas. He wu tidlni ln
a car and got abot and the police Wef1 looltlna all
over', and they made a book about lt and bad it on TV." '
Erica Nessa: '"Not much. He was H·
sassinat.ed in Dallas, Texas, and he was with his
wile. After be was shot his wile pulled hh1.l down.
I think be was sbot three times. I tb1nk he was .,.
nice president and honest."
Kevin Ball: "I Just feel sad tbat he's deed.
He stopped the CubanJ from havtnc mlsailes ... J can't remember anything else."
To help give the students a better Jdea of wbo
President·Kennedy was Mrs. Andenon bu what
she calls Kennedy Appreciation Day every Nov.
22.
"WE HA VE THE children brinl In books
and I have some old newspaper beadllnes," she
says. "We talk about the presidency. And we talk
about the assasaination because the cblldren are
fascinated by that"
Mrs. Anderson, who says Kennedy wu a
man she admired, was 15 when be was killed. She
remembers thaiday clearly.
"I first knew about it at lunch," she says.
''They lowered the fia&-lt WU the first time I
. had seen that."
Whal she remembers most a~ KeQDedy ls
that he wu young. "I had a lot ot l)?Specf for him
as a person and a family man. He was someone I
could relate to. I really felt we could trust him as
a person."
Through her classes she has learned that
what students most know about Kennedy II that .
he was assassinated. '
"It 'a hard to believe," she muses~ "It makes
you feel old. But as a child that '1 basically wbat
you remember about Abraham I.lncoln. '' ·
With L•ura
Dr. Laura Schelssinger
counsels radio listene~.
'
1-
(2 DAILY PlLO T Tu.ed.y. Novembet 22. 1en
1 JUSt read some atat.lttlca that sent a ~hill up
and down my spine,
It said that teenkltrt know ~lderably les1
about sex than most adult& think they know. A
national survey revealed most teen&1en knew
liUle 1! anything about birth control, presnancy,
or communicable dlseuea.
I don't mind telling you I haveo 't been so
shook up sinci! Butterny McQueen tbnnt'1p her
hands and screamed, "don't know not.bin' bout
birth in' babies, Miss Scarlett."
Now where are parents supposed to to for all
their information?
As I told my teenager the other day, '11'm ~
years old and I think it's time we had a talk.about
why I cry so much. Maybe It 'a meno-" ·
She clapped her hand over my mouth.
''Wheredid you hear gutter laniua1e like that?''
"The girls at the bowling alley. They said
there's a reason wh)' I cry when tbey pick up the
garbage and why I fall apart when I fl.nd the date
on my yeast has expired. What's happenlni lo
me?"
"Did you read the books I left in your
room?"
"I couldn't understand them. Look , tr this is
uncomfortable tor you, l could discuss it with
Mayva 's children."
"No, no," she said clearing her throat, "it's
just that I don 't know how much you know
already."
"Only what you told me last year that some-
day soon. I would look Into the mirror and my
grandmother 's face would look back."
"Thal 1s essentially true. It has to do with
gelling 0 -L·D."
"Don't spell in front of me!" I snapped, "I'm
not a child."
"I'm sorry. You have to understand bow dif·
ficult it is for teenagers to explain sex to their
parents. We don 't want to tell you too much or too
little. Did I tell you sex is a natural and beautilul
thing?"
"You told me that just before I went into 18
hours of labor with your brother."
"What's labor?" she asked suddenly.
l stood up in disbelief. "I'm going to the
bowling alley. Al my age, I can't afford
hearsay."
Wedding and e119agement announcemenla run on
Sunday m the Daily Pilot. Form• are avaaJablt C1t all
Daily Pilot olf1ces or by calling the F'etlturea Depart-
ment. 642·4321
To aooad disappointment, pro8pechve bride• are
reminded to have thetr lffddmg stonea, wtlh a black·
and-while glo&&y of the brule or of tM couple, to the
Features IHpartment one week before the weddfrig
Engagement announcements. wrth black-and-
wh1te glos$J1 of the future bnde or tile couple. must be
received by the PNtures Department six WHlu before
the wedding dtlte
DEAR ANN : Gosslp
can be a terrlble thto1.
Someone s tarted a
vicious rumor about my
mother and it really burl
her a lot. We can't un-
derstand why anyone
would do such a thing.
Mom is such a genUe
person she would.b 't hurt
a fly.
I am 14 years o1<1 and
hope .YOU wlll print a
• poem I came across. It
says a lot. I round this
poem in a book we read
in English class last year
and wrote it down. I wish
I bad written down the
author's name but I
dldn 't.
Wlll you please print it,
Ann? H might make
some people think twice
before they repeat
stories that aren't true.
-SAD FOR HER
DEAR SAD: Yea, I
wUI -bat I wllb I lmew
tbe nameoftbe aat.bor. I,
too, remember tile poem
from my blp acbooJ
day1 and bave tile feel-
ing_ that four Une. at th
••• La11ra \
(From Pa1e Cl)
She admlta that some rorms of mental lllness
are related to body chemutry, and a~a the peo-
ple suffering these are the onJ.y persons y,ho real·
Jy need a psychiatrist, and· add&, •if.bat 11 qot
what I am dealln1 with."
The counselor feels she helps thole •ho only
listen u mucb u those who call in. "Sometimea
it's the shock ot .reco&n1Uoo when you bea.-ot.ber
people sotvo t!Mlr probtem1... •
She say1 abe 1tumbled into counaeUna
because abe bad "an wUnct ror ll" and admlta
she baa a lot off Hdb•ck ln her own Ute and con·
aiders henelt ''very lucky.·~
Dr. Schleulnaer will talk to "anyone who
ba1 a problem" aAd HYI 111• •ttamptJ to conduct
her abo• With .,•\lltiortty and humor.' '
•11 don't mue very mu~ 111on11 d0tn1 tbt1
• on rad.lo.'• 1be 1.Yf. Why then, dOtt lhe do lU
"S.Cauae l have to. I am me. Wbltla met I
don't.~-"
Flights tnto ·Fane:f
The real shocker was that the instruction to relax
did achieve a deep relaxation.'
By LEJ; UNDER shining, the water rolling up the beach the
PIDLADELPH1A (AP> -Daydream-seagull flying by. '
ing is good for the health and people can slip ''With no other thoughts you let yourself
into any situation that is pleasant for them go into wbatev.er i~ pleasant for you. You
without using hypnotism or transcendental leave your body where it is and transport
meditation, says a researcher who stUdied your mind to another location and ex-
how to relax. perience.
''All work, not one better than "If you stop being on guard as you do in
another," said Dr. Louis Dubin, a dentist the course of your business, your pro-
who teaches a course on hypnotism at the f essi~nal or your social life, and let go ·
Temple University School of Dentistry. He ,physically and emotionally, all the tension
was part of a four-man rel,axation study· •Hl the apprehension, all the facade yo~
team for 18 months. create for the people around you, you are
Dubin likened relaxing more to a flight completely free of all responsibility.
into fancy, a mind-visiting trip to "The muscles relax, the mind relaxes
somewhere else -or doing something you the physical well-being of the person i~
like, which always makes a person feel bet· almost divorced from his body and he will ter. relate to What pleases him the best."
"It used to be if you closed your eyes, Dr. Donald Morse, an associate pro-
sat back in a comfortable chair, maybe fessor of endodontology at Temple's dental
listened to music, that this environment of school, headed the team that measured the
doing nothing was regarded as relaxing," physiological body responses of 37 men and
Dubin said in an interview. 11 women. "We now recognize that is sometimes a "The real shocker was th&t the instruc-
mistake, that relaxation is unique to the in-tion to relax did achieve deep relaxation,"
dividual, that it means different things to Morse said. different people. Some people are geared to The Temple research concentrated on
move rapidly. They have to be doing five states of relaxation; alert, relaxation-
something. Their best way of relaxing is do-hypnosis, task-hypnosis, med.ltat,Jop and
ing what pleases them the most -playing s\mple relaxation.
tennis or scuba diving, skiing or driving a Morse noted that the macbi.n'es that racing car. checked brain waves, blood pressure, pulse
"Relaxation is a pleasant emotional rate, sk1n resistance and muscle activity
state which subsequently results in a "couldn't tell the difference" when trying to l t hy · distinguish hypnosis and meditation relax&· P easan P sicalstate," he said. tion from just thinking pleuanttboughta.
"Suppose you enjoyed the seashore " Dubin bas taught hundreds of dentists· ~ubin suggested. "You conjure a ment~l around the nation how to use hypnosis on
picture oC a beautiful balmy day, the sun patients in the office and operating rooms.
Aaa
£•~
end are mllaln•· You
1cbolan oat there, will
yoa 1lve u a llddf
GOSSIP
Fin& aomebocl1 1old
.. . .
ERMA BOMBECK/ANN LANDERS
Horoscope )
81 SYONEY OMA
WEDNESDAY, Nov. a
A&I~ (March 2l·April 19): aian,e oce\lJ"ll
ID whal you own, buy or sell. Gemini, ·Vft10' naure prominently-and 10 aoes lb• flcure ..
number 5. You 1aln throu1h wrlUn1, advertla·
tng, aettlng views acrou to more people. More
c;banae ~wlDC oppoatlion from envious iD·
dlvldual.
TAVBUS <Apl'U 20-May 20h FJmllf altua.'
Uon ls clarified. M~or conceealon la made; be a·
gracious "winner." Libra, Scorpio persons
Cigure in scenario. You learn about Ume and mo-
tion, basic costa. You lnltlate project which could
"put you on the map."
GElllNI (May 21·June 20): Give yourself
time to think, renect and meditate. You gain
fresh, valld perspective. You can be rid of fears,
tensions. Pisces persons play key roles. See peQ·
pit! as they are. not merely u you wish jhey
might be. Define your terms.
CANCE& <June 21-July 22): Accent on de·
sire, frtencbhlp, business. Capricorn fl1ures
prominently. Older lndlvidual, interested in your
weUare, often IOWld financial coumel. Number
8 could play a key role.
LEO (July 23-Au1. 22 ): Study Cancor
message. Build reserves, refuse to depl.te J\IP-
pliea. Get rld of situation which drains, demands.
and gives nothing in return. Aries, Ubra f11ure
prominently -and so does the number 9.
Professional auperlor ii willing to "aet down to
caaea."
VutGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on dizl-
tance, communication, travel. You correct past
mistakes, start anew. You will be splritually
refreshed. Leo, Aquarius figure ln scenario.
Look to future -don't br-OOd about past.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You are pulled in
more than one direction. One who taught you in'
put could show the way. Aquarian ls in plclure.
Accent on lea.sea, tax matters, mate, money.
mystery and physical attraction. What bad been
m1a1in1 will "turn up."
SCORPIO ((}cj., 23-Nov. 21) -Lie low., play
waiting ~ame , check legal ri1bt1 and·
permluions. Forces are scattered. Take time to
retain senae of direction. You 1et 1reen lltht. to
expand. to communicate, write and advertise.
Gemin.l lt in picture.
SAGITl'AIUVS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Accent on
service, buic issues, work, health. Get rid of red
tape. Be direct, specific. If you do your
homework, YoU succeed. Those who pull strings
are eager to advance you, once you reassure
them that you do know the job.
CAPaJOOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Spot.U1ht on
change, creativity, expreJslon, affair of heart.,
Analyze words and deeds. Qemlni, Virgo, Sagit-
tarius persons could be part of scenario. Varied
interests combine, surge to forefront. You're go.
ing to win!
· AQUAB.R18 (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)!. Accent on
security, building base for future 1rowt.h.
DomlcUe t.s more important to you than ln recent
· put. Special care abould accompany actions.
Taurus, Ubra fl1ure promlnenUy. You receive
news concerillng values, especially wbere prop·
erty apprai•al ls concerned.
PISCES (i'eb. 19-March 20): Emplaula on
selection of ideas, chOGSlnl qualll1. Delualon
wouJd be a companion 11 you so permit. Be
speclftc in qboutJona, Be sure others cOm·
prehend your meanln1•. Tlke nothlng for 1rant·
ed.
PEOPLE I CALIFORNIA I NATION
f'ICTITIOUl~llNUS
...... ITAYMlalltT lllt IOI-... ,.,_.,. -fie Dlitl .......
It E C.Al IH0Ul>f l(IAL A'
\OCIAH:~ 1"4l Pwl lt1Nl't, H-1
le.ell. C.tllorfloooU..O ..... • , ........ »JI L.inlu v ....
0•1 ... ,t.eC.......C.lllOfNettOll
.Htlrey .... Crwtfl 1"4l f'«t '""'''• N ... •PC>rl .. <Kii, C.1110<1\lttf..0
Tiii• bUtlneu 1• <OnOuc:t" Dy •
.. ,,. r •I "'1t•l'WllP
Jen,.ytt. O••~
Aoyb 111\11.,
I 111' •t•I-wea filed wrlh f,..
Co\11\ly C .... k OI °'_,. Co.inly on tk
.-r21, 1tl1
lllCHAltO'-l.IMAN,IMl
u.11 .... u.e
IOl .. ltllltMMOctll.,..
~ll•UOt
L• A-1•, Clllttn\latto.I ,. ... >O
l'uDllohtd °' ..... Co.\•t 0..lly 1'1101,
No•omber 1,1, IS, U, It/I •II• 11
PU LICNOTIC
PCCTITIOlll MIM .. l ..
,._,,.. UATIMUY
He f91to.w'8 --tt ....... ~ ,." .,
111 "1""'° O.wvn -..-..._.. •• IY " o, .. .,.., Hll<tOQr....., by 1"1!ofMa
1)1 !loon ••~._-_.., 1'MU U...·
'~""'°" Ln, »n J ... n (•111\lrMO C.lllOHll•Ti.'1t •
lhom., ~ )lillW, l'IAI) C-•
r yw .. 11 Ln, \.tn Ju•n C.•11•uru•. '•'•'0' "'" .,,.h UU\ bwWnh\ I\ (~'.-cl Of 6ft lft·
llhrllu•I
lnom.1•-...nl>hll.r
lhlt \l•ltn~•I "'"' llltO Wltn IM
C.-IY (.kot' ol I.If'°""" l.bunty Oft NOV•
mo.r I, ••11
PUBUC NOl'IC&
..Oflca 'rOCAIDtTOa• tU ........ COllatOl'lN•
11A1IOl'CAU• IAPO. '"l~n'OI'~ I ..........
lf6U\TAVM.~ll ,I a
c:;u•\Alt tc• .. ltY >CHUL...l , ~ .....
llfOl t<Ac IS Mel IY 6tY!N .. ti. C••ic.o" .,.~ ~ ~·
CNt al1 ~*'6 """"• cialtN ~Mt IN MIO~ we,,....,.. M II .. U.n•, wllll Wit necti_., _....,., II\
tne elllCA d -Cl•k .... -tno
titi.a c111n. w ",,_._.., wm. ""''" lhe -~~le>U...,,... .....
at IJOOM;illlOf_A...,..,Nlll41~ ~lllornta mos. -.flldl ta 1111 •lt<.e et
,...... Dur.llWI>\ Of , ... llf'dlo•il~ '"•II "'"'" 11111111"""' Or•""" <..o.1.1 o.11y 1111« ,.,, 111ri.w,. ro the .. ,_. Of ..ia -
U• 1~.u.l'l.on<11JK .•• 1~11 ~11 UHlent, Wlllllft ~ montM ...... lllt
PUBIJC NOTICE
fl h I ~luti.n 91 U!li Mli<Af
C>attd h~ J, 1t11
JAMUE..HEIM,
Pu!MI< Aom1nl5l••tQ•
AGmlnlllr•IOI' wlll'I Wiii
UATIMEHTO,AIANOONMIHT •tWM•oltlleWlllOlll'lf
01' UH: 0" "00\lt-<l~I
PUBUC NOTICE ...
NOnca Ofl 141.•
OP aaM. ... Of'altTY
AT HIVA,a IA6.& ....A.,_
lllP&alOll'°"TOf'THI
tT A Ta Oft CAA.I l'OflllllA llOll TMI COUWTY wo11..,..a
t11 IM ....-ret Dia att.w .. il'l.ICE .11.A .. l(HIN°'-£11t, 0-.IH. ...... 11 ..,.., ,._ ttwt Ule ...
Agency
Aiinedat
'Wizard' ~--· lll'rlv•l4 ..... IMO# .ntrh•-·~t.lf11 ...
... MtJu., -t.~tatH,,.. 0rr W ASHlNGTON <AP) =•=!l,~~~~~ -Tidh eeat~ 1 OD Ce .._ .. ., ~ • ... ,....... _. cona er JWttalllnc lta
i..t ~,_..,. ""*"' • QIMI,_ own lni)Srial wizard of ,..,. ~ -s..er1ot ~ ..... rteM.t1t1e1N11Man1tt.tNN111tc_.. ~· Ku U.¥ Kla.n to cet ~ ~ ~.,:.::.-:."=~~ ltse~f an lntormant at tho
11tc.eMt11MIKtlllll'Mt>v....,Mlol!Of top, according to docu· 11Ww~-.otto1rn..or111....,. mentareltaaed Mond•y. ,..,. .. ~., .... ,.,.,......,.,,..._ The acb•-e lnvot··~..a .. *•Ill. In ft ..... tllt _,.." ....... ...... vvu .... ,,., t1Mdt 1n ... c;itY °' s.ni. deposing Jmperlal
A .... Covnty ot Or•flOt. Slat• of WI• a rd Robe rt M C.llMl'nla. jlllll1k111a1·tw euc"9M • .. • I' ICTITIOVS IUSINESS NAME AOIUAN KU'l'Plll, -~~~~~~~~~ COUNTYC'OUN•I~ • '"" 1v11ow1no P~nons ,, .... -aM.IUL•llll.SAMl,Oll'UT'I'
PUBLIC NOTICE totiow .. t ... wit: Sbtlton by conduetlne c.,:.:e~~":':::~.:t:.~ what the FBl memos Mttc:•I'-~ 111• 1n IN Plf1ct call(!d bluntly "a 1.near
.i"" c..wii, ~.., °' •• 0r.,. cahlpOl'"'" against him C-ry. liM9 C---'Y ..._ .. : .~ •
SUP'UUOltCOUltl 01' THE -n··m·." .... -ol tne ll<llllOU6 111111-• •U''•I# .......... _ .... , .. ~ ... SlATllOf'CALl..OltNtAfOH -~ • ......._.,. ..
lhllCOUNT'l'O .. Olt"O'C.t. t.lNNV > lVHOPEAN CUISINE P.O.leal#t
N•.A·•»n 't.OVNC..E, ~I •t•rbc>r lilwd. u.u1 =·~=-
.. OTICll 0 .. hllARl,.C. O f Mh•,CA'Ulll• l•tt-"9fWMINaltW.-"" w .... llM Pt•c•, SM•• ""•· The documents also
c.111or111a. disclosed that the Jo · l'tllll0H JOA PltOIAlll 01' \Ot1t.L lh<-11<111101" l!u.,,,.,u N~.,,. re· Publlshell Or-C<Nll U.ll Piiot A " 0 L f. T T f. II ~ 0 J. A 0 • l•rr•d to <OIJC>vr ,..,, 111..ct In Of41"99 -...-'I • MINl$TllAltON "'"" WILL "" (.oun1,onJ4n 1 .... 11 NO•, l),U,29,-0..C.•,1911 ...,).,, TtrmselWleC.-ln_,111_.,et l l R "" u1111w ~on c.on11nn.t1oe .. erna evenuo Service· HllXllO L•ondrd A H•nci.. 1icM Donni• PUBUC NOTICE ule •• , .. 11 CHll and b•l•n<e conducted what. it called tll•lt 01 HAkllLIJ '> ~Ul>, RG.,N•WIJW'lbe<Kh,(AfUM) -------------t :irn::'°O:.'::.:'.,.":~:::.--a sensitive investf1aUon 0.<tHtO t<;uln I ken64. 2204 Ooftn1e ACI ,
NOi IC.L I) 11ll<lhY (,1\llN 11 .... 1 NowpUtl b<"Kn.(A'1..0 P1CT1T1ouuuS1M11' • ._.,...,.. ... .,.wr1t1.,._w111 to determine whether h(Jljt,k f lJ C..VJl fW) Ul\:d n.-tllJIO • I tU't bu'tto• \\ ¥IA c.onauc.t..O OJ' •
,,,. foi==~:i-::,._.... :.::'IM.,...•,:r...:':':~~.! Shelton was miamln1 Xu OttHUO" fC)f prObttl• Qf \illftH 1tf\d l.lt .. n Q•Mtttl p,drtN-t\l'IC>
ot Aorntn .. lr .. t«t wtui lfttlf •~•to to "~'•n 1 Reno• .,. ,........,.,....,. ..... °'..... Klux Klan funds. The 11-v ...,•USI"'°"'• t•hrutk.• \0 .i.n1(n •\ lh1~ "l•l~ w-. h ltld ..,.,,n tt\t CAltOl.YN.$ Hl\llt FASHIOHS, 0.IM,.._..._ 1&, 1'71 d 1M1 H•wPo<l etv• .. Coll• Mau. -.itlOIA£LG.KHiNoLEA ocuments were among n .O• for IV<lh<r "'°'tl<ul""· ....a .,_., Co..nly C.l~•k ol IJ<M>Ot t.ounly on Nov.
tN' lln·t •rKI pl.C.t of ht411fl9 l'W. Wf1·t' J, t'rll c.111om1.nm ~ .. .,.wiu..w111· 53,000 pages of material "•' on·n \.ti tor ho"wn°be.or 141, t'-11. •• trl'"' A ..... ~:::c!"'...!;.."J:,4wlflvt4a :::=--oea.':!ata" released by the FBI on IU (IO• tn 1n IM <OYlrO<An of IJtNltl PuOh•hed 0.-C..U~I 0•11• P•lot.
n lnl "10 ) (If WIO (0Yfl, JI/(/() (.1vl<-Nov I, I) Jl,1-.,, 1'111 411111
ltn•tr lJtl'W\ 'ht\l o HK' (.1ly6f !:..1ot•
'"°''"•(.•UIOfnl"'
V•lfO Novt:n Ot r 10, '
¥flLLIAM E. ~IJOh"
<.OVnly(.k•k
kOlf.kl ..... UCllt.,,PAt•t.tk
Atterney •l uw
100 ........ '"'" • ~ ..... 1 .. Co,uM1w,CAtU2•
'" 17141 "40<1SJI Attorney for; Petlllon••
.._.vblti.~ \Jfctr~' l\J••"t l1J11., h+ot
_,.._,,!!'iml>t'ir ts, I•, u, l"IJI •lt'1'1 II
PUBUC NOTICE
I' ICTITIOU$ IUSINEU
NAME STA fEMl.Nl
l ne foll.,...lnci .,.,"'°"' •r• clolnQ """ n•s..•' ONA C.ORPORAllON, ODA DON
NIXON A!,~IATES. "O N•"POrt
<.entet O t lYt, ~utt• •U, Ntwport
111 .. cn, c.111 vi..o
UNA C.0.-•tl"", • C.•lltornl~ <O.•
po .. uon •tit N.'Wf'OM Uni., Clri••· ~•lo •IS. N.,.._t IMr«", C•lllornl•
'h..0
t "" bu>.,~••" toncNtt•o Dy • '°' por.atlon
ONACorll
Giid Oon Ntaon A"o<••ln ~ OW..IONl•onYn>10tn1 1 IH\ SI••-· .... , ...... With ....
C0<>nly C.ltr~ ot Cl••no<: COilnly on
No .. •mber ~ 1'111 ft ....
l'uDll.,_ <;<-t°"'' (J .. l'f f'1tol,
lhl• llWftKS •• Ci!n4Mtell bY....... •OH IHH• &OftALDl.ITllllf the dlJbanded acUvtties.
Glvl-1 ... ...,..., ............... ..,.
DellllltS.Smllh wt•WI .. .......
Tiiis •1•1-1 w•1 tiled wnll ltw PllOll"*' Orenot C:0111t Olllly PHot Def)C Rl.tft
County Clerk of Or...,09 County Oft NOV 12, 23, 29, 1'71 .-.n
PMW PUBUC NOftCE WASHINGTON <AP> s~~:~~~~~:~:;;>::E N:,,~~~.r,n;.~~·· °""'.~:; ___________ ,-The government's
0<1011er 21, 1tl7 -~~~~~~~~~~-!
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATIOHALIFOllHIA .. 011 PICTITIOUllVSINUI debt h• surpassed $700
'HECOONTYOl'OllANGE NAMa STAHMENT bllllon for the first lime. No.A-mu PUBUC NOTICE lM tot~~ I~ 0011111 bllll·
"'"'" ol AUC.USTA E. AOAtR, ------------· ....... : The Treasury Dcpart-0•<••""" l'ICTITIOU$1USINIEU ALPHONSOS, uu Pi.ctnll: ment's dally nnanclal
NOTIC.C. I'> HLREBY GIVEN to lhe NAMl.5TATIMINT Avtnut, N•wpe><'t Bt..:h, C•llfomla
trwa110,.o•theato••Mmt0o••c."""' r,,.1011.,....1r19per1oOM•reCIOino1>11s1 ., .. l statement for Monday
1n.1 "" ""'""''"av1r19 c1a;m~•11•'"'1 ,, ... u Loul" Oevt~. 1s E~ n. said the government
I ..... HIG <Mleele<ll •t~ "'"""''°to lilt NA110NAL RECREATION NtwPC>rtlleKti,CAllfOl"nl•'2*43 tntm, wltn lne nttl•.,itV vout~r\, In SVST EM!>, llU Shlrlt19ton Pltu. Tllil butlnela • CIWMluf;I~ II'( itO II·· OWed $700.12. billion al
.... otflo of tho <IHk of ltw ~bOn en· "V·'202. N.WPC>rt IH•<h, C•lllornl• OIV!dual •
tllleel <ourl,o. lop.-io...,nl lllem, wllh '"" 926'0 L.011he0.1;llOf'I ( )
r>eteH••YllOU<lllr>,IOlheunotrsion.<I .1o...,..s Kl,,.,_,111sSIWf'invt011 This st .. ~ w.s llltd With tlle JN SHORT •11,,. Olflo ol ART .. UA 0 . (.UV. II~ Pl•ct. "V·102, Newoofl BUth, C-ly Ci.t• al Of .. ~y Oft Oc·
Pine Ave.-. LDnO IM«:h, C.lllornll C•llfornl1'1..0 tobef 21, 1911. _
whit II 1\ lht Dl<KA' o! !>uilnfi\ ol IM un A""' _..., Fonytn, ._ C"-"· f'MC74 ----------cM,.,9...-0 "' u11 ""''b"' '"''•1n1no 1 net Pltu, ...._1 e.t<Jt. c.11torn1• PvbllWleel °'llf!Ot Cbut o.11y P11ot, the most recent tally last
.... P\l•lt"' W•d clKe<lenl, wllhln lour "16'0 Now.-1,1, 1s, 22. ttn •T»-11 Thursday The "OVem·
montM •lh:<lto. •ir•loul>lte•llon ot 1n1s This Dullneu 1s tone1.K1ed OY • " nouu Otntf'AIP¥1nt<lh'P PUBLIC NOTICE ment passed the $600
0•1•d0tto1>0•U,19n JC>WOft!> K•n-billion d bl l l I I MAA,,.C>1ARLEENAOAIR '"'' •1•1-..... 111..S ... t11 .... ------------e 0 a on y l •ocu1mo11 ... w 111 c-1., clef'lla10r~ c.0.,,,.., ... 0c. ttOTtcaTO<allDllOttS last year The main ARTHu:~,,.;~··"""""'cec .... nt 1ow11,1t11. '"'n ~~~~~~::"."'::11 reason for the mcrease
Anw11101uw p.,1111.,,., ()renoe Ca.•t 0..11, P11o1. TMllGOUtnYO"C>llNtN was a tli6 billion deficit
ltO,.lr1eA-Stl1J l•OY~ml>e< 1,l, 1.S,12, 1'71 471' 11 ..... ........i for f1•scal 1976 LOfltlHO,Caliter"'•-1 E1i.ttOf8AIUtY F. ltEY, DecNwd. •
Tel. uu1w-1 PUBIJC NOTICE HOTIC~ 1$ HEAE8Y GIVEN to trw AlterMyferEuc11tru ,,.......,.. • .,.. _ __.___,, Toll/tlottnt• Pubttslltel Orenve "°"'' o .. 11y P1101. ------------'"*'all'*""" -W. <Mtffn& eo-!Mt ----------'"IZ""!l.-·1._71 hovemt>trl,1.1).21,ttll •17'-11 STATllMllNTOl'WITitOllAWAL l:llt MMI ~ .,.. r~ to Iii. "llOM P'AllTNlllHHI" llllm, wllll 1M _..,., vouchen, In
No~. I# 1), 1J 'l"t, tV11
PUBIJC NOTICE
Sf ATlMENTOI' AllANOOHMl NT
OFUSEOI'
OPIRATINOVN.,_lt lflll Olfluof OW<,.._ Of -lbo"9 ..,_ "'Cl'ITIOUS IUllNISS HAMI lltlW court,w IOprnent them, #1111 the
TM tot1C>W1n9 pe<...., h.s wflhdr-n flKeMart _......,to IN.......,.,.,_
-----------•• • 9tntrt1 per111., trom lhe ti Ille ottlc.e Of .IEAOMl A. PAVER, SUPl.ltlOllCOUllTOl'TIIE D••lntr.t1111 ootrellf19 11""9f the fl<· t5q.,2IOSo<Aha.Wf'ly0tt"9,a.Wfty
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• llow•ril ~ea estate CNO recessed unt.ll Dec. 5 after ao encry,
exchable in ~ between Ttxu
Attorney General Jolla Btu ancl
attorne7a fpr the temporary
dmlniltratori of Huabea' estate.
