HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-07 - Orange Coast Pilot••
V Olley Kids Grabbed
With '
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 7, 1977
' gel Dust'
VOL rt, MO. Ml, 4 HCTIOMI, • PMH
• Sex Kidnap Suspect Balled Out
• FBI .Releases Kennedy Files
•IO Santa.Ana Fibns Obscene
• Fleeing Snspeet Defies Fog
Cyprus Base Hit j
-
, I . u~2 Spy Plane
! Crash Kills 5
FV Teens A1Tested '
I NICOSIA, Cyprus <AP> -An
American U-2 apy plane cruhed
today as it wu taking off from
the Britiah Akrotlrt air bue ln
southern Cyprus, killing five peo-
ple and lnJurlnl seven, a British
mllttary apokesmaa reported.
the dud include d the
American pUot or the U.S. AJr·
Force biab-alUtude recon·
.Jury Finds
lOSantaAna
Films Ob1cene
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. DlllfP!le4tMlf
,. .... ,........
.......... , .... et'
For all the travail, Sen.
Hubert Humpbrey has re·
llabed the fight, says AP
special correspondent
Walter R. Meara. And there'• 1omethln1 awry.in the
eulo1les pouring out to the
man baUlln& his final illness.
See story, Page 88.
Raids F~llow Sclwol Drug Sale
By &OBERT BARKER
Of 1111 .... ,, " ....... " A 15-year·old girl stunned an
undercover Fountain Valley .
police officer earlier this year
when she allegedly sold him five
balloona of heroin near the Los
Aml1oa Hi1b,School campus.
The incident touched off an In·
tensive 1nvesU1aUon Into drug
aalea at the Loe Aml1oe campus
wblcb this mornin• resulted in
the arrest of elghf Juveniles on
charges or selllng dangerous
drugs.
One adult, Fred James Allen,
18, of COCO West First St., Santa
Ana, alao was arrested as teams
of policemen struck at the homes
of suspects in Santa Ana and
Fountain Valley at 8 a.m.
Sgt. Ed Parker, who 11 In
charge or the Fountain Valley
Special Enforcement Detail, said
FBI Releases JFK
Assassination Files
and bl1 killer, Jack Ruby was
convicted of murder and died of
cancer.
Oswald's Cuban connections
have figured In some conspiracy
theories, and the newly released
flies show that the FBI checked
<See JPIC, Pase A!)
love Kidnap
Suspect Free
On Low Bail
LONDON (AP) -A fonner
Amerlc:ao beaU\y cootat wlnner
and her '=': accomplice, •c· cued ol 1pplna a Mormon mluf onary for lier Hllual
fl'.8WlcatlOA, have been fr-.d on
ball oo tbe coCldlUon that tbey live •ltb be.r mother who la 1n
En1laftd fO&' the trial. Tb• J7·1ear·old American
womJn hU belD ordtrtd to 1tand trial oo eba.raee of kldnapplna
th11ll.·1ear-c>ld Mormon, who tetUlled be waa chained to a bed
&ad forttd to have IHUal ln· tercoune wttb her l.hrH Umu. lorce KeKA•nef,iof Aib1vW1,
N.C., a foirmer Miit Wyomlnl· USA .,......, cant.It. wtaoer, wu
retuMd cm sa,eoo nu ~ th• rauq TUlild.Y. S.ltb Ma1\l4' or ... ,wooa. cam.:~. whO "u be tn•d;,:.S Ul8 Hm• cbatfe. al.o
••• ooball. Ball WH: 1ranltd after .a
pqettlatrbt U1d Mill KeKiaMY
would ~ iftentally and
pbyatc.U,, It a. wen ~ 1n
(IM ............... ,
moat of the reported sales ln·
volved PCP, which also is called
••angel du.st."
Parker said that PCP ls pro-
duced in laboratories. It ls used
as an animal tranquilizer.
"PCP ls more dangerous than
LSD and, 1n my oplnlon, even
worse than heroin because of the
damace ll can do t.o the brain,"
he aald. "It la powerful enough t.o
knock out an elephant."
Parker aald Lbat police worked
with administrators at Los
Amigos IDgh School and enrolled.
an undercover agent In the
school. The Loe Amigos campus
ls 1n the city of Fountain Valley
but 11 part of the Garden Grove
Unified School Dlatrict.
He aald the operator, who was
not a l>Ollce officer, purchased.
narcotf cs on t.be campus almost
on a dally balls durln1 the in·
vestlgaUon.
The probe began 2'1ii months
a10 when the 15-year-old girl
made Lbe heroin sale.
Ortlcen sald that heroin Is
commonly kept lo smaU, toy ' . <See DRVGS, Pa1e A!)
Oru n i.:t.• Co ~as&
Foa m,bt and momlnt
hours with buy aunabino
alt.rnOOftl tbroulb Tbun-
day. Lowa tonlaht 1n low
·SOI. Hllha Thursday upper
801 at the beacbet and
mld·'70s inland.
l?t8 .. •T08AY
TM mcdn beM1'doriet o~ cold r~• an tM com·
ponltt Utal NU Uwm, Mt 1M
tu//lrff'I IMO bitU Ulna, IQI coblmllW MWon MotmMne&.
Sfl POllf AU.
.... Jt
l:! DAIL f PIL l) T s Wvdntt11day December 7. 1977
,.,Fugitive Capt11red
Joan Little Held After Car Chase
N 1'~W \"OHK CAP) -FugiUve
Joan Llttl~ was arrested here
early loday following a high·
~t:d autoroublle chase through
B{joklyn, a Police Department
sP-Okesman said. She had
e~cuped from a Jail in Raleigh,
N C., nearly two months ago.
Miss Litlll', 23, and a male
<'om paruon 1dent1fied as George
McRae, 29, of Brooklyn, were
Ehrliclnnan
To Go Free
April 27th
W ASlllNGTON <AP> J ohn
0. Ehrhchman, the Watergate
rover up conspirator who ad-
m.itled surrendering has '"elh1cal
and moral Judgment" to Richard
M. Nixon, will be freed April 27
ailer having served 1'2 years an
an A ritona federal prison.
The US. Parole Commission
o.;cl the date Tuesday and in-
fo rm ed the 52.year-old
Kbrhc-hman at the Swift Trail
Prison nt•ar Safrord, Ariz. The
commission's action was an
nounced today
ll1s lawyc•r, Stu:irt Stiller, said
the former White House
domestic <'<mnselor would have
no comment.
· Ehrlichman was convicted,
along with John N. Mitchell and
H.R. Haldeman, of conspiring to
hide White House involvement an
lhc Watergate burglary and then
lying about it under oath.
Mitchell and Haldeman,
respectively attorney general
and chief ol staff m the firs t Nix-
on administration, will become
the last Watergate figures in
prison.
The three were convicted on
New Year's Day 1975 ..
U S. District Judge John J.
San ca sentenced each lo 21'2 to
eight years in prison, but cut lh<'
terms to one to lour years Ja5t
October.
Ehrlichman entered prison
Oct 28. 1976, before the uppeals
process had run its cour!>c, and
satisfied tht' one·vl'ar minimum
u n the anniv ersary date.
lfaldt'man will have completed
his first year June 21, 1978,
Mitchell on June 22. The former
attorney general has asked for
execuuve clemency because, he
sajd. he needs a hip operation.
Ehrlichmnn also•Was• undW la
sentence hf 20 months to fhe
years for conspiring to violate
the rights of Dr. Lewis Fielding
t,y authorizing Wh ite House·
sponsored burglars to search the
California psychiatrist's office.
Ten days alter SaraC'a tra mmed
lhc scntl'nces, 1,1.S. D1stP1ot
.Judge Geth aNJ :A . cr.ese.1(
fol lowed su1t 1n the Fielding case.
..
DRUGS ...
balloons because they can be
swa llowed and quickly con-
cealed.
Parker said thal most of the
heroin sold in Orange County
now comes from Mexico.
He srud police do not have a
rundown on the supplier of the
drugs al this time.
Parker said that PCP 1s
becoming more popular than
marijuana. He said that it can be
produced in borne laboratories in
rela tively simple procedures.
1'he juvenile suspects, who.
ranged from freshmen lo seniors,
according to Parker, were being.
processed and transported lo
Orange County juvenile hall to-
day.
Money for the purchases was
budgeted by the city of Fouolain
Valley. ll was not disclosed how
much money was spent. Parker
said m ost of it was not recovered
"'because we felt it more impor-
tant to stop the sales than to get
Lhe money, back.''
ORANGE COAST s
DAILY PILOT
<'aptured about 2 a.m. near the
Brooklyn waterfront, police said.
Durjng the 11.-~ mile ctrase, the·
palr<W car collided with lhe flee·
ing vehicle. and one policeman
s uffered minor 1njuriits. ·
Miss l.Jltle, whose 1975 trial
and acqwttal on charges ot ldll-
ang her Jailer made international
headlines, was booked on several
charges, includUlg reckless en-
APWl,....18
SEIZED IN BROOKLYN
Fugitive Joan Lillie
Fr-mt1 Page Al
JFK ..•
out at least some clues concern-
ing Cuba."
A Los Angeles informer told
agents the names or two San
Juan, Puerto RJco, men who al-
legedly bad knowledae of "ac-
tivities between Cuba and the
United States." FBI agents In
San Juan then were mstructed t-0
anlerview the men.
In another episode. FBl bead-
quarteni obtained and t.ranalated
~ letter written in Spanish and
mailed from Havana to Oswald
in Dallas. The letter, addressed
to ''F riend L~e '• t.rHl
postmarked six days after th~-as
sassination, spoke or a £10an~
deal and praised Oswald's
marlmnaoabl,p. But I.be Jo.Wal scrutiny "ot the files' did not in·
dicate whether lhls was a mean-
mgful clue or whether it was lbe
work of a headline-seeker.
The FBI will release another ·
40,000 pages next month. Jn the
Lwo batches, offi cials say, will be
all the paperwork generated in
the bureau as it investigated Ute
case.
No files are being withheld, of-·
fic1als say, although many word.a .
and paragraphs have been delet-
ed because they ere cl'assifi ed as
secret or are otherwise exempt
from disclosure.
The agency is releasing lhe
material lo comply with requests
under the Freedom of lnforma·
lion Act. Agents have spent about
18 months screening the files to
delete the classified and exempt
portions.
E'l'"OJll Page A" l
CHASE~· ..
he had just been robbed by a
hitchhiker who look his cat' and,
wallet al knifepoint.
lie said the bandit just drove
onto the freeway southbound
seconds before the policeman's
arrival.
Investigators said Olticer
Jackson immediately started lhe
pursuit which ultimately in·•
vol ved CHP officers, the sheriff's
office and Irvine Police Depart·
menl personnel before it ended.
Rios .llllegedly z()Omed down
the fog-shrouded Garden Grove
Freeway from the San Diego
Freeway, then off • onto the
NewpoS-. Freeway and finally
back to the San Diego Freeway.
He finally abandoned the ap-
parent.. escape 'attempt wblch
ranged horn 80 rAlles J>er hour lo
45 miles per hollr depending on
condition.I encountered al Sand Canyon Avenue.
danaerment, pollce said. She was
also held on a North Carolina
fugitive warrant.
Ortlcers said they had been
told to walch for a 1970 Buick
following a complaint from a
boyfriend of Miss LilUe.
Police said t.be boyfriend, wbo
was not lmmedlalely identified,
apparenUy tried to persuade her
to surrender. Failing in that, he
Jodsed a complaint wlt.b police
alle•lo1 that she and a man
threatened him with a gun at
Kennedy International Airport.
Police sald no weapons were
found in the car or on Miss LitUe
or McRae.
Ben Runkle, a spokesman for
the North Carolina Corr~U~
Department, uJd extradition
proceedings were under way. If
extradited. Miss UlUe would¥
returned to the .same '"°ison Crom
which she escaped, since that is
the only accommodation for
women inmates in the state
system. · .
fn New York, lawyer William
Kunsller said he would fight any
extradition attempt. Kunstter
said Mi ss Little's lawyer, Jerry
Paul, telephoned him from North
Carolina and asked him to
represent Miss LiWe at any pro-
ceedings here.
Pau! i;e_c~nlly ~~rved two
weeks ill Jail in connection with a
contempt citation s temming
from Miss Little's murder trial.
Miss Little, who ls black, had
been found innocent in a trial in
which she claimed she stabbed
white jailer Clarence Alligood in
1974 with an ice pick in self·
defense after he tried to force her
to have sexual relations with him. _ .
However. she was r eturned to
the North Carolina Correction
Center tor Women to complete a
seven lo 10-year sentence tor
brealdnf and entering a mobile
home n her hom e town of
Washinctori. N.C. Her escape
Oct. 15 came one 111oot.b before
abe would have beeo eligible ror
parole.
Miss LilUe had been denied
parole a year ago, but was placed
on a work-release ·program
several months ago, wortlng as a
dental assistant. Her privllege$
were suspended ln early October
after she allegedly reported late
and m issed at least one day's
work at the den Lal office.
E',.._P.,,eAl
KIDNAP .•.
prison any jonger. She and May
must report to police twice daily
and live with Miss McKinney's
mother, who h a~ come lo
England until the case is de·
cided.
They are accused of abducting
Kirk Anderson of Provo, Utah, on
Sept. 14, imprisoning him against
his will in a remote cottage near
Okehamptoo in Devon, a county
in southwest England, possess-
ing a fake revolver and a bottle or
chloroform. They were arrested·
Sept. 20.
Miss McKinney told arresting
officers sbe p layed bondage
games with Anderson to help him
sort out his sexual problems, but
she Hid be wu a willine parUcl-
pant. not a kidnap victiq>.
She tesunttt ·'l'uesday:tbet they
met 2'h years ago in the United
States because she had a sports
car he wanted to drive1 but that
h'!l waa ln love with her, not lhe
automobile.
Miss McKinney admitted she
had an ''all-consuming passion"
for Anderson, then sobbed: ''I
don 'l want anything more to do
with Kirk. He doesn't know what
eternal Jove is. Let me pick up
the pieces or my llle."
She spent more than an hour in
the dock telling the magistrates'
hearin1 her side of the case.
Welfare Cases Up
I.OS ANGELES (AP> _:One of
every seven persona in th~ coun-
t)"' rec~lves some form of public.
aid, according to the Department
or Public SociJJ Servkes. Cowit.y
wellare rolls tor October pused
the 1 mlllloo mark ror the nnt
lime ln hlstoc'y, with a total ot
1,003.8.2' cues.
.. ..
......... le
~CORONA (AP) -Anxious land
developen are atandlna in line
around ~ clock for three days
wailing tor this community's
)'ear-old moratorium on new
bomet to end.
"It 's a litUe unusual to turn the
City CouncU chambers into a
dormitory with people watching
TV, ealing and loungln1 aroun4
day and night." William Ket-
teman of the Building and Plan-
ning Department said.
But the develope(s want first
crack at permits for up to 1,985
new housing units alter a no-
crowtb •atorium ends at mid-
nilht ~.
The building limitation was or-
dered last year because the city's
sewage system was unable lo
keep up wilh residential building
DEVELOPER ERNIE SERVAS WAITING HIS TURN
In Corona, New Home Moratorl\H'ft Nurtng End
' spilling over from Orange Coun-
ty. Now the sewage system has
been expanded to handle lhe 1,985
uolt.s unless part of it is al-
located to inclustry.
Fr-one. Page Al
Since the building limitaUon
went into errect, housing demand
a nd prices in Corona h ave
skyrocketed. So t~e who get the
building ~niits may reap a
finlnilal bdnahZa.
' X-RA TED. MOVIES , ... .. . ......... . ~ . ... ~ ' ..
the verdict was to be regarded as
a "not obscene" ruling.
Judge Weeks quickly corr ecte\i
that impression and sent the
panel back to the Jury room for
further discussion on the five un·
decided movies.
Whatever the verdicts on those
five movies. the jury has already
determined that the Honer Plaza
Theater is a public nuisance, a
rulim~ lhal will allow the city to
closetbefacillty.
'lhe jury·wm also be asked to
assess damages against the
Mitchell Brothers in a hearing
that will be scheduled arter the
first phase or the trial is closed.
Defense attorney Joseph Rhine
'said Tuesday he will go to the ap-
pellate court lo ask for a mistrial
and also halt any acliop the city
may try lo lake against the
theater.
"!l<tt1tl44' bon<>•·• _,..,,.ry d!»•11<1111,hl'd
bylol41r1411.~•·(,>M •
rtm hMd~ ...... "'"' /) ,,,
""""'· lldfu•l41-n .nc:J~ "n•I drop lid cont)llond«'~ ,,,...,, •
W36 0111'1, H6(V1
Rf.0 SI 520 00
Ml.I! t 1290.00
The jury reached unanimous
decisions in declaring lour P( the
17 m~.ip lht.9 ,ciewe4 •·.qa,.
sce ne. Those movies are:
"Sodom a nd Gomorra h ,"
"Sensations," "Teenag4! Fan-
tasies,•· and. "The Story of·
Joanna."
Also declared obscene wll.tt the
jury voling indlcatecl were
"Behind the Green Door," 9 t()3;
"Inside Marilyn Chambers,'' 9 to
3; "Autobiography of a Flea," 10
lo 2; teenage Crullers:' 11 to l ; ''Fren~ etusmates," t to 3 and "LovelnaStranlite Place;'' fl tol . '
The: jury spent part of Uae trial
at the Honer Pim theater ~ew·
ing 17 of 4Z movlea dedtred by
the city or Santa Ana to be ob·
scene and In violation of.th~ ciiy
ordinance.'
Led by John Hoeger, president
of ttae Corona Land Co, represen-
taJ,iye$ i>I J.i ~velooen were in
line by "Tuesday efternoon. wllh
applications for.~ 702 d\feWngs.
And city of,fi~~ls expe~ted ap-
plicatiOllS to outnumber houslng
permU.a by the Ume Clty Hall
opens at 8 a.m. Thursday. aoeaer bad beeo waJUn1 a.Ince
3 p.m. Monday, and lo make sure
no one cheats, the city was taking
roll ·~ reeutar intervals.
Aoyone ~ho misses a roll call
and doesn't report in withln a
21t-mlnute grace period goes to
the end of the line.
. To accommodate. the walUng lane, the council chambers were
op81led tor slee,1>l nc baas . Re~ooms, 1l small ernployee
kitchen and food dlspensers were
also tnadea~aJlable to waIU..,g de·
velopers.
Christmas·
Gifts of
I'
Lastirag Beauty. ..
. by Henfedon
1 hell orig1n.1I, vrry sped.ii c11ft you·~ been 9earchlnq for mav
be n'}ht here. I-or ~our own holll('. for a memtwr of your
f.im1ly. lor thal )'O\.lng l'."ouple suirMq l~ Ji~~· A.-
pi1i:cx1 of Henrcdon lurn1\ure will moke the wtirlhQlbw of
Ouist'™I~ last for m.:iny ~ 10 come. Ht>re are dl\t1n·
gu1shed trca!>Ores from manv perts end stylM, any 01w or
whlc.h Ct)uld bl' tJie perlcrt touch r t""1'"~ r6om. Dl'<:ldb
for your~lf which p1e<.'C' beit suit~ ou. and qlft vour-.t•lf or
">Onwone you kwc with Hcnredon thi~ Chn~mJs Hur r.; !
Um11ed quantiU~ available for lm~1.i1~u~. .
A p,.it r~
lwodra•• r ~S~•Mlt 111\rr-"""' .UV I 'f•t~ t
'"" lll'Jtor.,,. oc '"""'J iwm, WJ9 D 18 H:ZO
RfO. '455M
SALE .,.5.00
\\ I
Orange Coast
EDITION
. . -
0 Today;s Closlq
N.Y.Stoeks
; .VOL. 70, NO. 341, 4 S.ECTIONS, .. PAGES dRANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1977 • c TE~ ce~~1
FBI Rele.ases JFK Assassinatio~ Files
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Ju.st
. lwo hours after John f . Kennedy
was killed, FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover conclude<l that
Lee Harvey Oswald was the as··
sassin and that Oswald wu a "mean·minded individual
... in the category of a out,'' ac·
cording to FBI files released t.o-·
day.
"I calle<f the altQmey general
nt bis home and told him 1
thought we had t.he man who
-I'na Readg'
killed the president down in
Dallas," Hoover wrote at 4 p.m .
on Nov. 22, 1963, a.s Kennedy lay
dead in a Dallas hospital.
Hoever's memos relating a
mlnule·by·minute account of his
acUon1 following the assassina·
Uon were part of 40,001 pa1es of files made public by the FBI as lt
opens its full records on Lhe in·
vestlgation of the assassination.
The flies, weighing about a half
ton, were rich with the details of
Death Cheats
Teen's Dream
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Ot 111• Dally f'IMI Maff
Richard Lee Cook had a lot going for him. Just 19 years
old, the handsome youth was one of the brightest and most
popular students at Newport-Mesa Evening School In Costa
Mt!sa.
Teachers and students were deeply saddened last week
at the news that Richard was found dead in a shallow grave
in Riverside County, an apparent murder victim.
Last year during his final semester, Richard's parents
moved to Corona. Despite the distance
he drove each evening to Costa Mesa in
an effort to complete his senior year.
DURING THE DAY he worked at a
Riverside area feed store, putting in
nearl) 45 huurs a week and earning
enough to gel a place of his own.
tragedy and drama as scores of
citizens told the FBI o/ lhelr sor·
row and their auaplclons -and in
some cases, t.heir hatred of the
Kennedy family.
But the material provided no
immediate or astoundlnJ new in-
sight about the mysteries sUll
lingering from the assasslnaUon.
Nor did it immediately resolve
the arguments about the various
conspiracy theories proposed by
some students of the case.
Bay View
Closure
Backed
A Newport·Mesa School Dis-
trict advisory committee recom·
mended Tuesday night that the
district close Bay View School in
Santa Ana Heights.
The recommendation wUI be
forwarded to district trustees for
action. Trustees have final say
on all committee recommend&·
t10ns.
As the district's smallest
school with about 130 students
Bay View has Jong been con·
s1dered a prime candidate for
closure, possibly as early as the
end of th.is school year.
The Warren Commission,
which conducted the official re-
view of the assassinaUon and the
way the FBI and others in·
vestlgated it, concluded that
Oswald was the murderer and
that be acted alone. Oswald was
shot to death in the Dallas police
stallon before be could be tried,
and bis killer, Jack Ruby was
convicted of murder and died of
cancer. Oswald's Cuban connecUonJ
have.figured In some conspiracy In another episode, FBI head·
theories, and the newly releued quarters obtaloed and tranalat4)d Illes show that the· FBI cbecbd a letter written ID Spanilb and
out. at least SODle dues concern· . mailed from Havana to Oswald
Ing Cuba. in Dallas. The letter, addressed
A Los Angeles lnlormef told to •'Friend Lee," and
agents the names of two San · postmarked aix dll)'s alter t.be U•
Juan, Puerto Rico, men who al· sass1naUoa. spoke ot a llnaddal
legedly bad knowledge of "ac· de.al and praised Oswald's
Uvilies between Cuba and the marksmanship. But the lnltial
United States." FBI aeent. 1n scrutiny of the files clld not ln·
Sao Juan then were instructed to dlcate Whether this was a meaQ•
interview the men. (See JFK, Pa1• A%)
It was a time of maturation and
reaching out for lolly goals, best reflected
in Richard's own words In a leUer that
earned him a scholarship grant from
California First Bank. COOK
Tuesday's recommendation by
committee members did not in·
elude any deadline for closing the
school. And the committee dldn 't
suggest an alternate use for the
campus, which overlooks Upper
NewportBay. 1'i'laeg ftenaetalJer
''I WANT TO LEARN, really learn about the many
things that are or interest to me." wrote Richard. "I enjoy
avlaUon and would like to expand my knOw1ed1e in this
area. Music is important Lo me; bpt I also enjoy being out-
doors and have thought of becoming a oaturali!i or going ln·
toaeology." He admltt.ed lo bls uncertainty over wb•t career path to
follow, but be knew "that tociUnulnc my tducaUon is the
rirst step toward my Cuture toals."
·'The opportunities are all there tor me and I'm ready to
go art er them!" he concluded.
Late last spring, Richard was selected as class valedic-
torian by teachers at Newport·Mesa Evening School.
However, two .1eeks before the ceremony at which he
was to address his classmates, Richard decided he could not
finish one of bis courses in time.
HE GAVE UP IDS schorarshlp and his selection as class
valedictorian lo other students. He told school officlals that
he planned to return lbis fall Lo complete the one course he
needed for graduation. He didn'L.return for uncertain reasons. But he apparent·
ly was quite happy with his work which put him close to the
land and the nearby desert hills he loved so much. Upon hearing of Richard's death, Newport-Mesa Eve·
ning School Principal Carole Castaldo decided to present his
parents, Joan and stepfather Ken WUllams, with the diploma
Richard came so close to achievinc.
Thursday night she will make the same drive to Corona
that Richard made each evening to present the diploma in
person.
Richard's body was cremated on Saturday. Hls ashes
were scattered over the bills near Corona.
The committee has been hold·
ing a series of public hearings at
schools with enroltmenta of 300
students or less.
According to committee
Cbalrman Evelyn Han. the corn·
mlttee will meet Jan. 3 to mue
recommendations on the pot.en.
tiaJ closure ol Victoria, Mesa
Verde and California schools. All
are ln Costa Mesa.
She noted that the com mlttee Is
concerned with the possible re·
instatement of a kindergarten
thcough six.th grade school
system as a possible aid.to declin·
Ing enrollment. All schools that
have been considered for clbsure
are currently kindergarten
through fifth grade schools.
· In November, school trustees
followed up on a committee rec.'
ommendation to close Monte
Vista School in Costa Mesa and to
use the Monte Vista campus for
McNally Continuation High
School.
The shift would not come
before 1979 and only lf an upcom·
ing district report establishes the
need for McNally to continue
operation as a separate raclllty.
Drug Raps 9Held • m
W Campru Sale Triggers Investigation
By BOBERTlSAJl&Ell
Of .. Dlllf ......... " A 15-year·old eirl stunned an
undercover Fountain Valley
police officer earlier this year
when she allegedly sold blm llve
balloons of heroin near the Loa
Amlaos Hip School campus:
Coat
made the beroin sale.
Officers aald that berolo is commonly kept in small, toy
oalloon1 because they can be
swallowed and quickly con-
cealed.
Parktt itald that 11\0St of the
beroln sold ln Oran1e County
now comes from Mexico.
He sald police do not have a
rundown on the 1uppller of the
dru1s atthb Ume.
Jim Daw (righl) and fellow members o!
the Pearl Harbor Survivors AssociQtion ob·
serve a moment of silence in honor of their
Callen comrades during memorial services
conducted this mornl«g at Seal Beach
Naval Weapons Station. The ceremonies
marked the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor on Dec. 7., 1941. The surprise attack
ob the Naval base on Oahu ln Uie Hawaiian
Islands brought the U.S., suddenly and ir·
revocably, into World War 11. See related
story and photo, Page A3.
Ehrlichman to Get
Freedom in April
WASIDNGTON CAP> -Joti.n
D. Ebrlichman, the Watergate
cover-up conspirator who ad·
milted surrendering hls "ethical
and moral judement" to Richard
M. Nixon, will be freed April 27
after havlna served 1 ~ years in
an Arizona federal ptison.
The U.S. Parole Commission
set the date Tuesday and in·
formed the 52 ·year·old
Ebrlicbman at the Swift Trail
Prison near Salford, Ariz. Tbe
commission's action was an-
nounced today. · Hil lawyet, Stuart·Stlller, sald
the CorDler White House
dome1t10 counselor would have
no comment.
Ehrllchman was convicted,
along with John N. Mitchell and
H.R. Haldeman, of consplrlng to
bide While House involvement in
the Wttergate burglary and then
lying about It under oath.
Mitchell and Haldeman,
respectively attorn•y aeoeral
and chlel rl staff in &he ft.nt Nix-
on aclmialstratlon, wUl beeome ·
the last Watupte flturn in
ptisob.
The three wen convicted on
New Year's Day 1975.
· U.S. District Judge .John1 J.
Slrlea uoteneed .. th to 2\l!a to
e1aht yeua in pt1aon, but cu~ &lie ter1111 t.o one to four 1eart wt
Octobet'.
,.~ ..........
FREEDOM IN•APRtl.
W•tet11a'9r Ehrffahman •
' Ettrlichman entereloi ~rlson
Oct. 28, J.916, before the appeals
pre>oe,.-had t'Wf Its courae, ·and
aatltOfd Use one•year mJnlmum on the anntveraar,y date.
Haldeman, will have completed
bis llrst year June 21, 1978,
Mitchell on June 22.
$2.6 Million
In UC Grants
The Uolvenity of Calllomla
can accept $2.8 mllllon h1
federal ald without compromis·
ing adm1ssJon standards for
Americans transferring trom
for~lgn medtcal schools under a
measure passed by the House to-
day.
The blll was approved Mf.O
and seoL to President Carter.,fOf'
hls expected signature.
IL a meads present law. wblcl\
required t.bat Amerlcaa
medical schools accepting the in·
ceotive grants for locreaal.nc
enroUment disregard academic
records of American medlcal
students 'ranllferrlng trobl
abroad.
UC President David Saxon had announced, along with the prest.
dents of 1.5 other American wli·
veraities, that UC no longer
would accept such requirements.
Loc•lly, UC Irvine would have
glven up $322,000 in Health.
EducaUon and Welfare grants.
The amended bill would permit
universities-to apply their own.
admission standards.
The exlsling law bad been criticb~ fl u lnfrlnsement on ac•dernlc freedom, &Ad for
pennlWna lessel' qualltied "Stu·
dents to ent.er' niedlcal schools.
j
~. •,,. 6 DAILY l'tLOf C
Fro• P•p. A J
J"FK •••
in,rul clue or whether 1t wu Ult
ork of a beadline-aeeker.
l'he f'Bl will release another .iu.ooo pa~cs next month In the
two batches. offtcaals say, will be
all the p;tperwork generated In
the bureau as al investigated the
.case. ~ No files are being withheld, or-'
ficials say, although many words
and paragraphs have been delel·"
ed because they are classified as
secret or are otherwise exempt
Crom disclosure.
The agency is releasing the
material to comply with requests
under the Jo'recdom of Jnforma-·
lion Act. Agents have spent about
18 months screening the rues to
delete the classified and exempt
portions.
oe11, .. il.t St•ll ,._ ..
BACKING THE FBI
ReUred Agent Warren
.·
U-2 Crash Kills 5, H11rts 7
American Pilot of Spy Plane a Victim
NICOSIA, Cyprus <AP> -An
AmN1car1 U-2 spy plane crashed
today as il was taking off from
the Br1Ush Akrolirl air base in
southt-rn Cyprus, killing five peo-
pll' and injuring seven. a British
m1htary spokesman reported.
The dead included the
American pilot of the U.S. Air
Force high -allitude recon-
11a1S!>ancc jct and four Cypriol
c1v11Jan employees al the base,
the chief spokesman for the
Dralish command in Cvorus said
Bntash authorihes refused to
lel newsmen and photographers
enter the air base. The
spokesman said the plane
crashed in a restricted zone
whl'rt:' photo.:raph1og 1s pro-
h1b1ted.
U.S. U-2s have been stationed
at Akrotiri since the 1973 Arab-
Israeli war. They make daily re-
connaissance flights over the
Arab-lsraeh front tines to check.
on compliance with restrictions
on troop deployments and ot.her
provisions of the cease-fire
agreemenL-; between Israel and
and its Arab foes.
The plane crashed on top of the
base's opcrau ons control center.
exploded and set the butldang
complex on fire, witnesses said
six wounded were three a1rml!n ,
a ~ritish airwoman and two
Cypriots, the spokesman uld
Plremen battled for more than
three hours lo control the blaie
D~age to the buildings was cx·
te~slve.
fhc crash occurred shortly
beforti 7 a.m., local time. before
most or the base personnel had
reported for work.
The British spokesman said j
there was no indication of the
cause ortho crash.
Given Immunity
Boy, 7, Testifies
In Beating Death When the screening process
was complete, agency employees
began making copies and pack·
ing them in cartons. Each set
~omes in 15 cartons that weigh
about 60 pounds apiece.
Several organizations, Includ-
ing The Associated Press, are
paying the lO·cenls-a -page copy-
ing fee the FBI charges for the
material a total or $4,000.10.
Ex-FBI Atient Still ..
"The U-2 look off, appeared un·
able lo gain altitude and lhen
swerved and crashed into the
operations building on the side of
the runway," i,aid a Cypriot
ytOrkman al the base.
"There was a lernfic explosion
when the plane h1t the building
and the whole area was engulfed
m flames."
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
Of lM o.111 .. !Mt Stall
Sad-eyed, dark-baired Arturo
Hidrogo, 7, of Huntington Beach,
took the witness stand again
Tuesday after an Orange County
S~perior Court judge granted
ham immunity from prosecution
in return for testimony about the
beating death or his 11-month..old
w1Ulul cruelty lo a child. She re-
malos In Oranee County Jail in
lieu of $250,000 bail.
Young Arturo, his parents,
Miss Cossio's sister and another
adult relative reportedly lived
with lbe aceused woman in the
same Hwitington Beach apart·
ment.
Bul the law allows an agency to
.vaive the fee jf the disclosure or
Lle material is considered lo be
ot great ~ublic importance.
Would Back Hoover One of the seven wounded, a
BriLish civilian employed by the
Royal Air Force, was reported
in serious condition. The other
So the recs may yet be ap-
pealed by the news organizations
to the Justice Department, which
has authority to overrule lhe FBI
1f it finds that the disclosure is
sufficiently important lo the
public
The FBI also is placing sets of
lhe files 111 lwo rooms: one for re-
porters and one for scholars, re-
searchers and other interesled
people. The material may be ex-
amined there w1thoulcharee.
By LAURIE KASPER
0t u. oe111 .. 11.1 Sl•fl
No matter what's been written
or said about the Federal Bureau
of Investigation in recent
months, retired agent Leslie F.
Warren is still "100 percent
behind" the FBI and J. Edgar
Hoover.
Break-ins and other reportedly
illegal acts committed by the .
FBI currently are being in·
vestigated and getting much at-
tention in the media.
But, Warren said, "I do feel the
FBI bas eot.ten ~ort or a short
Suspect Facing
Conspiracy Rap
Joseph Shelton Davis III, who
purportedly is known in the ilUcil
drug trade as "The Fat Man," is
scheduled to be arraigned today
in Orange County Superior Court
•n charges related to the Oct. 22
s laying of Stephen Bovan in
Newport Beach.
Like seven other people named
an a county grand jury indict·
ment, Davis in addition to the
murder conspiracy charge is ac·
cused of extortion and illegal
drug traCficking.
The 28-year-old former Laguna
Reach Hare Krishna devotee was
arrested Thanksgiving Day by
lndone~ian offic,ials pp l~1; dis-
tant ishlnd or Bad. 1 ' I •
He was 'returned here by two
Orange County District attorney
investigators.
Davis has been described as a
founding partner of Prasadam
l>iHributing. Inc., a New'port
Beach investment rirm that
purportedly served as the cash .
pullet for income derived from
massive ~g dealing-. ~ ·
WstaMesa
Offers Kids
'Snow Camp'
What's Christmas vacation
without a lrtp to the snow?
The C05ta Mesa Department or
Leisure Services Is ofrerlng a
"Snow Camp" ror middle school
youngsters Dec. 27-29 at Camp
Bluff Lake near Bii Bear.
Cost is $.12 per person which ln-·
eludes bus transportation, food,
lodging, all activilles and limlled
medical insurance coveraie.
Deadline for sirnups is bee. 16
on a first come basis at room 305.
Costa Mesa City Hall. The trip is
belng offered in conjunction with
the City ot Garden Grove.
A parent and camper orient.a·
lion meeUn1 will bf held Tuea·
day, Dec. 20 at 7:30 p.m. at tho
Garden Grove Coinmunily Meet· ing Center. For more informa-
tion caU5lSS-5300.
c
DAILY PILOT
~~~~:::'T::=i=:i.:::.= ~:::·~':~:e..'T'.::.~~~;: ::r~v':r~,~=~·:.=:=:. ~~-;: I...,... .. tclt/1wlll CHU. A ....... ,._,,_..
, .... It -·-t.411.....,. .......... "' Tiit .......... ..,..,.,,.,.. ....... It ilt .. Wtd ..., ~., .... Gotta .... Ct!~ .... ·-,. ..... "'""'9fl4"" "'*'llW
J1d •• CWloff VIC.t '"'*"lfllllll __.lllMlllMPI' neo;:::,--
'='·~Tl:"
Olff ...... '-....... .... ~ ............. ....
. Revelation or the alleged drug
dealing app11ralus came in the
wake of Bovan's murder Oct. 22
outside a Newport Beach
reslaurant.
Indications are Bovan was cut
down by a gunman in retribution
for his alleged role in the recent
kidnapping of a Prasadam of-
ficial.
Froa Page A I
X-RATED •••
said Tuesday he will go lo the ap-
pellate court to ask for a mistrial
and also halt any aclion the city'
may try lo take against the
theater.
· The jury reached unanimous
decisions in declaring four or the
17 movies they viewed as ob·
scene. Those movies are:
"Sodom and Gomorrah,"
"Sensations," "Teenage Fan-.
tasies," and .. The Story of
Joanna."
Also declared obscene with the
jury voling indicated were
"Behind the Green Door," 9 to 3;
"Inslde Marilyn Chambers," 9 to
3; "Autobiography of a Flea," 10
to 2; Teenage Cruisers," 11to1;
"French Classmates," 9 to 3 and "LoveinaStran~e Place," lltol
Th4' jury spent part of the trial
at Lhe Honer PJua theater view·
ing 17 of 42 movies deelared by
the city of Santa Ana to be ob-
scene and in violation of the clty
ordinance.
Attorney James Clancy,
represenUng the city, predicted
during U:le trial that a flncUn1 or
obscenity would encourage many
Calllomla communities to pros·
ecute exhibitors of X-rated mov-
ies.
Defendants Artie and James
Mitchell commented outside the
court.room late Tuesday that lt
was the first aucb reverse lbey
had received in a series of
lawsuit& lhat, until now. bave· ~one tbelrway.
~ "But that'll. how Ute Jury ruled
.nd we •ouldn.,t have It any
other way, 0 Artie Mitehell com·
mented. "Of co~. we 1ball be
appeaUna the verdict."
Lawyers tor both sides noted
during the trial that the obscenity
issue argued before Judge Weeks
could produce a precedent· setting verdict.
YMCA: Unit
_...,, -..
shrirt."
To combat this, the Newport
Beach Toastmasters Club
member has joined the lecture
circuit of area service clubs.
After speaking to the Mission
Viejo Rotary Club Tuesday, he
explained that his objective ls to
try and get the public interested
an his way of t.hinkin~.
··1 still think its the most efri·
cient organization in the United
States' hi.story, both past and pre·
sent," be said.
When the news of Hoover's
death reached the FBl's Los Angeles office, where be spent
most of his 33 years as a special
agent, Warren recalls making a
prediction.
At the Ume, he said, "The FBl
real soon is going to revert back
to an ordinary, political motivat-
ed organization."
So Car, he said, his forecast has
not come true. But, he cautioned,
"Really. Ule jury is still out."
Warren said Hoover, who he
met personally several times, on·
ly agreed lo become head or the
FBI because he had the op·
portunJty to free il of political in-
fluence. The former agent
believes his late boss succeeded.
"He did not let anyone buffalo
hjm ," he said. Presidents, al·
torneys general, no one could
control him. even though they
lned. he said.
Hoover, he said, would have
noLhing to do with the events m-
vol ved in Watergate.
But, he explained. the former
FBI director did believe "if we
didn't know what was going on,
why, we would be negligent."
Warren recalled that after lhe
the communist party and related
groups moved inlo this counlry.
First, he said, they tried the
direct approach but the people
wouldn't buy it.
So, he said, they began in-
fillr ating other groups and
operating through front or-
ganizations. Because of this, he
said, agents also went to rallies
and infiltrated groups.
UCI Degree
Added for
Environment.
A now baccalaureate dearee
proeram is be.lng debated among
faculty of UC Irvine. It would
manufacture professional en·
vironmentallata.
The UCI Academic Senate
takes up the proposal at a 3 p.m.
Thursday meetinr.
The prospective degree in ap·
plied ecoloiY would combine Ule
tradiUooal sclence training or a
biolo,lcal sciences major, In
comblnatloo with envl.rOnmen·
tally bued couraes ottered by the
proiram in social ecolou.
The craduate would be
awarded a bachelor of arts
degree.
Courses ln enYlronmebtal
quallty and health, plan.nlnl and
public policy, law and society
would form tbe foundaUon of the
new dlBclpllne.
Woman Robs
Auction Hoose•
In Newport
Newp0rt Btaob police are
seekl.Da a lone woman ban4lt who held up the Newport G.Um•,
25'2 w. Oou' Blahway at. .DOaA
tod•1· t
2MenHeld
In Burglary
Burglary investigators from
Costa Mesa and Hunllngton
Beach trailed two men into
Newport Beach Tuesday eve·
ning allegedly watched them
oreaic rnto a home at 2808 Cliff
Drive, then arrested lhe pair on
burglary charges.
In custody today in Newport
Beach jail in lieu of SS,000 bail
are Geffrey Glencoe Thorpe, 26,
of 966 Joann St .• Costa Mesa, and
27-year-old Ronald James
Gravelle of Santa Monica.
Investigators said the two men
had been under observation for a
number of days and are believed
to be responsible for a series of
home burglaries in Orange
County.
A double bolv>el
IJKfete<)' dbllnqubhad by w<lhll ,_., erid
octl 111tci-~ l~ut~S ~
ctoon. lldju>la~ ""°~ 1wf
drop Id con~1'11<<! .,, .. 1
W Jb 0 lfj'/1 1181 I
R(G $I 5?0 ())
SAUi t lJ90.00
cousin. 1
Judge Rot>ert Rickles, who
authorized the lm~unity grant,
said the lad may be the youngest
witness ever to be given protec·
lion from prosecution in Orange
County.
Young Arturo, whose head
barely showed above the witness
stand, testified Tuesday about
the Nov. 6 dealh or infant Edgar
Salsedo. . Deputy District Attorney Paul
Meyer said Arturo ls the .. key
witness .. in. the West Orange
County Judicial District Court
hearing to determine U Rosaria
Cossio, 23, should be tried for the
murder or her son.
The infant died rrom a massive
skull fracture.
An autopsy revealed that the
child bad suffered an earlier
skull fracture, three broken ribs,
three leg fractures and a broken
arm prior to his death.
Miss Co6sio, who police believe
is an illegal alien, is charged with
the murder of her sQn and with
When prMecutor Meyer asked
A·rturo to identify Edgar
Sslsedo's mother, the lad pointed
to the defendant and replied,
"My Auntie Rosaria."
TONIGHT
OCC LECTURE -"How to
Piao a nd Present Special
Events," Fine Arts 119, Dec. 7
and8, 7:30p.ro .
SOUTH COAST REPERTORY
THEATER -.. Knights of the
White Magnolia," Tuesday·
Sunday throu1eh Dec.18, 8 p.m.
THURSDAY, DEC. ·s
OCC LECTURE -"Slim
Chance in a Fat World,••
Womeo'sCenter, 7 p.m.
Christmas
Gifts of
la?ting Bffiuty. ..
OyHenredon
That Ofigmal. very sp&tdl gilt you·ve ~ ~•rchlngfor may
be right here. For your own home. for tl mem~r of your
family. for that young couple stllrlUVJ their forsl home. A
piece of Henn:don furniture will make the lllllrm glow of
Christmas last fOf l"llany seasoM t" romf'. HNC are dbtif'I·
qui.shed 1tcc1surcs fl'Om many P"'flod~ 1md 11tvles. 11ny one o
which could be the perfoct touch for ttny ltnc room. Decide
fOf yourself which piece ~t suits you. &n<2 gift yov~ Of
somoone you low with Henredon,thi5 Christmas. Hurry!
Limited quanlltlt.>s a1111il11ble fOf lmmedidte delivery
Apllwf'I
'"'od<-ct,...b~l!y
"""'"'""•IMd \lr\?ly 0t fll'OoJpC"' hi!l~orfM!l'I
r """· \\ 3".) 018 H.O
Rt..G. S455 00
IAL~UH.00
•
ll
A~Wl,..,...te
BATTLESHIP USS ARIZONA UNDER ATTACK BY JAPANESE AT PEARL HARBOR IN 1941
Thlrty-1lx Yeara Later, Veter•n• of 'Day of Infamy' Gather to Remember
That Day of Infamy
Cowitiam Recall·Bombing of Pearl Harbor
By ARTHUR R. VINSEi.
Ol 1119 01llJ ~llel Stall
The corks tn the bottles or
'>totch and bourbon were as loose
last night as the defenses were 36
years ago lhis morning at Pearl
Harbor, wh en Andy Antosik and
his buddies teamed about war.
They gathered al the Anloslk
home, 1120 Driftwood Drive, Seal
Beach, Tuesday night to rem·
inisce and simply live llfe as It is
loday in America.
l'hey always meet the first
Tuesday night or the month to lay
oul lhe monthly newsletter of the
Pearl Harbor Survivors Assocla·
lion, Chapter 14, of Orange Coun.
ty, so it was coincidental.
They are among 170 local men
and women who lived lo re·
member Dec. 7, 1941 , and of
course all those who didn't.
''I 'm just plain Andy, the
youngest of the bunch," the
gregarious Antosik told visitors
Tuesday night. He is 54 and presi·
dent of the county's Pearl Harbor
Survivors Association.
He was 17 when he Joined the
Navy lo see the world and got his
nose rubbed in lhe worst the world
has to orrer.
Antoslk is now an engineering
technician at Long Beach Naval
San Onofre
Danger Seen
In Cavities
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Possible
danger is posed by underground
• ca vi ties discovered near two
Southern California nuclear
power generating plants at San
Onofre, a federaJ official says.
Harry Rood , licensing project
manager of the Nuclear
Re(_ulatorY. .Commission, said
the plants' owners have been or·
dered to lnvesUgate the taves.
The report will be considered
by the Atomic Safety and Ucens·
ing Board, he sald, in approvin&
or rejecUng the application of
Southern California Edison Com·
pany and San Dleeo Gas and
Electric Compan)" for operaUna
licenses for two new unJt.s at San
Onofre.
''The companies are to come
up with a proeram to remedy the
sltuaUon," Rood said alter a pre-
liminary bearlnf Tuesday.
"If lbere are cbanees needed
, in the proposed program, we will
• discuss them. They are to submit
a Jetter by the end of the month
reporting on the status ol the
cavltles."
Shipyard.
On Dec. 7. 1941, he was a mess
steward serving orrtcers on tbe
battlewagon USS Tennessee.
"I'd made a date the night
before to meet a friend of mine
ashore for dinner. He was from
my hometown, Lynch, in Harlan
County, Ky ., where the coal
miners are.
''That's the last time I ever
s aw him," says Antosik, whose
hometown buddy served Qn the
USS. Arizona.
"He's still aboard. . . " An·
tosik says.
Jim Facer, 64, vice president
of the group, was a gunnery mate
aboard BB 44, lhe cJreadnaught
known as the USS California,
which took its share or Japanese
punishment 36 years ago today.
"Our 14·inch guns weren't
worth a damn that day." says
Facer, an Ogden, Utah, native
who now lives in Seal Beach.
"I was In the lower ammuni·
lion handling room or Turret
Four and I was about haUway up
to the deck when the first torpedo
hjt us. None of the ships that 'fere
~ llit !llh torpedoes ~ad tbeiG1
water:tlJbtdoora closed. •
"Tha['a why they listed and
sank, "says Facer.
The California was lucky, com·
ing back to sledgehammer the
Japanese Imperial forces in
retribution, although she was
burl badly at the outset.
"That was one of the best·
planned Jttllltary actions ever,"
Facer says or the Japanese strike
at the Pacific Fleet. "Their mis·
take was in not bombing the
machine shops and Navy yard."
Bill Shrader, 57, of Los
Alamitos, remembers 36 years
ago today well.
"I euess the most unbelievable
ractor wai watching the
Oklahoma roll over, almost to
lbe masthead," says Shrader.
who ran topside when General
QuarLera toun.ded on DD 173, the
destroyer USS Shaw.
"I uw a JaJ!anese plane drop
four obJ,cta ln the water. I
Ulouibt lt. wu a drill. . .Rlaht
alt.rv.tard we 1ot hit wlth planes .dh1ng' all over us. The Nevada
1ot lt bad. . •·
Shrader, a Navy fire con·
t.rolman, remembers the sicken·
Inc aftermath and the ordW of
tearful Army nurse Lorena
Dani•, w.hot b_ef9re 7:55 a.m. 38
yerra ago toaay, never bad to
play God.
Sb• had to decide who would
live and who would die. notes
Shrader, ... Who helped drive In·
Jurod personnel to Hospital
Point.
~be sligbUy injured would llve
to fight another day.
He recalls Mrs . Danis, now or
Yucaipa and married to a Pearl
Harbor survivor. taking dicta
lion from a dying man who want
ed to get one last letter off.
"He was busted up in squares
like a roasted ham.·· says
Shrader. "She had tears in her
eyes and kept trying lo get him to
tell her the name of his
hometown ... "
Hawaiian-born Peter ''PikeJo''
Correa, 69, the oldest or the sur-
vivors, recalls Dec. 7, 1941, but
not just because it was the day
the enemy bombed his beloved
island.
A hulking former prison guard
and karate and judo instructor
who looks easily 20 years
younger, the Seal Beach Leisure
World resident was then a
seasoned Navy veteran.
Re recalls the worst Lask men
encounter in any war
"We were picking up beads
and hands here and there and
pulling them in lubs . .. " says
Correa, as his wife Hilda, who
was also there, dabs al tear-filled
eyes in the memory.
"We had a captain, J .B. Cook. from lhestateo!Oregon. He was a
flne man," says Correa
"We just went around picking
up heads and hands and pulling
them in tubs and opening cans of
beer ...
"The captain kepl saying
'Let's have one last drink before
they get us too' ... "
And suddenly, last night, the
Pearl Harbor Survivors Associa·
lion's smaJI group noticed their
glasses were empty again.
Cowity Backs
Proposal for
Marine Area
. .' : ... .
' J ., .. •
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of .. 0.11, " .. 1111111
Dr. F. Sherwood Rowland. one
of two UC Irvine professors who
firal warned ol the dan1ers of
fluorocarbons to the atmosphere,
said Tuesday the danger Isn 't
over yel
Cranston
On Coast,
Urges Cuts
Sen AJan Cranston. 0 -Callf .
said in Newport Beach today that
he believes a $30 billion tax cut Is
needed next year to stimulate the
economy.
He also told u breakfast meet·
ing of business leaders at the Big
Canyon Country Club that he is
afraid President Carter's plan lo
couple tax cuts with Lax reform
w i II ca use undue delay.
"The facl is that tax reform is
going to be a very controversial
issue and it will be a long, biller
fight," he said
"I strongly support the pres1·
dent's lax reform objective but I
fear that we could lose. or at least
badly delay, both the tax cut and
the tax reform if he Insists on try.
ing lo achieve both objectives in
the same legislation."
Cranston said he believes busi·
nesses and individual taxpayers
need about a $22 billion cut Just to
offset the effects or ris ing soclaJ
security faxes, new energy taxes
and wage inflation resulting in
higher tax brackets.
An additional $8 billion would
help s timulate the economy,
Crallston said
"Right now the economy is
fairly s trong, with unemploy·
ment down from 8 percent a year
ago," he said. "But it is showing
signs of sag."
·'A substantial part of the lax
cul should go for business invest
menl which encourages business
to modernize and expand,''
Cranston said.
~ortArea
Phones Cut ·
About 1,100 businesses near
Orange CoWlty Airport bad Utelr
phone service cut ofC for up to
five hours Tuesday after a con-
tractor's bulldozer dislodged
several underground Pacific
Telephone cables.
A phone company spokesman
said the cables were pulled out or
their sheaths about 11 a.m. near
the intersection or Bristol and
Birch streets in Santa Ana.
Telephone service was fully
restored by ~ p .m ., the
spoke15man said.
Arthritis Club Set
A new arthritis club, for
families and friends or children
with arthritis, as weU as adults
who have had arthritis, Is form·
ing, with lts first meeting tonight
al 7: 30 at Children's HospitaJ of
Orange County. Oranie. For
further information call Karen
Schrnld at 547·55~1 or Judi Cover
at 738·0377. ·
Spealdng to a 1roup of faculty. •twlents and press at UCI. Dr.
Rowland said that althouc.h tbe
UmlnaUon or aerosol sprays in
t.be U.S. by 1979 wlll cut out two·
thirds of the lluorocarbons, the
amount that will remaln will stlll
pose a threat to human safety.
Blggnt Cedar
This tree, believed to be the
world's largest Western red
cedar, stands on state land
near Forks, Wash. It re·
eel ved liJ.tle attention
because signs In the Otym-
pic National Par,k still
direct visitors to a lesser
tree which hef d the title un-
til this one was discovered.
Patty Hearst
Loses Purse
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> •
Patricia Hearst has reported to
poll~e that her purse was stolen
from her bodyguard's van while
It was parked overnight near bis
Pacirtca home.
Ppllce said Miss Hearst and
bOdyguard Bernard Shaw came
to the station Nov. 29 -the day
after the theft of the purse con-
tainlnl( more than $400 cash and
keys to her San Francisco apart·
ment and her family's home.
Shaw, 30, is a San Francisco
police officer asslgned to guard
Miss Hearst
Besides the money and keys
Miss Hearst reported the stole~
purse contained a walJet, an ad-
dress book, credit cards and her driver's license.
. .
DAIL y PILOT AS
And, he sJld, eliminating the
remaining fluorocarbons and
chJorlnes, which pose the same
daneer. will be far more difficult
becaase their uns are more~·
sential than those of aero~ol
s prays.
Some are u¥ed in hospital
slerilants and others are used in
industrial processes, he sajd,
The problem. Or. Rowland ex·
plained. is that fluorocarbons
and chlorines, which are con-
tained ln fluorocarbons and also releu~ from other sources, set
c{(( a chain reaction in the
stratosphere that causes a loss or
ozone.
Since ozone protects the earth against ultraviolet radiation and
also a/fect.s the temperature or
the stratosphere, lts loss would
result in increased skin cancer.
an unknown effect on animal lire
and possible climatic chanees.
Had the use of fluorocarbons
continued at its 1976 level, the
loss or ozone within the next 100
years was projected al about 12
percent. Dr. Rowland said
However, even without the
aerosol Cluorocarbons, the
amount or these chemicals belne
sent into the atmosphere from in·
dustrial and related uses would
still result in an estimated s per-
cent ozone loss during the next
century.
"I don't think there's any argu·
ment for allowing anything
larger than one hall of one per-
cent loss," Dr. Rowland said.
The problem we face In cutting
the loss to that minimal level is
largely a political one, but it is
vital that we do so, be said.
Dr. Rowland and fellow pro-
f essor Mario Molina began stud·
ying the effect or fluorocarbons
on the ozone layer in 19.,1 and
1974 and noted that these
chemicals are so stable that they
rarely break down by normal
chem I cal processes or durittg
rainstorms. Jnstead. they ln·
Lerfere in the oxygen combina·
lion process that forms ozone.
causing an ozone loss.
After a series or hearin&s at the
federal level, the Food and Drug
Adminustralloo in 1976 proposed
to phase out by 1979 all nonessen·
lial uses of the propellants. The
governruent of Canada bas ado~ted a similar plan. T e result ha• beeo the sudden
app •rttncl! ~.Pul\1tf~~Aodorant
and hair spraf cans on store
shelves, rep acing aerosol
sprays.
Wife facing . .
Death Count?
An Anaheim man who was
wounded Friday during a family
dispute died Tuesday and police
today said his wife may be
charged with hls murder.
Francis Gallup, 37. died in
Anaheim Memorial Hospital four
days after binf shot during a Fri-
day night Uff in his apartment.
Already arrested and charged'
with assault with a deadly
weapon was the victim's wile,
Juanita Gallup, 48, or the same
address.
Police said the complaint
already nted against Mrs. Gallup
may be amended to renect what
became a homicide when her
husband died.
'' ., I 11 '
Ju~t ~
Coa§ting ,~f J ~.~·. ~Ir . "~~\
witb
Tom
.arpbine
A Merry
WhatlIUls?
ONI-. MOR•: TIME : /\lmo!-.I
l'Yery Chr1slmac; !'.l'BSOn
-.omt•v.ht•rc In our gn•at land, <•
•>1lcabk flap den•lops over what
kind or hol1duy program can be
pn•\enlcd in thl' public schools
Nov. 1t 's happ<·nt•d right hl·rc on
Lh1s best of all possible coasts
In Soulh Laguna, Principal
Lvlt• Proctor of /\lic;o School
c·en;;orcd th<· natavaty scene from
the school's Chrastmac; pageant
111::. action outra2ed a number uf parcnL'> and precipitated &
r • .11rly wurm debate between the
pan·nts and pranc1pal Monday af
I 1• r noon /\ t l his writing .
hoy, Pvt•r. Proctor was still stick
111g lo has ~uns and the nativity
'>rt•nl· is out
i\lii.;o '<'hnol has presented
uhout ;i thrf'l•-m1nutc nativity
~l'l'nl' an <•very Yule holiday pro
gr.am since 19/lfi /\las. this year
thl' youngsll'r whn v. on the role
a-. Jost•ph wall now be a
sla~chand
THE 8ASIS FOR the pran
c1pal's ;action an deletin~ a scene
on the birth of Jesus 1s of course
based on lhl' cnnstatutaonal ques·
lion of !icparallon of church and
state Thl' public school 1s thus
envisaon<.'d as the c;tate while the
nal1v1ty sccnl' represents the
('hurch
Thus. thl• argument goes, 1f
you prcsC'nt a nat1v1ly in the
Christmas play, the s late is fore
ing a view of a majority r<'lig1on
upon the minority religions or,
upon those pC'rsons who do not
emhracl' any faith
You mav b<• assurC'd that a de·
bate on this question of church·
slate st•paralion c·an rage on long
anto the n1i.:ht until all parties are
purple in lh<• facial ar1:a
In the South Laguna case.
tlowevt•r, the ruling that strikes
out lht' nativity scene from the
Kchool pro~rnm has some other
Interesting aspects
BECAUSE THE STATE
Educalion Code recognizes it, for
example, the song "Silent Night"
will be allowed lo be sung
Unless my memory is very
fuzzy, lhc Lh1rd word in that song
Is "lloly."
You might suspect that word
has some rcltg1ous implications.
Further. the South Laguna
principal noted that the Educa·
lion Code allows the public school
lo use the song, "Away in a
ManJ.!er."
/\gaan, relying on my suspect
memory, I believe one of the
lines in there suggests the
r,!angcr was the place where.
'The Little Lord Jesus Lay Down
His Sweet Head."
Some people might see a re-
ligious implication here, loo
APPARENTLY THEN, the
slate codes sec it as perfectly
legal to sing about the silent
night, the manger and lhe Uttle
Lord Jesus, so long as you do not
try to act it out.
Debating on separation of
<'hurch and state certainly can be
bP.ffling. Also exhausting. I think
t II take th1s federal government
quarter here and go gel a cup of
coffee What's this 1t says on the
quarter an tiny type right under
President Washington's chin? Oh
yes, by squinting, t can read It
now
"ln God We Trust."
'
Egypt Flays Russia
Cairo Evicts Sov iet Officials
CAIRO. Egypt CAP> Egypt
ordered the closure today of aJI
l'onsulut(.'ll and cultural centers or the Soviet Union and four other
t>:asl European nations located
outside Cairo, charging they
sa botaged Egypt's peace In
1ti;.1ti ve with Israel.
Prime Minister Mamdouh
Salt.>m told the People's As
't•mbly the dec1s1on was made Ml
" meeting of the cabinet
THE MOVE followed a warn
1ng from Pre::.1denl Anwar
"iadal over the weekend that the
!-lovaets "can be punished" for an
st1gat1ng radical Arab states to
hold an anti-Sadat summit 1n
Tripoh, Ubya.
The prime minister ::.aid the
Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia,
Poland and East Germany bad,
throu~h lheir cultural centers
and their consulates. "contacted
their a1enl5 in Egypt to foment
opposition against Sadat's in
1Uatlve."
Meanwhile, King Hussein of
J ordan flew unexpectedly to
Damascus, Syria, launching an
attempt to heal the split between
Syrian President Hafez Assad
and Sadat. Diplomats In the
Syrian capital said Hussein was
expected to fly on lo Cairo for
talks with Sadat.
OFFICIALS an Amman said
Hussein would also v1s1t Saudi
Arabia, lhe oil rich kingdom
which was reported also trying to
mend the split in Arab ranks.
Egypt has expelled Soviet
military advisers and abrogated
a frien<hhip treaty with Moscow
an the last five years. It has also
unilaterally decided lo postpone
paying its military debts lo the
Soviet Union for 10 years.
By Postal Serviee
Deficits to Halt
Saturday Mail?
W ASIUNGTON <AP) Elimination of Saturday mail deliveries and
closing of small post offices appear more likely because of con·
tinumg large postal deficits.
The Postal Service announced Tuesday a deficit of $652 million in
the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. Three months ago, the Postal
Service predicted that the deficit
would be $400 million
Unde rtake r
Charged With
Mass Burials
NEWARK. N.J . (AP) An un·
dertaker charged with burying
l ,531 infants and stillborn babies
in mass graves while under con·
tract lo Newark's Division of
Public Welfare claims he was
simply following a practice com-
mon since the turn of the century
Carmine BerardlneU1, 34, was
c harged Tuesday in an ad ·
minislrative complaint with
burying as many as 40 infanta in
one casket. The burials took
place at three northern New
Jersey cemeteries over a 61h ·
year period until August 1973, the
slate charged.
''NOT ONE of the l ,531 in·
daviduals entrusled lo
Berardinelli was buried in a
manner befitting the di1nity of
'the deceased," the state sald.
No criminal charges were
riled, but a hearing on the possi-
ble revocation or his morlfclan's
license was set for Dec. 21 before
the stale Board of Morluary
Science, which filed the 30-counl
complaint.
Burial of infants and stlllborn
babies of impoverished parents
in mass graves has been "com·
mon practice" in Newark since
the early 1900s, Berardlnelll aald.
"MY FATHER Joseph
Berardinelli received authorlza·
Lion In 1961 from the city Division
of Public Welfare for multiple
burials and 1 continued that prac-
tice." he said.
He said the authorization was
verbal. "In those days, very lltUe
was put on paper," be said.
"In my mlnd, there's nothing
)Vrong with It," be said. "MulU·
pie burials would be wrong for
adults, but tor infants, I thlnk it's
beautiful. Every one of them was
buried with dignity."
THE POSTAL Service also in·
creased the predicted deficit for
the current fiscal year from $554
million lo Sl.3 billion. And a pre-
dicted surplus of S282 million for
fiscal 1979, which would have
been the nrsl profit since the
postal reorganization of 1971.
was changed lo an anticipated
deficit or $784 miJJion.
"Obviously, this kind of loss 1s
unacceptable lo management
and Inconsistent with our
legislallve mandate," said Fran·
cis X. Biglin. the agency's lop
financial officer. "We cannot al·
low s uch deficits lo happen.·'
THE POSTAL Service did not
elaborate on how they could be
prevented, but Biglin noted that
possible service reductions such
as eliminating Saturday de·
laveries, closing small post of·
fices and reducing mail sorting
al night when workers must be
paid a premium are "under con-
tinuous review."
Biglin said the main reason for
the changes from the report he
gave to the Postal Services' gov·
crnlng board in Septemter is un·
expectedly high costs for injury
compensation.
TH E POSTAL Service has for
years been urging Congress and
the Labor Department lo do
something about the sharply
escalating costs of this program.
ln the past, the mall agency has
estimated that Americans this
year will pay one cent for Injury
compensatlon every time they
buy a 13-cent stamp.
The payments to anjured
workers cost the Postal Service
S639 million in lhe fiscal year I.bat
ended Sept. 30. The price is ex·
pected to jump lo $820 million in
the current fiscal year and Sl.2
billion next year. These costs
compare with $94 million in fiscal
1974.
The Labor Department, which
administers the program and
sends the bills lo the various gov-
ernment agencies, recently as-
signed 20 investigators to look in-
to cl aims of on-the-job inj uries
that may be fraudulent. .
Today's acUon made relaUons
one step worse, but lt was sWl
short of an outriaht break
between Cairo and Moscow. The
Soviet Union has refused lo a~
tend a peace conference coo·
vened by Sadat in Cairo next
week.
Israeli Prime M1nii-ler
Menabem Begin said today in
London that Israel does not want
to split ats Arab foes. but il will
not reject a peace treaty with
Egypt as a first step toward
peace with all the Arabs.
BEGIN ALSO said that despite
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat's separate diplomacy with
Israel, there were "good pros·
peels'· for reconvening peace
talks ln Geneva on an overall
Middle Ea.st settlement. Begin
l>aid such a peace remained
Israel's goal.
Apparently recovered rrom the
stomach upset that kept him in
his hotel suite Tues day, Begin
!>poke al a news conference clos·
ang his six-day official vl!ilt to
Britain. Ile returns taler in the
day lo Israel.
Begin told reporters that the
Israelis did not propose a
l>eparale peace treaty when
Sadat v1s1ted Jerusalem last
month.
"We were never interested in
driving a wedge between our
Arab neighbors," the 64-year-old
prnne minister continued.
"OF COURSE, 1f President
Sadat reaches the conclusion that
our other neighbors CSyrla and
Jordan > will not join us and he
suggests lo us the signing of a
peace treaty. we would not refuse
to do so on an understanding that
it would be a first s tage."
Begin also attacked the Soviet
Union. co-chairman with the
Un1led Stales of the Geneva
talks. for playing a "destructive
role" in the Middle East by op·
posing Sadat's initiatives.
Secretary or Stale Cyrus R
Vance left today for the Middle
East. saying he will strive to help
feuding leaders in that region
overcome differences standing in
the way of peace
VANCE ALSO adopted a new
hard-line toward Moscow and
downplayed the need for a
Geneva peace conference as he
new from Andrews Air Force
Base in suburban Maryland lo
Belgium. where he will attend a
two-day NATO meeting before
heading on lo the Mideast.
Of the NATO meeting, Vance
said he would talk to allies about
"how we can maintain and build
our military de fense for the
future ... and how we can ease
the tensions between the East
and the West." "
Earlier. Vance said some So·
viel statements in recent days
"have not been helpful." He re·
ferrcd to the Russians' recent
sp~te ot caustic public comments
about the United Stales. Egypt
and Israel.
New Storm Hits Rockies
Te91perat•rn
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..........-• "''. 1i
NATION I WORLD
Winterg Barl'est
A farmer near Little 1''atfs, Mann., used a combine in his
corn field Tuesday despite the presence or snow on the
ground: Many Minnesota farmers were caught off guard
by the early heavy snowfall that dumped as much as a
fool of the while stuff in lhe midwest prior to completion
of the corn harvest.
CIA Report Tells
Of Campus ROie
WASHINGTON CAP> -Campus harassment of CIA recruiters
during the Vietnam era prompted the use of agents to idenU!y poten-
tial college trouble spots, according to newly released CIA docu-
ments.
The documents do not on their race reveal a systematic spying
effort on American college campuses during the 1960s.
Instead. they show an effort, mainly by reviewing wtivenily
publications and establishing llaison with local authorities, to give
recruiters early warning or demonstrations or PQSsible violence
aimed al disrupting their activities.
TH E DOCUMENTS also contain a memo in which then-eIA
Director Richard Helms told Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
that the inclusion or U.S. students in a survey of student dissidents
worldwide was potentially embarrassing because "thls is an area
not within the charter of his agency."
The documents, some of them censored for security reasons,
were obtained through a Freedom of Information Acl suit filed by
rormer natiooal security assistant Morton Halperin and former CIA
employee Jobn Marks. The documents were made available to re-
porters Tuesday by the Campalgn to Stop Government SpyinJ,
which Halperin heads.
THOSE THAT WERE released contain a description or now,
beginning in 1967, the CIA called on Its field oICices around the coun-
try to aid and protect CIA campus recruiters.
A memo said field agents "developed rues on the universities
and colleges. came to know all the campus security people, special
units in the local and stale police, etc."
It said some of the information developed by agents "would in-
dicate that they attended some or the dissident meetin1s."
BUT IT SAID the uents could onlv advise recruiters or/
whether or not.to vislt a parucutar campus. If the recruiters Ignored
ad.vice to stay away. "we would send a man to lhe frloge area, at-
tempt to spot buildups and advise further action," the CIA memo
said. ·
The report on American student dissidents about which Hehns
expressed concern concluded that "communist ~ont groups have
been permitted to participate in some of the student organizations
but have not succeeded in controlUng them ."
~I I
I
ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES Wednesday. December 7, 1977 DAILY PILOT ....
. .
CSF Memorial ·Planned
A campaign to complete a living memorial to
vlcllms of the 1976 mass shooUnaa at Cal State
Fullerton 11 under way.
A aeven·m•mber committee beaded by Dr. T.
Roger Nudd bu set a $11, 770 1oa1 to flnhh. work on
the 1rove planned tor the area between the campus
library andpbyalcal educaUon bulldln,.
Nudd aald contrlbutlona are Invited from com·
munlty members as well aa from faculty, atatf alMt
aludenll. They are ~¥ deduct.Ible and should be'
aen~ to the Memorial· Grove Fwtd Com1nltt.f
Cbeclu abould be made payable to the C9
Fullerton Foundation and marked ".Memol'fal
Grove Fund."
DESIGNED BY THE CAMPUS landscape -:::;;;;;;;;;;;;jj;mifii;;;;;;iiiiiiijiiijijiiii~
architect. the arove will consist of at least seven
stone pine trees plus additional tree. whlcb elChiblt
aeuooal color changes. Flower beds will comple·
They'll Ride Froat
Riders on Mission VieJo's floa t entered in
the R ose Pa rade r ecently toured the hom e
of lhe Pasa dena Tourna ment of Roses
From left <JrP Debb ie J acobson of Mission
Viejo High School ; Chr isty Lung, El Toro
Hig h S('h ool ; Harrs1on R . Baker Jr.,
tournament president , Maria Lynn Caron,
rose queen; and Rhonda Shook, Capsitrano
Valley Hi g h School. The girls were
h ome coman~ queens or their respective
schools
Buyers May Get Help·
·county .Approves Funding Search Jor Fil.:OS
Orange County consumer af-
fairs officials plan to s pend
Dana Mother
Faces Charges
()f Beati~g Tot
A Dana Point woman has been
ordered lo face arraig nment
D ec . 22 in Orange C ounty
Superior Court on charges stem-
ming from her alleged attack on
her 3-year·old son and her sister-
m-law.
Lora J ane Berger, 24. of 33832
Valencia Place. was arrested
Aug . 25 m a San Clemente home
a fter sh e alleged ly struck
Stephanie Berger. 25, a nc1 her
son, E ric Duane lfrrgt'r . with a
wine bottle
$110,367 producing h ve animated
film s to help the buyer beware
County supen isors gave them
permission to seek the money 1n
lhe form of a grant from the
f<>der al Department of Health,
Education and Welfare.
THE BULK OF THE funds
\\-OUld be spent with Animation
Pilmmakers Corp. Lo produce the
fi ve films.
C onsumer Arfairs Di rector
R on ald Melendez said the hJms
will be produced m both English
and Spanish, offering tips to con-
s umers to help them avoid being ·
victimized as well as inform
them of remedies to seek if they
have been victimized.
Melendez said the films will be·
used by his s taff before various
groups and will be offered for
showing m high schools and cot:
leges.
HE NOTED THAT his staff
had 127 speaking engagements
last year. ·
Melendez also plans to con·
dense each film into 30-second
tetevision public service announ·
cements.
He said bis office receives 900
telephone complaints daily and
450 written complaints each
month.
Since the county Olllce of
Consumer Affairs openeCI in 1972,
he continued, 24,684 complaints
have been received and 60 per-
cent have been resolved in favor
of lhe consumer.
ment the trees.
.. The campus tragedy of July 12, 1976, remains
inscribed in t.be minds of all persons affiliated with
the university," sald Nudd, dean of student
services. "The deaths, sufferina and heroism of
that horrendous mornln1 are things that we will
L•t tll1m ll•r• •dry j1d/
The 11r11t1t1 gift you e1n 111ve e bldwe111r
11nd tho rest of the femllv 11 an end to this
Mrlo111 Problem. 8edwtllin9 It •rlout-•
11 e1n e1u• compllcattd psyctlologlcel
problem' that IHI e hfetlme. It's so needleu,
bPcau11 bt'dwet11ng. when not caueed by
never forget. 1 , • o•g.tn1c defect Ot d•MaM can ti. ended.
• "Memorial Grove," Nudd continued, "Is en-•' ..;_ Phoot for our FREI? dAOCHURE. lte'sl "llDWETTING ·WHAT ITI ALL ~ 11dvertl~1 ABOUT AND HOW TO END IT" visioned as a place of quiet reflection ln the midst of
the busy life of the university; a living memorial to
those seven persons who dled and a place where the
rest of us might be reminded or them. It wlll also be
a recogniUon of those who were wounded either by
the gunman's bullet.a or by the loss of someone
In Par41nta A report by thfM Medical Ooctora.
Mapalne. FREE-NO COST OR OBLIGATION.
PHONE TOLL FREE
800 -982-5860 whose llfe they valued." · Give vour nemt.addr111s.etc .. 1nd this valuable brochure
w111 be mailed to vou pl'Ompllv.Bedwetter ages 4 to 65. FEDERAL FUNDS WILL COVER construe·
lion of some element.a of lhe grove, includlng grad·
ing and plantings. However, contributions are
needed for stone paving, benches, lighting and a
PACIFIC INT'L. CRO LTD. OUR 27th
Stanford Profe~ional Center, YEAR
770 Welch Rd .• No. 154. Palo Alto, CA. 94304
memorial plaque.
Employee
Honored
For Idea
An Orange County
employee who labored in
his home garage to de-
velop a new hinge for
trash trucks has been
given a $1,500 reward
by county supervisors.
Sutervlaor Ralph
Clark said the hlnee de·
slaned by Otis
"Smokey" Napier or'
Orange saved the county
at least $40,000.
PUBLIC AUCTION
TO THI 1IADI a PUIUC
llMOVED FttOM SOUTH ARICAM CUSTOMS MO. US 1117
16 IAUS HAND MADI C>mlMT AL IU6S
The above shipment was ordered by Teheran House (PTY) LTD of
JHB South Africa arrived Durban 11 /4/77 Via Good Hope Castle
voyage No. 81. Due to financial difficulties the shipment could not
clear South African customs. The entire shipment was sent to Los
Angeles on the Nedlloyd Kingston for complete liquidation to .raise
money to pay cost incurred.
Note: This shipment was hand picked and contains very fine carpets
in varying quallttes and sizes. This is a great opportunity to acquire
oriental rugs. •
THE .AucnOM WILL TAKE PLACE
SUM. DIC. 1 l
AT I P.M.
VIEW DAY OF AUCTION 12 P.M. AT
HEWPOal'll IMM
1107 JAMloa& ID .. MIWPOIT HACH
E.IWMIMG T'""' lllfo:l21JJttMJ2l
AUCTIOMIB CGlh • Check Ctl C ... ct
CATAlOGUIS AYAH.AIU AT AUC110M
SHE t•ArES COURT action on
four felony counts . two of assault
with a deadly weapon, one of
cruel and inhuman punishment'
to a child and a fourth of en·
dangering the life or a child
Bloodmobile Plans
Holiday Donors
UNDER TERMS ol the
county Employee Sus-
gestlon Award Program,
Napier was given $1,500,
the maximum payment
allowed. Clark said new truck .. ___________________________ _.
hinges would not fit the ~-·-----------------------------. facilities county otfieials
Police report.a slate that the de·
fendant and her es tranged
husband, Eric John Berger, were
• jnvolved in a dispute about the
custody of their son at the time of
the alleged incident.
The Orange Counly chapter of the Am erican Red Cross Com·
m unily Bloodmobile will stop for donations Dec. 19 from 12 :30 to 5
p m . at Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach, and Dec. 22 from
2 to 6: 30 p.m . at Saddleback Community Hospital, Laguna Hills.
People who want to donate were advised to ca.U,tho Oraqe
CountY'Blood Center at 835·5381 for appointments. The center looat-
ed in Santa Ana, ls open Cor donations weekdays, 8:30 a .m . to 3:30
pm .. and Saturdays, 10 a .m . to2:30 p.m.
Mrs. Berger is free on her
promise to appear Dec 22
Death NotlC!e•
MILLI• 10 OO A M.etSmll11Tutllt11UlmbS."I•
OTTO PETER MILLER •Oe t• An• Morl ... ry C11a1»I wllll 1"9 Rev
RH ld<!ftl ol Ml SNS!•. C• Pau.o "•'Oii Yu h of 0r .. ge ollO<i•h"Q In •••Y on Monday December S~ •~11 11 t1rme.nl .-u1 bt at F••rP\av•n M tmor1•I
Patlllca H°'°'t•I Svr•l•td Oy ••on 01· Par•, Santa Ail•, Ct Smill'I Tulll•ll
to F. Miiier ol Hunttncrton Boen. C•. LamD Santa Ana MO<lu.,y dlroclon
IMte grand<hlldrtn •nd >la grul \41·•111.
qrandchlldrttn Mr Miiier #H an ac-llOSll
li ve moMbtr or VU1H1r Lodgt "'' G REGORY 0. ROSE, rttld1nl ol
F&AM or Rtd &lull, C• MHO"'' Coron• dtl Mar, P8\\td •••Y
runtr•I S.rvlco woll r.. condu<ltd al Oect mber S, lt/7 Ht Is survl•td by
IQ Q~ A M Friday Oec.,,,oer 9, 1'17 al daughter JtnnllOf' ROM .,d '°" $<oll
Mt. Slla•l• Mtmorlll Ola1»l .. 11n Inter RMe, """'"'' Ech•ard t nd Patr1<I•
monl In Ml W sla Memorial Patil. Roso ol N-1 &.a<l'I. gr.,dmoU>tr
Pierce Brocr..n SmllM' Mortuary In Edna P RoH 114 Pa..oen., l broU..rt
'""Oe ol local arr.,,94meiih. Doug In E. AoH ol Oct..,sldt, Pllilllp
SWEAlllHO[H Rou ol Auttrall• and Edward T. ~OSI,
For the
Record
Blrtlt•
"OUHTAIH VAU.IY
COMMUNITY HOS~ITAL
NOlfCMIU• It, "77
Mr •nd Mn. JoM Pena, F-1•1"
Valley. olr1
Mr and M,..., RoOerl Alnll", H""t
1no1°" lloac:11, bOy NOVIMll• u. nn
Mr aftd Mrt. l rlan Mlc"•ud,
WHtmlMI.,, olrt HOlflMll• U, 1'77
Mr. aftd Mr\. OouglH Fl•""•'· Wnlmlnllltf', bo't'
Museum
Study.
Backed
had been using .
Reconstruction of trash
facilities would have cost
at least $40,000, be said.
But Napier, a county
employee for 18 years,
worked on the problem
In his garage at home
and came up with a sub-
stitute hinge. ·
The public works
foreman was the eighth
county employee to re-
c el v e the maximum
$1,500 reward.
Courthouse
Tours Open
Senior ciUzerul' groups
can tour the county
courthouse in Santa Ana
by calling Rita Semple,
acting tour coordinator, -
at 834-2303 for an ap-
pointment. The tours run
IS DR. FLANZER CHl;l\P?
Ask hia wife about the last time he
picked up the check. Better yet.
ask aome of ~ia dental patients.
They mtght tell you that the tast
ttme he checked on his pick, It
didn't cost that muott So~ \k Or.
Flanzer cheap, or is inexpensive a
better word?
Check him out
·or. Arnold H. Flanzer
370 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
642-0112 STEVEN DANE SWEARINGEN, Jr., ol Newport Baacll. Mau o1 Cllrls· •Gt 1t Rnldant ol l.agune Bu en, Ca loa n Burl al 10 00 AM Tllurod•I'
Paned away on Oeombe< s, 1'17 •I December I at Our I.My 114 Mt. C.rmel Saddlaba~ll Community Hotpllal CallloWc ~II. Htw$*'1 lltec.11, ,,,_
Surttlnd ~ llh per.,ts Mr. ' Mn. tltf'ment Ptclnc View ~l•I Peril.
Ko,,,,tll'I S ... Nrlft09n, 1IS1ff Ktroft, 1"9'1'111' "'99H1s memorial c-rlbll•
grandf)ilrOfllt, Mr. & Mrt. Jim Ad.tm1 llont to Hoeg Memorial HHpll ...
or Sant• ,.._, ea. -vi Mr. ' Mrs. Pa<llft\ll ... Mor111tryOlrec:•r1.
Mr and Mn. ~ Ertl, Fountain
Valley, t>oy.
NOVIMll1Ut, 1t17
Mr. ef)CI Mf$. IErlc l.Awlt, Hllllllflttell
... "',bey.
The need for a natural
his tory, fine arts or
cultural history museum
in Orange County will be
s tudied by a yet-lo·be·
appointed clUzens group,
county supervisors have
decided. from 12:30 to 3 p.m. on ---------,---------......--------------~
Cl.rt11ta ~lnotn of Htw Mulco. DUNCAN
StevtnwHa11f'-•1tolL01Al•mll0t EILEEN MAlllOH DUNCAN, rttl·
Hloll Sch~I end wa1 eu1nc11n9 5.td· dent ot Stn Juen Capl1tr111•, Ce.
dlobaO Collfllt ..ii.rt "9 •H ttuelenl PnM4 awt'f 111 OK..,,._r s, 1'77 If!
body Vice Pl"eslde"t. An' .. ltnMfll• her home tfltr • IM9tllY lllNM. A
NoplUl't Socllty wllll private burl•I at nellw. er ~Ille~ to'Orentt
sea. • COlllllY 12 .,..,. .... Sha -°"ner .,
f'llltCI, JR. Capistrano VIII toe Florllt, S. J11an
llALf'H AlllTHU• PtERC,, J ll • re CtPlstr-, CA. SM •IJO unreel "
sldonl or 5-11• All~Ca. P•H..t •••Y Secreter., TAtturff lor ttit Seti J111n on December a, 1t77 ltl'le-V• oft. Lov· CaP1atre110 Olelnlltr Ill COmlftrc:t I~
1110 ton 114 NII. ' Rel.it P11tce or lt1S. Siie 11 1111'1tl11td by lier ~ S.nl•Ana,ca.~ IMNlcuwlllllll Gor1Un Ouncen of S•n J11w11
lltld Wtdn-y O.Ctm!19f' 1, lt11 ti C:1pl6l,.110, Ca ., deuOlll•r Lull•
' Mov1il 01 9-11 Juan Cepttlnno, Ca end
----------IWt '°"' \)erdlOn Ouncen, Jr. of S.11 ' J11a11 Cepll&f-. ca. ~ Menrf11 of
McCOJIMICll ca111dt. S9'vlco lleld Wtc1nttd1,i .-.TU"•llS Otetmbw l, 1'77 at J'JO P.M.. 1t ...... ·'Ta McC:orrolck ~lakln Moflllwt 0.Jlllf Lagun~ Beach F1t11er E. Sitter• of St. Mairgaret ;;f 494· .. 415 Stollefld E.llltcopef OIUrtl! ofl1Cl1l.f11 .. =. tft1lrnmeft~ wlll ltllo• urwlcu. La7gun Hills McCormlclt •ll•lon Mtttuer~ s..
JUI'! Wlstl'-,Ce.dlNCIOra.
San Ju11n Capistrano
496-1778
•
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Fu.nerat ""ices for
Mn. JordaaPtatlllps, 81,
a member ol the
H()llywood BOw1 Alaocla-
Uon board ~ cUrectora,
were achedwed today at
ihc WUJh.lre BOUievard
Mr. end Mrl. Lee !Mw, H1111Uft9\1ft
llMcll,911'1.
Mr, •ftd MI'S. Doulll• khftll.dt, HLtlll•
l1111lon lffdl.11r1. • NOVIMCI• U, 011
Mr. tftd Mn. l"r_,.• .. ., .. y, Huftl·
lflgton .. edl. llo<f
Mr. •rid Mn. Do1191as Onure,
WHtmlnAar, bey.
IAHO..•MlllfTfi
OINC•Al. MOS~ITAL
NOVIMll• M, 1'77
Mr. Mid Mn. Dl#letll Htlnrtcll, Oen•
Pol"" lloliOYIMIHIS, "11
Mr, ttMI Mn. lrtdl.., ....... ltfl Juan~-·"°"· ~ ...... 1'71
Mr. tlld Mrt. Jiit Coronedo, Ceplstr-IMdl, olrt.
Mr. tnd Mrs. MefllOl'l l(l"\ltt Jr., o-Poll'lt, llrt. Mr. lllif Mn. Vltli'f NegjNtl, IH o_...1a,..,...
NOYllMalR .. 1"7
Tbe board voted 4-1
Tuesday to create the
weekdays.
commltlee , wlth ' · · · · • · ·
Supervisor Ralph No Secession?
Diedrich opposed. SACRAMENTO (AP)
Diedrich argued lbat .-lt will)~ .. harder fot
lhe county's creation ot outlying sub.urban areas to try to secede from Los such a study group cbuld Angeles County tn the
lm ply lhal county funds future under a bill signed
mlgh.t become available by Gov. Edmund Brown
to build museums. Jr1 However, the bill, SB
''There are to6 many 700 by Sen. David
other areas that need to R o b e r t t C D • L o s
be ·addressed," the An1eles), doesn't affect
Fullerton supervisor ·secession attem.pts ln
• a 1 d • "Tb' ere Un 't Loi Anaeles County •and
enou1h money to go in Santa .Barbara
around now." County. Mr. ett4 Mn. Lt1rrY TOdd, c:.lltP-
&M<ll,11trl. Mr. •nd Mn. H-Cllftel; .._ _______________ ..;_ _____ ,
Clt(llNltt,boY\ ...................... . Mr. tftd Mn. Rlctlertt 11111,
CllPlstrtM 9'tcll, tw1111irlt. wov.,.. .. .,""
Mr, Ind /Wfl. T"'"* "'""• .. o-...11r1.
