HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-21 - Orange Coast Pilot. I
berfl (;0 Dies in Fire . . .
' ..
inshaw Tells Aetress Claims
Of Death Threat Hughes Married
At Chino Prison Her; Baby ·Born
/
DAILY PILOT oax Ph.oners
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* * * 10' * * * •
WEDNESD~Y AFTERNOON,. DECEMBER 21, 1977
VOL. 70, NO. au.. HCTIC*S, a rAOll!S 81
l,.1 At VandenfJerg
erange
·Victims
Talked to I
CO Perishes
In Base Fire
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE
BASE (AP> -A fire -whipped
out or control by the same hur· ricane-force winds that toppled a
high· voltage tow er and sent
sparks rainjng into pa re hed brush
-killed the base commander and
at least two other people as they
tried to fightit. It still raged out of .
control today.
"The fire seems lik e it's going
to continue as long as the high
* * * Howling Wind
Kifls Five,
'&t,ters State ,.
By Tile Associated Presa
Burricane·force winds howl·
ing through California's
agriculture-rich midsecUon at
more than 100 miles an hour
have left al least five persons
dead and a trail. of destruction
from Bakersfield to the Mexican
ba}"der.
The violent winds blew down
b•ms and airplane hangars, top.
BIG STORM HITS
NORTH-AS
pied heavy trucks, to11ed ·
chunks of brick a~d roofing
through the windo'VJ of homes and businesses, and Y'bipped brush fires out of control.
Hundreds of travelers were
marooned in cities throughout
the Central Valley and the Mo-
jave Desert, jamming hotels,
caf es and emergencx evacuation
enters set up in churches and
febOOls.
An estimated 30,000 homes, of. tlcea and industries from
Bakersfield south 1urrered
power outa1ea, and th1ck clouds
of du1t •ent reported as far a••Y as Stockton, about 200 miles to the north.
uu•1 the worst I've ever
~·" laid California Hlahway
., (8el sro-. ••«e Al) " .
winds do. It just keeps jumping, ..
Air Force Sgt. Dan Anderson said
late Tuesday. The fire. blown from ridge to
ridge on this sprawling military
com pl ex by erratic 70 mph winds,
spread in a patchwork or flames
over several square miles of the
150-square mile base 50 miles
northwest of Santa Barbara. One
thousand acres were blackened.
More than 300 firefighters bat·
tied the blaze throughout the
night, and the strong winds were
forecast to continue through lo·
day. Killed were Col. Joseph Turner,
48, the base commander; Base
Fire Chief Bllly Bell, 44; and As·
sistant Bue Fire Chief Eugene
Cooper, 45, from Vandenberg
Village.
A fourth reported death had not
been confirmed by base
authorities.
Base spokesman Capt. Leonard
Brady said Turner, a veteran of
the KQrean and Vietnam wan,
was directing the firefighting
operation when flames aur·
rounded his Jeep. Turner tried to
run to safety but was overtaken by
the names and burned to death,
Brady said.
Tunier, 48, was in charge of
operaUons at the 11,000·man base,
but was outranked by two
generals.
Chets 'Move'
A. Protest? .
BE.LG BADE,
Yusoslavia (AP >-Bori1 Spasaky failed lo show up
for play in the world
championship semi-final
chess match in apparent
protest of the removal of a
demonstraUon board from
.the game area.
The apparent boycott by
the Soviet player., who de·
pended heavily on the
board, lbl'f'W the to\lrna·
ment into a ptocedural
crlals.
The former world cbam·
plon, Wbo la traWq oppo·
nent Vlktor Korehaoi
1.5-J.S with OM lldJoamed
tame, dld not .. up to
resume play lD Ge 1Ztb
1ame of tile I0•1ame
match, whlcb wm de·
termlne a cballeoaer to· play world champion
Mlatoly Jtarpov nut year
for tbe crOMI.
Ar WI .......
BORE HUGHES' CHILD?
Ac1re•• Terry Moore
. .
Hinshaw Life '
'11ireatened in
Chino Prison?
Former Rep. Andrew J
Hinshaw's life was threatened whlle he was imprisoned at
Chino State Prison on a bribery
charge, KOCE-TV reporter Jim
Cooper said today.
An interview Cooper conduct·
ed with lfinshaw will be broad·
cot at 8 p.m. Thursday on
Cbanne150.
Cooper said Hinshaw told him
bis life had been endangered
before bis tranaf er to Orange
.County Jail and that the polili·
clan plans to contact legislators·
about priaon morm.
The halt-hour program cen· · te-rs on an interview with
Hinabaw at the jail, where be ls
serving an ei1ht·month sentence
on two counts of bribery.
Hinshaw has since entered a
work furlough program that al·
low• him to leave jail during tbt
day to work, Cooper said. · Tbe program ls entitled
"Hinshaw: From the In1lde."
Imnatee to ~Leave
LA PAZ, BoUvta (AP)' .... The
United Statel and Bollvl• have
Teached lllfWm•t In prlMtple
to allow Ammc:am lmprl-.d
here on eoaalM cbar1• to tSVe
out tbelr MDtences in their own ·~ountry. Of the 32 U.S. cttlamt
now btld, .bcnvcver, only dout
1lx are expected to be able to
leave lmmedlatety whea the
tre•tJ taUi effect. . ..
~
V ANOOUVER, Britiab Colum·
bia (AP> -Actren Terry
Moore, who claims she was
married to the late Howard
Hughes. says she bore a child by
the billionaire recluse, but the
baby was premature and died within 2A hours.
Miss Moore said that at the 3 C" an time she met Hughes, be was 43 ers and she was 18.
Miss Moore, 47, said ln an in·
terview Tuesday that in Oc:·
tober, 1951. she gave birth three
months prematurely to a girl
she named Lisa Marie. The in·
fant died a day later of blood
poisoning. she said.
Her claim that she was mar· ried to Hughes ls. not new, and
she hlnt.ed a year ago that she
might have had a child by him.
The actress aald Tuesday the
birth occurred while she was
making a ftlm in Munich, West
Germany. She said abe married
Hughes secretly on a boat off the
west coast of Mexico in No-vember lfH9.
Hughes was ln the United
State. when the baby was bom
and decided not to ao to West
Germany, she said.
"He didn't want a child," said
Miss Moore, "He didn't want
anyone to have a claim on bis
estate, and be saw to it that I
didn't 'let pregnant again. I real· ·
ly wanted a child and was
heartbroken when our daughter
died.
"I thought be was being
selfl9b," Miss Moore said. "But
he argued that unless you were
around cbUdren constantly to
create and mold them, they
. would hurt your Image, blacken
y~rname." -. BBExpl.-loa
After a one·year courtship, ·
she aaid they were married by
the master of a boat Hughes
chartered. She said ber mother
and Hughes aide Noah Dietrich
were witnesses, but.that Hughes
later destroyed the ship's log ....
the only legal record of the 111ar·
riage.
She said the marriage was
legal in California and Mexico
and that they were never
divorced but that she Jell him after eight years.
Miss Moore, who was married
three other times, now lives
with her children in Brentwood,
Calif., where she ls writing her autobiography. She sald it ls
mainly about Hughes.
Interviewed last year a week
after Hughes died, she told the
Fort Lauderdale (Fla.> News that she was secretly married t.o
him but did not plan to file a
claim against bis estate.
Miss Moore said in the News
interview that there "may have
been" children from the alleged
marriage, but refused to be
more specific.
She said in the News interview that "Howard was the greatest
lover I ever had. He was the
best."
She ls to appear as a witness
in Las Vegas' in litigation over
the billionaire's iso·catled Mormon will, which she cJ81ms
is a fake. .. He only ever wrote one will,''
<See HUGHES, Page A2)
·Tank Tnick Driver~
~uccumbs to Burm
of death.
Another worker auff ered minor
bums In tbt Incident at the
Chevron Oll Company's
petroleum depot at Gothard
street.and Talbert Avenue.
City fire officials said today
. that tbe tneine of the tanker truck
wa left runnina dwin1 the fuel.·
lnt=T.nhbum. city fire e4ucat.loq 1peelallst1 aald that t.be
meter on tbe true& appartDtly
malfunc:tiooed and that 1uollne
overflowed ODto t.be IJ'qpnd after
thetanmwuftlledtqcapaclty.
llanbbuna u1d that tbe ~ ln· · UMe9¥8',•ac•AJ) -
Victims of a cruel weekend
telephone hoax have told Hunt· ington Beach police in-
vestigators they believe the
caners were "deranged adults ...
not out-or-school youngsters seek-
ing a thrill.
Police Detective Art Droz in· terviewed 1S ol the hoax victims
Tuesday. They were among
about 100 called by someone
claiming to have news or a
"tragfo acctdent" and the death
or a family member.
Droz said some of the victims i
heard as many as three adult
voices, two males and one female.
Victims of the hoax: calls Fri·
day and Saturday said the calls
came at all times of the night
and even in the early morning
hours.
None of the recipients of the
calls actually lost any relatives,
police said.
·The pranksters apparently
used a current telephone direc·
tory and called their victims in
alphabeUcal order, Droz said.
None of the victims received
more than one phone call -
making it difficult to trace the
(See PRANK, Page A2)
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain lncreas·
ing to 60 percent toniJht
turning to showers Tluu:s·
:day. Cooler Thursday.
Lows tonight 50 to SS.
Highs Thursday 60 to 65.
INSIDE T8BA Y
You don 't jutt a ay
Chriatma1 in the Poulter
houaehol4 in Fouietain Vallq ..
YOU tGJI CMidma1 Chrinmot
Chmht141 far the triplf!t1 to11o
IJve t~. along toUh. tMir
five brolhe11 and 1bler1.
Page Cl.
. .. -.
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D.\!L Y Ptl.O l s WtdN9dar. Dicamber 21. lll'1.
p,....p-AJ-'
:rri·tA.~· ~ : n :u&.D-i!JS· •••
'
On -~1-ftnge Co~st
she said Tuesday, "and that.
dlrectt,d· all bl.a blohey lo his
medici.1 lmtltute" be dreamed or
Hl~lllf.• • Tt.a\ • ,u be ever talked
abo\at, even oo our wedding
nll(bt. That WAIS bis reuon for
llvina," abe aald, "I think his'
real will wu destroy~ ~ his
aides. 'Ibey gµa.rded blm nJght
and day. TowardstheendHoward
wa$ controlled by the people he
tried lo bell> ...
,
By ALMON LOCKABEY '
Delly ,....1Nl1"'9Wrt• '
·High northeast winds wbic~
wreaked havoc in most of
Southern Caliloraia Tuesday
m iraculoualy bypassed the
Orange Ooast but '<Neather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers not to be
complacent.
The batUe (>f the' bighs a.¢
lows tould bring: a.-'q\Jk>'s·~an4
~rastic change in the weather
pattern by nighttan, according
to National Weather Service.
The freak Santa Ana condJtion
wbleb brought northeast winds
roarlnc in over portions of
soutti~m California at velocities
or up lo 100 miles an hour were
expected to dJmlnlsh late today,
giving way to an intense low
pressure cold fronl that should
bring strong~.~~t JNinds
. .,.
Anita ··ftdJlbetl ~~
Actrel~.i~d bi·.s &mp~,.
~ -.... -.
• \ r I , ROME <AP> -Five arm.ed and masked ~ndits
crashed their way into the f 'leurban villa of Anita
E kberg, tied the Swedish actr~ and fled with her ·
cash, jewels and fur coats, police reported today. · ·
The 46-year-old actress, \f.bo··was the blotui,>•~·
goddess of Federico Fellini's "'1960 -film .. La '1liloe ~
Vita," was alone a t her ·villa in l\fentana, a~t 12
miles outside Rome, at the lime of the robbery early;
today. .
: The value of the stolen •goodS>.was put at al:JC>ut
·$9,000. The actress freed herself in two :hours and
twlUed police.
Miss Ekberg, semi-retired except for minor sup.
porting roles in films. and occasio·nf.ll televi~ioQ ap-·
peatances, has been living in Rome for some years . '" .
Car Hits Gas Mai~~ -... . !
' . .
Exploswn 4.v~rt~t:f , . .. ...-""' .
In Newport Ciash ·
Southern California Gas Com-
pany workers and Newport
Deacb firemen labored for two
hours early today to prevent an
explosion after a car smashed
in to a garage and cut a gas
main. '
A rresled on "suspicion or
drunken driving was Michael
Scott Morris, 18, of 1407 Not-
PRAN~ •••
source of the messages, Droz
said. · .
D r o z i s work i ti g -with
telephone company officials in
e ffort to track down the
perpetrators of the ghoulish
prank. He declined to' discuss
the method.S being emplbyed in
the investigation.
Most of the hoax victims are
Huntington Beach .residents, but
som e live in Costa Mesf,
Newport Beach an(l Fountain
Valley. ·
Droz said he believes many
victims did not report the hoax
calls to police. ''Many probably just called a
relative to check otil the 'death,'
but we w\ll never ,know. bow
many," he added.
Most of the victims he in-
terviewed said they heard what
sounded like police radios in the
background. Droz said.
"These must have been de-
ranged people wbo gel gratifica-
tion out of hurting folks -and
around Christmas time no less," ·
Droz said.
Fire Kills Woman
MERCED CAP) -A 74-year-
old blind and crippled woman,
Ventura Pimentel, died Tuesday
of bums over 90 percent of her
body, the coroner reported. She
was severely burned at her
home at Palanada east of here
Monday night when a gas stove
burner caught her 'l¥lon robe on
fire, firefighters reported.
ORANOICOMT
DAILY PILOT
tingbam· Road, Newport Beach,
the driver of the car.
Police SgL George Coelho said
Morris lost control of his car
about 2 a.m. while making a left
tiirn from Irvine Avenue into
Windward Lan4'. ..
Morris' small loreign car
jumped the curb and crashed in-
t.o a garage at 2200 Windward
Lane, Coelho said.
He said no one was home at
the time. The house belongs to
Hal Bay, according to. police re·
J>Qrts.' Fir\men al'\4 gas-comp~y
workers finally got the severed
gas main shut off about 4 a.m.,
Coelho said.
FrOWI P•,,e AJ
STORM •.•
The winds also were blamed
for the death of a woman rut·
ended by a tanker truck creep.
1n1 blindly alona a duat·blown
hichwayinK~ CQunty.
with rain.
The high pressure condition
causing the strong northeast
winds is being sucked tnlo the
low pressure trough, slowing the
front's proaress toward the
coast. ·
HQghes,, .was dlvorced from
Houston socialite Ella Rice in
1929. and married actress Jean
Peters fn 1957. The)' were
dlvol'fed'tn 1971.
The cold IJUlt was reported
less than 200 miles from the
~04'~l earlier tocJay aod moving
~!£ ,~ a rate or 20 ~~ ~:
~be front was expect.M-tU J>ring rain with winds lS lo i'80
kuot.s by late today, switching to
the southwest and west on Tbura~
dQy. .
' The battle of the fronts Tues·
. op.£(;: Chi.et• .. ... .
&ay was the most freakish -in~
met8ory of ~tlmel'S be.re. • '
• While northeas\ ~s of~ thu 70 miles ··an 1?.Rur wet'-
lashing San Bernudino aa~·
R\verside counties a~<l.wreaklQt
delltb and damage ln·Kem ~~
ty, a southeast gale Qf 40 ~ vt~tually closed SUl Di~
lf&rbor and was felt Ubr north·
aa·Dana Point. ·· l ~ .... ~ . <~
Wliile all this Wai gotng 'Oll.f.C)
th~ south and north, the Oranse
Coatt was locke<J'in l dead callii
wj.th an overcast-or dust th~t-i.
duced visibility lo as lo'-·~'z;· mile offst\or,~.:.. Vlaib11ib :
Avalon, Cat••• Ialalid>. • down to one mile in c'fusl by
midaftemoon. V.islbUlty offshore
at Newport Beach was Ulree to
five miles.
The southeast gale south of
San Diego caused extensive
damage as far .south.as Rosarllo ·~ctr hi B\fa. CatiCornia.
Oldtimers called it the worst
storm s ince 1939. A special
weather bnlle tin warned
"pleasure boaters to •t~ out of
the area and s hipping was
slowed to a near halt.
Boaters who ventured onto the
water at Dana Point were hit by
I .. Out for Clarist•aa··· ... .....
Watergate figure H. 'R. Halden)~feaves the Federat
Correctional Institution in Lompoe.·fQf.., fl .~~f;,fl~ida~.
furlough, wishing fellow inmate& and reportm,· }tave a .
merry Christmas." He 's serving a 2~ .t,r aight·rear sen-
tence for conspiracy, obs truction ·o(j~~~nd perjury.
a strong easterly wind. A s mall A 9-year-old Newport Beach dama1e at '6,000 and sal~ the
fl.re ap~. be1an Ui the wall ·
adjacent to a downstairs
fireplacein Baldikosklr•.home in
boat and a catamaran were girl who awoke today t.o find her
overturned at the height of the room filled with smoke roused
blow. her family by screaming and
Power lines. were down in escaped unharmed. the Bluffs~ .
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and
San Clemente and burglar Attorney Thomas BaldikoslU The fire then spread through
alarms set off by the damage said his stepdaughter, He ather the wall to a n upsta,irs
kept police in all three com-McNeil, managed to flee and bathroom, where it burned
munities rushing to answer false wake him and his wife, in their fiber glass insulation around the
alarms. downstairs bedroom when she tub and filled the upstairs with
"Weird" was the word used by discovered the fire al 6 a.m. in s moke. Fire officials said the
most observers lo describe the their home at 427 Vista Trueba. cause of the blaze is uuder in-
freakish calm conditions whJch No one was injured, be said. vesligali<>Q. No fire was Jit in ttle
prevailed from Newport Beach fireplace at the time, Bald.iltoslrl
Sri.li~ 'Splii ~
On .Oil Price .• > .......
CARA8~LEDA, Venezuela
CAP.)· -1b.:0PEC oil ministers,
di\iided over· whether to freeze
crude oil prices in 1978, wound
up their )Jleeling today without
i°'mediate word on whether
they resolved the split.
;I'be Libyan representative
.ea~lier predicted a double-level
pYfce system for a second year
in a row. •
·~1 t!iink there is going to be a
differenoe. on prices 8Jld a split
aa we b.ad al Doha last year,"
Libyan • Oil Minister Euedin
Mabrou told a television in·
\erv.ifwer.
Afle.r \he m eetin~ ended. a Veneauelan press officer
described the windup as "very
friendly and cordial." He said a
comrtrurtique was being drafted.
At th; 'organization orl
Petroleum Exporting Countries' I
'-l;'lce:.: ~mee\tne ~Doha, Qat•P..-J11Sfit>ecembq., Saudi :
Ar'-bla a'ftd Ule United Arab ,
Emirates opted f a lower price 1 than the OPEC · ority.
' 'Every· s cen\ increase in , the OP.£ price costs U.S.
motorists a half-cent more at lhe
gaioline pump, experts aay.
Fro•PageAJ
BLAST •••
take system of the diesel tanker
apparently sucked fumes into lhe
engine and ignited lbe gasoline. .
The blast and fire did $180,000
damaee to the petroleum depot,
and tanker truck. to Seal Beach while otber areas Fire officials estimated the said.
of the county were being lashed ""'"Ji:===========:;;::.-:=::=================-=====' by howling winds from every
quadrant.
J . Sherman Denny, retired
service manager for the Hunt-
ington Beach Co. and a lifelong
weather buff1,said. "It certa.inlv is strange, au right. Freakish."
He added that this has been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. John
Mo11trella llslened to reports
that winds were playing havoc
in nearby Los Alamitos and were
"blowing to beat the band" while
be looked out a dead calm that
was "still as glass."
Huntington Beach State
Lifeguard Supervisor Bill Kran
likened the dead calm in his
area to the eye or a hurricane.
HunUngton Beach Lifeguard
Lt. Bill Richardson gazed out al
the calm sea and the pall ol dust
stretching t.o Catalina Island and
commented: "It's really strange
stuff."
Small craft advisories re-
mained in effect today from
Point Conception to the Mexican
border with predictions of
southeast winds of up tG 40
knots. Gal.e warnings were in ef.
feet north of Monterey.
Light rain was falling in San
Fernando Valley this morning
and was expected to spread
south later in the day. ,
ld,eanwblle, the National
Weather Service conthrued
warnings to travelers as the
northeast winds continued to
blQ1V in San B..ernardtno,
Rt•erside·and IC•~ Counties"~
up lo 60 miles per JMN,tr. ·
Surf conditions'" alonJt the Orange Coast remained relaUve-
ly calm today u the northeast
winds apparently knocked down
the waves generated by the cold
front. At. 'Ole winch diminished
the forecast wu for surf from
five to seven fftt later in the dB.Y 'and Thursday.
l
.,
' , ·:save :$230°0
on thi~ 'tine Heritage .Console
. . ' ' .,
. .
. , ~ • J •.
,. Only Chandler's
. could offer a value like this one.
Heritage Classic Court Hall Console in rich,
P.ecans with simulat~ tnarble top W32", 014", H. 49"
. Reg. '459. NOW •22goo
Hurry, No phone orders please .
1514 NORTH MAIN
SANTA ANA • 541-4391
•
17
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VOL. 70, NO. 3SS, -4 SECTIONS, '2 PAGES ORANGE COlJ NT'Y, CALIFORN1A
•
T04ay'H Clos ing 1
N.Y.St~ks
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1977
Winds Still on Ba111page;
By The Auocla&.d Preas
Winds that nasted through
California's desert valleys, hall·
ing electricity, stranding
motorists and contributing to at
least nine de aths, continued
tbeir howling rampage today
from extreme N o rthern
California all the way to Mexico.
The winds, wtUle still causing
wid.espread damage today,
began slowing aown as misty
rains fell.
The National Weather Service
said that the east and southeast
108 mph gust:S'"' that turned the San Jeaquln Valle>:• Into a
mustard-colored dust bowl Tues·
day were still blowing as high as
50 and60 mph this momtng.
As a storm front approached
the coastline. winds were we·
peeled to drop even more to
25·40 mph Wednesday nlaht. with light rain, and to 15·25 mph
by morning, forecasters said,
The rain was welcomed at
Va ndenberg Air Force Base,
where a brush fire, in which
three men died, conUnued to
. SALVATION ARMY'S DOROT
Collectlon1 Down Thi• Vtar A
CollectiOm Lower
For Salvation Army
The barring of Salvation Army
collection kettles from two major
shopping centers and several
smaller ones Is one of the key
reasons donations are down this
year countywlde, Salvation Army
officials said today.
Collections for the needy have
been excluded this year from
Fashion Island in Newport Beach
and The City shopping complex in
Orange, according to Capt. AU red
Van Cleef of the Army's Santa
Ana office.
Don a lions are down $6,000 in the
Santa Ana-Tustin area alone, be
s aid. Van Cl~r said contribuU<>M
were also down in the Orange
Coast area but figures were not
immediately available today.
The familiar Salvation Army
keUle, with a man or woman ring-
ing a bell beside it, collects funds
for food and toys for the poor dur·
ing the Christmas season, Van
Cleef Sl\ld. The Salvation Army will dis·
tribute $20,000 this year ror food
baskets, toys and gift boxes for
rest home patients in l()range
County.
, ln addition to funds, the Army
acceptstoYt·
Donat.SonS can be made t>Y call· tne 898-9332 or 542·9150, or by
mallinl lift& and checks to the
Salvatiao Army et e!lher e100
Garden qrove Blvd., Gara.en
Grove, or 911 E. 3rd St., Santa
Ana.' · ·
raee out of control today. •
Firefighters from the Air
Force and surrounding count.jes
Osed bulldozers ip an attempt lo
BIG STORM HITS
NORTH -AS
control the fire, which blackened
more than 5,000 acres or hilly
brusbland on the 94 ,500·acre
base 50 miles northwest of Santa
Barbara.
Killed Tuesday while fighting
the fire were the base com-
* * *
mander, Cot. Joseph ~-Turner,
48, a Korea and Vletnrm war veteran; .Bue Fire Chie Bllly J .
Bell, 44; and Assistant Base Fire
Chief Eugene F . Cooper. 45.
The Vandenberg br ush fire
was one-third c9ntained ,th is
morning, said inspect.or Chris
Spruill of the Santa Barbara
County Fire Department. Light
rains assuied the effort, but con-
tinuing high wind& kept plane&
with !ir•·r!~ardant chemicals grounded, uld Air Force -Sgt.
Jim Scllmldt of the hal'e in·
* * * .
formation olfice.
The other six deaths were
separate traffic fatalities, thne
in the San Joaquin Valley, two In
Northern California and one
near San Diego.
The damasce was concentrated in the flat agricultural San Joa-
quin Valley area around
Bakersfield.
The City Council at Arvin, a
farming town of 7,000, asked the
state to declare It a disaster
area -and estimated damage to
homes. businesses and public
* * *
racllitlefl at $1.25 milliol\, said.
Jeff Cohen of the state
Emergency Service OCfice.
Water was also cut off because
well water could not be pumped
due to the electricity shutoff,
said Sam Mangun or the Arvin·
Edison Waler Storage District.
He said sand bad drifted four
feet high in his firm's parking
lot. t d t Electricity was res ore o
much of the town this morning,
but In neerby Bakersfield, 38,000
(See llAJNS, Page A!)
* * *
Coast ll,Ue for Storm
Warnings ?~stet}, f Or Travelers, Boaters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.llYl"li.c ......... Wrt~ High northeast winds which
wreaked havoc In most of·
Southern California Tuesday
miraculously bypassed t he
Orange Coast but weather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers not to be
complacent.
The batlle or the highs and
lows could bring a quick and
drastic change in the weather
pattern by nightfall, according
to National Weather Service.
Rain began falling early this af-
ternoon.
The freak Santa J\na condition
which brought northeast winds
rQaring in over portions of
Southern California at velocities
of up to 100 miles an hour were expt.cted to diminish late todjlY,
glving way to an jntense )ow
pressure cold front that should bri~ strong southeast winds
witJs rllin. • · The high pressure condiUl!M'l
causing the strong northeast
winds •• beinl ~-.ck~ in'-9 the
low pressuie trOUih. ·a1o"fng the·
front's progress to~ard the
coast.
The cold front was reported
less than 200 miles from the
coast earlier today an~ moving
east al a rate of 20 '1liles an
hour. The front was expected to
bring rain with wi nds 15 to 30
knots by fate today, switching to
the southwest and west on Thurs·
day.
The battle bf the fronts Tues· ·
day was the most freakish In the
memory of oldtimers here.
While northeasr winds or 91ore
than 10 miles an hour were
lashing San Bernardino and
'.tCondo Plans
To Get Review
ByCM Panel ,
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Clf ... ~ rti.c Sl.tt
..,_ ..
o.lt1 ............ _,SW.. Mll<Mf!
HIGH WINDS BRING YARD FULL OF TUMBLEWEEDS TO LAGUNA NIGUEL COUPt.E
Mr. and Mra. K . A. Lehner Have Cle1tnup Problem at 24522 Los Serrano•
Riverside counties and wreaking
death and damage in Kern Coun·
ty, a southeast gale of 40 knots
virtually closed San Diego
Harbor and wps felt as far north
as Dana Point
While all° this was going on to
the south and north, the Orange
Coast was locked in a dead calm·
with an overcast of dust that re·
duced visibility to as low as one
mile offs hore. Visibility at
Avalon, Clltalina Island, was
down to Qne mile in dust by
midarternoon. Visibility offshore
at Newport Beach was three t.9
five miles. ~
. The southeast gale south of
San Diego caused extensive
damage as far south as Rosarit.o
Beach in Baja California.
Oldtimers called it the worst
Another Meeting? J
Crude Oil Price
Frozen by OPEC
convened at any ttme. ~me
min isle rs m entioned the
possibility of calllng a special
price meeting in about three
CARABALLEDA, Venezuela
CAP) -The Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
ended its semi-annual meeting
today without a decision on
wh'ether to raise cr ude oil
prices. In ef(ect, this means a
price freeze until the cartel
holds another price-setting
meeting.
• months. The OPEC ministers could also
The next regularl1 scheduled
seml·aMual meetlrtg of OPEC oil mlnlsters ts.set June 1"; 'bUt
ao OPEC spokesman s'aid an ex-
traordinary meeti~' coul~ be
backdate any increase they de-
cide upon al a later date.
Sp0kesman Hamid Zaheri did
not elaborate on whether or
when a meetlna naigbt be held.
The communique luued~ alter
the meeting said only t.bJt UMti
regular meeting was seheduled
(See OIL, Page A2)
'Papa' Hugh.~?
Te11y ·Moore Says Yes
VANCOUVER, Britlab Colum-Hugbe1 secreUr on a boat off the
bla <AP> -Actress Terry west coast o Mexico lo No-
Moore, who eltkns 1he waa v•mberlNI. ·
marrled to lb• lat e JlowHd . Hu•bea wai tn tilt Ualted
Hus hes, says ahe bo:re a child by States when the baby wu born
· the blllionalre recluse, but the and decided not to so to Weat
baby wu promature a011 died Germ anJ, stw: aaid. wtt.biJJ 21 llOun. •"He didn't 1'...t a &llct:• aald
Ill.al Moore, 41, said in an ln· MJas Moore, "He didn't want
teniew Tuesday that ln Oc-.,.yone to have a claim on JUs
toH!z 1951, the iave birth tJtree estate, IDd he saw t.o ll that I
mOQu.. l)f'emablre&y to a Jlrl dldn •t set prepant •J**· I real• •• oaSIMCI Lib Marie. Tbe tn-lf wanted a tbU~ aa• was
fant 4led a day 1-tel' Of blood· heartbroken wlleD our-.......
po ........ Ald. died. Ret._ &Mi&.:IW WM mar-··~thou ht be Wat Mint
rted to ffllcbei .. 90t MW, and aelflab," Uhl. .,.
lbe lunted a )'tar .• ICO a.a& lbe be that ~ )'a. .went
mJlbl laave .._.a ~ i.r. MID. arouad ebDdnD cGMlaaU1 to ;, 'fte aa&awa Mid~ u.e ·create a.ad mold tbem, tMJ ~ oHui'li!d;y~~·~ri'·-~1'11 would hast ~ ......... .... IUlr.ililt&'ftlmJJl!IJf~c:h. ,,_ )O'Ur H IM. . .. .
• ~--ililil ........... (lee llOOllD. "-Al) . .
storm since 1939. A special
we.a ther bulle tin warned
pleasure 00.tecs to stay out o(
the area and shipping was ,
slowed to a near halt.
Boaters wt\b ventured onto the
waler at Dana Point were hit by
a strong easterly wjnd. A s mall
boat and a catamaran were
overturiled at the height of the
blow.
Power lines were down in
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and
San Cle mente and burglar
alarms set off by the damage
kept police in all three com·
munit~ rushing to answer false
alarm~.
"Weird" was the word used by
most observers to describe the
freakish calm conditions which ·
prevailed from Newport Beach
to Seal Beach while other areas
of the county were being lashed
by howling winds from every
quadrant.
J . Sherman Denny, a·lifelong
weather buff, said, "It certainly
is strange, all right. Freakish."
He added that this bas been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
(See WIND, AZ)
Coast
·weather
Chance of rain increas-
ing to 60 percent tonight
turning to showers Thurs·
day. Cooler Thursda y.
Lows tonight 50 to 55.
Highs Thursday 60 to 65.
IN81•ETeDAY
Y ou don't juat aoy
Chrt.tmaa in the Poulter
houHltoltlba Fountain Volley.
Yoll toll Ch~ Chriltmaa
Chrilt"* /ur the iriJMta who • Uoe IMJ-e, along toith tMir
ffoe brotMrs and lister1.
~~Cl.
I
ers
F,....Pt1pAJ
CONDO •..
· one (convenion), we want to make 1ure It's rltht, .. said
·Sick Adults?
Mayor Norma Hert.og before
the cowicll delayed action on
Ragan's request until February.
Councilman Ed McFarland
suggested that Ragan may want
to remove some of the apart-
ment units in order to qualify·
under the parking segment ol
the ordinance.
Victims of a cruel weekend
telephone hoax have told Hunt-
ing lo n Beac h police in-
vestigators they believe the
callers were "deranged adult.s1" not out-of.school younaaters seH -
ing a thrill.
Police Detecti ve Art Droz in-
terviewed 15 of the hoax victims
Tues day. They were among #
about 100 called 'by someboe
cla iming to have ne ws of a
"tragic accident" and the death
of a family member.~
Droz said some or the '4\Ctlms
heard as many as three adult
voices, two males and one
rem ale.
Fro•PageAl
WIND •••
Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. J ohn
Mpntrella listened to r eports
thitt winds were playing havoc
in nearby Los Alamitos a nd were
"blowing to beat the band" wtule
he looked oot a dead calm that
wmi "still as gla$s."
Huntin gt on Beach St at e
Lafcgqard Supervi sor Bill Kran
likened the dead calm in his
area to the eye of a hurricane.
Huntington Beach Lifeguard
Lt. Bill Richardson gazed out al
the calm sea and the pall of dust
stretching lo Catalina Island and
commented: "It's really strange
~luff."
Small c raft a dvisories re-
m ained in effect today Crom
Point Conception lo the Mexican
border with predictions or
southeast winds of up lo 40
knots. Gale warnings were in ef.
feet north of Monterey.
Light rain was falling in San
Fernando Valley this morning
and was expected to spread
south later in the day.
Meanwhile, the National
Weather Servic e continued
warnings to travelers as the
northeast winds continued lo
b low in San Bernardino,
Riverside and Kem .Counties ;1t
up lo 60 miles per bou~.
.surf conditions along. the
Orange Coast remained relative·
ly calm today as the nottheast
winds apparently kno4ed· down
the waves generated b)"' the.cold
front. As the winds diminhhed
the forecast •-was for surf from
five to sevim feet later in the day
and Thursday.
* * * F..0. PGfle Al .
RAINS •••
or the area's 175,000 customers
were without power and many
st.eel power towers were report-
ed· downed, Cohen said.
In the Taft area southwest of
n akersfield. visibility was cut lo
50 feet in the blowing dust this
morning.
In Fresno, 100 miles north, the
winds were calm, but suspended
dust in the air cul visibility to
less than a mile.
Far lo the north, in Humboldt
County, 65,000 of 100,000 homes
and businesses were without
electricity today and a state of
emergency was declared In t~
county. Two persons were re-
ported killed when a redwood
tree fellontheircar.
Mesa Woman
Takes Life
Costa Mesa police said today
the Tuesday hanging death of a
56-year-old woman was an ap-
parent suicide.
The body or Eleanor Lorraine
Regaldo was discovered about 3
p.m . by family members at an
apartment at 241 Palmer St.,
Costa Mesa.
Police and paramedics were
called lo the scene but were una·
ble to revive the victim. Police
said they discovered a sulclde
note near the victim.
DAILY PILOT
·-··--"'~'·"*'-, ..... Qlrtef VKe ............. 0.-.. __
,_..ic..... ·--T ................ ...... flt ...
~ ....... ..,.p,,...
A•tt-~~
C• ,
Victims of the boax calls Fri·
day and Saturday said the calls
came al all times or t.be night
and even in the early morning
hours.
None of the recipients of the
calls actually lost a ny relatives,
police said.
T he pranksters appa rently
used a current telephone dlr-'C•
tory and called their victim.s in
alphabetical order. Droz said.
None oi the victims received
more than one phone call -
making it djfficult to trace the
source of the messages, Droz
said.
Droz i s working with
telephone company officials in
e ffort t o trac k d o wn the
perpetrators of tbe ghoullsh
prank. He declined to discuss
the methods being employed in
the lbvestigation.
Most of the hoax victims are
Huntington Beach residents, but some live in Costa MesaJ
Newport Bea ch and F-0untaln
Valtev.
Droz said he believes m~y
victims did not report t!w hoax
ca11s to police. '
"M~ny probably j ust called a
relative to chec~ out the 'death,·
but we will never know how
m any," he added.
Most of the victims he in-
terviewed said they heard what
sounded like police radios in the
background, Droz said.
,.,,,_ Page Al
OIL ••. . -.
for June. Despite their inability.
to settle the oil price question,
the windup of the two·day
session at this resort outside
Caracas was "very friendly and
cordial," a Venezuelan press of-
ficer s aid. ,
A Saudi-led bloc pressed for a
1978 freeze on the c urrent price
of $12.70 for a 42.gallon barrel. It
was opposed principally by Iraq,
Libya and Algeria, which de-
manded Hikes ranging up to 23
percent.
Experts calculate that every
10 percent increase In the OPEC
price costs U.S. motorists one
cent more per gallon at the
s•sollne pump.
• The United Arab Emirates
mlnlater, Mana Sued Olalba,
told a news conference ;ruesday
that unanimity was posalbJe only
if the 13 ministers agree lo hold
the line on prices. He said his
government would freeze oil
prices unilaterally if the OPEC
majority demanded an increase.
Frot11 Page Al
HUGHES ••.
Miss Moore said that at the
lime she met Hughes, he was 43
and she was 18.
Arter a one-year courtship.
she said they wer"e married by
the master of a boat Hughes
chartered. She said her mother
and Hughes aide Noah Dietrich
were witnesses, but that Hughes
later destroyed the ship's log -
the only legal record of the mar·
rlage.
She said the marriage was
legal in California and Mexico
a nd that they were n ever
divorced but that she left him
alter eight years.
Miss Moore, who was married
three other times, now lives
with her children tn BrentwOOd,
Calif., where she is writing her
autobiography. She said it ls
mainly about Hughes.
Interviewed last year a week
after Hughes died, she told the
Fort Lauderdale (Fla.> News
that she was secretly married to
him but did not plan to file a
claim against hJs estate.
Miss Moore said in the News
interview that there "may have
been" children from the alleged
marriage, but refused to be
more speclnc.
· She said in the News interview
• that "Howard was the greatest
Jover J ev9r had. He was the ~l."
She is-to appear as a 'witness
in Las Vegas in litigation over
the billionaire's so-called
Mormon will, which she c1anna
is a fake. -
A White Clarist•as
This is probably not what tbe Anthony
Kolar family of Costa Mesa would call a
white Christmas, but this is what they
found when they awoke today at their
home at 2117 Elden Ave. Credit for the
~resh . blanket of mostly white toilet paper
1s gorng to members of the Costa Mesa
High School cross country team who re·
portedly became inspired during a party
at the Kolar home Tuesday night.
SWiss Vaults Bid Fails
Business Records Held by Grand Jury
A bid by officials of Swlss
Vaults Inc. to bave their btlai-
ness records returned -by grand
jury investigators failed Tues·
day in Orange County Municipal
Court when Judge Jryae Black
was told the county Grand Jury
is still investigating Swls"·
Vault's busi.Qess macbinaUon.s.
~ At tbe forefront of that &raod
j ury probe is what operators of
Swiss Vaults· claiJn was .. a f l.5
million robbery ol silver bullion
and gold coins at their Santa
Ana storage vaults last July.
Santa Ana police Investigators
have indicated they suspect the
alleged robbery was little more
than a coverup for the embeule-
ment of customers' sifver and
gold.
Tuesday, Deputy District At-
torney Cha.rles McFarland told Judge Black the Jury's in-
vestigation will be completed by
Jan. 5. • Simultaneously, M.cPartand
asked that the jCIGge delay male·
ing a decision on the request for
return of Swiss Vault business
.. ~ records unW the probe is com·
C S lw l B . d pleted. arpo. c 0 oar. Judge Black agreed to the • ~ postponement and set Jan. 9 as
the date to hear the plea for a re·
turn of the buaiiless records as Buys ~T-M Serv;ce~ well as ll motion to quash stUl l ~ 1 ti outstanding search warrants.
It was on a Saturday afternoon
Ragen told councilmen abouUt
percent ol the Vendome rent-.
en would be unable '° afford the
transition from renting to
ownership.
· Rent for a three·bedroom
apartment would climb from
$350 a month lo a payment. of
$452.37 to own the same unit,
said Ragan. This figure does not
include taxes or a ssociation
dues . which would push the
monthly payment as high as $590
a month, according to Planning
Department figures.
Although councilmen ques-
tioned Ragan about the pay.m.ent
hike, they agreed that the cost ol
a unit should not be a factor tn a
declslon on the request.
Ragan said he is prepared to
spend $7~.ooo to add a tennis
court and upgrade the facilities
with new paint and dishwashers
for each unit.
Plane Turns
Back Safely
An Air California Lockheed
Electra propjet wltb $6
passengers aboard made a pre-
cautionary -and safe -return
landing to Orange County
Airport this momlnc shortly
alter takeo(f. ·
Air Cal officials said. a smoke
indjcator light went oa in the
pilot'• cabin. promptiJle the
aborted flight.
Airport tower personnel re-
ported no pro~lems on tbe
turnaround landirig of Flight 15,
which was bound for San Jose
and Lake Tahoe.
Capistrano Unified School Dis· m enl with the Newport-Mesa' last July that Swiss vault plin·
trlct trustees have .authorized district is that it will allow the cipal Vincent Carrano called · police to the firm add reported Inmates to Leave district administrators to buy Capistrano district to have ac-the alleged $l.S million l.he!t.
five years worth or computer cess to a sophisticated computer Carrano said he went. to his LA PAZ, Bolivia <AP> -The
services from the Newport· Mesa system without having to buy Santa Ana office in respons~ to a United States and Bollvla pave
Unified district for $527,000. the system or employ additional call from an unknown customer reached agreement in principle
Among the services covered personnel at this time. who s4id he wanted to make a to allow Americans imprisoned
by the agreement are high The agreement will make d . r il b lli here on cocaine charges to serve
school class scheduling, report available to every Capistrano eft°2!!t~ ~;:! b1e ~~ned the out their sentences in their own
card preparation, personnel and school teacher a bank of student . door to let the customer in that country. Of the 32 U.S. citizens
business office record keeping objectives and test questions de-Carrano said he {aced a revolver now held, howe,.er, only about
a nd scoring of tests, said veloped by the Newport-Mesa anc!wu bound and Waaled wbU• sjx are expected to be able lo
TrumaTI Benedict. deputy district over a 10 year period, the robbers made orf with the leave Immediately when the superintendent. Mrs. O\terton said. h 1 treaty takes effect. Tru~tees a ls o told ad--:;:::;:;i;:::::::;=1=;;;::;;:::::;:J:;::;=======;;;:::::a=u=.====================:;::;;;;;;;;:;;::;:;;:;=::;;;::;:=::=::========:;;;;;;:~
mlnistrators to draw up bid
specifications for computers lo
be installed al CUSD offices and
in the district 's three high
schools. ·
School board members ap-
proved both items on 5·0 votes
with trustees Robert Bachelor of
Laguna Niguel and Ted Kopp of
Capistrano Beach absent.
"I think this move lo com-
puters is long overdue," said
trustee Jan Overton of Dana
Point, who has worked as a com-
puter programmer.
"The school district is, in ef-
fect, a $29.4 million corporation
with 21 subsidiaries, using out-
dated business methods."
Mrs. Overton said the advan-
tage of working out an agree-
Tank Truck
Driver Dies
FromBunu
A Lakewood man who was
critically burned wben his
gasoline tanker truck exploded in
· Huntington Beach Dec. 3died this
morning at UC Irvine Medical
Center.
. Huntington Beach fire officials
said that the victim, William L.
Dennis, 38, of 4458 Iroquois St.,
Lakewood, was fueling bis truck
when it exploded in names.
He was hollpltallied with
second and third degtee butna
over most of his body, officlais
said.
A coroner's spokesman said to-
day, that an autopsy would be
performed lo seek the exact cause
of death.
Another worker suffered minor
burns in the incident at the
Chevron Oil Cpmpany's
petroleum d e])ot at Gothard
Street and Talbert Avenue.
• 11! I f I Ill ••
Save $:2·30°0
on this fine Heritag~ Console
Only Chandter's
, could offer a value like this one.
Bi~haw ReJ!Prts Heritage Classic Court Hall Console in rich.
pecans with simulated marble top W32". 014", H. 49"
Reg. •459. NOW '22900
Hurry, No phone orders please.
1 Brison Death Threat
Former Rep. Atldttw J .
H.,,...aw'• W• WM il>r:ut.eoed
wblle b waa imprilontd at
Cbloo State Prilon OQ a briber)'
Chari•. 'KOCE-'IV re~rter Jlm .~!WlcUodu; t.; • An lqtervltt Coopel' conduct-
ed •ltia llluba~ will be broad• ca•t at I p.m . Tbur•d•i on
ChannelS>.
• COODW Mid ~w &.old Wm· hl1 Ille had bMb nuqen4
before bl.I t.r...rw tO Oranp . County Jail iilit lU pollU·
..
.
1514 NORTH MAIN
SANTA ANA • 541-4391
Tues~ Wed.. Thurs.. and Sat.: 9-..30 to ':30
Mon.: 12 to 9 • f n.: 9'.30 to 9;00
I
#
Wednesday December 2\ 1977 DAIL y PILOT A3
Board OKs C.a1npaign Monitor Panel~
By KATH\' CLANCY GI .. 0.01\' 1>1"'4 tWff
Ao Orange CQwit.v fau c~·
pai1n practices comml1 on
maay be created by county u~rvi.sors to monitor the ac·
tlvltles of those seeking coun. tywlde ofnees.
That was the informul agree-
ment supervisors reached on a
4·1 vote Tuesda~ Ill they be&an
going through five campaign re·
form ordinances submitted ror
their approval.
Supervisors also agreed that
candidates tor county ofrlc
s hould dllcl~e the sources or all
<.'ampalan donations no matler
how thriO or small
St6lte campaign l~ws require
public disclosure of donations
of SSO or more.
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
cast thl' lone dis~enting vote on
erealion of the fair campaign
praclicts commission.
He argued that enforcement of
an ordinance lhat may be adopt-
ed by supervisors should be left
ue> to the district attorney.
A ,.,... ..
SHIRLEY AND BILL RAMSER WITH REWARD POSTER
They've Got Their Cat Back -for $1 ,000
s 1,000 Kitty
Wuple Pay for Pet's Return
Li\ ~t ESA ti\P 1 The JOY ur Chn!>lmas is a scrufry striped
tat naml'd Laur:.a who means "everything in the world" to her °'' nt'r~ and $1.UOO to t" o couplci. who found her
Shirley :.ind Hill Ramser have no children. When their pet
r:rn :rn ay thl'.Y pul up their lifo savini:s to f:et her back
POSTEllS PROCLAIMING A $1,000 reward were distribul·
cd throughout this San Diego suburb. For 10 days the publicity
produN•d hundrl'ds of phone calls but no cat.
Ori(' callC'r told the worried couple to "meet me and bring
' some money."
Thc Ramsers put their money in a special rund and hired an
altornt•y. W. B. Nea l. After investigating numerous leads. Neal
asked : "Do you have any idea how many gray and black tiger-
striped cats there are?"
DOZENS OF-CATS WERE off'ered to replace LatJra: but
Mrs. Hi.lm~cr ~aid , ··To us, that is like saying lo the parents of a
ki dnapped child . 'Oon"t worry, we will give you another
d11 Id . .. ~ • ,.,. 1!' ••
True to a tip from a Losl Angeles womah that the cal prob-
ably "as hidin~ near the Ramsersl home, she was found Tues-
di.ly n1J!ht in an empty garage or an apartment complex -b ut
not by the Ra msers.
THE FINDERS -~R. AND Mrs. R. G. Bell and Mr. and
Mrs E. G. Bays -all face major medical expenses and would
n •ee ive their reward today, said Neal. ··w e· re just glad lo have her back, she's our baby," said
Ram:.l'r ··1t ..... ill be u good ChnstmilS now , gOl:>d for everyone.··
GM to Eliminate
100-voice Chorus
I.) ET HOIT IAP) General
M oto r~ Corp. ·s 100 -volce
employcl's chorus gives its last
conc<'rt under company auspices
tonight. The company, which
earned S2 9 billion last year , is
cutting off the group's $22,000
annual subsidy.
The GM Choruh, founded in
the depths of the Depression in
J933 by the late William S.
Knudsen. who rose to be GM
prc~idenl. also taped a concert
last week thnt will be broadcast
Chistmas Eve on radio station
WJR.
'J'he group will not even sing at
the firm's annual employee
Christmas concert. A Wayne
Stale univerl'ity f'roup has been
hired for $2!10.
Reagan States .
Party Stand
WASHINGTON (AP )
Former California Gov. Ronald
Reagan says he differs wllh the
ttepubllcan National COmmlUee
on how to oppo1e tM Paama
Canal treaty but wUI coettsnae to
work for the party.
"l am concerned that some re-
ports have given tbe 1mpreaslon
that Republican National Com·
mlllee omcials and I are in dis·
agreement and that I have
withdrawn my su_ppoi'l of the
party ," Reagan said In a at.ate-
ment released ln Waabl~ on
Tuesday.
•'This lmprtssion ts mis·
taken,'' Reagan said. "1o the
• extent that there 11 any dlf· ferenc~. it la limited to thfl w1ya
and meam by whlcb to beat op·
pose the propoud Panama
treaties u they b.ve been wnt-
ten " ... '
GM s pokes man Phili p
Workman confirmed the action
and cited a letter sent to the
singtrs ih August by' Stephen H.
Fuller, vice president for
personnef administration.
It said in part t.bat GM bad
made a "lo ng and com -
prehensive evaluation of the
cos ts and benefits" of company·
sponsored etnployee activities.
"In the C89e of the GM chorus,
rising costs •and the relatively
small number of employees who
actu ally belong t o the group
were the major factors. Jn other
words, the amount of money re-
quired to support the chorus was
dispr()portionate to the
employees who parti cipated.'·
the letter~aid.
l''rank G. M<irch, chorus direc·
tor for 22. y(!ars, said about a
third df the singers are not. GM
employees. Choros member'S
say all but 'five or six of lbe non· ~mployees arc members of
employee famUJes or are former
employees "who wanted to keep
singing.'' ,
"After we explained to the or-
-tlclals that we bad advance boofdnll tor a doeen eoneens.
the1 werelood enoqb to extend our fun lag through the Chrl1tmaa Mason," said Rose
Weber, a former choir presi·
dent. "But 'that. was It. Jf they
had as'*l U1 to trim our budget,
we would have done so. We have
done it before, when funds were
U,hl. But they dldD 't uk us."
