HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-16 - Orange Coast Pilotl I
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• 1e
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·Husband Relates
Ordeal of Wife's
Dying in Snow
. DAILY PILOT
~ * * * 10< * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 16, 1977
VOL. 70, NO.*·. SECTIONS, ... ~•ou
J SDow IilddiQg I
Diiiy .... Miff .......
Golden West College coed Bufi Brett puts Cinishing
touches on her entry in Thursday·s snowman contest at
the Huntington Beach school. She won first place for her
statue of a cowboy. Judf{es said it fit in nicelv because
the nickname for Golden West College athletic t eams is
. the "'Rustlers." After the judging, the snowman contest
degenerated into the in evitable snowball fi ght. The win-
ner of that contest was not a matter of record.
35 Overt Aets
Diedrich lmlicted
On Bribery Counts
dictment banded down
Two D i e
In Cr a s h .
·At Bridge
Two people were killed and a
third injured Thursday in a
three-car collision on the Vic-
toria Street bridge over the Santa
Ana River, wll.ich divides Cost.a
Mesa Crom Huntington Beach.
Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as T imothy Lee
McKeon, 25, of 33802 Malaga
Drive, Dana Point, and Carol
Lovette Stradley, 42, of 1015
American Place , Costa Mesa.
Both were in a sm all foreign
car driven by McKeon that police
said collided h ead o n at
about 9:50 p.m . with a vehicle
driven by Janet Ann Munson, 21,
162 Tulip Lane, Costa Mesa. She
was treated at · Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital for cuts on
her right hand, arm and knee,
and sent home.
A third car, driven by Irene
Garcia Dolan, 26, of 711 Pacific
Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach, skidded into the McKeon
car after the accident. Its drivu
was not reported injured.
Police said that, according to
witnesses, McKeon apparently
became distracted while wiping
the inside or his windshield with a
rag while heading toward Hunt·
ington Beach on the bridge. Wit·
nesses said his car strayed over
the double yellow lines in the
cente r and collided with the
Costa Mesa-bound Munson car,
spinning it around.
Costa Mesa police ar e in· vestigating the tragedy.
• cte I
. I
eig~~ .Ignore
Sereanis; Was It
' tra~gler Vietinl?
'
1
Sno.wyTragedy
Wife's Orooal of De ath ~old
Editor'• Note: A Sunda11 drive e1lded in trooed11 for Norman O •
JohJtMm. 61. Ht1 wife, Gwen, also 61, dJed o/ uponre tn d«p 87'0tO alter
the couple's car broke down in a ~e arte.. Here is Johnson'• account
of what /iappenld, as told ta Deurrtt Nnnr~n I.AO PtfTJI. ..,
PROVO, Utah CAP) -The hardest decision I have made in my
life was whet.her to lie down and die wlth Gwen or get up and try
lo save myself.
We had been married 35 years, and I didn't want to leave her.
But I had to leave her If 1 was going lo get help.
WE HAD COME DOWN FROM Salt Lake Sunday lo visit some
friends and then decided to take a litUe ride up the canyon. It was
a nice day, and the road wasn't that bad. Sut I turned to the right
instead of the left. Then J hit a rock in the center of the road, and it
knocked a hole in the oil pan.
I spent two hours trying to jack the car up and get it off the
rock, but I couldn't move It. It was then we decided to try to
walk out. We should have gone back the way we came, but I
thought it would be faster to try to walk over to Springville.
We walked four or five miles. When it started to get dark, we
got under a big pine tree, and I tried lo cover her up with pine
boughs. J tried to keep standing up to keep warm and then I would
lie down to try to keep her warm. Then the wind started to bowl It
seemed like it snowed all night.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE TO bobble about 100 yards in the
deep snow in the morning. I tried for three hours to help her further.
But I wasn't much help because I have arthritis. We talked
together of personal things. Then she began acting strange. Sbe
wasin acoma.
How couJd I leave her? Yet I thought I should get help. I prayed
to the Lord. and I felt the Lord didn't want me to die there.
1 hobbled along through the deep snow all the rest of the day. I
had seen a cabin on the way up, and I thought, jf I could just ma'ke
it down to the cabin. It was just getting dark Monday night when I
saw the cabin. But then I fell orr the bridge and into a five-foot·
deep creek bed. It seemed like hours before I could cra~l up the
bank.
I HAD NO HEAT IN THE cabin -no rood and just the snow for
water. I moved my legs throughout the night to keep the circula-
tion going. At daylight, I started out again. I was wet almost to
my s houlders from falling down 1n the deep snow.
I kept on praying that the Lord would help me just to keep on
going. l actually felt. ii I could just keep going I woufd find
(See IJFE OK DEATH, Page AZ)
II
··'
T wo· Lost
At Sea;
82 Saved:.
POBT ELIZABETH, SoutlJ
Africa CAPJ-Two America•
owned 1u_pertanker sister ships
collided in !Of and caught fire in
the Indian Ocean oCC South Africa
early today, s pread.ing a. slick
described as three miles long.
Two seamen were reported
missing aod 82 others, mostly
Hong Kong Ch i n ese, were
l'escued by helicopter and ships.
o rtlci a ls s·atd . Dozens of
crewmen leaped into the water to
escape the burning decks.
J ames Darcy, spokesman for
Gulr Oil Corp. in Pittsburgh, said
the two Liberian-registered
vessels were' on charter for Gulf
Oil but owned and operated by
Bethlehem Steel Corp. in
Bethlehem, Pa. Belhelehem ot-
ficials said that the tankers a.re
controlled by a Bethlehem sub-
sidiary, but the crews were not
American.
Only one of the supertankers.
the 330,954·ton Venoil, wucany •
ing a full load of oil, estimated by
officials here at between 58.8
million and 73.5 million gallons.
The collision with the 330,869-ton
Venpet occurred at about 10 a.m.
(midnight PST) 20 miles oft Cape
St. Francis, 54 miles east of this
industrial coasW city.
Ian Simpson, assistant port
captain· here, said ·a three-mile-
long oil slick was bulldlng up from
the collision site but strong winds
were blowing the spill away from
prime beach area tn South Africa.
(See SPILL, Page AJ)
87 GAllY GaANVILLE °' .. ...., ........... Su~ Ralph Diedrtch was
accused or two felony bribery of-
fenaa and of eqqlnJ ln a eop.
1P1racy to commit bribery 1n an
day.
Also named in
Indictment u a co ndant in
the conspiracy charge• was
Anaheim architect LelloY Rose,
Screams Go . Unheeded Co ast
t
-~h'91MeeH--0ounBMltmt)'-GNnd Jury-in~ ~eadaadthe
Fullerton supervisor's 1972 cam-Dj if""-·-palgnfinancemanager. ,,. "'""'3e8 Tbl.rty-ftve overt acts cited in theeight·pqelndlctmentalleee LOS ANGELES CAP) -' 1~_:_: _ ~m that Diedrich: Nelahbors say they heard bl?O<'· t:JtNU4,; -la earl>' tm received $25,000 ........_O\l..fdling screams ring out 111 a
from lawyer Michael Remington r ~llywood apartme.nt house · ? after Remrnstoo had been paid where the latest victim or the t.:n ~ Area. $14.'85 by a development flnn Hlllalde Strangler apparently iJ .,._. J then bavlhe a 'major land use la-was lured to her death.
r&EMONT (AP) -A sonic aue before the county Board ot "It was a very frightening
...__ •b t ttl d wind"w• Superv1'0nt. scream ••• Jt w1 as definitely th.e, ....,m • • ra e ., -A ....ua earlier repatd a wont ec:nam l ve ever. beard, tllrouOOUt tlle San Franciaco •e111000 -at lo• .. owed food aaldoneman. 881' .,... Thursday afternooa ...-, _.""'"" -T other lde •-ala
E' Jtave bMa caused by a B-1 company executive William '-·~W~ res fty o re. mW b8nC · telt.ed oVet' the Moore with a Rernlnston check ponea bevlna the screams at 8dftc Ocean, the Federal A via-made Pll•bleto Moore. about the time Tu'8day night
Acfmle"*ratkJDtaldtoday. -Ac:c1,.td la •te. trr4 about that Kimberly Diane_ Martin. •. ....,.. ~t .,.. l'ePOl"ted ID \he tzo,ooo bi "tecal tender" fl'oal pro.Utute, arrived to meet a e" Aid Rkbard Runt ottbe Jlem~ after Renmlstan wu mu, '• * t..mc eGDtrol ceater 1lvatwoh11000cbect111YRaM. But no one reported th• ..... •t W "-• ..,\tlllldWR.ONilt.Coln· ICl'MmsatbeUme. ~odlsfat. wedO P•D¥ oftldall hl 1974 for. •.ooo .. l didn•t pay any attention
tblrw 11 u. ,.altoltJ and, wJMD ref\aMd, uqed the ot-becaue lt (the ~amlnJ) went tlllre ..._ baye Mee•~ ftelall to .. ..,.. Influence to oooutlntbelobby, .. tbemantold
••••••le condltloa1 tbat balpblm._u.,,OOOloanat racUo aatloll Jtll'WB Oft Tbun-.._.._a C.lillllo boOID! toNllCb~·-"""· GU11e Gron bank. . day. ~ ~ c _ ~ra.~At>. KIM~wboworkedrora
'
prostitution service, was sent to
the apartment aften. a man
telephoned the service, said h1a
wife WU out of town and asked tor a young, attractive model.
Mias Martln's car was found in
front oC the apartmen~ Wednes·
IT'S SKYIR41N
JS. CONCORDE
The lumberin1 LakeT st)'lraln
almost beat the ele1ant
supersonic Concorde on recelnt
New York·LoodOll nlghta.
Firat-Ume traveler Huch
Mulll1an, 1pecial cor~poadei>t
tor the AP, found more
hnllarltJa between th• two
ta than one mJaht expect.
bis report on Pase AlO.
<
day mcndng. Her nude body was
round dumped on a hillside 10
miles aw~y.
Eleven ~Is and young women
have been tound slain in similar
settings over nine weeks .
Police later determined tho
telephone call was made from a
pay phone at a Hollywood library
and \hat the a~ment where
Miss Martin was to meet hlm was vacant. Its last tenant, also a
prostitute, was evicted ln
August, the apartment manager
said. lAaia Lee. a spokeswoman for
the OallComla Association for
Trolllpa, en organisation formed
to help prostitutes, 1aJd the
prwUtutloD aervice told her the man '-.ouncted lllce.J •• Just an• dlnarypyoutrora jood time."
JJbrary .... ,.. d..eribed • Jn~ wbo-.ci the pboMTlMlctay
STMNGLE, PaP.U)
Weather
Variable c ou ~lng cloudy with 30 percent
chance ol rain Saturday.
Cooler Saturday, Lows
tonight 50 to ss. Highs
Saturdaylow60s.
INSIDE T ODAY
.. The Ntdcracker" and
Chrhtma• teem to b~
aynonymout. TM traditional
holidaJJo ballet u ddailed in
atorle• and phoia. °" Page
Cl.
.,
\
DAllVP OT s Frtday December 16 19/7
Palestinian
WASJONGTON <AP) -Israeli
Prime Mmister Menahem Begl.ll
outlined for Pru1dcnl Carter to-
day bit natJ~·· P?"oposaJS uror
r esolving the issue ot Palestinian
Arabs" in ncgoUallons with Egypt.
)
Proposal Outlined
After Begin left the Whlte
Jfouse, Cart.er telephoned Egyp-
tian President Anw~ Sad•t. to
report on the dlscussion:s <..:arter
und ~gin are lo met:~ ugum Saturda.r nlgbt.
Jody POwell, .. the Wf1ft~"ltouse
press secretary. said there could
be further '•communications ·· be~een Carter: and Sad~t but we knew of no meeliruis planned
with the Egyptian leader. ·
A White House statement sald .
Front Page A l
DIEDRICH INDICTED. • •
·-Arter falling to repay the loan cognizance.
as agreed, told the Grant of· Thirty minutes later Rose
ficials he would make payment walked into the same courtroom
when they '•paid Rose and when with lawyer Sylvan Aronson.
LeRoy Rose paid him." Rose's arraignment was put off
The overt acts alleged In lbe In-to Jan. 6, he was given unUI Dec.
dictment go on to say that the ·20 to book himself into jail and he
Grant Co. through its s ubsidiary, also was released on his own re·
Anaheim Hill~. Inc., made 12 cognizance.
payments to Rose totaling In the forefront or the bribery
$138.lOJ.. . • .. ,iJl<lU:~en~ if lbe a~coe&Uw el· However, only the $20,000 Rose fort by Anaheim Hills, Inc:. to ob·
gave Remington was allegedly lain in 1973-74 county approval
traced direcUy Into Diedricb's for the withdrawal or 2,200 acres
hands even though all 12 pay-Crom agricultural preserve
ments to Rose are listed in the agreements. ·
overt acts. Diedrich was the leader in a 3
An indictment is a formal to 2 Board of Supervisors de·
charge made against a person by cision in March, 1974, that re·
a Grand Jury. Overt acts cited in leased the land from the pact and
the indictment are used to opened ittodevelopment.
demonstrate the basis for the ln the background to that move
charges. Neither the indictment was the compai:iy's hirang of
ZHfr the alleged overt acts Remington as their legal counsel
cstablishguiltorinnocence. ~nd Rose as a consultant on gra~·
Already under indictment for mg pro~lef!ls.
allegedly violating state political The. tnd1ctment alleges that
campaign regulations. Diedrich Remington w as hired at
responded to Thursday's indict· Diedrich's suggestion but makes
ment with a terse· three para· no mention or whatever role Rose
graph statement. was as~igned to earn the Sl38,301
··This charge is simply the next he received fro.m the company.
shot fired in the ongoing war by . Key. fi~re m l~e four· month
the District Attorney's Office. lllvestcgallon leading to the in·
This is another collection of rub· dictment was Remington, a
hi.sh that he (the district at· Diedrich business and legal as-·
torn<'y J hopes to use to get me out sociate. for 10 years. .
of his way" Diedcich s aid in his Remington was named in the
wntl<.'n ~ta'tement. July 1 political conspiracy indict·
nose, who, as a Fullerton plan· ment ~long w~t~ Die drich ,
nmi.: commissioner was Indicted Superv.1sor .Philip An~hony,
on hribcrychargesin I975butac· A~a~e1m City Coun cilman
fJUittcd in 1976, responded to the W1!l.1am Kot~ and would ·bc
indictment by resigning from the pohllcal ~nanc1er Gene Conrad.
firm he founded in 1960, LeRoy ll ~as m early Nove~ber that
Rost•and Associates. Remington pleaded guilty to a
n ose said his resignation was misden;ieanor cha.rgc related lo
"due to advc~i;c publicity regard· the alleged con~piracy. and was
mg past anu recent investiga· then granted immunity from
t1ons ." prosecution when testifyi ng
For his part, District Attorney before the Grand Jury a_bout ~is
. Cecil Hicks simply chatted for a knowledge of the Anaheim ll1lls
f<.'w m~ulcs with newsmen about affair.
other 'topics as Diedrich and Also shown by court ~ecords. to
Rose were called to appear in have been granted immunity
cdurt. were Robert H. Grant e1nd
ll was Diedrich who appeared Richard Owen, th~n Grant Com·
thal dunng th\' 1wo·hour meet-
ing. Begin und Carter also dis-
~ws11ed propoaals for future rela-
l l!ons between Isruel and Egypt.
"1'he president thanked the
prim e minister for his
thoughts in both of these areas
ond promised to give them
serious consideration,'' the l!tate-ment aaid .
Bus Ove rturns 1
Carter planned to fly tCJ Fay.
cttcv11Je. N.C., this afternoon to
attend the wedding or a nephew.
lie is due to return here Saturday
afternoon.
Earller, qualified U.S. sources
said Israel was "rethinking" lts
p~ition regarding the territory
on. the W~L .Bank 9C the Jordan River that it won in the Six.Day
This Saclcllehack Valle~: Unified School District hw; wc·nl
1>vcr u eurb and through a fente before landi.ng m the
l><1ck varcl of Builey Shakes' home at 23 1-lG Vasta Way.
El Toi·o Thursday afternoon. The driver. Lucy Guzzel·
1 a, ;,:1. ~f Dana Point, suffered only moderate injuries.
Sc·ott Chapp, the only student on the bus . was saf cly
lw ltl•cl to his scat in the had; and not injured.
War or 1967. Speculation cen·
tered on proposals for some
local·sell rule for the 650,000
Palestinian Arabs living there.
Beein and the ruling Llkud
Party had t.aken a fJrm stand
against relinquishing the ter-
ritory. which they consider hls-
torically to be part o! Israel. It
wu not immediately clear
whether giving the Arab resi·
dents greater control over their
day·lo·day affairs clashes with thejr concept.
Begin's proposals for future re-
lations between Egypt and Israel
were noL spelled out. However,
the Israeli leader, like his pre-
decessors, has had as his govern·
ment's ultimate goal a peace
treaty that would provide for ex·
changes of ambassadors and
other normal contacts between
neighbors.
Carter and the JsraeU leader
talked for an hour and were
joined for an additional .hour by
their key advisers.
Earlier, Begin was asked by
reporters i( he would meet with
Egyptian leaders. He said there
was a "real possibility" o' that "in the very near future." But he
satd be couJd not say where or
when.
Another topic for the talks in
the Oval Office was a possible
visit by Carter to lsrael to dem-
onstrate' U.S. backing for the
Egyplian·Israeli negotiations in
Cairo, which are being shunned
by the Arab "confrontation"
states.
Begin, asked by a reporter
whether he was inviting Carter to
his country, side!tepped a direct
response.
"The president or the United
States is invited by the people or
lsr ael to visit anytirpe,' • he said.
Med Salesmen
In Surgery
NEW YORK (AP) -The presi-
dent or a large surgical supply
firms says his eight salesmen in
New York state reported they
participated to some extent in
more than 000 operations the past
five years.
WASIUNGTON (AP) -
A California conareuman
will hold bea~ 1n Lbs
Angeles on Dec.'28 to dis·
cuss liq~id rotein, the
fast·d ict r substitute.
The gov t H)'S the
substance ma)' be Un~!>
the deaths of· mont '416
three dcnen people.
Rep. Henry A. Waxman,
D·Calif., said Thursday be
plans to look into reports of
death and injuries among
persons who were oa the
diet. He also wan.ta to find
out if the Food and Drug
Administration needs addi-
tional authority to deal with such s ubstances.
No Debris
In Private
Air Crash
A Na{ional Transportation
Safety Board lnvesUgator said
today there is no new informa-
tion on a small plane that
c rashed o!! Newport Beach
Wednesday aJl(l there will· pro-
bably be none unless some debris
washes ashore.
A relative identified the pilot ot
the plane 81 one of its two
owners, Sanford 0. Vance, 42, of
24501 Vanessa Drive, Mlssion
Viejo. With rum reportedly was
his son Dan. 19, a freshman at
Saddleback College. The elder
Vance was identified as a pllot
for United Airlines.
However, Miss Wally Funk ot
the safety board said officials
cannot coofirm the dea~.
•·we have some mbslnf people
reported but ';Ne can't pme it
legally," she said.
Witnesses said they saw the
Cessna 1SO spiraJ into the water
two miles of( Scotchman's Cove
south or Corona del Mar just
before noon Wednesday.
Some papers were later re-
covered containing the name 11'
the owners and the aircraft's
identification. It was co-owned
by Vance and his neighbor. Al
Andrew.
Miss Funk said that since the
plane went down in 280 leet of
water and divers in the area can
only aafely descend to 140 feet. no
dive is planned. Sbe said special
equipment for a dive would cost
an estJmated$U,OOO. • in Judge Robert Rickles' panycorporateofflcers.
courtroom first. Shown in the listing or overt
Without an attorney al his side, acts as the officials who issued
Diedrich was told to reappear in the Anaheim Hills. Inc .. checks
2 Crewmen Sought
When Boat Capsizes
Leon Hirsch. president of the
U.S. Surgical Corp. or Stamford,
Col\Jl., sai<i'JU.s salesmen report .
ed ia an anonymous question-
naire that they "scrubbed In" on
more than 3,000 operations,
meaning they were allowed in
the sterile area around the
operating table.
Hirsch testified Thursday at a
hearing held in Manhattan by the
state assembly's Medical Prac-
tice Taak Force. He defended the
presence or his salesmen, saying
surgeons using new equipment
for the first time often need the
advice of salesmen during an operation.
"UnW we get something that •
washes up on the beach. there's
nothing that. I Call do.•• 14ls!
Funk said. ' court Dec. 21 directed to book to Rose were Erik Berg and J ack
himself into Orange County Jail Si.ck_ler, a Jong.time Diedrich
and released on his own re· friend. •
Front Pqe Al
SPILL •.•
Maritime officials expressed
!ears about possible pollution
and described the collision as
the most serious supertanker ac-
cident ever along the South African coast. ,
Tugboats .with firefighting
equipment were unable to reach
the blazing tankers in the 40-knot
winds and rough seas, officials said. _
By early artemoon, the captain
and six crewmen from the
Venpet we.re put back aboard the
vessel to fight the names but had
to be airlifted to safety when con·
ditions were judged too
dangerous to continue.
Prisoners E scape
BEVERLY HILLS CAP)
Two men remained at large to-
day after escaping from the
Beverly Hills Municipal
Courthouse by persuading a
sheriff's deputy to open their cell
door to hand them a roll of toilet
paper. John Parker, 23, ot .
~Denver and Douglas Wynn, 23, or
Long Beach, were both wearing
civilian clothes at the tJme of the
getaway.
DAILY PILOT
The bribery indictment came
as no surprise lo Diedrich.
He predicted his own indict·
ment last week when grand jury
:nvestigators armed with a
search warrant seized business
records kept in a small Buena
Park warehouse.
True to the image he has pro·
jected since becoming a county
supervisor in January of 1973,
Diedrich vowed late Thursday lo
"continue waging this all-0ut war
I have on my hands.''
He said he wilJ not be able to
"intelUgenUy discuss" the latest
charges lodged against him until
he reads transcripts of the
testimony leading to the indict-
ment.
"Right now. I don't know who
is accusing me or wh a t
specifically I am accused of do-
ing or who the players are,··. the
53·year·old county supervisor
said.
OXNARD <A P> -A search
was under way today off the
coast for two crewmen of a boat
"'hich capsized as it was being
towed to Channel Islands
Harbor, the Coast Guard said.
A spokeswoman in Long Beach
said the missing men were
aboard a 17·foot Boston whaler
being towed to the harbor by a
4l·foot Coast Guard vessel
Thursday night.
.The missing men were Iden· tified as SLephen Fran~ White,
the boat's owner and oper.ator,
23, of Port Hueneme, and Charles
Lang, 21. of Ventura.
The spokeswoman said both
were reported to be fairly good
swimmers who were wearing
wetsuits and lifejaekets when
last seen.
Spokeswoman Day Mercer
sajd 12 boats and four aircraft
were taJUng part in the search
early today, and added the
F ront Page Al
IJFE OR DEATH ...
someonetohelpme. I kept falling down, and the sun was warm now
on my face. I just wanted to lie there, bull knew I had to keep going.
My next big obstacle was to get across the cattle guard. J coula
only move my feel about four inches at a time. I prayed someone
would find me.
WITm N AN HOUR, THREE boys came up the road In a pickup
truck. T.hey wanted to know what t was doing there. They could
not believe it when I told them my wife was dead up on Lhe ~oad.
They said-the besl thin a to do was to go down to Lhe service sta-
tion in Spaniab Fork Canyon and call the sherift.
Name Says It
'Penonkind' Takea a Step
BABYLON, N.Y. (AP> -lt's official. The former
Ellen Cooperman is now Ellen Cooperperson.
1J'y virtue of a decision rendered this week, Ms. Coope~rson 's name ts legal. She has used that name
unofficially three years and has been listed in the
telephone book as "E . Cooperperson."
A member of the National Organi,iation for
Women, Ms . Cooperperson has been active in
feminist causes since 1971. And that, she says., ls why
she added three letters -one syllable -to her name.
••1 did it simply betause I wanted to show my
strong feeUngs about the sexist nature of our lan1uag~ ... said Ms. Coopcrperson, 31. .
Thouih It all, she says, her friends and family
were aupporUve. Feminist groups pald mt!ch of the
ltgal costs. and som, other costs were handled by
yolunteer work. She says it cost her between $300 and MOO to change her name. . -... •
search force would be increased at daybreak.
She said the smaller boat had
been taken in tow after engine
trouble near Santa Cruz I stand.
The boat capsized as the two
vessels were making a 180-
degree turn around the Channel
lslands Harbor breakwater, she
said.
8 Nazis Arrested
CHICAGO <AP) -Eight Nazis
were arrested arter a street right
with reported members of the
J ewish Defense League. The
brown·shirted Nazi "storm
troopers" wearing swastikas and
helmets began to picket a dinner
sponsored by a Jewish group
when they were approached by a
group of men and the fight broke
out.
From Page Al
STRANGLE
night for police,-but Lt. Dan
Cooke said the description was
not.being released.
However, an attendant at a
parking lot across from the
Jibrary said police asked him If
he had seen a limping man with a moustache.
The library is next to a theater
that features live striptease acts
and less than a block from the
health food restaurant where
another victim of the Hillside
Strangler was last seen alive.
Four of the Strangler's victims
were prostitutes, police said.
Navy OKs Project
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Navy recommended Thursday
that a scaled-down test versiooot
Project Seafarer be construct.ell
in Upper 1!fichJgao. ·
CHURCH FIC117S
WOMAN PRIEST
PORTLAND, Maine <AP)
The Epi.'lcopal fiag at St. Paurs
Church new upside-down and at
half-staff today to protest the or-
dination of Maine's first woman priegt,
The nag was at hal!·staff' '1o
mourn the spiritual rigor mortis
that is in the Episcopal Church,''
said Father Harol d A.
McElwaJn, rector of Lhe church.
Mrs. Elizabeth AM Habecker,
now a deacon, was scheduled to
·be ordained tonight.
It's What's· Out Back ·That Counts
UC.NO. )30"22
Our store is like an iceberg! No-we're not chilly
to deaJ with-H's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting us for the first time are
flabbergasted when the spacious interio~ unfolds
before them. The huge showroom has thousands of
samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection th~av~_§een.)
Our warehouse contains an inventOf'Y of Infinite
var:iety. ·Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50
Remnant room.
Add offices, a spacious drapery room, plenty of
parking. D)easant people, end you·u have the. "Big'
Picture" of our successful operation!
DEN'S
: iiisiallitioii: ·custom draperies
linoleum • wood floor
1663 PLACfNTJA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALI,. 92621 • PHONE 6'46-~831 -646-2355
"
..
D•lyf'lllCSWt~ SETH MILLER, SCHOOLMATES MOURN MORRIS
For Friendly Cat, a Tree Growa In Cotta Mesa
Mascot Gone
Kith Mourn Morris the Cat
By JACKIE HYMAN
Df '"'° Dally f'li.t SUit
Students at Costa Mesa's Adams School conducted a
apeclaJ memorial service today for t.heis;..unofficial mascot,
a cat they called "Morris."
His real name was "Porky" and he lived across the
street from the school in Mesa Verde. He died earlier this
week when he suffered a heart attack while crossing the
street. He was 10 years old.
T HE KIDS AT Adams called rum .. Mot't'la" beeause
they thought he looked like the cat that appears in television
eonun41rd• few a calfood. "E~y wu Jult,J\eartbroken at Morris' death,"
lfold·1Chool'Seel'etaf'YM&r)' Farrell.
At the ceremony this morning, students presented sym·
pathy cards they had made to Morris' owner, Mrs. Betty
Boyce.
"HE WAS HERE ALL the time," Mrs. Farrell a aid. "In
the nurse's office, as soon as somebody wu lying down
sick, he was right on top or them."
It might have been because Morns understood how it
felt to be ill. Morris, Mrs. Farrell explained, bad suffered
from heart trouble for some time. ·
"He was the friendliest cat you've ever seen,•• she said.
"The only place he wasn't welcome was in the school
kitchen."
MORRIS' IMMOllTALITY was assured in today's
ceremony. ·A weeping willow tree was planted in his honor'.
"Wet.tied lo get a pussy willow, but they don't selJ them
tbls time of year," Mrs. Farrell said.
,S~angler Victim's
·.:si;reams Ignored?
LOS ANGELES <AP> -
Nelabbors ~~ they beard blood· ~rdllne screams ring oµt in a
Jlollywood apartment house
·•h~ the latest victim of the
.lllllside ~ender apparen\ly
••s lu~to her death.
·: "lt was a very frightening
-.cream ... ft was definitely the
~ont scream I 've ever heard," ••id one man. . • 1'wo other residents also re· :~eel headnl die. ae~ama at ~bou.t the time Tuesday night ~at Kimberly Diane Martin, a
...
BloOdTheft .
. , .1'aroned
prostitute, arrived to meet a
man.
But no one r eported the
screams al the lirQe. •
"l didn't pay any attention
because lt <the screaming) went
on out in the lobby," the man told
radio slation KFWB on Thurs·
day. ·
U.S. Tankers
~Out
. Of Control
PORT ELIZABETH. South
Africa <AP) -Two American·
owned sister supertankers were
burning out or control in the In·
aan-Oceao elf 6eutlt-Afr.lta...\his
uternooo after they collided in
momlng fog. A th~ee-mUe oil
slick threatened popular resort
beaches.
' h o uatben •ere rfl)Orted -.lplnf in tbe ahar~·tnfttted
, w•t'1'1 .Ml 82 otJ>~ts. moetly Cbtnese, were re~cued atler
aome leaped from the namlng
decks and a he1lcopttr pilot
dashed t.brOulth smoke and fire to
pick up survfvors. An American
engineer wu al'bong the aur·
vtvora.
Port authoriU• Hld ilunbr
fuel oU .,ULed from lbe 1tr1clcea
tankers lut il VIII 1>t11e~ed
millloni ~&..-11• of Ol'llde oU be-~~ ... .,. .... bold .... ~ tbi v-... WM .tm intact.
K•r'8e .aaailMW.. qpreued ,.... \W ... Miiftlme accident
~t~·l-·~ ~qi SoUtll Mlieill bfltOl'f:';·
.
...
T oday's Closl•I
N.Y. Stoeks
. 1
~
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1977 C TEN CENTS
,
Jlali)h Diedri~h Indicied
35 Overt Acts of Conspiracy Alkged by Grand Jury
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ot .. Dtlly f'IM411Mt
Supervi!or Ralph Diedrich was
accused ot two felony bribery of.
fenses and o/ engaging in a con·
s;>iracy to commit bribery in an
, Orange Cou!llY Grand Jury in·
dictment handed down Thurs.
day.
Also named in the three·count
indictment as a Cb·defendant in
the conspiracy charge was
..Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose,
a close Diedrich friend and the
Fullerton supervisor's 1972 cam·
ign finance manager.
Thirty.five overt acts cited in
the eight.page indictment allege
that Diedrich:
-In early 1973 ceceived $25,000
. from lawyer Michael Remington
Zoning
Ballot
Assured
. By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of Ille Dallr f'li.t Si.ff
The Amel Development Com·
pany dropped its lawsuit against
the City of Costa Mesa today.
meaning local voters cl,e.finltely
will go to the polls Mardf 7 to de-
cide the zoning fate of 68.3 acres
in north Costa Mesa.
H ow ever. Arnel partners George Argyros and Harry
Rinker said the suit questionin~
the validity or the qomeowners'
initiative would be refiled if
Costa Mesans approve the
measure at the polls.
The initiative is aimed at
blocking construction of
anything but sfogJe .family
homes on three parcels near
South Coast Plaza. Arnet Plans
539 afbrtment.s and 127 single
family homes on oae of those
parcels.
. Arnet olficialt said they would
be w llling to meet with
homeo wners p r ior lo the
muni'cipaJ election in an effort to
reach a compromise.
Arnet's declston to "dismiss''
any further court action for the
time being came after a Thun·
day hearing in which Superior
Court Judge Richard Hamilton
said: .. You're asking me to deny
the people the right to vote. And
that bothers me."
"I am satisfied that voters are
going to exercise their wisdom
and not their fooUshness," Judge
Hamilton commented. "This
seems to me lo be a lawful ,ex·
ercise or the initiative process ...
Despite Judge Hamlllon's rul·
ing on a number of legal points,
Arnel officials were left the op-
tion of seeking another court
hearing becawse they contended
they didn't have sufficient time
to present key testimony.
Followtl'lg a meeting early to·
day •between Arnel lawyer
Leonard Hampel, h9meowner
Michael McLaughlin and City Al·
torney Robett Campagna. the
Arne! principals decided against
seeking •nother court hearing
before theelettion.
·'We want to work with the
community," said Argyros. "We
will be happy to meet with
anyone, anytime."
Arnel officials already have of·
Cered to slice 176 from the 539
apartments they plan to build
south of Sooth Coast Drive and
north oC the San Diego Freeway
between Bear Street and San
<SeeZOMNG,PageA2)
•
after Remington had l>een paid
$74,485 by a development firm
then having a major land use is·
sue before the county Board of
Supervlsors.
,.-A month earlier repaid a ·
$30,000 personal loan owed food
company executive William
Moore with a Remington check
made payable to Moore.
-Ai:cepted In late 1974 about
$20,000 in "legal lender" from
Remington after R~mington was
given two$tO.OOOchecks by Rose.
-Asked Hoben H. Grant Com·
pan)' officials ln 1974 for $80,000
and. when refused, urged the o!·
ficials to use their influence to
help him obtain an $80,000 loan at
a Garden Grove bank.
-After falling to repay the loan
as agreed, toJd the Grant of·
ficiala he would make payment
when they "paid Rose and when
LeRoy &lse paid him.•'
The overt acts alleged ~n the in·
dictment go on to say that the
Grant Go. through its subsidiary,
Anaheim HiUs. Inc.. made 12
payments to Rose totaJing
$138,301.
However, only the $20,000 Rose
gave Remington was alleiedlY
traeett directly into Diedrich's
hands even though all 12 pay.
ments to Rose are listed in the
o~rtacts. """' An Indictment is a formal
charge made against a person by
a Grand Jury. Overt acts cited in
. .
the Indictment are used to
demonstrate the basis for the
charges. Neither the indictment
nor the alleged overt acts
establishgulltor if'.lnocence.
Already under indictment for
allegedly violating state political
campaign regulations, Diedrich
responded to Thursday's indict·
ment with a terse three para·
graph statement.
•'This charge Is simply"the next
shot fired in the ongoing war by
the District Attorney's Omce.
This is another collection or rub-
bish that he (the district at-
torney) hopes lo use lo get me out
of his way," Diedrich said in his
written statement .
<See DIEDRICH, P age A%)
• r • • _.,.._....,....,o .. ~
TWO DIE IN HEAD-ON CRASH ON VICTORIA STREET BRIDGE •
Body of One of Thursday Night Craah Victim• LI•• Covered at Right
Funeral Rites Set
I • •
For Wiilter Mellott
Funeral services wlll be held
Monday.for Wa lter. B: Mellott, a
·well·known Orange Coast civic
leader and owner or South Coast
Construction Company.
Mr. Mellott died Wednesday
after collapsing in bis office in
Costa Mesa. He was 64.
Services will begin at 11 a.m.
at Alhiser-Wilson Mortuary in
Escondido. Mr. Mellott, who
lived most or his life in Costa
Mesa, had moved seven years
ago to San Luis Rey Downs in
San Diego County.
He was a director of the Balboa
Bay Club, a pa.st director or lbe
Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce, a member of the
board of the former U'.S. Na·
tional Bank o( San Diego, past
presiden,t of the Orange County
Coast Association and past presi·
dent or the state Builders Ex· change.
Mr. Mellott was once chairman '
of the National Federation of In·
dependent Business. president of
the Qrange County 81.lilders Ex·
change, a member or the ad·
visory, committee of tb.e Orange
Empire Boy Scouts of America,
and st~ (lllllJlc:e chairman l~
the Ni.xon·~ge .carqpalgn for·
presldent.
He ineorpoFated the South
Coast ConStruction· Company in
1945 •
I
SUCCUMBS AT 64
Civic Leader Mellott
Survivors include his wife,
Aileen Smallen Saunders. two-time winner of the Powder Puff
Derby; daughters Diana Brazil
-0f Los Angeles and Deborah Dug-
gan of Jr\.rine, and a sister, Alice
Cartwrigbto!Costa Mesa.
Bridge Crash
Kills Two
In Costa Me sa
Two people were killed and a
third injured Thursday in a
three.car collision on th~ Vic·
toria Street bridge over the Santa
Ana River. whlch divides Costa
Mesa from Huntington Beach.
Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as Timothy Lee
McKeon, 25, of 33802 Malaga
Drive. Dana Point, and Carol
Lovette Stradley, 42, or 1015
American Place, Costa Mesa.
Both were in a small foreign car driven by McKeon that police
said cofficfed· head:on at
about 9:50 p.m. with a vehicle
driven by Janet Ann Munson, 21,
162 Tulip Lane, Costa Mesa. She
was treated at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital for cuts on
her right hand, arm and knee.
and sent home.
A third car, driven by Irene
Garcia Dolan, 26, of 711 Pacific
Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach, sltidded into the McKean
car after the accident. Its driver
was not reported injured.
Police said that,. according to
witnesses, McKe0n apparenUy
became distracted while wil>ing
the inside of his windshield with a
<SeeCR.ASH:Page.U)
Coast
Fairgro~d Flap St~re~ We athe r
Variable clouds beeom.
_ inL_cloudy wiU> 30.,percent
chance of rain Saturday.
Cooler Saturday. Lows
tonight SO to 55. Highs~
Saturday low 60s.
ticismTriggered by Expansion Plam
Co5ta Mesans have unUJ Dec.
22 to ask .questions about or
criticize the Orange County Fair·
grounds' environmental impact
report on its $16.7 million ex·
panaion plan.
The plfD alrMdy bU come un,
der flN ftom OranJe Coast
C0Ue1e and Colta Meta city of·
ficlala because 9C addett traffic
the)' fear .-tU be gederated on
F•lrview Roa d' at Arlln1ton
Avenk •
• Thunday 1*iht f alr direct«t
atron,ty lndlcate<i that the draft
llll• Waul4 1M ~ed at a
1pecl1l m.tinc t>tc. a at 7 p.m.
•th• f all'.PJUftda, I
No Plllllkt comment wm be al· lowed 9* tbe meejlq. but .,... 'ti* r.eav-s ~Dee. a mus• be
~swered by fair ofCiclalS ln the
draft EIR, accOfdint to Fair
Board ~ldent Cllilt Hooae.
Sucb commeirta eould set the
The lumbering Laker S~ytrahl
a l most beat. the eleeant
superaonlc Concorde on recent
New York·London fii1hta.
Flrat ·tlme traveler Hu1b -.u1u1an. fl*lal corr•pondeat
t o r t bt AF, found 1'1)9.1'•
1tmll1rlt1.-between lhe hirq
tlliht. tt.raae m .. ta~L
SMl°*NPC>rtGllht•AlO.
stage for future court challenges
Q.'{estfpnina the adequacy of the
EIR. Challenges would have to
be submitted withln.30xlays if the
EI& ls accepted aa final.
A major c:oocem of Orange
Coast College and Costa Mesa cl·
t.Y leaders are construction plans • .. t tlii north weil corner of the
f.-r1rMIDdl, opposite OCC and
Costa Mesa Hilb School.
PIH• call for a commercial
recreatloa center, skateboard
park, amalJ shops and fast food
outlets. OCC offlclab fear that
the fQOd shope may t}urt. campus tood pf08tatn revenues.
Commei:rta andque.sti09s about
lk Ellt lbould be tddrened to Fair Man•ger Ken Full, ta fair
Drltt, ea.ta M•a. •
INSIDE TODAY
"The Nutcracktr0 and
Chri1tma1 aeem lo be
111nonym""8. The trodillort.al
holiday ballet if detailftl m
stories and photos on Pogtt
Cl.
\.
QUITS UC IRVINE POST
Engineering Dean Mulllgan
UCI Dean
Mii1ligan
Resigns
The dean of UC Irvine's
engineering school, Dr. James
Mulligan, 57, announced h1s res:
ignation today effective Dec. 31.
Mulligan said he was resigning
.. for the good of the school of
eng ineering." H e would not
elaborate and referred to a stale·
ment expected Monday from UCf
Chancellor Daniel Aldrich.
Mulligan has been dean ot the
e ngineerin_g school since July,
1974. Prior to serving as dean, he
was secretary and executive of·
!icer of the National Academy or
E ngineering in Was hington,
D.C., froml968tol974.
He presently serves as part·
lime secretary of that organiza·
tion.
Mulligan opposed last year's
proposed merger of the school of
engineering and the school of
physical sciences.
University officials eventually
decided agains t the merger.
Mesa Mayor
Seeks Council
RB-electwn
Costa Mesa Mayor Norma
Hertzog has taken out nomlna·
tion papers Cor the March 7 coun·
• cilmanic election, bringing to
nine the number of potential can·
did ates for two council seats.
Nomination papers must be
completed by Dec. 29 and re-.
turned to city clerk Elleen Phin·
ncy in order for candidates to
qualify for the ballot.
To date, '10mination papers
J1ave b1:en ret\lrned by real estate
man Donald Bull, Planning Com·
m lssioner Arlene Sc baler and
Orange Coast. College •student
Carl Merkle. .
Five other Costa Mesans have
ta.ken out nomination papers
from the city clerk's office. They
in clude public administrator
Paul Raver, homemaker/slu·
dent Darrilyn Oliver, busi-
ness man Chris Steel,
py sc hothera pist Charles
"Carlos" Young and dry cleaner
Steven Finley.
..
-
The candidates will be vying
ror eouncil seats currently ~eld
uy Mrs. Hertzog and Jack Ham·
melt.
CHURCH FIGH1S
WOMAN PRIEST
PORTLAND, Maine (AP>
The Episcopal llag at St. Paul's
Cburcb new upside-down and at
hal(·StaU' today to protest the or·
dination of Maine's first woman
prie!ft.
The nag was at balf-staW"to
mourn the spiritual rigor mortis
that is in the Episcopal Churcb,"
said Father Harold A.
McElwain, rector or the church.
Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Habecker,
now a deacon, was scheduled t9
be ordained tonight.
09'AHOICoqf c
DAILY PILOT
.-.c'U ,(llltof
VIC>t ........... 1--41~
~ ..... fdllot
11 ""
DIEDRICH ••
)\oH, wbo, as a Fullerton plat\•
nlD• eommiA10ttu .,., tnd.lctecl °" bribery chart• ID ms bot ac· quitted ln im. responded to the
tndlchneti& by resign.inflrom the
firm he founded ln 1960, LeRoy
Ro e and Associates.
Rote said his realgnatlon was
"due to adverse pubUcity regard·
1ng put and recent Snvestiga.
lions." For his pm, District Attorney
Cecil Hlcks simply chatted for a
rew minutes with newsmen about
otber topics as Diedrich and
Rose were called to appear in
court.
1t was Diedrich who appeared
in Judge Robert R ickles'
courtroom first.
' Without an attorney at his side,
Diedrich was told to reappear in
court Dec. 21, dlreeted to book
himself into Orange County Jail
and r eleased on his own re·
cognizance.
Thirty minutes later Rose
walked into tbe same courtroom
with lawyer Sylvan Aronson.
Rose's arraignment was put off
to Jan. 6, he was given until Dec.
20 to book himself into Jail and ~e
a lso was released on bis own re·
cognizance.
In the forefront or the bribery
indictment is the succes$ful ef·
fort by Anaheim Hills, Inc .• to ob-
tain in 1973·74 county a pproval
for the withdrawal of 2,200 acres
from agricultural preserve
agreements.
Diedrich was the leader ill a 3
to 2 Board of Supervisors de·
cision in March, 1974, that re·
leased the land from the pact and
opened it to development.
In the background to that move
was the company's hiring of
Re mington as their legal counsel
and Rose as a consultant on grad·
ing problems.
The indictment alleges that
Remington was hired at
Dledrich's suggestion but makes
·no mention or whatever role Rose
was assigned to earn the $138,301
he received rrom the coml>any.
Key figure in the four-month
investigation leading to the in·
dictment was Re mington. a
Diedrich business and legal as-
sociate for 10 years.
Remington was named in the
July 1 political conspiracy indict·
ment along with Diedrich,
Supervisor Philip Anthony,
A~fUH'm City Councilman
William Kott and would-be
politicaJ financler Gene Conrad.
I
8iaowYTrajedy
, Wife's Ordeal, of Death Told
EdUor'a Note: A Sunda11 drioe ~ tn lrao~11 for Norman O.
Johnson, 61. Iii.~ wife. G~. alw SJ, d~ oj trpo$Ure in d1_,, mowa/ttr
the couple'• car broke down in a remote area. Httt fl Johruon'1 account
oJ what happened, aa told to De11Tet New1 reporleT Leo Perry.
PROVO. Utah CAP> -The hardest decision t have made in my
l!(e was whether lo lie down and die with Gwen or get up and try
to save myself.
We had been married as years, and r <Jldn't want to leave her.
But I had to leave her lf I wa$ going to get help.
WE DAD COME DOWN f'ROM Salt Lake Sunday to visit some
friends and then decided to take a little ride up the canyon. Il was
a nice day, and the road,..asn't that bad. But I turned to the right
instead of the left. Then fhil a rock In the center of the road, and it.
knocked a hole in the oil pan.
l spent two hours trying to Jack the car up and get it otr the
rock, but 1 couldn't move it. lt was then we decided to lty to
wa\ll: out. We should have gone back the way we came, but I
thought it would be faster to try tow alk over ts> SprlngvUle.
We wttlked four or five miJes. When it started to get dark, we
got under a big pine t ree, and I tried to covet her up with pine
boughs. l lried lo keep standing up to keep warm and then I would
lie down to try lo keep her warm. Then the wind started to howl. It
seemed like it snowed a ll night.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE TO hobble about 100 yards in the
deep snow in the morning. I tried for three hours to help herfurther.
Bul I wasn't much help because I have arthritis. We talked
together of personal things. Then she began acting strange. She
was in a coma.
How could I leave her? Yet r thought I should get help. I prayed
to the Lord. and I felt the Lord didn't want me lo die there.
J hobbled along thtough the deep snow all the rest of the day. I
had seen a cabin on the way up, and 1 thought, if I could just make
it down to the cabin. lt was just getting dark Monday night when I
saw the cabin. But then I fell off the bridge and into a five.foot·
deep creek bed. ll seemed like hours before I could crawl up the
bank. ·
I HAD NO HEAT IN THE cabin -no food and just the snow for
water. I moved my legs throughout the night to keep the circula·
tion going. At daylight, I started out again. l was wet almost to
my shoulders from falling down in the deep snow.
I kept on praying that the Lord would help me just to keep on
going. I actually felt if I could just keep going l would find
someone to help me. I kept f alllng down, and the sun was warm now
on my !ace. I just wanted to lie there, but I knew I had to keep going.
My next big obstacle was to get across the cattle guard. J coltie
only move my feet about four inches at a time. 1 prayed someone
would find me.
WITIUN AN HOUR, THREE boys came up the road in a pickup
truck. They wanted to know what 1 was doing there. They could
not believe it when I tdtd them my wife was dead up on the road.
They said the best thing to do was to go down to the service sta·
lion in Spanish Fork Canyon and call the sheriff.
Own Recognizanee
Murder Suspect
~reed from Jail
Bolida9 Toll qt 7
-CPashes Ki11
~ ..
" 4 Countians
Four people were killed in trar.
fie uccidenls Thursday nighL u
the countywide pre·Christmus
tram c death toll climbed to
seven in tbe past 24 hours. Oran1e' County coroner's dep-
uUe1 reDQrted tod~~ ...
A· 16·year·old Santa Ana
teenaeer and a 41·)'Hr·old
Gardtn Grove truck driver were
_. iChled tn an 11:31 p.m. collialon
tnat eoded a lOO·mlle·ao-hour
police chase ln Garden Grove
and Santa ~a, police aald ..
The driver of that speedinc
car, a 17·year-old from Santa
Ana, was charged with felony
drunker\ drlvlnt and released to
his parehtB, olficers said.
The dead are Michael Anthony
Albright, $409 W. Crystal Lane,
Santa Ana, a passenger in the
pursued car, and Osborn C. Van
Wey, 13802 Cypress St., Garden
Grove, driver of tbe other vehi-
cle, police said.
Van Wey's son, John 19, suf·
fered serious injuries in the
crash, police reported . A second
teenager In the car being chased,:
Erle Fassbtnder, 17, of 5422 W.
Lehnhardt Ave., Santa Ana, also
was h01SpltalJzed with injuries,
ortlcerssaid.
Police said the chase began in
Garden Grove, where an officer
became suspicious of lbe driver's
erratic actions. The car was
traveling about 100 miles an hour
when it aped throu~h a red light
on Newhope ln Santa Ana, stnk·
ing the Van Wey van, police as-
serted.
The overnight traffic death toU
also claimed the lives of two
pedestriana in separ ate a cci·
dents, investigators said.
Johrr McGuiness, 50, of 231 W.
Las Palmas Drive, Fullerton,
was killed at 9:05 p.m. as he and
his wife attempted to cross
Harbor Boulevard near their
home, police said.
McGuiness' wife also was
seriously injured, offi cers report-
ed. The couple was not inside a
Fro•PageAJ
ZONING •••
crosswnlk nnd the driver of tho
car was .not held, policeaald.
T he second pedestrian kil led
was Dolores C. Trevino, 52, or~
E . Chest.nut St., Santa Ana. She
d ied about tour hours after being
struck crossinf the slte« at 200 •
N. Grand Avenue at an unstriped
crosswalk, police H,d.
'the driver or the car ln that
8:49 p.m. crash Also hu not been
charged pendln1 further in·
vestigaUoo, police said.
* * * Fro•PageAJ
CRASH •..
rag while heading toward Hunt.
ington Beach on the bridge. Wit·
nesses s aid his car strayed over
the double yellow lines in the
center and collided with the
Costa Mesa-bound Munson cur,
spinning it around.
Costa Mesa police are in·
vesUgating the tragedy.
NoKvidence
Of Co(Ujtal
Pfune Crash
A National Transportation
Safety Board investigator said
today there is no new informa·
lion on a small i\lane that
crashed off Newport Beac b
Wednesday and there will pr<r,
bably be none unless some debris
washes ashore.
A relative identified the pilot of
the plane as one of its two
owners. Sanford 0. Vance . 42. oC
24501 Vanessa Drive, Mission
Viejo. With him reportedly was
his son Dan. 19, a freshman at
Saddleback College. The elder
·Vance was identified as a pilot
for U nited Airlines.
However, Miss Wa lly Funk oC
the safely board said officials
cannot confirm the deaths.
"We have some missing people
reported but we can't prove it
legally,'· she said.
Witnesses said they saw the
Leandro Lane. Cessna 150 spiral into the water
The homeowners• initiative two miles orr Scotchman's Cove
also covers two adjacent prop-south of Corona del Mar just
erties <about 18 acres ) owned • before noon Wednesday .
' -
It was in early November that
l\emington pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor charge related to
the alleged consp~c)' and was
then granted i munity from
prose~utlon wh testifying
before lhe Grand Jury about his
knowledgG!<>f the Anaheim HUis
affair.
Roy Christopher Richard, one
of seven people ,iailed in lhe s lay-
ing of Stephen J ohn Bovan, was
released Crom Newport Beach ci·
ty jail on hii:; owf' r ecognizance
Thursday night.
$2.35 million figure for Kulik
after being told Kulik raced trial
on charges of possession or 1.1
pounds or nearly pure heroin
filed in Orange County, was al·
legedly in possession of another
1.5 pounds of almost pure heroin
at La Costa and also allegedly
was involved in the kllUng last
Oct. 22 of Bovan, a Fountain
Valley resident.
by the Phillips and W aJceham • fam iii es, bringing the total Some paper.s. were later re. ....
acreage to 68.3. Arnet officials covwed containing tbe !lame ~f Also shown by court r ecords to
have been granted immunity
were Robert ff. Grant and
Richard Owen, lhen Grant Com·
pany corporateo(ficers.
Shown in the listing of overt
acts as the officials who issued
• the Anaheim Hills. Inc., checks
to Rose were Erik Berg and Jack
Sickler, a long-time Diedrich
friend.
·TONIGHT
FESTIVAL OF CHRISTMAS
-Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse,
Community Recre.aUon Cent.er,
Dec. lS-17, 8 p.m. Dec. 18, 2:30
P·.~ J WAN IS T R A VE L •
ADVENTURE SERIES -"WUd
and Tamed Alaska," Dr. Ted
Walker lecturer , OCC
Auditorium, 8 p.m.
OCC PLANETARIUM -"Star
of Bethlehem," Fri. and Sat. "7:30
and 9 p.m. Saturday matinee, 3
p.m . so unt COAST REPERTORY
THEATER -"Knights of the
White Magnolia," Tuesday.
Sunday through Dec.18, 8 p. m.
SATlJllDAY,DEC.11
COASTLINE PLAY
AUDITIONS -AudiUoos for "A
Man For All Seasons," NewRQrt
Beach Theater A'rts Center, 2501
Clift Dr. Noon Dec. 17 and 'l:JO
p.m . Dec.18.
Police declined any comment
of Richard's 10 p.m . release.
Deputy District Attorney Dave
Carter, who is prosecuting the
murder case, would comment on·
ly that the former president or the
t Laguna Beach Hare Krishna
Temple was released at the dis·
trict attorney's request.
Richard, 28, sought since No-
vem ber, surrendered to Newport
Beach police a week ago. He had
been held on $100,000 bail after
pleat.ling not guilty to murderCOJl·
spiracy charges in Orange County
Superior Court.
Meanwhile, Elsie Caban Kulik
was to go back to Superior Court
today to seek a reduction or the $1
mllllon baU that· is holdini her in
the county jafl.
Her husband, Canadian-born
Alexander Kulik, was told Thurs·
day' that he will have to raise
$2.35 million if be expects to re-
gain the freedom be lost W ednes·
day.
Kulik, 28, a sometime resident
of Newport Beach and bis wife,
28, were jiO~ by officers who
found her hldfng/under a split
level condominium in La Costa, a
r esort near Carlsbad in San
Diego County.
Judge Robert P. Kneeland set.
the high bail on the Kuliks aft.er
being told that Kulik organiied
the hiding of bis wife who is one
of seven codefendants in a
grand jury indictment that cites
charges of murder and con·
spiracy.
Mrs: Kulik pleaded innocent to
those charges Thursday. She was
ordered to1faee trial Jan. 23, the
same date set for her six
codefendanl8.
Judge Kneeland computed the
Name Says
'Pe-nonkind' Takes a Step
BABYLON, N.Y. <AP> -It's official. 'l'heformer Ellen Cooperman is now Ellen Cpoperperson.
'Y virtue of a decision rendered thl$ week, Ms.
Cooperperton's name is legal. She hu used that name
unofficially three ?!ears and has been listed In the telephone boQk as • E. Cooperverson."
A member of the N~tional Organization for
Woinen, Ms. C90perperson has been active in
.feminist ca\.IHS since 1971. And tbat, she says, is why
ahe added tlu'ee Jetten -one syll8ble -to her name.
"I did Jt sJmpJy because 1· wanted to show my
stronf feelings about the sexist nature of our
lan~age," said Ms. Coopcrpel'SQn, 31..
Tbou&h It all, sbe says, her friends and family
were l\Q)l)Ol'tive. Feminist groups paid much of the letlll cc&ta, and tome other aosta we~ i.andled by
volu'-' work. Sile says it cost her bctw~ $300 and UOOtoC!IWalebername. ~. ·
,
' ..
Seven or the eight people in·
dieted for their alleged roles in
that kUUng have now been ar·
rested.
A search is still under way Cor
Joseph Gabriel Fedorows~I, 28.
Scheduled to appear with the
Kuliks today were codelendants
Richard, 28, and Jerry Peter
Fiori. 41. ofHuntinllton Beach.
Fiori is identified by the
prosecution as the man who
pumped nine bullets into Bovan in a confrontation last Oct. 22 out-
side a Newport Beach restaurant.
Fiori is held with ball denied.
His lawyer was expected to ask
Judge Kneeland today to set ball.
Police claim that Fiori and tw~
other Huntington Beach men,
Anthony "Little Tony" Marone
Jr.. 23, and Raymond Steven
Resco, 28. were hired to kidnap
and kill Bovan in revenee for an
earlier kidnapping of Kulik.
have maintained that the small the o~·ner:s and the aircraft a
size or the land in question co~idenUI1catioo. It. was. co-owned
sUtutes "spot iooing " Vance and his neighbor, Al · ~ drew.
A/,ien Cards .
Wnfiscated
SOVTH GATE <AP) -A
hus bafEd wile have been ar-
rested 2,500 blank immigra·
tion ' reen cards" confiscated
by sh.erif('s depuUes, authorities
said tod•f·
Officials said they searched
the home or Francisco Tapia, Z1 .• 1 and ht• wife Guadalupe, 26, ana
look them into custody Thursday night.
Green cards are issued by the
U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service to certify
the holder bas entered lhe coun·
try legally, deputJes said. They
a~ded no printing equipment was
discovered.
Miss Funk said that since the
plane went down in 280 feet of
water and divers in the area can
only safely descend to 140 feet. no ~anned. She s aid speci:il
equipment for a dive wouJd cost
an estjmated $15,000.
"Until we get something that
washes up on the beach, there's
nothing that 1 can do." Mis~
Funk said.
8 Nazis Arrested
CHreAGO CAP) -Eight N atfs
were a rrested after a st.ceet fight
with reported members or the
Jewish Defense League. The
brown-shirted Nazi "storm
troopers" wearing swastikas and
helmets began to picket a d inner
sponsored by a Jewish group
when they were approaclled by a
group or men and the fight broke
out.
It's What's.Out Baek That Counts ~
~~·-~ ..
.
Our store is like an iceberg! No-we're not chilly
to deal with-it's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting u s for the first time are
flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfol ds
before them. The huge showroom has thousands of
samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection they have seen.)
Our warellou~. cminons arr rnventory of infinite
vaciety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50
Remnaht room .
Add offk:es. a spacious drapery room. plenty of
parking, pleasant people. and you'll have the "Big
Picture" of cor auccessf ul operation!
DEN'S :iiistillatioii~·custom draperies
llnOleum • wood floor \
1663 PLACENTIA AVENUf • COSTA M!SA., CAllf. 9~427 • ,HONE 646·4838 -646·l3SS
'f
•
I.
0.ly ~ .. SU# ....... SOME OF THE VOLUNTEERS AT HUNTINGTON BEACH'S SERRA THRIFT SHOP
From left, Helen Hellwlg, Janet Peters, Rote Smith, Rose Subblondo, Thereaa Przygoda
Shop ·shares Ali It Das
That Shirt~s 50 Cems -Free If You're Broke
By ARTlfUR R . VINSEL .
OI U.. D•lly J01lol Sl.tll
A plaster nativity scene, small
nd timeworn, stands an the win·
ow ~nd the aroma of mothballs
s the first thing that greets
~ustomt:.'rs or the Serra PJ'hrift l~Ahop on Huntington Beach's Fain Strael.
The shop is a bas tion of
l>rotherly Jove sandwiched
between the flashy surf shops,
bikini emporiums and bars that
r eflect the cultural atmosphere
around the Huntington Beach Pier -Surf City, USA.
A ytiletide dandy of tnodest
tneans could walk out of the shop
this holtd<Ay season weariag a
double-breasted, gray, pinstripe I suit and black and wh'ite, wingtip ~hoes.
,I He can get a white dress shirt.
too. The price is 50 cents unless
vtherw1sc marked, the sign says.
''No really needy person is
ever turned away for Jack of
money,". says Helen Hellwig.
who works at the shop for tree
;ind for The Lord. .. lt's stricUy for charity."
A young woman who couldn't be good or careful might fl.nd
baby clothes and a forgiving
s mile. neither costing anything.
"We collect infant clothes and
fix them up for the needy and
often unmarried young worpen,"
:.ays Mrs. Hellwig.
Shc and Janet Peters. Rose
Smith, Rose Subbiondo and
Theresa Przygoda are the duty
crew at the little storefront shop
rn downtown Uunliogton Beach on any Monday.
They are Christian soldiers
toiling a few doors down Crom the
Main Street Saloon and within
sight of the pier that long ago
became a mecca for America's
surfing enthusiasts.
"Sometimes the boys who
don't have anything to wear but
bathing suits come in for a shirt
or a pair of pants to make
themselves presentable if they
have someplace to go," says Mrs. Hellwig. -. ·
"We're volunteers. And every-
thing we take in from people
goes somewhere. Nothing is
wasted. "If we can 't sell ~omelhing it goes to the Baja
California missions or the St.
Vincent de Paul Society.•'
Jncome from the little thrift
shop sandwiched between bou·
. tiq ues deali.og in $25 bikinis. $19.9S
SF siwu, Goes On
jeans, stereo albums, roach clips
and posters helps support the
LYNN (Love Your Neighbor
Now) Center, in the downtown
area. which ministers to the
beach city's street people.
Volunteers who staff the Thrift
Shop daily are members of Sts.
Simon & Jude Catholic Church.
the oiltown 's oldest parish:
The so-called street or beach
people, are frequent customers
of the secood·hand st-0re named
for Father Junipero Serra,
founder of the California mis·
sions.
Some literally furnish their liv·
ing quarters with the white
elephants others more affluent
have donated to charity.
Business always seems to pick
up at the Serra Thrift Shop
around Christmastime. says
Mrs. Hellwig. One can s mell the
fragrance of old -but·clean
clothes being ironed in the back
room.
''Practically all our Christmas
decorations are gone a lready.
although we have a. few left,"
Mrs. Hellwig observes with a
smile, standing before the
timeworn manger scene in th~ ,
cracked front window.
. A · 'rrihute to Crosby
his nerves show after a brier re·
hearsal with the Jack Fisher band.
hospital employee. Bing did his
last five shows with his family,
which resides in suburban Hills borough.
Toward the end of the show.
Car Chas~ . .
.Ends in
Arrest
A 100-mlte.:an-hour freeway
chase, a crash into a chajnlink
· fence and a police revolver that
discharged into the ground by ac-
cident all figiired into the arrest
of a burglary suspect Wednes.
day, Los Alamitos police re· ported.
Offlcers arrested James
Helton Norcross, 25, ot Cerritos,
on burglary charges after a nine·
minute chase on and ore the
Garden Grove Freeway in Garden Grove.
Police said the 11:30 a.m. incl·
dent began when a woman al·
lege~ly spotted Norcross carry-
ing a television set Crom a Los
Alamitos home he 1s accused o(
burglarlring.
The woman phoned p01ice with
a description, which officers
broadcast.
It was about that time that Los
Alamitos Detective Terry
McCarthy, traveling on the
freeway with a Stanton officer Jn
an unmarked car, spotted
Norcross' vehicle and noticed a
television in its back aeat. police
Friday. December 16, 1971
Santa's Girl
reported.
A pursuit both on and off the
freeway start.ed then ended after
~bout five miles when Norcross•
car crashed into a chainlink
fence in a Garden Grove reslden-
Caroline Garbagnali, an 84-year-old resident of a Phoeni:C
nursing home, gives Santa Claus her ~hri~tmas requests.
She said she asked for a Cadillac and a m1lhon1dollars.
~· ti al area. police said.
Then as officers attempted to
handcuff Norcross. police assert-
ed, a scuffle ensued. McCarthy
struck Norcr0ss on the head with
his service revolver, police con.
tinued, and it accidentally dis·
charged into the ground.
Police said Norcross was treat-
County Death Suit ..
Delayed to Dec. 27
ed for minor injuries then booked LOS ANGELE~ !AP> -:-A
into Orange County Jail. wrongful death sutt filed against
McCarthy's service revolver the federal government by a
has been sent aw.ay.&o-fedettal -1..a~1tna l)ligueJ woman who
laboratories to learn why it mis-claims her husband's terminal
fired police reported. cance~ "'.as cau~ed by exposure ' to radiation dunng nuclear test• ,_
Holdup Not
lnthe~ript
CORONADO (AP) -Patrons
in a s hop at the Hotel Del
Coronado looked on impassively
as a bearded man knocked a
saleswoman to the floor .and
grabbed two diamond rings
worth $74.000,
mg has been continued to Dec. 27.
The $1 million suit, which also
named the Veterans Adminislra·
t1on as a defendant, is expected
to be dismiS&ed by U.S. District
Judge Francis C. Weyland pend-
ing the final decision of claims
filed with the defendants.
·•we will get a final denial from
the Department of Energy and
the VA, and then we will refile,••
saJd the plaintif1's attorney Ron Bak al. •
The petition was tiled last
month by Alice Patricia Broudy
of Laguna Niguel. the widow or a
U.S. Marine Corps major. Her
s uit claims that ~harles A.
Broudy, SS, developed terminal
. cancer after expo1ore to r,11<lia·
lion during government nutleat'
testing at Yucca Flats, Nev., in
The man got away in 8 car with 1951 and in the Pacific in l!M8. He was under orders to be at both
Except° for one sailor' who gave.
chase, the customers thought
they were watching a scene Crom
.. The Stunt Man," a motion pic-
ture being made at th~ hotel,
police said today.
two friends. test sites, the suit contends.
Jeweler Jim Jessop offered a
$10,000 reward for information
leading to soluUon of the rob-
bery.
Mrs. Broudy's suit also
charges lhe government was
negligent in placing'1er husband.
who died Oct. 27 of lymph cancer,
in an unsafe area and not Inform·
ing him or evidence that er• posure to the nuclear testing in-
cr .1ased the ruk of cancer.
T'He should never, ever. have
been exposed to that amount of
radiation without his consent;•
Mrs. Broudy said.
Crash Victims
Held by Cops ·
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Two
men believed to have beeu
aboard a mari.jµana-laden plane
which crashed jn the Nevada
t\esert 10 days ago have been ar•
rE\.5ted in a hospital here. police
l"eported. , •
Douglas M. Scherer and~
M. Komko, both 29, were report-
ed ln stable condition and under
police guard in French Hospital •
Each is charged with possession.
of a controlled substance with in· tent to seJl.
They reportedly were flown to
San Francisco from Nevada by
air ambulance after they
crawled away from the wreck:
a nd told authorities they had
been in an automobile accident,
investigators said.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Bing Crosby wasn't there for his
big annual Christmas gala, but
some show business friends
were, and the event turned out a
Tinging, emotional tribute to the
cld groaner.
'Crosby, who died or a heart at·
ack on a golf course in Spain two
"l just hope that it works out
all right -that they love me hair
as much as they did Bing," said Jlarris before the curtain.
Besides Harris, the lineup in·
eluded former. Jimmy Dorsey,
''Ocalist Dee Parker; the Mason·
Kahn dancers; singer Jon Hen·
dricks of .. Evolution or the
Blues,•• tap dancer Eddy Brown,
Nancy Bleiweiss of TV's Laugh·
Jn, recording star Johnny Ray,
and a tonoC other show·biz lights.
Harris catne back on stage.and s~d q~eU~ ''I 'm sure he~ up .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
there now, and he's looking down
onths ago, had made it a
ersonal tradition to d o a
hristmas show each year at the
ity's Laguna Honda Hospital, a
aven for the city's elderly sick
eople. As it must, the show went n.
Everybody Raid it wouldn't be
he same without Bini this year,
nd they were right -but not for
e lack of a starsludded lineup
;that showed up to carry on gratis 1or the vanished legend. I The show's headJlner was 73·
ear-old stage veteran and
oaby chum Phil Harris, who let
~A\'TON ... Ohio (AP) -A
~al judge has struck down his
Wll court-ordered school busing
laa, leaving It to the local board
f education to solve problems or
atial imbalance JI\ Dayton
u6lic schools.
Harris, who said he first met
Crosby 50 years ago. did some oC
the old numbers he's been aa..
sociated with the year s -
••smoke, Smoke, Smoke that
Cigarette/' "Old Man Time" and
•"'fhe Preacher and the Bear.''
Ray sang his "Walking My
Baby Back Home'' and "Little
Whf te Cloud," then went into the
audience to kiss some ladies.
In a comer sat Leon Kyer, a
Laguna Honda housekeeper
since 1962 who said of Bing.
•'God, be was a great man. but he
was also a good family man."
Bing had been doing the show
!or more than 15 years, the first
of them unpublicized at Bing's
Tequest, according to a veteran
on us, and I'm sure if he had
something to say, it would go
something like this:"
Then Bing's voice, from a film
clip of a Christmas TV show he
made not long before he died,
sang his legendary, "l 'm Dream·
ing of a White Chriatmu .•• "
Smoke Devree
" .
Plan Scrapped
In·HuntJngton
An ordinance making it tnan•
datory for all dwelling units in
the city to have smoke de~tors
has been scrapped in Huntmgton
Beach.
,. und.ay · PilOt. Tells
.· AICflholics' Aid
City Council members µnan-
imous1y rejected the -proeosed
ordinance tbls week with the
comment that there already are ·
too many government controls
regulaUng a peraon•s private life.
Tbe propoeed ordinance Would
would have required smoke de-tectors to be installed upon the
transfer of ownership of re,s.
idences.
Council members Ibo cited
poten~al prob1eme wtlb enforce-
ment of such an ordinance.
A. -An employee·ow11ed ratlon, Prototype Develop·
t .Meoclates Jnc. <P DA> la
about the "unlq"e;•
Jema of people. Dnlly ~Jot wrl8 Ka.thy Clancy in the
Buda• pace arllcle, takes
at !low the Santa A.nae
llrmlOl• audl Wall.•
Smoke detectors are required
for all new rokfences undet" cur.
rentcttylaw. -
The fire al~ 111tem also is creatintabulletfeedsystemfor required• when remodelins
flpterplanes. v~luecl at inoro than $1,000 OC•
80aAL WOES, -the Carter ~~·Uding Director 6..Tobra
White BoUle Ian t cooperaUng Bebren1 said that e.ooo
With UM WMbtngt.on social whirl. people died in house fires in 19'1'1 'J.'bat .._.it .. harder for the throqbouttbeuUon
PftW' cttm"" to meet those at. ,.An awfDl.11 ~ Ptl'ceatllect
tbe top. Bat U you have the • that' number CIOUl4 ban tieell an•m. there are •ay1; as an M-•He4 wtth an el.l'fT •aml.al toeiat..i~ltory pointaout. ap&em,•• hllalcL---. ~OBMAN BOCKWE~L -
He'1 had the artlat's touch all his
Ufe -the one th1n.e that set him
apar t from the net1hborhood
kids and peera. And although
he 'a probably America'• Jnott
popular artist, h•'• aUll narobin• at 83 for the OH
maaterpltce ~t will put htm bl tl)e le8IDe al ••fiQe art." M•
eOctaW "-9 ltaft writer Saul
J.>.UloakllltManllt'•llle. •
Bollright Rapped
D ENVERJ (~P) -The Califomla auomey general and
the district attorneys ot San
J'rnaciaco and San Mateo County
art failint to carry out •late law
by not bJooklng a bloodless bu.UflPt ICbed&IW for lllSarU1. •a.va U. Amedull Bnw'MAl-IOdatklll. .. --.
: .. ..
A
HAVE A.WARM .ANO
GlOWING-CHRISTMAS
w10I -ft/ IM meot w.,..rful
GAS LOGSyeu wlll-"'"·
~ ... -. .._~ .... .
~ 11\e-yw Ulla ... .... .... ,.,.. ...,._ ... ~ ..........
• SP. CIA L PRICED FOR.
. HOLIDAY OIVINO
-AERlCAN_ 'iJOLETS
fully•-'-4 ,t.ttll \ft blut , •iel•t, p1oilc ........... 1 79 .~ Sbe llft. U.A9 .SAk $ •
•
1
' ftld41y. Oecem~ HI, 1177 NATION /WORLD
Benefit Tax Bi.lie Backed
Reluctant Congress OKs Social Security Bill ·
Shaking
Things Up
THE SHAKES: "We were sit·
ting at the dinner table in our
home on Lido Isle when the
dishes ~gan t9 move and slide
and falltothe noor .••
,• "We rushed outdoors. The two.
story house was swaying in the
twilight. Off toward Ne.wport
proper you could hear the tin-
kling of falling glass. as though
:windows were breaking. Off to the
no~th came a low, rumbling noise.
··our main idea was to get out
of there. Thoughtful daughter
Lucile turned off the gas under
,the hot water heater. We piled in·
fo the auto and high·tailed it for
Costa Mesa, where we felt things
-r·ould be better. But the situation
'$Vas worse; on the m ain street,
containing 00 percent of the bus1·
ncsscs, buildings were crum·
b ling ...
"THE NEXT DAV the tremors
continued. Long Beach had been
}e rr1bl y devas ta-ted and
telephone service was to no
a vail. .....
These were some of the
memories of the late Sam A.
Meyer, newspaper publisher,
when he recalled the devastating
~ Long Beach earthquake in his
• Newport Beach history. "Filly
: Golden Years."
That was the evening of March
. 10. 1933.
. Loni? Beach took the brunt of
. th al great earth shake in proper.
• ty damage. injury and death.
Nl'arby Huntington Beach also
:-uffcrcd heavy damage. And that
may have been one of the reasons
that Huntington Beach was visit·
ed this week by H. Roger Pulley,
who is an earthquake specialist
with the California Office of
Emergency Service.
His office is attempting to push
for preparedness in event
another large earthquake should
:;trike our region. He came lo
Huntington Beach to brieC of-
\f1 cials on progress.
• ANOTHER REASON he may
"" have selected Huntington Beach
is th al the city is one of the few in
California to pu~b hard for an
earthquake pre~arednes• pro·
gra m .
Putley had both comfortinJ?:
<ind discomfiting news in his re·
port to local officials.
His comfqrtlng news suggested
that a major quake isn't going to
cause Southern California to
break off and slide into the sea.
Further, it is his personal opinion
that within the next 10 years,
geophysical scientists will be
able to accurately predict earth-
•. quakes pretty close to the time.
they will strike.
But as for right at this mo·
ment. the discomfiting predic·
tion involved a quake that would
: strike about4:30o'clock in the af-
ternoon with a magnitude of 7.5
: on the Richter measuring scale.
T HAT KINDOF a major.earth-
quake. at that hour, could result
in 10,000 deaths, 40,000 injured,
110.000 homeless and billions In
property damage in Orange and
Los Angeles counties.
Clearly in our coastal area,
there has been a lot of construc-
tion and a lot of PoPUlaUon gain
since the evening of March 10,
1933.
ll 's really all the argument you
need for development of some ef-
fective earthquake preparedness
programs in our region.
WASHJNGTON CAP> -A biJl
requiring a $227 billion Increase
tn payrOll taxes over the next
decade lo support the Social
SecUt'ily system is on its way to
President Oarter. carrying lhe
unenthusiastic support of a ma.-
jorlty of Congress.
The blll Jrnpoaea a ~ater tax
burden on workers than Carter
had proposed. But. he aay1, the
measure tbat passed Con"reas on Thursday represents "a &<><>4
resolution" or the financial
problems faclng the Social
Security system, which pays
benefits each month to 33 million
Americans. .
THE SENATE approved the
• bill 56·21; the House vote was
189·163.
Even without the bill, Social
Security taxes are scheduled to
Increase on ~an. 1. With the bfll.
ev.ery American who pays into
Social Security -the total tod~y
Social Security Tax
~.~.~ ...... ], ~ ............... ,] • • •• t. ••
OLD LAI I NEW LAW r
····--·-. -:.-! " , ..._
·-• ··-....... "'._J
lUAILE TU MUIMUM UUILC TU MAXIMUM
YUi wa;l UTE TAX YEAR WAG( UTE TAX .
1!11 SIJ.700 us-. Sl.01U5 1111 S17.l00 6.0S"l. $1.170.15
fU9 11,100 l.05 1.143.45 1119 22.900 6.13 1.403.17
1910 ' 20.400 l.05 t.234.20 1110 2UOD 6.13 1.U U7
1911 21,IOO I.la 1,311.l O 1911 29.700 665 1,975.05
1112 23.400 1.30 1.414.20 IHZ 31.100 uo 2.130 '°
1913 24.900 1.30 1.5H.70 1113 33.900 6. 70 2.271.30
1914 2&,400 1.30 1.Hl.20 1114 SI.DOD 6.70 2.412 OD
1915 21.900 I 30 1.757. 70 IH5 31.100 7.05 2.615.05
1916 29.400 I 4§ 1.196.30 1916 40.200 7.15 2.114.30
1911 31.200 1.0 2.012.40 1117 42.100 7.15 3,045 90
I.fl I.fl
A" WI__.. CMr1
BILL TOPS CARTER'S PLANNED TAX BURDEN
President Call• It 'Good Resolution' of Problem
32 Succumb in Fire
At Mental Hospital
MANILA, Philippines <AP) -Fire swept through a mental hospital
building holding more than three times the number of patients it was
designed for, and 32 were killed early today, officials said.
Some of the victims were so indifferent they lay apathetically in the
burning ward while others fought off rescuers trying to get them out,
Dr. Jaime Castaneda, director of
the National Mental Hospital,
said.
He reported that six of the pa·
tients were treated for minor
s moke inhalation. He said some
of the patients may have
escaped, but "Police will get
them back," and they were not
considered dangerous.
Tafla Continue
WASHINGTON (AP)
Although Congress h as ad-
journed for the year. a small knot
of House and Senate negotiators
is still in town. struggling to
salvage some agreement on the
toughest piece oC President
Carter's eneray program.
The negotiators agreed after a
meeting with Carter to remain in ·
Washington during the recess in
an attempt to break the deadlock
over the natural gas p ricing sec·
lion or the president's plan.
Strike Seauered
By The Associated Press
Far mers in Texas are talking
about a mysterious "Phase II" of
their three-day-old strike while
their counterparts in Colorado
complain of what they described
as sprtactics by the U.S. Depart·
ment of Apiculture.
With all the talk, however.
there was no indication Tt\ursday
that the strike was h avlng any
widespread impact despite scat·
tered reports of demonstr ations
and ralll•ln several states.
GoNir"..e11l Eo.-..ftl
THE HAGUE. Netherlands
<AP >-A nine-month po11t1cal
stalemate ended today with the
formation of a center-right
Dutch government beaded by
ChristSJU\ Democratic leader An·
dries van Ag\. But it m ay have
trouble ~use it has a majority
of only four11eata in Parliament's
lower bouse.
Van Agt. who at 46 becomes
premier for the IJrst Ume. wtll
[_1_N_SH_O_R_T_J
lead an administration of 10
Christian Democrats and six
membe.rs of the conservative
Liberal Party. They will be
sworn in Monday.
Millionaire
Fights IRS
Over Gift Tax
CHICAGO (AP> -Millionaire
insurance executive W. Clement
Stone says he does not owe $3.4
miJlion in gift taxes that the ln-
tern al Revenue Service has
billed him for.
Stone is the largest individual
contributor to former President
Nixon 's campajgns.
The IRS maintains that Stone.
head of Combined Insurance Co.
of America, owes $3.4 million ln a
deficiency assessment because
his ls million in donations and
loans to Nixon's two presidential
campaigns and· $2 million more
to other politicians could be
classllied as gilts and thus sub-ject to taxation.
Stone aays his contributions
followed the rules wbJch make
the m exempt from taxes.
From 1988 to 1972, when Slone
made the contributions. the law
required that any contributions
or gift.a of more than $3,000 w~
taxable.
. Stone~ other large contribu·
tion1 gave money in $3,000
amounts to many separate com-
mittees formed by political can·
didat~ to avoid those taxes.
The IRS notl!ied Stone of its
judgment after an investigation
of more than two years.
·More Rain Due ·in North
I
..
. ,., ..
·· Minneao'ta, North Dakota Poat AdvUoria
~ ... -,...,, .... l'9Conl tow NfnOff__.. fftl 11119 dftl, •lno-U•• ...01~_.....,_ 1'lwldity from
FIOrldalo~
Amot19 Ille •-d fll9M for tlle
.. I•: tO •t Al-. ColO., '4 at
Gre11d ltl•IHI. Nell., •ncl u •t GoHleftel, ICM. •
Calffor•la
(CoaaroJ totather in.·
/otmaUon totU be found an
'?CBftodcr>
~-
is 107 million people -will face
even higher taxes starting in
1979.
For, high·income workers -
those who will be earning about
$42,000 a year or more 10 years
from now -and their employers,
payroll taxes will more than tri-
ple over the next decade.
THE TAX INCREASE on the "average" worker. who earns
$10,000, will go from the present
$585 a yearto$715in ,..7 ..
for the next 30 y,ears.
The system Is In trouble
because of a sluggi6h economy
and a declining birth rate. which
mean fewer workers are paying
into Social Security, and because
inflation and a quirk In a 1972 law
are driving up benefits. ·
'l'he 1972 law resulted in over-..
compensating future retirees for
increases in the cost of living.
· The section of the law. generally
considered to be a legislative er·
ror, ha§ the effect of giving a dou-
ble bbost in future retirement But the governmentex pects th~
average worker's income to in~
crease to about $18,600 a year by
1987, putting his tax under the bill
at $1,330 a year. That compares
with a $1,200 tax on that level in-
come under present law:
· benefits for people who are work·
ing now. It could result in some i.
future retirees getting pensions
larger than the paychecks they
earned their last year on the job.
In evecy case. the employer
would continue to match
whatever payroll tax is levied on
the employee.
ALL TOLD. TUE bill is de·
signed to bring an additional $227
billion into So~lal Security
between 19'79 and m&7. At least on
paper, the tax increases would
remain in effect far beyond that,
because the bill is aimed at keep.
mg the system financially sound
CORRECTI NG THAT quirk.
which will mean lower benefits
for some future retirees. will
erase about halC the long-range
deficit in .Social Security. The
other half will be made up by the
higher taxes.
The only major benefit in·
crease in the bill would double.
by 1982, the current $3,000 limit
on what a retired person 6S or
older may earn and still draw a
full pension.
APWl,.,...19
NOTHING BETTER
Jennifer Patri
Mote-killer Relieved
Manslaughter Verdict: 'CoID:plete Victory'
WAUPACA, Wis. (AP) -Jen-
nifer Palri expreissed relief when
a jury found her guilty of
manslaughter instead of murder
in the slaying or her estranged
husband. Witnesses said he beat
her.
The verdict Thursday was
described as "complete and total
victory" by her attorney. Elan
Eisenberg.
"I DON'T THINK I could ask
for anything better," said Mrs.
Patri:
However , Anne Gaylor of
Madison. a member of the Na-tional Organization for Women,
observing the nine-day trtal said, •
the former PTA chairman
"should have been acquitted."
A.Waupaca County' Court jury
of nme men and three women de·
liberated about two hours. Eisen·
berg had complained that there
were too many men on the jury.
·ALTHOUGH THE charge was
first ·degree murder , Judge
Frederick -Fink told the jury it
had the option of returning a
manslaughter verdict.
Fink ordered a presentence in·
vestlgalion and did not im·
mediately schedule a dale for
sentencing.
Mrs. Patri still faces an arson
charge for allegedly setting fire
to her farm home to conceal the
March 25 slaying of her husband,
Robert, 34. operator of an auto
body repair shop.
ACCORDI NG TO court
testimony, he had moved out five
months earlier and was living
with another woman. He was
shot to death during what Mrs.
Patri called a quarrel over
custody of their two teen.age
daughte.rs.
She testl!ied that he was shot
twice in the back with a shotgun
while backing toward her
threateningly. She had bought
the 12·gauge weapon two days
earlier.
Mrs. Patri told about years of
a rm-twisting and other abuse.
Brighten
your day!
E•ch day the Dally PHot add• • little
brlghtne•• to your llfe with colorful
columnlata, Interesting feature•,
eye-catching picture• - and of cour•e, 16
humor panel• and comic•.
Our own Tom Murphlne pokes gentle fun
at th• ltfe •nd politic• along the Orange
Co••t, In hi• wry "Ju•t Co•atJng" column.
Raya of hope and humor can be found In
the 1MW Featurtng pegea of the Dally Piiot.
That la where Ann Lande,. gtvn her cogent
and pungent Mvtce. And Erma Bombeck
turns houMhold happenlnp Into hllartty.
(And don't ml•• your horoecopef)
• On Saturday•, chlldren find game• 'and
glgglee In Uncle Len'a Corner, while adult•
turn to Herb Ceen'• entertaining column
1rom San Francleco.
the bright, new, eaaler-tcwead pages of
ffiTDilly Pflor brfng-you-the-newa you need,
Information you can u•• and •ome
day.t>rtghtenlng momenta. Keep up wUtt
your world and have a good ttme doing It,
with th•
DAILY PILOT
842-4321
Friends testified they had seen
her with bruises.
S H E SA I D S H E was
hospitalized in Cedar Rapids.
Iowa. when Patri threw her
against a bed in their apartment
two years before they were mar-
'ried.
Asked why l>hc had married
him "despite the fact th al he h1L
you" before the marria..:e, she
testified: "Because we already
had a child and I was pregnant a
second Lime and I loved him."
The prosecution contrasted
Mrs. Patri's pre-trial statements
about having shot her husband in
their kitchen with trial testimony
that Patri was slain in the base-·
• ment where he had chased her.
MRS. P ATRl SAID she was un·
able to recall such details.
An assistant district attorney.
Philip Kirk. called Mrs. Patri's
memory l<1pscs-"convenient."
Kirk said she was jealous
because .. her husband found
som ething with anoUttt woman
that he didn't find with her."
'
I
I.
CALIFORNIA
Pilanski
·Rei>Qrts
~o Gliino
SANTA MONICA CAP>
Roman Polanski, the
film dlrector who
pleaded iullty to having
aex with a 13-year-old
girl, ia going lo prison lo·
day for a court-ordered
90-day J>IYchlatrlc study.
Friday, December 16, 1977 DAILY PILOT A :J
Skeleton Dug Vp
-_ Manson Victim Found
LOS ANGELES <AP> same time the MaMOI\ Cary Hlnman, wbo w11 name th• m . Th~
S h er l r r ' s l n • Camily killed eieht other tortured before being gravulte was on rock-vestigators. guided by persons in two rughls of killed in an alleged effort strewn land near tht·
former members of the bloodshed. to get him to turn over in-rugged Santa Susana
Charles Manson family, The others killed were s urance money to the f4ountaln$.
have dug up a skeleton actress Sharon Tale, the Manson family. E~en t.hou&tt no body
b e I i e ve d to be a pregnant wife of movie wus found before trial.
Hollywood s tuntman dir ec tor Roman A SHERFIFF'S Manson, 43, Bruce
killed by the clan eight Polanski, and lour other spokes man said in · Davis, ZA , and Steve
years ago,officialssay. friends; Los Angeles vestigators were led to Gtogan, 27, were con.
Officers tentatively grocer Leno 'LaBian.ca the grave . by former vlcted or Shea's murder
identified the remains, and his wife, Rosemary; mem\)ers or the Manson Jn separate C-rials io 1971
found Thursday in a and 34-year-old musician-clan, but h~ decUned to and \972. shallow grave adjacent .....:::..:.:.::..:...::....:..::::.:....:.:.::..:::==.::::.....::.:.:.:~.=.:...:.;:...::.::.:.:.::.:.:;.;.::....;.;_ ________ _
Superior Court Judge l
Laurence Rlttenband
efgned an order Thurs.
day allowing the 44·year.
old Polanski to report
directly to the California
Men's Institute at Chino
today Without first un-
dergoing Inmate proc-
essing at Los Angeles
County Jail.
.,..1,..""°'" to the Spahn Ranch
where the Manson clan CONVICTED OF CHOWCHILLA KIDNAPPING WITH BODILY HARM lived, as lhOse of Donald
Richard Schoenfeld Frederick Woods Jemea Sc.hoenfeld Jero"'e "Shorty" Shea.
POLANSKI pleaded
guilty Aug. 8 to having
unlawful sexual 1n -
tercour$e, formerly
known as statutory rape,
with an unidentified
Woodland Hills· s chool
girl during a photo-
graphic modeling
session at actor Jack
Nicholson's Coldwater
Canyon home.
The orrense carries a
possible s entence or
from one year in county
jail to 50 years in statt•
prison.
RITTENBANO or -
dered the psychi atric
study Sept. 19 prior lo
imposing sentence on the
director of such films as
"Chinatown" and
••Rosemar.y's ·Baby,"
who was arrested March
10 after the girl's mother
filed a complaint.
De11uty District At-torh~Y-Jtd'ter~unsQn
said the study could take
less than 90 days and that
, after Polanski's release
from the San Bernardino
County fa cility, he will
have to return to court
with in three days.
"Then a date would be
set for sentencing," he
s aid. "The sentence
would be based upon the
recommendations of the
state prison
authorities.''
Kidnap Victims Hllppy
0ver Trio's Sentence
CHOWCHILLA (AP) --Word that
three young men will serve life in
prison with no possibility of parole for
kidnapping 26 school children and
their bus driver was good news to the
victims.
"They got what they deserved, ..
said 10-yea('·Old Rebecca Reynolds.
"because they didn't have any right to
kidnap us ."
"I F THEY HAO gotten off there
wouldn't have been an y justice
anyplace.·· added her mother, Mrs.
Robert Reynolds. "Now we know
there is justi<'e."
Fred Woods. 26. Ri chard Schoen·
feld, 23, and James Schoenfeld, 26,
were found guilty Thursday of kidnap-
ping with bodily harm, meaning they
will spend the rest of their lives behind
bars with no chance of parole.
ALAMEDA SU PERIOR Court
Judge Leo Deegan said fainting spells
and stomach djsordcrs testified to by
Jodi Heffington. Jennifer Brown and
Reb'ecca Reynolds constituted bodily
harm underthe law.
"I'm glud they got it." saui Mike
Marshall, 15. the oldest of the children
on the bus. "Now they can't gel out and
come look_ingforus again." .
JOHN BROWN, the father of kidnap
victim Jennifer Brown, had similar
sentiments.
"I'm r eleived it's all over with," he
said. "lt's a relief to the ~hildren to
know lhey'IJ'never have to worry.
a bout being confronted ey the in-
dividuals on the street."
Miss Heffington, 12, said, .. I'm
gla~. 11 thought he Clhe judge) would
say guilty all the ti.me.
BUS DRJVER Ed Ray, proclaimed
the hero of the kidnap incident, was
leaving on his regular bus route at the
end of the schoolday in Chowchilla
when'Deegan announced the verdict. ··r really didn't expect this verdict,
but H sounds good," he said.
However, Ray said he didn't agree
with Deegan's ruling that he. hadn4t
suffered bodily harm. During the trial
Ray and a doctor testified that the bus
driver suffered after-eCfeets oCbeatex·
ha us lion.
LINDA VAN HOFF, mother of vie·
tim Cindy Van Hoff, said the verdict
will spell the end of a fearful chapter
in her daughter's life.
"l think it wijl be good for her
because everybody will quit talking
about it," she said. ''Maybe we can
all ~et back to normal living again."
"My firs( r eaction is relief," said
M ::id era County Sheriff Ed Bates.
"My concern is not out of vindictive-
ness, but I'm hopeful this will be a de:
terrent."
"Justice has been done," said
Chowchilla Mayor Robert "Red"
Perry. "I concur with the judge and
everybody l 'vo talked to feels the
same way."
.H~avy Snow Over Sierra ..
Skies Clearing in North Area
I ... FRESH
FRAGRANT . HOLIDAY
GREENS
Fresh fir
·and pine
boul)la.
CEDAR CARLAND •@•
YOUR LIVING CHRISTMAS
TREE BECOMES
ONE OF THE F AMIL Y0
. ProJ*..)7 tubbed and cared for, JOUf tree
may be cued year after,..,.
The eoullty coroner is to
confirm the identity lo·
day.
SHEA, 36, u handyman
a t th e ranch in
Chatsworth, about 30
miles northwest oC
downtown Los Angeles,
disappeared in the sum·
J'ber of 1969, about the
Voyagers
En Route
To Target
PASADENA <AP) -
T h e second ol two
Voyager space probes
bound for the outer
.NOW OPEN
. Breakfast and
Lunch as well .as
Dinner
7 days a week
Come enjoy our
varied menu and savor
the view
planets of the solar -===========--=-~~~--'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ system has caught up
with its twin and taken ~
the lead en route lo their
first scientJfic target,
Jupiter.
Voyager l, second of
the cran to be launched
last summer, pulled
even 'with Voyager 2 on
Thursday at a point 78
million miles from
6NEWHOMES
IN SAN CLEMENTE
Earth. ·
The twin probes were
hardly neck·and-neck,
however, being ,10 1h
million miles apart while
equidistant from Earth.
2V2 & 3 BATH • 3&4 BEDROOMS
FIREPLAtE • DELUXE KITCHENS
Voyager 1 wil( soar
past Jupiter on March s.
1979, with its 'cameras
·taking what are expect·
ed to be the clearest pic-
tures yet of the giant
planet, and 10 sclenllflc
instruments scouting the
atmosphere, magnetic
fields, radiation and
other phenomena.
Voyager 2, traveling on a
slower coui'st,,wlll pa~ ~
J upiter July 9, 1979.
ON CUL-DE-SAC
sas,750 to $91,500
A. L. WULFECK
General Contractor
492~8366·--492~2981
Save 25 % . Decorative toss pillows
Scoop up our toss pillows. Square ones, round ones, plump ones,
slim ones. Country style, contemporary chic, naturals and prints,
sofids and fancies. They'r~ the perfect accent for sofa and chair, for
bedroom or den. Selected plllow.s from Riverdale, Bloomcraft,
Crawford Pillows of Calif ornla, and Dakotah. These pillows
regularly $12-$24. Come see our collection, and save.
Draperies
. or
I
!
•
Founda on Hospital in Pcorama City, called a11tborittei Thursday
alter his wtfe Janet, 34,
wu •tabbed. olfle~r•
The finellt.
with huge
velvet blooms.·
...
•'-...... t •• .,.
OAKLAND (AP) -A
I
• Alao Azaleas, Mum•,
al)(f more. In HolidRy Wri.p.
ParentA .. i~Wf ,'" µ,c kJdit tor their little t.reett
to-6, Sun 12-6. BulJock's South Coast Plaza, 3333 Br~t~l,C.M .• 656-0611
/ •
• ..
./ •
r
...&........-~-_......_ .. _ -------"~_j -----~-· .::---~
•
. Frh:lay, O.cefT\ber 16, 1977 ..
~bert N. WHCl/Publlsher Thomes ~Mvll/Edltor , t
Barbara Krelblch/Edltorlat P• Editor o •• _eo..1 D••lyP!lo• Edito ria l P~e ........................................................................
·Ziggurat Reflects
Housing Dilemma ..
A congrcsbaon a l subcommittee \'ISitmg Orange Count~· last week focused r enewed attention on the seven-tiered Babylo~n·style ~lggut·at in Laguna Niguel, a S50 million
to $80 million building now being called a federal govern·
ment embarrassment and a sprawling white elephant
Why? Because the structure s tands nearly empty and
from m ost appearances probably will continue to because
Orange County housing prices arc too s teep for employees
who might come to work there. I
The House Subcommittee on Buildings and Grounds
.met for three hours with countv officials las t week to dis·
cuss the empty building and the hou5ing problems that ure
the cause.
• They didn't come up with any solution:-..
What they did do was once again point out the coun· ~y·s critical shortage of housing for low -and moderate -
income residents, not just homes they might purchase but
apartments they might br able to afford to rent as well.
Even if homes could be found for enough federal
workers to fill the structure, there aren't enough schools
nearby to hold the workers' childre n.
Unfortunately, there are no s imple solutions for eithe r
the IOY{·Cost housin g or school crowding problems.
Perhaps for the present the handsome ziggurat will have
to remain WfiSled and nearly empty on its hillside.
· Or perhaps the best temporary solution would be lo
turn part of the building into class rooms so badly needed
by the overcrowded Capistrano Unified School District.
Richer But Poorer
t f your income h as increased by almost half in the past
five years and you still don"l feel any better off financially.
you ·re right alongside the average wage earner. .
In fact, uccording to the Tax Foundation, the m edian
income of a family with one full-time worker has increased
46 percent since 1972, but the family is 3 percent "poorer"
in after-tax purchasing power.. .
In this five-year period , the median income rose from
Sl 1.152 to 516,248, a healthy $.5,096.
But federal income taxes for a family of four at this
le\ cl rose from S985 to Sl.646, while Social Security taxes
more than doubled, going from S468 lo $951.
Add s tate and local taxes and the inflation factor, and
the family com es up with a net loss of $258 in spendable in·
come. using 1967 dollars as a constant.
ll may or m ay not be encourngmg to leurn that the
.~ate and local governments are d oing considerably bet·
ter. Tax Foundation fi gures show that. nationwide, they're
Lak in~ in m.Qrc money than they're s pending, with
rc\'enues up 29 percent since 1975 recession a nd expen-
ditures up only 19 percent.
Federal revenue-s haring accounts for part of this, but
on a n average stale a nd local tax collections increased 59
percent in the five years from 1971lo1976.
California now ranks third from the top of all the stales
1 in per capita tax collections, with a 60 percent increase from
, 6603in1971 toS964 in1976. ~ ~ This is topped onfy by New York <up 65 pe rcent lo
br1n, • und Ala~ka. with a staggering 307 percent increase ~g apita tuxes over the five years -from $166 Lo
y ' ·re looking for a better tax climate. how about
sas. at the bottom of the list with a per capita state and
cal tax average of $454?
Public Property
Another court ruling has confirmed the public
ownership of documents ;.\Ccumulatcd during a public of-
ficial's term of office.
Last week a federal judge ruled that the transcripts of
H e nry Kissinger's tele phone conversations taken by his
secretaries "hale he was national security ad viser and
secretary or state. belong to the government, not to Kiss·
inger.
The former secr eta ry had deeded the documents to the
L ibrary of Congress. with the proviso that o nly Kissinger
or his appointees s hould have access lo them for 25 years
or until five years afte r his death, whichever comes later.
But ll)e court a greed with the Reporters Committee
for Freedom of the Press, the American Historical As-
sociation and others who contended the public bas a right
to access to the material under the Freedom of lnforma·
lion Act.
The judge fu11her ruled that documents removed by
Kissinger when he le ft office should be re turned to the
Sta te Department.
T he court decision probably will be appealed, but by
now it seems rather clear that public officials will have to
get.us¢ to the idea that the records of their office are the
properly of the United States Government, a nd except
where very genuine matters or national security are in·
volved,_are indeed public property. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Oaity Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authore and
arttats. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92628, Phone (714) 642·4321.
.. Boy.d/Matrimo~y .
B;LM.JIOYD
· U JOU ~ your bU1band
like a '**9 .10'Jng lady, will
you 1et aloGI with him bet· ~r? Jf yau ... Uatougb your
lie .ar:!l: ,...., i.now.,.
will u.at 11111.P Pl'O.«Dote peace Jn tbe fam.llJT Studenta of
Dear
Gloomy
Gos
NoW I know my landlOrd
thlllkl I'm stu1>l4. He -was
1u?»riled th• I trnew a broken Adlet when I aaw oee, and even more aur··
pr!Hd when l dldn 't
.,. .. It 1boold take three·
wetbtofixltl J.E.
matrimonial matters long
have debated whether Un•
deratandlnt one's partner
tends to bring about marital
happlnest. And tbe answer Is
Jf the researcb,ers at the
University of Chlcag.o are
rt1bt. Tbe)' 1ay their studies
Indicate the typical husband
and wife are Jun u contented
even lt they don't have the
fo11lat notion of what lllakes
each other tick. Our Love and
War man ls anaJntn1 these fin41np preliminary to hlB
final report.
Q. •iwJ>o was Hollywood's
!Int black star?"
A. Lincoln Theodore Perry
otberwtae known u st~pin
Fetchlt.
Q. How much dJd Alaalrl
costUi per acre?" A. Two cent.a.
• Q1 °Wbat WM t!wftm COlD•
mwclal TVMowf"
A. T9d Meet&'• ortalnal >.m...-11our1au.
Rowland Evam/Roberi Novak •
Carter Seeks Graham's Ad-vice ' .. I
WASHINGTON -An
ecumenical link with poliUcaJ
overtones between the powerful
evangelical Christian movement
and the American Jewish com·
munity has caused P resident
Carter to seek guidance (t om the
Rev. Billy Graham.
He privately sought out the na·
lion's foremost evangelist
because his
administra·,
lion's Mideast
policy ha s
angered not
only Jews but
Mr. Carter's
hardcore base
of born-again
Christians.
Asking advice
from Or.
·.
Graham alter some reluctance,
tbe President was counseled to
go slow. The role thus played by
Bi11y Graham stems from an ln·
teractipn of religion and politics,
direc(ly aHecting American
foreign policy.
Graham bas been courted by
leading Jewish activists for
several years in a successful ef.
Cort to bind Jews and Christian evangelists together as a new
pro-Israel political force. Unify.
ing 5 million American Jews and
50 million evangelicals (who in·
elude Jimmy Carter, a twice·
born Christian) is the mutual, an·
ti-Communist fear of Soviet in·
rJuence in the Middle East.
ecutive council ineeUng. I
Described later by Tanen··
baum u "a message intended
fo; tbe White House," Graham's
emotion-packed addreu a\·
tacked Palestinian terrorbu and
called for America'• rededlc.a-
tion to the existence and safety of
Israel. Two weeks later, Tanen·
baum notified all AJC area direc·
tors about Graham's s~cb, cit·
Ing it as one \'flOre example of
• 'd~ep and widespread
(evangelical) support of Israel
and opposition to PLO (Palestine
Li be ration OrganJzatlon) ter-
rorism."
"IN VIEW of public stat~
ments by some members or the
Carter administration to 'bring
leverage' one-sidedly on Israel
and to 'baflize' the PLO as
legitimate,' Tabenbaum aald,
Graham's opposition to PaJesti·
nian "terrorism" was notable. lt
was also evidence of deep sup-
port for Israel "among t'ie some
50 million.evangelical Christians
.... This support assumed
particular value since it comes
from 'born-again'. Christians
who were the first power base of
President Carter's candidacy.•'
Whal one year ago might have
seemed an inevitable connection
between J immy Carter and Billy
THOSE IN.position to know are ~lk:M=ll\/
loath to talk specifics about what 11('\ 1 ri
one insider calls the "growing .. ..
communication" between the t
President and Billy Graham.
This much is known: Mr. Carter
has personally sought Graham's
counsel on evangelical reactions
to his Mideast policie:s, especial·
ly since the joint U .S.-Sovlet
Mideast statement of Oct. 1,
which jolted both the Jews and
the evangelicals. -· Graham's response was a -------: clear word of warning, fortifying a
a cascade of angry criticisms
from Jewish activists across the
nation about bringing Moscow
back into the Middle East equa·
tion. It is Graham's conviction
that Mr. Carter dare not take his
evangelical base for granted.
T he slow buildi ng or the
J ewish-evangelical coalition
reached a climax Oct. 30 when
Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, the
articulate, imaginative director
of the American Jewish Commit·
tee's National InterreUgious Af.
fairs division, shared the state
with Graham in Atlanta .
Graham was there as keynote
speaker at the_AJC's. national ex·
Paul Harvey
Orabam wu in ract aborted by
Mr. t:arter's concern over
Rlchard Nixon's courtship of
Graham. Tbe President felt.that
would make the evangelist IUI·
peel to liberals. Graham hlmeeU
is sensitive 'Bbout lb.Lt, once tell·
ing a press conference ln Dallas
that although be bad been Nix-
on's Wblte House euest three
times, he bad visited Lyndon
Johnson there inore than 30
times.
MR. CARTER'S reluctance lo
b8 caught close to Graham lasted
only until the first major moral
crisis ot the Carter admlnlstr~·
tion : charges against Carter6·
Umate Bert Lance which ended
in Lance's resignation as budget
director. Soon thereaftet, the
President sought Graham's
counsel on bow to minimize tbe
political impact of Lance's public
disgrace, felt most sharply in
Mr. Carter's own Bible Belt.
. That started a dialog whicb
ripened when the Carter White
House was rocked by polltlcal re·
action to the Oct. 1 U.S.·Soviet
policy statement, bringing
Moscow t>ack into Mideast peace
politics. The l!ame statement put
an American President for the
first time on record favoring the
"legitimate rights" or the'
Palatinian people and· calll.01
· for Iaraell withdrawal <11 all prevlous Presldenu have) tram
Arab land.a occupied ln t.be 1181
war. ' •
Evanaelicala take tbe Old ...
Testament seriously. Many S
a1ree 1"tth reu,ious Jews -and •
Israeli Prime M.lnlater Mepabem
Begin -tbat God iDtaded the ,•
J ews to have all ol Pal•UM west ·~
of the Jordan Rivet (an bis· ~
torical·rellgloua lnlerpretation .~
shared neitber by Mr. Carter nor j
by tens of mHUON or other Chria· -~ tiaos and M011lenu). _..
~ THUS. while playinf it low· ~
kw. n group of eading ; evangelical churchmen in a New ('
York Times advertisement last
month called themselves
"particularly troubled by the
erosion of American goveromen·
tal support (or Israel .evident ln
the joint U.S. ·Soviet statement.'•
tbe group al.so viewed wlUi
"grave concern" any effort to
carve a "poliUcal enUty" tor the
Palestinans out. or the Weat
Bank.
Just such a "political enUty" is
the hes.rt of the Carter pollcy. So
to protect his policy in the
Mideast -and his evan1ellcal
base in the rlble -Jimmy Cart e r ls t lng to Billy
Graham for e p.
., . 1.
..
A Cut-r ate Compute~ m ·Your Future
Not everything costs more.
Mass production and competition
still cooperate to benefit the con··
sumer.
In 1941 the ftnt ballpoint pens
cost $4L Within 18 months that
price was down to 88 cents.
Tbe first digital watches cost
$500. Within 24 months digital
w a tches-
i mproved
over earlier
models-were
available for
$27.
Now wait'll
you s ee
what's next in
COTR puters !
There is a
home-size
computer available for this
Christmas lbat will wake you up
in the monilng, switch on your
shower, warm your coffee. While
you have breakfast il will flash
Charleii McCabe
on a screen for your perusal the
day's agenda.
After you leave for work the
computer will monitor the heat in
the house, watch for seepage .in
the basement. telephone you in
case of flrefDd the police ln case
of break·in. -
YOUR COMPUTER will
catalog your recil>t' me for in·
stant replay, help you balance
your checkbook, perfe,.ct youi:
bridge strategy, remind you of
appointments and birthdays. It
can be programmed to order-
groceries and g ather by
telephone for your perusal com·
puterized research m aterials
from a data bank or the public
library.
This is not some futuristic de·
vice for the year 2000; a home·
size compttter capable of all
these chores and more is avail&·
ble and adapt.able now.
If the initial cost is presently
prohibitive, so was the initial
cost of a digital watch.
Recently a hundred computer
firms, large and small, dem-
onstrated their newest In
Chicago. Any visitor was left
wfde-eyed tiut convinced that the
age of the computer bas begun
and that it will be altogether as
exciting as was the innovation of
television 30 years ago.
WITH THE world "speeding
up," as we frequently complain,
science is providing a means of
keeping up with the speedup by a
computer that is roughly one
inillion limes as fast as a human.
Jt is not altogether as simple as
I have made il sound. For a com·
puter to perform the fun ctions [
have mentioned it must be pro·
gram med for your purposes. No
computer can c6mpute when
your house is being robbed
Court, Psychiatrists Cancel E ach
I know fairly well four or five of
the town's leading criminal laW¥em~The5e chapshve..been.
around and can prove that two
and two make five, if need be. In
one thing they are unanimous:
Their coai.mpt for the practice ot
u s i n s p "' c h i a t r y a n d pa1chlatrlltl lD crUninal trials.
"You can bu1 those blrds like
aaaa•«•~· 1a11 one of the more
out1p~uren
l 8 W.)' el' I .
"Youe•blre
one and HY
anYUUna you
want 1al.d. to
make any
flndlaf you
want fouad.
The1 m•k• the practice
of criminal .
Jaw an even treat.er fatte than U
bulcaU,la. •
'1ln UM end the jQJ")' deddet
wt.k.b lbrtM ii ~ er.Ubl•
.... tbil otber. -~ ..... tMT
" I
•
rule the testimony cancels itself
out. The common sense of the
~u.ry 11 applied t4 t.h e non.·
psychiatric evidence.'•
SOME SUPPORT to this view
was made public the other day by
a psychologist apeaklng before a
recent mffting of the National
Homicide Sympoalum la Los
Aogele1. •
Jay 1Jlkhl, a prol-.or at tbe
counsellnl center of California
State Univenlty. Lqe Aateles.
aaid teltimoay o1 DeYCbiatrlsta
should not be permftted 1D ~
be<:auae tbeJ' do Dot know uy
more a&out their subject than
laymen.
••Jt you heed a pqcblatriat to
·tell you tbat....AM-detenclanl t. era~,•• aald%ltldn, •'be ile't. ..
He 1114 that teltllDOGJ M to the
prior mental eondltm 11 ·~.
less ... "It doel not JPeet the re-
qd.iHm.W ol law for qpert
tttt:lmony .• _ •.• lt ii ~ •· nUabM,~ylucftrata.
"A psychiatric diagnosis is
more likely to be wrong than
right. It is-even mOt'e likely to-be
wrong when trying to assess his
mental coodit.ion at some time
previous to the examination."
STRONG STUFF, you mllht
say ; and, coming from a
member of th~ mental fraternity,
rather a routµi1 ol bis· own nest.
Thls la not quite true.
Psychiatrlsta are docton who
have gone to medical school and
specialhe In mental dlJonSen.
P1ychologlat1 study human
behavior from a non·medic8'-
vlewpoint.
J co along with ZlsMn. The pro-
fession ot p1ychiatry. is to put It
k1ndly, a rather v.gue atfd dis·
ordered dlac:lpllne. Sbrinb deal
with the human mind, of wblch
very Utt.le is known that wu not
known to WiWun Shak•pean;
and th• aberrations of the human
mlnd, of which even 1 ... la
boWn.
without the instalJalion of
sophisticated and expensive
proximity sensors at all doors and
windows. To compute your taxes,
somebody has to feed into the de-
vice the latesttax laws. ~
But these changing tax laws
will doubtless become available
on m1niature cartridge tapes.
ONE TELEMETRY system
displayed is capable of 2SO,OOO
calculations a second and retails
for $1,070.
The first pocket calculators .•
cost hundreds of dollars, but
within two years were available .
for less than $20.
The home computer-after we ·
first get acquainted with them in
the rorm of TV attachment.
gam es-will be included as
routinely in new home tonstnlc·
"lion as the room-to-room 1teteo
presently is.
Other Out
..
. ' ,
The human mind is quirky •I
and intractable. .(Cler nearly a
centuey or Freudlaathel'~p~ MCI
all other forms ot treatment for
illness, it remains quirk¥ and in-
tractable.
The record of ncces1 In treat-
ment ot neuroeea and psycboles •
ta lamentably 1matl, Jud1ed even
by the 1taU1tlc1 of t be ~
psycblatrlata tbemaelns. .. #
IT WAS Zisldn'1 hope that the . ,,
.American Payeblatrtc Alsocla·
Uon would ccntkler "unethical'• .
t.be pracUce of lhrfnke offering
court testimony an a prior men-
tal conclltion becllUSe "they don't •
bave the competence to do 10.,.