, I
PEC&MBER SPBCIA~
Ol'THIMONJ'H
A dellclout ground belr patty ttrved on an l n111tsn
Mllllll\ wttttir*ltcl "'*'• lrtnch lr.u, 1e1wce, lom.ilo, ~ c:htps aoda glass or 7·up
•
. I
DAil Y P!LOT
'
.
•• • t .~
ESCONDIDO (AP) -
Almo1T-ioo starvlnc
1anlma1'1 .five dead rab·
~~it• •l\d sill dead · chldceosJiaV&beeofouod
· lo a wma11'1~ rented house~ aut.boritlea•ald to-, day. ~
The chlcDna.auu allve were 10 hungry they
wer& eating each other to
J7'4cursions to ~tur11"! ·stay alive • .said William
Huskey .. director of the
Escondido Humane
Society. Resumption of steamboat service between
Sacramento, Oakland and San Francisco is
planned by Marshall Owen, president of
lnland Waters, who wants $8.5 million to
build this ste3m-powered stem wheeler ex-.
cursion boat. He said he will seek govern-
ment approval for the excursion service.
which he hopes to have 1n operation late in
1979.
Layoffs May Be.Delayed
"WE FOUND a female
dog chained in the
bathroom and 12 dogs
tied or caged in boxes so
small they couldn't turn
around," be said.
. . .
The woman owner said
she fed the animals and
her three cblldreo, rang-
ing in age from 13 to 16,
and pays $150 monthly
r ent out of a $389 welfare
check.
House B-1 Support Could Mean More Jobs
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A House vote to go
~head with $462 million in spending on the B·l
bomber could mean postponement or some layoffs
and r ehiring or about 1,000 workers at Rockwell In-.
lernalional.
. But Rockwell. prime contractor for the con-
troversial supersonic jet bomber, said Tuesday it
won 't start recalling workers until the Senate
a grees to free the funds.
THE HOUSE APPROVED on Tuesday the pro-
duction of the filth and sixth models of the plane at a
cost of $462 million. Four test planes already have
been built.
In the Senate, whkb earlier voted to·cancel
money for the two aircraft, a second vote \vas not
Immediately scheduled. President Carter has an-
flounced he wants to kill the B-1 program.
Earlier this year, Rockwell laid off about 7,000
people when Carter decided to scrap the B·l in
favor of the Cruise Missile. About 7,500 are still
employed on the program, with the fourth plane
nearing completion. ·
IN A 191-166 VOTE, THE House kept alive an
earlier appropriation for construction or the two
aircraft. Carter bad asked that those funds be
rescinded and the Senate had agreed.
Rockwell has stockpiled parts for construction
· of the filth and sixth aircraft:--
ln urging Senate approval of the additional
spending, David Wright, Rockwell spokes man,
l Brown Backs
i Tax Cot Plan
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. says that if the legislature passed a blll
making the slate pay $300 million a year for local
•Welfare that homeowners now pay in property tax-
. .es, he'd sign it.
• . The Democratic governor said Tuesday that
'such a bill could be passed within 100 days and take
,effect within a year.
THERE WAS NO immediate estimate ot the
lmpact OD individual taxpayers, but $300 million
• divided equally among Callf ornia homeowners
'would be $75. •
It was Brown's fl.rsl expression of willingness to
tJlgn a bill to sblftt welfare costs. It came after a 14·
Jlour meeting with seven Democratic leaders of the
.State Senate, the first of four meetings this week
with different groups o! legi.slators. I Brown also said he'd be willing to consider pro-
r.sals similar lo the $4.8 billion tax shift bill defeat-
ed. the last night of the 1977 legislative session, or a
;"plan to increase the current $1,750 homeowner's
,Property tax exemption.
~ AND RE SAID BE IS wllllng to talk about drop-
. flDg provisioo.s o! the tax bills that would give blg-
~er rebates or cuts to low·income homeowners and
!!enters.
Republicans had crlticlzed those plans as
••social tinkering," and urged more relief at mld·
die-income levels.
All these options were offered but defeated in
the 1977 session. But Brown said he senses "a new
willingness" to compromi.se.
BROWN SA.ID DE AND the senators discussed
various tax proposals that will be before the
legislature when it reconvenes Jan. 3, and agreed
that alternaUveuhould be pursued.
"Tbi.s la the lint. step in brinal.ng about a ~Segialative property tu relleti>rOgram, ''he said. •
'
said, ''You wind up with two (more) airplanes in-
stead of having a pile of useless paperwork and a lot
of unused parts."
Huskey said she could
be charged on 200 counts
of cruelty to animals,
carrying a possible jail
s entence totaling 100
years.
THE FIFTH AND SIXTH planes are about 12
percent complete, he said.
The original program called for the construc-
tion of 244 B-ls at a cost of nearly $25 billion. The B·l
was intended to replace the nation's aging fleet of
B·52s, but Carter said the nation could continue to
use the older planes while also deploying the Crulae
Missile.
The woman said Tues·
day she was looking for
..some place in the coun-
try where 1 can take mf
anlmals and cblld.ren. ''
Lawsuit
'On Smog
Rejected
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-A judge h8$ dismissed
$22 million in damage
suits by five manufac-
turers, saying the state
was not bound by its
prior assurances that it
was going to require
smog control devices on
older cars.
Superior Court Judge
Jack Ryburn ruled Tues·
day that the state had a
right to repeal a 1971
measure requiring con-
trol devices for nitrogen
oxides and could not be
held liable for losses in·
curred by the manufac-
turers wbo had de·
veloped the devices.
PLAINTIFFS included
Dana Corp. of Virginia,
Echlin Manufacturing
Co. of Connecticut and
three Cali!ornia·based
firms: ConUgnlUon Co.,
Combustion Seiences
I n c . a n d E n e-c g y
· Sciences Inc.
Ryburn agreed with
the Califomla attorney
general's office that the
firms were not forced to
begin producUon or the
smog control devices.
The judge said be was
sympathetic with the
companies' plight
because of their reliance
on the Legis lature. But
he indicated any relief
would have to come from
the Legislature, not
. through the courts.
ATTORNEYS FOR the
five firms, when told of
Ryburn's ruling, said .
they would appeal.
The devices for alx
million 1966-70 model
cars bad beet\ required
under t.be 1971 A)r
Resources Act. At that
Ume, the Air Resourcea
Board urged industry to
develop the devices to
belp reduce smog.
~ . .
And only Perpetual
has Green Carpet
Treatment. The
Greenlight Express
Line lets you zip in and
out. Your eyes light up
at how promptly the
special Action Desk can
take care of you. You
feet richer the moment
your Savings Counselor
gives you those extra
sa'IJngs tips. You 'll like the
convenience of our Preferred
Service, too -just call and
reserve a time to come in and do
business without waiting. All free!
And you get interest higher than
any bank, savings insured to
$40,000, and people to serve you
with the biggest smiles in the
west! That'sjustpartofGr~n
~tate Mental Beal~h
ProgrlimS ilil A.gain
Carpet Treatment. Tryall
the rest. It will make
you feel good all over ..
·SACRAMENTO C:AP) -~ltomla'1 mental botplta.lt and~
i m1 tor the retuded are 1W1 ~·a •race,•• HJI the 1tate LltUe ver Oommllsion.
bi ~ TUelday aald lltUe Im· tinebl hu been lnade since the
mllllon remedies for rudl)' dellcr::r::I: wuteflll ~ ams" Diarlt two 7'at1 aao.
CALIFORNIA
,
for h:>licJaY
· fe.stivitiea ....
ourfmest selection~ classX=.
herri~e s~in
shades of broWn ,beige., or
traditional grey
44 faehk>n Island, newport center 144-5070
•
0
, ..
I i
. ' ...... -. -
• NATIONAl * DAILY Pit.OT
Roberts BUilds an Einpin~
EDITORS' N01E. WMn Oral·
RobtrP &Dal a bou, l• .fG~• fu1 /amily
1QJ.t ao poor that "wn tM poor pro·
·pie called au poor.' Toda11. Roberta
preafde• oi>er J worldwide,
multimUl1on dollar' mmut111. llere. ·m tJw thitd part of~ terle1, u a took
at Ute United Methofiat mi11Uter.
• TULSA, Okla. (AP) -Sweat
gliat.eoed on his forehead and
streamed down !Js face as the
dark-haired man dosed his eyes
and reached out bij hands.
"Put your han.ls right on the
screen," be crooned, his necktie
drooping beneath~ opened col·
lar. "That's riiht,put th~m right
up there, next to n;.ne.
"OH, GOD, ~AL these peo-
·ple. Let your api11t flow through
me and cleanse and heal these
people. Heal! He•l ! ·'
With thoae last shouted
words still nverberating
through the 10,(00.seat canvas
"tent, the Rev. Gr.mville Obadiah
"Oral" Roberts epened his eyes
and prepared l< close another
weekly televisiot performance.
But not before an appeal for
money to help tim continue bis
work.
aperity, iµ, 1tock in trade was
be.Uni. It'a a mocb more subdued
program now. But the money
that started trickling in then bas
reached a ic>rrent estimated at
well over S20 mUllon a year.
motlly U1 contributions.
The Or"-1 Roberts
Evanaellcal Aasc>ciation Inc., is
the um.breUa org•nizatJon which
covers alt the varied activities.
1'11£ LATEST AVAILABLE
information h-om the Int.ernal
Revenue Service is from the fis-
cal year ending July 31, 1975. It
showed that the association bad
gross receipts of $27.S mllllon oC
which $25.6 million came. from
contributions, aift• and erants. The information also showed expenses of $24.37 million. The
net worth was listed u $7.69
milllo~1 up from $4.55 mUllon at
the beginning ot the fiscal year.
The single biggest expen·
dlture -$7.2 million -was for contributions, gifts and grants.
All but $1.2,694 went to Oral
Roberta University.
mE NEXT BIGGEST ex-
penditure -$6.19 mUlion -w.s
'The aal• aW.9 I ~ •• .,.Cela Is Cite •••ettt ' tltlttle ..... 9MtllelJ, ·-tletltl.'
That was the way Oral
Roberts. evan:elist and Caith
healer, appeared on black and
white t.elevisioi in the late 19505.
THE TENf HAS long gone
and the weekly color telecasts
are taped Jn a studio on the cam·
pus of the university he foundea
and named tor himself. They and
the four yearly televised spec-
taculars are slick productions.
equal in quality to any top
network show.
The new Oral Roberts still
preaches of hell and redemption.
~ the television specials have
tha aura of a variety show.
Even the weekly services
have high entertainment value.
wth the World Action Singers, a
er.oup of clean-scru~bed
ytungsters, and Roberts son
Richard doing most of the
phfonnlng.
BUT THE ELDER Roberts does appear for a short talk and
t> plug his new book, which is
~for the asking.
It wasn't always that way.
Jetore the bi& tent there was a 11nall:er one, .eating only 300,
md little, backwoods Oklahoma urchee. That was the time of
tbirt--sleeved, ahoutloa Pen· atal Holiness faith healer
slowly. surely, gathered in
tlle sick, the halt, the lame -and
tltdollars.
Today, the suave ,
fahlonably tailored United
J&thodist mlniater presides over
~ ever-increasing empire that
infdes the $150 million Oral
rl8 Unlverait1, a propoeed
$1 million health center. the
telavtsion productions, Abundant
Lit? magulne, a retirement
villtge and a worldwide ministry
rea1hing into virtually every cor·
ner •f the earth.
IN TOE DAYS before pr,,.
for radio and television ex-
penses. Other major budeet
items included: reliflous l 1 t e r a t u r e , $ 2 . 8 m ll l,o n ;
magazine costs, $1.l million;
postage, $1.55 million; and com·
pensotioo of officers directors
and trustees, $132,355.
Roberts says be receives a
salary of $29,000 a year, a car, a
houae and expenses. The 8SIOCla:
lion's tax return Usu no 11lary
for him, as board chairmen, or
his wife, a trustee, but his son.
who is listed as prealdent, was
down for $25,000 compensation.
Other salaries and wages
amounted to S2.6 million; office
supplies and expense. $603,655;
data procesa!D1; $881,974 ; addl·
tional spending ~for sue h things aa
rent. travel expenses. pro·
fesslonal fees, photography and
miscellaneous, made up the r est
ottbe $24.37 million.
ROBERTS ALSO SERVES
on the boards of aeveral banks
and other corporations.
He says all bla savings have
been plowed bac~ into his un·
iverstty. But he adda: "I believe
God wants you to be 1uccessf~"
and that it's not wronc for a
minister to live comfortably. Ile
HY• that lt Jesus were aUVft to-day, he would h•ve bad bis needs
met adequately.
He warns. however, tbat
with all the money coming in
from bis various ventures, be bu
one~orry.
"THE MAIN TBJNG I uve
to watch ls -now this la lmpor·
tant. -the moment I think about
money, I'm dead.
"lcan'tget.on TV and ask for
money. Some do, but I can't. I
have to think and concentrate on
how I can help that person who is
diacouraeed or hurttn1, who
needs to have his needs met."
And he doesn't ask for money
exclusive and plUJbesf sections
of Tulsa. The latest IRS lnforn\a·
lion lists a $20S,594 lte111 for re·
aldential property, and while tt lJ
not specifi~lly listed aa Roberts'
home, those ~ho know the area
aay that land values and the style
of hJs house would put it to that
bracket.
ASIDE FllOM THE dona·
tiona that make up the bulk of the aasoclatlon's income, the Oral
Roberts EvangeUstlc Assoela·
tion Inc. listed Investments in 38
corpora lions tot all n g $1.19
millton in the la~st tax return.
Nezt: JU:: Humbard ORAL ROBERTS' EMPIRE 18 EV!ft INCR!:AStNO
United Methodltt Mlnlater ~ Wtte, Evelyn
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP
THE FRMERY . . .
Custom & "Do It Yourself"
Picture Fraililliej
* I ors of custom ....... to chooN from * Mats-Replcr c.cl no11 ... glau-cut to sa. * N11llepolnt stretching and framing -CMY she * Oval mah ..ct glass
. '
oranoeeou1oa;1yP1101 Editorial Pag_e
d~efurSo~tl~ W -----~-~~~---~~~
.c
Wednelday, Oecem* 7, 1977
Robert N. Weed/Publi$~r
in Zoning Dispute The Day U.S. ls~lation En ed .
There's now t«ome hope that the three·sided legal en·
tanglemenl tnvolving the Arnol Development Co., the
Costa Mesa City Council und the North Costa Mesa
Homeowners' Association may leave the courtroom and
return to the city leYel for a much-needed second look.
An encouraging sjgn came Monday when Arnel
dropped its $2.5 million lawsuit against the homeowners.
They are trying to stop construction or anything but single·
ramily homes on three parcels totaling 68.3 acres, includ·
ing Amel's 46-acrc parcel.
This sets the stage for a crucial city council m eeting
this Thursday evening. lf the homeowners and three de·
velopers have indeed reached a "resolution" on the issue.
the city council might remove the homeowners' r ezoning
mi'tiative from the March 7 municipal election.
This action. of course, is contingent on some yet-lo·be
~wered legal questions and the full agree ment of the
homeowne r s
If the init1at1vt• is removed, Arnel's still-pe nding s uit
aeainst the city for placing the injliativc on the ballot
would be moot
All three s ides could then start from the ground floor in
devising projects on the parcels that would satisfy every-
on e.
This fingers-crossed scenario could lead to resolution
of an incredibly complex issue without a bitter and costly
~gal battle .
'Classic' or J11nk? ,.
Cost a Mesans ijon't have lo drive far to reahle that the
city has a great many collectors of aging autos. There are
plenty around.
This can present problems to homeowners and city of·
ficials alike since one t'Qan'£ j'unk is another's classic.
This intriguing point has been brought to light by feisty
restaurateur Sid Soffer in his ongoing battle regarding the
towing of his three Cadillacs by city zoning officials.
Admitting to the ambiguous nature of a c ity mailer
that SoHer mis interpreted, city officials have offered to
give back his towing fees.
Soffrr is rejecting this offer and seeking to make
"p roperty r ights" a federal case. He says the city had no
business coming on his property and removing three opera-
ble cars
But rather than continue his battle over principles.
Soffer would perform a bettrr service by taking the city up
on its offe r to have him help write a new ordinance on older
autos.
The c1lv needs a clearer stand on the issue a nd there's
certainly ·no :.horla~c of local experts lo provide
al tern al i \'CS
Voice for Students
Beginning Jan. 1. there will be a student represen-
tative on the Coast Community College District B6ard.
After recent passage of legislat ion r equiring a nonvqt·
mg stude nt member. Coast trustees approved a system by
which the district's three colleges will rotate liOlection of
the rcprN;entative among themselves. ·
The first college t~bft tepreaented, as dt!eided by the
toss of a com , will be~en West, followed-by Orc.tnge
Coast and then Coastline.
Student leaders ·say they want to insure that those
selected ha ve a genuine interest in student well-being and
some knowledge of how the board operates ...
The responsible approach of most coast s tudent
leaders gives reason to expect that the new board mem·
bers will prove to be valuable sources of information and
irtformed opinion in influencing board decisions.
And should this prove to be the case .. studen.ls hope
their member eventually may be granted voling privileges. •
• Opinions expressed In the SQace a~ove are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on th1a page are those of their authors and
art1s1s Reader comment is Invited. Addrtss The Dall)t-Rflot, P.O.
6ox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Box
By L. M. BOYD
Interesting, that. word
"box.'' To "box" something
for shipment needs no ex-
planation, certainly. To
•'box'' a compass merely
means to name its 32 points
forward then backward in
consecutive order. But less
well known is that to "box'' a
drink is to pour it back and
forth between two glasses to
,miK it.
Are you satisfied with your
first name? If not, why not?
Scholan now thinlt that peo-
ple who don't Uke their own
Ont names tend to be dis·
sallsfied with themselves tn
teQeral. Far more men than
'fromen are known to dislike
their own (irst n•mes, in·
cldentally. .
Conalde r youra~lf a Seasoned ClUzen, too, If you
can recall the first l'.novi~ io
which that heavyweilhl actor
Sidney Greenstreet ap·
peared. "The Maltese
F~lcon," it was. In 1940.
.Greenstreet was almost a
Seasoned Citizen himself at
the time, lncldentally. He was
61. Not a bad way to head
toward retirement, whJlt?
At. hand ii a report that a
third of all babies born In this
coun~ry each year are the
offspring Of unwed tnothen
aged 17oryounger.
Q. "What's a housecat's
norm al body temperature?"
A. lOI'Aidegrees F.
Q. "When the Japanese
bombed Pearl HarbQron Dec.
1, ltMl, what were the new
m ovies playln'I In •
Hollywood?"
A. 111J'he Great Dictator "
"Ser1e ant York 11 arid
''ClUienKane. ''
Q. "In clgaret~. wh•~ was
tho No. l seller before filters came out?"
A.Camell.
lt 's a Sund•y ilk• any other.
Going on Christ.mas. Brown
p11ckagea hlddtn ln closets.
Outside brlSk and an•ppy,
thlldren 10 to Sunday School.
Newspaper jammed with ad-
vertisements. All about the new
upaweep hairdo. Wanamaker's
advertises white shirts at two
dollars (reaular two-fifty and
three-dollar values -better
come early). Morning news pret·
ty good: Russians counter-
attacking around Moscow ;
maybe tMy'll hold out after all.
After lunch the telephone r1nas.
And it's never, ever, the same
again ....
"Hey, heard the news? The
Japs ·have bombed Pearl
Harbor!"
"t-lo! You're c razy. Hey
~nestine .. , "
Everybody of my era knows
where they heard the news,
December 7, 1941. Try us out.
That's what separates geoera·
tions. The stadium was crowded
to watch the Redskins and at the
half the loudspeaker began to
blare. Will Lieutenant General
Smith call b.is office? 'I)iere's a
telephone call Jar Con)mander
Russell! It went on and on.
Veteran New York Times
p~ograpber George Tames
wcmdered what was up: called
his office: got the news. He went
to the Japanese Embassy; iron
gates barred; a gray white
smoke rising from burning
papers In the rear. There was a
two-way traffic Jam on
MassacbusQtJ.s Avenue of cs~
gawklng at tt\e embassy.
IT'S AN ·enniversar)· to re.
member not be<:ause a war start·
ed but becatl!e a madness ended
-Isolationism. l have a personal
feeling because I was one of the
gawky boys who,voh.tnteered In
Mr. Wilson~ dream to make the
world safe ror democracy. We
won ; there was the exhilaration
of tbe Armi.J11ce, and then lhe
Lodge right against the Leaaue.
Wilson forlornly asked the nation
to remember the "dear ghosts"
of boys left on Flanders Fields.
There was a majority, never a
two-thirds majority, for the
League. Soon the whole crusade
was derided. The Nye Committee
showed it was all a plot by munl·
tions makers.
Senate isolationists defeated
the World Court, too. Again there
was a maJority, 52 lo 36, but this
was several short or two·tbirds.
Borah· and J ohn&on le fl the
Senate chamber laugl'\ine and re·
joicing.
Isolationism came down
through lhe start of World War
II. It weakened when England
fought alone and when Hitler
madly attacked his surprised
partner Stalin. But Colonel
Lindbergh wrote an open Jett•r to
Americans through Collier's:
Franco wa.s defeated, he said:
Great Britain was being defeat·
ed; the US would be defeated,
too, if lt joined the fray. No dis·
Unction between Hitler 's and
Churchhill 's moral arms.
On Thursday, Dec. 4, three
days before Pearl Harbor, the
isolationist. Chkago Tribune and
WashinetoQ Tim es-Herald
published a top-secret U.S. posi·
tion paper layin~ out lo,lllstic and
supply plans for an imagined in-
vasion of Germany with 5 million
Atnericans in 1943. It was the
kind ol thmg all war offices pre·
pare, but the new s papers
charged it showed a Roosevelt
plot.
And so the day of trial came, 36
years ago. Most of it still ts quite
incredible. It is incredible
because we bad broken lhe
Japanese code and never should
have let the surprise occur. A
natty little colonel named
William Friedman who was a de·
mon at cryptography had un-
scrambled the imperial code un-
d~r operatJon ''MaaJc" and was
givJna the Army, Navy and State
Departments translations or
Tokyo waT prders before the
Japanese t.rOops got them: We
knew an attack was coming.
Where, we didn't know .
WE KNEW that Japan had
sent a so-called "peace"
emissary to Washington to fool
wi and mask the surprise, and we
played alona wlth it; it was a
double game of make·belleve.
We bad warned Army and Navy
Commanders Nov. 24 or a proba-
ble attack; we had sent a moro
urgent waminf, Nov. 27. But
mental blockage is more
powerful than reality; the attack
would be on Malaya, Dutch East
Indies, Phillplnes, Guam -not
Hawaii.
Then the following lunny mis-
haps occurred. Tokyo dispatched
a 14 ·part m esaafe to the
Japanese embassy in
Washington Dec 6 of which the
first 13 parts were decoded for the
State Department before the J •PS
got them. "This means war,"
solemnly 58 FDR to H&JTY
Hopkin• as h ate dinner from a
tray. There 1btatlll be hopt 1.b
the 14th aectl ; however. Oddly
enough the apaneae tranamll·
ters called it day betoro Mnd·
In& the 14th ectlon, which had
the sting In t (though it dldn't
mention P rl Harbor). They
sent it nex morning. General
Marshall, Clef of S~alf of the
Army, dldn' ect the 14th aect1M
till he cam in from a Sunday
horseback rt at. 11 :30. He sent
another alert
NfC equipment
picked up Ja nese planes Wln&-
ing to attack at 7 a.m. Just as
super sensiti electro~c equip-
ment is sup sed to do. The
watcb officer ldn't do anylhlna;
It must be a ight or Americaa
B-l7s.
shall decided lo
unday alert
to U .S . c mm anders,
because c ntact with
Hawaii was t mporarily inter·
rupted so he ent the crucial
me11a1e by W tem Union and
RC,\ and fina a motorcycle
courier ata out with it in
Hawaii to mill y headquarters.
Unaccountably rnbs began to
fall and he jum lnto a ditch.
to all of $.he
above the Ha 'ian comman·
ders, Admlra 1Kimmel and
General Short, ere barely on
speaklni term fromt int~r·
service Jealousy\ Ute b g bat·
llesbips were tied up lwo-by-two
for fear of sa\)otage. The
airplanes were on the ground.
Anti-aircraft &uns were wroUly
placed and there ~s no effed.lve
air patrol by either service.
Absolute surprise. The Pa~ific
neet was cancelled out: aght
battleships an4 three cruifers
sunk or disabled. I
Yes, I remember t.he da . 1
went to the White House d
stayed until l a.m. A crisp nl t,
nearly freezing; true.ks wiUl
ly Christmas trees cominC
Pennsylvania Avenue; a m ty
moon climbing the trees over e
old bronze cannon in Lafay te
Park. Cabinet meetin& at 8:
Congressional leaders at 9.
We went out to stand on e
front portico of the White H
-a llt.Ue stone ataJe among columns.
Behind the iron rails on
av.enue a lilUe crowd looked
us. It tried to sing the
Spangled Banner.
• TRB is a longat1ud ng
Waahington bybne. It• author LtT·
rently ia Richard Strout of the
ChrUtian Science Mottilor.
WOmen's .Conference Worth lnvestmen
To tbe Editor:
On·behatr of the Orange County
delegation to the National
Women's Conference held re-
cently in Houston, I wish to thank
the Dally Pilot lor its excell,nt
coverage of the event.
I should like to point out,
however, that your editorial
<Nov. 25) is misleading. You re·
fer to the Houston gathering aa a ~$.5 Million Meeting." The meet·
ing last month was the culmlna·
lion of meetings held ln every
state and territory of the Vnited
States, meetings which attracted as many as 11,000 women (Utah)
and 6.000 women (California). Jn
preparation for each of the state
meetin1s, educational materials
were prepared, workshops and
panels were organized, speakers
were found, Jnd smaller reiJonal
meetinp were held, such as the
one ai UC Jryine last sprlfli.
Publicity had to be sent out; this
involved \he designing, wriUng
and printina of thousand• of
brochures in order to insure am·
pie representation at each state
meettna. tin ally, deleaateit to.
Houston recelved mlnlmal ex·
pense11 for (are, room and boanfJ
the country even received ex·
pense money.
In the tradition of American
womanhood, we volunteered OW"
time and ener~ in the service of
our country.
Lel me remind you that ~
inillion represents about 20
minutes .Or the Vietnam war in
terms of cost and there was no
loss or life in l·fouston . Rather,
there was an amrmalton of life.
It was peaceful conference filled
with the hopes of milliona of
wom e n fro m all walks or
American life.
VIVIAN H. HALL
Chair, Orange County
Delegation, National Women 's
Conference
Al least another four million are
needed for completion.
For those wisbirJg to con·
tribute. donations may be sent t.o
The Arizona Memorial Museum
Foundation. P .O. Box 6061,
Honolulu, Hawaii 96818.
..
I ,,
I
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I
'.i
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D~LYPILOT Ae
i
Crnne 'Family' Netted~ -~ ----""--------" _ _,.
HE 'T \ 'i i EX I<<'( 'Tl\' E )10TO H 110 '11·
1-"BO\I 111 -'.l<H FHIFIH . \'l>EH l'IPOl<T~
Dad Again
·comedian Bob
Newhart, whose
situation comedy is
in its fifth season on
CBS, and his wife
Ginny are the
parents of a new
daughter, Courtney
Quinn, born Friday.
She is their fourth
child.
CLEVELAND (AP> -The
FBI. ouWnina its case aaalnat
nine alleted Co1a No.,...a mem-
bers charged In two car·bomb
murders, unlolda a tapestry ot
crime whose threads or extor-
~ion, murder, loan·sharklnl and
aambllng reech across the na-
tion.
FBI agent Joseph E. Griffin Jr.
describes the cue as "the most
significant action that has been
made to date against any alngle
organized crime family in the
United States."
AMONG THE NINE indicted
by the Cuyahoea County grand
jury wu 73-year-old James T.
Licavoli, described by the FBI
affidavit as the Cosa Nostra capo
or boss ln Cleveland. Specitlcal·
ly. the affidavit filed in federal
court accused Licavoli of order·
ing the assassination of John
Nardi, identified as a former
Cosa Nostra member, and of his
associate, Daniel J . "DaMy"
Greene, during a power struggle.
The nine were indicted on
charges of conspiracy to commit
Earn 8.06% v~~~~~~ 7~.75%
3-year certificate*
IRA/ INDIVIDUAL RETIR£.MENT
ACCOUNTS.
murder, aggravated murder for
hlre, agaravated arson aQd
enga1ln& in organized crime.
have saJd the organization rues • * H:!~·XHS~ or ;d7·ii'ii, l'\~•X ·f;77 7 l·.,t. :!7 .-,
in milllo~ ot dollars. -' so GAl.S The affidavit says that ln 1973, • • OF GAS
two yeara before tbe death 0( •
former Cota Nostta boss John ,.. FDEE ScaUab, Nardi "appeared to be it R
• .. ORANGE
• COUNTY'S
: IMPORT
• R KING" ,.. ;-..-.. ....... ..,_.--... __ __, THKEE OF THE men -
Llcavoll, Angelo Lonardo, 86,
and Thomu J . Sinito, 3S -en·
tered Innocent pleas Tuesday in
Commoo Pleas Court.
maklog a play for leadenblp in • .. 1ta ...... u the Cleveland .• .family." • "'-""~··
A fourth man, John Calandra,
66, suffered a heart attack after
his arrest and was in intensive
care at St. Vincent Charity
Hospital.
The affidavit signed by FBl
agent E. Michael Kahoe details
an "organized crime conspiracy
which Ls controlled nationally by
a membership which ls ex·
elusively Italian." The organiia·
lion ls variously referred to as
"The Out/it," "La Cos a Nos tr a"
or "our thing," the statement
aaid.
KAHOE SA.JD THE a!!ldavit
was based on information from
confidential sources, including
one Cosa Nostra member. It
gives details of the struggle for
~onlrol or the rackets in
northeastern Ohio, where police
A COSA NOSTBA leader WU
quoted in lbe affidavit as •ayine
that Nardi, a nephew of Cosa
Nostra underbosa Anthony
Mllano, "had five criminal u-
sociatea who were klWna people
by putting bombs in their cars."
In 1976, after be bad taken over
as capo in Cleveland. Ucavolt
lea med that four Cleveland faml·
ly members, wbowerenotfurtber
identified, bad alianed
themselves with the "lrilb mob"
headed by DaMy Greene, the al·
fldavltsaid.
Kahoe quoted one of his
sources as saying Licavoll called
the Irish mob "a tigbUy knit
group who were utilizldg ex·
plosives and olbe.r sophisticated
weapons to attempt to gain con·
trol of criminal activities in
Cleveland.''
WE PAY YOU MORE ON INSURED
SAVINGS THAN ANY BANK
,.. ... •• • • • • ,..
• •
fWY tt'
~Dif:GO.(fb.
or FREE
OIL CHANGES
A• recommended by the
factory for .. l•I as you owa )'«Ir ur.
• • • ,. ,..
• it ..
* • •• •• • '*'"""-....---~-'--......... • HERB
• FRIEDLANDER
it-ISMAKIN(j
Jt GR•:AT DJ.:A ,S
• • • • .. • .. ... • .. • • • .. ... ... • ;• .• ••
it .. •
,.
The IRA Plan 1s for employee,s JIQ~ cov-
ered by a pension or profit-sharing plan.
If you qualify. you may deposit up to 15o/o,
maximum $1500,of your annual salary ina
Gibraltar retirement account and.~arn our
high 7~ o/o interest. You may .deduct the
amount you deposit from your Federal
and State tax returns, and also defer Fed-
-.
YOUR IDLE BANK CHECKING FUNDS
EARN DAILY INTEREST'WITH
GIBRALTAR'S FREE TELEPHONE
YRANSFER SERYl~E·: ~·,11:
• eral and State taxes on th~ interest earned.
KEOGH/SEL~EMPLOYED
RETIREMENT PLANS.
The Keogh Plan is for self-employed
people. If you qualify, each year you
may deduct up to 15%. maximum $7500,
from earned income on your Federal tax,
and up to 10%. maximum $2500. from
your California State tax when funds ~re
deposited into your Gibraltar-Keogh
account. The high 7~ % interest yoor
account earns may also be deferred until
retirement.
As A non-employed wife, you may also
now p\irticipat& In an IRA Retirement Plan,
together with your h.Llsband If he qualifies.
A new law permits you to Increase the
annual deposit-tax-deferred-to 15% of
earned income, maximum $1750 , pro·
vlded the amount Is divided equa\1y In
separate accounts. 4,~
ltoth the annual deposit and the Interest
Glbraltar pay1 you are tax~eferr~1jntll
retlr-ment. Look into it. Call toll~f rre for
detall1. .
IAVINOI ntlUltlD
T0-40,000
11\ttrMI Coml)OUnded dally on
ell eccouni.. thu• mcreuinv
ennuel y,.id 10 emounla ahown ,.,,.,, balance •M1aln1 IOI one
YH• Fund• ••C•Ned by 101h of monlh"m lrom let when ,.,.Id lo
quaner·a •NI Note: 8y ftcH1at
11w ••l)' wHhd••w•I• on unuicate
and bOnua ecic1>unl• are a,u1>1ec1
10 a,ut>ft.tnl•l l "1tere1!peN1Ules.
Oll41Jt C!lm'ICATe ACCOUNTI:
7 79% annual yleld on 7 50% • Minimum $1,000,4 years. •
6 98% annual yield on 6 75''
• Minimum $1,000,30 month1. •
6 72% annual yleld on 6 50%
• Minimum $1,000, 12 month1. •
l.XT'JtA 90MUI ACCOUNT:
5 92% an'nual yleld on 5 7590 • Mlnlmum$1,000,90daya. •
FLIXllU! ~AlaeOO« ACCOUNT:
5 39% annual yleld on 5 25,6 • Depoelt er wlthd,.w any time. .-
Earn day-In to day~ut lntereat. No penel\1 ...
ITA TEMINT SAVING& Yov receive detailed monthly 1tatament1 when tr1naeetlon1
have occurred, plu1 regular quarterly 1tatemal'll Swing• Card •
NfVel 11 your plHboolc for Ill depo.ali., w11hdrawala and aaNlces.
24 hours a,,,,,,
7 dag• a week.
No need to go to your ba11k. Once yoUf account
fa ettabll•htf:f, pick up the pbone to transfer
money from your bank cMciclng account-
which earns "°·lntereat-to your Gibraltar
• Telephone Tranater aavlnga account-which
•"1'~6 l\ 4l'a compounded dally. Funds aiao.
returned to your bank by phone.
Calf t9\l·fre'e anytime, day or night, from any
part of 11'1' Stat.. Thi• tliM-aavlng, moMY·
eamlng.¥fVfGe f• free when you makltalna minimum
11000 ~atanoe In your Telephone Tran1far account
Minimum tranafer amount $100.
For more Udorrn11Uon--------...... -.
ORTO ESTA&~ YOURQ;,El;:,;_7;;e ( 800) 252 • 0194
ORYISITYOURN£AmTGIBRAl.TAROfnCE. -----------
EXTENDED HOURS
Ma'lffla11·.T~ur11tla11 9:00 To 5:30
Prl411;g . . . . .
1
• • 9:00 To 6;~
~rl!RDAY. . . . 9:30 TO 4:00
Jtoi • • ~ ..t
.~ .... ..
. .,.
' JOONLY PtLOT w.dne9d.y. D9c»mber7, 1tn • BOATING/ LEGALS --~~~~~~-----------~------------~---------------:-----:~-:-----~---:~--------------.;.._..;:;.;::.:..:.::.~:;..;_:=.::::.:..:.:::::.
By ALMON LOCKABEY DMtr~ ... ~wr1a.r
With yacht racing ln Southern
California waters reduced to a few
weekend reaatta.s and series a.a the
year draws t.o a close, major lnt.ereal
switch~ to Australia where four well·
known Southern California
"toldpJaters .. will be competing in
tbe Southern Cross Series, climaxed
by lbe rugged 682-m1le Sydney to
Hobart race.
The Sydney-Hobart will be still
another joust in the continuing rivalry
between Mark Johnson's 73-loot ketch
Windward Passage and Jim Kllroy'a
79-foot ketch Kialoa.
Otbera oo the U S. team in the
Southern Cross C:rcu1t are the 66-foot
aloop Phantom, co-owned by Tony
Delfino and Charles Phlfer, Marina
del Rey, and the •&·foot Frera-
dealgned Bravura owned and skip.
pered by Irvine Loube, Oakland.
WINDWARD PASSAGE, Klaloa
and Phantom were the top three
finishers in the heavyweight dJvlslon
·In last summer's Transpac. Based on
that record they were selected as lhe
U.S. team for the circuit.
Another U.S. tettm of smaller boats,
including Bravura and George
Tooby's America Jane III were
acbeduled t.o compete but Bravura.
waa the only one to make lbe voyage
down under, Like lbo other three
boats, she sailed from Honolulu to
New Zealand arter lbe Transpac.
Peter Cornette, sailing
coach at the Kine's Point
Merchant Marine-=~~ Academy, New York,
will hold a symposium
for high school age
aaUors at Balboa Yacht
Club next Sunday nlght
·aDd an on·tb•water 11..U-
in• demomtraUon next
Xonday.
Comette Is one of the top small boat sailors in
The m01t clololy watched· race ot
the 1erlea wlU be the Sydbcy-Hobart
wbJch tradiUooaUy lets under w~
Dec. 28 with thou.lands of apectat.On
watching tbe sbow trom the bluffs ol
Sydney Headl or a horde or 1pectator boat.a.
THE BATl'LE POa lllle honors ls
expected Lo be between Klaloa and
Windward Puaage -both yacbta
with skippers aod cren accustomed
Lo wl..on.in,.
During her early years of cam·
palgnlng, Passage was a record
breaker 1n virtually every race she
entered. Then alone came tbe new
Kialoa which started out wlnnl.ng llne
honors aod settlne records in every
race sbe entered.
It wasn't until Kialoa arrived on the
West Coast this year that the two
11peed1ten met head-to-bead in both
round·the·buoYI and offshore racln&. ·
ANTICIPATING THE upcoming
battles with Klaloa, Jobo.ton had
some exteruslve cban1ea made t.o Passage's rig which obviously lm·
proved bet already awnome 1peed
off the wind and Jmproved her
windward work.
It was Pusage by a clean sweep
when the two met in a match r•co
series cC»VUtuUng California Yacht
Club's Cal Cup oo Saota Monica B'f.
To prove lt was no flukt win.
J ohnson Look Passa,1 to Saa Fran-
cl1co Bay where she was 11alll pitted
af ainst K.ialoa ill 61, Ftancil Yuhl
Club'• 11bl1 boa\ terl•." She llaln
defeated Klaloa on nearly every point
of isall.
New Zealand's
Yachts Leading
the country and was the -----~\\\..
U.S. repre1tntative ln
the Finn Class 1n the 1978 r•chtina Olympics.
PUBLIC NOl'IC£ , .
FRANK ,JR.
(
'AT YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL .
f ' I -
I
'1 ( ..
,I
. Read lt'arra11tle• .•I Gilt•
• DEAR PAT: I know there "".as a new warranty
Jaw passed, bill l ican't recall 11.S provisions. Will
s ou give me a quick run·lhrougb so I'll be prepared
to check the warrant1es of my Christmas gift
purchases? '
W.D., Mission Viejo
New Federal Trade Commla1loa rales. lssfaed
uader the Mag,n111on-Moss Warranty Act, slate tbat
U • company offers a warranty oo a couumer pro·
duct wblch costa more than $15. the wananty mast
state to whom It la extended. what I.I covered.
respective warrantor aQ.d consumer
reepouibWUea and when the warranty begl.a1 Of
dlfferent than parchaae date).
W arranUes now wlll be labeled 0 fall" or "Umlt-
ed." Full warranties Indicate a warrantor promises
· either &o repair a defective product wltbln a re·
asonable Ume and •Uhout charge or to 1lve a re·
fund or replacement II the product canoe>$ be , ..
paired. U there are any restricUons on coverage.
the warranty must.be labeled "Umlted."
Sellers also are bound by the Jaw to make war-
ranties available for consumer perual before
purchase. Look for the warranty ln oeie ot the
followlng places: displayed neitr the warranted pro·
duct; in a binder prominently lltled "W•rantles"
and indexed according to product or warrantor or
signs lndlcatlng where the binder may be located,
and on the package or carton containing the pro·
duct.
The Fl'C has pubUshed a consumer pamphlet,
"Warranties," wbJch explains how to use the new
warranties to comparison-shop. along with explala·
Ing warranty rights and bow to enforce them. Single
copies are available free by writing to: Consumer
JnformaUon Ceater, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
Pots, Pa•• tor Partf11•9
DEAR PAT: I jus t can't go through cooking
Christmas dinner with my Revere Ware pots and
pans in their present condition. Several handles
need lo be replaced and about four pan lids are mis·
sing their knobs. Where can I get replacement
parts?
G.B., Costa Mesa
Contact Revere Ware Parts & Service by writ·
ing to 8660 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, Calli. 90035,
or by phonlng (213) 659-3287. A parts list wUI be
malled to you with prices listed, and you can order
what you need by mall.
Extra holiday cooklnJt always brings cookware
replacement inquiries from readers. Locating
sources pro\•es to be a problem when cookware bas
been used ror years and manufacturers' addresses
have been misplaced. The West Bend Co.
<CustomerServlce Department, 400 Washington St.,
WHt Bend, Wis. 53095) now handles a variety of
cookware, including Kitchen Kraft and Permanent
Stainless Steel. Other replacement Information
sources are the Dired Selllng Association, 1730 M 1 St., N.W .• M'ashlngton, D.C. %0036 (door·to-door
, purchase) and Metal Cookware Maollfactorers As·
sociatlon, Box D, Fonna, Wis. 53125 (retail
purchase).
~la OK for Bmcl
DEAR PAT: Commercial toilet bowl cleaners
are quite expensive, so I want to know if il's
harmful lo clean a toilet bowl with chlorine bleach.
I know sever al people who use bleach for this
purpese, but I want lo make sure it won·t damage
'the finish on the bowl.
L.L .• Laguna Beach
As a dislnfeclant and cleaner for toilet bowls,
showers and sinks, chlorine bleach Is effective and
Inexpensive. It. does not damage surfaces, but the
fumes are hazardous to breathe and the area being
cleaned should be well-ventilated.
For toilet cleaning, add a cup of bleach and let
fl it soak an hour or two. Do not add any other bowl
cleaner or scouring powder at the same time.
Dangerous fumes can result when chlorine bleach
I ls ml.xed with other materials except for laundry or
band dlshwasblng detergent. 'Bleach can be mixed
half and baJf with water for spraying or wiping on
showers to kill mold spores and to whiten groutlal
· In tile showers and on counter tops.
wittnauer
Puca.•1.if l1~llr.V,•Jut fl.f
\V.• .h ( .... , .... tny
A matching pairl
Tht brilliant diamond at 12 o'clock. The
Jet·bfack ~I. Time divided Into 4 quadrantt.
And the fujly Jewetfd Wlttnouer movement
••. 1 brilliant tXJntc>'-of Swia.~laion.
Mark hiS hoora, mvk her hours, with timt
told dramstlcallyand trlth unfalllno accuracy.
And ••• 'What a groat "Hit 'n Har" Qltt. " . .
.... . . . """-· -u .... ~,"''"i · :. i ;t ...
:v.n•:!;, l.J y Ju~eµh
' w.dt>Mday, December 7, 19n DAIL y PILOT All
Smelly. Situatio~
1t1 ... 1.11
Pentagon
P~CETS
HEAWNEWS
Skunk in Garage a Real Stinker Papers figure DETROIT (AP) -
Anthony Russo Detroit News reporter CHICAGO CAP> -Bill Stanton says
he was a Jaw-abJdlnC citizen wttiJ the
skunk wandered into his garage. Now
health officials tell him he's breaking
the law by keeping it -and he'd be
breakUlJ the law lf be let it go.
"I've done everything I can to get
rid of it, but I'm blocked In every
direction," Stanton, a 45-year-old
electrical contractor, said Tuesday at
his home on the city's far South Side.
••wBEN THEY COME to serve the
citation, my lawyer says: 'Just teU
them you are Willing to go to court and
take the skunk with you for evidence.
That should make Lhem think.'"
Stantbn said that the skwik ap.
peared In his garaie from a nearby field 17 days ago, took up domicile in a
boat he keeps there, and began spray-
ing ill musk to ward off unwelcome
visitors.
Stanton called the AnJmal Weltare
and city's stray pick-up servl~. but
··they wowdn 't have a thing to do with it. ..
"I CALLED THE police," he said.
"'They sat in their squad car. My dogs
were barking. The skunlt sprJyed. ·
The police saJd they woUld send a
truck lo pick it up, but several days
passed and no truck came."
State J(ame and wildlife ofrir.ii.hi
said they cowdn't handle it, Stanton has won bac k Cbarlea Cain weighed all
said. State and city health depart· the news releases that
menll told him he could not Jet It go his job with Los reached his mailbox at
because it might carry rabies. The Angeles County his office in the state
zoos didn't waotit. Alcoholic a buse capitol in Lansing lut of fi c e , a 1 on g month He even called Mayor Mi chael with all p~y and The · bundle weighed,
Bllandic's complaint department and benefits retroac· 1n~ pounds. ·
waa turned over to Chicago's rodent live to his dis· Cain said 27 otber
controldepartment. ~ charge June 23. mailboxes took in tbe
.. BUT THEY SAID mice and rats same stuff lor a total of
were their bag, not skunks,•• he said. 486 pounds, nearly one• quarter~ a toa. · Finally, Stant.on said, be bought a =._.;;=======:;._------------------wire mesh trap about 3 feet Jong and
16 ln~hes wide -"the kind a skunk
could~t Jnto, but not Otlt. I baited it
with coi'ned beef bub.''
The ploy worked, and a delighted
Stanton said he "called all the depart·
menll agaln and t.old them the skunk
waa trapped."
His reward. A state official ''told
me l bad broken three laws:
''THEY SAID NO matter what I do
now, l would be breaking other laws:
It was illegal t.o keep the skunk. It 1s ii·
legal to destroy it. It ls UJegal to Jet it
go because it may carry disease like
rabies." .
So the skunk is shll in the cage. A
deodorizing company gave Stanton a
botUe of scent that counteracts the
musk and makes the garage "smell
like a flower garden.·•
...._ricwd
""-"" c...,.
ORANGE
T1aHn-1Cetett~
Hit Ho. Tintlw Ave (714) 991-9960
·HAM
-SO Good ••• It Wll
,._.. Yott 'ffJ tt'1 Galt"
IT'S MOT TOO 141tL Y TO Ol.DB!
• • 0 ... Cllristw ........ 0 ... ,..,. I ,,. ,. .. . X-fllt ............................ .
ALSO ••• ORDER YOUR
CHRISTMAS HAM!
• R~ady lo Serve w1lh Honey 'n Spice Glaze • Spiral Sliced
for easy serving •We Packaee and Ship from Coa.tt to Coaat
• Full Service Dellcates1en •imported Cheeses
ANAHEIM COIDMl DR MAI Pllll SPl1NGS NOW IN n.. Yihge ce..tef' J700 l. Cont Hwy. 7 fSs-6 Hwy. 11 ' lA HABRA
1222 S. lroolclwnt 014) 613-9000 '"•-ho~ .. 1ot1o11 acu ~,..,.. RANCHO MIRAGE ~ (114) 635·2461 . ::,::: • {114) 348-3194 ·
MERVYN'S
If
What gift will
dress up his
casual look?
A satin finish
leisure shirt!
regularly $18
Give him one of these
handsome shirts. and he'n
wear It on every Informal
occasion when a Uttle
extra ftolr is in order. Our
machine washable potyester
shirts feature open collar
styling, adjustable button
cuffs. and one breast pocket.
Take your choice of florals.
geometrics, and all-Over
patterns in a wide range of
contemporary colors.
sizes S-M-L-XL Save today!
Price effective through
December 11.
This Christmas,
Mervyn's ha• the answers.
7
! '
,I
I
J
.... --...: ... ---.;.:
LISTERINf\
ANTISEPTIC '\
;,:_ ·~ C·HTB
\ I SALAD OIL
\..
~ 128 I \ 0 480Z. e ) ~... ·--~ .. -.... ~·~-·~
HEATING PAD
Ht11"V~,
tired illhf
muse·•·:.
w•lh
:.oott111,.
h» ti
NORTHERN
HUMIDIFIER
"COOL SPRAY"
Hum1d1hes with cool mist to
help prevent parched throat
and dried
4 88 out skin. 7 99 11812 • !3~AL. •
Regu lar and
magnifying In
colors of bluP
or pink. Ou~I
sided
5.95
for all standard flashc ube
cameras. 129 :~ASHES • .
".,;}. · _ "L 'OR EAL" . ~ l ~ 1~. . HAIR CARE
·:.~..,J ,,, I JI NEEDS
~··""1' . f ·~ .-or the HOLIDAYS
"Excellence"
Permanent SHAMPOO-IN
~!'~~~v?ul~~l 1.89
lhP color you r.Pf
"ULTRA RICH"
HAIR CONDITIONER
Improved body and 1 29 manageab11tly with lresh
balsam fragrance' 8 oz. •
II
Alo Rott
10 oz. TANKARD I sn or 2
RUSSIAN LEATHER
COMBO In A lewelry Bol
by DH ORO
GINSENG
COLOGNE FOR MEN
by CHGUS~ lCATHU
5.00 5~Z
MUSK "600" SH
by OH ORO
6.00
CAMERA OUTFIT
For normal or telephoto
shots with the flick of a
fever 44.95 ·
•
SOUMOCS1'M AM/f M ElICTROHIC
CLOCK RADIO
AM. FM with bu2zer atatm 39~95
SOUNDESIGN
AM PORTABLE RAD 10
Shde rule tuning dial
•1452 9.95
RIMINGTOft
XLR · 2000 ELECTRIC
RAZOR
system for T r1ple culling 3 6 g 7
~ close shaves. --•--.
REMINGTON lADIS
ELECTRIC RAZOR
"SMOOTH & SUU" \ ~ ,..n;;o,,_
Gently removes hatt. Leaves skin "
smooth & silk_y 19 88 •WU -$000 i
DUUXI
MOOEl#37
WaterPik
ORAL ltfGIENE APPUAHCES
;:~:ttuo 21. 9 5
Pulsating water action
tor clean teeth. ·
26.95
ORIENTAL "OODLES
--flmrt.
ALPHA 1
Montlored flash
tor better flash
pictures. 80111 -in
lnpod mount.
169.88
POLAROID sx 70 FILM 10 EXPOSURES 4.99
JEWELRY BOXES
"URRIMG MAGIC" or "HER LADYSHIP"
7.99u.
"ESQUIRE"
JEWELRY BOX
FORMEN 4 99
•
NOlllCO
NORUCO
RECHARGEABLE RAZOR
36 Rota ry razor.
bfade s. 9 close
.-comfort settings.
#1308 42~97
lADYBUG RAZOR
#HP-2127 17 .97
• -~ SUPIR SAVER (fl/Qm :shower Massage
~ ~~) bJJfbtu.Pil(. • '<':~, ... ~. Srtes o1 Wltll'.20 95 ..:.:J11JJJ!I
• SVR·U • HAID HELO
SliOwtr ••w1e
Saves eneru and
money
· :I' With Direct
'1t" Drive Motor
3 stainless
steel
1ttachments
to chop, tllce.
arate, shred. blend and ,·-a.. .. -~~
irtlld,· -'-.....;r.A
DETERGENT
WVUIA
MUSK
FOR MEN
by British Sterlin&
AmR SHAVE
40L 3.00
~-------------'•
BRUT 33
SPLASH ON LOTION
& DEODORANT
Sf'RAr 7 OZ. lA.
4.19
SHUlTON "Ol.D SPICE"
TRAVEL GIFT SET
2.69
BLUE JEANS
br SltULTON
Cologne Mist
IOt 2.25
.
DESERT FLOWER
DUSTING POWDER
by SHUlTOM
Oeltghtfully
refresh1ny.
50l2.59
ENGLISH LEATHER
AFTtR SHAvt
TIMBERLINE 0-RHULQ.
coz.u.3.50 u.
f
:'1 • . ,
PAIN RELIEVER
. '3 FT. Table TREE 5 59 ... ~,,.~
} COMPLETELY flAMC ·RCURDANT •
·•
TREE STANDS .:(l ~ _g-'-· NORTH STAR 1.59 £ nameled in
p~iJ\",..._ _ Christmas colors -1
.. ~ ,.,
' . •l
~,.
• ··} . '=-( HOLIDAY 204 5.95 :~\ With fou1, channel
.:/~''"[ design legs
~1 ~ -··i HOLIDAY 104 8.95 ~~ l x lrcmely sturdy &
virtually tip proof
C~911 REPlAaMENT
~!~~Jut~~~~~ t 115
colors PAK OF 5 •
•••" '-Ii~-·, . ·~
"FROSTYll Tree Saver
• .. _ _..__...,._ . .. .. .. ... • •-·~i.-· ,":;.':'-~w ..... .......... Jf .. '.
.
... ... • • ,.... o4 •
I
..
~ ... ~
/ALKA. SELTZER. '
I EFJERVISCINT Put /. :;
1.&l_i 2~ c :/."1 #7 .f
TABLETS J. • ~
.' , .
.. WALKING
Dachshund
BAmRY OPfRAm>
byESSKAY ,.,.~'· •• Barks. v.ai;\ '-•
tail, walk~ ~· forward & • · ,
backward
h lltnuut 5 99 ~:3 . ... . ...
MY FRIEND ~
Maody. DOLL
by FISHER ~
PRICE (; -.~
With t11•r
soft. tlolh y! ·· '<'.
and vinyl ... __ ,,'1,. •
aim:.& • ~ ·:-.
legs. ·hr ;. ~ .· · · ~"r'
can st trd ·~ ~ _)
~~a~~~ 14 99 .... 210 ... • ....
YAHTZEE
An exciting •
game of skill
and chance. \
loaded with
action & 2.99 suspen~e
~9SO
With urethane wheels
PAIR 11.99
Jergens
Regular or
Edra Ory
For Hand5
10 oz.
99~
DOU I . r,
Listen to ._ • --1) .:.-
heartbeat ~-I" .Y-.:· .~
ASST. PLUSH r
ADORABLE flUfFY ANIMALS
2.49m 10.95
BABY
Heartbeat
by llENNU ~J,_ : -!: t)
8 ~:E~s~::ing Ma
7
chin
9
e .
9
~~~hoscopc : ~,~~i ~
All mtlJI with oil 9 90 V on ~witch •86 • ... #26800 • ...
_. ,:;t£) Demolition Derby .. SIZZLERS 11
\ I .~l;j,~ 1r;i by LAKESIDE c· •t \"'~· ~~.. A rclCP a~ll1nst lime 7 99 Silver 1rcu1 \ -~~..?:... that drim kid~ wild RACING SET
\ it'.>-~ #8602 • ij/? 8/0 Cars with Sound < .. ~· ~
~ by ESSKAY -.....
• Authenhc des1r.n> 4 99 by MATTEL for real .1clton1 8 r T track. 3 lanes Wtde.
. ,..J . ~:. ~-:-~-Ft-o!_t_} .... 0AOOA .... 1M_~_5 __ • ...,9 ... 9.... ~,::,'"'"16.99
\ ~ p ~ Oehghtful ... •
• • sca1y Rame 114701 •
. "NEW LIFE" ORGANIC
\ HAIR BRUSHES
BROXODENT
~~ AUTOMATIC ACTION TOOTHBRUSH
THE PLAQUE FIGHTER
~Tt:(~ARO 16 99
•25011 •
P TITE
Typewriter
by WfSTIRN STAMPING
~rt
-......; '-·
Types all 15 99 capital lette1s
#44S6 •
TOTI-A-LOT
NYLON CARRY-AU
Tote Bag
FOLDS INTO
ZIPPER WAI.LET
G1eat tor
tiavel.
• school, sport!>
& everyday
. Pepto-Bismol
UQUID
FOW UPSET
STOMACH
Controls
common
diarrhea.
12 Ot
l PEPSODENT
1 TOOTHPASn
MIRRO
Corn Popper
WI~ Eltctlic Cord
Special coated ba sP.
speeds up popping action.
•123~0 4.44
ANCHOR HOCKING
Pagoda Jar
UB8£Y
Canister
CRYSTAL
PINE
TREE
lQE:~ V/111 beau tify
' you r table.
G r e a t
--'/Christmas
• gift.
) .
BBC 40 oz.. JQ.l,." HIGH
'
4-PC. SET CURUNG . !
WAND l I I
1.99
'• THERMOS
Coffee Server
Smartly styled 36 5 99 OZ. Insulated coffee
server. •900 •
THERMOS
Fas~ easy way
to aeate curls
that 1eally last.
Rudy in 60 :
seconds. f
nl•~ Sports Kit
~
Includes lwo 1 Qt. 9 95 vacuum bottles 1n
handy carrying case.
#140/242 •
THERMOS STA .. USS STUl
1 °'·Vacuum Bottle
Solid sla.inless steel 14 95 case & finer .
Absolutely
unbreakable. #2464$ •
I J4 DAILY PILOT Business
· ~!>~onn·v CALL ) Protection Proposed
h11 tlw "'Pht\lh.i\lcd lt.1Ju there\
••nh 1•lll' 1rnmbcr 10 nm11.:rnbcr-OUR \
540·8121
~ \!"" l 11d.I\' "pr1\..c,-·1omorro'' ·, '''Jtq:il'' ;r~ MerrUI Lynch Pierce Fanner 8 Smith Inc.
I h ''" Ii.' 1, c \ 1, ''"'
,
For Steel Industry
WASHINGTON (AP> -Pretldent
Carter ha• disclosed ~ pro.ram to ln·
crease production and employtrtent tn
the hard-presaed American steel ln·
dustry by protecting lt from unfair
competition from forcl1n hnports.
It was estimated the procram could
-;:=:::::::::=::::::========:;:;==~increase current steel employment in
reduction will . . . depend upon the
price beh avior of the domestic steel
companies. Tbe more sharply the
domestic firms raise prices, t he
smaller wlll be their recapture of the
market," said a report to the presl·
dent by an inter·aeency task torce.
The 35-page task rorce report was
prepared by Treas ury Un
der8ecretary Anthony M. Solomon FREE TAX SHELTER
SEMINAR
the United States by between 18,000
and35,000
December 8, 1977 • 7 p.m.
LocJgla IOCMn • lalMaa lay C ..
122 I Poclflc Coast Hwy.,
,. •• port leocla
SIOHSOttED IY THI IMVISTM&IT
IAHKIHG FtaM °'
THE P&OGR AM, announced Tues·
day, would establish prices below
which most h'port.s would not be al·
lowed to sell, unless a special tariff is
lmposed. It. also would provJde loan
guarantees and other financial help 1.o
asslat steel produce.rs In modernizing
and keeping tbelr plants open.
A Wh ite House statement said
Cart.et' approved of tbe report's rec·
om mendatlons and believed they
would •'help revitalize the health of
the doJnestlc steelindustry."
SOLOMON TOLD reporters the pro·
gram , if successruJ, could return
between 18,000 and 35,000 laid-off
steelworkers to their jobs. About
130.000 jobs have been lost in the ln·
dustry in r ecent years, including
20.000 in the la1t few months.
E. C. COCHRANE & CO.
Speakers w ill include a prominent Tax
Attorney discussing Estate Planning and a
top C.P.A. Tax Specialist. Latest IRS rulings,
what to watch out for.
It is designed to prevent torei&n pro-
ducers from Ooodlng the U.S. market
with steel priced below the cost of pro-
duction. Steel imports have accounted for
about 20 percent or domestic con·
sumption so f ar this year, compared
with an average of 13 percent between um and 1976. The rising tide of im-
ports bas resulted in widespread pro-
ductlOt'l cutbacks and job layoffs in
lbls country.
C.cldtls-qw.,.Auww ,.rtetl ..... 111•4.
CALL 17141 644-5100 FOi
RESERVATIONS
The administration did not rule out
the possibility that the proGram could
result l.n upward pressure on dQmesUc
prices. but said domestic steel pro-.
ducers could hurt their own cause·lf
they substantially hJke price..
"THE P RECISE LEVEL of Import
If no one else
is providing for
your retire1nent,
read·this: ·
Persons not included 1n a retirement plan can set aside some
income in a special Los ·Angeles Federal Savings Account
and pay no taxes on it now.
No taxes now on the lnrerest your retirement savings earn.
either. Not until you retire, when you'll probably be in a lower
tax bracket
To gain the tax exemption offered by a Keogh Plan or lnd1-
v1dua1 Ret1tement Account, you must be either self-employed
or not included in any company retirement plan.
And you must -th is 1s most important -act during the short
time remaining of 1977. Specialists are ready to help you.
Whether you save for retirement or any other purpose, you re-
ceive higher interest than any commercial bank pays, plus
FSLIC insurance on your savings, plus a sate deposit box. In-
come tax preparation, many other services. all without charge
w11h .1 minimum balance
Why not st;irt your Retirement Account today?
•
.\.,nu .I INVESTMENT CERTIFI CATES Currenr
Yll'ICJ S1 000 OR MORE Annual Ralf"
d U6° ~ 6 10 10 years 7J~OO
8.C>eo/o 3 yeert IRA, Keogh 1~·;. 179% 4 years 7'h%
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
$1000 OR MORE
6.98% 30 months 6J/4%
6 72% 12 months 6Y2%
PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
ANY AMOUNT
539% De~ In to day out SY•%
ALL INTEREST COMPOUNDED OAIL Y
Funds prematurely withdrawn from Certificate Accounts earn
interest <ti the Passbook rate. as provided by FederAI regulation
lllr thr I ilJ..IPrm ol 1nvestmP.nl IP-;s n1nPty dayc;
Publishers Hit
Newsprint Tax
WASHINGTON <AP J The Amertcan
Newspaper Publishers Association bas come out in
opposition t.o a proposed federal tax on newsprint.
saying it "could ilJ\pede the free now of ideas and In·
for mation."
The proposed $30-pet-Nearly one·lhird or
ton tax on waste prod· U.S. newspapers already
ucls also would affect are r~covered through
other paper and packag. recych~ or _reuse, the
Ing m aterials. association said.
The publishers' as-
sociation also said such a
t ax would be infla·
tionnry. lt said much of
the tax would be passed
along to consumers
because news print,
which accounts for 15 to rn percent of newspaper
operating costs. bas
more than doubled in
price since 1970.
THE ASSOCIATION'S
comments came during
hearings before the
Resource Conser vatlon
Committee, an inter·
agency task force
established by Congress.
The committee heard
tes timony last week.
The American Paper
Institute estimates such
a lax would cost the in·
dustry $2.6 billion.
Sen. Gary Hart, D·
Colo., has intr oduced
legislation that would
impose a $26-per-ton lax
on waste products. In Ule
case of newspapers, the
levy would decrease a!_i
the amount of recycled
paper increased.
THE PUBLISHERS'
association . a trade
group of 1,274 members.
s old the federal govern·
ment should provide
local governments with
expertise and even tax
incentives to help· recy-
cle solid wasle~.
Interest
Puzzks
Bentley
D . J . B e ntl e y,
chairm an of Be ntley
Laboratories, Irvtne, has
reported he knows or no
teaaon for the Inc rease
fn volume of tradtni and
the increase ln t he price or stock during t he past
lWOWeek,.
Shirt 1' ends Gum· .. ~., ... ,..,.
For the person who has everything, Alan Silverstone suggests his
bubble gum-vending T -shirt, manufactured by his company, U.S.
Chewing Gum of Oakland. Shirt f ea tu res a slot into which coins are
dropped and another that dispenses gumballs. It was demonstrated
by Silverston recently at Bloominton's ln New York City.
O ver The Counte r
~so LIStlfWJs
I MUTUAL FUNDS
Nerne c1,.1vld lSL Inc. T11FlMtg APL wt AVM Co E19<11'al> 11\FldU APltC.tnt 8r•ncl1M ,.,Cll)lil R~I VanOyllR ~HICO VndttHo ft~fTKI\ $011dStS c~'* .,.,.,,,,
AIHlkp ,.,,.,_
EoKo ~~~(.' J•m•lw Oan1EI D1'41Rtt
OOWN' Litt Ol9 •I• -l 1 J6 -1\\ , ... -,,
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Pct uo .n• uo 111 Up 11
Up IS.0
Up 12.5 Up 11.t Up 11.1 Up II.I Up 11,I Up 100 Ult 100 Up t.I Up t .I U1I f.} Up t 1
Up ti Uo I.~ Up 7 1 Uo 7,1 Up •. ~ Up •JI Up •.1 Up •. 7
Up •.7 Up 6 )
Pel 011 19.• Oft 11.2
Off 1•.0 011 1s.• Oii IU Oft IO
Oii "·' 011 11 I Off 11, I Off 11 I Off 11 1 °'' 11 l °'' 10 0 g:; ;t: °" 10.0
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011 " Ott 91 Ofl f I 1 .. 1'> l • ,.,.,. '• 011 •I I Ott I. IJ SI• JI
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7
I
I
I .
STOCKS / BUSINESS
edoeaday' ·
CJo ing Price
.. . ' ...
NYSE COMPOSil'E TRANSACTIONS
w.dnnday, Docember 7 1977 l/N DAIL V PILOT ...., $
Colds Pay on·
But Do Remediea· Help?
By MfLTON MOSKOWITZ
With tbe cold aeaaon ber~. tbe dr\l(J manufarturen are
llmberint up, t.ralnini their promotional 1l1bta oo ua.
'lben'a no known cure for tho common coJd aod tbat '•a
marvelous 1ltuat1on for the com.-amtt. They can concen·
trate on tbe lfQlptoma tbai accompany eolda -couabt,
sneeze., sore throats, con111Uon. There's b11 money to be
made 1n promlalna relief ~rom auch ~ondltlona.
DESPE&ATI SU•l'EaElt8 BUY TBE proml...-to.J4e tune of more than S1 .2 bllUon year. Here are tho main cot·
porate players in the medicine game;
-Richardson·Merrell will corue at you a1aln with lts
lon«i line of product'J sold under the Vicks label. These ~
elude NyQuil, Vicks DayCare, Vicks Formula-«. Sloex ~·
congeslants. Oracln throat loien1es and that old favori •
Vicks Vaporub
R ichardson · Mer rel I I
1pends more than $100 Money million a year on ad
vertising. Its share of Tree
the cold remedy market
la estimated at 18 per. cent.
-SmilhKllne capturea 13 percent of the bualneu wlth
Coatac, Slne-Otf, Ornade and Tuaa-Orpade. SmttbKllne
made pre1crlJ>tJon dtq1 unW it weat publlc wtth Contad,
the larfeat-sellln1 product in the cold remedy field. Tbe
company spends moro than $10 million a year to pub Coit-taa. I
-American Home Producta makes hundreds of pro-
ducts thtou'-b a host ot 1ubslcUarle1, neceuttaUnc a total
corporate ad budlct of $USO mtlUon a year. It take• down
about 10 percent or the cold remedy bualneaa with its DrlB~ and Phenersan llncs.
-WABNEB·LAMBERT MAKES TH£ top-aelllng
cough drop line, Halls. It also markets Benadryl, Benylin
and&ioutabs. It has an annual ad budget of $160 million and grabs 9 percent or the market.
Do these products help? The medical authorities wl\o
work for Co111umera Union are dubious. In tbelr book, .. The
Medicine Sbow "they take apart three toR-aelllng products •
. Dristan, iliey s ay, bas 1'ooly one elfectlve a1d tor '
cold: asplrio. '' Each Dttstan tablet bas the aame amount as,
any five.grain aaplrln tablet. It aella for rouahly 20 Umea the
price of pJain aspirin.
cu DEPtcrs CONTAC: ,.JUDGING by its formula, tho
more people 1lve their caab to Coatac, the Jlkelier they ar4'
to keep their co]da themselves." There are SO mllllll'ama elf
an effective deconge1taat 1n Contac, but tbe CU autborttiea
aay that alnce they are dlaperaed over a period of 12 hours•
"'the user gets too meager a dose at any one time to be efrec·
Uve agalnat cold 1ymptom1."
Aa for NyQuil, which you see people in television com'
merclals take before they retire at nlaht, CU says: 1
"lq 1bort, NyQull seems to be JUJt tho thtn1 for cold auf J
ferers ln search ot a medication that might knock them out.
wake the~ up, and suppress thelr couab whtle woraenln' ll. ••
Market Conti~s
Above 800 Level
IAUll
NIW YORIC CA~> -NV Moclr • "-'91 flMI • "•• .,, •• ,. .... • ~ ~lw• .. 1................. , WHll ._ ..................... .000 MMlll Ito .. .. • • • • . • • •• .... • • , .OOCI YHr ego • • .. • ... ......... • M0,000
T..o YH" •CP ••••••••• • ..... fif.t,)O J•n , ,,, ••• .. ......... •• ··n . .ooo nit lo •I• . ...... ..... ... •. a. AOO tt> 10 ,.,. .. •• ... • • .. •. 1; ''"'
•
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• I
INSIDE: •Television •Movies s f •People •Nation w..dnetday, O.cembet 7. 1917 t>AIL Y PILOT
,, It's a Dell of a Way to Get Repaid~·Bonds
'1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I , gave the Angels what they want-
ed," said an obviou.sly upset Bob-
1 by Bonds, •'and this Is a hell or a
way to get repaid."
Bonds, who bad one or his best
1 years in baseball with Cahfornla
this put season, said Tuesday by
telephone from bls home in San
Carlos, that be was shocked and
hurt lb al the Angels traded him to
the Ch.icaeo White Sox. . .
.. I thought it would be great to
finish my career in Anaheim and
' 1 thought I would,'' said Bonds.
who grew up in nearby
Riverside. "I was going to Jook
for a house in the Anaheim area
next month and move back Lo
Southern Caliloniia. • •
'
:Hedrick
Will Play
For West
Gavin Hedrick, standout
punter al Washington State
I University for (our years and a
product of Newport Harbor High,
I has accepted an invitatioq to
play in lbe East-West Shrine
game at Stanford Stadium Dec.
,Jl.
Hedrick was WSU 's varsity
,punter for four years and
averaged 43.4 yards per boot for
: his career. No punter in NCAA
'history bas held that b.igh of an
average for as many punts (217).
As a senior be averaged 44.7
yards per kick and lbat ranked
him fourth in the nation. It would
be a major surprise if he does not
go into professional ball.
OF DEER HUNTING -
Maurlce Martel may 11wear pR
deer bunUng for a long Urne after
G\.E"IN WHITE
WHITE
WASH
7 the experience be surrered re-
eeotly wbJJe bunUog in Vermont.
lie spent an entire day in quest
of a target but saw nary a buck,
:foe or fawa. So, be packed b1s
gear and left for home.
Then hls luck changed. He ran
Into a big buck. Literally.
I The mishap left his pickup
truck wltb $600 worth of damage
and the deer scurried away loto
Lbe woods before Martel could
lock and load ror a shol at the
neelng prize. I Some days It doesn't pay to get
oul of bed.
' OF TENNIS-World Team
I Tennis has a new franchise and it
will be based in Anaheim. H will
I' be called the Oranges and its first
player to be signed is Rosie
1casals. '
Sources had told lb1s column
•that the Russian team would play
in Anaheim for WTT. The Soviets
had replaced the Pittsburgh
franchise for one year and they
'will not field a team for the 1978
season.
So. the franchise that was Pitts-
burgh and was the Russians
now belongs to Orange County
They'll play 16 h6me matches
at Anaheim Convention Center.
The 31-year·old oullielder b1t
37 homers, drove lo 115 rWlS,
stole 41 bases and bit .26' in 1971.
California swapped b1mi out·
lielder Thad Bosley and p toher
Dick Dotaon on .Monday to the
White Sox for catcher Brian
Downing and pitchers Chris
Knapp and Dave Frost.
Angela omcia1s reporlpdly
were eager to trade Sonds
because of conlract demands and
the fact be could have played out
his opUon in 1978 and become a
free agent.
•'That really shocked me when
I heard that," said Boods. ..It
wasn't true. They didn't give oie
a chance to t.alk, they just tra'2ed
me. I t.b1nk the free agent talk
was basically a cover for them.
For 1ome reason, I dldn 't fit into
Bunie Bavaai's phuia for ruo-
nlng the baUclub."
Bonds added that he probably
would have stuck with tbe Angels
U Harry Dalton had remained
general manager. Bavasl wu re·
cenUy hired by An&els owner
Gene Autry as club vice presi-
dent, taking over many or
Dalton's functions, and Dalton·
then moved on to the Milwaukee
Brewers.
"The free agent market is good
for many players," Bonds said,
"but it hurt me. All the players
the An1els signed to lonl·lerm
contracts hurt me; Gene ap-
parenUy got to the point where he
dldn 'l want to spend any
more money and it was my year
to ne10Uate. Rather than try to
sl1n me, they ju.st sald goodbye.
"I wanted to slcn a 'five-year
contract when l caDJe to the
An1el1 ln 1975," Bonds con-
tinued, "but I slgnecS for two and
they were reluctanl e~en to do
that. It's a shame to have had the
klnd of year I bad and have to co
.aomewhere else."
Although his attorney-agent.
Rod Wright, bad said earlier that
Bonds was uncertain whether he
would report lo Chicago, Bonds
said he would.
"What other choice do I
have?" he said.
I ,. .........
KENT BENSON (54) DEFLECTS BALL FROM THE LAkEAS' KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR.
Hassle Over--Jahhar
Benson Confromation Tame; ·Lakers Win
INGLEWOOD (AP) -••My
gut reeling is that between him
and rne it's all over." Kareem
Abdul.Jabbar of the Los Angeles
Lakers said alter a game.tong
display of his talent eased
memories or a one-punch ex·
plosion ln his first match with
Mllwaukee'sKentBenson.
Abdul-Jabbar had 26 points
and 13 rebounds. and rookie
Benson got 14 points and six re-
bounds Tuesday n1ght, as they
finally got a chance to play a ruu
National Basketball Association
game against each olber.
The game also went lo the
Lakers 109-108 on a basket with
three seconds left by Lou
Hudson.
elbowed in the stomach by the
6-11 Bucks' center. The 7-2 Abdul-
Jabbar wu ejected from that
game woo by Milwaukee and was
fined $5,000 by the league. The
flve-tlme NBA most valuable
player also missed 20 games
because he broke a bone 1n the
hand that stntck the blow.
The 111 feeling wasn't entirely
gone when the teams bad their
flrst rematch Tuesday night.
"Benson tried to shake my
hand before the game but I
wasn't up for it," said Abdul-
J abbar. "But all this stuff about
fighting has lo slop someplaoe,
and I shook his hand on the way
to the dressing room after I.be
game."
two foul shots with 10 seeonds re·
maining to put the Bucks ahead
by one at 108-107.
The Lakers then cot the ball to
Abdul-Jabbar, whose book shot
missed. Kermit Washington of
the Lakers tried a tip-in that also
bounced away. Hudson, who
scored 21 in a reserve role, got
the rebound and pushed up the
winning jump shot from about
three feet.
MILWAUKEE 11011 JohnMltl 11, 1t11ywr1 U,
t!llns"" U, Buckner 10, Wlnlers 22, f.ngllWI •.
Ol11ne111 •. 8rkl!w"*' I. Wllllbn I, On.1n111d 11.
T1l1ls 0 2'-3110f. •
LOS AHOl!LES (10tl -WeMlllfOIOft 10, WllkH
•• Abdul·J•bblr ~. Nl•Oll 16, T11 ...... '· H-11, AbtrMlllr 11, OIGl'tQOrlo 6, .,,,,..,,,, ._ Toi.11 o
1Hll0t
Mflw~kM 1t 1'f 14 .Ml -1•
1..0l An91l11 • 16 27 10 -10f P'oultd out -N-. Total fovlt -Mil"'"*-"· LtKA1t9elH Jt, A-14,441.
Bonds aaid thai he \mdtrat.ood
he'd be w&lb Chieaco for a y .. r.
take a at> .,erceot pay cut. then
leave. But he also aald Veeclt
would det.emilne hil f\lt.u.rt.
11I'm not ColnC there wlth the
intention ot playlng only a yw
and then aelllna myself to lbe
hltheat bidder," Bonds sa.ld.
"I'm looklna for a home. l
thought I bad one, but I don 'l.'
Noting that he'd been traded
three \lmes lo five years -from
San Franclaco to the New York
Yankees prior to coming lo I.be
Antelt -BOl.lds said, "l Just
can't underst1tod it. I could prob·
ably blt 90 home runs a season
and stWgettraded.''
Sports iu B .. ief . .
Announcer Bies;
.-! I
Kings ~ip Blues
MEDlA. Pa. ~Charlie S)Vln,
the play-by-play announcer tor ,
the Phlladelpbla Eagles football
team, was round shot to death in
his apartment early today, police
said.
Swift, about 42, was l9llnd at
1: 30 a.m. by bls wife,. PatU', ln
the dlniog room of the •Part·
ment. A gun W8' towid near Ule
body.
Swift appasenUy died from ooe
gunshot wound to tha head,
police said. No foul pJay: was •UJ.o
peeled.
Khtp Rollt a.J
ST. LOUIS -Hike Murphy
scored goals 17 seconds apart dur·
ing a slx·coal second perlcxt ex.
plosion by the,\.0¥o1eles Kin1s
ht a 6-1 thrashing of the St. btiL'
Blues in a National Hockey
League game Tuesday nlgbt.
The Kings set a club record for
goals in one period and sent the
Blues to' a record fl(th·straight
home loss. St. Louis is winless tn
its last six home games, tying
another reeord.
Carter l•p,...,e•
PHOENIX -Race driver
Duane "Pancho" Carf,er was list-
ed in fair con~IUon Tuesday wi"1
jnjuries suffered last weelC In a.
high·apeed accident while testing
a race car.
Carter wu jure.d Frlda)'
when his car crasfu!d Of\ the front
straightaway at .Phoenix In-
ternational Raceway.
Hospital omcials said Carter
WflS still in lbe intensive care u.nit
but was expected lo be moved in·
to a private room by Wednesday!
,...,...,,1a11er Deal
HONOLULU -The Toronto
Blue Jays acquired lefthanded
pitcher Tom Underwood from
lbe St. Louis Cardinals in a four-
player trade at baseball's winter
meetlogs Tuesday.
The Blue Jays also r eceived
minor league pile.her Victor Crtu
in the deal lo exchange for right-
hander Pete Vuckovich and a
player to be myned later.
Grldclen Poboned
FARGO, N.D. -Medical
authorities blamed food poison-
ing Tuesday for the cramps and
headaches suffered by 37 mem-
bers of the North Dakota State
University foptball team and
staff.
Officials from the NDSU
athletic department said senior
Mike Soukup was hospitalized
and sophomore 'Maik Rudrud re·
ceived emergency room treat·
ment Monday night.
A doctor's examination oC
Rudrud revealed food Polson.Ing.
\lllcu, £11tz Wf11
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa Guillermo Vilas won the
$20. 750 top priu In tb~ South
African Open tennis cham-
plonsblps. beatltta B~ter Mot-
tram, 7·6, 6·3, &-4 ln the men's
singles (Jnal Tuesday.
In tbe doubles 'final Stan Smltl\
and San Clemente's Bob Lutz de-
feated Peter Fleming and Ray
Moore, 6-3, 7-5, 6-7, 7-S.
Add...011 Out
OAKLAND -Safety George
Atkinson suUered a broken ankle
Sunday and will mlss the rest or
the National Football League
season. Oakland Raiders coach
J obn Madden said Tuesday.
"We'll probably look for
another defensive ba-ck," said
Madden, sure or having only five
healthy defen.slve backs for next
Sunday's game against .Min-
nesota.
l'and11 Bo•t• Cup
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -Van·
derbilt University jn NashvUle
has been selected lb host a pre·
liminacy round of th~ 1978 Davis'* Cup tennla coblpetitlOL
The cont tan fQ the
matches <M\t t e Dlayed
Marcli 1r-is.. will be the lJnlted
States and the winner of the
South Atrlca-Coloinbia match to
be held later this monlh In South
Africa.
fog Halts.
Cage Game
Capistrano Valley Chris·
Uan's basketball team was
undefeated WlW the fog rolled
in.
Dense fog along the
Southern California coast
t;>egatl pouring through win-
dows bl&b above the basket·
ball court at the Laguna
Beach Boys' Clab Tuesday al·
ternoon. As rnoJsture in the loe condens_e~1 the playing
floor develope<i a coaling of
water:;.
OF NUMBERS-tr you llke to·
play wlth numbers, try this com·
bo from the scoreboard of the
Fountain Valley Hl«b-Long
Beach Ml\llkan basketball
game: It was 51-51 •Ub 1:51 to
play and rCMLLs were 5 to 1.
Just two minutes into the
season opener at Milwaukee Oct.
18, Abdul-Jabbar punched
Benson near the eye after being
Benson said that u far as he
was concerned, tbe problem
between them was over a long
tlmeago.
"Before the game I was a man
about lt and oUered my hand and
he refused," Benson said. ''I ex·
pected to be booed a lot tonight
and was."
HB Fighter Confident
''One of my kJds suggested
bringing ice skates,"
Capistrano Valley coach Ben
Rodrigtle% said after referees
ended the game with 3:52 re-
maining on the clock, 11v1n' St. Michael's Prep a S0-36 vic-
tory. (See related story, page
B-3).
"Several players took hard
tails and the referees were
eUdlng all o•er the place, ..
. llOdrlguei said. dRaUter Ulan
rllk injury. we decided to call
the came.''
· Poloists Horwred
Barnett CIF Co~h of Year
James Bergeson of Newport
Harbor High and goalie Jack
Graham of Uoivetslty Hlgh
<Irvine) have been selected CIF
4·A water polo co-p)ayers of the
year.
Coach of the year honors went to Newport'• BW Barnett, who
guided the Sailors lo tbelr Orth
CIF championship in the la1t 11
yean. ·
Ber'NO~? a junlor1• led tho
Sailor• to Ule tJUe wlm a tour· 1oal performacc• iA Jut
Salutd-.y's championship g.atna9
a1a!Mt Mira Cost.a (Manhattan
Beach).
Graham. a seoibl', is a two·
lime All·CIF honoree.
Bob Dolan of Costa Men,
Peter Campbell of University
and Jtlf Young of Newport also
made Ute first tam.
Elgbt other area playen, til·
cludln1 four Crom Newport
Harbor, were selected to either the 1ecood or third team.
The 14,448 f ana in the Forum
saw a rather tame batUe by the
NBA'• very phy.slcal standard.!.
Coach Doa Nelson ol Ute Bqcks
kept Benson on the bench for
maoy of the 38 minutes that Al>-
dul-J a bbar played, aad Jobn
Giannelli wai al center for
.Milwaukee wheq the Bucks made
a Jon' fourth perlo4 drive to
catch the Lakers.
Brlart Winters , who led
MU•a\lkee with 22 points, scored .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hunt.-
Ington Beacb"s Carlos Palomino
makes an wiprecedented fourth
defense 1n a single year of the
world weltenvel&ht boxln• tlUe
Sat11rday n.liht and .says fr.Uly, ••t don't 1ee ll\ls i.uy beaUni
me." College araduate Palomino
earns $100,000 for meell.ftg Jose
Palacloe of Mexico, 1ivin1 him
$3e5,000 in four flgbts ll\ls year.
Not t.oo bad for a fellow who once
shln'd lhoe:s in Tijuana.
P•lomlno kGocked out
Eniland 's JOhn St,racoy for tho
title 1n a big upset and lhlsGar: has 1occes1ftllly det.ende bl•
World Boxinl COuncU tltle
Umea. lt h• does it a fourth, be'11
have dccotnpll•bed somethlng
that Sue~ R~y ~blnson, lte.Qf'f.
Armatrong, 1oee ,1.1apolea and all'
the other c~ampk)8il didn't.
Plllomlno; now 2~1 started box-
ing at 2'1 aod wcm n.t1 tiUe ln l9l6
when he came OJ\ ai a 6·1 un-
derdoa and ta.toed Stracey. He's
deftndetl thl1 )fear wlth
knocltouta ot Maado Mun.b and
Dave Green and a decl1fon over Elveraldo..u.vtd(), · ..,
Tbe two private schools bad
aone lltto tbe nonconferenc~f
1ame with ldenUal 2-0 rec·
ord1. They meet again next
week on. tho Caplltrano Valley
court.
The Boys• Club heating syst~m wasn't functlODiq JC>
lt was impractlcal to wait for
the mohturo to dry,
llodrJ1uezul~
i
·1
I
J
t 112 OAll Y PILOT w.df\eeday, o.c:.emoer 7, 1917 BASKETBALL I FOOTBALL
16 Baskets • m Row Wrecks 118
DMIJ ~l.c ........... lrkll 0'0-11
HUNTINGTON'S RICO THOMPSON (32) GETS PRESSURED.
Heidenreich Out
A Thriller Again:
Vikes Nip Crespi
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM
Clf IM D.tl~ l'tlel 1111•
Heart-stopping finishes are
becoming a habil for the Marina
High <Huntington Beach) basket-
ball team. And so is winning
them.
Tuesday night M1trina won its
third straight curdiac special,
nipping Crespi High of Encino
61·60 in first-round action or the
Laguna Beach Christmas tourna-
ment al Laguna Beach High.
Marina was playing without 6· 7
junior ce nt e r Rand y
Heidenreich, who is out for ap-
proximately six weeks with a
broken jaw.
Heidenreich was attacked by
two Long Beach Millikan players
on the court and nearly punched
unconscious Friday night.
shots that weren't falling in dur-
ing the first half.
With 2·04 remaining in the
third quarter Marina finally cap·
lured the lead, 40·39, and the Vik·
ings never r elinquished it,
although severely tested by
Crespi.
Jn the final three minutes all
seven of Marina's points came on
free throws, as Crespi was forced
to foul in an attempt to overtake
•the Vikings.
Cr•~('°) <'I) Muf"I '' n,. • 4 0 I I !>ulllvan
!>mitt\ McG&ry
M911pl°"g
C1rr1b1no
Shure•
Tol1ls
It II pf Ip
1 3 • II
4 I l 9
I 3 1 S s • 3 u
2 2 I 6
• 1 l "'
23 14 1' '°
eon on
OIM>n
Tltul
&ruu
Hi ii°"
MltlU
01.,i.on
Toll li
1 I 3 S
0 4 s 4
9 I Z 1'
• s 2 " ' o a • 1 2 2 4
23 ll IS •I
S<w• by Oll•rttrs
161'111160
10 14 II 1,_.t
By GLENN WHITE
Of .. °"'~ l'ti.tiUH Compton Hlgb's tall. quJck
Tarbabes put on what may have
been the most daulinl display of
sb00Un1 accuracy I have ever
aeen u they downed atubbor:o but
outcla11ed ffuntloeton Beach
,Hlab 76-82 Tuesday nlgbt in the
WestmlnsterHJgh gym.