The $22,000 subsidy inclUded
the safraies of Murch and an ac·
companlst. The sln1era got
nothing but mileage to 1oine
conce.rU. 'Tfii-group i•ve more
than 20 concerts thl1 ytar.
GM'• proftll Wtn exceeded
only by American Telephone &
Tele1raph Cc>. at. $3.8 bllllon.
ATlsT ii clallfled as a utility
alnee moat or ill earnln1s come
hom ttlecommunkaUons.
,,
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said the distrid attorney would
be responsible for enforcing u
county campaign refor m or
dinance as well as state cam·
paign laws.
What the commiss.ion would
do, Diedrich said, is point out
publicly campaign practices
that are not necessarily illegal
but questionable. Commissio'l
statements, then. could be pn11l·
ed by the press, he sajd. f
"You are laying quiie a bit or
credence on what the press is
San Juan's
Preserve
Under Fire
By WILLIAM HODGE
Of IM Dally l'llel Stalt
An intliativc aimed al repeal·
ing San Juan Capistrano's con·
trovers 1al agricultural preserva·
l ion program has qualified for
the March 7 ballot. city officials
s aid Tue~day
The initiative effort gleaned
996 valid signatures of San Juan
voters. The signatures of 801 reg·
istered voters were needed t.o
qualify the measure for the
March ballot.
T ony Forster . a backer of lhe
initiative, was pleased al the
m easurc·s qualification.
"We wanted to put this issue
back in front or the people, .. he
s aid. "The council majority vot·
ed this program in even thou~h
the voters rejected it last year. ·
San Juan bas 230 acres of
farmland in an agricultural
preservation zone. which pro·
hibits development and main·
tains the agricultural usage. The
program was approved 3 to 2 by
councilm<.'n earlier this year.
'"In spite of fi erce opposition
to the prog ram they passed it
a n y w ay .·· F o r s t er said
"Thcy·rc lthc City Council 1
tr<i m piing a ll over the property
rights of fi ve peopl e.··
If appro\"cd in Ma rch. the in
ilwtin• measure would repeal
the city"s agriC'ultoral prescrva·
tion program. Councilmen are
~x p cc t e d t o approve the
signatun: Vt'rif1 cation and of·
ril·iall y plac<' the measure on the
ballot nt tonight's meeting.
The meetmg will take place at
7 pm. in City Council chambers.
32400 P<iseo Adelanto
Woman -Buried
Under Papers
NEW YORK (AP) A 70·
year.old Long Island woman is
deud after being buried under a
huge pile or books, ne~spapers
and press clipping$.
Police said the pile fell on
Eleanor Barry as she lay In her
bedroom and the weight of the
pa pers muffled her c ries for
help.
Police said they had to use an
ax to smash open the door to the
woman's bedroom becaus e lhe
collapsed pile blocked their en-
try. They said the entire house
was mted with towers or books.
newspapers. shopping bags and
assorted papers .
Wn Escapes;
Deputy Ousted
SAN RAFAEL CAP) A
Marin County deputy s heriff
who was buying coffee while a
prisoner escaped -has been
suspended for 30 days.
After escaping, the prisoner
held two men hostage for nearly
seven hours.
Dennis Shine . a n 18-year
veternn. was ordered suspended
following a disciplinary hearing.
He was cited for "failure to
maint ain a prisoner securely ...
Santos Yorba
Service Held
Funeral services were held to·
day in Santa An a for Santos Mike
Yorba, a member of Orange
County's pioneer Yorba family
whodiedSunday. He was86.
Mr. Yorba was a native or
Or1qe County.
He 18 survived by his wile,
Salome. and four sons. Mr. Yorba
also leave.•11 grandchildren and
39 great-grandchildren .
IUDI to Fly Again
WASHINGTON (AP) Sen.
Hubert HQ9phrey, who traveled
on Air Florce Oa• with Pre1ldenl
Carter earlier thts year, will
board Air Force IJ for a . trip
home to Mmnetota on Thuriday.
Vice Prealcteat. Mondale will
1lve Hum.J)hrty, bll loaa•time
friend and poUUcal mentor, a
ride on the •Ice presidential jet.
eoing to do," Schm it said.
"I think It would be oew when
the commission made '1 state-
ment,'' Dit:<lrlchconUnued.
Supervisor Thom~ RUey s aid
the commisition would serve to
encourage c andidates to be
res ponsible for stul,fmen\s con-
tained IJl their broch\,lres
In past campaigns, he sajd,
some o:>ailers have coJll~ined
materials ··that have no basis in
truth."
Supe rvisor Ralph Clark ,
whose own ca mpaign reform
LEAVING COUNTY POST
Recorder Carlyle
measure was among thoeo belo1
considered, said formation of
the commission was al the heart
oC reform efforts.
Sul)ervisors bave yet to air~
on hmlts for Individual cam·
paign donations, as well as
limits on the amounts lobbyists
may spend on officeholders and
their aides.
Tl\ey were to continue <Us·
cussion on the reform measures
today.
Riley said a publk hearinc
would be held on the final
0.Uf Pii.t Sllll ,_...
POSITION COMBINED
County Cletk St John
Supervisors Merge
Two County Posts
The elected office of Orange
County Clerk William St John
and Recorde r J . Wylie Carlyle
were combined into one office by
c·ount.> !>Upervisors Tuesday.
Thal means when Carlyle re-
tires from h is post next spring.
he will be replaced by a new
t•lected officeholder . the county
clerk-recorder .
Howeve r . i n a ddition t o
supervisors' unanimous decision
to combine the t\\o offi ces was a
second vote to endorse proposed
legislation tha t would permit
Orange County Superior Court
judges to appoint their own
court clerk.
Supervisors Ralph Clark and
Laurence S<;_hmlt voted against
the endorsement saying it is im·
portant to have an independent
elected officeholder serving the
courts as part of government's
checks and balances system.
Jn addition. Clark complained,
such legislation would ·•n y in
the face of the action we just
took to consolidate the offices.•·
But Supervisor Thomas Riley
contended that the actions
parallel one another.
lf the legislatJon were sQc-
ecssful, he s aid, the duties of St
John's office, which directly
serves the court, would become
the duties or the new j udge·
appointed clerk.
St John's other (unctions then
would be combined with those of
the new elected clerk-recorder.
St John said the court-related
func tions would involve the
trans fe r or about 150 of his 170
workers.
"It would completely wipe us
out.·• he continued. "It is the
minnow swallowing the whale
concept.''
Lois Lundberg, chairman of
Gem
Talk
Bu J.C. llUMPllRIES
G.:rrw/ogiM
A RARE GIFT
lo lhe SmUh11oman
the county Republican Central
Committee. said while the com·
mittee doesn't object t.o the con-
~olidation It docs object to the
transfer of any elected clerk·~
!unctions to an appointed posi-
tion
Supe rvisor Philip Anthony
said. ''I think we are hearing
some scare talk here today that
1sn 't really very accurate.''
At present. he said. those
employees working in the courti.
are being asked "to serve two
maste rs.·· St John and the
Judges.
The separation, he continued. would help resolve complaints
about that system by assigning
court employees to the courts.
St John said the proposed
legis lation would be opposed by
county clerks and other elected
office-holder s throughout the
state and would be difficult to
pass.
ln fact. St John said Tuesday.
he was concerned about the con·
solidaUon of the clerk's and re·
corder's offices because it would
m"ean the loss of another elected
office holder.
Ir super visors wish lo con-
s olidate. he said, that combina-
tion would be the most logical.
Carlyle also called the con-
solidation n logical one.
But he opposed it, saying "I
think there should be some of·
ficials elected by the public. I
think the people ought to have a
voice in elechng officeholders ...
Carlyle noted California Jaw
permits such consolidation and
1t is occu rring in caunttei;
throughout the state.
Howev~r. he said, the low
originally was designed to s er'\'e
sma ller counties where not so
many elected officeholders were
needed.
version once at is pulled to1et.her
by County Counsel Adrian
Kuyp r.
Kuyper warned last week lhat
impostng limits on campai1n
ccmt.rlbutlons might create an
enforcetnent problem If it were
In effect for the 1918 campalan.
That. ls because candidates
who already have stoked UwM
cumpolgn col!crs with eontribu· '
lions exceeding proposed limits
cannot be held to answer for ex-
c ce d ln g a new limitation, '•
Kuyper snid
Ex-Krishna I
.Chief Gets
lnnnunity
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of"" o.itr ,., ... 1~11
A former head o! the LagWl~
Beach Hare Krishna tem ple
t'ased out from under a murder
indictment Tuesday when he •
agreed to become a prosecution
witness In the Stephen John
Bovan murder case.
Roy Chrhitopher Richard, 28,'
o f Laguna
Beach. was
granted im-
munity from
pros ecution
by Superior
Court Judge
Robert
Kneeland
after pros-
ecutors t old
K n e c 1 a n d iucHuo
Richard "is a necessary witness
for lhe people."
The affidavits supporting the''
request for immunity filed by ·
prosecutor David Carter said
Richard could testify about
other defendanL'i in the case db
cussing Bo\•an 's killing.
Richard is the third person rn
the Bovan case to receive an im·
munity grant.
Earlier. Fra.nk Rossi. one 'If
the so-called "llali~s" alleged-
ly hired to gun down Bovan , wai. •
given a similar reprieve from·
prosecution.
And Rick Willis, a part owner
in a Newport Beach firm with
bus iness lies lo Richard and
other defendants in the case:
was also given Immunity in re-
turn for his testimony.
Tuesday's grant of immunity.r
to Richard lefl seven persons in••'
dieted and c harged with the Oc\111
22 shooting.slaying of Bovan out-
s id e a Newport Beach
res taurant.
The 28-year·old Cor tner high
pnesl of the l.iiguna Beach Hare
Krishna sect was one of the~\
or the eight murder defend
named in a grand jury indic ·
ment. to be taken into custody. .
It wasn 't until authorities
agreed to lower his bail Crom
$500.000 to Sl00.000 that Richard
surrendered to Newport Beach
police.
The tip off that he was li kely
to turn on his fotmer Krishna
and business mates came Fri·
day when he was released from
eust.ody wilhout posting bail. •
Earlier in the investigation or
Bovan 's murder and a spin off
probe into the fin ances of
Pr~adam Dis tributing Inc.. it
was r evealed that Richard ls an
officer of the high flying
Newport Re a ch investment
fi rm.
In its indictment. the county
grand jury alleged that Bovan
was killed because he was a
participant in the lddn3pplng ·of
P r as ada m leader Alexander
Kulik. 27, of Newport Beach, for
ransom.
The famous S mithsonian •
Institution lo Washington has just
received one ot the most important
gem contributions ever made to any
museum anywhere in the world. Tbe
b eautiful 62.89 carat Transvaa•
Diamond has been don~ted by Mr.
· and Mrs. Leonatd Wilkinson, who
had purchased the stone only last
year. The transvaa1 was mlned 10
years •to ln SoUth Africa. It was eut
a qtLru.let o~ pe~ect peall sl1aprd ~ubt~
s~~doked bg a dAru)\auc ~u~e
o~ baquefle dtrullo1tds . . . , from ·a 240 cant crystal.' It is a
champa1ne-colored dlamond, &nd ia •
cut in a pear shape. ll js mOUftled u
the pendant OJ\ a cold neckltce.,
which also bas 108 other diamaiidl. f
totalling 44.67 carats, attached. The
Transvaal has been rated by expert
appulaen as baring a very blgh
clarity. The gemological curator of
the Smlthlonlan says the Transvaa~
ts \h<1 lupst 1em Sift given to the
lnatltuUon Ii.Dee tbe Hope Diamend.
The SmtthlontUI bu ~-named UUs
11rt the ·•v\ct9tta Traan,al" ln
honor ol Kn. WUkiftlOft. •llale fttst
\
narM I :Vletortt. It ma•H a 1&unnitn1 1ddftioe to he
SmlthlGlllaJi•s ~oto11ca1 ...,.,.
1111ial11f J <"3r.•" ot n1blt•
~11<1 J (";>,.~., of J14nK111J•
pt1tTd ~I '• . .SOO
tlHl•IJ!"' houh. Y· .lO A.M. 1111 tl:JO P \I
1823 NEWPORT BLVO COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TEAMS
30 VIN'S IN Tt-«E SA...i LOCATION
4'••
•·. •, ~
wit•
Tom ~lliDe , _ ....... _,...,:_.• ,/·
THE PRONE J'OWES: This
is the season when the telephone ~an be the source of a whole lot
of trouble. Wrong numbers can
be a disaster.
You are reminded of this
menace by news dispatches re-
ported today about the hapless
couple from over in Encino who
have filed a lawsuit alleging
they have suffered $1.3 million
in telephonic inconvenience.
, In this case, the couple, Ell B.
and Bella Abrams, allege that
their telephone number was
used in a comic's skit on na-
tional television.
According to the legal action,
it is asserted that the comedum
suggesting that by calling a cer-
tain phone number, you could
get "free drinks."
THE ABRAMS CLAIM th1!1
didn't tum out to be very funny
when their phone continued t-0
ring oft the hook for the next five
days. Calls continued with Jess
frequency for several weeks.
The sad case of the Abrams
aside, this is indeed the season
that edltors h e r e in the
newspaper office become ex-
ceeding I y nervous over
telephone numbers.
The charity agency; for exam-
ple, drops by with a little news
release suggesting that people who have toys or gifts for the
needy may call a certain
telephone numb<?r to have their
donation picked up.
The editor will take one glance
at such a news release, shudder,
and rolls his eyes heavenward.
You see, with that telephone
number, you only n eed one
s mall typographical error and
some poor soul in San Clemente
or Huntington Reach is going to
start ~cttmg a lot of strange and
unsolicited telephone calls.
THEN THE HARASSED party
1s going to put in his own phone
call to the newspaper office.
His message to the editor will
likely fall short of being in the
Yuletide spirit. ·
One Christmas season a few
years back, the paper was re·
quested to publish a phone
number that a certain service
organization had arranged so
children could speak with St.
Nick at the North Pole. We published this public
service announcement so we
eould bring joy and happiness to
youngsters all along the Orange
·Coast.
TROUBLE WAS, the number
suffered a g r ievous typo·
grapical error. 1l was printed
"''ith just one digit wrong.
Two days later. we got a call
from this hapless, innocent
citizen who. in hoarse and raspy
voice, asked if we couldn't call
off the children. It was his phone
number that had been Incorrect·
ly printed instead of Santa's
:;'Pecial tine.
At first, he tried to tell the
children they had the wrong
· number. After hearing the dis·
may in many small voices,
hOwever, he decided to go along
with the gag. Day and night, as • !t}.S phone rang, he played Santa.
, w,Jten his voice gave out. his
• wife played Mrs. Santa, suggest·
;-ing that St. Nick was busy in the
." t~y factory.
LET ME TELL you, it's dif·
ficult to explain typographical
~ errors to a non.volunteer Santa
"· Claus who just lost two nights
~ sleep. ~ • So we gave him the Good Guy
~ oJ the Year Award. And we put • m, picture in the paper. ~ , And wished him a Merry i Christmas.
.............
Watergate figure John N.
Mitchell, 64, suffering from
a rare and degenerative
form of arthritis in the hip,
will be furloughed from his
1-4-year prison term so doc~
tors can decide if the hip
must be replaced. He would
have been eligible for
parole June 21, 1978.
Fanners
Protest
Editorial
LUBBOCK, Texas <AP)
Striking farmers, perched atop
dozens of tractors today, de·
layed delivery of a newspaper
which had printed an editorial
critical of the nationwide farm
strike.
Police arrested 3l people for
blocking traffic and tried unsuc·
cessufuUy to tow away tractors
until the farmers moved from
the scene to try to close Lub·
bock 's wholesale food outlets.
Officials said no charges were
filed and al) those arrested were
released.
Ford (}~• Ta.¥ Cett
WASHINGTON (At>)
Former President Gerald R .
Ford said today the Ameri~n
public "damn well needs a tax
reduction.'' and added the cut
(_1_N_SH_O_R_T_J
should be bigger and more
generous to the m lddle class
than President Carter is plan·
ning.
"Ir we don't get some relief
for the middle-Income people
... 1 think you'll have a tax re·
volt," Ford said. He said he
meant people earning $12,000 lo
$30,000 a year.
The new Carter plan would
s harply reduce taxes at the
lower end of the scale, virtually
eliminating levies on families
with incomes of $10,000 or less.
but would offer lltUe tax relief to
p e ople in blgber income
brackets.
~onRa•pa~
By the Associated PreH
Striking miners roaming
through northS!a.slem Alabama
set fire to an office, bloodied non-
.1.1nion workers in fisUigbts and
s mashed windows out of c<>iinpany
.vehicles at one mine, sheriff's of·
licialssay. (Related Photo,A16)
Fifty state troopers were dis-
patched lo National Guard
armories at Scottsboro and Fort Payne, Ala. DeKalb County
Sheriff BUI Ables aald he and his
deputies advised non-union
mines to close before sunrise.
.
Priees Take Jump
Largest Increase in Five Monlhs
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Hl1her price. for beet. fresh
fruit and other food products
helped push consumer prices up
by .5 percent 1n NovemtHlr, the
largest increase in five months,
the Labor Department said to-
day.
Overall food prices increased
.6 percent ln November, also the
bicgest advance in five months,
and Drlces of ot.ber &oocb con·
sumers buy rose .s percent, the
moat in nine months. Prices. ot
nett' aulomobUes wer4' up 1.5
percent.
THE NOVEMBER increase in
the Consumer Price Index ap.
peared lo cooftrm expectaUom
of many economists that the
pace of infiatioo will quicken in
months ahead, with higher JOod
prices a major factotr.
Consumer prices bad In·
creased just .3 percent 1n each or
the preceding three montba.
percent and for apparel. u"p .s
percent. The cost to the con-
sumer of aasollne and motor oil
advanced .8 percent, but that.
was less than ln October.
Prices of fuel on and coal
declined .8 percent, the first
price drop since early ln 1976,
the Labor Department said.
The .6 percent increase in food
prices compared with mes ol
just .1 percent in September and
October and was the' largest
since a .8 percent increase in
June. The lncreaaea bad been
expected since wholesale food
prices rose steeply in the past
two months.
THE LABOR Department said
beef prices were up 2. 7 percent
and fresh fruit prices jumped 6.3
percent. Egg prices rose for the
first time in three months and
there also were higher prices for
pork, poultry, cereals, bakery
products, and processed fruits
and vegetables.
There was some relief from
those lncreaaas beeauae of
decllnes tn pricts for d alry pro-
duct 11. coffee and freab
vegetables.
The cost of aervices rose ·'
percent in November. the same·
a.a tn October. Morteage interest
rates declined for the fourth con·
secutlve month and the cost of
medical care iwe .s percent. the
smallest lncreue Ulla year, the
Labor Department aa1d.
THE nGURES were adjusted
for ae&10C1a1 variatlons. In a eeparai. report on eam-
inga. the Labor Department said
the p urcbulnc power of
workera• paycbeeka declined ·'
percent In November. on a
seasonally adjusted baab,
although 1t was still 3.9 percent
better than a year earlier.
It aald the November decline
in ao-ealled real spendable earn-
ings was due to a .3 percent
decrease in hours worked, plua
the erosion of purchasing power
due to inflation during the
month.
NATION I WEA THEA
~meted
Comedian and Impressionist
George Kirby, 58, was found
guilty Tuesday on two
counts of possessing heroin
for sale. Sentencing has
been scheduled for Jan. 30. The Labor Department said
prices consumers pay lncreased
6.7 percent between November
1976 and last month. It said its ·
Consumer Price Index stood at
185.4 of the 1967 average of 100,
meaning it cost $185.40 to
purchase goods priced at $100 10 Women in. Combat Unit,s
years earlier. WASHINGTON {AP> -Jn a further forward than the rear of
T H E I NCREASE io food major policy change, the Army a brigade deployed tor combat.
prices in November had been ex· is opening missile units and The •ctioo will open all but 16
peeled, but the .5 percent in-other combat support asalgn-of the Army•a 377 mflltary
crease in prices of other goods ments lo women soldiers. specialties to women officers
was higher than economists bad The decision means women and enllat.ed pel'IOJll)el.
predicted in advance. It was the soldiers may be exposed to The new policy is the latest ln
biggest increase since a .7 per-hostile fire in any future war. a series of moves that have
cent rise last February, and the However, the new policy will gradually widened opportunities
• Labor Department blamed it still bar women from servin1t in for women in the armed forces
primarily on higher auto prices. direct combat roles with the in-since 1970.
The 1.5 percent Increase in fantry, field artillery, tanks, ' The Army bu always banned
new car pritt!s included bilher combat engineers and similar women from combat situations
prices for 1978 model U.S. canJ front-line units. by rules and replaUons. The as-
as well as prices of imported Women will even be posted to signment of Air Force, Navy
vehicles, which have increased the Army's elite 82nd Airborne and Marine women to combat is
because of the declining value or Division, which had been closed forbidden by ll)w. The Navy is
the U.S. dollar in countries such to them. see)cing legal authorization to al·
as Japan and Germany. One major errect of the new low women lo serve aboard
USED-CAR prices rose .l per-policy will be to erase a ships not expected to be in com·
cent after declining sharply longstanding rule that a wom3f1 bat.
from April through October. soldier could not be sent any Army sources say the rules
against combat exposure must be
changed \f the service ia to IUlflll
demands that it enroll subst.n-
tJally largernumbel"9ofwomen.
Current plans to nearly double
the 46,000 enlisted Army women
over the next five years hlnge to
a considerable extent. on l.his, •
IPtptagooaources sald.
Under the naw poUcy, the
sources said, women soldiers
may be aaaigned to Hawk and
Hercules anti·aircralt missile
units, ground·to·ground missile
and rocket batteries such as
those using the Lance bombard·
ment weapon, helicopter com-
panies and such other support
outfits as signal, military police.
transportation, maintenance and
medical units w,hicb are re.
quired in battle zones.
There also were higher prices ----------------.;......------------------------'
for alcoholic beveraJl(es. up . 7
Iran's Qµake
Toll at 519;
671 Injured
TEHRAN, lraQ (AP) -Barth·
quake casualties mounted today
to al least 519 dhd and 671 in·
jured in 16 villages in Iran's coal
basin, the nation's relief agen·
cy said. Many of the dead were
said to be ctuldren trapped by
collapsing mud-brick walls.
Thousands of miners and their
families were homeless in sub·
freezing temperatures. Mining
operations came to a ball, and it
was feared steel production
would be baited at the nation's
big mill at Isfahan.
THE NEW TOLL -up from
343 Tuesday -was given by
Ismail Gtlanpour, spokesman
for the Red Lion and Sun.
The only foreigners reported
killed were seve(l Afghan
workers on a construction site
near Zarand. Several hundred
Americans are helping develop
Iran's liral copper mine at
Sarcheshmeh, but it ls 155 miles
from the quake zone .
The quake struck an area 430
miles aout.h or Tehran befort1
dawn Tuesday, devastatlng the
villages of Sar·Asiyab, Glsk and
Bab·Tangol, and damaging at
leasl 13 other villages. The
damage in some or them did not
become known until recon-
naissance helicopters flew over
them this morning.
TRUSTEE FEES
TO SAVE FOR YOUR RETIREMENT?
These days, nearly every bank and sav-
ings and loan is talking about retirement
Plans to shelter 1977 income. They're
good plans.. Individual RetirementAc·
counts (IRAs) tor people who don't have
a retirement plan where they work. And
Keogh accounts for people who are self·
employed.
The fact la, each retirement plan re·
Quires a trustee. And a trustee usually
wants a fee. Which Is what a lot of banks
and savings and loans don't talk about.
S1750 split into two accounts . wlrh no
trustee fee on either of them.
Another difference ...
we·11 fVen accept· stock youve accumu-
lated from a previous corporate pension
or proflt·ahafir1g plan. We'll roll it over
Into a tax~ltered IRA for you. Again. at
no fee. •
Keogh accounts? Sure. Trustee fee? Of
COUf'S4l nol
ii· ..
·::Snow Blankets Midwest ·
Fidelity Federal otters standard IRA
and Keogh accounts, too. You can shelter
up to $1500 a year In our IRA. and up to
s 7500 a year in our Keogh. In both cases.
tM contribution and the Interest It earns
are tax-deductible until you retire_
Whether.you choose an IRA or a Keogh.
your fundt can begin earning 7~% Imme-
diately. With ltelly compounding, it comes
to an annual yield of 8.06%. You've heard
abot.lt federal regulations which reQuire
substantial Interest penalties in the event
of early withdrawals. At Fidelity Federal,
these penalties are waived when you
meet the Qualifications for retirement .
Act before Dec. 31st ...
• *C: Warm Air Canceu Etu1t's Stonn Warnings
~ ... 4'~per•t•re.
HI L.O Pac
>4 11 0 ,.
lS 11
6S u
" 47 '"' u 17
I I M n u
40 2J .of ,, 1' .. ao n 45 ,.
S7 J7
-u: 24 1• .. • » ,, ·"
" 17 14 • .,.
21, 1$ .,. ..
.., 41
JO 2t
2t tt u u • •
The difference is ...
We won't charge you an annual trustee
fee. Every dollar you set aside for your
retirement goes tor your retirement.
Which Is how it should be.
We can talk about other differences. too.
For example, was your spouse em·
ployed last year? If not. You can add an·
other 1250 to your IRA t:ontrlbuttdn. The
total you Mt aside can be as much as
~Fl
If youre thinking about an IRA o r e
Keogh, talk to us. If you already have one
someplace else, talk to us. You must do
It before Dec. 31 to get maximum 1977 tax
sheltered benefits. And the sooner you do,
the more money you'll be able to shelter.
We think you'll like t'he waye we're .dif-
ferent. We know you'll like the savings.
. .. where services make the difference
SOUTHERN CALIFORNtA OFFlCEI
• O..,..._: 800 No. Brand • hntlow.w: Alondrs I Bellflower Blvda. • lllg S..r u tl•:
lntef1aken ShoPplng CGnter • Btu. J1y: Blue Jay Mall • Cotta M ... ·Newpon 11 .. oh:
1859 H1rb0t 81vd. • Cutvw City: R1lntree Plue. 10784 Jefferson Blvd. • 'ul*1on: 911 No
Harbor IMVc:f. • Oltndof'a-Al-..a: College Center, 1173 E••t Aloata Ave • Long Betch: 5~5
EHt Ocean Btvd. a Long 8.-oh Ent; Bixby Pfau. 6707 PIOlflc Coeat Highway • North
tf~ 'Alley Ptau. 86$1 l..lluf'9I C.nlle>n 81\td. • lift r.-O: 2~ So. W..tem Ave. a ln9~r.,,...:1100 No. Mlln Strfft a l'*"*1 Oeb: t4e<>1 ""'Ma Blvd.• l •nton·
0.-. O'°": 12000 Beaci\ Blvd. a ,_..,.IOtC 2.4020 Hawtl'IOme 81Vd. et Paclflo CO.at Hlgtt-
w.y 8 ..,_ Nuys: 14545 VlctotY Blvd.
I
CALIFORNIA •• Wtc!Meday. Oeeember 21 , 1977 DAIL y PILOT A 5
South Storm Nortli Baiterea by Win(I.
By Tbe Aa1odated Presa
Kills Trucker
• • .. RAMONA <AP) -Broken trees and power r":lll•~'"'''"•
hoes today lay across sections or Southern
California whipped by winds reaching 100 mph.
Howling 80 mlle an hour winds
blew the roofs off Humboldt
County area buildings, knocked
~ut power for an estimated
150,000 residents and was direct·
ly responsible for two deaths ear-
ly toda1, authorities report.
The daman to farm c rops as the wind let up
Wll sporadic but widespread. Citrus and avocado
groves were reported hardest hit mainly in
north em San Diego County. '
A number Of animals died.
A BIG TRUCK RIG WAS SWEPT off In·
tentat.e 8 at Buckman Springs grade and down an embank~ent Tuesday, killing driver Russell
Velozier, 19, of Spokane, Wash.
Because or that accident 40 miles east of El
Cajon, the busy freeway was closed from Alpine to
El Centro. It finally reopened around midnight.
A six-car smashup injured three persons on
California 67 near Ramona. That state road was
closed but later reopened as was the Valley Center
Grade near Escondido.
LIGHT PLANES WERE grounded, and
several boats broke away from moorings alone the
coast.
In Camp Pendleton, a brush fire burned 750
acres of land. Fifty acres of brush were scorched
in northern San Diego, west or PenasQuit.os.
The winds blew the roofs off
the grandstand at the county
f airgrou,nda and a grocery store
and sent a tree crashing down
onto a truck on Highway 36 near.
Eureka, klWng two people, of·
ficials said.
All major roads reportedly
were blocked by fallen trees and
other debris. A fishing boat
capsized at Humboldt Bay Bar
but its s~ crew waa pulled
Crom the water when a Coast
Guard vessel reached the scene.
"' PAClftC GAS & Electric Co.
IN WAKE OF WIND -Milan Di~;~ ~~~l~~~iu:,:i.of when power
s pects toppled tree which smashed ·into The NatJooal Weather Service
living ..room of his home in Ramona re_ported u .s. 101. "The
northe ast of San Diego. There w as ReclwoOd Highway, .. was closed
wides pread damage from winds Tuesday from San Francisco to the
across Southern California. Oregon border because of fallen
-------------------trees blocking the road. A fire was burning in the Alms
G~ Suppl~s Decline
Ridge area of the Los Padres
National Forest near Big Sur,
' but it was QOt clear if the inclem-
ent weather caused the blaze.
THE U.S. FOREST Service in
King City received an uncon·
firmed report that the fire start·
ed in a structure jn the forest.
Ab()ut 120 acres had burned by
this momlne in the same area as
the huge Marble Cone fire of last.
summer.
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Southern California ·s
natural gas supplies are
e xpected to decline
about 15 percent during
1978, compared with this
year, according to gas
company officials.
But Southern
Calllomia Gas Co. said
Tuesday that the outlook
Pot Growers
Sentenced
LONG BEACH CAP>
-A doctor has been
sentenced to 90 days in
jail after his 11-ycar·old
stepson led police to a
garage full of marijuana
plants after hearing an
anti-drug lecture.
· Superior Court Judge
E llsworth Bean also
fined 33-year·old Chynel
F. Henning $1,000 and
placed him on three
years• probation Tues·
d ay. Henning's wife,
Karen, 32. was sen-
tenced to 60 days in jail
and placed on three
years' probation.
is better than earlier
forecasts indicated.
The cutback will con·
tinue to bite into the gas
supplies of large in·
dustries and com·
mercial customers who
have alternate fuel sup·
plies, officials said.
HOWEVER, THERE
would still be enough
gas to fill the needa of
the high-priority
customers: residences
and small bus in.ess
which lack the ablllty to
They were convicted
Nov. 18 or possessing
marijuana for sale, • ,.,.WI,..... cultivation of the plant uarrled a n d poss es s i o n o f 1r•'
hashish oil.
Police said Mrs. Hen·
ning's 60n, Gibrabn
Verdull, who lives with
his father in Irvine, led
officers to the garage
arter a vis it t o h er
house. The boy said he.
had recently attended a
school lecture on how to
identify marijuan a
plants.
Actress Sa lly
Struthers, 29, who
plays the daughter.
Gloria, in CBS-TV's
"All in the Family"
se ries, married
psychiatrist-author
William C. Rader,
39. at Westwqod
U nltcd Methodisl
Church.
burn other fuels, such as
oil.
The gas company said
the region is expected to
receive a total or 663
billion cUbk feet or gas
during 1978, compared
with 783 billion feet dur-
ing 1971. T~f decline stems
from the continuing
dep1eUOG ol natural gas t\e(d1 in T exas,
Oklahoma and New
Mexico.
S O UTHERN
Calif~rnla ls served by
two major •uppliers
from the Southwest: El
Paso Natural Gas Co.
and Transwes tern
Pipeline Co., a subsidiary
of Texas Eastern Corp.
Forecasts prepared a
Fishing
A shirt fr om our town
few mon\hs ago had pro·
jected lower available
gas supplies. Since then,
prospects for El Paao's
ability to deliver gas to
the Southern California
market have improved,
the gas company said. A'n estimated 75,000 homes
This SON'f AM/FM pocket rodio feoturM
telucoping ontenno, $1ode.rufe lvno-, 'lh" dynamic
tpeokllf, Ond 0 hond50me brushed all.mnu"1
cose. Comes complete with earphone ond
· cOtTyin9 Sir~.
This Is the bi9Qest. brightest SONY-· 21 inc+ies
of TrinltrO!I Plus, meo\ured di~ty, plus
91ectronoc: ~e conho/. This ii the SON'r' you've
been ~ing for.
and businesses Crom the Santa
Clara Valley to the northern San
Francisco Peninsula lost power
early today when howUnc winds
downed trees and voltage llnes,
the utility reported.
PG&E spokesman l''ritz
Draeger said the winds touched
otr a series of outages starUng at
1: 15 a.m . and st.retcblng from
Gilroy north to Milpitas and from
:the Lawrence Expressway east to
·SanJoae.
BESIDES THE PROBLEMS
caused by falling trees and
branches, Draeger said it ap-
peared power lines were "arc·
ing" -s horting out after
brushing up against each other
and sending sparks into the
wind.
Extra work crews were being
called in to flnd and repair the
damage, and Draeger said the
• • •
company hoped to restore~er to the tricken areas by n toa
day, "assuming we don't vo
any more strons winds or rata."
Some U1ht driule bad fallen
oo the Bay and Peninsula a~aa
by 5 a.m. today. but the maJor storm front predicted for
:Wednesday remained stationary
'Off the coast, the weather servico
:reported.
PORECASTEaS SAID tho
rains would probably move west.
in the form of sporadic showers.
There was an 80 percent chance
of rain by tonight for the Bay
area, where temperatures were
expected to range from the low
60s to the high 40s.
In the Sacramento Valley,
showers and a chance of thtln·
dershowers were predicted
throu.ch Thursday with hliba in
the mid·SOs and lows in the 4Qs.
¥ • ¥
Stranded Tourists
Hole Up in Mojave
MOJAVE (AP) -Motels were
jammed, diners were crammed
and semi-trallers clogged the
narrow streets of this sleepy
town.
Hundreds of tourists and
truckers today played a waiting
game with fl killer wind storm
that raked Southern California
Tuesday and continued today.
The California Highway
Patrol had stopped hundreds of
trucks northwest or here, and re-
ported that more than a half
dozen semis bad been llipped on
their s ides, blocking tralfic.
The dozen motels in this town
were filled by early afternoon
Tuesday, a rare occurrence, ac·
cording to one motel owner.
SONY Nit/FM dodc radio tells time wilh LED
d1q1lol numerals. features precision lime
od1ustment, repoot bor, blilt·in AfC. Ond many
other ConverWllrlC8S.
A UnLE SOllY
This SQl'-.I'( S" fdio9.) block & wN1e N i1
enQil'lllefed b1 bri<jlt. cri1p. h.<Ontrou clarity.
Feot1111n fl.4! VHF & UHF chonnd uilection,
AC/ DC Cf*'Olion. ond w9cjv. tw 7 lb. 11 oz.
STORE HOURS: FOR DAVIS•IROWN'S
AWAID·WIHNIMG
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
SERVICE. CALL:
Stordceeper Kevh\. Beck is wearing a kettle
doth sport shirt printed with famc)\l9
Newport Beach scenes. Natural ground
with navy, red, or brown prinl 23 .. 00
DAILY 9 • 9
SATURDAY ,_, 548-3437
'
airgrounds Plan
Needs Closer Look
On paper. the Orange County i'~airgounds plan for a
SIG. 7 million expansion program looks like a major step
towards transforming the 150-acre property into a year-
r,fiund cultural and recreational center.
F'a!r officials have been at work for nearly two years
preparing the plans which call for an upgraded central
uctiv1ties core surrounded by expanded parking.
However, the fair's plan to place comme rcial /recrea·
tlonal centers at three corners has generated some
jus tified criticis m from neighbors and Orange Coast
t ollege and Cos ta Mesa city officials .
Of particular concern is the corner of Fairview Road
und Arlington Avenue, where fast-food outlets, s mall
s hops and a commercial recreation center featuring a ~katcboard park are proposed.
Because the center would be so close lo Costa Mesa
l li gh School . an open campus. a nd Orange Coast College,
the fast-food outlets may cut into school food revenues.
!\l ore important is the potential distraction the
~1-;atPboard park may have on younger students.
Combined with the completion of a 3.000-seat am·
ppilhc ater <possibly late next year) on the west side of the
fairg rounds. the traffic picture on F airview Road begins to
look t'\'Cn bleaker. And the board also proposes closing
\";ingunrd Way between Fair and Arlington.
l 'nlC'ss a court cha llC'nge is made after the fair board
:1t·n·ph its En\'lronmcntal Impa('t Report <expected Dec
:!!l. 1 tlwrl' cun be no change in the plans. It seems the fair
board s hould l ake a closer look at this one corner. or at
lt·a st gl\ l' the c·ommunity assurance that there will be
n11n1mal d1stnict1ons during school hours.
.\net of course, construction will give the community
unot hC'r chance to sec Fairview R oad undergo one more
I .1<·<·ltft
Houses vs. Apartnients
As demonstrated by statistics released by the Costa
::\Icsa Planning Department, the city has strayed f'ar from
il s council -approved guidelines for future construction of
11.rng lc-family homes vers us apartments or condominiums.
City offi c iuls have u strong argument when they s uy
t h(•re wa-; no wa~· to foresee the incredible jump in the cost ~'' h o me~ sine<:' the g uidelines were adopted in January,
l !'l7 l.
Sti 11. th<.• statistics are disturbing enough to suggest the
<·ouneil tak<.• a very close look at new proposals for apart·
men ts By 1980, the city hous ing element calls for construc-
t 1011 of 1,00:3 new s in~le-family homes, plus an additional
~.588 a partments or condominiums.
To date, only 603 single-family home s have been built,
"h1lc apartment and condominium units have swelled to
:u2.t, n(•urly 1.000 units above the projection for 1980.
White the council s hould be commended for its
t•f'forts to make Costa Mesa an affordable place to
11\ e. the discrepancies are of concern to residents who
a lready live here . or the multi-unit dwellings that have gone up since
1974, only 542 of the units are condominiums. To achieve a
more balanced population. the council should consider
more emphasis on added condominiums rather than.
apartnwnts.
Siinple Life Saver
lnnovati\"c city ·programs aimed al improving public
~afety need not be particularly complex or costly. A case
in point is Costa Mesa's new "Vial of Life" program.
The kit. available free at any local fire station, con·
4lins a plastic via l in which senior citizens or the
t·hronically iii can place written medical informalion. The
,·i:.il is then placed in a refrigerator with an adhesive
~ticker placed on the outside to let emergency crews or
neighbors know the ,·ital information is easily at hand.
The system is a s imple way to speed up rescues and as-
sure proper medical attention. Programs such as this
let local residenb know their safet y is a major concern to
tily officials.
To J?et more information on this worthy program, resi-
dents can contuct the Costa Mesa Fire Department ad-
ministration office at 556-5435.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those Of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
.. ...
Boyd!Bloodhou~ds
By L.M. BOYD
Question arises as to
whether trained bloodhounds
could track down criminals
1n a big city Ule way they can
out in the countryside.
Definitely. Those dogs are
unbelievable. ltl a New York
Cib test once, a bloodhound
fwlowed the trail of a man
tftougb a park area where
just previ~ly 55,000 people
had attended a. rock concert.
1'afldentally., lhe only fOrl of
human beings that. baffle
bloodhounds are identical
twins. Their odors are iden·
tical. But. the odors of all
others are each unique, and
trained bloodhounds can
perceive Ulese differences.
Takes less time to fly from
Hong Kong to San Francisco
than vice versa. About three
hours less time, In fact.
You're traveling opposite the
rotation or Ule earth, tbat.:s
why.
Did 1 t4t1l you that 80 per·
cent of the cheese in this
country winds up in
eandwichel?
..
Robert N Weed Publisher Thomas Keevll1 Editor
Weclnelday, Dtcember 21, 1977 B.lrNra Krelblch/Editorlal P• Editor
llowland Evans/Robert Novak
-U.S. No ~Longer 'Israel's Attorney'
WASHINGTON ....., Prime
Minister Menabem Begin's sur-
prise visit here was viewed by
U.S. officials as an Israeli erfort
to hold on to the old dependent
relationship with Washington
which h as b een radicall y
transformed -perhaps ended..-
by the dramatic Sadat-Begin
diplomacy.
By rushing here \o discuss his
new peace plan for President
Anwar Sadat,
Begin was
telling the
Americans,
nothing has
changed, we
still rely on
you. In word
and nuance,
th e Am er·
I c b n s
h e re were
replying : ever y thing ha s
changed; you now stand on your
reel !ace-to-face with the Ara~;
tell them your proposals for a
M ideastsettlement.
Twq days before the Prime
Mini s ter arrived h e r e.
n ewspaper a ccounts in
J erusalem hinted that Begin's
visit was part of a broader
Israeli-Egyptian scheme. When
it became clear S~dat was as
surprised as the U.S., officials
here were so annoyed that this
word was quietly passed: Begin
is coming totally on his own in·
ilialive, with no Egyptian con-
nivance.
THAT IS just one clue lo the
new r elationship betweeo the
U.S. and Israel". Although· the
U.S. naturally looks to Israel as
its intimate friend in the
Mideast, direct Israeli-Egyptian
negotiations have suddenly
ended a full decade during
which Washington alone S}>Oke
for Israel in negotiations.
This lQrminates a long ptriod,
with only limited steps toward
peace, during which the U.S.
acted Cin the phrase of former
Mailbox
De fense Secretary Melvin
Laird) as "Israel's attorney."
The sU<Sden termination has led
the Israeli government to seek
neVA ways to keep the U.S.
h{tched to its side in negotiating
with the Arabs . That is un-
derstandable, but it is something
President Carter does not want.
At his press conference, Mr.
Carter carefully cir&umscribed
any effort by Begin to pin down
the U.S. as a negotiating partner
at the Cairo confe re nce.
But conflicting wit h Mr.
Carter's wise refusal to put the
U.S. back In the Mideast um
pire's seat is growing pressure
from Israel's potent political al -
lies In this country to resist any
U.S. move to a truly neutraJ
posture. That helps explain Ule
President's quick assent to
Begin's surprising self-invitation
•
\\ Do,.,'t get too comfott~b\e.''
..
to Wui:.hingt.on and Mr. Carter's
request after the first Carter-
Began meeting Friday for Begm
to stay an extra day for another
meeting.
As one Mideast planner told
us: "The last thing Carter wants
is lo give Begm, Israel or the
American Jewish community
the impression that Bel(.in got
the bum ·s rush here."
Begin hoJdB high cards in his
shrewd maneuvers to make it
appear that the U.S. and t.he
Carter administration are still
"Israel's attorney" even though
direct talks have started with
Egypt. During lunch at Bliir
Hou~e Friday. Begin confided
details of his new peace plan to
four of Israel's s t aunchest
friend~ in the U.S. Senate: Jacob
J av1ts, Richard Stone, H,:inry M.
Jackson and Clifford Case.
THI PRECEDED direct
Israeli word to Sadat of Begin's
plan. News "'as rushed to Cairo
not by the Israelis, according lo
adm101stration off\cials. but by
telephone from the White House
immediately following the first
Carter-Begin talk on Friday.
The obvious explanation of
Begin's decision to confide his
plan to Mr. Carter and four U.S.
Senators before explaining it to
President Sadat: m aintain the
pretense that the U.S. is stiU in
its old role as Israel's attorney.
Mr. Carter's intent is dif·
ferenl. He wants lo maintain a
certain -distance from Is rael
<a nd , of course, the ArabsJ
while exploring sever al n ew
idens with his own advisers.
With Israel facing Egypt
dire<'tly across the bargaining
table, Mr. Carter is comfortable
with his new role of indepen·
dence. He seems to be distinctly
enjoyinA the prospect of Israel
now carrying the r esponsibility
for hammering out peace on it~
own, u responsibility not affect·
ed by Prime Ministe r Begin'l>
s udden visit.
Think iwice About a Pet for Christmas
• To the F.clitor~
Perhaps fOU are considering
giving a puppy or kitten as a
Christmas gif• The volunteer
animal workers ask you to
please reconsider. These s mall
c reatures are a serious
responsibility. Consider the con-
fusion in the average home al
Christmas time. It ~s hardly the
place to bring a pet that needs
plenty of sleep and a quiet place
as refuge.
Few of us have time during
the holidays to properly
housebreak a puppy or to feed a
pet al regular intervals .
Children often pressure their
parents into purchasing a puppy
or kitten by promisinr to feed,
groom and clean up after it.
When the child doesn't perform
these duties, the parents will
often get rid of the pet.
IF ONLY a puppy or kitten
will do as a gltt, do consider a
gift certificate to be honored
arter the holidays when the
household returns to a normal
schedule.
Before obtaining a p'et any
time, a family should consider
lhe following:
1. Are you committed to car-
ing Coe the pet for its liCetime, or
just until your children lire or
their new toy?
2. Are you willing and eble to
pay for altering your pet to pl'e-
vent Ule birth or more animals/
in a nal(on already saturated
with pets?
3. ,\re you willing and able to
pay Cor all inoculations, yearly
check ups and any emergency
treatment the pet may need?
4. When choosing a dog, are
you keeping. .in mind that the
cute little puppy or unknown
parentage could, within a year
outgrow your small yard? s. Do you really want the exlta
work and sometimes the
destruction that having a pet,
especially a puppy, entails?
6. Are you willing to control
your pets so as not to 8(UlOY
YOW' neighbors? Remember, 09t
everyone loves animals.
7. If you are renting a home,
apartment etc., do you hate
your landlord's permlaslon to
own a pet?
HAZEL MORTENSEN
Chalnnan, United
Humanila.rtan.ofOrangeCounty
should have an $8 billion portfolio , reem to be a lapse in Ml". Hem·
wben our taxes have increased 25 . pel's political philosophy. ·
,,.er cent this year. But I ho)>e the courts win over·
Why cannot some or the $8 look this minor pblnt> ahd give
billion be used to reduce our tax-careful thought tC)i ·a' truly In-
es. I'd appreciate an explana-novalive, not to saY. •eccentric,
tion. theory or govemallce; it isn't
RUTHS. CHAMBERLAIN orten that we lfear voting
decried as being against the
principles of democracy. The tax collector-treal!lurer of.lice
act• 08 a "bank'' for 110 taxing agen.
de• in the county, i1'Cludiflg 34 achoOl
al'ld college dialrict1. The $8 biUton
figure repreams COiia f loui rather
th<rn inve&tfMnk. In fi.:al 1'1f·11
tlu office ~ JJ.179 billion of new mor)eW Of which t1S7 millabn
ccime from pr~y taxes. tit.a tt-·
maf?adn from other revenue sources,
including ltate end federal furid.s.
The taz coll«tqr-frea1Urer im>e1t1
the money end retunaa it to the tax·
ing agmcfes cu nsedid, plw interest.
Lalt year $43.3 million Jn interest uw diftribvtfd to the 170 taxing
Qgenciu fo enob~hem to hold down
tlaeir taz rale1. Edltor.
IJ-"'e StaRdard
To the F.dltor: .
I am strongly opposed to the
main idea or the article in the
Dec. 12 Pilot. tJUed, "Boy, 3,
KUledbyDog."
¥.y point 11$. if we kill this dog,
which undoubtedly killed the
boy, bow come we don't do
something equally drastic to the
people who are out oo the streets
again after having killed one or
two people? Befo~ destroyinc lhe dog, why
don't they find out if the family
has been treatinc Ule dog unfair-IY ln any wiu-? L1NDA McKINNEY
11 ........ l'letD
·To the FAitor:
The Dally Pilot reported
without comment tho remarka-
ble presentation of Arnel
Corpotation'• lawyer, a Mr.
Hempel, protestina the right of
Costa Mesa voters to have a
voice in the politjeal decisions or
their city. According U> the cor-
poration's spokeama, an evil
prttedent would be 1et if It were
~slble for mere cltt1et1s to up5et
the carefully con1tlructed
de•ls of pollticlana and de·
velopers.
His un~aJ Vfl# or govern·
ment seems to be that when a
political body haa made a de·
clltoa -tbe exalftl)&. at hand
beina the city counell'• approval
of Arnel '1 hl8"-demlly scheme
bl north Coat. Mesa -that de·
ciaion repnaents a decree of
wltc16m and forethoatbl .that
vowra lhould be ..,nented trom
challenging. •
Gl\'E"' U.11 wonhlpful at-
titude U.ard.our raGadl mem·
ben, 11 '• Plllllllal &o now that Al'lllll'a Mret'RJti· 'Jltich tre ill U'IUIJll. .. dlneted acatnst an aettoa ltp Ille council, not
........ tlfe ..... Ulll W®ld
DOUGLAS R. TOOHEY
Sirens 1t'elco•e
To the Editor:
I am hoping C.V. <Gloomy Gus.
J;>ec. 9), was being facetious with
the remarks about living next to
a fire station. We hope he will
never need help, but if he ever
does he '11 find the sound or those
s irens the sweetest sound he's
ever heard.
My husband had a cardiac ar-
rest in July. When I could hear
the sirens in the distance, il was
music. The Cos ta Mesa
paramedics and firemen calmly
and efficiently worked hard to
save his life and succeeded.
C.V. didn't have to move next
to a fire station. We'd be glad lo.
G. M. and SHIRLEY ROBINSON
We suspect c. V, WOI taking a
sideways poke at folk tohOJTlove nett
to airports, then grum"ble about
noise. AU praise to the paromedicsl
Editor.
Buri•e•• Cll•ate
To the Editor;
Recent government attitudes
and policies appear to be creat·
ing a dangerous business climate
for the future of the private sec-
tor. The recent governmenl-
endorsed Social Security and
labor union decisions have been
particularly disconcerting. We
r efuse to recognize the in-
disputable trend of modern in -
dustry away from labor Intensive
pro4uction and towards capital
jntensive. more efficient in-
dustry: We continue to adopt
short term politically acceptable
solutions for pressing long term
problems. .
FORESIGHT dictates we
become more compeUtive, not
bar the competition. However.
p01itical considerations continue
to blur our economic foresight.
As in the steel industry; the solu·
lion Ue.'J in increasinJ capital in·
vestment to become more effi·
cient and thus mo't!e compeliUve,
and not In Invoking trade tariffs
to simply bar competitrpn. We
can run but we cannot hide.