Thls, I think, 11 a sound idea,
a.ad one which abould be taken up
by the more rapouible doctors
ia the profession. We would have f alnr ad faster trtal1 u a n-
1Ult; ud the ••aeec1au1t1 .. now .,
tmplo1ed by la~ would have \
lllore time to explore their .,,._
VU. fl*lllt¥. tbeJauuau mind..
•
I
'I BELIEVE THIS IS THE PRETTIEST TREE'
Mike Ru110, Center, Saye It Works Like Magic
Tree Means Joy
Wncrete Canyon: A Nice Place
By JULES LOH
Al'~i.IC." ...... llt NEW YORK -This is the city of the
cold shoulder and the granite heart, so
it is said. the island of cynicism with
no room for sentiment. Bah, humbug.
"When that tree goes up, yo~can't
find a more neighborly place,• Mike
Russo said. "That tree works lil<e
magic."
THE TREE JS the one in New
York 's front y ard, the one in
Rockefeller Center, the one that is lit
each year on television totheoohs and
aahs of the nation. Mike Rtmo has
watched it work its magic tor 20
years.
That's how long Mike Russo, a
native New Yorker well versed in the
city 's moods, has worked In the
security department of Rockefeller
Center. watching the ·doors of lbe
great buildings. greeting the hun-
dreds of friends he has made over the
years among the 60,000 who work In
this city within a city.
"When I was a kid," he said, "I
never got a chance to come to
Rockefeller Center at Christm as
time. Those were hard times back
then. I lived on the Upper East Side
and we r arely got out of the
neighborhood.
• "BUT TIDS YEAR I'm going to.'
bring my grandson down to see the tree-
arid all the Ughts and decorations. He's
JO months old: I don't think that's too
young to enjoy it."
No, certalnly not, and neither is any
age too old.
( AMERICA )
Army trumpets summon joy to the
world. Roasting chestnuts from ven·
dors' ~arts perfume the air. Dickens
himself might have designed the set·
ting.
Above il all stands the masnificent
tree, a perfectly tapered pyramid or
green with branches swaying in the
wind Uke a sequined ballerina skirt.
"EVERY YEAR WHEN they bring
, the tree I get anxious," Mike Russo
said. "I always wonder if it's going lo
• be as nice. as the last one. So far, I've
never been disappointed. I don't know
how they always man4ge lo find a
perfect tree.'•
Not by accident, that's for sure,
though luck can play a part
This year, two Rockefeller Ct'nler
e mployees, Jim Reed and John
Godwin, traveled 8,000 miles inspect-
ing trees. about 40 or them, before
Godwin stumbled upon this beauty in
Dixfield, Maine, while fetching his
two sons home from sum mer camp.
It is a soaring white spruce, 65 feel
tall and 35 feet across at its lowest
branches. Arlything smaller would be
dwarfed in the c ity's concrete
canyons.
. "' frl~y. O.C.mti.r 11, "'1977 11¥C DAILY PILOT A 7
'Star' ·could Re-appear
Astronomers: 'Explosion' .Lighted Bethlehem
LONDON <AP> The biblical star of
Bethlehem was probably a giant thermonuclear
space explosion that could recur any time, three
astronomers report in an article published here.
The two Britons and a New Zealander say they
reached their conclusion after studying records of
ancient Chinese and Korean astronomers believed
lo have seen the phenomenon.
THE ARTICLE, PUBUSHED IN the pres ..
Ugious journal of the Royal Astromomical Society,
was written by Dr. John Parkinson of the Mullard
Space Science Laboratory al Dorklng, Dr Richard
Stephenson of the Institute of Lunar and ~lanetary
Sciences at Newcastle University and New
Zealander Dr. David Ctark of the Royal Greenwich
Observatory.
The star or Bethlehem, as described in the
Gospel according to St. Matthew, was a llght shin·
ing "in the easl" which led the Wise Men to the
birlhplaceofthe infant Jesus.
cubic Inch, would be pu\Un1 bydrosen gas ocr th~
larger star. ·
"The hydrogen would steadily accumulate
around the denae star unW, at. a certain critical mo·
meat, it would detonate ln ._ thermonuclear ex·
plosion. Then the whole process ol accumulatine
hydrogen would start. alt over again until the next.
nuclear explosion, perhaps several thousand years
later."
PARKINSON SAID THE PROSPECT of
another explosion could mean the star of Bethlehem. might. appear aiain at some lat.er date. But, the
scientist. added, lt was unlikely anyone would·
rccognlzeit.aasuch.
TM article said more confirmation of their
•theory was found ln an early Korean work, the
Chronicle of SUia ln the History of the Three
KJngdoms. The positions recorded by both the
Chinese and Korean records talUed with St. Mat·
thew's Gospel saying tbe star had appeared to the
Wise Men in Lbe east.
IN THE PAST, SCIENTISTS have thought the appearance or the star may have been caused by The article said only astronomers in the Far--
the conjunction of the planets Jupiter, Saturn and East in those days were 'reaUy interested in stars
Mars, or by a comet or meteor that lll up the sky. while scientists in the Middle East and elsewhei:e
But the journal article says the ancient Chinese were more concerned wilh the planets. It said this
Astronomical Treatise of the History of the Former · explains why there are no Western reporu of the
Wa•t• Water
Oregon Gov . Bob
Straub doscn 't like
the recommendation
that water from tht.•
Columbia River bt•
routed to Southern
California. "Thesc-
jerks in Los Angeles
just have no business
with the ... water, ..
he said. Han Dynasty recorded the 70-day appearance ot a sightings.
brlghtst.~altherighttimeandintherightplace~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
havebeenthe starofBethlehem. UBLIO IUOTIO The period the star was seen was typical of a
nova, a so-called new s tar lhat is in fa ct a runaway ·
thermonuclear explosion on the surrace'of a "white
dwarf" star in a two-star systepi, the article said.
"IT lS LIKELY TO HAVE been caused by a
small, i;yper·dense dying star in orbit around a star
that is probably still shining," Parkinson said.
'"The dense small star, with its enormous gravlta·
tional field caused by its density of several tons per
JFK Link
FBI Visit
Not Clarifit:d
W ASllINGTON (AP ) -The FBI's files re·
leased on the Kennedy assassination do nQt say why
the agency delayed telling the Warren Commission
that the name or an FBI agent was in Lee Harvey
Oswald's address book. .
The agcnl was James P. Hosty. The book also
included Hosty's car license number, a phone
number and the address of the bureau's Dallas of·
fice1 The entry was dated Nov. l, 1963, three weeks
before the assassination ol President. Kennedy.
HOSTY HAD GONE TO the Dallas home of
Oswald's Russian-born wife after Oswald applied
for a viSa lo Cuba while he was in Mexico. His wife
bas said she noted Hosly's license number and
name and gave them to Oswald.
The files show that. FBI Director J . Edgar
Hoover told the Warren Commission on Jan. 17,
1964, that Hosty's name had been omitted from the
book's list. of names giv.en earlier lo the com-
ESTATE JEWELRY & FINE PORCELAINS, CHINA,
BRONZES, RUGS, FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS. Etc.
1~ Million Dollars Worth
FREE ADMISSION -PUBLIC AND DEALERS WELCOME
Don't miss this important sale!
fine China, Crystaf, Porcelains, Bronzes, European Furniture, Oils, Etc.
FINE GIFT ITEMS -JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS
Also, many fine pieces of antique and contemporary jewelry including fine
watches, solitaire diamond rings, earrings, gold chain•. cluster diamond,
ruby, sapphire, and emerald rings.
SALE NIGttT
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
December 16, 17, 18
8:00 P.M.
INSPECTION
2:00 P.M. -5:.00 P.M.
and 7 • 8 P.M.
Sale Nights.
TERMS : Ban kAm•ricord • MaS111rChergc
Per'l>nel chec~ • Ci>ih ·Some extended 111rms can be arrangecf.
Property moved for conveniMce of sale to:
Cl<c111porl r;S'Jd!!erie.r, t:2td
2542 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach, CA
(714) 645-2200
CONSfGNMDITS ACCEPTED 'Tll 5 pm FRIOAV
Art Levine• Auctioneer
................................. .-...... .-.............................. ..
At Christmas time in Rockefeller
Center, young eyes brighlen with
wonder and old ey~ glisten with their
own best memories of childhood.
USUALLY, REED explained, find·
ing a tree isn't so easy. Even when a
likely one is located it has lo be ac·
cessibl~. Often it entails a year.Jong
search, following up tips, answering letters from visitors to Rockefeller -----------------------------------------------
LIGHTS, TENS OF thousands of
them. warm the gray December sky
like winter fireflies signaling a lime of
ho~. Bells. tinkly bells on sldewal:~
Santas and deep·t.hroated bells of St.
Patrick's Cathedral, serenade ice •
skaters circling and dancing on the
plaza rink.
At noon, school choirs from all over
the city bring their own sounds of in'.
nocencef:Od on Fifth Avenue Salvation
Center -they number in the hun. dreds of thousands every yeu-who
have been awed by the annual tree.
Once located, workmen lovingly
fold its branches to the trunk and tie
them. A crane hitches a cable lo the
top so it won't .fall when cut. Police
cars escort it lo Rockefeller Center.
Electricians erect a scaffold and
spend todays decorating it.
"'Ihis Is the 45th year they've bad a
tree," Mike Russo said ... I've seen the
last 20. 1 believe this is the prettiest
one I've seen. or course, I say that
every year."
Parents of 'Sam' Try
To Carry On _Living
BOYNI'ON BEACH, Fla CAP> -
Their peaceful r etirement shattered
• by accusations that their adopted
child is the Son of Sam killer, Nathan
and Julia 1'erkowitz are trying to re~
set.tie their lives -with help· from
their neiehb(>rs.
• .. Llle goes on, .. M ra. Berkowit1 said
Sn an hlterview. 0 We're doing the best
wocan."
"NAT SAISBD DAVID as b1I own. 80D.'• abe aald. "lt wu all a complete
ahock. David was never in trouble a
day in bis life. I mean, he was even an
auxiliary fireman." '
Nathan BerkQ.witz, 68, who adopted
David at. an early age, declined to dis·
cuss his feelings with a report.er.
The couple were married several
ears ago alter their spouses died and
oved here about two years ago alter
erkowjtz sold his hardware st.ore in
he Bronx. He soon became an official
f the-condominium· association
here they live, medlat.lng disputes
ween apartment owners.
THE~, AT 5 A.!tl. bn Aue. 11, the
lepbcne rani.
The call was from a relaUve tn Ne•.
ork. David had been arrested. ~ reportef1' were ringlnt the
and Berkowlts was fiytng to
tw Yod to help h1a IOD. »-rlnl a brief newa coo.f erenee two ar• latert a weeping Na~ban
rkowits uaced the pate]Jta of Son of m•• victlmt, "not t.o burden \II with
r feeUnp toward David. By us l
ean all tboae people who have
n David and me. We too are vie·
1 of t.hll traaedy. •'
~~
Al' ........
'SON OF SAM' SUSPECT
Da.vld Berkowitz
same people wllo couTQnol agree on
such mat.lerl as when eueat.s should
be allowed on the tennis oourts, sent. a
Jetter to the Berkowltzes, pleadln1
wltb them to stay.
"P EOPLE DISAGllEE about lltUe
things," said Mrs. Bertowlt1. '',But on
the big things they pull together."
The neltbbon are still protect.lve.
One frleocl refuted to introduce a re·
porter t.o Berkowitz, saying, 'I'd be
marked lousy. Nobody talks to them
about It. It.'1 a terrtblo thing that h•p·
pened, and we're all trying to help
them forget. It." .
Mrs. Berkowitz said that of the hun·
6retk of letters she has received, only
one wu rnild1y abusive. The rest. wtre
aupporUvo.
"MOST SEEMED TO be 1.,tne, 'It
could happtn to anybody. There but.
lor the ll'•ct ol God 10 I,' •• abt 1ald.
D avlcl Berkowltl, :U, la awaltlnr
lrlal ln New York m tht all)'lni of a
Brookl1ll womaa.
\ ..
~i?\ :THE GREATEST
~ .{:; .
Great ;k S EAR:
Idea ~ . ··
· for ~OFFER E~R MADE
Christmas RNAL 3 DAYS
FRI., SAT., SUN.--DEC. I 6, 17, 18
ALL PRICES DRASTICALLY
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE
EYERYTHlll ,M•T ICll
Fri. thru Sun.-10 a.~. to S p.m.
RNA' REDUOIONSll
-THOUSANDS OF ITEMS-UP T0 .75% OFF
DOWN PARKAS
fro...!31'
N()W$25
"°" .. """"
.... ..........
Clll6fll6 ,.., ..........
PARKAS
1JS '14
NOW '10.'15 .....
Repeat of Last.
Years Sellout
-OIJ61HA.L
COST
DOWN.VESTS
?M-
HOW s12so
AU. YllTI ..... .......
at the ..
. BACKDOOR FACTORY
OUTLET STORE .
CHICa-.4Alfla CHAI .......
s.. ..... ~.
NEAR MAIN & DYM RD.-SANTA .AMA
. 2710A S. Maill St.
7.l-(!'776
'
. ..
j
I
1 •
Aid
Fairview
Yule Party.;
A number of businesses.
sc:boola and of.her orianautions
Will be brmglng the holiday spirit
lo P•Uents al Fairview State
Hospital In Costa Mesa this mc)Dlb.
· Among the special events or·
ganhed for Fairview are
Christmas programs by Wesley
Flannery ot Midway City, Lin·
coin Middle School in Newport
Beach, Disneyland, Miss
Shannes School of Ballet in Foun·
·tain Valley, Mater Dei High
School, Melodyland Christian
Ce nt e r a n(j St Paul 's
Presbyterian Chur ch 1n
Anaheim.
County Spending Eyed
Orange County gov. for publlc l m prove· $200,000 Cor facilltlet• Ln
ernment officials wnd ment,a. flew tract.a to lower home
those of 14 of the county's Capistrano Beach, prices. ..
smaller c1t1es plan to
spend the bulk of $5
million in federal hous.
ing funds next year to
lower home costs or rc-
h ab i Ii tu le older
neighborhoods.
The llew Houi,ing and
Community Develop.
ment Act grant proposal,
presented lo s upervisors
this week shows that $2.3
million. would be spent
tor p ublic works and site
improvements aimed ut
lowering new home'costs
or improving older
areas.
ANOTHER $1 3
mt Ilion would be !>pent in
housing rehabilitation
loans and grants, while
$475.000 would be used
for buying property and
$515 ,500for planning and
adm inislration.
~ ~·
H\JNllNG ION l lACll
. .
HUNTINGTON 6EACH
TAXPAYERS AND VOTERS!
A New City Charter It Being Conaidered By The City
C.Ouncil and A Public Hearing Will Bo Held Dec. 21 al
6:30 p.m. Your Comment• On the Charter Propoul Are
Invited By la)Cor Ron Patlin~n. The Charter le .An
lmporlilnt Uocumenl Controlling C.Onduct of Your City
Government. Tlti.s ls Your Opportunity To Be A Part of
\\riling The Laws io'or Operatio n of City Government
Ouring the Next Decade. For Information Call 536-5501.
THESE INCLUDE the f''1ri.t
Assembly of God 1n Huntington
Beach. the Bank of America in
Long Beach, Schweitzer House of
Cypress College, Interact of
Wes tminster High School, Delta
Theta Tau of Long Beach and the
Triple X Fraternity, Orange
County chapter.
.,..,, f'IMl IUilt ..... S upe r visors h ave
5cheduled a pu61ic hear.
ing on the grant proposal
for Jan,4 and are expect·
City Council Chambers
Dec. 21 at 6:30 p.m. KA THY OTTO (LEFT), TAMMY MclNNES ACCEPT CARDS
Don Bull of Foater Grandparents Presents Them.
ed to take final action
Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main Street
Other party sponsor s are
Mar ywood School in Orange,
Latter Day Saints of Newport
Beach, F'irs t Southern Baptist
Church of Tustin, the human
serv ices c lass of Cypress
College, P:.irkvacw High School in
lluntington Beach and llunl
ington Beuch lltgh School.
CSLB S P -March22.
els rogralll cx~~~~e~ :.~~N~h~
· Or.ange Coast include: F S • · G l''ountain Valley, or en1ors roup ~1:~·~~~~ni~bl1i~ i~a
Colonia Juarez.
PARTIES ARE also being
given by the Garden Grove Com·
munity Church, Sahla Claus and
Scout Leaders of Santa Ana, Jn-
tern a lional Fool Printers of
Orange, Boy Scout Troop 328 of
Norwalk, and UN ICO of Garden
Grove. ,1
Cal Slate Long Beach. will again offer its low cost education for
senior citizens Quring the spring semester.
The Senior Citizen Fee Waiver Program is available to anyone
over 60 years of age and reduces the semester student fee from $98
to S3. A participant may take as many or as few courses as he or she
wishes.
Also sponsoring parties are La
llabra Jhgh School. Anaheim
High Sthool K1wunettcs, ldakas
('lub of Fullc•rton Un ion High
School. tht• Uigun11 Mo4l1on
Ki\\ ams. Girl Seoul TrooJf 254
from Nl'\\ port Beach, Latter Day
Sainl!i of M11>sion VicJo, Calvary
Ch :ipl'I anti Erhard Seminars
TraininJ:(.
ANYONE INTERESTED in registering for the program should
contact Leonard Kreutner, director of admissions and records at
C213) 498-4141 and ask for appli-calion for admittance to the un-
iversity.
Copies of the spring schedule of classes are available at the un -
1\'ersity bookstore for 20 cent!> and they are also a,vailable by mail.
Simply write and send a check or money order for $1.50 to the Forty-
Niner Bookstore.
REGISTRATION for Senior C1t1zens 1!> Jan 20 with classes
beginning on Jan. 23.
Addltional informatl,Q.n is available from the office of public af.
fairs. <21J > 498·4156. .
Church Silence
.On Sex Advised
ALBANY, N. Y . (AP J --One of lhe authors oC
the h)ghJy controversial Roman Catholic ·study.
"Human Scxualily: New Directions in American
Catholic Thought," says a little silence on the sub·
Jcct might be more helpful than talk.
The RC\'. Anthony Kosnick, professor of moral
theology at an Orchard Lake, Mich., seminary,
added in an interview here: "Sometimes I think it
would be better if the church said nothing more
about sex for at least 10 years to Jct the whole issue
settle do\\ n."
Sports Coverage 'Must'.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -San Diego City College ad-
ministrators may continue lo demand sports cov·
erage by the student newspaper, the Fortnightly, a
federal judge has ruled .
U.S. District Judge Gordon Thompson Jr. de·
nied a motion for a preliminary injunction filed by
newspaper adviser Glen Roberts and Tony Stevens,
Fortnightly editor, who filed s\Jit over the matter
last month.
He Hits
'Running
To Doctor'
AnORNEY AT LAW
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE $95
Unco'ntested
640-2507
HAVING
HASSLE
wftft ..... etc•
ClahM7
Talk frff with
consumer affairs
licensed clelm• expert
17141 547-824 ..
<e.1c.1on
Irvine, $150,000 for
a menities in new home
tracts to lower the cost to
buyers.
-Laguna Beach,
$100,000 for amenities in
Rew developments to
lower home costs, $5,000
for housing relocations
and $1,500 to promote
fair housing practices.
-San Juan
Capistrano, $50,000 for
pub Ii c improvement~
and $25,000 for amenities
t o reduce nt:w home
costs
· Seal Beach, $120.000
·NOW·
PIANOS
for Sale
&Rent
.......
. CllLE-uwu ..... IOMD & CMPllll.
HIMIOND 611111
AND PIANO CEllTU
CORONA DEL MAR
2854 I. C-•t Hwy.
644-1931
OPENING TODAY
Ray Sfuard Invites you
to visit one of the most
exceptionally designed stores for men
Feafuring wortd renow6ed labels
in Sportswear, Furnishings,
Clothing & Gifts.
STUARDS
@/!lk$olla
South Coost Plaza's NeYI Men's Store
540-7162 AcrCY>S from I. Magnln.
The issue, according to American Civil
~iberties Union attorney Robert Lynn, represent-
ing the newspaper, is whether students can be re·
quired to publi sh sports stories written to satisfy
class requirements. · ~~-1 SAYE .::. w::o '5"0ff I SAVE '5000
LAYAWAYS WELCOME '~ A..,..,• Stained & locquered
Deatft Notfen
COOK Dece,,.btr 14, 1971. Survived by
CARMEN V COOK, ruldtnl of Clau9Mer A.S. Mo<pllls of Fovnleln
Founteln Velfey, p•oed •w•y Y•lfey. deugMer Hef.., McC,..ry of
Cosl• Mesa, • IOI\ .l•m•• Cook of
Tllou>and Oelts, son Robert eo.-of
----------Torr•nce. -WllUam """'"-
IAlTl-IHGllOH
FUMHAlHOMt
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 648-2424
llUHOADWAY
MOITUAaY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·91 60
M1'M TUTHIU I.AMI
COSTA MISA CHAPIL
427 E. 17th St. Co.ata Mesa • ~888 Santa Ana Chapel
518 N. Broadway
Santa.Ma• &-47 ... 13t
P9ctllOTHIH SNl'f1t1' MOttTUAIY · 62 Mein St •
uril•no OOlreiCYI
536-6539
... PAMllY
~&. IUllDA&
NOMI
7801 Bo1ta Aw. w .. tmlnster
893-3525 ---PAc.ICYllW
t llt IOlllAL PAU
CemetefY Mot"Nery
Chllpef aaoo Pllctfie Vlft Ortve Newoon.
C•llfornl•
64'4·2700
of $en 01-.o. Stt'vku win be S.turdAY ~CAmlMtr 11 at l PM et P11elllc View Memorl•I Park Chapel. lnltrm'tnt
Pad llc v•--••I P-. P11elllc View Mort wry Olrec rors.
ATLANTA (AP> -Dr.
Spendr B. King Jr., 73,
retired chairman of the
history department at
Mercer University and
author of many articles
for literary, historical
and religious journals,
duedWednesday.
•
SAB23o 0443) U·02323~M342) PD U/08/77 1439
TWX BA YLINER ARLGN
ARLINGTON WASHINGTON DECEMBER s. 1977
NEWPORT PACIFIC BOATS
2200 WFSI' COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH. CA 9~
CONGRATULATIONS. THANKS TO YOUR S PE EFFO RTS.
YOU'RE NOW OUR NUMBER ONE DEALER. ON DECEMBER 1,
NEWPORT PACIFIC OFFICIALLY BECAME THE LARGEST
DEALERSl~lP JN THE WORLD FOR BA YLINER POWER BOATS
AS WELL AS BUCCANEER SAILBOATS.
ACfllEVING THE 'tOP SPOT WITH AMERICA•S LARGEST
BUILDER OF PLEASURE BOATS IS NO SMALL FEAT. IT'S
A REAL TRIBUTE TO YOUR PROFESSIONALISM AND CONCERN
FOR YOUR CUSTOMERS.
REGARDS;
•
...J
SWEATERS
ucws, v-necks o r cardi-
gdns -make great gifts-
!>elect from lambswool,
camel hair or cashmere
"17th & Irvine Ave., Newport Beach, Calif. (714) 645-0792
2JCJ "A" Street Downtown, San Diego ·(714) 232-6193
i. .
~; ToLA~oftiA, ... cw.l~ i ~11.tKL~~~.
~
Frida)'. ~mber 16, 1977 DAILY PILOT /19
She Ean Sing Too. McDonald's Chief
Activities Probed
~
Star's Kid Sist.er Making a Name ~ SAN DIEGO (AP} -In response to a
stockholder's complaint, McDonald's Corp. is in·
vestigating allegedly excessive use of airplanes and
other company assets by company chairman Ray
Kroc, owner of the San Dieao Padres baseball team. -
LOS ANGELES <APJ -A few ~ ~ years ago. an aspiring young country ~Inger named B(l!Dda Call Webb sat =Tops in Pops ~ m her Wabash, Til'C., home, puuJing
over the first big problem of her
career -she needed a name.
There was nothing really wrong
with the one she had, but her bit sia·
ter. already a country supentar, bad
wrangled a contract for Brenda Gail
and the company already bad a Bren·
da -Brenda Lee.
THEY PUZZLED AND puuled UD·
til finally Big Sis thought of the string
of all-night hamburger joints lo the
South, little square-shaped places
called Krystal that a.,.ved little
square-shaped hamburgers for a
dime. Thus Brenda Gail, Loretta
Lynn's kid sister, became Crystal
Gayle, the first known singer named
after an ail-night hamburger chain.
That was 197!,. when lady country
stars like big sister Loretta still
twanged perceptibly and wore
beehive hairdos, and a litt.e com went
a long way in Nashville. Being named
after a famous burger joint like
Kryst.al couldn 'l hurt the k.ld.
BUT TIUNGS CHANGED. Singers
like Kris Kristofferson, Waylon Jen·
nings and Dolly Parton showed the
rest of the world you didn't have lo go
barefoot to like country music, and
the art became respectable.
And Crystal Gayle quickly de·
monstrated that she had more than a
big sister and a famous name -she
could sing. Within a couple or years
she was all over the country charts,
getting a No. l hit with ''I'll Get Over
You" and finally being named
"Outstanding Female Vocalist" last
October. What's more, she bad
crossover appeal.
Crystal's sultry, bluesy, lament
"Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue"
found its way to pop audiences, and
it's now a top hit. Crystal seems likely
to be reaping the best of both worlds,
country and pop.
"l 'VE ALWAYS WANTED to ap-
peal to more people than just country.
lo sell more records," Crystal said,
displaying none or that Butcher '
"To the best or our knowledge, it is not true,"
H~ller, Ky., twang that 'a become her Donald Horowitz, executlve vice president of the in·
slSter's trademark. "l thought this ternaUooal chain, said of the allegation.
song ("Brown Eyes") had a chance to Kroc's fortune is estimated at $SOO million.
cross over, but that's not why I re· ... .,...,..... Horowitz said ••very litUebas been done so far"
corded it. I ju.at liked the song." in the inquiry. ·
Crystal, in town for a televlalon INVESTIGATED The invesUgaUon stems from a lawsuit Nov. 21 .rock show, said ber ability to sma pop. __ F_tr_m_Ch_ .. _t_K_r_oc ___ by;..._a_sh_areho __ ld_e_r. ___________ _
rock ste1DB from a childhood away r-ml!!'-~~~~llml_!!!llll .... lllml~..,...,..1111111_ .... ____ .... ..., ..... -.... -·•
from the coal mlnes of Kentucky, LAMPS-LAMPS-LAMPS where Loretta learned to whine ~o
pretty. Her · family moved from FACTORY CWRANCE SALE OF FAMOUS MFR'S. DECORATOR LAMPS THE •
Butcher Holler when she was a child, LARGEST SELECTION OF LAMPS COAST TO COAST AT INCREIHBL£ PRICES.
andsbegrewupinlndlana. r--1 ~~4!=.,'lt,$£9J!!~U
"I HAVE A DIFFERENT style ( ___ I MUSrM1NOrowtAWrowtUMMrl'C»""7WO
from Loretta because she grew up in SAT., SUN., MON., DEC. 17. 18, 19 • •O:OO A.M. to 7:00 P.M. the country and I grew up in a town. 1 ... ""'-,....,r---:.._~ /lt4A#rHUNDmDfCWllMITIPUl.&AMrt100t00aNOM
We bad two totally different kinds of WHU™""&.UT• AUw.ts.U.l'INAt 'backgrounds. J listened to folk music 1511 S. AU .. l&.WI.. AUllEm WAll'.IOUU (C) -
d Lesli Go lik kid b
__ _,.... __ .. _, __ , .... _..__
an e re, e any • , uying ·--.---=:•"»• --... ....,._ PHONE the 456 fhat"Were popular at the time." =.=,':\ii~...!: e:-.,=:_-:,. ... "=' .:-1-· .. .::'.; 533 7471 -... _c... ___ ,.. .. _ .... -_.-.. ..... --..--7-:-.. • I Finding a name was her first pro. blem. Living with the comparisons ._ _________________________ rl
folks made between Crystal and her-----,:--~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 sister was the next.
.. , remember in the beginning.
when I started singing, everybody
made comparisons," s he said.
"They'd compare our voices, the way
we looked, everything."
CRYSTAL HARBORED no resent·
ments, she said, "because that's just th e way things are when two
celebrities are related."
"Lore,tta got my foot in the door,
and I ~ it from there," she added.
"I look at my sister as a living legeod.
I think she's great. She's done so
much right for country music -when
anybody thinks of a country singer,
Loretta comes to mind first.'•
CRYSl'AL SAYS SHE has "no Idea
at all" if she'll continue her move-
toward pop.
"My roots are country," she said,
"but I sing everything. I try to never
label music, J don't want to restrain
the type or songs I want to sing. You r
voice is a tool -:--you ought to try to do
many things with it."
"HAPPY HOLIDAY"
Our Special Christmas Menu
Prime Rib of ..., •....•••••••
New Yortl Slrtoin •.•••••• 8.95
5...:1 fish •••••••••••• 7 .9S
labdVlrglnkaHaM ••••• 7.95
lncludel Fruit end Nuts on the table. Candied Y.ms, Vee. Soup or Salad and Dessert.
SPECllL IE1f YUl'S OE PACUIE
MAXW£L[~
By the sea -Huntington Beach Pier
·Holiday Postal
Workers Fall Off FUR ._ITURE W ASIDNGTON (AP> ~ Full-time Postal
Service employees have taken over almost ail the
Christmas mall-handling chores that once provided
thousands of seasonal jobs for college students and
housewives.
Jn 1952. the peak yeir for Christmas hiring the
Post Office had 520,000 regular employees 'and
407 ,000 holiday workers.
This year, there are 650,000 full-time employees
and less than 16,000 Christmas workers handling
the flood of mail, which is about double the normal
flow.
Postal Service officials say mechanical mail.
handling operations and overtime assigned to re·
guJar employees are re.>ponsible for the decline in
part-time jobs.
Thieves Loot Auto
MUNICH, West Germany <AP> -Thieves
broke into a jeweler's car while it was parked in a1 Munich suburb and found the keys to bis store and
safe. After cleaning out the car, they drove to hi.si
store and made of{ with $20,000 worth of jewelry,
the police reported.
WE ARE OPENING OUR· DOORS
__.. Q THE..P.UILIC-f.OA THE FIRST_~
TIME TO MAKE ROOM FOR 1978 STYLES .
.
WEST ·CO·AST
HOME FURNISH .INGS
LOCATED WITHIN WESTLAND CARPET MILLS ~~I .Joo 12802. KNOTT AVE. . . .
GARDEN GROVE
·994.4474
MM....,. Fri. , .. ,
w.tto6
S-.12to5
GARDEN GROVE FWV
t
N
(
!_~..: ---_r .. ~ -~ .------·----_....._ -~...1=-~JE"" --\l:o_-, K M' I .,_......_.. • ..
Fr1d1y, Oetembof 18, 1Gn Business
SOCH: it's the .Only Way(s) to Fly
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN "''-"' c.r,......_. Options: l,ines, Lovers vs. IJnes, No Lovers TJIE 8K'YTllAIN CAN carry :ws passengers aod requires n
percent occupancy. or 231, to
s how a profit. On the day I flew.
there were 258 passengers and ,
two lnlants, f(U' an 80 percent OC· •
cup•ncy. There were more
women lb•n men, more
backpacks than suit.cases. more
dealms than doublekn!ta an as-
sortment or bowling babies, ,
hand·boldtng lovers, elderly emi-
grants golng bome for the first
tlme. bearded and beaded poet·
~ and a Russian who sang
PASTRAMI IN A BAG
Freddie Laker
N f':W YORK-LONDON -I
popped over to Harrod 's last
week for a spot of Christmas
shopping (doesn't everyone?)
and pioneered a new standard in
transatlantic travel for which I
have coined the .word SOCH.
SOCH rhymes \Yilh POSH, but
it is much, much further out, as
we shall see.
POSH, THE I N·WORD for
elegance in the heyday of the
Gr and Tour, meant port out,
starboard home. a ready ref-
e ren ce for choosing your
stateroom lo avoid the beastly af-
ternoon sun. '
SOCH means Skytrain out.
Concorde home, a new exciting
\\ ay of criss-crossing the Atlantic
by experiencing the two latest
extremes of jet age lra vel: tbe
rock bottom, no frills economy
c lass and the s uperdeluxe
supersonic.
Quite literally. I went Lo Loo·
don on Thursday with a pastrami
sandwich in a paper bag aboard
FreiJdie Laker's $135 Skrtrain
and came home Tuesday nipping
at the caviar and Dom Perignon
'70 on the Concorde, British
Airways' $782 wallet buster.
AND. WOULD YOU believe it,
the jumbo tortoise almost beat
the Mach 2 hare?
The "Brown Bagger," as the
Laker already is affectionately
known. got to·London's Gatwick
Airport in 6 hours and 17
minutes. lumbering along at a
stately 560 mph with some help
from tail winds.
MAk! YOUR YEAR END CHAAIT AILE
Thenftd-GIFT COUNT!
1977-78 Youth work $55,000
SwfflWMtg pool tttcloture $21,000
W01Mt1'1 FffMst Cettttr SS.000
C~psSS,000
CASH-REAL ESTATE-SECURITIES
You CCM ""*•""' dlH•~nJ s~ y-c~ YMCA
ORANGE COAST YMCA
2l00 Uni••nlty Orh•
M.wport a.och, Co 92660 !'hon• '42-n90
_...,.-.,, .. flfCAI
For your convenience:
Martin P . Cleary has been appointed president
of the S-C Division of Gulton lndwitrtes, Inc. He is
former preRident, chief executive officer and a
director of Datatron, Inc .• Irvine. Before that, he
had been president, chief operating officer and a
director of Captecb, Inc., and earlier, was president
and chief executive officerofValtec Corp.
Gulton's S-C Division, localed in Costa Mesa,
designs, manufactures and markets high
technology sensor and connector systems.
* .
Sandra Schmidt, Laguna Niguel, bas been
named director of sales of the South Coast Plaza
Hotel, Costa Mesa.
The Concorde, which is sup-
posed to "beat the sun to New
York," was an h<>Ur and a half
late leaving Heath.row because of
what the captain called "late
catering of the aircraft" and "a
s light snag in the fine tuning of
our electrical system."
EVEN WITH TWO hours of
s upersonic scooting from the
Bristol Ch annel to Hyanis,
Mass., at speeds up to 1,400 mph,
her total eJapsed time to Gal~ 11
at Kt!bl'IEdy Airport was ~'hours
and 13 minutes.
Considering the Concorde cost
five times as much, the hour's
difference that day seemed all
the more precious. The sun was a
no·sbow at both ends of the
ocean.
The first-time traveler on both
aircraft is immediately struck by
their similarities, although they
are hardly birds of a feather . The
Concorde with its delta wings,
fine drooping beak and spindly
legs is a majestic hooded falcon
or some bizarre futurisr-insect
waiting for the rem:ike of Star
Wars.
LORD KENNETH Clark, the
e minent British art historian,
called the Concorde ''the seventh wonder~! the modem world, the
most beautiful piece of modem
technology I have ever seen."
but then be is not llated among
the celebrities who have waited Special
hours at
Merrill
Lynch
. in the aisle Lo use one of the three Before her trans fer ai:td promotion, s he toilets.
In addition to our
6:30-4:30 weekday hours,
the Newport Beach office
of Merrill Lynch will be open
Saturday mornings
from 9 :00 till noon.
\\('al...., mnkc hou<1Pcalls. Memll Lynch under-
·l.111ds llwronf1<l1·ntrnlit \' vou attnch lo investment ·'
111:il11•r.; So Jo tnnk<' you li:<'I more comfo1tablc, one
11f riur an.•mmt PXN:ll t I\'('"" Ill he glad lo stop by
your honw to d1~·111;..., your financia l needs privolelv
Hn<l d1:;crcctly. Cnll for un appointmrnl. We'll makC'
11 al your co1wt•nicncc.
z,\~ Merrill Lynch ~ Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc.
4!'l01 Birch Stn'(•I.
]'; cwport Beach CA. 0266.'3 • (714) 540-8121
represent~ Western Interna~1onal hotels as saJes ....... ~~SkyU'a,in is a conven·
manage_r 1~ t.hc ~cw York regional sa!es office. Her tionally plain DC.lO, which also
resf>ons1b1ht1es include total marketing and sales has a long line o utsid e the
for the400·room hotel. l avatories, especially after
•
Wayne F. Wegner, Newport Beach. has been
<1 ppointed Dodge reporler in Santa Ana for the South
Orange County area.
He joins the local reporting staff or the F .W.
Dodge division of McGraw-WU lnformatioii
Syste ms Co .• wltb respo~iblllty for gathering
descripUve data oo individual construction projects
in the area. The principal sources for the com-
pany's project news are architects, engineers,
general contractors, corporate building depart-
ments and government offices.
* H.K. <Jack) Doadyabell, South Laguna. has
been named president of Dancan ElectroDics, a
Costa Mesa division of Systron-Donner Corp.
Vice president, engineering, for Duncan Elec-
tronics for the past 18 years he be ins his
responsibilities immediately as
head of the firm, which
manufactures preclslon poten·
tiometers and electronic compo-
nents for a world-wide market.
Prior lo joining Duncan
Electronics, Houdysbell was
chief product engineer of the
helipot division of Beckman
Instruments.
A native of California,
Hoyd yshell received his elec· o MC u..
trical engineering degree from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and completed post ·
graduate studies in the executive program in busi·
ness management at UC Los Angeles.
During a four-year m1lltary service, he was a
flying instruct.or with the U.S. Air Force assigned to
B-17 and B-29 Air Force bases throughout the Unit·
ed States.
AMLING'S
breakfast when everyone wauta
to shave or put on makeup or
some combinalioo.a of both.
Both planes are all one dass:
Laker with nine seats acroas, all
tourist, divided by two a.lsles,
and the Cooeordo all deluxe,
whatever that means, with rour
seats acroes divided by a middle
aisle.
CONCORDE'S SEATS, which
barely admit standing headroom
liPWllo ... lw
'SEVENTH WONDER, BEAUTIFUL TECHNOLOGY'
Concorde SST: M•J•.UC Hooded. f •Icon
on the window side, are narrower
than Skytrain's but, according Lo
the tape· measure I brought
along, they allow 13.5 inches
between your knees and the seat
ahead, compared with only 12 on
the Brown Bagger.
Neither plane comes stocked
with newspapers and magazines
for the passengers, Laker for no-
lrilly economic reasons and eon.
corde for space limllalloM,
although they are banded out
free in the loun'e as one boards
thesupersonicbrrd. ~
Both play atrocious t aped
muaic on takeoff and landing and
throughout the journey weary the
weary traveler with wearisome
announcementS from the flight
deck. Passing the speed of sound
is certainly worthy of mention
but not passing the Sable Islands .
Over The Counter
MASD Ustiftga
sad songs all night.
The Concorde, whJcb alas will
never recoup its $2.3 billion
French and British investment,
holds 100. That day we numbered
9S, which included nine women.
no babies, no backpacks, more
pocket calculat.ors than poetry
books, one black diplomat, a half
dozen Arabic speakers, one set of
denims and a drawl or Texas
oilmen coming back from Libya.
No pastrami sandwiches or
hand-holding lovers.
Jn a future instal1ment we shall
detail the differences between
the worlds aloft of Freddie Laker
and Ernst Mach, which is more
than just the choice of watching
the in-night movie or the digital
machometer while waiting for
the 100 on high.
fl,,_ a11d DOlmU
DOWNI
.°i,, \Jpf>dN,.1 + .. Up t7.~ • .. uo 11.1
+ 1 Uo 1'.1 + ~ Vo 14 J
+ ~ lilJ> 14J ... •• uo IJ.J
+ '• Up 1J 2
• \, UP 11.S • "-Uo 11.S + "-Uo 11 S + ·~ Up 12.S + ~ Uo 17 J" ...... uo 11.2 + 1• • Up 12.2
+ "° Up 11.1 + °'• Up 11.t + V. Ul> 11.1
... '• Up 10.S + ..... Up 10.J + 'I• Up 10.0 + ... Up 9 ... + .... Uo 9.1 + 1 uo 1.s + 1AUp l .J
l .. U I 0WJ P(T
2 _; "" Oft 10 0 12~ -,.,, Oii 1& ,
l ''> -1,, Oii 11 ~ t -1v. Oii Ul 1 -v, OH 11.l• ••'o -1\'o OH 11.0 111.t -•~ Off 10.0 1•-r. -\lo Oii 100 714 -14 'Off 10.0 ,,,., -a. 011 ,,
2'h -v. Oii 9.1 , • ., -\4 Otf ••
,~. -... Off t.1 m = ~ g: :: , .. -"' Off •.• 7-., -\4 Off I 1 •1'9 -'14' Off I 1 11 -1"' Off I 1 17'~ -l!i\ Off I 0 4~ -* Oii 1.9 • -.... Off 1.7 .... _.,..Off ...
l"• -"' Off .. , :w. • Iii Off .. ,
Newport Nursery a n d Garden Center
·Bertea
Acquires
Interest MUTUAL FUNDS
Christmas
at Amling's is
Irving and fresh-cut
t rees (natural or flocked).
'-wreath~. garland, decorations
,,,_~J.' and colorful
Holiday Gift
pl-ant,,----
• Free Delivery • Gift Certltlcatea
• Decorations from Around the World
Bertea Corp., Irvine, ·
has reported an agree-
ment1to exchange its in-d u s rial produc t s
divl Ion with Seitz
Manufac turing Co.,
Milwaukee, Wis., for a 20
percent minority in•
terest ln Seltz.
As part of the agree-
ment, Bertea hu an op-
tion to acquire the re-
maining 80 peree.nt ot
Seitz for Bertea common
st'Ock. with the option
commencing Sept. 30,
1961, and extending to
Dec. 31, 1982, according
Lo ..R.l cluu:.d-B a.r taa ..
cbalrman.
Seltz is a privately
owned manufacturer of
bydraall;::en and related f«" such
1ar1• mobile ::\r:ient u matmal b g or
eartb movlna equip·
ment. The compu)' bu
'
u.let at a current annual
rat. of approdmatety $8
mUJlon.
The Industrial prod·
ucta dJvillon ot Btrtea
hydraulic eontroll for in-·
duttrlal 1PP11catlon1, ln·
ohadln1 larr• moblle
equipment. The product
Unu of the Bertea
dlv111on and Sella com· 1500 eHt oo .. t hwy. ne•port be•ch 844-9510 ==:c~=.ini:.
open ~•Hy: l :lo-5:30 • aund•y t-.S:30 cla4laf quaUt)' cori•
~ ........................ .._ ______ ~~------------~~-------..........:
•
'
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
. .
l/N
Not All Winners
Win ~nytbing
By SYLVIA PORTEil
"-''"'• .. nee
1f you win a claim In s mall clain111 court. that may not
always mean you win. In tact, ln a large perc.nt11e of
cases, a successful !Suit doc:s not lead lo a suc .. 3Uful collec-
tion.
A sampling of small claims cases in the New York
l}Orough ol Queens last year found .0 percent of those 1ur·
veyed had not recovered lhe money awarded ln their Judg.
ments. An earlier survey in Manhattan discl08'd that only
SO percent of the s uccessful uuaant.a had been able to col·
lect.
THE EXPLANATION IS. OF course, that many defen ..
dants don't have the resource. to pay. The administrative
judge of tho District Courts rn suburban Nassau County,
N. Y., attributes most f allures to debton who don 't have any
assets left t.o seize. A New York City courtofncial who holds
a similar view says many defendant companies were either
bankrupt or defunct.
In Nassau County. for instance, 1,'36 winners of small
claims cases turned to marshals for aid In securing pay-
ment , but in 32 percent of these cases, the marshals couldn't
collect.
(New York City's
Dep a rtment o f
Consumer Affairs
launched a program last.
summer to assist plaln·
ti(fs in tracking down
facts on· a debtor's as·
sets by inatitutin1 an
\
;# Money's
Wprth
"information subpoena and restraininc notice" from the
clerk of tbe Civil Court Cof which the sm all claims courts
area pan.)
THIS NOTICE TO THIRD parties -including banks,
ins urance companies and utilities -reveals a defendant's
assets and lheir locations and ties them up until a sherrif can
seize them.
The plaintiff also may ask the sheriff's offi ce to try to
collect without having to pay a $50 fee in advance. Triple
damages are awarded if the defendant company previously
ignored three or more judgments against it.
T he collection problem may climb sharply ltceillngs on
small claims are hiked.
A SOLUTION TIJEN MAY BE settlement ot small
claims cases after they are tiled but befC)re they reach the
point of judgment. If a defendant agrees to make some sort
of restitution, this generally results in a better chance for
collection.
To illustrate, a sampling in Queens, N. Y .• found that 100
percent of cases settled this ·way resulted in collecUons: In
Manhattan, the sampling showed the payout al 82percent.
For the small pe rsonal or monetacy disputes, the
American Bar Association has proposed dispute resolution
centers to setUe disputes without the formalities of a court.
While only a few exist, the center ln New York City has
been operating since·l975. The "judges" resolve personal
gripes after the parties meet with a tnediator at tbe center.
Agreements must be signed by bc?'h sides. ·
Market Sustains
Scattered Ldsses
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market posted some
small and scattered losses today following Thursday's
downturn.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 2.59
points to 815.32 after a 4. 77 loss Thursday.
Declines held a slight lead over advances among New
York Stock Exchange.Jisled issues.
Brokers said the market suffered something of a Jet·
down Thuraday, when tlle rally ot the previous session
quickly played itself out.
Some or Thursday's weakness was atrributed to an·
tlcipatlon of another increase In the money supply.
si~lu '" Tlte Spet llglli
NEW YORK IAPI· Sein, 4 p.m. P"kf ~ net c111n9t of me 1111.,., mo•t .cllv• New York Slocll E WCl\MOit IU\lfS, ~;"2:·~~~·-~ •I ~.~" S~;._ • 'It ~Ht St a'n...... 06,IOO 12'., + ll\
n Mot°".... J0?.200 62"• -"• ckNn PM...... Ht,JOO 21•. -1, ... ,,1 Ceftl. •• ••. 10l.to0 13 -1¥<
N-Y ... kCAPI FIN I 0--.nor•oe• STOCIC5 Coen HIQll L-Clo\e Ctlo JO Ind e1u1 a2r.ss a1u1 eu.u-2.~ :10 Trn 11.1.SJ 2U.6l 211.11 21UH· U1 u uu 111.u 111.90 110.u 111.ze •.•••• U Sill m.u 10 13 211.4• m.11-0 OI IMU~ • • ... •• • •• .. .. • • •. • • • • l,4'2,600 T'•n • • ..•. , . .• • • •• . • •'1.600
Utlll ••.. •.••.•......•.••• ~.tel
6S Slk ... , • .. • , • • • • • • • • • • • 2.tn.•l
OowllCll. •••••• • XM,600 H•• -" ..----------------t:.\>:'G~~:::·. ::u: l(,, ~-~ Marsto Fi.Id..... ,.,,300 2'1• -'•
Pll4111»Pet ., • • 'tt·: ~ ... -V~ r.\•,<~f...C:::::::. :n:to0 U"" = ~
K rn•rt . . • • . . . . US,000 271'1 -~ Holiday IM..... Ut,600 16 + \'> P.n Am.......... US,IOO ~ ~ ~
:
M'11af St o~b Dfd
NEW YORK CAP)
~:~r.:r Un<l\anot'd Total IH\16 N~w 1911 "~
New lt/7 -
SALU
NEW YORK IAPI ·l'llY Stock Uln Aopru lrn•I • •• • • . • • • ••• • .. • :I0.110.000 Pr•vlou• ci.v • .. • • . • . • . •• • •. •• 11,610.000 WHlt "90 ..•.....•• , • ,. , ••. , • 1'.110.000 Monl" aoo .................... u,no,ooo YHr aoo . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . U,110,000
Two YHrt ""JO ••• ••••••••••• 11.717.0SO Jan 1 IO Clalt ,., • •••• •• • • S1011,•f11100CI 1916 I& llala . . . . • • . . . . . • ~.076.116.000 HIS to d41e •• .•. . . .•. ..• •,•I0,10,119
WHAT AMEX OtO NEW YORK IAPJ
Prtv. ~o.u., ~I ., , ..
3)$ 341 '44 ftO
l • JI , s
..
• . ..
' CALIFORNIA .-.
....._.--~~~-~-.. l mhiding Drivers
.
Continental. to Lure Japanese Tourists €an Call 'Friend' . . .
• , LOS ANGELES (AP> -Some ot World War
•lSol •.~l'oodle.t battles took place long aao on the
Um Paclfic island$ of Guam, Tinlan, Saipan and ~k, Onulgn of bow long ago that was Is that Con·
,_1 ntal Airlines plans to sell vacations on those
u aAds to the Japanese.
ConUnental recently won Civil Aeronautics
Board approval fo r Tokyo·Saipan service, as well
aa new connecting routes from Los Angeles to
Abmerlcan Samoa, Fiji, New Zealand and Australia y wayofHOQOlulu.
THE NEW ROUTES HA VE changed Continen·
tal from a reeional airline to a major Pacific Basin
. carrier and Robert SJx, Continental's feisty ehief
executive officer, sees major profit opportunities ~ead in the South Pacific.
• ·· ... It's a big J apanese market because YQj.l can
·Jeave Tokyo at 9:30 in the morning with a 20·above
temperature and three hours later you 're at 80 or 85 de~reea on a lovely, sunny beach," Six says of
Saapan and the Marianas islands .
The L .A.·tO ·
Australiu aw~rd puts
Continental into com·
petition with Pan
American , which has
had the route to itself
sin ce American
withdrew in 1975. Six,
who has irritated Pan
Am executives in the
past by referring lo
airline's blue globe in·
signia as ''The Blue
Meatball." seems eager
to do battle again.
, .. The Pacific Ocean
is not o bathtub for Pan
America n World
Airways," he says.
'Best Gift'
Holiday Brightened
LINDSAY CAP) -Junior high students
here a re giving $500 to make Christmas a little
brighter for a classmate whose father , brother
and sister were slain last week.
The sW,dent councU at Garvey Junior
High decided to donate the money to Allison
Adney, 12, arter Principal Bob Edwards sug.
g~slcd the girl and her mother could use the
mt>ney during the holidays.
''IT MAKES YOU PROUD," Edwards
said Thursday. "It's the best Christmas 1.
present 1 've had this year.''
The $500 donation was more than he sug·
gcsted the students give, Edwards said. The
money comes from $3,500 the students have
raised for a trip al the end or s~hool in June
and will be made up by future rundraising
events, he added.
THE SCHOOL'S NAME was changed lhls
fall to honor Los Angeles Oodf,!crs fi rst
bas£•man Steve Garvey who school offici.ils
and students feel presents a clean image for
young~
Mass Adney's father Eugene, 46, brother
Roger, 16, apd sister Florene Cathey, 20, and
another man were shot to death Friday by
Mrs. Cathey's husband Chester who then shot
himself fatally.
AUTHORITIES SAID CATHEY was
angered at his wif~'s testifying against him a
day earlier at a preliminary hearing In whicb
he was accused or trying to drown her.
Cathey was bound over for triul but was
released from custody after posting a $2,500
bond.
Universal Tour . .
Noise Considered
·LOS ANGELES <AP ) -Proposed county noi.e.
ordinances would'; If enacted, force Universal
Studios' tours and amphitheater out of business, a
studio oUicial says.
"We cannot operate this tour and the outdoor
amphitheater as these new statutes exist," Al
J)orsklnd, vice president of Music Corp. of
:American claimed Thursday.
THE COUNTY HAS PROPOSED noise Umita-
'tions that are particularly stringent in residential
:areas during evening hours -45 decibels after 10
~p.m . Universal Studios is in a manufacturing ione
:where noise Umits are 70 decibels.
. •:n/s is not an attempt to get at MCA," said
·Supervisor Ed Edelman. "I want to make it clear
:that we don't wanl any Jobe ellnlloated at MCA°"
:MCA eliminated. I think we can reach reuonable
:SOlutlons. The noise situation didn't start with
;MCA."
"There Is a very big sky dlrecUy over It which is
also not their private property."
SIX EXPECfS THE NEW ROUTES to become
profitable within a yeu of beginnln& operatiQn, pro.
bably next spring, and dismisses doubters who
point out that American lost $32 million on the
Australian routes before giving up.
"American had no backup traffic," he said in
an Interview. "Los Ange:les is the big marketln1
area tor 70 percent of that market, plws we have all
the feed-in here." Continental operates primarily in
the West. while Amerlca~·a routes copnected
Eastern cities to Australia .
IF SIX IS RIGHT ABOUT the Australian
routes, It will be the latest in a lone list of profitable
decisions. He has run Continental for almost 40
years and the airline, more than any other, reflettS
bis aggressive personality. .
, Now 69, Six received his pilot's license in 1929
and began his career as a stunt pilot selling
airplane rides for $1 apiece. He worked for ~lime as
a co.pilot for a Chinese airline based in Shanghai
and tater opened a Beechcraft dislribµtorship in
Northern California.
In 1936, Six saw an opportunity to go inCO the
airUne business.
THE SOUTHWEST DIVISION OF Varney
Speed Unes, a three-plane ouUlt carrying mall
between Pueblo, Colo., and El Paso, Texu was
short on money. Slx bought a 40 percent interest in
the operation with $90,000 borrowed from his fatber-
in·la w, changed the name to Continental Airlines
and became president in 1938.
Since then, Six bas built Continental into a con·
sistently profitable company <only two red-Ink years
s ince llMO> that will record revenues or more than
$600 miJlion for 1977. The three mailptanes have
grown to a fleet of 56 jets, and CAL today has 9,000
employcs and acrriessjx mil lion passengers a.year.
THROUGH ITS CONTINENTAL Hot.els Inc.
subsidiary, Continental now operates hotels on
Guam, Truk, Saipan and Palau and also bas in·
terests in several Hawaiian hotels.
Another subsidiary, Air Micronesia, opeartes
among the Gilbert and Ellice islands with connff·
t ions to Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam and
Okinawa.
'anelt'i~ator for chTistJmas ...
jM;1
'
HEN IT COMES ·TO BUJING A: D.IAMOND
•
Y911 'r• In love. You want to buy a
dlemond for your 1weetbearL But
you're 11 llttle conclfrnt>d ebout
gen lnl( your mont>y'1 worth.
('hanc<'e are, you've heard about a
trlend that l(ot ripped·oll' b11yl111f a
diamond. Vou may have caaually
looked at 10me diamond rinJ• In a
s tore window (to ~et an ldt>a on
price•). Maylte you ve even 1hop•
ped a couple of je.welry 1tore1 and
been ater.Aly w arned that dla·
nu>nd• come in maay quallllea and
;you wanl to watch 011l (or tldn11
like oarbott ·~ u d bad color.
And of rourae 11ou're -n •d• thot
hllrt' odrrtt/~ Jr;. of/ 01S didlftOIU/a
thi• rrttk un111.
Bui oil diamond• look about lite
HmOI to )'OU. Try .. you ••Y· YO\&
Ju•t can't 11ee much dUlerellce.
(]ranted most diamond• do look
prelty much allke. But they're not.
If )'Ou 'II r ead on we'll rive yov
11o"'p ruct11 on diamond.a. Not love pocm11 or fNtclful phr1110. but roete.
We11 lct you handle the ro11i1a11ce.
FIT1lt of aU di.emonda art Jutt 11\e fl11«tr· prlnu. Each -la unUiuely indlvldaal. -Me'""'" e din>0911...S.you..Un -ladi· vi!luel tba~ th.t ..,.,. .. it Crom
any other 11-. And • dia--.d't 'lalue i8 really date,..,lned b1 \lit .. lndlvldu•I
clwacterlat lea.
Ga1nolo1tlala e¥alu•tt • diamond by (our olmple rui. ea1W the .. l'oor C'a" • Color,
Clarity ,-C..t pd ~weight,
OOLOR
MOM dt.mo..dt look white, but lhty'tt not. Di8n'IOnda uau.ally havt a 1ln,:e of yeli-or
brow11 body color. TM cloeer p diit.mond la to color!-the more v•luabl1 It \Ji. 'The
fact ill tho"l(h. 1'ha1 aho\ll ~ • of all dla· monde mlntod ha\19 Ylll)'int c1eic-or body • (IOlor.
H111 lf re.,.l diamond• look while. how it
mlc>• dtterminecf' Ky compori.on, You "'"'' pl)' compert th. unkn""rn diarnonc:I'• eo'"'
with a dlemoo41 of a known color •nide.
WE Lff YOU 'HANDLE THE ROMANCE
CLARITY
M .... 1 people tJinnnl -imptrfe..tion. in e
dtaa><>nd eno when-1 ... l art \1'1hll' 10 ti!. unalUed eye. The eye ,. ronlu..ed hy tht-bnlll•~. That'• why• lot ,,f d1•monda .,,.
oold tn what Gentoklf(U.t> a.M Llw I mtinf•'<'l
F'•d,... Jr• diamond ~ nol h.t•'ll vi.1bl~
1nclu•lon1 to the trained eye. lh•n It "
ftssitned 1 ~ acc:ordin• lo the .iu and
locllion of1he inc:IUAlnn .. -n und11r maa·
n1(1Q1tion. You're probabl,Y .. ylnK to yf)Ur·
wilf, -11 if you can't -11 what differena1 d08 It make. You l!Mw, yw're rf11ht. Clar·
i1y probllbly hu i-effttt on 1t.. b<oouty
of a dWnond tMl1 -ny of the Olhtr quellty
ff1C\.Of11. But beca..-tt la the -*' qlMll· lty Cac\or l.o de.c:ribe and democw.l.rate molt
jewelers t«ld to ~'be diamooc:I quelily
by t.M llrcle *'°'· U-111 the>' wlll eke you • loupe ud i.t you loOli for you-If.
MOit ~ -·t -~loe lhrouah a lotpe And arur Uwy .c. i. and .pttr 11
lhe diamond, they ll&Tft l I the diamond
tlw)>are~•tilpm.ty~.
1114 diamond ioQp. that Jewtlen u.. loou hko a \. .. !)' 1imp~ inatNment, bul to 1111(' it
effectively, requlree lo~ of practice. We
dan't 1how you di.ernond clarity throulib a loupe. We Ille a ll*l&lly d-'11ned binocular
#m ,nkroeoope called the Mark V Ct11io-
li1e. Tak6 our wotd for It when you look at
a ,.i.emond thrOllfh \hit 1hl1111. you'll -whai di.mond'damy iii all ebout.
• f(IU diamond te be ~11!1Wit. It ca.n
have no blemi.ehes or l11cluelona vitlblt IO
I ... t,.lned *Y8 Qridtt 10 ~-.nib·
liofl, In Sood licht. Thia Ill touch CTiterla end c~ a.ta )'Oil 'U ,..,.., -Ooe. All our
d1Am0nd c.laril,,)' pedl1111 la done by a C rad· uete Ctmolo,Sat end 011Jned a preci ..
icra«M on a lllW'-to Imperf~ -le.
Juat a wont •bout .,,.,,... ~cut that is
noc. the qndaJd round brilliant .. cal~ a f•ney cut. PriCft o( fancy cult •ill vary'
Ctoll1 • round oC the -quality end alz.e ..:wnlinc 1.o fulli0<1 and popoi.rf1y. And
accocdinc to how much -dif'lkull it i. io cut. Welcf>t re~tioo n-tlli rou1h di.. moad .i.o playe'. l'.eclor. Doo 't ltt M\)'OM
fool yoo. Jlioit becauolll • diemand ia • fADC)'
cat, clC* "°' !Min lh.l It ia more vahu1ble thllll • round o( Owl -qiWlty.
@~@@@
'. ' CARATWt~IOllT
A• )'OU know tbia refers to th• dlamand'a
eiu.. It'• ea<1y to buy 1 nice OrMt carat di•·
rnond for the aame pr,iee you'd PGY tor• lop
quality half car111. You've efnMtdJ detar" l!llnecl tlwt dllf~n«* In q,ualky le hlJd to
-· Ch&nc9 an you dori t have any di• mond eaJMr1. friend• or you w"ldn't be
.-dl.ni w. ed. So ... i,y not '*t.. '* $. mood? It cen.ill!Y,,... ~ '5.ve
-9 too cao't~·-Lba-w.i tllilhll Wb.l e ha dlamoed ll . Welt, -I.ha&'• 'IP to )'OU .... ,. )lllt i.e.. lo Jell you
whet,,.,.,.,. buyi,,.. The" are cldmii. ed· vanu119 ID~ btUat qu.llty, ,..,UCU·
larly w1-It -Co the ~ r.o.
(«. But !Jvt'• ano&her lid.
We've U>ld you e lot ebout ~ ud how t.hey'tt ,...cled. Now let 111tellyou11. • little bit abou• ooretlv-. We're dlall)Ond ~rta. Ontduete Oemoloil•i.. 0.moloA,
cal lnstilute of America. We've made {\ our buai11ea tt> know all abaut dlamoncb,
Nltjllft "-to romance them.
In ordtt to tell our di-icla ·~ ti» '-• po.Mble price. .. ' ... dons a l.ot Jr U! ln1111
thal lllOll jtweler1 would ~ l""tant <Nath ••
We've lltl«ted our pmnltfti oo I.ht ti.ab of
tent, MCUrily end ove~.
By~ to locai. a .tote .-,y ftoflJ th. ~,,. maJlll Md by Ukllljt 111 UjlllUIN loauon, we've cyt our rmc and ~,.....
blllt dramatically. We've •hori.ntd our
hnurllll !Jlet OUI 1ai. COii.i are cut IJI half,
And you r• the •Yi•
Qi,!it.e rranldy we ""'"• thet we'r. icolna 1o m•a lot ol cutWtuon. But we' rt not look· int (or lbe ~ I.hat llllY9 on llrtpuae
or la lookln1 (or mytblul ber«tlo.. We
w1nt cua1ornere that ert lntalll11e•t, Ille lacta and.,.~ w antlyae va/ut.
10£Al llUll.IANT .CUT "'Of'ORTIOHS
DIAMOND
CUTTING .
If YoU i.. • dtlmond 'wtth a Qhlp or ~ area, pr
Just wllh to have Grandma's old diamond recut Into
tOdav'l modern loOk..come In and talk to this~ for all
tt\e anawwa. Hie nerne la Jeny Chat1ea.
Wouldn't )IOU rather buy diamonds from the peopie Who
cut them? .
. WE THINK THE MORE r ou KNOW ABOUT DIAMON~ THE MORE YOU'LL~PR~CIATE us.
"JF YOU AAE NOT BUYfNG BY A STANDARD, .\'OU ARE P~YING TOO MUCH ...
SPECIAL tiOl.tOAY HOURS BEGINNtNG !40VEMBER 29tfl •
Daily J0-6P.M. • Sat 10..S;OOP.M. W.ster Ch113e • Bankamericard • Amerbn Express
' ...
• • '
I
•Ann Landers •Televl1lon
•Boating •Sports
.An Eve
To Revel
Orange Coast nightspots
a.re gearing up to ring in
the New Year.
The countdown to 1978 has already begun as
hotels and nightspots gear up for their New
Year's Eve celebrations.
As in years past, Orange Coast revelers have
a lot to choose from in the way of entertainment.
There's everything from the Big Band Sound to
rock and roll and disco. · .
There's also a wide range of price tags: from
a $50 per person hotel package deal to $10 per
person for a night al Disneyland.
Attire for even the most gala party, as is
typical in Southern Californil\, seems to be left up
to the individual. As one holef'<;pokesperson said,
it can be anything from black tie to "whatever
flips your switch.••
Reservations a re required for the big New
Year's Eve parties and most require payment la
advance. Because nearly everyone predicts
sellouts, it is advised to make reservations early.
For those not planning to stay home and
bring in the New Year with Johnny Carson, tbe
following survey may be of help:
South Coast Plaza Hotel: An eigbt~urse
.. Italian accented gourmet dinner" will be
served in Alfredo's Restaurant. The cost of $50
per person includes wine. champagne, party
favors. flowers for the women and entertainment ·
. by a female vocalist and a three-piece group, ·
between 9 and 2.
Jn the hotel's Blue Parrot lounge and diseo
there will be entertainment between 8 and 2. The·
cover charge is $7 per person, party favors in-
clud~. Newporler Inn: There will be three parties in
three rooms, each ofCerine a dinner-dance with
champagneandpartyfavorsat$70percouple.
Providing music will be Ed Leach and the
lJig Band Sound in the Monte Carlo Ballroom, the
• l:Ddangered Species in the Empire Room and the
Alan Remington Quartet if! the Maripe
RestamanL , t
. .
• Ih addition, the rock group Awakeninl wUl
begin playjng at 8:45 in the Udo Lounge. The
cover is $4.
Newport Beach Marriott: The hotel is offer-
ing tbrtle·New Year's Eve party packages:
-The Society for the Preservation or Big
Bands and The Brewers will provide the dance
music in the Pacific Ballroom. The price of $83
per oouple includes a steak and lobster dinner,
unlimited cocktails, champagne at midnight and
party favors.
-The Wally Ruth Quartet will entertain in
the Capriccio Cafe from 9 p. m. The cost is $78 per
couple and includes the Pacific Ballroom
package.
-Disco music will be provided in the King's
Wharf with a prime rib dl~mer and champagne at
midnight at $35 per couple.:
Sberat.on Newport: The Brasilia Room will
be the scene of the New Year's gala at $S5 per
couple. Included are a complete prime rtb din·
ne:r, cocktails served throughout the evening, .
champagne and party favors. The BBC trio will
entertain in the lounge, whieb wrn have no cover -
or minimum.
Regl.stry : There are two New Year's Eve op-
tions. Keith Willi ams and his Orchestra will en·
tertain in the Orange County Ballroom, begin·
ning at 9. lhcludcd in the $30 per person cost are a
complete steak dinner, (served from 7:30·10:30)
champagne and party favors.
The other party also ls $30 per person. A
choice of five special en trees wiU be served int~
hotel dining room, which is ne;d to the Grand .-
. Portage Room whe11e singer Oleta Adams, .ill
entertain from 9to1~45. There ls a dance floodn •
this room and an additional floor will be·add~t.-: the dining room. . •
San Clemente Ian: Mark Mordasini wlll·p~
vide the !Jig Band Sound in the Aqua '.Matiij.,
Room. Included in the $12 per cotiple plli,c~; .. f·•
champagne and party favors. The BBC.'wllh•
tertain in the lounge, which will have no cove11 OS\-.
mint mum. ·
Huatlagton Beach Inn: A New Yearp.: ·.,. package at $40 per couple wil\ include
<cboiceoffourentrees>, ch'ampaane, party • .,..
and dancing to the music of Germaine and Clear
Daya. Dinnerwm be from 8to 11 and muslcfromt
to1:30. • Taleol~ Wbale: The New Year's Eve .,Bal
Night" wllJ. begin with a buffet dinner at 8,
followed by dancing between 9and1 to the music
of Charlie BuUer and his Big Band Sounds
-een iOO l. The price iS $12:50 per person.-
pally ravon included.
Dtaneyland: The hotel is not having a party
but the park is featuring recording star Minnie
Ripperton (and Meco) on the Space Staie •.
Thejuz artistry of Roy Ayers Ubiquity Will <See EVE, Pa1e B2)
DAIL 'Y PIL.OT
Others leam to label first aid kits ...
HldegiJrd BrldeMteln. 1e1t. and Mrs. Gulver •
• t
..
••
The Rehabilitation Center trains hand-
icapped· ;Jc;J.ults to help themselves by
learning a ~rade.
~y MAR(:IA FORSBER~
Olu.to.11' f'lletSt.it
A Fountain Valley woman l:\'&nts
$25,000 for ' Christmas. llul she
doesn't waht the money for henelf.
In fact, Aline J . Colgate, ex-
ecutive dil"'eflor for Elwyn.
California Rehabilitation Center,
has mailed Christmas cards to her
relatives, saying, "Don't send me
any presents -just send Elwyn
money.'' ..
The f2s.009· is needed as
matching funds by Dec. 31 in order
to secure a grant from the rrvine
Foundation.
Elwyn-C'allfornia RehabllltaUon
Center (tbe only California pro-
gram of th~ Pennsylvan1a-based
Elwyn InstittJle) is a non-~rofil, non-sectarian facility serving in·
dividuals with developmental dis-
abilities, mental. retardation,
cerebral palsy, epi~e~y, emotional·
disability, neur~cal impair-
ments ~md/ot:'multi-handicaps.
The Center's purpose is to train
handicapped adults over 18 in work
situations and bring them to. the
point of competency so they may-
be. productive, emp)oyable cttizens
or the community, according to
Wesley E . .Bellwood, chairman of
the board of tnanaaen.
ELWYN·CAUFORNIA IS fully
approved by the Commission of Ac-
c red i ta tion of Rehabtlitatioo
Facilities and is recognized as a
charitabl e organization.
It's currently in the middle or a rund·ral.sinf: campaign where the
goal is $350,000. The money is
earmarked (or renovti.tion and pay-
ment or the mortgage for the Cen·
ter's building at 18325 Mt. Baldy
Circle in Fountain Valley.
"The Irvine Foundation gave us·
a $25,000 grant on the' condition that
we ralse another $25,000 or non·
government.Al fun~ by Dec. 31, · •
said Mrs. Colgate. • .. She added'that tire tacility has
c0nt~cted 450 dlfter.ent companies
in Orange County, appealing for
help so the gran( won't be lost.
But it tak~s time to become
known, and t}Je 3~·yeat-old work
activity center is sWI in its infancy
as tar as public awareness goes. It
has tried to accomplish its goals
' with a minimum amount of publici·
ty, but now finds itself in need of
financial aid to cover the cost
necessary to fund its training
center facility. ·
BUT WHAT EXACTLY does
Elwyn-California do? What goes on
<See ELWYN, Pa1e BZ)
j
f
...
.J • • o'.it, ....... ..., "" .. ,, ... . .. •nd to.count bandagM.
Du••aite·i~y·
The ~nimcil Assi$tance League helps
pets, prevents cruelty to animals and
promotes humane education.
. . .
•
By DENNiS McLELlAN "1'\'ices the lea.cue proYides.
0t11ito.11rf'IMtstMt • 'J'ffE AJ.L.VOLUNTEEll. non"' In the Animal Asslstanc,·Le'ague profit Humane •Oclety is de·
office in Garden Grove ttier& is a dicated to aiding lost and unwanted
rramed photograph of ,an pld • pets, preventing cruelty to
womln bUggtng a big b1' . anlmats, helplbg .peopt
The woman is smiling broad!~ and related problems and promoting
her eyes are on' the verge of tears. humane eciucatioo-
Tbe picture was taken at the dog The state Incorporated organiza·
pound. The woman, who was un· lion was founded in Mrs. GuiVet-'s
employed, didn't have the living room four years ago with six
necdsU'J-$20 to redeem ber J»'l. . other ani.Qlal lovers. Tbe mem-
• Th~ the Animal Aatltance bership roster today numbers
Lea1ue ci( Orange Couattfi 'Which some 200.
stepped ta and paid the fee, the "I've atwayl bad a deep affinity
·womanandherbeslfriendwetere.. 'for all kmds of creatures.'• says.
united. Mrs. Gulver, recently re-elec~
"Sbe Wiii in a r.i panic.'•says president for the third time.
leape PJ'!lldent Pat Gutter, lwho •'Through the years 1 belonged to
took-UM 1*tufe. "She thought that at Jeat one national humane or-
do1 wu JMiing to be klUed for 11,Pre. sanlzaUon.
She buqtl me sbe klaaed IM' dog •·aut generally in those kinds or
and abe WOUld ~ave posed for me groups the only thing you can do is
all tlaY-" send money. I always wanted to do Thu p)cl.ure dramatieally ll-more than that and this was an op-
lu.strates what the Animal As· portunlly."
J , I
f t
j
I
J
{
•
ailtana JieaCue ii all abOut. ' "' The poup originally worked out
Bu.t:,,_ ald, wblc;b prntdes of lbo HunUDllOll Beach J>Ouncl • .._.,... _.pt.QJow•loCcmapeople I tor emeraencles, is just~· tA the <See DOGS, Pase 93)
,
'l . ., ~ • • r • • ~ ..-..~-.r .. I...,.__....._· .......
JIZ DAii. Y PILOT Frld•t. 0.C.mbet 16. 1077, HOROSCOPE
. ['-_B_o_ro_...... _•~_·op __ e ___ J
SATURDA V. Dt;C. IT
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES <March 21 April 19): Cycle hieh -stre~s pioneering instincts, onglnahty. Take in-
!t1at1ve; t'xtub1t leudcrship qualities. Popularity
mcreasee; judgme!lt• inlultion on targ~. Yes, do
mak.e new starts 1n new directions. Many are
loQk1ng to you for guidance.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be confident
express views. Obtain valid hint from Aries·
message. YoU' get rid or rears, doubts. Answers
co~.e fro~ within you -you feel stronger,
~pmtually. mt.act. Leo, Aquarius persons figure
m scenario. Individual confined to home or
hospital appreciates your concern.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20 ). Accent on relief
from tension. What seemed a major obstacle is
overcof!te. Friend aids. Relationship becomes . ~om~thing to value, not to rear. Misunderstand-
ing JS erased, air is cleared. Aquarius, Cancer,-. ..
Leo persons could figure prominently.
CANCER (June 21 .July 22): Versatility pays
orr. -peop!J? see diffcrenl side or you and are du-
ly >m1;>ress@<I. Gemini, Sagittarius persons-figure
• pr<?~rnenlly. Accent on goals, standing, ca(eer.
• • ga1m~g support of professional· associates,
: supenors.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Study Cancer
message. Reach beyond current expectations.
Communications, publication and travel could
be featured. Your values, material and spiritual,
are spotlighted. Aquarius, Taurus and Scorpio
persons play key roles. Be specific about what
you wish to achieve.
. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Make inquiries
concerning accounting, leases, rentals -
cooperate with close associate, partner' or mate
in connection with budgetary matters. If you dig
deep, you save, earn and could strike pay dirt.
Gemini, Sagittarius individuals figure in
.scenario. · ~
·LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22 >: Moderation is key
-go :.low, avoid direct confrontations, especial·
ly where legal <iffairs, partnership, marriage are
concerned. Let. others spell out their desires.
Gatber information, material. Prepare r.ather
than attack. , '
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Study Libra
message. Avoid fooling yollrself. Wishful think·
ing surfaces. Be imaginative without brooding.
Perceive subtle hints, hidden meanings. Pisces,
Virgo could figure prominently. What had been
difficult can be achieved -il you stop trying to
force issues.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Good
lunar aspect coincides with journey, opening
lines of communication, utilization of your
natural talents. One you admire returns compli-
ment. Capricorn, Libra and Leo are in picture.
Love is a part of scenario -and you know it!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Origins,
past commitments, parental ties are in picture.
You complete what you start, but not without
controversy. Be ready for a "good fight."
AQVARJUS CJ an. 20-Feb. 18): Ideas neecf to
be "sharpened." Streamline techniquea.
Relatives may attempt to have you modify con-
cepts. Adhere to your own principles. Short trip, '
notes, messages, calls figure in scenario. Throw
• out the superfluous. You 'Jl get needed s upport for
doing so.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20>: Accent on
personal possessions, income, collection of
needed data. You know "inside" what must be
done -you perceive, feel and you have sense of
security that 1s on target.
U Dec. 17 ls your birthday you are creative
affectionate. have difficult lime in letting othe~
know the "real you." Capricorn, Cancer persons.
play important roles in your life. September was
memorable month. August of 1978 will be your
most s,ignificant month. Your position is strong·
don't permit enviou.s, weak, "blue" persons ~
convince you otherwise. .
(From Page Bl)
••• Eve
be spotlighted on Tomorrowland Ter race and
Louie Bellson and the Big Band Explosion wm
entertain in the Plaza Garden.
Advance tickets are at $10 per person ($12 at
the gate> and include unli'l'Dlted.use of pane at~
tractions, except sbootine gaUerles.
Balboa Bay Club: Harry Babbt\t and Ansel
Hill will provide the Big 6and Sourid tor D\em -
bers and guests. No-host cocktails will begll at 8
p.m., followed by dinner and dancing, begir.nln&
at 9p.m. The cost is $25perperson.
Bobby McGee's: The special evenlnt accom·
modation at $20 per J>erson Includes a five·
course dinner, champagne and party favors.•
Following dinner there will· be dancing in the
disco.
. For those who prefer to bring 1n the new year
m Las· Vegas, the gambling capital will do it up
with typical fanfare.
Some of th~ Strip hotel offerings are:
The Hacienda Hotel will have a midnight;
show, Jee Fantasy, at $16.10 per person; the Las
Vegas Hilton plans a complete dinner at 10:30
with champugne and party favors, followed by~
midnight Liberace show al $50 per person.
The Stardust Hotel is orfering a complete
·steak dinner, champagne, party favors and
dancing at 10:30, followed by Ule rnldpigbt New.
Lido de Paris show at ~7 per person.
At the Sahara the Midnight Buddy Hackel·
Donald O'Connor dinner-show will coat $42.50 per
pers.on.
Slip your Face· into
Something Comfortable .
•t---_..__-Slip yovr Fooe into-
Something Beautiful!,
Treat youraetf
to a nek hair style
for the
Hofidays ot
AL~ECO
ALFREDO'S
In
Laouna Beach-
and
• 1101 So, Collt Hwy.
Lleuf\e lelCh
(714) 494-'1111
..
•••. EJ"'yD
<From Pa1e 8 l)
bet\lnd the white walls or I.he build·
In& )ituated in an industrlahecUon
juist off the San Dlqo Freeway?
Aline Colgate tells tbe story:
lt aU started back in 1852, when
Elwyn Institute was foundiecl in
Penmylvania:
For 100 years, Elwyn grew as a
closed custodial Institute, where
people wilh problems were locked.
away because they were "dlt·
ferent," she said.
But in 1960, Dr. Gerald R. Clark-,
preaident of Elwyn Institute, began
working to remove the stigma of
mental retardation by revolutioniz-
ing the system there. "Ile ordered
the bars off the windows and the
doors unlocked," explained Mrs. Colgate.
· By opening up the facility, sh~
said, it was changed to a "transt-
tional rehabilitation center." The
purpose wu. to t.cAUuind ~re
the handicapped to such a degree
that t.bey would be able to )"'.Ork and
function independently in the com-
munity.
"ELWYN ESTABLISHED it.a re·
putatioo and became known
lhrm/ibout the Unlted States," suirl
Mts. Colpte. "We were invited by
profeqloaals In the rehabilitallon
lieldto1tart a cent.er in California.•·
trainees do, they are paid pitte
rates, and every two weeks they
get a paycheck.
The Orange County center, -
wbkb started with 14 handicapped
trainees and now serves 142, wiU be
JOBS ilE CONTRACTED with
area companies and are usuaJly or
the assem~y llne variety. For in:
stance, CrouJ>1: or trainees are cur-
rently p u ft l n g together
stetho1.copea , assembling
skateboards, packaging band·alds
and labeling tlrst aid kits.
• four years old next M'ay. During that time, 261 citizens hove suc-
cessfully been through the pro-
jram.
They advance at their owr rate,
Mrs. Colgate said. For example.
"We ftill have ,.r ·-' people who
have been here aanct the day we
opened. Others ar& out. in tour
weeq. It depends cm the individual
aad what he brings with him, bow
much he .knows."
l'Oll THE MENTALLY retarded
or multJ-handicapped person who
has little Idea of what's Involved
wllb holding a job, the day pro-
gram teacl~ bow to punch a time
clock, proper work habits and al·
"There are two things we have to
be most careful of. One is quaUty
' ~ontiol and the other is accurate
counts," M.rs. Colgate revealed.
t'bia center does more than teach
the trainees how to work:
"Sometimes the person may
have aJl the attributes or being a
good worker, but be may have
problems, such as inappropriate
behavior. We have to be careful that
they have the social development
artd maturity as well as work
skills," she said.
tJtudet, aafety, responsibility and So, the center .ofters -nncillar)"
"how to work -anything they servicee known as "1'dult Educa-
would have to know on a regular tion. '' This includes social aware-J~b." ness groups; a work preRaration
"The workshop se(tliigis CJeslibea---progrartr.to"1ft~fy~'ln1llfproprtm:e--
to be as realistic u an actual fac-. behavior; a basic sldlls program
tory -daydreamers are "brought where lower functionin g in-
back to the fact that thia ls a real dlviduals are taught to count, read,
job." abe said. staple, collate and so on; and a
In exchange for the work the heallbandbygieaeprogram.
Once sntiftrnctorlly tralned, the •
bigh Cund.ionlDI (lhose who can
read and wrlte, she explained) are
placed ln jobs they are suited fo('
Tra\nees at the rehabilitation
facility are usually referred and
sponsored by either the Regional
Center of Orange County or t.he
California Department or
Rehabllltation. Each person
11erved ia charJed a fee, which Is
paid by the sp6naorlne agency <or
trainees may pay private tu1Uon >.
ELW\'N·CALIFOBNIA IS self-
sustaining and able to roeet current
operating costs through the re-
ha billtatlon fees and contract
packaging operations, "but for
capital expenditures <Uke payment ot the mortaaae>, we do fund rais-
ing," .aald.Mrs. Colgate.
Ad mlnistrators intend to use
donated monies for an evaluation'
center (for tests that measurf!
Vf"caUonal potential), classrooms,
and a self-contained apartment fbr
training in cooking, wasblng
clothe~ and soon.
'"'fiy renovating the ttpstaft;"
said Mrs. Colgate, "we can provide
additional programs and serve
more people. Right now we have 60
people on our waiting llst -that
shows the demand.''
.
joyce·selby shoes
Just in ffmef!!
you've discovered ' the GarmeDt '~
District· . ~
Chri•bnas $$$ go twice as fer!
50°/o to 70°/o OFF Retail Prices
Dresses • Evenlngwear • Sportswear
Slzes3-16 .. .. 14K Gold Chains & Charms
642-0051 Houra 'till Christmas
SCARPINO
-1927 Harbor Blvd. 10:30· 8 p.m. ~ COsta Mesa Sunday 12-s p.m.
~~· .~-~
The best of both worlds. All the sottnesf and comfort of your favorite
loafer. The height and high styling of your best·dressed shoes Result· Joyce comfort, dash, versatility, CLASS! $34. · ·
•
Upper Level. Near May Co.
South Coast Plaza
Costa Mesa 546-4791
the quarter coat ... by ZERO KING~
..
-
........
petfed Winterweis?t. 100~ cot.ton
suede shell w1th plelining,and
deep slash pockets .
. .
t
VISA
I
t
l
--------:·,.. ~ ~ .f-.... ~~ '-·~~-:..~-,~. ,4. l.
&nday. Oecembor f6, f971 DAIL V PU.Ol' 83
Letter from a Gentleman of Christmas Past
r,' t> E A R A N N pr int somelhlnc that.
•LAllfDBRS; Last yc ur 1-forb rnn. You did. Was
JOU J>rlnt.ed a delightful ther~ a follow·up this pl~ on Chrialmas let-year? flow about lettlng
ten from ··Your BJonde us in on what happened?
Friend ln Reno." She INQUISITIVE IN
hid that. since you and BU RLJNCAME
her other favorlt.e, Herb "'
Caen, of tbe San Fran-· l>EAR INK: Herb
ChC'b&mu 1.etters, bu( your teetb. If Che bedside Brae~ BUveo's are dlf· radio Ja warm In &be
ferent. Now 86, the one· moralng, you left I& oa all
Ume Mttor of The New night. If you are wearing
Republic (for 30 years) one brown shoe and one
lives with bis wife at lllack shoe, you have a
Ktagacote Ga'rdeas, palrllkellaomewbereln
Stanford. Bliven wrote: • the cl01et. Try not to
realized my mistake a DEAR H.B.: I have
few days alter l fUled in good neW1 tor you from
tho appUcaUon and have l.oreo E. Lawrenct'. felt gullty about lt ever Director of thl' Passport
since but l let things OUlce lo Wuhlogton.
ride. D.C. lie uld ... The
~•co Chronicle, were· Caea wrote in Ja.naary of
both against Christmas. 1111:
letters. maybe you'd ••1 don't. care for
•• 'At 86. Jtosfe aad I mind when a frtead tells
Jive by the ruletJ of the y9a on your birthday
elderly. If &he toothbruab! &bat a Cate of prune juice
is wet. you have brushed b11 beea doaa&ed In your
name &o a retirement
bome •
l wtll be needing a new gentleman need n~t be
paHJ>()rt soon. I don't concerned. He should
want to perpetuate this submit a statement wlth
error, but I'm afraid I bis new pa11pert ap·
might nm Into legal dif· plication st-at1ag that be on whlclt way I'll 10 set. We rarely tuna f. flcultles 1t I put anoth~ ls corredlng lt1s wile's
next. Tb1a upaeta me. oe. • •• country when I apply for place of bll1JI. The reeord
Children abooldo't gam· I wu so amaaed b .. my new passport. Last wlll then be Jn order. No
hie. Ll.ke m08t ·eldedy B u r c e B 11 v e a •' week 1 mentioned this to problem." (P.S. Remlnd
people ~ 1pead muy Cluis&mu leUer that I a lawyer friend and he your wife sbe was born
hours ID ll'OOt ol the TV. wrote ud asked b1m &o shrugged it off. I'd ap-elsewhere so her story •• • Dogs
<From Page Bb
wbeu it was run by a private
animal control business.
That, says Mrs. Guiver, gave
them the opportunity to have their .. first experience working "1n a
pound and really coming to grips
with the problem or animal surplus
and the lack or responsibility of pel owners."
When the Huntington Beach
pound lost its contract, the leag(le
decldedtonotonlyconlinue, but ex-pand.
Volunteers moved out of a small
office in Huntington Beach last May
and into the present headquarters, a
' leased four-room house behind a
.kennel owned by a league member.
t'I tb'tnk our main thrust is educ a·
('lion," says Mrs. Guiver. "We try to
help people. Behind every animal in J trouble is a person. Unless you help
that person you can 'l help the pet.
"We have a lot of literature,
which we distribute at shopping
centers when they have bazaars
and things. And I speak to groups."
, The league's animal help line,
which operates six days a week
between 10 a .m. and 2 p.m.
(537·2.."73), is called more lban BOO
times a month.
•'THATS REAU.Y WHAT this
office is set up to maintain," Mrs.
· Guiver explains. "1 feel every time
we speak to somebody on the phone
it's an educational thing."
WhjJe they receive every im-
aginable question, the most com-
mon are from people who have lost
or found dogs or who want to get rid
' <>f a pet. <The league maintains <i
Jost and found.file).
Another frequent can is a request
Jor iofonnation on spaying and
neutering, which the league pro·
motes to cut down the animal ovec· population.
Nationally 13.5 million cats and
dogs were put to death in 1973, ac-
cording to the Humane Society or
the United States.
The figure for Orange County is as
equally distrubing.
Of the 57,788 cats and dogs re·
ceived by the county anitnal
shelter in 006, only 11,249 were re-
deemed and 4,600 adopted. That
means 38,607 cats and dogs had to
be destroyed,
THE PET OVERPOPULATION
is the county's biggest animal
problem, says Mrs. Guiver.
"Orange County has a particular
problem in that it's a very mobile
population. People seem to move
where their pet doesn't fit in or
isn't a llowed such as in con·
dominiums or apartments. .
"H's a lack of foresight on the
part of the owner. They get a pup-
py, not realty realizing it's going lo
get big, not realizing it's going to
make demands on the family.
"Buying pets is too much of an
" •J .1tat&er •ben I .
walk and 1mall boya
follow me, 111aldag bets
emotional, impulsive thing. Pets
should be planned." Aging Told
Stay Warin
put me Oil Illa malling list preciate your counseL -w l l I m a t -c b y o u r
foraextyear. H.B •• DETROIT passport.>
In promoting spay4ng and
.neutering to help cut down the pet
surplus, the league works with
300U1 a.do:zen CO!J¥y -Uterinarians
who offer reduced rates to pet
Bia reapoase was--------------~---.-warm and funny. or
• owners who are re<:om mended by
the league. Rates vary according
to area so the league advises peo-
ple to shop around.
THE GROUP ~ has several
volunteers at the county animal
shelter in Garden Grove, near the
City ~bopping Center. .
"This 1s where we meet the
public face-to-face," says Mrs.
Guiver ... A lot. of people come in
there with boxes of puppies and kit-
tens and you can talk to them about
spaying and neutering."
Mrs. Quiver says there is a state
Jaw that says no cat over six
months old can be adopted from
the shelter unless it has been
;i ltered.
While she views this luw as good
in helping control the pet popula·
lion, this means that a lot of cats
that might be adopted aren't.
But now, through the league's ef.
fort, it is able to step in and have the
pet altered so it can be adopted.
"We take it to the vet, return it to
the shelter and tbe owner pays for
the necessary fees and spaying,"
says Mrs. Guiver.
THE LEAGUE OPERATES on
an annual budget of about $11,000,
earned through membership dues,
fund raisers and donations.
••It's a hund ·t o-mouth ex-·
1slence." says Mrs. Guiver with a
laugh, "but we seem to make it."
WASHINGTON <AP> -With winter ap-
proaching, the National lnsUtute on Aging bas
advised elderly people to keep their homes heat-
ed at 65 degrees or higher lo avoid a potenUa.Uy
fatal drop in body temperature.
The institute, a federal agency, said 2.3
million Americans aged 65 or older -to percent
of the nation's elderly -are particularly
vulnerable to the condition called accidental
hypothermia.
The high·risk group includes people with dis·
eases or the veins and arteries, hyperthyroidism
or those taking phenothiazine drugs. These
drugs, commonly prescribed for anxie9', nausea
or depression. impair the body's response lo
cold.
The victims of accidental hypothermia do
not even shiver as thetr temperature falls below
the normal 98.6 degrees.
Dr. Robert N. Butler, the institute direct.or,
said recently that the body's heal regulatinf
mechanisms such as shivering often do nQtlwork
aswellamongtheelderly.
Hypothermia is defined as any body tem·
perature below 95 degrees.
Dr. Rob.ert W. BesdineofBoston, an institute
consultant, said death can occur between 80 and
90 degrees and "is the rule below 80. ••
"This is not from spending a winter night on
a pallk bench or immersion in the winter ocean,
which can be fatal to anyone, "Besdinetold a news
briefing. "These aged people are in dange.r of ex·
posure to mildly c;ool environments, .some as
warm as 65 degrees.'' Most cases occur in places
kept between 50 and 60 degrees, be added.
Last J anuary, President Carter ordered
thermostats in federal buildings set at 65 degrees
during the day and 55 at night, and he en-
couraged all Americans to do the same in their
homes. •
But BuUer said that may not be suitable for
elderly people "who are often up at night.••
cou:ae be woald -with
plealal'e.
Bat_.iu, ~re wULbe no Cbiistmu letter from
ta.a& dear maa. Last
May, Bnace Bllven died
quietly a& &be age ol 81 at
Tbe Stufonl Medical
Center la Palo Alto.
My CGDdoletle* to bis
wife, Ro11e. Wllat a
lac:ky WOIDUl lbe la 1o
have bad aucb a
atlmalattag, fu·lovtn1
compuJoa fOT so Dl&D.7 year1.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS1 Some time
ago, I applled for a
passport. The question·
naire asked, "Birthplace
of Wife" -although the
passport was for me
alone. By mistake I put
down "U.S." She was
born in another country
and came here as child.
For. a long time I was
confused because I
heard my wife asked this
qu~tioo many times and
she always answered, .. 1
was born in the U.S."' I
dick .A ·
-:==vernon's
li{lllf tswe:.1 r
iliJi~nm~high aocks,
reg. 1.29 to 1.99. 5 pr. 5 .90
thru this weekend
Offer Coocf Ott. 16-18
SOUTH COAST PLAZA ONLY
COSTA MESA
She notes that there are only
about 20 active voluntee rs who
donate their time on a weekly
basis. While most work on the
animal help line, one league
member is an accredited state
humane officer who investigates
animal cruelty and abuse cases.
There is, however. an urgent
need for more volunteers, Mrs.
Guiversays. A D~~ • HENREOON • LANDMARK • A~RELOOM BEDDING • HIBRITEN
••we are limlted in what we can
do only be the amount of help
available,'' she says. "The more
volunteers we have, the more
animals we can save."
c.nbe
RK'ded.
Orange CoaUCouege is the Ofllclal re<:.,cllng center
tor Costa AMw.
HAIR, ETC.
240t I MAlttMJM.111 PKWY.
MllSl09\ YlllO
INTRODUCES
UZZADE~O
MBfS & WOMIN'S HAii snusr· ·
HAllt ltlMOVAI. • .... ~y
IUIOl'IAM STYLI
·--IMJ.Nft&.-.•M MM.ITll#'f.0.U
ftlOMI 137-3332 '°' APPOMT1•1T:
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AMERION ON( ANTIQUES * PEWTER'* PANTS N:-0 SKJRTS * HOME ANO GOURMET ITEMS .. . .
G>
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wHI give you 11% Off
~nyway ••• eo BtJRR Y !
-PAN1'S -Si\ifiigs 0f'$ to---
541% on namebranda.
HOLil>AY!>R~ES-tJP to
25% OJ'F -!a Ume Cor· the parUes.
TOPS -Upto2S~ Oii
And remember ••• U U'• net
marked dowa, we wUl give
'OD It% ()(f anyway!
~ 111681Umw1 .. We I I utm
(In Fa.io't Shopping c.nter)
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23M8 ~ 111\od,
• (213) 371-1271
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After fifteen years in the same
JocaUon we are about to move to •
our fabulous new store at the corn~r
of 16th St. and Newport Blvd. m ~
Costa Mesa. What this means to ypu >
is an oi>l>OrtwlRYti)se ecnrom our tn
terriflc selection of qu~lity ...,.
fUrilish1Dgs at unbelievable saV10gs. ~
All purchases are on a first come n
fint serve basis, cash only with no '° returns. Don't delay -act now for >
the chance of a llf eUme. Decorate .,.,
for tbe holidays at discounted -i
pricp that will astound you.
LAGUNA BEACH
345 Nortt1 Cont Hwy
(71-4) 41M-655t
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OAIL V PILOl" 83 &tlday, Doctmber 16, 1917'
I •
Letter from a Gentleman of Christmas Past
I D~AR ANN
LANDERS: Last ye"r
J'OU Printed • dellghtful
.Piece on Chriatmu Jet·
print something that
Herb fall\ You did. Was ther e" a follow.up this
year? How about lettinf
us in on what happened?
INQUISITIVE IN.
BURLINGAME
J ten from ''Your Blonde
!'Tl end ln Reno.•• She
Hid that since you ¥Dd
her other favorite, Herb
Caen, of· the San Fran.· D£AR INK: Herb
ciaco Chronicle, were· Cua wrote lD Janaary of
both against Christmas. 1111:
letter.sr maybe you'd ~·1 doo'l care for
•• .DogS
Chrl1tmas lt'tten. but,
Bruce Bllveo's are dlf·
ferHt. Now 86Lthe one-time editor of "I.be New
Republic: (for 30 year•)
llvH with hJa wife al
Klagacote Gardena,
Stanford. Bliven wrote: •
0 •At 86, Rosie and I
live by the rulea of the
elderly. If the toothbna.abl
is w~t. you have brushed
(From Page sh emotional, impulsive thing. Pets
b t should be planned." w en t was run by a private In promoting spaying and animal control business. That, says Mrs. Guiver, gave neutering to help cut down the pet
them the opportunity to have their surplus, the league works with
••first experience working in a about a dozen county veterinarians
pound and really coming to "'rips who offer reduced rates to pet "' owners who are recommended by with the problem of animal surplus the league. Rates vary according ~~~!~:.~~ck of responJ1ibility of pet lo area so the league advises peo·
When the Huntington Beach pie to shop.around.
pound loSt its contract, the league THE GROUP ALSO has several
decldedtonotonlycontinue, but ex-volunteers at the county animal pand.
Volunteen moved out or a small shelter in Garden Grove, near the
fj City Shopping~ter. . of ce in Huntington Beach last May , 'This Is where we meet the
andintothepresentheadquarters, a public face.to-face," says Mrs. leased foq,r.room house behind a ~ .kennel.ownedbyaleaguemember. Guiver. "A lot of people come in , :'I think our main thrust is educa· there with boxes o{ puppies and kit· f 'tion," says Mrs. Guiver. "We try to tens and you can talk to them about
help people. Behind every animal in spaying and neutering."
trouble is a person. Unless you help Mrs. Quiver says there is a state
thatpersonyoucan'thelp tbepet. law that says no cat over six months old can be adopted from ~ "We have a lot of literature, the shelter unless it has been • which we distribute at shopping altered.
centers when they have bazaars While she views this law as good
and things. And I speak to groups." in helping control the pet popula·
The league's animal help line. lion, this means that a lot of cats
• which operates six days a week that might be adopted aren't.
between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Butnow,througbtheleague'sef.
<537·2273), is called more than 800 fort, it is able to step ln and have the
times a month. pet altered so it can be adopted.
• . . "We take it to the vet, return it to . 'THA'rS REALLY WHAT this the shelter and the owner pays for
. .oU~ce i$..&et.~~aimaiD-, ''. ~rs.--ure necessary fees and spaying,,.
Guaver explauuJ. I feel every time says Mrs. Guiver. we speak to somebody on the phone
il's an educational thing."
While they r~ive every lm· aginable question, the most com-
mon are from people who have lost
or found dogs or who wnnt lo get rid
THE LEAGUE OPERATES on
an annual budget or about $11.000,
earned through membership dues.
fund raisers and donations.
~ <>f a pet. <The league mai.rltains a
Jost and found file).
Another frequent call is a request
for information on spaying and
neutering, whicn the league pro·
motes to cut down the animal over· popuJatioo.
•' lt 's a hand·lO ·mouth ex-·
istence." says Mrs. Quiver with a
laugh, "but we seem to make iL"
your tee«i. It the bedside
radio Is warm In &be
morning, you left it on all
algbt. If you are wearing
one brown sboe and one
black aboe, you have a
palr Uke It aomewbere lD
lbe closet. Try not to
mbld when a friend tells
you OD your birthday
that a cue of prune JaJce
ha1 beea doaated in your
name &o a retirement
bome.
" 'J stair&er' wbea 1.
walk aad amall boys
follow me. ma.tiag bets
oa wblcb way I'll go
next. This upaeta me.
CbUdren sboulcln't gam·
ble. Uke most elderly
people we speed many
boars (A front of lbe TV.
Aging Told
Stay Warm
W ASmJIJGTON <AP) -With . winter ap·
proaching, the National Institute on Aging bas
advised elderly people to keep their homes heat·
ed at 65 degrees or higher to avoid a potentially
fatal drop in body temperature.
The institute, a federal agency, said 2.3
million Americans aged 65 'or older -10 percent
of the nation's elderly -are particularly
vulnerable to the condition called accidental
hypothermia.
The high· risk group includes people with dis·
eases or the veins and arteries, hyperthyroidism
or those laking phenothiazine drugs. These
drugs, commonly prescribed for anxie~. nausea
or depression, impair the body•s response to
cold.
1'he victims or acc1denlaJ hypothermia' do
not even shiver as their temperature falls below
the normal 98.6 degrees.
Dr. Robert N. Butler, the institute director,
said recently that the body's heat regulatinl
mechanisms such as shivering often do not work
as well among the elderly.
Hypothermia is defined as any body tem·
perature below 95 degrees.
Dr. Robert W. Besdine of Boston, an institute
consultant, said death can i>ccur between 80 and
90 degrees and ''is the rule below 8>."
"This is not from spending a winter night on
a park bench or Immersion in the winter ocean,
which can be fatal to anyone, "'Besdinetold a news
briefing. "These aged people are in danger or ex·
pasure to mildly <;ool environments •. some as
warm as 65 degrees.·' Most cases occur in places
kept between 50 and 60degrees, be added.
Last January, President Carter ordered
thermostats in federal buildings set at 65 degrees
during the day and SS at night, and he en·
couraged all Americans to do the same in their
homes.
But Butler said that may not be suitable for
elderly people•· who are often up at night."
realized my mistake u DEAR H.B.: I have
few days at\er 1 fill~ in good newa. for you from •
the application and have Loren E . l.awrenc~.
Celt guJlty aboW it ever Director of the Passport
since but I let. things Office Jn WasbJngton.
ride. D.C. He said , "The
I will be needing a new gentlemu need not &>e
passport soon. I don't concerned. He should
want to perpetuate this submit a statement with
erroc, but. I'm afraid I bis new passporl ap-
micbt run loto le1al dlf· pllca&lon statlDg that be
set. We rarely tuna fi ncultles It I put another ts eorred!ng Ills wile's
oo.' •• . country when I apply for place of birth. The record
I wn so 1u1u11ed b .. my new passport. Last 'Wiil tbea be lD order. N()
B u r c e B l l v e a •' week I mentioned this to problem."' (P.S. llemlnd
Cluis&mu 1eUe1' tllat I a lawyer friend and he your wUe sbe was born
wrote ud ulted blm to shrugged it off. J'd ap-elaewhere so her story
put mem bis malllal list pr your counsel. -w 11 l m a t 'C h y o u r
fornextyear. H .•• D OIT passport.)
Bis re1pon1e •••~~~~i.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ warm aad fuaay. Of .......
COU:'H be woald -wlUa
pleasare.
Bat alas, there wW be
no Cbrlstmu leUer from
U1at dear maa. Last
May, Bnce Bllvea dJed
quietly at tbe age Ol 87 at
Tbe 8taaford Medical
Center bl Palo Alto.
My c.daleMM to bi1
wife, aoale. Wbat a
tacky. womu she ls to
bave bad a acb a
stlmaJatt.aa. flua·lovtac
companion tor so maay
years.
DEAR ANN
LANDERSt Some time
ago, I applied for a
passport. The question·
naire asked, "Birthplace
of Wife" -although the
passport was for me
alone. By mistake I put
down "U.s .•• She was
born in another country
and came here u child.
For. a long time I was
confused because 1
heard my wife asked Ul1B
question many times and
she always answered. .. I
was bord in the 'U.S." I
dick 'A ·,
-:.Vernon's
11portswe:ir
thru thjs weekend
Offtt Good Dec. 16-18
SOUTH COAST Pl.AZA ONLY
COSTA MESA Nationally 13.5 million cat& and
dogs were put to death in 1973, ac-
cording to the Humane Society or
the United States.
The figure for Orange County is as
equally dlstrubing.
She notes that there are only
a boul 20 active volunteers who
donate their time oo a weekly
basis. While most work on the
animal help line, one league
member is an accredited state
humane officer who investigates
animal cruelty and abuse cases.
There is, however, an urgent
need for more volunteers. Mrs.
Guiversays.
• HENREOON • LANDMARK • A~RELOOM BEDDING •
0
HIBRITEN
or the 57,788 cats and dogs re-
ceived by the county aolrnal
sheller in 1976, only 11,249 were re·
deemed and 4,600 adopted. That
means 38,607 cats and dogs had to
be destroyed,
THE PET OVERPOPULATION
is the county's biggest animal
prqblem,s,ays Mrs. Guiver.
"Orange County bas a particular
problem in that it's a very mobile
population. People seem to move
where their pet doesn 't fit in or
isn •t allowed sucb as in con·
dom iniums or apartments. .
"It's a lack of foresight on the
part of the owner. They get a PUP·
py, not really realizing it's going to
get big, not realizing it's going to
make demands on the family.
"Buying pets is too much of an
"We are limited ln what we can
do only be the amount or help
available," she says. "The more
volunteers we have, lhe more
animals we can save."
HAIR, ETC.
24ot I MAlt.....n PIWf.
M1SSf6N. YllJO
IMTRODUCES
UZZA DE FRANCO
...., 1r woti••'S tWa snusr-·
HAIA llMOYAL • .... HOMIY ...,..... snu . ._. ........ , .... ,...-. ...
_.IYl/Jlf"f.OIU
PMOMI 137•3332 flOa AlfOIMWr·
CASUAL J.NOR Q.OTHING '* GFTS FOR HM . ANO H:R '* LARGE SB.ECTION OF TOPS AM~ CWC ANTQJES • ~ '* ~ANTS N-{) SKIRTS '* HOME At'() GOURMET rTEMS
C!tiiniversam
It It's riot marked clown, we
will give you 10% Otr
~nyway ••• ao llVRllY! -:ate
.'• PANTS -Savfnts ot 20% w st% on nAJDebrand.s,
HOLIDAYD~ES -U)> to
25% on -1D tune for· tho patt&ea.
TOPS -tTp to 25% Ofl
And remember ••• Ir lt'• "°' marked down. we wlll give
)'Oil 11% Ofr anyway!
11216 ........... w ...... .,
(In f&tto'• Shopptnv c.tlt«) , .... ,M4lt
~WEARE •
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TOAAANC£
231149 tWltlolt w Bl\ld.
(213) 318-Jm
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After fifteen years in the same
JocaUon we are about to move to
our fabulous new store at the com~r
of 16th St. and Newport Blvd. m
-COSta Mesa. -Wbatthis means~ is an opportunity to select from our
terrific selection of qua.lily
furnishiDgB at unbelievable saVlJlgs.
All purchases are on a· first come
first serve bmMs, cash only with no returns. Don't delay-act now for
the cblnce of a lifetime. Decorate
for the holidays at discounted
prices that will astound you.
•
3:
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DCI B attles Boise ._St ate
1 Boise State will bring Its fami· •
Y buketball act to UC Irvine
tonight (7:30) when the BronC06
Ctake on UCl'a Anteaters in rawfOtdliaJJ.
Pre-sea.son favorites to cap·
lure the. Big Sky ConfereJlce
cha,mplooahip, the Broncos are
coached b.Y' Bua Connor wtio also has twoolhls sona on the roster.
The eldeat. 6-3 senlor guard
Steve, has started every game
for BoUse since enrolling as a
freshman. He is averaging 14.5
points a game for the 3.3 Bron· cos.
·Freshman Bret, a 6.0 gµard, is
also exQeCted to see pleniy of ac·
WAYQIMl1" TIMTI"'
tion butlnareserve role.
There is plenty or experience
on the Broncos' front line. S.5
senior awingman Trent Johnson
has played in every game since
his fresbme season whlle 6·7
senior Danny Jones, a product ol
Compton Hlgh, is also a uu-ee-
year letterman. Both are aconng
In double fieures this sea&011.
Boise is coming oll a 92·$! vic-
tory over Chico State on Monday. ·
Jn last year's meetinc againat
UCl, the Broncoe recorded a ·
16·" triumph.
VC Irvine ts 2-2 on the year
f ollowlng Saturday's 59·51 vic-
tory over W}Jconain-Parkaide..
The Anteaters are led by forward
Wayne Smith who ls averqtng
18.8 points and e.a rebounds per game.
The only other member o( the
AP""'9
THE KINGS' GLENN GOLDUP (RIGHT} LOSES HIS FOOTING AGAINST BUFf ALO.
Sports in B rief
$3,2(J8 Bonanza
I n Los Al Exacta
R o ad G a mes
.No Deterrent
For Buffalo
LOS ANGELES <AP) -For
the Buffalo Sabres, there's no
place like anywhere but home. The second-hi ghest $2 win
payoff in Los Alamitos race
course history helped produce a ss exacta payoH or $3,268.SO in
the fourth race Thursday.
Longshot Cute N Tru, a llS.to-1
shot, won the race by half-a·
length over Rebelero and paid
S238 to win. Cut.e N Tru, a 2-year·
old· gelding, scored hls second
lifetime win in eight starts under
jockey Kenneth Clerlsse.
The exacta payoff was the
highest of the current
q u arterhorse meeUng.
The $238 was second only to the
$269.20 payoff that resulted on
Aug. 7, 1973 when Gomer Jones
finished ~irst.
Bruins, IJSC Pla11
LOS ANGEL!:$ -Perennial
powerhouse UOl..A is comiq off
a 69-66 defeat at the banda or
Notre Dame last Saturd~y nhcht.
Vanguards
Fall, 78-7 7
That could be.bad new&for a pair
of teams that figure to be out-
manned by the Bruins anyway.
Southern Illinois, 2·3, and UC
Santa Barbara, 3·2, provide the
opposftlQO for the eighth·ranked
Bruins at Pauley Pavilion this
~eekfJnd.
Also tonight, Southern Cal en·
t.ertall\a Arizona State. use may be without a pair of
The Sabres raised thelr away·
from-home record to 1M·2 and
their overall mark to 20·7·3
Thursday niebt with an easy '1·3
National Hockey Leasue victory
over the Los Anaelea Ktnga.
By ~, the Sabres took over fint place ip the Adams
Dlvlalon with '3JH)1Dts.
starters tonight and Saturday .. we•re not pneaured as much
nigh\_ wbeo the Trojans face Cal to put on a dls21aY oo the road as
State <Lang Beach). Freshman we are at home,'• said Buffalo
cent.er Cliff Robinson and senior coaob Marcel Pronovost. ~·1
forward Paul Henderson missed tbinktberaceinourdlv.lsionwlll
pracUce 1e111ions W edt\esday and 10 all the way dow1l the line ...
Tburaday with the nu. The Sabres lead the Boston
Paio.1110 to Ffgllt • Bruins by two potnt.a and the
LOS ANGELES-World ' ~~~c:~::~l~afsby sixlnthe
welterweight cbaruplon Carlos center Gil Perreault's secmd
Palomino, a Huntington Beach . three-g~ game of the seaaon resi~ent, will defend his crown and a three-goal nurry by the
Feb . 11 _against J a panese Sabreslna1:40spanearly intbe welterw~1ght champion Ryu second period were the key fac·
Sorlmacbi. tor• ln Buffalo's easy victory
. The ts-round bou~ will be car· Tburtday night.
ned live on television from Las Perre.ult acored ln each
Vegas. period cm tbeoaly lbots he took in
B rulcLeatk
BAKERSFIELD-Southern APPLEVALLEY-Bm Bruk
California College or Costa Mesa carded a five.under par M Tbun·
, the came to record his Jllnth
career tllree-goel 1ame. He oow
has 20 IOUI tb1a seuon and 252 ln
his NHL career.
· t halfU d day to take a four-stroke lead blew a 16-pom me a van-after two rounds of the Southern tage and dropped a 78-77 decision to host Cal Stale <Bakersfield> in California PGA Open golf tourna·
overtime here Thursday night. ment. , "We could only 1et u team re• Braak entered today • final
bounds ln t)le second ball," a blt· round of the 54-bole event with a
er coa~JrPm-PeaJrnid ,.,_. -...tcou.oll38..hlur troka In front
t he SCC Van1uard1 dropped of Art Schilllng, who car a
their secoocl overtime declaloa o1 Thursday.
the seuoa. "We didn't play well ....... l'fre c.ae• m tbe second half at all and we #
had trouble wUh OU1' four-comer DZTMIT -Herb Brown wu game." flHdubMdcoachoftlieDetrott
"The main thbui II for as to
keep w1nnlnl," 1afd the 2'-)'ear-
otd Perreau1l. .. We're play\08 a
liWe better defense Ulla seuon.
The main thing is everybod1'•
happy and when you're happy
ou win and when you win you're
-firitlIDlC~."
Don Luce-tallied twice for the
Sabres and Rene Robert hid
three aasiats. Craig Bamsa1 and
Gary McAdam scored Buffalo'•
other goals. •
Anteaters scoring in double
figures is swlngm«'O Steve
McGutre (11.5).