The loss sends coaob Roy
MlJler's Oilers b .. ok to
Westminster Thursday afternoon
at 3:30 to duel Westminster in
co nsolation play of the
Westminstel'basketball tourney.
Compton was nursing a 38·30
lead with a little more than six
Sea Kings
In 54-52
Cage Win
By ROGE& CAJtLSON
ClfllleO .. ty""9tstMt
Corona del Mar Hl&h 's Sea
Kings, back-to-back defend1na
champions in the ~arina.
Westmtnater lnyltational basket-
ball tournament, advanted·to the
championship semifinals ThUfS·
day night (6:30) against
Compton following Tue•d~'s
54•52 victory over the host
Wes tminster Lions.
In a gaJi'e that wu lied U
times, coath Jack Errion 's Sea
Kings got the break they were
looking for with 1:01 left when the
Liona got too anxious and tried to
snap a 49-49 situation.
The Sea Kings sealed off a
drive by Westminster standout
Ray Foster and Matt Osgood
grabbed the rebound.
Errion called time out lo re·
group and two seconds later
Shawn Ahem was (ou!ed. Ahem
hlt both ends of the one-and-one
situation to give the winners a
51-49 bulge and after the Lions
could manage only one of two
free throws with 45 seconds to go,
Jim Hitchcock put the lid on with
two more gratis shots with 29
seconds lert.
That gave Corona del Mar a
53.50 lead and Westminster's last
hope went down with another
miss from the field .
The largest difference of the
night was a 6-point bulge for
Corona del Mar in the second
quarter (22-16) as Westminster,
behind the play ol Foster, kept.
battling back with Foster's
penetration and the Lions' press-
ing tactics keepin& Corona del
Mar from movin& out to a more
comfortable lead. Things got sticky for Corona
del Mar in the third period when
Foster's three-point play made it
29·26 in favor of the hosts, but at
that point Errton bad his team
get the ball to 6-7 Jeff Burden,
who continually came through
with the clutch basket.
Burden scored a dozen points
in a span which saw CdM move
from the 29-26 deficit to a lie at 4.3
with 6:30 left. Theo Ahern and
Hltchcock took over.
C•M IM) OU W"\mlNllf' ,,,...,. ''"" .. ICotlller 3 O I • P1rker l o 1 I
Pickell o 0 I o Sl"'"ns 7 7 ' 6 Ahern
H II c lie oc.11
~lluroen
Tol•ls
) ' 2 u 11 .. 1. 3 1 s • 6 l I IS K. Foslw ' 2 J 10
1 0 3 t ".Fotler I 4 1 20,
1 3 J 17 Wiiker 1 O 1 2
U IQ 11 M Tol•lt 21 10 II 17
kate.., °"°".,.. eoron• ll•IMw u I 17 1s-i4
wu1mlnttw n 10 11 u-n Although he left the gym, he in-
itially said the inj ury wasn't
serious, but the following day his
jaw was diagnosed as fractured,
and it was surgically wired shut
Monday.
J.aguna Tourney
The. Vikings won their first
game of the season in a 57-54
thriller over Fountain Valley and
their second in a 55-54 cliff.
hanger against Long Beach
Millikan. In three victories
Marina has won by a total of just
live points.
Marina stopped Crespi with a
come-from-behind performance.
The Vlklhgs trailed for the entire
second quarter and for most of
the first and third periods as
well, but they put it all together
!or a stroni finish.
The Crespi advantage was as
. much as nine points in the secol)d
period as the Celts took advan·
ta1e or hot shooting and an aa-
1ressive style of defense.
In the second half Marina was
a different team. n suddenly
started hilling all the outside set
Barons, Lynwood
lock Hol'll8Tonight.
University Drops
53-42 Cage Duel
third quarter-and only a furious
fourth quarter rally enabled
Univeralty to make the !Jnal
score less lopsided.
Center Roger Poirier, normal·
ly University's most potent of· fen!lv~ weapon, wu beld to Juat
four polnta because be was t.tna·
ble to 1et 1ood position un·
derneatb.
The ta Mlradt detense kept
him out ot .the lane and finally
coacb Doug Sorey decided to take
Polder off the court for the
fourth quarter. ..... ,.,, "ft ... H4'MM11 J t t 1
"N4111"' • 0 t 12 Acn•«I ' t 1 ti J-• • 1 t •
LMlll> s 0 "' SdlfrM~ll I I 0 1 ,..... 2S •• S3
minutes to play in the third
quarter.
Then the Tarbabes went on an
incredible shooUnc outburst a.s
they reeled off 16 shots from the
field wlthoul a miss. a streak that
dldn 't end until early the fourth
period when a Tarbabe missed a
dunk attempt.
By the time the miss came,
Compton was ln command, en·
joying a 70-42 lead.
Compton had one bad period or
adjusting to the Oilers' tone de·
fense, but at that the Tarbabes
hit nearly SO percent from the
field In that stanza.
Overall they canned 65.5 per·
cent of tbelr shot&, and ln the last
half they made good on 7'.8 per-
cent oft.hem.
During the 18 in a row wing·
ding, Compton was hitting most-
ly from 10 to 22 feet. Only five of
those baskets were made from
cloaer in than 10 feel.
Meanwhile, the Oilers lrled to
stay in the game and they were
able to shake off what looked like
first quarter Jitters.
Curt Steinhaus played well,
scoring 20 points and grabbing
six rebounds. Tom Pestolesl hit
10 points and erabbed 12 re·
bounds. Curt Wooten tallied .12
points.
But the OUens WJre only mak
ln1 Sood on 38.3 percent of tbei
. Cleld aoaJ tr&~. And that, com
blned with Compton'• searln
touch and lt.s superior qulckne
and jumping obillty, did lo th
Orange and Black.
CM\11(911 ITU ,, ti ...
Jon•• 60111
Sliw911er • 0 1 • H•rtltl 11 0 I U
H1nOle"t ! 0 0 10
Htrnaon • 2 I JO H•rnltll 2 0 J 4
llrownr109e 0 0 1 O
1.llUtlltlO 0 0 I 0 01~\ 0 0 I 0
(UIH_._.. ... " .. I 0 0 CIM
Mq9r1IOllM
T110moson ... ,11-111
Woolen PHlolHI
Sltllll'llUS
I l 2
2 0 I • 0 0
• 2 ' ' 4 l I I s 10 0 2
Tol•I• ll 2 n ,, Tot•ll
lun~O...r1«t
Como10<1
H11nllngl0fl lltKll
~ ...
" 14 10 u
HB'S CURT STEINHAUS DRIVES BETWEEN STEVE HARRll;L (32) AND JOSE SLAUGHTEff(40).
Smldleback Leads
JC Football Stats
Three Saddleback College
athletes dominate the final area
JC football statistics, compiled
by the Daily Pilot.
The Gauchos' Greg Speicher
lopped the area in rushing with
1,212 yards and also was the top
scorer <'ts points) while team·
mate Billy Yancy was the lead-
ing passer with 1,514 yards and 14
touchdowns.
And Saddleback 's Tom Haigh
topped the area's pass receivers,
catching 42 for 781 yards and 7
touchdowns.
SADOltaAOC 11•1 I llUSHING
Greg Speicher
8111Y Ven<y
llrlanWf>Od
Kerry Cr el>tl
Tony Fu11..-
Mlckoll8M
JOllll Giii
Erl' PtltrS
lllck VOil ZUD
L•rry Gtstro
Acwy Harvey
1Ctt1 Wrlglll
Tet1I&
I~ .,. ,, "" .. • ....
2U t,J41 lS 1,211 IZ 4.J
121 •n U4 4oll 12 3 S "..OOfS ll.S 00 lJ t2 I ti I 40
lt 74 I Tl 0 3 I
11 n 21 S4 o 10
11 n • 14 o 11
4 1S 0 U 0 Jt
I 5 0 S 0 SO
4 4 I l 1 01
3 • ' 3 0 10 I 0 5 S 0 ·S 0
5'2 , .. ll 121 2,2" ~ J'
ll'ASllNO
... llC Ill YI W "l 1t4 90 11 1,SU U ...
1 1 0 43 01000
I I 0 24 0 1.000
Tim Wlo,,_-11.113.o; ic.vln Vtrnoy-11·,,..2,
SltYI e .. -~.1-11.111~; M•r11n-I0-17 o.
Scott Sher•r0-1· 101·0; M lclllln-•·H ·O.
lec-S· .. ·•: F~l-3·4·0; Je"OYIC--111·0.
8 a lch-l·H·O; Oyllet -l•t·O, Cl'lrl s
Romero-t·S·O: Mike OeLaur•-1·1·0. Bob
RoOrlgue.r-1-1.0 Tollls-IOS-1,175-1.
O•ANOE COAST 15+1)
llUSHINO
F1ye Wuttwn
Din Ouddrklgt
Gery Gulsneu
Dennis eos-11
L-yOaYls
Larry Hall
Oe\1Molllu
Vlcl.lndMy
V.r1IO Brown
Erik Flowen
Kunl'i-1
Mllcll Ol1m11W'S
01¥e Pin.I
Total•
Gulsneu •
H•ll
Molllc•
TOl•ls
k• " "' ""' ......
'3 376 16 * J 3.' '° 301 1 ,.. , 4.t
115 "' 162 256 I 1.1 46 2S9 9 250 4 S.•
"' IM 24 "' 0 l 6 32US 8127 IH
3S 1S1 41 110 0 11
72'02'0 41
3 U I U 0 4 )
5 u 2 11 0 1.S
' 0 ' 0 60 40 4 02.0
t 0 I ·f 0 ·I 0
446 1,IN 211 l,6D lt H
"USING
IN flC pl YI ti llCL
!tS t01 IS 1,HI t .Mot
lt 1 0 • I .M 14 • 1 .. 0 .J11
721 m 16 1.Jl4 7 .J.ll
"•ca'IVINO
Hill -2' ~loM, "4 yer .. , t TO; llr--
n-41-1; Pll"MI -It.I~; GI ... l.ASltr 1 .. N-1. Weellle~s-1~2; ~ldOm -.. Sl·I: or.if-.
~. Olfl. llOs-11 -~. Cnl9 Arn«llJ\eftlen -4-~; ~"T°"""_,.._.; 01le llk11M0 -
1-SM; S-Sempffl -l-IS.0; INrll ..._ -
lol+.o; Oon~-\.7~; Tollll-1tH,Jl4-7.
Carson Leads
Tritons, 7 4-50
John Carson scored 12 points in
the first quarter and finished
with 22 to lead hls San Clemente
Tritons to a 74.50 victory over
Pacifica High (Garden Grove)
Tuesday In the San Clemente
basketball tournament.
Behind Carson's performance,
Son Clemente had a 23--16 lead
after eight minutes. The victory
puts the TrJtons in an 8 p.m.
game Thursday againsL Santa
Ana.
Tonight's action pits Foothill
High 10( Santa Ana and Costa
Mes a in a 6: 30 gaJDe and
Newport Harbor vs Capistrano
Valley at 8. All games are at San
Clemente High.
l'edllct UI)
Scl'lalH"
Rllt
GroMtl
C.lllMn
Smith
Ml,.llllws
Wlll>run
Wair
C/lrofllSllf'
"ft,. • ' 0 1 12 I 0 2 2
' o 1 n 2 0 1 4
0 0 1 0
1 0 s 2
0 0 1 0
0 1 0 1
2 4 ) •
,,., ... a--ee ..., ...
MeJOlt 1002
Wldt 1 0 I 2
Sll9flotf!S J 0 1 6
J-s 2 s I 1
Ouvall 0 0 I 0 c;e.._. ,, 1 o n
Oednov J S 1 11
a .Mulll .. n o O 1 o
ic1e1n 10 1 in
TNYU I 1 1 3
Auslln o o 2 O
To111l 1• • II 42 Tett la lll U U 7' ~ ... Ollatlieft •
Pacilio
!..tnCltf'lltnle
,. 11 ll I~
" u 14 1.4-14
Viney
wrlollt Sieve cracio
ll•nd
G.Spelclllf'
TotAll&
7 2 I 11 0 .350
101 00.000
,.. t4 ll 1,Stl 14 .41$
•rcalVIHO
Tom H•loh Id ....... 11-. 161 yards, 7 TOI); Mlk•
P•rdl (21·3"2~); Vott %up CIM'1.0I; G. Speldwr'
~1; J1y 01He 14-$2-41{ Giii IHS-0; Stew
HIH>d ll·IM); WoM 1).11.0 : Eric Schulle <1-S.Ol,
TO\tl1-t4-l,5'2·l4.
Rustlers Fall, 100-94
OCK.O .. IWlst l .. U
•UIMINO tell n yt ..... ...._
140 IS1 ta 12' 10 S.t
Ill ltS t 106 S U
Ut 6CW Jt' aa 1 2.1
• SU I U4 s 7.0
64 .. 21 '" , .s.o )4 21• 1 ,.. a u
11 114 0 '" 1 •• , It '7 II S4 1 U T IS I to 0 1.4
I •O •1t.o \at JOJ.0 s • ' .., ..... 1 O ta •13 0 ·IM
'" a,S. »1 2,M » <Lf ........
• M .. ft .. ,ct. Holl\ ,.. ts to 1'"° 7 .Sit ~aft ,. " I .. • Ml "'*""' a o • o • • ,...., t ' • " • I ... o.Me.. 1 • 0 0 • .000
T-W• * fQf U 1,S1' 1 .SIS ··~IVINO ,,.~ S>feltMll tl7,...._, ... ,., ... l'fOl>J
Mark Pep(>er and Jay Lucas
combined for 47 points to lead
host Fullerton College to a 100.94
victory over Golden West In noo·
conference basketball Tuesday
night.
Pepper scored 18 or his 24
points in the first half to help the
Hornets take a 49-41 Ind at the
intermission. Lucas took over in
the second hall when he scored 20
or his 23 points.
Todd Zirbel, a 6·5 sophomore,
Pirates Bost LACC
was Golden West 's biggest
scorer. cannJng nine of 13 field
goal at.tempts and addUll three
free throws for 21 polnt.s.
Davo Stricklin had seven re·
bound• to lead that category,
The RusUers never led in the
game and couldn't come closer
than rive points in the second
half.
OllWll"""41Nl
S."*" Slrlckllfl ~rlMI "'"'°'" "•l<flff OllllAlr •
l'11r """ .... ltt. 0~•™-' ~111111: let•••
.. " ... 4 0 J • s 4 l ,.
• J '11
1 • 4 ' J I J 1
2 • ' 4 I S S II 0 t • 2
• I 1 ' 2 a 1 1 • 1 , ,,
HM llN
,, .. , .......... ".,.. '°. ,,, ~,.
LuteS
O.vl1
Htl,..llM
$thulC.
Mllllll",_,
Mecrwt. .,.,..
"""-
Total&
• 1 > n s • ' 10 J 2 a 1
J 10 2 1•
! 1 I •
0 ' ' ' t 1 ••
J • • '
Fo'untaln Valley High takes on
Lynwood at 8 followtn1 a 6:30
game between warren ~Lona
Beach M.llllkan 1n tonight's ac·
·uon of the Westminster buk~·
ball tournament. El Toro
. Gama ue Weatmlnstu Hlth.
WlJmtn advance to 1'._u~ay
nl•M '• Md\lllna1 round a~ t . Bat· rtnf • mlJor upse& tbntiht, that
would mean a Nm.at.ch betwten
Fountalft .valley and Millikan,
two tea.ma wb!cb battled bl a
thrUllnc MUOD opener last ..tet
(MUllkan WOD, 9'·81 ). . .
TeCh Tabs Coacll
! LUBBOCK, l'uu -OfftMlvt
coordlutor ,llex l>Ockery, • cloae
f lrleod Ol Steve Sloan, waa hired
Tuiada,y illltii u the new IM1d • -foc>tball co.cb ol the Ten• Tecb
Bi~IJHfl' Raiden.
f
'1
I ,,
7
I I
I
(
MISCELLANY
College,
·Prep Hoop
Results
a>t..LaGI
CWQUHnt et, CM!lakll V
Meua•l\wwtts 7 J, ~on U ti
Nreott• 11, Holllr•" Prev101,.ct It,~..., 10
St aon .. antUA •t, Cet11a11 $1
St. Jo11n'17J, Army'°
!Miion Hell M. c..111o11cu 7J
Jack>onvllleM, ValdOl(e St IJ
~w Lou!.,.,,. I 12, $ Florlde IS 1 tn,..,, .. 91. E Ntonl.,.. 1•
Clnc•nn•t1•l,Mll'nl,Oftfo.o
M.,Querte•t, MlllrtllOle «
E OOoleSt ... 8'tmlCIJ1$tU
Angelo St f6, TarttlonSt SS
TUHA6M",S....Ho1a1ons1 IJ AMo .. ~14.C..TiKflSI
Cel 8•Plhl W, Pomona·Pllter H
Cal Lull>tr.,.11, ltedlands 14
Cot or •Oo 1 ~.Sen JoM St ti
C•I Sltlt (F,.lltf'tl)lll 9t, Cll•P!Tlen
11
l.O'fOI • 1', 5an OltgOH foll
AIA "· C..oredOkS6
HIOHICNOOI..
VALll!NCIATOUllNAMINT
Ktnned'(6S, P-ff' S.
A ... CllO All'nllDt )4, GllnCl•I• u
S.nll•00'6, Rov•tOa414S
V•l•ntl• 4',AMIWlm '1 UP~lllt MO .. T CLAlll
TOUltN.\MaNT
Cf•ramont It, Ouer11 .o
Allo l.omaH, NoQll•HS
P-on• SI. IWrtlwl-SO c..,., '°· Ollld\lone •z UPt•n01S,Al11U~
C.1n•$"' 101, 8cwtl1a 10 Onttrlo SI, Wll""' SO
Cl\•• !tr Olk st, Monlcl91r"
~ ... Cl.IMINTIJOUltNAMINT
!>•nl• AN .. , Mon4e Vista 40
ClllltlT05T0UltNAMIMT
LCHlg B•ecfl Wlho0'1 U, $1. Peul »
PIU\ X 11, C..11<' JV'• Jt
lltOllllClstl,Glenn~
Cerrllos S., S..ve.,,,. 41
LAKIWOOOTOVltNAMINr
Oowner SI,~""'"°"'" R0Hln11Hf11166, ukcwooa"
GAltOEHGltOVITOUltHAMllNT
Gtrdt nGnlvtll. NMwlfk SI
l.AGUNA aa404 TOUltNAMl"T VUfa P4't-"4.l.o..-a61
AllllOYOTOUllNAME"f MU•r 10, El Mo<tla3'
lo• AllO\ 7l, Ol•lf1y SO
PACll'IC ~OllU TOUltHAMlMT
Culvtr City '4, Mlr41lhlt SO
OTHEllS
l.04WtH 0 Sonor• )4
Le O..tnlt I•. MIQt\0411 U
CtPr•n 13, Arllt\la »
Fullerlonl'f. SuMyHlllt/1
l.t H•Du ti, Troyµ
Sports
Calendar
w--,1DK.11 Bu~tfl>lll-Wef!mlmlff' tourney
O·ounllln Vall..,. v• l.yn-•I II,
~"ere-..• IOUrNY ccasi. Mew vs
Foothill •t • 10, Cipl<lr-V•lley v>
Newpon H•rtlor If II; 81""'1> Am•t
tourney tM.\19' Otl •s Demi.-. "'
8•Ulll Hfqfl, S .Ill; I.A-Be41<11
courn•Y tMlulon Viejo. L•ovn1
BHC" Un1 w,,1tv. l.UrlM .. E'Wnc&A, H11Mln9ton V•ll•Y Chrl\Uanl l.o•
Angell\ CC al Ot-C.0.\1 Coll990
II JOI
Wrt\lllnq Ir'""' •t f.,.ood S
WAY IOUflWV ~ DI-., Oolaen
Wt1I Coll-(1 301. G<O\\monl •I
Or•nQ• C0.•1Co41-l<o.m I
!>o<<•r Arwhclm •t (.oron• Ht
"'lar f\I.,,.•• •t El Toro, Tu\lln •I
C.•ohl,.NI Valley (Ill At JI, M•rln1 •I
Ml\\IOn 111•)0 (1) N•WpO<I Harbor.,
Bo\<O hell 12 JOI
C.lrh , .. Id-••• ""'"'-VfelO•I
N.,wp0rt HMbor CJ), C:O.Olla ti.I M11r
•I Fount1in Valley 12 JO,, Marine •I
University, F004hlll at Hynlt,.Qlon
Beach fl>Otll at J: ISi ~y (O.C.ll
811lreltl<lll -WeflmtMlor tourney
IHUPtl1"91etn euch P'o.-!l••n V•ll•Y
Corona d•f N>•r I l.aoun• 8e•ch
1ourr••Y tLaQune &teen, M""°" v ...
10, University, M•rlna, E\1..,<I•,
C•Pl•l•ano Vall1yl; o-Hiii• •I
G•rd1n Grove tourney. N•wPort
H<Hl>Or, C..PhCrt'IO Valley, CO\I•
Meu •nd !.an Ct•menl• •I San
Clement• crw11a11onat E.clolOn "> S.n
I• Ana Val...,. If LA Quinta t0<;rner
ti.JO .. LosAmtgMHl(ll>), M•t•r Oel
•I 81\"1>1> ,..,,.., IOYrn•v. !Mlddlt!IMck
•t Sanla 8Mbtt• tour,., IS p m •• H•N:OOI
So«•• c..,a.n Gro;.1 •I S•n
CleM•tt ..... 1 .. Clemente. M"t"' 0.1
., North••-I)), Cypttu •I fOUf!t•1n Vellty (7 101
WrtllfillQ WHI Torr•"C• di D•M lilll\, Ml>.SIOn Vlf)'> tt Fooll\111 (bo1fl .. '"
... --· .· : Ir ' ..
• WedMldaY. Deoember"f. 1971 DAIL V PflaP JIS
Blind Mftn Follows, Plays
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP)
Jim Bennett is a hockey fan who
hH sea.son tJcket.s to. the Edmon·
ton Oilers· World Hockey As·
soc1at100 games and plays with
12 other guys m a :1crub league
around town
port on a h~adphone rud10, tus
head turning from sidt: to side,
followln& the play.
"Well, you have to make it look
norm al so you turn your head,'•
he said at a recent Oilers game.
He attends eames instead of
just llstentni to them at bome on
the radio because he feels the
team should be supported.
game than be doea.
Bennett, a 38-year-old com·
put.er pro1rammer at the
University ot Alberta, wu left
blind after a childhood illneaa.
He HJd be did not 1•t started
play in' hockey until Jut year.
What sets him apart from
other hockey fans ls that he u
bhnd.
Bennett and his neighbors, Bob
Mac Eacbern. alternate with
their wives, Delphine and
Doreen, in going to the games.
Ile follows the action at the
games by listening to a local radio statJon'!t play-by-play re·
"Besides. you can come out
here and scream and yell. If you
do that at home, they'll lock you
up. And if you come to an empty
arena, it's boring as belJ."
The only dlflereace from
regulation hockey rules la that a
tin can ls used lnatead ot a rubber
puck and the players have three
feetclearaneeoooffsldeealls.
Hi• team won the national
championships in Toronto wt
year, defeating a Toronto club
. and one from Newfoundland. the
only other two clubs competing.
·Newport
Girls Gain
Net Finals
Newport Harbor High
School advanced to lhe
CIF 4·A girls tennis
finals with a 10·8 victory
over Westlake High CLos An~eles) Tuesday after·
noon on the winne r 's
courts.
Corona del Mar, mak·
ing a bid to gain the
finals in the 3-A divis ion,
lost to host La Canada,
JO 8.
Newport wtll play No.
t seed ed Bishop
Montgomery <Torrance I
in the champ10nsh1p
match Thursday (2) at a
neutral site yet lo be de·
c1ded. Newport won a
coin !lip for the home
team designation.
MacEachern said be thinks
Bennett gets more kick out of the
Coast Area ·Ice-cold
Prep WreStling· Dana Hills
'Drops Tiff MIUI ... v .. i. :tt, ll•l4NIC14 ll U -Ku,,.,I\ <VI ""'>n&vlorf91t
103 Feld,..., CMVldK. L..on/Mllm 1 ••
Ill-e.,u.11 IMV) U.GOllHlell I. no-Fella <MV>lllnW1.-yo.v
ll7-0u<IOI (MVI dt< Borllers'-• llJ-~1 <VI dee ~lire IM
Ill-GropllJem IMVI pin Borden J;U. us ltoei-n (MV ) Pl" Fr•nki. 0 .
lu-Holl IVICIKHocllltJ
14rl.l,,.,.mugll (V) Cit< Motlr 1H
115--Wlllle IMV)dK """" tl I l'1-AMart1ne1 <V) d pin AWll•y • o
Hwl I.Oii\ CV) WOil by lorlelt.
JUNIOllVAIUITY
MIUIM Vl$l', ValM<la J4 ts-Wei~ CV) won by lorltll.
103-lluslc IMICIKKl"ll.11-S
IU 8ur11tt5(MldKHolM,l-I
120-Bau (MIPllVl9d C.Htro, •. 11
U1 JtnnlnQ\ CMI plnnt<I Romero, • 11 Ill Gelvin IVICIK PIPllone,:J.~
Ill WllklM IMl plMeCI Norm•n
duu,3 21
IU-Mtnr CM) dee Srnt111, •·?.
.15' Haley rvi plnntd McOon•fd, •·os. "s CerbolW IVl-bylwf .. I
17S T•YI« IMI pinned Audofpn
I JI
n1 Ne~l IV)dtc LAnl•,I '·
Hwy-S•ndelllMl_,bylorleil.
FROSH·SOPM
MIHIM vrei.u. ValMcle IO
U Oo\lble lorl1U.
tOJ-81u• IMI dt< Petclwl. 10.0
111-Houta IMlplnnedSMperd,0 41. no-M .. cn IMlolnneaArno1d,o.s1.
127 8ac°"°'~ (M) dt< Ne09I, 9·0.
1u-c.-u. (Ml pinned Se~vle, l '.la,
lll-Oanlettofl !Ml die er10<ton, H>
~·:.-qolle fMI drM wllh Bentler,
VAltSITY
'911 Cl"'*"'t U, Kal9ll1 U
H -Carel• fl<I dac R~tft', 10.0.
10>-Bryenl II()_, b¥ fOfleU.
t 12-A ,,..._,, ISi N< L.e...,,, f.2.
llG-<Oi>lllCWne ISi dee C,rl01C1, J.O
Ul-81CIO (I<) ~d l<llfl>eclt, • S4/
lll-l!Cl•anb Cl<) Cle< ero..., W.
131-IPjlOlllo ti<) <Ne NU91nt, M.
IU-C.rlln (Kldt< Fl!lmlnQ,~2.
IS4-Hlell• (Kl pj1V>e4 8yr~.1·sc
14S Morr-(I() PIMtd Walaon,
I J1
Hi Klevl~ IKl1>l-d Pl'tlM<,)·d .
ltt-E dwerCIS (SI die Woodyard, 11 ·I.
Hwy-C.ltley lSl pl,,,,., Br-u, o.ss.
JUH104tYAltllTY
l(at911ai.,S.a.....Mtt
H Ooul>ltforfell.
103-GoorlJ <SI wont>¥ lortell.
112-HerCly 00 won by ClllCI. onr
Ce><nwefl. •
U0-81>w•H (Sic»< lllWllM, 11·7
111 AnOtrlOn (ICI dee R. Manclou,
·~ 1u-w11ey tK> ptnt11td McC.o••n. t :)O.
llt-llelly ll<)plMtdPw-11..-, 1 ••
It$-Cl•Y IKll>IMH Clerk, 1 21
I SI-Sc""" KI won by dlfeull over
C.•0"•"1>
IU StenphllllSldK Beland,,..
l7S-Morrf1 (kl plnntd ScllrcleCler.
l·H.
tfl Dou1>1110rf9't.
Hwy-Prttllen:I (IC) •OPlllt IO<ftll.
l'ltOSM·IO~
••ttll .... SMa-MatL
•~Ponll tl<lpinned041varws,o·o.
103 Ku1>1 (IC) pinned Tno•Mlty, 0:4'.
Cold shooting did in.
Dana Hills High Tuesday·
night al lhe Garden
Grove basketball tourna-ment. _
The Dolphins, who bad
stayed close to Glendora
in the first half (31·26)
while shooting ju.st 28 per
cent (eight of 29) from
the field. didn't improve
much in the second baU.
and went dowo lo a 75.55
defeat, their tirat of the
season.
Mike Samuels with 17
points and Dick Jeffers
with 14 were the only
players 1D double !Jgures
for Dana Hills, which
wound up with a 32 per
cent s hooting
performance.
Scott Wiison pulled
down 11 rebounds.
30 turnovers also hurt
the Dolphins' cause.
Dana Hills bas an 8:15
consolation bracket
game tonight.
DMIHlllSUU
LosAI
Rae~
Entries
"" ................ .,....,....,. ct-Trecll ...... ,.,... ..... fllU.
TMIRD llAC9 -lSO YatCIJ. 3 YMr
eld1. AllOWel!Ct. Pllfw~
T11ftdeJIM'Cllen llCnlthtl 11'
Trlol'l''l t:Uttf(CMdioU) tit
SWttl 8hNI IUpl\Mll 11'
Moon's KlllNMln tHkodtfnllll 121
l'armlnflOll (,Mlelr) Ill
Mll"~(Delom6tl 11• LI,.... OolHllrt> ,,.
Htf"ll (Ward> 11t
GtorllH"°VITrtlHurt) 119
,OUllTH lllAC8 -400 ,, ..... 1 ,,HI'
olds a. llP• Ollmlno. P\wM $4100,
Clelm1'1Q l'Plq"'510, Cllecl.,. Te (WtAI
Thel "'*' IAlllaon) Go Van Paclllcl~ml
MldnlQfll Speelel (0.lomCN)
C~rele.Jtl IMltt.llelll
Oii-81d <MYftll Wlnllffl l..atll (Oe<1$MI
Too 8ullt (WlltllClll)
GoJet ICarclobl ~· Joftn (Hert)
1tt ,,.
• 11t
uz
'" "' '" llf
122
11•
l'"tM ltt.CE -400 Y•tdl. 2 V'Mr
olds. Mlacllfl Oelmlno. Purw $1100.
Claiming ""1aV'80.
Olrect Thoulht {Ulflllll")
J11neTen1...-.1
TllTI I(. 8af' fLudlltl
Klpleo (T..-,,rt)
Hllashll Jotl(Alll-J
.. '-OOllM UCnltlll I Josie ~adllC(W9rdl
Some1Mt•1C:.trdo&o1)
JeU Commend IMllCNlll
S.IK'I' $\lart (Adlllr)
122
122
Ill
122 in
Ill
11• "' 111
11•
SIXTN •Aca -401 yards. 2 .,_
Ofdt. AU-tnU. l'Vrse PIDQ.
The Sailors' doubles
combinations of Kelley
Smith and capt ain
Margaret Deneher along
with Melinda Myers andl
Kelly Wagner. won all
three or their matches to
give lbe victory to
Newport over the No. 2
seeded We s tlake
Wallabies.
~~!3'-•btlwl IV) pinned Fr-rl1y.
16rOoyle fV)pi,_d EO...•rdt, 2 30.
llS 8er-(Ml pltv>ed Me<llne, 0 1'. ltl O'Har• IVl ..on l>y lerl•lt.
Hwy-Cherlelon IMI pjMt<I Aihle, o .••.
111-Plnclllu <Kl•onb'(forftll U0-0.evatl .. llCl dee w.11111, l 1
111-conteono tK) de< ltuulck, l·J
133-Monette 110 won by lorltlt. ID-Sher~~ fl() wonbyfll<'l"'I
u~aflM (Kldt<IMflllH.M
IJI-Pa1>•11l II()"'°" 1>' IMl•il l~A" (IC)-1>-tlorlelt
11S-lklt "'911 IK I pinned Smill\, t J7
ltl-VMldfnQ (l()Qec l'O<'d, 21-l,
H•Y Morr ll(lplnnedHowetl.1 co.
'• ft .. Jtlltn 4 • '
Euy 5'>1r111P ... une>
war F•llCY le.in
Clll<M Go (Adair) l':' Som4' ICI'* Homs tllroOlt'flttldJ So\118"9(~)
122
"' 1ll
122
1n
lit
122 ,,,
Smyll•• l 0 1 ~muelt • s 0
Thornton J 2 s
WlllO<'I 1 0 0
VAlt$1'rY P:llOSk·IO~" a. ... r 0 0 ' Da11a HUil ti, Wat Ttn..,ce J4 04ton J 1 I
1; locltty.S.Ctlen <U•m>
• l.ay A Patdl (Veughlll
Mr. TC2 (Ditlombll
: pttetdys TNdllt(G•Hoe•l llf
Los Alamitos .
Race Results
l"OUllTM ltACa -..00 yera.. 2 ., .. ,.
oflll. AllNanu. ""'"• IJIOO Ala oo Go <Adair> 11.to i .o 2.10
Tellr BeGlr lo.fomotl UO 2.•0
MS SertM R"PKt tLklnaml 2.40 Tlme-20.3'.
AllO r .. -Celyllan, S•llt Sill.
.Atonome.
No r.cratcllH.
""™ lllAC9-4QO y1rd1. ly11rotdJ &. up. Cl1!1Ttfnl. Punt l5'00 eer 111oc1te1 <Hen> 11.20 s • ., a.eo AGoGAQ~t lWatll S.00 2.10 Del Neel a. tc.ra.a) 4.00
Tlmt-.20.>4
Also rllft -.t.·YOfty, Mr. EllaDo, Ed
Oet, OanC1y'1Go BHI, Otektys Fir~ .. °'"•I.dies. A·-dwet'd C. AlradEl!try
SIXTH ll.t.a!-170yards. l yHrold•
,. up, Claiming. l'urN llOOD
Suger Loaf Cfwll (Adelr) 21 10 1 60 4.0ll
H•'t. Tris (HI~) 1 40 uo
Gold PollC'I' lltOUlllll jJIO
l ime -41.»
lse ren -ltuogtd 8omt1ttr, Gid-
dy'• Ro<kel, WlllCI Jammer, Mr. Ar·
row1y 5ftOf't ROdlel. KnlQlll of C.lory,
Scratelled -On tna H-. c.istom
T•ll°'", ~· Dancer, Tiny 1(...,. Kan. ColtY'J '"91r. JS •ucu 1-Jlllllr Leet c,• a,.,. • ._
attl .. ptlfl._, ...
aavaMTM UC.-JSlyartH. l,,eitr
etch & .., .AllowllMI. Purse UJOO.
S....P111Llll.aJtl
<O.i-11e1 22.60 7 JO 6,lQ:
9ooola Bllltl IWa..CI) • 4 00 a.40
Soulllotrn Gen11am.., IUph,Jm) 4.40 llmfl -11.fS.
No 'Cral<llH.
SU..IOWL LSU •-Stantord
a1..ua eottNaT llOWL
USCSOW<Tt .. IA&M .IM.J
S4.IM•eowL AJ•MINI ~Mr Olllo Slat.
C.0"°"80WL. T•JllU-Holrto.Mt
llOM90WL
Nikllf9all l4-rW~M
CNIANOe 90W\.. otl.,....,,_~ ,.,..
~y Pll~lOYfPClnclnnatl
SI. l.oulU over Weshlnoton s..My Hout ton 4_,0tlrtMnd
Plllltlf91,nte 6 011er Ne• YD'1t ~ltnh
Nf'lt E1191and4-~amt
New YQfllJtbl-Buftafo
Kt111AS City S-SNIUe
NtwCM-11-TenltNllW'I'
aaltlmon 14 Pftr O.troit
Chlcaoo10-~e..,.
Denver 7-S... Dlaeo
Oelcllfld 11-Ml"""Ola
Los A11111tl1S 1 r -Attllnl• MM!Uy
Dllllu 1-s. Frencc.1t
..
Profess10nal tennis
star Alex Olmedo's
daughters, Angie and
Amy, played for
We:,llake in a loiung
cat.ise Thursday, it will
be' the Fernandez sisters
in al least four spots for
R1shop Montgomery
T" o of them are na
t1onally ranked in Junior
Lennis competition
9S OUM-(WI dt< L.ower~ , _.
101 M<CM!n 101Dl-08ond1, 3 01
llZ-A~'10fl CWldt<O..loH,t I
Fl•, V•ley <•I Ill) l!i!..,da
95-Yomoo11M IFlcM< "°""'•,l-2
10)-8u\ll IFI <IP< Com91on, ,,,
CicMle< I l l
8tln I 0 0
$
J
l
AllO ,.,, -Ml. Roen o.<k, lva11'$
s•Y•NTM ~ -uo .,..-ch. J , .. r E•JY Jtt, Ck ...... , Aus Coufll
.......... Clel1Tt11'9-PurM UlOO.~------------------------------------------------~ Cl al mint Pria IJSOO.
P'••loHl11 P'rtddy ICelll
Red fled WIN ITrH<JUr•l Golimll•~llt IKnlllf'll WHRllltrl..._.11
"'"'-' 1111 (I) WHtl•-t si,,.,"
M• M•rt~ IN I lo.I lo £van• 3·t . 10.t toAinrOI""® t .,..,rc1111er .. o.
A Oontal• tN) 10\1 7-4, , ••• -• I Otlte IN I tixl06, l 4 won ... , ~" Smtrl\ 01ne11er t NJ det Antle
Ofmta1> R-1 s. Clel C,lr•rd unda
•·1, dtl Kue>trmen z1,.,,,,.,m.,, • 1,
M• Mytrt-Wagner INI *°" ... 6 1
' I. Anartws.C. Gonlll•• (NJ lo;l l •'. • • won6·3
C•M <II 1111 La Cen••
llfltll" Koehler tC> 10\I lo Marr O•, d•I
Giimour 6 0, dlf ,..,.,. •~; '°'" CCI
10\l 1 •· """"'-'· '-> Root <Cl 1011 2 •. *°"I•. •·L ~
8•1dwtn-8erc-ICI l<>M to Ohli ""Ilsa••.•, IOlt lo 1!111 .. EdW•fdJ s I ,
def Abbey S•n Cls 6 ·1
Kr•ttrPorl ... lleld ICI Iott .... ~. -•·I Goodbaoy-l.IPtOn lCllOllO•. l• 6 I
110 ln0<nton IWI""' ~lono. Jo
111 Ntwt\•11 IW) lll'C \/OQelWn(I,. 0
'" L•rwood 101 dt< MCOOU(lel c 1 Ill-Rug111" 10 1 cM< Kreu1,.'
ICS Pt111t IWl OHC Hulln J I 1~ V•n<tnl IWI 1>1~ L.•wll, 4 30
16S ll1>mo <0 1 die l.ol\oerly, 3 1. 11S Rl>Df>rl~ 101 p1nnl'd Anlll'r<on s·o
191 P•lmerlWI W0111>tle>rlell
Hwy 8arllell IW) ""°"by IO<f"I
"lt0SH·IO~
D111a Hllll )t, W"I Ten-8"(t 11
9J-$1r11199r 101 plnn•a W•ll•rt. t•SO.
IOJ Tllerl•Ull tOJ l>IMtd 89nlotn,
0 4S
11 l Oavfl HNI Of<: W•IUM>n, I l uo-LtUlrt IWI dee Marq.,., S·O
111 l.arw09G IOIO•cWl-.m~n.l·1
IU-JtMrN I DI OK Wlll•rd, 2 0
13' RU\Hll IWI dtC Wlnnt"9llOll ,.,
US-Spurfl"Q (WI pinned 8ock1r
I 1'
IU -~u"°'" IDl ti.c ltlma,.,4 7
IU-JamK IOl114tc Buro•. 4 7
US-Adam\ 101d&<; JulH, tl>-0
It> luccl 101 -.1>, lorlell
Hwy Slt•llon IOI """'"'° C.llmore 3 SI
Soccer
Report
VAltSllY
117 M•llby lFld«McMefll~l,100
UO Oo1neku IF I drew with um, l·I
Ill-Gu~rnlclt IF) won l>y C14tltUll °"" Rtlden 1)) 81\llolllE I ~< 0.Havfft,••I
Ill Citl~rl lEldt<Sn.,ctw l··l
10 8 f ,.,.,,..,_, 1 F I O« C.0.nu~ e
I l
H• Wlllo.,.,\ IE Idec l<•IOl>lt, 1 I
l•S !> Soutnw ... d tFI P•Med $Ntftr
0 I)
11S (,rHnlHI IF I di< Sl•oull\, IH
ltl WOO<ly IF I P""'"' WtlkO#Ull,
O SJ
H•r Mtrrill I El won l>y forfti I
JWllMr vars11,
IE1Tere1',lm ... u
'S IC1no""'11 tE > 1><nned W•ltrM>ll
' 11 10) Wtfton IE) won by lorftll
111-Kolln<,i\ Ill dee Ming 1a.s
120-Flournoy IElplnned.tlal .. 1 o
171 WHver <E > de< Hulchlnion I-•.
13). H•r~ ll)plnnad Ho-111 00
1lt-Med IN IE I pinned McCilMI\
J IJ
10 Halbout (I)~ P19911010.'
114-8•1o tEIPIMedS..ller& I OJ 1•S-Swt<1-Ill oll'Md S.ftetl14 ·IS
11S-Oovvllft (II plrwied Sdlneldlr
l "' Ht -Mey 111 Pl-d Niison I '° Hwy Hlllldey !El plMfd End•n
2: SS.
tS 10)
112
110
0 so
,, .... ~
llT-IUlftUl"I'"
Crt-IEldt< <:Mttllo• J
W•'""' lflplnnedC/lrl•IYO 10
MPCllN •Eide< W•llrl••• 10·4
NleCllH !El pinned Knowl ..
Tolalt ZD IS 13
SCotta aYOUAlllTaRS SS
01ne Hflli 11 14 f lO~S
GltnCIOr• 11 14 20 24-15
CV Christian
In 50-36 Loss
Ron Baily scored 16
points but it wasn't
enough to beat St.
Michael's Prep School
<Orange) or the weather
Tuesday afternoon as the
Capistrano Valley Chris·
tian High Eagles
dropped a 50-36 decision
in non-league baskelbaH
action at the Laguna
Beach Boys Club.
C..,. V •Hft' Cit. 16, IC. MICMlll'1 H C.po \/alley OlrlMllft-tlelley 1',
Jolltts4'n '· Gf1*I l, l.fvl~fot1 4,
Bowu• •. lillitv-rs 2.
Hellttm.' SL Mk ... tl'~ 31·24
Oft Tl>a HOU$a ldelrl
Go Oii Too ICltrluaJ
A••Y Slit GGHl8anksl
PH>9•'• llret Nerd)
Royal C.o Fl•t IC..raot1I
Sc>erlr I 1110 s .. OllSoftl
120
111
11t 1n
11f
"' 1n 1
"' ,,,
111 I
t
\
NINTH ltACa -lSO YM'dl. l , .. r
ot<h. Clalmlllfl. ~'" s.noo. c1a1m11111
Prlc.'4000.
I' Am A IClpCJ TllO I OelOfl'lllt)
Aegean't t1Y1119t (Mltchtfll
Jollln, JN (Meri)
Al eor (CllrClo~I
H•r~o·· A~IWeUon)
Drat ll (Adelrl
C111>ld'S Men (Clfflu•I
Rull1h llootttc..111
Smoottl Al Ptp98 lKnlofll I
Mld-y A..._, (Wtrdl
11J , ..
tU
1U
112 12t
1U
11f
'" 121
BUY or LEASE FIAT
TENNIS RACQUETBALL r.toYn.U..._.IR .·
A PrlYate C .. -c_...-, Localed
CHllSTMAS 5'ICW.
1MI WMOU YIAI Of lf71
AIU. MIMlaSHI'
MO MONTHLY DUIS
••
SIH~LI $350 FAMILY SSOO
Prep Basketball Cathi re• Valley U) (11 La MlrUa
Capl\lrano valley Hortno
Romero, Jorwlson. Srblt
l'lt1. Vtllt'fL1ta11<i.Alemll9tS
I' In. Valley-l<)m, Mitrlln
127 BO<Clln (1)-dJtnklMl'O
Ul-Collm•n IE J pinned J•n•k•
I J1
lll-8Ucll IE)pl"'11tdJonH l:JO 1-S-Ba<on IEI won by lorltll.
ls.l-R09ers fflplnnodEfdrldoeZ'41. l.S Gro'• 1ElolnnedWaqntr0·'7
17J-Oull IEldK W-1 J
Banquet Report
.leMtrVenlty
642·2000 ~ JIOW.W...
~c-. .....
Jouwor vanity l•ltltlMll
1.a1w11a "'•<"ti, '4IMIM.ck ..
l.•ouna 8U<I\ McDonald ti
NorlO J, E~..,. 12. Frint S OoOfrh
1 811\loy I. !>Mott> I
Hafltlm• 1!17t
141encl•41, C#Matllel1"1•r ..
EH•ncta \/en Horn 16, Pdtt ll,
Ruller 2. <H-r 1 Y•mt m• I Mid> din) Hlaon 1
C.dM IC.,_.. I, SN>llln 11. JonP\ t
MalloJ 14
HalllhTte: E<lllrlC.1•, 11 1~
E tJ .. n 11, OCI.., VI"" K
Edl\On -Hl"t IS Odo•". Herll~
10, Mc Donald 2', 0...... 1. wlol""" IJ,
H•l••,Moroanl Octen Vrtw Antonopoulot 11,
f 11111uon 2, Na•klll•llortn '· Relnlloltz I. Mdrede al>, 8ac~m•IM I,
Ng 2,Mtllr1ng2, HIKllnvt I, l!lrow•r 1.
l'fellllme: Edt\OI\~
Mat1N'2.Ul ........ M Merlne-Ntt1on 2', Holmu 2.
AltllO 10, Keirn 2, Seylor 10, MIY ... k"
3. G1brltl t, l'ltll 4. Orta•d 2. Nell1on
:I Htlllll'na: Merine, aJ.21.
•.-t11• ve11.., 'v T-111t11t "-'-111\lalleyM, l'wWH U
FV 1eorlnv-fttlll1111d4,Stoll I, Herfo.,.
10, Hlltlllard 11, Fl .. dt u, Pollllrettu.
Helfll,.,.; ,eotllltl,21·U, .... ~ ..........
S.11 Cl--'.....,.lon II, "-"'" 6, Aflm• .. Gen' t. Ml"IWll t. l'lll!U
10, l'fWval/I a,"°"""" 4.
H•l/ll"'e: s.t!OM!efltt, 1f.I),
••i.Jlda .. Qelfl~ .. llllll<~c:t 71, VIII Hom 11,
O._,.r •, ~t, y.,,.,.,,.i 4. Cetll ~-~IS, LackaY
2, l111110, Bauttt, I.ow t. ""rid. 11e1111..,., a111W1<1t, 2'-u.. ............ ..,. ..
Mtf ...... LIWU-M
""'"tlMttn a.acll-filfrlot 21,
Oltl!llHld I~. A,ele I01 Ol•M tJ
"•1111111111 U, Jttf'rt 1, Clultl ~.
ltll•11 1, ketlllll 1. Wllllnt, I,
o...a11u. "•lfl-: ........ 45&
M1"k 1, 8.,,km.., I, Thompson rs.
Gtnse 1, "'°"'" 11, ~·· Heflllm•• Unl~ly, 1'•21
~ ......... " co~ 44, ,.._ .. u
IE tlencla-Aledtn 10, Stllllh s. Rifer
J. camp 11, Aomero2, RlcNrd\ 2.
Corot1• Clltl M¥-Heu 4, Murl>IOY •.
JartUtll t I, Jolw>s "· C.111-rO 11 Hal"fme• CdM, 21· IJ
lr•IH ,., S-OtlMlltest
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NATIOHAt..a.u«t:TUU.
AUOCIATIC*
8ull1lo llS.NtwOrl•-to
Ntw York IH,8"1_, I .. , (Oll Portland llt, O evellll\d'4
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HOCICl!Y LaAOUI
V •ncou...,. S, Walllfllll.On 1
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VAlllllTY
M IHIWl\lltle II> Ill 8M-ill
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.IUNIO. VA•MTY •••Mdt <O (I) Mta ......
E ai.11e111terfll0-W•t•.
H .. flftM-1.0.
C•Pt•ln: Jim Ouco1Jll,11; Mo't
va111eblt: Tom euck; Moat Im·
P!'OWCI: Nidr-Slflomen.
t11111m-.
CllPteln: R4ndr McAtlltl11, Most Vetuable: 1Cevl11 Oltte.-aon; Mast 1m.
proved: Tony 8r«ltley.
""""'-C•P••ln: Mike M<Ceba; Mott Valuablt jemll ni-son1 ~I
IM~OWd· ~$4Al4gtr, CttU-....,...
ValNlfWtttrhle
Captel11: JoM Ol»n; Motl Vetua.
bit: 800 OOIM; Molt lrnprevect: Tom
Revers; ,,.._. lni1>lr•U01111, At111
Chacon.
.lwllltrYanltf Watw .....
Cllplaln: Tod ~tckltl; Mo51 11a1 ....
bl•: Peny Zedlaty; Most lml)f'OYed:
Joiln E1,,.at; Mo&t tnt1tlrtllane1:
$l-IWrlOlllr. .,...... ..........
~11: !Co1¥1n Bef111olom•h Mo.I
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100 t••t wat.r test-',
flllOf-Y'aflow/lllafnlfle
at"' C.M, allt dl11f.
>1AROL.tX ITttMHltt
Clf')'Sta I•
HANDSOME, ACCURATE,
DERENDABLE.
SEIKO QUARlZ.
Selko ha• the •nswerto ewrym1n'•
p,.,.,..,,c•lnquartzM1tchu. Oly/cWe
calendar watchet, '°'""9th trllln,ual ~
ultfl·thln dreu WltdtM, bOklly c010rW\
d~I•, end much mo~. ~1.,. hllhlY
accurate and outatandlncly sQOd·19c*fl1c· Stlliio p!on.wd quarti, and no~
hau finer collectlon. seuco Quartz.SQ
t •
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t
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2946 BAISTOl ST. 1530 8. HARBOR BLVD. 120 FIRST ST. AT CYP.RESS · 15221 BEACH BLVD.
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.. .• .• . ' . ,
'·ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC Wildneeday, 0.0.mber 7. 19n
I\ Perhaps the most lucid comment ot all on the
I. incredlble ceUo artlatry of CharJee CUrt1a ot Laau.na
Beach came Sunday altemoon in the reacUon of an
obviously moved audience in the Orqe Coast
College auditorium.
TboM deliihted oolooken roae aa one man to
«Ive Curtis a tribute the like ot which bu not been
seen by t.bla writer in all the years that be baa close-
ly observed the efforts of the Orange Coast Colle1e
Community Symphony OrcbeetrL
TO BE SURE, IT would have been a matter tor
the Grand Jury if anyone present had not
participated in that splendid and richly deserved
.standing ovallon.
Let's ma.Ice no bones about It, we were ln the
' presence or genius du.ring this performance of Dvorak 's Concerto fOl' Cello and Orchestra. The day
will come when those who listen to tbe praiae heaped
upon international artist Charles CurtiJ wut be able
to say: "Ah, yes, but then I always knew he would be
famous.Iheardhimplay as al7-year-old."
Allen Show Renewed
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Steve Allen's "Meeting
of the Minds," the award-winning PBS series in
which historic figures meet to discuss themselves,
will be on for another season.
New "participants" will include Martin
' Lugher, Voltaire, Plato. Florence Nightingale. the
Marquis de Sade, Frederick Douglass, Susan B.
Anthony, Emiliano Zapata, Socrates, Francis
Baco!'l and Empress Tzu Hsi of China.
SADDLEOAC K f'L AZA
-MfHI ll1'UIM Of l
THI rtt4IC PAMtHlr
• tNtM"I ti IU ',,, ............ ,...... .. .....
"FUt4 WITH OIC«
Ii JAMI" (PGl ·~
WALT Dt5N£Y'S
''DARBY O'GILL"
"'Sl.-.0 & tHI
IYI Of JHI TIGH"
(0)
"DIAO&.Y HYOIS"
"HUSTLf"
(A)
.. ~AIN\MLL.£Y • •:oot"""" '• n uo••-•PA"•~•t ... ,..,..
OitPHf.US·
l:40
"IUUTY AMD
1"111ASr"
7:00110-.15
SOl .Tll ('0 :\ST I
1Hf Afkt
I A(.llfllfA kf A(H .. I~ \.I
6:4S PM
.M ...... ~W.-S..1:45 :
.; :TltE4J'RiJ----1
"HEW YORK,
And another pr~UcUon: when that 4ay tocnes,
youna mater CUrtla will be u sraclool and modest
as be wu at the deli&bUul reception that followed
hi• triumph lD the Dvorak.
IT WAS A •E•ORABLE aftenaooa ol music
and Curtis bhnaelf, very conectlt, toalated on a full
measure of tribute aolnr to mae.tro Joieph
. Pearlman and hi. fluent ud well n.llhtlaw.lela OC-_...;;..----------....----...-:--z--
ccso. ~~ ..>" If this writer were a sololst oven the choice of a \ •
conductor be would put Pearlman oa the Podium . ·1i1 •
every Ume. H1a liaison with the art.lat 1a MTe!' less ~;. · 4 than admirable and his rapport with Cwt1a on Sun-: •
day wa.a 10met.blna to behold. ----------
Loog before Curtis took the stqe we bad been A OJNNER PLAYHOUSE
royally entertalned by two splendld.11 ~onn~ ~-----------~ll!ll••C works: Hanchl's very lovely "'lbeodora •overture ·..I
and Brahma' agelesll "Variations on a Tbeln• by
.Haydn. ':.Grand stuff, OCCCSO.
BVT THEN CAME THE champa&ne of th.la
writer's music-filled weekend: Charles Curt.la giv-
in& ua his exquisite interpretation of a glorioua work
that often defies the soloist ln tenna of maxhnum
extraction of what is often its almost etbel'eal
beauty.
Charles Curtb ls a musical pro1pect the like of
which we have never seen on the Oranee Coast.
And be iJS only 17 ! What a colden foturt lies before this splendid young artist and bow eacerly
we shall watch his progress on what will become a
world stage.
CHORDS AT RANDOM -Not.es at rehearsal
indicate that we are going to get our uauaJ top Olght
"'LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR' IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND 0 OF THE B~ '!..tu Snrirli. J\·111. rin Drlil,v ~
"Riv.tint ••• • dramdc: blodcbuater'1 •
Bruce WllU1m1on-A.Vb0v
"Olene Ke111on bums • hole
through ~· •Cfeeft ... Rea R~ewYoril o.Hy News
I
I
:"\
NOWPUYING
Tll&OlJGB JAPRJAltY 8
Perfomtance$ Nightly TU&-&111
The Delightful Family Holiday Musical \
"SHE ··~ LOJ?ES ME"
~ ·~'•"Joe Master~. MU$ic & lyncs t:y
"fiddler On The Boot'•" J«-ry
Bock& Shektan Harnlck
D1rect9d.,.. Nictl OeCano ,_...,._,.,.,..,_..IA.
For Af#w n.... Dandng & Ent•a ••If JHE ClllBRITY LOUNGE
. NOWONN
UMCH hm 11 a.a. M...bl.
"THE •tru•H Of
THI f'tHW PAHJHM ..
"FUH WITH DICI
& JAMI .. (PG)
NEW YORI" LOOillRTil FOR "CABARET;~, Dli1U · li1 dfNllal
WAU OfSfilEV'S
"DARSV O'QILL"
"SIMIAD Ii THI
l\'I Of tHI rtGH• (0)
AL PACIHO 11'C9l
"IOllY DIYFIH.D•
AL P4CIHO CPGI
"IOllY DEflffELDN
Open Doily 12.30 p.m
TAtlTU.•!··____.·~ 18.GOODIWl
USMQl£Y & In two th .. tert St.rtng DI•,,. Keeton THE BANDIT"
'1HE STING" .. ,
--·--eouT DIWID.DCNJ ... .,.....,..,.."
etOlllr ... ··-_... ... ,. ...
OUMU.LL IALL Y <"I
-.............. ...... ~
OllMl.,L UU Y 1N1
'Disco Fever'
Special Set
LOS ANGELES (P) -
John Travo1ta aod an all·
a tar cast will be bl ".Disco ------------
Fever, .. • televl1ion apecJal~aalu\lnf
loday•1 premiere of
. .. s~ tlll"dQ Nlcht Fe.er,"
7
j9 DAA. Y PILOT ~.Decembef7, 1en TereVisioia
.. ~
........ llMllYM with In
Oki.-OOMIWMt "'°"*' In ..... ~ '*I CMN!W9 .....
-IOINOYOME
Dt. Eetty undergoM °'""
l!Mrt Mirgety •nd the ~mpe.rt Hoeptlal elett
IMme the enguWi of .....
Ing tor word of 1111 oondl-
ton.
• , ... y "°"1MIT
'"Therepl.. UHd In
CCIUl'IMlllllO'' (I) C...wl
@MllW°""'9t
au.ttll Kenny Rogete.
1(1111 Dee. Foew 8'oou.
8 .8. King. ~. Ouy
Marlla.
. . .
Cl MOVIE * *'h "Flying L.Hther·
n~ll•" (1961) John
Weyne. AoClert AyM. A
tougtl Mwtne -ldtr
end 1111 men ~ to
reepect eecti O(tier --.... no ect1on 1n battle. 12
hra.)
8) TWE BRADY BUNCH
Bobby .. vee ~ trOM
being hit by. felling l9dOer
and lhe ddet 8'*'Y ptc>m-
~ ,_ to beCOme Bobt>Y•
alaw.
• THI! ..c>OKIES
A glr1 wll,_ a murd«
end Webel« 11-..lgned 10
get her teettmony. Tiley felt
In lol/9, but the girl la kln.d
by the mwderw. CD f'0006 FOR TliE
... ODEAH FAMILY
"Tutlc.y'' di Alie NEWS t:15. P\.EOGE &MAK
AegylMty ~ ptO-
grammlng may be dUyed
due to sMedge brMka. 1:25. OVER fASY
Ber.,.. Ftiedon; dellVery of
~;~hi.
1:30 D t.tOVIE * • * ··rtte 8now9 Of
Klllmenjero"' (Pert 1)
( 1953) Gregory Peck,
SuMn Heywerd. A brUll1111t
writ• tlnda IMMlng to hi.
lite In Afl1Ce, Mier a rwt·
Iese end •X1enllw -Ch.
(1 hr., 30 min.)
8) MY THREE 80N8
~I HIONl!Wt UAMCUJ8
AllCHIWS
IUJYIWCV "BrMikinO The l.MM"
• AOAAf..12
otnoer9 Mdoy and ANd
lmwnlipt tMlr nighl~
~~to~
the robbera In a Q119 at ..
Uon llOldup.
• MACNEJL/l.EHRER
REPOftT I'll YOBA WfT'H
MAOEl.JH& •
()) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 8 SPECIAL
"A Coemlo Chftlt-" Ari
1nlmet9d llollday apeclal In
wl!lc:h • boy encountera
thr• vttltort floom Mather
"'°'1<1.
I NEWLYWED BAME
tMTCH GAME P.M.
Tm IRA.DY 8UHOH
Sem. the tMc:Nr, nu •
big MlbeCt In hi• llf• Wl'lefl
Allee'• old boyfriend
comee to town. CD LET'S MAKE A DEAL fa LA. INTERCHANOE
"Snapehota"
'1l) 8TAR80AAD
"Brende Simon And For-
-Dandn''' (I) a12uoo QUE8TION 0 FAMILYnlJO
8:00 fJ ()) GOOD TIM£8
''Thelma'• Brief Encou~ ,.,.. Bio BtOthaf J .J. Is
watching wnan Thelma
bec:onlM the rorn111ttk: tar-
get of a hand~ llrang-
Chann~I Lbt.ing•
tJ t<NXT (CBS) Los Angeles
G KNBC \NBC) Los Angeles D KTlA ( nd.) Los Angeles
IJ KA.BC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (NBC) 5an 01.ego
G) KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles
G) KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
tit KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
G1) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntinglon Beach
Speeials Shine
ABC's Combo
Scores Again
NEW YORK (AP) For the fifth lime in six
weeks, ABC 's Thursday night comedy bit,
·'Laverne and Shirley," had a bigger audienco than
any other TV program, and the betworlc conr.:inued
to dominate the ratings race, A. C. Nielsen fi,gures
sbow.
In fact, ABC bad three of the lop five prQfgrams
during the week ending Dec. 4, including .. Happy
Days,'.' on the air just before "Laveroe and
Shirley," and "Three's Company," telecr1sl right
after the leader. "Happy Days" watJ No. 2,
.. Three's 'Company," No. 5.
ABC'S CONTINUING SUCCF.88 with the Tues-
day evening programs helped the n4!'twork over-
come a big push by CBS, which llated. seven shows
-including a tribute to actress Elb.abetb Taylor
and three Christmas specials -in the Top 10.
ABC's overall rating for the 'Week was 21.
Nielsen says that means in an aver.age primetime
minute during the week, 21 percent. o( the homes in
the country with television were. watching ABC.
CBS' Christmas special featurtJng the late Bing
Crosby was seen in an estimated 2' l .4 million homes.
ABC's str ength was in the •size of its Tuesday
night audience. "Laverne awJ Sblrley's" rating
was 34, which represents an etrtimated 26.8 million
homes. CBS' Christm as spec.11al featuring the late
Bing Crosby was seen in an r~timated 22.4 million
.homes.
THE TOP 10 Pll0GRA1'S for the week:
"Laverne and Shirley,," a 34 rating represent·
ing 24.8 million homes, aa.d "Aappy Days," 33.4 or
24.3 million, both A.BC; "Bing Crosby's
Christmas," 30.7 or 22.'• mUllon, and "Tribute lo
Elizabeth Taylor," 29.4, or 21.4 million, both CBS;
"Three's Company," '29.1 or 21.2 million, ABC;
.. Rudolph the Red·NfJted Reindeer." 28.7 or 21
million, "All in the JFamily," 27.4 or 20 million,
"Johnny Cash Chrl.stmas Show," 26.8 or 19.S
milUoo, "Rhoda," 25 .5 or 18.6 mJllton, and "On Our
Own," 25.4or18.5 mldlion, all CBS.
THE NEXT 10-~iBOWS:
• (...,_ A. Wat~ Jr )
wttba~PNI
.. P\JNTITONU ~ In tNa Mimetad ..,_.,, "* Anlttona relucuntty ~for e.nte a..
.... "" jolly Old gentle-
"""' apfalnl hla ankle and
la ur1abla to OOIT>Pi.t• hie
roundl.
• MOV\I
*.\Ii WThe llklattatad
Men" (1H8) Rod 8teig91',
C... Bloom. A won'4n
~ her lluebend to ,.._ hie body tattooed
with aymboM 1111aelng to
_..In~ ... (2 ttra.) 8 9 PAULLYNOE
"'nne The Hight e.tOt-.
ChrlabnU" Paul l~,
Anrte ~ .. Menna Rafe,
Allee Ohostley, FOiier
Broob. tiowmtd ~
Gaof'ge Oooet and ,,,.,.,
Wllllaml J>feMnt their wr-
llon of how the ,....,.,..
poen1came10 be~.
I JOt<IJfl WILD
CAAOl llURNf;TJ'
AHOfM!'HOI
au.ti: J..,_ ~
• MOVIE *** .. Murd• Inc."
(1960) Stuart Whitman •
Mel Britt ~ hlatcwy'a
c;rl.-•1. • yo.ig couple
•INggle to eecape the
ayndiceta, wtll<tl haa a
C<>nlract out on them. (2
hra.)
• 8PEaAL
"A Giit To LHI.. An
emblHared old man,
loucMd by'hle grendeon'I
gift, lherea"lftlh the bOy hie
rnernotlea Of dellgttt• and
dl .. ppolfltmenta on a
Cntte1tnU Dey neatly 80
yew'legO.
tor ualatanoe but llOOfl
find ~ c;aught In
the middle of • genotend
Mud. 8 MACDAVll
··1 ~ In Ctvtalmaa"
Sl11gar-co1npoeef Mao
De\49 .. ~ by 0.vld
Soul, SNelda and YWMll
end Engalber1 ~
dltldc "" a mllllaal lflp
ltwouGh lhe ~Of .,.., Ghlldtloode.
89 CHARl.n
AHGIJ.8
'"The a.r.ny o.¥111 Jr. l(J6.
nap Ctll*" The AllOela .,. l*9d to Pf<*lct ~
1ny Oavt1 Jr. from
ltldl~ Sammy o.vie
Jr. and hie wife, AKcMM.
pleyt .............
• IAON8IOI
Aft« Oftloer Fran 8atdlng
IMrM the ~ ic:• • aon
of IW dl\IOfoM friend hM
~ fatally ehot. Chief
lronalde 909 Into llCtlon.
• M9lV 0""1N
OUMte Kenny Rogan,
Kllll OM. Foeter Broc*e,
B.B. King, Plcaaao, Guy
Met111.
• 8PEaAL
.. Ber Mltzveh Boy" The
lntemll Ind .nernal oon.-
ftlcta plegulng a 13-year-
old boy undergoing • Nllg.-
iou. ceremony metttlng hll
tranlltlOn 11\lo manhood.
I!) INCOHOIRT
"NlnCy Wit.on"
(I) MOVIE * *YI "The Tloer And The Puuycat" (1987) VlttOrlo
Oaernen. 6-M>r ,,.,....,
A mlddl•·•o•d mon
eti.mpte to Ndalrn yciutti
with the help ol '* IOn'• gtrlfrlend, but finally
doddM lo 8CC1C1t IHe u It
-.(211ra.) '1l) MAGIC OF OIL
PAINTINO ··s-11" 10:00 D BETTE~ "OI' Red Heir la'~·· The
''DMne Mi. M" ctowrll
with Emm«t Kelly and atnos ,_ own lyricl to a
blttet..-.t planO numbor
ciompoeed and pl8)'9d by
Oultln Hofflnln. Muelcef
hlghllgllt• Include:
.. Frl1nda,'' "Duety'a
Tuna," ••ooua Oewn,"
"H~ and Higher," end
"'In the Mood."
1:30 a w szvSZHYK
Reggie Jecltaon I••
hllN4llf) COl1'Mll to ttw com-
m~ty center and otw. a
r-ard for the retlKn of the
llWG ~ bell wftlch
he hit In the ,_,t WOfld
S<#tel. fa CONCEHTRATION
;; CA081-W{T8 t:OQ·='~ *** "Uptown Saturday Night" ( 1974) Sidney
Poitier. Bill Coaby. l'<wo
~ wtlo ha-.. .,_,
rlppcld OH by~-Sii-
ky Slim, tum to Slim'• rlvel
"'Julia' is a gem.
II :::rrA
"Lyman P. Dokket, ~."
8aretta ettempU to ...
mwdef and ~ •
prloalea ..,.,aid noclt*»
~ to an o11 at*lc
Jane Fonda in her finest role ...
Vanessa Redgrave is glorious.
Jason Robards gives one of
the year's most memorable
performances.,, -Gene SballL NBVlV
D•lly 7:00, 9:15 . _.-_.,.-~--,,.,.,,,~~~--
Set 1:00• 3=30• a:oo. edwards NEWPORT
8:30, 10:46 NLUCOAST HWY.&MACAITMUI Sun 2:00, 4:30, •m•fOlti'Otnlll'nll 644.07' 7:00, 9:15
IT BEGAN THE DAY GOD
PUT ON SNEAKERS!
GEORGE BURNS • JOHN OEHVER •
TERI GARR • DONALD PUASENCE "Ott, COD!"1 ...
bul II l\lmptted by Illa
n-perlner (8tr0\1'4r
Merlin). Ill\ , .. eoenf,
• QET8MNn' amen muat gwtd • lrlllt·
1ng~siru""'*' • number of women -... ~ dilappNr'" •
mysterioue Wrty In Wllh-
a":4~
~~ ''V\lkon PMMOI'' 'OUt
youno man put "'* oour· ege and onclufanoe to lhe
lelt whHa f9Cl'llOlng ,,,.
tral Of IM ~ gold• ...... 10:$011.::.'
"Slant Nlgtlt" TM Vi4lnna
Boye' Choir and • rnulk:al
~perlofmaMlaC
tlon ol ~ muelo..
11:00 ••• (J) 0 HIWI HOU.'YWOOO
CONHIO'TIOH G MOYIE **"' "flylng Leather· neok1" (18511 John
WrtyM, RobOl1 Ryan. A
tough Mallno com111and•
end Na men laom to
..-pect Mell other at1er
Malng action In betlle. (2
tit•.) • ,... 000 COtJftl.E
To rtiM Vldl fOt Ilia
opera dub, Faix lnducel
<>acat to ln'ln89 tor a
~
Relph and Ille pol Ed lurn a
muqlHll'ade party Into
turmoil.
• DQCCAYETT
~ WJlerd 01)11n, pey.
choanllyla and Pf911c*tt
ofn. HMttnga c.nt•. D MAOf&. / LEHAER
~
f1:IO. (I) HAWAII AYM>
"The Uatener'' A former
mental patient (Oreg
~ueeaa..,..ot
Inger*-9'aCtl CM l6o Pienta
to tin.ten the P9)'Dhlatrllt
(Rob«t FoJCWOrth) wtto
onoa u.ted him. CR) e TOMIOKT' au.a hoft: DMtd .........
Ouelts Dr. Mlctloal Fo"-
Torrl Garr, Marvin
H#nMldt. frmnide AVlllDft..
• LCM. AMENOAle
~
''"-And Tho Intruder I
LOW And Tho Mllllonalrel" e Cfl ITAAIKY ~
HUTCH • .,..,. Bllf' &unity Md
Hlltdt pOM. ~ ...
MOflNIHO
t~ 8 TMUQHT ZONE
''1'19 Arrtvrr'
• f'OMVM
fBW#OOO
Wlnda'a lftcMa ~
Jeffrey; P*"l)I ~
tiet Cl~ tNlnQe; MIC
•tuU his OWl'I ~ •
World Wer II IOfdl1r
reeumtlafiar30~ .MOW
***IA "Pay Of Olo''
( 19e0) Errl9lt Boronlne.
Zohra Lempert. A cour-..
oec>UI l\alllft·American
pollOe '*''*""' Mtu. to keep New 'VOftl'I "Lmle
llafV'' "" Of tt-. dl'e9dod ...... Hind." (1 ttr .. 30
min.)
12:ao D Cll l<OJAK
"A HOUM Of Pr..,_, A Dan
Of nii.-•• A lAe VegM
policeman coller1 a
••retired" countarleltet
whO la murdered befcr• he
can bo nllUmOd to New
Yori!. Wiiy? (RI 8 MOVIE *..... ''Tnev Who Dote'' 11~1 D1ttc eaow«». ,,._"" Tamlrott. four 8rltlah
Commtndce Ind .. oftloaf'
tlloW up two GNak w
flaldl held by the ,....... (1
hi'., 56mln.)
• MOVIE *** "'Prtnoe Of Folale"' (18-411) Tyron• POW«,
Clflon W..... A young "*' .. alrnoM ~
by NI cleftara Of C-. 8orQIL (2 In.)
12:.17 8 0 AIC MYSTERY'
MOVll ** ''Tllo W9tfl#t:At Of wood•to~" (1t75)
Mlenall Petka. Meredith MaoA... An Mlctrklel
..,,,,. cMtng • rodt corto '*' tvtM • PMC*\.11 f9'l"IW IMO a.....-. CA) 1:00 8 TOMOMOW au-..: "°" ..... •
WlllHrtOIOft "°" --'*'·Md fd ~. T,_., eoent. ~
the WuftlftCltoft. D.C.
"DAMNATION ALLEY" (PG)
"FUTURE WORLD" (PG)
"LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR"
(R)
"SMOKEY AND THE BANOtr· (PG)
. "THE STING" (PG}
JI "BOBBY DEERFIELD'.' (PG)
"ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANY MORE".
"ROSE GARDEN" (PG) .
"LOVE ANO DEATH" (pG)
"HEROES" (PG) .
"THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAI~
"FIRST LOVE" (R}
"ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANY MORE"
.. Barnaby .T~ea." .. Allee," and "60 Minutes,"
all CBS; ABC~ater 'The Gathering"; "Return
of the Incredlblo HWk,''CBS; "Soap," ABC; "M·A·
s.H" uMl 'IOno Day at a Time" both CBS; "Santa
Claus is Coming to Town,'' ABC~ and "IJUle House ----------------_.;.;;~~--..-......_• on the Prairie/' NBC.
TUBE TOPPERS
--
Th(' Grralr?sl Am .. r•cdl• ldf'T\
,,., 111 tllfJt.on p.c!ur(• h1~t<1• ~
l\r I w .1sh•r1g1on D c N•JV t··:.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
TONIGHT'S LA TEST LISTINGS
··~.·· . ....
~...,. tNt Ille-.
an lie iov.. II had to an
eallM d6Clator.
1:*>• MOVll
• • ''Wake Up And Kiii"
t~ Aobor1 ~min • UN~A~man
~the exol~t
of ~ In tM city .. lie .cs hll girt Mand ~.
growing_ ~ ut11•
hll IMt detlflg rot>Oery
bftngl l d IO an .nd. ( 1
IV.,3omn) 2:001• .... . MOVIU ***" ''The fallen 8Paftow'' (1843) Jofl• . o.1fleld, MMMll O'Hllr&.
T"9lole~-
of tho lntarnetlonal
8f1gllctil. llCtlW In .,_
~ CM Ww, flnd9 '*'*"' tripped by Nllll .,.._In New Yortc. (2 hra.)
**'4 ''Tha Hired Wife"
(11MOI AoMlnd ~
Brtllft~ NI~ "'"'* till lllCdtary and ~ .... oompany In ...,
narM to lllV9 ttl9 !Inn. (2
In.) 2:201 Niwa 2:2a HEM
J:to8 MOVE *** "Among The Living" (11-41) Su .. n
Haywlrd, Albert Dalclcer. A
manla~ola.-.
der committed by hlo
.,_. twin btc>UW, (1 hr.
2Smln.)
• MOYIE8 ... "Vo,11g9 To Tho ~
Of. Tho ""'*-'' (1184)
Dennie a....,.. Fnll'lalll
8'nolen. T"9 Q9W and
pea1enoera aboard a
r~ ••••••his> .,.
plecealn •"81•0f---
pendad ~ by the
,. Of • Range ... (2
hra.)
**~ '1it1109Doeah To
Fur(' (1Me) Fcn.t TUCll•
.... matt 81ancNird. Mftj..
CM~ hotd up a lta-
geooacll In an
uneuooaMM •11emPt to
obtain fOld. (1 ,.,., 30 mlnJ
. 2:11 e MOVIE
···~ "'nle Olrt "' Tho Rad v....... ewlng" (1065)
~ ~. Joar\ ColllnL
A -*•• "''dkm Of ~
M*l•tca "°. ** "Alwt lad)I'' (1941) Y\IOrlM 0.Car1o,
Om\ D\lfyea. A ._...
pmbllng boal --.. lo form•~ In orcNr IO llll)' up arM "-"
t. ~ (1 IV., 30
min.) 10:00• ···~"lov. Lettatl" (1t45) JeMltllt
Jonel. Joeeptl Cotten. A
)IO&lflO ~ "*'* the loldlet 1M ~ ~
her ..._. from Cha front,
and .. lat•~ ol kll-
lng him. (2 llrl.)
• NlllNtOON
12:00• ··~""-Oeln
HMvon" (1M 1) Robert
Morttge>mery, lngfld a.v-man. When • "*1qjfy ..
tul1led ..... owner aug-. g-. a dOllblo IUlolde,
INll!lng II lo<* Ille• murder,
1111--. ....... him and NI
Pin IMddlra6. (2 twa.. 20 mlnJ
2:00 •••• '"The 8ledc
~ Of Falwortll" (1954)
Tony Cunis. Janee l.llgh. A
aqW'O ~ Ila .. ol ~ blOod and vowt to
rec1lty the wrong dono hlo
temltf. (2 In.I
l:OO@ ***~"AllTheWay
Home" (1183) Jean
SlmrnoM, Aobort Pralton.
A young tier flON the
hard IWll1Y of ct.th ""*' hll ...._ II 1!11.s In en
acddant. (2 In.)
l:IO. * *"' "l'lwo l.ovel" (1N1J ~ MICUine,
~IWV9Y.A ~
trovenlal toaoMt gall
mlud up With • fellow
t ..... wtlO~
...... (1 llr .. IO min.)
. "Fipding llit ont ~ love ••• is finding yourstlf.
HEMES
A n.rRMAN-fOSTER COMPANY J'ROOUCTTON I ~-Co"'11n1f'C HARRISON FORO·Wrll~n by JAMES CARABATSOS
Mulk by JACK N1TZSCM£ and RJOV.RD'HAZARO
Dirct.d by JU!MY PAUL KAGAN· Procklad by OA V10 f051tJt
and LAWlENCS TURMAN AUNI\~~' ••
Call the.iw
for .........
A hundred years
in the service of love!
,
7
.......
c.AAEERS /LOCAL /PEOPLE w.dMe<tay O.C.mber 7, t9n
I
Nixon
Officials
I In Probe
I
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
probe of illeflaJ act.5 by the FBl
has been broadened to include
lhe Nixon administration's Wblte
House and Justice Department
according lo Attorney Generai
Griffin B. Bell.
Bell made the comments m an
exclusive lnterview with the Los
Angeles Tames published today.
' In the interview, he said
J us lice Department attorneys
plan lo question former hiKh Nix-
on adminJstraUon octicials to de-
term lne ir anyone bad authorized
the lllegal FBI a<"LlvlUes, such as
break -ins.
Autop.., Ordftoed
NEW YORK <AP) -An
autopsy wlll be performed on
Rosemarie Maniscalco, who died
along with her 20-week-old fetus
despite 13 days or intensive ef-
for ts by doctors lo keep her alive
until her child could be born.
Some 10 hours of massive
bleeding and repeated cardiac
( IN SHORT J
failures preceded the comato!lt:
wom:rn's death at Victory
Memorial Hospital in Brooklyn.
hospital of£lc1als reported.
Park to Te•tlff11
SEOUL. South Korea CAP) -
A high-ranking South Korean of-
ficial says the U.S. and South
Korean governments have
agreed lhat Tongsun Park wtll
return lo the United States to
testify an exchange for blanket
immunsly. The U.S. Justice
Department hedged on confirma-
tion of the report.
The Soulh Korean source said
the agreement may be a n-.
nounced lale lhi11 week or early
next we1:k
Wlnm Bait Sall
. MANAMA. Bahral.d (AP>
Thor Heyerdahl -t rying to
navigate the Persian Gulf into
the Indian Ocean m a replica or
an ancienl Sumerian reed boat -
dropped nnchor 20 miles off
Kuwait because or unusually
.strong winds.
Weak rad.lo signals monitored
here Tuesday sald persistent
southerly winds threatened to
blow the Tigris, with its 11-man
international crew, back toward
Jraq. where it had set sail m late
November
A,..n Censured~
UNITED NATIONS CAP>
The Third World-Communist ma-
jority in the United Nations Js ex-
pected to kUl a Scandinavian
resolution to censure Ugandan
dictator Idi Amin for wholesale·
violation of human rights.
The resolution was introduced
in the General Assembly on
Tuesday by aJI five Scandinavian
C'ountries, and debate on it ls ex-
pected to st.art later this week.
Cra.la Cause Probed
LAS VEGAS CAP > -A board
or officers today searched for lhe
cause of an F-15 fightercrasb lhal
killed Col. William H. Walter, 43.
commander ot the NelUs Air
Force Base hospital and Lt. Col.
David A. Jacobsen, 43, com-
mander of the 433rd fighter
squadronatNellis. .
The men were killed Tuesday
while flying a war combat traln·
ing mlsslon about 70 miles
northeast o( here.
Strike Spreact.
CHARLE.5TON, W. Va. (AP) -
Non-union coal mines In Ohio,
Maryland and Kentucky abut
down in the second day of a na·
tionwlde llnJted Mine Workers
strike, elther in 1ymp1lhy with
the unlon or in reacUon to de·
Lermined union pickets.
UMW Preal4eot Arnold Miller
called the •trlke at 12:01 a.rn.
EST Tuesday, wbm the union'•
wage contract wJth tbe
Bituminous Coal Operators ~-
1oclaUon expired followtna eo
daya of truJu ... barcaln.lna.
Reform Group
Nt:ima Kutert
•
Coastal Zone FiscMr ~t i 'Crltieal'
DAILY PILOT 81
Planner Raps Warrant Truman Kin
Cl Extended Fights Stroke. emente Plea PASADENA CAP) -An arreat warrant lot Fro• AP Dlapatcbet
form er world cbeaa Mary Jue Truman, 88. sister of former Presl·
A San Clemente planning com-
missioner has taken tsaue with a
staff recommendation that de-
velopment of the city's required
Local Coastal Plan be left to the
California Coastal Commission.
"I don't understand why San
Clemente Is one of only ~
cities asking the state to do a
Local Coastal Plan, when thec1ty
generally has opposed state in-
terference in local matters."
said planning commissioner Al-
lan Wulfeck, at a recent meeUnc.
The Coastal Commission has
required all coastal cltid to de-
velop their own Local Coastal
Plans by Jan. 1, 1980. These plans
can be formulated by the cities,
or cities can request lhat the
state prepare a plan. said San
Clemente Planning Director
Richard Ahlman.
San Clemente took the option
last spring of requesting that the
stale prepare its plan, Ahlman
said. He blamed Coastal Com-
mission staffing problems for the
delay in starting work on Local
Coastal Plans. The&e problems
have recently been resolved, he
said .
Ahlman recommended that lhe
city not change course at this
point, but urged the Coastal Cem-
. mission to speed up work on the
city's plan. WuJleck argued that
relying on the commission might
drag the process on aod delay
LB Seniors'
Project Notes
Anniversary
The fourth anniversary of the
Laguna Beach TLC program
(Transportation, Lunch and
Counseling) will be celebrated
Friday and Saturday at the
Presbyterian Church, 415 Forest
Ave.
Friday's program for seniors
includes a luncheon beginning at
11 a.m. at Fellowship Hall. Guests
will include civic leaders and
representatives of Laguna Beach
serYice clubs and churches.
The annual presentation of
awards to organizations wblch
have supported the TLC program
duril\g the past year ls scheduled
after lunch. The newly formed
Santa Ana College Tap Dancers
will also perform after the lunch
hour. according to Carl Hansen,
. TLC manager.
Saturday's activities include
the musical book review. a reg-
ular weekend feature. beglnning
at 10:30atlhecburcb.
Entertainment by the Kool
Kats of Leisure World will follow
and punch will be served. For
more Information on the TLC
celebration, call 497-2702.
Irvine Water
Board Leaders
Re-elected
The fresident and vice presi-
dent o the lrvine Ranch Water
District board of directors have
been re-elected to two-year
terms.
Tbe rest of the board's slate of
officers. who are appointed, were
re-appointed, also for two years.
President i.s L.E . Eberling,
owner of a management and de·
velopment consultant business;
vice president; C.O. Retnhardl,
dir ector of physical plant
raclUtles at UC Irvine.
Appointed officers are
treaau"1', Wmen Fix, vice pre-·
sldent for finance for the lrvlne
Company; aecretuy, Arthur
Korn, asslJtant to the IRWD
1eneral maJ\ater: and three u· 1lstant Hcretarles, Betty
Wbeeler1 secretary to the lRWD
1eneral manager, and Alex
Bowle bd Nanoy Slianahan, dis-trtc tle1al counsels.
San Clemente planning and coo-champion Bobby Fischer dent ff•ll}' Trum.a, Is In critical cond1tJon In structlon. h as been ox tended Reaearch Hospital In Kansas City alter apparently
··1 think the city would be bet-because a lawyer says he sutrerlng a stroke. t ff t· · in 'ts needs more Ume to fe• Miss Truman. of Grandview, Mo., has been
0c;n ° Loc~'I'C:~!~ar':f~" gs,!id Fischer to surrender 0; hospltallzed frequently since 1960. when she un-
Wulfeck, a San Clemente builder. booking on an assault derwent a gall bladder operation, mostly with In·
"lt will be much easjer for the charge juries 1ulfered in falls.
Coastal Commisalon to take a "If b~'s not ln by 2 p.m. ' Miss Truman is the only surviving member of
. look at a completed plan sub-Friday, there'll be no the Truman family. During World War I, she ran
matted by a city. more extensions, no the farm ln his place and looked aner their mother,
, • You have to take political m o r e re q u es t s • . • M attba, until her death al the aae of 94.
conslderaUON lnto account," be M u n i c i p a l J u d c e • sa1d . "The Coastal Commission Mortimer Francl~us ·The author ~( 8 ~oon-to-be pt.U>Ushed book
has a thousand excuses not to said Tuesday. "The claims he ls the dleglllmate son ol the late auto
move. LeiisJators faclne election bencb warrant goes out mag:o~ ~ :~, 54 r De bo 1 1 in 1980 will be happy to extend the . . . . " . er!-• o ar rn, c -ms
deadline another four years." Police issued a war· . ord carried on an a'1alr
Councilman Tony DiGiovanni ·rant for Fischer's arrest ( J !or ~any. years wlth
supported Wulfeck's objections Oct. 28 after Holly Rulz, PEOPLE Dahhnger s mother, a
saying the city knows better what 30, a South Pasadena Ford Motor Co. secretary
Is best for its residents than the magailne wrller, ac· who waa married to a state cu s e d FI sch er 0 f Ford bodyguard. "Ir' we don't even show our threatening and striking D~bllng~·s boo~. "The ~cret Ufe or Henry
opinion, they won't know what her. She said Fischer ~ord, ls being Published b)'. Bobba·MerriU of New
we see as best for our city .. he became angry when be ork ttext year. It was wqtten with the help of
said. ' reaHzed that an ln-FrancesSpabLelgb&~a, who also wrote "Dog Days
Harold Hughes.
former Iowa gov -,
ernor and senator.
will portray himself
in a movie based on
"Born Again,"
Ri c hard Colson 's
stor y of his religious,
con version. Colson:
gives Hughes credit;
for awakening his:
Christianity. :
Ahlman said the city would tervlew she was conduct-at The White House, about the John F. Kennedy
have the same input on lhe Local ing was being recorded era al the White House.
