HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-02 - Orange Coast PilotButelinlclans say tbeU·week-·
told fetu1 tbat 21-year-old
llosemll'le llfDl'C'aJoo la .,...,.~
~ remalmiDdal!pl; bee~af·
' O.Uyflt ..............
CHARGES DISMISSED
Former C•ndld•t• Norton.
. -
.
Trial Caneeled'
Former state senate candidate
Loran "Kojak" Norton was
cleared 'l'bundaJ ol .ertmlQal
charia contabled in an Oranae COWltJ' Grand JUI')' tnd.lctmeat.
Superior Court Judie Muon
Fenton ordered the dlamllaal of
cbaries faced by Norton, '8,
after commentid1 tbat the srand Jury wu DQt atven both aldea of
the story in lta lnv.U,atlon ot
the defendant'• allesed crlmlnal
practleei.
Materials vital to Norton's de-
fense were not submitted to the
grand jury by the dlatrlct at-
Peru I;Jrug Bust
Jails 3 From HB
By ARTHUR R. TINSEL with no ball set in connec~on
otu.o.Ny .. , ... .-• with the alle&ed drug-smuge.Ung
A H'untlncton Hafbour caae. arc~eologist about to board a · Htt iatd Smith, whose aff'llia·
Jetliner for borne with an alltied tion with any anlversity or col·
4.5 pounds of cocaine worth lece wu uncertain today, was
$75.o,ooo concealed ln fake liven permission to do artifacts is in jail today in lJma, • Peru, aloqg with three traveling archeological reaearch ln the An·
companiohs.. dean country.
The arre~t of Dr. Jason Investigators said Smith and
Wallace Sm 1th, 35; a female his companions had been ln Peru
companion, Cris Annette P~yne, aweekandahalf.
24, of the Belmont Shore re11on of
Long Beach, and two other peo-Agents of the U.S. Justice
pie from Huntington Beach was Department's Drue Enforce·
announced Thursday evening. ment Administration, Hunt·
Hun&,ton Beach Police U. ington Beach and San Diep
Bntce Young, of tht nareottca de-police deteettvea cambtned. ~ ~ satd'the two other <>ranee rorces alona wlUl p~ r Coast residents• identities were federal authorities to Jn.
unavailable. vestlgate.
Smith. of 15974 Mariner Drive, and the ot.b«a .,-e..beldJ~y Rpu Investig.S.Ora 1aid Smltb and
• _HI 1 '1 • lj, ( 11 \ b1a group w~ }•ti>repafinl to
-leave the country when they were Nixon Letter detained at the !Am• airport.
Ferehes~$6,250
NEW YORK (AP)...-A letter
Richard Nixon wro~ an Army
general &ix years ago fetched
$18,250 at anauctfoo at the Waldorf
Astoria Hotel. Charles Hamilton
Galleries said 't was the most
. • ever paid for a letter by any llvtne
perso~ .
Agent Joe Flanders or the Drug
Enforcement Administration,
said today he was unaware what,
if any Southem California educa-
tional J.nstJtution employs Smith.
A check of Orange Coast area
colleaes and UDlveralUea failed to
reveal his name on faculty
rosters.
Ssnlth'• Huntlnston Harbour home ta a waterfront con·
domlnium untt near Sam's
Sealood Restaurant.
t.omey's office durinl those d.ts-
cuulom, Jud(e Fenton said. Be
tlicln"t lay' tD eourt Whal tbMe
materlab were.
His deciaion canceled the trtal
date set for Jan. 80 OD charlea of perjury and aoUcltlng perjury
and sent Norton from the county
courthouse in a jubllutt mood. The proaecutton elatmed
before Nortad was indicted that
he submitted• carnpat;n bnaiice
report whl~ ,tndlcated th•t be
personally loaned bis campiign
$6,600.
'
It was alle1ed that NortoQ re-
ceived '5,000 of that sum from in·
dlcted loan ~ker Gene Conrad,
but faUed to Indicate that source
on the finance zeport .or whenlle
teswiedbeforeth•aructjuury. m~SHA w : .... Perjury charges were fUecl J.~
after Norton's campal•n te.rmiDRlnahaw•aeuewu 0 en-
mana1er Gary Newmyer al· tirely m.nnnmrtate for tbt. type
legedly told the srancl jury that ofdetelidaDt.•r· ...
the money came from Conrad. Judce Kneeland appeued to
Newmyer earlier signed a report agree and told Capl11l: "I don't
indicatmi that the money was tbink 8 yeat tn Jail I.I Just a slap
Norton's. on the wrilt. ''
Norton. a former executive • He further reftdndtic1 tM }lto1~
aide to county su,eni1or ecutortbatit~DOt*-hl.tln··
Laureno• S9bmlt, waa a tentlosl to tentelice ~baw to
Republican CJ.Ddldate for tbe mor thu a one yell!' term when
atate senate ln 1971. \ 1he fonner RepabHCUf leilalator
Santa Sent
To Slammer
NEW YORK CAP) -Santa
Claus wu chortling his seasonal
"Ho, Ho, Ho," in Herald Square
when a slip of paper droppe4
fropi h1t red e\dt.
lt wu 81\ order dlrecUng San·
ta, othendu tQown as Michael
McBride, 20, otManbattan, to ap.
pear ln court lut Oct. 26 to
answer a charge of attempted
sran41arceny.
LOSERS ALSO
ATE WHEATIES
Talk to losers, not to Bruce
Jenner. about a childhood spent
"downing a lot of Wheallea!'
. That's "the advice of A"P
special correspondent Hugh
Mulligan, who won only fieeting
fame for all his breaktut table
effort•. . Mulligan'• plaint appears on
Pa1e AlO, a 1alute to alf who never hit a 11Wheat1e1 bT~e\!'
flrat c11me Won him for 1en-
tencing. • ConfUalon ov• the exiet term
th1lt Hinshaw must serve arose
when prison officials discussed
the posslblllty of apply1n4 the
term of confinement set out in the
new determinate aeotencin1 law.
That application would have
kept Hinshaw in state prilon tm·
til at leNt Aupt. 1978, an ln·
terpetatlon favored by Ciptat
"Hln.lbaw baa never 1bown tbe
allgbtesti tnce of• remo .... .nc1
bu never apololi&ed !Qr h1t m»·
C1JDdUQt. •,t Caplal prot.ested to-
day. "Many tllouaands of dallan that.a~ have 1*12 c()l~
troll\ q.e ~ w rolll were
lost-~c.a.aae of tbl1 mai:i•a
criminal conduct."
Hlnshaw wu sentenced after
being canyicted of acts of bribery
commlu.d while be sel"V$d u
co'unty asseasor.
He la Qrvtnf concurrenUy a
olte year Jail term ordered after
bl'I aonvlctlon cm further
criminal cbarses related to b1a 11·
legal use ot county manpbwer
and materials wblle aerviq M
county uaessor aud rwminl for
Con1reu in 1971. r Nixon wrote the letter Dec. 14,
1971, to Brig. Gen. Thomas A.
Aldrich. then eomznandtr of the
U.S. Air Force in the Azores, and
his wife.
Mary Benjamin of Walter R. P ..... P.,,.AJ
Benjamin Inc., an auto1raph
dealer In Hunter, N.Y., bouahUt
at the auction TbundJJ n.l•ht. '
Tbe previous rftOl'd for a Jette!'
• · by a llvlnc penon -f;l,000-was
paid for a letter written by Jac-
quell n e Ken1119dy tq an
• En1Uahman llibo bad Milt bet •
letter uJdntfor mone1. "l'bat let-
ter wa1 IOld by Charles Hsmilton ~ in196T.
' ~ ~ ' ~· Inmates Accepted
MEXICO CJTY (AP> :__ The
U.S. Em~aasy told lcfexlc~n ·
autlorJUe1 to.aar that 235 •
Am•rieenl m Mexican Jalll bave
beell •cCesited for trQater to the
United Stat•• uncln a new prtsonerexchan1•treat¥~ 1
• J 'DIEDRICH FUND~ • ONB-WAYBOS l'AllE woUld have~ atlwUO eentl.
Rasn.lna• ~ ~'1' damqed in 1'73 by a falllnr roll of c~t. He aald be r'eeelv., IOUl& welf-.re and d&abWt:y pay·
ment. to support bil f&mily ol 10, but the uact amount eould nOt
be de~ ..
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DAD WHULED SON I MILES FOR HELP
Confined to Ch•lr, He H.ad No Bua Fare
AP..,...
f.Atve ~nquers
T-rek for 'Son: 'Terrific'
HOUS'roN (AP) -A crippled mu aald be wheeled b1a
wheelchair elabt miles to a holpltal with his alck H·month-old aon
Oft b.ia lap because be dldn 't °'ve f!DOllP money to take a bua or a
tut and be couldn't reach frlmcls ot relaltYea for help wbeta tbe
baby became W. · • ~,,:;.;;;; .... ;~O<'.:
Ted ~ •former carpet l•Jer no ~ fl.Deel to a wbeitlchair two 1ean, .. td tt Sook him four. boon to
make \be trip acroa tow'D. He aald u S.ynr~ld aon walked bealdehlmtoat.eaclJO.wbeeh'balr. ,
HIS BANDS wnz BUS'l'EaED ind b1iectiDC wh.n be ar·
rived at the ho8pital, docton aald.
Doctors at Ben "Taub City-County Hospital checked the
baby'• ear infectloD and treated the father's' bands. TM1 save
Ramires mouth money for a taxi rtde home. ·
"Tb• father had rubbed bis' palm• raw pU.bin1 that
whulehalr and that'11ot to be remarltalile. ''Dr. James Watklm,
a pedlatric realdent. "We have so many perenta wbo won't brtnt
their children ln when they are sick and lt'• terri.flc to aee one 10
to ao much trouble.''
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Surrouocted _. by tehavlaton
cameras and ~uHtloailna
k
ewameo. three mea acc\IMd ot
nvolvement tn the ~cl tepbeo .Jolm Bcwaa ot ~
lY alley went to 0ran,, '\:owif:t
SuperlQI' Court to oau tbetr
pleutoday. . "/ ..
Fire~ Dispat,cher Linked
SAN Cl.BUNTE . FDlBllAN JUWlll ~elJJ. •bo
once said ht eoulaonb-maJ17 a.WD1DU wtUtnpo&ate-.
aeat to bb job al ttm.;:in~u m~ SuDdar to•• N dll-patcber Barbara If . . "Bein8 a fireman Isn't wbat lt ... to t. -~
cards and walttnc for alarm beUa to liq, .. P....u, Mid la
an Aueust Interview. "We ~ways have ~to do. ln fad, ,_ IDllbt .._.
• HY we're DWried to oUr jOba. u I ~
• aet m.mect. it will be to a woman who
understands that my Job bu to come
flnt sometimes ... SUNDAY~ YJBDl>ING WAS held at the home ol fellow tireman, Bill Bod1,
who sald. "At leaat they'll be workin1 at
the same time on emersencles. •• Fire
Chief Ron Coleman alto atten<hd the ceremony.
Rev. Joseph Stepbena, faUMr Of ftreman Ron Stepbem, otticlattd~ NTll t&.LT
The new Mr. ad Mn. IWllll1 IN c.in1edl7 • tMlr honeymoon -attatnc aftrttclwt MID'nl? lDMSJmner,
Bundy said. · • •
Pet Raccoon &/e ..
On Terra ·Finri,4
• ByllC)BEJl~Ua . °'...,..., .........
A BUlltiqton Harbour father
and b1sM>.~ l~ to~ alive today alter Utv •J>parently
)lieeame eanfUlal Oii who was at Ute cGDtrclll and allowed tbielr
aiJ'plaoe to fallJnto &bt oceUL
Tbe plane crashed Tbunday
about two mllea otfabore of
Sunset .Bellcb.
0 It was claulc boo-1>00, .. the
TONIGHT I
EVENING WITH RAY
BRADBVRY -OCC setence
" ~f 8'fl51 :•• , I :.-occ r. •·""' ,,.._ • AbcUtO\ilumJ' p_.Wf. :'f ~;·.v ' ' .
' ekit AdmlnistratTon, lluat-
IZl'ltbn Beacb and San Dl•&•
pollce dttectlns combined
fore ea alo~• with Peru•ian
federal autborruu to in-vQtiaate.
lnn•tiiaton •aid Smith and b1I group were just prepartn1 to
leave the country when they were
detained at the Lima airport.
Agent Joe Flanders or tbe Drug
Enforcement AdJnln1$trat1on,
said today be was unaware what,
if any Southern Callforuia educa-
donal insUtuUon e.mploya Smith.
A check of Orance Coast ma
eolleees and antvenJUes failed to revnl hia name on (•culty .!' l'Olten.
lhblth'• ~ Jf«dlaar J!ome 11 a walertrolll ll· Cl~m1-luiD uU iae.,.-Sain'•: Seifooda.ta~ ..:--~ • ~
OCC PLANBTAIUUM -'"Stu:of Bethlehem," 7:8G aml 9
p.m .·Satmday~ 1.:•.-.cll p.m. •
• 'TUE HllP8Y .-rnn~t.~ -
Costat Mesa ChdQ 1Ple~bouae,
ComnnmttJ .aeereatioa ~.
Dec. 2 and 3, 8:30 p.m. filNSHAW FRU>A.Y NIGHT PIL¥S -/
"Slaulhterbouae Fl••·" OCC • •
Porum. 7:15.p.m. W at least Aucust, 1978, an m.
F 0 0 T B A L L -Cl F terpetabfavored by C.pla:I.
Semiftnall, Newport Barbor VI. "Bhab.aw bu never abown the
St. Paul. Cerritos Collea•. 8 11l1btest trace of remorse and
p.m. • hu never apolog:lied for hb m.l.s-
SA'"TDDAY DEC 3 conduct." Caph.d protested to-OCC J.i:'CTuRp;S -.;Current day. "Many tbounnda of dollars
Tax D4vel~menta " Fine Arts that should bave been collected
119, 8:30 a.m. 0 1-ubUc l\ela-1from the oouaty tu 10lla ~ Uom, Prbmc:ldoaa and Market-oat because ol th11 man'•
Ing for Small .B~la~H," erimloalconduct." Science .. _......_.. 1 • m HlnaJJiw JrU sentenced after CHILD~ PiiM/':_ ·Tom· belDf convl~ of acts of bribery
Sawyer. Robin llood. OCC co11;1mu..d wbile lie served a l'oru~' .m. s& cent#~. • eounty •eHor. SA ;JRDAY NIGHT PXL11S He 11 aerv1Dt eobCW'J"8Ptly a ...:... •• ~ee Of "'9blil •• occ oue yea Jall&erm ordered attar ronun. a p.ID. • ' ~ hl1 con•lqlrou on f urtber
I ' crim.lAaJ ebul~ •tect to hia ll• ,SVNDA°'+DBC.• • le1al UM. d C!QUQ~ m.upower OCC CONCAT -Or~te and mateitals 1'blle •emnc aa Cont Qoaupun1')' ·67QaRbonJ eounty MSe81IOr and NDD1ng for Greb~" p.m. Concresa in,.1971.
' sol
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181
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A Jury that II now deUberatlna
the validity of obscenity cb¥tes
leveled aplnst X·rated movie
distributors Artlo and James
Mltcbell WU \U'aed Tbund., to
qulckly reject the qlty of Saota
Ana's lawault.
pie Defense attorpey Joseph Rhine
to l told the panel or seven women
ag and five men in Orange County
Superior Court that there wu
SUI nothlng in the 17 movies viewed
, by the Jury to harm any normal
ad alt.
E@ And he stressed that the Honer
W 4 Plaza theater now devoted to the
mi screening of pornogl'apbic mov~
l let is a clean, carefully regulated
pu faclllty which caters only to adult w• audiences. ,
m i Rhine said present day morali-l'ule Be Sfaoefeed
we ty and thinking demanded the
mi kind of auditorium that the
lal Mitchell brothers took over from
United Artists two ye an ago. k~ "Sex and obscenity are not the
same thing even though that has
in been implied in lh1a trial," Rhine
said. ra "Surely you don't want a sltua-
pl lion where the depletion of sex Is
Hco• not allowed anywhere In this
state? 11
te The City of Santa An a ,
represented by attorney James
Clancy, la urging the jury to find
w. that the movies shown at the
ar Mitchell theater during the past
two years are obscene and
Al without redeeming social value.
Sucb a verdict would im-
mediately condemn the theater
aa a public nuisance and allow
the city to close the facility under
the provisions of its antl -
obscenltyordinance.
tr that verdict is reached, the
jury in acting Superior Court
Judge Marvin G . Weeks' courtroom will return for a
further hearing at which they
b will be asked lo assess damqes
h against the Mitchell brothers.
c Lawyers for both sides agreed
11 Thursday that they are now wait-
ing for a verdict In what could be
ti a precedent-setting trial.
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The issue of obscenity, as
posed to the jury by the City of
Santa Ana, has never gone to a
jury in California.
Lawyers said a rinding of ob-
scenity could 'lead to a rash of
lawsuits being filed by other
California communities and the
Santa Claus (Harley Hyer) and ll·Year-old Susie
Peterson enjoy a hair-ralSing experience as they check
out a generator at a science toy fair in St. Pa~, Minn.
The generator stands hair on end with a harmless
charge of static electricity.
( prospect of the state's Supreme
1 Court taking another look at the
i • la~onobscenity. Depo ··-S t Rhine told the jury in bis cl~ 8ln1T ue8
ing argument that the Mitchell -........._
brothers made the sexual content ~ ...! .-8 1'7 ---'•"" of the movies clear in their-#"-· ..:JIVUJ P' UU.C...a
vertlsing "because they wllited
to make sure that people knew Ove Robbe what was being shown. r ry
''They believe that people have
the right not to go to X-rated
movies just as they have the
right to go, 11 he said.
"We're living In an age when
people are more open about
sex.'' Rhine told the jury. "But
Santa Ana wants to reverse all
that.
''Santa Ana wants to hide it, to
keep ignorant of It, to put it all
back into the old never, never
land of the first Hollywood mov-
ies.••
The Jury deliberated for three
hours after bearing Ryan's clos-ine 1tatement. Judge Weeks then
excused the panel unUI Monday.
Pajr Hit Treaties
BALBOA, Canal Zone <.AP> -
Two U.S. senators leave Panama
today after warning Gen. Omar
TQrrijos that the Panama Canal
treaties won't win Senate
ratification unless amendments
or reservations are added.
J>'nama's top tr~aty negotiator
•J!d he was "shocl,ted ' ;,y the
1t.tements from Sen1. Thomu
E•11eton, D·Mo., and Ted
Sttvens, R-Aluka.
A depositor who lost silver bars
and coins valued at $8,085 in the
reported robbery of the Swiss
Vaults in Santa Ana aued the
operators of the repository
Thursday for that sum and an ad·
ditional $11,000 In damages.
Abbott. E. Paine claims in his
Oranee County Superior Court
lawautt that defendant• Jack
Fulton, Vincent Carrano and
Robert G. Garrison were
responalble for Inadequate
security measures.
Sant.a Ana police c.Ued to the
Swiss Vaults Jut July t to in·
vestigate the reported theft of an
estimated $1.l million tn precloua
metals are conUnuinJ to probe
the Incident.
Officers who ruabed to the
buildine at 1404 N. Grand Ave.
said they found Canum tied to
an overturned chair.
They said Cmano told the~
he went to the locked olftce to
keep an appaintment made o\ler
· the telepJ!ipne ~d \Val al,;ed by a
number Of men who tied him y
and then ransacked tho vault.I.
Santa Ana poUce continue to
expreu doubts that such a rob-
bery took place.
"We had about 2$ petc,nt out
alck YHterday\1• Hl~ Pat
Wallace. •••lt.la~t to ti•• bo1pltal'• Heeutlve dlt•~tor.
.. Out J>CIO.P\O are beclc ~ .. 1i
went well and J,moothl,y ud
ratberprofealcmally~" ...
Psycblatrlc teetiD.ltJans were
proteatlns a pi:opoH\t re-
organlutJon plan niandeted by
the state. It would set u}> new
supetvilory poslUou restrictetJ
to re.clstered nunea in pl"ce of current poeltions open to both
nurses and tecbnlelJm.
The reor1antuUon, part ol a
move by the state to ro.•atn
Two Held in Theft
TOK, Alaska CAP) -Tw Tok
reaidentl. have t>eeii cbar=ecl bi connection wltb 101pe ,000
worth of trans-Al¥ka p lint
equipment recoverea in the last
three weeks', Aluka ~tate
Troopers &fl.Id Thursdai.
Troopers said iome $10,000 worih ·
of materials waa recovered
earlier tb1B week at Tok.
,..._. etrtlftcatlOD • JU&.
lUIDDttr to Falntft tht.o ~ ..,,hOtpJtab, ~'To·= rer\d.:.~al,t.bat. ., .. tMIJi ~ e.wnar
was mw (In the lick-ta). 0 1*14
Ltoy4 llcOlnot1, a rir'1.t•W tecbbl~ ''I• WU to Hll to Ule
attention ol \be &dmlniitraUan
tllat they're very aertoua abcM f ~to~~lbl7 ~tr•lnecl yro·
• ¥cGlmda. a~-4lNctoc': who worked delpJte the atct-tn; ..
1ald tedmlctam 111114-1ure there
was adequate ooverqe 'J1wn.
day tar~ and tbat ~
CIO hll fttd called ln aUrini tb'e>
day to be 1Ul'9 ~ta were be-1n1 c~for. He 16' DO' tmther---'--~ ~dam .. planned~-..
• mfftlq II~ at which state health -ol:ftclall and Oo"Y. Ed·
mund G. Brown ¥r. ar•
1claeduJtcl to d1scusa the 1tatu of ~
!:~1~8:..ll.~~u~a~~ C..eh, Gems StOlen H
Wetta ... llftlctai.., · A burllu whose method of enl Tecpmd~ &f• asking for try bu.not yet been determined •
both 11~Mt Pi federal relUla-tookc~h.an4Jewebl'wlthatotal1 ~ions l'ffOftll" them • .,-the value oUt,067 from a Dana P.olnt • ~uivalent~nanes ln cartnsfor hople. Oranae County aberiff's1
;tile ~ly dla•~· o(Q£e~ aald Ute theft occurred at .F~~ are prt111ari1Y tho bome ot Norman E. Parker,
ment.alb td8.tded or physically 42 ot~ Granada Dri'fe whll"'
handlcapJild people. · be wu at work. ' •
6'DOUGLAS
FIR
A4 DAILY PllOT
OLD GOLD DE"1'. -After a
recent entanglement with Std
Soffer, the bearded Newport
Beach r~taurateur, Coat• Mesa
dty officiala appaJ'enUy are back
at tbe drawlna boardl today on
their Jaw aimed at controllln& old
autoioobiles,
Soffer, who resides in Costa
:Mesa, clashed with city
authorities when they came out
to his place and hauled away
three older Cadillacs he had on
the property.
Sid screamed foul, insisting
that these elderly pieces of iron
were actually vintage classic
vehicles of enormous value in
collectors' circles. Soffer apparently won his point
and the city may now need to re-
appraise the way it defines
junkers. Maybe they could call in
experts.
THE TROUBLE WITH auto
experta is that they seldom agree
on .what is junk as opposed to
automotive vintage gold.
I C Consider how opinion varies.
l ~or example. I always con-
sidered the 1930s Hudson Ter-
raplane the most ugly apparation
that was ever visited upon
American highways.
Yet I had a good friend who
once scoured the countryside
searching for these grotesque
creatures of the road. which I
preferred to call Hudson Ter·
riblepains.
HE WOULD SHRIEK with JOY
upon finding a rusting Terrible·
pain bulk in some vacant lot,
haul it home and lovingly restore
it to its origtnal ugliness, in-
cluding the nauseous olive drab
paint job.
Other lovers of vintage auto
fron will insist that the most
marvelous machine ever to
lumber down our highways was
the circa 1930s Chrysler Airflow.
To me. this heap looked like a
pregnant turtle.
When it was first foisted orr on
the 'public, the Airflow waa
balJybooed as the car of the
future. All autos wPUld look Just
11ke it in a few years, the public
was told. Just wait and you '11 see
how beaut:lful it will look then.
We have waited more than 40
years. The Airflow is still as ugly
today as it was then.
Yet try to convince an Airflow
collector and you 're in for fis-
ticuffs. Try to haul away bis
.Airflow as junk and you'll have to
pry his hands loose as sobbinely,
he clutches the steering wheel.
COSTA MESA OFFICIA~.
meanwhile,. Apparently tried to
determine junkeni on the basis of
whether or not the ancient he•ps
around town would run.
Numerous collectors, however.
will inalat that runnina isn 'ta fatr
criterionofvalue.
Personally, I've owned ao~e
great old tubs that seldom ran.
Surely they never would have
st•rted up when some city in·
spector came around and de-
manded performance. You had
to coax my old junkers into ac-
tion.
DEMANDING TJIAT the
entine perform would be about
as effective as talking to a mule.
I on-ce bad an old heap that
every time it did start, you
checked underneath. If it was
spra11nl oil on the ground, you
kqew O'fel'1thinc was lovely. u it wun't gushing oil, you
tu.oied it olf because that meant
tbiefe wasn't any oU in it.
l'd h.W to ue a cit.Y .lb.spector
judge that one. . '"
Ftlday, ~I. 19"
WASHINGTON (AP) -The natlm'~ ~mP101meot ra edced
dowp fl'OJP 1percentto6.9 ~tin ~ovember, aUll withln lhe nar·
, row rt.DD !n wblcb it has fluctuated aince April, tbe 1overnment re-ported t.Oda1. .
But the number of Americana with jobs lnc~ued 1>1 oeuly one
lJlilllon last mootb, the lar1eat month11 rise st.Dee~ ueo, when tt
tocreased by 1.3 million. '\ . .
AITES TBB LATEST loblel• flCU1'I W-9 released today,
White House Press SocNtaQ-Jody Powell nlc! tbe Carter ad·
minlatratioo wu not 1otni to au.ain ttt cNI of nduclnl unemplo1·
ment toS.5 percent by tbo WM!ofthe year.
•'It's not 11.tely to be there,'' Powell aald, reterrt.ni to the Jobleu
rate.
r The Labor Department said total employment rose bJ 950,000 to
92.2 million la November and the proportion of the Population with
jobs rose to an all-time hl&h ot5'7.8 percent.
DESPITE TBE SllAllP tncre~ lo employZQent would be ac·
jobless penona lhowed llttle.c:hanae over the month. In November, e:a mlllloo Americans were unable to find jobs, abollt '°·000 fewer
than in October.
It would seem that a larce increase In employment would be ac-
coqipanied by a 1barp drop in \me~loyment. But Jut U10Dth, the
labor force also srew at an unus y abarp pace, increasinl by
900,000 to a total of 99 mllllon, the government said.
"The one-month cbanae Jn employment may be vastly overatat·
ed, appareutl)' reflecting cn>wth that we bad aeen earlier in the
year,'' said a Labor Department analyst.
Boycott Soaglat
&Mat Foes Begin
Rejection Summit ·
TRIPOlJ, Ubya (AP)-PreaidmtADwvSadat'aArabfoeaopeoed
theif "rejectionlat" summit todQ and Ubya1wu prentna tor an
economic abd diplomatic boycott ol El)'pt.
Reliable Palestinian SOJll'Cell nld the boycott would Htallate for
Sadat •a peace oy~~Y!! ~ !~rael ~ \UMlwUlo ibat the reat of tbe Arab
world was ag~ lt.
Col. ¥oaiD.nilt Khadafy, tbe follow bl• lead in cutting
-Libran ~gman, ai.o 14 pro. diplomatic relaUons with Egypt,
posing that Uie otbdr Arab stales theaour«*aaid.
Ban Weighed .. , on ·u ·d . mu
ProteiJGl>iet
,
WASlDNGTON t\P) -The
federal ~ ID ~
in& mandatory warnliit label.a OQ
predieested liquid protein and
other protein supplements, 1aya
it may yet try to bus the producta.
as a health risk.
.
8YKIAN PRESIDENT Hafei
AUad 's po1ittoo oa the proposaia
was u.qJmovni. but Jraq. and the
Palestunan delegatlOh support
them, the Informants said
·&1ypt, although In eoor
~011omlc health. ts no' likely to
be 'b\'rt much if the natJ.oa1 meet-
tn1liere Eit. lt~~peods on, Sauclj Ar aod oUier con· aenlU'N OaU ol( statea
for 1ubltdles that be)p keep lts
econocnY atJoat and pay for its
mWtary fore.es. Those cowitrtes
decllned to attend the Tripoli
s:peetlnp and are unlikely to join
any,l)oycott,
Black ~Leader's
Death 'Nb Crime'
PRETORIA, SoUth Africa (AP) -A mqistrite naltd tOday
that a two-week inquest produced no evidence that any person wu
criminally respanslble for the death in pollce deten&a of black
leader Steve Biko. ·
Maghtrate M .J. Prins save bis verdict ln a three·mlnute state-
ment a\ the end Of Inquest bearlnp on the death of the 80-y•ar-old
founder ot the Black Conselousness MoveDlent. He dl~ Sept. 12, 3\41
weeks after security pe>llc6 &m!llted him. ·
Biko's death t.ouc:hed oU worldwide prot#t that cUlmlnated tn a
United Nations arms embu10 aaainatSouthAlrlca.
..
HAMIL'roN, n.nDUcta <AP>-
Two blac:k ecmYict*I muid«WI.
one cbar1ed wltb 1la1ln1
Bermucla't 10Yemor •d Illa aide,..,_.., bWed atclawn ~ -.ner a mlbt cl '1olent rtotlU bJ' black youthl. ·
ft• tue'Qtloas ot J:raklne Bm"e row1, ._ and Larry Taetlyn. 25.
were tbe fint lince 1MS OD Utie
BriUlh ialaDd c:olOD1' '10 mllll
aouthUitotNtwYcd.
BVKaOW8 AND Tlekl,..
m.emben of &DOw-def\aQCt t.ftl'
Cf'OUD lmowri U the B1aCk Bin&
Cadres, were convicted ud ...
tencedtodea.t.btwo1 -.;
B\lft'Olft WU ecatkW et tbil • 1tta 1lQtn1 of 11~ atenrc
Sbarplel, tbit 8rttiab actt•DGI' cl Be?mllcla. h18 l1dt 4h e .. p;
Capt. BU&ti Saye~1 Ucl GI ..
tm UleatDadolt• PolleeOIMD•
JDUaiODlr Otofl• J>QcbW Bcltll ..
BurroWI aDd TickJ1a ......
vlcMd ot ldllliC two_lfllll:ilUi""'C
exee.utvealn a uti..-.· • POUCS BNl'OICBD a two-'
mile no man•• lan4 aroa.ad '
Cqematea Prllon, where the two 1 met\ wm& '°the taDcnn· Tllo of· flclal enQOqncement Gt U.. •·
ecutlona lVU held 11p for ii
minutes wblle a coroaer .. ~ 1 convened to eerUfF tM deat.ba ln
accordance with tbe law.
In anotbe'f' dneJopmlat: 'Cf.. ,
ftclals reported ;t&af-tfaN• ·
penoDI, ~ two pillU
and a it.aft member,d*lm afire
TbundQ nl-on an..,_. Goal"
of the•fuxwioua ~
Pri.DCOll Hotel 80..a mUtl ..
side Hamllton. Tbe oftlelala Mid
the fin bad no·~ ea111c·
tlOD with tberlotbleta:~ '
POLICB WJTBBlttD tile
names ot the vidlml ~
nottfleatloo ot th* Dnt 91 tdL
Almoat eoo pesta, mOlt or a.n
Americans. were eTacua~ to
otbtr botela.
Hamilton, the lllandl' aal)' d·
ty, WU calm U day broke but
polloe and troops nmalnecl OD
the alert lor a raewal of the
violence that rocked the dt)'
tbroqb the Dlaht. IAnlfl 9ftle• Pljlell•e • ...., .. ~ .
WASIJINGTON (AP) -Interior SecretirY ~D. Andrus ls
1
gtvln1 ~r bOoat to a projected pipeline q,at Would carry AJWa
crude di froni tbe <;alllorni' ·
coast to the reflne:r:v country ( J• eastoUlldland,Teua. IN SHORT AndnJs announced bis ln·
tention Thursday to approve a ,
1,026-mil4! pl)~ ob)fft io ~ retlew propoaod by
Standard Oil Co. of Oblo,($ohlo). The pl~e would beein ln tong
Bea ct\. A'8AD ON 1118 art\val Thurs· da.1 made no direct mention of
Sadat or his peace maneuvers
witla lerael. Sorial Sfttsrit9 T~ Sttld!e4 ~
''It ii natutll.'' he said, "that
The Food and Druf Ad·
ministration said 'Jbursday Uilt
31 deaths are now bein& ez.
amilled for possible linb to liq·
uid protein diets, altbou1h
medical investigators say they
are sure of a conllection in only 10
fatalities.
when a nat!oll facel danger, the WASHINGTON CAP) -House and Senate De&oUators, under
f ttblul -" t t d pressure to hold down Soclal Security tax Increases, are taldnt a AT ONE POINT, a 1Cboo1, a a sons c""' 0 mee an second look at benefits puaed earlier for the working elderly, the government office, a Uqaor
TK08E '10 DEATHS, all
woinen under ago 4f who died of
sudden heart attackl after weeks
of ingeating notblnc ~ut liquid ·
protein, raised partlc\llar con·
cern because •U of them were
dieting under medical
aupervlsloo. •
Tho mOdiiied Uq111d, protein
f aat was made popular by a book.
eallecl '"J'l>e 1-aaance Dlet."
w o r k t o p r e v e n t t h e blind """' parents of coUeao ... udents . are'"--.. and a ea-met
cataattopbe." • N~;ajor decisions :e:'e" made 'bursday, the first day the con· :ere biadn. ad anm•...,.
Observers said Assad's ference commltwie worked to reconcile differences tn billa passed pteventtd trom dt•ttn1 with tbe
avoidance of " condemnation of by the two chambers to keeptbe big retirement system solvent. outbreaks by the ram pastel s•ctat, h1s ~ajor~ally in the 1973 ,
ArafS.JaraelJ Wa.r, cated that St--i•• t•--fttde9 lfL.••• ,,,. talll•· \While at oddl with the yptian mH%G .... ..,,. -No maJor lQJurlet "8N r8l*t-
leade11 be was unlikely tolll.tff to WASHINGTON <AP) -. The federa1' 1ovemment, which pays ed, but dolenl ol JQUtba were•
stem qioves to isolate him. for 100,000 of the 1.3 mllllon lterillutlQD opwa~ perfonntd in the rested.
THE REASON for this was ap-United States each ye•, wanta to make au.re DO poor penoQ ii The eomervaUve, muWradal ~a rent. Sedat ls the only Arab steriliied unwtllin1ly OI' without undentand1na tbat the procedure ii Ua.lted Bermuda PaiV '°'""'"
d th t b 1 •-d t irreveralble. . mmt ;r.a.ct for calm In W. ea er 8 can e P n.itll ae The Department of Health, Education --.a Welf~-..r -1•ht __.. •-1--'•'-~-ack the Golan Heights. the auu _.. ,.,...,_.. ~ -.,.., ... _ --
Syrian territory pccupled by __ n_ew_r_ecul __ au_ooa....__rii;.._ura_d_ay_·_on __ feder __ a1_pay_m_en_ta_i_or_• ___ u_om_. __ ca_•_ta_._._~-..-----...._
JN PROPOSING tho warn1nt hrael since the 196'7 wat. 'lbe
label rtgulation, Food and ~ others talk a l<>t, but lbelr
CommilsioDer DoDald lrl. ¥• milttary threat to Israel i•
d f 1 tlf1 negllgi~ornooexiatent. ne y uked or 1c en c and. The~. called by Libya'•
legal commentl • wbether tile~ fiery lt:r'clqm~ Col. Moammar
protein· products need to be Kbad&fy, also drew Al--erian banned and the best way to take • such ac~SJIP Preatde:ot ffduari . .Boumedlenne;
"If we ddennlne that the tllk Palestinian leadt!ns )'aslr Arafat to consumers cannot be C!6~ and Georae Habaah, Iraq'• u d b labelln " lt ...t.. foreilD mlnllter and a member ~~d~ "tbln FDA Jin aeru~ • oUta4~._! Revolutionary Co_m·. m~ve the product. from tbe -man "'1\IUcll, aiad a delegatiOI\
market... • • • from South )'eDlen.
•
.
A'LB~. Calli. (AP) -The dormant lnvestlaatloll bsto tbe un-aoly~ l9S31l•Y1nl of an la.year-old Berkeley CQfd lsu beta 1Urnd by
the aul"l'Gder of the man wbo •u oace the prime••~
But t)'tllll thouib J°"1)b Qtto Ecenber1er, IS, nPorticll1 made a
statement that he killed Judith Wllll&mlOll of Albany 1' 1ean ap, bis
lawyer, Unco1n Mintz, aa,ld that
it E.i•raer if cbused with mur~tr..t ."~)le ~ .,. eQ~rinl •. plea of not y .. •
Mfnb ·~ t.b«lre wu no proof
to 1uppo~ a murder cbar1e,
againtt J:cenberaer, despite the
surrender, .
ti• I
ACCOMPANIED BY Mintz,
Egenh.rJtf "Sav• himself up on
Wedo~ay. His surrender wu
madp ~"b1k Thijrsday. E(en~rier, formerly a com-
put.er programmer in Chicago,
was tred for investigation ol
mur er, aoct sources said he
woul l>e fdrtnally char1ed with
mur4ertoday. • Ejenberger Is the son of the
late Joseph A. Eeenberger, who
was a mayor'of Albany and a
Jeadlng local ,wllUcian. He died in 1967. • .
EaenberHr's mother, Lor·
raine, sa)d ~e first Je'arned of hls
plan to $Urrender on Tuesday.
Her son told her "as gently as it
could be t.f!ld" of what he in-
tended.to ao. sbe said
MINTZ SUD Egenberger
walkM '•Into hJs office Monday
and dfd he wanted to surrender.
A&k~ 3'out the case retired
Albarij "JI~ c}&Jef Ralph Jensen
. ! . ' ~ -
said he believed that Eieober1er
waa the killer.
"We were qatt.e certain Ile wu
the penon wbo did it, but we
never could prove It," Jusen
told reportera. "I was hoplna •
that it would cet to him and be
would admltlt "
Eeenberaer and Miu
Wllllam1on attended Albany
Hlfb School to1ether1 . !here
Egenberger wu deacrioea u a ·
brilliant math student.
MIS!f, WIWAlllON, wbo
wanted. t9 bl• ~t«. w11 a atu-
d e o t at tilt tl,nlveuity of Cali!~ at Befteley. When lbe
left bet bame on Oct. 29. 1883. to catch a bU.ilo the campYS, 1t was
the luther f amlly aaw of her.
In April 1966, part of her
skeleton was found In a wooded
ravine 100 miles away in Ute San-
ta Cruz mountains. She ha.d been
stabbed 14 times. Items of her
clothing were found nearby.
Mrs. Egenberger said her son
worked as a computer program·
mer in various cities before set-
tling in Chicago some six yean
ago. Before returnine to
California to Jive in Albany, he
worked as a s ystems designer for
U.S. Steel in Chicago, sbe said.
..
ONCE PRIMI! SUSPECT JoleP!' Egenber9er
·ABStoUd
Col. Sanden Wina Battl.e '
LOS ANGELES CAP)-Col. 8-nders bas ap~tlf won a bat·
tle against Pioneer Take Out chicken over alte1ed milleadlna ad·
vertlsini. In. a U.S. District Court jddgmenl announced Thunday ,.Pioneer
waa order*1 to end lta televt~ commercials purportln& to com·
pare Pioneer chicken with.Kentucky Fried Chicken.
