HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-05 - Orange Coast Pilot• ·ire ar
•:;.
Tougft (;op 'Scalped'
•
On TV to .Raise Funds ..
MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBERS, 1977 ..
VOL. n. ltO. -· a HCTIC*I •• ll'AHI
• • • •
U oS. Puts Curbs on Lance Bank
Two Held
Newport Man
Slain in Hawaii
HONOLULU CAP>--Those
who knew Corona del Mar resi-
dent John Hagan said the young
man had become almost ob-
sessed with recovering personal
possessions stolen in separate in-
Viejo Rapist
Still Hunted
By Officers
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers hunted throughout the
weekend for the man who raped a
Mission Viejo housewife Friday
nlght and forced h er to
participate in unnatural sexual
acts on the front seat of her car.
Deputies said the 32-year-old
victim told them that she was
grabbed by her attacker and held
in a choke hold as she left home
and got into her car.
She said her abductor then
drove her to the San Onofre area
or San Diego County where she
was raped and sexually humiliat-
ed before being thrown out or her
vehicle. A passln1 motori!t took
her to police.
Officers described tb• tnan
who still has her car as belnf ln ·
his mid ·20s, wit.h a blond
military-style haircut •nd a
blond mustache. She told officers
he was wearing a green Marine
Corps type shirt, a one-day
erowth ol beard and an "extreme-
ly offensive body odor.''
cidenls since he arrived here
three weeks ago.
Hagan, 21, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Hagan, of 3007
Harbor View Drive, was slashed
to death at a rural Patu beach
park Saturday night. after accus-
ing a man of stealing his camp-
ing gear.
Two m en were In police
custody today in connecticn wit.h
the incident. Their names were
not immediately released.
No one saw t.he actual knlfings.
But witnesses who had been
camping wit.h Hagan said the vic-
tim had run after a van Saturday
ni~ht to confront the 34-year-old
driver regarding a Nov. 23 theft.
Hagan bad been seekln& the
driver for more than a week, of-
ficials said. Hacan reportedly
got into a scuffle with a man and
his 19·year-old brotber-in·aw,
then fell to the ground.
His friends said they ran after
the two men once they realized
Hagan bad been hurt. One of the
friends dragged the men back to
where Hagan lay.
Hagan was pronounced dead at
the scene.
The friends Hagan had met
mainly campers like himself -
said the younc man had been
robbed of $50 while watchina a
aurfin1 toumamertt on Oahu's
north shore in late November. The day before Thanksgiving,
Nov. 23, someone stole Hagan's
camera, a wat~h. a small porta-
ble stove, a knife and a key for a
locker at the Honolulu Jntema-
Uonal Airport while he was surf·
(See KNIFED, Pa1e AJ)
Chief Se,~lped
'Tougli, Cop' Help• Kida
CONCORD, N.lt. (AP> -A hardllne pollce chief
with an unusual appronch to civic duty has bowed to
the wishes of dozens of Concord raidents and allowed
his officers to shave his head on television.
It was estimated that about half the 30,000 resl·
dents of Concord watched a ca,ble television telethon
Saturday night to ralae money for the Boys Club
when Chief David Walchak made h1s hair:v sacrifice.
"He's a tough cop who doesn't do thla kind or~
thing. I'm still amazed he did it," said Joe Alosa, a
friend or the chief.
The Boyt Club w11 ln severe financial trouble.
Club of(lcials saii:S unless at least $t,OOO was raised,
th 300 boys who use the club would be back on the
attcetl.
Tho master or ceremonies Of the club's money
raising telethon Jok1naly uked Walchak if he would
agree to h vo his head shaved for cash. and the chlet
eaid yes. Jt nett d $1,100.
I Million Dollar Photo
That's 4,000 pounds of marijuana on which
Corona Del. Les Scott is sitting. The pot
was seized in a raid in Corona last July
and authorities incinerated it in Colton
this week. Its value was estimated at $1
million and police couldn't resist the urge
to record the haul with a photo. Wielding
the camera is Riverside County Deputy
District Attorney John Chessell, right.
FWeHitsHar.hourHOme
$50,000 Blaze Blamed on Child With Matches
By AllntVR R. VINSEL 0t•oa11, ............
Flames blamed on a child play-
ing wlth mat~hes ..devastated a
dentist's waterfront home in
Huntlngton Harbour Sunday,
caualna *5(),000 damage and for a
Ume tbreatenJng a 36-foot yacht.
tnveatiaators said today the
entire third story of Dr. Jam es L.
Kloss' residence at 18652 Wan-
derer Lane burned before the
10:'6 a.m. blaze wu controlled.
One flrefi1hter, Capt. Rod
Rle1er, required !M»pital treat-
ment for lnJuri~ sustained when
he fell while' belplna haul
hoeellMI up a 11tlrway· lnslde
the house. .
":l'be minute the crandmotber
was informed of the flre she
evacuated the children," said
Fire Capt. Ropr Hosmer.
He and Captain Rle1er said the
fire orlalnatod ln the third story
ol the marina home on Humboldt
Island.
"I guess the entire third story
Is pretty much burned orr," C•pt.
Hot mer said today.
Smoke was visible for miles u
the home owned by Dr. Kloes,
whose practice is in Anaheim,
burned. "We were the first ones to 1et
water on it.'' says Oranae County
Harbor Patrol spokesman Bobby
Walsh who reapoftded to the
scene irom Sunset Aquatic Parle
headquarters aboard Ule depart·
ment '• tire boat. •
Stock
Trading
Halted.
WASHINGTON (AP) -•
Federal bank reauJatora today •
announced a lo.day t.rad.illl SUS·
pension in the stock or the Na·
tional Bank of Georgia, the bank
once headed by Bert Lance, who
resigned in September as Preli·
dent Carter's budget director.
John Heimann, the comp·
troller of the currency and chief
regulator of naUonal ban.ks, aald
the trading suspension was or-
dered ''following a written re-
quest by the bank ln view of re,
cent Increased trading volume
and price movementa in the
marketfor the stock. • . "
Heimann said another rea.90Cl
for the suspemton was to allow
time for the public to leam fully
about necotiatlons by Lance to
sell a port.loo or bis aubstantlal
holdinp of bank stocb.
The suspension was effective
lmmedJately.
Lance, president of the bank
before joining the Carter ad·
ministration this year, bolds
about 200,000 shares, or about 16
percent of the bank's stock.
A sbarpdropin the value of the
shares after Lance became
director of the Office of Manage.
ment and Budget started the
chain of events that led to ques-
tions about bis financial dealings
and to h1s resignation ln Sep-
tem ber.
Although Lance has returned
to private life, he remains an un-
official adviser to Carter, his
close friend.
The lnveati1ation into bis
financial dealings is still belq
conducted by several govern-
ment a1encles.
Shares of the National Bank d
Oepr1ia, one of Georala 's
<See IANCE, Pace AZJ
'
Weather
Captain Riefer was treated at
Huntln1ton ntercommuntty
Hoapltaf for a sprained wrist Ud
released, firemen eald.
The occupanti or tbe homo, a
6-year-old boy whOM experl"*1-
. t•llon aa1trttdly aet off the
bl11e, h11 older 1l1ter and thelr
1randmother neaped harm, ln-
ve1t11aton Hid.
He and fellow Harbor
Pat.rolmen Ken Furell and Oen·
nls PoUlson aped the 1.5 mlle1
from tbdr offices to the scene by
boat after the smoke plume wu
spotted.
Wallh aald the ral~I bluo · wu thr,afenlng the Klon
ram11y•1 moored JM..foot 1allboat,
1'ooth Fairy, which the Harbor
Patrol boat towed to Hf ety wttb
ohly mom'°ta to apal'e.
Low clow:ll with loc&l
dense f os nlaht and early
morning houri, otherwise
basy sunshine. Lowa 48 to
53. Hl•h• 'l'uesday from
mtd-608 at the beaches to
mld-70s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
. TMrl'• '"°'° m them thar
hUit oftd Oi"aftOt Cood rcd-
dnf• ON~ olf to fftjoJ/ .. tM•~ • .ff«~CJ. <See FJBE, Pa1e Al) ... .. )[ ... ,,.
'-'-=_.;;D~A~IL~1-~;...=LO.;;..;..T~~....::S~~~~M~o~n-d~'X~·-o.c.....,c.1_m_.., ___ s._1_1~n I I Suspect ·'Wi.lillraws'· ,.-----_____..._ __ _
I • ~ •
Removal
•
Of BOoks
'Sam' Told of A.dmcion to Killini
NEW YORK CAP> -David
Berkowiti, charged with bein&
the "Son ot S.m" killer, has
totally withdrawn from reality,
the New York Poet re~ to-
day.
But in diaries written during
the four months in his isolation
c~ll at Kings County Hospital, the
Post said, Berkowitz ad milted be
is .. addicted to killlna." .
Boy Injured
ln Opening
Letter Bomb
OAKLAND (AP)-A.teen·a1e
boy remained in critical condi·
lion after a letter bomb be found
on a bus stop bench exploded in
his hands, allthoritles saJd.
Police U . Hay Birge said Ale·
1andros Morales, 13, and five
boys had just left a movie theater
at ubodt 12:20 a.m. Sunday when
l hey spotted the envelope.
The device exploded when
Morales opened it, Birle said.
The boy underwent abdominal
s urgery and was treated for
burns, metal fragments in bis
t•yes and Injuries to bis arm,
hospital information officer
Susanne Coffey reported.
Members of the Morales fami-
ly said Alex lost his left hand and
possibly tus eyesight.
David Zamora, 16, also of
Oakland, was hospitalized in sta.
hie condition with metal rraa·
ments in his eye. Three other
Morales children and a friend
were released after emer1ency
treatment.
"After the movie we were
walking and we passed a bus
stop. There was an envelope on
the bench there and it caught my
brother's eye. We thought there
m 1ght be some money in it for
us," .said Ale1andros' brother,
Alfonso, 16.
"'Alex opened 1t and it just blew
up. Everybody flew back except
for Alex and David. They just fell
nghl there. My eyes were burn.
mg and stuff. I was just trying to
hold back my little sister and my
httle brother."
His sister Rocio, 14, aald the
bomb was in a brown or manila
envelope with no wriUn1 on it
and was inside a plastic baa. She
said it blew up as Alex started to
pu 11 out somelhin1 which looked
like" an old shredded book."
Birae said police had "no sus·
pt•cts and no motive."
Front Page A I
) KNIFED. • •
mg at Sunset Beach. The thief
ulso stole fl6.
Ilagan learned later that the
thief then used the locker key to
take his fishing gear and more
personal belongings.
About that time, while lnqulr·
ing about his kayak, which bad
been s tored in a. container
i;hipyard, Hagan was told that
two persons had twice tried to
claim the boat.
After the second theft, one of
his friends said she saw Hagan
··walking up and down the beach
crying."
The people who knew hlm
described Hagan as a quiet,
serious person who loved body
surfing, fishing and running.
Fro. Page AJ
FIRE •••
The Seal Beach Fire Depart-
ment alao sent a unit to help quell
the flames.
Dama1e to the· three-atory
waterfront home itself amounted
to $40,000, while Dr. KJosa and ht.
family lost $20,000 ln belonglnp,
Investigators ettimated. ·
O"ANGI COAST . •
DAILY PILOT
The Post aot coplea of the
handwritten diaries and prtnled
excerpt.a aloft& with pleb.area
ta.ken INJdo Lbe priloD ward of
the bOlpital.
"Now that I am imprisoned I am quite content," Berkowitz
wrote. "l feel that Sam has Jost
some of his hold on me and I also
aee Sam cannot use me u a tool
!or deatrucUoo. . . .
Dlpro..at IHn
David K. E. Bruce. veteran
American diplomat whose
posts included mainland
China, da'<l loda~ of a heart
attack at Gl•orgetown
Univcrsitv Medical Center
in Washin°gton. He was 79.
Marine, Teen
Charged in
Kidnap, Rape
Orange County Sheriff's of·
flcera have booked an El Toro
Marine and a lS·year-old male
juvenile from that area on
charges of rape and kidnapping
after investigating the reported
abduction of two 15·year-old girls
in the El Tol"O area.
Marine David Edward Coff.
man. 19, was booked Into the
county jail after being linked to
the Incident reported Friday. HJa
alleged companion Is In Juvenile
Hall.
Investigators said they believe
Coffman and the boy picked up
the two girls as they walked
alone the edae or the roadway
near the intersection or El Toro
Road and Trabuco Road.
· They aald the two girls were
then raped in the aasallanta' car
at a location several mllea away
and then allowed to leave the
vehicle. They immediately
called police.
omcers said today that Coff-
man is being questioned about
an earlier rape in the Irvine
area. They said Irvine police told
them Coffman answers the
description of the man they are
seeking.
"I remember when the police
placed the handcwfa on me. lt
waa then that I ~ my first lute
of freedom, yes, freedom. I wu
happy. real ha,,py. In fact, I
found myself amiltna and
laughing all day Joni.••
Berkowitz, 24, claimed he
been possessed by demqns in kJU·
in& aix persons and wowulina
sevenothen.
In captivity, he bu settled into
a rouUne of aleepina and wrltin•,
the Post said. He 3oes not seek
conversation, does not want vis-
ilo rs and asks only for a
steady aupply of paper and
penclls.
The newspaper said his writing
is ln a strong, free hand. It aald it
was clear that be wants to re·
main locked away for life and
that he fears a return or llll de·
mona.
·'It a fortune teller were to
have forecast back In 1978 that I
waa goine to become a bomlcidal
maniac, killinl people, I would
not have believed her ... "
•'I guess I am addicted to kill-
ing since Sam has me working
like a clock at regular intervals. I
just hope that people can see my
torment and lock me away eome
place and throw away the key so
that I become a uaeless tool for
Sam."
In some entries, be discusses
the families ol.hls victims and
says that s6metirnes he reels
Sam may want him to kill a fami·
Jy member.
"It certainly is true about
families or the victims living in
torment," he wrote. "However,
no one was more tormented than
me. By that 1 mean even before
the shootings began.
"l will gladly show anybody
how much 1 tried to avoid it all
before it began. I fought the de·
mons with au my strength. I
tried lo put an end to their rotten
existence, yet l 've met with
failure."
Al one point in the diary he
wrote: "I am very tense now
because I can feel lhe power of
Sam descending on me .. .I don't
want lo hurt anyone, but J will for
Sam.
•'I think Sam wants me to kill
someone. Perhaps one or the-vic-
tim 's family. Father, if you want
me to be or service to you -lt
will be a prlvllege to rip
someone's bead off."
Female Cops
Less Decisive
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
federally funded study of New
York police officen 11 vea women
and men alMllar patrol
performance marks, but it notes
that the women tended to defer
declalona to male partnen rather
than assert thenuelves.
A report on the seven-month
study released Sunday recom·
mended 1pecW lrainlnl to en·
courage male officers to accept.,
women u on·the-job equals and
to encourqe more aaaertiveneu
from women offtcen.
The study of 82 New York City
officers, half of them men and
hall of them women, wu con·
dueled by the Vera Institute of
Justice with a $155,000 grant
from the Law Enforcement AA·
sistance Administration.
High Court Ruling
Police May Order
Driver From Auto
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that police ofClcera may le1ally
order motorists atopped for traC·
fie violations to aet out of their
cars.
The court, votina 6·3, reversed
a deci.aioo by the Pennaylvania
Supreme Court that a~id aucb or.
dera routinely liven by pollce for
aelf-protectlon violate the
motorists• con1tituUonal rithts.
"E.ltabilJhinl ' face-to-face
confrontation dimlntshH th•
po11lb1Uty, otherwise aubstan·
Ual, that tho driver can make un·
obaerved movementl," tbe
court'• majority said ln an \Ul·
1l&ntd declllon. "Thl1, in turn,
· reduc tM llkellbood that the of-
ficer will be the vlcijrn of an U·
1ault, '' '
The rullni tald ·iuie safety ot
the officer" ll Juatlftcatlon
enou1b for an tntrualon ol a
motorist'• rtahts.
Juattces TbutloOd Mar1hall, WUUarn J. Brennan J,. and John
Paul Stev9lll d1Amted, •l1ial
the c:ourt .., upa1utlft1 Polle•.
powtn too broadly. la 1eet1Q Suprem CoUrt te-'Yt..,, ,\be ·Pldl.Wphla dbtlt
atton\ey'a Oftlct tald tM "-t.
court. ruUn1 ''dl•r•a•r\1•· ·the
cl.ar "* tar.poJlc9 oftlttra to
t.•k• ttuon•bl•' and mlni111u
precautions for their .own
safety."
The appeal said the ruUn1
"needleMly increases" the risk
of a police omcer's death or
serious injury,
Two Philadelphia policemen
stopped motorist Harry Mimms
ln 1971 when they noticed that his
car carried an expired license
tag.
One of the two orRcers ordered
Mimms out of the car, and then
noticed a bulae ln Mlmma • coat.
The officer triaked Mimms and
found a loaded .as.caliber rl.atol
tucked In tho waist o his
trouaen.
Mlmtns waa arrested, and
eventually ftl convict" of U·
legal poue11lon or a platol and
carrylo1 • concHled deadly
weapoq. He waa sentenced to 18
months to three yean ln priaon.
But on abt>eal. the state
Supreme Court reverHd
Mimms' con~cUon and ordered
a new trlal. It deel.,-ecl that
Mlmm1' couUtutlonal 1rl1bta
a1aJut t&IU'IUGaablt Hareba
1uarultHd bt tb• Fourth Amn.chneat hid been vlOlattd
WhlD \be. DCIQct oftlc ... on.red
ltlm oa if~ car tdt.bout pod
reaaoo.
Tbe...,.., the court aal4, the
pistol Could not be lllVQdUeed u
.v!dene«1 at M.tmma' tn•l.
uw,,.....
ENCHANTRESS GOING UP FOR SALE TO PAV ITS DEBTS
Skipper Venlahea, Leaving Creditors S.22,000 Poorer
Skipper AWOL
Sought by Unpaid Crew
NEWPORT, R.J <AP) -David Kent's square-rigged tall
ship is called the Enchantress, but it seems to be bewitched.
Kent has dlsa.ppeared, leaving bis crew unpaid, hla bank:
clamoring for $&22,000 and authorities plannlng to auction the
Ve&JSel.
"THE LAST TIME I SAW him he was putting license plates
on a new Cadillac," said Chief Deputy U.S. Manbal George
Douglas. "He said he was 1oing to Florida."
That was In September, Douglas said.
There were 11 crew members, "and they never got paid a
cent," Douelauaid.
The 94-ton brigantine was buill for the Tall Ships race from
Portsmouth, England, to Newport in 1976, and was used for a
time afterwards as a charter craft.
DOUGLAS' OFFICE SEdED THE two-muted ship in Sep·
tember. Jt will be sold at public auction Dec. 16. It's lied up here
at a solitary Goat Island pier, aails Curled, and will be open for
public tnapectioJW>ec.13. ·
ChemlcaYBank of New York says Kent owes $422,000 on the tiriganUn~ The bank asked that the ship be s~. and federal
Judge Raymond Pettine 1a'le Kent 20 daya to come up with a
partial payment. But Kent dilappeared.
Douglaa said Kent wu a Marine Corps pilot in the Korean
War who gave up fiylna to manage a construction company on
Long Island, N.Y. In 1973, be aave up a $!50,000 a year job with the
firm to build the 19th century replica and sail in the Tall Ships
race, the manbal saya.
"IT TOOK TWO Y.EARS to build the hull and another two
years to outfit It," Douglas said.
Kent originally thout}lt the project would cost about $200,000
but costs ballooned and he ended up spending about $700,000.
When complete, the En~bantress carried 5,260 square feet of
aall on her two masts. Her bull was made from ferro-cement.
Douglas aald Kent tried to set up charters to defray some or
the coats, and at first his efforts were successful.
"HE'D DAVE TRIPS FROM Port Jefferson, N.Y., to Block
laland, with drinking and dancing. They were pretty popular,"
Doualu aald.
But Kent's longer trips were Jess successful. He chartered
the ship to 25 Swedish tourists for a round-trip voya1e from
Baltimore, Md., to Newport tor the America's Cup races.
However, the tourists got off in Newport because ''they
thought the accommodations weren't worth the $8,000 a week be
was charging," Douglas said.
The marshal said there was only one cabin for eacb el1ht
passengers and only one toilet for 20 persona.
"The jail cells at the state prison have more room." he said.
:.Fought
• EDEN VALLEY, Mlftn. <AP>
-The Ed•n Valley· Watk.lnt
acbool board hu voted to strike
tho Pulitzer Prbe·wlnnin1 novel 'To KOi a Mockin•blrd" from a
hlth 1cbool read1nf U1t on ~
IJ'OUnCU tbtl the ~ contalna ofte~lve Iansua1e. Th• 4'2 Vot.e by tbe board 1n thll . central Mlmiaota dJatr1ct cam !/.
a11inlt the advice of tbe tu~
tendent.
The board also voted 3·2, with
one anatention, to remove entire-
ly from achool'shelves the book.
''Runaway Diary," the story of a -
16-yenr-old runaway elrl.
About 50 parents •itned a peti-
tion of complaint ukln1 removal
ot the books. •
Harper Le4)'s novel about
seething racial feelin1s In an
Alabama town In the 19309, whicb-
won the Pulitzer ln 1961, was
found objectionable because it in-
cludes phrases such as "damn,"
"God -damned whore," "nl1ger' • and "whore lady."
A motion by board member
Paul Kerman to remove "To Kill a Mockingbird" from the achool
altogether failed for lack of a
second.
In "Runaway Diary," objec-
tions were ralled lo descriptions
of sexual conduct. Kennan
maintained tbe book wu ''no
help at all to 1et rid of all the
problems we have in school with
all the pregnant girls we have
each year."
Board member Richard
Stenger. who opposed both mo-
tions. said, "If we take either one
of these books out of the school,
we'd have to thlnk about 2etUn1
rid or the Bible and the
newspapers because we see that
profanity in the papers every
day."
Supt. Robert Black asked the
board to retain the books, sayinc
that banning the books, would be
"censorship, and it ian't eoing \0
stop here."
Thug Grabs
Purse, Cash
A South Laguna woman told
police a man ran up to her out-'
side a Laguna Beach restaurant
Sunday evenln1 and 1r1bbed her •
purae from her arm.
Ruby H. Gilbert said she was 1
approachM by a six-foot man 1
dressed in blue denim at about
S:lS p.m. near the Jolly Roeer
restaurant
Tbe suspect grabbed the purae
containing *100 In valuables, tb«ftt
hit the woman in the face before'
running south on Ramona'
A venue, police said.
The woman was not Hrtousl)'
hurt in the assault, officers safa.
today.
E',.,,_ Page AJ
LANCE •••
largest, are traded in the over·
the-counter securities market.
The trading suspension wUJ
terminate Dec. 14 the comp-
troller said.
The comptroller 's office aatd
that securities dealers and
brokers, shareholders and pnJ.
spective purchasert of the bank') ·
stock "are cautioned that the,Y
should evaluate the fnformaUon
available and any inlormat1qn
subsequenUy issued by the bacsk
and or the parties in interest."
f I
So unique is the anlaanahlp of this authentic United Sta tea
Vc!O goldplece watch, It measures time In generations not houri.
Swlas made tn 18k gold. It contains one of
the world't lhlnnest 35-Jewel self ·winding movements.
Limited In availablllty, museum quality.
it'& a collector's treaaure. IG,590. Non-automatic 13,250.
Orange Coast
EDITION
t
VOL 70, NO. 339, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES C TEN CENTS
'
Did Columbus Sail With Four Ships?
ROME (AP) -An Italian am·
bassador's Jetter WTitten ln 1493
indicates that Christopher
Columbus made bJt first VO)'qe
to America with four ships rather
than three as hlatory recorda, an
Italian professor reporta.
Mrs. Bonvini Mauanti says
the letter was written from
Barcelona on March 9, 1•93, by
Annibale de Gennaro, the am·
bassador of the king of Naples. It
went to de Gennaro'• brother, the
am basaa_dor to tbe duchy of '
Milan, and the scholar said she
found it in the archives of the
Este family, which ruled in
Modena then.
According to hlatory, Colum·
bus• first expedition in search of
a westward water route to the
Far East consisted of three
caravels, the Nina, the Pinta and
the Santa Maria. But Mrs. Bon·
--~ ........... ENCHANTRESS OOING UP FOR SALE TO PAY ITS De8T8
Sklppet Vanl&hft, Lemng Cr .. ora 1422,000 POoi9f
Skipper AWOL
Sought l>y Unpaid Crew
NEWPORT, R.I. CAf) -David Kent's square·riHed tall
ship is called the Enchantress, but it aeema to be bewitched.
Kent has disappeared, leaving his crew unpaid, bls ·bank
clamoring for $U2,000 and authorities plannine to auction the
vessel.
.. THE lAST TIME I SAW bJm be WU PuttinC llcea.se plates
on a new Cadillac," said Chief Deputy U.S. MarabaJ Georse
Douglas. "He said be was goinl to Florida."
That was in September, Douclaa said.
There were 11 crew members, "and they never got paJd a
cent," Dou1lassaid.
The 9-l-ton brigantine was built for the Tall Shipe race from
Portsmouth, England, to Newport ln JJ76, and wu used for a
time afterwards as a charter craft.
DOUGLAS'-0.FFICE SEiZiID THE two-muted sbJp in Sep.
tember. It will be sold at public auctlon Dec. 16. It'• Ued up here
at a solitary Goat Island pier, salla furlect_ and will be open for
public inspection Dec. 13.
Chemical Bank or New York says Kent owes "22,000 on the
brigantine. The bank aaked that the 1bJp be seized, and federal
Judge Raymond Pettine gave Kent zq days to come up with a
partial payment. But Kentdia~.
Douglas said Kent wu a Mart.M Cotp1 pilot ln the Korean
War who iave up ftyinl tO ma.oaie a CCIGIU'UCtloa company on
Long Island, N. Y. ln 19'3, he 1ave vp a _.,,000 .J y'ar Job with the
firm to build the 19th century replica and sail lD the Tall Ships
race, the marahal says.
"IT TOOK TWO YEAltS to build the bull and another two
years toout.rltlt, .. Douslu aald.
Kent oriatnally tbou1ht the project would COit •bout $200,000
but costs ballooned and be ended '-IP 1pendln1 about '700,000. ·
When complete, the Enchantna cerned 5,JeO square feet of
sail on her two mast.a. Her bull wu made from ferro-cement.
Do~u said Kent tried to set qp e~ to defraJ some ot
the costs, and at fint hll efforts were 1uceeUful. •
"llB'D RAV£ nm no• Nit Jette:non. N.Y .• to BJ~t
Island, wlt.b clrinkln1 a.n4 danclJll. 7bey were P""1 popular,''
Doullas 1ald~
vlni 'Mazzanti says de Gennaro,
in telling his brother about tbe
explorer's departure from Spain,
wrote:
''For the entreaUes of one
called Columba, lt pleased the
kine that he should rig four
caravels because he said be
wanted to go across the Grand
Sea and sail straieht westward
long enough as to reach the
Orient since the world being
round be could but mate a tW'n
and find the eutern part.••
.. Columbul returnoct aboard
the Nina. followed by the Pinta,••
said Mrs. Bonvinl Mauantl, a
aG-year«d blatory profesaor, tn
a telepbooe interview from her
home lD Seni1aglla, near Urbino.
"The Santa Maria was
wrecked on Christmas Day of
1492 when Columbus left 40 men
in a fort called 'Navldad' on the
laland ~ Hlapaniola. The fourth
abJp remained behind wltb tbOle
ln the fort."
She aald there are references to tbla sbJp beinl left behlM·in
Columbus' diary, eltbou&h the
diary la never precise about tbe
number of sbJpe. and in tbe re-
port he sent to Kine Ferdinand's
treasurer from Lllboa on March
14, 1•93. 10 day• after be docked
there on b.ia return journey. But
1be aaJ4 they were never in·
terpr~ted N mean.mi be bad de·
parted with. fourth 1bJp.
.. When Columbus returned to
the fort on tho next Journey. be
reported tbe men bad been tilled
and evorytblnc bad been
destroyed. Obviously, the
caravel also bad been destroyed
by the in.fUriated natives." the
prof eaaor said.
<See VOYAGE, Page AZ>
~
ort Man Slain
Victim Stabbed to Death in Hawaii
Funeral services are pending
today for John A. Hagan of
Corona del Mar, who was
stabbed to death this weekend
while camping near Honolulu.
The 21-year-old man died after
he confronted and fought with a
man he suspected had stolen his
camping equipment two weeks
earlier, police said.
The victim's mother, Mrs.
Walter Hagan of 3007 Harbor
View Drive, said services will
probably be held midweek at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church in
Corona deJ Mar.
She said her !amily has lived in
Corona del Mar for severa l years
Lance Bank
Suspended
From Trade
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Federal bank reautators today
announced a lo-day tradln1 aus·
penaion ln the atock ot tile Na·
Uonal Baftk ot Geoi'lda, the bank
once headed by Bert Lance, who
resigned in September u Presi·
dent Carter's budget director.
John Heimann, the comp·
troller~ the currency and chief
regulator or national banks, said
the tradin1 suspension was or·
dered "following a written re-
que.st by the bank in view of re-
cent mcreued trading volume
and price movements in the
market for the stock. "
Heimann said another reaaoo
for the suspenaioo was to allow
lime ror the public to learn fully
about negotlationa by Lance to
sell a portion of bJs aubetantial
holdinpol bank stocks.
The suspension waa eUectlve
immediately.
Lance, president of the bank
before joining the Carter ad·
ministration this year, bolds
about 200,000 shares, or about 16
percent of the bank's stock.
A sharp drop ln the value of tbe
abarea after Lance became
director of the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget started the
chain of events that led to ques·
lions about hla financial dealings
and to his resignation in Sep-
tem ber.
Although Lance bas returned
to private life, be remains an un·
official adviser to Carter, his
close friend.
Shares of the National Bank of
Geor1la, one of Georeia 's
tareeat. are traded in the over.
the·Counter 1eouriUea market.
The tradlne suspension wijl
terminate Dec. 14 the comp·
\f0llersa1d.
The C!(Hdptroller's offlce said
that 11curltlea dealers and
brOten, sba.rebolden and pro-
1Peetlve purcbuen of the bank'•
ltOck ••are caution.ct tbat they
1boul4 evaluate the Information
avaUablo and any information.
eub1equently laau~ by the bank
and or t.bepaitie1 in.J-.tereat ...
re &ill• ....
and noted that her son attended
Harbor View Elementary School,
Lincoln Intermediate School and
wu 1raduat.ed from Corona del
Mar Hieb School in 19'15. She said
be wu active oo the acbcd's
track team.
Two men were In police
custody today in connection with
the incident. Their names were
not immediately released.
No one saw the actual kniflnga.
But witnesses wbo had been
camping with Hagan said the vic-
tim bad run after a van Saturday
night to confront the 3'-year-old
driver regardlne a Nov. 23 theft.
Huan bad been seekln& the
driver for more than a week, of.
!iciala said. Haean reportedly
got into a scuffle with a man and
his 19·year·old brotber·ln·aw,
then fell to the eround.
His friends said they ran after
the two men once they realized
Hagan bad been hurt. One of tbe
friencb dragged the men back to
where Hagan lay.
Hasan was pronounced dead at
theacene.
The friends Uqan had met
mainly campers like hhmelt -
aald the youn1 man bad beeQ
robbed of S50 while watcbina a
surfing tournament on Oahu '1
north shore in late November.
Chief Scalped
'Tough Cop' Help• KidJJ
CONCORD, N.H. (AP)-.A hardllne police chief
with an unusual approach to civic duty has bowed to
the wishes of dOzens of Concord residents ad allowed
his officen to shave bis bead on television.
. n w~tlmated that about bait Cbe io,ooo resl·
dents of &>rd watched a caJ>l& te~vision telethon
Saturday l}ight to raise money for the Boys Club
when CbletDavid Walchak made his bai.rY sacrifice.
"He7'w a tough cop who doesn't do ·this kind of
thing. I'm still amazed he did it," said Joe Alosa. a
f riend..9.fthe chief,
T& Boys Club was in severe fmancial trouble.
Club Offlcials said unless at least $f·,ooo was raised,
the ~ boys who use the club would be back on the
str~.
The master of ceremonies of the club's money
ralsmg telethon Jokingly asked Walchak tf he would
atr:J!e to have his head shaved for cash, and the chief
s.atd. yes. It netted $1,100.
IflesaProfle
Second Suspect
Held in Slaying
Costa Mesa police have arrest·
ed a 1econd1uapectin theslay1n1
• Friday c:A a tarm worker follow·
lnC a drink1na party• accordlq
to Lt. George Lorton:
Santos Aeuilar Rial, 24, of
Window SID88hed;
Mesa Store Looted
Tblevea tolled a larle ltcJoe
police Mid wellbed at feast 100
pounds tbroulh the window of a
Cotta Mesa brau bed dealenblp
early &md~ and escaped wti,b a
bed and two bedagre.ada valued
at nearly Sl,000. Tbe theft wu reported Stindq
• afternoon by L1.1cla Ann An·
derson, an employee ol Wur
Bra11 Be41 at aaM N•wport
Boulevard, Costa.,..._
Mexico, la being held today ln
Com Mesa jail 1D Ueu of '250 000 bail. He was arrested by pouce
late Frida)' nllht. He WU found
hldlDI under a home near
MacArtbur Boulevard and Jlaln
Street In Santa Ana, police Aid.
· Allo belu beld on murder 8Dcl assault with a deadly •~a.JOO charlet 11 23-yeat-old Franciaeo
Zarate Alamdil, allo c:A Mako..
. Police believe tbe two men
were nllJ)OU!ble for ti»~ death ot AdalD Aguilar ;&i80
Mexico, who wu lhot tD the back
durina a n,ht at a labol' camp a\
639 SunflowerA,enue. Police ban J9l to eltablilb lf
the victim bDd two 1utpeeta were
re1lltered le.sally to work ln the
U .s. Polle• are also M•klnl
permenept addretHt for the
threo resldlnta ot Mexico.
The day ~for., Tha.nk.seiving,
Nov. 23, someone stole Hqan'•
camera, a watch, a small ~rta·
ble stove, a knife and a key for a
locker at the Honolulu tnteroa·
Uonal Airport wblle be was surf·
lne at Sunset Beach. Tbe thief
also stole $76.
Hagan learned later that the
thief then used the locker key to
take bis ftabing gear and more
personal belongings.
About that Ume, while lnquir·
log about bis kayak, wblch bad
been stored in a container
atupyard. Haaan was told that
two persom had twice tried to
(See KNIFED, Pase AZ)
IJomb Goes
To Chicago;
Bosley Too
HONOLULU (AP) -The
Cblcaco Wblte Sos acquired atuc· -1•r _ 8obb1 Bonds from tbe
Callfomia AnpJs Ulla afternoon ~tndealbueball's p.
MoVfnc to lbe White Sox along
wltb Bondi are two youn1
players, outfielder Tba.d Bosley
and pitcher Dick Dotson. In ex·
change. the Angels acquired
catcher Brian Downln1 and
pitchers Chris Knapp ud Dave
Fro9t.
Bonda, 31.. batted .2164 with 37
home runat 115 runs batted in and
'1 atoleD bues last aeuon. He
declared bil intention to become
a free agent at the conclusion of
tbe 1t78 baebaU sea.son and that wu one reuoa the Angela wete
ready to trllde bl.ID.
· Tbe WbJte Sos made a1JDUar
deals last HUOD wben they ac-
quired llugen Rlcble Ziak and
Oscar Gamble, both of whom
were unslped and left Cblcqo
as tree aienta at the conclusion ot the temon. Ziak subsequently
signed with Teua and Gamble
with San Dieeo. ·
Tbe Anaela slped their own
bl1b-prlced free a1ent last
month, acquirln1 Lyman
Boltoct, and that made Boods
expendable. · ',
Bosley, 21, batted .297 ln S8
games with the Angels after
startina the season at Salt
Lake City c:A the Paclfic Coast
League. where be batted .326 in
691ames.
DQt1on, 18, pitched tn the
Pioneer League last seuon, post·
ing. 4-5 reeord.
DownlD• batted .284 h> 69
Jamee wlt.b tho Wllte Sox. sbar·
inf the catchlac dYtiea with Jim Easlan.·
Wea••er
Low clOUdl With local
dense f08 nllbt and early
momlna houri. otberwise
buy sunshine. Lows '8 to•
53. Hlabl Tuesday from
mid-80I at the beacbea to
mld·10l 1Dland. . .
.IIUIDE H•AY
1'1wn'• .,., "' UWm lbo:i' hflll. ad OrGltQI CoGlt rtd·
ddU. ON 1*dDIQ o/l lo tnJoU U.. lldbtg. SIC .llQQf Cl.
lilMi:
Photo's Warth $1 JtlilHon
That's 4,000 pounds of marijuana on which
Corona Det. Les Scott is sitting. The pot
was seized in a raid in Corona last July
a nd authorities incinerated it in Colton
last week. Its value was estimated at Sl.
million and police couldn't resist the urge
to record the haul with a photo. Wielding
the camera i8 Riverside County Deputy
District Attorney John Chessell, right.
Mesa Bid
Rejected
On Autos
Costa Mesa city officials are
awaiting Sid Soffer's next move
regarding the month-long battle
that began when city tow trucks
hauled three vintage Cadillacs
off his property.
Soffer, who runs Sid's Blue
Beet restaurant in Newport
Beach, has rejeded a city pay-
ment offer of $127 to cover bis
towing costs.
At one point during last week's
plann ing commission meeting.
l'ity orficials even asked Soffer to
help them rewrite an admittedly
"am biguous" nuisance abate·
ment ordinance that led to the
towing.
The bearded restaurateur says
he doesn't have time for that, but
he certainly has time to continue
his on-going battle which he now
believes has escalated to a more
important level.
·'They (city zoning inlpectors)
came on my property and towed.
my cars away even though they
weren't dismantled or inopera·
hie," s ays Soffer. "The cars
didn't fall under the ordinance
and I think they might be liable
for this," he adds.
Ci ting addltlon~l "ad4
ministrative cosfa0 beyond the
towing fees to get his cars back to
his property at 900 Arbor St., Sof.
rer says he may now file an intent
to sue the city.
He can't say how much more
money he wants, but says he mJy
use the intent to sue document to
"put the cit.y on probation" for
six months.
If the city doesn't blow it again
during this time, Soffer may drop
the suit. Otherwise he plans to sue.
City officials have admitted to
the confusing nature of a letter
that led to the towing when Sof.
fer's mailed request for a public
hearing on the matter was not
.. received" by the city within 10
davs.
Assistant City Attorney Tom
Wood says steps have been taken
to clear up any simllar problems Jn the furture.
However, Soffer believu tils
property rights were violated
and he plans to make bis voice
heard again before city officials
m the near future.
I",.._ Page Al
VOYAGE •••
She said the ambanador's l~
ter was based on Columbus' re-
port from Llsbon to the Spanlah
monarch and Queen IaabeUa
and the envoy told bis brothe;.
four times he bad read it ..
ORANGa CC)qT c
DAILY PILOT
Kulik's Heroin
Hearing Shelved
A preliminary hearing on Alex-
ander Kulik's heroin possess100
charges was postponed today ln
south Oran$le County Municipal
Court. (Related story A3. >
Judge Blair Barnette granted a
continuance after defense at-
torney Philip DeMaasa told the
court there was a delay in obtain-
ing vital records from the U.S.
Marshal's office in Wasbioltoo.
D.C.
DeMassa is seeking records on
h derally relocated witnesses
J erry Peter Fiori and Raymond
Steven Resco, both charged with
murder conspiracy in the Oct. 22.
s hooting death of Fountain
Valley resident Stephen John
Bovan.
Kulik also faces murder con-
spiracy charges in the Bovan
shooting incident.
Judge Barnette continued the
hearing to Dec. lS at 9 a.m. in the
south county court. ll is believed
the federal records will be
available then. Harbor High
Christma8
WncertSet
. DeMasaa is seeking evidence
Music lovers wlll have the op-
portunity to enjoy a Christmas
concert and support the music
program at Newport Harbor
High School at the school's an-
nual Christmu concert Friday
night.
The concert, which will be held
at 7 :30 p.m. is bein& staced at the
Ensign Middle School gym thls
year because the high school's
auditorium is being remodeled.
Featured groups include the
wblch mlaht show Kulik was set
up by Fiori or Besco.
Huntington Beach resident
Frank Rossi, who implicated
Kulik and others in the Bovan
murder case in erand jury .
testimony, appeared briefly in
Monday's court session.
Rossi was ordered to appear as
a witness on Dec. 15 in Kulik's
heroin possession bearing. Rossi
baa been granted immunity f'rom
prosecution by the Orange Coun-
ty District Attorney's Office.
Youth Runners
Sailor Band, the Newport Harbor Se fi •I
Orchestra, the Swing Ensemble, t Or Lri.eet
the Chantelles and the Newport
Harbor Chorale. Members of the l C :I.I school's drama department also . n osta 1ri.esa will perform.
Al the close of the concert, The Costa Mesa All City Cross
members of the mu.sic depart-Country Meet for boys and girls
ment will open a holiday bou· ages 7·14 will be held this Satur-
toque in the middle acbool'• day at Wakeham Park in Costa
cafeteria. Mesa.
Concert goers will be able to The top three runners will
buy baked goods and handmade become eligible to represent
gift items. Proceeds will benefit Costa Mesa at the Orange County
music department projects. Cross Co\mtry Track meet to be
Admission to the concert is held next Jan. 1' at UCI.
free. Registration for the city meet
begins at the park at 9:30 a.m.
with the gun for the first race set
· to go off at 10 a.m. Entrants will Female 'Cops run distances between one half
and two miles, according to lheir
age. 'T ___ D For more information call the ~ ecisive' city Department of Leisure
Services at 556-5300.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federally funded study of New
York pollceofftcera ,ives women ·
a nd men aimllar patrol
performance maru, but It notes
that the women tended to defer
decisions to male partnen rather
than assert themselves.
A report on the 1even·montb
study releued Sunday recom-
mended special tn.lnln1 to en·
coura1e male ottleen to aeeept
women u on-the-job equala and
to encourqe more uaertiveneaa
from women officers.
F,...PageAI
KNIFED •••
c1a1ni the boat.
After tbe second theft, one of
his friendl said abe saw Hqan
"walking up and down the beach
crylq."
Tbe people who knew blm
deaffibed Haean aa a quiet,
serious penon who loved body
surfing, ftahlna and nmnillf.
2 Held in Theft
Of Shipyard Safes
Co~·rt· Uphol&
~
Officer Safety_
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that police offlc..-. may le1ally
order motoriltl atopped for traL·
Ile vtolatJoaa to 1et out of tbe1r c.ars.
The court, voting 6-3, reversed
a decilloo by the Penmylvania
Supreme Court that aald 1uch or·
del"I routlnely liven by police for
seU -protection violate tbe
motorlata' comtltutlonal ri1bt1.
"EatabU.hing a face-to-face
confrontation dlminiahH the
possibility, otherwhe aubatan-
Ual. that the driver can make un·
observed movements," the
court's m-'ority aald in an un-
signed decision. "This, in turn,
reduces the likelihood that the of·
ficer will be the victim of an as-
s ault."
The ruling said "the safety of
the officer" is juatlflcatlon
enou1h for en int!'11•lon of a
motorist's right.I.
Justices Thurgood Marshall,
William J. Brennan Jr. and John
Paul Stevens dissented, saying
the court was expanding police
po wen too broadly.
In seeking Supreme Court r e·
view, the Philadelphia district
attorney's office aald the state
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
-Regular meeting, City Hall,
6:30p.m.
CHORAL FESTIVAL -OCC
Chorale and high school choirs,
OCC Auditorium, 4~;30 p.m.
TU~DAY, DEC.S
''BEHIND THE
HEADl.JNES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer. OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
SOUTH COAST REPERTORY
THEATER -"Kni&bts of the
White Magnolia," Tuesday.
Sunday through Dec. 18, 8 p. m.
court rullna "disregard• the
clear need for POiice officers to
take reasonable and ~lnimal
precautloOI for their OWD
aalety."
The appeal said the ruling
"needlessly lncreues" the risk
ol a police olflcer'a death o~
serioua injury.
Two Philadelphia pollcemeb
stopped motortat Harry lllmma
in 1971 when they noUce4 thath.la
car carried an expind Ucenae' tag. ..
One of the two officers ordered
Mimms out of the car. and then
noUced a bulae in Mimms• coat.
The officer frisked Mimms and
found a loaded .38-caliber pistol
tucked in the waist of bis
trousers.
Mimms was arrested, and
eventually wu convicted of U·
legal poeseaaion of a platol and
carrying a concealed deadly
weaPOn. He was sentenced to 18
months to three years in prison.
But on appeal, the state
Supreme Court reversed·
Mimms' conviction and ordered
a new trial. It declared that
Mimms• constitutional rights
against unreasonable searchea
guaranteed by the Fourth
Amendment had been violated
when the pollce officer ordered
him out of the car without good reason. .,
Therefore, the court said, the
pistol could not be introduced u
evidence at Mimma' trial.
From Page Al
BOOK •••
of these bookl out of the school,
we'd have to think about getting
rid of the Bible and the
newspapers because we see that
profanity 1n the papen every ,
day."
Supt. Robert Black uked the
board to retain the book.I. aayiq
that banning the books, would be
"censorship, and it isn't aolng to
stOp here."
Mom, Eetus
HopeaFade
NEW YORK <AP) -A
c:omatOM Pl".'llllant woman
b11 developed pneumonia
' and lnternal bleedl.n1 and
doctors held Utile hope that
tither sbe or ber 6-month·
old tetu could be kept
alive. ·
Dr. Thomas LaBarbera,
director Of the critical care
unit at Victory Me-mortal
Hospital, deaerlbed the
condition of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, rr, OD Sunday aa "poor, very poor."
Mrs. Maniacalo, Who Col·
lapsed into a coma Nov. 23
after 1u(f orln1 severe
bleedin1 in her brain, i1 be.
inl kept on several life sup.
Port aystema at the request
of her family.
HBCorpse
Murder
Victiut?
Orange County Sheriff•• of-
ficers investigating the di•·
covery of a body on Huntington
State Beacb now believe they
have a murder case on tbe1r
hands.
But they refused today to dla·
cus1 4ietails of the ldWnl other
than to confirm that the man was
murdered at the spot )Vhere hls
body was found. He bu not )'et
been ld.entifted.
The naan. believed to be in hls
mid·30s. waa found on the beach
Friday by Golden Weal College
student Craig Allen Williama, 23,
who wu surfing in the area with
hiJ 1irlfriend.
Officers said the fully clothed
body was almost completely cov-
ered by sand. They aald they
believe the killer buried tbe body
alter ~posing of hiJ victim.
Murder Charges
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Police
say a J.9.year-old motorllt, Paul
Staffiero of San Dle10. wu
booked for lnveatl1atlon of
murder followln• a rouUne traf·
fie violation stop. omcen found
be was belna aoucbt in tlMt July
1booting deatb of Joel Muqla
durin1 a street confrontation. of·
ficera said.
'Sam' Avoids. Reality
NEW YORK CAP ) -David
Berkowitz, charged with .being
the "Son of Sam" killer. bas
totally withdrawn from reality,
the New York Post reported to-
day.
But in diaries written during
the four months in hls isolation
cell at Kings County Hospital, the
Post said> Berkowitz admitted be
is ·:addicted to killing."
The P06t got copies of tlle
handwritten diaries and printed
excerpts along with pictures
taken lnslde the prllon ward of
the hospital.
.. Now that I am Imprisoned I
am quite content,.. Berkowitz
wrote. "I feel that Sam bas lost
some of bis bold on me and I also
see Sam cannot use me as a tool
for destruction.
"I remember when the police
placed the handcuffs on me. It
waa then that I had my first taste
of freedom, yes, freedom. l was
happy. real happy. In tac~ r
found myself amlllng and
oeen poeaesaed by demons in kill·
ing six persons and wounding
seven others.
In captivity, he baa settled into
a routine of sleeping and writlng,
the Post said. He does not seek
conversation, does not want vis·
itors and asks only for a
steady supply of paper and
pencils.
The newspaper said his writing
is in a strong, free hand. It said it
was clear that he wanta to re-
main locked away for life and
that he fears a return of bis de-
mons.
"U a fortune teller were to
have forecast back in 1973 that I
was soine to become a homicidal maniac, ldlllng people, I would
not have believed her ... "
"I guess I am addicted to kill-
ing 1ince Sam bas me working
like a clock at regular intervals. I
just hope that people can aee my
torment and lock me away some
place and throw away the key so
that I become a UHlesa tool for
Sam."
In some entries, be dlacusaes
the f amlliea of h.la vicUma and
says that sometimes be feels
Sam may want him to kill a faml·
ly member.
"It certainly ls true about
families of the victims living in
torment," be wrote. "However,
no one was more tormented than
me. By that I mean even before
the shootings began.
"I will gladly show anybody
how much I tried to avoid it all
before it began. I fought the de·
mons with all my streqtb. 1
tried to put an end to their rotten
existence, yet I've met with
failure."
At one point in the dlary be
wrote : "I am very tenJe now
because I can feel the power of
Sam descend.lng on me. • .t don't
want to hurt anyooti, but I will for
Sam.
"I think Sam want.I me to kill
someone. Perhaps ooe of the vic-
tim's family. Father, if you wart
me to be of service to you -·it
. will be a prlvlleae to· rip
aomeone•sheadoff."
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Swiss made in 18k gold, It oonlalns one of the world'• thinnest 35·Jewel self-winding movomenta.
• Limited In availability. muteum quality,
It'• a oolltctor'a tre-.ara. •3.690. Nc».-automatlc •3.250.
• ,
Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Goofy and
other Disney characters celebrate al the
annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony
in the Main Street Square. The tree will re·
Suspect Defies Niche
Figrue in Bovan Death Offers Many Faces
By JOANNE REYNOLDS o. ... Oe11,,.i.cs1.att
Joseph Shelton Davis III 1s a
lot or different things to a lot or
people.
He is one of eight people named
in Orange County Grand Jury m·
diclments for a multitude or
crimes including murder, con-
spiracy, extortion and drug traf·
licking.
Davis also is the Hare Krishna
devotee who once Ii ved an
ascetic life or worship at the
Laguna Beach temple under the
name of Drdha Vrala Das, "ser·
vant of one who observes steady
vows."
Narcolacs investigators say
that in the illicit world of drug
s muggling, he was known as
"Dirty Joe" or "The Fat Man."
His middle class background In
Kansas suggests the en-
trepreneur who opened Govin-
da 's restaurant in Laguna Beach
and the founding partner of a
Newport Beach investment firm,
Prasadam Distnbutmg, Inc.
N arcot1cs investigators are
probing the allegation that those
businesses were financed by pro-
c e eds from a worldwide
narcotics smuggling ring operat-
ed by Davis and his partners
Davis is being brought from
Jakarta, Indonesia, lo Santa
Ana where he will face crimtnal
charges in Orange County
Superior Court. ·
Davis will join the four others
arrested in the invesllgation -
his one-time business partner,
Alexander Kulik, and the three
men they allegediy hired in the
vengeance slaying of Stepben
John Bovan of Fountain Valley._
Still at large in the case are the
two other Prasadam partners,
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski, 26,
and Roy Christopher Richard, 28,
as well as Kulik's wife, Elsie
Caban Kulik, 28.
Bovan, 36, died Oct. 22 outside
the El Ranchito Restaurant in
Newport Beach. He was shot at
close range nine limes.
The alleged trigger man. Jerry
Peter Fiori, 41, of Huntington
Beach, remains in custody. His
two alleged accomplices, An·
thony Marone Jr., 23 and
Raymond Stephen Resco, 28.
both of Hantington Beach, were
freed from jail last week after
posting $100,000 bail each. . .
Kulik, who was arrested wlthm
hours of Bov•n's death. was
originally charged with
possession of 1.1 pounds of nearly
pure "China White" heroin.
TO FACE CHARGES
Joseph Shelton Davia Ill
Later charged with murder con·
spiracy, Kulik set an O~ange
County Jail record by posting a
$750,00-0 bond to gain his
freedom.
Davis will be booked on a war·
rant which carries S500,000 bail
It will not be the first time that
Davis has been in Jail, although
none of his previous brushes with
the law have ended in conv1c·
tions.
When he was 18, he was picked
up with another local ~oulh in
Overland Park, Kansas, m a case
that ended when both paid $10
curfew fines
Davis was raised in the Kansas
City suburb where his father and
grandfather ran an oil firm
Davis was said to be the apple or
the senior Davis' eye.
Apparently the short, heavy
Davis begap to drift away from
his family in the turbulent 1960s.
He was graduated from
Shawnee Mission West High
School in Overland Park and
studied for a year at the
University o f Kansas at
Lawrence, before dropping out to
drift into Southern California.
Once here, he eventually set up
what was described as an onen·
tal rug importing business a
business that resulted in several
trips to Afghanistan and
Pakistan.
One of those trips in early 1974
ended in Karachi, Pakistan.
when Davis and his two
companions, a man from Hawaii
and a woman Crom Illinois, were
arrested in alleged possession of
hashish oil worth S3 million.
Charges against Davis an~ the
woman were dropped by
Pakistani authorities about six
weeks later and they left that
country.
Details on when Davis first
met this three partners are
sketchy.
They are described as close
friends and all apparently
adhered to some or the teachings
or the Krishna sect, to the point or
observing daily chanting rituals
in their business offices.
In addiUon to their business
ties, the four Prasadam partners
traveled extensively throughout
the Orient, ostensibly· on re· ligious pilgrimages. Narcotics
investigators believe the trips
may also have been smuggling
forays.
Records maintained by of-
ficials of the International Socie· ty for Krishna Consciousness
<JSKCON). the Laguna Beach
tern pie's parent organization, ap-
parently do not record th~ date
that Davis, Fedorowska and
Richard affiUated with the sect.
JSKCON ofnclals say the three
were thrown out for failure to ob-
serve the group's religious
teachings in September, 1976.
But a letter dated January of
this year indicates that Davis
and his associates were still re·
ceiving the personal blessings of
the sect's foundef· A C.
Bhaktavedanti Swami
Prabhupada.
Authorities found Davis living
on the island of Bali, where local
officials arrested him while State
Department officials revoked his
passport . ·
Indonesian offlc1als held Davis
for two Investigators from the
Orange County District At
torney's office who escorted him
back to Orangt> County
Park Arson
Suspect Held
YOSEMITE NATIONAL
PARK (AP) -A former
employe of Yosemite National
Park's concessionaire has been
charged with setting fires to con-
cession facilities that caused
about $1 million damage.
Park offlcials said David
Guillette, 23, was arrested at his
home in Sierra Madre in
Southern California on warrants
charging four counts of arson.
~yUrges
-Home for
Re.f!!,gees
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Former Sou.th Vietnamese pr.
mler Npyen Cao Ky of Hunt·
tn1ton Beach aay1 be bu sent
President Carter a telecram ur1-
in1 th• United State1 ac~ept
former South Vietnamese Wbo
are fiee!na the Communist re-
gi m~.
''President Carter la speaJc.lns a~out human rt1ht1 and so
forth," Ky aaid Sunday lo an tn·
terview on Los An&eles radio •lt'.
lion KNX. ''So I think the cue Of
the r41fuaeea is a good caae for
him t.6 show that he really cares
about human rights."
Ky, who fled South Vietnam
just before the North Vietnamese
overran bis country, aaid he de·
cided to send the teleeram after
seeing a newspaper pbotosrapb
or a boatload of refu1eea who
were turned away from Thailand
and set adrift tn the ocean with
little food.
"It's really a tragedy." he
said. "You see, most of the peo-
ple who have tried to escape from
South Vietnam are women or
children. They are not politi-
cians, they are not the enemy of
the regime, they are Just the poor
people."
Glius Cluuch
Eiwuioned
For County
The Rev. Robert H. Schuller's
dream or a ''church without
walls" has moved a step closer to
reality following ground·
breaking in Garden Grove for the
Crystal Cathedral, an ambiti~UJ
all-glass structure which
promises to become an architec·
tural landmark.
At the Sunday ceremony al·
tended by several thousand
members of Dr. Schuller's
Garden Grove Community
Church, Schuller spoke glowinr·
ly or his cherished $14 million
church-to-be.
He sald the idea for a see-
through church grew out of his
experience preaching from the
rooftop of a drive-in theater
snack bar before be built the
world's first drive-In. walk-in
church in Garden Grove.
"For ·six years l became so
used to seeinC the ~autiful sky,
sunshine and clouds while r was
worshipping that I have always
longed for a church without
walls," sald Schuller, whose
television show, "Hour of
Power,'' reaches 40 nations.
The 1rre1ular star-shaped
Crystal Cathedral. designed by
architect Philip Johnson, will be
larger than Paris' Notre Dame
Cathedral when completed in
198()
It will be covered with 10,000
five-by-two·foot tempered glass
panes each set in silicone sur· round~ by ah aluminum frame.
The glass, IC shattered, will not
break into shards and Johnson's
consultants are devising a
method to replace panes, prob
ably a cart with rubber rollers.
John Burgee, Johnson's
partner, said the cathedral is de-
signed to withstand earthquakes
registering up to 8.0 on the
Richter scale, or !500 limes
stronger than the February, 1971
San Fernando quake.
The church's sound system, de-
signed by Klepper, Marshall &
King of White Plains, N.Y., has
been desc:ribed flS the most
sophisticated ever created for a
church.
You Can't Beat It
Warm December sunshine, a placid scene at Main Beach
Park in Laguna Beach, and a set of conga drums -what
more could a rhythmic soul ask? Michael Joseph of
L<tguna apparently couldn't ask for more, as he
drummed intensely from a park bench Saturday. Conga
drums are his hobby.
Deputy Wouniled;
Gun Suspect Sought
An Orange County deputy
marshal can be thankful t-Oday
that a suspect didn't know how to
operate the marshal's service
weapon, Anaheim police re-
ported.
Deputy Marshal Steve Paul
Scott, 30, was reported In
satisfactory cdndi tion at
Anaheim Memorial Hospital to·
day with a gunshot wound in the
lower left leg.
The shooting occurred Sunday
in an Anaheim apartment com-
plex as Scott was attempting to
serve an arrest warrant on a
marcotics suspect, Timothf'ohn Harrington, 24.
Officers said a scuffle ensued;
Prostitutes
Pushed Out
Of Anaheim?
Police Chief Harold Baatrup
has strongly denied a report that
pimps and prostitutes have been
flocking to the convention and
tourist areas near Disneyland.
Baatrup said that when rumors
first began some months ago
about prostitutes from
Hollywood flocking to Anaheim,
his men pushed them out. "We
pushed them to Garden Grove,"
he claimed.
He was replying to comments
made by Sgt. John E. Marwin of
the Orange County Sherlff's Of.
rice, contending that prostitution
was nourishing near Disneyland
and the Anaheim Convention
Center. ..
"( am extremely angry,
Bastrup said. "For Marwin to in·
ti mate that there is a prost1tutule
on every cornel) is totally
wrong."
the suspect grabbed Scows
service weapon. The gun mil·
fired twice as Hartington al·
legedly aimed it at Scott's chest
but failed to remove the safety
mechanism.
The third abot, fired after \be
safety device was switched.
struck Scott id the lower left lee.
police said.
Police said the shooting oc-
curred at 12:10 p.m. in an apart·
ment complex at 2960 E. Jackson
Ave., where Harrington was vis·
iting hia mother.
Scott was waiting for bis
partner to arrive when be spotted
Harrington, attempted to serve
the warrant and wu abot, police
said. In the meanUme. Scott's ·
partner was waitina around a
comer, officers reported •.
The marshal t.ben su.mmGOed
police and the complex was SW'·
rounded and searched but Har-
rington escaped armed with the
service weapon, pol lee a aid.
CM Cemetery
Project Set
Ground has been broken for a
$1 million-plus conatrucUon proj-
ect at Harbor Lawn 'Memorial
Park In Costa Mesa.
A new mausoleum and
crematory plus a separate
mortuary and cemetery ad-
ministration buildin& should be
completed by May of 1978,
Harbor Lawnotficlala said.
The mortuary will have a
cathedral-type chapel that will
seat 175 people.
The non·sectarian cemetery
'was founded in 1951at162S Gisler
Ave., Costa Mesa, where more
than 7 ,000 local residents have
been buried.
Seal Beaeh A.ttaeks for christma8, J.. i.01\DOR th<Z. or1gine1 golf jec'l<e.t ... by lilt 100· Rapi.st Di.sappeared?
By ARTHUR R . VINSEL
Of .. o.ilf l"IMol Steff
Art.er 13 months of lnveaUga.
tion, Seal Beach police are con-
vinced today that the 10-called
Downtown Raplai ti cone.
The tall, lhin·faced man of
many d.Ls1uises, who stalked the
eight-square-block reiton called
Old Town armed with a knlte and
llaahlllbt, la believed re1ponal·
ble for alx 1978 sex altaclu.
Threatenlne to mutilate his
vlcUma' faces if they fou1bt. or
failed to cooperate, ho wu not
linked to alx other sexual U•
taulta that occurred lut year.
And be never did carry out hll
thrHtl to alasb and acar the
f acea 0( the •lx attractive women
he ls known to have attacked.
Police who en1lneered •
montb.f.10Ql 24·bour campalan to
catch the bnat.al raptat, however,
don1 doubt It may bave occured
lnUme.
Nellhlr did ost, lt not au, of
the 000 UllY men ud womeo
wbO Jaawed • th• McGau1h In·
UrmNiaa. Sebool auditorlu"' Blt1lt ~Oct. n, ~Jot a eomhln..,. nllY to dama.Dd b1a
apprehension and a briefing by
police investigators.
The rapist apparently dis·
played no d.l.stlnct psychological
pattern, according to
paycblatrists who second·
handedly profiled him, but he
was becomin& lncreasin1ly
violent.
Ooe woman who real.sled the
Intruder who slipped into her
apartment was amaahed in the
bead with hla tlashU1ht and
many had started obtainln& guns
for protect.lon.
"If you'l'fl certain you can km
him, then 10 to lt," Polle• Det•c·
tlve Diane Vasquez told aDIJ'Y,
frlahtened women in the tbrona,
not.tn1 ahe herself bad ntno platolt
ln her own home.
One apeclflc trait in th• Downtown Rapt1t '1 attackJ,
PQlice aald, wu the tact each vie·
llm wuqwte attracttve.
H1J apparent dla1uiaes varted
conatantlY, ln one cue involvtn,
an ablui'd Indian turban.
No other lu~haa so lnfiamed
tbe Com.rmml\1 -parttc\1141't1
the Old TOwn rqtoo bitween
~
Pacific Coast HJgbway and the
beach, where the rapist prey~ for years.
Today, 13 months later1• in·
vesligators in retrospect beueve
the meeUng that drew so many
ancry citizens and received
widespread TV doveraae result·
ed In the Downtown Baplat's dis· appearance.
'The town w-' 10 uptl1ht and
he eot ao much publldty we think
he 'booeled'. ·• uys Police Lt.
Gary Maiten.