Kirk Christ leads the team in Hboundlng (10.3) and assists.
And be iJ scoring seven points a.
game.
The Anteaters are expected to •·--=,~,.4 ...
h ave an easier Ume on Saturday
meht ('7:30) when they host 0-4
Aurora College. It wlll be the
first meeting ever between the
two schools.
Tuesday, UCI entertains
Portland (7:30). the team the An·
teaters dropped their season
opener to, 77-61.
Fight Pact
Fo r Norton -Is Set-Ali
NEW YORK (AP> -Muham-
mad .AU, who has "announced"
h ls retirement as world heavyweight boxing champion
several Umes, apparently will be
around quite a while longer.
At a news conference Thurs·
day to promote a t itle bout
against young Leon Spin.Jss in Las
Vegas, Feb. 15. All suddenly dis·
closed that he has signed for still
another defense next September
against Ken Norton, a three·Ume
rival.
Tbe Norton fight, for which All
reportedly wUl re<:eive a whop-
ping $12 mlllion. will be held in a
foreign country, a~cording to
Bob Arum of Top Rank, Inc., who
a)ao Js promoting the Spinks
bout. At the All·Spinks news con·
ference, the champion was asked
if he was ducking Norton. That's
when he ·disclosed his latest
plans.
The contract needs only
Norton's signature. Arum has de·
posited $125,000 in a bank to serve
as part or the purse. The money
goes to All if Norton tails to sign
by Mayl. .
"l see no problems in getting
Norton," Arum said. "l can't say
that I have him, tbough1 because
ldon't."
However, Ali said Norton's ad·
visors are clamoring for another
shot at the champ.
"They're bent on getting me,·'
Ali said. "But if I don't get $12
million we aln't gonna ctance."
Ali and Norton split a pair or
non·title bouts and Ali defeated
the challenger in September 1976
in a unanimous but bigb~ con·
troversial d.eciaion.
First, however, ls the little
matter of the 24·year-old Spi.t1ks,
the 1976 Olympic lig ht·
heavyweight champion. The two
flgbtera appeared at a news con·
!erence Tbunda1.
"My speed ia not like it wu,
but I still bave enough to beat
him," said Ali, who will be 38
next month. "It's possible for
hJm to win, but it's not likely. He
was a little boy growing up and
watching me. Now he's mffting
the master."
Spinks is two years older than
Ali was when be won the crown
from Sonny Lllton in 1964.
"He was great when I was a
kld," U. challenger said. "He's
sWl great, but he's getting older.
I'm waiting for bim. I don't think
I'll knock him out, but I'll be
ready."
'Skin s' Tight En~
,,
~ .. ,: I
I ')·J •\
Smith. NOt Bitter I • J
•r•1•11
l:r. ,,
n..s'f
·~ ·-. j
About Not PlayIDg~p
WASIDNGTON CAP> -Tight
end Jerry Smith says a season
spent mostly on the Washington
Redskins' bench has been good
for him.
"I think I've learned an awful
lot from my experiences this
year," said Smith, who will play
his last professional home game
Saturday against the Los
Angeles Rams.
"It's just highlighted for me
how important it is to keep the
right perspective on who you are
what it's all about," be said Thursday. ''This ls still only a
game. The thmgs that are most
important in life are people and
how we relate to each other."
Smith was cut last fall along
with long.tim e roommate Brig
Owen~. but both were brought
back. SiJJce then, Smith has been
used to provide an extra blocker
, on short-yardage situations and
caught a pass for a first down
against Atlanta in a drive that
ended in a Washington punt. But
mos Uy, he has sat on the bench.
He insists he is not bitter about
the lack otpla~g time. "It's been a necessary ex-
perience for Jerry Smith,'' he
said. Like Smith, a number of other
Redskins may' be playing their
last sea.son. If ,50, it will end
Saturday, unless 8-5 Washington
manages to beat the favored
Rams. If the Redskins do that,
they'll await the outcome of
Saturday night's Minnesota·
Detroit game and Sunday's
Chicago-New York Glanta eame
before knowing whether they'll
be in the playoffs.
For the Skins to make lbt1»1 · 1
postseason action, either the VF~ .... '
kings or the Bears must lose their
final game while Washington''
beats Los Angeles. : f I
Los Angeles has clinched the..,"::
Wes tern Division tltie in tho Na-, · ;
tional Football Conference. .. :
Owens and running bact : .
Calvin Hill have both said they "'' •
probably will not play a1atn. ~·
although Owens said he pre· f erred not to comment further ,.. •
••until everythinc'a been de-· ... '"'
cided.'' .
Other membet'1 of the '1CJV'el'o~ the-b1h gan1'' are waiting to te&'" •
whether coach George Allen -•
signs a new contract. 'Negotial
lions have been stalled al •
season, although Allen lnsis
that ''all that will be resolved
after the season.'•
If Allenst.ays, mostottbeokfer / •
veterans will probably remain; a · 11 ·;
new coach mJgbt well drop matU' · · 1
oftbem. ": . ' . . .
V anHooreheke ·: ; ...
In Rall of Fame .,~' ,
Huntington Beaeb HJgh pro-, I! . ,
duct Clare VanHoorebeke. who
coached Anaheim Higb's foolball .
teams for 23 years and had 16 , · ,
championship seasons, has bee11.11, •
elected to the National High .
School Football Coaches Hall o( I
Fame. -, , •
VanHoorebeke's 3S·YH~. ,.
coaching record was 191 wins, 4& ~ ...
losses and 13 ties. His Anabelm· /
teams shared the ClF c:b:::in' ,; ·
pionship in 1956 with Downey r · ;
won it.in 1.967. -~1 '" . " Fairly a Positive Thinke:f;(~
••. ,~j
"One day Alan Ashby wan·
dered over to my locker and s~id,
'You know, I used to see you play
wben our Little League team
went out to Dodger Stadium',"'
Jlon Fair~ related, amilln~. "1 told him to shut up." Fairly.·
the well-traveled baseball veteran. traded to the Callfomla
Angell by the Totonto Blue Jays lut week, said be really doesn't
mind being kidded about bis age.
Now 39, Fairly said he's just hap-
py he's been able to stay in the
aame as Jong ea he bu.
The first baaeman-outnelder's
"'Jlrljorleague--flffe begall-.Jn_
ltS8 with the Los Angeles
Dodgers, aad trades ,aince have
aent him to Montreal, St. Louis.
Oakland, Toronto and now
calitorn1a.
One oC his goals is to have his
stay in the major leagues span
four decades, a feat ac-
complished by just a handful of
players ill bauball history.
Fairly had one of bis better
aeuona last year with 'l'oronto
hitting .279. with 19 bomen and
M run• batted in. }le explains his
lenelby stay 1n the m~ora auc·
cinctly:
''I'm a good fastball hitter. lt
you can't hit a fastball, it Ju.st
gets harder for you as you get
older.Uyou can hit one, then you
don't have that much trouble as
y~et.cilder
"And one of the reasons I'v&
been around so long is that I
always think positive. When I
come up with men on, I always
consider it a chaiice to pick up
some Tbl; I don't worry about '" •
striking out like a lot of playersn• ••
do. 1f•
"Too, anybody who tells you be .. 1 • i: >
gets physlcally tired rtom play.mi~· 1
ing baseball ls full of bull. You(. '"
may set mesatally tired u the1 u•1·'
season wears en, but you can't--
get physically tired. There's too
much time toatand around."
Fairly, a stocky S·foot-10, ~Pounder,· said be haan•t lostl
an1 speed as b~• grqwn ol~r. • ·•
never hid any speed so there was
nothing there to lose." ,
Hts baseball odyssey bu fin'1·
landed him almost where he started. atr y wu a s -rc .... 1...--+---
University of Southern Callfomia
prior to embarking on his pro
career.
Aft•I' leadlnl at halftime, Piltoea ol Basketball Aasocla· ::·~u.ev:r=!*:r':m:: ~-.U manacer Bo& K"auf!·
Jot a hlab petC4!Dta1e abot. man wU1 l«"fe u interim coach 'f nsteaO, tbey turned the ball ov~ untll a teplacement ls picked.
el1bl times and Saktraflelcl
Rams htvlted to Play at.Big.A
.. 1 was IUl'J>l'lsed to wind up
here, .. he said, "but rm really
happy about it. I want to play at
least unUJ 1980; then maybe evei&
put that ••• "
cau,ht up with wo mlnutel to 1'lri. ~llJ'I• IHes
play. LAKE OSWEGO, Ore. -
!)avid Barron Ulet;t hit• 25-f• J'lorence L .. 11,. widow. of
jumper at the buz1er to Hild tM former N~ Dame football
gamelDtoovertJme.BarroaUd coaell ?ra•k Leabr, died
32 poiatl for the 1ame but .a, .w~.•w•Mo
nve Utiltl. usually hi& •troo•
polnt..
The Loe ..U.elet Ram• ol the
NaUonal Footl>al1 Leque Uft
been invited to make an enl....-
""ahelm Stadium thelr 11tw
laome, ltadfum otnctala 11y.
Rama owner Carroll
"°'enbloom bu upreued CU.·
aatJafictlon with the team•1
PHHDt home, M-yur-old IM
An1•l• Memorial Coll1tum.
AnaHbn lt.ldl1llll d.INCtor Tom u.ci.r Nkt 'J'llunday tbn u..
Pl'OPOlll to tDlatS• ta. racilttT ........ "7 ........ aid ---~ .
•• ..
;J •
•cw e realize we are one ot
1ever•l alternatives for the
Rams, JnchldiDC 1i.ytn1 at tbe
eou,eum, or 1oln1 to Dodger ltacltum or th• Rose Bowl,"
!Jetlenald.
"'But trankly, l think the Rams
haY• fallen ln love wltb our new
coneept and the Anaheim way of
dolnl tblnel·" Tle propoaed enlar1ement,
wlaleb ~d eo&t betwMD tr
mlJDcw • '15 IDDllon, would la·
creue tbe mdlum '• aeai:s capaeftf to betftm n,ooo
76,000 and add .to private boxes.
The stadium, which now bas no
stand•. behind the outfield
Cencea, would be completely
enclosed and triple-decked.
Lle1ler said the addition would
be designed, built and financed
by a private firm which Littler
says he has already lined up. The
firm would then lease It back to
the clt.1 fOC' 111bleuln& to tenants
Jncludblf \he Rama.
11We Wouldn't consider the 9d-
d1Uon wttbout u NrL team,"
JM ........
.
Radio, TV Tonight
Oa Raclto Toalgbt
8 <KMPC, 710) -COLLEGE
BASKETBALL -Southem U·
linola at UCLA <KFI, 840)
Arliona Slal.e at USC. P&Q
BABKETBAU. -Seattle at Loi
Angeles (JQ.AC, &"70).
OaTehrlflt•~
10 <Channel s> -coi.uo• BASKETaALL -UCLA VI
Soutbtnllllbloll. laped.
,
\
.. The Oilers wlll face Long Beach
llllkan tonight at 5:30 for the
-.On-.ationtille.
H~lingtOn Beach never trailed
t latancia kept it close. With
:08 remaining in the game lhe Saia,. tied It at 64, but. an abun· '8n~ cl fouls foiled the Estancia ;omeb~k. Th~ ):agles were cited Cor 29 in-
actions. They lost two starters
ho fouled out and hJd to keep
eir higb·scorihg center. Doug
ard1ne, on lhe bench for much ol
e · &econd half because· or foul
outle. . ·
Jardine picked up tlla fourth in·
ractlon with 2: 13 remaining in
e third quarter, and Estancia.
oacb Larry. Sunderman re·
oved him, saVing his talents for
he ~etch run. Jardine sat out
eve crucial minutes or the third
a nd ourth periods.
Huntington Beach, m~anwhile,
layed a comparatively errorless
~ame. It forced Estancia into 15
turnovers, blocked fiv e shots and
opened an 11-point lead mid way
throug~lhesecondquarter.
More than a third of Huntington
Beach's point total came at the
free throw line. Estancia got one
more fleld goal than HB, but was
beaten at the free throw line 23-16:
. Curt Stelnhaus poured In 2S
points for Huntington Beach,
while Toni Pestolesl and Marco
Pagnanelll each contributed 14.
Estancia was led by Mike Camp's
16 points, while S-2 guard J ohn
Carrido tallied 15. Jardine and
Jim J'riceeach pulin 11.
Tile victory improves the
Oilers· record to 4-3, while Estan-
ciadropsto3-3.
E11HCNl7U .. ft,..
0J•rt1IM ' 1 • 11 Cooper ' i s 4
Cerrldd 7 1 • 15 Price . ' , 11
~ .. I 2 ) 4
C."'1 s • ~ " i..r1m.., 4 I 4 • llr1un1dorl O O ' 0
IC l'OIWI f ti cl\ 1 0 0 2
Tol .. 1 211• 2' 12
(111 HIHlll"91"'-..C"'
""°MPMlft .. """' .. 4 0 • • St94nl\•u• • • JU
"-•lot~I 4 • 1 14 WOOi.., 4 0 $ • Pe9n.,,.111 • 2 I 1'
01""-tro 1 4 > • , ... 0 2 0 2
Tot el a 21 13 II 11
11nn" It 11 21 1'
CM:C Triumphs
(
. BB Te•r•ey
Ne:wp o rt N o Match
For Kate lla, 86-68
By DAVE CUNNINGHAN
••Dllllyflllel'441ff In a touch. physical basketball
game. Katella High of Anaheim
subdued Newport Harbor 86-68
Thursday night to qualify for the
finals of the Huntington Beach in-
vitational tournament.
Katella will ~eel Los Amigos
or Fountain Valley tonight at8:30
·tor the tourney crown, while
Newport Harbor battles for third
place In a 7 o'clock game against
Long Beach Wilson. All games
are at Huntington Beach High's
gym.
Katella was able to manhandle
Newport Harbor despite having
four of its starters In foul trouble
moat of the game.
A total of 32 fouls slowed the
game's ~ace, and Katella got
more than its share of the
whistles, drawing 23 Infractions.
Katella's two biggest players,
6-6 Mike Sarabyn and 6-S Ray
Donnelly, picked up four fouls,
one away from disqualification,
before the lirsl half ended.
But Newport Harbor was una-
ble to take advantage of the
situation and was virtually blown
out ot the game mid way through
the third quarter, when Katella
reeled off 14 unanswered points.
That gave the Knights a 60·36
lead, so it didn"t matter much
that four of Ka tell a 's starters
went into the fourth period with
four fouls.
Donnelly managed to avoid his
fifth foul and scored 27 points to
lead his team, while three other
Knights also hit double figures.
Newport Harbor found solace
in a 15-point performanre by
Brian Maravlch and a 14·point
game from Brian Freeman.
A tenacious zone press by
Kalclla was responsible for most
of the damage. Newport Harbor
repeatedJy turned the ball over
as a result or the pressure, and
the Tars had litlle success on de-
fense again~t their towering op-
ponents.
Katella started a front line
which averaged 6·5, three inches
taller than Newport Harbor's.
That enabled Katelin to scor~
most of its points inside, while
the Tars were· forced to shoot
over the tall timber.
N•w-1.._IWI IMI K.Mtlte ....... 6 7 • ,. Stlt<OI
Putmen
M•r•vltl'I .... ,
F,...m•n s-• Paquin
0119•n M<C•rtl\y
Strtel
Touh
.. ""' ._ l 0 l •
I 0 l t
' ) 0 1S 0 I ) I
4 7 4 1S
J • I 10 2 7 0 •
• 0 2 8
I 0 0 7
I I 3 3
WllltltlOt\
S.r•bvn Donnelly
l*"'OM
P•l•lcll
Et>erll•rd
Fr..i.rltk
Van Oroer
7 I ! S
lO I 4 27
• 0 2 12
7 4 4 ..
I 4 I 6
I 0 1 2
1 0 i 2
U 11 t~ Ill Tol•I\ )4 II 23 16 ""°"•'I QU.anfft Newport H•rl>O< 70 10 IJ U 4'
ltlltll• H 11 ?O 7• It
LOOp Play R ~~ 111 es
South Coast Fives Play
Round two or South Coast
League basketball action is on
tap tonight on four fronts as the
eight clrcult quintets wrap up
their one·w~k stint of league
warfare before the Christmas
holidays.
Defending league and Cl F 3·A
. champion Corona del Mar. with a
39.33 win over San Clemente
already under its belt. will try to put a grip on the lead tonight at
El Toro HJgh. El Toro also has a
league wih under its belt.
Tipoff in each case is at 7 and
other tiffs include Costa Mesa
(0·1) at Mission Viejo <t·O), Dana
Hills (1..0) at Laguna Beach C0-1)
and University (Irvine> C0-1) at
San Clemente (0-1).
Corona del Mar got a 20-point
effort from junior Dave Koehler
Tuesday, but El Toro has some
scoring power, too, with Rick
Reid and Ron Holmes in the at-
tack. Reid scored 20 points and
Holmes added 18 in El Toro's
61-43 victory over Laguna Beach
Beach.
Also emerging as a factor In El
Toro's game is freshman Wayne
Carlander, a 6-5 New York
transfer. ·
Costa Mesa's heightless
Mustangs ·may be in trouble al
Mission Viejo where the
balanced Diablos are paced by
M4ke Boster, who has a 15.6 a~erage.
.Rustlers in Semis
Mike Samuels has been the
brightest of several sparklers al
Dana Hills. The 6·2 junior ls
averaging 19.8 points per game,
including a 30-point outburst
Tuesday. Dana Hills sports the
bes t overall record in lhe league
with a 5-1 mark. Also big in Dana
Hills' game is 6-3 Chris Goller.
who has been in double figures in
four or five games.
ALTA LOMA-Golden West
Colleze reversed an early season
los~ and advanced to the
semifinals ot the Chaffey Invlta·
. tional basketball tournament
with a 77-75 victory over Los
Angeles Valley College here
Thursday night. . ·
In the consolation round,
Orange Coast College came from
behind to defeat East Los
Angeles, 58-SS to gain the
semifinals in that division. The
OCC Pirates played an afternoon
game against Pasadena today.
G(>lden West will face
Fullerton tonight (9) in the
semifinals alter posting Its third
straight. victory to bring its
seasen record t.o5·S.
After trailing at halftime;
40.36; Golden West took the lead
with seven minutes remaining at
51·56, theD ratUed off six straight
points and never looked back.
Gary Sanders bit four and Todd
Zirbel two lD the clutch drive.
v•1ey pulled to within two at
.75·73 with S4 seconds left to play,
then Will F1etcher sank a pair of
free throws to put the decision
out of reach at the 16-seconfl
mar)(. '
Orange Cout fell behind, 46-36
early in the MCOnd balf. then
came back Oil tbe 1troa11hootlng
of Jon Holland an cl Pete
Neumann.
Holl•ltd
OrNn
N ... mMll
Orgill
Ktrkut
Or .... c:.11 (JI)
.. It elf• Allin
1 2 2 • V•rdt•v
2 0 • 4 Wtlll • 0 1,. ....
•tltGelty
0 0 1 0 Tot•I•
1 0 0 2
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LHtr 1 4l 6
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0 0 2 0 2 0 0 4
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21 21 24 11
..._. Laguna Beach's record is the
opposite of Dana Hills' with a l ·S
overall and O·l league record.
Meanwhile, Roger Poirier and
his University teammates invade
San Clemente where the host.a
figure to t.ry to slow down the
Trojans' fut break tempo.
P oirier b as averaged 18.3
points per game. San Clemente's
ace is John Carson. a 6-6 standout
with guard capabilities. Carson
has averaged 16.6 points a game.
Vik.es, FV Rout Foes
M arirta lngh School asserted a
strong defens i ve effort and
welcomed back Randy
Heidenreich with a resounding
72-33 victory o,/er host Santa
Maria Thursday night In opening
round action or the Santa Maria
tournamenL
Meanwhile. Fountain Valley's .
Barons also had an easy time in
winning their first game in the
Arroyo Grande tournament over
Porterville, 78-45.
Heidenrelch played for the
first time in se9eral games and
tallied eleht P.Olnta. Marina will
play Doi Pueblos wolght in the
aemlflnali.
FOWltaln Valley meet:s Carpln·
teria in the semis or the Arroyo
Grande tourney after limiting
Porterville to 41 shots.
ltrMllkY
"'"' Het•
HOIMH
MKk Espinosa
Fifi. V•llty
Porttr•llle
80llm
OIMll
Tltu1 ·-· MltiM
~II V.Uey (71) .. ft"'. 1 o o , simon t • 1 e
6 0 4 12 Wttll-1 0 0 2
2 0 1 • McC:.r11\y 2 0 1 •
12 4 0 2t WtlS• 2 0 I 4
J I 1 7 Olri...,,wn 0 1 0 1
3 0 I 6 Tol•ts l4 10 12 11
ScOf'thOuerttn 14 ,, 11 20-11
" • 13 11--.
MarlN (72)
ftR,i• 0.WIOft 2 I IS
J • a 12 Selvey 5 1 1 11
2 2 S 6 ... lcltllAldl l 2 O 8
26'1110 AlYe,..& 1305
StttlZ.11 0111
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16 " 21 t S IS
COURTSIDe LEAsE.
~978MALIBU
~ .. , .. ..L.~··· ...... o ... .... ~011-••1A4•Gll9! .... 8er.OIOIO,k1•
BILL MULLIGAN
DAILY PILOT 85
For ]Cs, Preps
Wrestling ·Results
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U7-Boc-1• IMl-11Yfotltlt. t»-C-Ha IM) .,oll llY lorltl 1.
,.__.tllt IMl-ltytontlL
t0-0•,,t.l-IMl-bytori.tl.
tS4 l'..oerlsr <Ml Ol...cl Wllllems.
t:•7. 1U-Sparh (U) pl.....cl l!OW•rdt,
I Jt.
t7S-lff94'1 IMl -bytorf911. ltl -OouOt t lorftl t.
Hwy-0-t IOtltll.
VAltllTY
C"" M. IM c-.-•
ft-War,..., 1£1piM9clMclC•Y, 1;0t.
S ddl b k !~:o.-<h1trl11 IEI plMtCI 'Tll,.11er. a e ac IU-PaltMWI CEI plMtCI HOward.
ua-1v-1N1 p1nne<1 "-'"· o "· 10-J .. IO !NI plnnt<ICornwl<t, t:St.
1'4-FHNtr• IN) pllllltd w 1111 ...... o:n .
1U-PomdlN)pllllltdMM-. 1:42.
17S-L~rcll !Nl -bylorftlt.
1t1-Ruu•ll <NldeeWltkowalll,S..l. Hwy -MerrloU IE) ptnntd
Bo<llmllr«, 2:".
ts-.... .,,1s1-ll"li.rftl1. 10J-S.panen1 ICI pl.....cl rltllt. s.:io.
112-Mtndu• (SI dKOrT, 1M.
120-COllCharnt ISi WOii by 111'4. o ... r
MIMjoft.
Seeks 8th
Cage Win
Two of the highest
scoring JC basketball
teams in the state clash
tonight (7:30) when Sad·
dleback College (7·1)
hos ts Mt. San Jacinto
College (8·1).
Coach Bill Mulligan •s
Saddleback Gauchos ·
come inw the tUt averag·
ing 101.6 points per con-
test, havlng passed the
century mark in five of
the eight games.
Mt. San J acinto is
scoring at a 104.0 clip and
has a 141 -94 win lover
West Hills) to its credit.
Both teams, of course,
like to run and gun -and
Mulligan figures the
Gauchos won't have to
wse their full court press
to set the tempo' of the
game .
"For people who like
to st!e excltin& basket-
ball, this game will
teature probably the two
most exciting teams in
the state," says the Sad-
dle back coach.,
Saddleback has five
players averaging in
double figure s.
The top nine Gauchos
and 'their averages in·
elude: Rich McElrath
03. 5 >: Artie Green
'13.0); Rodney Miller
02.8); Tom Lloy (12.5);
Tim Knight (10.5); Tim
Shaw (9.8); Craig Stahl
C.9.8); Ben Bacon (8.8>
a nd Rick Patterson
(5.6).
Mt. san·Jacinto is led
by 6-3 sophomore
Donzell Graham, 8-4
freshman Sterling
Williams and ~-4
freshman Ron Chisholm.
,.,.. '
120-MtrrlU ISi c11K Fi-rt0v,l·J.
127-C•dtno ISl plnnecllt1on,3:».
Ul-OISon tEI dK Galven, 4-3.
131-B•rrl• IEI dK J-._ 7.J.
14S-StlotlN!ltr 1£1 6K Warnlo, "·'· tS4-6ltnt1IElclrtwwllllTuln,1-1.
tU-,Brown Iii) plMed Almtndrel, 0:22.
HS-H tr......,., ISi t>1nMc1 S<lyclt r.
2.11.
lt1-fltll411 IEIOt< Erclin,6-4.
Hwy-Callow1y tf ) W()ll by lortell.
JUIOOlt VAltStTY .. ,_ .. ~, ..
U -1Ct119V111ll tEI dK ~11141, 11·0.
103-arMr IEI pinned ~INr, 2:)0.
11t-Mtd1M IE I dee Htnoelldtr, 1().4, :~""*-' ISi plfwwd McEt.wr,
121_.tf_,.. ISi dee Mein, M .
1»-<:ot-tEldK o.let<IO,M. 1Jl~trtrra ISld9cMtdlN, 10.I.
1•S-Mecll IS)p1Mec!Eldrldg9. 1:20 •
1'4-P ... no 1£1 clnw wllll ~'• H .
1U-P•YM If:) dK s.nclova, M .
17S-Oull II! I pinned Lowl...,d. 1: o.
"'-B•rm.., ISi dK P•yne, .. 2. Hwy-T.-11t1 IS) dltt ReymoM. M.
f'ltOSH-$0"4
&IT-U.s.M1•u•u
U -CrHmer <1!1 -byf«telt.
tOl-Ooubletert.lt.
112-YllUIO (E)-bio lorltlL
170-H•rwy ISi pl1w11cl H•rtll.On,
1:44.
117-Wuwr IEI pinned Castille, 1:21.
liU-l(Mntf" 15ldec o.nillns, 11-U.
YAltSITY
Mlu1 ... Vl-te o, u111-...NJ1, tJ tS-F•ld"-IMI pinned Oulllftl),
O:~ tO) Spal..,k• !Mt pinned Ptecock, ,,,,
tn 8ut1ett lMldK~w1, .. s.
IJO-F'tllK tM ldltt Qlub. 10 2.
117-0 ucl,.. tM) Ot< Seu, tS..1.
113-Ludwlo IUI dlt( Plkt, 1·0.
1•-Groll\l., tMI -bv tor tell •
14'-lllllNtf IU)dltt lusll, t).7.
1S4~opo tMldltt Ai.ti. 7-0.
1.S-SCl\r-IU) dee 0<,,.., .. s.
17.S-Whlle IM)dt< loorr\, I~.
1'1-Net-1Ml ..... ffll41fh,2:SO.
Hwy-+4UQl>H IUldec ~II, 11.J.
JUNtotl VAllSITY
MIMI• *t9 ... UlllWW'llty 6 ts-Ooullt•fortltl I. 10)-Rusk IMI pinned Hem II ton, 0:41.
112-Hou• IMI pl-Norlhrutt, 0:22. .
UO-ThOMPMWI tMl -byfori.11.
1!1-8•r• IMl-bJlorltlt
133-f'tpl._ IMI plmtcl Pt-.son,
3;00.
1•-WlllllM IMI dee E•ley,M .
14$-tl\r tMIOK Smith ... 2
tS4-McOoNld !Ml-twlortelt.
1•S-Holi.tl tUI piMMMll\r, t :5S.
175 hy1or <Ml-bylorltlt.
1t1-L•nls <Ml-twtorfrlt. i.wv Jo,,,,_,IMl~K•lt,J 47.
'"°'""~ Mini• vte;. 14. u.iWf'Nty • ts-OoublaforMlt.
10l-'81ue IMlp!MMeoeeft,Ots.3.
127-«Mflletll ISi dltt Kiri., S.J.
1>3-<ro .. ISlclec Gerrl•.6~
••-smllll (C)ptN>eON\IO*f'll, 1:41.
tO-Crat1 lCI Olnntcl Fltml119, 2: U. 1'4-Ellas 1Cld9c lt'N, IOot.
..S-C.Q .... (C) dK WelMlll, 12-2.
11s-o~ ICI orew wllll s1-p11111,w . •
"1-llclwenlit ISi pinned Ralf, I: :IO.
Hwy-Aoll IClplnnedQtltey, 1:40.
JUNIOR VARSITY S.•~11.CtlM• •S-ft•YftOtCIS ISl-bvl9'1tlt. 103-.Jeort1 ISi W011 bytorttit.
111-flomalch.
l2t-Ho M•tcn 121-Blsw.!1 ISi dee IMditl, ,.,.
t»-EclWatdl ISi pl....,. Sol-.
1::IO.
Ul-Mc:Goweft ISi pi-ct Rtfd, •1•.
US-1-lllt ISl-ll"lt.rlelt.
1'4-Clarll ($)-'°JWM!t.
1•S-o "'91<1\.
17s-f'tll tw ISi -ttr fOl'lelL
191-Ev-ICl-byfotltlt.
Hwy-81Sll ISl_,b'/10f'lalt.
f'llOSM·SOll'M
S.•Cl-41.0Mlt
•S-OllvltH ISi -by forfeit. 10J-T11ornsly ISi plnntel Nemec.
1:st.
112-ICor""""'I ISi dac C19l91s, '"6.
120-tlbtl ISl~Af>Orllb, 1:•f. 127-Ruuell ISIOK ~.,dill, S..3
tU-O"GradY ISi 6KOrt11, >O.
t•-<:A>oPer IClplllntCIWtltr,0:0 .
10-Mt nclu lSI d9c GeuQNn, t-0. ,,._omatch
1U-.51o!l lfl IS I -by f«ltl t.
17S-SU.roedtr tSlpll!Md &ttn, 1. ts.
ttt-SMtcly ICldK F.,,._S..4.
Hwy-ffeMll ISl-bylorttlt.
1>1~ovt1-ISi pl-Heurd. -;=:;;===:;~;i;!!ii!iii~ii;!i~~;,;;;;;;;:~ 4:'6. • '
P rep Soccer
Summaries
VA•MTY ........ o.t .. , 141 c-., .. ...,
Mtttr 0.1 ~. OtdMM S,
Joru 2. Dltlos. C•P• V•lley-Le•~...!d.~.:;,,,,. ..
S.Ma """*'-f21 ., ---JUMIOll VAHITY
M•lw Otl !JI CAI C.,. V•lley
M•ttr 0.1 S<OtlnQ-MllllnQlon 2, Y-o. •
Y.-.Cta 1•1 111 t"'IM I rvlnt IQltinQ-w.akJty. _.,.. IJI ltl ._.Melllu
M•rlN tcot1ne-WOOCSW.,.d, Goll· ,,..,.,_
lfftllT-~--•t 1HUAMOll1l l .... ldllOft~tct.r-...
11' ..... IOf'M
. MlrlM tn •> ._. Melllca Merl11a acorl110-Gorma" 2.
Wlllowa, '-Cl. Dileds.
Pro Scor es
NetleMl lteclley lHtM
NY RenQerSS,Ottnlit S 111•1
Pl'll lacleljlfll• 6, llost«1 4
Cltvtl•nd 6, Allanta 3
8ulfelo 1, LosAnlel•O
BUY or LEASE FIAT
WRIGHT'S HARDWARE • • •
Christmas Present to You
THI IDIAL nMa TO~ Youa .
MAM A CHllSTMAS PllSIHT
1/; OFF ALL MERCHANDIS
In Qlr Store and Metal Warehouse
Hundreds of Items to Choose From
SATUUAYOM..YDIC.17
126 Rochester, Costa Mesa• 541-7745 ........................... ..,.
. . . ... •.• .. ...: .,::~ ······ ....... ...... .•.•. .·.~ ·-·· :-:
... . .
~: ' .
. · ..
•
~-
-
t
. .
r
. -
Alamitos Race Results
TMl•O •AC( 310 t•nll 1 Y<O••
-· ... 0--P\otW UIOO ..... ~_,. ...
IMylttl 120 1 Ml , 60
, ........ hlW-1 >00 240
0Kho••AGClldlCM41M•I l .O
Tln\e II IO
POU•THRACa a5eyarcK.hHf
Third Try l~lrl
fll'lle 1011
100
Alv ren 1..w Cult 0.1, IC•r V• o .... S•llor\ Clndr, W"ot• c;.,1.
It 1pJ90, Mr. Ro.,et Oec\JIM , llMll
C.•VI $cr•I<._. _,..Iden Notlofl !Cinda
MOvln, Miii-ire a.toy, Edlfl IEO
040• c1a1m1no PutWU400 • s1xrM a&ca .io ,..,d,. > .,...,
Cul• N Tru old> All-....:•. Puri.~100
C1er1 .. aJ 1M 00 )1 00 11 00 R•IM TN ROOf lhO.l~O 10,....,.rl ) 20 J 40 llla'*al Elmer Go •GordoLal 2 to Go$<,_,_, Ctiarll I 60 f.40
Sl!COND ltACa 400 r•rO\ t .....
f1mt 1123 Sllm N Gr-\Adair I l fO
!M:r•lt hed 0... Suerte, Hue•on, T•tM 20.31
Old• Cl•lmlng for m•IO.n• p.,,.. uooo. M•9llly ll•lltl. Fl .. Ll ......... nl Al$0 ,.,, -Wl•IM•ln C.mPAIQll,
• Pro IC•d !Mylo) ,, 10 10 "° 41 '° • HO!Wt y 0oo Honey
Farfftln(llon, Doc.'• £•!!' .. ,, Mlllflt u •••\I• lt·Clll• M Tru .. >• MeyeH,Ll-Go
••Mier•,,. ... P,Mt.M No •«•l<hH
• IT r•••ure) )4.00 10 l>O
Marti•! Rule IKellv 1
Time-101
• 00 'IPTM •AC& -.00 yard'-2 y .. r SIYIHTM llACI -UO yardt, 3
>IO> Cl•IMlnQ. For malclena. PurM u••roldl.Cl•ml~.Pur .. UIOO
~cral<he<I-~dv• Ao.,..18oy, 1Cll· ly1>u9 M_,, ~. si-r Lady C.Om·
~1000 ' April Fool•JoK• Go'"JUM ,..,,., 4.40 J JO 7.IO
m•nclperlonnance.
llCnlQhll 11.IO S.60 3.<IO S.geOh IMllC:,.111 4 • .0 f,00
Olrect Tl\oulllll (llllNml 3-IO J.40 O<Klbl• R 8an IVatllllWI) '·'° ~~~~~~~~~~~..::..:..:.:..:.:...:..:.:.::.::;;:..:.::::..=:.::.:..._::=-~ Tlrne -11.Gf AllO r•n -a.-.tl!Uf, Gold $Ml, KIPt't Old tl TIV• 81rd5, Oo.ible
Den, TrnMoon
l ,...., ""
''My Ntl1f1etlon haa been 111urld by the
people who c.rt."
RON BURDETT
Santa Ana
Orange County's oldest
Lincoln-Mercury Dealershlp
JOHNSON & SON
2626 Harbor Blvd. ! Costa Mesa • 540-5630
Scr•tc,_ -Tiit Qer, Rocut A
Plenty
u I •acta 1-o.t• ,,.. .. a "s.t9t Olt, ,.1.tu.M
EtGHTM••c•-lSOvard' ,.,. •• ,
o4d• ~up. Allownac:a. Pu"• '1000
C,,.nl\Elorn.tl
ILlpMfftl • 40 3 fO 7 80
O.c It A 8•r fl<n!vM I S JO • 20
Som<l IClnoa Nlg111 1VauQfWll 7 40
Tlm•-llOl Al\o ran ,...., •• E•o Jet, Coc>v
lll(jM, Bon 'N -"·Mr. Roan o.o.
GoC.IKlnQ
Scralc--Or. TWlellau,, Clcl-
NINTH •ACIE -3~ Y•rcls. 2 VHf
old maloens. Purw'3000
FHIJ•IWlns
IC.rdO.tal s.oo • 60 l . 70
7.IO s 40
3.00
Eesv FJ19 IMVC..)
f>Mer P•tr (Nlc:oeltm<K)
Time-II.II
Al$0 r.,, _,.,.Pean. Heit Nutt>er
J•I. Sirena, Friar llob, Josie PKlllc,
E•i>tc:tatlan, n, Toe> ElllYolllon
S<retched-91QM Trv.._v
u l! ll•<te .. ,. .. ,Jet w1 .. & ••u., ... , .. ,. ... ., ....
CV Rolls
Past Foe
Capistrano Valley
High School advanced to
the semifinals of the
Azusa basketball tourna-
ment with an 81-59 vic-
tory over Montclair High -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Thursday night w1 th the Charles brothers pacing
san juan hills
~ountry club ~
OPEN TO PUBLIC
Reasonable Rates
18 Holes• PAR 71 •Excellent Greens
~~;MAs§Qltl
FOR MEH & LADIES
• Set Woods & Irons • 20 to 50% OFF
• Slacks, Shirts
Skirts, Shells •JO% OFF'
• Golf Shoes • 25% OFF
• Juniors Clubs • Plus Y2 Price Table
SENIOR CITIZEN SPECIALS!
Mona, & TlltSday·ll H• (w/Cartl s5so~ _
WHI( DAY SPICIAL ""°"to ........ .1 ........•• '°"" II HMn • ~ ,_. , .. , 1/2 C.ri J•
SAT. & SUM SPECIAL PM RATES
••••••••••
Phone 493-1167•137..0361
S.JtMw!Capl1..._.•GralpT .... nrr t w-....
the winners.
In other action, Hunt-
ington Valley Christian
<Newport Beach) lost to
Rolling Hills, 87-32 in the
consolation bracket of
the Loara tournament
and Capistrano Valley
Christian dropped a 67-56
verdict to Calvary Bap·
list in non·league play.
Capistrano Valley's
Bob Charles hit seven
straight field goals in the
second hall, scored 12 of
19 for the night and
finished with 28 points.
Brother Robin was out-
standing on defense and
played a good floor game
on offense.
Capo Valley meets San
Marino tonight at 8 at
Azusa High School in the
semis.
a.eva11.., tatJ """• •. O!erlH :I S 2 11
8. Clwlrln l7 • 2 a
Fenenge • 0 I I
O'Hellor.,, l 0 0 6 a,.,.,,, • o " n
5111191 , ' 0 1
C:OlllM I 0 3 2
Scll<ltl«t 0 2 1 'Z
RMU 0 1 1 1
Oul>lvln I t. 0 2 •r•llft 10 02 Totell 34 ti 14 ft --~-... c.pov111., 1a ta ti ,._..,
Mollkl.W " • ,. ..., .._..,.... ... ,.. ............ ., ....... v.,..,o.u
Huntlngton Vall-V Owlttlen-tClnt
6, Fra .. r II, .,..,n I. t4eiltl-: Miine HlllS.41-IL
cetw..,6',CllleYlt..., Cit. M
Clllllfl'Mlo V•ll•1 CllrlUl•n -
klley 10 eo-n 2, ~ I•, Liv·
1noato11 I, Saldivar •· Het&on ~.
JOl>nwn e. Rodl1Qutr t. MelllllM:~ .....
.. ' .
" I I •
New Raeinr, Slate College,
Prep Cage
Scores Times Cup Series Set 1
COLLaoe AlrForcat?,$1 ~S3
0....v•r IOl, Grffl Fall>ll
LO$ A,.i• IMjl(lat 101, PomOlla PllHrt7,0T
H ArltON IOI, Al-•Arlehor991,.
S.<r•1M111<1St 111, SoOreoon '°
SHHle Peclfk 7•, St. Martln'a ..
UC Rlverskllt'6, "-•dine St
Wttlll~f1.ColorNc>70
Whitworth fl, WWa•hl"91on 77
Tul•nen,SM1Mlulppl4'
MICNtK"OOI.
loANDIMAS
TOUllNAM•NT
GenHhe,., LAN>l Beach Poly H
,. VerOurn Del ICI, A-It IFr'f""'I
5ANTAAlllA
TOUltMAMl!NT
Gtrden ~ ... 0..,,1.., JV 47
RM>ChOAl...,l'DU6.Gl-1'
AUtAMe•A TOUlllllAMl!lllT
AlhtmlW•,., 0.--.C' SJ
S.n G•ltl if. Catn.dral 52
l • Pllffll• 17, 8mco Tecll 73
Bellll-69, S."'51anS2
Arroyo•. K.epiiel •1
AHANl!IM
TOUltNAMElllT
CypttU 77. Mira Calta •• le....,,.
plon"'•PI S.rvll• "·Anaheim '9 Or•not 7~ INgnoll .. O
A•llOYOO•ANOE
TOU•NAMl!NT
AtaM:-n1l2,-~
Carpf11ler1e 60, O<wb »
Arroyo Grendl 7l, S.n Lor•nto
Valley 50
AZUSA TOUltlllAMl!lllT
Sen M•rlno n, llOIM GranOe S6
T-l>l•OIY7t..O..rter0MU
Aww $:&. Saollll P.-... 11
al!U.OAltDaNS
TOU•NAMl!NT
Glendora 1', e ... u.ren 60
Marsh•ll IP•HdenaJ U, 8 •11 Oaro.nass ·
11-.rnHd 73. Norw•lk Sit
N•lf S4, SI. ,..,, ..
eEVEll&. Y HILL)
TOU•MAMl!NT HarU7, Mlra1Hte60
lakew0004S. Ctrn•rlllo «I
Venice 60, North Torr•M• H
eUCXLEY
TOU•NAMElllT
FllnVfdg9 ....... •l, VIII-Chrn ..
llanfO •
Falt" a_.1,1s..er..irl"Oe50
O.tkwood .. ,Mld-Clll•Baop(l~tlt .
lluckl.., 6' s.i .....-Valley
Gllrl"len ..
CAMILLO
TOUltMAMENT
S...~7S.~S1
K..,_., ~fftl 10,CabrillUf
LOAltA TOUltNAMl!NT
LNr•77,~ ..
Jefl•n.an 7', U..AI•" ..
Canlwell37, V111•Perll3S
Area Fives
In Action
Four basketball games
involving Orange Coast
area high school teams
are on tap tonight out-
s ide or tournament or
league action.
At home are Edison
<Huntington Beach>
High 's Chargers, Mat.er
Dei (Santa Ana> High's
Monarchs and lhe Liber-
ty Christian <Huntington
Beach) High Minutemen.
While Irvine High"'S
Vaqueros have a road
game with Pasadena Po-
ly at 7:30, Edison hosts
Lowell <Whittier > High
at 8 ; Cantwell <Mon-
tebello> is at Mater Dei
at 7:30; and Liberty
CbrbUan bosts Victor
Valley ChriaUan at 'l •.
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Delly,. ............... ..
The Los Angeles Times Trophy, the oldest
yachting kudos in Southern California. has been re-
dedicated to a new series of ofCshore races
sponsored by Los Angeles Yacht Club.
The unique three-handled silver pitcher will be
the top prize in 1978 for Jia.e Performance ij.a"dlcap
Racing Fleet <PHRF) all! will be called the Times
Trophy Series.
The series replaces LA YC's Harris Series for
PHRF yachts and will run concurrently with the
Whitney Series for yachts rated under the Interna-
tional Offshore Rule. Also sailed concurrently wiU
be LA YC's Little Whitney Serles for Midget Ocean
Racing Fleet <MORF> yachts.
ANOTHE R INNOVATION IN LAYC's 1978
calendar is that one of the Whitney Series races will
be combined with the Newport Harbor Yacht Club's
Ahmanson Series, and one with the Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club's Cabrillo Ser ies. The Whitney, Times and LltUe Whitney events,
starling with the Midwinter Catalina Island race
Feb. 25, has been condensed to complete the six
races in April prior to the start of the Newport to
Ensenada race.
The Times Trophy was deeded to LA YC in 1903
with the inscription, "To the gallant yachtsmen of
the Pacific Coast." It has been competell for 62
Christmas Regetta
Ends ·Yacht Season
,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's traditional
Christmas Regatta Saturday and Sunday will. --
weather permitting wind up the competitive ·
yachting activity for 1977 in all of Southern
California. The only other regattas scheduled this weekend
are four small holiday events in San Diego, two in
the Santa Barbara area and one in the inlaJJd area
at Puddingstone Dam.
NBYC RAS SCHEDULED races inside lhe bay
for Lido-14s, Lasers and-Sabots. On outside courses
invitations have been sent to the Elcbells-22, Soling,
Sanlana·2X>. Luders·l6 and Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet (PHRF> classes.
Inside classes will start and finish off the NHYC
mooring area with three races scheduled Saturday
starting at 11 :30 a.m. and two on Sunday starting at
12:30 p.m.
OUTSIDE CLASSES WILL sail two races
Saturday starting off the Newport Pier at 11 a.m.
and one on Sunday starting at noon .
Signed entry blanks must be filed at the
clubhouse prior tp the· start of the first races on
Saturday. Starts will not be given for Jess than five
boats in any class. Cal Preston is regatta chairman for inside
classes and Arthur Strock is the outside race com·
mittee chairman.
Three-lwur Launching
timea, having been 8orinanl ln the World War I anl
World War II years. ·
SINCE lt5Z THE TROPHY bas been awardet
to the winner or the first race of the Yacht RacinJ
Union Cruise. Durine that era, Jack Baillie's l't
meter NewsBoy was a three tlmewlnner. The roster of winners engraved on the side of
the old pilcher makes it read like a history i
Southern California yachting, containing the nam
of y acht.s and skippers long since (Or gotten exce
by old timers in the sport of,yachl racing.
ProbablY as notable' as tbe winners is the U.l 'f
famous yachtsmen who spent small fortunes tryinJ
to win the trophy, with no more lban a covetous loot
for lbeir time, effo~ and money. :
IT IS NOT KNOWN IF lhe Times Trophy pr*
'dates the Sir Thomas Lipton Trophy. Both awar
were first given in 1903. The Times Trophy bas r
. posed in the LA YC trophy case and the Lipton Cul
was dedicated to San Dieao Yacht Club.
LA YC pommodore-elect said the restructuring
the Whitney Series was in response to yacht raceri
who preferred to see. schedules condensed to avoll
conflicts wilh other events and to cut down on ~
number or races during tbe season.
Second race of the series wlll be March 4. a race
around the north San Pedro channel, starting anl
ending al LA YC. The third race, March 11, will be southbound o~
of Los Angeles Harbor endlng at Newport Beacl\.
This race will alsosetve aa thefirstraceofNHYC
Ahmanson Series.
THE FOURTH RACE OF lhe Whitney, an~
Times series will be around Santa Barbara lslan4.
starting at LA YC April 1. The MORF LitUe Whitn•
yachts will sall a short course around Catalinp
lsland'sHipRock. r
Race No.' s. April 8, wiJI be combined with t~
start of . Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club's Cabrill.b
Series. The sixth and final race will send the COl'lJ·
bined fleets around Ea&le Rock off the west end df
Catalina Island.
The committee working with the Los Angel
Times on the r ededicatlon was composed ~{
Hoskins, Bill Scott, George Griffith. Dick Deaver
and Ben Wllllams.
Hoskins said the trophy will be presen(ed at tbe
club's annual trophy presentation dinner.
CLOSEOUT
SALE;
the SCUIA SYSTEM
Sc .... , •••
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Edlaon and Mater Del C'ead81 Weatller
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For. Christm~s • • •
league boBtilities. uotit ""'*' wtndl "~"' ..,d n-n111911outs. Hl(lllS In the low60s.
Coesl•t temper•ture1 will r•"99
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n I = 'Pl8ert1'1 ONIEi ·--.... ~ ... ,... lll9ua "'"" l'\lnlOf'S
encl tne S*wnedloe reecue --~o1 .. .,,_ .. Wdl. eMOYW •••'4 "Ollvw iwttt" (1t41) Aob«t tffW!Otl,
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llllOtM~ ~In
Ol'dtlr 10 llll'\IM. (2 In.)
• THI IAADV IUNCH
Whrl COUIJln ~ -
to ..wt ..... ~WION he i. a )In-.
• THe AOOKlf.S
The Rooklla befrllnd the
glttfri.nd of • ro«>ti« and
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·:' ~FAMILY -"FWI Flllet.t"
i ABCNEWS ta:30 THE PNg 18 RIGHT
• IATUROAY HIGHT
FEVER PREVIEW 9 OV!AEASY
Sam and Betta Jette:
patient'• right•: comumer
guide'°' Older people. ml FAMILY PORTRAIT
''Aemllrreloe'' (I) ceeHEWS 0 Mf1'V ORlfflN
Oue.l.t: The S~e. Pwn-
... Sue Manin, Pllyllla
Nftman.
7;00 8 THE MUPf>ETS
Ir l~~~;n~
'I
• I,
ADAM-12
~ Malloy and Reed ,_ two men from a
bUmlng house; break up a
neighborhood feud; and
look 10< a sroi.n car.
@ID MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
ml CAUFORHIA
TONIO HT
Cl) TO Till THE TRUTH
7* IJ A CHllUSTMA8
CAROL
Adventurer
J ohn Philfp La w plays the title role in
"The Golden Voyage of Sinbad" tonight
at 9 on ABC, Channel 7.
tD ENtAOY:A
NA TlOHAL ISSUE
Fred Fllnta1one looU at
the hls1oty of Iha .-gy
problem.
0) LET'S MAKE A 0£Al fJil LA. INll!RCHANOE
"lnlOfl!led Sourc.t"
ml VOTERS' PIPEUNE
"Publlc Televlalon
Special"
(J) YOUNG PEOPLE'S
SPECIAL
''The L11tHI Match Gitl"
11:00 IJ Cl) THE
NUTCRACKER
"Hew I Oot A ~mM
For You" Jewieh mernbeR
o1 •rnldwMtern <:tty1111 In
fOf Chrietlan8 wflO would
otherwlM have hed to
wort! on Chrtstmu. Mitton
Berle, Adrienne S.rtlllaU,~
Alex Co<d, Herold Gould,
8henle N«tll guear atar. 0 TOn.EWlLD
'COUNTRY
Thia lhow exploree the
1111Clent landacape shat-
twed by three Ice egea. U ®) DONNY & MARIE
Guesca; Mac Davis. Paul
Lynde. Mackenzle Phllllpa. Q JOl(£R'8 WILD CD CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIE.NOS
Guest•: Helen Reddy, John
9ynlr. llJ COLLAGE
1 1, D FAMILYFEUO 8 HEWLYWED OAME U 9 HOLLYWOOD souAREr-
A llghlMarled tale or a
811'\811 glrh dreama on
Chr111mu Eve INturlng
Mlkf\afl Baryshnikov In the
role ol the toy 11t11craclu1r-
t u rned-prln ce, Oelaey
Klttdand u Mille Ciera, the
<Ir..-end Alu.-lder
Mlnz u Orollelmayer, the
..izatd.
Oueata: Mike Roo1,
Auemblyman; Robert
Townaerid; Peg Oem«on,
OlreciOf' of Southern Callo
lomle CodlUlll Weltr-m m WASHIHOTOH
~lN REVIEW
II HALLMARK HAU. OF
FAMl
Channel 1.btlng•
9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles
• KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego e IUU-TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (NBC) San Du~go
I KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles
KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles
t:30 D CONCENTRATION CD CA088·WIT8 aJ al) WALL ITR£ET
WEEK
"Retlil Stores A Con*"m-
er Holiday?" Guest:
Jo1eph H. EIUs, Vice Presl·
dent, 1n .... 1men1 ~c;t>
Oepartmen1, Goldman,
Sadia& Co.
fllD KOCE·TV (PBS) HunUngton Beach
t:00 8 AOCf<FORO FILES
"The a-0 1 Pen1"
AoclclOf'd purauM • vac. tJon1nO !amity wtio ere una-
,..,. lhet Uley -In pc»-
·~-~ SHALOM -Jim Backus Cleft ) sings a Christmas carol for (from
left > Milton Be rle, Jayne Meadows and Adrienne Barbeau in
"Have I Got a Christmas for You" tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4.
DoW It Happened
LOS ANGELES CAP) -So what
kind or CJ'µistmas special can be-ex-
pected from a nice Jewish boy from
the Bronx?
Appropriately enough, one based on
a n actual incident in which a Jewish
community organized to fill the Jobt
of CbriaUans who otherwise wQuld
have had to work on ChrJatmas Eve
and Christmas Day. •
"Have I Got a Christmas For You,"
a .. Hallmark Hall of Fame" special,
w ill be seen on NBC, Channel 4. at 8
'clook tonight.
HJ'BE&E AllE TWO tbtnp I like
bout the allow," aald GU Cates, wbo
aa exec11Uve producer along with hll war'fttllier·Joeepb ... I wu vice presldent
the West.chester Reform S)'UIOIUe
I tblnt lt'a terrlftc to ~an
eaJcal 1bow forChrtltma.
• It
.. h •1 ent.ertainmtnt foremost." he
ckbowJtdled. "JM I ho»e 'It pro-
14-• Sdea • tbat people take to
rtber the ecumeolcal rtlaUonahip
tweena.r11Uan1 and lewa."
The .erlpt wu ftitten by Jerome
nmith, who Pf'OpoMd the idea
ates two years .,o after ntnnin1
Cl'Oll a newapaper artJcle about a
maU town 1n Wllcouin that had
ede the Yuletide twitch.
lion, "Emily, Emily," as well a"& the
original "Lucy" shows, ls the dJrec·
tor-producer.
Cat.es, whose dlrecUng and produc-
ing credits include the movies "I
Never Sang for My Father," "Sum·
mer Wishes, Winter Dreama" and
NBC's "Johnny, We bardly Knew
Ye," •ays he's produc49r of this •how
than manyofhiaotbers.
"What attracted me as much as the
Jewiab aspect ls the lnterpenonal
dynamics of lt," he said. "And I
-lrtmestlyo eneve fbe sp r t of
etaunenlsrn touched everyone."
11• Nill the memben of the star.
studded cat ln the llmlted-bucllet
produetbl worked for leu than tbeir
normabalariee.
'ASpen' Star Ellio tt
Signed for 'Legacy'
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Sam El·
llott, who recenUy starred in th6 NBC
mini series "Aspen," bas been signed
for "The Legacy."
Ho will star ln the supernatural
thriller with ~therine Ross. Richard
Mar quand will dir ect fro m a
screenl>l•y by Jimmy Sflngster. Film-
ing will be1tn 1n London in late
.1uuat)' •
...ion a1 .n ~
~lllolen~
Oeotge Wyner, Ken 8wf.,
ford ou-t .., .
• TOTtiEWLI>
OOUNnrf
The uoo lqUW9 mlll l(lu-
enfl N•Uon•I Perk In
Cetlade'• Yukon teNl1°'Y
la e.q>lcnd and boute
-of the rnoet epeGt.ac-
uler ~on Mrth. 89AIO~ ··~ ''The Golden Voy-ollQl8 or Sll)bed" (197•>
John Pflllllc> Lew. C.Ollne
Munro. Oemone and
dev1i., a0f'oerer1 encl
I lk .-..... el IMneOe
the hero Of the Atabllln
N>ghta • he Mt• NII In
--of ....... IMd.
• IAONIDI
San ~·e ~
t own become • Clllel
~· belt when one of the ~·e ....,. ..
klled.
• MPVORtmN
°"'11: The Syt-., Pam-
... SUit Merlin, ~
New!Mn, Stan Kim. Aim-
wd '--18. =~ "Prleon a.me" A oonteel-
ent In Ihle game ltlOW Ml
____,-~ ...
II the "'*10 Rloen '*-
wh (Edllh Qiu), Ille bor9d
1uburb 1nl1e (Jea1loa
W.,_) °'the ~aged -11Jno a.. "'"9 (Cera
Wiiiame)?
GD F1NHC3 UHi!
"Ooee Tfle Republlcan
Pelty Ha¥e A Fuwre?"
au.I: QW9 Booth L.uoa. t=*>. Cl) C8S 8l'£QAl
"The Houae WllhOut A
Chrlatmu Ttee" Preco-
cious tomboy, Addle MUia
(LIN Lucu). YMtM for a
Chrl11mH tree l>\Jt la
veloed by her 1taunchly
unaentlmental lather
(Juon Rooarda). ~.
they r98dl 1111 undemend-
lng with the help of Addle'a
grandmother (Miidred
Natwlek). (RI
10:00 D OUIHCY
''Orptlan Ami.'• eyee··
Quincy allows hie a<lul•tlon
of • lamoua, ..-illy alaln,
cowboy movie 1ter to bllnd
,him IOU.~ ...
don tnet robbaty rriav·
have bNf'I tM lftOtlY9
the Q1rne. ~ "°'*· Camaton Mlletlell 0VMt •tar. • ucu 8A8KET8AU.
Southern llllnoll V.. UCLA Q NEWS
d) GETSMART
Smar1 11 confronted with
Ille ...nu.i l lf lval ol the
"Blatt•" to dea1roy 1
natlonel monument end la
tefl\90ratfy "killed." G MOVIE * • • "Forbidden a-" (1952) Brigitta
~. 0-ge Poujouly.
...
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ fJ 6:00 -"Oliver Twist :•
Charles Dickens· classic tale of the
travails of a young orphan boy in this 1948
movie with Robert Newton. <Repeated at
11.)
CBS ti 8:00 -"The Nutcracker." A
ne w ver s ion o f this time-honored
Christ mas fant asy witb ballet st ars'
M ikbail Baryshnikov a nd Gelsey
Kirkland in the leading roles. ·
NBC 8 8:00 -Hallmark Hall of
Fame. Jewish citizens or a Midwestern
town fill in for Christians on Christmas
Eve duty in this TV movie, "Have I Got a
Christmas for You," with Milton Berle,
Alex Cord, Harold Gould and Sheree
North.
KCET@ 9:00 -Visions. I n .. Prison
Games,·· three inmates are accused of
m urdering their husbands, but only one is
guilty, in a drama with a game show
format.
Two young ctllldren l99Ct
to the hOrrOf or -by co&.
lecllng dead anllnale for
their ~ cemetery. ( 1
hr.,30mln.)
10::30 •• NEWS LATINO
CON80ffTIUM
"El PIMdla" A clay In the
119 of Hllpanki9 c:augh1 Ill
the web of a U.8. pNC>n.
11:00 I~ Cll 0 NEWS
***~ "Ollwt Twitt"
( 19411) Aot>e<t Newlon,
John Howard Oeviea. A
young orphen la IOrced
Into the criminal world In
e><d« to IUfVlve. (2 hta l CD n.E ODD COUPLE
"'9111 and o-decide to
hOld tllelt own "decathlon"
to determine wt1o'1 In bet·
W phy9lcal oon<IHlon. m HOHEYMOOHER9
Over Ra!Ph'• objectl0n1,
Allee lldoptl • pul>P)'. with
the reaurt thet Ralph lnad·
wwtenlly feada dog fOOd to
hla boee. 9 OICtCCAWTT
Ouett: ElH nor Clark,
Nallonal Book Award
wllWl9t.
11:30 e Cl) u·A·a·H
~. m..cl .. 8an-
ta ror the benallt of ~
KOl'Mll chlldr9n'a Ctwle't·
mu perty, hNrl Of heavy
cuualltlea on Iha betU..
lleld end board• • helicop.'
ter 10 aid • combet
tutgeon. (RI 0 TOHIOHT
Hoat: Johnny Cu 1on.
OU.U: Bob Hope, Joaeph
Wambeugh, Robert Blake,
Mel Tllffa.
8 1!1 BAAETTA
"Don't KJll The Sperrowt"
8arettll turna In hie badge
to tredt down • ...,..
~
12:00 B TWIUOHT ZOH£ ·~ocue Pocut And Frisby" .., FOAEV£A
FEAHWOOD
The good Old dll)'I have
Ohanged: Mac eocepts •
new recipe; Chrlatm11
~ and • deadly aom.
thing we contagloul In
F«nwood.
0) MOVIE * • "Trauma:' ( 1983) John
Conte, Lynn Bari. A young
-la traunwtb9d by her aunra "M'der. then Ylotlmtzed by her ldlemlng
... dlan. (1ht.,30 min.) t2lOl'1I (I) C88 LATE MOVfE * * ~ "C,C. And Conlc>e-rr(' (1970) Joe Namath,
Ann·MatQNt. The leader
of a motorcycte gang ,..
cu. • fuhlon editor whetl
her ll111ou1lne breekt
down, then 1111111 reacue
/18( • MCO<\CI time wnen
memwa of his own gang
try to force their attention•
on her. (R)
12::30 8 MOVIE • * • ~ . '·1ncendl•ry
BlonG•" (1946) Betty
Hutton, AIVo de Cordo-w. The .._ ol IN "HellO
Suckera" n1gllt club
~ T-Guinan, i.
'Ha ve I Go t a Christmas'
~.~Cllat ..,.., nlObl 9t IW S-.
-a Nel# Yw• I've. 0 111., 16 rMI.)
• HP\. QAMI Off THI
Wl8C
12:37. ITMT'IMI
''l'lnle Of fllloM ..
12*0 MOW! ••'4 '~'-" ( 1970) Hope LMIQe, ~
8oohner. A _. 1lndl
ttrrol' ....itlnQ l)ef •I\• .... ~.Haw England
firm. (t IW., 20 mlft.) •
~-...,.......WllCW.
HOit: LOii ~ ~
The Electr1c Ugh1 Ofu-
1" Rod ~ ...
Nldlolla. OorOUly Moore,
ThlnL.lay. D ISPY
A troupe of USO enlerteln-
ere le tlMded by a eelf-
center.d comedian .tlO
~an91*"Y~
gand•tarvat. 81 MOVIE ***"The u.t Momec:it"
(11Mn Ac*tt ~
&.an Haywwd. A ~
fll, loollJng f()f the loet I01'I
lotttr• of • famoul Wl1t•.
flnda • young girl wtlO 11&1 a llt811Q8 end eer1e tlki-
elon. (2 "'9.)
1:15 II TAU<A.IOO'r
AutllOre and ~ ecl-
entlei. Toni Md John Liiy
dleouea "'* ltUdlea of the
tnnw tiff 1111111 ett«npta to
l>ri<lga Vie OOI .. ~
tlOna o-.i ~ ~
end anlmele lllrouoft woril
with dolpNnl. 1*. MOVIE ***'4 ''WNn Tomonow C-" ((1938) ~
Ba)W, ._ Dunne.. A
famout ~ , .... In loY9
wllh • ~ bell le mar-
ried 10 • mad woman. (1
ht . 30mln.)
1:370 HEWS
2:oo Q MOVIES * * "c.try On 00c1or"
(1972) Kenn«h Wtttlenw,
Frrile 11<JwafG, Doclcn
at a llolpltll M ot non-t•·
mlnal petilnt• IC*ld more
1llTle PIA"'*'ll l'OINllOe
then INdldne.. (2 In.)
* * * * "The 8nall.e Pit"
(19") otMa de ~.
Mn 8'-'8. A former
mental patient recalla with
"°'~ lier elq)er1elioea -'Ille~. (2
!wt.)
~-N£W8 2:30il = **Y,"H~Of FrMk-.
•lain" (ta«) Bone KM1off,
Lon Chaney. A macabre
1clenllat wreak• van.
geence upon his enemlet
trom • t~1veOng horrOf'
lhow, only to be doomed
by th• Fr•nkenateln
Montier. (1hr •• 25 min.) 2;461'HEW8 a;00 MOVES * •'4 .. The Oeha"t
legion" (114t) Wllam
Yule Special D ifferent
.-By JAY SHARBUTr
LOS ANGELES <AP> -I tend to get a bah-
humbug attitude about most network Christmas
sbow a beca-.e they tend to look alike. A notable ex-
ception, however, i.s on NBC for an hour tonight at 8
on Channel 4.
It's "Have I Got a Christmas for You ," a spry,
well-paced tale of some Jewish folks who work one
nigKt at the regular Jobs of some Christians so the
latter can spend that night -Christmas -ut home.
and_ no scene proves too sentimental or too long,
Which makes for a rarity -a genuinely good,
orig inal Christmas special, Even bah-bumbug viewers will like it. • SUNDAY VJ EWING note: Many public TV sta-
tions are repeating J ean Shepherd's "The Phantom
of the Open Hearth," a classic, funny tale of youth
and the senior prom. Do not, I repeat, do not mlss It.
It's at lOp.m. on KCET, Channel28.
DAILY PILOT 87
''MIKtUJO'
TNMOnE
LOS ANGELES CAPJ
-When Paramount Pie!
tures needed a scent
I r o.m G jJ be rt an d
Sullivan's·~ Mikado'l
for the movie "Fout
Play.•• they turned to the
vuiting New York Citr
Opera Company. ·
P erfor m ers of the
oper a company, current-
ly playing at the Music
Center, were filmed dcr
ing the tJ.rSt. act of Ul«l
musical.
This yuletide yarn by J erome Coppersmith has a fine cast led by Mllton Berle. He's the narrator ,------------------------------
and plays the part of one Morris Gllckstein, who
worries a lot and quite sardonically, too.
THE PROCEEDINGS START at Temple Beth
Sholom, where the trustees and their rabbi Herb
Edelman discuss what Berle s·ays ls "dlsaster. Thls
plan can only end in disaster." ·
The plan, proposed by J ack Carter. ls the
Christmas Eve substitute work for the CbrlsUam, a
plan he notes bas worked successfully in PorUand,
Ore., Milwaukee and Philadelphia.
All approve the plan s ave Berle, the sole dis·
senter. He tells the audience: ''The seeds of our
deatruction were sown."
Suchisn•t the case, of course.
WORKING WJTB THE LOCAL interfaith coun.
cil, temple members a gree to fill in at various jobs
-as a nurse, as a radio disc jockey, as tenders of a
bar and grill and even as a Santa Claus.
Some confusion r esults, particularly for
Adrienne Barbeau and Alex Cord, cast u a youna
couple who'd originally planned to revitalize their
stale marriage by taking separate yuleUde vaca·
tlons.
They agree to run a bar and grill owned by a
m1ddl•aged Irish couple. Tbeir presence befuddles
Jim Bld:t.m, who plays a recular wbo alway,
makes a C)uiatmas atop at the bar for l'Wll·&Dd·
brandytodcly. · ,
They trt to explain they're aubblnf for ~
owners a put of a project of tbetr temple. Backus
sort of undet"ltands.
••Ob, Muons," says he.
GENTLE RUMOR LIKE TBl8 dots the show.
Another good bit: Harold Gould, caat as a middle· led -wlunbter ,;, bilttlr:1Dltltte(ras . a rs~
Jockey on a rock 'n' roll raciio ataUon-lie proves Capt. Square.
He ao.n 't yowl, acream w otba wile carry on. ADf when the llaUon'a blp JOllml enllneer urge, t0me platter cbaUer, be d..ot•. eoaamg r~
thllllY: "ft'• a. ab, Vflt1 nlftJ number.••
Tbe &bow baa tu Mrioul IDOaMDU -boa>ltal seene1 wttb .._ NonJa.. east u a wtdowecf, ~
year-old form• rawse, and a famiJ.1 "&bt between
Gould and his .aa, a coU•e kid played bJ Barry Pearl. ~
But the wtlole thin1 banp totetber beau.tltuU.V
in an exclusive interview
•
I .,
If• Rtlle-Card Slpatm-e l
' DEAR PAT: My husband says that J should
sign our Christmas cards "Mary and John Smith,"
· but I seem to recall reading tluit the husband's
nameabouldalw1cyagofirst. Whicblsrlght?
C.E., Mission Viejo
Yoa probably did read tbat tbe ln&abud'111ame
..._.d be 'Wl'IUell flnt. but Umes have cbu1ed.
; Nowadayw I&'• a matter of preference, say tbe peo-
: Ille at llallmark Carda.
\
f•it.if'~i.--...:..;W...;;..A:;;:;;SffiNGTON (AP)-
.-ood and Drug Ad·
ministration panel says
cleaning eat wax out
with cotton-tipped sticks
can actually impact the
wa;c in the ear canal and·
also Callie inf ectlon. •
The advisory panel of
three experts from out-
side the government said
ear s s hould not b~
swabbed dally with the
sticks.
The panel said it also
wanted to clear up three
.. m isconceptions: Ear
.,_~ wax does not cause deaf-~ .._.,. ness, the presence of the
•
wax does not infer poor
B.Uclafl C'ae(Ju Care Told
~EAR PAT: I was given an early present this u· .l'fL ·et Bill year. It's a Christmas cactus. My mother used lo 'fl .._.... fl
hygiene, and removal of
the wax cannot relieve ,.,..,,....... the normal loss of hear-
ing due to advanced age.
raise a 'variety of cacti, and If I recall correctly,
thia one has dilferenl requirements than most
others. Can you find out bow r should care for this
plant to keep it looking as lovely as it does now? . E.R., Balboa
Billy Carter sports an Indian headdress as
he addresses a group of international
cross·country skiers at Mt. Telemark in
Cable, Wis. during the Gitchi Gami Games.
He will be the official starter for the final
day of races.
A spokes man for
Cheseborough Ponds Inc., makers of Q-Tips.
noted that product's con-
tainer cautions con-
sumers not to poke the
swabintolheearcanal.
,.
AT YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL
..
CHRISTMAS HOURS: 8:30 to 7 Daily
Saturday 9 to 5:30. • Sunday I 0 to 5
CROWN ••• is well stocked as always!
we know what you need.
,. COMPETITIVE PRICES
• CHRISTMAS LIGHTS
• DIMMER SWITCHES
• EXTENSION CORDS
• TIMERS • GIFT WRAP
• LIGHT BULBS • TOOLS • APPLIANCES•
The Zygocactu, commoaly called Christmas
cactus. dWen from the others ~ause It does not
&J'OW .. &Mdesert bat OD,,.. ID the forest. It needs • a mollt IG8 ID winter, spring aad sammer, luU·sun· --------~---------------------...;.....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::=================::.-L.
llgbt. cool tempera&ares and medium humidity. In
the fall dais cactus need.I lZ boars ol darkness each
4ay &o encourage budding by Christmas.
DEAR. PAT: My daughter's classroom
Christmas tree had some .. cookie" ornaments
m ade from some kind of clay. My daughter has
asked me to find a recipe for these ornaments so we
can make some for our tree during her Christmas
. vacation. I've looked. but can't find one. Hopefully,
you ·u be able to help. P.B., San Clemente
This "Baker's Clay Orname.ts" recipe ls what
you 're JbOking for. Mix 4 cups of anallted flour with
I cup of salt and l ~ cups of water to make atUf
dough. Tum out on a Doored cloth and knead five
minutes. Roll oat dough to '4·lnda tblckaess, eat ID· -----------------... ..-----------llillil-.,. to shapes with cookie cutters and place on cookJe
sheets. Insert straw through the dough close to the
top edge. Bake In a lSO·degree oven for OJ:Je boar or
until bard. Cool and decorate~
DEAR READERS: With Chrlatmu only a few
daya away, AYS ls pu1la1 along tb1s boliday ad·
vice to consumer• from 'be state Attorney
General'• Office.
Always place yoar parcbues ID the aatomobOe
tra.D.k, lock the car· ud cloee the windows. Hold
pucbues Ugb&ly &o pre.ea& tMlr bellll takee. ltold
on to your pane ucl 1'cla't forge& to gel back you
credit card from the sales clerk.
Merchants also 1e& some advice beeaase bad
check artists are bard at work 'taldag advanta1e of
the confusion of hoUday sbopplag. Tbe AG "ams
merchants to require more than~ meau of Iden·
tlficatioo wbea cashing a check and not to accept a
temporary driver's license aa ldenUficatlon. Ba•I·
nesses also ask a customer to endorse a check at the
time It ls cubed and to be wary of baslaen and
·payroll checka since many forgers wW burglarb:e
drink• are inevitable. It can be applied over the
before ~very of tbe theft on Monday.
I
"
What gift
. comes in 5 colors,
and sizes to fit
almost every man? • Haggar® slacks
of Encron 8®
. polyester!
Traditional stytlng ond
Hoggo(s fomous fit combine
to make these slacks
something special Wide
belt loops, two bock pockets,
and sllghtty flared legs ore
the well-tailored touches. Ai-d because they're mode of
100% Encron 83 non-Qlitter
polyester doubleknlt.
these mdchlne washable
slacks wlH keep their good
looks t o long time. Go an and get him o pair
In £N color. ravy, brown.
ton. I<. and green. ..,,...,"""*"',. slacks come rn
waists 2""42. Inseams 29-34.
• • BO.t Parade Routes •
• SlloW Reviews
fMlt. December 18, 1977 DAILY PILOT
.N.eraeker'· HOiidl:ly Fare .
...
. isions of Sugar Plum Fairi.es, Snowflakes ~
Stories by Many ot the dancers are from
JERRY HERTENSTEIN /Mona Francea'a toata Neaa
Of &be OaUy Pilot Stall dance studio, according to kriva
It's beglnnlng to look a lot like Goelman, president of tho as •
• • • "The Nutcracker." sociation.. .
Orange Coast residents ~ho '
think the Tchaikovsky classic is
synonymous with Christmas
have their choice of four ballet
companies presenting the boll·
day tale.
They are the Newport Ballet
Association, the Civic Ballet of
Southe rn California , Ballet
Pacifica and the Orange County
Ballet Company.
The Newport group is gi)'ing on·
Jy one show at 7: 30 p.m. Sunday at
Valley }J.igh School Auditorium,
1801 S. Greenville St., Santa Ana.
Greenville Str~t is off Sunflower
Street near the South Coast
Plaza.
THE HUNTINGTON dancers
will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday
and Sunday at Huntington Beach
High School and at. 2: 30 Sunday
at the same site.
The Ballet Pacifica closes
tonight at the Laguna Moult.On
Playhouse with only a few seats
remaining for the 7 :30 staging.
However, the company moves
to Saddleback College next Tues-
day and Wednesday for a 7:30
performance each evening in the
gymnasium, 28000 Marguerite
Parkway, Mission Viejo.
The Newport performance, un·
de r artis tic director Mona
Frances, features g uest dancers
Zina Bethune and Gten While.
MISS BETHUNE was
formerly with the New Yorlk City
Ballet and dances the role of the
Sugar-Plum Fairy. Wh ite, lead
male dancer with the Robert Jor-frcy Ballet Company in New
York, has the part of the
Cavalier.
Miss Bethune is also an ac-
tress. She has roles on an upcom·
ing "CHIPS" television episode
and "Police Story."
Whlte bas· traveled extensively
with the New York City Ballet
Company and danced in ,major
productions s uc h as "Swan
Lake" "Don Quixote."
OT8ER PERFORMERS In-
clude David Gallagher. Davld
Lumian. Mark Sh'u1arman and
Denise Walls.
Anthony Setlars and Terri
Hayes dance the roles of Snow
King and Queen in the lf\lnt.-
ington p")ducUoo.
Sellars was prelJller dancev
wUh ~ Houston Ballet Coal-
pany five seasons and hla daoeecl
on NBC television. •
Miss HaJ'es was wltb the
American Ballet Tbeater...New
York City, and the San Antonio
Ballet Company. She ts .a native
of Westminster and W$S valedic-
torian of Marina Hieh School in
Htmtington Beach.
BETH EISLEBEN, former
member of the Los Angeles
Ballet Company; will dance .the
Dewdrop Fairy. Buddy CalbcJ
dance11 the part of the Cavalier.
• Dick Palmer has· the role as
Councilor Drosselmeyer, Gerry
Mahieu ;~ the Nutcracker, and
Janet Gould plays Mether
Ginger. .
Sel,lars doubles as artistic
director. Bales is producer.
Ellie Cameron has char1e ot costumes.
THE COMPANY has already
performed to sellout crowds at
San Gabriel Civic kuditorium
and Cypress College, according
to Bales.
Principal dancers for Ball~ Pacifica are Michael Panale
Kris ti Moorhe ad, Carri
Kneubuhl and Cynthia Tosh.
Others featured in the cast of 110
are Lisa Robinson and J...!.D.nifer
Engl<!\ Louis Carver an~ger
Faubel.
Tickets fQr the Newport stag-
ing in Santa Ana are $3.50 adults
and S2 children. Ticket Informa-
tion is available by telephoning
646-0271, 963-6733 or 642-4068. ·
Tickets for the liuntington pro·
duction are $2.50 s tudents, $3.50
a dults, but Bales says there will
. .,..,,. Nit ..... ., PMrtc* "0.-.
NEWPORT DANCERS -Jody Anderson. left. dances the
Danse Arabe and Laruie McKarns is the Dewdrop Fairy
in the Newport Ballet AssocJation's "The Nutcracker.··
probably be.,only a fer' avalla-Saddlebfck Gold Card holders
bleat the door. and children Wider 12 l'hey are.
.Tickets for the Saddleback . available at the fine art.box fl.
perf or.mances by Ballet Pacifica fke on campus or by calllnj •
are $3 general admisaion. $1 for 83l·'l41,or495-2790. . .: 4
•
• t • , ...
CHARLJ!9tOLGAN WlTH KELLY kNEUBUHL .
A · Tall Ginger
Anut's Use of Colors, Quotes .Brighten Life
Role Creative Delight ·
Cold cream, eye sh-adow, a hairpiece.
. Those are common in the makeup of most dancers and
players in "The Nutcracl:cer." But a stepladder?
Th.al piece of unlikely dressing room paraphernalia has
been an essenUal aid to actor Charles Colgan for hia role as
Mother Ginger alnce he decided to give it some bqhlnine years ago.
Colgan st.ands 10 feet when he is on stage as Mother
Ginger thanks to the assistance of shujax, a sophisticated
pair ofsjilts.
AND THAT IS WHY the Laguna Beach resident needs
the stepladder. It's convenient to sit on while removing the
sbu.jax which look like tripod legs.
Mother Ginger Isn't always In "The Nutcracker:• But Colga~ S-foot-7, favors the part because be ls free to use hls
1 imagination in creating the staging of the character.
I He knows of one other case where Mother Ginger is a tall,
imposing figure. ~ut 1n that production, the player wears a
caricature SUPJ>Ort on the shoulders and hides under the skirt.
The Idea for usln1 1Ult1 came from teUow Lagunan Al
O'Nelll some nlne years ago after the latter had seen the
.. growing" Mother Ginger in a Salt Laite City production or
the ChriatmasUme favorite.
"WE WEllE A BIT leary at first, .. Colgan said aner un-
buckling hlssbujax the other evening. "But.we practiced itln
the yard and decided to putlt in the production,"
They knew wooden slllts would be lincomfortable and
perbaps·unsafe. So Colgan, an actor for the "love of it."
called Disneyland which turned blm ontoshu.jax.
The contraptions are used largely by the construction in·
dustryforworking on ce1Unp. .
<SeeTALLGINGD,•aiea)
V afue Is Important to artist Cori ta Kent.
It could be the value of a biblical, Thoreau or Whitman quote.
Jt could be a color valueJ,tbe value of a sunset or more often than
not, .Jual beloe. \
AND TO nt08E TO -.roM her work appeals, tt has value.
Corita says ''everythitig I see and hear" inspires her. ••1t
comes flltertng in and I put it down."
What she largely puts dbwn are splashes of color and a quote,
sometimes pulled out of con-ext.
Her work is at Muirh~d Galleries in Costa Mesa's South
Coast Plaza through Jan. s.~Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays
through Fridays. 10 a.m. to•6 p.m. Saturdays and noon to s p.m. Sunday
CORITA, A DIMINUTIVE, somewhat stooped-shouldered
woman with a well defined chin and nose, spent many years
wearing the habit of a nun. • .
She taught art for years 4t Immaculate Heart College ln Los
Angeles and elementary schools.
"When ooe is young and religious, one tends to find value
there, but I now find it is bigger than sect," said Corl ta, who quit
tbe order ln 1968.
"Early on one of the things that moved me was the relltfou
art of tbe Bnantines and Middle Ages,•• she said during a brief
interview before a champagne reception.
COlllTA. NOW A RESIDENT of Boston, says that lt
something ''ls beauUful it has a quality ot value. There ls nothing
that isn't religlous as long as it is of some kind of value."
The art.lat claims she is moved by the "excitement of
abstract expressionism. I look back into clouds, sides and
flowers, at spots on the road."
One of her pieces is a small serigraph (most or her work is in
that medium) of a small yellow sun, orange, yellow and brown
stars and a few black strokes to indicate sky.
The question is asked, .. Why ls a sun and a moon and heaven
filled with stars?" It's titled "Man is Sun" and sells for $75 as a limited edition print. .
One of the "'striking.. works, hung hlgh on a wall Is
simply titled "Love." Jt is a big, uneven red neart with black
w.rltine, "Large Heart" and is $100. ·
1----Music, Stoq~Drawing ·· Cards-=--_
lt may be the ••magic" rl a st_o17 criglnated years ago that leading a group or toy soldiers against a reelment of mice.
Meml to be attracting luaer and l.Uler audlencee to '"nie Nut· Clara helps by killing the mouse kin It wben she throws her uacter'' ea&~ber. · shoe.
TM-9 aren't ••• other kDow8 worb t.bat hav• a ~tc~acbr The nutcracker tu.ms into a youne Prince who wishes to re· -ward ci ... a by tuJng her to the Pal•ce of Sweets. turn1al Imo•,.._.~ • .. The Snow Klng &Def Queen ·greet the Prince and Clara durtnr
.__.__ .._ thelr Jourqe.y. They dance accompanied by Snownakea. · 'l'dl:~t!t.;.d,'b:;'#w':.:h-=• :.9.J~~ When they arrive at the Kingdom of Sweet.I, the Sugar· Plum
to d.rw tbetrdatllbtera ID tutul Ud ... Ja leotards ln the )lope Fa1.r)t welcomes them. Tbey are entertained by da1nUn, Hot •'-·ym~daocethepartsoltbeanow'""emortbeprince. Chocolate <a Spanish dance>, Cottee'<a Danae Arabe) Tea<• ..... ..... .... Chinese dance) *rJd a Ruaslandnce.
Thin b.ln been many varlaUona on Ille balltt that bad its The Candy ~aoes are tollowed by the Mani pan
f1rlt1*'fonnanceDee.17,18812inSt.Petenbur1 ftuaala. Shepherdesses. There ls"also a Welti of the Flowers and a d~et 'J'be~ o1 th• ballet II bated on a fairy tafe by E.T. A. Hor-between the Sugar-Plum Fairy and her Cavalier.
fman. Tbe two ad.I and tbree leeDe9 opm with a Cbristmu partt tn a pleuantbos:ne. IN THE FINAU all the dancers join the Sugar-Plum Fairy
Clara, one of tbe c......-, l9tl a preaent of a nutcracker in and her prince in a final tribute to Clara.
thelhapeotuoldJerfrolllM.......,. · Charl• Colgan, who bu participated tn. "The Nutcracker.,
-PrtU. Qv•'• bro&Mr, ;cum. wWaller lortMDllterldllr. Jt 11 years with Ballet Pacl.flca. attributes Jta popularity to "the _......._ mualeltielt."
Llilis,.afttr etWJW Ml_.to bed, Clara r1M9 to look tor And a.. aar,, 0 Peoplc pretty much look forward to 1t aa a pa.rt .......,, ·~•WU.• wbk:ll .-. u&.cracbr Jl ~._,..~~-.... ~of Cbrlltmaa. • •
Smallerframed prhlts on t!*l1111ewall nl11 nell me=aps
as "Be of Jove (a little) more ca.retuJ tllan•of ...,udaf, •• .. I love you very," "I go ln to come out." and .. Tb.ls mom.at coatalna the
fuJJeat ol all momenta -nothing elleia needed.••
Not all her wort deals with the •'romantic" aide of Ute. Sbe looks at the dark side, though with the same tender concern.
One piece, "Agonies," uses Whitman.for the quote. "Aionies
are one of my changes of garments. I do not ult the wounded
P«SOll hOw be feels, I myself become the wounded person ... .
A POSTER BAS A.LARGE black 0 on nd background and
yellow lettering, Greatest Show ot Worth. It appears as the
familiar Greatest Sbow on Earth posters of the Ringling Brothers,·Barnum aodlHailey circus.
Another of Corita's favorite aayinp. "Damn eyel')'thiq but the circus."
She said she just returned from Europe ••roamtng around and getting a lot ol ideas.
"l've always drawn and made a lot of posters ln acbool.'' said
Corlta, who eajoy61 teaching children because "there is nothing
you can do qult.e as a ebild does it tboueh you may try ...
SHE BEGAN GAINING WIDE recogn!Uon after winning
awards at tbe Loa Angeles Count)' Museum ol Art and Sacramen-
to State Fair in-1951. For years. abe was known la tbe art worJd as Sister Muy Corita.
But in 1968shequit the•lsterhood and moved east. •
She says she made tbe s.witcllin ~Lyles because "I felt it was
time for a change. I dtdn't w.at to be1Uke the woman who keeps
bangiqgoatobercbildrenaftertheybarebeenralsed. ·
.. I stopped teaching to btlild a c:w:lerent ure, a more rouodecl · life ... -Jerry Hertenstein
\ I
• •• • I
Yacht~ng
i __ Rides· on
(Yuletide
i
It the °'-'tdoor Ughtlng more
beautiful on the boata or the
walerfront homes?
l• Huntington Harbour's dis·
play more da.ullng than Newport
Beach's?
THE ltJVAL.RY between the
Oranee Coast "s holiday boat. l parades ls spirited this year.
\ Huntington Beach's 15th an· ~al Cruise of Lights ls under
• way. The 1977 version of
"Newport's Festival or Lights a
tradition since 1908,.!Slarts Sat~r
day. Both run through Friday, Dec. 23.
• ~ Cruise visitors must park Jn
the Harbour Mall Shopping ~Center. Free I.ram service 'will be f provided to the marina on
Warner Avenue near Pacific . f Coast Highway where boats de-
f
' part between 6 and 9 p.m. on
45-mlnuterides.
~ THE HUNTINGTON Harbour
Phllharmonlc Committee is
(sponsor or the event. Tickets are
~$3 for adults and $1 for children.
An estimated 50 to 75 boats will
· •Compete for prizes in the
• Festival of Lights, sponsored by
: the Commodores Club of the
' •!'iewport Harbor Area Chamber
"ofCommerce.
Prizes will be given lo the best
waterfront home alon~ the route.
·the best club or organization en-try and small uo to 30 feet>.
• 1 medium <30 lo 45 feet) and large
r
C4Sfeetandup) boats.
The parade may be seen from
6: 30 to 9:30 each night, beginning
west of the Balboa Island Ferry
Landing.
f,1011y, ~rn~r 16, 1977
DllllJ ,. ... SUfl ~
CRUISER ALL AGLOW AT HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
-BOAT PARADES / GALLERIES
Museum's Dolled Up......_.
'PLAY IS A CHILD'S WORK' -Thls saying
summarizes the free exhlb\l of dolls and toy.a at
Bowers Museum.in Sant• Ana enUlled "Doll. A
Nickf\ame for Dorothy." Ifs on vi ew until Deo.
31.
Dolls. toys and two dollhouses are from the
19th and 20th centuries. Examples of doll
furniture Show painstaking workmansttlp with
fine woods such as walnut and cherry.
Dolb range from simple Raggedy Anns to a
classic ''character face" Schoenhut doll. dating
about 1920. Ono Schoenbut doll is of a boy with a
real hair wig.
COSTA MESA "ART LEAGUE -Olla and
acrylics ~Y. Vlrgiaia Kling and watercolors by
Nancy Williams are on display this month at
Glendale Federal Savings and Loan. 100
Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Ho\.trs
are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . weekdays.
TWO ARTISTS -Selected ~lassies by Ansel
Adams and new urban landscapes and Amish
country photographs by George A. Tice,
Tuesdays lhfough Thursdays, 11a.m.to5 p.m .•
Frjdays and Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m . through
Jan. 7 at Susan Spirit.us G:illery, 3336 Vla Lido, Newpo1t Beach.
"AN OLD-FASIUONED CHRISTMAS," an·
tiques and.heirlooms and quilts and various arts
and crafts from 1900 loatured in exhibit at
Garden Grove Artisans ' Guild 13271 Century
Blvd., Carden Grove. Hours 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Mondays through Saturdays, Sundays, 1to5 p.m. tbrou~h Dec. 24. ·
ARTWEA VERS II -Contemporary hang.
ing1 and dJ~ensional ~bjects by 11 artists at
Bird's Eye "tew Gallery, 3420 Via Oporto. Lido
Village, NewPort Beach. Tuesdays through Sun-
days 11 a.m, to5p.tn. through Jan. 4.
AQU~EL~, COLLAGES and drawings
by llerbe.rt ScJmeidcr through Jan. s at West
Coast Gallery. 2700 West Coast Highway.
Newport Beach. Hours 11 a .m. to6 p.m. M,Qndays
through Saturdays, Fridays until 9 p.m .• Sun-days l loS p.m.
'Serpent' Ends
Orange Coast College will finish its presenta·
tion or Jean-Claude van ltallie's "The Serpent"
tonight in OCC's Drama Lab Theater.
The play, under the direction or Thomas
Bradac, begins at 8 o'clock. Admission is free.
Bradac calls the production a ceremony
rather than a play.
"It's a ceremony dealing with cultural im·
prisonmcnt," he said . "It shows that man
doesn 't have the ability to make a free decision
because of his past. He is a prisoner of his
cultural heritage and he can't escape the bonds
of his ancestors."
/
Members or the ensemble include Cathie
Baum, Constance Belcher. John .. Beksa, Andy
Ciccarelli, Charlotte Comito, Brad Conway,
Denise Cochran, Paula Doyel, Richard Fehrlng,
Rene Gubemick, Mary Hynes, Jeffrey Koppe.
Laverne Osterhoudt, Patti Sampson, and Chris
Smith. Lighting Is by Guy Benjamin.
SCHOENHUT DOLL AT BOWERS MUSEUM
HOLOGRAMS INSTALLATIONS run
through Jan. 14 at the Newport Harbor Art
Museum. Hours noon to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through
Sund ays, Friday nlgh~ 6 to 9.
'
'
•
Tee~ QOMEDIANS I MISCELLANY Fttday, December 16 1977 DAILY PILOT C3
--,
3 Hope FUnny is Money Forum Offers
Dickens Play
•
ANTIQUE ROW
SEVEN VNIQUE SHOPS
'"CLASS TO CLUTTER
Teens Get 'Break' at NB Nightclub
81.tACIDE HYMAN Ol .. o.ity ...... ,~
Teen·aee cotned.lul\s don't get
much encouragement from their
families.
"They tell me they don't like
my jokes," said Tim King, 16, a
senior at Costa Mesa High
School.
"I WORK at K-Mart and when
I get on the P .A. (public address
system), my father gives me
notes on how he doesn't like my
announcement.s."
But Tim and fellow students
Steph en Vircsik, 15, a
sophomore, and Ronnie Waters,
16, a junior, have found a way lo
gel their jokes before the public.
On a ny Mond ay night.
you have a good chan ce or
<;,.atching one or their acts at the
sltowcase for new comedians at
Laff Stop, u comedy nightclub in
Newport Beuch.
TIM, WHO mude his Larr Stf•p
debut last week, said he's been
interested in comedy since the
seventH grade, wh e n he
performed a magic and comedy
act and won second place In a
Costa Mesa talent show. There
were three entrants.
"Well, I beat out a fady who tap
danced and s he tap danced
good." Tim suid.
Preparing for his chosen
C'areer as a comedian or comedy
writer. Tim said, "You' gel on
stage as often a::. pos::.ible. Try to
blend your jokes into daily life.
And it's not ca::.~'. I 'II tell you."
TEEN HAMS Co~ta :\it'~a :-tudvnh T11n Kmg. lett.
Stephen \'irc~ik ancl Honn1c· \\'all'l'!'i eut up lor thL· caml'ru
.1ust as the~· do on :\londay night!> :1t .J ~cwporl Beach
The "timeless" and
popular holiday ·season
pluy, "A Christmas
Carol " opens Dec. 22 at
the Mark Taper Forum
at the L<;ts Angeles Music
Ce nt er. Twe l ve
p e r f o r·m an c e s are
~~h eduled through Dec.
30 witb Christmas the
only day the theater will
be dark.
Ebenezer Scrooge,
Tiny Tim. the Ghosts of
Christmas Past, Present
and Future and "'ill the
other characters in the
Charles Dickens' play
will come to life in the
seasonal udoption by
Doris Baizley.
The play dircC'ted
bv John D<.•nni~. '" done•
by lht Mark Taper
Forum's res ident ens cm
ble. the lmpro\'isat1onul
Judges
Clwsen
Comedian l\larty
Ingels and actress
Shirley J ones huv~ been
cho1>en as judges for the
Orange County Arts Al-
1 i an cc' s Original
Playwrights' Fcsttn1l,
accord1n).! to a
Theater Project.
Matinee shows at 2:30
are scheduled Dec. 23,
24, 26, 28 and 30. Evening
performances are at 7:30
Dec. 22 through 30 with
th e exception of
Christmas Day. Ticket!.
are $4 for those 15 and un·
der. S6 for persons 16 and
over. Rates of $3 per
person are available for
groupsof26or more.
Ticket Information is
avnilable by telephoning
213·972· 7211.
Trip Set
To Getty
Museum
An Irvine tra\•el firm
as sponsoring a bus trip
\\' ed nesday. Dec. 28 to
the J . Paul Getty
Museum in Malibu.
The bus will leave the
Walnut and Culver Shop·
ping Center where the
travel firm, Gateway, is '
located, at 8:45 a.m . A
l'llop is also scheduled at'
'the Santa Ana Senior
Citizen's Center, Third ·
und Ross streets. Santa
Ana. at9a.m.
2428 NEWPORT, COSTA MESA
lhgbest Quahty
l\uuve ~texican Foods
Upen 7 Uays
All SPORTS EVENTS
GIANT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN
Mon.-Thur. 11:30 o.m. to 10 p.m.
Fn. & Sot. 11 :30 o.m. to 11 p.m.
1:-urooy 4 p.m. to I 0 p rr COCKTAILS
spokesperson for lhl• al-R ESER VAT I 0 NS
lwncc. must be made and paid' 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNJINGTON BEACH
Play manu::.cnpt~ will for by Dec. 23, according 962-7911
be jut.ls c d 1 n r our to a spokesman for the '=========~;:::::==~=====~ categories: dramu, com· Cirm. Cost is S» per <P
,.-dy. musica1 and puson not including Your team
children's productions. lunch which may be
H E St\JD he u!.ually writes out
his routines in advance, although
he occasionally ad libs too. and
he's a setr-tiught ~me. •
Tim described his routine as
. ·consisting or stories. with odd·
ities in liCc that you wouldn't ex·
pcct to h a ppen, like 'My
grandfather sold me a watch on
his death bed.'
comedy nightC'lul>.
to do something like star m a
movie -something s ubtle."
Entry deadline is mid· p u r ch as c d at the • :.:~.. • . scores A GAi N
hecklers who always think ~~~~l;~~·o2~ ~~rtc~~t~~t mi~~~t'h:s/aJ!t~~~~-are ... :~:.;..':.~/~ ;~·;.:· !
they'r e funny." he said. "It turns is a\'ailable by telephon· available by telephoning " .~ •. • .. · ., ·· ~; • 642-4321
DAILY PILOT
Ronni e Waters h as also
performed recently al LaffStop.
outtobea one·on-0necon~~~ .~in~g~6:~:·~ITT~l~l~o:r~~~l~~~~~·~~S:S:t~-1~7~1~1.~~~~~~~~~·~>~·,=·~~~·~=·;L;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
sec who can out-insult each
"Another thing is truths in life, ·
things like cracker·jack boxes
usually have the peanuts al the
bottom. no matter which end you
open."
Mc said he plans to develop
nt•w routines :.i nd perform Cre-
Quentlv at Laff Stop as well as at
Jlollywood ·~ ComC'dy Store.
which he plans to visit.
''IT 'S 1'1 A I N LY fo r ex ·
perience," Tim said. "I doubt I 'II
be discovered quite yet. I'll have
"l talked about differenl sub·
ject s -death. cats and dogi.,,
stuff Like what you have to go
through on your first dale.
H E SAID he also invented a
story about being kidnaped.
"After l got kidnapcd, my
parents snapped into action by
renting out my room.•·
Working In front or an audience
·can be traum'atic, Ronnie noted.
"We get a lot of spontaneous
one-liners because we ~et
Front Page CJ
TALL GINGER ...
Colgan has played in the Ballet Pacifica "Nutcracker ..
11 years.
I le loves being on stage because "I know the audience is
eating it up."
T llE PERSONNEL salary and wa~e mana~er at El Toro
:'It urine Corps Air Station got into.theater while stationed in
France in 1959 with the U.S. Air Force. "It was something to
do in the cvcninA.'' he said.
As an unpaid apprentice with the Cleveland Playhouse
for the l962·63season. he was" bookholder, prompter and as·
sitant to the dlrecto'r J ohn Cromwell,'~ who directed Betty
Davis in "Or Human Bondage."
Col~<.tn, 51. has played every performance for
many yenrl>. This season most roles are double cast and
Colgan issh:iring Mother Ginger with newcomer Dan Berney
and Drossclme.)'Cr with Mi chael Panaieff.
other."
Ronnie s uid he plans to be a
\Hiter. possibly a free·lancer·in
Journalis m. He ~ald he got start·
t'd 1 n c om cdy by writing
humorous <'S!.ay:-. und describing
them lo his friends.
WRITING IS also the career
goal of Stephen Vircsik. who
plans to make his debut at LafC
Stop this month.
Ile said he's gotten his ex·
perit>ncc "making people laugh
impromptu stuff."
"The only way to pull off a joke
1:-. completely scrtously."
Stephen added.
"Stand-up comedy is the
hardest kind or comedy because
st.and-up comics have no excuse
for betng there." he said. "I'm
goin~ t.o take the easy way by
telling stories."
ALL TllkEE listed among
t heir favorite comics Woody Al·
len. Steve Martin. Groucho Marx
and Skiles & Hentlerson.
And even though their jokes
may bring forth more hoots than
howls from relatives, Ronnie
pointed out some of the positive
results of being a wen ·age comic.
"It just goes to prove that you
don 't need dru~s or alcohol to get
ti J.lreal high.·· he said. "You just
go up and make an idiot of
yourself. and for once you're do·
ing it when you 're supposed to."
~\1'\ A MEXICAN
'=::===~~~HOLIDAY FOR TWO
..
8-days and 7 ·nights at
Playa det Rey Hotel in
Mazatlan (includes Air·Fare) • Plus many other prizes!
Drawing December 23rd
Enter at any Seaclitt
Village Merchant.
You need not
be present to win.
~~~~~~~· ~~~~~~.11-~~~~l-~
\
Giant-toys tn Santa!s shop, gingerbread men
and music boxes, and Ch ristmas doll s and cookies ...
See them magically come to llfe
in a whole new parad e of Christmas dreams.
Presented t wice dally Dec. 17 through Jan., 1.
And don't miss the traditional Candlelight Procession
featuring Buddy Ebsen, Dec. 17 and Ed Asner Dec. 18, at 6:00 P.M.
Special Hollday Guests
• • The exciting MOUSEKETE~RS, live on stage Dec. m tl'lru 23
• lESELGART & His Orchestra Dec. 17thru23
• PAPA 000 RUN RUN Dec. 17 thru 23 and Jan. 1
•••
{
-
full Soil 'Opens, Restaurant
' ! Full Sail has initiated entertajnment at
: the new Black Angus R-estaurant in Foun·
• lain Valley. The group, composed of l James A. Carroll, Bruse McKagan, Tim
• Dehan and Dove Tribble, pla.vs the con·
l
temporary top 40s and selections from a
recently released album. Full Sail will be
at the restaura!lt• 17920 Brookhu~t Ave.,
at 8: 30 p.m. d~uly except Sunday through
next Wednesday.
OUT 'N ABOUT/ INTERMISSION
~ome Coolmtg Treat
Sama Ana Spot Offers· Old-time Favorites
There are many approaches to the art of food
preparation so one fact stands clear: a world
without haute cuisine would be no more deplora·
ble than one In wblch there wu no other choice.
• The strtcUy gourmet· rest~urant has Ju time
and place (but only, ln my book, so long u YO\& 're
able to eitjoy it and not be suf!oca£.d lp a pervad·
lng air of pretension). Anyone's in trouble, ac··
tually. who feels the only road to pleasant dl1ting
is via Umbale de Jangouat'e amoureuse (one pom-
pous -and lncredlbly silly -offerJng
hereabouts that roqhly translates "kettledrum or pie-d.lahoflobster in love").
ON THE OTHER band, the term .. home
cooking" can be as meanlntlesa aa any
smokescreen applied l9 an expensive lobster
dish. lt'a also an expre.esioa to put one on guard.
Stumble across "home coolrtnc" as we dJd
one night last week, however, and you're ready.
to join the true believers ot the mldweat -
the heartlanders who !eel aorry for over-
ly sophisticated coastal folks.
Thia amum, place that C!lptured our fancy
for exactly what it Js -an inexpensive
reataurabt with gre.at food ()f ita kind, food
service and mlnlmwn preteme -ts eall9'\ aet.
ter Days. lt'a located, Just a mile off lbe beaten
• path, at 3100 W. Warner Ave., just otr Harbor
Blvd., Santa Ana. Telephone: ~7·2074.
llAKE NO MISTAKE: Here you enter the
type o( ettablishment that speciallies ln fried
chicken, pork chops, chicken fried steak -with
country gravy. But you 're wrong if you lhlnk that
automatically means a five-table, lO·stool counter operation.
Out 'N About.
Norman Stanley
Superviaor or U-e kitchen st.alt preparing her
old fashioned Missouri-style cooking, Is Jane
Jansen, Conner owner of Jane's cate near Dis-
neyland. She's b•cked in everythini from
bartending to cashiering by husband Leo,
daughters Roxanne, Diane Watson and Joyce
Hughes. and Joyce's husband, Wayne Hughes. ·
AS MIGHI' BE EXPECl'ED. too. by anyone
familiar with the middle· western ouUook oo food
Pros Tops
t
• in Orange COast Theater
, and lts pnparatloo. quantity ls a factor no las
impoaUat than qualit_y. Portions at Better D11s
are lmlDmle and most dinner$ include a f'Ull loaf
of hot bread with lots or son butter, a choice ot
one of two IOUps (thlclt and savory vegetable or
potato the evening we were there>. choice of potato (baked, ma.shed or French frles), a freah
ve1etable (in this instance, a combination or
corn and green beans> and dessert (three
varieties of pudding or apple pie on our visit). 1 Th~ is the second m a serie1 of five coLumM re·
It uiewing the year 1977 in theater along the Orange
Coaat. ·
1 While urn may have been a disappointing
: year (or community theater along the Orange
• Coast, it was a banner season indeed for pro· t Cession al lheaLer in the same locality.
• South Coast Repertory, the oldest and still
: the finest of the coast's Equity operations, forged
!,..~----------------------------.......
. ' •
Intermission
Tom Titus
~ ahead with plans lo build its Fourth Step Theatm-i in Costa Mesa's South Coast Town Center next
year . And it justified that project with a year or
: excellent productions.
. Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, the
· pioneer of the dinner theater wave in Southern
: California, proved so. successJul at its San
: Clemente location that the proprietors launched·
• another Sebastian's at the Grand Hotel in
·Anaheim.
AND •A THIRD COASTAL professional
theater was bom when the Harlequin Dinner
; Playhouse opened fn April and presented seven
• productions in rapid succe$Sioo, tbree of them~
• Orange County premieres. ·
For South Coast Rep, 1Vhicb railed tts-pl'o-
; duction total to 112 since the compan1 first set up
• shop in a converted swap shop In Newport Beach
: in 1965, it waa a brllliant year both artiatfcally
lUNCH•OltiNER DAIL V
' FoocHO Take Out
, 11:30 A.M. to 10 P.M.
.lt21 .........
COSTAMISA • '4~7162 • 646-ttH
¥ill -.
~ ~ineheu
~ SMORGASBORD RESTAURANT
11.UtOUIT PAC&mll-UPTO 1tt '90fl&'
HUWT!tfOTON HAOC •~Oil MM
U2MAINIT.AT"" -LCOMTMWY.
.... Jn tlfallltftil Affto ccmvon
CHRISTMAS DINUR
Served from 2 to 9 P.M.
ROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEY old fcuhiDMd
• a,,,,U and almond dreuing with {lfbln ll'tWN·
SAKEDSUGAR CURED HAM
Cllampagiw ~
ROAST LEG OF LAMB ou Mtwal, 1GtiOrJ
DN.-0 and MDII JBLLV.
ROAST PRIME Rl8 OP 88Bf' • • ~ Jlff•NdUla Soucc.
NEW YORK STEAK, inmlrw d' lloCfl. HALI BUT STEAK, Send• JI"'*'•
WMpptd PofoCov mo.I rom1 .
V~•Jord,.,.._ l'rnA~SOllM Hot Dmnfr RoUI
and financially. Season subscriptions were the
highest in SCR's history and norMNbscribers
often found themselves on the chilly end of an
SRO slgndurinf urn.
The most lmp.reulve SCR production of the
year proved to be Martin Benson's superlative
staging of •"lbe Lut Meeting of the Knights of
the White Magnolia." It was at once the funniest
abow on any stage during the year and also the
most genuiDely lnvolvlng - a rare theatrical
comblnetfoa.
Seemd hoaon, surprisingly. Cell to David
Em mes' beautifully mounted revival of "Private
Lives," proving that even Noel Coward can be ii·
luminated by Costa Mesa's splendid pro-
fessionals. Third was the entertaining, yet grip·
ping cabaret-style musical "Jacques Brei is
Alive and Well and Living in Paris," splendidly
fashioned by John-David Keller.
THE DARK DRAMA ''Equus" was dist·
inguis hed by lbe incredible performance of
Ronald Boussom as the possessed stable boy.
"Vanities," a bonus offering, ranked high in en·
joyment. Harold Pinter's "Old Times" and
Shakespeare's ·~wA Gentlemen of Verona" ·
rounded out the SCR seaaon, while Boussom 's ex.
cellent 45-m.i.nute mime comedy ''The Darling
DardoJases" was in a claas by itself.
Sebastian's w~ with more patrons clamor-
ing for tables, extended the engagements of its
dihner shows and thus-produced onb' four new productions duttng um. Of these, "My Fair
Lady" was tbe class of the field, Wilh "Guys and
Dolls" also worthy of note.
At lhe Harlequln, where established hits
were mixed with unfamlllar offerinas -a gutsy
move for a new theater -the current musical
comedy "She Loves Me" wound up number one ·
oo lhls column's preference parade.
It was one of the newcomers as was "The
Great American Backstage Musical," the nm·
ner-up in performances that made for enjoyable
theater. ''Forty Carats," the Harlequin's pre-
miere attraction, was splendidly done, aa were
the Neil Simon comedies "The Odd Couple" and
.. Barefoot in the Parle," which succeeded despite
their overfamlliarity with local audiences.
THE TWO·CHARACTER musical "I Do, I
Do" was an imaginaUve production -as. for
that matter, was the nadir of professional
theater in 1977, "Natalie Needs a Nightie," the
less said about which the better.
Looking a.head to the start of the 1978 season,
South Coast Repertory will lead off the new year
on Jan. 7 with Ibsen's classic drama "A Doll'.s
House." The Harlequin follows on Jan 10 with
"Lbt of the Red Hot Lovers" and SebuUan's
West brings Mickey Rooney lo for an original..t
comedy, "The Mick," premiering Feb. 22.
Next week lbls column will complete its
year·end theater summary with the .selection or
the top 10 community theater producUooa. Ute
top community performances and the annowice-
ment or the fourth annual man and woman of the
year in theater.
.---..------------.. I i~· Chinese Cuisine 1 I ORJENTALCOCKTAILLOUNCE
I I . BJLMllOO .. '""~~s:.;; I
·1 TE~&cE SPECIAL I
Moat utAlllishing of all about this restaurant,
though, ls tbe incredibly low prices. To peruse
the menu la t.o wonder if the calendar bas been
turned back a cloz:en or more years.
Our three entree selections were pork chops
(two center cut), $3.'15; chicken fried steak.
$3.50· combination shrimp .and top sirloin, $7.9S.
TogebH; wilh four cocktails and a large skillet of
deUciou sauteed mushrooms, $3, the bW came
to the fiabberga.sllng sum of approximately $25,
plus tip.
THE UGJn' AND crlsp batter on the pork
chops aod the chicken Cried steak evidenced a
master's touch in the seasoning departmenL The
shrimp, too, were deep·frled in a tuly batter,
although the evening's only dJsappointment was
the top sirloin; the steak was neiUier as tender as
it should have been nor cooked quite a.s ordered.
Every Friday the special is prime rib, $S.9S;
Saturday. T·bone steak, $6.25. There's also an
earJy dinner special for families from 5 to 7 p.m.,
Monday through Friday: $2.50 for·adults. $1.25
for children.
BB'ITl:R DAYS IS OPEN for lunch and din·
ner six days a week, closed Sundays. Hours are
11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday, ll to 10 Tuesday, 11
a.m. toia.m. Wednesday through Saturday.
Entertai.Dmebt and dancing, country and
western style, la offered in the lounge Wednesday
through s.turdar, from 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m .• by
Larry Bafes ind tM Mldnigbtert. Tbv.day
through Saturday Ute grc:Alp ii joined by a per{
and talented •oc:allat, Kathy WOOd.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
AT THE
ARCHES
"Newport's Finest" •• ( ,1f. 'it D~~Mln I •-I 10:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M • 11 _ .... Sl.71 ......... ~...._........-----------• I ~ AclMffWl-T.-81Ckroo"-o."""• I Pecfflc Coaet ffWJ. At NewJM)rt Blvd.
I I !Ei~.:Ti:::=~~ I 645-7077
PLUS
MONDAY
THRU
THURSDAY
Sl'ECIALS
~(Fri,. Sat.,. SC111 ..
'tit I p.m.)
RED SNAPPER • • • • • • 3A5
MAHI MAHI • • • • . .. • 3.96
GRILLED SEA BASS • 3.95
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK 4.26
NEW YORK STEAK •• 4.96
LOBSTER TAIL ••••• 6.95
STEAK AND LOBSTER 8.96
and dozens of oth1n
...
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..__!S3 EAST1711i ... COSTAMESA-1 645-S.SSO I· -----------------''ALLYSONS''
W•nt • .........
A Hmti1tf{U'UJS Ralflllrwltt
INVITES YOU TO OUR
7 A.M . GOOD MORNING
S{lfciM/irut~ I• E1trf'lllirri 8""~{1111
11 Oc/(J(k LUNCH TIME
3:30 AFfERNOON TEA
or1•n 't ~ _J '"'·'· ~ 5:]010 I1:00 EVENING CUISINF.
C or oU.•r mu•le•l ln•trum•nt )
For Clwifi~ Ad ACTION 34.Jl VIA UDO. NEWPOlff BE.ACll
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ll1ld lhe-lefloven belong to you..
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~EF\SONALITY
Performance Puzzling
Fans' Energy BaCkfires on Rod Stewart
By MICHAEL
PASIU~vtCll Of .. Dtltr ,. .... "411
This should have been
an enjoyable music col·
umn lo write, in which
Rod Stewart was once
again proclaimed Lhe
world's greatest rock
performer, and I'd be
able to break the news of
the s tunning Orange
County debut of Talking Heads.