HUI cbar1od Fraak Davit, an
attorney for temporery
&dinJ.n.l..W'aton AueU. lAmmll and
ber ion WUllana Lurnml1, wltb
proceedln• "in a mad doi fubloo" ln
ttemptlng to keep Hughe• from
beln& declared a Texas resident at the
Ume of bis deatb Aprils, 1978.
HUl 's stalem6ot wu a rebuttal to
Davis's accusation that Assistant
Attorney General Rick llarriloe sent
a secret document to an attorney tor
former Hushes aide Noab Dletrtell ln
excban1e for keeping Davia from
taldnc a deposition from Dietrich on
Nov.5.
* Ned BeaU1, nominated for an
Academy Award as best supportinc
actor this year for his portrayal of a
power·hUD.arY corpqrale exetutive in
the movie "Network," bas beeo sued
for divorce by bis wife of six years.
BellJada Beatty cited lrrecono.llable
differences in h~r Superior Court suit
filed in Los Angeles.
t
Declaring that no outside organlza.
lion la going \o dictate who will speak
al Central Michigan Universlty,
school taculty members asked Jue
Fonda to make a return visit. The ac·
livist actress ll>Qke Out. 10, and iden·
Ufied Dow Chemical USA as one ol the
"economic slants" which she said
monopC>lize the nation's economy. The
speech prompt.eel Dow to suspend "all
direct grants and gifts·' lo CMU. Tbo8e
grants amounted to at least $73,000 last
year, school officials said
* Jobe Dea.a. the onetime counsel to
former President Richard NIH•
whose revelatioos ot the Waters•~
coverup led to Nixon's resignation.
says he's starting a new career u a
reporter on a syndicated radio
proaram. "I really look upon tbLs u
not dissimilar lo the public
responsibility t.bat 1 once had ln
government," said the 39·year-old
DAILY PILOT Q
Dean. lU1 new radio series, • 'JUP.l to
Know," will conslO of five
lhree-mlnutf' pro1rama a week in
whlcb Dean will cover topic• auch as
women in the military, the tutu.re of
the Republican Party, Wuhln,ion
social life, lobbylata, God In
government, public opinion polls, the
pollticlan'1 Wife and alt safety. • The Navy aaya ltl tint woma.o pUot
ruiened after less than four yean of
fiylnf aervice.
, ( __ P._EO_P._a_· _)
Otrlcla11 declined to say why Lt.
Barbal'a Ralnef resigned, etrecU'fe al
the end of Ulis month. Source$ said Lt.
Raln.ey, .tfe of a.not.be~ Navy pilot, ls
pregnant. Ottlcials said she could
have taken maternlty leave and
returntd \o duty U she wanted to
remain lD the Navy.
Her resignation bas drawn
attention from Navy personnel who
question plans t.o lncreas~ the number
of women In uniform and \o widen
t.h.elr rotes. • _ Actreu·comedlan l•d1 Carne.
smUlng but makina no statements,
returned to Salt Lake City after her
drug cue was turned over to a arand
jury.
Mias Came, 38, wu charged by
Harrlson police with llle1al
processing of a dru1 document, a
tbird-deeree felony Conviction could mean up to 10
years ln pmon and up t.o ~.000 fine.
court officlala sold.
"CT ITIOVS llUSINlU HAMl. '"It' fOllOWll"liQ ptr "°" h•\ 4UMnednPd
th• u .. t o• tn• .,. ,, t1t1uu' uu,,rw,.~
ll'ttm• GRll~N VAILL~ HtAl.IOHS
HJ/ t• Avl'nue C.omp..Orl'\ t-ount•1n
V•ll•Y, (t11!turn1•lf//IJ9
Ttu-t 1<.t1ttvu\ hU\inf \ N,,mf· rt
ftirrtKI •o •oove W.t\ t1~"'C.1 '" Or•~
C.ounty on S. IY II.
Elmer c, fUQttnl, 1011• AvtnUf'
Compedro, founu1n V•ll•v
C..lllornl• 971118 Th1>1><lS1~•wtHondUCIWby•n rn·
<ll•kl11•I
StATllMCAU..OllNIA..011 llllou•l>u•lrwuoameolAOVENlUAE Hlllt, Callfofnle, WlllCll It tlle
T"l..COUHTYOl'OllANGll COLOURS ., 2•0• V.olmlrttsltr pl.cellf 0\1$1MSSCf the111-alo119dtn
JM. "'9MJ A""nut, S...t1AN, C..llf0fftl•92706 •II ...,uen .-nalfllng w Ille ftlale of
NOT ICE o .. HEAlltNO 01' 'fhl llclllloui Dualne.s "°""'Itel• Ukl.de<ecltnl,wOlllnlallr..--lhlallM
P'llTITION ,011 P'lt09ATll OF WILL mtnl for Ille ~rtnlP Wlll ltltd en INllrttP\lllllcMIOnofthlSnotk.e.
ANOLIETTlllSTllSTAMIENTAllY June 10, 19//lntntCollntyofOr ....
E> .. t• ol IOA MAY SCHOMAKER l'wllN.imtMl<leaGrvuoflntP.fllOn Dt1H:~17,1971 c .. <.UMCI Wtl1ta11w1ng· l'AEOEAICI< W. VEY
NOTIC.E IS HEAE8Y GIVEN tlYt Vivien ,..la, 'le Ju•"'"' Ori ... , ltdmlfllltrMWwlthtlltwlll
JAME!'> RAVMAHN MILLEA MS flleo Cotl•Mew,Ollf«'l'lle'2•,., ---•u.e.i.teol
herein• peirllonlor Proo.It of Wlllend VIYIMI ,...,"'°"" F•lt• trwMltlw,...,_,dK_ l~wence ol Lattan Ttstamentery lo ... n)l2 JllaOMIA.f'AVlll.ll~
the Pell._ ref.,.en<t to wtllcll It PuDI"-()r-.ve Co.ii Otlly Potot. Atl.,..,AtWw
NEW DELHI, lndla
CAP> -Death estimates
from the cyclone and
tidal waves that bit the
southeast Indian coast
last weekend mounted
today toward
10.000 as another
storm approached the
southwest coast.
News reports from
stricken Andhra
Pradesh state gave the
estimates of dead In the
fierce windstorm and
deluge that started
Saturday alon1 a
2SO-mllecoutal atretcb.
Air Traffic Group
Picketing Airports
mad• 1or futu.r 1)6rll<Ulan. -tl>at Novem-1.1, 1s,n, 1m •ns.11 •se.t119ewfiyo.tw
thttlm••ndolteeof-lngltleumot a-ftyNMll,~"212 ll-•G fUOt!>I
lllll •l•l~I '"'d' lllt-d w1fh IN
<.oun1y C.lt""' or Clr•nQO' C.ounty on
Ottobtr ll, 1917
hoH l>ffn .. 1 for DK. •l. 1tn, .. 10;00 PUBLIC NOTICE , .. , u~nrwm em., 1n Nc.eunr-not ~t ,. .... .,._,...,......,_
HO. a ol said~ M 7'00 Civic C...IM --wt-.wMI__.
0.1 ... Wtllt, In -ory of SMI• ""•· l'ICT1TIOU1•11so••H Pwllll&llM °'Mee Coett Oelt' Pa.t, '1.aJ
l'ubt1srwd o.-. C.O.st O•llv Piiot, C.11111-..ni•. MAMIUTAT&MINT Jiw.tt.2'.WO.C.. .. i.&.'IWJ.
D•ledNCl"e-17, .. 77' ll1efol_,..~tn14IOiflt.._ 4t0-77 _!<~emn.r t,t, IS. 12, "11 '411>11 =~$4.IOMN neu::i'oM.U J. COHAHAN & "'" PUBUC NOTICE JAMllSllA'l'MANNMILI.all SOCIATES, J2J02 GMlille (8plstr-, r-·-----------" lJtllS.. ... 11-.-P"tlCe S..I .. l!M, $M1 ~ c.fltt-, CAl------------
M)M4 ,..,._,,°"lllfl'721t n.lS
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTtCllOI' $At.£ 01' Ttt: 1MJl .. Mr. IONA MOltTGAG£ CIOMP.U.Y, •
PllAM>HALPllOPUITY tAP're,.er C.lltonola e«pWal1411\, 3'10 c.ntrtl
, "'Oll<ll,,,....b\19'"""'""'"na.r•no Plllltlll>tel Or-C.OHI O••IY Piiat 4vt1111e, 1111\e 617, IUvtrtl••,
..... , ... nlto the l•w ,,,_ ana P<OVIO< 0 NO• ,. • n. 211, .. ,, (.et lfornl• '"°' the vna•r>l-CI V.llLIAM H V.lll I\ $2-71 lhll b~lnett Is <Dflfi<lM bT A
I>' Int C..MllVlV.tNll A ... I~ •l IJ1)1 C:Of110Hllefl.
"'""let>CI !.I, C..r...., (',10 .. , <.•lll<o<n1• ·-----------IOHAMORTAGE
,, .... "'"-.ell •t OUlllK eucllon ~• •••d PUBLIC NOTICE CflPANY paor•u, ~• 9 o'(IOO • .m. on tho• tw1 a••
fit t-..ovt"rn~r. ttlll, •n• tot10Yw1n9 -----------... CTtnous IUSINES$
NAM.STATEMENT Ck.'!t<.,UkcJ ppr~I prooerty or ,,,o mu<h
ti>t••Of •S rn.y be ntCl\Wry 10\"ll\I~ 4
11~n dUI lheundlr\tQnecl fOf' f (Ot dnd 'n
flOtnltll ln<urreo •t lh•· •l>O•e
h tntio"•a.OOre», logethe• wlln<o>I•
Ol oGvtrll""9•flGtltP*f\W~Ot Mil~.
llncrfplion
Lo•e '.IUt, -10111-., .,, , H•na•ll
Ptobl rhon. OWN'r
:.1ereo. ltltvl,ton HI. ltc>IMlll
Ill: obti rt ..on, owner
&eorm ~l, lyptwriltr•, MIK.
-11tnen w•rt. Mi~ <1oth11\Q. lldDell
IJ1•1.owner
Amt. ll\>f
OIHIO
Adver11.inoto>b \ JO.W
t.•pen!1t>OfS.1t '~00
lOC.I .. )~YO
O•l•OthlllltllS.yO! Novtmber, 1911.
'htlll«YI k. V.llh1
l'uDlll.heel Of-c.o.ttt C>.t1ly PllOI,
~.o .. mt>e< 11,22. It/I 41'tl·l1
PUBIJC NOTICE
Ttlt lotlow!flo lltftonl 1re CIOl"9 bual·
n~Ha)
SIE!>TI' FLOWEAS, 17 .. 1 El T0<0
Ro.d, El Toto, C.lllomlat2U>
c.ro11ne-Jo!W'IO'N47lll, IOOC-.alte
P•lrlcl•, • 3, S.W. C111mente, C.lltorni.
•i.12
John Jr. ~ Yvonrte O'NttHI, "'"
C.1 lewv, EIToro, Ollfe>rnl<l'l7~
l:OwltCI .I. O'Ntlll, 100 C1llt
P•trlcle, • 3, s.ri Clemeflta, C.lltornle
t1•71 This DUiiness I• c~cttd Dy a
91MrtlparWltnlllp.
Oro!'"" O'Neill
'"'' Sii-i WH flled Wltn ltw Counly C,_ of Or-. County 0" Oc·
1-rlJ, 1'71
"'44» P\11141.-DrM\911 C.01111 0411Y Pllol,
No ... mlltr '·'· IS, 22. 1917 4134-17
PUBUC NOTICE
TaUaB~
BUENOS AIRES,
Argentina CAP> -
Secretary of state Cyrus
R. Vance flew t.o Braz.II
today atter reporlinc
"good progress" with
the Argentine 1overn-
ment on nuclear issues
but wlthout achlevlnt
major success In the
field of human rights.
"l think we made good
progress In nuclear mat.
t.er&," Vance aald ln a de·
parture statement. "In
the field of human rights,
we bad a far-reachlne
exchange of .vtewa. We
were pleased to see that
Argentina agreed to en-
dorse the declaration of
human rights "
~Blamftl .
BARILOCHE, Argen·
tlna CAP) -A runway
beacon went dark Just
before a chartered
Arcentlne JeUlner
smashed Into the side of
an Andean mountain
wblle trying to land at
Barllocbe on a 1tonny
night, airline sourcet re•
port.
Of the 79 people aboard the Austral Alrllnes
twlo·Jet BAC·lllt '5 were JtiDed and 31 were
lnjur*ti, four Hriously.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Alr
traffic controllers, in an etrort to
call attention to their demands tor
a new contract, baTe 1latJooed
intormatioa picket.a at Loe Anaetes
and Ontario airports here and at
nearly 150 other airport.I across the
country.
A spokesman for the
Professional Air Tralflc
Controllers Oraanization said
Monday that no controllers are on
strike and there is no work
slowdown.
But in Wubidgton, D.C., the
or1anl.iatloo'1 president, Jobn F-.
Leyden, said tbree days of
informational picketing would be
followed by a decision on whether
lo stage ~ slowdown during the
Christplaa season.
Jtf~ B•• St•ttae
LOS ANGE~ CAP) -'!be J.
Paul Getty Museum bas purchased
one or the world's most valuable
art treasures -an ori1inal
fourth-century Greek bronze statue
-for moretban $2 million.
The Los Aneeles Times repe>rted
today that the sale was concluded
last sum.mer In London through a
Getty-owned firm, and that the
statue is to be taken to the Malibu
museum in March.
6-Dealer 6ailtw
SAN FRANCISCO (APl -A
23.year-old Danville man, wbo
admits be IOl4 Sara Jane Moore
the platol aha used ln •n attem»t to
klll President Ford. bu pleaded
euUty to cbsges of Dot PQ1n.I
taxes on prtvato pn sales.
Antique IUD eollector StoJey M.
Fernwood lt. Mond•Y waa
1cbeduled to tie aenten'*'. Dec. 2Z
aft4r pleadlDI gulltY. to the
mlademeanor ebarie tn U.S.
( STA.TE J
Dlslrlct CoU.rt.
He races a maximum penalty of
one year in Jail and a Sl0,000 fl.De
for the eun tax charge, wbJch ls not
related to bis sale of a $125 plsto.I to
Mrs. Moore .
s..Mt Sed119 Cltv
LOS ANGEL£S (AP)-ASoviet
otficial •bo was tprayed wtth red
dye by a protester at tbe Soviet
National Exbibltion has filed a
claim against the city and is
demandlnJ either $.100 or a new
tuit.
Fedor Nekbaev, 53, aaid his
English wool auit, valued ~ 200
rubl.-, or $276, wu ruined, as was
hit shlrt and Ue.
Muriel Moorehead, ZT, of Sant.a
Monlca; bas been char1ed by the
U.S. attorney's office wllh
a11ault1ng an otncial pest of the
United S&ates. .
211eaee. laBebt
SAN DrEGO (AP) -An elderly •
woman died apd her buaband was
erltlcally injured followln' a
bealln1 durin1 an apparent
robbery at their downtoWn clotblnl
stoTe, pe>Uco say.
James and J .. le Effron were
discovend ~ooday blihl IA the
batement of l!:ftrOn'•'~ l<in1.sbed
Men'• Wear and Shoes after police
were called by paueraby who
noticed the door open and the &bop
un.ttettded. oUlcera wd.
•7he couple •8"1 fouad ttcid up and were the vlctlnu of an ap~arent beattn1.H aaid Lt.
Cbarlet Schlldcr.
I
-
PVJIUC NOTICE
l'l(TITIOUJeUSINeU
NAMalTATaMeNT
PVBUC NOTICE
The lollowln911enon ltdOlftl~tlneu "CTITIOUS eCISINIU
••· N .... tTAl'lM!INT • THE OTHER IMAGI, lttn ..,. Tnelol~~·•OOllll"""·
1noct•I• SlrHI, Huntington IHCll, neuu· ~lltomle.,.., E Z ~ k I E L A N T I Q U E
LI .... Cetel .y_.. ..... ~ lfttll'INl .... ER,, llJS WlllUler St.,
8.,Dere =ne, Huntington IUch, 8111101119 (, Unll 10, COSte Mew, CA
c..tllornla tt.21
Tiii•""" ••• COllCllKt• D• ... In· lrWC• Nl•.Conlnt, 131 E. mn SI.
ctlvldUll. NO. JI. CoM.I IMM. CA mv
Linde 'W4-. S.eYtll Gene All .. , 900 Clay St ..
T nit ne~T.; .. filed. ,_,111 tne Ne-.port ... ,,, CA n..a
County Clwlk d Oranot c:..u.ity •n °'" 1111, b11alneu is cenctwct .. Dy • ~rH, 1'11, QtntrllNrtl'lertlllp. , ,....11 BMA Allen C.rilnt Publl""41 Orlnllt Coaat o.i1y Piiot, n11 1tei.mtnt we& lllect wll11 tM Howemw1,1,u.22,1tn 41ll·11 c.ou111v Clerk of Or•~ County on
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE ......
IUl'IRIOllCOUltTOl'TNI
IT" Tl°" CA&.u•o•NIA f'Ott TMI CIOUMTY Ol'ottMel
Nov.), tt17. .. ..,
• PuDUthff Of°Mge C.oest Ooll'I' I'll«
Nov. I, IS, 21. 2t, 1'17 471H1
PUBUC NOTICE
f1Ue6
P11lllllllacl CKlftQe CoMI 0.tly Pilot
Hov.1s,22.at. OK.4, 1917 4'P-11
PUBUC NOTICE
j
5 .,
7 s.
D
A
I
L
y
t=OnL~iT r
OLSON
MESA WOODS
Convenient 4 bdrm,
beautlfwly decorated.
JQlt steps awa,y from So. OltPlua.
...... tors• NOTICE
••••••••••••••••••••••• 11750 down on '60,000. or G1• tll I 002 Veta no down. Many •••••• .. •••••••fa•••••• hornea to choose from.
IMCllDllLI caniirnowiiiiililllr.-_.:m._
VALUI lJIJ@@j1t: lldmd
~,.rv1ng Co~.1;1 M1" . .1 lrv11w
H1111l111qlo11 B1•,1c.h t~1·wporl B••.ic.h
11• CANYON B.MAMCISZ4t.UO
Absolute perf ectlon in ~ choice
corner Deane borne 0 Bourdeaux.,.
Ready for immediate possession.
Completely redecorated ln s oft
neutral colors. Van Luit wallpapers,
crystal chandeliers, custom drapes,
new cptna. 3 BR., 3 baths, marble wet
·bar a.ear far.
WULIY M. TAYl.01 CO .. QALTOU
. 2111 S.. Ju C I ... .... •
MIWPOIT caml. M.I. '44-4t I 0
1002 !u~·a':~:m.;;r::: 962.-447'1 W:im
Owner will consider VA ~~~~~~~~ll:Jl:.=~:=.::;:::;:.::;:;:l
or PHA. New c:?;t· n~w SHAlf 4•0IM MIWPOIT CIUT COMDO ~1!iaf:;:ir~ancf.ac~;: M~.100 Prl~ reCtucUoo 1 .t.owe.t WITH Y AID?
1nl brick flreplace Bet· Charmtni counlr)' Hl· priced s bdrm, dlnln& YOU'ii
ter' call on tbla OH. Uni. nleentry. Gourmet rm, 2~ batb condo. •tDDIM4tn
Ml-7171 kiteheD. Huge llYinJ rm Coordinated carpet1, We're not! See UU. new
t:wN11t9·11HUNJO•N<t• + dill area. 3 Spacious dra~• " wallpaper•. oflertn1 o.nly 4 miles
[.
bdnm, office too! Ter· Ubnew·$117~. , from the beach. Spadous
> ·IMliJIJ~I d:~d i:•:~JJ11~'!i :: PETE BARRETT ~~~.1 ~e!1p~~~ __ ,----·•••-=:<' buyers. Call faatt • -REALJY-new erpt.. new cstm
752·1700 IU·52tl drlla. Spacious 3 br, 2
CAPI COD O'fN '" 9•,, s ,UN 10 •r Mt• bellb •a lovelY tie yard I w1J?n~~== to 1,•NllM ~~~~~~~~~1:r ... ~
soartn1 2 story ret.nat! , :~ --=-=•-··-·-~ PrivaUI srounda protect --....... ---~-Hcluded entry to lavlsbl ________ •I
llvinl rm. Gourmet ADW.TCOMM.IM
kitchen overJoou 1un· OCIAMSIDI
abine courtyard I Wind· Main U ice n t 2 b r ma atalrway lead1 to w/emtom interior. Great aweeplnl maater Vint Super lndscpd. fs
bedroom plu• child'• fenced )'Cl. Only tu,500. retreat! Hw-ry, .ellfr U c.n: ~~/.~~1~,,Hict•. WAUACE&Co. UM.Toas
71~729-1966 ~IT-Hf: REAL;
~T[R~
OCIAHFIOMT
BJ ownr, dl>lx Balboa, 4
Br 2 Ba, Ii 2 Br 1 Ba.
541-1211; a-czai
OCIAMROMT
By OWDll', duplex, 2 Br 1
Ba-ea Ul:ltt. W. Nwpt. •mt: ISM221
-Walkt:r 1; l 1:1:
Real Est.ate
IUYAVITaAM
THE REAL
_ESTATERS. ~--'
PRICED TO SILL •-==----------
TllllW..ts
SUPP 4 'tlex, Cotta
tbruout. Custom
tur•• mirrored wardrobea. Wet bar, tbOrt w-1k to ocean, pool,
Jeeu:al • 1 ttnn1a courta. l>wner tovlng ~rea.
M'USTSELLI Me·ml
UDO ISU
Newly remOdeled • bdrm., den, i&
baths. living rm. w/ cathedral ceUlna.
Lge. muter bdrlJl. suite. $224,950
II~ CAMYOM
4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. BeauUfully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
lar1e lot. $325,000
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
I • 1 f~ , , < f' [) ! • O • 4 t\ , • ' f
....... IOOJ •1111 ... ...............................................
onHDAILY 1·1 '='~W:.1: ao1·•·St. 4•..ooL .... , .... ~· s1a.ttt PH,000 Parklike uound•
VltW Oi:eililc ~ enbuce rormal entrr to
One ol A Klndll Be tbe thl1 ele1ant home. ort,uw OW11C1' of thls a Spaclou.a ,llvlnl room. at.arr. a bdrm archltee· l'lelta. PJ.rU room over~ '
tural mHterpleee. loo~ hath eol&J1,Jard.
Glul, wood 4 movabl Wet bar. Oarcln View
electronic SQlt1ht. New kitchen. Spanltlt lll•t
ln.,:idout. mirror• 6 wooa . dramatiWJJ bleDdtd le
WAT!RfRONT compltt• mood of
HOMES cautomla UlettJle. OjeD AEAt.EST~TE •\&Ira IWHP to bq• ~1-1400 router •Git• • lfftt qiiarters. GI.'• ti')' no
do;i,o. H&artyt Kuat ~1.-:,ft,•~eg.m,
•
....
HOLi»• Y HAYOC -
C ... STNAS CHAOS IWIS7
MHT THI SIASOM PUAl8SI
**PHAll II ••WMO -owner Will
help you fiD ce th.la 1~kJUI 2·•tor)t HARBOR VlEWbome ed fot • tertainlnl I 4·bdrma, 3 ba , formal
dlnlog, family room -TWO
fireplacea. A M.UST to 1ee l
• •l&G CANYON TOWMHOMI -a real
steal at a reduced 1139,000! All tale comforta ol country club llvinfl Lu-
urtoua 2-st.oriea with luah carpetln1,
2-bdrma, 2 bat.M, fireplace, formal din·
ing room, HUGE master bdrm suite w /sitting room -close t.o pool, tennis
"golf!
••A "9UllM ,01 A DAY" ... or forever ... home, where privacy is King
reiana this "Monaco." This gracioualy
appointed 3-bdrm, 2 bath home in
st.tely HARBOR VIEW area bas
fireplace, beautiful landscaping & cov-
ered patio. Ample room for holiday
guests!
• •SPY•LASS -HIVll LIVID IMl
· Picture your Chriltmas Tree in your
magnificent Spanish courtyard
w /fountain, surrounded by a sky.
lighted living room, den & family
room I This 4-bdrm home has TWO en·
tertainment areas - a perfect holiday
treat with city ll&hts & water view!
QUICK P08.5ESSION -owner will
help fin(lllce. $244,500.
••THIS IS UVIMG-relax on your large
patio overlooking the bay & 40' boat
slip! This rare on-the·water home has
3-bdrms, 2 baths and is close to
schools!
••LA.UMA Ml.VIL -a sweeping
hillside view is only part of this 4-bdrm
retreat wrapped in lovely wrought·lron
fencing perched in homey hillside
area! Enjoy gorgeous pool & jacuzzi.
VA ASSUMABLE -PRICE now re·
duced t.o $94,900. Give yourself a pre·
sent. You're worth it!
i"Quail
liilPlaC•
Prap•rti••
752-1920
1400 QUAIL ST. NEWPORT BEACH
IALIOA lsa..MD-S 119 ,500
Wallt to beach, shops & boating from
this inviting 3 bdrm 3 bath 2·atory
home including lge mstr suite with ad·
joining sUnny study. Oversized double
garage, nice south patio. Situated on
lovely corner site.
CAMEO SHOUS-Vl!W-$310,000
Fantastic view of the blue Pacific on
one of best streets. Lovely home with 3
lge bdrms, 4 baths. den w/wet bar.
formal DR &.sparkling pool. Minimum
yard maintenance, 3·car gar.
lllD WATCHH'S HAVIM-HIW
View of Fashion lsland & bird
sanctuary of back bay. Brand new
home of appx. 2,300'. 2 Master BR
suites +2 additional' bdrms. Fam rm,
DR & great kitchen. Rm for pool.
llG CAMYOM TOWHHOMI
Great close.up view of Big Cyn golf
course! Choice end unit Pinehurst
model. 2 Bdrm1, den, 3 baths, closed
dbl garage. Immed. possession.
Comm. pool, jacuzzi & tennis. $198,500
DESlftaD'S HST! $1J4,500
Best buy & picture perfect! Highly up-
graded plan 5. 4 BR, FR, DR & sitting
rm in mstr suite. Really sharp &
tastefully decorated. Huge brick patio
w/planters. llh years new.
1002Ja, .. ,.,
WISLEY M. TAYLOR CO., ltlALTOIS
211 l S-Jo .... Hllh load
I 00J MIWPOaT CENTll, M.I . '4Mt I 0
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MANAGER WANTm
REAL ISTATI
A high earning opportunity with a well
known standing Real Estate Co. Open-
ing a new office in Costa Mesa. Must
• ll.a.v• -ape:riQace. S~y + Applica·
ti90& confidential. Reply to Ad •68.
Daily Pilot, P .0. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, CA 92626
1002 G1•HI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PllME DUPLIX
Well planned " well built
2 bedroom, 2 bath units
In •reat Costa Mesa
nellbborbood. Eucb unJt
haa lt's own private
yard, 1ara1e, bullt·ln
electric kitchen &
economical natural aas
heat. Very euy to rent.
Full price 198,900. CALL
5'56-2860.
.))
!:~!'! .......... !~!~!~!'! .......... !~!~
$7500 REDUCTION!!
Brand new 4 bdrm., 3 bath, upgraded
home located in the prestigious
· Woodbridge community; at $107 ,000.
this is the lowest price for the splendid
"Willows" Plan price includes the
land.
759-0811
450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 7b9·0811
--
THE REAL
f SlAfERS I -_,
Beautiful 3Br & den, 2Ba,
workshop Is storaae buHdln&, recently re·
decorated, ofrered by
owner. Shown by appt
only. ~lS,000: 675·5418
C.O..MMw 1022
CDMHOMI
BuUdable R·2 lot with nlce 2 Bll home. 10~ Down. Pull price la
SlM,900.
tS ... 350
I•• ••• •• r,,
t lf I' I• II • I I' l•f'
I I r---. ~ ~~~ ·-J
·~: . HERITAGE
. . k El\llO HS '-,... 1026 .......................
• -\ ·~· . r ,
Here lt il!°Asreat family ...
bona with 3 bedroom,
formal clb:l.lDI l'OOIQ, wee
bar, cu BBQ. family
room wtt.h a eom!oiUble ftreol.acia and coovealent •
to all acbools. All UU. for f only 1112.JOQ. J
I ..