''We bad hira worlced down to a
regular pattun. And half the
for~e was cornlnf ht on their own
time to wort •takeout.a,,. be HY•
of platnclodMI officen b'lna 1n
wait.
They drtll•ed caauaU.y, tn T
ahlrta and bermuda 1bort.,
pedallnj their blcycletp thtoufb
hla f dt·baunted area Utt
avera coU11eyouthl.
"I' f\U'e M'utill ln opv1tJoa
aome~re. 0 LL Malle fty1 ol
t.he laappearance of the
.l>O~WU tipll\ 0 Dta.t Ja1*
llklftC~ •?Jt ~1 1 dum:uham~ • • .,
jvtt. ~rflz.ot fOr•ll~wut: compl~t.ly weeheblc.
dacnm end cotton c&'hbrc. cloth.a
1ondon fba ccd\.Ullve..
8V&ll.ablc. m t.n,
~.yellow, nevy,lt..~,
enddemm blurt
regulars an:i
lonae
' ..
-~,r·.i.~_ -1--.... --
'
NATION /WORLD
. '
with JarMl; tbruteneCI a cam· •
paten to remove the. b.,d.
guartera ot th• 2Hnember Arab
Lea1ue tiOm C&llO and tjpel
E1ypt trOm the leasue, and ap.
pealed for au&tPOrt of sY?la, tM
chief remillUD& mlll~. th.Nat
toJarael.
\ ' BO, BO, JlO -With close ob· \ lenatloil. you can euily apot
AltbouCll no Egyptian firms
are kllOWO to trade with hi'ael,
the summlt parilclpanta clearly
fear. that new EppUan·W.ell
•lrffmenta tntcht lead to IA
economic relatloftahlp.
•eteran parents tbeae days
•moa1 t.be ~•• of Chrtatmu shoppers ln stores alone oar
cout. 'lbey're the ones with all
the quesUons. •
Tbe1e are the parent.I who
have bffn bad before. Upon
Yuletldea past, they have
purcba.sed the "Euy to Assem·
ble" toy for John, Peter or Mary Ann. .
Thtn came Christmas Eve
when they spread all the Euy to
Aaaemble parta beneath the tree
and started lookioc for a
screwdriver. With luck, they got
the thing together before the kid· •
dies leaped out of bed Cbristma
Day at dawn's early light.
SO NOW AS the Yule shopping
'rusb·of Im It upon us, you can
quickly recognize these veteran
'parents in the shops and stores.
1 It's also easier to identify them
if you've been one in Christmases
past.
They're the ones who ease up to
up to the toy counter and pick up
the new 1977 Space Bazooka SUS·
piciously. Looking lbe clerk
directly in the eyeballs, they ask
bluntly, "Does this come fully as·
sembled?"
Nole, fledgling firat·Christmas
parents, how carefully that ques·
lion was worded: Fully As·
sembled.
Sometimes a smooth-talking
clerk will tell you, "Yes sir, this
baby comes partially assembled.
Just a few little things to put
together on Christmas Eve. . . "
JUST REMEMBER, the few
little tbinga they dido 't put
together at the factory were the
pieces they couldn't figure out
themselves.
You open that box after the
young ones are safely in bed,
with vls\ons of sugar plums
dancing in their beads, and read
the directions:
"Congratulations! You are
now the owner of a 1977 Space
Bazooka which will provide your
child with many happy hours as a
Galaxy Gunman. . . "
So far so good. But then comes
the trouble:
"For a.uembly, just follow the
simple directions. Even a child
can euUy assemble t.hls Space
Bazooka in a few moments. . . "
Now tou are not onlJ in trouble
but y~ been put down. If you
can't follow tbe simple direc·
lions, which re first written in
Japanese, traQl!llated to French
and finally into English, you are
automatically a dull!lfd.
And if you don't get the job
done in a few momenta, your wife
will start reading over to you the
part about how any child can do
it. She may read that over for
hours.
After you've labored over get·
ting Tab Z into Slot A·X, you wlll
be inlormed by the dlrecUons to
install the Skyhook, wblch will be
found in the bandy little plastic
bag-attached.
ATTACHED TO WBATT
Where! Your next few houn will
be spent grimly buntinc throulh
all that shredded packaging
material in a search for Plastic
Bag-Attached.
And finally, you come to the
last instrudion: "Now simply in·
stall four Size C battertes and
your SJ)ace Bazooka ls ready to
shoot uptbeunlverae •.. "
You dodn't ask tbe clerk lf lt.
needed batteries, clld you? You
dldn 'task blm lf batteries were in·
eluded?
Lota of luck finding a store open
at3a.m.
Noses Ba"'f! It
Yul Brynner and Liza Minnelli meet nose to nose
backstage at New York City's Shubert Theater. They
both appeared at a Police Department Honor Legion
benefit to raise money for the Patrolmen 's Benevolent
Association Widows and Orphans Fund. Both are ap·
pearing on Broadway.
I•
AS nQ: BA•DUNB Al-abl
joined lo attacldnf11 Sadat'1
sin1le-handecbdl_plomacu µ.s.
officiala di.lcloeed in w~
that Secretary of State C11UI R.
Vance would visit Arab anc1
Israeli caplt.ala be•lnnlna th1I weekend to assess pl'Olpecta (or a
comprehensive peace 11tUe·
ment.
The officiala said Vance would
go to Egypt, Israel, Lebanon,
Jordan and Saudi Arabia. They
said only ''technical problems"
were boldlni up a vlslt to Syria
as well.
In another development, Ucan·
da 's PreJident ldi Amin departed
bis country for Libya, saying be ..
would discuss the Mideast situa·
lion with Libyan leaders. Amin
has had close tle1 with Tri poll for
several years.
THE SYRIANS JOINED with
Libya, Algeria, South Yemen and
Re~s Step Up Test~g .
,
long-range Miasile May Be Readied for Use
WASHINGTON (AP) -The 'loneer than any American mis·
Russians have stepped up their sue mounted on submarines.
test firings of a major new long. U.8, INTEWGENCE sourceSt
range submarine-launched mls· sald an SSNX·l8 missile was
sile, indicating they may be pre· fired last Thursday, apparently
paring to send it to sea. frotn a submarine in the White
The SSNX·18 is the first Soviet SeJ north of Russia, and that two
sub-launched missile armed with po•slble dummy warheads
multiple warheads, which can be landed in the northern Pacific
. aimed separately at U.S. targets aboUl4,800 miles away.
hundreds of miles apart. The ThiL'ffas the fourth launch of
missile, rated as more accurate an SSNX·18 within 30 days, more
than any ofber Russian sub· than the number of tests conduct-
m arine·fired weapon, has a ed durlng the previous 10
range more than 1,100 miies months, aou.rces said.
Coal Strike Nears
As Efforts Falter
WASIDNGTON CAP) -United Mine Workers Pl'fSideot Arnold
Miller said today there is no Cb'8ce of avoldinl a 114ti,onwide coal
strike set to begin at midnight tonight, when the conlracf\.expire.s.
Asked what the chances were for a strike, Miller said, 'There'll be
one.'' He said the status of the union's talU with the BiWJninous Coal
Operators Association were "nol (
too good." J More than 2,200 miners were IN SH ORT reported off their jobs la~ last
The Russians have been fiieht·
testing the SSNX-18 for about two
years.
A PROPOSED NEW U.S.·
Soviet agreement on llmlUng
strategic nuclear weapons re-
portedly would not prevent
deployment of the SSNX·18 or the
advanced U.S. Trident missile,
which is of comparable ranee but
about two years behind th• new
Soviet weapon in developmept.
U.S. sources said the Russians
have been preparina for the new
deployment by modi(ying some
of their Delt.a·clus nuclear sub-
marines to carry SSNX·18 mis·
siles. So far, three. modlfled
Delta Ill subs are said to be in
commlsa.lon and ready to carry
the multiple·warbead mlulla on
submerged patrols.
The Russians already have
long.range SSN-8 miaslles
deployed ln Yankee-and Delta·
class submarines.
IOOKllled
.Sadat aaJd the Arab campalcn
qalnlt b1m caUM'd Min ~ COD·
cern: He aJ10 told two lD·
tervleWel'I · IJI Cairo SuPClay tba~ ~
the Soviet Onion WM belilDd tJwi • 'ru bbilb" at the Tripo1l meet.t.n£
Hijackers' Role
I
in Crash Probed
JO HORE BHARU, Malaysia (AP) -1'1vestlgators are trylnl to de.
termine whether the hijackers ot a Malaysian airliner caus~ the
crash ln which all 100 people aboard die, and whether the hijackers
were Japanese terrorists.
One wltQess to the crash Sunday night said the twln·jet Boeing 731
wobbled unsteadily, rose slight·
ly, then started down and ex·
ploded. Wreckage, dilmembered
bodies, clothine and debris were
scattered over a square mile of
swamp north of the Jobore Strait.
and Singapore.
The Malay Mail newspaper
said the eyewitness reports "in·
dicated aome kind of tussle
between the hijackers and tbe
crew.
"THE EXPLOSION may have
been caused by explosives car·
ried on board by the hijackers,
considering the wide area over
wblcb the wreckage was strewn,"
the papersaid.
• Among the dead were tbd
CUban ambassador to Malaysia,
Mario Garcia, and·his wife; ~wo
World Bank officials from
Washington, O. D. Hoerr and S.
S. Naime, and 'Malyasia's
agriculture minister, AU Hajl
Ahmad.
Malaysian Airways said about
20 of the 93 passengers were
foreigners. ·
SOURCES AT TUE Kuala
Lumpur airport said the pUot
radioed that members of the
Japanese Red Army took over
the plane. But the airline said tt
could not confirm this and did not
know bow many b1jackers there
were. They took over the plane about
10 minutes after it left Penang
Island, off the northwelt coast.of
Malaysia, on a fiigbt to Kuala
Lumpur, the Malaysian capital,
and Singapore. There were 93
passeneers and a crew of aeven.
an airline spokesman said.
The plane stopped at Kuala·
Lumpur, but the biJackera forced
the pilot to take off almost im-
mediately for Slnagpore, the
spokesman reported. The ex·
ploaion occurred shortly after.
WIT~SAID there was a
second explosion as the
wr'eckage hit the ground. It dug a
~Uj[e crater in the swamp.
Pollce sald they were In·
vesttiaUng to determine bow the.
hljacken got on the plane un·
dete~ted. Communications
Minister V. Manlckavaaa1am
said security at all Malaysian
airports would be tightened.
The Japanese Red Army is a
small organization of extreme
left·wlogera who have been
responsible for a number of ma·
jor terrorist lncldenta slnce mo. -
Its moat recent exploit wu the
hijackinC of a Japan Air Lines )et
over India l.l\ September.
wflek in Ohio and West VlrlinJa --------•---"'
in apparent antlcipaUon of a na-closed a $2 million dollar real
lional walkout, which would be estate deal on the Alabatna Gulf
the 10th for the UMW in 40 years. coast for bi& Virginia corpora·
RloC .... E..U. lion.
Bo:m Pak, a former Korean
Army officer and president of In·
ternatlonal Oceanic En~t,i.ses,
Jnc., of Norfolk, Va., aaid the
firm inteods to operate seatpoci
and related Lndustrles at the s1t.e.
CAROlE LITTLE
HAMILTON, Berqiuda (AP)-
Britiab troops armelt-wl~ rifles
and machine guns deployed ln
Bermuda today for the first time
in nearly 10 years, but rioting to
protest Fricby's execution of two
blacks for political murders
already bad ended.
Britiab commanders aald 260
troops bad been brought in from
bases in Belize, in Central
America, and England to back
up the 900 men of the local police
force and the Bermwt. Reel·
ment.
'Moonle' Deal Told
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP> -
A key aide and interpreter I or the
Rev. S~g Myung Moon bu
C'tlk11ra Lladcetl
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP>-
Sclentlst.s believe they may have
found new evidence direcUy link·
ing three ancient clviliiaUons in
Mexico, Guatemala and Costa .
Rlca.
The key is a pre-Columbian
jade amulet estimated to t)e
about 2,500 years old found in a
northern San Jose suburb in Oc· •
tober by an excavation team
beaded by Michael Snarskis, a
Columbia University doctoral
1tudent.
Stirring the winds of Imagination
for St. Tropez West. White silk
crepe de Chine with multi-color
embroidery. And buttoned once.
Blouse, $76 Skirt, $80 Sizes
4-12. From a collection,
ours alone. Meet Carole '
·Tuesday the 6th ,11-3 in
Emphasis
Tof1ad0 MaJ ·Hit South
ortlumi Rockie• Brace for Blizzard
Te•peNC.re.-: .... i.-.... • • • .. . ... ,. 11 • • " •1 ... ,
4 •
.. 11
• 11 . " " az M • '11 .. .. " 11 u .. . .. ;, 1.t .. . ,. .,. .. . . "' . ,. . .. • • • •
\
CAUFORNtA
Queen Mary in Trouble
$2 Million Yearly Deficit May Sink Shi,p
LONG BEACH CAP) -The
Queen Mary, Long Beach's tloat·
ing white elephant, is not earning
its keep as a tourist attraction,
and local residents don't want to
pa y the once·proud ocean
liner's bills.
"Sink it." wrote one resident to
a local newspaper. Another sug·
gested turning it into a gambling
resort. and a third came up with
the idea of moving the area's
pornography businesses aboard.
One city council member,
irked by the ship's growing
9perating deficit -$2 million
tast year -said wishfully that
JJQmeone should "leave the keys
in the ignition" in the hopes that
a thief might take it.
OTHER OFFICIALS,
however, are looking to the
wealthy Long Beach Harbor
Department to salvage the finan-
cially ailing Queen, which baa ex·
perienced declining attendance
and revenue since it fint opened
as a tourist attraction in ur12 ..
About $63 million has been
spent converting the ship into a
tourist attraction with
restaurants, shops, a hotel and a
museum since it w~ bought by
Long Beach from Cunard Lines
in 1967.
Transferring the liner and her
deficit to the harbor department
is an attractive solution but one
which may involve the city in
litigation with the state.
THE SWP'S operating deficit
is paid for with tideland oil
moneys, but by 1980 those funds
are expected to fall to $1 million
and Long Beach taxpayers would
be stuck with the difference if the
ship's financial performance didn't improve.
The Harbor l>epartment, with
a hefty P> million budget surplus
raised from port businesses, was
described by one city official as
"a money factory" which could
much better afford to make the
capital improvements needed to
make the Queen Mary profitable.
BUT USE OF revenues from
the port. which itself wu built
with tideland oU trun fu.ndl, .. subject to state ~IUlaUan, and in
view of the shl~'s dJamal finan-
cial performance thus far, state
support for the project is by no
means assured.
"The question we must ask is
whether the Queen M8l')l"is being
kept alive to benefit Long Beach
or to benefit the state," said Sue
Wylie of the slate attorney
eeneral's office. "It would be an
improper expenditure of state
trust funds if the state as a whole does not benefit.''
IA»ekheed. Proposal
Striking Workers
Get Pact in Mail
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Lockheed Aircraft Corp. baa mailed
copies of Its latest contract proposals for ending a ff.day walkout to
8,SOO striking aerospace workers while charging that the wtlon
bas not kept the workers well Informed about company proposals.
"Our employees have heard many confllcUng report& about
what is In the contract we offered, and I thougbt lt was time we let
them get all the facts and see for themselves what their coQlpany
bas offered," Lockheed·Callfomla Preaident Willia H . Hawkins told
a news conference Sunday.
He noted that the public release or the proposal and ita mailing
to members of the Machinists union was unprecedented.
Stdper Flra ma Pollee Statloa
POMONA (AP) -A anlper fired from 10 to 20 ehota at the
Pomona Police Department headquarters, atrikinl three patrol
cara beblnd the station, a police spokesman said.
The sniper fire, whJch beean shortly after midnl&bt Sanda1,
blew out a tire ln one patrol ( J unJt and hit the doon and win·
dows of the other two, aaid STATE
Sgt. Kurt LoncteUow. No ln· juries were reported.
Lonlfellow said the ebota, possibly from a small-caliber
handJUD, appeared to come from tbe adjacent Municipal Courta
buildlns.
Ms. Wylie, who represents the
state Lands Commission which
adqiinist.ers tideland funds, said
the commission is awaiting de-
tailed plans on the proposed
capital improvements, which she
said could amount to $15 million.
City officials say the investment
would be "much less."
~la tors
Get $5 Hike
In Per Diem
SACRAMENTO (AP)
California'• 120 state lee:slatora,
starting Jan. 1, will draw $&0-a·
day expense checks when the
le1i1lature ls in session, up ~
from the 1977 level.
The increase, which also ap-
plies to some state employees
when they travel on state busi·
ness, was approved with little
fanfare last month on a 3·0 vote of
the state Board or Control.
The California Taxpayers As·.
sociatlon reported last week that
the increase will add about $2. 7
million a year to the state's per
diem bill.
When the Legislature is in
session, the lawmakers will draw
$280 a week in tax free money to
compensate them for expenses,
when llvinc outside their dis-
tricts.
The board also approved a two.
cent increase to 17 cents a mile
for state employees who use
private cars for state business.
Marine Freed
Pending Probe
Of Shooting
SAN DIEGO CAP) -A Marine
sentry allegedly involved in the
shooting death of a fellow 1uard
at Miramar Naval Air Station
has been released from confine-
ment pendlns the outcome of an
lnve,ttsation, authorities say ..
The military investigation.
simllar to that of a erand JW')', is
required before a court-martial
can proceed.
Authorities say the two
Marines were standlnf at sentry
duty lut Monday when Simon
Esparza, 18, of 'Greeley, Colo.,
was ahot and killed.
A .Naval lnvead11t1ve Service
a1eot took the other marine,
Lance Cpl. Paul D. DePriest, 20,
ol Hannibal, Mo .• Into cuatody on
the basta of lnform1tton obtained
at the scent, official• said.
A military spokesman Hld
DePrl11t, wbo waa reltta•ed
Tbur1da1, hu been aa.tened to
admlnlatratlve duties at the
Marino Banackl at North IilNld
Air Station, afftllated wtth the
Mlramarstatlon.
~. c.o.mws. 1en DAILY PfLOT A5·
B9 Sierra Otilt THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keitipe l .
Study Slatea
On Sundesert
SACRAMENTO (AP) -'no state Enerty
Commiaalon is pay inf the Sierra Clab u) to tt.eso to
study and recommend alternatlvee to U-o proposed
Sundeaert nuclear power ptoj.et, officials aatd.
Bob Shinn, an a,ld• to commlnton Chairman
Richard Mau1.14a, told the San Dlelo Union that the
contract .was awarded so that Ul• Sferrt Club could
•·put up or abut up" ln lta claim that alternatives to
nuclear power eXiat.
BUT f'lt.ANK DeVO&E, • San Dleao Gu " Electric Co. vice preaident, aald ln a telephone ln·
terview that such a contract 1' "aroaly unfair"
becau&e the Sferra Club op~ Sundeaert and ls
an intervenor in commla.Jon beariap reviewini
the proposal.
• • i
I
~
1
"U they want to put up or abut up, let them do
that. Wb.v have the state paytq for lt? There are plenty ol quallfled consultants around," DeVore
said.
• • TUE SIERRA CLUB opposes SDGU's $.1
billion proposal to build two reactors 1p the delert
near Blythe. The commlsslon'a decision OD tbeeoai-
pany 'a notice of intent to buUd the plant ls due Dec.
21.
Sohio Receives
Smog Ultimatum
Shinn said commluion staft felt that the Sierra
Club did not have thts resources for the atudy, which
involves k>oking for spots where non·nucleuplants
could be built that would be environmentally accep.
table.
"THE MONEY 'l'llEY are uslne la money from ratepayers. There must be as many cltl&en.s on the
other side who don't want their electrtclty bills to
subsidize these people who are obviouslY opposed to
Sundesert," De Vore said.
The commission's budget of mQre than '20
million a year comes from a surtax on electricity
bills.
DeVORE ALSO said, "I believe strongly that
there Is a cooalderable desire amoa' certain mem-
bers of the Energy Commission swt to delay or op· pose theSundesert project.••
He said the Sierra Club may uae the etate-
runded research to ••confuae anctwt.all tbe lslue."
SAC.RAMENTO (AP)
-California •a anU·smog
chief says ii Sohlo re-
fused to spend about $100
million on smog control
near its proposed Long
Beach tanker terminal,
"at eome polnt we'.te just
goibg to say 'Go away'."
Tom Quinn, chairman
of tbe state Alr
Resources Board, said in
an interview Sunday that
by "we" be meana both
the state and federal
eovernmenta.
Tbe two bave settled
their differences on the
pTopoaal and "are speak-
ing with one voice" to
Cleveland-~aaed Stan-dard OU of Ob.to and its
parent firm, British
Petroleum, be said.
Quinn meets today In·
San Francisco with
Douelas M. Costle, the
U .S •. Environmental
Protection A1ency ad-minlatrator.
He said Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. met high
Sobio and BP offtcials
late Saturday in San
Francisco, and "de-
11 v ere d a etrong
menage" that amount&
to no pennita 1Dl1ess the
anti-poUutlon work ia
done.
Sumi• jpins {lands id
19 new ·locations, so now we have
42 brailches 10· serve you~
The peopl• 111 Sumitomo have Joined hands
with tl'le P'C>Ple of 19 former B*nk of California
branches to provide even greater con-
venience to customers throughout the state.
Jf you are a customer of one of the
new Sumitomo branches-Sumitomo welcomes you. If you already have
been a Sumitomo customer-now
you have the advantages of an
inter-branch banking system
nearly 100 percent larger
than before.
-
'
Orange Coast Oa1ty Pilot E'~ftO~OI ~~~~.~ ...................... .,. ............ R•o•~•r•1N•.•w•ee•d•t•Pu•b•11•'"-.. ' ... Thorl'lll!ll•••••K .... v1.11•t•d•1t~ •• ·: U, ·r• ,r:·=~: Monday, Decembers. ian Barbara Krtlblch/Edl1orla1 P.t0e !dltor -Ambulance. Rules
Need Updating
A DQW county ordinance that would increase 111 of ambulunce companies servJng unincorporat·
ed communities will com e before Orange County
supent.9on Tuesday.
Tbe measure, developed by a study committee at work
the pnst 11 months, has the s upport ot ambulance
operators, law enforcement officials and the county health
officer. It deserves supervisors' approval.
The ord1nance would permit supervisors to regulate
the rates ambulance firms charge their customers, impose
medical equipment requirements for ambulances and re-
quire all ambulance personnel to undergo emergency
medical training.
The new regulations would provide a badly needed
replacement ror a 13-year-old county ordinance. They also
shift r esponsibility for ambulance medical st andards and
licens ing from the county Sheriff's Department to the
county health officer, a move that makes good sense.
Among its other merits, the ordinance would require
that nc~ firms wishing to provide ambulance service in
the county Justify the need for such ser vice at a public
hearing. It also would permit county officials to outline
specific service areas.
In addition. it offers a mbulance users a promise that
an y complaints about poor service would be investigated.
City cowicil members in the county s houUi consider
adoptin~ similar standards. Uniform requirements for all
of Orange County would serve the best interests of both
t he public and ambulance firms.
Unwelcoine Neighbors
Congressman Mark Hannaford, whosedistrictincludes
West Ora nge County, deserves some credit for the
Justice Department's sudden decision to stop relocating
government-protected witnesses in organized crime cases
in Southern California.
The decision apparently resulted from Hannaford 's
complaints after three such witnesses w~re involved in a
Newport Beach murder case in October.
The Justice Department already had been examining
the Witness Security Pro~ram that provides immunity to
organw.'<i crime figures for testifying against their col-
leagues, and moves them to other parts of the country with
new identities.
In the first few years of the seven-year-old program
the coopl'rativc witnesses were permitted to resettle
in areas or their own selection and Southern California ap-
parently was a favorite.
The Newport Beach case has not been the only
problem. Relocated witnesses in other areas have been
involved in bank fraud, burglary and extortion incidents
and several reportedly have been murdered when their
identity became known.
While the witness protection program undoubtedly is
of value to the government, a geographical concentration
of former criminals is hardly welcome. And it's apparent
the government should be paying more attention to the
activities and associations of the witnesses with prior
criminal records after their relocation.
Qualified Observer
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers had some harsh words
to deliver last week about parents who rellnquish their
cliild-raising duties to television and to the schools, and
a bout the educational "fads" in Orange County
classrooms.
The l luntington Beach Democrat, himself a former
teacher. principal and school trustee, was speaking with a
certain amount of expertise when he zeroed in on school
problems.
There's obvious validity in his reprimand of parents
who let their youngsters spend excessive time watching
television and fail to involve themselves in their education.
~nd o~ school districts that "let parents off the hook" by
implying the schools can take full charge of bringing up
children.
There may also be wisdom in his advocacy of more
traditional teaching methods with direct teacher-student
x,relations, rather than exces8lve use of headphones, tapes
euld other mechanical devices to liven up the lessons.
Mangers' forthright statements are not likely to win
too many bouquets from either parents· or school districts,
but his qualifications as an observer of the education scene
should give them weight.
• Opinions e)tpressed In the apace above are those of the Deily Piiot.
()\her views expressed on thfs page J&L• those of their authors and
~ts. Reader comment.It Invited. A'adreas The Oa!Jy Pilot, P 0
EIQIC 1560 .. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phon• (714) 642-432l.
Boyd/Columbus
Q . "What happened to the
man with Chrtstophet Colum·
~us wbo (lrst sighted land otf
t coaatoftbe New World!"
A. Rodriao de Triana?
Presumably, he was the
:nuow. He held tho watch at 2 m. on Oct. 12, 1492. There•e
~slderable arrument over
Jl1K destiny. But 1orne bb·
'U>tians contend that Colum-
..bu1 threw him overboard so
Columbua bltns~lf could ~lm the reward of 10,000
ravedls (equivalent to
ut $1,000 today> which was
posed to 10 to the rlnt
who taw the coaatltnt
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Q. "I don't care why the
chicken crossed the road, Ju.st
how fast tt was able to do
so .. ?
A. Figure 9 m.p.h. lt'1 not
the speed that makes the UtUe
rascal so bard to catch, lt'1
lhe indirection.
Q. "What'• in my cfcaretta
that sometimes mates them snap, cradcleor pop, however
1oallabUyr"
A. ~atevet, 1t '• ~ot tobac-
co leaf. siema, ~lrt. cotW>J}. even tob11cco worm inaybe.
'
Bob Greene ..
: !\'love to Bring Amin to Justice
An American attorney -Lu1J
Kutner ol Chlcaeo-has been ,..
talne4 by a world pnc• or·
&anhation to take on perhaps the
moat cb11lengln1 and binrre
tnl11lon 1n the biJtory of lntema·
Uonat law. Kutner'• a11lpment:
to brtnc murdero111 U1andan dlc·
tator tdl Amin to iuatlce.
Kutner, 69. leadlnc fliure in the
area o( human ri&btl 11U1auon,
has agreed to
take the case
on behalf of
lhe World As-
sociation of
W o r l d
ll'ederallata, a
peace eroup
w itb head-
quarters in
Amsterdam.
Kutner said that hlJ iioal ia to
bring Amin before the bar of ln-
ternatlonaJ justice to answer
numerous charges of "mass
murder, torture and crimes
again1t humanity."
In an interview, Kutner said
that be will immediately begin to
take action against Amin with a
two-proriged strategy:
(1) Bring suit ln U.S. Dlatrict
Court charging Amin with civil
crimes, under a new and untest-
ed statute that eliminates the 1m-
m u n I ly of sovereigns from
prosecution.
(2) Seek to establish a Nurem-
berg-like tribunal, through the
United Nations, lo force Amin to
tesUfy on the alleaauoni made
against him.
~utner said that the results of
the legal action, if successful,
co'lld be the execution of Amill,
and the seizure of the total assets
of the Ugandan president for
payment as reparaOons to the
s urvivorsofhis victims.
''TBEBE ARE rooix>8 full of
books on human rights," Kutner
sid. •'There are conlerencet after
conferences on human rtgbta. All
of that ls narciaaiaUc. The obl,y
thing to stop a tyrant like.Amin ls
to take pragmatic legal action
against him. I )Vtll charge that
ldi AnUn has committed certain
crimes agaimt certain persons.
These will be specific charges.
"All the evtdence suggests that
many thousands have been
massacred, tnrtured ·and exiled
by this man. lJe 11 waging war
a1ain1t bla own l*>Ple. It Is time
to take formal ltP! action.''
It is not surprising that Kutner
ia the attorney to take the action.
He is a flamboyant. con·
troversial legal figure who has
delracton as weU as admirers.
He bas specialized ln the (ield of
Earl Waters
lnternetlooal buman rlt!l&a
UU1aUoo d&Unc back to 1931 • .nct
bu r.preMDted. amonc otberl,
Josef Cardi.Dal Mlnduenty, who
WH imprltoned in Bud•S*.t;
Fatber Harold JUaaey, Jm·
prl•oned ln China: former "
Premier Moise Tsbom~ who
had been eondemned to encu·
tlcm ln the Conso; Deni• oCeell ·
Hilla, the British author con·
demned to die by Amln: and
aome ,,ooe Americana lm·
prl1oned ln foreign countries,
many ot them in Mexico.
Kutner compared the current
Amin 1ltuatJon to the rise of
Adolf HlUer in Germany in the
1930s.
"MANY PERSONS were otr
serving the thinp that HiUer was doina then, but did not know bow
to imp,lement action," Kutner
said. 'No one knew what to do
about HlUer. Fortunately, in the
... • • caJe ol. Amin; w• bow wUt to it. eltb« ~alb' or ~
do." a1enclet or representatives.
Ii• •aid t bia ""t action WW Once YoU fonnlllD a lawaull, 11 be to~ aa.tt ~&in.at Aml.4 lll t.ateaontudf.claldtplty."
U • 6 . ~D fl tr le t Co u rt l n . The second action, Kutner
Waihlncton. Jn lhe natne ot s&ld,,ntltietopetfUontheUnlt*Cl
apecUlc Ueandau wbo bave Natlom to ertabllah a Nurem·
eSthw fled AazUD'' r•aun• and buc~Uto trtbwlal to proaecute tr• now JJvln• Jn the VnJt.ed • AminfOl'bballenCtcrhD ... Sta~s. or wbo will come to the ''Thi• muat M done lf tho
United Stat. ror-tbe purpo10 ol' United NaUCJIUI ls to ret~ IC)
the lawautt.. · 'C>bll1aUons uDder. the ebatter " • ~·we havf a federal 1tatuto Kutner said. ''Ideally, I wWid ~
which ( worked 9n for 10 )'tart,•• Uk• to see A.min appeJrf/l'WQQal· ·'
Kutner aaid. ''Under th.la statute, ly before the tribun11. be Will :=
you ca.rul.ltfa soveretcn state Of a not do that.. l think there ti at }
aoveretin individ\lal In U.S. least a ttroni chance that I eao ·~
courts. nu. will be ou.r foot ln the take • ckpotltton from blm ~ ;I
door. 1t will be a reoreirentatlve Ka122paJa. •
action on behail of the Upndan,s "The United NaUona bu the !
brtnalnathesuit. power to lndlct and condemu
"We will nrve 1ummom on Amln to appear before a
the uaandan embaasy ln tribunal.Ubemuaes,theUnlted
Waahlniton and on the U&andan Nationa baa the power to 10 into
mlaslon et the UnltM Natlona. U1anda and put blm in cuatody ...
Amin will be asked to respond to Kutner said that. the UN hu re-cei ved many report• about
atrocities committed by Amin'•
regtme -from the International
Red Cross a.ad other orsanl.za·
UoDI. Ho aald that all of these re-
ports have been "burled, put
uld• for study'' by the UN. K.utaer said that if the United ~:
Nations 1'efUses to set up the •
Amin Tribunal, be will bring suit
~.inst UN Secretary General
Kurt Waldheim for "non-
feasanco.••
"THERE ARE reports that the
Nile i5 fiooded with thousands
and thousands of bodies," Kutner
said. '"lbl.a 1eoocide baa been re-
ported and yet baa cone un-
challenged."
Kutner salcl that. lbrmer Amin .:
cabinet membettbave told btm :~
that Amin would ~b)y qne ~
at leut to t&lve a deposition, .:
because "bla eao would welcome ..;
it with open arms. He would~
brazen it out and say that the peo. ~
ple he hD acted aaainst are ::
enemies to his re0me.,. ::
U found IUiJty in American
cou.rta, Kutner said, Amin could .
face '"total economlc sanctions-••
total attacbment of all b1a uaeta •
aroundthewodd." .
U found l\liltY before the UN
tribuqaJ, Kutner aald. Amin •
could face execution.
While admittlnl' that the
challenge of bril'&giof AmJn to
justice Is a difficult one, Kutner
expreued confidence In the
eventual outcome.
"I will act all the way bcme -with th1a one, .. Kutner aald. "I
will get blm ultimately. Tbere ta
no doubt about tt. It will take pa·
tience, but the cue la strona. 1
will get Amin in the end." ·
Brown Still a Thorn in Carter's Side
From the viewpoint way out
here in the West. the pride of the
South In the White House doesn't
have too much to be thankful
about in this holiday season.
Much of his discomfort items
from the faot that Callror9ta•s
youthful Gov·
ernor J e rry '
Brown has
been driving
the Georgia
peanut
grower
bananas. It
isn't so much
wbat our
Jerry doe:i ror' .. b1a rec·
ord as g_overnoT fives evtcfence,
he Isn't one to do much about
anythlns.
But juat the fact that Brown ex-
ists hu been drivinf the PresJ-
dent up the wall ever since Jerry
jumped into the Presidential
huiUnas in 1976 and beat Carter
bead-on in thr~ of four primary cont.ea ta.
If that wasn't enough to make
him an anathema to Carter, his
refusal to fold up and swing his
s upport to Carte r at the
Democratic Convention insured
it. Nor ha.s Brown done anything
to natch things up since. To the
contrary he beama broadly
everytime someone asks if be will
challenge Carter next time
around.
It is this threat to an incumbent
President from within the ranks
of his own polltical party which is
givin& Carter ulcers. Even ;r
Jerry doesn't think California's
problems warrant bis foll att.en-
Uon, be should quit clowning
around and leave the President
get on with solving the Important
problems of the nation.
INSTEAD, Brown not only con-
tinues to bug Carter by urging
him to certain decisions, s uch as
stronger enforcement of the
160-acre llmltat1on, and then an·
nouncjng opposition to those de-
clsions, criUclztn, other Caner
actions, and generally makina
himself obnoxious to the Presi·
dent.
Despite that, Brown bas been
successful in aetling Carter to
appoint some o( bis people who
undoubtedly will work against
Carter in the hope of bringing
about a coup for Brown at lhe na-
tional convention next year.
The funny part of it is that
Carter seems t.o be fully aware of
what Jerry is doing to him but
completely at a Joss in knowing
how lo cope with it. He seems
mesmerized and totally without
the adroit political sense for
which Southern politicians have
been credited.
You can bet that Missouri
fellow, Harey Truman, would
have made short work of Brown.
By the time old Harry eot
through "giving him hell,"
Brown wouldn't have bad a hope
of eoUJ.ng re•elected governor
ne.it year let alone dream of be-
in'g President. In his prime, that
other Southern 1entlemen, Lyn·
don Johnson, would have been
even tougher. He would, in fact,
have been vicious.
NEITHES would. the two
Harvard ienUemtU>. franklin D.
Roosevelt or John F. Kennedy,
have fowld Brown a difficult pro-
blem to handle. FDR carved a ''new deal" especially ror
Callfornla's Governor CUlbert L.
Olson which terminated bis
career after one term. And Olton
only aspired to betnc vice presi-
dent. He made the mistake of
throwing bis hat into the ring
withoutseekingFDR•aokay.
Kennedy made sure Governor
Pat Brown would be no threaL
He had Speaker Jess Unruh
eliminating any .. new frontier"
for Brown by keepina him in bot
water at home.
Perhaps Carter. as a "reborn
Christian,'• has too much
goodwill to do anything untoward
ajainst hJs Nemesis. Perhaps he
believes hJs prayers will make Jerry go away.
Surgery's a Snap with a Techniciil Assistant
•
rec~ive ten l dance leaaona.
With nve you 1• pa rol11. • • . .
I SMD J bated to be an old 1tay-
at-bome. but I cOllldn't Ullnk ol a
1lll1Jo oreab 1 wanWld to vote for. W aan 't ttiere another wayT
.. Boy, are yoq ever la tuekt"
said Uie Doc. "In order to meet
Uie ever-tncreaaiilll dtrnand for
elective auraery, wo invented an
entlrelv new operation onl)' tut
week." "Wonderful," I aald "Whars
it do?"
''Flnt, it brida• tbt rawninl
&•P between rich aDd poor," he expl&b\ed. "Jl'or 1ean •• sur-
1eou have belirl rem~ the
tall bladden ol the poor for
Mtdlcare and IUUna up \be tac.a
ot Use ncb , .. e•. But wtial Of
the YMl Ddclclll dMe 't OW \.MJ,
too. eutnJOy • rilll'a,...laU. hotpltal,.axmOIMMOl~·
tr•• CODY•l••••nc• ••d
something lo talk about at dfrtner
partlea."
"All on Blue'Cross?"
"YOV BET! We call lt an af.
raatomOli•· We •Imply removo
your bcll,y button, reach ln a.nd
ll1bten all your stomach
muscles, 1Mn1 )'OU a wup wal.lt
that lOOka Q 1ood aa new. All,lt
takes are tour 1ur1•on1, a t~chhtcal conaultant and a l\urae
to put ber lln&er on the knou,"
"A technical consultant!"
"That•1 rtpt. In New Yotk
they ha~• parU •aleamea Med
th• operaUnt team. But we 1nt1Jt
on tbt Nit,; Meet our eonauJtant.
Ed Calt«il, propnetor of Ed'•
cuatom UJ>bolat.ery Comf an.y."
"Y11, air,•• 1ald a taJ man 1ft
white CO¥•atl• Mtef r•moW\t JOme taea tram 1111 moot.b, •1
be • ~• iofa 1Pi1.ac1 for «> ,. .. ra end t1Mir'e•1 DOtbJnl to tt.
Ft pick up ud dellveey and,
when you're done, we'll caU the
mi11u1 to make sure someone's
home." .
"Wlll the scar show? .. I
aalced. "Not If you use an an·
timaca11ar," said Custom.
"Don't worry, I dont three of th•• operatJocator Chet Boao-
two overstuffed chalrl &hd a love
seat. I ,ive you • six months
suarantee tor normal wear.
<Don't let the kids Jump on lt. >
And I uso nothtna but the tlnest materlal1, Jlto tbla No. 20
1-.hwel;bt Cord. ~rl Ue lt tD e
macra mo· lmQt)lk• uita ...
•r
.
I
' I
NATIONAL DAIL V PILOT ,I • ..
Tke Preaching Business: Capitalists or Charity?
EDITOlt'S NO'l'E. Am•riccmt go111 n1arlJ1 '° ~ to C?horilJI Wt ~· Tlw ~ Oh10lk o/ U.. mow.r UJC.nt to r1Ugiou grOt1p1. Aftd th••• or·
gofttcotioM ant ul\Ur Qrowfftg preuur• to gioe
doaora mor• in/ormciHo" . o&ou.C the wo11 conlrlbu·
Uona . ant tpent. Hen ta a loolc at tlM mow tOtUOrd
/itUmcloldl«loaur~bvcboftUn.
Bl.!1'J!!8E COOK l'fWtllfrftlr
Representatives ol the naUon's top evangelical
aasociaUons are meeUnt in auca10 Ulla week to
talk about money and to\!')' to declde bow much
they should t.ell the public •bout tM Wit,)' conlrlbu·
Uona are apeut.
The religious charttles trad1Uonally bave been
the at.rqest opponent& of efforts to (orce non·profit
FINANC1AL MEETING -Pictured are four or some 35 evangelical leaders invited to
Chicago this week to decide how much to
tell the public about the way contributions
are spent. Left above. Oral Roberts and
Billy Graham; Left below. Re\' Ike and
Garner Ted Armstrong.
organizations to discl<>&e information about theil
financial operation.s. Some apolresmen contend that
le1l1\aUon on financial dlaclosure -would be a viola·
lion of the principle of separation of church and
state. Others rear that if people learn how much
money the charities have, they will atop giving.
THE ARGUMENTS AND TB» fears remain.
But a growing number of rellalous leaders say they
must set up a voluntary system for financial dis·
closure to avoid a mandatory one.
In a recent meeting in Washington, D.C.,
Roman Catholic bishops approved strict standard&
governing fund railing in the cburcb. Tbe atan·
dards, intended for use by all Catholic dioceses and
religious orders in the United States, require full ac·
countability to contributors, with regular, audited
reports settlng forth the amounts collected, the
costs of the fund raising and the purposes and
uses or the money.
THE EVANGEUCAL LEADERS -ABOUT
three dozen of them -were invited to Chicaeo by
W. Stanley Mooneyham. president of World Vision,
which a spokesman describes as "a non·profit, in·
terdenominatJonal outreach of ChrisUans con·
cemed with the physical and spiritual needs of peo·
ple around the world."
World Villon has been oqe ol the few rellcioua
•rOUPI which ba1 alway1 been wWinc to provide
ftnancJal Wormatloo to donon wbo uked, te1Un1
them bow mucb ft'ent to the ch&fttabJe cause ltaeU
and.bow mucb went to adminlltratlve expeuea.
In July, oRlcials or World Vision and about hall
a dozen other religious charities met tn th otflee ot
U.S. Seo. Mark 0 . Hatfield, Jl-Ore., who 11 a
member of the World Vlllon board.
AMONG THE StJBJEC1'8 UNDER dllcuutoa
was a bill proposed by U.S. Rep. Charles ll. Wil.aon,
D.Callf,. which woujd require moet a>ajor charttiea
to provide a breakdown of where .and bow thell'
money ia spent.
Speakiha 19 aupPort o1 h1a bill, W1Jaon nld It
represented ' a eolden o'pportunity to take 1
positive step_ tbitt will insure that the vital wwlt
done by legIUmale charitable Ol'IWJ&tionl Call be
continued in die future ln an environment tbat ls ool
tainted by frequent scandal.
"I 'Irish l could atat.e that well·known relldoua fund-ralsers have been ill the forefront of Ulla em,rt,
but unfortunately that bas not been the caae.''
AT ABOUT THE SAME TIME u Wilson was
speakin&, Hatfield wa$ talkinC to the religloua
leaders. Richard L. W1'tson, dlreetor ot com·
munlcatfon.s for World Vl.aion, said Hatfield told
them: "If Christian agencies don't take the bull by
the horns and come up with some kind ol or1aniaa~
Uon of their own that voluntarily provides inform•·
lion, t,hen Congress ls going to do it. . . .
"We agreed with Sen. Hatfield .... We felt
Christian agencies ougbt to do somethin1 volun·
tarily."
Watson said World Vlsion supports the idea of
financial disclosure, but is opposed lo making it
mandatory.
"Here ta another area where Uncle Sam ls gel·
ting ready to regulate," he said.
There had been pressure for financial dis·
closure from other sources as well.
PUBUSHED REPORTS SA.ID THAT tht Blliy
Graham Evangelistic Association was not in com·
pliance wfth a Minnesota law requiring reatstratlon
and aMual reports on annuity plans sold in the
state. The problem -whlch Graham blamed on
postal and other errors -was cleated up, and the
association subsequently proVided, for the first
time. a full, public breakdown of its spendine.
The l.ssue of financial disci~Uffl is not a pew
one Religious organizations in particular have
come under attack ever slnce the scandal within the
Pallolt.ine Fathers of Baltimore, a Roman Catholic
order, which rabed $20 million in a two-year period,
but spent less tban S percento!the funds on charita·
ble purposes.
Some states already limit the amount charities
can spend on fund raising. Others require charities
to include a financial statement aJont with appeals.
And a growing number of chariUes are providing
financial information, voluntarily.
ADVEaTISEMENTS Jl'Oa THE SA VE Ute
Children Foundation of Westport, Conn., include a
section Which asks potential donon: "Do you wish
verification of Save the Children credentials?" The
section says that 78.1 percent of the organization's
moi:iey is used for direct aid and support of the
charity itself. An annual report lbd auAlt statement
are available on request.
World Vision tells contribu.ton: "Ovet the past
three years, World Vision invested more thJn MS.9
million on its mlnlsteries while total overhead baa
averacecl 11.1 percent." A co.mpletllt nnanclal re·
port l• lent to anyone who requests It and on l~ re·
cent five-hour telethol\, the or1anb:atlo~t.atuf'td a
discussion of finances along with the standard ap-peals.
Like other charities, rellgious or&aniuUons
are covered by a portion or the Internal Revenue
Service code which provides tn~aempt. status to
"corporatiool or any comanmtty ~'beat fund or
foundatioa organized and operated etelualvely for
religious, charitable, scientific, testing for public
safety. llterar)"or education purposes or fbr the pre·
vention of cruelty to children or animals."
UNDER mE CODE, NONE OF the net earn·
ings of the group can go to ariY privai. shareholder
or individual. Tax-exempt groups also are PNhiblt·
ed from ''carrying on propaeanda or otherwise al·
tem ptlng to infiuence legislation.''
There are some 250,()00 tax.exempt or1antaa.1
tions in the United States. Most are required to flit
financial report.a with the ms. Because of conaUtu·
tional guarantees of separation or church and 1tate,
however, any religious 1roup which q"allnes tmder
IRS rules as an "integrated aWlUlary of a church"
does not have to file such a report.
Note: some religious charities may J)rovlde
Two Name
To Board
Howard Siegel and
George Schumacher of
Newport Beach and Dr.
Alan Edmonson of Hunt·
ington Beach have been
elected to the t>oard of
directors of lhe Los
Angeles County Easter
Seal Society for Crippled
Cblldren and Adults.
AMLING'S
" EdmonJon, chief
veterinarian for tbe
State of Callfornlna
Horse Racing Assocla·
tlon, and Schumacher, director of Penta
Pac1fic, were elected for
thelr second thr~ year
term a.
Lot Added
SAN PEDl\O <Al»
Six more acres ol Fort
MacA1"thur•1 Wbtt.e
Point Seacoast Batter
wilt be given to Los
An1etes ,for. use aa a
parkln1 lot. The land la
adjacent to 115 acres \ht
federahsovernment
tranaferred to the cltY
laat Auauat for use aa •
park
Newport Nursery and Garden Center
Christmas
at Amling's is
living and fresh·cut
trees (natural or flocked),
wreaths, garland, cntcoratlon1
and colorful
Holiday Gift
plantJ.
financial reports on individual arm• of thtlr opera· churches and church·related groups are not r ..
tlon1 Which do not meet IRS requiremebta tor the quired to provide flnancial lnformatlon.
exemption from fiUni. ''But the mood ol tbe cOUDt.ry LI movin1 tn tb
IT 18 'IUE8E &EUGIOUS G&OUP6, bOwever, dJrecUoo," he added, and "we will a1ad.ly c:onf orm
which ralte the most mon•y. TM Arnerlean As· to it."
soclation ol Fund·Ral1ln1 Count•l tnc. aa71 GIAILUI AUIO SUD: •-w&EN ~pl• atve to
Americam gave a record 129.~ bUUoa to cbarity in bur aaaocladon they t.ruat that it •1 beiDI handled
19'/t, up 9,, percent from 1'r1$: aoU1iOU1 l?OUPS &Ot properly and wtffly and inv.ted f~ tbe advance-
43.$ percent or $12.84 billion, upt.9percenthom the mentofthe KinCdomotGod, wbicballof ltls.''
previous :Year. Nut nm ••
The Treasury Department estimates that d• -:::---:_ ... _-_ .. G_raba_::::::m..-..--:=~=-====-~
ductioQI taken by individual t.upayen for chant•· -..,.1.,.h. • PUBUC NOTICE •
bl• contribuU. In 1978 c:Qlt ~federal iovem-•11•• meot about ~ blllloo in lost taxes. Ptcnnouuu11 .. aa .. ....STA,.M•NT Billy Gr~am has noted tn the past that --,.,. ... ..,...,_ ...... --. ---.....;..;....... _________________________ ..._~~ Olf'l .. OeNT DOO.,
SU•VICES. 1'°'1 SMllll'I \JI., Hwlll
lngtoft k«lt,c:.lllW!tl•tJW l'ete Tr...,•. leiC111 Slndr1 UI., .,... ___________________________ ._.H1111tlfttW19Mcll,C..lterftl1ttM1 1
Mttrl Tri'¥•• '*1 ...,.,. ll\q
Par Yaul' Canv•nl•nc• W• RP•
UPENaN .
SATURDAYS
PRDM IDRM TD ZPM
W••kd•Y Moura:
Monday • Thuraday 9.4
Friday 1·8
BE"DUR
GUEST FDR
' CDEFEE
FIND
GDDDIES J,-
Where Service• Mak• th• Difference!
A•••t• over 1100,000,000 22 offlo•• to ••rv• rov er.i.wlcl•
Costa Mesa-Newport Beach,
1855 Harbor Blvd.
H\llltlM!eft ...,,, c.llfomla'-D Tlllt ....._It~ Waft &11-
wlelliel. I · ""'•Treveto , r
Tllll t~ Wll fli.. Willi flt
"' o.nr "' er-.. '-"'I -. jo.ctmller 1, "17. ""* •
f'ulllllfWd OrMet 0Nst Oelly Pilot, lo.ce,,,ber S, 12. "· •• lf17 5117\17,
PVBLIC NOTICE '
f'tCT1nou1eusu1au NAMll ITATl.IMNT
,.!.~~ ...... ,.,...., ..... "' blltl·,
MOUNTAINSIOE TA)( At•
$0CIATl!S, J1tS C.~I, lrwlM,
Glllllo,,11•92714 Ger•IO J, 8~11•, VOS C.rm.I, ,, ...... Cell'-11'2114
Miidred ewrlle, '70S C.rmtl, ,,.. ..... t.lllller"'-t21l•
Tiiis l>WllltN It CANtCHICtlcl ti' •
lllfllH'll,.....,......
Thll a~ a::: flied With .Al C-l't Cleftl OI Orlftllll Coour11y on N• emlltrt7, 1f77, • ,.wt
'"""''"'" Ofafllt c..e. o.t•r ~ Nov.21,a...-01C.J,tt.1tn ~
PUBUCNM'ICE .-...
PVBUC NOTICE 1.J
'
-~ .. ·-----···---------------
MARMADUKE by lrld Anderson
I
"So dogpower is stronger than horsepower! I You still can't go!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
PROBLEM 1WO -
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
t h !1 IJ .. .
GERIATRIX
YOU .AND SL.AP~• N&VE:~ 5Eetv\ TO
HAVE: ANY
A~GUMENT~
ova~
SUDeeTING!
,
'
•
HOW 00 ~ DtlE~MINE
~E AREA OF A TRAPE ZOIO ~
by Ferd-ant Tom Johnson
DEAR M1t. ~EEi>,"""'"""""'"" He SHotJl.P·HAV~ l~AsMUCH STAYED IN BE!> As.
by H•rotd Le Doux
f ~
I
COMICS I CROSSWORD
by Roger 8radtield
0
0 0
by George Lemont
1 Punch.
Slang
&Envelope
me~rlala
48······1•. Fttry
51 Fr. 11udt nl1'
milieu
UNITED FMture Syndicate
.. tunf•V'• ~uut. loMcf·
10&:1er'1 · concem
'4Cakt
52 .i.t~r119Y:
2word• 64=~·
I : , ' • llC:
J c
ll'i I •
' p
. ,,. > ' s I~ .8
T II ~ ti
IC: I" \I ..
!f l~I i: dtc»talOta
15SpecJal
18USSRclty
17 lnwerd
MOobankrupt
S98oforlty
member et SauttS11
II •l l "I w
,-F
1l II~
AMI.
18 Boxing' a 92 Of tt11 lr11h
Eddie ···~ 83 Prlct ot
19 Ru11 river eometh1ng
20 Wtnt to bid 84 Tending
22 Aircraft 85 Earty 1r1111
24 Boo!( tenant
bindery &8 Dreg•
worker 67 Cllurcll
.. t ~ Fl J. 11 H ~ ,R'IJ .I I( " 'l::llllli( f'I u IJ ;: ' J. C:.I : I 11 c " t' l) ~= . AN ~ s ~ V L _ 1•
r; p 111 (•'-1 n ~ v IC
J '~ NIAJJ E u N
28 HonOft WJtll council t 2 Had a 39 Rt1embl1n9
word• tendency a a11oe ptr· 27 "Certtlnl~!" DOWN t 3 Frtncll ga11 for mane.
3 wotda 1 Platform 21 Old Ftt~h .. 2 ,. ...... 1 30 E-11 coln ,~,~ .. over water '43 OHOOd regl 31 Affirm 2 Skin 23 H1ven1 mena •
32 Son ol 81111 dlatHe 26 Turn 4e Htatt
Two 38mall 27 Paper 47 Hold•"9 37 Encloaure paving mulberry O.vlcN
38 Women'• atone blrk 48 Vaulls
companion• 4 Tourl•I'• 28 t>ryln11 •o· 49 Poo ..
40 C011tctlon velllolt paratue crown
Suttlll 50.'r.tlooll 200tlltcl 50EmttOt
41 Htmmtf • •• e Pru11lan 33 LIO i.. • 53 0111 It brttd
·-·· king O.a'VnltlOlll' 55 Mettl 7 Barrtl atave 2 wordl .,.. E t I 1
43 Blow a Ctlro netlve 3" 8ho-.r "v •• ~.'~!rt~~~
44 Mtttlttlallde a RalTIOfttful 35 Nlt11: Prtfut 57 TurMd r1gllt
COITlll\Unt 10 Mett Olah 38 Hat lunch 90 ~tnclt
•5 lnocullbon 11 Tapestry 38 S.a duck 111to'I
·-
I
-----
·: COUNTY I BOOKS/ OBITUARIES
~ew Niguel Park
C<?nstruclion is under way in Laguna
Niguel on the $1.4 million Crown Valley
Community Park, located on the west side
of Crown Valley Parkway at Niguel Road.
Plans call for an amphitheater (fore·
ground), a community center (rear), a
swimming pool. a baseball field and
volleyball and boccie ball courts. A part·
time clerk and a full·time ranger will be
employed at the park to coordinate
recreational programs, a county parks de·
partment spokesman said.
,J
Mondly. December e. 1tTT
Shaking the Shakers ., . ..
•j .. Christmas Books Can Say It All -~udly . :1
'I BJBVGBA.MULUGAN
U"'9dMCIJlllJ I f I
NEW YORK -At thia frantic,
teatlve 1euon the Cbriltmaa
book U.ta and bil dlaplay eda
trom tho publiaber1 add further
bulk to our dally newapaper and
remind us that the time bu come
. to browae the 1belvea and cbOOH
the rl1ht book for the r11ht
person on our lift list.
Not just any book will do 11 one
expecta to make an imprint on
the flyleaf of Ume without dome
irreparable damaae to time p~·
men ta.
(Colleen McCulloUCb) -To Bllly:·
Martin Ind Reut• Jackaqn from:!
owner a.tfe Stelnb"n.ner. >' :· -••THE HONOllABL~ SCHOOLBOY" (lobn lo Carr;e>,
..... To Steve Cautben trom.Ua.~'
1rateM falth!Ul at Belmont-. d ' wlndo•. ;;
-'J'LL WVE YOU WHRilrJ
YOU'RE MORE J,.IKE
(M.E. Kerr)-Flom GoreV to Norman Maller, and h •1
mud ln ~ ~e, too, feller. ,
-"THE WOllAN WARRIOR'
<Malllne Hog &npon>-Fromi
Bella AbzQI to Anita Biyant, Ol1
'tlJ'llE BOOK OF Kells,'' a col· vice vena. fee table dauler at somewhere in - ' ' A L L M Y S J N S
the nelehborhood of~. could be 1l E II J: MB ER.ED ' ' (Joe
just the tbinl for a dowaeer aunt Haldeman) -To John Dtan in the p f ·"'-in .. _ frc>m Rlcb8"1 M. Nlxoa. roceas o reYMI I '"'r _ u.a.1'JC!UTIPuED pa•YERS" will. 11Livin1 la the Beat "4-.~"~ AA Rnen1e," In paperback, milht <Truman Oapote) -To Edward
be more appropriate. llWLH .. ,.... Koch, wtnQer of the New Ytlldlr
.. Every a1e bath lta book," City'• mayor'• race, from nmolf
says the Koran, itaelf an all·Ume Here, with tho author's name loser Marlo Cuomo, lnscrtti&IJ beat seller. in parentbesil, are some auace-t-with the tull quote from St,
The trouble la this age hath ed gift tlUes for the areata and Terasa of Avila: "There an
thouaandl upon thouaands, Judi· the near·areats, and perhaps more tears abed over praye.rJ
ing from the pyramids of Utles somelngrates: that are answered than \Ill·
cloning the aisles at Scribner's, -"DREAMS DIE FIRST" anapered prayers." Doubleday's and Barnes & No· <Harold Robblna) -to Olympic -~NCELOT" (Walk~
ble, where Santa's bom·rimmed decathlon champion Bruce Jen· Percy) -To columnlat WUUa~
gnomes (all NYU and Columbia ner from the San Franclaco D.A., Safire, who lanced Lance a lot.
Ph.D.s> duh about with ladders, with the inscription; .. sending a from the banking crowd down to
stacks of bookl and quotable back your copy ot 'You Are What Calhoun, Ga.
1 quips from the critic1 to keep up You Eat.' " -"LOOKING OUT FOR
C t Pl A · withtheCbriatmaademand. -"THE 'EM~ARRY" (Ruth NUMBER ONE .. (Robert J. rans on ans ppearances Bondy) -To Walter Cronkite Rall0n011e~.;:-8.Toc•!!ll01~ ~~r~ FOR 11lE BUSY world leader, from An1"ar Sadat and Menabem ...,.... --~ w. v ....
ByO c HUSTINGS celebrity of board ch·'--·--Belin, lfatefully inscribed "For 1alubrlou1 1ud1, from nu oe.i.D..1, ,.1 .. 0 .,." ORANGE COUNTY Assessor Jacobs also told those at the who doesn •t have time t~e~P'Pi; Peate on Earth, There'• No brotben everywhere who bell~ us Sen Al ·c t illbe Bradley Jacobs says cities and meetinglastweekthatheseesno with the catalogues or 1,...0d a TlmeLikePrimeTtme." inlr11n1barder,Avta·lltei!· . · · · an rans on w other taxing enliUes should set end to ris'"" taxea witil •ft.. lY" ''THE 0011p• -BOO laml1
.. 1w -·-"' m Orange County for a aeries of their tax rates each year without payers p~ vlioro 1 ....,... noontime in bookilh banter with -~£ ~ K _ .~&;i.E DR , ~~:;:ranees Tuesday and Wed-being ~Id how much the U· "Butcally the way~t ~orb la r:r.:!!:'1:.'!· ~ ~~~:O:o'1:. OF .:0~~·~~rdf:,~· ~~ <Charlea hul Conn) -He'l1~pe kT d . t ~essed aluationtnthelrareahas thepeoplewbogotopublicmeet. puterlzed resources and ••· Broder, Walter Mean and the CaUfonila Gov. Jerry B
. 8 . ~es ay ev~nmg a increased. ings want more services and the · fro hil ·•-•-ff a Missi: bV1eJho cochktall party Jacobs told a Town Hall meet· people who don't pay, the bills " sembled a list of appropriate lilt rest o~~~~:gi:~uaB. l]\DS'~ aeef:1 the U::i:tca~IL -~ spons.or Y t. e 74t Assembly ing of the Newport Harbor Area Jacobsaaid ' · ' vorumes. ,.& larity-i•. ~
District Council of Democratic Chamber of Commerce that the 1-·------------------------------~------.,.,..--------..JJ.
Clubs. , rise in assessment la "irrele· l'i
Then .he 11 push on to Irvine to vanl" because it doesn't mean -t~
eat with the folks at As · taxpayerabavemoremoney iJ sem blyman Ron Cordova 's "It doesn't matter how m~cb it 1·.·j
$125·per·plate fundralser. (assessed valuation ioes up
1
On Wednesday, Cranston will because it can't be spent " ~et Us Help. -
s.~eak at a Dea:p()(rallc Roltnuu Ja(obs said. "I can't break ~(·
i. ncbeon in Anaheim. .Jll1 cblmneyto pay my tax blll." .
For the .-Record
Marriage
J..l~ntff• 0Ct9ff21
ANDltEWS.SWl!UU!Y -Wllllem
All.,.,21,-~_.AN\e,2A,botl\of ~nCl•m-•. ESC080$A.HOWLETT -Ste-.n L.,
2•. koniw•lk, -Mltt•I• Noel, 20, Nowportlleec:ll
~rl
DAVIS·WI LL IAMS -Wllllem
CltANITON
lto~ld, <M, HWlll"910ft Beec: ... , en4I
111\rlu Aft\. .a, l'eun1111n Velln. .......,..,,
llERWOltTH-PRI~ Oevlcl "C"• n, •IWI K~ , It. '*" ot lrvl ... .........
ALl!XANOl!lt·KLUG -Dnld E lmer, d , HW1tl119t011 .... ,. l"4
JIMI M.C~, '1, Newport BaK~
~· HOLT·IE~ -J im Ellll, 36, encl
Petrlt l• C1¥1U, it, both of Hunt·
lngton lloecll.
Deatlu Elsewhere ROBEllT Gt.EHN CRANSTON, rotl·
Otnl ol lrvlM -·eel ewey O.tembor 3, lt71, He 11 MINIWd b\I ton a1t1 L.
Crtnllon of lrvlne , nn 1toll1•t
Cran•ton of <:.orrwlll•, ArltOftl, OM CHARLOTTE N c Supreme Count for near·
o••nd1on and on• orul·9r111dton. ' • • Servlcu will bo hold Mondly (AP) -The Rev. H . ly 38 years, died Satur·
December s .. J.30 PM Pec!llC View Kerr Taylor, 86, of Atlan· day Cllapel. lnurnmen1 P•t lllc View • ::::~:;,•~,;:;~. Pa<lflc v1 1w ta, an ttuthor and mis· SAN DIEGO (AP ) _ • cslonary, .died here Sun· 1to1111tn d Memorial services Cor ••t~re ! 11;.!rt:~!!~11T!; .'.:~: ay · Allea Gerhardt, chlet a .. c11, c. .. orendl•"-°' 2-o••et· 0 agent of the U.S . ::::rc':"!!!.2•• ~,':'~ .. ~,,'.11°'. KLAHOMA CITY Border Patrol'• Chula --~-...,.._, (AP) -Andy Payne, 70,
··'
... A father piscover's his adolescent daughter is experimenting with drugs. He doesn't know what to d~
... A lonely wife sqbs into a pillow . Her marriage is breaking up. Her elderly parents have become a
burden. She can't cope.
... A middle·aged man with a good JOb shakes uncontrollably as he rea ches for a bottle of booze. He
tried to stop drinking, but fa tied .
-:
.. ,
r "
. . . ,.
<11eo, ca. "' M11a1u11, Lo• Anooi.s. who won a 1928 foot race V l 1 t a sec tor , ate
C• end 51 1111 Anll• Shrine CJwb scheduled Tuesday in .