.. · It was also orciered not to nth any comparison taate·tnt com-
mercial& lnvolvinl Kentucky l"rled Chicken unW May :U.1978.
Kentucky Fried Chicken,,whlch has cbar1ed the ads were ''de-
ceptive. warue. misleading and couUtuted unfair competition,"
was. awarded $30,000 damages under the conaent ~~ree. in wblcb
both sidet aereed to the judgment.
A statement from Kentucky Fried Chicken aald other tanctlona aeaiut Pioneer included ln the judame~ were ordered sealed at
Pioneer's request, and lbat Pioneer will be m.ontt:o~y to Re
that it co11>plies with all the re!tricUona. '
DAILY PILOT
SAN FRANCJSCO (AP> -The mt Calilomla Coat.al Act Jill
. have ''11.lcht lmperfeetiona .••. RN< I don't ... U1 belle tel.eta,
aalct tit• ttate IC!ftato~ eh~ a Marina on poealbll "'=:f"' the bW. Sen. lwry SmlUI, D·SU JOM1 aakS ThundaJ, 'I ft DMd W'1'
spend Une or four yun before uy cllancet u. made. Tberi bav• 1~
been a number of •us1eattons. •, ... • bY.t I think tbl)' are premat\U'9. "• De JI aiuD ot Ke.ciaietvtll• 1Gd '' •
The act~ dellped to p~ the •late commtuioo ·~at.tel'. .,.
coastal laQCl.e and reaulate cJe.. the faltb ~to it" b7 act-,
• velopment, was dlscu11ed at lnab4iyondlttle1a1JurlldlcUon ... • • Smith'• Senate Seclect Commit·
tte on Land UM Manaaement
Or1aniutiona.
A COASTAL DEVELOPER,
ft•ndolph G. Moore, vlce presl·
dent of Oceanic Callfomla Inc.,
of the 5,mo.acre, 5,200 unit Se•
Ranch on the Northern
Califomia ~~\.~~d ''the ~ ablllty or wnrw.uipeu of the
commiallona, state and retloaal, to make 4ecialoo.a la our bluest
frustrttion·" But qutclc deciatons, aald Dr.
Bradford Lundbor1, 1tate
Coastal Commlalon chairman,
''inevitably leada to dJaappolnt·
ment, and often ao1er.
14TBE STllENGTU of the
Coastal Act b in lbe ord&rly pro-
cedurea lt eatabUthe& /or reaolv·
in« these COAflicta -conflicts
that exlal became a 1rowtn1 pop-
µlation and 1rowlq economy
exert tncreaalna preaaures on
Oniie Jtnd and water telOUrCea ol tile Calllornia coastal aone,"
Lttndbol"11aid.
Cltln1 the denial of a baUpark
for Little Leaaue and Babe Butb
Leaeuo 1-eball at Arcata. IA>UJ.I
S.S Catalina
Evicted, Fate
Still Uneettain
~ .
SAN PEoao <AP) -ll'ti. r
once-pre1Uclou1 GrHL Wblt• Steamer Ml been evicted from a.
harbor berth to D:lDt ?QPm for a
drydock. ~ •
The future of the ~ Catalina,
evicted Thursday, remains un.. •
certain. It.a owner, BeverlY Hlllt
developer HYIDl• Stn1er, la bat4
Wn1 the City ot toe Ancelea tn h
court over docka1e feet. ~
WIULE RESULTS of tb,at bat'!
Ue are awaited, the tblp Will be
at Berth 1861 where it was ~ed
!or most of it.a 52 yeara wbll., • •
crul•lng between tbt malnlanct• ,.
and Santa Catalina lJland. '
Singer, Who bouebt ~ veael
in February al au.ction for
$70,ooo. has announced various ·
plam for it,
I : ..... r' JI I .. ~~,_.,_.,_.,_.,_.;..._,_.,_.~------------------------~~----~----~--------~----~
BOrinones 'Mallmade'
Cheaper, Purer Drugs Could Be P~duced
LOS ANGELES (AP> -In a !ong-awalted
br~akthrough, genetically manipulated bacteria
have produced an important human.hormone and
could lead Lo manufacture or the hormone ln "livlna
laboratories" within a year, scientists say.
The advance ln genetic engineerint bu proved
the feasibUlty of a met.bod for maldn1 cheaper,
purer drugs for such disorders as diabetes, srowtb
abnormalities and abnormal vulnerability to lnfec-
tions. it was announced . . , , ... ~
Tburadv. ( J ' Teal'l'la or scientists SJ'A.TE
, !rOm tlje'City of Hope and . · ·
· t b e U n tv e.ia i t y o t " ·'
California at San Fran-
cisco achieved the success, in Which an artificial
gene ~onUW>.ing "b)~eprlnts'.' for the hormone-·
soma'°5lalin was implant,e4 into a •lD&le-celled
bacteri1.1m.
1\'1cclear Plan• P,.ofled
SAN DIEGO CAP>-Tbe majorityofthe&Swlt·
nesses at a two.day hearing have opposed pJana to
build the Sundesert nuclear power plant in
Riverside County.
But the project drew support from represen-
tatives of se.Ycral Southern California clUes and the
Los An&eles Department of Wat.er and Power, who
backed~ SJ million plant proposed near Blythe.
The California Energy Comml.asion may vote
Dec. 21 on the matter at a meetin& in Sacramento.
Supect Plead• l•nocent
LONG BEACH CAP)_, A retired aupertnten·
dent oft.he Queen ,1dary, a onetime ocean liner now us~ .a a tourlst attraction in the Loni Beach
Harbof1 has pleadeCI innocent to cbargea that be
stole !m8re than 1$100,000 worth of item• from the
•hi .
John Oliver Smith, 87, of Long Beach. chatled
with 21 counta of ateallna several tona o( artifacts
from the vessel, eotued the plea Thursday at bta
arraienment in Municipal Court. .
Forced Bui .. OjtJN•ed
LOS ANGELJCS (AP) -John Serrano, cham-
pion of the poor in a laW'luit tl1at caUMd a revoJuUon .
in school flnanc~, bu now become a apokaman
for opponenta ot fotced •chool buaU, to achieve In· tesrlltlm. Serrao ann6Wlcttct ~ tormatSCIU of.• #WP ·
called CHOICE. -Caitt&fbtani'Ref P1D6 to bbtaJh
Individual Ch>ices 1n !:ducauoa. 1
• , 1 -:r• . Pedenria....rata11,,.r..,_.ec1 ·
LONG BEACk (AP> -An elderly man has
died after belng draned under lbe wheels of a
motor home as he crossed a ·street, police said.
They aaid Georce Petfchauaer wu croni.n,
Long Beach Boulevard when the incident occurred
at 3 p.m . Thursday.
Man Gl1'ftt Lffe Ternt
FRESNO CAP) -The ope~ator of a security
patrol service hu been MDtenced to Ute lD prtaon ln
the fint murder conviction in Fresno Cotinty In
wbkh the corpae never waa !ound.
Clarence Ray Allen, 47, of San1er, wu •en·
tenced on fint-desree murder and cooaplracy con-
victiona in the strangulation of Mary Sue Kittt, 17,
of Clovil.
A proeecution witness, Eu1ene Leland Barrow,
218, tetWied that he atrancled Min Kitt.a J:n AU.CUit.
1974, on ord.erdrom Alie~. . • • . ,
•
.. ~·
.
' • I .. ' ·.
t IJl\I 'l'I •11(} ,,, .. , 1) WEAR~·
MOVING
).
SALE
NeWport store only
• ••
..
....
'J
It's unaeWing to bear that ()range County's career "
lawbreakers may be getting ll&hter sentences than they
de$erve because of jammed~up Superior Court calend&r1
and tbe heavy workload In the district attorney's office.
County supervisors, in conjunction with the district at-
torney's staff and the county Criminal JuaUce Council,
took steps this week to relieve the situation. ~
• What they did was pump $96,950, primarily in federal
dollars, into District Attorney Cecil Hicks' budeet to
tlnance a new four-person prosecution team. The pros-
ecutors are to spot.career offenders, try to see that they re-
ceive appropriate sentences and try to seek restitution for
erimevictbns where possible.
The premise, according to criminal Justice expert.I, is
th·at most Violent crimes are committed by a relatively
small, ha.rd-core group oft!riminalJ.
They backed up the~ with court statiatics show·
ing that of 1,661 def endari£s convicted of crimes iii Oranae
County Superior Court last year, 1,345 had prior records of
some kind and 190 had been in state prison at least once.
Those figures show that paying_ more attention to thtt
hardened, repeat lawbreaker might help reduce violent cfimes.
TV Habit Broken?
In TV-land so-called Nielsen ratings are the statistics
that keep programs on or off the airwaves. And the latest
findings of the A.C. Nielsen Co. indicate that television
viewing as a whole has been dropping off in the P,8St year.
• Specifically, says Nielsen, there are 1.2 million fewer
viewers in the daytime (a drop of 8 percent in the past
year) and a quart~ of a million fewer at pig ht (down 3 per-
cent).
There are all sorts of theories for the decline, among
them more women working during the day and fewer
children in homes to watch the daytime shows.
Other experts blame the increase in TV specials and
plini-series that break the pattern of series shows appear-
ing at the same hour on the same night each week. thereby
disrupting viewers' habits.
Obviously the familiar TV set is not on its way out of
the cotmtry's living rooms, but the drop-off in viewine
could indicate that more people are resp()ndhyr to
monotonous or distasteful programming by simply oJSerat-
\ng the handy off-switch -or using their TV screens to
play one of the new parlor games as an alternative to JU$t
sitting and watching. · .
And it's conceivable that the remarkable upsurge m
book sales fits into the picture somewhere. Remember
when they said television was going to spawn a generaUon
of non·readers?
' .
;Lawmakers on ~runera
: Speaking of television. it's reported to be having a
salutary effect on the operations of the FloridA atate
· Legislature.
t: For the past five years, committee meetings and de·
tes in J.»th ts o F'lorl~a Legislature ha e
. en taped for n in a 60-minute eveninl IUQl,.
~ary on telev· QD.
· House Clerk Alle,n Morris, who'$ been around the ~gislature for oearlg SO years, says the television cov-
.erage bas greatlylmproved the lawmakers• behavior.
They come. to meetings better prepared, they don't
1"mumble bills through•• and they no longer eat lunch at
: their desks durin1 debates says Morris.
Additionally, he D~ .the tflevislon coverage gives
candidates a chance to atudy their opponent8 ln action and
new legiSlators who come in are f amillar with basic rules
1 of procedure from watching the sessions on television.
• And there has been none ot the grandstanding some
feared would occur when legislators found themselves on
camera. J
All of which might be reassuring to the U.S. Congress
lwhicb bas been debating the idea of permitting televised
sessions. Perhaps legislating In public would perk up that
august body too.
• Opinions expretsed 1,, the .1pace above are those of the Dally Piiot.
;other vlewa expressed on thla page are those of their authors anet
artl1ta. Reader comment 11 Invited. Addreta The Dally Piiot, P.O.
,~-·~~;:~:;::~:;::··
By t.M. ac>YD
I In times of pro1perlty, rnen. : braa about their old thlnp. In
•times of dtpH11ton, about
fthelr new. Knowln1 tbl1, •~me ~lal acbolan cl.Sm
the lnc~lng popularity of
ant1q"'81 alln1flea a pickup tn
tbe economy. lntetesUq. 1f
true.
four minutes, that you know.
Queation ariles u to ho\1J fut can the betttt raelng walkers·
do the mile. In about slx and a
half minutes.
,
ALREADY, Ute oil fields are.·
operated by, 3q,ooo :Egyptian
techrtlcians. Jn I act, most •of
Libya's en1luen, docte!'S,
lawyer.s and olvll servant& are 1
Egyptians. Perhaps one-firth of
Libya's popu.laUon comea Crom' Egypt.
Sou r~•t 1~~~ .. ~F"" Washingtbn levels r y (he n.i
States would discourage war
between*'sypt and Ubya. But -
they ac owledged '~t~~>' .. that the nited Stath w09W n
grieve over the downfall or
Khadafy. l,
"
Do high school students want
physical education classes? Is it
-
SdAH'8 ·soLJCITOa: In an
ea,.ller colum.tl, we rePottecl that th~ ahlh. ot Jtidi bft Jbft,; Prell-
.
rePor• abOws only 37 percent Qf
the schools have been wllllng to
Cully implement i~ provisions by
making P.2 . opUonal for both
Juniors and seniora. Howev.u,.an
additional aa percent agreed to
making it electi~e to't lenlon ind anot,ber 5 percent is permittlng
seniora ln the nnal ume ter to
fore10 auch classes. r~~ ...
AJ,'l'llOV9'1· 8a percent oft.he
scbdiledllakattd I.CMS~ n P,~ enroUiri~~ u we&Pat ttnn* tion1 or t'euii(ftmetits of 'ltdlJC up
. to.12 )ter«ftt, l'l also Sbowed that
betwten $1 ,and 61 percent -l>f
junlota 8"4.1eniors elected P.E. ,trainlnt 6r jt was no longer·
mandatory. ·
ll ' BUT WITHIN three moptbs
atte.r Bocera realaned ••
secretary of 1tate, he turned 'UP
~s a director of the shah's 'ahJa\li roundJl.ttQD. !ff e. inli.Sted
to odt as.kt•·Joe Spear at the
time that there was no conflict ol
iniere.st. He wu merely handli~
"rea\ C!ltate wori" for the lowi·
dlft.ionJ>e sattt. • But six mon°"" later. Jn June
1974, we were tracking down
rumors that the sbah had fun-
neled money into the Richard Jlillxon campaign. Suddenly out of
the woodwork popped Rogers,
who categorically denied the
story. Not only dld Rogers call us in
behalf of the shah but his law
firm sent us a followup telelfam. de~larlng that the firm .. had
been retained by the embassy ol Iran•• to communicate with ua on
tbe Nixon·Sl\ah Of Iran •t«Y .
Thls1ntertentlon seemed to be
1omewb1t removed from ·•real ta~ 1t It also raises tw.o quea-
&pa •Sbould-Rogen b•Y& ret~
l•ler'ed .under the Jaw as1 •
foreign agent? And dJd be vlol.ut
the law prohibiting former sov-t11iDl• emtllfoyees fol' oae. year fro:Dli n!pnt8ehtlnr corporlll:iona
or l®eign eovemmenbs that bad
come under thetlt juriJdlctioo?
sulta are open to question. For
example, students bad indicated
a preference for training which
would have a ll(elonc beqefit
wblle tbe 11.1rvey ahows a bJ&ll
preference tor two team sport.a. ·--.
MANY AllGOEIJ 'for CODtm·
uance ol P ,.E. on the •rounds tt
was cessenl~LI $.0 aurtt that ~ulflr A~ dhnt Would' be
physjcally l . 11t~ survey •hows
SS pe~nt or the schNls re-
d notttal!.J4 ln th~ •m~is o h)'sfotl fitness prolt'&ID$ •
School administrators aJso
arsu.ed that Greeorio'1 bill would
result in m*r cbanees in ac:·
tivities ottered but 50 percent re.
ported tb.ia bas not occurred.
Obviously more and IX'eatei'
detailed ltudy of tbe new laws
are needed. to fully undentancl
the elf eel.I. But the contenUon
that optjoaal P.E. wUl force bet· ter P .. E. tnlttuctlon appeart to
have been vallct. This 11 ~lai
ty true when, Q\alte vlsibly, the
old ".-&f up and run around t.be tracar.-:·141N·of P .E. rem~na the
nde a\ 1;0irly scbOOll wttere P. '£.
la 1tillmatdatofY. ·
' 'I'•
Ba~katWork
Na~te Fabray, foregr<?und, was back at
wor>c filming .. Harper Valley PT A" in Los
Angeles for the first time since she was ln·
jured Hallot'een night by a 2, 700-pound
· elerhant. Her publicist said she ha4 lost con-
tro of the movement of one eye aa • result.
Barbara Eden, rear, appears With Miss
. Fabrayinthetteehe. . .
:Panel ~o ,Eye'. .
~ ~ ,.,. , •• ~ t ~
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A b1tter feud publllhed a book oalled 'Plelstocene
between rival ffOUPS of archeoloetata· Man· At San Diego.' In lt be d"cribed·
has surfaced over who will 1et credit IA de\ail thd discovery 4f ancient
for diacovertnc evidence that man oc· ~artlll, atone 'utif acta and burbed
cupled the San Dle(o area u much.u\ ~ fire-broken roek in an exposed
1~:>C:!;.· lf confirmed, wouM 1 avelpltinMlulon Y~Uey.':
place man in the Amertc.,.,un. .-, Mlnsball a.i.cl ganef ~-tecl c$epoeltl
10 ooo u h'at 7-. in which the e.vJl:ljnc~ wu fcwnd Pl tbe ' years ear er t ~· was inter•lacial .--r•NI or Jn"'•O than believed. • , • -,r:;I • .,... trr'"1' '"" • 10,000 years -.o.
TBE OONTllO!f.CENTEas A spokesman for Smltb.and Reefts,
around the dlaeo ~ ea.ta ago of who were WUlftilable fOI' eoan11tnt.'
artifacta of ~f ..fq· y Dr. George said there is D6 ~oo that ClUter
F. Carter, a -Dle10 native now a aboald&etcredttl«1h'WGnd~ • , 1
professor ot a~phy at Texas A&M • •
Injury Clai111s Univel'Jd/¥. BOWBVD, SAID GEOBGE Self, The team. of Dr. Jason Smith and eoordinat« for the Peabodt Foubda-..:.;.;,;,:.;;....:..;...;..;.,.;;..~"'-----.-...----..,.~..._.~....,._-.-.... ...,..._,
Dr. B.O.K. Reeves, arcbeoloatsta tion which ls backlbg the Smith·
w ASHINGTON (AP) -A 31-yeu-old VlrliDi•
shipyard mechanic retires at aovemment expense
after suffering an on-the-job back lnj\a'y that he
claims keeps h1m from doinc even light clerical
work. He is later seen pla)'ine ball, riumlna foot
from the Un,lveralty of Calgary, Reeves dip, tbe aitet belnl aploted • however, Netttly claimed they dla-are new and unrelated 10 Carta'•
races and dancing at a local night clul>. .
A New York postal worker ii elven diaabWt)'
pay after saying he hurt his arm so badly tbat be
cannot pick up a letter. He later bowls a tame IO re·
markable that a local newspaper featQrUtpm in an
article.
covered evidence that man occupied original exploration. ·
sit.ea in San Diego'• Mission Valley Th .i•--..i datlnl back at lea•t 70 ooo and e new ~ove •• e,. c,alll'\I Self, • are the lint tim~ sucb ~ti of proba lylOO,OOOyearaafo. man have ~ .. found ln a aefln1~
The feud bu been ilmmerlng for 1 l al ,.--r-ti th '"'" months over wbo will be credited for ,geo 0i c. ro~a on at c~ ~ ac-
the find, wblch ls laraely undisputed. ,curately dated ..
It came to Ugbt ~ w~k tn a leUe~ to ~be Minion Ridge site beinl probe<I
newspapers b)" veteran ,amateut bY tbe.Smitb·Reeves team bu yielded
archeolQclst H.etbert r.;. MID.lba11 or about 3,~ artif•ctl,.Lncludine stone
san D~o. who al40 w .,.,.orked oil' -toolaandhearthatones,Selbaid.
· tbeortforyeara. t ~.. "Tliese people are tl')'tng te take an
THF.SE AND OTHER INCIDENTS bavdorced ' '$i .. .. ttJe credit,'• coontered 1 Mtniball.
the government to start craekina down"° what· a .. ..TWENTY YDRS ,1'~." f'ald ••"e've been wortina .on um fbr 20 ~ouse committee Jut year termed a ;rd~ ~'-~itlrllh 11 "(}e•r•~, I' <Carte. years."' ,1 • i..·,
t1tude among federal worken that lbe ~~-' ' • ~~ "
lion prQgrana for federal em~ees SUff t.Gti ~
the-job injuries rs "another form of"' rlir1te ..
benefits."
The Labor Department's administration ot the
program has sparled.~ ot frequent mal-
ingering by federal.4mploy ... , lihoddy a4minlltrl-
tion by the government and. wmeceaaary exp,ns~
paid by taxpayers. ·
AS A BEStJLT, TU..DSPABTMBNT an·
nounced that a division oMnvestisaUons is being set
up to crack down on fraudulent claims for injury
compensation. Twenty invesUgators -there cur-
rently are none -wlll be b1red to probe claims.
Cases where fraud ls.found will be referred to tbe
Justice Department for protiecutlon.
"We simply must put a stop to any 4,eceU by
claimants,'' Assistant Secretary Donal4A !:U.burg
said.
Although the two employees cited eventu~
bad their benefits cut off, officials believe man1
other federal workers are faking injuries and 1et·
ting away with lt. t
ShoWD above 8'1'e two pf the J..orkf •s lareest diamonds, the Transvaal
Diamond, 67.89 cts., and the Earth Star Diamond, 111 cts. Both were »Cl
bandied by Empire Galleries this past year.
1 Save !0% to 75% <1'er competitive prices by dealing with one of the
ri Westt's largest voCume dealers. Most of our merchand~ oomes from ~
prJva(p parties, ban~s, trustees. &state 4iquidations and our manufactur· 41 ..
t log f~ilitleS in Los Angeles. Thusty, we are able to self many Items at or •
, f>elow current who(esaJe prices. Included in our vast invent«Y are a wide u
-telecflon of antJque and contemporary ring$;-watchel,"Ohains, nteklaces,
' pendants, bangles, bracefets, earrings, etc.. etc. Otamonds. rubies.
$apphlres, opals. jade, emeralds, aquamarines, etc., etc. Many famous
brands Include Omega, Piaget, Role>C,., Mathey Tissot, Tlttany, etc.
Rare and unique pieces Include gokt mesh pur8es, antlqoo repeating
pocket watches, rare clocks, crystal, china, rugs, porcelains, bronze&,
• · O,iental Items, etc.
• Shop and compare at Empire ~lleries before you buy anywher4t.i Just a
f,w ~amples ff.Om EmpJre's-mllllon dQUar collection: •tf ' _.,, ...
.................. 4etlve Apprenttee
Stephen T. Muran. a miDwriaht with local
' 2235 of Pittsburgh, Pa., works out problem at the International Carpentry Appren·
ticeship Contest at the Anaheim Conven-
"' lion Center. Apprentices from all over the
• U .S. and Canada competed in a series of
tests with r esults judged by expert
J:>uilders and architects.
•
GLENDALE CAP > -
Funeral services will be
held here Friday for G.
Clark &am.say, 62, whose
two.year promotional
campal&n for the movie
.-----·---... · "Jaws" helped make it PACl".C YllW one of the world's top
Five new members bavt betD eleQ.ted and ftve
tncwnbellta rctu.rned to the C>nlatt Cdant; Health
J'lann.lna Couocll'a <QCUPC) Boardotl>lrec~
Memberl were select.cl b1 the Cowell'• Aa·
.. mbly ol Detei•* at tbelr annual eltctioa m8't·
-il\1 in Santa Ana. The A.aaembly allo elected .e at·
lar•edele•ateatott'IQMlbody.
NEW llOABD MEMBSU are Ooora• lurekle,
attorney trom Costa Meta; Paul Sepulveda, U·
IOdate for Ua.lted Way from Santa Ana; Cynthia.
GordGll. health planner for Kaller Permanente,
Seal Beach: J.R. Elpen, M.D.1 prychlatrllt and
pronam cblef for alcohoU.m, mental health and
drul abuae services for the CQunty of Ora.nae's Human Servicee Aaency, Santa Ana~ and lo• BUu,.
executive director of Planned PareGUM>od. who
lives lnOranie.
Incumbent.s who were returbed to olftce 11\elude
Loia Benes, a teacher from Irvine who bu juitcom·
pleted two yeU& u OCHPC csdent; Gloria Julacay, community volunteer Buena Park;
Wllllam CunnlhJham, vice president of Pacific llutual Life IDlutace CoJDpany, Corooa del Mar;
Pnl Flaua~, M.J>., itatbo)ostst fro~ Colta-Me1a: and • ~ .. Sheet., -pharmacl.lt ttom
South Lacuna. -. '-' also a put pl'elident of OCHPC. . • ..
SEPULVEDA WAS ELECTED tC) fill an unn·
ptred, one-,.ar term, and the rat were elected to
three·Jear terms. Board members can serve for a
mwmum ol alx years. Benes, Burckle, Jula1ay
and SeJ>U)veda are consumera and the rat are pro.
viders ol health care. A majority of the Board, in·
eluding holdovers whose terms did not expire t.bla
year1 ¥'C:OOIW'Den.
The OCHPc has a Board of Directors of 27
members, 23 of them elected to terms which are
staggered over three yean, and 4 appointed, one
each by the Board of Supervison, ·Leaaue of ctties,
Orange County Medical AasociaUon, and Hoepttal
Council of Southern California.
THE ELECTED MElllBE&S are aeleeted by
the Council's Auembly of Dele1ate1 which ia com·
posed ol representatives who are appoln~ b)' the
clUea, voluntary health a1encies, health pro-
fesalonal societies, and other bealtb·nlated or·
ganlzaUom, plus at·larse delesates elec&ed at each
annual meeting.
Comumers named to at·lar1e postttona are
Sooalo Alalllma, volunteer for the lnatitute of
Emergent Natlonallama Determinancy Inc. (TIEN·
DI), a Samoan demo1rapbic stud)' or1anbat1001 who lives in Buena Part; Diane Andenon, com-
munity relations and con~butlooa admlniltrator
for Rockwell InternaUonal, Oran1e; Jtltty Bfack,
realtor from Newport Beach; Phyllis Broutlette,
volunteer from Mission Viejo; Janice Carroll,
Engllah teacher at Santa Ana College, Santa Ana;
Fred De Boom, vice prealdent and mana1er of a
branch for United Calltomla Bank, Huntlnaton
Beach; Anita del Rlo, training and services
coordinator for the Manpe>wer Commlaalon, El
Toro, and Gary Fitzpatrick, self-employed
manufactmers repreaentative, lrvfne.
ADDmON.lL CONSUMERS are Hunter Ter··
rence Doi, stUdent at Chapm~ Collge, Orl:Dle:
Ed•ard EICobedo, director of the Gnduate M·
ftrmative Action program at UC Irvtne, Santa Ana;
Paul Garza, coordinator for tbe County of Orange
BetilWtment ed Pla~ment Center, F\lllerton;
Loins I. Goodman, retired attorney from Yorba U..
da; Carolyn Green, environmental planner with the
Jack G. Raub Company, Corona del Mar; Vlrclnla
Jeffrey, research assl.Jtant for the Oranee COUnty
Revenue Sharing Office, Santa Ana; Ann Jenkins,
aaaist.allt to the dlrector of the Creative Chlldren's·
Center, Santa Ana ; Ursula Kennedy, free-lance
writer and volunteer, TusUn ; Rev. Arthur Kent.
Methodlat mlniater, Oran1e; Pesaa Kllpsteln, re-.,
tired medical artist and research writer, Santa
Ana; and Charles Kovac, vice president for buai·
ne11 development, Rockwell lnternaUonal, Qrqe.
More conaumers elected to the .U.embly are
County Worloon
Get Pay Boost
Chapin C. Llnn, semiretired cona\altant ancJ acUve 'i..,:~
senior citizen. Anaheim; Freda Mqid, retired
social worker and active senior ctUzen, Lasuna
Hilla; Mary Malauulu, who worb for TIE~DI, the
Samoan or1anlzatlon, of Santa Ana; S\lalua
Masanlal, field supervisor for TIENDl. 8*nta Ana;
Bernard Meodo&a. cllrec~ ol the tunlca de Salud
Mental, WestJnlntier; Amaro Rudy MortPc> lit·
structor at llancbo Sant.taco ColSlmbnlb' ~ete.
Santa Ana; James Mu.ii)', ftnanc1al anall'I\ wlila
Pacific Invest.meat Kanaiemtot. Newport Macia:
Alda Ramlru, aupervtsor for ~mua.lu Development Council, Santa Aba; elcf, ef,.
ecuUve directer of the Creative :a.Mr, .
Santa Ana; and UUtan Renteria, uslltabt ex·.
ecutive director for Jobs for Pl°'op'ell1 A.nabehn. .
OTllEll8 A.RB David RobllDCler, ~COQftt G•
ecutlve wtth Merrill Lynch, Pierce, J'enaer aDcl
Smith, Anaheim; Celeste Roubedea~ rte:fUltment
and outreach worker at the Oranse COu.at1 IndlaD Cen~ Santa Ana; Oscar Sailao, Wbo worb for
TlENvl, Westmlnster~ M~ SapSford. a fonnet
On Sunday,
December 11, JI!"• M•••• and the h• .... nm I I •• Wiii Pr• .. nt a dellghtfol M~f'M of old dMllcal ' ~ lisiht In )'OUr °*" lllll! .... 11.
: Here ,., <>range CountJ. 1n tbe hlttorla llf!d llCOUSt~ Senta Ma HIOh Sc.hoof Auctltodum, ~ eonoeri originally echedui.d tot &30 p.m. ~'ft, will be pNMntild at 2 p.m. December 11. .• •
s.•• ·~ Sy •• ., Mi. i
·ser-a.: 111 .... , ...... Merry ,,....
4
.-s..t. a ..... ect ewe. s..tt St11
A•....._ s.19 Alllt H1cJ1i Sdloal Am•wfml h
.locattdat 520 Wett W ... ~Am.
......,. .... al . ~~ !~c.o..t.•~~:x
71U4"4tl I
The December· 11 concert orlglnally ft.a
eehedui.d for 1:30 tr:;! has bNf\ reechedui.d
for 2:00 p.m. All Tlcute fot tht 8:30 •
CQl'lcert n good for the Matlnee. Thete wUI ~no
. conCJrt In the .venlng.
. ~~~~~~--~~~;_;,.;..~;.;....;_.:.;.:_;,~~~~~-:-~~~~-..;.~~ 'Star' Returl18
MIMOr.au P.U money-makin1 films.
Cemet1.-y Mortuary if\amsay, an MCA Inc.,
•
Chapel vice president ln charge
3500 P'.telnc View Drive of m arketlng seawices "The Chrlltmu Star,''
Santa Ana Colle1e'1
planetarium abow1 .ia.r•· lurning tbl1 Obnatmu
season wtth two ahowa
every TueadaJ and
Nhi>Ofl. fo.r U"lve raal City '~ catlforn11 ... 644-Studloe, died Tuesday of ~ cancer at Good
MICOINICI Samaritan Hopsttal.
MOITUAlllS
UgUM Beach
404·0416
laaun1 Hiiis
. 7~33
S., Ju111 c.i>istrano
49$-1778
GL£N'DALE (AP) -Thursday ntibt at ,:30 Fu~eral servlcu were and 8:30 p.m. Reaerva
achedul•d today at tions .,_ nq\l1Hd bul
Forest Lawn Memorial admlulon la fre• •
Park for Daale1 8. ReHrvatlona wlll be
aoblaaoa, 89, dil-ector taken from 8 a.m. to I emnltua of the use p.m. at 835-3000,
school of pbiloaopby. •tt'D~•.,l<Ml,....31.,. •.. 1 ........... ~ .. Robln.aon, a past preal·
dent of the Am•ricaa
Pblloaopblcal Alaocla·
Uon and the author ot
several books, dJed Tues·
day In Inalewoc>d.
J I
LOCAL I NATION
GENEVA, Switierland (~P) -Ro~an Catholic and protestant n\eD'l~n .. __ ,
of an interfalth· com· ·'l~~~S:~~:-'JiJISl~~"!!~iMi~!1'kJ; mission have recom·,lor~-¥'\
mended that tbelr1 churches abandon the
"mutual mtatrust wbtcl\
still often prevalla •'
toward mlxed mar·
ria1es.
The commission alao
ur1ed that the Catholic
churdi's more llberal
guidelines tei..al'Clln1
Catbollc-Proti'naal
marriages pronoupced
• by Pope Paw VI in mo
be .. fully utilized In all
''NOW, THERE ARE studen*8
wbo have stood up before 3,000 or
'-000 ot their peers and uJd, 'I am a tra.nsaexual, I am taking
bormonea and I will have my
oper.Uons in 60 to 90 days,• and
tlaat'1 very healthy."
co~ntrl" and not Qierely ... ~~.;._.....;._.-.::.-..;::o,....._ ____ ~~~;.;.!..!~~.;.!!!!!!..!!!!!l!!E~~~!:......~ applied in a ~trtctlve
On Dec. 1, 1952, an ex-GI
named George Jorgensen Jr.
·went lnto a Danish operating
·room and emerged aa Christine
JorJensen. The hoopla that sur-
rounded the blonde nightclub
performer wherever she went for ._,. ............
manrter:"
· years seems lone ago and far
away.
"I have no regrets about the
1ur1ery and I have no regrets
now over all the publicity
alttiou11>tn the beelnnJng I hated
it,' said Ms. Jorgensen -now an
artJculate matron of S1.
CHRISTINE AT HOME IN SOUTH LA.OUN~
25th AnnlverHry of Sex Ch•~SI•
THE RECOMMEN·
datlons cam6 in a re·
port approved atter a
six-year dlalotue by a
20-member comllUNlon
lncludinf repre1en-
tallve1 o the Roman
Cathollc C'1urch, tb•
Lutheran World Federa·
tlon and the World AI·
Hance of Reformed
Churches. 'Both Protea·
"THINGS DON'T hurt the way
tbey did then. It's nature's way. I
suppose, ot keeplne us from 10-int lDlane.
•'The next generation will find
it even leu startling. Alter all,
what are the two bigeest thln'5
oa television -the bionic man
and the bionic woman? They
have parts that are in·
tercbangeable . . . They do
kidney transplant operations
now, It's really all the s ame
thing."
BEFORE OPERATION
George Jorgenaen
AFTEASEX CHAN OE
Chrtatlne Jorgenaen
. tant bodies are bued In
Geneva.
A Lutheran
spokesman said Thurs·
day the 32-paie report,
whlch nsveala differln&
views inaide the Vatican
regard.inc prospeda for
further a_creement in the
field of .qlixed mar·
rlaees, waa gotnt out to
all member chul'ches
following approval of its
publlcaUoo.
IT CONCEDES that
major differences
persist between the
Catholic and Protestant
positions but said the
talks brought the
churches "decisively
closer to a common un-
derstanding or mar-
riage."
Ford to Speak
Ms. Jorgeruien has a luxurious
South Laguna home which she
shares with Davy, a mongrel
dog, and an art collection Includ-
ing a signed Grandma Moses
print. She also has a con·
dominium in Hawaii bearing
testimony to the financial suc-
cess of her career as an enter-
tain er and a lecturer, her
autobiograp}\y and a film based
on her lite story.
SHE GIVES ABOUT 20 lec-
tures a year and says sbe bu
• spoken to 150i000 students In four
years. She would not specify how
much she charges for an ap-
pearance, but said: "I don't get
a. much u Billy Carter." •
She atlU finds the show busl·
ness world attractive, and a
month ago staged a one-night
performance of her old nightclub
act -for the first time in 14
yean -at the Grand Hotel in
Anaheim.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -
Former President Ford
will speak lo the San
Diego Oiamber of Com·
merce at its anoual
meeting Jan. ~. Ford
spolce al a meeting of the business group Jut year.
Officer Named
For Society
Linda -Ka y But-
terworth of Newport
Beach has been named
treasurer or the newly
chartered s tudent
chapter of the Society or
Women Engineers at
Harvey Mudd College,
Claremont.
Juror's Bite NO .,MiStrial
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Ha vine oPe juror bite
another may have been a "bizarre and painful ex-
periment," but it didn't stop a convicted rapist from
getting a fair trial.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled
that the act of biting a fellow juror as an experiment
dld not prejudice the case in an April 1975 rape trial.
SO TIIE COURT DECLINED to free George
William Miller, who was convicted or rape and ls
serving a 21-year prison term.
Miller cb~ged his convi~on on 1rounds the Richland County, S.C., jury that tried him conduct·
ed an uacon.stitutloaal experiment to check key
evidence tn his ease.
THE PROSECUTION REUED on pallce photo-
graphs of a bruise on one of Miller's arms when be
was arrested and on a doctor's testimony that lbe bruise was caused by human teeth.
Miller claimed he was bruised when he scraped
his arm on • chain-link fence the night of the May
1974 rape. '
AFrER IUS CONVICTION. Miller claimed he
had evidence that the Jury, in tryinl to make up lta
mind, conducted an experiutent fn whlcb a woman
Jurorbittheforeman'sarm. ~
lie alleged tbat the jurors then made periodic
checm oo the resulting bruise and compared It to
the photos o! Mlller's arm. The woman Jlilfer wu c:qnvicted of rapine
tesWled she blt her usallant«* the arm durlna the --------~~-~-----.--
attack, butc:oWdnottdentify Miller.
you think there's
nothing new Jn
Cluiatmas Candy and
Food GI/ta, then
you haven't been to
The Nut Kettle yet .
Qpen wery day
Wttd.&t. till 9 pm
And, yes, we domall
I
..
LIVIN(; THEES
rl'lllS <:HRISTMAS
Living trees cost little
more than cut trees and
and can be wed year
after year. They al.lo
enhance the environ·
ment.
We have the best for
our area ..•
MONTEREY, ALEPPO ~D STONE PINES.
Wreaths
~ from
.8.95
Living Chriltm~ Gifts
POINSETTIA
PLANTS
Huge velvet·
like bloom•,
From 10.00·
Also:
AZALEAS MUMS and
more
beautiful
plants in
bloom.
Hollil~ Hollday·~ped;
ready to sive u gifts.
A.JtDAllY f'ILOT Business .. .
u ......
WRONG-WAY PROBE
Winner Bruce Jenner
Graduated BiU
~ 81 !'J,.2~~~~~.,G.AN
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. -Far
be It from me to tell the diltrtct
attorney ot San Francisco how to
run bJt ottlce or to doubt what
Ol)'mplc decathlon champion
Bruce Jenner hu for breakfut.
but it would seem that the COD·
sumer fraud squad Is going about
the Wheaties invesU1aUon the
wrong way.
They should wrtn1 a confession
from the losers, nol the wlnnera.
J ATE 11IE breakfast o! cham-
pions for•years as a kid and I
never was a champion anytblnc.
Like Bruce Jenner, I don't
have the boxtops to prove it, but I
really did send away to General
Mills for all those wonderful pre·
miums: the Junior G·man
handcuffs, the yo-yo that lit up,
the secret doe whistle that wu so hJ~-pltcbed my dol never heard it.
I "downed a lot of Wheaties,''
aa Bruce Jenner says on TV. in
preparation for a lifetime of
athletic failuree, and I never did
hit a "Wheaties blut," as Red
Barber alwaya called it
whenever Dixle Walker put one
lnto the bleachers in Ebbeta
Fi;t.
Jiit FACf. I NEVER even
made the vanit)' baseball team.
at Cathedral IDib in Brooklyn,
which didn't win a sin1le iame in
my four years. The main reason
the coach cut me on the first day
of practice up in Proaptct Park
was that I waa too fat from stack-
ing my plate high wlth Wheaties
in cream topped oft, Jeoner·
style, with peaches and banana
slices.
The coach said bis charts
showed that at my weight I ought
to be 6 feet 4 inches instead of 5
feet 9 inches, so I figured baalcal·
ly I bad a hei1bt problem.
Anybow, I did make our local
Builder to Off er
Mortgage Option
Kaufman & Broad Inc., multinational housing producer, will be the
first in California to offer conventional graduated payment
mortgages to Its buyers, according to Ronald H. Kabot, senior vice
president.
Crocker National Bank will provide the financing and Ticor .