Wei( something went
wrong at Stewart's sold·
out Tu ~s da y ni g ht
p erformance at the
Forum -part of a 55.
venue tour that reported·
ly will gross $6 mtllton -
and it wasn't even hb
fault.
STEWART :.till \\ e<irs
.and sings it wel~. but for
unknown reasons, the
crowd's coll ective
energx level took a hike
about midway through
his mostly excell ent
100-m inute set.
Fronting a personable
and energetic new sextet
-much tighter if less
spontaneous than the old
Faces -lhe shaggy.
h a ired r ock veteran
strutted on stage to the
closing strains of ''The
Stripper" and l<1unched
full till into a ru~gcd
version of "Three Time
Loser."
His gravelly 'oacc "as
as compelling as ever,
and. as be pranced and
worked both sides or the
stage like a master, 1t
appeared to be a first·
class night on the town.
MORE HITS <a ren't
they all'!) followed, in·
eluding "You Wear It.
Well ," Chuck Berry's.
driving "Sw<'et Lillie
Rock ·n· Roller, .. and of
cour se. the t·lass1c
''Mu ~g it• Mu e,''
bols tered by a wcll -
executed rcgg<1c closin~
and sing-along.
The band, particularly
the guitar trio of Jim
Cregan, Billy Peek and
Ga r y Grainger a nd
keyboardist John Jarv1i.,
sounded strpnger with
e1H·h number.
Stewart, looking like a
peacock in his royal blue
outift and ever-present
long i.carr, twirled his
white mike stand and
posed with humor and
g race . He held th e
17 ,000-ptus fans ~s easily
llS a bottle of
Courvoisie r during
"Hot Legs," a ~evastat·
ing rockor from his new
album "Foot Loose and
Fancy Free," that m ay
lead Mi ck Jagger to con-
template suicide
THEN IT happened:
1ronically during his re-
m akc of The Templa·
lion~· "I KOO\\ I'm Lo~
ing You." The mostly
tecn·aged audience got
bored.
The action <or lack of>
from th e i g n ora nt
masses shouldn't be a
factor, but becomes im-
portant when it has such
an obviously negative
impact on artists who
a re turning in a great
!>et.
And tl 's not that
Stewurt didn't lry to win
them back even though
he was clearly ruffled.
llE JUMPED on top of
J<.1rvis' pi<1no, climbed
a bo ve dru mm e r
Carmine Appice, kicked
soccer balls into the au-
dience, and finally, when
it was obvious it was too
late, Stewart lay motion-
less on the s tage in
frustration then humbly
kisst'd 0lhe fl oor . lie
thanked the audience for
its "'indulgence."
P e rhaps he should
h a ve fried the bass
player (Phil Chen) with
a flam et hro w e r or
mutilated a life-size doll
of Rritt EkluJld to im ·
press the jaded throng
<probably Kiss fans).
Instead he provided
the m with a well-staged.
h ighly-profess iona l
A NEW DINING ADVENTURE mAnDAn1n CHI NESE Geurmet cu1s1NE·
PEKING • SHANGHAI
• SZECHWAN • HUNAN
Daily Lunch
And Dinner
Yow Host mMI Hoshlt -
...... -Am cw..,
(Former Chef of the
"Twin Oraoon&-Anah61m)
1500 ADAMS AVE. r•t ~ •M.1 •
COSTA MESA 540.1937
lts!>on in British rock 'n ·
roll. Well . what can a
poorboydo ... ,
*
AT LEAST fanl'> al the
Golden Bear an Jlun\.
ing ton Beach know <t
good show when they see
on e, as evidenced by
three encores calls Mon·
day night for the local
debut ofTalkwg Heads.
Incorrectly tossed into
the "New Wa ve" heap,
Talking Heads ts one of
the cleverest and most
pr o mis ing bands i n
watch and all , was the
band's focal point, ·spic·
ing up his .Ferry)BJ>wie
vocal style with . weird
whoops and cries. Hf:!
looke d and sounde d
possessed.
Also worthy of note is
guitar i s t and
keyboardist Jerry Har· ,
rison , both for his ag-
gressive musical style
and general weirdness.
The band may seem a
bit artsy for some, and
the a lbum takes a few
listens to sink in. But try
it out and don't miss
them live.
~ears. not prone to blur---------------------
ing guitar nm .. or a
"Your molht'r SC \\s
socks an hell ," lyrical
stance.
Th e b a n d s u ll p It l' d
spa r:.e sounding but
h1gh\y.pressunzcd rol'k,
solidly bus(:d on the
l\J otown /reggae rhythm
section o r ba ss i s t
Martina Weymouth and
drummer Chris Franz.
DEFINITELY one of
the odder looking bands
around -the members
look like they would be
mort• al home al an Ivy
League frat party in 1965
-the grou p played
strange tunes from its
fine debut album, "Talk·
ing Heads: 77 "
Lead guitar ist/vocahst
David Byrne. dlg1tul
Children
Welcomed
Orange County
children will have their
ow n s pec1al program
S unday at B o w ers
Museum in Santa Ana.
Six children ·s movies
arc scheduled. Among
them are "Twelve Days
of Christmas," "Stead·
fas t Tin Soldier " and
''Little Match Girl," all
classic stories.
Children's Day hours
are 1to5 p.m.
T-=~:.:::cloy
t:30p.&
Woody's
W/iarf
Newport Beach
Ope1ll1HJ At
JHi DlllY
IESTAUIAHT
W9d .. J-. I I
&Your Deity Piiot
cen be
Aecycled.
o.c.c . .,. .....
olflclal cent•• lotto.I•.,.. ...
1n secluded
Altso Canyon
/tlake Your Resert)atloas
No1e tor our
GALA~~~~ fk'M.U
frOM 7:30 P.M. on: PARTY
Complete Dinner
STEAK & WBSTER CO!UBO
Party Favort -Rau -Noi1emakPr11 ....
o-~·htg A EtUf'PC•J1t-.c ,.
1lwe.rdch1••..nr6~••t
GENO LANZI & BILL CRANDALL
Turn Inland at our sign
31106 Coast Hwy.
So.Laguna
Ample priv1te pmlng
L1m1ted Reserv1t1on$
499-2663
Big Fabulous SO's
Celebration this
weekend (Dec. 16-18)
honoring 'The Fonz!_'
at Movieland
Wax Museum
Buena Park ••ii.. • New ~Happy OaysM set featuring "The Foni.M
• Battle of the 8dnd .. Friday
6-10 p.m .
• KEZY·Radlo dlKo remole live
from Movieldnd'!> new Cdllfornla
Plaza Saturday 7-10 p.m.
• The Mugle!itons performing
live In the Callfornld
Plaza Saturday and
Sunday 1·5 p.m.
• Special guest npp.iardnce
by Pat ~AmoldM Morftd
from the "Happy OaysM
case Sunday 1-6 p.m.
• Take the Pepsl~hallenge In the
Movleland Commissary of the
Stars all three days 1J a.m. •
-, 5 p.m.
-; • Dancing, Prizes, Great 50's
Entertain mend
Be there
or be •quarel
Fnday. December 16. 1977 DAILY PILOT C.
MOW!!,.
"Oa.utGIC UNTrS HO. I HOUSI OF .M~"
, ... ,... • , ••• ,,. •• 09'y BOB WHITI!·
ERNIE ANDREWS
Wllin..-.~Trie
PLUS
LISTZ&
COMPANY
494-1081/9 .
J41 ~COAST NWT. u..,.111ocw
' .
, .. c ... ,.,.._
DAMCIMG AMQ...
EMIBT AIHM&rr .
L
TUE. TifltU SAT. ·"
9 P.M. TO 2 A.M.
s.....-....~ .... :
dtow It! HM C..tyf We
co•f4 ••• ell ttl••• Mjedht~ .......
Al,.,. N¥ h c-Ill. r-seH· Wo tNMi r-'I
c.-Mdi.,._D~. .............. __.,....
... ... "' ...... d •lftl oer •Mnoto ••••r•t• ,nee .........
KOMA LAMES
2699 HARIOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA
545-1112
0 0 Merry Christmas
We're celebrating with a Special
Christmas Menu.
Seatings at
1p.m.,3 p.m., 5 p.m., 7 p.m.
reservations ... 833-2770
New Years Eve Gala
Sp~cial Menu
Seatings at
_ 5 p.m., 7 p.m., 9 p.m.
(HATS, HORNS & NOISEMAKERS)
dancing to·Jimmie Boggio Fiascos
reservations ... 833-2770
Wishes you a
Happy Holiday Season
18700 MacArthur, Irvine.
(across from Orange County Airport)
I
' .. Fno.v. ~mber 11. 1tn
The Stic~: A N~w 'Beat' for Music ~r
Or~ge Coast Gets Chance to Hear Revolutionary Instrument
87 &A YMOHO EBT&U>A Ir. ... ...., .........
Stringed instrument pioneer Emmett Cbap·
man will brtn1 hll HvolutJoaary "Stick" 'to the Oruse Cout for a nve·nl1ht ataocht the White
House in La&una Beach next Tuesday throUlb Saturday.
Those who are able to find a seat in the small
tavern-club may be witness to a mualcal lostru-
ment two decades ahead or Its time.
It offers the mualclan all the sounds and in-
necllons of an etectrlc guitar, baas, harpsichord,
orian, saxophone. violin -and much more.
So. you say, you've never heard or it.
Even though Chapman, 41, has performed
throughout the country lhe pl)St few years, ~any
contemporary mwsic rans have yet to expenence
the Stick.
stlck sound is uniquely refreshing and clean even
at medJum volume .
Df'monstratinc the Stlck in his Laur.el Can-
yon home, <.;hapman displayed a pure piano-
J;trioged bass type aound achieved when it ta
played throU&h a small ampllfter.
On stage, Chapman pulls out most of the
stops and shows a stringed wizardry unmatched
today.
, A few months back, Chapman performed six
opening sets for saxophonist John Klemmer al
the Golden Bear in Huntington Beach, the Stick's
first visit to the Orange Coast.
Chapman performed rock standards like
"Eleanor Rigby'' und "Nights in White Satin" in
such a way as to amaze generally mixed in age
audiences at both the Bear and Cal State •
Fullerton's outdoor quad. He was accompanied
by drummer extrordinaire Les DeMerle. • -PROBABLY THE MOST popular contem-
porary performer to have acquired one of Chap-
man's Stick is rocker Steve 'Miller. On stage, Chapman ls quick to answer ques-
But the list is growing with names like jazz hons perhaps because the Stick requires a great
musicians Alphonso Johnson and Stanley Clarke deal of explanation for most people.
l d T Musicians marvel Atlts potential. and pop perforviers Peter Gabrie an ony Non-musicians Just can't believe Chapman
Levon. can bring so much sound from one instrumenL
Most people who look at Clulpman's inven; They keep looking for the "other" musicians.
lion don't know what it is. A recent Cal State
"I am first and foremost an improvisa-·
tionallst ,'' said Chapman.
Hands constantly in motion, feet silently
s huffling phasing, reverb and olher effects, he
creates sounds like no other musician.
Chapman, who looks and speaks like..a col·
Jege professor, polnts wlth pride to a comment by
W 'ather Report keyboard master Josef Zawlnul,
··a~ique ca.se where the invent.or of a remarka-
ble lnstruinent is a remarkable musician as
well."
Chapman stumped the 1974 panel on the
television show "What's My Line" when heap-
peared and was introduced as someone who plays and makes something.
Soupy Sates asked him, "Does it shootout lit·
tie puffs of smoke at one end?"
No. the stick does not shootout smoke.
But it does have an impact on anyone who
li stens and thinks about the future of music.
Mime Show Set
packages and d epart·
ment stores.
MUSICIAN I MISCELLANY
RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE
Now Under New
OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT
·REMODELED AND REDECORATED
. UMCM DAILY-Ma ._ fri. ·¥~"'' .. ,",,,..s1.t1
Dt.-sav•MCMm.Y , ......... S-.-Tlllrt. .... 11 ,... Hr..W. I
.. • ..... From $5.25 . ""
C~SHOPDAILY6A.M.lo IOP.M.
....
EMIBTAIMMIMT AND
DAMCIMC'i MIGHT'LY
,._ CLAllJIO Ir .. C.-dD••
Tuesday thru Saturday • •••••••••
aLAIMI HAIDIM • ,._
Sunday and Monday
Fullerton crowd was generally .spaced by the PLATING BASS 'LINES with one hand.
sight and sound or iL Chapman switches with ease to lead and rhythm
lines with his other hand.
"'Mime Dreaming of a
White Christmas,•• a
show that comblnes r e-a lity and fantasy, will air
at 8 p.m. Sunday on
KOCE TV, Channel 50,
from Huntington Beach.
T he 30-minute in··.
t e r pre tat ion o t FMhlonShowEv8tyT~at i2Noon
Christmas scenes is From Huntington Beactl_'a Leedlng Boutiques The Stick consists of five treble and live bass "It's both sustaining and at the same time
strings over a 26-fret fingerboard made of percussive. The strings are pressed on the frets
Brazilian ironwood and electronically duo-to produce the sound," he said.
amplified. It was perfected in the early 1970s. Chapman refers lo bis invention as "the ul-The story is of hOlid ay
happe nings jn the il-
lusionary world of pan·
tomime and the r e al
world o r Christmas
T h e e I e c tr on i c s, to some, may ti mate compositional ittstrumcnt" since a musi·
sound overpowering and unfamiliar. But for cian can compose on it much like on a piano and
those slow to enter the space age of music. the yet have closer contact with the strings.
Acadeiny Announces
Student Filin Contest
The Academy of Mo-
tion Picture Arts a nd
Sc ien ces and t h e
Academy Foundation
have announced plans
for the Firth Annual Stu·
dent fo'ilm Awards com·
pt>lition. The conte!.l is
for film studenll> al col·
leges and uni versities
across the country.
The competition, co-
s po n s ored by th e
American Telephone and
T e le graph Co., w as
established fi ve years
ago.
A FILM to be eligible
for the competition must
h ave been completed
after· April 1, 1977 iq, a
Regional coordinators
may be contacted for the
date ol 1:'!.Qn.na!-Jw-screenings for entries or
s tudent film s.
Coordinator for Southern
California is Dr. John
Allyn , department of
Radiol'l'elevialon I Film,
Cal State Northridge.
Te l ephone 213 -
88S·3192.
ReaJ
Cantonese FoOd
eat her• er
take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st ,I., Newport Beach ORlolt i.9540
N..-te M .. ICJM o.itf-W ....... Ulitll 1:00 .-.
O .... H-IMMM-Aalo\
DIV AN II , ~··~ '< Announces The Opening of Their .-•. ,
\ New West Coast RestaJrant ,,,.
FEATURING THE FINESTlN
TURKISH CUISINE
DIMMER S6 95 I'!• lb. u ..
~PECIAL With Soup or Salad MmlH UMfw
Saturday & Sunday Champagne Brunch
225 M.-A..._ ...._ ,.._, 67Mito
LA CAVE RESTAt;RANT
Di ne In Our Romantic Cellar
STEAKS•LOBSTER•CRAB
SHRIMP • PRIME RIB
Open For Lunch. Mon. thru Fri.
11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
AMPLE FREE PARKING
Reservations -641-794'& -;tudent-teacher rela· -------------------fl ................ .,,..._H_ts_'~-'-"'-in-e ~.__ _____ c_o_s_TA_iu_Es_A_. tionship wilhln the cur-
riculum or any accredit-
ed college or university,
according to Academy
President Howard W.
Koch.
Deadline for entries is
April 1, 1978. Entries will
be reviewed in pre·
liminary judging con·
ducted by ni ne regional
committees composed of
faculty, local film pro·
fessionals, journalists
and cr itics.
Film& will be judged
on or iginality, entertain·
ment, resourcefulness of
the filmmaker , and pro·
duclion quality, without
regard to cosl of produc· ·
lion or subject matter.
REGIONAL juries will
not consider films sub·
milted by by schools ou~·
side their regions. and
wi ll hav e so l e
responsibility for de-
termlnin1 final selec-
tions lo be submitted for
national competition.
Regional winning
films will be screened by
the Academy's mem-
bership or film industry
prof esslonals.
The national awards
will be presented May 28
in the A cademy's
Samuel Goldwyn
Th~ater, Beverly Hills.
' (ASH AWARDS of
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
SOMETHING NEW
Omakase
"Leave it In our hands ...
And who better would know which outstanding
seasonal selections will be exactly perfect for
this Very Special Japanese Dinner. Our Chef
knows your tastes, His selections will abun-
dantly please you-r palate. We promise you a
Superb Gourmet Dinner of at least five courses.
1 lors <D'oeuvres Soup Snlacf
.Rgemotto Yakimotto
RICE· GREEN TEA· TSUKEMONO
From $11 .00 per person
•If')
Ask your Wallf9SS to show you IOday'a Omakaae menu.
NOW PLAYING
THROUGH JANUARY 8
$1,000 will. be given i.n •
eatb ot four categories:
amm1ted, documentary,
dramatic a nd ex-
pefiment.al. Up to two
ad.Woaal 'merit awards Performances Nightly Tue-Sun :'.':::S~~alsg0i;:::a~ . The Delightful Family Holiday Musical
awJU'd ol $750 may be · "SHE awarded at th e
CROWN HOUSE
RESTAURANT
32802 COAST HWY.
LAOUNA NIGUEL
JAl_Y....,~---1 •
499-2626 496-5773
South Coaat'• Fine1t Ca.i1ine
IVY HOUSE
RESTAURANT
314F~AVE.
LAGUHA BEACH
{lft"'9~--j
Ample Free Parking
494-9491 752-8558
Holiday Menu
French •P'rult Compote '* Cream of Chlcken Soup •
Relish Tray: Crisp Carrot Sticks, Celery, Green
· ·Onions, Radl&h Rotes and Marinated Caullnower.
Entr ... In the HUNTINGTON BEACH INN'S
Finest Tradition
· ,_.,, Slwlt r.-,.,. s3000
. Ylrglafa Mm. '(Femlly or •l . .. . . .. ••• ·
-~~~.~.~-~·-·····················5'5 ~~~\-:rJ:t~-! ~ ..................... s•s
performed by the Great BANQUET .FACIL1TI ES -20 TO 70 American Mime Experi-
ment of Cleveland. The . 16431 BOLSA CHICA (AT HEIL) show won an Emmy as
~~fn~~~~t~~~~r:~te!r ._ ___ H_u_N_TI_N_GT_o_N_B_E_A_c_H _B4_&_-1_~_41 __ __
the year in 1976. ·
"Martha,islit that
Ladf Godiva the
strip sirloin steati • "
Let us start by confirming the whispers. Food at The Five
Crowns is scandalously good So visit this
authentic 12th century English coach
house and dine as the Lords and Ladies '""""'"'"':r-' of London did.
FIVE c~s ·:~:
3801 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. (714) 675·1374
llOfriOtr HctJ & Tennis Club
HSWl'oai ·~ 900Nrwpn-oC:-1>1
Make reservations NOW!
From 9:00 1.m. to 5:00 pm.
Pirone 171' I "64~•000
In tht Peclfic Betlroom
for $83.00 per couple
• Steak and Lobster
• Unlimited Cocktails
· • Champagne at Midnight
" • t=avors r.·,. • Continuous music with
6• ~,, · "The Sodtty for t~ ~ ' 111• ,,.,.,.~on of~
: Big Bllnd1" and
"The Brewers"
In the Clpriccio Cafe
for $78.00 per couple
• The Pacific Ballroom
package with the
Wally Ruth Quartet
from 9:00 p.m.
In the King's Wherf
for $35.00 per couple
• Pr'ime Rib
• Oiampagne at Midnight
•Disco
Academy's dl11cretlon. • ~·· \:t> T FIT-'ES ME" C 1tudenta wU.~.-.~:+\ ~_,_,
nown to Los Anaeles for · --;..·(! Book tw "Caba.fet'•" Joe ~~.-. ~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-.JE. .......... ~
.... _ ~e-". · -~.... Master0lf. Music & !\Irle• by
\Diii ~ • ..,,___,,. ~ "fiddler On The Roof's" Jerry _ Bodi & Shetdor'I Hamlet!
~-:td by Nlc.k DeCarlo ... ,., .... "_. .....
IOJl OMC1 & moHONI -..VAnoNS Ol'tN DMY
Tues.•Slt •• t A.M.·10 P.M.; Sun., Noon·7 P.M.:
Mon. 9 A.M.·6 P.M.
(714) 979·1111
ColH.mlo'• Motl &e,onl Dinrwr Tlitot,.
f!,1t,ln11lt\n 3503 s. Harbor Blvd. ~(§/ Santa AnQ
Half• NOf9I ti tk ~ DMcolrttw•Y MttWld Downey Sa.lflC'
All MaiOr Crtdlt Ctrdt Acc1pt1d
I
.,
. to::e~s!::-! ............ : .......... ~ .s2s~ . ~=~ .......................... 650
· All Entrees Include: Alce PUaf. <::llmled Yama or
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy, Com on the COb, 5"'19
[)(easing. Choice of Dessert: Pumptdrt Pie With
Whipped Own. Chocolate or StrNbtrrV Moulee.
. Mince Meet Pie ot Cheete BRntns ·tee CtMm or
Sherbet.
..
•
l
I
)
•
~COMICS /CROSSWORD
llllllrokE B~ER
A~,jow. 'btJ~ .iiM 15. 8AO. ) ~
~U ALWAv'5 M~ MY ' LIP?~ __...._ ' ! cfV,) I , t.,
t
' t
I
MISS PEACH
\ .. o.·•."---'-" .. _ .... _._ .. _ ... __ ...,.,_z_,-1""1__,i"'Ci>J~
by Wm. F. Brown and Met C11son
=:] \~ wJA1"
0'0-16'2 A~
v'ou GllZI.. MAS
5UIZ~; A ~ '}OGG(
Ml?~oet?
by Mell
I
Frldly. Decemb« t8, 1977
PEANUTS
THIS 15 BEETHOVEN'S
eu~THDAI/ ~
AND GIVE PRESENTS
TO THE GIRLS WHOM THE~ ALSO LOVE!
DAll.Y Pll.OT CT
by Charles M. Schu11
'Tt)MI{ ALL LOVERS OF
MUSIC STAND AND
PA'< iRISVTE 10 THE 61l.EAT C~PO~ ...
"I Just wanted to demonstrate our deluxe
)ce cube maker!'' ~ t'l.·1' . '-----------------t.A'>ft~· .~
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CAS.EY
MOON MULLIN S
'" ·~
. -. ' . . . . ~·
... .
by Tom Batiuk
Ot.J A COLD WINTER'5 Nl6MT
LIKE ™I&.-
™ERE'!> OOTHINGr LIKE
a.JRU~& UP IN F~T OF A
ROARING-TV!
by Charles Rodrigues
by Ferd and tom Johnson
MAMIE ;oL.D MS
NOT TO BOTHE:~
WIT~ Tl-IE
WINDOWS IF
IT RAINED.
GERIATRIX GORDO
-rH
WIFE GOIN5 ON ~T
ME.)(IGAN C~lJISEi
IN ..J~UAR.'I i
™E WAY MY Wl~
IS SHOPPING FO~
CH~IST~S, i\..L.. &6
L-UCKY IF I CAN
AF~it>C~S
A TOL.t> ~JPS&!
\ DE~NIS THE MENAC~
JUDGE PARKER
DOOLEY'S WORLD
rF tl3 gl
0)'.Jf;: OF MY
PAl15N'TS Wt::N'T'
SKIING 1..-.AS"r w eeKeNP, ROY
' )J
MOTLEY'S CREW
.
~ -ili ·.» ..
by Gus Arriola
FIR.5/CAeE :J. '\e EVJ!R /el.).4J
INTO WllH
A MOAT/
by Harold Le Dou x
by Tom K. Ryi'n
H(::'S 1llE ONl.'t' OME
I ~WHO fJRIN6S
MCK Wlt.t:d-'TWE-
WISP PEL.1S.
WME"N ME OOESN'T EVEN
LIKE HIMSELF ?
3•Wu11ther ol
380ollet'1
WOfd
•O FIOOr
ce>ml119
piecta
•2 So.Air.
11<ovlnce
'' Sllldt of blut
•5Galmenf
,, •'' by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Form~n ~ ,_ __
DOWN
, Taite
2Houncfa
quarry
3Havlng
bodily form
• Trea1111
"'' 5L1m~
8 Mlac:h19voua 38 Margarine
c:lllld 39 YO\lthlul
7 Apoea,.nct ending
8 Tie. collar '1 01 aound
and college mind
9 lndicalt •3 Htt!S
10 0.vttaltit •8 lnlants
11 Ole· S11n11 •8 Open rtver
12 Church ert1 valley
13Aporll"d 51Revolle
21 Corn unlta ..63 Oead drunk
23 Poetry cof!l· "'54 Commenceme"l I
poser 55 Become un-1 26 "8c111• : sure
Slang 56 Wnr away
28 R.cllned 57 "Home on l 29 Wiiderness the -····" abode 81 Mounta•n
30 01 the pool mouth 63 Slleep '
3 ! Dakota shelter ·~ 8' Wlde-dlllect moutlled 1uo
3!1 Coolidge ' 68 Deep ao•-It
VP row t"' 37 UnaU1homed68 Strew f()(
11w1ntorcer drytrio '
•
rr1doty Ovc41mt;1,1r lb 1'Jl/
Dolly's. Heartunrrning
By JERRY HERTENSTEIN
Ol••o.lly~letllaff
Carol Channing on stage is an
overpowering flgure.
When she's in the lights, atlen·
tion seems to be focused entirely
on the veteran comedienne.
M isl$ Channing is not a great
s inger or dancer )>ut In her
fa mili ar role or Mrs. Dolly
Gallagher Levi she seems lo
have the play "Hello Dolly" all to
her self.
0 F COURSE, one of the produc·
ti on 's weaknesses is that it
focuses so much on Dolly.
It ·s too bad.
Their leap over the orchestra
pit is no small feat. The number
brought rousing applause from
the nearly full house at a recent
performance.
Robert Lydiard as Barnaby
Tucker, assistant to chief clerk
Cornelius Hackle at Horace Van·
dergelder's Hay and Feed store,
is adorable.
Lee Roy Ream s plays
Cornelius.
He's good, but his singing
seemed a bit weak.
Eddie Bracken portrays Van·
dergelder in the production by
James M. Nederlander and the
Houston Grand Opera.
mouth and race in some funny
routines. A lesser performer
might not m aintain composure
with such antics.
· A particularly runny skit has
her gulping down haudful after
handful of bread then im·
mediately speaking: It's clever,
funny and well done. I'
MISS CHANNING got a stand· •
ing ovation at the recent staging
and she acknowledged it by talk·
ing to the audience after final
bows.
Gower Champion directed the
original ''Hello Dolly" produc·
lion and was choreographer.
This staging is choreographed by
J ack Craig.
The sets, designed by Oliver
Smith, are elegant. •
.. -
PLAY REVIEW! ... •
T h e play, c urrently at
Hollywood's grand, refurbished
Pantages Theater f,hrough' Jan. l
d oes have some\ "other " out·
s tanding talents.
For example , the voice or
Flore nce Lacey (as Iren e
Molloy) has a wide range. She re·
aches the soprano parts with
clarity. lier singing of ''Ribbons
Down My Back" and "It only
Takes A Moment" is 'heart·
warming.
Bracken's fame, especially
with those who grew up listening
to him on radio and who re·
member his comedy during the
'405, made him a big hit with the
Paritages audience.
"Hello Dolly," is lighthearted, --~:.:..:.::..::..-=.:...:.:..;.. __ ......:.... __ _..;.. __ -. __ _ delightful entertainment that is
esp ecially ch eerful in the
Christmas season.
The dancing, notably The
. Waiters' Gallop prior to Dolly's
e ntrance at the Harmonia
Gardens Restaurant, Is s uperb
athletic accomplishment.
BUT m E show clearly· belongs
to Carol. er Dolly.
ll 's Miss Channing the au.
dience came to see. And her
charm sparkled.
She's alone on stage several
timee. But near the end when she
sings "So Long Dearie ," s he's
solo under the sopts with no props,noscenery.
Miss Channing, in the mid·60S
p l ayed Do l ly i n 1 ,273
performances, missing not a one.
Her experience shows.
It's not a philosophical show
with deep. underlying meaning.
But for those who like that "hap·
py feeling" It shouldn't be mis·
sed. •
Performances are 8:30 p.m.
Tuesdays through Saturdays and
7:30 Sundays. Saturday and Sun·
day matinees are at 2 p.m.
Holidays ·Hopping
The male dancers pirouette.
leap and twirl in a sequence that
is at once artistic, athletic and
comical. She contorts and twists her
Service Lacks Starts Wednesday, Dec. 21st :\l ardi Hollo\\ prartic'csskirtdan ectobcpre -
:-l'ntc<I h~· t ht·,\ nrnn Folk Ensem ble at 1and 2
p. m . Satuteb~· 111 Scucliff Village Shopping
l 'enlcr. Jlunlington Hcuch. Rene and his
l'ontinl'nlal J>uppt>ls will appear at 3 p.m .
~li me ;\l1tdwl Yuun~·Evans \\'ill g ive three
pc•rforman<:<''> on Sunduy between 1 and 2
p.m .
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-After 3•.-'J years the
State Health Depart·
ment still hasn't adopted
rules for providing
services to old folks in
their homes, the stale
auditor general s"aid.
Prints,
Process
Outline d
,\ ~tucl10 work ~h o p
roursC' in s ilk :-.<·recn
printing will hC' ofrercd
by UC lrvint-Extension
bcAinnin g Thur~day,
.J:.1n . 5 on campus.
Th e ins tru cto r is
!\t ieke Gelloy of Lagunu
Beach. a printmaker
whose work has been ex·
h1b1ted an Holland, New
York ann California.
SH E R ECEI VED a
diploma in printmaking
and paintinA from the
Hoyal /\cad<.'my of /\rt.
T h e ll agul• and a
mnstc r's dc~n·c 1n Fine
i\rts at UC lrvmt.>.
nasic techniques ;:.ind
processes will be• taught",
including building a silk
:-.r rcen frame. Th<.' class
1s open to the public. No
previous experience is I
rl'quired. Enrollment is
limited. A fee of S80 in· I
e ludes liquids a nd I
paints. ' I
Have A "Christmas Treat"
Tues., Dec :27
-thr u -Sun.,Jan.1 ,~-.:,-._. ______ _..._...__,.
Anaheim Convention Center
P£RFORMANCESCHEOULE
TU6, Dec 77 ................................. · .. •1 00 P .M.
WftO , Ort 71 .................................. I 00 P.M.
Tnurl .Oet J9 .............................. •t.OOP.M. Fri .. Oo:< 30 ............................. ."7:00.•1.00P.M. S.t• .oec.31 ................................ ·~.oo~•:oo~.M. ~un •• J.&n. I .................. ~ ........... ,.2,00, 1.00 .M.
Tldleh A¥ell•l>I• Al: ANtl\elm COf'IVWtllon c.r.1w lcawt""' Mutvel Agencl• * Master Charge -BAC-VISA * (No Service Charge)
• 11.00 off chlld'9ft 12 end under
Holiday On Ice Tickets ~ke
Great Christmas Gi fts --------·-------HURRY, MAIL THIS COUPON TODAYI
Mall will\ h ll·AdClrHsed Sleml)..s Envef""9 To: Holldey On lc.e, t
Anehelm Conv11ntlon Cen•er I
IOO W. Kelelle Av..,ve •
Anehel m. C•llf. 91802 1.
FIRST CHOICE: O.le Time •
"ONE .. OF THE BEST
ICTURES OF mE YEAR!
TIME MAGAZINE
~'The Goodbye Girl'
is a joyous comedy~
just what the doctor onlered.
Nell Simon makes
feeling good legal ... "
GENE SHALIT. NBC· TV
A Mi STJ\RK PROOlJC11a'.j OF A HERBERT ROSS ALM
NER.. SIMON'S
"THE GOODBYE GIRL
RICHARD DREYRJSS ·MARSHA MASON
EDWARDS
The class will be held I
1n the Gr aphi c Art
Studio. 1''inc Arts West I
on the UC Irvine Cam· I
pus, Enrollment Is now I
'lpen at the UCl Ex·
tension Office, Room 102, I
Administration Build· I
SECOND CHOICE: De•e Time I TH EAT R E
Number ol Adult Ticket• --At •--£9ctt •-•.
ing. I
... LOVE
THY
NEIGHBOR''?
Sure.
1t can be tough
But four people on
this half·hour special
tell how they've
learned-and found 1t
helped others and
themselves as well.
Actress Jean Stapleton,
and a woman priest.
a musician and an
educator. all have
valuable insights to
share. Might even
make your loving
go better.
S££"UWE THY NllGHBOlt ..
12 NOON
SUNDAY · DEC. 18
KTLA·TV
CHANNEL 5
Number of Clllld Ticket• --At •--£11Ch ·--I HA~BOR ot ADAMS, COST A .MESA,
Tot .. Amount of Cheel< or Money Dreier' ·~======P=H=O=N:E:5:4:6:·:3:1 o:z::::====== (Pl-Prlnl) '
NAME I
STREET -------PHONE------··-----------~--•• Anaheim Convention Center · .1.
CITY _____ STATE----ZI'"----
Starts Today!
The most explosive picture
of the year!
LEE
REMICK
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
8 PI l r (, l ·" 1 1..1AC 1H i HU~
540-7 444
''The Year's Best Movie
•star Wars' has brought fun back
to the movies and glowingly
demonstrated they stlll can
make •em like they used to.
A grand and glorious mm ....
·-~
"A hell of o lot of fun...brims
with adventure, charm
and marvels. I loved it."
JOCtKIOI .............. Mago-
•
AL f"ACfHO lf"GI
"IOllY D'lltfiRD•
AL f"ACIHO lf"GI
"IOllYDl~'"
D•llY 8:00 Sat/Sun
12:30, 4:15-J 8:15
St•rt• Wed., Dec. i 1
Nell Simon•• ""h•
Goodbye
Glf1'' atamng Rlcherd
Drrfua end M•nh•
Me ton
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"CLO .
OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG)
BOX OFft<X Ol'£NS 10 AM. DAil Y
"LOOKING FOR MR. GOOOBAR" 11
Shows 5:45 -8:10-10:40
"SATURDAY
NIGHT FEVER" (R)
"DAMNATION A LLEY" PG
"FUTUREWORLD" PO 0-.130FulU'96.31>1015
"BOBBY DEERFIELD" PG
"ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE~"
llolltly I 00 ,,_I 00.10'.JO
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME""°
"THE DEEP'' PG
............ ~ .. ·~~o....iil'~ ............. ~
ALL DRIVIE·INS O~IEN 6:J0f".M ..... HTLY
Cnlld UnCler 1 2 Free Vnleu • KldClle ~nro111td
*. SchooJchlldren 's lon1 hollday1 need never
cb ':he :·bah humbu1" sta1e. thanks to tbe&e
om1n1 e>pportunlllea in the arts:
Lii l'omh Repertory
~ Four p lays ln repertory, with a different rformanoe daily, will be staged by Lagun a
uth Repertory Theater between Dt:c. 27
t rough 31 at Laguna Moulton Community
•Ybowle, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna ach.
MaUnees at 2:30 p.m . are scheduled for
'J>inocchio," Dec. 27 and 31: "Ugly Duckling,"
Jlec. 28 and "LltUe Red Riding Hood's Pot·
PGUrri," Dec. 29. "Aladdin and the Wonderful
Lamp .. wW be staged at 7:30p.m . Dec. 30.
General admission tickets at the door are ·1:50 or a Christmas packet for aJI four plays is
M~ T11"'• Magfc al
The Newport Harbor Art Museum Is provid-
ing eight days of holiday happenings for
~ungsters with emphasis on theater and music.
All events will be at the museum's new loca-
on, 850San Clemente Drive, Newport Center.
This Saturday at 1 p.m . "The Tale of the Wee
Ked Caps" will be presented by Theater in
tducatlon. This d r ama, celebrating the
Christmas season surrounding the winter
qquinox, is recommended for the littlest ones,
ages 4 to8. Admission is $1. ·
( At 3 p.m. mimes Miriam Tait and Vicky
snva will welcome the audience to their magical
\fOrdless world. Admission is $1.
• Children's film classics from Hollywood and
C.nada will be,>hown at 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 18
and Tuesday. Dec. 27.
The first program will feature two Oscar
Wilde fairy tales, "The Selfi sh Giant" and "The
l-ftlppy Prince'' plus "Up Is Down," an animated
tale about a boy who walks on his hands.
T he 1939 landmark "The Thief of Baghdad,"
lftarriog Sabu, will be screened on the second
<fate. Even adults m ay want lo enjoy the
f31tchnicaJ virtuosity of this film from a private
4r0Uection. Admission to each s~ow is $1.
· Preston Hibbard will conduct a three-day
JIUppet.ry workshop Wednesday through Friday, ~ec: 21-~. Admissi~n to each or the l p.m.
ess1ons 1s $3. Participants will J earn to create
eir own puppets and will give a madcap variety
s.ttow at2:JOp.m . Friday. t
edwa rds CINEMA WEST
WESTMINSTE:R AT GOL OENWES T
39 2-4·19 )
~~ l'ICT\Jll~ t'll(q"1
A TURMAN-FOSTER CQ\1 PANY
PRODUCTION ''FIRST lDVE"
Starring WILLIAM KATI SUSAN DEY
~bf ~NE STANTON
HITOtCDCK and DAVID FRE~ PIOduc:ed bv LAWRENCE TURMAN
·and OAVIO FOSTER Directerd by
J[)AN~llNC
Al 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 28, children
from the Irvine Conservatory of Music will
perform for their peers. Musicians as young as 7
wlU be in the ensemble. Admission is $1.
Youth Singe r s Open
Auditions for the Orange County Youth
Singers d1rected by Anthony Gril are under w,y.
Boys and girls, 8 tbrough 17, may apply. No
previous training or performing is necessary.
Try-outs may be arranged by calling 495-5013 or
831-2822.
The multj.Jevel, professional quality or-
ganization is ~ade up or training, performing
and touring divisions.
These singers appear regularly at the
Anaheim Convention Center and Palm Springs
hotels. Some members recently returned from a
three-week concert tour of Hawaii.
Explore on S at urda11•
For P.arents who want to give the gift of tlme,
the California State Museum of Science and In·
dustry in Los Angeles is offeri'ng two "Exploring
Science on Saturdays'• programs.
"It's a Small, Small World" will involve first
and second graders and their parents in making
sourdough bread, cheese and yogurt; investigat·
ing food additives and finding out why it's impor-
tant to wash hands and brus h teeth.
· Third and fourth graders can join "Nep-
tune's Crew" and go exploring on a marine re·
search vessel. ,
Orange . County classes will be held at
Breu-Olinda High School. Registration for
J anuary, February and March classes may be
arranged by phoning, (213> 749·0101, ext. 231 .
f
SEE OUR
BEAUTIFUL
ANTIQUE CARS
ON DISPLAY
IN THE
LOBBY
··--···· ESQ •• , apostttJSS ••••
S hoaet.f111e
The M ouseketcers wm perform on Dis·
n ey l anu ·s Spuce
Stage at 11:30 a.m ..
l, 3 and 4:30 p.m.
Monday throug h Fri·
day, Dec. 19-23.
REMEMBER:
ALWAYS LET
THE WOOKIE
WINI
-Seeing 'Star Wars' at Edwards Newport-Cinema is
like seeing It for the first time -an experience
lncomparabl~ anywhere.
Our huge 75x35 foot screen (the largest indoor movie
screen in Orange County) and our ext)IHrttlng six
track Dolt>J stereo sound system totally envelop you
In the action: You don't "watch" ft, you're part of JtJ
The force, the full force is with you at Edwards
Newport Cinema.
Experienced
Dally At
7:30 and 10:00
and on
Saturday & Sunday
at 12:90 -2:30 -
5:00 -1:30and10:00
'.
Friday, 0.C.mber 19, 1977 DAILY PILOT (,'9
'
..
.... ..
CJ• DAILY PILOT fttday. Oeetmbul 18 1177 REX REED INTERVIEWS MARSHA MASON"
Simon Says,-'Hire .Marsha ·Mason!'
• Marsha Mason b a m1uln1 person.
Onscreen, she never fails to mako an impreut<>n.
~cryhc 1mlle, trapezoid mouth, C\lnny valentine
hps curving down ut the sides like a child's
<:rayola drawin9\ eyes bubbling on the ver&e or tears.
But-when lhe Max Factor is P.acked away
and the dressini room locked, Marsha Mason
diuppeara. £,•en the !an magazines are
scratchlni their feather·beads. Nobody has a
clue. We haven't exactly been stampeded with a
plethora of Marsha Mason interviews.
ON THE NEW YORK hotel register,·she's
listed as Marstta Simon. The press agent Crom
her new movie, "The Goodbye Girl," in which
she once again lights up the screen as a warm,
huggable. over-the-hill chorus girl, emerges
Crom an elevator lo inform anyone who asks that
there Is no Marsha Mason on~ floors above.
The sunny, sweet-tempered. talkative gal
whofsigns for room service chicken saliid and
ll'ed Lea writes "Mrs. Neil Simon" on the check.
The waiter looks puzzled, shrugs, and leaves.
Even the sta.ffis convinced no movie star is stay-
ing here. · · ·
"I was Marsha Mason four years ago," says
the girl who made headlines when she married
the world's funnie~t playwright. .. But l 've been
Mrs. Neil Simon ever since. He is the star in the
family and the rest of il Is unimportant to me. .
·~THERE ARE R t;i\SOl'iS \\hy I don't do in
lcrv1ews. There husn't been a lot I've done that
people have been interested in. Mine is not one of
those across-the-board i.uccess stories. Also. peo·
pie never seem to re member me Crom one film to
another."
Neil Simon says s he spends three hours in
front of a mirror makmg herself look homely.
She has no idea how attractive she is.
Marsha laughs. "Streisand has an extremely
dear image of her:.clt. Such a thing just never
occurred to me. When I step in front of a camera,
whatever comes out that day 1s what you get.
.. I have no image. And J like it. To be a
Streisand, or 11 Jack Nicholson, or a Robert Red·
ford -to have that kind or mass appeal -I
couldn't cope with thut.' ·
ls she Betty Boop or B~tly Crocker? L'ntil
four years ago. she was JUSl plain Nulsy Fagan.
"I WAS FLOUNDERING and full of anger. l
was 27. married, divorced, rapy, and my
father was still asking me, • re yo eing a nice
girl'?' The actors l met we either getting horri-
ble divorces or they were omosexuals. 1 sort of
gave up on ever having a mature relationship ...
Enter a .cherubic, balding playwright with
horn-rimmed glasses named Neil Simon, who
had been married to his wife Joan for 20 years
when s he suddenly and tragically died of cancer.
leaving him with a des k full of hollow jokes and
two daughters to raise.
Marsha had deserted a good, steady, well-
paying job on the soap opera "Love or Life" and
" as working hard in a Snn Francisco production
of "Private Li\·cs" when her agent rushed her
back lo New York to read for u new Neil Simon
play calletl "The Good Doctor."
THE PLAVWRIGIIT STUCK his head in and
said , "Aren't you the girl from 'Love in
Bloom'?" Gelling the name or the movie
backwards made her laugh.
She didn't discover until l,ater that in the
Marsha Mason Simon
as she appeared
aPwlrepl!OIO in 'Audrey Rose.·
Anybody who could turn i.ot's wife
into a pillar of salt, incinerate Sodom
and Gomorrah and make it rain for
forty ~ays an~·forty night~ has got· :.!·: to be a fun guy. ,. . ,.:..::.>~
~CAUAMOIA
CIOH-"tl l 1 ti \A f l'HllU l'llU
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"' \AT fWIU Ti>U 1 00.$ U ·t H
I "C.t.SSAHDIA
CROSSIMG"
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'\ATT'HIVTVtS) 4'·1 0
Thanks to you
it works ...
FORAlllf W e '--... _
MANN'S so. com PLAZA tnu llm
J&llfmlol
Sl4-llll
MANN'S
SO. COAST PLAZA
C11u Mm
)Ill lrnlol
ll~ 2111
MANN'S
SO. COAST PLAZA
HIS11!11~r 10 llSI
MANN'S
CINEMALANO
IUI SI Marlor .......
m1w1
lilltN'S
CI NEMALAND
llllSt l!Jlw .. ,.,.~
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7~10 &t:lO
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"SATURDAY HICiHT
FEVER"
forl. tllrw Tllff.
I :45·l :45·5:SO:l :OO· I 0:00
IKl"lllM
"CLOSE tNCOUHTHS OF THI
THllD KIHD" IPGI
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WHKDAYS
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flUUIUK
''TELEFOM''
7:00·1:50.10:40
Set. ""11 T llH.
I :l0-1:20·5: IO· 7:0().1:50. I 0:40
nur-
GEORGE BURNS • JOHN DENVER
(PG)
m ~1\0,,N
I Ll~I M/\l M;li
1414'1.Heltlera..-..
Anlfleim•IS7101
0'HEROES is another uJ>and<omlng contender for my 10 Best list for
1977. It also marks the auspicious arrMll of video sitcom king Henry
Winkler as a major screen star · and all three words In that description are
w-ell earned.
" ... he gives a sensitive. thoughtful performance rich in Insights made richer
by his uncanny ability to convey them. His deceptively free-wheeling style
soon gives way to a quiet eloquence in which he says the most with sllence
and his portrayal should make him a cinch for a Best Actor nomination in
~~ar's Oscar race.
"Balancing him brilliantly Is Sally Fleld ... A strong actress with a bold. defini·
tive style of her own ... In HEROES she meets her match in Winkler. and
playing off an actor of her own Intensity only seems to improve her already
well-etched performance.
"Also contributing sparks to this saga is Star Wars space captain Harrison
Ford. whose touching pefformance as o'ne of Winkler' s former war buddies
provides one of the fllm's most memonibly moving sequences ... Ford
could easily win a 86t Supporting Actor nomination for his gentle, per·
suasive portrait of a soldier whose war wounds will never. ever heal.
"HEROES is the first major film
to deal intelligently with the
plight of returning Vietnam
veterans. It's a sensible, sensi·
tive screen essay, well directed
by Jeremy Paul Kagan and
wonderfullY. well-acted by
Winkler, Ford and Ms. Fleld.
The result Is a very special Olm
that should have a high-priority
position on your Must~See list"
-George-Anthony.
THE TORONTO SON
A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTlON
"HEROES"
Co-starring HARRISON FORD ·Written by JAMES CARABATSOS
Music by JACK NITZSCHE and RICHARD HAZARD
Directed by JEREMY PAUL KAGAN · Ptoduced by DAVID FOSTER
and LAWRENCE TURMAN ·A UNIVE~SAL PICTURE·TECHNICOLOR•
lNbW 11'1 Berkley Plipert>acllll f!l!J=!l-•i;,.....,:,'fe"llii&IW"'! §i•l ~
CO.HIT AT HARBOR ----• tB'.2~~
IS "THIEVES'•
REX REED
in the raw
i •
1
blackness or the empty theater where she was ~
reading for the role she was only a page and a '
half lnlo the script when he leaned over lo the :
director and whispered "Hire her!" ,
"'Jl was just one or those extraordinary
chemical lhin~s. On the first day or rehearsals, I
we were all silting around this table reading the I
script aloud. We took u corree break." Marsha •
recaUed. • I •
"HE CA!\IE AROUND, put his hand on my I
shoulder. and I r emember putting his hand with '
my hand like we were old friends. I can't explain •
it. It all sounds so s illy. I was very .embarrassed. •
We were married 21 days later."
.. •rGJ-
FOUNTAIN VALLEY .......• 839-1500
CENTURY 21 .............. n2-8902
MISSION VIEJO ............ 830·6990
CINEMA WEST ............ 892-4493
HARBOR CIMEMA .......... 646-0573
ORANGE MALL ............ 637·0342
·BREA PLAZA .............. 529-5339
STADIUM D.I •.............. 639-7860
LA MIRADA 0.1 ............. 921 -9996
.. WI ill • ~-u ·-I CLOH INCOUNUH , , • 11 .. ,..,,.. 01 fHI fHlll) KIND ; IM·2400 IUIOWICU 12iOO• J!lh UOt 71JOt I•
""' ltt & 1.V 11.lO AM IOllf
h •lttft "-.... , ... tM-2.400
OIOllOI MMMS • JOMN lllMVll
OH 0001 l'POI Pl.US
OUMIAU. IALL Y lllOI
Al PMM0 • liWITMI llRUI
IOUT OIUfll\.Dl"OI """ 1011 OAJOltil lit
'°"" l'IAVOl lA IATUIDAY MOHT HVll (IQ
CMMUtl90MIOM
ftUJOMCNt
'LUI CHKlllllO •&.AO
..
t
erryMood
o t,ed at Go/Jen West
"The llany Mooch of Christmas." the an-
• aal boUday concert by tbe Golden West
College Symphonic Band, will be pe.rf onned ln
tbe community theater at a o'clock tonight.
Thomas F. Hem andei, director, will con-
duct the 58-piece band In a program desl&ned
,to capture the carefree images and restive
music of the holiday season. General ad-
mluloo la $2, or $1.SO for seniors.
The co n ce r t will open with
"Zaralbustra," followed by Henry Filmore's
."Rolling Thunder" and "Christmas oy" ar·
ranged by Nestico.
"Por Pa Espana Canl" by ael Mendez
will feature a trumpet trio, Pa Banaau. Joe
Artinger and Ron Fitch.
The band also will play Berlioz's
"Beatrice and Benedict,·· and Ronald Morria
will be student conductor for Leroy An·
derson's "Promenade."
Other selections are Heed's "In Storm
and Sunshine," Caesar Giovannlnl's ''Ski
Run," Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite,"
and Ander&On's ''Sleigh Ride."
k en Kock is soloist for "Tubby the Tuba"
by George Kleinslnger.
A Quick Look at the Movies
, I Disney Gift
•
i: Opens Here
J
By BOB THOMAS s I 'e e p ' ' o v c r t h e .. PETE~DRAGON" telephone. and cause . normal cltiZens to blow
1 the Disney package for up defense installations
t"' holldars. a.nd an as part of an obsolete
agreeable gift It 1s. The Russian plot. KGB agent
/ c ast is talen le~ and Bronson and dual·a1ent froli csome: Mickey Lee Remick have to stop Roon~elen Reddy, •him beforeanuclearwar ~ u n~. Jim D~le, starts. Unbelievable?
S}telley inters, J am Very.And yetDonSlegel
la c k u s a n d S e a n keeps the pace brisk and
arshall. who is Pete. Bronson fans will adore
e r eal star is Elliott, a it. PG.
nnlng, 15-foot actor "1011v 01r1r•~••LD''<omD1,,.,
th al ,· I aD11toowMtlowstorywlt11avtorec-
SC es. "mgs, ong •"9•"d1i.D1....i1ss~prll1no1ye11tt· I and hot breath. He is tlve Al P«lftO Is"" A-•IUft r.c:e
,a, classic Disney crea· :~\~.~= ~' :.::":'0 ~'.~; ~on, his appearance Vl•H••~,.•Yred cornrec1e111a s...1u
t. f ·d Wftlterlum .,.., 9f><OUn1"" • wen mpensa 1ng or art 11 .. MtY w11o 1"'""'•'" u.n 1111,...,._ Itches in the mm. Al him.A leleclrorMnod. ... -.Alvln a s h a a n d J 0 e l S.roent 'ucrlpCls ...... wltll llapr{ _,,..,_and s..-.r Po11ac1t dlrww rschhorn contribute wllll • fine llktorlal ..,.; ..... ... e rollicking score. Rat· a scension Is stunnln •• Ti.. ... .. w llonslllp -Pac:lno and Martfle
p& G. . Kati ... _,.,; """'" ._.,414 M ... ' trec11Wly Wl,...allle. A.Ced PO, bl.It
1~ .. 'TELEFON" i s ~ames Bond played
"iUiout tongue in cheek.
Qbarles Bronson re-& a ins straight-or
t'!ather s tony-fa ced
ihrougti the far.Ietched
~ adventure. We are
ked to believe that
ny Donald Pleasance
n recite Robert Frost's
!~miles-to go befor e I
11'e lltm "" -nudlly, Ion .,... rwoh '-"9'»0t·
"JULIA"lsa.....,.ltnonocatlonof
-mory, Ulllan Hellrn.l's ncollec·
lion of ..... ,,~ wlbl ll 9t1t•
K -10lr1 -ldHlltftl led her Co lre~y In Nell Germany. Fred Z.lft-,,.,.,.,.,, l"From Hoen le Elamlty,"
''T.,. H1111'sSlort''ldllP..,._whla
MllllllvllY Ill NllNn nlal~11$.
JIM FOftda 1$ -'•llOfl es the YoWi111
... llmen, d911nNllllO Mr lnM<11rt11",
..... 1 .... 1n11y. Nr ""'*" , ... ~ Venessa Aedlr.,.. Is • perfect ,...l<h
.. Ille •"'--' Jlllla and Miki ....-1
stems from J-"otNrn. Ma•· ln\111•" S<:hell, H•I HotbrOOlt and •-mary ,,,,....,,,.,., AMed PO.
SOl"Tll ( ·o \~'I
lHf AT ... f
I ti. .it.,& fH (4 ft ••'i I
6:41 PM
............ ~ ... -S-.1:41
THEATUl----1
1aws1 ·
~Kong
ti] A P.CVtl> V1 Fl~'"'
lNI
"SIAPSHOT'
"THE MAN WHO
SUD DOWN
MREST'
tNt
Friday. December 16. 1en *DAILY PILOT CJJ
Singers Be(Jl the Odds
F o rmer B arb er, D a ughter T o p Charts
NASHVILLE. Tenn. <AP> -The Kendalla
have overcome the oddl to regiater one of the bi&
countrr, mualc hlta ot im. "Heaven's Just a Sin
Away.'
The rather·daught.er due has been working
aeainat this atacked deck:
-"HEAVEN'S JUST a Sin Away" was re-
corded u tbe S.side.
_, It was one of the flnt country music re·
leuea for Ovation Records, a •mall label.
-No other father-daughter d\.IO hu ever
become nationally known in country mutic.
-They originally pald to NeOfd in Nuhvllle
and turned out a hit. Hundreds of other people
have arranged such custom sesaiona and gained
nothing.
"OUR WHOLE CAREER has been against
the odds," says 24·year ·old Jeannie Kendall.
The odds have been battered. "Heaven's
Just a Sin Away" has been No. 1 for as lone as
four weeks on some national country music
charts. -
"The people love it." says Royce Kendall, a
43·year-old former barber: "People want to hear
Jt 30 minutes at a time. We played it three times
in a row ilJe other night. I wish I knew the seeret
to it. I don't know what it has, but if I did, I could
make a lot of money."
THE SECRET MAY be the harmony, with
J eannie's soprano backed by her father's deeper
blend.
"I've sung harmony for years," Kendall
said. "I may not be good at it, but I like it. She"s
good to sing harmony with because she's on key
good. Also, I think the harmony may come
natural because we're related."
An i mal Towns Probed
BERLIN <AP)-The East German newspaper
Neue Zeit says it's sendlnf: a reporter to see what
life is like 1n Dog Air. While he's at it. he may check
into thinp at Bull Crack apd maybe even Cow
Beer.
Hundeluft, Bulleritz and Kuhbier are among
300 East German communities whose names have
something to do with animals.
Neue Zet(, or New Time, ls plannina to publish
a serf es ol 1tories on the more oddly named towns
when its reporter returns from them.
Starts Wednesday,
December 21st!
"It's hard to imagine anyone who will not,
in the encl, tum on to 'The Turning Point':•
-Rldilr4 ScMcttL n11e Mapzine
SIIlRLEY MacLAINE
nrr;\T1ITHl~'Tl'n'"1X-A HHllll:XT ,., ..... flUI
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edwards HUNilNGTON
HACH AT IWS. H.L
14M388
A fl undred years
in the service of love!
The song was the flip side of the original A·
side, "Live and Let Live." But several radio sta·
lions began reporting numerous requealS for
"Heaven's Ju.st a Sin Away." _}
"WE DIDN'T recognize its potenllal." Ken·
datl said. "But l do re member saying that I kind
of liked It."
The rather and daughter began singing
around home in St. Louis when Jeannie was 15 or
so. TheJt in 1970, they took the big step and moved
to Nashville.
The duo had a fairly strong hit, a country
version ot John Denver's "Leaving on a Jet
Plane," after paying for the custom record·
ing session. Another moderate hit was a country
version or "Two, Divided by Love."
THE KENDALLS have beer\ told that they
were ahead of their time when they entered the
-business. The buying public just wasn't ready ror
· country groups in the early 1970s, music officials •
told them.
AP~
''I think the public is more oriented into
harmony and groups now," Jeannie said. "1 've
alwl\)'S lho\llht the family was the mainstay of
country music.·· ,Jf:AN~IE, ROYCE KENDALL HARMONIZE
" 'LOOKING FOR MB. GOOD 'IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND 0 OF THE BEST! ~-ws""'"· ,,.r:JI' r,,,.i 0oi1.v ,,·rn.
"Rlntlng ••• a dramatic bk>ckbuet•r"
Brue• Wllllem1on-Playboy
"Diane Keaton bum1 • hol•
through the ecr .. n.''
" .. RMd-HewYork Dally New1
LOOKINGFOR .~
~ IR.OOODBAR
In two theaters
" ~--··"'· , .......
n
1:00, , .. "
s.tJS4lft l :»-S:IS
1:•11lU
ed
HAllOI AT ADAMS. COITA W1SA
MISA YH DICINTa t}l-4141
' ,_ I
IHEY'LtDO
a ·NYTHING
TO STOP
•£61'0.,
The operation that
can trigger
-
51 human
time
bombs.
..
•
..
FfidaY, ~ 1f, 1977
,. Hall Solos. in . 'Sacred Sangs'·
.,UMIOmNloN
•OYw a Jtallallfeut at .. Y.-t'a Onaa A!b ............... o.rr,1 llall o. ........... Moad .. , MlllollD 0.... (tbe
~---------------.. 11We also used Kenny
( ]
Passarelli, Caleb Quaye,
K and Roger Pope (all of ROf:K TAL . whom are currently on
tour with Hall and ...______________ Oates). I sort of audi·
.. otter, •••taeb.loed
•a•) re•ealed their wut t4) play a bit plMe ~plans. In New York.'• Darryl
• Tia• boys were ex· ufd, .. altbougb tbe rest
aaated after a amub of the tour baa beta blf
._ arli• that even· areau.llik4ildU.,fdeaof
tn1 gattbePallildldm (ttie two ni1bta at the
l n a I • f e a t u r e d Pallaatum iDltead. ·
P h llaOelp hla pal• .. lt'• tuony though,
Sylvester stalloae drag-after all the J:wlc halls,
sinlDUT)"lacUolmoft· playtns ln a ~ce like
atage) but elated by the P.u.dlum (It holds
.mat Darryl ealled ... under 3,000) fe.ls like
.areat lllgbt." playtnc tn a tlA7 elub ... uwe didn't reall1 Darryl'a fiallbed bis
...
tloned them for the tour
solo LP -tlUed •'Sacred through my solo LP."
Sonia." whlcb be co· Does this mean be and
produced with Robert John aro -Breaking
Fripp. Up?
.. IT'S STUFF I've
wanted to do for a long
time," be said, ••more
rock and roll than the
music I make with John.
I worked with Fripp
because we have similar
interests, like conceptual
art. • • and be'a great •
"No, no," said Darryl,
"It just means that
there 'a stuff we ~an do together and separately.
We '11 still continue to
make the music we do
together ••• We're re-
cording another Hall and
Oates album ln March."
Somethiog SpeCial.
.... • .. • t
· ·~.~ch year 'a .. ~pecial motion
pict&:ire ·comes along ·that
touches som~thing"'within
.~v~iyone, evefywhere.·
IF YOU bad trou~\e
buying rock albuma for
Christmas gl.fta lt cer •
tainly wun 't for lack of
stock ln the stores. In
time for the mad l"Ulb
were new LP1 from
Crosby & Nash, Kiss,
Queen, the Beatln <Love
Songs), Paul Simon
<Greatest Hits). Electric
Light Orcbeat'ra, Nell
Young, Aeroemltb, Boz
Scaggs, Loggln• &
Mesalna, Earth, Wind &
Fire, ·Emerson. Lake &
Palmer, Blue Oyster
Cult, Billy Joel, Steely
Dan, Santana, Neil
Diamond, Eric Clapton,
and the Ramooa.
·This ye"r "Satlird&Y Night" Fever"
is that special movie. ·
Its. hero comes from the streets.
His dreams are everyone's. .
He knows that beyond his wot1d
of gangs, girls and discos,
there iS some~hing more ...
-... CatChit
•1 f I '
·,
YO
1974 CORONA
2 Dl.HDTP. •
6 •P<I •• 1. oond . ·-· meg s279· 5 • w11 .. 11. l>feltY ,,,...,i.c ll'""· low mllHge. 13"M01
1973 COROLLA
COUPI
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1973 TOYOTA
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_., ....... OtiMOSJ'
US9CAISI
r ,.
~
I
~ l
• •
-
...
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•
•
' l.
1
·.
! •
•
•
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IT:
II. l.
" •• •· .. •• •I
• ... ..... -
ft• u · ... -·
1
I
I
• .... OT F11d•r Doeember ,e 1011
MOon's Church ·cultivates.Low
81 DA GOLDB"EaG
NEW YORK (AP> -On morn·
.lnP wbm tbe weather is 1ood, a
portl)' YOUD.I man stand.a on Ftl\.b
Avenu playin1 a aouupbone
and hawking The News World,
th dally newspaper financed by
SWl Myung Moon's UruflcaUon Church.
Moat ol the time, be draws a
curious look or two; the same
lool pauera-by eive the crippled
beagar wttb the rabbit, the
sidewalk artists or the man
wearlnc . the sandwich boards
promoting hwsband Jlberation. ·
THE MOONIE S HAVE
blended into the New York
scenery.
Few aects have received more
attention or evoked deeper
hostility than the one founded by
the South Korean evangelist. And
few have been the subject or so
many investigations, most of
them triggered by the openly
political activities of church
members.
In 1976, Moonles were the best·
publicized sect in America,
spreading their doctrine of the
coming of the Messiah and the
Kingdom of God, preaching on
street comers and al big rallies
in New York and Washington
and, as opponents protested,
alienating impressionable or un-
stable youngsters from their
families.
EDITOR'S NOTE -TM heat1J/
public lt01'Tna o/ a ytar or tioo ago
have aubnded. the glare of natlonaJ
attention has dimmed. The Rev. Sun
Ml/Ung Moon'3 Umf1cat1011 Church
1oldurs on, cultwoting a low profile,
minding 1t1 prospering busineu a(-
Jaara, and fending off a bevy of
inve1t igation.a.
Revenue Service is said to be in·
quiring into its tax exemp\fons.
THE CHURCH STILL is ac·
cused or brainwashing )'oung
men aod women and estranging
them from their families; of sub-
jecting them lo a totalitarian
lifestyle, and of filling them with
alien dogmas. Some or_ the i.Q·
vestigations center on altega.
tions that Moon is an agent of the
South Korean Central In·
teutgence Agency.
Finding a Moonte io a big city
today takea more work than it
would have In the spring and
summer of 1976, when they were
busy promoting rallies al Yan.Jcee
Stadium and tbe Washington
Monument. The best place to
spot them is suburban shopping
cente rs; ln northeas t P en-
nsylvania or Minnesota or col·
lege communites like Cam-
bridge, Berkeley or Lansing.
The church i~ spending a lot of
time on its business enterprises.
NATIONAL
... ,_. AS 1977 ENDS, less is heard of
the sect's aggressive recruiting.
The Unification 'thurch ..
midway in its two-year drive to
evangelize America, but there's
no indication that its message
has caught on with more than a
tiny fraction of Americans.
IT RUNS, FOR example, a
small tuna-fis hing f l eet in
Gloucester, Mass., a jewelry
store in New York, and the daily
newspaper, The News World,
that members hawk for a dime
on New York streets. It is seeking
nccredltaUon for the Unification
Theological Seminary in Bar-
rytown, N.Y., about 100 miles
north of New York City.
LOUISE, KEN CONNEATALKAB&UTEXPERIENCES IN BRINGING THEIR SON BACK
Moon lea' Sworn Enemies Work to Retrieve Cultlat•, Cl aim They Are Brainwashed
whether South Korean funds are
being used by the Moonies.
Moon's c h ief aide and
translator, Col. Bo Hl Pak, was
once the Korean military attache
in Washington. And there have
been allegations linking both
Moon and Pak with South Korean
President Parle Chung-bee.
confirm that an inquiry is un-tial, stable group, and it's not as
derway. threatening as it might have ap.
• peared when they didn't un-Church officials put the mem-
bership at 30,000, which is fewer
than many an obscure denomina-
tion 's, a nd those who have
studied the movement ~ay there
may be no m ore than 3,000
ha rd core converts.
ONE SOURCE OF contention deratand It better."
But if the Unification Church
has yet to make a significant im-
pact as a religion, il's made pro-
gress in other ways in part
because the faHurc of a mass
responso from American youth
has quieted the most serious ap-
prehensions.
AMERICAN LEADER
Neil Albert Salonen
ccpted than we were," says Neil
Albert Salonen, 33-year-old head
of the Unification Church of
America. '"l think many people
have come to believe the church
is not as threatening as it might
have appeared when they. fu-sl
became aware of it."
Il also is continuing to ac-
cumulate property -do\VJltown
buildings for headquarters, naral
farmland for training centers
and. schools. In New York, it
owns the big old New Yorker
Hotel, for use as a dormitory,
and national headquarters is
whnt used to be the Columbia
University Club.
NOR HAS THE church been
helped by the investigation or
Tongsun Park. the South Korean
businessman implicated in in-
fluence buying among members
of Congress: But church o!ficlals
insist they are Independent of
Tongsun Park or any Kore.an
government influence and de-
nounce the invesUgatlon as a fish· ":lg expedition..
between the Moonies and the IRS Salonen says a low profile ls
is the politics of the church: the church's normal state. It
Some church m embers maintain hasn't tried to stage big rallies,
that the prayer vigils staged on as in 1976, but is circulating an
behalf of Richard Nixon during hour-long promotional special
the Watergate i.mpeachment pro-for which it has boueht television
cess were simply that -prayer time.
THE CHURCH HAS won court A YOUNG MAN once involved
in attempting to dt aw Moonies
a way from the movement puts it
this way: "I just don't care much
a ny more. If someone feels
strongly enough about the church
to join it, that's his problem."
MOON MIMSELF HAS an
estate in Tarrytown, N. Y.
Northern California is the most
ct· ve commercial front. The
c aUiliated lnternatjopal .
ge Enterprise11 Inc. in
San anclsco operates lntema-
vigils designed to bring the coun-
try together. But Salonen con·
cedes : "We supported Nixon. It
wasn't orchesµ-ated as support
for Nixon. but it bad that effect."
As it did during the Nixon
period, tbe church maintains a
force on Capitol Hill -a force
church officials are sensitive
about calllng a lobby. They say th~ testdent'MOontes stmpty ex~
plain the church'• position to
mem hers of Congress. It's
particularly useful at a time
wben many arms of the federal
government -are lined up against
them.
THE CHURCH ALSO is re-
a ssessing its techniqu es,
particularly the hard sell. and
concedes that excess zeal of
young adherents often rubbed
people the wrong way.
"You have lo realize," he adds,
"that our church is very much in
the formative stage."
* * * •
Convert: 'I
Found What's
·fights against depro~rammers
who sought to reconvert young
m embers of the movement. And
if church recruiters haven't
turned eveey kid on the block into
a Moonie, they've turned a large
contingent into street vendors of
~andy and flowers and put others
t o work in church-amtialed busl·
nesses that generated $24 million
in profits last year.
Like the young man with the
sousaphone, the Moonles are
blending in.
That is not to say the Unifica-
tion Church bas lef• all of its troubles behind.
It is still Q.nder investigation by
a congressional subcommittee,
by the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, and local
tax boards. The Inte rnal
tlooal Exchange Maintenance, a
cleaning firm. Its contracts in·
elude one with the federal gov-
ernment to clean rugs in federal
office buildings in Monterey,
Solano, S~Joaquin, San Mateo,"
Santa Clara and San Mateo coun-
ties; al Mather, McClelJan and
Travis Air Force Bases; the FBI
office 1n Sacramento and the of·
fices ol two Democratic con·
gressmen from California, Jobn
E. MossandRobertLeggett .
About 600 foreign church mem·
bers -many Jap~neae or
Korean -are under deportation
orders from Ute Immigration and
Naturalization Service for over-
staying their viaaa or falalfying
informat.100 on viaa applications.
In many cases,J..t_he Immigration
Service found M.oonies had ap·
plied for entry u students of re-
lipon but had spent m oat of their
time peddling flowers on the
street.
Despite its problems, the mov,
1:::~:et. is optimistic about its Important'
··w e certainly feel more ac·
-i. •
Moon-oriented?
Thousands Oppose
Proposed Industry
BAYOU LA BATRE, Ala. (AP>
-Residents of Alnbama's bayou
countr y at first welcomed plans
for a new shipbuilding induatry
in their marshy backyard. But ·
they are up in arms now because
many believe the proposed busi·
ness" is connected with the ·
Unification Church of the Rev.
Sun Myung Moon.
John Schmiellke, gen eral
manager for the Virginia-based
International Seafood company~
said that the fears or lhe bayou
rolk are unwarranted. The com·
pany controls U.S. Marine, which
. is planning new shipbuilding
fac;illtieshere .
ScBMIETl'KE SAID the firm
in Norfolk.has "very smooth'' re-
lations with that community and.
National leaders maintain that
the California businesses are
owned by individual church
_ members, not by the ctiurd.l.
They .cootend that there is leis
overall control of the movement
from church headquarters than
is generally asaumed. But they
acknowledge that most of the
profits from California are
turned over to the church, if not
directly. then aa tithes by in-
dividuals.
THE PllOPITS IN those en-
terprises varY-The News World
is losln1 money. But othen are
profitable, In p-.rl because Jabor
is cheap. Kany Church members
donate their Ume, and wbile others are paid, they often con·
tribute their salaries to the
church. They often work unpaid
overtime.
Jeffrey Scales, for example, is
an ex-Moooie who was manager
of Aladdin's delicatessen in
Oakland. He says he put in 110 to
120 hours a week at the job, and
' was paid for 40. So were a lot of
others at the delicatessen who
worked even longer hours.
Most students of the m ovement
agree that the biggest profits
come from street sales.
contrary lo rumors, the Moon Aft,,..,...._ SALONEN RECALLS THAT
Finally, there is the investiga-
"tion by the IRS. The agency
never officially confirms such in·
vestigations, and church officials
won't talk direcUy about it. But
highly placed cburch sources
"HISTORICALLY IN this
country there's been a tradition
of new religious movements and
groups undergoing a period of re·
jection and semi-persecution,"
Salon en says.
.. But after a wbile, it comes to
the point. wbere.tbere's a r eall.za·
lion that this group ls a substan·
Parents' Efforts:
Retrieve Cultists
By S'l'llAT DOUTBAT
PRINCETON. W.Va. CAP) -Ken and Louise Conner consider
themselves to be on a holy mission. Jaime Sheeran feels sbe•s found
God. They are on a spiritual collision course.
Jaime Sheeran is the director of Sun Myung Moon's UnlticaUon
Church in West Virginia and lives al the church cent.er in Hunt·
ington. People like Keo and Louise Conner, who are worting to draw
people away from th~bureb, are her sworn enemies.·
"WE DIDN'T It.NOW ANYl'lllNG about the Moonles until our. son wu brainwuhed by them in California," says Conner ... He
wasentnppedlaatfallandweftnallygotblmoutlastspring."
Louise Conner sits beside her husband, listening to him and toy·
ing nervously with a stack of books and pamphlets on the subject of
cultism In America.
Ken Conner Jr., one of the couple'• slx cbildren, was 21 and a
third-year student at West Vlrginla University In Morgantown when
he joined the church. He had taken a semester off for a blcentennlal
bicycle trip acl'06s the country and had planned to come back to
acbool ill.January wn. followers wbo are employed at • ' when the church first got Into the firm do not work for free and KOREAN EV ANGELI ST. · ll l ti al b .. .:.1d MJ'llAT'S WREN' RE RAN INTO the Xoonles, .. Conner save.
.Done Of the Company m oney is Rev. Sun u..un11 Moon ao c ta on s es, e was -~v
Channeled to Moon. ..., • that his peo.J>le couldn •t clear .. Tile boJ wu hypnotized. He didn't even know what he wu getting
more ttian $15 a day. He Into." Hla comments caple after esum·atea that they now taie in TheConnerssaidlheybegantotetsuspiclouswbentbelrsonr~ some ~000 people, about one-buttheyhavesaidprevfouslythat .... 0 t -.. and aid t.o fused tocomebome.
t ..-.rd ~t Rom0 n Catholic-u s M · · otti-.,;fl ·a.tty ... 0 ~. some are 5
u • v "" . . anne is n "" nanci make as much 8t\ ~ -... He told us be was go'".r on a weekend retreat-with these peo-
domlnated Bayou La Batre prop-to Moon. . The church ar.~oone. well ~le. wen. thentrul was-;;: alarm.near Boon"11.le. Calif..; and il
t:t, ""turned oat Sunday. at a raUy Scbmiettke s-aUflnternatlonal· legally, often with the support or luted for se\'en weeks." qys Cooner, a sales representative.
oppo11ng the industry· A local Seafood employs 100 and "about Uk th A · c· u ·'When we fmally found out what be•d gotten himself into we went to minl.•ar told the crowd that group!' e e mer1can iv ""' 12" are members of the Unlfica-Liberties Union. my 29-year-old nephew from San Francisco and. by golJy, lbey
you.n1 people .. are lnnocenUr, tion Church. Jn September a California ap-almost got him, too.
snared mto this satanic power "They are family people. They peals court ruled that parents
of Moon. _ 'lave children. They rent. apart· have no ritbt to claim cuatody ol "llY NEPHEW SPENT A WEEKEND On the farm and called
.:...W:m aT,.. ausiNl:"'IHS_.,-,--JDJafe~t:s, -~am.e.1.-..l:hl)'-&d their lf~WD ~bll4HD if •t ID•.-.Jle-Nld,-!tJDCl8 JCen, lt-yw .... wul &o ... )'OV-tlOft-.,a.in
ff!ID•DAAIU oo•r..... p u hlld object Th t d --you'dbeetereomooutbereand~bim!" I
and clt'Sc leedera bave formed a· . 1n 'u.. i>aJoU. where the_.. :...CSre:. a JoW.r.·!urt ~ · Tbe eomai.a he..s.d for Cnla and au.JD.ptecl to abduct
1roap caDed Cclneemed C~ nlah vtlla1el'1 owe tbelr tbat turned OYfl' ftve lloael• to tbelrMD. • · oftbe&outhtotrytokeepthetlnia llveliboOd to the 1ea, oppoaltion ·th. elr. parents; aDcl ~ foar o( .. Bat we bcltcW It." CcaMI' IQI. "And after that.,,. didn't"
out. Marine could 6e a formidable obstacle to the five aubeequentlJ left tlMf' hear tromldm f(w mcmtm. n... tut spring be eoetacted an o1d st.rt ~:Uabthe•~~=:: tbe company._ . . clulrcb cm their own, tbe effeet frttod and lhe later called and told ua he was ataJina at the Moorda
two ween 110 when it bou1ht 700 CL.\ aBN CE •··so NNY,. :::m~ ~all7 end ~ Center ID C,.UUbal, Oblo ...
ae ... 1 ol bayou land for t2 million Sprinkle, tbairman of Concerned • n-. CONNED SOUGRJ' TBB AID ·or Ted Patrtet, one of the
tro .. foro>er Volce of America CiUieuottbeSouth,sald, 0 Wt're THE aw.CR coN'qNUfs bea~~ammen. Conner and two frlenda thesunatched \ Director Kenneth Glddens of not obJectlni. to oew indus(ry. to lklrmilb with the r•ru •ov· gen Jr. Md toot m to a mot.ti ~here they said Patrick "depro·
Mobile. We're objectllls to tbe u.ndealra· ernmeal.bdlnver • , 1tammed''ldmfortbreedQ'I.
· The Initial euphoria faded blelnflaeace. We•'t1'tnl~ A adbeommlttM of tbe ~ 1 coan.r.::rbll1GD.wuf\utoaawhenbewasabducted.
"'ben lt wu leamM that t.M 'tampertiswttlaourchl.14rei..•• ' l•terutioNI Relatlou Com~ "'He'd •t me as tr be could k:lU me. But after tboae u..... '
flrm '• ~~ob•-&::; Sta~ ae,. Bob Ola• told • tee 'Jade4 by J\tl>, Donald «1•111 llt ...W.Jt loak4Ml over at me u if he waa aeelng me foe the ·-:,:;.::.;.. .U: .:m Plk...: .. tbedU at a 1bopptn1 etater l'r .. DJllba .• ..._._.., ,ftrltU..JlalNdd'BlDad,lto'lfatef.:!"' 'dep---•-
Cfldeat or later.-itlon.V.· ==~~~'::'.!';~':':. t=~~.='~eul=ln'=F.ir-~==·~~~ faod.. .i.r., p beet ad a.ll Mv . ._ tlae ol»jnu~:'~f .~1outi ia: _.. tlYie ~about tbtlr .,...._e. 'tflUa \be
• madeabed.WU• .... w. eere .. ~-~ ... = JI '.IW--'t~~.,..tn&deviaatbekaoo. Beyouwaatre." • atMi' ~ .tt.il'Jeo1119' • ma!T.._,.,...,..... ••
•
)
BURLINGTON. Vt. (AP)
J aime Sheeran was a senior at
the University of Vermont when
she first came in contact with the
Unification Church.
"I was studying social work
and religion and I was searching
for experlence with God. 1 bad
been to many churches," she
says. "One day I saw a poster
that mentioned something about
a one-world community.
"'mAT APPEALED TO me so
I attended a lectore. That was in
1972 and I didn'tjoin right away.
I liked the people, though, and I
thought their ideaa were interest-
ing. After that, I would see them
from time to time on the campus.
"Then. at Easter of 1973, I at·
tended a seminar at their center.
I was very impressed with what I
found there. I liked the way they
got up early and the way they did
a Jot of singing together. I asked
them if I could stay for a while.'•
She smiles at the recollection.
"THEY SAID IT would be all
right but they didn't press me at
all. I finally decided to spend the
s ummer with them. I felt that if
there really was a God I'd at
least spend three months trying
to find out."
Whal she found. she says, con-
vinced her to dedicate her life to
the church. '
"I stayed at the center the
following semester an~ finished
school. Then I beean devoting
my1Jell to the church fullUine."
AT 26, .JAIME Sheeran, chun!h
director in West Virglnla. aays .
she's found what's important 1n
life. She smiles at suggeatlons
that ~be hypnotizes helpless vie~
tlms.
"I couldn't hypnotize anybody
if I wanted to. All that atuJ'C
sounds like something out of a
zom ble horror movie.
''I know about the Connors (see
r ela ted story) a nd the work ~they're dC>illg. As faru rm ~
cerned, they deal In half truths
and fear. But God doelQ 't work
that way. He \lr'Ol'b tbroalb love '
and I'm just irateful for what
I've found 1ln tbe .Unification
Cburcll; W• chanaed mr life. ..
SHE SAYS BEa parets had no lnlUal ·react.Ion to lier involve-
ment.
'!Not for the tint .two ·years.
But then some of those depro-
grammera visited mr patents
and it. wu heU after that. My
pareou were convlnced 1 bad
beea bralnwaahed.and ftlY father
would keep 111:.t •1t•1 .n ftlht. honey, you can tom,!r
''I'd try and •U Jalll tbt J
badn't been bralnw.W bat.be
just wouldn't listen,'•
PEOPLE /LEGALS
P 8UC NOTI t;
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTtca TOc11ao•TOlt5 su .. a111oa COUllTOPTHE
&TATIO,CAUl'otllNIA 'Ott
TH&QOUNTYO,OllANOE .... .....,,,.
'Esta• Of WILLIAM R. LEWIS •u
W. A. LEWIS -ROilliRT LEWI,, l>Keewo.
NOTICE IS HEAEllY GIVEN to IN
<recllton Of IN_._.. JWMld ~· 11\al ell --....,.,. ca.Im• eoalnil ,,,. wkl -.,.. r-..1rac1 10 Ill• them wllll Ult,__,, YO<K111r11, In
the olflce ot the,,.,., OI 11\e •bov• tn•
UllM coun, Olf '9-Mtll lllem, with Ille
nac .. wrr -.cl'oerr.. lo Ille'"""' >1~ el -Olll<e OI MILi.ER A MAUl IHO •IWnan •• L..tw, ~ S...k of Amerk • 8111kllft9, Wllltller, CA Wiiien ~ tilt
pl•c• ol llUMneM Of tM uncMr>IQMCI on
•II melt•" 111rwlr>1no to u.. ••l•lt 111
w1d Cle<~. •1Wn '°""" nlOf\thl •fli•' Ille fltllPlitlloullonof llll>n<>l1tt
IJellCI 0<1. 19, 1977
ROSEMARY HEN~~
E-utr1ao11new111 olt11t-~--· MILLIRAMAUTINO ·--., ...... ...... .._...:...-...
Wlolttler.CA .... I
Tel: lllU-.tS11
Att••Y i,r 1~""1•
P"l>ll"'90 Or-c.oaet o.11• Pllol "° .... u. 0-. a. ..... Im
PUBUC NOTICE
AO:IUJ NOTtCITOPllUON5 tNTli.llEUEOIH
The E>tot• •I f!ALl"H TONY
OlllWllY.O.....-.
"40t1'-., "9(90y o•wn •o ... Pf''°"" •nttr•\t•d. whither tU crtdltOt'I.-he.r1.1 llQ•I .. >, qr otYI-•, In If.. ettale 01
HALPH 10,.Y OREWR'T. IM'U•~.
•no, ••• ,. •dare\\ .... , 411~ e ••• f f\Orno••• Or•••. ~o'l "'•vne. lno•MW .... u. tn" totter\ 1 .. 1.,,,.,.tary or of
•dmln1\lr~t.on "4•• bffn hsuect to GWENOOL'TN A. OAEWRY Cly: AL
LEN SUPEf!IOR COUAT (ALLEN
LOU NTY), •court of tompel•nt
JutlMflC110flOf 1111 S4-el lnal-. Tllet Uit loll0¥fl"CI PltlOn It 1.-~ to « llOl<llng pet'tOMI ,,_rl'f ol IN
Nici ~: 8erlll of NMtlU, 'TlMt
City Centr• Br•ncll, 011• Cltr 1:1o11-.. Wont. Qly. Or.,ge, c-. t)IOIOt.._. ••
Tllat Ille UlldenlGNd dMlrM to , ..
CAI .... tlle Wicl Pl'-111' « <Oll«I lille
Cl .. M -ID......., ... lllel COlleeted tw AC.al-'""" u. $(.U of Calltoml• to
tl\t -~ -· ...... , • .__ tory tw of ~nlslr•t-............ 1 ..
11uec1.
All perM>nS l\avln; Cl•lms eoalnU tlle
O C-nl W an lnltrftl on Mkl •tlal•
end w .. 111ng 10 OO)ect IO tueh ,..moval
mu" Q•._• wr1U.n noOc• of WC.ft OC>IK·
llon to ltw '*""" ~ 111rwnt lnaetnoo
,0, Of l>olo1~ PU""'411 P<-rlY 01, Ill<'
dli(.vdwnL M:n "°''tt n'u•• bl O•¥tm to
1N per'°" holding tr. 111rM>NI 11<oe-r
ty or •94i•Ml Whom u. d •tn1 "~•I
,,,. •ooreu on 11•19C1 •-wlll\ln JO DAY~ ...... llrlt pUCMIUllon ol '"" l'O••<lf U•leCI Nov 1.S, 101
G""""'°'yn A.Orwwry
""''"°"91 llepretet1tal Iv• ot IN
f;.•i.1eof A•lpl\ Tony Or-ry
Publl\lleel Or411>9t COIU1 O•llv Pllol O.c. 2, ¥,It, 1911
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOOI •USIHIU
NAME STATIMINT
T ht 1o11.,..1no --~ ••• do1nq bu"
M U•\
BBNO PAllTNt:lllSMIP, USO Von
l(,arm•n Ave,,..., S..lta lOS, N••Porl Buell, C.1110<111• tli60
Rot.rt W. Lnll, f1101!1 CirKO O t•
c:le, Fountain V•ll•t• ~llornl• Ulot
C. w. HOQCMrQ, US Amloos Wty, • s. N•«porl 8Hcl\, Callfotr>I• 92'40
N•ncl' Chet!•<. ll10 81ue key,
CorOfla O.I -· C.llfornla tlUS , Alcfla~ o. Frain, 1l6 MOt\ot•Cll ••v, South l.aQUM. C..llfor"la •>611
Tntt 1>uslt1tss •• btlno conelutl•CI Dy d
O.ntr•I Parl~lp.
Aicl\lrCI 0. F•HM
Tnh ttlt-l llled wllll tlle C-1•
Clttlt ol Otet191 Counly on· Hov. JO,
lt/1.
t.a•Ofllc:otef
lllCMAltDO. l'JIAllE
FU tie
4Ht Ii• IC_ A,.-, Ullo S.S H••-t IH<ll. CA UMt Pul>llahed OrltnOI Cotti O•llv Pllol,
Otc. •. 1•, U,*1, 1t11
Sl»-11
PUBUC NOTICE
P\JBUC N&TICE
IWN.,Oll C*lltYOP nte IT~,_ Oi' CAU ""lllA POil
Yita COUNTY 01"0.AltGa
Na.A•ltM
llW tu NOTICe 01" N&AlllNO 01' a...,..; Ht*. f'aTIY!Otf l'Otl ~TS OP W11.L
AND ,011 l.a"•H T111TAM.,,._
LN aitOWN, TAltV. ... M•, CA ...... Of ANOaaw J. BElll!HS,
l>Kt•'"-~ .... "'° NOTICI rs Hl'lt 8V GIV~ ,,.., , &ell~. CA. SAllMllA e,. iAHA!CiRto I "-> 11*1
....... II. lletlllon tor ,, .... ,.Of Wiii •nO
~•rMalO, UU '-' 1.Atten T .. ~ltnl•rv, '-''"'l\<e IO
,(A ~ wlll<ll I• -for IUflfW( p.tf'llCulfl"t,
McloKleG .... • 411\41 tNI "'9 II-.,., D•k• Of l\utln(I
Ille._,.'*-Ml I« O.C..mo.r 21.
1"'1. tt IO • ""· In 1111 cwrtr_. of O...rt.....,. Ho SOI .. l~Hou•I, at 100
Chllc Gefttw Ori .. We•t, In UW Coty Of
5Mle Ana, c.ll!Wftl•.
0.-. Oec:efflbtf' •• "" WlW.AM&.llJOtlN,
PUBUC NOTICE
c ..... llO'nc:s ,.o c:.aa.,.104l• 111 f' .. UOll CIOU ltT Of' TH•
HA T9 Ott CAU'°"NIA FOil 1'HaCIOUNTYO,OltAMO• .... ....,,
~ ....... .... .._,
l:tl.e .. Of UD llUGCNS l..AWVEll,
~TEO I>, LAWVER, O.C..•-· NOTICI! IS Hl!Rl!8Y OIVl!N to tlw
Ct.Olton Of IN .... Nrnecl cllK-•
11\al ell _..,. ._,,,.. tl•lft1> -''"' !he ... ., -.... 1...,..i ... to fl ..
1nem. •lln.,. ,,.'9H¥'1' ~"'"· In ,,.. Dltu"" Ille clen. Ol IM •llO•• •n
lllled <Wtl,W to !WM«ll lllen'I. Wllill lt.e
"Ke"9t'f ~ \OU.~lor*
•I 11\a l•wOffl<.eOf StiAW'-GAUGHAH.
IJllO Ho«h,.._.111$1-1. ll<lttt10,~I•
Ane, C..lltornl•'1IOI, wlllCI\ I• the plac.
Ofllwlln.tUOflN_,tlQMclln•llmet·
M tPfft .. ""'9lO"'°..._•otwlo-.
-1. wllNn I-i-. •w IM llrM Oillftr o.n. ~ llT A. IAH!t&Oll ET
t•N,.,..._f,Wteto0 "-"'AIN,CMl ....... eini.
• llO*fl<•UoMflflltl!Otlee.
·--""'""'*-_____________ , P\olMltMd QrM@tC.0.tt 0.01' Plk>l.
0..11111et't, 1C>t 16, 1111 S14J:71'
l>•e.ct~U.ctn.
JUNS E. i.f.WVl!R
AG'l'INUWalrlJIWlltlWlll
AMtlllO Of ... "'14'te Of , ... ...__~
$HAW & QAUOffMI ~-~~~-t--~~~~~~-t-~~~~~..lo.l.-------'UIMN.Mel!IM.,$WMHI leat.t ..... CAW.t Ttl:0'41W1 ... PtJBUC NOTICE AIWM" _ _.._...,..C'TA
Pul>lt"*I Or-Coelt o.lly Pllol,
Nov, 21, 0.C,2, • ... , 1911
• ~IW7
~POBUC NOTICE
IW2lllD
SU l'l'lllOll GOUllf Of' TME
STATI Of'CAUl'CHINIA l'Olt
THaC:OUNTYOl'CMIAllOI _"', ...
NOTICI 01' HIAlllNO 01"
f'ITITIDN '°" l'ltOMT& 0, WIL4. ANO ~It L.anlilU T&ITAMalf.
TAllV AND l"Oa AunfOllllATlO.
TO ADMINISTUt 'UND&a THI INDll"EHDINT AOMIN .. aATIO..
O,ISTATUACT.
E•t•t• of CAltOLVN &Al(IR
HUNTER, el9o .,_.. • U.:>1. VN 8,
HUNTEA.0.C-.
NOTICE 1$ HEAEBV OIVl!N ltlet
LESTER HUNTER l\H Iii.I ....... 1\ e pellllon for Probal• DI Wiii aftd fO<' .._
•U•llC. of I.All~ T .. t~ ef>d flH' Autl\orouitkln to Admlr"'lff......,. tN
lr>O.penaent Adml,.•l••tlon of El\ltM
Act, ••lenonc.1 10 w~kn '' m-fer turllW!r partl<ulo,., .no 11\at lhe llm.
ono pl•ceol ,.,.a<•no tt>t wm•na•bnn
..-lfor December 21. 1911,at 10 OO•.M.,
onl ... tourttoomol ~~flm"1lNO )of
w1cl tourl, •I 100 C1YIC Cantor Orlw Wt<\I, on lh• City ol Sa nto Alie,
c;a111ornl•.
Dated O•<tmbe r •· !ti I WILUAMI S4.IOMN,
CourOCll!ri<
VINCENT I . I.A ROSA
Intl lrMllllWIC Strwt ,_tel• vau..,, cai~tv•
T .. 1 ~ A-•-=l"lrtl-Publll-Or-Cotit o.tly PllOI,
Decembff9114, tt.1m Sla.n
Friday, ~mber 18, 1977 DAILY PILOT D:t
Now They're Himicanes?
Tropical, Stomu May Get Mede Nicknames
From AP Dtlpatelliet
Don't be surprlsed it the 1979 hunicanM have
names like Tom, Pierre, Th« and Marlo along wtth
the female names like Cb111lillo and Lorraine that.
have long been u bane to the women's Jlberatton
movement.
"It's J)OSslble," NeU Frulc, bead of the Na·
tlonal Hurricane Center, said in Miami. 'There bas
been aome preaure to get away from juat fentale
names.••
But Frank said I.bat for the first time lt lsn"t the
sole prerogaUve of U.S. meteorologists to declde
what to call hurricane.. New names, start.ins wlt.b a
1979 llst. will be cholen in May in Puerto Rico at the
!irat meeting ot a newly formed hurricane commit-
tee repl'e8elltlng 21 Central American. CaribbeaA
and North American nations. ·
* A Democratic candidate for the lteut.enant
governor nomination next year says he doesn't
mind a bit being sued by a Farmington bank for
$4,592 in New Mexico allegedly due on a promissory
note.
Rieb Sims says he's( J grateful for the exposure. P.'E'O'DLE He said 'tbe bank was 1iv· C• T
inll him "thousands of ---------dollars of free publicity."
"J thank t.bemfol' it, I think itbelped me;• Sims
said.
Vlld.or Korcbaol drew h1a ninth game against
Borla Speaky in tbelr finals match ot candidates tor world chess cbamplonsblp.
The draw took place arter a
total of nine hours of p:Jin Bel-grade, Yugoslavia.
Korchnoi, self-~xil from
the Soviet Union, Jeads Spassky
6.S·2.S and needs only four t>oinls
to win this 20-game match and
qualify for the challenge round
match against Anatoly Karpov.
the world champion. of Che So.
vietUnion.
After some hemmiDt and hawlnf, the Los
Angeles Qty Council decided that there will be a
street named after Gea. Tlaaddem ~ -
whether or not people can pronounce it.
The council last month unanimously voted
against honoring the Polish-born ~volutiooary
War hero on the rec om mendatioo or the city
engineer. who pointed out the 10-letter name •
wouldn 'l fit on a street sign.
What's more. he said. "there would be dlrflcul·
ty in pronoun~iallon and spelling."
PUBLIC NOTICE
However these objecUoDll did not exaotly im·
press members of the Polbh community and other
citizens who remembered Kosciu~o·s wartime
valor and sub5equent contnbullons to American
culture.
• A federal Judge rerused to change the fiv~·year
prison le.rm and $15,000 rlne he im ed on former
state Sen. Richard Dolwlg for
his part lo a fraudulent r-eal
estate finand.og scheme.
The brief order by U.S. Dls·
trlct Court Judge Samuel ConU
1n San Francisco said only that
the record had been reviewed
and the motion was denied.
Dolwig, 68, and five con-
spirators were convicted Sept. 8,
1975 by a (ederal jury in conne<:·
tion with a scheme by which de· DOUflO
velopers were induced to advance large sums or
money to a company called Eurovest, head·
quartered on Grand Cayman bland. • Former President Gerald Ford, his wile and
children will s~nd Christmas at VaJI,· Colo., a
Rocky Mowttain ski resort, :•
tradition the family began when
Ford was a Michigan con-gressman. .
Ford is·to arrive Wednesday
and will remain until J8Jl. S With
the exception or a one-day trip to
Pasadena t.o be grand marshal
of the Tournament of Roses parade.
Former first lady Betty
Ford and daughter Susan wlll ht'
in \tail throu~hout the holidays. a family
s pokesman said. The Fords' other children will join
them for Christmas Day, he said.
The grand theft trial of financier C. Arnholt
Smith has been postPonedforthefourth time •
Superior Court Judge I Robert W. Conyers agreed in .. ·
San Diego to delay the trial &om
Jan. 9toApril3.
Smith, 78, was lndlcted by
the San Diego Co1,mty grand jmy
Dec. 15, 1975, on 64 counts ol
grand theft, tax evasion and
forgery. Conyers has since ten-
tatively dismissed 54 counts,
with defense arguments to drop
the others contmumg.
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBlJC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUSMlllltU.S
MAMalTATEM&NT ni. ... ._...,___ dolllo ..... -.. : It & I! EHTl!llP1USIS, '111 -..,.., Cln:la, VIM'""-, CA. '2ta
lltMelOt.. ..... 1111 Moftt_, Cit'>
de, Wei.......,.., CA.,.., .
...... .,.. ,,... ,.. "'' MonllfWf O.Cle. WllAo t..W, CMlf. tHoN T"ls~-~b'f•llfl'll .. .. pef'tMnHp.
ltonMdl.. ...
Tiii• ........... -t li.d Wltll Vie Clltuntr a.ti tf Olwlo-Quntyon Nov.
lt,1'77.
$1141114
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
f'ICT1T10UI IUSINl!SS
NAMaSTA.,......T Tiie ,..._... ,__ .. dOfltll blot· -·•: C:OLLMORR AOl!NCY', 140 M<G«mlcaA ... , o.te Mase, C.A m,.
CollHn """ Morrt1roe, 1111 Pacific Cont Hlatlw~ a.to ,.,. NtW1*t lleedl. CAflMJ
Tiiis ltlnlnesa I• ~ ~ 111 ..-1 partfter1tlPlp, GDllWt A. Morr'f-
Tllls ltfl--ntact Wfth tNt Oounl 'f Clefll Of °'enet County on DK • t~19n. . -"' P\1111~ Or-oi.st Oell'f Pilot. l<M?ff
Publl&Md Or-Coast 0.lly Piiot. sotJ.n DK..16,2S,30, 1tn,Jen • ._ 1m Dec:.!.'· 1•. u. ""
PUBIJC NOTICE
524+1.T
PUBUC NOTICE
ZE·77·l SS for Rl<Nrd N. Eaton, It•
W••I Hiii Street, Coste Mn•.
C•llfornl•, for • COndllfoMI u ...
"'""It to c4fWluCt .-... rMlo<• Uon, lnchNllno llOdr alld lnt•rlor "'*°"'''°"• IOW'9d et 115 w .. t llt!O 51"91, In an MG-· ll!n\'t-t•I
Oelwrtlllletloft CCEQAh ED~
1'. ZONe EXCl!l"TIOH PERMl'I': z1.n-U6 1w Jecum ~ a.. ... Inc. H euti.1ted ... for t4, L. k"'91r _, -lie Kt"9tr ,,,.., »t
H«tl\ f'elm, lnotf'ty Nlll1, c.llforlll•,
for I COndl"°""I U... Penni! tor out· door-· l.tldlr ••••• foOt IMl•t c._.,, locAlted et m ~A...,..,.,
In en MP HM. •11Ylronm1nt•I
Oe1ern1l111tOen (Cl!QA): E•mpc.
Foir IW'lllW I~°" the lbOVfl -ll<el'-, ..,..,._~~or c•ll
•• '"' oftW. .. ,,. ..._ .... °""'"" ....,.l, A_, 200, 11 ...W on ... Gero(e Me••· C:.lltor"'41.
'
PUBLIC NOTICE
IJICTITIOUS eu1111•ss
HAMa STATUoUHT
TM fotlowlno l*'1'0ftS .,. doing bV~I·
NUH:
DANA, PARTNERSHIP, 921 Al-
pO SlrH t, Newpoo1 8Hch, C.lifornl• ~
<;.ML. Kerm<n, '77 A.._ SlrMt,
Nt ..,porl &.«!\, c:.ll!ornl• nMO
Orvllle L. -rlell, ..,. T,.mont
LAM roron11001M4r, C.tll0<nlet»U
L•on•rd O. W.lnbt<o, •~.SO Cl\•r.
lr>Q Crou 11....i. l.01 AAQtlH. C.lll0<n••
9001• RIChArd N. l(rupj), ,,,,. Mounl•ln
MeeCIOw Ro.tel, E\C:OllCllOO, C.lllorn!f
•101• Thh bu,1"41\\ 1 .. conctuc fed bY •
;ener•I p•rtrwr\hlp
<;."" L.. Ktr,.,,1n
Tnl• \l•l•menl w•• 111.., wllh thr
Counly CIPrk ol 0<•fl9e County on NO•
ern11er ?I, 1911 ,._,
Publl•htd °'""09 C04\I Delly Pilot o..c. 2, t, 1•, 2l, ,.,, .sou.n
PUBLIC NOTICE ..,,
$TATEMINTOl'A~HDOHM•HT
OP'USIOP'
l'ICTITIOUS eUSINEU HAMI Tho 1011ow1no per'°"' htw •b-
-IM -ol ll'e IKllllOU• b•d lMU n•Mt FOOOHIQn CORPORATION •• ooo ...,, .. ,. 8oult••ro, FullerlOt>,
C•tttotn1•
TM tl<lllKKA ~n·•n•\\ n•mf' rfltrrf"d
to •bOve w•) hied tn the Covnly of
nrAOOe FOOO ENC,INEERINCi A'IO
OE~ICiNEO <;'l"<;TEMS INC •
c..-11forn1• corQOtatioo
OU\bO\IM\\WA\(onduttrdby Food
Engu>erru>Q •no 0-'Wgn..O Sy•lt""· Int..• C•l1forn1•<orpor•llon
J•mt>A B•rg, Pre,IOtlll
Tnl\ >l•ltmefll wa> l1ll!d wolh lhr
County Cler-ol Orang• Cou111Y on NO .. mberl0, 1t17.
GILelltTWOOLWAY
Alt_.,
tol S..01~ ,._,, 9o.tle•~rd
Lot A .... lf!l, Ctllforftlt tOOOS
F·s.Jirt
P\iDll\...., 0r.-. Coul O•lly Piiot,
Decombert, ••, 1l,JD, 1'71 S 1·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
•••• NOTICE TOClllDITOltS
HO.A .. Jat
SU ,.ElllOlt COUllTOIJTHE
ST ATI OF CALI FOllNIA FOii
TN E COUNTY OF OllANGE
tn lf\t M atter ot '"' [\l•lf' of LOWE LL Hl'ROLES, De< .. W<I
Nolla " "'"'"' 01wn 10 creo11or\ .,..,ng cl•om\ -•n•I !tie u ld «M<o·
lk>nl lo hit Wld C1•1M• '" llw ollko ol
IM Cltrk of llw -... 10 court OI' 10
prtunl lhtM IO lt>t .,ndtrslgne<t •I tht!
office ol ERICA. NELSON. AllOfntl'el
Ltw, US North er...i Bl•d. S..lle JOI.
Cil•ncl•I•, C.tffomi• t1203, wllkll l•Ue< olllu I\ ,.,. IHl<t ol bu,lntu 01 lht un
Cler>lgneo In •II ,.,,.11 ... .,.,,•lnl"ll 10
u ld ••l•t•. Suell cl••M• wltll 11\t
neunuy vou<htn m<nl be 111..cl or
pre\enttd ., •l«e••to w tOtln rour
monlh• •lier Ille first IM'bllct llon Ol lnll
nGCl(I ,
Daltd Decembtr I, 1'71
lirltA Nel!oOrl
AdMlnhtr•IO<of '""
E>ltltol "''d 0.Codent l!IUC A. NELSON, p,. Ptr
AtltrMl'·•l·UW us ..... ~ ... _ •1•11., "'"•JOI
GteMl•le, Ctlltoml• tlllJ
Pubil\!led 0.enqe C.0.•I OellV Pllol,
Decem11e1t,1•, 1l, J0, 1tn suo.n
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUf'l!ltlOltCOUltTOIJ THI
STATl!OflCALIP'OllNIA f.Olt
TH• COUHTYOflOltANO•
HO.AtJnf
AMllHO•O
OltOEltTOSffOWCAUS•
IC.C.f'.lt217l
In •• Te.-ln °"" VMIMlll,. MlnM,
bV Phlllp JoMtlll Veflntlll ttld TtrHt
Ann v •nntlll, his per..,ls, 10< Cht1191 ol .........
WHEREAS, Pttlllp ~ VM!ntlll
•nd Tertw AIHI VMrw411. P91111-rs.
t • Die ftlhtr -ITIOlhtr, retelfJ<llYt ll',
ol App llc•nl TERIN DEON VAN·
·NELLI •• oenon -•lo"'•" 1111 1••ro ol -·....,.. 111..cl a P911tlon wllll 11\e Clerll of 1110 Court IOI' tf\ oreler
<"•nolr>O Aoc>4k Ml'l ,,.,,,. from Teri') o.on VeflNlllloJon Teri" Veflnellf. IT IS ORDERED 11\tl •II per'°"s In·
,.,.,,.., In tr. -·•-llllod mt tler
-•• btfort INs Court 111 Deperlmenl 3 at the COuntv Couft-., 100 Clvk
Ctftltr Ori,,. Wt,., City ol Seflta Ant,
Cl llfornl• on J_., 10, ttlt, et Ult
'*"Of 11:00t.m .. -t....,encllllere1o
tl•ow ctuw, 11 <Hly, WllV Ille P9tllloft for
Cllt119tof .._tllouldnotbtor.,11<1.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED tllt\ •
(Ot)'f of INl ..-be publl-In IN
0r•ll9t Conl O.Cly Pllol, Posl Offl<•
SOK IMO, 0.1• #M ... Callfof!ll• tllU•.
once • ,..... fO( tour woteul,,. -·· •!Id thll Mid publk •tlen tit completed pr I Of' to Ille Merino ol !Ills Order.
DATED: OK-r1, 1'17
WltrVt!! TtltftlloW JUCIQIOf lllt
5-lor(ourt
RIC~A•O L ltN•CMT I• flUl.Of', llOl.ITON, •ullNl&MclUn1t1CK ...... ~
f'•IOffke ... VM ... ,,.eu. ........... .... ... _,.n 9-:11, CM!tenle tlMJ
T .. i C11•171Nm11 ....... .,. .. ......_
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l'UBUC NOl'ICE
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..., htol• •• , •••• 1000-,,,. The Bluest Marketplace on the Oran&• Coast
................. '3000 .... ""'°"""' ltw• .. ,...,,. ... r..,_1a1 . ·········~*'
Annoul'<tmeflll, ~Mnak.
low & fwwl ....•• $MO-s.t99
DAlhY PILOI CLASSIFIED \ADS
Employment &.
'1-.,ototlOn •••••• 1000 7199
Mtf<hond°i"t •••••• 4000-*)99
..... & MClr1ne
S., v IC H f. •epolr. 6000. 6()99
You Can Sell It, Find It, [ 642 & ) One C II Service
Trade It With a Want Ad •5 78 Fast Credit Approval
(qutpnMl\I • • '• • • • ~tot9
AlnOMbllff .. •llwf
T1on.,.na111n ••.. 9100 '"9
1002 ~!!!.~.~ ....... !~:.~.~ ...... . ~!!!~~.~~ ....... !~:~.~ ...... . ~:~~ ....... 1!!~!~~·~·······
~al I 002 G1•r.. I 002
........ s. •••••••••••••••••••••••
G11•ral •••••••••••••••••••••••
VANODOWM
$65,000
Charming country H t·
ting. Tile entry. Gourmet
kitchen. Huge living rm + din area. 3 Spacloua
bdrms, olfice tool Ter-
raced back yard. No
down to qualified VA
buyers. Call fast!
'752·1700 OPEN 1119• II S rUN TOlll fVICto [WJ IUlll
MESA VERDE
~ ... ,.. I 002 fineral I 002 •••.............••.... ; .•.....................
SORRY, MO SALE
1''or your decorator, that is· this
beautiful Bluffs "G" Plan is aiready
decorated from plush carpeting to
expensive wallpaper. Waft until you
$ee it! There is also a terrific tiled
patio, off the living room that ls
completely private: 4 Bdrms:, 3 baths.
$17 4,500. Call today!
673-4400 J
REALTY
. DMs&o. of H..tlor ............. Co.
4 IR.st 42.000
Stunning 4 bdrm, 3 bath
Mesa Verde pool home!
Truly an outstanding en·
tertainment home. Huge
hving & family rooms. 2
Frplc"s. Spacious
kitchen & family room
over loolc giant sparkling
po<X! Executive laving al GeMnll 1002,GiMr.. 1002 a realistic pnce! See it today. Call 646·7171 lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
GeMf'.i I 002 G1•r.. t 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
' NEAR OCEAN!!!
•.. just 4 doors, Ocean Blvd., CdM.
Elegant 3 bdrm, 2 baths; carpeting
over parQuet floor in living & dining
rooms -cathedral ceilings in these
rooms. Marble counters + brass
fixtures in both baths. Patio with bar,
gas connections for BBQ. The home is
only iv,. yrs. old, should sell quickly at·
$289,500.
759-0811
460 NEWPORT CE~TER DRIVE 759-0811
preview.
r i :li.iil\I ~ ~ Ci1Mral 10021G••ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
))
OH llG CYH GO,LF COURSE $198.500
Spectacular long range view of
fairway! 2 Bdrm & Den 2 ba
--Pinehurst model. Beaut quality cptng
CoROHA DB. MAR & drapes. Lge patio, closed dbl gar,
COMMERCIAL end unit, pool, jacuzzi & tennis cts.
LEASE
-in the heart of Corona
del Mar. Approximately
4000 square feet on
ground noor plus 2 s mall
apartments. Parkmg for
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS
2111 San Jooquill Hih Rood
HEWrottT CENTER. H.I. 644-491 0
up lo JO automobiles. 65<
Per square foot~ GftMf"Cll I 002 Ci11•ral I 002
COLE Of NEWPORT •••• ••• •• •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••• REALTORS
67S.55t I
SPANISH ESTATE
BEACH 2 STORY
41R.POOL
GI
TERMS
On this btfl shingle roof
ranch style ram1ly home.
3 bd, 2 ba. (mly rm
w/loads or cement work,
planter areas & big cov·
ered patio. Also fenced
dog run. lge ch1ldrens
play hou.se & play yard.
Only $76,500! Our "x·
elusive. 646-7711
MEW LISTIMG!
OCEAN VIEW '
Steps to ocean; ·deluxe
duj)lex, 4 & 2 bdrm. unit:..
Park 3 cars. $189,000 !
LIDO SANDS
Hop, skip or jump to
o~ean; l ike n e w 3
bdrms., 2 ·baths, used
brick frplc., new kitchen
& all appli a n ces.
carpets, drapes. Only
$145,000!
CORONA DEL MAR
Ocean side or hwy. de ·
lightrully charm1111g 2
$78,900
Park-like g r ounds
enhance formal entry to
this e legant home.
Spacious living room.
Fiesta party room over·
looks lus h courtyard.
Wet bar. Gorden view
kitchen. Spanish tile mir·
rors & wood dramatical·
ly blended to complete
mood or The California
Lifestyle! Open stairs
sweep lo huge master
swte & i:uesl quarters.
Gl's try no down. Hurry!
Must sacrifice. Call
963-7881
COMDO FOR BR. home +near new 4
$62,500 BR. apt. + 4 car garage
Ttus two bdrm is close to $l8S.OOO!
everything. includinu the ~lay Prop.
beach. Perfect for a cou-Reafton
pie, single person or 1r * 675--7060 *
c_ ..-frJ' Q • #I •1 >rf ti J f
[ WJ:ll~ldf I you JU.St had a baby. Call ~~~~~~~~~ us now. S46-2313 =
INVESTOR'S
SPECIAL-4 PLEX
2YRSMEW
NEAR OCEAN
Ol'tN 1119 •II\ (Ul-1 IOlll NICI '
fmlR!ll
MONTICELLO
BEACH DUPLEX
SI 75,000 FwwlsMcl
See and h4!ar th4! surf and
bask in the s un of
Newport Beach living.
Short steps across lo the
beach. Large 2 Bdrm un·
its with patios a nd
balconies offer excellent
rental units for s um·
mer/winter rentals.
-
1
WATERfRUNT
HOMES
REALESTAT£
631-1400
$45,000 DOWN
Pride or ownership units
with fantastic stbnc
fireplaces. Enclosed
gara ges. All beautiful
spacious units. Owner
bought another -must
sacrifice! ·uurry! Many
additioo11l Investment opportunities. Call now!