F11Mr•• .....,""today ao1 2 oo P "'· at from California to New t~~~~=.~o~~;~,.:~~! York In 87 days and later ~:,u~Tedv~~~~cf;.~ha~r~~~ These·scenes are commQt'l every day expertences.~11 of us have problems an~ we search for their solutions.'
Mort ... rvc11rect:uv ~:~ ai•:~ka 0lt!~: home after a heart at· Sometimes we svcc;e~d. Other times we can't. Then we need professional help. Where to find this he~f) eo~~11~~.!,!~;:;~-:=~~----------t_a_c_k_. ---------lCan become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps people find answers to their problems. '
1t77. Ho h IUNIWd b\I Nuoht ... Rome
J een Re~ ol HeWllOft Be.ell, '°' f '
Buford A. a.tley, Jr., ef Vlf> Huyl , 1 •
9r<Mldclllldfe11, 6 O<lll-9'1ndc:hilclrM,
b•olller Gl-lell•Y ti 1.0f10 Beec:ll, ,Iller Gale of Horii! Hollywo.4.
Servi<•• w lll bl hold Tuud•Y December 6 et 11:00 AM ~KllW; View
Cll1pel. lnlermelll l'eclllt View
Memorlll Park. Pacific V iew Mortuary DfN<len ..
McCOU•ICW
MOITUAlllS
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hiiis ~68-0933
San Juan Cap11trano
495-1776
IALTZ-1116llOM
fiUMIULMOMI
Corona del Mar 8 73.9450
Costa Mesa 849-2424
.a.llOADWAY
MOITUHT
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
&42-0150
MTN nma&. ~
COSTA teM ~-427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mela•~
s.nta Ana Chaoet
611 N. Bf'olld*-V Santa Ma• 547~131 .
. Antique
Lovers?
Meet me
on 3Jst
Street
'I
PRO~LEM TALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral services located in Orange County. • I
" PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here to o.~fer you help ·through counseling and referral. There is np,
harge for our sen(ice to you. We refe; to both public and private agencies in Orange County. Facili·
~ties to <;are for irydividuals are available on a 24-hour bas~. That means we can help you whenever you
meed help. Appointments are not necessary. If you prefer t o make an appointment, day and eveniA9
hours ere available. (Office hours: 8:30 a.m. -5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. In extreme
emergencies, a ~oun~lor ca n be reached after .5:00 p.m., and on weeken ds.) ..
Let Us Help With:
Crisis lnterventfon -When a problem 1s so big or
complex th.at you are unable to see alterna·
tives, taJkir,ig with a professional may help.
Marital Discord -A counselor helps establish a
startin~ point and gu idance f or husband and
wife.
Adolesc;nt ProblelJ"S -The years 14 thro.,gh 18
are trying fot the young person as well as his
parents, learr\ing to communicate is one of
the basic steps a counselor can help bring
about.
Alcohol and Drug Problems -More and m~
people are becom ing dependent on alcohol 1
and other drugs. Special ized medical care aod
a treatment program are needed. ~
• • J
lndfvidual P.sychiatrlc Prot>lems -Sometimes we '
feel .that our world·is caving in on us. Tension,_,i
anxiety, and fear may keep us from coping.}
effectively with everyday life. Psychiatric h~
may be your first step toward healthy living,
91 &M Aalocla&ed Pretll
Beil or a.rtiftcial? No matter what kind ot a tNO you ctloole for Cb.rlatmN, you'll pay more t.bo ~
d14 lut ,ear, and It makes HnSe to know what to
looktw.
• .John Koch, a Birdsboro, Pa., 1rower and
1Pc*uman for the NaUonJl Christmas Tree Aa· a0c1aUoo, aald prices pald to the people who ralae
tree1 are about 5 ~rcent or 6 percent hiaher '* they were tut year. He said lncreaae1 al the
r*11 level will vary from area to area.
AMElllCAN TREE Ir WREATH, the country'1
blccest manufacturer o! u1ificial trees, said ret&U
prices fOf' its products were about 5 percent above
1971 levels. MarkeUn1 bead Don Warning also aatd
that buyers are choosin1 more upeosive models,
detplte .Price increases.
TBS IDBI' TBING TO look for when tluylnl a
Uve tree ta fl'elbneu. Try bending the lleedla. 1'be1
abould '"1 ntbbery and should not break. The color
1hould be dark creen. the tree should have a stronc
evercreen smell and the butt lbould be atscky with
~ap.
'l'o keep the tree tresh, make a new cut at the
bottom ol the tree -or have the retaUer do tt for
you. Thia enables the tree to ablorl> water. Once
you get the.the home, put lt in a cool plaee, awa7
from the beat. and give it
plenty ot water. Check [ . J ~~~~~~~s~t~ CONSUMER
a tree tbat bas been
standing Jn a lot for 1ome
time may absorb as much u three quart.a ol water a
day.
1t Joota like a live tr.," be said.
Other cooalderat1ou to keep ln mlDd lMI•
'eu• of uaemblY, 1tor11• and name reelstuce.
Remember: ,Just becauae aom tblnf II fl.re ne.11·
tant, doean't mean Jt won't bunut.all. Even lit.be
tree la arUflctal, lt ahould be placed aw91 ~ i..ai
llOW'CQ.
Prices --·~ •tut at about ao for • •mall arllflclal tree and 10 to over $100 for lar1~t..~• varletlel. 'lbe mott popular mode1a alDel'UQ' are alx feet tall and can be 1tored ln a cll'tcla about the Ilse of a small co«ee table. Tb4t ao-calltd coe:
venJence tree. -wblcb you do not ba-n to u-
aemblebra.odl·bY·brancb-aremonapemlve.
'f A&NING SAID IDS COllPANY -WJ0Ca
accounts 101' •bout 55 percent ot the artiftctal trees sold in the United States every year -e.Umatee
that about 23 mllUon artlflclal treea Will be ln uae
tbJ.a year.
oONSUMeR I AT YOUR SERVICE
t ...
Koch said there was a poa.sibWty of some spot
sbOrtaeea ol trees. He said wbolesalen bou1ht up
au.the trees early in the seuoo tb1a year, 1nd1catin1
tl)v expected demand to be blager than .supply.
~wen will sell about 27 million live trees thil y~aT, Koch said, about the same as lut year.
· The most popular species are the Scotch ploe ~ tbe Douglas fir, followed by the Balaam fir. A
six-foot Scotch pine lold for about $C.2S to SS.25 at
tl;le wholesale level. Frel1ht charges and retailers
C9'ta and profita mean consumers will pay at least
dtiuble this amount and probably more, Koch said.
Tbe U.S. Department of Acrlculture bu a
voluntary trading system for trees and 10me
srowus tag thelr producta accordloc to quality.
The eradea are based on shape, density, freshDess
aAd ahHPce of defe<:ts. U.S. Premium ii the top
""de, followed by U.S. No. 1 and U.S. No. 2.
He a1ao said studiea indicate that an lncreulQ1
number of cooaumera are •wttchlnl from real to
artlflcial trees. Accord.ins to Wamin1, a auney of
23,176 penona who boueht artJ.flclal treea lut year, -;::================== showed that almoat fS percent had purehued a live
Doctors Practice EngU.la
DEAR PAT: Several weeks ago I
read about a foundation in Montreal,
Canada, which provides information
about doctors practicing in foreign
cowntries who either speak English or
were trained in the United st,tes. My
SOD plans to leave before long on an
extended tour or Europe, and I would
like to contact this foundation before
he leaves. I did not clip out this item
when I read it and I can't even recall
where I read it. Can you help?
J.H., Newport Beach
A YS couldn't track down this foun-
dation for you and the Canadian
Consulate In Los Angeles laad no In·
form atJoo about It. Tbe couulate's
public affairs officer 11Dg&esta you
wrlte a letter of Inquiry to: Medical
Council of Canada, Registrar, 1867
Alta Vista Drive, Box 8234, Ontario,
Canada K1G3H7. If any readers know
this founctatloo'a address and ~tact
A YS, you wUJ be informed.
Reader Eye. New Needle
DEAR PAT: I have a lO-year-0ld
stereo set that's in excellent condition
except for a worn out needle. I can't
find a replacement, and J 've looked
everywhere. Do you know of an "old
needle" replacement source? I
thought I'd ask after having read your
recent ileln About eht ehiJwupattern
buying sodrces. "' . ·•
Needle In A Haystack (6749 Spring-
field Mall, Springfield, V L . %%150)
Is what you are J~g for. Thia finn
will check old needles free or cbarge
to see U they are 1Ull ln good cood.1·
tlon, and It wiU sell new ones fv older
pbpnographs and stereos. Be .sure to
include your stereo brand, model
n~m ber and year of purchase when
contacting this company.
lloates oA Wheela OaHned
DEAR PAT: Is there any basic con-
sumer-oriented material available for
people considering the purchase of a
m~bile~me? I'm sure there must be·
APPEARANCE IS ALSO A KEY factor when it
comes to buJing an artificial tree. One industry
spokesman aaJd realism was the most important
consideration.
"The better the tree, the faater it sells, the more
··Cot a proOll'Tll' TIM'11 wnlr IO Pol Dvnn POI 1111JJ
cut rtd lcxpt'. 11 .. 11m11 I/le OIU>LW• Cll>d GCllOll llO" ufd
Ill IOll!f! IMqulllLI Ill l10Nntmflll aiwl btuiuu MOil
11our qu..llu>ns to Pol Du11r1. Al Your~ •• 0rOJ1S1•
Coast Dat/11 Pilot. P 0 Boz 151/(). Coato M~IC. CA
tM26 Al many ldtn• as poJll~ ..U lw Oll,_rtd,
11111 pllOftfd lllqlltT1H or lt.llWI "°' IJICli.dulg .,..
reodrr"1 /uJI Mrr". oddrtu ol>d ~., ,_,,. ~
llU m bn COl'tnol ~ CONrdned. T"" col.illltn O~Orl dal·
lvrzctf]4Salurdag6 ·•
some things one should be aware of
betore purchasing and living in lhis
type of housing.
R.C., Costa Mesa
Bonds Pused
FALLBROOK (A,P} -
Water storage facWties
will he doubled with
money from $3.8 mlllloo
in bonds approved over-
whelmingly by Rainbow
Municipal Wat.er Di.strict
voters. 1be work ls de·
pendent on a $10-mWloo:
federal loan.
tree tbe year before.
Consumers keep artlflelal treea an averqe ot
six years, although WamJ.nt aald they can lut
much looser-"even a lllettme, with proper care,"
. DISCUSSING BUYER PREFEllBNCBS,
Warning said that eight years aeo, the company'•
best-selling tree cost $19.95. Today, the same model
costa $24.95. But the best-selling model ls the Ut.85
one. And the thl.rd most popular style costs *129.
IF }'Ola thlflk there'• .
nothing ne&11 In
Chmtmm Candy and
FOod Gf/U, then
}'Ola haven't bun to
The Nut Kettle vet. •• Most artificlal treea sold today are made ol a
green plastic. Aluminum trees which were popular •
several years aeo have gone out of faalUoa. r
U you have one of these trees, the Coolwner
Product Safety Commission warns that you 1bould Open f1V8rf day Lumber Yard Plmla
neve~~utulllgbta on it. Sharp metal ed1ea can out the Wed . .&t. till 9 pm 384 Ferell Aw. -cord 1WI at1oo or metal needles m~ touch an elec· • ., _ •~1.. trically charged component, productna an electric And, yn, we do Nil --v--
sbock. ......................................
.
Mobllebome loea&l9n wanantlel,
park management and &eou&I' rtghta
are among muy topics cqvei'ed ln a
1%-page pamphlet, ''MobUt Homes, A
Consumer's Galde," Jointly de·
veloped by the department• of
Consumer Affairs, Hoaslng and Com·
munlty Development and Motor
Vehicles.
THE CHRISWIMAS SRREAD.
Tbe free pamphlet la avallable at
D M V field offices. It covers
mobUebome buying and living from aU
perapectlvea, wltb Information for
both the potential fint·tlme and the
long-time mobllebome owner. PerU·
nent state and federal laws ue noted In
the margins.
~ Better fn Satet11
DEAR PAT: What's the best way to
wash children's pajamas to keep
them name retardant?
W.S., Newport Beach
Don't me ao11p; It form1 a scum that
build• up oa the fabric ud decreases
name·retard•nt properties. Im&eact.
use a phosphate detersent, or if yoa
prefer non-phosphate deter1en&a for
ecological re~. ue doable the
recommended amount of a beavy-daty
llquld detergent, n.cb as AU, Wisk,
Era and Dynamo.
Cblorlne bleacb 11 not recom-
mended, but It can be used oa name-
retardant fabrics made with man.
made nben, aacb as nylon, poly1ter
and SEF modacryUc. Bu& dOn't me
chlorine bleach on name·retardant
cotton bec:a~ It wUI decreue tbe ef-
fectlvenea ot the fin.lib.
Always aae a •ater softener, 1uch
H as Calgoa or·Boru, If the water ii
bard ln your atea or If you me a DOD·
pboapbaie detergeat. Do not .....
fabric softener. Warm-water
washing, low-heat drying and no Iron·
lag also are recommended.
Jantzen
with a gift suggestion
During the holidays, Santa
and his helpers often end up
stuffing themselves more than they
do children's stockings. The resUlt?
They get stuck with a present they
didn't need. A couple of extra
pounds and inches. (Such a waist.)
There's a way to avoid the
holiday weight. Join Holiday Spa
Health Clubs. There's never been a
better time. Because these offers
will never be priced this low again.
2 people for the price of 1.
Between now and December 21,
you and a friend can join together
and each get an alll\ual member-
ship for the price of one regulat
renewable :Qian.
2~forthe~ofl.
Or if you can't find a friend to join
with you, you can join by. YQiJr8elf
-'
•Televlslon •Movies
•Stocks. •Entet1atnment
LOS ANGELES (}.P) -
Quarterback Pa\ Hadel) ll5tened
to Harold Jack.son and Bllly Wad·
dy and hiJ eventual surprise de-
cision sends the Los Angeles
Rama into the Super Bowl
playoffs and leaves the Oakland
Raiders wondering.
The defending Super Bowl
champion Raiders wonder if
they 're going to have a shot at de·
fending their tiUe because their
division hu been captured by the
amazing Denver Broncos and all
that's left is a possible wild card
entry.
Haden arched an unexpected
43-yard touchdown bomb to
Jackson with 2: 10 left to lift the
Rams to a 20-14 Victory over
Oakland Sunday.
"I faked to Waddy and that
drew the free safety to him and
then I threw to Jackson. We
weren't really thinldn1 of a
touchdown. We really Jus'l want·
ed to get in position tor a field
goal.
"I didn't want to take any
chance of an interception, but 1
let Harold and Billy convince me
they could get open deep.''
Jackson was in the end sone
and behind Lester Rayes when
he caught the bomb that traveled
more than hall the length of ~
field.
Althouan Jackson caught iM
big one, every member of the
Rams received a game ball for
the victory over the defending
world champions.
Los Angeles put its record at
9.3 with a nfth strateht victory
and captured the NFC West for
the fifth straight year. Oakland
also is 9-3 and Denver ls 11·1 in
the dlvlsio.i and has won the tiUe
off its point differential ln bead to
head meetings wilb the Raiders.
Denver won 39-7 and lost 24-14
and th• differential of 13 goes in
favor of the 8roncos, who can't
lose the title even tl they lose
their last two re1ular season
games.
Sad Sag_a of Sad Sacks:
Was It Really Oakland?.
LOS ANGELES-Those were
the 1977 Super Bowl champions?
How? They must have jacked up
l the real Oakland Raiders and
slipped in their place a bunch of
sandlot jocks.
ti for a loss when he made one of
those lunges on the winnine TD
drive In the game's closing
minutes. • The miss let Cappelletti get
away for an 11-yard gain and a
firstdoWh. Then it was Hay.es who let
Harold Jackson get behind him
WHITE
WASH
falls in front of Oakland's Cliff
Branch, who watches while the
Ram gets up and tuns another 20
yards to the Oakland 26.
5. Oakland i!J driving for a
score, getting to the LA 19. But a
Stabler pass is intercepted in the
end zone.
All those atrocities were In the
first half. Stand by for a com·
merclal timeout and we'll carry
on with Oakland fiddle·daddle 1D
the last two quarters.
6. Oakland has the ball at mld·
field, Stabler actually bas a re.
ceiver <Clarence DayUI) open
and hits him. But Davis, perhaps
shocked that the ball is being
thrown to him instead of to a de·
fender, drops the throw.
The circus eoes on as Stabler is
sacked on the next play, then
Oakland ia tagged with a 10.yard
holding penalty.
7. Now we move to the fourth
quarter and Oakland has a t1rst
down at the LA 32. But Stabler is
sacked again, then adds to the in-
df1pity by fumblina the baH
aW•Y· 8. Finally, the Rams are d.riv-
in1 and Haden throwsb but
-Oakland's Monte Johnson aa lt
come ri~t to him. No surprise\
here. He drops it. l'he Rams si.,
• _alive atkl e« a fie141oal out of it.
· There you have it. The sad
saga of the sad aack5 who showed
up In Ra.ideft Unlfornu.
Tbere°"'ibt to be a law aia.ln.st
a m isrepreaeptatlon of that
maanltuete! ,,
Atlanta lost SU.Oday and Is at
6·6 wlth no chance to cat~h the
Rams tn the NFC West.
John Cappelletti scored on a
1-yarcl s10a.sb for the fint Los
Angel" t.oaebdown, but Oakland
evened the count on a Pete Banaszak l·yard bunt wlUl Just.
54 secondl left in the half.
Rookie kicker Rafael Septien
booted fteld goal.a of 21 and 44
yards to put the Rama into a six-
polnt lead.
Then, Wlth 4:43 left in the
game, Ken Stabler threw a 21·
yard touchdown to tight end
Dave Casper and, with Errol
Mann's converalon, the Raiden
led 14·13 and were alive in their
division race.
Haden carefully lirought the .
Rams bac~ as they started at
their 16 following the kickoff.
He pused to Terry Nelson for
21. Cappelletti ran for one. Tben
Haden completed a sideline pass
to Cappelletti. Lawrence
Mccutcheon ran for the six, the
Raiden drew a facemaak penal-
ty and the Haden-CappelleUi
combination lost two.
That's when the quarterback
hooked ul) with Jackson and two
division races were decided.
·'I felt au aloni that we were
going to win th1I division, but I
guess all I can say now is that I'm
wrong," said a disappointed
Oakland coach John Madden.
"Unless they make a new rule,
the best that we are lookinl al is
a wild card spot.''
The Rams' defense sacked
Stabler four times and intercept-
ed four of his passes -two by
Monte Jackson. Another ID·
terception, by Pat Thomas, was
called back by a penalty.
Haden didn't throw an in·
\ercepUon but was sacked twice,
once by John Matuszak that
ruined a scoring bid.
The Rams host AUanta next
Sunday while Oakland plays host
to its erstwhile Super Bowl foe
Minnesota. '
ac-e11yo.e~ 0.llt..... 0 1 0 7 u
LMAntelet 7 O J *"-XI
LA -c..,..otttt t"'" ISetM..,. •tu 1 o ... -~tf\lft(~tU<lll
LA-,GSeipt'-'21
LA-l'Gs .. u .. .,. •
08..-C-21 lllbSfrOrft •1t11er (MM!! ~l ~k~ -H, _.._ 4 f1et1 ,,.,,, ~ ~ ,. _.,..,,
l'lntcllOwns
lt11"'9• -yM«n P•slf\t yards
AM11rnty-Pesus ...... "
STATIITICI
Pate, ·Stacy
Wm Tourney
LARGO, Fla. -Jerry Pate dropped a 10.foot birdie putt on
the final hole Sunday as be and
front-nmniDI partner Hollis
Stacy broke a Ue .nct scored a
one·atroke victory In the Ulllque.
$200,000 mixed team 1olf cbam-
plonshlp. •
Pate and Stacy, the cutftnt
U.S. Women's ()pen champ, com·
bined for a final round, 2-under-
par 70 that just held off tbe last-
. ga.sp cballen1e by disappointed
.rookies Curt.ii Strange, 22, and
Nancy Lopez, 20.
~-o,· • r yra .... .. -.. , . .
Sports ia Brief
Wkers Dealt LosS
In Final Secofiiljj
INGLEWOOD -Jimmy Price
fired ln a 20-foot jump shot with
three seconds to play Sunday
night, living the Denver Nuggets
a 111-109 National Basketball>..
soc ta lion fiCtory over Los
Angeles and rUlning the return of
the Lake"rs' a tr-pro center
Kareem Abdul·Jabbar.
Tbe ~ers ~ad Ued the game
some 12 seconds earUer on a
Jumper by Norni Nixon. Denver
called a timeout, then played for
a last shot. Price took a pass
from David Thompson and hit
from thetopofthekey.
Abdul-Jabbar scored 21 points
and grabbed 14 rebounds in his
first game since he suffered a
broken right band In the Laken •
season-opener at Milwaukee Oct.
18 when he slugged the Bucks'
Kent Benson. The five-time NBA
Moat Valuable Player played
most of the game Sunday nltht.
Thompson led all scorers with
27 point$. Denver center Dan 11-
sel added 23 points. Price. a non·
starter, finished with 12 points.
OEN VP <tltl _.,._ 1', Wll"*'10ft a, 1.-t ti.
Taylor 7, T~27.Etlb4, "°""114,l"rlce 12. C..Mn 41, ~ Tot.ls4t •>14111.
LOS ANGl!L£S (fotl -WeM!ffltlOll a. Wllw
111 A~~Jt, .. 111111'71..T•tu!'ll12. =
•-"'• 1>, 01Gff911tlt t. dwll'di •· S. Tot•IS .. tt·U10t•
Denittr • » 29 t1 -tit
Lot A119tl.. V 21 32 tf -tOt
Total tout~ -0.!'Vtf 2s, l.es -'no-tu u. A-ts,.ot.
beaten seasop, 16·0·1, an-cl ·
stopp6d the Dani' winning streai r
at 20 stntc&t games. USF Jinlshedthe~2M-1. ~-
"We had pltnty ot cbanees to,
score, but it's obvious you can't •• win U you don't put the ball in~ 'ti
goal," said loeing coach St~v~· 1
Negoesco, "'bdae tea'Cll bad ... 11
half ·do~ near mlsse". ·
TOKYO -American Bili:
Rodgers won his rourtlf.
marathon of the year Sunda~
overcoming cllrzlness and g ·
rivab in the 12th annual Fukuoka·
International.
Rodeers was timed in two
hours, 10 minutes and SS.03
seconds for the 26 miles, 28S ]
yards and said. "Although it ls
not a gOOd rff<>rd, I am happy I
won the race. 1 started out s&ronc
but l got d.Luy after halt way • "
&olml to A•rltraJ • l
BOMBAY, In4i• -Vijarc
Amritr-.J Wj)O the men '1 a~
tiUe of tbe Indian Grand Prix tee;.:
nil championships by defeat1q ~
Terry Moor, 7•8, M, Sunday .
,. ' ' ... ., .. ~·· .,,. " ,. ..,.. f/ ' • .
91LL~ U.-IMdl , ••• YW""*'" I .IOMWe&.aAllMI ........ ~ ..........
I FV Duo, GoDipf Head -Area Grid Team.
!
RAIDER RECOVERS -Oakland's Pat Toomay pounces on
a Rams fumble in the second quarter Sunday as LA's
John Cappelletti watches .his bobbled ball. The Rams.
.-~,....
however. won the turnovers war with four interceptions
and two fumble recoveries. LA also won the game.
I V~es' Rally Sinks 49ers
Rookie quarterback Tommy
·Kramer hurled three touchdown
paaaes In the fourth quarter, in·
eluding a 69-yard bomb to Sam·
my White with 1:38 left, to lead
the 'Minnesota Vikings to a 28-27
National Football Leaaue victory
over the visitln& San Francisco
49ers Sunday.
Tbe winning touchdown came
one play after James While re·
covered a 49ers rumble.
Kramer's toss traveled more·
than 60 yards In the air to a wide-'
open While. .
The victory kept the Vlk.ln11.
8·4, a game ahead or the Chtcaco
Bears ln the NFC Central
Dlvlalon.
Rookie DAve Wllllama scored
one 49ers touchdown when be re·
turned the second halt tdckof( 80
yards and aet up another with a
60-yard puntretum. ·
Elsewhere lo the NFL Sunday:
PHILADELPHIA AT
DALLAS-Tony Doraett beeam•
only th• third rookie ln NFL hla·
tory to 1atn over 200 yardl ln one
11ame when he led the Dallu
Cowboys to a 28·14 wln over the
Eagles that bllnched tile NFC
Eaatem DMslon Utle.
Dorsett rushed tor 206 yardi
and •cored two touchdQwna, lo·
cludln1 an M-yard dash early ln
tbe f lnal period.
Jt was the lontest s.corJne run
ln the NFL th.ls year.
Dallas, 1°"2, tbua reached the
pt1yoff1 for the 11th tlmt ht the
Jut 12 years. It w•s th' 1eventh J11tern crown for the oo..,bo19.
llon Jaworakl t9H•d two
to\IQbdowu pas1e1 ror tho loeen.
A8HINGl'ON AT BVPPAJ.O · .Joe Tbel1mann '1 ll·yatd
touchdown pass to Jean Fu1ett
early in the second quarter was
all the Washington Red1kln1
needed to subdue the puncblees
Buffalo Billa, 10-0.
Mark Moseley kicked a 20-yard
rleld goal with l:~ to play to aeal
the victory.
Mlke 'lbomu &alned 89 yarcb
rushing and keyed the Redskins'
touchdown drive with pua recep.
tlons or l5 and 13 yards.
DENVER AT HOUSTON -
Denver'• Broncos cootlnu• as the
beat team 1n lbe NFL wtth an 11·1
record following a 2'·14 win over
Houston.
Denver•• Crall Morton, play·
inl deapite a strained shoulder,
lhtew 13-yard touchdown J>UH1
to Riley Odoms and Rick
Upchurch u tbe Broncos
cllnebed their first playoff a berth
in their ~year history.
MortAlll threw both or his TD
1trlke1 ln the second quarter to
rally the Broncos to a l4·T
halftime edge after Houaton had
taken the lead on Ronnie
Coleman'• a.yard run.
and quacterbac k Terry
Bradshaw ran for two
touchdowns to lead the Steelers
to a 30·20 victory over the Seattle
Seahawks.
Gerela snapped a tie at 13 with
a 43·yard field goal that hit the
uprlgbl and caromed throu1b.
Later Bradahaw scrambled for
16 yards and followed with a 22·
yard TD pass to Ly~ Swann. On
the ne xt Steelers s eries,
Bradshaw led Pttt.sbur&b on a
44·yard scoring march that
ended when be rolled 3 yardl into
the .nd 1ope on a foUrtb-dOwn
play for a »13 lead.
CHICAGO AT TAMPA -
Walter Payton tained 101 yards
end 1cored the 1ame'1 only
touchdown on a3-yard run as the
Cbica10 Bear1 dropped Tampa
Bay, 10..0.
Bob Thomas put Cblcaco
ahead 3-0 with a 32-yard field
1oal earlier in the fourth quarter.
h Payton, who carried aa times.
U DOW ialned 1,6'J yarc:ll th1a!
1e1100 with two 1fmea left. He
needs 362 yarda in the next two
1ames to break O.J. Simpaon'1
single-season rushing mark of
2,003 yards.
Tampa remains wlnleas after
12 1ame1 and tta loetna 'treak li nowaus. .
NY IET8 AT NEW ORLEANS
-A pail' of f O\lrtb quarter field
1oalt by Pat Leahy l1fted the
New York Jets past the New 1 Orleans Salnta, 1&-13. •
The field 1oa11 meuured J9 iil4 2T yatds. Earlier, Leahy bad
tioot4ld aG-yarder.
f\lcbltd Todd plllid -yards to Jerome Barkum ha the fint quarter for the Jets, •~le
touobdown.
Jt WU Todd'• ftnt 1t.arttn1 as•
signment in three weeks.
Archie Manning, who hit on 15
of 25 passes for the Saints. con-
nected on a nine-yard TD toss to
Henry Childa for the first New
Orleans toucbdown.
Chuck Muncie scored on a 17·
yard run In the fourth quarter.
CINCINNATI AT K.\NSAS
CITY -Ken Anderson threw two
touchdown paues and Pete
Johnson scored on a 1-yard run to
lead Clneinnatl to a %'1-7 victory
over Kansaa City.
ClncinnaU took a 11·7 lead with
the help of Tony Davis' TO-yard
punt retW'1l, then dominated the
Chief a 1n the th1rd quarter, keep-
ing the ball all but 1 : 35 of thoae 15
minutes.
DETROIT AT GREEN BAY -
llookle David Whitehurst
en1lneered a 70.yard Green Bay
touchdown drive, capped by wtU
Harrell's 2-yard run and safety
Johnnie Gray led a 1oal line stand with 4:48 lelt to help the
Packers to a 10-9 victory over lbe
Detroit I.Jons.
Harrell's touchdown on the
fame's 11th play plua a ST-yard
field 1011 by Cheater Marcol
before balftlme, 1ave the
Packen a 10-0 lead. The Packen
then held orr a furious LI.Obi
comeback In the fourth quarter to
break a five-1ame losln11treak.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -
Quarterback Dan Fouts haa fut
Pizzica Selected .
<;o~h of the Year
Willie Gittens and Bryan Caldwell of Fouiitaln Valley
High and Laguna Beach Hiah star Blll Gompf have been
chosen u best of the cream of Orange Cout area football stars by the Dally Pilot staff.
Gittens, wbo scored 52 touchdowns tor the Barona in h1I
27-game career, ls the back of the year. The J75-pound whls
led Fountain Valley to the Sunset Lea1Ue cbamplon.ahlp and
10 straight wins before the Batona fell ln the CJF playoff• to
Loyola <Los Angeles), 21·20, ln double overt.lme. Gittens chalked up 1,408 yudt on 190 curiel, avera1ed
7.4 yards per crack, was a.crack receiver and 1cored In every aatne. Twice he acOred four touchdowna 1n • 1ame for the
Barons.
·Caldwell is the lineman of the year. The two-way
atando\U at center and tackle, lnUmldated the oppo1lUon
with hls rugged tacklln& and was conatantly the overwhelm·
ing factor in a superb defense.
Gompf, a three-t1me most valuable player on Lasuna
Beach Hilb '1 teams and sought by aucb achoola u Nebraska,
Oklahoma and UCLA, ts the player of the year for hla out·
standing work on ottenae and defense.
Coach of the year laurela go to Newport Harbor JD1h'1
Bill Piuica.
All·Oranie Coast Area ' , Flnt Team Ofteue
Rec-Mike Camp, Estancia .
T -AlfCoenig. Fountain Valley
G -Jim Ingram, Mater Del
C --Jeffllelkes.Ediaon
G -Larey Budgen. Fountain Valley.
T -Kent Tucker, Marina Rec-Tim Holmes. Fountain Valley
B -Marco Pagnanelli, Hunt.inaton Beach
B -DougThompaon. Fountain Valley
B -Dave Gonzales, Mater Del
B -Willie Gittens, Fountain Valley
B -Grea Kannan. Marina
First Team Defeue
DE-Mike Ochoa. Mission Viejo
DT-Bryan Caldwell, Fountain Valley
NG-John Gleason, Mater Del
DT-Jerry Nelson, Mission Viejo
OE-Jeff BiteUJ, Newport Harbor
LB-Bill Gompf, ~auna Beach LB--John Bogdan, Edison
LB-Don Barker, Newport Harbor
DB-Stan Shibata, Fountain Valley
OB-Je!fffyder, Edison
DB-Wayne Kasparek, Newport Harbor
Sffond Team Olfeue
Rec-Scott Brummett, Huntington Beach
T -John Hess, El Toro
G -Doug Brockmeyer, Newport Harbor
C -Steve Finch, Costa Mesa
G -Kevin Obymako, Estancia
T -Tom Hughes, Univenity
Rec-David Reyes, Mater Dei
B -Crai& Lyons. Newport Harbor
B -Mark McElroy, San Clemente
B -Dave·Jeran~1 Est ancla
B .--SCOtt Spear, ml.salon Viejo
B -Steve Gramlich, Dana Hills
8.ecoad Team Defeue
DE-Steve English. Untveralty ·
DT-Don Weisman, Edison
NG-Brad Wood, Fountain Valley
OT-Kevin Sloan, Estancla
OE-Mike Baker, Corona del Mar
LB-Dan Charnitlkl, ?.tiaslon Viejo
LB-ctaig Olson, Mater Del ·
LB-Jim i'ree!Jlan, Fountain Valley
DB-Earl Hewell, Eatancia
DB-Ron Padilla, Fountain Valley
DB-Mike Wade, Saft Clemente
195
~5
220
205
190
205 205
193
175
165
175
190
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr. -
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
183 Jr.
210 Sr.
205 Sr.
197 Sr.
201 Sr.
198 Sr.
195 Sr.
195 Sr.
180 Sr.
170 $r:
170 Sr.
185
185
201
160
20S
201
160
180
175
175 192
190
195
19S
195
247
210
191
190
206 la5
170 uo
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Sr.
Sr.
Sr. Sr.
Sr.
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Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
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Sr. Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
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Sr.
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fQOTBALL I HORSE RACING J MISCELl:ANV
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121
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Rose Harold is the women's president's
cup tolf champion at
Irvine Coa.&t Country
Club.
Pro Cage,
Hockey
Standings
. . . ' .
P'ounhln Valley ~'::'""'
Htch '• WUU• otttena. u ~ he dld ~ eoUN ltUOD, ~
dominates tbt final = Orange Coast .,... foot-.,..
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ball 1taUstltt wlth t,408
Yards ru•hll\I ana a wbopplnc lH polots,
th•nka to hl1 28
tou..cbdown Nl\I.
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.,., try to he • -frOm rai~ ,....~Cotti ••
Olt .. Miami ~· at ._ 0rMoe Bowl. MIMIL
• MOVle '* * * "Th• aurolar•" (1178) JNn.Paul ~
dlO. O!Mr 811Mf, A~
of ,,.,.. ltelll • fortune
In -lllde with the lild cit
• CCNYlplMr. (2 Iva.)
• 1M MADY BUNCH
Oreo and P91er 11• oon-WlOICI that Merda II a tra. "or *--lhe 11 Inter· .... In • llvel lldloof• ~~
Four pecpe out for~
ment In • ltolen plclwc)
become fUgltlYel frOn\ the
i.w wh9n their tun tuma
Into murder and robbery.
• FOOOe FOR THE
MODERN fAMILY
Al..,.,,oAct·
••Chlol(en''
1:11 e PLEDGE~
~ echecluled pro-
gramming mey be delayed
due to pledge breeka.
Lucie Amaz tests hei: skills with an eleph~nt
in the second annual Circus of the Stars"
tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2.
t:2S. OVER EASY
Mr. end Mra. INlng Stone;
rnenct.tory retirement; fed.
eral lnfotmallon centera. «t1>8 MOVIE
how much of • pest • kid
brother can be When Chip
end e buddy break up hi•
date wtth a P<llllY glrl.
G!) FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Role Of The Femtly Ser·
vloe Agenclel'' .:It** "The Thief Of
8agdad" ( 111<401 Sebu,
"-0Uprm. A thief In old
8egded la drH lloelly
changed lifter mMllng •
genie. (1 hr., 30 min.I
Cl) C88 N.EW8 7:00 D HBO NEWS
., MY TffREE 80N8
Robbie Oooglu IHtnl
D UAR8CLU8 ., I LOVE LUCY
"Lucy Fall" lllnaa" tD AOAM-12
Officer • Reed rleka hla Ill•
C'Jaannel .Lf•ting•
e KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles II KNBC (NBC) L os Angeles e KTt.A (Ind.) Los Angeles G .KASC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
llJ KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 0 KCST (NBC) San Diego ID KTIV (Ind.) Los Angeles
Cl) KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles fJD KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles '1i> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
to 11ve Ottloer Malloy dur·
~agunti.ttle. 119 MACteL I LEHA!R
RIPORT
Cl) 'YOOAWITH
MADE.UNI!
Cl) TO TE.I. THE TRUTH
7:iMI D CONSUMa. euvu.-e NIWLVWEDGAMI! ., THE llWW 8UNCH
When Bobby dlaoc>Yen he
.. the Ol1fy Bredy wtlhou1 •
troptiy of tome kind, he
~a trentlc oompet·
llor.
Cl) LET'S MAKE A DEAL
fD LA. INTEACHANQE ··Popcorw·· '9 FAEHCH CHS'
''To Aout A ChieMn'' (R)
Cl) 1100.000 NAME THAT
TUHI!
1:00 9 Cl) ClllCUI Of THI!
STAM
In this eecond annual
event the rlngmutera WUI
be: LUcllte Belt, Telly aav ..
lu, Cindy Wlllleme and.
Mlehaal Yori!. Richard
Roundtree wtll dive from a
hlghtew« thru a ring of
Bappg JOOtla., BapPfl Bags
..
. , .. ~ .... ............ ~
will tide 1111 moec.~ on
• lllgllwtlw .... of .,...
~··~ eum.a~OM
TMIMAM "IWaOomeTMMcM,.
Low ........ No ,.,,..., Adm'! l6mlnl and
NI 80ft. LUke. '*°'"9 ~ by "' """'"' of Wllnwl ~·· ..... i 01 .. on •net •Piii•}•' Hhootte•oher, M H ..... eMCMI **•" ..... W11I\ fdllf'' (1147) Wllllam ~.
1Nrie Dunne. A WOINlll and
Mr ---l'lllflllg4t to ~ ..... ~
tyrennlOlll ~ ca
hrt.)
I JOeCIR'I WILD
CAROL --.rT AND"'IDIDi
• litO'M *** .,,.. Jar SlnOer'' (186S) Dan!lY lllofnat>, PtooY ~ A )10UflO men
deolcl.-on a ~ In
... ~ r1lthlr than
follow In 111• father'•
~ ... CMtor. (2
hrt.)
• NA'TJ()NAL
~SPICIAL
·"Yukon P~" l'OUf.
young men put their oour·
.. and~ tot.he
lMI wl1llie f9tnldnO the
tr911 of tile Klondike OOld-
Mekere.
ID THE8EST Of EMI KavN;&
a:ao1··~TIOM l1at.OOO QUE8TION
OVEAEMY
9!00 N80 MOVIE
''The St~· (Prem-
iere) Martin Belum, P9tty
Duke Aatln. Ira Davidoff. a
veteran t~ wrtter, II
troubled by a IT'IOtMr'I
chargee that his telepley
motlY9ted llCtlONI by ....
eon ~ ~ed In lhe
tiov'•daeth. • MOVIE **l.-i "S COndor" (1970)
Jim Broiwn, LAe Van Cleef.
A cMln gang eecapee end
• wlll1e Apeche IMder
head for Melllco to •!Ml a
mllffon.dollar fortune In
gc>td. (2 hra.) llJ IROH810E
lronelde'l lilde Mt• hlmeelf
up u bait to net a l!lller
loen.netk.
The cast and crew of TV's top·r ated pro-
gram ''Happy Days " gather for the cut·
ting or the cake celebrating the filming of
the looth program ln the series. It's seen
Tuesdays at 8 on ABC, Chann.el 7.
By JAY SllAl\BtJTT
LOS ANGELES (A.P) -BUl't
Sugarman ia an executtvo pro-ducer. ms bag ts coetlng up
ideas for TV. Next Suhday NBC wtii air an idea of b.ia, thel first
"Billboard Nusnber 1 Mllsic
Awards'' abow.
There are 12 cateJories of
honors in th1I effort, ~ted ·by
tho. Bee Geos and Kris Kristof.
ferion, and involvinl ~ ».OP maic charts of BWbc>Ud, a ma.-
jell' publleat!OQ of uow1 aboUt the
mutlc 1Mlline11. • n aeemsb~. week soes.by
Without all entertainers dOMi.og
for.ial duds, aotna to tbe TV 1tu4lo and gettinf an award.
ADOtb« awardl show Ia tiut a
trC)pb~ venlon of coal• to
.Nertcutl•Hiit•? .
' abow in the mu&ic field~ and
that's the Grammy awards," he
said, meaning the show in which
the recoid industry votes for and
honors its own each year.
Without namin1 names, be di&-
missed other music: award shows as all bosh, mere Popularity
partlet where the public Js asked
to vote on performers much of
the public may not know much about.
ABC G 6:00 -Monday Night ~oot
ball. 1be BalUmore Colts Invade the
Orange Bowl to take on the Miaml -
DOlphlns 1n a crucial AFC cou~. ..
CBS 8 8:00 -Circus of the Stars. The second annual extravaganza in
which movie and TV cttebritiea perform
iD circus acts .
KCET at 8:00 -"Yukon Passaae ...
Four men Tollow the trail ot the early
Klondike gold hunters in this National
Geographic speeaal.
NBC 1J 9:00 -"The Stoeytellef.0
Martin Balsam stars in this new TV mov·
ie as a television script writer accused of
,,prompting a young boy's death. . ..., .......
ou.18: Mao Ofti-. Connie
~ Patrk* Duffy,
~v ... eur.n . I =•UllKIND
··~ • .,...., Publlo !yw'' (1172) Mia ,MOW, '{opol.
When.·~~ band ..... pttya1e ~
tlW to wlltdl ..... -the plan bflcldll'-. ~ tn.)
1:10• HOU.~ lalYlltOM THIATlfll
"The I~ Play"
Tim Ma1tleeon. P9ny King,
Mltohall AyM and AlelcM-
der 8oouftly portl'*'Y four
~ In the ... of EtnMt ,...,..IP')'. (R) 10:00. CJ) twrrOH
Alt old vlUdevlllan (o.vld
Wayne) II lhot ~ a
~and P9te and Mao IWUl'9Ct .,. pall
with • buck~ act
of their own to find out
~. .
I G NEWS
GIT'IMAAT
Smart Ntume home to find "In bed with. bla ..
but Ille Ctlief ~that
the girt II an Impost•.
10-.ao •• HEWS
11:00111 8 (I) (II NEW1 HOU.~
OOtlHECTIOH
•. MOVI& * * * "Tiie 81Kglara" (117') Jeap.PU Blllmon-
do, Omit stwtf, A quart«
of w.v.a ....... fortl.N
In .-aldl with tl1e aid ol
• oompuW. (2 hrt.)
eTH&OOOOOUPU
Feb oeta OICW In trouble wlttl tM lntemel ,...,.,_
a.Moe.
• HOHrtMOONl!M
flalph't clalm that he II too
lhd to Wiit hie~
law b9CldlNe .... Aloe
i.ma ttult ,,. .. ~ In
• bowing toumemlnt .,,..
;r'~ CAV1!1'1'
"ow.t Verdon And The
Amerioan Denae Mlldllne''
(Part 1of2) e MACHEL/ U!HMR
fEPOtltf
11:ao 8 CJ) Cle LATI MOV-.
• ·~ "McMlllalt And Wlf« Huabandl, WIVM And
Kiiier•" (1971) Rook
Hucllon, 8uaan St. JWML
A m-.•Quer•d• party
erupta In panic when •
dOM friend of Ule Mc:Mll-
..... murdered. (ffl II TONIGHT
Ol.ieet hoet: David lk'entMW.
Oueeta: John Travolt.,
&mnne a-.. Helen
Gurtey 8rO"tWn. Frankie
VIiii.
• LOW. AM!NCAH
8TYLI
It's Not I a 'Cop
By JER&Y BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Don't
tallc to Larry Brody or Mel Swope
about cop shows. They don't
want any part of them.
find policemen with stories to fit
tliose themes.
"I'm as fu bJonably anti·cop as
you can be," says Brody, a
muscµlar writer-producer. ''If I
thought this was a cop show I
wouldn't work on it."
Strange talk for two men who
produce a television sbow called
"Police Story," the only show
ever created by a writer who was at the time a policeman: Joe
Wambaugh. The Emmy-winning
NBC show, after four years as a
one-hour series, is now back with
eight two-hour movies.
B&ODY AND Swope don't see
"Police Story" u a cop show. At
least, not the kind with squealing
tires, shootout.a and supercops
who know all the answers and
never are emotionally touched
by tbeirwork.
•'Tb.is show ta not interested in
violence," aaya Brody. "We're
interested in character. What's
soinl on in someone'• bead 1n a
atreH aituatloo. fiot violence, but the effect of violence en
policemen and the victims.
We're dolng a show now where no
one e•en drawa •gun. ·~1 don't think of tbla u •cop
1bow. Tbe police reality la the
tound•tion we bWld on to show
the human emotions. We're after
tbe human reality."'
SWOPE, WHOSE father WU a
police chief In North-
ern Callforula, adds, .. Policemen .
eo through the tame ~raooal
1truaeles as anyone else. ' .
Unltte other police shows,
"Police Story" ls baaed on the
true experiences of J)ollcemen.
who' Brod.Y taya, .. bare their
eoui. to us. They tell u tbinp
the1. wouldn't tell their wives."
FiDdlnf thelJe policemen 11 the
Joi> o Los Angeles police
homicide lnveatteator Set. Dick
1'alk, who wu Wambaua._,,
partner unW Wambeqh quJt U..
foroe to write ftl1l time. ID put R&tODS, acrtpts were
bated on •&Hrlencea wlu:n· _.. Jw., POllcemeo, Tbf1 ·year ~ UMl~S~ decldecl on
qbt ~~tbril~ and bad Kalk
"Now that •e're in. our fifth
year," says Swope, "it's bard to
keep coming up with 1ood
stories. 'lbaVs why we went for
specifte themes. On one ahow we
tell bow illegal aliens are ripped
off by both the Mexicans and the
Americana.
.. IT'S ABOtJT A Mexican-
American officer who 's always
ignored bis heritage, then baa to go undercover in Mexico and re-
turn here as an illegal alien. It's
not a story of him searching tor
his roots, but it turns Into a love
story •hen be meets a etrl on the Way up,"
Apotber sh•• bas a youn1
policeman going tmdercover as a
student' at • high school to ferret out a nareotics operation. Brody saya, "When I sat down
to write lt I was against .it: The
whole business of a eo_p mu· .
queradlng as a student to get the fi'::::' on <lther students .. When I hed it, bavina lived it in·
directly, 1 won'tao sure. I know
if I was a cop I couldn't do it. The
cop in the story has bis own
doubts and guill"
Then tbete'• the story of a
polleeman vtewtnc bis Medal ol
Valor u a 1U,ma. He winl the
medal in a shootout ln Wblch bis
partner is tilled, and be feels be
let bis partaer do\yn.
PTBEa STORIES include klct-
die porn and police alienatim
from soclety where the cops
belleve they are the toocl p,ys
and everyone else ls ball. Thia is not the fodder of most
police.,_,., Al Wambaughnid
when be created ihe show the re. al dancer a poqceman laces is
not the pbystcal daneer, but the
emotional wrench the Job puts
him through. 'l'beae are the
dramatic themes that have l1f'ted
"Police Story" above Qie ~
dinary. .• ~
Kalk, who worked bursla ,
tail with Wambau1h' for -·---L years, said, "Some Q( \hue
are involved bl un~llev
thtnea. I've been Oil. ~ J~~
years and I've never ~;~
sel'Vlce revolver. o;,~ ••A friend of mine was w
residential burglary, Wb~ interviewed him be b~
mention a search fQr~ a • The guy was going
divorce and was wonted a
bis own kid. That'• how the
came out. They eventually 'B the boy at the bottom ol •
swimming pool. That turoecl
one of the best abows they~ did, 'little Boy Loet.• I
think they ever did the but •
story." i •1•
I IA
KALK SAYS BE bu alot,i time during the day to leek
the policemen wttlutork9 to~
He aaya, "If aomebody's to~~
kill someboclY else, they al.,._
seem to do it at ni~. So, I'm d on a case all nlgbt and have
off durlnl ~day." '?\
Although the impttJlsioD Ja u.9i
"Police Story" is the Los A.DPli(
Police Department, tt>e ahtfJC
never saya so ~caJlT. ~ 4elvea no offlclal supPol't
the police -and very littl• ~ fictal support. •"
Not lo~c aio Brody w
stopped by a tiatt.ic officer. ttr
speeding. BrodY said be~ t&e convenation around to fact that he' prOdueed ••
Story." ·..,
The om~ flnisbed wntlq;I ticket, handed to Brody Ud
"I hate 'PollceSWey.... ·~~
NYSE · COMPOSITE •
I
f
l
N DAil. Y PIL.OT U
A.gene! Deserves.
Business Award
TllE IAftEll, TREY n:Et. aEACI' to tbe oeed:s of a.llUll business witb tbo 11ino •Pffd and eotbuafum aa mJabt be dllplQed by a bh>llO ta a iuQdbolo. '1'ta4s1felt11-
Mftd, crowded out; 1.My felt an tmemWYttTto tbelrllOOda. Now \be Council of Small tad lDdePUdeot Bu.IMu JU-I
llGdatlcm. wboee memberl npn1ent 7'0,000 1mall en-1
terptUel, bu presented lta first lmwal award fclr "Fedenl . f
Small Buatnen Program ~celJ.eDce'' to tho NaticlPal t
ScJence Foundation.
Small matter? N'o. lna1ead, 1\ leelQll
highly sJtnJ,fteant for taxpaJeN, bual·
nesa people, government otnclall &Del
Ute D•tbl in 1eneral. l'IJfJ•~ Milton Stewart, former preeldent ol p
' th• N atlonal Small DUilness Alaoc.la-
tlcm, expn•• lt~ '"11H9 NSF plan eoWd
be a prototype for other agencfea. It's the
ft.rat federal proeram iD adenc. 8lld _..., ..
teebnolo0 \bat makea aeue fOl' amall business."
Small bl•iM'I baa lon1 eomplalned that lt Aeti•• too
little of federal 1overnment money for researcb ud dea
velopmeat. Much oltbe m~ 1oe1 to larau ~or 1 to the sreat unlversiUes. 1
A BILL PUSHED BY SEN. EDWARD H. Kenaedy. J).
Mau., wbo al.lo ~ved an award. retuJta Jn •mall bul:\-ua receivin& a percentage of NSF money for reseucb •pt
plied t.o national needs. Now 12.5 percent. it will rise to 15 ..... ~
Tbe tint compeUllon was cooducted tbia year. wben ~
propoeals were reviewed and flnWtaie granta of u.e.009 made to 4Z companiea-
f'or some amall·buslness people such money ~ t,.
the Heel fron:a tVhicb lfe&l prod\lcts lfOW witho\lt tJm ~
moaey they m!Jibt never aeek to Co forward. &1mpl1 becaua'
tunda are fff'1 aiftlcult to obtaln.
' I l
!
1
J
i I
l I
TBE nasT STAGE OF 'nlE NSP procram WIS to mi i vite amall-business people, mabl)y tn hfgb tedloolo~ i
areu, to submit. brief proposals, oo more than 20 paaea. for t
nie.eareb in the national interesL 1'be lure was grants of up.;
to szs.ooo.
Most ol tbe mOMy awarded \I for fe-.l~~luche. ..
be apent flfler a (our-to elit·montb pctod, •tin& bl report~ nisuits.
Uthe resuJts an prom laing, a compa111 cu a~ fw ~ '
second·atqe grant. ID wbldl it might receive much We
1\UDI, $100,0GOormon,todnelopaproeotype. ,
But. tbere la a eoetintenet to thJI •eecod ~. Part of
tbe plan la to bring ln pt1vate cQli.I, end IO u ilull•t i. .
cbooaing award wtnen at um polat la t.be nedlw1
private capital IOW'Cee to carry on from there. "'
Sti>Ck Market Takes S
Another Small EOss
NEW YORK <AP> -The ltocl iniriitt a •mell
lou toda, ln a qtd«.MMJoe Cl" Well~
Tbe Dow Jone1averace:.o<3'•1'•!fl'· oft l .'13 poin~
Frida)', wudowa&QOtMl'l.tlto'21.'fS; ._.
Losen held a -4-3 a4vaatate 0¥9 plDva IUDOlll N
York Stock Efthanae·Uat9d ~
i
~.-~! .. ~!.~I ~~.:::::::::::::::::. . .................... . , ................. ._. " -................ . !~ .................. . ;; ............ , ......• , . ............... ,, .• ' I t~
.. T ... OtO (,
NIW Yoi.K CA~I
B.r ne A•t0elaled Pteu
TbeloUowtnc are Billboard'• hot record hltl few th wedt eodln1 December 10 u they appear ln
next weeJt·•~ueot BUlboard maautne.
HOT fNGU:S
l . \'Ou LIGHT UP MY 1.JPE -Debby Boone amer-O&rb)
2. DON'T IT MAKE MY BROWN EYES BLUE
ryalal Gayle <United Art.tats>
3. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Oeea )
4'. BLUE BA YOU Llnda Ronatadt (Asylum)
5. lT'SSO EASY -Linda Ronstadt (Asylum)
6. HEAVEN ON THE 7TH FLOOR -Paul Mtehola.s <RSO)
7. WE'RE ALL ALONE -Rl&a Coolidge •M>
8. BACK JN LOVE AGAIN -LTD (A&M) .
9. BABY, WHAT A BIG SURPRISE-Chlcago (~olumbla)
10. YOU MAKE LOVIN' FUN -Fleetwood Mac (Warner Bros. t
TOPLP1
1. LINDA RONSTADT Simple Dreama ( eylum)
,.., 2. FLEETWOOD MAC Rumours (Warner nros.)
Garson'• Got 'ena
3. COMMODORES Live (Motown)
4. ROD STEWART --Foot Loose & Fancy Free <Warner Bros.)
5. L YNYRD SKYNYRD -Street Survivors
<MCA >
Pieee of the Roek
EASY LISTENING
l HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees <RSO>
2. HOW CAN I LEA VE YOU AGAIN -John Oenver(RCA)
3. HERE YOU COME AGAIN -Dolly Parton· C}lCA>
4. SLIPSLIDIN' AWAY -Paul Simon (Colum-bia)
S. WE'RE ALL ALONE -Rita Coolidge
<A&M>
SOUL SINGLES
l SERPENTINE FIRE -Earth. Wind & Fire
<Columbia)
2. YOU CAN'T TURN ME OFF -rugh Inergy <Go rdy)
3 BACK IN LOVE AGAIN -L.T.D. (A&M )
4 IT'S ECSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN
NEXT TO ME Barry White (20th Century)
5 IF YOU'RE NOT BACJC IN LOVE BY MON-
DAY Millie Jackson <Spring)
..
Buddy Holly Story Due for Movie
By PETER J. BOYER
LOS ANGELES <AP> Hollywood,
having churned its way through war.
sex and the Old West, has discovered
a mother lode of relatively untouched
material-rock'n' roll.
Sure, there were some beach
blanket films i(J the 60s, and there
were the Beatles films. too. But in the
case or the former, music was just
another piece of scenery. like Don
Rickles and Annette's two·piece
bathing suit. As for the Beatles, well.
they were the Beatles You got the im-
pression the cameras just went along
for the ride in those films.
But wilh "A Star 1s Born" -lhe
Streisand-Kristofferson epic of self
destruction, rock style It became
YOU KNOW BUDDY Holly's musk, 1---------• whether you th.ink you do or not . It you
don't remember ·'That '11 Be the Day"
and ''It Doe!n't Matter Any More"
from the 1950s, you may recall Linda
Ronstadt's hit.versions of tbos.e Holly
tunes inthel9'10s. •
In fact, Miss Ronstadt is currently -------~~........,~,-._...;....;z.;_=.:-...:...._...,-;...:..;.:.,..1
riding high ln the chartswith uotber
Hollytune, "lt'1SoEuy."
"They ttbe potential audtence) are
familiar with the mu.sic," Bauer say1.
"I think they want to know where rock
androlloamefomrrom. ••
But there's more to the Buddy Holly
story than music, and that's the story
it.self. And Bauer says that's the main
.strengtbothldilm.
-------------------apparent that rock had something
filmmakers ought to look into. The
rock'n' roll subculture, with its
sometimes nihilistic tendencies, could
produce some good drama. There was
more in that well than a bunch of kids
dancing on the beach.
HOLLY WAS A poor white kid Crom
Lubbock, Tex. Ws parents didn't file
his !winy muidc, his girlfriend nagged
him togotocollegetohavesomethlngto
fall back on, and people ln the music
business couldn't understand how a
white boy could make that good
rock 'n' roll.
·-·~ fU/$Jl·tHO
..,,.., WIHICUI e MU Y ,.'"
HllOll1Nt '"" TMI ITIH01'9! , .
Al 'ACIMO I MUM lt1UO
IOllY ~f:PllLD<Nt
NH wnt DICK I JANI CN1
...... MCllAOAIN
CAHll 111 ""' WtNr OPPrtaNGI CNI
..,,... ........ -9INVll
OH OOOttH! ~Ill
OUMIAU UU Y <NI
"MA#Y .. , ......... MMll"
OIAND '"'" AUTOcNI ""' Uf MYDUITllNI
ROCK STARS, SEE, orten live reck-
lessly and die young. Instant leeends.
The perfect fodder for Hollywood.
With that in mind, a young en-
trepreneuer named Fred Bauer has
come up with what sounds like the
perfect idea for a movie -'The Bud·
dy Holly Story."
Holly, you may remember, waa the
Great White Father of rock'n' roll,
less a hillbilly than Elvia. less blues-
based than Chuck Berry.
Like so many rockers who followed
him, Holly's star burned bright and
fast. He was killed in an airplan•
crash in 1959 at the age of 22, two
years after hitting the blg tlme.
Bauer, a televl!lon rock show pro.
ducer, saw gold 1n the Buddy Holly
story. He sought out Holly's widow,
bought the rights to the story, and
1pent lour years hustling the money to
produce the mm
BUT BAUER KNOWS he's going to
have to beat some drums to interest
moviegoers tn a mm at>?ut a man who
died nearly ~ years ago. Holly may
be prime stuff to rock fans, but
Bauer's not interested tn a rock fan's
in·filck. He wants to make money.
Toward that end, Bauer's set
himself to the task or Interesting folb
in Buddy Holly, fact and legend.
"I am fond of quotlne (famed movie
man) John Ford," Bauer aaid one re-
cent day, as he was ban1tn1 the Holly
drums at the old Selmlck studio.
"Ford used to say 'Tell the legend, not
the truth.• We are doina the legend ot
Buddy HolJy. ''
HoflyhuacuJtfollowlne, butl'mnot
fool en()Ulb to think that ev•rybody out
there knows who be 11." Bauer con·
t1nues. "But they 1ure a1 bell know hll muatc .•· ·
• On th~t point, Sauer couldn't be cloaertoth,mark.
He was rejected and generally treat·
ed ln a rotten way until a Buffalo, N. Y.,
disc jockey heard a demo of his, and
loved it. He Jocked him1ell Into the
studio,Jegendhasil, vowlngnottoleave
unUIHollywasahlt.
Holly, ol course, became a hit. He
forgot about the nagging girlfriend in
Lubbock, fell in love with a Puerto
Rican eirl in New York and aot mar~ ried.
fie was idolited in England, awed in
the United States. Butsi>l months after
he married, he was killed. and the
phenomenon became a legend.
IT'S A GOOD story. How film novice
BauerwiUbandleltremahutobeseen.
Bauer got his partner, Stephen Rash,
to direct. It's Ruh'a firstfilm Bauer
eot hi• best Buddy, Rrrt a1wer, to
write the screenplay. 's Gittler's lint
screenpJay.
Bauer raised tbe mopey, he says, by
coming te Hollywood ahd "putttn.r on a
highprofile." '
·•we rented a big house in Beverly
Hilts and drove big can," be say1 lau&bihl~ .. After all, this ls tinsel town.i' w1tsa~bustlerasakld. Tome,thJala
jUJtanOt.berhuaUe."
ShooUng on the fllm, which ls belni
tnade at the refatfvefy small coat ot $2
million. wW be finlJhed ln ~ember.
ll "nftb't~leasene"-t&prfne.
Gary lldlley will play Holly. with Don
Stroud··llnd Charles J,f artin Smith tn
aupportblr'roles. AU three are must.
cian1 ancfflolly'a music -12 aonas -wm befllmed live.
"DAMNATION ALLEY" (PG)
"FUTURE WORLD" (PG)
~!'!"""'-----"LOoKf NG FOR MR. GdooBAR"
C~l
j
• INSIDE: •Ann Landen • ClassJfled
• Horoscope • Lifestyle ·
. .
l -Featuring I lllillillilllilliilllilllllillil.__.._._,.
Chris C/Blk,
above, models
this year's
look In
ski wear.
Right. Jeff
Jones tunes
skis.
Resolved
. aB80LtJTION8 RECOMMENDED BY,
HOUSTON DELEGATES: .
Orange Coast residents
are taking to them thar
snow-covered hills.
BJmBKYL &OMO
Of .. Mty .........
Well 11drr1, JIOU' ratn danc:,u llaoe flnallt1
paid off . and Mammoth . and mod o/ the other
SterrornomanOPEN,OPEN,OPENI
l.01t HGIOft tOGI "The Year of the
Nightmare," but lhil ecuon mav Ind up ·°' .a
++Callfomi4 Dream." Condftton. range from
good to fotr -.and ioerc ucellent over
Thanbgtolng. * * *
Skiers are pWllne their winter clothes out or
mothballs and bot waxing their aids ... I'd rather
be aiding" bumperatickera are appearine on clty
streets. Younc executive-types are putting their
racks back on their Poracbes (lf they ever took
them off) and surfers are adapting their vans to
bold •Ida instead of surfboards .
.,MOGUL MASBERS"and "BofDoga" have
been ·seen of late practlcln& deep knee.
bends and doing aerials into awimmine
pools. The community colleees are graduating
neophytes from dry land ski cluaes who have
been preparing for the "bi1 event" since Sep-
tember. And ski club meetinp are 1ett1ne
serious again (well. may~ not too serious) and
reservatiooa are belne taken for th1a seuon's
escurs!ona on the slopes.
Ski shop proprietol'J look tired but are sm.il-
1n1, •mllinl. amlllng. Says a harried Alllon Drown~ Pat'• Ski Shop lD Bunttqtoo Beach,
"The last three years have been bad. But th1a is
the first tlme we've been able to ski at
Thank.aglvt.ng. I think It's really coin& to be eood
thia year."
The early mow, aaya Jim Jacobsen of Neal's
Sportini Goods in Newport Beach. "took a lot of people by surprise.•• Stan Mullina of Hollywood
Sports Plua considers the snow a •'Godsend.••
FOR TBE BEGINNING SIDEil, ski equip-
ment proieuionala had the following ad. vice: • Be ID shape. Endurance buildlnc exercises
like Joainl, bicycliJll and awimmine are ex-
cellent, u well as exerciaes to help combat
fatigue such u 'squats, alt·ups and push·ups.
Work °"*on a regular schedule and stick to lt.