I cannot reconcile govetnment
decisi..ob.s which allow '15 to
vlrtu1Hy create a quas\·
iovernmental corporation m
Lockheed.; at the sa m tf rne we
will not aUoW ~r mo'( emcient
buatneuma"' the American
farmer, to make even a rnlnirnal
pront.
President Cart r PIMced to
trim the tederal bureHcraCyi
but the number or federal •
employees has increased under
his administration.
Recent government rhetoric is
leading us in a sense or economic
stability that is without technical
foundation in the private sector;
the life blood of our economy.
GREGORY V. RUZICKA
ERA lnlo,....ation
To the Editor:
I must speak out. lt has been
two days since I read the letter
from Mary 0. Moore <Dec. 14
Mailbox) and I am still fuming
from her inaccurate charac-
terizations and less than indirec·t
jonuendoes about a fine person
and hard worker for all human
rights -not only women.
Vivian Hall and her hus band of
30 some odd years certainly do cto
use Ms. Moore's words) "hold
dear the family concept and the
Jove and devotion between a man
and a woman."
l would like to comment on
each point of Ms. Moore's letter
because it is rife with inliensilive
perceptions of important issues.
However, I \\ill limit myself to
trying lo make clear ont! point
that the anti-ERA forces have
continuous ly tried to mis·
represent. Whatl am abouttosay
has been stated many tim es. but
evidently not enough if even one
person. such as Ms. Moore, is
still "confused.··
RATIFICATION of the Equal
Rights Amendment will provide
equal rights under the law for
both men and women. Period. It
does not legislate what a person
holds to be. true Ill their privat.c
lives.
People who would like to have
more information, fact as op
Posed to some popular myths,
s hould avail the m selves of
services offered by Orange Coun-
ty ERA Coalition. They have a
,speakers bureau and will send
someone, free or charge, to your
groop or org4nization to discuss
what the ERA will and will not
accomplish. There is also a 24·
hour answering service for the
coalition which wiJl direct your
inquiry lo the appropriate
person. The number is 639·8807.
My point in all of this i~.
believe what you will. it is your
right. BuL please, base that belief
on facts 8nd not false assumption
a.nd unsubstantiated conclusions.
BARBARA L. HAMMERMAN
• Lltttrf /rom rto4vs art wtlcome.
Tlaf right to condense letlns to fit
'PC'Ct or tlimmole li~I i.t rtNTWd
,Ldtm Of 300 tDOTdl fir l«*' tJill k
otllfft prf/trfflet. AU r.uen mutt flt·
clilck li~ure and moillng ocfdrtn
but namt1 may bf witMdd Oft tt--
qwl1af1\1/Hciffll reoson S. CIA)Orfftl. Poetrv wilt not bf publuhtd.
TRAVEL
Cc;.ncorde Jet
Luxury J,iner
Of Airways
By HUGH.\, MULLIGAN ...... , .. CWT ........
LONDON ...!.. No doubt it's the nostalgia cra~e
gone awry at double Mach speed, but the supe.rsonlc
Concorde is beating its drum in proud sonlc
. boomlets to evoke the grand era of the grand
transatlantic luxury liners. Her advertising copy
writers, putting a patina or prestige on the $'197 .35
one.way ticket, hail the fleet, ungainly bird as the
new holder of the ''Blue Riband," the gilt and silver
trophy once awarded for the quickest Atlantic
cross inc by a passenger ship.
ALSO CALLED THE HALES Trophy, after
ilenry Keates Hales, the British member of Parlia·
ment for Sheffield who thought up the idea, the Blue
Rlband passed from the old £our.stack Mauretania
to the Bremen in 1929 when a crossing or 4 days, 17
hours and 42 minutes ushered in the miracle of the
"Cour·day boat.''
The ill-fated Normandle, in the 1spirit of
Na pol eon's great cheer leader, Capt. Chauvin, un-
furled a 30·meter-long blue pennant <a meter for
each knot of her speed> from her top aft mast as she
s wept past Ambrose ~• • j Light to claim the trophy ~ in the summer of 1935. Stew But the Blue Riband,
-. which unlike British
A I r w a y s t.o d a y th e huu'ghty Cunard Line never deigned to recognize,
was permanently retired July 7, 1952, when the Uner
United States on her maiden voyage, with Marearet
Truman looting the whisUe as the ship paaaed
Bishop's Rock, crossed to England in 3 days. 10
hours and 40 minutes. The new champion pier~ed
gale winds to beat the Queen Mary's 14·year-old
record by more than 10 hours.
NOW THE CONCORDE TAKES as many houn
-31..'.i -as the United States took days to crosa the
ocean, and only the gorgeous mohair steamer
blankets handed out by the stewardesses to jet lag
slumberers look anything like anything out of the
mothballed grand lady's grand past.
Still, some of London's luxury hotels have caught
the magic of Concorde's record·shreddlng AUanUc
hops.
Over the concierge's desk ip
the Savoy Hotel is a call board
marked "Atlantic Crosslnss."
which used to list the Aquatania,
the America, the Queen
E l izabeth, the Nleuw
Amsterdam, the France and
other queens of the deep gQlng
all the way back to the Titanic
and the Lusitania.
MA11o•uTuuMAN Now it lists the Concorde, de·
parting at 11 : 15 a.m. every Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday.
THE ONLY OTHER SllJP·ON the call board's
horizon that day was the Christmas Caribbean
cruise of the QE2.
Roy C.J. Dobbs, the head porter at Claridge's,
goes out to Heathrow Airport to assist Concorde
passengers with their Gucci cases and Marie Crost
durf!e bags, the way he used to go down to.
Southampton on the boat train to lend a hand wlt.b
the steamer trunks and poodles ln wicker baskets.
Flying the Concorde for the first time, this
bereaved lover of the old luxury liners found almost
the same shipboard camaraderie among tbe 90-odd
passengers. Passing the speed of sound apparenUy
is a shared experience that compels conversation.
"ABOUT THREE HOURS fN these ltty·bitty
scats is all a body could take," drawled the Texas
oilm a:i across the aisle, shattering the awkward
silence that obtains on most subsonic flights.
"Like fl ying tourist class on Trans·Texas,"
agreed his seatmate, peering out the tiny window at
the rapidly vanishing Bristol channel as the
machometer on the wall In front or us edged toward
.96. A sUght vibration stirred our martinis.
The .slew popped a bottle of Dom Perignon '70 as
we passed the speed or sound, as if to mutne the
sonic boom over Land's End, and explained there
·would be no in-flight movie because "the aircraft
isn't configured that way."
"YOU MEAN IT AIN.,. big enough for a sc~?"
suggested another member of the oil fraternity, and
she went orr mumbling about there only being Ume
to serve the meal and fill out the immigraUon!orm.
Seasoned Concorde travelers bragged about hav·
ing "flown the Frenchman" on the Washingtoo run,
the way the dowagers in deckchairs used lo count
theft crossing on the old Franconia or the
Mi chaelangelo. ·
After the barquettes of caviar and dressed cr-b,
served at 10 miles up as we accelerated to our top
speed Of Mach 2.oa, lUllch was a choice or Roast Sad-
dle of Engllsh Lamb, Breast ot Chicken Epicure
and Medallions or Veal Smttane, topped off wlth
Chateau Brane Cantenac ·n and Pullgny Mon·
trechet '75.
••WHAT, NO STEAK?" EXPLODED the mu
across the aisle, who had been ln Libya {or two
years and "had enough mutton for a lifetime." He
assured us his "hangover broke up at Mach 2, ••and
the "best thing about getting there twice aa fasi la
')'OU only.drink balf as much."
QUHNlf . Bv Phil lntellandi
WITH .
MAGNAVOX
EONSOLE ··· s:r·EREO
... ••
YOU~ GET
AccOli$11cALL r ...
anti EXPERTLY
PRE-MATCHED COMPONENTS
IN ONE BEAUTIFUL CABINET
FOR PERFEOL Y BALANCED
I INTEGRATED STEREO SOUND •••
STE«EO FM/AM RADIO WfUf
•· AUTOMATIC 11£COID ClfANG'tR ait' l·TRACK PWO/RCCO~DU
$349.95
MEOITHRANUH CONSOU
WITM $T£REO FM/AM •Al>lO
AUTOMATIC uco•o PLAYER
& 8·1RACK PLAYtA/l~COMDER
$399.95
We Service What We WI
AM and FM MULTIPLEX
STE11EO RECEIVER
• 1'e 11racldtt "state •I tllt art" tllim·
••111lfier Is ml11e11 fer HtS1111~ln1
rttt•Utl. Ml 11 th 1mh1t SU·
tlta , . • 'ffta CHtiHHslJ watla.it
bss "" ttdlt mtr1l11 lll••IHt••
sllM-rtlt "'" spelfff Him• ctit-trtf1 "•·•lft" Mtt1111tlc lrt ... llCJ ce111nl1 "'1 stettt l••lcattr ,., ,.,,,,
hHtl11 set1ct1r. Th l1t11r•tU ••Ufltr IM ,,..,., are ftsll ...
wfta ... It ,..., rtNm '" i.. ..... ttnlil tt ....... •IJ•t ••• ct• ...,..,,,... ..... %. . \
MULTI-SPEAKER
SOUND SYSTEMS
A u111,1ttr •tsiptd, COISOll
SH•• ClllMllltr S,tabr SJftHt,
'"' I• ilstortlH •d wttlll i•te·
cr•td ,...r n• •If• fre,1111er
ttSJHst. wkrt It sll11lf h ...
prtf11cl111 rlcll lllau tnes cross.
I .. tllr .. tll I tin llltf.11111 Ht·
werll l1tt' l111Cf 1tff ctH tweet-
.,, hr cr1stal clut ••11111111."
Strl111 latt1M1ll ""' flu strl111s ••• llem lltM llkt lltm ... 11• "" nt• hc ... s a tlr· ... , ........... ,.
NOT •••
HIT & MISS
"D0-11-YOUISEU"
STEREO
PROFESSIONAL TYPE
TURNTABLE/CHANGER
SJ•U 11• techol11t 1t
M'CUYll ISSlrlS ,.. ,, rec-r•
S,tff UC•ICJ, lllal11ce• tote·
arll SIS,HSiH wttll trackl11 1.,u •e111r111 I• 1r1111S. ha·
tires Hti·sbtt fnlco, 11tt1111-
t11 Dlt•tff, •t•••tlc rect~
Sfzt stltCt, IHI lrM HfltJ
clttclll IM Cffilll Cllltrtl. EKll
IM_,, ct.,tlllt b MltCllH au llttamn wt• o~cll etw flf •lrfect c•1tallll11JI
WITH
MAGNAVOX
THE
PRE-MATCHED
COMPONENTS
MAKE THE
DIFFERENCE
8-TRACK STEREO TAPE
PLAYER and RECORDER
l1w slcul to •tise utio aall
aufit each1eet.. hafs fer lt11cer
lift. Accoutlc~lly ~eslcnell hr
111111 susiti•itJ. lower d1St1rtit1·
plus rtd11ctlo. of "wew" '"' "fl•t· ter." futures llltt• rrict stlecter
httu u• pn1ra111 l••lcatu t11~s. A11l1 ••• nery c111,1111t
Is •rt·111tchd •10 tnrJ tOtr
t1 alv• ,., H eldl1 ce.,1t1M1
IJ•t.. ,., lltrtlSd ltljtpttat.
1111 llStHI•& ,ltHlrt.
,
•
• OAll Y .PILOT L..SC WedMlday O.C.mbef 21 . 1977
hoc~
I
Tendency ,
Stuffied
...
NATIONAL / WORLD
1AS.T .MINUJ;E
'GIFT ·IDEAS!
SO HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTIONI
-~~ Wiii B e C'let18 S••• ~. 26 W ASUINGTON (AP)
-The Consumer '
Product Safety Com-
mission has announced a repair campaign lnvolv-PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SA.T. DECi 24, 1977
ing more then 21,500 .. •••Ill!
aall Wiii B e Ol't!n
.tie•. DPt•. 26., h• te flpM.
... w1 .......
SWASTIKA USE ALLOWED ON MODELS
Clerk Holds One of Protested Toys
Nazi Toys
Church Protests Fail
COLOGNE, West Germany CAP l -American,
Japanese and British toy makers are flooding West
Germany with models of Sluka dive bomt>ers and
other swastika·cmblazoned reminders of the Nazi
war machine.
Protestant and Roman Catholic orficials have
joined community leaders in demanding the West
German govc.•rnment stop the sale of the toys. The
government has not respOnded.
THE GERMAN TOY MANUFACTURERS'
Federation says members also produce so-called
war toys. but they amount to less than 1 percent of
their total production. ·
ref riger alors made b y
three firms and sold na-
llonwide.
The 14 -cubic-foot
refrigerators may hJve
an improperly placed
heater wire which could
'tontact the cabinet or
evaporator. possibly
s hockin g anyone
touching the unit, com-
m lssion spokesworpan
Heidi Halter said Tues-
day.
MS. HALTER said too
campaign arrects 17,508
refrigerators made by
While-Wes tlngh.quse,
2,607 maf1ufactured by
Magic Chef and t ,508
made by Kelvinalor,
The White ·
Westinghouse units in
question are models
RT146T , RT145T,
RT14 4T, RT141T,
RT14XW and RT14YW.
They bear serial num-
bc rs beginning with
RUD, RUE, RUF, RUG.
RUii. RUJ, RUK, RUL
and RTG followed by
five digits.
ti-THE SHOWER ffiASSftOE
by Water Pik.
e A mesHfl with ev"y 1howerl
e Feetur• pulsating bursts that
fNIMtlt, IOOfhe, $tim411tte.
• Fully adjuttablt, HSY to Insult.
WALL MOUNT MODEL ·
OUR REfi. 19.99
l!I
EA. No.SM·2
HAND HELD MODEL
OUR REG. 29.99
!l!I
. , ' . ,,.
'"' ... , .... NC>if ......,_ ...... ,, .,. . ,, . ,,.
"?;~=::~Hl•Okl HOil / f.Jool• .. , , ...
a11op.vac.t '1dl-.a wn /DRY VACUUM
e No twavy duty clNn up job i. too toughl
• Pecka up where other vacuums fall ... power
cleans wet or dry ... v1rsat1le 9nd lightwe1fht.
:~: :::~e package; both J ~" iiiisories.
59.99 ::1::1
SAVE •2•1
"Not only the Americans, but the Japanese and
English are also laking a good share of the German
market," said Peter Josef Weiss of the Rhineland
State Youth Federation. a Cologne group of
political. reli gious and social leaders.
THE MAGIC C hef
uni~s are model FB148
with serials beginning
RUH, RUJ, RUK~ and liJ....l:-;.---,,
fivedldgits.
• Fold1w1y, port1blt wortc
~ten, oi*'t vise end saw-
hol'19 all-in-ontl
The youth federation is protesting the sale or
i.t1ch do·it.yourself kits as Monogram's Junker-87, a .
model of the Sluka dive bomber that Is touted as
·'the pride of Germany.'' Monogram Is a subsidiary
of the American toy maker Mattel.
· .. AT LEAST THEY SHOULD explain the con·
nection between the swastikas and Nazi crimes."
Weiss said.
"To make matters worse," he continue<(\ toy
ratalogue says the Monogram Ju-87 carries the
markings of the dive bomber flown by Hitler's
favorite pilot, the ace Maj. Ulricb..Rudel. ,
·'There is not a word in the catalogue about how
many bombs that plane was capable or dropping
over Rotterdam or Warsaw and all those other hor-
rible things." Weiss said.
THE SWASTIKA, LIKE OTHER symbols or
banned political parties. cannot be displ~yed in
West Germany. But a court ruled ln 1973 that the
swastika was also the national marking of German
war planes and may be used on models.
·"Models have to be tr'tM! to life," saXl Josef
Scbiessel or Monogram.
.. lie said the model bUllden can leave •the
~ astika decals off if they find them objectionable.
1 MONOGRAM AND REVELL PLASTICS,
ataothe r American company which claims to lead
lite market in the sale or World War II models, re-
fused to say how many models U\ey ftave sold in
West Germany. •
r But many toy departments acros11 th~ country
Have set up special stalls just lo handle the pro-
ducts.
' ,
The KC'lvinator
refrigerators are model
TPX140MN with 10-digit
ser ial numbers begin-
ning with 107.
THE SERIAL num-
bers a re on a plate on the
lower left front corner of
t he unit above the
kickplate and are only
visible when the door is
'open .
ELEPHANT
KJLLED
SO DERTAt.JE,
.s~ae~,~~P>~ctk~~ "'elephaiU chewecl 'dn .. a
high tension el~tric ~.,
ble and was electrocuted
j ust minutes before it
was to have performed.
One of three elephant&
belonging to the Circos
Carlq11, it had been tr~in~ lot. 10 years a nd
rePfeSflOled a 1erious
finilncial loss ::to th.e
circus.
·Answers DeiU.eti · ,
: Governor Screens ~st~1111 J: ...
............
NEGATIVE QUESTIONS
Gov. Ray Blanton
1 Ashe las t week wrote James
O'Hara, district director of the In·
ternal Revenue Service, listing
fUghts on state aircraf\ by Bl&r)~~
family members and friends. ·
BUNTON SAID THE IRS already wu eudltinl his1lncome' tu, at his
request, ancf, 1'1 can a~sure you that
mf taxes are there.,. · · ' ~ • '
Blanton told reporters be is SUf" l•linl that P.,-Mldent Carter alld all
other elected officials in the nation
follow a simUar policy about positive
questioning. He ·~~e has com-9leat*l hi• ,.~ to ~~
'ri':'~ come to the conchaf«i that'
there has to be·,.a tum-around," he said. "The mesaage I'm 1e(ting is
tilt public ls Ured or the .,....ntam
.of.tllaaewaJD,..._......,·~·...:.-;.-..~
• A itreclslon multi·purpose eccessorv
1or those 1X1ctln11 do-lt·vourself jobtl
• Convent p01Ublt drills Into precision
controlled drill press.. .. f11.J most 1/4"
and 3/~' electrlc drills.
• Depth control meesurln1 device.
• Rotating scale dltermln11 eic1Ct angle.
• Drills 1v1ll1blt at Angels low prices.
SA VE $10.00!
ASSORTED CHRISTMAS ::.= S~ll. TREE NOVRTIES
• Hurry for best tel~lonl n;n • While qu1ntiti•
l11tsorrv no
raincntcbl OFF
ANGELS LOW, LOW PRICESI
• Fli. tny flrepi-
• Tabet we '-VV 9iauee 2" di.-w.
atffl ... ctrbon stMI .....
OUR REG. 44.99
• Choot1 from
Metric °' SAE.
e Drop fMeed atffl
e 1/4" Ind 3/8"
dflve.
OUR REG. 9.99
0 .. :·;. ,
'.·. :
7%" CIRCULAR SAW
• 10 imp motor, 1~ HP ... tMgti 5700 cpm cut·
ti,. 1peed. •• 2 311" outs •t 900, 1 7/8" at 450.
• F .. tu'" new Safety S-wltch end Guard Stop.
• True prof-.ional q41eilty ... comforuble htndlin•
OUR
REG.
34.99
l!I
• Sturdy steel bMe.
SINGLE HEIGHT
OUR REG. 49.99
1111
e Antiqued WHthered br-
f1nish. .. complett with all
hardware. rudy to hang!
• Full 1 yeu fUlrtntee..
SA VB •2B.OO!
OUR REG. 67.99
!I!~
.,,--,..-~ 1Nrln1 fol higtt.
power drlltlnt.
Double intul•t ...
Grt1t een-111 pur·
PON drlll few tlolM
end dlop •
()UR REG. 13.91
1111
EA. • No,710'
... .
Uhrary
Hours Set
The Orange Coas t
C oll e ge Library is
operating on restricted
ho)lday hours through
Jan. 2.
It is open weekdays
from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m . The library will be
c losed weeke nds and
Dec. 26 and Jan. 2.
Normal ope rating .
hours are 7:30 a.m. to 10
p. m. Mond1tys ·through
Thursdays. 7:30 a.m. to
S p.m. Fridays and noon
to S p .m . weekends.
3KILLED
INA1TACK
! •••.._n.~•~~
DEAR PAT: I have a n April 21, 1927 edition of
the Balboa Times newspaper which I would like lo
donate to an appropriate organitttion. Can you help
me locate one?
M.A.C., Newport. Beach
The Newport Beach HJstorlcal Society bas
establlsbed a permanent display or early Newport
Beach blstorlcal Items at the Balboa branch llbrary
UOO E. Balboa Blvd.), accord.Ing to Jqdy Banning of
the aocldy. Memorabllla of all types, lncladlni
reataurant menus, wrlUen matter and other hls·
tortcal materials relating to Newpore..Beach will be
welcomed for Inclusion In this collection. Contact
Mrs. P eggy Post at the library for more Inform•·
tlon.
Put Ener911 Into lttt:efttion
DEAR PAT: I've heard that the government ls
offe ring a new opportunity program to inventors of
energy-saving items. Where can I write for more
information?
A.S., Laguna Beach
Contact the Office of Energy.Related lnven·
tlons, National Bureau or Standards, Washington,
D.C. 20234, and ask for the free pamphlet, "The
NBS Energy-R~lated Invention Evaluation Pro·
gram -Wltat It Is And How It Works."
Anyooe may submit an lnvenUon to NBS and
have U evaluated. There Is no fee, and oo obUga-
tion, financial or otherwise. The procedure ls quite
slmple and Involves completing a form <Evalua·
&Ion Request Form NBS -1019) and returning lt with
a description of your'lnventlon or Idea.
New Suri'• Coming fJp
DEAit PAT: I heard somewhere that a new soc·
ce r team is being organ~ied in Orange County that
will play home gam eiin the AnaheiQ'l Stadium. Can
IOPH, Malaysia (AP> you tell me howl can get more information about
-An Aborigine police this team?
team killed three Com· F.D., Costa Mesa
munis t gue rrillas, in· You must be asking about tbe new California
eluding a woman, and · franchise or the North American Soccer League.
wounded two others In an This team , formerly the St. Louis Stars, moved here
"Got ~ problem ~ Then writ~ lo P¢ Dunn. Pat wfll
cut rfd '•· ,-nw.o ,,_. ~ond.octfn.~ n•d "' 1olw tnetzUU1t1 In ~ventmml ond bu.Ji,...,, Moil
11our qwataon.t to Pal Dtmri. At Your krvice, Oro'Wf
Coast Dauy Ptlot. P.O. Box 1560, Coale Mua, CA
9%626. A3 many letters as pouible wUJ bf.~rtd,
but f1h<lned iriqulnea or lerten not mcluding tM
read~'s full Mme. addre11 and bu.mreaa hours' pMnt
number cannot be considered. Tfu.scol1onnapptar1dci-
ly ercepe Sa1urday1."
lion about the California Surf profeaalonal soccer
team.
Bar Va"'W. Doe. Cite Trlelc
DEAR PAT: I maae a refreshment bat for Our
family room. I paint~ it black, but my wife nys
she ls sure the paint wl)l be damaged by spllled
drinks. Is there some kln<f o!vamisb T can pul over
1l lhat will protect it better'! How aboul lacquer?
8 .J., Newport Beach
· Mw. paint s tore• earry .. bar varnl1b,"
esc,et~~sultable where hud usage and spllled
dr are lnevJ&ule. It can be QIJ.led •vet &M. •
palat, ~-you •aY bave to dull tM flalsll
1ll1lllU1 IO that the vamllb wW ft'Sp better. Por1et aboutlacq~r. I& maydamase&Mpalllil.
1t"9Blwtdd8tpaw.,.,, .
DEAR PAT: My friend ~ t are plannlbl to
rent ap apartment tottlher. StiouJd both of • algn
tbe lea~, or 41 one peJ'lort '1 sl&Juature aufrtclent?
C.F., Newport Beach The person 1lgllln1 tbe 1..,. or '""9 •cree-·
meat, or parttdpatblg In &M 8'&l asteemeat lf
tbere fl no wriUD1, ls resPGUtWe to die laacllord
for the fall mat for Ute hill term of tlae a1reemnt
unJe11 there II a apeelflc acreeta~t to ffll• · trary. Tltla means that U two people Ip eafe
for a year aad one of &Item leaves m•~
bo&b are lndepen4eatly retJ>C*Slble for the hall
amOYat of &he remalal.Dg ren&, uless the place b,
or can be, re-ented. lf two or more people rent a
place, bat oaJy one sips the a1rMment, ~ that
. person Ii Uable for Jent as fU"'IS Ute lucllorcl Is
concerned. .For your own (trotedloo, Insist Uaat
your friend also algna the lease.. or rental agree·
mu&. '
~
DAILY PILOT ......
YOl.!l1l GETS
DA.MAGES
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -A j ury has
awarded $300,000 lo 11·
year·old Brett Lewis, of •'
Spokane. Wash .• whOlf
was blinded nine year
ago after a glaucom
operation.
The San Francis
(:ounty Superior Co\l
jury agreed with th
plaintlf( that Or. Willi•"'-"·
Richter, a f o rme
Spo kane eye s urgeo
now living in Hawai
m isdiagnosed the di
ease .
Additives
In Pork
Studied
r'..dJ:l• ~S ~~R • ~~ ~ • ~ J&4El4S • .JOW~·~0ml'3"'ft¥ :Sf-fdf"• ~
WA SHINGTON <APl
T he Ag ri c ul t ure
De partme nt ,has an·
nounced tha~ a public
meeting will be held Jpn.
16 ''to seek more effic,ent
mea113'' of reducin" .ii·
legal quantities of s ulfa
drugs which have been
showing up in lhe oation's
Pork supply.
ln addition to 1dep~t
ment ofncials, the Food
and Drug AdJ1'inistra-
tion will be represented,
Assistant Secr e tary
Carol Tucker Forem a n
said.
"' . . 2 i ·lttsli · ~
j l ... :.~·-··· P I
t: Q~ vA f~ GWd e.ft:v~~ j~ ~ ~ ~ ~rviJs . , • wi.tk t~ yer~ -00~
~
~ ~ Toh A~ot 'LU, ... ~~ i ~ 1lflu,~ i:AUA. ~ ..
1: I
!
1: c ~
~ 1
r;t. ,.,
fl)
:•11
'"l
I .I
• ••
of
rl ~
., · ·~ . I
attack on a rebel camp at the cortcluslon or the 1977 season after playing 11 THE FDA has the
50 miles north of Jpoh, of. years In St. Louis. The first West Coast season Is responsibility of enforc-
=f=ic=ia=l=s=s ai=·=d=. =====-...:p:...:l.:.•:.nn:..:..ed:...:..:...f:..:..o.:...r..:.197.:.__:8.:... . .:...P..:.bo.:...n_e_6.:...3_4·_8326.:.___f_or_m_o_re_ln_ro_r_m_a_·. ing regulations to keep additives from e Kceed·
I"" >
~ ~
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ in g s p c c ifl e d Ii m its ,
while the department is
supposed to m onitor
meat supplies for the
chemicals during meat
and poultry inspection.
Tastefu.l Holiday Gifts from ...
Hendy Imported batllen l1lled ""'h nne Sen Amonlo wines end
cheeMS. Come see our dlt91ays •nd ltt ut pertoo1lly pr4191re •
bmll for your lndMdual glft·glvlng nM<I•.
Gift Boxes
3·bottle ~ 8-bottle dastom wine b01tn complete wtrh wines,
c;ortcputlen, .... Wld chMMI. The ldMI gll'I for aN family or ~gtftgMng..
..J...Cheeses 1' Fun wt'9lla Ind h9lf wl!eelt of Chene Choose 1mpon.d' ~
Jaf1eb1Kg, o.n11t1 '°l'tlna. ~YO(!( theddw, Gouct. .. ~y ............ ~r....c:•~ ~· I J,,
Other glH Item• available lndude Imported wine &41.~. wine raaka, 5 & 10
. gallOn oak barrels, llqueu~ bf'andtei: c:ognecs.
«J>ur JL,cca.tione:
MAIN WINERY Phone 223-1401 737 Lomor St., Los Angeles
NEWPORT/COSTA MESA -e454t40 -15" Newport Blvd.
Wttf LOS ANCELES SANTA ANA ' _11.__.,___ crM1wr.-.m1111--MARINA DEL REY/VENICE
Rl!QONDO IEACH ONT AllfO ID·WA mt --
11 .. -. to• a.,_ o.-...., t7Mt -1111, VTff --CANOCA p AJlK ,.,_...,
In the case or s ulfa
drugs, which are used by
farmers to boost swine
g rowth and to prevent
certain types of dlseaus.
FDA allows up to one·
tenth of 1 parl per
million sulla in pork.
~ !'-"-'-~"\..~ ~
"'' J '. IMlJ..c;
~;
ace •
Save. It's as simple as that. Open a tax-deferred,
tax-deductible account at Mariners and rechfce your Income taxes by
the amount you save.
Individual Retirement and KEOGH Tax-Deferred
1 account:S have been set up by the Federal Government to
encourage individuals to save for retiremenl With an LR.A., you can
save as much as $1500 a year and with KEOGH as much as $7500 •.
PLEASE NOTE: Married couples who both work may each save as
much as $1500 In individual accounts. Also, non-working spouses
may quallfy for an I.R.A. contribution to bring the combinecl accounts
to a maximum of $1750 per year.
Don't delay. December 31st is your last chance
to reduce your income taxes for 1977. But, avoid the rush , come
to Mariners today. Our expert counselors are prepared to open your
account In minutes.
Prepare today for a better retirement! .
•WM), t.R.A. and KEOGH you may 11We.15f> olytAtt annual Income• 0t thltamounts Shown,
whichever Is kse1
FSUc --.............. __ . . .............. "'91M•--l~C..••) (Corn.fol Forelt Ave.)
10M.,.,.C:.. J1001~1S\. (NJ..... (114)-.70
~ >
,,,
•'
• , r 4
II t 1 I .
"
AJ• DQ.V P1LOT
•
' (
40% off on
imported Christmas
ornaments & lig.hts.
Decorate your tree or .
give them as gifts~
Umited to stock on hand through 12/2A /77
Gi~~, f.t.~"-·
long and short sleeve. Great
for casual or tie up with a
Blazer.
University
Seeks ~ys
· ForStudy
SAN FRANCISCO
CA P > -University of
Wasbjogton researchers
arc in the Bay Area look·
ing for couples -
espeetally gays -who'tl
volunteer to say what
· makes their relationship
tick or tremble on t~
brink or ruin.
Although the n,.
\jl>hwide project will in·
votve 3,000 couple! of all
kinds -heterosexual, bomosei;cu~, "f, .• g, old, Pt •.!Jeft ' . ..J.l!'e raearC:liers aay y re particularly Interested
in gay or unmarried
~9\lp~.s. ;iince ~~)e!lce M~)•a•bad -..~~eo.on marrieds.
"ALTHOUGH mERE'
' bu been a Jot or rea~b
on m arried coualea O\te r
the years, '<lie' .. koow
virtuallr nothing about.
uumarrled pr gay
cpuples," said Dr. Pep·
per SCbwart, who heads
th~ research group.
"Gay cooples are a good place to look for answers
since they have never
had a blueprint to handle ~ the temptation of non· 17th & Irvine Ave., Newport Buch, C<1lif. (114) 645-0792 ~QogaJll)'." -'---__.. __ _.._ _______ ....._~ · The San Fran~lsco
,
arfa, baa long been a
bav_~·tor homosexuals.
. Esotri'ltel are that one ln ae~en ott'.he c1cy'a 680.000 r~!deDts 11 gay. I
TJIB szso;ott three· year1proJect Is financed
by the National Science
Foundation. ·
About 1,000 Bay Area
couples who voluntee"r
will fill out confidential
questionnaires about
ttlclr relationships:
I
Col/,ege
Buib:Ung
Named
Orange Coast
C91lege's new business
educaUon bullding has
been named after the
first chairman of the
OCC business education
division, Charles Haley.
The Co~st Community .College District board
approved the name
Haley Business Leamlng
Center ID honor' of Haley.
who JcMned the ataff ln
1943~reUndin1978. He la· RresenUy
mana1er of the Orange
County Teachers Ctedit • Untdll. Tb;· adt:.ooo buildlu ~u C:pmtid.esl UU. tall
t •-' cl'8taited t, WUUam @lurock le Parteera (II
• ~na dtl Mar. '
••
NATIONAL I CALIFORNIA
..
Three Levels of
Fine S--opping & t>,IQlg ,
In a Relaxed AtmosJ;bere THE ~ 0
' HOLIDAY mls: 10 tot p.m.
Wed. thru Sat.
Open: Sun., Mon •• TuK. 10 to I Jt.m.
GVILLAGE ~1' TD -.
. . Lagunas Ghiardelli ~ '-.j
. II ~~~ ·--.. V:: il':!~I SO (l)AU.... ~ 1.! __ ..
llM9' .. .. ... , ..
1100 ·So~ Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach, Ca.
E•dre 1100 Mod Soetla C.... IUPwaJ. hecc.a-..,..... . . ~ -· ~e1~r av,,.,, § Oto
•
ZEMITH1S BEST PORTABLES ·
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'78 ME ··.
'ZENITH\ '
FULL FUJI.Ell ·
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NOW YOU NEVEi
HAVI TO MISS YOUI
FAVORITE SHOWS!!!
.,
BOATING
NEW PRINOLE·18 CATAMARAN SAILED
High Per1ormance for Heavier Crews
High Performance
Catamara1i Bared
Surfglas. Inc. of Santa Ana, producer or the
famed Prindle-16 catamaran, has announced pro-
duction of the Prindle·l8 reportedly the only asym-
metric 18-foot catamaran on the market.
"Tht• Prindlc-18 catamaran b as been developed
lo provide a higher performance Asym metric
"cat ·· for the skipper c:md crew whose combined
weight is over 300 pounds,·· said company officials.
The Prindle·l6 wus de!>igned and recommended
for crews whose combined weight ranges from 260
to 300 pounds.
"But there arc many people who want to race
•nd sail a Prindle catamaran who do not fit into this
rani!c. The Prtndlc-18 should be able to be raced
~ompetitively with a combined weight of between
JOO and 360 pounds,·· company spokesmen said.
Standard features of the new "cal" are asym·
metric hulls, adjustable tiller extension, double
trapeze, Seaman foam battens. mast rotating con-
trol, Internal halyurds and through deck hatches.
Specir~ations or the Prindle-18 are: Length
,.verall 18 feet; length waterline 17 feet ; beam eight
feet; draft 9'h feel; m ast 28'h fe et, weight 335
pounds. The boat carries 66 square feet in the
mains 'I and 50 :.qua re feet in the jib.
W~y.Oec.~2t,1tn DAIL y PILOT A J J
Newport tn .19801
Olympics Viewed
NEWPORT. R.I. <APJ -Thepresi~
dent. of t.be Narragansett Bay Yacht·
Ing Association says he ls optimistic
that Newport wlll be chosen as the site
for the 1980 Olympic sailina trials.
Robert B. Conner, NBYA president
and New York Yactit Club member,
said he and otller Rhode Island yacht·
ing officials met with an Olympic site
selection subcommittee in Newport.
"I FEEL QUITE optimistic about
it," said Conner. "We answerect all
the questions tbey asked, so now we
ought to hear what they've decided
within a month.''
Newport, along with Cleveland and
Rochester. N. Y .. are the three sites
being considered by the Olympic
Committee o( the United States Yacht
Racing Union, which Is he~d ·
quartered here.
.. We got some very good feedback
from .the group subcommittee," Con·
ner said. "We've· got things to offer
that neltber Cleveland or Rochester
have."
PETER LAWSON, pasl president of
NBYA and navigator aboard the
12-meter yacht Independence last
summer, said Newport also has sail·
ing conditions similar to those in the
Soviet Union.
"They're interested in the water
CHRISTMAS
, l t I. •
•l....J.. • i
: 11
I
SPECIALS
''
FROAf THE OUTBOARD
SUPERMARKET
Start a new yeor right with a
new Mercury outboard for
your soil or shore boat.
Ml!rC 7!>
The· best. is not always
the best without •h•r
sales service. We have
factory trained
mechanics and 10
years experience
in Newport Beach.
MttrC 110
~'!) ,,,,..,....-r."~~~ttcl.or J,marine Co .
__ : .. ' ".~--~ (At Newport Dunes} _,.._~1-..;:..;o.:::..-·· 1171 Back Boy Dr.
Newport Beach, Ca. 92660
(71.4) 644·45"5 '
'
Boat Beaching
Practice,Nixed
By San Diego
)temperature -cold but not so cold
you can't swim in it," Lawson said.
''They want one 4> t wo-foot seas, light
·winds ~d J~~an Udeg~wind_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ · shifts.
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Sailors no
longer will be able to beach their
boats at high tide, avoiding the cost or
staying at a boatyard.
After many years or such a practice
known as car~ning, it now is banned
by San Diego without s pecial
permission of the port director.
The new regulation was reportedly
aimed at Michael Kim Watkins,
owner or a shabby ·old. one·lime
tunaboard named the Zarco. For
several years, that engineless wooden
boat has been beached on Shelter
Island while Watkins pal!!bed holes in
the hull.
T he city attorney's office dismissed
five citations against Watkins as too
difficult to prosecute because the
beaches the boat in places without
posted prohibitions. So, the blanket.
ban was adopted this week.
"WE TIDNIC Newport will more
nearly duplicate what they will ex·
perience in the Otym pic:s than what
they will find elsewhere."
Lawson pointed out that the state
has aireed to make Ft. Adams. local·
ed at the entrance to Newport Harbor,
available as a headquarters for the
Olympic trials.
Newport Firm Gets
Barbor Dock Pact
A $249,1.50 contract to rebuild the
county's Newport Harbor dock faclli·
ty OQ Bayside Drive in Corona del Mar
has been awarded t o Tr autwein
Brothers by Ute Orange County Board
or Supervisors. •
Supervisor Tom Riley, in announc·
ing the award, said the Newport
Beach firm was the only bidder. The
project will include r e<:onstructing
the dock and replacing electrical wir·
ing.
Boat Show Annou_.ced
The 22nd annual Southern
California Boal Show will be held
Feb. 3-12 al the Los Angeles Conven·
Hon Center, chairman Bill Kellen·
burg or the sponsoring Southern
California Marine Association an-
nounced.
The Los Angeles show is the largest
all-marine exhibition on the West
Coast and one of the two or three
largest in the \,1.S. Kellenburg said
the 1978 ~how will expand to 275,000
square feet -a total of 35,000 square
reel or new display space which will
be added on the parking lot level.
The new space is in response to the
heaviest demand for exhibit space in
the show's hsitory. said Kellenburg.
The 240,000 square feet inside the
Conve ntion Center was fully booked
more than~ days in advance or the
show date, be added.
More thC.n you
expect
In a hardware store.
CHRISTMAS HOURS: s:lo 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
~~~OPEN SUNDAYS
CORONA DEL MAR, 31t7 £COAST HIOHWAV/llULO!CETER sounr OF M 7 MacAJmf\Ja 1ae-to1«u1 671•2100 . !-..-1
Crown I 1•ueYaiue •·
N S01ne ·cOlor in tllis picture
and Santa will put a little soanething in VoUP stocking.
You can even color a little bit out of the
lines. Or make Santa's beard bright blue.
Because this is the Brentwood Savings
Coloring Contest where everybody winds
up a winner.
Just bring your masterpiece to
Brentwood Savings and Santa will give
you a "little something " plus a real-life, tell-
em-what-else-you-want picture of you on
his knee.
Santa will be in the Huntington Beach
and Long Beach branches December
15-23, from 10AM to 3PM. Saturday from
10AM.to 2PM. He'll be in the North Pole
on Sunday.
Adults must be accompanied by children.
~-G--....;).. ~Brentwood Savings
Huntington Beach
5828 Edinger Avenue
Long_ Beach
2211 Bellflower Boulevard
~EDB~----------~--~~
I LIVE ATI------·-· -·--
\ .
I
. ~ 114Ja~v"'-oT
Tr8nsit Reserves Flllsh
. ,,, • By KATHY CLANCY
Ol tM o.ur PIMt ltaH
~ The Orange County Transit
t District's reserve fund, buJJt up ! tbe past five years with a share of
' state sales taxes, la by far the hJg~est In the state.
According to a report by the
California Auditor General,
OCTD 's savings account includes
$24.2 million set aside for de-
Teacher Held
On Pot Charge
SAN CARLOS <AP > -A
junior high school teacher has
been arrested for investigation
of supplyini mariju.a.n.a to lour
or bis former students, police here report.
Officers said Gary Osborne,
35, who resigned recently from
his job as a special education
t eacher in the S an Carlos
Elementary School Dis trict, was
booked at th e San Mateo County
jail Tuesday and released on his
own recognizance.
A grand jury indictment al-
leges he sold. "furnished." and
"agreed to furnis h" marijuana
to four former male students th e
past three years.
signaled projects alone with $<&.7
mlllton with no designated
purpose.
OCTD officials say the large
reserve -nearly twice the si.ze of
any other transit oper ation in
California -was built up by
di rectors on purpose.
THE PURPOSE Is to keep the
district's treasury in healthy
shape and lo have ready capital
·ror building a rapid transit
system.
More than half the $24.2
million. or $14 million, bas been
set aside for such a rapid transit
system.
That system may see its begin·
nings this year when OCTD of·
· ficials begin negotiating for
purchase ot abandoned Paclfl.c-
Electrlc right-of-way stretching
between Santa Ana and Stanton.
Eventually OCTD omclals see
that right·of·way as the
backbone of a bus or rail transit
system linking Orange County to
downtown Los Angeles.
STATE OFFICIALS who
worked on the auditor general's
report explained its purpose was
to find out counties and transit
operators were using state sales
taxes. . .
They found , for example, that
as of June 30. 1977, there was
St•7 .2 nulUon worth of sales tax·
es unspent by various agencies .
As a result, they said, the
Legislature may want to amend
regulations governing use of that
money.
BOTH SUGGESTIONS men-
tioned as ~ible revisions could
a ffect OCTD, although state of-
ficia ls said it would be unlikely
a ny c'1ange could affect tbe re-
serve funds already held by the
transit district.
One suggestion might permit
road building projects and other
transportation programs to be
financed with the state sales tax·
es now channeled almost ex-
clusively to OCTD.
The other could permit OCTD
'to use a larger portion or st.ate
sales tax funds tor operating ex-
pen1es.
As the regulation now s tands
OCTD can use no more than half
its portion of sales taxes for
operating expenses.
. -
Bus Record
Poli,cy Set
A policy govero ing
public records has been or-
dered by directors of the
Orange Co unty Transit
District.
Board Chairman Ralph .
Clark called for the policy
as part or district efforts to
formalize many previo'lS.ly
informal procedures.
In addit.ton. Clark said,
legislation may eventually
require the district to have
such a policy anyway.
At Clark's suggestion,
directors asked OCTD of·
ficlals to inventory exist-
ing records listing which
records s hould be con·
fidenlial and which open
for public review.
Jn addition, they were
told to develop guidelines
governing access by the
public.
The guidelines should in·
elude a detailed appeals
procedure for those who
believe they have been de·
nied reasonable access to
r ecords, Clark said.
Sadaleback Sets
Special Courses
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Death Notice•
YOlllA
MIKE SANTOS YORBA. ,..,ldet!t of
lellt• An•, Ca . P .. H d •••Y on
Ot<ember 11, 1977. He wa• • n•ttve ol ~..,9• County C•lllornl•. S..rvlved by hit wife S.lome Y0<ti. ol Ille home.
lour ch•ldrtn, Di vld Yorti. ol S.nt• ...... c •.. Raymond YO<N ol EKon·
dido, C• .• l0<il• Y0<1><! ot Porterville.
C.. •nd Roy Yc...-1><1 ol Porterville. C.. ttso lhirlft'n Qr.oncl<hlldren Re<ll••
lion ol "'" Ro...ry wa' Mid on T.,.soav Oeu mt>o-r 70. 9'11 ot & 30 P M. at
Smith TutNll Lamb !>clnl• Ana (l'h1pel
~\$ ot C-ntt\tf.,, Durldl w•\ h•ld WHJ,.
n .. ddY Dottmber 71. 1977 •I 10.00
A.M. al Our lady ot Poll•r C•tnohc
O uren 1n Sdnt• An•. C.. tnl~me-nt
"'"' t>to "' f """"~" ~'"°'1a1 P•r,, !>enta ... ,,.. C... Smith Tuthill Lamb
Stllla i'na Morlu•ry alrector1.
j47-0 JI.
GOLOSIEllRY
BERTHA E. GOLDSBERRY, rHI·
deftt ol Costa ~w. Ca. Pat~ away
Two courses aimed at the physical growth and
rehabilitation of handicapped people are being ot·
fered during the spring semester al Saddleback College.
The courses will Include strengthening and re·.
sis ti ve exercises. cardiovascular conditioning and
stretching and relaxation.
Each student will be diagnosed to determine his
strengths and weaknesses before being provided
with an individual exercise plan.
Persons with any type of physical disability are
eligible to enroll in the courses which will be offered
from 4 to 7 p.m. Fridays and 8to11 a.m. Saturdays.
Registration is limited.
~ THIS WEEK'S ~ ~SUPER SPECIAL i ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
RCll the new
1 Sportables
Hlgh-~rformance
black & white TV
ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES
Stinday Bus ln~o
Service Resuming
The informaUon operators who
provide facts about Orange
County Transit District bus
routes may MKLDd lrritated at
times when Sunday information
service resumes Feb. 12.
Why? Because tbey'U be work-·
lng in a Santa Ana office buildine ·
without air conditioning in tem·
peratures that sometimes reach
100 degrees.
OCTD DlllECTORS have re·
instated the Sunday information
service they discontinued six
weeks ago:
But only Direc tors Robin
Young and Al Holllnden favored
providing air conditioning for the
operators at. a cost of $216 a Sun·
day.
OCTD officials explained
earlier that the cost for alr condi-
tioning ts steep on Sundays
because tbe aystem ln the office
building can't be 1hut down to
provide cooling for just one arett.
AND THE DAILY eoet to alt
condition the whole building was
aet al $216. · However, the operators will
have to work in the non·&lr-
conditiooed office for only a few
weeks.
District o!Oces, tncludJnt the
Information center, wlll move
next spring-to new offices ln
Garden Grove.
Heart Seminar
S~~ in Newport
A seminar on ecbocardlo·
graphy, the diaenosis of beart
abnormaliUes by sound waves,
will be held for physicians and
technicians Jan.5-7 at. the Maro
riot Hotel, Newport Beacb.
Tbe se minar ls being
11ponsored by the Orange County
Chapter ol the American HeaR
Association. For furth•r lA·
formation call the OCABA at
:>t7-3001.
Here • Raised flsewltere
MICROWAVE OVE"S
OR DELUXE 19"
DIAGONAL
COLOITUI
1 Oft December 11, 1911. I' natove ol
lewa. Siie ~ survl.,.d llY her dauc;ihl«I
Mtrt•rtl C..thn of Costa Mew, Ca.,
llfld Carolyn Martin ol •-•· and wn ic.-th Goicbberry ot I-a, tllO SUr•
"1¥td by MYtn 9r•ndchlldren a nd
tllnt 9reet"')ret1dchlldren. FuMr•I .. rvtces will i. ,..Id Frtoay Oe«mber
IJ, 1977 et tO:OO AM et Tiit Ulllltd
Further information may be obtained by call-
ing Ron Hastings in the co:s:l~le~g~es~p~h~y~sl~c~a~l e~d~u~c~a:_tl~o~nJI;;;;;;;;!;;;~;;;~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~!!~!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~!. department at 831-9700 or ~95-4950, extension 342.
Presbyttr1an Olurc.ll !ft Gnlftc. t-•· f"-=:a:l:=z:::::;::i:=:;~"t;l:r;.::..,..,. Interment Wiii II• at EHi SIM
CemelM"Y In E<l/lervllle, •-•· Smith
'Tuthill Lamb~•• MeS<I Mortuary In
<har9e ol local arran 9•m•nh . , ... .,...
WI NOLIN)(
CHERYL JEAN WINOLINX, rest·
d•nt ol C.O\la ~sa. Ca Pa.-..s •w•Y on December 9', 1977 el Ille "9f OI 11.
Beloved CUUQllt..-ol R_,t & Shirley
Deaths
ElseuJhere·
W1"4llnulCosta1MW,ca.GreYHldl SAN DIEGO (AP) -
"''"ten held \ooey Dee•mtier 21' 1917 A funeral was held to-"' 1 :00 P.M. .. El Toro Cetnttert WIUI
or.OonaldS4Uf'QPOn ot 1n11,..o1nc1a1-day fo r Mabel Hum·
•"'I !>mitt\ Tuthill !Jmb Costa MeU phrev, 85, first COUSin Of Mortuary dlr~lors . ...._481. J
SHEARH Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
H•ROLD R. SHEARER. a9• ••. D-Minn. She died at a tong time ..ia.nt ol l.OnQ Buell, C•.
now ol ........ Hlll1, paswd .... ay on convcilesccnt home Sun-
0.comoer "· 1m. S..rvl•..S by Ills day w11e Floret,., dWQl!te.-. Pal Ford, •
Pen,,y .Jonet, Linda Groll, Cerol•
Oobbs •na Debby Crevellng, len RUTLAND, Vt. (AP)
9rend<hlldr9", sisters, Ed!'a Roech, WllU W Wbl 53 Meve Pet.,.s end Selly Ga llller, -am • le, ,
brot111rs Victor end Glen Slleerer. Chairman Of the board Of
Ol•pel ,.,.,,let!$ end lntennent Thurs· A 11 · d p & L · ht oav De<ember n, 1911 el 12:00 NOO<I. IC OWer l g •
Olrocteo by WH tmlnst..-Mtmorlel Co . or Vermont and
Perk Mon .... ~~v~~·'l'· All antic Electric Co. of
WALT'A BUDlllTIS, rnloont ot New Jersey, died Mon-
Sent• Ana. Ca. Pened •••Y on day O.umMr It. 1'77 S..o lved l>Y his •
wife Lout• A. Buc!Yltls ol Sanle Ane. . WASHINGTON CAP) C.1. two sont Stel)hefl V. Budwltls ol -
C:0<on• c1e1 Mt•. ca.""" Allan 11. Bua--NelUe Tayloe Ross,
'""'01Dana""'lnt.ce.deughterJ•ne 101, the nat1·on's first E. Geurww ol Fretno, C.. and -
9rand\On Mlrk c:;.uMr OI FrKno, WOman governor and a
Ce • slsttr Wenda l<rau1 ot llllnols. former director Of the Holy RoHry will be 'Thu rsdey
otcembtr n . m1 •t 1 » P.M. •t U.S. Mint, died Monday
Still Ber99ron Coste Meu Ci..pel · t · h h Meu ol Cllrlstl<H> Burlel will be held 3 a nursUlg ome ere,
Frtd•yDec-rZJ,H77at•:ooA.M. Mrs . Ross was in ·
a t St • .Joeclllm Cetllollc Church. augurated governor Of S.rvlc.e5 con<lude. Private lntermenl
Htrbor L•-Me..-1.1 Park. Beltz Wyoming on Jan. 5,
eereeron Fune.-al Home Cost• Mau 1925, succeeding her 0_1•_ec_t0
_'-"--------husband, who died a few
IBJ.llOADWAY
MOITUAIY
110 Broadway Costa Mesa
642·9150 .