C<?aslal Plan. whether it works for publication. • w~th Coastal Commission stafr or TeleviSion executive Sheldon Saltman filed a
w1lb a ctty consultant. p,.. Bl t d lawsuit against daredevil Evel Knievel, seeking un -
"lf we try to do it ourselves -. a. e specified damages for injuries he received when
there would be a hell of a lot 0( LOS ANGELES <AP) Knievel hit him with a baseball bat.
tur:n bllng around before we get -¥ o s t Amer I can Saltman, who ~iled the sult in Los Angeles, suf.
going in lhe rJgbl direction .. he worfers, even those rered a broken wnst and arm in the Sept. 21 lnci-
s ald, suggesting the city ask the employed year -round dent.
League
Seminar •
Scheduled
' .
~
s tate Coastal Commission di.rec-are unable to maintain ~ Knievel has said he hit Saltman witb the bat
tor to give San Clemente a high c ) because be felt a book the television executive had
priority at &he regionaJ level. SJ'.4TE · written about him was insulting to his family. The
Development ot the plan la ex-. ·stuntman pleaded guilty in the attack and bas been
peeled lo take 18 months or two modest standard or fiv. sente~ced to 180 days in jail and placed on three
Registtatlon is opeo Co~
t he 1978 spring con ~
ference of the League foi:
Innovation in the Com•
munity College. to be
held In Newport Beach. ; years. Ahlman said. Jn the me•~ ing, HYI an AFL-ClO re-years probaU_on.
time, the city has applied lot' a port. ..
"categorical exclusion" /l'OIJ;) The reason cited is
coastal commi!lslon controls. that workers• buying
A fw:id-ralsing drive for Rosa Parka, the black
woman whose refusal to give up her seat oo a city
The three-day even~
ho!lted by the Coast Com.
munity College District
will have as Its theme
"Focus on Learning -A
National Conference on
Innovation, D1Husion'
and Delivery in Educa-
tion."
The city's application for lhe power has increiqed on-
exemption has been approved by ly 4 percent in the last 12
the regional Coastal Com-years. The report, which
mission. Ahlman said . IL will now covers most wage and
be considered by lhe state com-salar y earners, con-
mission. eluded that "workers
bus s pa rked the 1955 ~ .• ~ · Montgomery, Ala. bus boycott, I" has fallen far short of its $50,000
f4 goal.
Jn fact, ln 11 months, the
drive has brought in about $3,300.
Auction Adds
$5,129 in
San Clemente
San Clemente's police auction
raised SS. 192 from the sale of un-
claimed lost and stolen property
Saturday. not counting a surf-
board and wetsuJt lost in July but
reclaimed right before the auc·
lion.
A San Clemente High School
student helping prepare It.ems
for the sale spotted a surfboard
and wet suit a friend lost on the
San Clemente beach last s utn-
mer, nld Roger Wiberg, police
investigator alld aucUoneer.
He called hJs frlend, who iden·
llfied the items to the satisfaction
of police.
"That was the higbJlght ol the
auction," said Wiberg. "He muat
have paid over $ZOO for those
things and thought they were
gone forever."
Saturday's proceeds were
a lrecord for the annual police
auction. The highest amount col·
Jected previously wu last year,
Wiberg said, when sales amount-
ed to $1,234. All proceeds are de·
posited in the city's general fund ••
\
have a lot or catching up ·
to do." The lack of support for the
campaign in the city's black
community was reflected In the
turnout or only 45 persons for a BroumSued
SAN DIEGO <AP> Pa11ic5 celebr ation al lhe Holt Street
Gov· Edmund G. Brown Baptist Church marking the 22nd anniversary of the Jr. and three state of-year-Jong boycott .
facials have been named *
in a $4 million lawsuit Former Gov. Ronald Reagan says the Carter
filed by a San Diego administration comes up every day with miracle
psychologist claiming cures !or which there are no
they fabely accused him known diseases.
of i mproper conduct If God ravored permisslve-
wblle he was chairman ness. says Reagan, Moses would
of the state Ucensioe have come down from the moun-
commlUe.e. tttn with 10 s u1restJOfts instead
In hls suit. Dr. Wallace of the IO commandments.
V. Lockwood contends The light observations came
Brown, Consumer Af-In Reaean's speech to the San
fairs Department dlrec-Diego County Federation of
tor Richard Spon and de· Republican Women.
Pa r t m en t o tr i cl a Is • Haoa-.
Michael Krisman and A 36-year-old man sougbt in connection with the
Gus E . Skarakis "al· beating deaths oltwo elderly Hollywood women last
tempted to coerce" him year has been put on the FBI's list of 10 most want·
from the P$ychology Ex· ed fuglUves.
amlnlng Committee oC Authorities were seeking Enrlque Estrada of
the s tate Board ot .Los Angeles in connection wllh the deathi of Fay
Medical Quality As-Blodgett and Anna Zlster. who were slain In their
surance. apartments in October and November 19T6, respec.
Workers Split Uvely.
An FBI spokesman said Estrada baa been at· res~ed 20 times and convicted seven Umes on
various charges. He is believed. to be armed and
dangerous, and anyone who sees hJm should notify
the FBI, the spokesman said.
Registration for the
March 6-8 meeting al the
Marriott Hotel costs $45
.for league members, $25
for full-lime graduate
stude nts and $7S for
others.
Additional information
is available by calling
556-5933 or writing to Jef-
frey Dimsdale at Orange
Coast CoUege.
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-Wblle a Southern
California lea der of strJktng Lockheed
tnacblnbts vowed to con-
tln ue a nine-week-old
walkout. two local• ln San Francisco who
algned a Jabor contract
wltb Lockheed bave tiled
suit against their union
olflclals.
-Field COmb·ines · Both
In Los Angelea, Rk b
Celebron, president o!
International Associa-
tion ot Machinlat.5 Dis-
trl ct Lodge 727, uld
Tuesdll)' that In 1plt.e of a
trickle of workers re-
turn l n g t o the Job,
machlniats will conUnue
to •trlke until key
a tum b)ln1 blocks are
overcome.
By JOYCE L KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: Could you pleue cUJ.
C!DH blomedJtal enclneerlJlg H a
career?
-W.I.K., Asbury Park, N.J.
Biomedical eneineers CBMSs ) •P·
P.lY U~e prin~ples of engineerinJ to
med.leaf and health-related concerns.
On the bionic side, some BMEs de:
•i1n artificial body parts, Crom hearts
to bips. Others uae lasers to develop
bloodless scalpels. A noattn1 bed tor
burn paUents ls another example of
blomecSlcal eqioeerina, as is a minl-
mlcropbooe tb1t can be placed within
a patient to detect heart murmurs.
$ome BMEI adapt 1:0mputera to
medical reHarcb and clinical prac-
tice, and conatruct systems to
.modmme Jabl and bospltale. BMEI
1n bolpltall usually are called clinical cn1tneen.
( G4REERS J
c ,elved master's· degrees In
b1omecUcal engineering. •
. The federal Labor Department an-
ticipate. about UO Job openiais an-
nually (or btomed 's until 198S, based
on current cond1Uons. If things
change -naUonal health insurance
nefi technology, increased bospitai
hiring -demlU'ld tor BMEa would
cUmb.
FOR A COPY OF "Biomedical
En1lneerin1 Education and
Careers,•• a 12-pa1e p•per, send 50
cents to the Alliance tor Eneh>eerlng
in Medicine .and Blolon, SWt.e 40t "°5 Eut·Weat H11hway. Bethesda' )Jd. 20014. A school directory t~
available from the 1ame nonprofit o.r-laniuUon for $UO. -RBADER SERVICE: To obtain a frff
COf1f otQMCOCW•rr l«J/Wt Ofl ~ ~ pubUtW "" ,,.. ~,.,· ~" ,or .Protndortol ~ lfttl ~ ~ '*IM•t to J~,. K~ .at thM nNtpaper. Alk for ''Bwmillc:al~. ••
• •
\
1
-DAILYPILOT ~. DeQembet 1, 1977 NATIONAL.
~ulogies ·Fail to Capture Humphrey the Fighter
• B1WALTE1t a. MEA.88
WASHINGTON <AP) -There
may be pl1ce1 more depressJnc
than an airport terminal long
after midnight: vul, empty.
echoin,. a place to depart or to
arrtve, but not to be.
Beh(nd unattended Ucket COW>·
ten, the displaced traveler can
read a gueteet of cltles that
cJD't be reocbed at this hour.
Maybe liter,
"'l'llAT BOSTER OF American
places must stir a special pang
fqr the man who is running tor
SAYE
president. tryina to re•cb every
ooe ol lboae clUea and a thounnd more.
fof him, thb ibostJy airport Is
even more depressing, for while,
he waits bere for a tardy cam·
paip aide aa&jgned to drive him
to still another motel, the can··
didate can only ponder all lbe
places he cannot reach. all the
people he cannot hope to
persuade.
Of lhiB there can be no more
compelling evidence than the
fact that one night, long ago, Sen.
Hubert H . Humphrey was just
""f 8.00 2:1 '' * REG. 29.99 .
such a political traveler.
atranded in the quiet c1vern o!
Mi11nl JaternaUonal Alrport.
'lbat wa1 ln 1m, in bis lut real
queat for tbe White HoU$e, aod he was camalcnlnc tor a Florida
presidential primary ~ would Joee to Georae C. Wallace.
BIS CHARTER FUGllT ar-
rived early, his driver arrived
late, and there was nothing to do
but pace the hard, ecbotni floor.
"Damn." he snapped at the
emptiness, and talked of the
rigors of running, queslloned
SAYE
1:00
AD I DC TAPE RECORDER ~1 WINDSOR PORTABLE
S.1'41 S1111t AC/DC T.,. 1-4.r wi!tl Nit le ,..._et
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whether it was worth the effort,
wbetber a man really had to en·
dure niglrta like that in order to
lead.
Humphrey endured them,
aJQaa With taunts and sllcht.e tbat
mJaht bave soured a lesser man.
He baa spent a geoeraUon and
more demonatratina that a politi-
cian does not have to be president
ln order to lead.
IN THESE DAYS ot his last ill-
ne.sa1, under treatment for in·
operable cancer. there is praise,
eulogy, celebr•tion ol a career
'that 1panned docadea'of ~hln1e. EducaUon an'Cl Wetrare bu bffn
1t hu st.Ncbcd from the New named for him. AbOut $5 million
Deal to Jfmmy Carter, has seen of a S20 million quota hu been
him strive and lose, in tbree ma· raised to endow the Hubert H.
jor quesu for the presidency. a. Humphrey Institute o( Public M~
hope th ltl,ll summered even fains at the University of llla-
afltl' C erJ>ad taken coJDmand neaot.a.
of the Democ'ullc Party 1n 1V7t. B11t tn these bittersweet ob·
And Jtun:1phrey b!i• bad at servaDces. there is sometJUnii
leaat as much to do with the ma· awry. It beglns to eound a•
jor chanies ol bis tJmea ·~have 'though they celebrate some
the .meo OQ bested bun in. philosopher-politician more at
preaade.nUalcooteat. · home ln the co.later than 1n the
arena. · THE 8VILDING THAT houses
the Department of Health, That's not Hubert Humphrey.
MAI FACTOR ere11~%f~~
Bl¥·0UI ~
Wt'YI IOUGM'l 1M ttm111TOCl, .. $tsi,00t WOITM Of fAMOUS MAI
·~aoa COIOAY, '"'*'""" & AQUAIM flAGUNCS IT AN UNllUIV· Alli 2'% TO 75% SAVINGS. YGCrLl ,. GOUd Loam, COLOGMS,
POWDDS, IUllLI & •ATM CIYSTAU, nt A f,\IUlOUS AIU Y Of abMJc &
GWS CONT.-.S. MOST All 111 '"l IOXI$.
149
I
~1!'
RHINESTONE HEART
& STAR JEWELRY ,_....,,, .............. '""" .. ..w • ....,,_ ...... ...........................
t I
INSIDE: • Featuring .•.
•Club calendar
• Ann Landers
•Recipes
I
Wednesday. December 7, 1 en DAIL y PILOT
':.Bake Up
'I ;!A Storm
Try stollen and pudding,
spritz and a yule log.
STEAMED PUDDING lS.18Servlngs 2cups milk
6 cups coarse soft bread crumbs
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1 cup molasses
2 cups all·purpose flour
2 teaspoons soda
2 teaspoons is alt
4 teaspoons cinnamon
lh teaspoon allspice
~teaspoon cloves
1 cup chopped candled citron
1 cup raisins
2tablespoons grated lemon peel
Holiday Hatd Sauce
Pour milk over bread crumbs in large mix-
. in& bowl. Melt butter, cool sllghtJy; blend into
bread mixture along with molasses. Combine
flour, soda, salt, cinnamon, allspice and cloves;
stir in citron, raisins and lemon peel. Add to
bread crumb mlJCture; blend thoroughly. Pour
into weU-buttered 2-quart pudding mold with
center post. Butter inside of cover tomold; cov·
er; steam 31".I hours. Remove cover ; let stand 10
minutes. Invert onto ser ving plate; serve very
hot with Holiday Hard Sauce.
Holiday Hard Sauce: Cream !,'a cup (l stick)
butter until fluffy. Gradually beatin l lh cups sift·
ed confectioners' sugar, 1 leaspoon vanilla and 1
tablespoon sherry. Cover and refrigerate. Let
stand at room temperature 15 minutes before
serving.
To steam : Place rack In large kettle tall
enough to accommodate mold. Place filled and
covered mold on rack. Pour boiling water into
kettle so that it comes halfway up height of mold.
Cover kettle tightly. Keep water bolling over low
heat to steam pudding recommended time or un-
til cake tester inserted in center comes out clean.
NOTE: Pudding may be made ahead and
refrigerated or frozen. If frozen, completely
defrost. To reheat, wrap pudding In heavy duty
aluminum foU and heat in preheated 350 degree oven 1 hour.
For Christmas: Steamed pudding, stollen, Noel Cake, and Spritz.
CRRISTM AS STOLLEN Yield: 2 coffee cakes
2:V.. to3cups all-purpose flour
14 cup sugar
1 teaspoon sail
1 paekage active dry yeast
lcupmilk
~2 cup (1 s tick) butter
legg
1 2 cup raisins
1h cup chopped candied cherries
112 cup chopped blanched almonds
l tablespoon grated lemon peel
Softened butter
Vanilla glaze
Candied cherries
Almond!!
Thoroughly combine 1 lfi cups flour, sugar,
Serve wine punch and chicken~ to tree-trimming fWests.
salt and undissolved yeast in large mixing bowl.
Heat together milk and butter until very warm
Cl20·130"F. ). Gradually add to dry ingredients.
Add egg. Beat. 'h minute at low speed of m ixer.
scraping bowl occasionally, then 3 additional
minutes at high speed. Mlx raisins, cherries,
almonds and lemon peel with v. cup of the flour.
Add to yeast mixture. Stir in enough additional
flour to make a soft dough. Turn onto li&htly
floured surface. Knead until smooth and elastic,
5 to 10 minutes. Place in buttered bowl, turning to
butter top. Cover; let rise in warm place WlUl
doubled in bulk, about l hour.
Punch dough down. Divide In half. Roll out
each half on lightly !loured surface to Corm 8-inch
circle. Spread with softened butter. Fold ln balf;
press only folded edge firmly. Form into crea·
cent. PJace on cookie sheet. Cover; let rise hi
<See BAKE. Paae Ct)
T~ee ~i1u Gala
Whetho/ 'your party includes the family on.fy or .fr:itJnds,
serve ~r guests something besides fruitcake. i
Americans decorate nearly 40
million Christ.mas trees every
year I And bow all this tree trim·
m lng began, no one really knows.
Perhaps Reformation leader
Martin Luther set the tradition
when he trimmed the family tree
with candles on its branches.
Other hlstorlans will claim
stories further back ln history
where trees were decorated with
apples to tempt Adam and Eve.
So it la today -the celebration
of Christmas that sWl inspires us
to trim the tree. And such a
celebraUoo creates a ~eel at-
mosphere for a tree trimming
party! Whether _your party in·
eludes family members only or
good friends too, lift their spirits
with s0metb1ng other Uian egg, ~os. and traditional fruitcake!
Party goers will be in for a
seasonal surprise wh_en they
feast their eyes on Fireside Fon-
due, snapey Winter Wine Punch
and Crunch)' Chicken Puffs.
For ease ln party preparations,
almple but dellcious, Winter
Wine Punch can be made the day
before and chilled until serving
time. Your guests wlll be pleased
with the "adults only" taste.
WlNTER WINE PUNCH
1 cah (46 fl. oz.> Cocktail
Vegetable Juice
1 cup orange juice
6 tablespoons lime Juice
2 tablespoorui sugar
~ teasr:>00n ground nutmeg
2 cups Burgundy or other dry
red wine
I.Jme or orange slices
Combine all ingredients except
lime slices. Serve over lee cubes
in chilled glasses. Gamlsh with
lime slices. Makes about 9 cups. 8
servings.
FIBESIDE FONDtJE
~ cup aau.teme or other dry
white wine
l large clove garlic, minced
1 pound natural Swiss
cheese, cubed
'.4 cupnour
l can (10\11 ounces) chicken
gravy
1 tablespoon li&ht cream
Generous dash l{roand nutmei
Cubed Fnach or Italian
bread
In saucepan or fondue pot, slJn. mer wine and aarlio 2 to 3
minutes. Tol8 cheese with flour;
gradually aUr into wi,Pe. Heat an·
til cheese melts; •Ur often:. Blend
in 1rJvy, cream and ant~ Heat, sUrrlpa unttl 1mootb.
Spear bread with fort or
toothpick and dip blto bot tcDdue.
Makes about3 Ctq)S.
APPrl'IZEB CJlB.UI PUPl'8
lh cup butter or marprine
1 cupslfted all-pwpose flour
IA teaspoon salt.
•eep
Melt butter In 1 cup bolllnl water. Add flour and salt all at
once: aur vi1orousl1. Cook and
sUr till mixture Corms a ball tbU
doean 't separate. Remove fl'OCQ
.heat; eoohlllhtly. Addena.ooe
at a tJme, beaUnr after each tilt
smooth. Drop by bHptaa te.:-
I
•
••
r
. • '
OAILYPILOf 'Nedntlday,O.Cember 1, 1f71
'.Celebrate With
A Jubilee Roast
.
J
Wblle the !:n11lab pork cet.a further flavor
don•t exactly clalm aa1t1t from tan1erlne
Chrlatmas, no one could Julee, and the cltru1
ar1ue that any other taste works beauW\llly ~untry bu 1ucb fervent w 1 t h t h e m e a t •
holiday trad1Uon.s. The Tan1erJnea are sweet
r lint Cbrtltmu fetUval and Juicy, readily availa-
"in Brital.o wu celebrat· ble all winter lone.
.. ed by KlDI Arthur ln ~l. Thanka to the zlppery
l lOted teVeral daya, and skln, they are easy to :1or all we know featured peel, too. Tangerine sec· f armoured ttocklngs lions combine with
Mn1 by the chimney noodles, rice, and
wlth care. the only peanuts to fill the center
;gn1U1bman of record of the crown. The platter
-who 1rumped about ls 1arni.shed with parsley
(:hrlatmas wa.s Scrooge, and more tangerine sec·
"Who aot bia just desserts. Uons, and the pork bones
;..And we don't mean are topped with orange rt-lneepie. ·crown jewels -vivid
kumquats. Thia year, we mark Taneerlnes add a ;~,brlltma with a splen· festive note to the ~d Enlllah crown rout n honor of Queen vegetable course, too. Brussels sprouts, a tllllh•betb's Silver favorite on English
•:Jubilee. Crisp, crack· menus, derive cheer.
, lDI• handsome, lbE from a 1hue Of butter, ·~rown roaatia a modern brown sugar, and
,'Yenlonotthe trad.IUonaJ tangerine juice. The
En1ll1h roast pig that glaze is simplicity itself
turned up at Christmas Lo prepare and give the
mouthing an apple in· vegetables the elegance stead ot an oink. As a nicety, some ancient you want for your holi· day meal. cooks would form a Another English
pastry crust shaped into favorite, the trifle, turns a boar's bead to cover up tor Christmas dinner the pig. A doubtful im· in delicious simplified
provement. form. Into a glass bowl
The crown roast is lined with ladyfingers
composed of two rib ends arrange orange sections,
of loin porkchops tied to add vanllla pudding
form a crown. The roast made from mix, and
is as different from garnish with more
single pork chops as a orange sections. Orange
sprig of holly from a Trine is easy to make,
Christmas tree. Since delicious, and sure to
the chops are roasted 1n find favor with the
a meaty block, they re· youngsters.
tain maximum fl avor There you have some
and succulence. The great suggestions for a
••• Bake Up
(From Page CU
warm place until doubled in bulk , about 30
minutes. Bake in preheated 375 degree oven 20 to
25 minutes. Remove from cookie sheet to wire
rack to coot Frost with vanilla glaze and dec-
orate with almonds and candied cherries.
V•nilla Glaze: Combine 1 cup sifted confec·
tioners' sugar with 11.h tablespoons half and half
Or lig_bt.cream and lf.a teaspoon vanilla.
BUCHE de NOEL
CAKE ROLL:
~•cup sifted cake flour
1A cup cocoa
1 :? teaspoon bakiDg powder
1 ':! teaspoon salt
4 eggs, at room temperature
:i"' cup granulated sugar
l tablespoon water
I lea.spoon vanilla
Confectioners' sugar
FILLING:
1 teaspoon unflavored gelat.m
1 ~ cupwatet
1 cup whipping cream
1,>i teaspoon almond extract
2 tablespoons confectioners' i.ugar
FROSTING:
1 lf.i sou ares 0 'h oz.) unsweetened
chocolate
l teaspoon instant coffee
3 tablespoons butter
1,~ cup sifted confectioners' sugar
Dash of salt
1h teaspoon vanilla
leggwhite
11. cup sifted confectioners' sugar
Preheat oven to 875 degrees. For cake roll.
butter bottom of 15 x 10.inch jelly roll pan; Une
with flour. Sift together flour, cocoa, bal<lne
' powder and salt; set aside. Beat eggs on highest
I
speed mixer until thick and lemon-colored. Add
sugar, a little at a time, beating well after each
addition. Beat until thick and fluffy. Fold in
water and vanilla. Gradually fold In flour mix ·
ture until smooth. Spread evenly in prepared
l pan. Bake 12·15 minutes. Whtie cake Is baking,
sprinkle a kitchen towel with sifted cake flour.
Immediately on taking cake from oven,
J looteD eda• and i.um OUL on prepared towel. • Peel oft waxed paper, trim edges. Rell up cake In
towel, starUng with narrow end. Let atand 20
minutel CJD cake rack. While cate ll 1tancllng, sprinkle 1elat1n over
water to aoften. Heat over low bat unW dll·
solved, at1rrtn1 COD1taatly. Cool to room tem-
perature. Beat creana to cblUed bowl with cbiUld
beaten unW atltf peaks form. Fold ln 1elatin
mlxture then almond extract and contectionera'
sugar. Cover and cblll S to 10 mlnutel.
Uoro11 cake and 1pread wttb wb!pped <!ream
filllns. Roll up a1aln. Cover and cblU 1 hour or
more.
Melt Cboc:olate over low heat wtth lnstant
coffee: cool 1Uptly. cr .. m ~i IJ'adually
add ~ eqp ccmfeeUoam• 1Qtar unm 1Uff peaks
form. l'olcl choCol.to ~ure btto •II white, ·
gently bunhorou•hlY· n.tc:an J'OU. Draw ttnes
ol fork ~ oYer top ol ·&oa to raemble
bark. ~\1 wtth wllote A1moodl and candled
cherrlel, tbon>Ulhb' · beifon ...ms. Or, trees.. ttiawt.o .-ve bUt do DOt allow to become
warm. Oandlb PJ•Uer with candy a~t
leaves and mai'ucblDo chem•. U "-lNd•
IPUl'Z ~cup (lltlak) bUttft
'tt.c:Qp~
141UJOlk • ~ti ...... aJIDGiidfttract
.. P90DI .U·purpGMftOUf
• d•..-.. Cnaam butt.; ac1d aDd crom uatll llaht aOd
llu.ft'1. ea Ud almond ntract. Gradual· 11 bWad la flour. <Do not dill1 doqh > nu cookle prell. UM Cbrlltmu tree, camel, wreath. plat.ea
to J::: ~ on cool cookie aeeta. •Sp .... l\llU',illftl'dt.,...Ol'di· ~r•t4t 1itlll Of cGdltct ewtrte1. uiae am :pt Iii fil",.,. ~ 8'ake e;10 mtntat•. C401 an , ___ fWaOri{DtijbUJ ..... oodtilMi.
memorable m7 Jubilee
feut. Hooray for Queen
Elh:abethl Hoor., tor
Kine Arthur! And
hooray for an En1llah Cbriatmur
JUBILEE
C&OWN &OAST ·
6 to 1 pound crown
roast of pork
Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons
vegetable oil
2 tablespoons
minced onion
1 clove garlic,
minced
Jh cup fine eeg
noodles, uncooked
1AI cup sliced celery
1 ~ cups tangerine
juice
'1'.a teaspoon 1alt
tf.a teaspoon poultry
seasoning
~ teaspoon dried
leaf thyme
1 cup packaged pre.
cooked rice
h cup chopped
peanuts
1 cup tangerine sec-
tions
Preserved kum-
quats, drained
Parsley
Sprinkle roast with
salt and pepper. Place on
rack in shallow roasting
pan, with rib ends up.
Place en.Wied aluminum
foil in center cavity to
help keep crown shape;
cover rib ends with
aluminum foil. Insert
meat thermometer into
meaty part of a chop.
Roast in 325 degree oven
35 to 40 minutes per
pound or until
thermometer reaches
170 degrees. Meanwhile,
heat oil in large
saucepan; add onion,
garlic and noodles; cook,
stirring, until noodles
are golden. Add celery,
tangerine juice, and
seasonings. Bring to boll·
1ng; add rice and
peanuts. Cover pan; re·
move from heat. One
hour before end of roast·
ing time, remove pork
from oven. Remove foil
from center cavity. Com-
bine tangerine sections
and rice mixture; fill cavity oC roast. Cover
stuffing loosely with foil.
Return to oven and roast
t hour longer. To serve,
place on platter. Remove
all foll. Place a kumquat
on each rib bone and sur·
round base of roast with
parsley and additional
tangerine sections.
Yield: 6 to 8 servings.
Have the butcher pre-
pare a crown roast or do
it you~lf. Buy two rib
ends of pork loin with the
backbone removed.
Make a small incision al
base between each rib,
then, blend each piece in·
to a hall circle. Join ends
and sew them, using a
large needle and stron1
white cord. Tie securely.
GLAZED BRUSSELS
SPROt.rrS
WITH TANGERINES
2 tangerines
~ cup butter or
margarine
;. cup light brown
sugar
1 cup tangerine juice
If.a teaspoon salt
2 packages (10
ouncea each) frozen
brusaels sprouts or 2
pints fresh sprouts,
cooked and drained.
Peel tahgerines, re·
mov• wtdte 1nembrane.
Pull sections apart, cut
off center aeetloo mem,
brane witb 1cl11ora.
Reserve tanse:rtne aee-
tlons. In larae 1k1llet. •
melt butter. Add brown
1u1ar and t.n1etlne
Julee. Simmer 15
minutes. Add salt and
cooked Uuuela 1prouts.
Cook over medJum heat
until aproutl are
tborouabJy beated and tined. Add t1111erlne
1ec:t1oni ftir. Serve lm· m~tdf. Yleld: a aerv-
lnf•· O&ANGBftll'LE
11 ladJftnaera
l C\ipe cblllect «I.Ille
aeCtloal,dralnii4 a paota1H <a'A
oancea each) lnttant l'anllltr"'4'u.a mix
M " spui 1-lfftqen and
•tud arOUDd ald• ot 1· ~u.n iOua bowl, Place
remitntna Jad~:a•r• oa bottom et atad
add ~atoed fruit, n-H"ln1 some oran••
HOtlODI for ••rnl1b.
Prepare vanllla pQ4dlna
wttb mUk, aceordbll to
pack•I' dliedf6ai~· Pour
puddi•f over trult.
Mfrl1 .... i. utn well
eblDICL ~ 1rftb re·
18"ecf ~ iilietJam. ,yJeJd:ttol~
LAIGI
CAUFOIMIA"
IHFCHUCIC
IOUHDIOME BEEF
ROAST
m1.09u.
IOMEWSLIAH
BEEF Stew
DUIUQUEI&
FRANKS
FAB .
"" JIMS
Meet ........ ltecl ......
We~ Acc.,t Feod St ... t
W• Reser•• Tit. RicJht To U..wt quantitl••
A.ltd • ..._ .. Sate To~ AMI~,...,._
MILD
SPAMISH
ONIONS
10~.
CAUFORNIA .RO~
~ FRYING .E:t~ CHICKEN
··~ LEGS and
THIGHS
··~
LOWER
PRICES I
FllESH LOCAL
ITAUAN
SQUASH
29~.
.BAR M BULK
SLICED
BACON.
==1.29&&
iiiiiNA 89!.
(ii POLISH ·
SA USA IE
MEATY 1 39. BREASTS · e u. 1.11~ iAcii· I~
TISSUE49c
RAMCHFRUH 200COUMI'
. .
HAM
100
COUMI'
Texas
Sticky
Buns
for
Christmas. breakfast.• Toke DaW1l's grease challenge. Compare Dawn with
any dishwasbing liquid. We know you'll like us better on
those tough Qre4SY jobs.
Bec4use Dawn does more than it:&'t cut grease. B Dawn breaks up grease, actually surrounds it. "Jakes gr88Se nns out of your way to help keep it from settling back on your
dishes, glasses, ·pans. And plastics! Try Holiday Sticky
· The dishwater doesn't feel greasy. Neither do yaur hands.
3ng ,grated rind alonf -with egg. That's right, neither do your handsl Holiday breakfasts can be
something special when there's a
family favorite on the menu ·
waUles topped with whipped
c ream and fresh lruH, an
omelette "stufted" with a tasty
filling, or homemade sweet rolls.
such as Fresh Orange Sticky
Buns, Texas Style.
orange slices aod a hot brown
sugar glaze end up on top! And •
tucked inside each bun are plenty
of plump, chewy raisins and
walnuts!
~!~~=·rJ:~b:'i;,~~ 'J8ke lhe Dawn ahaJlenge., ~:i~='tf:;:: =:_ 'fry a bottle of Dawn. And if you don't believe Dawn bimdlestough greasy jobs better than
Sprinkle wtth mixture of cin· your dishwashing liquiQ, we11 refund your purchase prioe by mail. Mail the fluid ounce statement T~~o~~ Y namon. tuaar, raisins, and 14 cup from one any size bottle of Dawn {remove fluid ounce statement by soaking bottle for five of tbe walnuts. Roll up tlibtlY. . ho ....._, _, 'th --'...3-.. ---' ·-'"'---• to; O l°"L-n....... 4 or 5 medium oranges begiDDlai at wider aide; Pu.ch minutes in t wa11a,·1, cuong w1 vour name, au~~ cuN p~ pnoe awn \JUGIR'Dge
l package Cl3'4 ounces) bot seal Cut roll Into 12 sUca. Offei: P.O. Box PG633, El Peso, 'Iexas 79977. ~011 mix <callio1for 1 e11 > !'emalnlng bllUer into round 9-Offer good only In Arizona. California, HaweB, Idaho, Nevada, and Oregon. Umit one 2~~~ mel~_!>~r m~b cake pan. Slice l orange refund per name or address. Your offer rights may not be assigned or transferred. Offer good ........ poona 'WMU9£UOD thinly; arrange oranae slices and ~ cup suiar ~mainlng walnuts decoratively from December 7, l m to January 24, 1978. Ple~ ~ow 4-6 weeks for delivery. I •
'4 cup raiains 1n butter. Spoon brown surar on
>r2 cup chopped walnuts slices. Place buns on top, cut side • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••'I
Made from convenient bot roll
mix, these orange sticky buns
are full of surprJ,aea. They're
easy to prepare since the bot roll
mix is premeasured, and there's
no kneading required. A!ld, best
of all, these fragrant breakfast
treats can be made ahead of time •
and tucked in the freezer where
they '11 be ready to use throughout
the holiday season.
Grate 2 oranges for 2 table-own 8 Y apart. • ..oe ._ , ... ._ .... ..., , ••• •w
-ble in bulk -about 45 minutes. _ ~ _.,....,.. .. -
If.I cup U~ht brown sugar d and ligbU Let.... -rYN ......... aw. M-D to-..... ,. • I
spoooa or•"'ae rind,· then cut and in warm place until almost dou-.• S~WE 25 liritn-.,,..,.. ... ......_ '1 .
juice them~ strain. Measure ·~ Bake In 3SO degree oven 30 to 35 § !'I' ~--=-:.=-.. r:: c:_.M:_.::...= I cup juice. Prepare bot roll mix.' minutes or until golden. Invert. -.:=c= ~~ r These orange sticky buns are substituting warm orange juice pan on serving tray. Remove and I -... -:&.:. .. --~
best eaten straight from the .f 0 r t be % cup water let cools minutes before serving. I when you buy 1 King Size (32 oz.) er~~=::.:=-:.:: : [
oven. When they're turned out of -called for, to dissolve the yeast. Serve hot or cold. Makes 12 large I l Gia t Slz (M ) §:;'.:.=e':.".:':O.::r~~!: 1 E the pan piping hot, fre11h Te>cas Proceed as package direcU, add· buns. I gr D 8 u. OZ. ..=~"'Ei.::U:...:.=-.. 8
I e.,~;,.-.,•?'#.:C.":.mi.~::; : l
t • u;1111 SID..,ci..ts1z .. ,.,,ot ~iw:re:-:::..:;.~ I 1 I ~labl• for fldelnptlon at your ... ~-.-~ Wbil~ many holiday too -just put a pan of !f.lcupmoluaes a 1\ii quart steamed pud· t •twt. tllltCCIUP'll t.llbo=oo •· • -----1111•1-. I ~ 7 cllsbes require lengthy waterlnt.otbecmo ~ 2 cups \malfted all· dine mold. FUI withpud· I tWD (1hz.) .._..aa · PROCIBI I 8AlllL£ · Is::
l> reparation. a with a foll-covered pud· parposeflaur dine mixture and cover '-••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••.I• Cbristmaa pudding ls din& mold. and bate for 2 t ••.•po on• loosely with a plece of · •
one part of the meal that about an boar. Ste~ baldni powaa. peued foll. Place flttu
can be euy. Pean~ But. helps keep the JJQCldinC ~ t.llJpOOllealt of water into the oven
ter Coconut Stumed tender aDd molal The 1 teupoon baki.na Place puddine next t~
Pudding is a blend of. peanut butter, moJuaea aod~L pan of water to a pre·
peanut butter, molasses. an~ coconut in the recipe -n teaspcJOQ each cin.· heated moderate ov~n coconut and orange rind: bnng dlstlnctive tlavor namon, nutme1 and (SSO degrees) for 1. · to bo d b tte 1 to the deaert and also cloves ...
in a mema e a r. contribute to its mallt Orated rlnct of l hour or unu1 pudding Cinnamon, nutmeg and texture orange feels firm to the toueb in
cloves add marvelous PEANVT BVTTE& 1 can (3"' ouncea) the center. Cool in pan .... flavor and tempting COCONUT fiakeclcocoaut for s mmutes, tap to
aroma. The entire mix-STEAMED PVDDING looeen and Invert onto
..
' ,
ture can be stirred . ~cup peanut butter ID a bowl. m.lz peanut serving platter. Serve
to1etherinooe1>c?wl.re-~cupaugar butter,sugarandbuUer. warm topped wltb q~rlng no special •P· >,t cup butter or Stlr in ea. SUr in milt vanilla lee cream,
pliaaces that need clean,. marrarine and molauel. Stir in re-sweetened whipped 1n1 afterwards. 1 eu mainina ingredients. cream, ha.rd sauce or
Tile steaming l5 easy~ 1 cup millc Grease and ~tb' flour cwst.ard sauce.
.,
YUMMY•Um
APPlEl•E NUT BREAD
(Mikes One L.oa1)
1 O.,ll!Qll' 3~~MUk ~ TllllPOOftBllt
i ~AoPltella 2QipaSltted ~Fm ~ ~ C11NT10n
,.4 Cup ()flex> 00 1 Te.poon ~Sid \4 r-.poon NIJ1rneg
3 Egg Whites 1 TeMpOOn ~ Powdfrl ~ OVpaqiped Walnut:a
unto au ~.tt .. Wlll blended.
Stlrln~.,.,
Spt8ld blltef In olld Ind floured
8 x5 JC 3 Inch loaf PM.: BlkHt 360"
toreo-70~
" .
: ..
.......
.::,
,I
,
"
y
I
1
l~ '-'y • t
I
"
' i
ake a Cake
From Heaven
Cut • •lice hom this
and baQdaome,
·hosted angel fOOd
and • • • •W"PriM t
Tbe cake, a lovely plnk
color dotted with cb6pped maraschino chenie., completely en-
veloped in luscious
cbocoiate cream nJUng made from a cbocolate-
a 1 mo n d bar.
marshmallows and
wblpped cream.
GIQrioui!
Simple-to-make and
•tllJlniq-to-serve, this •l*>wy dessert would be
Ptrfeetfor a holiday par·
ty or ror afternoon or eYenlnl bridge and any
UJne of the year.
CBOCOIATE·FILLED
C)l.EBRY ANGEL
CAKE
Cllel'l'J' Aqd Food Cake
1 package (14.5
ounces) angel food cake
mix
lcupwater
3 tablespoons
maraschino cherry juice
1 tablespoon cherry
flavored liqueur <op-
tional)
% cup chipped
maraschino cherries
Combine egg white
mixture from cake mix
with water, cherry juice
and liqueur; beat as
directed on package un-
til mixture is very gtjff.
Slowly blend in cake
flour packet until dry
max disappears. Fold in
chopped cherries. Pour
batter into an ungreased
10-inch tube pan. Cut
through batter with knife
or s patula to remove air
bubbles. Bake al 375
degrees for 25 to 30
minutes or unlll top crust
is golden brown a nd
looks dry. Cool inverted
on funnel or bottle at
least l lh hours. Remove
from pan, chill.
Chocolate Almond
Bar Fllllng
1 giant milk
chocolate bar with
almonds(~ pound)
1 .. 1 cup milk
l 1h cups miniature
mars hmallows or 15
large marshmallows
1 cup heavy cream
':?teaspoon vanilla
Chop chocolate bar un-
ti I almonds are very
s mall pieces. Melt
chopped chocolate bar
with milk m top of double
boiler over hot, not boll·
ing, water. Add
marshmallows an<l stir
until melted and smooth.
Cool completely. Whip
heavy cream with
vanilla and fold into
cooled chocolate mix·
lure. Chill at least 1 hour.
Whipped Cream Fnltlng
l 'h cups heavy
cream
3 tablespoons confec-
tioners· sugar
Beat heavy cream and
confectioners' sugar un·
til stiff. 3 cups frosting.
To Assemble: Pl•ce
cake on servinj .pJaf.e,
widest side down .. With
serrated knife cut a one-
inch layer from the top
and set aside. Cut around
cake one lncb from outer
edge to 1 ~ Inches from
bottom. With fork, re-
move the aec:tlon of cake
between the cutt, belnc careful to leave eubltan-
tial walls and a base of
Bread for
Stuffings
cake l lh-incbea thick.
Spoon cbilJed fllling Into
cake eavlty. Replace top
of cake and press gently.
Froat cue with Whipped
Cream Frosting;
garnlab as desired. Chill
several hours. 10 to 12 aervlnp.
•
..
ChOCOl4t&-
flllod ang8/
cherry cake
makes great
holiday detJSert.
l
SAVll .,OW P.RICIS ....
c
TOMATOES ~FAM/CY• MD• 91 39c ...
AVOCADOS
.,.,.1.-·11wc I •1• •• ,-............ a. ~tr·~<* ''" T.--llTIAI(. ........ UL
---~K ............... ULf l .. ~OIN • •TWI • IKIMLUI • , .. .............. .. ....
;;_ SllAK ........... le.., H ...
CHUCK
ROAST IJL,ADE.CUT
FOOD
FOOD
l{~oe~·
FORM LOCO BOILER IN 8 OZ. FROZEN JUICE CAN FORM CABOOSE WITH HALF OF RAISIN BOX
(ADDROOF)
2~
FORM % "THICK LOCO CHASSIS-7'' LONG
3 n_Ra_is..,_~ ins_
. SHORTEN BOX HALF TO 1 ~'~FORM COAL CAR
6 TRIM: GUMDROP HEADLIGH~ SMOKESTACK
and CHIMNEY • STRIPED CANOY WHEELS
·LICORICE SECTION WINDOWS
'
FORM LOCO CAB IN QUARTER OF 15 OZ. RAISIN BOX FILL COAL CAR WITH NUTS and RAISINS
How. to Make a Train
· Rememberwbensome pan ... and set the fami· fa~ilies turned over ~n Jy to work making Its
entire room to a tram own decorative choo-w or Id? There were choo
miniature houses, lakes,
bridge, even town halls. POPCORNCllOOCHOO
along with miles and 1 package CS oz )
miles of miniature train popcorn
tracks. Here's a chance 1 cup sugar
to wax nostalgic with the 1 a cup corn syrup
family. Pop plenty of ·~ cupw&ter
corn ... we've used the ·~ cup butter or
kind that pops in its own margarine
Prepare pop<:orn ac-
cording to package
directions. Pour into
Jarae pan or kettle 1 !eat
sugar, corn syrup and
water in sauce pan to 250
degrces-260 degrees or
until a drop of syrup in
cold water forms a hard
ball. Remove from heat
and stir in butter. Pour
over popcorn and mix
thoroughly with a large
spoon. Save 2 or 3 table·,
spoons of syrup for use in
attaching train parta.
Coated popcorn is now
ready to be formed into
tram. You will need an
empty 6 oz. juice can and
the empty botton of a 15
oz. raisin box. Grease
your hands and all con·
tainers well. Use extra
popcorn to form small
balls for stocking fillers.
Holiday Fig Pudding
Steamed Fig Pudding s uggests-
a gr eat new way to steam quan·
tlliea in the oven at one time
This delicious, inexpensive pud·
ding is sweetened with figs and
customary molasses.
Dessert puddings make prized
gills. This method allows plenty
to serve and share. Store the pud-
dings, covered in aluminum foil,
in the refrigerator or treeier.
The foll can remain on the fud-
ding as a gift wrap, be part o the
package decoration, and cover
during reheating in. the oven at
serving time.
1 cup light molasses
1.• cup butter or margarine
3 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon soda
• 2 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons cinnamon
I teaspoon ground cloves
I teaspoon ground nutmeg
I teaspoon ground ginger
2 cups chopped nuts
cooled fig mixture. Add nuts. Stir-
u n Li 1 well moistened and
blended. Divide mixture into pre-
pared containers.
.. ~ -.. . .
Finally, there's a rlch coffee flavor you
can enjoy without putting up with coffee
bitterness.
New Sunnsetinstant coffee mellowed
with chicory. Tastes better natured,
not bitter.
Because Nestle has discovered how
to mellow fine coffees with roasted
chicory to bring out coffee's better nature,
but leave the bitter taste behind.
Introduce y0urseltto new Sunrise.
... ..-w-_..._
· Ovea-S&eamed Holiday
Fl« Pudding
3 cups cut-up dried figs
l cup boQin& water
Combine figs, water, molasses
and butter in 3-quart saucepan;
let stand to soften figs. Generous-
ly grease four 1-pint containers.
Crisscross 2-incb strips of
aluminum foil across bottom and
up sides of each container with
extra at Ulip. Grease strips. Sift.
dry ingredleni. tocether over
Cover with a piece of aluminum
foil Tie with string. Set molds
in 13x9x2 inch baking pan; pour 1
inch boiling water into pan. Fit a
large piece of heavy duty ,
aluminum foil over top; press
tightly to pan top all around.
Steam in 350 degree oven 2 hours.
Serve warm with hard .sauce. if
desired. Refrigerate in toil cover·
ing or freeze with an overwrap ol
heavy duty wrap. To rebe1t, set 1 foil-covered pudding in350degree
oven, 30 minutes lf chilled, lbourl s.------------------~----------~,------------or more if frozen. Makes four 14:
ounce puddings, t aervlnpeflCh. ;
•llfrodlc1ng S s.o~, ...
FANTASTIC . ~ ~/lfi t
PRICES TO THE PUBLIC Gs
F.uMB.K>t*4 FilMBJOHM fA JOHN .......
BACON SKIMWS POLISH KNOCK WURST LINK SAUSAG SAUSAGE I &.a.,. .. SU.IOI
I OJ. PllG. SU.IOI 1.25u. 1.19u. 39c PKG. 1.09u.
G.AUO ·PASTRAMI BEEF
SALAMI PATTIES. AVG.JLl.U .
AVCi.J U.IA.. 1.42 LA ••
IO&.a. IOX
2.19 LL age"
SQUID
Ul.IOl
59~L&
.,
,
·.APPLE
SAUCE
Gr,ut with pork! 8priniclicld No ao:l
Stuffing = ... 49c
Corn Rread, Herb or Cube -8 OY. pkg
Dressing S£vocsus •• 49c
Viva lialian, Horb & Spice -8 07.
Top Ramen . • • • 23e
Jnponeso Noodlci1 • • nil llovor11 -3 o;-,.
CAKE
MIXES
Choice or lll•lty C:roi·hr lnycr
vnrietiel'
Margarine son ••• 79e
Fleiechmann's -· spreads so cn11ily! J lh
· Paper Towels . • 55c
Tuf n' Heady t:olors or prints! Hig roll
Fireplace Logs • 99~.
Pinc Mountain nolurnl or color -6 lb
t; Stewed 39c .
~: T ornatoes . • I lunt'11 red riptl J(ooclncs11! No :mo •. . ~~ -R.--LOMG_CW1 ___ 5_9_c
~ ice AMII WU Ill •••••
: Minute makes it ea11y! A :V4 O"t. pockogc •
· Tortilla Strips . 59c
• l'oco -for the cocktnil hour! 12 oi.
' . Onions JDQI Fm • • • 39c
'-0 &.C -keep crisp in tho 3 •,, or. can
I Burbank, for rt'mcmbcrcd nnvor! 14 o~.
. ' M.D.
. · TISSUE
('olors or While -4 roll pnck
Grape Drink ••• " 49c
Wt'lch'a for true lMlel 46 oz can
Finish FOR DISHES •••••• age
' For nutomnt.icR · :13 oz. (Ile •ftl
· Cat Food :U .... 59c
Choice of four nnvors! 18 01. pkJJ • Souptime :~·~. 49c
Choice of navors -packag• of four
Pancake Mix • • • 49c
Tho familiar Aunt ,Jemlna! 2 lb pkg
Syrup ........ s1°9
DelLcious maple blend -24 OJ\ blle
Diainfcctani in 6 ounce bottle
Dinners =.-• ... 79c
Fried, Crftpy or Barbecue
..
fro~ the heart of America's great mid-west!
FRESH!
LEAN!
t • I • ' . . . : .. Tender and leant 1he succulelt eooctness of porl
..... betterf See f1r ywseff' this
week, why there la a difference
in port from 0 bncho!
--Pork·#Loin--
RdAST
Whole •••••••• SJ 1!
OI •Ml.fl Eastern pork at its beat
Center Cut ••• SJ 4!
The eent.er of the lean tasty loin
Boneless •••••. s24!
IL mnk .. a fine rotiaserie treat
Park loin Haan ~~H •••••••••. 11!
J(astero pork at. it's delicious best.I Really (reeh, close trimmed and priced to rc11ect our qunlity! Average weighl -4 lbs
Sausage curASllOIO • 99 i · . ·Sliced Bacon •.• SJ o! Sausage ITAUM snu • s J 3!
Our fscah pork and fine seasonings El Rancho's thicker ••ranch style" As authentic os we can make it!
f Pesh Spare libs ~wt~ ......... II!
Finger lickin' good! f'rcsh mid-west. pork, with so much mcnty goodnci.s to 1>leoi.c tho hunl{ry horde' Lovo tho vnlue!
Cubes of Pork . s21! Bratwurst . • . . . . SJ 3! • Meat Loaf n IAIBS s 1°!
For your favorite Chinei.c rccipc11 Pork, milk-feel veal, line aeaROning Oven m1dy! Mode with fresh cggi.
Park loin Chnp1 · c:f.E~ ....... ~l!il ..
Thoy'll bo 80 delicious broiled, hcCllllllC you're 11811\lred of tonderne811, navor and snlisfnction from our freeh mld-weat porkt
STUFFED
PORK LOIN
CHOPS
Orowcat Dressing, butt.er, fresh eggs
~ ...
CHUCK . -STEAK 79!
ll.S.D.A. Choice beef, to be sure!
Ground Beef ~rJ:$11!
I .con -does not. exceed 22% fol
Steak. :-ClAlHD s13!
J>oc11 not CXC'ccd 16% fat .... 3 per lh
BOHWSS
PORK LOIN
CHOPS
Moro value with our closer trim!
Top Sirloin $279
SOAK • 1.oin cut or U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Top Sirloin ~r .. s21!
Loin cut of ll.S.D.A. Choice beef
WI FEATURE CINUIE Mft.k FED
VEAL
Compare the quality -and he t'onvint<'rl
Super Fresh Produce
..
TIUCK CUT
PORK LOIN
CHOPS s1•!
For baking or the barbecue!
BOHEl.ESS
ROAST 5 1 5!
Chuck cut shoulder clod -Choice!
Chili Beef :U .. SJ 0!
Doea not exc~ 30% fat. content.
Game Hens :mo 99c.
'cordon Rieu or DreMing' Nt. wt 12 07.~ea
Bananas: ............... II!
Rake n cako. , • moko friLton1 ..• n gelatin des.iort. .•. Rllcos tor breakfn11L ••• or in tho lunch t)()x I l•~njoy thorn!
.
Pippin 3 1s1 · ,Apples 1
Crisp and tart · and larRo 111110!
,_.., lwtttl
MatlritY fruit
from ltiwall.
RED ·
YAMS
US No. 1 quallt)' ••• all purpose
FREE!
110
ROSE PARADE
TICKETS
,
Mo purcha$t ,....-Jat ....... ,.. ... In
MJ tf w ct1111•11t elby Mxtd ntty.fhe win-
ners tacit rtetl¥t 2 tittt te tht ,... ... -
rtttned ..au• C.CMI M ... ,._ FrM
PIBJnet
WDllllS NAMES Will ~
POSTED TIIS. DEC. 21·
FRESH FILLETS!
PACIFIC RED $219.· Snapper
Fillets t.o bake, broil or rry
Catf iSh Fillets •• *1 1?
Delicious familiar Creth·water fl.ah
Halibut Steak •• $35!
Ce~ter cut. from Northern flah
Perch coe.ouoo ••••• ,, 59~
Pon ready! Net wciitht 8 01 •. each
Crab legs ••.••• s2 1!
Meaty! .• : from Alaskan crabs
COOKED $J79
SHRIMP •
Juac. l'iirht for ahrimp cocktaU.
Liquo; Dep 't
st.oo om a UHdlO
STRAHltT s499 Whiskey
She yean old -86 proon Quart
-W. d s5t~ ~n sor ••••••••
Canadian -reduced 90¢ -Qunrt.
Ten High san ....... s999. ·
Stral~I. whiskey -1.75 liter
REDUCED SOc
ll RANCHO'S
RUM s3••·
Choose Light or Dark .•• fifth ,
Riunite l.Jl• ••sco ••• s2•1 ·
Red, White or iw.e wine -fifth
Paul Masson.., s21~
J)urrundy, Chablla or Roee -Carafe
B • I • s319 eau10 a1s ••••••
Louis Jadol.'a fine quatlt.,Yt Fifth '
Delicatessen .
B ~d• I FAMILY PACK 5nc Uu 1g S MEArs ... s oz PKG.. · ~
I
)
l
l
'.
t • .
FOOD
Cherry-Nut-Mini Chip Cake and Torte.
Gingerbread to dip in lemon fondue.
Fon due Dippers
Gingerbread .Fondue is
a terrific "participa-
tion'' dessert to serve
after a movie, aprcs-ski,
or after dinner. It's a
new -fangled party
pleaser and a good rea,
son to get the fondue pol
off the shelf.
Ir you don't have a fon-
due pot, any sort of
candle-warmer or hot
tray can be used to keep
the lemon sauce warm.
And if you have· more
than one fondue pot or
warmer, then add to the
merriment by serving a
choice o( sauces. Lemon
sauce is the lsleal fiMJt
choice, based oh its long-
standing traslJUon as a
gingerbread topping. '
.GINGEaB&EAD
FONDUE "DIPPERS" .
· ~ cup butter or margarine
i,., cup sugar
~ cup unsulphured
moJasses
leH
l 1tit cups all-purpose
nour
1h tsp. baking soda
1A tsp. baking
powder
1~ tsp. salt
1 tsp. ginger
1 tsp. cinnamon
ira cup sour cream
Preheat oven to 350
degrees. Cream butter
and sugar; add molasses
and egg and beat well ..
Stir In sifted dry ingre-
dients and sour cream.
Beat 250 strokes or at
medium mixer speed for
1 minute. Pour batter in-to greased and fioured
9xl3-lnch cake pan. Bake
at 350 degrees for 25
minutes or until golden
brown. When cooJ, cut in·
to l·lncbsquares.
LEMON SAUCE POil FONDUE
1 cup sugar
~ cup cof'Mtareh
2 Tbsp. all-purpose
flour
2 CllPS cold water
~ cup butter or
margarine
grated rind of
lemon
ira cup lemon juice
lh tsp. salt
Jn 1 i,., quart saucepan,
combine sugar, corn-.
starch, flour and cold
water; stir unW smooth:
Cook, stirring constant-·
ly, unW mixture comes
to a full boll and ts
thickened. Remove from
heat, .and stir in butter,
salt, h!moo Juice and
rind. Keep sauce hot m a
fondue pot (preferably
the 2-part type with hot
water in lower section)
or on a warmer. Stir
sauce occaalonally dur-
ing servlnt to ~aintaln a
smooth C0011atency.
Sauce •bould not be
prepared ln advance and
reheated 81 it may
llqully. Yield: 3cups.
•
.. ' . . .. . .
Milli Chip ~es~rt
. CHERRY·NVT·MINI CHIP COCOtPEC.\N'·MLNI CHIP :~
CAKE TORTE
1 cup butter or margarine 2 'c! ps all-purpose flour
2 cups sugar 1 i,; cups sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla 4 teaspooM bakinf powder
4 e1p 1 teaspoon salt 2~ cupt all-purpose flour lh cup butter or margarine ~ teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon vanilla
¥.. tealpooo salt % cup milk
· V.. teaapoon nutmeg (op-2 eggs
tiooal) 11,, cup mUk
l cup dairy eour cream or Coconut-Pecan·Minl Chip
van ill a yogurt FU Ung (recipe follows)
2 cups (J.2.ounce package> Combine flour, sugar~ baking
chocolate flavored mini chips powder and salt in Jarge mixer
1 cup chopped nuts bowl. Add butter or margarine, ~cup flaked coconut vanilla and % cup milk. Beat 2 ~• cup chopped maraschino minutes at medium speed. Add
cherries, well-drained eggs and 11,, cup milk; beat 2
Mini Chip Glaze <recipe minutes longer. Pour into 2
foJJows) • greased and floured 9·inch round
Cream butter or margari.oe, cake pan.s. Bake at 350 degrees
sugar and vanilla in larie mixer Cot 30 to 3S minutes. Remove
bowl; add eggs, one at a time, from p&M; cool completely. Split
beating well after each addition. to make 4 layers.
Combine flour, bakint soda, salt COCONVT-P&CAN·'MINICBJP
and nutmegi add alternately Fl.LLl:iJG
with sour cream or yoaurt to 1 cup evaporated milk
creamed mixture. St.Ir in 11".I l cup sugar
cups ot the mini chips, nuts, 3 ega yolks, slightly beaten
coconut and cherries. (Reeerve ·~ cup butter or margarine
remalning ~ cup mint chips tor 1 teaspoon vMJlla
alaze.) · ·· H!i oops flaked coconut
Pour batter into a greased and
floured 10-inch lube pan; bake at
325 degrees for 1 hour and 35 to 40
minutes. Cool in pan 10 minutes.
Serve warm with confectioners'
sugar or cool completely and
glaze. If desired, sprinkle with
additional coconut.
Mini Chip Glaze: Brang ·~cup
sugar and 2 tablespoons water to
a boil in small saucepan.·
Remove from heat; immediately
add reserved 'i'a cup Mini Chips,
stirring until melted. Add 2
tablespoons marshmallow creme
and 1 to 2 tea.spoons bot water for
desired consistency.
1 cup chopped pecans
1 cup chocolate flavored mini chip's
Comb\ne evaporated milk, sug·
ar, egg yolks and butter in a
medium saucepan. Cook, stirring
constantly, over medium heat
until mixture boils. Boil and stir 1
minute. Add vanilla, coconut and
pecans; return to bolling point.
Remove from heat and im-
mediateJy spread about ~ cup
filling onto one cake layer;
sprinkle with 114 cup Mini Chips.
Repeat erocedure for remaining
layers, ending with filling and
Mini Chips on t.op. Cool com-
pletely.
...
·.
DAllYPtlOT
HIGH PRO I EIN ...
A Holiday Treasure
from the Orient
Now you can crute
the deltclous
dehcacles or
Oriental Cuisine
In your own
kitchen With the
Wiiiiams-Sonoma
Wok. Made to our own
apecfflcatlona of heavy
gauge poUshed
copptl '-'th 11 practice I
ltalnlut ateel Interior. Handfea•or glowfng
brass are contrasted with• hendaome
cover of gently brushed stalnles1 steel.
The W-S Wok would make• marvelous
Christmas girt for your favor~ chef. How·
ever, you 100 may flnd youraelf hopelessly
ettached 10 the "Wok Way" or cooking. We
can gilt wrap and $end anywhere wflhln the
United States.
WILLIAMS-SONOMA
South Coast Plaz.a • Costa Mesa
(Across from I. f.iognln)
San Francisco· Palo Alto
Beverly Hills· Costa Mesa
NIM
IAftlf~IUUll'fm .. ----·-··· ---=-~----... ~M~t;S'fif eZS" ....... ..:
.. ••
I
AILY PILOT
f er.sonal Fruitcake Gift
• Penonaliu your holl-l cup butter
day 1lft lilt Una year by 1 cup sqar
1lvi~ home-baked fruit· 5eua
cak• wtth th• "spirit" ~ cup 1 li v ere d
incl Oded. almonds
l cup chopped Wben baked ahead and pecan•
flllowed to ripen lo Warm raisins, cur·
navor, these fruitcakes ranu, dalea, 1laced
also c:an eUmlnal~ lul· f ruJu, candied cherries
minute ahoppin& sprees. a n d Jr is h Mi at i n
1plce1 and Ht aalde.
Cream bullet and 1ucar
untll Ushi and fluffy.
Beat in fll.I, one at a
Ume. Mix ln dry lnere-
dient.s ; comblne with the
marinated frullll and
nuts. Spoon lnto 1 8 in.
tube pan and 1
31,u4~x2~ ln. loaf pan
or 2 loaf pana or 2 tube
pans that have been
greased, lined with foil
or parchment paper (ex-
tend '>ii in. above pan
rim> and greased. Place
shallow pan of water on
lower rac)c of oven. Bake lo preheated 'n5° oven
2~ bra. or untJl cake
tESter comes out clean.
Cool cakes in pans on
rack for ~ br. Remove.
from pans and peel oft
paper. Cool completely
on rack. Recipe may be
doubled, adjust 1picea to
ta1te. •
To store cakes :
Saturate cheesecloth
wlth Irish Mlat. Wrap
cakes with cloth then
wrap tt'-htly with
aluminum foil. St.or6 !n
tightl)' covered con-
tainer tn cool place to
ripen. It desired. open
occasionally and
sprinkle cheesecJoth
wltb lriab Milt.
To decorate; Melt •f.
pie Jelly ln s ma 1
saucepan. IJptly brush
top and aides of cakes
with melted jelly. Press
candled cherries, alaced
fruit and null into cakes
forlrlm.
-
• ! -~ ~
Irish Mist
Uquer
aeasonsa
fruitcake.
They also can save saucepan, stirring to
time and money. Made combine fruits with hq-
w it h convenie nt ueur. Cover and let
packaged foods such as marinate overnight. Sirl
chopped dates, nuts and flour with salt, soda and bite -s 1ie glaced rruil-----~----------------------------------_...;~~-..;:..;--=--~~~----~~...-:.--~--....;;.----
pieces, these holiday de·
lights cost about half as
much as the price of a
purchased fruitcake.
. The "spirit" is added
with Irilh Mist liqueur.
whose honey·like flavor
marinates the potpourri ot dried and glaced fruits
pvernight. Each cake
'1so is swathed in a
cheesecloth saturated
with Irish Mist, then foil·
wrapped to ripen before
J,f ecor_ating and gift ~rapping.
Giving holiday fruit·
cakes to adult friends
can be the beginning of a
beautiful tradition in ~our home. A copy oC the
fccipe, Jucked into the
wrapping, would be
welcomed by those who
~njoy baJting, too.
HOLIDAY FRUITCAKE
11~ cups light. and
dark raisins
1h cup currants
1 cup chopped dates
i 1,2 c ups d i c e d
glaced mixed fruits
1 4·oz. container can·
died cherries
1 cup Iris h Mis t
liqueur
3 cups sifted flour
l tsp. salt
1 i,, tsps. cinnamon
1 tsp. each nutmeg,
~round cloves, allspice
Yuletide
Jn Italy
•
By TOM HOGE
"" ,...........,_ Wrf11w The observance of
Christmas varies from
nation to nation. and one or lhe most elaborate is
in Italy where they start
festivities the night
before the b{g day and
keep gotng until Jan. 6. The colorful details.were
disclosed to me by Or.
Lucio Caputo, persona·
ble Italian Trade Com·
missioner for America's
Eastern Seaboard
states.
•'Nowadays Babbo
Na tale (Santa Claus) has
replaced La Befana in
many homes," Caputo
said . "And a tree
trimmed with lights and
ornaments has joined lbe
creche as a symbol of
Christmas much the
same as in America."
Here's a recipe for
roast quail that graces
many yuletide tables in
Italy. It is usually ac·
companied by a sparkl·
Ing white wine called
Asli Spumante, made
from grapes grown in the
\}>iedmootregion ofltaly.
6 thlck slices bacon • 12quall
oil
2 tablespoons peanut
2 ouncea salt pork,
diced
1 l medium onion,
t:bopped
: l clove garlic,
~lnced I 3 ounces cognac l 1 cupchickenbrotb
~ teupoon tarraton
Salt and pepper to • ~le Sprto of parsley ~ Cook &aeon ln skillet
ill crisp. Drain bJcon on
aper towel and l'eserve.
etaln fat In 11dllet and eheat. Add quail and raute. tuminl frequently
U1 lightly browned.
'Remove quail to oven·
)>roof C&llel'Ole and keep _.,arm. Drain ott bacoo
tat. He• ))el.nut oil ln killet and Ulhtly brown
aalt Pott. Adel on.ion and
1arl{c, brown UlhUJ and atlr m co111ac, brOth. tar· "fon. Brtna llquid to lH> I •Del atsnm.r l•w 10mui. to blend nayon.
8ta1on .tth nit and-peJ>' per and .,..... ove quail
,111· cuaerole. Set pea m
~e~ oven, COYtr
•nd eook bird• JO JDhautH tlll tender, Utt• tr·~MnVir .
• -. Ill .tl' .. 'tt !:~ =~ 1rt ..... t(ltl9 p_AnW .,,,..1L' ltraln IHH t.-r..~:~ MU~llU.Mri•e
How to .find
your way past
the holiday hul-dleS.
·~
l'
I
' I I
~
,,, .,, . \,i.o ••
~
One stop shopping at
Lucky saves you the
hike from store to store.
Fruit Baskets:
All slz.es, all shapes. We have them already wrapped in gl)stening
cellophane and ribbon. f.ach handsome reusable basket is filled
\Alilh fresh, top quality fn11t, or nuts, or both. Some have extra
surprises, like candy or clleeSe or wine, tucked next to the apples
and oranges and pineapples and limes. They're great gift ideas.
And don't forget to get at least one for yourself.
I
Trees ·and Trim:
Many of oor stores have fresh cut trees. Again, aD sizes, all
shapes, Including Douglas and Noble Frrs and Plantation Grown
Douglas Fir. Our larger discount centers have a graceful and
colorful selection of ornaments, lights and garlands of all sorts.
(Don't forget the popcorn and fresh cranberries for stringing
into chains around your tree.)
Gifts:
If you're alre.ady a Lucky shopper, you know our Oisc:ount
Centers have a u.Jriety of gifts like to.vets and linens, like clothes,
toys, and games. Walk up aid.down the aisles. You're sure to be
inspired ""1th gift ideas for everyone near Md dear.
There's even gift wrap and ribbon.
Gift Certificates:
Instant problem solvers are our Gift Certificates. They fit your
budget. They keep you from the trouble of trying to play mind
reader. Evet'yOl'>e on your list gets just exactly what he wanted.
(And there aren't too many gifts that can make that promise.)
Besides, theY're easy to pick up. Just call your nearby Luc:ky Cor
information. Or stop by and see the manager
next time ~·re here •• , .
The Dinner.
While you're doing all ~ rest of your Ovlstmas ~. you
might as wen purchase dinner. See the pink juicy hams ••• both
boneless and bone·ln. rind the pump Gracia A turkeys, basted or
unbasted. Yams, cranberry sauce, h6w can you resist it all? Look
at our delicious weekly listit'lg t:A representative pricef, ~nd •tart
checking off voUr menu. Out discount prices wl1l ~ ~ut ~t
eo tartnir. anc1 help make yOUr hdiday memei.
And that's what we're an about.
~~FL~ ••.. tO 198
~[~~.tO 118
TOP llOUHO STEAK
OOHCLOIOOOCIUISXJ • .. •••• \JI 1.58
OOSS IUO f'OAST l)()o(U»OO!«DOCU~• .UI 1,J9
DON£l£SS RUMP ROAST IONDU>OW~ lA(llllCUI , .• lD 1,28
1·~ QIUQ( ROAST ·
ll()Q,00((7 •• ,, ••••• ,.. •• •••• lO ,79
F1WH OUf DPJSKET
OONIWI OONOa> aw ........... ,, UJ 1 .39
OONEWS STEWING DID ~llGJ . • ••••• , ........ Ut.1.~
LAP.GE EMO ND STEAK
OOl'Oll> llUf ......................... U) 1 .58
E·Z<UT OJOE STEAK
IOIQD 1U1 ••• ,,. •• • • • •• . •.• , • • •••• IA 1.88
001'A LEAN GRCXJND DID
DOD NClf llml> 2ft IAI , ,, , • ., • , ••• , Ul 1 • 1 8
7~ OIJO( f'OAST
IOIQDIGJ. ••••••••••• • •••••••• IA .89
~ SH0ULD£A P.OAST
l1'(lllfl()Clll'IU, ....................... l0 .88
F/tNIO JOHN SAUSAGE ~..-..................... otll<G,.49
F1'ESH SP.AP.ENDS ~ll!D ........................... u..1.19
~OEEFUVU ;..us ................................ U) .78
5UC£D BACON
Miii Clll f-."l IOMN .... , • ,. , • IA fl'A 1 .18
I.ADY LEE SLICED OACOtil .................. " .............. tlAJllG..98
Canned&Packaged
L ~~ ~~ £~-~J?OLCDl,,59
L ~~~~.~~.~CNi.85
! ~)~~llllL.67
l ~~~.~~ .. ~.85
L ~l.~ ..... 1ar.fl«l. -t.5,3
Delicatessen
l'HAAVEST DAY o~!~'-~ot(>N.13
LARGE ~~~~.~-.. ~.09
Household & Pet · ·
l ~.~~.~ .. CL(M.22
! ~-~~~.~~.~.~-IQl~
b ~~ .. ateo.1.1~
b ~~~ .. ~or.a.65
L~.~~.~ .. .66
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Liquor.
, ,,.
I
T
' I I I
.. ~
t
r
) .
Beef
stroganolf with
rice is
easy on the
·budget.
• Wednead1y, December 7. 1977
I
Budget Beef :W~th Rice;·,~ . .
Rice is playing a more and more important
role these daya in "beefing up" budget meals.
From a strictly nutdtional standpoint, we don't
really need· th~ size •erving ot meat or seafood
we're used to eating. There la enouittl protein In a
smaller amount. But that amount looks akampy
Qn a dinner plate.
Here l• where rice eomes to the rescue. Take
that ama1ler amount of meat, cook it in a
Oavorful sauce (as in Budget Beef SU'oganoff),
and aerve it over rice. Rice does several things.
First, tbe peycbologlcal effect. .. rice makes
the dinner plate look fuU . ActuallY you've won
bait the beUle here because your tamUy i• pre.
pared for a hearty meal. Next, rice tastes like a
lot. The tender, but distinct 1ndivtdua1 grains
Ii ve a feeUna of bullt as they are eaten. ·
FJnal)y, rice does cont'ln some protein • . .
addlng to the protein content of the m eat and
sauce. Rice bas vitamins and minerals also.
Those plus the nutrients in the sauce and other
ingredients used can end up making a better dis h nutritionally than you'd have had in a srtce of
meat.
Not only can saucy meat be served over nee,
but .also rice can be sUrred Into a sauced meat or
seafood and baked until bubbly. Neptune
Casserole is an examJ)le of that technique.
So don't get discouraged with high prices.
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
l cari UO·~• oi. > condensed cream or
mushroomaoup •:.1M 1" cup& beef broth or water
1 cup choPped onions 4 2 tablespoons flour
1\cupsourcream
· :ic\Jpsbotcookedrice 'i ~
Sprinkle meat with seasonings. Brown in r
butler. Stir in soup and l cup broth. Cover; sim-• ,1 mer 30 minutes. Add onions; cook 10 minutes •l
longer. Blend remaining broth and nour. SUr in· c
lo meat rnjxture. Cook about 5 minutes, aUrring
frequenUy. Add sour cream; heat thoroughly, /
but do not boil. Serve Qver beds of fluffy rice .
Makes 6servlnge. . • •·
NEPl'UNE CA¥BltOLE
% cup each chopped onions, celery. and
green pepper
I tablespoon butter or margarine
1 can <6to7 oz.> tuna, flaked a cups cooked rice
1 cup crumbled cornbread (or sort bread
crumbs)
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 teasp00n each salt and poultry seasoning
14 teaspoon pepper
l cup chicken broth.
~:i I
('I
11'1
J
•1
' I . "
I
")
Frost and Fire Fruit
With a little planning and a lilUe help from rice
your family can still eat as well as ever.
BUDGETBEEFSTROGANOFF
WITH RICE
1to1 ~pounds lean beef round steak, cut in
thin strips
Sautc onions, celery. and green pepper in
butter until solt but not brown. Comlline with re-
maining ingredients; mix well. Tumlnto a light·
ly buttered shallow 2-quart casserole. Cover and
bake at 375 degrees for 20 lo 25 minutes. Remove
cover and bake 10 to 15 minutes more. Serve with
tartar sauce. Makes 6 servings.
I I
~ MAUNALOA
PROST AND FIRE
Gently !old whites into
cooled papaya custard
mixture. Pour into 2
quart mold, preferably
stemmed glasses. Top
with a aplasb of cbam·
pagne and apri1s of
mint. Makes 2 drlnlul.
1 teaspoon eacb salt and paprika
1At teaspooi;i each pepper andgarlic powder
Or cook 1 pound fish fillets in seasoned water
:for 10 minutes. Drain and flake. .
.,
.., ' What with the hectic
rounds of shopp1n.g ,
party-giving and party·
going, the holiday
season is a busy time.
2 Hawaiian
papayas. peeled, halved
and seeded
4 eggs, separated
1 cup sugar
cone shaped. Freeze ,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wh en it's your ti!~ to be
the inviter instead of t,bf
invitee, why not con.
sid er a fanciful inake
ahead des~ert, one
1 8 teaspoon salt
1 4 cup lemon juice
firm. To serve: UnmoJd
on serving platter. Sur-
round with fruits and the
remaining papaya,
l that's guaranteed to
draw raves from your
guests with a minimum
I of ~ffort on your part.
3 tablespoons dark
rum
1 quart cut up
fruits: banana, apple,
pineapple
Puree 2 or the papay~s
In blender or press
through a sieve to get 1
cup papaya puree; set
aside. Beat egg yolks in
top of double boiler until
thick. Beat in 34 cup of
the sugar and salt. Stir
in lemon juice and rum.
Cook, stirring constant·
ly, over simmering
water until mixture is
thick and smooth .
Remove from heat; stir
in pureed papaya .
Refrigerate until just
cool but not set, about 30
minutes. Meanwhile,
beat egg whites until
foamy. Gradually beat In remaining 1/4 cup sug-
ar; continue beating un·
til s tiff peaks form .
sliced. Spoon fruits into
dessert dishes. Top with
soft.frozen papaya mix·
ture. To flame: Hollow
out top of cone to hold a
clean egg shell half. Fill
with warmed rum or
brandy. Ignite. Makes 8
servings. Note: Mixture
does not freeze lo a hard
consistency.
I
1 Whether halved ,
seeded and served simp-
ly wlth a wedge of lime,
or filled with lee cream,
, covered wilh light mer·
I ingue and quickly
broiled, Hawaiian
papayas add a touch or
tropical elegance to
you r holiday table.
When buying fresh
papayas, look for those
that are partially golden
r.eUow in color an in·
7 <iication of ripeness. A
. yellow green papaya
will ripen in a few days
if left at room te.rn-
' perature, but be sure to
refrigerate the papaya I pnce it's ripe.
PASSION FRUIT
CHAMPAGNE SPLASH
\.'l cup frozen
passion fruit /orange
concentrate, partially
thawed
1 ounce lime juice
3 ounces light rum
1 banana, sliced
11 '2 cups crushed ice
1 split champagne
Mint sprigs
Into blender, put con· centrale, lime juice,
rum, banana and ice.
Whirl to blend. Pour into
.
• • Trim Party .
ffrom Page CU ~poons 3 inches apart on greased
cookie sheet. Bake at 450 degrees
for 15 minutes. t,hen at 325
degrees for 25 minutes Remove
from oven, spliL Turn oven off.
put cream puffs back in to dry,
about 20 minutes. Cool on rack.*.
Makes about24 puffs.
•Unfilled cream puffs may be
frozen; wrap in double thickness
of heavy duty foll.
CR UNCllY CHICKEN PUFFS
, 2 cans (5 ounces each > Chunk
White Chicken
1 tablespoon soy sauce
2 teaspoons cornst.arch
'" teaspoon ground gmger
~,. teaspoon sugar
Generoll5 das.b garlic powder
1 1 cup canned bean sprouts
~" cup thinly slice~ celery
'" cup sliced green onions
~"cup chopped radishes
t,4 oup chopped waler
cheslnuta , '
24 appetizer-size cream purrs
Drain chi~en , reserving
broth. In saucepan, combine
broth, soy, cornstarch and
seasoning. Heat, stirring until
thickened. Add remaining ingre·
dienls except cream puffs. Heat,
stirring. Spoon about 2 teaspoons
chicken mixture into each cream
puff; cover with tops. Makes 24
appetizers.
WINTER WONDERLAND.
SANDWICH
I can (lO•h ounces) chlcken
grnv y
I tablespoon chopped parsley
. I tablespoon chopped pi· m1cnto
4 servings sliced cooked turkey
4 English muffins, split and
toasted
t package (10 ounces) frozen
asparagus spears, cooked and
drained
In skillet, combine gravy,
parsley and pimiento. Add
turkey. Heat. To serve, arrange
turkey on muffin halves; top with
hQt asparagus. Serve with re-
maining sauce. Makes 4 open·
face sandwiches.
·~· .. !lllB!r'1$··
" ~' "B!&B~Be!P·
~.7 Days Inc~ Sunday 9·6 :....... ~
............. 121' 1/77 "--......
. ··.TOP SIRLOIN . , ... I HIS. c:~nw,.. •
If you made a new
dry food with everything
a cat craves,
lots of chicken, tuna
.. ~d milk Rroteiii~-~ I :t •I . ., I P,
(.
What would you call it? ;.
' .
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' ' -~Clft OAlt.YfttLOr-Wednnday, 0.0.mber 1. 1177 • FOOD
Some Recipes to Stay Trim 'During Holidays
What does a dieter do
wbea .wrybodf ttlae la
f atteuloi up on boUday
pumpkfn pie? Today,
we've eot some trimmer
alte rnaUvea.
Our tint la a wtnninc
idea Crorn Lillian Smith
of Fostoria, Ohio, who
s h ar es he r Low·Cal
Pumpkin Cookies. Her
tim ely recipe wins her a
copy o f my "Slim
Gou~met Cookbook.''
LOW·CAL P UMPKIN
COOIDE8
(Soft and chewy! )
2 cupsfiour
1 teaspoon ba king
~-
salt
One-half teaspoon
1 and one-half tea•·
poooa pumpkin pie aplce,
or : tbree·quarters teas-
poon cinnamon, one-haJC
teaspoon nutmeg, and
one-quar ter teaspoon
cloves
One-half cup brown sugar
No-cal sweetener to
equal one-half cup sugar
One-half cup diet
margarine
legg ,
1 cup raisins
1 cup unsweetened
<'anned pumpkin (not pie
filling mixture>
Mix well : flour, baking
soda, salt, splce, brown
sugar and sweetene r.
Cut in margarine until
mixture is consistency of
coarse meal. Beat egg
· ' lightly and mix in along
wi t h raisins a n d
pumpkin.
Drop by teaspoonfuls
on ungreased cookie tin.
Bake 12 to 15 minutes at
350 degrees.
Makes 8 dozen l·and·
one-half-inch cookies, 25
calories each.
If pie is off-limits, the
filling doesn't have to be.
Ba~e the filling sans cru~t. and serve It as a
pumpkin custard
BAKED PUMPKIN
CUSTARD
2 cups cooked or
canned uns weetened
pumpkin (not pie filling)
4 eggs
Three.quarters cup
ski m m11k
One·half cup honey
4 tablespoons a ll ·
purpose flour
One-quar ter teas-
poon salt 2~~ extract ·
1 and one-half teas-
poons pumpkin pie spice
Beat l ngredleat&
together in electric mix-
er bowl. or blende~-.
Pour into baking dish.
Place the dish in a larger
bakil'\I dish rilled with
one inch oC boiling water.
Place in a preheated
400-degree oven and
bake one hour, until a
knife inserted in the
center comes out clean.
Chill before serving.
Serves eight, 145 calories
each.
No time to bake? Try
o u r bl end er -easy
refrigerator "custard."
This one is made without
eggs so it's okay for
cboleslerol·watchers:
NO ·BAKE EGGLESS
PUMPKIN 'CUSTARD'
Three-quarters cup
skim milk, divided
1 envelope plain
gelatin
1 cup bolllng waler
1 and one.quarter
cups canned pumpkin
pie nl.llDC
Put ~uart.er cup of
the cold •kim rnllk in
'blender container .
Sprlnkle oft 1elatin. Wait
one minute, until 1of·
tened, tb6n add boilina
water. Cover and btena
on hlsh speed, 1crapln1
down otteft, unW aelaUn
cranulee are tborouibl1
di111olved. Add remalq·
lng mllk and canned pie
filling. Cover and blend
· smooth. Pour h1to 1lx
custard cups and chill
several hours unW aet.
Makes stx servings, 60
calories each.
***
DE·F ATTED PAN
GRAVY -Your rout <and lf•V)') wUl be more
flavorful lf but.eel oe-
caalonally wUb a tables-
poon of wine . Add a
peeled omoo. a stalk of celeey and a carrot to Ute
routJni pan.
1. Before maklD8
sravy. draJa th• pan
Julcet mto • ,aua Jar
m•uuri.DI cup. Bl auto
to acrape up the Oavorl'Ul
,_ _____ ....... water llneeded.)
SH•
Gou,...et
By 8a(bara Gibbons
residue from the roaat-
tn1 pan (add a little bot
2. Wall W1 the fat rltea
to th• 1urtace, tberi meticul~ly 1lpho11 oft
every blt with a squeeze-
bulb buter. Or, if you're
not 1D a hurry. cb.lll the
Jar unW tbe fat harden•
on top; then 1l&Qly lift it
~"· 3. Meuu.re the stock;
add water to make the
amount of gr avy you
want.
4 . Reheat l n a
saucepan.
6. For each cup of
grav y wanted, combine 2
tlblespoooa nour and 4
tablet.POON cold water 1n a amall cup. Stir to
make a pi14te; then stir
the paste into the alm·
merin1 liquid.
6. Sbmner lhe 1ravy
unUl it'• the thJckoess you want. II lt'• too
thick, tbln it with a little
waler.
7. Season to lute or
vary the Clavor with sail,
fepper, herbs, lemon
uice or vlnesar .
Monosodium glutamate
CMSO) wtll ootlceably
intfn•lfY tM flavor of a
weak iravy. but 1ome
people are alleritc to lt.
For a darker, richly
flavored cravy, use a lit·
tle IOy la\lce,
Worcett«'lhln aauce or
brown cravy navortni
baae. Sprin kle wlth
chopped freab paraley
before aervtne.
GRAVY WITHOUT
DRJPPl NGS can be
made from canned, con-
dented chicken brotb or ~t broth. (First. 1klm
the 1lobul• of fat from orrecomttt\Qd)forpart · tomato pute or toDlato
the autface.) Combme a of the water. Before Julee. F\rst way: com-
lO·and·ono·balf·ouoce maJdna the cravy, fat-blne 1 and ~ball to 2
cao, undiluted, wttb ! •klm tM pan Juleea and cup1 fat-skhl>med meat
tableapoons flour. Cook 1lmmer them do..m to a broth wttb a &-ounce can
and 1tJr unUl thJdr; then rich coocentnM. Com· tomatopqte.
aeaaon to tute. Or uae bin• cold liquid 1kim Cook and atlr uotll
homemade fat·lk.lmmed milt with flour. Blend thick and smooth; dilute
b.rotb 1lmm1red from well, tbeD 1tir lnto the wi tb bolUna wate,r to
leftover bones. Or a 11uctpan. Cook and stir sauce eonailwncy and
broth ...,Ututed with over low heat unW tb.ick. aeaaoD to ta1te with
boll I nJ ••t•r and Add 11aaonln11 and Itallap berbt. Or, com-bou.Ul~~uba Or conccm· ber ba to taate. bine 3 cupe tomato Juice trated beefttock. I T O MATO GRAVY wlth fat.4k1Duned meat
.. CRBAM" GRAVY 11 n e e d • n o f l o u r drlpplnp aa4 atrnmer
eaally made aublUtuUn• thlckenera. You can down to sauce cooalsten·
1klm ~ (trelh. canned make lt two waya: t.'ith cy. Then season to tu~.
Pick up your FREE sweepstakes ticket today at all Fazio'•
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1 L_ . .
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Joenn Fisher
Lano••ter .
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Huntington Bnch
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Yvonne Yaala
Oxnard
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JMn Dent
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ROSEMARY SAVAGE
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,. Cream of Mushroom
CAMPBELLS SOUP
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® J!:·H~.2'~0M , ......... 3gc
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® ~~~!~ .. ~~ ................ 6i'109
l)cl i-l>a i r~·
~FARMER JOHN
'lYFAANKS ,
11.b. Padt•
VOL. ON£ 49c ... ,.
on eale this week
... 89c
,.
..
,.
..
Groc·cries
Diet Rite or "I
@ RC COf:.A
·:.~ 4F89c Plus 0
Deposit A
,...,.
t>rc)(IUCC
'
Pure Gotd "I
NAVEL ORANGES
® 19~ Sweet
Juicy
Luncfl Bo• Sin
... .
(;roccrics . ,. GOfd Medal "I
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5 Lb.
Bag
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fr,,zcn 11H,ds
,... Banquet ....
FRIED CHICKEN
® s11e -.
2 Lb.
Box
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-
lkall h ~ lh·a ul_, \ icl~
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,. Fresh Made
GROUND BEEF
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U.SOA. lntPKled F~ ~lb. i/6il-
Dlitlnctlve Gift C8rtltlcataa
from Failo'a
r
1
FOOD Wedn tday. Oec;ember 7, 1en
........ .-. . ' .
DAILY PILOT CJ J
Dow to Use that ·Bumper CrOp of Persimmons
By DOROTHY WENCK
0. .... c:a..ty "-A•¥t-
S om e people buy
persimmons to eat
others buy them JUbt to
look at because of their
beautiful oran&e or red·
orange color.
Non -persimmon .
eaters shun them mostly
because of their soft.
' almost jelly-like texture;
or perhaps they 've en-
countered some under·
ripe persimmons which
can be unpleasantly
puckery.
Persimmon propo
nents enJOY their untque,
delicate flavor. They
have teamed the techni
que or holdmg pcr:.im-
moos until they arc fully
ripe and frtt from lht•
puckery a:.trmgency.
In Orange County
persimmons are an early
wmll'r crop available
through Deccmbt!r. They
grow well here and in a
good year a backyard
tree ('an :;upply enough
persimmons for many
fam1hcs
Wl•stcrn Pl'rs1mmom.
arc .ihoul lht• !'ti.ti' of
tomaltws, but slightly
more oval in shape. Ont.•
variety the Fuyu 1s
sweet <ind non ;istnngcnt
even Whl•n firm. Other
varieties suc h as
Hayc h1ya are very aslrin
gcntuntllsofl ripe
Persimmons art•
picked when they are
mature and an• allowed
to ripen after p1ckmg
They ripen Just as well
off lhe tree a=o on Their
flavor 1s best when they
become soft and cilmo:.t
jelly-l1kc
Once ripe. persim-
mons are very fragile
and perishable They
need to be refngl·ral£•d
and Ust.'<I within J r1•w
days You can k~cp
maturt• pt•r:-.1mmon!'I
from hecoming !>oft r1pt·
by hold1n).! lhl0m 1n tlw
refrigerator until you 're
ready to let tht.'m ripen
You can gul'1;s from
their color that pcrs1m·
mons are a good source
of vitamin A A medium
size one will supply all of
your day's need for this
vitamin. It will also sup-
ply about a fifth of your
vitamin C needs, plus
some iron, along with
about 130 calorics
If you've got a bumper
crop or persimmons, how
can you use them?