• Al'lp)'a a.aie leaou. No matter bow well
meanln8 or bow good a skier your best friend is,
take lealODS from a certlfied ski school lnstruc·
tor. It could mean the difference between speo'
ing the aeuon on ati.a -or in a cast. r
• lleDt yoar eqalpaaeat laltt••IJ. Until you
have learned to ski and ba-ve developed your own
style, renfinl atla, boot.I and poles is the best
way to go. After that, say the experts, btzy your
boou flnt because foot comfort ls easentlal. ·
• .._ 1G9 tire• die alopel. rat. Ka.t acci·
denu OCC\U' because of fatiaue and durin1 that
"one 1ut nm" of the clay.
•N~ald..._.
AND, PO& BOTH BEGINNERS and
seasoned lkiera, it's important to look eood and
stay warm when you embark on that "ultimate
experience." Accordiug to tbe ski shops
manufacturers have introduced many lnnova·
lions to make you look slick and feel 1ood this
year.
"Style Gods" and "Fashion Queens" will
<See SNOW, Page CZ)
·Conferenee
Afteri11ath
The proposals range from
abortion on demand to aid
for battered wives.
By CREKYL&OMO
Ol .. Mtf ...........
.,. ............ ~ ..... O'o-11
Barbara Wright, B months pregnant, teaches her ski c/a$$.
The Coach
Patricia Wright teaches skiing even
though she's pregnant. '/ have to have
SOMETHING to tell my doctor ..• '
"Bend your knees more:"
"Too much on the left leg and br·
lng those tips a little closer"'
.. Push your feet out farther!"
"Not knock-kneed, Jo Ann:"
The tiny, ski coach was yelling to
her class at Orange Coast College
as they· c~me wobbly-legged down
the plastic-covered ski ramp.
Th~ ski instructor, who was also
wearing boots, aids and poles, de·
monstrate4the11£bt way to come
down the ramp for bet studenU.
Nothing unusual one might say,
but Barbara Wright, the instructor,
ts 8-and-a-half-montbs prepant
with her second child.·
She abrug.s and smiles as she ex·
plains, "I have to have
SOMETHING to tell my doctor on
Monday." Then, as an aside, she
says, "He'll probably die of a heart
attack when I tell him I've been
skiing!"
Mrs. Wright, who also teaches
•
backpacking and gymnastic~
classes at the school, says sb~,
plans to return after her tiaby •
born in February to coach
women'•SYmnasticateam. • 1.,!r
She says abe ham •t been snoW"S
skiing this year because of her ad+.&
vanced pregnancy, but still pl~
to "1et in pretty much of the-!
seuon. •• Her first child was not"•
born unW May an'tt she proudly re-
calls she skied the whole -
that year. .
'"'tbe onl7 fear J nn, bad when.:
anow"ildllflfprunan&;.., that it.
•oy~, would blt· .. e. I was
cautious. and •ii~ the mOl'e ad•
vancecl rum w~ the be~
probabW wo4ldia'1 run into me."
ft f The coach saye-ebe bu remained' i
fit durlna botlr J>regnancies by
combl.nlng yot&sand atnkhtng a• · erclaea. How abe do it\-
"lt's my nature and my.type· • ,
wort. I do u mueh as I t119ally d ·
-IJmtlow-keyitalltUeb 0
Q 0AaL Y PILOT
f ~ ~ • Resolved
(Prom Pase CU
Coqreq abould support a policy ol fWl •~ploy
ment few women.
EQUAL a1GBT8 AJJENOMENT. The
°EQual Rl&bt.1 Amendment lbould be raWled.
HEALTH. A naUonal health aecwity pro-
aram abould be eatabllahed and abowd cover
women u individual.a. The authority ol tbe Food
and DruJ AdmlnlltraUon should be expaocled for
1b1cter drua tesUn1.
BOllEllAKEU. Marnaie ahould be 1e1al·
ly defl.ned a.a a partnership of equals. ~
INSURANCE. There should be no denial of
coveraae because of sex diacrimlnaUon or de-
atal of covera1e for presnancy and for related I expenses. •
INTERNAnONAL AFFAIRS. More women
ibould be included In the forumulatlon and ex-
~uUon of all aspecta of United States forei1n
policy. '!be U.S. government should acUvely
seek the establlJhment of a U.N. Commlaaion on
the Status of Women, promote international
education and communication, and should aive
support tothe International Women's Decade. .
MEDIA. There should be more jobs for
11tomen and realistic portrayal of women In the
med la.
1-MINORITY WOMEN. There should be more
aid to minority women who face "additional OP·
presalon" and "double discrimination."
OFFENDERS. There should be reform of
sentencing laws to ellminate dlscrimalion
against women. Particular attention should be
. paid to the needs of poor and mill()rity women.
OLDER WOMEN. AddJtional health and
social services should be provided to older
women enabling them to live with dignity and
security.
RAPE. Federal, state and local govern-
ments should revise laws dealing with rape and
local task forces should be established to aid vic-
tims.
REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM. There
should be abortion on demand in first three
months of pregnancy, and federally paid abor-
tions for the poor.
RURAL WOMEN. There should be equal
benertts to farm wives and working women in
rural areas and the establishment of a presiden·
tial committee to investigate the conditions of
seasonal and migratory workers.
SEXUAL PREFERENCE. There should be
elimination of discrimination against lesbians in
Jobs, housing and child·custodydisputes . .
STATISTICS. Governmental agencies
should be required to collect, tabulate and
analyze data relating to persons on the basis of
sex to assess the impact of programs for women.
WOMEN, WELFARE AND POVERTY. All
welfare reform proposals should be examined
specifically for thejr impact on women. Oppose
Carter Administration's proposal for welfare re·
form .
DEFEATED: Resolution to create a
Cablnet·level women's department, which oppo·
nents contended would "ghettoize" women's is-
s ues.
( Horoscope )
TUF.SDAY, DEC. 6
I
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-
April 19): Wait and see.
Be alert to subtle
signals. Emphasis on.
restrictions, legal
blocks, acceptance of
some ruJes.
TAURUS (April 20·
May 20): Apply basic in-
form atioo, utilize facts
at h and . Capricorn,
Cancer persons figure
prominently. You're due
for added recognition,
promotion.
GEMINI <May 21-June
20): What was taken for
granted could now be
subject to sudden
change. Know it and pre·
pare accordingly. Aries,
Libra fisure prominently
-and so does the
number9.
CANCER (June 21-
July 22): Jnghlight in-
dependence, originality.
Get foothold, refuse to be
draned back to past.
You get new view of
facts, figures, ap-
praisals, home, proper·
ty.
LEO (July23·Aug. 22):
You 1et eome excellent
ideas. However, don't be
affaid to edit. You feel
p\&lled in two directions
at once. Red tape can be
tllpilnated -if )'OU talce
.. Uitultive leap." naoo <Aus. 23-Sept.
21): Empbula on
~e1; finanotal altua· tlQn apotll&ht~. Key la
tat.xpaJid, aoclaU&e, turn
on charm and win what
yaaneed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct.
22): Some of the best·
taste of backstage,
behind scenes, perceive
operation from the in-
s! SI· Gemini, Virgo p~rsons figure pro-
'Jlli,i\ently -and ~o does
numbers.
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov.
22·Dec. 21): Friend sur-
prises with "scheme" or
plan which is outside
usual pattern. Accent on
desire, romance, fullill·
ment, profit as result or
business endeavor.
CAPRICORN (Dec.
22-Jan. 19): Define
terms, heed counsel of
"stalwart" member of
commitnity. You may be.
laughing, but this con·
servative individual
thinks well of you and
can help In career,
fulfillment of ambitions.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 18): Accent on
long-range plans which
chanee. including travel
arrangements. Get or-
ganized, obtain "guaran-
teed reservations."
Meana be in control or
circumstances.
PISCES (Feb. 19-
Marcb 20) = You dig
beneath surface -apd
could •trike pay dirt.
Mones, finances ,
partnersbip,lans are in
picture. I married,
mate wants to have a say
inpollcy.
U Dee. I 11 you blrtb·
da7 you have 1ootb1n1
voice, a penchant for
''aweeta" and you ~ea
natural diplomat. You
also are pbllosophlcal,
comprehend the mean-·
lbgs of numbers and are
sympathetic to pli1ht or
those less privlleeed.
laid plans are due to be ----------oftrtumed, to 10 utray.
Be-analytical-and flex·
Ible. Member Of opposlt~
sex could read "riot
. " Speclftc lnforma·
tsavaUable. coar10 <Oct. 21-
N . 21): Qo beyond pre-
sc bed 11mltationa-1et
....... ,. .......
RllMJ.CWm • ~-.
ANN LANDERS/HOROSCOPE
Ban .H~liday. Letters
DEAR RJ!:ADERS :
You've been ukinc for a
rerun of tbl1 eolamn
since 1988. I'm renm.n.lht
it, lrnowtni ftill well that
torne "' you ate aom, to cet tnad at me all over
11aln!
DEAR ANN
LANJ>ERS: Please tell
me wby normally in·
ttl111ent people ta~e read aomethln1 like this recelptl and cancelled
leave ol tbelr eensea at and I hopt tbty ftt tbe cbecka .. When l 1ot out
Cbrlltmas. I refer t.o ln· hint: my copy ot my Telurn I
dividuala wtao compose "Dear Frlenda: We ne~l.Y PllHdout. Tbere
interminable cbro&Udea bad a ~~rfec:tly rotten were many pbony deduc-
of the year'• acUvities, year. Hal wu puaed ttops, one of which wu
bave them mimeo-over for promoUon lnteust on a home. (I
bed ( all a1atn. JO be eot mad and Uve with my parentl.) irap uau yapoor quit.Hehun'tllnedupa There wera lar1e i:b!!~ae:4w~:1!:~ new Job )'et, but be looka ~·cbul"Cb contrtbution1."
name tbeJ' can •Ptll. in the papen everyday. (I don't e-lon1 to a
What makes these peo-"Hal lr. wu defeated cburcb wtth my
pie think Ul)"One (save a for homeroom monitor. paren apeclal oc·
special few) 11 lnt.ereated He fiunktd Frencb and caslo I tried to call
David Bushatz prepares tor the ski season .. ~a~~~· tbrouib all ;1~ :::oi. •0 ~.:U.:i :e ::i'~l~ ·
F 1 had a balrcu ce b e,ndt8connected.
••• Snow!
<From Page Cl)
we•~! ~::r:u:l~~= August tnd bad to Fortwaatelv, the IRS ..
family oewalotun, and his iuilar to repair hll auditor believed me ;
l'\'e bad it. What aalll Ho n d a , w b I c b b e when I aQl I didn't re· .
me ls the way they try to wrecked. My mother-in-aUze my retUm was tull
paint aucb glowin1 pie· )aw,'s annual two-week of lies, but be said I •u
tures ol affluence and vl~1t turned into two responsible because I
1ucce11. I have before mo~ths, and my ml-bad slpectlt.
me a flltful of chatty lit-arrames cot ao bad l have Ann, I had to 10 out
Ue Cbrlatmu letters to go 1)ackintotberapy. and borrow the monerto
from all over the coun-"We hope next year la pay back the refund, plus
'try. I'm 1otnz to lift a better. It ,couldn't be interest.
few sentences froJU each worse. Love to all. -Why doesn't someone
~'~ IWM191-.L
1MIS CMlltS'll~ 25% 0,,
SWEATERS
CA$HM•Rl!S, LAMBS WOO~
SHETLANDS, A:~AS;
ACRYLIC ........... c.-.. .. .... ...... .............. M
NOTRE PLACE:
' 1711. 11Mt It .. C.Mo ~~·"-. 541·3035 .
probably relish the new slim and fitted un·
derknits as a replacement for both long un·
derwear and traditional ski sweaters. They're
for use under a windshirt or a trim .. bib jumpsuit
and according to Chris Clark at Newport Skl Co~pany, coat half the price of a re,War
sweater.
. You can let yourself go with a vest parka that
features removable sleeves. Down vesta remain
popular, although many of the man~facturers
have introduced less-expeJ?slve, hberfllJed
versions.
to Ulusttate the point MARY." war.n people about (the n&Jllea of persons DEAR ANN: I hope.__;;_ ______________ ===-
and organisations have my stupidity about taxes
'8en chabled to protect will help someone eise.
According to ski merchants, the color blut
still rank11 number one m the hearts of American
skiers, but there are lots of earth-tones and
bright. bright colors floating around this season ;
particularly in form-fitting jumps~lts with
matching, short parkas and nashy racing pants
and suspenders.
Ms. Drown says there is a trend back to
stretch pants and iiWay from the bulkier powder
suits, but maintains skiers aren't returning lo the
traditional. waist-high versions but to new, high-
waisted pants with suspenders.
THERE ARE MATCHING hats for every
conceivable combination, as well as matching
sunglasses. goggles, gloves and scarves.
Shop proprietors were in agreement about
the changes in ski length : they 're longer than
previous seasons -running what Is t.ermed
"mid·length."
Neal's Jacobsen says the in-between length
still gives you the ability to maneuver quickly,
and adds, the manufacturers also are
getting away from putting cent-er grooves oo UJe
bottom of skis because they have found "it
doesn't affect their performance.'•
the guilty): · Here's wbatbappened:
••near Friends: What I waited last year unUl
a wonderful year we've iero hour to file my tax
bad! Jack wu named return. A friend told me
vice prealdent of tbe about a man who does
bank, so we celebrated taxes. I rushed over to
by buytn1 a Mercedes him with my W-2, picke.d
and taking a trip to the up my return on April 15,
Orient. In addition to his signed it and mailed it. I
Boy Scout work, Jack a ss umed it wasn't
waa chairman of the necessary to check it
United Fund drive. He is over because the man
still on the hospital board knew a lot about taxea The real Sant•'•
a n d p re s i d e n l o f a n d I d 1 d n 't know at Hunttnoton Center
Santa With
A Real Beard
Kiwanis. Just for laughs, anything. d*1IY to visit with
he played the lead in a A few months later I the kiddie&. Photos
Little Theater produc-received a l~ge refund avellable If Yo\I
tlon last June and -almost everything w1sno1wnlle~walt·
everyone said he was that was withheld froJD 12.60. free honday
better than the star who my pay. In July I re-l?f=~~~~
did It on Boradw~. His· celved a letter from the ~ 18 t! h i • ~ .• tO first love, ow r , s IRS wantlnJl to see my ' ec. 19-2 21
still conservation, and he Beach BIVd. & Edinger
continues to work hard -======~---1.-------:--as chairman of the Com--:
mlttee to Fight Dutch ( RELIGION Elm Disease. _
"'After completing my
term as JUnlor Lea1ue
AN,
John
Robert
Powers
The Schqols for Your
Personal Development
ORANGE
3 Town (, Country
(714) 547-8228 Pet.e Vanderburg of Newport Ski concurs
and s.ays the. longer skis .. ate ''for the
performance-oriented person because they
have more edge control. Fol'.the begiMer they
could be barmCul
president, I swore I -----------...;~---.:~~:::-:::=::::::;'.'.:========would lake U!e euy, but
I accepted the vice pre-
sidency of the earden
club ancf am stlll active
in the DAR. I also ran the
rummage aale for the
Eastern Star this year
and mana,eed to squeeze
In a course on flower-
arranglnS offered by a
Japanese exchange stu-
Boots are lighter this year, with some ski
shops tecommendlng rear-entry boots and
others sticking with side-hinge types that they
say have better lateral stiffness. Jack Chalfin,
also of Newport Ski, says the rear-entry boota
are not for everyone, "Because everyone's feel
are not the same.
dent. "MANUFACTURERS ARE MAKING "Juniorwonhia letters
modifications on the rear-entry boots; but there in football and basket-
1s still a lot of work to be done before they make ball. He placed second in
them perfect." And then he added, "Of course the national oratory coo-
there 's no boot that's perfect." test and has been accept-
There are also new bindin1s on the rnark~t ed by Han'{rd. We were
that utilize Teflon parts -making for ease of re-surprised to read in the
lease. The bindin1s have a diagonal heel releue paper that our little Billy
and wlde·heel hold rather than the old lateral won $100lntbeAmerlcan
system. And, to replace bindings aitogethef, akl Lesion esaay contest.
brakes are catching on In popularity. (He was accepted by
But, apart from exercisl~jr1 newclothlng and Eaglebrook.) Debbie
equipment, there are tw'o uunas one m\lltn.'\ was elected president of
forget when mustering onto the winter alopea at her clan at Dobb's
Mammoth, Heavenly, or Park CJty: auntan lo-Ferry aqct la now taller
lion for your face and a bod a bag for ~our ace. than her mother! Our
\ wee Betsy is quite a little
Weddmg and engagtmtnt announcemffttl nm on
Sundqy m tht Daily Pilot. FormJ art at10Uobl1 ot alt
DaUy Pf'°t of flcett or l111 calUng the F"1ature1 Deparl-
ment. 6C·4il1. · ,
To avoid di$appointmtnt. protpfctiw bndt1 Off
reminded to have thrir wedding 1torle11 with a ~
and·white glouy of tht bridt or of the couple, '" the
Feature• Department one wttk befort tht w(dl)ing.
horsewoman -won a
blue ribbon In the show
at Grosse Potnt.!' And so
it goes ,_,.. \Ultll you could
throw up.
Next year, Ann Lan-
ders, I'm going to send~·
newsletter to everyone•
wbo bas been sending
ME newalettera. It wW
I
Winners Fold For Club
Balboa Yacht Club'• wtn* 8Ub1dat Settea •u ~eed by mote loJ than auuhlM 8aturday and Sun-
day and was fUrth r slowed by Ua.bt wtncla on both Jnalde and outaide couraea.
The S\Ulklat Series la aailea over the fltlt
weekends in December, January and February
with •mall centerboard boats aailln& over courses
inside the bay on S.turdaya and keelboata racln1 over ln.eide-oUtaide CIOurses on Sundays. Resulta:
OUTtlDI 4Allllf PHllF·A-1, SC« Geur. 8111 H•~Okk °'-· IYC; t. ~. DeftMclCl~ll-Mtl"""r, NHVC.
PHllF·I -1, P~mbl•, .. llM>ert K._r, NHVC; t, Wlkleet, ...... Sdloonm.ur, ICYe; Hewie"" Mite kMcll4M, IVC.
PHltl'-C -~ s.ieMlnt Tkket, Tem Scloodl, HMVC; t, Llftt, Watt.a Oleo!ti, ICYe• a, bl-, Den Norostrom, 14VC. sANT~J0-1, AlldMtar, Wiii T.,,......., IVC; 2, l!Mllty, Tom E111-. VYe. . ltHOOe.5-1'-1, Curloin, l'rtd Strautll, BCYC.
LUOEllS.16-:i:::::. Dao\ H~IWI. NHYC; 2, Lolll-. aw ""Kalr, ave;~ Aft811, 1111 rt Jr.'-Hl(VC. INSlul CLAIM$ THISTLe-81H Kl~. eve· t.Oa1eHw10 .... wcvc.
L.10<>1.iA -1, 1111 Mcecwd, ave; 1. DkJI Uneber9W, AIYC; i, OWis ••lo.HHVC. LI00.1.,.._1, lrlM Hendl, IVe; 2. e,,_. Oii•, SLIVC; &. !kw. Oery,NHVC. MeTCAU'-1, ... Reilly, •'!'el t. °"' Hwrlt, eve;,, lie-... ~llns, IVC. IUI "'""'"'· avc.-.nc11 °""'· IVC. ~ ...... -1, Tim Can!IOfl, ecve; l. -Pl~llMr. BCYC; "' ... ~~MorTNn. ICYe.enctTlmt.ulllv..-. BCYC. LASElt.._I, Gery Milon, leYC; t. ....,_ 0r._.. IVC.
LSl\Se!UIO Plla-1, lrwu Twkhell. ave; l. Al .... -. I.SC; J, Oorla lllr-51, IYC. -
SABOT A-1, Doo4 Teull•, IVC; t, Joll '"""'11ey, BCYe; J. ....... lkM. ave.
SAIOT 8-1, Mlclr.4ty ScanloM. IVC; 2. MMV """"·SVC; 3, Tedd Padla, ave.
5A80T C -1, R1y Gilrre, acve; 2. lryan H-, BCYC; J, ,..m ~>l•wn ave.
MOTHERS SABOT -1, M•ry Jane .._.Mlfl~IVC; 2, Jackie Smiley, •VC; l. tie _ll!tl-cotlfte GlllOons, ave, and Al•cl• 11llObOn, uc.
Cup Sailoff
·Finals Slated
d. Long Beach Yacht Club started the wheels turn·
ing for the 1978 Congressional Cup match racing
classic Saturday and Sunday with an inconclusive
sailoff to determine who would represent the home
club.
Zero visibility fog and light air combined to
abort the salJoffs Saturday, and on Sunday similar
conditions allowed the race committee to get in only
tWO·thirds of the scheduled matches.
The winners were Barney Flam over Don
Wilson and Roy Cundiff over Arch Van Palmer. The
two winners will meet next Saturday to finalize the
series for the LBYC representative.
Meanwhile, LBYC officials have indicated that.
next year's Congressional Cup will be somewhat of
a replay of lm.
Already having accepted invitations are Ted
Turner, the 1977 winner and also defender of the
America's Cup; Tony Parker, Annapolis, Md.;
Graham Hall, Larchmont, N.Y., and Dlck Deaver,
Los Angeles Yacht Club.
Invitations not yet confirmed have been sent to
Dennis Connor, San Dieeo; Pelle Petterson,
Sweden, and Noel Robins, Australia.
Turner won the 1977 Congressional Cup for the
first time after 11ine years of coming close. He
followed up by sailing the 12·meter Courageous to a
decisive 4-0 win over AUJtralia in the America's Cup defense al Newport, R.I.
Deaver and Connor are bol.h former
Congressional Cup winners. The Congressional Cup
ii second only to the Amerlca!I Cup tn match racin1 supremacy.
Mackinac Winner
In Capo Regatta
Capistrano Bay Yacht NO SPINN~ICl!:RS-1, Rucker, Club wound up it'a year's L•rrr 11ue11.r, oPvc: 2. S1101111
I n.-r, •• Streng, C:.po eve; l. rac ng activity Sunday Am ... 1~n Pie, Ml)ie R .. rc1on, C:.po
with the December ave. ·
Barry "Buzz" Miller ot Newport Beach wu
on• of U oew driven ad•ed to Evlnrude
Motors preaU1lou1 100
Mile Per Hour Club in
1977.
M Iller a veraced
106.018 mph Jn a run
throuah the trap• at
Waterford. Calif.
Fastest speed reported
by new members waa
run by Oley Berkis,
Toronto, Ontario,
Canada, racin1 at
Welland, Ontario. Berlda
went throueb the traps at
111.89amph.
SECOND HIGHEST
speed recorded was by
Dave Parker of
Honolulu, Hawaii at
Kaukauna, Wisc. with
speeds "or '111.351 and
110.~~ tor an average of
110.938 mph.
Mark Roth arm el
averaged a speed of
109.131 with runs through
the traps o( 110.196 and
108.067 at Welland .
Rotl)armal hails from
Wlllowdale, Canada.
The only other
Calllornia driver to
make the club was Jay
Root, San Diego, with an
average speed of 107.569
at Waterford.
EVINRUDE'S in-
ternational roster ol 100
mph drivers now num·
bers SS. A major rule
goveroine the club's
membershlp ta that the
record must be run In ac·
cordance with the
American Power Boat
Association <APBA }
rules and must be
certified by APBA.
Foreign drivers are
certified by the Union In·
ternationale Molonau-
tique in Belgium or by
their country's natlonal
sanctioning authority.
Other , • .,,.,, drivers who II•••
rnede the cl\19-:
TlnllerColllfllle,Ane/telm, 1•11
Ron Hiii, Gerden O....w, 1'7S
P•lrlell lllAwplty, W.stmlnst•r, 1'71 aoo Piper, Oerden Grow, lt7l
Ted May, "-t•ln V•lley, 1'7J Joflft OlllOs, Colla Mffa, 1"4
Jim Mc"-. F-laln V•llW, 1'14
Tlllm•,. ....... .
RIUU.m:US --
R e g a t t a f o r ~-=:;::::::::;;=;:;;:=:=======::;::::;~::=~
Performance Handicap TELESCOPES Racing Fleet Yachts.
Overall winner was
Mackinac, satled by Wes
Thompson. Capo BYC;
aecond was Blue streak,
Georee Vodicka. Capo
BYC, and third was Fun-
ny Feelln', Pete Meade,
CapoBYC.
CLAU A-1, MkldnK, 2, II_,.
Slrfflt; 1. Gold RUii!. Ketl O<\Ms,
OPYC. CLASS l-1, l'UllllY l'Mlln', 2. ~. lldaa tr•q, c..,. eve; J, Thumper, Jim L.ucb.I, ~ave.
"IN ASTRONOMICAL
OPTICS FOR
15YfARS ..
OPEN MON-SAT
9:30 to 6:00
(714)Me-1211
Me-1111
12' W. liUI St., Costa MN
PUBLIC NOTICE
LI I ',_,,-...,.
1,.1111 ...
1002 .......................
•UCID
41•ROOM
Great llleea North 10$1!'
bedroom with new
carpet.a and many other
featuree. Cloae to
acbooll, aboppin& and ac· e.a to freeways. Let.,
Mii it and move you ill by autatmU.5M-2313 . -~NIC9•11S'lll'll fll~i•
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Beautiful 5 )'ear old duplex. Each unit has
king sized bedroom. 3 up-
1t.alnl plUI 2 downatalri.
Each bas wood bumin1
fireplace, built·in elec-trical appUance1. J usl
MARvaous
MOMA CO
Call U!I at.o~t tbls ini
macula~ one owner, 2 bedroom, convertlbte
den home ln Harbor
View Homes . Th e
owner's meticulous care to every malntenan.ce
need will impress you.
And the hltbly com· oetlUve price or $136,500
lee ~ill please your
pocketbook.
Ctl'44-721 I
WAUCTOWATU
PtHIHSULA".
$275,000
A~roas the atreot t o
Peninsula Bayfront and
just steps to best Ocean-
front beach. Grandiose 4
Bdrm home 2 stories or
creative decor, epen feel ine balconies and soar-
ing indoor greenhouse. One of a kind on a pre-
stl&ious corner locaUon
WATERFRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE 63H400
like a home. $146,500. ~~~~~~~~ ~~iWPORT IHVISTOll'S
REALTORS SPECIAL
671-551 I $47,500 l---------1 Guarded 1ateway pro --------•I tects lavish grounds with pool. Secluded entry to JUSTSOLDl
NEWLlSTING
Open beams, woody de·
coc, ruatk flrepJace, 3
bedrms, large lot with
room to build 2nd urul in
back. Zooed R-2. $64,500.
644-7270.
executive II v. rm
Sunshine go urme t kitchen overlook1
private courtyard .
Sweeping master bdrm
& child's retreat. Owner 1-anxious. Submit any
olfer! 847·6010 --~~--"!l.--'!'I . CIMNJ11••ll>llJlll fO•l'K•• =..a i e.1u111
VA TUMS '
OML Y $62,500
THI Best bl.I)' ln the area, Alr 5 WAS A conditioner and soroe
FIXB UPPEl other nice xtra's. Catung
1be owner couldn't wail us is a must -The dog
ao he washed, painted, bites! A qwck escow and
laid earpet and aU those th i s y e a r • s b e s t
thfqa YC>U dream of do-Christmas present i1 inc. Seller requat.a only yours. 546-2313
that you remato with f)ls ~"" ''' o ·"~'"""roll N-t ~;:. ~=tiF:r: [ ~ Hltl
9"fN 111 Q • " s llJN 10 N ' EL OUMPO ~•.lliMll ~:~:.!~'!~ the bmfalo roamed. A
ROOM FOR TWO hanctyman's paradise!
Paint and profit! A quiet· , ... 1wlmmlna pool1, )ane sheltered by tower-
basketball court, or lng trees lea& t-0 this
whatever e1ae you mfaht rustic hideaway, Eoalish like, in this bis, bla yard style 3 bdrm. Shovel 'em
at the eod of a cul-d•·aac, out, paint 'em up ahd you
Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath got yourself an estate. home wtth but.It.In Island Priced dirt cheap at
kitchen, family room & '85.900 which seems only
lush courtyard entry. rl1ht. Celt qulck t
Ownen have aonc " are 847-6010 anxloua. $96,500. CALL °"'"' ,,, .,. 11Hvtoouwcf• •a~~;ES l•l&ti).
IFYOU
have a eeJ'Yiceto offer or loods to ee.U, place an ad
in tbe Dally Pilot
Cl.auifled Section Phone e42-5678.
TRAILER PARK
PROPOSED
l.93Spacepart DOW being
usembled. First user
depreclaboo la av all A&t.
842-9601..
.... ,.. 1002 ci ... ,.. 1002 1 ...............................................
1M1 lAST POI THIS PllCI
~r this one ls sold you won't be
able to. find a 4 bedtoom & lamlly
room custom home with a pool in
desirable Westclill for $179,500.
Owber ls packed & motivated.
I
I
l
.
I
Qt OM.VPLOT' ....... .i.1na1 .. t.1"1l , .............. S. ........ ,_,.~ ',......,....MM ......,.,_Sile . .._..,_.. N1•11hPS. -;;::--~ ·' -...................... . .......... :.-~· .. ······ .............................................................. , ............................ .
\t11161,_.. lat ,,..... ewwws4 t10Je111r1I IOOJ •t.unt IOft ., .. ,.. 1002 MtM 1024 c:.hW... 1124 P1 J*Ylllf I014 .. _ ................... r----····---· .............................................. Je;;·······-~~··· .................. -........................ ···-········-······· ._. ................. .
9r 1 11 tlU• illl I COUNftY GllAT'50t.P MISADILMAI dlA'flAUILAMC
----··--·--••••••••• ..... -•• ..WHOllll -a 000 C*•SI-Eae•ptlonal"'" clean I Bedrm J bath •' • • ""-'--••,,.. y _ • flreplace,'air coadl: 2 Bedrm co1&atr1LvJ:r3bdtm,flDb'rm1.~t1t•f•U1 deurated
ttoned •I• er-ta ebanDerla EJ.sdeOOlla ~ ._ •ltrml GJ.D ,hocDe wwa I Mrm• ••
fmced ;,.., TYler 11:U lieu. LI• lrnaular lot. nn. Rl&bt• JC>lt course. trD&c .. c\4ld0-m abutten,
in Biveulde J uat Com&r1 breakfast room Atfotdl ~ enter· 11iake nof • l ulb
e5,000. Roy lie ·eanu.. onrlook• ebarmlaa ta1alAI ID ._.rQl\7 tm • l•rdlt!hll ':i:°CH
I tlr't.1-'-.•/Wle bonus rm. nrua ..., carpeta • paint. Priced to aell
Mo.eAY tMN1' fOOl"IAU. Paa by
thla beautiful • bdrm and you'll want
to see more. Run in.aide • you'll love
the uJ>li'aded carpeUn•. new vinyl ·
paneling. Kick your feet in the 1blm-
mering pool. All this " more for .
$1Z1,000. Ctll 64Nl61 •
COSTA ...sA llAUIT -charmlna ' bedrm home with separate dining
room near South Coast Plaza. Lovely
interior with plush carpet.a, drapes &
decorator wall coverings. I.arge back
yard with patio ... Hard to ftnd" large
bednns too! $70,500 and it's yours!
c•l46-4t4t
Serving Costa MesC1-lrvtne
H untin';}ton B e;ich-Newporl 8P.ich
CA.t•O SHOID l'ca tul.IOO
Pre1tlglous Cameo Shorea and
palatial ~o· uod1 surround this 3 ·
bedroom le Btol'Y that hq beeP fe·
modeled wl taatefu.l imagination.
Features include an 80xl60' lot,
microwave ovenL smoke detectors,
subtle.wall papen, garden-like.gazebo
and a rambllnl feel of colorful com-
fort. A quality home properly .priced
at $228,500
U~ICJUI: tiVMl:S
REALTOR~ 876·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990
• I • Ga•~• 10021Cia•r• · 1002 G' al 00 G • 1002 .. ••••••••••••••••••••--;i~....................... .. , I 21 ,,.., ----------------............................................. .
NEAR OCEAN!!
.. . just 4 doors from Ocean Blvd., CdM.
Sometimes we feel that the word
"CHARM'' is overworked -but it re-
ally fits this 3 bdrm., 2 bath New
England style home. Cathedral cell·
ings in all rooms, incl. living & formal
dining rm. The home is only llh years
old. Realistically priced at $289,500.
759-0811
!:~ .......... !?~~!:~ .......... !·~~~
PEHIMSULA POfHT
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities.
Lovely area, few steps to beach.
$189,500
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bd.rm., den, 4
baths, living rm. w/ cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. s uite."'$224,950
llC:. CAMYOH
4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large lot. $32.5,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Buy'>•d .. 011111• NB o7S 61bl
G1Mrtlf 10 f 002 ....................... ...................... .
TAXSHELTY .
4-Plexd near So Coaa
Plaza now available.
Pnced at $114,000. All un
1 •ls 2 Bdrm, some with
bdths.
Call 645-6'46
pre~enfj
SPECTACULAR PACIAC
OCEAN PANORAMA
Located in Cameo Shores on an ex-
clusive cove with white water view.
Warmly inviting in its elegant
simplicity -pool, patio, sauna, 4
bedrms, den and dining room. Call Liz
Beazley, for details on this new list-
ing I ..
CAMIC HIGHLAHDS-$17'.500
New exclusive offering! You '11 love
this 4 BR home on the most quiet
street in the area. Almost like living
in the country. View of ocean & sur-
rounding hills. Nice f am rm, formal
dining + bonus rm. Lge private front
courtyd. Charming LR w/cathedral
ceiling.
WISUY M. TAYL.Olt CO., IEALTOIS
2111 S. Ju48 ... 1...-.
MIWPOIT cana. M.I. , ..... ,I 0
•.soo. .
. ~ ' .. ' ~ ICS·'T1'21 aarden. <UHt brick ld&cblew/f....Uc~W. NnllPOITll ' . n ... place. Remodeled 6openl..atni. Pb091oo llAL.ft ,7591641 ~~-bathroom. Shady fruit da)'tolalped. MS-M91 ---------IUIUltl1A treea. See to b•ll•v•· • Slat.a to bU1 you lb.It TIM.IV& JVST R!!DUCED $1.iOO daarmlAI I BR• P1l tam
' ,
BeautUul trt-level huab· ~call M&JllTl 0a· 1q&def eul-de-aac at Dlcoratar'• dream, 2 &try urtUB•mtlnst.onBtach. Ol'INIU•llH!AVIOllM(t•. ~IDJtate 203IAlllo.olUOth.fslrv. ll'llbelt b.11). 4bl' +lt\ady
Bl I l Driveb)'Auuanaee.Call It tam rm. Ace.a to a ~·:it b':..1:.U IJkt ,..r, by owner. di aytlme qt, 141-lCMt or poo&a1 ·~ to 1chl 6
book caH la matter Prlnoeton. 4Br4 aba, 875-llilO. shop ft, Cet~ d.,,. 6
bdrm. It loob likoa oew pool. •,800. &U-1'121 aft wallpaper> tbruout.
1IJDdet tn a very quiet S. MISA VllDI Below mrln. '91.500. ()po
oN.bborboocl.548-Z3l3 a•+ 'AMtLY IUCCOLA JtMSatJSan8'M090.
Ol'fN 1119•11 ~ fUN IOOl NICf' $7J.f0o.le.... lmmat'1 4 br, din rtO, fam Xlnt EHtlld• Cotta M'Crnjl .. nton .rm, 3c:ar1ar. Xlat. loc •• ........_ ...... 1040
-· location. I Bdrm• Elltltde O>st.a Mesa. a.2 Premium lbe lot at the ...................... . + pt add oo famlb bedrm bomet a room f« eod of the cul·de-Hc. SZOOO DOWN room I Sbon Uk• a Je'nl man._ .. _ aoo• deep.... Great famlb' home. a. VA b ....._.,., av... ft•IH!E .,, .... .....,.R8 '4bl'10U Imo tbll 2 BJl. 2 ~---' THE REAL
~STA_T£R~ J :.om.1 ~:d:W:'t! BUl'l'J·lota of potenUal D~75Hm"•v BA coodo!Cbe to the ~OMIU Veta!) Prlce l'educed IMNICall-.a&O. beecb, 1uper sharp, low
Balboa Peol.n. last re-$2000 for fast aalel SI 10,000 pa)'lllenta. Offered at
ducedl 8 Unitl, five 2 Hun71 CallM&-nn A s Br, 2 1tcf7 beauty •·900• bdnDI. "1l·bdrm.,OD2 OlfN 1119• llS fVN 1081 Nl(fl with luite shuttered FR. 191-7115 :::~::: ~•1111 ~a~ w:um ~·~%~~c~ro"':t $60 000? =:r~~crow 00 BUY BEFORE
owner'• unit. Blt·ln1, .. M_. IOZZ Yea, tbe~e are itill SOUTHCO.AST IMV. PRICE
frplc. Priced at $175,000 ••••••••••••••••••••u• bornes and Condos in CO •
Bay Ave. duplex. 2
Bdrm. home -bdrm. over
garage; in xlnt locaUon.
Priced at$l75,000
673-3663 M2-ms Eves
. associated
!1'1UK £~'.-IH Al TOR',
201\ \f'i u~an1. u f,, ,, ~ !
NO
CREDIT
NEEDED
$68,000
BIG 4 BDRM
HOUSIALOHI C.M. available from 645-1103 l.._.CREASE ll worth thia price. But a.ooo. LOW DOWN/NO•----=----· f""lll =~!: ~:d:f J!~ :S'Rf!t,,ea~~~~tr WHY MOT SU * $57, 900• Is have tenants help Blll.645-3118. Make your commitment Don't delay I Save on thls
.. 15 ooo •IUD c "-IPEl ' on 3 Jklrm home. Save. l!rclous 2 atory condo! pay ..... • · -"' ,.. Owner. Call 6'8·1'90 .-,.tures2br,2ba&acar
MORIMS REAL TY j;;;;;;;;;;~~;;; 5pm.apm. praae. OtJt * 494-1057 * ~··Da· PERFOlMAMCE ~ Prime Meaa Verde Home. 147 3514 SPYGLASSHILL CO 'AMISA 4Bedrooma,2bathl,aew·1----·----
Watcb sunset over $72.000 pool lsjacuul.111&11)' up··i--------
catallna, New Bedford 3 Bedrm, buge lot. 1rad.et. Open Sunday, IMTMISTID
Model. 5/6 Br, 2 1ty, Complete with bard wood 2.st"J Europa Dr. 55?·2157 .... MOVl .... ~1 f1oest view street. Agt. floor, dbl ear, covered _or_M&-_%17_3. _____ 1 " "9
640-9025 patio & quiet street. Out Leola .t wW
COMCOTTA6E
WITH POTIHTIAL
d state owner needs lm· TillD OF WK llALTY
mediate sale. Super buY· RIMTIMC-.7 a..tootfet>t
burry!Call5"-!5880 Goreeous 4 BR, pro· •Receive top com·
feHlonally decorated. mllslona. ·· ~/-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
Beaut park-Wte yard Is •Receive an lncenUve
vacant. Ready for fut program, atooce.
2 BR, 1 BA charmer.
Uve l.n beautiful front
wilt, wblle buildl.na unit
oo rear of lot. Great
leveraae. 1~ Down OK. I~~~~~~~~
Only 113U80.
move·l.n •Want a fantastic s4t-3666 1uaranteed 1a1ea pro-gram.
955-0350
II I fl\• l I HI f l llVU·•·U\I,,
JU ''1•f)l.I• f•f \.I t Jf II
lltf ltelc111
RIAL 1\TAH
•To earn more moneJ.
•To h·a\'.'e a ft.OD • competitive mana~
•AplUlb otlice In desira·
ble locallon.
•Be treated H a pro-
feuional realtor.
I
. . . . .. ·.~.~.~ ........ ~.~.~ ........ ~.~.~ ........ ~~~ ..... :. ~~~-...... ~~.~~~...... ~.l>eoemb«a.1m . . ~YN.%.
I? A ........ I 040 ....... I 04• ~...... I OH•..;__...... I Oii ......... ..... 106t ............... 1200 Othera..t ..... ...... ..... ..... • "'•" ...... • ······················· ······················· ....................... ~ ................ ····~~·vii\i¥-····· ....................... ~····················· ··················!-~·· ·····~,···~~~ ·
DESPERATE UNlVt;ttSITY PARK 14ClfS Properfr 2000 .... PHIU• 3207 ............. , .. ,. .... , •.
Villq•· tir 2200 tt<1 ft COMDO, ••ucm ·Tum of the Centwy, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••o• •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• P'•mlly Ntltbborboo4.
detached home In xlnt STHOUSAHDSS atory, Victorian COMM.NOMT4•1 DRA)IATlC Bay 4 Vien Bl'oo1rhurtt a•
owner •el 11 n a at toe •hr h1ahly upgr•df'<i Reduced for a raat Hie. Mansion. Barn. many 125 n. aloaJ So. Coa1t N~tt nli• lite v .. w YwktoWL ltnme4 ee.; ·
aac:rif1ce Ho1Aae in aame lhr110ut. &uaut. puquet Vacant & seller 11 anx-out bld1f1, city water, Hwy Jn La1una Bcb. {:~"a,": :r.:!:~ 3 nip. a Br, 2 ba, dblUlii'
.,... jushold for S71,000! flr in k1tch/fun rm: 11 lous. BeauWul a br end lot.a ortreee. Can~ 1pllt. Price blcludet 2 buUda· TOwen 11 = ~ nn.11• UY rm w/frpl0'6
You Clln have W& 3 br, 2 yd, bf!autlfuUy lncacpd \mlt w/frplc. C:Ommuftil)' BKR. bl• lota w /plan•. " 2 nr -· roo---s. .....latter ram no. I..-. ba, prol. lndtcpd. beauty $134,900. Ownr. SSl-4632 pool, Huna. fr Jaeuui. At (71() m"589l c:oauMl'd&I bldp. Aclj. ·-mo.••-•• tb lawn. tf,ZS. (N ....
forocl)'.. :&fl 7PM thla price It ~oa·t lull ORS22--0630 to fatoollt art ceotar, W8prdeni.q).~ '
999 $REWARDS Hlft)'!CallMS-0303. 19u..thCoat•Mna :~ m:~t~ •a~ C... .. .,. 3222 Exeautin bome,aear ' MOltTHVIEW HOMI Eaatalde, near Ocean. 01-24AtcrdM.525 · ""•-••• ... ••• ..... • ~: ' J>ct; a ba. tam ( youburry) Outoftownbuyers-pro P~ ...__..._...JM. ..... ...._ 2 $3l.000per unit. SIS0,000 W ___._, • nn.dl.Drm,wetbaf,fir. 1@ ~, re111onal reultor bu -....--_. ...-... ._ • slrll• cab or eq~y will ban· e Uni& Apte, EHb&de, ra:vec~~~new, .. C"outdoor. 1:!~ w~.'-D23E2•3wrr over 40 homes lO ahow, ....... ,.. ..... Y9"4I -..... ... .... .<Jle. Bt.r.MCM724 C.M. Sl880. lDCOnH. -~. -c~ room.)(•-1 I. t'flO/.mo; c I " alhreaa, "no presaure". *-Uy md ,..._, 111,000. p/mo. Owner. 5'6-1773 J .. u.une reek. ua • opt. ltl410r; -.-r
Previ11w to "buy rtghl", 495-1720 .. __ '="""" llll...IVESTORS ocean view, upiradtd. ~~~~~~~~I call Putrick Tenore Act. DANA SOUTH LIASl/Of'TIOM " LdtforS. 2200 llJOO/mo. TeQ!lla-l)OOl, OlkduUBr,1 .. baC.oa: a.a._,__ M2-4414.24hra. POINT LAGUNA NEurnnRT HEIGHTS 5 Acre1 loaded w/Oak =entry.~ do.2mltobeb. $!TS/mo.
.. ~'!"I"-LAGUNA BEACH nrv . trea ln tbe Cleveland •••0••••0••••Ht•H•• ERBIEOO eeo.aoD.«ta-M.Se lla•aw 1042 Woodbrldae 2 Br+ den, 2 4.98-8812 ~1 «·Mii ·John Saar •it. S4.8-2020. Nal'l Forest, So. or I+ ACllLOT • '"Br 1 ...... _~.fQCli . ••••••••••••••••••••••• b a , D r o • d m o o r Quall Place Prop. Oran1e Co. Municipal CHOICI AIM • • "' .... U • • OCEANFRONT w/alrium, cor. nr lake. MU.TOP water, ientle rolllni, tAMJuAM SO.olHwt,OktCdMcstm sns/mo. ca i
Sunset Beach
. 2 homes, 2 lota. Bkr I Agt
84t>-S666
1044
pools, & tennis. $101,000. lAlgMa leocJI 1048 Mewporl IHcll 106' beautiful view •ltea. i br, 2 ba, l1.1am rm, 2 ull for !Uta, MUIU. ~l-068S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HIDIAWAY Owner wlU carry. CA.PtS1'aAMO h'pa, Jot. of wood, am. -.11a&aftlpm..
WOULD YOU We juat listed a nice Terms. Blcr. Rudy to b\tld, pvt road, *k yd. &aadeck, p'ft. SP' .&.,CJOUS 2 UDROOM S COHSIDER ••• home oa Catalloa Dr.; 3 (71•> 676-S71.T lood eq11ntrlan traua. mcL~, eep.!i..JlDdr')' ~ . pl·-. u •RIOR VIEW bdrma., family rm., 2 OR-=-..,...... $125,000. A1ent (71') rm. rem. 1 sq. ft. J BR. 2 BA. 1'50 -a. a. -living l block to the ~ frpb.,2paUoe•adeck. _ _, im..Z215orUC.a51J AvL , _, mo. Muli oriat.d comQl.i ••••••••••••••••••••••• A DEN bbeatcbh. wlthi 2 Bdrms.I, 2 PH !.!.!:!!mudp. ewrltha dnee~ $149,IOO ,.._ 1 ed d Owrlr/A&t . ..,,_lW. •alk to ltM. l ml to U.. $158 500 a s, pr vacy, n ce tue1U.IU I. .. MAIJHllSC:OVI C-rcflll .,... acre, mJll'OV , rea y ~ tGS/mo. • · neighbor• &: tlex1 ble price reduction. Owner -.uyy 64 ..... 46~ ...._..., 1600 to build. La1una Hilla. l!Mut. dplx, 3 br, 3 baths, Nla.SOlti..R.E. w.•-D ea ne hom e-Univ. And in Smokelree of terms? Would you con· has bou~ht another --• ..-..-__ ni s;-~wnesooe.552-3224 1800', 8 aundecu, fpl, -]'ark "Kenaionton" mdl. beautiful Irvine. A s uper ·d o v 0 t ho ! F ul •· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,.. 1 .. t b b •••11: ------br---•• I Pl 2 s1 er our • i . or me a oua ma1 ... r ,.. VllW HO._.I Profess. bldg. acro11 'WI .. o c • vuu. ~unt a ' I ha. w/pool, jacuzzi & air. c ean an on a l'Orner $85,500. bdnn,newAlmoodcpt--CHOICEVIEWLOT e -.1855 t.trr v\ew All abutters
Cstm. pool decking. 2250 location. Extr a large .... _..INS RE•LTY decorated to the hilt -B.l&hlY upJraded carmel from N.B.P.O. 1900 Sq. Nellie Gail Raocta. pooi J~ A11iDA utU sq. fl. Mini -blinds patio, rust colored plush """ "" outalanding' backyard 3 br +Cam. rm w/view. ft. Lae $'900 mo., sell Cbaqe in plana fol"Oel 2 Br, fbcd yd, newly d• rm • auto garap door.,
thruout, Coming C:Ook· carpet and tasterut uaeof * 494-8057 '*' with Gazebo & Jacuzzi. A fee land. $10,900. $125,000. AJt. 646-au• .the aale ol our ~ acre. cor'd. ~S15. 175·8083 ..-iS. mo. ()pt. to bQ.
top stove, lush atrium, wallpaper. Now asking Beaut. Harbor View 983..a3T1 BKB hilltop, equestrian lot. eve1/wlmids D'Ja'ScrlC1-qr'J9
eulo. spnoklers &: lites. f76 990 home area &Sx.105 level area Prtn
Ownr/Aet.540-4646 ' · ~-519·990.-. BY. Owner·Blg Canyon o.MXH/ onl,y.AaldntSllO,iioo.PJi Ccroaadtlllar·soatbof.,.,... 3244
OHMYGOSH ~ p ACIFIC COAST drps. SUO&OO· 833--0821 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. Beaut. mamc~ UGI• pt m. a Br 2M. Ba.
___ .;;..._ _____ • ~ ,.. ~ , v Townhm. 2 Br, 2 ba, crpt, lWh.. I IOO Dl.ateoevea. tqbway, 3br 2ba, ta:S __ , .. __ ., ...
F ee laod. New carpeting . ...:-.•. _ . PROPERTIES 60-0789. TRIPLEX bome, blk.1 tq abop 1. + boftua rm. Oxford. J~t installed. Well locat-COASTLINE VIEW Ollf of~ = 4' bcb, Jawn maiot '525.NT 7°"·-.azis
ed. 4 BR., 2~ ba .. family Spacious 3 Br, 3 ba home 631-0400 24 HRS UDO ISLE Propartf 2550 'd. Ownr. 548·l732 • ' w~:.V~ome, only $109,950. Wlth elegant large entry . 3 Bdrm£., famlly rm.. ~119 500 ···~·;·~·c··~~~;;··· Bayview 3 Jk 2 Ba newer ~ Rl-:i~·.:-u::I
RANCH REALTY &windlngstairwny. Dm· IAYVIEW aundect, lar10 atone duplex on park. Avail fart."::.( •de )v.
ing area, Crplc & ample 2br, 2ba Mobile Home ln frplc., private club, ten· Goo Eaat/ide, Costa &:'~\:!e" !:,~e~; 1/1/11. $.W>. 864~ ba, frpl, ~!tbed'r~~
1 ___ s_S_l·2_0_0_0 ___ 1 storage.$149,500. exclusive Ba ya Ide nia,beacbes.$2.59,500 Meaa area. Near 17th hrne, 9 wella, ~pprox 88 cell'&•·· atrium, I•• 'HI 833-9781 lIJ Hester-Brown $83,900 DOLPHIHl.E. Village. Din. rm, d~n. UDO REALTY Street. 3·2 Bedrm units, acres in alfalfa & facil c:o.t.MeM 3224 BBQ,E-Zmalnt.~ --'-======== Call494-ISll Jndry. wet bar. Pool, 673-7300 aep. aar. Owner mual for m~b more. Holdlna •••••---•~•••••••• orm.M•h.-es LOC ... TIO ... ! Jacuzzi· •-clbhse rac aell, submit all offe-. LOC~TION! For this superb Deerfield --L-OFTY B 0 at si i P 8 v a 11 : Callnow.8'5-'122l ... pens, auto teed trouab EASTSIDE aparkling nr Woodbrtdse CroaalnC
Wt .&1 IOllS
Terrace Cambndge, end
urut. Desirable morning
Mm kilch. nook. Loads or
upgrades. 1 yr. warran
ty. Vacant & move in
<.'Ond.
VAUEY 640,9900 -WALNUT SQUARE
3 bedroom lownhome S59,500/ofr. 675.7903 S-Cle•• 1076 cattle scale & Joadlnl new2 br. pvt. paUo, pr. J..ablroaL J Br, UY rm.
Upgraded throu1othout RECLUSE ~ ramp, some acreage "car apace. Adulta, no din rm, brakfut. noot. Commwuty pools, ten HEWPORT HGHTS' ••••••••••••••••••••••• fenced• Cl'OU fenced. U peg $2:50. ~Sta Isabel ..,/mo.Cllll5Sl·lZM
nis, cable TV and so Absolutely bidden & Chzy3 brw/fplc,haathat Pa00~1.f'CIH boeq·~'P~~clinudedto.tal IDOl"e Pb.f73.GZ3ltoinapect TURTLE R 0• C Jt much more in tins fine pnvate, tbia very un-certai.nsomelhina! Don't T ,....., -.. w ,.,_ ___ ,_..... ... ... community A HEAL usual, well built home miss this picture book fromthll~12BR · "95.000. ._ .. ..,. ......,._. 3 Br-. PIU£SIDENT BOKE. 3
BARGAIN'' has a mincl·bogghng kitchen &: that touch of home. Large yard, WntdlffRealt., Call George Frey, at Ben x1nt loc. Schools, stsos-, lk'. 2 ba. lam rm, 1-e
vaewbolhdayandnite;2 yest.eryear!Couldbethe hardwood noon. Local· Hinkle Real Eat•te eaclyd,$(75.875-2083 Janl,commPoOJ.t8mila
I rm. $121,900 "120> home you've been wait-edonattractlve,qulet re· .SU.3456 Available nowt Eutalde at.a. XlDt nef•hbc•hcmd.
Mlan · ing for, ir you call now! sldentialatreet.$'18,300 • ._,.,opllty JOOO Aendles.,___ CY, nr Irvine Ave. "75.Pbl55-W
i Royal Properllea, AMCHOltAfil ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gro"" 2700 I>etidend street. 2 Br 2 Brand new up1radecS•
I 642-1830. s• .... CLEMEll...ITE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba, lge fam rm, W/Wet 2.Br+ den, 2000 eq. ft.
Ill • IMVISTMDn'S """ m raulT F M bar & rptc. Kitch bu Townbome, top o1 h1ll.,. I t 1714t 496-7711 Four yr . old lri-plex, "' AR stoverefrtgw/lcemaker, ICenlc view.~. mo.+ L · Ft bayfront. 4 BR, den, 3-2·2 in good rent.al area. 6000 Trees-.pple-pear· D/W, wuher " dryer. dep. N 0 11 t " laat. RANCH REAL TY ··~ pier.on Peninsula. ========:=! OnlyS127 500 peach-cherry. Fully •WU\ Onl -•·· .... .... -• -·--• _,_ Marshall Rlty 675..(600 IMVISTMBCT BERTHA.HENRY mana1ed. Mus t sell i;i.mo +e:4;,~~·.; m.:m9 .. n .f
OPPOlTUMITY REALTORS partial interut. Call pets. 613·128'7
2 BR. A 1C condo. HeautJCully upgraded, • ___ 5_5_t·_l _OO_O ___ , ARCH HACH HTS
<:t~1omn mOn. I~~ 900& Recrea-V.A. OCEANll \:'l EW, beam · ., _,, · ceiling vmg room w I
VALLEY 640-9900 T frplc, 3 DR, 2 Bl\, bltns, erms arc acceptable on d e c k 5 , & p a t 1 0 ,. tlus fanl' 3 bt.'droom homt'
-
no\ c5'0'<l ~"' w/waterCall. Prire re·
""' i;. , 1 m the pn•stifdous Rae· duced 10 $139,500. Set' &
QU('l Club homes of -~i. rr
HANG YOUR
ChrishnDs Stocki'"J
ln this super ramlly
home 1n Turllerock.
Pool1ue l ot with
fiPrinklers . Center
atrium. Like new carpet.
Rural setti.na. Don 'l de·
Jay, woa'tlaat.
VA.LUY 640.9900
Irvine. Convenient to ....... eo er
frei!ways, ~chools. and
shoppmg. Atikmg $88,000.
R.AHCH IEAL TY
551-2000
SPECTACULAR
OCEAMVIEW
1'wo family hvioe. 2 BR.
2 BA. living r oo m
w frplc. dining room.
kitc hen w /bllns &
DOWNSTAIRS complele
guesl apt. Priced ~t
$235,000 terms.
AMERICAM HOME
REALTORS
494: I 00 I 494:7513
OCEAMFROMT
Lovely 3 BR. 2 bath
furnished bf!ach house
7l06 W. OCEANFRONT
Only $277 ,000
CAYWOOD
REALTYlNC * 548-1290 *
Three suite Medical 21SDelMar 4n-4121 _D-_2873. ________ ,-"'----------1
bldg. Reception room, . • .......... SPICIAL , ,
A/C. Can be rented at 55< Hunt111gton Beach.. 2 blks l:xct.4 · JIOO S Br 3 Ba home on 101f
per sq. ft. Owner wlll 2frob mbsocean1r· -tluru(tls): 2<bl) .•• , , , c:lOW"le. Opt avail. 12115.1---------'d t d •-•-r e w rp c r •••••• ••l-••••• • • • ... ,._. c:on.51 er ra ea ... ....,rms. ... ( > •2b 'l.-1 1 •mo.---$252 500 (93-0233 •<0~ w /gar, 1 r apt, Would liq w trade ove y 1----------1
' lrg, & 1 bach unit. ln· home in Corona, 3br, SPACIOUS3Br2811, TU-546-0801
come Sl.200 mo. $200,000. l'M>a, lrg fam rm, tmt 61Cd yd, RV apace fplc, ~ ~2371 rm, din rm, kit, uW rm 4' SUO mo, 5'9:0028; ........ INcla 3248 ---------1 lrg y?d. In xlnl cond. M2.(J550 -··•-••••• .... ••-•••
MIRRORS NEVER B4 OFFERED, 7 Be t t f l f new~r ants. Pride or b I par COM OWDNOrl • POOL .. -.. ... IS CapeCedCluwr
WOOD ,.. ouae 10 , or p • ,..,." 4 & Bliaeblrd ea & owner'• unit. Eaat Costa area. 646-8402 ' & Fam am 3 Ba~ • Jl.10D. Plus a multi·faceted \1'\ _ Mesa, Income SZ',750 yr. do.Lse pvtpado,ncrm, S650. Ph 'l'•l73S VIEW m all dlrectlona.1-__:: _______ ,_ Agt.552-5232 It-!,:.~ etc. $486. f7a·11'l'l;1-ev_tw_lmd _____ _
An exciting Palermo that ,.,.......... Hts "' 2900 Cll·UIBO
will cause you to reach "C" Plan. 2 BR, 2 Ba, 1 *4-PLEX * ••••••••••••••••••••••• l-..;._-------1-=-.:
for your pocket book! level. 2 Car gar. A ate&I Finest ln ar,,a of Colla ANTED: Vacant nx.,-IMSTAN'l'MOVIMM
Come and see-BUT at '6',900. OWC 2Dd. Try Meaa. Thia treat In· upper's, calloolyltlt'aa LIUnew4brpool&>QpiJ2r
SOON! 10% down •. •SS.5toe by ve1tora Income haa r eal fixer upper. Great foe entert"'lm¥.
SOUTHCOAST owner. owner's unit. Offe?d at M7-2U11. A.873-811f;60-9884 {-) . . -LOCJ11ftC1 S.och I 048
IMV. CO s..ta AM • a 010 '1:~ UNITS*
CANYOH ACRES 645-11 OJ n•••••••••• .. •0 •••••• • .a. ludeD aettlnt,
Half way up secluded Ca-r Buy 12 \mlta together or ......... •••••••••••••• fl'plc, aioD•moker, adlta. WALNUT SQUARE •••••••••••••••••••••••
Attr 3 BR . 2 ba_ & sew-ALWAYS VIEWS
1ng rm Central aar. Deluxe 2 BR home. wet
<.:ov'd pal111. )!any ex bar in lrg. den. secluded
tras ! litl.200 g a r d e n p a t 1 o .
EVEl. YM COPELAND Prores11ona l.s hm.
REALTOR 552-0434 $1SO,OOO Z.ochky,Rtaffor
494-8611 HAPPY TIME
RIVIERA
EXCLUSIVES
W~Jb~mgE OPPORTUNITY OF A
The Village or Wood· LlFETIMt;! Oceanfront
bridge. The best of both realaur ant, heart of
worlds. Architecturally Laguna Bench. All new
uoique 2£l3 bdrm at-equipment. SBS0,000.
tached & detached re·
sidencea from $96,990. M Y ST IC H I L LS .
559-llBl Overlook In& Laguna; ---------1 3.000 sq. rt., Cbri1 Abel
·JUST
IMAGINE
designed 5 bdrm. home.
I\ rare opportunity al
~5,000.
nyon Acres Dnve is this Balboa. o cean ront llMVISTOlS! 1eparate 4-plex, al Homn,....tMcl •---------no.,.._MGO/IM,OUITS
coiy 2 Bdrm home Lols dramatic duplex-4~ Sharp! Duplex with 3 SLllS,000 each. Frplc 10 ....................... New Brookview Condo, a
oC pra"acy. O wner bdnna. Perfect owner a bedrms, 1~ bath each front2unitawilhiacome leoce. 316t Jk, 2~ a., air coad, ~~CJlftl>l'.4BR.
transferred overseas. homew/lncomeorsuper unit. Under 2 years old. $1000perbk1g. •••••••H•••••••H•H•• cpt.1.drJ!s,allmajorap. frpl, imsiiaculate;
Must sell!! Full price s ummer/winter rental. Hard to find. Call now. * 12 MEW plm. Pvt patio, teufa, prap.1'7SOll0.4M-9329
S79,950 Seashore Real FA late, Only $112~ UNITS* ON BEACH. VIEW of pool. jacuut. No peg, L::u r
Cati 645--6646 67>SllOO 21 ~ MA IN CH ANNE L. *'50 mo. Nr. S. ON.al KmU-Cftltwy W All 3 BR, trplc, w/great Decorator 2 story, ' br Plaa.640-2BR.1Bll ........... s:MS
84M4 4 investment potent.lal home. Beautifully IODS~OIC 2BR+Dfdl',2ba •• $400 /(': f R€STIG€ HOM€~
BY OWNER ~~~~~~~IHurry,calltodayonyour furnished w/all . JBR+D,llbta. •••• S500
future. amenities. n-st Cblna E/Slde 2 •pr, $385. 1 BR.2 ea. ........ 75/53S GREAT VIEW of L.A. W.ltii.__ 1091 54"3666 _, 846-448CJl'875-8258 IBR.,~bL ...,75/650
li&hll. 4 Br, fam rm, .. ••••••••••••••••••••• "'" · CovelocaUon'85()/mo. Br. .. _ 4BR.SBa ••• ::::$1'5n50 1---------1 HVH Monte go. Many HERE'S YOVR CHANCE ON UDO., Elecant 2 Br 2 , c:pts, _,,_, ki4a ck. 6BR,aBa. •••••••••• '8'fS
amenities. $159,500 or Beaut 3 BR home, sisoo with color TV, view A no doas. $250/mo.
bestofr. C&l.16"-2601 dn. Call now, 24 hr prlfftebeacb. S100fmo. 1_14_16_m_•------t aervice MM8'19 •el· w .. ...,,_, "-• _. __ "'-' ,,._ 6"' I 1400 -.,.. Kar' Br, 2 ba.
DB.UQ DUl'LU 1~~-~~·~·~~~ ftplc. bltm., ~ pool. MIWPOiT HEIGHTS I-pat. dbl pr, yard 6 PGOl
2 BR.1 BA units. Pride of OMTHI SAMD mal.nt'd. $SSO. 97N079 or
ownerahlp. Great street. Beautiful abr, 2ba, dplx. _55NO&S ___ ·------1 =~b Scbool. l O?'o pat.lo, new crpll, drpe. a Br, 1 bath,· qt/~.
9511! "lSO Avail lmmediateb' 'W Wa1ber/dr7er, atove.