Appolwted Mortgage Insurance Co., a
private mortgage insurance or-
ganization. will insure the loans
offered to Kaufman & Broad's
home buyers, he said.
The program will be in·
troduced Saturday in four of the
developer's California com·
munities: Indian Ridge in
R iverside. New American
Homes in Cucamonga, Windsor
!<'arms in Milpitas and Parkside
Green Ill in San Jose.
KABOT SAID THE program
allows prospective home buyers
to reduce their monthly pay·
ments by as much as 2S percent
the first year, followed by
gradually increasing payments
designed to correspond with
projected increases in family in-
come during the next five )'ears.
Under the new procram, the
prospective buyer's purchasing
power will be analyzed throu8}l a
computer nstem Uul\ cqnaiQters
such items as the pr1ce of the
home, down payment, buyer's in·
come, mortgage terms and.
potential for income growth.
A graduated payment program
is then tailored to the needs of
each buyer.
USING THE GRADUATED
payment method, the buyer's
down payment is placed in an ln·
terest·bearlng savings account
as pledged collateral. Qurlnt the
first five years of the mortca1e,
the money in the pledged account
earns interest which, combined
Bank Raises
Mortgage Rate
Security Pacific Bank bu ln·
crea~ed the interest rates
charged for new fixed-rate con-
ventional home loans by one-
fourth ot 1 pet"Cent.
The new rates mean that the
best possible interest rate for a
borrower buyine a home with 80
percent financing will be 9\4 per-
cent instead of the former 9 per·
cent.
Paul J. O'Brien, aenlor·vlce
president and adminiatrator of
the bank'• real estate finance de-
partment,. said the hJper in··
terest rat.es refiect unaeuonabty
heavy loan demand and prevall-.inl market conditions.
with principal, is uaeJ to reduce'
the borrower's monlbly payment
until the savings account is
depleted.
The buyer's gi-adually increas-
ing monthly payments level off
at the end of the fifth year, when
the payments are no longer sup·
plernented Crom the pledged sav-
ings account.
Iris Sankey, chairwoman or
the ·tax information and af.
firmative action committees
of the stat e Board or
Equalization, has been ap·
pointed to complete the
term of a member who died
in office.
Sales Auger Busy
Gift,..buying Season
NEW YORK <AP> -The nation's lareeat retail chains have report·
ed improved salet for November, and analysts sald the results
augured well for a busy holiday shopping season.
Most of the chains PQstell double-diiit percentage increases In No·
vem ber sales over the revenues reported for the same month last year.
Stuart Robbtns, a retail sales
analyst for Mitchell Hutchins cooler weather experienced
Inc., said Thursday that the throughout the country ln the
strong sales figures extended a middle of November sharply
recenttrend. stimulated sales, p8J"\1cularly in
"The numbers were ~retty the apparel lines."
much what we expected,• Rob·
bins said.
"OUR PllOIECDON for the
fourtb quarter is that sales 1ains
will continue, and we're loold.ng
for a good Christmas season."
Robbins said the increases ap-
parently have been led by higher
salea of clothing. "Apparel de-
mand ia strong, and that's a good
siin al.nee moat of theae at.ores
are oriented toward clothln1
sales," he said.
Seara, Roebuck & Co., the na·
tion 's largest retail chain, report.
ed that its sale.a for the four
weeb ending Nov. 28 were $1.'1
billion, up 14.2 percent from the
$1.5 bllllon for the aame period
last year.
mE aDCAOO.BASED firm's
sales for the flnt 43 weeks of the
year rose 15.9 percent to $15
billion from $13 bUllon.
The chairman of K·Mart Corp.,
Robert Dewar. 1aid,!ll firm'•
November sales -up 15.t per·
cent -would have been even·
1tron1er ll cool weather bad ar·
rived earlier.
"SiUes were rel•dvely ao1t dur.. iDJ the flnt two weeks of the
month, 0 Dewar aatd. ,.The
AMONG OTHER RETAIL
f'lJ'IDs reporting November sales
fi1ures Thursday:
-J . C. Penney Co., based in
New York, reported a 13.3 per·
cent November sales gain. Sales
were $888 million laat month, op-
posed to $784 million in the same
period last year. 'The company
operated 2,119 retail wtita last
month, compared to 2,084 last
year.
-K·Mart .d Its sales in·
creued to "78.8 million from
$758.5 million last year. Tbe
Troy, Micb.·bued company bad
1, 7'8 .tores in operation last
month, compared with 1,m in
November 1976.
To the Winsrers Aho~t Xmber Fluid Brunch
sandlot team, the Owla, which we
orlginaJly called the Golden
Ea1les 1,UlUl the front office,
which waa really locat.ed in the
back of Mn. Myers' candy atore,
found out that the felt letters to
paate on the uniform shirt.a coet 8
centa apiece at Mandelbaums'
sport.a store on Steinway Street.
After making the team. 1
doubled my input of Wheaties,
and actually aot into a game one
day when the flrti strins catcher
had scarlatina and the second
stringer broke his thumb tryinl
to bold onto a spitter that ahnos'-
drowned hlm.
MY PATBEll WAS comln&
home from work Just as I got a
ninetb:Lnning rally eotn.a by aet-
Ung bit by a pltdled ball. I 1ot so
excited waving at him, the
pitcher picked me off on the ftrst
throw. The next afternoon, the
leas rather than mew. cynical. I
never cbttiit.d tha1 Tld WiWams,
JobAny Felty Md tile other Red
'SOX bad ~ Pft.Jbl•mt Cettl.ne rid
of thoee cases of Narraaanaett
beer.
But tbanb to WbuUes, J once
did win~. I won a partln
tho tldl'd·lradt health pa1eant at
'St. Patrfcltra• .. cbool In Lons
Island Qty. !;et tbe record show f
played Patty n..ues, • heavy,.
whllt the star outfielder on &he.
Owls b9CI a wAJ.tion u Vitamin C.
LATl!a IN LIPE, when I
chanted my ~ fare to a
bloody mary at Toots Shor's
around nooa I could Loot across
the room 8iMi Ne Mickey ManUe,
· Billy MarUn aDd Whitey Ford
bruncblng on ambu OuidJ that I.
lme,,, wttbout Di.J 1ecret wrist
radio were not concentrated
Wbeadea.
One day J read In a 1ports an·
tholo&y aboul Babe Ruth down·
int a dozen bot do11 and half a
case of beer in the interval
between a doubleheader in
Baltimore, along with some clam
I was too fat from
stacking my plate high with
Wheaties in cream ....
aame thing almost happened to
Dolph Camille, only be redeemed
himself and won a case of
WbeaUes by belting one into the
parking lot.
I used to wonder what Dolph
and Dixie did with all those cases
of Wheaties, seeing what the rata
did to the bin of potatoes in our
basement, but after I moved to
Boston and matured a bit, l &r~
cues, com on the cob and p,otAto
chiP.•· and I waan 't1bocked,tall.
I auess I never dld believe that
before every fipt S\t1ar Ray
Robinson sen\ over to a atauitrter
house on Tenth A venue for a
bucket of bull '1 blood, or that
Two·'l'on TOil)' Galeoto trained
w.fth a tee ot beer next to the
punchlne bag at Stlllman'a. But
they may have ..
Over The Counter
MASDUttiwp
•
Last week lo Manbatten i
watched a -cnotorcycle coP
1lvo a p kine ticket to a
CedlUac er outaldo bU aboe'
atc>re ld1JOa Annue. ''Sc) clci
m• a avor." he told the officer~
'1Next Ume io up to Central Park:
and eatch yourself a muccer.,
Leave the taxpayen alone." ~
don't know why lt made me~
of Bruce Jrnner and tbe Priaco ~A. :
I
" .. .................................................................................... .
MUTUAL FUNDS -
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Friday's
Clo11ing Price
NYSE COMPOSITE 'FRAN~ACTI0NS
.N DAILY ,,.LOT A JI
-RAVE YOU SAVED ANY •ONEYT Do JOU now
how mueb money you'll need to fiet staned! How much ot your own you can put Into tbe bu• .,..? Where you can bor-
row the rat?
-Have YoU estimated • U»come per year? Can You live OD less and UH tome to belt> J'OW' hl11IM1t ll'OWf Have
you talked to• banker about JOUl'plaDaT Rec6lvecl approval
or a negative reacttant
-Bow about a ~? If JOU need a partner "1th money or tnow-bow you don't bav•. do JOU tDow tomtc>QO,
who will flt? Do Yo\I know tbe prQI ml oma of Cobl1 lt akloe.
havtna DUtners. lncorpora&iqf Have Yotl talked &o a
la.,yer aboutlt?
-BOW ABOtJT YOUJt .-oTENTIAL c'u.atomenf Don
most bustnaaa in your community aeem to be 4olnc well?
Are bnsi..-.. UJte the one fOU want to open dolnC ..Ut Doi
you know what kind of people wtU •ant to bu)' what you plaD. to sell?
-An your location and bUlldlnc •ell-cboMnt can l
customers aet to your bulld1n& eaaily? H&a a l•wyw
cheeked tbe lease and rootn1t
-Have you compared prices and eredlt te:rma Of aup-
pllen! Have you CCIDlidered buJfll& MCODll·b.ud t11u.IJ>. meot7 ·
,
'
1
. -I
) • ~
men's sport
shirts
REG. 7.99
4.99
' Long ileevee in
IOlids. 100% rl J
cotton cham· j 1 brayor100%
polyester.
r Slz•
S·M·L·XL.
polyester
Qiana• dress
shirts
REG.12.99
·9.97
long Sleeve
100%0lana•
\ nylon. Sizes
1 14*to16*·
)
Short 1leeve,
reg. 10.99, 7.'¥1
leisure suits
t. 1 One Day Onlyl
15.98
' .
JKket.7•
Pem, 7 ••
acket,etfe
S·M·L·XL;
pant, waist
8iztlS 34-40.
Cotton'lpolVelter. Slzea S-M-L-XL.
Cr.w.end tube eocks; fits lizes 10-13,
reg. •1pr ...... 3 PR. 2.21OR790 PR.
men's wool sport coats
· 39.S9Reo.a ..
Sport coett and b&aiera.ln ttadldbnal
ltylea with 2-button front.a, center·
beck vent. Sizes 38 to 48.
~men's dress slacks
9.99 RE0 .• 18 . ~
Famous maker wov.., Dacron• poly-
etter/woof; bett ~; ellght ftare leg;
wide waistband. Waist lizel 32 to 40.
long sleeve
sweat' shirts
RE0.12.91
7.97
footed knit
sleepers
RE0.6.&0
3.99
Modacrytlc/ poly-
ester IOlld bot-
toms with print
tops. Slzea
. 1-2-34 yeal"I.
L.E.D. watches
for men
RE0.19.96
"9 cleaning or
winding.
Fine Jewelry Dept.
' . men's long sleeve shirts
3.99 REO. 6.99
Turtleneck or crew-neck knit.a In IOlld
colora. Eay-care polyester/ cotton In
lizes S-M·L-Xl.
gentlemen'• knit shirts
6.99 REO.t.n
Short sleeve, collar anc$ button-ftOnt
in 100% ecrytlo; V-necka ln 1009' ~
eltef. &av-care-slzea S-M·L-XL.
boys' cottqn underwear
3FOR1.99 ft£0.3FOR2.n
MeNVn'• own briefa end tees of 100%
cotton. SlzteSC2-4), M(&-8), L(10-12)
andXL(14-18).
Short llelve, crew
neck knftl. 100"
cotton. Sizel
S(&8), MC10-12>,
l(14-18).
XL(18-20).
jr. denim
overalls
A~G. t11
'14.99
Bib-front style.
Pre-Wltlhed, cot·
ton JndfgO blue"~
denim. Slz• 6-13.
Sponsweer rUpt.
.
mist
curling Iron
· REG.I ..
6.99
()n-off IWftch,
ready dot. built.tn
stand end IWfYel
cord.UL
listed.
girls' wedgie boot
10.97 RE0.13.11
Trk:ot lining; low Wldge; CUINon crepe
.-. Bleck or' oamel. Men-made uppers.
chokers.
earrings
REO.t2
•1
Fine chain c:hok-
et'S; UIOrt8d pierc-
ed wrings. Al fn ~
gold-tone end ~
.aver-tone metall. if
Costume Jewelry
Oepenment
nylon quilt
vest
REO.t18
12.99
Zipped Wit of rip-
ltop nyton wfth
100% oacrone
poly9lt8' fiberfiA.
SizelS-M·L
Coat Deperiment
women'• flannel
sleepwear .
RE0.•7
4.99
Long gowne end
button-front pa-
jama. Cotton.
Sizes 34 to 40.
women'• chow allppe..,
1.99 REG.2.11
Pulowraw.t·
eralnddl.
Welheble
100"-~
Junlorm.
S·M·L.
IF PERFECT 1.79-~M
66° EA.
88% cottori/
14% polyester
Ot 100% cation.
Minor imper-
fecdonl won't af.
feet wear or looka.
I ..
~ • .J I
• Televlslon
By JUDITH OLSON
Ol h 0-41'f ...........
Once upon a time there was a singing mail
girl at the MGM studios. She sana in
the halls as she delivered the mail and secretly
hoped to be discovered.
Instead of becoming a star "l was asked to
be quiet," Myla Lichtman recalled with a laugh.
But me got a glimpse of the world of &lamor
as she ate her lunch on movie sets and watched
the parade of stars through the MGM balls.
herself on the guitar and.participates in tbe.Fri-
dar evening services with speelal i:eadiop.
"l'M A SONG leader more than a cantor."
she aatd during a late afttfrnoon in~iew before
4l service in the Balboa temple.
"Cantors usually have theological training
like th'e rabbis and help with religious instruc-
tion, though 1 teach the children on Saturday morn p .•·
Music bas always been an integral part of
the Jewish service but Miss Lichtman is making
"it.even more special atShir-Ha·M•·Alot. Myla Lichtmaq, the mail girl 'fbo wanted to
be "the next .M.ary Martin," went ~ to 1ta1e
roles in ~ew l'1trk. Now ,abe is WWJPhl on her · She is teaching the ~g'"ation e>Ue new
doctorate in theater at use while .. =as the •ons every week anc1 is constantly writ.a.-~ ew cantoress at Sbir:Ha-Ma-~ot l'emtu~ alboa. 1 ~ies and lyrics. SheL.brttais a wt QT
She is one of the few cantOresses ti s area 1triowledge about folk music to her job, wb c ihe
and possibly the only one who ICC9mpan.les lntertwtn~ with the tradiUonal musjc, an~ an
' • r( • • ~ H • I I ' • •, I .
I
(
endless cwioeity about
world.
Miu Lichtman pl~ya ~ 12· and S.strlnf
g,1,1ttars during the sef'l1cet. s1ritch1n1 from l.ft.
1trument to instrucnent"' bet' mood cbangM •
As she ainp for her guests in t.MJate after·
noon wit.b the sun setting over-the beacb, titer• is
an almoet myslital quality to her voice.
• THE MEtODf'is ~ abiuntlni m,fnor key. :'Lit :'rlJ. ~ toJm..10* Id~ IJ'"'!d ~hout fM
Shi say\ tiler=~ ~~, .. e,tl)' ~g into ill fullest oC ~ ..,, 1'blch also couldbe~brber 1 ... ror'P '' tNbri ~llt wtiij wu ed at an eatfr. age b •J\er j>areni.. ,.. an ts de· ~ica(~ to both the the@ .t and ~~v~s, ,1 •
-IWLYPILOT
... Abusive ..
. Mother ·
DBAR ANN~.-...------
LANDERS: I have nad
several Jlttera lb JOQJ'
cohamJJ 'bout lnceat
but It'• .. ft11 betu a ''Fuant~" • .iep. dad, a fatler ar a .
brother. tver bavt' YoU
. grtntect a letter about a ·
,,, motber w&o molested
btr own clau1hter. It
yo11've ~er received
one-:-a....•1,your 1'lnt.
l am,.,W 58 yean old
and Am'SPI~ ol lt for tbe flrat 'tlme. M1 rellef ltt.~tit,mte mother wu a teac~er tb1t 1.U. m.-""1--
a D d a ate ad 1 R&NO,NBVADA"-
cburcheoez'. Sbe d1Cf tbe D&Aa=· ~ foollni U'OUIMl wben abe ' , bath.a me. 1 never mew for DI ,. Tlaat 1
then w• ~ uh· wlaat_.I'• ... fw'. Aad
Ulual aboutbjr bebAYlor :ii""•',.. ..... d ~tU mJtdllr wa!Udla ......... .
Oil qa .,s _.a tenifte ft wlll •w.rwc:r. ..... •··~<!.:_~,...,, ~~ .. . .olcl af mu mudl ...
: f.ooollltObe~
.lllotb*.) ~
4 Sbe nner touehfd me .. •tter that, bat t•e damace abe bad dolle
1)'&a comiderable. wi--. I married I bad a hard
... ~· ~ llU and-and atifl ao. I .
ALTilouGBTBB womulau eha1Jdn1 com·
pound on her bandl and t.boulh ber car and 'her
whole bod)' havesmelled Utt restn after WClltiJla
with tbe aubltaDce, tbe akilla lbe'a been JurDlnt have pnpandber for a btih level podUon ,.uh a. IOOd wqe-.. More than a waltnll • leCl'Mal7 make "abelQS. Sbe'a worked ln tbe woodabop bulldfu
cabllieta, In tbe r1U1Q.c and mut abop ucl la the
molclabop.
NORWALK-With a berth in ·
the CIF (Big Five Conference)
football fmals awaiting the vic-
tor, Newport Harbor High 's
Sailors collide with St. Paul <San·
ta Fe Springs) tonight (8) at Cer-
ritos CoUeee.
The Sailors ot Newport Harbor
coach Bill Piuica enter with a
reputation for outstuding de-
fense-an item, along with the
passing or quarterback Cra.I&
Lyons, which has ~arried the
Tars to a 9-2 record.
Coaches Say
Offici~ting
Was Terrible
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Los
Angeles coach Ron Stewart
wasn't happy following the
Kings' latest National Hockey
League game. That's not surpris-ing since they lost.
But Philadelphia coach Fred
Sbero wasn't particularly
pleased either, and the Flyers
won .
The coaches were upset about
the same thing -the officiating
in Thursday night's contest, won
by the Flyers 4·2. The Flyers won the game on a
power·play goal by Reggie Leach
with 3:50 to play, which snapped
a 2·2 tie, and an empty-net in·
surance goal by Tom Bladon with
only 27 seconds remaining.
"The teams played terrific
hockey for 50 minutes and then
the officiating almost threw it
away," said Sbero, whose team
now has a 15-4·3 record. ''The·
rerreree called dumb penalties on
both teams at the end of the game.
"Both teams were very
physical for all 60 minutes
tonight and that's unusual,"
added Shero. ''This was definite-
ly one of the best games of the
y~ar, the Kings gave us our best
game so far this season tonicht. ••
·'The thing I 'm most concerned
about. and don't you guys mis-
quote me, is that we played a de·
cent game, got caught in a line
change on the winning goal and
got beat on the play, which was
our fault," Stewart told re-
porters.
"Number one, I don't know
how a referee in this league can
call a penalty on Dave Hutch.iaon
and then be right on top of a fia·
grant one on Larry Brown and
not call it." continued Stewart,
referring to a call on Hutchison
shortly before Leach's winning
goal. "Number two, I don't know
how two linesmen can stand
there and watch that icing on the
pass that led to the empty net
goal and not call it.
"Number three, I don't know
why this league designates a cap-
tain. All I saw wu five of their
players standinc around the re-
feree all night long. If that's not a
penalty, I don't know what ts."
Stewart referred to an .NJIL
rule allowing only a team captain
to talk to officials regudin•
penalty calls.
Cup Scroll Stolen
&YDNEY • Australia -A Jarce sterling silver scroll disappeared
from the Davia Cup tJ'ophy
'l'huraday after the cup wu ex·
hiblted durinc a draw for the
Jtaly-Australia final in a
dowlltown hotel.
Security guards found the
trophy, wbicb bel)'S ~ name ot
all DaVil Cul) final.lits sinff uoo.
had been tampered with.
But the Swordsmen of St. Paw
coach Marijon Ancicb, in the
playoffs for 10 straight years,
champioos in 196f and '11> ud l'UllDersup in '75, have lived with
a stifling S.2 readiug defense.
Additionally. the Swordsmen
have two-time Ancelua League
player of the year' Tim Cowan at
quarterback and tbree-year
st~rter Rick Valensuela at
halfback.
It's a naued combination the
Sailors must solve. Valenzuela
Sports in Brief
baa everqed 4.t yardl per carry
andtsathreattogo~edlltanee
atfnyt4me. •
Cowan baa ~plet~
pasosea for l,2D yarct. and a
touchdowns out ot a spriatout
style when he's aliftecl runner.
The defeme 1s 1~ by •afety
Chuck W..Wc. •bo blf ln~cept· ed 14 puaea to tie a CIF record.
Trylq to beat Wl1llg and the
rest of the Swordsmen \.\P f?Gat
will be .LYoDS and tu. rt1bt "°m,
which bas aceounted for 1,232
...
'
6 Swim Victories .
For A.meric~n.Ace
VERONA, Italy -Mite Bruner toot. three events and
American awlmmera won six out
of seven events in the City or
Verona men'is swimming mee\
Wednesday night.
Bruner won the 200-meter but· terlly 2:02.&C, the 400 freestyle in
4:00.0l and the 200 tree in the
1:53.-47.
Bruce Furness finished first in
the 100 h-ee in 51.65 and the 200 in-
dividual medley in 2:08.10. Bobo
Tiernell woo the lOO·meter
backstroke in 58.00. '
Woll Paelc 1t'I••
BERKELEY -Edgar Jones,
Nevada-Reno's 6-10 center,
scored eight of his team 'a 12
overtime points and finished wit.ft
a total of as Thursday night to
lead the Wolf Pack to an 89-81
basketball victory over
California's Bears.
Jone. made the first or two tree
throws to tie the score at 77-Tl at
the end ot regulation Ume, but
, missed "8 second and potential
game-winner. He made up for
that in the overtime as Nevada-
Reno jumped off to an 80-Tl lead
and stayed in front.
The victory put the Wolf
Pack's record at 4-0.
IAOlplpie•
Los Angeles may be able to
stage the Olympics in 1984
without a deficit, but there will
be "modest costs .. that wm have
Mixed Team
Golf Leaders
1..AltGO. Ft.. (AP) -Finl round ICOAS T'Jlun. NY'" tM UD0.000 Ml-.:1 Tum golf ~p
CHI the 7,01$-V•l'd. ,., .. n ~" Couru MIN
a.rdMOOr CAIUnUy Oub
Pllt•St.cy ,.., ..... , .....
NtllOll·Altott r,.....1,,..1MM
Of.itl·Alnlln '" Mct.MdM-P,,.-'1 sir.._...._,
,,..,,.. ... lodt
EOW•nls-UW.
8--0'C-P•lm.r.P.irr.r
~·"-*'" Hor1~ Porter
Arm~ 110drlt\l9l·~ .. ,, .. ,_
Gr•llem-Flo\4 Tewel~~
~lft'ft.·"""'' .... "~ Oldfl~ ..,..,..5...,.._, ................
WM-Wiii~
ltoAurv-Brltz SI-•~ ,~
IEkMlllergw·ll9llllWlnlt
Nlc.Mtl-Y .....
keclt-Lelltr
to be reimbursed by added rev-
enues collected from fans, mayor Toqi Bradlenaya,
'There are gotnc to be some
costs no matter -.vhat you do in
ent.erta.iniol any apeeial event.
whether it's a conveotioo or the
Olympl_es," the mayor said
Thursday in a speech to about 50
foreign diplomats stationed in
Los Angeles consulates.
''But these will be modest C06ts •
when you compare them with the
revenue that will come to the ci-ty, not to the Olympic organbtng
committee," he added.
Bradley said be was confldent
the games could be conducted
without a deficit because the city already bas all but three needed
facilities -a swim atadium. a
rowing facility and a velodrome
for bicycle rac:es.
Trejo .. Beaorm
Two-time All·Amerlcan safety
Dennis Thurman was chosen
USC's most valuable football
player and outstanding defensive
performer ror the 19'71 season
Tbundayoigbt.
Fullback Mosl Tatupu was \>ot·
ed most inspiration.al player by
his teammates and was also
chosen Trojans offensive player
ortbeyear.
Other award winners included
quarterback Rob Hertel, honored as a co-captain and as outstand-
ing player in the UCLA game;
defensive tackle Walt Un-
derwood, outstanding player in
the Notre Dame game ;
linebacker Clay Matthews, co-
captain and center Gary Bethel,
senior with the highest grade-
point average.
~ .......
LUBBOCK. Texas -Texas
Tech football coach Steve Sloan,
33, who brou•ht ~e Red Raiders
a championship in bis second
year at the Southwest Conference
school, has accepted a bead
coaching Job at tho Untverait3 ol
Misstaaippi.
Baylor coach Grant Teaff, a
former assistant at Texu Tech,
becomes the No. l prospect to
take over~ Red Raiders helm.
'
a ltDebacter Don Barnr ha.,. ~out.
NewDOrt must coMalll the
quJct duU of Valenzuela aad the
ftfte-ute abort PUHi of Cowan;
wblle the ,Swordsmen tlpre '°
Uy oil !iewport's pu.tlq ca.me.
:Which ha 'been CODSiateDt all
year wltll J,yooa at tho controls.
St. Paol ls f.amous tor mding ttt. bJi play-u It dl4 .. alnst
Edison (JlunUnJlton Beach) in
the npt rom>d of tbe playolfa
(Vale~'• 8S-yard kictolf r&-
.Teff Platt. a 30-tear~ld Sporting goods store assistant
,,1 tdana-, gives a jump· for joy 4urlng a recent Chicago nµns ~~etball ataQJe. Platt is the president o( the
Bulls' fan club and is called Su~ Fan for his antics
used to fire up crowds on ga~ }\lght.
SYDNEY. Australia <Al') -
Australia's John Alexander
fought off a strong cballenp by
Italy's Ccrrado Baraszutti todayl
to take the second "'"'1• match
and put Australia two-qp ill Jibe
finals ol tbe Davia Cup challelrae
round.
Alexander held off a third eet
cballeqe by the 24,Year·old
Italian to take ~e match s.a. M,
4-6, 6-2 and put Australla ID a
9trong position to re~ the Cup -
from the Italian tltleboldera. . )
Vetenm Australian left·bandeJ1'
T~., ~ earlier oateluaed Italy's Adriano Panatta 6-3, M,
......,. ~ take the opening singles
matcb. · r Ale~firstpJayed In D~
Cup in 1968attheageof17. :
The 32-year-dld Roelle. Ive
times Wlmbledon doubles ctwn-pion. used b#S powerful serve am
vollel,,r. to leave the 27-,.br-old l scraml>Uag.
Both players appeared to M af-
fected by the so.decree heat on
the center court at Sydnty's
White City Stadium. t
Roche started badly. dropling
his serve in the third game of the
rirat set. Sivl.U Puett.a ~ 3-1
lead before the left-bander fOancl
his touch.
UCLAAwftd --. I To Bashore,.:
Linebacker Jerry Ro~on
and running bact James Qhns were named co-whmen of tbe
Henry R .• 'Red .. Sanden Award
Thursday nl&ht for the most
valuable football player at UCLA. ~is year. '
Robimoo WU Q All·Amedcan
choice for the aeeoDcl stt11lght
season, wblle Owens ruhel1 for
more than 900 )'lll"dl •
Other award WUUm's hiclbded
Bomer Dodier 11114 JOit I ~~ i~~plqen; ~b ilQ Be.eh) .
duct Rick ·Buben ud
Easley, "'Boold• ol the w,"
Jlm Main. outl&aoclfnt:~~e emeo: t>ave Konon, • r:, delenal•• pla7~
Pederson and !'rd •
outat.&Ddlu Nnlcn, A4 ·
Brown and Steve Tettrick, Who were honored for •1au4J'oUDd n·
cellence.0
•
.. DAILY PILOT
JlrCIWG811Bh' ..............
Dma BUii HlCh belcl
off a fallaQt ralb' b,
C.Jllltiano Vallq lDtb to r.9CCllrd a G·M bullet. balf Tict«y ln the Opell•
inC came of the aeuoa
Thursday nl&bt at Sad·
dle\)aek Colleee.
l\ •• allo the ftnt· .... bukelball Wt for Capo Valley•a Cougars.
An4 they played re-
martablywell.
Dana Hllll appeared to
ha• the 1ame locked up
1n tbe wanlne minutes of
the third quarter-
bolting a 41-36 leact. ~ut the Cousan' Bob Charles hit two buketa
in the ftDa1 minutes and
canned another shot to
ooen tbe fourth quarter -cutting the
deficit to48-42. ·
Oapo Valley continued
to .close the gap-finally
grabbing the lead wilh
2:52 to go on an 18·foot "j umper by Bert
Fertenga.
But the Dolphins didD"'t
rattle. Mike Samuels lm·
mediately hit a 14-footer,
and after a Capo Valley
miss, Dick Jeffers
canned two free throws
to give his team a 58-55
advantage. Jeffers added two
m()l'e charity tosses with o:.µ left to really wrap it
up.
Charles, who wasn't
expected to play until
January because of knee
surgery performed prior
to the football seuon,
was the big sparkplug
for the Cougars.
A two-time athlete-of·
the-year at El Toro Hieb
the past two years,
Charles had is points, in·
eluding 11 in the second
half.
Samuels and Tom
Thornton paced the
Dolphins with 16 each.
Dana Hills won the
game at the free throw
line, converting 26 of 36
·attempts. Capo Valley
went to the line only six
times, bitting five.
O..HIDl(U) .. " ,. "' J-'fer• :a • J 12 5"'vtM 1 • J •
°T'llOffttOfl s • 0 , •
S."'11e1S • • s ,.
WlllClft S 1 0 11 Tot.IS 11 2' 11 61 ~-Va....,CJlll ftftpft,
5ctwbtrt 0 0 1 0
Sllltes • 0 1 11 ,.,,.,,.. 2 0 J •
O'H alloran 2 0 J 4 Bryant S o 4 10
a.O>arl" 1 s • 1t R.oi.rln 1 o J •
COHIM 1 0 S 2 TotA!l t 27 S U 5' SC....,~ . t>ana Hiii• 20 t It ,.._.,
Cepl1trano \'alley 16 ,. 10 17-ff
C8ge
Results
..
TROJAN SCORES -:-University Higb's
Steve Tilles (45) goes high to score over
Edison •s Paul Freudenberg Thursday
I
Edison Outlasts Uni ,;
j
Setback In Overtime, 62-58
By ROGER CAllLSON By Danamm-pa. ot•Dlltr........... ot•Deltr .......... Tom Pestolesl poured You'd be bard·preded
in 20 pol.n&s and~ Hunt· to llnd more evenly
ington Beach High Oilers matched teams than the
got double fisure scoring two that opeped the Can·
from two other start.en yon Claasic b-.ketball Thursday nlg.bt. but it tournament Thursday
wun 't enough to offset night at Cu)'on Blgb la
the height and talent of Anaheim.
hoet Los Amigot (Foun-Univeralty High
tai.n valley> 1llgh ln non· (Irvine) IDd Ed1lon Bish
le ague basketball of Huntlngton Beach bat.
openers for both teams. tled to a 56-5IS lta.Ddoff
The Lobos of Loa tbrou1h four quarters Amigos coach John
unveiled
I
Oranse Coast Colle1e Moorpark. Golden West romped to an easy M-a trailed by a 47"'2 margin
baatetball victory ov• earl1 ln the second half
Pboenlz Collet• Tbun--but Oln)10QI scored 16
day DJ&ht to reach th• walabt to pull ahead
semifinals of ill own 61-42 -and lt was all
Miles Eat.oft tournament. oveg:.
OCC'1 Pirates rilface .t ........ .,
Imperial Valley tomcht · s.Mtn ': ~
at 9, followlng a 7 o'cloet -~1-1 • 1
tiff matcblnf Sad· ~ ·• :
dleback and Fullerton. := ~ 0 The latter •W'Prtaed San· Leat • 1
ta Rosa, 102-n, while Im· =:. ! :
~· 0 1
CMIMll• • 2 ""*'"' 2 1 Ttt•t D II MelftllMt~4M4.
0.-..0. .. , .......
6 I t A-'~ i ' . . ' l ·..t I I ·-y
I I 4 ' . . • 2 •
1 4 I
1 • ' ' . . t I I ....
MISCELLANY I BASKETBALL
MISCELLANY
Prep Mat
Report
For Area
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127-ZAQAr !Lidie. V09tlUft1'-L 1~(01fllC. Ol-y7•1.
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111-llom. IOl~M9flllO:S7. m-11ti11wta0»""'9M •111ots112. 1t1_,.~ CO)-..ANINH.
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1»-McOllWll1 U lplnneclWeltu:•.
1.U-Jellen <I I dK Sdlh•rer 144.
114-Wet...,. Cll pl!W*I H19tllroe
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CARL ANDERSON GETa A HELPING HANO IN CIF FINALS.
Women's Athletics
OlltLITIWll c., ... ~
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• For your slide, movie, and
color print film
• Eas>""to-use. just drop In the
mail
. .
' •Your processed films and ~
• Act now and be sure to ask _ prints malled right to you. ............ • t
us tor KODAI< Mafl~rs ,
BARBOR PHOTO
•
• OM. Y Pk.Of
I t< II) \'t
£VENIHO
a.<009 a 8 Cl) GI NEW8 • eotwaA
"A Ride In The Sun" G Twe A\IENOEAS
steed Joins • seem aociet1 and Emma Wllu the ptentc.
I MICK!V MOU8I CLUB
8UPIAMAN
"The Man Who Made Dreame
Come True"
1,9 VILLA ALEGRE
• 5:15ID SESAMESTREET
• 5:30 tD BEWJTCHED
"I Get Your Nennle, You Get
My Goat"
Cl) ADAM-12
"Skywatch" (Part 2) m HODGEPODGE LODGE
"Soldier• Delight"
8:001J C8S NEWS DD NEWS U EMERGENCY ONEI
Paramedic Gage reacu• a lire
victim end goea on television.
GMOVlE · **',., "The Man Outside"
(1967) Van Heflin. Peter
Vaughn. A former CIA agent
becomes entangled In
espionage and vlotence. (2 hrs.)
tD THE BRADY BUNCH
The Brady kids. accompany
Mike on a business trip to an
amusement park where he la to
present plens '°' some new additions.
Cl) THE ROOKIES
Giiiis I• being Investigated fOf'
shooting a boy who was
trapped In a flaming police car. •
'11) FOODS FOR THE
MOOEAN FAMILY
"Special Occasion Baking" 0 ABC NEWS
8:16fll) PLEDGE BREAK
Regularly scheduled program-
ming may be delayed due to
pledge breaks.
8:25fll) ZOOM
1 8:30 tJ THE PRICE IS RIGHT
Q) MY THREE SONS
A lady engineer and a member
of a gtrl's hockey team cause
problems for Steve Oouglaa
and his son, Chip.
~ FAMILY PORTRAIT
.. Violence In The Family"
Cl) CBS NEWS
®J MERV GRIFFIN
Guests: Danny Thomu, Mel
Tiiiis. Lonnie Shorr, Argentinian
Gauchoe. She Lido Showgirls.
7:00 f) THE MUPPET&
Guest: John Cleese. 0 NBCNEWS U UARSCLUB
0 ABC NEWS
Q) ILOVELUCY
"Lucy Writes A Play"
Cl) ADAM-12
Officer Reed's overanxious
attempt at a tan complicates
the day tor the team.
&i) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'11) CAUFORNIA TONIGHT
Cl) TO TELL THE TRIJTH
7:30 f) ALL-STAR ANYTHING
GOES
"Aoe Trucking Company" vs.
"The Comedy Store"
D FAMIL V FEUD
8 NEWLYWED GAME
Stark Terror
Suzanne Somers is attacked by a crawling horror from
beneath the earth in the TV mystery movie .. It Hap·
pened at Lake Wood Manor" tonight at 9 on ~C. Chan-nel 7.
8 QJ8 HOLL YWOOO
SQUARES
• THE BAAOY BUNCH
After eee1n$1 a JMgk:lan per-
form a dleeppeanng act, Cindy
delielope a fw of the datk. 8 L!T'8 MAKE A DEAL e LA. INTERCHANGE
"Informed Sources" 19 VOTERS' PtPEUNE
"Sacnrnento o.teMne"
(I) THE MUPPET&
Gueet: Mitton Bene.
8:00 8 (I) WONDER WOMAN
Wonder Woman )oln9 fOl'oea
With Androe, an emtaury from
the Interplanetary council In
remote apace, to crush fugitive
outlaws from apace before they
can lay wute to Earth. (Part 1
of 2) D CPO SHARKEY
"Natalle'a Ultimatum" When
his longtime gltlfrlend agitates
for a fixed wedding date, Shar-
key penkla at the thought of
abandoning his bachelor daya.
liJMOVlE
***"Road To Utopia" (1946)
Bing Crosby, Bob Hope. Two
proepectlve miners meet a
beautiful woman after heading
for AlaaJca gold. (2 hra.)
Ratit19s Guide
1Mo¥1 .. ..-e r.t.cl eccwdlftv to bolt
offl<• li1--e. Mo¥1ff tor TV •re lucl99d by acrllk l
... * * -Excellent
*** -Very Good
** -Good .. ' -Fair
* -Poor
G GI DONNY l KARIE '
Mitton Berte, Ct\MS' end The
Sytvera join In a tr1bute to Lau-
rel end Hardy. 8 JOKER'S WlLD tD CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIEN08 e MAACU8 WELBY, M.O.
A newty.....,.,.ted wtfe con-tract.a a __.. ~ .._,
:,she ha., affair. flD 8D WASHINGTON WEEK
INREVIEW
8:30 D CHICO ANO THE MAN
8 CONCENTRATION m CR088-WIT8 f19 I!) WALL $TREET WEEK
"Understandable Eoonomlca"
Guest: Beryl W. Sprinkel, ede-
uttve vtce president end econo-
mist. Hams TrO.st And 8avlnga
Bank.
t:OO 8 (I) CBS MOVIE
***"The Four Musketeers"
(1975) Michael York,· Raquel
Wetc:h. In this MqUel four
mwket..,. attempt to protect
their SCMWelgn, King Louts XIII
and his Queen from the evil
plots of Cardinal ~lchelleu.
D ROCKFORD F1LE8
''Hotel Of Feat'' Angel, 8'at*'
to testify against a syndicate hit
man, lives It up In posh hotel•
under police protection until
the suspect la freed on a tech-
nicality.
8 ABCMOVtE
"It Happened At Lake Wood
Manor" (P1e11-.) Suzanne
Somera, Robert ~. A
group of people aeW'Chlng for
romance and pleaure llt • &eY-.
iah summer resort ere auddenfy
trapped by a deedty thnMlt from
the depths of the earth. D Btu.YGRAHAMCRUSADE
Cash Films TV Movie
FLOR~VILLE, Texas CAP)
-A seemingly drunken Johnny
Caah was driven up to the county
courthouse 1D tb1a South Texu
town by a law enforcement of.
ficer the other day.
Then the officer did It again.
And acain. And aiatn. until be gotltript.
It 1'U all part of fllmtn1 of a
televiatoc movie, .. Thadeus Rose
and Eddie," being partially
made iD thla small ranching com·
munlty 25 miles southeast of San
Antonio.
FLORF.SVILLE WAS chosen
by CBS to portray the hometown
of two rambunctious modern-day
cowboys, played by Cub aod Bo
Hopkins. June Carter Cash,
Cash's wife, a1ao stara ln the
film.
The movie revolves around the
attempt of a cowboy, played by
Cash, to get out of bi.• rut of
drinking and women-cbulq by
purchuing a citrus farm ln the
Rio Grande Valley of Teua.