SMITH TVrHIU U.MI
WISTCUfF CHAra
427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • 64M888
Santa Ana Chapel
• 518 N. Broadway
·santa Ana • 547--4131
rtBCE lltOTHElltS
SMITHS' MOttTUAIY
627 Main St.
Huntington Beach
53&-6539
PlllOAMI\ Y
COlOMtAl. PUMHAL HOMI .
7801 Qolaa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
PAClllC YllW
MIMOllAl.PAH CemetMy Mortuary
Chapel •
3600 Plclflo View Dri\19
Newport,
Cellfornla
64'4-2700
MtCOIMtCK
MOITUAa9H
LIOUf'll Beach 494·9415 LIQuna Hiii•
1e9-0933 Sift Juen C.olalr~
496:-1778 -
weeks before the 1924
election.
ROCHESTER. N.Y.
CAP > -Lilllan W.
Black, 84, who survived
t h e sinking of the
Titanic on April 14 , 1912,
af\er it struck an
iceberg, died Tbur11day. . --
CULVER CITY (AP>
-Graveside services
were conducted. f or
veteran Hollywood press
agent Ruuell Birdwell,
74, who established his
reputation with a
splashy campaign for
the mm "Gone With The
Wind." Birdwell died
Thursday or a stroke ln
Oxnard, where he had
been Ii ving In retire·
ment since July.
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Funeral services for
big-band drummer Satn·
my Wel11. 67, were
cond uc ted••
Mount Slna:l Meinorial
Park. Welas died Sun·
day. Wetaa made many
character appearances
as "Sammy the Drum·
mer" oo Jack Benny's
radio and televl1lon
shows.
· Neptune SocletY.·
ClllllMATIC* 8UllltA'-ATHA
~7L11 . ......... ...., ..........
..,v.:r~· ...... -~ ....
..
the quarter coat ... by ZERO KING ~
•'
petf ed winterwe19ht. le>Cr" cotton
suede shell w1th pile Hnmg,and ·
deep slash pockets.
•
644·5070
--·
.
l
-
Sears
SOUTH COAST PlAZA ONLY 4 BIG DAYS· Wed., Thurs., Fri. and
Sat., Dec. 21 thru Dec. 24
Our best
=i;." Drill
SAVE 130!
Craftsman
3/8-In. Drill
Reg.
$59.99
2999·
Delf. max %-HP. # 1148. Variable speed and reversible.
l/2PRICE l/2PRICE
21-Pc. Drill
Bit S.-t
Regular $26.99
~
Craft,.man
:! •Ji -in. Vise
Regular S29.99
26-pc. Router
llit Set
Regular Sep. $90
#6719 131'' 14.,.,
#5 180 #25448 s45
l/2PRICE l/2PRICE l/2PRICE
Craftsman
Tool Box
Regular $16.9!1
• #65 12 8'>'>
-Regular $1.29
4-0-Drw. Parts
Organizer
Regular SJ 1.99
ns5349 71•J •39217
CUT
•1 so!
Women's
Fla nnel
Night
Go wn s
Were S5.4!) in
Fall '71)
399.
Some 100,.'r cotton, some
cotton and polyest e r
gowns. In assorted prints.
Sizes 28 to 40.
·Screen Print of:
Y ou r C hoice·
wit h The
P u rc h ase of
An y T -Shirt in
Stock
SAVE *66!
74-Pc. Mechanic's
Standard Tool Set
SAVE '150!
). Craftsman 10-In.
Radial Arm Saw
• Regular $379.99
22999
Motor develops 2¥2-HP. Cuts 3-in.
deep at 90° angle. All up-front
controls. •2310
While they last!
A•k about Sears Convenient Credi& Plans
Regular Separate 4999
$116.95 40
only
Two quick release ratchets, assorted sockets,
wrenches, sturdy metal box and more. #33064
' '-~.'
.-~. '
CUT
.. ' ... -... ',,.
Winnie-The-Pooh® Slippers.
Were
$5 .99 In Christmas
'76 Catalog
297
Cushioned insole is cotton flannel
lined. Nylon Tricot® lined upper.
Cotton flannel shirt holds slippers in
pockets.
Magnetic Photo Album
While They
Last! ·. 66c
Five page magnetic photo album
that gives you ten full sides to. .
arrange those special photos.
Assorted cover colors. .
SAVE '11!
Storage Seat Valet.·
. .
Regular 2197 $32..99
Helps keep clothes
organized. Has
hanger, trouser
ba r, tray,. P·added
seat lifts for extra
storage ..
~ ..
" E a ,ch o f th e s <·
advef4tised items i s
readily available for'
sale as "adv~rUsed.
Sears regular prices
may vary by geo-
graphic area. -
#9670
·PRONE
540-3333
&.S"f Prtcbat PoUcy ft an ltem ti 11ot des<StW n
zedue.d ot' a special purchase. 1\ ,is at ltt NIU!at price. A 1pedal purc.buo, &houp not tecluced. II .. ~~Uooal value. ..
l
I
IJ 'DAIL 'r PILOT
Quantitie's Limited:
Shop early .
JCPenoey, Newport Beach, Fashlo" Island store only
Now
10.99
Now 12.99
Orig. 16.91
Roering Hot Cycle"
Baby Heartbeat ™ Starsky and Hutch
\ Play Set Listen to her heart through
the special stethoscope.
Orig. 14.99 Orig. 6.99
NOW 10.99 NOW 4.88
Hamilton Beach
Fry-All. Orig. 17.99
Northern Donut
Bakery. orig. 22.sg
' .
NOW
10.99
Orig. 15.99
tender love
n kisses ·· I
Now 13.99
'
Orig. 19.99 Wizwheel
,
~ ONLY S26.99
Polaroid One Step 1s the
easy way to take great
SX-70 pictures. indoors or
out. No focusing necessary.
1ust point and shoot.
Features variable electronic
shutter, autom':itic time
exposures to one. second.
Weighs only 16 oz.
carrying case
only 4.95
SX70 twin pack
fllm only 9.99
flash bars 2.29
Only S59.00
Help yourself enjoy the holidays
w ith G.E. Food Processor.
Stainless steel knife blade for
grinding and chopping, as well
as grating, mixing, orumblrTg or
blending. Reversible disc slices
or shreds. Stay on switch tor
continuous operation and extra·
tall food chute to properly direct
food.
l
T aastmaater Mini
Griddle. ortg. 1&.H
\ .
Only s14.99 .
Mirro~>'Watta Pizza
Mirroai Watta Pizzaria electric
, : pizza baker. Bakes frozen.
scratch or ready mix pizza in
12" baking surface. Also
use ful for baking and
warming dozens of other foods~ ·
Orig. 17.99
. .
Only 14.99 ..
t aCPenney f;8st Grilli!')
.••. broils up to two
hamburgers In minutes.
lrnmersible Qooking tr~y. 0419. 21.99 ii
Sale sta~ts 9 a.m.
Thursday
December 22
Now
15.99
Orig. 19.99
Green Machine
·Tonka Aerial Ladder
Orig. 10:99
Now 8.99
·Tonka Mighty O~mp
Orig. 11.99
Now 8.99
Hot Wheels ••...
Thundershift 500 orig. 14.99
Now 11.99
. .. ~. .
I I
' ----
Only s7_99
Pyrexlll Bake-a-Round./9 bread baker
bakes each loaf with crispy crust. In-
cludes glass baking tube, handy oven-
pro'Of rack for handling. instructions,
recipes.
Orig. 11.99
' . -"'..... .,;,: ·~·-~·· . ... .
.. ... ..: : •. ~ 1',
, .. : . " ,' .. ,: .;,,-. :·' ,
~_;;ji
Only s14.99 ,
DazeY® Donut Factory
lets you·make fresh, hot
donuts in no time, non-stick
surface for easy cleaning
Orf0.19.19
OPEN
MON.-FRI.
9 A.M.·10 P.M,
SAT. 9 A.M.-8 P.M.
I
Quantities limited
Shop early
Holiday Sleepwear
coordinates
3 colors in antron Ill nylon
satin with embroidered
floral tnm. Orig. •8. to •18.
NOW 25°A> off
Mademoiselle
FUR
SALE
30°/o off
Entire
line
of jackets.
wraps, and
boot length
coats. Choose
from racoon,
rabbit, lamb
' and fox
sections.
Orig . *250
to •750
Fashion Shawls
Floral challis, assorted
plaids. Fashion colors.
• l ...._.
Night gown and
Pajama sale
Elegant lace trims and
embroidery "' white and
pastels. Misses and large sizes.
Orig. •e. to •11 .
I
..... -.. •
NOW 25°/o off
--,, t . Fluffy
women's and
.ctilldren,.s ·
slippers
assorted ,
colors; broken
sizes
20°k off
Selected
Men's
Sl.lppers
20°/o off
Wednetday, Oecemt.r 21, 1977 DAILY PILOT JIJ5
Men's
·Down Vests
Most efficient
insulation for cold
winter weather .•
Orig. •25.
NOW S16.99
Contes:npory
~Miss Sportswear
, Coordinates
Blazer. vest.
pant, and
skirt.
Bl,ack and
khaki
sizes 8-18
Orig. •12. to •30.
NOW ,.
··J. ~0% ~!t '
t •
•.t;
'
Men's
Non-clannish plaid
Here, Its Burlana~. a blend
of Dacron~ polyester/wool,
styled with flap pockets.
Orig. •55.
NOW S34.88
Men's 3 piece vested
Corduroy suit
Orig. '60.
NOW S39.88
...
Men's Solid Color
Golf Shirt.
50% Poly/50% cotton
Orig . 19.
NOW S6.15
.. Men's Selected
Sweatets
SAVE 30.% to 50%
Women's Blouses Girls' super denims
Prints and solids. Jr. and
m isses sizes.
Size 7·14.
Orig. •7.
NOW 20-40% off NOW SS.88 to S14.88
'
NOWS3.99
~
Men's and Ladies'
~o~~~ !,~ls. key chains, gold
filled and slerling silver chains
50o/o off
Fine Jewelry
Stone Rings
. 40o/o Off
I
. ~
Worrien's Skirts Women's Coats
Plaids & solid wool wraps
Jr. and misses sizes.
· Orig. •40. to •56.
NOW30% off
..
· Peasa·nt CQ-ordinates
Mix or match sepanates skirts and blouses .
" . N0Mf S1.99
\
I
ii
AJeONLv PILOT
Lack of Understanding.· Me'1n$ Estrangement
By JOHN C NN&f'F A~ ..... -.-YA "lhfl••--NEW YORK -Concern IS
J;rowin' in Amerieao bu.ine~
that the private eotnprise
aystem that helped make lbi:v
.the m ost materially wealthy na·
tion on ~arth Is eroding dnder
pressure ot societal cha,nge and J>ureaucraUc drift.
Causes and effecl are inter ·
mingled. The pl'Qliferalion and
rigid applicatiol\ of laws, the em··
FDA Nix e s/
Labelling
-·R~gmation
WASJDNGTON (AP)
-The Food and Drug
'Administration b as
dropped plans to require
food labels bearing pie·
tores or the food being
sened to state whether
ev-erything in the picture
is in the can.
~ Under the proposed
rule, for example, if a
can or peas were lubcled
with a picture of peas in
a dis h, with bull<'r melt·
ing on top -and there
wa~ no butler in the ('itn
the label would have
to state that the butter
was not enclosed.
A s imilar rµlc is Jn ef-
•rect for packaged main
,dishes, bu~ the proposal
would have extended it to all packaged foods.
µhas1~ Ol\~onsumerism al the ex·
pense ot production and a "oo-
rb I(.'." tnenlallly in regard lo
te.chool~y are amon1 the factors
involved.
PaOMINENTLYme ntioned
also are a lack of economic un·
derstanding and a reeling o(
estrangement from the economic
syste m .
Whlle polls sometimes show
Americans tending to become
more conservative, rejecting the
notlon of government as the
answer to alJ problems, the
trcndB seem to continue almost
beyond control.
Many businessmen today feel
they are bt)"tng isolated from the
com muntty ilt large a nd
cate gorized as the e n emy,
sometimes by the nation's m~t
respected leaders. even by the
president
ABOUT $50 billion would "go
into the pockets or lhe 011 com-
However, only four
comments supported the
plan, out of 45 received,
so the proposal is being
dropped.
IIis face mask doesn't disguis<' the intent of this st riking coal
m iner in Chesapeake, Ohio. lie and other United !\line Workers
~athcred Tuesday lo form a caravan lo halt t ransportation of non·
union coal. Stic kers on his ,·:.in left no doubt a bout his views.
We'll handle all the det••~
dnd even enclose •
pe1~on4I g•ee11n9.
1 •• I ll P ST•CIC '"""Met .S•v•-,e, \ 1 01, "'"'k' Midp ' Lo"'"°'"
S 01. '"""" C....... a,., 1 or ""'" Oov1h 1'\ Of 8•1'-F ~'"
• ftf. ···~ SUd., .... , ltl'IWl)e"V 8o•bo-l&tl
t 4 ..l'A -a 0t '"""'
Close Encounters
of Another Kin~
Ano ther kind. altogether. As. when
you get together with your dentist.
Could You get closer than that to Dr.
Arnold Flanzer? Well. he doesn't like
to let money keep people apart. So
you could get pretty close. For a lot
less than you might suppose.
Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer
370 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
642-0112
Business
O ass Set
t\ high -.peed
-.horthand roursl' will be
offer ed for the first time
t his spring at Orange
Coast Coll ege. Costa
Mesa.
Spring cl;.isscs begin
t-'cl>. 6. Rl'gist ration
starts Jan. 12. lnformu
t1o n is uvailablc from
the '<!Ollege. S56·673S.
The course will meet
T ut•s d ays a n d
T hursdays from .\ to 5·30
p.m. As a prcrcquii.itc.
studt•nts must be ahlc to
take s horthand at 100
words per minutt•
Sale Set
By Utility
Dir('rlors or San Diego
Gas & Electric Co. huvc
authorized the sale and
jssu a nce of up to I 2
million ),hares of pre-
ference stock.
Thc.,stock will be of'
f e r e a fo r sa l e i n
February. SDG&E will
us e money raised from
the oCferlng to pay a por·
tion of the company·s
short-term debt and to
continue the construc-
tion program.
In another action. the
board d ec l a r e d a
quarterly dividend of 34
cents a share on the com·
pany·s common stock.
payable Jan.15, 1978.
GALA
NEWl'EARS
EVE
. CELEBRATION
Fdbulous 6 Cour:.e
Gounn4t Dlnnl't
Comphmenlary Ch<tmpagn1>
I
F .. wor~
Nor~M.ikers
OcJncing
all ev1:nl119 to th~
panles'' I/ Congress rejected his
program to continue regulatlng
oll and gas prices, said Presi-
dent Carter in October. He was
angry, using the words "ripoff"
aod "pronteerlng."
He was also incorrect. The S50
billio" figure referred to gross
profit$, not net iocosne. Should
tbe oil compan'es gross $50 bill!~ during any period, they
would likely k.eep as ineome less
than lO percent or It.
Infrequently. business is
pleas antty s urprlsed. His st·
titude molded by ye a r s of
frusjr\tion, Ed gar Speer 's
word~ snapped with anger. "Big
deal,'' said the U.S. Stee l
cbairman scornfully of his meet-
ing the next day with the presi·
dent.
"IN THIS COUNTRY," he
sald brittlely, "We 're saying it's
trrelevant whether our steel in·
dustry competes or not," In
other countries. he said, they
protect their businesses for I.he
~lfare or all.
NEWS AN,.f Lt'SI S
mentally clean facilities?
Sidney Terry, Chrysler Corp.
vice president, asks s imilar
ques tions. He tells ot the tiny,
unde r $10 anti-pollution item
that Chrysler inadvertently s ub·
slituted ror the almost identical
de vice approved by the Environ·
mental P rotection Agency.
THE EPA SUED for $95
million, or St0.000 a car, even
though the device was equally
effective as the original one.
even though most of the errors
were corrected. The judge dis·
missed the case. There was no
case, he said.
Why does the government as·
sume such an altitude? For the
protection of the public? 01', ask
some businessmen, for I.he pro-
tection of bureaucnU~ riibts
that eventually hurt the con·
sumer by inexorably forcing up
prices?
Edward David Jr., president
of Exxon Research &, Engineer·
ing and ~c,ence adviser to
Corme r P r eside nt Np,oft,
b e lie ves our atte mpts t o
eliminate ris k In everything a.re
foolhardy, thwarting technoloay
as well as free choice.
RELATIVELY LITTLE
money is being appropriatedfor
research that produces new
technology, he suid. Instead, it
goes for product improvement.
ro r attempts tq eliminate rlsks
that are inherent m life itself.
Sidney Homer . a noted credit
authority, observes that as a nu·
lion we ulso
have b ee n
funn e lin g
more money
into the con-
sumption or •
gooda, and
less into the
means for
producing
those goods.
We do not un-cu•N1irir
derstand, he says: It cannot COD·
tlnue.
Carter lis te n ed to Speer,
'.cbanfed his own thinking on im·
"s\Oits. and on Dec. 6 announced a
plan to protect the industry
~lgainst import competition and
to aid ii through loan guarunlC('S
an d t ax breaks.
Bu t businessmen suy their
\"icwpoint is usually more dif·
· ticull to eonvey. Speer noted
durinA the int ervicw that he had
sought a Wh ite House meeting
on imports three years before
the invitation came through.
Ford Awarde d
$9 Million Job
A lack of understanding is the
common denominator of busi·
ness gripes. Subject of repeated
sun eys. thc answer is alway~
lht' s ame ~los t Am ericans
kno\4 \'Cf\' liltll• about thei r ~ystc m ·Ma ny p l•op le feel
l'Sl ranged from it
"!\10Rt; Al'\D l'I ORE peopl<'
arc coming to sec their pe rsonal
interests ancl the interests of
business as separate and incom-
patible," says Paine Webber.
the securities firm, Jn an essay
lo be incorporated in its 1977 an-
nual report.
1fE OBSERVE D ALSO that
the import problem, while
foremost, was but one area in
which cooperation was needed.
\ Exacting application of environ·
mental regulations to obsoles·
cent units also contributed to
steel 's problems, he said.
Would il not be more efficilml.
h i! a s k e d . t o b e m o r e
1• 1' o n o m 1c a 11 y u wa r e and
Sl'ns1tivc. and permit those old
facilities to live out their brief
rem aining Ii fl! and !>pend the
money instead on new environ-
A $9.613,000 contract for •·first
buy.. production or bot gas con-
trol valves for the U.S. Navy's
Trident I fleet balllstic missile
has been awarded to Ford
Aeros pace & Communications
Corp .. by Lockheed Missiles &
Space Co., Trident missile prime
contractor.
Ford Ae rospace & Co m-
munications Corp. Aeronutronic
Division at Newport Beach will
perform Uie work on the Tridenl
val\'es. A development program
wr1s s tarted al Acr onutronit
0 1vis1on on the Trident \'alves in
1973. This is the fi rst prod uction
award.
We demand more from gov-
ernment and gove rnment de·
mands more from business but.
says Waller Hansen, chairman
of Pete, Marwick. Mitchell &
Co .. the accountants, we fa il to
set.· that:
NEW YORK lAP) C.OluVenl
•S ~lle,:t~:l"t!ll\I Com~H CMI r
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AFAProl • 1 &!:'.:t't11 AID Inc ,.,. ,~,.
AVM Co J 3' 1 Dfla 100
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"The closer the effective tax
rate approa<:hcs JOO percent. th{'
elo~('r it is that tax rc\'C:nuc~.
production an d job crt.>atlon up
proach zero ...
"4tt~I 1Mdt\lr1twt1on il~ ~r0f1h
o"~r The Co unt~r
NASO Listing'
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MUTUAL FUND S
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
'\l' t"do sday'
lo!Siug Pri ·e~
NYSE COMPOSITE . TRANSACTIONS
..
WedtwMlday. December 21, 1977 VN DAil. y PILOT A J 7
Credit. Given ..
·Women Fail to Ap~y
By SYLVIA POllTElt
Between tast June 1 and Oct. 1, more than 300 mJlnon
notices lnforming women of their ngbts to have jolnUy used
accounts listed in their own umes were sent out by banks,,
department stores, oll companies and other creditors. The
mailing was required by law. A spot surv91 by the Com·
merical Credit Coc'p. disclosed an overall respoa.M rate or 9
percent on avttage.
Ml.Wons of women are at.ill vque or tanorant about
letal rtthte retarding credit. Wblle th• federal Eqeal
Credit OiJpcwtunlty Act o( 1915 has been w1dely publlclsed, di~erhnlnaltoa Jn lhe 1rant.Jnt fJf cndit to women conUnues
on an alannlnib' exL~elvucale.
YBT. BJGJfJ'S GVA•AHtEED TO women by this law
touldoneday .,.-lile·savlng. Tblouah ellber death or divorce.
some 85 percent of mnrrled women will at some point be
single again. Wben this change occurs, those who never have
bad ctedit 19 their own names will face a struggle for finan.
cl al aurvtval.
UnW tho• law .. the following are specifically pro.
hlblted: .
(1) Retuatng a married woman a separate account, even
thoughsl}ewouldquaUty if she were single.
(2) Demandlasf financial inrormaUon about tbe spouse
whu tbe~Ucantlacredltworthy individually.
(S) ~lnl credlt
becaUM ol a tba.nt91n
marital status.
(4) Refusing a m a r-
ried woman credlt
because of the credit
rating of her ~pouse, un·
Jess the application ls
for a Joint account.
Money's
Worth
CS> Refusing lo consider alimony and child-support pay
ments as bona tide income.
(8) ASKING AN A.PPLIC.\NT ABOUT b1rlh control
practices or chJld·bejring plans.
C7> Refusing to conslder a wife's income when she and
her husband apply for credit jointly.
(8) Refusing to consider regular part·time employment
or ret.i"'ment bepefits as income.
(9) Re!usJng to reeoanile a married person's legal
name.
Ut) TERMINAnNG, REVISING Oil requinng re·
appUcaUoa ol a credit tramacUoo ~ause of retirement or a change in the borrower•s marital atatua.
(11) Requiring a spouse or anyone else to co.sign for an
unsecured loan.Uthe applicant is creditworthy.
Cl.2) Rausing to extend or continue crediL because age
makes you ineligible fot· credit insurance.
T.he Equal Credit Opportunity law represented a vital
breakthroug~ for America ·s women.
tlVT OF 'UIAT WORTH IS lhi~ law if women do not
know their rigbls or exercise them? can you, for instance,
answer the following?
-A woman must prove that discrimination by a credit
insUtuUoo wu 'ntentional. <Answer: NO.) •
-Lending Institutions are compelled by law to reveal
grounds on which credit is denied. <Answer: YES.) '
-DISCRJMlNATIO~ INVOLVING amounts of Jess
than $100 does not justify a law ault under federal law.
<Anawer: NO. Any amount ju.stllies acUon. >
-A:Dy appllcaticln \hat aaa marital status for credit
pUt'pOAI must state that an answer ls optional. <Answer-: YES.)
Stocks Rally Ends
4.:.day Loss String
NEW YORK CAP) -Stock prices raU'ied today, re-
boundln& from a four-session decline.
· The Dow Jones averaRe of 30 industrials. off 16.40 points thelast.fourseuions, recovered7. 71 points to813.93.
$ALES
New YOAIC (AP) ·NY SICKk .. ,. ~o• ti...i ........... , •• U,Sll>,oot """'-o.y ...... • • •• ... U,UO,(J(» w..-•oe> ............. .... • Ji,ll~--111 691> .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . • lt. UO,i VMr •90 .................... , ,.,uo, T*O Y9•r&... ............ 11.1.a:> .Jeft I to... .... ......... 5,141,H•, IU• lo Wto ........... ,. . ~.l ... M .OGO '"' to •• .. . .. .. .•. .. . •.st•.,.t.ua
naf AMEJC 010
HIW Y~IC IAPJ
MlaX SALES
~· •IMI eecet , ..... " .. ··• 2,'10,oot 11.C. ~ ,..,. • • .. .. • .. . • J, 1 ro.oao ~ft f!M" .,.a MIH .... ,. • , Stl0.000 Nild ..... .,... --.. .. .. .. • . • '!A!0.000
,
I.
Al•DAILY PtLOT WednM~. December 21, 1977
,
(
· ..
Regular
anil
Menthol
/
r
INSIDE; .•Televlslon •Movies • r
DAILY ptLOT BJ
Washington Bas Chanee, says Ex·Husk~ EVeret ..
By ROGER CAJlLSON °' .. Dlllty f'Mlll MMt The Washington Huskies
arrived in the Orange Coast
area Tuesday •. but before they eyen took tMlr fint
practtce ~t Oranae Coast
Collett todq they've been
assured by inairy that their
tut Jan. 2'(8t the l\tise'Bowl
la Pasaden• ii ~ ot an im·
poqjble nature.
The Michigan Wolverines
will be supplying the opposl·
tion and the Big-10 cbam•
pions are heavy favorites.
Nol all are convinced.
.however, that Washington
will do niore than •um the
victim .. The BUJkles were un·
derdop in appearanc:et tn
1.MO-f1.. Jet ~ed WlleaMl.a I "-1 .... Minnesota.>..'!"'"· · • 'i:Sob Scblor.... ~· on&o e7ed .Wasllla.cto11 qu~k, wa tbe player:
'Ill the 'ame ln M&la ol those
vidonea and on..U.e ilGeliaM
as lieekup for Scbloredt. w.ere
Bob Htwer and Jim Everett.
Hlmer wet on to coach '
Miasloo VJejo Hlth's football'
guided hls Pioneers to the
CIF !'mats in 4-A finals in
1971 and '72 before being
eliminated by Bishop Amat
Huskies Arrive in Coast:
''We're not just satisfied wilb
stetting here," said Washington
Huskies coach Don James. "Our
1 goal didn't end by just maldng it
this far."
James' Huskies, the Paclfic-8
champions who will oppose
Michigan in the Rose Bowl Jan.
2, arrived in the Orang.e Coast
area Tuesday to begin final prep.
a ralions for the Pasadena bat·
ile against the Big Ten co·
c hampi on Wolverines.
Washington is working out at
Orange Coast College while
s taying in Newport Beach.
Many were surprised the
Huskies made It this far. It had
been 14 years since their last ap· pearance in Pasadena, and
Calitornia members of the Pac-8
bad . seemed to have a ham-
merlock on the Rose Bowl in re-
cent years.
Thia HuskJ team bad lost
three of its rust four games in
1977, including a 22-20 setback at
the hands of lightly regarded
Syracuse. But Washington came
back strong, futisbing wilb a 7-4
overall mark and winning the
conference championship with a
6-1 record.
"You don't know how happy
Sports CUpped Slwrt
HB:s Palomino Honored
Huntingfu~ f Deach r esident
Carlos Palo mino bas been
chosen 19T1 Southern California·
A thJ ete of the Year by the Citizens:
Savings Athletic Foundation Hall
of Fame board.
Palomfao ls the fifth prize
fighter to receive the award
s ince James J. Jeffries was
honored with the first award in
1900.
Palomino. the world
welterweight boxing champion,
defended his crown four times
, this year and has an overall rec·
ord of 24-1·3. •
f PITTSBURGH -Tony
Dorsett bas donated $1,000 of bis
Dallas Cowboys pay to the
University of Pittsburgh, where
he rushed tor over 1,000 yards In
each of !our seasons playin1
football.
The gift has been m1ltched by
$1,000 from Nelson Goldberi.
Doraett's aeent.
• Wahington. Everett viewed
tbe USC·UCLA game on
televlaioo and says of the
VSC vi=~bic\) cata= ed the tni.tJte Bow&.·-..,,..=• fleld NI tbill !~ ~·~~.:= ·;:~~ tt•1 nke to t;;t· sbellr\ .ome~ e:•·
Rellllnded that\Washington
appeaNIL •be suCh .a 1>0Gr · team ·.-..,::r~--.. -~t: ''W .,,_ Stanfa'd •fn mu ~ b£
. IJfeUl~ffublfla-' . CLA . ' .
and it dJd tb.lnp on oth
days that ~ much bett~
than tn lb& UCLA pme:• " EvNett ts not the onl f~met' Hu.skies star wltb
Southern California nnor.
• A'JD'ODI hl.s teammates on
thon ·W••Jtlllgtoa toam1, ~
asid•, fto& H'vner. are 8a•aua. <Anaheim> eoacll
'MUce Merkle and teJe'fialetl
director Lee BemardL
. Two pros oU those teams
were Oakland Raiders star
Ben Davidson and San Diego
llne-acker Chuck Allen (bbth now retired) •
. ~ee~iste~cy
,, ' • i ...
..
1
a2 DA&LY PILOT
..., ........... ~Cl'.._.
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH'S OREG PAQUIN REBOUNDS OVl!R JEFF BURDEN (23).
Maravieh's Bucket Does It
Last-second Shot Beats CdM, 55-54
By ROG ER CARLSON
01t•o.1tr ,.. ... SUft Brian Maravich's arching 18·
fool shot with no time remaining
provided lire winning margin
Tuesday night as the Newport
Harbor High Sailors sent rival
Corona del Mar away with a 55-54
non· league baaketballloss.
ll was an unreal finish for coach
Jerry DeBusk's Sailors, who ap.
peared to be on the ropes with 30
seconds left as the Sea KJn1s, with
a 12·51 lead, took possession after 4'f1 Newport turnover.
'f3teve Esposito of CdM scored a p~iroffreethrowswlth28se~nds
Jelt lo up the count to 54·51, but
o,.n Stekol 's in&de shot with 16
sqconds left cut the lead to 54·53.
'With no timeouts left for either
teflm. Newport's only hope was to
fqpl and hope for a miracle. It
came as the Sea Kings missed the
first ot a one-an~·one situation at thF free throw line with 10 seconds
lo go and Jon Sweek rebounded.
tQuickly the Sailors came
dQwncourt and Sweek's pass to -
l\~ravich found the 6-3 senior
otfen-but at long range.
)'daravich's moon-shot tQuched
ndthing but cords as the bom sounded and theSaUora survived.
'Tonight the Sailors wlll try to
irfiprovCJon thelr7·3 record With a
non.Jeague Uff against visltinl
C\ista Mesa (0-4). Itatarta at8.
'ttlewport wu in the ftrtver's
sut throughout the first half as
the Sea Kings of coach Jack Er·
rion were struggling from the
field <IH>f ·25) and at the free
throw line (4-of·ll). At one point
the Sea Kings missed 12 straight
frpm thefleld.
But defense and the' offensive , p).lnch of 5·10 Junior iuard
. I
Dave Koehler kept the Sea Kings
within range, then CdM took the
lead behindKoebler's scoring.
Once Corona del Mar took the
lead at 35-34 wilh 2:38 left in the
third quarter Con Koehler's
baseline drive), there was lltijeto separatetbetwo.
Stekol converted a free throw
on a ted~ical foul with 35 seconds
leCl ln the U1ird quarter to tie it at
37 and Pat Baku~~ assist to Rieb
Putmantieditat40wlth6:S21eft.
But then the Se.a Kings took the
lead OD Koehler's three· point play
and they kept it. buildlng to a 47-42
lead wUb 5:12 left on Jim
HJtcbcock's.bucket.
The Sailon, however. rel\ased
to fold. stayed within ra.Qge, got
the break they had to ba ... then
struck gold bebiDd Mara'rich.
c:.iatsit1 ....... 6 I 2 IS • 2 t to
2 0 • •
1 1 2 21
I 0 S 2
0 2 0 2
0 0 2 0
0 0 1 0
2014tl~
Hlklleodl Alltnl
8.WcMI\ Koetller
Ot9ood Eff>Oilto
R•lnt
51KMJ
Totels
Gii ........ ......
• t s" 1 1 , 3 s....i ....._
Mer•vlcll
8M:ff
F'""'91\ s-11
Hell
"'"' Tote!J
6 6 • 1• 2 '2 • 6
3 6 2 11
I 0 4 2
0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0
19 11 2A SJ
k#e.,OIMt1trs
Coron• de! MaP " " " f 4-54 NewportH..-r II IS n le-.-&S
Artists
In 60-58 ..
ReversBI·
By DAVECVNNJNGllAll ·-........... ~ /t. valiant come~•ck by Lanna
Beach felJ Just sbOrt u ta-. ~rtists
lost \o boet G¥<Sen Grqve Wah
60·S8 1n non·league baabtball Tu.-d~ night. Forw~ Randy SmiU. tUtned
in tbe beltscortng performa~ot
ally Luuaa BeaCll player )'et this
season as be tallied 26 .POfn~.
fighting oft a recurring bloody nQSetodoil
His hostllng play and ac:-curate
shooting frot:n medium range
helped' the Artists overtome an
ll·point IMd that Garden Grove
bullUntheflntquartA!r.
Ahbouah Lquna Beacb never led, tt PUt oa swcb a convincing
oomebact that Garden Orovede-
ctdtd to go Into a four-comer stall
with 3:38 remalftlng to protect its
two.polntlead. '
The eloeest the Artlats Cot wu
in the third quarter, when they
Uedthe1ametWice, buteacbtime
the Argonauts were able to pull
away again.
With 1:38 remaining Srrtllh
sliced through the lane for a laytn
to cut the lead to 56-54, but Garden
Grove's Dave Lingenfelter wu
fouled at the other end while elnk·
ing a bucket to stretch to tbe Jead
to~S4.
He missed the free throw but
barden Grove controlled tbe all-
lmportant rebound and worked
the clock down with its stall tac-
Ucs.
A turnover enabled Smith to bit
a lS·foot jumper and make it'
~H, but when Garden Grove got
the ball back Lacuna bad to com-
m l t a foul to prevent tbe
Argonauts from boldlnS the ball
unW tbeclock ran out.
Clay Harris converted both free
throws wttb seven s~nds left,
building the lead to four point.a. so
Garden Grove juat watched un-
concerned aa Smith connected
with a 15-footer u the buzzer sounded.
Harris ftnlabed the game with
17 points to lead Garden Grove in
that department, while Jim Golla
and Mark Bakereacb contributed
11. Laguna's Jim Rlcbardaon
"°red 18. TIM defeat drops the
Artlata •record toz.e. .. , ... .... .." .. . Ocltle 4 3 4 II
BM;tf 5111'
~ 3 2 1 I
Gnr 1 s • •
Het'rls ' s J 11 ~te/ter3 o O'
UllmM ...... , .. .... . ....,...,. t .o t ..
lmffll " .. ' • C. .. 11 ...... 0 t • t
Rk1'erdson I I 3 11 Nlmols 3 0 3 6 LI~ I I 2)
P•IU-0 0 2 0
Tot.is 1S I 1t SI Totals Z2 I• IS 61i
--.~a..n.n
Ug\IM 8Mcll IJ ti n ~
OllrWn ~ 20 U 11 ·~
99-6 7 Victory
F~r Monarchs
Steve McCrea scored 16 of his game·bilb ~points in a 30-point
third quarter as Mater Del <Santa
Ana) High whipped visiting
Burbank, 98-67, in a non-league
basketball game Tuesday nlgbl
McCrea. a M senior, clicked on
11 of 16 field &oal.adempta for the
Monarchs. who raised tbelr
season record to 7·2 with the vie· itory.
Coach Jerry Tardie began sub·
st.ltuUng in lbe middle of the
second quarter and played re·
serves nearly the entire fourth
period. Nine players 'cored for
Uie Monarchs, including five lD
double figures. •
McCrea and 'l1m Peabody each
puJled down nine rebounds and
the Monarchs wound up with 42
total caroms.
Mater Del a1ao ~oyed an ex·
cellent shooting night, canning 39
of 73 shots from the floor (53.4 per
ceQt) and 21 of 28 shot.I from the
freethrowllne (7Spercent).
M.-Detftfl
''""'. .... 4 '2 IJ o.rde S J J U ,,_.,. 4 4 I 12 ~0.-tf 2 I J4 klwtt.r 1 0 I • ........, 1111 c. oa o 2
o.ylM S 2 I 11 H,.._ 0 • t 0
MMc:Mll' • O 1 I T .. elt It 21 M 9' sc...-. ......
" 11 ,. 11-41
2t " • n....,
V'ikee F.aee Loara
·--
..
FOOTBALL /BASKETBALL
DallY .. 19''4.llf .....
LAGUNA BEACH HIOH'S Blii-L GOMPF
Flrat Teem AH.CIF OM91on II Selection
Tiro Others Honored
·La;igun..a's Gompf
E8rns All~CIF •
Laguna B each Higb's alJ-
purpose standout Bill Gompf,
the Artists' three-time most
valuable player, has been
chosen first team on tb" All·CJF
Division II football team as
selected by the Citizens Savinrs
Athletic Foundation board.
Also acconled honors on the
second team are Costa Mesa
High cebter Steve Finch and
Corona del Mar delensive back
Bruce Batcheller.
Gompf captured 16 of a possi·
ble 20 votes for first team
honors. The South Coast
League's player of the year was
credited with 85 un·a11lsted
tackles, '1 assisted tackles,
caused three fumbles and re-
covered two, bad two lntercep-
tlons and knocked down five
others and blocked four kicks
Cthree punts and a field goal al· tempt>.
That was on defense. As a qu~rterback·lailback, tJie 1B8-
pound Gompf averaged 5.3
yards per carry and scored
three touchdowns and passed for
786 yards and seven touchdowns
with 55 conu>leUons In lOS at· temPta.
Gompf's coach, Dennis Haryung. says: "He is the moel
complete football player I have
ever coached.''
Among the major universities
interested In Gompf are use,
UCLA, Nebraska, Oklahoma,
Texaa A&M and Stanton! .
Finch, the center from Costa
Bleaa. waa that school 'a most
valuable player and conalatently
beat the opposition with bis of·
tensive bloddng and eucuUon.
Although weighing only 164
pounds, the two-year Mesa
starter used his qulckDesa t.o de·
teat bis larger opponents. Batchell~r, a two-way starter
and only one of three retumlng
starters tor Corona del Mar, was
a standout all year for the Sea
Kings.
STEVE FINCH
Costa Mesa
BRUCE BATCHELLER
Corona del Mar
Marina (Hunthlcton Beach>
Higb's VUdn.p tanale with .the
Loara {Anabelm) HJgh SoODS
tonJg.ht (7) in DOO·lea1ue buket· .
ball at the VUdnp gymnasium
whtre coach Steve Popovich's.
Marina ca..ulDtet la teekinl to im·
prove on !ta a.a record.
He ran 6:1 yards with a punt
return for a touchdown against
Newport HUbor and was a co-
captaln tor the Sea Kings.
Player ol the yur honors go to
Q\Ulrterbllct Pbll Davia of Cen·
tral Conference champion
·· Norwalk.
Dll-EamtllWllson, 0¥rtlf'n
Dll--Ql.4lrlle RelcL Ant.._ V"'lev Oii-Terry Short••'-cu1 ... CllY
Dt-$tevt Fr!encb,, °'9Mel I al...O•
HO Sr.
tl'O 5'.
IPS Sr in Sr.
,., Sr.
, .. Sr.
220 Jr.
2lO ~. tu Jr.
l&S Sr.
,., So-.
1Af SI'. ,. .. .
214 .. . trs ar.
tl'I 51'. t• Ir. ....... "o Sr. ,. $r, -"· , .....
llO, Sr.
171 Sr.
'" Sr • . UO.:"·.
"''s... 1• Sr. m Sr.
•Jr. ns Sr. , ... .. "· m .,., ....
JOS 5'. HO .Jr,
-Sr. '" Jr. llS Sr.
HS If.• 110 L • '712 ;.'
20S .Jl•
las 5'1.' .. ·,
I
BASKET BA I HORSE RACING I MISCELLANY Wednesday, December 21 . 1977 DAil v PILOT B :J
.. uchos Set Hot Pace
Seven Playen Averaging Over 10 .0
G SHEFF a.11, ............
season, is aver1tging 13.2 points
per game. Lloy, the former
Edison Hi gh <Huntington
Beach) standout, has only start-
ed two games but is hitting at J
Consider he situation or Sad·
dlebac k College basketball
coach Bill Mu\Ugan : his team ts
9·1, it is aver ging 102. 7 points
per game and even players 1tre 12.6 cUp. t'
hitting in dou neures.
Such atatis cs would make
most coaches plurous.
But M ull gan says the
Gauchos still e not playing as
well as be thin s they can.
''We're not aying as well as
we did late in he Orange Coast
tournament," says Mulligan.
whose team tmgles with Santa
Ana tonight <7:30) Jn the Dons
gym.
"And I reallr don't know why
we're not playing as well We've
been beating '°me pretty good
teams, but we're not playing
with as muct Intensity as we
were earlier ·•
· Mulligan s11ys he's not s ur-
prised with •is team's record,
but he as a Ultlc surprised that
seven playen; are averaging in
double figurw.
* * *
.. The scoring balance Is un·
believable and I love It that
way ••• any coach would. Tbe
last two years we had lo rely on
Deruijs Smith and if he didn 'l hil
we were in trouble.
"It seems to be different guys
every game. Someone ls always
picking up the slack. Our two
most consistent auys have been
Rich PflcElrath and Tom Lloy,"
says MuJUgan.
McElrath, a 6·2 sophomore
guard who was an All-Mission
Conference sel ection las t
* * *'
Saddle back Faces S anta Ana
Saddleback College bids for its
10th victory ¥'111 games tonight,
tangling with Santa Ana College
at Santa Ana. Game lime is
7:30.
Saddlebac k coach Bill
Mulligan will start Rick Pat·
lerson, Cr<.1ig Stahl and Tom
Lloy up front with Tim Shaw
and Ric k McE lrath in the
backcourt. Patten.on played at
Santa Ana last season.
The Gauchos have seven
players averaging in double
figures-led by Rodney Miller
with a 13.4 mark.
Santa Ana, 6-3 for the season,
has four players flitting in two
figures. They include Howard
Avery Cl8.3>. Edgar Wickliffe
114.0). Steve Hair (13 .1) and
Frank Jefferson Cl0.9).
Saddleback also has a game
Thursday night, hosting Golden
West at 7:30.
For Area
Saddleback 's top so6rer Is
another reserve, guard Rodney
Miller, a transfer from Cal State
(Fullerton). He has two more
points than McElratb and is
aver.aging 13.4. •
Others bitllng in twin figures
include Artie Green C12.9), Tim
Knight (U.2), Craig Stahl 01.0)
and Tim Shaw 00.6). And
freshman Ben Bacon has an 8.8
average.
Shaw, a 6-2 forward-guard.
has been slow coming around
after suffering a stress fraclur&
in a Jef, but he had his best
performance last Saturday night
in the Gauchos' 95·90 victory
over Santa Monica, scoring 20
points.
Shaw was the m ost valuable
player in the Mission Conference
las t season.
•'One of our goals before ·the
season began was not to have
teams hold the bitll on us. We've
been able to set the tempo, but it
has hurt us in some areas like
defense. We may be giving up
too much to get the tempo ... we
may be gambling a little too
much, .. says Mulligan.
But the Gauchos coach is
gene r a lly pleased with his
team 's play.
"I've never had a junior col·
lege team that's had a better
start. We've played some good
teams, but the opposition is not
getting any easier, ' says
M~lligan.
OCC 2nd ·
Mallard Baul
Newport Beach resid ent Barre Stephens
holds a pair of mallards downed over de-
coys at a pond on his Alturas ranch_. Hunt-
ing in the northeastern portion of
Galifornia has been hot and cold, depend-
ing on the weather.
Los Al Entries
SECOND MCI J10yerd\ 3 vHr old\ ~ up. Oalmlno. Pur .. U . .00. Cle1nunv prlct '3,COO.
cnaroe 10 O>anu lAClelrt Routll Minnie CMylfll Ml't A-enl Iler IH<lrtl lloval llarSu IUphemJ l'ortf Ket.I IWMd)
t19 1n
1tt
"' 11t
...
1 Les Alami tos
Race Results· .... T_.y ci-.-••I
""" llAC9 -400 YMdt, t ¥Mr olft, Cl•I ..... , ~ UtGt Some KlllG Hor"'
-.:~ H-y, terrlll01 llp'N Go, lleqp .. • ............ ~
Scr•l<llttl -Oupe't "''"'''• , tt'911t Oii Wllllt. ..
<Gaut > 20.• 9M S.uy ao 10...-1 J,«l Vein llltlle (0.ton\Oel
--' .... '40 •Ul•NTM ltACI -· t1h.,.olt:~ >• )'lilt OICll & up, Clelllllllf. l'llrM. uo ..... Time -11.11 Alto ran -Of'l>lt w,.,,.,.,., -In Moofe, l'ltJ Ueul-1, Mllllllf 0uPoflClllcll, Jtb 0..lre, W..,werol llui. No Krel<Mt.
61 IXACTA -1· ....... •IMI M-a ).S.uy a.. F•N s111.-.
llCONO •ACI -400 Y•rClt 2 .,..r oldt. Clalmlng. F«-me-....
l'vrM UOOCI. LlllleP .. 111011¥
l•ote O•nc:•r llanUl OraltOO. IWerdl •. oo s )0 J.40 ... uo ltpyel Oo "t•I IC«Vola I Tlme-7,0I. ••
AIH r•n -Grad•, C1,.1om T•llored, Hev• Goool O.y, 1Ut91n, Volt l'or ........ W . Tlt1r Rocllet, •
F rMloecll n "'"*"". ~ Screl<Md -lad swi. Papa'•._ ar•I. WM lllttef, LltasN. '.It;:
IFeulfM) UO
TM Oleuvln1$1 IHart I Heven Jet IW.,dl
u llllde .:tt""..-'*"'"' a Pf 420 3'11 ,.r,,..._,.._..,.. ~.·
llO 300 ".,.
:l.lOI llOHTM uca -~,. •••d•. >-.; Yt•r olCI• & .._ ••-ence. ,...,... .. .,. .... :--:; Elli ClllU !TrMWf'lllSa l.00 l.01.
Tlme -2101 AllO r ... -V•nltllll\Q Tllou9f>I, ICllld• Movl11. Royel 5'rocco, l'r-Pluno•r, si., l.Jtnlly llabe. Hall e
-· Re(MM Eeoit Scret<."H -S.mllr Ooo. N.4ry Kttlvl,.., .. ._Doll¥, April Fooll.
THlllD llAC• -1JO y., .. a.,..,. olds. Cl•lml,... l'ww U.00. MN'S lll95CM (CerClou) j.00 • .0 , .0
TMCZ.r IV ...... ) ti .• 7.60 l'•lllom Go <Ll~m I 1.40
Tl--11.21 AliO ren -ere .... Rocllet, Rocky Venltf, OAl\dy Frosty, R-lele $of\. ny, Potll, 00.rr•'• Rocket. Strut Flollttr. No urelcllts.
U IKACTA -.. -,,ala ltlf' &
a.Tiie cur. Flld s1•.•
l'OUllTN •ACI -.00 yen!I. 2 r•er olcb. Clalmlno. For m•llMn1. Purnnooo.
OKGoOwr l..,,.._l UO l
01' Wllet ltll'(t7lrn IW.uGll I 7 •·., Tlll\I -\l;ot, AIM r.., -Oii< Pel Oo, c.Ka'A C•PY, l!scape Artist, 1941• Tu. 8t Sure Aoelll. Tbe MoOll Wll <ll, Some Kll\d• ltllytllm . S<ralcllt4 -Dully Parr, She
WlllUklWf'. '
NINTH ltACS --yeNI.. I.,..,. ..... & .... ~ ...........
GooC1 lc!ee (Offgerl UO 4.40 •.OO Fly Iler Too (LAlclllt) 11.40 a.•
l.IO'I hllV !Ac»lr) j,60 :r1 .... -21.o.. AIAO ren -Pelleo'• ..,., ,...,..,.
Moon, Heu Aetlel, Roen Mambo, Treek: End, Goll.a Oo tyrol, OWIS Taylor. Scr .. cllod -Mr. Mostar, 5llol't Roclltl.
Mllll011elre 8etl'I $J ... na -I 01M 1-. & .. ,.,
<Canto.ta l e.OO • 00 4.01 e.r Too, Fakl Sits 00. Tll\y Sip CWardl 4.20 J.IO Allel'lclenc:e .... ..UIZ Roch Busy WOlow (fl..,llnel UO
Ttme-21.°' AISo r1n -Co mm•ftol
,..,1rom•nce. Sanc!Y' Ro••• eov. M•. Net Tourney Bold 11 .. u, Jocllff 51\.oow, MllJ Tull, Mrl. SllHV LAc!V, Apt'kol llr-. Screlched -Hiiiy Biiiy Ju11lor, Entri S gh • B••u l(llM>, Recli Whip, s-Copper es OU t Doll.
"'"™ uu -t00 Y••ds. 2 ., .. ,. Applications are now 01c1s. Cl•lmino Pvrw '2.00 being accepted for the Llqulcl Amtier 1oe1om1>.1 > u., 1.«> Ho third annual El Toro
Tum1111nT--7"° 510 High School tennis ~11~s':'1, IW¥dl ...c tournament lo be held at 11m1-20.t1 the school on the .. ~ Also ran -l'lcllte Spla, Re ... i.tor, k d f J 14 15 Miu A••111ett, Some z..1 ... weccl'I wee en s o an: • eo. T ... ..-Limit, Pro Keel and 21·22 accordmg to
No Scre«llft. l l di to B b u 11x•CT• -1-u..w AIMff a ournamen rec r o
.. T11 ... 11t1 .. T•1*t•••· 1'•14'264.M. Johnson.