963-7881
Btflly maintained Mon·
ticello t.ownhome l acing
Jvly green parkway. Up-
graded cpls, drapes,
s hutters & fl ooring
thruout. Prime location
c lose l o school s &
freeways. Ideal 3 bdrm, 2
bath starter home for the
young couple. Many ex-
tras. 646-7711 I~~~~~~~~
(~1Wtil341$1§ii • ()PfN 111 9•ll'SllJN10 11( N~"
!IZ!IUlll Real&lat.e
ITFB.LOUT
OFES<:aOW
H•....,..""-1.of!!.TO.... Buyer didn't qualify for ""1 •~ " Joan. This home is ready IEACH l&r Immediate oc:cupa.n·
FOUR U .... ITS ey If you quaury. A lt>l of
" xtras, no paint, no work
Four luxurious units with is required In this 6 yr old
spacious owner's unit. home. Hurry it is back on
Ahno&t carries. Owner the market and won 'l
will trade. For profit pro· last. Seller didn't rajse
jection incl udl ng t ax his price. 546-2313 shelter benefits, please a>rNlll9•11HVNroiuNICC• ·~::~~s• 1811111
11m100M
$62..500
Seber is anxious. Good
area with some nice
xtras. Your Chrlslmaa
present !or your family. Will also go VA. camn1
~a must. ~2313
()P(1-11119•IIHI.IN1oiitN1Cf' • ----------Mlill
VAeANT
3JJedroom, 2 bath.
.. ,500.
RED CARP-ET 756-lJllZ
** ,... .......
JI04Wtleee
C-.MeM You are tbe ,.-tMet or 2 rreettcketa worth $14 to
HOUDAYONICI
•tth• ANAHEIM
CONVENTION CENTER
Dec. 27th-Ju. J.s\.
Free Tlclceta IOOd fer
Dec. SOlll ot Utt performancu. Call "2·5'71. ext. 331, to
da&ln10QI' Ucketa • .. ..
MAIV&OUS
MONACO·
Call us about this im·
maculate ooe owner, 2
bedroom, convertible
den home in H ... bor
View H omes. The
owner's meticulous care
to every maintenance
need will impress ·YOU.
Aod the highly com· petitive price of $136,500.
fee will please your
pocketbook.
Cal644-721 I
~NILEL
01\lll y &
l\SSUCll\TES
PENINSULA POINT
· 4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amt:nitles.
Lovely area, few steps to beach.
$189,500
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den, 4
. baths, living rm. w/ cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite.:$224,950
llG CAHYOM
4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large lot. $325,000
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
341 Buy\1d1· 0 1•11• N B 6 75 6161
1002 1G...,.a1 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
FOR.Mat MODEL
SUPER SHAR,
$85,900
Spacious entry hull .or former model home.
leads to large, luxurious living room finished
wilh premium ~rude wall & floor coverings.
Natural wood burning fireplace. professionally
landscaped. Own<>r n<>l'<is fast sale llurry, call
Eliot 962 7788 KEY REALTORS.
G....,. .. I 002 Gettttol 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT
DUPLEXES
Two NEW duplexes from
$179,000! Prtme Newport
Heights locations! Finl
user depreciation is
super. Fast escrow. All J
bdrm. 2~ bath units. Jog
to water. Best buys In
Newport·PLUS-a _peek-a·
boo ocean view. Call fast
646-7171
()PfN Ill 0 •II\ 'IJfJ TO~f Nl<f '
[~!IUIHil ------.---BY OWNER
C.StoM·
S.OOOsqft
Rmdl&tate
Stable, aeparate maid or
guest home enclosed
Island for aviary o
animal encl011ure on ap-
proximate Jlla acr e
parcel. Adjacent approx
3 acre parcel also avail
In whole or part.
•
DUPLIX
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Dela.e unit.a, 1olf coune
view, 2 Bed.rm• each, private. quiet, large•----------
1araies. Perfect retire-ment home and income. can 540-1151
--s ~ HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
IOOZ .......................
·SIX UNITS
.In x1nt rental location in
N. Costa Mesa . Btrl
layout with lg-e. 1>001 as
added attraction. Close
to major shopping & bus
lines. Just introduced, to
the market. 646-7711
~ Walker ~;lee
PllSIDIM1' HOMI
Huge family home in the hills of
Turtle Rocle. 5 bedrooms, family
room, large yard, sprinklered &
'lighted. Near recreation center wftn
pools & tennis. Night Ute view
across Sanla Ana Valley. $215,000
•~..,,..co.
644-1766
2tf1 iAN JOAQUIN MIU.a RD.
•• HRWPO«T C8NT'P
•••••.............•.•.. ···········~···········
~ .
OUMTaY B4Gl.ft'H CffUM
Exte lve (and expensive!) use of
used rick and wood siding on a ll
three oelightful patios s urrounding
t ti'i s 4 b ed ro o m Woodbridg e
Broadrnoor home that reeks of Old
Englislt c harm . Professionally
decora~ and landscaped (bonus size
lot) neat" the 30 acre lake. Priced at
just $125,000. <Owner is a licensee).
U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S
~EAL TORS•, 675·6000
2443 Ea~Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also·~ Mesa Verd~. c1~ 546-5990
GeMnll 1002 G~ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ACT HOW WAU<TOTWO
before the pric~go up in IA YNOMTS
J an u a r y . S p e r 4 $291.tOO bedroom, 2 b h home with built-i n 1 ourmet Brick. beams & warmth .
kitchen, forced Ir heal, Beautiful 4~ yr old new paint & carpeting & duplex on Balboa island
a short walk lo schools, ~pecially large 4 & 3
church & city park. Low, Bdrm units. Balconies &
low price of $14,900. patios.
CALL 556-2860. • •
«;::SELECT ~ WA1~~NT
T' PROPERTIES P'!lll' R~t,-~~E
VA TERMS
OML Y $62,500
Best buy in the area. Air
conditioner and some other ruce xlra's. Calling
us is a must -The dog
bites! A quick escow and
this yea r 's bes t
Christmas present Is
yours. S46-2313
oPfN 1119 •If S IUN IO~fNi<I'
THEREAil
ESTATERS i ----'
Have something to sell?
Classified ads do it well.
IAUOAPEMIH.
S Years young. duplex. :i
up & 3 down . ocean s 1d1·
o f b l vd . Pride ol
ownership prope rty .
good rcnlal his tor).
$189,000 lncludln~ land 1
673-3663 642·2253 Eves
associated
BROK f ll'.. Rf l\L TORS
J•J 1· w e.,1t..~ .. 1 ~. • i 1-i i
1002 G.......e 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
macnab I Irvine
realty
FINER HOMES
FROM $46,000 TO $195,000
MOVE IUGHT IMI
Lovely Greenbrook .S BR home
ready for the most discriminating!
.Completely redecorated & prof.
landsca p ed . Hard-to-find
country-kitchen. A Super BUY at
S95,000. Kaye Evans 642·8235. <All)
IALIOA ISLAND
Duplex on quiet s treet -spacio'ls 4
BR (3+den> wiprivate atrium patio
. + rear 2 BR wi beautiful HdWd
floors. Oversized 2-car garage.
F lexible financing & ONLY
S274,500! Joyce Edlund 642-8235.
(Al2 )
STOP LOOtCIMGI
Move right into this perfect 2 BR +
conv. den home in beautiful setting
across from greenbelt, l ·blk to pool
& c lubhouse on nice corner lot
(a ttra c tiv e ly l a nd sca ped
w, extensive brickwork ). Covered
patio. Pride-of-ownership! Marjori
Mahon 644-6200. <At:n
"THE Sf'RtM'iS"
Private desert Luxury! Rancho
Mirage -ready for season &
long-term inves tment. Fairway
location! Two Broadmore Plans
w /2931 sq. ft. Elegant condos
w/3BRs, morning rm. + 2-car gar.
& golf cart gar. Poot -jacuzzi +
limited membership In "Springs0
golf & tennis club. One Spanish -
one West.em Ranch -Sl.99,500 fee
--each! Tom A llinson 642-8235.
(A14 >
LOY&. y t•vu·•E TlllACE -
Slf0,500
Well maintained, adult-occupied
home on-nearly lt4·acre. Ov.ei-.2000
sq. ft. of light & brigb~ living space
.wicbarming oak·floor family rm.
. opening onto beautifully manicured
yard. Features dark room, gounnet
·kitchen & Joads of rqom for pool or
? Appt. only, Paula Dalley 642-8235.
(AlS)
TllPLIX
Investment properly on Balboa
Peninsula -prime location for
summeri winter rental. 1, 2 & 3BR
'units, partially f urnlshed. $159,500.
Lynne Valentine 644-6200. CA16)
I .....,.,,_.. .._.,,.,.W. } ....... •'-~ Hoewt,_.S. Frlday.~mber18, 1977 • . OAiLVPtl.OT • 85 ................................................................................................ z l•t.. 1001 e..... ....... 1022 C.-4'1..._. 1022 CotteMtte IOM ..._..,_.~ ...... 1PorS-. . ,_W."
........ ' ............................................................................... t••·········· ..........•..•.•..••..• ·······~·········-'···
00 .............. MillfW• .,..... I 044 kit I 041
:;;;;;;;;;11i;li oca.M•HZ" R U 5 y I C Hft•• 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~r 1plll le"el oo a l\Ul, .. ..,.•••••••••••••••••••
Juat back from the CHARM llACH CONDO LllSUll!TIM11
1-acb. 3 &!Jtoom. 2 bulb cham~r with apol'lous ~ ILUFf !_~fll'q.a~ec~~~·
~HmnMAI etv ... , Give yours
hn th.ls Christmas wlth SPA G
Townhouse. Picture Santa redu.c g in
lhe SAUNA after a brisk swlOl the
POOL all for $65,000. c .. '404 ''
PllCI SUste IOl QUICK SA ! -
ch•rming 4 bedroom home with
t>eparate dining room near outh
Coast Plaza. Lovely interior with
plush carpets, drapes & dee rator
wal,l coverings. Large back ya with
patio. ~'Hard to find" large drm~
too! S69,700 and it's your ! Call
546-4141
51.•r111114 Co'il.i Me ~a-ln an e
2nd alory. Suod•ck . ..,.... "_..USICl' ... a•-"'"'•
c r a c k I I n 11 b r 1 1· k PDOL ID&llt tee!
flrvJace. Kea\onuhly $74,900 COUMS&OllLTY
prtced at SlOtl.000. CAl.l. f ..... 381 m ,319l. l'M IACK IH CORONA DEi. MAI mu: or A KIND! Heovy 1--------
!p SELECT Co me & visit our new office at 3601 E. wooden, open beamed '"'-. I 044 Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar (corner celling h1ghll1llts lhla •••••••••••••••••••••••
PROPERTIES of OrchJd Ave.). Our associates are cW1tom home. Complete Ga.IATFAMILY wltll 3 laree bedrms. 2 HOMI
ANANCING
A PROBLEM?
We have prope rtle1.>
where the owner's hav1•
agreed to help work out
financing.
•LAGUH.AIEACH
1V1t:W>
•HIWPOIT 'EACH
tllARBOR V EW >
Carol Pukli & Tom Fleming. full balhll. and overal&ed
For the convenience of residents of living rm. 8500 sq.fl. La~una Beach, visit our office at 1213 estate slie lot. Zoned R-4. NOW VACANT for lm-N. oast Hwy., Laguoa Beach. med.late occupancy and
MAURY STAUFFER priced lot last aalet s•• LIOM 1m•LTY Hurry,caUnow! 963-8961 &A lllA ColomaJ Real FAtate
3'0 I I. Cocmt Hwy., CclM 67J01Jl4
I 2 I J M. c .... L.g.Cll l each 497-3311 MISAV•DI
POOLHOMI
Vacant & ready. 3 BR. 2
8A, Turtle Hock Broad-
moor. Large pool-sz lot,
country atmpapbere.
$11',900
~~ ~-----
IEXICUT1VI HOME
OH&.Y $134,950. ~ He!:t-ter-e.n-n Hu nl111qtu11 B1· .1c h-Newpor Bc.1ch
3 BR, one ol our sharpest
llstlnp today! Priced
right. Call \0 see. One block to btn lake.
1bls brand new Wood·
bridge llome bas 4 big
bd.rma. 2 battls, frml din rm. 2 ovenlied frplc.s ·
$7,500 worth of upgrades.
75-1501
11HI 833-9781
-au1101ir·-HOUSEALOME --------•I la worth lhis price. But WOOOlllDGE you can live near the ~:'! ........•. !~~,!:~ .. ~ ....... !~~~
GROWING FA~Y?
COROHA DEL I
If your kids are into surfi g & sailing·
& you have lots or them ~ids, that is).
-then you must see t~is exclusive
new listing, just one blotk from Big
Corona on TWO LOTS ip old Corona
del Mar. S Very large bdrms .. almost
5.000 sq. ft. in the home. t330.000
673-4400
THE STARNES COMPANY
REAL TORS 640-5711
180 Newport Center Or., N.8 .
PRESENTS .
•Big Canyon Golf _Course Estate•
The ultimate in living luxury on •
~ nearly 'Y2 ac. lot. Enter parking court f tt\ru remote control gates for privacy
. & security. Marvel at nearly 7000 sq.
Panht daPoiftt
3 Br" diruna, beam clga,
fplc, 1182.000.
I
Bur r Whit~ Ill.ti t ~r 1
?901 Nl"wporl Blw<I •• 0
171 4161')-4630
OM of a Kind!
Big beach hom~. 4 hr +
FR + i;amc rm, 2 ba. low
ma1nl . le rra f1c rcnl
pot.enltal. $108.000.
645·6080
~8-0066
CALL 955-0350
J4l f/••1(11' 1 l•'.ltl •nN•
111 1\1 f1 Ill I II ~I I 1}6Jf 11''
• -ft. home ideally designed an<J
decorated for formal entertaining, yet
has a cozy den for relaxing, a
separate 'ame room /wet bar for
casual parties. s pectacular free form
... , pool /jacuz1J and sepa~te pool house
for wet fun, S huge "'f>edrooms, S'h
baths, breakfast nook, and of course
an exercise room.
C. F. Coleswortbv ~~ ••••••• ~?.~~
REALTOltS 640.0do MESA VERDE
COUMTIY CLUI
• ~-I 002 GtMt'al t 002
I ••••••eeee•eeeee••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE
$1000.
in corpeling with the
purchase of l a rite 4
Bdrm, 2 ha Cuhfornla r Ranch style home on
quiet tree lined Street. ~ Gourmet kitchen, formal
dining area vlcw11 park
like grounds. Veterans
offe rs encour a.:cd.
$72.500.
J.C. ....... Realton
540-1101
Glitterin2 Lites
LAGUNA
Spend holidays In 2 bedrm. 2 bath hideaway
with deck o verlooking
Laguna. Leasreicpcnsive
in Arch Beach Heights.
$112,000. Vucunl.
400£.17" .. FOR AU ~Micf: .. w
JUST LISTED!
Al r·cond. 2 bdrm. + con
vert. den. Patao Home in
village or Deerf1d d.
$89.500 Call Roger Laule
WAL TBS. l<IHG
& ASS()C. '73-2500
· -------• N~e~!:!?!t0l,,11t -----~~ : WALKTOWATB l&Vel. 4 bdrms. 3 baths. J '$275,000 Overtlted lot With polen·
•. This ia a jewel! on Ual to build large add1 · l007 Apolm.a with soaring 2 taonal units with swim· lcAoa , ........ ·story ltvl nf room ming pool to boot !•••••••••••••••••••••••
• w/beams 1£ warmth. $167.500.644-7270 OftlH 12-5
CustoRI 5 ...... hlboo, ... , •. t Remodeled 3 Bdrm, den.
large living room. Help
make the payments on
your llome by renllng the
• ctiamune bachelor unit. l A temnc value. r WATLRPl ONT • • • • .
' . .
HOML~
REAL ESTATE ~31-1400
• .. • COU. .. IPARI 1 3 Bdrm home. Open moet
.. afternoons & on Sat &
' Sun 10·3. 20. W11h 1 Forest ~. f7'7,SI01 By
~ OWDfl. •at . .l .gwg
•
FIX
UP
421 St•ih
Completely remodeled
executive home! Better than new with cu11tom
ameniUes loo numerous
t.o menUoo. Huae ramll,y
rm. den, formAI dlnina &
more. 4lh bath.I, 2v, car
eafNe + worubop. Call *' 1S81 f()r delafla . 1 Colonl&l Real &tate
OWNER Wt LL
FINANCE! No quality· ClphtlWo '9oct. I OJI
Ing! Very low <Sown1l 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bedroomai Cot1\er otl OCEAN ,,...,.w· z. b ,.,...1 Needl Iota of workt-RE» "u:. r. ... ., • CARPET '754-l20'J quiet at • C I a lo
VIL~
3 Bedroom. 2 bath.
Please call 831·029S
~/al\.
~~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
MES.A VERDE
VILLA
2 IDRM llEAUTY
You'll Jove those
earthtonea ! Highly up-
itaded cpU & drps. Very
expertly decorated con·
do . Lvly patio
l•ndacapecl w/ choice
plant• & Java.. rock to match cpta. Pl'lced to
aell. Call pow t<f •••e.
~1 ... .,... l
:-~ ... -..
· bea.ch/tJchl. Rm for boal,
1002 GtMr.. 1002 RV. etc. S85.000. Prln on-0 _ r-ly. 493.S472 ..... al ..,.tale
~ Walkr.r 1; lt~e
CiE .
llOlll ILlllS~· CD.:
QVEFf SO YEARS QF StRviCE • .
SPICTACULAa UDO ISU
New L11tlng. One Of A Kind,
BeauUtul,Cbeery,Sunny,$treetTo
Strada, One Sty Ho~,. Three BedrOOIDI, Two Baths. Lrae. Uving Roo~ ~· Dlnlnl Room, Lovely -sunw Yto · Plus south Patio Really An mmaculate Home. BWlt
B1 H . PriC*I At f385,000. A
"J Of Of N8"port" Llltlna·
GOOOll beach in Corona del Mar
New list.Ing ! The very de· & have rear tenant.a help
slrable Poplar--Model. 3 Pll)' ... $175.000.
BR. wlth conversation * 494-8057 *
pit., paUo with cover. Up-1---------
FOREST c;
OLSON .. ~ . .. .
S&S Resale Specialists.
3,4 or 5 bdrm models
avail, 1ome w/pool1.
968-4602 •a~-~ . Pennington Properties
Me1aVerdeGolfClub FOR SALE: San Miguel·
5 Br. fauit.aatic view. Ya aeacout·atmospbere 2
Acre.-1295,000. Shown by el«)' home. Hilb brick &
appt. only. 1790 Panay W1'0U,lbt 1rOo fe.dcilll for
Cir. privacy. BUiiard rm.
Ast. 540.o608 family, rm w/mauive
1x UD and Jave!
(pie, glua form. dlne.
Cuatom pool, laced In
brick w /deck. Prime
beach area. vacant and
easytoaee. Bkrs.36-9311.
Good ow , ........ d
Fri ..... ,
HUNTINGTON
UNIVERSITY PARK~x·
ford. 3 Br, 2~'l Ba. bonus
rm. ~ sqfl.. New cpta,
drps, steps from maj.
greenbelt "pool. Owner .
Avail lmmed. $112,000.
M2-8587. '
WAMTID
Have buyer for
Sycamore Plan on cul de
sac <Woodbridge
Creekside) Write P.O.
Box 3001, N.B. 92663.
Agent.
UNIV.PARK
DeaJ\e HoJQ.f. 3br, 2~ba,
d i n rm. ram rm.
$142.000/ttade. 673-8437
graded carpet aod IHVESTMEHT~
wallpaper. It is nice ... OPPORTUNITY: o
Priced compeUlively at beautiful mote.1, heart of
$102,500. Lquoa Beach. Close lo
red hill ~
552-7500
FANT~TIC
LOCATIO'N
*chee & parks. Xlnt cood. $750,000
SKYLITES!
Amenities too numerous
to recounL 4 BR. din. rm .. skylitcs. beams.
study, (J>lc. ideal floor
plan&more. Sll!O,SOO ..
OPIH SAT/SUM 1·4
161&.alNa
lmmaculllll.e home.
ocean aide hwy., short
walk to popular beaches.
Redecorated thruoul.
with 3 large bdrms.. :1
baths. $199,500
IMMACULATE!
This 2 bdrm. home 1:. A
located on a quiet street
ln a good neighborhood.
Beaullfu1 yard. ocean
view, potential +.
SJ,.35,000
Cl.OSllM
Thia a bdrm. cottage
would make an ideal
starter home. but bas
lots of potenUal as an in-
vestment. Creatl ve
financing avail. lo
quall.fied buyer. $W,OOO
~
For this immaculate and l10SN.CoostHwy.,Logune 494-nn t o t a 11 y u p g r a d e d 31601 Cocu t Hwy .. s.Loguna DEERFIELD 3 bedroom 499_4591 townhome . On a _
beautiful greenbelt. LolJlllGHils 1050
Walk to community •••••••••••••••••••••••
pools, spa and p11rk Lovety4 Br, lge Fam Rm.
a.reaa. Now SSS.900. w/(plc, living rm, formal
dinm& rm & mstr bdrm
w/cathedral clp. All up-
anc&ed Is Drol lDdacpd. J car gar, -w.uaually lge
lot. Owner. 768-S1&1
FORMER
HOITHVIEW
MOO&HOME
Outet.andinc view of bills
& llellts. Upgraded thru·
oul. S.D. freeway lo
Crown Valley Parkway,
riaht Nleuel road to top.
right Hlflhland, left to
292SZ R dgeview Dr.
OpenbouseSaUsSun l·S.
Call &11-029Sowner/agt.
OWNER BEING
TRANSFERRED
~ OCEANVJEW
PaUo hse, 2Br. + den.
custom tnler., hardwood
firs .• lux. carpets , wooden shutten. brtck
523 C pallo, ceramic tlle. 't AMMRtdRVilE vaulted ceillnp, central
Great Eaatslde locallon,
extra Larp. lot, fruit
trees. Skyli&ht upstairs,
3 bedtooma, formal din·
~ll-~.: living room n~ace. Trailer park·
ln«. $79,500, BKI, ctll
540-1 '130.
LANDMARK POPULAR ..,. Condomlolumt for et• jacuui, adult llv·
Priced to move at
THI WILLOWS \ ,500. Flexible term.a.
adulta, full ncreation CREEKSIDE facll. 24 •hour 1ecurlty Coua'1'J kitchen, '91/iy 417-aeot.aN.457
rumty rm. with frplo,. l~~~~;;im;;;;;;;;;-pte. ror a lloUday ever· A S)'Cal:OOlle ..mod el 1dV,c.iJ: avall1ble-ln February. 4 •iail•I , ,,_.Rell & MMC bedrooms. on a large pie
t•J.Ot26 ~'<:tf:~·ca=o!~
IYOWtda llu:IW• drapes.Onl)'Sl07,900.
Openj ..... , 1042 ....,_,dean ;t~:, 2 bat -.. ••••••••••••···~··~ .
faarm.,oaq\llltcuHte· OCEANFRONT .ae. Mr 20th It lrvble.
waU pa per • wood,
makes tbll a ,..l.rabte
family home, ln Irvlno;
'only $79,900, !or J
bdrms., z baths. Call for
app't.
~· Drive by, aol8 Allto • .hQMll leach
eall ua.ttt7 or 2hoaMl,21oU. Bkr/Ail .. _.... . Jt.ii.u( (ll.l~aT·llOt ,_ .. _______ _
....... eotlot ,, ........ D~ATDTHHS.E ~-------~~~~~~I ~ ltql'J. 4 br l'b•t et &•tali .• •kabp, ••
patio, l>Ullt·~, H•I .......... .., .,. .. , awlm pool. Owner.
564Ull
'"°""' prtoe •aterfroltl .;:: a -av 1111-Cell \o-Cadlllact to Oo-Ca.r\f . ~ Whatever U-.Fad ~ &MLTY lloll 'ern offtbe madlet ..... With a CluallJed Acl Call Nowt M2.-S678
Ott GREEN CAllh
lor WHrrt elephant.a wtUta Cl .. tned Ad
CaU&tW618
If It's gOt wheels
you'll move It
faster Ina
Dally Piiot
cta11ffltd
ad. calt
642.·5'78 anct a friendly
ad•Vltor Wiii
help you turn
your wheels
into ash.
L9glM ...... I 05 .,._wport leoc.. I 069 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LowHt Price In
Monarch Summ.lt II
$89.500
2 BR. C·fllan
Owm:r/ Broker 67S·4562
Ko/an
,lt'.11 [ ,•,1/1 /II('
I Mor•"' /t llo1v Pl,11.i
tibl 111:>1 BJl JHH8
HORSE COUMTRY
·El bow room in the
meadows u nd rol 11 n g
h.tlls of fabled San J uan
Capistrano. 4 Bedroom, 4
bath ranch home on a
one acre site on u private
lane. Large family room.
beamed ceilings. top
quality construction a
with a ll a m en llles.
$33S.OOO
CJ Coldw~ll _Bon~':'
3 Monarch Bay Plaza
Laguna Niguel
496-7222 831-0836
OCEAMVIEW
CONDO, REDUCED
S THOUSANDS S
Rl'duced for a fast sale.
Vacant & seller 1s !!DX· aous. Beautiful 2 br end
unit wtrrplc. Community pool. sauna. & jacuzzi. At
this pnce it won't last!
Hurry! Call 64S·0303.
FORESTE
OLSON
"'" Pltl A• •nu-.
I 055 -~-·-~-----c_..---=---••••••••••••••••••••••• LUSE/OPTION
NEWPORT HEIGHTS .
John Saar agt, 546·2020.
Quail Place Prop.
SA VIES · ly OWMr
Beautiful Lakefront
home. 2 Story. 4 bdrms. 3
baths, frplc, walk-in bar.
lmmed possession . By Owner-Big Canyon
· · Lowest pnce on the lake Townhm. 2 Br. 2 ba. crpt.
Redu<!ed to $115,00Q. drps. Sl49,SOO. 833-0821 or
581·S720. _64o._._07_00_. -----
Miuiow Viejo I 06 7 Ba I boa o c e a n ( r on t ••••••<t••••••••••••••• drumatic duplex. 4&3
---------bdrms. Perfect owner 's HILLTOP VIEW home w/income or super summer/winter rental. Magnificent 3 br ~o~. Seashore Real Estate, upgraded lhruout. met g. 675 5800 cntrl air. Priced SS.000 --·-------
below mkt. $109,900. M.1.DOLLHOUSE
754-7800agt. OHLY SU.000
•TENNIS*
•SWIMMING *
Just steps away from lrg
sngle stry 4br Deane
home. $98.SOO.
Miller Rlly, 768-0319
1-, male to beach. btn con·
do professionally de·
corated. 2 big bdrms. 2
baths · close to pool.
sa1ma & jacuni or walk
dwn to beach. 759-1501
'f I '' ~ .. I I JI I C ( •~. '' '' • bt.Qgo I-fl in-. TlU'.1'. l •I'-'" I. l•t•I'
MEWPORTHTS
Three Bdrm, 2 ba home
on tropically planted lot.
·0ne of a kind. Waiting
for a special person.
Designed for fun living.
Open Hae Sun 2·6. 291.S
Broad. 675-4961.
THIE CAUi SOM CO.
2819NewportBlvd, N.B.
MAKI OFFER
URGENT! Owner must
sell! Home vacant! Best
priced 3 BR, 2 Ba, in
Sesame Street. 24x52
Sunnybrook. 1972.
1'191X·U Beautiful sbarp
home. Pacirlc Coast
Resales Inc. 2105 E. Ball
Rd. Anahelm.1/991-8680
s.a-• 107, AcnocJlforMle 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WAMTMM
OCIAMVllW
AT A RIASOHAILI
PRICE?
2 BR. 1 V. BA Prealden·
tial Height.a condo w/a
great view. A bop, skiv&
a jump to J9lf coune.
$12,500.
... CHOIAGI
FIVE ACRES
loaded with oak trees in
the Cleveland Nal'l
Forest. So. of Orange Co.
Municlpal water. gentle
rolling knolls, beautiful
VJew sites. Owner will
carTY. Terms. BKR.
(714) 676-5711
OR522·2080
IMVUTMIMTS 5-10.20 ACRES
............
Lease, new 4.Br. overtook·
log can)'Oll. ocean view
from backyard aazebo.
S5001st & la.st + $300 ~ep.
83'1-2138
3206 BToro ··············-········· ...................... . erock 4 br. fam nn.
--------Super, lovely 3 br, 2 ba, din 2b vlewof UC I 3Br,3b~ fplc, crpt, fenced yd, rm, a. · Yrlylse$S25/mo. Irids/pets welcorne . .,$395. A.ail. Jan. 3rd. Lse • ,.,,.,. f Grdor. water. assoo. Salt_, Realty 963-4567, ._.,nt, no ee. dues pd by owner. $57S.
l714f 496-771 I No. Idaho, 40 ml. No. or
•-.--------~=========I Spokane on Hwy 41. 1• Beaut. f0Nl8ted terrain, f'IOPISSIOMAL nr. lakes & riv~. Fis·
f'\n 13 Ctl '7Ut00 Twnble custom 2Br, 2Ba. Agt. 541-5032 L. t-fl:lc& ~ air, attach gar, apacious, New 1 br Or etr .. Con· "1 ...... , ........ 3207 $340mo.5"-l04l do, A/C, ~. Jacu••4
IARG~IM
HUNTERS Sparkling New-port
Beach pool home. 3
JMIMONTEG04br,2ba, Bdrm. !am. rm. & din.
fam rm. Ownr. 2015 Port rm. Beautiful carpets &
Q\elaea. 640-1981 drapes. Priced for a· fast .....;.. ________ 1 1ale at'Sll8,950. Hurry!
~ .. och 10'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••
• Ibe fuleat draw in the Call 540-USl W'8t. . .a Dally Pll
Classified Ad. Phone
GU-5678. ~.s.~ HERITAGE
. r~EAl.TORS •tew,..IMch lH? ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..
I
.....,IMG bina 4t hunUng. s1200. san aemente prof. bldg. per acre. Call Robert
office suilea avaU. 1-8 Turnbull, 556-3610 Rooms. Larae parklng1...:~;:.:..;..;....:..,;__ ___ _
FIVE ACRES area. Rent at SSC per sq.
ft. Consider trades &
terms. $252,500. 493-0233 •
,.
~ Owner 3 br, 1 ba oc~•~ Camino. Wood. waJ15Nlper, prln.
........ 1
,
'
H.ard to find horse pro-
perty. Brand new 3 BR. 2
BA home. Huge famlly
room. wet bar, Crplc., 3
car garaae. Won't last!
BKR..
(714) 677·5891
OR~
GOf,..D MIMI TIMIBl
DIV&OPllS
510 acn1. 80 Ml. N/of
Sacramento $1250 per
Mte.SW4&TZ. MG-1U'1 •
Sll,009
2>. 40, 80 Acre parcels. From $11,000 up per
parcel. No. Calif. Terms.
tall SW ARTZ. 640-1121.
. '
P~ ,ow "'°'1'8 pt wiU1 ....................... .....,,Mgt• leech 3240 tennl:I, clbhse. $300. mo • '""Ii "'~ . DR AM A.TIC B• y 1' -•••••••••••"•••••••• ~Owner~~rj_/~A!ll~~Zf~-~ I t::i::::. Newpoct Dlte lite ~w 4 Bedroom pool home. ntv eark 2 BR 2 Ba ='1m1MPf'"Cto*t of MMtttl'l from tflia apiKtaC 2 SUO/m°"tll. SHARP. $4.'t). mo Jea.seor'ts~/op:
W(fsted •Ith. tri• trim ~ br. J ba Ne~ ... ~~ AvailablellOW, e41Jl Mack lion: Mi-f9'7! aft. 5:30 ~rut~•.,,.ir7071'~~ ·=·~--at9112-1'188. wkdya S.1111 ........ SI.ii eec:ll Dett41J. Add C:W•-.M• JZ~ II Walnut1 Square Condo. *~" «II fOf t;st-dm ...... •••••.•••••••••••• M RY JU..t remodeled! Like
MACIC prfrc 111tlen1•8 einMil ................. J1Wview'3 Br 2 Ba,-gar, '""'-U..1$--.._.. •s new. 2 br, gar.,~·· No ............. a-....... -, ' · newer d •""JU OD a.atk. ~nft 1 '"'~ peta#$)30. Ml-2885. ~SIOJI ...,,;..,.., .._,_ ~h ~ 99.,•ft Dfpt. 10S Avl l /ini." 9530. --~-Spend ms in 'k brand ~~~~· .:i:s =-2~i tta ~Mia =:E Newly remodeled J br, 2 s;.~~ ~-w U!r~: MoYE '" NOW dflSSIS. Use easyo1 lalwic. Ttl'r • 1eau-Mil lie, fl. d Bwy. "650/mo. cd, hplc:f dbl. g'arase. 1 Pnnd htllm 9'7~: QMI-......, .. ...... l)aya ~ Ev• le pvt. ymt. Ch.Udnn 6! Alli a r conditioned 4
dr1t's Saa 2, 4 6 •. 1. Sia a VALUE ,..i.t. l~E~ **875-1931 pets welcome. Onl~ bedrilom. 2 bath home In
tallls Hl tc11. 4~ rMfT Cltllll. -"''"' t525/mo. See dalb' 1•5. &be ~ar RANClt of • s.. •t.n .., eedl .-225 cltlips, 3 fttl IMide. All' SPYGLASS ocean view, 4 m 1Tth St. Agt. 980-6181 r r vi n e • Q U.1 C K AcN,;,.., ~ .._..;;-.; tfe!U. !Wt.~ Seed 75' 11raa. •• 2ramra15,.POOl or•JJU. ~~.MG/ino. tnt"* .,.. ......, e;.·-. ... o. .,... table. cmr.lled pa{b, 1~~~~~~~~~L .... • • ....... ._. all xU-. $1450mo.u~1: * r-Y ""'•··-.. .t Broktn-.7414 Real Dice 4 k, 2 ti.. tplc, .... !Mini Slldl 'Ii hkli ....... ........__.LI cpt.a, CODV. area. Wove
Cledlll .. _.t"-3 BR. 2 bL. -cell, dlht tn. $395. 96M5e'J, Plttet'n Dept. "'2 c..llllt ........ -.. a teo. frpl. $525 A&ed. DO fee. Dally PllOt ................... 4-BR. l~ ba1 )Ce. Jard. m w.t Ullt Sl .... '"" ~ 6'Dtt ........ -• a_~-2 ba Condo. Frptc, '" soon ,.... ,..._II>-S.llllW.y ....... .n a•1Pt.C...tb6c!ralcell. JJU1'.pool•tenn1.s.~. RAMCHllM.TY
Dlfst__ZI; SOI-' lftU -~-··· M brttlht•etrJ.$3115 llt/laat+dep. Arter 5' 111-2000 . ~ ' • -...... Sf!AUONREALTY' 1...:;;552;;.-8:i..;;;;:l83;...;..;.__...._ ___ 11---------
Slft $to'w $100 •lltll JOO'" f:~:: =:::::i rn.5* '9'7-3318 Execut.lu bomo nhr
it ye>ll11tlfl lots ol ~ dMWS. ,_ -..... 2a-1Ba YD ""''C -er ocean• 4 I.A J -f&m pants tb~ Totll Weidtolll = =-........ -• ~ •ro • .. ..,... • ..,,,., v"'' n•111 n NEW fAll.WIMltR ._ -.. · •• • boule. $385. rm. din rm. wet bar, fire ~m~100At.oc. toul)Oll '°' i 'i ... n4::: I M4-11.20•lWN755 ctm:i!:~ ci:!~..!·~~:.;;;.;.;~-'""'!--
•llY -· ,,... Stld ·7s. ll im ........ 11f vrav ~a Br 2 Ba, a opt.~·~ :3241 llltllt=':.····"~sl:: llllltl lllft ......... Jlj ltY bome. Wood paneJ~ • •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• =t.. ........ M = .::t.···":; LR ll Mstr bdr. U!j '8r + boaL1a rm, country br, atv, n frti. frplc. '*' ..-.... ::::: ue ...... Ill ... :::::::n. . ~ ~ ctt~~;:e. ::1l°:it~~e~o1rJ: ::1cJ.::!:. to ~bin~~
ePM --: o&-$UJO -..i ,
•
, .. c
•
-~ --~~ ----- -
~ ....... ,..,.,, •• , A.f••••hu..r.. Ftlday, Oeoembot 16, 1977 DAILY PILOT 01
•• a .... ._ ••
IJI Dlwu-' ...........
•....._VJ.wH
Monaco ~I. :t bd
ba Ul"'Peta, dr
rcn&-ed yard f.$2$
. . ..... , ...................................... . e.-Mt.. . . !!~~~ ... ??~~ lllll~~lillljlll,..llllllilll&llllllllll&llllYilllillillll ....................... mi ........... .
Bve
BIG!
St1ftSHIM(j/ EXECUTIVE ROW, Inc.
Pre1Ugfou1 office space In Newpor1
Bch/Alrport area. Tasteful reception lob·
by. telephone message aervlce, con·
ference rooms, kitchen. beverage, In·
outgoing mall Hrvlce, dictating & copy
machine•, travel con1ultar)t1, com·
puterlud typeaettlng. Complete
secretariat service• available ••
needed. From $290 per mo.
• Al •c:tfMllh/ J •::••!ft/ . . , .... ~., ,,_.. .... ~--~ ....
. ~!.~.~ .......... ~.~.~ ....... .
Ala a•~••llh 5100 ~... SIOO •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
cl aardet11.'T
640 1"40
llVU -' Hr. fam
clc:un, upgud,td,
\ 1ew Xlnt cond.
644·21M
Yqio an lhe w OOeT of 2 tree \iekeu wiotUJ S 14 to
HOL9AY ON ICI
•ttbe
ANAHEIM
CONVt.:NTION
CENTER Dec. 27th-Jan. IM Blurt:. J GREAT RECREATION:
>'rff Tickets aooo for pools, !>hQPS & Swlmmln&. u unns. 2
De,;. 30th or 3 1st ~-mo_ca_1~~l_s+•_·0....._ __ he111th clubs, bilhurds.
P•r1ormaoces Cull BAYSllORES ch night·llfbted t e nnis
A Winning comblnotloo
Of adult oporttnfnf hemes
with luxury appointments on<I
supero recreation ot o premium
location. Tennis • gym • tMcopy
spo • swimming • bllllords.
Ooe & lWo Be<lrooms. One Botti ,. Gt.= ...... ·fa"<Me~Vlfr
HO Poulorlno Ave., Coato Meao 71H.fH5 ....................... ...,_, Ctl 17141752· 7170
t42·5671, tilt. 333, to J ffr. 2 Ba home courts. Pro & pro shop.
dalmyourtlcket.s. dshwshr, fplc, roogolfmdrivtng range, putty C.....cWMw 3822 CostoM---AporfwMtth URfw1I. ~ .............. * * clgs, 1 blk ba ·-3814 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••-
. .,,., uir 27()8 F UN. ACTJVIT' F.S : ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• • ~_,. 1 • ••••••••••••• HYnttntt• hoch 3840 Nt'W'pOf"t .. och 3869
2 Br, d en, 112 batb,1-c-------jf----Fu..lltime director, free Luxuryl~rw/minlocean 2 br townhse. 2 J:>r apt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Panoramic ocean view -Jue Sunday bn.tncb, BBQ's. & jell)' views, only steps wlpool &jacun1. BR OK $220 , $430 3 8 2 b 1
~
JJapp'J..A-nniver~lU''J
·.Scoftia
Th anks for 10 fanlasL1c years. 3 t~rrifi c sons & 1mmcasuroble
ha ppiness. "I love you more today
than ye::;tcrday. but nol us much as
tomorrow."·
Love, Paul
$4.SO, 497·2370 Capi1tn.o t rips. parties. s port 61to.S~1.,~a Cove. $450/mo. 645 2498 1 . pet . mo. 32G . r. a. enc . gar. -............... ....... .,.~ . ~St. Call art 5 30 Olk to beoch. Balcony, no ~___........,.....__,........w:1""""....--~
By the beach 1 Br, t' ~ lia, toumamentB &more! NEWLY DECORATED 960·4~ pets.
frplc, beam etllllngs, BR. 2 I.iii Ad BEAUTIFULAPTS: ColtoMffG 3824 2brw/gar.S245.2176''E" l'\..a ... ,.•--"cits TSLMimt 64.2-1603 OfflceR...tal
paUo, gar. Tropical M~t· $&00 ~3 Lion Singles, l&2 bedrooms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Placentia. Cpls, wtr. pd. ,... --· Bk be h c h
4400
Una. Ocean view. M;.turl' 4:17 3:188 fUrn. & unfuro. Models COSTA M ESA-21040 636-41.20, I 5 Near beach & i hops , 2 Br I e to ac rom s arp
couple pref. No 1>c 1s -opendailyl0lo7.Room-Thuran Street. Brand 2 Ba,pvtpauo,gar,$310 Nwpt Hgts 3 bdrm. 3
Some furnitur~ u' ail 3br. ,2ba, ram mate service avail. No new deluxe 2 bedroom mo. QOO.IZ19 bat~. Bike included !!
S375.499 19111 }rt.I, tennis, n lease required. Sorry, units. Lovely spacious • • 646-175Agt ~---mo <19'HT11 adultaonJy.nopets. townhome type with l'atric:khc:k Seawind Village t..arge 3br, 2ba apt. Sun· 3~.,!ba on•·• aC're wipoot. Westminster 3298 Oakwood family rooms. $350/mo 23722 Colh• loy New l&2 bdrm luxur) deck, 2 blk~ to brh $325. G~:~ f :::i:o~0msee•t.t1Lns~c· •••••••••••• •• •• •••. •• Garden Apartments Q U A I L P L A C t: Lagllna Miguel adult. apts an 14 plans mo. yrl} 204 43rd ~t.
EXECUTIVE SUITES
B ea utiful bldg .
Peraonalized phooe cov·
ernge, secy service, conr.
room. xerox & more.
Easy frwy acC'esa. Near
So. Coast Plaia. From
S225. 9'79·2161 Al t "•~IHcll/Horitt PROPERTIES, INC. You are the winner of 2 from $265 + 1xK1ls, ten· ~.row avw Feb l. 497-1934 rurnos new.' 880. lrvlne (at 11th1 (714) 752-1920 or 548-8553 ---------w/fpl c. D nl k d treetJcket.a wortb$14lo rus. waterfalls. ponds! S.Cl..,.nt• 3876 300sq.f1.'.deluxeolfice, W. , __ .... , _ _, 3252 P r e .L t 645·0550 eve ngs or wee en s . HOUD"Y ou ICE From San Diego F 19th S C t M __,....".,,..... " M•.,..,tlHcti/Swttii RENTAL AGENT ON • " rwy ••••••••••••••••••••••• t, os a esa.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ne1ghbo~ 170016tl\SI. PREMISESSAT&SUN. atlhe drive North on Beach lo Sparkjlng 2 Br2Bacondo $150/mo.Tom,540-2200 . Beautiful Sea Terrace ~7. A Do 6 h ANAHEIM ~cFaddeo then West on gar m!nl ocean view'
home. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. ram '-+------< ~.;1t7~ l > 2 BR, 1 Ba duplex. Cpts. CONVENTION McFadden to Su wind $325. mo. 633-4720 (714 > ' HO. COSTA MESA
rm,frml dlrung &l1V1ng. ~~~~~~~~~I drps. refr1g, stv .. encl CENTER Village.<714)893-5198 . •5Rm.803sqlt$32lmo Pvt community w/pool. . _ gar. No pets $270 mo, Dec. 27th-4an.16t . . Spaoous 2 Br garden al)l. •l201q f\ &ngl ofc$60 m o
jac. tennis & be:idi. incl grrl ·Jo Kelly.,.__ .. __ .. _____ 646-1.2.46 Free Tickets good for Deluxe 2 Brm 4 plex. Nr $28)permo. "'442sqfllgeoCcS155mo
S72.S/mo. POils. lse1opl. 1146-1371& ,.1985 ,. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Dec. 30th or 3 1s t 5 Points. Encl. ~ar. No 498-1137or834·3471 All ground fioor, front
SOJO
I you're not ietllni: 13.8r, • return on your in
\'e~tment, call Snnd~
ll06S, Aj11x Co. 837-374'1
•Average yield on p11~
orfs to Ajax investors
Jan. thru July, 1!171
State l.iw pt>rm1ts u prl!
paym·ent penalty charge
equivalent to 80% or 6
months unearned in
tcre.st on the balance
Mortgaae Brokers. Of
fered 10 CahCornla reio
dt!nts only.
CJCl!CJff• T ru.s t DeedS 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752·9223or499-4611 ,.............L.. OCliMFltONT performance11 . C1tl l pet.s540·44B4 ;S4S·3442 b S 1 pritg,A/C,utilpd .. prof. __. 3 BR, 2 ba, yrl>1. $595 C 0 S TA M ES A -2 2 I r. ng mature person, bid t MiuionVl•io~l267. 3425 s~TOl., .. }.H Bedroom, for m ~turc 64_-5678. ext. 333, to LIVENearTheBeach! nochildrenorpets.$210. g,eC'. LOWEST 1....-~ 15Av .. drum your tickets. Cmo ct.I Sol 540-2:200or 540-5101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• 2Br,2ba,furn,yrlyS310 adults only. No pets. * • 229 \venida Del Mar.•---------l......_.tRatn
New4BR.2-sty.mt.v1ew. LA~DM K.Mag~olia -2Br,houseunl.$37~ Refer. $265/mo. Quail BeauufulAdultApts 49'1·5771 THEEFFICIENT Lndscpd . No pet,; Atlanta B .. A~ults only. Place Properties, ·inc. Gas&WaterPmrl. ---------.. Ao..-lstT.D.'s.al10 s42s mo. <t liS · 4 0 ..,4 over 40 M1lhon S rec m4> 752.1920 or 548.8553 Mle81iBJIU 21661 Brookhum, llB SouthLCICJUfta 3886 .ALTER""""' VE 2ndT.D. Loant. -...019 " · rac1I ~~nty,allapphC'. 962-6653 •••••••••••••••••••••••Mo. to mo. rent incl FalrestTermsslnce J94!1 ....,..._ 960-l3&ieves. weekends Ask for Bachelor S225 _____ 21 2 Br, pnv. bch. s mall · Wanda 2 Br $295 R e c e p t . s e r v . . Sattter MhJ. Co. Mlwport Beach 3269 --1-----· d Its READY MOW yard, new C'J>ls, l'Ozy. No personalized phone cov 642.2171 545-0611
••••••••••••••••••••••• br. Pou , enclosed gar. 1~1E.lll~~~et 2 Br. painted, crpts, pcts.$295.499·2587 erage, conr. rm, mail
U VEOu Ch att.I .I OK. Ga rden ._ 2 Br, 1Ba,1 story, shag, '"2·""1<1> drps, 1 ba. Gas stove. "-.1.:-ll90 serv .. underground prks ANTED: 2nd TD loans. " Grove. S300 mo. Call ~ '" """" ,._.... & · N rt THE GOLF COURSE! Siji.ll8tTtmMoran --------....,,~ dra pes, patio, frplc, ---------Adults, no pets. S250. 425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~Ex~~VE Oceanfront P roperties.
BigCanyonT'ownhome,2 2br,lba .S300mountilthe beam ceil, garage. VlllaVittaAph l2lh. S2'40.UTILIHCLD S50 M Secured by Del br, 2 ba s700 per mo. end of June. Avail Im· Ad\Uts. $275. 2544 Elden 2078Thurin h SUITE,640-5470 Mar Houses. Will pay 640-5274 IAll-4tM>l'lh "8MshH med. 673-6939 Urut 0 . 538-8406 Brand new. large 2 br, Beac studio duplex: 2 Water, gas. electricity. M di ulte Ul pd 10'7o +IO points. Also wall lh b lwnh /f BR,l 'l'l ba .. gar .patio, Un ique 1 & 2 Br. xs s.u • seell$40M2ndTD'l5' ..
4 hr. 3 ba, ram rm, 3200 8alioa and 3706 S..Cletntat. 3776 Foxholow Vlll-aXJo t ous~.,~ am no pet. $325. 64~1682 Complete recreational A/C, ample pkg, from d t p I p
621W. Wllson646.ro10 .'ffi~Mg~l area.642'.i603 lf"¥1fte 3844 facilities. Adults only. $165.Nolsereq.875-6900 (7~4~~~~Days'Ooly sq.ft. 1444 Santaagq,, N. 8. •••••• ••••••••••• ••: • ••••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• SlOOOmo. Agent, 541-5(>:1:.! Deluxe cheery 2 Br. quiet 2br util pd $270 mo J im ----adJL'! y. No pets. $375. · · · · Westcltrr Shopping i.tr(•a 6734 498·1000. ext 518. o r
FURN OR UNFURN Sorry, nope~. COST MES" •2brtownbomew/frpl NEW2BEDROOM ••••••••••••••••••••••• CalifomioAptt * A ""* l8%YieldS45,000.3yr2nd
•Lgepalio&enc.garage 2 Br. garaite, A/C. $315. Orangetree, new 1 bdrm J4932NewportAvc. ~~'::..~~q~~:q";(. T .D . 10% i ntere st 2Br, 2ba, frplr, pallo. -_498-0 __ 1_49_art_6 ____ _
pool $425 /mo Calt Altrac 1ve tbr w/1tar .nr
•Adults only. mo.~ w/lort. Brow11 carpet, ·~tin. Call today: ~ ...... ,,..,, • .,_7604 quanerly on 11 a cres
Pool&jacuzz1avail. self·C'leanlng ov~n 832·6122 . .,....~.,.... Bon.iall: ~-&.818. 4 yr Isl
644·8184or752·77!1!l town & water. ~1M/mo. ~Ml ~--------+ ut . 675-2773 ~'"\" UnfumlstMd
___ ...::... _____ 1.arge 3 Br Townhouse AvatJ. now. $325. C"CK ffi 'I T.D. Sale at $12,000. per
with patio, garal(e + 552·7552 I:.,;) ·O icespaceavai · acre. u ~;. discoun1
$700 3 br Conrlo l l'I lo -•••••••••••••• •• •• • •••• Fashion hlanrl Short Char'1ing. beaut. furn. 1 G al 3802 Woodland Village pool. Quiet com plex. • ---.. h 3848 Apcatnwnh F-urnishe-d on c,oast Hw\,k CdM. ( 7 lJ ) 7 5 l • 4 8 2 7 or Adults, no pets. $350. -,--oc: orUnfumiWd 3900 Pre · 8 cct / kpr. 1714)493-lWcves
term only 759·(J(J$17 ~r pl. patio, sundeck .•• ::'::•••••••••••••••••
-845 Paulanno
Beautiful, new, adult
apts. Great location. 2
poola, 2 j acuzzis.
645-3381 or 675·5949 •••••• •••• • • • • •• •• • •• • • ••••••••••••• •••• •• • •• • .... 67_S._237_3_o_r_6_75-0088 _____ •---------
Luxury penthouse. 2 br, l niE EXCmNG . Ofc & Recpt. area 18% Yield $80,000. 3 yr. ----o. Ut1l pd. 675·1392 . FINE« HOME -----.-•Bach $165. Long Beach.
BIG CANYON. AbsoluH•· L.Brtycarly ~25 mo. Ut1l. Stv, ref. Ulll pd. No pets.
Lge 2 Bdrm, 1v~ ba. 2
SWry, pool. Kids OK, no
pets. Nr schls. $285/up
23 10 Santa An a Ave.
64.>~ or <213 > 371-4032
ha, din rm. frplc, big PALM MESA Ans. f 0 r r e 0 t • N P t 2nd T.D .• 10% quarterly
v I e w . B I o c k t o on 20 acres prime Vista
ly s mashinl( Augu~a tn<ll . Avail. 1mmed .1_11_4_1833-__ 897_4 ____ _ Move in immediately downtown. $475 mo MlNUTESTONPT Och/Fashion bland, land. $78.010. S yr lsl BCH ftrn or not. $250. Call: Plan. A masterpiece or1_67_5St-22!l_. _____ _ Bachelor $22S-s245
l Bdrm $265·$275
494·2379 eves:957·0282 Bah t&2 BR • 7"°_.,, T.D. $62,500. cash equj. c · · ........,,.. t y. 15% discount. 1 Br. Ocean view, blk to from $220. 4' up. llllllMtll 1...-i....a ,.450 8 2 6 Lge2 Br, clean upper, in 4 bch. Adlts; no pet:. Adults, No Pets nn• .. < 71') 7 5 l •4 ° r
dramatic design with un· Peninsula 3707 l4Aoa Island 3806
surpassed golf cou rsc •• ••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrnt $295-$325
view! 3 BR. & deo. B CH. Vaew, Pier, 2 Br. Lovely 4 Br 2 Ba, duplex,
$795/Month S'fiO 1 Br s375 . s325 w/v1ew. Uke oew, $600 •
plex. Cpts, drps, avl Dec. S275·S295. 49-1 -3280; 1561 Mesa Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ("114)493-U~eves.
Rental0ff1ce 22. Adlu. no pets. 499-3900 (5BlksEast orNewporl 4DB.UXEOFC'S Ji..-c.,,..../
HASTINGS & CO. Adil~. util pd. J03 E: _m_o_._61_5-_oos_·1 ____ _ OpenDaily9·6 645-7485 ---------1 Blvd.) Con!. rm., seat 25. all PwSI04~t/
TSLManagement Convert'd gar , furn or Sil6-9860 paneled. sm. whse in re· Lost•Foiad RIALTORS 640-~56~ fl:lgewater. Cll 871·2866. lc6oa PfftlMlllo 3107
_,.._.,. .. ___ .,.•ISH Room for s ingle •••••••••••••••••••••••
WATER VIEW ~rson. Nr. 10th St. Bay. Balboa Penn 2 Br. deck.
• Townhome located an the tt'ach. ~on·smkr. $125 gar, new cpts. paint, yr· Coves.2 UR,2·~baths.2 fllO . 7 H ·546·060 1 & )y. $400 . 673-2077;
Priv. patios. Upgr11cted ._.,1.~1 _67_5--66 __ 70_. _____ _
nppla's. Security, pool & ~a M;;;-3724 Quiet 2br garage apt. Cpl
Jacuzzi. 6 Mo. lease. '-••••••••••••••••••••• pref. No pets. 1309 w. owner will consider SSO WE.,_"'* UP Bay $350/yrly675-3096 longer. $1500/mo. U\ • _.;;.,_• ~--...;..,... _____ _
Studio. 1 bedroom STEPS to Beach. 2 br, 1
Maid service. pool ba. $325/yrly. Gas & wtr.
2376 Newport Bl. C.M. pd. 642-8216
~·97S5or 645·3967 a..;:. ________ _
~
11'"'.Hl\IT\
'1;; ..
754·0081or64i!· 1603 Families, small children unf. 2 blks to bch. 1 blk to -1---------ar. 1 or ~ yr. lease. Lake -------'--J---upto2yrs, 2 Br apt. $235 Forest, WW cpts, paoc·I· ooma 4000 F ores t area. Kent. MESA VERDE area. mo. 2077 Wallace Ave. 1ng, util pd. Off strttt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harkms.
Home atmosphere 2 & 3 CM.646-2826 parkng, quiet. $170. Roornw/kitchenelte 714·581·9393
brdeluxeapts,546"·1034 ---------~aft10AM SSO week&up. EASTSJDE cozy 2 br, -----------548-9755 pprox. 400 sq. rt. C·2,
WESTIA Y TltlPLEXES
COSTA MESA
BRANO NEW
1 Br From $280.
2 Br From $305.
3 Br, 2 Ba From $395.
patio, garage. bltns. Sharp2 BR. view. $425 • NC. at 130 E. 17th St,
$275.16021.lSt St. 548·2127 SEA LION REALTY Ambatsodor lnn in Costa $150/mo. Doyle S48·1168 497·3388 673-5354 Mesa. Zl11 Harbor. Cen-1----------
MESA PINES trally located.235 rooms. 28-0 lse. Store·Office.
New studio apt$230. l Br Choice coodG at golr MANY with kitc h en , 960sq rt under 30'. 19478
$285. Avail. Jan . 1st. course; J BR. 2 ba., phone & TV. Swimming Beach Bl,HB.842·2834 Pool. jacuui & laundry vaulted cell, lge. deck, pool, jacuzzi, and rec. 1----------
rm. Adult.s, oo pets. Open trees: pool, wsbr/dryer. room. Dally & weekly "---HICJ!Nf
Beautiful new 3 unit daHy. 2650 Harla Ave, $450 Mo. Agt. 494·7578 rate' starting Crom $48 a . 27635 Forbes Rd.
STUDIO Qui~~~~l utn. buildings. Xlnt location C.M. (Mesa Verde Drive OCEANFRONT week. R«alllo(fice873sq.rt. UIEEA#LY ••TES near So. Coast Plaza. East orr Harbor Blvd). 645-<MJ40. Retail/warehouse 1336
·~·.I t 0J1! H•1 Carondel "'''
TIHHIS & IEACH
3 Br 2 Ba. Newpor
Shores home, n ewl"
painted & decor'd. $550
mo. 640-2981
.... ""'"'"" -1 pel"IOO. DO peta. 673-6372 ... 549-2"'47 DB.UXE ft Full Kitchen &TV Children welcome. ~o . l.eaM, I Mo. Frtt Sleeping rms $75-1105 mo. ~flee2118sq.ft.
Linens & UtJJities Capllfi WO~ 3111 pets. Rental omce open &Side homey large 2 Br, r All $50. wk. Share kit/· Avail Jmmed
CLOSE TO OCEAN 3••Br••••3•b••••Oc•••••••••d••b•I g~i~~~f5B~~~~ker St. 1 patio. Walk to school. 2-2BR r$SOO. 646-0505 bath. Shown Mon·Sat. Estate Equities
Royal Sultn Motel • a. ean vu. 557.5215 s.-m. mo. 675·7396 l.oCJuno Hilb 3150 Refa req'd. 556·0058 or AgtSte R·l
2(8)Newport.Blvd,CM gar, frplc. nr schl. $350.1----------3br 2b ,.....,... ,._ • .,CA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-5954 831·1633or544.0033 496-8268 or (1) 528·5107. a ~·II'-... ..., _.,,., NO FEE! Houses, condos. ____ 642_·_2S_l_I___ mo J~med 'occupancy View Tnhome: .3.br, atch Young prof M/F Park ........ 4500
d 1 ,.~.._.M l822 LACASAILAHCA · gar, rec. fac1lltaes. nr N t NB $l9'o up exes. R e nt al SUSCASITAS _ _... • 2'S22·B Santa Ana Ave. r $375 wp · · m o .••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Pavillon,675-4912 Bkr. _ Nir.-ly rurn. large & •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• loch, llr-AYI How 646-3192 reeways . Lse · 759.0999 evs; 731·0150 Sqft.ofindu.strial pro·
smaJl 1 br. Adults. only, All utila pd .• cpts, drps. 831-2923 dys. =r w/1800 sq ft of a ir Luxury Condo. 3 bedrm, :i N pool, lndry. rac's. Adults CITY LlGHTS-2Br · Vu 1-u:--.1 3852 ot
•••••••••••••••••••••••
5100 ..........................
** G..y llal&ffl•y
26802 Via S• Jose-
-MlssloftVl•fo
You are the winner or 2
!tee tickets worth $14 to
HOUDAY OHICE
ntthe
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
Dec. 27th-Jan. J.st.
Free Tickets good for
Dec. 30th or 31st
performances. Call
642-5678, ext. 333, lo
claim your tickets.
** --SAME-DAY DElIVERY
Rubber Stamps-$3, 2tSS
Ch r is tmas Gift Certificat~s a vail.
!&-1758 bath. den, walk to beacL no pets . 21lO ewport re ..,._ -over 35, no pets or Quiet adlt bldg w/bllins . --r--,....,...... Room 'W/ba, pvt ent. 2 "--"'-'pbcs.AS46·~ 2956
P I I Blvd. v ••••••••••••••• •••••••• blks "'-acb. $100. tn"'. nA1JUU1 ve, "'""' oo. tenn s. $650/mo m ~ children. Call Sue: $305.631-0537appl. N" & B & ""' u . Lolt&FCMMI 5300
• [';~~;~A~~i.1::1.~27~sk Huntincjon lffch 3740 ,,,, ore_$ . . 556·7707 or II e nry : Mesa Verde 2 Br 2 Ba. ~ 1 & :ec r;.:m~ qu':~i 43rdSt.NB494-6044 2 O O Sq ft. In . •••••••••••••••••••••••
________ __._1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-9137 spacious llv rm, w/fplc, area. 83l·'n66 VCICClllo. R...talt 4250 dutt/Comm'L 2952 Ran· Lost: Mon. 11/28. Seal
_,.. .. ,.. .. ____ •!SMALL BEACH HOTEL GARDEN APTS dming rm 4car, cloee to ••••••••••••••••••••••• dolpb Ave, CM Call Point Siamese c::at, 1 yr.
WALKTOBEACH,pool Rooms $32.50 Week CORONADELMAR l Br, crpts, drps, yd shops&trllDSp.$28Smo. Mewpcrileoch 3869 cabin,BigBear,slpe 4·18. ~16S3. old. female, spayed,
&.tennis. Exciting 2 Apt$150/mo.S36·7056 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. carport. Kida ok. N~ ~afUPM ••••••••••••••••••••••• $35 up. Pool tbl, clr tv, wearing nea collar. VIC'.
S A bdr 3 b Pool --1• So I i I UDO ISLE dbl frpl, 494-861L Rockledge and Victoria tor)', .Dls. a.sun-l.oCJunoleac:h 3748 ,tewua. me ocean dogs. $225. nc. ut . 2 br unlum $UO mo. 1 • s.--. 4550 Dr. Laguna Beach ~ & atrium. $675/mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Catalina views. Close 64.5-22748-5. child 00 .... '., Luxurious Waterf!ont 3 BIG BEAR CAJUN fp'lc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reward!! 494-9466 or .,,... to Fashion lslaod & fin e ' .,....... BR. Penthouse. View Of .. _d ' 7 ft,. 5 30 PM LA R G E h 0 m e 0 n LAGUNA BEACH MTR. beach. Also 1 Br. 644.3611 2 Br, 2 ba, all bltns, Crplc, 646-12Sl The Bay From LR & sips 8, week or w.... . Storage uuita from $15 494-2.al ..... :
WATERwithboatdock. 1~· S65/wk. s25o1mo. ~~J~!;·~l cony . 2br,2ba.lolder childOK. MBR. OQly $900 Per 60-S565 mo.lodoor&outdoorRV
2 Story w/4 bdrms. fam ~al~ ~erv. c,01°~ 7 rv · s.-•ess. Walk lObch. TSLMgmt . 00·1603 noCoripetaande. r~D" mo. 1570 Month. l Year Lease. R...taktoShare 4300 & ~ si:tge. Mg~~n SCRAM-LETS
rm, dm rm & pn vacy e 3 0 P 0 0 · 4, > """' "' .. 9-'"•0 ~Elkins Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~age ~a~~~~~s
Sl.200/molse. _ :i!;294· 985 N. Coast ~~l~~~~~acla2;.~~ 2 Br. Mooticello condo, .... ~ 881DoverDr,N.li Need rmmate M/F, on Mt.Langley,No.ofEUls. ANSWERS
UDO NORD best le1ca· · pool & Rec rm. $350/mo. 631·1100 Peninsula, S'125 mo. Call Fountain Valley. Chorus -Bound
hon. Exec. 2 Bdrm, den, ~Mlguef 3752 ~ Enc gar, lndry hkup. "--Poiftt 3826 P"•K .... ~RT aft.6,631·0824 Phone964-1607 Ch1los-Agbasl-
dlninc rm. N-" 1·n & "Ut ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHARP 642-8005 -""" "snrv COUGHS "'" ., · ••••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• B b I Ouistian Female. to ahr $700/mo. Scenic views. luxury 2 Br, 1~ ba townhouse Panorama view, new cln ac e ora, 1 or 2 deluxe !um condo. $UO llai._/hn-Mt/ I don't want to brag but
ON LIDO. Special 2 adult apts, rum & unr. APARTMENT / u 610 J St ........ 2 ba + den 4.plex. Bedroorm&Townhouses mo.............. Rn•c• m,.v wife happens to be bdrm++. GlemofOUll Near Regional ShQPping w pa 0 · oann · """ From$274.50 · ............,., very cultured. She has so
hideaw•v, 185()/mo Center. Heated poo.l. 2 Br, 1 Ba, 2 •t.ory. Com-Small pets. 548·7638 No peta. Mgr 496·1097 Spectacular apa, total Fem lo abare"2 br hse in .. ···~•••••••••••••••• much class. s b c
ON WATER. Fab11lous jacuzzi.Nr.comerAIJc1a munlly p~ol. 4352 Lrg lbr,734·DSbalimar. PARKL1NG 2br, den. recreation program. CM$13250 + util Call 0,,-"1-.ta. 6005 COUGHSlnFrench?!
VIEW 2 Br be ut d Pkwy •-Paseo de Valen wnbs social program. 7 pools, 8 Mindy 548-9964. • I a _,., ... , a •. "' . Shor'"'creat. S·295 mo. Nunn•,..,LSmo. 2 ... t e ""'ean vu .. "' "' ,.... -""' ' .... • temU.a courts. At Faahion ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost aiale cat 10 mo old. C01'$650/°'9lae. c1a. ALICIA PLAZA 67$-2311 AGT. Daya. NO M2-3288.SS4-1616 dbl gar $375. Cheri Island, Jamboree & Sao Fem'l needs roommate, SAHCLIMIHTE blk wtwht markings vie
W-' f -~ &VlLLAG~ F_!E ___ .---....,East.aide.quiet, 2 br, J~ 861•1811·~75 JoaquinHUISRoad. Cree laundry rac, patio, Pet Shop & Grooming. Beach/Garfield.960·1286 •I t 581-6\Sl 581-6130 --.--...-----ba.gar.,paUo,fplc.DW, lBedroomapt,guage, 1714164~1900 gar.,nrbch.98().5398 Retiring after 7 good FOUND: White m ale,
e.t631·140 Sorry,nopetll. 2Br2~Ba,de.n,famrm, vacant,$360.Fordetalls. lmilet.obeach.AtDana Female or male, young, Yd~:.... Fine location & poodle, lfe. MagnoUa & ~~~~~~~~tt• .. ;;,..~iw;;;rtJi .. ;;-d; .. :-m,W !~C~f.~O, ga.r. $600 mo. aient.ria, .,~~685 or eves. J:'QlnU93-00'75 --aov. PCH HB S48 109 ~ · = .... ,.._.. -iJI'' ..........,.,, Ch o>ol'"""' BACHROR APT. S 1 2 s mo -• n r . BER'mAHENRY • • • .• New Seaview. 3 Br.'2 ba. ••••••••••••U••••••••• 2Br,Jge. modem apt. GarCield/Delaware. REALTORS _5a_·7893 _____ _
.. Pool, tenn l s-0#. · ac . 2 Br 2 Ba. like new. 2 car 3 BR. l~ ba, 2 sty, dble $300/mo. A.LLUTILS PD! S36-6343btwn6-7PM ,21.SDelMar -..W Found: Long HalrNl
a'75/mo.yrly875 BACHELOR APT. gar, washer/dryr. $445 gar .. rp, sundeclt. va. Eves498-0318 lOO' t tb SI i ~ 1 rom e ocean. NEED A ROOMMATE? TUY& "G .... CY amese m x em a e. mo. 7»1131; 494·• cnnt, $380/mo. for de· "'-ml c · h d A 11 "" R"" JI tl t h Sub-lease, no de~ re· ALLUTILS PD! t.aila. Agent, 54,,..168 or Specious 1625 sq ft duplex ....., · urn1s e · va Call The Professionals u n n1 on e o c .
qui ed II l d BIG lb f I """"' a pt, 2br, 2ba, de.n. lodry nowy I ! 20$2501 E. Balboa BINvdO. you've seen & beard or! Lettartua show you hTow to, 546-7308. r • ava · e · 100' from the ocean. eo1y r, rp • _... eVa. Chris, 557-0975 r y o s "" agency rave --------67" "'""n1.. "'-gJ/mar-'ed cp.I No rm, bltns, crptd, lrg · per m · Radio-TV -· · ~u........ J Semi·furnJabed. AvaU ~•/chlkl~~""' 6"0.7030 2br lb t$250 deck. enclOfted •ar. S380 FEE. Call ; "Sue at nmeMaiuine-Press exp.ootnecessary. Total Found: Sa moyed, vie·
S 3 B f now! 201 E. Balf)oa Blvd. .....-_.,.,. • •· vacan -. l·""" ..,,,,.. "' 556-"1M ·-... •me ~-,,...,.,·-· .,,. .• ···-:atartup le opera lint Adams & Beach Blvd. u~r r , a rm. 2 br, patio, gar, fp, Va· .. .., --• •v, .. .,,.. ~u VftW"l•UI HB"'·--a ••• s:n--. Harbor VJ•w H ea. Yrly. $250 r.er fio. ~ l.nunac MP uniU Br 1 Ba, ca nt, w I D are 8 , caplt.al required. $30,000. ...........,. ·~·.,
l
teOO ..... permo.PMa?.,to ~~ FEE. Ca I : ue a +photoroorn,fl>lc,mlnl S32S/mo. ..._.._._.~_ .. 3140 BAYFRONT, lae 2 Br 2 SucessfullySincel971 (714)838-9242 FOUND: Doxie m i.x, yg C.U : ... n.w s.56-7701ao)'t(me, ocean view. Encl 1ar, 2br lb -..5 ..__,, --11 832-tl.34 · ma1 U Vi u I ~&latl. 7 kU of chum, claN to .....! 1 ba,_.rei F ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba,1ar, priorftytoamatl Laddscaping-Main· e. DO c;. c. man • _.... .. ,_-''• ..... 1,_ ~~'"·a. .$U5. or ~ .. nn3 erdel••we ...... acb boat.alp. $600. 833-9442 Rmmtneeded.Oceuvu, ttaaoce. larce com· St." Balboa Blvd, OC-.1.~0.,. _ .. • ..,........,, '"'w, no .....,....., AIDt. S48-1168 or ~ ~ .,., ·-1·• o nta pl Balboa 67~ llA~ "' peta. $375. 642.WI or eva. Chris, 5S7-«Yll5 unit. D/W, frplc, paUo, ...... upstaln, clean. $150 mo. mere .. ace u u1 •
Avail 12/16 to t./10/'18. 644·1179 fill"· AvaUeeo..:358 , z Br U4r Ba, Twllhae a\yle. 83H012 equip. 968-2'720 Rewnd. Loat Female •
Aval\Jan1.Aclf75-ax •Br, 2ba. 2 c.,. pr, 2 Br lower, , ... beat, -u.wu . .-w :!1~ DO pets. $255. h._:r... SAJLSBY1CIS Keabund pupppy, vie ___,., -tua*k, W/D. dahwbr, 2 !r, 1 ba, view, hie, water $)Cl $225 • ., $250. _._ "•"' _._ ,..10 ..,_.. ....... _., __ .. Brookburst & Hamilton ,.,.....,,"Wwrr hlnll1 Oftbr, t800/mo. or bUrw, dahwhr, wu h/dry, 631·2177. 380Vtctorfa 3 Br apV~, coove-... ......-.. ••WI .... waaen, · I ' BR. i B~. tplc, r ced conaidsalioD fOfj ritbt , ... $95. ~ MCMXZ71 I nlnt loc. 5 unitl avL ~ Spldoull, bri&ht 1 br. Iba ....................... )'lldlt OWMra. Many re-909313· ' fNf~tt tr.et car party. 2910 W. oc .. n· lz12b'r,l~ba.·1yroew. uP.96'-1507,&40-1751 apt,""w/w cpta,bltn11, Sta-1• ftr••• overllead wardl. lSK. Reply Boit LOST: l1e 'neut. male
,,,....., U\O. front. (Upstal,..)"543116 Lr 2Br. 1Ba. f reably Acfult1 only, no pet.a. $.1CIO mo. Cann.,-y area. door. $3$. No. 6. 131 W. 131 %1)aily Pilot, P .O. Siamese Cat'. Vic. Top or
lMt. ·. pailrt.ed. aoutb or hwy, 1.m~79 Hew deluxe (plt:X. 3 BR. 87US22 1JthSl,CM8'7S-7787eve Box 1S60, Cotta Mesa. the world. Lag. Bch..
. adults, no pett, ~mo. rryi1c.~ltn• WD hkup 0 0..1112J1126 ~ da)'I. CX' ~·1588 SPICIAL Atten : Stral•bt pror. ~5 l«e 3 Bdrm 2~ bath con· Y&rd IC• $305. SU.:iecM. Br apt, sl4pe to ocoa.n, otftceR_... 440 --u""""NT ~es.
· llr'2~ Ba condo, wly rnan. Why ooUomet.hinl do. All m lljor appt. tea.CU utll. pd. sno. m o . ••••••••~•••••••••••••• "'-'Ll'Uunv 1----------~'d. Opt avail, J n 1. betltrlhan al~l)' apt? 2Rr, 18e Df::, In qu.let Frptc. attac hed 1ar IQ.1334day.842·6571eve n •rasq PT MARK.ET Lcl&l blk Cs wht cat, male,
mo.M>-2181 Share e qually w 12 ~}bthlbaa •,.:.. M1tndl, w/~. comm. POOi. ~~~fpltwnhtbl •pt.lwln• 1617WESTCLIFF·NB Mustae~l-~et.$35.000-yr Htg.Bcharea. others a tux f\n•n ocean -WI r re .... a 'r'/ Jae.~. S. Cit Plaza -'"9 c tDa ff Haven, 2 Br 1 Ba. AOT.$U.SOSZ Apnt..._....,51 S36-0409aft.6PM
9"f• l~ 2 Bl\, ba. vu h~me 1~ Ne~port nn. sieUo. far, pvt beb area. Euy fnry ·~'*'· hkuP =bl attach 1ar qie.., d~ paUo, etc. No --------•111l. -..flt loca Ion. $300/mo lncM .. r. w.u: •CCC91t pdllr, ldha. '315 ft'J.5/mo. 53Mf7t after $115. .l&M218 cblldnri, 1)etf. Pref older llOI W.elclff lk. ~ ... ....:...;... 5025 Lost: Female Pvppy 3 • -..~6"-1133 , _ __. -·Id"· ....... ,. -.ITMm_ epcn 11 .. _ .... ,-•• •-•· "nr,J•L ldJi..Ji!95,541-Q06 • =---n .. •-tctt .._, ~ mo'•St!CP•tmlx.Gray
.... -.... -...... ~.... ~-• p ... 1' IDll ..... ·-······· .. ••••••••••• W/1.ao. Wht paws, W•Ar• ilr,IE Gdftnanclalbdrvnd ....... 1 ............ l..., Dr·~ 6 lbr tobte. a.di ccmdo. $81. Poola, Newport Sboru. 4 Jtr, OffkeS,.C. llonty A ....... man1 ln• ~rowQ collar.• ~" ~ rsr Mn&all.M4-04M ~ t Pol!IH tla, ~~~~-.~!.; ;;_ .. 3. Pd ~Ht. oloae Jn. 4'1la.fl>lc,28a~an&l1ar, Calloe&kelfanuer aource1, aU pl"0Ject1. ~Jl&:lll.L_B•ward. --.. ,,,,_vuu __,, .s.100mo.6C5·'7• Cn4)6424lU ext246 SSOKmln.'lsz..t062 ea.ms.
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, .. -lllil OAl&.Yf'tl.~f Trlelef, O.c..mbet 11 1977 ..,.... • , • • J r-> !, • • • 1 • • • • .--s _
•
11'Add11 ... Bultd , .... Diaper iL .. Hammer Jt ... carpel SER~ICE ' I I RECTORY Plumb I t.. :>atch it. .. Pip~ It ... t<emoae1 It~·· ll.I°"Cement lt ••. Wlre u ... Hoe IL.Clean lt ... Move Root·rt. .. Lar •scape tt...T!te 1t ••• l'rlm lt~ •. St~lt ••• · I
lt. .. Pfiss it. .. Patnt tt...Natt ft ... Plaster IL.Fix It... - -.. _ --"""" _ __. 0 _ ~-_ __ ~-_ -""' HAUi It ... Adi ;t, •. Plant 1t ... Alter It ... Learn It ...
· 'r" • ........ 1 c.,.. s..t.. . c:-.t/Cwt• ..... 1 t 1
1 tf ' I -~'.: HH1"ed1 Hf 1 " ,. .. ...,.... , i-. ft• ~P.,...t119 llu ..
•-,.••··~······ ........................................................ ~ .. , ................................................................................... ••••·················• ...................... . Ba.r~Smc .C&l'petMaowiDl•yyoun CEMENT WORK. All Df1 U lAndlca~ Main· att!:APEST M)l)lnr to HAveiacleanhou.aetorthe CHRISTMAS lnt4~or, extenor paint ROOrSFORU:SS ~~f.~0• ~:"i0or~e::~or~ ~~c.~t=•· Free ~af:r. b~uF;:'l;: :.S':r:~EAP! g~::::s5e~~~~Yfatl~ SPICIAL t.! 'inar!hJ:,.Pc~ J:c: ~:f~·u~·~~~~:
l&JUa m-01• llt biaaer aaviop. li"tee Ce m n t W 0 r le • clean-up11 , rototilllna. tb;uinJ.aaLg rcas &refe. 5*2393 Avera1• 3 bdrm bin '225 9611 f19i$ sr. Senior clUatos ~ot. •
• DR t .. eat.~ . Drlve~u)'$, pat io~. FreeEst.875-SSJf ....................... a.....c.,tng ~~~~t;_~•lli "-ir/l.,.ir 11&'.0UUnyUme 1
--.............. Shampoo & ateam clean. walkways R('alionable, G-ual S......lcH Want a REALLY CLEAN ....................... .. .. , ............ ~•••• Sewtlitf Ah lt'&M
•Deaicn•En,tneerinf Color bri&htenera; wbl treee&U ~~7 •"•••••••••••••••••••• HOUSE'! Call Gingham Walla, patioe, new lawu, Pa1tlt.lni. .Ext.r/lntt. Ex· l1 YNEATPATCH •••••••••••••••••••••••
-oo.itructJon.New q:QlOrnmblHch.Clean i. HANDYMAN: Carpentry, Olrl.Freeeat6'5-5123 sprklera. iron work, pr'd, honest, neat, reu. '~~&TE.XTORE CUSTOM SEWING Xlnt
MdiUona.Res/Comm'I. llv. din rm, haJI $15. Avg 'i:;L k<.:\n~~et:lu~O:;,. electl'ica.I, plumbinc & Thol ulate Cle oln fountains. Llcenaed Uc'dll4-l0'5Dave Freeist. 89S·~m Quallly, 1tllo atteraUou. P.D.J Corp MQ.'1020 rm S7.~. cooch $10, cbr oc · n c • noon. Ph 847-2787 mmac a g 837..w3 YOUNO MAN. 5 yrs ex pr doU cl~ m.1aro ~Y
$5. Cuar elim pet odor. concrete walls. Security co. YOUR SATISF.-\C· in wallcoverl~. Free PA'nNPLASTERlNG ...... _ C-A'f u•a Cpt repair. is yn ex pr. Bllllders. 834·9118 ... I HI I.AIOI 'MON GUAR. 1ll'S·03'11 Mii 111 .. f A 11 y pea , F r Q ~ •-
--.. •••••••••••••• Do work myself. Rels Asphalt/Concrete & tree for members. All ••••••••••••••••••••••• ests.645-857&A Y eaUmus.Call~ •u••••••••••••••••••••
Cerpentry. any t 1pe. 53HllOJ. removal & cleanups. 8erviefll $10 hr or Jeu 5'»1SHIMIGIRLS Brickwork. Small jobs. Profpaint'c&paperbang.1-C ERAMIC t l le. Panel. doort, etc, also F E 631 so1• 673-S013 Alltypesotbome•omce Newport, Costa Mesa & inf. Clean, work auar. '" -,. New/remodel. Free ut,
eornmi. Ue/eaL 6'8·2119 ree st. -"· cleaning packages. Irvlne.67S-3175eves. F ree est 957·094l •• .. •••••••••••••••••• aml jobs weleoma,
aft5 WeCareCarpet Cleaners l.JceNed. ........ SpeclalApts&R.Ework. 536-4383 'llOM~VERS. Plumb· 538-24.28al\5. ---------1 Steam clean 9 or sham· llectrieal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bonded/lnsured. Free Ing ~ eating. Free est, ----------
DOORS, w l n do w s , poo also upholstery.all ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sldploader. Dump truck. ma le instant service. PaiRHftcJ/l'aperbtg Paint y.,. Catft. $10 hr. oneat & rellable Ceramic tiles, tltohena.
cabinets, sh e ~vea·. work guar. Trurk mount ELECTRICAL SERVICE Haulil)g, tree work. MC).~&tSS2--0245 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AverageExtrJStry$39S 7~1-3 ~~A7'n~LC OK. ~~~~mc!: .. t~on~2'!· Rouahlflnlsh~ Pacltup wut. Fr est, reas rat.es CALLSSlShr, &SMALL gradfng, d e mo etc PETERS PAINTING 2srorySS45,lntr$45rm -"---;,...•::... .... _........, ____ 1 __ ... ~ ___ •• _ .... _......_ __ _ wortc 642..,... uc.3716 OBS a.,.,., 831 '""'7 Housecleaning wilb a Expr'd . Reas Kat•s. Pri . I I bo ~ . ...,,.... ~ J ·Ml!·°"""' ""-' .. cea inc matrl/ a r REP "'/REMODELS y.,,.. Sen'lc ~ penonal touch. Refs. Free Est . Call Gene ~ Carpenter, all phases re· Steam Clean ! ftollday HmAtg $16-1A20Qt' 536-6128 .,~_....... Guar/Jnar-Free est. Re bJe, qua I work. •
· models, patio cov~rs, Special. cpl & uphol (3 UcHubbcrdl27''..., EIKt;~74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• """'..,....., UC320881, Ted636·708S Eul'Jle536·3688. · ••••••••••••••••••• .. ••
etc. Free eal. Re l . Rlll.'I) $19.95 up to •oo ......, Tree/plant trim or re· ATTEN: Reallots & PROFESSIONAL Paint· MICHAELS PAINTIN"'· Rs-Mt~ •-..1 Removals, trlmmln1 •
....... ..... D ""n +hall •• bath free• y d l Landi--'-Expert ex . R u . --~ ""'r-r pruning. Free est. uc~d, v .. ~_,,, ..... · "" · ELECTRICIAN-Priced move. ar c eanups, u.-..... • · lfli. lnler/Exter. eas, ext. houses .-comm. ••••••••._ ,•••••••••••• rwtylnsured64z.2&24
CUSTOM FRAMING 631-~F·E~~t~~afl6 n ght·free estimate on ~~:"5863work. Lite moving, ::.· r~!~g;:s~.mtsop~ workgu11r642-0386 bldg's.675-514laft. 5pm. Paint yo1 r house for•---------Room Adds o K CD large or small jobs. ..,.,,.. ,......:Ml K•·" p . t . . ry ---------1 l.acensed 673-0359 not.ch, depend. servk-e & Fine Pamt'g at stay busy Prolesslonal Painting, top luea"'~..., ~-;~. Wahtbech
_w_a1_1>_._ss_1_-4820 ____ -.1Cahrittc) Student, big truck: Haul· est. Also Holiday clean· prices. 'l""ry me, free esL. quality painl. Resulls .ni ,~o. •••••••••••••••••••••••
ing, clean-up, tr~es cut. ing,11lverpollshln11.wln· Stlil.'/lnsr.836-SSSS ' quaranteed. Lie. 346996.•.-a... P i'ne ,._ Solid o ... •••••••••••••.•••••.•••• • Gardanlnn Any s .. job. 494·7669. dows etc Ell 968 41 .. 3 "' • .,.. • ...., .. • Don't give u th hi I f h re II • .,, .. I • en . .. P0 0· .. ~ESSIONAL PREP 646-9288 ••••••••••• ••••••••••• waterbeds Cooiplete line p e s p. or l e open rur a :ur. A ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gregg "' r
"List" it In classilled. occasion pers onal WEEDINC·CLEANUPS ---------· s-tdlltaCI,_! &PAINTINGEXTER. Paintln,. Homes·fntr. & P.<?<JFS 1nsi~ted factory & acc., Reaaonable.
Ship to shore results! service. Cabana Cater-WeeldyMai.Dtenance Find what you want ln ~.,.all, etc. Mr. Reas/Insr. Lie. 236741. Exterior . Specialty: direct; esu 35yrs. Call Terry a Nwpt·Ba7
642·5678. ing6'5-9858 Free est . 642-9907 Dtily PllotCluaifieda. L,ynn96(Hi844,S36-7711 Free est. 638-7394 Apts. Lorates83l-2508 HaroldCLlN ~-2961 642-0161 ""
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Lod&Found 5300 f'enottalt <'s:JSO Help~attt•d 71 00 HelpW_..d 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 Ht4pW..t.d 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HtfpW.... 7100 .... W.._. 71H , .•.........................................................................•............••..•••...•....••....•.....•..•.•.........•........•...................••.....•....•• ~········· ................•••..•.
FOUND: C~rman Shep u 'SS 'GE. ASSEMBLERS Bright couple with ability COOK, relier, saute & HOUSICl.IANIMG Looking for b1 ~ht yo\lng MICHAMC/ JJUPpy,male,SantaAna ~ "' to manaaeabuainessfull b roiler , Call btwn Electronics ,.5,_. ... 11u gal loranat11titectsof-YAlDFO.,...AM
St.CM.6-l2-0?57 FfGUREMODELS We willlr81Jl.Apply 7am or p/t. Unlimited in· 3-llPM,499-2271 MlcroPhoto vronu.. lice.Mustbe• letotype E~er. in diesel 111 l!:t!:CORTS MacGregor Yacht Corp, com~/'\ Day work. F /time & well.caUTel"J'. 67~ . Respdlrecllflo FOUND: Cat, grey tabby, ~ 1631 PlacooliaCM s13-3609,67~ C.osmetic Sales, exper. Proc:essorT~nH p/time. Wknd & eves v .. Sal commemurat.e ~~thu~t f&e ~a~nlii~g: OUTCALLONLY ASSEMBLER TRAINEE Full time, per manent Company near Orange workavall.!'ieedwindow MACHIM ~J w/exper. Call for appt.. HB. 963.2065 631·38 I a SANTA ANA pos. Prestige Drug Store. County Airport is seek· washers also. Must pro· In "" Bring resume. ValJey Call 549_2475. IUU.OC«S bch area. Mr. Elwood Ing an Individual for vide own transportation. 4 Day/40HO\l Week Crest Landsca""', Joe.,
FOUND: Male Blk Lab &5CORT SERVICE So. Coott P1au1 67S-Ot:i0 photo chemical process· $3/$4 per br, ~9525 General macht 10 work 1..900 S. Yale, sa\ia Ana.
puppy, vie Santa Ana & MODELING OUTCALL ASSEMILEttS ls Now Interviewing "-·--• ing procedures for a Tht S.111Mu (iif'h ocno~upaolnileynta! ~~paacs~ 714/646·7975. Equal Op. s ant a J s ab e I c M . 24 Houts 847·6520 F A ~ors micro electronics lirm. '" .. • E 1 B Chol 646-0007 ---------WAMTB> ASSSSTAMT House Counselors, mar-wm train for first shin HOUSICL~•S aembliea. Mustt '.!bleto PD1' mpoyer 1 ee.
*#SANDY'S* Canon Busine ss CUSTOOl'LMGR. rled cpl only , no position.Excellent com· Hard worklnc self workfn>mdetAlouplan·Mothers Helper, Mon. Lost: Small golden brown OUTCALL MASSAGE Machin~. Inc. h as im· ~ children. Live in. pany bene~its including motivated. Call 759.0377 ningsheets &bhl prints. thru Frfday. Rert. N,o" dog, white spot in left 973.0329 med. openings for as· Exper.inallareas Supervise 6 teenage nuijor medical and den-Applyln~~ on smoker. Call aft a.
eye. Vic Talbert & s eitiblers in their ofjanitorialservice girls. Expenses & sal. t al. Housecleaners needed, Monday -Thusdar 558-CM38 ,-
. Beach. Last seen Dec. 9. ~ nt & calculator manul. plant. isrequlred. Xlntco. Oaktreeffomes, S40·47M TRAHSMJ>.SK Mature top$$ Call Nee. Wer ..... triiit hie
Rewanl. 847-1415. oytnt--+1-Apply Lo personnel dept. benefits. COR.P. 642·1403or645-3439 21olDoveSt, J .B. Mothers helper, rel, P/T. eparc.n.... 3191 Redhtll Ave, Cost.a Apply Personnel $4 hr. Call btwn 9·4. MaJe long haired poodle ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa,92626.556-4700. MondaythruFriday COUHTIRGIRL 39S2CampusDrive• Housecl eaners, own MACHINIST 646-9193
Terr, blk/Whl markings JobsWm.ted, 7075 J0am-noon&3-5pm Apply at Ca m eo NewportBeach.CA92660 trans.Top$$ Diversified wor~ J~ad --M-
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Jike an Eng. sheep dog.••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTO DETAILER 33331tbto1St,CM Cleaners , 1650 San 540-6080 64Z·7207or646-487l mfg electrontI I D-"':"' A~wers t~ n:i!l'e Pups. Will be your nurse & Self-motivated, hard EqualOpporEmployer Miguel,N.B. EqualOpportunlly M/I" llou$ecleanina Service slrumentalion. odern Dally Pilot route In ~5z-,~r 'l MCA, rew. phys i ca l therapis t . working. 759-0377 CUSTOMIR needsEngspk~ggaltull, shop. Advanced elics Newport Beach. Alter-
_________ , AvaJI. rorday work. C.~1. SaV/S...-'Y p/t. Car nee. Top $. Inc., 1231 Victoria St., "°?ns Monday throuih •nc-ot'. k area prer. Ex pe r. Automotive IUSIOY -. En . . Li . g · 557 ~ ft" CM.646-7l65.E.o .a Friday plus Saturday&.. ""'"'u · Lt red sn:il Pe · ""' ""·'" E New Detail Shop needs I •-11 Sm. corp., based in · gineer specia zrn in .......,.. a "· Sunday morru·no•. Cr-· angesc nds med1 cat1on .,...,....,..., ves Aggress ve "" we ... T 1 h e le ctrical trains . ~ ..-.,.... . . • · help. groomed, dinner house Irvine. e e p one ex· HOUSEKEEPER. Live MAIN'TEHAM~ $380 per monlh. $50 cuh Crest & Maui St HB M .1 T -d E Ii /l · Miniurnum requirement, . · · . ature women ues1 re op wages pa1 . ngmc exper. pref'd. Apply Vic· p/ le acctg ypmg nee. a Mas ters Degree. in. Refined lady English MECHAMICI deposit required. Call 536·3262 home & office cleaning. Steamers, eng painters, H l 361 Cliff Call· 540-7800 -fti.1 d R r .,,.., • .,.,L Ask for Circula-tor ugo nn, · F luency in E"nglish, s........,ng, 6 ys. e s re· Experience in n1Ain· ":""'.._ FOUND: Samoyed mix Re. a s o ~ab I e r al cs' buffers & polishers, up-Dr, LagWla Beach. Mon· Counter girl Dutch, German, & In-quired. NB. 673-4.256 tenance installatiOJ°"and uon. dog, ma!C w/collar, vie sausractton guaranteed. holstery shampooers, FriJ.5pm. A 1 0 :.r ---------CdM. 833•8830 days ext Phone&t2-3460 any hour. check out, pick· up & de· Part/Full time doneslan. t east l HOUSBC•ERS repairs of produqion MOTOR ROUTI
live ...... Apply al Carpe t layer helper Demiu Cleariers CdM years exp. Walling to equipment. Per ml a nt Dm .-y 5l5 HatpW..ted 7100 ., travel extensively. No exper. nec .. Xlnt posltion.Mustbew ing a.1•-
2059 Harbor Bl, CM needed. Exper. COUNTER Ci"rl/Printing 7cn ,.,.,.,1 benefits includ. sick pay. to work overtime. X· To deliver large motor FOUND: Poodle mix, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64 030 _.v,, long tail, Apricot w/gray __ 5-1 645•3646 shop, Npt. Bch. Opening Bayview Con v. 2055 cellent benefits nd route In S. Laguna and
patches , 548·1095 or Acctng BkkpngAutoTransMechanic CMlWASHHIELP avl. im med. C all: EXEC.Sec.toPres.Xlnl Thurin,CM642-3505. working conditio s. Laguna Niguel. Must
962-85.211 TEMP0111'RY Orange County's largest o F 644-8233forappt. SH. fine opp., must be Includi ng 11 p id have gooddrivingrecord . ..._ c N ed 3 verl8. /time.· abletolakecharge.Start HOt]SEKEEPER Must bolld •'d anddependable 11Uto.$SO Register Today to work lransrrussion °· e s ApplyMetroCarWasb Delivery Driver & saJ.open.645-2667 spea.k, read & write ays, company P•1 ca.ah deposit required. Found while fluffy cat ap· on various accounting & q u a I ~ f I e d R & R 2950 Harbor 81, CM Production Worker. $3 to Spanish & Eng. $525 mo., group insurance plfo, i
prox. 4 m06 old. Mesa bookkeeping ass ign-mech~rucs. Top wage!\ & start. Call&t2-2256. Fashion Artist-design & 40hr wk. Apply to: Calif. sick pay benerits, llbet For informat on call Verde area. Days ments. Work close to benefits for exper. pco-CASHIB handpalntfabricsinac-Emplymt.Dev.Dept.for vacation benefits, e · 6'2-4321. ask Cor Harry •,
979-2'731• eves MS-l304 your home. Figure pie w/own tools. 962-6655 Full/p/t. Resp person DBJVaY PERS OH cordance with onental direction. Advertisement Call for appointment r W ey or Don Wllllams
Found: Black male Lab Clerks lo Sr. Acroun· ovr20, will tm, gd pay Part-Time. Regular fashion design & current paid for by employer come to personnel om · Newport Stationers lnc.
lants needed thruout METRO CAR WASH work, pleas ant l'ondi· fashion trends. Must 9AM·4PM Mon-J:'rl. needs theatre i\cket ~~~ ~e~~~~:~~. toe. Orange Co. AYON 2950 Harbor, C.M. tions. Chance of adv an-create designs from own Hsekpr for 2 adults, pvt complete appllcauon. cleric lor mut.aaJ agency.
-Robert Half's cement. Apply In person. ideas. 2 Yrs ex per: 40 rm/bath. Refined lady CAUFOAM Full or p/time. Pbooe fol'
Found: Red Mini female Accountemps a.BUCAL FREE Coast.Office Equlpment. Hrs per wk. Wed-Sun. ~ prelers good home 16661 VoaK_,..,. appt.557·9212asldorMr.
Ooxie, vie Bushard & SOOS.Main,Sle501 Chri1tma1Earning1 Specializing in all 2121HirborBlvd,Costa SIO,OOOper year.Siamor tohighwages.644-8819 l"IM West.
Yorktown, 118.640-7329 No. Tower, Union Bank leCJl-How clerical, secretarial, l'tlesa,Calir. Laguna Beach, 384 Insurance Property & 557·1110 -........ -----... -..n----Jn The City of Orange For • vou sales & administrative Forest Ave Ste 22 A E 1 n.Wlp llp ar-•ery FOUND: Blk Lab puppy, 714183.s-4103 ~ " jobs. DEUVERY MAN-Ear-Laguna Bea~h Ca Ms' Casualty Secretary. X· ~ Mature resp. adult for M 1· & J REPRESENTATIVES usOFHJOIS ly AM,. Los Angeles . • · . · per. nee. Xlnt benes. n......rt.itys--a..y•_,, tu All dell II t vie • agno ia n -Beat time to establish .._ Ti N C M &man Kat1yuen.yongv1l, FredS James Insurance -1"1""' ....,._, •• ear.., v •. Ill d1anapohs, H.B. 968·0803 Call 540-6055 Coastal mes route, . . . 494-4443 • h C 11 bavetrans.IM0-2754J. -_ Accoun\Sreceivablebook-customers . Interested ? ' .area,$350mo.546-4481 · Bkr, Lag Be • a Maintenance-Lite, days. •
LOOT:blkLabmale.V1c. keeper. Apparel import Call 540-7041 or Zeruth per::;.n&Ageney, 2790 FOOD Processing P/T Mauri ne Bradl ey, Apply ll31 Back Bay NIGHT CLERK Good
Pomoba St., C.M. Nwpt company, Costa Mesa . 7.1359 Har • DEIJVERY of parts & eves, 6-8 hrs, 3 day week. 494·1087 or 549·3058, Drive,'Newport Beach. salary. Apply in penoo
tags.645-8648 " Must. have experience, aerical, p/Ume, typing, yard cleanup person for Irvine.-Hvy tilling. EOE. only. All Baba Motel.
Classiried ads sell ·big able to take off trial BABYSITTER wanted In fillof , telephone answer-trucking co. Transtates, S3.50/hr. 751·2600 22fiON'ewport Bl. C.111.
items, small items or balance. Send ri:sum~ to CdM hme, required to log, 31 bra per week. O.C. ;~i, ~l~estrninster, Food ~lee AHt INTERIOR DESIGNER ManageCmARentE£R MUaSIS AIDIS
any item. Just call Box l3l. c/o Daily Pilot stayovernlgbts attimes. Sales OUlce. Call Exper'd pro[esalooal to &ou-••s
642·5678. P.O. Box 1560, Costa &IG-5143 714-U-~ D&IVlltY Sultsfftvh work In lg. Anaheim -
Mesa, Ca. 92626 Messenger/Courter On·Call Basis. 2-2~ hrs furniture s tore selling UIUlf'(MENJ XJsl-~t benBaelitsi ln~!!d· Penonclk 5350 Ad ertis" BAKER Ellp'd or appren-a.aKTYPtST 5 ..inu ~ ... P/Ume am or per day. $3.10 per hr. Ap. many name brand". mlUUMI ..,.~y, yv ew \,ARO.,., v ang u·ce Call btwn BAM •-Trainee pc;>eition for Bill· ~ .... 1 t J · u 1r· d " """'" urin .......... <>CM: ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLASSIFIED noon· .• ""·1410 . "'ing Clerk in Insurance ppa. Know Orir Co. spyh o, Dryintel tn291e41 Prefer designer OPPORTUNITIES -~----·"----------Drinkingproblem? PH-...ES"LES ....., Co. in Nwpt Bch. Good 835-3149btwn8&10AM c oo ut r c ' w/prevlous furniture MUltSISAIDIS Call Alcohol Helpline Vl"ll. "' Banking typing akilu. Salary to ~ve, Irvine. (714) store exper. Opply to • Experiencedoal)'.
2-1 hrs a day 835-3830 Good earru~1 pot~nlial TB1Bt p /TIME $500 & &ood company DENTALMSISTANT Equal Oppor Employer work In Newport Beach At Jack a. T11e'lox _Sat & SUo laJD4pm, Sat
PREGNANT? ~~ 8P~,v~t~~ti~~ We are seeld~g a benefits.~ R.D.A.elllible,orthoof-areaatlerlatofyrwben ,...., .... __ ,., '"Sun 8pm-8em, Abo.
Caring confidential · ood customer orietttecl 1ndlv. flee. chainide exp. pref. GENERAL OFFICE branch wlll open In ~lht dut,y Kon thn& Fri
counseling & relerral. sal~ +comm, g co. ror p/lime teller position a.ERK TYPIST. canon Newport Beach. Lite typing & sales. Full ·westclllCPlua. Jack In 'lbe Box bas im-41>m-1am. Elderly men Abortion. adoption & benefit.s. Good typin& on in our N.B. olc. Recent Business Machines, has 640--0121 or part time. 557-0825 Mlftetf'°I ,........,. mediate openings for ""'1 patienL Call collect
kee.ping. IBM elec .\ypewrller & teller or cashiering ex-opening for a maturef 77.._5313 management trainees in •Q1327S-SOOO.
APCARE 5'7·2563 good spelling es.senUal. per. prerd w/litetyplng. energeltc lndlvidua DENTAL San Clemente, San Juan ---------
Must ~e a mb1t-lous , Xlntsal &worklna con· w/atleast3ynp~vloua RECEPTIONIST GENERAL Capistrano, El Toro, HUISISA-.s UMDAlrVICKI persuasive, & llke peo-ds.Applyat exper. DutJes vaned & Coltalfesa S-48-7a74 Janitot'Couple,daya,llv-Lacuna Beach , and Ir~
o.tcllMatacJe ple. MARINERSSAVINGS interatlngw/aomeover· LABORERS ing qtra. Apply, 1131 DanaPointareu. Jlfeeded lo give tender
For the,_ of It! rot APrroft~LL 1515 WestclillDr, NB timet pc»slble. Ri'!:': DINT AL RECEPT Ba.ck Bay Dr, N. B.. dST. M, .... 'Gll!a loving care to lhe elderly Servin 110 c iane ' Equal Oppor Employer nea appearance, a Exp. In appt scheduling, Needed Immediately ~ ~"~ -patients. Wlll traln ga range o. {714)537·7510 accuracy. Salary com· •-•-M .. nl d lin Long & short t.erm as· JANITORIAL, laun· SIO 40"'$12 310 yn llfi d 1 835-7313 or (213) 628·1354 BARTENDER mensurate w I abiHty. "'IUB· Ue• e Soy ea g s lgnments. Holiday & dromat cleanup, retired ' i.r ' "' qu e peraonne •
132.61Century81,G.Crv. Experienced Call Personnel ror appt. w/public. a l open. vacation Pa Y . couple pref. Flt Vly-~wb.ileyoaJ~All •MICHELI.E'S* AK.night-Ridder Call Bob,S79·75SO 556-4'700 543-9'31. ut •• 7 5058 MAMAGl!ll ~ avail. Apply 1..s
Out all-. ,_ _ Hos pitalization plan nestm.area ..... -$ll,OO"'Slt,760ya a-rtor N 8. c massage Newspaper 3191 RedhUJ Ave. CM. i.r ......,... ' • 10AM·2AM 7314'62 EqualOpportEmployer BicycleMechanic needed. DeaEngr/Del to$18K &alleb%S":£]1all JANIT<16, part-time, _ ... .,.-_-.-lSIS--AIDIS----.
Previous expe r. Rita COCKTAIL AccowrtinCClerk $750 IY.J•l ~' janitorial & lite maln· APPLY IN" PERSON 3-ll,exper.pref'd.<:ou.. 18~~~=eal ~e. (213) 436-8151 ext Leaml:~n;,arsut!most ~c~!eperat~U~ d6twf t ~~~~:;~r,try ~~~·1J>fr.f>.J~ ~~b Conv. Rom ..
SanClemente.Fullyllc. }$SEMBLER ltHDaYWORKBS. ex~iUng, g lamorous, lrvioePersonne11,fency lHIC...,.Drtn LMALSICY 5 P ?tf AT THE --------
Forappt.492·7296 W/traln, bind e ry bighlypa1dprofess. Day •E17thCoata esa 546-4741 Sm. business UUgatlon ANAHEIM SHERATON ...SISAIDll
DANCEOFFUN TRAINEES helpers, f/Ume, perma· ar eve aesalom. Place· &lit.eZM • "2-!410 (AcrossFrom firm lo Npt Cntr seeks HOJ'EL, 1015 W, BALL 3ShiftaHall.
Bta nude lirla dance le Needed.Immediately nent position. Immed mentuslaL Goodjobop----· OrangeCo.Alrport) exper. lecal secy. Must RD, ANAHEIM. UCLVMPJT.
rap aeuloo. lOAM to Long&: short term as· openlno.Call833·9811 por. ' DIETARY Asst. lmmed EqualOpporEntployer have xl nt skills. Orsendbrlefresumeto: 3·i1.r:30 shift. Appt,,.
2AM Mon·Sat US N. algoment1• Holiday & Cal714/751.flt4 opeulngs. Lido Conv: Shorthand req. SabmJt ed•904' aak for llts EucFRUEdEAS~.,559-.ro,!W/AD v acation Pa Y. IOAT IUILD& So. Calif. Cocktail ar., 1555 Superior Ave., GIRLS resume ln C91lfiden~e to J.LSMITH 11.,cson, Put llld• ~ n Hoapttallzalion plan Mew,...._tUute WaJtreasea. Inc.· 17922 NB 646-7764 Ad 1987, D1llly Pilot, ~.Hotp,•flaPhlP
REl..AXJNGMASSAGE av,ailable.Slarttodayl LooldngForExper'd Sky Park Bl, Ste C, . . Ownyour~bu~~ P.O. Box 1560. Cosia ~,,a .
BobJamee·Udtuseur II I Electrictans Irvtne,Ca92'1l• -~~" ~:lf.t.642-24S5. l v. Maa.CA,92621S flJODMAlER, IN& ,Nurstni aide• aonae
__ 0ut_._ca1_1_a._e._ot_-s11_1 _ ~ •] llt ~initallers -COOKS~ ;;ti1saerv1ce.6'2-3482 meia&. ..LaaALSICalTBY ASUbeU!laryot ~1roc4ilableclrem..
" Pltimbers Breakfast, Luncb, din· N.& area. Oen. Prac. ex-, Ralston Purt.oa Exp· prd'd but oot ~
• I · ,. Carpenters ner. £xper'd. Appl)' in Electronics per. 9'75-0lU. Company qu{r I!~-~ve in. « out ..
J ... !,~ 31 C ..... Drl•• T~ pay, itlnt working person, Ma Barker's Come one, come all! "UARDS P.O.Box'183 P/T.-.ms ~ 546-47~ t cOods & lood benefit.. 4 Restauran~ 212 E. lTlh Rapidly expanding com· a LMAL SCTY SanDte10. Ca. 92112 Part/Full/Thne, bite or· no W. 1 ltll St. (Acron From . n.y week. ~"N St. C.11. puy needs cood people: Full It p/Utne. Work_ any Lefal PoallLOft avaJL in An Equal den 4r rn..U. cleliveriea Ml.,.t leecll OraftleCo. Airport) APPLY IN PER;:,v Aaembler tmes, t hlf ahllt. N.B. area. Unliorm H.B. Law Firm. Some ()pportunjty Employer Ave $H7 '*" br.·icmi •
You are ;,~inner of 2 F.qualOpp«Employer ~~4SE,f.J.i'$'?1'8,sA F~j~~-~U pln&/receivlng cler • ~ ~d olrN. Tt'elleph eicper. ln Utt1.uc.?!1Pref. bave reliable ear • freetkkelawortbSlOo nN -........,~ ._ ..,. thin rum lab, bonders, • car req . a co. Salary open. 841-w.1 No MAN GEMENT ~ Wel:ndA.QIQ~
HOUDAYOHICI AIM!mbelen Bookkeeper, full charge, DonfGraPpL-..etl die attaclaera, as· w/top P•Y • benefl\a. employ.ment acenclea PkLEPERsoN Fplhr BrUI~ C'O •
.tthe 11!:1 ...,....__.._. P/Tor full Ume for buay ' COOi I' HmbleN~ Sn1pectors, callsa:M«139am-2pm needcalL Elec. needs p/Ume •II· 754-fA71.
eu ... -~'"'""""-CPA olc tn N.B. Exp In 4 "" h electrical in1pectora, , .. _.._. al '"• 1--------no,,...,o:n. IXP ... CID aecretarlal *""' req'd. EQer' oaly. All ti Uta. failure enal71l1, teat llAlRS'1'YlJST eQjoy the uouoaca.aK IOC. .... WUUlet eaupp.,,. PMT'IN • ~ON JlapldJf arowtu lnifte s~tary open. Call Good1=ylabeoeftta.AI: tecbntclan, d{!.amlc relulnl profaaJon of NwlltBcb 541-1'11 ·::~ capltalhed, $Ule.\YOMl.Y Dee.rnb~an.11~ company JM• lmmed M»14lor640-'77M ~~.~:~.:.~ bim.EDPopera b. 1 lkln care. Xlnt aalon. LIVE·IN compenton Jlrt.iettodrop-.U.iOt
Pree 'J'Scketa aood for openinp IA tM tollow· Be• Compan7 ~~ our 'r ~ housekeeper nhrJ llaa•r•ment Po11t1001 ~ ~Pdot 8o cant...
Dec. Htb or aut lna: IOYS·•I~ ~:T:i. e, medical ---~.d·-. Penooable open. Prefer cultured Sal• eicper. nee. lnq. E .._ ba¥9 •• • larfe :perfo1'mancH. CaJ, •RudSoldertnc U.llyean ot-... 111.,... 1ST COOK Eitp'd. only~ • 1 c ~-, ....,. 1... wo.oao •bt• 10 traveL PocoCandla,401'uhlon atallOft wqoa + oo4 •••-Mft, est. au, to •Wirewn-'•• !:Lcnworlr. OMala new Pall time. Pft. Clu&. EDYJronmtftl• om· attrac.tltie "llto typ._ ,,_., .. Cali"' .. """-'a..uc, ltland.Newport.Beach. drltlnl ncord. C•ll _. .,,.,... ....._..fortbeDal --.. -..... .... ma1lteetlon11 make1 Dlnner Houto exp. pre-·-1 un·-"B ~ ..... -,.. c:WID,.._Ue.t4tt. •cceufull appUcenb 11 ~ wlill ~ u:;""'S::: ••--.,..._. alltam UliD fllm. hybrid rd. APlllY vtctor Huso 1oocl drivln•. re~ord. MAMIC-.sTS ~ ~~ nllrQ'. * * "'8 have 1ood muaal edaalt ~. Kern -~le compo-IM. 381 ClUI Dr. Lq. NoNmoter. No beevy F/tlme for busy talon s+or "°" wu.ualllf'
...... --.. dmerl\Y • pottttte -to •--weet or COOIW.IAD MllUfsamata. Bch Mon-Fri, :t-5PK ~~~ ~ ~1 Rlcbard ObtJlette. JOO t-! .. "'x •-r OIVNJOUl'OWD_...,...... can-do attitude, 1'otk :=...... r-11 :;;-.) .... -. Ll l t d We an•• ~ual 0p. a;vw1-·-~arDr,NB' x..•-~ _.....