<r-V 6/11. 'JD.7•1.0d)'I Kida OK. $t05mC>. Ph
I' '/ , 1111 1 •jl 1•,,
'" 1 .. 1 •• rn / 1.J1•t •·
HOMI & IMCOME
Middle a&ed epl vlattiq .:548-all1=.:::;:.::0'~U0.==189=3=----r:·=:-:-----::::-~
from Europe need •C· lbr,lbal19fncdJTd,pr. GE bOUH Dr Bl'll
commod&Uona, Newport No pets. $.175 mo. lit• Scbool,amallyard,2Br2
or CdM area. Dec. 15 last mo. $1.00 cha'I fee. Ba, '450mo.4M-8178
thn.!Jan3L f40.(l236 ~B Pomona, 8'2-0728 ....... .... 3210
the room you'll have with
3 bdrmt . and 2 Mt ba ,
apread over 2200 eq. ft. 2
Flrepla~. ooe in ram.
rm. & one ln mast. bdrm.
End Wtlt, which glvea
you a vlew of the moun-
t.atn.a, + extra large lot.
$l.16,SOO
NORTII LAGUNA. Walk Ml..i.Vlefo 1067
to beach. 3 Lar«e unita, ••••••••••••••••. •••••• ~autifully landscaped, 3 Br z Ba, carpet, drp1, ~th ocean views. Priced patio, lndacpd, rocd,
niblal $289,000. beaut view • .547-SSSO or
MAGNIFICENT 3200 sq. _8»37 __ 25 _____ _ ~ · HERITAGE
. • Rt:AUO RS rt .. 4 bdrm., 4~ bath MOST Plush pit 1n town,
home. Finest oceanfront 3150 sq.ft. 4 Br 3 Ba,---------
community. Loada ol ex-1139,900. Jeanne Cran· HVHMONTE00'1>r, Zba,
tns. $350.000 dall M-V. Auociate tam rm. Ownr. I015 Port•----------~
881-1548; 581-1330 Cbefaea. 840-lJlll
LAROE -4 bdrm., famlb' .
home. El Toro, CIOM to ... .,.... leoch 1069 ............ 1069
achools & ahopplna. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••'••••.•••••• .. •••••• $112,500
BUILDER'S attention.
Two R-2 Iota, heart ot •573 G\MM~lllVntE Dana Point. Both ror ~----~-~---· ... 000
: -:111111 ILlllS CD.
1
•uc•u UVIUICI
rr:rl hilt _
OVER 60 YEARS OF ~~RVICE , .,.1
23UMITS
Well metatetned 1 stor7 UDltl la T911Un. Ooly
•••• OwlMl'/Bkl'. DA. VU) BOU'RKE 1u:ra.:
~
BR. 2. Omdo. ..... N1De. ss:so. mo.
<
•
I I .
Monday OecetTlbw1 ''" .,_...,.h...,*d .,..._. .. h....,.... 1••-•hu..tur.. ~~ Offkel...tat uoo star.,. 4550 Lott&F....t noo · ""':!!:r~------....,..~-·"""?'~-:---'--1 •..... •••••. •• •. •. • . •• • ••• . • • • • . • • • ••••••••• •• • •• • •• • • •• • ... • •••• •• • . . • ••••••. ·a;;;;.··· 1i6t •••••. •• • •••••• •• • . • . . . ..• .. .. .. .• . . • . . • . . • • • • • •••.•••••.••••••••••••
..._., U ...... ¢sd .._.. J769 c:.ht.... Jl24 eo.taMffe . 3124 ••••••••o •••u o •u•u MIWPOltTCINllR found ll'emalto SWU., vie • ••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••.•••••• •••••••••••••••••.•••••• M•••••••••••••••••••··1·•,..•••••••••-•••••••• 48r28a,)'rb'1-e-.lm.milllL occup&nc;y 771 Jt'rwumo • Vaa Lou:l&a • .., ..... .._. lHt Me.,_..._.. JJ4t £.&Ide 2 br 1•1 ba. fpl New cl)U. us 14\h It. eq ft. Wells l>'arco Bldi:. FROM 30 TO Call S88 UD2. ~ ••••··~;·•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BACHELOR APT aar. am~OK$3GOVa' COSTA M.ESA 2 C'7l•,m.m1:83Wl78 NptCritr.'40-'7'724 1.00059.FT. ·~-s blt I'-•-.._ ""ANT .. "'TIC N l T ' Bedroom adulta onl;y -----~a ft'\ w • "41Lnl BIG CANYON Abeolut~ r ~ P c:rr . _ • cant All· ~-1168 I N ~-.1 .,.1&/ 2 Br 1 Ba, cla.e to bch, ISOI W'~lff Dr. Terr. vlc Alicia Ai
1_ • <."Ondo, a br, 2 ba, rec ALLtmL..S P1>1 ° pet.a. n<»tt... mo encl aar, S32S ~r mo, lat ... ,.. stora1c unit. from ll5 Ttabuc:o l2/l AN to ~·•matblnt Alsu•~ areH, w1h1dry. BBQ, 100' from the ocun 2 Bdrma Newly cpt'd, Quall Place Properi1es, &lul +aec 673·9404al\ NewportF\n.ancialClr mo.tndoor&outdoorRV "Killy" ~d.amecticaUon ..t---"u ~~WI> l<'b• lrpl $460 mo. 7$4 1202 Semi rurnltbed. Avail pauit«l. plumbtnJ, elc Inc. t714) 752·1920 or 6only Ltoele=Offl~• c-• & boat storaao. M"r un 493-QOO' • .._... ~---·'j( wH Wl• Marcel, act. now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd Drapes. Very reasona 548<8SS3 wedlea<U Ask C.ltc;:Slte 11~ preouse, at hrt 1ttunty •~•• &O courae Yrly t2S() per mo. NO hie. Pbevesooly546-1384 focWanda. &e2br.1dntlocatJonlo (7l•}&U-3llluUilS 'lbeStorage Place, t830e FOUND: Fem. Great
v •wl S BR. • deo. SUVllW FEE. Call : Sue at Sbownbyapptonly. Newport t(ibts.P'orinlo. Ml.i..n,ley,No.olEllla, DarwWealmln.sterVic. tftllllonth t ----all c .... ,......., ~ l I V II ~T .... S &CO. SI 100/MO ~T70Tanyt me 2 &R, 1 Pa d~lex. Cpla. COSTA MESA-21040 c ..._........., D&UXIOFACIS coon~t!nea~l1W7 1192-1839
llALTOIS 64t-5HO ~!!;J~f,.1~;h~:~1e! ~·Nr:'~ s:;.;0 ::~ ~r~~!!e;t~:!~ 3~etn~~~~~.!!~ ~:1~~-·x:~:~ _~~a~=~~~~~=
from thla 4 bdrm, 3 bath OCUH.-OMT 648-IJ68 wlit1. Lovely ipaolo\&S oearschool•, sboppln&" uthq. f\. L&&Ni&uel" ~ or~
WAllllvtlW
Townbome located In the ea. 2 BR, 2~ batbs. 2
pat.Joe. Uparaded
'a. Security. pool &
jacuzzi. 6 Mo. leaae,
owner will consider
laqer. $1500/mo.
~
I I 'I.. II I< I \I I'
' /'I'. I Cu" "•1 C1•0•1•t'111•
Droadmoor s .. vicw b l t.s95 townboine ';ype wltb reaeaUon. Perfect lor Ml11lon Viejo .areaa Ratata 4650 ---------
home. Brand new, never ~52 TaO, >'!l,;..cH ~SIDE cb~ry 2br, patio, family room.. $350/mo. rarnil)'.538-!5805 Handy to S.D. Fr'A'.y. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • lived in Upgraded ••ir;s--pr, blt.na. Adlta, $275. QUA 1 L pl. Ac E CallU3M400 ,...... 53$0
carpeta. Formal dining. 28R,lba,yrlyS310 mo.16021at.~·2127 PROPERTIES. INC. Park Newport sub·lae. .u~rf Offices ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Fireplaces. Self· 28R,lba,yrly'3'75 (710753-1Vl0or548-8553 2br, 2ba. panoramic & Al Callusror: Winter-sum· WlllownerolSeiko Walcl\
cleanina " microwave Fo.WOw VIiiage evenings or weelcendt. ocean, ~Y vie\-, quiet. t ONTH FRE8 mer-yearly • store ren· . left as security at local
ovens. Comm. pool & ten· 621 W. Wllaon 646-2010 RENTAL AG£NT ON Tenoi.I, poola, 1pa. Jan 1. P\Jll service. No leHe re· tals. We have them all I rcataurant on 10·10·'77
nls eta. Almollt immed. FURN OR UNFURN PREMlSF.S SAT & SUN· 6"-0001 q'd. 20()..600 sq. Ct. Plenty please redeem. Watch
occupancy. Hurry, call •2brtownhomew/frpl DAY of parking. 2082 S .E. will be sold on 12·9'-'7'7.
75.2·1700to prevlew. •LcepaUo•enc.1ara1e · BAYFRONT, lie 2 Br 2 Bristol St, Newport Cal1Jobnat645-3676.
O"IN 1119· •' HvN rod1 ,.f{,. •Adulll only. O-PoltRt 3126 Ba.1ar, priorit;y to amall Beach. 557.1010 [ I Pool &jacu21lavall. •••••••••••• .. •••••••••• boat alp. '600. 833-N42 Drinlttn&problem? ~ 1lll~l1:1J PROMONTORY POINT & b Panorama view new ctn eva. btafi•e low e.c C.HAkobol HeJpllne ~· JiiJI /Ji Exquisite 1Br ~. lofti2~l~dults3 dl1r 2br,2ba +d~n•·plex.zBr lba completelyre· otc space in Newport· FORRENT:Hallror ~llnadayl3S-3130 ll.~~~.:::1~c:~~~~-~I comBalboplaet".elyOcCurne ... ·. T1eenwn•~. hwaaber. ·Gaa pd. 77S Nopets.Mgr496·1097 dee'. Frpic. d/w, l blk to Airport Area. Reception, NEW YEAR'S Ute>AAVIQU 2 BR IDdeaway. Private, 1.: -.. ...... .. " ...,S mo year'" phone serv .. conference Call Oan642-7958 ... ..,. '" rd .._. 1276 Gym, Social ActlvlUet. Sc:oUPl.642·S073 SPARKLING 2br, den, :;-om-,;....H,:_ .... ~.....,. Y • o.tctiltt•1-_ q .. ...., .. e ya . _.. mo. ba __ .. _ a• ~-............... r1n;. lulch, secy eerv, die-•·-'---·fl .... ,1 -.-_ 49'·5873 or a ft. 8, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Very Private. S150moto Coi 1 b / Crplc Quiet 2 l wwae, ocean vu, • · latina & copy machine. -••~ ,_..._,_ .... ,
'119-UJ311,556-0M6 BR w/garace. $35o. mo. moOK.67S-S628 gr%at ,!c:uon. No pets'. dbl gar $375. Cheri Sm. 1 Br, Mlboa Penln. From$29(). (TI4Y15 -7170 ,.._. Servlntall OraqeCo.
219 Miramar. 1st, last, ""-lwllh adults. $230. 646-9241> 661-1111. 4113-6575 New paint " carpet. ....................... 83$-'131J 1::~~::.· 2 ba, dep.492-2134 u.twWIMd • ._..... ... acll ll4'0 Rdric. '180 mo. yearly. EXECU11YESUmS ~ 5005 A t &44 133 3 br 2 ba townbome ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOURSEASONSAPTS ••••-••••••••••••••••• Tom, 833-12118833-3309 Be au ti I u I b Id g. -,.,.-·-·r
&en ·I w/v1ew, nr. ocean. Frpl, lalao91"-d 3106 SpacM>US 2
1br town'bsti_e. DELUXE APT. 2 Br, 2 ba, 2 BR, bath, carport $280 Persooallzed pb_one co~· •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• N\lh>T. Sboc'ea, walk to dbl gar, tennis " pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l 2 ba.:_lpood ok' pS2vt7fa 7;>s frplc:, encl gar, laundry mo. W\r & IU pd. No erage, secy service, co . SAM ClEMENTE ---------bc:h, no pet.s. 2 br, den, 2 .... ..., 71""""' ,...,. 2 BR, tai I nl sm cw . . fac:il All adt•• no pet.a ~ "'"'· .......... .,.. room, xerox & more. Pet Shop & Groomln1. ba..-.548-31SS7 .-. ... .....,.........., ups rs, cp 0 y, JoannSt 646-6483 · -· or ....... .,....._ or Euy frwy access. Near Ret1nna after 7 "ood --. no pets. Rd's. S29S mo. ___ · Great locaUoo. $285. P h 3917 So Coa5t Plaza From • " . -.....a.15.1a•cH Paooramaolt.hePac1fic 112MarineAve. v1• I •v1sT· 8'7·2622 ~ """"2161 . years. Fine location & .. ..,_ ._ Lux. 2 br, sundeck, gar, ..._ """ S.Clew• 3176 _,,.,,.,. client.cle
3 ·Br 2 Ba, Newport pool, jacuzzi, many ex· lalM>a Petlittlda 3807 Brand new large 2 br;l'Ai SHARP 3 Br dehue beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• Office space for rent by . BERTI-IA HENRY
Shores hom e, , newly traa. $360. 5.22-6827 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba townhowie, xlnt loc:., unit. Dtyv. frplc, patio, On beatb; utll. pd. New month. Approx. 550 per REALTORS
painted & decor d. ~ $111<1. Nice bach, Resp. S350. gar. Avail 960-2358 inter. 2 BR. UOO; 1 BR . sq. f\. 2 story bldg. Near 215 Del Mar 492·4121
mo.640-2981 s-c;rtrano 3278 adlt. Util pd. Av.all now. TSLMgm...!_ 642·l603 IRANDHIW $350.Yrly.1-492·3710 Boba Chica & Warner. OCEANFRONT
•SHERILEE•
Certllled Maueuae
House Calls· By Appt.
838-6838 Beautiful new 3br • 2~"1 •••••••!••••••••••••••• 106 E. Bay Ave, apt 9 3 Br apt/condos, conve-1 Br in duplex on San FroU SlOO. & up. Call MARKET
bath dup!ex, sun dee~. AN JUAN VILLAGE 2 l Br btwn ocean & bay LA CASA ILAMC~ nient toe, S units avl. $400 Fernando. $225. P ref 846' 11 Must sell! Net. ~.000 yr.
(rplc, pallo, gar. Rent is brand new 3 Br 2 Ba S265Yrly. lach, llr-A•IMow up.964·1507,640-1751 older person or couple. MO.COSTA MESA Agenl.642·4758
neg.548-3365 Townhouses for only $3S(l 675-7876or547-4200 AH utlls pd .. cpts. drps, 1 &3 b 492-2134 ,.5 Rm,803sq ft $391 mo Specially Gift Shop on
DANCE OF FUN
Btf1 nude sirll dauce &
rap ae11ion. lOAM t o.
2AM Mon -Sa t 825 N.
EuclidAnah 559-8150
NOFEE!Houscs.c:ondos, per mo. J!ayward· ,. __ .... _. 3822 pool,lndry.Cac's.Adults New dlx 4pex 2 r. f 'Mi St f B lb Walson Real Estate. _..__..M_. over 35. no pets or frplc, bltns, WO hkup l Bdrm, den, deck, $245 •l.20sqfl1n1lo cS85mo an · o a oa duplexes . Jtenlal 731.5581 •••••••••••••••••••••••children Ca ll Sue : yardgar$305up S4S·3604 mo. 118 W. Escolones. •442sqfllgeolc$195mo Island. Xlnt location.
hvibon,675-4912Bkr._ BAYVIEW Oplx. 2 Br, 556 .7707 or Henry : 962-4218 499-2496or499-4861 All ground floor, fronl $24,000+anventory.
•Br 2 br lovely Colonial s.taAM 3210 2ba, frplc, gar, adlls, no 009137 prkg, A/C, util pd., prof. Salisbu ry Really. _R_ELAX.lN ___ G_MAS __ SA._G_E_
FREE SESSION W /AO
h m'. L ~ 11 f n c d Yd , ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. $465. Pb 673.6004 New deluxe 4plex. 3 BR. le New luxury 2br, 2 ba apt. bldg, et~. _67_3-eeoo________ Bob James-Lie Masseur
tl!tl0/mo.Call642·800S eat4br,3ba,fpl.c,cpts, bltnsWDhlcupyardgar w1lb ex.lraordln ary 54().2200ors.40-5101 PLANTS. ANTIQUES, OutcaUl>-i,4M·Slll
fenced yard, kids/pet New 2br, 2ba, fam rm.. $395. 54s-364N, 962-(2l8 featw-es. CIOH to •hops. HOT TUBS, priced to ---------
OK.....,.... ,,., ..... c.a7 A t ..... ...., balcony & patios, comp Callatt.er 8PM 492-7714 THE EFFICIBilT . .... .. 55_.GE Newport Cetlter Ir _... . .....,........, . gen • n;8 v Se . d Viii sell. $22,500. A1ent. ~ A •'-C-on Area. no fee. '[),, /l~!'.c~ ~~n k1tch. S35o. 3Wln I age DUPLEX-HIW·VIEWeat ALTERNATIVE 64Z-4758 FIGUREMODILS P-;;;'Ugi~'2 Br, den, 2 ~ 3216 New 1112 bdrm luxury 3bd l~ba + extraa. I Mo. to mo. rent Incl: ANANCIALHELP iSCORTS
Ba, w all dlx reatures ••••••••••••••••••••••• LG 2 br, 2 ba apt m nice adult apts in 14 plans Arlle492--412l (.\it) Re c e p t . s e r v . , .
8 1 1 n s 1 n c 1 u d c ach Cottage, 2 Br 1 Ba, GARDEN APTS 4·plex uml on Mendoza from $216.5. + pools. ten· 2S3 Madrld penonalized phone cov-For OUTCAUOHLY
microwave Pvt walled secluded, hot tub, rent CORONA DEL MAR Dr. S275 per mo. 549-'1132 nis, waterfalls. ponds! ..__._.,........,.thecl erage, cone. rm, mall Small IUIMHHI 631·3'11
yard, security environ-lse or lse opt. $525 . 2 Br T<t1¥nhouse, frplc or SS! 1690 ~!..clheftB.lvd lo McFadden --:= ;~-1-L......1 3900 ~morrv .. e1mlndNeregrowpoui1rtd. prkg 11 you're beinC squeezed
I · l -..5725 cca 7200 Pool. tennis. Some ocean --.. ,.,.. -~-"' by tu...,er costs, hi"her LYNN DONOVAN, please rnenl, ~ {~· ennis, """" or.....,-& Catalina views. Close Duplex. 3 BR, 2•~ ba, (714)893-5198 •••••••••••••••••••••• THE EXECUTIVE wages8~nd lower -pr;flls. call 1/319/235-9003,
Sll50 mo. · 1 Wfttminster 3298 tD shopping & Cine beach gar.cncld bckyrd • frplc. THE EXCITING SUITE, 64o-5470 you can use our services. Waterloo, IA. Mary
New B 1 g c a n y o n ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·261 l 569·7111 or644·9996 New deluxe twnhs apts lg PALM MISA AnS. FOR La .1..rE We'll provide you with a
Townhm 2 Br, 2 ba, ull ta bargain! • BR. 2 3br ~ba fpk blt.ns WO MINUTESTONPT -supplemental income. MODELl.NGOUTCALL
Jmmed. occup. $'700. per BA w/fplc, O W, cpts, Nr new 2br, 2ba, aar, A/C. hkup patio dbl attach gar BCH. The most competitive We r-uire only good AFTER6:00 "' $:115.545-3604,963-4218 B rates in town! Fully -... MON-FRI 847-6520 mo. 673-9023. fenced ya rd. $395 . $315/mo. Bach.1&2 R. businesa sense, honesty ---------96J..4567 Agent, nofee. 64!>·4655 2 Br, 1 ba & gauge, fromSZM>.&up. serviced & improved of· and a desire to get u•-y 13tll
children ok. Walk to Adult.s,NoPets fices.Spaceavail: 1455& abead.586-0356 """'".-1561 Mesa Dr. 1533 sq ft at 60< per n. --------• BIRTHDAY to beach. $260.1162-3533 (5 Bll<s Eastot Newport Also avail: 434 to 4200 sq a...est... ...
STUDI0Garden apl.2br, Blvd.) I\ from 62< to 66< per n. Oppwtait~ 5015 DIANA
------l 'ri ba, encl paUo, gas pd. 546-9850 Call Prop. Mgr.. Judy ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUr Wonderful Stude.nt
1 child under 6, OK. No Clark, 833-8813 or slop by If you're not gel tln& from MOM & DAD WESTIA Y TRIPLEXES
COSTA MESA
BRANO NEW
1 Br f)-om $280.
2 Br From $305
3 Br. 2 Ba From $395.
dop. $275 mo. 8'2-9102 LA.RM I &2 IR •100 Birch St, Suite 104 0 13.8%• rel urn on your in· ---------
FROM $205 blk from O.C. Airport, vestment call Sandy • SAMOY•s •
RIADYMOW Quiet bldl w/beautiful Birch al Dove), N.B: &ss,Ajax'Co.837-3744 OUTCALL MASSAGE
2br,paint«l,crpts,drp1, lndscpg, cov'd garages, Open Mon thru Fri •Average yield on pay-973-0329
J ba. Gas stove. Ad ult•. ad u l t s , n 0 p e t s . 8:30-5~ offs to Ajax investort, -REYll---51-.-0-ltH--G--
no pet.s. $250. 42S12th LEEWARD APTS. 2020 Pkna Jan. lhru July, 1977.
Br balb d .....,5 ""Uertoci Ave, 1 blk E. or &--·.1.1 .r...lt State law permits a pre· _B_y_li.Y...;;..;..po_oe_i.t_. 53_1.()3.'M ___ _
Beautiful new 3 unit 2 • lY.a con o. -· Newport Ave, 1 blk s. of ~·•• ~ •• payment penalty charge b\ildm~. Xlnt loc:atJoo Pools, play areas, nwly Ba 63 -0397 View omce with full equivalent to 80'1. ol 6
near So. Coast Plaza. dec:.87ll7341 y, 1 services: Telephone, re-months unearned in-,.,lan•s..wac.1SUO
Children welcome. No 4000 cept.ion. secretarial, con-terest on the balance. •••••n••••••••••••••••
pets. Rental olf1ce open 2
1 Br ti apt, hlj'~poolcnf~ ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ferenc:e room. Executive Mortgage Brokers. Of. PnlleuionaJ ?itauaie, otr
daily 10.5. 840 Baker St, I oca ;s\47.~ · 0 Roomw/kttchenette furniture avail. 2082 rend to California reai· premlM buis. C.11. on·
blkW.of'Bnstol. pet.a. · ~week&up. Michelsoo,752.-0234 dent.sonly. Jy. Llc•o aed 10·10.
2 Br. 1 Ba, 2 story. Com· 557·5.2l5 UK£ A HOME? 548·9755 Attractive OfCice •pace PARTNER needed IM-l-S4MSU ________ _
NEW & SPECIAL-3 munity pool. 0522BR,1Ba.stove&reCrig, Spac.2Br or3Br,2&, bassadorlnninCosla avail,1500sqrt,at65<sq MED.forUNIQUE R.E.111t .. m•1t•
BR. 2~ BA, frplc .. extra Shore crest. S300 mo. util. pd. Adults, no pets. Cplc, lge Cncd patio, serv· Mesa, 2277 Harbor. Cen-ft. 673-3272 INV. $MILLIONS can be
large rooms, plush 675-2311AGT. Daya. NO Nrprk,tenrus&.i;bop'g, lngbar,bltns,lndivW/D trallylocat ed,23Sroom•. ad /'-""'d Will FEE . m e w w .., aya. -·•••••-••••••••••••. car pets Minutes to _ _ _ _ _ 1265. mo. 548-7689 hlcup, pvt gar. l'i'a mi to MANY with kitchen, Office Suite, new bwld· offer a PHENOMENAL !±=± &
beach & freeways. $425 ~ bch. Nr shops & schools. phone & TV. Swimming Ing, all or part, 4 blks R E T u R N -
mo. Children, pets OK. Deluxe 3br 2'""ba frplc 2 Br w/gara.g.e ~250. Water Kids/pet.s neg. $335 up. pool, jacuzzi·, '""d reA. from ocean in downtown $30 000 $SO 000 r e . ......_.._ 7005
Agt. <JA"'l311. nearbeafth·. n • pdca'11l53'7betwnB 1·5raMn·gFe . 536-0581 -· .. Ht.mUnaton Beach. $325. ' -• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,. .. room . Daily & weekly •· ft quired. 631 .. 039 NOW I Co• ... A ... or's ""-Op
673-7127 • 3848 mo. + uul. 800 Sq. . -------------· .... '"' .........
CORONA DEL MAR-2
Bedroom. fireplace,
enclosed garages, P{llio,
completelY returbiahed.
Inc:. (714) 752.1920.
for Denyse.
SHARP 21~ $2 35
lAdry fac. 22e9 C M a pie
540-4484 646-3442
NNclalGomm te?
To Prolesalooally Find
THAT RIGHT PERSON
-~-... / , ........ /
4450 Lrt•FoilMI
•••••••••••••••••••••••
tWp W..ted 7100 .......................
AJ:COUMTIMG cun
The lrYine Co. LI CUl"l"eDt·
ly teeJc1n1 an acc:ounUog
clerk in aupport of our · ceneral a~ IOC·
tlon. Req'• l -Yr of
1eneral ofc exper. In
A/Payable " 10 lte1 by touch. Xlot co. beftetlta. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~i-Clluts LAGUMASHOPS Ai.a•i:-... 5t00 ~ qc< ~ ~ n-..-•-:dnt toe u •••••••••••••••••••••••
cau ~,9am-ooon
THE IRYIMI CO
S50 Newport Ct.r Dr
Newport BeachC. 92163
Equal 0ppor EmplOJel'
~ ........,......, .. .,. a oo. DUCK HUNTE RS! We cu ~ Approx. llOO sq. ft. '5 470 ha lOO'aof Blinds avail __ 83M1U ___ s_1n_c_e_1_9'1_1 __ 1 aq. ft. Im mediate oc· in v;_ locations tb ruout
c~mlcs 67S-8700 Calli. For Info. call llr.
------'----Drake, 5.'!M638
Loet•Fomd 5100 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• a ACCOUMTIMG
t..oet: Seal Point Siameae CLBK
----------cat, l yr. old, female, 1be Jolly Boe•, Joe. bu
1119Yed, wearinl nea col· an entry level openln&
lar. Vic. Rockied1e and ,.,. ao iDdUIU'lous lodlv.
Victoria Dr. La1un looklng tor oppor. to
8 ea c b . R ewa rd I I ffOW. Mutt be prollclent ~ OI' ~17 a.ft W/lO bfltdder. Poaltlon
4 OB.UXE OFC'S
Collf. rm.. aeat as. all
1-----i'-------& paneled. am. wbae in re·
ar. l or 2/IT-lease. Lake For••~ area. Ken t
l'..!!~~~~~I Harkins.
•~-----~-~
5:30Pll calla tor flllnc, audlUna
ol dally W. rtportl for
our r.ta~ as .uc s~:-dUU.S~lud-• RMlptiQolat
• A~Y JJl PlftOll,
1100 OTllette Au .
lrvU.. lam·5pm Moo
UlN.Pri
Add it ... Build 1t...Diaper 1t...Hammer It ... Carpet SERVICE ft. .. Cement it. .. Wire 1t...Hoe it...Clean lt ... Move
lt. .. Press it...Paint it ... Nail 1t. .. Plaster 1t ... Fix 1t ...
,_.. • .,._,.NN ___ _... ___ ,... ... ,.
Ho.K..... L••cupl I 'uWkt/P•"-t .......... ,,,~ Tie ..>II' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Roof frumina. 111dlo1. t .. Mrdllfftric Sk.lploader. Dump truck. Wull1, patio. new lawns, PETERSPAJNTIN'O Palntln1. Homu lntr 41 ER AM I C t.1 r•41'~
stain. pkt up. Alter ~ l.J<-32"11.36 M~-QJ74 Houllng, tree work. ~Cle•! aprklera, iron work, Expr'd. Ro• nates. Exterior. Specialty : N«)w/remodel. Fr•• ~1 PfllcallMl-41'20 arading, de mo etc Wl I et" Mr fountal111. Liconaed Free Eat. Call Gene Apta.toratetG3l·2508 uni job• welcolb.,.-, ELECTRICIAN-Priced 83H257 • • .... • ~ 536-au&at\5 ., e..,.tSentce /C ~ right-free eetlmate on ...._ Lynn9tJO.S&U,536-7711 83'1-4.3$J YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs expr ·
••••••••••••••••••••••• OftCnn• t:arseorsmalljobs. ..-•PMJ 411!1.aSHl ... Er-IRLS Tree Ir plant trim or re· PROi'ESStONAL Paint· ln wallcov!rtni. Free T.._Stnlce H
Shampoo & steam clean.••••••••••••••••••••••• Ucemed 673-0359 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ " ., move. Roto-toll 1prklr 1nJ. ~/Exter. Reu e.t.e.e45-8$76Andy .. •••••••••••••••••t
Color bri&btenera; wht EMENT WORK. All_ • OCC Student. Big ~ T All1 ty~ofhomek4sol0c• rpr, lawn ren'ov/ioat work1uar60-0386 ' PROF-."lONALPREP R=ovala, trtmmill*,,.
cptalOmlnbleach.Clean kinds. Reasonable. l''r~ ww•~ truck. Trash, tree trim, c eanina PilC aicu. 548-51163 ~ ng Freeetl ~· llv,dlnrm. hall $15. Ava esti.Call750-6625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc. Randy 642.s1oa, SoedalApta&R.Ework. F~Prieet.StawUclcln· &PAINTINOEXT&.R. ull.YilllUredM2·26zc
rm ST.so. couch $10, chr Dig It Landscape Main· 549-31l66 Bonded/innred. Free t411a11 J aur. Exttrtor aped&litt. Jle"9/lnar. Lie. 236741. "I S5. Guar elim pet odor. e .m e n t W o r k . tenance: Mow & Edae. est.a & Instant service. ....................... Try me·d.Ucote 836-SSS5 Free eat. 8S-7394 llfltDhhry ,
Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr. Dr1 vewaya. patios , Full maint, hauling , ~ ~&SS2..o:MS Brickwork. Small jobs. •H••••••••••••••••0~4
I)o work rnyself. Refs walkways. Reasonable, clean·upa, rototilling. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport, Costa Mesa & P~Una. Extr/lntr. Ex· ........ ;a.,.ir Sleepen $99, Std ~·
. 531-0101. free ests. 55e-07S7 Free Dlt. 675·5316 Want a REALLY CLEAN Ilse maintenance clean· ln111e.~175 eves. f"w.~~1~:: Dneat. reu. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl29, moat cbra $1'.~TJ
. HOUSE". Call Ginabam ing & yd wk, am & lg, ....,.. ..,.....,. ~ ave labor V1ariely fab1,.•-or Japanese gardening G' 1 Fr _, u c 5,:.. own equlp, dependable. ~ . PATCH PLASTERING H 0 ..;, 1& rd• 11 c 8 ~..,, WecareQirpetCleaners ••••••••••••••••••••••• service. Tree trim, clean U' • ee ...... .....,. ~ gd refer, free eat. H.B. ....................... lnteri91'tc extenor paint-/\ 11 t Y Pc s • Fr~ e UpboUtry76&-0106 .,m
Steam clean 9 or sham· MARK SILER CONST. up. Hau I Ing, am I I M M A C U L A T E 842-1206/848-4031 MOVING & HAULING i n I • S u P r e m 6 estimates. Call 540-6825 _,
poo also upholatery·all Newconst.Res/comm'I. lndscp'g642-1403 CLEANING . YOU SHIPSHAPE Local&longdiatance worlr'tnanah1p. QillJ•ck ,...... Wahr ...
work guar. Truck mount Rm add, remodel, Patio DESERVE OUR BEST. 646-6952or836-5768 91!8-781K .;;.:.!'.~ ............................... ..
unit. Fr est reas rates Uccontr.Call979-4411 G••ralSer-.lcff 759-03'17 Expert experienced • AcousUc Clnp shot In· HO~AVERS Pl b Pine & Solid ().~ 64S·3'1l6 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• bousec:leanlng done on a •Two Men Will Move tr/Extr Si lal D . -~ · um · waterbed.I CompleteJiM,. ---------Drafting Ir Dealgn HANDYMAN: Carpentry, Ught housecleaning done ~or bi·wkly bula. You'' We handle big Ed ards Prodc a rRoCr Counn Ull 6: Heatlna. Fret'. est, & ace Reasonable
Carpets & Upholstery ••••••••••••••••••••••• electrical, plumblna & byexpr'dGermanlady. Genl cleaning, walls. moves . Office & tr.~751."t747 · n-SlO~.HonesBofAt'':.re,cliaObKle Terry"s NwptiBa~
steamed c 1 ea n e d . Drafting & Desi go. Room noon. Ph 847-2787 Xlnt refs. '-'hr. 546-4831 window, waxing. Also household. distance & la'Vtce. • -• 642-0161 A
$19.95-Srms up to 400 sq add · rem ode Ii n g . rent.ala &boldiday ltime local, also packing. JbAse Painting. 10 yra ex-r751-31.50or847-0383
ft . Llc /insr /guar . Reasonable. Expr. aft 5, IDO.ff AU HOUSE MOUSE specials. Reas. Honest Lowest legal rate. Lie· pr NB. CM areas. I 'M._._ NOTICE •
645·3939Jim 842-7937 Call 642·4957 QUALITY Serv. w/a ~~lA'! free eata. Ellen dfinsrd. Cal T #111·9'4. SMALL -MY PRICES =:~••••••••••••••• bow Daily Pilot Class·
CARPETREftAIRS Drflsmaldng "Personal Touch" . ....,....,.,. Ph84M278 ARE SMALL. Ronc.ompleteRooforRepair. itied ads display t~'f.!
Call 557·6103 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATCH FOR TiiE Ref's. Call: Pam 536-9522 WW clean your house or 642.6199 Gutter Service also. Call messages with leglb1 f
---------1DRESSMAKING. 24 hr DAILYPILOT Sandy'aCleanJngService apt. Exper & reliable Trade YoUr old 1tuff for CUSTOM PAINTERS 547-0427 andimptdcti:Ourade~~~
Have something to sell? service. Nothing over CHRlSTMASTREE Dependable. Low rates: wtrers.$4.00hr.548·3531 new aoodlea with a "Wedoilall" -------.,A-... 56-78·' :':t ~sult:~YPbeO{i".(
Classifiedad.sdoitwell. S25.9tJ0.3836 EVERYTIWRSDAY 645-22.6.'Jeves. Sellid.Jeit.ems 642-5678 Claaailiedad.'42~8 Uc.281400 MS-5347 WantAdResults .,.... 6'W67S. , r;
ALARM IMST ALLER
Will train, must have
own transp. Call 540-3461
for info. Ask for Skip,
631-0458 aft 6pm.
ALTERATION LADY
for a cute shop. Pleasant
working conditions.
642-1826
loaf c_,......-. Clerk
Ccrpenters ToolilHJ MAIL CLERK
Pacifica needs ex· Need energetic person
Chri tma Earnl perienced boat carpen· ;·n1 · ti •-ood 1 1 n«JI ters. Boat building & new w 1 tia ve "' g ap· lhCJin Mow boat toolin~. Xlnt Com-pearance. Individual will
For "'VO... be doing mail dlstribu·
AYON COST ACCOUNTANT
Job C.oSl System. Perm.
F /time. CballeQging op·
por. forexper'd iDdiv.
ROSAN, INC.
2901 W. Coast Hwy, NB
Equal Opp0r Employer ~ " pany bcne its including tion, receiving, small re-
REPRESEHTATIVES Paid Medical & Lire pair & misc. duties. COUNTER Girl ror
Best lime to establish Insurance. Pacifica by Some heavy lifting req'd. Laguna Deb. Dry Clean·
customers. Interested? Kipper Yachts, 928 W. Call 644-3389. 9am-noon ing store. 494-1538
Amb·i· C I W ed Call 540-7041 or Zenith _1_7th __ S_t._Co_st_a_M_e_s_a_. --1 1ous oup e ant THE IRVINE CO Counter Person, Mature.
to manage a smaU busi-7-1359 loat a.ctricians 550 Newport Ctr Dr p/Ume. for :\!uick serv. ness, p/time, Will not in·' ________ _. Pacifica needi; ex-Newport Beach Ca 92663 . .
terfere w/your present1--------~ EqualOpporEmployer sandwich s op. Call job. Must be willing to BANKING perienced Boat Electri·1---------betwn8&3,833-8919. 1 'M H 11 642 ciaos. Xlnt Company -------------~----earn. r. a • ·1634· benents. inclooing paid COCl(TAIL CUSTODIAM
ANSWERING TELLER medical & life insurance. 4 Hrs per day. Evenings.
SIEAVICE Pacifica by Kipper WAITRESS 9 Mo's year. Start Yachts. 928 W. 17th St. Learn in 40 hrs the most S.t.437/hr. Apply, Laguna Mature reliable relief A part time position is Costa Mesa exciting. glamorous, Beach Unified School
graveyard operator. Ex· currently available at ---------h.ighJy paid profess. Day District, "<n Blwnont St, per. pref. but will train. our Newport Branch for IOATTOOLIMG or eve sessions. Place-Lagun.a~ch.
Gd. company benefits. a Teller with new ac· INSPECTOR ment assist. Good job op· E.O.E. 646-8000 counts expenence. Typ-.. por. Cutlers
A/PAY TRAINEE
MacGregor Yacht Corp.
1631 Placentia. CM
ASSEMBLERS
•Open 7:30am-5:30pm
•Call Evenings 533·8882
For swing &graveyard
•MO FEES
Experienced & Trainees
Car & Phone a Mu11t.
6~
'f MPORARV •tFl P
'"... 140-4455 Equal Oppor Employer
Am.omotlve
New Detail Shop needs
help.
fop wages paid, Engine
&.eamen, eng painters.
Wiers ft polishers, up-
hol1tery abampooera,
check out, p1~-up & d~· &lvel')'. App\y at
20l58 Harbor Bl, CM
64.$-1030
AUTO SERVICE
WRn'£R. Pd lnaurance
Ir unllotma. S.Jary open.
5 Da1/wk. 7:10·5:30.
P1eue appl)t lo Ptl"IOn.
CWf't Aut.o Repalt, 174'1
Anaheim A'Ve, C.M.
· · ed Th. · Inspects macume parts, mg IS reqwr . IS IS a Call 714175' .9194 ST. JOHH IC ... ITS career opporturuty with knowledge of fiberglass. " goodcompanybenefits. Abletoworkfromdraw· So. Cali . Cocktail Needs Head Cutter &
Please call for ing.s &specifications. Ap· Waitresses, Inc. 17922 Cutter & Spreader. 17312
appointment ply at Hobie Cat Corp., Sky Park Bl. Ste C, East ma o , Irvine .
Patti Van Dalfsen 2026 McGaw Ave, Irvine. Irvine. Ca 92714 540-7171.
(714) 759·7421
An Equal Opportunity I
Affirmative Action
Employer Male/Female
a-ERJCAL
' STUffYOUI .
STOCllMG WITH
HOLIDAY CASHS$
Kelly baa lntereatlDI
temporary auitnmenta
tor all Clerical le ln· ---------1 du1trl1tl 11clll1. Work ~ you want. Day
week-month or tonier,
Paid vac1. You don~t
pay, wep1110u..
COOKSAUTE
With •~te1utve
knowled•• In Prencb ~t.al Cuisine. On·
Jy proleuionala w/1d. nif~ JRIOCl, app}y at
tJu. eictl\ll!Ye d.l.mR!r eal. Ambrolla.. Bm. lll, S05
ao&hSt.,"B
.a ___ DM.....,_v_ ..... ________ ~....., ....... ~...,. .. --....,_a. .. 1_rn_ . ~!~!~ ..... !!.~~ ~~-~·.~ ..... ?!!! ~ ........... ~ ............. ~~!.! ~.:!'.~ ...... ~!!! ................. ~!!!
DGIHm'a W ""94 71...._W..... , •• -&ab for Koior Rout•. ...... 1001 PEBSL\N klt&eu. CFA MOVIN.O SALB nt W.'.A.lilll.J'lleft ----..................... ;;;;r....,.,........ .... llCUTAIY Small cu llOC•Hary ••• -................. ~Sbowquali~. Lulooi•, Nwpt sbo,.... "'"a....,
. L\"N run time lm•~. opealnl tor ~r.u .. mcsHp. Ptr1lan rna1alflunt ....._ Aa&Sq.-, Chfn.a, Furn. JO~J=1~if'?'-cf~l
1.,J.30. NUl'M'I udtil fwl ..:ntar7 W/2-S ,,. ad· TICHMICIAH Suoblr, clrca uao. ~ Bl• Poiltt kit-a&Q..10-. ~y WATCBSS
ume 7 a·so. A~y al DAI. HTAn tao«llS a · SALB r mln.istntiffe:lper. MUil -1h24 •• mlnl eoisd ..... call cbamp llnel ... .. 1070 ART OBJ~· oo• ,,,.• W ... h ve ~t .... (IW' two m-.;1t.b ' be utr 1t&Nr. d•t•ll 1:o1«trooic loat.rumenta· Gurseou. s•m eolon. --~ ,,,.;.__.. • .. w ~ -· Pm Lido Ccov cea u ~ --. ... mtDded. Typlna tswpm tloo Firm needs llDaloa PvtP'¥. 805/4M-ml uVU1.-·•·-••• ... ••• .. ••••••••••••• SILVER SE VICE,
OM&erarcallMZ.aou experienco m. commerdal & invest-"'dlctapboce. Exper. 1.n technicl11n to cover Do'J' 1040 W.'•NTED FINE FURN. • AN· OFRCI .-,, ment properties. W ealey N. Tayler Co. · 1ud dcvelopmeol or real Watern SU.t.e out of new PUIUC AUCTION ....................... A u DO 11QUES. "5-ZllO ...id ._~ •-~ 81ta1e dellrable Onnae County location. MANY JTEKS OF J'INE DOG TRAINlHO TOP CA.Sn LLA R Perm. p/Ume. Mature is a 32-year..,,. ~u Ill owned • or;>erata1 a..-K TYPtST Salary plus over time, ESTATE J EWltLRY. Your Pi.oeor lllDe PA JD P 0 R Y 0 UR
Good t)'pJ.lt. Exper'd OD· by its fou.oder. We are not a IUb-ll\&o, • expenses. FuU ART OBJECTS AN· Olmllutla JEWELRY, WATCHES. ly.~.lllZCbarle.st, aidiarr, division or branch of lmmed. opeotni tor CQa>pany benetlts. In· TIQUES. FINE v'uaN •• J · 5•0Gl5I ART OBJECTS. GOLD,
CM somethinl else -Just headquarter1. clerk typlit. Ac~ra~e d1.11try luder ~ 800 ETC. PJl()N.B FOR IN· ,SILVER SJtaVICE,
WATERIEDS Dl.SOOUNTJ:D ~$111."1'1~· Aqua lfeaTelM-.,_ Odes' cS.k/r~pt, a()u(S Applicants must r:sess highest pro-~iti7:·.:. n~. )' employee.. Major. pro-FO .• BROCHURE. UluaAJllOI FINE FURN • AN·
with numbers, worlcln11 f i al al' •-i i .Pfeueca1i8";... duct is machinery pro-lf.S..z2IOO Yorbhlre'IYrten '11QUES.8'S-DOO wtth cuttomen, neat & eaa on qu it ea w ntegr ty to · tam 'tll noon t.ectlo~ of centrltu,.l Beal»mlx UWlltoct 1071 mm'• ~ amu.
p(euant teJephc>Ao man· lll&tch our own. Interview by appoint-: lMllRVIHI CO. =ttr'!~u:S~u~~mF~::c1 MUSICIOXIS lilllledldttea.I ••••••••••• .. ••••~ ..... nerw.~11" ment only. · 1 '50NewportCt.rDr Service Manaaer. 17931 CLOCKS RJmalaran.1 Rea. KorsunW-., brott
Browo plo1tn_,. a a d
bl&ek/IJ't1 p1aM1 Siu G teeular. Paid G10 •a. Almoet ..... I.oat. u. .
can't wear. ao e acb.
fm.2M2 after 8:00 Pll
WISLIY M.·TAYLOa C6.. llALTOIS 1• NewportBeacb,Ca926sa Skypark Blvd, Suite E, PAllCIR"SPITS to rid• fl drive, blk ~-'!1.mee cie}~e-:..~: • 21 I . s.. Jo I r I ... .... • EqUal Oppor Elllployer lrviae, CA. 9271' Slot Ma.c!b1neit, Nlelelo-Next to RALPB'S at par• Mor1an 1•1dlD1.
._. • IU.a ..... utnM-,......_ .... • ......... tlO ! deon1, pbonofraph1. FordRd.N.B.8404Cl80 Eng, Western (710 Av1 •'7 per hr •. Mu1l .....,..,,,._, ~·-. --. --World'• larae1t Hleo-m. have reliable ur & Telapl .. Sales ti on. Al10 1Uta, :;c1011 For Qlo: ~ T4mDla
pbone.Wetr.io.eauThe Want to make lnoney? furniture, anUquu. YORKJE .PUPS. AKC.f"'ICllllMI~ 1071 aub Mtmbenblp. Call
Fuller Bru1b Co. ~ ... w· .._ .... · Secretary Can you •ell on the Amertcanlotero.Uooal; Male" Female. Call •M••••••••••••o•••••• 110-tm.
15'-6471. ·~ •.-. 110 HtlpW..t.d 7100 uettOWSICY phone?ToPfinourbusi· 1a Kettenne: Irvine. 862-1713 • LatbeWlllonl.880l1"xZ•"'-..,-___ -___ --.,-_.-.... -,-,m-l-DWD-----------i••••••••••••• .. ••-••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Irvine Co. la seekina nea.s. 646-3030, a11k for '15C·tm . Open Wed..-Sat. Scbna Sl.100. MtUlfi' 2IO''x41'" •;.;;~ .,:--·--~._.!IMMIG• Recepdoail~fwl Ume, SALES leCt'e'taries w/exs>er. in IU1. Salt :r::-t>Pe~ilAfC~· 1$3,200. Prea1 brake so MZ·U19
..... _nw "-Newport BH@ RE of. real est.at.e loans, title or --------•I SALES Qwo llDel in.a(, •.tat, n". IS,000. Cinc(n.1---------$17S week. Outioioe, en· fice. Good typlq • xlnt &ICTROHIC e.crow. AbWty 1.o Ulllt TelephooeSales Primitive arts le Anti· P · ·natl Horizontal mlll N•v..SO rup. Pvt Prty, thusi~1tlc personality. appear•oce. lndu:atrlal OIGAH SALIS the customen, tome typ. HOUSEWIVES ques rrom Africa, ln· Golden Retriever pups, $1.100. <JlS) 811·M34 ~,!S.11 t/StaQ oalf
7
, Dec. ~~t!:~v='~"~~~~.1-Brok __ en-'-,833-W ___ L ___ HIGHEST C 0 M • ~l~~'d. Xlnt co. $$$$$$$ $ $ $ $ dooeeia, China, Eu.rope AKC, 1l weeks. $100. t4llcel•1w 1010 .,.~.,. .M0-48$
depend ab 1 e c ar . lECEPT /TYPIST MISSION /G UARAN • Call644-3389, 9am-ooon Fall ls berelt allhougb lt 4' New Gwnea from my 5S8l70 •••••••••••••••••••••••&'Teak Wall Unit t250 Pr.
$.ipervillngadwts4'car· Must have lroot olc ap-TEE I FR IN 0 E THEIRVIHECO maybeearJy, it's Ume private collection at the Wanted· Toy Poodle for Phooetlcs COW'H 24 re· Ant.lque Spool Seda SUO.
· A all bl & od t · "-BENEFITS. Sell in bl&b N Ctr D start ma"'"'-.. some extra Anthropot West Corp., little .rlr1•1 Cbrl1tmas. cords" vlsual aid book. ea. 15" Comm'l Floor Sa~;.. ~l:e~xt. ~· stfu.. ~u~~; traffic sboppiq malla. N~~hCa9~ cash fo;cHRISTMAS. 34(:2lA W. ~ac~rthu~ Natm:i;bmoaeybutlov-OUJd teaches self $35. Polisher $200, Alrleaa
250, between 1-5 PM. Alk Lucich, Dir.oCSaJes. Some abWty to play the F.qualOppor Employer n~we Libraries has e ~een ar or lnabome.8'7-6871 Folded boxe 1 for ScrtYer, Dda work ~. far Jim HIWPORTER INN orsan req'd. Previous the finest &cone or the Fairview), Santa An•. Cbrhtmu 1lft.I, candy a...tnelST5.541--N80
ule1 uper. useful, but most profitable p/lime Dttember 8th thru loth Samofed/Huskle pup-or coolc.lea. white, 2~ de· PASTEUP Art.I.st wanted. 1107 Jamboree Rd, NB we wlU train you. Call SIClET ARY jobs avail. We orfer 3 from lO A.M. to 8 .P.M. pia. S WltJ. old. Xlnt ep 1115/8 lone SS/S wide, Lindy 1111 wekl•.
Exp.prel'd..orwllltraJn. F.qualOpporEmployer Mr.Lynn,89S-M31. General office glrl shift.a per day to lit into One ptece or the whole lamllydop. $Z5.979-Q2 10ceaor3/2SC.6'2·337& Ubnew. POO.
F/llme pos. Co. benefits. R. E. $""' .,r needed for you.a& Orange your schedule, a base collection. Daya f79.116Zt "'"pl"· Pennysaver 1 ~ houri Dealen Welcome. Adique piano, xlnt cood, Pia~tiaAve.,cM' Young executives in $$$SALESEX&Ct$$ Counlylirm.Acctspaya-Y wage+ a com· Beam.lfulsweettempered recently tuned saoo.Dovre 1kl rack. Roof -----"-----t commercial real estate AreyouaJready a winner ble, Accls receivable. mission & an xlnl boJ\US. female black standard Girl'• canopy bdrm let model with build-in PIX Amwtr s.n-. nnn, seek trainee for (But your earnings don't Typlne & 10· key by No travel, F /Ume ls STIWAITIOTH poodle puppy. 11 weeks, incl. deak w/boolr.caae & locka. Like new, uaed
Want to work days, after· t'Omtnercial real estate. reflect it?) Hi&hly re· touch. Ca 11 for a ppt. available. AHTl9UES have 1>9pen, all 1botl ex-dresser $.100. 4 Antique twice 125. Tire cbaJna
noons & evenings ln ND 1 Vearexperieoce in real garded co has a career ~~litti'i~n:oFi~fu'!.~ Tr:g&g~i~E •AMERICAN OAK• cept rabl .. , $300/ofr. delk soo. Sewin& center ~JJ·7o-U aerle1 SU.
&. CdM areas? Work estate aale1 rerured. poe e>pen for an exper'd C 203 SE M i TIUSJOBTS.FOR YOU! The lqest most com· .551-3321 ~.96IJ..4039
Wf/llkm_«:. or p /:i~le. ;erc'r~:atr~. 0
J r ;; e& =~~!~::::~ _1_~_·_._1
__ ._· __ •_n, CALLUSNOWA'r ~~~e0t,:e~~P'u~! ""toY• 1045 Membership University Kini O'LaWD front tbrow
p :eye•;: r-a :':SP 'er ,r~ benefits. Cail hhmell & a \erritory. c----.-Pool Be 833-1095 in Calif. We buy dire'!:t & ... •••••••••••••••••••• Athletic Club, Nwpt Bch. :;:_;1~· Id concl SlOO.
operators. caU 640-0IU2. Realooomlcs,Corp. High comm. Leads. No --··-r tween8:30&11AM pass the aavlngi on to Fl"ee:Mlxed breod PUP· $315,SaveSS.1·743-4881 i---·------
E.O.E. ____ 67_S-67 __ 00 ____ 1Larofls. Expense pd ~~~~:i! ~~_tnfpflt. si~ r~::.&i~ you . Also, Antique PChlels, readPyb for PAINTINGS-Artist needs ..... SlotMadlilln .--------111 RlSTAUUHT.rlZZA trainina. No invest. Your persoo to Mr. Fuentes, Reprodurtions are avail. -~~aftma61. one: casb. BIG SAVINGS I Unusual German made 1'UJJ & p/Ume openings future is now. Call Robert Bein, William EqualOppEmplyrm/f attheverylowatprices. ,,_......,.. . GaUery Qu.Uty Paint· Antique Slota. Several to PIX OPERA TOR
P/time. Exper. nee.
Please contact Mrs.
Sullivan,
f~} eeneral rest. work -1-~ __ ac_?_-2«6 __ . ____ Frost & Assoc .• 1401 ~~~~ERRO S.A Pet Cbinchillu, ln-lnpto$14S.C&ll6U-M30 choose from. 1100.
oeuOCairport. Mu.the QuaJISt.N.B. 1'. I nlu. -Sal Th N · · tdll(ent & band tamed 497-2143 ·
San Clemente Genera! Hosp1lal
496-1122
18 or over. Apply in SALES 1e er.w_..,ne 8$ <At 7s 1~21Frwy> Call7St-Ol3t. . f~yourAbGusEl .. !.~cGardS. NorwecianBloePox person, LOOI T SECRETARY We will train. Eorn -•voµ .__ ., .... A Newport Center Low Christ mu money . ()penSun-WedlM r.Alt•• IOSO Send one card for each ...... :~~-57c.. SGT. PEPPERONI'S
PIZZA STORE firm. Some le&al expr Salary and comml1111100. & Thurs.S.l 10-S ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• tag plua one 11pare. We v•.rvYV•.,. v•.... -JfflS!!!J pref, but might consider Call: STOREWIDESALE return permanently '-dotyS.
PtnoMtlTr-... 2.30() S. E. Bristol
Santa Ana He.iahts
549-8674
n--Ule Ubrari-has trainee . lntelhgence, 631-0337,askforDon w bi ri New fr used fura. •ppl's, sealed attractive tai: & Coolue Jara, Bath ac· ....,.. -11 .. _ .... _.... & typ1Do re-e pey &best p cei for misc. Wilton's Bar1aln 1trap, meetln° airline operunga for part & full-,..,,uuu.IU .. fine old furnlshings, art Nook. 545 & 814 w. 19th, . .. ceu, factory 2nds" db· Our growing agency
seeks dynamic indiv.
w1sales background.
Good personality to train
to become employment
t'Ounselor in fnendly ofc
<Next to Mc Donalds> F.qual Oppor Employer
time telephone sales quired. Call Rulb Brazer objects, Oneota! rugs CM. 642-79301c5'1-3262 l.D. ~uarementa. Pre· cootinuted styles, aelliuc
represenlabvet. Good 644·2Cnl TELEPHONE etc . .N1choboo's 362 N. vent lou "theft! For• below wholesale. Dlrs
RESTAURANTS
working atmosphere. Cat Hwy La1una Beach Gold vinyl aofa MO. Twin penooalized ta1 enclose welcome. Mon thru Sat.
Make &ood money. Hrly SECRETARY /&•c SALES ~ bed with frame $75. W•llpaper, fabric or Twin Wlnton, 31968 + b & Req r /lime w /lop Or· . • 6'5-1705 "Day Glo" paper " we C.mino Capistrano, San waae teed o n usesbU garuialional skills to run Work Part/ltme In one of Tum of cenl.ury lhln1s for will back 4' trim your Juan Cap. (acros1 fr El ~g nec;J:J::1~hllts~ busy ofc. Qual: non-our circulation sales sale. Massive couch & THOMASVILLE 6Pc. t.ags. Or try two cards AdobePlaua)
Wemakeltfun&profila-lmlOker.xlnltype,S/H& rooms & still have chair; custom made for Bedrmiulteloclud. 6W backtoback.
w/relaxed atmosphere. New continental rest
Call Carry Fox, 540-6055. opening & desires ex·
Coastal Personnel Agen· per'd waiters, cooks &
cy, 2790Harbor, CM P /T, c ••hie r If ood -'----------1 checker.
bl 1 u d1t'talmi mach ability. pleasure tim e for a Pasadena eatate. anmtre. Over $2000new. PRICES: lltUSUUHUHllllS sell ;rb!~~-the a:air~~~ Gd ph manner. Xlnt yourself. You can work Horsehair stuffed, sold Mual sell $1260. 557-7385 $2eaor3/'5 Garrett electronlca, coin
l'erson needed to care for Apply at 3201 E. Csl Hw y live plants 1n com· CdM.
learn call us at thll work cond. Send resume near home & still pursue color. S.SOO both pieces. or 835-0211 pager no. 4f5tag.s $1.eoea. de t 0 ct 0 r .,, I d ls.
number betwn s :3o &c lncl'g salary to P.OBox outside activities. We Fumith your hU1band1 9'72. 6/9tags $1.SOea. crimi.nator. $120. 8'8-0fat
merclal selling. Exper. Mon·Frl 9-12. ua 295.1.Nwpt&h,921863 · pay wages+ comm. PM omce!! Blue-1reen qt. lOormoreSUOea. m. & AM hrs avail. Call for canning jars. Porcelain Q.OSEOUT SALE Sa.lea Tax Included & transp. necess. Call 9 See Mr Bruce.
l.04:30. 557-0150. ---------833-t095 SECRETARY Bd ght details. lined. &inc lidJ. Sl.Oea. or Overstocked coif ee l'IOCARD? IClll-w
YOU WON'T DE future for bright, sharp Los Angeles Times 3 Coe $25. Set. or orginal tabla, wholeaale &c un-Draw your own or send Wcmhtd 1011
flCTURE Framer, ex· p'd. w/knowledge of art
supplies. Call: 897·29
a/\6PM RETAIL
CLERKS
DISAPPOINTED! U u I w t id· l Y PI n i · S40.0301 "Dixie" i}asses FREE der, IOfas & hideabeds name, address, phone & ••u•••••••••••••••••• TIME-UFI Shorthand skills. Our w Ith canning jar from S16S, Game tablea, we'll make ooe card per ANTED; 86" Da tch
UIUAJES,IHC. secretaries have a re· purchase.646~188after8 $38.S, qualily merehan· tag.Addis-each. door w/wlodow.
F.qual Opp Emplyr m /r cord of quick edvanceml Telephone Recept. for pm dlse at low prices, start. Send chock or money or· &uoo.able. 751-UU
PIZZA
Meaget&Cook.
to top positions In the in· small law ore + lite lYP· · · sat. 9. 5 p M. Tb e derto: t----------
vestmenl field . Call: ing & Cihng. Sal from Persian rug 13'9"x 11'3", Furniture Connection, rtLOTPRJMTIMG WANTID
Sales 759·1.Sll. Mrs. Garo for ~-$600 per mo. Call Mahal blue, '1500. Can 7351 Heil. IL. Rul\tinatoo po Bo 1560 llCYC&.1 DaCISOR UNUSUA1 OrnY '78po11t1on. 752·7606 for interview be seen In So. Laguna Beach. 8'2·12U · • x 711 ..a••o Sal + bonus + part of
busmess if it workl oul.
Ca II S48-78153.
Help wanUd 1st, 2nd & MIH & WOMEH --"--S_EC_R_ET_AR_Y ___ , appt. 213-837·1350 •-:::Cos=ta=M:•:•:':ca=. 92626=::;;.!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;._;;;;;;;;;; ... ;.;;:=-c
3rd .sbU\s. No experience * *I BUY* * " req'd. We train those Sales people & crew Shorthand reqwred. Tow Truck Drivers ex-ANTl't)UE Ill.ASS · ---------1 hired. AppUcants apply managers needed for cxper. 971M550 per'd. Top pay. Apply, Bathroom Fuctures, Fry Good Uled Furniture &
--------• al: new divialon of major G&WTowmg. 1000 Irvine Pans, Lighting Fixtures, Appliances-OR l will
PLASTICS corporalloo. Xlnt train-SEC'Y Ave,NB642·1252 Hardware " Collec-&ellorSELLfor You.
MOLD PRESS OPR UTOTEM ing program, hieh earn-Our company ia seek mg,________ l<!bles. Open daily. lQ~. MASTIRS AUCTIOH ing potenUal, paid vaca-1-
STORES lions, paid health & life an enthusiastic scc·y TYPISTS SANTJULLIQVANUES'S '46-1616&133-9625 To operate 1nject1on insurance. Call Mrs. w good typing & dicta
mold1og machines & Smith,540-l.2A7 lion skills to aid an ex· ManyNeededNow l.23'1So.Maln,S.A. S'Aift..longcuatompadded
lnm smaU plastic parts. LocatedAl: ---------• pand1ng secretarial •0pen?:30am·S:30pm S.1-4174 porlabl~ bar with
Day shift. Exper. pref'd. ·----------1 service to the c M area mulUplex tuner, a track Wrll lram. 12-14.2 Lampson, G. Grv a~ . . . •call Evenings ~-8882 AppliClltCn 80 t 0 & tW'tltable-aU are buil~ ST ',COSW1TCHIMC SlOW.SouthSt,Anahm SALESWOMEN Muatbedependable&ca Forswing&graveyard ....................... lns·plu• two custom
1iiBakerCostaMesa lllDelMar,C.M. Experienced in ready to ~~~·::~.e[e · :~~kw;i;:: •NOFEES FRGHT DAMAGED wrought iron bar stools~
549_3041 88SGlenneyre, Lag Bch wear & sportswear tor 546-2S82 Min 45 wpm. Variety of HOTPOlNT SALE. 3308 Sharp! 681-7446.
Eq 0 We are an equal new Draper's Laguna ---------1 assignments. Long & w. Warner nr Harbor. , __ ::___ _____ _ ~~ual~~p~po~r~E~m~p~lo~y~e~r~~~op~po~rt~un~lt~y~e~m~p~lo~y~e~r~I }fills Store. Full &c Pert· Service Station Allen-shor1 term. Top ff$. Santa Ana. 979·2921 -Time Available. Call dant, exper 'd. Day & SOFA&LOVESEAT PRIMTIMG RM 11·7. r /H-Mrs. AuaUn, 7118-6622. Eves. Full 4' p/Ume. Ap-CASH PAlD BOTH PIECES $199
STRIPPER Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, ply: Shell StaUon, 17th & For Wshr/Dryra/Refri& 9 Pc Corner Group $139.