Che cking
Banque t s Bl1Sketball To H Jay>OeO !8""k'l cnlck Doolin (Upham) 0 rn e ts Ho.Snot CUle Bar lKl\IQhll Flffl'l Dupe (Art I
E•OHTN 11Au -1soyerc11. J , .. , There is no age limit in "' Old ' Allow e Pu se S4 )00 SIXTH llAa -110 Y•rdt. 3 veer · b in 1,,:Ken':!·.,,v1c.:.'.' · r ' • 01~Aup.c1a1m1no.PunU3400. the competition wit ac-
m ... ,,., euv .i.1 tt<aru 119 • s1. An ArOUl\CI ti on in both men's and
OIUNoa COAST COLL.EOE Wem ... ·• 1 .. c11w1 ..... 1 A••rll• Ve41eyNll Mo>I VAlu.Ol>lt Adll E\n.,CI. MO\I Improved 8011n1r Ou•• All tonlerenct: E•Mrd. "•lclHocku Mo\I Velual>lt Jult• Rol>trl\
Mo"' t mproved M•''""" LA••vff Al
1 conftrtnc• 11no ltctm) Aorwnd
Urm\on, L•ure WAlk•r. Jul1r
llOC.rh
l'-ul" V•lltY Hl•ll Venltrl'eotMll CD-upi.1M L•rrv 8uOO<tn """ llon P.Ollle, Mo\I v.1 ... 010 Wiii•• G•I l•n•; Mo<.I ln'4)1rellonel D•n O..n
n,., Mo\I lmorow<t o ... Ot"""' Scl'lol•r •INote 8111 ~n; H.itlwl Awe rel Lerr., BuclQtn •ncl Ron P.Ollle, G-tletAw.,cl Tomsi..w, Larry 8.....,, Jim l'retmMI. ROft Pecllfl•. Roberl Sl•nton, Ooua Tl'IOmpt.on-°"" Oennl'C\ Jvlli«Vonltyl'-._n Mo•• VellMl>lt M•rll Wel"'°'t Motl lntplr811onel· Merk LUftS, Mo\I lmpro .. cl Mlll.e l'r......,,
~ ......... Cepteln Gll11tr1 Meruv•m• arMI
II-ti Von H•Utn. Ml»I Vfl.,.blt em MtTtlr; MOii 1mprovef G•rv Hl<k> l'.-e.-I-wt> , .... II CD-<aPl•IM Rey Gubernkll and 11o111n M•r-1; Mo\1 V•l.,.ble; 8111 Tyler ; MO>I lmpro .. d Steve Sovtllw•rd.
Ol1lrkl "'-""''" ......... • C.o·ceplalns: Brl.., Bal\ ~no Glbt> Jtrnlg•n : Mo\I Valuablt O•v•CI
O~\p•r. M O\t 1miuovt10. Br11n H>0mp•on
EIT ..... HI ... v.-.11,P.eotNll Mo\I Veluet>lt 8•0 Otnnli Oroml Mo>I Valuable Llntm•n !>1tve Pinc.; MOtl V•lu'31t Pl•'fH'
Gtor" Je<oClo, CM>l•ln•A""V Oi<k; Motl Improved; Jttl G'f«>>. C .. <ll't Aware!. Ken Bern.
~ ... ..,...1 Motl V•lu•blt L.lrwman lltc k INtlr•: Motl V•l.,.blt B<Kll' Cnucl< GCltlty, _, Val ... l>lt Pleyer Ron Holm ... l'utvr•CNrw DevlclKey. ,,....,_ .. _...I MIKI Vei-.Pleyw; am P-no. Motl V•l..al>I• OH ... M l'red He.tin. Mo\I V•llMbi• 0.fen .. Rkn 51.,,..,
Moll lm"""'9CI· Mike ky eo.c11' ..... .,., RI<--Ron Jtl>n'IOn
Baske tball
Sco res
'
JUNIOR VARSITY aASK&TaALL OerCIH-... u.,... .. ecllJO L•9ur>• ><orlnv-e.,i.er "· Friou 6, Smlln6,J H•,,,.n2,S.H.,.,al\2. Hellllmo: c;.,,,.,.Grove, »·JO.
Now...,rtU,Cer9NMI ~r4J Newporl SulllvAI\ 11, Oooclv •. Celelwtll 11. 0.,.1e4 IJ, Gadcll>6, BliKk • Eut>a~-\2. Coron• clel M<or-Mc(Orbll 1. Colo •l 1(1t>C1orl6,SN>llln6,Mtloyl2,Jonu 1.0&V1\) H•llhmt »20.
Mayfair T ... ,.._I Hvnt IM<ll M, LY!! ..... U Elclrlc!ve 11, 01-•. Ay.i• 11, Glenn t. P~lll It, Jeffrey• H•llllme Z..l•.
llllAMl•l6.-.. Merln41 ~IWW\6, Hol<nn-', AltllO
IJ, K•rln 2. SeYIOr 12, 1'1<116. Orl•rd 4 E\191\<I•~" 111~r 10, 8\ll·
teyS,l'riul.~ltt.
H•llllme-£"AftClaJ.S.21
l'lltESHMAN MltUEl'aAl.l,
EtlafKla-Edl-~t N-"9n H-lffl IMl Mel.,. Del N-rt KO<'lng-o..ni .. 11, An-lllOllY 2, S.uerl><•Y 2. NtlUH n.
Everll•rl •· ume 1, Cle<<k>•. H-se
1, L. P••tr-a. NlllOI\ 4, R. Peterson 2, En91•rMl 1. Meler Del tcorln9-M•dder I,
~oul\ •· s.clgwlcll 6, Avllle l, Wr.1001 2, luno 2. L..-.c>6, SedQwlc~ 4.
"•llllme: Ne...,...,,. tt-1•.
veteitcla67,Ulllwnlty44 Unlvertlly-Mervtc.k 11, C•mllbell • PotneH •· Gtnte •. StmpM>n •. M<L•UQlllln6,Gllberl 1.
H•llllm«V•l...cl•2> It. s..,.. ...............
U IMftU,H.-tM..-O Edlton-Nlotlna 10,L.HJ,Har'lcer t6, 8anh 6, Tel<onlli 4, 8er9111M 3, 9oyer 7,CovlterU. Nt•Port Harbor-Gaddis 6, Eccles
Wrestling
Results
VAllSITY
irVIM Hltll (t7l 14$1 Dolt L-• s -C our lne f lOL l plnetd W•ler"°nO SS 101-H•l-n m PlnMd Ouever•
3 00 .. 112-KHllnQ li)Clt< H•mmond .. 4. t10 -Gonules IOL) p11\necl HulCl\lnwn0· 17. • 127 -8orclen (I I pmneCI Agulflar
J 0) t)J H&re 111 plnrwd Aller\ l;St UI M•rlln (OL) pl"ntCI ,\,\(Glnnif
0 )0, tO-Allechtrll IOI.I dee: Halbour M . tH-!>oeres IOLI pinned Jelle" 1·37. u'-Bertsclltnler tOl t pinned Roc1oersO:S6.
4. lln\lly 10, VerOley IS, Or•• 4, Hellrlth6. Hellllme-Ecll...,3HJ.
O•n• HllltSZ.Clilta~ft Co.i• M .. e-CMl\OI\ 1, Rl<Mrelton •. WAlamu•• J, l'ltlcl 12, Cht>Wl•Y •. Beclell 6, Jar1<lil. D•n• Hiii• Cro-r 14, Smith 14, Stlt>orm•nl,Cr•ll2,Anoertonn. H•lltlme--0-Hllf• lt-14
Mt1si-vi.ten,o--.1e MIUlon vi.jO KO<ir>Q Moof't 11. 0<c111ptnll t. a.A•lc 14, C..mmtno I, O<no• U, Cr-'lno 3, Tt.ornton J, Mo11r 1, KurU, L.oalt••,CApone 4, Hallllme MV.~1'.
LA11vl\• Boac:ii ».Ger-Oro ... M
L •9urt• •••<f't-Lvdwf e • .. Alcherd ..... 11, W•IU Jt, ...... '· Polre•n l, Run~ll 2. H•llllme: ~ ll<te<n, 1 .. 10
S.,.._AMT..,"'-' CfflaMAWJ1,S..C..,_fOteJI Cott• MHA--2, Humot1rev 2, lllcMrcltOn 2. l'leld It, Cht»MY •• 8.0ellt.J.,.,.1U
~" Cle-nCo-C.111 10, TUl'Mr t, CuclleUI 10, hMOI, Naur•••'· H•llllm«-C..SlaMeU l .. IS.
Edl_T_,..,,..,., E41Mll 117) IQ) 11-llt AIM'lllllOt Edl'°n KO<lnQ-Moll"" U , LH t. Harkor 2, 8•nU I, T•-u•hl •, Betglvnd 14, &over 2, Jorden ll, C.oulltr 17, Janu• ... •· H•lltlme: Edllon0·77 1111..., ftJ) 142) Lewett Edl•on \CO<ll'fl"'"""°lln.t 10, Boyer 7, JorCl•n 7. 9..,i., •. TOu\nl •. 8ttQluncl j , Kt1w.y 4, I.ff, H•rker 6, Wlle•ly 3, Coul .. r 11, J..,<nk• 4. H•""""'· Eohon.o.n O~-T_.._..,. c ... ...-.111,,.,...
11 tuncla ... s..t.e,,,.. • E•l•n<l•~l•<Mn u. lllley 14, Burtherdl 7, Smllll 4, Ump•. Ol9ull\ 2, M•llOO 2, Aknerell •• Romero •. ArtUkOYitll 4.
Hallllme-E.ltAftCte•t._ lldl_T ........... E1UMla6S, .._L ..... SI Etlen<l•-C-U, Alley 10, Smltll 10. Al eden 14, Burdwlrdl I. Hu .. UllQIOOI a.-n-•t• U, W•lhr
4, Au\derNlde4, lle<ker 7, Turrwr U, Tllomp-.. IN.0.-.. 2 "alltlrne-E\IM\<1• .,, .
New,.,. H.,..: ... --Del., Newport H--SIOOl 1, Htllrkll 1, l'c<I., S, Llntlly I, Zlolle I, Oecldll 14, Y ardl•Y 20. M•ler Del-Bray 2. LlpO.y 1, GIO<'k>U 2, CMlyte 1. S..111, Or-y 14, HtrnenCIH 17 H•llll"'e-1 .. 1'.
lervlle U, l!MtlM M M•rln41-khlellltr 4, M<Cl•ll•n It, Finley 10. E.-c11 s, Menl.Ofl t, ureon 4, ll011enn1 I. H•llllme-Marln41H·I•.
At lhe end of the fall
season.. Orange Coast
College trails Fullerton
by a point in the race for
the South Coast Con·
f e r e nce 's athletic
supremacy award.
The OCC Pirates cap·
tured the women's cross
country title, finished
second in soccer and
were third in football and
women's voJleyball.
Fullerton won titles in
footbaU and W'ater poto.
Points are awarded ac-
cording to the con-
ference finiah in each of
20 men's and women's
sports on a descending
scale with first place
earning 14 points. There
were seven recognized
· sports in the fall.
SelllllCHtt ...... 1 Fulle'1on 160); 1. Orange Coul IS•>; ). G,_,,_I l~l; 4. Ml. s.tn Antonio 1461; 5. S...t• Aft• 1411; •.San 0199C)MeM 12Ul;7.C..rrllo\ (n.J).
All-com ers
Meet Slate d
A series of all-comers
track and field meets
will be conducted during
January and February
on Saddleback College's
all-weather traek.
Divisiooa include open
(college and university),
novice <high school ),
women and masters
(over 40).
Prelims will be held
Jan. 19, 26 and Feb. 2
with the finals set for
Feb. 9. Competition will
get under way at 1 p . m .
For information, call
831-7850.
Soccer Summaries
Tn•I Trlplt H-'< IClerl\Ml ToPMoon$port lGre<el Mr. Zing IAlll\On)
11• A-Oullv $11t•n ICleris .. > 11t (V•uolln ) S3.00 1•.>0 1.IO • · I d
111 vive v111. tTrN•ure > 122 Nettle's L.o 1eeni.s1 •.20 a . .o worn en s sang es an '" O•vld C•Prl ILI..n.ml 111 Lltll• Go l'l•I (ROUQlll uo doubles in B. c and D "' CArMll Man INl~usl 122 Tim• -0 .77 l . D dli r
TNIRO RACE -lSO yerdt. 1 y•er olcl melCltni. CAlll·l>f'.O. Clelmlnv. Purse U ,.00. Clelmtnv prlc.e itO,COO. Bruceet• Llmltt ICl••lt .. ) ttt Dusi•" Bou IV•uot>n> 1n lne Purl IW•rcll 11' l'rler Bot> (Alll\Ol\I 112 Slrefl• IR0"911) 1 tt Repoued IH•rt I 177 M•ry Ca" ((.erd01el tit Dandy Tl"'9l IMylhl 11• Tiny B•nJo lMll<ntll I 121
A·GoS.oe-(KnlQlll) lit AliO ran -I'm t..Hvln, Go 01' Ca egoraes. ea ne Or Werit• Go ((.erclot•) .119 Tory. Nullltr Will-. Dane• Wit Ma entries is Sunday, Jan. 8.
Shew111utu.r 1AC1A1r> 11• Entry blanks are
A lube• V••c1tv l• Entry . available at Saddleback
NINTH uc1 -uo yard•. 2 vur Vallev sporting goods ~,::·P·~·:~r;:=· Pur .. "·*'°· <1•1m· Pro Scores s tores a nd recreation
Much Aou 10om1"00'tr> m Nau .... i ~.._.1 A1MCtalle4! centers. Trophies will be Native vu.my 1eare1oa1 "' awarded the top two Wiiiie Nelson lUpham l 1n 8uff•k> no, --104 ee1 vour wa11 .. <Oer1, .. 1 122 P11aenl• 1io. New YOf11" finishers in all divisions. Klc!PtPPfflT,__l 122 O.lroll111.5911Afltclnloll1 F f•• ... b inf M1 .. w ... w.,10e1..,,...1 '" Chk•90 .. ,A11111>1•• or '"" er orma-"ou11TH •ActE a10 ,.,c1. J Y••r c11ie1 L.ullti <Mylt\l • 11• Lo' ""1191"' uo. W-"!"9I011 llS Uon, cont.act Johnson al g~~BL~*l~ ... ~.,.. "·:7 ~~~~?~~ut· m :5~i~;~=-· !11dt -~.:atbed:~'i:~
Matlc1•tion ~., ::: Allentet.v-211111 ay. Wiid O..rrr 8"ancll' IV•UQ!ln l "' O...rt .. e.nmr lOelomo. l 112
Zip'\ Son (CMCIOUI 11' #1.WlllowSprl~CAooont 119
l'IPTM ttACE -sso yards 3 YNr olclt ~ 119, Altow•nc:e Pur\e u. 100 Klr\Cllf 8er !Mylnl 111 Motl Royat IAlll'°"> 112 Ml 8uCIClle !Hartl tJO 110 Royal 8o0 ,,.. ... .,, 1n B•melot IC:.rclor• I 1 n T•11yNolwlTreeturel '" Ti.\ Tov91\ 1Cler1t .. 1 119 Otcl1•8ut 0-1• 10.lombel 11•
'SIXTpt llACa -tOO yerds. J yeer o .. .-Vp. l'lllln & """'"· Clelmlng, Purw U,200, Clelmlno prk• '10,000 Sllet')"l'I Bffm ICA991rl llt
~:.~~~~!!";;;iiiiiiil!iiiiiMiiiiiiiji;~H;;;;;~O;;;•NiiiiiiiDiiiiiiii•Aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
1. 1111 MiNN!t11 CS... Cll!NnteJ '°;'° k-record); 2 • .,... v-M. 18810N VIE ·•o derHms IMlalon VltJol 31:10; J. G'
A.Vil• kl\tl-IM!alon VlllOI 31:21; 4. ~•lpn c.<>one IS." Ctemenlel .U:H: 5. Cllel Vert IS•n Juen UCll&lr•nol l2:a5.
W-'•MIMMeler""' 1. Ellen II-OrvlNI 21:20: 2. Sue Hollow•\! lSef'ICle-t)U; 22:41;J, CAftle l'leNQen IO>lle Mesal 24:»; 4. S.ncll M<CllllR•r <Sen Clemente)
2S:tJ1 J . l'llVHli MCOillOUQI\ !San C1tme11t•I »:OO.
TheM~mDay
. Lady Godi~a Prefers.
Cd.M Gets Brea Siar
HONDA
EXPRESS
't1.) Twice•-'>-.. -~ 1 2 1No~orbell~
By a Dally Pilot Writer ~l=:'.:"'""° .. .,.,
Brea High junior Chris Jobnaton, a 6·3 all· a.umonu.1111........, .... °"",_..
i f . to .. , s..w. ...0""" _...... league player as a sophomore. s trans ernng .. _.,.ua.
Corona deJ Mar High and la expected to be suited :'.:$ 29· 5· up for the Sea KJngs' South Coast League basket·
ball game at Laguna Beach Jan. 3.
Johnston's dad, Dan Joballon. confirmed it.
'Pueaday Dilht at Newport Haftl>r High where the *E*x*a* i.tEiNT'* *SE* ~ ~~,o*N* *1·N* '*s' ilty,.;..r;_*. Sea Kings of Corona del Mar loet a 55-54 decision. :~I "'-"
"We're committed to Corona del Mar ... says
Johnston, a former Centennial <Compton> High WE. Off ER AN 8 MONTH WARRA
coach and adversary of CdM coach Jack Errion. FOR I BUYER !
"We always opened with Errlon and his St. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anthony (Long Beach> teams," adds Johnston, ~
who prepped at Whittier High and played at
Compton College under J . Kenneth Fegans.
"We'll be movine into the Corona del Mar at-
tendance area on the 27th of this month and we're
just hoping that Chris can work his way into
Corona del Mar'a 11.neup," says Johnston. .• GRAND OPENING•
Special 175-Rleberll (Ol) plnn<!d WOOd\ 1.S•. 191-Ell>l'ler lOLIWOllbyfO<'ftrt. 2lS-E"°"r!i Cl)_, by IO<'fllt.
Corona deJ Mar, the 1977 ClF 3·A champion,
shares the South Coast League lead with Mission
Viejo after two starts and ls lavored to win the
league ch,mpionship again.
,,_,,, G•rlldlt Peleltl"° 1Mar1t IC--------------------------11•0. MVP1 N.t~bo Dele<erda IDom-Men's Hooded
Sweat Shirt Jw"6WVanHy WfttaMa
l'eotNllT~ 111-cor-1 is.11 o...-1e1 flrat
"1~'-11uul<k <Sen Ct en<entel M<tftdPIKe. 127-Mtl\dOH IS.n Cteme111el M<-ptact. 1n-Ec1ward1 IS.n Cltmentel founnplac• Ul-M<GowlM <San Qlmenl•I llratpla<t. 10-l'lemlno is. .. Cle~•> llnt
place. 1U-SlenPlllll ISell Cle"'tnlel ple<edlll1rcl. 11s-sc11roec1tr IS.ft Clef'lllnl•>
pieced tnlnl.
1'1-F-ISan ~) pl~ third.
1"91191);-.. lf\tl)frM'-1: S.••-MIM~rrtea IJNtll l(eppel), ........ Ven!Cr
................ 1 l'rli.e2. Halftl~. ~Vanltf lM!tl ... t.1,.,INI Helllll'M-14. Veratty
lfftt!TeonctT~ ........ ._
... _ •• 9eftf'IY """. Edlson-Wellll•r 2, Ktuller,
lloeMI, ·-· Cr•IM. H1lfll"'1-24. ,,..._VanltT
lfftllT--eT---4 • ._1, ...... ldl•n-0<1peMltylllckt. NeftllTlfnllltet,a,._t
HWJ-11111 !Sell Cltmen411 plocect --------~----------------llrtl, THm 11-lnot-I. F-11111; 2. San CltmAflte.
• Day Racing Tuelldcrr thna
Sunday•Forln.tormaUon
caD (113) '31-1381 o_r
(7IC) 195-liM
I ,, ~
"My tttltfectton hat bteft ..aured by tt.-
people who e1re."
RON BURDETT
Santa Ana
Orange County•• oldest
Llncoln·M•rcury Ollterehlp
witt.
CORtrcnt
Tri•
,
•
i14 ~l Y PllOT •
SOme 'Loefttion'
:~:Bette Davia Irked by 'Travelogue' . :.-:
; ~ By BOB THOMAS and fitted with a wig, and abe reported x . to the temple JocaUon precisely at '~:KARNAK, Enpt <AP) -One 7, punctual aa always. By )ate mom·
aM>nument meet.a another: BetLe 101, she bad sUll not a,ppeared before
e..vta at the Temple of Karnak. the camera. ·
'She ii a tiny figure amont the 122 Even ln good humor, she can be
lt01e columns that comprise the rormidable. Lord Snowden bu been
: JITpostyle Hall erected 1300 B.C. She here to do apeclal pboto1rapby to~
~en teema amall in a procession of "Death on the Nile," and :,e ad·
• ~ra portraylnt 1930 tourists -mined, "When J tint photographed ~vld Niven, Pet.er U1Unov , Angela her. my hands were ahaldn1 so that J
: l_ansbury, George Kennedy, Jack could hardly hold the camera. That's ~rden and others. what it wu like to be ln the presence ~ut · tn ankle-length shantung suif ot such a lesend."
' jiith wide-brimmed black bat and Characteristically, Mias Davb ls
i'frasol, Bette Davia (born 1908> not staying wtth the rest of the in· ~med large. She was portraying a ternational cast and British crew at a.
~lneering American socialite in modern hotel in Luxor, part of a
~-lilm version ot Agatha Christie's European chain. She occupies a regal
,.,.Death on the Nile." It was her first suite at the Old Winter Palace (b~lt
w-oft location, and she was none too 1906) wtth a sweeping view of the
~PPY about it. Nile and the Valley ot the Kings on
~""WHEN I WAS at Wamers, I was
"1!ver off the lot -never!" said Miss
.navis, whose conversation is always well punctuated.
• "They built everythini;r on the back lot, from a Webb village ('The Com
.,. . is Green') to the
Petrlfled Forest.
They even con-
structed
Chapultepec
Palace ('Juarez').
and later I visited
Mexico City and
saw the real thing.
I defy you to tell
the d!Uerence. l.
OAVIS
''Oh. I suppase
if you're doing a
picture about the
Nile, you must mm on the Nile. But I
swear, the areas where ·we shot at
Aswan look uncannily like California.
She ~ontinued : "I honestly believe
the opposite shore.
AFTER A. 13-HOlJR workday, she
s at down on the balcony, pulled off her
wig, donned a cap reminiscent ot
"Elizabeth and Essex." She poured
herself a Scot.ch and water.
"You know." she renected on her
long career, "I'm amazed I'm still
here."
Indeed, she is a rare survivor. With
the pauing of such contemporaries
as Bing Crosby and Joan Crawford,
she is one of a handful of figures
from Hollywood's golden time still
working al her craft.
that we're not actors anymore ;
. we 'v\ become stunt men. Up at
: Aswan one day, I slipped on a rock
And she has been busy. Since re·
ceiving the Life Achievement Award
from the American Film Institute in
February, she has appeared in three
films: "Return to Witch Mountain"
for Disney (•·great fun ">. "Harvest
Home" C"a patt I've wanted ever
since Tom Tryon wrote the book">.
and now "Death on the Nile," her
86th film role .
"THAT'S THE BEST thing for me:
having my work," she remarked. "J
would never gel married again; that
jus t didn't s ucceed. When your '
children grow up and )eave you, lt
c::in be very lonely. Luckily for me,
I've gol my work lo fill the gap."
• and went tumbling to the ground.
Jus t as I fell, I look up and there was
; poor Angela being thrown from her
: ·donkey and landing on her back. .
"I ALWAYS THOUGHT It was the
actors who made a movie. Nowadays
.ctirectors become so in love with
· locations that the actors are secon·
dary to the scenery. You end up with
. travelogues."
There was reason for her irritation.
She had risen at 5 a.m. to be made up
.-. • !f1 • .: . "'1" . .. . ..,,.~
Massachusetts-born, Bette has
always been a confirmed Easterner,
recently making her home in Weston,
Conn. But in 1978 she plans to move
to California
''I still prefer the East," she re·
marked.
''The: Year's Best Movie . • . . . • . • .; • .. • • .. • •, • • ,. . . • • ,
'Star Wars• has brought fun back to the movies and
glowingly demonstrated they still can make 'em
like they used to. A grand and glorious film:•
Ttne MrJgoiine
"A hell of a lot of fun. .. brims with adventure, charm
and moNels. I loved it."
Joe~ l<lol Nc.w;wee1c Mogollre
. ~ ~ HAM1U. ~ FOPD CAANE FL5Hffi
PE:lER,SJSHNG
Al.EC GlJNN€S5
~end Oftcetd by
GEOf\G€ l.UCAS
(PG}
Leonard Nimoy,
formerly of the hit
"Star Trek" series
will star in a ne~
version of the movie
"Invasion of the
Body Sr:ialchers. · ·
.,FIU SAU .. trGJ llM-..... _
"THE LA TE SHOW" -1'.Jt
0 HEROES0 1,.,
W&l.ftllOll'f'I
"PETE'S
DRAGON ..
ll: ... W.0-,,,..,_.
"f'tlCI OJ THI
o\Cnc>H'"INI ., ... ~.,,.
• ALICI DOKM'T
UYl ........ YNOlr ,,_
~'Neal to Appear
In 'Champ' Flick
LOS ANGELES <AP ) -Ryan O'Neal will play
the title role in a remake ot the 1931 tUrn cluaic
"The Champ."
It wtll be the first American film ot noted ln·
ternatlooal director Franco Zelferelll. ntmtn1 will
start tn early 1978 with a new acript by Walter
Newman.
0 'Neal just completed "The Driver" and is alJO
scheduled to play 1n a sequel to "Love Story."
MATINEES SATURUAY & SUNDAY
· OF THE THIRD KIND" (PQ)
90ICOfflQ!Of'Ud10A.M DAILY ·. ti 45-2"30-t 1Mot.'.tek45
"SA-rUROA Y NIGHT FEVER" (R)
"LOOKJNG FOR .
MR. GOODBAR" (R)
..1900" (R)
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
"THE DEEP" (PG)
"BOBBY DEERFIELD" C )
"ALICE OOESNT LIVE HERE ANYMORE"
STADIUm 5 scREen
b) 9 7 8 l:iO DlHVE-tn
WALT OlllHFrS
"PETE'S DRAGONS"
"FANTASY ON SKIS"
"THE HEROES""°
"THE OTHER StOE OF THE MOUNTAIN"
"OH GOO" (PG)
"GUMBALL RALLY"
"SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT""° .
"THE STING"
"THE GAUNTLET" (R) .
"F~EEBEE & THE BEAN"
Al.C.. O•IVl:·IHS Qf'£f4 6:lOP.M.MfOHT\.Y
C"lld Utuler 1 t '"'" U111eu • lddle ~o•trou11d
OF 11IE ¥EAR." TIME MAGAZINE
"'The GoOdbye Girl'
is a joyous comedy-
just what the doctor ordered.
Neil Simon makes
feeling good legal ... "
GENE SHALIT, NBC-TV
"Dreyfuss and Mason
have a special
chemistry that
is absolutely
dynamite."
PAT COLLINS, CBS-TV
A RAY STARK PRODUCTION OF A HERBERT ROSS ALM
NEJL SIMON'S
"THE GOODBYE GIRI:
RICHARD DREYFUSS· MARSHA MA50N.
and lntrodud~ QUINN aJMMJNG.S as Lucy
Written by NEJLSM)N • Produced ~ RAV SfARK
Directed by HERBERT ROS.S• M.111c SandandMepd by MIE CH.SN
5orY:} ~Gooc,bye Girr \l.\1tten ard R!J fort.~ by twJID G\TES
a RASTAR fuature •Petris b,r t.G1 Labs
I SiiiiiNDw~on EWl!1! RtaMls I l~Wtn ~ F1m1Wiriwr8oob.I
@C:::C.=:el'#J .. __ -----·--=-...:::Q
ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES
<MM a l (\.IWf lU1'WOOO
GAUNnn111
4111~-iio1~~--~ .. ~
cmm21;:=.)c:.,.1'~n•
a.Y,MINm
.•.·.·.~ .. ~ ~I 11f 14 tiii?I
ENTERTAINMENT I HY GARONER
Dino Not Really Drunk
Q: b l>eu Jllartba really • clruk! Or ll Utt. Jut •II mace! -llarry SctaoruieLD. Scollaclale, Am.
A: "lleople love to hear about my drink in· or to
think lhal I'm d(Unk, '' be once told interviewer
Oriana Fallacl. "Like with Phil
Harris. In fact, everytime there
la a joke on TV about drinking.
it's either gonna be Dean Martin
or Phil Harris. l'm not that
much oC a drinker ... The image
ls there because when I was with
Jerry (Lewis) and I was so un-
happy, yes, I used to drink.
There was nothin' to do but
drinkin' and I drank, gettin'
drunk at tlmes. But no one has
ever seea me drunk. I 've never been picked up by
the cops, as many actors have. I could name you a
doien.
"You know, .. the versatalented superstar con-
tinued, "these all-American boys who drink like·
bell, those liars, are picked up by the cops, but their
names never get to the papers. If I had been picked
up, you can be sure, right away it would have been
in the headlines.
"Yes, they think I am a drunk, and who cares?
There's nothin' wrong with drinkln', and I'm not
saying I don't drink. I love to drink a little. And to
make fun of it.''
Like the time be summed up what he thinks
about. actors wbo go into politics like Ronnie
Rea1an (then governor of California and a friend
for 20 years) sitting in the audience: "I only would
become g()vemor if all the drunks voted for me!"
About his long partnership with Jerry Lewis,
Martin told Fallacl, that when they went to a party,
he sat so quietly in a corner that everybody thought
he was bigheaded and stuck up. Which he wasn't.
"It was because 1 didn't know how to speak good
English, so I used to keep my mouth shut. I used to a
say 'ain''' all the time, and 'dese' and 'dems.' And
didn't know how to hold a conversation. Now. I've
reverted to 'dese' and 'dems' on TV and I'm a big
hit 'cause I talk bad English. Yeah-it's a crazy
world."
'Glad You Asked That'
by Mwlly11 CMd Hy G_...,
semblance to bis famous father who didn't live to see the boy.
Q: Yoa see so many older stars who are on a
you&b ldek -the way they dress, the way tlley talk,
the way they aet. How does aomeoae like llmmy
Stewart. feel aboat th.la! -Peter J. <aie 83), ColUm·
bus,OhJo.
A: Jimmy can't 1:0 along with people who are
getting on in years but insist they feel like kid.$.
"I'm 68," aigba Stewart, "and I feel every year of il! ..
Q: Who did all the stunts for Robert Coarad OD ·
bis TV shows, "WUd WUd West" and "Baa Baa
Black Sheep?" -Ma.rk Werner, Statea JsJan~, N.Y.
A: The wild, wild Conrad himself. "I got badly
hurt doin~ my own stunt work in the 'Wild West'
series," Bob revealed. "I was doing a stunL" he
told us. ''A little gymnastics -chandelier work. I
used st as a bar <that·s a trapeze kind of act). And J
missed my timing, my grip. I didn't chalk up pro-
perly and I went 15 feet to the concrete and frac-
tured my skull. I was in intensive care for 72 hours,
with a slx·inch lineal fracture of the skull and a high
temple concussion. A few people were praying over
me -and a few were saying, 'Well. there be goes -
another actor.' They wouldn't insure me any more!·'
Q: Isn't Rev. BUty Graham plannJnc to quit
preacbJng and become a movie and TV aetor?-
A.R., Evansville, Ind.
At We doubt it. ''Years ago Cecil B. DeMllle of-
fered me a role in one of his spectacular movies,"
Dr. Graham once told us, "but J turned it down.
Sever al years later I got a definite offer to do a
morning show for a TV network, but said no to that,
too."
Send your questions to Hu Gardner. "Glod You
,•\!ked Thal," care of this newapaper, P.O. Boz 11748,
Chicago, ILl. 60611. Manlyn and Hy GardMT will ~T
as many question& cu they can in their column, but t~
volume of mail maker personal replies impoS1ible.
'<11
Wedneeday, Oecemb« 21. 1977 pAILY P1LOT
S.Cout V1lla9eopp. S.Coau Pt.re CHAPMAN AVE . at SA. FWY ;
Cost• Ml'~ll • !)40 0!)94 4. W.rminttef' • 993· 1305 Q: I beard that the late Fats Waller was once
kidnapped by Al Capone. What's the story? -C.S.,
Shreveport, La.
A: As a surprise for the boss' birthday party in
Cicero, Ill., one of Capone's associates kidnapped
Fats to play for Al and his guests. Tbe henchman
kept Waller incommunicado for a few days, finally
releasing him in time to entertain at the shindig. He
found htmdred dollar bills stuffed into his pockets
for every request he played, and his glass was con·
stantly filled with vintage champagne. As a result
when Fats returned to Chicago he found himself
several thousand dollars richer. Waller later said
the only reason he recalled the incident was
because it was the first ti me he drank champagne.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~-:-~~-----
Q: Is It true that Met Opera star Beverly Sills
was once known as Bubbles Silverman? And what
waa her fint 11Dgl.Dg job! -Mrs. Wm. Doherty,
Buffalo.
A: Born Belle Silverman. Beverly got her start
as Bubbles Silverman on "Uncle Bob's Children's
Hour" on New York radio station WDR. As a pro-
digy, she appeared with Major Bowes' Family Hour
and later on Morton Gould0s Carnival Hour. She
••retired" at age 12 but made her "comeback" four
years later with the J. J. Shubert Operetta Com-
pany. Her big-time debut was with the San Fran·
cisco Opera in 1953, at age 24.
Q: What ls It that Spiro Agnew 1Mbnlres eboat
bis friend, Frank Sl.Datr a? -Saocly W ., Baltimore.
A: His loyalty and courage. "Frank and I,·· he
once explained, "have become very· close friends.
Which hurt him to a certain extent," Spiro conceded.
"A lot of people don't like me-why should he inherit
that? It was a very courageous thing to stand up for a
Ci:,iend under those circumstances."
Q: Why do we seldom, If ever, bear or read
about Clark G1bJe's son, or see hU photo 1n priat? -
M.A.K., Seattle..•
A: His mot.her (the former Kay Spreckels) is
wisely permiltlng John Clark Gable to enjoy arow-
ing UP. a private person. Thus, as far as possible,
discouraging ltidnappera or cranks from gettin1
any ideas about him. Young Gable was born in 1961
and will be 16 this March. He bears a close re·
'Annie Hall'
Acclaimed
By Critics
NEW YORK CAP ) -
Woody Allen's "Annie
Hall" carried off three
major awards as the Na-
tional Society of Film
Critics made its annual
selections Monday.
The movie was voted
best picture of the year,
and Allen's co-star,
Diane Keaton, was vot-
ed best actress. The award for best
screenplay went to Allen
and Marshall Brickman
for the script of "Annie
Hall."
The best actor award
went to Art Camey for
his performance in "The
Late Show," and Luis
Bunuel was named best
director of 1977 for
"That Obscure Object of
Desire." Named as best sup·
porting players were
Ann Wedgeworth or
"Handle With Care" and
Edward Fox of ''A
Bridge Too Far."
• eJ I ' , ... l~ine your lie hangs by a thread.
Imagine your body hangs by a wire.
Imagine you•re not imagining.
Preview
once only
at 8:30 p.m.,
-.
}
TeleriSiOn WedM9day. 0.C.mbet' 21, 19n ,
. •
.. Mil Y Pit.OT
\\llJ'l"ll\'i ..... Mllcm .... ... • fllEwt
• .; • 9PilllHOV CINI.I .. ,..,., ....... ,_...
~ trapped ---...., lft a ""'* dla1ng hie act, encl Or. Btac*tllt'a
.... .. admitted '° Atm-~ -~· • MOYll * *'-' ''Gr9garlo And Hla
;;-Anf1tl° (1961) 8roOertc*
"'" Crawford. A derellot ~ beoofnea cuttodlan of • 'I! dud\. and .. dltmleMd ~ ... tnaklng ""..-.o1 ~ ., ..... (2 Iva.)
{ • Tii£ MADY BUNCH
"-Bobby Wld a.-. aid.cl by I! tNllr yOllU!tul lrneglnetlona. ~ ~ o'Citloi!IOtd tn.t ~ Chey are onto a "11 plOI ~ that lnYoMia Mike. ~ • THE AOC*IE8 7 The rooklet enjoy• Ctwtsl-;r: m• dilvier at Ille Danko'• ; non. on Ctwlltmal Ev..
>: • ZOOM
, QMTMAl8"0W. t:ao. RV'IZNYK
In OfcMt to twwe ~ iw •
""""" wMtlln the ..,,.,.. groupe Of .,.. oomnMllty
cenw. Nldt ~ an
aricounw ....ion.
I OONC:efTMTIOH
CRQll..WITa
OVIRIAIY
~......,,~ ..ooe <*MOYll
"Med Bull" (Prwlllwa)
Al•K ~arra•. 8uun
,.,,..,... A piof•l0tial
wr•all., b.comH •o
ll'wOIY9d In ~ ~-~ t)'Plfy tN modern
~ "' ... ..,ort diet It dettro,. his~ and
catM1 e Ifft with NI Old
WOfld ....... • former
°'*""'°"" .. aACKIH&J'
8QUAOROH
"TM 200 P04Mtd Oorllta"
Sgt AtttJy Mk*lln (Aid
w.t),Whllle.,,.._ ..
Ilka ot an oHlc«t le "' known, la Pf'OnlO(ed co
W#fW!t OMoer Ind In Ne
trwtratton, goea on • 'iii Ii) FOOOl lllOR THE
~ MODEAH P:AMILY
"Pr~Mlllcll" ~ . l!I ABC NEWS
• ~G MOVIE
Beauty and the Bull GV'<:MAIWl's
ANOEUI
;,. • • ~ "Th• Profane
•: Comedy" (1Hll) Clludt
·' Connors, Lynda O•y ~ George. 8-1 yews altar
Alex K a rras s t a rs as a .. villain"
wrestler who Calls in love with Susan
Anspach on the CBS movie "The Mad
Bull," tonight at 9 on Channel 2.
~TM Cude AIMii 8tofy"
The wealthy --of • poefl ~ randl ,... lhe
Angell to lnwltlgate when
he ~ one of hie
~ta la a lllUl'd«•. ~ a rnan la convlel.O Cl(
maMlaughter, the town
arunll -•tly con*-
lo tn. alrne. (1 hr., 30
min.)
89 MACHEl I LEHAEA
REPORT
~ .
Q) MY nfR!E 80N8
St-Oouglu takM par1
In a tatheta-verlUl·ton•
qulilhow.
fD OVEREASY
GUM\: Htlen Humes
(!!) FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Mile Seiectlon And Mii·
rl909Aee4!MM"
Cl) C88NEW8
®} MERV GRIFFIN •
Questa: Rlch11d Thomae.
Player, Richard DNcon
al) YOGAWITM
MADtl.JH4!
(I) TO TEU. TH£ T""1™
7:.ae>G IMANANA
I HtWl.YWmGAME
MATCH GAME P.M.
THI aAADY llUNCti Or-o ordws Mtl'de not to
dete hll ICtlOOI rtvel.
I lET'S MAKE Ao.AL
L.A. INT!ACHANOE
"Snapehota"
6l) 8TAABOAR.O
"The Muglelton•"
Cl) •121.000 QU£8T~ 9 FAMILY FtUO
7:00 0 NBC NEWS 1:00. 0000 T1ME8
Wlllona'• CMatrnu joy It
thraelenad whe11 •h•
IMtM her moet preclou•
Q!_fl mty be taken trorn her.
U GRIZZLY ADAMS
"The Choloe'' Ademt must
1eact1 • youngster (Jonn
81Wip) ttie pelntul leMon
I UARSCLlJI
A8CNEW8 '8 ILOVELUCY
"Kt.ptornanleo"
.., ADAM-12
Officer Reed II que111oned
•"• tie enoota Ind 11111 • 11-year-old tnlpet.
Channel Ll•t.h•g•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles D KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 1IJ KCST (NBC) San Diego
Q) KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles
8) KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
f!) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
~ KOCE· TV (PBSI Huntington Beach
1'.tter 10 Y~ars
Will McGarrett
, I •
" Bid 'Aloha?' • ....
HONOLULU lAP> -The cast and crew of the
television show "Hawaii Five-0 " have finished
filming their lOlh se;ison, and actor J ack Lord says
crime fighter Steve McGarrett may not be around
for season eleven.
"Ten years is a long time to stay with anything.
l want to do pther things with my life besides play ~~~Garrett," Lord said Friday, as lhe cast wrapped uJ? lhe final episode of the 10th season.
:· "I'm not saying there will not be another
soason," he said. "At this point, I just want to rest
a~d recuperate."
IT WAS 10 YEt\JlS ago that the stony.faced
Mt;Garrell began rounding up island crime ele-
ments on television.
, Lord and co·star James MacArthur agree that
ntany factors have m ade the show a success. The
IUwailan setting, the character p f McGarretl and
his aides, the strong in\er·relatlonshlp or the cast
and crew, and the variety of stories were all con-
ldbuting factors, they said.
The cast and the television audience have b~om e old fri ends. said MacArlh~r. "We've been
ii.·your living room for 10 years. Friendship doesn't
dt.e easily," he added.
: ''THE FORMAT LENT itself to such a rainbow
ot colors." said Lord. silting on the studio grounds
Dfar the slope or Diamond Head volcano.
• "It's not a hard·driving police show on the pre·
c'cl level. It's on a high felony level where we can
di bizanethlngs," he added.
• He questions the future of the show not because
otlh.e ratings but because of his own feelings .
• •He loves the show, but 70-hour work weeks can
b'-'ld up too much pressure, he explained.
.. .,"I TIUNK THE NEXT step is to meet with lhe cas executives and say, 'Js there anything we can do to light.en the load because. I've been carrying
t1P:9show, '"said Lord .
.
...
ot allowing Illa pet deer to
;tr~E
• •• ''Mon1leur
BMUU!r•" (1~6) Bob
Hope, Joen Caultleld.
Battd on the book by T.H.
Terklngton, a barber
attempt• to melniain Pl.-
tarice In the COUttl of King
Louis XV of ~raMle. (2 IQ.) 0 9 EOHTl8
ENOUGH
"Dew Mita Dlrlth" TM
~ly unrutned ·Torn los-
es hi• cool when hi•
daughter Ellzalleth Mkt
hit ltdllloe to the lowlofn
column If the lhould take
"The Piii." 0 JOKER'S WILD tD CAAOL IU..,.,.,.
ANOFRl£HOI
Gueata: Ken Barry, Cert
Reiner.
CIJ MOVIE * * ·~ "Cera on City"·
(111521 Rtndolpll ScoU,
Reyrnond Mu My. Two
brotheft become 11Vel1
during lhe conatrucllon ol
• rtllroad In 1170. (2 hra.) f8 SPEaAL
"Cllrl•"'1H Al Popa"
Ar11'1ur Fl.Oler. lllt Botton
Popa Orchestra al'd the
T~ Felltv.I Cho-
~ perlorTn mullo trorn
lhe farnlllat holiday res>«·
tolra.
Ql\) MAGIC OF 04L
PAINTINO
''Sealcape''
Cl) OfW. A08EAT8
D AOUHOnte T*-E
CAACX.Mfel
A IMrlQ tet>INUx, an 800-
volce choir, hand·bell ring-
... and tn. °""'1onM
singing group Pf-t •
program ol ChrlatmH
rnu.ie.
• MeRVGNFAN
Guella; Aichard· l'homal,
Pl~. Ncnard OMcon.
Pater Tauber, Roger oa
Cclu<09Y.
• GREAT
P£fW'<>RMANCES
"C~y By Belen-
d'llM With TM,._ York
Clly Ballet, Part II"
Excerpt• trorn thraa ot
Georg• Balenohln•'•
~ "Emafllada" (muelc:
by FIUl'9). "Rublee" I""'*
by Stravinsky) and
"Diamond•" (mulllo by
Td\alkovaky) .,. teeturtd,
conduding wltll tM Stra-
vlnlky Violin Corlceno. GD AU8TIN CITY LIMITS
"Grea:zy WtlMlt, Mtrda
• 8111 And The MIM rly
8rotherl''
CJ) MOVIE • * MKow To Frame A
Figg" (11171) Don Knot!•.
Joe Flynn. An lnl!OC«lt vic-
tim get• lhe beet ot hi•
tdwnMIM with the help
ot a cornputor. (2 lwl.I
10:00 G POUCE WOMAN
"Dull! G11mt" Pepper 11
pltgl*I by a menecing
~ Qller ""° toya with
her In a -* of hetrowtng
cat-•nd·mouH gemH.
~ Par90ff ~·
'IJp Against tlae Wall'
Ned Beatty ls besieged by youngsters
Thomas Carte r. Scott Colomby and Barry
Miller <from left ), all or whom want to be
Mass Telecast
"Midnight Mass at New York's St. Patrick's
Cathedral," a 9().minute Cbmtmas Eve special
will be telecast on KTLA, Channel ~ beginning ai
midnight.
Terence Cardinal Cooke or the Archdiocese of
New York will preside over the mass, to be present·
ed without commercial interrupUon.
Highlights of the tape-delayed presentation in·
elude hymns and carols sung by the St. Patrick's
Cathedral Choir.
... ~
OECISION fHRIS
PUT CHRIST BACK IN YOUR CHRISTMAS
BY SHOPPING AT MARANA THA VILLAGE
WE HO~OR CHRIST ALL.YEAR LO G
TUBE TOPPERS
KT L A 0 8 : 00 -"Mon s ie u r
!leaucaire." Bob Hope causes an uproar
m the court of King Louis XV in this 1946-
movie c9medy with J oan Caulfield .
· KCET Q 8:00 -Christmas at Pops .
Holiday music is pe rformed by conductor
AM.hur Fiedler and the Boston Pops
Orchestra with the Tanglewood Festival
Chorus.
CBS fJ 9: 00 -"The 'Mad Bull.,.
Former football player Alex Karras
plays a professional ''bad guy" wrestler
in this TV movie with Susan Anspach.
KHJ f)9:00 -Round the Table Carol
Sing. This Christmas program features
an 800-voice choir, hand bell ringers and
the Overtones singing group.
....... 11=:nA
"It Goea Wltfl The Job"
Baretta It tnatlltd tor ex•
outlOn by holdup man Vic
Jaokaon al1er 1layl11g
JaGUorl'a bfolller during a·
robbery. Tom Alklna. C..-
• Y•t•, SNne 8hwtko
~8111. m G£TSMART
Smart and Agent 09 ttlte •
job In an art ~m to
trall 111\ art thief.
CD SPECIAL. "GreenpMOe: VoyaQM To
Save TM wiw.t" Mem-
bers of Ille Greenpeace
Found•llon loou• world
•tt-lon on the exterrm-
natlon ot ~Of wt\ ....
by lnternattonat oonvner-
Q9f 1n1-t1.
11>;1()·~
"The Ellzabethlll\ Ctlflat·
mae C-..,,atlofl" Proo.-
*-· '-ting. alnglng tnd
dancing typical ot the Eh·
abethen period celabrll•
the i.tl¥e holld_!1. 11~ •• 8 Cll U NFNI HOU.VWQOO
COHNl!CTIOH Cl MOVlli
• *'-4 "ar.gat\o And Hie
Angel" 111168) Broderldc
Crawford. A darallc:t
~ tfle CUltodlen ot
• c:hurc:h, and le dllmltMd
after breaking lhe 9181u. ot
an angel.
• THE 000 COUPLE
Fell• revH ll how ha
~ hit own mar-
riage by ttylng to ....,.
Oecar'a. .. ~
Wltneulng a benll
robb41ry, Ralptt goee l\ofna
10 ..,. but Iha gangsftt't
... hlmCMll •
• DIQ( CAV,ETT
GIM\! Antonie 8rlco, oon-
duc:tor of the Bnoo Sym-
phony In Oen¥ar. G~L/LEHAP
AE.PORT
11:IO 8 CJ) HAWAII fM.O
An obeclure lhopk...,
~ttle~ln
the ...-nation plot ot
an Iron Cllftaln detector.
(R)
D TONIGHT
Gueet hoel; JOtln 0.vld-
IOI\.~ Carol~
Ing, 8Nce Jenner, .v.ttla
Fnlnklln. 9 LOVE.' AMllUCAH ~
"LOYe And The Uldy Ath-
lete I Love And Th• es· STAMKY a
HUT~
"Capt.in OoMy ·-You're
Dead" When a corrupt
lnduattialllt ordera the
beCU!lon ot • pojloe ~
taln and hie ~. ,,.
employ9 1111 aecaped con-
vict aent to prl9on by the
captain to do the Job. (~ l ~SMART
Max and 119 .,.. aent on a
mlNlon to trade down Iha
-peeled klller ot an
agent whoM llutt.d body
-Nn1 beet co CON·
Tflot. '-dquarttt't • 9 CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
MOMINO
12.1>0. TWIUQHT zoH!
"Changing Ot The
Guards"
• R>AEVER
FEAHWOOO
Loretta find• Charlie; Jet-
frwy d~ Lor.it•'•
:r;elecled as the community "Center's can -
didat e for "youth or the year" on Szysznyk1 toni ght at 8: 30 on Channel 2.
.
What happens when
the Almlghty makes
~ou an offer you
can't refuse!?! -
GEORGE BURNS • JOHN DENVER • (PO}
TERa'GARR ·DONALD PLEASENCt
• •
TONl()HT'S LATEST LISTINGS·
.-et; CMtlle tfllnll• IMl'd
f!IU'.• • IOuly lent.I.
• MOV• **''TMOUttew't~
t«" ( t~I Jim Oa..tt, 81M
W1llMla. A~,,_..
dOWI\ an ~ '° •rand\ OWMd ~ an •-outlaw
Wld Ilia bealltltul deughttl'.