••
red hill ~
!>52-7500
BY OWNER·RSJ 2Br +
den, blfl view, coop
w1bkrs, siu.ooo. sse.5268 af\5PM
SI.ASHED $15JOOO
AMODaHoMI
• t
EXPANSIVE!
Five bedroonu on poot.
sized lot with ~lure
landscaplq: sue upon .
mountains ft valley; all
Uua It more, • must see home. Now 1ellin1 tor
$12111,500 (65) •
• I year new 2 story rusUc
modern approx 2400 sq.
ft. Gi1antic bdrm.a & 3
bathl, elecant liv rm
w /wood burning frplc ai
formal din. Sunny ram
rm w /walls or glass over-•=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;:;;;;:::;;;;;;;;=:..1
looking ample back yanti--------·I
w/room for pool. Heavy
shake roor & quality con·
struction on quiet cul-de
sac street. Motivated
seller PRICED WAY
BELOW MARKET for
fut sale. Call now or
1 you'll regret it later.
Century 21 All Walk·ln
Realty 848 8080.
REDUCED TO SELL
By owner 2 Br 2'i'I Ba, ~· Deerfield Twnhme. Pvt garden patio. comm .. park & pools, many nice
features. $73,500. Open
House Sat & Sun 12-4PM
~ Goldenbush, SSS· 7219
f ~-~~~ ..... ~!.~
\ EASYUVING
C:s Coldw~ll Bon"er
411DIOOMS +
IONUSROOM
Senaallonally located
near scboola, one mile to
beachea " marina. Open
lcelfDc with lots of vif!ws.
3 Car garage fl large
family room. $139,500.
CJ Coldwell Banker
_J:.-~----.....---~--------~~ • .,, • ..........._
Ill •f•• 1 '•'• •\ ,,
l•I ,, I' h• t ' 11. •f'I I f",
--~-
TUUX.C.M.
Great Eaat1lde ~ 3br, 2ba, trplc, yd.
C2> 2br, lba, patio., encl. aar.aw.ooo. Tom Lee, JUtr, "2·1IO:J
bltn ranje, oven Ii D/W. La paUo. New cpt, dr111 ~ poL. Walk to bch, ten. GRt;AT RF.CREATION: .157..tlOO n1a crt & pool. $$25 mo. Swlnunln•, uuna&W, 2
6'2--0063 health c:lub:I, billlanh.
n1aht-111hted tennis · 4Br 2aly, 2 ca~ 111r. blk to courts. Pro & pro shop, ,.~ u... bch. Clb pr1v. Jmmed -..-""'"• 3124
occp. SOOOmo. 642·3242
WATERFRONT 3 +
study +2 Ba, fplc, huge
patio. 673·H87 &
213·78M768
AHHHOMES
DECORATOR'S
OOMPLETE Ef'FORT 3
BR, 2~ ba. ''Country
Fr.ench Townhome" in
The Bluffs No delat
overlooked' T ola II)
elegant! $.575/Mo.
BIG CANYON. Absolute
Jy ama:.h1n1 Auguatt
Plan. A masterpiece 01
dramatic design with un
surpas~ed golf courst
view! 3 BR. & d en
$795/Mo.
HASTINGS Ir CO.
RUJ..TOIS 640.5560
PLUSH 2 Br 2 Ba, den
condo, nr beach, PoOI
Cplc, $450. 558-8534,
675·1938
room.
FUN ACTIVITIES .
Fulll1me d1reclor, free
Sunday brWlch, BBQ'1,
lnp1, parl1e1. 1porl
tournaments & more!
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMJo;NTS .
Sinclei., 1&.2 bedrootm.
Fum. & Wlfurn. Models
open daily 10 to '1. Room·
male service avail. No
lease reqwred. Sorry,
adults only. no pell.
Oakwood
Garden A partments ... .,........., .......
880 lrvlne <at 17th)
1145-0550
... .,... hedt/Swtt!
1700 16th 9t
< ()()\ler at 16th >
st2 8170
Foaolow Vl11cNJt
621 W. Wilson 646·2010
FURNOlt UNFURN
•:hr town home w /frpl
•L¥e pat.lo & enc. garage
•Adults only.
Pool & jacuzzi avail.
I
.. M ...
NEW BREED APTS we l bdrm, bllm, cpts, 2Br. 2Ba, on Lido, brick -1 Br $260. Adl.llt only. No drps. Adil& only, no peL:s.
frplc, Dec only $550 pets. 3931f,111ik.on, Call ofter4PM 645·3198
f
(213) 793 0427 f
Deluxe Beach Co-nd-o, 2 1:; BACHELOR APT. 64
5-44
1
-2br, 2ba. $275. 3br, 2ba. -~~-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-• ., ALL UTILS PD! 2 Br a Pl s & 3 b r frplc, pal10, $385. Mesa !~: 8~'.:n:.aSM~ fu.~~· 100' from the ocean. townhouse. AdulL11. dis· Verde area. Ask for B-Ot· BACffB.01 IPT Semi-furnished. Avail hwasher. Gas pd. 778 ty. 645-9161or540-7088 •
now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. Scott Pl 642-5073 ALL UTILSPDI On the sand. lovely 2 stry
3br, den. Pool, tennis.
Yrly lse. 968·8263
Yrly $250 per mo NO 2Brw11tara&e$22S. Wuter 100' lrom t be ocean. FEE Cull · Su~ al Qny 1 br w/ frplc. Qwet, pd. U67 "B" Orange. Seml·Curniabed. Avail
556 7700 t · eteat location. No pets, Call betwn 1·5 M·F 'now! 201 E Balboa Blvd
any ime. adult.a. S230. 646·9249 636-4120 ' Yrl.y. ~·per mo. NO Nice Jte rurn'd room.
WESTCUFF Woodf d v·1 Large 2 bdrm, gurage, FEE. Call: S~e at ~me atmosphere w/k 4 Bdrms., formal dining. Balboa, 2 br apt-pool. Nr. an 1 lage pvt patio. Nr. sch ls, 556-7707 aJ13f,ime pnvilegealn a Ir& dplx
COWltry kitchen & family bay,beach. $300. 63l·0020 845 Paularino shopping. 1285. 645·7388 Dana Pot Marina. Pr rm. leadmg to loveJy pool or646-15SS 3S area. $1000/Mo. BeautUul. new, . adult 28 2 ba 2421 Elden Yearly, 3 Br, 2ba, ~ blk to wo~adn ove~70 • mulna i---------i apts. Great location. 2 r, · · b c h . I 4 7 5 Tm o . wo... aya. •" mo Broker 64282.15 OCEAMFROHT pools. 2 jacuzzli.. Garage. $275/mo. Call (213)921-3328,943·7754 elusive. Call aft 4,
3 BR, 2 ba, yrly. $59~ &:heduled movein Dec l . 6'ZJ.282S. _•_1919 __ • -----•
NFT HTS 2 BR, encl
patio, frpl<', l.:e corner
lot Qwel area 646·6251 ---
$700 3 br Condo. Cl!. Lo
Fashion Island. Shorl
tum only. 759 0087 -----SanC .... nte 3276 •••••••••••••••••••••••
STEPS TO HACH
2 BR, 1 ba, yrly $310
2 BR, 1 ba, yrly S375
associated
IJROKER S-·R E/\L TORS
l OH W ~nlbua b 71 J61. I
Bachelor S22S·S245
l Bdrm $265 $275
2Bdrm1295 $325
Hurry. make your
reserv a tioru. now!
TSL Management
754-0081 or644!·1603
PANORAMIC Ocean _Lg clcan2Br2Da,gar,
view. 3 br. 2 ba, tasteful-SENSATIONAL View & centrally located, adlts,
lyde<:or'd. $395. 496·8033 Apt. Dock avail. Fplc, or 1 s ml child. $295.
WeshNMter ll9I pool S69Smo Oeconly. 7SH927or545·0212
••••••••••••••••••••••• _ _675 9877 _ Nrnew2br, 2ba, gar, A.C.
Extra ni ce 4br, 3bn. $100 $3l51mo ~ Agt. Global Rily ~nh 645-4655
892·3393 u.mrnistwd -.--
- -•••••••••••••••••••••••NEW BACK UNIT l'rplc, ~ laltoaPfftinwla 3807 D/W, 3 br, 2 ba, dbl gar.
Unf\rnished 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $395. 675·2311 days. Agt.
Dana'olnt 312
····················~·
SHARP 3 Br deluxe beach
unit. D/W, Crplc, polio,--------
gar. Avail 960-2358
IUHDMEW
3 Br upt7condos, conve·
nient loc. 5 unllll avl. S4
up. 847-41887, 640·1751
fllOMlOTO'
1.000 sq. FT.
4600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
occupancy
4650 1--------·1 Call ua for: Winter-awn· lller•yearly & at.ore reo· 110019.n.
divided into e omces ID Meta Verde. Cpta, drpc,
A/C »:sq.ft. Mr. Hadle1
aes.883S
tall. We have them alll
Kurr Whit\' lk1lt 1.•1
/1../4..JI ~4t·W~HJ'I hi~ f f". h
; t 4 I h • •, ti• tU
••••••••••••••••••••••• •A'>< yrl 2 b 2 ba 2 8 -I -N ~ y. r, • Lrg 2 r n ewport
E1 Toro new condo. 2 br .. 1 story. 2 car encl. garage, Hehts $375 inclds ap· MEW HEW MIW
ba, view, garage. $350. ha I cony. pUances, gH " water. Delwre apts. w fW crpt.s.
S8l-42Meves __ TSLMgmt 642·1603 Klds/pelok 646-6715. Drps DW's. Enc Id
°""HI Unfunt 3600 $190. Nice bach. Resp. New CONDO 2 br, 2~ ba, ~a.rages. Very close to all
••••••••••••••••••••••• adlt t;til pd. Avail now. 2 frplcs. bltns, pool" spa sboppln1. freeways &
2Br. lBa. Costa Mesa. 106 E. Bay Ave, apl 9 $350. 875-4912 Bkr. schoola. 1Bedrm.1~ ba, newly remodeled, encl -$260; 2 Bednn, 2ba,1285:
garage, patio. show Cor'OMldet M• 3122 2 Br 11~ Ba Twnhae apt, Children OK. No pets.
place cond. $350 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• brand new, never lived 7931-'19'1 St.ark St. H.B.
645-7276 In. 1!!a1talde. upgl]lded Cr o a e Co u n t t y
SEND CHRISTMAS CARDS
VIA THE DAILY -P.ILOT
(Sli'!~~:-.
$SO WEIK & UP GARDEN APTS I
Apartwwlth Funtl1hed •••••••••••••••••••••••
Costa Met4I 37 24 •••••••••••••••••••••••
throopt. PVt fncd plltioa, ProperUea, 848·1188 o
fplc, D/W, encl sat, 642·7267.
adlta. no pets. 1st " last ---.-----..--• Mo. + 1100 dep. $350 mo. New bwldlng, 2 br, 2ba,
Also; 1 super lge 3 Br 3 Crplc & gar. On Van
Ba twnMe, 2340 Santa Buren btwn Slater &
Ana Ave. 541.5(28 Hospital 847·3241 Studio, 1 bedroom CORONA DEL MAR
Maldeervlce, pool 2 Br Townhouse. frplc. 2 BR, 1 BA and garage.
2376 N rt Bl C M Pool, tennla. Some ocean Quiet Ion& term occu· ewpo ' · ' •-C •-"-· Cl 541-t755or&t.5-3967 "' a ...... a views. ose pants. S2Q per month. ---8-TU-0-1-0--~ toahoppina"fmebeach. ADULTS. No pela.
Wlllu.Y UTIS 6'4·2611 631·3149 or &42·1080 aner
FulJ Kitchen lcTV ---------•-5-P_M_. ------·
U luu Spotless. Walk to bch. Llnens • t es 4Br 3Ba Fm rm 2100llqf't
CLOSE TO OCEAN Ytly, 509Acacia145-7048 Rov9 Suftes Mohl
2080Newport Blvd, CM
64.2·2611
Mailed anywhere in the U.S. for $1.00 ,
Send your Chrlatmaa m••••ll• to your
loved onea -write, type or draw your
card or we wlll aet ft In print for you.
Sampl•• are ahown below. Actual atzea
are 1W' x 3" for $10. 1%" x 8" for $20.
3V•" x 3" tor $20. A~d St .00 to the coat
and we wlll mall a complete paper to ·
your lovttc! onea. Your Chrletm•• Card•
wlll appe~r on December 8th. For more
Information or to order your card. by
phone plea" call our Chrlatmaa Card
AJ·YIHr at 842-5878. Or you may bring
or mall your card to Dal'1 Piiot Chrlatmaa
Card, 330 W. Bay St., P.O. Box 1580,
Coata Meaa, Cant. 92128. Charge It or
uae Maatet Charge or BankAmerlcard.
HAPPY
HOLIDAYS
to the
Dear Aunt Liz: GRIG~.S
in Vir.~n1a
DAILY PILOT
61!·5678
'
Ta.md!J. •
~dd 1t ... Bu1lb tt ... Olaper it •.• Ha~ r 1 ... Car~t
1t ... Cement It... Wlr lt ... Hoe Jt ••• Clean lt ... Move
it ... Press lt ... Pamt lt .•• Na I tt ... Plaster It ... Fix It... SERVICE ,,...c...... e.,.ts.ri c • .... ..., .-, ..... g ···················••4 ......•............•... •..•.•......... . .....•............•....•...••...••.................
B•JAppll.u~~rv. :arp.t1lanwt11Ja1youra llAJUtS1L£RCONST. Japanue 1ardenln1 X:C Student. Bli ~ T
TRIPCHARGl!SlO or mioe. Repaiu &. Newc:onst.Ri /c:omrn'I. r.ervice.Tree.tnm,clean Lruet. Traah, 1.1" lrtm, ~S llain, S.A c!Mnint &.oo! Quar ... k am add, remodel, PaUo up . Hau I an a. 1 m I etc. Raad1 f0·~70a,
M9-2a2 ~1-01 • blaar 1ump. ''" uccoatr.C.11979·4'11 lndacp'a.U·t403 s._.
AocMwdwlll ••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••
New'P9l't Manne Entpr. 11"9Ste...c .... •9
673-2940
f9l.14$~ ' I
SeU lhiDO fut WW. J>iUly
PUot Want Adt.
~.~: .... ?~.~~~.~.~ ..... !~.~~~~~ ..... !~~~ ~!!~~ ..... ?!!~~~~ .. ~ .. ?!!~ • !~ ... 11~0 HetpW..t.d 7100 WjjtM itOOtWpW..W 7100
ASSIST MAMAG-•• • ••• •• ••• • •••••••••-•••••••••••• •••••••n••··~··••••• .. ••••-••••••••••••••••• 1st, 2nd & ]rd T.D.'1 1''0UND • -/t)'pl8t ~/payroU ell· FactorY·H•J.nt traloee-
LOANS AVAILABLE WATCH Call: Acctng_ Bkkpog Pvt country club. For .8aokiDi per. for work 1n Public naU1ahyde fJ euvaa ...... !~im• ~!!""' .• :;:
Credlt'notimportant. 640-7190btwn6&9PM .TEMPORARY appt.call644-M<M. HIWACCTSRIP. Account offtce. Gd typ. Cl£W-302SS.Kilaon,S.A.Dyer ........ _... "~ ~,P-M.
lrol&er.49J..ll02 Found Female red Regia~r Today touwork AUTOMICHANIC TB.Lii lq. u .. lO.ke7 add.er. w. Is Newport Frwy, lllnan~S9•At ... a~~w•M' onvanou.saccoun ng& Xlnt emptov"" t Call541-7CMOfor•.-MIUl1!£RS da-~""' • ~ ' Money Available, many DachsbWld. Vic HB, Ed· bookkeeping assign-~ ci0an wi:!!1aeq~~ at JOcal om'C;e~f ~~·. -rr· MM ·--....... ~-·-------•~Ctr . .,3' 5. B~.
sources, all pr0Jecti1. Inger & Hell. 842-4411 or meots. Work close to p. wn • ee dlebact Savlnca. Exp. Cfrtlh9W/lcpt. P/ttme evenings & FACTOIYWOltlllS ~
$SOK min. 752·6052 842·1752. your home. Figure days. Larry Hunt Auto pref'd. Jluat type Variecf aiilea for bua:r Saturday• mana1lng Lite ma•ufacturln1
Speculators-Jnveators Lolst dog E. C,M. Neut, Clerks to Sr. Accoun· CeoterRd1825Lacuna Ca· ~m. Pia. eaU Mn. ~ewapaper office. Junior Sales Persona plantneeda-lp.Callfor real tors. Short term male, Tetner mix, 6 yrs tanh needed tbruout nyoo , L.B. 494.3000 Jerueforappt. • -.-> aell1ne aubacriptlona Imo. lloo, -tue.. Wed.,
money avail fut. Call Blk Wiwht chest, 20 lbs. OranieCo. •AlltoSal•:craoa rlnnlfBAClf door to door. Requires betwnl-4pm.~. BlilDaveoport549-9803 Name "Pickwick". Call Robert Half's Ex ri ced MUUI. ft COC«TAIL van or lar1e atation Accountempe pe en sa eaperson WAJTllSS wa1on. Phone collect, ••CTORY woua
MGMyWmhd SOJO ;!~~.dys 979•7900 Nsc;s.Mai~.~te:i1k ~~/~:R~s:.S~ SAVINGS Leamla40hret.bemocl 213·597-0H&. Aller ~~r'~!~'\ .. ~~typ-••••••••••••••••••••••• o. ower, ruon an Immediate opennlnc. excltln1. 1lamorou1, S:OOpm.~'13. ...,., tr--. AUJt. co..
H you're ool 1ettln1 Lost. wht. male Whippet ln~~~J~~an1e Full tJ me. Fringe 759-0181 hi&hJy pald Pn>(esa. Day beaeftta. C.ll: IMI0403
13.83• return on your in· Nds medical alten. La.st benelils. Call for ht· or eve 1esilou. Place· Fiber«•• W.....,.
vestment call Sandy seen Laa. Bch. U 119. tervlew; uk for Sales met U&lat. Good job op-,. Ros&.AJax'co.837.37« Heartbrokeo.i.ubstantial AccolDlting M.... Bar Id ,,... T pol'. DILIYBY/Aft..,... ChopperGun<>Perator d 831 9U l .. · ma • .... _ area. op ~ for Reiister. 2PM Rollen -Mola Prep •Aver;ige yield on pay ~~~~ · . or A/PAYAILE 137-4100493-4511 pay.Nlfbta. C4111714/7Sl·tl94 to SPM. Over -/mo ams.Blreb,S.A.na
olfs to AJax investors, Exper. pref'd. 10 Key 7S.-!M97 So. Call#. Cocktail _,.,
Jan lhru July, 1977. Lost: German Shepherd, ability&llletypin1 Xlnt Automotive. Waltreaaea, Inc. 11922 aroaa, 1 day week. FINISH CARPENTER,
State Jaw permits a pre· fem BUt & Gray wJsllver work in I con d s & New Delail Shop needa •lllCE STOii• Sky Park 81, Ste C, ~. tnmt be food. Owa tools
pay_ment penalty charge choker & blk flea coUar. benefits. Apply, NaHonal help. Assist. Mg:r. for Scbwiml Irvine. Ca 92'114 Delivery, PIT, stron1 yng not requtr.d.1'op wac•.
eq1.Dvalent to 80% of 6 Vic CM. Answers to Systems Corp., 061 Tap waaea paid. f;:nglne Dlr. Sal $10,400. Must man, ovr 11, local area. 645-3730or7•M23
monttbs unthearbncld in "Shannon." Days Birch St, NB <Nr OC Steb·ja,me'!~ enll1 bePllllltera, Juve prior bJke mech. CPO/tJCmlt!A301LhrWwakltNreit~' Cln.drree.5CH378. lniaber, r ... flnlaber. teres on o a ance. 836•9600 ext 301. Eves Airport) EOE .. ers • po a rs, UP· uperinaatore.552-9222 '" · · .... ---------"' Mortgage Broken .. or 646·7092 holstery shampooers, 54CM)573 DBJVEAYMAM lounecl. ope1llqt for ...
fcred to Callforn1a re1ol AdMtles Dlndor cheek out, pick-up & de· Bo~ltkeeper fulHlme. Ree p'd only. ffl"1 qualtty dents only. Lost: Young rem cat. Drk (Q!rtifled> F/time. Rep· livery. ~ply at Stimulating atmoephere eo..p.lft Typht Be p.b. ne5t•tu" eneraetlc. cuato m wood•ork ---b n·"C t' VI . : · d """" borBJ CM Health plan plus other Speed • accuracy ac • oners, 4020 bJ i b Lid PARTNER WANTED fo rown ... Y iger. c. ly to Cla.ss1l1e ad no. 66, "'"""" ar • be ft S 1 Campu.a Dr, Newport ca ne I op. o
H.. E. INVESTM EN~ Btwn Edlnger & Mc Fad· c/o Daily Pilot, PO Boie 645-1030 L.H~ 1a~~a.a :~n~~!: ::•:~·re~::. ::m: Bch. WOOilworb..al.Q290
operation. Sl2,000·$2S,OOO denoffEdwanis 897·2674 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca AUTOMOTIVE appt.586-•5 pasteup & productJon DIUV-Y chareeBkkp .• Harbor
required. ENORMOUS Lost. SmalJ Shellie 11120 ~ P..+s C:O.terllll•! • knowled&e helpful. Work -area. Eicp'erience with
PROFITS can be made Sable/wht male. 7 mos. ACTOR's Co·Op always Get set for '18' Chevy de· BOOKKEEf,fR· ~C, t 1 with ma1azh1e'1 art Peraon to make de· multiple aet of boob
QUICKLY' NO RlSK! Nr Wilson /Harbor. CM. sean:hlng for those aeek· aler m growl~I Orange ~~o~~9160ce. ~J dept, lo Npt Beh. Xlnt Uu:'~ ha~le oic sup· throuih financial llate-
6314039, 675-4030 Reward . 642 ·4689, ing employment In the ColDlty Airport Complex · Ol' beoefita. Call Ruth or ~of ,::.1 ~ic n~~ ment.a. Send resume to ~1.Tn11t ~ entertamment industry. seeks two parts coun·BOOKKEEPER, & Penny,n4.f75-1330 aomebeavyUfUnareq'd. =:~~C!!!'t~~°!;:c~: Dftdi 50?5 trSOftClll. 5350 All ages·lypes.1167-0282. lenrttm with G~ dealer 1enett1 offi~ work. Part Coolr~t Xlnt bendita. Apply 9:11626
ua.rdS fc GundeUu: earn xtra money for
hoUdaya. Temporary, f\all • p rr opemq frona
Nov. 14 thN Jan. t1. im. Various abif\a. \;OU(d
work hatq permanent
posltioftl. Uft.armed, UD•
lfonna fwu'd. APolY at 12'7 w. Vlctorla '·Ave,
Gardana. or betwn
INPM at mernberthip p6ckup:
Hwitlniton Beacb
1212 Edl.n&tt Ave Fountain Valley
1'1'08t Brookhum MLllMii Vklo .
:u500 Alicia Partway ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Advert·is·mg Parts exp er 1 enc e . time. Apprx. 25 hrs S 11 ....... ·•--a-•h""P Jaclt <t Raub Co., Attn: t----------Permanenl posillons in p/wk. Schedule flexible. ma ~ ..... •..-~-""' · Roale Jlrock, ~ JS&Mr Retired couple has money Dnnking problem? RESEARCH pleasant surroundings. Call Meyerbof's, 557-6232 £:...M~re. •: Will •tratn. St, C.M. 714n51-2510 bounor M~;rtnotiwr:!~ ,•~R!=S·,,.!,'!: t.o loan on tst & 2nd TD 'i. Call Alcohol Helpline Oppartunity for advance· _.......... p ....... --""' II14 ~" i\gent.4~ 2.thrsaday83S·3830 ASSISTANT ment We train. See Bob IOYS·•llLS Q>ok Esp. nee Apply in DentalAaalst·Cblllde. 31h .::=. ~ ::= :::.::~~.~:.••
LOWEST PREGNANT? Brigbt, tnd\t&Uious lndlv. Cook, H 0 WARD U·lB .vean of ace. Eve· per'aon, LebWlrrlla clc)-s. Pref. CDA or ROA who wiab to aupptemeot
Caring confidential needed to prepare .. l'fl· Olenolet.. DoYe & Quail maa wcrit. Obtain new Frenct. Cafe, 414 No. or mlo 2 ,,.. eitper. family ~me. Apply al HAIR stYLIST Wiided.
Interest Ratll coun.eling 4' referral. cord result.a of surveys. Sta .. Newport Beach. aubserlptioos for the Dal· Newport Blvd, N. B. '14/833.1831. MeDonalda, 700 W. Cout JU.UUteed aala17, mt
Abortion, adoption & Req's a great deal or ly Pilot working with an 8U-e100 DINTA.LASSIST Hwy, Newport Beach. worklnt ~. pd
I stT.D.'s, also keepine. leadin.&delatl Must be AVON adult 1uperviaor. Earn Ca. vacaUOnt + otber 2nd T.D. LoCIM.. APCARE 547 .2583 able to type & compose S20 to .., per week or Cook. exp'd breakfast ~ve. F. VL Y 4fc benellta. GZ..ee.sd days or
FaarestTermsi.mccl949 own tettera. Apply, Na· ll'lOl'e. Qll.1213/ 5&7-0398 cook. $S.2$ br • op. needll bright, en· 6ALFllDAY •S441aveaforappUn·
Sattler MtCJ. Co. LINDA Ir VICKI tlonal Systems Corp.. Cfriit.n.s ~ DOOb·Spm, 2U/ 498·2473 6'U1181 " Lbu.alutlc cbairslde Ute lfpinf. variety of tttview
642-2171 545-0611 OutcalMCllSGCJe oc4361BircbSl,N.B. (Near leCJllltMow...... 5pcn·9pm,CaUCollect. W/e;i:anded doUea to d\ties. Call Moo. Tues --------
FortheF9rofltl Airport)EOE. ... •• .-.... IUSIOYS COOK com e::itbet.e=·~ftt Wed., betwn 1·4pm: Ht:ir~m~n·M:J'Hlcal
WE BUY FIRST & 2ND ., ........ .._g 11 Orange Co "'"""' #or ..... __ • ..: . .-n• 1JP· oppor. o~ • .,._. ~ ~h1. re'"'paJ-... roo~lamnt' TRUST DEEDS. AGT .._.-..w • · AmblUousCoupleWanted Rl!PtllS8ttATIVES Eves. Dltlrnao's 1' .,. ·--uo• • -........ . .. •
714-496·0800 1135·7313 to manage a small bus. Best time to establish Restaurant 801 E . for (utW~ Jntmf...Ap k: 'r\'AL1l"t. ~u.re. GARDENJNG mainl. 2811 S. Bite S\, Willnotinterferew/your cuatomers Interested? Balboa 81, Balboa U . Cou\Hwy, .. t a ... e exp, en· FOREMAN SA.
$80,000. second T . D.
behind $78,000. on choice
20 acre sold North San Diego County tor
$282,975. Paya 103 In·
terest, due 3 yrs. $61,000.
buya it I 751-4827 o
4f3.1W eves.
Amta..c1-nts/ Penoaat1/
Lott & F04imd
* ... ICHELLE'S * Outcalt M'as9age
10.uf·aAM · 731·"62
Splrltull lleodlr
181SSo. El Camino Real
$an Clemente. Fully Ile.
For appt. 492·7296
•SHeRILEE • Ctrtifiecl Masse\lle
House Caba· By Appl. --
present job. Muat be will• eau 640-1041 or Zenith 673-7726 Ma-1475 tlll.miaaUc. 83H4.20 MuatbuJlper. ---------
Ing \o learn. Mr Hall, H.359 COOi Deolal, chalr•lde. Frt, 642...oTrbtwn8:3o·5 ...,.I 8'2·1634. US DRIVERS Sm. Van exp. As of Dec 1. X·ray 1'orbe~utyta10h. l'ullor
L. ......._... lfPe b~. Keep van at Far small retirement lie. required. Xlnt op· ia--------· p It Im•. R le b • r ct Antique Auto Restorer. r.--10'Jl' home. Will traln for home lo La1 Deb. Call po&1. ~ snanAL oracE Oueltttt• Salon; 100 must do everythlng. For y rOlda Lagbt Bua Dr1verCert. P/Umei 494.9451 for details & U.1.1\ rr• Nft'portOtaa.Dt.N.&
Exp. " refs req. fl hr. houaekeepln1, Tue1 . 3 hn da1. 7:11> tll 91 3 U appt. Dental Chalralde Asst. Jllany Needed Now I Hf'D"'W'-,,. ... ...,,111 ..
Call Employment Dev. Weds Tbura, 2 30 to 4 30 '185 per mo. Pleasant ll'OUp prac. •<>Pen1:aoam,5:10pm Now"':!='a':::~ •• ~.