Quality color litho. Must 661 Cent er St, CM Seamstr eu. Exp'd Irvine.NB. worklngoroot957.s133 Sola & Matching ·lov-
know all forms of strip· 548-5585. ae~tres.11 wanted for Service Sta. Nl&ht Attend 1---------1 eaeat $300, 4 Drawer ping from color s.u.,r ta1.l making Industry. 20r5nltesawk.Apply, Re co nditioned dresc:::·,...._.. ~::.~~= i~~~:t r~~: sum.JMEHT ~7de Sallmakers, Shell, 17th &Irvine, NB am. 540.4455 :er~~:~~t:.--·F~~':~~ IHS Hftor IL CM
tor. Many company YOUlll ... COME Service Sta. Attendant, F.qual OpporEmployer damaged&ModelHome 64Ml51
benefits. Peartree Pre1111, "" SEAMSTRESS exper'd. F\Jll or p/llme. j~~~~~~~~~ retUJ'lll. Guar/del. Also ~~~~~~~~ ~7955. ,s?!! STIMISSS needed for canvas pro-Appl~ Arco Station, 17th TYPIST/Recept. P/Ume new appliance. at coat+ :..:
Proeramer -• duct.a. Boat covers, awn· lrlrvme, C.M. for NB Syna1ogue. 10 to 10%. DUNLAP'S lOHO New custom ma de
!iybol/AvoJ exp. prct'd. 'Ta.HOMIWORK inp&bap.PbN.2·72311 Sernce Sta. Attendant, •.M·F.Call644-1999 Talbert Cat Educlld) FV. !t"~uf~,';,.~:!k:r~
flexible hrs. small HOUSIWIVIS SEAMSTRESS Sall mak· FUii "p/time. Hrly & 963-0'12l0pn 7 ays. bottle bolders·STS;
•dynamic company. COILIGISTUDIMTS ing iearnstreu to work Commisslon.6'73·3320. ffllhback camel cbalr I ResumetoDelcomp, 3303 Guaranteed Hourly p/Ume evea. Mu.at be ex-br&d <need.a recovering)•$SS. ' Harbor Blvd, Ste K·6, W .. e Plus Bonus. 5:30 p'd. on Nylon, iome Serv. Sta Help needed im-Rdrlg, ws ryr. CaU 842-01.38.
C.M. pm to 8:30 pm. Call Dacron aewlni. Call med. Full or p/t. Apply,------------------1 648-4223orcometo2SOE. MarahallSaill,6'&-0038 :'11. E. Cal Hwy, Nwpt ----------i .:RANGE BOY, needed call 17\bSt., ec.ta M~a.
9AM·2P M, New port ----::-:--:-:::-----:-1~--------1 Beach Golf Course, SALIS SewlnJMacbineOprs
·_1_s1_-4344 _____ 1 Are you an artistic, SECRETARIES ST.JOHMKMtTS
creative, energetic ManyNeededNowl Needlexper'doperators RIALISTATE person who likes Urtnes •Open?:30am·S:30pm onsln.(leneedlemachlne Profeaalonal, licensed 1parklln1. likes to clean, *CallE•enln05ll-8882 for fine blouae11. Also,
• salespeople wanted to hat aalea ability? Li~o Ft'Jrewtqlrlliveyard s pe cl al mac ht n e ' 1 ffl ff VUJ.a0e•1 le"""1 .... Jeweler S operatA>r for buttonholes, compete o ce 1ta . • .......... •NO buUA>na "overlock. l73l2
i, Computerized llatinaa. wlabes fUll or p~tlme ln· With 6 "1tlio11i ab. 50 E 8 • l rn a n • Irv l 0 e • ... generous commlsslona. dud. Sat. No nl&l¢s. Call wpm +. 8bort " ton• MC>-7l'11.
r Advance trainln1. Call 673-9334. "' term. 'tOP • --------
for private Interview. Sales Clerk-CHhler SHIP~llYIHQ, 642-5062 FOTOM "I drt AT ta. DI ap. Valid llf. Vert Uc •• C•m f 21 Crocw J>licaUons. Eitper. pref. fork.Ult uper. Prefer ex-UI W. lttt.St .. CM l»/T, 10AM·2:30PM per.lnumaUwarehou·'--------
--2:30·7PM Mon.·Frl. ln&os>«ratfoo or milltary ~ Eltate aalespeople Sat. lOAM.,.Pll. Call eupf>lr oxper. ver y ...:::::..:;;:.;__.;__.;__ ____ 1 ________ _
....med for San Clemeau · _ Hel_eo_~_-llll50 _____ , ...,.._ 14M4H helpful Apply, l'latfon•l 1 __ --. ____ .;:...__
'olflce. Work lo Oran1e SqualOppcrEmplo Syste m• Corp., OU Coontf'• (Qtat SalH ~orrt1poadent. )'at Btn:b St, N.B. (Near oc
'beach city. All llatlnp Blaln • c:ar.e.r 1n t lec-1-.-------I Alrport>EOE. . are video uped "1bown t.ro/oS)tfcaJ NI•. DeP'4M1• -, oo cl01ed c:lrcult TV. oat nqdrtd. lluat have
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USE THE DAILY PILOT
CHRISTMAS
TREE
GIFT PAGE
TO S E LL YOUR
HOL IDAY Gt FT ITE MS
OUR PAGE •ppeara every Thunday
from Nov. 17 thru Dec. 15. The more
you run th • I••• you pay. For
•nform•tlon & help In piecing your ad
c•ll your
CHRISTMAS AD-VISER
642-5878 ..
-
YOUR
UNUSED
ITEMS . COULD BE
I SOMEONE'S
CHRISTMAS .
---
GIFl'S
TOYS
SPOR'DNG GOODS,;
JEWELRY
POIS le PIANJ'S
HANDMADE ITEMS
CAT84'DOGS
c! GIFI'
CJ:Jtl"U'JCATES
AUl'OMOBILE
Th••me ed only M.oo
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• ....... ......Sell tD60 ........... e.S./ Y-9570 Autoa.l..,...W · ...... 1 p.+td Monday.DeoemW6.1177 DALY PILOT
, p .. , IOIJ ••••• •• ••••••• ••• •••••• ... 11e. ... f 160 ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••• ·~··•!••••••• . ,---'!'". --~--------~---~---..;::=..
---·-•••••••••••• WA)tfllSULTS1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "7e Dodie Va.o. lmmac IMW t712 MGI t744 .... Uted Amtos.UIH ....._U1H • •
Quale eleetnc G1baon ~U your boat lhru • ~ 17'. fully aelf outsade, plu•h Waflde. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••!!••••.••••••••••••, •••••••••••••••••••••••
,.W-. inlnt cond. 1 SOUTHWISTIAM contd. Very 1ood cood. 19,000 rru. V.S. Auto, •nrf, "CLASSIC" '73 MOB Kfl'd 11: aon top, AMC ttOI Qs ,.. tt20 M1rawy t950 vt.ota&e "75. 6'2·l37V YACHT SALIS Bltofr. 541-9633. crse. ~firrn. •97 2277 197 0 8 MW 2 80 OC S Rldl. , new clutch, brka1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••;•••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
B•JI ,..,..~.T ,.,..... 9170 c rlna• " valvea. A.lmot\ '72 Javelin, auto., p /B, ORANGE COUNTY ·s "4 vkltlo tBS. T"nor baoJ rv 1 ~nr-v Olevy Van, l of a kl!'d OUPE·<& apeed, aun-new tires, car cover, , PIS, air $1700, bit orr. ...IWIST
SlCIO. 662-3379 DIA.LEIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Custom It e d . wall roof, factory air cond., rvis gd. $3300/make olr. IM2.&289 " <71')~1l ~·ALJOlmp .• >'ordLTD ucrlflce ur trude Blaupunkt AM /FM 5'8..Sl75 ---------it lfo LINCOLN-MERCURY ---• Waaoo. both xlnt w/all 493-4674 aleroo, electric windows, '78 Pacer, lo mi, fully Dealership la now OPEN
B EA u T 1 1'' u L • 7 6 xtru. Both for under licht alloy whee la & Pwpot '741 loaded. stereo, alr, VI, • • RAY R.ADEIOE
CA"rAL.lNA 22 Llke new $10, 0 0 0 or w I a e 11 '75 Ford Van, p IS. p /B, Arctic blue w /tan lo· ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk on blk. Mlllt aell it ~ IJNOOLN·MERCURY
w trlr Muy extras. separatel¥.548-1791 air, new panelllne. lerior.lnexceUentcondl· '16 DIESEL. Jo ntl, Im· S:SOOO. Gre1 497·1979; • • 16-UIAutoCenterDr .
Office .......... ,.
......... IOI ••••••••••••••••••••••
SCll Electro.tauc Copy
Ins Mactune, model 44
Good cood. w1paper
loner. Beal ofr. Of
~00 _£all l714J586·1098 1,.72 Komfort . S•lf· crpt'g, sun roof, whls & tioo thr1 uout &only 63,000 mac. A/C, stereo. Mov. ~. ~ • ! SD Fwy·Lake Fore(l
" " tires. $5000. 875-2181 rruJes. Sl0,500 firm. Pn. tng, must sell! 962-0~or .. de ''IO .... It • exit
10' Wildcat, raceriii contained. with hot pty. Call owner at 213-112_..H ••••••••••••••••••••••• • it.I JRVJNE like new, $32S. Great water (81als) le shower. 'fn Chevy Van llO. 6 cyl, 3 642-0138 • it( Chnatmas Gift. 960-5260. Ids ol extru, Uke new. spd, nu tares. Muat aell. · PwtcM . t710 .-i Special. Ru111 well. • ,... 130.7000
KJTE, 12, ""'rfect cond Just S2550. 637--4156 95&1487 '72 2002 ti!. Must sell. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• . Xlnt cond. $550 or beat ,.. it' '70 Mooteeo MX • Dr 842-8000.
r Autot Wanted 9590 e$3ZO()ves ;.,.,.P5vt pty. 752-1325 Restored lPllf off~. 548-7l0'2 ..... ..._i air, A steal! Mu~t sell. i ,.._. & OrCJ-.s 8090 new hurdwure. hand trlr 'EB Aintream, 27' Joler. ..,, u ... 1 .... .... •••••••••••••••••••••• meld $525. 646-8051 Dbl A/C, stereo, tape, 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . .,uu;S:.?04AJSSIOO. '71 Electra 2 Dr, low ml, ROGER MILLER SAYS.· owner t895. 963·7SSS
Thomaa Organ, Mon· ---nu tires, x.lnt cond. P.P. 'Tl 8201 13000 ml, all ex· loaded, orig. owner, .. SHOP IY PHOMr '72 Colooy Park Wagon,
tecello 371 w /Syn -loats.SUps/ 752-8222 Lru,Jmmto.cond.Day: '77 Porache tit. blk,·twl0.1148-1807 4t4-tlll 146-tt67· k>aded, 98M, Must seU.
theslzer, rhythm, Cull Docks 9070 Aul'OSenk:. Perts 752-Xll.eve:5'8·31.9T Jetru.Batofter. · c Wmc 9915 $1050/offer. 644·9877
voice option & Lesli ••••••••••••••••••••••• &A.ccetsorlH 9400 ~ 9720 W-4274480 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• _an_e_r _5P_M _____ _
$3000. 631·1SSll AVAIL· Short term slip -·•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••H••••••••••••• ...... f751 M · .. d
New Brand Name Pianos roi; ~· sailboat Slip f?r S Jug 15" split nm for * DRIVI "' * •••••••••••••••••,••••• ft uno arquas 4-..r se an. 10'·:. over cost. JO ·35 sailboat & hide tie Ford truck w /flap & A '71 JU8 froot wbl drive, • Auto. AM·FM, pwr wnd,
Beach Mu11c Center for J0' .• 35' sail boat. Nr. tube $10. 5 1:C 15" Ford * LITTLE * C)'I, auto, new tires " etc. $790. 640-85
78
17404 Beach Blvd, H.B. 15th St. Bal Pen1n. truck Wheel & tire for SAVE .._ L••O• T batt • 1'13-'19'7' 65 Comet. 2 dr, 6 cyl, 847 8536 546 OOOI spare $5. 6'2·3379 18' · • • auto, runa good, $295.
---loah <--'& - -SHOP&OOMPA.RE ltolslloyce 975' °'s:tc---· 64~9486 Organ, Wvrl1tzer Fun· ~La•........, ,.010 '52 CMC 2 ton, '61 Chevy ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,,. •
m a k c r S p r 1 t c .-.. ., ~ ton, '69 Chevy Bis· ,. "I-DEALER IN U.S.A. Ctttfer -u--,,.... Jo all 'U C 0 MET Need~ w/microphone & ta"" un· ••••••••••••••••••••••• cayne. 847·3'52 • ;e --"9r • pwr, alternator & murfler. ,,~ 6' E ul d v i o -FM at.rto '*r· blk·OQ· ... ftk rr ... o •aa .. at, single keybrd. Ideal 1 sqwre, eep • I ·, , ~ ROY 1977 Ir 1976 blk, 17000 m , 873.ao&T -eo er ................ eve~ Christmas gift. Xln $2750.Xlntcood. 64· 77 Used Mustang CARVER CADILLAC bel.T:IOamoratt.Sp.m. _6..;..w_knd __ s ____ _
rond. $275. 675-1161art6 96M039 &~ge.~.r~.~ker. CONNELL ~=~~~· ma1 wbeet., ROUS·ROYC£ SIVIWS M.TaO./ti.t ofr. MllfGICJ 9951
llammond Organ. 14' CLASTROM '74 33bp CHEVROLET 538..a ,.............. (S) Toebooae Prom ••••••••••••••••••••••• ExcellenlCondihon ene. w /trlr. $1100. Part.Ii for '74 Honda Clvie. $3800. l2T =rn• ... dl. All fully equipped wltb ,..__._ ftJI 19M M.ustanc 289·V8, ~5. 644~,.,. 492-97'2 All or one at a time. 2128Har'""'r Blvd. 19 7 3 DATSUN 61 o d I t t 1171 -,_ a\jo a1.r PS vinyl top 1 ~ __ ...,.._ ~anytime If" CLosto ~PAYS ___ e uxe ta ure1. •••"•••••••••••••••••• • • • •
Sacr1f1ce Uammon.d 17"nrnewRunabout.deep .... ....__-...~ ..... -COST546.AIJ.;!OESOA SEDAN, very clean, 1 Seville, (212Nlll), '70 Newport 2-dr AC O'fnlr. $1350 bst oHer.
Regent Full Orga & V hull, sUdan& bard top,-...,..~ -A owner, 38,000 mi, new prktdulowu ll/H. D\a tires, 'good 1'15-1898at\er5:00
oCrt.akcs.645-2283 n. 1& hp, 1/0 OMC, fresh• .. • .. ••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPOOLLA.R rudlals . 844 ·65&3 Toyota 9765 $9888 ~'lo mi. $875 firm. 't711"5lanl.ong.owner
--------water cooled. Lay down Allfl~ FORTOPUSEDCARS PM/Wlmds ....................... W.1798 Orts. in/out. Xlnt cond. ok~:~:'rd s~~~~Jl~~;;ol~ :r~~~ ~~~ 0~1[.,~ t;,r~ •••••••••• • •••••••• !~!.! FOREIGN. DOM F.STlC ,,.. ., •• .,.. Htr• llFORI YOU Nabe' . Coot' ... ttlO ~mi· R/Hd p (S. con$1s~e.
or CLASSICS All models & colon. SB.I. YOUR rs· ·················.····•· !.'". "13, ·~ft. 5llorers7.~9·41°"os5· Sl.25. Llke nu. 673·8075 G44·95H7 1-'lberglass Model T fen· u di -· .. " ders, 1924•27 Chev front your c:ar 1s extra clean Imme ate TOY OT 14., CadiJJ '71 Lincoln Continental
15. ''I "'-h M see us Cirst. D-H Toda I r k I -..USMC"" .p. crcury axle wheels & springs, IAUERBUICK -•ery 'I· See UI or a top dollar ac Mar 111 , xlnt cond. Must11ell'89 astback.~ SewincJ Machines 8093 o, u, trlr, <·.xtras. Very some emblems & horn estimate! . llS50. 968-4039 VS. A·l cond. Auto, &Jr,
••••••••••••••••••••••• reasonable &12 11793 ring for .54 Packard, 40 29'l5 llarbor .Blvd R~ 1977 MAR9UIS TOYOTA 2600 H.irbor Blvd . ,._.... 9932 P/S, radials. Pvt ply.
Singer Touch n Sew zig --Ford front fenders, 32 C06taMcsa 11792500 HanGotToGo! MISSIONVlEJO Co".sMcs.i 540·9100 _..... $1950.7118-6537 .
.eog cabmet model 750. Transportation Chev Jrille shell. 1 131-2110495-IJIO ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••
Very hllle use. Cost $900, ••••••••••••••••••••••• beadli1J1t, 1' Chev AM TOP · 11 CorYette T-Top Oldlll.,blle 9955
mlikeorr. 631 1.558. ~. SoA~/ radio, 74 Chev steering DOLLAR 72 Toyota ceuca, 29,000 '68 C.dlllac SDV. EX· On1.1 eooo miles with lac· ······················~ <-.rti-G--.L. 8094 Rent 9120 wheel. Need 38 Packard p .... •D ni, new tlrel, batt, $ZUO. cellent as Znd auto. tor)' warranty to July '72 CUTLASS Hdtop, xlnt
.....-·"""7 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• parts.642·33'19 "" 2145HARBORBLVO. 5G-3122 DrivetobeUtve.979'4M '78. 8urcundy, Cull cond. A/T, A/C, P /8 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR CLEAN r;er, speed control, P /S. $1500. Wkdys art Fischer Superglass ·oo Ford l ton wll2.' self Two lllOD '59 Mercedes· 540.64 IOS40.0Jll ,,....__.. t767 Sharp 1970 Coupe de flallfactoryw/(ac· 4PM962·1932 t•ont Four Winds -·--' . r-r50 r1ow' ............ sbdnnowgss.~S71s~.M19K5·500cmWwood/o Camper.$1950.968·4039 meBalt>oa'"'Wl.Nn.s •. 6.7,"4·600~ • • .. •••••••••••••••••••• Ville, all extras. New totr_Jnag wheels.Limited Edition 1975 ., 8 or rR 6,·,'71. wht/blu. rlbar, tirea, air thoeks,. disc C17"1CP ). Hurst Oldsmobile W /JO
170cm w/Eckel bind For Sale: Big cabover RecreaHonal -am/fm, cste ca.ss., cmp brakes. $ZSOO. or best o(· OMLY $9675 Model w/Hurst Hatch
ings $15. Ski boots-sizes camper, xlnt cond. Vthlca.. 9530 '77C .... ..oe at bltl, 2 lops, aki rack, f•.548.ocMO MeWWNNlet II Min roof & shifter, 442V-i ~~~· 7& 8~~.5~0~~-~· ~~ Reasonable. Call 536·7056 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Demo & executive sale ~:.~r: avail. $489S. '73 Coupe DeVlllt, clean, 11189 Harbor. Costa Mesa with Cull pwr· (brakes.
:.kates Size SN. skate bal{ '64 White Cadillac llcarse. C.Onvt 4 seat street legal IMPORT CARS now going on-hurry! full power, AM I F M 64Z..0795 steering, windows): air
& skate dress-size 10 salettrade for car Ideal dune buggy S800 Call 88800VESTREET 76TRlUMPHTR7 stereo w/tape. IC you see r-9933 conditioning, AM/FM
cchlld) all for $50. Also. for camper or surf board 529-8486 ALL MODELS (Near MacArthur Ulvd. Immaculate & loaded! 1t you'll buy it. $3900. -....,-stereo, 8 track, swivel urf ----&Jamboree Road I AJr cood., AM /FM stereo S4().8902 ••••••••••••••••••••••• seats. cruise conlrol.
6'6"' s bourd with ~cw c a r r 1 e r • S 2 O 0 O 4 ~ Driv.s 9550 WE NEWPORT BEACH 'fn Mere Couiar. new 289. etc. Xlnt cond. $3950. Ph
fin & lea:.h ·S35 Call <213)334~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 13).IJOO cas~tlte, 100 + macs, Auto PS d brb AC (714)~ Mon thru
&t2 Oll8 Motorised a°ikH 9140 1975 FORD 1''·250 4X4· MEED ~~·~e 1~ 2 ~~~ :nW:f:': * 71 Ced WV.* nds 'mlD0r "bocs1 ~orlL'. Friday.
l)ovrc ski rack koo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Automatic, air cond . CLEAN 76 Oat.sun 260Z. A C, 4 carmine red w/saddle ln· Loaded, beautilul. tae90. Must sell. 955-1417 ---------
model with b'-li Id ·in '77 Puch Newport Moped, cruise control, new tires USB> CARS Spd, mags, xlnt cond terior. Many more n · PvtptJ. M0.2Ul
loc:ks. Like new, used xlnt cond, burgundy. w/wbite spoke wheels, ... OW Copper brn · $5900. traa! Pr/pty <JAX 78) !~~~~~~~~~
t w1ce l2S. Tire chains 1395. ( + bonua Sltadel auxlllary tanks. other ex· " 759 t>-IJl or 752-6737 · 640-1176 or 831·204<l. cnewl E·70-15 seriea $15. lock). or best oHer. traa le only 41.000 m iles. CALLf'APPY Ferrari '78 Seville. It gold, Im· _ __;.. _____ __...;....
<"'0 ""•2 ,, • ., 1•u ,,.,, 1991 Prl ply Call 638 3r•9 9 7 23 '74 Spitfire, worth $2700. mac, all xtras. $9,2!50. ""'""'' ....... _ ...... _o_r_ ....... _. ____ ,a!u;r7pmorweeke~d.a":' 540·5630 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nds mlnor work. $2200.
Custom made BoogleMOPED: slightly used Ferrari Dino '74. Mom'1,962·586S
Board.a. Laree. l30 each Batavus. black. 370 ml. JEEPS •77" Bm/Tan. Lo ml. Mint
644·Zl08 Excellent cond 968.()863 C J . S , 1 • C J 7 , s . cond Great Investment.
TY.Rmlo. BATAVUS MOPED, 8 ~erokeea, Wagoneera, 2626HARIOltllVO. $19,950/olr.675-7903
.. R, Steno 80tl moe old, super cond. Lo Pick-ups, 1.11>toSl.200dl1· COSTA MESA fllat 9725 ttl7
U ""''"'ts "' yr 50 ooo mile WE I y ••••••••••••••••••••••. "" -·. verv good c ... nd. Cwuu • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu, a xtru + access . ....,.... · " • U ""' •no ·~ u Several beaullful color !375. Must see to apprec. warrantys available. USED CARS! '7S Xl.9. really Uke new. Mi.et sell. $1700 or beat. •••-•••••••••••••••••• '74 WAGON~tlck 1hUl.
1V'S,S99&up.S&STV ~1655 CapetmdMtnhlc We'relhenewthcvrolet Bro/tan int, AM ·FM 963.oo94 'EB 307.Auto.alr,PS,PB. runs1d,looklgd.Very
.....,., Ne"""'rt Blvd 118 2001E1.st SA 558-8000 .. __ , L.i I •L. I stereo. Lo mi, air, maos, v----w-9770 Perf Int. Orig Hugger econ. 997·3101or979.szss CM. 642.~ • • BATAVUS Moped, hkc ' ...... en .. P n .... c rvrnc pp $3895 646-2.389 • _. _..,..... Orange. Nu wht vln top. -brandnew,riddenonly SIOOOOFF Auto Center We need . . ....................... su~.67s.89U ..,_..... 9960
AM/FM 8 track, receiver~ forty easy miles. $375. •LL ... EW yourusedJcaOr!E •73 128SL Spt Cpe, radal • VW conv. R&dl, xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• & t l bl 1 t d 675-0989 ""' " AM I F M. must aeJ cond, nu tires & shocks. u..,_._.. _ __,...._.., '74 Gran Sedan 360 Fury. um a e. x n con · ------•CHHOKEE $1,000. 968·9179 or Clutch & trans rebuilt. Che¥rolet 9920 : .. ,,___ ,...._ All power. A.M'/FM, new
$85. 4944~ tt:rsl••/ ·-"'"UPS MAC PHERSON Cl I •. Red I h _ .. ,ftls ht h h d"' ,..,_ 645-2556 eves ean n .,. out. w l ••••••••••••••••••••••• r..._ , 1 c , vy -Y
Boah & Marine 9150 * WAGOMEERS CHEVROLET black top. 4 speed. $1900. 'Tl CAPRICE 1000 mi all '7l Ford LTD sta wgn. shocks, fully serviced .
. Equipnwnt •••••••••••••• • •••••••• OHer Good Thru 12/18177 21 Auto Center Onve '75 Fiat Xl9, xlnt cood. Lo 983-3187 • extras. Im mac. c~nd. Auto, lo~ 2,..~ cond. ~~a4c9. $1750/bst ofr.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 197'1 250 Yamaha MX· HURRY IRVI .. ....,. rru's Loaded. $4095. C.U Day· 7cz 2•11 t e · -----------~ loCllh Mc:rin~ Terry kit front fork. Bog 768-7, .. 2 ""zz 675-29UI. '67 BUI. x.lnt cond. $1200 • " • • ' v • , --------Equipnwnt 9030 shocks, clc SS50 Call 30Toa.oo..From orbelt.Cal1Jeff5'8-5992, 5e3U7 77 COUNTRY Squire 'TO Plymouth Roadrun-
••••••••••••••••••••••• 962.9898 artcr 7 P m COPELAND MTRS Autos, Imported '76 Spyder 124 Convert. 1 545-SOll ~ Monza 2+Z V8, stick, LTD, full pwr, load~ n«. 383V8 eng & lraru. nr· fo'ibcr"IJ~s Drnghv • - -20Q1ElstSASM8000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~r. Mlntcond. Must~ vw B Xln d AM/FM auper clean. w/ext.ru, PP. 8600 mi. just rblt, cyclone rims. .. . . , ' Suzulu ~ GT. all xtras. --,....,_ R 9705 see to apprec. Home ui. t COD • mso. Ph 54&-560I $7Sll8. 97'9·1829 SllOO. 540.2738
i:d <-ond. $12S Imm.at. Low miles. $750. 77 Scout. Green. P /S _.,... Olmo 675-1503. Work 640-8150 U.SOO mi. $.1500. 6310!H3 Pvtpty.557·2978 P /8 . V·B enalne. Lug·••••••••••••••••••••••• Ll-..1.. 97•7 "5-5089(wkdya) •..W?7CJiiv. "13GranTorinoWgn.LugpCllUffac 9965 '""' ·t . D • N aage rack. Am/Fm 8· L976 red Alfa Spider. Ex· ..._ • M,.....,,,. rclc, A./C, 1 owner. Trlr •••••••••••••••••••••••
..... n:.ma~ iscoun~· ew 1970 Yamaha ATr 125 traclc.3yearor36000mi cellent cond. Orig.••••••••••••••••••••••• JruGESELECTION ~MUlAGI pkt.Clean.su-5093 l.972CatalinaSafariwgn.
Mannc. Elcc·tron1cs & w/all street legal equip. contract. 15,000 'mllea: owner. AM/FM &terco, lo '75 Honda Civic CVCC Sta NEW "USED CA.RS 2+2 HATCHIACK '62 Futura, rWls & looks Xlnt cond. F\111 pwr, AC.
Hardware. Low Cost. Xtra tires, elc. Xtra cln. *",800. 837·9710, '""'6686 mileage. 988·0863 Waa. New Urea. 1 owner. AUC.O traftl a1r CO"d ""000 i ........ 2113 673-8119 -°""" Gd cood Top cash.., for vour VW. . ., .. '' pat. ~-or best. ""• m · .,,.,. • · $275. 548-0063 aft 5:30 9707 . ~. -' pwr. •t.eerinC le brak.,, 642 7353 •-..a... fl 0 Audi Paid for or bot. Call i-adlo, apeclal MW paint • 1973 Flreblrd Formula
_,_., ow.r 904 '&I Honda 450. Needs COST~MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrmlclHtw'77 KeltborJerry. Job" much morel '73 Ford Gran Torino. 350,topcond.,origownr,
••••••••••••••••••••••• work $200 '76 Audi Fox, 4 dr, A/C, HO .... D ... c · ..J.,,OwB .. WITHA.t-• .. ~v .. wve. (125422). PS/PB, new radials, lo mi, radial&, AM /FJ\I
FOR SAUi!! 9'19·9621 AMC & JEEP sunrl. atereo, ma es. war· " " ars '':.7""1~7880" Mow°"" $57tl Good cond. S179S. Pb stereo, new trans, $3000 '77 Sea Ray 24 ft ,, TOO ranty. Xlnt . $5195. MANY --... _. HOw_.._,. __ _... Mf.3054or (213)592·S289 orbstofr.497--4214
Weekender with 7 71 Honda 90 <T rail) 988-0972 "--•• _.. hours. Must sell; bought w/buddy seat, pe111. 2 MANY ---------ToCIMioHFrond '68 Bui. Snrf, AM·F'll Doye•QuallSta. im Gran Torino $900 'fry a Daily Pilot
new bout. rn. ply. Call helmetsandbumpercar-JEEPS '73 Audi 100.L.S, AM /FM UNIVERSITY CUI 1tereo. Nu tires. NEWPORT BEA.CB M.uatlell ' · Classified Ad to buy Sl!ll
Jerryul rler. 32S males 1350. MUSTSELL70 stereo,xlntcond., $2800. -....._ .... 11 V.rhood.641-lTIOatU 'IJJ.0555133-0116 6-rs-2503 orrentsomcth1ng. '
544-8858 979-1.342 JEEPS BY «best offer. 559-4291 ..,_.,. or546-1200 CHRISTMAS ..... c_.. • ~MC 'et Sundiaibtop-to AlllOt Mew tlOO Mt99.Mew . tlOO Aaltos Mew tlOO ---------i'75 Yamaha500,Gdcond. PleueCall Aaldilt-Hffley . 9709 T-'"-ccaaam/pMer.. t 001 •••••• : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••••••••••••••
lo miles. SRSO. ••••••••••• •••• ••• ••••• • --F 549-4050afler4PM 549-1023 1960 Classic Austin 2850HarborBlvd. Sl795/blt.4N ·2UO
252A HARBOR BLVD. Healey 3000. Xlnt cond. Costa Meta S40·9640 XL 75 84cc. Xlnt cond. Costa Mesa Priced for Im med. sale. yell. ~rlative cond. Red Convertible Cla11ic
AJll978Models ·77 Must sell $375 . fn5-8M4orS40·3174 S2895.646-851S '9VW.Newbatt,coll
18'.]0' 49-1-4554 '74 Dodge, new whls, Urea fuel pump. Run• rea & paint. Super! $4,300. BMW 9712 50 MPG! 1970 Honda 600 IOOd. Bit olr. Ms.
HARRISON'S MotorHoMH, Sale/ 675-2181 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sedan $175. Radlo, ~ Retut/Storage 9160 beater, recent overhaul. ----------' SEA RAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Chevr Blazer, • Wbl RUNS SUPER! 646·3008 "13 Super B\11 . Orana
""""So MaJn SA R t 1977 E t " dr.4Spd, P /S. V·B.·Many '-9730 ~k.!Dz.2t1Dt cond. ~· . •. . . en a xcu 1ve xtru Xlnt cond. S6500 ....,... ..,.,..,_,
54G-655S Motorhome or Mini· ~ · "•··~••••••••••••••H• -----------1
3101 Coast Hwy. N. R. motorhome Crom Herb · 'M J XKE R d "131-pqa Van 631·2547 Friedlander. Call any or r.b 9560 11· oa ater • Excenentcood.ltJon ---------' •L.~ be • Hardtop, wires, S2800 or ~ ... u!C3enttMl77 ... ~~:·;;::;;;:;;·3~; 1978 BMW•1' belt. 552-0505 eves or °'95 ._.
H7•7777 yanlDbtleDump. HERE NOW• ~ '19 VW Wesiphalla e!:r.
12MUI 8"7·3452 • =:! ........... !?.~~ ~~~~ .
SEA RAY'S COSTA MESA DATSUN· . .
DEMANDS YOUR RIGHTS
COMPUTI "13 JH. Stereo. xlnt cond. n vw C.AMPR
IODY SHOP Newtop; red/black. Exctlltot eoodltlon.
HOW OHM Runs great! S44..o202 Sta'eo «c. and m•t MU Pl O tuTCHIACI
1.-GWe t7JI r~ 82800 w. weekend. "ROMT WHm. Dllvr 1210 HATCHIACK
IXC&LIMT
SBICTIOMOP
IMWUSAUI
We may baV. ;~ ntltt car in ow loY@tory. Call
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CREVIER
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7
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
EOlTION
A.fteraooa
N.Y.Stoek8
VOL. 70, NO. 339, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
------~ ...............
ENCHANTRESS GOING UP FOR SALE TO PAY ITS DEBTS
SkJ~r Vanishes, Leaving Creditors $422,000 Poorer
Skipper AWOL
Sought by Unpaid Crew
' NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -David Kent's aquare·rilled tall
ship is called the Enchantress, but it seems to be bewitched.
Kent has disappeared, leaving hb crew unpaid, bis bank
clamoring for $U2,000 and authoriU• plannlnl to aqetim the
vessel.
• 'TllE LAST TIME I SA w bJm he WU putttq Ucens• l>I••
on a new Cadillac," saJd Cblef l>eput)' U.S. Manbal Georp
Douglas. •'He said be was going to Florida ...
That was in September, Douglas said.
There were 11 crew members, "and they never got patd a
cent,'' Douglas said.
The 94-ton brigantine was built tor the Tall Shlpa race from
Portsmouth, England, to Newport in 1916, and was used for a
time afterwards as a charter craft.
DOUGLAS' OFFICE SEIZED THE two-masted ship ln Sep-
tember. It will be sold at public aucUon Dee. 16. It's Ued up here
at a solitary Goat Island pier, sails furled, and will be open tor
public inspection Dec. 13.
Chemical Bank of New York says Kent owes $422,000 on the
brigantine. The bank asked that the ship be seized, and fedel'al
Judge Raymond Peltine gave Kent 20 dt)'s t.o come up with a
partial payment. But Kent disappeared.
Douglas said Kent was a Marine Corps pilot in the Korean
War who gave up nying to manage a comtrucUon company OD
Long Island, N. Y. In 1973, he gave up a $.W,000 a year job with the
firm to build the 19th century replica and aall in the Tall Shlps
race, the marshal says.
-!:IT TOOK TWO YEARS to build the hull and another two
years to oulfitit," Douglas said.
Kent originally thotiaht the project would cost about $200,000
but.costs ballooned and be ended up spendhl8 about $700,000.
When complete, the Enchantress curled 5,260 square ffft ot
aail on her two masts. Her bull was made from ferro-cement.
Douglas said Kent tried to set up charters to defray some of
the costs, and at first his tfforts were successful.
.. HE'D 11.\VE TRIPS FROM Port Jeffer1on. N.Y., to Block
Island, with drtnlcin& and dancin1. The)' were pretty popular,"
Douglas said.
But Kent's longer trlps were lea aucceuful. He cbuteHd
the ahlp to 25 Swedish tourlatf for.a round·trip w~a1e from
Baltimore, Md., to Newport tor th• Amertca•a CUp races.
Howevel', tbe towilta Sot ott In Newport beelUH '4they
thou1bt the accommodations weren't wortti the '8,000 a week be
wu chareine." Douslas satd. •
' The manhal said there wu 0011 one cabin tor eacb elfbt
paasen1era and only one toilet for 20 persons.
•'The jail cel111lt the state prison have more room," be aafd.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA : MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1977
U.S. C11rbs Lance .Bank
... . .
Suspemion Ordered in Stock· TraJ,ing
WASHINGTON (~P) -
Federal b~ regulatora today
announced a 10-day lradtns aua·
pension in the stock of tht' Na·
lional Bank of Georeia, the bank
once headed by Bert .Lance, who
resigned in September u J>resi.
dent Carter's budget director. John Heimann, the comp-
troller of the currency and chief
regulator ol naUooal banka, said
the tradina suapensioo wu or·
dered "following a written re-
quest by the bank ln view of re-
BB Corpse
Murder
V. ~~? ICa.J,...U••
Orange County . Sheriff's of·
ricers investigating the dis·
covery of a body on Huntington
State Beach now believe they
have a murder case on their
bands.
But they refused today to dis·
cuss details of the killing other
than to confirm that the man was
murdered at the spot where his
body was found. He has not yet
been identilled.
The man, believed to be in his
mld-30s, was found on the beach
Friday b¥ Golden West CoUeae
student Craig Allen Williams, 23,
who was swftng in the area with
his girlfriend.
Officers said the fully clothed
body was almost completely cov·
ered by sand. They said they
believe the killer buried the body
alter disposing or hls vicUm.
Fila Probed
For A.rly 'Clue .
To Strang'ler
LOS ANGELES CAP>-Police
are comlling mental hospital rec·
ords, re-read.in& old crime files
and checking 1uapicioua Ucense
plates but have come up with few
clues in the search for tbe
''Hillside Stran1ler,'' believed
responsible for the slayinaa of 10
younc woqien in six weeb.
Patrols have been increased ln
areas ~ the clcy where the vie·
tlma, aged 12 to 28, were last seen
. alive before their 1traa1led
bodies turned up in remote bil.l)'
sectiona. Moat of tbe women
wer-e raped and most were found
in the northern 1ubw'bl. •
Five qt the womeo were known
to be involved in the seamy
Hollywood street scene, and two
·of those were reportedly
prosUtutes.
The '2-man task force bas been
working around the clock follow·
ing up hundreds of phone calls a
day from clUzens who have seen
11ometbin1 or someone sua·
plcioua.
Kindercarten enrollment for
children wbo will be f<Mµ" yean
and n1M monfbl old by Feb. 2
opened today In HUnUniton
Beach'• Ocean Vlew School Dis· trlct.
l SffnUPI wW ~nUnue for two
WMQ.
'A apeclal brochure outllnlng
advantqee abd cllndvantaaesot eat)Y~~~ergarten enrollment
bu been prepared and la aValJa-
ble at nelabborhoOd aehooll unUJ tbe Dec, 11 etan of Cbrlatmu
vacation.
FurlbeJL_ lnf ormaUon 11 allo
avallablf uvm JOfDD• Walker at ~.
cent Increased trading volume
and price movements in the
marketlor the stock. • . "
Heimann aaid another reason
for lhe auapenalon ~aa to allow
time for the public to learn fully
about neaotJaUons by Lance to
sell a portion ot his substantial
holdings of bank atocka.
The suspension was elfecUve
immediately.
Lance, president of tbe ~
before Joinln& the Carter ad-
m lntstraUon tbia year, holds
about 200,000 shares, or about 16
percent of the bank's stock.
A sharp drop In the value of the
shares after Lance beciame
dlrector of the Office of Manaee·
ment and Budtet started the
chain of events that led to ques·
lions about his financial dealinp
and to his resignation ln Sep-
tem ber.
Although Lance bas returntd
to private life, be remalna an un:
ofticlal adviser to Carter, h1a
close friend.
$50,000 Fire Guts
Wateifront Home
JSy AR'1'1Wa a. TINSEL
Of .. llllffy ........
Flames blamed on a eblld play.
lnl wl&b maiebea devastated a
dentist'• waterfront home in
Hunttogtoa ff arbour Sunday,
causm• *50,000 dama1e and for a
time tbreatenma a 36-loot yacht.
lnvestt1at«s said today the
entire third story of Dr. lames L.
Klou' n&ldenc• at 16651 Wan·
derer Lane burned before the
10: 46 a.m. blaze wu controlled.
One firefighter, Oapt. Rod
Rieaer, r:equ&ed hospital treat-
ment for lnjuties suatained when
he fell wblle belph:tl haul
hoselinea up a lt.alrway lmide
thebouse.
Captain Rlecer wu treated at Huntington Intercommunlty
Holpltal for a sprained wrist and
releaaed, ftreme.a said. ,
The occupant. of the home, a
6-year-old boy whoff experlmen·
tatlon userudly Ht off the
blaze, his older slater and their
grandmother escaped harm, ln-
veatigaton said.
'The minute the 1randmother
was informed of the flre she
evacuated the children,•\ said
Fire Capt. Ro1er Hosmer.
He and Captain Rle1er said the
fire orieinated in the third story or the marina home on Humboldt
Island.
"I euess the entire third story
fa pretty much bumed off," Cap-
tain Hosmer said today. Smoke was visible for miles as
the home owned by Dr. Kloss,
. whose practice is in Anabelm,
burned. ·
"We were the first ones to get
water oa It. .. •Q• Oranee County
Harbor Patrol spokesman Bobby
Walsb, who responded to the
scene from Sunset Aquatic Park
beadqqa.rters aboard the depart·
ment 'I fire boat.
He and rellow Harbor l>atrolmen Ken Ferrell U4 Den·
nia Poullon aped the 1.5 miles from their ottlcea to the aeene b)'
boat aft4r the amote plume •u
spotted.
Wal.lb eald the r11in1 blue wae threatenint the Klou
famUy'1mooredJ6..foot1ailboat,
Tooth Fairy, w!dch the Harbor
Patrol boat towed to salety with
only moment. to apare. <SeenaE, PafeAJ) .
Tbe inveati1atlon Into bis
flnanetal dealings is still beine
conducted by several govern-
ment agencies.
Shares of the National Bank d
Geor1ta, one of Geor11a•1'
largest, a.re traded ln the over·
the-counter securities market.
Tbe trading suspension will
terminate Dec. 1' the comp-
troller aaid.
• The comptroller's office said
that securities dealers and
<BeelANCE, PageAJ) 1
H~ington
Explosion
Probed
Huntineton Beach fire in·
vest11ators are still probing for
the exact cause of a Saturday
night explolion and blue that ln-
Ju red two men and caused
$180,000 in damage to a gas depot
and tanker truck.
Meanwhile, truck driver
Wllliam L. Dennis. 38, of
Lakewood, remains in critical
condition in the UC Irvine
Medical Center burn ward.
Tbe loading dock at the
Chevroo OU Co. depot on GOthard
Street near Talbert Avenue was
engulfed In names at 6:10 p.m.
The namea rose almost 300 feet,
officials said.
Hunttneton Beach Fire In.spec·
tor Gary Glenn said be la st1ll
questioainl witnesses to the ex·
ploslon.
Ron Hughson. '8, Lake Forest.
was in an office near the loadlnc
dock when the explosion took
place.
HuO*a raced to the aceoe to
aid drtvu Denn1a who was COV· -eNd with n • ..,.., aceonll.lll to
Chevron spokeaman Harold
Ha born.
Habom aakS Huitison WU able to roll tho bumi.ng man on the
ground and extinguish the
Oames.
Despite Hupgon '• effort. Den-nis suffered second and third
degree bums over moat of b1s
body, c:;..amedlcs said. Hug suffered burns on four
fingers. He was treated and re-
leased from Huntington ln·
tercommunit)' Hospital.
Firemen from the Gothard
Street station, less than a block
away, cloued the blue with
chemicals inabout20 minutes.
Five nearby tanks filled with
petroleum were not damaged by
the explo&lon.
The explosion rocked nearby
homes.
F~male Cops
Less Decisive . .
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federally funded study of New
Yorit police officers elves women
and men almllar patrol
performance marks. but lt ~
that the wmeq tended to defef
declaloaa to male partaen rather
than aaaert themselves.
A report oa the Mven·mooth atu~y release4 Sunday recom·
mended apecJ.al traln.lnf to _.
courage male ottlcera to accept.
womeJl u on-the-job equals &Del to encouraie more ba~v..a from women Officers.
\2 DAILY PILOT HIF
Suspect
Avoids
Reality
NEW YORK CA P ) -David
Berkowitz, charged with being
the "Son of Sam" killer, has
totalJy withdrawn from reality,
the New York Post reported to-
day.
But In diaries written durt111
the foW' months in his lsolatioa
cell at KJngs County Hospital, the
Post said, Berkowitz admitted he
is •'addicted to killing."
The Post got copies or the
handwritten diaries and printed
excerpts along with pictutts
taken inside the prison ward of
the hospital.
"Now that 1 am imprisoned l
am quite content," Berkowiu
wrote. ''I feel that Sam has 106l
some of his bold on me and 1 alao
see Sam cannot use me as a tool
for destruction.
"I remember when the police
placed the handcuffs on me. It
was then that I had my first taste
of freedom, yes, freedom. I was
happy, real happy. In fact, 1
found m yself s miling and
laughing all day long."
Berkowitz. 24 , claimed he
been possessed by demons in kill·
ing six persons and wounding
:.even others
In capt1v1ty, he has setUed into
a routine of sleeping and writing,
the Post said. lie does not seek
conversation, does not want vis·
1tors and asks only for a
l>teady i.upply of paper and
pencils.
The newspaper said tus writing
rs in a strone, free hand. It said it
wus clear that he wants to re·
maio locked away for life and
that he fears a return of his de·
mons.
"If a fortune teller were to
ha vc fore<:ast back in 1973 that I
was going to become a homicidal
maniac, killing people, I would
not have believed Jle r ... "
.. I guess l am addicted to kiU·
ing since Sam has me working
like a clock al regular intervals. I
JUSt hope that people can see my
torment and lock me away some
place and throw away the key so
that I become a useless tool for
Sam."
In some entries. he discusses
the ramihes or his victims and
l>ays that sometimes he feels
Sam m.ay want him to kiJJ a fami-
ly m ember.
"It certainly is true about ·
families or the victims living in
torment," he wrote. "However,
no one was more tormented than
me. By that I mean even before
the shooUngs began.
"I will gladly show anybody
how much l tried to avoid it all
before it began. I fought the de·
moos with all my strength. I
tried to put an end to their rotten
f'XJ Stence, yet I 've met with
f:Jr lure."
At one point in the diary he
"'rote. ''I am very tense now
lwcause l can feel the power of
S.im descending on me ... I don't •
want to hurt anyone, but I will for
Sam
"l think Sam wants me to kill
!->Omeone. Perhaps one of the vie·
lrm 's family. Father, il you war~
me to be of service to you -it
wi ll be a privilege to rip
~omeone's headoff."
Front Page A I
FIRE ...
The Seal Beach Fire Depart-
ment also sent a unit to help quell
the names.
Damage to the three.story
waterfront home It.self amounted
to $40,000, while Dr. Kloes and his
fa mily 106l $20,000 ln belonJings,
investigators estimated.
Blood Tests Set
}o'ree blood pressure clinics,
!iponsored by the Oranie County
Chapter of the American Red
Cross and State Mutual S.vtnp,
will be held Wednesday, Dec.7, JO
a m. to 12 noon, and Thursday,
Dec. 8, 1 to 3 p.m., at State
Mutual SavtngsL .001 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Heacb.
O"ANQI COMT Hiii
DAILY PILOT
·q'ough Cop' Helpa Kida
CONCORD, N.H. CAP) -A hardline pollce chief
with an unusual approach to civic duty has bowed to
the wishes ol dozens ot Concord residents and allow~
hls officers to shave his head on television.
It was estimated that about half the 30,000 resi·
dents of Concord watched a cable television telethon
Saturday night to raise money for the Boys Club
when Chief David Walchak made his hairy sacrifi~e.
"He's a tough cop wbo doesn 't do ·this kind of
thing. I 'm still amazed he did it," said Joe Alosa, a
friend of the chief.
The Boys Club was in severe financial trouble.
Club officials said unless at least $4,000 was raised,
the 300 boys who use the club would be back on the
streets.
The master of cerem onies of the club's money
raising telethon jokingly asked Walchak if he would
agree to have his head shaved for cash, and the chief
said yes. It netted $1,100.
Trustees· Order
Removal of Novel
EDEN VALLEY, Minn. (AP)
--The Eden Valley-Walkins
school board has voted to strike
the Pulitzer Priz~·winning novel
.. To KiU a Mockingbird" from a
high school reading list on
grounds that the book contains
offensive language.
The 4·2 vote by the board in this
central Minnesota district came
against the advice of the superin-
tendent.
Mom, Fetru
Hopes Fading
NEW YORK CAP} -A
comatose pregnant woman
has developed pneumonia
and internal bleeding and
doctors held little hope that
either she or her 5-month·
old fetus could be kept
alive.
Dr. Thomas LaBarbera,
director of the critical care
unit at Victory Memorial
Hospital, described the
condition of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, Z1, on Sunday
as "poor. very poor."
Mrs. Maniscalo, who col·
lapsed into a coma Nov. 23
after suffering severe
bleeding in her brain, is be-
ing kept on several life sup-
port systems at the r equest
of her family.
Toro Holdup
Yields $500
Orange County Sheriff's of·
ficers have now determined that
a total of $500 in cash was taken
Friday night by an intruder who
robbed an El Toro liquor store at
gunpoint.
Deputies said the theft occurred
at Churchill Wlne and Spirits,
23344 El Toro Road, where the
clerk was ordered at gunpoint to
"put all the money you've got ln
the bag." ·
Officers said the unharmed
victim described the sunman as
being a man of Mexlcan-
American ancestry, aged about
30, wearing a Marine Corps type
jacket and with black curly balr.
The board also voted 3-2, with
one anstenUoo, to remove entire-
ly Crom school shelves the book
"Run Away Diary," the story of a
ll·year-old runaway girt.
About So parents signed a peti·
lion of complaint asking rell)oval
of the books.
Harper Lee's novel about
seething racial feelings in an
Alabama town in the 1930s, which
won the Pulitzer in 1961, was
found objectionable because it ln·
eludes phrases such as ''damn,"
"God-damned whore;" "nJgger" and "whore lady." ·
A mot!~ by board member
Paul Kerman to remove ''To Klll a Mockingbird" from the school
altogether failed for lack of a
second.
In "Runaway Diary,•• obJec·
lions were raised to descriptions
of sexual conduct. Kerznan
maintained the book was ''no
help at ail to get rid of all the
problems we have in school with
all the pregnant girls we have
each year."
Board member Richard
Stenger. who opposed both mo-
tions, said, "U we take either one
of these books out or the school,
we'd have to think about 1etting
rid or the Bible and the
newspapers because we see that
profanity ln the papers every
day."
Supt. Robert Black asked the
board to retain the books, saying
that banning the books, would be
"censorsbJp, and it isn't going to
slop here." .
f'roaPOfJeAl
LANCE ••.•
broken,· shareholders and pro-·
s pecti ve purchueis of the bank's
s tock "are cautioned that· they
s hould evaluate the inf ormaUon
available and any ioforrnatlon
subsequently 1aaued by the bank
and or tbe partJea in interest."
.
Gang Leader Held
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Michael Lo\lle, 21, the reputed
leader of a Chinatown 'a Wah
Ching, amon1 tbt 1an11
authoritlflll believe to be lied to a
wave of recqt violence. wu beld
this weekend for invest11ation ol
murder, police reported.
CdM Man Slain
Near Horwlulu
Funeral Hrvlca are pe1ld.lnl
today for John A. Hasan of
Corona del MarL who was
stabbed to dtath tru1 weekeDd
while camptn1 near Honolulu.
Tb• :n.yur-otd man dled after
ht conftuMd and f ouaht wtt.h a man he .uapeot.ct bad 1tolen b1a
campma equipment two weeta
earlier, police Mid.
The vlctlm '• mother, Mrs.,
Waller Haaan of 3007 Harbor
View Drive, tald Hrv1cu wlli.
probably be held midweek at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church in
CoronadeUlar.
She said her f amU1 hu ll•ed In
Corona deJ Mar for ••veral years
and Doted \bat her 10D attended
Harbor vi.., Elemct.ary Sobo61. Uneoln lnW!nediaq loMol IDcl
WU m:•t.d from CGrofta dll Mar khoollD Jm. SM8*
bo WU idlft • U.. aUiool .. ttactttem.
Two mtn •••• ta poUoe c~ toclaY lD ICIU.iicUtlil Wltb lh• iJlddeat. 'l1iMI' ..........
not lalmedlat.lJ n.Mllld. No ODt taW UM Mtual liDlftall! But witn ..... wbO bllCl Mtli
c_,..1"tb iltam'IMdtM..,.
tltn hH ran.,... I Ya......,:
.nl1lat .. aoift• &be ... ,..,... dn.-.........., • ~. •'tML H .. aaW MM ... ._. drt•• for..-. th.a a , el· ttel•ll •lid. Hqu npon.dlr aot llM • IN!le .wa • •llll·l'Di hla 11-,.eu-old brotb.r·l"·••·
f
WASRINSJTON (AP) .:_The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
lhat police officers may le1ally
order motorlata atop~ fot traf·
tic viofatiODI to get out Of their
cars.
The court. vot:tna 6-3, reversed
a decision by the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court that said auch or·
ders rouilnel)I siven b~ police for
self-protection vJqlate the
motorists' constituUonal rights.
"Estabiishlng a face·to-!ace
confrontation dlmlnlsh~s tbe
poaaibility, otherwise substan-
tial, that the driver can mah un·
observed movements." the
court's majority said in an un-
signed declslon. "This, ln turn,
reduces the likelihood that the of-
ficer will be the victim of an as· sault. ••
The ruling said "the safety of
the offlcer" is justification
enough for an intrusion of a
motorist's rights.
Justices Thurgood Marshall.
William J . Brennan Jr. and John
Paul Stevens dissented, saying
the court was expanding police
powers too broadly.
In seeking Supreme Court re-
view. the Philadelphie district
attorney's office said the state
court ruling "disregards the
clear need Cor police officers to
l ake reasonable a nd minimal
precautions for their .own
safety."
The appeal said the ruling
"needlealy increases" the riak
or a police officer'& death or
serious injury.
Two Philadelphia policemen
stopped motorist Harry Mimms
in 1971 when they noticed that his
car carried an expired license
tag.
One of the two officers ordered
Mimms out or the car, and then
noticed a bulge in Mimms' coaL
The officer frisked Mimms and
found a loaded .38·callber pistol
tucked in the waist• of his
t rousers.
Mimms was arrested, and
eventually was convicted or 11·
legal posseasion of a pistol and
carrying a concealed deadly
weapon. He was sentenced to I!
months to three ye an tn prison.
Viejo Rapist .
Still Hunted ·
By Officers
Orange County Sbertff'a of·
ficers hunted throughout the
weekend for the man who raped a
Miaaloa Viejo housewl!e Friday
night and forced her to
participate in unnatural sexual
act.a on the front seat of her car.
Deputiec !laid the 32·year-old
victim toUI them that abe was
grabbed by hel' attacker and held
in a cbolte bold u ah'l lef\ home
and aotintohercar.
Sbe aald her abductor then
drove her to the San Onofre area
or Sao Dte10 County where she
was raped and sexually humlliat·
ed before beinf thrown out of her
veblcle. A pualng motorilt took
her to police.
Officers described the man
who still bas her car u beinl 1n
his mid-201, wtth a blond
mUltary-style balrcut and a
blond mustache. She told offtcen
he was wearing a '1'"11 ldartne
Corp• type ablrt, a one·day
growth of beard and an •'ext.rem•
lyofferusivebodyod.or. ••
Dlp.....,IHa
David K. E. Bruce, 'veteran
American diplomat whose
posts included m a inland
China, died today of a heart
attack at Georgetown
University Medical Center
in Washington. He was 79.
Clan room
Rental Eyed
ByTnutees
Rental of a two-room portable
classroom facility to alleviate
overcrowding at one newer cam·
pus will be considered tonJtbt by
Huntington Beach'• Ocean View
School Dlatrict Board of
Trustees.
They are contemplatin1 the ac-
tion at Harbour View School ln
the rapidly developln1 Hunt-
ington Harbour region on the city's north welt end.
Currently that campus has '137
student.s, or about 60 more than lt
was oricinally planned to ho\lse
and educate, according to Supt.
Dr. Dale Coogan.
Rancho View School, on the
other hand, in an older &«tor of
town near Warner Avenue and
Beach Boulevard. was closed 18
months ago due to insufCicient
enrollment.
The district plans to move its•
admini!trative offices into the
old campus from current opera·
lions at what was the old Ocean
View School within the next year.
Some consideration id being
given in the meantime to also
rentiDC space to the Head Start program .
And the current admlnl!traUve
office complex will then be sold
for commercial development ot
Its site.
District officials estimate it
would cost ~.010 to provide a
portable classroom unit at
Harbour View School through the
end of the current school year.
Couple Slain;
Motive Eyed
PITTSBURGH (AP) -An
elementary school principal and
his wife, Richard and Donna
Hyde. bne been found dead
within 28 boura of each other ln
the suburban Pittsburgh com-
munity of Moon Townsblp.
Tbe deaths occurred with.in a
· few miles of where two other
roen were killed by shotgun
blasts within recent weekl and
two women are mlsslng. Police
said· Lile)' have no evidence to
connect the.layinp,
InvesUgaton aald they hMl no
motive, no 1uapects and UWe
evidence in the latest slaylnfs.
EXplede
OAKLAND <AP) -A teen~ boy remained in critical
Uon alter a letter bomb be I
on a bus stop bench exploded
bl1 bands, authorttiea aald.
Police Lt. Ray Bill• aaJd Alo-
jandros Morales. 13, and ftv
boy1 had Juat left a movje theater
at about U :20 a.m. Sunday wbea.
they spotted the envelope.
The device exploded whe
Morales opened lt, Birge said.
The boy underwent abdom1n
5Urtety and WU treated fo
burns, metal fragments in hlr-"
eyes and irtjuries to his arm,
hospital information officer
Susanne Coffey reported.
Members of ~ Morales fami·
ly said Alex lost his ten hand and
~bty his eyesicht.
David Zamora, 18, alao of
Oakland. wu hospitalized in sta-
ble condition wilh metal trat-
menta ln blJ eye. Three other
Morales -~hildreq and a friend
were released after emeraency
treatment.
''After the movie we were
walklne and we passed a bus
stop. There was an envelope on
the be•cb there and lt caught my
brother's eye. We thou1ht there
might be some money in 1t for
us." said Alejandros' brother,
AllOJ¥0, 16.
"Alex opened it and it just blew
up. Everybody fiew back except
for Alex and David. They Just fell
right there. My eyes were ~
ing and stutt. I was just tr'Ylnl to
hold back my lltUe slater and my
little brother."
Hls II.st.er Rocio. 14, said the
bomb waa in a bro'fln or manila
envelope with no writlnl on lt ....
and was inside a plaatlc baa. She
said It blew up aa Alex started to
puU out sometbhtg which looked
like "an old sbtedded book."
· Birge said police had "no aus·
pee ta and no motive."
Grove Youth
Shot During
Blook Hassle
A ~year-old Garden Grove
boy wu Uated in serious condi·
tion today after beinl abot duri.a& •
a neighborhoQd arrument Sun-
day night, poliqe said.
OUicers declined to releue the ..
youngster's name. •
Police sald the youth was
standing outside an apartment c~mplex at 12G12 Keel Ave.,
with three companions when the
group began ar1uing with some
other people inside a car.
Those ln the car left then re.
turned shortly afterward, and
one of the occupant.a fired five
shots into the eroup, police said.
The ~year-old was the only
person atruck, officers saJd, and
the eun·toUng suspect fled the area on foot.
The youngster was UstA!d lo
serious condition at UCl Medical
Center.
Murder Charges
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police
say a 19'-year-old motorist, Paul
Stafflero oC San Dieao. waa·
booked tor lnveltltatlon of
murder following a routJne traf-
fic violation atop. OfCleen found
be WH beinl IOU&bt in the July
shooting death or Joel Mungia.
durin1 a street confl'ontatlon, ot-
flcera said.
I . ~~
VOL. 70, NO. 339, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today' Clo Ing·
N.Y. Stoeks
TENCENl
-Skipper Skips; Enchantress Eaees Sale
I
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -David Kent's square-rlaed tall
ship is called the Enchantress, but it seems to be bewitched.
Kent has disappeared, leaving his crew unpaid, bla bank
clamoring for ~.ooo and authorities planning to auction the
vessel.
"THE LAST TIME I SAW him he was putting license plates
on a new Cadillac," said Chief Deputy U.S. Manbal Geor1e
Douglas. "He said he was going to Florida."
That was in September, Douglas said.
There were 11 crew members, "and they never got paid a
cent," Douglas said.
The 9f·tQn brlcanUne was built for the Tall Ships race from
Portsmouth, England, to Newport lo 1976, and was used for a
time afterwards as a charter craft.
DOUGLAS' OFFICE SEIZED THE two-masted ship lo Sep-
tember. It will be sold at public auction Dec. 16. It's tied up here
at a solitary Goai Island pier, sails furled, and will be open for
public inspection Dec. la. ..
Chemical Bank of New York says Kent owes $422,000 on the
brigantine. The bank asked that the ship be aeb:ed, and federal
Judge Raymond Pettine gave Kent 20 day1 to come up with a
partial payment. But Kent disappeared.
Stock Trade Halted
:At ·Bert LanCe Bank
Photo's Worth $1 lfliUfoa
That's 4,000 pounds of marijuana on which
Corona Det. Les Scott is sitting. The pot
was seized in a raid in Corona last July
and authorities incinerated it in Colton
last week. Its value was estimated at SI
million and police couldn't resist the urge
to record the haol with a photo. Wielding
the camera is Riverside County Deputy
District Attorney John Chessell, right.
Selling
Holdings
Studied
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Federal bank regulators today
announced a 10-day trading sus-
pension in the stock of the Na·
tional Bank of Georgia, the bank
once beaded by Bert Lance, who
resigned in September as Presi·
dent Carter's budget director.
John Heimann, the comp-
troller of the cunency and chief
regulator of national banks, said
the trading suspension was or-
dered "following a written re-
quest by \he bank ln view of re-
cent ~ued t.rad!ni voJwue
and pike movements lo the
11'1 ark et for the stoek. . . "
U•ll'UDD uld llDOCb4tr reuoa
rot the suapen.slon waa to allow
time for the public to learn fully
about netotiations by Lance to
sell a portion of his substantial
holdings of bank stocks.
The ..suspension was eCfecUve
immediately.
Lance, president or the bank
before joining the Carter ad·
ministration this year, bolds
about 200,000 shares, or about 16
percent of the bank's stock.
j CdM Man Slain 'Mockingbird'
Killed by
A sharp drop in the value of the
shares after Lance became
director,ol the Office of Manaee·
ment and Budget started the
' chain of events that led to ques·
tions about bis financial deallnp
and to his resignation in Sep-
tem ber.
I
I Near Norwlulu
Funeral services are pending
today for John A. Hagan of
Corona del Mar who was
stabbed to death thls weekend
while camping near Honolulu.
The 21-year·old man died after
he confronted and fought with a
man he suspected had stolen his
camping equipment two weeks
earlier, police said.
The victim 11 mother, Mrs.
Walter Hagan of 3007 Harbor
View Drive, said services wtll
probably be held midweek at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church in
Corona del Mar.
She said her famlly b6s llved 1n
Corona del Mar for ,.veral years
and noted that het ion attended
Harbor View Elementary School,
lJncoln lntermediat4t School and wu 1raduated from Corona del
Mar Hilb School in 1'15. Sbe said
he was acUve on the school's
track team.
Coast
Weatlaer
Low cloua with local
denae foS nl1ht and early
momlna houri, otherwise
hazy sunsbtne. Lowa 48 to
53. Hlabs Tuesday from
mtd·60I at the beaches to
mid-70s lnland.
JN81DE 'l'ODA Y
Thn•'• ~ m <Mm tr.or NIU . and OronQw Coo.et tflt· c:r-t• CIN ~ of/ to lnJo# thi 1Jdtng. Sft ~Cl.
Two men were in police
custody today in connection with
the incident.. Their names were
not immediately released.
No one saw the actual knlflngs.
But witnesses who bad been
camping with Ha1an said the vic·
Um bad run after a van Saturday
nlaht to confront the 34-year-0ld
driver regarding a Nov. 23 tbett.
Hagan had been seeking tho
driver for more than a week, of-
flclals said. Ha1an reportedly
aot into a scufne with a man and
his • 19-year-old brother·in·aw,
then fell to the 1rowid.