(!Iv., 30 mll'IJ
1UO. MOYll **"' "lobeoOo AGM" (tlM1) 0.. Tierney, OWle
~~ .., ..... _, oeorvia .....,
from _.. dlpniYlly, ( 1
"'·· 2f ink\.) • MOYll
..... "ltn ,... Men"
( 1t51) Burt LAncliltef, Qll-
bert Roland. When lAgk)n-
~ try to atop a Alff
attedl on Twte. • Ml9Mfll
~ a >'°""Cl gll'I and
talta In kwe with her. (2
lwa.)
1~1 • 0 AllO M't'llUY
MOVtl *-*'A "Mt. And M-. And The 8end8t8nd ...,,.,. ••
'(11175) All wnioant rom
Siar. who ,_ .iianllted
~ WOUllCI llirn, le
tound d..i In Na drlellng
room tolloWlng • ~
menUll 0Ulbln1 during •
conoatt ,...,..,,. (ffl
12:40 8 Cl) KO.WC
"...,,_ TM o.A KllOWI"
The M\1111 ol the IUl'\ll\otng.
half ol • c.t bUrgllr IMln
(Henry Darrow> ..,.,..,.
... -the .. ol '*"* Intending to ellmlnal9 Mm
.. OfoMlg.., ......
day.(A)
1;00 D TOMOMOW
A dllootlleque antm•
9'IOW with Norm N. Nit ..
Van Mceov. Lou Bredcer
and lluttle dlnolra. (R)
• 18PV
Amerlc:e et"'"9l9 to ,,,.... •
writ • ttw•• led MOllelft ul'fWn9 In Morooco •
1='0 • MOVIE . * *... "Deported" (1115 t)
M.na Tor«i. Jett Cflan-
dler. A 10'lllf !NII plott
and ._ IO oaetl In on
the btac:k llWll9t. ( 1 lw' .. 30
min.) 1:161 Nl!WI t:OO • NEWS
MO\llE
•• ''The Cf~"
( tHS) Ctlllfltlt Oreke,
Oeof91 SandenJ. ~ ~ tot the mat1er
thief ""° °'*'* one aate .,..,. enottw. (2 tn.1
* * . .,,,. M)'tiary Of Mar·
.. Roget'' (111<C2) Mwla
Montei, Patric 1<nowtaa. A
medlcll euminer uncov-
ers • murder after 1111
aetreea cllMppear'a. ( 1 llf .•
30 min.)
D MOVIES * * * ''Thia Land la MIM" (1M3) Olattee t.ughton,
M•uraen O'Hara. A
Frendlman eurnmons hit
c:ourtge end deflee the
occupying German.. 12
hra.)
• ·~ "ltep Uvely" (1944) ,,.,. 11ne1ra. oion. 0e
Ha~ Altw many flNln.
dal hUrdlea. • pr6tluCer
1tnd hill cul la/Id In the big
Ulna. 12 tva.) 2:201 NEM t:ao a.t<>V\D ** "Montier 'r°"' A ~orlofltanal"(19Ml
Tamlo K•wajl, Yollo
V..-noto. Three IMfl clleo
CIOYW a .,. IM eNllo>10
cnet-Md..,,. Wle cnewre'•..,.... ~ •· lngltto~--~
(2 In.)
• • "TM "-"' Of ,....
Vamplr•" 11143) hi•
l.llgOel, Hine fOdl. A '*""'
plf9 oontlnuea to H..,.
~ tM NII• ltlrouglt
hie tie.t. 1, "' .. ao mlllJ 1:11• MOYll ••• "leianbul ~ ..
(tNI) 0... Batry, Jofln.
SUon. AA wt dlllller ~ •
rteflCIM .,, ~ end f ~ trllln '* ....
ori • aacrwt 00-••••4 ........,.,. I 1 llf .. 66 mlrl.) l:OO. MEWS
Tlaur•da11'•
Dqti.te /tf..,les
MOANING
t:SO ••• ""-°°'an.-""' .. (11152) ...... ~
Jedi 8uetll. A ~ pt,
,..,_, by CMl'ok.. Ind!--
-wtlo .. ded by outtwe. ....... lllw Into
her own handa. (1 hr .. 30
min.)
10;00 •• * -11 ~On Fifth Avenue.. \ 1U1l
Ctlarlaa RugglM, Gall
Storm.~ the -le
W#ftf, a hobo r-. Into•
IMnlkln ancs 1rw11ae °"*"
10 '°"' """· Including the 'rMI -lncognilo, (2
In.)
AFTMNOON
12:00 ...... "Mr. Solt
Touch" ( tll49) GWnn Ford.
E~ ~ A retwnlnQ
......,, finds hie niglltdub
-~ -by. gqat•. (!Iva.. 20 min.) 2:00. ··~ ••f011r ~· t.t.\" (1MO) AldO Raly,
Haather 8-'a. Four ...
pwat• men, on 1111 ltland
off Sydney, Auatralla,
thraatan to deatroo/ the
. city. (2 hrs.) -
a;00 9 • • ~ "Only"'*° can
Piii(' (1"2) ... ar Sellerl,
Mii Zetttring. A Ubrary
board member \aama '°
appreclalt his wit• altar
IN tlat a brief attlllf wlltt a
K~(2hra.)
l;IO 8 * * * "The 7th Voy-age Of Slnt>M" (11158)
Kerwltl .....,,_., ~
Gr8"t, A pl1ncMa. dwarfed
by a maglcian'I .,.,.., II
aided by Slnbad. (1 Iv., 30
ITWI.)
Tuesday flits
Score Again
LOS ANGELES (AP> -ABC's one·two·three.
Tuesday punch, "Laverne and Shirley," "Happy
Days" and "Three's Company," continued al the
top or the Nielsen ratings for the week endine Dec .
18.
. The shows placed in that order, followed by two
other ABC shows, "Eight Is Enough" and "The Six
Mlllion Dollar Man," lo sweep the top five.
ABC's "Soap" placed No. 7, its highest ranking
lo date, as St continued lo be the top·rated new show
of the season.
Here are the top 20 s hows:
1. "LAVERNE AND Shirley," ABC. 2. "Happy
Days," ABC. 3. "Three's Company," ABC. 4.
••Eight Is Enough," ABC. S. "The Six Million DoUar
Mao," ABC. 6. "Alice," CBS. 7. "Soap," ABC. 8.
"Alt ln Ute Family," CBS. 9. "A Ch•rlie Brown
Christmas," CBS. 10. "The T.iny Tree," CBS.
11. ".LlttJe House on the Prairie," NBC. 12.
"The WaltOOJ," CBS. 13. "One Day at a Time."
CBS. 14. "60 Minutes," CBS. 15. Mooday Movie.
"Sunshine Christmas," NBC. 16. "M.A·S-H." CBS.
17. "The Night Before Christmas," CBS. 18. NFL
Monday Night Football, ABC. 19. "Doug Henning's
World o( Magic," NBC. 20. Perry Como Christmas
special, CBS.
The Fever Is Spreading
.. ,_ .......... .
! I \\, : . . . . .... _';;"" ·.
ENTERTAINMENT / MOVIES
An
THEATRES -ORANGE COUNTY
llA•M'S .. SEMI TOU~H" II)
SO. COAST PLAZA DAJL y
~:.i::::. I :JG-J:J0.5:)0
~ 1111 7:JG-t:l 0
MANN'S so. com PUZA
Cuu110 1
J.11' lhftlj
~1111
NUN'S
SO. COAST PUZA
ms111tt•t1
)4t m 1
MAH'S
CINEMAUNO
1414 s. ..... ..,
&.t1a11•
llS IHI
MANN'S
CINEMAUND 1414 s. ...... , m•11• us'"'
MANN'S
CINEMAUND
l4ltS1.11M-.r
balitl•
6JS-7ill
1111 , .....
"SATUIOA Y MIGHT
FEVER ..
DAILY
1:4'-J:45·5:5o.l:OO-t0:00
llll,_ "'
"Cl.Ost IMCOUN1'US OP 1HE
THllDIUMD"IPGl · •.
IJ ·~~''" 1 .s-1 .. 1•
UTllMOW th N AMMA ...
llU PAHlllC
.. OH. GOD11 CPGI
DAILY
I :JO.l : I 5°5:00-6:4'
l :lO·IO:l 5
•"TELEFOH0
DAILY
I :J0-3:20·5: IO· 7:0M:50. I 0:40
"THE OTHER SIDE
OF MIDNIGHT"
DAILY Cal
l:IS.5:15-1:15
HENRY SALLY
WINKLER FIELD
1-tl:llCtl:S
A fURMAN-fOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION #HEROES•
Co-starring ~ IARR ISC?N fOR
DAILY PltOT
WednMd•Y: December 21, 1977 DAILY PILOT •7
Life Was a Banquet for· Roz Russel(
"' ' By JEB&YaUCK ,
LOS ANGELES <AP> -You've seen those
Hollywood me1DOlrs: the spicy gossip about tbe love arr airs, remorse over the marriagea that falled and.
digs at co-atars ud rivals.
Here's a Hollywood autobiography witb a dif •.
ference and What a delightful difference.
"Never in the 37 years that I knew Rosalind did fi cult to play. It's just a matter of getting the type or~
I see her bein& r\lde to a alngle penon." said person who would meld with the woman who plays•.
Frederick Brisson, her husband for 3S years and a Rosalind. You have to cast the woman. She has lo·
leadlnf Broadway producer. have tremendous stage presence. ~
'-The day after the funeral 1 took tM car to be "Basically, she was a private person, but when~ It came time to be on at\e was everybody's Auntie'\
Rosalind Russell's ''Life Is a
Banquet," published a year
after her death, is the witty,
charming book that has sudden-
ly surfaced as a best seller. It
was co·written with Chris Chase
and is published by Random
washedt" he recalled. "She had always handled' Ma me. She didn't just play Auntie Mame, abe was~
tbat ana the manager came out la tears. He Mid he AunUe Mame au ber llfe... '
, had ellllne trouble on the Ventura Free~ay once ·~--~~~~~:iiii!i~:ii·~=-~iiiiiiiiiiij:~. and no ODI would stop -until Rosalind came along.
}Je said Jhe not only drove him to the station, but
back to his car and waited untU the trouble waa
fixed. I think that liOrt of exemplifies her human-nesa.''
House.
MIS.S HUS.SELL DIED l'iOV,
28. 1976, after a long bout wtth
cancer. But it was rheumatoid w.;
arthritis -and her reac:~ to the drqs U.. \oak
for it -that made her life a atrual•. .
Carson Inks Pact
For $2.5 MiUiQn
'f
i .. . ' "Jane Fobda and Vusessa Redsrave
are cloee to per;fectkm. 'Julia' is
moving in lta slowing eommitmeat
to the power of friendship."
-Hewew=*Mrt·
I
"'Julia' is a movie that baa~ Jane Fonda l&lws an lmpusloned,
complex and elmmt egonfzingJy
<fe4icated j>erfdlmance. Vanessa Redgrave.._ tbe &ClmD with her
v1::~ormance.'Julia' fa ·~~ ~ , "' . _.....,IJndk:...aOia.m' t · I
MISS RUSSELL REVEALS some foibles in the book1 moer=rown. She was kind and generous, a fact Known beftre the book, but there is no mis-
taklDI that I wu a movie queen of the old school. ·
111 Gee aegment she tells how she handled a young
actna wbo attempted to upstage her in a mm.
Brillcla Hid he hoped the book would be made Into a ftlm. But who would play Miss Russell, who
starred in 51 f~ a"d in such Broadway hits as
"WOOderfUl Towii" and "Auntie Mame?"
He bad 81\ hnmtdlate answer. "Faye
Dunaway. BIM.Plared tbe kind of part i n 'Network"
tbat l\OI ~.~_PIAY• Jn -Take a Letter, Darling' aad 21 other uum the J>ll)'ed a career woman. She
wu all tbe tbi.nta tbat J'aye Dunaway was in· 'Netwark.' "
FOUNT.AIM YAW't' .......................... IJt·llOO
CIMTU•Y 21 ................................ m.ettz'
MISSION ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l,Jt.lftO •
CIMINA WIST ••••• , • •••• •••• ............... ltJ"44tJ ~
HAllOI Qte.4A, •••• •. • ••• ' •••••• , •••••••• ,. 64Ml7J' ~
01.A ... I MAU.. ••••• .,-M'. •••••• •••••••••••••••. U7 ... J42 • MIA. PLAZA • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• ~ ••••••••• , •• llt..SJJt ~
STA.DH .... D.L ••••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••• IJt.JMO ~
LA MllADA DJ. •••••• , ....................... tit ·ttf6
#~ NOWPLAYINO
'}L.
ORANGE COUNTY :-.
-ONEOFTIIE ~
BESI' PIC'ltJRES •• ..
' ., . ' Of 'DIE YEAR!' ., •
.~ 11M£ MllGAltN£ ~
~ ~ ~ ~ne Bancroft
~
Sl..-rlng Rldtenf DferfUH Shlrtey Maclalne end Marttle MelOll
at the Huntington et the Cinema,
Cinema Costa Mesa
• .
• • ,DAJlV PILOT' W~. 0.-iemhtf 2f, 1977
. \
..
Wednesday, Thursd0¥, ~r:iday .· 5.:QC)p>.m. to 9:00p.m. 1
I I
FREE GIFTS -TO .ALL ~CHILDREN · UNDER '·lO
• UNIVERSITY's ·"F8mily €hris~8s Speci81" •
Brand New 1978 OLDS $~·. 17 7 . · IMMEDIATE
DELTA 88 SEDAN
Automatic, atr oonditioning, pewer steering and ,, · TAXru'c9ENsE DEL I VERY -
brakes, tilt steering wheel. (3L69R8C120969) (6353) .
1: • ~~~~i5~~ ~~'
·.; $ee 'them
• • • · m our ~,
,; Sluilirooni · ' .
.
J .. •
..
• •• • • • • • • • •••• .,,.. ... ., , • • , • • .91, ~ ' ... ,, • , ••• ••-. •• • .. • .-·-• •• ~ •• ' ... • • • • • • • • ' • • ' • • • • • ... • ....., ---••• .....:.. " •
•
•
I NS I DE : • Food •Ann Landers
•Comics •Horoscope
W9dnft<Say December 21 , 1817
Christmas
.. Christmas
Christin as
When there are triplets around the
house, everything comes in threes.
By MARCIA FORSBERG
Ol IN O•lly ,. .. , Sl•ll
Folklore heroes wrrc granted
three wishes: in baseball. fl 's three
str ikes and you're out The old !-.ay·
ing admits that the third time's the
charm. There were three blmd
m ice, three wise men and three
musketeers.
And at the Coulter house in Foun-
tain Valley, it's a three.ring circus,
especially at Christmas time.
Hal and Marianne Coulter are
the parents of J lf.i.year·old tripleLc;,
not to mention fi ve other chil dren
-ages 10 months to 15 years old.
Their blue-eyed, blonde threesome
-Kimmberley, Crystal and Bob·
bic Jo -was born July 27, 1974.
This ,Yl'ar, th<·;"ve realized the
wonder of Chr1stm<1", and thcv've
been involved to the max v. 1th i1oh-
day pre1>ar at1 ons
WHAT'S IT REALLY like during
the month of Dt•c·cmber for the
Coulter family'! "Do you want the
truth or a he?" Mrs. Coulter dead· panned.
"They're very curious. I just
started pulling up decorations to-
day and they already want to know
when I 'm going to take them
down.•• They've n •peatedly told
her how pretty it all is, she added.
Mrs. Coulter lcL'\ the gi rls help
d ecorate Christmas candy and
cookies because "they want to he
helpful. They're into my baking,
lryin~ to lick the bowl and watch
me. They like to do my dishes while
l'm on the phone," she said, eyes
heavenward .
F or holiday !>hopping sprees,
they take the bus to Gemco and
South Coast Plaza. H's not easy,
she confessed, "because they get
lost and they can ruin a (store's)
department int wo seconds."
THEY'VE BEEN known lo
''destroy the Winnie the Pooh sec-
tion al Sears, and the other day at
Gemco they knocked down a whole
· stack of toy kitchen utensils." .
Hut toys are what Christmas is
all about lo the triplets. "( buy
them all alike to keep my sanity -
or else they'll fight over it. l buy
the same doll, same color."
l n addition to the toys for her fi ve
other children, there wi ll be three
scooters, thrcc plastic shoppinl!
I' arts, three dolls and three See 'N
Says waiting under the tree on the
morning of Dec. 25.
Mrs. Coulter noted that it gels ex·
pensive playing Santa for eight
youngsters. She tries to buy well·
made, sturdy gifts for the triplets
because "they're destructive. I
have to buy things that h old
together."
MRS. COULTER recall ed
Christmases past with Kim -
mberley, Crystal and Bobbie Jo.
·'The first year they were babies -
that was a nice time," she mused.
When they were JI;, they were
starting to gel around "and they
got into everything. They tore my
tree down and they just destroyt.'CI
<See TRIPLETS, Page Cl>
Dally l"llel Pr.et• Illy a.rt -
From left, Bobbie Jo, Crystal, and Kimmberfey Coulter.
)
Joe lchlchen, whose panes are mwn Eg~ «~Tut
drawing.
•
....
' -l
DAU. Y PILOT
Bill BsJJance: 'I'm in a state of euphoria •••• The reception· of my show is like being born again.'
Bill ~naUBDee ·
The popul~r talk show host has moved his show to Orange County.
'The real value of a show like mine is that people undergo a repeated
serjes of sPocks of recognition, and think to ·themselves, "Ah, I'm not
alone!" '~e says.
By CllF.RYL ROMO
Of Ille D•lly Pilot Sl•ll
After a quarter of a century in razzle·
dazzle Hollywood , Bill Ballance is pa~·
ing his cardboard boxes at Crestfallen
Manor and m oving his S.000 Civil W•r
books and other possessions to Uie
Orange Coast. '
The popular talk show host and Witty
word manipulator h as his eye on
Newport Beach -but only on the coh'<ii -
, lion that ~re is a vacant tennis court on
which he c~ play every day.
"BB" ~Uy moved his show from
KAilC-Radio in Los Angeles to KWIZ in
Santa Aua. Currently, he is navigating
lhe freeways in his "gas guzzUng" blu~
Lincoln six <lays a week while working
the graveyard shift between midnight to
5:30a.m .
Why in the world did he leave his
prime, daytime show at KABC Where his
ratings looked like a close·upbflhe lop or
Mou'nt Olympus?
"I got fired,'' he replies witti veteran
calm. Admitting he was completely nab-
bergasted about the reason for hi s dis·
missal, which he says is confidential,
Ba llance states, "lt was som'! blow."
Ross Kaplan with cobra.
Tut Nuts
The King Tut Ex.hibit doesn •t
open in Los Angeles until
February, and their tickets
aren't good until June, but the
7th grade MGM studeJ,)ls at
Gisler Middle School are l'aring
to go.
, To prepare for the visit, the
Huntington Beach class for
weeks has been .st\.adying the
Land of the Pharaohs. They've
also created their own Egyp-
tian exhibits and projects:
everything from jewelry to Tut
busts.
Wolff, all 7th g,rad MGM stu-
dents in the Huntington Beach
Elementary School District will
Ac~ordlng fA. t.eacb.-cncty
The former Top 40 d\sc jockey, wh'>
lhen went on to star in his own radio an1t
television talk show, s ays his new show
at KWIZ has beeo an instant success:
'Tm in a state or euphoria. Botb men
and women are calling in and ( 'm
am azed. The reception of rny show is
like being born again. It's the same en-
thusiasm and interest that l received
five years ago at KG~ (Where he in·
lroduced his "FeQ1lnlne Forum" show>.
"And the calls are more intelligent.
I've only had to bleep out <a four.second·
tape delay> two calls in four weeks. I
think Orange Coul\tY has a larger
number of young~r types -they're
eitber a Jot. of insomniacs or a lot. of stu-
dents burlng the midnight tongs ten ... · •
The twice-divorced bachelor, who
•. describes bimsell as lh his "middle
ea rlies," says the average of the
listeners '°o phone him nightly is 24.2
<as compaled with 42.3 at l<ABC and 38.5
at KGB$) • .KWlZ is currently increasing
its powerto5,000 watts durl!lg his broad·
casts to blank~ the Los Angeles area. ·
Ballance is doubly ecstatic, be says~·
because after the fi rst of the year, the
Christine Dunn with King Tut.
m a ke the trip to the Los'
Angeles county Art Museum
next June.
"We're one bf the few -or
the only -Orange County dis·
trlcts that was able to get
tickets," she says, 41and we put
in the request a year and a halt
ag<;_>/'
Won 't interest in Tut wane in
the ensuing seven months?
i!lation 's parent company, Davis Broad·
casting, will syndicate his show and it ·
. will be heard all over California, Oregon,
Washington and Canada.
The format of the show consislc; of ask·
ing questions, such as: "Where and
when was your first kiss?" or "What re·•
pels or attracts you instantly on meeting/
a m an or a woman"" or "What reallY!\
happened at that school reunion?"
"The women l 've talked to in the las\ _
seven years have forced me to look'.
within myself," he admits. "And to think.
•.Jn areas where l 've never thought
before.
•'The real value of a s how like mine is
that people undergo a repealed series of
shocks of r ecognition, and thJnk to
themselves, 'Ah, I'm not alone!'''
Despite the free-wheeling, b ed-
hopping personality he often projeds on
the air, ''Billo" says he's a one-woman
man .... currently between ones. "I'm
looking forward to roving around after
the first of the year," he says with an im-
pish J(rin. Then, paUlng his chest, he
addl, "I'm healthy. The last time I was.
sic1c was in '55 when I had a sore throat.'·
($ee BALLANCE, Page Cl>
Tom Simpson with mummy.
H•d d Tut by Rene Jacobs.
I
• INSlDE : •Food •Ann Landers
•Comics •Horoscope
Wltdnetlday. Oucemw 21 , 1977
Christmas
Christmas
Christmas
When there are triplets around the
house, everything comes in threes.
By MARCIA FORSBl\RG
OI IN 0.ilf Pllet Sult
Folklore heroes were granted
three wishes; in basebal 1. 1t 's three
strikes and you 're out. Th<' old say-
ing admits that the third time's the
charm. There were three blind
mice, three wise men and three
musketeers.
And at the Coulter house in Foun·
lain Valley, it's a three-ring circus,
especially at Christmas time.
Hal and Marianne Coul ter are
the parents of 3'7'.1-year -old tripleLc;,
not to mention fi ve other children
-ages 10 months to 15 } ears old.
Thei r blue-eyed, blonde threesome
-Kimmberley, Crystal and Bob·
bie Jo -was bom July 27, 1974.
This year, thl•y 'vc realized the
wonder of Ch ristmas. and thcv've
been involved to the max ''1th huh
day preparations
WHAT'S IT REALLY like during
the month of December for the
Coulter family? "Do you want the
truth or a lie?" Mrs . Coulter dead-panned.
"They're very curious. I just
started putting up decorations to-
day a nd they already wa nt to know
when l 'm going to take them
down.•• They've repeatedly told
her how pretty it al 1 is, she added.
Mrs. Coulter lets the girls help
decorate Christmas candy and
cookies because "they want to be
helpful. They're into my baking,
trying to lick the bowl and watch
me. They like to do m y dishes while
I'm on the phone," she s aid, eyes
heavenward.
For holiday ::.hopping sprees.
I hev lake the bus lo Gem co and
South Coast Plaza. It's not easy,
she confessed, "because they get
lo~t and they can ruin a (store's )
department in two seconds."
THEY'VE BEEN known to
''destroy the Winnie the Pooh sec-
tion at Sears. and the other day at
Gemco they knocked down a whole
· i.tack of toy kitchen utensils." .
But toys arc what Christmas is
all about to the triplets. "t buy
them all alike to keep my sanity -
or else they'll fight over it. I buy
the samt• doll , same color .··
In add1l1on to the toys for her fi ve
other cluldren. there will be three
scooters, three• plas tic s hoppinp
l'arts, three dolls and three See 'N
Sa) s \Vailing under the tree on the
morning of Dec. 25.
Mrs Coulter noted that il gets ~x
prns1vc playing Santa for eight
y<>ungsters. She tries to buy well·
made, sturdy gifts for the triplets
hrcause ''they're destructive. I
have to buy things that hold
together."
MRS. COULTE R recalled
Ch ristmases pas t with Kim ·
rn berlcy, Crystal and Bobbie Jo.
·'The first year they were babies -
that was a nice lime." she mused.
When they were 1 1 ~. they were
starting to get around "and they
~ot into everything. They tore my
tree down and they j ust destroyed
(Stt TRIPLETS, Page C3 )
O.hy ,.. ... ,,_. "' O.ty ·--
From left, Bobbie Jo, Crystal, and Kimmberley Coulter.
Joe lahkhen, wnose p11,.,..,,, .., 1rorn Egypt w#tJ King Tut
drawing.
\
--
' i
OAILV PILOT
Bill Bsllance: 'I'm in a state of euphoria .••.• The recepticx; of my show is like being born again.'
·,
BiJI ·~naHBDee ·
The fJOpul~r talk snow host has moved his show to Orange County.
'The real value of a show like mine is that people undergo a repeated
series of ~hocks of recognition, and think to ·themselves, "Ah, I'm not
alone!" 'he says.
By CH F.RYL ROMO
Ol tlle Oallf Piiot 51 .. 11
After a quarter of a century in razzle-
dazzle Hollywood, Ihll Ballance as pac;Jt
ing his cardboard boxes at Crestfallen
Manor and moving his 5,000 Civil Wtr
books and other possessions to Uie
Orange Coast.
The popular talk show host and Witty
word m anipulator has hi s eye on
Newport ~each -but only on the condi·
lion that t.Jtsre is a vacant tennis court. on
which )le c~ play every day. "BB"~tly moved his show from
KABC-Rn.dio in Los Angeles \o KWIZ in
Santa Ana. Currently, he is navigating
the freeways in his "gas gunling" blue
Lincoln six clays a week wblle working
the graveyard shift between ltlidnisbt to
5:30a.m.
Why in the world did he leave his
prime, daytime show at KABC 'Nhere bis
ratings looked like a close-up bl the top of
Mou·nt Olympus?
"I got fired,'' he replies with veteran
calm. Admlttlng he was completely flab-
bergasted about the reason for his dis·
missal, which he s ays is confidential,
Ballance states, "It was som~ blow."
Ross Kaplan with cobra.
'fut Nuts
The King Tut Exhibit doesn't
open in Los Angeles until
February, and their tickets
aren't good until June, but the
7th grade MGM students at
Gisler Middle School are raring
to go.
To prepare for the visit, the
Huntington Beach class /or
weeks has been studying the
J..1lnd of the Pharaohs. They've
also created their own Egyp-
tian exhibits a nd projects :
everything from jewelry to Tut
busts.
Wolff. all '1th grlld• MGM stu-
dents in the Huntlhgton Beach
Elementary School Djstrlct will
ACf:Ording fA teltclllr 'f eady
The former Top 40 disc jockey, wh'>
then went on to star in his own radio an1l
television talk show, says his new show
at KWIZ has beeo an instant success:
'' l 'm in a state of euphoria. Both men
and women are calling in and I 'm
amazed. The reception of my show is
like being bom again. It's the same en-'
thusiasm and interest that I received
Cave years ago at KOBS <where he in-
troduced his "Feminln'e Forum'' show),
"And the calls are more inlellieent.
·1·ve only had to bleep out <a four-second ·
tape delay) two calls in four weeks. I
think Orange Coul'\tY has a larger
number or younger types· -they're
eit.ber a lot of insomniacs or a lot of stu-
dents buring the midnight tongsten ... "
The twice-divorced bachelor, who
, describes himself as in his "middle
earlies," says the average of the
Jlsteners~phone him nightly is 24.2
<as com wi 42.3 at KABC and 38.5
at KGBSJ. is currently increasing
its powerto5,000·watts during his broad-
casts to blanket the Los Angeles area.
Ballance is doubly ecstatic, he says.,
because after the fi rst of the year, the
Christine Dunn with King Tut.
make tl)e trip to the Los'
Angeles County Art Museum
next June.
"We•re one or the few -or
tbe only -Orange County dis·
tricts that was able to get
tickets," she says. "and we put
in the request a year and a half
ag':>:''
Won 't interest in Tut wane in
the ensuing seven months?
''Oh, we can keep up the cn-
t hus i asm , •· predicts Mrs.
Wolft, wbosays the Egyptology
unit received 100 percent stu-
dent partlclpatlon. "The kids
.are reall).-A~ aboGt it. .. ~
station's parent company, Davis Broad-
casting, will syndicate his show and it
. will be heard all over California, Oregoo,'
Washington and Canada.
The formal of the show consists or ask-
ing questions, such as : "Where and
when was your first kiss?" or "What re·
pels or attracts you instantly on meetin~~
a man or a woman?" or "Whal reallr~ happened at lhat school reunion?"
"The women I've talked to in the las' _
seven years have forced me lo look .
within myself," he admits. "And to think,
··In areas where l 've never thought
before.
''The real value of a show like mine is
that people undergo a repealed series of
shocks of recognition, and think to
themselves, 'Ah, I'm not alone!'"
Despite the free-wheeling, bed-
hopping personality he often projects on
the air, "Blllo" says he's a one-woman
man ... currently between ones. "I'm
looking forward to roving around after
the first otthe year," he says with an im-
pish grin. Then, patting his chest, he
adds, "I'm healthy. The last lime I was.
sic"k was in '55 when I had a sore throat.··
<See BALLANCE, Page Cl>
Tom Simpson with mummy.
(2 OAJL'f' PILOT
DEAR ANN : Encloted
are some practical
aspects of the Oolden
Rule, to which I would
rQ.ff PlAZA iW!OA 1 like to add the lour in· ~ 9eocl> 'l<1I ~A.., itials made famous by
5"48-41?1 67>1~ A n n L a n d e rs -._ ________ ,., M.Y.O.B.! Ju.st sian me.
4 w so q; J 4 4
W~ay, O.cember 21 . 1977
-DAILY READER IN
NEW YORK
1. If you open it, close
it.
2. rr you turn lt on. tum
it otr.
3. If you unlock it, lock
ll.
4. If you break il, re·
I A•• La•d~rs ·.rciiiisTMlsiooi<·"·s·--A ... L._E ... l pa;~ i1ti you can·t fix it.
1 . call in someone who can.
·J · NOW IM PROGRESS! · tu~nKyou borrow tt, re· --~---"'
"
• COASTUME .. ~ 1. u you use it, take to mteu1g~nt women on
I care oftl. a ODe·t.o-One basis, but J COLLIGI s. If you make 8 rness, when it comes lo asking J ,fS!?J!.t.()jl~. ·· · clean ll up. one to ,dinner I freeze.
• _,., L-..~.. 9.Jfyoumovelt.putit Th1 ~ mus t .have
tI _,.in;:t--back. something to do wit.b my J ::..~.: r-_i§J---, ~ ' -10. If it belongs lo mother. She was very 1. ....__L.:.:_..t:...:-:.:._.J ""'"'"-somebody else and you critical of me. Not.bing J ·~ ... , a::;c:a.. want to use it, get ever did was good
""".._ ... .,.~~:,.-: . permission. enough. M y older ~;;:==:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiii_"'°_ 11. If you don •t know b r o t h e r w a s h e r
6,• how lo operate it, leave ti r~vorlte. l always felt alone. like she was sorry l was
-o:;; ;: A
I .
( Horoscope
THURSDAY, DEC. U motion, making room
R for yoursetr al more By SYDNEY OMAR elevated position. Leo,
ARI ES <March 21· Aquarius figure prom-
April 19): Emphasis on inenlly.
acti vlty, ideas, selec· LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct .
Uon, relaUves, visits and 22 >: Long-range, future
short trips. Analyze In· and past, history and re·
formation -tak e ligion all blend into
oothiag ror granted. today's scenario for you.
'IAURUS <April 20· Aquarian plays key role
May 20): Accent on -and so does the
money. payments, cot. number 11. Special
lections, protection or publication could aid
valuables. Be specific, cause.
insist on factual in-SCOR PIO <Oct. 23·
fo rmation. You may Nov. 21): What seems
wanl to rebuild, r!'.ln -restricted. nailed down
force , tear down for is only temporary. Your
structurlng on a more own veniatlllty, willing-
&Qlld base. ness to be nexlble de·
fiEM INI <May 21 · termine final outcome.
June 20): You get your Gemini. Sagittarius
way -circumstances figure prominenUy.
\.
~N LANDERS I HOROSCOPE
Last Minute Gilts
Roger's Giant Ecke Poinsel·
tlas !\ave never been more
beau1lful. They drt! avail·
able wi1h mulu1>1e bloon'' In
either Chrli.tma• red or
white.
RO!I"• w1d.-n• • 1>41>·5800 ~"" ,loaquln at MacAnh11t • N""'P"'' BflH'h q•"'-6pm
s100 DOLLAR DAY.PACKAGE 12. If it doesn't concern born. you, don't mess with it. All the way through
DEAR N.Y.: Tbanka school I was the qu.iet
for the excellent sae1ea· type -afraid to raise
tloaa. 1'bey a.re n re lo my hand and speak even
h el p l•br l c ate tbe when I knew the answer.
machinery ol hamaa re· The sound or my voice
turn in your favor . Be Si\GITrARllJS (Nov.
confident. Take in-22-Dec. 21): Emphasis
it I a ti v e . St r i v e '4> r on ci rcums lances. de. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;-~
greater self-expressioit\ cisions made by others,
Be. more selfish when It legal ties. Your position
comes to protecting and is solid, despite delays.
promoting your own In-Key now is to be obser·
terests Pisces, Virgo vant, patient, willing to
per sontt are part or let one close to you show
..
1. MASSAGE
2.SAUNA
3. FACIAL
4. SCALP& HAIR TREATMENT
5. HAIRCUT
6. HAIRSTYLE
7. MANICURE
8. PEDICURE
9. EYEBROW ARCH
10. COMPLETE MAKE UP.
RcKMD 0£LlfTTE
SALON & COSMETICS
F °' Men & Womeft
200 HIWP'OllT CIHTEtt DlllYI
Newport leedl 6444671
;:A 1894' HARBOR BLVD loi! 191h St•eel)
• COSTA MESA, CA 92663 For •ppoontment e<ill 642·NAIL :·:v GENTLEME~;~0~RE 1Nv1rEo ..
,:()
: .. : '-! ~ ... to a FREE
I y HOLIDAY PARTY ,
t;
,~
f
, .
T,Y our flexible aoryhc nails (can be
worn clear!). Our gift to you, a WllEE
•rt ol h 1dleld .. al e t1e l .. •e•.
Holiday prices effectiv~ until Dec.
Nth.
latloas. u yoa add my terrlried me. • M.Y.O.B. It makes tlllr· l . know l here s
tee a -a a a alacky· something wrong and I
number.So -may l add ne e d some ~elp . j ust one more! Therapy Is out: I m not
If It will brlgb&en e.mo~ionally disturbed.
someone'sday-11aylt. 1 m Just ~y. What can
O E A R A N N you s uggest? -EM·
LANDERS: The letter P~Ri1N:toBI A. about the young ban-· dicapped man with Have I got a book for
whom the girls• refused you. It's "Shyness" by
to dance brought back P.G. Zlmbardo <Addlson
some fond memories. Wesley Publlsblng Co.>.
Twenty years ago (l Now In paperback.
was about 17), I attended Thia book caa bring
a dancing party. l yoa face·lo·face with
noticed a slender fellow, yourself aJtd ltelp you
ver y attractive who understand why you
seemed to know ~very-have bung back all these
one -but he didn 'l _years. It will lns&rud
dance. I wangled an In· yoa on ll6w lo break out
troduction and round him of your shell.
sc.enario.' the way and have a say.
CANCER (June 21· CAPRICORN CDec.
.ruty 22r: Don't look 22-Jan . 19 >: Com -
back -:r someone 11\&Y be mun i ca l e w il h co· "gaining on you.·• Key workers, persons who 1 is to perceive potential, share your interests,
not brood about past. goals. Petty annoyances
You're asked for coUMel should not be permitted
concerning hospital.· to get in way of "big pic-
club or civic project~ lure." Gemini, Virgo in·
LEO (July 23-Aug. dividuals are hlgblight-
22>: Frie.odshlp ls test-ed.
ed. A relationship needs AQlJARI US (Jan .
a new direction. Ex-20·Feb. 18): Good lunar·
press feelings. Be recep· aspect coincides now.
tive to suggestions of with creativity, specula·.
others. Yo u are not lion, pursuit of pleasure.
glucdtotradlUon. PISCES <Feb. 19·'
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. Mar ch 20): Accent on
22>: Emphasis on civic building, reviewing,
duty, standing in com-comprehend ing mean-
munity, superiors. pro-ing of fine print.
••• Triplets
absolutely char ming. I
finally a'skcd why he
wasn't dancing. He
replied, "I wear a brace
on one leg and I limp. I
don't want to inflict that
on anybody.''
I said, "Maybe we
could try the next slow
number." Well, we did,
<From P age Cl)
it. I don't know how many times it
fell on them."
and he was a magnifi-
cent dancer. I felt like a
duchess. We attracted a
lot of attention, and
before long he was waltz-
ing off with somebody
else. After that. nearly
every girl there wanted
Last year, ot 2~. they discovered
Santa Claus and "dldn 't like him.
They won't have anything to do
with him now, either. They're
scared to death or him, but they
want him from a distance," said
to dance with h im Wedding and engage-~ause he was clear~y ment announcemmts run
the best slow dancer m on Sunday in t~ Daily ~he room. Wb,erever he Pilot. Forms ore available
1s, I h~ hes healthy at all Doily Pilot o/fices or ~nd happy and still danc· by calling the Feature• l~k! '1:a':.:a~~butl~~ Department· 642-4321.
Mrs. Coulter.
The three little cheer s -dressed
alike in blue·aDd ·wbite print
dresses, white r uffiy pinafores,
white kneesocks and black patent
shoos -obviously love Cbrlstmas.
"They know they're golng to get
presents,·· smlled Uteir mother.
love to have a shot at To avoid disoppoin'· danc.~og with old "crlp-ment, proapective brides
pied ~ Jual one ore reminded to hove their ~------=~iiiiiiii~=------more hme. -BEST tD~ing storie1, with a REGARDS FROM A black-<md-white glossy of
S A N A N T 0 N I 0 the bride or o/ the covple
~
Last Minute Gifts 1
. READER to the Features Deport:
DEAR ANN k'-f LANDERS: I am a 24· =one wee VII:' ore the
year·old male, a college ng.
graduate, now employed Engagement annoiuiu· !Is an ~tant. Here ments, with block-and-
1s how I d describe white glouy of the future'
m y a el f • I ' m n o t bride ar tM couple, muit
bandaome, but not ugly, be r eceived bt1 the
1K>t too abort Of too tal-1 Feature• Deportmnt dr
-llOt too fat or too Ulin. weeks be/ore the wedding t •m not d lsformed or date
disfigured in aoy way. I ·
dress n ice and am
polite. I'm what you
4 0% off OD
imported Christm88
ornaments a: lighb.
Decorate your tree or
give them u gifts.
Umlted to Mock on hand dliic ... 12/2'/77
Roten ~dens • 640-5IOO Sert ........ et NKAnhw • N«wporf I.edit_.
FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
2'14 O.o~foi< MoU 84 Hon1in91on Cent••
LAGUNA HILLS COSTA MESA
logllftO Hilll MoM 1805 N<rwpott llvd
Open EYening1 and Sundays until Chri1tma1
l £ittpt Col\A MKlll
BonlcAmencord e MosfW thorge
C1..0ftf)
MON., DEC. 29th
.. SSIOH VllJO .... ...... .....
JlltZNe ... llw~. ____ .,...._ -........... 4tMf02 _ ......... _,.,
COSTAMISA
HEWPOln' HACH
J6t I. I 7tlt Mt...t ...............
....__.,~ ...
Roger's
Gl~
certlflcatea
m ight call Mr. Joe----~----------------------------~~~---------~--~---------------------~ Average Glzy. The prob-
lem: I have never bad
a real date. Why? ~-s· ~· ~G' Gift Certificates
Everybody appredatn a gift
from Roger'• and with a aU\ Cfttl8c~ can let them select y what they nftd
for their home or yard. Auall-.
able In any dmomlnaUon.
R~1G.dme • 640-5800
Smi ~ •t Mll<Anhw • NN1'11'1 Bffctl~
Because I've never been
able to get up the nerve
to ask a girl to 10 out
with me ..
In case you're wonder·
ing1 I a m totally straight
aoa I enJOY the company
of women. I've been lo
many meetings and
partiOA and Wee to talk
hcxx:ied ~tahirls
for chri!stmas your choice. ...
our two great
s-weatehirts.
tbifirst)a
cottonbknd
in a color a.
the seoond;the
fine.at sueded
lambskin in
natural chamois
ortoffu.
44 f8lhk>n Island, newport center 644-5070
I
CHRISTMAS CARDS
Christmas
Cards Past
l n11s11al and orig111al Chri:-.Lm;.i:-. t•ards
t'O\'t.•nng a 100-yc.•ar span. 1875-1975, arl' Ol'·
ing clisplayt.•cl through Saturcla~. in lhr Spa
al P ark :";pwporl Apart ments . San .Joaqu111
lltlls and .Jamhorl'l' Uoacls, :'\;l'\\port
lk a l'h.
Till' Anwrit·a11;1 CollN'lor's Shop, Santa
.\na. is prt'"l'nl111 g the.' exhih1t collec:lcd
o\ t'I' 15 \'l'ars hv O\\'IH.'r E n 1lenc Pulc.11.
I 11t'iuckcl in" the show. h<'sidt.•s the cal'Cls
.... ho\\ n h1..·n·. arl' t.'"amplt·s of the first color
«hrnmolithog raph,v by Louis Prang in 187:>
C'.arcls I>\' l'<1tt.· (;r('enawav and other
f;imous artists will d c p1l'l it~·lc chang t•s
through lhl' ~·l'ar:-.
The <.'xhibit 1s open to the puhlie.
DoSomethi~
Different for the
Holidaysl
Club Calendar
Toke o cou"e at JRP
John
Robert
Powers
.1 hr Schools tor Your
Pt.'r.,on.JI Dcvelopm<>nl
ORANGE
3 Town ~ Country
(7 14} 54 7·8228
HARBOR AREA LEGAL SECRETARIES:
The gr oup will have a Christmas party Wednes-
day, Dec. 21, bc~innin~ at 6:30 p.m. with
cocktails at Club Jona, Newport Beach. Mem-
bers will board a 95-fool yacht for a tour or the
b:.iy and Christmas boat pa rade.
ALPHA XI DELTA: Mrs. Roger Crawford
will open her Garden Grove home for a holiday
brunch at l l a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 28.
B'NAI B'RITll WOMEN: The first daytime
chapter will meet at 12:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec.
29, at the Fullerton Savings and Loan Assn ..
F'o11nt nin Valley. More information is available
from Ann Weitzman. 846·5110
Club Calendar runs each Wednesday in the Dally
1'1/ot and contains nnt1ces of women's and service club
ml'etmg.~ and eve111s for the followang week -Thurs·
day through Wednesday. Send notices to Club Calen-
dar. Daily Pilot. J> 0 . lJor 15fJIJ, Costa Mesa. CA 92626.
Be sure to include your name and phone number.
Notices mu.st be in our hands hoo week! in advance.
To request a picture. write or call the Features
Deportment. 642-4321. Picturts are limited to fund·
raiser• open to the public.
Lst tll•111 hav(I a dry bad/
Tht' qrratest Q•ft vou can 91110 a bld-tter
,1nrt tht• '"''o f thr fJ m•IV ''an end ltl th11
!l<'flOUt fl'Oblt>m. Ell'd-llmg .. WrtOllS
Wedding and e11gag1
e-
ment announcements run
on Sunday in the Dady
PiLot. f orms are avaUable
a l aU Dolli/ Pilot olfices or
by calling the F'eatures
Department. 642·4321. 11 c1Jn cnutl' complocn111d osvcholog1ca1
problems 1ha1 11151 11 hlellme. ll's so ncudlto.
bec.1use hl'dwe111ti9, \IOhen not causefl hv
1, • o•llc}nlc lltf~Cl 0t dtl"aM! Cllti be ended
ill Pilant tor our FREE BROCHURE,
Qe•f "llEOWIETTING ·WHAT IT'S ALL
A11 ndHirtl~d, ABOUT AND HOW TO !ND IT" In P1m;nta A report by three Medical Doctors Mapz1ne. FREE-NO COST OR OILIOATIQN.
PHONE T OLL FREE
800 -982-5860
G•114J VOUI n11"1f •ddreH etc ,.Jnd '"'' veluoblt llroc;hure w•ll 1>1 m.~•lwd 10 vo11 promollv.Bedwetter egea 4 to.85.
PACIFIC INT'L. CRO LTD. •OUR 27th
Stanford Proleuk>nal C.nter, VEAR
?70 Welch Rd .. No. IS4, Palo' Alto. CA. 94304
To avoid disappoint·
ment, prospectft>f! bride&
are remhaded to have their
weddmg atoriH, with a
black.and-while glqssy of
the bride or o/ the couple,
to the F'eature1 !Hpart-
ment ant wuk before the
wedding.
Enoaoemenl ,announce-
ments. unth black-and·
white gloafll of IM future
bride or tM couple, must
b e Tece•ued by th•
F'eolure~ Dcportmnf m
week.I before the weddl11g
dolt.
corooa del. mar
............ ... -.... .
•
Wednesd!'Y· December 21. 1977 DAILY PILOT Q
••• Ballance
(f'rom Page Cl)
Describing himsel! as an "eternal op-
timist.. even during the tough times
<and he admits there have been some> -
and an "old-fashioned romantic ... he s eys
he is concerned about the status or romance
in today's society.
"I don't know wti o many men find lt so
difficult to say 'I love
tragedy." he says. Even his book, now in
its third printing, "Tb Bill BaJlance
Handbook of Nilly Moves, ' he laments
over the condition of modern r ance :
"Love between unequals c
cced, even though modern e affairs are
like business agreem en : no frills, no
Clowers, no time waste n elaborate com-
pliments. verses. or lengthy seductions, no
complications, and no scenes, pleas!',"
He says he really likes to talk to women
more than men because "guys thin)( it's sis·
sy to admit any failures." Does he ever get
tired of being funny?
"I'm not really funny; I'm whimsical. I
was born relentlessly cheerful and I love to
do my show. I look forward to it every night
and I can 'l stand to get off. I never tire dur-
ing the s ho'tV and I let down on the way
home." Then. he adds adamantly, "I've
been broadcasting since I was 17 and I'll
never retire."
Ile admits that occasionally, his show is
not funny a t all, especially when someone
C'alls in with a serious problem. Ballance.
''ho forme rly had guest professional
counselors. to handJc s uch situations, now
says:
"You can tell so much from the human
voice. l learn as much from what people
don't say as from what they say. l 've had no
training in counseling. but arter listening to
100,000 women and 5,000 men callers in the
last five years, it has forced me to think
seriously about myself . . .
"IC a caller sounds like they are in deep
trouble, I suggest they see a therapist or a
lawyer. Sometimes. because you're in the
public eye. people think you can do
anything -•md I have to remind myself I
can't."
Occasionally, he even as ks other
listeners to call in with their suggestions for
someone who is In trouble, "Ha human be-
mg just has native intelligence, it can work
wonders. They can come up with some very
good suggestions. Maybe they don 't use the
best English . but it's sensible."
The n . with a twinkle, the Lord or
Crestfallen Manor, who always sprinkles
his humor with his own life philosophy, re-
called for a vlsitoroneof his "Laws of Life." .
"A person brings nothing into th\s world
and takes nothing out o( it; and considering
the kind of world it is, he's extremely lucky
to break even. That's because we all learn,
ultimately. the Ballance Axiom that IHe is
really a series of gradually reduced expec-
tations.
·'So enjoy yourself more. as you wonder
what ·s next. The thing that ma~es living
fascinating is that life is seething with lm-probabiliti~."
Send Last
Minute ·
·Gifts By
Wire
A 61!:~?.?4
Sen Joaquin 81 MacArthur • N"1pof1 Beech 9am·6pm
f'hte Q•allf)1 a .lclrer
Furniture A Decorator I••••
Dul ... 01uwn, t+t~6fdl, Selittt, C-"-'· °''"'· 8ulttn, Pl'"' Stands, Ito-Ot.lclen, htlt•ood •ocur1, Wicker •ocktn~nd mut~. murll miwol
l.J N 'BEL Vi
IN WESTPORT SQUARE
369 E. 171h ST., COSTA MESA 141·5533
Last Minute Gifts
:
Pine Pots
H<>gt•r\ uniqul' holiddy pllll'i>
con1bi11ed with h olly .md
other colorful pl.ints ni.11<1! d
~11.'M long gih 1hc11 will dCCl!Ul
any home'i. p<11io or e111ry.
Ro<l•" (,.ud•n• • 640-5800
""" Jo.tquln •I M...-Anhut • N,.,. port 6••rh 9 .. m.flpm
~..,"v"'v,.,.. ..,..,.v-ro:r~
~ 'T w as the day before J Christmas and all through
the store, so cc off
Decorations, Ornaments and
more
FOR CHRISTMAS
LIVE and PERMANENT
•Wreaths
• Center Pieces
•Wall Decorations
'Imp o rte d Hand M e d e ORN4MENTS ,
FEATHERED BIRDS, SILK FlOWEAS from
AROUND TME WORLD. UNUSU~l GIFT and
DECOR ITEMS
OPEN 10 a .m. thru Saturdav
Jot1n 'fhomas 1.rd.
·.
DAILY PILOT Wedne.d1y. OtcembW 2t. ttn ·FOOD
A little ·gift from Bisquick:
Holiday Snowball Cookies.
Minty Cheese Cake '
/\.:-. tll'11ciou:-. as tl is l'lcgant, this Hint·O·Minl
Ch l't'M' Cakt• \\ill IJc <1 sure fire s uccess for
~hri:-.1 m<.1s E H· . d~i.bcrt. Ma de especially de
l1cwus hy comlunmg crus hed peppermint can
dies \\ tlh sour (•ream ror the topping, it will wir
ra' l'I> :.and brinl-( guests c lamoring back for more
IONT·O·MINT CH EESE CAKE
Om· rl'c01Jll' for J 9 mch ~raham cracket
c·rust.