In between abooUn1 a scene
where be•s jailed for u1aulttq a
Juatlce ol the peace, Cub talked
~1th townapeople and posed with
tbem for dozens of. snapshots.
BE ALSO FIELDED citizens'
queatioas about where be buys
hts clothes and if It dJdn 't hurt
when the sheriff awung him out of
the car.
And, while.Cub's only musical
contribution to tbe film will
probably be a aong near its end.
tbe country amaer said music ls
1tlll tbefocuaotbls career.
"I'm giving this mo'rie a moolh
out of my life, but after tbiDp
like this are over I always go
. back to my first love -singing,"
said Cub.
CASB&\ID BE chose to star lo
"Thadeu Roae and Eddie'*
because the film ia void ot sex
and violence. "One of my prlorittes in mat-
1Dt something ii that lt be fOOd
f amtly entertainment.
Everybody talks about how
there'• too much violence and
sex on 'IV, 10 we're trying to
mate ,,..,wMftl tor the whole
famlb'."t..aald.
Ploresvllle wu picked as one
of the ~attm for •bootinathe
film 1lm.1>17-.use It WU better
than any Hollywood set that
could have been built for tbe
movie, according to producer
Dan Paulson.
ANDTllAT MAY be the reason
the cltbena of Floresville didn't
seem overly impreued with the
filminc goiq on in fruit of the
Willon County Courtbouae.
The town already has
.. starred" in two other ~
films -"Tbe Great Waldo Pep-
per" and part of ''The SularlaDd Express.''
'Father' Family
?Jans Yale Special
LOS ANG~ (AP) -'!bat
''Father Knows ~·· eant ia ba~k for a airtstmu reuniOG m
NBC OGSunday, Deo.18.
Robert Younc, ;_tatie w,.~
Elinor Donahue, aw Gray . Lauren Qaapin tbeortdbal east" the loa&-nmningaeriea. wtn~.
They were flra\ t>rou1ht together for areun.lonlaat!ifayl.5..
• ME.AV GRtfflN
Guests: Denny ThomM. Met
TUiie, '"°"nJe Shorr, Aroent1n11n oaucno.. 81• Udo Showglrle.
Alan ..
I COUAOE
8PECW.
"Hollywood On Trial" An
unftatt..tng p*9 of Amet1oan
tllatOfy .. *"'fed wtth footlQe
from the 1947 trtll ot the Holly-
wood Ten, who Wtre llCCUMd Of being Communllts. convict· ect end _,. to prtaon. ID FtAtNG LtHI! GI MOVIE ··~ "Croob And Coronet•" (1HI) Telly S.valu, Edith
Evena. Stately British manatona
become the WQet of a group ot • thttvlna a-ngetera.
10:00. QUNcy
''The DMdty Connection'' A
myaterloue ~ In • email
rtnehlng community Hnda
OUlnoy and Sim on a llt•end-
dellh lffllgnment to Identify
the ..... befor9 the petilnta
~llottld succumb. Lonny
..-i.Ouy~EN· ;r~~-
CokndoY8.UCLA l~AT8EA
The Allted conqu.t of the
8olofnon tllanda la recounted.
• MOVIE
**** ''Knife In The Water ..
(1982) onoted by Roman
Po1811'1d. ~end poten-
Ult Yloler1oe lurk In the eunllt
shadows • two men compete tor a WOtMn'• ldtentlona. 10::a011 NEWS 11:00 ..!£:Cl> al NEW8
* ·~ ''The Man OUtllde'• (1987) Van Heflin, Peter
V.ughn. A fonMr CIA tgent
becomes =d In ~and (2-·' iiTHTooo .• .,,
To undentand each other better, t=efbc and O.C. rewrae
thelrrolet.
• HONEYMOONE'A8
R.iph i..na that In polltlca
running tor oftlce haa Its UPI
anddownt. e LATINO OON80RTIUM
''El Mari8c:hl Canta''
11:308 Cl) M•A•&•H
"I Hate A Mystery" When eome
of the toot from a wave of theft•
la found In Hawkev-'a footSoc*·
•• he turns detectJve end
IOfwe the ctlmeL (R)
D TONtGHT
Hoet: Johnny carton. Gue.ta:
Bellerfy su ... Bob & Ray. 89 8ARl!TTA
"Can't Win Fot L091n"' A man
(Whitman Mayo) buk• In the
pr .. of hi• oelahbors when ~
tak• credit for the murder of •
~led doPe P*Sdltt.1R) • NEWS
• GET$MART SIX agenta rM9t With blzatre,
fatal accident•.
I CAP110fotED ABC .. EWS
MACNEIL I LE.HAER
REPORT
MOAN1HG
12:00e lWIUGHTZONE
"TheMaeka"
Spaee~I ~
,.
l
Lynda Carter as W-oader Woman joint
torees with an in ten>laiietarY emtssary tO crush fugitive ouUaws from space on Wo~de~ Woman, tonlaht at 8 on CBS,
Cbanael2. ·
'-i\il Hll\'t
..
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS If 9: 00 -"The Four Musketeers. The sequel to the latest
version of "The Three Musketeers" with
Michael York, Raquel Welch and Faye
Dunaway. among others, featµrlng
Charlton BestoJl as Uie evil Cardinal Richelieu. ~
ABC fl 9:00-.. It Happened at Late
Wood Manor." A summer resort is
thrown into panic by a deadlythlat from
the depths of the earth ln t&ls TV movie
with Robert Fox\ivorth and Suzanne
"" Somers.
I -~ ... --,-
~ .
PVBUC NOTICE
NOT1ca'1:1aso..s 11na1tlSTID Ill
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICITOCIHDITOllS
SU .. lltlOllClOUltTOflTHI
IT A Ta OP CAUl'CNllllA l'Oll
PUBUC NOTICE
SUf'HtOifi CbiidOJ fiii
STATIOPCAl..lflOltNIA flOlt THI COUNTY Of'Olt.utG& ........... N•flca 04' MeA1tt1t• Oft ~llOID fllTITilON flOll
AH Of' WILL AND L•'fTllll TltTAMIHTARY lileet ot OSCAR Al.UH MILLI a,
OMMMd. NOTICE IS HERE&Y GIVEN Ht
ltO•&RT A. EASTMAN, Nt lllM
PVBUC NOTICE ....,..
tu ... •toaCOUHOflT"a STATIOltCAUNIUttAflOll
T ... CDUlrr't'O,OUMOa ~•Mtlll .... _,11..,tHlltllMI ..... OttH• Dt•IC.
• TU .. C9•YaVANCa O(lt ••AL =ttY TO CDMflUT8 ~· oar:1fW ,,."IIHt~~::i It ltt·UU ay PalUONAL ........ "'"''~ .. fft ... ... l'l!9tWr .. Ult lat eta of:
OOLt.IE P. RAI.._, •Ill DOLLY
PMOLOTA •AINlt •111.e DOLLY fl. RAI~~· 1~~~~~~-=::UWf•
""' 1CINDALL •••Ns end p•nn• '·C NOTIC.:o "°"C.lffOWALTJIR,..,ttlMdlll<rt• ..,_ D
~ 11Ct1111 • lliMlttlef ~· -----------J ,.P•HtllltllV .. OI tllt Hiatt Of INTHllUflllllOllCOUltT
DOLLIE P. RAINS, Otct-d. Ofl Tlll ITAllM CAUl'OltNIA 'TMn Is, '41ble<I to td11!111latratl0fl In INANDf'OtlTHI Ille....._ of lht dK .. 1td, urttln rHI ~r::OflOltAHOll property sltutted In Yorba Lindt, HO.A-..
Ortng11 County, CtllfOf'Nf, dHcrl-
• lollclllll: Loll I 14 2' ef Trtct t11h1
.... ~ .... 8ooli ... ~26tnd
21 et Ml~"""' 111 tile OHIC.e Of Ille tovnty "4cw•r, Co\lnty 01 °'~· OI '-Ottf'llller 26, 1'1J,. DOLLIE P.
AAINI, ~ t119C;UIAHI encl di•
11...,... • CIOllCrtct Ill wtlllnv "" Wllldl
. OM.'( PILOT 87
Kennedy File
Adds Little
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Sophia
Euer. who troie to death 1il me
alter fallinl to pay a '72 1u bill,
left an estate worth flSD,000. ~·
also left quesUona in the inSidi Cl(
heirs.
"We've Qe\'er been able tofleure
out wily the bill wasn't paid, .. said
Louis Walker, one of six coualnl to
share the elderly splnater'a le11cy.
"We knew she wasn't in aeecl ol
anything. She certainly wun 't in ·poverty.••
MISS ~ER, 8!, WAS found
dead in her suburban Munhall home
Jan. 19, 1978. Equitable Gu Com·
pany bad shut off servlce two weeks
earlier, and her d~ath brouibt out-
rage ahdinquiries. -
"Don't be poor in Pittsbur&h. Jt
could cost you your life," a New
Jersey newspaper columnist·
wrote.
Pennsylvania Sen. Huch Scott
said the incident raised serious
questions about corporate
responsibility.
Allegheny County Coroner CJriJ
· Wecbt conducted an inquest and
· said he considered involuntary
: manslaughter charges.
"I RAD 111EN AND I have now
mixed feelings about charges," he
said Thursday. "If it bad been
possible to pinpoint the actions of
specific individuals, I would have
moved for charges.''
Miss Easer was sent a cancella-
tion notice Dec. 8, 1975, and an
Equitable collector went to her
home to warn her of the pending
DEAR PAT : Please advise bow we
should pack and ship backyard citrus
fruit to the East for Christmas.
T.B., Costa Mesa
A very sturdy cardboard coatalner
Is advlsed by both the U.S. PoRa1
Service and United Parcel Service.
The post offlce suggests markln1 tile
box "Perishable Commodt&y" to u-
sare fut abJpmeat by pared post. A
postal spokesman says ano&ber good
way to expedite delivery is by mallblg
the package C.O.D. aad provldlnC
payment to the redpieat.
UPS uya to wrap tile fndt with two
lncbea of cusbJoaJng material U'OGDd
ucb 1Ddh1dual plfce. Crumpled sbop.
ping bags or ot11er slroDI caahloalq
material aho will ~Ip protect a1atmt
freezing ID transit~ Seal dae fblpplag
box with s~g tape rather titan atr·
lng. Exact dellv~ry Ume coaldD"t be
pinned down by elther parcel post or
UPS, and malling coet will depead on
<tbe weight of the package ud Its
deatlDa~.
'Sbt~ Baek 111 T..e
DEAR PAT: I am very anxious to
locate the lyrics of a song called "Sls·
ters." It was featured in the movie,
"White Christmas." My two
daughters want to ~rform this song
(or our family Cbriatmas gathering.
I 've looked everywhere to no avail
and you are my last resort.
S.S., Balboa
A YS also drew a blank lD loeaUD1 a
copy of tldl aoag bl tbe Soatll Coast
area, bat NaUoaal Mule Service lDc.
to Anabelm la boldlnl Its lut aWet
0ta1lc copy ol "Slsten" for you. can
1'11·7131 to make anangements for a '
m aUed parchaae.
1!11seCUOllCllJle 6reeChlp
DEAR PAT: Junk mail ls bad
enough all year round, but lt seems to
double durin1 the holiday season. Is
there any way I can aet off 1ome of
U.eae adverUaing malling Uats?
G.G., Fountain Valley
Wrtte to Dlred •au MarlletiQ .U·
IOClaU.. 1731Kst..N.W.,8Qlte115, WaalalDCtoa,D.C.Mlt,and~a 0 •rop f-." 11.D K otll ... ntan to
DMMA. AltlMM!p It ••1 bie preeu1ed too lac.to c1I& dowa • tJU ,-e~• llOll· d1y mawllp, DMMA wW ult Ua
•••l>er eo .. paalea, aamb•rl•• ..... z,-. to .. end.I.la& ediert»o
•1, ea~ aod MUettadoU to 7oa. •
... WOVLD}lf-r &\VE dNam«f
she bad that much mone7,'' said '
Wa .. er, a resident of the AlletbellY
County community of West Mlttlln.
Since tbe death, the 1tate bu
tightei'led contn)I over 1hutoffs. "
New Public lttillty Commlsaion
regulations require JU companies
te band·delivel" terminaUon
· notices. And when that'& no't possi-
ble, their field inveatla1tors arel'e-
quired to talk to tteigllbors to see
whether a shutoff woµld be harmful.
In addiUon, tbe PUC must be '
notified before service ls cut, and
customers are entitled to PUC
mediation if they're not satisfied
with the blll.
view or this regulation and what it
provides.
E.R., Huntington Beach
These regulations ire Umlted 1o
merebandlle only and do not IDdade
services CODDeded wltb mereban·
dlse, Heb H mall·order plaoto
flDlaMDg. Alto eiscladed are seeds a.net
growblg pluts, magu:l.aes aDd other
aerial ddl•erles ezeept for tile' lalt1aJ
delivery, COD orden, and aegaUve
optJo• plus nell u book clabl..
T11eae ralea do ~•Ire tlaa• mercbuwllae be' lllil» wWlbl II
days after receipt of the order. Tbe
hayer mast be notified Of Uy delay
be1ond daat time aw ltn• .. optl09
to cucel and cet a refaid. U a ref1IDd
la reqaetted, tt •ut be waecl wiUWI
1evea days. Tiie teller allo la nqu.tnd
to bave a "reasonable baala for
claim•" aboat sblpptac times. A
buyer's fallare to rupond to a teller's
notice of delayed delivery and opdcMl
to cancel woald be couldered eouent
to a 3t-4AJ dela1. For delays loqer
titan tba&, tile bayer mu& give lab ex·
preH coment.
Boaters Still
Fight Sanitary .
Device ProbleJQ.
C..-1111 ....,...,._ Wiii rt1199
-•tWHll U elMI 12. lllt~CI tem• oeretwH wtlt renoe ..._ ~Md 77. n.ewew~.twewllltleU.
P•tDAY
Je<Ol'lt"Jtl\ n:as,.M. 4.0
Secoft4111ew l :Up 111. o.t
IATVaDAY
"'"' "'"'· ,J:l7•.~ 4.f Flntlow t :t4•.m, 2.1
Second """ ' t i•p,m, ••• ~ ... .,.,,,... 1.\
Hank Thayer, a former AU-American 1wlmmer
at UC Irvine. baa been belld ~ coach at the
school. He replaces Carl Reinbatt who wlij remain
with the UCI •alllng Pl'OCl'Ul, concentnttna hb •·
forts in theinstrUetlonal and development phases. •
A 1965 araduate of Newport llatb(>r Hl1h
School, Thayer attended UCLA before entertni ~
service and •pencUnc a 1eu at the Unit.cl Stat.es
Military .Aeademy •. He attended UCI in uea..
where he eameclAll·Amerlca bonorl as a member
of Ute ~teaters NCAA Dlmioll ll cbamptCllllbip
awimte.m. • .
Thayer ha.I been tn~olved in competWve Nil·
ing 1lnce the ace of five al\d bu extensive e1!' perlence lD tnternaticmal competltlqp,
He participated in the 1968 O)Jmptc a.W.,
trials and wu a CJ'e1fman aboi.rd the 12-meter In·
trePid In th!$ year'• preliminary America'• CUp
trials. 4
I
• t nt.nnlsslo•
•Out 'n About
" I ..... ..,....,._
llALLe;T PACIFlcA·s SNOW QUEEN AND KING, LISA ROftRTSON, ROGER l'A.UBEL
Andre• Dayw•tt, Caroline Sutherland, HeldJ Edgren, Ev• Henderson
'Nutcracker' Returns
The Nutcracker Prince and the
Sugat Plum Fairy will again
, •eave a magic spell for
youossters when Ballet Paclflca
• launches ita 11th season of ''The
Nutcracker."
In Laguna Beach ,
performances are acbeduled in
tbe Laguna Moulton Playhouse,
606 Laguna Canyon Road, Thurs-
day, Dec. 8 through Friday, Dec.·
16 at 7:30 p.m. with weekend
matinees at 2:30 p.m.
Dancing the role of the Sugar
"lum Fairy on different dates
will be Carrie Kneubuhl, Kristi
Moorhead and Cynthia Tosh.
Their Nutcracker Prince
partners will be Louis Carver
~~David Panaieff.
'The Nutcracker'' story by
ffmann concerns a little girl
wJo receives a wooden nut-
~~cker carved to resemble a
man. In the magic of Christmas
Eve, the nutcracker comes to life
and eventually turns into a
handsome prince.
Music is by Tchaikovsky;
choreography and costumes are
by Lila Zall; technical director is
Carl Canaway; storyteller is
Sier/ ud Pboto
BJ JERRY BEllTENSTEIN ot .. o.t ....... ~
. Tucked awv tn the stem of the cavernous Queen Mary t. the tiny Royal Theater.
Tllere, Thursday through SUnday nights, .. Left Field
and Beyond," a group of three actors, three actresses Rd a
piano player provide• ••utb a minute with their lmprovtaa.
tlonal comedy.
THE PIA.YEllS, WHO WILL act out nearly anythln1
the audience Wishes, are from the rec4'nily formed South
Coast Actors Co.Op of Newport Beach.
Tom Austin, producer, likes to boast that "Left Field"
ls Orange County's newest, "maybe only:• profeaaion-1
eomedy theater troupe. .1
That may be. But the Queen Mary, docked at Long
Beach, la hardly Orange County.
True, the co-op, started to give aspirant theater trp,es
"who don't want to run back and forth to Hollywood,• a
means . for bulldine a portfolio, ii in OC. ·
Douglas Reeve.
Tickett are " for adults and $3
for students aud children. Group
rates are available for 15 or
more. .
Mail orders may be sent to Sal-
ly Reeve, P.O. Box 241, Laguna
Beach, Ca. 92652. Checks should
be made payable to Ballet
Pacifica and a se1f-addresaed
stamped envelope should be
enclosed ff tickets are to be
mailed.
For further information and
reservations, call (714) 494·1148
week days between 10 .a.m. and 2
p.m.
? 41
• Llve enterlaJnment dunna th•
early boUdaJ HUOD ilon1 the
Oranse Coa1t ran1ea from a
1lna·a-Jq of the "Meutab'' to
utronoiny lectures on lbe Star of
Bethlehem.
Mu,tcal' events at Ounce
Coast Collete atan Monday wben
nine hip tcbool cbotts Joln the
colleie'ltChotale for a Holiday
Choral F..UvaJ from 4 to s:ao
p.m. The ~ will perform Christmas music by Handel, Of.
fenbicb, Vivaldi, Praetorius,
Berltt>1, Schuh, Bender and
Brahma.
Ata p.m,; on Friday, Dee. t the '
93-voice OCC Choir will PreMftt
"A Day for Dancln&" •• mem-
bers of tbe dance department In.
t.erpret t,he ael,ctiopa lD the col-
lece audltoriu"1.
Choral 1ineera from
througbout the coun~ are invited
to OCC'• auditortwn on Satur-
day. nee, 10 to participate 1D a
community slnt·a-long of the
great choruses of Handel's
"Messiah." Particlppnts are
asked to bring tbelr own music to
the 7: 30 p.m. event.
The ~member Coaat Master
Chorus will be led by Carole
Boelter in its Cbrlltmaa concert
, Sunday, Dec. 11 at 3 p.m . ln the
OCC auditorium. Admlasioo ii $2
except for OCC students ~d
senior cltiiena who will be
welcomed free.
"Choral Fantasia," "•essa Di
Gloria" and selected choruet ol
tbe "?desaiah" will be performed
with orchestra.
SEASONAL SONGS ::r The Irvine Muter Chorale wW pre-
sent its P.OPUJar Cbriatmu con-
cert at 8:~ on Friday ahd Satur-
day, t>ec. 9 and 10 In the Santa
Ana High ~boot auditorium.
John AlexJnder wtll direct the
135 singers In abort masterworks
incl\ld"-" Monteverdi's Gloria ln
Excelsli Deo, Bach's Komm,
Jesu, Komm and Poulenc'• Four
Motets for the Season of
Christmas. Special arrange-
ments of well-kno~n carols wJll
complete the program.
Advance purcbase of the $8, $4
and S2 tfckets is recommended.
For further detaUa, call 542·1790.
TUNING JN -The Sad-
dleback College Wind Ensemble
and Community Band will pre.
sent a free holiday concert at 8
p.m. Monday at Irvine ~h
School. Selections by Vaulban-
Wllliams, Shumann. Grainger
and Sousa will be performed in
the school's Little Theater, 4371
Walnut.
Golden West College hu
ac:hedule4 ill 12tb annual bollda9
art sale at the campus Communi-
ty Center from noon to 8 p.m.
Tuesday. Dec. 13 and 10 a.rn. to 4
p.m. W«tneaday, Dec.14.
A varlet)' of lft't media pro-
duced by .iudenl$. faculty and
atatr will be on sale ln time for
holiday givi.Jlg.
HOLIDAY FAIRE -This
seventh annual ••return to
handmade gU'ta" Is open to tbff
public tree of admls11ion frolJl
Sunday through Friday. Dec. 23.
at Muckeotha)er Cultural
Center, 1201 Vi. Malvern.
Fullerton.
..
ONLY PILOT
ostalgia 'Erip
Rush Takes Ailllience &/Ck to Elvis Em •
By .IEB&Y HERTENSTEIN 0t•.,..., "911 .....
The week of Nov. 20 was one la which ttaie n•·
tional ltories broke OD the late Elvia Pretle>-: ,. .. It wu revealed tbat be bad over *1 mUl10D lo
Fheckiog accounta. Hi• father, Vemoa Presley,
• agreed to allow the public to visit Elvis'• 1rave at
<iraceland Mansion in Memphis, And the rock and
roll "klng" wu named la Lu Ve1u the "Male
¥u1tcal Star of the Year," an aw.rd tbat eluded
him while alive.
. 4T THE CLOSE ot tM week. Johnny Rusk, wbo
Juts been lml\aUng Pr•ley.for nearly five ye11'11,
· PteHnted a two-hour concert ln honor of Elvia to
2,500 at the Anaheim Convention Center.
1.. In the second half, Rusk dressed in a frtqed, ~ tbf ack outllt and banded out white scarves to the
,,moeUy women wbo crowded afaiGlt the Ital•. UMll'
arms waving wildlJ. He dramatically wiped bla.
,,J>r.ow before toasin1 the •carvea. 'l'be women
'l.tquealed. -. Strange thin& 11 tbat moat at ,tbe
!llaee appeared too youn1 to have even been around
,..in the .'50s, the heyday of Presley. Yet lt wu re.
• mini1cent of the~ it was then.
l lt THE MAJORITY in the audience were ln tbelr
30s. They remem~ted. ·
Jt They sw<>Ooed when Rusk crooned "Love Me
,-i 'tender," clapped and shouted when be cut looee
·.,w,lth "Jailh<M.We Rock." It wu as thoutb ElYia ,
Jijmself were on the stage.
Many were there, no doubt, beca~e they bad
l.1. oever seen Elvis "live." Or they wanted to relive a· ~"~e that will probably never be duplicated.
Rusk made it possible.
WREN HE SANG ''Teddy Bear," it .,,_. a
nostalgic trip. It wu easy to recall the days of DAa
and sideburns, black leather jackets and en&lneer-• Utt boots. Full, pleated skirts, sweater1 and neck
scarves, saddle shoes and while ankltta with tops
turned down.
"I'll be sad and blue cryln over you," brou1bt
back loq-fotJotlen times of slttilll ln dad's ell' by
the Jake, a fU.ll moon in tbe aky, lryinl to get up
nerve f« tbat "ftrat" kiss. !COit of what llwik did was wbat worked for
Elvl1. Jt was obvious \hat Rusk had studied the
"klnt" a tone time. He had the wiules, the hip ec·
tlon and tbe low murmun down to Qear perfeeUon.
RUSK. DRESSED in a told apl.Jllled jacket
and black shiny jump suit for the first ball of the
concert, "Elvia In the '50s, ·~ and the black trloied,
1caned out.flt in the aecond halt tor "Elvia ln the
'109," even looked a lot like Pretley.
But he a1ao came throuah u RU1k.
'' ~ercy," be keptaayln1.'' what a audltnce." .
Rusk did what amoUnted to an eulol}' wlten he
sang PresltY'I "If I Can Dream,'' to close the first
half of the show. An "American TrllocY" concluded
the coneert.
RED SPOTS WERE cast on the Stars and
Strlpea behind Rusk and above ~ scoreboard. On
the bottom of the scoreboard were the worda,
"Mltt. lbe beautltul ~. ••
Rusk, hil rqother and relatives ln the stands,
u1ured tbe audience .. there is only one Elvia. I've
been a fan all my life." But Johnny never lolew the
"ktng" personally, nor had ever met him for that
matter.
Perhapg the lhina that beat summed up Rusk'• perfo~ance came in a tender, otf ataie moment an
bour i.fter the concert.
Rusk. 35, and now a Seattle resident. was greet·
Ing old acbool chums and former Redlands
neicbbon at Jl nea.rby hotel birthday party for ~
public relations man.
A BLONDE woman, obviously shy and
awestruck, approached Rus~.ft>hnny turned aside and said, ''Ah, this .... she was l.Y"brstsweetheart."
Their eyes met. It was th ·~ again, a time for
teddy bears, pink carnations that ftrst kiss.
:·LEFT FIELD AND BEYOND ZANY FUN. • •
•
Advance ticket aalea,
group rates, and pricea
for students and senior
citizens are available ..
l'
<From Cl)
idea is for the audience to have a good time."
. The Lquna Beach native adm.ltt abe at first had trouble
composing lyrics on the spot. "I finally had to stop worrying,
juststartat.nging and 1et toewontaout, "abewd.
peslnolntematt~al out of San Juan HaUUata. Tbe ll'OUP en·
tert1lined vineyard workers in the field and later toured
America, Spain and Germany •
... ''WHERE I AM NOW as an actor (improvisational
theater) Is an lmPOrtant process," said Scott, who teaches :. mlme at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. "There is an
element of therapy because olthe connection that everythln1
is com lng off the top of the bead."
f 4
..
It's the relationship of actor and audience that la also
important to Scott.
"You have to break through a barrier," Steve aald.
"The theater audience has been trained that to 10 to the
theater means to sit In a numbered seat; it means
Broadway, or in Los Angeles paytn1 a hiah price to attend.
"lmprovi.sationai theater means tbe audience bu to
come out of that tradJUonal role," Scott said. "Here we do
what is functional. There la aomethin1 for everybody in this
crazy place on a cruy boat."
JIM BOBl:SS, 25, baa much enthualum for "Left
Field."
He and Chlpres tre In South Cout Repertory Theater.
Both currently tour with plays for sc11ool-a1ed childrerund
have done work on the nlain stage ln Costa Mesa.
"This ls a°> entirely dlffereiit concept from SCR," the
briabt-eyed Boresa said. "It's artistic expression and Just
plain fun.
•'It'• exciting. lf something works there is an Incredible
' feeling of 1uccess. If it doesn't there is enjoyment of the
}• search," Jim said.
BOR~ SEES IMPROVISATIONAL theater as a "re-
newal" of the "ancient barbs in Great Britain.
"My work here should help me tremendously in leeit
theater." Jim said. "I can derive a ere at deal of experience
working in something as unpredictable as this.
"Confidence and open mindDess," are two require·
men ts he sees for perform Inc extemporaneously.
He flashes a toothpaste commercial smile and says be
wlll ''workasanactorunWtoooldtost&Dd."
Then he "zooms" olf to rejoin the others Just like lo a
closln1 skit he ha(}. done earlier on a Chevrolet commercial
in which a stool la fits sbjny, big Am~can car.
AL11IOUGB "L•PT FIELD., rehearses, lt tries not to
carry anytblna already done into lta spontaneous .non..
"Whenever JOU bdns lo aomethln1 from ribe11'11al lt
wlll die," Ron ChipNI •81•· "In practice ae11lou w• ·~on·
lytrylnfoutcbaractenand1etUn1tolmoweacbother."
. He did hil ~nt.lmp~Jae !cfin( wit;Jl. the.Jeatro C.m·
And there is Kelly, the plano~layer.
"BE'S ONE OF VS." all the players •creed.
Kelly bane• out the tunes With the same apontanelty.
"They are mood aonca," Kelly, 28, aald. "If I can see
the actor's face, I can transmit a mood to my finiers."
He's played keyboafd far some major croups aucb aa
The She, James Taylor and ltauiy Oatton.
Austin ls a dramatic frts anduate of UCLA and bas
been active ln community theater. His most recent stage
appearance was in "Front Page" at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse.
DIRECfOR IS AL V ALETl'A and Sandra \yard 11 atqe
manager.
Showtimea are 8:30 p.m. T!lunday, Friday and Satur-
day. 7:30Sundays. "Left Field and Beyond/' wtll be at the
Queen Mary indefio.ltely, accordibg to Austin.
Tickets and reservaUops are available by telepbonlnc
1J57-0283. Student and aroup dlaeoDta ate ottered.
SingiJl6. ·Duo
At HBSclwol
Rock-pop singer Mary
Mccaslin and country mualc
artist Jlm Rlnger headline
Golden West College's cof·
fee house series, the Son1bae. at 8
p.m . today.
Appearlna ln the community
center, McCulln and Rtnaer
perform alone and es a duet.
Ringer ls a tradltiqnal and coo.
temporary countr)' performer.
Ms. McCaslln's new album in-
c ludes acoustic veralona of
several rock and pop mualc ltan·
dards done in her vocal atyle. and
uUlizin1 different guitar t~
McCaslln and Rln1er are re-.
turning to Or&a1e Cowltt from
an East cout tour durlnl wblcb
they pl&1ecf at U.. Pbila~~
Folt F.Uval and New Yort•a Bottom u.ne. ~ a11o an tn t.be s
process ol completiq tb flrlt due• album. 1 i
\ ..
II
. Where you can combine shopping with a
relaxing outing to refr~sh your. own Christmas
spiritl Th~ ,dozens ~f dockside shops and busi·
nesses offer a treasure trove of gift ideas
ranging from Art to Yachts ... including the
widest array of im1>9rts, crafts and specialfy
items on the whole So.uth Coast.,
Give yourself a holiday, too! The restaurants and . '
recreation of Dana Point H~rbor await you • • .
where San DiegG Freeway meets Pacific Coast ,.
Highway. And enjoy these special Christmas
events:
HOLIDAY Hl~LIGHTS BOAT PARADE
Fri. & sat., Dee. 9 & 10 e &-9p.m.
SANTA' IN MARINER'S VILUGE
Sat. & Sun., Dec. 10 & 11 e 1~ p.m.
FREE BOAT RIDES WITH SANTA ,,.....,.,.,.,,,.,
Sat. & Sun., Dec. 17 & 18 e 1.4 p.m.
f
OUT 'N' ABOUT I MISCELLANY Fridey, 0.0.mber 2, 1977
Group at Regi8try H~tel Proves Popular Attraction
IRVINE DATE SET
Frank Sinatra, Jr.
Mh111lng a first annlv~rsary
celebration m ans you're-rolng
to hove lo make amends. So we
endeavored to put thln1s rilht,
about a month alfter the aet.ual
observance. with ~ belated birth·
day h~it to the Registry Hotel In
Jrvinc.
Concern ubout tardiness
evaporated, however, the minute
we settled down in the maJn dJn-
in& room. As luck would hove It.
Wt! had happened Into the Grand
Portage just as another first an-
nivcn;ary party was about lo
begin.
If nothing else. lhis festive af-
fajr proved th~C\iwinglng is hefr='e
to stay -swlnglng, that ls. to big
band music. A capacity crowd
gath<.'rcd to help the Keith
Williams Big Band com -
memorate Its first year or re-
gular Sunday night appearances
Out 'N About
Nor1nan Stanley
to all ages, to liny couple who re-
vels in the old·fashlohed delight
of hoJding each other close on the
dance fl.oor.
KEITH'S MELWW big band
sounds fill the air at the Registry
every Sunday rrom 8:30 to U:30
p.m. Dinner -to round out a Cull
evening -is served from 6 to
10:80p.m. ·
sophisticated and informal. The
wide-tanging menu ls served In a
semi-French style, highliJbte<l
by tableslde preparation and
naming dishes.
quired wt~ for many, but. it un·
' arguably .~epre oqta an adven~
· turous and eommendable effort
to present the unfamiliar:
The same applies, too, to such
an uncommon entree seleeUon as
Jo perdlx sous cloche a la
0 Re&lstry." Although avaUable
ln season only, this istartllna item .
will net you two quail broiled and
served on a bed of wild rice. wlUl
u rich Mars11la sauce, $14.
Other entree posstblUUes run
the gamut lrom beef and prime
rib !Selections to seafood and COO•
tlnental dishes.
Berformtnces of two m~
20ih century composltlaa. for
wJn<l-' Will hlihJJOit the fall oall·
cert of the Unlveratt7 WiQd.
En:iernble t.onJgbt. and Salurmy
ln lbe Fme Arts VUlago T~-, UC Jntne. Both perform...,
be&ln atlp.m ..
The Ensemble wtll perform
Gortton Jacob's "Muale tor a
Festival" and 'I'hoeus
Beversdorf's "Symphony No'.:3"
for Winds and Percussion. •
The Ensemble will 11so
perform "Mars," from ~.~e
Planets" by Gu.stav Hollt, VJr~
"l'homl*JO'• .. A Solemn Mure: ..
and Projofiov•a .. Athlett~
Festival March." Proft1&6r CharlesAUUnsonls conductor.
Choral Unit
To Feature
BachMwic.
at the hotel.
Throughout. Lhe evening, the
dancers (augmented by what ap-
peared to be just a few listeners
only) clearly demonstrated their
enthusiasm and loyal support for
the Williams brand of music. The
14-piece aggregation all but held
the audience captive as it played
both golden oldies and today's
i-.ounds in the vein of such big
band ruvorites as Tommy
Dorsey, Glenn Miller and Woody
Ir you want to start your visit
with a relaxing drink. the hotel's
Lobby Court Lounge is only a few
steps from the registration desk.
This/beckoning bar Is set apart
by a dramatic skylight. large
g reen plants and sumptuous
sofas and chairs.
Specialty appetizers (all of
which we can highly recommend
on the basis o( our savory sampl-
ings) •lude jumbo shrimp with
a Cine' brandy dressing, $3.95;
:$nails, prepared with Burgundy
wine. shaJlot. butter and herbs,
folded into fresh spinach leaves
<rather than the regularly en-
countered shells), $1.25; chicken .
liver pate with sauce Cum-
berland, $3.25.
Dinner and lunch are served
doily and there's a c,hampagne
brunch on Sunday. LWleheon
specialties include nearly two
dozen hot and cold dishes.
om~Jettes, sandwiches and
salads. Price ran1e Is sa.eo to
SS.95.
Frank Sinatra. Jr. will debut ln
the Grand Portage lounge Mon·
day and ,continue on s late
through Saturday, De~ 17. He
wUl be backed by the Larry
O'Brien Octet.
.JACOB'S "Mu1lc for a
Festival" was comllllaaloned bY
the Arta Council of Great Britain ·
-for the ceJebr,_Uon of the FeaUval ot Brit.ala in 1951.
''Celebration in Song," u
choral concert by-lhe Golden
West College Singers and
Madrigals, will be presented in
the colJege theater, 8 p m., Fri-
day, Dec. 9. The college is at
15744 Golden West St., Hunt
angton Ucach.
Vocal and choral music in
slructor Henrietta Carter will
conduct. Feature piece will be
Bac h 's Cantata No . 140,
•'Sleepers Wake,'' sun I! in
German and accomp;.inicd by u
guest instrumental ensemble.
Soloists will be Laurie Welty,
soprano; William Ketts, tenor.
and Perry Pederson. bass.
FOUR AMERICAN hymns ar-
ranged by Alice Parker will also
be s ung -"God is Seen,"
"Calvary's Mountain," "Good
Morning, Brother Pilgrim," and
"Hark. I Hear the Harps
Eternal."
The madri$!als will sing a
variety of short selections The
program will conclude with a
selection of o ld and new
Chnstma.c; carol arrangements.
Adm1ss1on is S2 general. $1.50
with a ~tudcnt or Gold Key card
lkrmun.
LEADER WILLIAM S, an
ama11ni,:lv versatile musician. Is
al:;o :1 producer and recording
company l'xecutivc Magazine
polls h:.ivc listed him among
Amefica 's Top 10 drummers; his
w Hie ly-ucc I aimed trump et
artistry can be heard on several
of the hit albums waxed by his
own Valon Record Company.
The band was formed four
years ago by Keith and Harry
Betts. Lee Whitney. featured
vocali!!t and performer. was a
costar of the Star Trek television
show
Hecently the band also ap·
pe&Arcd as the star musical at·
traction nt Canuda's ramed Klon·
dike Days 1':1Cpos1lion 1n Edmon·
ton. i\llx•rta.
It struck us , too. as we
obs erved the dancers :1t the
Grund Porta~e. thul Keith's fans
arc by no m<>ans limited to the
"swingers" of the 30's and 40's
Big band music plainly lippcals
SUNDAY BRUNCH
AT TUE
ARCHES
"Newport's Finest"
10:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.
Pacific Coast Hwy. At Newport Blvd.
645-7077
RESTMJRArtT
Combining spaciousness with
intimacy, the tiered, L·shaped
room housing the Grand Portage
restaurant and lounge manag~
to be simultaneously elegant,
THIS LAST exhibits one of a
number of genuinely unusual-
touches you'll encounter in the
restaurunt's offerings. Th<!
rather sweet Cumberland sauce.
as u dipping accompaniment to
pule, might have to be an ac
OCC Symphony
Sinatra will perform al 8 and 11
p.m., Monday through Saturday,
nnd there wiU be a $5 cover
char1e. Reservations are now
being accepted and can be made
by calling 752-tr777.
17th Season · Unfolds
The Orange Coast College Community Sym-
phony O\chestra opens its 17th season at 4 p. m. Sun·
day in the Orange Coast College Auditorium.
The 73-member orchestra is direct.eel by Joseph
Pearlman. Pearlman ls an OCC associate professor
of music and a member of the Board of Directors
for the college, conservatory and university
division of the American Symphony Orchestra
League.
Guest soloist is cellist Charles Curtis of Laguna
Beach and a student al Corona del Mar High School.
Curtis is upJ><-'aring with the orchestra as a win·
ncr or OCC's second annual "Young Artists
Award ..
A ~tudent of Ronald Leonard, principal cellist
with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra,
Curtis has won three major awards this year. They
are the Gregor P1at1gorsky Memorial Pnze. the
Joseph Schust.er Memorial Scholarship
Young Art.istaAward.
anfte
Curtis wlll perform the Concerto for CeUo and
Orchestra by A. Dvorak.
The remainder of the program includes the
Overture to "Theodora," by G.F. Handel, and
·'Variations" on Theme of F .J.Haydn by J . Brahms.
The Orange Coast College Community Sym-
phony is presented under the auspices of Oran1e
Coast College and the Costa Mesa Department. of
Leisure Services.
Tickets arc $2 for adults and $1 for students and
senior citizens. They are on sale.at the ticket office
m the OCC Admlnistratlon bulldlng. Hours arelt a. m.
to 10 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and Saturdays,
8 a.m. lo noon. They will also be available at 3 p.m .
Sundayattheaudi~rium boxotnce.
The work ls cast In the form ot
an ea.-y 17th ceattll)' sulte -wttla
Interludes performed by a bras.a
choir of trumpets and trbflh
bones.
One of the youngest mus'l~al·
ensembles at UCI, the Wmd
Ensemble is composed of the S5
wind and percussion players.
Custom Show
·0pens TOday
Tlle 5th Annual lntem•Ucaal
Autorama & Custom Veh•cle
Show is scheduled today, Satur·
day and Sunday at the Anaheim
Conventlon Center.