«WW«.No monthly hoora 8AK•,:IOPM. n·-00-0 -.0-.... p ... m.-(tt•) m • m •"a • ftPllftlt'I l!mployer Hotel btwn5610PIUorappt. ........ _. Pl e d•"• evea 6 ·, charlt· Tbe Telepbcme Salaey, oeea. company .,, 0 e eldbt. $1 hr, C .... 1,........__ c.a.-u-.~ ..,. ExporF.! bet ~-A&laatlc,L..8 . .,.sd~Callorap. •atn. • ..,.,. Call GoodMa,...Ap. ~Caltforappt: Mt. ~_.,, ---~ Llv•lD waoted. Privat. wvwoman~earefor =· ID ·eo <213,_._ ~lo.,._. Cdled. , r. pncm. ouw ..... earwm.,.,. 811-PttkY 1""°" for room. Oen~ vtew. kidl. •Pl 3 Is 5, COM t!~ £0 •••i a.a.u ettaara•• 11411 ao.t.D1e.JSUmaJ1to. day abiA. Good frlnl• Boerd +aalarJ aNa. llln. 31 lira/wk. _ _. ·-PIOC.IUIU'I GAR.AG£ SAL2 .. In llecArtllwii~tntM:' A. ......... Ofl*'f«ad· aueo·•ma . SUI. ... driff, have m ...... &. ,, • ~LD* .1, •• D'.A.'P.A.l..U--' U..D.U,PUotbriJlllMIP-llt'nlldlam6..,_. ~ VHHrDeDt. Apply tn ' ·, niferww.17W1111alfer 1 :;:v QdlWM...-. 'i ,..,._ ~ 0'J'Wufta.'l'oplaceyour . , _ aia11ruldal*'s, P!lll'IOft&oNancy, 2-4pm. SELL Idle ltema with a 5~ • TrWie JOW ... llilti .__CaJll .• f.,,._,1 ...... A'ff:1"S
1
drawln1 cent. flume PSad wMt ,pa~ ID ......... !! .. ' Sb.raton Hot~l. 4H5 .DallyPllotClaHlfiedAd, a·...:.••~ '!..•" .1oo4l--;..W.,tt'-
._ --It' I ~ ..... ~ .... -•. ,_ JWJ,~-~ _1.a.e....-.~-'-L MacAltbur!vd,N.B. ~ --Mt ,,ta.5171 ~ecla4;f1DB!1 .. • . . ~· . ... • •• -~" ••v-' -.._ ~ 'i .. . -·
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~ .......... !~!! J!rlc:t-v. o.c.t-nbtr te. 197'1 \ CAA. v PILOT. :.~
lt4 f.J:JI •'
C11untry Cl Yb C:oav, Uoa., L • ..
CHE It a y o'l Jt L 8 ,....... IOIO ,...... IOIO ..... ,. ''IOtl ~ ... SllowM CRUJSEll. rfnden, •Pt· •••••••• •••••• ••• •••• •• •••••••••• •• ••• • ••• • • •• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ffM£TAIJ£S TECHl"'IN if~ & Inter, t1Ak, ex. oond. STOltEWJDESALE Ulbt ~ flniah rorreo Oa.rqe Sale: CbrlllmH ...,_ llllft SUlO. ll"rW802 Nft 6 UNd turn. appl'a, table It 2 ~ ~blc:1, $30. aifta, al .. ware. SatlCM. '" TJPSJS mlac. Willoa'• Baraatn $ta-.a 392\ScotUdaJc, JrY. • ELEC J :.o..t aMea'a 10..pd: 26",!3" .. ML.IS 1 Bl ~pated for tha up • • eW.tlry ZI" frame.. Oat 3-whlr Nook. SU It 814 W. ltth, l:DD&A·BED Blue Grt'en Owner movin&I MVat aefl . ~ eomtn• bollda.v•. t;urn 1'r11n1ducn de11lao & ._.,._......... blke.49J.87lhfl8 CM.80-1130lc54l-3353 Vlll)'l,xlntoon4.JiSS. evet)'thio1W.weokond.
YOUI IMCOM. top -on lemporury 1111 CIA.Llbratlon I"' H.t.or we1v1.. * *' IUY * * 144).0327 1'\tm .• PoOI lbl, '11 tl4 $' •• s•'SS ii Sn-roll with omce Brrortboard1na Bo)110.Spd Schwinn bike, Porsche. vw part.a. "''
,
-~ overic;.d. Call todily for Pos1t1on E·M A11be~bly I•--------2'" wbl base. '80. Good 1.11ed Furniture fc Davenport, lood eond. Oat St. CM SaUa&an on·
TW ~ T'll!!oal lnuneduit~ pl:at't'nt1mt Senti re11umeor call. WHOLESALE 5444455 :Jf'o!.sn~~~o!,. will :.S.~~-SlOO or b6t orfu · _1.Y_._&U-4 __ 1_12 ____ _
SundowR "'~ Ltd. Tour. Ridden once. Cian .. .., m~· ne .. 8 • side rtlriM/f...-aer cop. Hous.W.~u ~o~ off1·ce • ChuckEsLrudu TOTHETRADE ManslOspeedSchwlnnLe MAST•SAUCTIOM Lov-' Ca -'b .. ofa Movlnal Clblon 1lcle by
!t. CO&J.alST'f08'n'S 1 d 15292 i;;."'Cwca not tell trom new siis. '4M"6&eJS.'625 down cu1hlon1. 3 pr l)t.'l'tooe, llke new, itJU s ·----------1 Gueranleed H()urly 0 over oa 1un.Bt·ARDE IMC. 828-9348 caC!~PAJD m1tcbln1 drapvtu, yr1 Jen on warranty .• m 1u9ms Wuie Plus Bont.t• 5 30 J833 E. 17th St. Ste 122 H.I. (7141193-7509 ---------• ""1n eu1tom miadc Glori a Abo like new 4 c:uatom
H,Ullfl LR pm to 830 pm .. Cu ll 557-0061 SantoAna,Ca9't701 10Speedboy'sbtke20"ln For1dl\lfTVod,f\lm,anti· Vaoderbllt fabric, xlnl bu $too1a',_ curio l>t-aJ .. __ ,,_ .. ,.P"lrm"n .,,..,A.,....orcometo".,.E. 3723BlrchSt,NB (714)835-4692 Armolre, 1800 Oak , mintcond1Uon,$40.Call Q\ICll,.cr 195T41S3 conct._,,. Monvaarare -•--""·ah ·-·•n"' • " ~ ~ handcarved. One-of-a. ' -· # ·h rabl.oet W/nuI"nn.. "'..., : ' ~~ = :w;k~r~l~il-17th __ St-:.,::-COll-=-::la:M:-:-c--a_. --,,_ .... ~;;;;;;;;___ Equal Opportunity kind. Sac. s:ns. 5'8·5441 898-S2SO. lxctleRt 61ftlll ~~i~e:1:i1~:~~~ ~:~0: ooly. MOat& .~ Uain. 761.-.U. SALES tt _ __.......... Ir-Of 1£mployer M/F Antique fire exlin.~uisber GJ~1..!.,0Sr !AP9~d8 bike 5~ ft. Ion s cue tom delier, etc. •99·110l YARD Sale! TooJ.t. anl· ~" •· c ~~~~~~~~I 1 be _,......,.. .... "°' Podded PottabJebarwllh qs appliance•• Sery~t .. PLUMBING SALES PROMOTJON &L.calh toSl8,000 -amp, aut con • cop-"° mulUplex lW\U, 8 track Lge Ch1na Cabinet, do· reirlri,. 433 Boaonta.
Experienced dtaln· BACKGHOUND-Pro EmpfoyersPayAlll''e<'s TtMphoMSalH per/ brass, pro 1930. · &tW11table-1llare bulll· corators deslan, Pecan CdM SatltSUnall day
•• cleaner wanted. J.-:arn sportaopptyfoe11omeonl' Li1 ReindeQiAgcncy Wont to make money? 536-<MIB.1. JTALVEGA, Nouvo jna-phaa t~o cu1tom flnuh.•a.la11doon,adJ. • •
·" 1400, pe)-wk . Cu I I wllh advertilhJi & ticket 4020 81rcl ,Ste lt>i Cun ~ou 11e,ll on the Armolre, English circa rr:~r~a'm;yoi:u~:l~t· wrotllbt fron bar 11loola. thelves, Int. ll&htlng. Sunday Dec 18. l4JJ Keel
4!J8..4G1between8 am & s s ales abil~. Proven Newport Beach 833-11190 phone. Top S 1n our bual· 1870. Magnificent cond. nu p~rts 24.,.. .. 1325, Sharr>! 581·'7446. Cost ~.1ell, '5()0. PP. Dr. CdM, rerrig, Connor·
Pm. ~=~~e~e~~l•n~l'e~.'r~~: CallforAppt/F.&tub '1;5 nes11. 646·3030, ask lor 8'2"x'7 '8". Moving. f1andrialO·&pd adconi Medlt cabinet Sl4S, hide· 5119-4'7'1'7 ganothermlsc.
Printlna/blndery person l e rest In a fl nan(' 1 a I Hay. $8,000/bst orr by Sun, $60. SS7·0250 ' · a·bed, queen az, oak Moving. car part.a haehld
'" P/T, Mon-Wed. Apply pack1tgeforrtght.~rson. SECRETARY TELIPHOHESALES 12118/'1'7. Please call for dteuer w/beveled mir· CHregeS. IOU goods. 8·3:30, Sat/Sun, j 1660 Placcnt.fa Ave. CM, Submit resumes to H. Newport Center I.aw Tired oflhe routine'? appt, 7se-0t59 pp 1~~~.21~'.:0/! ~::vf:!: ror. Must aell now. Aft •••••••••••··~··••••••• 20131 Marina Ln. HB
Wed. Thun1, Jo'rl, 9·5 Jaffe, HOO Quail, Su Ile r1rm Some legul ex pr ThtJ>job Is for you! 3 shell open hutch. oak Call 631·1Z35. Spm. 845-'11S7. PUWC AUCTIOM Cange Sale, coins to
-PRODU CT I ON / lOl,Newporl&ach,Cli. pref.butm1ghl conslder CullUsNowAl buffet, marble wash New custom made MANYFINEITEMSOJ<: ~pemualtellmany
MATERIAL CONTROL _92660 ____ ._. ____ , trainee. Intelligence, 833-1095 stands. end lbls, game 10-speed racer, man'•· wrought lron barkarl ESTATE JEWELRY. sporting good Items, Cl.EllKJ Tra~.Exptt shortha.nd "typing re TIM~·LlFE lblw/4goldpaddedchra, brokenbandbrake.$35. wlth2,iassshelvea&8 ART OBJECTS. AN· motorcycle & some
•• deslrl!>le, but not man· SALES quired.CallRuthllraicr LIBRARIES bookcase. steamer 900-3836 bottle holders·$7S; 11QUES, FLNE FURN., household llems.•2209
>< dalory. The following 64il 2071 EquaJ Opp Emplyr m/f trunk, nusc. 642-2262 USED BIKES Highback casual cbalr ETC. PHONE FOR IN· MlnerSl, C.M. ~-•
.,. wi.11 quaUly: Typing ILICTROt41C Secrela-r-y/_l_r-ne_n_e_e-ded Oak dra fll ng dak . Recond. 814.Y, seU, trade. ~~f:verln1)·$35. ~~ BROCHURE. Selling Ilia & Hen to buy ~: t:"~~:hc:n ll.~~~~ OltGAM SALES wllh xlnt t yping. gd Tele~ne Sales Hoosier, oak & wal dska. Cycle &C-0. 2488 Newport Ours: froelle11 refrla. ~iftels machines, ex-JJ r G JI! S 1' C 0 M · phone personal~to de· We will train. Earn Playhse.642·73'7 Blvd. C.M.842·7910 IEDS--IEDS Loads of wet suits, nr-nu washer, 4.Q'er, dinettes. ~ )lll'.4'accurat.eool0key. MISSION/GUAHAN vek>p legal & ag card Chrt:.tmas money . Anliq. Pool Table, Slate c .. ,...& Herculon den furn, Ing .•71 Pinto, bookcaees.
_ 1Hfh, m ust possess T F. E, PRING E machiee exper. Call Salary and commission. Top.Ballretum.Leather .,.,...... 1030 !Uttrets&BoxSprtna: boybed,Hotpolntrefrtg, de1k1, dressera, 1ofaa.
b ailc arithmeti c BENEFITS.Selllnh1gh 644-8150 • Citll . 1Pocket.s.CallSS6·58Sl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only$4'1.aset dishes,2setaor11asseli, recliner. twn b•ds, 0 , bowled"e le capabiltly. tramc 1hopprng malls. ---------631 0337 ask for Don Blk 01 Solabed.9onlyJ U8. Kirby vac" Sat 9·1 at ooolera, m~c. Eastblurf •
... Tel~c. considerable Some ability to play the SECRET ARY · ESTATE SALE!!' ympui OMl·MD, Calltoaeeifanylen 2CXJ71 Bayview, s.~ Hts. NB, 10.S. 752-7183 i l I organ req'd. Previous T .. eohoM/Recept 50mm U, 200mm 3.S. SOFABEDCITY &muchmore.
c.n:i't':,, n~~ to:~ro ~~ sales eicper. useful. but Lile bookket>pmg & typ-New PTT 'telephone An l q . Ch I n es e elect mlr drive, Ml8 con· 22S1Harbor Bl, CM Paintings, t oya, boot1 ..
we will tr11in you. Call ing, must be mature, system or PBX oper. Porcelains,. furn., em· lrol gnp. S500/bst o!r. 6SH580 Girl's bike, int doors. quality items. 673-0444 ,. customers, vendors & M L 89 neat & attradivc. Con brolderies. Iron/brass 494·'1'706 · power -mower, h edge Sun 9.5 19 Beacon Bay ~·parent compan y . 1 r. ynn, 3·6531. tacl645·2265 t;xp. pref1'd. Type 45 beds, screens, Cbina. ,..~ KING size Waterbed trimmer, patio rurn, NB
2 Peraonabl• telcphnncl-------~~~-·I wpm.&Su ury dep on 49J.~76 _. 1035 w/frame, liner & new tools, AC/DC gen, lOr • -----
personality & m11nncr ts S l LESGIRL SECRET ARY skills exp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• heater. $80. Blk Leather lrl/bls compressor & HorMI 1060
., ims>OrtanL Cull Thinltne A Cllll8.1:1·981l PERSIAN kittens, Cl''A lllde-·a·bed w/mattreH. misc. 'awn ing, camp ••••••••••••••••••••••'". Ptlfn (Santa Ana) .. for attractive Tennis •-Untma.t re'"utered Showqual1ly • .,,, 6731820 R I t d A b divblon Qf town Jordu~ Shop in Corona del Mar. 'Out6tanding oppty to join Tow 1'ruck Ori vcrs ex· -•..,..· 6"' sJs.S308 · .....,. • eves. gear, Sat/Sun. 1929 Con· e g s ere t e
.. Co. ' ... ema oca~ualout Must hli ve expr & refs. the excltlng world of ~r·n. Top pay. Apply, luy•Aati;: Ba Id b tinental CM Chestnut, 3 yr old
\.. d ca•A...:~ .. In the b""'p1tal1· G&WTowin", lOOO Irvine JANE'S AHTI ES n-1040 3. pc ssett eo & w t • Stallion. Green broke. ~door f urniture >. Max1oe640.4172 ..... u.,.. ..... .. .,...,. k.1Nbedrm1et$8S ~-·G a SalAI Nick h l ti I ly industry . Above Ave,NB642·12S2 ~uy, sell, lake consign.••••••••••••••••••••••• 7 ~ · """" ara.e .... Brent s ow po en A · -71'·9'J9.0l3l _ Sales Lad y, mature. l & -ments, fu~llure, china, OOGTRAINING 52 nacks to furn. Store $1500. firm. 6'15·8180 r average yving pre-TRAJNEt;s .Ladles u1 et 157SN C t Ev ;. P/111f~OFCASSIST Hallrpark Gift Shop. Hr:. vlOUS secretarial ex per Mn~·· about i'mprovi·n" crystal, silver, unusuol Your Place or lt11ne Solid walnut rolltop desk,8 eqwyp.Satc.only · oas , __ es_. ______ _
-Hra ... w/llte book· inc Id some n 1 g ht s . ed XJ .. ~ r l & .... """' " decorator Items, jewelry John M-... 'n .. A.,,N\CO 48" S-roll, beaut. orig. • · • -.. reqwr · nl ""ne 1 s your present standard or ., .. ....., """"" Reg 8 yr old Palomino qtr
Jceepln1 exper. Xlnt typ. ~~-7__ wor1 dikmg co_nd1tlons. App-living through concen· M-.fri I 0.4 oond. $1200. 640-82tle FREE horse show ltalned.
-ing le organization al SALESMAM Y rect to lraled part-time work Sat 11·5 Lhasa t\pe08 .Brown Jordan 40x60 oval $1100. Aft Gpm, ~-6756.
skUla req. $.380/mo. Send Ex per in elect ronica So. Coast Ploia Hotet with people? Call Ex· 2721 E. Coast Hwy. table & 6 chalrs. Orie. Garaee Sale sign1 while · resume to Y.S. P Inc . 666 Anton Blvd. CM ""''live Women's Council ,...-....:-....._ ....... M• Yorkshire Terriers quantities lasl. 645·7221 Appy Mare, trained, gen· 3J03 Harbor 81\'d St~ nel<l. Needed lo cover ~2500 EOE M'I'' """ ~..,.. BeaelemJx price $187!5. 1st $500. c~uRY 21 Ue. $400. Yearhng fill)', -D-JJ,C.M.92626 S F. ,·alley area. Xlnl -------· 640-S292ext 4t08 673-5752 Mlxedkllten.s takes!840-8208 lliOl"'llll Paudlt bloodline, cull
E.O.E. l'ompany benefit s in SECRETARIAL TR.AVB. AGENT rnmalayans EVERYTHING Must go! Westdlff llfflfty 96IMD64
t" .. ttbhshecl local r ep Contraltor seeks office o 1 I I r PARKB'SPETS f'ivecompleterooms! -------d--RIALESTATE t'<lrupany Send resume 1 h d u "" e sa es, com!". Schoolnse clock, cir<:a Fri, Sat & Sun. Front Beaut. realslere Ap· to Box 59, •;Daily Pilot. cmp o yee wit goo Tra' c! ex per. re q d. 1900. Completely recond. Next lo RALPH'S al S4$-0$46 . Yard Sale, Ul1l. Trailer, paloosa Geldine. Mu st Professional, l1 cense<.1
, !>lllespeople wanted to
complete office ~tarr
Computerized 11:.tini::..,
1 generous comm1ss1oni.
r 0 . Box 1560, Cos la ~retanal skiUs to han Es tab I N B. ugency. SlOO. 714·SS2·'839 Ford Rd. N.B. 640-0080 rJtee '6ble •uw60 d,,.a. 6'. Windows. Bird Caoe ~ee lo apprec. $600. die typing or conlral·t:.. PleW>e rall !Wt-7371. ""' .. ' -" ' ... • .. --· Mesa. Ca. 92626 1 •. b 11 d color. aood condition, 3'h, 4'w. Stove, TV's .. 10' -~
SALESMAN
Plumbing Department
48'llra per wk. Sat & Sun
a must. Exper'd. Apply,
Kcrm Rim.a Hardware
2ii68 Harbor Bl. CM
proposa !>"" t mgs an TD•VB. "'GE.._.T Chns.tmas Gifts-Beautiful Poodle les Stnn. Ca II t ---------other related dul1c:-. Ex '""' "' " Ant~ues & ong. photo· pupp . u • NO. 546·9'34 · mper, se con ., misc. Jewttry 1070
per.isa plus.Goodwork Expcr'd only for tern-gra .Sat&Sun.ll·".7 dards.AKC,shots,M/I'. 850 W. Wilson, C.M . ••••••••••••••••••••••• d •· 1 u .,.,,, '"'""l Movlna to East Coast. &a.>728.5 mg con 1llons "'i;a ary porary m Jan. Po!ls1ble '-ust, Jrv1·ne. Off Jef· CWU'UJ" .-·----------1 E Call <c7 77 '1 h &.»<: mual sell, furniture &·· WANT D Fr ..,,, ·-l l ,, un . l ru ftllmc J>Oll_.!_S4·15S5. frey Rd & S.D. Frwy. Irish Setter Puppies 9 misc llema. !540-0292 aft Leavini the country• TOP CASH DOLLAR
t. TRAVELTRAINEE 5.'iJ-8544. weeksold.$50.CallaftS, 6:30 everyt Ing must i:io. PAID FOR YOUR 5360068 Baby Grand Plano, Oak
SALES PERSONS, easy l Real F.&tnte Sales People Christmas money. Your
, wanted. Up to 00/101!~ own hours. unique
comm. split. Nwpt l:Jch Crys tal Pris ms, sell
Advance training. Call
for private Interview.
642-5062
Cewfury 21 Crocker
·u1W.19th St., CM SEC 'Y We will train. Rd typing .1.-.11 101'0 · Desk, modern st.yle , Tbl, Chest & Dresser, JEWELRY, WATCHES,
n..-· req non-:imoker, no ex-.,.,...ClftCH Pit Bull 6 months female meta.I w/wood top. $35 •. 'Silver f'latware, "OS ART OBJECTS, COLD. vw company 15 seeking per ne". full travel ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' · • SILVER SERVI CE th l · ' • Re"'~tered ... ,c 646 4716 898·9124 dryer, chain saw, & • an en usias ic sec Y henefils,640·6111,0·5. FRGllT DAMAGF.O .. ~ · ....,. · N · w/good typing & dicta· -----HOTP-OINT SALE. '"'"" alter6&weekends. El t" 1 Sor much more. J Day only, F INE FURN & A • 'd """" egan .uora spray a. Sat Dec 17 32135 TJQUES.6'6-2200
•• 631-0000 themselve:i. Conluct .
CRYSTAL
k:NCOUNTERS
fi42·6342
lion skills to a1 a n ex· Typist, f/l, 5 day week. w. Warner nr Harbor, n 0 x er pup 11 , AK c ma~ch1n1 gold velvet • 1 W S ,
panding scc·ret arial lake ortlerll. some SanlaAna.9'19-2921 Registered. Champion Swivel Rocker, Sq. Virgin a y, 0 • Laa. EMER~LD Rln& "
Recei•ifttM~r service to the C M area telephone l·olleclions. ------sired. glass/wood corree tlb!i. 8 ·1636 neck I ace w I m 8 n y
Mw;tbildependublc&a Call Jim, 546-0606 85 CASHPAlD 847-00lllS wing back chairs. Dec J6/l1th. Tnyic, dlamonds.Exqulslle11et· •. Mature person for rN·
mgr. Manne hardwari•
r~ store. Beach toe.
Nat'I co. w/bcneflts. fo:x.
per. nee. Call B. Mor
rison. 645·1711 Mon lhru
t'ri for appt.
self-starter Pay c•om Mon-l''r1. For Wsb.r/Dryrs/Refng herculor:-sofa & love· clothes, elect gult.ar w/e· tJnp.631•1128,631·1374
SALESPStSOH ~~rate w /sk1ll:. TY p 1 ST I BK p R workingornot9S74J13J Qum Terner. l Yr old, sut, kang bdrm &et, quip mike s tand K d I t
Part-lime. 10AM ·3Prtf . TRAINEE N cw po r l male, AKC papers. lov· lamps. game tbl & ch1'9, rootor~ycle + misc part~ 2 V;4 om e c lush or ma tlispos1llon, gd hm servert wall units. furn, m uic. 10683 t:I diamond ring, Al aa-Mon-Fri. Slcody work. SECY I RECEPT P S.>ach CPA firm. typmg Rec on d i t i on e d more import lhan money storage cotftt tbls, glass Soneto, Euclid/Ward, aets Is round dlamood, pleas;rnt working c·on<h· Good typun. full lime . .iccurucy req'd W/Lram Refngeraters, washers Make ofr. Org cost $200. top dinette mlac F V S.Uer. Same ring sellln~
lions. Apply in person must be personable NB m bkpng. Small office, & drye rs . Freq;hl 955-l9:.I. 0.58&1 • ' · · lo~ally $3500. $1400.
Coust Office FA1u1pment. area. 752-0565, Lorena benefits 714·71;2.0274 • damaged & Model Home Sat ·2pm, Sun lam· 64CMM9
RlCEPTIOHIST 2121 Harbor Blvd, Costa _co_llUJ.l ____ C_IT_IZ-R.a...IS TypisL good 5 ,...11 ..... for returns. Guar/deJ. Allo W'11h Box pup for Dad's s Pc. Bedroom Set, de~ 1pm. Bikes, t.oys, rurn. 'u·-.-.. -odr-----.... .,..-7-5 For Conslructlon Co. Mesa. Ca hr. ~-.on ..... "• 1· t t + pr--t can s-nd """' •tor llne Yellowlo-• .., OCcu•1onal overload, at new app iances a coa """"' ' .. ~ ..,.,. cor · ·•· •c 29435 EdJewood Rd, Near Brookhur1t & You. can supplement hom~ or in off. nr O.C. 10%. DUNLAP'S 10960 only, Call btsn 9·12AM Combo. bureau·deak, SJC495-tBJl. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1 Adams. l!iB. Call btwn 9 SALESPERSONS your present Income by Airport. Flex. hrs. Reply Talbert <at Euclid) FY. M7-86!58 chair. hdbr d, comb. Rea. Moraarunan, b~e &M •-•p ,962·.,..Q" "'-· ..... rienccd. 30"10' com-benefiting other Sr. .,.,.,,,,,.,1.n.-7d "•b1'nel w/._~ .. ahlva•c;an•oE~ALEFrl Sat to ride 4'f drJve bllt
'"#• ...... VVo" LA,.-. H d k CitllCN. Do it HI your lo ud •86. Daily Pilot, ,,.,.,.,,~ ""'"' ays. Miniature Schnauser. ::.:,,./"-lolr.~"AO • kN.B~t.hl~llC 'club ~ade Mor"an ceidl ..... •-.-. ........ IST nuu1on. ar wor ing. b . p 0 Bo lc6o C l AKC l le _.._ Ma"e _,.,. --• ... "~--""'" sell motivated only! Call spare tJme Y visit mg · · " " • os 8 reg 11 r...... 11 • membership $90. 962 ng, Wea tern (710
1 Busy conv. hosp. Front 759-0377 Wll.h your friends. Call Mesa, CA 92626 ISE TRASH Compactor, 5/mookl. SlOO. 963-6381 Want Ad ff~lp? 642· Junlpero Dr. CM 338·1011
desk. Ute t)'ping. Apply, for appl. 64().6453, Senior WAITRESSES excellent cond. Sl50. Sootliab Terriera, 1 male, .,.---------_1_44S_Su--'-pe_n_or_A_ve_._N_B__._1~~o~~~Pi~· a':U!~ _C1_tl_ie_ns_D_is_cou __ nt_C_l_ub. Exper 'd . Apply in 64.>7634eves. 3 females, blk & True
RECEP'l'IONlST Brigtil ALSO Te I e phone Service Sta. Attendant, penion, 9·J0om & 3-Spm Heavy DutyG.E . Washer, Brindle, •fiota la papen,
incliv. for sm. architect Soltcilors. at home. exper'd. Full or p/tJme. Mon thru Thur s . & Hotpoint 220v Dryer, <80S)32C-1408
o(c. Gd. telephone man· 673·5013 Appl~ Arco StaHon, 17th Gul11vers Res taurant, $.ISO. both.. 494-9891 FrMto Y• 1045
f!Cr.-Attracllveappear.& -SALES TJMECLOCKS &Jrvme.C.M. 18482 MacArthur Blvd, . ~~;I••••••••••••••••••• hte tynlng req 'd. Contact , • . Irvine. See lhe new Kirby Cla11slc KalhJ,'&.u.0675 -Dayllme work contact· Service Stat!on Allen· m demonstrated in youi
.::.:!. ing local businesses. f''ull danl, ex per d. Day & WAITRESSES home at no cost or ob· * *
Receptionist/Order Detk. or p /tlme. Men or Eves. Full & ~/time. Ap· & Dishwasher. Apply In ligation. 1 Room ol ...... tt•Alhby
· G<;lOd w/numbers. peo· women. Some leads. ply, Shell Stauon, 17th & person, Stavro's, S9J<l, W. carpet ·shampooed ju1t 3900 P..tl Vn La. .
.. pie, phone contact , typ. Commisaion. Call Mr. Al· Irvine. NB. _ __ Qst Hwy, NB forlooklng. 759.()629 '"'-
ing. Needs lo be neat & len, 839·5322 ------I( pl™anl. S40·1144 Servi~ Sta. Night Attend WAITRISS Rebullt frby Classic, You a"' the winner of 2
Sa I es : W c need ~ 2 Or S nlles a wk. Apply, Wanted, exper. Full & like new. $139.95 freeUckets worth 114 to
RECPT/TYPIST salesmen to s ell ad'· Shell.17th&lrvinc,NB parttlme.ApplyolDon 759-0629 HOUDAYONICI o c:o ts ieekin& a \'erlis1ng for local direc· . . nd c 1 R t t 2956 ---------atthe ur · torles .,d commission Service .station altc ent ar OS es auran · GE Refrigerator, avocado -· qualified, enlhusiaet ic . .. · Day shift.sonly. full time. Bnst.ol. C.M. gm, xlnt condition s150. ANAHEIM r~pt-typlst w /a gd protected terntory. adv Airport Texaco. 4678 WELDER Hellarc for 644-0403 CONVENTION phone personality for a sales exper prererred, Campus Dr NB ---------CENTER
busy, frl~ndly ore. ~ust but will train 1f qualified. · tugh pres~ vessel weld· 111; Cu. Ft. 3 yr old, Dec. 27th-Jan. lit.
v have f~l ofc. ap~ar. 848-9708/ C213l003·4007 Serv. Sta Help needed Im· ing, exp d. $6. hr + refrigerator. $100. Free Ticketa good for
CM. 548·~ med. Full or p/t. Apply, 55H228 H61·2626 Dec. 30th or 31st ---------1Seam1tress. pay com· E. Cst Hwy, Nwpl performances. Call
RISTAURAHT.Pl%%.A mensurale t.r /exper. Bch. Merc:hcMdlN Gas stove, O'Keefe & 642·!5678, ext. 333, to 1 f\ill & p/llme openin&s Santa Ana. Call 549·2475. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Merrit's classic w/elev claimyourUcketa.
for general retl. work -Sewing .Trainee. Will ~ 1005 broiler. lrg oven, shelf & • * *
near OC Airport Must be SEAMSTRESS. cushions train if you have home ••••••••••••••••••••••• grill. $70. 646-8750 ---------•
18 o,.. over. Apply In & canvas product.a, s3me sewin& ex per. 3025 S. P'UWC AUCTIOM Black Lab rem spayed, to
-penon, :'" ~=r:::?631..:J:is wK.ll~N Avert, s,.A. <>Dyer MANY lTEMS OF P'INE Elmlect. Class~ range "/,,,tosop lood bome. Well man·
SOT. PEPPERONl'S
PIZZA STORE
23008.E. Bri1t.ol
~Ana Helabta 6*«14 <NGl t.o llCl>onaldl} ~ !.faal ()ppar lJm~oyer
cMJte.i.urapt bell> f~J aclt· 'I' Jn.The·l'lolt, {m · diate
QPenlnp on au llh fts al 3 ...... COM.a Meta ator•• .Pleas
0 apply In per$0n: '
:Ip~. 17th Sl, ... ~BakerSt.
' 2235 Harbor Bl•d.
. . . . ·°' ewpo rwy ESTATE JEWELRY crowav., oven. ~ , ne:redl&lralned. SS2·5898
SECRETARY Shippln&/Warehou11n11 ART OBJECTS, AN: a.ZT72,82'1·39to _evs_J_w_kndll ______ ,
Fast growing Real Clerk.Eaper'donJy.Call TJQUES. FINE FURN., J2cuftliotpolnl,Harvesl iv.a Yr old fem cat was ~tate £irm near Orange !546-6290. ETC. PHONE FOR IN· gold,6moold, abandqcied ndt 1d hm
County Airport, needs STUDINTS ~~ BR OCH URE· $125. 960-313e Sm bllt, w'bt, 'fi1Yed ,; ~~,!~abwUi/~~tto. lycoplmrt~ 21·25 yu old for --------·--Washer/dryer, nr new, shots. Very ovable
aau .. • •.11 xlot cond. $350/both. _61_5"_8943. ______ _
pose corr eapondenoe, bartendor trne. Must be MUSIC IOXIS Brig"• & Stratton gas .. Yr _, .... v -•e Lab/blk. Zerox 800 kn owledge ctn cut, p/Ume S3.00 + .-., ._ .,..
helpful. Real Estate fn· tJps. Call Mr. Bennett CLOQCS eng. lawn mower $50. Tralntd, re1l1t ered.
vestment or tacrow el· Mohday Deo t9th 11·•:30, Slot Macbloet, Nickelo· Days 642·5027, ,after 6 646-5473
'd "-lary ---.o.rMS-Mm deon1. phonoarapha. 552.31173 ---------per. req · .,. .......... " --------3 '---ui.. .. -ell beha~ed t / World'• lar1e11t aelec· ,_ .. .,. .. • mens u r a es w ex P · Switchboard operator for ti 0 n . A la 0 .. i It s , ,. __ ,,._ IO I 5 dlicll l Lab, 2 Germ Shep
Q U A J L PL A C E console board In aulo de· " --mbt rht.o Cd ho e (213)
PROPERTIES, INC. alerahip. Xlnt fringe ~~~8tnt.!::i~~:O~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• see.ems, JM.G'.ISr: (71A)
(71')752·1844. benefit. le worklnl c:on· 1802 Kettertna: Irvine. 67$-7~
SICltDAIY dJtions. Exp'd penon 754.1777.0peo Wed.-Sat. PUBU Cl0'URNlTURE --------
Conatructlon exper pref'd. Call Gordon *llll'flQN* XlnthmeformaleA11han
neceuary. Thorough Taylor for appl. ·--------""" Hound, 1 yr old. Obed. knowtedp of bldlntr ft,_1_1'-_546-_1_cn_o____ T_...7:30P.M. trained. 175-Cll30
"°"'1'acu. Contact Mrt. TAXN•AIBS STIWAITROTH C.,..._Welc_.)
Halt1np for lDlerview a. H 11 h ,, 01 ume.ve8 r AM'fl9UIS CQtJSIGNllENTS ,_ Miia• IOIO more llito. 714-56'1-&770 . sround tax olc. need. ex· •AMEIUCAN OAK• STOCK y QUJDATIONS ••••• .. ••••• .. •••••••••
for promln.nt
Coas t 1lulldlo1 lit9'
locatecl la TcuUn.
Prt•loue coutrucU~• exper. nqulNCI. T1pe
...... • DO abfr1.bao4,
Ocdad PeaoU1-•1
~ ... 1 t The larten mo1t com· Lovely b drm aeu, Sola w, JU.S.a. ...,i. ~.~t!c:er:.r tf::i prebenafve inventory ot cbests. U'tDolret. bunk Very -Cood coad. fll. ~l Cootact .Mr. A~1can Oak Antiquea badl,cbeltbedl,oblna& .. T ln \Allf, We b\l1 dlrec\ fl dAniDC tQ1e1. + tbN, bu .....__..__ ____ -4
or .r. rapp peaa the aav~ oa t.o atGo&a. rock.-, coffff "'-..... Ua-to"'-~-tor~ at W11tMD Al • .. _ .... ,_ -111 -~na "'·-• e --·J .... = 10, nhq ue tbll,...SU*fl....,t uu, WbaW.e:rU.Fed _ .... ...,.. c•, · -uctlonl are avail. refr11er atorlf\ atov.,, Jtoli 'e.raolfUae--...W
W.-JIUrSt.CKt41.Q11J. ,,.,-ylowtetpricea. laat cha nt• for n ew wt~aClulllledM
TIACHmll Located at: Cbri1tnw toya. PLUS Catll'fowl 942.ll'Jt
f-t.tlme OC' ll'ull·tlin• 750 E. DYER RD. S.A. LOTS Or Ml.SC. ---.------~ AIY A.~.P. u,c., 1nterna· w.n;r="W»> $AVISAVISAY.l l--•00111111v•o•u--C:-EC£~·ch =:!~~·~~u!~~ OoenSUn·WedlM ~:.:r::i~ !::ck~~ OPl'EllASJ:RVICIW R-a'• *"f'' bl ~ Bat bara la ac·1~~·~-,Th~un~-8~at~lCM~~·~I CASH. Mo p ersonal Let the pubUc how wl&b r 1 11 , o • 8 t b • ~ •DMA~aUona ror 1• checlct PLEASE! Food an ad tn t&e Dally Piiot
..-oa.rtcal won. Sh r•pr ... t.l {vea 1.-tho available. JtAmt 1ubJect S.Vlc• t>lredory, 1' can
er 1GI _,... t,,... LA °'*'ft~ •ni•. c.cnnaertoGo.-C.ru w ..._.ie. cmt YoM .. IU41t u .$1.lf ..,... AfPIY.b,; 12/11/'IT. Tre&alnl pro¥lded, xlnl Wllatfferth•Fad · NASTmtSAUCTIOM per day. hr men In·
hnonntl Ofn~. aoo inoolile. very aatiaf1i•& Roll 'emolftbemarket 207S\.\~lll•d OJI rormaOoa aad com~ Jlle•PGtt•~ .• Na. ~,~2"·•d~kat WtthaCla .. 1ntc1A4 m.1115 ...._ na.ecan....-ra.
1-. -·-c.nNow1 ..,.,..,.
We are pleased, to announce that
this newspaper will ru n the
HOLIDAY ON ICE "Find Your
Name Contest'' in the classified
section beginning December 16
thru December 26.
Readers whose names are listed,
<some where in the classified ads> will recruve, absolutely free, two
r eserved seat ticke t s t o
HOL~DAY ON ICE opening at
Anaheim Convention Center, 800
W. Katella Ave., Anaheim Cali f.
December 27t h and. runni ng
through Ja,nuary 1st, 1978.
Yo u may find your name
hi dd en a n yw here in the
classified section preceded by
two stars (* •) making you
eligible to receive a pair of
tickets tor a night at HOLIDA y
ON ICE as guest of th e Dally
Pilot.
•
f
4 • . '
I
•"" o bQ 1e um Mtte•tl .. o.ia 1010 ...__ .. ~ 1090 8~Marifta MotorfMClllkn .+140 ~ r. ""."...;;;~.:.;.;==.:...:.:=:.:_------_:.:.:' =~~·.::ou=m=:.:'..::::..· :.::....;.. ••••••• ::: • • • • • • •• • •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ to l 0 ••••• ·-·. •••••• ••••••• v.wca.. 9' 30
... _.._,.., io1 t&utta •-ION iatal• »le : 13•0 SELl.JNO OUTI HorruiP .... .................. MOPED ...................... . "'° ······~················ WIWIU.IU.,
................. ._.... • ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Km11.ood Rd. Apt, UI c. ClavJ1u1tL SG75. J\oland ~ CHllSTMAS Ja~;-'1:.0. ~ t:;-t •= 1g~/ .'l.at-.e CoJdieattr 117 .,._ •c •ucnoM NllWOOO Lelaurc World. Sol 1t.Mg$7~. 61S8363 SPICIALS eTW8'7l S::. IY· •
11 'dO" II.TI~ D .O ..-_. • 1-.... delvdtQ.2503 Beach. (off St. Andrewt> Hammottd Orflin l.xluut YO N bl VllP
YOUIDAISUH
PAJO PO~ 01\,N~ TMDC>U.AA
FOi TOP CAilS 14• " ll. . bapei SANY lTEMS OF FlNE ., .. ,,.... Chrome II 11au pedestal lilce new, WaJnui. Valu~ ~e Al fl'nr: J911 OS · rr Uke new. 400 ml, 2 apd ·1s ~cord Mint home,
11·• lt'14 lrodc St.4fte> ~TATE Jl!Wt:L&Y, Unlv~y At.hl.Uc Club table, 4 chelni. ond $3.SOIJ. mod. L. too, wt 0 ._fMS299Tuo'NtCS 3·600 auto. c01l$U>, mnkeof· loadec1.. Sips. 6. very un•· "-ta Preas tt7 30 ART OBJF.CTS AN M mbn'fhl for sal• at tabl•, fs·bookcuw, ltk• ..u' ..i. od 225 110 .... " · · fer.673-3622 1 ®f.PI 000 $M"48'7 -.-. 4 to Til'Y •~ J!';.,I: fo'URN e P .... b I newh1deabed,r"'1velvet I ea..,.r.m . . wbJl• l1n«: dopth re· _que.__· --·--·-----1 -1~)18l·M34 ,... ... · •n "$215. 833·27'" uaoeu swi~lch.aJr&ottom.an. watts. $1,:500 . PP. corder, reg S475. now '17 8UROUNDYBatavua SANDBOOC
CASE8AaotOE,680••t :~ [H~~~Ji?Sa'~: tin. dbl bed, Beauty Rest Box ~m 219 Moped . Xlnl cood. SIQOorbellotrer.
BARWIC k DAT'>UN
811 111') '1YJ.jJ7')
Xl:otaond S'1~.2.lllllW ~2200 Beds. queen , twins , 1pr1n61 & mallre11• Tn· rl frotn$495 Nfo~WPORT BOAT W/lock, side view mlr· Wlthtraller
Sth St Sani. Ana. Dy Recbner, B/W TV, Sew. ple dreuer. m1rr
0
or. 2 ~ tCoMole SNS CJ::NTF.K roni, buddy seat, bukel, 646-$72$ WEIUY
CLIAMCAAS
&TRUCKS
~.eva,a,si.4629 W.&TERBEDS Mach. Palnlln1s. n11ht slant.ls. all like ~Win al 11 t~NewportRlvd, gH can. dire. 1l1nal1. --"'
A Sculptor,rnisc.9'75-484~ n~w . Velvet i.ofa, Re~~ ~bava._ ft · Cot.la Mes11 tl4Sti015 C4Jl :84().-:198o 4w....IDrtY .... 9150 CHAJNSAW,2A" DlSCOUNT~D mod & I Slools.~nc es ... g1 II -----••••••••••••••••••••••• Pioneer 750 From lll7 77 Cflmplete Pvt pr\)' ml.I.tit sac, 2 Rem· ern chrome I: as:. Shop &c:ompare values F\tll 111ze Binnacle from D Tlgre Mani Bike. Xlnt .. 11 -~ 646 AQuatteaven5S4·7~ inatonelect.typewrlters. lumJll, over lOO Avon PcU'1Pi.oShoppe L1berty11h1p compa:;:s cood.SlSO. JllPS 77
Qist over $000 ea. Wlll botUi:s, Lots or misc & 728 w. 19th CM S48:7~2 works. Navy arcy paint. 968-3581 C J • $ • s • CJ • 'J ' 11 • CONNELL
CHEVROLET W.W ~~ FOR SALE: One of a kind ta.ke$250ea. Call846-8692 craft lteau . ..$ome anh· ~ady lo restore ~ Olerokees Waaoneen, · • r. truel'Ollectoraltem. Im· quee.Frl9:30-<lPMSattll SportlfttGoods 1094 M6-6040d•is. · · ptclt•&afll,u'p to$l,200dls· ___ 6_4 __ 7_1_4_7 ___ 1 ported frorn Thailand, F'or sale: t'&'' surfboard, noon, bring ad, gate ....................... Mo!or:'tdtt/ ~ta. 5 yr 60.000 mile
uqul>lloly uned ex""1ent....._ "" ••••· open10AM. Flocher Sup"'''" 17v.' Boot Trailer, hoavy S..-lws tllO ~•U•ble. Tea~wood panel-6'x8"· tric baas 1ult•r. $40; Fur coat, French rabbit, anowskls,. 195 cm w/o duty. ••••••••••••••••• .. •.••• · Mtn lwc
showing village s cene. Olbeon ''Kopyut elec· $200/beat orrer. bdngs.·$75. MK·500 Wood 673-4933 1974 250 Y•maha MX· 2001 i.t. SA 6$8-8000
Good investment art trlc ,uitar brand new 678-0801 170cm w/Eckel bind· Mertury O/B, 1977. 20HP. Terry kit rront fork, Bog ••••••••••••••••••••••
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WANTED values appreciate. Cull $100. Call Ken, eves at ings·$45. Ski bools·slzes 5 mo old, used once. Cost shocks, etc. s:soo. Call SI 000 Off
A 640-<m8 894·377S Seth ThomH weitht 6\.;, 7, 8,,., 10; $1.50, $25, 5917 musl sell asking 962-98118after7p.m. AU.NIW
,TOP CASH DOLLAR ~ir•otM--L.·-· 8'•~akwallunlt~"".Tbl driven clock. 1916 $35 & $45. Girl's Ice $750 Ph B37·2760 or •CHMO"'H :PA I D FOR YOUR --~ ~ ..... "'" .....,., Shotaun. 2 Men's skates·SiieSN,skatebag · 1076Vamaha400Enduro.. " o.JEWELRY. WATCHES. U al German made saw $50. Airless sprayer diamond rings. 7 mm & skate dress·slze 10 543-7~ _ I.ow miles. New top end. •'9CICUPS
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CA RS
FOREIGN. DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS
, tr your car ls extra clean
see us first. •ART OBJECTS, GOLD, Antique Slots. Several Lo s:m. Comm JS" butler Sporterized rlne. La Sele Cchild>·all tor ~. Call Auto Pilot 12v Signet. For Excellent cond, road •WA~MIElllS
; SI LVER SERVICE, r hoo!> c r ro m · $700. $200. Clarinet $60. Spool clarl~et. 2 beautiful ac· 6'&2-0138. tiller. Perf. S2SO or tradt' equipped, extrb. $900 or Offer GoodThru 12/18177
FINE FURN. & AN 497.2743 beds,C'irra1000,$12Sea. cord1an11, German & . gunor ?M().0099 takeoverpayments.Call HURRY
IAU&tlUICK
292Sllarbor Blvd.
i TIQUES.645-2200 648-!HOOdys Italian made. '62 Cat. Never used: Domonlle ---eveninpafterS.494-4747 l-ToC--.Fro:
S -• Phone·Male 800 Answer-1930 era chest & vanlly (Pantera) sk1 boots. St loots, Power 9040 _ Tl LUGGAGE TAGS Factory UI~ D I w/mlrror. Stutz Sungod 81,; man's, reg. $150 now ........................ •73 Honda 350. xlnt tun· c_........, M f C:ook1e J ar:., Bath ac· ing Machine. e uxe <RA > radiator c ap SIOO/bstofr.675·1021} FORS"LE1,.11, ning cond. New battery, 2001ElstSAS58-8000 • rom your business card l'l'b.'· hictory 2nds & du;-model ln itl.Dl cond. Call 1 b 1 A chain & tune.up. $32.S. ---------1
Costa Mesa 979.2500
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
tFORCLEAN
.Send one card for eac toollnuled ~tyles,selltog 840-3980. f.~~~ .. ~we g l or g . Sk1bools,NordicMeteor, '77 Sea Ray 24 ft 645-8070 COST"'MIS"'
tag pl~ one spare. W 1 DI .,......,......, ed Int cond Weekender with 70 ---------"' "' re turn permanent! below wholusa e. rs Peu~eot 10 spd, cood U!. once-x · hours. Must sell; bought '76 Kawasaki K2-400. less AMC&, JEIP
. sealed attractive t&I? welcome Mon thru Sat. cond $90 Drk room CARPETING: good cond. $150. 494·2Al7 new boat. Pn. ply. Qlll than 700 rni, xJnt cond. TOO
·strap, meeting a1rltn Twin w.i nt on. 31966 cqwp: Lili enlarger, lpcl4 ydJ,2 pcs.l7yds Loads of surfing, diving, Jerryat ~/offer.631·2'&4days,
11. D. reqwrements. Pre Cmuno Capistrano, San trays, tanks, lu. 541H461 oa. $150 pr yd. wtr & snow skiing suiu.. 544-1158 or 842-5916 eves. M4MY ~-~ ,~-, ~ ..... vent loss & theft! For Juan Cap. <acr086 fr EJ ~ Yard S4le Sat 9·1 20371 J.S
personalized tag enclos Adobe Plan) Hummels $40. Flrepla~ u. r.....: l T . Ba.Mew s A Hts. or 546-1200 Honda Trail 90, ncls work, MUST SELL 70 , f t' 4 •, (l t ,, d 11. If l
~•tJ'-'4!1~t t • .._, IH Al" tools $45. Argentine oil au. "'u1s mas ree. nu, ~·· ' . . ----• h EPSBY ~~~~~~:.~ • p!~:1~ ! ---------1 orig. $150. Other paint· white, rortable for easy Spedema.n bindings, like $100. 250 Yama a $300. J.ERISTMAS
will back & lnm you PNnc~L~~~~Ja~'.~~f inis "°·$1S. Gorgeous take own to store. new,ailver. $25. SEA RAY'S _540-_3238_______ Pleasecall
tags. Or try two ~·c1rdi. $350. &up.840.2341 mink jacket. sz 10·12, 962-206l 675-6142 :559·4274 .._111 1971 MOcleia HONDA 71, 750CB, 12,000 54f-80ll
H 1.' • '•t' •, 1 l l ,
IMPORTCAIS
AU.MODELS ·back to back. wom twice S47S. Cush. Topiary sculptures, Reio· -ml, xlnt. cond. Karley
PHICES. l•--------1 548-8459 <Wer&f'oreatElves$400 Go.If Outis. matched set . 18'.]0' Davidsonrearwheel,fuU 2.53tHARBOR8LVD.
.$2eaor3/SS DIRf.CTLA!'"'5rovou 4 Com'I style pinball up.497·2214 ~:!.fi'~~~l~S~oods, 9 H.a.aa15oa..a•5 Sb~:.~i~ bars, etc. ___ eo. __ ta_M_ea,_._ __
'4/5lal{s$1.ti0l•u . ic. hi G od c d """' " ---------im Scout Jnt~rN1t.ional. 6/9tu".s•t 5(l 1·a K " hangin" h e rb mac.nes. 0 · on · Refrig,mlcrowave,Quad DUCK HUNTERS•. We 51:•R"'Y M t $6700
WE
NEID
CLEAN
USB»CARS
NOW
CALLPM'PY
., " " Pri c e n ePot1abte it 5"' "' UJce new, camping trlr, any x ras . . :ioormorc$1.'10cil. l(u rd<'n:., $2.49 up for 493·4630 " 'sy.sten:i , ~torag~ un ' have lOO'sofBlindsava1l ta.kesblkeslnside.Kitch, M8'""84or646-8S91
Salei.Tax Included kitchens, 6" h11nginR · ~ll:Jl·l328 ortl J.1374 in 33 locations thruout 2327i4~~s'sS.A. b 77 Hood cllrt/
NO CJ\fW'! plant!> Sl.4.9 up. Al so MOVIJ"!G SALE! Men's 3 Misc.a ... oua Calif. For info. Call Mr. 3101 Co"'sl •fwy, N.B. 8 arp. aXL '73 Chevy 4x4, o/• Ton. All ·Draw )Our own or send Afncan Violets from 98c. pc swt, u 40, ort wht. Wmthd IOll Drake,558-8636 .. ~ stre¢~~ 12 l2S, new thruout. Must sell
name. addrcs:., phone F'or the cat, live catnip European cul, almost ••••••••••••••••••••••• . 6ll-2547 $295. t. 1•2342 thlswlcnd.493-7920.
we'll ITUlke one card pe Sl.49. 17362 Gothard. new Gentry Ltd. SlOO. Wi h Boxer pup for Dad's SKYDIVING GEAR 28 ft. Unifiile SportJisher. '75 Yamaha 2SO Enduro. '74 Dod&e 4X4 P.U. New
tag. Add 25' each. H n <N rth r SI t ) Hiking boota, Vasque, as d Bob 1 · odl Xlnt. cond. $550. 4.94·7996 whla, tlrea •· p aint . Send check or money or . o o a er med·welabt men's sz 9\.'J present, can spen SSO. 548~7 1 owner, n mmt co . ..
540-5630
1011 \SO\ & SO\ 847·Sl4l .. • ' l' only. C8.ll btwn 9·12AM Uoo&loaded!Customln· eves. Super. $4300. Call der lo: !~~~~~~~~~ & ladles sz 7'n. Very al· 557 ...,<a N w K-2 .,.,, sk'· USA's l 1 pll t A D F S I ~....., 67" "''" PILOT PRIMTIMG I Ue use S2S ea. Cash only ........, e • .,....till • "''r er or• 0 • · • • '74 muk 125, -""'• ............ 2626 HAlltlOR l&:yo •
....i. 675_7514 aft4PM ...... _1 _. 195 ~c. s 1Jl actory V.H.F., sunlog, oulrig· RunsgreaL ---------COSTA MESA P.O. Box 1560 .....,. .....c.. plastic. $12.5. call, Lynn gers, AC/DC natural gas 546-128laft6P'M r---------
• l INCOl N. ME numv
Ccsta Mesa,Ca. 921i26 '* * FINAL DAYS·GOING IMti-llh 1013 642·3727 rdngeralion & cooking, ---------aTNdls 9560 '6111tlUY Robert Kircher OUT OF BUSINESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• barnini top w/enclosure, 71 Kawasaki 100, dirt •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ·rn; MOVING ~ Bike'!. tr:un. JllOISCMdrt-Crt l0%-50%offentireatock AutoH..,$25 TY,Radlo.
8091
newChrys lermanifold:s, bike, xlnt cond. Great lt7'TOYOT4 USB>CARS!
layout. bar. rnb, b;iby r-· -..rd H_... 5..._ CallSS2·3S82 HIR, Steno risers & elbows plus ex· Outstmas presenL $4.25, llilottbcdf'lda9 We're the new Chevrolet things, toy:., r iot hes. San,,.._ Cop. '"' -...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• tra fuel. Call Dale at oner 673-302S :ondlt dealership ln the lrvinc tum. la~p:i. motor l'Y You are Lhe wmner of 2 . 4thSo&CLaoast Hwy Steel string folk guitar Several beautiful color 498-2709 · In excellent cond tlon Auto Center. We need
di!, I'll' 631·2342 free tickets worth $14 to · guna w/use, xJnl cond. $85. iv·s. $99 & up. s & s TV. ---------11975 XL'JO. Honda, ioo m1, ::!~r4 ~p:~:~ .. r:od,~;:o your used car!
-HOUDAY OH ICE Open daily 10·5 until 833·7572 days, 673·392S 2052 Newport Blvd, 118, '74 MAtfRADER 2A ' Open oewcond. SSOO. mil (""""rv> ..., JOE Li::c \Hou~hl iron chan ;itthe Christmas eves. CM.64.2·S340 Cruiser w/255 Mere. 540-4032 es . .........,. ·
1k1ter, 11~9 rt. Jrea ru(;. c-·•-Loh •• sso ........,.,y $339& MAC PHERSON · k I · l\NAflEnt BeauL1ful or1·g1'nal oil •~er. ours . ..,., · '75YAMAHA'""'Enduro, ~ " ctuld ' rot· mg 1· lJ1r. " YA'·rtAHA FLUTE 9 Ft I t t ~ 0' rr ? 8 CON. VEN!ION pa1·nt1ngs. Indonesian " · wa nu 5 ereo 675-8867 -' CHEYR 11951 .child nm·~ bike!> 5SG 7-1 c ENTl'R XLNT CONDITION cabinet. Xlnt for com po· ---------1 xlnt cond, veryJow uu.
• -, landscapes. $49. 898·9124 SSS. Call 979·S857 nent.s ; 21" Admiral color loots, Rent/ $400. ' 542.3749 21 AutolRCeVlnNteEr Drive lnrloor and Uutdoo De<'.' 27th-Jan.1st. • 1V, needs transformer. Chcrtet> 9050
IJ(anls. Al'aullful Pll' Free Tickets iiood for Smith/Coro~a manual or-OVATION Accouslic elec. ~7248 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Hodak• 125. brand nu 2MS~RBORBLVD. 768-7222
tures. hookshells, unt1· Dec. 30th or 31st l'i cetypewnter. 12 string w/case. $500. CHRISTMAS PARADE, eng.Neverused.lmmac. 54MitlOl40.0JIJ quc chmr, candles, etc pe rforman ces. C all $15. 645·1705 67s.8363 lUtac4000BassCB,Cosl 3B'Ketch,$75 nlghllyin· cond.$325.646-0386 AIJlo..a--&ed
51!6·9177 642·5678. ext. 333, to $ o DU .. P TRUCK o •.....-•
Vans claamyourtlckeb. Baby str.ol ler, thr ee Clevela n d (King) $229. Asking 10. 1 cl<ball.646-4005 '67 Yamaha180CC street, • '1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9570 * wheeler bike xlnt cond T Gd d $80 Mobile CB Asking~. l clec 8._ ... , like n'u, le .. wheels, International, G••til 970 I '* ' · rumpct, con · Techn1·c turntable, Model -....&. Sall 9060 .... ~ .... _,_. ___.. "'" 000 2818 W Both$2S S56 3997 . l ......... than900ml$300 a .. •.9574 ........... ~. ... . .••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------· · Lv'g for service mus l 5 O O w IS tan ton •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ....... 5th SL Santa Ana. Dya * *
Skutt kiln, never used. sell.63H235. cartridge. $100. WAMTRESULTS7 '.75 Honda CB 550, pert. ~;evs552-t829 ctydeHow.-d SURFER
VANS
1 ffl-3 TO CHOOSE FROM
DODGE-8200 • s7409 Blue. sunnse special. 98076
DODGE-8200 $84'19 Red, AlloYS, Custom Paint. 43465
DODGE-8200 S6CJ99 White, wheels, design 111 2 1693 .
TOYOTA CAL CAMPfR $8599 Home on wheels, loaded! 95778
HOUSE of IMPORTS .
. 714/523-7250
6862 MANCHESTER ILVD.
IUIEMA PARK
Elect.potterswhl. Conn trumpet w /case. 673-81.20cx.273 Sellyourboallhru cond. $1000. Daya. POloxl277
640-2&96 Xlnt cond. 'Like nu. Medit.erranean3pch1gh.fi SOUTHWESTERN 675-l636eves:S4H630 ~~tJUri!.1~~~~: F-t•Yaley
Plnball mach In blk print Perlect stu. instrument. cabinet. Beautiful piece YACHT SALES '76 Ya mah a YZUSC $9S>. OoC-7996~ves. You are the winner of 2 -
w/stars on either sltte. $140.675-5941. of furn. 552·5896 FOJt/HEWPORT Mono·ahock. FMF freetkketswortb$14to
Siinlfray bike. 673-8063 Gibson acoustic J -45, 2 yr evs/wknds DEALstS Porcupine head. $550/bsl '70ElCamJno, good condl· HOUDAY OH ICE
old /h d L' o<r. 548-6204 tton. $2300. 845-9473 an at the F\tll length Autumn Haze w ar case. 1 23" color TV console. <714) 673·9211 5PM ANAH EIM
mink coal , ex,collenl new. S275· Call A $175 COtlOHAD025 '72 360 M~ Yamaha . ,72 DATSUN P.U. CONVENTION ~7~~7S'acr1Clce $800. 645-8576 675-6731 WESCO Supercluo.$400. CabovershellS1700. CENTER
---------1 Comple~ 1:-udwig D um Solid mahog 8' Medit Xlnt condition, many ex· 64&-4964! ~2613 Dec. 27th-Jan.1st.
Two deep sea risbing rods set, Zaldjian cymbols • cabinet ror stereo com po. tras-Wlnt SLIP. Must HONDA zso as new cood. Free Ticket.a food fot"
withreels.$100. must sell $550/&l ofr. nents, records, sm tv & Sell! Perr. for am. child . mo DATSUN Pkup. 4 Dec. 3.0th or 31st
548-6204 557-llSSeves. bar. Beaut, carved, 751-6449 957-0396 $225/offer.499-41S3 apd, A/C. Gd. cond. performances. Call
crifice $145 Aft :Spm p · t.ePart • $il.95.831M1438bef4PM 6•2·5678, exl. 333, t o 5 Pc Gil1's Bdrm set, $250, Offlc.e Fllnelhre & sa ' I ' nva ) CHRISTMAS SPECIAL claimyourtJckeU.
includes twin bed ............ 1015 645-78S1. BEAUTIFUL '76 •73 Yamaba .lOOMX. lo '1BE1C~o-Reblten1. '** ~1716 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12'' B&W portable TV CATALINA 22. Like new mi. S250/best orr. Newpamt, campersbeU,
Copler. l YearoJd. Umit· goodworkingcond!Uon. w/trlr . Many extras. 675-9768 P/S,P/86'U386. NfeR-o 9705
POOL TABLE·AMF,
4~8· ed u se. Rec 0 n d . $50 645-1705 $5700. Call (714)58G-1098 .... Dod k t It ••••••••••••••••••••••• slate top, all accessones Delk/book t~ w/aup. ,74HONDA M~ -. ae •or roe • .... 1 II! ROMEO
$400.S4S-0336 pllee.$4S0.645·722L Complete Sound System; Lazer w/trlr, wh.ite hull, Li.kenew '25(). n.msgood,1dtranaporta· *..,.A *
A Pioneer Rec. SX·lOlO, 100 N 0 . s 1 3 , $ 1 o o o . 548·1795 tioo. $:500. 675-3175 Eves will be feat11red at a car 130SQY RDS,otwhite&t New 13" fu lly elec watts p/chanJ R~S; 7l~day/eves ___ ..:::::::.:,:.::::, ____ 1--:---=::--:--:-1show December 16, 17 &
aaut.eme carpeting. Xlnt typewriter ror bus or hm Technlcs d irect d r1 ve '76 Su~uki RM2SO, xlnt "14 Datsun PU, good cond, 18. Harbor View Plaza,
s hape. Reasonably use. $289.50. Master turntable SL-1500, with WESTSAJL 82 Kit boat. cond, mustaee&rideto camper, s poke whls, st.n Joaquin Hills N &
priced. 496-4088 evea or Q\arge or VISA. 216 A Pikering SX·lS/UOOE Save over $3,000, extras, ...:a:!pp:!::.:rec.::.::::.:::•=:.5·:..:M6::=.-4653..:::=--·l:-:-Sl-4007•-:-IM0--20G8-:-:--::--::.-::-I s•n Miguel, .Newport
earlyAM Marine Ave. Bal Islnd. cartridge; two Kenwood Ph:7U.998-3688af't4PM Motor.._t.s.le/ '8' Intenational PU, ~ach.
Powerreelmower,edger, Call673-6007. llO watt loud speakers Fully equlp'd -'70 claas R..t/Stwage fHO 41pd.Newwtdetlreaon '78Spldenarebere!
sewing mach S20 ea. C I Dl Mk LK·177A; S ansul sallboat$1:500orbestof· •••••• .. •••••••••••••••rear. S800 or bat. orr. Afew '-s lell.atfact""" ' ad t op er uo. a es Reverberation amp fer inclds trlr ca11 """'·-" _,, C'aah reg. sa:;G/tr e or 8'iUll sn1l tel!Jes. Orig Rent a 1977 Excutive _-..-...... _________ , reduced price.
alotmach.842-2827 CD1ts.12\.asklil1$8S.Call ~~i:C :::ws~~;~ Ste~e.962·5844alls Motorhome or Mini· '13 GMC 44 ton •·•pd, IEJ>.CH IMPORTS
A..to1,Mew 91004-tot.M•w 'floOAlltM.Mew tl00·1 IMS-21.36 ~w/dolby). Componenta Muat sell! 23' Sloop, motorhome from Herb hydrallc llttaat.e. $995. 848DOVESTREET • •• ••• ••• •• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••• .. •••u•••••••• Oak plan mes, 2 drawer in superb cond. $1300. W f st i p . Mo v In I to ="n~:rs Call any of ~ . (Near MacArthur Blvd. -----------------~--ml!~----.. 1 fireprool files aa!es. Ex· 848-9498att.3pm Denver. Ask for BUI ltM777 ,68 Datauo PU •!'73 2300 4cJamboreeRoad>.
ecutlve oak desk, ex· AM·FM stereo auto ti.In· ~7~1 577.7777 Qev, Ve1a, brand new NEWPORT BEACH COSTA MESA DATSUN·
DEMANDS YOUR RIGHTS
TO ECONOMY. 9UALITY.
LUXUIY AND
SAVINGS!
FI O H.ATCMIACK 1210 H4TCHIACK
''FtlOHT WH• DllVI" ·,~
110 4 DOOR ."l'H. LUXUIY CAI"
ecutive deak & credenza. tng, panasonic receiver, C.olumbia dinghy $500. 8• 12 ... .., u.r.. pa.lot w/2 tone pin 752-0900 -Wooil&~etal tb:, childs turntable, 12" spkrs. black flberglas9 hull. stripe,·~ tape deck, Sharp Altetta GT super
de1k1, ot/col water Good cond. $8S. 552-9390 Sails oars trailer can· MOTOR HOMES all puges, many xtras. handlln 't ell' dr::erw~U~~~4:::. ~ STEREO-Macintos h vas oove.r. Ah good'cond. FOR RENT ~~~~:pend&· !!!"u.of ~":.' ~ o~
drawer files $60.99. MR67 Tuner, component 675-6160 From$100. wk. 77()..()644 v•~
Judge's HJ.back . chrs, parts. $250. or best oCr. ISLANDER 38. Bristol, RENT FirebaJl 23• s.ir '6:5Cbevy .. runsstrong, Ami 9707
electric typewriters, ~ loaded ! A.'lking 142.SOO. cont. Auto/air. CC, CB, ~s ....
1
,,.•
7
:•:•U••
0
•
1
•F0•••
1
••••• calcul~tors & copy lolhlrM..t" PP.673-4220 1s~tereo~~·!.s~lpe~6~6'5-~2283~~-I:;--------:;;-:-:; It •A m a c b a n e s . C • E . 1 , _... -y 9570
Wholesale Of rice • •P •nr 25' Coronado. Xlras. MoforHwll ... al -AutOmatic, air cond .. Furniture 2044 Placen· ... •••••••••••••••••••• Leaving area, must sell. • ............... ••••••• sunroof, low miles & in
tla. C.M. 631·2777 or G11•1 al • 90 I 0 $7200. 615-3673, 768-5639. lll/J to 32' '7•~ Dodie Surfer Van. Immaculate condition!
631-2570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a-..&. su-1 ~~eC:.Uf;c' Conv, new Urea/brakes. (328NPZ).
0 --. ,... 0 Snrf, rnao. Xlnt cond. u • .,. _.. Plmos & OnJ-• 109 Docb 907 Holidays & weekeOO.. MOO. Ph 963-2503 ....__. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• * '* ••••••••••••••••••••••• REGENCY MOTOR New Brand Name Pianos EcManl DaYlt $200 Reward for helplna HOME RENTALS '88 Ford Window Van.
10%overcost. 16251 HoMlul•Ln. findulipreolalfora32' ~N.HarborBlvd,S.A. XJnL Not hot-rodded.
M l\\ION VrlJOIMl•""lffTS
811 I '.Jh .S¥~ 11(),J Beach MuslcCenter IWlagtOlileach Islander. Beam 11'1", ••S31·2S03•• $1100.Callm.Gn
17.o&.BeachBlvd,H.B. You are the winner of 2 vertlcle clearance 46'. Allltos.r.lce P..tl aa: Open.Road bubble m3 Aud i: silver blue,
847.SSOO tteeUcketaworth$14to Wkdys (714) 983·9657, ..&Acc•eori" t400 top, used , 0 eeds auto, AM/FM stereo, 2
Baby Grand Plano, good HOUD4YOMICI Wknd$(714)987·9617. •••••• .. ••••••••••••• .. fiberglau work & side dr,s~rcond.MuatselL
cond. $~or best ofr. ~l.iU:iM Wanted: slip for 30' aall '64·'77 Uaed .ll&la_tani wf.ndowaSZIS,MS-855.l SZJOO/ torr.644·2369
li61'6708evebest cONVENTION boat, Npt Bch or Dana Parts. 990 No. Parker, 76 DOKE ZOO '72 Audi 1001.S, air cond,
G• "'MD CENTER Pnt. lemp or pe,rm. Mar· <>ranee. Call 99'1·2000 a.11 -lm. All ·"tl'as. Lo sunr~. l Owner. $2200. ""' rled cpl wir e s. Days , c""'..... """ 494.,,,., or-494-2458. Aaillb.llM'-Dec.2Ttb-.Jan.lst. 840·3368 evs/wknds 72Porsche9141.7en100• ml. Super nice. Sac.
VI""'"" w Free Tickets good for 753-1786 ' ly, $700. '66 Buick V8 SQI0.83H042 • Mlallar 970t
Antique Piano Co. & De,&. 30tb or 31st reblt & bored eng, Uk• •••••"••••••••••••••••
LouitPianoServ.Recon· peflormancea. Call ~s...dlt newSSOO . .NewMOHNakl "1300.DGEXlnLio-out. •eo AUSTIN H EAL\' dllloned American up· 642·5678, ext. 333, lo .-. -~---9010 racks for ''JS or '18 47000 mi. Family coo· Classic, Coovert. mdl
rl 1 h ta from $4 so. s' claim )'OW' tick ell. •••••• •••• ••• .. •••• • • • • Ponclle 91". $30. 6ll-o105 venkJo $3800. 6'5-9420 3000. $280() Xtnt t 615-8344
Kawai Grand, very reu. * • Racine craft huJl '69, aft6PM •=Van 250 e
1 8 ·w
971
.., BNut. Art case Grandi ("27) w/tt.ndem trlr, lots . 11 • a et pvt. pty prlcea. 895' Motorised surfboard, ol xtr'as. Must see to ap-100 VW Putt for sale, C)'l. 1.S,000 ml, crpt •••••••••••• .. ••••••••
GJtnne1r9. Lquu Bcb. $100. (coet$500) pnc. $4700. Ph: 54M6e2. tome new. From 111'7 to ·~ m111t aeel•ll&e:S ''C&.ASSIC'' ~ 1-4181·3836 . . ~ Oak St. CK ftri:D. '1IZI 1970 BMW ZIOOCS
a.a,,lfudPiano.walnat t' American flberglaaa Tt n 1p1Jrt•'-· "JIQnJ•an.Auto,crpt, COUEE·• speed, aun-~ Yacnalia. XlDt c:ond. dlnJbJ. Almost new ........................ ..,_._,,. =-~=52Runa root, lat'tot')r '1r cond.,
AaldDI SM00.1188"3f0 ... 55&4IHO days. Cil!l'f lrt. S./ ................ _.. _ B 1 a u'pelua kt A ~1 F K __ ,,, ......._ %! ~~ ._ 9120 ...,._,, • "JO Dodie Trlldeamaa 109 stereo, Odrtc wwuowa. 11-IWJPWPJ ............ an. ~ 90-so ••••••••••••••••••••••• ¢ ... :.. 1•20 -· hAaA Ill V8 ma-llaht alloy wbeela & 1na1t soll,_ 900LO Ctr ..--~ • v _ _.. "''"' ~J • ••• ~~llairnr. •nea ••••••••••••-.-•••••••,. 14 Ford C.mper •!1· •••••••• ............... ~d.~,c~bed, terior~Iotlloellentco.odl· •AAA&C Colnpl equip. Lo ml •. 193'1 Chevy 2 d:r "4.tft at•re~. CHI. &heh u l"Ollly83 000
Plano. )'•m•ll • r *a.vv•"'. No-w tlru, UOOO. eni. reblt, bod~adi sound. $1950. Call m1°f .. JlO.M_!>r __ .iof· •--..liiiiiiiiiii.11111!"---•--llllitt.-.-.iiili.-iilii~iiiiil._.P.~~P.'-ll Conurvatory C·3. 'Port•A•lllanu 5*W74. -~--.a.~rk . .-, t 0r. 875-'TMI. , ..... "'·U lul bob 4' V Inn tabl Bo ti -...,..... wv .. .,.,.. ••· • .....,. ..... owner ::,UUM,OC:,/be~' ofl'. °b; 2925~le:e. C.M. t"lerlaed-.. ti 40 ler.s.6-:189.1 •Fwd Eeonoll11e Super _a_t8U--'i'-t.a8. ____ _
b , 1211811'7. Pleue call (114)540-2070 ....................... 11S'7 Porda: Conv. $l.100, Van.,~nclA~ CMPJ. cw>; '74 2C112 BMW • ..AM/FM
lorappt, 79.ouifP , '11 Ronda Expr ess. lo ffardtopf700. • ..-._. ... rea..., Toi a-Iii' rbll en• & s.mncJ·l Or-.y Marine m uee,., xhu cond. 5S'M'3U CbritllH• cabiuta, tni6., au~r eln "360
CONN Eleetrlc Orian Ena vs. COIQ.Pl•t• S27$/bRolr.541.Na nbic. "°"" tlu, ARA ni*aft• . . . 'Mocltl f641, xlltt coed W/lNUM, clHD ts hr Mil. Jeep ~. rat.end, A.IC. ...._, tap unietl
beauUflll cablotl ._, ailllC& 01{. 1 c-.rf1let Mot.obt~Ht. 8rand nu all WMiber top, ~u _,. box. radiala.. XlDt COQd, '7* 1002 TU, orlilaaJ, beacb S7SO/lt1t orr. CrowoL_e..!...J!S P •t• till-~U t1boek1. Pcrf Jn1. buuty. fHOO. am. 1414111 aft. •~• ..-pamt-=-o. IM-Ollll w/"-.lMMIP' l'Olld...,.s.8red8'7&-Ntl ~ Pll . ~
I
..
' ~ .... w .......... ..w .......... rt.cf ........ ,...... ..... ••• ..,.,w .... l•porftd ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Friday, December t&. t9n
I
DAIL V PILOT f) f J
~ t7 I 2 ~ 9711 .,..._ t720 Mere....... '740 ttwa.. t7SO T...... 9767 Awtot, IMporhd .bto1, l•porttd Allto1, 1_,artH ····••••••·~·••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••eeeeeeeeeeeeeee~eeeee ••••••••••••••••••••••• eeeeeeeeee•eeee•••••••• ••••••eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ••••••••••••••••••••••• e eeeeeee•e•••••••eAeeet eeeeeeee••••••••eeeeeet
1978 IMW's
HaENOW!
COMtLITI
IOOYSHOP
MOWOPIH
IXCILLIENT
SIUCTIOMOF
IMWllSALlS
>]695
Bill MAXEY
TOYOlA
11111 l ir.t fll l loc1 i 4 ' l\'J\
HUNl•••UIVHltA\.H
We may have your next
Clil" In our mvcntory. <.:all ~--us today! -9720
IJt.2040 495-4949 •••••••••••••-••••••••
WAHTEDTOIUY
Quality wied BM Ws
ROY CARVEA IMW
lS40Jamborec !toad
NEWPORT BEA<.:11
640-6444
CREVIE
I
&I S f• lll~OWA'I'
SAHfA. AHA
835·3171
lHE UlflltilATI 0111\11110 MACHINf
•USED IMW's *
'77 S30i 45 pd 286S EU
'77 320ia S/ R 177RSK
"7620024spd S/R 401 l'OP
'7732014 sp013RTP
'76S30iAS/R 712PQl\I
CIOHd On Sundays
ORANGE COUNTY'S
&
Sales·Ser\'ice-Lcui.1ni:
Roy Caner.Inc.
Rolls Ftoyce UMW
IMO Jamboree Newport Beach 640 6444
'73 2002, air. s unroof,
:.tereo, Kon1 's $-1600. 673-8816
74 IMW IA¥ ARIA
With onh-21.000 or1~1na.l
mile:.' Sold & .,en 1t ed
h~ us. Automut "' .11 r
l' Cl n d & .., l l' I I' fl
<7'1lKYq 1.
SADDLEIACK
VALLEY IMPORTS
831·2040 495-4949
Capri 9715 ..•..........••........
'7l Capri. 4 s pd, s:oncl
l'Ond. New dutd1. $!>95.
Call 499·4349.
*DRIVE A*
*LITTLE •.. *
SAVE A LOT
!:>HOP&COMPARJo:
SARWICk OAT N
'-..111 Iii.Ill j .'Jfl'' 11111
831· 1375 49 .3375
TM '711 An H~tt
All models & colors.
--dlote
Dtfivery Today!
L.t.'il chance for fantastic
i.11v111gi, on all remaining
'77 model~ in !>lock
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2.84SHARROR BLVU
540..6410 540.0213
NEWPORT DATSUN
'71 c1..-.,e
Demo & cxecultve sale
now .iotn~ on hurry!
R88 DOVE STREET
!Near MacArthur Bl vd.
&Jamboree Road>
Nl::WPORT llEACll
833-1300
1975 DATSUN
·l-210COUPE
2 Door 'I ~peed trans &
low rnlles. In excellent
t'Ondlt1on' 123JNDN J
MAl<EOFFER
1977DATSUM
KIHGCAI PICKUP
~1th l'llffipl'r s hrll S
:.~'ti lr;ms . factory air
l'OOO. & AM FM ~tt!rco
tape. ( 11-:47577 1.
MAKEOFFIER
MISSIO N V•EJO IMPOllJS
A,o , I, \I ••••••• ,. , ..,.,, ........... .
83 J I 748 49.S· I 704
Call
'76 Capri 11. AC, lo m1 MEWPORTDATSUH
Priced lo sci I betorl· lor lhc best bur in a new
'Chn!>lmas M2 37211 or uM.'<I Dati.un"•
Auto1, Used 833-1300 •.•••...•...•........•.
MEW '71 VW RAlllT
wtttiAM/FMa~
. Including luel 1n1ec11on, 1.6 liter OHC engine
4 speed. lront disc brakes. rack & pinion
steering. 4·wheel independent suspension
and hatchback. Ser 1117830'42536
CHRlstMAS
SPECIALS
ON
USED CARS
'62 vw !-, $995
"--211
·uvw~ Sl,2'5 ........... "' 'HVW~ 4111o llk•,,_l l
Sl,3'5
'!.! .. !.~~6 Sl,491
'HVW~ St,5'5 4t11.,mao-. .,.., t12u
'HVW~ SI.HI • .., •• ~ •11
•74 Fi.t w!'i Sl,9'5
RMI g,aa ·-· 4 H OO '7J VW 412 Wp. S2,3'5 ""'°'" lool ,_ f li0l6
ona H USID CAH IM STOCK
'7J ·,~Celka ST ..... ..,. tllOI $2,HI
•121--..-• Cite ......... tlotl Sl,ttl
•nvw~c....,.. ,., ..... ~, U,HI
·11Yw1 ..... SJ,491
• tOf.4• .. ••...,l!'O.IOMI tt20e
71'1W .... H,4tl • tOt ..,.....,.,.. ...... , .... .,,... t!l04
. *76 'IW~ "·"' ........... ''°'' ''76f~C..... Sl.7'1 • OI~•-... --.IOMI tJ1t4 ,
··141.-.... Sl,ttl """°, w . .....,. Nlelft •fdl.1"'41,,.. •nor
• "71 YW C :OS::" ~of•.-'ttto3.tl211 SOLO
,,
'71 StaUott w•ion. v~rr •I 1965 l'olSCHI •m Triumph GTU, vrry VGIUw_,.. 9770 Vot.o '172 Volvo 9772·
t'COnOmicaJ s 492 8263 356 COUPI ood t.'Ond. SJ,000 mile.,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• an~r •PM In excellent rondlllon must ~Isms. 493 l\304 "72 ~ampe~. rblt ena, re· • .-ottl YOU ~I COUNTY , --~ ee1pts, 1mm1lc. Oya SILL.YA•-VOLVO ·73 PICKUP lliOOcr with factory chromo 16 Tl\7. Loaded 3600 mi. 645· 4294. a tt 5 p M -
caJIRl<'kdays &&82119.& wheel11 . (0624). MUST "19S. 549.39115 11fl S. 644.(8;4.S3400orbstofr. VOLVO, t-:XCLUSIVt:LYVOl.VO
al\ t>PM 1~1 ?11Sa ' St: Es'·~ ... OLD •cl( ~~10 X·22S8 dy, V-' See us ror a top dollar Lora t Volvo Dea Irr
<MOZ Ti, air, )t1<:k. \I 1' h 11
s.u~.
1972 M-cede -A utVO 9771. csUnwt 1 1nOrung1.1Countv' ,.::,: s v AU.£Y IMrORTS v...... 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MARQUIS VOLVO BUY or ~EAS l'!
·~·3003
1917 2l!IOZ. :.11r 1n..1 i::. :.111,.
moldtnJ.t, 1 ,p<l, AM 1-'M,
17~ 613-49~
~:.!id ':'.!~'h~ .. r,-t1>-102• 831-1.040 49 5.4949 ••;~~~~·~~~;:~~.-~~· • • 1977 VOLVO MISSION VI t:.JO DI H ~CT
S 5 89.5 ·~:: :.;.:;,~ • .:',"·,/~~~ NEW & USED CARS i:'Ji.;;t.~i:;~o;.! IJl.2110 495-1210 ~~~~ ~ell now Obtain own Top ra:sh $S lor )Our VW h 1 C ., IF YOU ~-:t-~ "~-:t ~
fioanctni; or assume lsc. P1ud for or nut Cu II ~~~ s < 0038 ) • u n huvc a i.ervkl' to offer or 2025 S Manchester
Bill MAXfY
TOYOTA K~l.'·673"5482 Kei~~~~~~glAM vw SADDLUACK ~~hl~:S~l~~:~c1.:;r1~~ Anahei~ 750-2011
1977 Porsche 924. A/C, 7600 Westminster Ave. VALLIY tMrOITS Classified Section . . • •
sorf, AM·FM stereo. It 893-7Mlor638·7880 131·2040495-4949 Phocw642·S678 71 Volvo1800, xlnt rond. gm, H,000 mi, lmmac · S4200 or bea t offer .
11111• ........... , ,., .,,.,
... ... ' ""' 4 • ,. • ' • ~·
cond. $10,300. Wkdys '71 VW camper, Adven· 1, Mew tlOO Autos, M'ew tlOO Trades c onsidered.
IW().1460, wknds 499·3828 lure convtirs ion, bubble· •••••••••••••••M•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• !li54""487
19)3 Datsun
"·~ Ta~• •he• llohy 4•d
(2¥!1YH) GoOll lhtu 12•1 .. 11
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
1111, l••·•l i•d 1•• I',\\
MUN f •N(, I U... I t A I.. •t
·71 240Z, air, mugs.
AM/FM, mint cond
Orig. owor . S32SO
644·2440
1971 Datsun 510 Wgn, air,
R&H, clean, $1450.
R46-4292 --------fenoari 971.3 •••••••••••••••••••••••
197SMII280
SEDAN. Tobacco brown
& In lmnuiculate condi·
lion. 1229MF'WJ. Must
sec lo appreciate!
top, butane elect ref. tile. • ·--------
NOWOMLY $9995
M ISSION Vlf JO 1MPOIH5 .. . . . . ... ...........
Mll.aMl '72 914 Porsche, ne w
paint. clutch & tires.
$.1650/bst offer. 640-4079 '72 VW Bus. clean. private
party $2250/0fr. 673·3012
eves. ----'64 SC, xlnl cond. ularm,
stereo, lugi;uge riH•k, mw;t :.ell $4ij()()/8st olr. 1968 Baja Bug. i\M/FM
&!0·1713 ~lcroo, CB. sun roof. $600
64S·65S7 8311148 49Sl704 Por11che ti" mu~s. 911 &
912 cng & trans purls. big
19tl7 230 MRZ nuns ftnt.'. selection, 536 2303 or
J:ood rond New 1nlcr1or 640-0676
'77 Chumpugne ed1t1on
con' ert1ble. wh1l<' on
while. FM stereo 8 trk.
xtras . A beautiful
classic. $6650. 675-6833
A ~I F M , rad l tr e !> ,
PB PS $3375. 644·5499 '74 914 1.8 S1h·er blue,
AM/FM cass. Nu p111nt,
ll..ftll cond. $4995. 673·0497 '76 VW Sc1rocco 20,000 '76 MIZ 450SEL
F\illy luxury equipped mi, stereo, 1mmac. $4$00.
673-71Z1 1ncJud1ng crwsc control, 1972 Porsche 914, white,
sunroof, air conditioning, new clutch, ball, $3700 or ~l ofr. S4S.0562 '67 VW Panel Van. New stereo l1tpe & leather tn· -------_ e n g w /wrty . $1350.
tenor. (046653). 771t 924 Porsche. $12.000. 631·9560or 642·7353
Loaded ~unrno(, AM / FM tap c , l' t r. '65 Bus, new engine. $1000 MISSION Vlf JO IM POll15 ....... . ....
1 •r, .,.., • •"••···
IMMEDIATE .
DELIVERY
SUPER SELECTION
Jagu~r
~~
831·1748 49S 1704 Ferrari 01nu '74 .
lirn T~1n. Lu rn1 Mint . eond. Greut inn·:.lmcnt. 7G 4."ASL. under wurnrnty.
1 770·1!'>83 or make offer.
----CullS48·7819
'7ti 912 F.. immal' l\lu:.t
sell. Xtr.as. Sl2,700. or ol ·
ler. 494·7675
'69 VW CAMPY
Must 11011. 975.3795 dys,
499-1878 evs/wknds
Triumph $19.950tufr. 675 790:.1 xlnl l'onrl 2 tops, slcrl'o --l"UM;clle. SIK.500. ti.&O .tltil
Fiat 9725 nflHPM .....••...............•
1976FIATXl/9
With stereo casseuc &
only 19,000 mile ...
1887PFI J.
SADDLEIACK
VALLEY IMPORTS
831-2040 495.4949
'74 MII 4SOSE
<.:omplrlt.• with Sll·rco.
pwr windows. nu1se
l'Ontrol & less than 34,000
miles. A rare find !
Rois Royce 9756 1965 VW. good mcch cond .
••••••••••••••••••••••• Int & ext needs work. •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. Bestorr. 7Sl·4163
ROY '75 Robbil, A/T,. radio.
CARVER $.DX>. /
ROllS·ROYCE IMM254
tWOJ•m-ee '76 Rabbit, must sell ,
Newport .. n ll Leaving the country .
F
\ ___ _,....... $3200. 499-1636
75 lal Xl9, xlnl cond. ClOSlO SUNDAYS
MIS ,ION ~If JO 1MPOll1S
8)11/4~ ~11.110.i
14.000 mi. Loadl.'d $3750 Mu.'>t sell. 675-29111 · Show Room cond, '7S 66 Rolls Royce. Silver
---DO. 26,000 ml: all xlras Shadow, xl nt cond.
'59 Bug . Sunroof, 36HP
eng.SynchrotraOll.
FIAT 124 •sunroof. 450SEL. i.ame While. $18.000. 631·~5.
SPIDER styhng a:. '78 Mod. but Robin '04 VW Squareback. good
Bsl orr. 497· 1592 ---
COHVIERTllLES Sl4.ooo less. 63.1·2342 condition. $750 or best
A ~~~~~bl~!~~ ~•••••••••••••!?.6.~ l:-:-·:_S_·
7
:ptop camper
l.&J To Choose fo'rom ·1.a. 'i5. '7fi & ·77
All ~1th lnw rnlll':.tl!l' & in
excellent showroom ,·on·
UJlllJn 1111!1'73 I
AM/ FM stereo caf.:C~~:. * SAAi * Xlnt cond. Must M~c to
crwi.c control & ,·cry lo~· Wiii be featured ut a ti.Ir apprec. PP. $2500. rruk~. (105302>. shooecDecember 16. 17 & 645·!13'72 (tt:zµ_ HONDAS .,, . p ACCORDS ·
Priced to SELL!
M ISSION VIEJO IMP01115
MUST SaL!I! 18. ftarbor View Pla1.a. ·66 vw l"astbat·k, 25·30
f)an Joaqwn Hills N & mpg, reblt 1600, dual
San Miguel, Newport carbs. frnl d i!IC brka,
Beach. AM /l"M stcr. Quad K trk.
.. ··'· '·•·. 1!'• ......... .
MIHIO N VII JO IMf'OllB
.... 1 -•
8311148 49Sl704 . . "" . . . .. -.
83 1 1148 49S 1704
Honda 971.7 .
••••••••••••••••••••••• 77 JOOD Merc•1.'<lcs, 10.000 11~ u ,77 miles. Take over lease. '""""' new IH2·8987.
HONDA Cars
MAMY
To ChooH FroM!
UNIVERSITY
OlckMObil•
Honda Can • GMC
Trucks
2850 Harbor Bl\ d
Costa Mesa 540 9640
'75 Cn·1r. radtillS. AM ·
F~t. blue. Xlnt cond.
$2500. &t2·2701
"72 Honda. 43 mpg . .S spd,
gold blk. AM·FM radio,
htr. snow l"h<•tns. dl.'pcn
dablc. $-135. 5<10·302:1
77 Red llonda. 7.liOO mi.
$.'l!XJO Ownt'r 1)44.!).&4 J nr
~·2
Karmann Ghia 9735 ...........••....•.....
'70 Karmann Gh111 . u1r
$1950. t:.>7 :nth St. N fl. ,,fl
ti. 75!.J.5752 bl wn 8 1
'67 Karmann Ghia. nd~
lite body, eng. run:.
perfect. $450. 751 i.t34
Mazda 9738 •.................•..•.
miracle
mazda
1.150 H_.... llvd.
Cotto MHCI 645·5700
HURRY-HOW AT
MIRACU MAZDA wrm nm PliRCHAS i-:
OFANVNEW
1971 MAIDA GLC
You will receive an
AM/FM stereo
"FRE!" .
or the cash equivalent
thru Tuesday, Dec. 20th.
COMTEST SALE
t=NDS DEC. 20th
MIRACLE
MAZDA/RENAULT
21SO llarborBlvd. C.M
645-5700
'
Ml",\•Of, ./If /0 jMP1 l., r \
1 jl I.,,.. J\ 'fl•J
'$ 280S, Wht. ext le blue
Int w/Becker radio.
$5,000. 67S· 1530
''" zeosa · Xtra olean with all <>P·
tlonf. l Owner l>t-luxe
sedan. In tine concl. All
orig. '8000. firm. 640-G410
Of'6'4 ...
·n i\lcn·cdl·" .i50St.. 1m
mul· We re whl~. sky
blue. Both top~. J\11
:.tras. Sl.J.500 1;75.2181
1972 MII 2200
1\ut.omullc· & air cond.
Fur lhc luxury or a
Merredc.-s & the errir1en·
c') ofad1eael <834EIE1.
MAKE OFFER
MIHION VII JO IMPOllJS .. . .. '·-. .. . ...
1131 1748 4 9S 1 704
1967 230.5L
HAUTIFUL
640·7834
"61 MR l90SL White w 'red
int. I ltd & soft top. $49'J5.
497.3020
'74 MIZ 450SEL
LOW miles. Complete
w1lh leath1•r interior,
~tereo cassette, pwr.
windows & air cond.
llW6PHll.
MAJCEOFFIR
MISSION VIEJO IM P01115 .. . .. . ...
• "" •• '*
1131 1748 495 1704 -----
MG 9742 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 MG M1df'el. Wht/blk
top inlr U''>S than JOM
m1 n ew car guar
11 ani-fcrrnhle. $31100
firm 493 2570 wknds or
wkdys art.Ii
'71 MIDGJo;r Hed. 27350
m1. tonneau cov. $2700.
646-5063 or 642·4532 Mon,
Wed, Fri. only.
'77 MG M1di:et, Convt,
hl u e . 4 ,300 miles.
AM/FM radio. $4100
&'75-2(&')
Opel . 9746 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'71 Opel GT. Auto, Sac.
Must sell.· Moko· ofr.
7Sl·S802 eves/wknds.
"750pel Manto, xlnl cond.
lo ml. fuel inj, AC,
AM/F"M, S2800. 979·0127
•P'IUCHOT• wm be featured at • car
show December 18, l7 4'
18. Harbor View PIHa,
Slll'I Jo1qui• Hilla N fr
S&n Ml11ael, Nt1wport
Dench.
A new shipment olecMe a '78 Oletel11 now in 1toct1.
llACH IMPOlft
84800VESTREET
<Near MacArthur BM.
ftJamboMe Road).
l'llEWPORT BEACH
712-0tOO
\
'78 Saabs Arc Here!
A few '77 Saabs lefl.
(3122). E)'om$S925.
We are now taking re
servat1ons for the '"turbo
car"''
BEACM IMPORTS
IW8 DOVE STR I:: ET
<Near MucArthur Blvd.
& Jamboree Road I
Nt-:WPORT Bl':ACll
752-0900
Toyota 9765 .•....•................
C~es.i.
lfflToyota
Pick Ups
& eon.>ers
Good Wectioll
SUNI
SAVINGS
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA •
1919• ... ,, • ._ lt.d .... !l,')\
HUM J 1M(.TQHlf•(H
BEFORE YOU
SELL YOUR
TOYOTA,
See U.<I for a lop dollar
e.Umate'.
MAR(?UIS TOY OT A
MISSION VIEJO
831-2880 495·12 I 0 ---
Bil
1975 Corolla ·-• oq . tow '°"' ""°9 IU•ll IOl Pnce tood ttwv 12-te.n.
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
1111 ,,.., "'l••d •••I\\\
•~ J" "•Hr,.•ON II Lt...•f
• I
$1100. 536-8098. · & CIVICS
'70 VW Bus, rblt cng., nu
clutch & trans. sha.i cpl,
must ~ee ! $2650 firm.
846-<*>9
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
75 Ll·Grandc, :.hurp ,
green metnl11l· pu1nt.
:.unroof $2800 firm .
645-513$
70 BuJ: Convert em ·
mal'ul:.ile. red & black.
t!350or blll otr 497·:1195
~1ust llell h)' Christmas.
'72Sqbck. beige, u1r. new
:.U rdls. f'M/Slereo cabs.
Cleon. $2293.84/offcr
5S2-43JS wknd!> e~~
Auto1, Mew
' • I •
GUESS WHICH CAR
DEALER IS MAD
BECAUSE HE HAS THE
WORLD'S WORST
LOCATION?
.
Yup, Oat Sun of a Gun, Jim Parkinson. sez he
promises to save you money for Christmas -
Hurry in or call us for OUR Discount Prices!
BRAND f 78'S IMMEDIATE NEW I~ DELIVERY
280Z *. 200 SX * 810 * 510 *8210 * FlO *TRUCKS
...
210Z 5 1000
..;. OEMO ~ER. NO. 6780) DISCOUNT_
LEASE A BRAND HEW 1978
DATSUN 1210 FOR .ONLY
36 month open end leue. Cap cost-13321 .
Reaidual-41881.6!>. 1200 cond1tt0n deposit. tax. license &
first months payment down, on approved credit (378643)
WE LIAH ALL MAICIS & MODl&.S -
ASIC FOR (HHI WOODS •
56406
MONTH
Prices Plus Tax & License· Cara Subfed To PriOI' Sale ·Offer Good Tht'U 12·1~7.7
••
... •
.. •
~ • . . .
. .. • .
. . . . .
. . . •
•
j
•
#
s1395·
lt7 •2~:~s2s95 (011NXMJ ... :.os3395 (1H38962)
It lt74 ~=-0 $3795 FOllD s4195 UOMCO
11840()) 6
lt77 1'7 s5395 . ':.,~$4495 DOOCH ....
(979SPT) (1867799)
WIHA¥1~Y " 1
MOU MADS & MODlL!.. POIO F-JSO $ 7995
TO CHOOSI NOM ··~~
.... .. , .. •
• •
AMloe. UMCI AMtot, UMd AMtot, UHd Auto.. UMd 'Autos. UHd ............................................................................................. , .................... .
__. ff I 0 C •.c tt 11 Ca •ee 99 l S Qroplff ttZS OW.motHS. 99 st ..........................................................................................................................
s1195
.$3.595 ...,..,
Gtll.M.4H
!368NZP)
f7 MUST=~i4495 t920RS "" . ·..,'::. 'c':i. $ 5195 (607Ql...
·• JMck C/S, &ood coodl· &iaa, de8D., 1'UDI good.
XlDt hod,r. $985.163-0641
'11 Estate Sta. Wgo,
slereo/ tape, a II pwr
eqpt, suoo. ~5089
9'15
•
I 977 eADIUAC
DEVIWS
(6) eo..es fss.ctana EXAMPU::
COUPIDEVIW
Leather iDterlor,
Cabriolet top, crulae con·
llU. stereo witb digital
readout, etc. (l18BXH).
Priced •low ..
$9588 .
Nabers
Cadillac
2600 H.trbo' Blvd. Cu~tJ Mc~ 5.i0-91 00
J f7S CADIUAC "13 Cpo Dtvtlle. loaded. COUPI DI YUi Hatwlt yellow + llllr,
Fdll • ls la nJce ari1ownr673-0444 coaCo~ <t 7tHEW>. C o 9917 NowredUC4Mlt,o •••••••••••••••••••••••
OMLYS24t5
SADOLllACI<
VAWY IMPORTS
Hl·l0404'M94t
1'71 CADILLAC
COWi DI VIU.1
" mantb9. left ta leue. Ael9e call for detalla. Cort,_"'-"' 641-3661
7' Camaro LT. AM/FM,
air, '8.000 mi, new radls,
xlnt. $3500.0BO, 6'1f.45l!
l!JllWIS
Open Dally • !Uaday •
'tll lOPM -
2929 Harbor Blvd. •
Coslli Mesa
546-1934
Lcirge Set.di°"
Brand Hew 1971 •
PLYMOUTH
VOURESEOAH
Auto1T111t1c transm1ssio6,
225CIO cna1nc, 6 cyj.
bumper guards front •
rear, power steerint. <Ser ltfl141C8Bl27407)
NAB·ERS •.CADILLAC
HOLIDAY CLEARANCE SALE
77 Monte Carlo.· xtras '72 LTD Xlnt condt Air.
plore, xlnt maint. Like SJ.800. new. '93·9686. 6'73-53:Mor 558-0983
'• Malibu, Id enc. nr DU rwlials, lo miles.
$8511. 494-3537
Grand Torino, all pwr,
stereo, AM/FM l•trk,
xlot cood. ~. 731""33
or751·5050
$4095 ..
.AT LAS CH RYS LI R
PLYMOU I~
'tll lmpala, 2 dr bkk vynl ---------1
top. xtras, act cond $S3S. '67 Mustanr. V8, auto. <>Pen Dally lcSUaday -·
IMl-7713 7761 Volga Dr trans, pwr steer, stock. 'tll 10 PM • ·: • "--n. H.B. $1500. 557-1756 Eves. 2929 Harbor Blvd. ~ Costa Mesa
'S3Chevy4drSedan, 71 Country Squire 9 pus, 546-1934 -'
Musts ell lhis wknd. AM /FM tape, l owner. .
968-3624 S995. PP. 759 -0096 1972 Plymouth Sea mi>
'°"° (iltAlt TOllNO ' °""' v.. -"--Ol-'"G a br•M • CO"llO fadlO •u:ae ~ ""--'* ----'--~-
POIDPMTO
4 cyt '"V'"" 4 -AM roolc> e-.W -.tt.OOO•m•lc""""""' l<C.•-T
c.AOIUAC SOWi Ill vw p_.., '*"" OOOlt. AMI™ llorwo. -
-clnoo ...... '"' .. -"'""' '"'" Flrtlt~ h'I Oh•I gr..,. flr.-at. 6-6,800 --Loe •3111FlN
UNCOUe MARIC IV
8C>lll -..... " At.It-lfl"eQ ,,_...,..
---1oc•1.M.tll &L.-IOO. ~ f0UF()Y
DATSUM J.210 2 DI. ~~· -...... -.oao--Ult.
AUDC IOOlS -........... ,.,,,,.. __ _ -.Uc--J
1MUWi AD LANDAU •
f'utt -· l!'c:tucli"9 --· AM/FM -··"'--~-' _._ ____ ,......_
.. .._ ...... ............_Uc.fMtL.a •
..am•weAU ... _ ................ ~........................ __ .......... _.....,.._UC. .,. ....
'67 · CLASJICS •
Pl Y. VOlMll Nf.MlfJt WAGON ve .. .,.--. • .,,CONt °'°"""'~• Dr.-...., A.""'4 .... ..,. CtUiM OON•of '°"' ........,,. __ ..._n.ooo-a..
"°'' ..
MTSUNI """°· 1.-. * CIDl'd.. NAHM -'-· _,_. ,.._.,,.....,.,._n
le-Lio 11121ASO
'67
---------• eve/w~ Sl400 -0r best ofr. B.Bt.
'73 MONTE C.rlo. full T . 2 O HT XJ Sl390.60. 847-0818. pwr, A/C. very gd. cond. '71 onno, r , • nt ....;_....;_ ______ .,...
$2250. 831-2'M6 or S57-3:i00 cood. Must sell. Call Lcrge s.ledlo.
as.kforlrene _546-_S3116 __ . -----lrmdMew 1971
'75 Monza 2+2. 5 spd, air, '75 9 ranada 2 Dr cpe. JOK P\. YMOUTH
o r ig. o wner. 22,000 nu s, vinyl, P /S, P/B, VOL.ARI COUPE ·
careful m iles. Clean. A/C. $2"150 firm.~ Automatic transmissi~
S25()0. &nel.84 Ma¥4tridl 9947 225 CID engine, 6. cyt.
tinted windshield,;.
bumper guards front II:
rear, power steerln~
space saving spare. <St?r
IFHL29C8B 127377)
'72 Caprice 4 dr, AM/Fm. JUrH, A/C, other xtrH. 2
Tone wb\/gld. S107S.
496-1.,..,.
Qryslet-9925 •••••••••••••••••••••••
t...,. Wtctfofl ......... 7.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
J976FORD
MAVBICI<
Automatic, air cond ..
pwr. steering, radio.
heater & vinyl Lop. Jn ex·
cellenl condition with
only 24,657 miles !
<42.3NPL).
OMLYSl295
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
CHRYS&.a
COUOIA
Bucket teats. auto trau, B CID eng, VI, remote
conll'OI mlrrort, body side moldings, stripe · 2M5HARBOR BLVD.
deck lid, protective 540-6410540.021l
strips front & rear, auto Metary ttSO speed caatrcll, Wt wheel, Jandaa vjDyl r oof, •••••••••••••••••••:•••
AM/FM 1ter~o. wire ORANGECOUNTY S
wbeel covers, backet HEWIST
Mllta, power at.eerinf le LINCOLN-MERCURY
br*es, fad«)' air con-DealershipisnowOPEN
dltioaing, tinted 11us. RA y FlADEIOE
<Ser ts82'2J8R 1266112) UNCOLN·MERCURY $6495 l8-18AutoCeater0r.
SOFwy-Lalte Forest exit
IRVINE
AT LAS CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
830.1000
1967 Monte Clair , xlnt
mecb cond. 75,000 miles,
$4095
ATLAS CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
Open Daily & Sunday :
'Lil lOPM
29:2:9H1rbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
546-1934
&.-.. Sefedioll
..... ~1971
PLYMOUTH ARROW
Vinyl b ucket seats, 4
speed transmission 4 e>4
engine. 1600cc, vinyl sidCI
molding s . (Ser
rn2lK82lS0038)
$3695
ATLAS CHRYSL£R
PLYMOU TH Open Dally le Sunday SSOO. 752-7850 or 548-9888
'tll 10 PM Open Dally It Sunda,f • 2929 Harbor Blvd. '71 Capri 1600, 4 spd, runs 'UI 10 PM :
c.o.ui Mesa good, nu radials. Make 2929 Harbor mvd. • S46-l fl4 ~fer. 67S-70l.8 eves. Costa Mesa
· tWUCJ 9952 -~5~46-~1~9.;:;..34..;...___-. '77 CORDOBA fully •••••••••••••••••••••••
equlp'd. $1,000 " take ,68 GT 390 cu In auto ·~ DUSTER P/S, ne~ '1Vf!I pymta 5'5-5'138 . · &. • • Ure:i, 6 cyl. Gd. con<t. , stereo, nu tires paint. $1750 831-2046 or m-350b
'-9ts.lectlo. = clean $1950. askf~lrene :
.... Mew lt78 -'-"uc 9'6J
atlYSLa '74 MUSTANG II 2800 V6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .
WAROM ~ or beet offer. C.11 '74 Grand Am 2dr, Ad..
A&&omatic trammisaM>n, Ollis aft 5:30PM wkdys. AMfFM st.reeo. PS. pl(
V-1, Ill CID en1lne, ~tlell.M&..3JS3 newtt.res.Tbiscar ls~
Yuit1 mirrw Wuminat-'65 OONV. V-8, auto. Ex-new w/only -42.000 m~ .
.... daaal remote coot.rot cellent.. $211B5. Sacrifice $2990. 960-3531 •
mlnW. rillfl body aide C&ll~2522 moldlDI. conier lltet, bumper 1uarda, auto •llul&ang, P/S, P/B,
apeecl coatrol, po•er 1ood cood. $1000. tlMrtDI • bnktl. ""1f!lr 6*GS3 aft. 4pm
aWIDIWI •..., locb. •• llmt"'I convt Part ff7' CUt 1teeda1 wlaeel, eftal'ed2se VS . A/T ..... ••-•••• ........ ,._
All/PM "-?-• wire PIS. PrB, air. s7s.734.3'. 1990 T·Blld, ss.ooo ~ ............... con4f· 8'totr$3000. ...., tirel,·l.trk. $100(' daalne. (let tPll2ZRIO C48TS-7-420. : 1..s35) 'M GT. Pooy tnt4 rior.•-_.... ______ _
$659 5 Ori< cond. Must sell. VNll • 9t7i 6'2-8135 •• -.~ ................ ..
ATLAS d~RYSlf R
Pl 1"Hllil H
, LW74 Vea• Hatchback, le 65 .Must. Blue, 4 s pd, ml. 1ood cond. All"..
.KW'lt, Holly, -4 : 11 J>Ofti, SJ.00/ofr. 6'0-8Sll8
sb111>. '900/ofr. ~5976.
ffl imv::~A er
......... ••• •••••••••• • 8'7 • 71311 or S»-6994 •
TOllONADO--Claulc • 1IM AC. Good eood. can "71 Ven. nblt eu. De?'
Bob dJI n•47Mru, eva clut c'h, xlnt In/ ou"-
'71t MO -~e.ta-nss :·
•
Brand New 1978 Olds
Cutlass
Brand New 1978 Olds . ~ .
Reg~ncy Sedan
(3X69K8M026990} (Stk. 6249} , Automatic trans .• air cond .. pwr. steering. pwr. brakes. Landau roof. tilt wheel. radio.
heater. w/s/w tires & rallye wheels. (3G87 A8R405920) (Stk. 6082)
IMMEDIATE $
•\
DELIVERY
IMMEDIATE . -$
DELIVERY
PLUS TAX & LICENSE DISCOUNT OFF FJDERAL STICKER PRIC~
Brand New
1978 GMC.
·Brand New
1978 GMC
.·Bralad New
. '
1978 GMC
Y2 Ton Pickup 1 Ton Dual Wheel
Call & Chassis . Jimmy 4 Wheel Drive
' .
VB. 4 barrel. power steering,· heavy duty. power brakes.
chrome bumper, locking differential, gauges. auxiliary rear (TCD148Z509233) (TCL338Z509172)
.
'72 OLDSMOBILE
TOR ONA DO
Full power. factory air cond . AM/FM
stereo. 6 way power 5eat & low miles.
(450FJ01
'71 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD
Like NEW wllh '.2 vinyl top. air cond. radio.
heater. power steering & power brakes.
(9540WH).
MAKE
OFFER
'72 PLYMOUTH -
ousTER
6 cylinde'r engine. air cond. automatic.
pcwer steering, power brakes, radio &
... heater. (072GJVJ.
17.f'DODGE •73 AUDI --
CHARGER COUPE .
With power steering. radio. heater ahd Automatic transmission & AM/FM stereo
vinyl top. (199835). with cassette (651KARJ
'72 FORD
PINTO RUMAIOUT
Automatic transmission. air cond1t1oning.
rao10 and heater. (3'27GtS).
172 BUICK
SKYLARK COUPE
Automatic, air cond.. power steering,
pcwer brakes. radio l hHter. (039FLZJ.
'74 PLYMOUTH
SEBRING PLUS
Automatic, vinyl top, air cono . pwr. 5teer·.
ing & pwr. brakes. Af'v11F-M stereo & pwr
w1noo• ( 195352)
1 73 BUICK
REGAL
Automatic. air cond .. v inyl top, pcwer
steering. power brakes & AM/FM radio.
(020JPS) • ,,..
seat & folding rear seat. (TKL 188Z508304l .
IMllEDIATE DEUYER
$ "
'73 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS
Air, automatic. power windows, power
steering, radio. heater & power brakes
(132NWK)
.
•
•74 HONDA
HATCHBACK
This economy car 15 lully eQu1ppeo A r&al
gas saver! (225K5V.;
'74 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SJ
MBtack Beauty." Air cond.. \.'1 vinyl top,
AM/FM stereo with 8 track tape deck,
bucket/power seats. pcwer windows. hit
wheel & rallye wheels. VERY NICE'
(338KBM).
MAKE
-OFFER
'76 CHEVY
VEGA HATCHIACK
EQuipment includes automatic trans., radio.
heater & air cond1honing ( 436POPI
'75 CHEVY r-
MovA COUPE
lfv1th air cono111oning, automatic.. POwEir
steering & power brakes (I':> 1 tv.v 11
'77 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUP~EME
Autoniatlc trans .• air COl'ld., power steering.
Power brakes. hit wheel & AM/FM stereo.
(182895). -
Los lnvltamos a Esta su caalta Dunton
FC>fd Para &etViles c:on guato en todas au
reparaciones ya sea en autos nuevos O
usado. Y para todaa aus neceidades an
todas repanciones de servfclo.
Su Amigo Y Coosejero; Frank Medrano
NEW '78
FORD FIESTA
l ..0001 MATCHIACK
1.6 II tre transverse mounted engine.
4-speed fully synchronized manual trans ..
front Wheel dnve. front suspension. rack &
pinion steering. front disc brakes. Michelin
ste~l-belt> radial tires. bnghl aluminum
bumpers, bucket seats, fold-down rear
seat. carpeting, heavy duty package. AM
radio. llnted glass. vmvi insert bodyslde
molding. Ser. #C92543 Stk. "0517
53899
Front disc brakes. steel-belled radial ply
tires. wheel covers. brtgl]I exterior mold· $
!ngs. opera windows .• carpeting, woodtone 4699
inst. panel appliQue. 4.1L/250-1V/englne •.
selectsh1l1 crui59-o-matlc, pawer steering,
deluxe bumper group. Ser. #131014 Stk:
NEW'78
FORD MUSTANG II
2 DOOi HAllDfOf'
4-speed manual 1ransm1ss1on. contoured
bucket seats. carpeting, tachometer. amp &
temp. gauges. vinyl roof, 2.8 litre v-a
eng1ne-2V. pin stripes. wsw radial tires.
d1g1tal Quartz crystal clock, power rack and
pinion steertng, pawer front dlac brakes.
ttnled glass-complete dual SPOrt mirrors.
Ser 111 18899 Stk ;;413
s4499
1519
NEW •77
FORD COURIER
l COHOM'r ... CKUf' NEW '78 FORD VAN
106 9 inch wheelbase. 1800 cc engine.
power front disc brakes. bright front
bumper 6-lt pickup box 4-spd manual
trans. 1400-paund capacity. tinted glass
complete. western mirror LH-RH swing lk,
wsw tires Ser !1P21231 Stk. #5532
V-8 engine. glass-fixed rear door, custom trim option and bucket seats
driver & pass, 7550 lb GVW peakage. transmission cru1s~·matlc
m1rrors·bnghl tow mount west . glass-tinted. door-sliding side caf\}o.
super cooling package, fuel tank aux1hary w/atd tank, speed control,
power steering. bumpers-chrome front & rear. grille-bnght surround.
Ser. #AJ4753 Stk. #230
-~599
GT
\HS •"'10 Ir~ laittory ••' tOf\O•hOt'ttnQ C>OWef"
••eennQ oo--OllC or»-. '*'40. ,,....,, ttl\teo gNM.
.. nyl onletKA lJ.n ena S1WJ> lJC I I 0211111 I
•77 VW RAlllT
HJ.TCHIJ.CK
4 <YI 4 WAOC1. •t. AM/FM •t«eo tl<llO. """O()f
Mo<:nelln '"°'Ill' & tyClOne INIQI. C..a!OM W-.
l>h••PHI & QIJOQ.9ll 1n town. Lie;, 1404SPtl s4199
177 FORD
MA VllUCK 2 OOOlt
6 c. f ,,, oorottONno oower 1tliftr1no oower bf9klll.
to<l•O "e"'"' Suoer -p' rffdyt llC •S>!l3SOE
53699
•74 DATSUN
710 COUf'E •
4 cyl , 1u10 trons . -· '*''~ wM-111 llrH. -cover& v1nyt tNt900f. t>Mutllv' maroon hnt1lt uc.