Dept. 5SM5U. Ad pd by 6:30 In Mla•lon VleJo. '17H05l ook for Hamt.ur1er N.B. tncludea aJtematto ..c.lJEveninpm.m2 •PPIY~';:i.
pvtpty. P>/Week Refennces rt· CAllMIT M.AUIS Hamlet. exppnfd. AP~· Sat AM'•· Exper'd oru)'. Fora~loJ_"lli"s yatd ~SP'li!a Jtl!S w. COaat
A/Payable· Asst Bltkpr qwred. Call 83'MMl82. ly ln J>tJ'.IOD btwn 2· . RDApref'd,'40-1122. MO )fwrf ".-pta.eb.
needed. Xlnt co. Sat Ba-.ittarfortmo. boy. Exper. pref'd. i'/Ume. lS45AdamaCK Departmeni Clerks, ----·--------
>y• APIJb', Jlalnbow Cabinet DOQ(ASSlSTANT CuatomH Servlce HOSTESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ D_ANCB ___ ()_F_FUN___ open. St. John Knlta, M~~~~l 9-S. ·Shop, 32H2 B CaJle COOk. p,,.... Part · or fWl Ume. Boat Clerb, PBX Opn1. Loni
a.o.t&Fomd 5300 ~!,.312n7Ea1 atman, l"lne. ___.. Pel<edo,SJC. l>aylhllt. ~xper'd lo lo· expr. neceaur,. Call •abort term aul1n· EL TORITO aow In·
••••••••••••••••••••••• Btfi nud~ &lrls dance & ,,...,. · BABYSITI'ERNEEDED 1tltuU011al e1>oklo1 Wed thru Sullday . men&a.TOP• CAsrvieWiq for bolt.ell.
Lost or Found a pet? Call ~?M 5~~~-~atlO~~ ~~ ARTIST/PASTEUP Evenings & weekends afeterta/Induatrial. needed. Call Jlutb, f13.3515 Day ii nenla,f poUtlon
Animal Ast1istance Christmas ati 2' NearHarborBlvd&San M2-S551. ---------1all1 .. t "' ~i EucUdAnah559-6150 Draltin1 inking pre.ts vac on. Dieg Frwy c M M . •---------• "•· ~P 1 n LeagueS37-2273nofee. FREESESSIONWJAD rreparatlon. E~per'd smaUchlldren.S46-8683 Fti, 06:30pm·Upm. S:t COOK htloc.Montbna y 0~ LOST: Neutered male, ELAXl nterutln1 work .Babysltterneededlnmy llam-8pm. Grlll, lto5Pll.or8aturday.
Himalayan cat, beiae JlBobJamNea\~~AssGeEur BelldU Aadvancem bomtt for 3 yr old boy. -1andwlcbe1, aalad1. WFull Ii p/Ume. Xlnt ---------C2Z1(_..~~8l«vdW.)ay
w1brwn marklnp le bllt ~ llNIJ'Owtn1co. 971M860 Coeta M•a area. Own OUler jobs allo •vall. •I•• Benefit.. Meta ""' -~-lace. Vlc War.der 0Ulcall9·~.494·5111 trans 5411-'BSSaft 12 Call~ Verde Conv. Hotp1 611
r f •.1r • 1. \If' 't I ' t
Newland, HB. a.ward! •S ... ..._.Dv•s* AITMEIDLIWORK . . . t:::'"'""""'.""~-:-:·:--:~~-::"'t..:Ceftter=::.::St.i::;CM::.:::548::..·=5585:::::..· _,
-.1683 an.3PM • ~ ., Maturereap.ad\lltw/eJl·Bukinl-•-s LEANING WOllEN *COOKS• ,...,.,.... ..... per. lo knittl.nf, crochet· ·--W~ NT ED. $4 hr . Loll: Male YorltLe, lrvble ..,_. ........ llltlsoeed.lepotoi wanted H.B. Branch lnloe/NB, Hunt Bch
COUeae Park area. Gt11 ,6P~"'4~ for poailloo In Arl Full & p/Urne poslt10114 ==uathaveowncar.
& tan, 11pprox 10 Iba, 81\~T Needlework Speclallty avail. Bank •xJ>etr, needs dally medlcaUon ENLAltO•DIT Shop. Some retan exper. pref'd. t-_.._ _____ _
Reward.651-4685. llnugllHyptosls reqalred. us~sue ApplyinPenoii L.&ANl~O LADY
Gronn :terapy, welfnb ,_Wkda _ _,Yl_•_tter_e_AM_._--t Peraonnel Otnee ~h, competent •
d ...... .-Mon·Frl, 10-1u~1-1 ex;~d W/cl.n'I. ID•lnt'•
aepreaa on " sex nl• G Dldiuhile... f1oint. ow., trana • xlnt •---------pot.enc•. MJllQl 63l-0334 10230$. Paramo\lflt. ..efa. I hl'I ea. l'ri, '3.50
EXO'llC GIRLS 1>ownoy,eaut.eau1 trr.8"-4416H.a;
'
C2U)-.Nel Mauaa• Mddelina F.qual Oppor Employer Ou&call 542.flet/su.mG
:t Ll-!.fll~~
'.' ,,,•. ''
DAL ISTAft • SA SALIS
We bave qperu.oa for two m with• Pf~E Framer, -..
qperience ir;t commerclNal & L1nv•ct· p4. •1~:: :.;~~ ment properties. Wesley . Tay or o. aACPM
b'y a ::Y=d c:r::e ~°':1 ~~·!~ ...,...,...~-JIM--.,..•IC_M_/_
1ldla_r1. davi1io9 or branch of AISTCAMB4.MAN
somet.bl.nl else -Ju.t head~uarten. :.:&:: ~ + bonus. ~:
Applicants must~ hl&h t pro-uca .• f~t-r.:!ua ou.-i COAST. DAILY PILOT fe11lonll qual ties & intqrity to Avo,Cll HOW. IAY ST .. COSTA MUA
match our own. Interview by app(bt--.. ... , ... 1.-U_• .... •u_"_a__ betweentbebotinolt:ooa.ra.·S:00p.0>.
ment only. • eau 1.pr •PPolotmat eiea ..
WISUY "' TAYl.01 co .. llAl.T'OIS E.lpr'd cttato elHner 641.-4121. •xt. 276
2111 =• 111" , .... ~--~r.»~ ~------~-0p_pc>rt_wa11_1_E_m_P_'°_>'•_r":'---NIWP011T C N.I. "44-tflO btwotAll•Sa»M. •
' W-4' 7100 HllftW..ted 7t00 ftltlS~ ............................................. .
. OfftleH'nnter ... to atart1•--------1---~--------------· ......... w-.a......a 710 ..... wa.t.d 7 t + bon"'8. 40 lit wk. Co. 8ALEs ................ __ ...;.,;.;--~---.;.__--I .. _,,,, _._ ..................... _ flt 1.p 1 p ~r"lnlRIES ,, ,... .... --·----... ---~mt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• ucne •· p1y. en I FUNNY illUI l.I, Want &o makt 1noaey? •• Houaekeeper/Baby1ltter. MACHIMIST DYUver, 1MIO Placentia Can you HU on the
live.Jo. Ref req!Ured Centerltss Grinder Opr. Ave, CK, Production TflNG & nflSTS phooe? Top Sln our bml·
Prefer Eng spkloa. CdM Exper'd. Deltronlc _De--=-pt-·------1 Be~ for the up. nea. 8"-3030, 11k for
areaSU.5185 Corp., Costa Meu. Print.inc. VeraaUJe phot-0 Har•um Comln1 holiday•, earn _Ray_,:._· ___ __,.; __
HOUSEtCEIPEaS ~ tys-etter/pa1~rson. f"l.ft top sssa temCC:r~ ... , _____ .... __ •!
No exper. nee. Bayview MAID, The Seaclltf =:-n~p. ~:~: ON THE WAY ~~ ~/}: 'NepboneSaJe1
Conv. Hotp., ~ Thurin Motel, Ul81 South Coast on A.II. Compsel or hnmediat.ePlacemeoL HOUSIWn'IS
Ave,CIU42·3505. Hwy,Laa.Bch.494..a92 ~m,l!!r equtpmenl JO WOii. · · SSSSS$S$SSS 1~~~~~~~~[~~~_:_ __ _j
Houlekeeper, mature 7·3Maintenance, retired cpl. --OIDN1 ~Q~ office.• Fal.11abenltaltho\llblt1...;
ab1ft in guest home. CM. (or restaurant. So. Laa. Real Est.ate Sala People I I . 0 overload may be~ U.'• Um• to Porta bl• dl•bwaaber, Brand New DIHU•.
641-6716 are 30 hrs weelr early ""' start ma aome extra Kt1cben A.Id. Xlnt coad. Butcber block w /4 · a. • waated. Up to ...,/JO~ W'HIT JO GO 557.0061 cuh tor RlSTMA.S. '8$.875-ll&J.afU -•tcblnt, chra Muat Housekeeper/Cook, live AM. Reply to Ad ftl, comm. •put. Nwpt Bcb Ml 'nJne.Ura IJbrarlel bu ~ • .._ :.&.eit.J.514
1n. Must speak English. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box s:n~ l723Bln:b8t,NB tbe nn..t 6 000 of Ute Lrc.copperPhlkorefriC. ..... _ a,.. 1560, Costa Meu, CA. --------1 H_.....__ ~~~~~~~~ bl
1
.,.___., • ___. .. 35 Refs Good Home. 92826 1--------•1 ,_,._.. .:.. moet prollta p/t me .-~:m••••nmc~-· ... Matd>lq.,...a•aya.
'673-3502 ..,__...OMIST _...._ Secretary Joba avail. We Otter S Call54Mm. port&lovewaL~ M
.a. ..... .a. l!..aa ~-fl• "'--_.,__ -..... $ .......... y •cHTS _._,,._ ...... dav to fit Into ..... --on ~r1 .. New ........ 19 HOUSEWARES SALES "'"'"'-f9r buay North H.B. Real ....... or---.,, -::_ vn "'y • ; acbedule~ a baae .,... • -~~ "# _. ..
PERSON Perm position SISOjWES( liltat.e ofc. Exper'd. 5 pott._y-.--Mr11V1~ .r. hourl.)' waie + a con\· Blieed ~. l!vvest Gold Maple couch. cbr, aml
full or part·llme. Apply To supervlse adults and Daya. lncld't Sat • Sun CALL US FOR Excellent opJlortunlty mi.Ion as an a.lot bonu. \f Hber Iii IH dryer coll tbl as match• c 3107 E. CstHwy, CdM. counsel caniers. Must 8:00 &o 5:30. Real Estate AN INTERVIEW for person able, No travel, F/Ume Js 8S.f$30n•. roelrar, tlOO/btt ofr. --------•be over 25, enthusiastic, Ucdeslrable,butnotnec. IASlrAY + self•l•rter. Dictation available. MmtMUby,$at.l'Ja.IMt Insurance Property & outgoing and enjoy peo-Call Vera at, 848-1371 lor IOMUSIS akUla required. Marine TIRED OF THE llcyd9t 1020
Casualty Secretary. Ex· pie. Dependable car a appoint. COMM + Industry experle nee ROUTJNE"? ••••••••••••••••••••••• to rtad Jn bait Or per. nee. Xlnt benes. mwst. Available even·~~~~~~~~ ~DtstanceLlnes helpful but not crttlcal. TIIJSJO~lSFOR YOUI Boy'• yetlo' ~bwlno have a bed back? T"'-&'k';',
5L'::·~:':."."'~~~~ ~ ·.:rn.t ~:::rog; RECBPTIONiST-G••· Cao F&M.=:·.... Xlnt bene!lto. ·~~· CALL U9NOW AT Vanf1¥, ... wheel ... t:t ·=~ .. ~'l'.tr.: Maurine Bradley, between i :oo and Dentistry, Npt Bch.-rAIT-TIMI ~lAak for e ' IJMotl 8pd lb xh:at coDd . ._ bed. l>b mdl. Eatra
494·1087 or 549·3058, S:OOPM. Ask for Jim. exp'd.MC-0032 If you read well, like Benml:30!UJ!•Uam 79-1191 taae.JIU .... CUhallly.
1
--------
EOE. Equal Opportunity .__./Secy talk on the phone• wan S~llTUY Tllfl!:/UFE C & -15~Pbm.un
Employer. -. .. _,... Buc·t to eQ)oy )'OW' job Call To lhe _pnsidenl Money lJBRAIUIS --,. JAMITOI 1...:...__.::__::... _____ , Newport each Ad· Betwna·aoamA:U•m mgmt flr'ft>, exec ~Y &o EquaJOppEmpl)trm/I If Sp .t 1030 .. • lfll
Needed for Oranse Co. vertllq Asency Joo«Jn, young president Tyfina ................. ._.. ...... ...... ... ... rarm. !)46...2901. 2031 s. E. M A N A G E M E N T Cor sharp, lnte1U1ent 11rl TIME/UfE ' 1 k i 11 1 as b a n ll n I · lhtnl1a e.s. 2 leu, Q. a.le: E~
MamSt,lrvine. Couples or matur withm1Aimum2ynex· knowledgehelplul Bra. T.a...P,ne"..a-; luxe crlp, fllteu, lnltl*..,ntrtt.lfi1Ult
singles wanted to help per. Type 60 Wpm,. lood uan••l£S INC Earl AM to 3PM w 8 ·-~ ahamiaumede .... 7831 oddl 111111 .... ·a mana1e am business. phone personallly as xlnt 9'M Y • • We w tl train. Eno IDd 'N Matd......... J.j ICIYPUHCH Must be ambitious secretarial it.Ills Call Govura the 2nd Jae ChrlaLmu money, lllnolt.a SRT·101. maa1 9INeco tc. BB"iiliO.Ma
wllllng lo learn. Mr. Barb le Fu 1 mer 833-8095 NewportBeacb.9'0-23.50 Salary and comllllaalon. xtru, Ute ne•, JtlO, PrtftiiY•Caa'tlt.,tst
l(tly hos l"""'d. 01Mfto Hlckok963-4'21 (714)640.2822 OppEmplyrm/f SF.cRETARY P/time af· ~41S7 -·~lorDoa !1'1-3111 ...... 106
f1t91 for ••p•r'd Manager needed, sma I.I.SAW ~~~~~~~~&«noons ror lnaurance ,._ Ctllt toll .................... .
keyp.tdl. key •llfry, retail college bookstore. s~ established office qency. Typiq nee Nr •-••••••••••••-••••• lel:PnBredAribl 111,
dodoloo data 9610, F.V. •'"•·To apPly < need, qua I 111 e d ..... -· 752·5!3l P£1181AN -· CFA ..0 tnlood. = --------
CAT, etc. 714~forappt. salespersons; favorable nrt-UQNO'S SICUTUY TELLER , ~Sbowqullty. ~ ~ am. lhanbeubtp • D •-· hl hf T contract Tralnln1 of UWlll Jmmed oruonln1. Type as.ll30I tacl:...__ .... 1112 New-Beac:b Temda ~:a;;.~1,~rr:c~ls. ~~ MAAIMIHA•DWAIE !erect. Maury Stauffer, r1~110N IS' auo 50·80 .J,~m Sb or f'llU u'" posltJop. Ex· mailCBENGALCAT a.a~st.t olr. "4.JO'n,
don't pay, we pay you. SAL ES It
5
om Se a L Jon Re a It y rlN LM speedwrltina Good perleQCe prelered. Apply (I/I lets•r Leos.d) ... ..,, .. aUC'fdp.'44oalln• Pa1dvacations warehouie worjl . ·'97·3318.1213 N Coaat Exper'd 1aleslady phone personality. t "-'-v_.aer&I Sav ...___,_ 7_.,,.AIA
1 F/tJme.~NB. Hwy .. La1un•Beach needed tor moderate Pleuant wortdn1 cond.I 8 ..,.....,., ... ._ · r.__, _....., ~~ , 1!!1tat• 8ale-P aao.
Callmome In l<>day MATURE, ...... adlll lady'• departm..., •pP. •-benellta.c.111.,. ~~.'l!'f. ~.':*:: 'fn".~°J:/.;,.~ ' 1'0P~T::'.=rua ~~~; IEL[~ early A.M. newspaper llSTAUltANT ly In person #3 Fashion appt.6'2·1183. 962·1378. Equal Op· n.-IA...-O PAID ~oa YOtJ R 105 c.. req'd. lllc!J deJJvery, msl have t.rans. ••--Bel Island, N.B. • -un1ty Elllp>loyer ..-. -J-J WATC'Jf-_....__ ...... .., -r-11
-AppUcauvum nc SECRETARY -· .... -•• • .. ·-········· ... :-o ... ·zm oot'-n ....... -m. nflV-. -840-aiS6. Aceeptedfor. .. .. ~o nn&i~ -._ n4/-·2'71UOl'appt. ~eRvice s ,,..--&._ •-L.-SALES w/1.1.Uc.Me DOGTl'AUlla.n s1Lvaa s av1cz,
aJJ..1441 MECHANIC'S helper for ~-YI· Tlkedt~UoD.WUUng&o'.l'cnr Truct Drtvera ex YOUJ'Placeor.lllDe PIHi! PORN 6 AN· bootaddld1&4.,bcUt11 ~~~~~~~~1 tune·Ups. Salar5y opeJ n. • ............ a .,,.._0..,..,.. work weetendl, auist ln 'd.~ ... ppl,· JolJD)llJtin 5'8-0GSO TlQUES.MJ.ZIOO 11-S 111,~ 2 Pl' &ftenti = Apply at: 2500 an oa· Interviews being held -· R "'-roordlnatJDg offices pre. per pay. " • boob ad.Mil " t. l pr
Kftcheft S..-nfsor quin Hills Rd., CdM at Reuben's Or Is adores Oll~AM SALIS sent.ly ln San CJemente'to GAW , 1000 JfVitJ• SILKY B1k. J!ne. Cocker, U •" I01I ddJd blktot boot. •a 4 F/Ume. Xlnt wages & M.,..., ....... 1C/••noo 10·4 Any day ucept HIGHEST C 0 M · Oceanside Sal+comm Ave.HIUMJ.12$2 · ma.htA.KC,tye.v, ••••!Oil ald,:lotbl.aJ smau ladi.i
beneflla. Reply lo •¥""'" _, Thurs MISSION/OUARAN· Ph: Pat B ant, Pret: 1 ,._, .................. ••••• le tMn alua. All la-
Cluslf&ed ad no. 66. c /o Exper'd froot frnd, 2SlE.C.tHwy,N.B. TEE I F RING E Wh.ltewat.er1:ater Rlt.y llPISJS Rq.llbrf
1
~mad_.n.brotbl~ pnced. Student desk. Daily Piiot, PO Box, brake, 1en'l repa in EqualOppor Employer BENEFITS. Sell in blab 1Dc.49U843or491-2722 BIB.DSBTIU>SBUU>S to I' dt • ''.,..i~.-• Wbl&e •/brown drawen. • 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca 2M~l;u~lon~Vl~e;J~o.~83~1~-9~S4~0~.~~~~~~~~~ tratnc 1hopplnc rnalll. BalfM p • ..-.. ~ llorpn fetaltlS, szs.~
92GI M Some abiUty to Dlay the Secnt&ry ManyNeededNO'#I qoca """..... leac,-WeaterQ ('11()1...;;~~---""'!'--orsan req'd. Previous ....._A.Mht $1200 :=T:aoam-: GoldCrowa~ •JIU c.-a..Jc Santa Cfaqaes
LABORERS
•Open 7:30am·5:30pm
•C.U Even.Inga 533·8882
Foe swing & graveyard
•HO FUS
car•pbonea must.
Loog & short term
uslcnments.
0 ~
I! MPl 1l1/\HV tU IP
1""'9 54M45S
F.qua.I ()ppor Employer
RETAIL · aa1e9 exper. uteful, but Free Top erowth pos. •Ca .!ven!np ud p~~ ORANl>OPDJNOSALE '5. le tis. Oeramlc pla· we wU1 train you. Call w/xtDt co. ii you ti.ve iy. Fcrawtqft~vey · At _., Jocauoa
2
blka q from•• Poodle. CLERKS llr. L)'l\D,-.wt. aJ eltate or titJe exper. a sbilb av~· ,.,!,.AllBto---Sil ~Bto aortb old locaUoa t1 f:YmfA' !'!IDJISto •rd otbe r
Help waot.ed lit, 2nd " lrd lhifta. No experience
req'd. We train tboae --'--------i !lired. Applicants apply
at:
UTOTEM
STORES
Loeas.4At: ~LamJlllOll, G. Orv
610 \t. South St. An.Um m Del Mu, c.11.
88S Glenneyre. Lar Bch
We are an equal
opportunity emplo~
aood s. lrllla Ut1s can opea •MO n-.. -.. ™"&"" 9 AJfala ~ .,.._ m It.em ~au• o er. the door for rewardlna Min 45 wpm. Variety ol atFCll'dRd.N.B. ...v •-"!!-""-'-...,.eve., areer Also Fee Jobe 111l1nmenta. Loni I: .._.. .._ • --..._
SALES ~•II Cbri• uo 8055. abortt.rm Top* ends Pee 1. BBAC llotore1el• bel met
S FOR Coastal PenOanet .Acea: . Esnnc : sf1~1ei!'er s~alel ~EJ..!!!! .. ~4 XI,J.00.Jarze~a C .. ISTMASI cy,rmoHarbor,CM AKC. 1 yr. b&e ·--.,.ao•u.-.w MMlu• ·
Earnext.ralncometbn. . RD pet. Cd w/daldnt. oldr perclayorne1.ofrertn1 SECURITY GUA • Cpl. Mustoe. dallPtef
cbarp accounta In JDa· Set:uril)' Patrol Guard alleretc. us. Pb: Jor retail l'torei near F /Uma. Must have CaUf. ...~
your home. lCo exper. State Cartlfl~atlon to a-.a...;._ .. 14,... .. 41t .
nee wetraJn Call· carry weapon. Min ~ -'"9foY• I04I A.D~s. . . ~~ ~:.~ ~= l'Alua.I Oppot BIDe)'ef •••• , ................. .
('11')523-5185,extsao • . • J"amU1 ,movin1, llr.
1 <213) NS-•t Servi~• StaiJon Attea. WAllHOUIBQN P......Ut.1, ~ cto..
•a.St, ~xper'cS. •Day Is I WUI train, fOod op· needt IOYID1 home. jj '£\tee. ru1l 6 pJUlQt, Ap.: portunliy w /srowlnf:i_;_IDOl..;.;,..·~f45...;_1051_. ____
11 SALISMAM ~U St.aUoa; lftb 6 Martne Co. Mall Order Fem.Je Shep mix. t No.
HAJlDWARE • llufm.167-9808 ~.abot.l,Alaolmo.
P/tlme Sat/Sun " J 8ervie9 &a. Nlaht Attend W00DWOlllB$ fem. Tabby, To IOOd
wlrdy 20r6 DUes a wt. Api>Jy, Mtllmen, •i .. mbl•H, bome. 841·1611 or ......... tt..1w.. Shell, 17tb Alrvlne, Hlt Hndera, orayeu &i _cm __ >ea ______ ~·u
WHart>or Bl, CM Serflce sea. Mtendant, •tatnen. Silperfenced 8amoJed. mate. 1 Jwe:· • •• --•AllJI aper'd. ~~ume. recaw.t, uceuai pay~ Buu&ifuJ aww. 't ---.. AJlPJ.v Arco 17th beneflta. HO! W. eWm.ai-te. For pet 1hop. Exper'd. fltlMne c ll. MacArthur Blvd, San Full or Plrl·Ume. Send • • Ana. PUNbnd Yorblllnll, 2
resume to Carol. 1m Service Sta. Attendant. • • fem&lu free to coocr Pon BannouUa, N.8. c.. P/thne, 1'feat appitar. 4 home. -....s.
9'.2881» hand~tlnf only need Mii ch• •1
€ouat ilail!
fJleatng•
11o•lad.,e
ioallerl
S••-. apply. 1:590 Newport .. •••••••••••••••••• .. • ~Pc::1~~
,_....._ Blvd, CH 1001 ebUd..ha, Cal\ "5-2108
. Part Ume, 54s>m.t. ~OD· Serv. Sta Help oeMed Un· •••• .. ••H•H••-•••••• ev-. Fri. perfect fOI' \iCM.leae med N or Pit. Apply ---.-----~-11 StudeDt, no preHare 9llO E C.t u,-, Nwpt MUltC IOllS a va. Germ. Sbortbm
. Tu~uaem Into = quo&u to meet. iiclt. · • CLOCIS ' poln~r•. a m0t elcl. Chr.tsimas ~sl:I
by PilCfftl •n a:dpitdel' our DAI~¥ P.ILOl'.
CHRIS1'M•S TREE •
Microw•ve oven, Litt.on
Mod 420. A iirl -..at dJdn't take $:t35. 673-~13
THEOVERLYN
STUD10S OF VOO'AL ART '
~IU>SDOitlter. ~to Paint. kxtra Cbrome.
2SOO ml. lla.t Sell. t:rrOO. MarkGH~
8.'\RWIC I< OA T\UN
j I I ' Ii•
811 IJ7S4'D-JH~
Acting fo'uodamental~ " St age Tech n I q uh .1---------cBMW '17 Ra9VS runs and WE PAY TOP DOLLAl\
Beginners classes for IAYLAUNCH IOQktfttit. saoo. Honda FOR'tOPUSEDCARS
Singers & Actors833·3069 Diesel t8' 675--""' '7CJ.7Sj>, ovet. 900 in ex· .FOR£1GN, DOMESTlC ---• · ·-tru. si.aoo. Jim '93>'1111 or CLASSICS Tiffany's Pvt Club, N:B.1s· GLASSPAR w/'f5hp lf~cariaesttaclean
Membership for sale. EvtnrUde. Beaut. cond. ~"°"'"' S./ aeeuafirtt.
$27S. Reg price $350. siooo.Ownr.1162·3818 Rttlt/Sl•Ofl 9160 IAUlllUICtl
Must relocate. Call Phil,. H••••••••••••••••h••• ~--?8ZSHatbor•lvd. (213)"98·1690. 78 Sea Ray 2' rt. Kent a 1 .... ., E tl Ul8UIMeaa m.2500 wkender. ~ Mere., \ow •• • •cu ve1---------1 Surfboard-Hawk. Also, hrs. Trimmed tabs, llotoTbome or Mtcil•
Orum Set. Ask for Kevin, VHF, cust. canvas, dendi motorbome f!'O~ Herb
842$43. Jinder. $14 500/0fler P\1~u. c.J.1 •I)>' ot
I ~JIWJl~
Toshiba Copy Machine,
table top model.
l-2l3:~ ..... 111
537.7777
12Mlll
Maro.& HOMF.S rol\RENT
COSTA MESA
OATSUl-4
TOP
DOI.I.AR
PAID
FOllCLEAN
IXC8.UN1'
SB.ICTIOMOF
IMWUSA&a
BARWICK DATSUN
' ' ' ' '
RJt.tllC,·191 l .17C,
COSTA MF~A
OA TSUN
*5HARBOABLVl>.
140.:6410 140tfl' l
NEWPORT OA fSUN
m iracle
n1azda
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••••••••••••••••••••••
Sf Pontl•c auper sharp
tfnt nmnlai condJUon
. .
-----ton Beach
HunUngton Beach city officials
have held a aeries of wild meet·
in11 on the plan to chanee In·
duatrlal land to residential uses
alone the Gothard Street Cor·
rldor. · But Monday nlsht's City Coun-
cil meeting was t6e wildest yet.
At Issue was a request by de·
veloper Franklin Buccella for a
chance in zoning to build homes
on 40 acres north of Talbert
A venue and 1,200 feet we1t of
Beach Boulevard.
One member ol the audJence
was evicted frorn the chambers
by Mayo.rRonPattinson.
Another shouted that Coun-
cilman Al Coen was out of order
while the two were sklrmisbinc
over allegedly p~vloua ioninl
commitment.I concerning tbe
use of the land.
The council devoted more than
three hours to the single item and
when o vote was finally taken, it
ended in a 3 to 3 deadlock.
Harriett Wieder. Richard
Siebert and Coen led the forces
opposlq the zone changt.
Pattinson, Ted Bartlett and
Ron Shenkman voted in favor of
the change. Norman Gibb$ was
absent. Becasue no deflnjtlve actlon
was taken, the item wlll
Suspect Held in
' .
Plane Fo1md
G/,enn Miller Death Clue?
'"
NEWHAVEN, England CAP) -Fishermen here
say they have discovered aircraft wreckage that may
provide a clue to the disappearance in 1944 of
American dance band leader Glenn Miller.
Miller disappeared over the English Channel
while flying from England to France during World
War II. Radio contact suddenly was lost with the
plane as it flew over the sea near this southern
English port
The plane failed to arrive a,t. its destination. No
wreckage was found at the time and Miller's body
was never discovered.
Miller was a captain In the U.S. armed forces at
the time. The concerts given by him and his band
were great morale boosters for Allied troops fighting
in Europe.
...