Over 300 hot rods, vans,
customs. motorcyc·aes ,
dragsters. pickups, road and
oval track and off.road· raclna
vehicle:s will be on display.~~
will also be antiques, restored
Classics, sports can; and boats.
Hours are 5-11 p.m. today,
Noon to 11 p.m. Saturday and
Noon to 10 p.m . Sunday. General
Admission is $3.95, 95 cent.s for
children 6 lo 11 and children un-
der 8 will b6admltted free.
~tlFORNIA'S -OST ELEGllT
~ • . DINNER :JHUTRE i(wtNo . ·~JU~MINUTE~AW ... •Y~..., ~-~ s .~~~1
RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE ~il ~.· j =-
Now Under New
OWNERSHIP ANO MANAGEMENT A DINN~ PLAYHOUSE 1-!~!li~~!jiiiliiiit
REMODELED ANO REDECORATED 3S03 s. Horborltvd., ~Ana w;;;;;;.:;;.....--..
LUNCH DAILY -MGR. ttn Fri.
fllh "' FrOM SI. 95
01..-. save MIGHTI.Y
5 to tO,.... S-..llilin. • I .. 11 ,_ Ptr ... s.t.
Entree1 FnMn ss~s
COfffl SHOr DAILY' A.M.to to P.M.
"Outstanding v 41u~.. PIV Wilt.tell, KIEV
''Great ... Buff..-t Excellcnttt Ted Kr«. O.C. News
''Delightful .•. Elegant'' Doris Crandall. Register
MOW Pl.A YIM• ntlU JAM. I
,.._ ac:nT~...,.S..., ..
t~ THE DEUGHTFUI. FAMILY (~~ tiOLIOA Y MUSICAL
KOTO
celobratos 3 succetsf\.n years In Newport Beach
by presenting the
FRANK •·I -~
•
EMTllTAIMMENT Ate
DANCING NIGHl'L Y
RED CLAllZIO& tit Cordon'
Tuesday thru Saturday
~%.~., r. "SHE LOVES ME" · ... H ltiOlcb),"CobOtet's" .-Most.off.
ARIGATO .
·SWEEPSTAKES
111 l.'ltl\NS TH/IN!( YO\JI
Corne to Kolo tor your tickets.
LUNCH COCKTAILS DINNER
<1300 VOn l<arman Avo . No.,..Port Boach
F0< res<!rvahons call ( 714 l 7!>2·7151
. S3000 IN PRIZES
IDRAWINO OtCU,tU£A , .. lllfi'l ,
,..
. SINATRA.JR.
~
With GueSt Oleta Adams
December 5th thru 17th
Shows at 7:30 & 10:30
Monday thru Saturday
Reservations for Dinner Suggested
(714) 752-8777
Cover Charge
THE REGISTRY
1 MG>TEL
# '
• ••••••••• ILAJME HAIOIM _ ,._
Sunday and Monday
FashlQn Show Every TuMday 1t 1~ Noon
From Huntington Betct\°s L.Mdlng Soutlqun
..... Fe&llfftet,... 20 .. 71
16431 BOLSA CHICA (AT HEIL)
HUNTINGTON BEACH 846·1~47
McJsic&~by
l •"Fiddler On The Roor 1" ~ lodt &
0
:..J SMldon Hornidt
,Oire<Nd by Nkk OeCorlo
NIW Y1aa•1 m ..... YAftONI •ow
f<H A~~ TPteotre OortCJflO & Entertolnment
THf CELllRITT LOUNGE
LUNCH from 11 a.M. MOft • ..fri.
•
latest U Again Relies on Romance
ByMICllA LPAS&EVICU. .................... ...
wtua tbe reteU. ot .. Down Two, Then wn."
Boa Scqp bu sot romantle-mlndtd 1'9Cotd
buyers rilbt where be wanta tbem, and uaer.•1
lltely to bt noeomplUnta.
lb been Marty 18 months llnc. Sc a1es·
scored b1I eommerdal breakthrouP wlth "Slit
Dearees," a gold record that apawned tbret blM
includlni tbe Grammy-winning "Lowdown;"
atlll a dlleo favorite.
To all bUt h1a mOlt recent lam, the delay for
th.la b1I seventh album, wu no surprile. A
1lmhartime laPM preeedecl the release of "Silk"
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
• ·Specializing In Chinese A Lo C.Orte Dishes .
LUNCH•OINNER DAILY
Food tO Tlke Out
1.1:30 A.t.\ to 10 P.M.
·zon...._..,,.
COSTA MBA
642-7162 • 646-HU·
------------.. • J l.k-Chinese Cuisine· 1 Ill. /?Jr' ORIENTALCOCKTAJLLOUNG!!. I Featurln( Tropical Drink.I ·
I f BAMBOD · DECEMBER I
I l TEIUt&CE SPECIAL I
I JfX_ 'rt D ........ T-•W... I
I
I\ -S.UI Pw ,.,_ · I -""~ I ....... PricelL71 I .. ~ A-tlr9" -T~ 8'ldl. £09 Roi. Cltlb Puff. I
I I Im soup • Ent•--"'•-Duck. eamDoo I , am Tett-..., -._ ..... Almond ClllcMn •• j Frt.dAlce •IM&-... , I '.J; •_t.\c-F.or:aor ..... -Md"'-llaChow~ ~· t ?'" r rr-Olt.!icpiNa'*-'bertll, 1977 . ~,;;EAST. lTrH •.. COSTA MESA 645-555011 -.-,-...---.~-----~---
ID fte &elased A&llMSJ>bere of Oa( • o'Altv.l.U'Nr.tl~1 AND AFTERNOONTEA
Open 11 A,M. to 6 Mon. tbru SaL
BEEB• WINE • HORS D'OEUVERS
P~at~~~-~e D~liver ·
E. COAST HiGHWAl"
CORONA DEL MAil M0-'7092
NOW•!.·
BOBWHITE
PLUS
LISTZ &
COMPANY·· . .. .. . .
..
alter Boa turned out bls maste!'plece, "Slow
Dancer," in J'all 197•. Artllta taP tM1r time •
"Slow Dancer" marked Seqp' trUIWODi
both vocallY and styliatically, from bluet·butd
rocker te _..ldcated aponentof claaay BU
and soul.
· On !"Down TWo. Then Left." Scates eon· tlnuea to~-hi the aame cool 1.t tlllotloaal
veln that bu made him a aupemar capable of '
affectini the heart.a of both men and women.
BIS aEUANCE ON the tbeme of incomplete
but tteep\y cc>m.mttted romance lt erideot aa au
of 1lde one'• ftvt excellent tracb. On • 'Stlll Fall-
in I For You." a eently uaertlve mid-tempo
rocker with a fllabty diaco baa line, Sca111'
lyrical stance it capsulized in the line: "No mat-
\er wbal I say or do, it all belins and ends witb
you."
Scagp• mU1ical characters are often caucbt
in a 1ort ol romantic limbo. Perhaps lt'a a re.
a.wed lCJlllingfor a love that wasn't appreciated
as lt waa baliPenlng. or a chance meetlnt that
sbould lead tO bllaa but can't d"'-to prior commit-
ments.
Al oo .. Wbatcha Gonna Tell Your Man,"
Scaus asks h1a aecret love: "Wby'd you have to
ao and do ltfor girl, make me love you like I do?"
Rather tban fall into a maudlin trap of help-
less romanUc pleading (althoqb Scaa~ d<>es
t!ome cloee to crooning at Umes), hls lyrtc1
always leave room for a vague senUmental h •.
• THIS IS TOUCIONGLY brousht to Usht on
"We're Waiting," a beautlful ballad in. which
romantic longing is experienced by a eroup of
friends. They aimlessly lounge about a country
estate shooting ducks off the pond ("cause
there's nothing else to do"), waiting for the re-
tu~ of the. ir long-lost friend and love. And they
will always wait, at least in spirit.
Scagg.s' eloquent vocals continue to sound
ereater and more confident with each album.
Cbeck out bow be bends hia final notes oo the
runed "He.rd Times,'' a staple of biJ live
performances tbat is given a perfect treatment
• here. .
The solid bass and drums seem to dr•C juat slightly, setting the perfect stage for Scana•
rivetirlg upper regiater vocals. For trivia buffs,
this potenUal hit features a simple well-placed
guitar solo by Scaggs, his first OD ~cord since
the "My Time" album in 1973.
Scaggs is by no means the only star on
"Down Two, Then Left." Keyboardist Michael
Omartian co-wrote the lyrics and arranged and
conducted the string and horn sedions with a
sua ve but never slick hand.
PRODUCER JOE WISSERT, who turned the
dials on "Silk Degrees", is also evident
throughout. In fact he steals the show on
"Hollywood," a high-energy disco tune that
features an irresistibly catchy refrain -
"camera, action, do it again" -followed by a
rapid triple-beat that sounds like a movie studio
crewman slapping the slates. A guaranteed
dance hit.
On tlMt musicianshil'> side, Seago once asaln
has surrounded himself with top-notch session
meD.·All are fine but It's drummer Jeff Porcaro
who bolds it all together witb his eonsistently
, steady and lnvenUve kit work.
Yes, there is one cut OD "Down Two" that
qualifies as a turkey, but nine winners out of 10
songa ls an incredible av~age.
-Chap.man Sets
Carols Fest
An "International Festival of Carols•• wut be
presented at 8: 15 p.m. Sunday at Chapman
College's Memorial Auditorium, 333 N. Glaaaell
St. The Cbapman College Concert Choir JJtd
Symphony Orchestra will concertize traditional
carols ln an evenlns oJ family entertainment.
The Concert Choir, conducted by Dr.
William D. Hall, will perform "Glory to God in
the Highest," "Tbe ChttJt Child," "What Child Is
Tbta?" and other selections by Joubf'rt,
Althetber, Brttten and Burt.
The :~;:phony Orchestra. conducted by Donn L. , Joins the choir for the flna1 selec-
tion, "Une Cantata de Noel," which features
aololsts Nancy Bramlase, soprano, and Robin
Buck, baritone. Laurence Gordon will offer
piano accompaniment. •
The concert marks 1he second event of the
Cbapman Collete Concerts Series. Individual
tick eta may be purchased for $7, $6, and $5, with
senior citizens and student rates at '2· Group
tickets are also available. For additional 1erit1
information telephone 997-6646.
Dance to the soft rock music of
Sound on Sound at the exciting
Rect Oniorl.
Wednesday-Saturday 9PM-1:30AM
Sunday 8:30 ~M-12:30 A~ . ·
Toni Basil, dancer, singer and cboreog-
. rapher, headlines the reopened Aquarius
Theater with her "Follies Bizarre." The
show, comprising a cast of 4.0, opens
Thursday, Dec. 8 at the Hollywood
Theater. Basil, the "Dance Queen of R-ock
and. Roi;!," will star in the revue that also
f ea tu res the Lackers dance troupe and the
Los Angeles Ballet Corps. Ticket informa·
tion is available b y telephoning
213-650-6535.
499-2626 ·~
Souala Co04ll'• Fine•• C..Uine
IVY HOUSE
RESTAURANT
:
Sl4 FOREST AYI!.\
LAGUftA ~ctt t (lfllM~)
Ample Free Parking
494-9491 752·8~
EaanCE'XBIBtT-Man.lfestatlon.sofErot
by seven artlsts in show held over unUl Jan. 8.
Collector'• Choice GallefY. •. 666 North Cout
Highway, \,afuna Beach. Hours TuesdllY
throu1h S8titrday 10 a.m.·S p.m. Sunday noon
toSp.m.
·Galleries I Exhibits
in prints, sculpture and other media at Tannar
Gallery, 2139 La,-una Canyon Road. Closed
Wednesday and SUnday. Hours n a.m.·7 p.1n.
-(fally.
CA~RNIA CAPTV&ED -By artist
Raymond Sipos. Twenty-seven small worlt.s on
diap)ay at Haggenmaker Galleries, 372 Nortp
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Gallery open
daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Show runs through
December.
··GRANDMA'S KITCHEN' -Museumof
Orange County, 301 N. Pomona, Fullerton,
shows utensils, recipes, appliances and clothes
froi:o by1one days. Tuesday, 'lbursday, 10
a.m.·2 p.m. 5aturday, 10 a .m.-5 p.m. and Sun·
day,noootosp.m. TbrouJhMareb,1978.
DOW A.ND TOYS -Dolls, doll houses
and late 19th century toJs on diaplay at Bowen
Muaeum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Opena
Saturday, throuch Dec. 31. Hours, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tuesday-Satqrday, 1·5 p.m. Sunday, 1-10 p.m.
Wednetday, 'lbunday. Free.
PASSAGE -Katie Ap1ar; photolfapb$ .•
and clothinl artifacts on display at UC Irvine
Graduate Gallery. Hours, Tuesdty-Saturday,
noon-Sp.m.
RVBREU. STYLE -RelrolpecUve look
at Hollywood photographer George Hurrell 's portraits of tinsel and notables at Laguna
Beach Muse\Jm of Art, 307 Cliff Drive, Laguna
Beach. Through Dec. 20. Hours 11 :30
a. rn . _.: ~ p.m, daily <Closed Tuesday).
INDIAN ARTIST -Works by Dan Nam: •
lngba in continuina show at Orange Coast
Oollege Art Gallery, through Dec. 18. Open
weekdays 10 a.m.·3 p.m., Monday al\d Tues.
day, 7-9p.m. Free.
PICl'URES AT AN EXHIBITION -
Music, paintings and drawings wltb clay
worktJ and sculpture by six art.lsts. Mllls
House gallery, 12732 Main ~. Garden Grove.
Hours, Tbunday-Monday, nOQD-4p.m..
.. A TllLETES IN Acri ON -Dbplay of
11>(>rt.1 writer·lllustrator Robert Ricer's WC>rks
at M\lSeUm of Science and lndustzy~ExposiUon Parle, Los Angeles. Throuah Jan. 12, open
9:30 a.m.-Sp.m. daily.
COMIC REUEF -Orilinal drawings
from Crati Dorsey's "Graphic Tales"
al '1PSl&ln Callery. Opens Monday. hours,
Monday-Friday, l·Sp.m.
'Happy Time'
Mesa Staging
The Costa Mesa Civic PlaybOuse will present __ ....;.._.;...;.........;.. _____ -;-______ Samuel Taylor's "The Happy Time, .. at 8:30 p.m.
tA>day and Saturday. The theater ls at the west end
of the Orange County Fairgrounds in the Communl·
t'y Recreation Center. •
''The HaPPf Time'' Is about the grewtng up of
12-year-Gld Bibi Bonnard, youngest member of an
uninbiblted French family living In ottawa.
BIBI'S FATHER wants bis son to grow up to ap-
preciate the warmth and humor of life. The boy's
w~ tmcles and grandfather. by their carefrff w~ys,
&el biQJ 1nto ~ble one day. However the three re-
fatlvd 'rally like tlle Tbtee Muskateers, rise to. the
occulm and abowthelr true honesty and humanity.
They ltrik• a blow for freedom, and lD a scene
that ls wamil1 bum~• and deeply toucb.inl, Bibi
learns what i•i• ''truly.\O be a man." It ii a play for
~e famUy's enjoyment.
Tlcketa are $.119ril •ctin1il1~ $2.SO atudenta
d a'1llor dtlleila;.'Jl'"i'Vatlou 'ire available by
telepbonlna •5'59. , .
Stephen Hibbert e>f Costa
Mesa, JuUct Brown of
Corona del Mar, and
Wayne Waaner, Santa
Ana.
Rebecca Saft.ford is
staae m ... er, The sets
were destined by
Richard Aries.
The production .is ln·
tended for matur~ au-
diences. Admission is free. ••••••m•illllillllllillillllilillllliiliiilill ..
18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD.
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA
COppoeltt Orenge CountyAlcportl
(714) 833·2770
I
Intermission
Tom Titus
,,.. Cordio ls extremely s trong as the b"-h, ·
}tlm bastic tourist who turns the emb8"~ into a
~• dhousc and delivers Allen's pungent punch
es with sure thrusts. Sheeran, grinning like
red E. Neuman throughout, ls perfect for the earl of the boyish klutz who neverthe~S$ wins
tqe heart of Cordio's daughter.
Barbara Lentz, making her non·mustcal de·
but, is a good low·key counteri>art to Cordio as
his glib, wisecracking wife. Nancy Henson needs
a bit of seasoning for her character as the
daughter ; she plays with a stran1• lack ot con·
vlction
THE CAPTIVE PRIEST is well done by Ben·
n,y Goodman, while Bob Howell is not enough of a
contrast to Sheeran to make an effective am-
bassador's aide. Bob Davies goes through the
mollons of what could be a ric~-~pporting role,
that of the secret police chief K"11ack.
"*** ••ANWlfl'LE, ANOTHER Saddleback
Valley commUnity theater sroup, the Mission
Viejo Repertoay Theater, l1fts th• curtain on lta
first abow, Neil Simon's "Barefoot ln the Park. ..
tonight Qi PJ Toro Hi1h School'• Charier Hall.
This third proctuctlon of "Barefoot" on the
Orange Coast tbls year wUl be staaed Fridays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Su.ndaya at 2:30 for
two weekends uhder the direcUon of Jay Rayl. Pat Cullem is producer for the show.
l'ldton Splculat
Visitors on the Universal Studios Tour
may be "invited" to survtve an airplane crash as part or the new Screen Test ·
Theater. These tour visitors have just
·~umped to safety" into a tank of water
representing the ocean waters of the •
Devil's Triangle. Universal, using lnsta!Jt
replay cameras, allows the visitors to see
themselves playing r<>lea in the moVie,
"Airport '77' with actual footage from the
film spliced in.
Heading the cast are John Thompson and
Alyssa Vilya as the newlyweds setting up
housekeeplnc In a top·fioor New York apart·
ment. Sandy Olshan plays the bMde's mother,
Dick Grover is the upstatra neighbor, while Tom
Lucas plays the telephone man.
· As an extra attraction, the El Toro singing
group A La Carte will otter Christmas carols dur-
ing lntermLssions. Reserv•tioos are available at
586·3803.
~
Stan Nau.ed . . .
' LOS ANGELFS <AP' · -Samabtha Enar and
Barbara Partlna wlll
. star u Billie Burke and
Anna Held, wives of
s howman Florenz Ziegfeld in the NBC
movie "Ziegfeld: The
Man and His Women.''
"HEROES Is another up-and-coming contender for my I 0 Best IJst for
19n. It also marks the ~ anMI d video tltoom kl~ Henry
Winkler as e major SCtten star • and an three words In that delctfption are
well eemed .
.. M • he glYes 0 ~ ~htful perfonnetioe rtc:h In Insights made richer
by his uncanny ebUity to corrvty them. Hls de<:epavely ~ ~
soon gtves Wl1'I to a qui« eloquence 1n v.tlkh he says the~ v.1th silence
and bl9 poftnl)'el should make hJm a cinch fore Best Actqnomlnedon fl
D )!;!r'S Qssat l'8Ce.
•· Balanclng l11m brilliantly Is Sally Field ... A strong oc;U"esS wtth e bold, deftm.
UYe style d her own -Jn HEROES she meets her match In Winkler, and
playlng c:lf an ac:tord her own Intensity on~ .eema to Improve ~r already
~ perfonnance. • .
"A!so contilbuting spmtcs to this saga II Star Wars~~ HanWon
Ford. ..t'°9e touching perfClftMnc:eaaoneofWlnlder's formerwer buddies
PfOYldes one of the ftlm's molt memorably moving teqUenc:es _ f'Ofd
could easily >Mn a Best Supporting N;tot nomnetlon for hJI ~ per·
suasiYe portrait o( • soldier whose Wit wounds wUl ne\'ef. eYet heel
"HEROES ts the ftnlmajor film
to de3' fntelllgentJy with the
plight of rt:Curnlng Vietnam
W!teran& It's ~ tenllbfe, tensl>
ttve .creen essay, well directed
by Jeremy Paul t(agan and
wondetfylfY. Mfljf$Sed 6-1
Wlnklet. Fon:I 111'4 Ms. fleld.
The result Is a W!fY ~film
that lhould h8Y8. ~prbity
P,oeftlon on your Mijlt SU Utt."
-Oeofge~.
:ftfE~~ 4 . ,,.,.L_,,,,,..,
111 PCJ"at l. BOYEA
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Cleo Laloe'1 mualc,
Ute raiQy afternoons and
reruna of "The Wiu.rd of
Oa, •' makes 1ettin1
thtoup thll life a much
easier task. One raw sUk
'Laine rendition of "The
Street.I ot London" or
"Blues in the Ni1ht" can
make you foraet all the
1cratcby, one-abot dlaco
queens and drug store
rock stars.
For 25 years, Cleo
1..aine bu been busy be-
ln1 the world'• finest
voealllt, jlvinl ua wlth
Jazz, wooln1 us with
evocaUve love songs,
~
llttlnc us with iSraUc aria• and brin n1 us
back down with er own
111 UNDA DEtJTSCH ._ ..... """' .. .....,.
"ANOTHER MAN,
ANOTBEa CRANCE"
takes an unusual look at
the Old West through the
eyes of a Frenchman.
Director-writer Claude
Leloucbe, best known for
his "A Man and a
Woman," brings his
special charm to this in-
triguing tale of two
pioneers. Genevieve Bu-
j old 11 a rebellious
French beauty who runs
off to America with her
photoarapber-lover.
They marry and go west
by wagon train. but
violence lurks ahead.
~Ol 'Tll ('0 :\ST '"' ",,,, I /\r llN A fq lU tt ..,,., 1\1\
6:41,.,. ........... s..:-5'.. 1:45
-THIATllJ .
'~PUMPING
IRON" (PG)
•1HIATU 11 . • ----e
."ANOTHER MAN,
ANOTHER CHANCE"_
"A MAN AND
A WOMAN" (PG)
--·· .,..,..,,,..,,._ ~~~~w I
"PUMrtHG llOH .. tNI
"" ... ,,.,......,. ...... ., ..
·sLBl'llt .. , ... ... ,.-..-..... ,,,,
1peelal brand of the
blues.
AND AT It, the lady
from Middlesex,
Entland, la only settin1
better.
"I hope l'io 1etUn1
better," she said onUi~:~ rec en Uy. J•t don't
I'm atandina sWl in what
I'm doing. I think that
each time I 10 out,
aomethin& different hap-
pena."
Sometblng. different
happens ~b time Cleo
Laine goes onstage
because the lady herself
is forever chan1ln1, br·
in1lng new llf e to the old
tunes, adding a touch of
daszle to new ones, com·
ing as cloae u il mortal
can to perfection in a
variety ol 1~~:atyles.
Sb• acta wben lbil •ins• ·~can appar,esitly 1ln1 wtiea •'-e acts, •lace
sh• 't been tlsned to
portray DorotJiy D.a·
drid1e ln the upco~
film, •"J'be Dorothy Dan·
drldge Story."
'Dlat seat for nriety,
1be H)'I, la what ll"pa
her ln a clUI alone.
''Unllke other sin,en,
I do •Loe material that ll vastly different, and
challencinc In many way,, Tbere are very
few 11JJ1era today in the
popultr field, or even the
operatic field, that at-
tempt to lint -and do tt
successfully -an opera,
a Stevie Wonder son1, a
Jam ea Ta~or sona. a
Gerabwln sons,
''I DmN'T have a
creat deal ot tnln1fte,"
1he ••YI 4W l -.uted to make it ao. I wanted a
vast ranae ao ttiat l' coutd
cope with eve!'Ytblnc."
Ever lloce that day 1n
lW wben 1be took a
SU·•·Week 1,ob wttb John Dankwoijh s Bll Band,
Mlaa LalDe hu abown ~-t •ll• ~an, indeed, cope with Just about
everythina. Man1ed to
Daokworlb, himself a
respected Jau man, in
1958, lllsa Lalne hH
1pent the put 25 yean IJ
weavln1 pop, Jau and
the clalliea Into a in·
tmltable musical fabric
that deflea catesoriza-Uon.
James Caan is a gentle
veterinarian whose wife
is brutally raped and
murdered leaving him
with a small son. Bujold
and Caan eventually
cross paths, but the road
there ls aometimes
tedious. There is splen·
did golden photography
of the dusty West and
flashes of gritty realism
that create a convincing portrait of the era. Rated
R.
( A Quick Look at the Movies J
I
Motion Picture As·
sociation of America
MPAA rating defini-
tlon1:
G -General au·
diences. All ages ad·
m1tted.
PG -Parental
guidance 1u1gealed.
Some material may not
be suitable for children.
R -Restricted. Under
11 r9C1ulres a~~mpany·
ing pa.tent or adult guar-
dian. X -No one under 17
admitted. Some 1tatet may have btgber a1e
limits. ·
"LOOKI ... ..ott M•. OOOOM•" uptllf" wtlll wntylng Kcvr•o .,.
They're trucldn' t111111c11 Na'-'.
does it like
the
teenagers ...
andJhev
doitall4n
"WE BECOaDED some at. the House or
Music in New Jersey, and Ulen some •t the
Record Plant in New York. l Jove the Plant
. because I love being in the clty '1ld in between
:· takes I can .io to Smith'a bar on the corner and
, • 1e.t a drtol(. ·
•'In Jersey J can't really take the sound of the
crl-eket.s, bui the sound we get in the studio is
great, We're trying for dlfferent sounds, we're
evep golng to record 'Easter' (the tiUe track) in
a church.
"The main thing I'm proud of is that I .. t to
play lead guitar on '25th Floor.• My voice is real·
ly different, too. lt.'1 been built up ctr something,
aDd I think I'm slnfing 10 times as 1tron1 as
before. Wbatl'm hoping ls that when this record is
finished my voice will •ound different to people as
Dylan'• did when be came out with 'Nubvllle
5~¥line' andll'eakedevery1>o4yout.
"JIMMY IOVINE is fantastic," Patti said.
(lovine, who's engineered recor41 for John Len·
non and Bruce Sprlngsteen, ls Patti's current
producer.) "I have all the advanta1es or John
Cale's artistic talents, «nd Jack Douglas's
technological expertise (they were her two ,
former producers) m lhls one maniac Italian,"
she enthused. ••1 decide<! I wanted to record the 23rd
Psalm, then none of us could· remember it. My
assistant-. Andy Ostrow, had to call up a priest in
a church in New Jersey and bei him to read it to
her over the phone.
He asked, •Are you in trouble, my dear?' She
explained, then be asked if he could get a com-
plimentary copy of the album. I don't know If It's
gonna be his favorite rendition of the 23rd Psalm
*** THE WORD FROM London is tllat New York
band·in·eitile, the Heartbreakers, may return
home soon. The Heartbreakers performed in
Londor;i with new drummer Terry CMrnes
(formerly of the Clash> after Jerry Nolan left to
form his own band, reportedly called the
Junkies. (The Heartbreakers once considered
calling themselves the Junkies, but manager
Lee Black Childers refused to go along with It.)
The Heart.breakers also left Track Recordt
with no explanation, ud rumors are that CBS is
mterested. If so, the ban(! might retum to lhe
U.S.
Aflhoucjl OU' moil\ collection consl5t{ of investment prt, we
would file to rdnird Oft art lovers that we have o very fll'le selection
of ortifoct, besides inveJtment pointing\. $UCh o• wedern sculpt\'•.
porceloin f~ ~ ~ewelry. mable cameo well decorations,
fine ontq.le ayttds. cprpets ond mony more items.
Moy we iovitf one ond oll to 'Visit us next time you're in the
or~. to bowse c:n:l enjoy yoursetves.
All nschardse carriM on uncon&tioool 7-doy moneybod c;JUOf¢nlee.
0,. 1 clap per week t..... I 0.6
Tht: ~T f'tlll i:N>~CO.
206·0 Riwen1cle Newp«t Beach
.. ••. aod he knocked ovtr lftY ttaah c~s. CblV
up Swanson's yard, tore down May&ee's
-clothealf ne... -r--
~ PUNKY WINKeR81!AN
• ..
Luxury equipped with factory air oon~itlonlng,
Power steerinO A 4 wheel disc brakes, fuel
injection & transistorized Ignition.
electrically adjusted remof e
control mirrors, power windows.
infinitely front bucket seats.
tinted glass & morel
The car yo.u lease does make
quite a difference. After all, you
don't drive the lease, you drive the
car. And when you lease a
Mercedes-Benz you drive some·
thing special indeed.
Whichever Mercedes.Senz model
you choose, you drive one of the
worltl's most respect~d automo· ·
biles. A car with legendary engi·
n~ring, meticulous craftsmanship,
outstanding performance and
safety.
. Something else: you'll drive the
car you lease for two, three or even
four years. Most cars look out of
date all too quickly. But when you .•
lease a Mercedes-Benz, you drive a •
car with classic lines and timeless· .
ness that is never out of date.
We have several leasing plans to .
off er yett. One is certain to make it ,
more convenient for you to drive a
Mercedes-Benz than you~ . migt]t have thought possi·
ble. Call us tOday .for the
~urprising facts. •
Ask about our
many convenient
leasing plans ..
1 60 MONTH
BANK
flNANCING
AVAILABLE
On Approved C<ed1t
-DISCOUNT
p
I
L ..
Q
W1w'SHotiu:
A.ll N&l ettate ad~erti.Md mum oew1paper b •Ub·
ject to the Federal Pall'
Houalng Act of 1998
which make:t lt illetal to
advertiae "a~,Pre· ference, Umlta or
dacrhnJ:naUon on ~:;,·:;J THE REAL ,
~l ESTATERS race, color, rellalon, sex,
or oaUonsal ori,in, or Ill
intention to make any auch preference, lhnita-V 4 TltlM$
tioO. or dllcrimlnaUon." OML Y UJ.SOO
Beat bqy In the area. Air
Thia newspaper wlU not condl&Jona ad •ome
knowingly accept any other nice xtra'•· calling
advertlstna for real us ts a must -The Clog estate wblcb ls iD viola· bit.eat A quick eacow and
_Uon __ o_flh_e_la_w_. ____ , th la yen r '• be H
--' THE RCAL
ES!AHRS _.
~-THE HEALl
~~l ~~·~·ATERS _i
Chri1tmaa pregent la youn. 546-2313
<l'fN 1119 •fl S IUNIOlllNIC'I'
~~r THE -REAL l
11 ,-: ESTATERS , ~~ -~
~ ----THE RF.AL
ESTATf.R~·
~-
THE REAL
ESTATERS -
j
COUNTIY Bt.ustt CHAaM
Extensive (and exp\tn.sive!) uae of
used brick and wood siding oa all
three delightful patios surrounding
this ".bedroom Woodbridge
Broadmoor. home that reeks of old
English Charm. Professionally
decorated and landscaped (bonus size
lot) near the 30 acre lake. Priced at
just $~.ooo. (Owner is a ijcensee.)
U,._,lfJUI: li()Ml:S
REAL TORS~ 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also In Mesa Verde. at 546 5990
PEHIHSULA POINT
4 Bdrm.. 2 ba. home. All ~.
Lovely area, few steps to beach.
$189,500
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den, 4
baths, living rm. w/ cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950
ll<i CAMYOH
4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large lot. $325,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J-l 1 Buy'>•<l" Dr•v" N B 6 75 6 161
NO
CREDIT
NEEDED
$68,000
BIG 4 BDRM
~COATS & WALLACE
~REAL ESTATE. INC .
·i i01.~11• J~NI O t:O ~l'A Ht ~LIMNL
IHI '>lll•I H C11A·;1 AHll\ \INr! 1%1
eooD MftlCIATIOM -now Is Y®r opportunitJ·to'.own real estate at just
$=-lovely Mesa Verde. See UdS 2 CoDdO ln a fine locatlall; C4
S4Ml4t
121.00I 19UCTIOM -Owner wanta
action. Tbls 3 bdrm home with famlly
room over!Oob tbe blue Paclflc Ii
offers the dlicrimlnating buyer a
place in th aun for ·himself & hi.I
family. Prlced at $100,000 C•ll
64CMl61
St-rv1nq C o~la M ec;;i-lrvrn"
H unl1nylo11 Ck,tch ·N e wnort 81•.ich
SO. OF HWY. DUPLEX
An xlnt ESrATE BUILDER l.o good
rental area or Corona del Mar: neat 2
bdrm. home with frplc. PLUS brand
new 2 bdrm •• 2 bath Wllt over apacloua
4 car garage. Owner motivated to
sell! $189,500
759-0811
O I ' "• I I I •' ~ • •
,,, •0 '''"' 0 • HI II
VICToafAH IUUTY
-
I -HERITAGE
1-H 1\1 f()K'.,
F DRE'S f E.
OLS ON ·---
•
I
FD~C"Sl E
OLS ON ..... ' . ~-
hMIPoW .......................
8 ASVRll 0 11.ul:.•u!rln<
r
.
RANCH REALTY
551·1000 1!: Macnah ·Irvine
1-rHu-s 1 r
OLSOl\J
. . • I
OPEH 12·5
C.tomShMft
lalb09 , ........
421 S.•IAe
Completely remodeled
executive he>Qle ! Better
than new with custom
amenlties too numerous
to menlion. Huge family
l'f'Q, ~. formal dinin& &
more. 4'A baths, 2h cur
garage + work11hop Ca II
Yfl4.1681 for details.
Colonial Real Estate
BY OWNER
OPENSAT&SUN
611 Kines Place
3 br, ram rm, din. 2 rrpls.
2 ba. pool, dbl s ar. Sl69.900. 213.579.5333
126'WATERFRONT
on Cherry Lake, Back
Bay. Brand new cstm I
, br. 4 ba lri·level home on ~pt. Bch's only LAKE!
Fish. swim or go boating
on fncd. pvl lake an
Wooded Seltlni. $340,000.
Open Dully Z310 Tustin
Ave., Npt. Bc h. ~d
Leonel II
CAPRI PROftERTIES
644-4720
By Owner-Bi& Cunyon
Towohm. 2 Br, 2 ba, crpt.
dr~. $150,000. 833·0821 or
~ &ID-0769.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Thr"ti i;u1le Me d lcul
bldg. Rece ption room.
A1C. Cun be rented at 55"
per sq rt . 011. ner will
coru>tdl'r trades & terms.
So!.13 ,500 49J-0233
Jt111p Ahead!
So. Coost PSaa
Do•I, wide Lowy
BeauUful 4·Star Adult
Park . w /ull the amenities. This wttek11
best buy. 2 BR. 1973 .Ben·
dix ror only $21.900. See
Oflwr'lffl•tet•
SAN CLEMENTE
Four yr. old trl·plex,
3-2·2 in &ood rent.al area.
• 1 ••
U I 11• '-r Ji-I >'.'"I •A"•V
, .. f\1 f Ill'" ( ,f 'JI l I 1&-ll l l '•
to believe. (81107X·U) 8 Unit Apls, Eaiti.ide,
~5837 C.M. St680. Income.
CaUfomia Baciflc p ·mo. Owner. 546·1773
Mobile Home Really HOME & INCOME
Coda MffojHwpt lch s1oa ..........
2 ·aR. 2 Ba, 2 car
gar/carport. Beaut.
S~lem houac Mobile
ff6me. In adult .c ·Star park. Swlm'g pool .
Jacuui & scads of sodal
life. All for only $19,950.
tKW8818) S.<>.5937
Callfomia Pacific
Mobile Home Really
22x8', Nwpt Bch purlt,
askln1 $27SO. Xlnt cond.
PP.MS.Q34
JACk,OTI!
~ BR Beauty only $9,750.
O\&staocllng vaJue. Im·
rnac. home. 1961 Great Lak~s 10x80. (S1313)
Hurry! Pacific Coast.
Rtsales lnc. 11891-&Seo
THIHI BUY!
HOMEFINDERS
Thousabdt ot Recitals
All areas all pricff Sample.
$125 lbr hie kids/pet.
I
.. ONLVPILOT
140~ live
BIG' . -.. . .
GREAT RECitEATJON:
Sw\mmlng, 1aunas, 2
health clubs, billiards,
----------• night-Jlgbted tennis courts. Pro & pro shop,
golf drivln& range, party 3425
--------... •• ••••• ••• •••••• •••• ••• room. WATERVIEW EIToronewcondo.2 br.,l FUN ACTIVITIES :
Townhome localed In the ba, view, garagc. SJS(). FullUme director, free
Coves. 2 BR, 21 2 baths. 2 5814255 e~ c~. Sunday brunch, BBQ's,
l'tiv patios. Upgraded - ------1 trips, parliea, apor\
,1pph ~ Security, pool & s.iys, Mo.. ~l'W condo. toi.irnament.a & more!
Jacu1ti 6 Mo lca~c. view. 3 Dr. 2 Ba, attach BEAUTIFULAPTS:
owner will tonsider gar. rec fllC'll, Lake Singles, 1&2 bedrooms.
lunger. Sl!>OO/mo. Forl'!tl arc•~.:_:W?,:14~----------
~
1 1·-;i..ll1n \Ll'I
;J f I' 't '" ',\ , , I ~IH Cmt llttt C111n1 f11ll11
LJ\ND!\1AHK, M.ignolrn
Allant..i UH. Adulls only,
oH't ·10. 1\llllton S rec rac.·11 S<·cunty. all applic.
960· IJOI) C\ CS.
Duplexes Unfum 3600 {. u x t,; ll l 0 us 2 ~ l y ...................... .
Wtrfronl 3+ study, Crpl,i---------1 1lch~htful polio. ulils pd.
li73-:i 187 & 213-789-8768 NEW & SPECIAL -3
BR, 21 t BA, Irplc., extra
large rooms, plush
carpets. Minutes to
Whistle Clean, Lre 2 br, z
ba. w/&ar. Conven. locat·
ed. Adllsil sro. chUd ok.
$295 mo 545-0242 or
751-1927.
Newport's Finest
2br. Jba. Higly upgraded
t" nhse. bllns incl 'd
''shr. rJryr . .Sauno. pool,
Jai:. Wik to bch. 6 mo. 111
beach & freeways. Sj2S1---------mo. Children, pels OK.•------------------
/\gt. 846· 13 l l.
1110 l~c ~75 mo. siao mo•--------1
_ w out gar 5't0-4180 __ 3 Br duplex, pvt yard,
HluJf:. condo. 3 BR, 2 ba, patio, d_bl gar, bltns, 1
\Int t·ond. S.'iOO Mo child OK. &lS-1759 CM
1\gt.>nt t>i_± 11~ _ Apartm..wh Fwnlslwd
:\WPT. Shorcs. v.alk to •••••••••••••••••••••••
BACHELOR APT.
ALL UTILS PD!
heh. no pets. 2 br. den, 2 IGIMHI llfand 3706
h,1 ~·9~s.ul·~7 - -·······················i--------·
TENNIS & BEACH
OCEAMFROMT
3 BR. 2 ba, yrly. $595
STE:PS TO IEACH
2 BR, 1 ba, yrly $310
2 BR, 1 ba, yrly $3'15
associated
n11.i-:r11c, Rf/11 TOP'S
,01'1 " E·.th~ .. t. I ., •• ,
'PNo of Orange count(S most beoUllful opo11men1
communllles. A relamg
sentng wtlfl S11'eoms.
walel1als. and mojesUc
trees. Featuring pooll.
Jocuz:z!. sauna. blllords.
and exclllng cM>house
wtn\ soclol events. Tennis. 1----=------11 gym, and voleybol Of
---------
The Vlage. More of
~ you·re looking 1--------11 for. Fum#ure 11 ovoloble.
CO HD 0-t O O L SSO WEB Ii UP 1 or 2 Br. Adulta. no pets. One Qnd ?No Bedroom
3 Br 3 Ba, nr Hoag Hosp. Stud lo, 1 bedroom S225 & 12SO> 2421 E. 16th Ad'* L.Mng.
New paint & dcco,r. Avl Maid service, pool _N_._H_ts_._64_&-_180_l ____ 11 omc.open 9:001o6:00.