!·'or f1lhng
1 pound cream cheese (softened)
1 :.i cup sugar
2cggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
For topping:
l cup sour cream
3 ounces hard peppermint candies or can
dy cane~. crushed
Crea".' together cheese and sugar. Add eggs.
one al a lime, beating well after each addition.
Add vanilla and beat until mi¥lure is s moolh.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Pour cheese mix·
ture into prepared pie crust. Bake 30 minutes.
until set. Cool 5 minutes. Mix sour cream with
crushed candies. Spread over baked cake. Raise
oven temperature tt> 400 degrees and bake 5
minutes. Cool ~nd refrigerate. Before serving,
decorate top with candy canes or peppermint
candies.
Snowball Cookies
~ cup powdered sugar
}S cup butter or margarine,
softened
2 cups Blsqulck baking mix
~ cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon almond extract
1 to 2 tablespoons water
Powdered sugar
Heat oven to 350° Mix }S cup
p0wdered ·sugar a11d the butter Stir
tn baking mix. nuts and almond extract
Mix tn enough water to moisten dough
Shape dough into 1-inch balls Place on
ungreased cookie sheet Bake until set
but not brown. 10 to 12 minutes Imme-
diately remove from cookie sheet,
cool 5 minutes While warm, roll balls in
p0wdered sugar About 3 dozen cookies.
IAVE· 111111 A llllSTIR WIDE
,
Sweet 'n Spicy Fruit Soup.
Winter Warmer
2 medium apples,
peeled. cored and s liced
5 cups water
I 1-oound can sour
pilled cherries, '' ilh liquid
sim.mer five minutes.I
Continue cooking,
adding c herri es
with liquid. Gradually
add all the crushed can-
dies, mixing after each
addition until dissolved. I'
Add nutmeg and cloves
CHRIST
SALE!
A p e rfect winter
warmer, this sweet and
spicy fruit soup is just
right for serving all
through the holiday
~cason. Or, luck the rec·
1pe away to bring out
whenever frosty wcathrr
t•alls Cor a warm, mv1t·
ing dish.
SWEET 'N SPICY
FRUIT SOUP
I pound assorted
hard sour ca ndi es.
crushed !half the cirn·
dies should be le mon. fla vored )
and mix well. Simmer an
additional 10 minutes, lr.\111~• stirring three or four
limes. Serve piping hot
with a dollop of sour
<:ream garnished with
sliced fresh lemon. Can
be prepared ahead and
refrigerated or frozen.
Makes 8 generous serv·
l 12-ounch package
pitted prunes
1 S·ounce package
apricots. dried
'i cup raisins
2 m e dium pear s,
peeled, cored and s liced
·~ cup crushed cin-
namon candies
1h teaspoon nutmeg
14 teaspoon cloves
Place first five ingre-
dients in a h e avy
s aucepan. a dd water,
bring to a boil and ings.
ChristmaS Ideas
Heal mincemeat with
canned pineapple chunks
and a little diced candied
fruit. Spoon on tirm
vanilla or eggnog Ice
cream.
*** Drain and toss a
chilled can pineapple
chunks with c hopped
1reen onion and pimien-
to. Add a can of shrimp.
Pile into small serving
glasses and top with
Thousand laland Dtess-
ing. Serv• "'1th lemon
wed1e. Malces starter
cocktails for!' or~. . .. .
Gingerbread, ~un
sweetened prunes and a
cr eamy cottage c:h"9e
topptn1 an L' claolce
ccmbinatlon 10 ma•• thla lei• No. 1 on 1"J' winter deasert Ult•
.. Pref are • lin erbrtld.
;J
batter -from a mix or scrumptiously in a candy
your favorite rttipe -idea that's tempting .)let
and to it add some finely not overly sweet . Make it
chopped cooked fitted ahead, st.ore alrtlght in a
prunes. A bal cup cool place, and have ln-
prunes gives Just the waiting to~ the holidays.
right touch ot flavor Over low heat, blend
throughout an 8 or 9-tnch smooth 12 va n i ll a
panful. For the t(>ppln1; caramels with 2 tal>le,'
beat ~ cup wbfpplng spoons orange juJce.
cream with 1 tablespoon Re!Jtove from heat, cool·
granulated 1ugar until in1 slig6Uy. Add l ~
still. Fold in ~ cup teaspoons 11atAld aran1e
creamed small curd cot· peel. B~bles~. beat tage cheese and 1 tea· ln ~ c altled po.wdered
spoon 1rat•d orange . 1ucar. In ~ cup fine·
pc e l . Do 11 op o n to ly chopped walnuu. Ml•·
glneerbread pieces, then llare wW be turf, Utlnl
place o whole cooked U1btly buttered ftn1ers,
pilled Prw:ieuponeacb. shape teaspoonfuls htto
• • • balls. Co•t lope with ad· Sun-~ecl pl'UMI, dtuonal finely chop~
CaJUornla walnut•, walnuts before utUn•
o r a D I e a ..e • -. b-11 apiece Intro &be caramel ... dill Cl~ • JDcllatadoa ol a note
ol texture aad 111 .. ot pitted pruae. Mttee
ta Y orUea i'er • M,piat24.
CA••ED IAll
. .............. . ....... ~ I
i * 1'7991 l 1111no.tJ·ll.<Mtn•~Mf co11P011'fl "Mll'. I VftCf1¥l tllll 1 Oft, 1 t '"""'"MC. U, ttn •••••••••••••••••••••• YITAI. SAnlfaa. MARAllTID ==-~:·=·-==~~--==-·~=~=-::.-: _, .......... ""'_41ej ....... Nll. -~-" .. ""'-.. , ...... t•t11 ......................... ,"'9( ... Mtll9'.M1 .... .... . ..,...,,
And a special offer
for 209 o~er ~licious
Bisquick recipes.
For a l1m1ted time only. we're
offering our $2 B1squlck cookbook
for 1ust $1 50 Its filled w1tb all kinds
of tempting recipes-all made with
81squ1ck. the baking mix with 45 years
of quality and experience behind 11
So send your name and address and
$1 50 to. General Mills. Inc .. Box 769.
Minneapolis. Minnesota 55460.
And we'll send you
I'll~· IYf . I fl!H u .. . 4, rm .
your cookbook.
i
t
. . . ........
Wednesday Oe~omb91 21 1977 DAILY PILOT s
Get Into the Cookie Spirit Without Calories
Thi' u• lhl' ~i.>J:-.nn <:ook 1~ tans ur large through. Keep warm 1n Qround 3 lablespoons flour
when everybody 11> 1nlo :-.hallow broiling pans. sklllet or chafing dish 2 eggs <o r 4 egg Paa>rlku <optional 1
cookie baking. Exccpl Broil. turning once, until Makes about 50 party whites) • Bultt:r Ouvored salt
you , poor dear. But SI brown. s ervings . under 60 One ·h~l( cup or buu.er navoring (OP·
you 're into a size 9, afler iM In a large nonstick fry calories each. c hopped fresh parsley tional)
months of self-sacrifice. pan or electric skillet. BAVARIAN MEAT· 2 onions, finely Combint: water :rnd
and you're not about to Gournte.t com bine remaining in· BALLS IN 'CREAM' minced bread with one-half c up
blow lL To heck with J oi-gredients, except corn-SAUCE 2 teaspoons car.away "vaporated skim milk.
ly Ol' St. Nic ho las! ByBarbaraGtbbons starch and cold w ater. lcupwater seeds Mash we ll, then add
Cover and simmer two 6 slices dry protein 2 teaspoons salt (or m eat, eggs, parsley.
Cheer up! You can get minutes. Combine corn-orhlgh-fiberbread garlic salt> onion. caraway. salt and
into t he Christma:, 1 table spoon• quarter cup soy sauce, starch and water and 2 large 03-ounce) Pinch of <red) pepper .Toss lightly and
On('e. Combine rcma
1ng evaporated milk w
mus hrooms and flour
n sauce pan o ver lo
heat. Cook and stir un
aea m sauce thlcke
Season to tas te. Comb
browned meatballs an
cream sauce ln an elec·
lric skillet or chafing
dish and keep w arm.
Sprinkle with paprika or
chopped parsley, if de-
sired. Makes about
servings, 60 calor ie
cookie spirit without gel· cornstarch MSG. eggs, and loss stir into skillet; cook and cans evaporated .ski m cayenne pepper shape into tiny one-inch
tmg into caloric trouble. One-quarter cup cold lightly. Shapt> into tmy star until. sauce thickens milk 8 ounces canned m eatballs. Arrange an a
Today, we've ~ol two water one-inch meatball~ Ar· an d bubbles. Stir in 3 pound s fat -mushrooms,includingli-s ingle layer and brown
lrlm treals thatan•vt·ry Combine meat. one-rnnge 1nas1nglc layeron meatballs and heat t ri mmed beer round, quid under broiler. turning Scrooge like •1~11ut ,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
calorit•!>.
t'H('h .
CHOCOLATE
)JERINGUES
2 ounces un
~Wl'<'lcncd chocolate
l t ablespoon hot cof.
fee
One-half cup s rrt4.!d
cake fl our
7 tablespoons ~h1lc
sugar
4 egg whites '1l r oom
tem perature
One-quart er teas
poon s alt
P inch of cream of
lartur
Combine· cho<:nL.11!•
and coffee and allow to
mell vrrv !>lowh rm ;1
warm In~· tr:iy, r"ir o\'t"r
' l' r \' l o \\ h l' a l
'.\t ean.wh1h:. :-.1 rt rlour
with 3 tablespoons sugar
<1nd set aside. In c.t glc.11''
or m e ta l <not piastre 1
mixer bowl, combine e~i.:
whiles, sail and cream of
tartar.
Beat with un electric
mixer until ~td(.
G radually beat in re
mainlng su~ar. a tables·
poon at a time. Beat in
the flour m ixture a l1 tllc
al a lime. Fold in the
melted chocolate. Spray
a nonstick cookie tin with
cooking spray for no·
-;tick buklng.
Drop t he meringue
mixture by lhe teaspoon.
one inch ~•part. Rake in a
prehe;ited 275-degrcc
1s low 1 ovc•n fo r t 5
minutes. o r until lhe
cookies are dry. Cool
before removing. Make~
two dozen. ;ibout JS
calories each.
~ "HUNG~RlAN
•NUT' BRJTrLES
Pastry:
2 cups flour
One-half cup sugar
-· One·quarter teas·
poon salt
1 tablcsµoon~ dret
margarine
l egg
1 teaspoon vanill a
l Topping.
•• 2 eggs 6 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon maple
l'lavoring
l cup high-prolein
cereal
Optional: I tables·
pqon chopped nuts
Mix nour. sugar a nd
salt in a bowl. Cut in
margarine. Stir in egg
and vanilla. <The dough
will b e dry and
crumbly.) Spread evenly
an a lO·bY·IS·inch jelly
roll pan that has been
sprayed for nons tick
baking. Bake IS minutes
at 375 degrees.
For topping, mjx the
eggs, sugar and maple
•(lavoring in a small
saucepan. Cook over low
heat, stirring constantly,
unUI thickened, about 5
minutes. Stir in tht>
i;ereal.
R emove pastry from
oven . Spread t oppin g
over it. Sprinkle with
~µts, if desired. Return
to oven for 15 minutes
more. Cut while warm
ioto l -and one-ha ir by 2·
inch bars.
Makes 50 bari\. about
lO calories each . •••
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Fresh Meats
L.o'fl(C, , ., •• ••• .100l (1<11.49
I t
•' . .:
/' .·
liquor & Wine
\WOR04"\ £ MOHAWK O(llCllSI"""•
HAMS 98
••••••••••• !HD C>H 7
Dairy & Frozen
.f'LADYLEE 6~-~~.59
}I LADY LEE
: b ~~-~~~cm .• 59 Household & Pet ~
! ~~~~-~ ... eD' ~ .48
WHIPPED TOPPING
UDYLU •••••••••••••.•••.•••••• ~Col<"-.49
~ ALUMINUM f04L ·b llol:'llH'*4Vl'Wl'f.
~ KL.EENEX HAPKHS
6 ()INNI.,, .•••
~·ww.1 .59
l>OC1.""4 .48
t ! ~~~~.~.~ ......... '60( "t1 .55 • ~TICWP.AP
'-'IWLll •••
' ! ~~.~~.~~~!•;, ,'{ 'f .OS • _P_r_o_d_u_c_e_ ------
l-' !' GP.EEH GIAHT VE<SETAOlES ,l 0 lllOUl!tl\~;)VHWI( .... IOOZ.l'I\<, .49
t lADY L£[ OMNGE JUICE EXTRA LARGE
COllCJH1lWt ................... UOl.C>H.71 CELERY 25
I h & Be d (l\l}PC,(r\UNCHV, •• llUll. e Hea c auty Ai s
r m£HOL• TADLm 1 09 ~~~o~~."~~YAMS
6 ~~on,;at •••• """ or:'IO • HAWAIIAN PIHEAPPl.£ u .2&
,, .25
.33
!' SIHE·AfD TADlET'S i "'7 ... ~,~ ............. .
b ····· · ·· · ·· · · · · ··•· ····· · · "'G or,.. ,'OJ CAUfO"HIA AVOCADOS
I ~~:~.~~~-~~~1.1 .11
b ~~~~~c~.o'l.1 .09
~ OE.SITIH LOTION )> ................ \Oc.tO'l..1.09
fl\V~.~-...o-~..._'".,,
l'!!)bf' .... , ..... '°°"""~ ~· .~ ,..,, ,~.O.C:~77 •• ,,
(~4 t•7~0t"iJl/!lllr~\'lCU~~ ,. ~ ... dw:io>~ ... ,....,.~t~ .... ...,
,......l .... ,.,,,,..~fJl"(~ll!'»··~
>~.DUlllA•looOOll<,.,.llOll • Lt>
IUDGMPB oc:uc. ()(/lt 'I IWlUJH ... ' 19 .39
Fruit Baskets
"" A!l.-s ef'CI '"'"" Ol 111em, •'••aav ""'al!Pld. 11eOy IOf gllllnQ. G11t.11ing
ce•loo/lane and er.so ril>OO'I cover re· us•t>lll o.stoets lln!l(j wlll\ lru11 o< llUt\
n• more II g a "just 11gll\ io.1 IO•
•OOogllbOl5 Pl A camm.\IH '"""'°815
wl'IO'vt beell Da'1oC•J'9•1y helplut •. 'JI
•vefl '"" Cll.lc!Utll"I lavOll11! l@Kller
· ... what discount is all ·about.
,,~~
AH/llfllltl UO w. LA ltA ... A ,IYINUI
•coat•,., .. 21 .. M•to" II.YO,
fWHTINOTON HACH • l.AOUMA Nll.U
1 .... •"OOllHU"IT IT"HT tttn CANT llOAO AT U PU •it.,.,..:::. tttO"l'llfQ Cl .. ll" •o=~ CMAP'MAtl ,eYINUl *'::WJ."A_,O\..,Ml1' .......... __
So thot our el'l'lpioyffs cons~ w holldoVi with their fomlll•s.
lie wlll be open 6 o.m. to 6 p.m. on Chrlstmo~ Eve
ond will be clos.d Chrbtmos Doy
ond Monday. O.Cember 26
•MUN1'1HOTOH HACH
Mat lllr.AllTA AYltlUI
•HUHTllfOTOlf l tACH
! .... IOI.IA CHICA AYlMUl
• TUITIN 11111 lf.....,..T AV'INUI
•wtftnlP
tlOll I . MUUU.tf oa. •W..,..IMITUI
1H"f1 ..... NOOAU ITlllllT
'
18 .. ··-.. ,.. "',.
I
'
·' ... .
fC D.\IL Y PILOT WednmdaV Decambef 21. 1977
Million
Arab to Buy
Lance Stock
From AP Di~patcbPs
Former Budget Oir~ctor B ert Lance has
agreed to &ell most of his &tock in the National Bank
of Gcorgta to a Sauch Arabian businessman al $20
per share, $3 more than he paid for most of it.
F1.rrn's '
Fmances
Troubled
PUBLIC NOTICE
A...,
N011CI 011' •AL•
O"lllULll'ltOl'lltTY AT ll'lllVATI lALlf
... AtWJ
IN TMaMill'lfllllOtl COUlllT'OI' THI STATI 01' CAL1'011NIA POii THIE COUNTY 01' OlllANGI'.
In 11111 Mell., of .,.. E•l•lt OI JANE
M c DAN IELS •II• JANEE:
McOANIElS •k• JANE ESOBEL
McOANIELS, O.Cu.wd Ntll<t I\ lltrtOy gMtn 11\al IM un d•••lvneO wlll .. 11 at Prlv•IO wl•, 10 Ille hlgf\ttt -~I bldOtr, •u01ecl lo <onfltmallatl ot ..,d Suc>trlor Cou•I, on or •ll•r Ille lOltl day ol December, n11,
•• IM olllc• ot RHODl!S, 8ARNARO, MALONEY, HART & MUlL£N, I
Proteul-• C0<poullon, U'-4 Sl•th Slr"t, S.nle Mani<•, C-ty of LOI AnOtlH, Slllta ot C.l!IO<nle, •II lh•
rlglll. 1111• -ln1ereot of w•d dttH>ed
I.
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI •USIHHS
II.AM& al'AT•MeNT
Tf\t followll'Q--• •t•OOll'G °"'' .. ,. .. ,
Pl!All tAI& LANE, 16it2 Hel•
Av•n"9, I ('lt/lrtlf; CalU0tni.
Rota.rt P. Werml"9(on. •un H•••
Avenue, lrvl,.., C..lllornl•
J A Re'f"ofds & Co •• a C..lllornle
corporaUOfl, "° N-t C.nttr Or , No. JOJ, Newpor1 Buell, C..lll0<ni• John ~ C«rlg.n, ~ ValoHl<I•
0•1••. 0•-· C.llfornl• Tllh bullnet• It belnQ ConO\l(lecl by•
LIMI !ff :C::~"'~rmlno1011
TM• '161~ Iii.ct .. 1111 llW <Mlllly
Clffh of Orenvt County 011Ot<tmlltr2, 1t11 .. ..,...
P11Dllshed Or-CO.st Dally Pllol,
Offtmbff 7, 14, 2t, H. 1917 Sl2"71
PUBIJC NOTICE
l'l(TITIOUI 11111 .. IH
MMUI ITAT&M•NY
Tiit ltlltwl"I _ _, 1, °"'"" ""'"' .,. ... ,:
ALllllllT CONURUCTl()fj, 117 ~"':lrt PIKt, to.Mi Mew, C.lllttllle
lllcllerd LllHlb Vandervort, 111 :;:;,-· ...... c.. ... MtW. C.liltnll•
This OV•INU I\ c.onduclad llY an lncllvidlMI.
Rlclle<dL v...-rvor1
Tiii\ lla"'"-1 w*1o fll9d with Ille Cou111v Clttlc of Ora1199 CoU<ll'f on Ot<tMW 2. Im "" .. P11bll•lltel Or"'91 Co .. 1 o.lly Pilot, Oettmt>er I, U, 21, B,~I S0..-77
P UBUC NOTICE
PU81JC NOTICE
HOTl(• 1 .. \llYINO 110'
NOllt• I• hereby 111 ... 11 l ... t lh• IJO•rd ol Tru>l9" ot llW CN•I Cot•11••11nhy COll"t Ol•lll<t Of 0.t<I .. Coufth
C.•lllOV1le, *Ill •K•IVt ... ltd blch "" te 11.00 • m , flr!Oev. J..,..,.,., 20. ttll,
•• lht Puft~llQ 0.91 Of Wiid K._I
dl\lrlfl IO\.e•4'CI al U10 AO.m• A-llt. Coue Mewi, Clllllornla. •I Wftlth lhne
..... 11•• w111w1M11111<1v 0Mn.d •Ml,. edl ... Ll!ASl!WITH OPTl()fj
TO l"OlllCWASE
All bkll arw to lie In .ctwdell<• wllll tht Bid Form tn•lrvcllOfl• end Conell
llon• aftd S.lllUllOl\t which•••"°"'
on flit and....., .. *-'" t"" office Of tM ll'vt<l\etl"IJ Aoef\l Of •aid WhOOI dl•t•l<t.
..,
PEOPlE
' P U BIJC NOTICE
MOTIC& TOCll&OITOlllS
$1111'111110.COUlllTOf lH•
STA1EOf'CALl,0111NIA l'Oa
l Ha COUNTY 01' OAANO
.... A•tUJI E)lal• oi HAl(()LD L 8U~11t o•-k AH 0 LU LA)i\llLHI llU~t1 C>.(U)ecl, I
NOTICE 1$ HL~lllV (,IVlN ~ •"' trectUoo of llW -• ,,.,,... 04l~et1I
UWI ell ~ 1Wvifl9 O.im• •""' llW ••Id dK~ tre req.,11,.q IP hi•
llWm, wiltl \IW ...C..Ufy vo~IWt•, tf1
I ... oHll• ot .,,. ~l«k °' Ille •ME 1111.0 '°"'"or 10 .... ...,1111em. w "ttw
l\~U>try -.Cher .. 10 I/le....,_ •h.0 NtWl>Of1 ,,,.,., u ...... :..;"'I))),
Mewpe>r• ~II. ~lltotnl••~ wruch
,. ""' Ill.Ct ot _,.." ot "* 1111 Oof .. Q...0 In •II t"N•lerl PM1tllll"9 to
tlle nl•I• ot Mid oe<*lenl, w11nr11 •~·
"""''"' ...... ti..,, •t ""°'1u110nr 1"" l\01"4 Robert A. Altman, an attorney ror Lance. said
the businessman, Ghalth R. Pbaraon, intends to ac-
11111re a majority interest in the bank. one or the
largest in Georgia.
SAN 1''RANCISCO
IA Pl Hills Bros. Cof-
r~c Jnc. officials have
confirmed reports that
the company was caught·
in a financial crunch and
JS seeking bank aid
because of declining cof-
fee prices.
•I Ille 11,....oc dlt411h ancl •II the r!Qfll, II ;--------------1--------------
EMii blcldtt Mlltl a~lt wlll\ 111• bkl
e cnhler's CIW<ll. cerllll•d <heck, or b!Odtr't bolld m-PIYelllt to 11'\e or tier of I"" eo .. 1 Comnl<lnlty Coll-
OIJtrict B_,, of Tnnol"' Ill en •rnovlll not len IMn llvw perctnt 1~-..1 ol v.t
•utn Old ts• 9'M'4itlt" tflll lht bl-• will Miff Into tllt prapo-.O C.,.,1••<111
'"" wm• Is •wardM •o hlm. in uw tvwnl of lailUrt 10 W\lff lnlo •UC"<""· t••<I, lht Pl'O<fed\ of lht <Nt<k will ~
lorte/ltd. or In ttw <•~ oi • bond llw lull •um lherHI wlll be IO<lelled lo 'MOid
O•tea N~berf, 1'11. AlenV lltnll
AC1111tnhua10r V.V.A
ot •IW L•lalt ot I/It •OOve M,,_ CN'<-111
lie said three other mujor bh:u·eholders agreed
in principle to sell their share:. if the negotiations
arc <·omp({•ted
Lance, "ho res igned as Pre&ldent Carter 'b
bud~etd1rertor an September, wall sell about 120.000
or his :.hares for a total o r S2 4 mil hon
* Cornella Wallace's request for temporary
alimony from h e r e!-ltranged hu~band. Gov. George
<'. Wallace. has bc<•n rejected by Circuit Judge
_ Joi;eph D. P h e lp& in Montgomery, Ala.
Mrs. Wallace, Jf!,
The compnny "as c ur-
r en ll y experiencing
financial d1fficolties
caused by the railin g cof-
frc prices, .. Neil Cortesi.
Bills' group product
manager. said in a
l{!lcphone interview.
Hills Bros. is one o f the
nation 's largest coffee
roastf'rs and dis-
tributors.
said Wallace, 58, failed to ( J
provide her with "any PWPLE
f'mon<·y on which to hve." I PUBLIC NOTICE
Phelps. who will pre· ..,,_ ---------------------
-;1dC' over the divorce trial
tH.·i.:anning Jan. 4, turned down the r equest, saying it
"'a-. "neither n<'ce~sC:try nor appropriate."
•
J\. Bartlett Giamatli, a Renaissance literature
s1 holar at Yalt' University, agreed to become the
FICTITIOUS aUSINISS NAME STATEMENT
The toll-Ing P<r•M>n> •r• dolno
DU)ine\\ .,.
THE HOUSE DOCTOR, '3.0 C•m·
PU• Ori••· SuHt , ••. Ne•PO•I Bee<h, CA tU6d Gtoroe L. Hamlll, ll?S Corel Av•.,
CoSI• Mew. CA 9162'
ll• end ln1 ..... 1 tMI ... ······of H•d
""' .. "d llti ¥Qlllrecl by OPC'•eUon ot PUBLIC NOTICE
lew °' o!N<Wlw, oc11er ,,..n °'In .Odl 1--------------1 1101110 llWI ot ~•d dt<H\ed, el lh<t time
01 d .. 111. In -to •II •~ cerleln rul pro""Y •llueleo In Ille Co>unly of 0••"9•, Sllllt oc Celltorn1e, e>arllculer
ly On<1lbed1i10Uow>. •o "" Loi ff of Tr.ct No 110 •• l>*r m•p r.corcMd In -IO, Pl19e> O lh•OUQll
~ 01 Ml.cell~ M•PS. •IC.Ord• OI Orenqe County, C•lllorn1a.
EICC.EPTINO ll'K'•••rom ell oil, 0•1. ml,,..rlll and ot""r hvOrourbon
sub•l•n<n In encl under wld l,nd, bul wllhOUI Ille r19111 ol tnlry lo lht wrtece
OI Hid ta"" -10 41 <MC>lh ol S00 leel btl-lllt w<1ate, M ,. .. rved In Oeed•
of re<Ofd. mon com,,_ty known•• 1015 M.,le
Sll'ffl, L• H"°'•· Cet1l0<nte Term• ol wle cull In 1awtul m-y 01
lht Unllecl Slotlo on COftllrm•llon ol
\•It. or p1r1 «tih •od O•l•ft<f'
evloenttd t>y no•• M<ured bY Morlo•~
O< Trull o..d on Ille P•Oe>e•IY •o Wld fen percent ol •moun• b•d 10 De dePOSll· eOwllllbld.
Bl~ orotlers 10 be i11wr111no end will
bt nc11v9d at lh<t alortHld ofllce ol •nY time •fltr the llr\I puOhC.1Uon
hereot •ndbelortdaltOl •alt. Dated 1111, l,dayol Oecemt>c>r, ""· (.HARLES R_ HART. JR I! U<Ulor of Ille Wiii
of wid Oe<e<1<!11t
llHOOl S, IAllNAAO, MALONE V, HART A MULLEN
lt·ll9t
SU l'ElllOlt COUllT 0' TME STATIO,CALll'OllNIA 1'011 THICOUNTYO,OllANGI
.... A-UIN
NOTICE 01' HIAlllNO 01'
ll'ETITIOH ANO 11'1109ATIE 01' WILL
AHO l'Olt LITTllllS TUTAMIN· TAltV
Ellalt ol ERNEST ALBERT WILLIAMS,Ot<-
NOnCE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\el NORMA N WILLIAMS hH llltd lltrtln
a oetltlon for Pn>lllt• of Wiii •nd 1.., ••·
suen<t of Ltllen T•st-lery, r• lerenc• to ~kl! 11 m-lof 1111'1,,.r
e>••li<ul•"· -t.,.l tht llrne and plec.t ol "•••Inv Ille ..,.,.. nas -n wt IO< Jtnu••Y 10. lt1', el to·oo t .m., In tht <ourlroom of Oeplrlment No. 3 ol said <our I. al 700Cl•lc c.tll., Drlvt WUl, In
Ille Cllyol Sanle Ant, C.lllo<nle Oa•tO Oe<embtr It, IUI
WILLIAM I!. $1JO+IH.
coun1yc1..-i. llOWLAND H. OllAH""°' ttt I! ........ _,
AIM-re, C..1 ........ 1 tt .. I
AlltrlltY ter: fl'wtlt ....... Publlsheo Orenoe C.0.>I D•llv Pllol, Oe<emt>trX>,21,27, 1911 Sl.:1·77
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI TOCllllDITOllS Sll~lllllO. COUlllT 01' THI
ST'ATeOPCAUl'OtllllA '0111 THI COUNT'YO,OllANGI!
E•••I• ol ~-;.~·:ttELOOWNEV
ELGIN oa EllZA8ETH ANN OOVLE MclLDOWNEY ELGIN,
Oteeutd. ""°°' dl••rlcl NO blddtr ""'' wlllldr-hl\ Old, .... period Of IOt'ly-l1ve IOI .. ~ •II•• ..... llale \ti IOr the-Ing thereof
HUllWIU., REMEll,Mi<OO .. ALO,
MlAOl & 110$ENWALO
A ll'rtltu~ C.W,_•llM ... New,_, c..tw Oft'ft
ht•UU New..-n a-11, <.A.-11141 HMJll
A ...... , ...
A41ml""''-W't!IA
Publl-Or..nve C.CM>t O•llY ""O' Nov JO, 0.t. /, 1'. 21, 19// *'t II
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN lo'"' trtdlt0<s of lht lllove ,,.,,,.d cle<edenl
•~•• all ""°""' havlno <••Im• •!l•insl tht Hid cle<tcMnl art required IO lllt lllem, wllrl llW necauary wo..chtrt, In
Ille olll<• of Ille cl-of 11\e 1bove en· Ulltd court, or to prtMf11 lh4lm, wllll Ille
neceuary "°'1CN<S, lo Ille underllgneO
al lht ollkt ol DAVID STEALING TINGLER, LAW COllPOAATIOH, ~ Newport Ctn I er Orl>rt. Sul It t20,
HtwPMI leach, Cellfor11la, wfllell Is I ha C>la« of lluslnet1 ol ltlt -$1gnecl
111111 mtlt."perlalnlnv lo Ill• ffl•lt 01
The BO.rd of lrll\lff• re .. rvu IN!
prlvlleoeof rtlecllnvany-•11 bld•or lo welve ony lrreoularlllH or In· lormalllleslntnyboctor In IN Oldo•nv. 1--------------
NORMAN E. WATSON
~I~ 8oat41of Tr~eet
Open: Jen.10, 1'11· 11:00• ""· Publltfled D<Ml90 CO.ti Dally Piiot, De<. u ,21, 1tn
wld dec-nc, within IOU< MOftllll •It« ·-·------------lht ll"l l)Ulllkellonol lftlsnollce. Oaltd N_,,_ U, tqll
C•lllornla Flrsl Bo11111; & K..,,..lhE E101n
Ge·E .. c111ors
Of lht Wiii Ol Ille •bo•• ,,......, Oeodenl OAVIO ST'lllLIMG TINGLllt LAW COllll"OlllATIOM
JM llt•lttf1 CMIW Orlve 5'111etlt
Nt•-1 h kll, CA tUM
teh 1710 Mt·MJJ
All...,..rlwC.l•cvl••
PUBLIC NOTICE
lttasS
NOTICa TOClllOITOllS SUll'lltl()tl COUllTOI' THlf ITAYI Ol'CAL.,OlllNIA FOii
TNICOUNTYOl'OllANGE Nt.A•tMi6
lft 11\t Matlff ol lne E>l•lt of FRAN·
CIS C. MULLINS. 0.C:HMd
PUBUC NOTICE
FICTITIOU$ IVSINEU NAME nATEMENT
~:!.'01iow1119 peri.on ll OOlno ,..,
1-INESl HOMES REALTV.~ll l
C.CMlll H'1jhW<ly, (.«ON del M•t. C.A
t1•1S
K•tnryn l.ou W•ll, 231 U-I•• ••u. !o•n 1-ran<IKO, CA9~11/
l f'u~ C>UM~ Ii <onckiCtto by an m
a1v1au4I.
1<. <llhryn Lou V.• 11
T1>I• ••••crm.n• .... , 111ec1 w11n me C.OWllY (.1<rri. ot O<.onge c.o..nt• on hov
111, 1¥11 I' MOit
Publl•._ Or-lOCI\• O•llY ... 1101, Nov.JV. 0... 1, I•, 11, 1~11
l0)1 II
university's presidt•nt
Jo•eph S. Holly, ?S?tl Orell•no
Wo. Lao-Hiiis, CA 97tSJ
Thll bU•lneu h condu<led by • oeneral 114r1nctrsn10
A l',..IHllONI Ciwlto..-tlOll 1--------------1 Pubhlhecl Or-C:O.>I OaUr Pilol..
Nollet> I• 11...-•by gl..,.n 10 creo11or• lltvlno <l .. m, -In.-tht Uld <lt<e·
dtnl to Ille .aid claims In Ille olll(" 01 "'* '*" el • ._ •tor~ld court °' to r>r•unl lnem IO .,,. uncl•tr"-" itl IM
ollk• ol WALTER s. SMALL, Allornev PUBLIC NOTICE Gaamalli at 39 will he Yale's
youngest president.
King man Brews ter J r .. the
previous president. left to
become U.S. ambassador to
Gn.•at firitam last spring.
Giamatti was one of two
candidat es just interviewed by
the lfl·member Yale Corpora-
tion, \\hi c h has been conducting
:.i !>earch for a new president for
GIAMaTTI ninl' months
Judith Campbe ll Exner, of Newport Beach,
l111kt•d rom:.inlac:.illy with the late Pre~ident J ohn F.
K f'nned.Y. want:-lhl' federal gov-
t•rnml•nt to p:.iy her attorney's
fL•es for h l'r suceessful suit to ob·
t.11n ht.·r fil<·s from the f'BI.
~l rs. Exner won a recent ap-
pcl I <1tt' court decision ordenng
llw bureau lo turn over its files
undl·r the Freedom of Informa·
I Ion ,\ t.'l.
Mrs . ExnN· has been also
linkl•d to slam mobster Sam
a!. \11!
Giancana. EXNEll
llt.•r attorney, Ric h a rd L eonard, said the
-A·oman deserved governme nt reimbursement
bec:.iuse opening her files under the act was
bcn<'ficial and "satis fied the public's need to know
th'-Jruth:' about h er past.
* Olin Teague said he will not run for re-election
to I ht' ll S. House of R cprcsentati ves next year
hccaus<' of health problems. The
Tt•xas Democrat has served in
the llousefor3lyears.
··I have given the job o f
rl"prescnting you with all the
en<'r gy and ability at my com -
mand," Teague said in a lett er
to cons titue nL'i.
TEAGUE
'I;e ague, 67. who los t his left
ankle and root in World War II.
raced al least four c hallengers in
ncxt year's primaries.
* .'\n apparent mixup at the post ofCice delayed
Ila· dl•hutof "Billy Beer" lo parts oflhe Northeast.
·'It has been a comedy of er-
rors with the U.S. Postal
Sl•r\ ic-c." said Frank Owens,
'I('(.' president or the West End
llrcw1ng Co.
I\ permit from the New York
Stale Liquor /\utbority lost its
\\ ay in the m ail, he said, but
true ks this wee k will begin de·
laveri<'S or the beer named for
P rt>sldenl Carte r 's brother , Bil·
--,,_,
·,~-,.,_ .. --.. · '"'\" .. ·
• )I'
ly Ca rlt>r. •n.LY CAllTlll
The company has marketing rigMs to the new
lict.>r in the Northeast
~
Larry f 'lynl has resigned as publisher of the
).CX·Oriented Hustler magazine and appointed Paul
Krassnel', a W est Coast freel ance writer, to replace
ham
K rassner has not been associated with the
m aJ!a zinc previously, a spokesman said.
Flynt recently promised to change the format
nf Tl ustlC'r. o ne of the most explicit of men ·s
m~gazines. His decision grew out of a religious eon-
\'cr~ion he claims to have experienced through the
help of evangelist Ruth Carter Stapleton. sist e r or
President Carter.
* Pk. Sara 1\1 . Lowe became the first woman to
finish al lhe top of an integrated basic training unit
s ince the Army began training men and women
tdgcther in October.
The 27·year-old Santa Rosa, Calif •• native was
named the outstanding trainee of her class during
g raduation cer emonies at Fort Jackson, S.C. She
U>pped the other 260 female trainees and about 540
m en of the 8th Battalion, 2nd Basic Training
Brigade to earn the honor.~-•
Selection was based on military appearance.
military conduct and overall perfoi;maoce during
basic training. w h ich in cludes rine marksmanship
and tactieol combat mnneuvers • • Mr. a nd Mu. Kenne&b L . Woolley or
Wcfttmoreland, N.H., unveiled a plaque at tn·
'®gurntion ceremonies ln Ouaternala Ci ty for the ~ooll<?y Bridge, named after their son. Pvt. Ken-
·n~th E. Woolley, who died helping rebuUd it. The
t}rldge wa" d estroyed by an earthquake Feb. 4, 19'16.
Pvt. Woolley died a month later when a bat-Jolton or engineers from Fort Benning. Ga •• was re-·
construct-Ing it. .,
lndustrlaUst Cbarlea SMpmu Payson. ma.Jon· .U' tockholder In the New York Metf baseball t~am. :.,,m marry magazine editor VlrCUll• Kratt in
• ·•~11lmoulh, Malneoo Dec. 28.
1 The couple made known theJr lntenUon at the
town t\alJ. The c:ere1Dony wiU tako plac&at St. Mary
lbo Vlrsin Eplacopal Church .
.-.. Pa,yaon. 79. h as hom" ln Falmouth, N~ Yortr
:11ad Florida, HiJ former wife, .Joan WhJlney
:Pay1on. who once owned lhe'llets, cUtd ln 1tn.
• Ma. Kratt ls an associate editor aL Sporu 11-
'lu l~aled,
G-oe L H•mlll Tll" , ................. lllC!O W•lh .....
Covnly Cltrl< ot Or•n11<1 Coun1y on Oe< ,., 19'7
'910U PubllSl'lfd Orange Co.ISi O~oly Piiot.
Ut4Sl•thStr ...
i.aRI• M ... tc.. CA. -Anorft•Y\ lw Eaec~r Publllheo 0rd"OI' Co ... 1 0.,ly Piiot,
0ec 10. n, n, 1917
Sllll'l!lllOlt COllllTOll' THIE
STATEOl'CALlll'OlttOA FOii TNl~OUNTVOl'OllANGI
~A ... 7M NOTICIOFSALI!
OF lll!AL ll'llbll'lllTY AT :>llllVATI'. 5ALI
Dt<. JI, H, 1'11,Jtn,4, tl, 1918 1--------------El•ale of GILBERT PAUL MON•
TAGU, C°"s.rvalee. U!Oll
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS l<AME STATEMINT
Tll• lollowtno -win Is CICMng buSI·
neu •s SUMMERWINO PROPERTIE$.
1j0() Ad•m• Aveni., COtlt Mew. CA .,.,.
Willl•m JOM Kennedy Jr tH•
B•IHrlt Orive. C.0.1• M~se. CA.,.,.
fnl~ l>u\tN\\ i~ condu<tt>d l>'f a
•1m1ted pa,trier~ip
William JOM Kt,,,,..dy Jt fftl) stal-"I w•• Ilic.I wllll IM
Co""'' Cltr-ol Or•nOt Counly on O.t ••• 1911,
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUSaUSINEU HAME STATl'.Ml'.N~
Tl•• 1011ow1no 11tri.on h dOino ~I·
MH•t: c.ATALINA SUH llOOF C.O . !Mt
Suo•rlor Avenu~ .. Co\t• M•s•, ~lllornla 9)j,Z7
P•ul Tor1orlce. 413 A<acle Av4nue, Co<ona Otl ,,.,, C.lll0<nl• 93'16
Thi• 1>11$1neu I• <ondv<tecl by en In· dlvldual. Peul Tortorice
Thli ••••-• wH ltleo wllh lht county Cler~ ol Or•noe Counlv on Oeumt>tr 2. lt17
'"* Publl•heo Or•ntit Coes• D.,ty P1101,
NOTICE ISHEAEBV Gl\/EN \NI on or •lier O.C.-JO, 1971, Ille un-
de;slgntd '"ConservetOf ot the Eslett ol GILBEltT PllUL MONTAGU,
Conwfvll•, wlll lell et prlvele Hit 10 ,,,. hlQ,,.\I ntl bidder. wolec I 10 con·
11rmallon by the above·enlilltd Suoarl0< Covf1. all Ille rlg!U. 1111e, ,,,.
ler•SI In enclto INl<ef'1•1nrnl Pfoper.
iy localed In lht city 01 Minion 'lleto,
Sl•lt ol Cefilomla, commonly,.,,,...,
lo H U1'31 Vie S.n 011 MIUIOn Viejo,
~1 llornle, dt5C r1119<1 e• IOllOW• ·
l..o• ,. of Tract No llJS, •• per M•P
re<ordtd 1n 8oo4< ,I 1 P-• 40 to«, ln-Clu>l•t Of MltcellantOllS M•P• '",,,.of II<• 01 Ille County RKOrOtr 01 Hid
Covnly
1'11016 O.cemb4r I. u , 21.11, 1t11 "'1'11o11
S.le wlll bt Wt>lt<I •o current l••H co..,•n•nts, condOfons rtttrtttlont, r• s.er..,Ahons, fl(ll'tt~. r •Ohh of w•y •nd
••wmtnt\of rKOtCI Publl\...O OranQI' Co•>I Daily Pllol,
O.c ll, 11. 1911, J•n •. 11, 1911
SH4-ll
~----------~--
PUBLIC NOTI CE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAMI STATEMENT
The 1011-•no per,.,,, ·~ cJotng bu>1·
nt\' A\' FERRARO ENTERPRISES IUI Porl Cn.,IR> Pl., NtwPOrl Beac!I, CA
92..0
Ro1>erl O Ftrr••o. 1611 Porl CJlarltt Pl N....,por. 8U<ll. CA '1..0
Th•• OuSlneu •• <on<lueltd ov •n In· olvldual
R-n O. Ferr•ro Tiii' Ital_,,. wes lllcod wllft ll'lc!
Counlv Cieri< ol Or•ngo Counly on
Dec ••. 1911.
"'''" PubllSIM!O Or-""1•1 O~ily Pilot, Dec 21, 21, 1'77,J•n •, 11, 1918
PUBLIC NOTICE
~-------------l'ICTITIOUS l llSINEU
NAMa STATEMENT
Tht lotl-1"11 perMlft h dOlR9 bu•I·
M U••
0-J DEVELOPMENT COMPANY.
tlOS Bavslde o ....... N•WPOfl Beech, Calllo•nla '2662
Lonnie M. Ounn 111, 1lOS 8ey,1'M Orlvt, Ntwpof1 Beacll, C.tlllornla 91662
T hh bu•iMu It condu<teo by en ln-
d1viou•1.
Lonnie M. Dvnll 111 This ••ot1-1 was lilac! "'llJI the
Co1'"ty Cl-of Of•llOI Covntr .... DKtl'llbtrt. 1911. , .....
Publl1hf0 Oranoe Coasl Dally Pllol,
OK. u ,21,21. lt1'trlCIJ•n.4, ltll snt-n
810\ or ofte.s ,,. 1nv11ed '°'Ii.ls pro perly .,,., mutl be •n wrlllllO encl Will.,..
•<'<t••~ 81 ll'IP Olfl(<' of WILLI AM A ,.IN£A, Allornn It>< w1d Conwnralor, Al JlStS Hewtl'Onw St~. 51111• J60 Tor-
r•n<e, Cl'li!orn1a '!>SOl. O< mtv be llltCI
wllll lh• Clffll of the 5-••0• Covr1, ti
•ny time aue. t"' ll~t puOllUll.,., ol
11111 Nol1ce •ncl befOf't IN making of Ille Wit
u ... 11 -------------
T'ht prOCJerty Wiii be liOld Oft IM
tot I owing 1 .. ms. ~II or l)efl cash and
P<lrl <rtdll. llW term• 01 •u<h creoll lo
be •«-.i•eblt •o U>a ...-rsl9'*1 and lo
tM Superior '-1, .... ptr.:tr1I 110 I ot Ille a...-1 llld lo ac<omt>el\V lhe ol· '"'·end Ille b91an<t lo bt paid promotlv lollowlnQ ~lr.,.tkwl ot Wit by Ille
Court. Ta•n. nnl6. oparellno and m•lntenance UP!JftHS, and pr~m•um•
on ln,-.irancf! ~<Ct"Pl.,btt to Uu!J
pur<lle"r '1\all be ptc>ra•f<I es ol IM
d<llt OI •KMdlf!Q O! ..... convtyMCt
Tl'lc! CO\I ol • tl .. 1dArd lorm OWMr'\
POlltf ol tlllt """'""'•· ON>-Nllf 1° o I trw •"-'O* fw .. •I'd olher ,.\.C,O* •• oen•os <u'llomarfty Pll•d by lhl' S.lltr In
" rul estale HIO lr•nwcllon In 0••"11f Councv, Calll0<nlol, wlll be Nie
by Ille es•••• One·h•ll (I~> 11\f etc row tee. •II CO\ll of obl•ln1ng llnenclnq
lrom • lhlrd PM1Y !or Ille N•I ol IN purchase pr10.1hl M1C1111one1 <osl ot II·
lie Insurance lor 1'e>t<l~I •ndOrtemtnh "'u1onc1ect , __ bcvand l,,.t or•
P UBLIC NOTICE
,tC'TITIOUS IUSIHEU
NAME STATEMlNT
Tiie 1011-11111 peri.on ll dolno b<lso-"e'' •s PACIFIC COAST C.RAFTSMEN,
885 W. lllh Sl., Costa M«H, CA 97011
RtehM'd B. Dully, 101 16th SI = J, Hunhngton llNcll, CA,,_
Tnl• bu•ineu I• tondu<leo by •n ln-dlvldu•I Alc,..rd 8 D<lfly
r111s .itlemt"lll ••• 1119d w1111 1i.~ County C.•••-ol Oranoe County on Dec 19, 1t11.
1'17MS Publl•lltd Or•not CCM$1 D•ily Piiot,
Dec. n, "· 1'11, Jen •. 11. ,,,. 5151-11
P U BLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTI CE
l'ICTITIOUS IVSINISS NAME SfATEMl'.NT
Tiit 1011-•no peraons •r• d01no bVsl· ... u ••
BEACH CITIES SEAi/iCE CO, Ull Crhl• Palma, Hunlll•Qlon Beottll, CA9lU7
R•tot> M L-Hnoer, oSJI Crl•le Pelma, Huntlnqlon Beach, CA '1MI RelOf\ A. Lenlef'nlef'. •.511 C.rllla
P•lm•,Huntlnglon8•~hCA'1 .... ,
TllU b,.Jlneu 11 condu<te4 by • gtlleral pe<-lnlrllllp.
ll•IOll M. L.Anl.,.n1er
This ""-' .... llll!d with tht County Clerll of O.o11119t C-y on Oe<.
12. 1911, ,. .. n,
Publl•lled Orenoe co.st Dally Pllol.
Oet. U, 21, 19, lt17,Jen. •. 197. SIU-11
•l•ndard form-• 's POll<Y of t1lle In
.Ufa110, .nc1 all olhe• uoeniH OI ncrow <11womarlly <llerged to Ille bvyer Ill.,.. •• nt•I• Mitt ....... ,,_
In Oren11t Courlly, C.lltornla, "1•11 be
el lht ••P*nM Of IM buyer. Stlle< shall 1..,.,,llh l"rmlle •-rt encl pay tor....,_.. required on said
rtl>Orl UC> to en arne>unl l\Ol tO•U("d uso.oo.
The u-rVerled rtMrvtl lhe rl0/111•
rel Kl eny -ell bids prior lo entry of
~·-------------1-~·----------~~ ."oo:.~~'i'~'.':.~r· SUll'lllllOlt COUllT 0' THE STATE Of' CALll'O"NIA 1'0111 THE COUNTY Of' OlllANGI .... -NOTICI O~ HEAlltMO OF ll'ITITION l"Olll ll'llOIATI 01' WILL AHO LlnlltS T•STAMINTAlllY,
l'O• AUTNOltlZATIOH TO 110· MIHIST llt UN Ol ll THIE IHOlll'INOEHT AOMINIHIU.TION
011' IST'ATISACT.
h lala of JEAN M<OONALO •-• JEAN M. M<OONALO, Oe<ta-.
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN Ill.II
CHESTER L. McDONALD l'\Cls llltd Mreln • pellllOll lor Proo.le of Wiii and luu•n<e of I.tilt~ Tttl...,,enl••Y
lo lht Ptlll-, for autllorl<alloll lo
..imlnlater \l'IOer 1119 l~nl Ad· mlnlstrallOft of Ellales At l, reltrtn<t
10 wlll<ll Ii mad• tor fuflher parll<ul•rt. -lh•I Ill~ time end pl•<e ol llH•lno 1rw ....,. h•s bcttn lei lo• Jan. •O, 1'71, al 10:00 • m .. In Ille
coul'lroom of Oe:l>atl-"I No. l of Hid courl, •I 700 Ov\c Cctnler Drlvw Wut,
In Ille Clly ot S.nl• An41, C•lllornl• O•ltd DK-r ••. ltll WILUAMl.StJo+!N County Cle<k
J . OltEGG EVANS LEONAllO COMllGYS
mt Wlltlll,.. llftl. Mt. Sii
LH .......... CA *It Ttl: .... , ..
Atttf'MYl ._, ~llltMr
Publhheo OiraftQI! CNst Oally Piiot,
~. n. n . 11. 1t11
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS •USINIU N ... ITATIMllfT
TM IOll&wlfl9 o-non• ••• <lolno l>Ull· ,.....,., .
MORTON MEND£LS, c ........... ..,, WILLIAMA.l'IHlll,AIMtMY llSUNa..._.,..tl,_..,SwlltJM
Ttffl!Ke,~Mta
Ttl:S*-UD AttWMY f#C..-rv•Mr .,, .......