Many people enJoy
them as a fresh fruit ,
quartered or eaten with
a spoon from the :.kin.
sliced 10 salad:. or on
cereal : or as a sprcud on
bread II\ ptat'l' of Jelly.
Pureed pN:-.1mmons
make a colorful and
flavorful addition to milk
shakes or a topping for
ice cream.
In bakc•d foods like
breads, cookies. rakes.
and puddinits. you can
use persimmons Just like
applesauce to J!IVC moist
richness and flavor If
yo u can't find a pcrs1m
mon recip<' for' these
foods , use an applesauce
recipe instead
Persimmons can also
be frozen. or preserved
as jam Re sure to use
fully ri~ persimmons
tJtat are free of any as·
tringency when you pre-
serve them.
For persimmon jam,
use a recipe for either
cooked or uncooked
apricot jam and s ub·
stltule persimmon puree
for the apricot pulp. Be
sure to include lhe lemon
juice called for in the
recipe as it brings out the
flavor and produces the
richt proportion of add
to make the Jam g~t
thick. Cooked jam should
be simmered slowly.
rather than boiled, so it
doean 't get bitter.
Persimmons can be
frozen whole simply by
waahing and drying
them and removing stem
ends. Arter they're
troien, store tn plastic
baas and use within
three months. Another
niethod ls to freeze the
puree. preferably with
ome 1u1ar added (l cup
au1ar to f cups purte).
nut wW keep Jonter H
1 u aar b elpa d eter
~ymeacuon.
· "Cl· Ollce I rememlet ••th• Hme dried ,.tllmDIODI ud t-.aai.t
.-weN dtllclou.J It
fealftJle to d'/ PVilm· .-11thome
A· ~e11 penlm~on1
( Q&A J
are ralrly easy to dry. you prefer. roll them in
They do not need any auear before drying to
pretreatment before dry· g iv e a g I a i e d a p ·
ing. Use firm-ripe fruit pearance. Place fruit
as the sot't·ripe are too slices one layer deep on a
difficult to handle. Peel tray and dry in the oven
and slice or quarter the at 140· 1.50 degrees. Leave
persimmons using a ovendoorslig))llyajarto
stainless steel knJte. If a 11 ow moisture lo
>
escape. Slices will dry 10
about 1.2 hours. Wben
done, dried fruit will be
light to medium brown
and tender but not
sticky. After drying,
store fruit i.n plastic baes
in coffee cans or plastlc
containers with t.lgbt rtt.
ting lids. Keep In a cool
place or in the
refrigerator.
Q. J made some
persimmon Jam follow·
iai 1 redpe wbJcb In·
el ud ed su«ar. Jemoa
Julee, and powdered pee.
tlo. Tbe Jam la tblck aoct
a beautllw color but It'•
too .. puckery•• to tat.
Wb at bappen ed't I
tbou&)lt Ute penlmmona were pJeaty rtpe. la there
aa ytbJ.al I can do to
make lt edlble1
A. Elther your perslm·
mona were not ripe
enouch or you heated
them too lont at too hl1b a temperature when you
cooked the Jam. Bltter-neas and Ntrtngency ls
more pronounced when
persimmons are heated
at hi1h heat. The astrln·
gency It caused by
larae amount.a or o com-
pound c•lltd tannin.
<Tea aJ.ao ('()Qtatn.s tan·
nin. ) The tannin disap.
J)eara u the lndt ripens
but we! know ot no way to
eliminate lt. on~e you
have lt fQ cooked Jam.
Q. Woald you help re·
tolve u arpmeat we've bee• havla 1 about
peralmmoaa. S~ould
l ut19fmllk °'Country ltyle
Pllllluy
Biscuits
711 oz. II pq.
" .... httcloul Dall Nut loaf
1soz. II pkg.
tbey M peeled? I HY oo,
because tbey're too bard to aJke witboat 1kla1;
my b bud 1ay1 Yet.
beceue w doeta't JIU
the1lda.
A. Youra ii a question
that has no one "ri8ht"
answer. Wben perslm·
mona are sliced ror
salads and for serving
fresh, many people like
to leave akina on as they
are much easier to han-
dle. II you were 1oln1 to
peel them for slicln1,
Western
1Cebm1
lalluc8
you'd want to use the
allahtly less ripe !tu.it -
about u 1tOft as a ripe
tomato. Som people Uke
to tat the very aofl, jelly·
like fruit rl&ht out of &.he
1kln with a spoon. Maybe
your husband would pre-fer them U\11 way. If you
aro going to make
persimmon puree for uac
ln cooked foodl or for
f reedn1, you would
scoop the pulp out of the
skins and not use the
skins.
Pantry Fillers Super Produce
~c~ Mutnn M1x 1•1 01. 17 pkg. •
Jor 21 pkg ••
Soi.. 25 b•• •
1'••&.. 45 ,., ..
USDA Choice Beet Golden Premium Meats
usoA Al Rcllphs Beef Stealcs •HI Roasts
CHOICE are USDA Choice Exclusively
8fff Chuck-Bladt Cut
Clllck
Staak
per II lb.
Cut tnto Chopa or AoHt
Whole or Rib Half
Pork Loin
per
lb.
,.,1..ic~ ~MsG~W 7 Bone Steak
_ IHIC-·Am1°"1
~.w,~ Round Bone Roast
09
3 lbe. or Larger Ground
Beef
ptr II lb.
WaterAd~d
Com King
Boneless Ham
per
lb.
i: .79 ~S~nPort<Chops
':: 1"
':' 1''
111
':. .69
~p~Ct;p.
~v;;CM
· D F,;., Sole F111et
~ Pdic Oysters
79
'::' 121
~ 1s• . ~ 2"
1001. ,., 1''
First of the Season Fresh Crab Sale!
Fresh Whole Cooked Dungeness
Crab ~.98
~1.29
•
,~ .... 85
MOL 211 btl
l 'iOL 73 ..... . '
Super Del/
D s;;;dti~ •••• 1'' ,.. ..
~ st;;chiddar 10 ec. 121 ....
D WiftM.Cor11 IClllf
Canned Ham 5 lb. 921 CM!
D 11""'9-Cfw!li ·~ MJld Cheddar I* 1" ••
DDohcheeee • OL. 1" ,,-g.
tON. 111 ,...
Health & Be3uty
~ O•lllfUf Chtrry Pi.-~ Aeperg&m .
Super Floral
~~Mistletoe
~~Plantl
$14"" Bakery
Frozen Foods
•/"
... 29 ttcll •
.~ , ..
pql
l••t. 89 IOtl 1
:t .83
~:·.79
~\ .58
::~ .29
, .... 49 ,. .. .
.... 85 ,. ..
< f
••
•
"J2 DAILY PllOT w..:Jn..cs.y, DeC9mber 7. 1977 ClulJ Calendar
•
r
Pl Bt:l'A PHI: Tb• Soutb Cout Alwuae
Club will meet at 10 30 a m • Thursday, Dec. 8, at
the home of Mrs. Will Higgin, Newport Beach. A
luocbeon will follow 1''or rnformation, coatact
Virguua Bollman, Balboa.
O&ANGE COUNTY HISTORICAL
SOCIETY: An Aulbon' Recocnition Dinner wUl
be held at6:30p.m. Thursday, Dec. 8, at tb•San·
ta An• E1b Loctce. The dln.oer also ii 1ponaored
by tbe Patrons ot the Library, cau.tornla State
· University, Fullerton. Keynote speaker fl Vtc:k
Kniibt.
JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB OF LAGUNA
BEACH: The group will meet at 7:30J>.m . Tbura·
day, Dec. 8, at the home of Doreen Smith for a
meeting and giftescbange.
MESA HARBOit CLUB: The group will
meet at 10:30 a .m. Thursday, Dec. 8, at the Mile
Square Golf Course restaurant in Fountain
Valley. A luncheon and Christmas carols by the
Coata Mesa High School Madrigala will follow.
AAtJW: Tbe Laguna Beach branch will bold
a holiday tour of homes from 2 to 5 p .m. Thurs·
day, Dec. 8, in Lelaure World fot the benenfit of
the fellowship fund. For information or tickets,
call Blanche Garrison. 837·91'0, or Roberta
Thayer, 830-5373.
MENTAL BBALTK ASSOCIA"!?n'1~c Lou Stoetzer will present a worbbop ln Tr 111d
Skills in Co-Therapy at 9: 30 a.m. to noon. Frtday.
Dec. 9, at Republlc Federal SIVinp and Loan,
Santa Ana. ReservaUons may be made by call-
ing MHA,547·7559.
THERAPEUTIC RECREATION: The City
or Costa Mesa will conduct a monthly dance for
developmentally disabled teens and adults of
Costa Mesa from 7 lo 9 p.m . Friday, Dec. 9, at the
Downtown Community Center. For information,
call 556-5300.
NEWPORT BEACH. HADASSAH·
CHAPTER: The group wllJ present a Night 1n·
Gay Paris at 7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, at the
home of Lillian Kamph, Balboa. There will be
music, buffet, entertainment and an auction.
BETA SIGMA PW: The Orange Cout Coun·
ell will meet at9:30 a.m., Saturday, Dec. 10, for
an executive board meeting at Glendale Federal
Savings and Loan, Fashion Island. The group
also will meet for a lu.ocbeon at 12:30 p.m. Satur·
day, Dec.17. Gills will be exchanged.
UCI MEDICAL CENTER: More than 700
former patients of the neonatal Intensive care
unit and their families have beeo invited to the
anoual Christmas reunion from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 10, in the cafeteria. For informa·
lion, call 634·5285.
ERA ORANGE COUNTY: A Saturday, Dec.
10, deadline is set for reservations for the ERA
Holiday Happening to be held from 7 to 11 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 15, at the Linda Isle home of Molly
and Leon Lyon. Tickets are $50 per persoo for the
fund·raiser for ratification. Call ERA !or res·
ervations,639-8807.
ALPHA CIU OMEGA: The alumnae in the
Orange Coast region wlll bold a Christmas
luncheon at noon, Saturday, Dec. 10, at the
Reuben E. Lee Restaurant in Newport Beach.
Social hour begins at ll:30 a .m. For resena·
tions, call Mrs. Allen Hammood oC Newport
Beach.
FRIE~ OF OASIS: The group will hold a
Christmas dinner at 7 p.m. Saturday Dec. 10, at
Lincoln Middle School in Corona del Mar. For in-
form a lion, call 759·9471.
DELTA GAMMA ALUMS: Tbe Santa Ana
Newport Harbor executive board will bold a
Christmas cocktail party from 6 to 8 p.m. Satur·
day, Dec. 10, al the home of Mr. and ~rs.
William Scholes, Costa Meaa. For reaervations.
call Mrs. Michael Cate, 557 ·5713.
sotJTH.CO.AST JVNIOll WOMEN'S CWB:
The group will bold a proereutve dlnaer beein·
niog at6:30 p.m. SaturdJlY, Dec.10, attbebom•
ef Mr. and Mrs. Alan Kaufman. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Munck, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Davis, and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Kakowski.
JUNIOR EDELL CLUB OP IBVINE: Mem·
bers, families and friends will travel to St.
Teresa'• Orpltanage and the Esquela de
Guadalupe School in Ensenad~ Mexico, with
i-.ore than 170 Chrslstmu presents donated by
Irvine residents. The party will leave the mom·
mg of Saturday, Dec.10.
KAPPA ALPHA THETA ALUMNAE: The
El Camino Real club will bold at Cbrbtmas par-
ty at8p.m. Saturday, Dec.10, att!KsbomeofMr.
and Mrs. DooaldMartin, El Toro.
PROVIDENCE SPEECH. AND REARING
CENTER: The Harbor Area Auxiliary will hold
a champagne auction brunch from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11. Cost is $20 single, $35 per
couple. The public ls invited. Auction will Include
·a·car, mo-ped, tlckets to San Francllco, sailboats
.and monftems. For lnformatloa, call~.
838-5689.
OPPICEBS' WIVB8 LEAGVB: Tbe ll'O\IJ>
..Ul hold a Cbrlltmu Ball SUnday, Deo. U.
Social hour ta at 4 p.m. wltb dinner at 8 p.m. at
the Elim Club in Santa Ana. For reservationl call
Parade Party .
From left, Carole Pickup, G4l1en Colwell, Vicki Warmington and
Peggy Duerr prepare for a Chrlstmaa boat parade party given by
the Mariner's Auxiliary of the Florence Crlttenton Services of
Orange County on Sunday. Dec. 18, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Warmington. Proceeds go to the Crlttenton services. .
Synchronized
The Synchro Seas will present a water ballet at
3 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, and 3 p.m. Sunday,
Dec. 11, al the Marina Inn. The program u free
apd open to the public.
Mrs. Victor Coppard, Mrs. Edwin Loni, Mrs.
Wal.lace Sharp. •
OPEBA LEAGUE OJ' LAGUNA B&lCB.: A
Chrtatmaa party will be held at 5:30 p.m. Sun·
day, Dec. 11 at the home of Mn. Paul
· Outerbridge, Emerald Bay. There wlll be a buf.
fet and carob. For reservations, call Wilma o 'Keefe, 493-6319, before Dee. 8.
BETA 81GllA PW: The Newport Barbor·
Area Council will 8ive a Christmas party at s
p.m. Monday, Dec.12, at Glendale Federal Sav·
ings, Newport Beaell.
l'adNDS OP BIG SlftiWJ: The group will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Moodaln~ 12, at the bomo of the cbalrman ln Santa
LAGUNA PBILBAll•ONJC COIOUM'EE:
The aonua1 ainstma party will be held at 11
a.m. Monday, Dec:. 12, at the bome of Mn. M.
Thomas Rlsaer Jr.,.Laeuna Niguel. Luncheon ls
at noon. There will be a musical Pro&nm and
giltexcbanee. .
TUESDAY CLVB OF NEWPORT
HARBOR: The group will bold a Christmas
Candleli&bt Tea from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Dec.
13, at the home of Mrs. Robert Wiese, Corana de.l
Mar.
SADDLEBACK COMMUNITIES
CHRISTIAN WOMEN~ CWB: Tbe group will
hold a lashion luncbeon at noon Tuesday, Dec.13,
at the El Adobe Restaurant, San Juan
Capiatrano. For reservationl, call 831·1989 or
492·6542.
ORANGE COUNTY PHILHARMONIC
SOCIETY: Tbe Spy&lus Hill committee wUl
meet for a Chriatmu lunebeoo Tuesday, Dec. 13,
at the San Gabriel Room of the South Coast
Plaza. Cocktalla are at 11 a.m. with luncheon al
ndbn. For reservations, call Mrs. John T. Forte,
644-2538.
KAPPA ALPHA TJQrl'A nJNJOa ALUM·
NAE:· 'lbe group will bold a Chrtstmu potluck
dinner and Cll'IWDeat ezebange on Dec. 13 In IniDe. l'or resenatlou call Sandy Zook,
646-3158« meboo.
SONG wanD8 Ot11LD: The groop will
hold a Showcase at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 13, at
the China Gate Restaurant. Stanton. A meeting wUJ be held before tho 1bowcaae.
WOMAN'S CLUB 01' HUNTINGTON'
BEACH: The lfOUP will bold a Cbriltmas
luncheon and baked 1ooda aaJe at noon. Tuelday,
Dec. 13,' at the club boute. For reservaUom, call
Mrs. Elmer Addiloa., AS-TllB.
RANCHO VIEJO WOILVMJ CLUB: The
group will ~at 10 a .m. Tu.day, Dec. 13, in
the ~ room of People'• Federal Sav-
inp. 8'ddleb8ct V.U., Plaza. El Toro.
AllDICAN PWl.BGAL ASSOCIATION:
The Oranie County. cbaoter will have a
Cbristmu 1et·~ at 7 ~.m. Tuelday, Dec.
13. at the Cciloay kltcbea. Cotta MeaL For in-
formation, callADDJlcCllllkey, 751..a&H.
NEWPOST llBACB CB.BISTIAN'
WOMEN'S CWB: Tbe poap will bold a
luncheon at 11:45 p.m. Wedmlday, nee. 14, at
the Atrporter Inn Hotel. For !nformatlon, r-.
enatlom an4 AunerJ' aentce, call 8'13-eMO or 673-1811. •
•Oi'llBU 01' TWINS CLUB: The Oranle Cout group will meet for a 1 p.m. aodal and 8
p.m. din.Der Wedwclq, Dec. U, at the Grand
Bot.l ln Anabldm.
For Nltl'Yatlcas and bifonnatlon. call Mn. Boser Drue. 981-6321.
Cruise of Lights
From ten, Mrs. I. R. Wilhelmsen, Tom Kasabali and Mrs. Carl
Rolson prepare for the Cruise of Llgbts sponsored by the Hunt-
ington Harbor Philharmonic Committee. The boat parade will be
held at 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 10 and 11. The public is
invited to cruise from 6 to 9 p.m. nlghUy from Dec. 12 through
Dec. 22. Price is $3 for adults, $1 for children. For information, call 846-9216.
Club Calendar nau each
Wed~tday in the Daily
Pilot and contains notice•
of timMn'• and an-vice
clMb mtttfnga 01ld events
for Uw followinQ week -
Thurlday through Wednes-
day. Smid notice• to Club
Calendar, Daily Pilot, P .O.
Boz 1561>, Costa MtlO, CA
92838. Be sure to tnclt.MU
your name and phone
number. Notice& muat be
in our hantU uoo weeka m
advance.
To reqtU!at a picture.
write or call the Feature•
Department, 642-432J. Pic·
turea an limited to fund·
raisers OJ)e'ft to _&he public.
SOUTH OOAST
.~CJOBSCO-OP "'''":r.?ii:'~*':,=::1 rl•U~tnt 111 ti" fll,,..•TV 114w•::z· "" ••u·hpt•
C*lll,'11') 957.0ZSZ
WESTQH FUL\ 8AU10A ISl»I>
~ 8eodl 'J.(R MaMe lwe.
54Ml21 ~ICI04
.J
t
l
Santa With
A Real Beard
The real 8anta's
at Huntington Center
daily to "'-it with
the kiddies. Photos available It ~u
wish ·while you wait •
s2.60. Free holiday
puppet shows every
Thurs thru Sun thru
Dec. 18. Also Dec. 19-20-21
Beach Bl'vd. & Edinger
DoSomethi~
Dfferent for~
Holidays I
Toke o CO\ltse at JRP
John
Robert
Powers
The Schools for Your
P~raonal~
ORANGE
3 Town & Country
(714) 547-8228
..
• Featurigg _________ w.d_ ..... d.•y •• o.o.m_l!l.
1111
1 ... ,.m ____ OAl ... LY·Pl·LO•T•~•d-:'
Dolls of al~ kinds at the Assistance League Doll Tea.
Nora Brehob with three dolls that she M Inn le Luthiger with Western dolt.
Girl Scout Winnie Poster. 9, looks over the do/~.
Bride and groom doll.
A Tea
For Dolls
The annual Christmas Doll Tea was
held last week by the Assistance League .of
Laguna Beach. The League has been sup·
plying hundreds of dolls, hand-knitted caps
and toys for the Hopi and Navajo Indian
reservation children for several years.
The public attended the tea and viewed
the dolls collected by members. Girl
Scouts, Brownies and other organizations
which scrubbed, painted, dressed and
packaged the dolls in time for Christmas
delivery.
~ I
made. ~;.;..------------------------------------------------------~------..
By SY1>NEY OMARR
THURSDA V, DEC. 8
ARIES (March 21-April
19): What had been held
down by r e d Lap e,
blocked by escrow is due-
to be released. Your own
vitality, Ideas, concepts
bring greater recogni-
tion. Another Aries, the
number 9 and a Libra are
all part of your personal'
sce_narlo. TAURUS (April 20·
May 20(: Make new
starts, welcome fresh
contacts, open your heart
to love. Ques tion ot
marital status could be
on agenda. Do plenty or
listening, observing.
GEI'IJNI (May 21-June
20): Follow through on
hunch. Share knowledge
because now you learn
by leaching. Aquarius,
Horoscope
Cancer and Capricorn
persons could be in -
volved.
CANCER (June 21·
July 22): You create, im-
print style, become ure
or party and bring new
energy into project that
was "dying on its feet."
Social life accelerates -
concern about diet Is
temporary.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22):
Be aware oC Cine print -
read between lines. IC pa-
tient and thorough, you
win. Aquarius, Taurus
and Scorpio peraons
figure 1n picture. Accent on home, property, deal-
ing with parent or older
authority figure.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept.
22): Plenty or activity In-
dicated, shopping lists,
visits, are all on your
personal sc hedule.
Gemini, Sagittarius and
another Virgo figure in
scenario. Get thoughts,
ideas on paper.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.
22 ): Emphasis on what
you collect, pay, con·
serve, waste, obtain and
give away. Domestic ad-
justment, budg et.
special arrangement
with family member -.
these arespotllghted.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·
Nov. 21): Lunar cycle is
such tllat you lake In·
ltlative, make personal
appearances and de·
moostra~ faith in your ow n judgment. Perceive
potential. Accent quail·
ty. Define terms.
speclfications.
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov.
22·Dec. 21 >: some-
meanings are blurred -
statements are ''bathed"
in obscurity. Keep pro-
mlae lo one confined lo
·Mom, Soµny's .l\'.J~sy
home or hospital. Aura D E A R A N N mlcropbone1 into the Mary's boyfriend.
or mystery prevails. LANDERS: Here's races of relatives on 'tom,telephonedanhour
Sharp. clear meanings something that could their way into churches a e o. Her fat be r
seem to have Clown the have been added to your at funerals, women wait· answered and told the
coop . answer to the mother-in· Ing at mine sites for word young man that Mary
CAPRICORN (Dec. law whowanted to know or husbands who are was in the bathtub. He
22-Jan. 19): Accent on how totellherson'awire trapped,cbildrenoutalde asked Tom to call later.
friends with .unusual to clean up her house. of burning homes. Mary claims It was
soals, des.ires. Money la Take n from someone Ii( pareota of accident •le-vulgar, crude and gross
in picture. Eccentric ac-who knows. U have two Aaa tim1. Most of these peo. to bave mentlooed the
lions could be costly. slaters-io·law in the • pie are so stunned lbeY, bathtub. Now she says
Know itandprotectyour aameboat.) Lander• go along with the media sbe·can'Ua~bim. Your
interests. DEAR MOM: instead of saylne, "you opinion will be the last
AQUARIUS <Jan . Som1bouseisamess, have a lot of nerve to word.-ARBJTRATOR
20·Feb. 18): You make is lt? Did 10Q foreet your the San Francisco Ex· bother me at a time like DEAR AllBt It llaouJd
inroads toward eoal. son Uvesbere,tooT a mlner and feel better th ls." What ·s your ~me u DO nrprtae to
Prestige ls on upswillf. Tboae clothes tying on after comparJltJ my opinion,Ann-B.R. · Mar1'1 bo~d "•i
Your ideas. sue1esUona the noor are bll, and tlle emotional strugales with DEA& B. a.: Same as she bathes. _Jl!tfeftr, l
paydividends.Accentoo smell ln the bau.room others.Theproblemsare y ouu. Companion a1ree wl&b 7oar
career, reaponalblUty, comes from wet towels oft.en intensely personal sboald take precedence daagbt.erthatltlsaotes·
new start. Creative be threw ln a corner. but those who write to over 1ensatlonaU1m. sential to give everyone
juices flow. They were left there un-you do so or their own Tbanlta for polntlnc lt ou$ wbo pboaes a detailed
PISCES (Feb . 19· W J. came home from volition and no names 1odrama&kally. . . account u to wby the
March 20): Avold dlreet work. are u1ed. DEAR ANN: Our 14· person wanted c .. aot
confrontation. Take Why should "Sonny"· Even worse than year-old daughtor ts cometoOtepboae.Bat-
long-range view. Follow have to pick up b11 ow1. m:wspapers 11 TV -the furioua with her father. Mary shoald not be so
through on hunch. Pay thln1s?Tbeonlythlnghe way they shove Isshejustifled? banlcmberol'dad. he~~ lM« fff~P-b int~~lnfl*~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Someone behind scenes up 11 a can o beer .~-------------------------.......
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ls ''pul~ga~p.'' That's tbe way you I tF DEC. 8 IS YOUR rai.Jed blm. fRANCI~-ORR
HUNDREDS Of
CHAIRS TO OfOOS~
FROM FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
• Wall-Recliners~ ~Kl•Mt ()Illy .-ltOm lllt ... 11
BIRTHDAY )'OU bave YourhO'mels~potless.
drive, power, amblUoo Why shou.ldn'tlt be? You
Capri corn, Cancer live by )'OW'lelf, don't
persons play Important work, anCI have nothing roles in your li!e. You to do but lnspecl the
aredueto•alnwlderre· bom .. Oft.be llrla who f'ne ~a+·1orery l"rvrv'\~ del mar co•nltion nest year -. married .. your boys." I Sli ,l \.A.A \.A la · Auaust could be your l'm~tbla-HATE . .__ __________________ ~~~-----:
most alplftcant monta TO E • TOO ,
ot1978. D A& BATE TO:
------------. Tll••lr• tor &lae well· worded blut. She de·
IE
CONCERNED
PRMNT
WILD LAND
FIRES
..nedU.
DEAR ANN: How ref'retbbll to read that
letter from "Ann Fan'' nt"'1al'to U.. vlolaUon ol privacy by tbe press -
the way tbey make public
the most lntlmate details
ol the illneues Of ,ubllc
Jliarea. (In tbat ~acUcular• case it was
.lea. Haa.tBu.mpbtey .)
I n.S ,our column ln
• • I
w.dMeday, Oeciember 7, 1877
Fresh
RKCHOPS
Smok-A·Roma
SLICED BAC
1-lb.
Pkg.
19
!~~~to!~!!'Fre~O~~to~~~~ ~1 89
I:!!!f 1e1!~ ... ~.~~~ .... : ...... ~ 89°
P!!!!!t~~.~.~~~t~~~.~. Al. 59°
Bottle Shop Buys!
Prlc:a ~ffecttve '" Uc.oud Saftiwtyt.
Zee Towels
Tul 'N 590 Ready ,
Roll
Dawn
uq~::g~~~en1 79C ·)=
C0Upon Good For
(1) One 11«. J•
NU-MADE
PEANUTBUnE
1~590
...... for
f1)0M .... llze PAR FABRIC SOmtlER
a::-89°
VELKAY
SHORTENING .. . 89° 1'1111 ~ =· ~
,_APPLES
· Red or Golden Oellclous.
Fancy
ex~:sh,1ngton staote 0 .
. '
Large S8lftt'-of
• . THUNDERBIRDS
• LTD's • LTD. ll's
• GRANADAS
•FAIRMONTS ~-MUST A~_GS
# • • •
• FIEST A's • PINTO$.
•
. CUSTOM .cOINER
VAN CotlYERSIOllS
• HOUD~ Y • MESA SPECl~LTIES
• RO_LL-A-LONG • SIERRA • SUNDIAL
~COURIER CONVERSIONS~
• FANTASTIC MINI TRUCK
• MARBORO 4-SEA TEI
• SOUTH BAY 4-WHEEL DRIVE
#It\ . o1· l:arge · election ·
I .
. lEASlllGrt ·
.NEW 177
FORD PINTO
lDOOISIDAH
. .
53399.
51680
175 FORD
MAVIYlfCIC 2 Dl.
·~.-~---.-......~ ·"'~· fOOI • ._~ ...... _....UC. 1638Hl0..
52199
53299
TRUCKS
•· RANCHEROS
• BRONCOS 4x4·
• F-1 00 • -F-250
• F· I 50 • F-350
'76 FORD
GRANADA 2 oa.
• cyl -,,_, .-. ....... ----Clfl _.,,,..Uc. l~INLF.
THEODORE ROBINS LiASE COMPANY
LEASES AL&; MAKE
CARS anti IRUCKS
A.T
COMPETITIVE BIES
53699
·zs
D f;.100
lnUStDIJllC:IUP
QwooiM ....................... --.... .........,_ .................... llO() ovw.,.......
• :ioav .. ~~~-~llCIO o11Go14rw, eaf1611tt a11111.,._. -. -a--.. lire c.,rl«-111Joe.oul. llWn-'Ow "*1111-orttftt. flMdlint ,...., ................. __ aiollrlf ,_, --.. ""'-· ..... A32QM-• •o:MX>
s2195
•
by Briel Anctersoa BOOMER
I
"What happened?!? My bodyguard only
7 guarded his own body!''
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
~.,.
I IT'6 IMP06&18LE. 10 E~ ~~IZE WHAT1Hl6 51tJFFIS!
CASEY
•• MOON MULLINS
MISS PEACH
by Tom Batluk
JU6T ~ I UICE. "'
r-OREIGt-! FOOO !
by Ferd and Tom Johnson ................ -
•
DOOLEY'S WORLD
o0 JUST 'THl~K !
EACH ~E OF I "JHESE SNc#Jft.AKES o IS DIFFERENT! j . . ~1
o o;
t
~R.SMOCK
PC..E!ASe c:>ON'T
SQUe!!!Z8 -r'HE! CHAllirM.AN,
MR. W.-ilPPC..8 !
by~n
PEANUTS
MY, "T'Ml5
MAS NSN
A C..CN~ WIHJK, HASN''T" 1-r,
STAN&..t!Y .,
TODAY'S CIDDIDID PVllLI
-I
w.dneeday. 0.0.mber 7, 1877 DAIL y PILOT' es
................... ~--
._. •• I e •I. I I I JCIOI.....,,
~._"iloNI .... . "'-ii ............. JOID.»itt
CLASSIFIED
I
. INDEX
To Place Yeur Ad, Call
642·5678
......... Hoa .. Forw. ....................... •••······••····•······· 1--------1cG-. ....... r"9!• IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLU
Deluxe un1t•. golf course
view. 2 Bedrms t•11rh.
private, quiet, lurgt•
garagt'S. Perlect rNire·
ment home a.ad income
Call 540-115 1
II~ CANYON
OHN Hod"
Elegant f br. country club estate done
in formal. antiqued d~ot. Imported
Halian lilo. Rirepit. PJanlaUon shut·
ters & much, much morel Owner's
moved, must sell. orrers wanted.
'320,000. Open 1-5, Wed., FrJ., Sat. &
Sun. Call Gay or Joyce for entry from
guard & appt. 759·1511 ••• £~HERITAGE
. •• REALTORS HOUSES JOI SALE ~....,..,Hoffee~ MIWON DOLLAR ~~·· 1
11'! ·~~~~~~~~~ ... lll'!t.ulORHOOD ""''"°! ~!:.":.vr• . l~~ All real estate advertised 1_ r .n
c:.,t1111..o 11 ............... 1011 ln this newspaper is 5Ub· -•ue DUPLEX Golf course townhome. located in ~ ... :' .... , .:: · ... ~~ Ject to &be Federal Fair r-1U,.... Newport's famous Big Canyon. Blg ~ .. ~ ::: :· :· ·· · :~ ~~~i~lt~cft 1fi~,~~~~ ~~~~2 "'b:LJ!' ~~:~! Canyon Country Ctub. Beautifully de· ttwru¥ ... 7:.•:.1.;:·::::: · := odvertlse "aoy pre-lo great Coi.ta Mesa corated 3 br, 3 ba with an array of 1=.11o..-11.::·:::· .: · ::: ference. limitation, or nei&hborhood. Each unit custom features, including 2 gated
i..-•Hlll• .......... •·t.11 discrimination based on has IL's own private private patios. Owner moving, must =e::;:• ... ::· :·: ..... : :~ race, color, religion, sex, yard. aaraee. butll·in sell. orrered at $169,500. with terms. ~f.:!!:::" ·: ·.:". := or national origin, or an electric kitchen, & S....Jv1nC1~lrano . ltml Intention lo make any economical natural gas Cali Gay or Joyce at 759·1511 ~.:::,, . · .... · ::= such preference, limila· heal. Very easy to rent. * • * !><Ml\~ '""" lion, or discrimination." l'Ull price $89,900. CALL WOODIRIDGE CHARMER ~::!~':i~,h•I• .: :~~ 556-26fi0. IUL £STAT£ Th.is ~ewspaper will not .SELECT CooJ, lush & cozy professionally de·
Atr•11:•rats••• . knowingly accept any PR PERT E corated atrium townhome ready for
Aoa,,a>111taforS•I• :~ advertising for real 0 I 5 immediate occupancy. 3 br, 2 ba. ::'''""~~.~. •J'" estate which is in viola--fireplace, vaulted ceJ'l1'ngs •-priced for ~~"f:~·~,·~Ysit' · · :t~ lionoflhe!aw. (¥ =:i~~1,:;~~1>' •• .)flll YA NO DOWN a smart buyer. Owner moved & wants
OvPI<:••• 1:n11•11a1... l~ .-...tors• ofrers. $99,500. CaH Gay or Joyce at
:: 1~,';;!:~;~4 • · = ••••••••••••• ••• • •• ••• • or Assume lol!n. Supt•r 759· 1511. ~~tf;"""•~ ~""' G11Mo Ill I 002 udult occupied Condo. * * * M~1.11 ..... ,,,, ,.,~. jf.; ••••••••••••••••••••••• Low dowu FHA finunt: 210 ... ewport Ct•ter Dr., .... ,.. lcL ~WM11.o-r1 11 .. 011 itfi TWO 4 ONE in . 9 500. " .. " " o~f.rl~,..~·~...... . ~~'. SfZ,000 a_..,,rl• ..... ;a;. ~.-. -. rw-::.--75'· 1515 75'·0017 Out ol !>(ak l'roP''" ' ·-
R111<1\n .. , ... c...... rioo Eastside bargain just .......... 4471 -· 546· ~-=-..~..__..........._..~ t:: !':::!:: ~~·"'::4'": .. 1\Pl $92,000! Just reduced .uc ,_.,
1
t .. :.wo $5500 for fast sale! 2 _ G...,... 1oq2 Gn1ral 1002
OOALS Bdrm home PLUS l C OSE'l'O l"' ... CH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 ... , .. •··r-l•hfll J100 bdrm apt-on one Jot. Jn-L SA Hoo.on l..'nfw• .. •Md J..1ll
"-... •l\or tnl .•• •• J~ come $62Slmo. Take ad-DCJPLEX =::: t~;". ·. . ~ vantaae oC this 2 for I 2 Yrs o'd, clean, 3 •. 1 en rv..m-->'llr11 . J.lOl bar1aln today. Call -• "' r:;..wi::1t:;."1 : •• ·: ..... ~ 646-7171 now. Cpt'g. drapes. bltni.. ·I
~...,. t;n1 • >ooo 0t1•1 '" .,,. ,, P~• '"'It• ·1 c~ gar, etc. ~r::.~<:·: ... :-. .: ~[ta tt~lill1lll J.c:::·::m
1f01tf•,Mot11. •• • '1•0 ~ -•-••-••-67r6670 C-1 ll<o!rw• .......... . 0.41 ----~---bumn,..r )t.f'nhl•. ,4;'00 \'.r-'\l~ t(tM•I• • t.~
RflA•t' l'7M.,t. 4)11 (,,.,,,.f',. for Mcnt • 4~J om-. Rt..t.t ._,, lfUf..i~•Hf'f\t"I 41.)11 l""""ltl•I ll•nl•I l'.<XI ~~:.,i: "'iut(~ !t:!
)luc thntab '"'°
BUSINESS, INVEST·
MENT, FINANCE
MESA VEllDE 4 H + ,OOL
4 ... $142.000 $55,100
Stunning 4 bdrm, 3 bath Bike to beach from lhtll
Meaa Verde pool horoe! beautitul garden home.
TruJy an outstanding en· Best buy in Huntington
tertalnment home. Huge Beach. $2300 down or as·
living & family rooms. 2 sumc $240 monthly pay
Frplc'H. Spacious ments. Hurry! Coll kitchen & family room 963-6767 ~:i~:~ai'~~! ...... '.= overlook giant sparkling Oi'fN 1•19• 1111v111u&"'"'' ~::l=~~.:;1:.::::: •• := pool! Executive living at[~ ll~l'li~ll t::~.':::-J:::.:.::· .. :· .::ze a realistic price! See It . :' ; ai0t1~ .... Tll'• • !N.ll today. Call 646-7171 to . > ___ ..:._ =)·~·
AMMOUNCEMEN.TS, P~~·~~.,, \,. ,, .. , '"., . .. -
PllSOHAlS & [. • • I OCEAHFllOHT LOST & FOUND ll~!Htll By owner. duplex, 2 Br l A..._"'',,_" . . .. ~sro ;1j Ba en unit. W Nwpt f.:~.';~~j., t.~ .:.... ---548·7219. 559·4221
I.au, t Wfld ........ , • :Olo.O ,...,_,,. . ... ~
lio>rUIQvbo ••• ~ T•••ti . • }l:A/
SE.RVIClS
EMPlOYMENT &
PIErAUTION """'°"" ltl<trwtloft . f,~t, W.::'n~: tJ ·,,·>
MEnHAHOISE
~COATS & WALLACE
'::::rP REAL ESTATE , INC.
A lOCAUV OWNED COMPANY SC RVIHG
fHl SOU IH COAST AREA Sl~Cl l9b3
MESA YtaDE'S FIMES r and lowest
priced 4 bdrm & family room home at
only $77,900, but make offer anyway.
Highly upgraded, new roof, carpets,
drapes & painl. Call aow 546-4141
COUNflY CWI $65,000 -The owner
has bought another home & is willing
to let you benefit on this well placed
condo. Shop around then call us. We
think you'll agree that this is the
finest value around. $65,000. Cell
640·6161
Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine
Huntington Beac h·Newporr Beach
G1Mral f 002 G,_ref I 002 ........•.....•....... , ··•·•••······•········•
MOUNT AIM VllW JRIOMT ROW
MEW HOUSE VllW
I .t. •G .t.fN Spacious 3 bdrm, 3 bath
""' A with step down hv rm & Lu'<urlous 3100 ~q rt. FORMAL dining room
H4YI YOU SUH SIAVllW1
BeauUtut homes by Broadmoor In a
beautiful scUlng overlooking Newport
Beach and Unique bas several ex·
cellent listings on them. A variety or
floor plans, all with views and all are
Jt>caled on quJet cul·de·sacs with easy
access lo communitf pool, jacuzzi and
tennls. Priced from U37 ,000.
In case you didn't know, Seavlew is a
new Irvine Village community with a
sligtftly Cape Cod flavor or cob·
blestones, paned windows and
tarnished brass.
U ~ ICJU I: ti()Ml:S
REALTORS". 675·6000
2443 Ea51 Coast H19hwav. Corona del Mar
also 1n Mesa Verde, at 546 · 5990
G........ 1002 IG•Mrol I 002
········-·············· •·······•···········•··
MESA VERDE ELEGANCE
Just listed, a lovely single story home
with 3 bdrms .. family rm. & formal dinin~rm. There arc many amenities
including a very efficient security
system. A large frplc. & wet bar lend
to the coziness of the home. There is
easy access Lo the 3 car garage &
great storage space. The landscaping
is outstanding & is profess.
maintained. Realistically priced at
$129,500.
759·08 I ~
flEHIMSULA ,OfNT
4 Bdrm .. l ba. home. All amenities.
Lovely area. few steps to beach.
Sl&J,500
UDO ISLI
Nl?wty rt!modeJed 4· bdrm .• den. 4
baths. l1vmg rm. w/cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. sulte. S224.950
.. G CANYON
4 BR. fom. rrp .. 3 baths Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra tar~~ lot. S32S.OOO
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Jilt Hny••d•· Urtv1• NB 67) 6161
I .
I
MOUNTAIN HIDIOUf $64.tOO I
Get away from it all & still be:
highway close to civlllzatlon. sf
bedroom, 1 'h bath, brick fireplace,:
rormal dining room. Clean air. Single:
garage detached. Some rurnishlngs ~
flock of chickens go with this:
Silverado retreat. ' .
CHllSl'MAS IONUS $107,000:
Spend your Christmas in lhis loveJy Z:
s tory. 4 bedroom. 2:1." bath in beautiful
Anaheim Hills. Wet bar, auto energy
time saver, air purifier fol\
asthmatics. Many extras. Decorate t~
your heart's content. Separate dinint
room, !aree family room.
IY fHI SEA 167,tOO
Walking distance to beach, communi-
ty pool, 3 bedroom, 1112 bath, condo.
Lender will finance to investors. • ·,
I IMDOOI SUMStilME SH. top
Good news! Light up your Hfe with t~
indoor sunshine of this beautiful 3
bedroom, Pl• bath cornered lot home.
Many amenities. Bring your wife &
smell the freshly baked bread in th.ls
sunny kiLchen.
I IOH Mopolle St.
Foat .... y .,,.,
fU·Hll
GeMr.. t OOZ f ••MrClll t 001 . ............................................ .
DEHF1RD'S IEST! SI 14,500
Best buy & picture perfect! Highly U.P·
graded plan 5. 4BR, FR, DR & sitting
r m in mstr sulte. Really sharp .&
tastefully decorated. Huge brick patio
w/planters. Ilh years new.
WIS&.aY ... rArLOI co .. IEALTOIS
21 II Su J~• HW1aNd
NlWPOIT CEHJH, H.1. 64iMflO
ChMrel t002 GeMt'Cll 1002 ····················-·· ...................•...
HUMTIN&TOM
IEACH
NEARllACH
$107,000
Pour 1.igaotl~rooms.
Including hule muter swte. This lat-ge 1cnled
home ls desl1ned ror a
farndy that enjoys belnt
toi:ether. Just.one mile to
sandy beach. Owner may
help finiAnce. Coll for ap·
polntmcnt.. 962·7788.
CAPICOO
$Sl.GOO/$Z, I SO
TOTALOOWM
Wlndtnf roadway to
$00rlnl J story ~aU· Pri~•te. trounds protect
secluded enil-y to Javbh
living rna Gourmet
kitchen overlooks sun-
shine court.yard! Wlnd·
lng slalrw~y leads to
aweeping maat.er
bedroom plus child's
retreat! Hurry. seller Is
anxious. 847-f!OlO
home on h1lls1de with Btll quality w3 11paper
!>pect3cular view or snow thruout. custom fix
capped Saddh•back tures. mirrored
Mountains. Luxuriously wnrdrobes. Wel har,
:iwolntl.'d with premium short w;illc toocelln, pool,
fcntures too numerous to jacuizi & 2 tennis courts.
llsl. Priced under OWQet leavlrig area.
buJlders curreat price MUS'l'SELL! 646-7711 lor next unit at SI62.SOO.
F'or appointment to ln·
aped. call 962·7788. e Walker & lee
• K€Y G-""'91 I 002 ••MNI · I 002 c I h •••• ••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••-••••• P.EAL TOll\S
"'1N llJ 9 •II S 'IJN IOtlJ A/l(f •
l•lfilll
COl"OM .. Mar
Spacious Duplex·S
bednns. 3 baths. patio,
fpJc; 2 bednns, 2 baths,
sundeck, /pie. S176,000.
6'4·7270 ~ Walker 1; h!e
Real Estate
IUDFORD BACI( BA y fNVISTOtt"S
TOWHHOMES 2021 I SftlCJAL VA-f1JA BUYERS 41DRMIAIGAJM 3 br. l'A ba, dbl gar S47.SOO
UDUCED $58,500 ~ew Ave. Gua~ aat~ay pro·1-------·
• KfY ------· So sharp Just move rl&hl • • • in.cant &open dally for ted& lavish arounds with IALIOA rEMIH. BY OWNER ln. 4 Queen alze bdrms. VACANT! your Inspection. It's a 3 pool. Secluded entry to S Year$ )'OUftl, duplex, 3
,. __ ..__ Gourmet kitchen . 4 br. 11,~ ba, dbl gar. bdrmhomew/hardwood exect1Uve llv rm . up&3down;oceanslde ~tvm Be uUfuJ ed I Ml~ noon. on a 60'xl30' lot. Sunshine gourmet of blvd. Pride of 5000 ft wt~ i::th Pc'8 ••• Ofreredatl?lSOO Sub kllcheo overlooks ownership property; • 'Cl 00
g 141· a SUPERlSTORY mJlyourtenm.' · -private courtyard. 1ood rental hlstor)'. RCIRCh !state ng:J~,}.~~ '"'' 'O"' ,,.,., • 2 br. l ba, dbl gar. $53,950 FULi.Ei RIAt.TY Sweeping master bdrm 1189.000 Including land!
Stable, separate maid or [ 9. · I CRAWFORD & ASSOC. 546-01I4 & du1d's retrnt. Owner 673-3663 1142.2253 Eves
guest home enclosed 11~·!1·1! 9S74701 is anxious. Submit any 11land for aviary or 1 iJi) -.-... ~-,-.r-.0-1-0-.. -----.....i o«er!lc7-fi010 animal enclosure on ap-, -==-=-=•·~~ ~ ~ vr .. _ O'fl'<ln1••11HUN•o•,..flC'1· F.J!~!1":r::£ii 0:..'Y~:oo ~;.J;~ .. ~~J·~~:4 ~~~~.1--1111 associated
UllOl<•ils Rr11.• ~:
In whole or part. Best buy .ta tho area. Air $88,000 wtth a deep Jot for many ~~~~~~~~W~~~~~~~~~
condlUoner and some projeda. 1002 Ge•rel
l +..]' 'W 9 .>I•.,. .. • • t
745E.,tralta
Hth Dr, ........
ShQwn by app\ only lo
qualified bllyen. (714)
521-3430 Courtesy t.9 bk rs, ·------MAIV&OUS
MONACO cau ua about tbls Im· rnaculat.e one Qwner. 2
bedroom, convertible dea home in Harbor
Vhw H ome.. The owner'• rn.etJculous care
to every maintenance
need wUl Impress yo4.
And the highly com·
peUtJvc price ol $13C,SOO. tee will please yout
pockttbook.
c.-644-721 t
other nice xtra's. Calling ~ 400llr .. FOR All ••••·~··••••••-•••••• •••••••••••••••••• .. _.• us Is a must -The dog
bites! A quick eacow and c.M.'...if!i llllMUS
this year's beat ..?A> ,,..10r...,...~i..._ Jpri j
Christma& present ls ~ 645-9161 ___ ,_ · yours. 5'&-2313 '
• Ol'rl'<I 111 q • II > fl.IN 10111 "I I • ------,
THE REAL I
ESTAT£RS I --____ ,
Tllll.8\ PAIK ~ Public Mollee PROP.OSED ~e ~·=!fie 1:!u~ ~Sl>ace ~ark now being
loaf\ ~aap with Jo•n• aasembled. First user up~ uo1ooo. 8""~ Int.. & ~precla~ts Is avail Act,
LOWER down pay-st?-9601.
menu. (OnlytJ~. down --------
on '60,000. price>. We have 10 chplce bome11
from "53.000 to ST1.SOO with FHA urmt. Call for
detali.. a,,1.seoo
WI ftl Httwort
NMfNSULA POIHf
.cc.oo ..... of 3 u,... .. 'HOlllft
OT *
$44,500
,UOOSq. ft., with 2 bdr ms.
& 2 baths . Mar in a
facilities avail. Also
communily .POOi. Jacuzzi
& clubhouse. An xlnl
mobile home value in ex
dnsive &v11lde Vllla.ee 673·4400
HARBOR
If '"' • ... '"' '
u , · rl\v a on rorvt~n.rv v
l •l l\LfOU•• IJt \If\ C1Pl US
FORESr e
OLSON ....... ······1 '''""
4'140 , ..... , 4
HAND~N~
DREAM HOME
Pant .. uc opPoJta11ttr for the bandiman ..-. bis a Iara• worbhop at home. Bl1 Hpara&e ~ta bade ....... f~u· mecllanlo. wood worMi-, elt!ctrith10, or 11t Better hWTT! CaU ... .
""""'""•-1·-----.......... .,. ,_
l"f ltelc"Jlt
lll AI BlllTI
11¥/tela n
RIAL 1 ~11111
BUY BEFORE
PRICE
INCREASE
•$57,900*
Doo'tdela.yl Save oo th.la
•Ptldous 2 story condo!
features 2br, ~ • 2 car ilJ'aie. Call PlllOIMAMcl 147..JIM .
LAGUNA
NIGUEL
fll.S-1720
LAGUNA BSA CH
'91.aut
$1J.t00 !!'!~~ .... .!!~ ........ ~.-.. !~!
Forthla81$ef'bDeerfleld WOUl.DYOU Br 2 Ba, carpet. ••
I bedroom-townbome. COMlell patio, lnd1t'P41, faed,
Upcraded lhl'OUJbout. Uvfnl 1 bloc:k to tbe beaut ~. Mr.._ or Communl\Y POOlt, ten beach. db 2 Bdrm.a 2,_.l30-ms ___ ......,. ___ _
:!:d,c=::. 'f: .:I!dn! bath., privacy. oi~.
commuoJtv A RE nelabbora • flexible,..,....,,.... llff BARGAIN!'). lwml? Woukl you coa· .................. ....
· •Ider our O·Y·O tort---••-1111!11-~. BY818 .. I
IAMCHllALTY
MOllMS llALTY GREA't 'VlJ:W tll L..\. . * 4tWOl7 * UJbtl •• Br. ,.., •in.
HVH Moateco. Jf •nT amenltle1. SIM.Mt or · .. bestotr. ean-.oi
111-2000 . . WATEBFRON'J\Newport --------1·-~ · Shores, tee land. aarcten
V .A. COASTUMI VIEW fr dect overlooL •a&er.
Spac.iol.a I Be a ba home 'Cute2sty2Brhocne, eor-Terms are aceepteble on with elepnt iarse entry ner lot. JW,OGa. ~1191
tblttiDelbeclroc>mhome "windlntat.aJrway. Dln· Owner/Acent
ln the presttO,OU. Rae· inc aru, frplc & ample Ft. ba)'fniat.•Bll.dla
quet Club ltomH of stonge.'149,500. Pier onPeri'ma••a • Ir.toe. Coavenlent to DOLPttlM l.L M~ JUty rrMeoo 1reew.,., adoc>la. and Ctl 4'4-IM a ·
aboppiri&. Alklna ... 900. NEWP0aT BAY
• 'l'OWZISQONDO ' I U....a-.i .. 1..-:.a On tbe ........... 11
nnm....:u ~.!:.._·~~=: ~. ;;-rn,. •••·•••· Tbat'a tbi9 thiiae OD tbla Ownr/ Alt 7S2ID older custom home • ._. _ __...._ ___ ........ _ BILTON!l.OTS INTHE ._ _____ _
M.NCH llALTY VILLAO!! Ol'LAGUNA. ~AIM Ill 2000 it bas ~ mud • b u. .......
• NOW VACANT• JS ~•--BEING EXTENSIVELY Spartu •• ~••port
REN OVATED • Beach l>OOJ boaae. 3
REMODELED. Sprawl-Bdnn. tam. ms. 6 din.
lnl a .BDRM. PWOR tm. BeautJfQJ carp«a 6 --------1 PLAN. dlnlQI area, bllt· drapm. Priced tor• fast.
in kitohen 4c a CAR ~· at '1U.•. 8Qft'Jt GARAGE. S1>9clous llv. Call•UA\ • rm. bu MASONRY
FIREPJ.ACEP NEW ._! ~. HERITAGE
coocUUonlni. Do"llH ~u'a~o& ~ ~xte~ry:
CcrreaRealt«, 6".a514 uae Of GLASS WAJ..J.8;~~~~~~~
TNllANCH THAT AFFORD A llONTIGOa,2ba,,
. • HE.At 1 Ofl~,
.. Bctnn, lowest priced SCENIC OCEAN VIEW. lam MD. onr. ans ht
pool home ln the area. ~actor 6 .=u: <MM-.•Jlll
Vaeaat. lfoye-ln before llllla:.=. lt belna IAY YllW ainstmu. Dou&Ju Oor-r;"AOON ....... -o.. . ,.. .Rall«• &$14 ......... •.,. • e.c. • 2111', 2b.i Molltle Soiail Ill 1--------1 etc. Wben all of thla u:clull•e Ba~•ide -Make This ' '8V&IN.ES I S VWace Din. l1D. dla. l'lNISKi:D'', you can lndry, 'wet bar. ~
. POITUDO
·"Houle o1 Glau" feellns
with aoartac windows
and bltb open vaulted celllnca. Maiuloe perfect kitchen, clan
breakfast area. Boattns fireplace . Jaolated master + dine . CbJldren'• rau a . 1.Altlltud)t. BKR518-8311
Clwf stmas
• .GQe to remesnber. Give
)lour family Ulla lovely a
bdrm., 2 ba. bome. Clean
• new carpeca • paint. Terrine location cloM to
recrea&ioa area. $92.000
red hill ......
'i»/-1··,r111
moveriJ.btln.forOb}1 Jacu_zd Is elbbe fac. $127.IOOMPrlu, Boat allp ••all. MISSION llALTY tsi.500/ctr.175-'1113
tlSS. c.t. Hwy, Lal\UUI OCIAMYllW
,._4'4-0731 C~l9UC•
•THOtll,...s
Redbcid tor • felt ..ie. ~m!rij Catalina Vacw • eeDer Js au.
SUDNtl. A vMIW '° l&r1e '°"9. 8eauWul 2 bi' end 1t mlllt be Men to be ..tt w/frple. ~ ~ed. Tbtl, eouplecl poo11....., 6Jemt At
9'ithanlmmacu1.ieasa tbl. ,,nee ft won-i l<l ltome on • buae lot, ll.&aTJI CaUllS •n. creates your dream estate. $289.DQO ('22)
r-or~tsT f
O LSON
........... ,. Mobile Ho... .... ...... ····.·····~····· .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·······-············ IHcMl:tn Fw.'4"-d Houtri U11fwWIMd >touatt UlffWWIMd Wedrte9Cfay. 0.cembor 7, 1877
·····•···········""··· ,_. • ....L.. 1 too ....................... ,....w-rtt.ocJt 116' co.t.Mese 3224 e.t.lloftvi.a-3~61 ~ •• u .. ,.,.."*' ., ••• "••,..,.*4 ......., -' ~"' I 06• ._ ,--· ,~,,, ~ ••• ••••• • •••••••••••••• ••••••• •••• •• •• ..-arpcwy ~.. 1' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,..,.,.., 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• . Ht'llW • rt~· j7,·; •••••••••••••• ,.. ,. ...................... •• JAc:.llPOTU •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bca'm. mod kitchto, Mth POOL & ~-s NC'W .. bt in~ rm. 2 b.;1 MeWport IHch 32" 4por COf'OfMI .. M• a Ml.._IS . Sl nr '-~llCh Av•ll Dec ,..,...... ........ .._, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••"•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••~•• '""" :? BR ~·1uty onty $9, 7!IO S .a..,. c• ·-.....ID..ft'I • -t.... F R 3 ,.._ ''1"con}, up _ ..... 'WOOD Out.lllndin1 velue am ~ ~· 15 lhru JWle. No pets, 4 or, ain m~ Ba con 1r11cJed tfn1 . S-150. Hluffa CO•~..t.._~ BR, 2 ba, • 2 Dr 1 Ba, a bib u, bewch. nwc. lloaw 11181 Ureat Y<Alt yr. ~d trf·plu. M30 mo 839·5789 do.Lcepvtpallo,rttrm. S8l~t xlntcoctd.~l\fo S4Z5 La Plua. • multi l•etltd Lllk 10 60 tSIJtJ) J.2'2 In llOOd n-ntal urn etc. $485. 973.7377, A&ent64Hl33 B ~2i:0 e. AC l. vn;w in llll dlrcrtlon11 llur;" I P~t'lfl(• (;l)ao\ Utly$1J1.$00 Hames u..fwnllohed 8:Jl.JJ80 Nt!W 4 DR41 2..cty • mt , ___ ::;.,______ Me .
Antiu•1llniPMlt'r111oth11t R'-~ltte l/9tl-8660 8ltR111AHJ:NKY ••••••••••••••••••••••• view lndicpd No peti NWPT. Shoret. walk to ~br:-r;;lc.
1111
c, wm Ct1&1e YGfA w re•ch - ' REAUl'ORS GtlMI.. 3202 8Toro JZU $450 bch no pets. 2 br, den, 2 p1illo, ,14 Jaamln• f3$q
tor1Y<AAr r.,ket book• ULTIMA'rEINQUALlTY .!_U~~.,. 4924121 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ il93·4819 ~S..S48-96S7 G mo 673~ fl <;om~, •n sec BUT preatlglo1u p.,lc In ti Unil Ap\.s East.atde •l&Al&CTALS Super, lovel,Y 3 br, 2 bia. 7 TfMNtS &11.ACH Bl ' '
SOO ,.1>u-... <'hoke:-~vrnor, t!W deg c M ~1680 Jncome' Whypay$2S<s:tswhen fplc. crpt, fenced yd, Mlw,airf IHdt 32'9 3 Br 2 Ba Nt>wport CclefwMeN JIZ4 s~ • ..,COAST Vlt'W 19'16 Roy~l .l.anct'r, I mo Own~,: s.e 1773 you con ldl \be belt for kids/pet.a welcome. ~. ....................... SboreiJ ho nu•. newly ··--············· ·~
IHV. CO lSH
1
"'I fl tiO patio p le111 Open7d1y1 DM-4.567, Agent, no fee. WAL« TO llACH palo\Od " decor'd. $~ • BdrJDL Ne~l1 · 4, US.lttl $~\~~~ ~ 0UI~. R~nl Taln.EX,C.M. Sl253br~U,lhareUB 38drm.houseplbllarae mo.&40-2981 Sltlnted. J>lumDlll4f, ·
• 1 7· 3 :.,.un iego
0 Great ~01h1de loc. SUJObachw/pooluUJpd u._11.._,. ll-.:-..L -s2,.0 fenced yard Only one --.---------GREATR&CR£ATION: DtoJ*. Very re• lid•· Ralbou oceunf.,on.t 74 4 ZJ..,v n<>W1•r3br.2ba,h'plr,yd. $175unltut.llpct. aw w+•-#,. block lo the beach. NOFEE!lfousq,condos. Swlmm101. uunu. 2 bl•.Ph•v .. onl)'Mf.~
dramat1a duplex. 'l&;s l!n:S 1'>x58 f!Jllcrest Nr 12> 2br, tba. pat1oa, encl. SU~ tbrVlll11 wtrncd yd ••••••••••• .. ••••••••"* H.50/mo. HURRY·call du PI e lC e 5 • R e ri tu I hetlth club.~. hllllartls. Shown by apptonly. ::::,11 ,Pe~fott owner's Gre1m;1ver l(otr eo~rse, gar SJ85.000. S200~ott.ut1lpdNrBch ·~~It c:n:oe H~n~'I * 494 0057 * Pavlllon.875-4912Bkr. nlaiht.·llght•d tennta 2 lJft, 1 8.t duplCJI. Cpt ••
cw •.nc1<>1J10 orb. upe1r Coro1111 Lrg hr bltn Tom Lee, Rltr. 642·1603 ~2br w/pool kids o.k. nu.r ' r, • 8' -a 4 Br 2 br lovel" Colonlal couru. Pro & pro •hop, dr-. refria, 1tv .. •cj i-ummcr w ntcr n•nla h d b · d $2452br furn tripl~x CM new cpt, cirpe. Lse HTS. --• · ~ a ti ·''"'vi art" ...., ., Seashore Heal Estnle, ws rl ryr, R3r iige ts· GoodWri .. Off! S3003bth.~e.kldl"potis 548-4S95. FANTASTIC Npt Terr hm . LTI rncud . o un n•rpnaie,p J 1ar. No pets '270 tl)o
675·5800 P~! Sl'l' r~nt ~I 3!J so Great rental area. 2 1826 Newport QI' C.M D-af ru'"e ... br, 2 ba, rptc. condo. 3 br, 2 ba, rec $600/mo. Cati 642 rroou~ A CTJ v I 'f I a.: s ; 646-1246 --.--$12.2,00 ~ ,O·l~lti or ·r I 6 I II f ,,.5-~""""""' .. • areas. wi.h/dry, BBQ, ... ---------NEW LISTING M511.'>00oft31 M 2~~.~=t~ $2~,~s, 8 $I~. ee .,.. '"""' epts, conv. area. Move frpl 1460 mo. 754-1202 S.Cle•..te lZ76 Fullt1mf!' director, free E-SIDE chA.....,-A2br,.,.IJo.
This churmlnn 3 BR :! Ac...-for •de 1200 So Callt. ftealty HOMEFINDERS right in. $3195, 1163""5e7, Marcel, ait. ' 1•••••••••••••••••••••• Swiday brunch. HBQ'11 , 1ar. bltna. dtu, UU.
" ~ ...... _.,_ f R 1 A1ent no tee -•rl P". p1.1rti"~. sport mo. UMJZLsl. IMl-21Z7 BA. 2 frplc llome on very •••• •••••••• •• •• ••• ••• • 546-5605 • •IU\aands o enta s • · - -z BR w/ garage. $350. mo. ' " ....
pre11llg1ous strel!t 7 ACRE$ All•reaaallpneea Family Neiahborhood 4 br, 3 ba, Cam rm, 3200 219 Miramar. lSt. last, lournament.s&more! Fodolo y:.T. wt park llkeaett1ng Thu. Turn of thr Ceotun l 1000/oTmrSheftet' Sample· Vie: Brookhurst & sq.ft.14'4Sant.laao, N.8 . dep 492·21.34 BEAUTlruLAPTS W
11
• :
hom11 1H r~dy for your , 10 r .Y \' 1 ct 0 r ( ~ n Buy C! houses on l lot for S951br furn. mobile Yor ktown. hnmed oe· SlOOO~o Agent. 541·5032 -S....-'--· -.,-.-. ------1 Slnales. 1&2 bedrooms. 621 NW IOn&te-· J:
Chmtmas&•fl $109,900 ~\lunsio~ Barn, many $67,000 w/$600 mo erou 117~2brhsektds/pel:i cup. 3 Br, 2 t>a, dlnlna ••••••••••••n••••~~~! Furn & unfurn. Modela ~R O~UNJo~~
1 5 .. "31..66 i1ut bldu • r1ty water. &SS2,000a,sumable In & $1503br hseopt tD buy rm. lge llv n:n.w/frplc 6 open daily 10 tu 7, Room-• town me rp
""""'• .. ~ · t$lOOOOinJOO'' l LlFETIMESERVICE 1 •~a·einW-tc'·ff Neat4 br.3ba,fpl.c,epta, mate ••rvt ...... ~veil No •Laepallo4'mc.car•&e lot.., o( tre..'!> Can be '>Phl. ann~b ' ., ax even area fam rm. Lov· ~ " ~ u """ .. ,. .. • Adult.son! Whela11
""'' ur.ur
E\C:Hf,A'O Lo"ei;~nC't)n Ncwporl Old 1· house l\n11.
IOU!> for 0 rl•r! $74,9()()
MA.RINYS COVE
REAi.ti' 646-4463 ------
llGCAHYON
G<ilf COUrlil' Nl<IW 41 (;u nyon hland Dr. <! BR &
den. 2' 2 ba • J>1nl'hur1>t
Modtll. $185,000 Cull u.:t
for app't S.IO·MIJO ·--tMVEST!
BAY VIEW
Wwlls of glass und wood
dttktnt.: eoomplemcnl this
custom des1Jtned and
butll new home Tt>p
area. 645· 72:U
CENTURY 21
'!·st~~ ••ofty
Uy Owner ~st Uuy
New & lo\'dy duple11:. 3
bdrm, 3 bath CUl'h
F'rplc. 512 Bolu Npt
Hcts. 64~21 ll ~6·e30~
ScMCI._.... 1076 •••••••••••••••••••••••
OWHIROHaS
1971RENT
GUAIANT& '1..AH
7·Pll•X nr bC'h $349.000
S.Plcx nr bch $255,000
Tn·plc:11 nr bch Sl<19.000
Call today for detaili.
llKft shelter for 1977 Cu II 557.0tZ2 ely lawn. U2S. CNeaotia· Condo II vine at ib best In (enced yard, kids/ pet leue required. Sor ey. • . . y. • 1111 1 677-~1 <'P.A. 644 0782 or ......... __ ...._... blegardenlng).546-2165 lhllbtll&briaht2bdrm OK.~.963"4567.Aeent. aduJtaonly.nopei.. Pool•Jacuwav•I"' un ? 05JO 541-~ _,_ 3206 2 bath end unit w/brick noree. · O a.kwood 2 8 r • p ts & 3 ~r 522
-••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. 2 ba Condo. Frple, rrplc, bltna " ltlr•SauttlL-32t6 GardcnAn.o.•tmeC\ta. townhouse. Adult.'f, S· 19 U-a. c t M I •... tt y park. pool 41 tennl.3. S3SO. ••~ag ....... rllM\ ---.. -h h G ,. • "'" OI a •sa llunt•n"'on Beuch ? .. blk~ -Ca -...._ DUA e sp ""'· ..,_ per ••••••••••••••••••••••• H•~ ....._ .. ,........... wa1 er. as P~· ... • " ~ ••1• lst/last +dep. Arfer 5, mo. Aoll Now. Pool.,_ h _..,..__ SccttPl.6'2..5013 F.aslb1de. near Ocean. from oceun. 4 units (IJ $235/mo. 494-4524 SS2-858.l utilized by only 12 """ae Cottage, 2 Br1 &. IJHO rvin~ lul \71hl '.t
$31.000 per umt St!I0.000 2br hse wtfrpk. '1 l 2br •.-&.--p ..t_ __ ..,_ 3207 owners 1 540-89t4 Walker secluded, hot tub. rent 645 0550 Woedfmtd Vil -l <'lbh 1>r equity will han· h."e w/gar, <1> 2br apt, -tlW Executive home near •. , ---R· .. 81 ,.,_late lse or lse opt. $525. H._,.,. hecWS... I
rile Bkr. 840..f724 _ lrg, & 1 bat•h unal. In ••••••••••••••••••••••• ocean: 4 bd, 3 ba, tam _ .. _~ __ "'_.,. _____ , 494·57'~orS58·7ZOO 1700 ltilh St ~.Pautarino •
"<>m" $1200 mo. $200,000. 0 RAM AT l C U a Y. & rm. d10 rm, wet bar. fire SEAVIEW 3B 2 b < Oovt.,. at l6th1 .1 INVESTORS
llOO
•••••••••••••••••••••••
• "' N r r. '" a, WnhNnshr 3291 64 Beautiful. new, a1;1\l)t 5:16 2377 ewpo~ nite a~c view ring, outdoor BBQ & f am r m . 0<'~an vu. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~2~8~1~70~~~ apta. Great locaUoif."~ from this ~pectacular 2 pool. $750/mo; Conslder pool/tunnl1. Security. , • I 2 j a c I
t-Lforct-'-2200 llr, 2 ba Newport Bay lse/opt.&4-0707;Y68·4347 $975/mo.1213>430·3629 What a bargain. 4 BR, 2,._ _______ llml•I p oo s. UJ:J: i..
o.un -Tnweni. rront condo. 3rd --"----""'--;____ ------_ BA wtrplc. ow, cpts, ,. ~!)~led movein l>et'l. ••••••111•··············· fir. SS9S mo. 675-11775 ColortuJ 3 Br. 1\1'~ ba Con· II A R B 0 R v l E w f e need ya rd. $395. s•"ffEl.OR APT. I. I / 6 ACRE -- -do. 2 mi to bch. 1375/mo. MONACO with private 963-4567 Agent, no fee IMI •• ~CENTI .a. Corona cW M.-3222 960-2021,or962-2456 courtyard, beautifully -. -ALL UTILS PO' Bu chelor S22.S.S24{i
1 BdrmS2165-S275 • 2 Bdrms~. r~ "" land11caped. Upgraded Alrnocit new, 4 bedrm, 2 ba IOO' from the ocean. Office bwld1ng site with ••••••••••••••••••••••• Springhurst 3 br. 2 ba, thruout. Available for w/fplc. DW & cpts. Sem1 ·furnlshe!d. Avu11
plans terr. view. All shutter!.. sale. lse/opt or rent at P r e 5 ' 1 g 1 0 u s now ! 201 lo;, Balboa Blvd. $149 000 Wavecrest model, new, 3 pool, Jae~. sauna, util $625/ mo. Owner/ Aa:t neighborhood. S47:5 . Yrly ~ per mo. NO • BR, 2 BA, family room. rm, auto garage door. 7.59-0619 fl63.4567,Ageot,r>ofee. FEE. Call: sue »l
Hurry. make YOU\'"
reservations now! TSt.. Manaaeme
754-0081 or '42· l MIKESAVAGE Juamine Creek. Mini-$475. mo. Opt. lo buy 556-7707an)'tlme.
REl\L ESTATE ocean view, upgr aded. 962·766.Sor847-0779 Westcbff Shopping area. C.do••-!~~~~~~~~~
51200/ T · I 2Br, 2ba, trple, patio. u.tur.l*ct 3425 r. Nr new 2br, 2ba. car. 642•960 I mo ennis-poo ' Really neat, 3br. 2 b" $31"'/mo guarded entry. 640-6600. r l r d• pool. $'425/mo Cal ••••••••••••••••••••••• " I+ ACRE LOT
CHOCCEAREA
SAHJUAH
GERRlECO. w::!, c:, cpu. ence 644-llUMor752-1799 EIToronewcondo.2br .. l OCEAMAOMT ~
Y . Kids/pet OK1. S395. ba. view. garage. $3SO. J BR • .2ba, yr)y. S$9S New CONDO 2 br, 2tw
CAPISTRANO
Ready lo bwld. pvt road.
itood equeslnan lr11li.
St:!S.000 Agent (714 t
91!2-ZllS or 6U 8519
Coron1 del Mar -south ol
lughway. 3br ,2ba, $625
mo Beaut. manicured
home, blks to 11hop'g ,
parks & bch. lawn malnt
ancld'd Ownr. 548·1732
---Bayview 3 Br 2 Ba newer I 2 At•rc View lot Im duple>. on park. Avail
proved Laguna llilli. 111178. SS30. 644-6126 Zoning horse1t. 552·32i4
96.'H!67, Agent, no ec. Deluxe Beach Condo. 2 lg 58142M eves STVS TO llACH 2 rrptcs, bltns, pool•
•IRAHD HEW* ~~: s!~:.'~'~2-.f:~· LANDMARK. ~agnolta-2 Br. 2 ba. Cum, yrly Salo "'50. 875-4912 Bkr.
L u x u R l 0 u s . Atlanta HB. Adull.b 001>·' 2 Br,hoUM: u.nr. U'1$ 38r '2'~8a tile entry, $700 3 br Condo. Cls t over 40. Mllhon $ rec
fam rm. w/Crplc. llltid lc1t Fashion li;land Short roc1I Sec:urity, all appllc. W'ESTIAY ~f$
w/microwave ovt!n, dbl term only. 7$9-0087 960-1366 eves. COSTA M'l::sA
gar w/aul.O opnr. Fully BRANONJ-:W
lndscpd, encl patio. 5 51.AVIEW .,..._xnu.fwn 3600 JBrl"romS28a.
blkll Lo heh. ~ mo. 603 $1100/MO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br From 1305.
lllth St Oiave ~earon Dra~at1c ocean & 3 Br duplex. pvt yard. 38r,2BaFroinS3VS.
Nl•wly remodeled 3 br, :.! 536-3701or 846-1371 Newport nltc llghl!I view patio, dbl gar. bltlls. l AP.• 1 1111 Be if
1 1
... DAMA POINT bu, s of Hwy $65()t mo 2 h 2 t d t from Olis·• bdrm. 3 bath ehHdOK.64.>17S9CM 1.....::.:..thtd out u new ll:vl r. !I ory con o. crp !I, Broadmoor ""&Vl"W ---. bWldlJ)gs. Xlnt &ocatJOO V>c•w lol. 46xt65 ut 32861 Dayi. $36·0343, ~,·e~ & drpi-.. carport. Leai.~ "" " ••••••••--•••••••••••• near So. Co1111i Pl1tih. B~ ... CHW .a.UC Marque Level wkn~~ __ S.275. 536·2375 home Brand new· never Afla hw..ts Furnished G1M1rcil lt02 Children welcome. Nu ~ ,_ $49 900 '"-t .....,___ 3224 11 ''ed in. Upgr ?llcd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •0••~••••••••••••••••• pct.s. RenlJAI oCfice o n TOWHHOMES ' ~ a....._ rnr + boous rm. country eurpet.~. fo'ornwl dining. lc6oa lak.d 1706
'•Mil" to the '--~Ah from MIKE SAVAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• k1l. pool. Lsc or mo/mo 2 fo'i re pl uce11 . Sc Ir. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Bach 'rlfu!S LongNBeach. g~1Wy .10-olBrl· 840, •. ~a. ker . I ' " "" .. " s-1•L S475 ft't ... A t cle•nln~ & microwave Del h 2 B ul t Stv, re . UI pd. o pet.I. "" thl•. J Bil. 212 BA, patio REAL ESTATE "~ ,_ I a myers R C wee c eery r. q e 7141 .. ..., ..,...4 ....
7
."'"l"'
" oven.'I. omm. pool & ten· adlt..'> Only. No pets. $375. ..._._, -1----""-""-"--...-CO\l'r, dcclung. wet bur 642-960 I 5 Br 3 nOpa home Ion golf 960-1701 : 494-54~ Ol<I cts. Alm<)l)l 1mmccJ. ""'" ........ .......__ ,_._... 1106 8 Ba _,_. twnhm Check the com· --course t ava1 12, 15 f-1--324.. u1.,.......,.. --R, l • stove & , ~ ... g.
Out of C--.t.. S89S mo fH0.298 1 ' • ._ .. occupunt'.V Hurry. call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ullJ pd Adult.I no pets mun1ty faellaltcis Jr p ~ .. , 2550 ....................... 752·1700toprev1cw laltoaPec•IUlo 1707 3 Bedroom, 1 Buth. with Nr prk.' tennis & .shop'g,
Olympic Sz pool
2 roperty Sl'ACIOUS3 Br2 Ba. Uiuv Pk JJJ. 3 Br 2•':1 Ba. 0 "'· • ''' '··· ' ........................ brick fireplace. Avail "aunas. 6 s111elhte pools •••••••••••••••-•••••• lncd yd, IlV space. fplc-. + bonus rm. Oxford, [® i BEACH. View. Piel', 2 Bt. Jan 1st. !IO' From beach. '_S26.5 __ ._mo_._S48_·_'7689 __ _.,.,...
&tf'OOl.'iCOUrlbSIOl.500 400ACRAHCH ~HO mo S41HJ022. SS25.547·70«;83J.J21S 11:u•.i''·:~· s.aso. l Br $375, S325. Yearly lease $500/per Br. 2 ba 2421 EJd .
C00:.1!\llng or 4 parcel<;, 642.~ i;'Eii'i: I Adlts. ultl pd. 303 J>, m 0 " th G E 0 R c E Garage. $275/mo. cai1
NEAR One 2 Br homt', one 3 Ar T \J R T L E R 0 C K Edacwater. UJ 87~·286(). 1 ~EL~~K.IN~S~C~0~.:!63~1'..:·1::800~.--l-:0/-..3-:-2825-:-. =-:--:-::--:---~:.; SE. "'CUFF VLG hme. ll wells. appro" 88 3 br co\ta11e. pool, Jacun1. PRESI D8NT HOM Jo;. 3 _
1
_ ~ acres an alfaJIA & lac1I W.hwasher,adal ... only Sr. 2 ba. fam rm. lee FfHMHOME OCEANFRONT Bach apt avaUible 1~~ Ji'OURS~NSA~ shopping 4 BR. 3 Bi\ for much more JI old in a 645-~98 yard, romm pool, tennjs BIG CANYON. Absolute· BachelOI' wut for 1 very med. tzts ntJ 1Mli!Ci\1t ~clOUR i 2.dN' L •
w 14xt6 family room & pens. auto feed trough crt.'I Xlnt neighborhood. ly smashlnl( Augusta spec1!'I penon. No pets. uttl.OIS·SO'l•alt3PM ,.,,, ba. pP6t, pvt pattq, formal dining Upgraded call le i.cale & loading New Brookview Condo. J S6SO. Ph 955·208!! Plan. A ma\sterp1ece of S26S. incl. ullL 673-6372 ----------• •M. child ~ $275. 1lS
curpets thru-ool Great ramp. some Jueage Br. 2'2 Ba. air eond, . . . dramatic design with un· lcAoe'••--Jt07 Joann St.~
location $121,000 fenct'd & c:r~s fenced 11 cpts. dr~. all ma1or ap Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bu. i.urpossed gotr courbe SM. Rm for agl. person. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •--------..i..;..
bought in total more pins Pvt putio, tcnnl!<.. w fplc, cptg. Super area. view! 3 BR. & df!'n~ Nr. lotb St. Bay, bei.ch. Balboa Penn 2 Br ~ck, VILLA YISTA ~
eqwpmeluded pool. Jacunr No peti;. K1dsl pet O K. $3115 . $795/l'tfonlh Non·smkr. St2S mo. gar. new cpl!!, paint, yr. Qrandnttlarae2br1~:1 t I $495,000 S450 mo Nr S Coast 9634S67 Agent.no fee. HASTIHQ.S & CO. 714·546-0601 I y. s 4 00. 6 7 3. 2 O 7 7 ; bt to~, ~Int u.:.
Call George l"rey, ut !Wn ~laza S40.fl886 CORNER 4 br. 3 bJ UALTOlS '40-5560 Corona del Mer 3722 OIS-8670. ~·Mamt 64.2.1 '
REALTY INC. Hinkle Real Eslah KIDS/PETS 01( C11lverdalc. $425 mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
28
S32S ri1 ll.25 E
AHCHORAGI
INVESTMENTS
17J4) 49 .. 771 I
714/846-13!1 542·3456 E1Sldc2er.1ar,S365. 1w~1 --W-A•T•a-v·aaw ___ OCEANFRONT1Br.$3SO B~boaB~>' , .'
8--L-. E-~4848orors..s~ • ·--£LS winter, fPle, patio, car, 61 .. _...l • I"' CASAILAHC4 .. --ft----. .----. · llOl"l 1"' Townhoroe located in the ot3-T187 eves. ...._. .-'
Income Prof*iY 2000 •• ~:.~ •••••••• ~?~~ J 8r, 1 bath, cpt/drpa. 2BR, iBa ........... $345 Coves. 2 BR. 2~ baths. 2 Nice bactt. & 1 ]Jr. $190 & Al~ 1pd':,~PW:.~~I
••••••••••••••••••••••• Washer/dryer. 11tove. 2BR + D&F, 2ba .. $400 Priv. patios. Upgraded Me. 3724 s:no. Req. adlt. Utll pd. u)ij FRUIT FAIM Ktd• OK. S40Smo. Ph 2 BR+ D, 2 ba .•..• $500 appll's. ~urity, pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••• No peU. 106 E. Bay Ave, pool, ~ry. fac'a, Adu pt DUPLEX
Cir Coldwe~I Ban~r
.......
Ctptttem 1071 ........................
abr, 2b•, r1un w/frpcl.
Orea& t>o untry at
nios phere . 184,2$0.
"3-3434
T...._ IOfO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.-.. ..... ,
Q)a_~..a11ftt It 4u.l•t. 2
bdrm .• 2 ba. ~ wllh
ID th a~. V~ry
•• buy •l'51,8001
Pftl<.:fo: REDUCED! 2
Bedroom units, private
1>11llol\, remodeled ex·
teriors On desirable cor.
ner lot 1n Eastside Costa
Mella NOWSlln,500
3 BR 2 Ba •~1•1c~c J I M I nv er .,~, no pets _. 6000 Trees-apple.pear· 548-5981or54o.18113 , · · · · ... ..,, .. -.. acuu • 6 o. ease, SSO WB a UP apU. ~bUdren . Call Sut;
peach .cherry . Fully . 3BR,2~ba ..... $475/650 owper will consider Studlo,lbedroom -,...:..-_-_-........ --.... --~-~-.-2-2 ·
managed. Must sell 2 Br, cpts. drps, kids ok, 4BR,3Ba ....... S74S/7!10 lon1er.IISOO/mo. Maidsel"Vice,pool ----a ~9~0'7 or Henry
parti.111 interest. Call n o d ogs. $250/mo. 5 BR.38a ........... S875 ...,..6N--Bl C M •••••••••••••••••••••··~~~=~~~~~
838-2673. 645-2274 ..... ~.e7Ss";;~3967 . BAYVlEW Dpb. 2 Br,i,.
Reol &tot. 3br, lba l&e fned yrd, gar. 2ba, frplc, car. ad.Its. oo
Exdtang. 2100 No pet.,, "75 mo. ls\ ll STtlDIO pets. '485. Plt&TU004
••••••••••••••••••••••• last mo. 1100 cln'c lee. WEEICLY ltAru
1940-B Pomona. 842·0728 Full Kitchen fcTV WouJd like to trnde lovely Linens •Utilities
home In Corona, 3br. I BR. private. no pet,s. Newport Ctahr & CLOSETOOCEAN
l'2ba, lr1 fam rm. frnt S240i:oo Water•1aspd. ~C~An a~WtesMoht rm,dinrm,klt,ut1l rm• 2072 Newport Blvd. -·,~· a.
lrg yrd. ln xlnt cond. #D4'E. 5'8-41.'JS; 842.0835 P aJous 2 Br. den. 2 2080 ewport Blvd, CM
Resl par\ or town for Ba. w/all dlx features 642·2611
house in CM. or Np1 NOFEE!Houses,coodos. 'tS2JC,ot""Dt:fRvhtE BI t n • Inc I u de SUSCASITAS
areu 646-8402 d up I exes . R e o ta 11----------1 mkrowa\19. Pvt walled
Pav1lion. 675--4912 Bkr. Turtle Roett.. C• mp us yard, 1eeurtty environ· Nicely furn. large &
biltals 3 Br. 2 ba, family rm,
••••••••••••••••••••• •• Jard. Khf.8 ok. No pets. HouMt ,,.,..119H Incl. all utU. $370. '20
J BR oceanlroni$1AA>
:um. BlueLa1oonl6SO
View. 3br, atrium. wet ment, pool, jae. tennu. small 1 f>r. Adults, only,
bar, llldscpd. sprldr. etc. S8SOmo. ~71» no pets. 2UO Newport
Lovely, reactY !an 1, ~Ne• B 11 C • n 1 o o _Bl_vd_. ------
mo. call GU 2233 ys. Totmlun. 2 Br, a ba, all ADULTSonly.llabrfuni
833-&82 aft~ tmmed. «cup. STOO. per aarden apts. Stream,
AIC. mo.fra.~.
2br, 2i>.. lam rm.,
balcony • patios, ~11111 • •ppl in kltch. U J:
S48-0M4
~pie~ 3 BR. 1~ ba.
aar.encld bckyrd, frplc
SS7-9712 or 6'4·98116
-I -r...OA1LvmoT . o.c.mtwT. "" OMcta...., •.coo •••n.. • ,,_. 1 ,00
La • • .... , .. ···-·········· ~·' .... f 5 001 ··-··-·-·····-···· ... 11 t;......_ Ulfwli;. u..t.., · " •• ... ·'·•-••........... .._..w-...., 11 HefpW..., "7f00 W_... 7 f •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• •••••••• .. ••••••••• •i••••••••••••••••• ... ••. 1101 W...., Dr. Lacd owner•·ln•eaton. Ktn In ru f(>111td tD ii~T ••••• ~ ...... .,. ... ,. •••••••-•••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••-••-••!! ~MstM • 3124 .. ,. ....... J.140 . N~linecJ.-JCtJ' lnwreste<l lD UvtloplJ>C tront "'COM Post Ofc.i--------1
.............................................. S..Q • 311 6 ....... Offk:..S,.Ce your property? We will lnqwreWlthln _ AOCOU'NTINO ----------... ------•
Lplbr,2b1 upper Adlt.1, 1 Bdrm Dl• Aft. Bltlm ....... ._ ... •••••••••• CaUooSlteManager work w/your ld•a• or FOUND J Tandem lv<'Y • ACCOUNTS
no pt'tl Nr S. C. Plau. D/W, frpk, ••d tar'. ()Q beach: UW. pd. New m 4>842·1llle.ll\MS OW'l.Dellper&buUder. c.le. Owner klcnuty by uc..v.._ ... ,
$315 mo. 7Sl 8204 W/W cpt, dnuief httd Ult.er· 2 BR. $400: l BR. Mortb CM.ilrutUoo <'oior, braod a1mo. au., "',, ~ patio.tlJS.PU•u $350.Yrty.1 .. uuo IOOaq ft del\1.xeoff1ce,w. ~...-sl8 ~4'date,loc1Uonloet fAYAal ~ud~·.uU:ek~w!u,S:O t8ll.S>etOK.m>mo.a l Br la d~ea oo San ~1.!!.'T~~~~·· ....,..._ .. , IHBPDats:Jf-582% CLBI
lebl.175-73111;642-48S4 J.adlkcaJlalU:• Fernando. iais. Pref HO.COST'"' MES• 0,fDrfWlllf • 1015 J'ound: Terrier Mb. A P01ltJoo ta narrenU1
8 b /d Cpt/d -..-i older penoo or couple. ~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laree BJ.act • whit• aY&ilahle lA our account· 20''2w~ot:· au!PI· a.31.M •5Rm,IOUqftSl8Tmo u you're oot. t•U.lni male. VlcBeacbftAUan-bit~tforanln-..,!· 2 .. , .. _ "!'~ 11•1~11 ,_......__.. ..... 1 Bdrm den detlJ. u.s •1J01qft1nt1ofc"5mo l3.So/eu·m1.moo-··ln· t.a,liB.MIMde divtd~"'~ IOQd bulc ,_., ..,_, -... -.------' • • •4G1qft.1ieOfcJ195mo ,..,.. omc. .-..... 'l'h1I poai· Del Mar. MS-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 118 W. Elcoloou Ail around noor front v••hneoL, call Saody LOST: Purebred Calleo, UotJ lnvolt .. aa.tebint
-Luxury pent,houff, z br, 2 ~or49Mll81 prta AJC utiJ pd• prof Rots. >J•Jt Co. 83'1·3744 wttlt• w/oran1e 1pott, lln 0 l c •a a fa• •u t 2 Br, \Ya ba 1.ownhou.ae ba, dJn rm, trplc, ble blda.'etc • ·• · •Averace 1ktld on pay. Male, (T.C.) ~end.• pun:=~Olj.lreceiv-w/patlo. 1>10 Joann St. v 1 e w . s 1 0 c k t 0 Spark11Dm1J2 Br2 Ba condo, 5'o.2iooor 5'0-&lOl off1 1.o >Ju 14v .. toN, declawed. Vie. Solana ...,, r and eomput.-
CUSTODIAN
AT EASE in Fashion bland. N~ Beach haa an openlna for a Cua an
with light maintenance abWUes. ya
-Mon thru Fri"ay .