Hil frlenda said they ran after
the two rpen once they realized
Ha1ao had been hurt. One of the
frtenda dra11ed the men back to
tSeeKNIPED, Pa1eA2)
Viejo Rapist
Still Hunted
By Officers
~~~!)
-The Eden Valley-Watkins
school board bas voted to strike
the Pulitzer Prize·winnlng novel
"To Kill a Mockingbird" from a
high school reading llst on
grounds that the book contains
offensive language.
The 4-2 vote by the board lo this
central Minnesota diltrict came
against the advice of the superin-
tendent.
The board also voted 3-2, with
one af\Jlentlon, to remove entire-
ly from school shelves the book
''Runaway Diary,,. the story of a
18-year-old runaway girl.
About 50 parents signed a peti-
tion of complaint asklna removal
of the books.
Harper Lee's novel abput
seething raclal feellnas in an
Alabama town in the 1930s, which
won the Pulitzer in 1961, was
found objectionable because lt in·
pludtt phrases such as "damn."
.. God·damned whore," "ntgaer"
and "whore lady."
A mOtlon by board member
Paul Kennan to remove ''To Kill
• a Mockinebtrd" from the school
altoaether failed for lack of a
second.
Jn .. Runaway Diary.'' obJec·
tlolll were ralaed to descriptions
of ••sual conduet. Kennan
maintained the book WU 0 DO
help at all to aet rld of all the
problema w, have In school with
all the prepant 1trls we have
each year."
Board member Richard
Stenser, who opposed both mo-
tioot, s&ld, "11 we take either one
of thlH booQ out of tho school,
•e• bave to think about s•tUns rtd of the Bible apd the
newspapers because we '" tbat plj(ullty 1n the ~pen every
day ...
Although Lance has returned t~pri.v~ life, be remains an un·
official ~dvlaer to Carter, his
close friend.
The investiaation into his
financial dealings is still being
conducted by several govern·
<See IANCE,'Page AZ)
I Douclas said Kent was a Marine Corps pllot in the Korean
War who gave up ftyln1 to manaie a construction company on Loar Ialand, N. Y. In 1973, be 1ave up a *50,000 a year job with the
firm to build the 19th century replica and sail 1n the Tall Ships
race, tbe marshal says.
"IT TOOK TWO YEARS to bUild the hull and another two
years to outfit it," Doual., said. -·
K'.ent orillnally thought the project would cost about $200,000
but costs ballooned and be ended up spendlnt about '700,000.
When complete, the Enchantress carried 5,280 squue feet {)f
<See SIDPPElt SKIPS,, Pate AZ)
Mom, Fei&.
HopesF&le
NEW YORK (AP) -A
comatose preenant woman
has developed pneumonia
and internal bleeding and
dpctors held little hope that
either 1be or her S-montb-
old fetus could be kept
alive. '
Dr. Thomas LaBarbera,
director of the critical care
unit at Victory Memorial
Hospital, described the
condition of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, 27, on Sunday
as "poor, very poor.'' ,
Mrs. Maniscalo, who col-
lapsed into a coma Nov. 23
after suffering severe
bleeding in her brain, is be·
ing kept on several life sup-
port systems at the request of her family.
High Court
.Backs Rule
~Safety
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that poliea dficen ma lually
order motorists stopped for l.raf.
fie viDlat.tons to set out of their
Carl.
'lbe eourt, votlnf 8-3, reverted
a decision by th• Pennsytvania
Supreme c.ourt that sald such or·
ders routinely given by police for
self-protectfon violate the
motorists' constitutional rights.
"Establishing a face-to-face
confrontation diminishes the
possiblllty. otherwise substan-
tial, that the driver can m"ake un-
observed movements," the
court's majority Hid in an tm·
signed decision. "This, in tum,
reduces the likelihood that the of·
fleer will be the victim of an as·
sault."
The ruling said "the safety ol
the officer" ls justification
enoush for an intrusion of a
motorllt's righta.
Justices Thurgood Manball,
William J. Brepnan Jr. and John
Paul Stevens dilsented, .sa)'tnl
the court was expanding police
powers too broadly.
Jn s~g Supreme Court re-
vleff, the Philadelphia district
(See SAFETY. Pase AZ)
Irvine
Director
Resigns
By PIOUP ROSMARIN Of .. .,.,., ...........
Jesse Washington, Irvine
director of community services,
has resianed his job after an un-
favorable job review by City
Manager William Woollett Jr.
and the City Council.
Washington offered a letter ot
resignatJon Nov. 23, within 24
hours of a secret council session
to discuss bis job performance.
There was no announcement of
the action. The resignation was
made public only after a re-
porter's inquiry.
The resignation won't become
effective tmtil Feb. 17. However,
Washington already bas been
replaced by an interim director,
Harry Ehrlich, a public works
division head.
Woollett said the time was
given Washington to look for
another job. Washinaton was
hired last January.
Washington was unavailable
for comment today.
· Woollett said Washington was
not asked to quit, but "we talked
about wbat his options
were • . • and obviously that •
was oae cl u.em.,.
d a •erles ot
p ks were held
between himself and
Wublngton.
Said Woollett, "I think be felt
for his own good, and for 'the good
of the City-of Irvine, lt was better
to flnd another Job."
In his letter of resignation.
Washlncton wrote that bis job
had been "a welcomed ex·
perience."
''The chalfenges of this city
have, been many, varied and
sometlmes nwardin«, but un·
<See QVFl'S, Page A%>
Crash Injures 2
SAN MARCOS (AP) ,... A Saft
Bernardino County couple
escaped with minor injuries
when their liaht plane crashed
while making a forced landing.
Van Wolslaael, 29, a real estate
af praiser, and bis wife Carol, 28,
o Chino Hills were taken to
Palomar Hospital in Escondido.
\
, l:! DAILY PILOT I
F,.._r~.41 ..
SAFETY •••
attorney's office aald tht at.ate
C.'ourt ruJane "dlsrecarda the
C.'lear need tor pollet omce.n to
take reasonable and mlnlmal
precautions for their own
fafety "
, The appeal said the rullne
I' 'needlessly increases" lbe risk f of a police officer 's death or
(.•erious injury r:' Two Ph1ludelphia policemen
• stopped motorist Harry Mimms
•. in 1971 when they noticed that hta. \~ar carried an expired license
,ag.
• One of the two officers ordered
Mimms out of the car, and then
noticed a bull in Mimms' coat.
The officer fri ed Mimms 8Dd
found a loaded . -caUber pistol
tucked in the waist of his
trousers.
Mimms was a rested, and
eventually was co v1cted of U-
Jegal possession of a pistol and'
carryine a concealed deadlv
weapon. He was sentenced to 18
months to three years in prison.
But on appeal, the state
Supreme Court reversed
Mimms' conv1ct1on and ordered
3 new trial. It declared that
M 1 m ms' constJtuUonal ri&hta
against unreasonable searches
gua ranteed by the Fourth
Amendment had been violated
when the police officer ordered
him out of the car without good
reason.
Therefore, the court said, the
pistol could not be introduced as
evidence at Mimms' trial
Fr081 Page Al.
LANCE •..
ment agencies.
Shares of the National Bank of
Georgia, one of Georgia 's
largest, are traded in the over-
the-counter securities market.
The trading suspension will terminate Dec. 14 the comp-
troller said.
The comptroller's office said
that securities dealers and
brokers, shareholders and pro-
spective purchasers of the bank's
stock "are caulloned that they
should evaluate the information
available and any information ~ubsequently issued by the bank
nnd or the parties in interest."
Fro. Page A J
.... ,....,... ..
ENCHANTRESS GOING UP FOR SALE TO PAY ITS DEBTS
Skipper V•n••h••, L••Vlng Creditors "422,000 Poorer
Fre. Pflfle Al
SKIPPER SKIPS .••
sail on her two masts. Her hull was made from ferro-cement.
Douglas said Kent tried to set up charters to defray some of
the costs, and at first his efforts were successful.
"HE'D HAVE TRIPS FROM Port Jefferson, N.Y., to Block
Island, with drinking and dancing. They were pretty popular," Douglas said.
But Kent's longer trips were less successful. He chartered
the ship to 25 Swedish tourists for a round-trip voyage from
Baltimore, Md., to Newport for the America 'a Cup races.
Howevi!r, the tourists eot off in Newport because "they
thought the accommodations weren't worth the $8,000 a week he was charging," Douglas said.
The marshal said there was only one cabin for each eight
passengers and only one toilet for 20 persons.
"The jail cells at the state prison have more room," be said.
-. -----. ~ . ~~ -------
NEW. YORK (AP) -David
Berkowit&, char1ed with being
tbe "Son Of Sain" JdJler, has
totally withdrawn from reality,
the New York Post reported to-
day.
But 1ll diaries written durln&
the tour DlOOths ln his ilolation
cell at Kings County Hosp1t.l, the
Post said, Berkowitz admitted he
is •'addicted to kJJUne. •'
The Post tot copies or the
handwritten diaries and printed
excerpts alone wlth pictures
taken Inside the prilOJl ward of
the hospital.
"Now that I am Imprisoned I
am quite content.." Berkowitz
wrote, "l feet .that Sam bas lost
iome Of his hold on me and I alJO
aee Sam cllMOt use me as a tool
for destruction.
"I remember when the police
placed the bandcufCs on me. It
was then that I had my first taste
of freedom, yes, fr~om: I w~
Reeords Sought
Kulik's Heroin
Hearing Shelved
A preliminary hearing on Alex-
ander Kullk's heroin possession
charges was poatponed today ir\
south Or~• County Municipal
Court. (Related story A3. >
Judge Blair Bamette..eranted a
continuance after defense at·
torney Philip DeMassa told the·
court there was a delay Jn obtain-
ing vital J'ecords from the. U.S.
Marshal's ornce in Wublngtoo.
D.C.
DeMassa is seeking records on
federally relocated witnesses
Jerry Peter Flori and Raymond
Steven Reaco, both charaed with
murder coospiracy in the Oct. 22
shooting death of Fountain
Valley resident Stephen John
Bo van.
Kulik a1ao faces murder con-
spiracy charges in the Bovan
shooting lncldbnt.
Judge Biµ-nette continued the
hearing to Dec. U-at 9 a.m . in the
south county court. It is believed
the federal records will be
available then.
DeMas.sa is seeking evidence
which might show Kulik was set
up by Fiori or Resco.
Huntington Beach resident
;Frank Rossi, wbo implicated
Kulik and others in the Bovan
murder case in grand jury
testimony, appeared briefly in
Monday's court session.
Rosai was ordered to appear u
a witness on Dec. 15 in Kulllc's
heroin possesaloo beartns. Rosal
hu been eranted immwllty from
prosecution by the Orange Coun·
ty District Attorney's Office.
lrVille Offers Hom~
To 63 Languages
Some 63 languages are spoken
in Irvine homu, although not
necessarily in all of them, ac-
cording to a school dutrlct sur-
vey.
The survey was taken to assess
possible prpblem1 students may
have in school because the major
language spoken at home is other
than English.
happy, real happy. In fact. I
found myaelf 1mllio1 and
1Ru1hln1 all dJY \ta1.''
Berkowlti, 2~,. claimed tie
been poesess,cl b1 demonJ lD ldll·
in1 six perfOO' 'pncl wOundbiJ
sever) others.
In capUv(t.f, h•lu 1ettled foto
a rouUne of .io.p1Qg and writln1.
the Post said. He does not seek
conversation, clod 1lOt want vis-
itors and uh only for a
steady supply of paoer and
pencils. \
Tbe newsQaper s•id his writing
is in a stronc, free lland. It aald lt
waa clear that be want&· to re-
main locked away for life and
that he fears a return of b1a de-
mons.
''If a fortune teller were to
have forecast back in 1973 that I
was a:oing to become a homicidal
mania~. killing people, I would
not have believed her. . !'
"I guess I am addicted to kill·
inf 1ince Sam has me worklnl
like a clock at regular intervala. I .
Just hope that people can see my
torment and Jock me away aome
place and throw away the key so
lhat I become a useless tool for Sam."
Jn ao111e entries, he discusses
the fanfWes of his victims and
says that sometimes he feels
Sam may want him to kill a falJli.
lymemt>ei'.
"It c~rtalnly Is true about
families of the victims living in
torment," he wrote. ''However,
no one was more tormented than
me. By that I mean even before
the shootings began.
"I will gladly show anybody
how much I tried to avold lt all
before It began. I foutJit t.be de-
mons with all my •trenitb. I 1
tried to put an end to their rotten
existe.nce, 'yet I've met with•. failure."
At one point in the dlarJ be
wrote: '1 am very ten.le DOW :.!
because I can feet tlle power of
Sam descendin1 on me ... I clon't •
want to hurt anyone', but I will for 1
Sam.
"t tbink Sam wants me to kill • ·
someone. Perhaps one of the vfc·
tlm ·s tamJly. Father, tr you wart 111
me to be of service to you -lt .,
will be a privilege to rlp J
someone'sheadoff."
QUITS •••
fortunately not rewarding
enough to prove that I could be a
success in Irvine," he wrote.
Woollett credited Washington
for being instrumental Jn
establish10g the city senior
citizens and cultutal art.a com·
mittees.
Did Chris Have 4 Ships?
ObJect is to meet state require-
ments to provide tutoring of
students m EDgJlsh by someone
who speaks the languare of the
home. Such st.udent.s, reasona ~
law, need special help in acbool.
Froma Page AJ
KNIFED •••
where Haaan lay. •
Washington came to Irvine
from the city of Santa Monica,
where he was division bead In
charge of recreation in the parks
and recreation department.
Before that, he worked in
recreation in the city of
Berkeley.
Band Concert
Set Tonight
At lroine High
Saddleback College's Wind
Ensemble and Community Band
will perform in concert tonight al
Irvine High School.
The program, featuring selec-
tions by Vaugblln·Wllllams,
Schumann, Grainger and Sousa,
will begJ.D at 8 p.m. in the hi&h
school '11 eymnulum.
Admiaaion ls free and the
public la invited to attend.
Terry Newman, director of in-
strumental actlvtues at the col-
le1e, will Jead the Wind Eoaem-
ble .. ArlM F.nmeier. will conduct
the150-piece band which ta com·
PoHcl ol high school students,
commwllty adult.I and senior
cithetts. Enmeter abo la director
of tbe Capistrano Valley Hiih
School Band.
DAILY PILOT
ROME (AP> -An Italian am-
bassador's Jett.er written in 1493
indicates that Christopher
Columbus made his first voyage
to America with four ships rather
than three as history records, an
Italian professor reports.
Mrs . .Bonvirti Mazzanti says
the letter was written from
Barcelona on March 9, 1493, by
Annibale de GeMaro. the am-
bassador of the king of Naples. ll
went to de Gennaro's brother, the
ambassador to the duchy of
Milan, and the scholar said she
found it in the archives of the
Este family, which ruled in
Modena then.
According to history, Colum-
bus' first expedition in search of
a westward water route to the
Far East consisted of three
caravels, the Nlna, the Pinta and
the Santa Maria. But Mrs. Bon-
vini Mazzanti says de Gennaro,
m telling his brother about the
explorer's departure from Spain,
wrote:
"For the entreaties of one
called Columba, It pleased the
king that he should rig four
caravels because be said he
wanted to go across the Grand
Sea and sail straight westward
long enough as to reach the
Orient since the world being
round he could but make a tum
and Clnd the eastern part.''
"Columbus returned aboard
the Nina, followed by the Pinta,"
said Mrs. Bonvini Mazzanti. a
JO-year-old history professor, tn
a telephone Interview from her
Sports Car Flip•
SB College Coach's
' Son Hurt in Crash·
Police said a Laguna Beach
Youth, ~ told h1a passencer to
buckle fiis seat belt shortly
before passing three car1 on
Laguna Canyon Road Sunday
evening, wu lo critical concUUon
today alter apparently Joslnf controlofhlasportscar. ·
Steven Dave Sweartnaen, 19,
Female Cops.
. 'Less Decisive'
WASIDNGTON (AP) -A
federally funded study of New
York poU.ceattlcer.alvea women
and men •imflar patrol
performue. marb, but ft notes
that tbe ~ teDded to deter
decltloaa to~ pii'Ulert rather Uluraaaert tberQM1"8 •
888 Summit Way, the aon of Kesa
Sweartneen. Saddleback Coll•1e
head football coach, wu b\ the
Intensive care unit at Saddltback
Cotnmunib' Hospital an.ir J)Ollce
and flrerntD from La'-waa Bea@
..fitted the 1oun1 man a spo.rtse~ to extract the Viettm from the
wreckqt. He'• the A11odatec1
Student Body vice prelident at
Saddle back.
Swearlnien~1 puHnser1 Steven Delmoad WlWam1, 19, or
345'2 Cal.le Paloma, Capistrano
Beach, wu onl7 aUabtJy bwt In
the 1:'5 p.m. crub one mile eut
of El Toro Road.
• A report on . tbe' HVeD·ltloath
1tud1 releuecl SUncla)' NtOm-
mendect speotal b'alnld1 to tn-coura~• mllo omcen to ace.pt
. ~ ..,womfll u on~ equa1t: ... ~
· tO edeourqe more aH•rt1v..,._
from womenoftlcen. · '
'
..
home in Senieaglla, near Urblno.
''The Santa Marla was
wrecked on Christmas Day of
1492 when Columbus left 40 men
in a fort called 'Navidad' on lhe
island of Hispaniola. The fourth
ship remained behind with those
in the Cort."
She said there are references
to this ship being leCt behind in
Columbus' diary, although the
diary is never precise about the
number of shlps, and m the re-
port be ~t to King Ferdinand's
treasurer from Us&on on March
14, H93, 10 days after he docked
there on his return Joumey. But
she said they were neyer In·
terpreted as meaning he had de-
parted with a fourth sb!p.
"When Columbus retumtd to
the fort on the next Journey, he
reported the men bad been kllled
and everythlns had been
destroyed. Obviously, the
caravel also had been destroyed
by the lnluriated natives," the
profenor said.
She said the arnbauador's let·
ter was based on Columbus' re-
port from Uabon to the Spanlah
monarch and Queen Isabella,
and the en•oy told Hla brother
four times he had read it.
Consequently, the district is
seeking volunteers who are
fluent In one or more of 48
languages regarded as a han·
dicap to learning in an English-
speaking school.
Some of the languages are fair·
ly common, at least in foreign
countries Armenian, Bengali,
Croatian, Czech, Hungarian,
Persian, Portuguese, Russian,
Samoan, Swahili, Vietnamese
and Yugoslavian.
Some aren't common even in
foreign countries: Bebuano,
Guamanian, Gujarati, Ilocano,
Kannada, Mahariti, Papiamen-
to, Peisean, Visayan, not to name
them all.
Other linguists needed to speak
languages closer to home are
Apache, Cherokee, Chippewa,
Hawaiian and Navajo, accord-
ing to the district, which insists
all of these and more are
legitimate language needs.
To volunteer, or hear a com-
plete list of the languages, people
may call district offices at
556-4900.
Ha ... an wa!i pronounced dead at • • .1 the scene.
· The friends Hagan bad met
mainly catnpen like himself -
said tbe y9ung man had been
robbed of $50 while watching a
surllne tournament on Oahu's
north shore in late November.
The day before Thanksgiving,
Nov. 23, someone stole Hagan's
camera, a watch, a small porta-
ble stove, a k:nJfe and a key for a
locker at the Honolulu Intema-
tiona I Airport while he wu surf-
ing at SUllfet Beach. The thief
alto stole $7~.
Hagan learned later that the
thief then used the locker ltd)' to
take his fishing 1ear and more
personal belongings. '
About that time, whUe Inquir-
ing about his kayak, which had
been stored In a container
shipyard, Hagan was told that
two persons had twice tried to
claim the boat.
After the se<!Ond theft, one of
his friends aa.ld she saw Hacan
"walking up and down the beach
crying."
The people who knew blm
described Heean as a quiet,
serious person who loved body
surfing, fishhll and tunning.
So unique is the artlaanahlp of thrs authentic United Sta tea
•20 gordplece watch, It measures time fn generations not hours "
Swiss mede rn 18k gold, h contains on• of
tt\e world'a thlnntll 36·Jewtl N"·wlndlng ml>vements.
Llmlted In avatlab!Oty, museum quality.
ll'• a coUector't trtaac.ire. '3,690. Non-automatic '3,250 .
'
day'.-
loaiog Prie NYSE · COMPOSITE
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DAILY PILOT •
~-
. AgenCy Deserves
Business Award
By JORNWNND'I' u $ .......
An aceocy ol the federal •ovemment baa bo.n &iYeD an
award IOI' excellesset by amall·baaloea people. an occur.
nmco '° -rare it falls into the catecory ot man-klllel·
blppopotamua toriea. 1
-Perb&p1 you bavo not been awan, but many leaders of
amall·buslnea poupe. clalmial \My are the.l\W'dlam of
tnoovation and Industrial vltal.h.J, have been 1D a raae
a1atnat bit unions. bt1 business and bl& govemmenl
THE IA'ft'Ea. THEY FEEL. llEACT t.o th• Deeds of
amaU ti..dlnesa with the same 1pei(! and tnlbuslum u
mlabt be displayed by a hippo In a mudhole. They felt 11· nor~ c1 owded out; they reu an lnlenaltlvlty t.o lbelr aeeda. ~ow tbe Council ot Small and Independent Butlneaa Al·
soclationl, wboH members represent 150,000 amall en·
terpriees, has presented its finst annual aw~ tor "l'ederal
Small Business Program EICcellence" to the National
Science Poundatlon. 1
Small mauer? No. Instead, ll seems
highly sllDiflcant ror taxpayers. busi· . nesa people, government olllclals and
the nation in aeneral.
Milt.on Stewart. former prealdenl ol
the National Small Business Aasocla· lion, expreaes it= •'The NSF plan ecxald
be a prototype for other agencies. It's the
tint federal program in science and ..,...
tec~no~ th.al makes ae.llae f« small CIHIH"'" busaness. ' •
Small business bu long complained that it receives too
little of federal government money for research and de·
velopmenL Much ol the money foes t.o lar1er enterprises or
lo the great universities. .
A BILL PUSHED BY SEN. EDWARD M. Kennedy, D·
Mass., wbo also received an award. results in small busi·
oeaa receiving a percentage of NSF money for research aJ)o
plied t.o national needs. Now 12.S percent, it will rise t.o 15.
The first competlUon was conducted this year, when~
proposals were reviewed and first-stage granll ol $1.028,oop
made lo 42 companies.
. For some small·buslnesa people such money could bt
the seed from which great producta grow without this ~
money they might never seek to go forward, simply beca~,
fund.a are very difficult t.o obtain.. ·
THE FDlST STAGE OP THE NSF program was t.o lq.
vile small-business people, maioly in high tecbnol~ •
areaa, to submit brief proposals, no more than 20 paces, tor ,
research in the national interest. The lure was grants of.,-
t.o $25,000.
Most of the money awarded ls for feaalbtlily 1tudie1. to-.
be spent over a four-to alx·monlb period, cwmlnatJna In report of result.I.
If the results are promiling, a company can appty for..,~
second-stage grant, in which it migbt receive much lnc
sums, $100,000 or more, t.o develop a prototype.
But there ii a co0Un1ency to thia second si.,e. Part of
the plan 11 to brint in private capital,. and 10 aA element la
choosin,g award winners al ~ polol 11 the nadinea Of •
prlv ate capital sources t.o carry on !tom th.et'-. ·
Stock Market Takes
Another S11Ulll Loss
NEW YORK CAP) -Tb& martlt
Ion today ln a quiet. seasion an W-8~
Tbe Dow Jones average of 30 btdiii~,
Frid.a)', was down anot.her :us too~
Losers held a •-3 advantqe over 1amera;a91111
York Stock Excbange·Ustectu.tuel.
Stoelal•T-Ooaolo•nA .. ~MtEJ:
Soot IJalat m.l°"'IA'> .. Mt~ ...
NEW v&ic~"". u1et, 'I»"'· ,..1ce .,. s ~ i.-0ose f;t · 9ftCI Mt <""-of "''-" "'"' active » tr• Of:'•• IC -11 n1 A~ i. .... v-£11C11enot ,,_,, '° iNi m» ·,. iiUa 11.:u:: •.a
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MC0."9\0t ...... 21S'°" ttYJ +..-Tran :::.·.·.·:.:·.:::·.·.:·.·.·.:·.·; ::..'i:mm..,_ Honoll $Im...... 27~400 Ith -\ol Vlllt 1$
ft -·... ...... .. "' -• -------------.....
CIJ:,'?...:.:.00
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IM . .. •• *2,POO "'° -tt """ • .. .. • ,,,.. 1 -~ , '"" ~..... '°·'°° 9 + ~
NIW Y°"IC IAPI
Due to late transmlsslon
today's fisting wlll nqt ·
a~ar 1.n the Dally Piiat ••
• I
' •
, ..
WfCAT AMIX DID ''If!
HIW l'O"IC IA~I .'1•1 ..... ~,,, =~ ~ r, ¥=r,=. m ~ .... 1'71 flltN •l .} ..... "77 ,_ ' S. I
MW• SAC.SI
Due to late tr•nsmlsslcn .,,
today's ll1tln51 will· not , ·' ar In the 0•11 t»ttot.
.. DAILY PILOT
'I @~b Tops in Pops~
By Tbe A...-.la&.ed Presa
The roDowtne are Billboard'• hot record bita for
the week endint December 10 u they appear in
next week's ~sue ol Billboard magui.ne.
HOT SINGLES
1. YOU IJGHT UP MY LIFE -Debby Boone
arner·Curb> 2. DON'T IT MAKE MY BROWN EYES BLUE
~ystal Gayle <United Artists>
3. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees
SO > <&. BLUE BA YOU -Linda Ronstadt (Asylum)
5. IT'SSO EASY -Linda Ronatadt (Aaylum)
6. HEAVEN ON THE 7TH FLOOR -Paul
cholas CRSO)
7. WE'RE ALL ALONE -Rita Coolidge
M)
8. BACK IN LOVE AGAIN -LTD (A&M)
9 . BABY, WHAT A BIG SURPRISE -Chicago
lumbia)
10. YOU MAKE LOVIN' FUN -Fleetwood
(Warner Bros.)
TOPLPs
1. IJNDA RONSTADT -Simple Dreams
ylum)
Z. FLEETWOOD MAC -Rumours (Warner
Bros.)
3. COMMODORES Live CMotown)
4. ROD STEWART -Foot Loose & Fancy Free C arner Bros.)
5. LYNYRD SKYNYRD -Street Survivors
<:;A >
EASY LISTENING
1. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees
(ftSO)
2. HOW CAN r LEA VE YOU AGAIN -John
O«!nver <RCA)
:. 3. HERE YOU COME AGAIN -Dolly Parton
tftCAl
4. SLIPSLIDIN' AWAY -Paul Simon (Colum·
bta)
5. WE'RE ALL ALONE Rita Coolidge
(A&M l
SOUL SINGLES
1. SERPENTINE FIRE -Earth, Wind & Fire
(Columbia)
2. YOU CAN'T TURN ME OFF -High Inergy
<Cordy)
3 BACK IN LOVE AGAIN L.T.D. CA&M )
4 IT'S ECSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN
NEXT TOME Barry While C20lh Century>
5. IF YOU'RE NOT BACK IN LOVE BY MON·
DAY Millie Jackson (Spring)
Garson'• Got 'ena
Veteran actress Greer Garson doffs her tbp hat during a visit
backstage with the cast of the musical "A Chorus Line" following
the performance at New York's Shubert Theater.
Pieee of the Roek
Buddy Holly Story Due for Movie
By PETER J . BOYER
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Hollywood,
having churned its way lhroueh war,
sex a nd the Old West, has discovered
a mother lode or relatively untouched
material-rock'n' roll.
YOU KNOW BUDDY Holly's music, ._ ___ .,... ___ .._
whether you think you do or not. tr you
don't remember "That 'II Be the Day"
and "It Doesn't Matter Any More"4 from the 1950s, you may recall Linda
Ronstadt's rut versions of those Holly
tunesinthe1970s.
ENTERTAINMENT' I MUSIC I MOVIES
S ure. there were some beach
blanket films in the 60s, and there
were the Beatles films, too. But in the
case of the former. music was just
another piece of scenery. like Don
Rickles and Annette 's two-piece
bathing suit. As for the Beatles, well,
they were lhe Beatles You got the Im·
pression the cameras just went along
for the ride in those films
In fact, Miss Ronstadt is currently --------.......,~----------'"'"-•
But with "A Star ls Born" the
Streisand·Krisloffersqn epic of self
destruction, rock style -it became
riding high in the chartswith another
HoUytune, ''It's So Easy.''
"They (the potential audience) are
familiar with the music,'' Bauer says.
"I think they want to know where rock
androllcamefomfrom. ''
But there's more to the Buddy Holly
story th;pt music, and that's the story
itself. And Bauer says that's the main
.strengthofhis film.
-~------------------apparent that rock had somethjng filmmakers ought to look into. The
rock'n ' roll s ubculture, with its
sometimes nihilistic tendencies, could
produce some good dra ma. There was
more in that well than a bunch of kids
dancing on the beach.
HOLLY WAS A poor white kid from
Lubbock, Tex. His parents didn't like
his funny music, his girlfrlendnaaged
him togotocollegetohave!iomethJngto
Call back on, and people i n the music
business couldn't understand how a
white boy could make that good
rock •n' roll.
MIHllY Wl ... Ln e SAUT "fUll
HllOllCNI
Pl.US
'"' mNOcNI PASS ts
Al '&OHO e lllAITMt ltlLUI
IOllY DlllPIRDCNI
P\US
JUN WIM DtCl I .JANI !POI
OtOllOI tUIMI • .IOMN ll(N'tt•
OH 00Dt1Nt PlUS
OUMIAU IAl.L Y ll'OI
... l'SllAUllGAIH
CAllll 111
"UI
IUINT OfflllNOS l'OI
"' '"""° • MA.nll aun IOllY DllUllLDl'OI "us JUN wftM DK« I JANI IHI
~ UHi • -lfNVI• OH OODl !N I Pl.In
OUMIALL IALL Y l'Ot
--------· #MAl'PT DATI Ml Nnl AOAIM" OIAHO TMln AUTO IPOI Pl.In '"'MY oum,..,
ftlllll *"' COllUC) 1. orna 0t1U 111
2. W Youa AUIY tel i . TIHOll LOYINO CAI 11>
nbOlaWPtHM1
ROCK STARS, SEE, often live reck-
lessly and die young. Instant legends.
The perfect fodder for Hollywood.
With that in mind, a young en·
trepreneuer named Fred Bauer has
com e up with what sounds like the
perfect idea for a movie -"The Bud·
dy Holly Story.''
Holly, you may remember, was the
Great While Father of rock'n' roll,
Jess a hillbilly than Elvis, less blues·
based than Chuck Berry. Like so many rockers who followed
him, Holl y's star burned bright and
fast. He was killed in an airplane
crash in 1959 at the age of 22, two
years after hitting the big lime.
Bauer, a television rock show pro·
ducer, saw gold in the Buddy Holly
story. He sought out Holly's widow,
bought the rights to the story, and
spent four years hustling the money lo
produce the film.
BUT BAUER KNOWS he's going to
have to beat some drums to interest
moviegoers in a film about a man who
died nearly 20 years ago. Holly may
be prime stuff to rock fans, but
Bauer's not interested in a rock fan's
in·flick. He wants to make money.
Toward that. end, Bauer's set
himself to the task of interesting folks
in Buddy Holly, fact and legend.
''I am fond or quoting (famed movie
man) John Ford," Bauer said one re·
cent day, as he was banging the Holly
drums at the old Selznick studio.
"Ford used to say 'Tell the legend, Mt
the truth.• We are doing the legend of
Buddy Holly.''
Holly has a cult. following, butl 'm not
fool enough to thlnlc that everybody out
there knows who he is," Bauer con·
Unues. "But they sure as bell know hia
music."
On that point, Bauer couldn't be
clo1ert.othemark.
He was rejected and generally treat·
ed in a rotten way until a Buffalo, N. Y.,
disc jockey heard a demo of his, and
loved it. He locked himself into the
studio, legend has it, vowing not to leave
unlilHollywas a hit.
Holly, of course, became a hit. He
forgot about the nagging elrlfrlend in
Lubbock, fell in love with a Puerto
Rican girl in New York and got mar·
ried. ..
He was idolized in England, awed ln
the United States. But six months after
he married, he was killed, and the
phenomenon became a legend.
IT'S A GOO~ story. How film novice
Bauerwillhandleitremainstobeseen.
Bauer got his partner, Stephen Rash,
to direct. It's Rasb's firstrilm Bauer
got his best Buddy, Robert Gittler, to
write the screenplay. It's Gittler's first
.screenplay.
Bauer raised the money, he says, by
coming te Hollywood and ''putting on a
high profile.''
"We rented a· big house in Beverly
Hills and drove big cars," he says,
laughing.'• After all, this Is tinsel town. I
wasapoolbustterasakid. Tome,tbisia
justanotherhusUe." >
$hooting on the film, which is being
made at the refativefy s mall cost of S2
million, will be finished In December.
It 'saetfotreleasenextspring.
Gary Busey will play Holly, with Don
Stroud and Charles Martin Smith In
supporting roles. All three are musi·
cians, and Holly's music -µsooes -·
wtll betilmed live.
''DAMNATION ALLEY" (PG)
"FUTURE WORLD" (PG) .. ~------"LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR1
'
CR}
.. FIRST LOVE"
Do 1011 ,.,,,.,..., ~ •• atwring ,,.,
Wlllle111 Ka1t ... .. 110.,,
Plue
''""lfNOS''
''UT!N AUVI" ptue "~NEY INTO THI
HYONO"OO
7
Lag11n8/South Coast
VOL. 70, NO. 339, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
Afteraooa
N.Y.Stoeb
Stock Trade Halted
At Bert Lance BaDk
,......, .... '" ......
FIREMEN WORK OVER INJURED LAGUNA BEACH YOUTH AFTER CRASH ON CANYON ROAD
Steven Swearingen In Crttlcal Condition; Pauenger Onty SHghtty Hurt
LagW.a Youth Critical
Pmsenger Hurt m Sporu Car Flip1 Over
Police said a Laguna Beeeh
Youth, who told his passenger to
buckle his seat belt shortly
before passing three cars on
Laguna Canyon Road Sunday
evening, was in critical condition
today after apparently losing
control or hts sports car.
Steven Dave Swearingen, 19,
888 Summit Way, the son of Ken
Swearingen, Saddleback College
head football coach, was in the
intensive care unit at Saddleback
Community Hospital after police
and firemen from Laguna Beach
ltfted the young man's sport.soar
to extract the vicUm from the
wreckage. He's the Associated
Student Body vice pregldent at
Saddlebaclc.
Swearingen 's passen1er,
Steven Desmond Williams, 19, of
34592 Calle Paloma, Capistrano
Beach, was only slightly hurt in
the 6:45 p.m. crash one mile east
of El Toro Road.
He told officers at the scene
that Swearingen had told b1m to
buckle up shortly before be at-
tempted to pass three vehicles on
the two-lane.roadway.
Police Sgt. A. J . deLuca said
the small foreign car apparently
went out of control on returning
to the right hand side of the
roadway.
CdM Man Slain
Near Horwlulu
Funeral services are pending
today for John A. Hagan of
Corona del Mar, who was
stabbed to death this weekend
while camping near Honolulu.
The 21-year-old man died alter
he confronted and fought with a
man he suspected bad stolen his
camping equipment two weekl
earlier, police said.
The victim '~ mother. Mrs •.
Walter Hagan of 300'1 Harbor
View Drive, said aerv~ea will
probably be held midweek •t St.
Mark Presbytedan Church ln
Corona del Mar.
She said her family Jias lived ln
Corona del Mar for several yea.n
and noted that her son attended
Harbor View Elementary School,
Coast
Lincoln Intermediate School and
was graduated from Corona del
Mar High School in 1975. She said
he was active on the school's
track team.
Two men were in police
custody today in connecticn with
the incident. Their names were
not immediately released.
No one saw t,be actual knlfinas.
But wltne.ues who bad been
camping with Hagan said the vtc-
Um had run after a van Saturday
night to confront the 34-year-old
drivel' regarding a Nov. 23 t.heft.
Hagan bad been seekine the
driver for more than a week, of-flci~ls said. ff aaan reportedly
got into a scuffle with a man and
hla 19-)'e&M>ld brotber·in-aw,
then fell tbthe ground.
His friend.I said they ran after
the two mto once they realized
(See kNO'ED, Pase AZ>
The car bit tbe ditch ~bant
ment and overt\U"Ded, perhaps u
many as three times, deLuca
said. The vehicle landed upri1ht,
with Swearingen pinned under
the engine in the rear of the
wreckaee.
Laguna Beach firemen and
police lifted the car and pulled
Swearingen away from the
debris-strewn field. Officer Paul
Workman and a new reserve of·
ficer gave mouth to mouth re·
suscitation to the victhn until
paramedics arrived.
Officials at Saddleback C<>lleee
said today tbe Swearingens
moved to Laguna Beach a little
more than a year ago.
Thug Grabs
Purse, Cash
A South Laguna woman told
police a man ran up to her out·
side a Laguna Beach restaurant
Sunday evening and grabbed her
purse from her arm.
Ruby H. Gilbert said she was
approached by a slx·f()()t man
dressed in blue denim at about
5:15 p.m. near the Jolly Roger
reatauranl
The suspect grabbed the pune
containinl $100 in valuables, then
hit the woman in the face before
running south on Ramona
Avenue, Police said.
The woman was not seri°"'-'IY
hurt in the assault, officers said
today.
Strike Continu~s
OAK.LAND CAP) -Alameda·
CC)ntra Cost1 Transit Dlsv.tct
rlden began their tbJrd week.
without bus aervlce today.
Selling
Holdings
Studied
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Federal bank regulators today
announced a 10-day trading sus-
pension in the stock of the Na-
tional Bank of Georgia, the bank
once headed by Bert Lance, who
resigned in September as Presi-
dent Carter's budget director.
John Heimann, the comp-
troller or t.he currency and chief
re1ulator or national banks, said
the trading suspension was or·
dered "following a written re·
quest by the bank ln .-)few of re-
cent increased trading volume
and price movements in the
marketfor the stock. . "
Heimann said another reason
for t.he suspension was to allow
time for the public ~ learn fully
about negotiations by Lance to
sell a portion or his substantial
holdinas of bank stocks.
Tbe suspension was effective
immediately.
Lance, president of t.he bank
before joining the Carter ad-
m inistralion this year, holds
about 200,000 shares, or about 16
percent of the bank's stock.
A sharp drop In the value ol the
sh"res after Lance became
direct.or of the Office of Mana&e·
ment and Budget slatted the
chain qt events ~t led to q~
t.lont •bout hit fttiauetal deaunp
and to his reslanation in Sej>'
teaaber.
Althougb Lance bu retufbed
to private life, ht remains an un·
official adviser to Carter, his
(See IANCE, Pase AZ)
DoumtOtDn Rat!er
Laguna Beach cross-country ski student Lorraine Holl-
ingsworth tromps along on the sand at Main Beach Park
in LagWla Beach as part of a class sponsored by a local ski
shop. Operators or the class say cross-country practice
on sand is not as good as real snow, but beats watching
field lessons. And where else in South Orange County
can you ski within blocks of your own home?
Trustees to Decide
Capo Ballet Issue
Trustees are expected to~ clde tonl1bt whetbe.-tbe
Capistrano Unlfied School ~
trict will call for a $C9 mlllion
bond issue, a in million lease-
purchase agreement or a $1.S
million state apportionment elec·
tioo March 7.
Toalabt's school board meet· lnr •ill beeln at 7:30 at district •
offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in
San Juan Capistrano.
'Bushy' Feted
Laguna Kids Horwr Janitor
All three measures have been
recommended for the March 1
ballot by Supt. Jerome
Thornsley. ~sults of a com·
munity survey showed 65 percent
of the respondents favor both a
· boni! and a lease-purchase elec-
tion, Thornsley said.
•'The superintendent main·
tains the position that it is consts.
tent with t.he democratic process
to .allow the electorate to voice
their opinions officially by put-
ting these issues before them,''
he said in a memo to trustees. By STEVE MJTCllELL ot•Oll., ...........
He says be's 21, but lf you
badger him a bit, Francis
Bushman will admit he's really
52.
Not that lt matters to the 200
kids '¥,ho turned out to wish hap-
py birthday to their favorite
janitor at Top of the World
Elementary School Friday.
"Happy birthday. dear Bushy,
Happy birthday to you,"
chorused the circle of first,
second and third eraders at the
Laguna Beach school.
"Her,. thank.a a lot kids, that's
great, ' Bushy laughed as a half
dozen youngsters crowded up tq
him with gifts from their
clasarooms.
And wbft eifts they carried.
Lola Rake and Darlene O&Je'•
first 1rader.s made a patchwork
wall hanaing, with each
youn11ter contrtbutin1 artwork
on _his own11mall piece of cloth.
Leone Brockman'• first
graders presented the surprised
maintenance chief with a scrap-
book full of drawings and notes to
Busby.
"I like you, you are my bud·
dy," one card from ''Timbo"
refiected. Anothel' said, "Thank
you for fixing up our school.''
A third said, "I like )'OU Bushy
because you let me help you
clean up."
•'Some or the kids help me pick
up after lunch," the former com·
mercial fisherman explained.
"I've got a waiting list for that
job,'' he chuckled.
Why was he picked out for the
birthday surprise?
"Because I'm smilln~ all the
time, I guess," he saJd. "What a
bunch of teachers and kids,"
Busby said. shaking his bead.
"You know, I've got a scrap.
book at home ol all the stuff kids
have given me over the pest two
(See BUSBY, Pace AZ)
Trustee Edward Westberg bas
opposed a lease-purchase elec·
tion, saying it would be a dis-
service to voters to offer them a
school construction option so in·
ferior to a bond issue.
A successful bond election
would continue a 00-cents tax
rate, administrators have saJd. A
lease-purchase agreement would
hike taxes about 50 cents beyond
the 00-cent rate.
A bond election requires two.
thirds voter approval, a lease-
pUTchase election a simple ma·
jority.
School construction funds are
needed to provide bousine for ap-
proxlmately 8,000 new students
officials anticipate will move into
the Capistran<> district in the next
five years, said Tbomsley.
District elementary schools
are currently full and hitb
schools crowded, he said.
DAILY PILOT USC Mond • 0.0.rnbel 5, 1977
Deelslo• Be~erwetl
CoUrt Upholds
Officer Sttf ety·
WASHINGTON (AP) 'nle
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that police officers may letallY
order motorilta stopped for traf·
fie vlOlaUons to gel out of their
cats.
The court, voling 6-3, reversed
a decl•ion by the Pennsyl van.la
Su~reme Court that said such or· ders routinely 1iven by pollce for
self-protection viol.ate the
motorist.a' coostilulional rights.
"Establlilhing a face-to-face
coDlrontallon diminishes the
possibility, otherwise subatan·
tial, that the driver can make UD·
obJerved movements," the
court's majority said in an un-
signed declslon. "This, in tum,
reduces the likelihood that the of-
ficer will be the vlctlm oL an U ·
sauU."
take reasonable and minimal
precautions for their own
safety.''
The appe said the ruling
"needless ncreaaes" the risk
of a e officer's death or
serious injury.
Two Philadelphia policemen
stopped motorist Harry Mimms
in 1971 when they noticed that his
car carried an expired license
tag.
One of the two officers ordered
Mimms out of the car, and then
noticed a bulge in Mimms' coat.
The officer frisked Mimms and
found a loaded .38-callber pistol
tucked in the waist of bis
trousers.
Mimms was arrested, and
eventually was convicted of ii·
legal possession of a pistol and
carrying a concealed deadly
weapon.
.., ........
Dfp ..... tDla
David K. E. Bruce, veteran
American diplomat whose
posts included mainland
China. died today of a heart
attack at Georgetown
University Medical Center
in Washington. He was 79.
\
11110 &aUblazer
By ANNE COOPF.R OI .. Deltr llJ\lllt Miff
Wben San Clemente resident
Gel\e~ck9 uys there is no corner of h• world quite so
pleas as San Clemente, he has
a solid uiaof compartaon.
As a explorer and fllm pro-
ducer, Wl81'cko has been lo parts
of thct world most persons see on-
ly on television -perhaps in
features filmed by Wiancko.
Al 18, tho Oklahoma boy. was
hired as an apprentice in the field
of oil exploraUon. By the late
1940s, he waa seismologist in
charge of field parties exploring
the arctic for oil.
.. When we lint went up there,
the maps were wlld," he aaid.
"They were baaed on aerial sur·
veys and gave us a rough Idea,
but we had to remap as we went
along.
"We depended for supplies on
caches brou(Cht in over the ice by
caterplllar tractor trains,"
Wiancko said. "They used exist·
ing maps and would leave a
cache on what they thought waa
land.
..., ................
TRAVELING FILM MAKER
Gene Wlancko
own
Ills first attempt was nearly a
washout The novice film maker
tried to fllm the Edlnbur1h
festival, complete wlth an ap-
pearance by the queen. only to
have it ralnevery sin1Je day. 4
Hls luck has Improved since
then. Recent films include
studies of the peoples of Japan,
Mexico. Italy, Yu1oslavla and
the countries along the Danube
Rlver.
Wlancko currently travels
from October through May, put-
ting on about 130 film produc·
lions Cor audlences ranJlni from
the National Geographic Society
to local service clubs .
He has recently shown bis
Danube River Clim to San
Clemente and La1una Hills
Leisure World audiences, which
he characterized as "discemtni
and well traveled."
Ills next filming will~ of the
middle East, where he wUI at.art
by leading a cruise tour next
year. The ruling said ''the safely Of
the omcer" is justlllcation
enough for an intrusion of a
motorist's rights.
Justices Thurgood Marshall,
William J. Brennan Jr. and John
Paul Stevens dissented, saying
the court was expanding police
powers too broadly.
In seeking Supreme Court re-
view, the Philadelphia district
attorney's office said the state
court ruling "disregards the
clear need for police officers to
Trustees Order
Removal of Novel
"We would come along after
the snow melted, though,· and the
'land• might in reality be a lake
-with our supplies somewhere
on the bottom."
Hls parties d.llcovered a small
oil field at Camp Barrow, said
Wlancko, which has saved
Eskimo lives everv winter as the natl ves' supplies run low.
found ln the Arctic," he said.
"We didn't make any big flnds
ourselves, but we paved the way
for the discovery of the peat
fields."
Jn 1956 Wlancko left oil ex-'
ploration for the new field of
television. He didn't want to
work for a network, so he decided·
to film travel features on his
Another rllmina proJe~t wu
postponed by the outbreak of t.be
civll war in Lebanon. Wlancko
had been invited by the Lebanese
1overnment to make • mm,
showln1 how well the Chrilt1am
and Arabs aet along there.
Two weeks later. war broke out
between the two facUona.
Judge Delays
Hearing on
Heroin Charge
A preliminary hearing on Alex·
ander Kulik's heroin possession
<'harges was postponed today in
south Orange County Municipal
Court.
Judge Blair Barnette granted a
continuance after defense at·
torney Philip DeMassa told the
C'o urt there was a delay in obtain·
ing vital records from the U.S.
Marshal's oHice in Washington.
D.C
De Massa is seektng records on
federally relocated witnesses
Jerry Peter Fiori and Raymond
Steven Resco, both charged with
murder conspiracy in lhe Oct. 22
shooting death of Fountain
Valley resident Stephen John
Bovan.
Kulik also faces murder con-
spiracy charges in the Bovan
shooting incident.
Judge Barnette continued the
hearing to Dec. 15 at 9 a.m. In the
south county court. It is believed
the federal records will be
available then.
DeMassa is seeking evidence
which might show Kulik was set
up by Fiori or Resco.
Huntington Beach resident
f"rank Rossi, who implicated
Kulik and others in the Bovan
murder case in grand jury
testimony, appeared briefly ill
Monday's court session.
Rossi was ordered lo appear as
a witness on Dec. 15 in Kullk's
heroin possession hearing. Rossi
has been granted immunity from
prosecution by the Orange Coun·
ty District Attorney's Of(ice.
Frma Page Al
LANCE •••
close friend.
The investigation into his
financial dealings is still being
conducted by several govern-
ment agencies. .
Shares of the National Bank of
Georgia, one of Georgia's
largest, are traded in the over-
the-counter securities market.
The trading suspension wlll
terminate Dec. 14 the comp·
troller said.
-The comptroller's office said
that securities dealers and
brokers, shareholders and pro-
spective purchasers or the bank's
stock "are cautioned that they
should evaluate the lnformation
available and any lnformaUon
subsequenUy issued by the bank
and or t.be parties in inlereat."
OftANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
EDEN VALLEY, Minn. (AP>
-The Eden Valley-Watkins
school board has voted to strike
the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel
"To KiU a Mockingbird" from a
high school reading list on
grounds that the book contains
offensive language.
The 4·2 vote by the board in this
central Minnesota district came
against the advice of the supenn·
tendent.
The board also voted 3·2, with
Mom, Fetw
Hopes Fading
NEW YORK (AP) -A
<'Omatose pregnant woman
has developed pneumonia
and internal bleeding and
doctors held little hope that
either she or h('r 5-month·
old fetus could be kept
alive
Dr. Thomas LaBarbera,
director orthe critical care
unit at Victory Memorial
Hospital, described the
condition of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, 27, on Sunday
as "poor. very poor."
Mrs. Maniscalo. who col-
lapsed into a coma Nov. 23
after suffering severe
bleeding in her brain, is be-
ing kept onse9eral hfe sup·
port systems at the request
of her family.
Fro111 Page A 1
BUSHY •.•
and a half years," he beamed. "1
keep everything they give me.
The drawings, pictures
Everything."
Now the father of four has
more memories for bis collec· lion
His thick arms encircled
posters. the wall hanging, a
birthday cake and scrapbooks as
he walked toward his storeroom
Inside a building at the hilltop
school. A half-dozen youngsters
tagged along beside thelr giant
janitor, asking if they could help rum carry his birthday booty.
"Naw, you better leave me
alone or l 'll get in trouble," he
said, sidestepping quickly to
avoid a first grader in his path.
"But you kids are great, you
really are," Bushy said, ducking
into the small storage closet.
CrashSparb
School Proteat
PIXLEY (AP) -Jn the wake
of a serious school bus crash.
parenta here are threaten.int a
on•·week boycott of Tulare
Union Hlah School unless a fog.
ty-day bus schedule b adopted.
Under fo1n·day acbedules,
schoolt st.n one or two boun later than normal when vtaibWty
i• 10 poor tbat,drlvtn1 ta
hazardous ln tbe oormal T a.m.·t a.m. buuuntlme.
AbOut 1,00 rtaldeota ot thla area, some ·with cblldren m·
vol•ed ln Frlday!1 craab, iliMd
a petltioo drlq the weekead..,: mandt.nc a fo10-ctay aebedule.
OtMrwtae. •popaora Hld, tb•
1cbool wU1 M boycottid all ol
neztw t. "
one anstentlon, to remove-entire-
ly from school shelves the book
"Runaway Diary," the story of a
16-year·old runaway &irl.
About 50 parents signed a peti-
tion or complaint asking removal
or the books
Harper Lee's novel about
seething racial feelings in an
Alabama town in the 1930s. which
won the Pulitzer in 1961, was
found objectionable because it in·
eludes phrases such as "damn,"
"God-damned whore," "nigger''
and "whore lady."
A motion by board member
Paul Kerznan to remove "To Kill
u Mockingbird" from the school
altogether failed for lack of a
second.
In ''Runaway Diary," objec-
tions were raised to descriptions
of sexual conduct. Kerznan
maintained the book was "no
help at all to get rid of all the
problems we have in school with
all the pregnant girls we have
eachyear"
Board member Richard
Stenger. who opposed both mo-
tions, sald, ''If we lake either one
oC these books out of the school,
we'd have to think about getting
rid or the Bible and the
newspapers because we see that
profanity in the papers every
day."
Supt. Robert Black asked the
board to retain the books, saying
that bann!ng the books, would be
"censorship, and it isn't going to
stop here."
Anita Stans
Bible Drive
KANSAS CITY, MO <AP) -
Anita Bryant, professing love tor
homosexuals, says she ls now
more interested in getting Bible
reading and prayer back into
American schools.
"There Is so much emphldis on
homosexuality when there are so
many things to be concerned
about -abortion, pornography,
drug use, thlngs that desperately
need our attention," Miss Bryant
told a news conference Sunday
before appearin& at the Revive
America Crusade here.
''I have love in my heart for all
homosexuals,.. she said. Miss
Bryant became controversial
when she led the movement that
repealed a homosexual civil
rights ordinance in Dade County,
Fla.
f'ro91PageAJ
KNIFED ••.
Ha a an had bed hurt. One of the
frienda dn.11ed the men back to
where Haaan lay.
Haaan waa pronounced dead at
tbe1cene.
Tbe friends Ha1an bad met
malnly campers like hlmself -
aaid the youna man had been
robbed of ~ while watching a
1w11n1 tournament on Oahu'a
nortbshoreinlateNovember.
''Most Important, thouah. we
proved that oil and gas could be
"They'll settle down •Cain,"
said Wlancko. ..The conflict
should Ollly make IDY film more
interesting."
Trustee qDestio•s Costs
Schoo~ Hire Architec~
Lacuna Beach Unified School
District trustees have hired a
South Laguna architect to com-
plete a facWtles master plan tor
the hl&h school, despite concerns
from one board member that the
asking price was too high.
Architect Alvin Wlehle will
perform the extensive master
plan tor Laguna Beach High
School at a cost of $26,300 after a
4· 1 decision by trustees Thursday
night. Board chairman Harry
Bithell cast the only dissenting
vote.
In opposing the proposed htr·
ing, Bithell said, "I feel we can
put together a master plan within
our budgeted area."
Last year the board set· aside
$12,000 for a facility plan for the
cramped 14-acre campus. Wiehle
was one of nine architects who
presented plans for potential re-
v amp or the 49-year-old campus.
And while trustees liked
Wiehle's plans, Blthell had ques-
tions about more than doublinl
the price set aside for those
facility proposals.
But other trustees countered
Bithell's argument, saying pro-
posals from other archJtects in·
terviewed by the board were
lower, but left some cost.a out of
their esUmates. Board member Marylyn
Pauley said, ''Some architect.a
who fell within the budaeted
amount still had extra costs
which were not made known to
us." Ron Chilcote agreed, saying,
•'Those architects who proposed
lower r~tes were vague. I'm con·
cerned it would cost more in the
long run and I think we've got to
consider whQ has the quality
plan."
Funding for the first part ol the
architect's plan will come from the $12,000 set aside for the P"?j ..
eel last year, according to dis··
trict business manager Clyde
Lovelady, An additional $7,000
will come from the cllstrlct bulld·
in* fund this year. The second portion of funding
for the plan would come next
year from community services
and adult education account.a.
The purpose of the master plan
for the JUsh school is to ensure ·
the orderly expansion of the cam·
pus in the event the student body
increases from its current 1,125
level.
While the plan itself calls for
drastic changes in the physical
appearance of the campus, most
of those changes would not take
place unless there ls an locruse
ln students. •
In the event there ls little or no
student growth, school offlclala
maintain they still need a muter
plan to facllltate changes, such
as a new swimmlna pool and U·
panded library facilities.
And trustees are looking at
areas surrounding Laauna
Beach, such as ihe Irvine
coastline, a portion or which falls
within the district boundaries.
Growth In those unincorporat-
ed areas could mean an influx d
students to the di.strict.
Tagupa Man Listed
As 'Fair' in Crash
A Laguna Beach man was list·
ed in fair condition today at Hoag
Memorial Hospital whez:-e he i~
Actor Plans
Colkge Show
Shakespearean actor James
Dale Ryan will stage a special
one-man show at 8 p.m. Wednes·
day in room 336 of Saddleback
College's Fine Arts Complex.
The presentallon, which is
open to the public free of charge,
will feature character sketches
and poetry from the works of
Shakespeare.
Following the performance,
titled "What a Piece of Work Is a
Man," Ryan will answer ques-
tions from the audience.
The performance ls being
sponsored by the college's
Theater Del)artment. Further in·
tormatJon may be obtained by
calling Lynn Wells at 495-4950 or
831-9700. estension227.
recovering from injuries •Uf·
fered in a traffic accident Satur·
day in Newport Center.
Robert Heu, 24, of 1282
Catalina St. was injured when bis
van ran into a light pole on the
median strip of Newport Center
Drive near Granville Lane at
about 1:45a.m.
Firemen called to the scene
had to use a special power tool,
the "Jaws of Life," to tree Hess'
left leg from the wreckage of his
van. Fire Capt. Tom DaJley said two
passersby, Al Tabor of
Westminster and Gerald Zweig
of Huolingt.on Beaclf. stopped to
aid Hess while awalting,arrlval of
firemen and paramedics.
Dailey said arrival of lbe unit.I
wu ali(Cbtly delayed because tbe
unldenUfted person who called to
alert firemen to the accident
gave them a location at Newport
Center Drive and Santa Barbara
Drive.
He said t.he units were cl1reded
to the p~r location by a pass. ,
in«i motorist.
The day before Tbanka1lvtn1,
Nov. 23, 10meooe •tole HUan'•
camera. a watch, a 1mall porta·
ble atovet a knif • ed a key for a
locker at the HOnolUlu lnteota·
Uonal ~while fl• wu turf·
ln1 at sumet Beach. The tblef
*1IO •tOl• "'· . ' -_. ff••an lei.med later that the thief then iM4 tbe IOCkv k«r to
tall• b.11 ftila(iai • ..,. and mort .
pmoial~,
So unique ls the artisanshlp of this authentic United States
'20 goldplece watch. It measures \lme In generations not hours
Swiss made In 18k gold, it contslnt one of
AboUt Uull , wblle '-IUlr· ln1 aboUt .hll kqak, whlcla W been 1tor•d tn a contalHr
tblpyaftl; ........... tllll two ,_._,.lilid hHM triei to
dalm tM liOil.
After' ......... ~ .. el ... ,,... ........... Raaail
·~-mMldOWitMbellela . ~· ~· :W'bO llHW tslit
Mttl -....... -qQIM,
Mr1oa = no 1nec1 ~.,;:_ ... ,......
th• wor1d '• thlnne•t 35·Jewel setf~wlndlng movoments.
Limited In avellablllty, museum quality,
It'• a collector's treasure. '3,590. Non-autometlc '3.250.
(
J ,
I
u
•• DAILY PILOT use Monc!!t. ~$.ten
Deelsio• Bewenetl ..
CoUrt Upholds
Officer Siif ety ·
WASHINGTON CAP) The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that police offlcera may le1ally
order motorllta atopped for traf-
fic violaUona to aet out ot tbelr ca;..
The court. votine 6-3, reversed
a de<?illon by the Pennaylvanla
Supreme Court that said aucb or·
dera routinely given by police tor
self.protection viotate the
motorists' constitutional rlghta.
''Eatabllablng a race·lo-race
coafronlallon diminishea the
po~slbility, otherwise substan-
tial. that the driver can make UD·
ob•erved movements," tbe
court's ml\jority said in an can·
signed decision. "Thia, In turn.
reduces the likelihood that the ol-
'1cer will be the victim of an u-
sault."
take reasonable and minimal
precautions for their own
aafety."
The appeal uid the rullne
"needlessly increases" the risk
or a polic;e omcer's death or
serious inJW'Y.
Two Philadelphia policemen
slopped motorist Harry Mimms
in 1911 when they noticed that bl.a
car carried an expired license
tag.
One of the two omcera ordered
Mimms out or the car, and then
noticed a bulge in Mimms' coat.
The officer frisked Mimms and
found a loaded .38·callber piatol
tucked in the waist of bis
trousers.
Mimms was arrested, and
eventually was convicted of iJ.
leaal possession of a pistol and
carrying a concealed deadly weapon.
Dfpio..at~
David K. E . Bruce. veteran
American diplomat whose
posts included mainland
China, died today of a heart
attack at Georgetown
University Medical Center
m Was hington. He was 79. The ruling said ·'the aaf ety ot
lhe otricer" is Justiflaatltin
enough Cor an intrusion of a
motorist's rights.
Justices Thurgood Marshall,
William J. Brennan Jr. and John
Paul Stevens dissented, saying
the court was expanding police
powers too broadly.
In seeking Supreme Court re·
view. the Philadelphia district
attorney's office said the state
court ruling ''disregards the
clear need for police officers to
Trustees Order
Removal of Nove(-
Judge Delays
Hearing on
Heroin Charge
A preliminary hearing on Alex·
ander Kulik's heroin possession
rhurges was postponed today in
south Orange County Municipal
Court
Judge Blair Barnette granted a
continuance afle!' defense at·
torney Philip DeMassa told the
rourt there was a delay in obtain·
ing vital records from the U.S.
Marshal's office in Washineton,
D.C' De Massa 1s seeking records on
fl'derally relocated witnesses
Jerry Petl'r Fiori and Raymond
Steven Resco. both charaed with
murder conspiracy in the Oct. 22
shooting death o f :Fountain
Valley resident Stephen John
Bovan.
Kulik also faces murder con-
spiracy charges in the Bovan
shooting incident.
Judge Barnette continued the
hearing to Dec. 15 at 9 a.m. In the
south county court. It is believed
the federal records will be
available then
DeMassa is seeking evidence
which might show Kulik was set
up by Fiori or Resco.
Huntington Beach resident
Frank Rossi, who implicated
Kulik and others in the Bovan
murder case in grand jury
testimony, appeared brteny in
Monday's court session.
Rossi was ordered to appear as
a witness on Dec. 15 in Kullk's
heroin possession hearing. Rossi
has been granted immunity from
prosecution by the Orange Coun·
ty District Attorney's Office.
E'rora Page A J ·
LANCE •.•
close friend.
The investigation into his
financial dealings is still being
conducted by several govern·
menl agencies.
Shares of the National BanJC of
Georgia. one of Georgia's
largest. are traded in the over·
the-counter securities market.
The trading suspension will
term in ate Dec. 14 the comp·
troll er said.
The comptroller's office said
that securities dealers aod
brokers, shareholders and pro-
specti ve purchasers of the bank's
stock "are cautioned that they
should evaluate the information
available and any information
sublequenUy lsaued by the bank
and or thepartln in interest."
ORANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
EDEN VALLEY, Minn. CAP>
-The Eden Valley.Watkins
school board has voted to strike
the Pulitzer Prize.winning novel
"To Kill a Mockingbird" from a
high school reading list on
grounds that the book contains
offensive language.
The 4-2 vote by the board in this
central Minnesota district came
against the advice of the superin·
tendenl.
The board also voted 3-2, with
Mo"" Fetus
Hopes Fading
NEW YORK CAP) -A
comatose pregnant woman
has developed pneumonia
and internal bleeding and
doctors held little hope that
either she or her S·month·
old fetus could be kept
alive
Or. Thomas LaBarbera,
director of the critical care
unit at Victory Memorial
}{ospital, described the
condition of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, 27, on Sunday
as "poor. very poor."