Brian Hills, captain of the trawler Wildflower,
said Monday the wreckage was accidentally hauled
up in his nets about two miles out to sea from
Newhaven.
Sudan Chief Hails . . .. \ . .,.11'. ,.
Sadat Israel Visit·
CAIRO (AP) -Sudanese
President Jafaar el Numalri flew
to Cairo today to show his l\Jp-·
port or Egyptian President ·
Anwar Sadat In the (ace of bitter
division in the Arab world over
his visit to Israel. Numairt called
Sadat's trip a victory and urged
Arabs to support him. <Related
story. picture Page A3)
·'On this mlssion and \his trip,
we scored aaaln a bll victory, '
Numalri was quoted by Cairo
Radio as saying. "The first Ume
was In October (1973). This time
also the decision was an Egyp-
t.Can and Arab one and the battle
was ours.
"We must be proud ln all Arab
countries over this victory,"
Numairt said after a l~hQur
meeting in the Egyptian leader's
Kubeb Palace.
The reterence to October um
was to the Middle East War of ittat year, re1arded by Arabs as
a victory for Ute E1ypUans even
thou1h they were driven back by
the Iaraelis after lnltial 1alna.
Bealdes Sudan, which Is allied
wltb El)'Pt lo a defense treaty,
Sadat has won iOme deiree of
support among Arab nations
Crom Morocco, Oman and
Jordan. Syria, Iraq, Llbya, Alaeria and
South Yemen have denounced
Sadat's trip to Jerusalem, while
Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates have l>een silent.
Arab critics, locludinll l>ales·
Unians, bave ~ailed Sadat a
"traitor," accused him of
deatroylng Arab unity JOd
threatened him with aasassina·
lion. Jordan's Premier Mudar
Badran and Palestinian Jeader
Yaslr Arafat arrived In
Damascus, capital of Syria, to
confer aft.er Sadat's visit.
Whlle neither Badran nor
Jordan's KinJ Hussein has com-
mented oo the visit, Jordanlan
sympathy wu expressed by In·
formation Minlater Adnau Abu
Odeh who said the trip •'broke the
psychological barrier and pro-
vided fresh hopes for the recon-
v en ln g of the Geneva con-
ference.0
Syria accused Sadat today of
"surrenderln1 to the Zlcmlat
butchers" .
Pacific
North
Freezing
by Tbe Alsoclated Preas
The northwest comer of the na·
lion wu gripped today by bitter
cold that broke some records and
was blanketed by heavy snow -
in some places where mild tern·
peratures and rain normatly pre·
vail this time or the year.
The National Weather Service
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
GETS RAIN, SNOW..:....A3
said more snow and freeslng rain
were expected in a wide belt of
the Pacific Northwest.
Portland, Ore., the "City of
Roses," was virtually paral)'Jed
by five inches of snow lh•t fell lo
•lx hours -an &JnOUll coawui·
ed to an annWll average saoM'aU
of 7.5 laches.
• Mola ta~ on
and nei1hbortna souUiw,•t
Washln1toa were closed, and
coqdltions were worsened by
freezlo1 raln that crusted on top of th&accumulation
Trame.on the heavily traveled
north-south ln1er!ltate 5 was
almost at a standatlll, and one
state trooper said that became of
the stalled vehicles cars and
trucks were 'bavm1 to run like
f ullbac~· to get throu1b
Another CODlJnented be had not
seen that much snow "in 30 years."
Downtown Portland. normally
busU1ng al 7 a.m., was nearly de-
serted u workers took an un·
ar'1eduled bo~ay. What traffic
there was was at a virtual
standsUll aa unprepared
motorists found their vehlcles
couldn't make it up the 1U1best
inclines.
Othen rushed to buy 1now tirel
and cbalna while tbose who took u in stride were wJXtna cl'Oll·
country skis and H~iint O\lt the
sled for fun tn the p~b and
neigbbofboOdA.
Heavy precfpltation In t~e
form of rain or snow also fell lo
drou1ht·stricken Colorado and
Callfom1a.
automatically reappear on the
Dec. 12 agenda when Mrs. Gibbs
returns and presumably will
break the stalemate.
Siebert and Mrs. WJeder had
earlier unsuccessfully push~ for
a delay on all 14>nlng matters in
the Gothard lnduatrial area until
after first of the year when more
data can be analyzed.
Council watcher Gordon Off.
stein was ordered evlet.ed la~ in
the hearing when he questioned
PatUn1on's handlln1 of the bear-
ing.
Off stein fired the openiq slavo
when he said Pattinson 1ave his
friends favored treatm~nt qver
the ordinary citizens.
Later when developer Buccella
took the podium to speak, orr.
stein shouted, "Your five minutes
are up.''
Patllnson warned aratnst ~
further outbreaks.
Offatein replied, .. You made the rules.··
P~ttinson responded, "Mr.
chief ot police wtU-you take tbia
manou\ofthech•mbe~.
dhlef Eal'le Re>bltallle.
otherwise silent durlnc the
marathon proceedln1 said.
"Gordon, where ..-e you!,.
The two left to1ether <See~NE, Pase AJ)
·11an'S Death.
Murder conspiracy defendant Alexander Kulik (seated)
and his attorney, Philip DeMassa, wait outside Orange
County Superior Court where Kulik's arraignment on
charges involving the death of Stephen John Bovan of
Fountain Valley wu delayed Monday. Judge Robert E.
Rickles put the arraignment over to Nov. 28 after
Kullk's attorney challenged the grand jury inructment of
his client. The jud1e said be will rule on the challenge
at that time and expects Kulik to enter a plea on the
$8TDe date.
Ocean View Backs
~ . .
~REovement Plans
Trustees of HunlhlltOD Beach's
Ocean View School D.latr1ct have
approved spending more than
$183,000 to improve U smaller.
older elementary schools.
The 1~1-awaited modifica·
Uons "tt'tft ftCOIDDlencled M~
day after study by its so-caned ·
K·8 Talk Force, a group ot I
teacbers and admlnistraton. as-
signed to upgrade the f acWties.
A total oflhcbools c~terlna OD·
ly to cblldren ln kindergarten
through the sixth crade .in
benefit, with aome facllltles
which can be used by the public,
such as handball courts.
Kinderca.tten storace apace for
educational materials wUl ~pro
vided at 14 of the 24 acbOob cv-<SeeSCBQOLS. Paaa.U>
Tipoff.
heads to
HF T
Woman'• 8,000 Rids
MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAPJ -A
California woman whose $4,000
cout-t.o-cout taxi ride wu cut
ahort by a court ordt'r says 1be la
determined to continue her trip
t.o New YOl'k.
''I've just been tryins t.o reach
Memphis to set another cab,"
Je•n Caren. SS, said Monday In a
telephone interview from a hotel
in Jack.son, aboul 90 mUea north
of Memphis.
Mrs. Caren set out Thurllday
from Santa Marfa, Calif. on her
3,000·mile odyss6y with her poo-
dle Duchess. By Sunday evenina,
she had made lt to Jackson. two·
thirds of the way, before her
driver, Ed Thomas, was told to
turn back by his company.
"We weren't here that Iona
wben everything happened at
once," Mrs. Caren said. "He got a
phone call from hls boss . He
le rt Sunday night.''
Mrs. Caren sald Thomas did not try to persuade her to return
with him. She said he gave her
the telephone numbers of several
reliable drivers in Memphis.
Police stopped Thomas and
Mrs. Caren near Blythe, Cali!.
near the Callfornia-Arlzona .
border, but allowed them to con·
linue.
"The officer who talked to her
said she seemed a little eccen-
tric, but in control of her mental
faculties." a police spokesman
said. "So he figured If she wanted
lo go across country in a taxi ,
that was up to her."
Diane Bernal of Santa Maria,
Mrs. Caren's daughter, obtained
a court order Thursday barring
the Black and White Cab Com·
pany from transporting her
mother, but the firm did not hear
from Thomas until Sunday.
Mrs. Bernal said her mother
]. T. Gregory
Rites Slated
lelt wl her lnowled and la
a dtap,osed echl~hrenlc who
bud been ln am ntal lriltitUUon
In New York betore the family
moved t.o California in May.
Sally Cbavu, whole h'1Sband
la part owner of the u b com·
pany, said a c:trlYer tr.led to talk
Mrs. Caren out of making the ex·
penalve trip. But Mrs. Caren re·
portedly said she was afraid to
ny and that •he bad been told by
bus and train companies sbe
could not carry her dog.
Mrs. Bernal said a priest
talked with Mrs. Caren on Sun-
day nlgbt in Jackson and that he
was told she planned to go to
Belgium to visit her mother.
Mrs . Bernal said her
grandmother died three yean
ago and there were no relatives
left in Belgium.
Mrs. Caren, who said she is not
livlnJ with her husbana and that
she has another daughter in New
York, declined to discuss her
reasons for the trip or her current
finances.
"l 'm just trying to get lo New
York right now," she said. "I
don't want it in the newspaper. I
just have to get to New York.
''Everything will turn out all
right, I'm pretty sure," she said.
Fro• Page A J
SCHOOLS. •
rently being utilized by the dis-
trict serving much of the city
which was developed by
homebuilders lo the late 1950s and
early 19608.
Outside storage areas at 14
schools will also be provided, thus
clearing areas inaide the schools
for expansion of learnine
facWties and a better environ-
mentfor learnin1.
Additional electrical pluas will
be installed in classrooms at five
other schools, for the fourth
project.
Outside storage areas are ex-
pected to cost $101, 700: handball On ~edne8 J _Y courts and blacktopping $33,880;
(.IC.J kindergarten storage space
Funeral rites are scheduled $22,SOO aod the electrical plua ad-
W e d n esd a y morning for a ditions $15,256, according to cost
\fidway City man who was fatal-projections.
y injured in a tragic accident Support.en of the improvement
.vhen his wife accidentally struck prosramalsocalledoriginallyfor
1im with the family car at addition of multi-purpose bulld-
tN estmlnster High School. ings to many school• which do not
Services for James T . havethematthepreaenttime.
::;regory, 70, of 14651 Newland District officiala pointed out at
)t., will be at 10:30 a .m. in their last meeting, however, that
W'estminster Memorial Park...J tJ1is would cost more than S2
\iortuary Chapel, followed by ln-r -1-nUUon and ills vital to wait for re-
erment. There wUl be no view-ceipt ot future enroJlment projec·
ng. tions before proceeding.
He was opening a gate on the Due to shlfUng populatiqn and a
WeBtmlnster High School cam-trend toward families having
:ius access road Saturday, ap-fewer children, the district has
>arently as he and his wife been forced to close Its Rancho
Laura, 71, were going to a Junior View School, which wlll with.in
t\ 11-A merican Football Leaaue two years become the new district ~ame. headquarters office complex.
Policesald Mrs. Gregory's foot Yelontheotherhand, its newer
,lipped oft the brake onto the aas Harbour View School near the
>edaf and the car accelerated, rapidly growing Huntin1ton
;triking her husband, who died of Harbour region ls now over-
llS injuries Sunday morning at crowded by about 60 younesters.
Nest m 1 ns t er Commun l ty District officials have decided
iospital. it will be necessary to use a just-
The victim's wife had to be co"'Pleted multi-purpose room at
reated for shock at the same Harbour View School for tern·
tospital where her husband died. porary classroom space for the
Besides Mrs. Greaory, Mr. restoftheyear.
}regory leaves two dau1hter~. They point out it would be a
\frs . Wanda Edwards, of wasteofmoneytorushintocon-
\Udway City; Mn. June Packer, structinl new onea at other
>t San Diego; three brothers; schools without an overall view of
hree •lat.en; six erandchildren, the community's future enroll·
ind two il'eat·grandcblldren. mentneeds.
Rites are under direction ol Studies into the enrollment
Nestminster Memorial Park and questions are expected to be com·
\iortuary. pleted next spring.
One 1peaker al a previous meet-
FBI Details
Castro File
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
iupportera of Cuban leader Fidel
:aatro becante the tar111t of FBI
iarassment shortly after tbt
!lbortbe Bay of Pi&• lnvaslon 1"
t9el, accordlnt to newty reltated
f'BI documentl. <Related atory, P3)
The FBI campallfn lnvolv.d In·
'iltraUng pro-Ca1tr& 1roup1 ii
ietatled tn FBI files r<ued
Monday ln response to Freedom:
>f Inf ormaUon Act requests:> -
DAILY PILOT
ing cited the fact that at star
View School in the city's northerly
sector there ia no multi-purpose
room yet 1' different community
oreanlzationa utilize il.
S~pectHeld
In Holdup
BliiSe Hits
HugMs]et
REDDING <AP> -A Jet'·.
en1lne on a Hu1be1
Atrweat DC9 cauabt Ore u the plane started to take off
from the Reddin& airport.
But th~ takeoff was
aborted and 20 passe111era
ROt otr without Injury. the
fire department sald Mon-
day.
The plane, Flight 5
bound for San Francisco
and Mexico, had been on
the ground tn Redding
through a Sunday night
snowstorm.
Westminster
Plant Blaze
Cause Probed
Fire that ultimately caused
$30.000 damage to the inventory
contents and structure housing a
Westminster area statuary and
fountain factory broke out at to
many points It may be lmpout-
ble ever to determine a cauae.
Orange County Fire Depart·
ment Capt. Bruce Turbeville
made that disclosure Monday
when asked about progress of in-
vestigation into the blaze at San·
ti's Fountainland.
The raging blaze reported ear-
ly Friday at W12 Beach Blvd.,
when it was spotted by a
policeman on patrol, ultimately
required more than 50 firemen
from four a1encles to control it.
Investigators said an acljacent
sport boat. manufacturing plant
and storace area were
threatened, but firemen pushed
and shoved the trailered boats t.o
safety.
Kidnappings
lecture Topic
Joseph Bell, a freelance
journalist who has written about
the Hearst and Chowchilla kid·
nappings and the apace program,
speaks about. hls eltperiences in a
public lecture at 7 tonieht. at UC
Irvine.
The lecture is in 178
Humanities Hall; general ad·
mission is $4. UCl students,
faculty and staff will be charged
$1.25. It's offered under the
auspices ofUCl Exteruilon.
Bell, a UCI lecturer lo En•Ush
and comparative literature, will
talk about the demise of major
American magazines, the at-
li tudes of critics, and the
personality cult he finds connect-
ed with the magazine business.
Chavez to Aid
Onion Picken
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -
Cesar Chavez, president of the
United Farm Workers, AFL-CIO,
has pledged financial aid tostrik·
Ing onion pickers here and posed
the threat of a union boycott ol
onions.
Standing OD the back or a truck,
Chavez spoke bl SpanJsh Monday
to about 500 men, women and
childretl at a strikers' camp in a
field northwest ot Phoenix.
• 11 lnvlted myself to offer
solidarity to these strikers,"
Chavez told newsmen at the
scene afterward.
Police Lack Clues
In Man's Murder
DetecUvea investi1atln1 the
morder of a Seal Beach man in
hls Slpal Hill machine shop five
daya aco aald Monday tbq are
sUll without a motive or any
a,J>!Cl!ic auspect.
Robert F. Mrazlk. aa. WU killed almoltlnatantly by a stnale
.d caliber 1la• fired lnto ht. head as be thibred with broken
amuaement machines at his
workbench.
· A man who police alle1e ned "
-Fountain VaUe,y cUseount house
with $2,100 ln diamond rtn1s on
his fingers wu arreated Monday
nl1ht alon1 with an Hsert..S
P•rtner.
Manuel Lopei, 27, a carpenter,
or 2218 s. Maple St., Santa Ana
and Victor Lopez, 22, of Artesla,
were each boolced Into Oranae
County Jail on 1uspiclon ot ~m·
mercial bur~ary followin1 their
capture.
lnvesUeaton collared the
Lopezea not far from the Gemco
memberShlp departmeat 1tor..
17099 Brookhurst St., artel' wit·
neases obtained a description of
lhe a eta way car. They remained in county jail
today, held in lieu of ~.ooo ball
on the relony cbaraes.
A jailer said today the pair will
be arraigned in West Oranie
County Judlclal District Court
Wednesday.
The UJpeiea were arreated by
Fountain Valley officers Jerry
Rltschel, Chris Kielich and Kent
Knobelauch on Brookhurst Street
south of La Alameda Avenue
following the tbert incident.
Gemco jewelry department
clerk Kenneth M. Desper, 29, al-
leged one of them tried on three
yellow gold and diamond rings,
claiming he wws shoppin1 for a
luxury item.
Removing one, tbe suspect
then sprinted from the store with
Desper in bot punult, Jumped In-
to a waiting car and sped away
with two of the costly rings,
p01ice said.
I',... Page Al
PAINTER •••
Myecs, however, was not robbed.
O'Rourke theorized that thlnas
happened too rut. and the gun.
man apparenUy didn't have time
to take the $65 in cash from
Myers· wallet or credit cards.
The sb00Un1 occurred aloog
the side of lnteratat~ 15 near
Barstow .
The suspect was believed to
have drfven the van to Victorville
after dumping Myers' body un·
derneath a tumbleweed.
O'Rourke saJd the suspect then
rode a bus back to Fontana.
O'Rourke saJd he bad no doubt
at all that Myers bad picked up a
hitchhiker althouab Myers• rel-
atives said that thl1 would be out of character for Myers.
The detective a~ aald that on· ly one person ls believed t.o be ln·
votved in the slaying.
A motorist who witnessed (he
body being thrown from the van
identified the auspect as a
Caucasian with a mustache.
The jailed suspect was
described as a black with abort
hair a.na a mttstache. O'Rourke
said that the witness motorist
would be contacted aaaln for
identification.
Still UMxplained was a aeries
of numbers that Myers bad wrt~
ten on the J>alm of bla. hand
with a baJJpOint pen before b1I
death.
O'Rourke l\ad earlier said the
numbers represented a poulble
clue as to a auspect vehicle.
Tbat theory bu now apparent·
ly fallen tbrou1h.
''We may never know wbat tbe
numben meant. or why be wrot.
them," O'Rourke said.
lnvatfpton allO' aald earlier
that Myen was 1Mt by two dlf.
ferent "apons. 01Rourke 11.ld
that bullets enterlna the body
from different analea may have
been reapomlble for that lm·
pres1ioo.
Fires Kill Two
Sen . Edwara Kennedy
pauses at the grave or his
brother, President John F.
Kennedy, at Arlington Na-
tional Cemetery. Prestdent
Kennedy was assassinated
14 years ago today. For a
look at bow teenagers who
weren't even born on Nov.
22, 1963, view the Kennedy
era, see Featuring, Page
Cl.
Grandparents
Plan Visits
To Ocean View
Ocean View School District ·s
Vlata View School will conduct
its annual Grandparent Day
Wednesday, with scores of senior
citizens returning to class
More than 100 rranddads and
grandmas came back to a school
campus lHt year, led b y
grandchildren tuilinc at their hands to show th.em lb.la or that
about Vista Vlew School and to
show*m oU and share them.
"We tey t.o lmp.ress them with
the tact that. while our school
probably looks quite different
than the school they attended,
there is st:W the seme old em·
phasls on 'readin' wrltin' and
'rlthmetlc'," says Principal
Marilyn Koeller.
Some grandparents came from
faraway places -as tar as
Wisconsin -for last year's
Grandparent Day and many will
repeat their Journey• tbJ1 year.
"We would love to think that
the visit was just because of our
day,'' saya Mn. Koeller, "but
Tbanka1M.ai f am.lly •atherinp
durinl the week ad(( to our atten-
dance.''
Wedneaday•s proeram,
hJehligbted b.Y a 10:30 a.JU. re-
ceptJon wUb refreshments, will
also feature an op port unit.)' lor
viatUnt in.ndparentl tot.ell wbat
it was like when they were in
school.
Bonfa to Address
. Realton Meeting
· Huntln1ton Beach Clty At·
torney Don Boni& wm address
tbt Huntlgton Beach·Fountaln
Valley Board of :Realtor• • ,toNDON <AP> -Two more persona 4led ln fb'tl today u tho.
Def enH Mlnl1try or4ettd
another 4,000 aoldlen to help .:~==~=· •Tb• COc.J d deatbl frOJQ lJN .l'Qlt
Wednesday at a a.tn. at the Hunt.·
1Dsto" Beach tnn. Bciiif a i. J'\IMlnt for re-electlon m nut April's tnunlclpal tl~·
'Ubns. Tiso aubJoet of hlt talk ie1 'mi• Clt.y Attomey•a Offlce aDG
You."
·to 2011.dce Brttaln'• lh'lt natioew
fll'emen'• Wike 1t~Nov. l.4.
t
Two 1,et:s
fli 'ljjjr Jn
Space Age
NEW :YORK (AP) -Ftcnch 1
and Briilih Concorcte ets .-eh
carrftoc 100 puseneera landed ,.
at Kennedy Airport today, brlnf •
In• comm rclal avlaUon here in· lo il\o aupenonlc •I• and •1tnal· 1111 anot&er defoat for those who
vowect to bar the fut but notay ·
plane. Url~er gray $kies, the swept.
wine jets carryin1 crews of nJne
and capacity loads eet down on
runway 31 Rlsht -just 3~ houri
after leavtna Paris and London
on their first regularly scheduled
lllghlt on the lucrative New York
run, The French craft landed at
5:50 a.m. PST, followed about
two minutes lat.er by the British.
Both new al a crwsln& speed of
l,340 miles per hour across the
3,500 miles of ocean, beatlnt the
sun acrou the Atlantic.
Among the passengers on the
Air France jet was CBS Newi
aMbornian Walter Cronkite, re·
turnlntl from Cairo after the bi.I· ' torlc(v1sJt by EIYl>tlan presldetit Anwf r ~atto llrael. f '' t 1 a very beautlfu
airplane," Cronkite commented,
'It's a small plane, equal to tourist
class, but tbe servJce ls first· •
class. There ls no ~uestion about it, It '1 ha I rt.be time'
''This moans Concorde has
made its blg&est breakthrough
yet," said Normao Lornie, •
spokesman tor 8riUsh Airways.
"Thlt ls a prime airline business
market. London and New York
are the two business capitals of
tho Western world.''
A small band of pickets waa on
bapd from various anti·SST
groups, but their protests have
diminished considerably since
the flnt test landings of the plane
proved less noisy than many resi·
dents of nearby areas feared.
'Tbe 111ghts marked the effec-
tive end of a IO.month court bat·
tle to keep the Concorde from us-l n g Kennedy Airport, whose
nel1hbora claim noise from the
supersonic Jet ts louder than that
from reautar Jets.
BB Trustees
To Consider
Pay Increase 1
Huntington Beach Unlon Hltb -
School District trustees will coa-
alder a propoeed ahc percent pay l
bike Cor abOut 15 cooaselon.
psychol<>Cista and other student
guld•nce penoo.nel tonight..
Tr\&lleel wl1l meet at 1 o'clock
in the HUntin,cton Beach Hiih
School student center. 1905 Main
St., Huntlnaton Beach.
The dlslrlct'a 1utdance pel'SOll·
neJ have asked tor a contract
calllna tor the pay hike, in·
creased frln10 benefits and
specified worklnt cond.IUona.
Diatrlct. olhclals bave not
made a COUD\er offe~ as yet. ne
proposed contract would cost the ,
diatrict an estimated $1 mWion
thla year, district officials sald.
I',.... Page Al
ZONE •••
peacefully.
Patlilon later allowed OftstelA
to retum and reportedty told him
that be was forced to evict oa ... stein.
Offsteln reportedly replied, "I
would have done the same thine
my•el!."
Offstein aa14 later that bt atlll
opposed the WA'/ Pattlnaoo con·
ducts public hearings.
"I don't tbJnk the public ia
1lven adequate time tO apeak to •.
issues," be aald today ... A Utree-
mlnutt Ume Umtt II not enouah."
H• also aald that be tblttka
public bea.rinc• on ocb con·
trovenlaJ ltem1 1hould '".held at
1neeUnc1 aet aaldt tor tbat
purpose.
•
VOL. 70, NO. 326, 3 SECTIONS, 28 f>AGES
BJ Tiie Aaotlated Press
The northwest corner of the na·
l~n was lrll>Ped today by bltter
Cfld that bme .ome r~ut'ds and waa blanketed by heavy 1now -
in some places where mild tem·
peratu,_ and rain normally pre·
Villi tblJ tbne or the year~
The National Weather 8ervice
nid more anow and freezing rain
were ex~\ed W 'r.tde belt of
Ute Pacific Noriliwes .
Bearing Dela11ed
Murder conspiracy defendant Alexander Kulik (seated)
and his attorney, Philip DeMassa, wait outside Orange
County Superior Court where Kulik's arraignment on
charges involving the death of Stephen John Bovan of
Fountain Valley was delayed MC:,~· Judge Robert E.
Rickles put the arraignmept -to •
Kulik 's attorney challenged the grand jury indictment of
his client. The judge said he will rule on the challenge
at that time and expects Kulik to enter a plea on the
same date.
Director Survives
Second Vote Tally
Newly elected Irvine Ranch
Water District director Wayne A.
Clark has survived a challenge of
Ule Nov. 8 election results by run·
ner-up David L. Hansbrough, who
lost byfivevotes, accordln1tothe
original count.
Monday Hansbrough paid a
S200 fee to demand a recount by
the county recistrar of voters, but
still ended up ad election lo.ser,
though by only two votet.
Accordine to the re&latrar, the
final vote, which still must be
'
certified by the Count)' Board of
Supervisors, wq 281 for Clark,
280 for Hansbrou&h. ·
Clark ls an executlve aide to
Supervisor Laurenc'e Schmit,
Hansbrotiahisaneqglneer.
Hansbrough blamed hla Joas on
what he said were poorly de·
elgned election ballots.
He said 15 ballots were volded
because voters overlooked in·
structions to vote foronly one can·
didate, and instead voled for two.
Hansbrough said the votln& in·
atruclions weretn small print.
Traffic on the bea\'lJy traveled •e•n
north·aouth Intentate 5 was " )'ea re ...
almoat at a standstill, and one Downtown Portland, normally J>uatlln• at? a.m., was nearly de-
serted u workers took en tm·
scheduled hotiday. What tratflc
there was waa at e vJrtuaJ
atand•till u unprep•red
motorlatl found tbelr vebicles
couldn't make t up Ule alliJiOat
lntUnn.
ttate trooper sald tbat becauae of
tbe stalled vehicles, •can and
truck& wer.••bavtu1 to run Ute
fullbacu" to set thtoU&h.
Anoe.her commented lie had not Othen ruahed to buy anowilres
Sudan ~S.alnt
.
Peace .Effort Hailed aS , ~ig ffktory'
CAIRO CAP) -Sudanese
President Jafaar el Numairi flew
to Cairo today to sbow bis aup-
port or Eeypt.lan President
Anwar Sadat In the face of bitter
division in the Arab world over
his vjsit to lstael. Numairi called
Sadat~a trip a victory and ur1ed
Arabs to support blm. (Related
story, pJct,ure Pa1e A3)
"On "111 mluion and this trip,
we acQted again a bll victory, '
Numatri was quoted by Cairo
Radio as sayin1. "The first time
was ln October (1973). Thia tlme
also the decision wu an Etyp-
tian and Arab one and the batUe
was ours.
Tip Leads
To Arrest
Of Suspect
.. We must be proud ln au Arab
countries over tbla victory,"
Numairt sud after a l~·bour
meeting in the Egyptian leader's
Kubeb Palace.
Tbe reference to October 1173
was to the 11,lddle East w..-of
tbat year. retarded bf Arabs as
a victory tor the Etyptlans even
though they were driven back by
the Jaraella after iniUal 1atna.
Besides Sudan, which ii al11ed
with EOPt in a def~nae treaty,
Sadat liu won some de1ree ot
a.upport amqne· Arab oatlons
from Morotco, Oman and
Jordan.
Syria, Iraq, Ubya, Algeria and
South Yemen have denounced
Sadat'• trip to Jerunlem. Wbile
Saudi Arabia and tbt United
Arab Emirates tiave been allent
Arab critics, includinl Pales· Unlans, have called Sadat a
"traitor," accused hl~ of
deatroytn1 Arab unlty and
threatened hJm with a.ssusina·
Uon. • Jordan •a Pre mt er udar
Badran arid Palestinlan leader
Yaair Arafat arth'ed in
Damascus. capital of Syria. to
confer after Sadat'• visit.
Wblle neither Badran nor
Jordan'• Kint Hussein baa com-
mented OQ the visit, Jorda.alan
Gl,enn Milkr Death Clue?
SYlJ'patby was ~preased by ln·
forll\atlon Minister Adneu Abu
Odeh who said U\e trip ''broke the psychol~cal barrler and pro-
Vide<I f'teeb hopes for the recon·
venlng of the Geneva con·
ferenc;e."
Syria accused Sadat today of
"surrendering to the ZlooJ1t
butchers" and "stabbing the
fellow Arabi in the back•' by
traveling to Israel.