,,... c• 644-5010 w..w.p
All&PorMr.lolmt
Small peta. 548-7638 downtown. $415 mo. iat, nl ocean view, J•n. thru Ju.ly, 1977. WyLa1unaBc:h.•-1122 ln1 1eounts and re-
49f.2379eves· 957-0ZU S3Zmo.83M720171') 1'HI ~1au. State law '"9rallt.t a pre· bat. SHAIP211S.US ' .a. &t •Ftnfrlttsl llil"T"I'-llil"'I• payinentpenaJty chute FOUND GTut. Dane ' HtfpW...-7100 twaW..tM 7IOO
Lndryf.lic. 2261lCMaple OCEANFRONT Deluxe 1 ~ .. ~ •••d ltOO ALTEIHATIVE equivalent to 80'At ot 8 female. vtc Goldenw..i., 01ar top waie• are ....................... ••~·r .................. . ~ 846-3442 & 2 BR, $400 & $500. 1ncJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo. to mo. reot ancl; months unearned ln-Wet\mlnater. pleaae IMlcked by 0 uc:ellent IOAT IUUB COMfiU't8t Ol't
MESAPJNES util.~ 1HEEXCITING Rec• Pl. s er v. • t.ere:st on the balance. ldentlfy~-om beoelUa pacU,e wbicb Fiil ll'OWhal COtnPM1 Swlnaablft. 2YrsJobex·
8ND NEW l~ bdrms. ortbead-Ocean view 'ALM teAAPTS persooaljzed phone cov· Mortga•e Brctera. Of. Lost : SI AM It SE includts company paid need• •uperv&eor.r per. UI/ .a X>OS .
S28S "$350. Jmmed. oc· triplex. Walk to Sbawa MJNUTESTONPT • eraae. con/. cm, mall =:i CalUomJa real· CAT/Fem. Hunt Bcb medical aocl life lo· f:,P;~mpll!.s8r,r so FamiJlar w/ICL 41
cupancy. Pool, Jll<'Uz.zt, Cove. 2 Br 1 Ba, F / A, BCH. serv., undetfrow>d prk1 >'· Poet Ole vlc. "Ava" aurartCfJ. Paid vacaU~ tlona· I c ca-Spoofers. Servi~ Bu.re11u
frplc 4 dshwhr. Aduill, new drps, cpta " ap-• Bach l~BR li~I~~· Rftard.Ml-a2 !!.'!i.!oFpany pud MlcMAMcA&. f!llll«,belptu.l.ApptyNa-no pet.a. Open daUy. 2650 pile's. $W, utll pd. from s'.22o & up VE MoAeyto Lo. 5025 ..---P an. lion al Sy1t.em1, Corp.
Harla St. C.M. (Meu (714>494·7491 or Adults N~P~ SUITE,64().5470 __ •••••••••••••••••••••••LOST: Black Lab mlx,. &ICftJCAI.. 4.'MJBlt-cbSC..N.B.<Jllear
Verde Dr· off II arbor <.213)79'7·2US Wt M.. Dr 0tt1co Suite, new build· ht W & 3rd T .D •s male, 2 >'l"I old. Pomona C.ll (TH) ~l CAIJllM'fltY OC Airport} tOE.
Blvd.> ~S.BJkaEutolNe;,,port Jni. all or part, 4 blks WANSAVAILABLE St.CM.~ OrAWJ.ylnPenoaTo: T()()UM(j,
lMONTH FREE Oceamlde; CWf Dr. Bi& BJvd.) from ocean In downtown Credlt'nottmporunt. l'tnostllr 5310 We need tood meo C9C)IC ,
549-2447 view, 1 BR + gara1e. 546-8860 Huntlncton Beach. $325. lf'olutr,493-3102 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TafOaM w/exp. capable of Bra.kfut.afad. App·
2 br townh.se. 2 br apt S400Mootb~·t329 mo. + util. 800 Sq. rt. WWownerofSelkoWatd> PIOOUCTS leaderablp4'r•ponslbu· ~ la, ~Ion, .. a
w/pool •JaCU2ZI. Choice condo at golf I.AIM l&.t II S38-~or673-226S Money Available, many Jell as securlty •t local COMP.AMY t y in t be above , rket s t.au:rant. 212
64>2'698 course; 3 BR, 2 ba., FllOMUOS sources, all projeeta. restaurant oo 10-30·71 Div.Bliss~ catecoriea. Top pay, xlnt EJTthSt.C.M. ---------t vaulted ctdl., Jge. deck, Quiet bldr w/beautlful OCficeal~uite, new bulbllkd· SSOKmln. 752-«>52 ~eaae redeem. Watch Laqbll.nlnd beoeftta. All correapon-COOK •--------111 tr•es p ol -ash I ,_ ... _.....,, cov'd l"••ees, anc. or part. 4 s -"JI be ao'd oo 12"77 mor--... -Avenue dence k_, conlldenU1l.
"' • 0 • .. er ........ ~,... .. fro do tow hbi--Tr9t .... • ·•· · ...,.,....._, wrt•· 1.o"""'Ad .... DaUy For small retirement COSTA MESA -2 dryer. '450 Mo. Act. adu l ts , no pet1 . moceanin wn n ~-~... SOlS Ca.llJobnat645·3STI. Analw!J.miCA.92806 ... -., ho ln Lac .... ,._11 Bedroom. adults only. 494-7571 · LEEWARD AP'I'S. 2020 Hunilnjt~ Beach. $325. -Equal Oppty Emplyr Piiot, P.O. Box l~O. ,.94m;4S8 1 dt·ll-4'
No peb. Reier. $275/mo. Fullertoo AYe, I blk E . of mo. + uul. 800 Sq. ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drinldn1 problem? MFH C.OSta Mesa, CA. i262S appt. or e a 1
Qaa!I Place Properties, Lge.l·BR,priv.$350 Newport Ave, 1 blk S. of SJ1J.7S04or673-226S FREE SEMINAR, Use Call Alcohol Helpline
1
,._,,_
Inc. (714) 752·1920 or Bay,631-0397 Newport Center·F'ublon Pre-TaxDoUaratolnvest 24b.nladay83$-S30 _ _...."" COOl(.Fl'l'l~I 1
--l BR wa•-Pvu*'""" '" "'-uat De ..... -Koo&b ~--wit"' comriut•r J:.ayroll ' ·-5'8415S3 weekends. Ask ..,.,.... • • ""'• ....,.,. n~ . 4000 Island, small pnvate-of. ... "' ...... "' PR"'"NANTt • 1a.... ,.J.-L '' ~ Afternoons. Mes• Verde r Wand -n 11 I ed • o I .R.A. plans for self· """' '°'ccas1-. exper. Fu l or pt. Refs "·-H .,. ,._ or a. lBRcharmer,$400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ce ava . mm . .,14. employed or those with Carine contldential . . AlaoNeed nec.NB.M2·~. ""'v. o&p, 661. V11JDter
Turner Assoc:. Room w/ kitchenette X~~x service on pre· ret.lrement plans. Dec. 8, counsello& & referral. • .., MhJllit ....... _St...;._C_M_S48_·._558S ____ _
1 OR, redecorated, rerrig. Realtors -.M-1177 · S50week & up. 111.1se. 673·8167 7:30PM at So. Cat. Piasa Abort.ion, adoption " UpJD.7am. Conta~ Mr. loolckHper COOK, p/time. Kitchen
meld. $22S/mo. ask for . End Laguna lBr, •275 548·9755 _ 1770 Orange A.v,000, CM. Pvt Hotel, San Die10 Frwy at !~~lE 54'7·2Se3 Hanna.a, Airporter Jqn N.B. lnvestn;-ent firm. knowledae pref'd, but
lilll,546·5880 • restroom s~ incld'g Bristol. In San Felept Hot.el.~2170. F/C,CommfsslOf'llllblrkpr. will tr .. ln. Small ----mo. 491-COOS or 494·3725 Ambassador Inn 1n Costa uul. Llz. 547•2533 rm_ Phone 542-5661 for Req 1 expei;. In pegbc>•rd restaurant olfers vatjed
eOSTA MESA-21040 al\4PM Mesa, 2Zl7 Harbor. Cen· reservation. LIHDA•YIQI 1ya. Koow I In readln11 oppor. Apply, 2633 W.
Thurln Street. Brand -. trallylocat.ed,235rooms. M db suite:., uUI pd, OWAMORTGAGE o.tcalM•rep AmbtlioulCIDu""eWanted computer reports
gew deluxe 2 bedroom Br. Ocean view. blk to MANY with kitchen A/C. ample pkg, from Broker 542·5661 flot'fM'-oflt! 1.o manace a :-'mau busl· . Co a 5 l H w >' N • B •
units. Lovely 11pac1ous bch Adlts; no pets: phone & TV. Swlmmlne SIM Nol.sereq 67~ Servintall Orao&eCo. .,.., p/Ume, Will not in-640-012.3. llam·2pm. -----
townhome type with S27S·S295· 494-3280 • pool. jacuzli. and rec. LOWEST 835-'131.3 lerfere w/your presen\ lteakfodCooll C()()t(
t11m1ly rooms $350/mo. 499-3900 _ _ _ room. Daily & weekly sq ft. of 'Office space )Ob. Must be willing. lo E.Jtper. only. Good pay & P/time nitbU & full time
Q U .\ J L PLA C E onverl'd ear, furn or r~startmgtromS43a ~~1~P7~~a~~~7t~ llMnsflat.t SpklWleeder learn.'Mr.llall.642·163"\. benefits Apply, Jolly days. Apply, Coco'•, aft
.PROPERTIES. INC. unt.2 blkstobch,lbll<to ll' • S lstT.D.' .... IO 181SSo.ElCamlnoReal Automecb forMercedes Roger,4005.CoutHwy, 3~m, 4647 MacArthur ;~~~~sz.gs l: ~!::~ lnl"oresutit.1WWpd cl)t80ff. panel· __ 645-4840 _ ~~!s.J~i m o • 2"dT.D.Lo..s.. SanFClem~~P'U~llc. Ben1. independ e nt LafUDaBeach B vd, NewportBcb.
RENTAL AGENT ON g,k ·. street Share house 1n El Toro, ----Faireat'krmssince1949 Ol"a_.._.,....., garaae. 530 W. Katella, IUSIOYS Coob, Delivery driYen
PREMISESSAT&SUN-~~~ft~~l~· 5170
· ~C:i~~~~l50mo .......... ~~'!!4!' .... !~~-~ SattlerMtcJ.Co. *MICHB.U'S• Oranae. Full or p /lime. See p/ttme openln1• to;
DA y . LAGUNA SHOPS 642-2171 S4S.06 I I Ou~all Muaa1e AUTO MECH. Foreifn. Jackie, Moo· Fri. 9-1. San wotnen & men w/outco-HkJRI 1152 Fem furn rm in pvt home. lOAM-2.AM 731-4462 Yq person, alert W/Sd Clemente Inn. 125 Inf penonalftles-& take ~'PT HGTS. 2 Br. FP, ••••••••••••••,••••••• Lndry &kit. priv. Cali aft Downtown, x.lnt JocaUon. PRIVATE Party will buy wort babtta. Top~y, id Eaplandian. 492.e103. pnde In their worit. Over fR. I child, ttml pet OK. ce 1 & 2 Br, 1285 & up , .Cpm 842-4772 Approx. 900 aq. ft. & 470 •2nd TD's •SHERI LEE • .. d 21 tt able l.o wotk eves.
$375. See Mgr. apt 1, 2M3 pool 4' rec room, qulel sq. ft. lmmedulle oc-844-1721 CertifiedMuaw wora con s . a t4a Cwrel'enon '2.70..U.001.o &lar\. Apply
Mol<St .. orcall 644·ti034 atta.131-1?6e V..._._.. 4250 cupancy. HouaeCallt-ByAppt. Toyoto-Volkaa Porsche ToworttaVertlcalCom· after SPM dally. Me·n·
aft6PM ....................... RealonomJcs,675-6700 ._,..,=•/ 8311-em Tune&Repalr.&42-JU4. merclal Camera. Ed'• PW.a. ~10 E. l7tb
'ER C 1 hoch 3169 SKIERS. House for Rent 'tft---1 • AUI'OllOTIVE FIJllillar wjtb PMT fro-St. CK \ Y NI E 2Br un t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• mall 1ho1>9 & offices, 1 ~&·Li_,. DANCEOFFUN E 'd 1---------Pallo. rpls/drpe. adlts inTaboe.S200for 4mos. ideal for photo Jab. -.._ US8CAI ·CH&. xper. pre .
I ·~ R r 23"'A UVI otil Call (714)546-3428 eves. Sld c f • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Btfl nude aitla danc• " M-U•u•c P/tl.rne. Mon. Tues, Fri.. COPY STOP on Y. no ~....;. e s ,,.. El e M rom 8S mo . ..,.D111K1•..t1 SI 00 rap aeulon. lOAM to ..__ Sat. Co. benellta. Apply, Need irnmed. Hardworlt· Santa AnaAvc.646·2423 TH!GOLFCOUISE! Cabin Bi" Bear 11 .... 41a 673-1723 2AM Mon·Sat 625 N. Excellentsalary&work· P•onY"•ver. 1•eo . - -Big"-nyonTo·~nhome 2 • .. · ""' · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• i di • t " • " l,,.,,...._,...,,,, .. fltimetr,: ..,.. .. • $35 P l tbl cir t EucUdAnahfiS9.6UMl ng con t ions or PlaoeotlaAve,CM .,. ............. ~ · Wcstindc. 2222 Paciric. lge br, 2 ba $750 per mo. up. oo , v, 4 08.UXIOFC'S DUCK HUNTERS! We FREESESSJONW/AD q u alified used car in~bualneu. Ca for ~~hr. 2d bl a, uar .. frplc, 640-5274 dblfrpl. 494-Mll. Conf. rm., seat 25, all have lOO's or Blinds avail mecbanlc to perform Carpet cleaner/driver. ln ew, 751'1050
...,JO '' u lll. 8'2·07S8 TENNIS ANYONE? paneled, am. whfle In re· In 33 locations thruout RELJ\XINGMASSAGE arled &lnletestln U~.,. NMd ma I l k/ h --5295 mo. Nwpt Hgts, love-Calif. For info. call Mr . v C .... D or rue • op COUNT ER Girl for •2 Hr. 1 ba Meu Vt!rde ly 2 Br. 2 patios. no pets. Brine family lo Palm ar. l or 2 yr. lease. Lake BobJames·Llc Masseur mechanical work. P· work. Good oppor. for Laguna Bch. Dry Clun-uppcr $235. Gar a vl. 49f..:l223; 548-580( Springs Canyon Area for Jo' ores l are a . Kent Drake, 558-8636 Outcall 9-9, 494·51U portu.nlty for' advance-semi-retired person. lngatore. 494.1538 AdJts no pets 833-8974 Holidays, unllmlted ten· Harkins. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL ment. See Service Mgr., 983-030'2 -- - -Promontory Point Sub nis no additional char1e. 714·581 ·9393 MASSA'i! HOWARD Chevrolet. -COUHTEIHU
Lanie 1 B<I. DIW, n1.>w cpt lse. 2 Br. spectacular Contact Nancy Daly Ten· Rubber stamps-3 line& FIGURE MODB.S Dove " Quall St&.. CAil WASH Part Ume. Dependable
& llle nrs S230 Avail To ocean view. Painted, nis/Golf Condo Rental 280 lte. Store-Office, ~·::~l;:.;;8m~~!5d~ Newport Beach. ~ll •PITime C.pt. MJlte's Flab Fry:
:.ee. Mgr Apt 711 A wall papered occupied (714)323-<C737 ~~~i~c::'.~~78 deli very possible ESCORTS l\'"""lll....,....,..,. A~ In pereon. 4200 CallMS-28?5
Sb1t11mar.64S-6625 only 2 mos .• Relocating Rentabto ~ 4 300 962·1759 OUTCAUOMLY u ~vonvu•r. B1rch,Newport8eaeh. --------
Eabt Side Tn-plei.. 2Br, Dec s. S700 mo. 1 Yl" lse ••••••••.-•••••••••••• XL.NT LOCATION 6l 1-Jt 11 AUTO MECHAMIC Qashiers cuuer.ST. J"~ .,~-s d n .. " w/opt. 759-9555 Office Ir retall •pace Va ca l i on b o u n d ! ~.!._1:~-~!.°~~ IC~Y/~ •o ~ "ru' am Y • cozy, gar, •~ov Meeda 1laaitUM11e7 ( Houses1tter that's COOS· LYNN DONOVAN, ple11e n.uuun.....,.. """''""'" ..-.... ~ -Need1 ftead Cutt.er ~ .mo.6'2·~ ~ PAR.lfNIWPORT ToProfesalOOallyFind ~&bl ° Cu~-~n DVileJo clentious. trustworthy, call 1/319/235·9003, anexperienceduaedcar Weoeedrespomiblepeo-~r&~.11312
{
'-h t THATRJGHTPERSON .-iceway, ... _,ion ejo. · ( __.... __ ,c for ape-·· ~lorF.T.P/TnnolUons E t I i 2Br112Bn,pa1.Jo.gar,"liJ Jtae e ors, 1 o r 2 Build lo swt DELTA 1mmac .• mature. Res. Waterloo.IA Mary ~ ...... S CM,..... as man, rv ne.
pd. Mature adults, do BedroQms &Townhouses ~c·CI2ut.S °UHuMsTW E!\'TERPRISES83l-1400 675·1955 nent job with the best or n °"'" .A., . . "H.B. 540-7171. • I ixu. 343 Gabrtllo. $260. Pfom $274.50 MODELJNG OUTCALl. benelits. 5 day week. Call ulf serve au ltatJons. S48-9518 Spectacular s pa, total UJ".t. ~ ~ t:A:IG~" • R....., 4500 Insurance discounts: Cd AFTER6:00 Mr. Smith. Mu1t be 18, retirees DEIJVERY mall fOC' ear-'
recreation program, n>~~·wq . ••••••••••••••••••••••• studnt, nn-s mkrs ; MON-FRI 847-&20 147 .. 555 -welcome.821-82$) ly morn L.A. Times
LQe 2 Br. c~ & dill&. IOClal proiram. 7Pe>ols,8 8.12-4134Srnce1971 Motor cycles, auto, route, Ne>. Costa Mesa. &
lndry. qui~ adlts. $230. tt'nnis courts. At Fashion Fem roommate 10 shr M2. 2000 Sq Ft. W/OF· home. Days 523·1890, 0~S~YJs~o& ut.omoUve CASHIER Htg Bcb area. Good pay,
:>&8·46Gl Island,. Jamboree & San homeinCDM 875-920lor FICE. San Clemente. 581'8889Eveis. m-0329 New Detail Shop needs Full time, day •hill, _546-448 __ 1 _____ _
NEWLY DtCORATED JoaqwnHllls Road. 675-2563MillJ . 49&-560l Lotf &r.o.JI $300 Top wa"eabe!~id En•'-mature & resp. O>ntact: DeBvery Drl ver & 2brw/&ar.S2-t5.2176 "E" t714l &44-1900 ane. Sqftol~ rt 1 . ....................... UVERHA~G &eame:,, ~Paw~ Jim DacP't. Newport.er ProducUon Worker.'3 t.o
Plaeetitla. Cpta, wtr. pd. Female on1T &hare 2Br, pert)' •II ...... }ft ~!fr Loat: Mon. ll/28. Seal By~. 581-GSM bulfet'I ,;.poUs.ben. up. ~ .!1
0
ar Jamboree Rd., st'.art. Call 642-2.256..
63MJ20, 1·5 a~, Harbc>rfBaker area cood oles """"54&.Jasa 29.56 Pomt Sl•mese cat. 1 'Yf. bol1tery ahampooera, r=· -·""'·
l Br Eu .. ·lde, wood beam . BACHO.OR APT. latrlst-+ $50.979-6843 Randolph Ave CM . old. female, apai ed , ...,....Ser¥lcel 5360 check out=ick-up •de. '_c _AS_H_l_ca_'H_OS_Tl_S_c_ o ... ~Y ·~-~ "" M v-~-p~• h ' wearing fiea collar. \1Jc. livery at _, . ~ .....__.. 1or party·~ ceilings & cabinets, stove ,ALL UTILS PD I eu __, .,_ me, 3 2 o o sq f t . In • .Rockledge and Victoria elSSou.J Muaafe, off 2059 atborBl CM Must have aper. Apply •tore tbru-Holidays.
& refrig. $235. mo. 130 E. 100 from the ocean . room & pvt bath. clean d1.111VComm'J 2952 Ran· Dr Laguna Beach prem.lte basis. C.M. on-845-030 • in peraon to Food Mir. Hl.Wt bl 1'Jnold. Appl.Y
20thSt. 754-0680 Seml·furalsbed . Avail quiet living. $165 +lAI dolph Ave,· CM Call Reward!! .C94·9468 o~ ly. LI tensed 10·10. 1 . J obn Glide. Hotel ~NewJonBl.CH
----• nowl201E.Balboa BlYd. utiJ.545-510$afU 546-1653. 4JM.2Ct7atlS:30PM 546-4Sl8 AUTO SE R V I CE La1ama, '2$ S. CoHt•----------
0..,oMt 1126 Vrly. S2SO ~ mo. NO STOPLOOKJNG! Mature WRIT£R, Pd inauranc:e Hwy,LacunaBeach. DENTALAMISTANT
•••••••••••••••••••• • •• FEE. Ca I~ . Su o at male •h~ Nwpt Crest • ~ LUSI It un1Corms. Salary open. CASHIB . R.D.A. eU,Sble, ortbo of·
Panorama view. new ctn 556-770T anytime furn Condo. Vu nr Hoag, F.torn BSO·J,000 aq.ft. S Day /wk. 7 :30·5:80. FuU/p/t. Reap person . nee, chafnlde exp.. pr@(,
Zbr. 2 ba + den 4.pfcx all amenlties lnc:J. $215 Warehouse 4' carpeted, PJ.eue apply~. ll NewportBeach. Nope~.Mgr.C98-109T 3 Br In Newport Hihta. move 1n De<"/ Jan. draped & air cond of· ~'!_.Auto M, 1747 O:~~cra·~~U' l40-012l
SPARKLING 2b d large unlt. xlnl location ~2094 n~.:.......-T-Co. l\DdUClmnve, . . 2950Harbor.C.M. •DINTA&.ASSIST r · .e n· near schools, shopping & • ,,__. -,,_., Cbairside. Beach uea. 2ba twnhse. ocean vu! recreation. Perlect ror Fem 1 rmrn.atea wanted, 4 544-0760 CLEANING WOMEN Endo ofc. Xr_, cert. Ex·
dbl gar $375 Chen fomily.538-5*>5 bdrm Ilse, nr bch $100 AYON WANTED . ,4 hr . perpl'e.f'd.7l4JU7-3Sl3. 611·1811.~S --mo.963-0S92ove. Mlteel_.ow lrvloo/NB. Hunt Bch1---'--------0_,,~ -BAYFRONT, lse 2 Br 2 F h · Co d R.... 4650 area.Mustb11veown cu . l ~l rnJvulmtoa~ &arhage, Ba, far, priority to small 'e,~ . as rue~-n o ••••••••••••••••-••••• Clwot.,_. e.rnh P 968-81146 DBn'A&. OFFICE
Seeb a qulified ~
tlon llt m,na1er.
644--0683.
e udC • boat s ip. $600. 833.9442 w ~ JICUlll • eauna. .......,,_ .... _ -------
"913--007S evs ·~ m1 from ocean 1 f T" _,,_.._..... • 646-0f20 Cal UI or; wtnur-•wn· FwAVOM
........... .._.. 3140 2 BR bath carPort •280 mer-yearly & st.ore ren· aralSINf ATIVIS ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• mo. 'wtr & 1., pet. No Fem roommate wanted to tals. We)lavet.bem all I Beat ume to eatabllth
DELUXEAPT.2Br,2ba, peta or kida. &42-4658 or ahr 2 bd ap,t. nr S.C. customen. tnWested? ltrplc, encl &ar. laundry l:J3.a9l? Plua. 979-8330, 55'7-6521 Burr Whit\ !l l'..dt~r
CLERlCAL
STUffYOUI -STC>CQ4C5 WITN Dea ~~.LJ>ec to$1.8K
HOLIDAY CASH$$ Ptn ~ tof7SO 'facll All edl&a, DO pet.I. hlilllll .... Great loc1Uoa. S215. Ph NWPT HOTS. 2 Br, FP, forfl9/f · 4310
N14822 FR.1 child, sml pet OK. lt'lllllt 7<¥1 I """'I"''' lllv<I r~ fl
I 't 1 I hf 'l 1l,, ii) m. See M~. apt 1, 283 ............ •••••••••••
SBABP 3 Br Oeluxe beach Knox St., or call 6".f034 Sln&te prage, OYerbead --------
K•llr b11 Jbterfltina ExecSecT • to$UK. J~~~~~~j a.toporary auJpmenta F/CBopkbepento~
i;;:; for all Clerical fr In· lnillehraorlnel~
du1trU I t klll•. Work •Bt7th0o.tall ...
when YOO want. Day-&.tlte22' tG-1410
week-mclntb or loafer. f,!!!~~~~~~~
Paid vaca. Yoll don't DESK CJa't ao exp. ~ •
unit. .PIW, trplc, paUo, aft6PM dooc't..'40· No. a. '131 w. FOR RENT: Hall for pr.Avall980-23S8 llth~CK81;1-7'18T•ve WEWYEA.l\'S ..... ...-...-... Charm.lnc•~loapt;3 8r __ ._..._. .. 400 Oll!Dm M2-79M •
___ ,...... l~ Ba, balcony, ~ean ~-.. 1---------aBrapt/eondol, ~VO-view. 9500 '!rl y. ••••••••H•••••••H•••• ... *. l..U. avt,.. 213-Z'f( NIW'POIT canu "'Jt"'f lftfttt/
u.p.•1!07,M)..1151 lmmecl. occupancy. 771 rm•ce
Re1ort,Llvtn1 Year sqft WelllF.,.,oBJds ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hew1 .~bux1e •J>J_:x0. 3._~R. round,~ IJ• ~odlux.e 1 NptCntr 8'0-'mol ·a • au . rpu;, tna " d .Up Br oce..n.rmtl. .. em, · O,••rt.ftr SOOS
yard tar '3115. 545-"°" fpl~. gar 6: whit 1 view! 61• pa sq FT •••••••••••••• .. •••••••
8IMall 87M210 J.OJ7 WESl'CLIP'F·NB SAN C&.IMINYI
AGT.5'1·1131 Pct Shop • Croom~.
Retlrill,S af\er 7 1o0d
yean. Fine loc:1Uotl • eUentele.
BERTHA HENRY ~;..;;.;.;~..;;.:..,;;...,_i~--4 -~tq.flwcNJtuel• REALTORS
Ml., too VltJo 1rta1. 215 J>sUfar 0%""121 Ha~y to 8.D. l'r'fl!Y· 51*iallf Oltt Sbop oo
Cell!IS1·1400 llaln St. of BaU>e>•
·'At.:~ rtOf• J1Ju d. Xlnt tocattoll. ,.,,, • '*' ' H f ,OOO+lnnnto rt. Jl\lll1Nn1~~1'9-=uu Jh altt. l'..IUltm•llJllJU!l
~~~~
pay, W8J>a¥ )'(N. IDq.$1u'f i.sm.:Lqana
I Jleadl eauor.,,.1n today! 1---------
IELL~ Nee':~~New
eqaf p •• restaurant. AJ •
ly1ooa 8.ea\a11ra11 t_.
17~.
S~l"IVICl!b
lll-1441
OISHWASMa
Wed tJlru SCl.D PM ahi.ft.
Mth Verde Coqv. HOtp.
ts1 Center St, CK
'
t
.i.
.W.0.ielday, O.C.mti.r 7. 1977 *
DIREC'FORY
ic.l'Mts..ke • 1f1 I Holaec1itos'·9 L..Mc .. 1111 , .. ....,,..... P~J?_,.n.g Nes.nice ' ········~·············· ..................................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• i •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
WeCanCaf11C'tCle&Den I' a tn•ctnc sttploadu. Dump truck. l.iaht ~)eanus1 done Walll. s>•Uol. nsw l1wn-. Ptr,ERSPAINTlNG Profpalbt'i•peperbans· Rtrao~ala . trlmmla,g •• : Steain CIMO tor abtQJ· Ucll71'1 Ms-eTf JhuUni. lt11• work, by wcpr d Ge:rmao lady aprkleu, iron work, E.apr d. RtH Ralea. Ina. Clean. ~ suar. pnmtbl. "'" .. t. Uc d,
poo alao upholatu)'·alJ aradlol, demo etc Xlntrefa. $5hr. 546-4Ul tounlaln1. Licenud FrH Eat. C•ll Gene rree ut t5'7·09' l , ft&Uy'-W'9d1U·aa4 ~..;....;... __ _....;,.......r-f wort lll&r. Tnlcl mou.at ELJtCTIUCIAN·~ced DHZST HOUSI MOUSE 83'1-'SS:I m.oua ~ U,.•ht•, .
uolL rr •C. ,. .. r•t. rilbt·free .. uma\4t OD l'ree " =trim or ,... PROFEs.SIONAL Paint· --........._/•-..&.. :::................... . MS.STtl L•-oumalljobl QUALITY Serv. w/a ~ ...... , .. ,_ 1. I •--/o-R .--....,..... ~ eT~ ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ''Peraonal Touch''. move. ..... •Pr..u ~1-n ........ t.er. eu, ••••••••••••••••••••••• tieptl'9 m. Std ioraa . 1..;:;~;;;:..:...;;.....__..;._ __ OCC Student. Bii '4 T Ref's.Call: PamS3S-9522 rpr, lawn renov/ln1t WWklWU'a.u.oae VEl\YN&ATPATCH $129, mo•t chrt an
tr\ack. Trash, tNe lrlro, 548-5883 _ Fali'Pric .StateUc~la· JOBSllTCXTURE labor Var1dety fab1"lc1. P'ortheopenal.raffaJr. AU ••••h•••••••••••••••• etc. Randy ffl·5703, RolemRarl e,'• Holl&eclean· U•a •Y 8\U'. E~or ipeclallal. Ftee•t. 8t3-Hll9 ~,!!1~ryr 1~: • \ m
occ1uloo per1ona) WEEDING·CLEANUPS SG-38116 lng. es. reaa, own ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trym6-Cancott83G-SSSS PATCHl>LASTEIUNG .,...,.
.Deddo modeU 11ervice. Caban• Cat.er. Weekly MalJJt.enance ---trans. 642·1403• 645-3"S9 Brickwork. Small Joba. p-•-u ....... 11 tr E A 11 t y I) u F re e W ......
pair. ~/job too:'~~ J!!!~9858 -Fteeeat 842.9907 ~ . Newport, Coeta Mea1 " -:'c1, ~u-oe:t. ·,.a!· estimatel.,Call~ •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• . &Umates. Eves fS·"897 C.n•wt/c.cr.t. Dlf It Landlcape Main· ....................... c-klRa CleM! lrv\ne. 875-3175 eves. Uc'd &M-1065 Dave . a.. Pl o • " 8 o ltd 0 a k ....................... t.enance· Mow It Edie Want a REALLY CLEAN w:::::il Mo...t-.. Pfm it At waterbeda Oompleto Unc
c.p.t5-Ylce CEMENT WORK. All Full m'ato•, haullna,· HOUSE' Call Oloaham 1'"' •etc. Mr. ...., lnterior ut.ertor paint·•••••••••• .. ••• .. •••••• • &C'c. flea•onable .• •••••••••••••••-•••• • Oltl fi'ree t 64.5-512.3 Lyon 960-.5844, 531J.1'7U ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ' S HOMESAVERS Plumb T ' N w t 8 a '
Carpet Man wiU ~your ~c.1;i:="· Free ~:"F:r~:tlllln1. . ea MOVING UlAUUNC ~::..~amhi~p r!; J':c: lnt "Headq.°P'ree et~ ~flt I p -)' ...
pr mine. Reralrs · Alicea Housec)eanlna. SUMSHINIGIRLS Local&lott1dtst.ance 1168-'JIN SlOhr.Honatftreliable•---------
cleanjn1 too' Gllr wo Ce ment W o r k . Japanese c•rdenlna Reali, reliable. refs. Own A.lltypesotbome&omce 646-(852oc836-5788 semcc. BofA, MIC OK.
!at bli1er savhp. Fr Dr! vew aya , patios. service. Tree trim. clean lrans."2·7207or4M6-4811 deaning pa cit a let '1Sl·SlSOorlM'7·03P ~\,845-3146 walkway1. Reaaonable, up. HauJlna, a ml l MM AC UL ATE Si>tt1aJApta4tR.Eworlt HAVE YAN. WUI do lite AcouatJc C~1 abot. In
-poo "11.elm clean f~eata S58-0757 _ lndscp'cM2·lf03 C LE AN 1 NG . y 0 U Bonded/m.sured. Free OlOVlng ExPT'd. reaa. tr/Extr Sine .U.or Owm aooftag
... DESERVE o~ I BEST eets &. instant urv1ce. Rick 832-5.5418, oft 3 30 edwards Prod. R.C. Con-••••••••••••••••••••••• r brf~; wb Coe h «tow G_, .. 5er1ices v R 54G-952S &~5 wkdys tr. 64.5-5266151'1747 ROOFS FOR LF$S
DAILY PILOT
CJIRJSTM~ TREE
lWERYnlURSDAY
Qasalfied Stttion
CpC;alOmlnblutch.Clea •••~••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7S8-0!l7 "Two Men Wiii ... ov• fi '1 Hv, din rm, hall tu Av ,..ARKS" ..,. .. CONST HANDYMAN: C•rnan• ..... ----MllCl"S • "' PROFES.SIONAL PREP All typea, nao •"*' .
rm t7..SO cotitb 110 h "' ~ -b...-.. , SKIP SHAPE SHIP/SHAPE Vou " We handle bt1 •PAlNTlNGEXT&B. Free est. lic/bood'4, lo· jl 62 ~f DAY • · • c Newronlt.Ree/comm'I. electn cal, plam Ina " move1 . Offtce • Reu/lnar. Uc. 2:.'Mn4l. ar.SeniorcitiMOadiscnt. • ~ ~~li~ ~ ~~~ Rm add, remodel, Patio floors. Pb M'J.1717 ~!~=&!!,n~e: ~erc:,~:~e~i;~~~n;o: houu'bold, distance & Fteeeai. 531-'156 ll&f..001 anytim~ .at.:,•:~~,!~or
Do work myself. Ref Uc contr.cau97944u IDOITALL weekly or bl-wkly buia. specially. Ml.nocrepain local, also J>•cll:an1. CU5T0t1p·.a...-... ·---531~101 c ·1 l in 11 F · i.owe.t JecaJ rete. Uc. • •'-"HA:on.> --DAILY PILOT ____ . __ Bedric9 Call 642-4957 en c ean 1. wa 1 , ree eahmatea. Call d/lmrd. car T #lll·9" "Wedottall'' ·-SEDYfCR.
window, wutns. Also Cn4l5'l--0831 • ...... 847.-lJc.28l400 uc...:iu7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Iii People whonffd people ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE I HI LAlott rental.I &.holdid~ l time ru '"'0 .,.,,. c E RA Al l c t I I e . 0 IECTORY
sho\lldalwayscbtck Lhe ELECTRICAL SERYJCE for member.. All speclels. Reu. Honeat Tnlde your !>Id at1:1.ff for HAVE VAN. Will move. YOUNG KAN. 5yn expr New/J'flrnodel. Free eat, I
SuviceD1rect.orylnlhe CALLS SIS hr, &SMALL Servtcea SIO hr« less rates & It~ eat8. Ellen new .goodies with a Expr'd, Uc'd . C.11 Jeff in wallcoverioc. Free aml Jobs wel c ome. oo,~~T5Nf7W1! __ D:...;'_\I;.;;L_Y~:....P:....l...:.L:...;O...:.T __ 1_J_O_BS_M2_.&23J_____ 673-@13 968-4143 Class1fled ad. 642-5678 rtnt~l esta. ~6 Andy 536-2'26&1\ 6. , ____ .,,_.-_____ • • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~SEMBLER
TRDtDATA
CORP.
St.....,,M..,n•a
DMsJo.
An Applled Magnetics Co
3400W.Segontrom
Senta Ana. CA 92704
(714 J S40-J605 ext. 213
HefpWi.ted 71 . W..eM 7100
•!•·········· .. ········~···~~·····~· .. ····•!•.!
I.IA&. ESTA Tl IROIBS & SAUS
We have an opening ror two men w1th
experience in commercial & invest-
ment properties. Wesley N. Taylor Co.
is a 32-year-old firm owned & operated
by its founder. We are not a sub·
sidiary, division orr branch of
something el&e -Just headquarters.
Applicants must possess highest pro-
f essional qualities & intearity to
• mat.eh our own. Interview by appoint·
mentonly.
WISUY M.·TAYLOlt CO .. llALTORS . .. IW~ I~·:...~ ·-:: ... tto .
7100 '
..OJemicaJs • ~...-... + C•+ ..._
Leadinll dislr. provides
ideal oppty. to M!Uve ao-. r:c,,r. Call Bill, 833-2700. Ir De1lllW Person.
nel s.-.tce ot Irvine, ao12
Mlchehon .,
Sa.lea
UNUSUAL OPPTV .. M84&WOM!M
Sales people a crew
manafera needed for new dlvtsloa of major
corporatloa. Xhtt train-
Ini pn>CmD, ~earn· . ini po&aaUaJ, paid vec•-
tiom, paid buU.b 4' life
tn1urance. Call Mra.
Smith, S40-Ut7
~leech
lalookisilia<;.;per'd . SECRttAllES
.ssoca.ns & TYPISTS
For t em Pora r Y Be prepued for lhe up·
Cbrlalmu help w /the Com.Ins holidays, earn :-'~ ~~: top S$S on temporary u ·
Weolfer an oppoc. tojoln 1l1nmttnl1 with office
an eacttln1. raablon O\let'kMid. Call ~Y for fGr'WG"dot1anl~• i'tepl•ceinent.
Plew Apply 1t1 Yer:IOn 8~ o t ~ice • Mon-Frida)'~~ overload ll'-t'•I ...
ual Opp Emptyr o;Vf 557.006 t ·
3723Birebst, NB
~Ofc t
Etnployen Pay All Fees
Liz Relnden A&ency
40l!I& Blrcb, Ste llM NB
Call for Appt/ ... tab '65
..
Service St.a. Attendant.
exper'd l''Ull or p/llmc.
Apply Arco Stallon, 17th
&lrv1ne,C M
Service station allendent
Oay shifts only, full lime
Airport Texaco 4678
Campus Or. NB
Scr v1re Station Allen·
dant. cxper'd Day &
Eves. Full & plt1me Ap·
ply, Shell Station, 17lh &
Irvine, NB.
Service Sln. Night Attend
2 Or 5 nit cs a wk Apply,
Shell, 17th & lrvmc. Nil
SHl'"1l
EXPBl&ICB>
STAITS750 MO.
$840 W /EXPORT
EXPBJIHCE
Quick Pay Ral11ea
Full Benefits
Newport. Beach Co.
646-5076
Slupplng/Warchsc clerk.
immcd. opening.
546-6290
SHtr /RECEIVING
Valid callf. drivers lie ,
: Sr. T~t
Needed Immediately
~ Loni ~ 11hort term ••· ' alsnmenla. Holiday Is
vacation pay .
, Ho•r.ltallullon plan
aval able.
VOLT
' I " ... ·~ .. 'I\ I I .. ,_. • • • I •
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Reg. Moraan mare. broke
to ride ' driv~, blk parade Morlan ;eldlna. Ena, WHtern (71.C >
331-1011
ttadtlt•f1 1071 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Latbe Colchester 1175 1T''x60" $8,715. D.S.C.
14''x00" Sl,000, Sha~r
lf" ltT4 Strock fi,400. Punch Presa 1174 80 t.on
$3,300. (313) 981..J.f.34
. .....,w.
'Cookie .Jan, Bath A(!·
ceea facio1'y lnda 6: di•·
contiftl.l&ed ~I•. Hlllnt
below wholesale. Dlr1
wtleome. Mon thru Sat..
T•ln Winton, UHi Camino Caplatnno, San
OUR PAGE eppe•r• every Thuract•Y
from Nov. 17 ttvu Dec. 1&. Th• more
r.ou run th• •••• you P•Y• For nformetlon & help In piecing your ad
ceU your
CHRISTMAS AO-VISER
1 842-5878
CHAM»·
OPBIMG
Antique Plano Co . It
U>ul1 PlanoServ. R~n·
dltlOMd American UP· rlpu from $4SO. Beaut. Art cue Grandt •t pvt. Puller, 54 .. 7172 d•Y•.
l>lY pncei. 89S Glen· ~~eves
neyre, L•1una Deb . 22• C.\alln•, loaded ~ avaU. at Dana Po
SewlMJM•lllua IOtJ Bestofr493-1454 w
....................... Flber1La:l1 S~bot, txc.
Sears Kenmore aewlna oond .. t!OO)plete read) \q machine. Xlnl c:ond~ aall •1 "'rm ,...,. -$110. •• II ,_._..
i'73.Q77 10• AT, like new.
S.•rtt.teioc* 1094 ~ • .:.t,(i[.~ieo.°J:o8l
••••••••••••••••••••••• •---"'--=---.....;;..;,.__ Fischer Superalau UDO t4, xlnt cond. wf
snow11t.11, 195 cm w/o foam/wood float. 17~bdnp.-$15. MK..SOOWood 752-15lb&ceva~
170cm w/Eckel bind·
lnp.$45. Ski boots-sizes
8'12, 7, 8\.\, lO: $7.50, $25,
$35 & $45. Girl's Ice
sow-size SN, 1bt.e baa
& 1kate dres•·•lle 10
(chlld)·all !oc $50. Call
&U.0131.
. .
•
'
'I'w91UOD 'II Mt.{,edes. onifuillln1; &Tl50. 510 W. nan., N.8. e76.4e00
~ .... v ..... tuo
~~~················· ~ • 1eal strl!'fl leKal
dtet bui&Y. S800 <.:a II .. ~
-·
tHO
~·················· 191' FORD P'·2SO •X•·
h11tutornatlc, air cond.,
1 r1~ coatrOI. new Urea
w/wtaite apolle wheels,
audlarY \&Db, other ex· tr.&6 Ool7 41.006 miles.
'.:Pri. pty. QU &31·»49
..,...Tpmorweekends.
.. JWS"77"
C J ·S'1. CJ ·T'a, ~. W11on.t1rs, 1.'11~·· upt4$1,200dl•· eoi*tb.. 5 yr so,ooo m Ue
warrantya anllable. .,c.,11•Mtn ••
• · • mot £!It, SA 5511-3000
SIOOOOFF
J/•t. .... •• u1w .... -.... ,,,, .. •Ct&OKEE
•ftQtUPS ,:.~., ~WA.oHlllS
Off ,r Good Thru 1.2118/ 11
HURRY
lOT•CI IMfrOM
COfll.AM» MTIS
0 ~ .-rt E Lit SA 551.-00 i~ ·~t.' Greep. PIS ~~ ... V·I eQilof. Lui· nie rack. Aro/ Fm a.
3YMrot X ,000 ml.
ct. lS,000 miles.
837-lflO, 830 6616
aftS:30
' ORD Ranger XL T
COl1d. Mu~t 11cc !
~~
9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :1s Doda• Van. lmmac outald,, plush 1nslde. 19,oOo ml. v.s. Aut.0, anrf,
"""PJOOflrrtt. 491.zm
1QWVY Van, 1 of a klnd.
ICJ,l,toralud, will
sanlflc• or trade.
4DM874
•7a1Jord Van. V8, 3 spd,
111ftW atru, runs icfnt. s:n-3133 aft s: 30
~ ,P'ont Chat.eau Win· rl\Pw. Van, new auto trans,
•
BARWICK DA HUN
'-'·•II lu.u1' ••" 111.
1Jll·ll7S 493-Jl71J
WE BUY
CLUHCAIS
laTIUC9'S ·
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
~
IHH I'> O[llCH Bl VO
HUNTINGTON flfACH
8 I] 1181 ~40 04<1<'
IMPORT CARS
ALL MODELS
WE
HEB>
CLEAN
USB>CARS
MOW
CA.U.PUPY
540-5630
IOllXSOX &SOX
• LINCOLN-MERCURY
CREVIER
&I Sf 6 UOl4DWAY
SAHfA Arif
835·3171
lHl IJ\lltff.Tl OltlYfHO MACtl114£
•USED IMW's•
'77 530l 41pd 2861EU
'71320ia SI IU7VRSK "18 2002 4Sj)d SfR'.401PDP
'Tl 320\ 4 sp ~p
'71530iA St ll '712PQM
Cs..d Ow S.daya
OIAHGE COUNTY'S °i·
8ARWIC IC DAf SUN
'' '' .. u. ' q 11 ·' ' •
811 13 l 'J 49 J. JJ/S
NEWPORT DA fSUN
77 ca.. ClltC4t
Demo & eucuUve sale oow eolng on-hurry!
888DOVESTREET
CNear MacArthur Blvd.
&Jamboree Road>
NEWPORT BEACH
133-1300
'76 Datsun 280Z, A/C, 4
Spd, mrags, xlnt cond .
Copper brn . $5900.
759-0431or 752·673'7.
·71 eng, tran11 & rear end.
$400, 548-7401 or 842 0480
Ted
'1• Lo1una •s•. 4·spd , .Uck, stereo, nu wide
rad., aR ml. 13200/ofr.
1»279
'11 MONTE Carlo, like nu,
aaper lo mi. Well below
1llltt. at SGS. fSC·1800
!'20 l:l camtno SS 3". 4 lod.~P/8, PIB. A/C. Na eh4clL $UOO. ~ al\ ......
'9 SUPER•
SELEOIOI
" .
-
EVERY
BRAND NEW
1978
PLYMOUTH
VO LARE
in stock reduced to only
$75.00 Over Factory Invoice!* ....
GIANT
VALUES
ON
'77
DEMONSTRATORS!
'69 OLDS
DELTA II
V-8. autOl'nllk, air conditioning, p0wer
steermo. power braka.. radio. heater. whitewall t1re9, vlnyt roof. Ult wheel.
(ZLK178)
,.
'15 CHRYSLER
CORDOIA
ATLAS
Chrysler Ply111outh
S.r•lce Hours: MOftday
thru Friday, 7:00 CUii. to
6:00 p.m. Saturday. 8:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
'77 PtYMOUTH
VOLill'
V-8, automatic. &If cond111ornn1. power
steering. POW9f bfalles. radio. heater.
vinyl roof (870RSV)
•
•
..
. '72 PLYMOUTH
RIRYWAGON
V·S. automatic. air conditioning. power
steering. power braket, ndro. heater.
whitewall hres. lugg,ege rack. (619fT0)
'71 FOltD
COUNTRY S9~1ftE
WAGON V-8, automatic. 1lr conditioning. ppwer
at.Orlng, pcwer brakes. AM/FM 1tereo
radlo, he6ter, Whitewall tires. vinyt roof.
crulM control. leather, p0wer windows.
IJ28MXA)
v.e. automatic. air conditlonlnSJr PoW.r
stW1ng, pow•r brakes. rldlo, ,heater. v..s. automatic, air condlllonlng, pawer:
wtutewall tires. Vlf\yl roof. (8fSOFTO) • \ steering. powe4' brakes, AM/FM erereo
radio. heater. (0730FC>
For FIHt Sale or
Leese l11foMRatlOR,
Coll Pot CrH9n,
546·1tl4.
Automatic. arr conditioning. power
st•erlng. power brakes. AM/FM
cat1e11e . rt<S10. heater, bucket see11.
{416ACOJ
l
J
VOL. 70, NO. 341, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1977
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Valley Teens • ID Held Drug Raid
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. o.lly...,.. M•ll
A 15-year·old airl stunned an
undercover Fountain Valley
police officer earlier this year
when she alleeedly sold him five
balloons of heroll\ near the Los
Amigos High School campus.
The incident touched ore an In·
tensive investigation into drug
sales at the Los Amigos campus
which Uus mornln11t resulted in
lhe arrest or eight-juveniles on
charges of selllne dangerous
drugs.
One adult, Fred James Allen,
18, ot 4040 West Flrsl Sl., Santa
Ana, also was arrested as teams
of policemen struck at the homes
of suspeds in Santa Ana and
Fountain Valley at 6 a.m.
Sgt. Ed Parker, who is in
charge oC the Fountain Valley
Special Enforcement Detail, said
most of the reported sales in·
volved PCP, which also ls called
"angel dual."
Parker said that PCP ls p~
duced in laboratories. It is used
as an animal tranquilizer.
"PCP is more dangerous than
LSD and, in my opinion, even
worse than heroin because ol the
damaee it can do to t.he brain,"
he said. "It is powerful enoueh lo
knock out an elephant.••
Parker said that poUce workt."ti
wllh administrators at Lo•
Amigos Hlch School and enrolled
an undercover agent in the
'school. The Los Amigos campus
is in the city of Fountain Valley
but is part ol the Garden Grove
Unified School District.
He said the operator, who was
not a police officer, purchased
narcotics on the campus almost
on a daily basis during the ln·
vestigaUon.
The probe beaan 2~ months
aeo when the 15-year·old 1lrl
made the heroin sale.
Officers said that heroin ls
commonly kept in small, toy
.,alloons because they can be
swallowed and quickly con·
cealed.
Parker said that most of the
heroin sold ln Orange County
now comes from Mexico.
He said police do not have a
rundown on the supplier ot the
drueaatthlsUme.
Parker said that PCP is
becoming more /opular than
marijuana. He sai that it can be
produced in home laboratories in
relatively simple procedures.
The juvenile suspects, who
ranged from freshmen to seniors,
accordlne to Parker, were belng, ·
(See DRUGS, Pa1e AZ)
5 Die, as American U-2 Crashes
Gi1'en lnamunitg
~oy Testifies
In Tot Death
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
Ol 1,_ D•llf i-11•1 Sl•fl
Sad-eyed. dark-haired Arturo
Hidrogo, 7, of Huntmgton Beach,
took the witness stand again
Tuesday after an Orange County
Superior Court judge granted
him Immunity from prosecution
in return for test1mony about the
beating death of his 11 month-old
cousin.
Cowity Tax
Due Soon
Orange County property
owners have until Monday,
Dec. 12, to pay the first In·
stallment of their 1977·78
tax bills.
County Tax Collector·
Treasurer Robert Citron
said that normally, the
first installment is due
Dec. 10. But since Dec. 10
is a Saturday, taxpayers
will be given a two-day
grace period to make their
payments.
The bills must be
brought to his omce by the
close of business Monday
or ca rr y a Dec. 12
postmark, Citron said .
He also warned tax-
payers who for some
reason failed to receive a
tax blll to contact his office
immediately to obtain a
duplicate in order to avoid
the six percent penalty for
late payment.a.
Protest Ref used .
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
National Park Service ls refusin1
to permit Iranian students to hold
a protest rally near the White
House on Thursday. Manus Fish,
park service regional director,
denied a request, citing a "clear
and present danger to public
safety."
Judge Robert Rickles, who
authorized the immunity grant,
said the lad may be the youngest
witness ever to be given protec·
lion from prosecution In Orange
County.
Young Arturo, whose head
barely showed above the witness
stand, testified Tuesday about
lhe Nov. 6 death of infant Edgar
Salsedo.
Deputy District Attorney Paul
Meyer said Arturo Is the "key
witness" In the West Orange
County Judicial District Court
hearing to determine lf Rosaria
Cossio, 23, should be tried for the
murder ol her son.
The lnlfQt died from a masalve
sltul.Uracture. An autopay revealed Lbat the
chlld had suffered an earlier
skuJl fracture, lhree broken riba..
three leg fractures and a broken
arm prior to his death.
Miss Cossio, who police believe
is an illegal alien, Is charged with
the murder or her ,son and with
willful cruelty to a child. She re-
mains in Orange County Jall in
lieu of saso.ooo ball.
Young Arturo, his parents,
Miss Cossio's sister and another
adult relative reportedly lived
with the accused woman in the
same Huntington Beach apart·
ment.
When prosecutor Meyer asked
Arturo to Identify Edear
Salsedo's mother, the lad pointed
to the defendant and replied,
''My Auntie Rosaria."
Arturo denied ever seein1 the
infant struck or fall. The boy said
he never saw any blood on the
baby.
The boy's family attorney,
Robert Van Hoy, previously in·
1tructed Arturo and the four
adults be lived with not to testify
for fear of self·locrlmlnaUon.
Judge Rickles said tbe im·
munity 1rant tb Arturo ls
perhaps the broadest which
could be offered lo any witness.
Last week, a patholoelst
testlfled that Edgar was the vie·
Um of the "child beating syn-
drome."
1'Daeg Retae111her
Jet Hits
Base at
Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus CAP> -An
American U-2 spy plane crashed
today as it was taking off from
the Brlllsh Ak.rotiri air base lo
!Southern Cyprus, killlne five peo·
pie and injuring seven, a British
milit.ary spokesman reported.
The dead Included th e
American pilot of the U.S. Air
Force hii;th·allitude recon·
nai.ssance jet and four Cypriot
civilian employees at the base,
the cblef spokesman for the
British command in Cyprus said.
British authorities refused to
let newsmen and phologr~bers
enter the air base. The
spokesman said tbe plane
crashed In a restricted zone
where pbotograpbi.ng Ls pr°'
hiblted.
U.S. U·2s have been stationed
It ,
Jim Daw (right) and fellow members of
the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association ob·
serve a moment of silence in honor of their
fallen comrades during memorial services
conducted this morning at Seal Beach
Naval Weapons Station. The ceremonies
marked the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941:The surprise attack
on the Naval base on Oahu in the Hawaiian
Islands brought the U.S., suddenly and ir·
revocably, into World War II. See related
story and photo, Page A3.
at Akrotlri Alnr.e tbe 1973 Arab-•
llnell war. Ibey make dalb' re-•
connallaance tuahts over the
Arab-Israeli front 11Des to check
on compliance wttb restrictions
on troop deployments and other
prov ialona of the cease·fire
aereements between Israel and
and Its Arab foes.
The plane crashed on lop of the
base's operations control ceater.
exploded and set the building
complex on fire, witnesses said.
Rapid Hoover Move School Aitk
Retires/or
Shown in JFK Files He~th RetUon
"The U·2 took oU, appeared \10·
able to gain altitude and then
swerved and crashed into the
operations bu11dln& on the aide of
the runway," said a Cypriot
workman at the base.
"There was a terrific exploslon
when the pJane bit the building
and the wboJe area was engulfed
WASfUNGTON (AP) -Just
two hours after John F. Kenned)'
was killed, FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover concluded that
Lee Harvey Oswald was the as-
sassin and that Oswald wu a
"mean-minded Individual
. . . in the category of a nut," ac-
cording to FBI files released to-
day.
"I called ttae attorney 1eneral
at bis bome and told him I
thou&bt we bad the man who
Jdlled the president down in DallH," Hoover wrote at 4 p.m.
on Nov. 22, 1983, as Kennedy lay
dead lo a Dallas hospital.
Hoonr's memoi relatinC a
minute-by-minute account of his
actions following the assasslna·
lion were part of 40,001 paees or
files made public by the FBI as it
opens its full records on the ln·
vestieauon or the assusinaUon.
The mes, weighing about a half
ton, were rich with the details of
tragedy and drama u scores ol
citizens told the FBI of tbeir 1or·
row and their suspicions -and In
some cases, thelt hatred ot the
Kennedy family.
But the material provided no
Immediate or utoundlna new~
(See 1FK, Page A%)
Uie case 11 de·
lo flames." .
One ol the seven wounded, a Charlea Palmer, deputy BriUsh civilian employed by the
superint.endeot in charge of busi• Royal Air Force, was reported
neaa for the HWlllneton Beach Cl· in serious condlUon. The other
ty (elementary) School Dlltrict, six wounded were three airmen, announ~ hls retirement Tues. a British airwoman and two
day ni.&ht because of health Cypriots, the spokesman said.
reason1. Firemen batUed for more than
The retlremeot of the 57-year· three boun to control the blaze •
old Palmer, who bas been earn· Damage to the bulldlnes was ex-
ing $36,820 annually, wlll be temlve.
effective Dec. 31. The crash occurred sborUy
Palmer la tbe third top district before 7 a.m., local Ume, before
administrator lo announce bis re-most of the base personnel bad
Uremenl t.bla year. reported for work.
!Jetty Funkhouser stepped. The Briti.sh spokesman said
down u aulstut superintendent there was no tndicatlon of the
for instruction and certified cauae of the crash. personnel In llie spring.
Superintendent S. A. Moffett
al10 minounced his retirement
recently. It will take etted lo
June of 1J71t.
Palme!\ bu worked only on a
limited bul1 1lnce a blood clot
wu detected on bls lung last
Ncr1ember,
After tbrie new trustees took
otnce ln April, tbe school board
said ltdlcln'twaat Palmer on the
job un1 .. .,. bat a complete
phrslcal cJeanoee and would
work full u~
Tnuteea n14 tlaey took t.bat ac·
Uos:a because tbor dictn•t want to
be retpoaalble for Palmtr•a
health oroblemt. He dldta't· re-
ceive the necealat1 medical
clearance. •
Palmer'• poetlloa bas been
fitted by Robert· Landi who has
·the tltl• ot interim aaatatant
superintendent. ·
Palm•, a Nftl>Or\ ISeieb n&l·
dent1 c_am.e to tbe · dlltrlc' u a
teatMr in use. He adfaoeed to
(See ant&£> ••'9 AJ) ' I
Relugees on Way
TOKYO CAP> -Sixteen Viet·
namese refu1ees from three
families left tor Loa Anaeles and
San Francisco today to aetUe lo
the United States.
Coast
J
I, DAIL y PILOT H/f WednMCtay, O.C.mbef 7. 1977
'I'• Readg'
,
l .....
Death. Cheats
Teen's Dream
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Ol lllt Olilf Plltt lMtlf
Richard Lee Cook had a lot aomg for him. Just 19 year!>
old the handsome youth wu one of the brightest and most
popular studeots at Newport-Mesa Even101 School in Coala
Mesa. Teachers and students were deeply saddened lut week
al the news that Richard was found dead In a shallow grave
m Riverside County. an apparent murder vicUm.
Last year during his final semester. Richard's parents
moved to Corooa. Despite the distance
be drove each evening to Costa Mesa in
an errort to complete his senior year.
DURING THE DAY he worked at a
. Riverside area feed store. puttin& in
nearly 45 hours a week and earnina
enough to get a place of his own.
It was a time of maturation and
reaching out for lofty goals, best reOecled
in Richard's own words in a letter that
earned him a scholarship grant from
cool( Californ.ia First Bank.
"I WANT TO LEARN, really learn about lbe many
things that are of interest to me," wrote Richard. "I enjoy
avlaUon and would like to eitpand my knowledge In this
area. Music is important to me; but I also enjoy being out·
doors and have thought of becoming a naturalist or going ln·
to geology."
He admltted to his uncertaJnty over what career path to
follow, but be knew "lbat continuing my education is the
first step toward mv future l(oals." "The opportunities are all there ror me and I'm ready to
go after them!" he concluded.
· Late Jast spring, Richard was selected as class vaJechc·
Lorian by teachers at Newport-Mesa Evening School.
However, two weeks before I.he ceremony at which he
was to address his classmates, Richard decided he could not
finish one of his cour!)CS in time.
HE GAVE UP HIS scholarship and hls selecUon as cla.ss:
valedictorian to other students. He told school officials that.
he planned to return this fall to complete the one course be
needed for graduation.
He <lidn 'l return for uncertain reasons. But he apparent·
ly was quite happy with bis work wtlich put him close to the
land and the nearby desert hills be loved so much. Upon hearing or Richard's deat.h, Newport.Mesa Eve·
ning School Principal Carole CastaJdo decided to present his
parents, Joan and stepfather Ken Williama, with the diploma
Richard came so close to achieving.
Thursday niaht she will make the same drive to Corona.
that Richard made each evening to p~sent the diploma in
person Richard's body was cremated on Saturday. His ashes
were scattered over the hills near Corona.
2MenHeld
In Burglary
From Page Al
DRUGS •••
processed and transported to
Orange County juvenile hall to-
day. Burglary investigators !tom
Costa Mesa and Huntington
.Beach trailed two men into
Newport Beach Tuesday eve·
mng, allegedly watched them
break into a home at 2808 Cliff
Drive, then arrested the palr on
burglary charges.
Jn custody today in Newport
Beach Jail in lieu or $5,000 bail
arc GeHrey Glencoe Thorpe, 26,
of 966 Joann St., Costa Mesa, and
27-year-old Ronald James
Gravelle or Santa Monica.
Investigators said the two men
had been under observation for a
number or days and are believed
to be responsible for a series of
home burglaries ln Orange
County.
After wakhlng the two men
leave the home of Clyde McKay
about 7 p.m., aUegedly carrying
a pillowcase ruu of stolen goods,
investigators followed their van
lo Pacific Coast Highway and
Riverside Avenue where the ar·
rests were made.
Investigators said they re·
rovered a large quanUty or lnex-
p('nsive jewelry and toys with the
price tags still on them from the van.
Suspect Trial Set
NEW YORK <AP> -Police
s ay Harvey Collins, 19, who
drove a stolen car along a Times
Square sidewalk crowded with
pedestrians had been scheduled
lo stand trial on a gun charge Fri·
day and might have been trying
lo nee. The suspect was charged
with homicide, assault and grand
larceny.
ORANOIE COAST HI !'
DAILY PILOT
Money for the purchases was
budgeted by the city of Fountain
Valley. It was not djsclosed how'
much money was spent. Parker
said rnosl of it was oot recovered
"because we fell It more lmpor·
Lant lo stop the sales than to get
the money back. 11
Pilot Unhurt
In Air Crash
CARLSBAD (AP) -A private
airplane was heavily damaged
after it overshot a runway in
dense fog at Palomar Airport
and plowed into an adjacent
tomato field Tuesday night.
A police spokesman said the
unidenUfied pllot o! tbe aircraft,
a single engine Cessna 185, was
not reported injured.
There were no passengers
aboard the plane, officers said.
Coastal
le.ace Ends
•
In .Arrest
A Wllminaton teeo-aaer ls in
jail today alter alleaedb' leading
police and highway patrolmen on
a 27. mile chase on three
freeways at up to 80 miles per
hour 10 zero vlalbillty foa at
Um es. Enrique JUoa, 11, was arrested
and booked on suspicion of
armed robbery and grand thetl of
an auto after fUlalJy pulllng over
and SW'renderin1, to eod the Seal
Beach-to-Irvine pursuit.
California Hi&bway Patrol
spokesmen 1aid the youth 1ave
him self up to two 1berlff'1
ser1eant.s without incident and
no accldenta resulted ftom the
madcap pursuit.
Se al Beach police said
Patrolman Tom Jackson was
naued down at 2:58 a.m. by a
Grants Pus, Ore .• man who
waded out or the soup waving his
arms on the Seal Beach
Boulevard overpass at the San
Diego Freeway.
The victim told Officer Jackson
be had just been robbed by a
hitchhiker who took hl1 car and
wallet atknifepoint.
lie said the bandit just drove
onto the freeway southbound
seconds before the policeman's
arrival.
lnvest11ator1 said omcer
Jackson Immediately started the
pursuit which ulllmately in·
volved CHP officers, the 1berifC's
orrlce and Irvine Pollce Depart·
ment personnel before ll ended.
Rloa alle1edly zoomed down
the fog-ahrouded Garden Grove
Freeway from the San Dl.ao
Freeway, then off onto the
Newport Freeway and finally
back to the San Dle10 Freeway.
He !lnally abandoned tbe ap·
parent ~cape attempt which
rao1ed rrom 80 mUes per bour to
CS mlles per hour depending on
condlUona encowitered at Sand Canyon Avenue.
Fro•PageAI
JFK ..•
sl1ht about the my1terle.9 sWI
Unaerlnc rrom tbt uaualnaUon.
Nor did ll lmmedlately ruolve
the ar1umeoll about tbe various
consplracy t.beorfee propoeed by
some 1Ludentl of tbe cue.
The Warren Commlaalon,
whlcb conducted the ofnclal re-
view of the usualnaUon and the
way the RBI and others In·
vestigated it. concluded that
Oswald was the murderer and
that he acted alone. Oswald was
shot to death in the Dallas police
statlon before be could be tried,
and his killer, Jack Ruby was
convicted of murder and died oC
cancer.
Oswald's Cuban connecUons
have figured in some conspiracy
theories, and the newly released
files show that tbo FBI checked
out al least some cluea concern-
ing Cuba.
A Los Angeles informer told
agents the name1 of two San
Juan, Puerto Rico men who al·
legedly had lcnowl,:dge of "ac·
livities between Cuba and the
Unlt.e4 Stat.es, 11 FBI agent.a ln
San Juan then were ln1lruct.ed to
interview the men.
In another eplaode, FBI head·
quarten obtained and translated
a letter written ln Spanlab and
malled from Havana to 01wald
in DaUu.
Al'Wlr.,_.. a ... .,.,..,,,.,,,. ••
For all the travail, Sen
Hubert Humphrey has re-
lished the fight, says AP
s pecial correspondent
Waller R . Mears . And
there's something awry in the
eulogies pouring out to the
man battling his final illness.
See story, Page BS.
Froa Page Al
RETIRE ...
his present position in 1970.
Tuesday n11ht trustees accept·
ed Palmer's retirement and
granted him the status or a
tenured teacher for six months so
that be can receive lon1 term dis·
abUlty insurance.
Payments would be approx-
imately two-tblrda of bis salary.
an ortlcial said.
At the same time, trustees
declined to act lmmedlatel)' in
seeking a permanent replace·
ment at the auggeaUoo of board
member Dave Sonkaen.
Sonklen aaid lbat studies are
needed to det.ermlne 1f the posi·
Uon must be filled ln view of the
decline in enrollment that faces
the dlatrict.
Moffett aald that Palmer wa.s a
dedicated employee "who not
always made those he worked
with real comfortable.''
A double bonnt·I
Y<ff'WY .... ~khftd
tJy w•tnul ~"'end •
rldl Mtdwlre futu1ea Al•"
docn ~ebl4r "' ........ ...,.J
drop lld con•pon•kn< • "' \'.•.
W36 018'/a 11811/1
REO. t "20.00
aAL& • 1390.00
SiltQuestioa
10· Santa Ana
Films Obscene
. By TOM BARLEY °' ... o.fly ......... ,. A Jury that bas thus rar founel
10 movies 1bown at the Mitchell
Brothers' Santa Ana theater in
• the past two ~ears to be obscene,
Is back at ltl deliberations today
in Orange County Superior
Courl1 • Ac ang Superior Cqurt Judge
Marvin G. Weeks sent the panel
back ror further discussion late
Tuesday when questlonln1 ro·
vealed that. Jurors .had not
reached a clear verdlcL on five
movies.
They are: "CB Mommas,"
"One of a Kind," "Roller
Babies," "Resurrection or Eve,"
and "Hungry Mouth. 11
The votlne late Tuesday oo
three of the movies was 8 to 4 ln
favor of obscenity. The jury was
deadloclced at 6 lo 6 on "One oC a
Kind" and "Roller Babies.••
The jury voted 10 lo 2 that
"Summer or Laura'' waa not ob-
scene. The same verdict was re·
ached by a vote on the movl~ "My
Erolic'P'btasles."
Nine votes constitute an ac-
eptable majority 111 an Orange
County Superior Court trial.
Anything le$s constitutes a hune jury.
The jury believed when they
came back to lho courtroom
Tuesday that they had reached
verdictsonall 17 mQvies.
Judge Wew was told that the
jury was under the impression
that in a division where the ma·
jority bad less than nine votes,
the verdict was to be regarded as
a "not obscene" ruling.
Judge Weeks qulcklY corrected
that impression and sent the
panel back to the jury room for
further dllcusalon on the five un·
decided movies.
What.ever the verdicts on those
rive movies, the Jury has already
determined that the Honer Plan
Theater is a public nuisance, a
rulln ll that will allow Lhe city lo
close thefaclli~f · ,. to The jury wiu aJso be ukeu
asu11 damaaes aaalnat the
Mitchell Brothers In a hearing
tbat wlll be scheduled after the
first phase or the trial ls closed.
Detense at.tomey Joseph Rhine
aald Tue!day he wUI 10 to the ap·
pellate court to ask for a mistrial
and also halt any action the city
mny try lo take aeaiost the
theater.
The Jury reached unanimous
decisions in declarln1 tour of the
17 movies lbey v!ewed as ob·
scene. Those 1'6oviea are:
··Sodom and Gomorrah,"
· 'SensaUons," "Teeoa1e Fan·
tastes." and "The Story oC
Joanna."·
Also declared obscene with the
Jury voting indicated were
"Behind the Green Door," 9 to S;
·'Inside Marilyn Chambers," 9 to
3; "Autobiography of a Flea," 10
to 2; Teenage Cl'uiscrs," 11 to l ;
"French Classmates." 9 to 8 and
''LovelnaStran(ePlace." lltol
Thd jury apent part of the trial
at the Honer Pl~ theater view-
ioC 11 of 42.. moviei declared by
the cijy of Santa Ana to be ob-
scene and in violation of the city
ordinance.
Attorney James Clancy,
repruent.tn1 tbe cky, predicted
during the trial that a rlndlng of
obscenlt)' would encourage many
CaUtorn1a commul\llies to pros·
ecute exhibitors or X·rat.ed m ov-
ies. ·
Defendants Arlie and ,James
Mitchell commented outside the
courtroom late Tuesday that It.
was the first aucb reverse they
had received In ' aerie• or
lawsuits that, until now. bave
gone thelrway.
"But that's how tlie jury ruled
and we wouldn't have IL any
other way," Artie Mitchell com·
mented. "Or course, we aball be
appe'lllng the verdJcL"
Lawyers for both sides Doted
during the trlal tt\"t the obscenity
issue argued before Judge Weeks
could produce a precedeot-
seltlng verdict.
Christmas
Gifts of
Lasti~ Beauty. ..
byHenredon
That origln&I, VP.ry special gift you've been Sl!lllrhlng ror may
be right here. Fof your own home. for o member of your
family. for that yowng t:ouple starting their first home. A ~of ~redon furniture will make the w11rm glow of
Chrlscm;)s l11Sl for many seesons to come. Hm ore dlstln·
gulshed ~asur~ from many per1ods 11nd styles, ony on~ of
wh1d1 could be the perlec:t touch for any flne room. Dedde
for yourself which pi~ best suits you, end gift your$elf or
someone yOJJ love wllh Henredon this ChristlT\ds. I-lorry!
Umited quantities W'lltldble for lmmed14le delivery.
Apelt(lf
llO!Od.-~>ltequ.t•'(
~ .. 1-1
llnQlY Of grouped "' hal. ~-"'livln<I roont. W39 018 H::.>O
Rl!O. S455.00 •
9AUtSU.OO .
.. ' Editorial Page ............................ ~ .......................... ..
.,,
Orange Coa'it Daily Pilot Wtldnetday. D.c:embef 7. 1971
Robert N. Weed/Publisher ThomH KMvll/EdltOf'
S.rbara Krelblch/Edltorlal Pege Editor
Proper Approach
\ \ To Trainee Jobs
The city of I lunffogton Beach has announced that it in·
tends to Jay off about 85 Comprehensive Employment and
Training AN <CETA) employees beginning ne11i( February.
• Ordinarily the news would be greeted wtth widespread
anguish. ll no d oubt is bad news to the employees con-
cerned .
·The city seems to be armed with several good reasons
for its decision, however.
, The employees were hired onJy for a temporary period
a nd the goal of the federal program is to train hard·corc
unemployed for permanent employment elsewhere.
Ins tead. som e of the employees have worked as long as
t hrce years in the cit)• in ··temporary" Jobs.
The city has relied heavily on CETA employees who fre·
qucntly occupy skllled positions. This is not the intent of
the program. This practice also could backfire on the city
'>hould federal funding be eliminated
Also: the city has been sub~id1zin~ salaries of CETA
<•mployecs who earn more than Sl0.000 pt•r year. This total
1-. ·projected lo reach 5350,000 annually H the program
t:ont1nues unchanged.
The money that Huntmg.ton Beach paid to subsidize
I he t emporary workers will be used to hire about 25 perma-
nt>nt e mployees.
City leaders say they will oontinuc to use CETA funds
hut will hire people for limited-Lenn jobs only. Most of
r hesC' Jobs will be in trainee p06itions.
We <:Ntainly )lope that the disptaccd federal workers
will be able lo find jobs. They will n:ceive city counseling
and ass1stan<:e m finding work.
The training they r eceived in cit~; departments is a bi~
I h ing lo ha\'c going for them in the JOO mar ht
Trustees' Pay Raise
• lluntmgton Beotch Union Jligtr School District trustees
hJVl' \'Oted themselves a maximum of $200 per month for
attending at least two board meetings.
Prc\'ious ly. trustees received S30 per meet mg
'.':e1ghbonng Newport-Mesa scho.ol district pays board
members s.to per meeting attended. to a maximum of $200
per month. Fifty dollars per meeting is not uncommon for
board mt•mbcrs of various special districts, other than
:.thools. "ho meet less frequently.
One truslN' complained about the high cost of
~.1solirw .\notht•r district official noted Ur.at tru::.tees ha\'e
;l\·eragt•d about three mct•tmgs per month recently High
~thool di:-trtC't hoard meetings a\'erage about five hours in
lt·nglh
That cio(•s ml'an extra t1mc and work. But maybe if
t rusll'l1s c·ould strive harder to keep tl'le1r m eetings
..,ho11cr. the\. \\ould not havC' to meet so oflen
This money is supposed lo cover routine expenses and
local lra\'C'l incidental to the job.
lroni<:a lly, trustees cut this year's 'budget back by S2
m1lhon t•arlicr this year. The cutbacks included limiting
home-lo-school and other student busing prpgrams.
Voice for Stude nts · I .
Beginmng .Jan. 1. there will be .a student rt-prcsen·
1 alive on the Coast Community College District Board.
·\flcr recent passage of legislation requiring a non\'Ol ·
mg student member, Coast trustees approved a system by
which the district's three colleges will rotate selection of
the representative a mong themselves.
Tht' first college lo be represented. a:-. decided by the
toss of a com, will be Golden West. foll<>t"cd by Orange
Coast and then Coastline.
Student leaders say they want to insure that those
selected have a genuine interest in student well-being and
som~ knowledge of how the board operates.
The res ponsible approach of most C<>ast student
leaders gives reason to expect that the new board mem-
Ders will prove to be valuable sources of information and
informed opmion in mflucncmg board decisions .
And should this prove to be the ca&e. studeJTts hope
thtir m ember eventually may be granted voting pri.vileges.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Piiot.
Other views expressed on 1h1s page are those of their authors and
arttsls. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot, PO
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boy d/Box
ByLM.BOYD
Intere8llng, that word
"box." To "box" somethlng
for shipment needs no ex-
p tan a lion, certainly. To
"box" a compass merely
means IA> name its 32 points
forward then backward ln
con1ecutive order. But less
well known Is that to "box" a
drink Is to pour it back and
forth between two glasses to
mix lt.
·Ate you satisfied with yoµr
fU'llt· name? It not, why not?
Scholars now think that peo-
ple who don't like their own
first names tend to be dis·
aatlsfied with themselves in
1eneral. Far more men than
women are known to dislike
their own first name•, in·
cidentally.
Consider yourself a
Seasoned Citizen, too, If you.
can recall the first movie in
which that heavyweight actor
Sidney Greenstreet ap-
peared. ''The Maltese
Falcon," it was. In 1940.
Greenstreet was almost a
Seasoned Citizen himself at
the time, incidentally. Re wa.s
61. Not a bad way to head
toward retlredlent, what?
At band is a report that a
thlrd of all babies born lq t~
country each year are tlle • ;,.
offspring or unwed mothers
A(ed 17oryounger.
Q. "What's a bouaecat's.
norm al body temperature?''
A. 101'f;degf'eea F .
TRB
The Day U.S. Isolation Ended
It's a SWlday like any other.
Going on Christmas. Brown
packaaes hidden in closets.
Outside brisk and snappy.
Children iO to Sunday School.
Newspaper jammed with ad-
vertisements. All about the new
upsweep hairdo. Wanamaker's
advertises white shirts at two
dollars (regular two-riCty and
three-dollar values -better
come early l. Morning news pret·
ty good: Russians counter·
attacking around Moscow;
maybe they'll hold out after all.
A!ter lunch the telephone rings.
And it's never, ever, the same
ae,ain ..
•·Hey. heard the news? The
Japs have bombed Pearl
Harbor'"
"No! You're c razy . Hey
Er.Q,es tine. . . "
Ev&?rybody of my era knows
where they heard the news,
December 7, 1941. Try us out.
That's what separates genera-
tions The stadium was crowded
to watch the Redskins and at the
half the loudspe¥er began to
blare. Will Lieutenant General
Smith call hjs office? There's a
telephone call for Commander
Russell' It went on and on.
Veteran New York Times
photographer George Tames
wondered what was up: caUed
has office; got the news. He went
to the Japanese Embassy; iron
gatt!S barred : a gray white
smoke rising from burning
papers in the rear. There was a
two -way traffi c jam on
Massachusetts Avenue of cars
gawking at the embassy.
IT'S AN anniversary to re·
member not because a war start·
ed but because a madness ended
isolationism . I have a personal
feeling because I was one of the
gawky boys who volunteered in
Mr Wilson's dream to make the
world safe for democracy. We
won . there was the exhilaration
of the Armistice, and then the
Lodge fight against the League.
Walson forlornly asked the nation
to remember the "dear ghosts"
or boys left on Flanders Fields
There was a maJority. never a
lwo·thirds majority, for the
League. Soon the whole crusade
was derided. The Nye Committee
showed it was all a plot by muni·
tions makers .
Senate isolationists defeated
the World Court, too Again there
was a majority. 52 to 36, but this
was several short of two·th~.
Borah and Johnson left the
~~n~lf chamber laughing and re· J01cang.
lsolationtsm came down
through the start of World. War
ll. It weakened when England
fought alone and when Hitler
madly attacked his surprised
partner Stalin. But Colonel ·
Lindbergh wrote an open letler to
Americans throu1h Colller's:
France wu defeated, h~ said;
Great Britain was beina defeat·
ed: the US would be defeated,
too, if it joined the fray, No dls·
tlnction between Hitler's and
Churchhlll's moral aims.
On Thursday. Dec. 4, three
days before Pearl Harbor, the
1solationl.st Chicago Tribune and
Washington Times-Herald
published a top-secret U.S. posi·
lion paper lavini out lo•lstlc and
supply plans for an imagined in-
''aslon of Germany with 5 million
Alnericans in 1943. ll was the
kind of thing all war oUices pre·
pare, but the newspapers
charged it showed a Roosevelt
plot.
And so the day of trial came, 36
years ago. Most of 1t still is quite
inc redible. It 1s incredible
because we had broken the
Japanese code and never should
have let the surprise occur. A
natty little colonel named
William Friedman who was a de·
mon at cryptoeraphy had un-
scrambled the Imperial code un·
der operauon "Maflc" and wu
giving the Army, N•vy and state
Departments translations of
Tokyo war orders before the
Japanese troops got them. We
knew an attack was comina.
Where, we didn't know.
WE KNEW that Japan had
sent a so-called ••peace"
emissary to Washington to fool
us and maak the surprise, and we
played along with It; it was a
double game of make·believe.
We had warned Army and Navy
Commanders Nov. 24 of a proba·
ble attack; we had sent a more
urgent warning, Nov. 27. But
mental blockage Is more
powerful than reality; the attack
would be on Malaya, Dutch East
Indies, PhlUpines, Guam -not
Hawaii.
Tben the following funny mis·
haps occurred. Tokyo dispatched
a 14 -parl message to the
Japanese embassy in
Washington Dec. 6 of which the
first 13 parts were decoded for the
Slate Department before the J aps
eo~ them. •1This means war,"
..
solemnly nJd FOl to H&tf'7
Hopkins u he ate dinner fl'Qm a
tray. ThCl'e mi1ht still be hope ln
the 14th section. ho...iever. Oddly
enough the Japaneie transmit-
ters called It a day before send·
in& the 14th section. which had
the sting in it (tho11gb lt didn't.
mentaon Pearl llar~r ). They
sent \t next mornhl&. General
Marshall, Chief of Staff of the
Army, didn't get the 14th section
till he came In fro.-i a Sunday
horseback ride at 11:30. He sent
another alert then.
ELECTRONI C equipment
picked up Japanese planes wing·
ing to auack at 7 4.m .. just as
super sensitive electronic equip-
ment is supposed to do. The
watch officer didn't •o anything;
it must be a night of American
B·l7s.
General Marshall decided to
se nd his Sun~ay alert
to U.S . comtnanders.
b ec ause contact with
Hawaii was temporarily inter·
rupled so he sent the crucial
me~sage by Wester) Union and
RCA and Cinally ~ motorcycle
courier started out with it in Hawaii to mllitury qeadquarters.
Unaccountably bortibs began to
tall and he jumped lnto a ditch.
As background tqJ all of th&
above the Hawaiia;t comman·
ders, Admiral Kimmel and
General Short, w~ barely on
s peakini terms from inter·
service jealousy: the big bat-
tleships were lied up two-by-two
for rear of sabot ge. The
airplanes were on t e ground.
Anti·aircralt guns w e wrongly
placed and there was o effective
air patrol by ~itb r service.
Absolute surprit;e. he Pacific
fleet was can cell out; eight
battleships and ee cruisers
sunk or disabled.
the day. I
House and
stayed unt.111 a .m . crisp night.
nearly freezing; t cks with ear·
ly Christmas tree coming down
Pennsylvania Av ue; a misty
moon climbing th trees over the
old bronze canno in Lafayette
Park. Cabinet m ting at 8:30;
Congressional lea ers at 9.
We went out t stand on the
front portico of t White House
-a little st.one a ge amon1 tlle
columns.
Behind the i rails on the
avenue a llUle er wd looked in at
us. It tried lo s ing the Star
Spang led Banne
• TRB 1s a l ngstanding
W03hmgton byline. Its author cur·
rently ii Rrchar Strout of the
Chriltion Science n1tor.
Women's Conference Worth Invest ent
To the Editor:
On'behalf of the Orange County
delegation to the National
Women's Conrerence held re-
cently in llouslon. I wish to thenk
the Daily Pi.lot for its e¥cellent
coverage of the event
~ should like to point out.
however, that your ed1tqrlal
<Nov . 25> Is misleading. You re·
fer to the Houston gathering as a
"SS Million Meeting "The meet-
ing last month was the culmina-
fion of meetings held In every
state and territory of the United
States, meetings which attracted
as many as 11 .000 women <Utah)
and 6.000 women <California). In
preparation for each of the state
meetings, edueational materials
were prepared, worltshops an4
P•nels were or.ganized. speakers
were found, ahd smaller regional
meetings were held, such as the
one at UC Irvine last spring.
Publictty had to be sent out; thi
involved the designing, writJna
and prtnting of thousands of
brochures lo order to Insure am·
pie representation at each state
meeting. Finally, delegates to.
Houston received minimal ex·
pense& ror tare. room and board.
the country even received ex
pense money
In the tradition of American
womanhood. we volunteered our
time and energy in the service of
our country. ....
Let me remind you that SS
million represents about 20
minutes of the Vietnam war ip
terms of cost and there was no
loss of life in I louston. Rather,
there was an affirmation of life.,
It was peaceful conference filled
with the hopes of millions of
women from all wulks of
American life
VIVIAN ll. HALL
Chair, Orange County
(Delegation, National Wom~·s
Conrerenc:e
Poeeer£t.a
To the Editor:
About a year ll«O l read lh the
Dally PilQt that Edison was plan·
ning to bury the power linei.
alon1 Warne'r Avenue fr<>rn
Golden West to Bblea Chica.
Since these lihe~ tower nearly 50
f~et above the il'O\IOd Qt the de·
porture end or Meodowtark
Airport, this seemed llk~ a great.
idea for increasing the u~ty ol
aircraft operations. Logically,
Edi.on .should have llllrted the
job at Bol!a Chica ond worked
eastward to Golden Weat.
In lead, they started at Goldton
W~t and worked WC tWatd unUl
they sot to tho cd1e of
Meadowlark th~n they•
SlOJ'ped! '
circumstances -not engine
failure. If the plane hadn't been
tripped by the power lines, the
pilot may have been accused of
low Oylng, but he would have
made a successful departure
artd the plane, the power lines.
and people's nervet; would have
remained intact.
Al the first Huntington Beach
aviation colnmittee meetin~ on
Nov. 2 , councilman Siebert
promised to look Into the pto·
blem. We are anxiously waiting
lor some action.
Edison and Huntington Beach
have already 11pent many
thousands for beautification. How about improving our safety asw~n?
RALl>H D. RICKS
Huntington Beach
chance, what ith a 6 to 2 disad·
vantage. ·
Irvine
L
VOL 70, NO. 341, 4 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES
CampuSales
8 Youths Held
· 1n Drug Raid
By ROBERT BARKER
OI -Delly i-ileC t.IMf A 15-year-old girl stunned an
undercover Fountain Valley
police officer earlier this year
when she allegedly sold him five
balloons of heroin near lhe Los
Amigos High School campus.
County Tax
Due Soon
Orange County property
owners have until Monday.
Dec. 12, to pay lhe first in-
stallment oC their 1977-78
tax bills.
County Tax Collector·
Treasurer Robert Citron
said that normally. the
first installltlent is due
Dec. 10. But since Dec. 10
is a Saturday, taxpayers
will be given a two-day
grace period to make their
paymenl.5.
The bills must be
brought to his office by the
close· of business Monday
or carr y a Dec. a2
postmark, Citron said.
· He also warned tax-
payers who for some
reason failed to receive a
tax bill to contact his orrice
immediately to oblaln • duplicate in order to avoid
the six percent penalty for
late payments.