12/JO. $495 mo. 640-2981 2378 Newport 81, C.M. .Af.tl".!....."'L... NoW l'ri'lg.
548·9'165 or 645'-3967 ~ 4 Br, 2 br, lovely Colonial---------•••••••••••••••••••••••
h m . Lrg fncd yd. STUDIO lcAoalllcMd 3106
9600/mo. Call 842·8005 WEEICL y RA ns •••••••••••••••••••••••
Newport Center &
Ilg Canyon A"a.
Prestigious 2 Br. den. 2
Ba, w /all dlx featores.
FullKitchen•TV
Linens & UUllUes
CLOSE TO OCEAN Rovt!I Suites Mohl ~Newport Blvd, CM
macnab I lrvtne
raaltg
~VllWHOMIS
Clean 3 Ba Cannel avail. OD yrty ..
leue or JnQ~to-mo. Outatandln8 locatton. Carl Butler 642·823$. c1-n> .
BR. ~talrs, cpl ooly,
no pets. Ref's. *295 mo.
112 Martne Ave.
lalloa PtnlnsMla 3107 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Hurry, ma)ce yoW"
teaervatione now !
TSL Manaeement
--------Larae Z bdrm. garage.
pvt patio. Nr. schls,
ahoppin&. 1285. 645-7388
FOURSEASONSAPTS Lge 2 Br, beams.
Spacious 2 br t.ownhae. qwet ad Its. $240.
l"" ba. pool. pvt paUo. S48-46al
sm. chJld ok. S?7&. 733 ---------
Joann St. 846-6483
2 Br. t Ba. 1 story, 1hac,
drapes. patio. frplc.
fW"JUsbed bo1.11• on
bch. $200. Capo Bcb.
Eves ~3·5343/•9$-4l600
P LOOJUNOI Mature
male share NWPt Crest furn'd condo. OC vu. all
amenities Incl S21S.
garaae. o•erbud
door. $40. No. 6. 731 W.
18th St, CM 67J.T187 eve
Wanted; garage to use as
woodwork shop in
La.run•· 494·2942
as .. atorqe only, 325 J .
·l7lb Place. (off Santa
Ana Ave) CM. See after
llAM
See Wbet 'I under OUt'
DAI{,\' PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE ••••••••••"•• .. ••••• eY.-, Thursday ha U>o
E B A 111 c t t l e • ausmed MCticwh For Info c,1, our
CbrtsU'n., M-VIW
642·5$78
OHk:.e..... 4400 ......_.Rental 4450 ........W R..W 4500 MIK•I••-.. , • v • I 1• A.._. 1300 ,._ u• •s&O Help W-'M 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... •••••••••••••• ·-••••••••••••••··~··• ......_ , 4•10 O,p11 ...,,, SOOS 0,1 a: ... , IDOi ... ••••••••-•-••••• .... •,-•••·---··••• ••••-••••••_.. ... ..
I SO I Westclff Dr. LAGUNA SHOPS 1260 sq ftw12 omces. Ute ........... -• .. ••-•••• ··--···-........... ·-···--·--l'ollbd paralteei w /lef _Newport Financial Ctr . Downtown. xlnt. locaUon. AIC, 3 phaae power+220. AIRPORT LEASE, 2 acrt. PRE-SCBOOL band. Vl9 Otle t. Jn, .-one GllL5
· IACISlllgOfflce Space Approx. 900 aq. ft. & 470 Annual leaae. 16181 Callus tor: Wlnter-1um-Flftd Bde~atiaD..~ OPENSATltSUNIN Ql.MMl'10 MeuaielcModellnC
C.llooSl\e?rfanager 1q. ft. Immediate OC· w e II ts t. t e st. mer-yearly" atore l'eQ· cni E. ol. L Qx 40' l'IUI ... a Br ~!Alt White,.,. JJaua. &..,;O...;.u&.;.;e_all~SG---Sl!-•-'!54J. __ 3250 __ ._~;.;.;.;;.;..;...;.;.;.;.........;..;:..;;;;.._
• (n4)8U-3Jllext246 !cipancy. =nster.-.ofllor tala.W1bavet.bemall1 :r::t~'tn~'~t.'f:!Y; PoOl.~crt.<>ra.Oo. s.J~ uu. Coal YNNDONOVAN,pleeee ... _ ..... ___ _
. D&UXEOfflCES . ~illooomlcs,&7$-f700 m.atnt., tledowns, ru&bt G. Wllllams. lUtr .a-nd.NolD.-.-call l/818</2H·9001,
O>mml & Jndatl spaces, 1 • 4 Da'UXI OFC"S M.2. 2000 Sq Ft W/OP· ICbqol, air lU.l, alJocratt 13Ml&6 POUND: 1 BJo olu. W&t«loo,IA. Mary ~to 2000 sq. It. As low c.ootiedrm .. se~ 2ti all FlCE. San Clemente. ::!:·.::=;::ae. call GIFT Gallery-: workln Royee·11nlon, lfu4o· Need rJde-Caplatraao
. as 350 sq. ft. Laa Nl&uel & pane • sm. w e re-496-5601 • Partner. Umud bn = K·Mart. Dltt Beadl to Labwoocl Ol' • Mluion Viejo areas. ar. l or 2 yr.1e-.e. Lake Specialty Gift ShoP lnvatmt req '4. 0 • Seen,'Sclnrtnn, Lone Bel <lam to
Handy to S.l>. Frwy. Forest a r e a..,. K e nt 6400SqRot~mtrtal pro-Malo St. of Balb:: purchase option. Mon• 1 UnlmowL Owner Iden· 4:1Qpm)481-D11•ves
•C..n:83H400 Har1dns7i 45819393 • pcrty w/1800aqftotair FORRENT:Hallfor Jaland. Xlat Joc'atJon. l\1,10-U.8'1W080 tilYb.ralzei~'Mria.J n..-... be--'n._.
. . lXlOd ~cs. $48-1653. 2956 NEWYEAR'S •2 .. 000+1 t no.,.datAtlr oc •• Oon· ~)'our-• cu.l•~ Offices 80 1 s• OCfl RandolpbAve.Cll CaJIDao6'2·1958 • .. , oven ory. t&c:t H.B Police ~ ahartof it w/mature se. .ore· ce. Salls bury Realty. SULEIJ(AN ,,__ ~ ....,.,.., widowed woman? Com·
l ~FREE . 9&osq.n.. under 30". 1&418 a 2 0 0 sq f t • I D • l7a.aoo PRODUCTIONS --paDion mat be bet. 55--eo
·F_uUservtce.Noleasere· BeacbBl.HB.842-2.83' dmt/q,mm'J. 2952 Ran· PLANTS, ANTIQUES, Canently aeethl& In· • ol. moMt.ary mew.~~~~~~~~ ~tp:,s:•·2~at':~~ wpt Bch. Nr. Mariners dolpb Ave, CM Call ...._../l•••d/ HOT TUBS, priced to nll&On fGI" ...-cooeept •-*"-·_1'20 _______ •
Bristol St. Newport Mile Square. 700aqft.Of. 546-IW. All•c• sell. 122.soo. A1eni. In Chlldrell'• TV ahow, '-naalStnica 5360 Beach. 557.7010 !ice or store. 2610 A~ Stol.,. 4SSO ;;;; ............... ~ .. '42-4158 West Cout Diaeo. Must ..................... ..
EXECUTIVESUITIS SL&U-UM,eT~06 ••--•-••••••o•n•• Op~':twltr 5005 FIMAHCfM...., ~=:..·.~
B e a u t l f u 1 b l d 1 . XLHT LOCATION •••-•••••••••••••••••• For Jovestmt. whieb bU71 Pe~sed phone COV· omce " retail space RlOM 30 TO SAM CLEMIMTI Small........ ~ ol &bow. Ped. tu era&e,secyaervice,conf. right off San Dieeo Pet Shop Ir GroomJng. U·yoo'rebelntaqueezed abelter.Call: '
room, xerox Ii more. Freeway, Mlsalon Viejo. I ,000 sq. FT. Retlrln1 after 7 cood by hl&'ber costa, bi&ber &alel~n, 2Jl.T'nM1.Cl
-Easy frwy access. Near Build t.o suit. DELTA yea.rs. Fine locaUoo & waeea and lowerpcoorita,j~~==~~~~~~J~~~~~---. So. Coast Plaza. From ENTERPRISES 811·1400 Stora1e unit.a from Sl.5 cUenteJe. you cap use our aenicea .
. Si!25. 979-2181 ...... , ... ltnttl 4500 :Ob!'~:::~:.~~~ BE:~=RY We'IJ provide )'O\I with a
Office apace for rent by ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ml·· .... h-..... urt... s upplemental lncome.
-· 00 ""-~ ..,. 21SDel Mar 49'l-4121 We require <ml7 Jood month. Approx. SS< per 2200 ~ ft: 3 offices • dls· Storage Place. 1.8306 buslJM!U ttnse. bOoesty
sq. Ct. 2 story bldg. Near pl•y area + 1200 sq tt ot Mt. Langley, No, of Elia, OCEANFRONT and a desire to ~et Bolsa Chica & Warner. wafeliae. Located In So. Fount.alnValley .... _ MARK~ •
From $100. & lq>. Call S.A. near C.Jl. llne. SSfl • ~964-1~" Mustsell ! Net $85,000 yr. abe6d. S8llo0356
'846-1311 JJJ0.957·1801 A.genLMZ-4168 WuatAda
'· , ...
HAPPY
HOLIDAYS
to the
GRIGGS
ln Virginia
PREGNANT!
Carine confldeotlal
coUDHlbtg A: refeaal. --------1 Abprt1GD, adoption le ~-•~y keeotn•· ,...,,.,._" APCARE 547-2563 Resi1ter Today to worlc
oo variOU1 ~untine & boolttee piog auleo-
meots. Work close to
YQtir bome. Fif ure Cletb to it .... CIOUD· tantt oeeded thruout
----~__.,,; ........ ----10rmp~~
ACCO\PllemJll
91& ~Slll!Dl NO. Tower, Unloo Bank
Jn 'l'be Qty Of-Orul• '114/llHlm
•
Ba.nldni
lmmed. maloorcopen·
1 in& for experienced
, /TIMI! nu.a · 'cAltfl~Y
I Xlntoppor. "benefd.I for . res p. qualified can·
dJdate .
._.ofl"IM
14322CulverDrive
Irvine 5Sl·l600
Equal Oppor Employer
BankinC
·LOAM
OFFICER
Min. 2 Yrt installment " lite comm'l bank lending expe r . r eq'd.
Progressive Independent bank offers xlnt benetlta.
CaU or apply at:
SANTIAGO l~MK
832·5200
535 E. 1st St Tustin,
Equal Oppor Employer
BEAUTY OPERA TOlt
Assist. F JtJme for b~y
i.alon . Will train.
Richard Ouellette Salon,
200Newport Ctr Or, NB
~
I EricsOn 1Khts •llKE STORE•
Assist. Mgr. for Schwinn
Dir. Sul $10,400. Must
have prior bike mech.
--------• Has the followfng fall·
~x~r In a store. 552·922?
BKKPR /Girt Friday IRIGHTGAL
for Magazine: to type,
phone, write copy,1paste
up. Part or fl111 lime.
<.:lcrlcul, stock contro1.
inventory contro l ,
customer contact. Full
Ume, benefits. Fashion Isl. Gall Patti 10 lo 5 PM, --------1..;...;..;;..;.... _____ _
644-8860 IUS~OYS COOt< Exp'd, dinner &
545-2000
- -~ Full or pftlme .. See breakfut,f~tUme.App. ____ ........_ ................ _1 mcKPR/Full C~· Jackie, Mon-ri-1. 9-1. $an 1y btwn 2 & s.,. Joli)
ST JCHHKNITS C\emeote lop , ps Roger.'lf»3 W, Coait
Heavy expr nee. 11312 F.sg\,anc\lllo. 492·6l«J. R\o'J~8. • . ' -1
11 Eastman, lrvloo Call c ft. RE E R o· p . ' C~F1th1• ·~I
I _54~ '--P()RTONlTY I« matur M ' . ,A_911 "Y.fl'dt
I I ·, pmdn, musC.b•~ tnin 2 eon~raF pel}t~ _..:.a;·D"""DCT---.....;A;.wl U..(4$.11..t~.ulru;;.sT_._
lkk...:1TW11t ~SI ex per in" any o( Sl, GM Cl\Aln1de aeach arj?a. ,, CPI> <>fc In 'N.B. :i;,.1 ·ro~g : .banldnc. 001· _,,...;,y..,,-.... ,,,....-,,p-1,,....i;::< .... ,-.'i._......,-Endo ore. Xray cert. Et·
I bo.okkeeper 4'> ao ltilton. ac~OUJKI re· IJ COO.I< perpref'd '114/M7·3S13.
li'Pill Pc'l'm .po 'c4'hlllble, Insurance or ._,,, FIT A 1 1 · "' fi.nantecorporaUon. XJot wan.-. · PP Y " DENT"'L OFFfCE perA.on only ple•ae. ~
Detl»' Restaurant •ft Seeks a quallrted recep·
time openings ror e~·
perienced . tlel,e. Waaes
based on exper~
/ Ffnf-"LIM c..,.,..'"
Cabhtet St.op
AHi ........ C~Shop Mru.. .. .....................
'Eft9MIMt ......
Fi~GdC~M Fibei9an Touc'"'P · .
Full benefits, med1-cal,
denLal &-oPl}cal. Plea~e
apply at. S.cunty OfcJ
··~tc~MYACHTS . ~13• ,,.....-....
~QAno 1
I
Part lime, permanent 12~PM, typln11. ~ne11al
office. Mature J>TOC'd.
Rt9\tme t.o: PO Box 1091,
Newporl Beach, Ca.
RETAll : .. 1
· TllEPHONE
· . SALES
Work Part/Ume In one of
our ,,:Jrculation ules
rQqms .\ 1t.IJ1 h!lve
plh•ure Ume for ~II. You c•I) work near horoe & atlll pursue
__ .,.........._. ____ -.-..i out.aide actM\tes. We --------
rlX/Ccnhler /Typist
PBX exp. req, lite typ.
Ing, 5 duy/wk, perm.
posiUon for right perbon.
JIARBOll VW, 84241~
rB'IOflMIT,..,._.
Our growing agency
seeks dynamic lndlv.
w ;ga I es back around. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiil ~~~~-..L-----1
Good persona lily to train SAL&s
lO become employn\~nl
,.)' ,wap. + comm. PM Beautiful European Anti· ---,------•AM hrs av all. Call for qoe wall clock collection 1------... -. detaila. & watch collection. Pvt ' Lb.,a APMe
Yorkablre Terrier•
Be.gle mlx ~lxed kltlena Himalayans
AR.AGER. 9:30 Co 4 Sat
oaly. Bumper ..pool tbl, tent. lampe, mlic Jtema. 3421 Blue Ko Cotf SaodcuUe) Cd.M.
Sat/SUn 9 to 4. 2'85 lrviDe
Ave. CM <rN BACK)
Pano1001c 7" reel to reel
tape rcdr w /36 rode tapes
~. Sewing machlng &
many other items.
Honn 8060 .......................
look
.see
check
WAMTID
BICYCLE EX&CISOR
751-4140
• • • Stereo console, 9', walnut. B E A U T I FU L 1 7 6
tuner, cban1er It TV.
l200/ofr.556-7248
Cadillacs to Go-cArU
What.ever \he Fad Boll ~)n off~ mal'ket Wi a CIUAtled Ad c..n Nowt Kt·5678
1927 rutore4 ctauy Cla.,tc 32' mt.r yacbt
need• 1Jlp. llembe Cfaaalc Yacbt AH•.
SIOOOOFF AU.MIW
•C:HBOIU
•PICK .. S
COSTA ME\A
DA T'>UN
1975 CHIY'l l
ELCN41MO
Automatle, p.t. 1teer· •
Inf, air coad., I tnck
stereo, low miles le mra
sharp! (80970Y). Local car.
MowCWvS4195
HIWPOtl'fDATSUM
888 DO\tE STREET NEWl'Q~T BB4Cll
133-1100
I.a YOlU' Profeealort HOME llErAW?
Did you know JOU can
place a classl~ ad ln·
the Dallt Pilot Service Directory tot a wbole
D1Mtb f<rr •• Uttle as sua J>er da)'? For more lntorinatioo,eaJl
~~··1
\ /'" ~I j •• t " , f f. • f
'1 , 1 ' '" I ' I • ff f ,,\_I ! '
,. '· ,, 1 11 1)' 11
IMPORT C'AIS
ALLMODILS
WE '
HEED
CLEAN
USB>CAIS
. NOW 1
CALL PAPPY
540·5630
1978 BMW'1
HERE NOW!
COMPUTI
IOOYSHOP
NOWOPIH
IXC8.l.Bft t
SIUCTIOMOF
IMWRESAW
We may have your next
carinQurlnventory. Call
us today!
831·2040 49Mf49
5 1895 ... ..,. .... rt
'IT JAG 42CJ auto. air, disc
brttet, lllGL eODd. "5()0. -.im
~ • ...... ,
Ml\~llJfl ll'''IM~· ·lt1,
t1 ' , ; ) ~ I ' ' ,
1011 ~SO\,~ SO\
Ml'..'>10N V•t 10 J/IAl•l.>llrS
U J • 11·l11 .I \I ·, • I 0 ~ 'SC Jq. XKE Roadater
Hardtop, wires, SZ800 or 'M SC Wte, new pat, 1---------• WANTEDTOaUY beat. 552·0SOS evea or ltT•Ml•2IOC ~cood. Quality uaed BMW1. wknda w • 55z.t7'2PM
2626HARIOl ILVO. ROYCAIVERIMW A auperb car with
COSTA MESA l.540JamboreeRoad '73 XJI. Brwo/tan leath AM/FM stereo caueUe, · ft7l'-OISCHI
NEWPORT BEACH lnt.r. 51,000 ml. '6600. Ph cruiae control & very low 914
WE BUY 640.6444 :wM'797 afUpm. mUet. Clel0302). Wlth lnll wheels if ap.
US•OARSI '71D..._1.ZOOScllt.. ,,__ 9732 MUSTS&Ull pearance 1roup. Ex·
We'l'e Ute new CheVTolet '800· 640-1228 •M••••••••••••••••H•• cellentl ("88.$). de~tenhtp in the lnme • 9715 ~ J JiY• J-..sn.a SADDLllACX
• LINCOLN·MERCUR)
Auto Center. We need••••••••••••••••••••••• 13PKUPLlkenew, loml, , ...... ...,. VAUIYIMPOllTS
}'OW'UMdcar! '16 Black Cat Caprl, V-3, \ride tires, wbt apoke HEAUY 131 2••049• •949 • JOE 2800 4 spd, zs,ooo mi. whla. Sl99S. 846·1'7'9 A aleamlna beauty! • '" -'T• lpltlln, ~ 12700. 'tlJ Vft Futbaclc, 1l1M 5 VW sctrocco '2990 or
MAC PHERSON $3800/bs~.;315 '7.5 280~ 2+2. rads, lo ml, <GRBH). MG 9742 '61 PC)l'1che 3SeB, reblt ~~~~ ,aaoo. =~-~.f•· Askins ~~~ <7H>
CHEVROLET . . Vep" ~ce67. C CC"" $4195 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee trans, CooclenaJ.ne, nJce, V............... ,1 I . .,._,,,, HOW' .A.RD 75 MG Ml....._t S3SOO 846-517t • ..,__....... 70 '71 VW ~per Van. Rblt _.__. 977• 21Au•"'CentcrDr1ve 71 Capn, rW\S good, new "" ' -.... .. •••••••••••••••• .. ••• eoa S f. $2250 by UllYV • ""IRVJNL' clutch. SHOO or best. '76 J>atswa 280Z, A/C, 4 Chevrolet Convert. Rallye wheels. '64 Porsche cpe. Chrome · p~~ · .9135 •••••••••••• .. •••••••••
76 7 "' 2 499-4349. Spd, ma11. xlnt cond. .,. Immaculate. <394NCM > whla, racllo. Loolta 1ood 196$ Bag. •1 Pd• nu ~bU. owner. · 144 1976 VOLVO . ____ 8_·_2_2 ._Bil Copper bro. $5900. DoveCJQuallSla. 1Year,12{000 mile war· runs cood. $3100 /olr. :li~lnt cond. ot er. '61 Su,ndl•l pop.top JHGl.SIDAM
-75&-04Slor7S2·6737 NEWPORTBEACH rantyaval able. $52-<mlcwa39-4711 . camplr. Rbl.t ena. ONLY U,HO mllea!
Autoa, fnlported • 133-0555lll-0116 $29'9 ,61 Cab ~IC Con • VW conv. RltH, slot eaa/FM. Aatomatlc, factory air ••••••••••••••••••••••• a Ca~EWPORT D.ATSUM Mada 9731 C~ Mtrs vert. Cherry red Just re: cond, nu Ura & abocu. '1'795/bst. 49'-2130 cond .• full leather lo·
RABBlT/SClROC• 'O 2001ElatSA558-8000 done. Best offer. 67' "7000 Clutch & tran& rebuilt. -VW B ...... C"•t .. m lntr tenor with apllt seat. " .ror the best buy In a new •••••••••••••••••.•••••• "" ,.. __ ln & out Red wltb ,.. u,;, -v di 1 ' Owners. Improve handl· or used Datsun! ...,._., • & alnl. New en& & stereo ra o· U¥ury lng. Set or 4 Bils tcin 76 CAPRI 9744 Restored 1966 .black top. 4 apeed..11JOO, :!...t!.!0 Must sen by Jl'Tl· penonifiedt (O:llRVZ).
shocks. Nearly ne w. 833-1300 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Model912. SS800. 983-.3187 d'a-,:-S:asooJbat ofr. $8188
Sl7S/bstofr. 552·0691 cvs ~c:;.~· ..... 1974 MGI 769-1~ 'fr'I Bua, xlnt cond. ll200 84.M'T20or64$.4493
Gwral 9'01 Ferrari 97.zJ ROADSTER ll3356C, 1ood~ Clean, ~ ... ~13t.CaUJeff~. Red Convertible Classic Nabe ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3 695 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llO lh'4. Simply BEAUTIFUL! newUm. ~. ........., ':19 VW. New baU, coil & rs .
RABBIT /SCIROCCO Ferr a r I DI no '7 4 · ColN MeMI 641-StOO (lmMIO) 848·5877 "7S VW Bua. Xlnt cond. fuel pump. Runs real
Owners. improve handl· Ooodl'lwvfH-rr Bm/Tan. Lo ml. Mint Sl495 ... Royce t756 15,SOOml.131iOO. Jood. Bat orr. 845-7988 Cadillac
ing. Set of 4 Bllstein cond. Great Investment. MUST SELL· Yours for R ••••••••••••••••••••••• MS-5089 (wk4,y9) anytjroe ~7~~~t-of~~:.~t"e;~. _$19.950/olr. 675-7003 low book. Like new. low HOWA D . #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. "18 VW We.tphaUa Pop -'76---RAB--B-lT-.-,-O-r.-T-a_k_e ' 2600 H.irhur Blvd.
Fiat 9725 mi, xlnt cond. AM/FM. 4 Chevrolet ROY TDp Camper. Xlot cood. over pyrnnu.+$500. Call C11s1 .. ~s.i 540.9100
••••••••••••••••••••••• l9lll FiatSpyder Not run· Rotary Wgn. Call now Dove&QuaUSts. CARVER tll500. •---· ave •
Alfa Rom.o 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• on the floor. '74 Mazda ~ Call ....... D 7~1 SG82
n1n P . . 646-6887 NEWPORT BEACH ... ...._ .... 9100 ... .-... .... ~ tlOO ·----Mew tlOO 1976 red Alfa Splder. Ex· ------9-7-2-0 g. "~!,OJ?!."2· ......___ ....... _ •--i 133·0555 • .,., "'116 ROUS· ROYCE -"ew --.-w -cellent cond. Orig.Dot.... .....,..,,.., ~-.. 9740 --tMt.Mlft-.. •••••••,•••• ... •H••••• •••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••
owner.AM/FM sterco,lo •0 •000•uuuu•u• lf76Ff.ATXl/9 ................. •0 •••'73MGBHard&ao(ttop, :•.:z' .. ""' •t ·
mileage. 968·0863 * DRIVE A* With stereo cassette & 1974 MIZ 280 R&H, new clutch. brks. c 0 ~OA Fantastic Fla' t Spider I 71 Alfa Romeo Spyder LITTLE. only 19,000 miles . SEDAN. In 1bowroom rings & valvea. Almost ~HO YI • •
Convert. Good cond. Best * •• * (1187PFl). condition with very low new tires. car cover, To,oN 9761 Fant ti Pel I ~-'"!!~-~-offer. 640-2016 SAVE A LOT SADDLllAC« mil811. Must see lo ap· runs gd. $3300/make orr ....................... II c ca ,,
VAWY IMPORTS preclate! (111793). We 548-8175 Must sell 1971 Cellca OT
AMdJ 9707 · SHOP&COMPARE 131-204049.:'. 4949 have a good selection or "-J 9746 5-spd Metallic blue ~t--~.......tl
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ MBZ' t 1' :':::•••••••••••••••••• w1wht 1n\. 6800 ml. AM ·
1975 AUDI FOX 1975 Ff.AT 16 OPEL ISUZU. 24•000 FM stereo, snrf, 5,000 ml
Automatic, Ulr cond.. 124 S..&Aar ml. xlnt cond. AM•f'M 8 s yr service contract. s5aa5
sunroof, low miles & m r.-:. truck. s2soo or bst ~.900. Call 833-9252 dys, '~•7
immaculate cond1llon < 1976 DATSUN ~~'Jn!l~;'94~JM>. & very 499.2480 673-1592evt Mr. Wallace l32SN~t<e OfFU 280% 2 + 2 Priced to Sell !! '60 Classic 4 dr 190. new illl
Automatic. air cond.. llLL y•'l'Rs paint. interior. Ures. -ll~~!'l'L
MISSION VIEJO IMPOllJS mag wb~ts &only 14,000 Al'° valvM. re bit trans ...
miles! (040009). Muatsce VW~RSCNIE clutch, much more. Very II·• o I ' ' ' t• 't ~
to appreclate·caJI tor eur San Juan Cap~trino c 1 e u n . must s e 11 .
special price! 137-4100 4tMS I I $2800 bsl o<r. 960-1210
. .. . .. ~ ..... -..
831 174t! 49S 1104
'76 Audl Fox, 4 dr, AIC, NEWPORT DATSUN
t.W\n. stereo, maga, war· 888 DOVE STREET ranty. Xlnt • $5196 NEWPO'RTBEACH 1909Flat850Spyder. ~2 . 133-1300 f1~:m°f51:n~
'74 Audi lOOLS. 4·spd, 4·dr, '72 Datsun Pickup. Extra •76 lM SPYDER On.I lo mi, AM-FM. $2500. Ures & rims. Camper 20 000 l hl Y
493-6802 sh IL t '"'" 6400 • m • m.ag w a, new -------__ e separa e . .....,. tires, white. xlnt. cond.
'73 Audi lOOLS. AM /FM 19 7 3 DATSUN 61 o Must tell SU.SO firm. PP.
stereo, xlnt cond .• $2800. SEDAN. very clean. I 714·752·7400 from 9 to
or best orrer. 559·4291 owner. 38,000 ml, ·new 6PM ~ 714-64S·6263 aft
Austin-Healey 9 709 r a~ I a I s . ti 44 · 6 5 9 3 _6_P_M ___ ~---
I 97Z Mil 220D
Automatic ft. nlr cond.
For the luxury of a
Mercede1 & the efftc1cn· cy or a diael. C83IB1E >.
MAJCI OFF!tt
MISSION VII J() IMPOIH S
BJ1 .1 1.1s .ivs 1104
'tt69MIZ
210SLCOUPE
52495 Oeod llWV ,,...,.,
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
l'Ul1 1.,1 .. 1,.1 I• r 1",':.\
M\,l,..T1Nl\•IOt4l l•(.tt
••••••••••••••• •••• •••• PM W\cnds is XI.II, really like new.
1960 Classi c Aui.t1n The 78iAre ,...,. Brn, tan Int, AM·fl'M Only 211,000 original 1~------:-----::::-::-:::-::
rrulea! Automatic & air
BILL MAXEY
lOYOTA
,,,, .......... 1 ••• , ... ..
1tU•tT1f'tC.''•..,.l ta ••
'
Healey 3000. Xlnt cond. All model• & colors. 11tereo. Lo ml, air, magi,
Priced for immed. sule. l.-dlah PP. $3895. 646-2389
67s-&M4 or 540·31N DtU•ffY Today! • '72Flat124 Sport•
cond. One owner car.l'r,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 YDS67Z >. II
SAODLEIACK IMW 9712 P.rimc ·AM/FM ·Conv.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • lemalnlftc) 19 77 $3250 642-7837
I 977 IMW 320I HaYe c.ot To Go! "73 128SL Spt Cpe. rads.
4 speed, IWll'OOf. stcr AM /FM , must sell
cassette, etc. Must see $1,000. 968·9179 or
appreciate! (f'aSET>. MS-2556eves
MAl<I OFHR 2M$ HARBOR BLVD. '75 Flat X19, 1Clnt cond. Lo
54°"6410540.0213 mi's. Loaded. $4095. Call ,, _________ , 675-2918. MISSION I'll JO IMPORI \ . ..
II _, • • ~ •• •
HJI 11-lB •9S llv4 NEWPORT DATSUN 1976FIAT
V ALLIY IMPORTS
131-2040 49S.4949
'74 Mii 450SEL
Lealher interior. pwr.
windowa, c:nnae control,
•unroof & metalUc paint.
ln ire at condition! <1911LOY>.
~l\'.ION V <l 10 IMN>RI~ . '
&J I 1 l•h 4!1S 11()4 '72 BMW 2002, AM /FM 124 SPIDEil
immac. c®d,$4,700. '77 Cleal"PftCt CONVElltllLE Lo 1 6'2.0167 ~mo.& excc~tivo aulc With .Weo 4Jow mJlea 1976300.D. m, lmmac. ---------1 -• -h · cond. Crse tOl\troi, auto, now fwni on urcy ! In lmmacwale condl· A M / p M 1 t e r c 0 •
CREVIER 81800VESTREt."T tion! ~e.o~ Sl4,l001'o!r. PP. 844·5370 (Near MacArthur Blvd. M~ ~
le Jamboree Rolld) '73 Mercedes 4SOSL, Im·
& Sf • .. OAOWAY NEWPORT .BSACR Good HIKtlOlt ot oth•r mac. wire wbls. sky blue,
SAllTA 4"A 1 ___ a .... J_3-__ ll_~0_10 ___ 1 late 11,1Qdtl 1pl~er1 to both t.opa, all xtras.
835·3171 1975 DATSUN chooaetrolfl. $13.SOO. 675-21Jl .
THC ~TIMATI DlllYlllG MACHI~ 1-210 COUPE I t71 MR 21q
2 I>Qqr, 4 apeed traha. & SEDAN. Tobacco brown
low itlllet. In eacellent. le ln hnmacl.&late condl·
condltlool <283NDrO. tlOP. WHCF.W) . .Muat ....,"'..,10-.. 9P7 aeet.hl)pNCJa\el
-rr"lliA " HOW OHLY Sttf5
lt77DATSUN
,._.,~,I( N VII '0 IMl'11'1r•
l!Jf •1·111 d0~, ,,,, ----
1'11 o •'4 • 1 t j( I I ...... • Jfl, \
j I I I ~ J • : .I 1 'Ii : --------
1977 Mercury
Cougar XR7
UN!au rOOI i.ctorv .,. c:ona
-· 111111-•oC>n .... -
Cf\r•IJ "'"'llll. --P<OMCl-Q10\IP -~, .....
AM ~M •hl<llO I .... -QIOl;P
'-"· OI'* utta ~·I
Auto111ettc ...... po-. ••-no _ .. °' ..... .,....., ... -
r•Cltn•nt DUCk•t ...... Ch .. lf
mirton 6 ~-' l~I
HOW ONLY
s11n
HOWOHl:Y
55799
St Pontiac. needs tran11
lOOd cond mo. $1 Olds I ar. lull power look• areat. $SOO. 556·1670 or ~-6417 wt 6PM
AMC 9905
··········-············ '72 Javelin. auto., P /B,
PIS, air Sl700, bet ofr.
842-8289
'78 Pac11r, lo ml, fully
loaded. 11tereo. air, VS.
blk on blk. Mubt sell
$3000. Gree 41'7·1979 ;
642-6857.
W.;lc 9910 .. -------------11111!1~· ...................... . 1977 Metcsy
. GrCMd......,_t
f ull DOwet, lad;; r, COllO.
AM1' M olat.., 11'.-d I-OH •rt••• io••o conrrol t•'" c:omlott , .. h Lanoau roof &
rneny ••" ... lllCl1499J
CA>O SILEeTIOH Of HIW '71t
AND USED CAlS HOW lM STOCIC
19761Uta<
RIVIRA COUPE
Full power. stereo radio,
cruise control. factory air oond. & all the deluxe cxtraa. t:•tru nit"! (78'lMVS>.
$5788
Nabers
Cadillac
~600 ll.111-nr Bl\ll
C..11\l,1 M.·~.I 5·1{)-1)1 t)()
'73 LeSubre CWitom. oil
pwr, till whl. xlnt cond.
Priced to sell. 551·4077
1957 Special. Runi. well.
Xlnt <.'Orld. $S5() or be11t or fet'.~7l02
'7S Electra a Dr, low Dli,
loaded. orig. owner,
$USO. 846 1807
Coclloc 99 I 5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'69iCad Cpe DcV11lc
tl19S. X~nl cond. In/out.
Lo ml'11. 646-4844 days
Evca. MC}.8902.
'13 Coupe DeVjl)e, clean,
Cu11 powec, AM /FM
istereo w1tape, lf you see
it you'll buy it $3900.
s.10-8802
'76 Sevllle. clas1.lr sliver
1977 & lt7' shadow paint. Loaded,
CADILLAC =~cond. Sl0.250. P.P.
aDORADOS , (7)ToCbooseFrom 74 Sedcn DeVlllo. 1 AJI fuJly eqwpped with owner. low mileage, gold ___ ...__ ... ____ •
many deluxe extras. A w leather seats Like __ . -------
1 9 7 6 EI Do r a d o • new. 075·TIOT 70 Matibu, look• & runa
(WSPCX.>. prieed as low 1974 C.d. El Dorado con• &ood, almost everythint
as vt. All xtras. '6300/b•t 0•w. Se.a to f&pprec, $7888 otr. 759·1876 _&f7_-l4_1a ____ _,,
• '7S l!fonte Carlo AC, PS,
lt7' CM>IUAC * 75 Cad SdV. * PB, PW, radlats, t=
COUPIOIVIWS Loacl«i, beautiful.~ top, Vtl'1 clean, ·
. (6)ToChooee From Pvt~>'· 840·2121 67SaJll8 !
-'78 Che"'tte, AM/FY, AN EXAMPLE -------: CB, deluxe intenQr, 1*1·
Astro roor. atereo radio 83 ~upper· muc. cond. s,,300 ne1',
with cassette to~. ~0/40 ~ re'1J;-Make o(. "600/oller. PP . .f'73·100:J
power 111eat , Cabriolet J IW6-a741 '7• Moote ea .... II t o p • e t c e t c . _ " rJV, a pwr,
<Ser.Q148815>.
$7388
•
l t7S CAOILI.AC
CO"'I DIVJLLE
L~ather Interior . AM 'FM stereo with tape
player, tilt wheel.
Cabriolet toP.. crulae con·
lrol, etc. (9s.&LQT l.
$6388 •
1974 CADiLLAC
COUPE DE VILLE
ONLY 29,909 miles! Full
leather interior, AM/f'M
ate~ with tape player,
Wt wheel.etc. <647LFKI.
$5.188
•
I '72 CAOIUAC
COUii °""''
all xtru. S9,2SO .
87S.2Ull
· 197' CUlu,AC
Le at.he r 1 n t e r I o r . Camaro '17 AM/FM tcreo with
t.aJ)f, vi lop & loaded •••• .. •••••••••••••••••
wrlhextr . <~EOJJ. f97:J'CAMARO
$3288 Don't m:0t!i! one-it's
• danllng! (717NXN>. QU~./y~RS $3295
TOSEl.!CT t'ROM HOWARD •
Nabers
Cadillac
2nl>O H,•rhc11 8tvtl.
Cm1.1 i\h:~.i 5~0·9 I 00
Chevrolet
Dove &Q1,101l Sts. N~'WPOl{T B~ACH
tlJ.0555 llJ.O I l 6
I 976 CHRYSLll
".:. ; ,\ M c i.
r . f <,L N
-4 . . -,.
wheels. radio & bt!atu ..
(ft7Ml0).
$1999
Nabers • AUTO CENTER •;
Div.otNabersCadUlac .. •
1425 l.Ua ST. ~
ACROSS FRO&l FEDCO ;
COST4MISA
, t I
Brand ·~:New 1978 Olds . ~ . ..
·,Reg8Rcy Seclaft ,
rl ei • . '70. OLDSMOBILE ·~·; ... I
172 PL YMOUTi.f ~'
. •·· .. CUTLASS . . ' . DUSTER
6 cylinder ehQlne. air oond. automatic.
power ateettno. power brakes, radio &
,
'72 FORD
PINTO RUMA~OUT
AutorMtic. air cond .• vfnyl top, pwr. steer·
Ing l flWf, ~. bucket seats & low miles, heater. (072GJV). c.. i. ., ., ~tie transm16st0n. atr conoitlOftlng.
racuo ano heater. (327G1S1. • · (&4~00), 0 .. . .. " .
-. , -~T~S
·C hryaler Plymo•t~
• . S..-.lce Hums: M~ ..... frlclar, 7:00 ..... to
' 6:00 ,... Satwclay. 1:00 ...... tos:oo,..... · ~~·-. -·
..
,.
DAD WHEELED SON I MILES FOR HELP
Confined to Chair, He Hiid No Bua Fare
,., .........
Lo\re Conquers
Trek for Son: 'Terrific'
HOUSTON (AP) -A crippled man 1ald be Wbeele4 h1a
,rbeelchair ei~t inil~J. boepltal with 1:.:J#. W~tb:pd.on onhill.ID..._lle ._.poufl! teW.atiUl«a
taxi and be eoUJdn't ruCh frlendi QI' fe)a~v• for help wbea tM
babybecameW. , .t.;:....:... •
Ted Ranilrel, 44, a former~ layer wti"o laU ~ eoa·
ftned to a wbn'chalr two ,..,., tald U toot him four houri to
make the trip aCJ"Oll ~ Jie uld ID 8-~~ ilDll •alW
bealde blm tostelldJth• wbeelcbair.
HIS 11ANDS WE•t: BUS'l'DED and bleedli11 wben be ar-
rived atthe hospital, doctors aalcL
Doctors at Ben Taub City-County Hospital checked 1he
baby'• ear infection and treated the fatber'a balldl. They 1ave
Ramires enouah money for a tui ride bome.
"'lbe father bad rubbed bu palm.a raw pusbln1 that
wheelchair and that's &Ol to be ~markable," Dr. James Watklns,
a ~atrlc resident. "We have ao many parents wbo won't t>rlng
their cbildren in when they are sick and it's tenUlc to •ee oae'lo
to so much trouble."
aAMIJlEZ SAID THE BUY, Steve, aJ>Qeared to be 1etUng
wo,,e after two days ~ beinC tick. He aald be tried.to 1et a ride
throµ1b a net1hborhoo4 cUnic but wu told he would have to 1et to
the hospital on h1a own. 'the cllnlc later aald tbere wu a miaun-
d~ra~"'!t"f ~tifled woman 1ave him a ride the final flve blocks
of the trip. I
"I only bad 30 cents," Ramlra uid. 0 We •topped about
halfway and I bought a Coke for us to sp11C"
ONE-WAY BUS F AJlE would bne been aUeait 80 cents.