''A• a result of this
divenlooary, tra&ic comedy, the
Middle Easf bas become a
theater of .the abaurd," Syrian
Am baasador Mowaffak Allaf told (8ee8ADA'l', Pase Al>
NEW YORK (AP) -French
and Brltiah Concorde Jets each earr)'i~ :1oct~seocen landed at XeMedy Alr'J)Or:"t today, brine· tni eomrnerclahtiatlon bere in·
to the lwenOiUc aee and •icnal· inc anot&er defeaflor those who
vowed ti> bai' the fast but noisy
plane.
Under tr•Y akles, the swept.
Wini jets carrying crews of nine
and capacity\foad.s set down on
nmway31 Ri&ht-just a~ houri
after leavtitt Paris and Lon®n
on their first re,Warly sch6dwed OJpts on the lucrative New York
nm. The French crtft Jand6d at
5: 50 a.m. PST, followed about
two minutes later by the Brltlsh.
Both flew at a crulslne apeeo of
1,340 miles per bour across tb•
3,!IOO miles ol ocean, beatina the sun acros. the Atlantic.
Amonc the passeoeen on th• Alr France jet WU CBS Newa •
anctiorman Walter Cronkite, re·
turnanf fro. m Cairo after the hla· torld visit by E«YPtJan prMldent
·Anwar Sadat to Israel. •'It •a a very beautUul
airplane, .. Cronltlte commented,
'lt'1111nallplane,equaltotouriltl
claaa, but. the service le fli'it·
clus. Tb.ere ls no quest'loa about it,it'•balfthetiMe" ,. I
•'This meana Concorde bas
made 111 bluest breakthrough
yet.,•• said Norman Lornle, •
spokesman tor BrttJsh Airways.
'°Thia iA a prime alrlioe bu5lhess
market. LOndon and New YorlC .
are the \wo bus1neu capitals of
the Westen world.''
A a mall band of picket.a was on
tiaDd from various antl·SST
groups, but thelr · protestl have
dlinlnlahed contlderably since the ftrst test Jandlrqts of tbe piano
CSeeZIETS, Page.UJ
WASHINGTON <AP> -Dur.Mom. Md Dad: U a
letter In lbe late ·ea. from an anonymous "lriend .. warnln1 that
Junior was "lhtowln& away h.La fulW"e" ln political proteet, you werea'talOM.
Tbo FBI wm. .. veral.ot u..m.,. alODS with leaflet&. pamphlets,
student newspapers and lettel'9 to poUUclans, all ln an effort t.o dis·
credit or hamper the anti-war movement.
TllE BVaEAU llEL£A8£D 51,MI paces of it.a counterin·
t.elllgence ftlea oo Monday, revealln& the tactics It used to curb the
influence of dlsaldent poll ti cal fl'O\lpa.
A quick alance through a Cew hundred of lbe 9,000 paaea devoted
to the New Left revealed three letters to pareots which purported to
be written by sympathetic friends. Names were deleted to protect
the privacy of those involved.
Jn one cue, the FBI aald lt hoped to apur the puent.a of a YOUQI
activist to action by telUni them of a bogu.t drug problem.
''I 8" VE GREAT REVULSION for what I am about to do." lbe
phony letter said, "but I feel a 1reater good wlll be ;served; lb at la
the salvation of (name deleted).
"It Is with great remorse that I infortn you that be is using pot
and LSD and my heart cries out to him ... "
The FBI aaent who wrote the letter in October 1968 said lbe
bureau wanted to simulate the handwriting or a friend of the ac·
Uvist, "but handwriting samples were not readily available."
Another Jetter went to the mother or a 17-year-old girl picked up I " ___ -='••-r O.-.•r •ido Isle by police while wearing a hat bearing an obscene phrase. ~ _. Me' 111/'ll:; ~
"DEAR MRS. <DELETED) •.• "THE FBI letter beaan, " ... J
am sure there ls something wront with any so-called 'movement
which resorts to lbe autter in Its Hereb for a me us of expresaJon.
"Ir you permit her pathetic association with her Yippie friends.
she will surely end up where my poor daughter is now -under psychiatric care."
The FBI also wrote leaflet& intended to stir up anlmoslUes
between radical iroups, such as one to New York University
purportedly written by a member of Students for a Democratic
Society.
THE LEAFLET, ENTITLED: "Hackett, the Racist with the
Megaphone Mouth," depicted a black •ctivist as anti-Semitic.
One FBI letter, purportedly from a Vietnam war veteran, was
sent to a WiJSconsin state legiJSlator complaining about scholarship
aid being given to radicals at the UnivenJty ol Wisconsin.
In Washington, the FBI published a fake student newspaper
called "The Rational Observer," Jrihich was distributed at
American University In a campaign to discredit the anti-war move·
m~nt.
Arraign111e11t Todag
Suspect Arrested
In HB Bar Death
A San Bernardino man has
been arrested in Fresno in con-
nection with the Jan. 30, 1975
shooting death of a 25-year-old
Huntington Beach bar patron
during a fight over Juke box
music selection, police said to· day.
Lee Allen Frazier, 35, is being
held on suspicion or shootlni
Kenneth Aubry KJng Jn the
doorway or a Huntington Beach
bar.
Kine was pronounced dead at
Pacifica Hospital from two .25
caliber pistol bullet wounds in his
chest, officials said. .
Witnesses said Kine and
another man became involved in
a fistfight over the music selec-
tion on the juke box at the Capri
Cocktail Lounge, 406 Pacific
Coast Highway.
f'N•PageAJ
2 JETS ••.
proved less noisy than many resi-
dents of nearby areu feared.
The filghts marked the effec.
live end Qf a 10-montb court bat·
tie to keep lbe Concorde from us·
ing Kennedy Airport, whose
neighbors claim noise from the
superaonic Jet la louder than that
from reauJar Jet&.
Demonstrators bad Jammed
the alrport several tima during
the ban by snarlin1 traffic with·
slow·rnovi.n& cars.
Re1uJar Concorde passen1er
!ervlce between Europe ancl
'Wasbinaton's Dullea Intertna-
tionaJ Airport •tarted in May '1976.
Today's.twin lancUn1s -coin·
One of the men waved a gun,
witnesses said. As the 1unman
ran toward the door, King re-
portedly followed and was
gunned down, police said.
Frazier, now in Huntington
Beach police custody in lieu of
$100,000 bail, was arTeated f'rl.
day by Fresno sberi!l'.s depuUes.
Suspect Held
In Holdup
FBI agents arrested one of
two brothers suspected in the
$900 holdup Monday afternoon of
the First National Bank of
Orange at 14601 Red Hill Ave. in
Tustin.
FBI spokesmen said aaents.
picked up Larry Hlgbbouse, 20,
of La Habra shortly after the
heist a:ld are still looking for his
brother Terry, 22, or Anaheim ln
connection with the robbery.
Investigat.ora sald one of the
men carried a gun ln hla
waistband and lbat the money
was taken from a woman teller.
The pair also are suspected in
the Nov. 1$ robbery of Crocker
National Bank, 1 Fashion
Square, La Habra.
Gray Whale
Forum Slated
Goodyear blimp Columbia cruises over Newport Beacb's
Lido Isle Monday with load of passengers from the
Marine Corps helicopter facWty !I\ Tustin. Columbia wW
fly to the former N"avy bHtnp base I>ec. 8 for annual
maintenance. Its crew brought it down from its Los
-PAINTER •••
behind the shootine was robbery.
Myers, however, was not robbed.
O'Rourke theorized that things
happened too fut and the gun.
man apparently didn't have time
to take the $65 in cash from
Myers' wallet or credit cards.
The shooting oc~urred along
the side of Interstate 1S near
Bprstow.
The suspect was believed to
have driven the van to Victorville
after dumpJng Mllers' body Ult·
derneath a turpbleweed.
0 ·Rourke said the suspect then
rode a bua back to Fontana.
0 •Rourke said he had no doubt
at all that Myen had picked up a
hitchhiker although Myers' rel·
ait\fea said that this would be out
or ch~racter for Myers.
The detective also said that on-
ly one person is believed to be in·
vQlved in the slaying.
A motorist who wftnessed the
body being thrown from the van
identified the suspect as a
Caucasian with a mustache.
The jailed suspect was.
described as a blaclc with short
hair and a mwst.ache. O'Rourke
said that the witness D\Otorist
would be contacted aaain for
identificatt90.
Still unexplained was a aeries · ot numbers that Myers had writ·
ten on the palm o! his hand
with a ballpoint pen before his
death.
O'Rourke had earlier said the
numbers represented a possible
clue as to a suspect vehicle.
That theory hat now apparent·
ly fallen t.bl'Oulb.
"We may never know what the
numbers meant or why he wrote
them," O'Rourke said.
Investigators also satd earlier
that Myers waa shot by two dif.
ferent weapons.~ .O'Roµrke said
that bulleis enterinc the body
from different angle1 may bave
been responaf ble for that tm-presalon.
"
,.,.._Page Al
SNOW •••
make," said State CUmat.ologtst
Tom McKee.
Freezing rain and ice snapped
tree limbs and power lines near
Eugene, Ore., caused electrical
outages. }\adlo st~Uops in
western Oregon aoutb to the
Northern CaUfomla moUbtalna
urged motorists t.o 1tay at h:I: ~ the fMecut called for free
taln and more snow.
A housln, lawsuit against the
City ot Irvine and the Irvine
Company over the Irvine In·
dustrlal Complex-East was
formally dlsmi1sed In Oranie
County Su~or Court Monday.
The suit, whicb was settled out
of court, claimed that the\ln·
dustrlal complex would brlng
housing pressures that violated
requirements of the cltY1eneral
plan to pro\tlde adequate hous· ing.
The notice or dismissal was
signed by attorneys for those who
brought the suit; the Orange
County Fair Housing Councll and
seven Irvine residents-Wesley
and Judy Marx, Leon Napper,
Dorothea and Florence Fry, and
Angelo and Marllyp Vassos.
Under terms of the settlement
agreement, the Irvine Company
is to buifd up to 1,400 apartmepts
affordable to famllles or low in·
come.
The City or Irvine is to COD·
trlbute up to $329,000 in state
Housihg and Community
DeveJopment funds to subaidize
Blaze Hits
:Hughes Jet
REDDING (AP> -A Jet
engine on a Hughes
Airwest DC9 caught fire as
the plane started to take off
from the Redding airport.
But the takeolt was
aborted and 20 passengers
got off without injury. the
fire department said Mon·
. day.
The plane, Flt tht 5
bound for San Francisco
and Mexico, had been on
. lbe ground in Redding
through o Sunday night
snowstorm.
~~identally comlna exactly H
ear1 alter the at•uall\atlon ot
he president tor wb9m th•
irPort .it named -were • finely &med operatton worked out for
be 3;600-mlle route over the
An illustratied lecture about the
mi1ratton ol the Calllarnia rr.y
whale is scheduled.at T:30tonigbt
at UC Irvine, lo 220 Social
Science Tower. The pto1tam 1J'
free and open totbe J>ul>Uc. .. ,.,
Gaey J11mea, cbaltifiift ot the .. The advlaorfes, warnlnt or
Oran,1e Coaat . Oo111munity • heavy snow ln some areas,
Colle,., D• P• r tm en t of e:dended 'into Idaho, Montana.
~tlanf.lc. A9ricUltqre Ud Bloto1y, .re. Utah, Wyomtna and the
counu. bJJ ·tripe to Scammon's mountalnsofnortbernColorado.. L•1oon. and San Ignacio and
Magdalena bays ln Mexico, the
aonu.J winter deatJnat.Jon ol the Arctfc'grays.
The lecture ls sponsored by the
Oran1e Cowlt1 ~h1apler ot the
American Cetacean Soelety.
In nelihborlnf Idaho, all
schools n•ar TwJ.t> Palla •ere
closed and tK '91\rport retnatned
cloaed t.hii morning. ·
•
site improvements.
The lawsuit delayed bulldlna of
lbe industrial complex. accord-
"'' to the Inine Compaoy, for 2~ years.
Lecture Set
By Novelist
Novelist Oakley Rall, pro·
lessor ot English and com-
parative litl:rature ai UC Irvine,
Is scheduled to read selections
Crom his works in a noon •P· pearance Wedllesday at Orange
Coast College.
He will speak tn Room 148 of
the Literature and Language
Building; the public lecture ls free.
.Hall is a recent recipient ol a
$4 ,:500 g-rant Crom the National
Endowment for the Arts to write
the words ror an opera based on
Niven Busch's "Duel ln the Sun."
He is Ule author of ".Downhill
Racer·' and other volun'les.
Fro..PflfleAJ
SADAT •••
the GeneraJ Assembly.
"We are so conlwsed that we
are no longer able to tell an ally
from an enemy," be said. "We
don 'l know whether we should
weep or laugh, feel shame or pJty... .
But foreign ministers from the
nine European Common M..-ket
countries today praised ··~he
courageous Initiahve" of Sa!lat
and called (or a peace tilat wowd
Include lbe Arabs or Palestine.
David Owen, Btitaln's forel111
secretary, said or Sadat: "He
made it possible to brid&e Ule
mistrust barrier. He's made tho
Inconceivable conceivable."
A Corona del Mar pb)':Sldll\
and educator lias •ne to court in
a bld to overturn ttie South Coast
Regional Zone Cons,rv1Uoil
Comnlttslon•a rejectlon of bli
plans to sllbdivlde land adjacent
to tbe Top ot the World develo~
menl in LaiwiA Beach. • 1
Dr. t.o.,ds A. Gottacbalk, of 4801
Perhan'l 'Road, chairman of~
DepartP\ilnt of Ps~hlatry ~ ·
Human Behavior at UC I~
c:lalma tn hta OranJe Count~
Superior Court lawsuit that the
Coastal Commlsslon failed td
gl\te him a falr hearinf before t ,
dentedlUa application.
He points out that Orangt
County ol(lqlals had already ap~
proved his plan t.o break ao s.~
acre parceJ up Into five tots.
The lawsuit indicates that the
commission's rejection was
based on the. flndlnc that 1 POI'
tlon of the proposed develop•
meat fell witbln the Laaun1
Greenbeltplann1n1 area. •
•
SAN DIEGO CAP)-San Diego
police have revealed the disap-
pearance or more than $250,000 m
gold and precious stones from a
storage company 1 apparently
stolen by a man posinf as a
buyer.
The theft from Security Vault·
and Locker Rental Company probabl~ occurred in l•te Oc·
Lober. police said Monday.
It w _. not disclosed because in·
vestlgators hoped the 10Id 'and
gems would t"m up on the under-
ground market. ,
omcers are still notityirig vie·
ti ms.
Fair Backed /
The board of directors of the
Ne po Harbor ~rea Cbamber
of Commer~ vOtiet unanimously
M d y to endOrse a proposed
1981 World's Fair at the Ontario
Speedway.
Mem~rs voted for EJpo "al io
part because it Is 4!xpected to 1t·
tract about 30 million viattori to
SOuthel,'1\ Callfqrni4.
l'he ~po. Whicll has been ap-
Pl'QVed by the Bureau of Joterna.• Uonal Exhlbllfona, would b•
much bigger than the SeatUe ~ '
MontrelU world'• ralra, dtreetors
were told.
Snow
y The Alaoclated Pr.,•
The northwest corner of then•· tion was grtpped today by bitter
cold that broke some records and
was blanketed by heavy snow -
in tome places where mUd tem·
puatures and rain normally pre· tail this time of the year.
The Natiorfal Weather Service
said more snow and freezing rain
were expected ln a wide belt of
the Pacific Northwest.
Portland, Ore., ~ "City or
Roses," was virtually paralyzed
by five inches of snow thatfell ln
six hours -an amount contrut·
ed to an annual average snowfall
of7.~ inches.
Schooll in northwest Ore1on
and nei&hborine southwest
Washington were closed, and
conditiQns were worsened by
freez~ rain that crusted on t.op
or the accumulaUon.
Ex-La I ....
Plane Found
Gknn Miller Death Clue?
NEWHA VEN, England (AP) -Fishermen here
say they have discovered aircraft wreckage that may
provide a clue to the disappearance in 1944 or
American dance band leader Glenn Miner.
Miller disappeared over the English Channel
while flying from England to France during World
War II. Radio contact suddenly was lost with the
plane as it flew over the sea near this southern
English port.
The plane failed to arrive at its destination. No
wreckage was found at the time and Miller's body
was never discovered.
Miller was a captain in the U.S. armed fdrces...at
the time. The concerts given by him andvhiSl>and
were great morale boosters for Allied troops fighting
in Europe.
Brian Hills, captain of the trawler Wildflower,
said l'y{onday the wreckage was accidentally hauled
up in his nets about two miles out to sea from
New haven.
'Colll1110n' Cause
. Firemen believe flames from a
fireplace blaie might have
spread lhrouah loose mortar and
bTlcks to ignite studs In a house
along Laguna Canyon Road early
this morning.
Four companies of Laguna
Mission Ma1J Foes
Meet in San Juan
A panel of downtown busl·
nnsmen and property owners
wUl s~ak a1ain1t San Juan Clplstrano'a mlSllon dlstrlct
mall and parkin1 sludy at a
bnakfast meeUna Wednesday.
The. meeting, ~red by~
C.pistrano Busm,ss and Proptr·
ty {)wnen Aasoeiatlon, wlll belin
at 8 a.m. at Harr1'1 Family
Restaurant, 32082 C•mlno
C1i1>lltrano.il1 San Juan. !'bl' res·
ervations or iriformatlon, phone 49S-0288. •
Beach firefighters arrived at the
canyon borM owned by Patrtck
Curran at 2999 Laruna Canyon
Road al about 1:80 a.m. to find
names leaping from the rooftop.
The 16 firemen quickly
knocked down the names by cut·
Ung a bOle in the roof near the
chimney where the fire
originated.
Tlie early morning blue
caused an estimated $8,000
dama1e to the building a1)d
another $500 to contents of the
boble, ftremen said.
l"lasnes apparently Ignited
3tudl and ftammable buildln1
matertaJs in the wall near the
fire box before spreading.
The Ii.re spread lo the aitlc and
roof areas before firemen from
all threeatatiom anived.
One fireman said such fires are
not uncommon, addlni that older
homes oft.en have fireplaces in
which U. mortar ls loose or hu
openlnp tn lt between the nre
ud tbe bulldlnl.
Traffic on the heavily traveled
nor\)\·aouth Interstate S was
almost at a standatlll, and one
. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
• O!TS RAIN, SNOW~3 .
state trooper satd that because of
the stalled vehicles. cars and truck); were "bavini to run like fullbacks" lo aet through.
Another commented be bad not
Sudan
Applauds
Sadat
CAIRO (AP) -Sudanese
President Jafaar el Numairi new
to Cairo today lo show his sup-
po rt or Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat in the face of bitter
division In the Arab wor'ld over
hi s visit to Israel. Numalrt called
Sadat's trip a victory •nd urged
Arabs to support hlrn (Related
story, picture Page A3)
•'On this missi<>n and this trip
we scored aaain a blg 'Victory,"
Numalrl was quoted by Cairo
Radio as saying. "the firat time
was In October (1973). This tlme
also the decision was an Egyp-
tian and Arab one and the battle
wasoun.
"We m~t be proud in all Arab
countries over this victory,"
NuQlalrl said after a lY.a·hour
meeUn11n t.M EtyptJu Jea4er's
Kubeh Palace. •
:rhe nrt~ OCLObef um
waa to tbe·~Middle East Wu of
that year, re1ar'ded by Arabs P
• victory for the Egyptians even
though they were driven back by
the Israelis after lnitJal aains.
Besides SUdan. whk?h ll allied
with Egypt in a ddeose treaty,
Sadat has won tome de.1.ree of
support amoni Arab nations
from Morocco.., Oman and
Jordan.
Syria, Iraq, IJbya, Al&eria and
South Yernen h4ve denounced
Sadat's trip to Je~alem, while
<sMSAD.\T. Pa1e .,_2)
aeen tha\ much anow "In lO years."
Downtown Portland, normally
bustling at '1 a. m., WH nearly de·
serted u wo.rkera took an un-
schedulM holiday. Wtitt trafftC
there was was •t a virtual
standstill as unprepared
motorists found their vehicles
coutdn 't mate It up the sllaheat
inclines.
Othen ruibed to buy Miow ti
JI .,
'
&tadi&PD aeatl at D-.na WU.
Hlth School, expected to COit
close to $300,000, will bo lneJuded
in proposed school canatrucl.lon
proJectl in Capistrano Unllled
, bond and Je ... purchate elec·
A~WI,......
Sen. Edward Kennedy
pauses at the grave of his
brother, President John F.
Kennedy, at Arlington Na-
tional Cemetery. President
Kennedy was assassinated
14 years ago today. For a
look at how teenagers who
weren't even born on Nov.
22, 1963, view the Kennedy
era, sec Featuring, Page
CL
LB Council
T8tcontinue
Meet Dec. 30
With eight public hearings on
their agenda last week, Laiun•
Beach council members didn't
get too Car down their llet of
things to do.
So they'll be back Dec. 30 for
an adjourned meetini lo hear
those items they mi.lied the first
time around. according lo City
Clerk Verna Rollinger.
Items held over include a new
animal control ordinance, lo be
presented by Police Chief Jon
Sparks for council adoption.
In other action, the council
will ·
-Hear a Parks and Recrea·
tlon Committee report oa popf.
ble recreation tl!ea lor Moulton
Meadows, If lbe hilltop parcel ie
purchased by the city.
-Study a proposal for an in·
crease in buainess license lees.
-Hear a report on the J>ark·
Mermaid senior citizen hoUllnl
project proposal and possible
alternatives to the site.
-Consider tha next.move lor a
Parking Management. Protram
wblch pro~ea thrff parldng
structures in the downtown area
of Laguna 8each.
-Hear a request from the
Citizens Alliance tor a
grandfatherins ordinance ythlch
would allow property owners
whose homes are destroy~ in a
major diluter to rebuild them as
they stand. CUrreoi ~ity law says
'those older homes must meet
today's codes or the ownet' mt11t
seek a variaoce.
-A requeat for dlscuislon of
the l>ropo1al for a commUni\y
center wUI also be on the Dee. 30
Uona beln1 welibed for next
March.
T-ruatees voted 4·1 Monday.
wilb Edward Westberl opposed
and Georae White and WllUam
Thompson abaent, to Include
seali.n1 for the higb acbQOl loot·
ball field.
Trustee Westber• of San
Clemente said he opposed the
motion, saying he does not sup•
port a lease-purchase election.
He said a bond election serv~
district taxpayers better 1n pro-
viding necessary school con·
struction in the rapidly ,rowing
district.
Trustee Jan Overton of Dana
Point proposes the inclusion of
Dana Hills stadium seatln1, say-
inl "some people at Dana Hills
reel pretty badly about not hav·
in1 sealS' int.be stadium.
Trustees approved plans
earlier this mdnth for a '359,250
stadium at the new Capistrano
Valley High School in Mission
Viejo. The Capistrano Valley
SCORES •••
1tadium would be built entirely
with funds donated by the M.!A·
sion Vlejo Company developers,
San Clemente Hi1h School, tbe
oldest in the dlltrlct\ baa a
stadium that was bu lt with
apectal district fWldint anct fund·
in1 brought into the unified dis·
trict by the old Capistrano Union
Hiih School Dletrlct, said
Truman Benedict, deputy
superintendent.
Cd.MDoctor
Files Lawsuit
On Land Plan
A Corona del Mar physician
and educator has gone to court in
a bid to overturn the South Coast
Realonal Zone Conurvatlon
Commission's rejection of bis
plans to subdivide land adjacent
to the Top of the World develop-
ment in Laguna Beach.
Dr. Louis A. Gottschalk, of 4607
Perham Road, chairman of the
Department of Psychiatry and
Human Behavior at UC Irvine.
clalma in his Orane• County
Superior Court lawsuit that the
Coast .. l Comml.aalon failed to
give him a fair bearing before it
denied bia application.
He points out that Oran1e
County Officials had alrta4y ap.
proved bis plan to break an 8,2·
acre p~el up lnto five lots.
The lawsuit indlcalea that the
com ml11lon 's rejection was
based on the flndin1 that a Por·
tion of the proposed develop·
ment fell within the La1ima
Greenbeltplannin1 area.
F,....PageAJ
SNOW· ••.
make," sald Stale Climatolo1lat Tom McKee.
Freezini rain and ice snapped
tree IJmbl and power line• near
Eu1ene, Ore., caused electrical
outages. Radio stations ln
western Oreson south to the
Northern CaHfomlAt mountains
ur1ed motorlata to at.Jy at home
as the f orecut called for fl'fflinl
rain and more snow.
The advisories, warnin1 of
heavy snow in some areu,
extended into Idaho, Montana.
Utah. Wyoming and the
mountains of northern Colorado.
In neigt\borine Idaho, aH
schools near Twin Falls were
closed and tl)o airport remained
closed this morning.
One record for the date was
broken early today when the
temperature dipped to 14 below
zero at International Falla, Minn.
The previous record was 9 below,
set in 1956.
Havre, Mont., re<;orded a low
of 20 below th.ii m6mtnc, t)'ini
the record low temperiture for
the date, set in 1931.
Thieves Raid
~a Homes
Thieves walked away with 40
yards of brown carpetins at a
ne..,Jy constructed houae in
Laguna Beach Monday, and
camping eear and ctoth!Qg from another boZM.
Police said SSOO worth of
anchorman Walter Cronkite, re·
turning from Cairo after the his·
toric vlait by EoPtfaA president
Anwar Sada\ t.o Israel. .. ll's a :very bea uUful
alrpla.oe.'' Ctoakite commented,
•1t11 ••mill plane, equal touriat
daai, but the service ta flrst-
cla.as. There la no question about
it, lt'sbalfthetlme''
•'This means Concorde has
made tta bt11eat breakt.b,rou.ii
yet," Jalcl Nbrman L~rnit,
spokesman for BrlUAh Airways.
"This is a prime airline business
market. London and New York
are tlte two bustne.1 capl1-ll of
the Western world."
A amall band ol picket.a was on
haqd frQm various antl·SST
groups, but their proteata have
diminished considerably sloce
the first test landlnes of the plane
proved leu noisy than many resi-
dents of nearby areu 1,ared.
The flights marked the eff~tive en4 oC a 10.monlb court b -
tie to kttp the Concorde from • ing Kennedy Airport, w
nel1hbo claim noise troa
superaoruc jct is louder than th t ~
from re1ular jets. l
Dell\onstrators had jamm~ the airport several times duri
the ban by snarling traffic wi J slow-movm1ca .
Regwar Concotde passengdr
1erviee between Europe and
Washington's Dulles Interlnf'·
tlonal Airport started in M~y
1978.
Today'a twin JandlQiS -coio-
cldentally cominat exactly l4
yeara after the au inalion ~ the president tor wbom t e
a.lrport is named -were a line
Umed operation worked out for
the 3,SOO·mJlc route over the
Atlantic. t
Taxi Marathon{· ~ ..... raeeAJ
SADAT ••.
Saudl Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates have been silent. Woman's $4,000 Ride Halted
Arab critics, Including Pales-MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -A
tinlana, have called Sadat a California wof1)an whose $4,000
·•traitor," accused him or coast-to-coast taxi ride was cut
destroyint .Arab unity and ahortbyacourtotderaayasheis
threatened him wt.th assasslna-determined to continue her trip
tlon. to New York. Jordan's Premier Mudar "I've just been tryin& to reach
Badran and Palestinian leader Memphis lo get another cab,"
Y a s l r Ar a fat a r rived l n Jean Caren, 55, said Monday In a
Damascwi, capital of Syria, to telephone interview from a hotel
confer after Sadat's visit. in Jackson, about 90 miles north
Whtie neither Bad ran nor or .Mempbis.
Jordan's K.lnf Kusaeln bu com-Mrs. Caren set out Tbunday
mented oa. U\e visit, Jordanian rroiv Santa Maria, Calif. on her sympathy was expreased by In· 3,000.mUe odyuey with her ~
formation Minister Adnau Abu die Duches9. By Sunday everune,
Odeh wbouid the trip "broke the she bad made it to Jackson, two-
psycholocical barrier and pro-thirdA of the way. before her
vided Cresh hopes for the recon· driver, Ed Tbomu, was told to
vening of the Geneva con-turn baclcbyhlscompany.
ference." "We weren't here that long
Syria accused Sadat today of when everythint happened at
"surrendering to the Zionist once.'' Mrs. Caren said. "He aota
butchers" and "stabblnf thl' phone call from h1I boss .•. He
fellow Arabi ln the back" by leftSundaynlaht."
travellnatolarael. Mra. Caren said Thom-. did
' ' A 1 a re s u lt o t t bis not try to pertuade her to return
· diversionary, traelc comedy, the wilb blm. She said he aave her
Middle E~st has become a the telephone number• of several,
theater of the abs\,\rd," Syrian reliabh~driveraln Mem,,Phil. Ambass~dor MowaffekAllaftold Police stopped Thomas and
the, QeneralAaaembly. ?4rs. Caren near Bl)'tbe. Calif. neal' the Callfornla·Arbona Su8pect Held. ::u~~r, but ai1owec1 them to coo·
1 "The officer Who talked to her
said sbe seemed f llttle eccen· In Holdup tric, but In control of her mental f acuJUes," a police spokesman
FBI acenta arrested one ot said. "SO he fliured ihhe wanted
two brothen suspected 1n the to ao act'OIS country 1n a taxi. ~ d ond thatwuuptober!' ~ hol llP M 11 afternoon or Diane Bernal of Santa Marla,
\be Firat Nattonat •Bank of Mn. Caren'• dAUCbter, obtained
Oran1• at 1'801 Red H1U Ave. in a court order Tbunday barrinl
Tmtln. the Black f.nd White Cab Corn· FBI ,spokesmen aaid aaents pany from tran1porUn1 her
pl eked up LwrY Jllabboule., 20, mother, but the ftrm did 11ot bear of La Habra tbortfy -1tet the heist and are ll111 looltlq for hia from Thoniu until Sunday.
brother Terry 22 or Anaheim in Mrs. Bernal tald her mother
connectJOl\ with the robbery. left wlthoUt ber lmowled1e and ls
lnveaU.ators Id one ot the • dlalJ)OMd ae.hbophrenlc who
.1 bad been 1n a mental lMUtutloo men 011rrle4 .~n ht bit 'f.D New Yotk before the famUv waistband and at the. money "·
wa1 takel\~m a woman teller. movfd toCallfomJaln May.