The Incident touched off an in-
tensive lnvesUgalion into drug
sales at the Los Amigos campus
which this morning resulted in
the arrest oC eight juvenHes on
charges of selllna d1n1erous
drugs. .
One adult. Fred James Allen,
18, of 4040 West First St., Santa
Ana, also was arrested aa teams
of policemen struck al the homes
of suspects in Santa Ana and
Fountain Valley at 6 a.m .
Sgt. Ed Parker, who is in
charge of the Fountain Valley
Special Enforcement Detail, sald
most of the reported sales in·
volved PCP, which also Js called
"angel dust."
Parker said that PCP ls pro-
duced in laboratories. It is used
as an ani., tranquilizer.
"PCP is more danterous than
LSD and, in my opinion. even
worse than heroin because of the
damage it can do to the brain,"
he said. "It is powerful enough to
knock out an elephant.••
Parker said that police worked
with administrators at Los
Amigos High School and enrolled
an undercover agent in the
school. The Los Amigos campus
is in the city of Fountain Valley
but is part of the Garden Grove
Uniried 5ebool District.
He said the operator, wbo was
not a police officer, purchased
narcotics on the oampua almost
on a dally bolt dUllnl the Jn·
vesUgation.
i Bill to Allow
The probe began 2~ months
a10 when the 15-yeaf·Old Cirl made t.hebetoln 1ele.
Olflctrs tald that hero1n ls
commonly kept 1n •mall, toy
.:.alloona because ~Y can be
swallowed and quickly con· ·
cealed.
I , UCI to Retain
Terms, Aid
The University of California
can accept $2.6 million in
federal aid without compromls·
ing admission standards for
Americans transferring from
foreign medlcal schools under a
measure passed by the House to-
day.
The bill was approved 344-0
and sent to President Carter for
his expected sl1nalW'e. ·
Jt amends present law, which
re q u ired t b'8 t A mer i can
medical scboob accepting the ln·
centive grants• for lncreuing
enrollment dbregard academic
records of American· medical
students transferring from
abroad.
UC President David Saxon bad
announced. along with the preai·
dents oC 15 other American uni-
versities, that UC no longer
would accept such requlrements.
Locally, UC Irvine would have
given up $322,000 1n Health,
Education and Welfare grants ..
The amended bill would permit
universities lo apply their own
admission standards. ·
The existing law had been
criticized aa an infrin1ement on
academic freedom, and tor
permitting lesser q,uallfied •tu·
dents to enter medical schools.
Coast
Parker said that m05t oC the
heroin sold in Orange County
now comes from Mexico.
He said police do not have a
rundown on the supplier of the
drugs at thl.s Ume.
Parker said that PCP Is becoming more popular lhan
marijuana. He said that Jt can be
produced in home laboratories in
relaUvelY simple procedures.
UCI Degree
Added for
Environment
A new baccalaureale degree
proiram is being debated among '
facul&y of UC Irvine. It would
manufacture professional en·
vJronmentallats.
The UCI Academic Senate
takes up the proposal at a 3 p.m.
Thursday meeting.
The prospecUve degree 1n ap·
plied ecology would combine the
ltadlUonal science tralnlng ol a
blolo1lcal aclencea major, in
comblnallon with envlronmen·
talJy baaed counes offered by the
proiram in social ecology.
The 1raduate would be
awarded a bachelor of arts
de1tee.
Courses Jn envlronmeotal
quaJlty and ~th. plannin1 and
pubUc policy, law and society
would form the foundaUon of the
new dlsclpllne.
..
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1977 TEN CENTS
· 'l'lleg Re111emfJer
Jim Daw (right) and fellow m.embers of
the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association ob·•
serve a moment of sllence in honor of their
fallen comrades during memorial services
conducted this morning at Seal Beach
Naval Weapons Station. The ceremonies
,marked the Japanese· attack on Pe~rl
Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. The surprise attack
on the Naval base on Oahu in the Hawaiian
Islands brought the U.S., suddenly and lr·
revocably, into World War II. See related
story and photo, Page A3. .
2 Hospitalized
A8 Fog COWies
2-truck Cr<Uh
Two people lnJW'ed when thelr WASHINGTON <AP> -~ ·
pickup truck CfNhed lnto the D. EbrUcbmua. abe -~~~ alde of a tnclor·traller rig ln eover-u9 conspirator •bo ~
beavr foe 1lt an trvlne intersec. mlt.ted surrem:terln1 bJl ••edaJw
Uon were .ln aaUslactory condl· and mOf'at J~tment" tb Richard
Uon today at Tustin CommunltY' M. Nixon, wU1 be freed April 27
Hospital • after having served l'Aa years in
Hospitalized Tuesday were the anArizonafederalprison.
driver, Matthew E. Huebner, 21, The U.S. Parole Commllslon
of 13801 Stampede Circle, Irvine, set the date Tuesday and in·
and Michael Ecclettone, 21, of formed the 52 ·ye a t·old
15361 Saveme Circle, Irvine. Ehrllcbman at the Swift Trail
Both were thrown from the Prison near Salford, Adi. Tbe
pickup on Impact and suffered commission's action was an·
deep head cuts, county nouncedtoday.
paramedics said.· Hla lawyer, Stuart Stiller, said
A tblrd occupant of the truck, the former Wblte House
Randall C. DeLapp, 21, of 179'2 domestic cOID'laelor would have
Cedar Tree Lane, Irvine, was no comment.
Jess 1eriousJy Injured and was EbrJlchman was convlcte'd,
treated by TmUn Community along with Johll Ji. MUchell Md
Hospital doctors and rele&1ed. H.R. Haldeman, of consplrlng to
The accident occurred at bide White House lnvolvementln
Culver Drive and Barranca the Watergate burgJary and tbeD
Parkway. lylng aboutltunderoatb.
The driver of the tractor· Mitchell and Haldeman,
trailer truck, Edwin c. Frith, 38, respecUvely attorney 1enera1
of El Monte, was uninjured, and chief~ staff in the first 'Nix·
police sald. on admlnlltration, will become
Witnesses told officers that Ule lut Watergate figures la
Frith was turning left across prison.
Culver Drive oo a green ll1ht and The three were eonvlcted on
that Huebner missed seeing the NewYear'sDayJ97S.
red light· against rum 1n dense U.S. District Judge John J.
fog. Sirlca sentenced each to 2\i to
Olflcers sald visibility was Jess eight years in prllon, but cut the
t.ban 200 teet. . tier ms to one to four years last
•October.
Aid ~ _ ail d EllrUcbma.n ent.red prlaon • e .tS..98 • e Oct. 28, 1116, before the appeals.
BOISE, Jdabo <AP) -Jobn
Weidert, a CaU(onlJa farmer;
came to Ida.be> to claim the
state'• former governor, lntefior
Secr,tary ·cecu And.rm, 11 run· nln• •round the cowitry spread·
fq Ue1 ~cemCnJ fnterlOl'•a el· tos.U J.o enfotce Cede.rel n1ula·
tJons about farms. federal water
arul l&Qd rtctsc..
FREEDOM IN Apf.~ . W•~• Drlcllman
Jet· Hits
Base at .
·Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -An
American U-2 spy plane era.shed
today u It was taking off from
the Brttlsb A.krotiri air base Jn
aoutlaern Cyprus, killing five peo-
ple and lnJW'ing seven, a Brttbh
mlUtuy spokesman reported.
Tbe dead included tbe
American pUot of the U.S. Air
Forae blgh-altllude recon-
nallsaJX'e Jet and four Cypriot
civ11fan employees at the bue.
the chief spokesman for the
British COQlm.and in CyprUJ said.
Brttilb autborlUes refused to
let newsmen and photocrapbers
enter the alr base. Tbe
spokesman aald tbe plane
cr11bed ln a restricted zone
where pbotocrapblng is pro·
blblted.
U.S. U·2s bave been staUoned
at AJcrotirl since the 1973 Arab.
Israeli war. They make dally re-
conna!Jaance tl11hts over the
Arab-Israeli ftoot tines lo check
on compliance with restricUoos
on troop deployments and other
provisions of the cease-fire
a1reementB between Israel and
and its Arab foes. •
The plane crashed on top of the
base's operations control center,
exploded and set the building
complex on fire, witnesses sald.
"The U-2 took ofl, appeared un·
able to lain alUtude and then
swerved and crashed into the
operatlom bulldlnc on the side of
the runway," said a Cypriot
workman at the ban.
' .. Tbere waa a.terrllic explosion
wlMn the plane bit the building
_. *M wbol• area waa engulfed • ID flames." •
OM ol the 1\veo wounded, a
~b dvWan ... loyed b)' tile
..... ~ ~ WU repOrted
oo...,, Tbe other
tJtree airmen. • ~~id,JiWll>man and two cnrl•k.i&aaelPGbamao said. -~ INaWed for more than ~ ...,... to eontrol the blue. •
Demap to the bu.Udlog1 was ex· ~lve,
Tbe eralh 0«urred sborUy
before 1 Lm,, local Ume, before
mott of tbe bae personnel bad
rePGl'ted tor .ork.
Tbe "1Uab spokesman said
there ·~ no lndlcaUoo of the
tal&M af&be crash.
Planners OK
Home Plans
'l'he Irvine Plaonlnc Com·
mluloa bu approved the build·
la& ot '6 coadominluma in Wood· brlqe VWe,ie, and preUmlllary
sU.e plana for nearly 900 bouae.'l
and apartments ln the TurUe
Rock resldentlal area.
The CQDdom.lnlums ue located
at Ashwood and Woodsprina. The Turtle Rock project ls tho
fir.st to come under the strictures
of a new bllllide development or-
dinance approved by the CJt:y
Council l•t month.
Tbe on:Unance pl'Oloribea the
bu.lldlq ot ho111es that would
bJoek acmlo views or reqQLre
massive gracllng of rldgetops. •
Auto Victim .
A Saata AU teen·acer whose
car 1mUbed Into a tratftc 1'-'1al
po11 ln lnlne Saturday still waaln
crUJcal CGDdltioo today ln &he in·
tenalve care ward of Tustin eom-
mantt:y ffolJ)ltal..
Mart A. Rauacb, 18, was re-
. •'1yed at the aeene, at Calver
Drive ln4 Barranca Road, by
Otani• Coun~ paramedJu, who ,.ld the 70U1b was not breathlnc
wbeA thq arrtftld.
JrYlne pOp-ee •Uece Reach
wH cl.rlYl.Qa uder tb• lnllwence
of aJcobol wb41ri hll car swerved. Jo'o tbe Ide.
. .
f Z ONLYPILOT Wednfldg.o.c.mtw1,3m'
Hoover Move Tel•
. ..
FBI Release
Fiks on JFK
KW ASHINGTON (AP) -Just 'fwo hours after John F. Kennedy
was kill ed, FBI Director J .
Edgar Hoover concluded that
Lee Harvey Oswald was the aa·
sassin and that Oswald WllS a ·'mean-minded individual
'• .. In the category of a nut," ac·
' cording to FBI files released to-·
day.
" ( called the attorney general
at his home and told him l
tbougbt we had the 01an who
killed the president down in
Dallas," Hoover wrote at 4 p.m .
on Nov . 22, 1963, as Kennedy lay
dead in a Dallas hospital.
Hoover's memos relating a
. minute-by-minute account of his
actions following the assasslna-
taon were part or 40,001 pages of
rates made public by the FBI as it
opens ils full records on the in·
vestigation of the assasalnaUon.
In a11o&.her episode, FBI head-
quarters obtained and translated
a letter written in Spanlab and
malled from Havana lo Oswald
in DaUas. The letter, addressed
to .. Friend Lee," and
postmarked sis days aftet the U·
.sasslnaUon, spoke or a financial
deal and praised Oswald '.s
marksmanship. But the lnlUal
scrutiny or the (Iles did not in-
dicate whether thls was a mean·
ingful clue or whether it was the
work of a headline-seeker.
The FBI wUl release another
40,000 pages next month. In the
two batches, officials say, wlll be
all the paperwork generated ln
the bureau u it invesU1ated the
case.
The files, weighing about a half
ton, were rich with the detaUs or
tragedy and drama as scores or
citizens told the FBI of their sor-
row and their suspicions -and in
some cases, their hatred of the
Kennedy family.
No mes are being wlthheld, ot-'
Cicials say, although many wOt'ds
and paracrapha have been delet·
ed because they are clasalfled u
secret or are otherwise exempt
from disclosure. -~ .......... 'LOVE SLAVE• SUSPECT WAVES TO CAMERAMAN
The agency ls releaalng the
material LO comply wlth requests
under the Freedom of lnforma·
tlon Act. Agent.have spent about
18 months screeninf the .fUes to
delete the classified and exempt
portions.·
Joyce McKinney Facing London Kldn1p Trt11
But the material provided no
immediate or astounding new in·
sight about the mysteries still
lingering Crom the assassination.
Nor did it immediately resolve
the argumenls about the various
conspiracy theories proposed by
some students or the case.
When the screenlnf process
was complete, agency employees
becan making copies and pack· ·
ing them in cartons. Each set
comes in 1S cartoos that weigh
about 60 ~da apiece.
Ex-FBI Agent Sti11 ··
Would Back Hoover
I t I •
The Warren Commission,
which conducted the official re·
view or the assassination and the
way the FBI and others in·
vesligaled it, concluded that
Oswald was the murderer and
that be acled alone. Oswald was
shot to death in the Dallas police
station before he could be tried,
and his kiUer, Jack Ruby was
convicled of murder and died of
cancer.
Oswald's Cuban connections
have figured ln some conspiracy
&heori es, and the newly released
£ales show that the FBI checked
out al least some clues concern·
ing Cuba.
A Los Angeles informer told
agents the names of two San
Juan, Puerto Rico, men who al·
legedly had knowledge of "a~
tivities between Cuba and the
United States." FBI agents in
San Juan then were instructed lo
interview the men.
Several organl%aUoAS, lnclud·
iAg The Associated Pl'ess, are
paying the 10-ceGla·•·pace copy.
ing fee the FBI d)arges for the
material -a total of ~.000.10.
But the law allows an agency to
waive the tee ii the disclosure c,f
the material is considered to be
of great public importance.
So the fees may yet be ap-
pealed by the news organizations
to the Justice Department, which
has authority to overrule the FBI
if it finds that the disclosure Is
sufficiently impor tant to the
public.
The FBI also is placing sets or
\he files in two rooms: one for re-
port.ers and one for scholars, re-
searchers and other interested
people. The material may be ex-
aminedthere without charge.
From Page Al
DEA~~111~NP,S DREAM •••
ly was qultaJteppy wlthbls work which put blm close to the
land and tbe nearby dnert hills be loved so much.
Upon hearing of Richard's death, Newport-Mesa Eve-
ning School Prlnclpal"Carole Caat.aldodeclded ~present bis
parenls, Joan and stepfather Ken Wllllams, w{tfi the diploma
R icti~rd came-so closeto•chleviog.
Thursday night she will make the same drive to U>n,.ia
that Richard made each evening to present the diploma ln
person.
Richard's body wb cremated on Saturday. Hl.& ubes
were scattered over the bills near Corona.
Youth ]ail~d After
Wild Freeway Chase
A Wilmington teen-ager is in
jail today after allegedly leading
police and highway patrolmen on
a 27 ·mile chase on three
freeways at up to 80 miles per
hour in iero vl.slbillty fog at
times.
flagged down at 2:58 a.m. by a
Grants Pass, Ore., •an who
waded out of the soup waving bis
arms on the Seal Beach
Boulevard overpass al the San Diego Freeway.
The victim told Officer Jacks0t1
he had Just been robbed by a
By LAURIE KASPER °' .. .,..., ............
No matter what'• been written
or saJd about the Jl'edenJ Bureau
of Inve1U1allon lo recent
months, ret1red agent Leslie F.
Warren is stlll .. 100 percent
beblnd" the FBI and J , Edlar
Hoover.
Break-Ina and other reportedly
Illegal acts committed by the
FBI currently are being in·
vesUgated and getting much at-
tention 1n tbe media.
But, Warren said, "I do feel the
FBI has gotten sort or a short
shrift."
To combat this, the Newport
Beach Toastmasters Club
member has joined the ' lecture
circuit or area service clubs.
After speaking to the Mission
Viejo Rotary Club Tue.s<ay, be
explained that hla objecU+e is to
try and 1et the pubUc interested
in his way of th.inking.
"I still think its the most effi.
cient organiuUon 1n the United
States• blatory, both past and pre.
Jent," he said.
When the news or Hoover's
death reached the FBI 's Los
Angeles office, where he spent
moat ot hls 33 years as a speclal
·aeent.. Wunn r ecalls making a
predlctioo.
At the Ume, he said, "The FBI
real soon ls going to revert back
to an ordinary, poUUcal moUval·
ed oraanlzaUon.''
So far, he said, bis forecast has
not come true. But, be cautioned,
''Really, the Jury ii still out."
Warren said Hoover, wbo he
met penooally several Umes, on·
ly agreed to become bead or the
FBI because be bad the op-
portunity 1o free 1l of poUUcal in·
rtuence. The former agent
believes hla late boss succeeded.
•'He did not let anyone bulfalo
hlm,., be said. Presidents. at·
torneys 'eneral, no one could
control him, even though they
tried, be said.
Hoover, be said, would have
not.b.lal to do with the events ln·
volvedin Water1ate.
Ba'z. be .explained, the former FBI curector did believe "ii we
dido •t know what was golng on,
why, we would be negligent."
Warren recalled that after the
Bolshevik revolution in Russia! Enrique Rios, 18, was arrested
and booked on suspicion ·Of
armed robbery and grand theft or
an auto after finally pulling over
and .surrendering, to end tbe Seal·
Beach-to-Irvine punult.
.hllchhllcer who took h1s car and At Lea&t IO . wallet al knlfepoint.
He said the bandit just drove,
California Highway Patrol
spokesmen said the youth gave
himself up to two ahetUf's
sergeants without incident and
no accidents resulted from the
madcap pursuit.
Seal Beach police sald
Patrolman Tom Jackson was
------~--------~----=··
DAILY PILOT
onto the freeway southbound. Mitchell Films seconds before the policeman's. __ _
arrival. ,
Investigators said Officer Ruled OL---ne Jackson hnmedJately •tarted tho ~
pursuit wbicb ultlmatelJ In·•
volved CHP ofOcera, the tberilf'•
office and lrYine Pollee Dtpart-
ment penioanel betore lt .. ded.
.Riot allegedl1 ioomed don
the fog-abrouded Garden Grove
Freeway lrom -the Sut Dl910
Freeway., then off onto the
NewPort Freeway Hd nnally
back to the San Dleao Freeway.
He flnally abandoned the a~
parent escape attempt wbJcb
ranted hom IO m11-**'hour to
45 mU• ~ bout de~dlna on• c_ondlt1ons-encounterid. at, S"and
Canyon.Avenue. • •·•··· • •
the com(Dunbt party and related
groups moved into lhls co4Jllry.
First, he said, they trled the
direct approach but the people
wouldn't buy it.
So. he said, they began in·
filtrating other groups and
operating through front or-
ganizaUons. Because or this, he
said, agent.! al.so went to rallies
and infiltrated groups.
Warren said he personally
believes that the government, if
it proceeds, will have trouble
proving criminal intent in their
case against former FBI New
York supervisor John Kearney
who has been indicted for
wiretapping and mail openings.
A~bonnrl
M<ftlef)'clllll~
by~ ,,..nr.'f onJ
ridl h«dw.trf! IN!u"n g•.in °"°' .. ~~Ml.,
• drop Id eot19'pl)Odeftce 11<• •·
W36 018Y'J 1181'h
REG. ~I ~:>O 00
Ml.&UH0.00
1'1ornaon Trial
Freed on
LONDON (AP) -A former
American beauty contest winner
and ber alleged accom~lice, ac-
cused of k1dnappln1 a Mor,non
ml11lonary for her a-xual
1ratifieaUon, have been freed on
ball on the condition that tbey
live with her mother who. is ln
Endand for the trial.
The 21-year-old American
woman has been ordered to stand
trial on charges or kidnapping
the 21-year-old Mormon, who
testified be was chained to a bed
and forced to have sexual lll·
ter'course with her three limes
Joyce McKinney of Asheville,
NC .. a former Miss Wyoming·
USA beauty contest winner, was
rele&1ed on •.600 bail after the
rulint Tuesday. Keith May. 24, or
Maywood, Calif., who wlll be
tried on the same charge, also
Otllt f'tMt 1&an..,,...
BACKING THE FBI
Attired Agent W1rren
was freed on ball.
Ball was franted after a
psychlalrl1t sai~ fdlss McJ(lnney
W0\&14 detcrlorate mentally and
physl~-1ly 11 she were kept lA
prlloP any lonaer. She and Mq
'm\ISt report to poUce twice dally
ttnd live with Miss McKbmey's
mother, who bas come to
England until the case is de-
cided.
They are acc'used of abducting
Kirk Anderson of Provo, Utah, on
Sept. u , imprlso'1lpg him atainst
hla will 1n a remote cottaie near
Okebampton in Devon, a county
in southwest England, p<tSsess·
ing a rake revolver and a botUe of
chloroform. They were arrested.
Sept. 20.
MiH McKinoey told arresUng
ortlcers she played bondage
games with Anderson to help him
.sort out his sexual problems, but
she said he was a willing partici·
pant, not a kid.oapvlcUm.
Sh~ testitled Tuesday that they
met 2'A ·Yeata a,o In the Un.lted
States because she haid a sports
car he wanted to drive, but that
bll} was in love with her, not the
autompbU~
Miss McKlnaey admitted she
had an "all·COIJJUIJling passion"
for Andersoa, Uaen sobbed: "f
don't want u1lblnl more to do
"'ilh Kirk. R~ doesn't know what
eternal love is. Let me pick up
the pieces of my lite."
She spent more than an hour lo
the dock telling the maglstrates'
aearlog her side of the case.
Figure Incorrect
A number wu inadvertently
dropped from a stoor on Sad·
dleback College's future COft·
.slrucUon needs {h Tuesday's edi-
,Uon of the Dail)' Pilot.
l'be story referred lo the col-
lege's future building needs as
totaling fT million In today's
dollars. It should have read $75
milllon in today's dollars.
Christmas
Gifts of
Lasting Beauty. ..
by Heiiredon
That orlginel, very special gift you've bce-n 5ear~ f~ mov
be right here. Fo< your own home. for llrnrmbet d YOUf
family, for that young couple ~artlng their first home. A
piece of Hetaredon furniture wlll ll\llke the waim glow of
Christmcu lalit ror many 1eMOn'> to come. Hare are dl5tfn·
guished treasures from m<)(lv perKX.l~ end styles. eny one ·or
which could be the ~r1ect touch for any nm: room. ~de
fOf yourself which piece bt.:sA sul\S you. e"d gift')'Ollrsel 04"
'iOl'l'\eOOe you rove with HunrPdOfl lhl$ Chrbtmas. Hul1)'!
limited quenllties &vllllllblc for lmniedidte delivery.
Aflll.rf~ '""°"'-d!oU~ lmrr-W. UM:d •
~\ngly OI !lfOIJl-.d In
... ~.~OtlMng
1vom. W39 DIS 11i0
RC.a. t4!>~.oo •
IAl.E n•a.oo
'
Lagunft/South Coast
*
~----
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 341, •SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALtFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1977 TEN CENTSl
·5 Die as American U-2 Crashes
'
Campus Sales
8 .Youths Held
Jet Hits
Base at
Cyprus In Drug Raid NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -An
American U-2 spy plane c:rashed
today as It was taking off from
the British AkroUrl air base in
southern Cyprus, kllJlng five peo·
pie and injuring seven, a British
mUltary spokesman reported.
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .... o.u, ~ ... f>l•fl A 15-year-old girl stunned an
undercover Fountain Valley
pollce officer earlier this year
when she allegedly sold him five
balloons of heroin near the Los
Amigos High School campus.
I .
WuntyTax
Due Soon
Orange County property
owners have until Monday,
Dec. 12. to pay the first in·
stallment of their 1977-78
tax bills.
County Tax Collector-
Treasurer Robert Citron
said that normally, the
first installment is due
Dec. 10. But since Dec. 10
is a Saturday, taxpayers
will be given a two-day
grace period to make their
paymenls.
The bills must be
brought to his office by the
close of busmess Monday
or carry a Dec . 12
postmark. Citron said
He also warned tax-
payers who for some
reason failed lo rece1 ve a
tax bill to contact his oCfice
immediately to obtain a
duplicate in order to avoid
the six percent penalty for
late payments.
Truck Hits
SC Store;
No Injuries
A runaway truck plowed Into
· the plate glass store front ol a
' downtown San Clemente drug
· store after business hours Tues-
day. damaging the front of the
building but causing no injuries.
Police said the brakes ap·
parently failed on the eight·
wheel rig, which was traveling
eastbound on Avenida del Mar
just west of Med-Rx Drugs, 2'1
Ave. del Mar. No information
was available from police today
on the driver's Identity.
The ·store had closed shortly
before the 6: 10 p.m. accident,
said Val Maya, manager.
"We were lucky there was no
one in here," he said. "If anyone
had been entering or leaving the
store, he would probably have
been hurt."
The slbre was open for busl·
ness today.
A city fireman who attempted
to move the truck out of the traf-
fic lane on the busy street said
the brakes Called as he tried to
park it across from the store,
causing minor damage to a
parked van. .·
Coast
Weatber
Fog nl&ht and momlna
hours wit.b buy aunsblne
afternoons throuab Thun·
day. Lows ton11ht ln tow
50s. Hlehs Thurtday upper
801 at the beach11 and
mld· '70l ldland.
IN81DITODAY
TM '"4ia bfMffdorilt o/
cold '""**' art CM corn· pantft u.al ..U tM?n. not UW
n//lflrl' tolliO bUf #Mm, IOI/I • 'colutidle MfUOft Molkolof~.:
S.IPGfl'-41•. . . . ......
~~ &1--~ "l! ~ ,. E ....... ,. .. AM> .... .. ... ""' .,,. ........... _Mo.al .. or ... o..... .rs ,;: ......... ,.,~ ~=~-=-.... =-'; C1.u,U ~ ,..,m ....... J ....
The incident touched off an In·
tensive Investigation into drug
sales at the Los Amigos campus
/Which Utis morning resulted in
the arrest of eight juveniles on
charges or selling dangerous
drugs.
One adult, Fred James Allen,
18, of 4040 West First St., Santa
Ana, also was arrested as teams
of policemen struck at the homes
of suspects in Santa Ana and
Fountain Valley at6 a.m .
Sgt. Ed Parker, who is in
charge of the Fountain Valley
Special Enforcement Detail, said
most of the reported sales in·
volved PCP, which also is called
"angel dust."
Parker said that PCP is pro-
duced in laboratories. It Is used
as an animal tranquilizer .
"PCP is more dangerous than ,.,,_.._.
LSD and, in my opinion, even 1.a•.c;fl Reme.IJer
worse than heroin because of the
damage it can do to the brain,.. Jim Daw (right) and feUow members or
he said. "It is powerful enough to the P earl Ha rbor Survivors Association ob·
knock out a~ elephant._" serve a moment of silence in honor of their
_Parker s8:1d. that police workej.,_ fallen comrades during memorial services wit~ adm1n1strators at,,.....-f:~ \.. conducted this morning at Seal Beach Amigos tilgh School and enrolled \.. . . W . S . · Th · an undercover agent in the N,1val eapons lat10n. e cerem onies
marked the Japanese attack on Pearl
H arbor on Dec. 7, 1941. The surprise attack
on the Naval base on Oahu in the Hawaiian
Islands brought the U.S., suddenly and ir-
revocably, into World War 11. See related
story and photo, Page A3.
school. The Los Amigos campus
is in the city of Fountain Valley
but is part of the Garden Grove
Unified School District.
He said the operator, who was
not a police officer, purchased
narcotic$ on the campus almost
on a daily basis during the ln-
vestigaUon.
Thes,P. began 2'h months
ago w the 15-)'ear-old 'lrl made eberoinsale.
omcera said that heroin is
commonly kept in small, toy
-alloons because they can be
swallowed and quickly con.
cealed.
Parker said that most of the
heroin sold In Orange County
now comes from Mexico.
He said police do not have a
rundown on the supplier of the
drugs at this lime.
Parker said that PCP is
(See DRUGS, Page AZ>
Firemen Quell
Laguna High
Roof Blaze
Smoldering sofa cushions were
tossed upon the roof or the
foreign language wing at Laguna
Beach High School Tuesday
evening, but riremen quelled a
small blaze before it spread.
Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, who
ptlrportedly is known in the illicit
drug trade as "The Fat Man," is
scheduled to be arralcoed today
in Orange County Superlor Court
on charges related lo the Oct. 22
slaying or Stephen Bovan in
Newport Beach.
Like seven other people named
in a county grand jury b'ldict-
ment, Davis in addition to the
murder conspiracy charge Isac-
cused of extortion and illegal
drug trafficking.
The 28-year-old former Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna devotee was
arrested Thanksgiving Day by
Indonesian officials on the dis·
tant island of Bali.
He was returned here by two
Orange County District attorney
investigators.
WASHINGTON (AP> -Jbbh
D. EhrUcbman. the Watereate
cove]',-up conspirator who ad-
mitted surrendering his "ethical
and moral judgment" to Richard
M. Nixon. will be freed April ~
after having served 1 'h years in
an Arizona federal prison.
The U.S. Parole Commission
sel the dale Tuesday and in·
formed the 52-year·old
Ehrllchman at lbe Swift Trail
Prison near Safford, Ariz. The
commission's action was an·
nounced today.
His lawyer, Stuart Stiller, said
the former White House
domestic counselor would have
nocommtnt.
Ehrllchman was convicted,
along with John N. Mitchell and
H.R. Haldeman, of conspiring to
hide While House Involvement in
the Watergate burglary and then
lyln1 about it under oath.
.,..~
FREJ!DOM IN APRIL
Waterpter Ehrtlchman
The dead Included the
American pilot of the U.S. Air
Force high·altitude recon·
nalssance Jet and four Cypriot
civilian employees at the base,
the chief spokesman for the
Brltlsb command in Cyprus said.
British authorltles refused to
let newsmen and photographers
e nter the air base. The
spokesman sald the plane
crashed in a restricted zone
where photograpblng is pro·
hibited.
U.S. U·2s have been staUoned
at Akrotiri since the 1973 Arab-
Israell war. Tbey make dally re·
connaissance fllchts over the
Arab·IJraeli front lines to cbec:k
on compliance with res trlc:Uons
on troop deployments and other
prov is Ions of tbe cease-fire
agreements between Israel and
and its Arab roes.
The plane crashed on top of the
base's operations control center,
exploded and set the building
complex on fire, witnesses said.
"The U-2 took orr, appeared un·
able to gain altitude and then
swerved and crashed into the
operations building on the slde of
the runway," said a Cypriot
workman at the base.
''There was a terrific explosion
wheD Lbe plue bit the building ,
and the whole area was engulfed •
inflames."
One of the seven wounded, a
BrW.h clvWan employed by the
R~ Jlltl ,..., wU reported
in IUJ6aa ~dilion .. The other
six wounded were three airmen,
a Brltlsh airwoman and twcy
(See U·Z, Pase AZ)
Thieves Hit
Lagllna Store
Thieves who managed to avoid
tripping burglar alarm.wires in a
Laguna Beach liquor store
sometime Monday night or Tues.
day morning, escaped with near·
ly $1,200 in cash.
Police said burglars fled with
$1,191 from a desk drawer lD the
oCflce atea of Cove Uquors, 104.S
North Coast Highway.
Owner Edward O'Neal sald the
burglars missed all the alarms to
get to the office area, where they
found a key to open the
manager's office.
Battalion Chief Forrest
Johnson said there was little
damage to the wood shingle roof
following the 9 p.m. Incident. ·
School vice principal Betty
Davis said the sofa was located
on a balcony above the foreign
language wing. "The smoldering
cushions were either thrown
down on the roof or taken up
there," she said today.
Davis has been described as a
rounding partner of Prasadam
Distributing, Inc., a Newport
Beach investment firm that
purportedly served as the cash
outlet for income derived from
massive drug dealing. .
RevelaUoo of the alleged drug
dealing apparatus came in the
wake of Bovan's murder Oct. 22
outside a Newport Beach
restaurant.
Mitchell and Haldeman,
respectively attorney general
and chief ol staff ln the first Nix-
on admlnl1traUon, will become
the last Watergate figures in
prison.
Tbe three were convicted on
New Y.ear's Day 1975.
U.S. District Judge John J .
Slrlca sentenced each to 2"4J to
eight years in prison. but cul the
terms to one to four years last
October.
Ehrllchman entered prison
Oct. 2a1 1'78, before the appeals
proceas bad run its course, and
satisfied the one-year minimum
on the anniversary date.
HaJdeman will bao,(e compJeted
his first year June ,21. 19'T8,
Mitchel£ on June 22. tbe former
attotney general has salted tor
exec:uUve clemency became, be
said, be needs a hip opel'atlon.
Marine Faces Rape,
KidnappingCharges
"But fortunately. someone saw
the lire and the damage was not
thalgreat."
lndicaUom are Bovan wu cut
down by a gunman in retribution
for his alleged role ln the recent
kidnapping of a Praudam of·
ficlal.
Panel 0 Ks Water
Lacuna Beac'> County Water
Dlatrlct officials have received
coastal commlaalon approval to
construct a 7,000 loot water
pipollne between two Laguna
Beach hllltop sectors.
• But c;oastal commlaalonera
placed a bll con41Uon on' con·
atructlon of the federally funded
flro protectlQO Une I Qt week.
.. Tbey told us we could not at·
tech any lateral lints tv the fire
pipeline wtltt9ut coutal COID· ml11Jon approv&l, •• exptalntd
water dllt.riet aucDw Robert L.
Joyce.
Comritli1109en upr"'4id oon-
cern that tM lJ.lida ltd~· lion llD8 UU1n tlie Arcr. Beith
Htllbll and op of the Woftd
commual1Jt1 mlCht ~· ... foot 1n tbe CsoOr-for deulopment
a.Jona UMi Iida•·" • Tb• toUtal cotnmlJaloa ruUnc
cltan Ult J.Ut bUtilt la LM WV
· Ebtttcbman also· was under a
sentence of 20 ·month• to five
yeara for c:ooaplrlng to violate
tlae rlahtl of Dr. LewlJ FJetdin1
by authorizing White Hoqae-
<lee PAROLE,P8'eAI)
S&te Injury.
A Camp Pendleton marine was
arrested in Oceanside early to-
day and handed over to Orange
County authorities as a prime
suspect in the kidnapping and
rape of a M.lssloo Viejo woman
last week. The 22-year·old marine Is also
suspected oC kldnappl.n1 and rob-
bing an 18·year·old El Toro
woman shortly befoce abducUna
the Mllsloh Viejo victim.
Orange County Sherllf'• ID·
vestlgaton ldenuned the suspect u Joaepb Art.bur Frlecletlck, "a
22.year-old enllated man ·~· Uoned at Camp Pendleton."
A sherlff'a department
spokesman said Frl~ertek was
apprehended b)' Ocea.ntlde Of.
tlclals who found him aleepina ln
hl1 robberY·rar>e vlcUin •1 auto
this momJ.ni. The l2·1ear-old rape vJcUm re<>
ported.b'. was kidnapped Dee. 1
outside a M.lsalon Viejo re«ea·
Uonceot.r. The woman was alle1ecU1
driven to a south county locatloa
•herelhewa raped Md~
LaLer• ac~ to crlm• re-pprt.t, I.be woman eae&Ped hri' at·
liacken bi Sao Dle10,
Earlier th same nl&bl. lt wu
·reported to 1berUl'1 ln·
veaUcaton that a IPatl tit~ U\O aame descitptjon had Jwaped ~ toanta.yeer~4~ oman•aautoat
MulrlUdi BOWevatd and IUdl
Rout• Dtlvoead atWll~COa.b-
duct her at knife.point.
However, the young woman r•
portedly Jum~ from tbe car
and escaped her attacker who
fled with her auto.
Jt was later found abandoned
In Mission Viejo near the locaUon
where the second victim was ab·
duct.ed.
A sherlrf's lnvesUgator said
that 1n addWon lo being found In
the second victim's a&alo:;
Frledertck Ota the descrlptloo or.1
the auallaot 1lven .investJaators
by both women.
The lnvesUaatol' sald obara
pendlnt against the suspect ln
elude two kidnap and ro
counts u well as a single
(See SU P CT, hte AJ)
Tennis Tournamenl
Si8"¥pe Still Open 'f
Slpup1 tor tbe lOtb unual
Junlor t•nlll• tournam•~-~! aebedulid thlS weekend, are •WI
poaalble It the Human Alf Airs Department ~t city ball ln
Lasane Beach.
Events 1.DclildO boya and alrla
1ln•l•1, and double• for
younptss In the tourtb throuah 12ill end ... !:atty fM II $1 'for
1ln1lea and • for teams. 'rtir mo.re lilfocmaUon, call tlf:-1Sll; at. ...
OAJLY PILOT L C
NEW FIRE PROTECTION PIPELINE TO LINK TWO LAGUNA BEACH COMMUNITIES
7,000·Foot Line to Join Top of World (Foreground) end Arch Beach Heights
~pid Hoover Move w ~:;.~;r.~~
SholVn in JFK Files
WASHINGTON CAP) -Just
two hours alter John F. Kennedy
was killed, FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover concluded that
Lee Harvey Oswald was the as-
sassin and that Oswald wu a
··m ean -minded ~nd l vi <Wal
... in the category of a nut:• ac-
rordmg to f'BI files released to-·
day
"I called the attorney general
• 1t his home and told him l
thought wt had the man who
killed the president down in
Dallas," Hoover wrote at 4 p.fll.
rm Nov. 22, 1963, as Kennedy lay
cl~ad in a Dallas hospital.
Hoover's memos relatlna a
minute-by-minute account of his
Front Page A J
U-2 •..
Cypriots, the spokesman said.
Firemen battled for more than
three hours to control the blaze.
Damage to the buildings was ex-
lcnsi\'c.
The crash occurred shortly
bt:forc 7 a .m .. local Lime, before
most or the base personnel had :
reported for work.
The British spokesman said
there was no indication or the
c·ause of lhe crash.
From Page Al
SUSPECT ..•
charge.
Additionally it is expected the
suspect will be charged with two
counts or auto theft and two
counts of assault with a deadly
weapon.
OflANOl COAST
DAILY PILOT
actions following the assassma-
tion were part of 40,001 pages of
files made public by the FBI a.. It
opens its full records on the In·
vestigation of the assassination.
The files, weigbina about a half
ton, were rich with the details or
tragedy and drama as scores or
citizens told the FBI or their sor-
row and their suspicions -and ln
some cases, their haLred or the
Kennedy family .
Services Set
For LagDna
Crash Victim
Private service! at sea are
scheduled for Steven Dane
Swearingen, 19, who died Mon·
day as a retultof a car crash along
Laguna Canyon Road Jut Sunday
night. .
The 19·year-old Saddleback
College student body vlce presi-
dent ls survived by bis parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Swear-
ingen of the family home at 888
Summit Way, Laguna Beach.
The senior Swearingen ls head
football coach at Saddleback
College.
The young business major is
also survived by a.sister, Karen1 a LagU.Da Beach Hiah Scboot
senior; grandparents Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Adams of Santa Ana
and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Swearlngen of New Mexico.
Steven Swearin1en was a
graduate of Los Alamitos Hilb
School and played soccer at Sad·
dJeback College.
F~PageAJ
DRUGS •••
becomlnf more popular than
marijuana. He aald that lt can be
produced in bome laboratories in
relatively simple procedures.
TIJ• Juverille 1u1pecta, who
ranged fromfresbmer\ to aenlors,
accordl.na to Parkilr ~ wore beina •
proce11ed an9 transported lo
Orance County Juvenile ball to-
day.
M OD.91 tor the purchaae• wu
bud,eted by the city Of Pount.a!D
Valley.
Juana Street in Arch Beach
Heights and the Alta Laguna res-
ervoir in the Top or the World
community.
A portion of the loan will go to
revamp and enlarge the Tia
Juana pump station for addi-
tional pumplna capacity for fire
proteQt.lon\
In addition, up to 10 below-
ground fa re hydrants will be in·
stalled along the lane for fire pro-
tection, Joyce said.
··we understand the coastal
c-o mmission's concern about
future developm ent along 'the
ridgeline." Joyce said . ''But
we 're putting in the line for fire
protection and to tie the two
(community) systems together."
He nid fire lines in both com·
munltiea are curre ntly dead·
ended, and completion of the 12·
inch line across the ridge, ''given
as more potential water for each
system If there ls a fire in either
communiLy. ''
Joyce said the new fire Une
.should be completed by April 30.
Santa Arrival
Kicks Off LB
Yule Season
When Santa Claus comes to
town this Friday night, Laguna
Beach will omcially klck off an·
nual Christmas activlUes, rang-
ing from free tram and trolley
rides, to Children's Storybook
Parade.
Santa will arrive atop a vino;
taae firetruck at 6:30 p.m. Fri·
day, getUn1 off at hl1 house on
the 1rounds of City Hall, 505
ForeatAve.
HJs CJty Hall headquarters will
be open to children from 2 to 4
p.m. every day and from 8 to 8
p . m . Wednesdays thtougb
Saturdays.
S fa Question
I 0 Sant& A:na Blast Hits
PG&E Tower
' ·I .
Films ObsCene·
CUPERTINO CAP> -
An explosive device plant·
ed near the Lop of a 70-foot
Pacific Gas & Electric
tower near here detonated
early today, otficJals said .
By TOM BARLEY OflM IMlllr Pll .. lltlf A jury that has thus far found
lD movies s hpwn at the Mitchell
Brothers' Santa Ana theater In
the past. two years to be obscene
·is back at its deUberaUons tod,.f
in Orange County Superior Court.
Acting Superior Court Judge
Marvin G. Weeks sent the panel
back for further discussion late
Tuesday when questioning re-
vealed that jurors had not
reached a clear verdict on five
movies.
They are: •'CB Mommas,"
"One or a Kind,'' "Roller
Babies," "Resurrection or Eve,"
and "Hungry Mouth."
The voling late Tuesday on
three or the movies was 8 to 4 in
Adler Shoes
Manager
Dead at 60
Longtime Laguna Beach shoe
1tore manager Bruce E .
Roseberry died Saturday at the
age 0!60.
Mr Roseberry I ot 484 curr
Drive, was an 18-year resident of
the Art Colony. The Iowa-born
lather ol three was manager or
Adler Shoes.
Prayer services were set for to-
day at Peek Family Chapel in
Westminster. Burial was
scheduled at Good Shepherd
Cemetery in Huntington Beach.
Mr Roseberry ls survived by
his wife, Marlon; his mother
Florence of Huntington Beach; a
son. David or K e ntucky;
daughters Regina Roseberry ot
Belmont, Calif. and Cristine
Roseberry of Iowa. He ls also
s urvived by three grandchildren
and brother Thomas of Colum-
bus, Ohio.
A•f ul~,. t ro I
.9-''Cfl f.11 .. ·d ''°'' .... ' J by"'"""" ·~nc:c:1 ~ \J
FW"h hotd•.at~ ft •h..tf•\ q''''
chin .• J/(l\lftbioo -M 0"' I
dftJP hJ Ct;t1t•ftJ.1tV\1Jf'ln<.t~ )•f" "·
WY> 0181/1 llFJI''
REO. 11 '20 00
MUt1290.00
.
favor of obsceftity. The jury WU
deadlocked at ~ to 6 on "One or a
Klnd '' and "Roller Babies."
The jury . voted 10 to 2 that
·•sun\mer of Laura" was not ob·
scene. The same verdict was re·
ached by a vote on the movie "My
Erotic Fotasles."
Nine votes constitute an ac-
eptable majority in an Orange
County Superior Court trial.
Anything less constitutAls a hung
jury.
Ttte jury believed when they
cam e back to the courtroom
Tuesday lhat they had reached
verdicts on all 17movles.
Judge Weeks was told that the
Jury was under the impression
that in a division where the ma-
Jority had less than nine votes,
the vet"dict was to be regarded as
a "not obscene" ruling.
Judge Weeks qUickly corrected
that impression and sent the
panel back to the jury room for
further discussion on the five un-
decided movies.
Whatever the verdicts on I.hose
five movies, the jury has already
determined that the Honer Plaza
Theater is a public nuisance, a
rulinli? that will allow the clty to
close the facility.
The Jury will also be asked lo
assess damages against the
Mitchell Brothers in a hearing
that wm be scheduled after the
first phase ol the trial ls closed. •
Defense attorney Joseph Rhine
said Tuesday he will go to the ap~
pellate court to-ask for a mis trial
and also halt any acUon the city
may try lo take against the
theater.
Fro• Page Al
PAROLE •••
sponsored burglars to search the
Californla psychiatrist's office.
Ten days alter Slrka trimmed
the sentences, U.S. District
Judg e Gerhard A. Gesell
followed suit ln the Fielding case.
Ttie bl ast caused Uttle
damage to the lower and
affected no customers.
PG&E spokesman Paul
Girard said the device bad
been set about so feet up
the steel tower near the
company's Monte Vlsta
substation. The tower was
carrying about 60,000 volts
of current.
SC M11lls
Residential
Hotel Use
A public hea'ring ls scheduled
tonight before the San Clemente
City Council on a proposed zon-
rn g ~mendment, allowing a
downtown hotel to Install cooking
units and funt:tlon as a residen-tial hotel for the elderly.
The council meeting wiJl begin
at 7: 30 p.m, a' city hall, 100 Ave. Presidio.
The ci ty's planning com·
mission has recommended that
the zoning amendment be ap.
proved. Commission chairman
Melford Moraan bu commended
hotel owner Roy Stevens for at·
tempting to provide Jo'Y·cos t
homes for the elderly close to
downtown shops, the post office
and the library.
The hotel, located at 114 Ave.
del Mar. is in a commercial zone.
The building dates from Lhe
founding of San Clemente 50
years ago and is currently used
as a residential hotel, without
cooking facilities for residents.
Stevens told planning com·
missioners the proposed im-
provements will raise rents from
the current $120·$175 per month
range to about $~85-$240.
Christmas
Gifts of
LaSting Beauty. ..
by. Hehredori ·
That offgindl, very spec.1111 gilt you'v<' bt~n ~archmo tor m~v
be right hen. ror your own humt'. for" mf'mb(:r or your
family. for that young coupl" 'ld!ltnq thdr llr~t hom••. A
piece of Henreclon furniture v.111 m.:i~1 the w.irm c1low ol
Chnslmd!> last f()( many '>C.ic,on, 10 romP I lt•rt· 111· <.ll\11n-
gu15hed trc4SUres from mdnv r-·11011' ,,,,., i.tylc~. ony une c·f
which could be the perf~t IOU< h for .inv l1m• room. Decide
loryoorself which ptt..'C'e Ov'>I ""'"you .• ind 111f1 vour.,..lf or
someone you Jove with I lcnwrlon 1h1~ Cl1r1,1m.J\. > lurr~·!
Limited quanlltict avalldble 101 1mm~d11Jle Jchvi:ry.
Ar»t1ol•
1 .. 0<1<11 .. tr
rheiu N\'IUllY
tmpr~""'c~
.. .,,,1y <>r ''""IJ"'d '" hall. bedroom O• IMnq
roo<n. W39 018 H.lO
f:lG. $.tt;5.00
SALE nas.oo
1
Abool<~I
dliN•t-on
living. ~ltlg roo<n
()( 11.t" wllh l..edr<t
~'"'~~ll>blt ~ art<I 1114"10< lid>Ctn.1-
ldt.JI IOI I ~ttl,.. IC'<f J<•1o1Jv.
Ol1enlal lnspftd
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rrt•hlt lrii.t<1rlo!IM o.t TV °' AOtMd ~l'J"T'l'nl Md ix ... et Ill•-b.-low.
llM(I 020 Ii 781 Wl9 01, 118411,
R((i. It 2'.\!1.00
U.1..&U0 ... 00 llro. • I OG' 00
IALll eaes.oo
1514 NORTH MAIN
SANTA MA • 5414391
I . LI
Orttnge eoa .. r Daily Pilot . Editorial Robert N Weed/Pubtls~r
Wtdneld1y. De<»mw 7, 1977
i
'Move to Pr serve
'Laguna Charmers'
Enforcement of today's strict codes and zonin1 regulo·
t10.ns would create heavy problems for owners of the older
hoRles in Lagun'a Beach in the event of a major
catastrophe.
Tholoic "Laguna charmers." could not be rebuilt as
the\ now s tand if they were destroyed by fire or an earth·
qucfke.
But a proposed "grandfather" ordinance would allow
victims of a major disaster to build a carbon copy of their
quaint homes taking into consideration current health
ans safely standards, of course
Whcr=c the proposed ordinance loses some support is in
1Ls ·effort to include all residential, commercial and in-
dustrial units under a sort of "blanket amnesty" approach
to l)H.' problem.
, City officials. as well as members of the Citizens Al-
llauce. <.iulhors of a proposed ordinance, will be taking a
look at potential problems related to a grandfather or-
dinc.ince in the next few months
Cons1dcrat1on~ include parking limitations should
C'Orh mercial parcels go up in flames, as well as city err.
do~sement of a property owner's request to rebuild his six-
umt 01partmcnt building m an area that is now zoned for
:-.inglc family home:..
Rent Assistance
Now that fodcral rent subsidy has arrived in San
Clemente via the Orange County Housing Authorjty, the cj-
ty coun<'1l 's unflagging opPQ,ilion no longer serves a
purpose
Cit~· t•ouncllmen have objected to rent assistance on
the ground~ that it would encourage a migration to lhe city
of "he:H:h bums" looking for a free ride.
Hecausc the city offers no. rent assistance. the county
hou!'ltn~ authority is processin~ applications from San
Clementt• rt·~1<lents for rent s ubsidy funds available
through a federal llousing and Urban Development pro-
gram
Thl' ('ount~ agency has invited the city to name a
person to its advisory committee. Doing this would help as-
sure that the fund::, go to San Clemente'!'I elderly poor.
handicapped und low-income families the people for
whom the pro~ram was established.
Whether the program turns out to be a boon to deserv-
ing San Clemente recipients or the rip·off councilmen pre-
d1c·ted. the city will benefit by having a representative on
the ud\'lsory committee
Animal Control Rules
Authors of u proposed animal control ordinance m the
t'tl.V of l..agun:.i Beach ure back at lhc drawing boards this
\\ N.•k in an <.ill empt to make the new law less subjective.
l.Jpon order of the city council. the new draft will be
more specific in il'i definitions of terms, which at least one
l'Ouncdman described ns "too broad."
The ordinance proposal was a joint effort of the police
department and the city attorney. and last week's council
merlin~ was the first lime the new document received a
public airing. .
Complaints ranged from vague wording to cri\i~1sm
that the proposed law leaveg too much contro1 to the dis-
('J't•l1on of un animal control officer.
·rhc city's present animal control ordinance, a vintage
doC'umcnt datinj:! back to 1953. has been revised and updat-
ed St'\'eral l1m('s in tht? pa~l 2-l years.
With rnmmunity involvement, including that of the
dty·s Pel Responsibility Committee, the 23-page docu-
ment should come back to the council in a m onth in a
workable form Lt)at is acceptable to animal owners as well
as those charged wllh maintaining the peace .
• Opinions expressed ln the space above are th0$e of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment is invited Address The Dally Pilot. P.O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 6-42·"321.
Boyd/Box
ByL.M.BOYD
Interesting, that word
"box." To ''box'' something
for shipment needs no ex-
p I an a tion . certainly . To
"box " a compass merely
means to name Its 32 points
forward then backward in
consecutive order. But less
well known is that t-0 "box" a
drink is to pour It back and
forth between two glasses to
mix it.
Arc you satisfied with your
first name? Ir not, why not?
Scholars now think that peo-
ple who don't like their own
first names tend to be dls -
saU•fied with themselves ln
general. Far more men than
women are known to dislike
tbelr own first names, in-
cidentally.
At hand ls a report that a
Dear
Gloom~
PoUce and proaa
ch a r acterh Lhe
murderers ot Hollywood
hooktra 81 public
entmlet and I.ho vlctlma as "poor, milled youn1
• ladtu." But ~hen the
victim• are )'OUhg q:>en
huttUn1 to earn a J1vlntt
tbt)''ro "111 Vic:Umai'r
and pOJlce don't even
bioth•r llndlna a 111'11·
pect.
third of all babies born In this
country eacb year are the of I spring of unwed mothers
aged 17 or younger.
What most people refer to
as the jugular vein ls not real-
ly a vein but an artery.
Q. "Every lime thb girl
from 1 re land excuses herself
from the table, she says, 'I 'm
going to spend a penny.'
Why?"
A. Used to cost a penny ih
Ireland to get into the public
restrooms. Maybe lt atilt
does, don'tknow.
Q. "What's a housecat's
normal body temperature7 ''
A. 1011.,deirees F.
Q. "When the Japanese
bombed Pearl Harbor on Deo,
7, 1941, what were Ute new /
movies playing in
Hollywood?"
A. '-rbe Great Dictator,"
"Seraeant York" and "Citittn Kane."
Q. 1•1n cigarette.a, what wu ,
the No. l seller before ftlters
came out?"
A. Camels.
..
TR:B
The Day U.S. lsolfttion Endea
It's a Sunday like uny other.
Going on Christmas. Brown
packages hidden in closets.
Outside brisk and snappy.
Children go to Sunday School.
Newspaper jammed with ad-
vert\sements. All about the new
upsweep hairdo. Wanamaker's
advertises white shil"U al two
dollars (regular two·fifty and
three-dollar values better
come early l Morning news pret·
ty good : Russians counter-
attacking &Around Moscow.
maybe they'll hold out after all
Alter lunch the telephone rings.
And it's never, ever, the same
again ..
"Hey, heard the news? 'l'hc
Japs have bombed Pearl
Harbor!"
"No! You 'rt: crazy. rtey
Ernestine ... "
Everybody or my era knows
where they heard the news,
December 7, 1941. Try us out.
Thal 's what separates generu-
tions. The stadium was crowded
to watch the Redskins and at the
half the loudspeaker began to
blare. Will Ueutenant Gen,ral
Smith call his omce'! There's a
telephone <;.111 41r Commander
RusseO ! It went on a1'd on'.
Vet~ran New York Times
phot~arapher Georie Tames
wondered what f.tas up ; caUed
has office. got the news He went
to the J apunese Embassy; iron
A ates barred ; a gray white
smoke rising from burnrng
papers in the rear. There was a
two -way traffic jam on
Massachusetts A venue of cars
gawking at the embassy
IT'S AN anmversary to re-
member not because a war start·
ed but because a madness ended
isolationism. I have a personal
feeling because I was one of the
gawky boys who volunteered in
Mr. Wilson's dream to make lhe
world safe for democracy. We
won ; there was the exhilaration
of the Armistice, and then the
Lodge fight aga1n8t the League.
Wilson forlornly asked the nation
lo remember the "dear ghosts"
of boys left on Flanders Fields
There was a majority. never a
two-Lhards ma1oraty, for the
League. Soon the whole crusade
was derided. The Nye Committee
showed it was all a plot by mun1·
tions makers.
Senate isolationists defeated
the World Court. too. Again there
was a majority, 52 to 36, but this
was iseveral short of two-thirds
Borah and Johnson left the
Senate chmber laughing and re-
jolci ng.
Isolationism came down
through thq start of World War
II. It weakened when England
fought alone and when Hitlu
madly attacked his· surprised
Mailbox
partner Stalin. But Colonel
Lindbergh wrote an open Jetter to
Am~r1cans through Collier's .
France was defeated, he said:
Great Britain was being defeat·
ed: the US would be dereated,
too, it it joined the fray. No dis·
Unction between Hitler's and
Churchhlll's moraal aims.
On Thursday. De$!. 4, three
days before Pearl Harbor. the
isolationist Chicago Tribune and
Washington Times-Herald
published a top-secret U.S. posl·
t1on paper lavtnR out logistic and
supply plans for an lmagil)ed in-
vasion o( Germany with S milUqn
Americans 10 1943. lt was the
kind of thing ull war offices pre-
p a re . but the h ewspapers
charged it 1>howed a Roosevelt
plot.
And i.o the day of trial came. 36
year~ ago. Most of 1t still is quite
incredible. lt 1s incredible
hecause we hud broken the
Japanese code and never should
have let the surprise occur. A
natty little colonel named
William Friedman who w&s a de-
mon al cryptography had un-
scrambled the Imperial oode un-
der OPfraUon •114,.1Jc" nd w•a
glVlna the Army. Navy and State
Department• tunalatlon.a or
Tokyo war orders before the
Japan e troops iot them. We
knew en auack was comlng.
Wher.e, we dldn 't know.
WE KNEW that Japan had
sent a •o-caHed "peace''
emiaaary to Washinct.on t.o Cool
us and rnask the aurprh;e, and we
played oJona with It; il was a
double game of make-believe.
We had wamed Army and Navy
Comman<\en Nov. 24 ot a proba-
ble attack; we had sent a more
urgent wa-rnlng, Nov. 27. But
mental b{ockaae ls more
powerful than realily: lhe attack
would be on Malaya, Dutch Ea.st
Indies, Pblllpines, Guam -nol
Ha wall.
Then the tollowine runny mis-
haps occurred. Tokyo dispatched
a 14-part messag" to the
Japanese embassy In
Washlneton Dec. 6 ot which the
first 13 parts were.decoded for the
State Department before the Japs
got them. "This means war,"
--z.· .. = ... e~~;·"·
"You CA11 leod c1 ~el to iht Odsis, ~ut you cArlt mAke hi1t1 d~lllk!'
solemnly sald FDR./ to ffarr1
Hopkins as be ate d~· or from a tray. Ther-milht st.i be hope {n
the 14th section, ho ver. Oddly
enough lt\4; Japan transmit·
ters called it a da~t rqre send·
lng the t•tll seetio which had
the stlna in it (t 9. it dldn 't. mention Pearl Ht.r r). They
aent it next morr'tin . General
Marshall, Chief of Staff of tht
Army, d1dn 't get the J,.4th section
Ull he came In from a Sunday
horseback ride at 11 :30. He sent
another alert then.
ELECTRONIC equipment
picked up Japanese planes wing-
ing to attack aL 7 a .m .• just. a&
super sensitive electronic equi~
ment is supposed to do. Thl'
wotch officer didn't do anyt.hlng;
it must be a flight of American
B·l7s.
General Marshall decided to
se nd his Su11day a l ert
to U.S . commanders,
because contact with
Hawaii was temporarily inter·
rupted so he sent the crucial
message by Western Union and
RCA aod nnallyL~ motorcycle
courier started 4'Ut with lt In
Hawaii to military headqua~. Unaccountably bc;lmbs becan to
fall and he J<nnped
1
into a ditch.
As background to all ot e
above the Hawaiian comman·
ders, Admiral Kimmel and
General Short, w~re barely on
speaklna terms from inter-
service jealousy; the big bat·
llesbips were tied up two-by-two
for fear of sbbotag~. The
airplanes were on the &round.
Anti-aircraft gu"s were wrongly
placed and there was no eUective
air patrol by either service.
Absolute surprise. The .Paclfic
fleet was canc:elled out; eight
battleabips end three cruisers
sunk or d.lsabled.
Yes, I remember tbe. day. I
went to the White House and
sLa)'ed until 1 a.m. A crisp night,
nearly freezing; trucks wlth ear·
ly Christmas trees comlng down
Pennsylvania Avenue; a misty
moon climbing the trees over the
old bronze cannon In Lafayette
Park. Cabinet meeting at 8:30;
Congressional leaders at 9.
We went out to stand on the
front PQrtico ot the White House
-a little stone stage amon1 the
columns.
Behind the iron rails on the
avenue a liUle crowd looked in at
us. It tried to sing the Star
Spangled Banner.
• TRB ta u lo rig atanding
WC1$hing(on byline. Ila author cur·
rently b Richard Strout of the
Chriatian Science Monitor.
W onien's Conference Worth Investment
To the Editor:
On behalr oflhe Orange County
dele1ation to the Na lion al
Women's Conference held re-
cently in Houston. I wish to thank
the Daily Pilot for its excellent
coverage of the event.
l should like to pomt out,
however, that. your editorial
fNov. 25) i.8 misleading. You re-
fer to the Houston gathering as a
"SS Million Meeting." The meet·
ing last month was the culmlna-
flon of meetings held in every
state and territory of the UnJted
States. meeting~ which attracted
as m ony as 11.000 women I Utah)
and 6.000 women <California). ln
preparation for each or the state
meetings, educational matenals
were prepared.· workshops and
panels were organized. speakers
were found, and sm~ller regional
meetings were held. such as the
one aL UC lrvinc lasl spring.
Publicity had to be sent out; thl5
involved the designt ng, wrlUrtg
:and pl'intlng or thbusands of
brochures in order to insure am-
ple representation at each st.ate
meeting. Finally. delegates to
Houston received minimal ex-
penses for Care, room and board.
the country even recei vcd ex
pense money
ln the tradition ol American
womanhood. we volunteered our
time and energy in the service of
our country.
I.cl nw r(.•mind you that S5
million reprcscnb about 20
minutes of ttw Vietnam war in
terms of cost and there was no
loss of ltfe in Houston. Rather,
there was an affirmation or Ure.
It wus peaceful conference filled
with the hop(•S o( milllons of
women Crom all walks or
American life
VIVIAN ll. HALL
Chair. Orange County
Del<'~ation. National Women's
Conterence
people did not see it either.
I certainly don 't feel l owe the·
City o( Lasuna or the downtown
merdrants any addiUonal
money. The people thal make up
these rul~ regarding a two-hour
llmit appar'ent)y do not sh.op in
Laguna as tt certainly lakes
more Qlan two hours lo do m~c~
shopptn1.
Alter 1.hi& I will no doubt take
my bua(neu back t.o the shoJ>pll\g
malls as They seem to appreciate
my business.
MRS. JAMES T. McCULLEY
W ...... 8•tSp•C
To the Editor:
ln the Da~~ Pilot, Saddleback
Edttlon, dateu Nov. 30, Mr. G11ry
Granville 41d an artlcle tiUed
"Hookers, Bookies Increase in
County ... In the fifth pttragraph or the article Mr. Granville
write:J1 "In county territory, Ml1-
1Hon Viejo was l;sted by Marwin
as the' hot spot ror caU girls.''
I CALLED Sgt. Ma~ln re·
aarding this statement and
asted htm spectrlcolly where in
.M"sio,P Viejo. Sgt. Marwin sa.ld
that ttiey had on one occa8ion at· rested tsome women for prostJtu
Uon at o hotel ..-htch In fact, ls in
Lacun" HlUs and not tn Ml!lslon
..,. Vjejo as the nrtlcle Infers.
It ... outd be •Ppreciated If the
Dally Pll()t would print tbe prop·
er ar • and also place ln
perapac:Uve that a one•lime ar·
re•t. In,~ Lacuna Hllla hotel does not conAUtute the hot spot for call
la l.n Mi1sion Viejo,
JOHN E. NOBLE Chalnna.n MunJetpa.l
Ad'<dlory Council
Such is not the case at the
U.S .$. Arizona Memorial in
Pearl Harbor. Since opehing to
the public. more than 10 million
have visited the memorl.81. Not.
all Americans, not all honey.
mooners. but travelers rrorn
aroun4 the globe, and 1,,-aJl the
moment of contact that 'tep from th~ shoreboat to th!morial ls on' ol aw•, respec;t humiUty.
for beneaUtthe Sllb ged dflCks
o( the once. rnight.y Jiona r.102
AmcriCl.t.n sarvlc*' n are still
entombed.
WITH THE ever increasing
numbers visiting tb memorial.
present facilities vastly in·
adequate. With lhb mind, The
Arizona Memori Museum
FoundQUon was con lved to de·
sign, bQiJd and m in a park·
like museum comp! located on
an.ll·acrc site at arl Harbor.
The federal govt ent has ap.
proprlated two m ·on dollan:1 .
At least t:inother fo million are
needed for compte •
For those .vlsti 1 ·to con·
tribute, donations ~ t>. sent to
The Arizona Me al Nuseurn
Foundation, P . Box. 8067,
Honolulu, H.awatl 8,
.KNIGHT
•
7
..
Orange COast
EDITION
. ... -_. ..-.-.
Today's Closlag
N.Y.Stoeks
'VOL. 70, NO. 341,' SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES .OR>~GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1977 N TEN CENTS l
FBI R eleases JFK· AssassinatiOn Files
WASHINGTON (AP) -Just
. two hours after John F. Kennedy
w as killed, FBI Director J .
E dgar Hoover concluded that
Lee llarvey Oswald was the as··
sassin and that Oswald was a "m e an ·mind ed individua l
... in the category of a nut," ac·
cording to FBI files released to-·
day.
"I called the attorney general
at his home a nd told him I
thought we had the man who
killed the president down in
Dallas," Hoover wrote at 4 p.m.
on Nov. 22, 1963, u Kennedy lay
dead In a Dallas hospital.
Hoover 's memos r elating a
minute-by-minute acco1A11l of his
actions following the assassina-
tion were parl of 40,001 pages of
files made public by the FBl as it
opens its Cull records on the in-
vestigation of the assassinaUon.
The files, weighing about a hair
ton. were rich with the deta1ls or
Newport Council
trasedy and drama as scores ot
citizens told the FBI of their sor-
row and their suspicions -and ln
some cases, their hatred of the
Kennedy family.
But the material provided no
lmmedlate or astoundin1 new ln·
sight about the mysteries sUll
lingering from the assassination.
Nor did It immediately resolve
the arguments about the various
conspiracy theories proposed by
some students of the case.
Rogers D~clines
Re-election Bid
DROPS OUT OF RACE
Councilwoman Rogf,.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol IM O .. h r 11.-llall
Newport Beach City Co un-
cilwoman Trudi Rogers said
Tuesday she has reversed her
earlier decision and will nol seek
re-election in the April coun-
c1lmanic elecllon.
Mrs. Rogers, widow of the late
Mayor Howard Rogers, was ap-
pointed to the council following
her husband 's death. She has
served slightly more than a year.
In October , she said she would
seek re-election to the Balboa
Peninsula seal her husband first
won in 1968. However, Tuesday
she said she has decided it's lime
to wi thdraw from city pol1lics to
de vo t e her self to persona!
pursuits.
"I will have five more months
of activity on the council ," she
noted. adding that she plans to
stay active in community affairs
through her club affili ations.
Mrs. Rogera pointed out that
she mana,ed he r hus band's
three 1A1Cce$1£ul election c•m·
palgns and lnvol ved herself In hls
work on the council.
Panel R ecommends
Bay View Closr.ire
A Newport-Mesa School Dis-
trict advisory committee recom-
mended Tuesday night thal the
district close Bay View School in
Santa Ana Heights.
Newport Park
Project OK'd
Newport Beach Parks, Beaches
and Recreation commissioners
approved plans Tuesday to build a
new 7.5-acre park at the intersee-
Uon o( San Miguel Drive and Spy
Glass HiU Road in Harbor Ridge.
PB and R Director Cal Stewart
said the park would include a
baseball diamond and four teMis
courts, with the land and rough
eradlng provided by the de-
veloper.
He eaUma~ the city's c~t at
$$)0,000 to $600,000 but said the
fund• have not been appropriated
yet and that the park is two to
three years away from comple·
u~. .
Coast
Weatb~r
Foa 1\lght and mottllng
hours with hazy aunablne
atternooaa throuch Thurs·
day. Lows tonlihl ln low
501. HIC}ls Tbutlday upper
10• at the beacbH and
mid• 70t inland.
I 81D.E T ODAY,
7'1t1 maill btMflclbrln oJ
cold rftMdMI are JM com-
pon1,, thal "" thfm, not tlN
IU/flrn'I fDho bcq/ lhfm, ICIJll
coflonnld MUtOll No.lco1DUt.·
SuP•AlS.
The recommendation will be
forwarded lo district trustees for
action. Trustees have final aay
on all committee recommenda· lions.
A s the district's s mallest
school with about 130 students
Bay View has long been con-
sider ed a prime candidate for
closure, possibly as early as the
end of this school year.
Tuesday's recommendation by
committee members did not ln·
elude any deadline for closing the
school. And the committee didn't
su1gesl an alternate use for the
c.ampus, which overlooks Upper
Newport Bay.
The committee bas been hold·
log a series ot public bearings at
schools with enrollments of 300
students or less.
According t o committee
Chairman Evelyn Hart, the com-
mittee will meet Jan. 3 to make
recommeodatJons on the poten-
Ual closure ol Victoria, Mesa
Verde and Cautornia schools. All are ln Costa Mesa.
She noted that the committee is
concerned with the possible re·
instatement of a kindergarten
through six grade school system
as a possible aid to decllnlng
enrollment.
''It's time for me lo get a little
more fl exibility In my personal
hfe," she said.
Mrs. Rogers said she is not
presently supporting a nother
candidate 1n h er d)s tric t ,
al though she would be willing to if
she finds one she thinks is worthy
of support.
The March elections will in·
volve four council seals -Mrs.
Rogers' first district, Mayor Pro
Tem Pete Barrett's third dis·
trict , Mayor Milan Dostal's
fourt h dis trict and Lucille
Kuehn's sixlh district.
So far, the only candidate to
announce in the first district is
former school board member
Donald Strau.ss of Lido Isle. The
firs t distrl ct in cludes the
Peninau.la ~ to 3~d Street and
all of Lido.
Of the incumtJertt rouncil mem-
bers. only Lu~lle Kueh" has an·
nounce4 htr c.od&daey. There
are indlcaUOht thlt Barrett will
seek another term, but that
Dostal will not.
Filing for the electlon1 opens
Jan. 12 and closes Feb. 2. Under
city law, if an incumbent In a dis·
trict does not me by the closing
dale, then filing will remain
open five additional working
days for candidates oth~r than
the incumbent.
The election will be held April
11. Candidates must Uve in the
clistrlct. they sedc to reptesent,
but they are eleeted by a vote of
all eligible voters ln the city.
Wom a n Robs
Auctio n H ouse
In Newport
Newport Beach p olice are
seeking a lone woman bandit who
held up the Newport GaUeries, 25~2 W. Coast Highway at noon
today.
Details were not 1mmedl1t.ely
av1Uable, but officers aald tl)ey
were looking for a woman 1Jbo
mi1bt have been wearing a 'tt'll
of red. curly. shou,der·len1tb
halr.
The woman, 11ld to be about
five feet, four locbe9 tall was
descrla,,d as arm~ with a two-
lncb autom•tlc handgun.
She reportedly made her
e1cape 1D a dark blue. late model
Cadillac, ttaveUnr eastbound on
the highway.
The Warren Commission,
which conducted the official re·
view of the assassination and the
way the FBI and others in·
vestlgated it, concluded that
Oswald was the murderer and
that he acted alone. Oswald was
shot to death In the Dallas police
station before he could be tried,
and his killer, Jack Ruby was
convicted of murder and died ol
cancer.•
Oswald's Cuban connections
Tlaeg Renaenaber
have fJ1ured in some conspltacy
tl\eories, and the newly releued
CU" sbow thal the FBI checked
out 4l lJut some clues concern· ing Cuba.
A Los Angeles informer told
agents the names or two San
Juan, Puerto Rico, m en who al·
Jegedly had knowledge of "ac-
tivities between Cuba and the
United St.ates." FBI agents in
San Juan then were instructed to
inter view the men.
In another episode, FBI head:
quarters obtained and translated
a letter written In Sp•niah and
· mailed from Havana to 01wald
in Dallu. The letter, addressed
t o "Friend Lee," a nd
postmarked 11ix d1y1 after the as-
sasalnaUon, spoke of a financial
deal and pralaed Os wald's
marksmanship. But the lnltJal
scruUny ot the files did not in·
dicate whether this was a mean· (See JFK. Pa1e A!)
J im Daw (right) a nd fellow members of
the Peal'l llarbor Survivors Association ob-
ser ve a moment o.t 'Hence in honor of their
Callen .. mrades during memorial services
conducted Lhls mornin& at Seal Beact)
Na val Weapons Stallon. The ceremonies
marked the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. The surprise attack
on the Naval b~e on Oahu in th• Hawaiian
Islands brought the U.S., suddenly and ir·
r evocably. into World War 11. See related
story and photo, Paie Al.
EhrlicbDJan to Get
Freedom in April
WASHINGTON CAP) -John D. Ehrlicbman, the Watergate
cover·UP conspirator who ad·
milted surrendering bls "ethical
and moral judgment" lo Richard
M. Nixon, will be freed April 27
after having served l i.'.I years in
an Arlzooa federal prlson.
The U.S. Parole Commission
set the date Tuesday and ln·
formed the 52 -year-old
Ehrlicbman at the SwUt Trail PrlSOf\ near Safford, Ariz. The
comntisalon's action was an·
nounced today. Hii lawyer, Stuart SUller, said
t he forme r While House
domestic counselor would have no comment.
EhrUchman was convicted,
along with John N. Mitchell and
H.R. Haldeman. of conspiring to
hlde White House involvement in
the W atergal& burglary and lben
lying about it under oath.
Mitchell and Halde man,
respecUvely attorney general
and chlef ol stalf in the first N11t·
on admlnlstraUon, wlll become
the Jasl W•lergate figures in
· prison. .
The three-were convicted on
.New Year's Day 1975. v.s. Dllh'tct1 J1Adce John J.
Slrlca aeotenced each lo 2"4.a to
el1'1t years ln prison, but cut the
termi to one to four yeara laat
October.
UWI,..._
FREEDOM tN APRIL
W-'llfV•l•r Ehrtlchm•n
• EbrUchJQa~ eDtered Jnis011
Oct.. .21. 1978, belore lbe •11tai.
proce•• had run Its coqrJe, and
saUSfled Ute one-year minimum
on the anniversary dale.
Haldeman will have com~
bis llrst year June 21, 1978.
Mitchell on J'une 22. · c
Bi,U to AllDw
$2.6 Million
In UC Grants
The University ol CaUromla
can accept $2.6 million Jn
federal ald without compromis·
Ing admission standards for
AmerlcanJ transferring from
foreign medical schools under a
measure passed by the House to•
day.
The bill was appro\fed 344-0
and sent to President Carter lot"
hit ea~ signature.
It amends present law. which
requited lhat American
medical schools accepting the in·
centlve grants for increasing
enrollmebt dlareeard academic
records or American medical
s tu1J.,nts iranalerring from
abrqad.
UC President David Sax.on had
an.oounced, along with the presi·
de11ts ot 1S otb.tr American wu. veuiU~, that UC oo Joneer
would accept 1uch requirements.
Locally, UC Irvine would• have
glve~. up $322,000 in Health,
EducaUooand Welfare grants.
The amended bill would permit
uriivenltJes to apply their own
admlssiatt standarda. ·
The txlltlnr law had been crltl~IUd u an Infringement on
academic freedom., aqd tor
permlttlna Jesse".,~ quallfiecJ 1tu·
dents to ehter memcalschools.
• •
2 DAILY PILOT __ ..:.;N:.._ _ _..;..;.=;.:.;;:.;.r.L.;,:=;;:.;:.;;;;...;.~..-...
l're•r~.-11
JFK •••
•nctul cl'1e or whether 1t wa1 Uie
work ol a b.adJln•·•eektr
U-2 Crft~h Kill.S 5; B111·ts 7
Tht FBI will release itnolh~r
40,000 pages next monlh ln the
two batches, omc1als say. will be
ajl the paperwork a•nerated ln
Late bureau as ll lnveshgated lbe
CHe
American PiWt of Spy Plane a Victim
.i.No ruea ore belncwit.hhold, ot-1
ficials say, althouih many worm
and paragraphs have been delet··
cd because lhey are classified as
~ocrel or are otherwise uempt
from disclosure.
The agency is releasing the
material lo comply with requests
under the Frt!edom of Informs-·
lion Act. Agents have spent about
18 months .11creenlng the fiJm1 to
delete lhe classified and exempt
portions.
When the screeninf process
was complete, aiency employees
began makln1 ccn>les and pack-
mg them in cartons. Each set
comes Jn lS carton.11 that wei&b a bout 60 pounds apiece.
Several organiiations, Includ-
ing The Associated Press. are
paying the 10-cents-a-page copy •
mg fee the FRI charges for the
material a total or $4,000.10.
But the law allows an agency to
waive the fee if the disclosure ot
the m aterlal ls considered to be or great public Importance.
So the fees may yet be ap-
pealed by the news organizations
to the Jwstlce Department, which
has authority to overrule the .FBI
if It finds that the disclosure is
-;u fficicntly important lo the
public.
The FBI also is placing sets of
the riles in two rooms: one for re·
porters and one ror scholars, re-
3l'a rchers and other Interested
people. The material may be ex·
a mined there without charge.
Misconduct Charge
WILLOWS (AP ) Glenn
County Sherirr Ben Krani& is be·
ang accused by the county grand
1ury of willlul or corrupt mlscon·
Quct ln omce, an action that
could result in his removal from
office. ·
D .. lf ~llM 11411 "'9tt
BACKING THE FBI
Retired Agent Warren
NICOSIA, Cypru.<J CAP) -An
American U·2 spy plane cruhed
today as it was takln~ ott trom
the BrlUsh AkroUri air base In
southern Cyprus, killing five peo.
pie and injuring seven, a Brltbh
roiJltary spokesman reported.
The dead Included tbe
American pUot of the U.S. Air
Force high-altitude recon·
naissance jet and lour Cypriot
civilian employees al the baae,
the chief spokesman for the
British command In Cyprus said.
BrHlsh aulhorJUes reCwsed to
let newsmen and photoeraphers
e nt e r the aJr base. The
s pokesman said the plane
c rashed in a restricted zone
Ex-FBI Agent Still
Would Back Hoover
By LAURIE KASPER
Of CM Dell' ~11•111411
No matler what's been written
or said about the Federal Bureau
of Investigation in recent
months, retired agent Leslie F.
Warren is still "100 percent
behind" the FBI and J . Edgar
Hoover.
Break-ins and other reportedly
illegal acts committed by the
FBI currently are being in·
vestigated and getting much at-
tention in the media.
But. Warren said, "I do feel the
FB l ha.s gotten sort of a short shrift."
To combat lbls, the Newport
Beach Toastmasters Club
member has joined the lecture ·
circuit of area service clubs.
After speaking to the Mission
Viejo Rotary Club Tuesday, he
explained that his obJecUve Is to
try and get lhe pubJJc interested
in his way of tb.inkinit.
·'I .11UIJ thlnk its lhe most em-
cient organlzatJon in the United
Stales' history, both past and pre-
sent," he said.
When the news ot Hoover's
death reached the FBI's Los
Angeles office. where he apent.
moat of h1.s 33 years as a apetlal
agent, Warren recalls mating a
predlcUon.
Al the Ume, be said, "The FBI
real soon is aolng t.o revert back
to an ordlnary, poUUcaJ motivat-
ed organizaUon."
So far, he said, bis forecast has
not come true. But, he cautioned,
"Really, lhejury is still out."
Warren said Hoover, who he
met personally several Umes, on-
ly agreed to become bead of the
FBI because he had the op-
portunity t.o tree it of pol1Ucal in·
fluence. The former agent
believes his Jate boss succeeded.
Suspect Facing l '
''He dJd not let anyone buffalo
hlm," he said. Presldenta, at·
torneys general, no one could
control him, even thou&h they
tried, he said.
Hoover, he said, would have
nolhlng to do with the events in·
volved ln Watergate. Conspiracy Rap
Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, who
purportedly is known in the illicit
drug trade as "The Fat Man." is
scheduled to be arraigned today
in Orange County Superior Court
on charges related to the Oct. 2a
slaying or Stephen Bovan in
.Newport Beach.
Like seven other people named
10 a coWlly grand jury Indict-
ment, Davis in addition to the
murder c<>nspiracy charge is ac-
C'uscd of extortion and illegal
drug trafficking.
The 28-year-old former Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna devotee was
arrested Thanksgiving Day by
Indonesian oflicials on the dls-
1 ant island or Bali.
UCI Degree
Added for
·Environment
A new baccalaureate dearee
program Is being debated among
faculty of UC Irvine. ll would
manufacture professional en·
vtronmentalista.
The UCI Academic Senate
takes up the proposal al a 3 p.rn.
Thursday meeting.
The prospectlve degree in ap-
plied ecology would combine the
traditional science training or a
biologJcal sciences major, In
combination with environmen-
tally based courses offered b)' the ·
program In social eci;>loty.
The graduate would be
awarded a bachelor of arts
degree.
Courses ln envlronmenlal
quality and health, plannll)I and
pubUc: policy, law aftd 10clety
would form the foundaUon of the
new dl.Jclpllne.
OflANGI COAST
DAILY PILOl'
lie was returned here by two
Orange County Oislrict attorney
investigators.
Davis has been described a.s a
founding partner of Prasadam
Distributing, Jnc., a Newport·
Beach investment firm thal
purportedly served a!I the cash .
outlet for income derived from
massive drug dealing.
· Revelation of the alleged drug
dealing apparatus came in the
wake of Bovan's murder Oct. 22
outside a Newport Beach
restaurant.
Jndications are Bovan was cut
down by a gunman in retribution
for his alleged role in the recent
kidnapping of a Prasadam of-ficial.
Yretim Grabs
Knife; Rape
Attempt Foiled·
A would-be rapist who put
down his knife when he mla·
takenly thought. be'<l over·
powered tus victim. was chued
off when the woman grabbed the
knife and threatened her at·
tacker, Newport. Bea~h police
said today.
They eald tbe attempted rape occurred Monday afternoon ln
Balboa.
Tbe 19-year-bld victim told
polfco the man, descrjbed u be·
ing between the ages ot 20 and 25.
and dressed in blue Jeans and a
grey sweatshirt. flrst ap·
proaded her Monday afternoon
when •tie was washing 'her car. 1 She saJd he asked to borrow her
hoae and a rag so he could wash
his car. Alter cleaning his auto,
he left. She said' she r~turned to
her home and a few momenta
later he was at her door.
He came into the house, she
said, grabbed a knife which he
held tC> ber 1tomacb and took her
Jn to a bathr~ro w~re be 1ald b• wuaolnltorapeher.
The young woman aald she
walled until her six-toot tall,
.175-pound aaeailant put tht lmllo
.down,. thtn abe arabbed t.bt>
:weapon.
After a brief lt.rui'10. tbe Dl&A
Jled, sbe~dpolicp.
A Corona del Mar woman who
TtJ)ortedJy bad become
depruaed over Woeu appa.rtat..
ly took '~j_llfe lllfor\da,y aftar.
noon. i N_~rf SMch police re-POrted t.Oday.
Jnveatlj1tor1 Hid 8Ja11ebe
Koent11ben. •. ot '11 Ba.Ywood ~s d.cll.Nd dad on aiTfnl•al
ffoac Memonal "oepltaJ •l •bo4lt ~:JS p.m. 1bri~4 UN)'_ bavt 11.Jl~ her' Mith u a tulaJde ~
to aa onrdol• oflleeplna pUll.
But, he explained, the former
FBI director did believe "if we
didn't know what was going on,
why. we would be negligent.'·
Warren recalled that after the
the communist party and related
groups moved into this country.
First, he said. they tried the
direct approach but the pe6ple
wouldn'tbuy it.
So, he *aid, they began In·
filtrating other groups and
operating throu.gh rront or·
ganizaUons. Because of this. he
said, agenta also went. to rallies
and infiltrated groups.
Warren said he personally
believes that the government. if
it proceeds, will have trouble
proving criminal intent in their
case against former FBI New
York supervisor John Kearney
who has been indicted for
wiretapping and mail openines.
Warren joined the agency at. a
time when men wlt.b both in·
vestlgalive and business ex-
perience were needed. Since he
had prev1oualy worked in sales
promotion and repossession, he
was qualified.
He aaid he probably faced lhe
possibility of more physical
harm while repoaaeuiog
aut.omobUes than any Umt dur·
ing his FBI career.
The closest be ever came to be·
Ing shot u an agent wu during
the SLA shootout. in 1oulh Loe
Angeles when a bullet. singed
passed him.
During hla career, he said, be
worked on Juat about everyt.hlng,
including lhe murders of John F.
Kennedy and Robert .Kennedy.
YMCA Unit.
Names Chief
RobertJ. Marahall,«Newport
Beach bu been ap~lnted the
first chairman of a newly formed
YMCA 1upport CtO\.lp, the
Heritaae Club.
Club.
Marshall, a IJdo Isle resident.
bu served ~ put two yeare OD
the Oruae COut YMCA'• Bo.rd
of DirectQn and b acU•t ln tM
.Newport Harbor Area Cbamb.r. ot Commerce.
Ttte Herltaie Club ii open to
local people •ho .ttbtT make a
direct oontrlbutlon to the
YMCA'• eadotn:D9nt fucl orwbo include IUCb d.onatloaa 1n tllelr
•tateplena. l'orfwtberinforma·
Uon, contacttht Y att41 tel0.
•
where photographlne Is pro·
hlbiled. U.S. tJ.2f have been stationed
at AkroUrl since the 1973 Arab·
Israeli war. They make dally re·
coonalasance mahts over the
Arab-Israeli front lines lo check
on compllance with re1trlctlons
on troop deployments and other
provls,ons of the cea1e-fire
agreements between Israel and
and lu Arab foea.
The plane cruhed on lop or the
base'• operaUon.s control center,
uploded and set the buildin1
complex on fire, wltne11e1 sald.
·'The U·2 look off, appeared un-
able t.o &ain altitude and then
swerved and crasbed into the
operaUOOJ bulldlnf on lhnlde of
the runway," said a Cypriot
workman at the base.
"There was a terrific explosion
when the plane hit the building
and the whole area was engulfed
in flames.",
One of the seven wounded, a
British civilian employed by the
Royal Air Force, was reported
in serious condition. The other
six wou.Qded were three airmen,
a BriUah airwoman •r\d \wo
Cypdols, \ho 1pokesman. .. ld.
Firemen battled for at.ore than
three hours to control ttie blue.
Oamaae lo the buUdln&s was ex·
tenslv1.
c • -. Deliberations
T ht crush occurred shortly
before 7 a.m , local time, belort
most of Ule baae personnel bad
reported for work.
The British spokesman said
there wrt:J ne> lndJcaUon ot the
cuuae of the craah.
Santa Ana Films
F ouiid Obscene
By TOM BARLEY
DI .. Dtltr ~ lwt
A jury that haa thus far found
10 movies .11bown at the Mitchell
Brothers' Santa Ana theater in
the past two years lo be obscene,
is back at its deliberations today
in Orange County Superior
Court.