10/lflPH 52399
•75 CHEV
• VJ.H
V-8, IUIO Ir ..... llr conCI , -ll-lf11j, -brakH. R IHl !Ifft. fnlOL UM 1l tor wO<k or '"'Y '
i.ae 11A011!>111
'· • sa99
'75 CHEVY
SHORTIE PICKUf'
Voll. power .._,,., lllOIO. .._ & RWL Urn. HwO IO
hnCI Lt<;. •-!Ill
~43'9
176 COURIER
PICKUr
4 cyt.. 6 ICIMd. *· -· _.., ~ ~ -.1190--. Ol'<ly 1•200 ..... lJC. e 102370
53699
176 FOID
COUltaPU
"""' Tr-. w CGllO. &ieo ---
llller>O< 6 ... tenor --· u-1 t.<IOO -Uc 11F91i63
WINDOW STICKER PRICE •••••••••••••••••••••• saoe7.45
SALE P'IJCE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $6717.45
DISCOUNT 5 1300°0
'74 PINTO 4 cyl. auto. "-neater ""'•tewlll I·•• -~•'• vtn)'t tft1ettor. Nnl ten1he to ,,,.,.. l.c a7t()f(VU
'2399
•72 FORD
LTD
v..a •vto .,-.,. . OO'Wet •t1«1no OO'*ef bfi1)t.M OOW9f'
•lt'IOO•t. AWfM flOtO. ~1nyt tOOf AtlOfG•bte
h.1•.• v l c •34.2JP'IC
51599
•75 FORD
GRAH TORINO 4 DR.
,t.,uto ''an'. 111 c:c..rio. p(rN9f a.&enng. pow..-.,,._ ... '"°'°· vinyl root unoer tfl 000 """'" UC. 18/3POG
52899
•73 PINTO
WI.GOH
4 cvt .. 11110 --... , cono . tOOlo. lug. rac.k. ·s..-
ane•P paont. UC. t647NJZ •
•75 IUICK
ArOLLO 4 DR.
AU1 It~' D' COrtcl 00~' llfft ng power Ot•'8'
rooio No<:e earl UC. 182el.PZ
52999
•72 CAPRI
V-1>, IUIO tr.,.., W , ,_ rllltre-. ~ l-
ll>ln 32.000"" Hun'y! lJC. lb42.1El
'75 FORD Fl 00
PICKUf'
V-4 euto llWL -11-.ng. -~ ,_ t1t\ll ¥1nyl-. <i.t 111-~ •13432Y
53799
'76 COURIER
PICKV'
4 cyl 4 -8"utlll.il ~ ""'" -lllllCIOnO. uc. 11E0620t I . s3291 ••
4 cyl.. auto .,__ llc:lory a<r cono.t-.,.,...,
••Hnn11 -CI09C •-'"''°· -· .,,,._,,.
"'"· ""'~ ~ -CO¥et$ UC. •632SO£
•74 PINTO
WA.GOH
4 cYI , auto tr-.. rOOlo. -·· wllitewall llrn. -coven. twury 1111enor -· Na, nlQe earl UC. l818MIP
•16 PINTO
RUHAIOUT
4 -""'· ,_,, """'--" ,,,,_ pin tlllC>1"11 "A brown beauty. UC. l•lllNPI.
52899
'75 PINTO
4 c:yt.. 4 -..i. air condltlon1"9. redlo. heat«. __ , ...... -......... ,_ "-llfOUI'.
HH l\ld 1-'°""'9 0ii& Uc. 1664NLC
'77TOYOTA cal~ CU. UflTIACK
4 cyl , au10. lrW'9, ,,., concllllOflMO. AM/f'M -
~·--ltyOU<ranAnClantc.-. buy Ill lie 1384AKO
55799
•74 FORD LTD
llOUG+-tAM 2 Dlt.
Voll. IUIO Ir .... , lilt POllO , -"e<!nf11j, -
ln"-M. --. -1111ta AM/fM 14.,_., -'°· ..... ,..... -......... tOPI. BroN• S.IUI)'. lJC. U $6STH
'3399
'72 FORD LTD
SQUtltEWctH.
Voll, euto lY'Wla.. w -. -MMllno. pe,,.\r ..,.,..._ r-tug f'8dL "tvry, Uc. 14'2FIC
51799
•72 FORD LTD
4 DI. HARD TOr
v ...... 10 ...... --· -·'-· ~ _,.,..._ reOIO, """'....., 1.... A -l>U\I I.le. tM2FlL
f ,
ZDOOR
;
El ven<.!edor de camlones Rudy Moreno es
un espeaallsta en su ramo. Tiene 3 anoa
de e111s>et1eocia en c;omo ordenar ca.miones
hechos ·al gusto del cllante. para
determined<> peso de mercancia y al gusto
personal del c:omprador.
NEW '78
FORD LTD
\
2 DOOlt l'ILLARIO HARDTOf'
PACJotlY AIR COHDlflOMIHG
Front d1~ brakes. rack and pinion atee(lng,
coolant recovery system. bright and vinyl
bodyslde mldg. bright exterior moldings, $4699 carpeting, delux.e wheel covers, bright LH
Vinyl roof. 6.6 htre/400 CIO/V-8 engine,
dual accent paint stripes. wsw radial tires.
deluite bumper group, AM radio. tinted
glass-complete. light group, full wheel
covers. Ser. #104320 Stk. 1075
style mounted mirror, accent paint at/lpes,
3 . 3 L/ 200-'tV I engi ne, selec t-sh lft
cruise-<Hnatic. wsw radial tires. front and
rear bumper guards.. AM radio. Ser.
1149925 Stk. #0682
·s5999
NEW '77
FORD PINTO
2 DOOR SIOAM
4-speed manual transmission. front dtsc
brakes. rack and pinion steenng, bucket
seats, carpeting, min1-conao1e. electnc rear
window defroster, steet-belted radial ply
tires. wheel ci:>vers, 2.3 liter 2V engine.
deluxe bumper group. Ser. 1405728 Stk. #5575 •
NEW 1 78 FORD F-250
CUSTOM STYLISIDI PICKUP
53199
NEW.178
FORD F-100
CUSTOM FURISIDI ptCKUP'
Chrome front bumper. lull loam seat, folding seat back. dome lamp,
headliner. 6800 GVW package. V-8 engine. gauges-ammeter & oil
Press., transmission cru1se-o-mat1c, power steering. mirrors-low
mount-bright. glass tinted-all around. alternator 60 amp, extra cooling
package, bumper-rear step painted. Ser. #880510 Stk. 10567
Chrome front bumper. lull foam seat.
folding seat back. dome lam:>. headliner.
302 8 cyl, gauges.ammeter & 011 press~
power steering, glass ttnted-all around,
cigar lighter. extra cooling package.
bumper-rear painted. Ser. !f8A 1841 Stk.
#420
WIMDOW STICKH PRICE •••••••••••••••••••••• $7551.'2
SALE PllC-E •••••••••••••••••••••• : ••••••••••• $6251.62
DISCOUNT > 1300°0
~76
MA vaec -. oa.
6 cyl. auto ---.. -·•-1111, AMIFM -r.ooo. --..._.,... luA ..,..,.,. lJC. 1&69POO
'76 PINTO'
IUHAIOUT
' -ec:t. rlQIO. -...... ""'YI rPOI, f)lll llnl)ed. ·uent_CM ... Uc.106IP£Y
-sn99
176 FORD
PICKUP' PI 00 6 c:v( .• pOW9f 1t-m11. rJOoo. atep oumP<1r. 'Eco"omy
Nlula< l•c. t 871958
53999
•72 TOYOTA
CIUCA
4 cyt, • apMd. p ._ -· w1111-an fir-. Hard to
11nc1 mocHlll ue llJll3f'TH
5l899
'72 T-llRD
52699
Voll IUIO -. ., OQftd.llOn'1'Q -at-no -M·~-----AMFM
..., ... " ..... ---ltrw ..,,.,. ~ ,......, ~ -HI Cove<$ _,.......,,_,,,Loe: •llO?MPS
s3299
'76 GMC PICKUP
414
Voll. SllC~ •"'ft. -tl .... "11 Vlnyf f"lltflor. aua tonk. lockl111j1111Cle....__,,.uc. 1108111112
56499
'73 FORD COURIER
PICKUP
' cyl , 4 ~. radio. ....i ... m901 RWl Wn. alee>
bum1Mr. '"''''""' -rebulk 8'\VfR<! Loe U3032W
52399
•77 FORD F-250
PICKUP
II cvr.. 11tc11 111111. power llfl«W\$. llac> 011-• ._
ll•1n 500 tnilft. Uc. llG°'308
55499
'73 FORD F-100
"SHOllTil" f'IC~Uf'
Aulo. tr1ns, ••r oond.Uon•"O rldlO neaittt. ••OIOtttt
PICl<ell• Hard tot.non Lie. e 1F198211
53199
'75 VW IUG
• cyt .• 4 ~ AWFM I-raoio ,,_ RWL H'M 6 dlfome ,,,.,. Sl""1> ktl .. buo Loe. I 411WJ(O s2999
•77 FORD
GllAHADA.
• Cyl., auto. .._ .. , --· -"~ -.......... ,_ -·--all'""· t"""" glau.\llftytllll...,, IOIO-IJ<: •83&SO!
54799
'75 MAVHICK
If ... IUIO I,__ Olf --· OOWfol <l_,"Q , -bl ........... lu!IUIY ..... _ ' ...... .,. ooc... Nice ca• oSl(Wl'lM311
52899
173 FOllD PIMtO
IUMAIOUT
• e11 • euto "-· radio. -""'YI •POI '""YI
lftter>O<. ,,_ '*"' ' pon """*' •:JR 11 X2 I 6 ti 8
s1999
•69 CHEVY
. CAMI.RO
Voll I UIO lratto, -llMnng, '"""'· W"'I-•" ,,._
bock•! lf!81S • coneoe. WaO catec:t IO< CIHllC' lie. ~EJ74& s1799
•7z PLYMOUTH
RMY Ill
V II. 1u10 ""'5.. llr concl•llOnlnq, -llee<lng.
PoW« br11«11. radio. '-•· --'""· lllnyl "'°'· t•nt•d gta.s1. wh•el covet• Suoer cle1n. L•c.
1311NRO $1999
•16 CHRYSLER
CotlDOIA
V·8, IUIO. lrlM. DOWer ll .. r1"1j, p0wer bflk ....
AM/FM '"""' ,_,., vinyl'°°'· PIUsf> '""'"' lnlenor. For tN>te *"'> aon I -"'1 IS8nMGR28llO 18
~4799
'77 FORD LTD II
SQUllll WAGOM v fl •vto trans.. ••"CV • ., ~fUOtUf\g, OO••; ... .,."0• -brlf<"'--'W\dO.. AM rM ·'""° •adio. ,_ _...,.. lllH. 1111--
<:Or!lrol ---. ~-. "'OoaOe ,_ Uc.
•IMSlO s7399
•77 FORD LTD II
2 DOOlt HARDTOf'
Auto traM. Ill' c:or\llttiontnO -llffMO. -
btllitft --. -..... .... hll -..,_ '°"'"" --2.000 .,...._ 0... ot a lllltdl L~ •lln!OE $ 5999
. ,
~
•
t • ...
VOL. 70, NO. 350, 4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
I ~ .. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1977
.. .
After• .. •
N.Y.Stoeu
' TEN <;:ENTS
Tankers. Collide, Spread 3~mile -Slie~V' .,
2 Lost at Sea
PORT ELIZABETH. South
Africa (AP>-Two America-
owned supertanker sister ships
collided in fog and caught fire in
the Indian Ocean off South Africa
early today, spreading a slick
described as three miles long-.
Two seamen were reported
missing and 82 others, mostly
Hong Kong Chinese, were
rescued by helicopter and ships,
officials said. Dozens of
crewmen leaped into the water to
escape the burning decks.
James Darcy, spokesman for
Gulf OU Corp. in Pittsburgh, said
the two Liberian-registered
.Vessels were on charter for Gulf
Oil but owned and operated by
B·ethlehem Steel Corp. in
Bethlehem, Pa. Bethelehem of-
ficials said that the tankers are
~ont.ro1led by a Bethlehem sub-
. Snoae Kidding
sidiary, but the crews were not
American.
Only one of the supertankers,
the 330,954-ton Venoil, was carry-
ing a full load of oil, estimated by
officials here at between 58.8
million and 73.S million gallons.
' The collision wUh the 330,869-ton
Ven pet occurred at about 10 a.m.
<midnight PST) 20 miles off Cape
St. Francis, 54 miles east of this
industrial coastal city.
Ian Simpson, assistant port
captain here, said a three-mile-
long oil slick was building up from
the collision site but strong winds
were blowing the spill away from
prime bcacb area in South Africa.
Maritime officials expressed
fears about POSSible pollution
and described the collision as
the most serious supertanker ac-
(See SPILL, Page AZ)
, :, Golden WesC College coed BuCJ Brett puts finishing
touches on her entry in Thursday's snowman contest at
the Huntington Beach school. She won first place for her
statue of a cowboy. Jud~es said it fit in nicf:!IV becauf?e
the nickname for Golden West College athletic teams is
the "Rustlers.•· After th~ judging, the snowman contest
degenerated into the inevitable snowball fight. The win·
ner of that contest was not a matter of record.
lfuntington Teacher
l;o Run for Council
LIBERIAN SUPERTANKER VENOIL, CARRYING FULL LOAO OF OIL, BURNS AFTER COLLISION AT SEA • "'"wi...,....
Indian Ocean Crash Leaves Two S.amen Reported MIHlng, Three-mile-long OH Sllck
35 Overt Acts of Conspiracy AUege·d by Grand Jury
By GARY GRANVILLE
1 01.,.oao., .. 1i.ts~
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was
accused or two felony bribery of·
fenses and of engaging in a con-
spiracy to commit bri~ery in jln Orange County Grand Jury in-
dictment handed down Thurs-
day.
Also named in the three-count
indictment as a co-defendant in
the conspiracy charge was
Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose,
Screams ·
Heard by
Neighbors
LOS ANGELES (AP>
Neighbors say tbey beard blood·
curdling screams ring out in a
Hollywood apartment house
where the latest v1ctim of tbe
Hillside Strangler apparently
was lured to her death.
"It was a very frightening
scream •.• It was definitely the
worst scream l've ever heard.''
said one man.
Two other residents also re-
ported bearing the screams at
about the time Tuesday night
that Kimberly Diane Martin, a
prostitute, arrived to meet a
man.
But no one reported the
screams at the time.
"I didn't pay any attention
because lt <tbe screaming) went
on out in the lobby," tbe man told
radio station KFWB on Thurs·
day. Miss Martin. who worked tor a
prostitution service. was sent to
the apartment after a man
telephoned the .ervice, said his
wife was out of town and asked
for a young, attractive model.
Miss Martin's car was found in
front of the apartment Wedn•
day morning. Her nude body was
found dumped on a hillside 10
miles away.
Eleven girls and young women
have been found slain In similar
settings over nine weeks.
Police later determined the
telephone call was made from a
pay phene at a Hollywood library
and that.. the apartment where
Mlss Martin was to meet him
was vacant. Its last tenant, also a
prostitute, was evicted in
<See STRANGLE, Page A2)
valley Sets
Yule Program·
a close Diedrich friend and the
Fulh:rton supervisor's 1972 cam-paign ft.nance manager.
Thirty-five overt acts cited in
the eight.page indictment allege
that Diedrich:
-In early 1973 received $25,000
from lawyer Michael Remincton
after Remington had been paid
$74,485 by a development rmn
then having a major land use is-
sue before the county Board of
Supervisors.
-A month -earlier repaid a
$30,000 personal loan owed food
company exe1:ulive William
Moore w1th a Remington check
made payable to Moore.
-Accepted ln late 1974 about
$20,000 in "legal tender" from
Remington after Remington wu
given two $10,000 checks by Rose.
-Asked Boben H. Grant Com· pany offlclals in 1974 for $80.000
and, when refused. ure_ed the of· •
ficiala to use their influence to
Wife's· Ordeal of Dealh Told
Ed#of"• NOC.: A SWICfor driolf.ndecl k 1'°""11 for Norrna11 O. Johnaon, f1. Bil 11111•, Gwn, obo 11, dW of espNWW tft dnp "'°'°a/Ur
the cocgU• car~ dolOn tit• mn«e ar-. fffrf le J<htltm'• ~
of what lqlpenal • ., told to De.,. NftOI reporter 1AO Perf'I/. --PROVO, Utah <AP> -Tbe hardest declsloa.I have made In my
JHe was whether to lie clown and c:lle witb Gwen o:r &et qp and try
to save myself. · we bad been married 35 years, and I didn't want to leave her.
But I bad ~Jeaveher if I was1oing to1etbetp.
WE BAD COD DOWN ROM Salt Lake Sunday to visit some
friends and then decided to take a little 'ride up the eanyon. It was
a nice day, and the road wasn't that bad. But I turned to the ri1ht
instead oltbe left. Then I bit a rock in the center of the road, and lt
knocked a hole in tbe oil pan.
I a pent two hours tr)'Jnl to Jact the ~ar up ~ 1et lt off the
rock, but I couldn't move lt. It wu then we decided to tey to
walk out. We should have gone back tbe way we came, but I
thoughtit would be f~ter to try to walk over to SpringvllJe.
We walked four or five miles. When It started to &et dark, we
got under a bll pine tree, and I tried to cover Mr up with pine
boughs. I trted to keep atanc:llng up to keep warm and then I would
He down to try to keep her warm. Then the wind started to bowl It
seemed like it snowed all Dlght.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE ro bobble about 100 yards In the
deepsnowinthemoming.Itriedforthreehourstohelpherfurther.
But I wasn't much help because I have arthriUs. We tall(ed
together ol personal things. Then she began acting strange. She
was in a coma.
How could I leave her? Yet I thought I should get help. I prayed
to the Lord, and I felt the Lord didn't want me to die there.
I hobbled aloag th.rough t.be deep snow all the rest or the day. I
bad seen a cabin on the way up, and l thought, if I could Just make
it down~ cabin. It was just getting dark Monday nlght when I
saw the cabin. But then I fell off the bridge and into a five-foot· d:t creek bed. It seemed like hours before I could crawl up the
b • .
. I BAD.NO BEAT IN 'l1IB cabin -no food and just the AOW for
water. I moved m.f. leC• thnugboat UMtniCbt to keep the clreala· Uon 1o1DC-At daylight, l atarted out ag.in. I was wet·allllOlt to
my shoulders from falling down in the deep snow.
I kept on praying tbat the Lord would help me just to keep on
going. I actually felt lf I eould just keep going I would find
someone to help me. lteptf Ulincdown, and the sun was warm now onmyface.ljuatwantedtolletbere,butllmewlhadtokeepgo~~. My next btg obltacle wu to get across the cattle guard. 1 couau
· only move my feet about four inches at a Ume. I prayed someone
would fJbcl me.
WttldN AN BOUa, 'l'llallBboys came up the road In a pickup
truck. They WID&.d to know wbat I WU dotng lbel'e. Tiiey ~
Mt belne tt wbeD 1 toMl tlMm my wife wu deed upoa tbe road.
Tbe1 laid tbe belt tbtq tDdo .... to .. dowD to tbe Ml'Vice lte-
tlonln SpaaJsb Fen ea,._. nn tbe' eberift · . ' .
help him obtain an $80,000 loan at
a Garden Grove bank.
-AlterfalllDgtorepaytbeloan
as agreed, told the Grant of-
ficials be would make payment
when they .. paid Rmle and when
LeRoy Rosepaldbim."
The overt acts alleged ln the in·
dlctment go on to say that the
Grant Co. through Its subsidiary,
.Anaheim Hills, Inc., made 12
:pa~menta to Rose totaling
'118,IOL • Hcnt~t~_U.$Zt,OOO Rose save ~ waa ane..l1Y
tl'acecS 41reet1y into Dledrtch's
bands even tllaUgh all 1Z pay·
ments to Rose are listed In the •
ov'rtaeta •. An indictment Js a formal
charge mllde qainst a person by
a Orand.Jary. ~ert ads cited ill
t.b• htcltetm.,pt UP. used to
demonscratAt • balls tor tM cbarges. !WUMr the iDdlctmen&
nor the alleaed overt acts
atablilbpiUOf hmoeeaee.
Already upder bulictment for
allegedly violating atate political
campaign regulations. DJedrlcb
responded to 1'1lunday•s Indict-
ment with a terse three para-
graph statement.
''This charge is simply the next
shot fired ln the ongoing war b1
the District Attorney's Office. nus Is another collection of rub-
bish that he (the district at-
tome1> hopes to use to get me out
of bis way." Diedrich said In b1'
written stltement.
Rose. who, as a Fullerton plan-
ning commlsaioner was indict.ell
on bribery charges ln 1975 but aee
quitted ln 1976. responded to the
indictment by resigning from tbe
firm be founded 1n 1960. LeRoy
Rose aDdAsaoclates. , Rose aa1d b1s resignation was
.,due to adverse publicity regard·
ing past and recent investiga•
(See DIEDRICH. PaJe A2)
R4NDIC4PPED
TA.UGBI' TIUDE
Tbe Ehr)'n·Callfornia
"R.P.habilltatlon Center In Foan· tain Valley teaches baa•
·dlcapped adults a trade. See
Page tu. FeatwiDC.
Coast
Weather
Variable clouds beeom• lng cleudy with 30.percent
chance ol rain Satw'Qy.
e:ooler Saturday. Lows
tonlgJat :90 to SS. Highs
Saterdq low.eoa.
IN8DtE H•AY
..,.., Ntdcroclccf"' nd
ChrfahllGI Hfm to b• --~~=-= ltorie• aid phoCpa °" Page Cl,
latlex
Las~ Rites
Set Monday
For Mellott
Funeral services will be held
Monday for Walter B. Mellott, a
well-known Orange Coast civic
leader and owner or South Coast
Construction Company.
Mr. Mellott died Wednesday
:1fter collapsing in his office in
Cos ta Mesa. lie was 64.
Services will begin al 11 a.m.
<tl Alhiser-Wilson Mortuary in
Escondido. Mr. Mellott, who
lived most of hjs life in C06la
Mesa, had Jnoved seven years
ago to San Luis Rey Downs in
San Diego County. ~
I le was a director or'the Balboa
Bay Club, a past director of the
Newport Beach Cha mber of
Commerce. a member of the
board of the former U.S. Na-
tional BanJc of San Diego, past
president or the Orange County
Coast Association and past presi-
dent or the state Builders Ex·
change.
. Mr. Mellott was once chairman
of the Natio.":nl 1-'ederalion of ln·
dependent Business, president 0£
the Orange County Builders Ex-
change, a member or the ad-
visory committee of the Orange
Empire Boy Scouts of America,
and state finance chair man for
the Nixon-Lod ge campaign for
president.
He incorporated the South
Coast Construction Company in
1945.
Survivors include his wife,
Aileen SmalJen Saunders, two-
time winner of Ute Powder Puff
Derby; daughters Diana Brazil
of Los Angeles and Deborah Dug-
gan or Irvine, and a sister, Alice
Cartwright of Costa Mesa.
Former BB
Store Head
Dead at 59
Masoru c funeral services are .
scheduled Friday for 23-year
Huntington Beach resident and
clothing store manager Philip
Rearson, who dled Tuesday at
Apple Valley.
He was 59 and had retired to
the mowitain country juat three
months ago after a career
managin~ various Robert Hall clothing stores in the Harbor
Area.
Visitation was scheduled from
'1 p.m . to 9 p.m. today at Pierce
Bro ther s-Smith's Mortuar y,
Huntington Bea ch, followed by
rites Friday at 2:30 p.m. in the
lluntington Beach Masonic Temple.
Interment will be at Pacific
View Memorial Park ln Corona
<lei Mar.
Survivors include his wife
Naomi "Nikki" Rearson; a son,
Claude R. Parker; daughter
Mrs. Dolores Hahn, both of Hunt·
ington Beach; a brother, Harry
Rearson, of Waterbury ~;a
sister, Mrs. Sophie Muska( of
Miami Beach, Fla., and seven
gr andchildren.
DAILY PILOT
U* ... ----,. hJ.I iNif'.t, Dtatricl Al~J c.eu Rieb tlmolY et.au.it IW a few 111......, .tt& ......_..., illPi&
otber topks as Dl-4rtell Md
Rose we.re called to al)pear ln
courl. lt wu Diedrich who appeared
in Judge Robe rt Rickles'
courtroom Onst.
'Without an attorney at bis side,
Diedrich was told to r~appear in
court Dec. Z7, directed to book
himself into Orange County Jall
and released on bts own re·
cognizance. Thirty minutes later Rose
walked into the same courtroom
with lawyer Sylvan Aronsoo.
Rose's arraignment was put ore
to Jan. 6, he was given until Dec.
20 to book himself into Jail and he
also was released on his own re-
cognizance.
o.tty ~ ,,_..,....., ,._...
·Murder ~.
fl ·~ ·-<: .. :
Smnect :~~~ r , ...
Released!:~; . ....
Roy Christopher R ieb.a.rd, a.;:;~
of seven people jailed In the slay .. :::::
Ing ol Stephen John Bovan, was ,::~:
released from Newport Beach cl::·:::
t)' jail on his own reco1nizanca ;::
Tburaday nl&ht. ·~
Police declined any comment • of Richard's 10 p.m. release.
Deputy District Attorney Dave
Carter, who is prosecuting the
murder case, would comment on-
ly that the former president of the
Laguna Beach Ha re Krishna ··
Temple was released ai the dis.
trict attorney's request.
In the forefront of the bribery
indictment i.s the successful ef-
fort by Anaheim Hills, Inc., to ob-
tain in 1913-74 couoty approval
for the withdrawal or 2,200 acres
from agricultural preserve
agreements.
TWO DIE IN HEAD-ON CRASH ON VICTORIA STREET BRIDGE
Body of One of Thursday Night CrHh Victim• UH Covered at Right
Richard. 28, sought since No-
vem ber. surrendered to Newport
Beach police a week ago. He had
been held on $100,000 bail after
plea-:ling not guilty to murder con·
spiracy charges in Orange County
Superior Court.
Diedrich was the leader ln a 3
to 2 Board of Supervisors de--FroaPageAI
cision in March, 1974, that re-STRANGLE leased the land froft\ the pact and ·
opened it to development.
In the background to that move August, the apartment manager was the company's hiring of aaid. ·
Remington as their legal counsel
and Rose as a consultant on grad-
ing problems. .
The indictment alleges that
Re min gton was hir ed at
Diedrich's suggestion but makes
no mention or whatever role Rose
was assigned to earn the $138,301
he received from the company.
Key figure in the four-month
investigation leading to the in·
dictment was Rem ington, a
Diedrich business and legal as·
sociate for 10 years.
Remington was named in the
July 1 political conspiracy indict·
ment a long with Diedrich,
Supe rvisor Philip Anthony,
Anaheim City Councilman
Willi a m Kott and would-be
political financier Gene Conrad.
Lois Lee, a spokeswoman for'
the California Association for
Trolllps, an organization formed
to help prostitutes, said the'
prostitution ser vice told her the
man "sounded like ... just an or -
dinary guyouUor a good time."
Library employees desctibed a
man who used the phone Tuesday
night fo r police, but Lt. Dan
Cooke sald the description was ·
not being released.
However. ·an attendant at a
parking lot across from the
library said police asked him if
he bad seen a limping man with a
moustache.
The library is next to a theater
that features live striptease acts
and less than a block from the
health food restaurant where·
anoth er victim of the Hillside
Strangler was last seen alive.
It was in early November that
Remington pleaded guilty to a
mis de meanor charge related to
the alleged conspiracy and was
then granted immunity from
prosecution whe n testifying
before the Grand Jury about his
knowledge of. the Anaheim Hills Four of the Strangler 's victims affair. were prostitutes, police said.
Also shown by court records to
have been granted immunity
. we re Robert H. Grant and New Flu Bug Richard Owen, then Grant Com-
pany corporate officers.
Shown in the listing of overt S • C •
acts as the offlcials who issued wme ousm
the Anaheim Hills, Inc., checks
to Rose were Erik Berg and Jack ~TLANTA <AP > -A new inr Sickler, a Jong-lime Diedrich tluen za virus similar to one
friend. wltjch was prevalent from 1947
The bribery indictment came through 1957 and said to be a
as no surprise to Diedrich. "distant coualn" of swine nu has
He predicted his own indict-m ade its appearance in Russia
ment last week when grand jury and Hong Kong, the national
investigators armed with a Center for Disease Control re·
s earch warrant. seized business ported today.
records kept in a small Buena The CDC said the minister of
Parkwarehouse. health in the U.S.S.R. has
"'True to the image he has pro-noti fied the World Health
j ected since becQlning a county Organization in London that
supervisor in Jai\bary of 1973, moderate outbreaks have ~en
Diedrich vowed late Thursday to reported throughout that nitttoi:t·
"continue waging this all-out war Don Berreth, public affairs I have on my hands." ,,1 ~pokesman for the CDC said, "It
He said he will not be able to' 1s a new virus, and from what we
"intelUgently discuss" the latest have seen up to now it is not a
charges lodged against him until particularly virulent virus." He
be reads transcript.a ot the said that because of the nature or
testimony leading to the indict,. nu, it is llkelY that scattered inept cases would appear thls winter in
"Right 09W, l don't know who ~ther parts of the world •. includ·
is accusing me or what mgtheUDitedStates.
speeifically I am accused of do-
ing or who £be players are," the
53-year·old county supervisor
said.
Man Indicted
In '63 Slaying
OAKLAND CAP> -Joseph
Egenberger Jr., 33, was indlcled
Thursday on a murder charge
stemming from the 14-year-old
slaying of Judlth Gall Williamson
of Albany.
The Alameda County Grand Jury heard 19 witnesses and de-
liberated rour minutes before re-
turnlnc the indictment and boost·
Ing Ecenberger'a 'bail from
$10,000 to '50,000.
No date bas been set ror the ar-
raignment of Eg~nberger, 33,
who qult his lob in Chicago and
unexpectedly turned himself in to
police Nov. :.>. Neither he nor his
alLorueywere present Thursday.
Playground Open
Ad•enture Playiround at
Talbert Avenue and Gothard
Street in ijuntlnlton Beacb will
be open durln& Cbrlstmu vaca· Uon. The playground will be open
b'omllLm.to~p.m.weeke!aya.
F ..... PageAI
SPILL •••
cldent ever along the South African coast.
Tugboats with fir e fighting
equipment were unable to reach
the bluing tankers in the 40-knot
winds and rough seas, offi cials
s aid.
By early afternoon, the captain
and six crewmen from the
Venpet were put back aboard the
vessel to fight the flames but bad .
to be airlifted to safety when con-
d lt ions w er e judg ed too
dangerous to continue.
Panel Seeks
Replacement
The HunUngton Beach Public
FaclliUes Corp. <PFC) is seeking
a seventh director to fill a vacan-
cy on the board.
PFC di.rectors oversee the
operation of the Huntington
Beach Civic Center and Central Llbrary.
Tbe vacecy was created when
Brander CaaUe resigned as a
direct.or. People may apply by
sendinl a resume.to Donald. w.
KJaer, 17371 Got.hard St., Hunt-lattoc Beach.
2 Killed, 1 Injured
In 3-car Collision
M eanwbile, Elsie Caban Kuutc
was to go back to Superior Court
t.oda)l'to seek a reduction of the $1
million ball that is holding ber in
the county jail.
Her husband, Canadian-born ·
Alexander Kulik, was told Thurs-
day that he wUL have to raise
$2.35 million if he expecls to re-
gain the freedom he lost Wednes· day.
Two people were killed and a
third injured Thursday in a
three-car collision on the Vic-
toria Street bridge over the Santa
Ana River, which divides Costa
Mesa from Huntington Beach.
Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as Timothy Lee
McKeon, 25, of 33802 Malaga
Drive, Dana Point, and Carol
Lovette .Stradley, 42, of 1015
American Place! Costa Mesa.
Both were In a small foreign
car driven by McKeon that police
said colli d ed h ead-o ft at
a bout 9:50 p.m. with a vehicle
driven by Janet Ann Munson. 21,
162 Tulip Lane, Costa Mesa. She
was treated at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital for cuts on
* * *
her right hand, arm and knee,
and sent home.
A third car, driven by IN!ne
Garcia Dolan, 26, of 711 Pacifi c
Coa st Highway, Huntington
Beach, skidded into the McKeon
car after the accident. Its driver
was not reported.injured.
Police said that, according to
witnesses, McKeoh apparently became distracted while wiping
the inside of his wimhhield with a
rag while heading toward Hunt·
ington Beach on the bridge. Wi~
nesses said his car strayed over
the double yellow lines in the
center and colllded with the
Costa Mesa·bound Munson car,
spinning it around.
Costa Mesa police are in·
vesUgating the tragedy.
* * *
Kulik, 28, a sometime resident
of Newport Beach and hiB wife,
28, were jailed by officers who
found her hiding under a split.
level cOndominium In La Costa, a
r esort near Carls bad in San
Diego County.
Judge Robert P. Kneeland set
the high bail on the Kuliks after
~lng told that Kulik oreanize4
the hiding ol his wife who is ontt
or seven codefendants In a
grand jury indictment. that. cites
charges or murder and con-
spiracy.
Mrs. Kulik pleaded innocent to
those charges Thursday. She was
ordered to race trial Jan. 23, the
s ame dale set for her she
codefendants.
4 Di.e in County Judge Kneeland computed the·
$2.35 million figure for Kulik
arter being told Kulik· faced trial
on charges or possession or 1.1
pounds of nearly .Pure heroin .
fil ed in Orange County, was al-·'
legedly in possession of another . · ·
1.5 pounds of almost pure beroi.Jl' .. ,..
at La Costa and also allegedly , ·.
was involved in the killing la.st · · ·
Oct. 22 of Bovan, a Fountatn · ·
Traffic Accide~
Four people were kiUed in traf-
fic accii:lents Thursday night as
the coun tywidc pre-Christmas
traffi c death toll climbed to
seven In the past 24 hours,
Orange County coroner's dep-
uties rePQrted todav ·~.
A 16-yea r -old Santa An a
teenager a nd a 41-year-old
Garden Grove truck driver were
killed in an 11:37 p.m. collision tnat ended a lOO~mile·•n·hour
police chase in Garden Grove
and Santa Ana, police said.
The driver of that speeding
car, a 17-year-old from Santa
Ana, was charged with (elony
drunken driving and released to
his parents, officers said.
The dead are Michael Anthony
Albright. 5409 W. Crystal Lane,
Santa Ana, a passenger in the
pursued car, and Osborn C. Van
Wey, 13802 Cypress St., Garden
Grove. driver of the other vehi-
cle. police said.
Van Wey's son, John 19, suf-
fer ed serious injuries in the
<:rash, police reported. A second
teenager in the car being chased,
Eric Fassbinder, 17, of 5422 W.
Lehnhardt Ave., Santa Ana, also
w.as hospitalized with ioiuries.
officers said.
Police said the chase began in
Garden Grove, where an officer
became suspicious of the driver's
erratic actions. The car was
traveling about 100 miles an hour
when it sped through a red light
on Newhope in Santa Ana, strik·
ing the Van Wey van, police as-
serted. ·
The overnight tralfic death toll
also claimed the lives of two
pedestrians in separate acci·
dents, investigators said.
John McGuinesa, 50, of 231 W.
Las Palmas Driv~. Fullerton,
was killed at 9:05 p.m. as he and
his wife attempted to cross
Ha rbor Boulevard near their
home. police said.
M cGuiness' ·wire a lso was
seriously injured, officers report·
ed. The couple was not inside a
crosswalk and the driver of the
car was not held, poUce said.
The second pedestrian killed
Valley resident. :
Seven or the eight-people In-•
dieted for their allefed roles in
that. killing have now been er; ;'.
rested . · , A search ls still under wa.y for
Joseph Gabriel PedOC"Owsld,. 28. Schedul~ to appear with the
.Kuliks today were code(eadants
Richard, 28, and Jerry Peter
Fiori. 41. of HW\Uneton Beach.
Fiori is identified by th• .·
prosecution as the maa who ·
pumped nine bullets into Bovanto ·
a confrontation last Oct. 22 out1 ·.
side a Newport Beach res tau ran~ .
Flori is held with bail denied.
His lawyer was expected tO ult
Judge Kneerand today lO'set ball. ·
Police claim that Fiori and two
other Huntington Beach men. . Anthony "Little Tony" Marone
J r., 23, and Raymond Steven ,
Resco. 28, were hired to kidnap
and kill Bovan in revenge for an.
earlier kidnapping or Kulik.
was Dolores c. Trevino, 52, of 220 Cage Sionops Set Bypass Funded E. Chestnut St., Santa Ana. She -e-,.
died about four hours after being The HunUngton Beach Recrea-
SACRAMENTO <AP) -State struck crossing the street at 200 lion Department will hold ftg.
hlghwaycommissioners haveap-N. Grand Avenue at an unstriped istration for a youth basketball,
proved use of $10.5 million for crosswalk, police said. program Saturday from 10 a .. m.
first.stage work on a freeway to The driver of the car in that t o n oon at p I a y grounds
bypass a stretch of Highway 101 8:49 p.m. crash also bas not been throughout the city.
south or San Jose called "blood c ha rged pending further in-More Information may be ob·
Alley·" vestigalion, police said. tained by calling 536-9385. • --------------------------------------------------------------------------~~~ ~
It's What's Out Back ·That Counts
. •.....,,,-
Our store Is like an iceberg! No-we're .not chilly
to deal with-it's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting u~ for the first time are
flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfolds
before them. The huge showroom has thousands of
samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection they have seen.)
Our warehouse contaJns an Inventory of infinite
var:lety. Hundreds of remnants i nhabit • 26x50
Remnant room~
Add offi088. a spacious drapery room. plenty of
parking, pleasant people. and you'll have the "Big
Picture'" of our successful operation!
ustlfm lffapiJr1ss
linoleum • vlood floor
COSTA MESA, CAUf, 92627 • PffOMf 4 .. 6--4838 -~6-2355
'
.. ::
..
• .
-NATIONAL/ CALIFORNIA Friday, O.C.mt>er 18, 1977 S fti/F DAIL y PILOT A 1 I
•, .. .. Tree Means .Joy
. ' .. ·' Concrete Canyo n : A Nice Place • !L!~'c!~~.~-( J NEWYORK -Truaialhecityof the AMER ICA ~d •boulder and the granite heart, so
it b said, the island of cynicism with
noroomforsenttment. Bah. humbug.
''When that tree goes up, you can't
find a more neighborly place," Mike
Russo said .. "That tree works !Jke
magic."
· THE TllEE IS the one in New
York's front y ard, the one in
RockereUer Center, the one that is lit
each year on television to the oohs and
aabs of the nation. Mike Russo has
watched it work its magic for 20
·years.
That's how long Mike Russo, a
native New Yorker well versed in the
city's moods, has worked 1n the
sec urity department of Rockefelle r
. Center, watching the doors of the
great buildings, greeting the hun-
dreds of friends he has made over the
years among the 60,000 who work ut
this city within a city.
plaza rink.
Al noon, school choirs from all over
t he city bring their own i.ounds of in-
nocence and on Filth A venue Salvation
Ar m y trumpets summon joy to the
world. Roasting chestnuts from ven-
dors' carts perfume the air . Dickens
himsel! might have designed the set·
ting.
Above it all stands the m agnificent
t ree, a perfectly tapered pyramid of
green with branches swaying in the
wind like a sequined ballerina sktrl.
"EVERY YEAR WHEN they bring
t he tree I get anxious," Mike Russo
said . "J always wonder if it·s going to
be as nice as t he last one. So far, I've
never been disappointed. I don 'l know
how they always manage to fmd a
perfect tree."
Not by accident, that's for s ure,
though luck can play a part.
'I BELIEVE THIS IS THE PRETTIEST TREE'
Mika Russo, Center, Say1 It Works U k• Magic
.JFK Llak
FBI Visit
Not Clarified
WASHINGTON <AP) -The FBl's files re-
leased on the KeMedy ass aasjnation do not say why
the agency delayed telling the Warren Commiaalon tha& the name of an FBI a1enl wa1 in Lee Harvey
Oswald's address book.
· The agent waa James P: Hoety. The book alao
Included Hoety's car llcenae number, a phone
number and the address of the bureau's Dallas of·
flee. The entry was dated Nov. 1, 1963, three weeks
before the assassination of President Kennedy.
HOSTY HAD GONE TO the Dallas home of
OswaldJs Russian-born wtre after Oswald appUed
for a visa to Cuba while he was ln Mexico. His wife
has said she noted Hosty's llcenae number and
name and gave them to Oswald.
The files show that FBI Direct.or J . Edgar
Hoover told the Warren Commiision on Jan. 17 •
1964, that Hosty's na me had been omitted from the
,.,.,,..,..... book's list of names given earlier to fhe com-
• mission. ·
C.11142-5671. "When I was a kid," he said, .. l
never got a cha nce to come to
Rockefeller Center at Christmas
time. Those were hard times back
then. I lived on the Upper East Side
and we rare ly got out of the
neighborhood.
This year, t wo Rockefeller Center .JI» A
e mployees, J im Reed and John , .. ag rea
Godwin, traveled 8,000 miles inspect-
Put a few word• to work for ou.
THE COM~ION ASKED by letter for a full
~xplanatio and Hoover himself noted ln bis own
handwriting on the let.t.er: "And I want to know de-
tails of this at once."
UBLIC AUCTIO
"BUT TIOS YEAR I'm going to
bring my grandson down to see the tree·
and all.the lights and decorations. He's
10 months old. I don't think that's too
young to enjoy It."
No, certainly not, and neither is any
age too old.
At Christmas time in Rockefeller
Ce nte r, young eye!! brighten with
wonder and old eyes glisten with their
own best memories oC childhood.
LIGKl'S, TENS OF thousands of
them, warm the gray December sky
like winter flrefli es signaJlng a time of
hope. Bells, tinkly bells on sidewaJ:~
Santas and deep,throated bells ol St.
Patrick's Cathedral, serenade ice
s katers circling and dan~lng on the
..
ing trees, about 40 of them, before
Godwin stumbled upon this beauty m
Dixfield, Maine, while fetching tus
two sons home from summer camp.
It is a soaring white spruce, 65 reel
tall a nd 35 feet across at its lowest
branches. Anything smaller would be
dwarfed in the c ity's conc rete
canyons.
USUALLY, REED e xplained find-
ing a tree isn't so easy. Even ~hen a
likely one is located it has to be ac-
cessible. Often it entails a year-long
search, following up tips, a nswering
letters from visitors to Rockefeller
Center -they number in the hun-dreds of thousands every year -who
have been awed by the annual tree.
On.ce localed, workmen lovingly
fold its branches to the trunk and tie
the m . A crane hitches a cable to the
top so it won't fall when cut.
National Parts.
System
Warehouse-Open to the Public
Domestic • Foreign
Air Filters
Most Cars
$159
~,:,,__ .. ~ '--------
Oil filters
All Cars
fl (I f
::#' " . .. , . .-:""·..'~ ... ._~.
Open am to 6pm
for Your Cortw•nf•rtc•·O,.,. Sundoy
WARNER
I
Proposal Eyes
Pollution Cut
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Regional planners
here have unveiled a $500-$600 million a year anti-
poll u lion ,Pr oposal which suggests dramatic
economic and social chan ges.
ESTATE JEWELRY & FINE PORCELAINS, CHINA,
BRONZES, RUGS, FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS, Etc.
1Yz Million Dollars WOl1h
FREE ADMISSION -PUBLIC AND DEALERS WELCOME
Don't miss this important sale!
The recommendations propose ways to clean
tne air, dispose of sewage and solid waste, dis-
courage auto use and put nouslng closer to job3 and
public transportation.
Fine China, Crystal, Porcelains, Bronzes, European Furniture, Oils, Etc.
FINE GIFT IT EMS -JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS
-ONE PART OF THE PROPOSAL call s for
parking taxes and higher bridge tolls and asks the
c1ty lo ban parking on downtown San Francisco
str'eets to reduce tramc and smog.
Also, many fine pieces of antique and contemporary jewelry including fine
watches, solitaire diamond rings, earrings, gold chains, cluster diamond,
ruby, sapphi1'8, and emerald rings.
The comprehensive anli·pollution blueprint
was drawn up over a 17-month period by the stare or
the Association of Bay Area governments and a
special 46-member task force.
PubUc com ment on the plan will be solicited for
the next few months and the association's general
assembly will vote on it at a meetiiig in San Jose on
April 6.
TO BECOME LAW IT needs state and federal
approval as well.
The plan proposes to clean up Bay Area smog
by:
-Increasing bridge tolls to $1.25 during peak
tramc hours.
-Charging a 35-cent. regionwide tax for all
vehicles entering paid parking facilities beLween 6
a.m. and lO a.m.
-Using the estimated $19 million in annual re·
venues from the increased foUs and parking taxes
to expand Bay Area public transit.
SALE NIGHT
Friday, Saturday; Sunday
December 16, 17, 18
8:00 P.M.
INSPECTION
2:00 P.M. -5:00 P.M.
and 7 • 8 P.M.
Sale Nights.
TERMS: BankAmcricard • MasterChorga
Per$0nal check • Cash ·Some e>1 tended terms cen be errenged.
Property moved for convenience of sale to:
CHCwport cf'Jtrllerles. ~td
2542 West Coast Highway. Newport Beach. CA
(71 4J 645-2200 ,
CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED 'TIL S pm FRIDAY
Art Levine • Auctloneef'
,
Great
Idea
for
Christmas
~ -. ~OFFER EVER MADE
RIAL 3 DAYS
FRI., SAT., SUN.-DEC. 16, 17. 18
ALL PRICES DRASTICALLY
REDUCED FOR CLEARAMCE
EYERTIHllG MUST GOii
Fri. thru Sun.-1 0 a.m. to 5 p.m.
. .
Riii' REDUCllOllSll
· THOUSANDS OF ITEMS -UPT075%0FF
DOW.N PARKAS ..... ~ '
NOW$25
Nont Hlthtf
W.'• • L811et"
SWEATERS
Acrylc&W ..
.!11 'ZZ
NOW $]2SO ....................
Me'•·'-'"" ce.1'*••. ,.., .........
PARKAS
1JI '14
NOW 'I 0·'15 · .....
Repeat of Last.
Y ecir's Sellout
OllllMAL cosr
DOWN VESTS
~
Now s12so
AU.VIS" • ....
CASH Q41Cl.:.WH1'1l CHAI.._..... . .
S..D19p~
.. .
..
... ... ...
. -
"
.
~
.
DAil V Pll.OT
Group Aid
Fairview
Yule Party •
/\. number or businesses.
schools and othc:r organizations
will be bringing the holiday spirit
to Pftients at Fairview State
HoapHal in Costa Mesa this
month. ·
Among the special events or·
ganjzed for Fairview arc
Christmas programs by Wesley
Flannery of Midway City, Lln·
coln Middle School in · Newport
Beach, Dis neyla nd . Miss
Shannes School of Ballet in Foun·
'lain Valley, Mater De1 High
School. Melody!and Christian
Cente r a n d S t. P au l 's
Pr es b yteria n C h ur c h 111
Anaheim.
THESE INCLUDE the First
Assembly of Cod in Huntington
Beach, the Bank of Amer ica in
Long Beach, Schweitzer House of
Cypress College, Interact of
Westminster High School, Delta
Theta Tau of Long Beach and the
Triple X Fraternity, Orange
County chapter.
.......
; r
o.11, ..... IQH -
KA THY OTTO (LEFT), TAMMY MclNNES ACCEPT CARDS
Don Bull of Foster Grandparents Presents Them.
.............................. -----
Federal Dousing Funds UIU.'S ..-.v.a1NO HIATING
Al• (OtfO. !>I lK 111.~I Cou~ty Spemling Eyed
Orange C~uV gov· for public Im prove· S200,000 for facll1lics in
'""'"''" •~'>1..-o•• .,_ ~ c .. 11~ ...... ..,.~1 •o..• .,.,_.,
CO"A Mt:~642• 17S3 ,~.._ .....
ernmcnt ofltcials and ments. new tracts to lower home
those of 14 of the county's Capistrano Beach, prices.
MtU•Olot v11uo495-0401
t..U C-M (.lrotilr-l~•fl D-l'rwy •IA,...y "'•r I
smaller cities plan to
spe nd the bulk of $5
million in federal hous-
ing funds next year to
lower home costs or re·
h abi litate older
neighborhoods.
The new Housing and
Community Develop.
ment Act grant proposal,
presented. to supervisors
this week shows that $2.3
mlllion would be spent
for·public works and site
iml>rovements aimed at
lowering new home 'costs
o r i mprovin g older
areas.
ANOTHER $1.3
million would be.spent in
hous ing rehabilitation
loans and grants, while
$475,000 would be used
for buying property and
$515,500 for planning and
administration.
Supervisor s h a v e
scheduled a public hear-
ing on the grant proposal
for Jan. 4 and are expect·
ed to lake final action
~
~
HVNllNGTON lf.AOi
llUNTJNCTON BEACH
TAX.PAYERS AND VOTERS!
A New City Charter ls Being Considered By The City
Council and A Public Hearing Will Be Held Dec. 21 at
6:30 p.m. Your Comments On th<' Charter Ptoposal Are •
Invited By Mayor Ron Pattinson. The Charter b An
Important Document Controll ing Conduct of Your Cit~ . .
(;overnment. Thja Js Your Opportunity To Be A Pnrt .o r
Writing The Laws .For Operation of City Government
During the Next Decade. For Information Call 536-5501.
City Council Chambers
Dec. 21 at 6:30 p.m.
Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main Street
Other pa rty sponsors are
M a rywood School In Orange,
Latter Day Saints or Newport
Beach, First Southern Baptist
Church or Tustin. the human
services class or Cypr ess
College, Park view High School in
Huntington Beach and Hunt·
ington Beach High School.
CSLB S P March22.
ets rogralll ex~~~~e~ ::;~~N~h~ STUARDS
For s ·eniors Group
PARTIES ARE also being
given by the Carden Grove Com·
munity Church, Santa Claus and
Scout Leaders of Santa Ana, In-
t ern ational Foot Printers of
Orange, Boy Scout Troop 328 of
Nor walk, and UNlCO of Garden
Grove.
Cal State Long Beach, will again offer its low cost education for
senior citizens during the spring semester.
The Senior Citizen Fee Waiver Program is available to anyone
over 60 years or age and reduces the semester student fee from $98
to S3. A participant may take as many or as few courses as he or she
wishes.
Also sponsoring parties are La
Habra Hi gh School , Anaheim
Hi gh School Kiwanettes, ldakas
Club or Fullerton Union High
Schoo-I , the Laguna Moulton
Kiwanis. Girl Scout Troop 254
from Newport Beach. Latter Day
Saints or Mission Viejo, Calvary
Chapel and Erhard Seminars
Tra ining.
ANYONE INTERESTED in registering for the program should
contact Leonard Kreutner. director of admissions and records at
1213 > 498-4141 and ask for application for admittance to the un·
iversity.
Copies of the s pring schedule or classes are available al the un-
tv<'rsity bookstore for 20 cents and they are also available by mail.
Simply write and send a check or money order for $1.50 to the forty·
Niner Bookstore.
ftEGISTRATION for Senior Citizens is Jan. 20 with classes
beginning on J an. 23.
Additional information is available from the office of public af-
fairs, (213> 498-4156.
·Church Silence
On Sex AdVised
ALBANY. N. Y. <AP ) One of the authors or
the highly controversial Roman Catholic study,
"Human Sexuality: New Directions in American
Catholic Thought." says a litUe silence on the sub·
ject might be more helpful than talk.
The Rev. Anthony Kos nick, professor or moral
theology at an Or.chard Lake, Mich., seminary
added in an interview here: "Sometimes I think it
would be better If the church said nothing more
about sex for at least 10 years to let the whole issue
settle down."
Sports Coverage 'Must'.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Diego City College ad·
ministrators may continue to demand sports cov·
erage by the s tudent newspaper, the Fortnightly, a
federal judge has ruled.
U.S. District Judge Gordon Ttiompson Jr. de·
nied a motion for a preliminary injunction filed by
newspaper adviser Glen Roberts and Tony Stevens,
Fortnightly editor, who filed suit over the matter
last month.
The issue, according to American Civil
Liberties Union attorney Robert Lynn, represent·
ing the newspaper, js wbetber students can be re·
quired to publish sport.a stories written to satWy.
class requirements.
Death Notice• Death Notk~•
COOi( Ot<embtr U, 1971. Survived by
CARMEN v . COOK. ruldtnl of de119Mtr Aclt Moro!lls o• Fountein
l'ounteln V•llo, peued •••Y \lt llr(, d..q,wr Het., McCrttry of
Coste MH t , • wn Jtmts COOi< ol Tl\oUstnd O.ks, son Robert Cool< of
----------Torrano, DrOtlltr Wllli•m Armstronv
U.LTl·H«•llOM
FUMllALHOMI
Co<ona del Mar 6 73-9450
Costa Mesa 648-2424
llUIROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IMl1M 1VTMIU LAMll
COSTA ... SA CHA ....
427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa • e.4M888 Santa Ana Chapel
618 N. Bro.dway
Santa.Atll •647...,.131
of Sen 01900. Sef"Ylces wlll bt Saturo.ay
Dt<t1ftbtr 11 ~ 2 PM ti Ptclflc View
Mtmorlel Perk ChtPtl. Interment
l'•c:lllC vi.w Mftmorl•I Ptr'k. Peclllc
\lltW MOrtuery Olre<lofs.
ATLANTA (AP) -Dr.
Spencer B. King Jr., 73,
retired chairman of the
history department at
Mercer University and
author of many articles
for literary, historical
a nd religious journals.
dued Wednesday.
PUBUC NOTICE
He Hits
'ltunrUng
To Doctor'
ON THE OTHER
hand, he said, childho.d
bellyaches IUld earaches
probably do not set a
doctor'• attention u Ire·
quently as they stiould,
and aore tbroall may or
may nol be ln that group,
depeodina on the pre· val6nce of rheumatic
~-O'nflH
SMITMS1MOtn'UARY 627 Main St
Huntington Beach
63&-e531) --~-ca-TO_at_•_os_TOtt_s __ , fever in Uw: community.
.... ..._ Be aald be favors .... Mil,
~L~
HONI
7801 Bol• Ave.
Wfftl!'lnttef
·~5ff -
•
1uf1H10Rc:oun0f'TM• breast·feedlng inf ants, -;::-~==.=-aod pouible cbaqes in
• '" .. .._ • ... ase.t.., JOHN childhood hnmunizatiOft
IC. •OIMIUOGAH ... "°"" ICI~ Hhedules. He Hid be ii 8ALL ltOU ·OU~t. M.011 Id JOHNICIMMU.ltQl5.uuoo.\N,IM aaainst the UH of most
JOHN IC. •osa.ouQOA ... AU>. medicine• in routln• °"'"'" H•Ut • •• "''"• '"°'" •• .-. childboodlllnesses. cre1t11en ........, tMltM ...i..tt tM Frfea bu co-authored :::_~,.:.•::,::~ .. Taldftl Care of Your :.-.Ci:r.t':9.~:.! Ch1ld," a do·lt·yourself ~ .. -. .. ._.. ~. "•· ,,., guide to help parents de·
LM A ..... ...._. ....... ""''°' C}de the Hl'iOUnal Of a ......... ic. .......... llMINM.. hlld ' b l 1 .. _.,....,111 .. 1_..,.,.., .. ,.. c s . p y1 ea com·
""• .. 1t1 ...... 1uc11 c•a1-wtt11 "" plain ta and to IUlde them ~ .._ .. , .... .,. ._ ............ _ ---"'---c ,..._ ..... iJitllill .... ,..,, -------~ .......,....., .. ,.,......,~•1111• Uon. ..... 0.-""""'9f .. tm •
~WA•O--.oY~N
ATIORNEYATLAW
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE $9.5
Uncontested
640-2507
HAVING
HASSLE
wttt.1-..c•
Cfm-7
Talk free wl1h
consumer affairs
llc,.enaed cl~lma expert·
1714) 547-824 ..
<£1.C. 1977
Orange Coast include :
-Fountain Valley,
$140,000 for public im·
provements in La
Colonia Juar ez.
-Irvine, $150,000 for
amenities in new home
tracts to lower the cost to
buyers.
-Laguna Beach,
$100,000 for amenities in
new d evelopments t o
lower home costs, $5,000
ror housing relocations
and $1.500 to promote
£air housing practices.
-Sa n Juan
Capistrano. $50,000 for
public improvem e nts
and $25,000 for amenities
to reduce new home
costs.
--Seal Beach, $120,000
NOW·
PIANOS
for Sale
&Rent
UAll-Wllll .CAll.l·IAWAl ·Clllll
IMll lCAIPIDl
HllllOllD ollll AND PWIO CUTEI
COROU DEL Ill
2854 I. c-1t Hwy.
~1931
,
o/ <:f<1 rf.ollr1
OPENING TODAY
Ray Stuard Invites you
to visit one of the most
exceptl~ally designed storesJor men
Featuring world renowned labels
In Sportswear, Furnishings,
Clothing & Gifts.
STUARDS
@/!Iii $olla
South Coost Plaza's New Men's Store
540-7162 Across from I. Mognln.
SAB23o (1443) <1·023235M342) PD U/08/77 1439
TWX BAYLINER ARLGN
ARLINGTON WASHINGTON DECEMBER 8, 1977
NEWPORT PACIFIC BOATS
2200 WEST COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660
CONGRATULATIONS. THANKS TO YOUR SUPER EFFORTS.
YOU'RE NOW OUR NUMBER ONE DEALER. ON DECEMBER 1.
NEWPORT PACIFIC OFFICIALLY BECAME THE IARGEST
DEALERSIDP IN THE WORLD FOR BAYLINER POWER BOATS
AS WELL AS BUCCANEER SAILBOATS.
ACHIEVING THE 'tOP SPOT WITH AMERICA'S LARGEST
BUILDER OF PLEASURE BOATS IS NO SMALL FEAT. IT'S
A REAL TRIBUTE TO YOUR PROFESSIONALISM AND CONCERN
FOR YOUR CUSTOMERS.
REGARDS, _,
?T'
BEN H .. GARRETT
VIC£ PRESIDENT, MARKETING
BAYUNER MARINE CORPORATION
~NN
... .. , ,
. ...
J
l
Irv.toe
,
VOL. 70, Nd-fSO, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's £1• l•g
N.¥. Stoeks
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1977 T~N CENTS
' \,?
Strangler l'ictiln's Ser ea ms Heard?
LOS ANGELES (AP). -
Neighbors say they heard blood ·
curdUng screams ring out in a
Hollywood apartment house
where the latest victim or the
Hillside Strangler apparently
was lured to her death.
"It was a very frightening
ICl'eam ... It was definitely the
worst scream I've ever beard,"
aaidoneman.
Two other residents also re·
ported hearing the screams al
about the time Tuesday night
that Kimberly Diane Martin, a
prostitute, arrived lo meet a
man.
nut no one r eported the
screams at the time.
"l didn't pay any attention
because it (the screaming> went
on out in the lobby," the man told
radio station KFWB on Thurs·
day.
-~ -.....,~ ............
SETH MILLER; SCHOOLMATES M<1URN MORRIS
For Friendly Cat, a Tree Grows In Costa Meea
MBseot Gone
Kids Mourn Morris the Cat
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of llie Dally ...... S\lltf
Students at Costa Mesa's Adams School conducted a
special memorial service today for their unofficial mascot,
a catthey called "Morr\s." · His real name was "Porky" and he lived across the
street from the school In Mesa Verde. He died earlier this
week when he suffered a heart attack while crossing the
street. He was 10 years old.
THE KIDS AT Adams called him "Morris" because
they thought he looked like the cat that appears in television
commercials for a cat food.
"Everybody was just heartbroken at Morris' death,"
said school secretary Mary Farrell.
At the ceremony this morning, students presented sym·
pathy cards they had made to Morris' owner, Mrs. Betty
Boy~e.
••ffE WAS HERE ALL the time," Mrs. Farrell said. ''In
the nurses's omce, as soon., as somebody was lying down
sick. he was right on top or them."
It might have been because Morris understood how it
felt to be ill. Morris, Mrs. Farrell explained, had suffered
from heart trouble ror some tlme.
"He was the friendliest cat you've ever seen," she said.
"'l'be only place he wasn't •wercome was in the school
kitchen."
MORRIS' IMMOR~ALITY was assured in today's
ceremony. A wee"il'\g willow tree was planted in his honor.
"We tried to get a pussy willow, but they don't sell them
this limo of year," Mrs. Farrell said.
~rican Tankers
,Collide Off Africa
:PORT ELIZABETH, South'
Africa lAP>-Two America·
owned supertanker sister ships
ctDUlded in fog aod caugl'lt fire in ~e Indian Ocean off Sout'h Africa
•rly today. spreading a slick deacr.ibeduthreemileslong.
Two seam~n were reported
.. Isling ~ 82 others, mosUy !tone Kont thihese, were
JIMCUed bf helicopter Mid shlps,'
·llffltlal1 aald. Dozens of .. wmen leaped into the water to ·.-ea;e the burning decks.
.James Darcy, spoJ<esman for
Quit Oil Corp. in Pittsburgh, said
... two Liberian-registered ~· were on charter for Gulf al but owned and operated by
MissMartln. wbo worked fol' a
prostitution service, w11s sent tl>
the apartment after a man
telephoned the service, saJd bis
wife was out of town and a11ked
for a young, attractive model.
Miss Martin's car was found in
rront of the apartment W ednes-
day morning. Her nude body was
found dumped on a hillside 10
miles away.
Eleven girls and young women
have been found stain in similar
settings over nine weeks.
Police tater determined the
telephone call was made from a
pay phone at a .Hollywood library
and that the apartment where
Miss Martin was to meet him
was vacant. Its last tenant, also a
prostitute, was evicted in
August, the apartment manager
said.
Lois Lee, a spokeswoman for
the California Association for
Tromps, an organization formed
to help prostitutes, said the
prostituUon aervlce told ber the
man "sounded like. • .just an Qr·
dinary guyoutfor a good time."
Library employees described a
man who used the phone Tuesday
night ror police, ~t Lt. Dan
Cooke said the description w.as
not being released.
Howeve~-, an attendant al a
parking lot across from the
library said police asked him if he had seen a limping man with a
mustache.
The library iS' next to a theater
that features live striptease acts
and less than a block from the
health food restaurant where.
another victim or the Hillside.
Strangler was last seen alive.
· Four of the strangler's victims
were prostitutes, poUcesai<1.
Ra.lph Diedrich Indicted
35 Overt Acts of Conspiracy 4lleged by Grand Jury
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of ... Dally f'llol SI..,.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was
accused of two felony bribery of-
renses and of engaging in a con·
spiracy to commit bribery in an
Orange County Grand Jury in-
dictment . handed down Thurs·
day.
Also named in the three-count
indictment as a co-defendant in
the cons piracy cha r ge was
Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose,
a close Diedrich friend and the
Fullerton supervisor's 1972 cam·
paign finance manager. •
Thirty.five overt acts cite<l in
the eight·page indictment allege
that Diedrich:
-In early 1973 received $25,000
from lawyer Michael Remington
Bovan Slay
after Remington had been paid
$74,485 by a development firm
then having a major land use is·
sue before the county Board of
Supervisors.
-A month earlier repaid a ·
$30,000 personal loan owed rood
company executive William
Moore with a Remington check
made payable to Moore.
-Accepted in late 1974 about
s20.ooo in "legal tender" from
Remington after Remington was
given two$10,000checks by Rose.
-Asked Robert H. Grant Com·
pany officials in 1974 for $80,000
and, when rerused, urged the of·
ficials to use their influence to
help him obtain an $80,000 loan at
a Garden Grove bank.
-Arter faWng to repay the loan
as agreed, told the Gran\ of.
ficials he would make payment
when they "paid Rose and when
LeRoy Rose paid him."
The overt acts alleged ln the in·
dictment go on to say that the
Grant Co. through Its subsidiary,
Anaheim Hills, Inc., made 12
rayments to Rose totaling
$138,301. '
However, only the $20,000 Rose
gave Remington was allegedly
traced directly into Diedrich's
hands even thoua:b all 12 pay·
ments to Rose are listed in the
overt acts. ·
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person by
a Grand Jury. Overt acts cited in
Engineering School
the indictment are used to
demonstrate the basis for the
charges. Neither the indictment
nor the alleged overt acts
establish guilt or Innocence.
Atread~ under indictment for
atlegedly violating state political
campaign regulations, Diedrlch-
respooded to Thursday's Indict·
ment with a terse three para·
graph statement.
•'This charge is simply the next
shot fired in the ongoing war bY'
the District Attorney's Office.
This is another collection of rub·
bish that be <the district at·
torney) hopes to use to get me out
of bis way.·· med.rich said in bia
written statement.
(See DIEDRICH, Page A2)
Freund,
Anthony Suspect
Released
Roy Christoph\'r Richard, one
of seven people j8iled in the slay.
ing of Stephen John Bovan, was
released from l'<{ewport Beach ci·
ty jail on his own reco1nizance
Thursday night.
,__._ -Resigni;itiµ...-,__.__ ~~m~~ ~---.
Police declined any commen
·of Richard'• 10 p.m . release.
Deputy District Attorney Dave
Carter, who is prosecuting the
murder case, would comment on·
ly that the former president or the
Laguna Beach Hare Krishna
Temple was released at the dis-
trictattorney'srequest.
Richard, 28, sought since No-
vember, surrendered to Newport·
Be1tcb police a week ago. He had
been lleld on $100,000 bail alter
plea'.ling not guilty tom urder con·
spiracy charges in Orange County
Superior Court.
Meanwhile, Elsie Caban Kulik
was to go back lo Superior Court
today to seek a reduction of the $1
million bail that is holding her in
the county jail.
The dean of UC Irvine's
engineering school, Dr.~
M um1-. 5'7' UDOUDCed. • ignation today effecUve Dec. 1.
Mulligan said he WP resi~lng
"for the good of the scboOl ot
engineering." He would not
elaborate and referred to a at.ate·
ment expeeted Monday from UCI
Chancellor Daniel Aldrich.
Mulligan bas been dean of the
engineering school since July,
1974. Prior to serving as dean, be
was secretary and executive or.
ficer or the National AcadeJQY or
En gineering in Washington,
D.C., from1968to 1974.
He presently serves as p~
time secretary of that organiza·
lion.
Mulligan opposed last year's
proposed merger of the school of
engineering and the school of
phys\cal sciences.
Una versity officials. eventually
decided against the merger.
QUITS UC IRVINE POST
Englnfffing Dean Muttlgan Her husband, Canadian-born
AlexandeT Kulik, was told Thurs·
day that be will have to raise
$2.35 million if he expects to re·
gain the freedom be.lost Wednes·
day.
Kulik, 28, a sometime resident
of Newport Beach and bis wife,
28, were jailed by orricers who
found her hiding under a split
level condominium in La Costa, a
resort near Carlsbad lb San
Diego County.
Skateboard Hassle
Nears Settlement
Judge Robert P. Kneeland set
the high bail on the Kuliks after
being told that Kulik organized
the biding or his wife who is one
of seven codefendants in a
grand jury indictment that cites
charges of murder and con·
spiracy.
(See BOV AN .. Page A2)
Blood Theft
Thtmrted
A year·long dispute between
some Irvine homeowners and
th e City Council over a
skateboard course In University
Park appears near settlement.
Members of the Parkcrest
Community Association, who
filed a lawsuit against the city
demanding that the skateboard
park be abut down as a nuisance,
have voted approval of a com·
promise plan proposed by City ·
ManagerWllliam WooJlettJr.
Parkcrest President Mel Posln
said the proposal approved this
week a.I.so had the unanimous
concurrence of aeven membera PHILADELPHIA (AP> of the aasociatlon, whose homes
-Two employees or the directly abut the course. 'n1ey
Red Cross have been bad filed a separate lawsuit. charged with stealing about 150 gallons of blood The Plan will be offered for Q •
plasma from the agency's ty Council approval next month.
blood program bead· Uthe council approves it. Poaln
quarten here, police said. said, the homeowners will qree
The stolen plasma al· to drop the lawsuits.
In September a Superior Court
judge ordered rules enforced,
which included requirements
that skateboard users wear safe.
ty helmets, gloves, and elbow
and knee pads.
SuperiOl' Judge Mason Feat.on
also decreed that a supervisor be
posted al the facility <luring operating hours. _
Such supervision was costing
the city a projected $12,000 a
year .
Posin said the homeowners felt
a supervisor was •'nJce, but nOt
really warranted." He said l'eC·
ular staff who man l)\e nearby park clubhouse building · could
check the course per!od'C<!8l(~ peering throuih the chaib·
fence.
CHVRCB FIGllTS
WOH4N PRIFSI' . . legedl)' wu sold to a local FandameAtally the propo1al
afftce ot interstate Blood calla for the city to lnllld a COD· PORTLAND. Maine (AP) -
Bank Inc. tor fl4,000 over a cret.e block wall around tbe area Tbe E~ flq .t St. PauJ.11
fov·moath Pll1od be•in· of the all:.teboard •COOrte that Church new upeide-doo and at n'-:f~~~ ..... \atch er, Red abuta the back yardl of &even ~~~~&~·=:=
Crou pabllc relations condominiums. pridt.
director, llld Tbur1day The remainder of the coUne TM na1 wu at ball .. t.lff ''to
tboa1 and current. cit;y Ptannlng
Commiuioner Ellen Freund
b•M IW candidacy papen for
r U. March Irvine City Council elecllop, CJ&)' Clerk Raye
Kin .. bua7 Hid tod~. • They M'e U..flrat to file among
10 praueetlve cln<Udates for the
explrTng council terms or
Gabrlelle "Y~yor-ana John
Burton.
i,rs. Pryor has announced she won't seek re-election. Bw11on
claims not to have decided.
Because Mrs. Pryor isn't run·
ninJ, the filinc period in which
to declare candidacy has been
extended until noon Jan. 3.
Candidat.es who have tak"1 out
nomination papers but not filed
are Westminster High School
teacher Vivian Hall, who ran un·
auecessfully as the Democratic
nominee for the 40th U.S.
, Congressional district; state
biologist Don Murphy; and
private investigat..earol Effen·
berger.
Also, UC Irvine student
Pamela Davidson; businegsmao
Carry Hollman, an Irvine plan·
ning commilal.oner; communica·
lions systems engineer Robert
Moore, membef of the city com· munity services commission;
and attorneys Larry Agran and
David Warren.
41 Seek Cop Job
LOSANGELES <AP>-Forty4
one law enforcement officials
have applied for the job of Los
Angeles police chieJ, including 18
from outside the force. Theil" names were not disclosed.
Ceast
Weather
Variable clouds becom·
Ing cloudy wWl....30 percent
chance ol r~urday.
Cooter Saturday. Lows
tonight so to 55. Highs
Saturday 1ow eos.
INSIDE TODAY
••'J\u NMtcrocker" and ,
Chrittmat aeem to b4t ~· fte tradUionot lloUda11 baUd w ddailfd in
atonr• ..i paotos °" Pao• 1
c~.
u
OU AM Ehlehem St eel Corp . in
lebem, Pa. Bethelehem of.
la 1-'d \bat the tankers are eeatrolled by a '84Mlebe111 au!>-m•t Ot the stolen blood 1 ed b haln link moum the spiritual ri80f ..US ~~~==~~~=~·~~·~·::••• w11 aallt tor would be~enc~-°'---'-c....-......:....' • __ &halJ& lD the g~r Cb'8'eb." raw •d,....,s ... ll--uut...-.. • .--t--M .. T_.b .. • bomeownen are uklnc 8"iTO Fnlrlr' '11'1 •
have bMl uaed OD'Y ln lhe dt1 to continue enforclnl XcElwatn,. rector ot the c~.
laltora_, work. ll• aald 11fetf rules but ureed to drop Mn. Eli111*.b Ann Ha~.
mOlt al It had been n-fullt me 1upervfaioa of the oow • deacQD, Ytn ~ to tOTered. • be ordalned tonJiht. course.
AZ OMV "'-Of I
f',.._P-AJ
DIEDRICH .•
Rose. wbo. u • Pulluton plan·
nJq ~WU tndkted
00 brlbery cfaarg i_n 19'75 but aC·
qultted ln im. r~Pooded to the
mdlctmtmt by resianlna Crom the
firm he founded In 19e0 LeRoy
Rose and Associates. •
Rose said his resienatlon was
"due to adverse publicity r egard·
ine put and recent inveasUp·
tions."
1''or h1s part, District Attorney
Cecil Hie~ simply chatted for a '
few minutes w1t.b newsmen about
other toplc1 as Diedrich and
Roase were caUed to appear In court.
Jl was Diedrich who appeared
in Judge Robert Rickles' courtroom first.
Without an attorney a l his side,
Diedrich was told to reappear in
court Dec. 27, directed to book
himself into Orange County J aJl
and released on bis own re·
cognizance.
Yashes Kill
4 Countians
Four people were killed in trar.
tic accidents Thursday night as
the countywide pre·Chris tmas
tramc death toll climbed to
aeven in the past 24 hoyrs.
Orange County coroner's d~p.
\llies rePQrted todav, ...
A 16-year·old Santa Ann
t eenager a nd a 4l·year·old
• Garden Grove truck driver were
killed in an 11 :37 p.m . collis ion
tnat ended a 100-mlle-an·hour
police chase in Garden Grove
and Santa Ana, police said.
P olice said the c hase began in
Garden Grove, where an officef'
became suspicious of the driver's
erratic actions. The car was-.
travellf\I about 100 milts an bbur
when it sped throu~h a red light
on Newhope in Santa Ana, stnk-
ing the Van Wey van, police as·
serted. ·
The overnight traffic death toll
also claimed the Hves of two
pedestrians tn separate acci-
dents, investigators said.
John McGuiness, 50, of 231 W.
Thirty minutes late r Rose
walked into the same courtroom
with lawyer Sylvan Aronson.
Rose's arraignment was put o!f
o.lly ............ "' G..-, ..,..._ TWO DIE IN HEAD-ON CRASH ON VICTORIA STREET BRIDGE
Body of One of Thuraday Night Craah Victim• Ues Covered at Right
The driver of that speeding
car, a 17-year-old Crom Sa~a
Ana, was charged with felo'fly
drunken driving and released to
his parents, officers said.
Las Palmas Drive, Fullerton,
was killed at 9:05 p.m. as be and
his wire attempted to cross
Harbor Boulevard near their
home, police said.
to J a n. 6, he was given until Dee:
20 to book h.imself into jail and he
also was released on his own re·
cognizance.
In th~ forefront of the bribery
indictment ls the successful ef-
fort by Anaheim Hllls, Inc., to ob-
tain in 1973-74 county approval
for the withdrawal of 2,200 acres
from agricultural preserve
agreements.
Diedrich was the leader in a 3
to 2 Board of Supervisors de-
cision in March, 1974, that re·
leased the land from the pact and
opened it to development.
In the background to that move
was the company's hir ing of
Hem ing.ton as their legal counsel
and Rose as a consultant on grad·
ing problems.
The indictment alleges that
R e ming ton was hired at
Diedrich's suggestion but makes
no mention of whatever r ole Rose
was assigned lo earn the S138,30l
he received from the company.
Key figure in the four-month
"" investigation leading to the in·
dictment was Remington, a
Diedrich business and legal as-
.socia te for 10 years.
-
Remington was named in the
July 1 political conspiracy indict-
m e nt ;d ong with Diedrich,
Supervisor Philip Anthony ,
Anaheim City Coun c ilm an
William Kott and would-be
political financier Gene Conrad.
It was in early November that
Rc mingtol\ pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor charge related to
the a lleged conspiracy and was
then granted immunity from
prosecution when tes tifying
before the Grand Jury about his
knowledge of the Anaheim Hills
affair.
Also shown by court r~cords to
have been g ra nted immunity
were Robert H . Grant and
Richard Owen, then Grant Com-
pany corporate officers.
Shown in the listing of overt
acts as the officials who issued
the Anaheim Hills, Inc., cheeks
to Rose were Erik Berg and Jack
Sickler, a long.time Diedrich
friend.
The bribery indictment came
as no surprise to Diedrich.
He predicted his own indict-
me nt last week when grand jury
in vestigators armed with a
s earch warrant seized business
records kept in a small Buena
P ark warehouse.
True to the imaee he has pro-
jected since becoming a COi.lilly
supervisor 1n January of 1973,
Diedrich vowed late Thursday to
.. continue waging this all-out war
I have on my bands."
IT'S SKYIR41N
JS. C ONCORDE
The lumbering Laker Skytrain
a lmost beat th e elegant
s upersonic Concorde on r ecent
New York-London fligl)ts.
First-time travele r Hugh
Mulligan, special correspondent
for the AP, found m ore
similarities between the two
Oights lhan0ne mighLexpect.
See hi& report on Page AlO.
ORANG« COAST
DAILY PILOT
No Evidence
Of Coastal
Plane Crash
2 Killed, 1 Injured
In 3-car Collision
The dead are Michael Anthony
Albright, 5409 W. Crystal Lane,
Santa Ana. a passenger in the
purs ued car, and Osborn C. Van
Wey, 13802 Cypress St., Garden
Grove, driver of the other vehi·
cle, police said.
Van Wey's son, John 19, sUf-
fe red serious injur~es in the
crash, police reported. A second
teenager in the car being chased,
Eric Fassbinder, 17, or 5422 w.·
Lebnhardt Ave., Santa Ana, also
was hospitalized with injuries,
officers said.
McGuiness' wife also was
seriously ir\jured, officers repart·
ed. The couple was not inside a
crosswalk and the driver or the
car was not held, police said.
The second pedestrian killed
was Dolores C. Trevino, 32, of 220
E. Chestnut St., Santa Ana. She
died about four hours aft.el' being
struck crossing the street at 200
N. Grand Avenue at an unslrlped
crosswalk, police said.
A National Transportation
Safety Board investigator said
today there is. no new informa·
tion o n a s mall pla ne that
crash ed off Newport Beac h
Wednesday and there will pro-
bably be none unless some debris
washes ashore.
A relative identified the pilot of
the plane as one of its two
owners, Sanford 0 . Vance. 42, of
24501 Vanessa Drive, Mission
Viejo. With him r eportedly was
his son Dan, 19, a freshman at
Saddleback College. The e lde r
Vance was identified as a pilot
for United Airlines.
However, Miss Wally Funk of
the safety board said officials
cannot confirm the deaths.
"We h~e some missing people
reported but we can 't prove it
leg a Uy." she said.
Witnesses said they saw the
Cessna 150 spiral into the water
two miles off Scotchman's Cove
south of Corona del Ma r JUSl
before noon Wednesday.
Som e papers were later re-
covered containin~ the name of
the owners and the aircraft's
identification. ll was co-owned
by Vance and his neighbor, Al
Andrew.
Miss Funk s aid that since the
plane went down in 280 feet of
water and divers tn the area can
only safely descend to 140 feet, no
dive is planned. She said special
equiprc:::! for a dive would cost
an estimated $15,000.
"Until we get something that
washes up on the beach, there's
nothing that I can do," Mis!
Funk said.
Navy OKs Project
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Navy recommended Thursday
thpt a scaled-down test version of
Project Seafarer be constructed
in Upper 1!1ichigan.
Two peopte were killed a nd a
third injured Thurs day in a
three-car collision on the Vic·
tori a Street bridge o~r the Santa
Ana River, which · · es Costa
Mesa from Huntington each.
Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as Timothy Lee
McKeon, ~5. of 33802 Malaga
Drive, Dana Point, a nd Carol
Lovette Stradley, 42, of 1015
American Place, Costa Mesa.
Both were in a small foreign
car driven by McKeon that police
said colfid.ed· head-.on at
a bout 9:50 p.m. with a vehicle
driven by Janet Ann Munson, 21,
162 Tulip Lane, Costa Mes.a. She
was treated at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital for cuts on
her r ight hand, arm and knee,
and sent home.
A third car, driven by Irene
Garcia Dolan, 26, of 711 Pacific
Coast Highway, Huntington
Bl'ach. skidded into the McKeon
car after lhc accidcnL Its driver
was not reported injured.
Police said that. according to
witnesses. McKeon apparerilly
Burglars Hit .
Three Trailers
Burglars broke into three
motor homes stored at College
Molorhomes. a retail sales firm
c.it 53 Travel Land Lane in Irvine.
:.ind stole a porta ble color
television set from each.
Steve Banas of the company,
who reported the crime Thurs-
day, valued the loss at $1 ,200.
Banas said two or the homes
were in a service bay a rea, being
prepared for, delivery to new
owners . The third home, in the
same area, was being serviced
for a customer, he said.
Snowy Tragedy
Wife's Ordeal of Death Told
Editor's Note: A Sunday drive ended in tragedy for Norman 0.
Johnson, 61. His wife, Gwen, alao 61, died of ezposure in dup mow after
the covple's car broke down in a remote area. Here i8 Johnson's accoiQ&t
of what~. as told to Deseret New!! reporter Leo Perry.
PROVO, Utah <AP) -The hardest decision I have made in my
life was whether to lie down and die with Gwen or get up and try
to save myself. •
We had been married 35 years, and I didn't want to leave her.
But I had to leave her if I was going lo get help.
WE HAD COME DOWN FROM Salt Lake Sunday to visit some
friends and then decided to take a little ride up the canyon. It was
a nice day, and the road wasn't that bad. But 1 turned to the right
instead or the left. Then I hit a rock in the center or the road, and it
knocked a hole in the oil pan. .
I spent two hours trying to jack the car up and get it oet the
rock, but I couldn't move it. It was then we decided to try td'
walk out. We should have gone back the way we came, but I
thought it would be faster to try to walk over to Springville.
We walked four or five miles. When it started to get dark, we
got under a big pine tree, and I tried to cover her up with pine
boughs. I tried to keep standing up to keep warm and then I would
lie down to try to keep her warm. Then the wind started to howl. It
seemed like it snowed all nicht.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE TO hobble about 100 yards in the
deep snow in the morning. I tried for three hours to help her further.,
But I wasn't much help because I have arthriUs. We talked
together of personal things. Then she began acting atrange. Stle
wasinacoma.
How could I leave her? Yet I thought I shouJd eet help. I prayed
to the Lord. and I felt the Lord didn't want me to die there.
I bobbled along through the deep snow all the rest of the day. I
had seen a cabin on the way up, and t thought, if I could just make
it down to the cabin. It was just geltina dark Monday nlaht when l
saw the cabin. But then I fell off the bridge and Into a five-foot·
deep creek bed. It. seemed like hours before I could crawl up the
bank.
J BAD NO HE~T IN THE cabln -no food and Just theanow tor
"ifater. I moved my lees throughout the night to keep the circula·
tlon going. At daylight, I started out aa•ln~ I wu we.t almott to
my aboulden from f alllnl down in the deep snow.
I kept bn praytna that the Lord would help me ju1t to kMl> on
plng. I actually felt tt J could juat keep goln1 I wou.ld find
1omeonetohelptne.lk$tfaDin1down,andthuunwaswarmnow
on my face. I Just wanted to Uethere, buU knew I had to k"P aotng.
My next blg obst.acle waa to cet across the catUe 1urd. 1 coun:
onty move my feet about four inches at a time. I prayed.omeooe would ftnd me.
-"•, ™'" AWDOvw, 'l'A*ftboynnnt-"up the fOtld hi a~ truck. 1'hay wanted to know what I wu dolnc there. They eoul4
not believe lt when I told t.hem my wife wu dead up on tbe road.
They 1ald the beat thlDC to do was to 10 down to the aetvlce ala·
tlon tn 5"nllh Forlt Canyon aocl call the 1herirt.
became distracted while wiping
the inside of his windshield with a '
rag while heading toward Bunt·
ington Beach on the bridge. Wit·
nesses said his car strayed over
the double yellow lines in the
center and collided with the
Costa Mesa-bound Munson car,
spinning it around.
Costa Mesa police a re in-
vestigating the tragedy.
Fro•PageAI
BOYAN ...
J\t rs. Kulik pleaded innocent to
those charges Thursday. She was
ordered to face trial J an. 23, t he
sam e d at e set for her s ix
codefendants .
Judge Kneeland computed the
$2.35 million figure for Kulik
afler bcin~ told Kulik faced trial
on charges of possession of 1.1
pounds of nearly pure heroin
filed in Orange County, was al-
legedly in possession of another
1.5 pounds of almost pure heroin
at La Costa and also allegedly
was involved in the killing last
Oct. 22 of Bovan, a Fountain
Va lley resident.
Seven of the eight people in·
dieted for their alleged r,oles in
that killing have now been ar·
rested .
A search is still under way for
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski, 28.
Scheduled to appear with the
Kuliks today were codefendants
Richard. 28, and J erry Peter
Fiori. 41. of H11ntin11ton Reach.
Fiori is id~ntified by the
prosecution as the man who
pumped nine bullets into Bovan in
a l!on!rontaUon last Oct. 22 out.-
side a Newport Beach restaurant.
Fiori ls held with ball denied.
His lawyer was expected to ask
Judge Kneeland today to set bail.
Police claim that Fiori and two
other Huntington Beach men,
Anthony "Little Tony" Marone
Jr.. 23, and Raymond Steven
Resco, 28, were hired to kidnap
and kill Bovan in revenge for an
earlier kidnapping of Kulik.
Bypass Funded
SACRAMENTO <AP) -state
highway commissioners have ap-
proved use of $10.5 million for
first.stage work on a rreeway to
bypass a stretch of Highway 101
south of San Jose called .. blood
Alley."
The driver of the car in that
8 :49 p .m. crash also has not been
charged pending further in•
vestigation, police said.
Mideast Session
Carter and Begin
Conj er in Private
WASHINGTON <AP) -Israeli
Prime Minister Menahem Begin
outlined for President Carter to-
day his nation's proposals "for
resolvlng the issue of Palestinian
Arabs" in negotiations with Egypt.
Arter Begin left the White
J loose, Carter telephqned Egy p-
tian President Anwar Sadat to
report on the discussions. Carter
~nd Begin are to meet again
· Saturday night.
Jody Powell. the White House
press secretary, said there could
be· further "communications"
between Carter and Sadat but we
knew of no meetings planned
with the Egyptian leader.
A Wh.ite House statement said
that during the two-hour meet-
ing. Begin and Carter a lso dis·
cussed proposals for future rela·
tlons between Israel and E gypt.
"The pres ident thanked the
prime mini s ter for h is
thoughts in both of these areas
and promised to give them
ser ious consideration,•' the stale·
rnentsaid.
Carter planned to fly to Fay.
etteville, N.C .• th.is afternoon to
attend the wedding of a nephew.
He is due to return here Saturday
afternoon.
Earlier, qualified U.S. Sl)urces
said Israel was "rethinking" its
position regarding the territory
on the West Bank of the Jordan
River that it won in the Six-Day
Wa r of 1967. Speculation cen>
tered on proposals for some
Joeal·self rule for the 650,000
P a lestinian Arabs living there.
Begin and the ruling Likud
P arty bad taken a firm stand
against relinquishing the ter-
ritory, which they consider his-
torically to be pa rt of Is rael. It
was llO l immediately clear
whether giving the Arab resi-
dents greater control over their ·
day-to-day affalrs clashes with
their concept.
Begin's proposals for future l"e·
lalions between Egypt and larael,
were not spelled out. However,
the Israeli leader, like his pre·
decessors, has had as bis govern·
ment's ultimate goal a peace
treaty that would provide for ex-
changes of ambassadors and,
other normal contacts between
ne ighbors. '
Carter and the Israeli leader
talked for an hour and were 1 joined for an additional houri by
their key advisers.
Earlier, Begin was asked by
reporters if he would meet with -
Egyptian leaders. .,.
Med Salesmen
Aid Surgeons
NEW YORK (AP) -The pr~.
dent of a large surgical supply
firms says his eight salesmen in
New York slate r eported they
participated lo some extent in,
more than 900 operations the past-
fivc years. . :
Leon Jfirsch, president of the
U.S. Surgical Corp. or Stamford,
Conn., said his salesmen report-
ed in nn anonymous question-
naire that they "scrubbed in" on.
more than 3,000 operations.,
meaning they were allowed in
the sterile area around the
operating table .
Hirsch testified Thursday at a
hearing held in Manhattan by the·
state assembly's Medical Prac·
tice Task Force. He defended the
presence or his salesmen, saying.
s urgeons using new equipment
for the first time often need the~
advice or salesmen during an
operation.
It's What's Out Back 'That Counts
uc. NO. nom.
Our store is like an iceberg! No-we're not chilly
to deal with-it's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting us for the first time are
flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfolds
before them. The huge showroom has thousands of
samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection they have seen.) -
Our warehouse contains an Inventory of infinite
vaciety. Hundreds' of remnants inhabit a 25x50
Remnant room.
Add offices, a spacious drapery room. plenty of
-: parking, pleasant people, and you11 have the ''Big
Picture" of our successful operation!
.,
DEN'S.
: iiiiiailatiiin: ·custom drap11ri11s
· noliiiii • Wood ~ -
1663 f'lACfNTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92427 • PHONE 646~138 -646-235'
"... \. .. . . ... . • '• -..A
,
Lag11na/SOuth Coast Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 70, NO. 350, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C_ALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1977 TEN CENTS
·Laguna Hits EalTrans Tree Trimming
o.lty ...... $Uff --SEVERE PRUNING OF EUCALYPTUS IRKED COUNCIL
Was CalTrans Insensitive To Laguna Esthettcs?
''Worst I've Heard' 1 ·--~.....-~~~~~~~~
Strangler Victim's
1. Screams lgnnred?
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Neighbors say they heard blood-
curdling screams ring out in a
Hollywood apartment house
'.where the latest victim of the
Hillside Strangler apparently
was lured to her death.
"It was a very frightening
$cream ... It was definitely the
worst. scream l 've ever heard,"
·sairl one man.
' Two other residents also re-
'ported hearing the screams at
about the time Tuesday night
that Kimberly Diane Martin, a
prostitute, arrived to meet a
m an.
But no one reported the
-screams at the time.
"I didn't pay any attention
because it <the screaming) went
on out in the lobby," the man told
,radio station KFWB on Thurs-
day ..
Miss Martin, who worked for a
prostitution service, was sent to
the apartment after a m an
telephoned the service, said his
wife was out of town and asked
for a young, attractive model.
Miss Martin's car was found in
front of the apartment Wednes-
day morning. Her nude body was
l ound dumped on a hlllside 10
miles away.
Eleven girls and young women ~ave 'been found slain in similar
fetUngs over nine weeks.
Police later determined the
\elephooe call was made from a
pay phone at a Hollywood libraey
eoast
Wealber
Variable clouds becom-
• Jng cloudy with 80 percent
chance ot rain Saturday.
Cooler Saturday. Lowa
tonight· 50 to 55. Highs
Saturday 10..V &Os. ·
JNllDETOB~T
and that the apartment where
Miss Martin was to meet him
was vacant. Its last tenant, also a
prostitute, was evicted in
August, the apartment manager
said.
Lois Lee, a spokeswoman for
the California Association Cot'
Trollips, an organization formed
to help prostitutes. said the
prostitution service told her the
man "soUhded like .•. just an or-
dinary guyoutfor a good time."
Library employees described a
man who used the phone Tuesday
night for pqllce. but Lt. Dan
Cooke said the description was
not being released.
However; an attendant at a
parking lot across f rorn the
library said police asked him it
he had seen a limping man with a
must.ache.
The library Is next to a theater
that features live striptease acts
(See STRANGLE, Page A2l
Three More
"' Lagunans
• ·seek CoUncil
Three more Laguna Beach
rnid~qt.s have taken Qut papers
for the March 1 City Council race,
bringing the number of potential
candldates toelght.
City Clerk Verna RoJHnger
said Diana Dike, Tom Adams
and Kelly Boyd have joined the
ranks of the signature seekers in
the A rt Colony.
Mrs. Dike. of 718 Coast View
Drtve.,.is currently chairman of
the city's plaMing commission.
Adams, of 571 Blumont St .. is a
taxi driver. And Boyd, a Vietnam
veteran, operates a men's •l>-
parel shop in Laguna Beach,
Mrs. Rollinger said today.
Tbe trio joined law student
James W BiaboS>, graphlc artist
Adema A! Gay, housewife Jllag.
gie Me•p, stockbroker l{oward
Dawson and retired bualneaaman
John Gabriela In preliminary
competition for three seats on the
Cit)' Council.
To date, council members Jon
Brand, Ca.ti Johnson and PbyUJs
Sween~ have not '-ken out
papen r.r another roUQd of four·
year ttftnSon tile ~qel.
The ~•Utloaa , wlUi tbe
U,Uturea "' • ,.._td oit)' ~tmlll~-... ...... Dee. zt. But tt any ol UM \hr" lneum· .................. ,term
tflat twilf MU'WID tie ext;;w
to .J•. I for aoa-lD~•.,_.
By STEVE MJTCHELL Ol 1 .. o.11, .. ~ .....
The city of Laguna Beach ia Ill·
ing a claim against CalTrans for
what one councilwoman termed.
"the magnificent mutilation of
our trees."
It was the severe pruning of
e ucal y pt,u s tre es a l ong
8 roadway rec e n·tl y that
perturbed council members and
residents alike. and sparked
Wednesday night's action.
CalTrana crews came along
several mooths 110 and trimmed
back the long row ol eucalyptus
Jehmanli along Broadway, a
state arteriaJ roadway main·
tained by that agency.
But grumbles about the tree
trimming began shortly after
most or the project was complet·
ed, including a ho\ and angry let·
ter to CalTrans from 40-year
landscaper Fred Lang.
Lang says the normally hardy
eucalyptus has a hard time of it
in ~oastal areas such as Laguna
Beach. ,
Jo a telephone interview today,
the landscaper said the trees suf.
fer from heavy salty winds along
the coast.
"Almost every leaf is speciaJly
conditioned to withstand the
wind and salt," he explained. "If
they are unprotected. the leaves
burn right off."
So Mayor Jon Brand used a let-
.
ter to CalTrans from Lang as ao·
example of residential revulsion
to the tree trimming.
Lang referred to CalTrans as
"environm entally deaf.
horticulturalJy dumb and
esthetically blind,'' and men-
tioned in his missive that he
''shudders every time I see one or
your orange and blue trucks.·'
Council members said Wednes·
day they couldn't agree more,
<See TREES, Page A!)
Ralph Diedrich In.dieted
35 ·Overt Acts of Co11$piracy Alleged by Grand Jury
By GARY GRANVILL~
Of Ille DAiiy Pl .. tstall •
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was
accused of two felony bribery of·
fenses and of engaging in a con·
spiracy to commit bribery in an
Orange County Grand Jury in·
dictmenl handed down Thurs·
day.
Also named in the three-count
indictment as a CO·defendant in
the cons piracy char ge was
Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose,
a close Diedrich friend and the
Fullerton supervisor's 1972 cam·
paign finance manager.
Thirty-five overt acts cited in
the eight-page indictment allege
that Diedrich:
-In early 1973 received $25.000
from lawyer Michael Remington
Bovan Slay
Suspect
Released
after Remington had been paid
$74,485 by a development firm
then having a major land use is-
sue before the county Board of
Supervisors.
-A month earller repaid a
$30,000 personal loan owed food
company executive William
Moore with a Remington check
made payable to Moore.
-Accep&ed In late 1974 about
$20,000 in "legal tender" from
Remington after Remington was
given two$10,000checks by Rose.
-Asl!.ed Robert H. Grant Com· pany o((lclaJs in 1974 for $80,000
and, when refused. urged the of-
ficials to use their influence to
help him obtain an $80,000 loan at
a Garden Grove bank.
-After fa Wng to repay the loan
as agreed, told the Grant of·
ficials he would make payment
when they "paid Rose and when
LeRoy Rose paid him."
The overt acts alleged in the in·
dictment go oc to say that the
·Grant Co. through its s ubsidiary1 Anaheim Hills, Inc., made lz
payments to Rose totaling
$138,301.
However, only lbe $20,000 Rose
gave Retf\ington was allegedly
traced directly into Diedrich's
hands even ,though all 12 pay-
ments to Rose are listed in the overt acts. ·
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person by
a Grand Jury. Over~ acts cited in
Name Says It
'Personkind' Takes a Step .
BABYLON, N.Y. <AP> -lt'softicial. The former
Ellen Cooperman is now Ellen Cooperperson.
By virtue of a decision rendered thJs week, Ms.
Roy Christopher Richard, one ,.
of seven people Jalled In the slaY· ,/
ing of Stephen John Bovan, was
released from Newport Beach ci·
Cooperperson 's name is legal. She has used that name
unofficially three years and has ~ listed in the teleph~e book as "E . Cooperpe~ ...
A member of the National Organization for
Women, Ma. Cooperperson has been active in
feminist causes since 1971. And that, she says, is wny
she added three letters -one syllable -to her name.
ty jail on his own recognizance
Thursday nighL ·
Police declined any comment
'Of Richard's 10 p.m. release.
Deputy District Attorney Dave
Carter, who is prosecuting the
murder case, would comment on:
ly that the rormer president of the
Laguna Beach Hare Kris hna
Temple was released at the dis·
trict attorney's request.
Richard, 28, sought since No·
vember, surrendered to Newport
Beach police a week ago. He had
"I did it simply because I wanted to show my
strong feelings about the sexist nature of our ·
language," said Ms. Cooperperson, 31.
Though it all, she says, her friends and family
were supportive. Feminist g roups paid much of the
legal costs, and some other costs were handled by
volunteer work. She says it cost her between S300 and
$400 to change he r name.
been held on $100,000 bail after ~1 s·~ ·-s d plea1ingnotguiltytomurdercon-.,. ACn; prea S
spiracy charges in Orange County
Superior Court.
Meanwhile, Elsie Caban Kullle
was to go back to Superior Court
today to seek a reduction of the $1
million bail that is holding her in
the county jail.
Her husband, Canadian-born
Alexander Kulik, was told Thurs-
day that he will have to raise
$2.35 million if he expects to re·
gain the freedom he lost Wednes-
day. ·
Kulik, 28, a sometime resident
of Newport Beach and bis wife,
28. were jailed by officers who
found her hiding under a split
level condominium In La Cost,a, a
resort near Carlsbad ln San
Diego County.
Judge Robert P. Kneeland set
the high bail on the Kullks after
being told that Kulik organized
the hiding of his wife who is one
of seven codefendants in a
grand jury indictment that cites
charges of murder and con·
spiracy.
Mrs. Kulik pleaded innocent to
those charges Thursday. She was
ordered to fac~ trial Jan. 23, the sam e dale set for her six
<See BOVAN, Page A2)
American Tankers
Collide Off Africa
PORT ELIZABETH. South
Africa CAP)-Two America·
owned supertan.lcer sister ships
collided in fog and caught fire ln
the Indian Ocean of! South Africa
early today, spreading lf"'slick
J)escribed as threemUes long.
Two seamen we~e reported
missing and 82 others. mosUy
Hong Kon1 Chinese, wer e
rescued by helicopter and ships,
of{iciala sald. Doiens of
crewmen leaped into the water to
escape the burning decks.
James Darcy, spokeaman for
Gulf Oil Corp. in Pittsburgh, said
th e two Liberian-registered
veaseb were on charter for Gull on but owned and operated by
Bethlehem Steel Corp. in
Bethlehem, Pa. Be\helehem of-
ficials said that the tankers are
controlled by a BeU\lehem sub-
..
sidiary. but the crews were not
American.
Only one or the supertankers,
the 330,954-lon Venoil, was carry-
ing a full load of oil, estimated by
officials here at between 58.8
million and 73.5 million gallons. Th~ collision with the 330,869-ton
Venpet occurred at about 10 a.m.
(midnight PST> 20 miles off Cai>e
St. F.ranc!s, 54 miles east or t.h1s
Industrial coastal city.
la'n Simpson, as~iatant port
captain here, said a t.htee-mile-
long oil slick was building up from
the colll.sioo site but strong winds
were blowi.o& the spUl away from
prime beach area in South Africa.
MariUme officials expreaed
fears about possible pollution
and described the collision as
the most seriOU! aupertanker ac.
<See SPIU.., Page AU
the indietment arc used lo
demonstrate the basis Cor the
charges. Neither the Indictment
n or the alleged overt acts
esta bli&hguilt or innocence.
Already under indictment for
allegedly violating state political
campaign regulatJons, Diedrich
responded to Thurtday's indict·
ment with a terse three para·
graph statement.
"This charge ls simply the next
shot fired in the ongoing war by
the District Attorney's Office.
This is another collection of rub·
bish that he (the district at·
to*ey >hopes to use to gel me out
of his way," Diedrich said in his
written statement.
<See DIEDRICH, Page AZ)
life.guard
Facility
Approved
Lacuna Beach city councilmen ap!ll'!· o~ im· pa oP<lt'l llarine
sat. ~ te be CCIU&ructed
at Maia leMb Park, then went
ahead and appropriated $65,000
tobuildtbe structure.
The new lifeguard head·
quarters building will be located
atop Pump Station No. 11 al the
west end o( the $7 million beach
park ..
Councilmen were pleased with
tbe low profile of the single story.
1,100 square foot struclure, say-
ing it will not block the view oC
the beach area from South Coast
Highway.
The structure will include a
ramp atop t be building for
sightseers, and landscaping will
hide the shape of tbe structure
from the'street.. council.aw!trwere
told.
But council watcher Johll
Gabriels spoke out against the
structure, saying it has no place
on a public beach.
Gabriels suggested a second
story au.ached to city ball would
be a better place for a marine
safety headquarters, adding that
most of the proposed facility is
comprised of office space "and
very little storage."
"Admlnistralion areas should
be at cUy hall, and first aid and
communications should be at the
beach right where they are
now." Gabriels said .
He told councilmen they should
postpone approval of the struc-
ture and look into placing the
beadquarten at cily ball.
"You're talking "about putting
a building that is not needed in a
solid gold area," be said.
But Mayor Jon Brand quipped
.. I think that area <the sewage
pump station) ls more Uke solid
bronie than gold," adding Ulat he
thought tbe facility would up-
CSee FAaLITY, Page AZ)
-
42 DAIL V PlLOT l SC
F,.._P119eAJ
FACILITY. • ... grade the area and add more
open space <with the observation
deck ) than Is currt>nlly available
for public usl'.
The council npprond the EIR,
and approved aµpropru1t1on ol
$65,000 from lhe general fuod re·
serves. But, lhcy added, the ap.
proval is contingent upon ap·
proval reimbursement from the
Publ ic Improvement Corp.
· which sold bonds for the Main
Bench Park project in tho late
1960s.
A portion or the facility expen·
diture would come from rev·
e nu es received from the
Festival of Arts, which gave
more than $190,000 lo the city lhis year.
Chief lifeguard Bruce Baird
s aid the facility should be com-
pleted by next summer.
Blood Theft
Tfurorted
PllILADELPHIA <AP)
-Two employees of the
R e d Cross have been
c h a r ged with stealing
about 150 gallons of blood
plasma from the agency·s
blood program head·
quarters here, police said.
The stolen plasma al-
ki!cdly was solc1 to a local
office of lnterstute Dlood
Bank Inc. for $14,000 over a
four-month period begin-
ning in July.
David Butcher, Red
Cross public r e lations
director, said Thursday
most of the stolen blood
plasma was unfit for
hum a n use and should
have been used only in
laboratory work. He said
most of 1t had been re-
covered.
Front Page Al
BOVAN •••
l'odcfendants.
Judge Kneeland computed the
S2.3::i million figure for Kuhk
after being told Kulik faced trial
on charges of possession of 1.1
pounds of nearly pure heroin
filed in Orange County, was al·
legcdly in possession of another
l.5 pounds of almost pure heroin
at ~ Costa and also allegedly
was involved in lhe killing last
Oct. 22 or Bovan, a Fountain
· Valley resident.
Seven of the eight people in·
dieted for their alleged roles in
that kllllng have now been ar·.
rested.
A search is still under way for
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski, 28.
Scheduled to appear with the
Kuliks today were codefendants
Richard, 28, and Jerry Peter
Fiori. 41.-0f Huntineton Beach.
Fiori is identified by the
prosecution as the man who
pumped nine bullets into Bovan in
a confrontation last Oct. 22 out-
side a Newport.Beach restaurant.
Fiori is held with bail denied.
His lawyer was expected to ask
Judge Kneeland today lo set bail.
Police claim that Fiori and two
other Huntington Beach men,
Anthony "Little Tony" Marone
J r., 23, and Raymond Steven
Resco, 28, were hired to kidnap
and kill Bovan In revenge for an
earlier kidnapping of Kulik.
FrowaPageAJ
STRANGLE
and less than a block from the
health food restaurant where
another victim of the Hillside
Strangler was last seen alive.
Four of the strangler 's victims
were prostitutes, police said.
Navy OKs Project
WASIUNGTON <AP> -The
Navy recommended Thursday
that a scaled-down test version of
Project Seafarer be constructed
in Upper 1!1lchigan.
OftANOI COAST L1K
DAILY PILOT
'
Bolida9 Toll at 7 . ::.
Crashes Kill .·
-:-:,
~· .. ··. " .•
4 Countians
.. .. · .. :·. •!"'
Four people were killed in traf-
ric ~ccidents Thursday night as
the countywide pre-Christmas
traffic death toll climbed to
seven in the past 24 hours, Orange County coroner's dep-
uties repqrted todav ·~.
A 16-year-old Santa Ana
teenager and a 4l·year·old
Garden Grove truck driver were
killed in an 11:37 p.m . collision
lnal ended a 100-mlle-an-hour
police chase in Garden Grove
and Santa Ana, police said.
Police said the chase began In. ·.
Garden Grove, where an offlcer. ,
beeamesusplcioua of the driver'•· ·
erratic actlons. The car was
traveling about 100 miles an hour
when it sped throuRh a red liJ(ht
on Newhope in Santa Ana, slrik·
ing the Van Wey van, police as-
serted.
The overnight traffic death toll
also claimed the lives of two
pedestrians in separate acci·
dents, investigators sald.
John McGuiness, SO, of 231 W.
LOW-PROFILE LIFEGUARD HEADQUARTERS FACILITY GETS COUNCIL NOD
$65,000 Structure Scheduled for Summer Opening on Main Beach Park
The driver of that speeding
car , a 17-year-old from Santa
Ana, was charged with felony
drunken driving and released lo
his parents, officers said.
The dead are Michael Anthony
Albright, 5409 W. Crystal Lane,
Santa Ana, a passenger in lhe
pursued car , and Osborn C. Van
Wey, 13802 Cypress St., Garde~
Grove, driver of the other vehi-
cle, police said.
Las Palmas Drive. Fullerton,
was killed at 9:05 p.m. as he and
his wire attempted to cross
Harbor Boulevard near their
home, police said.
McGuiness' wife also was
seriously Injured. officers report·
ed. The couple was not inside a
crosswalk and the driver or the
car was not held. pol lee said. Canyon P11rchase Eyed
Van Wey's son, John 19, suf.
f er ed serious injuries in the
crash, police reported. A second
teenager in the car being chased,
Erle Fassbinder, 17. of 5422 W.
Lchnhardt Ave .. Santa Ana, also
was hospitalized with injuries,
The second pedestrian killed
was Dolores C. Trevino, 52, or220
E. Chestnut St., Santa Ana. She.
died about four hours after being
struck crossing the street at 200
N. Grand Avenue at an unstriped
crosswalk, police said.
Laguna Weigm Acreage for Parking Lot
Laguna Beach councilmen, in-
terested in peripheral parlsing.
are going to find out how much
10.S acres of Irvine Cdmpany
land beside Laguna Canyon Road
would cost.
Mayor Jon Brand suggested
this week lhal the acreage, at the
junction of El Toro and Laguna
From PGfl*! Al
TREES ••.
and Vice Mayor Sally Bellerue
suggested the panel send photo·
graphs of the trees to CalTrans
director Adriana Gi anturco.
M'ayor Brand was hesitant,
however, saying, "I 'm su re
Adriana s hares our concerns and
that this is the work of some
zealot down the line.'·
But on lhe suggestion of Coun·
rilman Carl Johnson, the council ..
una nimously voled to seek a
claim against CalTrans for the
alleged tree damage, and to send
a photo of the trees to Miss Gian·
turco.
Following the vote. Coun ·
cil wom an Phyllis S weeney
asked, "We don't happen to have
a before picture, do we?"
E'ront Page Al
SPILL ...
cide nl ever a long the South
African coast.
Tugboats with firefighting
equipment were unable to reach
the blazing tankers in the 40·knot
winds and rough seas, officials
said.
Dy early afternoon, the captain
and six cr ewmen from t he
Ven pct were put back aboard the
vessel to fight the flames but had~
to be airlifted to safety when con·
ditions were j udged too
dangerous to continue.
Bypass Funded
SACRAMENTO CAP> -State
highway commissioners have ap·
proved use or $10.5 million for
first-stage work on a freeway to
bypass a stretch of Highway 101
south of San Jose called "blood
Alley."
Canyon Roads, could be used for
peripheral parking during lhe
summer art festivals t raffic jam.
"I have no idea what the land is
worth," Brand said, "but even if
it were $200,000 to $300,000, that's
a drop in the bucket in terms of
dollars spent and values
gained."
The mayor expressed concerns
of the annual parking woes sul·
fered in the central business dis-
trict at fostival time, saying the
congestion hurts merchants.
Brand said advantages of the
canyon parking site include a
stop light at the comer for traffic
control. He satd the move would
a lso show the Coastal Com·
mission lhat the city is spending
money to achieve that agency's
gouls for providing adequate
parking.
His scheme would include of-
fering free parking and free bus
rides into festival areas for out·
of-town commuters on the six-
weekends of the annual event.
"Those 12 days we have both
beach traffi c and festival traf.
fi e," he said, hdding the rest of
the year the proposed parking lot
could be used as a park site.
"There are so many potentials
out there. If we arc to survive,
Laguna Beach needs peripheral parking."
Councilmen agreed with the
mayor's plan and voted to seek
an appraisal on the land a nd con-
tact Irvine Company -officials
about their plans.
Brand said efforts to use a
nearby spot for peripheral park-
ing last festival season failed
when appeals by neighbors in ad·
jacent county territory held up
the Irvine Company's free-lease
offer .
By the time the city received
stale coastal com mission ap-
proval to use the parcel, it was
too late lo prepare the land in
lime for the festival.
Councilman Jack McDowell
said he approved of the idea of
using the 10.5-acre site designat-
ed by Brand, r eminding the coun·
cil that the land falls within
Laguna's sphere of tnnuence.
In which case, he added, the ci·
ty could possibly condemn the
site for park use and acquire it in
that fashion should the Irvine
Company be hesitant to sell it to
the city.
"l think we should contact the
I rvine Company officials to fmd
Fro•PageAI
DIEDRICH INDICTED. • •
Rose, wbo, as a Fullerton plan-
ning commissioner was indicted
on bribery charges in 1975 but ac·
quitted in 1976, responded lo tbe
indictment by resigning from the
firm he founded In 1960, LeRoy
Rose and Associates.