Th• Mir u.o ate auapected 1n Sally CbaVeJ, whoie huaband
the Nov. 15 robbery ofi1Crocku" 11 part owner of the eab com·
National Bank 1 PHbion PIOY, Hl4 a driver trlld to talk
Square. Ia Habra.'• Mn. Care out or 111aktq th• eic-
penalve trip. But Mrs. Caren re-
portedly sald she wu aflald to
fly and that she bad been told f bus and traiil companies s e
could not carry her dog.
Mrs. Bernal said a prie.t
talked with Mrs. Caren on Suil·
day nlaht in Jackson and th~t e was told she planned to go
Belalum to v1slt ber mo . •
f
FroraP-ileAJ 1
PAINTER •• ~
Myen. however, was not robbed.
O'.&ourke theorized that Wnas
happened too last and the guh-
man apparently didn't have time
to take the $55 1n cash fropi
Myers' wallet or credit cards.
The shoolina occW'red ~Olfl the sJde of Interstate 15 ~
Baratow. 1
The suspect was believed t.o
have driven the van to VlctorviUe
after dumping Myers' body uh-
demeath a tumbleweed.
O'Rourk•••td the suspe~t t.hf1 rOde a bus ~ck to Fontana.
O'Rourke said he bad no doubt
at all that MYera bad pl.eked up a
hitchhiker eltbough Myers' rel-
atives sald that this would be out of character for Myers.
The detectlve ~IJo said that Oh·
Jy one pet'HD is believed to be in·
volved in the tlayi.n,. '
A motorist who witnessed the
body beiAe thrown trOm the:;..~ ldenUUea tl'ae IUlpect .. a
Caucasian with a mustache.
'l'he Jailed suspect was ~rtt>ed u a black with short
h&lr and a muatache. o·aourke
uid that the witness motorist
would be contacted afain for
identillcation.
SUll unexplained was a aeries
of numben thtt Myen had writ-
ten on the P•lm of Ms haftd
with a ballpWtt pen before hb
death.
O'Rourke h~d earlier &aid tibe nu1J1.,.n represented a pos~le ~lue u to a aual)e(!t veblcle. 1
That theory hu now app&Nnt.
ly f alien throu1h. • :>
"We may never ki\ow: what>tbo numben meant or why he YNte
them,•• O'Rovkesald. l
lnvelll11ton also 1&.ld e er
that Myers WU shot by twu dif •
fereot weapons. O'Rourk d
that bu.Uttl entertnj the tiOd.J
from dllferent anales may .hhe
bein r11~1>1e ror tbat
preulon.
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• 8Al'£WAY STOass, THE IAllGEST p-oeery chain ln
Lhe country. te~rted a I &Mffffnl decline ln profit.I for tbe first nine montbS of l97T -and that'• on tap_ of a II ~t
decline lD 1178 • .\AP, t.he •ec:ond·larcat.~ha.ln. reported a
horrendous • per~nt drop 1D pl'Clfttl for the three montbs
ended last Aug. 31.
The grocery buslneu.bu alwaya been a low marcln af.
f.alr, and the maratn.s are 1'amNi.nl. Tbe 75 lara•t cbalns,
those dotn1 better than $100 mllllon a year .. an netUn1 less than a penny on every dollar of Ml•. Even the chaln1
that normally out·
perfonn tbetr industry
-Wlnn·Dbtte in the
Soutb and Jewel ln the
MldweSt -have been caught up ln the
uutlalae. Wll)n·Dlxle 'I
pront1 in the ~ inontbs ended Sept. ao awed no 11ln
over 19'18. Jewet•1 moet recent quarter eanWlp were down
19perc• Since the 1rocery industry ls supposed to be reeeulan·
proof (after all, people alwQt have to eat>, wbat'a happen·
ing"? Here are three answers:
•• PACED WITH HIGBEa coSr$ 00 an alde!S. especial·
IJ In enea'IY and shelter, consumers are beinl careful about
bow much the~ apend.
2. Since they are buylna fewer ltema, consumers are
sboppln( more ftequenUy at 7·11• aDd 9tber conffDlence
stores. 3. More famlUes, many of them chlldlesl. are uUn1 at
fast-food outlets or restauranta.
Tbe ~ chains are reactlnl to th• trends in
varloca ways.
SOU Alli!! MOVING IN19 a baril·boaa warehouse.
type. no.brand-name operatJon wben UM merchandl.14 ls
stacked ln lbe ortainal ablppln& c:u1ons and prices are sientficanU,y lower.
Otbcn are putting mlcn>wave Oft8I In ltorel to beat
the falt·food operators at their own pme. ~
StlD others, Ju.at a few. are bedlbtc their bets b1 e~r· in't tho restaurant field thom.elve.. 1Ac:1ry S.ONI. OM nlott
dlversttled pf the a~rmlltket chalnl, ls operalifta l'° Sirlol.n Stockade restaurants. American stores, which ranks
fl!th In the lndu.atry wilb lta Acmo and Super Savtr atore.s ln
the Eyt and lte Alpl\a Beta •uperma.rlteta in Ute West, la
runnllif33Alpb,y•a famUy restauranta and l2Budoe'1 fut·
food uru.u. · 01.beri. Ol course, are in a state of abook and don't how
what to do.
•
TBE VALU& LINE INVE8TllENT SUJ'YeJ wuned re·
eently that ''the supermarket tnduatry wtll bHe to ""'' • st.root._ to survive •t aaythln• approacblJit .. ~NMnt siJe. lttabecouilil1 apparentthattberewtllbea eo.rtln 'ihe ·1nduitn-.•.• Tbole &rocetY chains eabae to aiapt
tut ellOUP to U.O new Industry treDds OC' unwtWnr to tllnk
in termsol dlftl'SlllcaUon wW prObablJ ft« wtvtve otet Lhe
loniruo... •
NEW YORK <AP> - A 1ma.ller·tban-e1peeted Increase in consumer prices and other favorable economic news
helt>ed Utt stock market post a broad gain CA>day.
The Dow Jones a•1era10 of 30 industrial 1tocks Wal' up
8.41 polntl to"2.52.
Qalnen held a Z.1 eda-e over loaei::.s amq New York S~k Eaclian1•llated i.saua.
IAUI'
Due to late tran1mlalon today's fisting wm not
•PPt•r ln the ?•11.Y .~Jlot.
-OM.Y '1LOT
I i t -..1) \ \
£VENlNQ Fl.:£0N
"A M•tter Of Clroumetanoe" THE AVEHGERS
MICl<eV MOUll CLU8
• auHAMMt e SEaAMI! ITN!!T I YIU.A AL&GRE
6:30 BEWITCHED
''No Zip In My Zap"
.., ADAM-12
"A teentige robber ohaleng"
the Adam-12 teem. G FREEHAND SKETCHING
1:00 8 C88 NEWS D8 NEWS 8 EMEACiENOY ONE.I
The paramedlca rapond to •
..... Of unua&al ~
after t,..tlng an ln)ur9d woman
ataaMnee. 8 LYNN SHAKElFORO CD THE BRADY BUNCH
"Snow White And The Seven
Bradys"
Q) THE ROOKIES
A manslaughter cue turns Into
a conteat of credlblllty aa the
only wttneaa la retarded. ta ZOOM CD AS MAN BEHAVES
IAnleltl
John David Carson
guests as a lonely
young dreamer on
Mulligan's Stew
tonight at 9 on NBC ,
Channel 4.
81 THE BRADY BUNCH
Cindy develope tonllllltla. m LET'S MAKE A DEAL 9 28TONIGHT G NEWSCHECK
(I) THE THANKSGIVING
THAT ALMOSTWllSN'T "A Converatlon With Or. Wll-
llam Glauer"
(fl) ABC NEWS
&:301J MOVIE *** ''The UFO Incident"
(1975) James Earl Jonea,
Estelle Paraona. A husband
and wife olalm they were
abducted by a apec:eoreft and
8.'008 (I) THEFITZPATRIOK8
JICk F1tzpatrick tt1es to keep
up with ht8 contemporaries by
amol<lng marijuana. bu1 find•
the reeultlng trip a llttle too
rough to handle.
e COU8TEAu oovssev
"Calyplo'a Seerd'I Fot The
Btttanntc" An attempt to .otv.
the myltety of the Wor1d War I
llnklng of the H.M.S. BtttannJo.
• PARENT EFFEOTIVENESS
"It'• A Deal" No-Loee Prob6lm
SoMng l"MUltt In a tOlutlon
negotl•ted by parent end chfld.
8:30 8 (II LAVeRNE & SHIRLEY
"Laverne And Shlrtey Meet
Fabian" After trying unauc-
oetaflJlly to buy tlckett for a
Fabian concert, the glrta begin
ooncoctlng a acheme to meet
theW ldd f-.to-t.o.. Fabian
g_ueet...,.. .. hlmMlf. , examined medlcally. (1 hr., 30
min.) 8 BASKETBAU
LOI Angelea Laker• VI. Phoenix
Suns m MY THREE SONS
"What About Harry?"
fD OVER EASY
Howard F•at; produce
bargalna; dlacount aervte:e.;
IOclal MCUrfty.
CD GROWING YEARS
"The Chlld'a Mind" (Part 1)
(I) C88NEW8
9 MERVGRIFFIN
Gueata: Prince end Prtnceaa
R.inler of MonllCO, Jedc Pur,
Charlton HHton, Wayne R~Olna Merrill, Clltf
Robertaon, Tom Laughlin, Cart
Reiner, Dolor.. Taytor, Dlc::I<
Van Patten, Vincent Van
Patten. Roy Emeraon. Clark
Grabner, Don Budge.
7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 LIARSCLUB D ABCN~8 m ILOVELUOY
"The 8Mnoe''
Cl) ADAM-12
The crah of a light plane lntet-
rupta Officer Reed'• teulng of
Officer Malloy. la MACNEJL I LEHRER REPORT m EARTH, SEA AHO SKY
"9ttuctural o.o.ogy"
(I) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 D CANDID CAMERA e NEWLYWED GAME 89 HOUYWOOO
SQUARE8
D MAN FROM ATLANTIS
"Cryttal Wat.,, Sudden 0..th"
Mark Hant• find• hlmtelf
threatened by ttrange under-
... being9 when the larcenoua
Mr. Shubert trldta him Into
penetrating the fcwce field pro-
tecting thefr aubmerged habl-
tat. e MOVIE * ... Molly And L.awteaa John".
(1973) Vera MU., Sam EJIJott.
A emall town lherttt'a wlf9 it
flattered Into helping a young
prteoner eecape the gdOW8. (2
hre.)
• (II HAPPY DAYS
"My Fair Fonzie" Fonzie fall•
for a pr9tty eoclallte whoee
anobbith broth« tak.. OM
10ok at Fonzie and dectde9 It would be a grMt gag to Invite
him to a h)gh ~lety party. m CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIEHOS ~
Guest: Pu Sand.
• MOVIE * ** ''Whatwet Happened To Biby JaM" (1"2) Bette Oevla,
Joan Crawford. Two .........
former...,.., llw • peychopath-
tc eidttenoe In a terror-ridden
h<Me. (2 hrt.)
Rating• Guide
'*""--..... k~ t• •• office ......._.. ........ fer TV -, ............ Qitk.1 * • *,, -Excellent
• • • -Very Good
** -Good
• ~~ -Fair * -'Poor
•
UJ CR088-WIT8
I!) OVER EASY
Howard Fut; produce
bargains; dllc:ount MfVlcea;
eoclal eecuttty. (R)
t:OOe(I) M•A•&•H
A notable tenct.cy toward
midriff fteb proniptt an angry
~ ColoMI Potter to demand dally
callathenk:e and lud• to a
4077th ()tymplca. D MUWGAN'8 8TEW
"Llttle Orey Bird" When now.., not• and COMtent
ahadowlng become a part of
hie pattern, the open admira-
tion of a lonely young man
(John David Cataon) begin• to
trlgh!en Jane Mulligan.
8 (II THREE'S COM~AHY e MERV GRlflFIN
Ou.ta: Prtnoe and Prlncetl
Aalnlet of Monaco, Jack P.ar.
Charltoh H••ton, Wayne
Rogers, Dina Merrlll, Cllff
Robtrtlon. Tom Laughlln, cart
Reiner, Dolcna Taylor, Dick
Van Patten, Vincent Van
Patten, RoV Emet9on, Clark
Grabner, OOl'I Blldge. e PLEDGE BREAK
RegulM programming may bie
~due to pledge breaka. 8 MA8TERPlEC& THEATRE
"I, ctaudlur. Wiiting In The
Winge'' JuUa contlnuea her
ecanc:Sab» otgiel whlle her
ton, ca.udlue, appears to be
hllf·wtUed becauae of a
...,._..endallmp. t:1se tRON8lD£
lronaide la Cllled ~QOl"I to pro-
StUI Tunhig IJp
Sammy Cahn Shows 18 New Ones
LOS ANGELES (AP) -It's the
custom for elderly 1on1wrtters to
grou1~ that today's tunes aren't aa
good as ln the old day1. We QOW tum
the floor over to Sammy Cahn, 64.
"Aw .. ?don'\ hold wU.h that much,"
the four-time Academy Award winner
said by ph(>ne from New York. "I
think every 1eneraUon bas the rilbt to
put its own st.amp on ill own culture."
Lyrlclat Cahn, a son1wrtter since
a1e 17, has 18 new tunes ln one show
arrivingWednetday. It'a a <=BS music
special called "Once Upon a Brothers
Grimm."
A PEPPE Y MAN of sunny
disposition and a favorite c;oinposer
for such alnaen as Frank Sinatra,
Cahn counts the tunes be'• wriUen in the thousands, not hundreds.
The better·known ones range from
•'Three Coinl in the fountain" to "Bel
Mir Blat Du Schon." ID addlUon tb hls
Oscars, he also sot an Emmy in 1955
for ''Love and Mama1e1" later a
Sinatra bit.
A resident of Beverly Hllll for SI
years, Cahn still maintains ah
apartment In bis native New York,
where he and a pal, Saul Chaplin,
broke into the song business u a
team.
IT WAS TBEllE they first scurried
about the halloed halls of
tuneamithing, the Brill Bulldlna Ill
mld-Manhatten. knocklne on
publishers' doors, offerln1 their
warea and learnint of rejection.
"We got turned down every day, but
that's how we-learned to write,••
laughed Cahn, who recently ended a
at.1Jlt ~New York's Rainbow Room in
a show that featured both l\11
anecedotea and bis music.
When be began his career,
publishers ran tblnta. Cab}l wu
asked where he'd try today lf he, at
his 'Current age, was 1tartina fresh,
had no reputation and never bad a
IOnl recorded or publllbed before. •
t
8 TONIOHT ,
Hott: Johnny Careon. Gvlstt:
Kenny Aooera, lterllng
Hayden, C4tt Rein«. e LOVI. AMEJUCAH aTVlE
"Love And The PWn TMh I
I.ewe And :The ~
CtJll•" 8 QI AllO MOVI• .
**~ "Where Htv9 All The People Gone?" (1874) Peter
Greve., Verna atoom. A faml!y
ttn.iogtel to .urvlW Wttlte Earth
II being dellutated by a deadly ,vlrua. (F\) I r.MAR1"
The Ct!W .-On• ee end 89 to r9tneve a dead1y aolentlflc t•
'!!:I frorn tcaoe.
• CAPTtONEO ABO NfiWS
MOANtNG
12:00e 1WIUGHT ZQNE •
t;~~ooo a.-1nvotYeie Tom In tMlf •
vtdoue pk>t: Mette Wta Chart
about the lottery: Wanda
d*"'" H 1nce1t with Cathy;
Mn tweatt ov. a loan.
• MOVIE **'A .. Riden Of Vengeance"
(1953) fUchard Conte. Vlwca
Llftdfora. Afttt hi$ Wtr. la
murdered, a proap•otor
MWdlM • fOf the k!U«a and teams up with a man Who wu
robbed of his •t•t ... (1 hr .• 30
mint.) e DICK CAVETT
Guett: WOt16 r.nowned oP«•
figure Sir Rudo" Bing. 12~8 MOVIE **'A "To The Victor'' (1~)
Oenn49 Morgan, VIYeca Unfort.
Collaboratora must stand trial
after the war tor their off.,_
against France... ( 1 hr., 55
mini.) .MOW: **'A ''What A Woman" (11M3)
Roaaltnd Au9eall, enan Aherne.
An authot'• pmty *Q*"t gett
Into tome romantic muddtet
wtth her olenta. (2 hn.)
1:00 8 TOMOAAOW
GUiit Mortimer Adler, phlloao-
phtr and author.
GISPY
Kelly and Scqtt ar• atalgned to
reecue a young EQg""' girt, but
ate stymied ~ tl'lf refu ... to leave.
1:071 NEW$ 1:30 MOVIE ** "Love Of Tht• Queen•" (1953) Hedy Lamarr. A WM!thy noblemal'\ foUoM • beautlfuf
ectrea from city to dty. (1 hr ..
3CJmlM.) a.-001 HEWS MOVll1 ** "&et)' Man I• My Enemy" (1870) Robert Webber, Ella
Martmtlll. When a dartng jewel
robbery It foled by the po41ce,
the ~ member of the oano to d"°°"9r who
~ .(2hrs.)
2".20 I NEWS 2:21 NEWS
2:IO MOVIE
tit~ "The HeadJ9" Ghoat"
(1959) Richard Lyon, Ullane
Scottane. Three exc:henge ttu.
dents In Btttaln vllft Ambf'QM eaaua. ~ heunted by
Cousteau Sea Special
Explores Brittanie
A quick 1lance th(ou1b a few hundted of th• t,liM p~u dovOtect
to the New Left revealed three letten to pateabl~hlcb purpoffiid to
be written by aympathetlc friends. NJme!I were dele~ tO protect tbe privacy ofthoH involved. •
In one cue, the FBI •aid it hoped to spur the parentt Of a youna
actlvlat to action by tellin& them ol a bol\&I drua pi'oble1n •.
"I HA VE GREAT .BVUWON for what I am abOQt to do.•• tho
phony letter said. "but I feel a treater good wlll be Hrved; that I.I
the salvauon of (name deleUd) .
.. It I.I with creat remorse that I inform you that he ta ualn1 pot
' Goodyear blimp Columbia cruises over Ne\vport Beach's
Lido Isle Monday with load of passengers from the
Marine Corps helicopter f~cility in Tustin. Columbia will
fiy to the former Navy blimp base Dec. 8 for annual
maintenance. Its crew brought it down from its Los
·2 Concorde
Jets Arrive
In New York.
NEW YORk <AP) -French
and Brtttsb Concorde jets each
ttarryin• 100 passen1er1 landed
at Kennedy Airport today, brine·
ing commetelal aviation here ln· !9 the .upel'IOnic aae and slpal·
ing anothel' def eat for those who
vpwed to bar the fast. but noisy plane.
Under gray skies, the swept·
'4'lng jet.a carrylNf crews of nine ~d capacity loads set do'Wn on
111nway SI Ritbt._ Jutt 3~ hours
after luvtnc Paris and London ~ their fint re"j'ularly schedu1ed
ry&tita on tbe lucrative New York ruii!'Tbe French craft landed at ,..
S:SO a.m. PST, followed abOut
two mmutel later by the Britl.lh.
,Be>th ne'lr at a cn.rlsln1 ·~ of 1.340 l'ftiles per hour acl'OIS the ~500 miles of ocean, btatint the
aun acrou the Atlantic.
Amona the J)•en1ers on the
Air France Jet was CBS Newt
·anchorman Walter Cronkite, re-
l.-minC from Cairo after the bl•·
• <See t 18'1'8, Pase AU
:~ .
Gknn Milkr Death Cl~?
NEWHA VEN, England (AP) -Fish~rmen here
say they have discovered aircraft wreckage that may
provide a clue to the dtaaP,pearance in 1944 of
American.dance band leader Glenn Miller.
Miller disappeared over the Enelish ChaMel
while fiyi.ng from England to France during World
War II. Radio contact suddenly was lost with the
plane as it new over the sea near this southern
English port.
The plane failed to arrive at its desilnation. No
wreckage·was found at the time and Miller's body was never discovered.
Miller was a captain in the U.S. armed forces at
the time.· The concerts given by him and hfs band
were great morale boosters for Allied troops fighting
in Europet
Brian Hills, captain of the trawt~r Wildflower,
• said Monctay the wreckage was accidentally hauled
up In his nef!t about two miles out to sea from
NeWilaven.
•
~ ...
Seo. Edward""" Kennedy
pauses at the grave of his
brotb~r. Pre81dent John F.
Kennedy, at Arlington Na·
tional Cemetery. President ·
Kennedy was assassinated
14 yeal'$ ago today. For a
look at how teenagera who
weren't even born on Nov.
22, 1963, view the Kennedy
era, see Featuring, Page
Cl. ~
l
CAIRO CAP > ..... Sudanese
President Jafaar el Numairi fitw
to Cairo today to 1how hl• sup-
port of Eeyptlan Prealdent
Anwar Sadat in the face of bltttr
division in lbe Arab world over
his visit to Israel. Numairi eallecl
Sadat's trip a victory and urted
Araba to suppori 1Um. (ReJated
story, picture Pace A3 >
·'On this mission and thl• trip,
we scored aaain a bi& victory, '
Numairi was quoted by Cairo
Radio as saying. "The flrat Ume
was in October (1973). This time
also the decision was an Ecyp-
tian and Arab one and the battle
was oqrs. "W~ must be proud in all Arab
countries over t.JU' vlctpry ... •
Numairi said alter a Hi-hour
meeting in the Egyptian leader's
Kubeh Palace.
. '
The re.fer~• to Oetober tm
WU to tl1e t!illd#Jt Eaat War of
that year, re~ by ~-aa a victory for tbe Ewttana even
thouab they were driven back by
tho llraelll e.tt.er initial catn.s. Bestdea Sutfaft, which la ~ed
with Ep_pt ln a cteteose tre4tf',
Sadat bu won 80me dearee of
support amon1 Arab nations
from Morocco, Oman and
Jordan. Syria, Iraq, Libya, A11ena and
South Yemen have denounced
Sadat's trip to Jerusalem, while
Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates have been llilent.
Arab critics, includinC Pales·
Unians, have called Sadat a
"t,raito{." accused him of des~rqyfog Arab unity and
threatened him with assassina·
lion.
r.
M~rgare~ .Trudeau, ~estranged wifer of the Canadian
prime rrums ter. dances with tennis star Vilas Gerulaitis
at a party in his honor in a' New York discotheque.
<Related story Paae B7. >
Fro•PageAJ
PAINTER ARRESTED •••
described as a black with short
hair and a mustache. O'Rourke
said that the witness motor\3t
would be contacted again for
identiflc1ttion.
Still unexplained was a series
of numbers that Myers had writ·
ten on the palm of his hand
with a ballpoint pen before his
death.
O'Rourke had earner said the
numbers represented a possible
clue as to a suspect vehicle.
That theory has now apparent·
ly fa1len through.
"We may never know what the
numbers meant or why be wrote
them," O'Rourke said.
Investigators also said earlier
that Myers was shot by two dif·
rerent weapons. O'Rourke said
that bulteta entering tla body:
from different aJlgles ma1 ~iwe
• been . responsible for th~ m-
press1on.
New Call Sou.-.t
Court Or~r StallS
Cross-country' Taxi
MEMPlDS, Tenn. <AP> -A with him. She said he eave her
California woman whose $4,000 the telepl)one number• of several
coast-to-coast taxi ride was cut reliable driven in Memphl1. •
short by a court order says she is Police stopped Thomas and
determined to continue her trip Mrs. Caren near BlYthe, Callf.
to New York. near the Callfornla·Arlzona
"J've just been trying to reach border, but allowed them to con·
Memphis to get another cab," tinue.
Jean Caren.~. sald Monday ln a "The officer who talked to her
telephone interview from a hotel aaid she seemed a little eccen· ...
in Jackson, about 90 miles north tric, but ln control of her mental
of Memphis. faculties," a police spokesman.
Mrs. Caren aet out Thursday said ... Sobeflcuredifahewuted.
from Santa Marta. Calif. on her to go across country in a taxi,
3,000.mUe odyssey with her poo-that wu up to ber. "•
die Duchess. By Sunday evenina. · she had made it to Jackson two-Diane Bernal of Santa Maria.
thirds of the way before her Mn. Cart:n'a..dauibter, obtalned
driver, Ed ThomJi, was told to · , • cou~ order 1bunday b•rrinl
turn back by his company. the Black and White Cab Com·
"We weren't here that tone pany froJD ttansporttna. her
when everything had.peped at ll)otber, but the firm {ild not bear
once "Mrs c l "" ot from Thomas until Sunday. • · aren sa . ne 8 a -H¥ntington. Beacti ·bar patron
Phone call Cf?m h~,s boss ... He Mrs. Bernal aatd ber mother, ' • , lettS~dayn1ght. left without her 1<n9wlodae and lt ~r•. p.,-en said Thomas did di ID04ed hi ·
noi try to persuade ber to return ~ad ~ 'tn a -~e!~bl:::ft~:::
CdMDoctor
Files Lawsol.t
OJi Land Plan
A Corona del Mar physiclu
and educator hu gone to court ln
a bid to overturn the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation
Commission's rejection of his
plans to subdivide land adjacent
to the Top of the World develop-
ment in Laguna Beach.
Dr. Louis A. Got.tachalk, of 4807
Perham Road, chairman of the
Department of Psychiatry and
Human Behavior at UO Irvine,
claims in his Orange County
Superior Court law~uit that the
Coastal Commission failed to
give hlm a fair hearing before it
denied bis appljcaUon.
He points out that Orange
County officials bad already ap·
proved his plan to br.eak an 8.2·
acre parcel up into five lots.
The lawsuit lndlcates that the
commission's rejection was
based on the findlng that a por·
tion of the proposed develop·
ment fell within the Lacuna
Greenbelt planning area.
in New YO'tk betoro the famlly
moved to Calllomla ln Nay.
Sall)' Chavez, wbost husband
is part owner of the cab corn·
l)any, said a driver tried \o talk
Mrs. Caren out of maklnc the ex·
pensive trip. But Mrs. Garen re·
portedly said she was alraJd to
fly and that she had been tolct by
bus and traln companies the
could not carry her doc.
Mrs. Bernal said a priest
talked with Mrs. Caren on Sun·
day night in Jackson and that he
was told she planned to IO to
Belgium to vitk her mother.
Mrs Bernal s.aJd her
crandm9l}ler dled three years
ago and there were no relaUves
left In ~lgham.
Mrs. Caren. wtio aald she ia not
living with her husband and that
she has anotller dauahter in New
York, declined lo dJ-cuas her reasons for the ttip or hu current
finances.
''I'm Just trylnc to get to New Yor~ right now," she said. "I
don t want lt in the newspaper. I
Just havetocet to New York.
''Everythlnr wilt turn out all
right, I'm pretty sure." she said.
, ...... Gffe.4J
'DEAR DAD' LETTERS •••
''If you permit her pathetic aasoclatlon wlth her Yippie friends,
she will surely end up where my poor dauahter b now -under
ps)'chlatric care." • The FBI also wrote Je.rtets intended to stir· up animosities
·•between,. radical IJ'OUpt, such as one to New York University
..., • 'PtJrpoaudlY written by a member of Students. tor a Democratic
SOclet.y, ·
THl!l LEAFLET, £NTfri.Eo: "Raclcflt.t..; tht Racist With Uie ~ Megaphone Mouth,., depleted a black aetMst a~ antl·Semltlc.
• One FBl letter, purportedly from a Vietnam war veteran. waa
sept to a Wlsconstn state teat11ator complaln.lna abOut •cholarshlp
old being gWen to radicals at the UnJvel'$l\y o( Wl1eonaln.