Acting Superior Court Judge
Marvin G. Weeks sent the panel
back for rurlber discwislon late
Tuesday when quesUonlnc re-
v ea I e d that jurors had not
reached a clear verdict on five
movies.
They are: ''CB Mom mu,"
''One of a Kind," "Roller
Bi.hies." "Resurrection or Eve,"
and "HWlgry Mouth."
E"rona Page A J The voting •late Tuesday on
three of &.he movies wu 8 to 4 in
tavor of obscenity. The jury was
deadlocked ate to 6 on "One or a
Kind" und "Roller Babies." DEATH ENDS DREAM. • •
ly was quite hi.ppy with his work which put him close lo the
land and the nearby desert bills he loved so much.
Upon hearln1 of Richard's deat.h, Newport-Mesa Eve-
ning School Principal Carole Castaldo decided to present his
parents, Joan and stepfather Ken WiUlams. wltb Ule dlploma
Richard came so close to achieving.
The jury voted f,O to 2 that.
''Summer of Laura· was not ob-
scene. The same verdict was re·
achtd by a vote on the mo\'le "My
Erotic Fotuies."
Thursday night she will make the same drive to <.;orona
lhal Richard made each evening to present lhe diploma in person.
Nine votes consl.itute an ac-
eptable majority \n an Oran1e
County Superior Court. trial.
Anything less consUtute1 a hung Jury. Richard's body was cremated on Saturday. His ashes
were scattered over the hills near Corona.
Sporting Goods Stolen Fro~ Boat
The jury believed. when they
came back to the coµrtroom
Tuesday lhat lhey had reached
vetdicta oo all 17 movies.
Newport Beach police are
seeking lhe thief who stole sport·
ing goods valued at more than
$1,280 from a boat moored off the
Balboa Penln.11ula 's Coronado Street.
~ double bonnrf
~1"14ry d•.i•v1,,;.i..-J
by \llrlllnut "_.",,.''' ~ n<hhMdw•cl~rit.tu
doon. edjt..«able .tlet.'I ''"'' dtopktrOlte\pOOrlt'fl" r.atr J
W)t. 016'/r tiflfV•
Rt.Ci \152000
SAU: t 1290.0G
Boat owner William E .
Wllkio1on. 45, of Claremont, told
police tbe equipment was in
place when be last used bis boat
Nov. 8. He reported lhe break·ln
Monday.
Judge Weeks wu told that. the
jury was under the lmpreuloa
. that ln a dlvlslOI) where the ma·
jorlt.y had leas than nine votes,
the verdict was to be re1arded as
a "not obscene" ruling.
Christmas
Gifts of
Lasting Beauty. ..
bY Henredon
Thal original. vety SJle(i.11 gift you·v<' bl'cTl ~arc1'11tq for may
bt? right here. for your own hom<' lor a member of your
family. for that youngcoupk! ~cJr1mg &heir 01'!.t ho~. A
~or Henredon r\Jm1ture will make the W<lrm glow ol
Chrli.lmas la<>I for many ~c'lsons lo romc. Hew <1rr d1c;1ln·
')u1~~ trea.,urcs from mdny r-c11od, ono t;tyles .• my on4' nl
whirh could be the perfect touch for ony line rQ(>nl l>'<.1dt:
fOI' your!leff whid'I pteee !Most au1ts you. and gift yodrwll or
someone you love with Henredon this Chrl\\maa. I lul'fy !
Limited quantities available for 1mmrdi<1te dl!h111'ry.
Ape;,d
'''"" cir-tt <f-.~f arr.,,.--u9"d
i.nqty 01 grouped In
..... ~d-Ol !Mr.g
1r,om. WJ9 018 H21)
R('Q. $O'S OI) •
~ues.oo
Oiffnul""""""' l!mMWll46ootl
~ .... ,,,.
lhd.~p.w11·
ti01111Mid b-dt~• 10
pem11t ir.k1on OITV
Ot tQimd ~11 lllld ._...,..,*"low.
W'40 010 H788
h'OO. • 1 oe.oo
IAL8•1tt ...
Prof11ulonal lnterfof Ot11lg1t without ~Jon
Comfortable Parking • Conwtllent PlnandnQ
Orange Coast 011ly Pilot
City Deserves
A Fine Library
Next MontJuy, Newport Beach city council will
once again confront the thorny issues surroundif)g con·
struction of lht• Newr>0rt Center branch library.
Thl' library. wtuch hai> bt!UD the source pf con-
troVl'fl!t) most 1·ccl•ntly over size still ls Jn the planning
:itagt!s hcc:tuli<: the lnitiul construction bids came in about 40
perceut over whul the archilt•cl and city staff estimated the
building cost lo be.
It's up to the council lo ctec1de what to do next. but we
should like to comment on some of the Cundamental e le·
ments of the dec1s1on.
First and foremost, 1s tht• problem of library size and
population. The new library has got to be big enough to
~erve the ultimate population of the city. The 14,000-square
foot building meets that test, hbrary officials say.
Second, it ~hould be somcthin~ that the entire city can
point lo with at least some modest pride. It should be a
..,howcase for the whole cit} So far, none of Newport
Beach's t'Jl} buildings c.•omc clo.se lo athieving this
Third the llffil' honored tradition of Newport pleading
municipal poverty 1s wearing a bit thin. Just as the
cheapes t item in the store seldom is the best b:lrgain. and
·getting by" ,.., simply another term for mediocrity. so
good city stewards hip requires vision and courage and be·
ing able to look beyond one's own ward and beyond th<'
next clcctwn It's time lo do something really Cine for all
the residents ol Lhe city
Caution in Order.
Next wt·t·k, Newport Beach residents presumably will
begin secmg another petition drive organized by Dr.
Eugene Atherton.
Dr. Atherton was the man responsible for the initiative
which rl•sultcd in the passa~e of lhc city's new parkland
dedication ordinance.
Thul orclinante. "hi<'h increased the amount of land
developer"' must g1vl' lo the city from two acres per 1,000
resident~ to fin• ac:res. looked pretty good when the pelt
ttons \\.Cfl' c1rt:ul..1t<.-cl <.ind when the city council en£tcted the
measure
In retrospect. howe\•cr, 1t appears the measure is go
ing to advt•rst·I~ affe ct redevelopment of the older parts of
town by imposin)o! eno rmous fees on developers of projects
of more than four unit-; and less than SO.
The s 1lualwn olH'iously was unrntentional. but Wl'
think a les:-.on tan be ll'arncd.
~ow Dr. Alhl·rton 1s s N •krng Lo have the voters enact a
l'lly law rt•quirm~ sln•ct dcd1cut1on:-. along the blufftops 1n
any new subd1v1s1ons 1Jtl.1oin1ng Ncwµort Bay and 1or the
l'aC' it 1{'( >l'ean
It sounds ~t·m•rully n•<.is1m;1ble. but we can't forget
what happt•1wd with his la'>l ~l·ncrally commendable idea.
And we do ha\'(' a Coastal Commission which is going to
make s imilar and probably overriding demands on de-
velopers
A serious fla"' of too many tniliulives is thut they can
only be corr<.'ctcd by othN initiati\'es, and their very rigid1
t.v can prl•vcnt hetfrr solutions to specific problems
through m•goli<1t1on or spt•ciul ordinances.
The wisdom and m•ct•ss1ty of the proposed initiative 1s
O[>en lo (!Ul'"l1on
Voice for Students
Hc•g innin ~ .Jan 1. lhc r(• will b<' a student rcprcscn·
tat1\'l' on t hl' <'flas t l'ommun1t) Colll·gl• District Board
\llc1 n •l'l•nt pa..,saJ!l' of legislation requiring a nonvut·
in~ student mcmbt•r, Coat>l trus tees approved a system by
''hi ch the cltstrict 's thn·e collcl(es will rott.1le selection of
thl· rl'pt'l'scntativl' among themselves.
The fir"t college to be represented, as decided by the
toss of CJ roin, will be Golden West. follov.cd by Or:.inge
Coast anct then Coastline.
Slurlent l<'arll•rs say they want to insure that those
sclcc:tl'Cl ha,·c· u ~cnuinl' interest in student well-being and
some> knowl(•dgt' of how the board operates.
The n 'sponsiblc> approach of most coast stude nt
k·ad(•rs gi\'l'S rt·uson to expect lh<.it the new board mcm·
hers will Pl'O\'t' to ht• valuable sources of in(ormation a11d
informed opinion 111 1nflut!ncing board decisions.
And should this provl' to be the ca~e. students hope
their mt·mbcr e'en tu ally May be granted voting privileges.
• • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on lh1s page are those of their authors and
art1sls Reader commenl 1s inv1led Address The Daily Pilot, PO
Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642·4321
Boyd/Box
ByL. M.BOYD
Intf'restlng that word
"box." To ''boi°'' something
ror shipment needs no ex·
f.lanation, certainly To
'box" a compass merely
mean!! to name Its 32 points
forward then backward in
consecutive order. But less
well known is that to "box" a
drink is lo pour It back and
forth between two glasses to mix it.
Are you !lath1'6ed with your
first name? It not. why not?
Scholars now think that J>tO-
Dear
Gloomy
Gu
11 lt bett to stay In the
l 1al trarnc lanea et the
end of the Colla 1 Mesa
Freeway and 'add 21
mlnutea to 10,·home· lime, or Join lhe throne
1e>tn1 do~n median
lanea, acot·frei! JR J ,'. -
pie who don't like their own
first names tend to be dis·
satisfied with themselves in
general. Far more men than
wpmen are known to dislike
their own first names, In·
cidenlally.
Q. "What's a housecal's
norm al body temperaturet"
A. lOl'hdegrees F.
Q. "When the Japanese
bombed Pearl Harbor on Dec.
7, 1941, what were the new
movies playing In
Hollywood?"
A. "The Great Dictator,"
"Seraeant Ybrk" and
"Cltlien Kane."
·The Day U.S. Isolation Ended
It's a Sunday like any other
Going on Christmas. Brown
packages hidden in closets
Outside brislt and snappy.
Children f(O to Sunday School.
Newspaper jammed with ad·
vertlsements. All about the new
upsweep hairdo. Wanamaker's
advertises white shirts at two
dollars (regular two-fifty and
three-dollar values better
come early ). Morning news pret·
ty good Russians counter·
attacking around Moscow;
muybc they'll hold out after all.
After lunch the telephone rings.
And it's never, ever, the same
again
"llcy, heard the newh., The
Japs have bombed Pearl
Harbor'"
"No' You 're c razy. Hey
Ernestine. "
Evtr>bodY of my era knows
where they heard the news,
December 7, 1941. Try us out
That's what separates genera·
lions The ::;tad1um was crowded
to watch the nedskins and at the
half the loudspeaker began to
blarf' Will Lieutenant General
Smith call hls omce'! Thete's a
' telephone call fOf Commander
Russell~ Jt went on and on.
Veteran New York Times
photographer George Tamei.
wondered what was up; called
hts o(fice ; got the news. lie wenl
to the Japanese Embassy: iron
gates barred , a gray white
smoke risln~ from burning
pap~rs in the reur There was a
two -way traffic Jam on
M assachusl'tls /\venue of cars
gawking at th(' embassy
IT'S AN anniversary to re
ml'mber not becaui.e a war start
ed but because a madnes s ended
isolationism. I have a personal
feE>hng because I was one of the
gawky boys who volunteered in
Mr Wilson 's dream to make the
world safe for democracy. We
\\On : there was the exhilaration
of the Arm1st1ce. and then the
Lodge fi ght against the League
Wilson forlomlv asked the nation
to n•memhvr I.he "dL·ar ghosts"
nf boyi. left on Flanders Fields
Tht•n• w<.1s " rnaJOrll!I. never a
two thirds majority, for the
Lea~ue Soon the wholt..' c rusade
was dcrtdl'd Th<' Nyt' Committee
showed 1t was all a plot by mun1
!tons makers
Senate 1solat1on1sts defeated
the World C<>urt. too Again then·
was a majority. 5~ to 36. hut this
was several short of two·th1rds
Borah and Johnson left the
Senate chamber laughing and n:·
JOI Ctn~
l solat1on1::.m came down
through the start of World War
If It wr:>kE>ned when England
Cou&.tit alOOl' ;.ind when Hitler
madly attacked his surprised
partner Stalin But CoJonel
Llndbergh wrote an open letter to
Americans through Collier's
France was defeated, he said;
Great Brltam was being defeat·
ed: the US would be dereated,
too. 1( it joined the fray. No dls·
tincllon between lllller'is and
ChurchhJll 's moral alm!i.
On Thursday, Dec. 4, ttu'ee
days before Pearl Harbor, the
isolationist Chicago Tribune and
Washington Times-Herald
publish~ a top-secr et U.S. posl·
tion paptt lavin~ out loiistlc and
supply plans for an imagined in·
vasion of Germany with 5 milUon
Americans m 1943. It wi.s the
kind or thing ull war offices pre
pare. but the nOIWspaperi.
charged it showed a Roosevelt
plot
And :.o Lh<• day or trial came, 36
years ago. MQSl of 1t still is quite
incredible It ti. incredible
because we had broken the
J apanesc code and never should
have let the surprise occur. A
natty little colonel named
William Friedman who was a de·
mon at crypto&raphy had un·
scrambled the imperial code un·
der operation "Macie" und was
advlng the Army. Navy and State
Departmoo\s trAn•lationa of
Tokyo war ordera before the
Japanese troopis .cot thefTl . We
knew an attack wo11 comlng.
Where. we didn't know
WE fC.NEW that Japan hud
se nt a so-called "peo.ee"
emlssary to Washln3ton to fool
us and mask the surprise, and we
played along with it: It was a
double game of make·belleve.
We had warned Army and Navy
Commanders Nov. 24 of a proba·
ble attack; we had sent a more
urgent warning, Nov. 27. But
mental blockage is more
powerful than reality; the attack
would be on Malaya, Dutch East
Indies, Philipines, Guam -not
Hawaii.
Then the following funny mis·
haps occurred. Tokyo di,&~fiehed
a 14 -part message -to the
Japanese e mba ssy 1n
Washington Dec. 6 or which the
first 13 parts were decoded for the
State Department before the Japs
got them. "This means war,"
"You cM1 le4d 4 co,,,el to ihe OdSis, buf you c~t ~ fii1t1 drink."
solemnly aatd ft'Dlt to Harr)'!
llopklns us h ate ~inner from a
tray. There mlaht ~Ill be hOP' I•
the 14th section, hdwevt•r. Oddly
enough the JupunJ". c traMmi~·
ters called it a da)! before aenO.
ing the Mth t1cclioo, which had
the sting in 1t (though It didn't
mention Pourl Harbor). They
sent It next morning. General
Marshall. Chief of Starr of the
Army, didn't get the 14th sect I.on
till he came in from a Sunday
horseback ride at 11 ·30. He sent
another alert then
ELECTRONIC equipment
pickrd up Jopunesc planes wing·
tnlC to attack ut 7 a m., just as
super sensitive tilcclronic equip·
menl 1s supposed to ~
watch officer didn't do anyUttng~
1t must be a rhght of American
B-17::..
General Marshall decided to
send hi s Sunday a~ert
to U .S. commanders,
because contact with
Hawaii was temporarily inter·
rupted .so he sent the crucial
message by Western Union and
RCA and finally a motorcycle
courier started out wifh it In
Hawaii to military hcad~uarters.
Unaccountably bombs began to
full and he jumped into ,l ditch.
As background to ~ll of the
above the Hawaiian comman·
ders. Admiral Kimmel and
General Short. were barely on
i,peakin~ terms from inter-
i.erv1ce Jealousy . the big bat·
lleships were tied \lP two-by-two
for rear of 11abotage. The
airplanes were on the ground.
Anli·aircralt guns were wrongly
placed and therti wa!\'no eHective
air patrol by c1tl\er service.
Absolute surprise. The Pacific
neet was cancelled out; eight
battleships and three cruisers
sunk or disabled.
Yes, I remember the day. 1
went to the White House and
stayed until 1 a.m. A crisp night.
nearly freezing; trucks with ear·
ly Christmas trees coming down
Pennsylvania Avenue; a misty
moon climbing the trees over the
old bronze cannon In Lafayette
Park. Cabinet mooting at 8:30;
Congressional leaders al 9.
We went out to stand on the
front portico of Ute White House
-a Jillie st.one st,.ge among the
columns.
Behind the iron rail! on the
avenue a little crowd looked In at
us. J t trted to sing the Star
Spangled Bl.Ulncr.
• TRB J )/ a l o ngstanding
Waslungton byltn(> Its author cur·
rentl.11 1~ Richard Strout of the
Christian Sc1en.ce Monitor
Women's Conference Worth lnvestnient
Tb the Editor·
On behalf of the Orange County
_delegation lo the National
Women's Conference held re·
cent Iv 1n Hous ton. I wi sh to thank
the Daily Pilot for 1ls excellent
coverage orthe event
I s hould like to point out,
however, that your editorial
<Nov 25 >is misleadmg. You re·
fer to the Houston gathering as a
"SS M1lhon Meeting " The meet·
mg lasl month was the culmina·
f1on of mectmg11 held 1n every
!!talc and tE>rritory or the United
State:.. meetings which attracted
as many as J 1.000 women (Utah >
and 6.000 women ICalifomia). In
preparation for each of the st,att
meetings. educational materiDls
were prepared. workshops and
panels werE' organized, speakers
were found, and smaller regional
meetings were held, such as tht
one at UC lrvlne last sprtng.
PubllcUy had to be sent ou~; this
involvM the desianlng, writing
and printing of thousands of
brochures In order lo insure aft\,
pie representation at each state
rneotil')g. Finally, delegates to
Hou9lon received minimal ex·
penses for rare, room and board.
Tlf ESE MEETINGS and many
ot.her .icpenaes, too numerous to
menUon, were al\ Included in the
~ million price t i · Approx
lmately 200,000 womett (and
some met1) attended the &tat
and lenitQty meeUogs. J lb.Ink
that it the Daily Pilot ll1uret the
cost on a natlonnl basis, the
ed ltorg will see that the t •
pa1ers, who lnclude4 those ot UI
who partlclpated reaionally or
notlonally, ucthed their
money's worth.
Womeh ~Pf sent '3' percent of 1 the nJUon. This I« ~· first Urno
Jn our country's hl1tory that 1,
series oC meettn11 dedicated to
the well·belnl of A merlca '1
women hu ever b tn federal~
funded. Con1rtRt de1l1nated the
el cted ~ele11ate1 to act u a.a id· ~tory ~Y. t6 decld or IU(I • ~Hey or Je9!1t1Uon Most cf ca.
h'a\'e bfic1'i working fol'. aim<*\ a
,. ... "'~pay; ool • Maidtt.11
iOf fhOie wmen involved lmlM
the country even received ex·
pcn~c money.
In the tradition of American
womanhood, we volunteered our
lime and energy 1n the service of
our country •
Let me n •mmd vou that S6
m1l11on represent.II about 20
minutes of the V1etn<.1m war lo
terms of cost and there was QO
loss or life an Houston R•t~ef ..
there was an affirmation of Ufe.
It was peaceful conference fiUed
with the hopes of milhol'\:) of
w o m c n Cr o m o 11 \\ a.I ks or
American hfc
VIVIAN H HALL
Chair. Orange County
Oclcgat1on , National Womtn's
Con(erct1ce
f'•ttltefl Me•• ..... I
To the Editor~
Is Pearl ,ffarbor ltemem
bere4?
• Dec 7, 1977 marks th ll6th ln·
ah1ers.ry of the att;icle on Pearl
Harbor, ''A day that. wtll Uve ln
ipfamy." But, f$itt remembered?
Certainly many graves ar~ cfec·
ot'afed with flats . eome
newspapers carry sliort ltetns.
and civic g roufs cnther to ••Jlcmembtr Pear Harbor."
Such 11 not the c: c at the
\J, •. S. Arizona Memorial In
Pearl Harbor. Sin~ openlni to
the public, more lban \0 mllllon
have visited the momoHal. Not
a\1 Americans, not tU honey
mooners, but traveler• rom
around the.> 1tobc. and ~ol' au the
mom cnt of <'ontat't that attp trom
tht ahoreboal to thf' m~morlat ls oneo( Nf', r"pect nd t\umlllly,
for beneath th aubmer •d deqkt ot lht once mlahty Arbona 1,l.DC2
:American !f vie m or UU
eotombed
WITH 'l'HE av r-lncreqln•
numbors vlsltln1 tho memorial,
P~ttnt facllltle• aro vaaUy ln·
dequate. With thla ln mlnd, Th
~rliona Memorial Museum J'ounct11\IOA wQ c:onc:elv~ to de·
1l1n, bu.lid el)(f.ma1nulli1 l'..-k
like museum complex loeated on ll·acre a to at P arl Harbor
Tt\e ~.a overnanenL hu P"' propr:t t ralllion doU1r1
Al least another four million arc
needed for completion.
For those wishing t,.o con·
tr.Jbule, donations may be sent to The Arizona Memorial Museum
Foundation, P.O. Box 6067,
Honolulu, Hawaii 96818.
W.A. KNIGIIT
'}' f!S•f19'1
To the Edit.or:
The Daily Pilot reports on ef·
forts of Air California and
Western Airlines to obtain routes
rights between Orange County
and Reno, Nevada.
These repeated applications of
the airline industry, the vacuous
content of the recent Environ·
mental Impact Statement.
<'oupled with the silence of the
COUj'lty Board or Supervisors re·
mlnds me of the lyrics from an
o)d song, "Your Ups tell me 'no·
no,• but there's 'yes-yes' in your
f'YtS."
The board should tell them "NO" on additional rou.teg; tell
t hem .. NO"' on alrport ex·
panaion. There is no middle ground.
Polnt them to Ontario.
WILLIAM M. MONROE
Dls..CerA"'9
To the F.dit.or:
Your editorial on Newport
Boulevard that appeared In the
Nov. 30 edition of your paper was
totally proper, however you did
not SP Car enough. Whal is hap
penlng t.o Costa Mesa and its
dthens because of the ir·
r lJ'OnAlbllity of Sacramento Is
beyond the reader's com·
prehe'nston. Nol only Is Newport
Boulevard taklnt ita bloody toll
year alt.tr year but ~ll of our sur·
tac• tll'ffts are takln1 a bttUn•
••well.
For many yeart Costa Ma•
hat bHn a ptoiresalvt clty th1t
has trtcd to malntatn a cUmato Pi
devtloprnen• th•t wm b• o'r ~eflt to lta clt.llen.a. The 1tate'a
refusal lb complete the freeway
has' eraeed thla. dovelopmcnt ln eu~• ll &>ot•Uorflhat w• are a;ttn1
a tr an led to death by trolrfc.
The manpcnnt ar\d hec rn~r&Y
d vot ID 'ewpof't ard
lak away lt'ttoc tnforcemcnt
thnl is needed in other parts of
lhe dty.
Perhaps lhe most unfortunat!!
a!lpect of this whole situation is
that faalinJ.! to complete this
frcew oy atrc(•ls all of Orange
County. Recent informal surveys
done by the traffic bureau in·
dicate that 53 percent of the
persons involved in lt'i!fric coJ.
lis1ons oo Newport Jjoulevard do
not even live in Costa Mesa.
While this ts not a°' official sl!r·
vey, we I eel that1 It is close
enough to indicate that Newport
Boulevard is a problem \o
everyone In Orange County.
THE FAILURE to complete
Newport Uoulevaru. coupled
with ttw dlsus&rous loss of
University Drive H a main east
west corridor between llunt·
lngton Beach and Irvine, has had
effects that every citizen that
lives in Costa Mesa will feel for
years.
'I'he state is again studyifll
Newport Boulevard for solo·
lions: the only soluUon ls 1oing to
be the compleUon of the treeway.
In the meantime Newport
Boulevard should bo upgraded
with major Improvements. Of
course the stale will isa)' th y do
not want to Improve Newport
Boulevard if they are golnf( to
huild a freeway Thut statement
has been made for lhe last lS
years.
l hope thi!s will not be a tragic
Christmas season for :1ome
motorlat who haiJ to tra\-el on
Newport Boulevard. We In the
police deo1>rtmcnt know that
Newport Boulevard with Its uily
trees and ditch hiu l\Ol claimed
iu loat vtctlm.
• LT. J. A. REGAN
Tralftc Bureau C9iiuoander
Coata,Mcs1 PoUce Dept.
•
~""""wdown Seen·
lb School· Needs
After month~ of c.J1s('U1SMng the need for a school build· ine bor1d <!le(·t10n, Suddlcback V111ley Unified School Difi·
trict offldals h.1vo decided they can postPQPe the election ror more thun u S'car.
Supt. Hu:hur<.l Welte says now th1:tl the e!ection woq't
hav'e to be ('all~d until June. 1979.
Jn spite of the &ret.1 's growth, school enrollments ap.
peac to be incrcusing at a rate less than projected. This
trend apparently b e nough to hold off the need to build
more schools beyond wha t is currently under construction.
A slowdown in the sale of both new and existing hom es,
coupled with FJ>eculation, has contributed to this trend, the
sup_ermtendcnt s~ud.
Another foctor, he said. is that fewer people with
~ oung childr<:n arc moving into the district. Young
fomslicl> apparently just can't afford a house in the Sad·
dleback Valle}
If the ds!>lnct ·s current projections arc valid enough,
overcrowd<'d .,chool~ und double sessions will be avoided.
Jl soumls goocf hut residl·nts shou ld be aware that the
situutton could shift again and send more students than ex·
peeled mto tht· sc:fiools h) 1981
Midnight Secrecy
Lately t lw 1 rvinc.· City Council has been burning th~
midnight oil a nd the 1 u m. and 2 a.m. oil, too-at public
meetings.
Such diligence and dedication to getting the job done
may b<> commcnduble in s p1ril, but it does not make good
muni('ip<1J sens<' ·
Matters of wide imporl<1nce often are finding
thems<>lvcs on the tail end of lengthy agendas, thus being
debated sn the small hours•of morning when minds arc
more attuned to srecp than to judicious decision-making.
Most n•ccnlly a campaign reform ordinance, pre-
sumably of hi~h interest to all citizens. suffered from not
one, but two p~t-m1dnight debates. J\t one the city at·
torney wus so lirt'G he could not trust himself to answer
legal q ucstions u bout the ord in a nee.
Most of the public had no first-hand means of learning
what the debate was ubout b<!cause most were in bed.
That 's not the \\ ay to make city policy. In effect, the
public's business is bemg conducted in secret.
If the t'Ouncll workload is too heavy, then more fre-
quent mcL•tings will have lo be scheduled, or meetings
might h<!gin earlier in thC' duy.
Business m which pubiic participation is not vital
m1~hl ht• conducted in afl<.•rnoon sessions, with <early )
ni~hl l>c:ss1ons fl•st•n·N I for public hearings.
Conununity Spirit
L:.ist w<.•c•k. two S:iddleback Valley organizations -tht-
Exchungl' Club and the Chamber of Commerce
s ponson·d a lunch for m C'mbers or the Saddleback College
football tt'am and their coaching staff.
Th<' noon-hour affair was touted as a salute to the col·
legc team for lhc.•1r Mission Confcren<ie football crowrl anti ~ •
subsequent Mission Bowl \'ictory over Glendale ColJegc.
Hut the event marked something far more tmp0l'tant
in lhe area's relatively short residential history -the
emeq~encc or a "community'' reeling.
While groups like the Mission Viejo Mtmicipal Ad·
visory Council and the Saddleback Area Coo.rdlnating
Count' ii have atlC'rnptcd to fill the community governmen-
t:U ~ap created b~ the valley's s tatus as unincorporated
county territory, somethin8 has been Jacking.
As one diner pointed out, the college team's winning
season helped put the valley oh the map. But more im·
portanlly. it created a focal poiht for the area's residents
whose enthusiasm was just wailing for the right opportuni·
ty to s urfac~. '. •
We appl11ud the efforts of these groups in rallying resi·
dents hrhind something thal can only lead to a stronger
t'Ommunit.y tceling 'umong valley people.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Oatly Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those ot their authota and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O.
• Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Box
ByL. M.BOYD
Interesting, that word
.. box." To "box" something
for shipment needs no ex-
planation. l'crtainly. To
"box." a compass merely
means to name its 32 points
forward then backward In
consecutive order. But less
well known is that to "box" a
drink is to pour It bacll: and
forth between two glasses to mix it.
Seasoned Citizen himself et
the lime, incidentally. He was
61. Not. a bad way to head
toward retirement, what?
Q. "In cigarettes, what was
the No. 1 seller before filters
came out?"
A. Camels.
What most people refer to
as the jugular ~ein is n9t real-·
ly a vein but an artery.
\ .
Consider yo urself a
Seasoned Citizen, too, if you
can recall the first movie in
whlch that heavyweight actor
Sidn ey Greenstreet ap·
peare d . "The Maltese
Falcon," it waa . In 1940.
.GrteMtreet was almost a
At hnnd la a report that a
third of all babies born in this
country each year are the ,
olfspriog of unwed mothers
aged 17oryounger.
Q. "What's a housecat'1
normal body temperature?"
A. 101 'h deireu F.
The Day U.S. Isolati:Qn Ended
It's a Sunday like any other
Going on Ch.rlstmas. Brown
packages hidden in closeli>.
Outside brisk uod snappy.
Children go to Sunday School.
Newspaper jammed with ad·
vertisements. AU about the new
upsweep hairdo. Wanamaker 's
advertises white shirts at two
dollars (rcicular t wo-fifl y and
three-dollor values -better
come early). MomJng news prel·
1 t.y good · Russians counter-
attacking around Moscow ;
maybe they'll hold out after all.
After lunch the telephone rings.
And it'& never, ever, the same
aaaln ..•.
"Hey. heard the news? The
J"ps have bombed P~arl
Harbor'" ''No 1 You 're craiy. Hey
Emesllne .. "
Everybody of my era knows
where they heard the news,
Dt:cember 7, 1941 Try us out.
T hat's what separates gentra·
lions. The stadium was crowded
to wateh the Redskins aDd at the
half th.e loudspeaker began lo
bla re. Will Ueutenant General
Smith call his off~&.? There1i; a
telephone call for Oomm'*1er
R u~se.tl ! It went on and 011.
Veteran NEIW' York 't.Hnes
ph_olQfCUpher.,., Geq,cg~ Tames
wondered w~t •Wat up: etaDed
his office: got the news. He went
to the Japanese Embassy; iron
aates barred; a gray white
s moke rising from burning
papers in the rear. There was a
two-wa y trarric jam o n
Massachusetts Avenue of cars
gawking at the embassy
IT'S AN anniversary to re-
mern ber not because a war start·
ed but because a madness ended
-lM>lationisro. l have a personal
feeling because I was one of the
gawky b(>ys who volunteered in
Mr. Wilson 's dream to make the
world ufc for democracy. We
won ; there was the exhilar ation
of the Armi&Uce. ~nd then Ute Lodg~ Jight agaJaia\ the League.
Wilson' forlorn•y asked the nation
lo remember the "dear gh~ts"
of boys left on Flanders Fields.
There was a majority, never a
two -thirds majority, ror the
League. Soon the whole crusade
was derided. The Nye Com mitt~
showed it was all a plot by mWti·
tions makers.
Senate isolationists defeated
the World Court, too. Again there
was a majority, 52 to 36, but this
was several short of two-thirds.
Borah and Johnson left the
Senate chamber laughlng and re-
joicing.
I solationism came down
through the sl~rt of World War
11. It weakened when England
fought alone and when Hitler
madly attacked his surprised
Mailbox
partner Stalin But Colonel
Lindbergh wrote an open letter to
Ar'nerlcan5 through Collier's
France was defeHted, he said;
Great Bntain was being defeat
ed; the US would be defeatecj.
too, if It joined the rray. No dis-
tinction between Hitler's and
Churchhlll 'a moral aims.
On Thursday, Dec. 4, three
days before Pearl Harbor, thl'
isolation.isl Chicago Tribune and
Was hington Times-Herald
published a top-secret U.S. pos1·
tion paper layin~ out lo~istlc and
supply plans (or an Imagined an-
v asion of Germany with 5 mllUon
Americans in 1943 It was the
kind of Uung all war ofhces pre·
pare. but the newspape rs
rhargcd it showed a Roosevelt
plot
And. so the day of trial came, 36
years ago Most of 1t st11l 1s ~ujtc
incredible. Jl u inc·red1ble
because we had b roken lhe
Japanese code nnd never should
have let the surprise occur. A
natty little colonel named
WUliam Friedman who wa& a de·
mon at cryptography had un-
scrambled the ln\l)erial code un·
der operation ''Maaic" and was
giving the Army, Navy and State
Departmcnlll trJnslatlons of
Tokyo war orders before the
Japanese troops got them. We
knew an atlack was comtng.
Where, we didn't know.
WE KNEW that Japan had
.sent a so-called ''peace··
emissary to Washineton to fool
us and mask the surprise, and we
played aloo.g with it; It was a
double game of make-believe.
We had warned Army and Navy
Commanders Nov. ~4 of a proba·
ble attack; we had sent a more
urgent warning, Nov. 27. But
mental bloc kage ls more
powerfill than reality: the attack
would be on Malaya, Dutch East
Jndies. Phlllpines, Guam -not
Hawaii.
Then the following funny mis·
haps occurred. Tokyo dispatched
a 14-parl m essa1e t o the
Japanese embassy in
Washlneton Dec. 6 or which the
first 13 parts were decoded for the
Stale Department before t.he Japs
got them. "Th1s means war,"
--z.. .. ' ~~--~, ......
•rou c6M leAJ 4 C4maJ to the o~u;,, ~ut you cAn't "'4ks him drink."
aolemnly tdd FOJ\ to Harry
Hopkirut WI be ate dinner fri a
tray. There mlaht atlll be ho Sn
the 14lh section. hC>wever. dly
enough the Jupano11e traMmit·
tens called It a day before send·
Ing the 14th !iecUon, which h.ad
the ating ln it (though it dl«ln't
mention Pearl Harbor). They
sent. it next morning. General
Marshall, Chier of Staff or the
Army, didn't get the 14th section
till he came In from a Sunday
horseback ride at 11:30. lie sent.
another alert then.
ELECTRONIC equipment
picked up Japanese planes wing·
ang to attack al 7 a.Jn .• just. as
super aeMIUve electronic equip-
. ment is s upposed to do. Th.e
watch officer dldn 't do anything:
it must be a fhght of American
B·l7S.
General Marshall decided lo
send h is Su nda,.v alert
to U.S . co mmand ers.
becnuse co ntac t w ith
Hawaii was temporarily inter·
rupted so he sent the crucial
message by Western Union and
RCA and finally a motorcycle
courier started out ~1Jl it in
Hawaii to military headt\uarlClrs.
Unaccountably bombs 'began to
fall and he jumped into a ditch.
I
As backaround to ,all of the
above the llawalia~ comman·
ders, Admiral Khnmel and
General Short. wer, barely on
speakin.liC t erms hom inter·
service jealousy: the bic bat·
tleshlps were tJed utp two-by-two
for fear o f sob aee. The
airplanes were on e eround.
Anti-aircraft guns were wrongly
placed and there wasno effective
air patrol by eiU~r service.
Absolute surprise. jhe Pacific
fleet was cancelled out; eight
battleships and t.hree cruisers
sunk or disabled. 1
Yes, I remember tbe day. l
went to the WhiU, House and
st$yed until 1 a .m. 4 crisp nigbt,
nearly Cree2ing; tr k• with ear-
ly Christmas trees oming down
Pennsylvania Ave e; a misty
moon climbing the eea over the
old bronze cannon n Lafayette
Park. Cabinet m Ing at 8:30;
Congressional lead s at 9.
We went out to and on the
front portico of lbe hlte House
-a little stone sta among the
columns.
Behind the iron l,ails on the
avenue a little crowdlooked in at
us. It tried to sing the Star
Spangled Banner.
• TRB i1 a long ttuttHn g
Wa.thington b11tme. Ill 1dl'lor cur-
rently fs Richard St "t of the
ChmUcn Science Monft •
Women's Conference Worth Invest
T9 the Editor:
On behalf of the Orange County
<telegation lo the Nation al
Women's Conference held re-
cently in Hous ton, I wish to thank
the Dally Pilot for its excellent
cove race of the event.
l should like to point out,
however , that your editor ial
(Nov. 25) is misleading. You re-
fer to the Houston gathering as a
"SS Million Meeting," The meet·
ing last month was the culmina-
flon of meetings held in every
state and territory or the United
Stales, meetings which attracted
as many as 11,000 women <Utah)
and 6.000 women <California). In
preparation for each or the sta~
meetings, educational materiafs
were prepared, workshops and
panels were organized, speakers
were round, and &mailer regional
meetings were held, ~uch as the
, one at UC Irvine last sprinf.
Publicity had to be sent out; thts
involved the designing, writing
and printing of thousands of
brochures In order to insure am·
pie r epresentation at each stale
meeting. Finally, delegates to.
Houston received minimal ex·
penaes for fare, room and board.
the country e~n receivod ex-
pense money.
In the tradition of American
womanhood. we volunteered our
time and energy in the service of
·our country.
Let me remind you that $.5
million represents about 20
minutes of the Vietnam war in
terms of cost and there was no
loss of hfe m Houston. Rat.her,
there was an a!firmatloo of life.
It was peaceful conference filJed
with the hopes of millions of
women from all walks or
American life.
VIVJAN H.1HALL
Chair, Orange County
Delegation, National Women's
Con!eren~
l'lttf-.·Memt...COI
To lhc F..dltor :
Is Peurl Harbor Rcmem·
bered?
Dec. 7, 197'7 marks the 36th an-
niversary of the attack on Pearl
Harbor, "A d11y tbot will llve in
inCamy." But, ii it remembered'!
Certainly many graves are dec-
'o rate d wllh rl~gs , some
newspapers carry ebort items.
a nd civic groups gather to
"Remember Pearl Harbor."
Such Is not the caae at the
U.S.S, Arizona Memorial 'in
Pearl Harbor. Since opening to
, the public, more than 10 mUllon-
have visited the memorial. Not
all Americans, not all honey·
mooners, but travelers from
around the globe, and for all the
moment or contact that step from
the shoreboat to the memorial is
one of awe, respect and humillty,
for beneath the submereed decks
or the once mighty Arizona 1,102
American servfcemen are still
entombecJ.
WITH THE ever·lnC'reasinr
numbers visit.inf the memOriaJ,
present facilities are vastly. in·
adequate. With thls in mind, The
Arizona Memorial Muse um
FopndaUon was concejved to de·
Bign, build and maintain a park•
like museum complex located on
•n' 11-acre site at Pearl Harbor.
1'be federal government has •P·
propriated two milllon doUa:n.
At least another four million ~
needed Cor completion.
f'or those wishlnc to con·
tribute, donations may be 1Jent to
The Arizona Memorial Muaeum
Foundation. P .o. Box 8081,
Honolulu, UawaU 96818.
W.A. KNIG.Ht' .......... .,s,..t
'to the Editor:
In th DA!lY Pilot, Saddleback
Edltlon1 dated Nov. ao, Mt. Gary
Gra11vJ11o dld an article t.!Ued
''Kooken, Bookies lncteue ii\
County". In th fifth 1>arairaph ot th• articla Mr. OranvUle
write•, "In cou"ty i.rrttwr, NJ•·
alon Viejo waa lilted by MarW\ri
111 the hota~~r cl.U&lrl1.1
er area and lso place in
perspective tha a one-time ar-
rest in a Lagun Hills botel does
not consUtute th hot spot tor call
girls ln Mission 1ejo.
ORNE.NOBLE
Ch rman Municipal
dvisory Council
To the Editor:
The Dail1
forts of Air
WestemAlrlln
rtahta belwff
and Reno, Nev
These repea
the airline lnd
t reports on el·
allfornia and
to obtain routes
Orange County
content of th recent Envlron-
m en ta l Imp t Statement,
coupled wtth e silence of tho
county Board Supervisors rtJ·
minds me of t tytics from an
old 1on1, "Vou Ups tell mo 'no-
no,' but there' yes.yes' in your
eye11."
The board uld tell them "NO" on addl al routes; tell
them "NO'.. n airport ex-
pan•ion. Ther la no mlddJe
around.
Point them to ntarlo.
WIW Jd M. MONROE
•..-iM.lal
. . .
uda!
race, creed o~
nts of two tee:D·
t's tvake up.
L
17
Saddleback.
VOL. 70, NO. 341, • SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES
Marine Held
In Kidnapping·
A Camp Pendleton marine was
arrested in Oceamude early to-
day and handed over t.o Orange
County authorities as a prime
suspect in the kldnapplng and
rape or a Mission Viejo woman
last week.
The 22-year-old marine is also
suspected of kidnapping and rob·
Who's Got
The Blimp?
A 25-foot blimp that
owners or a newly opened
El Toro restaurant hoped
would lead customers to
their door has been re·
moved by an unknown Ln·
truder.
Orange County sheriff's
omcers said U.e balloon,
white with red fins, was
taken from Arby's 23862
Bridger Road, by someone
who cul the restraining
lines.
Operators of the
restaurant-sandwich shop
valued the blimp at $2,000.
8 Youths
Seized on
·Drug.Raps
By ROBERT BARKER
Of.,,. D••r ~Stall A 15-year-old girl stunned an
undercover Fountain Valley
police officer earlier this year
when she allegedly sold him five
balloons or heroin near the Los
Amigos High School campus.
The incident touched off an in-
tensive Investigation into drug
sales at the Los Amigos campus
which this morning resulted in
the arrest of eight juvenlles on
charges of selling dangerous
drugs.
One adult. Fred James Allen,
18, of 4040 West First St., Santa
(ma. also was arrested· as teams or policemen struck at the homes
or suspects in Santa Ana and
Fountain Valley at 6 a.m.
bing an 18·year·old El Toro
woman shortly before abducUng
the Mi9sioo Viejo vlcUm.
Orange County Sheriff's ln·
veatigaton ldenUlled the suspect
as Joseph Arthur Frtederlck, "a
22-year-old enlisted man sta-
tioned at Camp Pendleton.,.
A sheriff's department
spokesman said Ftiederlck was
apprehended by Oceanside of.
ficlals who found hJm sleeping in
bis robbery·rape vic:Um 'a auto
this mominc.
The 32-year-old rape vlcUm re-
portedly was kidnapped De<:. 1
oul!lde a Mllsloo Vlejo recrea-
tion center.
The woman was alle1edly
driven to a south county locaUoo
where she was raped and robbed.
Later, according lo crime re.
ports, the woman escaped ber al·
tackers ln San Diego.
Earlier the same night, It was
rep o rted to sheriff's in··
vesUgators that a man filUng the
same description had jumped ln·
to an 18-year-old woman's auto at
Mulrlands Boulevard and RJdae
Route Drive and attempted to ab-
duct her al knife-point.
However, the young woman re.
portedly jumped from the car
and escaped her attacker who
fled with her aut.o.
It was lat.er found abandoned
in Mission Vlejonear the locaUon
where the second vlcUm was ab-
ducted,
A sbertff's tnvesUgator said
that 1n addition to being found ln
the second victim'• auto,
Fritderick ftta tbe descrlpUon of
lblt assailant given LnvesUcatora
by both women.
The lnvestigatnr said char1es
pending against the suspect in·
elude two kidnap and robbery
counts as well as a single rape
charge.
Additionally lt is expected the
s uspect will be charged with two
counts oC auto theft and two
counts of assault wJth a deadly
weapon.
Skate Injury
Fatal to Boy
Eight-year-old Jeffrey D.
Reznicek or San Juan Capistrano
died Tuesday from head injuries
he apparently received while
skateboarding more than a
month ago.
1'Dlefl Remetahr
Jim Daw (right l and fellow members of
the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association ob-
serve a moment of silence in honor of their
fall en comrades during memorial 1ervices
conducted this morning at Seal Beach
Naval Weapons Stalion. The ceremonies
marked the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. The surprise attack
on the Naval base on Oahu in the Hawaiian
Islands brought the U.S .. suddenly and fr.
revocably, into World War 11. See related
story and photo, Page A3.
Jury FindJJ
lOSantaAna
8Y TOM BARLEY Of. OtJtr""' ""' A Jury that bu thus far found
10 movies shown at the Mitchell
Brothers' Santa Ana theater ln
the past two years to be obscene
is back at ill deliberations today
in Orange County Superior
Court.
Actln' Superior Court Judge
Marvin G. Weeks sent the panel
back for further dlscusslon late ·
Tuesday when questioning re-
vealed that jurors had not
reached a clear verdict on five
movies. They are: "CB Mommas,"
''One ot a Kind," "Roller
Babies," "Resurrection ot Eve,"
and "Hungry Mouth."
The voUng late Tuesday on
three or the movies waa 8 lo 4 in
favor of obscenity. The Jury was
deadlocked at 6 to 6 c;>n "One of a
Klnd" and "Roller Babies."
<SeeX·RATED, Pa1eA.Z)
Chamber ·Meet Set
WASJDNGTON <APl -la
D. Ebrlictunan, ~ Wa~ate
cover·up conapiHlor who ad·
milted surrenderine his "ethical
and moral judgment" to Richard
M. Nixon, will be freed April 27
after havlng served 1 'h yean in
an Arizona federal prison.
The U.S. Parole Commluloa
seL Lhe dale Tuesday and iD·
formed lbe 52-year-old
Ehrlicbman aL the Swllt Trail
Prlaon near Safford, Aris. Tbe
cornmlasion's actlon was an·
nounced today. .
His lawyer, Stuart StJller, said
lb e former White Hou1e
domeaUc counselor would have
no comment.
Ehrllcbman wu convicted,
along with John N. Jlltebell aQd
H.R. Haldeman, ol COftlplrlna to
hide Wblte House lDvolvemeat ln
the Watergate b&&rllarY and &MA
lying aboUt 1t under oath.
-~
Afternoon
.N.¥. toeks
TEN CENTS,
Jet 'Hits
Base at
Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -An
American U-a spy plane craabed
today as It was taklna off from
the BrlU.b AkroUrl alr base in
southern Cyprus, ldlllna five peo.
ple and lnju.dnc seven, a BriUsh
• mWtary spokesman reported.
• The dead included the
1 Am ertcao pilot of the U .9. Alr Force hl1b-allllude recon·
nallaance jet and four Cyprtot
clvWan employees al tbe bue.
tbe cbief 1pokesman for the
Brltlah command in Cyprus said.
Britl.sb authorities refused to
let n•wamen and photographers
•nler the air base. The
spokesman said the plane
crasbed in a reatrlcted 1one
where pbotoeraphing is pro·
blblted. U.S. u ,25 have been staUoned
at Akrotlrl since the 1973 Arab-·
Israeli war~ They make dally re-
connaluance filght11 over the
Arab-Israeli front lines lo check
oo compliance with restrictions
oo troop deployments and other
provlslon1 of tbe cease·flre
agreements between Israel and
and lt. Arab foes.
The plane crashed on top of tbe
base'• operaUons control center.
exploded and set tbe bulldlng
complex on fire, wit.nesses said.
.. Tbe U·2 took oU. appeared un·
able lo gain altitude and then
swerved and crashed into the
operatJoos buildln& on the side of
the runway," said a Cypriot
workman at tbe base.
· .. There wu a teniflc explosion
when tbe plane hit lbe building ,
and the whole area was en.iulled .. lnflames,"
<See u.z. Pase A2)
SOn'B Cancer
Plea Nixed
ALBANY, N.Y. CAP) -Gov.
Hush Carey bas turned down a
father's appeal that he intervene
Ln a court baWe against tradi·
tlonal cancer treatment for his
S.year·C>ad son. ·
"I'm asllin• tbe govemor, as
one fa~ to another. to please,
pleue, please alve me back my . aon,,. John Hofbauer told a news
conference Tuesday.
But Carey, whose wlte dled ot
cancer and who opf oses the
LaetrUe treatment tha Hofbauer wanu-approved for his son, told a
newt conference that 11 "the
mecllcal judgment ls ovenvhelm·
Ing,'' lbe court should ''TmeJy
and Jud.lcloualy" order treatment
wlllch doct.ors believe will save
the boy.
Sgt. Ed Parker, who Is in
charge of the Fountaln Valley
Special Enforcemenl Detail, said
most of the reported sales ln-
volved PCP, which also ls called
"•ncel du.st."
Parker said that PCP is pro-
duced in laboratories. It ls used
as an animal tranqulUzer.
Orange County Coroner's dep-
uties said the boy, ldenUfied as.
the son of Susan Otis, dled at Mis·
slon Community Hospital.
Deputies said tbe youn1ster had
been taken lo tbe hospital by his
parents on Oct. 30. They had no
further information on the acci·
dent.
Saddleback Valley Speed Print
wUl host a Chamber of Com·
mtrce Cb.rislmas party and mix·
er Thursday at 5 p.m. al 23011A
Moulton Parkway in Laguna
HUb. For inlormatlon or res·
ervations, pbone 837·3000.
Mitchell and Haldeman,,
respectively atlonaey aeneral
and chief ~staff in the flnt Ni&·
on adm.inlstraUon, will become
the last Water1ate figures ln
prison.
The three were convicted on
New Year•a Day 1975.
U.S. DlJtrict Judge John J . Saddle&ac~~Board
"PCP ls more dangerous than
LSD and, ln my opinion, even
worse than heroin because of the
damage it can do to the brain,"
he said. "It ls powerful enough to
knock out an elephant."
•
Parker said that pollce worked
with administrators at Loa
Amigos Hlgh School and enrolled
an undercover agent in the
achoo I.
Coast
The boy Jived at 29735 MUl
Pond Center.
Ex-FBI Agent Still
Would BaC1' Hoover
By IAU&IE KASPER
·-Dellf Hee SUH
Sirlca sentenced each lo 2~ t.o
el1ht years in prison, but cut the
terms to one .to tour yeara last
Oetober,
Ehrlichman entered prison
Oct. 28, 1976, before the appeals
process had run Its course, and
aatlslled the one-year mlnimum
on the annlvenary date.
Haldeman will bave completed
(See P AllOLE, Pa1e A2)
To Moll New Exec
been runracged.'' Welte sa!d.
He 18ld truatees also are ••are
of tbl• rec:01PmendaUon and ~
pear to fllPPOR lL •
The superlntendeot said there
probably will be other changes
and realignments u a result of
the study but he could not dis·
cuu tbem bC!lon the trustees are
inlormed df &Mm.
Trustees ordel'ed the $lf,OOO
study during budcet dellbera·
Uons t.bls summer. Since they
froze mo1t upendltures at Lbe
central Qfnco level unW 1&1 com-, pl~Uon, admlnlatratora have '
been looldne fonrard to lbo end
ol tbe atudY. It was supposed to \
hav. been cton.e by, tho middle of
Oelober •
.la otber acUon, tnaatees wlll 1 coaulder weya of developlnc a
tat ot ttudont.t• basic tlcfils and
pdllclu to cover the ~tabUlh~
meot cit SChool Slte Advlsory
Councill, _bodl ol which are re·
<Bee saroor..s. Pip AJ>
r·
... . 4 , 2 DAIL V "LOT SB
l'..._P.,,.,AJ
X-RATED •.. f
The jury voted 10 &o J Lbal
ummer ol Laura" wu not ob-scene. The tame verdict w&1 re.
ached by a vole on the movie "My
Erotic Fnwies."
Nine votes constitute an at·
tplli1ble m~orily in an Ora.nie
ll>unty Superior Court trial.
.llbylhina lesa constluates a hunc
1arr.
The jury belleved when they
came back to the courtroom
Tuesday that they bad reached
verdicts pn all 17 movies.
Judge Weeks was told that the
jury was under the Jmpreaslon
that in a divltion where the ma.
jority had less than nine votes,
the verclict was to be reearded as
a "not obscene" ruling.
Judie Week! quickly corrected
that Impression and sent the
panel back to the jury room for
further discussion on the fl ve UD·
decided movies.
Whatever the verdicts on those
five movies, the Jury has already
determined that the Honer Plua
Theater is a public nuisance, •
ruhnl? that will allow the city to
etose the racuHr. The jury wil also be asked to
. assess damages against the
Mitchell Brothers In a hearing
that wUl be scheduled after the
first phase or the trial is closed. •
Defense attorney Joseph Rhine
said Tuesday be will go lo the ap.
pell ate court lo a.sk for a mistrial
and also halt any action the city
may try to take against the
theater.
The jury reached unanimous
decisions in declaring four of lhe
17 movies they viewed as ob·
scen e. Those m o vies are:
··Sodom and Gomorrah,"
"Sen.sations." "Teenage Fan·
tasies," and "The Story of
Joanna."
Also declared obscene with the
Jur y voting indicated were
··Behind the Green Door," 9 to 3;
"Inside Marilyn Chambers," 9 to
3; "Autobiography of a Flea," 10
to 2; Teenage Cruisers." 11 to l:
··French Clusmales," 9 to 3 and
"Love inaStran11e Place." 11 to l
The jury spent part of the tnal
al the Honer Plaza theater view-
ing 17 of 42 movies declared by
lhe city or Santa An a lo be Ob·
scene and In violation or the city
ordinance.
Attorney James Clancy,
represenllng the c lly, predicted
during the trial lhal a finding of
obscenity would encourage many
California communities to pros·
ecute exhibitors or X·rated mov·
ies .
Defendaats Arlie and James
Mitchell commented outside the
courtroom late Tuesday that it
wu the fir.st such reverse lhey
had received In a series or
• lawsuits that. until now, have
gone their way.
"But µiat's how the jufy rµled
and we wouldn't have it any
other way,'' Artie Mitchell com-
mented. "Of course, we sbaU be
appealing the verdict."
Lawyers for both sides noted
during the trial that the obscenity
issue argu'd before Judge Weeks
could produce tr precedent·
setllna verdict.
Frottt Page A I
PAROLE ..•
his first year June 21, 1978,
Mitchell on June 22. The former
attorney general has asked for
executive clemency because, he
said, he needs a hip operation.
Ehrtlcbman also waa under a
sentence of 20 months lo five
years for conspirine to violate
the riehts of Dr. Lewis Fielding
by a uthorhlng White House·
s ponsored burglars to search the
California psychiatrist's office.
Ten days arter Slrica trimmed
the sentences, U.S. Dis trict
Judge Gerhard A . Gesell
followed suit In the Fleldlog case.
Whale Quota Cut
TOKYO <AP) -The U.S. del·
egalion lo the JnternatJona!
Whaling Commission lowered lts
proposed bowhead wtiale quota·
for Es kl mos to 18 a year, but the
commiaalon was not expected to
reach a final decision unW late
Wednesday, delegation aourees
said.
DAILY PILOT
. ... ----------------
Gold But Clarbt•as
Gates Elementary School performers (from left) Dawn
Lloyd, Lori Stroup, Robby Baylon and Tom Austin, dee.
orate tree in preparation for "A Gold Dust Christmas"
which will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Los
Alisos Intermediate School. The public is invited.
.
B~il Set for Sex
Kidnap Suspects
LONDON <AP> -A former
American beauty contesL winner
and her alleged accomplice, ac·
cused of kidnapping a Mormon
m isslonary for her sexual
gratification, have been freed on
ball on the condition that lhey
live with her mother who is in
En~land for the trial.
o .. 1.,,......~,....
BACKING THE FBI
Retired Agent Werren
f'romPageAJ
AGENT •••
Bolshevik revolution in Russia,
the communist party and related
groups moved into this country.
Finl, be said, they tried the
direct af)proach but the people
wouldn 'l buy it.
So. he said, they began in·
filtr ating other groups and
operaUng through front or.
gantzaUon11. Because of this, he
said, agents also went Lo rallles
and infiltrated groups.
W arr'en sald he personaJly
believes that the government, lt
it proceeds, wUI have trouble
proving-t:rimhtal intent ln their
cue against former FBI New
York supervisor John Kearney
who has been indicted for
wlretapplng and mail openlnes.
W anen joined the aeency at a
tiD1e when men with both In·
vetti1aUve and business ex·
perlence were needed. Since .he
had previously worked ln sales
promotion and reposseulon, he
wa• qua1111ed.
T he 27 -year-old American
woman has been ordered to stand
trial on charges of kidnapping
the 21·year.old Mormon, who
testified he was chained to a bed
and forced to have sexual in·
tercourse with her three limes.
Joyce Mcf(jnney or Asheville,
NC. a former Miss Wyoming.
USA beauty contest winner, was
released on $3,600 bail after the
ruling Tuesday. Keith May, 24, of
Maywood. Culif., who will be
tried on the same charge, also
was freed on bail.
Ball was granted after a
psychiatrist said Miss McKinney
would de~norlte mentally and
physically If she were kept In
prison any longer. She and May
must report to police twice dally
and live with Mi11s McKinney's
mother. who has come to
England until the case Is de·
clded
They are accu.sed of abducUng
Kirk Ander.son of Provo, Utah, on
Sept. 14, imprisoning him against
his will in a remote cottaee near
Okehampton In Devon, a county
in southwest England, pos.sess-
lng a fake revolver and a bolUe of
chlorororm. They were arrested
Sept 20.
Miss McKinney told arresting
orricers she played bondage
games with Anderson to belp him
sort out his sexual problems, but
she said he was a willine particl·
pant, not a kidnap vlcUm.
She testified Tuesday that they
met 2~ years ago in the United
States because she had a sport!
car he wanted to drive, but that h~ was in love with her, not the
automobile.
Miss McKinney admitted she
had an "all.consuming passion"
for Anderson, then sobbed: "I
don 't want anythJne more to do
with Kirk. He doesn't know what
eternal love Is. Let me pick up
the pieces of my lire."
She spent more Uran an hour ln
thl" dock tell1ng the magiattates'
hearing her side of the cas~.
I',.._ Page Al
SCHOOLS. •
quired by state Jaw.
Truat.ees also wlll consider an
agreement with the Coastline
Regional Occl.lpat.ion Program
(CROP) to 9rovlde reataorant
trainine for students at
Esperanza Schoool for \be
trainable mentall)' retarded. Ad·
dilionally, the1 wlll conalder
another CROP coqrae In office
machlno malntenanco and re-
pair.
SadcDebaek YMCA
Seta New Cla11ee
Tb• SaddJebatk V•llq YMCA
•
Hoover Mt.v:ed Fast ' ~ ....
JFK File Shows .t!Jsw;,,ld Certainty
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Just
lwo hours after John F. Kennedy
waa killed, FBI Director J .
Edgar ~oover concluded that
Lee Harvey Oswald was the aa-
saatln and that Oswald was a
"mean-minded lndlvldual
••. in lhe cate1ory of a nut," IC•
corclJng to FBI fi{ea rt1Jeaaed to.-
day.
''[ called the attorney general
at his home and told him I
thought we had the man who
kiJJed the president down in
Dallas," Hoover wrote at 4 p.m.
on NOY. 22 • .1963, u Ken&led)' Jay
dead• a Dallu hospital ..
Roov4'r'1 memos ret.Un' a
minute·bY·mlnute account of hi11
acUona (Oll~lng the .aaaasslna.
Uon were part of 40,00l pages of
flies madtt public by the FBI as lt
opera Its /Of I recorelt ob the in-
vesUtation of the asaaulnation.
The rues, weighing ;tboqt ~ half
ton, were rich with the details or
lraeedy and drama as scores of
ci Uzens told tbe FBI of their sor-
row and their suspicions -and ln
11ome cases. their hatred of the
Kennedy family.
But the material provided no
immediate or Nloundlng oew in·
sight about the mysteries aUll
lingering lrom the assassination.
Nor did lt immediately resolve
tbe arguments about tho various
conspiracy theorJes proposed by
som c students or the case.
Valley to Dedicate
Newest l!igh School
The Warren Commission,
which conducted the official re-
view or th~ wassinalion and the
way the nu bd others in·
vesUgate4 it, concluded that
Oswald w•s lho murderer and
lhnt he acted alone. Oswtld was
s hot to c\eath in the Dallas police
station before he could be tried,
and has killer. Jack Ruby was
convicted or murder and died or
cancer.
. A U.S. con1re11man, school
dlatrlct trust.eel and members ot
the Capistrano Valley Htah
' School communlty will Join stu-
dent a, faculty and ad.
mlnlstratora Thur11day to ded-
icate the new acbool.
. Keynote speaker Con1resaman
Robert Badham, R·CaUf.. will
F,....PageAJ
U-2 •••
One of the seven wounded, a
BrlUab civilian employed by the
Royal Air Force, wu reported
in serJous condJUon. The other
six wounded were three airmen,
a BrJUsh airwoman and two
Cypriots, the spokesman said.
Firemen baUled for more than
three hours to control the blaze.
Damage lo the buildings was ex-
tensive.
The crash occurred shortly
before 7 a.m., local lime, before
most of tbe base personnel had
reported for work.
The BrlUsh s pokes man said
there was no Indication of the
cause of the crash.
/Jo.6'><*""~' _..., do.tl'lqll\ih<;\1 ' by"'"'""'~~· und
orh '' v"'*ou-f....,,~ Jff't 'J.)"" ..,..,,,,, •tiv-c~,..... ,,... in.I
d''-"' '•t c0ttrt9a.,.., "4:~ ... -..
V.:.l'• (JI" ll'JI
~(.C, ~I' ~I) •1
aAL& U 290.00
present an Am~rlcan flaa lo the
scbool which opened for classes
Sept. 12 ln Mission Viejo.
Dedication ceremonies will
begin at 11 a.m. at the school,
26301 Via Escolar.
Capistrano Valley High, the
third high school ln the
Capistrano Unmed School Dis·
trlcl, currently 'has an enroll-
ment or 1,400 stude nts. The
.school was designed in two
phases, the tirs t of which has
been completed.
The school capacity in its first
phase is 1,5-00 students, wllh
portable classrooms on campus.
The secood pbue wlU expand the
school's capacity to 2,500 stu·
dents, said a spokesman for
Wllllam Blurock and Partners,
architects who deslened the
school.
Funds to complete the high
school are included on a March 7
.school cc>nst.rucUon bond election
of $47 mJlllon, whJch district ad·
mlnlatrators say Is needed lo ac·
commodate the 8,000 new stu-
dents expected lo m ove l{lto the
16,000·sludent district by 1&82.
Oswald's Cubun connections
have figured in .some conspiracy
theories, and the newly released
files show that the i''BI checked
out at least some clues concern-
ing Cuba .
A Los Ai1Jleles informer told
agents the tf\1u11es of two San
Juan, Puerto Rico. men who al·
legedly had knowledge or "ac·
tivitles between Cuba and the
United Stal~s." FBI agents In
San Juan then were instructed to
interview the fll~n.
In another' episode, FDI bead·
quarters obt~ned and translated
a letter wriUen in Spanish and
mailed from Havana to Oswald
in Dallas. Tbe letter, addressed
t o "Fri e nd Lee," and
postmarked six days after the as-
sassination, s poke of a financial
d eal and praised Oswald's
marksmanship. But the lnlUal
scrutiny of tbe liles did not in·
dicate whether this was a mean·
ingful clue or whether it was the
work of a headllne·sceker.
The FBI wlh reiease another
40,000 pages next month. In the
two b&Jtches, o/flclals say, will be
all the paperwork generated In
the bureau as it investigated the case.
Christmas
Gifts of
Lasting Beauty. ..
b}'Henredon
Thc5t orlgln11I. very sped.ii !Jill vn11\1· bo.·~ ~·w<hio!'I for moy
be right here. For your OINn l.01111•. ltJr d mr·mtx·r t.I your
family. for th.:>I young C'ouph ~1.1r11r.,,1 1h1~1r llr-sl home. A
pit!cc or Henrc.-don lumrturr ... 111111.il-.• 1hc w11rrn <Uow of
Chn,1mc1'> ld'>l for m<>ny N'cJ .ons 10 romc. HC?rt' are d1~ln·
guW\ed t~aS\Jrt's tromm.1n}' penod1nnd1tyle5. onv onf" of
whic.h could be lhtt ~rk-ct tnurh f0< any f1nr room. ~clde
for yoursell whKh pte<e be~t 'Ult!> you. und !Jlft-ya~l(or
, someone you lollf' with Hf!nr•·don th1~ Chi 1o,tm11s. Hurry!
Limited quc1n111les <1v.Jil<1ble /or lmrn1•d1<1h: dchvt·ry.
A~•cf
l1"0 df•w~
<lw11>l•rqwll\<
lmPf'""""' 11....C
'"11Y"' l'!•o<ipo:d II\
lwtl.I• tror.11~QJ \.1r.nq
r!'o<IOn, WJ9 0 18 ltJO
htG.H~~.00
•AL~ nes.oo
a. ..... ,~
~w~h~
~4 .... "°IWotbit tlwf. lefllO~ pot'll•
~M\1:11..ti<~"'
.-,i111MU&t11eno1 rv
a o0Wld foll'Jll>Cntftl 4llld
·-"ihool b<olow. w"° oao H188
k(.Q, tf 065.00
MU•ns.oo
•
I '
•
S owdown Seen'-
ln School· Needs
: After months of discu ssing the ne1.:d Cora school build·
in8 bond election, Suddleback Valley Unified School Dis·
tncl officials have decided they can postpOne the election
for more than a yeur .
• Supt. Richard Welte says now that the. election won't
have to be called until June, 1979.
l n spite of the area's growth, school enrollments ap·
peur to be increasing al a rate less than projected. This
trt1nd apparently b enough to hold oft the need to build
more schools beyond what is currently under construction.
A slowdown in the sale of both new and existing homes,
coupled with s peculation, has contributed to this trend, the
superintendent said.
Another foclor. he said. is that fewer people with
young children are moving into the district Young
fumihes apparently just can't afford a house in the Sad-
dlcback Valley.
If the district's current project~ons are valid enough,
overcrowded schools and double sessions will be avoided.
It sounds good but residents ~hould be aware that the
'>ituation could shift again and send more students than ex·
peeled into the ::.choob by 1981.
Midnight Secrecy
Lately Lhc Irvine City Council has been burning the
midnight oil und the 1 u m and 2 a.m. oil. too-al public
meeting:-.
Such diligence and dedication to getting Lhe job tione
muy be t·ommcndable in :-.pirit. but it does not make good
munit·1pal sl'nSl'.
:\l alters or wide importance often arc rinding
themsclvc::> on the t ail end of· lengthy agendas, thus being •
debalt>d in the sma ll hours of morblJig when minds are
more attuned to sleep tjtap t9 judicious decision-making.
Mo:sl recently a campaign reform ordinance. pre-
-.umably of high interest lo all citizens, suffered from not
ont'. but l\~O post-midnight debates . At one the city at-
tornt>y wm. :so tired he could not trust himself to answer
legal qucstwns a bout the ord in an cc.
Mu:-.t of the publi c had no first-hand means or learning
what the· ell-bate was about bec ause most were in bed.
Thal·., not the way to make city policy. In effect, the
public's hu-.mess is being conducted in secret.
If the rnuncil workload is too heavy, then m ore fre-
quent meetings will h:iv<' to be scheduled, or meetings
might hC'gm t·urlier in the day.
Busi1wss in wh1t h pubiic participation is not vital
might be conducted 111 afternoon sessions. '' ith <early)
111ght Sl''>s1ons resl•r n'd fo1 public hearings.
Community Spirit
Last'' l'Ck, two Saddleback Valley organizations the
Exc:hangt• ('lub and the Chamber of Commerce
... ponsorcd a lunch for members of the Saddleback College
football karn <1nd their coaching staff.
The noon-hour affair was touted as a salute to the col-
lege team for their Mission Conference football crown and
subsequent Mission Bowl victory over Glendale College.
But tht• C\'ent marked something far more important
in the area ·s relatively short residential history -the
t"mergcncc of a "community" feeling.
While groups like the Mission Viejo Municipal Ad-
' isory Council a nd the Saddleback Area Coordinating
Coundl have attempted to fill the community governmen·
Lal gap l'n·;1ted by the valley's status as unincorporated
county tt•r-ritory, something has been lacking.
As one diner pointed out, the college tea m's winning
!)Cason helpe d put the valley on the map. But more im-
portantly, 1t created a focal point for the area's residents
whose enthusiasm was Just waiting for the right opportuni-
ty to s urface.
We applaud the efforts of these groups in rallying resi·
dents behind something that can only lead to a s tronger
community feeling among valley people.
• Opinions e)(pressed in the space above are those or the Dally Pilot.
Other views e><pressed on this page ere those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addresa The Daily Piiot, P.O.
, Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Box
ByL.M.BOYD
Interesting, that word
"box." To "box" something
for shipment needs no ex-
planation. certainly. To
"box" a compass merely
means to name its 32 points
forward then backward in
consecutive order. But less
well known ls that to "box" a
drink is to pour it back and
forth between two glasses to
mix it.
Cons ider yourself a
Seasoned Citizen, too, if you
can recall the first movle ii\
which that heavyweight actor
Sidney Greenstreet ap·
peared. "The Maltese
Falcon." it was. ln 1940.
. Greenstreet was almost a
Deal'
Gloomy
Gus
Seasoned Citizen himself at
the time, lncidentally. He was
61. Not a bad way to bead
toward refirement, what?
Q. "In cigarettes, what was
the No. 1 seller before filters
came out?"
A. Camels.
What. most people ref er to
as the jugular veib is not real·
ly a vein but an artery.
At hand is a report that a
third or all babies born In tbiJ
country each year are the
offaptfng of unwed moth~ra
tt1ed 17 or younger.
Q . "What's a houaecat'a
norm al body temperature?"
A. lOl'Adegrees F.
..
,
Robert N. Weed Publisher
We<Jneaoay, Dtoomber 7, 1977 Bafber• Krelt>lch/Ed1torl1t P•ge Editor
The Day U.S. Isolation En~ed
lt's a SWlday like any other
Goins on Christmas. Brown
packa1es hidden 1n closets
Outside brisk and s nappy.
Children go lo Sunday School.
Newspaper jammed with ad-
vertisements. All about the new
upswe~ hairdo. Wanamaker's
advert1ses white shirts at two
dollars <regular two-fifty and
three-dollar values better
come early). Morning news pret·
ty good . Russia ns counter-
attac king around Moscow,
maybe they'll hold out arter all.
After lunch the telephone rings. Aod it'• never, ever, the same
again .•..
"Hey. heard the news? The
Japs fl&Ve bombed Pearl
Harbor!"
"No ! You're crazy. Hey
Ernestine .. "
Everybody of my era knows
where they heard the news,
December 7, 1941. Try us out.
That's what separates genera-
tions. The stadium W¥S crowded
to watch the Redskins and at the
half the loudspeaker began to
blare. Will Lieutenant General
Smith call his office? There's u
telephone call for Co111~ander
Russell! ll went' on and 011.
Veteran New York Times photographer George Tames
wondered what w.s ~, called
his office; got th~ news. lie went
to the Japanese Embassy; iron
gates b11rrcd; a gray white
s moke rising fro m burning
papers m the rear. There was a
two-way t r 1tffic jam on
MassachusetL-; Avenue of car~
gawking at the embassy.
lTts AN anniversary to re·
mtUnber not becaus'I? a war start·
ed but because a madness ended
-Isolationism. [have a personal
feeling because I was one or the
gawky boys who volunteered in
Mr. Wilson's dream to make the
world safe for democracy. We
won ; there was the exhilaration
of the Armistice. and then the
Lodge fight against the League.
Wilson forlornly asked the nation
to remember the "dear ghosts''
of boys left on Flanders Fields.
There was a majority. never a
two-thirds majority, for the
League. Soon the whole crusade
was derided. The Nye Committee
showed it was all a plot by muni-
tions makers.
Senate isolationists defeated
the World Court, too. Again there
was a majority, 52 to 36, but this
was several short or two·thlrds.
Borah and Johnson lefl the
Senate chamber laughing and re-
joicing.
Isolationis m cam e down
throuih the start of World War
II. ft weakened when England
fought alone and when Hitler
madly attacked his s urprised
partner Slulln But Colonel
l.mdbergh wrote an o(.>en letter to
Americans through Collier's:
France was defeated, he uid,
Great Brilam was being defeat·
ed; the US would be defeated.
too, if it Joined the fray No dlfl·
Unction between Hitler's and
ChurchhjlJ's moral ail'D$
On Thur!iday, Dec. 4, three
days before Pearl Harbor, the
isolationist Chicago Tribune and
Washington Times-Herald
published a top-secret U.S. posi -
tion paper lavln~ out lo1tistic and
supply plans for an imagined ln·
vas1on of Germany with 5 milllon
Americans in 1943. It was the
kind of lhinK all war offices pre-
p a r e, bul t he n e wspapers
charged 1t showed a Roosevelt
plot
And so the d<iy of trial came. 36
)'ears ago. Most of it sttll 1s quit~
incredible. lt is incredible
because we had broken the
Japanese code and never should
have let the surprise occur. A
natty' little colone l named
William Friedman who was a de·
mon at cryptography had un·
scrambled the Imperial code un-
dtr operatJon "Maiic" and was
glvln& the Army, Navy and Slate
Departments tran1laUon1 or
Tokyo war orders before the
Japanese troop got them. We
knew an attack was coming.
Where, we didn't know.
WE KNEW that Japan had
sent a so-called "peace"
emissary to Washington to fool
us and mask the surprise, and we
ph~yed along with it; it was a
qouble iiame of make-believe
We had warned Army and Navy
Commanders Nov. 24 of a proba -
ble attack; we had sent a more
urgent warning, Nov. 27. But
m e nta l blo ckage is more
powerful than reality, the attack
would be on Malaya, Dutch East
Indies, Philipines, Guam -not
Haw au.
Then the follow1ng funny mis-
haps occurred. Tokyo dispatched
a 14-part mess afe to the
Japanese embassy in
Washington Dec. 6 of which the
first 13 parts were decoded for the
Slate Department before the Japs
got them. "This means war," '
--<Iii!'... . -~~~~•r..-
'11 You ccUT le4d a co1t1el to tht ods is J bui you cA111t m"ke hi'" drink.''
solemnly aald R to llatry
Hopkins u ho 'At dinner Croro a
tray. Thero m~ WI be h~~!n
the 14th section, wever . Oddly.
enough the J ap ese transmit-
ters called lt a d before aend-
ing the 14lh sec n, which had
the sling in it (t ough u. didn't
mention Pearl I arbor). They
sent it next motJliog. General
Marshall, Cblef Of Staff of the
Army, didn '~gct the 14th section
till he cam in from a Sunday
horseback r e al U :30. He sent
another ale then.
ELECT N(C equipment
picked up J anese planes wing-
ing to attac at 7 a.m., just as
super sensit e electronic equip-
ment is su posed lo do. The
watch office didn't do anything;
it must be flight or American
B·17s.
General rshall decided to
send his unday alert
to U.S . ommanders.
because ontact with
Hawaii was t•mporarily int.er·
rupted so h sent the crucial
message by estern Union and
RCA and Ci lly a motorcycle
courier sta out with it in
Hawaii to mi ary headquarters.
Unaccountab bombs began to
fall and he ju pcd into a ditch.
As backgr nd to all of the
above the J waiian comman-
ders, Admi 1 Kimmel and
General Sho were barely on
spea k in~ le s rrom inter-
service jealo y: the big bat-
tleships were ed up two-by-two
for fear of a botage . The
airplanes wer on the ground.
Anti·aircraft g s were wrongly
placed and the w as no effective
air patrol b either service.
Absolute surp e. The Pacific
neet was can lied out; eight
battleships an three cruisers
sunk or disable •
her the day. I
le House and
• A crisp night.
nearly rreezin trucks with ear-
ly Christmas t s comlne down
Pennsylvania venue; a misty
moon climbin e trees over the
old bronze ca n in Lafayette
Park. Cabinet eeting at 8:30;
Congressional ders at 9.
We went ou o stand on the
front portico o e White House
:-a little stone ge among the columns. •
Behind the i n rails on the
avenue a liUle wd looked ln at
us. It tried t aing the Stal" Spangled Bann
TRB fs c ngs tandi n17
Waah&nglon bylin Jts author cur-
rtnaly i& Richa Strout of the
Chmtian Scienccr nitor.
Women's Conference Worth Invest
To tho Editor:
On behalC of the Orange County
delegatio n l o the National
Women's Conference held re-
cently in Houston. I wish to thank
the Daily Pilot for its excellent
coverage of the event.
I I should like to point out.
however, that your editorial
(Nov. 25) ls misleading. You re-
fer to the Houston gathering as a
"SS Million Me~ting." The meet-
ing last month was the culmlna·
lion of meetings held in every
state and territory of the United
States, meetings which attracted
as many as 11,000 women <Utah)
and 6.000 women (California). In
preparation for each of the st.ate
meetings, educational materials
were prepared, workshops and
panels were organized, s peaker:r;
were found, and s maller regio.nal
meeting.5 were held, such as the
one at UC Irvine lust spring.
Publicity had to bo seht out; this
in~olved the de&ignlng, writing
and printing of thous ands or
brochures in.order to insure am-
ple representation at each state
meeting. Finally, delegates to,
· Houston received minimal ex-
penses ror Care, room and board.
the country even received ex-
pense money.
ln the tradition o( American
womanhood, we volunteered our
time and energy in the servi ce of
·our country.
Let me remind you thal SS
millio n represents about 20
minutes of th(• Vietnam war in
terms of co~t and there was no lo~s of life In Houston. Rather:.
there was an affirmation or life.
Jt was peaceful conference fllled
with the hopes of millions or
women from a ll walks of
American life.
VIVIAN H. HALL
Chair, Orange County
Delegation. National Women's
Conference
fi'itthl9 Me.a.n.I
To the Editor:
Is Pearl Harbor Remcm ·
bered?
Dec. 7, 1977 marks the 36th an-
niversary or the attack on Pearl
Uorbor, "A day tbat W1ll Jive fn
infamy." lJut, lts It reptembered?
Certainly many graves are dee·
'orated with flags, some
newsp apers ~arry short Items,
Wlela
and civic groups gather to
"Remember Pearl Harbor."
Such is not the case at the
U.S.S. Arizona Memorlal in
Pearl Harbor. Since opening to
the public, more than 10 million
have vJsited the memorial. Not
all AmeJ"icans, noL all honey·
moone rs, but travelers from
around the globe, and for all the
moment of contact that step from
the shoreboat to the mei:nol'iaJ is
one or awe, respect and humility,
for beneath the submerged decks
of the once m ighty Arliona 1,102
American aervicemen are sUU
entombed.
WITH THE ever·in<!reaalng
numbers visiting the memorial,
present facilities are vastly In·
adequate. With this In mind, The
Arhon a Memorial · Museum
FoundatJon was conceived to de·
sjgn, build and maintain a park·
like museum complex located on
an ll·acre site at Pearl Harbor.
The federal government bas ap-
propriated two mllllon dollars.
At least anothet rour million are
needed for completion.
For those wishlni to con·
tribute, donations may be sent to
Tho Arllona Memorial Museum
Foundatlon, P .0. Box 6067,
Honolulu, Hawaii 96818.
W.A.KNIGHT
.,,.. ..... , 8'-.et
To tho Editor:
In the Dally Pilot, Saddleback
Edition, dat.ed Nov. 30, Mr. Gary
Oran-ville dtd an artJcle tlUed
''Hookers, Bookl8 1ncte8!'1e tn
County''. In the !lfth paraaraph
or tbe artlcl• Mr. Granvlllo
writes. "Jn county &errlt.ory. MU.
slon Vi jo wu listed by Hnwtn
al tbt hot spot for call •lri.."
e r al'ea and lso place In
perspective thn a one-time ar·
rest in a Lagun Ulls hotel does
not constitute th ot spot for call
girls in Mission ejo.
HNE.NOBLE
Cha man Municipal
visory Council
To the-F.ditor:
Tbe Dally Pllo
forts or Alt c
West.em Alrlia\e&
rights between
and Reno, Ncvad
These repeated pplications of
the airline indus , the vacuOWJ
content of the ent Environ·
mental Impa Statement,
coupled with th allence of the
county Board of pervlsors re-
minds me of th rie& from an
old son1, .. Your t tell m e 'no-
no,' but there'• .yes• in your
e.ves."
The boa.rd 1
"NO" on addltJ
them "NO'" atrport ex·
panslon. There s no middle
ground.
Point them to WIW .... ..,..
To the Editor:
Hurrah for Be
Regardless of
color, as the par ts of two~
age children, l's wake up,
America.
Maybe more
Uon would stop
of 10 or more lov
What.ever ha
punishment? As clUzens,
pa,yera, "e wU
bulld O>oacaftoJ
'
STOCKS I BUSINESS
•
D~ Y P\LOT ,U4
Col4fs Pa17 011 . .
IJut Do. Remedia Help? . . .
BJ MILTON MOSKOWITZ
With the cold ""on ben, She druc manuf acturel'I are
llmberlnc up, tn1nlnC t.b4lr »r0mOU.nal 1S,bta oo •·
'l'beril•1 no known cu.re forth•eomll,)on cold and that'• a
marve1oul sltuati<>n for the companlel. "?My can eonceo·
ti-ate on the J)1D.P\OIU th.al accompn1 colds -CO\llbs.
aneeia. IOre throatar. COD,ietllon. Tber.'• bit moootY to be
made in promllinl reuef from auch eoadlilons.
DU,B•ATE vn.aasu 8l1I' TU promlMI to u.ie tune of more than tt .2 billion year. Here ,,. tho maln cot· pora~ players ln the medicine game: 1
-RJcben:Uon·Merrell will come at you a1aln wlth 't:
b\g line of products aold under the Vlcb laMl. Tbele I •
elude NyQull, Vicks J)ayCare, Vicks Formula 4', SlDex d •
eon1estant.s. Oracln lbtoat loaep;es and that old favol'1~,
Vic k a V a po r u b . .--.:!Ii·~-----,
Richardson -Merr e ll 11
spend.a more than $100 Money mllllon a year on ad·
verttalng. it.s share ot Tree ..., the cold remedy market
b eetimated at 18 per·
cent.
-SmlthKUJle capture• 13 percent of the bullDesa will
Contac, Sloe-Off, Ornade aod Twsa-Orqade. SmltbKlln•
made prescription drua• untll It weat pubUe with Contac.
the large1t-1elllng product ln .the cold remedy field. Tbf
company 1penda more than $10 mtwoa a ,eat to ~b Coo.-
tac. -American Home Product& maku, hundred.I of proo-
duc:tl tbrouab a host of aubsld.lutes. ueeu\taUua a total
corporate ad budget of $160 mUllon a, year. It taku down
about 10 percent of the cold remedy bualneu with it.
Driatan andPbenergan lines.
-WABNEJl·LAMBERT MAKU T8B top~1el1lnc
coU&b drop UDe, Halla. It also market. Benadryl, BenylJ.n
ad Slnutabs. ll ba.s an annual ad budaet of '140 mlllloa and
pbs 9 percent of the market.
Do these products help? Tho medlcal authoritles who
wort for Comumen Ul\lon are dubiou. J,. thelr book. 0 Tbe
Medlclne Show ''they tate apart three~ prod\ICU • . Drist.an, they aa,y. ltas "ooly one eUecUve l.ld for a
cold: aspirin.•' Each Dristan tablet hat tbe same amowit u
a1J.1 five-grain aspirin tablet. It sella for roucb.b' 20tlmea the
prtce of plain upirin. • •
CU DBPI~ CONTAC: "JUDGING by ill formula, thO more people atve their cula to' Chnta~. the likelier they are
to keep tbelr colds tbemselvea." 1'bere are 50 milllaram1 ot an eK"eetlve decoqff\ant 1n Contao, bat the CU autborttlea
say that since they are dispensed over a period of 12 bours•
"the uaer sets too mea•er a dose at anJ ODO time to be eUec--
tlve aaaln.at col4 symptoms." ~ >.a for NyQull, which you see :T;f:9 tn televWon com·
merc1ala i.ke before they retire at , CV says: '
''Two of the lqnd1enta lo ~yQalJ m.q belp to induce
sleep -but nc>t by ..,Uevifti cold 11mpto.,. Thta alcobof com.at Of NyQuil m&bs tho drink IO proof, and the an·
tibiltamlne in it Js known as a cause of ckowsineu. Un·
fortunatelY. NyQCdl hu too llLUe medlcatloll to relleTe con·
• which ll often what hii>dart -.~. lta 8 m!:lr;•ma e are leu th•D OM·thlrd of U.. dole u pre· ~tteCUve deconaoatant ac:Uon. EpbedrlDe ta also
a cmtral nervO\ll 1Umulaat ••• N)'Qull doe8 contain •
cough l\W>feSS&Jlt. • • But that aetlon 1U7 be eoumeracted ~Y, lbe _ a<ihlltamlu, •blob oan tnt.eaaJfY a oouah by ~btoDcb.W~· .. In short, NJQull seems to be Jut tbe UdDI for co14 nf •
feren In eearch of a mtdlcaMoti U.t mlcllt bock tbem ~
wake them up, and ·~ Ulelr couO WJdlia worMn1na lt." 3 ..
Bells Bing
Holiday Buying ·.
Rises in Sti.ite
Cub registers are ringing merilb' for retailers
throuabout c.lifornla tbia bolld~ .euota. N1I Seewity Pacilfc But. .. um year•a IM>l!day Qtndtng appears heeded to a record blgb. . • Beeearcbers at the bank project • reetri IDCw in
Callfornla's holiday spending t.h1s year about U pereeut
abaft lut year's fairly strong ... son. Mt;; adjllltment for ""'•Uoa, wblch in Calllonua bu a.-erapct aboat T pm:ent· Udl ,...,., retallera ca.n a;pect an a,pprosfmate J pel'Clll11Jl.t
creuecwer 1918'• holiday lpencUa•Jevel. · , . ' I
BICIL\JtD W. A'f Ba, A8818'1'ANI' TICS P?eSkteut. U19 ncord eaiDa In esnploymeat have produced"" a bialthy 1ncNae In peraoul mcome. "Obnoo.11. IDcrenecl employment Ud 1pend•n1 poww are •• to eacomace
· people In the& bollda1 apendlng an4 lift~=la19· AJu adda tha~ altboulb Call(onlla arw Qead .. Inc fNIJ1, they are being leledlve m theU' , are "" ~ lm..Plllae 1pendlng and are l~ for nlUM -:
partlcuJariy through sales.
••contumers are
~bUtua ( J large number or fun·
OONSVMER =~~h.::: .., ___________ partleularly well -
1tateboar4e llad of
1 : • CiUGl'M tbe large munber
d.newYMSeoiam-."beAlcl: "Weallo~~-lp men'• and women'• cloUllAI• u well aa home fUrldlblnp. , •