Mrs. Maniscalo. who col-
lapsed into a coma Nov. 23
after suffering severe
bleeding in her brain, is be·
ing kept on sueral life sup.
port systems at the request
of her famil~.
Front Page AJ
BUSHY •.•
and a half years," he beamed. "I
keep everything they give me.
The drawings , pictures
Everything."
Now the father of four has
more memories ror his collec·
ti on .
His thick arms enclrcled
posters, the wall hanging, a
birthday cake and scrapbooks as
he walked toward his storeroom
inside a building at the hilltop
school. A half-dozen youngsters
tagged along beside their giant
janitor. asking if they could help
him carry his birthday booty.
"Naw. you better leave me
alone or I'll get in trouble " he
said, sidestepping quickiy to
avoid a first grader in his path.
"But you kids are ereat, you
really are,'' Bushy said, ducking
into the small storage closet.
Crash Sparks
School Proteat
PIXLEY (AP) -In the wake
of a Hrioua achool bus crash.
parentl here are threatenlnC a
one-week boycott of Tulare
Union Hieb School unless a fos·
ay-day bus ICbedule ia adopted.
Under fosn·day 1cbedule1,
1chools It.Pt one or two houri. later than notmal when vlllbWly
l1 ao poor th1t,drlvln1 l•
hazardous 1n tbe normal 7 a.m.-t
a .m. buanmtlme.
one anstention, to remove· entire-
ly from school shelves the book
"Runaway Diary," the story of a
16-year·old runaway girl.
About 50 parents signed a peli·
lion of complaint asking removal
of the books
Harper Lee 's novel about
seething racial feelings in an
Alabama town in the 1930s, which
won the Pulitzer in 1961, was
found objectionable beca~e it in·
eludes phrases such as "damn."
"God·damned whore," "nigger"
and "whore lady."
A motion by board member
Paul Kennan to remove "To Kill
a Mockingbird" from the school
altogether failed for lack or a
sl'cond.
In "Runaway Diary." objec·
t1ons Wl'rc raised to descriptions
of sexual conduct. Kennan
maintained the book was "no
help at all to get rid of all the
problems we have in school with
all the pregnant girls we have
each year"
Board member Richard
Stenger, who opposed both mo·
lions, sald, "U we take either one
of these books out of the school,
we'd have to think about getting
rid of the Bible and the
newspapers because we see that
profanity in the papers every
day."
Supt. Robert Black asked the
boatd to retain the books, saying
that banning the books, would be
''censorship, and it isn't going to
stop here.''
Anita Starts
Bibk Drive
KANSAS CITY, MO <AP) -
Anita Bryant, proressing Jove for
homosexuals, says she ts now
more interested in getting Bible
readina and prayer back into
American schools.
•'There ls so much emphalis on
homos~uallty when there are so
many things to be concerned
about -abortion, pornography,
drug use, things that desperately
need our attention,•• Miss Bryant
told a news conference Sunday
before appeartne at lhe Revive
America Crusade here.
"I have love In my heart for all
homosexuals," she said. Miss
Bryant became controversial
when she Jed the movement that
repealed a homosexual civil
rights ordinance 1n Dade County,
Fla.
t'ro111Page.AJ
KNIFED ..•
Hae an had beert hurt. One of the
frienda drqted the men back to
where Hqan lay.
Hasan was pronounced dead at
tbe1cene.
Tbe friends Hasan bad met
malnly campers like hlmHlf -
said the yount man bad been
robbed ol *50 while walchins a
1urfin1 tournament on Oabu't
north aboNln late November.
The day before Thanbalvtng,
Nov. 23. 101Deone stole Hqan'•
camera, a watch, a small porta.
bl• Ito\'•· • knit• and • key ror • lockv at tbe Hoaolulu lotel;Jl•·
tlonat Airport wblle he wu IUl'f •
\DI at Sun.et Beach. The Ualef
aJ.o 1t0le ""· ffaian l.araed law that the
By ANNE COOPER
........ Pl111Uwft
When San Clemente resident
Gene Wlancko says there ls no
corner of the world quite so
pleasant as Sart Clemente, he bas
a solid basis of comparison.
As an explorer and mm pro-
ducer, Wlanc::ko has been to parts
of th41 world most persons see on·
Jy on televlslon -perhaps in
features filmed by Wiancko.
Al 18, the Oklahoma boy was
hired as an apprentice In the field
of oil exploration. By the late
1940s, he was seismologist in
charge 0£ field parties explorin&
the arctic for oil.
"When we first went up there,
the maps were wild," he said.
·'They were based on aerial sur·
veys and gave us a rough idea,
bul we had to remap as we went
along.
"We depended for supplies on
caches brouaht in over the ice by
caterpillar tractor trains,"
Wiancko said. ''They used exist·
ing maps and would leave a
cache on what they thouaht waa
land.
"We would come along after
the snow melted, thoush, and the
'land' might ln reality be a Jake
-with our supplies somewhere
on tt\e bottom."
His parties discovered a small
oil field at Camp Barrow, said
Wiancko, which has saved
Eskimo lives everv winter aa the natives'suppllesrun low.
"Most important, thouah. we
proved that oil and gas could be
DMty ..............
TRAVELING FILM MAKER Cle"• Wlencko
found in the Arctle," he said.
"We didn't make any bis find•
ourselves, but we paved the way
for the discover)' or the tteat
fields."
In 1956 Wlancko lert oil ex-
ploration for the new field of
television. He dldn 't want to
work for a network, so he decided·
to film travel features on his
own Ills first attempt was nearly a II
washout. The novice film maker ~
tried to fllm the Edlnbur1h " festival, complete with an ap-..
pearance tsy the queen, only to ..
have it rain every slnsle day.
Hls luck has improved slnce
then. Recent films include
studies of the peoples of Japan1 Mexico. Italy, Yugoslavia ana
the countries alon& the Danube •
Rlver.
Wiancko currently trJvela
from October through May, put·
ting on about 130 mm produc·
lions for audiences ranging rrom
the National Geographlc Society
lo lo<: al service clubs.
He has recently shown ht.a
Danube River mm to San
Clemente and Laguna Hills
Leisure World audiences, which
he characterized as "discernine
and well traveled."
His ne:ict. filmina will be of the
middle East, where he will atilt
by leadln& a cruise tour next
year.
Another filmine proje~t wu
postponed by the outbreak ot the
civil war in Lebanon. Wlancko
had b1!tD lnvlted by the Lebanese
government to make a fllm,
showlne how well the Christiani
and Arabs set alona tbere..
Two week.I lat.er. war broke out
between the two facUon1.
"They'll aeWe down a1aln, ..
said Wlancko. "The conmct
should only make my mm more
interesting."
Trustee questions Costs
School,s Hire Architect
Laguna Beach Unlfled School
District trustees have hired a
South Laguna architect to com·
plete a facilities master plan for
the high school, despite concerns
from one board member that the
asking price was too high.
Architect Alvin Wiehle will
perform the extensive master
pl an for Laguna Beach High
School at a cost of $26,300 aner a
4·1 decision by trustees Thursday
night. Board chairman Harry
Bithell cast the only dissenting
vote.
In opposing the proposed IUr·
ing, Bitheli said, "I feel we can
put tog~ther a master plan within
our budgeted area."
Last year the board set· aside
$12,000 for a facility plan for the
cramped14-acre campus. Wiehle
was one of nine architects who
presented plans for pot~ntial re-
vamp of the 49-year~d campus.
And while trustees liked
Wiehle's plans, Blthell bad ques-
tions about more than doubUnc
the price set aside !or those
facility proposals.
But other trustees countered
Bithell'a argument. aayine pro-
poaals Crom other architects in·
terviewed by the boarcl were
lower, but left some coata out of
their estimates.
Board member Marylyn Pauley said, "Some architects
who fell within the budteteci
amount still had extra costs
which were not made known to
us."
Ron Chilcote a1reed, saying,
"Those architects who proposed
lower r~tes were vague. I'm con·
cerned It would cost more in lhe
long run and I think we've got to
consider wh<> has the quality
plan."
Funding for the first part of the
architect's plan will come from
the $12,000 set a.side for the proj ..
ect last year, according to dis·
trict busineas manager Clyde
Lovelady. An additional $7,000
will come from the district build·
inf rund thla year.
The second portion of funding
ror the plan would come next
year from community services
and adult education accounta.
The purpose ol the muter plan
for the high school is to ensure '
the orderly expansion or the cam·
pus in the evellt the student body
increases from its current 1,125
level.
While the plan itself calls for
drastic changes in the physical
appearance. of the campus. most
or those chanees would not take
place unless there la an increase
ln studenta. •
In the event there la lltUe or no
student growth, school orficlala
maintain they still need a muter
plan to facllltate chanees, such
as a new swimming pool and tx·
panded library racllltiea.
And trustees are looking at
areas surrounding Laeuna
Beach, s uch as the Irvlne
coastline, a portion of which falls
within the district boundaries.
Growth in those unincorporal·
ed areas could mean an infiwc m
students to the diltrtct.
Tagupa Man Listed
As 'Fair' in Crash
A Lagtma Beach man was list·
ed in fair condition today at Hoag
Memorial Hospital whe~e he i~
Actor Plnns
Wllege ShouJ
Shakespearean actor James
Dale Ryan will stage a special
one-man show at 8 p.m. Wednes·
day In room 336 or Saddleback
Colleee's Fine Arts Complex.
The presentation, which is
open to the public free of cbar&e,
will feature character sketches
and poetry from lhe works or
Shakespeare. Following the performance,
titled "What a Piece of Work Js a
Man," Ryan will answer ques-
tions rrom the audience.
The performance ls being
s ponsored by the college's
Theater Department. Further in·
lorm auon may be obtained by
calllne Lynn Wells at 495-4950 or
831·9700. extension 22'1,
recovering from injuries sUf-
fered in a traffic accident Satut·
day in Newport Center.
Robert Heu, 24, of 1262
Catalina St. was injured when bis
van ran into a light pole on the
mediart strip or Newport Center
Drive near Granville Lane at
about 1:45a.m.
Firemen called to the scene
hild to use a special power tool,
the "Jaws of Life," to free Hess'
left leg from the wre<?kage of bis
van. Fire Capt. Tom Dailey said two
passersby, Al Tabor of
Westminster and Gerald Zweig
of HunUngton Beaclr, stopped to
aid Hess while awaiting arrival of
firemen and paramedics.
Dailey said arrival of the units
was allghUy delayed because lhe
unldenutled person who called to
alert rlremen to the accident
gave them a location at Newport
Center Drive and Santa Barbara
Drive. He said the units were directed
to the proper location by a pus.-•
in.c motorist.
About 1,00 r~sldentl ot th1J
area, some with children In·
volnd in hiday11 crub, alined
a petlUoo drtD1 the weekend d.-
mandtna a fotO-day eehedute.
Otberwtae, 1popaor1 aald. the
school will be boycotted all ot
ntstweet.
thief tlMi1 Uled tbo loCker key to
tall• hla ~·..., and more · · peraonal •• AbOut that mt, nu. 111QU1r-
So unlque Is the artlaanahip of th la authentic United States
'20 goldplece watch. It moesures time In generations not hounl.
Swiss made ln 1 Sk gold1 ll contains one of
tht wortd'e thinnest 35-Jewet salf·w1ndlng movements.
m1 abo\lt tdl kayo, •bleb U4 b6en ttored In a coatalaer
tblpya.rd,i Jlqd WU iold 1b.a\
two ,.nodl}fied t'ilce ttW lo
ClalmtMWt.
Aftfr' tile MeOlld tbeft. OM of
... In.di Mid .... " llapD • • .._. .. ....a..,..... UN bMell emnl7 '1'be \peopl1 who knew hlm de1ertW a., .. ., • qwet
Mtlou c:: Wbo IOffd •
W:Oa1. ~lad twWnf. ~
Limited In avallablllty, museum quality.
If 1 a collector'• treasure. •3,590. Non·automatlc '3.250.
•
ii
h
"
. ............
'
7
Orange Coast
• EDITION
Tod•y' Clest.g
N.Y.Stoeb
' VOL 70, NO. 339, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES OR.l' ... GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
l
Did Columtnis Sail ·With J'our Ships? -
ROME (AP) -An Italian am-
bassador's letter written in 149.1
indicates that Christopher
ColumbU$ made hJs first voya1e
to America with four ships rather
than three as history recorda, an
Italian professor reports.
Mrs. Bonvini Mazzanti says
the letter was written frorn
Barcelona on March 9, 149.1, by
Annibale de Gennaro. the am-
bassador o! the king of Naples. It
went to de Gennaro •a brother, the
ambassador to the ducby of
Milan, and the scholar aald she
found it in the archives of the
Este family, which ruled in
Modena then.
According to hlatory, Colum-
bus ' first expedition in search of
a westward water route to the
Far East consisted of three
caravels, the Nina, the Pinta and
the Santa Maria. But Mrs. Bon·
............
ENCHANTRESS GOING UP FOR SALE To-PAY ITS DEISTS
Skipper VanlehH, Leaving Credttor• 1422,000 Pooter
Skipper AWOL
Sought by Unpaid Crew
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -David Kent's aquare-ngged tall
ship is called the Enchantress, but it seems to be bewitched
Kent has disappeared, leaving his crew unpaid, his bank
clamoring for $422,000 and authorities planning to auction the
vessel.
.. THE LAST TIME I SAW him he was putting license plates
on a new Cadillac," said Chief Deputy U.S. Marshal George
Douglas. "He said he was going to Florida."
That was in September, Douglu said.
There were 11 crew members, "and they never 1ot paid a
cent.'• Douglas said.
The M·ton brigantine waa built for the Tall Ships race from
Portsmouth, England, to Newport in 1976, and was used for a
time afterwards as a charter craft.
DOUGLAS' OFFICE SEIZED THE two-ma.sled ship In Sep-
tember. It will be sold at public auction Dec. 16. It's lied up here
at a solitary Goat Island pier, sails furled. and will be open for
public inspection Dec. 13.
Chemical Bank oC New York says Kent owes $&22,000 on the
brigantine. The bank asked that the sblp be seized, and federal
Judge Raymond Pettine gave Kent 20 days to come up wJth ~
partial payment. But KeQt disappeared. . .
Douglas said Kent. wu .. Ma.tine Corp1 i>Uot 1n the Korean "'"
War who gave up flylng tt> m.,..1• a construetlGn company on
Long Island, N. Y. In 1973, be 1ave up a $50,000 a )'ear Job wlth the
flrm to build the 19th ce11tu17 replica and san 1n tb• Tall Sblps
race, the marshal says.
I
"IT TOOK TWO YEARS to bu114 the hull and another two
years tooutfitit, "Douglas said.
Kent originally thought the project would coat about '2'>0,000
but costs ballooned and he ended up 1pendina about $700..,000.
When complete, the Ench&ntfe!t carrljtd $,280 ,quare feet of
aatl on her two masts. Her hull wu made from ferro-lement.
Douglas said Kent tried to set up charters to defray tome of •
the costs, and at fl rat his efforta wen aucceaaful.
• • "HE'D RAV& TUPS ROM Port Jefferson, N.Y., to Block
Island, with drillkhi& and dandr\a. They were p~y popular,·~
Dou1lu said.
viol 'Mazzanti says de Gennaro,
in telling his brother about the
explorer's departure from Spain,
wrote:
"For the entreaties of one
called Columba, it pleased the
king that he should rla four
caravels because he said he
wanted to go across the Grand
Sea and sail atralgbl westward
long enough as to reach the
Orient since the world being
round be could but mate a turn
and find tbe east.em part."
.. C9lumbus returned aboard
the Nina. followed by the Pinta,"
said Mn. Bonvinl Mauanti, a
36-year-old history professor, in
a telephone lntel'View from her
home in SenJgaglla, near Urbino.
"The Santa Marla was wrecked on Chriltmu Day of
1492 when Columbus left 40 men
in a fort called 'Navldad' on the
lJland of HllpanioJa. Tbe fourth
sblp remained behind wlth those
in the fort." .
She said there are references
to thls ship bein1 left btblnd in
Columbus' diary, aJthouab the
diary is never precise about the
number of shlpa, and ln the re.
port he sent to Kin& Ferdlnand's
treasurer from lJsbon on March
14, 1493, 10 days after be docked
there on hia return joW'Dey. But
she ••Id tbey were never In·
urpreted as rneanln1 be bad de-
parted wtth a fourth Jl\lp.
"When Columbus returned to
the fort on the next journey, be
reported the men had -n killed
and everythina had been
destroyed. Obviously, tbe
caravel also had been destroyed
by the infuriated natives," the
professor said.
<See VOYAGE, Pa1eM>
Newport Man Slain
Victim Stabbed to Death in Hawaii
Funeral services are pending
today for John A. Hagan of
Corona del Mar, who was
stabbed to death this weekend
while camping near Honolulu.
The 21.year-old man died after
he confronted and fought with a
man he suspected had stolen his
camping equipment two weeks
earlier, police said.
The victim's mother, Mrs.
Walter Hagan of 3007 Harbor
View Drive, said services will
probably be held mklweek at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church in
Corona del Mar.
She saJd her family has lived in
Corona <\el Mar for several years
~eBank
Suspended
From Trade
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Federal bank regula~rs today
announced a 10-day trading sus·
pension ln the atock of th• Na-
tional Bant ot Georgia, the bank
once headed by Bert Lance, who
re1l1ned in September as PresJ-
dent Carter's budget director
John Heimann, the comp-
troller of the currency and chief
regulator of naUonal banks,., said
the trading suspension was or-
dered "following a written re-
quest by the bank in view of re-
cent mcreased trading volume
and price movements In the
market for the stock "
HetmaM said another reason
for the suspension was to allow
time for the public to ~earn fully
about negotiations by Lance to
sell a portion of his substantial
bold.Jnp of bank stocks.
The suspension was effecUve
immedla~ly.
Lance, president of the bank
before joining the Carter ad·
ministration this year, holds
about 200t000 shares, or about 16
percentotthe bank's stock.
A sharp drop in the value of the
shares after Lance became
director of the Office of Manage.
ment and Bucl&et 1tarted the
chain of events that led to qges.
lions about his ftnanelal dealings
and to his reslsnation ln Sep-
tem ber.
Altbouab Lance bas returned
to private life, he remains an un-
official adviser to Carter, his
clou !tieiid.
Sbare1 of the NaUonal Bank of
Georgia, one of Georgia's
Jarfeat, are traded In the over-
the-counter securltlea market.
The trading suspension wlll
terminate Dec. 14 the comp·
t.rollenald.
• Tb• comptroller's office said
that. securities dealers and
brok•ra. sbareholden and pro-
apeaUve purchasers of the bank's 1iodl "are caut.loned that they
1houl4 enloate the Information
avallabt. and any information.
auhMcluently iuued by the bank
•nd or tbe parties ln interest.•'
and noted that her son attended
Harbor View Elementary School,
lJncoln Intermediate School and
wu traduat.ed from Corona del
Mar High School in 1975. She said
he was acti\'e on the acbool'.a
track team.
Two men were in police
custody today in coMecticn with
the incident. Their names were
not immediately released.
No one saw the actual knlfings.
But witnesses who had been
campln1 with Hagan said the vic-
tim had run after a van Saturday
nlght to confront the 34·year-old
driver regardin& a Nov. 23 theft.
Haaan had been seeking the
driver for more than a weet, of.
ficlals said. Hagan reportedly
got lnto a scuffle with a man and
his 19-year-old brolher·in·aw,
then fell to the ground.
His frienda said they ran alter
the two men once they realized
Hagan had been hurt. One of the
friends dragged the men back to
where Hagan lay.
Hagan was pronounced dead at
the scene.
The frienda Hagan bad met
mainly campers like himself -
said the youne man bad been
robbed of ~ while watching a
surfine tournament on Oahu's
north shoreinlateNovember.
The day before Tbanbgi~,
Nov. 23, someone stole Hagan s
camera, a watch. a small port.a.
ble stove, a knife and a key for a
locker at the Honolulu lntema·
tionaJ Airport while he was surf·
ing at Sunset Beach. The thief
also stole $76. ·
Hagan learned later that the
thief then used the locker key to
take h1s fishing gear Gd mOl'e
personal belongin.p.
About that Ume, whlle lnqulr·
ing about his kayak, whlcb had
been stored in a container
shipyard, Hagan was told that
two persons bad twice tried to
lSee KNIFED, Page Al)
Borul8 Goes
To Chicago;
'Bosley Too
HONOLULU (AP) -The
Chlea10 White Sox acquired slug-•
cer Bobby Bonda from tbe
Calllomla Ancela this afternoon ~-IG';~eatbueball's
Movtnc to tbe White Sox aloof
with Bonda are two younf
players, outfielder Thad Bosley
and pitcher Dick Dotson. Jn ex·
chanee, tbe Angels acquired
catcher Brian Downing and
pitchers Chris Knapp and Dave
Frost.
a Bondi, 31., batted .284 with 37
home rum, US runs batted ln and
·Cl stolen bales last season. lie
declared b1.t intention to become
a free a•ent at the conclusion of
the 1978 bueball season and that
wu one reason the Angels were
ready to trade him.
· The Wblte Sox made similar
deals last season when they ac-
quired. atuuen Richie Zisk and
Ostar Gamble, both of whom
were unsigned and Jett Chicago
as free agents at the conclusion
of the season. Zisk subsequently
slped with Tex.as and Gamble
with San Dieco.
Newport Boy Spots
Fire, Calls Firemen
The ~els signed their own
high.priced free agent last
month, acquirin1 Lyman
Bostock, and that made Bonda
expendable.
Bosley, 2t, batted .297 ln 58
games with the Aneela after
starting the season at Salt
Lake City of the Pacific Coast
Leque, where be batted .326 in
69'James.
J,>ot1on, 18, pitched In the
Pioneer Leaeue last season, post·
ing a 4.5 record. A teen·age boy rldlng by on his
bicycle ls credited with discover·
ln• a flre that caused about
$10,000 to a Newport Helebts
bom8, flre department officials
'aaldtOclay.
E'Tienne Quenneville, 17, ot
209 W.inut St.. was rldlnc by
·about 1:45 a.m. when be spotted
the fire at 4.26 Allio Ave., officials
said. Realdenta Mr. and Mn.
Jerry Goodman and their two
eons were ablent at tbetlme. QuemMrvllle uld be aaw smoke
pourinc ft'Om tbe windows u be
cycled ·past. Be stopped an« nn
around tho house, ban&ln1 oa doon, to Heil anyone wq home.
Getting no respome, be freed
tbe family do& from tbe
backyard and al~ nelpbors,
wbo called firemen.
. Down1n1 batted .284 ln 69
games wttb the White Sox, star'·
inf the catching duties with Jim
Eaalan.·
Coast
Tbe fire was quelled wlthln
ht.lf an hour. Officials aald the
flre orlalnated ln a closet ln the
kitchen. 11'e cause ls still under
lnve1tlpUon.
Fire offlclals ldenUfled the
owner ol the two-atory dwelllil• .
u Paul Mumby. Weather
Lo• clouds with local
dense IOI nltht and early
morning bourS. otberwlse
buy 1umbi.ne. Lows 48 to
53. Hl&bs Tuesday Crom
mld.eo:t at the beaches to
mld-10s lnl~d.
JN81DET••~Y .
T~t "'°'° tn Uwm Char
hUll. acl °"°""' Cooei ,.. ...
4-U. an Mtlt#llo on to nJor shl1~.-~CJ.
la•e•
Photo's Worth SJ Mi iiion
That's 4.000 pounds of marijuana on which
Corona Det. Les Scott 1s sitting. The pot
was seized in a raid in Corona last July
and authorities incinerated it in Colton
last week. Its value was estimated at Sl
million and pohce couldn't resist the urge
to record the haul with a photo. Wielding
the camera is Riverside County Deputy
District Attorney John Chessell, right.
E'rom Page 11 I
KN I FED ...
daim the boat.
After the second theft, one of
his friends said she saw Hagan
"walking up and down the beach
t·rymg."
The people who knew him
described Hagan as a quiet.
serious person who loved body
surfing, fishing and running.
OCC Rower s
Selling T r ees
In Fund Drive
Members of the Orange Coast
College crew teams who are sell-
ing Christmas trees to raise
funds for their sport, say they
will deliver trees free by boat to
waterfront homes.
The trees will be on sale until
Dec. 22 at th<' I ntercollcgiate
Rowing and Sailing Ilase, 1801 W.
Coast Hlghway The lot will be
open from 9 am. lo 10 p m.
Although a two year college
team, OCC's crews have compet.
ed successfully against four-year
colleges and last summer
participated in the 140-year-old
Henley Regatta in En&Ul.od..
The proceeds from the tree
sales will help finance travel to
meets tn the 1978 rowing season.
Garage Fir e
P robed in NB
NewPort. Beach firemen are
studying the remains of a garage
in Central NewPort today to try
lo determine the source of a
$20,000 fire that swept through
th<' structure f'riday night.
A fire department spokesman
said investigators are still not
sure what ignited the blaze al 107
29th St. at about 8 p.m. Fire of-
ficials estimated $10,000 damaae
to the structure and $10,000
cla m age lo its contents.
The home is occupied by
Dorothy Hemmer Firemen said
there were no mJurtes reported in
the blaze.
f'rona P age A 1
BOOK •.•
of these books out of the school,
we'd have to think about getting
t1 d of the Bible and tbe
newspapers because we see that
profanity In the papers every
day."
Supt: Robert Black asked the
board to retain the books. saying
that banning the books, would be
"censorship, and it isn't going to
stop here.··
OlllANOI! COAST "
DAILY PILOT
.... '1 ....... ,,.~~,_.....,.,_
., ...... c .... Vl<e-Jleel\l _ O._.tMot.....,.
T-•••-1•11.,
T~AMllfW!lt1e ~""'"'''• Cll-'nM.l..Mt •1c-..., ..... AUhl~ Mlntfl"' 'Oller\
2 Held in Theft
Of Shipyard Safes
Two men are in custody in
New port Beach today and more
are bemg sought for the weekend
theft of two safes which were
taken Crom the Lido Shipyard.
Held in lieu of S20,000 bail each
are Frank Daniel Robinson, 24,
of 16752 Glenhaven Lane, Hunt·
ington Beach and Curtis Roy Ed-·
dy, 22, of 13131 Slanrich Place,
Garden Grove.
The two men were arrested
Satu rda y afternoon al
Robinson's residence by detec-
tives Al Fischer and Tony Villa
who had been called out early
that morning to investigate the
break·in at the shipyard.
Shipyard employes told police
that burglars had stolen a
shipyard truck to remo•e the two
safes, one of which weighs more
than l,OOOpounds.
Villa said today there was
evidence that the burglars had
attempted to take a third safe,
but gave up because 1t is bolted to
the floor.
He said evidence gathered at
the scene of the crime led in-
vestigatiors to believe they were
seeking formtr employees u
suspects in the case.
Oelly..itetlUff ......
f"Afllekotd.·
Brooks Brann, 18, of Udo
Isle Troop 37, has achieved
eagle scout status. A senior
at Newport Harbor High
School, he is the son. of Mrs.
Brooks Brann, 1217 E.
Balboa Blvd., Balboa.
Eddy was arrested by Fischer
when the detective went to the .
lluntln&otn Beach address seek-
ing Robinson, a former employe
of the boatyard.
Robinson, who was not home at
the time Eddy was taken into
custody, was arrested two hours
later by Villa. The detective said
the safes and the truck were
found in Garden Grove. He aJ-
leged a quantity of the stolen
money-including some collec-
tor's edition S2 bills-were found
in Eddy's pockets.
Unidentified
HB Corpse
Murdered?
Orange County Sheriff's of·
ficers investlgatina the dis·
covery of a body on Huntington
State Beach now believe they
have a murder case on their
hand1.
But they refused today to dis-
cuss details of the killing other
than to confirm that the man was
murdered at the spot where his
body waa found. He has not yet
been ldenWied.
The man, believed to be in his
mid·30s, was found on the beach
Friday by Golden West College
1ludent Craig Allen Wllliams, 23,
who was surfina in the area with
his girtfrl~.
Offlcera said thQ fully clothed
body was almost completely cov.
ered by sand. They Hid they
believe the killer buried the body
after ~~posing of hls victim.
Boat Torched
In Newport
Newport Beach police and fire
investigators are probing the
midnlaht fire which 1utted a
trailered 2l·foot sailboat at an
Upper Bay launching ramp to-.
day. .
The boat owned by Mark
Skrukrud of Garden Grove, was
reported stolen lb October. A flre
department spokesman said to-
day the fire was obviously the
work oC an arsonist.
The blaze occurred at
Von's Bdat Ramp on Back Bay
Drive. Damage to the vessel was
estim at.eel at M,000. ·
Kids Abandoned
LYNWOOD (AP) -Three
Morales children, Debbie, 13,
Erle, 12, and Felicia, •, who re·
portedly were without food for
more than a day and bad not eeen
their mother in a week were
found abandoned by the landlord
of their apartment, 1beriff'1
deputies uid.
l.agu.na Man Listed
As 'Fair' in {Urasli
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today
that police offtcett may leaally
order motQNta stopped for traf-
fic vlolaUont to set out of their cars.
The court, votln1 6-3, reversed
Harbor High
Christmm
Wncert Set
Music lovers will have the op.
portunity to enjoy a Christmas
concert and support the music
program at Newport Harbor
High School at the acbool '1 an-
nual Christmas concert Friday
night.
The concert, which will be held
at 7:30 p.m. is being staged al the
Ensign Middle School gym this
year because the high school's
auditoriwn is being rel modeled.
Featured aroups include the
Sailor Band, the Newport Harbor
Orchestra, the Swing Ensemble,
the Chantellea and the Newport
Harbor Chorale. Members of the
school's drama department aJso
will perform.
At the close of the concert,
members of the music depart-
ment will open a holiday bou-
toque in the middle school's
cafeteria. ~
Concert goers wlll be able to
buy baked goods and handmade
gift items. Proceeds wlU benefit
musk department projects.
Admission to the concert is
ffee.
Egypt Brea/a
Diplomatic
Ties With 4
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -Egypt
broke diplomatic relations with
Syria. Libya, Algeria and South
Yemen today in retaliation tor
their decision to form a "re-
sistance and confrontation front"
a1ainst President Anwar Sadat's
peace initiatives wlth Israel.
Diplomatic envoys oC the four
nation• were summoned to the
Enptian Forel&n Minlatry and
given 24 hours to leave the coun-
try, the Middle East News A&en-
cy reported. (Related story, Ar>
The aaency said E1ypUan
diplomatic officials in the four
countries were instructed t.o re-
turn home .. immediately."
The four countries and the Palestinians concluded five-
day summit talks in Tripoli,
Libya, with a declaration also
"freezing" relations with E&Ypt.
The Egyptian retaliation move
exempted Iraq, which took part
in the summit talks, apparently
because it walked out of th&
meeting and did not sign the
declaration.
Murder Charge s
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police
say a a.year-old motorist, Paul
Staffiero of San Die&o, wu
booked for lnvesti1atton of
murder followin& a routine traf-
fic violation atop. Offtcers found .
he wa1 beine aoutht In the July
shooting death ol Joel Mungia
durlnl a street confrontation, of.
ficers said.
a declalon by the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court that said auch or·
dere routinely given by police for
Hlf-protecUon violate the
motol'lata' comtltutlonal rtabta.
"Establishing a face-lo-face
confrontation diminishes the
posaibUlty, otherwise substan-
tial, that the driver can make un-
o ba e rved movements," the
court '1 majority said in an un·
signed decision. "ThJ1, ln tum,
reduces the likelihood that the of-
ficer will be the victim of an as·
sault."
The ruling saJd "the safety or
the officer" la justlflcation
enough for an intrusion of a
motorist's rights.
Justices Thurgood Marshall,
William J. Brennan Jr. and John
Paul Stevens dl.ssented, saying
the court was expanding police
powers too broadly. .
In seeking Supreme Court rP.-
view, the Philadelphia district
attorney's office said the state
court ruling "disregards the
clear need for POiice officers to
take reasonable and minimal
precautions for their own safety."
The appeal said the rulin1
"needlessly increases" the risk
of a police officer's death or serious injury.
Two Philadelphia policemen
stopped motorist Harry Mimms
in 1971 when they noticed that his
car carried an expired license·
tag.
One of the two officers ordered
Mimms out of the car, and then
noticed a bulge in Mimms' coat.
The officer frisked Mimms and
round a loaded .38-caliber pistol
tucked in the waist of bis
trousers.
Mimms was arrested, and
eventually was convicted of U-
legal poaeulon of a pistol and
carryine a concealed deadly
weaPOn. He was s~ntenced to 18
months to three years in prison.
But on appeal, the state
Supreme Cou rt reveraed
Mimms' conviction and orC!ere<l
a new trial. It declared that
Mimms' constitutional rights
against unreasonable searches
guaranteed by the Fourth
Amendment had been violated
when the police officer ordered
him out of the car without good reason.
Therefore, the court said, the
pistol could not be introduced as
evidence al Mimms' trial.
NB. Burglary
Loss $4,600
Newport Beach police are
seeking the thief who broke into a
Peninsula Point home Sunday
and took a variety of items
valued at •.600.
Rodney Allen Bleam told
police he discovered the burglary
when he returned home after a
day's abllence.
He said stereo equipment,
camera equipment and two an·
tJque pocket watches are mis1ing
from hlshome.
Fro.Page Al
VOYAGE •••
She said the ambassador's let-
ter was based on Columbus' re·
port from Lisbon to the Spanish
monarch and Queen Isabella,
and the envoy told his brother
four tbn .. es he had read it.
Mom, Fetra
Hopes Fade
N'BW YORK (AP) -A
com at°" presnant woman has developed pceumonia
and Internal bleed.ins and
doctor1 held little hope that
ellber the or ber ~montb
old fetus could bo kept alive. ·
Dr. Thomaa La Barbera,
director of the cntJcal care
unlt at Victory Memorial
Hospital, dt1cribed th•
condltJoo of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, 27, on Sunday
as "poor, very poor."
Mrs. Manlscalo, who col·
lapsed Into a coma Nov. 2$
arter sufferln1 aevero
bleeding In her brain, lJ be·
Ing kept on several Ute sup·
port syst.ema at the req~t or her family.
Mesa Bid
.Rejected .
On Autos
Costa Mesa city otflciala are
awaitU., Sid Soffer'• next move
tegardlna the montb-lon1 battle that beaan when city tow trucks
hauled three vintaie Cadillacs
off hia proRertY.
Soffer, who runs Sid 'a Blue
Beet reataurant In Newport
Beac~ has rejected a city pay-
ment offer of $127 to cover his
towlna coeta.
At one Point durina last week's
plannlns c0mmls1lon meetin1,
city offkiall even asked Softer to
help them rewrite an admittedly
"ambl1uoua" nuiaance abate-
ment ordinance that led to the
towlna.
The bearded reataurateur uys
he doesn't have tlme for that. but
he certalnly hu tlme to continue
his on·going battle which be now
believes bu escalated to a more
important level.
''They (ctly 1on1n1 inspect.on)
came on my property and towed
my cara away even thoup they
weren't dismanUed or lnopera-
ble," says Soffer ... The cara
didn't fall under the ord.lnance
and I tblnlC they mlpt be liable
for this,'' be adcb.
Citing add itional ••act.-
mlnlstrative costs" beyond the
towlna fees toeet bis tars back to
his property at 900 Arbor St., Sof-
fer says be may now file an intent
to aue the city.
He can't say bow much more
money he wants, but says be may
use the intent to 1ue document to
"put the city on probaUon" for
six months.
If the city doesn't blow it .,aln
during this time, Soller may drop
the suit. Otherwise be plans to sue.
City officials have admitted to
the confusing nature ol a letter
that led to the towine when Sof.
fer 's maJled request for a public
hearing on the matter was not
"received" by the city within 10
days.
Assistant City Attorney Tom
Wood says steps have been taken
to clear up any similar problems
in the furture.
However, Soffer believes his
property right. were violated
and he plans to make his voice
heard again before city official$
jn the near future.
Blood Tests Set
1''ree blood pressure clinics,
sponsored by the Orange County
Chapter of the American Red
Cross and State Mutual Saflnls,
will be held Wednesday, Dec.7, 10
a.m. to 12 noon, and Thursday,
Dec. 8, 1 to 3 p.m., at State
Mutual Savings, 4001 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach.
• SO unique it the ertltanship of this authentic United Stl\IS
120 goldpiece watch, It measures time In gon-ratlona not houri.
Swiss madt In 181< gold, It contQins one of
the world's thlnnest3S·Jewel self·wlndlng movements.
Limited In avallabllity, museum quality,
It's• collector's treasur•. '3,590. Non .. automatlc 13,250.
Saddlellaek
VOL 70, NO. 339, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES •
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
'
School Board Delays Bond . -Election
Saddleback Valley Unified
School Di!trlct's on agal!l, off
agaln plans for a school bulldt.na
bond election are off again.
District officials now are look-
ing toward June, 1979, as the date
when they expect to bold the elec-
tion.
When school opened in the fall,
administrators were recom-
mendi~ that trustees seek voter
approval of local bond.a tA>taU.nc
$75 million and another $10
mllllon in State School Building
Pro1ram fuoda on March 7, UJ78.
District trustees were then
scheduled to decide whether they
would call the election on
Wednesday. The Issue, however.
is not listed on the agenda for the
school board meeting.
Superintendent Richard Welte
said a slowdown in the district's
enrollment growth prompted
him to reconsider the recommen·
dalion. ·
The dlatrict'a scboolJ opened in
September with about sao fewer
studenta than expected. Robert
FergUISOQ, the district'• director
of plannin& and development.
said h11 office is cur;;.antly
evaluating their moat recent
enrollment figures but it appears
the 1cbools are now down about
350 students.
Dr. Welte said there currently
is a slowdown in the sale of new
homes and the resale of existing
hornet Jn the valley. 'l"hl1,
coupled wltb a_peculatJon, bu
contributed '° the trend ot re-duced powth, he talc!.
Tbe 1u.perintepdent sald thmv
atao bas beeo a 0 dramatlc
chance" in tho qe of younpt.ers
movinc in'° the district. Y OWll tamtlla with young children,
who bad been e~pected to fill the element•ry acboob, can no
lonaer afford the down payment.a
or monthly payment.I on homes
Stock Trade Halted
At Bert Lance Bank . .
.............
l Photo's Wortla SJ lfllllion
That's 4,000 pounds of marijullla on which
Corona Det. Les Scott is sitting. The pot
was seized in a raid b) Corona last July
anci authorities inclQerated it 1n Colton
this week. Its value was estimated at $1
million and police couldn't resist the urge
to record the haul with a photo. Wielding
the camera is Riverside County Deputy
District Attorney John Cbessell, rieht.
Golden West Wins
1 Pre-trial Victory
Lawyers for the Golden West
Publishing Corporation won
what they regard as an lmpor·
t.ant. pre-trial victory lo the
Orange County Superior Court.
trial of a lawa\llt filed byJ.aiuna
News.Post publisher Vernon
Spitalert.
·Judge Walter Charamza ruled
immediately befofe aUowina bis Jury to hear openhlg statemtata
that juron must DOC be tolcJ th'at
Spltaleri 'a <.'ODStltutionaJ rilhts
were violated when he allepdly
was bam!d from delivertna hit
papers at Laguna Hllll LeJlure
World.
Judge O>aram.ia, re~ tM
argument. by attomex W. Mllce
McCray t.bat conatltutlonal
Coast
Weat•er
Low cloudi Wlth local
den•e fot n.lsbt and earl)'
morntna hours, otherwlH
hazy 1unablne. Lows '8 to
N . Hl1b1 ~etday from mJd-eGI at the beacbn to
mJd·70I inland.
rights in the ~a of free press
were violated by the defendants
when Spitaleri 'a papers were de·
Died entry to the retirement com·
munlly.
Spitaleri seeks a total of not
leas than $7.4 mlWon in dama1es
in a lawsuit that pits his
publishing company a1ainst the
Golden West 1roup, publisher
Carlton Smith and advertising
mana1tni Richard Blrc:ball.
Ri.t action all~ei that the de.
fend ant.a engaged in a conspiracy
that has effec:tJveJy kept bis
newSJ>apers out of Leisure World
for the paat 10 years.
'
'Mockingbird'
Killed by
School Board
EDEN VALLEY, Minn. (AP)
-The Eden Valley-Watkins
school board has voted to strike
the Pulitzer Prize.winning novel
"To Kill a Mockingbird" from a
high school readlne list on
grounds that the book contains
offensive lanllJage.
The 4·2 vote by the board ln th1I
central Minnesota district came
against the advice of the superin· ·tendent.
The board also voted 3·2, with
one ap.steutlon, '°remove entire·
ly from school shelves the book
"Runaway Diary," the story of a.
16-year-old ruQaway &lrl.
About so parents slaned a peti-
tion of complaint askinc removal
of lbe books.
Harper Lee'• novel about
aeethin1 racial (eelln1a in an
Alabama town in the 1930s, which
won t.be Pulitzer in 1"1. was
found objtcUooable because it ln· c:l~e1 jillruM 1uch as "damn,"
0 GOd..c&mrled whore," •'nl11er"
aad .. w~ lady."
A motl~ by board member
Paul Kerman to remove 'To Kll1
a MocldnablJd" from the •chool
altoaether f alled for lack of a
1ec0Gd.
Jn .. Run•••>' i>iary." obJee·
tlona were ralled to deacriptlom
of Hxul.1 conduct. JICeranan maintaJAed tbo book wu • ._
help at au '° cet rid of all the
problea •• have in •cbOol ~ all the ~pant clrlt we bav.
each )'ear."
Board member Rlchard Stena•. who OppoMd both mo..
tJOil•, 1ald. "U W9 tan eltbtr OM
of u. ... boOkl oUC Of die teboiol,
we'd b.ve to tblak aboilt ~
rid ot the Blbl•L'nd tbi
DtWlpa,,.,.. tiiCaUH W8 ... tbit
protanlt1 1D \be paJ*I e\IW7
daJ."
Supt. ~ Blui Mbl U.
board to ..... Ult ...... .,...
~~:l::,=~
•t.ODbft" 4
Selling
Holdings
Studied
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Federal bank reautators today
JUU\OuAced a 10.day trading aus-
penaroa 1\) the stock of the Na-
tional Ba.Dk of Georgia, the bank
once headed by Bert Lance, wbo
resigned in September u Prell·
dent Carter'• budcet director.
John Heimann, the come·
!,roller ot lbe currency and cbJet
reculator ol naUoaal banks, 1ald
the tradlnc 1uapenalon wu or-
dered "followtni a written re. q-.\~U:!t•" bl Yiew of n-caat trading vol~
an4 pdc:e aaN•'DODQ in the mmttfarti...cocL ....
Heimann Wet ~r l'UllOD
for th• ~Jod wu to allow
time tor the pubKc to learn full)'
about neeotiatiou by Lance to
sell a portion « hls aubstantial
holdinp of bank stocks.
The 1uspenaloo wu etfectlve
immediately.
Lance, ~ldent of the bank
before Jolninl the Carter ad·
mhrlstration thl• year, bolds
about 200,000 abaret, or about.16
percent of the bank'• stock.
A sharp drop mthe value of the
1hares after Lan.ee became
director ol the Offtce of Manqe-
ment and Bud1et 1tarted the
chain ot events that led to ques-
tion• about hll' financial deallnp
and to hi.I raip.atlon ID Sep.
tember.
Althoqh Lance bas retumed
to private life, be remains an un-
official adviser to Carter, hll
close friend.
The lnve1tt1atlon into bls
financial deallnp la still being
conducted by several aovern·
ment a•endea. •
Shara of the National Bank ol
Georcla, one of Geor1la 'a
Jar1eat, are tl'aded 1n the over-
tbe·counter securities market.
Tbe tradln1 aupenaion w111 terminate Dec. 1' the comp.
trolleraald.
-The comptroller'• office uld
that eecurttlea dealers and
bl'Oken, 1barebolder1 and pro-
1pecUve purcbuers of tbe bank's
stock ••are cautiQned that they
should evahaaW~ infonD.UOO
nallable ana ~ lntormatloo
1ublequeatly Jailifid by the bank
and or &be.,.et lnlnterett. ''
in the cn.trtct, 6• ul>lalaed.
'lYou don't want to bold (a
bond election) untJJ you need tt
but you ~t to bold Jt at the best,
mo1t opportune ttmo, •• the
superintendent said.
He 111d Fersuaon met with
county and state offlclala end de-
termined that June, 19'79, :'When
there la no p~ary, 1ea'1'al or
·school trustees elecUoa, Will be
,the next beat titne for a boild elec·
ti.on.
Mom, Fetus
Hopes Fading
NEW YORK CAP> - A
comatGSe pregnant woman
has developed pneumonia
and internal bleedln& and
doctors held UWe hope th.at
either she or her s.month·
old fetus could be kept
alive.
Dr. Thomas LaBarbera,
director of the critical care
unit at Victory Memorial
Hospital, described the
condition of Rosemarie
Maniscalco, Z'T, on Sunday
as "poor, very poor."
Mrs. ManU!calo, who col-
lapsed into a coma Nov. 23
after suffering severe
bleedinl ln her brain, ts be· ing kept on several We sup-
port systems at the request
of her family.
High Court
.Backs Rule
On Safety
WASfDNG'l'Qf( (AP) -11'e
U .s. $upreme Court ruled tedaJ'
t,b.aL J>(dlca. officers may lefallF
order motoriats atopped for traf·
fie vlol.UOU to set out of \belr cus.
The eowt. voting 6-3, reversed
a decision by the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court that said such or·
den routinely given by police for
seJf.protectlon violate the
moton.ta' constltutlonal rights.
•'Eatabiltb.lng a face-to-faee
confrontation dlminiabes tbe
poaaiblllty. otherwise aubsta.n·
tial, that the driver can make UD·
observed movements,,,. the
court's mljority aald in an un·
signed decision. •"This, in tum,
reduces the likelihood that. the ol-
ficer wW be the victim of an as-
sault."
The rullnC said ''the 1afety of
tbe officer" is JuatlflcaUon
enough for an intrusion of a
motorist's rights.
Justices Thurgood Maraball,
Wllliam J. Brennan Jr. and Jobn
Paul Stevena dlasented, •8Ylnl
the court was expandinc police
powers too broadly.
In aeeldng Supreme Court re-
view, the Philadelphia district <SeeSAFE'l'Y, PageA.2)
There ts a 0 Jot of psycholoo ..
to a bond election, the 1upertn.
tendent Hid, and certain tlmef
have Jess probabWty Of success
than otben. But, irrespeetlve ot
when the election ls called, be
aald, ottlclala will have a selllng
job to do.
Trustees and admlntstraton
bave woni~ publlcly about the
erowth in the d.Lstrict. and the
need for more money tor school
<SeeBOND, Pace AZ)
* * * Decision
Slated
In Capo
'trustees are expected to de-
cl a e tonlaht whether the
Capistrano Unifted School Dis-
trict will call tor a $l9 mll1ion
bond l.ssue, a $27 mlllion lease.
purchase acreement or a $15
million state apportionment elec-
tion March 7.
. Tonigbt'a school board meet-
·1ng will begin at 7:30 at district
offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in
&an .Juan Capistrano.
All thNe measures have been
recommended for the March 7
ballot by Supt. Jerome TbornsleyA Results of a com-
munity survey ahowed q percent
of the nespoodents favor both a
·bond and a lease·purcbue elec.
tion, Tbornaley aaid.
'•The superintendent main·
talns the position that It ts consts.
tent wit.babe democratic process
to allow tPe electorate to volce their oplnlona officially by put-
ting ~e:se iaauea before them,••
be sald fna memo to trua~
Trutee F.dward Westbera has
opposed a leaae-purebue ~ tion, aa,m, It would be a ells·
service to voters to offer them a •
1ehool coast:ruction option IO in· lertorto a band J.nue.
A suceesaful bond election
would cmtloue a 90-ffnll tu
rate, admin1atntora have aald. A
lease-purchase agreement would
bite taxes about SO cents beyond
the 90-eent rate.
A bond election requires two.
thirds voter approval, a lease-
purcbae election a simple ma·
Jorlty.
School comtruction funds are
needed to proride housini for ap-
proximately 8,000 new students
officials anticipate will move into
the Capistrano district in the next
five years, aald Thomsley.
District elementary schools
are currenUy full and blgh
schools crowded, he said~
Emigration Denied
LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R. (AP)
-The wife of chess grandmaster
Vlktor Korchnol, who defected *°
• tbe West 17 months a10, ,_,.
Soviet authorities bave refused
permission for her and ber aoo to
emigrate.
Hearing on Heroin
Delayed ~or · Data
' A prelbnl.nary hearlnl OD Ala·
ander KU11k'• heroin pesseslloo
cbarc• wu postponed todtY in aouth Otange County Municipal
Court.
..
AZ DAIL y PILOT SB
Boy Hort
As Boillb
Explodes
OAKLAND (AP) -A teeo·afe
boy remained in critical coodi·
tion after a letter bomb be found
on a bus stop bench exploded ln
his hands, authorities aaid.
Police Lt. Ray Bir1e said Al•
jandros Morales, 13, and live
boys had just left a movie theater
at about 12:20 a.m. Sunday when
they spotted the envelope.
The device exploded when
Morales opened lt, Birge said.
The boy underwent abdominal
surgery and was treated for
burns, metal fracments in his
eyes and injuries to bia arm,
hospital information officer
Susanne Coffey reported.
Members of the Morales fami-
ly said Alex lost b.is left band and
possibly bis eyesight.
David Zamora, 16, also of
Oakland, was hospitalized in sta-
ble condition with metal frag-
ments in his eye. Three other
Morales children and a friend'
were released after emergency
treatment.
"After the movie we were
walking and we passed a bus
stop. There wall an envelope on
the bench there and it caught my
brother's eye. We thought there
might be some money in it for
us,'' said Alejandros' brother,
Alfonso. 16.
"Alex opened It and it just blew
up. Everybody flew back except
for Alex and David. They just fell
right there. My eyes were burn-
ing and stufC. I was just trying to
hold back my little sister and my
little brother."
His sister Rocio, 14, said the
bomb was in a brown or manila
envelope with no writing on it
and was inside a plastic bag. She
said It blew up as Alex started to
pull out something which looked
like "an old shredded book."
Marine, Teen
Charged in
-Kidnap, Rape
Orange County Sherlfl's or.
ficers have booked an El Toro
Marine and a 15·year·old male
juvenile from that area on
charges of rape and kidnapping
after investigating the reported
abduction of two ts-year-old girls
in the El Toro area.
Marine David Edward Coff-
man, 19. was booked into the
county jail after being linked to
the incident reported Friday. His
alleged companion is in Juvenile Hall.
Investigators said they believe
CoHman and the boy picked up
the two girts as they walked
<Jlong the edge of the roadway
near the intersection of El Toro
Road and Trabuco Road.
They said the two girls were
then raped in the assailants' car
at <1 location 11everal miles away
<ind theri allowed to leave the
vehicle. They immediately
called police.
Officers suld today that Coff.
man Is being questioned about
an earlier rape In the Irvine
area. They said Irvine police told
them Coffman answers the
description of the man they are
S<.'Cking.
Fe~ale Cops
Less Decisive
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federally funded study of New
York police officers elves women
and m en slmtlar patrol.
performance marks, but it notes
that the women tended to defer
decisions to male partners rather
than assert themselves.
A report on the seven-month
study released Sunday recom-
mended special tralnln1 to en-
courage male officers to accept
women as on-the·Job equals and
to encourage more assertiveness
from women officers.
0 .. ANO! COAIT SI
DAILY PI LOT
•
...,......,u,...,~
B...,aiiSla ... 9
Stab Victim's
Services Set
Funeral services are pending
today for John A. Ha1an of
Corona del Mar who was
stabbed to death this weekend
white camping near Ronolulu.
Th• 21-year-old man died after
he eonfn>n.ted and fought with a
man he suspected had stolen his
camping equipment two weeks
earlier, police sald.
The victim's mother, Mrs.
Watter Hagan ot 3007 Harbor
View Drive, said •ervices will
probably be held m1dweek at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church ln
Corona del Mar.
Tnl$tees
,
She said her f amlly bu llved 1A
Corona del Mar for aev•ral yean
and noted that her ion attacled
Harbor View Ele1nentary School.
Lincoln lntermt41ate Sobool and
was 1raduated f~m CorOaa cW
Mar Hip School In 1'75. Sb•lald
he was acUve on the 1cbool '1
track team.
Two men were lo police
custody today 1D conneetieo wit.ti
the incident. Their oamea were
not immediately rel"49d.
No one saw the actual lmUlnp.
FIREMEN WORK OVER INJURED LAGUNA BEACH YOUTH AFTER CRASH ON CANYON ROAD
Steven Swearingen In Crttlcal Condition; Paaaenger Only Slightly Hurt Discuss
Bui laing
But witnesses who bad been
camplna with Ha1an sald the vie· tim bad nm after a van Saturday
night to confront the M·year-old
driver resardlDg a Nov. 23 theft.
Hagan bad been seeking the
driver for more than a week, of.
ficlals said . Hagan reportedly
got into a scuffle with a man and
his 19-year-old brother-in-aw,
t.hen fell to the ground. Fro111 P~ AJ
SAFETY ..•
attorney's office said the state
court ruling "dis regards the
clear need for police officers to
take reasonable and minimal
precautions for their own
s afety."
The appeal said the ruling
"needlessly increase~" the risk
or a police officer's death or
serious injury.
Two Philadelphia policemen
stopped motorisl Harry Mimms
in 1971 when they noticed that his
car carried an expired license·
tag.
One of the two officers ordered
Mimms out or the car. and then
noticed a bulge in Mimms' coat.
The officer frisked Mimms and
found a loaded .38·caliber pistol
tucked in the waist of his
trousers.
Mimms was arrested , and
eventually was convicted of ii·
legal ppssession or a pistol and'
carrying a concealed deadly
weapon. He was sentenced to 18
months to three years in prison.
But on appeal, the state
Supreme Court reversed
Mimms' conviction and ordered a new trial. It declared that
Mimms' constitutional rights
against unreasonable searches
guaranteed by the Fourth
Amendment had ~n violated
when the police officer ordered
him out of the car without good
reason.
Therefore, the court said , the
pistol could not be introduced as
evidence at Mimms' trial.
Kids Abandoned
LYNWOOD (AP > -Three
Morales children, Debbie, 13,
Eric, 12, and Felicia, 4, who re·
portedly were without food for
more than a day and had not seen
their mother in a week were
found abandoned by the landlord
of their apartment, she riff's
deputies said.
Sports Car Flips
SB College Coach's
Son Hurt in Crash
Police said a Laguna Beach
Youth, w\io told his passenger to
buckl e his seat belt s hortly
before passing three cars on
Laguna Canyon Road Sunday
evening, was in critical condition
today after apparently losing
control of h1~ sports car.
Steven Dave Swearingen, 19,
888 Summit Way, the son of Ken
Swearingen, Saddleback College
head football coach, was in the
intensive care unit at Saddleback
Community Hospital after police
and firemen from Laguna Beach
lifted the young man's sportacar
to extract the victim from the
wreckage. He's the Aasoclat~
Student Body vice president at
Saddleback.
S wearingen 's passenger,
Steven Desmond Williams, 19, of
34592 Calle Paloma, Capistrano
Beach, was only slightly hurt jn
the 6 :45 p.m. crash one mile east
of El Toro Road.
He told officers at the scene
that Swearingen had told him to
buckle up shortly before he at-
tempted to pass three vehicles on
the two-lane roadway.
Police Sgt. A. J. de Luca said
the small foreign car apparently
went out of control on retuinlng
to the right band side or the
roadway.
Saddleb.ack Community
College District trustees will dis-
·cuss the district's five-year con-
struction plan and the state's
Community College Construction
"Act when they meet at 1 o'clock
this evenidg in the campus
library.
•Trustees are required to com-
plete the five-year plan to con-
tinue receiving state funds for a
portion of their construction
projects.
Projediona indicate that. by
the year 2000, the district will
have at leut 50,000 students and
spend more than $70 milllon on
construction projects.
Within that time, the dhtrict'a
populatiop also ls expected to
surpllSS that of other community
college districts in the county.
Saddle back's popula\lon.
wblc'b now ls the lowest in tbe
county, is expected to grow to the
largest with s,12,400 in the year
2000.
Building projects on both the
district's maln Mission Viejo
Campus and its new northern
facility in Irvine are projected to
meet the needs of thls growtnc
population.
Also during the , meetlne.
trustees are expected to consider
a. resolution on the Com-
prehensive Educatfon Trai.nlng
Act In-School Youth Pro1ram.
, His friendl aaid they ran after
the two men once they realized
Hagan had been hurt. One of the
friends dragged the men back to
where Hqan lay.
Hagan was pronounced dead at
the seen~.
The friends Hagan bad met
mainly campers like hlmaelf -
said the young mao hact been
robbed of ~ while watcbing a
surfing tournament on Oahu's
nortbshoreinlateNovember.
The day before Thanks1lving,
Nov. 23, someone stole Hasu's
camera. a watch, a 1mall porta..
ble stove, a knife and a key for a r.
locker at the Honolulu lntenia· .,,
Uonal A.lrport while be wu 1urf • ;
lng at Sunset Beach. The thief ,.
also stole S16.
Hagan lea.med later tbJt the
thief then used the locker key to
take his fishing sear and more
personal belonainp.
About that time, while lnqutr.
lng about hil kayak, whlcb bad
been sfored In & container ~
shipyard, Hagan wp ~Id that
two persons bad twice tried to
claim the boat.
Arter ~e second theft, one of '
hi• friends said she saw Hasan
"walking \IP. and down the beacb crying."
The people who tnew blm
described Hagan aa a quiet,
serious person who loved body
surfing, fishing and running.
'Sam' Avoids Reality
Ul'll'Mlo
Dlplonlat IHn
Dav id K. E. Bruce, veteran
American diplomat whose
pos ts included mainland
China, died today of a heart
attack at Georgetown
Univers ity Medical Center
in Washington. He was 79.
NEW YORK (AP> David
Berkowitz, charged wilh being
the "Son of Sam" killer, has
totally withdrawn from reality,
the New York Post reported to-
day.
But in diaries written during
the four months in bis isolation
cell at Kings County Hospital, the
Post said, Berkowitz admitted he
Is "addicted to kllUne."
laughing all day long."
Be rkowitz, 24, claimed he
been possessed by demona in kill·
ing six persons and wounding
seven others.
In captivity, he has settled into
a routine or sleeping and writins,
the Post said. He does not seek
conversation, does not want vis-
itors and as ks only for a
st eady s upply or paper and
pencils.
that I ome a useleu tool for
Sam."
In some entries, he discusses
the families or his victims and
says that .sometimes he feels
Sam may want him to kill a fami-
ly member.
"It certainly is true about
families of the victims Uvlng in
torment," he wrote. "However,
no one was more tormented than
me. By that I mean even before
the shootings began.
Did Columbw Sail
The Post got copies of the
handwritten diaries and printed
e xcerpts along with pictures
taken inside the prison ward of
the hospital.
"Now that I am Imprisoned I
am quite content," Berkowitz
wrote. "I feel that Sam has Jost
some of bis bold on me and I also
see Sam cannot use me as a tool
for destruction.
The newspaper said his writipg
is in a strong, free hand. It said It
was clear that he wants to re-
main Jocked away for life and
that he rears a return of hi5 de·
mons.
"I will gladly show anybody
how much I tried to avoid it all
before il began. I foutht the d•
moos with all my stren,U.. I
tried to put an end to thelr rotten
existence, yet I 've met with
failure." With Four Vessels?
'ROME CAP) -An Italian am·
bassador's letter written in 1493
indicates that Christopher
Columbus made his first voyage
to America with four s hips rather
than three as history records, an
Italian professor reports.
Mrs. Bonvinl Mazzanti says
the letter was written from
Barcelona on March 9, 1493, by
Annibale de Gennaro, the am-
baaaador of the king of Naples. It
wept to de Gennaro's brother, the
anfbassador to the duchy of
Milan, and the scholar said sbe
found It in the archives of the
!.;ate family, which ruled in Modena then.
According to history, Colum·
bus' first expedition In s~arch of
a westward water route to the
Far East consisted of three
caravels, the Nina, the Pinta and
tbe Sant. Maria. But Mrs. Bon-
vini Mazzanti says de Gennaro,
in telling hia brother about the
Toro Holdup
Yields $500
explorer's departure from Spain,
wrote:
"For the entreaties of one
called Columba, It pleased the
king that he s hould rig four
caravels because he said he
wanted to go across the Grand
Sea and sail straight westward
long enough as to reach the
Orient since the world being
round he could but make a turn
and find the eastern part."
fi'ro111PageAJ
BOND. • •
more than a
''I remember when the police
placed the handcuffs on me. It
was then thal I had my first taste
or freedom, yes, freedom. I WU
happy, real happy. In fact, I
found myself smllln1 and
,
''If a fortune teller were to
have forecast back in 1973 that I
was going to become a homicidal
maniac, killing people, I would
not have believed her ... "
•'I guess I am addicted to kill·
ing, since Sam baa me working
like a clock at regular intervals. I
just hope that people can see my
torment and Jock me away some
place and. throw away the key so
At one point in the diary be
wrote: "I am very tense now
because I can feel the power of
Sam aescendlng on me ... I don't
want to hurt anyone, but I will for
Sam.
"I trunk Sam wants me to kill
someone. Perhaps one or the vie· tim 'a ramUy.
SO unique is the artlaanahip of thl• authentic United States
•20 goldplece watch, It measure.a time In generations not houra. •
Swiss made In 1 Qk gold, It contains one of
tho world's thinnest 351ewet self ·winding movtmonts.
Limited fn avallablllty, mueeum Quality,
It'• a collector'• treasure. *3,590. Non·automatlc *3,250.
-
S ONLY PtLOT ..
Energy Pia•
•t
WASHINGTON CAP> .-TOmakelW'eltiln'tcauptun·
prepared for another wb)ter ot H¥en tuel abortqes. the
federal governmeat la dlat.rtbutia• • l\dd• on how belt to
cope with eold·•eatber enerl)' eDM1raencJea.
Fuel allocaUom. maad•&or7 t.MrmOltat 1.utnp and a
variety " Jess ~poula for migknlstn1 abortacea of nabanl pa. oil.. propaoe and by4roelectrle JQwel'\
are clllcussed In \be two-volume ••Enerp Emer1mey Plan· ning Guide. 0
It WU outlined to the,,_. tJ7 Darid J. Bardin, bead of
the department•• eeono~ ,..,a)atoq tdmlnlstratloll.
TD GlJJDBt aBLEASBD BY TBE J)epartnatat of •
Eneru. ts the flnt comprebenalve attempt by the aovem• 1
ment to outline pot4QUal probleml lnwolvlnf all m.tor'
eneriy ~ and to recocnmend • .,. that federal an4 •
atate •lendes ~ deal,wltb \heal.
The 1ovemlbent. lw prepared fuel emer1ency plans~
put years, but ODl.Y 1n reapoaee to lmmedlate lrobWma1•
aucb as the Mid~ oU eml)arao of 1973·'1• ~ cbronic: ,
wlnteraborla1eaota.tura1au.