" In Washlnat<m, the FBI J>Ubtlshed a rut atudent f\e\tSpa~r
called '~he·. l\atlonal ObServer," which was dlstribUted at Amerl~an Unlverait)'. l.ti a. campJign to dbcre'd.lt the anti-war move·
mtnt. •
In~ernatiooal Airport 111d
, •~ow plows weft able tQ lleep Qllt ~nway open but he sa1a it was
takinl som~ taxicabs up to three
hours to mike it a few mlles to
the terminal.
Heavy ' pYeci\iitation in the
form of rain Ot" snow also fell in
drought-stricken Colorado and
California.
In Colorado, a handful of the
two dozen or so ski resorts were
open, but IJ state cUmatolo1ist
said the ini>unta1n drouaht that
plummeted business last season
was notnecessarily over.
"One month. a winter does not
make," said State Cllmatologlst
Torn McKee.
Freeztnc rain and ice inal>Ped
tree limbs and power Jines near
Eugene, Orel> caused ele~trical
outages. Radio st•tl.ons in
western Oregon south to the
Northern CaU!ornia mountains~
urged mot.otlsts to stay at home
as the forecast tailed ror freezing
rain andmo,..anow.
The advisories, warning of
heavy sn9w in some areas,
extended into Idaho, 'Montana.
Utah, Wyo.mint and the
mouatalns of northern Colorado.
ln neighboring Idaho. all
schools near Twin Falls were
closed and the •ifPOrt n:mained
closed this morning.
One record for the date was
brokeq.. early today when the
temperature dipped to 14 below
iert> at lnte!)JattORat Falls, MiM.
The prevloua record wat 9 below.
aet in 1956.'
Havrti Mont .. recorded a low
or 20 be ow thts morning, tying
the recoro tow temperature ror
the date, tet ln 1931 .
Mesan· Jailed
After Assault
A Costa Mesa man rem(llned 1 . jailed today after police aUegebe 1 swunt a nail-studded board at bis
landlord and threw a &lass bowl
at a police officer.
Ponce said Ted Howard, 52. o1 1 140 Citbrillo St., is being beld m
lieu of $25,000 ball, He faces
possible charges or aasault wtth a
deadly weapon and assault. witbi
a deadly weapoh on a polic:e of.
fleer. No ol'le was reportecl 1.ojured
the Saturday nisbt 11\cident, of·
ficers said. • • -
The incident reppJ1e<lly gq
when trlliler park inana1er
David R. Mannln1 trled to l1A!P
Howard, who was alle1edly
breaking windows in traUen.
\tOb 70, NO. 326"' 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
Snow
,
Byftet\uoclakMl Prne
f The northwest corner of the na·
Uon WU aped today by bttter
cold that e aome rw..:u1'Clt and waa blanketed by heavy 1bow -
,lo aome places when mlld tem·
P.eraturel and rain normally pre-
vail thia time of the year.
. The National Weather Service
'laid mOl'e snow and frfflint rain
were expected ln a wide belt of
e Pacllic Northwest.
Murder conspiracy defendant Alexander Kulik (seated)
and his attorney, Philip DeMassa, wait outside Orange
County Superior Court where Kulik's arraignment on
charges involving the death of Stephen John Bovan ol
Fountain Valley was delayed Monday. Judge Robert E.
Rickles put the arraignment over to Nov. 28 after
Kulik's attorney challenged the grand jury indictment 9f
his client. The judge said he will rule on the challente
at that time and expects Kulik to enter a plea on j.be
samt-date. \
I
Family in Viej~· • I
. '
Flees House Fire
Members of a Mwion Viejo
family and their vlslUn• rel· alives escaped without fdjury
ftom their burftln1 home today after awakeoing to the cl-.nl of a
•Anoke detector, tlremen re·
1t0rted.
• The drly momtna blaze at the
)!ome of Robert Hathaway, 25'752 ~enil, Mluloo Viejo, caused an
.eathoated $5,000 damace, ~emensaid.
The·S:l.9 a.m. blue erupted ln
' bedroom closet near where ;two members of the Hathaway
fAmtlJ were sleeplnc, firemen
IJid.
Hathaway, bl• wile and 1'·
month-old IOQ escaptcj without
.
lnjury, alon& 'Wtth Ha:s~wQ'a
vtsiUn& brother, Wife ton,
firemen reported. 1 Hat,ha.ay an4 a peJjbbol' at-
tacked the blue Wltll a ......
laole and fire e~wber md
namea were nearly Put out wlMin
firemen arrived.
Tbe cause of the fire la at1U UD<-
der tnvestl(a\iOB. ~mta aai4.
P'ire ometala nld It may well
be that tbe lanlll1 m• .ot bari
awakened in time to Hold~
or death If they bad not bad a ftft
detector. ' ·
"We can't 117 fqr eertaln that
they would not ba.e awakeMcl ln
tlme," a fire apot•man takt
"But once agmn 1moke deteeton
do tave lives. h
atate trooPer said i.hat because of
UM stalled vehJclu. can and tnaeka ere "bavlnt to run like
futlbacb" &o aet t.hroup.
Another commented tie bad not
C~IRO (AP) ·-Sudanese
President Jafaar el Numairi new
to Cairo today tq show bis sup-
port of E1ypttan President
_, Anwar Sadat in the·face of bitter
dlvlslan ln the Arab world over
hl1 vlalt to Israel. Numalrl called
Sadat'• trip a victory and ur&ed
Arabs to support him. <Related
story, picture Pace A3)
"On this miulon and th1.s trip
we scored aialn a bi& victory,"
Numairi wu quoted by Cairo
Radio u uylnc. '"The firat time
was in October (1973). This time
also the decision wu an ECYP-
Uan and Arab one and the battle
was ours . . .
'Ilp Leads
To Arrest
Of Suspect
"We must be prc>Qd In all Arab
countries over thl1 victory,''
Numairi sald aft.er a 1 ~-hour
meetlnc in the EIYPllan leader's
Kubeh Palace.
The reference to October 1971
WH to the MidcUe J!!ut War ot
that year, recarcled by Arabi as
a victory for the £ayptlans even
tboucb they were driven back by
tbe Jsr.U. after lntUal 1alna.
Besides SUdan, which ti allied
with Egypt in a ~ense treaty.
Sadat bu won aome desree ot
support amon1 Arab nations
from Morocco, Oman and
Jordan. ~
Syria, Iraq, Llbya, Alteria and
South Yemen han denounced
Sadat's trip to Jerusalem, while
Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emtrates have been•tt.t.
Arab critics, lnclU~ll\c Pales•
tlniaar, have caU'4 Sadat a
"traitor,'' 1.ccused bim of
destroylnt Arab unity and
threatened him with u1asalna·
Uon. Jordan's .Pt.emler: J(ud•r
Badran and PalesUnlan leader
Yasir Arafat arrived ln
Damascus, upital of ~rla, to
confer after Sadat'• visit. ·
While neither Badran nor
Jordan ·s King Huaaein haJ co~·
mented on the \'bit, Jordanl.an
Gl,enn Miller Death €lue?
•'
Nf! YOJ\k (A'?) -Pren~
and Bri~ Concorde jtl• each
c:1rrylne 100 puaen1era tanded
Jt Kennedy Ait'PQr'\ today, brlna·
tna commerclal ad on &tn lft.
to tbe aupenoolt •ft llld l[pal> lnl another defeat lor t&os• who
vowed to bar the fast but notsy
plane,
Vnder ~, the swept· wlnt J• e n e,...1 of nine
and eap•etty Ht down on
runway n Rt-1tt -JUlt •~houri
after lea .. na P•rt• and t.or\dOn
on tl,leh• ftret Ntllltrly tehedul~
llltbu • UM lullf>atlte Ntw York run. Tbt PreMh ertft laJ\dtd at a:IO a.m. PST, toltowtd 1bout
two mlnuteetatwbytht BrtUah.
yet." said Norman Lornfe,
1pokesman for Brllilb Airway1. • "lhf• ja a prime airlfne ~tlness mark-. J.Adort and Ntw York are tbt t'flO bualn • e1pi'41s of thew~ world.•'
A small band fJf pickets was on
hand trom various anti-SST
'roups, but their protests have
dlmlnlebed conalderably since
the lint~ landJnc• or the plane proved less nolsy thaQ many resi-
denta of nearby areae feared.
The Oigbts marked the effec·
tlve end ol a 10-month court bat·
· tie to keep Uio Concorde from us-
l n • Kennedy Airport, whose
nel•hbora claim noise from the
auperl(lftlc Jet is louder than that
from r~gular jets. Bott\ new at a crul1ln1 •Pff<I of
1,340 mi* per hOU\" across the
3,500 tttltes of ocean, beating the
sun across the Atlantic.
Amons the p n1era on the
Al~ France Jet wu CBS News ·~~rrnan Waft.fr Crontdt.. ro-
turi\lns ttoin Cal -"tr t.Ji• hlf' ..
torte vllit by Elr.!r ~ldtot
Demonstrators had Jammed
the airport several times during
the ban by snarling tram c with • -.--F•.t-r 0 194..or •1 .. _ fs•-alow-moving cars. Jl.Jti"A.7 ~ ....,~ 11.J ..u ae-
Anwf r Sadat to . '' t 's a very beautiful
airplane," Cronkite commented,
'It's a small plane, equal totoqrlat
class, but the 1er•ic• 11 ftrst·
class. Thor~ is no ~ut1tlon about
it, it's haJfthettme'
Jtegular Concorde passenger •
Mrv ice belwJen Europe and
Washin&torJ'• Dulles Intertna·
tional Alr'port started, in May
19'76.
Today's twin landings -coin·
cidentally coming exactly 14
yeau atter the ass assination of
the pre~ident tor whom the
airpqrt is named -were a flnely
timed operation worked out for
Goodyear blimp Colwnbia cruises over Newp(>rt 8eaeh·s
Lido Ille Monday with load of pauenaers from the
Marine Corps helicopter faclllty in Tuitin. Co1umbia \VUl
fly to the former Navy blimp base Dec 8 for annual
ma intenance. Its crew brought it down from its Los
''ThJ1 mean• Concorde has
made lta. bl11eat breakthrouih the 3,500-rnile route over the SCORES
Atlantic. • • •.
'Jnni0r's Bad'
FBI Admita Letters
WASHINGTON (AP) -Dear Mom and Dad: If you received a
Jetter ln the late '909 from u anonymous "friend" warninc that
Junior was "throwin1 away his future" ln political protest, you
werep 'l atone.
The FBI wrote several of them, aJonr with lealleta, pamphleta,
student newspapers and letters to pollUcians, all in an effort to dis-
credit or hamper the anti-war movement.
THE BVllE.\tJ REL!ASED 52,648 pages of its count.ertsa·
telllrence ru .. on Monday, reveallng the tactic• it uaed to curb Ult
influence or dissident political 1roups.
Hanson Elementa'ty School atten·
dan ce boundarlea tn San
Clemente.
Ole ffanaon tint 1rader1 scored
in the 88th pvcentil• on 1975-76
1tate readinlJ tnta, but only 67
percenUle on 1978·77 teata as
second graders.
The1e percentile •cores mean
that Ole Hanaon flrat 1radera in
1975·'78 aoored better tho• per-
cent ut California firat traders
who took the standardized read·
lni test that year.
Last year, as second araders,
they scored better than only 61
percent of second graders in the
state whotookthereadln1teat.
The decline ia directly •t·
tributable to t.h6 tnfU1lon of low
socio-economic class children Ui·
to Ole Hanson's student bocly,
Grie nonsaid.
Saddleback Valley t!n)tied
ScboQI DJ1trtct t'ruateea ._ave
been advised to bout a bit and
"gd close" to tbelr con1Utuents
if t.he)' ever hope to paaJ a 1ohool bond election
The advice was offered by
architects durln& a dlacusslon ol
alternaUve1 for the district's
future bulldlne procram re-cently
It's something that concerns •
the district's trustees They are
expected to decide early next
month whether they will call a
bond election i,n the 1pril\1
"If your people don't vote local
bond elections. then tt gets
serious, very serious , said Bijl
Davit of Davis Duhalme As·
sociates.
A quick &lance throuab a few hundred of the 9,000 pages devoted
to the New lAft revealed three letters to parenta wtiich purported to
be written by 1ympatheUc friends. Namea wert deleted to protect
the privacy of those involved.
In one cast, the FBl saldJt hoped lo spur the parenta or a youna
acttvlat to action by teUJn1 th•JO of a bolUI drug problem.
''Another factor sometimes lg-
nored Is lnate ablltty," s aJd
t rus t ee Robert Bachelor of
La1una Nlfutl, an elementary
school teacher ln ~e Saddleback
Valley Urllfted district.
He said the only other way to
bu~ld needed schoots is to ill· crease taxes.
Bond elections fall so ot(en
because of the two·thirds vote
that 11 ttq\tlred for approval,
s aid Cbrts Arce of Allen and
Milltf. A!ao, ti~ 1ald, districts
wait too lq tO teJt ~le what
ls belns dooe and wbat l• needed.
Deadline Nearing
• "I HAVE GREAT REVU~ION for what I am about to do," the
phony letter)1fd, •'butt feel a greater good will be served: that la
the aalvatJon of {name deleted).
"It fa wttb treat remone that I inform you that be ia uslne p0t
and LSD and my heart oriel out to him. . • '•
Tht P'BI •tent who Wl"CQ ~ letter in October 1968 said the bureau wanted to 1lmul1l$ tbe handwrtUng of a friend of the ac·
tlviat, "btrt. }landwrmn1 samples were not readily available." Another letttr went to the mother of a IT-year-old etrl picked up
by police while wearinf a bat bearing an obscene phrase.
,.DEAR MU. <DELETED) .• .''TRI l"Bl Jetter began, ". . I am aore there la 1omethln1 wrone witb any so-caned 'movement'
whlch relOt'U to th• autter lp it.a search for a meaM of expresalon.
''Jf )'OU permlt her pathttie usociation with her Yippie friends.
she wtll surely end up wMre my poor dauthter ls now -under
psychiatric care ...
The nn alao wrote leafleta intended to sUr up anlmo11lUes
between radical 1roups. euch u one to New York University
purportedly wrltt.n by a member of Students for a Democratic
Soetety.
THE LEAFLET, ENTITLED: "Hackett, the Racist with the
Meaaphone Mouth,., (Hplcted a black activist as anti-Semitic.
Ont FBI JeUer, purportedly from a Vietnam war veteran, was
sent to a Wltcoatln 1tate l•ll•lator complaining about scholarship
aid being etven to radicalt afthe UniV.rtit1 olWitconain.
ln Wuhinl\On Pa• FBI published a tab student newspaper
talled "Tbe l\atlonal ObHrver," which was distributed at
American Unlvenfty la a campaip to discredit the anti-war move-
ment.
"Let '1 carry that one step
further a,od not hold teachers
re1pon1lble for test scores," slUd
trustee Sarah Lipp of Sfo
Clemente, a fonnet" teacbtr.
"They can only work with what
is senttolhem, "abeaald.
Scores showed wide ranges
a rn ong Capi1trano Unified
schools, with Lu Palmas first
graders in San Clemente getting
only In t.M t3rd percenllle on
readinc tem, while CaatUle first
graders ln Mission Vlejoacoredin
the 98th percentile.
Supertnteodent Jerome
Thornstey p0ln~ out to trustees
that, whlfe Laa Palmaa first
graders scored tn the low 23rd
percentile on readlne teata, alxth
graders at tile acboolscoredi~the
81.nd perceaWe In readlnl -above averaee for district a1xth
graders.
,. .... ,,..,. .. 1
SNOW •••
'Tru1tee wnuam .Kohltf aaid
most peqple don't know that
· pusage of a bond election won't
raJJe their taxes u long u the
district remains under tbe ai.e a1d~procram.
When the.v reaUze thlt, ~e 1aJd,
they 're WWinf to tUJ>PQrt the
bondls1ue. ·
Both archJtecta advlted that a
wtll·orsartlzed public Info~•· Uort pro1rard fl o~ed in 1 auc·
ceaaful bond election. "Tho,M
with the leaat 1ucc1Js are thoSe
wlt.h the least eltort behind Jt," l)avlf 1.it:t.
H4' added, "the day oC the low
key approach la out, In my
opinion."
The archltt~t.I otfertd their as· alatance If the dl1trlet bat a baN1 el~tJon but they aJJo 1u1111ttd
bulldlna, alte and tDerfy alternaUvt1 for tha d11trlc •s
futurt acboola.
Frldai ii t.be tut day for voters
to •lf!l .Petltionl c•Wn1 for a June balldt meuure to Umlt
propert,)'. tax• to oae oereeat ot a
propo&rfy'•vl!Uft. #1.
St••• Tyler. Saddl9'aek
Valley coordinator ror tbe
atatewlde petlUon drive, aald
about 10,000 area restdeotl have
alrudy signed the petitlOQI. lhlt
he aaid be would llke to tet1U
many as 20,000 v811-Y l'MldeDts
to sign their suPPt>rtatthe effort.
A iotaJ of 500,~ slenatures
from t.broUboUt tbe ttate would
put the mJtlaU•, whteb hli --proposed b)' the Vntt~d
Oraanlz.ations CJ( Taxpa)'en, on
tilt ballot.
T)'\er Aid the voluntMr or-
S-'1lt=lon hU Ht Frid17 u t~ft -JO If•• them dine ·
l to ora..uae • petlttO'll* and bave
1f 1natuh-cheeked by the .,
•1 MILTON •oaaowm AlthoQah you would n•v•r "*' \t from tM way Ut. re1!1ter tt mountl up at tb4t JUpetmarlutt cMckout
counter, the nation'• •roc:ery cbalna are not b•!blf •tu-rUlc..Jtu. Sales are aluaatab, proms are DOWJ2a to writ. bome
about.
~
8AnlWAY noaEs. TUE IA&OBST aroee~ ehalu lo the eountey, report~ a 5 ~ decUnt ra pl'Oflta for the flratnlMmontbl of 1971 -and tbat'• on toJ>.ot a apettent
declln• In 1976. A&P, the se®Dd·tarau(cbalD, r.ported a
borrendoQs 88 percent drop in proflu fOI' tbl tllne aaont.ba
ended la.at Au,. 31. '
The arocery busine11 bu llft.)'I bMrt 1 low mar1ln af •
fair, and the 111argins ate nanvwlq. The 71 Jaraest ebalna,
those dol!\g better than $100 mlWon a yoar, are Mltln.l leu
than a t>eMY QD every dollar ohal ...
Even \he cbalns ---.~---""""' that nQrmally out.
perform their lnduat.ry
-Wlnn·Dhd• ln th• South and :Jewltl tn the
Mldw.i -bJve been cau1ht up ln the
malalae. Winn·Dlxle'• prontt ln U.. tbree montba eQdecl Sept. ao lbowtd no gatn over 1978, J8Wel'1 moat recent quarwr earnlftO were down
19percent.
Since the 1rocery industry is supposed to be NeltUton·
proof' (after all, people alwa)'I bave to eat>. what'• bappea.
tna"t HeN ut three anawen:
J. PACBD WITll moua tosTs on all 1ldes, eapecial· 1Y ln easa:Y and 1belter, comumera IN be.lD1 careful about
how much they spend. . .
2. Slllce tMy are buylna fewer items, consumers a.re
1hopptna more frequently at '1·lla lt14 other eocvtnlence-
1tore1.
3. lf.on.famllles, many of tbem cblldlea, are eating at
fut· food outletl or restaurants.
The irccery chaina are reacttn1 to these trend• in
VarlOUI ways.
80•8 UE MOVING IN'ft> a bare.bones warebouse-
type1 no.brand.ume operauon where the mucbandlse 1'
1tac1ted 1n the orlsJnal sblpplq eU1onl and prices AR
1lptftc81)tly k>ftr. •
Otberl are putting microwave ovta1 ln 1tor:e1 to beat tbe f aat-foodoperaton at tbe1r own aame. . sun otberl, J-.st a few. are htdllnt tbtlr beta by ente;r.
tnr tM N1taunnt field them1tlves. Lucky St.oru, the most
dlvtrtlfttd ot the suptrmarket chelnl, II operatln1 140
Sirloin sti>clcade r•taurantl. American Stores, which ranb flltb lft tbe lDdUltr.Y wltb lta Acme and Super Saver stores lA the Eut and lta Alpha Beta a\Qlermll'Mtl in tbt Weat. la
runntn1a3Alpbf'• family l'eltaurCtl-ancl J,JHataee's lut.
f oocl unlt.t. OtMrs, ot course, are to aatate ofsbook and don't boW
~~to~ ;
THE VAWB UNE JNVESTMEN'J' Surw1 WU"Ded reo cently tba\ "the supermarket industry will have to talt
itrona steps to survive at anJtblnl apgroacbinl ita present
11.te. Jt is beeomlq apparent thattben wm be a lbaieout 1o
"th. 'tnCtultry .•• Tboee srocerY cbalnl unable to adapt ra.-t en°""" lO Ult new industry trends or uowuua1 to think in term• of dlveralflcation will probably not aUl'Vlve o\ler Ult
lon1run."
11 I "'" \ 'l
PENNO .
1:00,~GIN
''AMatterOf~··
TiflA~ MICKEY~cwts
IUPEAMMI SDAME8~1-RE1-1
vrL:LA AUDRE
5:30 ll!WfTOHED
"No Zip In My Zap"
• ADAM-12
"A tMNlge robber chatenget
the Adam-12t..,,,,
ID ~8KETCHIHG
e:OO e cas NEWS ae N£W8 8 EMERGENCY ONEI
The parMMdiol retp0nCS to a
..,... ol unUUtl .,,.,_.w:-.
after treetlng.,. ln)lnd women
ata..-nce. D LYNN 8HAKELFORO
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
"Snow White And The Seven
Bradyt" m THE AOOklE8
A maM!augtrter cue turns Into
a conteet of c:redlbllfty u the
only wltneu la retatdad.
• ZOOM
QI!) AB MAH BEHAVES
"A Converatlon With Or. WI .. 11amo.......-·
(II ABO NEWS
8:30 fJ MOVfE *** "The UFO l~dent" (1975) Jam•• Earl Jones,
Ettelte P~ A hulbMd
and wife olalm they were
~ by. epacecratt Md
-examined medlcel1y. (1 hr •• 30
min.)
G BASKETBALL Loe~ Lakert v•. P~llt
Sune m MYTHREE80NS
"What About Harry?"
• OVEREA8Y
Howard Fut; produce
bargalna; dltcOUnt MMcee;
social NQJffty.
G GROWING YEARS
"The Chlld'a Mtnd" (Part 1)
(() C8SNEW8 9 MERV GRIFF1N
Gue.ta: Prince and Pl1nceN
Rainier Of MoMco, Jeck Paar,
Cbarlton H .. ton, Wayne Roger~Dlna Merrlll, Cutt
RoberttOn, Tom l.algblln, Cart
R*oer, Dolor. Teytor, Of<*
van Patten, Vincent Van
Patten, Roy em.eon. Clarie
Grabner, Don Budge.
7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 UAR8CLU8
fJ ABcNEW8 CD I LOVE lUC'V
"The Sane»"
• AOAM-12
The crah of a light plane Int«·
rupta Officer RMd'a teulng of
Officer Malloy.
• MACNEIL I LE>tREA REPORT
CID EARTH, 8EAAHO'SKY
"Structural Geology"
(() TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 II CANDID CAMERA 8 NEWl. YWED GAME
fJ lfl HOLLYWooo
SdUAR!S
John David Carson
guests as• a lonely
yoUag dreamer on Mulrtgan 's Stew
tonight at 9 on NBC.
Channel'-.
Rating• Gulde
..,..-~-~t .... lfflce .... :ti te. Mllwlla ._ TV ere l ......... oillc.) • * • * -Excellent * * * -Very Good · ** .1 -Good •~ -Fair
• -Poor
•
• COUSTEAU OOV88EY
"c.lypeo'a 8-rQh For The
Btltannlo" An attempt to totve
the myltefY of the World War I
elnklng of the H.M.8. 8tlttnnlc.
• PARENT E.FFECTIVENE88
•i1t•a A DUI'' No-LON Problem
8oMng rMUlt• In • toiutton
~by perent and child.
1:30 e di LAVERNE• SHIRLEY "Lewme And Shlttey Meet
Flb!M" After trytng untUC-
oellfuly to buy tldcet• for a
Fabian OQnCert, the gltta begin
conoocang • eChen'Mt to "*1
their Idol tac.to-face, Fabien
fglta(aaahlmNlf.
CR088-WIT8
OVl!REASY
HO••rd FHt; prodllO•
bflrVllnl; dlloount ~:
aocial Mcurtty. (R) e:oo•CI> M•A•e·~
A notable tend.cy toward
mldrtfl fteb proms* an MQfY
i Colof'9I Potter to demand dally
caaathenloe and leeda to •
40nth Otympa. 8 MUWGAN'8 STEW "Llttla Gray Bird.. When
now.., not• and constant
lhldowlnQ become • part of
hie pett9m, the open admlr•
tlon of a k>flety young man
(John o.vld Cerlon) begin• to n: JIM MUWgan. 0 TH~S COMPANY
MEW GRIFFIN
Gueeta: Prlnoe and PrlncMI
Ralnlar of Monaco, Jack Pair,
Charlton HHton, Wayne
Rogera, Dina Merrill, Cttff
Robel18on, lom Laughlin, Cer1
RatMr, Dolor-. Taylor, Olde
Van Patten, Vincent Van
Patt.n. Roy Emerton, Olattt
GrabMr, Don Budge. e PLEDGE BREAK
Rllgular programming may be
~due to pledge bNeka.
• MAITERPt~THl!ATRE
"I, Claudlt»: Waiting In The
Wings'' Julia oonth'lue9 her
~ orglee while her eon, a.udlua. appMrS to be
halt .. wltt•d becauee of •
.,,,,,., and a limp.
t:11e IAONSIDE
lronalde la cetled upon to pro-
years. Caba aUll maintain~ an · apartment lD hll native New York.
where be and a pal, Saul QlapUn,
bme Into tho IODI buain.. u a
team.
&:t a women't Hbber from a wou d-be .......,,,
t:.308 Cl) ONE DAY AT A TIM
"The Gl'lolt Writer" Under
preatU,.. to PIMM Mir mother
and dO Wtll ln tchOol, Barbara
~to ~e rneuu,...,
All09 GhQiitleiJ tu.el1 ....... eoaoAP
(Eplaode Ten) While ~al.
!zed, Jodi. male• • cnlOlal
deoltlon; the Godfather Otlfla on
Mary Campbell; JeHlca
decldet the Tat• and cemp. bellt ate Qlf'Md. (~
~~dl8cntlon.) e SPECIAL .. Staamblth" Blll Bbcby, V.,.,..
"-'1M, JoM ,,.... 8tuoe Jfll
Ftiedmen'• btnrr• oomady
abOut tlf• after deeth.
10:00 • (I) LOO GRANT
Lou f ... that thl sw-tre he'•
put on reporter Joe fSoeel to
get mot• lt)voMl(t "' "" atorlat ha forced Aoeal to tak• unneo-
eeawy tleka While doing an ln-
dtPth Mt&n on mental hOIOl-t.a.
8 POLICE WOMAN
"The lnelde ConnectlOn" .,.
per tak• <NfK tor a tltln re>c*i.
pollcewomln -mo .. lnwstJ..
gating a drug-nmnlng ~
tlon In the county )all. F«nando
Lamu, JayM ·Kenoedy au-t
star.
I NEWS QI FAMILY
"The ~ Nfllghbor'' The
LllWl .. a. must dadd9 what
action to take When they
become __. that the eon Of
.,, attom.y In Oouo'• ... ftnn
1a a chlldouee vtcttm. e OET8MART
TM atOfY apoofs "I Spy'' and
Rot.t ~ of that --~In a~ rote.
• THe COU8TEAU OOV88EY
"Celypao'• a..rch For The
Brftannlo" The myttet)' i*!lnd
the elnklng of the Tltnc'• ..
t« lhJp .. examined, ~ wtth
tt• aubrnel ged ...-na1na.
10:158 NEW8 10'.30•1 NEW8 ,. ..
11:001 •(l)D NEWS HOU.YWOOO •
CONNECTION ·~ * * ,._ "Th• Day or The T~" (1983) Howard K ... ,
Nicole M..-ey. After a metec>f·
lte lhower ~ bllndnea to
the wotld'• QOP4Mtlon. atrenge
Nedi tum Into rnan.-tlng
planta Md attack. (2 hra.)
• THI! 000 COUPU!
Felllt'e new romantic lnt-..t la
not thl llbtatlan he think• ... ...
• HON£YMOOHEA8
Norton tMChea Ralph how to
pllly goH ao that Ralph can Join
hit boet In a fout90me.
• ~Ell I LEHRER
RE.POAT
11:30 8 (I) C88 LAT! MOVIE **\t "Columbo: Etude In
BID" (1872) Peter Falk. John
CPNIMtet. The maestro of the
Hollywood Bowt f8oN acandal
and the poalble loae of ta )Ob
wf* hie mlab .. ttwMtelia to
expoee their affair to hie wife.
(R)