Ramires' m-. were damaaed tn tm by a Wllnt roll ot
carpet. He aald be receives aome welfare and diaabWtJ IMlY· men ta to support bis family ol 10, but the exact amoa.nt could not
be detmnlned.
BJ AaTBlJ& a. VINSEL ... ~ ..... A HunUn ton Harbour
arcbeQloll.lt tO board a
jetlliler for bome will an alleted
4.5 pound.I of cocaine worth
$750.000 concealed in fake artlf acta la in jail today in Lb:na.
Peru, alq with three travellna
compaDlom. . The arrest of Dr. Jason
Wallace Smith, 35; a female
companlOD, Cris Annette Payne,
2', of the Belmont Shore relioe of
Lone Beach, and two other peo-
ple from Huntlnaton Beach wu
OM Victim,
Of Slaying
FVWornan
One of two youbg women
whose bodies were found Nov. 216 '
in separate locations may have
been murdered, Orange County
, Sheriff'• officers believe.
. The Sberlff'a Department i~
tilled the body of the pos11ble
murder victim today as Jayne
Christine Curry, 23, o! Costa
Meta. Police withheld her ad·
dress at the r equest of her
parent.a, wlth whom she resided.
The body of the other woman was said to be that of Joy Rene
Cloutier, 19, of Fountain Valley.
Sgt. Blll Miller said aut~~~es
are l>efng done on both bodies to
determine exact causes of death. · Miller aald the Curry death ia
belnc treated aa a homicide beca~ ~la --••Tldence
that la not eonslkttot with a
naturil death. We're ~ to
•erifY tt." He decUOea to teluae d~llt.
lllit Curry'• deci>m~bod1 .wu foUnd Nov. 38 ln ClHeland
Natlow Forest temtory Juat olf
the Ortesa Hilb.w~ by a couple
hlklnC in the area who spotted the
remains.
· Miller said a check of dental
records enabled officers to
establlab her identity.
Miu Cloutier was identified
from ber ftn1e1"Print.I . Her body
was found off the Roadway Nov.
26 by two aeuba divers off Paclftc
Coast :!f,bway near Crystal
Cove way between Laguna
BeacbandNewportBeach.
Mtas CUrry WU repoJ1ed mlss· ln« Aue. 8 when she dilappeared
whJle vt.altbli tbe Capistrano
Beach area.
Mias Coutier wu reported mJs.
stng Nov. 28. two day1 after her
body wu found and before 1$he ·was identified.
Orance Coast nrfera were m
their element today a waves
be•an ~ up to OCCHicaal
five·footen in aome ueu. S&>oke11nen at Huntin1ton
State Beach and Bolaa Chica
State Beach aald westerl.1 waves
were averaaiDI two to three feet
wlth aomeswells up toftvefeet.
Ctt.y Ulquard Ro•er Yount
Hld the downtoWn pltr area wu
1ett\n1 ool7 one to three-foot wavee but the sea wu ,_..,y and
the December m balmy.
annoUDced 'nluraday evehln1 .•
Huntlnaton Beach Police Lt.
Bruce Youna, of the narcotics de-
tail, 1ald the two other Oranse
Coast resident.a' ldentltlet were
unavailable. ,,. Smith. of U974 MarineT Drive,
and tbe others are held by Peru
with no baU aet in c<>hneetloe
with the alle&ed dru1·1muUUDc
cue. He cald Smith, whole affilla.
lion with any unlveralty or col-
le1e was uncertain today, was
given permhalon to do
arcbeoloeical research 19 the An·
dean country.
Inveattcaton aald Smith Ud
bl.I com~ons bad been tn i>eru
aweetanctabalf.
Aaenta of the U.S. .Justice
Department'• Drue Enforce. m~dmlliistratlon. Hunt· tnston Beacli and San Dte10
police ~etectivee combined
forces alone with Peruvian
federal authorlUes to ln-
veatl1ate.
IDvesttcators said Sn:µt.b ucl
h11 1roup were just pr.parlnl to
leave the country w~ they were
wttD .... belieVed to be Rem·
lnpm Md fonner GnDt aftlc:lala
R1cbard OWeD and ROben Gnat. ~ to the docu.nMnla,
one unideintlft" wttileu aa1d be
wu asked to pay ROie a pre-
mium few IOIDe out ot atate l'eal
estate. a nqueat turped down by
the company.
Later, the affidavits indicate, <See Dl.BDaJCR, Pase, AS)
I-year Term Tops,
Hinshaw Assured·
o.llY """ .... ,... 'AN ARROGANT RIPOFF'
Prosecutor Capizzi
Pair Suing
. Eatery Over
i
"Obscenities
A mother and son who claim an
employee subjected them to ob-
. scenltiea and threats in a
crowded Fouotlln. Valley
(rutaurant have 1ued • tJM
•operators ot the premises tor not
" less than $5,000 in dama,ea.
Named as defendanb in tbe
Orange County Superior Court
laws ult filed by. Marguerite
Warne and Paul Szymanski are
Marie Callender Enterprise.s and
employee Ed Deerin1.
lt is alleged that Deering
became ageresslve ln the Foun-
tain Valley restaurant Oct. s
when Mrs. Wame went to him
a nd complained that her
.Margarita cocktall w11 weak.
*Wanted Man.
~
Admits Death
RIVERSIDE (AP) -A 1&-
• year-old stable hand wanted for
sentendni on an tndlana convtc.
• tlon led autboritla to the body Of
a feed store manager he said be
stranjled and burled, lherifl'•
depatl•aau'· ·
• Antboa)' Keney, wbo lived on
the Glen Avon ranch outalde ~ Rivenide where the ~ wu
found, told officials Tbul'lday
about the ldlllDf when they came
to arrest him on an Iddlana .,._
.. rant for a child inoJosUnc eopvJc-
tion. the deputies •aid.
Tiley added Keney led tb81P to
the ~. Of &l·yelJ'-olcl Rlobard 1 Lee COok, of Mira Lo~a. wile>.
> J\ad' been mbalba alnc• T~ nitbt When be· f'1lld to ~ \; mun deJivednt. feed load.
K ,
ByT09 BA.aLEY OI .. Detty ...... SIMt
Former congressman Andrew
Hinshaw was assured today that
he need serve no more than one
year behind bars for convictions
returned in two Orange County
Superior Court trials.
Judte Robert P. Kneeland
reached that decision after
listgening to the furious objec-
tions of Assistant District At·
torney Michael Capizzi. tbe man
who prosecuted the former coon·
ty assessor.
"Hinshaw is getting a break,
but I think the public deserves a
break," Capizzi protested while
urging that Hinshaw be sent back
to state prison to serve a one to
14-year term.
• '"This man committed an ar·
rogant ripoff of the Orange Coun-
ty taxpayers," Capiui aald. .
Judge Kneeland's declslon
means that Hinshaw will be free FV S h 1-in April if he recelvea the C 00Ut
custo~ary four months re-
mission for good conduct. He bu OK Effo---for already served four months ln & It
the state's Chino facility.
Hinshaw will be allowed to T ~
serve the balance of bJs jail term eacber ~ unds in the Orange County Jail.
Defense attorney Marshall Fountain Valley (elementary)
Morgan told Judge Kneeland School District trustees voted 3 d>
that the application of a prlaon 2 Thursday to apply for $30,000 lo
term In Hlnshaw•a cue wu .. en. Obrange Co\plty Mental Health
tirel)'. lnappropriitalal' Ulla. type epartmart funds to be used for
ofafudant." • . teat:Jier Walnin&Jiu>reveotion pt
Judge Kneeland appeaNd fo atudent druf abUM, delinquency
agree and told Caplul: '1 doa1 and chlldbeaUnc.
thlnt a year in jail ls Just a slap The 7~·month proeram would
on the wrist.•• train 80 teacbert on methodl of
He further reminded the PfC9-deallng with parent.I and stu-
eoutor that 1t 1-1 not been hll ln·· denb on tr:uaney, abusive acta
terttion to sent6ce Hinshaw to aDc:l ln.-O)>tld behavior .t
more than a one year term wlMn · acbool, diitrictdOctals said.
the former Republican legislator The training would be a
first came before him for 1eo-cooperaUve project by diatrict of.
tenclng. ficlals and the Fountain Valley
Confusion over the exact term Teen Help·Youtb Services
that Hinahaw must serve arose Bureau, a local juvenile
when priaon official• discuaaed diversion program.
the possibility ot applying the Teen Help .Director Randy
term ofconflnementsetoutlnthe Davp told school board mem-
. new detenntnate aentenciDI law. ben student.I would not bedlrect·
That application would have ly Involved lo the teacher train-
kept Hin.shaw in state prison un-inl program.
til at least August, 1918, an in· , Truat.ee Betty Mlpan~ aald
terpetalion favored by Capiul. she opP<J"d the plan bec1111e ~t
•1Jlta1baw hu never abown tbo would take teachers awa:r ~Pl
slightest trace of remorse and· teaching baste clasitbC>m. aub-
has never apoloabed for bll mf.I. jectl. Sbe..au&•W me 4llatmt
conduct," Capisal ptotelted to-wait before~~ro~O..'JlW14
day. "Many tboUland&.of dollars Trustee Rtc:ttara l'luAi .,~
that should have beeA collectacl voted qalnsttbipla.
from the county tax rolla were
Joat becaule of this man •i cnmtnal CObduct. ..
Rlnaha• was sentenced after
beinJ convicted of acts of bribery
committed 1fbile he served u
county assessor.
He ia eenh1I concurrenUy a
one ,-ear jail term ordered after
hil conviction on furtber
criminal charges related to b1a U-
l~gal use of CO\lnty manpower
and' materials while •ent.ni u cou.oty auessor and ~for
Congress in 1971.
Frolll Page Al
FETUS ••• ·
Richard Finfrock (center), Orange Coast
College student body president, and Henry
Weil (right), Golden West College student
president, watch as a coin is flipped to de·
termine which ~ollege will have the first
~tudent member on the Coast Community
College District board. The district's at-
FroaPageAJ
DIEDRICH ••
the wttnesa wu uted to hire
Remington as the company's
counsel in il4 effort to have land
placed In ab -'griC\,lltuiai pre-
serve Ji'leaied' )>y the Board ot Superv~,
It i1 ~ WJ"ilon of th~ fees pa.id
RemiUtoQ Uiat alleaecilY went to
DiedriCb and llloore aa loaaa that is in queltiao.
Tbe amount actually sent to
Moore by Remlnstoo was $30,000
and. lD fact wu repayment of
money ow;f the food company
executive by Diedrich, the al·
tidavita indic•te.
The Rose $20,000, Jess taxes, that allegedly seeped tflroueh
Remington to Diedrich alle1edJy
was money paid the architect by
the company for land studlea .
Diedrich bu not responded to
the Ros,e p-anaaction aue,aUQn.
However, two weeb aa~o~~itte4're~flh\DI ~ IPMD rom Rem in~ ·for OW 10-caUic
aqd loan repayment to Moore
said It had oothl.ol to do With
Remfngtoo's Grant Corporat.loo
legllf9'9.
\Vb~ iotd that RemtDl(oanad
deposrted the money lo a special
account and drawn the two
checks oo the account, Diedrich
said, "How am I supposed to•
know what money went in and
out ot what Remm,ton bank ac-
counta?"
"At the time these dunes were
happening. Mike was boldlnc lot.a
or ml. own money and I aasqmed
that • where the check• came from."
"My auditors are worldn1 now
. to determine just how much Mike
was holdinf tor me when these
things allegedly happened,''
DledridlM!d. •
·He ~bed that Moore's
ont1 boWJqe of the traDlac-
tion was that hit wu beinf repaid
0 mone7~bJ1n.·
•'There are two ald• ot um
1tory and I'm not yet ready to
give mine ln full detail,•'
Diedrlch Aid when ~roated
with JlemlnatoD•• venioo it tbe tran11ctklm. ·
Lt. George Lorton said police
received a call abo'1t 3:-;M> a.m.
refardlng a knlte ftgbt •t the
Jabot camp ate Sunflower Ave.
lie-~~ invettfp. ~T-i.trancla~ri:JC::. knifed blt Clb the head dllltq
a fight. Several men then 1tft the
camp, retunlin& a few minutes la~~~ wffh • rifle aDd &bootfnc an<l tll.Ung another man.
A descriptim of the auapeet.s•
vehicle was broadcast, Lt.
Lorton said, and Santa Ana
police spotted tbf car about 8:30
a.m. outalde a second farm labor
camp at Columbine and Main
Amigos Slate
Fund Party
The Am\IOI de Bolaa Chica ta
holcllq a fwid-raisln1 party
tonight at 8 o'clock at 11701
Boler-0 Lane in Huntington
Harbour.
A spokesman said the affair ii
held to raise !unds to inc"818
political. ed~Uonal and 1epl
eHeeUnaeu ot the IJ'OUP•
The ADQOI de Bolla ChJca ed· vocat.. the PreMrVatloo ol the
Bolla au~ lt 1upp0rts public acqu~ttioo Of the manb.land and
wants it preserved in ita natural state.
1treeta tn Santa Ana.
He aald one IUpect, Jmown oo·
11 •• Pancho. •u arrested and a
• aecood man escaped on toot..
COl'Ober•e CJfticla1I Ud police
Hlcl they were not able to itve additional information until Span~ Offlcera could
int.vvlew between 10 and ~ Wil-nesses and the suspect.
Mi8sing Me.an
Found Dead
In MoillittiUu
' .A ea.ta lftU 1ll.ID ......
aJmoal a Week Ill UaeSan.GPIW
Mountains 1VH loua4 4•4
Tburlday at the ~ d a
r~ttllde, a IM AUe1M ~
... Sb.~••iKW•mail~~liil. No Ioul pra,,ia au bl the
death of A~ an WW!,
38. of 1181 TR!'ller Drive. said
S1t. Ben BOters. Ke 1ald the
cause ol death la Wit.aUvety list-
ed aa either • beart attack or m-
JWiea suffered ln the rocblide.
An autopsy is scheduled..
The body WU lpotted bf. a
search helicopter, wblcb IUided
rescue tea.ma there. Roaert 1a.kl.
He said the dilCOVel')' WU m.se
about4p.m.11lursday.
.Mr. Wulf, wbo worked for the AUaiit.le. Rlchfletd Cqmpany in
Lo$ ANelea.!po""4fY left a· note at .bosge ov. as •ulna be
was gom. hi and wOuJ.cI be
b•ck la~U..tday.
Wbeii the uperieo~ biter
la..lled to retprll dlirlD• Ule
weekend, hil lather-Sn-law dro-re •
UJ> to the IDountaina, found Mr.
WuU'• ~keel ear ud DOdfied the 1herUf'1 departmeJ:rt.
Several teal:QI of aeatchers
combed the area all week. /
Mr. Wult ls survived bJ bis
wife, Donna, and dauihter, J'~
t . Funeral arnniemt.nta are
pend.inf.
( I
7
t
DAD WHEELED SOtf 8 MILES FOR H£1.P
Confined to Chair, He Hect No Bua F•e
,,, ........
Love Conquers
o Trek for Son: 'Terrific'
HOUSTON (AP) -A crippled man sa.ld he wheeled bis
wheelchair ei8ht mlles to a bQSpltal with bis sick 14-month-old son on his lap because be dJdn 't have enough money to take a bus or a
taxi and be couldn 'f reach friends or .relatives for help when the
baby~eW. . ttnJ~~~ :Jl'&~.~!t1rm~:r ~ '°:; make the tr\p aeroa ton Be aaid u a.1 .. r-old .-walked
beside him to'lteadythe wbeelehalr.
BJS llANDS naB llUBTDED and bleedin1 when be ar-
rived at the hospital, dOcton aald.
Doctors at Ben Taub City·C.ounty Holpital checked the
baby'• ear infecUon and treated the fat.her'• hands. They save
Ramirn enouah money for a taxi rt de home.
"Tbe father bad rubbed bl• palms raw pusb1n1 that
wheelchak and tbat'11ot to be remarkable, .. Dr. James Watkins,
a pediatric resident. "We have so many-pannta who won't bring
their children 1n when they are sick and it's ttl'riflc to see one go
to 10 much trouble."
RAMIREZ SMD THE BABY, steve, ap>peared to be cettlng wone after two days of beinc alct. He said be tried to get a ride
throu1b a nelpborbood clinic but was told he would bave to 1et to
the bos~tal on his own. The cllnlc later said there wu a mi.sun·
dentaridJ.nc.
· An unidentifled woman cave him a ride the final five blocks
of the trip .
... Ollly bad 30 cuta .. ' Ramires said. ..We stopped about ' hallway and I boupt a Coke for us to aplit." .
ONE-WAY BUS FARE would have been atleaateoc,nbl.
Ramlrez' knees were dam.aged in 1973 l>Y • falllng roll of
carpet. He said he receive. tome welfare and disability jay-
tnenta tb support his family of 10, but the exact amount couI not
be determined.
ByTO•BAaLEY
Ot .. o.ltr ..........
Former CC11Jgreum1n Andrew
Hinshaw wu usured today that
be need serve no more than one
year behind bars for convictions
· returned in two Orange CountY
Superlor Court trials.
Juda• Robert P . ~eeland
reached that decision after
llstgenlng to the furious objec-
tions ot Alslstant Diltrict At·
torney Michael Capizzi, the man
who prosecuted the former COUD·
tyasseuor.
l)ielli-ich
Received
$75,00()?
By GARY GRANVILLE
«• Dlilly "" .....
Affidavits filed Thursday in
Orao1e County Superior Court
support attorney Mfc:hael Rem-
ington's contention that about
$7$,000 was funneled through him
by the Robert H. Grant Corpora.
lion and Anaheim architect
LeRoy Rose to county Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich.
The affidavits also show that
Grant officials in 1974 arranged
for Diedrich te> obtain an $80,000
loan from a Garden Grove bank.
At the Ume of the transactions
outlined In the affidavits atteated
to by Assistant Distrjct Attorney
Michael Caplnt. the qrant
Corporation, parent company ol
An ab elm mu., Inc .. had a major
land use issue pending betore the
county Board of Supervisors. 1
Purpo1e of the affidavits made
pubUc Thursday was lo support a
request for search warrants COV·
ering bank accounts believed to
reflect the suspect transactions.
Those transactions are cen·
terpleces in a Grand Jury in-
vestigation into bribery allega-
tions swirling about Diedrich and
Rose.
So far, Remington and two
Grant officials have received Im·
munity from prosecution in re-
turn for their testimony about
their knowledge of the 1973-74
and early 1975 Grant Corporation·
Diedrich transactions.
Four weeks ago Remington
said Diedrich was loaned $25,000
of a f/5,000 legal fee paid him by
the company.
At about the 1ame time, the
Fullerton attorney sald, Diedrich
told him to loan food C!ompany
execuUv~ Wllliam Moore $2S,OOO.
And late in 1974. Remingt.cm
aald, Role 1ave him $20,000 for
uneamed legal fees that wu de-
posited in a Palm Sprinp bank and later doled out in cub pay.
menta ''cl. from $!,000 to $31000"
to Diedrich.
The cOurt atlldavtt.s tlled by
Caplnl are baaed on the
(See DIEDRICH, Pace, A!)
He paused, then underllned the
word .. breeder" to emphalio
that tbe reactor mates mote tuel tban lt uaa.
The blackboard was connected'
to a acreep at Shlpplocport,
where officials read the °"'9r
and complied.
As Rickover, Carter•s mentor
from bb days in the N•vy'a nuclear aubmarlne proeram, lec·
tured the president on how the re-
B1TOllBABLl:Y .... Plllr ..........
Surrounded by televlslon camera• and que1Uonlnt
newsmen. three men accused Of
involvement in the tllUnf of
St•pheD JObn Bonn Of Fountabi
Valley went to Orance Count)' •
Superior Court to ofter their
pleas today.
Alexander Kulilt, 28, of
N•wport Beach. and Anthony
Marone Jr., 23, and ll~
lleaco 1-8, both of H~ Beach, were Joined tn the
co~ by Jeny Peter FiOri. •1. alaoolJluntlqton Beacn. Fiori, idlnt.ifted by otncers as
·tbe •• -~peel DID*buUD
Into .BCwilA • Outilde a Newport _
Beach rettaunnt lut ~ 22, 11
beld lD tbe ~ jail wttb bail
demid. TIMi JllOleeutiotl 11 aeet-mctbe4eltb,.._.t7. ~-7udp aob.rt~. KnMllDd de-
layed PlOrl'a respope to the
ebarsea until law &oday wbtD be
will hold a beartnt Into obJec·
tions a1alnst portloDS of the .er and jury indlctment.
K\lllk, .MUODO and Raco, all
free on baiJ,~Jeaded not ftllty to
CBeeBOVAN,Pa1ecU> -
•
DAILY PR.OT
~
JHNSllA •• tli _at _1..-n Aucuat. 117 , an IA't te~faYoNdtiJCa~ .
"Rlubaw bu oover ahc>\m the
llisbtest t.raco ot remorse and
baa never aPolotlsed for bl• ID.ls·
conduct.•• Caph.U proteated l().
day. "Mally t.bouaands of dollars
that ahould have been collected
from the county tax rolls were
lost because of tbla man'•
c-riminal conduct."
Hin1haw ftU aent~ed aft~
being convicted or acta of brtbeey
c:ommltted wblle he served a.s
county asaesaor.
He is serving concurrently a
one year jail t~ ordered after
his copvlctloo on further'
criminal cbarses related to bla ll·
legal uae of county manpower
and materiall wblle aervlns u
county assessor and running for
Congress in 1'71.
.,.,,.... .........
4AN ARROGANT RtpO"-
Proaecutor Capizzi
. ,
Ono of two young women
wboM bodies were found Nov. 26
tn separate locations may have
been Ulurdered. Or~e ~
Sheriff's olftcerJ beUeve. Tbe Sheriff's Depart1J1ent.,lden· tlfi~ the body ot the pc>&Jiblo
murder victim today aa Ja)'Jl• Chrlatlne Curry, 23, of eo.ta
Mesa. Police withheld her ad·
dreaa at the request of her
parents, wltb whom she resided.
Tbt l.)odJ of the otber woman
was said to be that of Joy Rene
ClouUer, 19, Of Fountain Valley.
'IR4.NSSEXUAL
REUYESPASI' Kiilnapping,. Rape
Christine Jor1ensen of South
Laguna, who made headlines ~
ytanagowlthacontroveralalaex
cbangeoperation, aays she baa no
Suspect 'So~ht
regrets. · She ls, however, surpriaed that
transsexuals are not nearly as
controversial today as they were
back in 1952.
See story and pictures on Pa1e
A9
Orange County Sherill's ln·
"esllgators are seekln1 a suspect
with a military haircut . ln the
wake of two kidnappings and a
rape in the south Orange County
area Thursday night, authorities
reported today.
Elderly Man Slain
~ Chair .AJ.!giune~t
..
'MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
An 83-year-old man waa fatally
beaten and stomped becaUH be
ref us~ to give up bis chair wben
a younger man demanded lt for
bis girlfriend, police aay.
Billy Patrick Lyons, 36, ls
charged with second-degree
murder in the death of Sam
Kronenberg.
·'There was no reason to hit an
old man like that."
Kronenberg died Nov. 12 at a
nursing home nearly three
months after the Aue. 1S attack.
The medical exam,lner said an
autopsy determined that Kronen-
berg died as a result of the beat·
lng.
Kronenberg once lived at the
hotel where he was attacked and
often returned to visit friends. He
was talking with another senior
citizen when the fatal incident OC·
Police said Lyons and a young
woman approached Kronenberg
as he sat in front of a hotel where
he was visiting friends. Lyons
told the old man to 1et up and
"give my aiflfrlend 7our chair, ..
1'ilneasea told police. Kronen-
berg tefuse4. poUce nid. · '
• curred.
••ae beat bim, knocked blm
down and stomped him, 0 pollce
Sgt. Frank Tootle aald 'J:bursday.
,,,.... P•ge A.I •.. -
ATOMIC •••
terspersed questions desJped to
show the preferabWty of u.slnl
this new type Of reactor.
Wouldn't it increase the energy
output some 20 limes over other
types of reactors? the president
asked.
"Yes, sir, if it works,••
Rickover shot back. "J don't like
to start thlnas that doxi·~ work."
Nazi 'Death'
.:. j : •
Calls Banned
HOUSTON (AP)-A Nut Par·
ty phone message, wblch offers
~.ooo fOI' the death of ''Jews and· Other DOn·Wbitea" lVhO attack -hi tea, baa been ordered stopped l>Y a state Judi• acllnc on the .n.
'tluest of a Jewtah televlalon re-
,1110rter. ~
Th• American Nall Party In Houatoa reacted to the order by
••Yln1 tt will UH force \f
ieceuary to maln\aln lt•
freedom ol expreaton. '
N azl members ~alltd -news ~onference Tbur1da1· ahortly
,fler 1*trlet J'¥ll• Rteb'1'd
Jllllarcl approved a te~
tTe•train\Dg order \O •top ih•
telep)looe meuapa.
The suspect alle1edly en~
an 18-year-old El Toro girl'• ear
at knltepoint about 6 p.m. at
Mulrl~ .Boulevard and Ridge
Route Drive.
Accordln1 to Sheriff's in-
vestigators, the 1trl was able to
flee the car shortl1 after the al·
leged kidnapping.
. The suspect then abandoned
the 18-year-old's car-In Mlsaioo
Viejo.
He cont.lnued into llimoo Vie·
jo where be forced' a 32-nar-old
resident into her car and kid·
napped the woman to an area of
aouth Orange County or nortb
San Dleso Ooanty. lnvesdlat.ars
said.
The 32-year-old woman was
then raped by the unknown as-
sailant. Depatles aald the woman
1 escape4f her attacker . shortly
after the rape.
Further detalls on the condi-
tion of the woman we%e un-
available.
p,....P,,,,eAJ
BOVAN •••
-_ __.......__ -
Two Deaths Told .
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. CAP> -
An 18-year-oJcl unemployed
shipyard labo?'e!', Alex Hefner,
went to bl• qiotber-ln·law'•
home, abot hi• .._ll•)'ear·o!~
estraneed ll'Ue Deo'bl~ lo d~aUJ
with a •aw~-off •bolaUD ~
later killed himael.f a1 oWctn
used tear eu to rout.blm. police
say.
Pre.aP-AJ
DIEDRICH FUNDS. • •
testimony of three unldenwted
witnesses believed to be Rem-
ington and former Grant officlall
Richard Owen and Robert Grant.
According to the documents,
one unldeotifled witness said be
w,as uked to p~ ROM~ pre-
Qlium f9'..,Y""4• ~~ ~tate. ' ... ~~.\11 the co~. Later, tbe affldavlta tndlcate,
the witneu wu ukecl to bire
ftemlngton ~the compu1'1
COUDI bt lti .. ,.~ h ... ad
placed In an •lflcaltm'al pre.
serve mused b1 the Board of
Supervtaon.
It is the portion of the fea paid
Reminstoa that alle&edl)' went to
Diedrich and Moore u Joana that
is in queatlon.
The amount •ctualb' aeat. to
Moore by Re.m.lnaton was '30,000
and. in fact, 'Wal repayment Of
money owed tbe food company
executlTe by Diedrich, tbe af •
fidavltl indicate. The ~ $20,()00, leU taxes,
that. all•aedl~ , .. ped 'thJ'oUlb= Remington \:o Diedrich llleS '-Y
wu m~ Kd the arcbl "'' the co~~am\'lt11c11el. .
Dlectrtcb Ji*S'DOt "9pGaded to
the RotettansactSoo alftiaUC..i Bowmtr, tw~.aqo a. ad· mltted nftlniut tb4t 1J1mqftotn aemlnfCtOD far·D>e ~an..s'loa
and loan ~d to •oore but salcl lt bad DCJ*bln1 f.O do with
Remlqtml't <Jrant. ~tkln
legalf ...
When told that~ bad
depo1ttecltbe ~ lA.a ·~
account and drawn the two
checks on the account, J>ledrich said, ''How am I supposed to
kno~ what money went lo and
out of ~t Remlilcton bank ac.
counta?"
"•t tbe tlmetllele tblnJ.:;n b•n:--.--bot lots of :olM*ik'1 and I &llWDed
tha 1 ·WIWre the checb eame
from.••
"Jily audltol'I" attworklnl uow
to determine just bow mucb Mike
wa1 holding for me wbeo thole m~~ci.·.1!.er'l)' bappeal<t."
He emphasized that Moore's
only knowleqe of the tr~ac
tion was that be wu beinl repald
money owed him.
"There are two sides Qf this
story and I'm not yet ready to
give mine ID full detail,••
Dieclridl said when confronted
with Reminaton '• venlon of the tramactlons.
• 1\elJllDlton, Dledrlch's
penonal_ and bulineu lawyer for
10 yea.rs, inade it clear that bis
uncJerttandiDlf of the Calla ftow
wa1 th,at..~ were belDg made
to Diedrlch U.at would be ~d wh•n~ 0 sosne 'real estate c1Nla ..
were completed.
Howe.-er, lie ac1,1nttted, the
loans ~ve not been repa,tcl.
Remlngtan, Diedrich And four
other men were lndlcted July 1
oo ccmsptraey cbarses related to
alleaed violatloas of state cam·
paip regulatlooa.
A descrtpt!oa of the suspeet.s•
vehicle waa broadcJtt, Lt.
Lorton Hid, a11d StQta Al>• r.:.m!==.:.: camp at Colwnbine and ~ • streets lD Santa klL ·
4 Hasaldboe~~on
ly as Pancho, was~ Cd a 1 second man esca.J>M. Cis foot;
Coroner's offlclals and police
said they were not able to dte
additional tnforinauon until
Spanlab·spe&Jdns offtcen could
interview between 10 and 20 ..tt..
nesses and tbe suspect. .
Search 'On '
For Elephant
PALMDALE, Fla. (AP) -
1 ---Colonel Joe,'' tbe dilappeartng
pachyderm, ~ to be the
at.er of South P1orida '• elephant
bUDt. '
The eJ~evaded 1tarebers
"ialD Th"undaY u they combed
thls sparsely popUlated area ol
lowlands, woods Ud large ftelds.
Colonel Joe escaped from a
circus truck Tuesday alter it
caughtflre.
STOCKS I BUSINESS
.
Friday'•
Clo in Price
t
I
)
• NEW VORK (AP) -The •tock market WU natrow)J
mixed in moderate tradlna today. c911tJnuJ.n1 a cautious
trend of the put few day a.
The Dow Jones average ol 30 im!ustrial stocks. down by
abouU points earlier in tbe sasJ'*, Jost l.13 point.I tol23.88. In the bt'oad tally ot all NYSE·Uatpcl 1.ssu.es, 1.uiera aod
losers were a~t eQUJ!llY matched.
REG.7.81 .
4.99
Long 8'eeves In •
IO(idl. 100%
cotton cham-
bray or 100%
polyester.
Sizes
S-M·L-XL.
One Oay Ontyl
15.98 ....... , ..
hnt.7.•
Jacket, lizea
S·M·L·XL;
pent, waist
Iii.el 34-«>.
Qiana• dress
shirts
REG.12.99
9.97
Lones1 .. ve
'\ 100%~na•
\ nyt&f. Sizes
· 14*to16*.
Shon11 .. ve,
reg. 10.99, 7.97
men's underwear
3 FOR 3.50 ~EG.3FOA04.fi0
Cotton/polyelter. sfzet S-M·L-XL.
Crew and tube eockl: frta sizes 10.13,
reg. •1 pr •••••• 3 PR.~ OR 790 PR.
men's wool sport coata
. 39.99 REG.•&&
Sport coata and blazer1 In traditional
~with 2·button fronts, center-
beck vent. Sites 38 to 46.
men's dress alacks
~.99 ~EG.•18
f llmOUI maker woven Dacron• poly·
estet /Wool: belt k>opt; lfigtit flare leg:
wide waistband. Walat lfln 32 to 40.
long sleeve
sweat shirts
RE0.12.91
7.97
Showa hour1, ml-
nut•, MCOndl,
month, date. Nelda
no cleening or
winding.'
footed knit
sleepers
REG.&.GO
3.99
Modacryllc/ poly-
ester eolid bot·
toma with print
topa. Sita
1-2-3-4 year1.
.._
men's long sleeve shirts
3.99 REG. 8.81
• I Turtleneck or crew-neck knits In solid
cokn. Ealy-care polyester I cotton in
llztsS-M·l·XL.
. gentlemen's knit shirts
6.99rceo.••
Shott tlMYe, collar end button-front
fn 100'6 •crvUc; Y·necks in 100% poly-
elter. Eny-cere. Sizes S-M·L·XL. ·
tioys' cotton underwear • 3FoR1.99 RE0.3FOR2.71
\
RE0.2.11,
1.99 .·
Shon......,.. CtM
neck knftl. 100%
c:otton.Sizel
S(M). M(10.12'.
L(14-16),
XL(18-2.o).
jr. denim
overalls
BE0..11
4.99
81>-
Pre-Wnhed, cot-
ton indigo blue
denim. SizelS-13.
Sportswear Dept.
mist
curling iron
REG.I•
6.99
On-off IWftoh,
reedy dot, bultt-ln
stand end IWivef
cord.UL
listed.
girls' wedgie b~ot
10.97 REG.13.11
Tricot lining; kM wedge; Wlhlon crepe
ao6e. Bleck 0t camel. Min-made uppers.
Shoe 0epertment
girls' denf m Jeana
5.99REG.tt
ZJpped Wit of~
.iop nvfqn with
100% Decron9
pofyelter
SlzelS·M·
women's chow slippers
1.99 REG. 2.89
815'6 cotton/
t4% polyelt«
ot 100% c:otllon.
Mlnor imper-
fectfons won't af.
feet weer or lookl.
..
women'• sweat shim
6.99 REG ...
DAD WHEELED SON I MILES FOR HELP
Confined to Chair, He Had No Bua Flff
Ar .......
Love conquers
-Trek for Son: 'Terrific'
HOUSTON CAP) -A ert~J~ mu Nld ... wheeled his
} wheelchair ei&bi mi1n to a bc>fpt~ wWl hla alek l+IJICIDtb-old '°"
onbt.S.•1 t••~-=-~~lll!il'tflJla••• t taxi and be eouldll or aUves for tielp wbeD the
baby became.ill.
Ted JWnirez, '4, a f.-mer qrp,t layer wbo hu been eon.
fine6 t. .. lll1hb'I• t• ..... &all ~.W. four lloun to
• mate the trip acrou to~ Be laid a!l 1-yeU'~ld ~ waJted 1 beside him to steady ttie Wbeeldialr.
BIS BAND8 WBBE BUSTEaED and bleedlnc when he &r•
rived at the boepttal, doctors said. .
DoctoN at 8en Taub City.county Hospital checked the
baby's ear lnfectiott and treated the father'• hands. They gave
Ramirez enough money for a tui ride home.
"The father bad nabbed his palms raw puahln1 that
wheelchair and that'• 1ot to be remarkable," Dr. James Watkim,
a pediatric l'ftldent. "We have IO many parents wbo won't btiQ&
their cblldren in when they are stck and lt'a terrific to aee one 10
to 10 much trouble."
" RAMIREZ SAlD THE BABY, Steve, appeared to be cettlna
worse after two day1 of b.ln& alc:k. He aa:ic1 be tried io c~ a ride throup a netshbotbCM>d cllnle but wu tol4he would have to pt to
the bOlpital on h1a own. The clinlc later said there wu a mlau.n·
deratanding. • ·
· An unldentllled woman 1ave him • ride the final ftve blocu oftbetrlp.
''I ably bad 30 cent.a," Jlamirea said. "We stopped about
halfway encf I tiousht a Coketor us to split." . .
.. ONE-WAYB\78FA•Ewoulflbav,ebeenatleuteoeenta.
Ramlra' bees were dama1ed ln 1973 by a falUng roll of
carpet. He tald be receives 10m• wellate and dbabWty pay.
m~ta to tuPPott bis faiDtJ.T ot 10, but the euctamouiit could not be dei.nalftecl.
1SJ TOM BASLEY ... _., ..... ...,.
Forlllfl' concressman Andrew
Hinshaw wu usured today tbt
he need serve oo more tban one
year beblnd ban for convictions
· returned in two 9ranae County
Superior Court trta.ta.
Judae Robert t>. Kneeland
reached that decision after
llstgenlne to the furious objec·
lions of Aaalatant District At·
tomey Michael Caplui, the man
who prosecuted the former coun·
tya111essor.
Diedrich
Received .
$75,000?
By GUY GRANVILLE Of•OMIJ ...... .._.
Aflldavlta filed Thursday ln
Orange County Sqperior Court
support attorney Michael Rem-
ington's contention that about
$75,000 was funneled through him
by the Robert H. Grant Corpora·
lion and Anaheim architect
LeRoy Rose to county SuperV'lsor
Ralph Died.rich.
The alfldavita also show that
Grant offlclala Jn 1974 arranged
for Diedrich to obtain an •.ooo
loan from a Garden Grove bank, 'AttMUmeot.a.ti~ outJlned In tile atftdavits atteisted
to b1 Assistant District Attomey
Michael Capizzi, the Grant
Corporation, parent company of
Anaheim HUll, m., bad a m~or
land uae issue pending before the
county Board of Supervisors.
Purpose of the affidavits made
public Thunclay was to support a
request for search watrants cov-
erln1 bank accounts believed to
reflect the sus~t transactions. Those transactions are cen·
terpieces in a Grand Jury ln·
vestigaUon int.o bribery allega.
Uon• swirling about Diedrich and
Rose.
So far. Reminston and two
Grant officlal1 have received lm-
m\IDity from prosecution iD re-
turn tor their testimony about
their knowledge of t6e tm-74
and early 1975 Grant CorporaUon-
Dledrlch transacUons.
Four weeks aao RemJngton
said Diedrich was loaned $25,000
of a $75,000 Je&al fee paid him by
the company.
At about tbe same Ume, the
Fullerton attorney said, Diedrich
told him to loan f oocl company
executive Wtlliam Moe>re f25.000.
And late tn 1974, RemlnctOD
aaid, ROM 1ave him szo.~ for
unearned le11l fees that was de-
posited in a Palm Sprlnaa bank
and later doled out in cub pay·
menta "of from $2,000 to $3,000''
to Diedrich.
The court affidavits filed by
Caplnl are baaed on the
testimony of three UD.ldentlned
wltn•~ beli~ved to be Rem· 1nMton and former Grant offtclal.I
Rf chard Owen and Robert Grant.
Accordlnc to the d(;cuments,
one ~ldentUled witn8'1 aald be
was utect to pay ROie a pre·•
mlum fOI' aome out ol 1tate real
ettate, request turned dOwn b~
the company.
• bter, the alftdavtta lridlcate,
<lee DJEDaJClf. Pace. AU
A San "Clemente businessman
held a Camp Pendleton Manne
at eunpolnt at the city'• bus depot
Thurld87 until police arrived to
arreat. tile Marla. on au.spiclan tl
robblna the ~eepe.r earlier tn tbeday.
Len Davls called poUee at 4:30
p.m. to report ·he bad .,.en
robbed. ill his Old,, City Plua
shop, Len's Guns i.ad Books, w
W. Ave.; Palizada._
AZ DAIL y P1LOT L' c
WASHINGTON CAP) -Preai-
' dent Carter today 1ent an elec·
tronlc order 2:50 mtles to stoke up
a new atomic reactor to full
power , dramatblng bla pref-
erence for nuclear power pl.anti
that don't make plutonium,
which can be tunled into bombs.