Rose said his resignaUon was
.. due to adverse publicity regard·
Ing past and recent invesUga-
tions."
For bis part, Dist rict Attorney
Cecil Hicks simply chatted for a
few minutes with news men about
other topics as Diedrich and
Rose were called to appear in
court.
It wu Diedrich who appeared
In .Judge Robert Rickles'
courtrooro fint. ~
Wit.bout an attorney at b1a side,
Pledricb wu told to reappear ID court. Dec. Z1. direct.cl to book
blaanlt IDto Oran1• Coaaty .Jail and released on b.11 own. r• ~~mln"'tea later Rote
walked Into ~same coartroOm •Ith law¥er S7lvan Arouoe. '°9e•a atrallnment WU l*t oil
to 1 ... e. be .......... tmtll Dec. ao to book hfllllelr 1nto Jail 8M h• also was Nleaud oa hie own,. cocntaanee.
ID the fonfroat ol tM btf'*7
lndldmeal II tbe ncC..1111 fl•
fert bit Aiallbltm HUia, inc,, toob-taia .... ..,,.,. eouat~ ~ ..
for U.. wt1Mr8'ral ol a.-...... from •1rtcaltural prH•"• *'""menta. ~,.. ... ., ......... ,
to 2 ouwv ol SuPft':Yilon d ..
dllon iD •ueb. 11'4; that .....
leased the land from the pact and
opened it lo development. •
In the background to that move
was the company's hiring or
Remington as their legal counsel
and Rose as a consultant on grad·
ing problems. •
Th,e indictment alleges that
Remington was bired at
Diedrich's suggestion but makes
no menUoa of whatever role Rose
was asslined lo earn the $138,301
he received from the company.
Key figure in the four-month
invesU1aUon leading to the in·
dlctmenl was Remington, a
Diedrich business and legal as-
sociate for 10 years.
Remington was named in the
July 1 political conspiracy indiot· mont alone with Diedrich,
Supenlsor PhiHp Anthony,
Anahelrn City Councilman wnuam Kott and would-be
poll Uc al llnaneJer Gene Conrad.
It •• 1n early November that Retnlnston pleaded pUty to a
mbdeme._ charp related to
tb• alJeled eomplrae.t and waa tbn 1raated Immunity from proeecutlon when te1tlfyln1.
before tbe Grand .Jury about IUI
knowledl• ol t.M Anaheim ff.WI
affair. •
AJ.o lhown bJ court NCCll'da to bav. .,._ 1raDtM lmmuaitr
'Vere Robert H . Oraat and
!Uaard Owm. U.... Grant Com· ~omeen. SbCrwD ID U. UaUac ol omt
act.a a the oftldalt who tasued
the AMIM'm IWle.t. loe., cblcb
to Boee wwe Erik Berl .ad Jack
Slekler, a Jona;um• Dl.vtcb. ~.
out their willingness to sell. and
their thoughts on how they intend
to use the land," he !laid. officers said. ·
The driver or the car in that
8: 49 p. m. crash also bas not been
cha rged pending further in·
vesligaUon, police said.
* * * SQowyTragedy Dana Point
Wife's Ordeal of Death Told
Editor'a Note: A Sunday drive ~ fn tr~y f&r Normmt 0.
Johnaon~6I. Iii& wife, Gwen, aU<>61. died of upoaure in deep .nmDa/ter
the couple's car broke down in a remote area. Hne is Jo1m$01&'1 account
oj what happened, cu told to Deseret New& reportn Leo Perry.
PROVO Utah <AP) -The hardest decision I have made ln my
life was whether to lie down and die with Gwen or get up and try
to s ave myself.
We had been married 35 years. and I didn't want to leave her.
But I had to leave her if I was going to gel help.
WE HAD COME DOWN FROM Salt Lake Sunday to visit some
friends and then decided to take a little ride up the canyon. It was
a nice day, and lhe road wasn't that bad. But 1 turned to lhe right
ins tead of the left. Then I hit a rock in the center of the road, and it
knocked a hole in the oil pan.
M~Mes.a
Woman Die
Two people were killed and a
third Injured Thursday in a
three·car collisioh on the Vic·
toria Street bridge over the Santa
Ana River, which divides Costa
Mesa from Huntington Beach.
· Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as Timothy Lee
McK-eon. 25, of 33802 Ma~aga
Drive, Dana Point, and Carol
Lovette Stradley, 42, of ·1015
American Place, Costa Mes.a. I spent two hours trying to jack the car up and get it off the
rock, but 1 couldn't move it. ll was then we decided to ti)' lo
walk out. We should have gone back the way we came, butf.
thought it would be faster to try to w~lk ~ver lo Springville.
We walked four or five miles. When 1t started lo get dark, we
got under a big pine tree. and I tried to eover her up with plne
boughs. l tried to keep standing up to keep warm and then I would
lie down to try to keep her warm. Then the wind started to howl. It
seemed like it snowed all night.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE TO hobble about 100 yards in the
deep snow in the morning. l tried for three hours to help her further.
But I wasn't much help because I have arthritis. We talked
together of personal things. Then she ~gan a cting strange. She
was in a coma.
Both were in a small foreign:
car driven by McKeon th~tpolje«) ..
said collide d h ead -on at
about 9:50 p.m . with a vehicle ·
driven by Janet Ann Munson. 21,
162 Tulip Lane, Costa Mesa. She ··
was treated at Costa Mesa'·
Memorial Hospital for cuts on
her r ight hand, arm and knee,
and sent home.
How could J leave her? Yet I thought I should get help. I prayed
to the Lord, and I fell the Lord didn't want me lo die there.
I hobbled along through lhe deep snow all the rest of the day. I
had seen a cabin on the way up, and I thought. if I could just make
it down to the cabin. It was just getting dark Monday night when I
~aw the cabln. But then I fell off the bridge and into a five-foot·
deep creek bed. lt seemed like hours before I could crawl up the
bani<.
I HAD NO HEAT IN THE cabin -no food and just the snow for
water. 1 moved my legs throughout the night to keep the circufa-
'tion going. At daylight, I started out again . I was wet almost to
m y shoulders from f alllng down in the deep snow.
I kept on praying lhat the Lord would help me just to keep on
going. r actually felt if I could just keep going I would fmd
someone to help me. I keptfallingdown. and the sun waswarmnow
on my (ace. I just wanted to lie there, but I knew I bad to keep going.
My next big obstacle was to get across the cattle guard. l couii..:
only move my feet about four inches at a time. I prayed someone
would find me.
WITIDN AN HOUR, THREE boys came up the road in a pickup
truck. They wanted lo know what I w~ doing there. They could
not believe it when I told lhem my wife wu dead up on the road.
They said the best thing to do was to go down lo the service ala·
lion In Spanish Fork Canyon and call the sheriff.
A third car, driven by Irene
Garcia Dolan, 26, oC 711 Pacific
Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach, skidded into the McKeon
car after the accldenL Its driver
was not reported injured.
Police said that, according to
witnesses. McKeon aP.parent.Jy became distracted while wiping
the inside of his windshield with a
rag while heading toward Hunt-
ington Beach on the bridge. Wit-
nesses said his car s trayed over
the double yellow lines in the
center CJnd collided with the
Costa Mesa.bound Munson car,
spinning lt around.
Costa Mesa police ar e in·
vestigaUng the tragedy.
Merger Planned
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Carter administration ~ plan·
ning to merge the U.S. Customs
Service and the Im migration
Service and the Immigration and
Naturalization Service into a new
border "super agency," accord·
ing to informed sources.
It's What's Out Back ·That Counts
-
UC. fl«:>. Zl0'2l
Our store is like an iceberg! No-we're not chilly
to deal with-it's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting us for the first time are
flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfolds
before them. The huge showroom has thous8flds of
san)ples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection they have seen.)
Our warehouse contains an inventory of Infinite
vaciety. Hundreds of remnants Inhabit a 25x 50
Remnan•room.
Add offices. a spacious drapery room, plenty of
parking, pleasant people, and you'll have the "Big
Picture" of oor successful operation!
I
DEN'S.
:;;;;ta11atioii.: ·custom drapsr.iss
llnolium • wood flOor.
. . .
I •
1663 PlACfNllA AVlNUE • COSTA MESA, CAlJf. 92611 • ,HONS 6 .. 6 ... 131 -6-46·23~5
..
'I BELIEVE THIS IS THE PRETTIEST TREE'
Mike RuHo, Center, Says It Works Like Magic
Tree ~eans Joy
Concrete Canyon: A Nice Place
By JULES LOH ... s.KMll~-.t
NEW YORK -This is the city of the
cold shoulder and the granite heart, so
it is said, the island of cynicism with
no room for sentiment. Bah, humbug.
"When that tree goes up, you can't
.Jtnd a more neighborly place," Mike
Russo said. "That tree works like
magic."
THE TREE IS the one in New
York's front yard, the one in
Rockefeller Center, the one that is lit
each year on television to the oohs and
aabs of the nation. Mike Russo has
watched it work its magic for 20
years.
. That's how long Mike Russo, a
native New Yorker well versed in the
city's moods. has worked in the
security department of Rockefeller
Center, watching the doors of the
great buildings, greeting the hun·
dreds of friends he has made over the
years among the 60,000 who work in
this city within a city.
"When I was a kid," he said, "f
never got a chance to come to
Rockefeller Center at Christmas
time. Those were hard times back
'then. I lived on the Upper East Side
and we rarely got oul of the
neighborhood.
••BUT TIUS YEAlt 1 'm gotng to
bring my grandson down to see the tree-
and all the lights and decorations. He's
10 months old. I don't think that's loo young to enjoy it."
'[ __ AM_E_RI_CA ____ )
Army trumpets summon joy to the
world. Roasting chestnuts from ven·
dors' carts perfume the air. Dickens
himself mjgbt have designed the set·
ting.
Above it all stands the magnificent '
tree, a perfectly tapered pyramid of
green with branches swaying in the
wind like a sequined ballerina skirt.
"EVERY YEAR WHEN they bring
the tree I get anxious," Mike Russo
said. "I always wonder if it's goinA lo
be as nice as the last one. So far, I've
never been disappointed. I don't know
how they always manage to find a
perfect tree."
Not by accident, that's for sure,
though luck can play a part.
This year, two Rockefeller Center
employees, Jim Reed and John
Godwin, traveled R,000 miles inspect·
ing trees. about 40 or them, before
Godwin stumbled upon this beauty in
Dixfield, Maine, while fetching his
two sons borne from summer camp.
It is a soaring white spruce, 65 feet
tall and 35 feet across at its lowest
branches. Anything s maller would be
dwarfed in the cily's concrete
canyons.
Bag Area
Proposal Eyes
Pollution Cut
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) _:Regional planners
here have unveiled a $500·$600 million a year anti·
pollution proposal which suggests dramatic
economic and social changes.
The recommendations propose ways lo clean the air, dispose or sewage and solid waste, dis-
courage auto use ana put housing closer to JODS and
public transportation.
ONE PART OF THE PROPOSAL calls for
parking taxes and higher bridge tolls and aslts the
city to ban parking on downtown San Francisco
streets to reduce tramc and smog.
The comprehensive anti-pollution blueprint
was drawn up over a l 7·month period by the staff of
the Association of Bay Area governments and a
special 46-membcr task force.
Public comment on the plan wlll be solicited for
the next few months a nd the association's general
assembly will vote on it al a meeting in San Jose on
April 6.
TO BECOME LAW IT needs state and federal approval as well.
The plan proposes to clean up Bay Area smog
by:
-Increasing bridge tolls to $1.25 during peak· tramc hours.
-Charging a 35-cent, regionwide tax for all
vehicles entering paid parking facilities between 6
a.m. andlO a.m.
-Using the estimated $19 million in annual re·
venues from the increased foils and parking taxes
to expand Bay Area public transit.
• •
USC./I
UBLIC .lUCTIO
ESTATE JEWELRY & FINE .PORCELAINS, CHINA,
BRONZES, RUGS, FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS, Etc.
~ 1Y, Miiiion Dollars Wort h
l'ffEE ADMISSION -PUBLIC ANO DEALERS WEI.COME • ~
Don't miss this important sale!
Fina China, Crystal, Porcelains, Bronzes, European Fumitu11, Oils, Etc.
FINE GIFT ITEMS -JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS
Also, many fine pieces of antique and c9ntemporary jowelry including fine
watches, solitaire diamond rings, earrfngs.. gold chains, duster diamond,
ruby, sapp~ire, and emerald rings.
SALE NIGHT
Friday, S.turdey, Sunday
December 16, 17, 18
8:00P.M.
INSPECTION
2:00 P.M. -5:00 P.M.
and 1 ·8 P.M.
S.le Nights._
11
TEAMS: BankAmerieafd • ManerCharge
Penonal d'te<:k • C.$/'t ·Some utendllld uirms can be anengcd.
Property moV8d for con11eniencs of sale to:
cW"e111ptJr! cS'JalltJ17CS, ~td.
2542 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach. CA
(714) 645·2200
CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED 'TIL 5 pm FRI DAV
Art Levine • Auctioneer
• Three Levels of
Fine Shopping & Dining THE
•
In a Relaxed Atmosphere
HOUDAVHRS: 10to9p.m.
Wed. tbru Sat.
Open: Sun., Mon., Tues. 10 to 6 p.m.
1100 So. ·coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach, Ca.
Elltlre 1100 Woct Sowtla Coat Hlg•way
Free C-tomu Partdil&
G\TILLAGE 'PAIR.,.
Lagunas Ghiardelli Square
t JMllC. UOIAlL
· c7hd/ir OrP11n ~
No, certainly not, and neither is any
age too old.
·At Christmas time in Rockefeller
Center, young eyes brighten with
wonder and old eyes glisten with their
own best memories.of childhood.
USUALLY, REED explained, find ·
ing a tree isn't so easy. Even when a
likely one 1s located it has to be ac-
cessible. Often it entails a year-long
search, following up tips, answering------------------------:-------------------------letters from visitors to Rockefeller
UGln'S, TENS OF thousands of
them, warm the gray December sky
like winter fireflies signaling a time or.
hope. Bells, tinkly bells on sidewal:~
Santas and deep·lhroated bells or St.
Patrick's Cathedr al, serenade ice
skaters circling and dancing on the
plaza rink.
· At noon, school choirs Crom all over
the city bring their own· sounds of in-
n ocence ~c;t on Fifth Avenue Salvation
Center -they number in the hun-dreds or thousands every year-who
have been awed by the annual tree.
-Once located, workmen lovingly
fold its branches to the trunk and lie
them. A crane hitches a cable to the
top so it won't rail when cut. Police
cars escort it to Rockefeller Center.
Electricians erect a scaffold and
spend lOdaysdecoratin~ it.
"This is the 45th year they've had a
tree," Mike Russo said. "I've seen the
last 20. I believe this is the prettiest
one I've seen. or course, I say that every year."
Parents of 'Sam' Try
·
1To Carry On Living
BOYNTON BEACH. Fla <AP> -_..,_,...l"'!"'.~r.-.
Their peaceful retirement shattered
by accusations that their adopted
child is the Son of Sam killer, Nathan
and Julia Berkowitz are trying to re-
settle their lives -with help from
their neighbors.
"Life goes on." Mrs. Berkowitz said
Jh an interview. ''We're doing the best
Tt'ecan:•
"NAT llAl.SED DAVID as his own
IOD, .. she aald. "It was all a complete
abode. David was never In trouble a
day in bis life. I mean, be was even an
auxiliary fireman." •
Nathan Berkowitz, 68, who adopted
David at an early age, declined to dis-
cuss his feelings with a reporter.
The couple were married several 1ears ago alter their spouses died and
moved here about two years ago after
Berkowitz sold his hardware store in
'the Bronx. He soon became an official
of the condominium association
where they live, mediating disputeE
between apartment owoers.
THEN, AT 5 A.M. on Aug. ll, the
telephone rang.
The' call wu from a relative in New
York. David had been arrested.
Soon, ,.eporten were ringing the
doorbell and Berkowitz was fiyini to New York to help his son.
Durln1 a brief new1 conference two
days later, a weeping Nathan
.Berkowitz aHed the parents ·or Son of
8am '1 vtct.tm1, "not to burden UI wt lb JCMlf feellnp toward David. By us I mean all those people who-bave
bown David and me. We.too are vie·
Um• ofthlllragedy."
WREN BERKOWITZ returned
lome, be planned to sell hit apart·
.... t.
''He •u 11h1med and embaT· raned,0 Mid Oft• Mend. "Re fl,ured le wup\ wanted around Ml'9 any
~=U.BldDwtbel'nelpbon,the
.f,
I
Al'Wl ....... e1 'SON OF SAM' SUSPECT
Oa.vld Berkowitz
same people who could not agree on
such maU.ers as when guests should
be allowed on the tennis courts. sent a
letter to the Berkowitzes, pleadinl
with them to stay.
"PEOPLE DISAGREE about little
things," said Mrs. Berkowlu. "But on
the big things they pull together."
The neighbors are aWl protective.
Ooe friend refused to introduce a r~
porter to Berkowitz, saying, 'I'd be
marked lousy, Nobody talks to them
about it. It's a terrible thins that hap-
pened, and we're all trying to help
them for1et it."
Mrs. Berkowitz said that or the hun-
dreds of letters she has received, only
one was mlldly a~ive. The rest were
supportive.
"MOST SEEMED TO be 11)'fn1, •1t
eou.ld happen to anybody. There but
for the craco of Ood 10 I,' "1h11a1d. J>avld Betkowlt.a. U, 11 awaJtJ.na
ttlal ln New York 1n the llaJIDI ol a llrooklJn woman .
Great . EAR
Idea.
/or
Christmas
~OFFER EVER MADE <
RIAL 3 DAYS
FRI., SAT., SUM.-DEC. I ~· 17. 18
ALL PRICES DRASTICALLY.
REDUC·ED FOR ·CLEARANCE .
MRYTHllll MIST lml
Fri. thru Sun.-1 0 a.m. to 5 p.m.
RIA' REDUmOISll
THOUSANDS OF ITEMS ~ UP JO 75% OFF
DOWN PARKAS
..... .!JI"
NOW$25
Nofte'H ......
M1tt .. ·a..lel'.
SWEATERS
Auyllc&Woala
.!I & 'tZ
Mow s12so
MS-. ...........
Mea'•·~· c .......
hly1111tNa4
PARKAS
•JI '14
NOW 1 10·'15 .....
Repeat of Last
Year's Selout . .
OltetMAL cosr.
DOWN VESTS
!H"
Now s12so
A.U.YBTI .....
at the .. CAIH CHICl.....,...lm ct4
BACKDOOR FACTORY
OUTLET STORE
NIAR M~IN & DYER RD.-SANTA. ANA
2710A S. Main St.
751-0776
s....,.,.,.
·i
I.
l
118 OAlL.V PILOT
G Aid
A number of businesses,
schools and othe r organizations
wlll be bringing the holiday s pirit
to patients nt Fairview State
Hospital in Costa Mesa v;a,
month. -
Among the special events or-
ganized for Fairvi e w a r e
Christmas programs by Wesley
Flannery of Midway City. Lin·
coin Middle School in Newport
Beach, Dis n ey l and , Miss
Shannes School of Ballet in Foun·
'lain Valley, Mater De1 High
School. Melodyland Christi;in
Center and St . Paul 's
Pr esbyt erian C hurc h 1n
Anaheim
frtday. 0.C.mw 11. 1en
I
OellY "9t IUH -
KA THY OTTO (LEFT), TAMMY MclNNES ACCEPT CARDS
Don Bull of foster Grandparents Presents Them.
Federal Bousiag Funds
• r
Col;tnty Spending Eyed
Orange C~unty gov· for public improv e -'200,000 (~r facllities in
ern m enl oft1cials and men ts. ntw tract5 to Jower borne
those of 14 of the county's -Capistrano JSeach, prices
s maller cities plan to
spend the bulk of $~
fnillion in federal hous-
ing funds next year to .
lower home costs or re·
h abl llt ate older
neighborhoods.
The new Housing and
Community De velop-
ment Act grant proposal,
presented to supervisors
this week shows that $2.3
million would be spent
for public works and site
improvements aimed at
lowering new home 'costs
o r improvin g older
areas.
ANOTHER $1.J
million would be spent in
housing rehabilitaten
loans and grants, while
$475,000 would be used
for buying property and
$515,500 for planning and
administration.
~ ~ t!VNTIHG TON llACH
HUNTJ NCTON BEACH
• TAXPAYERS ANO VOTERS!
A New City Charter b Being Coneidercd By The City
C.Ouncil and A PubUc Hearing Will De Hold Dec. 21 at
6:30 p.m. Your C.Ommcntt1 On the Charltir Proposal Are
Invited Dy ~laror Ron PaWn8011. The Charter Js An
Im portant Document C.Ontrolling Conduct of Your City
CO\crnment. Thit1 Is Your Opportunity To lk A Part of
Writing The Laws For Operation of City .Government
During the Next Decade. For Information Call 536·5501.
City Council Chambers
Dec. 2 1 al 6:30 p.m.
Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main Street
THESF. INCLUDE the First
Assembly of God in Hunlmgton
Beach. the Ba nk of America in
Long Beach, Schweitzer House of
Cypress College, Interact· of
Westminster High School, Delta
Theta Tau or Long Beach and the
Triple X Fraternity. Orange
County chapter.
Other party s ponsors are
Marywood School in Orange.
Latter Duy Saints of Newport
Reach. Fi rst Southern Baptist
Church of Tustin, the human
serv ices class of Cypress
College, Park view High School in
Huntington Reach a nd Hunt-
ington Beach lligh School.
Supervisors have
scheduled a public hear-
ing on the grant proposal
for Jan. 4 and are expect·
, ed to taxe final action
March 22.
CSLB Sets Program ex~!:~.~ .:;~~N~h~
PARTIES ARE a lso beirrg
given by the Garden Grove Com-
munity Church, Santa Claus and
Scout Leaders of Santa Ana, In·
ternational Foot Printers of
Orange, Boy Scout Troop 328 of
Norwalk, and UNICO or Garden
Grove.
Also s ponsoring parties are La
Habra High School. Anaheim
lligh School Kiwanelles, Idakas
Club of Pullerton Union Hi gh
School. the Laguna Moulton
Kiwanis. r.irl Scout Troop 254
from Newport Beach, Latter Day
Saints of Mission Viejo, Calvary
Chapel and Erhard Seminars
Trainini.t.
For Seniors GrOup
. CaJ Stale Long Beach, wall again offer its low cost education for
senior citizens during the spring semester.
The Senior Citizen Fee Waiver Program 1s available to anyone
over 60 years of age and reduces the semester student fee from SS&
to $3. A participant may take as many or as Cew courses as he or she
wishes.
ANYONE INTE R ESTED in r egistenng for the program should
contact Leonard Kreutner , director of admissions and records at
(213) 498-4141 antl ask for application for admittance to the un-
iversity.
Copies of the snring schedule of classes are available at the un-
iversity bookstore for 20 cents and they are also available by mail.
Simply write and send a check or money order for $1.50 to the Forty-
Niner Bookstore.
REGISTRATION for Senior Citizens is J an. 20 with classes
beginning on Jan. 23.
Additional information is available from the office of public af-
fairs, <213) 498-4156.
ATIORHEYATLAW
Church Silence
On Sex Advised
He Hits
'Running
To Doctor'
BANKRUPTCY $95
DIVORCE S95
Uncontested
'40.2507
ALBANY. N. Y. <AP> -One of the authors of
the highly controversial Roman Catholic study .
.. Hurwm ~alily: .New Directions in American
CatboJlc Tbo(t~ht.'' aayt a little silence on the sub-
ject m ight be more helpful than talk.
The Rev. Anthony Kosnick, professor of moral
theology at an Orchard Lake. Mich., seminary
added in an interview here: "Sometimes I think it
would be better if the church said nothing more
about sex for at least 10 years to let the whole issue
settle down.''
Sports Coverage 'Must'.
SEA'ITLE CAP> The
best medicine for a cold
is "the u se of a
heodlcerchiet," s ays a
Stanford University
physician who maintains
children are hauled to
doctors too frequently.
HAVING
HASSLE
wfthl ..... ..c•
CfahM7
T•lk free with
consumer affair•
licensed clalm• expert·
1714) 547-824 ..
<f IC 1917
Orange Coast include :
-Fountain Valley.
$140,000 for public im -
proveme n ts 1n La
Colonia Juarez.
-lrvjne, $150.000 for
amenities In new home
tracts to lower the cost to
buyers .
-Laguna Beach .
$100,000 for amenities in
new developmen ts to
lower home costs, $5,000
for housing relocations
a nd $1.500 to promote
. fair housing practices.
-San Ju an
Capistrano. $50.000 for
publi c improvem ents
and $25,000 for amenities
to reduce n ew home
costs.
~-Seal Beach, $120,000
NOW ·
PIANOS
for Sale
& Rent
UAll-Wllll
. WU· UWM ·MID IOIUI & CAIPllll
HllllOllD ORUll
AID PWIO CUTER
COIOIA DEL UR 2a.s41. C.O.t Hwy.
644-1931
OPENING TODAY
Ray Stuard invites you
to visit one of the most
exceptionally deslgnep stores for men
Featuring wor1d renowned labels
In Sportswear, Furnishings,
Clothing & Gifts.
STUARDS
@/~$olla
South Coast Plaza's New Men's Store
54(} 7162 Aaoss from I. Mognln.
SAN DIEGO CAP)-San Diego City College ad-
minis trators may continue to demand sports cov-erage by the student newspaper, the Fortnightly, a
federal judge has ruled.
U.S. District Judge Gordon Thompson Jr. de·
nled a motion for a preliminary injunction filed by
newspaper adviser Glen Roberts and Tony Stevens,
Fortnightly editor, who Hied suit over the matter
last mo.0th.
Dr. James F. Fries,
assistant professor of
medicine, says he thinks
t he re is entirely too
much "running to the
doctor" tor minor lj&li~~Fi::cci:~11a~~~i~t~~~f?~~~~~:-7~:~~~~~1,11-1i~~~-childhood problems. , ,_.LAM~)'#" ., -·~ .. -; ':' ':.J.':
IN FACT, HE says an ,.
average child probably -· ,.._ " ·
sees a doctor twice as ~~--• ~
The Issue, according to American Civil
lJberties Union attorney Robert Lynn, represent-
ing the newspaper, is whether students can be re-
quired to publish sports stories written to satisfy .
class requirements.
orten as is necessary. INCLUDES: ONLY I .
Two children suffering L:7,',:f~:=-• °''11 ,
identrcal, 11standard" H"t•rwtthThermcntot 0000 '17995 childhood scraped knees 'ed"1o1 & Flit K11 rHllJ c-,.l•t• ~---will find thal a scab Frpme&Heodboof'd CHllSTMAS
Deatla Noti~e•
forms and is gone in
about four days whether
they are taken to the doc·
tor or not, Fries said dur·
ing an interview here.
COOtt Oocember U, 1'17 Sur vlved by
CARMEN V. COOK, •u ldonl ol d•uqlllor Adll Morl>lllS of foont••n
,011nt•ln Valley, P•SUd aw•v V•llev, dM>Qllter Htlon McCrory ol
Coil• MHo, • '°" Jamu COO!< Of
Thousand O.IU. \On RoMrl Cool< ot
----------Torrance, brol.l'lef Wllllam Am-str-
HL Tlslll(H•OM
FVMHALHOMI
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646s2424
llUllOADWAY
MO•TU .. Y
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
SMITM TVn4lt.L LAMI
COSTA MISA CHANL
427 E. 17th St.
CQtta ~ • 646-<4888
Santa Ana Chapel
518 N. BtoedWty
Santa Ana• 547.,.131 -"8CI •ontas
twmt1• MOlt'NAIY
627 Main St.
Huntington Beach
63&-8539 ,_,ANK.Y
4=0IONIAL,_.IM. rf,
HOid
780f Bol11 "~· W"trnln•t" '" ··~25
PACllllC '1IW
..-.0114LPAll
Ce"'9terv Mort1.1ery
" Chapel 3500 P1curc Vi.W Ori~
Newport.
C.11tornl1
844·2700
of S.n OleQO Services wlll be S.lurd•v
December 11 M l PM at PilClltc View
M9fYlllrl•I P•rk Ch•P'!I Interment
Pecllk View Memorial Park Pacific
Vi.w Mort..-rv 01 rec tors.
ATLANTA CAP ) -Dr.
Spencer 8 . King Jr., 73,
retired chairman of the
bistory department at
Mercer University and
author of many articles
for literary, historical
and religious journals,
duedWedneeday.
PUBUC NOTICE
ON THE OTHEll
hand, he said, childhood
bellyaches and earaches
probably do not get. a
doctor's a\tentlon as fre-
quently as they should,
and sore throats may or
may not be in that group,
depending on the pre·
valE:nCe of r heumatic
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I
or.age (;oiJst
EDITION
• T .. ay's~l••lag
N.Y.8toeks
VOL 70, NO. 350, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1977 N TEN CENTS
Strangler l'ictJm's Screams Heard?
1
LOS ANGELES <AP) -
Nel1hbors say they heard blood·
eurdling screams r ing out in a
Hollywood a partment house
where the latest vi ctim of the
hillside Strangler apparently
was lured to her death.
ported hearing the screams at
about the time Tuesday night
tha't Kimberly Diane Martin, a
prostitute, arrived to meet a
man.
But no one reported the
screams at the time.
"It was a very frightening
scream ... It was.definitely the
worst scream I've ever heard,"
said one man.
"I didn't pay any attention
because it <the screaming) went
on out in the lobby," tbe man told ·
radio station KFWB on Thurs-
day.
.
Two other residents also re·
OMtr~SUfl ......
SETH MILLER, SCHOOLMATES MOURN MORRIS .
For Frfendty Cat, a Tree Grows In Costa Meta
Maseot Gone
Kith Mourn Morris the Cat
By JACKIE HYMAN
Oft• DMIJ PINC IUff
Students at Costa Mesa's Adams School conducted a
special memorial service today for their unoHicial mascot,
a catthey called "Morris." . His real name was "Porky" and he li ved across the
street from the school in Mesa Verde. He died earlier this
week when he suffered a heart attack while crossing the
street. He was 10 years old.
THE KIDS AT Adams called him "Morris" because
they thought he looked like the cal that appears in television
commercials for a cat food .
"Everybody was just heartbroken at Morris' death,"
said school secretary Mary Farrell. Al the ceremony this morning, students presented sym·
pathy cards they had made to Morris' owner, Mrs. Betty
Boyce.
"HE WAS HERE ALL the time," Mrs. Farrell said. "Jn
the nurses's omce, as soon as somebody was lying down
skk, he was r ight on top of them."
It might have been because Morris understood bow it
felt to be ill. Morris, Mrs. Farrell explained, had suf(ered
from heart trouble for some time. •'He was the friendliest cat you've ~ver seen,·· she said.
"The on)y place he wasn't welcome was in the school
kiLchen."
MORRIS' IMMORTALITY was assured in today's
ceremony. A weeping willow tree was planted in hls honor.
"We tried to get a pussy willow, but they don't sell them
this lime or year," Mrs. Farrell said.
~American Tankers •
: Collide Off Africa
· PORT ELIZABETH, South
Afrlca <AP> -Two American·
0wned alster supertankers were ~rnJng out or control in the In· 411.., Ocean off South Afr)ca this
artemoon after they collided in
mornlnl roe. A three-mile oil ~Uck threatened popular resort
,,.ac .... • Two aeamen were reported
•11sin1 lo th• ahark·infealed
:Waters and 12 others, ~mostly
:CblD"fJ• were rescued after lome leaped from the naming
•eeks and a heltcopter pilot
)llalbed tbroQCb 1moke and fire to Jiiek up aurvtvors. An American . .
engineer was among the sur·
vivors.
Port authoriUes said bunker
fuel oil spilled from the stricken
tankers but iL was beJJeved
millions of gallons of crude oil be-
ing carried ln the hold of one of
the vessels was still intact.
Marine biologists expressed
fears that the maritime accident
could prove to be lhe wont of
South African biltory. .
"A• far u pollution qf the
coHtline 11 concerned. the lftl·
pUcallon of the colllslon are
enormous '' aald A. E. Heydorn,
director Oi the Marine Blolo1ical
Retearcb lnat.itute ln Durban.
Hours art.er the collision, ~
knot wlnda fanned ta.. aamea Md
hampered ftnfltbt\nl tuaboatl from reacbln• the tJberlan· ~istered 1hlp1. Fin 1ntl·
JuUon patrol boitt raced to elHlle. . .
The fully=o•d l80,t54·lon VHOU •u<1 a.tween '73.5
mtllioa aad ... I lllloel ol
mfd• oll wbi1e th• -... a.on yenpet w11 report9~fty .
•
Ml11 Martin. who worked for a
prostitution service. wu sent to
the apartment after a man
telephoned \.be service, said his
wife was out of town and aaked
for a young, attractive model.
Miss Martin's car was found in
front or the apartment Wednes·
day morning. Her nude body was
found dumped on a ..-hillside 10
miles away.
Eleven girls and young women
have been found slain in similar
settings over nine weeks.
Police later determined the
telephone call was made from a
pay phone al a Hollywood library
and that the apartment where
Miss Martin was to meet hlm
was vacant. Its last tenant, also a
prostitute, was evicted 1 n
August, the apartment manager
said.
Lois Lee, a spokeswoman for
the California Association lor
Trolllps, an organliation formed
to help prostitutes. said the
prostitution service told her the
man "sounded !Ike .•. just an~
dlnary guy out !or a good Ume.''
Library employee$ described a
man who used the phone Tuesday
night for police, but Lt. Dan
Cooke said the description was
not belng released.
Howeve~, an attendant at a
parkJng lot across from the
library said police asked hlm lf be had seen a Umping man wllh a
mustache.
The 'library is next to a theater
that features live striptease acts
and lesa than a block from the l health food restaurant where.
another victim or the Hillside.
Strangler was last.seen alive.
Four ol the strangler's victima
were prostitutes, pollce sald.
Ralph Diedrich Indicted·
35 Overt Acts of Compiracy Alleged by Grand Jury
By GARY GJlANVILLE OI ... D4111J l'li.t 51•11
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was
.accused or two felony bribery of.
fenses and of enga_gjn& in, a con-
spiracy to commit brib~ry in an
Orange County Grand Jury in-
dictment handed down Thurs-
day.
Also named in the three-count
indictment as a co·defendant in
the conspiracy charge was
Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose,
a close Diedrich friend and the
Fullerton supervisor's 1972 cam·
paign finance manager.
Thirty·five overt acts cited in
the eight-page indictment allege
that Diedrich:
-In early 1973 received $25,000
from lawyer Michael Remington
Bovan Slay·
Suspect
Released
Roy Christopher Richard. one
of seven people jailed in the slay-
lng or Stephen John Bovan, was
released from Newport Beach cl·
ty jaU on bil own recognizance
Thursday night.
Police declined any comment
·of Ricbard'.s 10 p.m. releaa~. Deputy District Attorney Dave
Carter, who is prosecuting the
murder case, would commenton-
ly that the former president of the
Laguna Beach Har e Krishna
Temple wu released at the dis·
trict attorney's request.
Richard, 28, sought since No-
vember , surrendered to Newport
Beach police a week ago. He had
been held on $100,000 bail alter
plea1ing not guilty to murder con·
spiracy charges in Orange County
~uperlorCourt.
Meanwhile, Elsie Caban Kulik
was to go back to Superior Court
today to seek a reduction of the $1 \~illion bail that is holding her in
\he county jail.
Her husband, Canadian-born
Alexander Kulik, was told Thurs-
day that he will have to raise
$2.35 million if he expects lo re·
gain the freedom he lost Wednes·
day.
Kulik, 28, a sometime resident
of Newport Beach and his wife,
28, were jailed by officers who
found her hiding under a split
level condominium in La Costa, a
resort near Carlsbad in San
Diego County.
J udge Robert P. Kneeland set
the high bail on the Kuliks alter
being told that Kulik organized
the hiding of his wife who is one of seven codefend ants In a
graod jury indictment that cites
charges or murder and con-
spiracy.
(See BOVAN, Page AZ)
BWodTlwft
'lJm:arted
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
-Two employees of the
Red cross have beev charged with stealin g
about 150 gallons of blood
pla1ma from the aeency'
blood program h ead·
quarters here, pollce said.
The stolen plasma al·
legedly wa sold to a local
offlce of Interstate Blood
Bank Inc. for $14,000 over a
four-month pniod be&ln· n.tq la July.
David Butcher, Red
Cro11 public relations
director. 11tcl Thursday
moet ol tM stolen blood
plum• was unttt for
humaa _... and •liould
bne been uted only in
laborat.ciry work. He 11.ld ..a. f/l Jt hlld been re--
~ericl.
after Remington had been paid
$74,48:5 by a de\\elopment firm
then having a major land use is-
sue berore the county Board oC
Supervisors. ..,
-A month earlier repaid a
$30,000 personal loan owed food
company executive William
Moore with a Remington check
made payable to Moore.
-Accepted ln late 1974 about
$20,000 in "legal tender" from
Remington alter Remington was
given two $10,000 checks bv Rose.
-Asked Robert H. Grant Com·
pany offic ials ln 1974 for $80,000
and, when refused, urged the of·
ficials to use their influence to
help him obtain an $80,000 loan al
a Garden Grove bank.
-Aller faWng to repay the loan
as ,agreed, told the Grant of-
ficials he would make payment
when they ''paid ~ ~a... LeRoy Rose paid him . ....--·-
The uvert acts alleged ln the in·
dictment go on to say that the
Grant Co. through its subsidiary,
Anaheim Hills, Inc., made ta.
l>ay m en ts to Rose totaling
$138.301.
However, only the $20,000 Rose
gave Remington was allegedly
traced directly Into Diedrich's
hands even though au ·12 pay-
ments to Rose are listed in the
overt acts. .
An indictment is a formal charge made aaainstaperson by
a Grand Jury. Overt acts cited in
Engineering School
UCl's Mulligan
Te&· Resignation
The dean of UC Irvine's
engineering school, Dr. J ames
·Mulllgan, 57, announced his res-
ignation today effective Dee. 31.
Mulligan said he "aa resigning
"Cor the good or the school or
engineering." He would not
elaborate and referred to a state-
ment expected Monday from UCI
Chancellor Danie! Aldrich.
Mulligan has been dean of the
engineering school since Jaly,
1974. Prior to serving as dean, he
was secretary and executive of·
fle er of the National Academy of
Engineering in Washington.
D.C., from 1968tol974.
He presenUy serves as part.
time secretary of that organiza·
lion.
Mulligan opposed last year's
proposed merger of the school of
engineering and the school of
phys\cal sciences.
University officials eventually
decided against the merger.
QUITS UC IRVtNE POST
Englneerlng Deen Mullfgen
Funeral Rites Set6'
For Walter M-ellott
Funeral services will be be.Id
Monday for Walier B. Mellott, a
·well·known Orange Coast civic
leader and owner of South Coast
Construction Company.
Mr. Mellott died Wednesday
after collapsing in his office ln
Costa Mesa. He was 64 . Services will begin at 11 a.m.
at Alhiser-WUson Mortuary in
&scondido. Mr. Mellott. who
lived m0$t of his tile iJ) Costa
Mesa, had moved seven years
ago to San Luis Rey Downs 1n
San Diego County.
He was a director or t4e Balboa
Bay Club. a past director of the
Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce. a member of th
board of the former U.S. Na·
Uonal Bank of San Dle•<>• past president o( the Orange County
Coast Association and past presi·
dent or the state BuHden Ex·
chanee. Mt. Mellott was once cba1nnan ot the National Federation of Jn·
dependent Buslaeu, P.t•ld-1 of
the Oranee County BWfden Ex·
change, a member ot the ad·
vtaory committee ot the Oraqe
Empire Boy Scouti ol America,
and state 11Danc:e chairman for
the Nlx.op-Lodae campal1n for
president.
He Incorporated the Sooth
Coast Coas~Uon eosn..-1\Y ln 1945. .. sur.twn lnelude bla wile,
AUffG ScDaUtn sa.-en. two-tlme • ..._. of the Powder Puff
Derb1; d....,.. Dlua 8ra&11
ot LOI Aaceles and Deborah Due·
1an of Irvine, and a sls\er, Alice
Cartwrigbt.ofColta Mesa.
CounCil ·to Meet
Ne•P91't Beach cJty coun·
ellmtn bave tche41ded a bull·
"'" meeting Monday to 8:,Vold meetln1 over the Cbriltmu boll·
day. The seaton wflJ be held at
rt:io p.m. at clty ball. There will
be DO ~at.u.11-lloD.
the indictment are u sed to
demonstrate the basis for the
charges. Nelther the indictment
nnt iha~';,.q~rt 4cts en4tm:l'n c!ti:'..w. •
Already under indictment for
allegedly violating state political
campalgn regulations, 't>iedri~
responded to Thursday's indic~
ment with a terse three para•
graph statement.
"This charge is simply the next
shot fired in the ongoing war by
the District Attorney's Office.
This is another collection or rub-
bish that he Ctbc district a~
torney > hopes to use to get me out
of his way," Diedrich said 1n hi.I
written statement. .
<See DIEDRICH, Page A.%)
OC Rapist
Held/or
Kitbtapping
•
Aa Orange resident, freed.
fl'Om Jail pending sentencing for
a recent rape conviction, was ar·
r-.ted Thutaday afternoon by
}If ewport BMch police who allege
be ~· loca! ._y_isitor in wht 1fM bsuc-
ce• I tJtPt d.eliap~ Cbria Raqtion Declter, 23, was
tn custody lnNewl>ort Beach City
Jail today on susplclon of kidnap·
ping a 51-year ·old Pasadena
woman, H1s bail ls $25,000.
POiice all~e Decker cornered
the woman early Thursday
morning as she was on her wa,y to
a boat where she was staying on
the Lldo Peninsula. Sgt. Michael Blitch alleged
that Decker forced the woman in·
to hls car and drove her to the
Tustin area.
Blitch said lhe woman talked
Declcer out of maJdng any sexual
advances and be finally let ber
out of bls car on Chapman
A venue in Orange.
PolicQ arrested Decker after
tracing him through a license
plate number supplied by the
woman. According to Orange County
Superior Court records, Decker
was convicted Oct. 10 on a v arie-
ty of rape, sex perversion and as-
aault charges stemming from an
Incident. on April 20 in Garden
Grove.
The day of the Garden Grove
attack for whlcb Decker was con-
victed, be bad been acquitted Oil
another rape charge, stemmlnc
from an alleged sexual assault
that occurred in Dana Point on
Christmas Eve.· 1976, court
records show.
Coast
Weather
Variable clouds bece>m·
ing cloudy with 30 pereeut
chance of rain Saturday.
Cooler Saturday. Lows
tonight 50 to ·SS. Highs
Saturday low eos. .
INSIDE TOD" Y
CWlVPllOT H
, .... _ .. .I
DIEDRICH ••
lla&e, ._ u a NM~an· alal cc-n .... !.cP.Pr tfU d.t
oa bribery chara• ln uns but ac·
qukted la 11'11. responded to the
tndlctmsU. by ralantna rrom ut&...
firm ho founded lo 1960, Le~
Ro&e andAuociata.
Rose u1d his re&J1n•Uoo was
Hdue to advene publicity retard·
ing put and recent lnvestJia· tions." 'cw hla part. Dia\rict Attorney
Cedl lnella 9'mPlY chatted for a
few minute. wit& newsmen about ot~er topics as Dledrlch and
Rose were called to appear in
court.
IL was Diedrich who appeared
in Judge Robect RJckles' courtroom flnL
Without an attorney at ht. side.
Diedrich was told to reappear tn
court Dec. :n. directed to book
himself into Oranie County J ail
and released on bla own re-
cognizance.
•• I
4 · Countians
Four people were killed ln traf.
fie accident3 Thursday nieht as
the countywlde pre·Christmas
tramc death toll climbed to
se~en in the past 24 hours. Orange County coroner's d~p
uties rePQrted tod~x, ...
A 16.year·old Santa Ana
teenafer and a 41 -year ·old
Garden Grove truck driver were
killed ln an 11:37 p.m. colUJion
that ended a 100-mile·an·hour
police chase in Garden Grove
and Santa Ana. police said.
Police said the cha o betan in
Carden Grove where an oUker beeameswsplclous of the driver's
err,A1Uc actions. The car was
traveling about 100 miles an hour
when it sped throu~h a red lil~ht
on Newhope In Sunta Ana, stnk-
ing the Vun Woy van, police as-
serted.
The overnight trarrtc death toll
also claimed the Jives or two
pedestrians in separate acci·
dents, investigators .said.
Thirty minutes later Rose
walked into tbe same courtroom
with lawyer Sylvan Aronson.
Rose's arraignment was put off
.to Jan. 6, he was given until Dec.
.,...., ........... _,...,~
TWO DIE IN HEAD-ON CRASH ON VICTORIA STREET BRIDGE
The driver of that speeding
car, a 17·year-old from Santa
Ana, was charged wlth felony
drunken driving and released lo
bis parents, oCllcers said.
Newport Planners
Back S&L Project
20 to book himself into Jail and he
also was released on his own re·
cognizance. ·
In the forefront of the bribery
indictment ia the s ucceutul ef-
fort by Anaheim Hills. Inc., to ob·
lain in 1973-74 county approval
for the withdrawal of 2,200 acres
from agricultural preserve
agreements.
Diedrich was the leader in a 3
to 2 Board o! Supervisors de-
cision In Match, 1974, that re·
leased t¥ len4 CroJU lb~ p~ and opened it to development. -• · · ·
In the background to that move
was the company's hiring of
Remington as their legal counsel
and Rose as a consultant on grad-
ing problems.
The indictment alleges that
Remington was hired at
Diedrich's s uggestion but makes
·-no mention of whatever role Rose
was assigned to earn the $138,301
he received from the company.
Key figure in the four.month
investigation leading lo the in·
dictment was Re m ington, a
Diedrich business and ·legal as·
SO<'iate for 10 years.
Remington was named in the
July 1 political conspiracy indict·
ment a long with Diedrich,
Supervisor Philip Anthony.
Anahei m City Coun cilman
William Kott and would·be
political financier Gene Conrad.
ll was in early November that
Remington pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor charge related to
the alleged conspiracy and was
then granted jmmunity rrom
prosecution when testifying
before the Grand Jury about his
• knowledge of the Anaheim Hills
affair.
· Also shown by court r ecords to
have been granted Immunity
were R obert H. Grant and
Richard'()wen, then Grant Com-
pany corporate qfficers.
Shown in the lisUng or overt
acts as the officials who issued
the Anaheim Hiils. Inc., cheeks
to Rose were Erik Berg and Jack
Sickler, a long·Ume Diedrich friend.
The bribery indictment came
as no s urprise lo Diedrich.
He predicted his own Indict·
!llent last week when grand jury
investigators armed with a
.search warrant seized business
records kept in a small Buena
Park warehouse.
True to the image he has pro-
jected since becoming a county
supervisor in January or 1973,
Diedrich vowed late Thursday to ·'continue waging th11 all-out war
1 have on my hands ...
He said he will not be able to
"intelligently discuss" the latest
charges lodged against him untJl
be reads transcripts of the
testimony leading to the Indict·
rnent.
"Right now, I don't know who
is accus ing me or w hat
specifically I a m accused of do·
ing or who the players are,•• the
53·year·old county s upervisor said.
Navy OKs Project
WASfllNGTON (AP) -The
Navy recommended Thursday
that a scaled-down lest version or
Project Seafarer be constructed
in Upper 1!1ichigan.
DAILY PILOT
·-...... ......__~
Vlce~~=--....r
~.::""
~~
--:::.~ ....... -....... ..._
..
Body of One of Thursday Night CrHh Victim• Uea Covered •t Right
The dead are Michael Anthony
Albright. 5409 W. Crystal Lane, .2 Killed, 1 Injured
In 3-car Collision
Two people were killed and a
third Injured Thursday in a
three·car collision on the Vic·
tori a Street bridge over the Santa
Ana River, which divides Costa
Mesa from Huntington Beach.
Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as Timothy Lee
McKeon, 25, or 33802 Malaga
Drive, Dana Point, and Carol
Lovette Stradley, 42, of 1015
American Place, Costa Mesa.
Both were in a small foreign
car driven by McKeon that police
sa id coffiaed· liead··on ai
about 9:50 p.m. with a vehlcle
driven by Janet Ann Munson, 21,
162 Tulip Lane. Costa Mesa. She
was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for cuts on
her right hand, arm and knee,
and sent home.
A third car, driven by Irene
Garcia Dolan, 26, of 711 Pacific
Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach, s kidded into the McKeon
car after the accident. Its driver
was not reported injured.
Police said that, according to
witnesses, McKeon apparently
became distracted while wiping
the inside of his windshield with a
No Evidence
O/Cotutal,
Plane· Crash
A National Transportation
Safety Board investigator said
today there is no new informa·
lion on a small plane that
crashed oCC Newport Beach·
Wednesday and there will pro·
bably be none unless some debris
washes ashore.
A relative identified the pilot of
the plane as one of its two
owners. Sanford 0 . Vance, 42, of
24501 Vanessa Drive, Mission
Viejo. With him reportedly was
his son Dan, 19, a freshman at
Saddleback College. The elder
Vance was identified as a pilot
for United Airlines.
However, Miss Wally Funk ot
the safety board said omclals
can not conftrm the deaths.
"We have some missing people
reported but we can't prove it
legally,•• she said.
Witnesses said they saw the
Cessna 150 spiral into the water
two miles off Scotchman's Cove
south of Corona d el Mar just before noon Wednesday.
Some papers were ·later re·
covered containing the name of
the owners and the aircraft's
identification. It was co-owned
by Vance and his neighbor, Al
Andrew. .
Miss Funk said that since the
plane went down in 280 feet of
water and divers ln the area can
only safely descend to 140 feet, no
dive is planned. She said special
equipment for a dive wdWd cost
an estimated $15,000. ••unw we get something that
washes up on the beach, there's
nothing that I can do," Miss
Funk said.
rug whUe heading toward Hunt·
ington Beach on the bridge. Wit-
nesses said his car strayed over
lhe double yellow lines in the
center and collided with the
Costa Mesa-bound Munson car,
spinning it around.
Costa Mesa police are in·
vestigating the tragedy.
Pasadenan
Held in NB
~tabbing
Newport Beach police said to-
day they are continuing their in·
vesligaHon of the stabbing of a
local man.
Already in custody in the case
is Robert John Landgraf, 29, of
Pasadena. He was held today on
suspicion of assault with a deadly
weapon.
Detective Ken Smith said he
believes Landgraf was one of
four people staying al the West
Newport motel where the stab·
bing occurred Tuesday night.
Another motel guest, Kurt
Eckholdt. 35, told police the
group was being noisy in the
hallway and, when be went out or
his room to quiet them, he was
stabbed.
Smith said Bckholdt is in good cond1t1on at Hoag Memorial
Hospital afler undergoing sur·
gery.
Smith said he is continuing his
investigation in a n effort to
locate the other members or the
group. He said he located Land-
graf Crom the name and address
on the motel registry.
8 Nazis Arrested
CHICAGO CAP) -Eight Nazis
were arrested after a street fight
with r eported members or the
Jewish Defense League. The
brown·sblrted Nazi .. storm
troopers" wearing swastikas and
helmets began to picket a dinner
sponsored by a Jewish group
when they were approached by a
group of men and the fight broke
out.
<BURCH FIGH'IS
WOMAN PRIEST
PORTLAND, Maine CAP)
The Episcopal fl ag at St. Paul's
Church flew upside-down and ·at
hatr.staff today to protest the or.
dination of Maine's flrst woman
pndt.
The nag was at half.staff '"to
mourn lbe spiritual rifor mortis
that Is tn the Eplacopa Church."
said Father Harold A.
McElwaln, rector of the church.
Mrs. Elh:abeth Ann Habecker,
now a deacon, was scheduled to
be ordained tonight.
Name Says
'Penonkind' Takes a Step
BABYWN, N.Y. <AP> -It's official. The former
Ellen Cooperman is now Ellen Cooperperson. By virtue of a decision rendered this week. Ms.
Coopcrperson 's name is legal. She bas used that name
unofficially three years and has been listed in the
telephone book as "E. Cooperperson.'' ·
A member of the National Organization for
Women, Ms. Cooperperson has been active in
feminist causes since 1971. And that, she says, ts why
she added three letters -one syUabla -to her name.
"I dJd it simply because I wanted to show my
strong feellrlgs about the sexist nature of our
language;" said Ms. Cooperperson 31.
Tbouah it all, she says, her Crienda and t amlly were iupportive. FcminJst groups paid much of the
legal COILS, and some other costs were handled by
v.olunteer wort. She aays it cost her bet.ween '300 and MQOfA~ebername. .
•
p,.._ Pllfl*! AJ
BOVAN •••
Mrs.' Kulik pleaded innocent to those charges Thursday. She was
ordered lo face trial Jan. 23, the
s ame date set for her six
codefendants.
J udge Kneeland computed the
$2.35 million figure for Kulik
after being told Kulik faced trial
on charges or possession of 1.1
pounds of nearly pure heroin
filed in Orange County, was al·
legedly in possession of another
1.5 pounds of almost pure heroin
at La Costa and also allegedly
was involved in the killing last
Oct 22 oC Bovan, a Fountain
Valle~ resident.
Seven or the eight people in·
dieted for their alleged roles in
that kiJling have now been ar·
rested.
A search is still under way for
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski, 28.
Scheduled to appear with the
Kuliks today were codefendants
Richard, 28, and Jerry Peter
Fiori. 41. of Huntinetnn Beach. Fiori is identified by the
prosecution as the man who
pumped nine bullets into Bovan In
a confrontation last Oct. 22 out·
side a Newport Beach restaurant.
J[ior i is held with bail denied.
His fawyer was expected to ask
Judge Kneeland today to set ball.
Police claim that Fiori and two
other Huntington Beach men,
Anthony "Little Tonyv Marone
Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven
Resco. 28, were hired to kidnap
and kill Bovan in ~venge for an
earlier kidnapping of Kulik.
Med Salesmen
Aid Surgeons
NEW YORK CAP> -The prei..
dent of a large surgical supply
firms s ays hjs eight salesmen in
New York state reported they
participated to some extent in
more than 000 oper ations the past five years.
Leon Hirsch, president or the
U.S. Surgical Corp. of Stamrord •
Conn., said his salesmen report-
ed in an anonymous question-
naire that they "scrubbed in" on
more than 3,000 Ol)eratlons,
meaning they were allowed in
the sterHe area around the
operating table.
Hirsch testified Thursday at a
bearipg held in Manhattan by the
state assembly's Medical Prac-
tice Task Force. He defended lbe
presence of his salesmen, saying
surgeons using new equipment
for the first time often need the
advice of Hlesmen during an
· Santa Ana, a passenger in the
pursued car. and Osborn C. Van
Wey, 13800 Cypress St., Garden
Grove, driver of the other vehl-
cle, police said.
Van Wey's son, John 19, suf·
(ered serious injuries in the
crailh, police reported. A second
teenager in the car being chased,.
ErJc Fassbinder, 17, of 5422 W.
Lehnhardt Ave., Santa Ana, also
was hospitalized with injuries,
officers said.
~e~•port Beach planning com-m 1ss1oners approved p la ns
Thursday for a two-story Laguna
Federal Savings and Loan build-
ing on property adjacent to the
Fun Zone on the 8alb9a Peninsula.
The building ls planned for a
vacant lot at East Balboa
Boulevard and Palm Street and
would not require removal or any
Fun Zone attractions, said
Richard Hogan, the city's ditec·
tor ot community development.
,-------------------------------------------~.\ SnowyTragedy,
Wife's Ordeal of Death Told
Editor'• Note: A Sunday dri~ enMd in fraged11 for Norman 0.
John.son, 61. Hil tDi/e, Gwen, a1ao 61 , c1Jed of •zpcnur• in dfq> moio ofter
the couple'• car broke down in o remote oreo. He-re i.t Johnson'• O«OUnt
of what happmed, oa told to Dese-ret N.,,,_, reporltt U<J Perrv .
PROVO, Utilh CAP) -The hardest decision I have made in my
life was wllelher to lie down and die with Gwen or get up and try
to save myself. •
We had been married 35 years, and I dJdn't want to leave her.
But I had to leave her if I was going to get help.
WE HAD COME DOWN FROM Salt Lake Sunday to visit some
friends and then decided to lake a little ride up the canyon. It wu
a nice day, and the road wasn't that bad. But I turned to the right
instead of the left. T hen I hit a rock in the center of the road, and it
knocked a hole in the oil pan.
I spent two hours tryj,ng lo jack the ..car up and get it off the
rock, but I couldn't move it. It was then we decided to tq to
walk out. We should have gone back the way we came. but l "
thought it would be Caster to J.ry to walk over to.Springville.
We walked four or five miles. When it started to get dark, we
got under a big pine tree, and I tried to cover her up with pine
boughs. I tried to keep sta nding up to keep warm and then I would
lie down to try to keep her warm. Then the wind started to howl. It
seemed like it snowed all night.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE TO hobble about 100 yards la the
deep snow in the morning. I tried for three hours to help her furl.her.
But I -wasn't much help because I have arthritis. We talked
together of per5onal things. Then she began acting strange. She
was in a coma.
How could I leave her? Yet I thought I should get help. J prayed
to the Lord. and I felt the Lord dldn 't want me to die there.
I hobbled along through the deep snow all t.tie rest or the day. I
had seen a cabin on the way up, and I thought, if I could jU$l make
it down lo the cabin. It was just getting dark Monday night when I
saw the cabin. But then I fell oft the bridge and inw a five·fool·
deep creek bed. It seemed like hours before I could crawl up the
bank.
I HAD NO HEAT IN THE cabin -no food and just the snow for
water. I moved my legs throughout the night to keep the circula·
lion going. At daylight, I started ool again. l was wet almost lo
my shoulders from falling down in the deep snow.
I kept on praying that the Lord would help me just to keep on
going. I actually fell if I could just keep going I would find
someone to help me. I keptfallingdown, and the s un was warm now
on my face. I just wanted to lie there, but I knew 1 had to keep going.
My next big obstacle was to get across the cattle guard.! cou;.!
only m ove my feet about four inches at a lime. J prayed someone
would !ind me.
WITIDN AN HOUR, THREE boys came up the road in a pickup
truck. They wanted to know what I was doing there. They could
not believe It when I told them my wife was dead up on the road.
They said the best thing to do was to go down to the service sta·
tion in Sp.anisb Fork Canyon and call the sheriff.
I'
1•
l
I
r .
I
l.
[I
I
J
I
operation. ~--------~------------~------------------------------------------------~~
It's What's Out Back ·That Counts
UC. NO. 2l0422
r---
Our store is like an iceberg! No-we're not chilly
to deaf with-it's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting u s for the first trme are
fla5t:>ergasted when the spacious interior unfolds
before them. The huge showroom Has thousands of
samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection they have seen.)
Our warehouse contains an inventory of Infinite
vaclety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50
Remnant room .
Add offices. a spacious drapery room. plenty of
parking. pleasant people. and you'll have the "Big
Picture .. of our successful operation!
DEN'S
:insiaJlai:ian:·custom draperies -·'.lt."1-~N.l'tl)' linolun • v400d floor .
COSTA ME~ CALIF. 9l627 • •
..
•
I Saddlebaek Allt•rnooa
" N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 350, .c SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORAC.,GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRfOAY, D ECEMBER 16, 1977
Strangler l'ietim's Sereams ·neard?
LO$ ANGELES CAP) -
Nel1hbon say they heard blood·
curd ling screams ring out in a
Hollywood apartment house
where .the latest victim or the
Hillside Stran&lcr apparently
wes lured to her death.
"It was a very frightening
scream ... It was definitely the
worst scream I've ever heard,"
said one man.
Two other residents also re·
ported hearing the screams at
about the time Tuesday night
that Kimberly Diane Martin, a
prostitute, arrived to meet a
man.
But no one reported the
screams at the Lime.
"I didn 'l pay any attention
because it (the screaming) went
on out in lhe lobby," the man told
radio station KFWB on Thurs-
day.
o.itr "*'Staff,.....
SADDLEBACK SCHOOL VAN CRASHED THROUGH FENCE
No Serious I njurlea In El Toro Accident
l·SVUSD SchOol .Van
.Jwnps Toro Curb
. A Saddleback Valley Unified
School District van jumped a
cµrb, cruhed through the back
yard fence of an El Toro home
and overturned Thur sday but
Qeither the one chlld on board nor
tlle driver was seriously injured.
.Betty Manwill, the district's
transportation supervisor, said
the van was on Respit Road ap·
e roaching the intersection or
Osprey Street when the boy
dropped his metal lunch box on
the fldororthe bm.
She said the noise so startled
the driver, Lucy Gunetta, that
she either looked up In the mirror
9{ back al the child. When she did
this, the vari jumped tbe curb and
bit the wooden fence and brick
41 Seek Cop Job
. ·Los ANGELES (AP) -F'orty-
otae law enforcement officials
bave applied for the job of Los
ADgeles police chier, including 18
f..Om outside the torce. Their
names were not disclosed.
'
post in the backyard of Bailey
Shakes'homeat23146Vista Way.
The driver, who has worked for
the district Since 1973, was treat-
ed for slight injuries. and re-
leased from Saddlebaek Com-
munity Hospital.
The boy, Scott Chupp, 11, of
24432 Osprey Street, was not in-
jured. "l was in the back," he
said alter thee-accident. "My seat
belt was on and it was tight."
He was the last student on the
van which was carrying students
Crom the district's special educa-
tion classes.
Mrs. Manwill estimated
damages to t!e bus at $1,500. She
said the district began repairing
damage done to the Shakes'
home this morning. There were
no estimates on this damage.
This was the first accident in·
volving any of the district's
school buses this year:"The dis·
trict's last accident was last year
when an automobile broadsided
a bus. 'There were no injuries
from that accident either.
"We've been very, very
lucky," Mrs. MBJ.lwill said.
Miss Mart.in, who worked for a
prostitution service, was sent to
the apartment after a man
telephoned the servl.;(.' said his
wife was out of town and asked
for a young, attractive model.
Miss Martin's car was found in
froDt or the apartment Wednes-
day morning. Her nude body was
found dumped on a btllside 10
miles away.
Eleven girls and young women
have been found slain ln 1lmllar a et tings over nine weeks. ·
Police later determined the
telephone call was madeJrom a
pay phone at a HollywOod Ubrary
and that the apartment where
Miss Martin was to meet him
was vacant Ill last tenant, alao a
prostitute, was evicted ln
August, the apartment manqer
said.
Lois Lee, a spokeswoman ror
the California Association for
'Trolllps, an organization t9rmed
tQ help prostitutes, said the.
prostltuUGR service told her the
man "sounded like ... just an or·
dlnary guy out for a good time.'·
Library employees described a
man who used the phone Tuesday
nl1ht for police, but Lt. Dan
Cooke said the description was
not being released.
Ho~evC!°• an attendant at a
parking lot across from the
library said police asked him if
he had seen a limping man with a
mustache.
The library is next to a theater
that features live striptease acts
and less than a block from the
health food restaurant where.
another victim of the Hillside.
Strangler was last seen alive.
Four or the strangler's victims
were prostitutes, police said.
Ralph Diedrich Indicted
35 Overt Act,s of Comlpiracy Alleged by · Grand Jury
By GARV GRANVILLE
Ot ... D.ttr rli.t Sl.tt
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was
accused of two felony bribery of-
fenses and or engaging in a con-
spiracy to commit bribery in an
Orange County G,,._d Jury in-
dictment handed down Thurs-
day.
Also named in the three-count
indictment as a co-defendant in
the cons piracy charge was
Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose,
a close Diedrich friend and the
Fullerton supervisor's 1972 cam·
paign finance manager.
Thirty-five overt acts cited in
the eight-page indictment allege
that Diedrich:
-In early 1973 received $25,000
from lawyer Michael Remington
Bovan Slay
Suspect
Released
Roy Christopher Richard, one 1
of s-even people jailed in the alay-
ing of Stephen John Bovan, was
released from Newport Beach ci·
ty jail on 'his own recognizance
Thursday night.
Police declined any comment
·or Richard's 10 p.m. release.
Deputy District Attorney Dave
Carter, who is proeect&Ung the
murde~ase, would comment on:
ly that the former president or the
Laguna Beach Hare Krishna
Temple ., released at the dis·
trict attorfty's request.
Richard, 28, sought since No-
vem ber, surrendered to Newport
Beach police a week ago. He had
been held on $100,000 bail after
plea".ling not guilty to murder con·
spiracy charges ln Orange County
Superior Court.
Meanwhile, Elsie Caban Kullk
was lo go back to Superior Court
today to seek a reduction of the $1
million bail that Is holding her in
the county jail.
' Her husband, Canadian-born
Alexandel"Kullk, was told Thurs-.
day tftat h~ will have to raise
$2.35 mllliortll he expecll to re-
gain the freedom he lost W ednes·
day.
Kulik, 28, a sometime resident
or Newport Beach and his wife,
28, were jailed by officers who
found her hiding under a split
level condominium in La Costa, a
resort near Carlsbad in San
Diego County.
Judge Robert P. Kneeland set
the high ball on the Kullks after
being told that Kulik organized
the hiding or his wile who Is one
or seven codefendants in a
grand jury indictment that cites
charges of murder and con-
spiracy.
(See BOVAN, Page A2)
after Remington had been paid
$74,485 by a development firm
then having a major land use is-
sue before the county Board of
Supervisors.
-A month earlier repaid a
$30,000 personal loan owed food
company executive William
Moore with a Remington check
made payable to Moore.
-Accepted In late 1974 about
$20,000 in "legal tender" from
Remington after Remington was
given two $10,000 checks by Rose.
-Asked Robert H. Grant Com-
pany officials in 1974 for $80,000
and, when refused, urged the of-
ficials to use their influence to
help him obtain an $80,000 loan at
a Garden Grove bank.
-Arter falllng to repay the loan
as agreed, told U!e Grant of-
ficials he would make payment
when they "paid Rose and when
LeRoy Rose paid him."
The overt acts alleged in the in·
dictment go on to say that the
Grant Co. through Its subsidiary,
Anaheim Hllls, Inc., made 12
payments to Rose totaling
$138,301.
However, only the $20,000 Rose
gave Remington was allegedly
traced directly into Diedrlch's
hands even though all 12 pay.
ments to Rose are listed ln the
overt acts.
An indiclml!nt is a formal charge made against a person by
a Grand Jury. Overt acts cited in
the indictment are used to
demonstrate the basis for the
charges. Neither the indictment
nor the alleged overt acts
establish guilt or innocence.
Already under indictment for
allegedly violating state political
campaign regulations, Dledrlcll
responded to Thursday's indict-
ment with a terse tbtee para-
graph statement.
"This charge is simply the next
shot fired in the ongoing war by
the District Attorney's Office.
This is another collection of rub·
blsh that he (the district at·
torney) hopes to use to get me out
or his way," Diedrich said in his
written statement.
. (See DIEDRICH, P age AZ>
, . i oaay rll9t IUH .......
ROOF PANELS FOR SOLAR HEATING OBJECTS OF CONTROVERSY IN MISSION VIEJO
Famlty Fighting Legal Battle•to Retain HHtlng Syatem Which COat ThouH nda
Energy or -Estheti~s?
Homeowners Fight to Keep Solar System
By WILUAM RODGE
Of .. Deity ~-SUff
President Carter isn't the only
one having trouble with his
eoer~y program.
Sam and palricia D•Angelo
thought they had a
beautiful achievement. a solar
pool heaUng system they spent
thousands to install.
' cosmetically acceptable and lo
increase the value of both my
property and my neighbors·."
The D'Angelos also added
more solar panels than
necessary on their home's roof.
"We overcompensated ror the
north facing roof and put extra
panels on there for uniformity,"
be explained.
But t he conflict between
energy-saving solar power and
comm unity esthetlcs continues.
panels on D'Angelo's root were
unsighUy.
And the homeowners appeared
likely to file a lawsuit to seek re-
moval of the solar panels. ''The
board bas determined in its own
mind that the basis ror the pe.nd-
ing lawsuit ts solid," Association
President Lindon Stewart told
the gathering.
. Coast
Weathe r
Variable clouds becom-
ing cloudy with 80 percent
chance of rain Saturday.
Cooler Saturday. Lows
tonight 50 to ss. Highs
American Tankers
Collide Off Africa
But their homeowners associa-
tion didn't see solar roof panels
in t he same light. T he heat
gathering devices oUendecl the
assoeiaUon sense of. estheUcs.
The D •Angelos were ordered to
.,removethesyatem.
The D'An1elos wer~ told Nov.
10 to remove the solar system or
face a lawsuit demand.log ill re·
moval.
"We were given 30 days to re·
move the panels or be taken to
court," D'Anaelo said. "We hired an attorney and be1an wrlUna to
public offlelala becauae we
believe pubUc policy la that aolar
power ii good."
At a homeowners association
meeting Thursday, several resl·
dent. complained that the solar
The board adjourned to a
c l osed session to consider
whether to sue immediately or to
poll individual homeowners lo
test support for such a lawsuit.
(See SOLAR. P age A2>
Name Say~ It
.• Saturday low eos.
'i 1N81DE TODA 'Y . The homeowner nap be1an . when the D'Anteloa received
permlulon to make an add!Uoa
to the1r lbdrid J'cn home. Tbey
planned to lhtesrate plumblnc
for tbe aolll' beating IJltem into
the addition by hidinl the pipes
ln the walll. ••weCCIDCMled .ii Uael'ecrulred
pltambtnC wbldl ii nermally on
the n terlol' of t be bocaae, ''
D An .. loexplalned. "I'm llOt to-ln* to do tldnp to m1 bouM Uiat
would deenaH lt ln value.
"We· dl~ ... eed that tolar pwll for tllll Pl'OPllV were UD·
acceptable lot •tbetlc nNCllW, "· D•An.~NMI. .. , tblDt I've .... fV9rytNllC polllble to mab at
'Penonkind' Takes a Step
BABYLON, N.Y. <AP> -It's official. The former
Ellen Cooperman is now Ellen Cooperperson.
By virtue ot a decision rendered this week, Ms.
Coope~~f s name i$ legal. She has used that name
unof fic1ally three years and has been listed in the t~ephone book as "E. Cooperperson. •• . A member of the National· Organization for
Women, Ms. Cooperperson has been actlve in
f eminfst causes since 1971. And that, she says, is why she added three lett~ -one syllable -to her name. .. I did lt simply because l wanted to show my strong teellnes at>out the sexist nature of our
Janauage," said Ms. Cooperperaon. 31.
TMuih Jt all, she says, her friends and f amlly
were sapjort{ve. ~emlhlst groups pald much ol the
legal COits, and some other costs were handled by
volunteer work. She says it cost her betM>een $300 and
'400 t.o change her name.
• -
I DAH.V,._OT
·'~• ... DIEDRICH ••
. R~e. "ho, as a Fullerton ptan·
rune c:ocnm.la1oott waa mdicted
oo bribtty t'bar ln 1'75 but ac:·
quitted in 1976,.A'ellponded to the
md1ctmcnl byfr~i1nin1 from the
firm he (oundtd an J$60, LeRoy
Hose and Associates.
Rou said hi.a reaignalion wu
''due to adverse publicity reaard· '°' past and recent investi&a·
llODI."
For hb piart, District Attomcty
Cecil J.Ucks •imply chatted for a
few minutes with newsmen about
other topics as Diedrich and
Rose were called to appear in
court.
It was Diedrich who appeared
in Judge Robert Rickles'
courtroom first.
Without an attorney al his side,
Diedrich was told to reappear in
court Dec. 27, directed to book
himsel( into Orange County Jail
and released on his own re-
cognizance.
Thirty minutes later Rose
walked into the same courtroom
with lawyer Sylvan Aronson.
Rose's arraignment was put off
to Jan. 6, he was given until Dec.
21> to book himself into jail and he
a lso was relew.ed on his own re-
cognizance.
In the forefront of the bribery
mdictment is lhe successful ef-
fort by Anaheim Hills, Inc .. to ob·
tain in 1973-74 county approval
ror the withdrawal or 2,200 acres
from agricultural preserve
agreements.
Diedrich was the leader in a 3
to 2 Board or Supervisors de·
cision in March, 1974, lhat re·
leased the land from the pact and
opened it to development.
In the background to that move
was the company's hiring of
Remington as their legal counsel
&ind Rose as a consultant on grad·
ing problems.
The indictment alleges that
Remington was hired at
1Jiedrieh's s uggestion but makes
no mention or whatever role Rose
was assigned to earn the $138,301
he received from the company.
Key figure in the four-month
investigation ' leading to the in·
diclment was Remington, a
Oiedrich bu.siness and legal a&·
::.ociate for 10 years.
Remington was named in the
July 1 political conspiracy indict·
menl along with Diedrich,
S upervisor Philip Anthony,
Anaheim City Councilman
Wil~iam Kott and would-be
polit1<.'al financier Gene Conrad.
It was in early November that
Remington pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor charge related to
the alleged conspiracy and was
then granted immunity from
prosecution when testifying
before the Grand Jury about his
knowledge of the Anaheim Hilb
affair.
Also shown by court records to
have been granted immunity
were Robert H. Grant and
Hichard Owen, then Grant Com·
pany corporate officers.
Shown in the lisUng of overt
ucts as the officials who issued
the Anaheim Hills, Inc., checks
to Rose were Erik Berg and Jack
Sickler, a long·lime Diedrich
friend.
The bribery indictment came
as QO swi>rise to Diedrich.
He predicted his own lndict-
!11ent l~t week when grand jury
investigators armed with a
-,earch warrant seized business
records kept in a small Buena
Park warehouse.
True to the image he has pro-
jected since becoming a county
supervlsor in January or 1973
Diedrich vowed late Thursday t~
.. continue waging this a ll,out war
I have on my hands ...
He said he wlll not be able to
"intelligently discuss" the latesl
charges lodged against him until
he reads transcripts or the
testimony leading to the indict·
ment.
"Right now, I don't know who
i s accus ing tne or what
specifically I am accused of do·
ing or who the players are,•· the
53-year-old county supervisor said.
Navy OKs Project
W ASffiNGTON CAP> -The
Navy recommended Thursday
that a scaled-down test version of
Project Seafarer be constructed
in Upper 1!fichlgan.
DAILY PILOT
-·
Bolfda9 Toll at 7
Yashes KiU
4 Countians
Four people were killed In traf.
fie ac<.'idenb Thursday night as
the countywlde pre-Christmas
traffic death toll climbed to
s eve n in the pas t 24 hours,
Orange County coroner's dep·
utles rePQrted loda v.
/\ 16·yeur -old ~Santa Ana t~nager and a 41 -year-old
Gar\ien Grove truck driver were
killed in an 11 :37 p.m. collision
tnat ended a lOO·mile-an·hour
police chase in~ Garden Grove
and Santa Ano , pblice said.
The driver or that speeding
car, a 17-year-old from Santa
Ana, was charged with felony
drunken driving and released to
his parents. oCCicers said.
Laa Palmas Drive, Fullerton1 •
was killed <1t 9:05 p.rn . aa he and·
hia wife attempted to cross
Harbor Boulevard near thelr·
home, p<>llce said. _.
McGulness' wife also wu
seriously inJured, oHicers report·
ed . The couple was not Inside a
crosswaUc and the driver or the
car was not held, police said.
The second pedestrian killed
was Dolores C. Trevino, S2, o/220
E. Chestnut St., Santa /\na. She
djed about four hours arter being
struck crossing the street at 200
N. Grand Avenue at an unstriped
crosswalk, police said.
SAM ANO PATRICIA D'ANGEl.O INSPECT PIPES USED FOR SOLAR HEATING
These and Roof Panels are Only Elements of New System Visible From Outside
The dead are Michael Anthony
Albright, 5409 W. Crystal Lane,
Santa Ana, a passenger in the
pursued car, and Osborn C. Van
Wey, 13802 Cypress St., Garden
Grove, driver of the other vehi·
cle, police; said.
The driver of the car in that
8:49 p.m. crash also has not been
charged pending further in·
vesligation, police said.
No Evidence Found
In NB Air Crash
A National Transportation
Safety Board investigator said
today there Is no new informa·
tion on a small plane that
crashed oCC Newport Beach
Wednesday and there will pro·
bably be none unless some debris
washes ashore.
A relative identified the pilot of
the plane as t>ne of its two
owners, Sanford 0 . Vance, 42, of
24501 Vanessa Drive, Mission
Viejo. With him reportedly was
his son Dan. 19, a freshman at
Saddlebaek College. 'The elder
Blood Theft
Thuxuted
PHILADELPHIA <AP )
-Two employees of the
Red Cross have be en
charged with stealing
about 150 gallons of blood
plasma from the agency's
blood program head·
quarters here, police said.
The stolen plasma al·
legedly was sold to a local
office of Interstate Blood
Bank Inc. for $14,000 over a
four-month period begin·
ning in JuJy.
David Butc her, Red
Cross public relations
director, said Thursday
most of the stolen blood
plasma was unfit for
human use and should
have been used only in
laboratory work. He said
most of it had been re-
covered.
Vance was identified as a pilot
for United Airlines.
However, Miss Wally Funk of
the safety board said officials
cannot confirm Lhc deaths.
·'We have some missing people
reported but we can't prove it
legally," she s aid.
Witnesses s aid they s aw the
Cessna 150 spiral into the water
two miles off Scotchman's Cove
south of Corona del Mar just
before noon Wednesday.
Some papers were later re·
covered containing the name of
the owners and the aircraft's
identification. It was co-owned
by Vance and his neighbor, Al
Andrew.
Miss Funk said that !.ince the
plane went down in 280 feet of
water and divers in the area can
only s afely descend to 140 reel. no
dive is planned. She said special
equipment for a dive would co~I
an estimated S15,000.
''Until we gel something that
washes up on the beach. there's
nothing that I can do," Mas~
Funk said.
Froa Page Al
SPILL •..
equipment were unable to reach
the blazing tankers in the 40·knot
winds and rough seas, officials said.
By early afte rnoon, the captain
and six crewmen from the
Venpet were put back aboard the
vessel to fight the names but had
to be airlifted to safety when con·
ditions were judged too
dangerous to contin~e.
Snowy Tragedy
Wife's Ordeal of Death Told·
Editor' a Note:. A Sunday drive ended in tragedy for Norman o.
John&on, 61. Hu wa/e, Gwen, also 61, died of erposure in deep mow after
the couple'• C4T twoke down inc remote area. Here ta Johmon'& account
of what happened, cu told to De1eret Nf!IDS report~ Leo PeTt7J.
. PROVO, Utah CAP> -The hardest decision I have made in my
hfe was whet.her to lie down anq die with Gwen or get up and try to save myself.
We had been married 35 years, and I didn't want to leave her
But I had to leave her if l was going t<>get help. ·
~E HAD COME ~WN FROM Salt Lake Sunday to visit some
friends and then decided to take a litUe ride up the canyon. It was ~nice day, and the road w~sn'l that bad. But I turned to the right
instead or the l eft. Then l hit a rock in the center of the road, and it
knocked a hole in the oil pan.
I spent two hours trying to jack the car up and get It off the
rock, but I couldn't move it. It was then we decided to try to
walk ou~. We should have gone back the way we came, but r
thought at would be (aster to try to walk over to Springville.
We walked four or five mUes. When It started to get dark we
got under a big pine tree, and I tried to cover her up with pine ~ughs. I tried to keep standing up to keep warm and then I would
lie down ~try to keep her warm. Then the wlnd started to howl . It
• seemedlikel\snowedallnight.
GWEN WAS ONLY ABLE TO hobble about 100 yards in the
deep snow in the morning. I tried for three hours to help her further
But I wasn't much help because l have arthritis. We talked
togetber of personal things. Then she began acting strange. She waeinacomL
How could I leave her? Yet J thought I should get help. I prayed
to the Lord, and I felt the Lord didn't want me to die there.
I bobbled alOllg through the deep snow all the rest of the day. I
bad seen a cabin on the way up, and I thought, lf I could just make
lt down to the cabin. It was just. getting dark Monday nlaht when I
aaw the cabin. But then I fell orr the bridge and Into a five-foot·
deep creek bed. It seemed like hours before I couJd crawl up the
bank.
I RAD NO BEAT IN THE cabin -no food and Juttthe snow for water. I moved my lege throughout the nlght to keep the circuJa.
tioa aotn1. At dayU1ht. I started out aga.tn. I was wet almost to
ftlJ •houlden from r.tlln1 down in the deep anow. I kept on Pfllinl that t.be Lord would help me just to keep on
•olng. I actually felt if I could Juat keep 1otn1 I would find
1omeooetobelpme.Jteptfilllngdown.andU..1unwuwarmnow on my face. J Juat wanted to lie there, but I knew I h•d to keep 101Da.
lly next bla obltacle wu to 1et acrou Uie catUe 1uard. l couil: oal1 move my feet about four inches at a time. I prayed someone
would ftnd me.
W.ITIBN AN noua, TRaEE bo)'a came up the road tn a pickup
truck. They wanted to know what I waa dotn1 there. T1Teycould
not believe It when I told tbcm my wife w11 dtad up on the road.
They• d the best tblnt to do was to 10 down to tho service sta·
Uon in h Pork Canyon and call the sherifl.
•
Frora Page Al
SOLAR •..
Members refused comment on
the session's outcome pending
ad vice from their attorney.
Me anwhile, the ti • Angelos
have gleaned support for their
solar power efforts from other
cornersofthecommunity. -
Mission Viejo Municipal Ad·
visory Council members Monday
voted 4 to 1 to support D'Angelo
and ask the homeowner board lo
\\ ithdraw its objection.
And the Mission Vi ejo Com·
pany has issuc.'CI a statement sup-
porting D' An gelo and solar
systems that are esthetically in·
tcgrated into Lhe community.
D' Angelo has also received let·
ters of support from state of-
fi cials -some of whom have
toured his installation. Other let·
ters mailed to county and federal
officials have brought promises
of a response.
The 24-year Marine Corps
\'elcran and his wife initially in·
stalled the solur heuting s ystem
bec;1usc or governrnenlal stale·
mcnts that pool hcutang with gas
might be restricted in the near
future.
But the system in operation
for only one and a half months -
ha!. already saved them money
from high gas bills.
.. We're using less energy, our
gas bill is down and we're gelling
basically free heat,·· D'Angelo
said. "At the end or four or five
years we will have realized a gas
savings that is equal to the cost of
the solar' panels at today's
prices."
Plant Stirs
Controversy
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The San
Diego City Council is the object
or both supporters and opponents
o( the proposed $2.5-billion Sun·
desert nuclear power plant to be
built near Blythe.
Mayor Pete Wil son said Thurs·
day he would seek council sup·
port for the project. Then three
county supervisors sent a letter
to the council urging it to con·
sider opposing the nuclear plant,
which would begin deli very or
electricity of the Sari Diego area
in the ear)y 1980s.
Tb~ supervisors recently voted
to oppose construction of the
project proposed in a joint ven-
ture with several other utilities by
San Diego Gas& Electric Co.
Van Wey's son, John 19, su(.
fered serious injuries in the
crash. police reported. A second
teenager in the car being chased
Eric Fassbinder, 17, of 5422 w'.
Lehnhardt Ave., Santa Ana, also
was hospitalized with injuries,
officers said.
Police said the chase began in
Garden Grove, where an omcer
became suspicious or the driver's
erratic actions. The car was
traveling abo\1t 100 miles an hour
when it sped lhrouti;h a red li~ht
on Newhope in Santa Ana, slrik·
ing the Van Wey van, police as·
serted. .
The overnight traffic death toll
also claimed the lives or two
pedestrians In separate acci-
dents, investigators said.
J ohn McGuiness, SO, of 231 W.
* * * Bridge CrtuJh ·
Kil/,s Tioo in
Costa Mesa
Two people were killed and a
third injured Thursday in a
three-car collision on the Vic·
tori a Street bridge over the Santa
Ana River, which divides Costa
Mesa from Huntington Beach.
Costa Mesa police identified
the victims as Timothy Lee
McKeon, 25, of 33802 Malaga
Drive, Dana Point. and Carol
Lovette Stradley I 42 , or 1015
American Place, Costa Mesa.
Dot~ were in a small foreign
car driven by Mc:Keon that police
s aid collid.ed· tiead'.on at
about 9:50 p.m . with a vehicle
driven by Jane!t Ann Munson, 21,
162 Tulip Lane, Costa Mesa . She
was treated at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital for cuts on
her right hand, arm and knee,
and &ent home.
A third car, driven by Irene
Garcia Dolan, 26, of 711 Pacific
Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach, skJdded into the McKeon
car arter the accident. Its driver
was not reported injured.
.Police said that, according to
witnesses, McKeon apparently
became distracted while wiping
the inside or his windshield with a
rag while heading toward Hunt-
ington Beach on the bridge. Wit·
nesses said his car strayed over
the double yellow lines in the
center and co1Jided with the
Cosca Mesa-bound Munson car,
spinning it around.
Costa Mesa police are in·
vestigating the tragedy.
Fro.Page Al
BOVAN •••
Mrs: Kulik pleaded innocent to
those charges Thursday. She was
ordered to race trial Jan. 23, the
same date set for her slx
codefendants.
Judge Kneeland computed the
$2.35 million figure for Kulik .·
after being told Kulik raced trial •
oo charges of possession of 1.1
pounds of nearly pure heroln·~ · ·
filed in Orange County. w_u al•
legedly In possession or anot6er-.
l .S pounds of almost pure heroin •
at La Costa and also allegedly '
was involved in th~ killing last
Oct. 22 of Bovan, a Fountain
Valley residenL ·
Seven of the eight people in-
dicted for their alleged roles in
that killing have now been ar·
rested.
A search i.s still under way for
Joseph Gabriel Fedorowakl. 28.
Scheduled to appear with the ,
Kuliks today were codef'endanta· ·
Richard, 28, and Jerry Pet~r · '
Fiori. 41. ofHunlineton Beach.
Flori ls identified by the
prosecution as the man who
pumped nine buJlet.s into Bovan in
a confrontation last Oct. 22 out-
side a Newport Beach restaurant.
Fiori Is held with bail denied.
His lawyer was expected to ask
Judge Kneeland today to set bail.
Police claim that Fiori and two
other HunUngtoo Beac:h men,
Anthony "Little Tony" Marone
Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven."'!.
Resco, 28. were hired to kidnap: ··,
and kill Bovan in revenge for an
earlier kidnapping of Kulik.
Merger Planned
W ASHJNGTON CAP> -The
Carter administration is plan·
ning to merge the U.S. Customs
Service and the Immigration
Service and the Immigration and
Naturalization Service into a new
border ''superagency," accord·
ing lo informed sources.
IT'S SKYIJW~
JS. CONCORDE
The lumbering Laker Skytrain
a lmost beat the e l egant
supersonic Concorde on recent
New York·London flights.•
First-time traveler Hugh
Mulligan, special correspondent
ror the AP, found m ore
similarities between the two
flights than one might expect .
See his report oo Page AlO.
It's What's Out Back ·That Counts
UC.NO. 2JOO?
Our store is like an iceberg! No-we're not chilly
to deal with-tt's that you only see one tenth of our
store from the front.
People visiting us for the first time are
flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfolds
before them. The huge showroom has thousands of
samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest
selection they have seen.)
Our warehouse contains an inventOt'Y of Infinite
vaciety. Hundreds of remnants Inhabit a 25x50
Remnant room.
• Add offices, a spacious drapery room, plenty of
parking, pleasant people, and you'll have the "Big
Picture" of our successful operation!
DEN'S
:iiiSia11atiaii:·custam ~rapsrlss
linoleum • wood floor
t663 PLACENTIA AVfNUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6.C6·Al38 -646-235'
rS~T~OCKS;;i~/~BUiii;S~l~N~E~S~Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!i,iii~-~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ijii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii.!iilii~iiiii!iiiiii~~;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~--:;Fttcsay==.~o..:;;mbw~~1=~~1877;;:::::----s----OAA.--v_~_~_OT __ A_J..;_J;,
S•allCaDas __ .. Frida1'• . . NYSE COMPOSfrE TRANSACTIONS 2~m. (EI)'I') Pneea ~ ............ ._ ....... .,._...._.,"""*•""•t1•1~a"el' .... a* ....... 111Ktl •• • • • • • .• ~ .... ....,_ ... ._...,.._.._"'""'·~ ............ IMt.
••
Not All Winners
Win Anythillg
If you win a claim in amall claims court, lhat may oat
alw•y• mean you win. In tact, ln a larce pereentqe ol
cues, a auccessf\JJ ault does not lead to a aucceutul collec-
lton.
A sampling ol aman ~Jahns cue9 ln the New Yort
borougb of Queens last year found 40 pe~t ol thole gur-
veyed had not recovered tbe money A1Warded 1n tbelr Jud;. m~ts. An earlier survey in Manhattan disclosed that
50 percent ol t.bo aucceasf\al lltl&atl bad been able to •
lect.
TRE EXPLANATION IS. OP coune, that many detm-
dants,doa•t have lbe resoul'CtS to pa_y. The admlnistraUve
judge ol the District Courts '" auburban Na.uau County,
N. Y ., attributes rn06t !allures to debtors who don't have any
assets lefttoaelze. A New York Qty court otftdal who holds
a similar view says many defendant COOlPanits were eitber
·bankrupt or detunct.
In Nassau County, for instance, 1,438 winners of small
claims Case$ turned to marshals for aid In securing pay-
ment, but. in 32 percent of these c..._ lbe manbala couldn't
collect.
<New York C\ty's
Department or
Consumer Affairs
launched a program l8$t
summer to assist plain·
tiffs in tracking down
facts on· a debtor's as-
sets by instituting an
\
Money's
Worth
"Information subpoena and restralnllll notice" from the
clerk of the Civil Court (of which the amall claims coart.s
are apart.)
TID8 NOTICE TO TllD.D parties -including banlcs,
insurance companies and uUlltles -reveals a defendant's
assets and their locations and ties lbem up unUl a aberrif can
seize them.
The plaintiff also may aslc the sheriff's office to try to
collect without. having to pay a $50 fee In advance. Triple
damages are awarded if the defendant company previously
Jgnored three or more Judgments against il.
The collection problem m~ climb sharply ii ceilings on
small claims are hiked.
A SOLUTION THEN MAY BE setUement of small
claims cases after lhey are filed but before they reach the
point of judgment. U a defendant .,-rees to make some sort
of restitution, this generally resulta lD a better chance for
colledion.
To illustrate. a aampUng in Queens, N.Y., found that 100
percent of cases setiled thls way resulted lD collections. ln
Manhattan, the sampling showed the payout at 82 pettent.
For the small personal or n;ionet.ary disputes, the
American Bar Association bu proposed dispute resolution
centers to setUe disputes without the formalities of a court.
While only a few exist, the center ln New York City has
been operating since 1975. The "judges" resolve personal
gripes after the parties meet with a mediator at the center. Agreements must be signed by both aides.
·Renovation Due
For Casa Laguna
Steve Parks and Larry Collison have purchased the
22·Unit Casa Laguna Motel in Laguna Beach.
Parks. 34, is currently with Turner and Associates in
Laguna Beach. He plans to conUnue in real estate wbile
overseeing the management of the motel.
Colli.son, 41, a former music teacher with the Garden. Grove school system, will move immec;l.iately to the property
and takecootrolofthedailxo~ations.
A complete renovaUon of the Sl>anish-style motel is
planned dUJ'ing the next y~ar. inchadlng re-landscaping or
the semi-tropical gardens and ref\lrbishlng of the 11resent
units.
Tbe new owners are Laguna Beach residents.
Plfua PlatU Detailed
All-Metal Fabricators, Inc .• Santa Monica, has
purchased a nine-acre site in Orange County lor a $6 million
Lake Forest Plaza Shopping Center development.
The seller was Occidental Land, Inc., of El Toro. Price
was $1,327,308 for the sale ol lbe land for a six-building pro-
ject eaatof the San Diego Freeway.
The site la at tbe northeast COrneT of Late Forest Drive
and Rock!ie1d Road.
( TAKING
STOCK
between Irvine and El
J Toro.
Constnrct.ion Is to
begin this month or ear-
ly in January on tbe six
bulldlngs, which wiU
total 83,000 square feet
ofnoorspace.
These wiH be the Village Inn Restaurant, 4,900 aquare
feet; a dinner house rest.aurant. 8,500 square leet; a United
California Bank branch, 5,000square feet; a two-story office
building, 1.5,500 square feet: an L-shaped lree·standin& re·
tall building, 45,1~,~quare feet for multiple tenants: and a
4,000-aquare-foor buuding for a slngle tenant.
CoosttUctioo is expected to be completed 81x or seven months after ground is broJcen.
Mere..,, Opetu £alee F..-est •rwla
Mercury Savblp and Loan AuoclatJon. Huntington
Beach, has opened a branch office in tbe A.span Plaia on
Lake Forest Drive, near Roc:tdleld Road, ID lbe Lake Forest. area. It is the association's eleventh laclUty.
Located at 22821 Lake Forest Drive, juat eut of lbe
Lake Forest ex.It of the San Dlqo ~way at As pan Street,
lbe temporary otnce has fr&e parking and j)rovides save.rs
who have acCOUllta at otber Mercury tocaUona opportunity . to conduct buatnesa locally. ,
llanaeer oft.be Lake Forest ontce la Deaana VeiUa.
former ciperatloes aupervlsor at llercury'a La Habta·
Fullerton office.
Houn are 9 a.a:a. to 8 p.m. dally and Satu.rdQs from 10 a.m.to4p.m. ....................
H~ Aircraft Co •• Fullerton, &u broken ll'OQDd for
an Sl.2 mlllloo buildln& expans.lon prouam to accom-
modate curreilt and expected growth of lt.t lfO'&Dd syateros
fr~ wlll ln•ol\te a tbi"M-story. llO,OCJO.aquare-
fodt ext8mloa to tho maautacturt.u UMmbJy bulldlnf.
U.POQ eampletloa ln tlM nnt 4G.rter ol im, t.be arH will be
oecupled by ~11Dinlltri&he aod mai.oeeri.DC actlvitles.
O.CflletiN APJlre.,ell -
Tbe c.llfomla DelW'blleat ol lMUrwe hu ~roved .. tbe PW"dlae ot a SS mWJoa airtiftute of CCllltrlbution by tbe a Coalliwftl Grwp lnc., lt waa ~by the company'• .mu·~~ Employenlmarneeeo .• Fullertoa. W Employers ta • dM.1.IOG ot IUchmoad co •• a 111m1-.-ot tlae CClatlneotal Groap. 1 n. t&e.t ol tlU tr ...... wUl nsulttn.., lDcnue, ~ ot•~-~...,,._olW..wnE~ t • nlcllcmNoY.at,ltC&J.tat.-.-.._
CALIFORNIA L-1 '
~,.;..,.;.._-~...:...-.._..;....____._.._. Jmbiding Drivers
~ntal. to Lure Japa:neae TouriatB ·ean Call 'Friend'
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Some Of World War
111'1 bloodl•t baUles look place long a10 on lb•
South Paclf'ic lsland of Guam, Tlnlan~ S.lpan and'
Truk. One alp of how tone aro that wu ia that Con·
ttnental Airlines plans to sell vacatlons on those
islands totbe Japanese.
Continental recently won CivU AeronauUca
Board approval for Tokyo·S.lpan service, as well
as new connecting routes Crom Los Angeles to
American Samoa, Fiji, New Zealand and Auatralla
by way of Honolulu.
TRE NEW ROUTES llAVE changeJt Continen· tat from a regional airline to a major Pacific ~asin
carrier and Robert She, Continental's feisty chief
executive officer, sees major profit opportunities
ahead .in the South Pacific.
. "It's a big Japanese market because you can
leave Tokyo at 9~ ln the morning with a 20·above
temperature and three hours later you 're at 80 or 85
degrees on a lovely, sunny beach," Six says of
Saipan aod the Marianas islands.
The L .A .·to·
Australia award puts
Continental Into com·
petition ·with Pan
American, which has
had the route to itself
since American
withdrew in 1975. Six,
who has irritated Pan
Am executives in tbe
past by referring to
airline's blue globe in·
signia as "The Blue
Meatball," seems eager
to do'batUe again.
"The Pacific Ocean
is not a bathtub Cor Pan
American World
Airways," be s.ays.
'Best Gift'
Holiday Brightened
LINDSAY CAP> -Junior high students
here are giving $500 to make Christmas a UWe
brighter for a classmate whose rather, brother
and sister were slain last week.
The student council at Garvey Junior
High decided to donate the money to Allison
Adney, 12, after Principal ftob Edwards sug.
gested the girl and her mother could use the
money during the holidays.
"IT MAXES YOU PROUD," Edwards
said Thursday. "It's the best ChristmaJ
present l 've had this year.''
The $500 donation was more than he sug.
gested the students give, Edwards said. The
money comes from $3,500 the students have
raised for a trip at the end of school in June
and will be made up by future fundraising
events, he added.
THE SCHOOL'S NAME was changed this
fall · to honor Los Angeles Dodgers first
baseman Steve Garvey who -school officials
and students feel presents a clean image tor young people. .
Miss Adney's Cather Eugene, 46, brother
Roger, 16, and sister Florene Cathey, 20, and
another man were shot to death Friday by
Mrs. Calhey's husband Chester who then shot
himself fatally.
AUTHORITIES SAID CATHEY was
angered at his wife's testifying against him a
day earlier at a preliminary hearing in which
he was accused of trying to drown her.
Cathey was bound over for trial but was
released from custody after posting a $2,SOO
bond.
Universal Tour
• Noise Considered
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Proposed county noise. -
ordinances would, Ir enacted, force UnfvensaJ
St._udios' tours and amphitheater out of business, a
studio official says.
··we cannot operate this tour and the outdoor
ampbllheat.er as these new statutes exist," Al
Dorsklnd, vice president of Music Corp. of
American claimed Thursday.
THE COUNTY HAS PROPOSED noise llmlta·
tions that are particularly stringent in residential
areas during evening hours -45 decibels after 10
p.m. Universal Studios is in a manufacturing zone
where noise limits are 70 decibels.
"This Js not ar> attempt to get at MCA," said
'Supervisor Ed Edelman. "I want to make. it clear
that we don't want any Jobs ellmlnated at MCA or
•MCA eliminated. I think we can reach reasonable
·isolullons. The noise situation didn't start with
·MCA.''
''There la a very bl& sky dltedly over lt which ii
also not their private property."
SIX EXPECl'S THE NEW ftOVTES to become
profitable within a year or beginning operation. pro,
bably next spring~ ~od disml$ses doubters who
point out that Ame"J'lcan Jost $32 million on the
Australian routes before living up.
• "American bad no backup traffic," he said in
an interview. "Los Aneeles ls the big marketing
area for 70 percent of that market, plus we have all
the feed-in here." Continental operates primarily in
the West. while American's routes connected
Eastern cities to Australia.
f • : i ,,., ,
I 1•
f
MISSOULA, Mont. CAP> -'g\e holiday spirit Is
lntectlng even Mlasoula 's Bl& Hooker.
"Let Big Hooker take you home tonieht!"
blares big type in newspaper ads ror Otto's 'J'owln•
and Service Center, which ls startine a "Tow 1
Drunk'' 1ervlce.
For $16, a morotlst who has Imbibed too much
can can Otto's any time, and a tow truck will pick
up both motorist and bis vehicle. There's a special
$14 rate for Big Hooker Club members.
"So enjoy the holidays. To the fullest," the ads
say. "But, If you're filled wlth too much Christmas
cheer, tet the Big Hooker take you home tonight."
IF SIX IS RIGHT ABOUT the Australian
routes, it wllJ be the latest In a long list of profitable
decisions. He has run Continental for almost 40
years and the airline, more than any other, reflects
his aggressive personality.
"Shall I call the m~Unc to order, or do you want to?" In the
Now 69, Six received rus pilot's license in 1929
and began his career as a stunt pilot selling
airplane rides for $1 apiece. He worked for a lime as
a co.pilot for a Chinese airline based In Shanghai
and later opened a Beechcraft distributorship in
Northern California.
In 1936, Six saw an opportunity to go into the
airline business. ·
THE SOUTHWEST DIVISION OF Varney
Speed Unes, a tbf-ce·pl11ne outfit carrying mall
between Pueblo, Colo., and El Paso, Texas was
short on money. Six bought a 40 percent interest in
the operation with $90,000 borrowed from hls father.·
in·law, changed the name to Continental Airlines and became president in 1938.
Since then, Six bas built Continental into a con-
sistenUy profitable company (only two red·lnk years
since 1940) that will record revenues of more than
$600 million for 1977. The three mailplanes have
grown to a fleet of 56 jets, and CAL today bas 9,000
employes and acrrles six million passengers a.year.
THROUGH ITS CONTINENTAL Hotels Inc.
subsidiary. Continental now operates hotels ori
Guam, Truk, Saipan and P.alau and also bas in·
lerests in several Hawaiian hotels.
Another subsidiary, Air Micronesia, opeartes
among the Gilbert and Ellice islands with connec-
tions to Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam and
Okinawa.
an ~\1~ator for christtrnas ...
rsi
fbr~rs his ihvorite shirt, mack. in fmrz. sll cotton witn ~tail&. eolid. eolora of-red., wb~;navy, lt.blue.,euQu.&'ta, meton,~undy~ ~Jrowa
dartmoutl1a8Pd bf"OW'O. by~
HEN IT COMES TO BUYING A DIAMOND
You're 111 love. You want to buy a
diamond for your ••~&heart. But
you 're a llttle concerne d abou&
ceulnc your monl'Y'• worth.
Ch.a-. an, you've heard about a
friend that J04. rlppt-d-olr buylnl( a
diamond. You m•Y have ca•ually
looked a& ilc>fde dlam611d rlfll• In •
1tore window (10 l(el an Idea on
prlcee). Maybe fOU'vo even •hop·
ped •couple of Jeweolry 1toree aod
bee n •ternly warned thal dla·
mond• come in mftny qualities and
you wa11t to watch oul for thin&•
like e&rbo111pou and bad color.
And of mar•«' ,au'rC' •ren od• that
hart' odreorlillt'd .w. off on diamond•
thi• irttlc on/r.
But all d1amo11d• look about lhe
1ame t.o you. Try aa you ma,y, you Jutt tan'l aee m11c h dlrference.
Cranted mo11t diamond• do look
pretty much alike. But they're not.
Ir you 'II read on we'll Jive you
eomc ract11 on diamond•. Not love
poem• or fanciful r.hr1aae, bul racb.
We'll let ynu hand c the romance.
First or all diamond• ert j1111 like fi1111er· ptinls. Rach one la uniqutly Individual.
P.1'al{tlify • diamond olld yoo ctn -iod1· Yldwi( charxterietlc:s that aepente il rt0m
any other stona. And a diamoncfa value la really dot.,roi.,.d by lhbe Individual
cha.racterilt.ior.
Omioloalaia evaluate a diamond by four
aimple n.ileo ull'll lhcr "Pour C'a" • Color,
Ci,nty, Cut and Cetat wtiahl..
COl.Oft Moet diarnonda ~ white. but they.,_ not. Dialmndouwally haYe a 1q,... of yell.,... 01
brown bndy color. Tlle rloatt a di•mond ill
lo colotl-. IM mort valuable II oa. The
fact ;,. t~b. that •hcNt 941' • or aU clla· ~ mu~ ha ... Vlll)'lc1c de,,_ o< body • <'Olor.
But if mMI diarMftda look whit•. how ia
mlor dt1~nni-r> By compenMKI. Yoo 111m·
r>1f corni»te llNt unlulnwn dia.-.d'• <'"'"' Wllh I diamond Of • known tO(ur 1trade.
'thl• tolor comp•rlton haa lo bt done In North dllr,ll11ht 01under1 llPf(MI chromat•
lcall)' ba •n* llaht, beceuM diamonda lilao tflletl any colored l~ht that mlitht be •round. At PTore.alonal ~"haw a •t Of lllHler dl1mond1 lh•t h1vt been Q9d«l lor ua by the C:~J l,.tllute
or Ametic•. We ti.vi an lr.trument csDed
ll Dlarll4H'ldli&.e whldt II ~ to CRct. diamond CC!lor. It'• 9U)' t.o \119• -a llut· mo call -diamond colot lllllt.anlly. All
• GOJ"dia..-d .... ~Nldtd '" thia ~ all4 ualcnad 1 colof it.da on a colori-'°ya~ _...
WE LET YOU HANDLE THE ROMANCE
CLARITY
Moi<! people nnnot ..,., im~rfoction> In 3 d1amood eve11 when they &k v1•1blt 10 the
un•lded el". The eye I• cooru,..,.J by the bntli:intt. That'swl\y a lot ol rharni•nd1' •r•
oold in wliat ~L<u call &hr lml"'ffM'I F,..""-IC a diamond doea not have V1Nhi<-
1 nd11•1on1 to &he tr•ln4'd eyt', then ll 11 ..Mined a l'NCM ~ to mo, Cl!~ Mid l«allnn or iN ind...,,, .,. _,, unokr ml~·
n1ftation. You"re pn>b.bly u yin1 to yoo.r-
atlf, ... ~1 if you can't -11 wha1 dlrr""""'
don It make. You know, )"OU're MJhl. C!.r·
11y probahly has lftll "fTon "" !he! beautv of a diamond than uy or tht otht-t qual11y
fact<>n. Hut becaWle 11 is the ~l qUJal·
ily rector "' dncribe and dernonttnte """'" J.wt*,,. Und t.o dmcnbe diamond qu•l11y
by 1b11 sinale taciot. Uaually tlwy wm '"" you a loupe and let you loolt ror youMlf.
Moel people can'! -anythlnc throudo a loupe and af\er I.bey alru~,i. and ,-r nt !he! diamond, they &«Jtt that th<! diamond
they are lookin11 at ia pretty clear.
Th& diamond ~pe lbal jewtlefl UM looks hke • vtty aJmple imtn.i~t. bul t.o we 11 •
effectively, requitM Iota of praclic@. We don't show you diamond clanty Lhrooili 1
loupe. We.,. a epecially d.il(Md binon1l•r
gtm mlcroocope called the Mark V Cemo· 11~. Take our word for it whet1 yoo look lit a diamond throulth thia !hlnK. you'll Me
what diamond·clarlty LI ell a.boot.
CUT
Now this II whe19 lt'• really htrd t.o .... dlr-
re1W'Q8 In quality. MOK diamorida a"' dlA· played undn ha,.h, int~mq lil(ht. Eveo rake dlamonda look -ood under thHa
condltlona.
The r.n la tboudl. that cut ha mont to do
with diamond bftucy than any1hin,; tlM.
An kMaHy cut dialTIOfld la a bHutlrul thin«
to behold N«&rdi..ortbecolor oullnty.
llnrort11n1tely. mott diamond• are not
ldnlly cut. Tiiey varr CON!ldefably, ror a
lot of~ Siu, 111hlcb we'U talk at>eM a
liule later, plays a IM11 role in dlamood tut· 1in11. It'• pre«y hard for a cutter lo rol en
.86 carat diamond whe11 he knows by
111>readlnt1 h out • little bit IM C1n t•t a
mud\ ll'ION ..S..bae l.00 cant. Bed lllC(U-
liOM or bletnllhh t•n be eliminated by VM'Yil'tt the C11t. What la 1mpottan1 thnuah. b -.hat the efttllta abawn Oii I~ illUMNlt.lnn
.,,. .uictly .thend co. Tlwy ani impoftllnt lot-the U-1it ii bmt. d~ and ,... llerltd. W• '1'ade PfOPOf1,lolw In 1n m.vu.
!Mflt called the P~ You CAii
tMlly -the ao11lee alMI propc1ttlllfl1 for 1'0'lrMlc.
CARAT Wf.IGllT
Aa you know <h•A r•f~,.. IO the diamond'•
M&e. h '• <"~•Y to h11y a n~ one car11 dla. m(lnd Cot the Mm•· prkt you'd pay for a top
quality holf c-arat. You've alrffdy dtter.-
n11ned thot dil!'ere~ in quuhty ii h.!Jd lo ..... Cha11<1ea Ate y<11J don"! have any dia.
mond eaptrl frftnd~ (Ir you wo11ldn"t be
.-Jin.f thlo ad. S-1, "'"r not buy • bt11 dia-mond. It cvrtalnly l<M>kl more lmpr-lve
and you can't'bt11i a f.iirn nn the hair a.rat
telhn1 "hal a fil'• d1omond It la. Well, that"a up to you, ,. •• ,.., J""l ..,.,. tn l•ll you
t1bat you're ~ni. ~re arc d«&rui.e ad· vaniaaes tn buyl1111 better ~lity, partlcu.
larly wtwn It -"' the lnVC!ll/llml ,_
lot. But 1h111's anothff ad.
Wt'"•~ you a kK aboot dill,,,.,,... end how tt.)''l'I ~ N-let .. !Ml you a 1i111t bit about ourwelv.1. w,·,.. 41ainond
npuu. Graduate C~Hac&. Oernolotri·
ul lrvth11te or America. We"ve mede It our bwl._ u1 ltMw all about dienv>nde,
not """ how to rorMnee lhftn.
In~ to Mll our dlamondit •I the i.-
po1111M price. we've dOM a lot n( thln«s
that ~ jewckrs woultl tc!Nldtr lnatant dull\.
We've ..t«t.ed nur prem1lll'9 on the beNa of rent. M<\lnty and ovemf:>d.
By cllominc lo loeate a atore away from the thopl""lf mall• ind by takin11 an upo11ln
lna1tl0ft, we've cut our nrnl and In"""""' bill• dramatically. We've ahnrtentd our
httu1uo that our labor COM.a'" cut in half. And you 1ft the uvln--.
Quite rrank\y we .-llr.e that we'ni icnlnir to
ml# 1 lot or cu1.t.nmtra. Bul we•,. not ~
lnit f'OT !he e111t.omer that buy. on hnpul .. or la lookln1t rnr mythical bariralnL We wan! cutlomtra that are lntelllicmt, ltke
r1c11 and are able w analyic value.
10£AL lfUU.tANT <UT "'°'°"TlOHS YOU CAN TELL
EXACT\.Y
_·:,. HOW FAR
~ t DtAMONDS ·-VARY
FROMlltE
-··" IDEAL 1 PROFILE
W£'VE
SHOWN YOU ..
DIAMOND
CUTTING.
If YoU have a diamond with a chip or bl'oken wee. or
Just wllh to have Grandma'• old dlllnOl'ld recut Into
tOday·a modem look. come In and talk to this man fOt" all
the \nswera. His name la Jerry Chartes.
Wouldn't y00 rather buy diamonds rrom the people wno
cut them?
WHIN IT COM&t 'TO A"'9lA•NO JIWIUtY
..... -. ·--.. --.... 0 •' ,...,_. ... i......-. ....... 0 ____ ......... _ _....... ........... -......... -....... -----.
WE THINK THE MORE YOU KNOW ABOUT DIAMONDS THE MORE YOU'LL APPRECIATE US.
••tF YOU ARE NOT BUYING BY A STANDARD, .'fOU ARE PAYING TOO MUCH."
' SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 29th
Daily 10-e.M. -Sat 10.S:OOP.M. Maatet Charge • Ban~mc',ticard • American Express
dEWiELEPIS'·ING.
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