C.,-ter called it \'a b.lstorie day
in thellleof ourcou.ntry."
Energy Secretary James R.
Schleslnger and Adm. Hyman G.
Rickover, chief of the Navy's
n~lear program, joined Carter
in a White House ceremony at
wblcb a ll&ht-water breeder r&-
a c lo r In Pennyalvanla was
directed to be brought frotn 90 •
percent to full power
Dlitly...._. ..........
'AN ARROGANT RIPOFF'
Proaec_utor Capizzi
From Page Al
HINSHAW. •
til at least August. 1978, an in-
terpetation favored by Capizzi.
"Hinshaw has never sliown the
~lightest trace or remorse and
has never apologized for his mis-
conduct," Capizzi protested to-
day. ''Many thousands of dollars·
that should have been collected
from the county tax rolla were
lost because of tbia · maa'i
criminaJ conduct."
Hinshaw was sentenced after
being convicted of acts of bribery·
· committed while be served as
county assessor.
He is servfna concurreDtly a
one year jail term ordered after
hi s conviction on further
criminal charges related to his il-
legal use of county manpower
and materials while servtna as·
county assessor and running for
Congress in urn .
Nazi 'Death'
Calls Banned
The reaetor, at ShlpplD•pon,
.Hll>ts ~ eleetridt,y '°" ~ PIU.buJ'stt area; abOut 25 iD11ea away.
With Schlesinger and RJckover
lootinJ on, Carter stepped to an
electronic, pre11ure•Hn1ltive
blackboard set up near bif desk.
With a piece ol wblte cbali. be wrote:
•'Increase Llaht Water
Breeder Reactor Power to 100 'percent. Jimmy c.ner •••
He paused, then underlined the
word .. breeder" to empbaalze
that the reactor makes snore fuel
than il uses.
T.be blackboard was COMeeted
to a screen at Sblpplncport.
where officials read the Order
and complied.
As Rickover, Carter•s meator
from bis da1s in lb' Na-.y'a
nuclear submarine proiruai. tec-
tured the Presideqt on 00. the te-
actoT works, two d1ala rtaged in
front of Carter's dealt be1an. to move. '
Fro.Page.41
DIEDRICH ••
the witness was asked to hire
Remington as the company's
counsel in its effort to have land
placed in an agricultural pre-
serve released by the Board of
Supervisors.
It is the portion or the fees pald
Remington that allegedly went to
Diedrich and Moore as loans that
is in question.
The amowit actually sent to
Moore by Remin~on was $30,000
and, in fact, was repayment ot
money owed the food company
executive by Diedrich, the 'al·
fidavits indicate.
The Rose $20.000, less taxes, that allegedly seeped through
Remington to Diedrich aJleeedly
was money pald the architect by
the company for land studies.
Diedrich ba.s not responded to
the Rose transaction aJlegation.
However, two weeks ago be ad·
milled receivine the money from
Reminnoo for the so-called loan
and loan repayment to Moore but
s aid it bad notbin1 to do wit4
Remington's Grant Corpont.ion
legal fees.
When told thllt~ '
deposited the m~y in a speclal
account and drawn the two
checks on the account Diedrich
said, "How am J supposed to
know what money went in and
out of what Ytentiniion bank ac-counts?"
"At the time these thfJ)p were
happening, Mike was holdtne lots
of my own money and I assumed
that 's where the checks came
from."
"My .auditors are workine now
to determine just bow much Mike
was holding for ate when these
things allegedly happened "
Diedrich said. '
HOUSl'ON CAP) -A Nazi Par·
ly phone message, whlcb offen
$5,000 for the death of "Jews and
other non-whites" who attack
whites, has been ordered stopped·
by a state judge acting on the re-
quest of a Jewish televlsioo re-porter.
He emphasized that Moore'a
o.nly knowl~ge or the transac·
tion was that be wu being repaid
· money owed him..
The American Nazi Party in
Houston reacted to the order by
saying it will use force if
nece ssary to maintain Ill
freedom of expreaslon.~ -
Nazi members called a neWll
conference Thursday shortly
after District Judge Richard
: Millard approved a temporU)t
: restraloinc order to atop the • telephone messages.
: Students Barred
~ BALTIMORE (AP) -More
than 20,000 junior and se~or bilth • ~ school alud1nta tbrou1bout
~Maryland were h•rred from.
< cla11es Tb\lfld.ay because th6y
could not prove they bad either
1 had measles ~r vaccination.
t; a1a1nat the~.
Aulopsies .
Slated for .,
.r
Tu:oWomen
One of two youpi womOl'I
whose bodies were found Nov. 26
in separate locations .may have
been murdered, Oranee Count.y
Sheri!ra olllce,rs bell~
The Sberift°.& ~..,t iden-tltl~ the .J>&ly of ~ possl~le
murder \llcdm today u J'yne
Cbrlatine Curry, 23, of Costa
Mesa. Pollee withheld her ad-
dre11 at the request of her
parents, witb wbom she resided.
The body of the other woman
was eaid to be that ol Joy Rene
Cloutier, 19, of Fountain VaUey.
Sgt. BUI MIOer said autopeies
are being done on both bodies to
.ttetermine exact causes of
death.
Miller said the Curry death is
being treated aa a homicide
becauae "'lbere is some eviden~e
that ls not consistent with a
natural death. We're trying to
Verify It," Be declined to release
d«iib ... ,r~ ~, . ., ~ • llla1 ~i'CMCcnnposed ~y
was found N~. 2$ in Cle\leland
National Forest territory Just off
the Ort.eta Hlpway by a couple
hlkt,ig h\ the ,,.ea who spotted yie
teinalns '* .. •
?.tiller '•lf4 a lilieelc of dental
records ei)e6{ecf oftlcers to
es ta blisli her fdentltr.
fd'las Cloutier was Identified
from her rmaerprtnta. Her body
was found off the Roadway Nov.
26 by two scuba divers off Pacific
Coast HJghway near Crystal
Cove. mldw_, .between J,.alUJla
Beach and Newport BJ!ach.
Mias Curry was ,..ported mi.u-
in1 AUJ. 3 wben abe dlaappeared
while vialtJ.ng the Capistrano
Beach area..
Miss Coutier was report~d mis·
sloe Nov. 28. two days after her
bod)' was found and before she
was tdenttfied.
Members of the Laguna Beach Hlgb
School jazz ensemble and dance prodUC· tion class stage portion of two·bour
"Phases" concert schedl,lled tonlJbt and Saturd~y night at 8 in the school
auditorium. From left are dancers and
~~rt>•rafi~I
SURVEY ••• ..... rt.,. . .
.. .
bond and• a lease-purchase
measure on the Marcb ballot,
1,695 or 6$ percent, were in
favor. .
Respondents indicated that if
the elecUon ts nof held or fails,
they would prefef the following
remedies to accommodate
enrollmt!nt Increases. listed by
order ol preference:
-Year-round school.
-Use of the federal Ziggurat
building in Laguna Niguel, if
available.
-Double sessions.
-Use of tents and other t.em·
porary housing measures.
-ltllmlnaUon <Jf transporta-
tion fori blgh acbool.atlldenta.
-Big&er cluaes. " ' Pa«b'•'"•D4 othff.itlon-
(eachlic ~eaDbftddnta fatosed y~ar·rou:nd school over all other alt~rnatiyes 1u11ested, but
teact>en ~ dauble HJ~ ...oveqrw~ ·~:.U....re-
port iud4. • • • • -"""'
. · A. 01'9 ~mioa : bo~d election
and a S27 million lease-purdiue
election have been proposed by
district staff for Marc h 7.
trustees will vote on the r~om
rnendations at Monday's school
board pleeting.
•'The superintendent m ain-
talrJs the position that It Is con·
sis tent with ll\e democratic proc·
ess to allow the electorate to
voice their oplnlona officlaJly by
puttin. these Issues before
t.hem, • Thornaley said in a
memo to truatees, noting the
survey•s ~ percent support for placing boCll • bot\d and a leue-
purch'lme"Meaaure bil the tfallot. "' .. , ... ..
Abouf & (JdO ,new stude&l.a ·are
expeeled?fo. movi ln to the
Capiitri&i> -scJiOOl district in the
next ftft years,· accordib1 to
district pn>Jecttoas: CfP\Strano
eleMjmtlry schools are
operalfnl '8t o\*"be)ond c•paclty now, 'and all thtee hl•h acboola are f)eyond enroOment tapacl·
ty, a dlattlct spOkeamu laid.
~
AaaembJ1111an Roa Cordova.
D-EI Toro. tblnka If 1tate parks
offlclals want to build mQre
recreational vehicle campsites
tbey sbouldlooltdown-coutfrom
Dana Point -at Camp
Pendleton.
Whlle J\lley want. to halt state
plans for campcround develop.
ment, 'Cordova aaid'be wants to
delete the state purchase.
."I am more nsplcious, .. he
continued, explaining he fears if
the atate buys the property• tlate
offlcials might 10 ahead and
build the camptround anyway.
That 'a what Cordova said
Thursday durid1 a brief mfftlnt with Orange County Supervisors
Chairman 'lbomu Riley.
Cordova said be ba.s discussed CoJU*-•-tw• R
the expansloo of the San Onofre "' ICC,.; Sta..t~ Beach with the Camp 1'.T
Peqdl comUJandant, wbohaa l .'10 • .w> ~;m O~~ a.... --~ODCJfthe .a~ A~ J • 'J
~=!==n~ .. the ·.:n.;..__J_ ~r.. H t :.
San ODGIN plan rather tbao Ct.a'• ~ uotDlt
rent state plans to buy -40 blufftop
acres overlookint Dana Harbor
and devek>p thetn for recrea•
tional vehicle camping.
Such campgrounds, Cordova
sajd, beloog in an area where
they won't be disruptive rather
than in a community where they
would become an eyesore.
The assemblym an said he
would introduce legislation next
month or seek amendments to an
existing measure to delete the
Dana Point purchase from a '65
million a ppropriation b ill
already signed into law.
In the meantime, Riley said he
is hoping fellow supervisors will
join him in opposing the proposed
blufftop recreational vehicle
park.
Cordova said what he a nd
Riley ate seeking really ls the
same. ..
Inmates .Accepted
MEXJCO CITY (AP) ;_ The
U .S: EmbuSy told Mexican a~tnorltles today that 235
Americans in Mexican Jaila have
been accepted for traosf er to the
United States undet a new
prisoner exchanae treaty.
La~a Beach bullcllJll lmpec-
' ton ...... to--~ do9ooa~~bo operate noisJ tools on .
A city ontinaaee $peeiftes no
work may doDe at construc-
tion alt. on weekends, holidays
or before 7 a.m. and att.r 6 p.m.
duriDa the wee~
Planning director Doug
Schmitz aald there has been an
increue in buUdin1 activity on
the weekends and Nid buildmg
inapecton wW be "red ta&eiag''
some project 1ite1 begl.nlllng
next month. 'lbe tag me'ns work
must be halted at the aite unW
the bulldlnl department lifts the
ban.
"Tbe ordinance does not in-
clude workers who want to use
band sawa or hammers."
Schmitz explained. "It Jaast
means they can'lUS6power tools
and the noae em100t penneate
beyond the boUndartes of the con-atructloo ltte ...
Meanwhile. pollce officers
have been Instructed to cit~
projects th.at do not comply with theo~ce, Scbmltlaaid.
"We're givlnc builders a
montb•s notice before we belin
halting projects.•' be added. •
17
DAD WHEELED SON I MILES FOR HELP
~ned to Chair, He Had No Bue Far•
.,.....,.
Love ~nquers .
Trek for Son: 'Terrific'
HOUSTON (AP) -A crippled man JS~d be ·wbeeled bis
wheelchair eight miles to a hCepJtaJ witb ~ ttck U-mootbJ.ol410D
on hh lap becaµae be dldn' have enoqb-money to take aiM.11 or a
taxi and be~ ~ or ~OC. ~ &M baby became lb. '
Ted Ramirez, 4(, a former carpet la)'er 1Jho bu been ooo-
ftned to a wbeelcba1r two )'ean, Hid lt took .lalJn four boun to
mate the trlp acrou town. Ht 1alcl • •r._-okl acm walk.ed beside him to steady the wheelchair. · ..
BIS HANDS WERE BU8'1'EBBD and bleedinl when be ar.
rived at the bolpital, doctors aald.
Docton at Ben Taub CltJ·CoantJ lbpltaJ checked tbe
baby's ear lnfectlon ud treated the fatber'a bands. They save
Ramirez enoulh mon•Y for a ta-1 ride bome.
"The fatber bad rubbed hl1 palms raw pu1bln1 that
wheelchair and that's 1ot to be, remarkable, .. Dr. James Watkin.I,
a pediatric resident. "We have so m8D1 parerat.s who won't brtna
their children bl when they are sick and it'• terrific to see one ao
to eo JDUch trouble."
BAllll&EZ SAID TRE BABY, St.eve. appeared to be lettlDC
worse after' tWo da.ya of belnl 1lck. He said be tried to cet a ride
through a neiahborhood clinlc but wu told he would have to aet to
the boapltal on hll own. The clinic later aald there waa a milun·
deratandln.1. ·
• An unldentlfled woman 1ave him a ride the final ftve blocks
of the trip.
, .. I only bad 30 cent., .. Ramires said. ••we stopped about
halfway and I bought a Coke 'for us to apllt.,.
ONE-WAY BUS FABE would have been at leuteocents.
Ramlrei' kneel wet'I damaeed in 1973 by a falllnl roll of
carpet. He ul~ be recelvet aome welfare and dilabill~jl.Y·
ment.s to support hil family ol 10, but the exact amount couJ not
be determined . .
ByTOJlf B.ULBY oe•~,...._
Former consreuman Andrew
JDnJbaw wu usured today tUt
be need serve no more Uiu one
year behind ban for convictiom
. returned bl two Orance eounu-
Superlor Court trials.
Judce Robert P. Kneeland
reached that decl1lo11 after
lilt1entni to the fµrioua objec-
tlona ol ANl.atant Diltrtct At-
torney Michael Capb&l1 the man
who pl'Olecuted the former .eoun· tya11eaor.
.. Hlubaw fa lettinl a bre"ak;
but I ~-~ 1>Qbllc desenw a
break, 0 caplal .~ While
u.r11D1 that HIJLlha.w be 1eot back
to ttai. prilon to serve a one to
· l4-year tenn •
~This mu comtu.itted an ar-
ro1ant ripoff ot tbe Oroee Coun· ty taxpayera," Caplul Hid. .
Judae Kneeland'• declalon means that Hinshaw will be free
in April 1f be receives the
customary four moptb1 re·
mlsslon for Rood conduct. He bu
alteady MrYed four months In
tJie mte'1 ChlnO facWt1.
Bia1baw will be allowed to
Hrve the balance of. his Jilll term in the Oraqe County Jafl.
Defense attorney Marlhall
Mor1an told Judae Kneeland that the application of a pri.aon
term ln Blblhaw•a case wu .. .,
Urely inappropriate for thlS tyPe
of defendant.."
Jud.re Kneeland appeared to aaree and told Caplul: .. I c1on•t
think a >'~ ln jail la Jwit a alap oothe~."
He turtber reminded the P!'OI-
ecutor tbat It bad not be8Q b1a m;..
teo.tloa to MOtaee H!Mbaw to more tbaD a one,.., term wbilD
the former Repu.bllcan lelialator
fltat. came before him for MD· t.enclnc. .
Confusion over the exact term ttiat BlDlhiw must aene aroee
when priiOn omciats di.acuaaed
th' ~bUib' of applytq the wrm of Contloe..,ent set out In the
new cletermlnate aentenellla law. Tlaat appUcaUon 1\'0uld have
kept Hlnlhaw la 1tate prboll -.
<See BINSllA.W, Pap, A!)
Surrounded by televl1lon
camera• 'and queatlonln• new1men. three men accused ot
lnvolHmellt ln the tllll.D1 of
Stephen Jobn Bovan of Fountain
Valley went to Or&llle County
Superior Court to off er &Mir
pleutoday.
Tlaeg're Flipped
Richard Finfrock (center), Orange Coast
College student body president, and Henry
Weil (right), Golden West College student
president, watch as a coin is flipped to de.
termine which college will have the first
student member on the Coast Community
College District board. The district's at-
torney. aobert Henry, flipped the coin.
Golden West College won the toss. Stu-
dents there will select a representative to
serve from Jan. l to June 30, when OCC
will take the post. State law requires the
district to add a non-voting student
member to the board.
Fra.PageA1 · BB Man Arrested DIEDRICH .. In Peru Dl-ug Rap -serve released by the Board of
Supervisors.
It 1s the portion of the fees paid
Remington that allegedly went to
Diedrich and Moore as loans that
js in question. '
The amount actuaJly sent to
Moore by Remington was $30,000
and, in fact, was repayment of
money owed the food company
executive by Diedrich, the af.
fidavits indicate.
The Rose $20,000, Jess taxes,
that allegedly seeped through
Remington to DiedricR allegedly
was money paid the architect by
the company for land studies.
Diedrich bas not responded to
the Rose transaction allegation.
However, two weeks ago be ad-
mitted receiving the money from
Reminllt<>n for the so-called loan
and loan repayment to Moore but
said it bad nothing to do with
• Remington's Grant Corporation
-~=!;_~SEL
A Huntington Harbour
areheologist about to board a
jetliner for home with an allee~
4.5 pounds of cocaine worth
$150,000 concealed in rate
artifacts is in jail today ln Lima,
Peru, al<)Qg with three traveling
companiom.
The arrest of Dr. Jason
Wallace Smith, 35; a female
companion, Cris Annette Payne,
24. of the Belmont Shore region of
Long Beach, and two other peo-
ple from HunUngton Beach was
announced Thursday evening.
Huntington Beach Police U .
Bruce Young, of the narcotics de-
tail, said the two other .Orange
Coast residents• JcleotiUes weto
l.DlaVallable. ' '"" -,
Smith's Huntinat.oit.. H.arbow
home is a wattrfront con-
dominium unlt Jlear Sam•s
Seafood Restaurant.
Eseape Foiled
Gunmen NablJed on Ferry
VASHON ISLAND, Wash. {AP) -An island ls no
place to stage a holdup, especially when the ollly
public transpo'1ation available for e.!JCape is the state
ferry. . · ~d waiting to greet it at dockside are the police.· :
,. legal fees. .
.. When told that Relil~ ba4
deposited the money in a special
account and drawn the two·
cbecta on the account, Diedrich
_Smith. o1 ~1el!l>J:.:'""':'I ailft ·the others"lN"beta 'by"P
Ar. and held. on $10 000 bohdieacrh kl Kin~
· Cowtt.J'. I' investigatioWOf arm~~19ndt rb
dayw'e 1;Ary Silvernail~28. DfJb&Tb ~ ~ anct · t James Johnson, 21.
said. '1,fow = m~. t.o • know What \n . W.l .sD;ind
out of ~l:Re lnstoa ·'*'*.-c· counts?" ' '
"At the Ume theee thlnes were
happeninJ, Mike was boJdlne Iota
of my own money and I aasUJJJed
that's where the-checks came
from." ·
.. My auditors are wortlnc now
to de~nnine just bow much Mike
was holding for me when these
things allegedly happened,"
Diedrich said. .
· He emphasized that Moore's
tJnly knowledge of the transac-
tion was that be was being repaid money owed him.
"There are two sides of this
story and I'm not yet ready to"
give mine in full ~etall,"
Diedrich 1a1d when (Onfl'Onted
with no bail set in connection
with the alleged drug-smuggling case.
Be •ald sm· whose'"af1lli•
lion with aJlY' unlteUI~ ol' ·
lege was uncerbla todar· WM given permission o do
arcbeoJogical research in the An-
dean country.
Investigators said Smith and his companions had been in Peru
a week and a half.
Agenta of the U.S. Juttice·
Department's Drug Enforce-
ment Administration, Hunt.-
ington Beach and San Diego
police detectives combined
forcu along with Peruvian
federal authorities to in-vestigate ...
lnvestigatOrs said Smith and
bis group were juat preparinl to
leave the country when they were
detained at tmt Lima airport.·
with Remin&ton's venlon of the , Agent Joe~ ottbe Drui
transactiom. Enforcement AdzplJUstrauon, ·' Remington, Diedricb's salcltoclaybewuunanr.wbat, •
'personal and business lawyer fot ltby'Southem c.tlfornJ• edut•
" 10. years, made it clear that b» ..• Uonal lnstitutiOQ~1DPloya Smith. underataodlne of the cub floi# -
was that loans were belne made
to Diedrich that would be repaid
when "some real estate deala" , were completed.
However, he admitted, the
• loans bate not been repaid.
,.. Remlngtoa, Diedrich and four
' other men were indicted July 1
" on conspiracy charaes related to
alle1ed vlolaUona of state cam-. .. palp regulations.
" •• Remington settled a~counta •
.. four wee.ks ago 1l'bt11 he pleaded
to a am,Je charge. 'f.U ,(lDed
.. $1.S,000 and placed on three ye.an
probatioo. ~ ·
·A cbec)t of Oranie Cout nea ooUeges and unlventtiea tailed to
reveal bis name ob faculty rosters.
I
_Missing Meaan ..
Found Dead
' . In MofVllai118
A C-. Meee tPaft mllabUI
almost a "9k ta U.. SU OalM'Ml
Mountalas wa1 found dea4
Tbunday at the bOttom ot a
rocblide, a 1.o. A.lifelel Count7
Stibifh ........ ...,•ate toda7.
Nq .. foilplU 11.IUl~mU..
deaUi Of~ HmDaa Wulf
3$, of 1111~Tanaser Dtive, .. ,4
Set. 9-Roiera. ~e •aid the
causeW death ll 14ntatl~ lllt-
Ja.
They were accused of beaUng a Vubon Islandr
Jewelry maker at his.itortr• a.dm¥*11ilidlGJ'tllQ!inlf
$3,lll»'tn' cUb, jewelry and guns, Ge 1581~ ... ~., · ..
A eetaway attem.;l aboard fem~e"rt.from·
private boats the only way.off the lstand--waa foiled
when the f enj Tillicum looped back and forth across
Puget Sound to give police time to assemble.
r ..... raseAl
BOVAN •••
LONDON (AP)-Iaraell
Prt.me Mtn•ster Mena.hem
Belin,.wbo u. caerrilla
leader battled the Britisk
in Palestine 30 years aio.
arrived here today for a six-clay vtalt. It was bis
fir1t officlal visit to Britain as prime ml.niater.
Security was tight for the
visit, which ls to include
six daya of talka with
Prime Minister James CaJJagbao and otbu aov-emment leaden.
Tbe vJ1Jt had i,ten .POO~ H"'° .. "b bet-aa:se ~ an Ptal·
dent Anwar Sa '• vfliUo Jeruaalem.
•
Two men who claim they were
overcome by fuma while using
the rest room at a Co$ta Mesa reataunm sued the operators of
tbe f acU~ty Thursday for
dama1e1 to be determined in trial court.
Named as defendanta in the
Oraqe Oowit7 Superior Court
Jawautt filed by Wayne Clement
and Cbarl., Cook are W.R.
Grai:e apd. CompaQy, Vu West
Servtees, Inc., and Reuben'• PlaQtho111e Reat.uraut, 155
AcJ•1111Ave.
• Tbe two mea claim a dlQ:dcal
UNd bl Uae ~ room OI,) .Jan. i. 19'1'1, caused them to become
nauseous, diny and abocted aDd
was respomfble for a tempotUT
Jou of eyestabt.
Love Coopers
Trek for Son: 'Terrific'
HOUSTON (AP) -A crippled man said Ile wheeled Ma
wheelchair eight miles to a hospital with hll lick 1•·mootb4d aoo
on bia 1-p became he didn't have enoup money to~ a INl or a
taxi and.be coQl nach f .. or,ftlaUYJI f~ WI wliliQ t.-
baby beta.me ill. . ·
Ted Ramirez, '4, a former carpet 1-yer wbo bu been con-
flned to a wbeelcbair two )'earl, 11ld 1' toot bim four Mun to
make the trlp across towa. lie •aid aa •year.old .aaa walked
beside him to1leady tbe wheelchair,
HIS HANDS WERE BUSTDED and bleedln' when be JU·
rived at Ute hospital. docton said.
Docton at Ben Taub Qt,y.County HoapttaJ cbected the
baby's ear Infection and treated t.be father' a bands. Tbey 1a\to
Ram iru enou&h money for a taxi rlde homo.
"The father bad rubbed hia palms raw pqaliint that
wheelchair and that's got to be remarkable," Dr. Jamt1 Watkins,
a pediatric resident. "We have so many parents who TfCW't bri~
their cblldftn in when they are lick and lt •• terrlftc to see OQe 10
to ao much trouble.''
aAMDtEZ SAID fllB BABY, 5tefle, appeare<t to be fettlq
wotae aft.er two days of belna lick. He aald be tried to get a ride
tbrQug,_ a nelgbborbood c)iDlc but was told be Yf~d have to get1o
tbe hospital on bit own. Tbe clinic later aald there was a milun·
derstanding.
· An unidentified woman save hlD1 a ride the (lnal ftte blocks
of the trll). .
"I only had 30 cents," Ramirez said. uwe atoPPed about
hallway and I bought a Coke for us to split."
' ONE-WAY. BUS PUE would have been a.tlea1UO cents.
Jtamlrei' knees were dama1ed in l973 by a fallinl roll of
carpft. He nld be receives 10me welfare ancJ dllabillty j•Y· me~ to IUppOrt his f am Uy of 10, but tbe en et amount couJ not be determined.
8yTOM BASLEY °' .. °""' ......... Former conareumao ADdrew
Hinshaw was assured today that
he neecl sene no more than one
)'ear behind bars for convictions
· returned to two Oran1e County
SupetiorCourt trials.
Judee Robert P. Kneeland
reached that decision after
llstgening to the furious obJec·
Uons of Assistant District At-
torney Michael Caplul, the man
who i>roeecutecl the former COUD·
tyassessor.
Dieftrich ~
Received
$75,000?
~'Htmbaw it a•tttnl a break, b\at I think tbe_pubf!c deterv .. a
break," Caplul1ptj)te.ited while
ur11n1 that Hinsha"Y be seat back
to 1tate pri9on to Se('Ve a one to
l'-yearterm.
"This znan committed an ar·
ro1ant ripoff ot the Ora118• Coull·
ty taXJ>'ferl," Caplui a.id. •
Judge Kneeland'-t d~cislon
means that Hinshaw will be tree
in April if be recelves tbe
customaTY four months re·
mission for «ood conduct. He hu
already served four mootba ID
Orange Count)' SberUf'a in·
veatigaton are seekin1 a suspect
with· a milltary haircut th the
wake of twp lddnappln11 and a
rape ti\ the aoutb Oran10 County
area Thursday nl&ht, ~thortties
reported today.
The sus~t aJlececlly entered
an 18-year-old El Toro girl'.s car
at tnilepolnt about 6 p.m. at
Muirlands Boulevard and Ridge
Route Drive.
the ltate'a Chino facility.
Hinshaw will be allowed to
serve the balaace of b1I Jail term
in the Oran1e Count)' Jail.
Defense attorney Karaball
Mor1an told Judie tcne'1a6cl
that ttie appllcatton of a plbon
term in Hinlhaw'a cue wu •w.;.
tlrely inappropriate for um type
of defendant."
Judie Kneelaod appeared to asree and told Captul: "I don't
think a year in Jail ii Just a al.Ip
on the wrist."
He further reminded tbe proa-
.,..,, ................
'AN ARROGANT RIPOFF'
Prosecutor C•plzd
F...-Pa,,eAJ
mNSHAW. •
til at least August, 1978, an in-
terpetaUoo favored by Capiui.
·'Hinshaw has never shown the
slightest trace of remorse end
has never apologized for his mis·
conduct," Capizzi protested to-
day. "Many thousands of dollars
that should have been collected
from the county tax rolls were
lost because or this man's
criminal conduct."
Hinshaw was sentenced after
being convicted of acts of bribery
committed while be served as
county assessor.
He is serving concurrently a
one year jail term ordered after
his conviction on further
criminal charges related to his ii·
le.gal use of county manpower
and materials while serving as ·
county assessor and running tor
Congress in um.
Man Slays 2,
Kills Himself
PASO ROBLES (AP) -A
man despondent after being
served divorce papers shot and
killed his wife and a neighbor,
then turned the gun on himself
and committed suicide
authorities say. '
Orville Brooks, 46; his
estranged wife, Ettie, and a
neighbor, Katherine Mantser, 38,
were pronounced dead at the
~ne'I'hursday. . • ..
San Luis Obispo C"nt~
sheriff's officers aaid Brooks got
the divorce papers Wednesday
rU,bt. They said a wttnea1 quc>Yld
Brooks aamlQl,Jlm~· In•
samethlottai•ke '~',.Plrf re'ceiving the"<focu enti.
I',.._ Page AI
NORTON •••
personally loaned his campaip
'6.600.
It wu alleged that Norton re-
ceived $5,000 or that sum from in·
<licted loan broker Gene Conrad,
but failed to indloate that source
on the finance report or when he
testified before the crand juury •.
Perjury charges Wttt! filed
after Norton 's campaiin
manager Gary Newmyer al·
Jegedly told the grand jury that
the money came from Conrad.
Newmyer earlier s~ed a report .tndlcaling th,at the money waa
Norton's. .
. Norton, a former executive
lltde to county Supervisor
J..aurence Schmit was a
Republican candldat~ for-the
state senate 1n 1976.
·Students Barred
BALTIMORE (AP) -More
· than 20,000 Junior and senior bllh ~chool students tbrouahout
.Maryl•nd were barred fronl ·~leases Thursday becaua~ tbey
could not prove they hld eltber
•bad measles or vacclna1lon. a1ainst the dl.aease.
WASHJNGTON <AP) -Prell·
dent Carter toda.J a nt aa lee·
tronlc order~ JDJlu to atote up
• new atomic reactor to IUU
power. dramaUthll bl• pret· erence for nuclear power pJanta
that don't make plutonium,
which ean be turned tnto bombl.
Carter called It"• hlat.orio da1
in the lifeoloureountry ,1•
Energy Secretary James R.
Scbleslnger and Adm. Hyman G.
Rickover, chief of the Navy's
nuclear PfO&ram, joined Carter
in a White House certmony at
which a llght-wat.er breeder re-
actor in Pennyalvvaia w••
directed to be bn>u1bt from· 90
percent to full power.
The reactor, at Shippingport,
helps produce electricity for the
Pltllburgh area, about 25 miles
away.
Wlth Schleaiq'er and Rickover
looking on, Carter stepped to an
electronic, pre11ure-1enaltive
blackboard set up near his desk.
With a piece ol white chalk, be
wrote:
"Increase Light Water
Breeder Reactor Power to 100
percenL Jimmy Carter."
He paused, then underlined the
word "breeder" to emphasise
that the reactor mates more fuel
than it uses.
The blackboard was connected
to a screen at Shippingport,
where officials read the order
an~ complied. As Rickover, Carter's mentor
from his days in the Navy's
nuclear submarine program, lee·
tu red the presldent on how the re·
actor works, two dials rigged in
front of Carter's desk began to
move.
l'rom Page AJ
DIEDRICH ••
and, in fact, was repayment ot
11'oney owed the food company
execuUve by Diedrich, the af.
fidavtts indicate.
The Rose $20,000, less taxes,
that allegedly seeped through
Remington to Diedrich allegedly
was money paid the architect by
the company for land studies.
Diedrlch has not responded to
the Rose transaction allegation.
How,ver, two weeks a10 ~ad
mitted reeeiv=· ~-,none.J s Jl4; ln~ fOI": alblct
a:d'ioan repaymen to Moore b\I
said it bad nothin1 to do with
ReminstoG'~ Grant Corporation legal fees.
When told th.-t ~Q'.lfp.gtolftt
deposited the ~er Jn a special
account and drawn the two
checks on the account, Dtedrlcb
said, "How am I supposed to
know what money went in and
out of what Remington bank ac·
count.5?"
"At the time these things were
happemn,, Mike W8I boldln1 Jolt
of my own money and I assumed
that's where the checks came
from."
"My auditors are workini now
to determine Just bow much Mlke
was holding for me when these things allegedly happtned .,
Diedrich said. ' .
He empbast.zeil thai )loon's
only ~wledgft of the tranaac·
tion WP that he was beine repaid
money owed him.
"There are two sides of th1a
story and I'm not yet readv to gt ve mtne ln full detafl,t•
Diedrich said when confronted
with Remington's venlon of the
transactions.
. Reminiton, Diedrich'•
penonal and busineaa lawyer for
10 yean, made it clear that bit
undtntandln1 ot the oath now
wu that loam were beinl made
to DledrldJ that would be repaid
when "IOme real estate d.eala''
were com~ .
However, he admitted, the
Joans baVd oot ~repaid. • RemJnctca, Diedrich. and tour
other men were ~cted July 1
on conspiracy charges related to
alleted violations of atate cam·
Palen reautatlona. Remtntton settled aoeoants
four ~ aio when h• pleadtd
to a ·~ charge, wu flrMd '15,000 and plac:ed po three ~..,. probatlob.
-
E'ro. Page AI
SURYEY.-:..
bolld and a lease-purchase
measure on the March ballet.
1,695 or 65 percent.· w•re In favOJ',
Reapnndenta lndlcated tUt lf
the election ii not held ar fails,
they would prefer t;be followtni
rem ediea to accommodate
enrollment lncreaaa, listed by
order of pll'ference:
-Year-round school. ·
-Use of the federal Zlcgurat
building in Laguna Niguel, if
available.
-Double sessions.
-Use of. tents and other tem-
porary boualDg measures.
-EllmiDaUon ot transporta-UOn lor ,..., ... ~ .iudenta. • ~lei~.
Paren 1 anCI other non-
teachin1 respondents favored
year-round school over all other Uernat~ ... ·fllested, but ~·rs 4lfiM <IOUf>le sesslo9
tlYU 'year~ id.Joo!, the re-Pott lald. . .
A $49 milllcm bond election
and a $27 million lease·purcbase election have been proposed by
district staff for March T. Trust~ will vote on the recom-
mendations at Monday's school
board meeting.
"The auperintendent main· taios tbe poliUon that It i. eoa-sistent with the democratic proc· en to allow the electorate to
voice their oplnloaa offtclally by
puttln1 tbeae l11ues before
them," Thon11Jey aatd ip •
meQlo to trulteet DOW\.& the
.urvey's 65 &*'cenl.•Ul'iDolt'Jbt-
.Plsdnl both. -~a· lela't purchase mwa.w&-. · ~
About 8.000 n 'If ..re:
expected to move iJl to tu
Caplatrano school dlatl1tt ID. UMr
next. ftTe >'•an. accol'dlbl to dilt.rlct projectloas. ~
elementary 1cboo1''~•-~•
OJ»'J,'atlq at or beyood. oapadtY.
DOW, and all thJ'ee hlCh tchoola are beJ'tl)d enrollmeit capaeJ.
ty, a dt.trtct fPOketllDtQ lal~ The Capt.truo Ualfted DW
trict ta eompdMd of 20' l)el'Cent
of Oranae Coun~ land, mucb ol
tt 1UU to be develweCS. It in·
clQdu tbe communities of Sail
Cleme!!te1 San Jue Caplltrano,
Dana rom~ Capiltrano Beach.
Laguna NllQel And patt of IQ;...
sion Vt«lo.
dfttb .
Mlllv Aid the CUtry death 11
beln• treated •• a bomlcldt
because "There i. .-om• evidence
tbat u ~ cooatsient wJth a
natural deeib We're trytna ~
verify it." He ~ecllned to "10U4t
det.alla.
Ml11 C\lrr'Y'a decompoud bod1
waa found .Nov. 215 Jn Cleveland
Natlo'* Forest territory Jut off
the Orteca HJgbway by a couple
bikini in the area who a potted tbe
remalna.
Miller aald a check ol dental
record1 enabled olflcera to
establish her ldeat.lty.
Miu Coatlet wu ldenWled
from bee ftn&erprtnts. Her bQd7
was found off the Road•aY Nov.
26 by two scuba dlven off Padtlc
Coast ;;way near Crystal
CoH, IYi•Y ~twtel\ Laauna llucb an l'i«iWPOtl Je,cb.
Mils ~ WJl$ repcried Rl.iAI·
ina Aug. 3 w1',en •ho dlNppeared
while villUnl the Capjstrauo · Beach area.
Mils Coutler WU NpOrted mls-•iD• NOY. 28, two days alter ber
body wu found and before &be
waa ldenWled.
F,....PflfleAJ
BLEACHERS
He said tho bleachers will be
enclosed to Cive tbe atbool addl·
donal atoft1e •l*ce.
In additfoo to 1elllu1 tbe tan-
dy ba"· =~ne.t111 Jre atktn11<~ riftdi~; ~pdlW'· blUttodt'to
pledge a mlnimwn ol one cent
fot e"'7 dollar ralaed i,, atu-
de'1ta W. f~a .&1a•4{!11e!'C
""The 'ilUleat! who ~!tY•~ .Pie moat c~ ~Wlo ,a&ali Of
airllne tf*tl to mw tleau
and puaee to the. Super Bowl.
Other prizes, ran1Jn1 from din.
ner and tJcketa to Beatlemania
to gift certlllcates, al.lo are be-
ing ottered.
Tbe candy ban come with a
coupon for a free hamburger,
wfth tbe purehue of one ham· bureer, from a local restaurant.
***
TWO EXCllANGE Cl.VB members settled a bet Thurs-
day over tut week'1 UCLA·USC football c:oateat.
Nick DlGiuro-a UCLA fu-lost the bet to Dr. Lou
Hulwanter but had the last laugh anyway.
"I promlaed I would pay off in the coin of the realm and
that's exacUy what 1 plan to do -pay you in t.be coin ol my
realm," DlGlurotold Haalwanta-.
The loser paid off m lira.
lly IACDE HYMAN Ot•°"'Y ..........
A brawl durtn1 a drlokine
party at a Co.ta Mesa farm labor'
camp today left one man dead,
another man wounded and a
third Jailed on suspicion of
murder, police said.
However, lancua1e difflcultles
were Impeding the inveatiaatloo
and Jdeotitiea ol t.be victim and
suspect were not available early
today.
Lt. Georse Lorton said police received a call about 3:30 a.m. regardlnl a knife fipt at t.be
labor eamp at 639 Sun.flower Ave.
He u1d pnli:mJDU'7 investi1•· tlon revealed that one victim,
known only u Miranda. bad been
kniled and bit on the bead durtna
a fi&ht. Several men then 1-the
camp, return1na a few mlbu.tes
later wltb a rtlle and •hooUDi
and kllllng another man.
A deecriptloa of the. au,apeda' veblcle was broadcast, Lt.
Lorton said, and Sani. Ana •
• police apotted the car ~t 1:30
a .m. outalde a second farm labor
camp at Columbine and Kain
street.I In Santa Ana.
He n1d one suspect, known m-
ly u Pancho, wu arrested aDd a
second man escaped OD foot.
Coroner's offtclals and police
said they were not al)le to .live addtttonal Information until Spanilb·~ ofllcen could
lntet"Vlew bear• 10 liDd 20 wit-nesses and tbe smpect.
Two Deaths.ToJd
HUNTSVULE,AJ~ ~P)
An 18·)'ear-oJd unempJoyed
lhip)'ard laborer, Alex Jhfner,
went to bts motber·ln-law's
llome. •bot bla H·1ear.old
estra111ed wUe Dtbble to _.
with a sawed.off sbotpD and
later tilled himMlf aa Cllftlc9s
used tear au to rout him, pol1ce say •