Putillthtd OrtnQe Co.st Delly Pflol Oec.10. 21, 27, "11
ANJIM MECHANICAL. tUI Tou<111, l'ounlaln Vellty, CA t77ot
Jam" A. Slffle, •HI Touc•n,
FOV111•111 Valley. CA'"°' sn .. 11 Lom•n Faulllner, ist Fowler,t-·----------~~
Pomone, CA PUBUC NOTICE Tllh bllll,.." 11 <OllOV<IH by • venertlP*f1ntrSlll~ 1--------------1 J-A.Slftlt This ittl~ Wit 1119d with the
County Cltfl. Of ~Al\Ot COUfltY Ol'I
Dec '· ltll .... ,,,
Publltllect Orangie C.0.St O.lly Pllol,
O.c u , 21,21.1m,Jen •.If/I S21:J-71
PUBLIC NOTICE
December I,"· 11, 21. H11 Sl1•11
PUBLIC NOTICE •• l•w. "" w C•Hc:enl ~. •2n.1-----------...._ __ A,,...._lm, CA neot. wf\1<11 """' otlt<e NOTICE TOCllEOITOlllS
It Ille plac:. of """""' ol Ille un· SUll'lllllOlt COVIil 0' THI! ll'ICTITIOUS•USIHISS ~r&IQMCI In •II ,,...11.,, perl•onlno lo STATEOl'CALll'OllNIAl'011
NAMISTAYIMENT H id ulalt. SIKll Cl•lm> wllh the THECOUNTYO,OAANOS Tiie 10•-•no -ton II dol"9 bu•I neces•rv _ ... ,,. "'"'' ~ llltd or HLA•U41•
"'"'" • pruented .. •loreUld wlthlll four E••••• ol RUTH ELLEN ClARKE C.LE ... H SWEEP INOU$T RIAL MOftlhsetlMll\ellrJlpVl>lluh°"of 1110 eka RUTHE. CLARKE, Oeuueo.. SWEEPING,~-....... Hunllno•on noll<t. NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN Id 1 ....
hath, c.tllorftl• Dated Ot<. '· ttn. credit"'' of 1i. -nameci lllU•de<ll ECIWarO J. E,,,lquet, 104 MtMpllls AN NAM MUlll NS lh•I •II ,.,_ hevlno tlalM• ~aln\I Hurillno1on lleKll, C.llfornla. Ei.clllorof the ,.111 IN uld de<,-nt ue •-lrtd Ito 111~
This !Mnl"*U ll <~ltd llv ..i '" olw•d•<-nt ""'"'· ,.,.,, ,.,. necu-y ¥0\ltfltn, 1" dlvldual. T• IN ofll<• Of ttie <ltr• of v.t .....i..e en EctwardJ.Enrlqutl WAL .. Its.SMALL lllltd <Ollr1, or lo pr ... nl ~""'"-"· w1111 II I Antr .. , et Law Thi• ···•-t ... , 19d w Ill ..... tMSW.Cl"MC...CAw. •W ..... lltcttwrv VOU<htrl, 10 • un C.ountY c1 ... 11. of 0r"'90! Coun1v on A11eMlm, CAt2tt1 aerslvn•d •I Ill• olllu -t OHN
Otumt>trl2,•9n. H'7U Publl"*IOranotC.O.JID•llyPllol, GUERI N, 111• A Peclllto Ohl
PublisheoOrantit Coast Dally PllOI O.c 14 11:a1911 Jen' ttll HIQhwty, kuntln91on ' l<h. ...... 1• ,1 -,.,,_J · ' ' ' • · ' )•l< 11 Celllor111a • ..tllch Is !he t>lect ol bv., .,,.(. •· • • ... an.4, 1¥11 • r ,.. .. oi lhe utlde"'-" In all ~•lier ___________ s_1_tA_·1-t --------------1Pt•laln1n11 lo '"' "''•le ot •alll lkH
0tn1, ... 11111n lour monlhs eller tile lir>I
puOll<ellon oi 1111• nollu. P U BUC NOTICE
,._,
PllOll""94 Or-Coetst O•Hv 1>1101 "°" lO, • .,., DK.'· ••. 21, ·~,, Sl.IJ/./
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
DaltdANLo~A~~ ltl1
BICKELHAUPT
E •Kulri• Ol IM W•ll ol
lht otl)Ove named Oeucse~t JOHNGUlltlN Attw11ey t.tuw
llUA l'e<UkC..•IHit'l*•Y ~:.~':~~:;w;:::· C.llltr111• •• ,,.
All.,..My lw En<..C'1a
Publhll<'d Or.,,.ge Coa•I Dall\< ..1\1101.
Otnmller I, U. ll. ll, lt11 Sp~ /I
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
"He attacks me under the mistletoe and you
give him a cookie!?!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
HOW'b THE CHRl5TMA5
CONCERT COMING I HARR9 ?
CASEY
'fou'~E ~fOOS;
yoLJR B!:.AUTIFOL..
EY~S MAKE M'I H~RT<SO l<A8ooM ...
GERIATRIX
WE DIDN'T KNCN )t\J
HAD A GRAJ-JP5~ IN
THE "STAR WNl'$11
.AGE: SRACKET!
I •
I
.,.
DENNIS THE MENACE --------------~
'W~ OUTfal
M1Sll.£TOE !'
,,
BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel C~sson .-----~~~~~~~---.
MISS PEACH
o+(W
YotJ'i'e OU~L.
-lou·~Ai.~
~P,
_., A~V ...Ou
~Avi.;. ~
Stx A~£.Alt I
!'Vi COME. '1D PICK UP YOU~ OLP, ~1'EN TOY~ ~ WE CAN FtX 'nieM UP
GORDO
-
ANO Give iHEM
1'0 N&&1'Y 1(.10~.
~-
by Tom Batiuk
WE'RE. STILL.. l'R<.llN& 10
GET A HANDLE. oN lHE
ME.&&IAH !
ll·l.f
IZ ii
f ~A 10 ReAtotK. •
MOT ixco6~f //
) )
by Mell
DOOLEY'S WORLD
AITTR O~RIS17MS
MY CW>'S GoitJ' ON
A STRICT DIET
DR .. SMOCK
-ro &Ase: HIS coi-Jsc1eNce , ONCE: A YE:AR
HE: GOE::S LJP ON 1"HAT HIL-L,.. ANP
MAKE::S HOUSE:
' " I
CAL-t-S .'
11-1-1
by Gus Arriola
PEANUTS
IF '(OO COOf NEAR
ME /liJAJN, ~ KN<XAI
WHAT l'U. DO?
DAil Y Pll.OT ~
by Charles M. Schull
l'M NOT AAl.AID ~
'{OU Ml MOR£ ..
by Roger Bradfield
-HEi5 Nor ~VE~ COWA
WATCH
TuESUGAA
BOWL.GAME !
by Templeton and Forman
GOOO •. :THEN 1
Al!h PA'flN' FOR I
»I'( OF ~I~ 5TUFf.
TODAY'S CIDURID PVIZLI ~
ACROSS 46 Es0t11 •• UNITED Feature Syndicate
I Ravioli
d<XJQh
6 Yea. res
SOIMh
1 O Mas11c1 te
Dial
14 Piie
t 5 Ger motor
Inventor
•6 We1v11101
lnd11
49 Venerated
symbol
SO Take as
one's own
51 co·s riQht· ............ ~~~
hand men
52 Wino ss D1sc10s1no
S8 Asian
badger
60 Rehreo
Abt><
61 Potter stake JUDGE PARKER
17 Drew back
16 0 ooosed
20 Calendar by Harold Le Ooux abt>t 62 lrr19Ularly ~&:::t-:rl':':'4~
indented
638acl!lalk
Informal
lllg!~~~~~;;-;;~VQ;j:r-Bfl r------...-----. r-::-:-=-:---:---:-----.::::-· 2 I Valley e'f TKE WAY, LILI... NO SPECIAL REASON! APP-'RE'NTLY 23 Speed
TUMBLEWEEDS
DID MISS $PaKER ,___ THERE WA6 SOME MISUND!RSTANOtNG 24 Devoid ot.
ASK YOU TO MAYE ON R06'5 PART! hu. R06 FIX A SHELP: 26 Flevlve
JN HER CLOSET? 28 Boat b1a111
30K1nd ol
lea I her
31 Mountain
r1<1Qe
32 Child's
soonsor
36 Buaineas
abbr
37 Med1c;inel
substances
38Soulhern Abbr
39 "Smelhno
"~J 1M9 WlllP 16 SACK AT &.ASYi MEN 1
J'\le Rli'TURNIW SAFf ANP SOU NP 1!
42 "·····3Hot
Tin Roof '
44 Not
compact
4S FeehnQ
concern
64 Give b1rlil lo .__...._......_."'""' .... ~-......... .__........__.._._.
65 Pub pastime
DOWN
1 Exceed
2 TeM1s star
3 Marine
disaster
4 Leiter
S ~•nt ·······
€Sculpture
oeO.•tal
7 Chemical
Sulla~
a.Ac101 •••
Irwin
9 tonic Abbr
tOSewino·
machine
device
11 Severe 12 Tele ••••.
lnori•ate
13 Make
broader
tq ,_,.s Bara
22 E ,, Al/lens
25 Tnote
26 Cneatat
marbles
27 Agts
28 Postal
mate,.al
29 Buffalool
India
JO Orun~ard
32 Coarse
JJ Cost figurer
34 Time ol day
JS Oil-yield1n9
tree
37 Steep slope
40 Secret mar-
vessel
42 Furnished
food
43 SurlacP
measure
4SC1oe •
collage
4€ Ventures
4 7 Serous lluad
ellus•on
48Shel1ercd
nooks
49 Feline
51 Theater
9rouo Aobr
53 For tear tl'lal
54 Tobv
beverages
5SCan
oen1nsuta
Abbr
S7 Cllemicat
sulfa•
59Macaw
I Z J 4 S ll
u
. .. I
......... t ... .. .... •i
..
• I (W OM v PILO,.. WedneedAy, December 21 , 1977 HEALlH
' I
•• ,
. . ....
. ·
..
1
v'
I.
v• . ' ...
. '
, ..
ct.
~·
.. •
Memory Plays Tricks as Age IQcreases
• • 1 ,.._
\
8)' UR. TElNCROllN
People are tunny Memory as runny
We 're i.upposed \.O l06e our memory ai. vie grow older. We tend to forget what we
had for breakfast yesterday and re·
member what we ate one morning at lhe
ageof7
What's normal for one is abnormal for
the other. Jf you've always had difficulty
in reme"-berlng names, that may be
normal IOI' you.
ON THE OTHER hand, sentlily may
be the answer if a good memory steadily
fails. Next to taJk about the weather one or the most common expressions Is, ··r
c an N!member faces but can 't re·
mcmberna01es "
SAVE
10.00 II
l 've always had dlCflcuJty In remem·
bering names. Years ago, Jl:C\ hospital
ball, ,.given lo raise funds for a new build·
Ing. I was approached by a smiling cou-
ple. I said, "I'' and not "we" bec;ause lh~
man w as my patient and had beitn in my
orrtce that aftemoon.
I should have easily remembered his
name. But when it came time for in-
troductions, I said, "Just how do you
spell your name?" And he said, "Smith.
MY WIFE WA~ not surprised, because
s he had s uffered such indignities. OJ\
m any occasions.
The following day m y wife and I were 1
caught up in traffic at a red light. A car
drew up next io oura. The driver had one
of t.he bigg~t. rcdde t noses I've ever
seen . My wile said, when we drove orr.
"Did you see that? r· wonder what that
was?"
I said, •'The poor devil b as
rhlnophymahypertrophica."
SHE SAID. "CAN you possibly repeat
that wilhoutstumblinc?" ,
I r epe•ted. And she said, "Are yol.I
sure you're the guy who couldn't spell
Smith last night?" We lauahc<t.
She said, "Ile mus t be a heny
drinker."
1 said, ~·Not -heceuarlly. H '11
:sometimes called whl11key nQlle, t1ut U
can occur In non·drlnk!I' We don'\
FOR THE BUSINESSMAN ON YOUR LIST
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"ti! ,. BOHSEI LCD CALCULATOR . . .
60 % DOWN FILLED* JACKm IA mH · UGHT IN un 'WEIGHT I ... LCD c ........ .-Wtoe Nttt1iwt fw '-' lfe -ffMy leaf
lo Mo~ Wlttl Ml ..-y, perc ... by,~_,, c ... liay te '"'9! Ropsrop nvlon Quilled inside & 0111 'bO•. down
loll 3S ~. wot er fo..,I feo1her' ond l1ber
~{~ xr-~· REG. 99c PR.
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MEN'S · :,
"COURTLEY''
DRESS SOI .
Orlon acrylic/
" Nylon, Nylon
fuhkntl, 8anlon
Nylon 1n colon. I
11ze 1111 10 · 1 J.
E1ect11c 1ondw1ch ~
horoburger grill
oro1is nol i bur 2
iiomourgers in 60
\ttondi! 2 iideo ior
· cool..1ng . I.Ju 01
optl) grill.
• t
COMPARE All THESE FEATURR
AND QUALITY TO THE NATION· I • . All Y ADVERTISED S225 UllTt
PLUS THE ADDED fUTUlt II ll'OSITIVE ON /Off SUOY
SWITCH! POWERfUL DIREC
DRIVE MOTOR.
59!,jf.·
PRfCE
FOOD PROCESSOR
Works foster rhon the eye
con follow 10 rake mo\t of
lhe work out of food pre ·
poro11on. All purpo\e1
.. 11.(Uh
...,..,..._. ___ ~LUGE FAMILY SIJI
1 U ·IMOtfUtfACl
1 •• .w..~~ .... . ........ ~ ................. .
~ ................. ~dllr· , ........................ .
~ ........ .......,
.............. i-n~. ..... : ..... , '~· .. . 1,%,_ ..... ......
J r
al tYt know wbat enlarges the pores,
r41ddon:s the nose and causa the blood
vessels In the skin of the nole to become so prominent.··
"IS THERE ANYTHING U>do for It?"
I said. "l don't know. Perhaps
rhlnoplasty <plutic suraery OD the Dose)
n.ay beJp."
.. . .
We take our akin for grant.ed, yet it ls the largest orian of our body 1aya Dr.
Slelncrohn In hit booklet, "Practical
Gulde To Skin Probltm1 ... For a copy
writ<' hJm et this paper enclolint 50
cenl11 Md u 1tamp00, H lt·addrened en·
velopc.
PRICES •aoo 1HRU
CHllllTlfAB --·
011/ fNHILE •rocrs
LAIT
01~11se dfinks ot o
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360° 1wi,,el bollOffl
el1minalt1 lifli"V. In
OUOl'led ~S!
FROM nus INSTRUMf NTS 1111
;v.~t.
MARK 21 :*
7 ·FUNCTION . · "
CALCULATOR ''J. .•
Slimline with 4 bvt ·
t911 full cccUlllUloting
mtfllOfY· Pffforms oll
boiic o r ithmetic
lunctioru. 8 d19it
llUO<escenl di&ploy.
9~:
:~
. ~
20x30· lllCH t MIRROR f
GRAPHICS .
E rnting 11tw wbjtcta •
'" color 011 dis tor· j
to on· free plot• ~Ion J.
with chro111e ·look j11
frome. By Morsel. :
... •-.. .... -.
l
f
' I -
LOCAL I NATIONAL I CALIFORNIA
Hello, Sunslripe
..
. .
Police
Reaction .
Assailed
LOS ANOELES <AP >
-County supervisors
have demanded an in-
vestigation into claim s
that lbe city's police de·
partment refused to take
tnlormalion on the la test
Hillside Strangler vie·
Um because4the vlctlm wu a prostitute.
"I think the police
have a lot or answering
to do to the police oom-
m I ss i o n ." s aid
Supervisor Ed Edelman.
"Jt could have been an
aclive lead at that time
that might have led to
a rrest of the person who
ls committing these kind or crimes."
Five-year-old Bryn McCrossan contemplates a bas ic solar furnace
constructed of dozens of mirrored squares during a visit to the On-
t<i rio Science: Center in Toronto.
The nude, str angled
body of Kimberly Diane
Martin. 17. was fou11d In
the Silverlake area of
Los Angeles Dec. 14 and
was determined to be
the 11th in a slring of
victims killed under
similar circUrtl$tances
by the same p~rson or
persons.
Ad Campaigns
Slowed Down
W ASI UNGTON CAP) -Nine national advertis·
ing campaigns were eith4'r discontinued or
modified after challenges by the Council of Better
Business Bureaus.
Jn six other campaigns questioned by the
bureaus. the advertisers provided substantiation of
their claims.
Advertisi11s modified or discontinued included:
-ABC LEISURE MAGAZINES agreed to alter
its advertis ing lo m ake clear that "Musical
America " is a combined magazine with "High
Fidelity" and a s ubscriber will not be receiving two
separ ate magazines.
( CONSVJHER)
-Dart Industries
discontinued advertising
claiming that Its Seamco
Racquetballs are rounder
than competing balls.
-Dutch Boy Paints Division discontinued ad·
vertlsing for Di rt Fighter Paint which claimed that•
the paint repels dirt. The firm said that it continues
to support the clAims, however. and was halting the
advertising for marketing reasons.
-ALSO DISCONTIN\JED FOil m arketing
reasons was advertising by Fairmont Foods Com-
pany claiming that its "Better Than" ice milk
tastes better than lee c ream.
-GilleUe agreed to modify advertisine for
''Good News" disposable rai.ors stating that they
offer "freedom from nicks and cuts." Th~lm had
charged that this was :m absolute safe~ claim.
Gillette disagreed, stating that it meaqt.th,., "ffe
safe r than competitors, but said it· '"11 chaQgt e
ads.
-Marantz discontinued ad v.ertislna cl.IUmiq&,
that no one can duplicate Its stereo eqal~ment an~r
BBB asked for s.ubstanUation. How~r. Maranti
did not.e that it holds patenta op s~l of ita com· ponents. , ' ·
-MOBIL OIL COltP. P1lOV1DEt>aub&tanlia·
lion for several claims Cot its Mobil l motor oil but
agreed lo make a. change in claims eoncenlln1 de-
te rgent content and said it had droPs>ed lbe st.ate·
menl "best motor oil." . ·
-Nationwide Leisure Corp., agr~ to rnodi(y
future advertising for air travel to Europe th clarity
that it deals in charter t rips, not regular· airline
service.
-UNION CARBIDE ADVISED the BBB that It
had already modified ads for Prest.one II antJf~ie
to eliminate a sequence sboWi.ng a car ~fusing to
sta rt. BBB had felt that the sequence would give the
impression that a frozen cooling system wlU pre·
vent a car from starting.
· Advertising for which firms provicfed substan·
tiation satisfying the BBB lncluded Allegheny
Airlines Fly and Ski Program, Di.sston Power Paclc
rechargeable Jantern, Cocoa Purrs breakfast
<'ereal. DeJ~ Big D shock absorben , Pledge
Furniture Polish and Levi's Dura Plus Kids' Jeans ..
City Forec~t.s Crime
JACKSONVILLE. Fla.· <AP) -The Jacboll-
vtlle SherUf;a Department., ~ a ~~ from U.e
National Weatber service, pl.as a forecast ol'lta own -crilee: . · ·
Sheriff Dale C~ aa.id a cr\D)e foncut; ...
to *ln in about alx moplbs, may·r .. d ~--like this: "Residents of the Sprincflekt are ~
be oa the lookout n>r bw-aJan u a~ number ol bur,laries, at teut 4S, are P"4ScteCl for tbls
weekend. There alao is an 90 Jjlettent chute ol two
or m9re rapes."
A•t• Cl'ash Test~
OCCAsks
Signups
In Advance 'Blffl' Plan Bit
Orange Coast College SACRAMENTO <AP>
officials a re r eco m . -An angry crowd or
mending t hat students 1,500 farmers has pro·
obtain registration ap· tested proposed restric·
point01ents as soon as lion s o n c h e m ical
possible for the s pring pesticides, a lthough
semester to get the best scientists say using bugs
selection of courses.
Appointments will be ( J issued beginning J an. 3 SI'ATE a~ the admissions ofCice. j ---------Hours a re 8 a.m . to 10
p.m. Mondays through t o ki ll bugs can b e
Thursdays and 8 a.m. to cheaper and better.
5 p.m . Fridays. The ~ta\e Dep~rtmenl
R egistration b y ap -of Food and Agriculture
pointment runs Jan . opened a lwo·d.aY hear·
12·31 with open registra-Ing Tuesday on the pro·
lion Feb.1-13. posal, which would de-
Information is availa· lay pesticide applica·
ble from SSS-5735. lions for 72 hours to de t er min e i f
Seniors'
Leader
To Speak
Septuagenarian Mag·
gle Kuhn, founder bf the
Gray Panthers oreanlza.
ti.on, will head the list o(
guest speakers Friday,
J.an., 27, at an Eme ritus
Day for senior citizens
on th e Saddle back
College campus.
M\ss Kuh.n 's a p-
pearance will hl.ghligbt a
day or . tours, art an.d
c raft exhibits, academk
advisement and lunct-
Cortbe area's elderly.
The day's events will
include the opening 01
the college's Emeritus
Center, future home of
classes and special pro-
gra ms for area Seniot
cltlz:ens.
alternatives would work
better.
BdpS0ught
SACRAMENTO <APJ
-Gov. Edmund Brown
J r. called for 20 volun·
teer p,s.ychialrists ln the
San Francisco Bay area
late Tuesday to "lend a
helping hand" on a part·
time basis at Napa State
Hospital.
Dirt t• M°"e
SACRAMENTO CAP >
-State health officials say they expect t he
Navy to move n .ooo
tons or radioactive An· ·
tarclic soil out of Port
Hueneme.
The dirt was exposed
t o radiation from a
nuclear power plant in
Anta rctica that was dis·
mantled because o r
leakage several years
---------ago.
GLUEB4N
ORDERED
WASfflNGTON <AP)
-Htgbly flammable,
quick·drying glues -.re
being banned from sales
to tfte general public by
tbe Coosumer Product
Safety Commission, but
remain available to in·
'dusttial usen, mainly
furniture makers and
buildfrs.
The commbaloa in-.
troduced tbe ban
because of evidence
there have tieeD 130 bum
injuries, lMladlag lS
••th•, since 1910 that are d lrectly attributable
totbeglues.
Pedttoa. 01''d
SACRAM£NTO CAP >
-Initiatives agains t
school racial busing and ·
publicly financed abor·
lions have bee n a p·
proved for drculaUon in
efforts to qualify for the
November ballot. state
otncials say.
Secretary o( State
March Fong Eu also 'n·
nounced Tuesday that
an iniUative campign
sponaored by a Sant.a
Clara County man who
wanta to cut property
taxes al9o was approved
for ctrculation. '
------Water F....,_
PETALUMA <AP>
• The city councll bas lift·
ed a wate r ratlonlQg
C--orpSe Tests Halied
plan put into ef!ect.i 10
months ago at the height
of the water crisls.
Mayor ·Helen Putnam
said •he bell.eves the d·
W ASJJINGTON (AP> -The
Tranaportatlon Depstmnt •bas sus-
pended tb8 u0 ol e..tavera 111 auto
crasb test.I until it C'Olftpletes a l"e\'lew
of tbe practice. a department
.spoJreeman1akl. • ..
Hal Panil of &he Natklnal ID.8h8l
Trame Salfty AdmlnlttraUoa Mid.
Rep. John 11c1111. J>.cant., .requateCf thtllll~ '
ty h the flrst Sn tbNe )!eare. lt werftuaed &a •tbdles on Callf ornla to kek 1 off
Uae ef~veneu ot akba,., devices from Undtatlons tnltltut· lalt.Ued andet an auto dqhbo&M ...a •-which Uaflale ..,_th car 11 lSl.c>lVed "" au IDOlt or NortMrn ln an·~ Calilomla1 lut aprln.I.
I •
ALt CUI q.p ta tbe Unit~ •s=IDodll 1ev1114 IDUlt have A•u~ Pree• eiUMr or .... aUc..-~lta SAN Dmdo <AP> -
to ~Met11•1.,... An~ 20 Ammeana
· , , have Ren under the ~1-e airtta1 t•ll wlth eadavon 1>rltod• exe)laNe ,..o. ,..... ~~ea~ .• prtvat. 11'•1D wi&a. JIGkO. seav~
HM•reta ll"8 ln !halfalo. Tlie firm. fPI about 100 Iii U•• aud Ute cadavers .ere willed &o U.. Metropolllan Col'Nt•
et.le UllivenllJ'otNewYorkmedttal Uonal Center. • . •ehool et ...,,., ud famUMI were A• Uae" releuecl Jut coataotid for .,.rmJHion before week~ thole Clvea their bodl•~~•--latbetelts. freedom. on Tuesday · · h ·I · ' HM'•d two-ttitru of nte .,.._, ••1' UH o1 their Medea• prt9oa ..._t• """1dt1 mo~ iAIQC'IMdoia · wrm1 or aecmtula'9d
._ ..... lldurM9 uct fetalltiti eaoaall IOCli '9bavfor
tlantiltiU1lniau1nml•. ~dworkdme.
-. .. . ---·· . . . . . . . ·-• •
.. ..
DAlLY PILOT 8J
Attraction foT Thieves
Newport's Fashion Island Lures Criminals
Newport Beach police say
they're not sure why it happens,
but they claim Fashion Island at-
tra~t• more thieves at Christmas
time than other nearby regional
shopping centers.
Capt. Wayne Connolly, com·
mander of the department's
patrol dlvision, said he isn't as in·
terested in figurina out why the
phenomenon occurs as he is In pulling a stop to it.
CONNOU.Y SAID tnS division
s tarte d a progr a m last
Ct r istmas aimed at reducing
crime in the shopping center and
because or its success, the effort
is being increased this year.
He said the police are selling
their sights primarily on three
types of lhefl -shop lifting, car
burglaries and purse snatches.
He said all the shops and de·
partment stores ln the shopplng
center have sent personnel to
po li ce·conducted t ra i ning
sessions oo sboplilitng.
"IN ADDITION TO beelect up
security provided by the stores,
we are stationing a uniformed of·
ficer in lhe shopplng center dally
to aid in a rrest or shoplifters,•• he
sa id.
The program on car burglaries
and purse snatchJni involves a
team or undercov.er officers,
dressed in street clotbe3, who
patrol the parking lots.
''We also use survelllance from
the rooftops. lt 's surprtslngly ef·
fective because there are a few
places ln FashJon Island from
which you can see nearly the
whole shopplng center," he said.
L~ST YEAR, WHEN the pro. gram was started, Connolly said,
a limited amount of special "''
!orcement resulied in an 11 per.
cent increase lo theft arrest& at
Fashion Island.
This year, he said, because of
the increased manpq,wer, the
number of aJTeSt.s shotlld go 'up
even more dramatically.
Connolly also bas advice for
shoppers :
-If you must )eave Christmas
packages in you_r car, lqck t.bem
in the tnmk or cover them. so
pas~ers-by cannot see them.
. ...,..,.,....
A HOLIDAY FIRST FOR HELEN, FRANC•& BEAROSUSY
They'll Travel to Daughter's Home for Cetebnltton '
'Best of JUI'
• •
F iimily Tradition Altered
' .
.l
FRESNO CAP> -Francis and
Helen Beardsley won!t use their
43·foot-long dining room table
this Christmas.
Their new home here just isn't
big enough to bold them and their
20 children for \he hollda}'St 'so
they plan to spend Christmas
with a daughter in Los Gatos.
.ANOTHER PROBLEM was
try.ing to sneak presents lnto the '
house past all the curious.
children. A claiset ln the couple's
o(f .Jlm1b bedroom served as~a
secret cacbe, she said.
THE BFARDSLEVS. WHO re-
cently moved to this Central
CaJifomia city, were portrayed
1n the mcwte ''Yours, Mine and
Ours, .. an adaptat(on of a boolt
ab9ut combiping the ir large
faD\i lles, .. Who Get s the
A• the years passed and the children began leaving bome, the
Beardsleys continued their
<.'Wltom ol hanging stodtings tor
each family member.
"It is diftic\llt now sitting here
'fOlldering how we got through lt au, but the-time went so fast Sbat
l also wot\der where Jt wen~t·
B,eardsley said.
o .. umstick?"
Both were wJclowed, aod QE' Health
Beards!ey, a reti~ Navy war-~
rant odi~t, had · 10 chJJdren. p ·
.HTS. Beard,ale)' •. whose first anel Beaded
husband dled ln 1f8 Navl Jet ~!'rr.~'1.~e~::Z:•;:' By eedM .. J.,an couplethenbaitwomore. ~ M
Tbls ~ wlll be the first "
~Y bave spent without all \be Wllllam Cunnlagbam or
family lll'OUDd them in \heir pre-Co d 1 M vi 'd t Vl'o"• thr......._1...,el u-.room bome rona e ar, ce presl en ,_ .....-..... Mr and gr~ administration ex·
in Carmel. e<!utlve tor Pacific Mutual lJf e
ONLY THE TWO youn1est.
Joseph 15, aad Helen, 13, now Uve
with their parents, the rest bav·
in1 left for school or Jobs. The
Beardaleys also have eJaht
crandcbUdreo with two more ex·
peeled.•
Beardlley aaJd the famlly isn't
wt•ltb.Y from the book, movte
and' aitttfl'YWon commerclil f04"
•b~ad coWli*fty, •
ha fact Ulen wwe some lea
years wben manty CJ1r11tmu
pnHpa...,. ...,_.or ln-
•ol•ed =t1ta 'to clo. each ~· toc.a~Mn. BeardaliyAkflD aa lntemew.
•oWEVm. 1WE CIULDREN'
btralded• evary yul,Ude,
blptilJMcl 'lrY Cbriatmaa Mau..
•''tie •t Chrtltmaa of all" •.SW. ' '"We tMIChtour cblldren lt wu
tbe love ln tbe ctvlna and not Ute eott of tM l1ftt U.., &bared daat wu~··
Tb•r• wer•• 10 •••7 ................ &M ......
ln:suranceCompany, was elecwd
president of the board of direc·
ton of the Orange County Health
Planning Councu. ,
Cunningham, vice preslde$0f
ocHPC. is a fel&cny of both the
Soc iety of Actuaries and the
Canadian Institute of Ac\Uartet.
OTBEll OPFICEU eJeeted by
the bolld are Beth Gralaam, La
Habra, vie&~; Ju BUii,
.Or•te. ~. Md Michail McCartney. D.O.s.. Irvine, treas um-•
Mrs. Graham ls a ·~ Ha!JJ"a
c:ttx ~---P.4 '°'*' mayor. SM le Jl(tllwtel ol the
Orange Qount1 Vector CCllltrol
District .ncl letretUy 61 Unlt4cl
Wayof Oraft,e~. .
BLIM II SXECUTl\'E dine· tor of,,.-P~thQod and ia
a meJD'ber ol the alecUcal Quality
Review CDmmit.tee fot. WI re·
wttb •1111111111 -. ..... . . . , ........... . at~. Mce.tMJ Will bt tvv1a1
bi• ~year • tnu"1V, Be
19 a d..a.t, will Offtcea In TUUn Md'lcWll. I ,
tlleHmeWDe;"•w•. Oa•nl= d ••aeMtldl Be9• of .. prealdat.
''LEAVl.NG PACKAGES ~
ting in the open in your car is Juat
invitina a broken window andt.be
loss of those present.a," he saJd.
-Elderly women ahoppen-
lhe most frequent victims of
purse snatchers-should carry
thelr money and credit cards ln
their pockets.
•'Carry your purse by the ha!\·
die and it someone garbs tt let it
go. If you've aot your valuables
in yoor pocket, you'll be saving
yourself Ule trauma or a struggle
with 11 theif over your purse.'' he
said. I
CONNOU. Y SAID HIS special
enforcement team will also be
making spot checks or other
shopping 1centers in the-city such
as Lido Village or Westcllff
Plaia.
"We have had train ing
sesalons for every sllopplng area
In the city including Corona del
Mar, WP!tcllff and Udo Village.
"The idea is to make it so dif-
ficult foe' lhoptirters and thieves
that they'll go somewhere else,"
hesald.
Wine C.ountry
Samples Go
By Wayside?
NAPA CAP) -Many Napa
Valley wineries -among the !ew
places left wher~ )"oo can get
something for nothing -may
soon part with the popular tradi·
ti on of free wine-tasting.
Are a residents say the hordes
or tourists have become too much
for the quiet, peace(ul valley.
"WE DON'T WANT to become
another Disneyland." o~ local
vintner.said.
The sugg~Uon that wineries
charge either for parking, tours
or tasting was made in an in-
formal report to the Napa Valley
Vintners AasoclaUon. Prepared
by a llubcommittee of winery
owners , it will be submitted
formally when the group meets
in January.
The association has no power
to coerce members, and two of
the bl&eest neries, Inglenook
and Beaulieu. don't belong. But. senU~ ._.., many v lqt'ners makAJm'tt Uk.e, that the day may
soon be gone when friends can
pile mto a car without a dime
among them and drive out to the
country to drink away an after-
noon.
THE OWNERS INSIST they
are not ~1 Inhospitable, nor
are th&y trY.Jng to make money
ottvlsitors -theysaythey mere-
ly w•t to preserve what sub·
cqm#{ltee chairman Mike Rob-
bins calls "a unique national re-
source."
• •we•re getting s ome
pressure." Robbins said. "The
county hlls upressed sincere
coacem about the monumental
traffic problem, and we feel our
own concern !or our valley.''
Robbins said,about two million ee0pte a year pour into the n.ar·
row valley about 40 miles north
of San Francltco, alt in their cars
bum}>er·to·bumper along two-
lane roads and fight for places in
crowded parking lots.
OBSERVERS SAY th e
changes wouldn't affect many or
the so-called boutique wineries -
s mall, high-quality operations
which welcome visitors by ap-
pointment but discourage public
t astings. Sterlin& Vineyards
already charges $2 t.Q t ake a tram
to the crest of the hilltop where it
sits. And Domalne Cbandon,
wbteb makes cbampagne ,
charges $1.2$ a glass.
Bat for the big Wineries. oiler·
Ing a ebance1o taste at least two
wines is a time-honored tracliUon
and a \'Ital part or public rela-
tions.
AT ROBERT .MONDAVI
Vineyar$, where an estimated
2,000 free cases <St wine ls diS·
pen.aed each year, public rela·
lions .director Margaret
Biever' said, "We don't do any ad·
verUsing."
She said the giveaways "seem
worthwhile to us. It gives us a
chance to ta&Jc to people, to tell
them, for m1tance, why you
wouJdn 't want a aweet wine with
a filet mlgnoo."
OCC!to. View
Space Future
llan'• fUwre in space wtU be cJllcuued 1n a talk,
"A LUnar Bale Verau.s a
Spate Co1oay •" to be ~11 b~· ..f,2 at Oranie · t Coll4* .. 8eNnce Hall. Dr. Jact Greee. a pro. tepor ol ....,. at Cal
State 1-a Beacb, wlll
'"9k at. llOQll. Mm1laiaD • tefne. ,
• •
t
. · ~·Shuttle
~Bus Eye
' .
~~For Park .-. ·-ASH MOUNTAIN
<AP> -A shuttle bus • system is being proposed
to virtuaJly eliminate
private cars from some ~ parts of Sequoia Na·
tional Park in the
·• sou them Sierra Nevada.
The shuttle system,
tied to a staging area and
information center at
Wolverton corrals, is in·
eluded in a development e plan released by the Na·
., tional Park Service. >·
ANOTHER KEY
feature r ecommends
moving all overnight
facilities from Giant
Forest about four miles
north along Generals'
Highway to Clover
Creek, said Hank Jones,
park information oflicer.
Government Ser.vices
, Inc., the park's con·
cessionaire, would build
new visit.or facilities al
Clover Creek. an un·
developed area about
-·three miles northwest of
Lodgepole.
..
IF RELOCATED, the
number of lodging units
would remain at around
1,240, Jones said.
Implementation of all
recommendations would
cost the park service
about $31 million and th~
concer:-Eonaire about $11
milllo~ Jones said.
.. THERE MAY be
limited inconvenience to
a few visit.ors • • • but on
the whole it will be a
.much better park;' he
added.
"It will remove the
man·made develop.
ments and clutter
around the main attrac·
lion -the giant sequoia
trees -and offer better
park experiences. That'$
what the people come to
see."
Public hearings on the
de velopme nt concept
plan and environmental
statement will be held in
• Fresno Feb. 1 and Vis·
-alia Feb. 2.
Classes
~Expanded
AtOCC
The weekend program
·at Orange Coast College
in the spring will expand
to include 190 Friday
nig ht and Saturday
morning classes.
• Spring courses begin
Feb.6. ·
The weekend concept
was initiated at OCC three years ago with 2S
.classes. The number o[
. ,.offerinp has increased
each semester.
Subjects range fn>m
theater, art and dance to
accounting, psychology,
marketing: geolo&y,
nutritioo and marine ac·
UvitJes.
lleglatralion will be
open J an. 12 through
Feb. 13. ReglstraUon ln·
formation is available by
ealllng SM-5735.
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I ~~
L y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D.
RN •t.e. Ho.Mtflw W. No.snFof' W. .............................................. ·•·•······•············
-----------Ge•r• IOOJG.......a 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
'v\ L~l.I 'i '.\
TAYLOR CO.
HI·',\ !:I <JI·::---": 11('1· l~Hli
MANY SPLIHDOllO 2 & DEN
IH IRVIMI THIACE
N!Uthtr'• HoHce: Elegant simplicity. spacious rooIQs •
All real estate advertised Ci nes t cons tr uc ti on & d e ta 1 I,
in this newspaper 1.s sub· magnificent liv room, handsome den.
Ject to the Federal F11ir secluded patio & modest ocean view.
Housing Act of 1968 Of(ered at $275,000 incl. land. . .
which makes it illegal to SHOWN IY SPECIAL APPOIHTMIEHT
==="""""-·--· .. -.
"••ff,.,.S. ·•·••••••••••••••••••• ······•··········•·•··• ··············4"9······· ...................... . ••••• too •••rll 1002 .ca..... 1002 .... ,.. 1001 ...................... . ........................... , ....................................... .
~COATS & WALLACE
CrP REAL ESTA TE. INC.
-' lOLAll\ O\'tHlL 10Ml'.U•1 >IM ~l .. l.
!Hl SOlllH CllASI llRll\ \IN1 I l'lt,t
JOY TO YOUR WORLD -the 8\UlSets
will make you feel Uke you are in
another wo1·Jd. 'this home has. bteh
completely redecorated inside and
out. Copper plumbing, new roof,
beautiful new ext~riors. New carpet ln
e arth tones blending with wallpaper
and ~aneling. Workshop and patio.
Ju~t listed, $69,500. c• s4Mt41
MIHUS $25,ooo -you can look out
upon the BLUE PACIFIC every day in
this 3 bed rm home that bas. been
reduced in price $25,000. Perched high
on a hill with p panoramic view, all
for Sl00,000. Cal 64CMl61.
Serving Co~t.1 Mt ·,,1 lr11rnt>
Hun l1nglon 01·.tch tJewport n1-.1d1
\
THI asT l'VI Sl8l ••
In all of Seavlew this one stands out.
For its view, Door plan. decor and
price. 1t•s a Port Royal noor plan with
several upgrades and a fabulous,
unobstructed view. Don't fQrget the
many ~niUes of Seaview or that this is a lowest price of '235,000.
IJ~l()IJI: ti(),..H
REAL TOR~ 676-6000
2'43 East Co.st Hfohwav, Coton• del Mar
al~ in Mesa Verde, at 546·5990
advertise "any pre· W"'r• -u T ... YLOR CO., UA.LTORS · ference, llmitat1on, or ~• n. ""
disc.riminaUon baaed on 2111 S-Jo19b Hill Road . · GIM:r., ·~••••.. • IOOZ
race, cdor, religion, sex. HEWPOllT CEHTllt. H.I. 644-4910 I 1 OO" ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-••••••• or national origin, or ¥D Ge•r.a I OOJ Ge•ral a
Intention lo make any ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!~~I·••••••••••••••••••••.. ••••••••••••-•••••••• · such preference, Umlta· --..... ... POINT
Uoo,ordiscrimh111Uoo." Gt•rel 1002 Ge•r.. 1002 .-__..w 4 Bdrm .. 2 ba. home. AU amenities. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
This newspaper will not ---------•t knowingly accept a ny rll'JSIDE ' advertising for real Ut.l
estate which is in viola· BACH PAO tionoCt.belaw.
~-~~!~......... $69,200
Ge•.. I OOZ Large. level lot, fruit •••••••••••••••••••••••
GOLF COURSE
HOME
Super s_ BR. 3 BA, 3 car
gar. Lrg. FR, stone frplc,
patio on lairway-
Coc'everview. snc,ooo.
LAICIFROMT
CONDO
tree11, 2 be4rms, 2 baths,
gara1e. A areal fixer up-
per in best Eastside loca·
tion. Live in now, enlarge
lat.er.
400Lll" ~:£\ C.M.t'~
MARVELOUS
MONACO
CaU us about this im·
maculale one owner, !
bedroom, convertible den home in Harbor
View Home s . T h e
owner's meticulous care
to every maintenance
need will impress you.
And the hi&bly com·
petilive price or $136.500.
fee will please your
pocketboolt. I
C•644-7%1 I
/Jn NIGEL
l.JAIL[Y &
J\SSUCIAI ES Luxury 3 BR, 2 BA, Irg., _______ _
den, st)'. LR, frJ>Jc. Nr. S BR & 2 BA 4 IORM + POOL clubhouse, sec. gates-SSS 000
foreverview.$100,000. Wood floors. wood Biketo bea~b from this
NEW 4 BR.
11WILLOW11 PLAN
Just being completed & upgraded; 4
bdrms., 3 baths, family rm. & formal
dining rm. A lovely 2·story home of
a pprox. 2,000 sq. fl. A "BEST BUY''
al $107,000, including the land.
759.0811
450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE • 759-08>1
tOOJ G••• .. 1002 "'rl.a -..'&"'I' shlnale roof, tlreplace, ......._........ ard bo .5 ~ dble 11rage. $64,SOO. _.'" .... 1 en me. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-·••••••••-•-••••• W:ALKE. R CJ/FHA financing avail, Best buy in Huntington --------
Santa Ana near Warner. Beach. $2300 down or as· NEWPORT SHORES aume $240 monthly pay·
lB loyMcC.... ments. Hurry I Call &75-4144 IW\'Ot 1110••,..••4 963-6767 Walk To Beach Cofta Mela 541•77Jf OFfN Ill 0 • 11 S fVN TO Ill NICI'
Lovely area. few steps to beach.
!189,500 ' UDOISU
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den. 4
baths, living rm. w/cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master l>drm. suite. $'224,950
llG CAMYOH
4 BR, fam. rm .• 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large lot. $325,000
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
l : 1 ,, "' J. r l • • ·4 r1 ( • . t116,
c..... 1002 c..... lto2 ....................... . ..................... .
SUIPllSll
You eao b\IY • 1200aq. n. Bayside Vlllase mobUe home for only $4+,500 and
live near the bay in a bea\.ttifw, park·like set· tin&. with pool, jacuul Ill boal slip all available.
And, don't tb1nk thla ll an
old trailer, It isn't! 2
SIXUMITS
In x1nt rental Ideation in N. Costa ·Men. Btfl ~ with J&e, pool as added .a.tr~ Close to major .abopping & bu.s
Unos. Jusl iD&roduced &o uae IUJ'ket. Ne-7711
~ Walker t; lee ); II Immediate occupancy,
newly decorated, Im·
maculate 3 bedrm, 2 1--------• · . bath, 2 patios. dble gar
Bdnns., 2 baths, blt-hul. Real Ealate
---------• carpets, paneUng, on &1---------
00. See today, Is you wW AFTll CHllSTMAS OH IA.LIOA ISLD. on alley.
$291.900 $2000.,0WN 400C.l.lU-; 4'' ~fOR •• ~
EASTSIDE Beautiful young 2 story Wapt to see little bucks, 1;;~1·-111-~ ... ;--~ COSTA MESA duplex with spacl0\19 ' & turn into big bucks. It's At. _
. 3 Bdrm units. Balconies simple, buy this cute 3 • • Beautiful 5 year old & patios for indoor/out· BR home for only $52,500. d~plex: Each unit bas door Uviq. Live ln one & Low down & cheap pay. --------
king sized bedrooms, 3 enjoy the benefits of an menta. u p s t a l r a p l u • 2 '-....... ., S .. "3666 downstairs. Each ~ .. .......,....pro,......,. ..,.
GREAT
RATES AT
SOUTHWEST·
BANK
).. Great Rah For
UNdC....,..
(The same as f• new
be surprised. SPIClAL
Everyboijy dlscounls
and baraalns at
Cbriatmas •• our sellers are no exception about
tbelr 4 bclnn. A lot of nice·
feawre. to turn. )'OU 00 and a good location. So tab advamqef 5*!313
0#1' t• t • 11s RJNro• Ma• wood burniGC ftreplace, -WATERRK>lllf built·in electrical ap-HOMf.S
plianees. Ju.at like a REALE8TATE
home. $1'6,.500, WW ex· 631-1400
Wltelc"'ln '°'c Al i. "ll All cars.> ~~~~~~~ ~tl ' THE R[Al
'J ESTATERS _ dlang~ ·~~~~~~~~ COLI OF HEWPORT I·
REALTORS
675-551 t
CORONA
DB.MAR rl
REO c.ARPET' •
'ffATaMS
OHLY$62,SOO
Best buy ln the area. Air
conditioner a nd some
other nice xtra's. Calling us is a must -The dog
bites! A quick escow and
this year's best
Christmas . present is
yours. 546-2313
3 Huge BR, 3 tile BA,
den, dining rm, 2 sty
w/'lt' open beam cell· in~, We entry, Crplc.,
wet bar. lawidry i:m,
oversized dbl gar. 3000
Sq. ft. of very unique liv·
i.ngspace.
W \A#._.I OPfNlllO•llSflJNl081NICl1 ~1.6~;"-•. ~ ----"'
a'rea! Latg9 yara?-tow ~. •?.
price! VAorFHAterms. ~·:.... ,,.,,;;::~
THE REAL 1
ESTATERS :
$ 149~500 VETS! JACOBS REALTY Move up!_ Use your G.l.
67r L 670 Benefits I Fantatstlc 3 ~ bedroom! Corner Iott •---FfX-8-PLU-.-5--.-r Only tn,5001 Call now!
POSsallMCOME 754-1202 11iis ~ W OD anl~~~~~~-~-
R·2loll0""8eould bWJd. HALECREST ~7Ull baH a 3 $69,500 bedrool6 nx.. and uae ...... _ ·-to ot super clean 3 bedroom, 2 oana· .. very opea . bath with a blC yard. Its'
lers. The fixer find of the clean as tidy! Cractllng ·~!"~~UNro11~r· brl ck fireplac e &
' THE REAL
ESTATERS 751-3191.
_, 1;::::======:::.
BESTIUY
3 Bedroom with massive
alone fireplace & ex·
pand~d living room,
formal dining room,
warm country kitchen.
Located on a large lot
with av access. Close to
sbopplng, &: Newport·
Mesa-Schools. Priced at
a Jow $84'9()0. CALL
556;-2660.
CSELECT :
T'PROPERT1ES
lll•W ltlllC 1•1
eblex., golf ADULTLnlMGi
-.!'14 . 2 BednD $44.950 each. Private, quiet, BeaatlltillJ maiDtahied ~ma·• .. · oDlr Ualt ml1 townbome in 540-USl Ideal location near shop.
~!~-HERITAGE llbl8 A the beach. Can't
10 wrong w/lhls btn
piece ol property A aucb
I~=~~~~~ alowJftcllt ..,1111
. . Rf:ALTORS
~ Walkt!r 1; lee sso.tso n-11 """tat.e 2Bedrm,11,.ij)ath Condo., ___ nc __ ~----
New ~rpeb & paint. w..I I 006
End' upit taclne .creen ......... •••••••••••••. area. Hurry. won't last.,_ ______ ....
~
•
gourmet built.-iD kitchen
' .,,,· For further details CALL
C::SELECT ·
I PROPERTIES
. -_, ~View JJ you ve been longing associated ------.... -.. G••r .. ....................... ~············ .... ······ HAMGIO
3 Br, 1 ba furnished
bouse nr W. Oeean£root.
Dbl gar. $12S,OOO.
f) u r r \\ h 1 ' ( H l i! I n
/~11 t~1 ""''' ,1 H1o1,i ~J Ii
• ~ ~ , I, ~ , lf, 11
for a 3 bedrm home wllh JUST USTED
view of entire harbor and C D M D U P L E X -
catallna s11nsets, come c:ompletelY remodeled,
POOL HOME!! see this one -Thursday ·~~~~~~~~ new paint ln/oul. New $58,900!! evening from 7 to 9 for a•· kit.chem. Each unit bas2 y ~TERMS rare treat. Enjoy lhe bedrms, brick fplc. ireat
Tremendous 3 br hom&e ~~e~ !'J::. (,:~ location, walk to ev~
w/qver.alted farn rm .• ~t:l!f» soo. FINANCING ~~o Aaktni '1'8,500. PllHlve brick frplc OJ) 911 Kinp Rd. NwptBcb
[l ~UK f f1 ·, IJ t I\ l T ( l.J <,
lv J 1, \A, l1,1lbo •l I f I If#
qulet.1ecluded st. Sell~ aiffhaven-o~tb•mutr MADE r1~y1 ~
1 ________ 11 mu.st move ln a~ Ol)eObouleThunT-Gpm Ut.l • lV~~
CHIHA ~OVI ;:er~~ MY ...-. PETE BARRETT J Cbolce propertlea , . 1~
On Ml SL .. Coroca d1l 754-7toO -REALTY-a~vailable. •EA&JOltS Kar; newly, pro·
,_.k>oall1 de<!Ol'ated, 2 542·5200 bdrm.+ den·3 bathS. s ~
t\OrY home w/elevator; 1 ~ CHEAPCOHDO!
1ourmet kit • aU teak 1--------111 ~IHI •tate $0 to $2500 moves you in. cabinet.a fl floor, wet bar, To place)'OW' mea11e 640.5357 Call for immediate info.
frplc. Some bay view, MB HB.P7 before the S41-0425Agt.
too! Stesil to beach & Hel.Pyuurselttoa readingpubllc, ba~::-!°°' Heap\n&Hlectlooor phone lay Prop. QQallfied Hopefuls Dally Pilot
ltdton in the DAILY PILOT Cluaified, 642-5678 * 675-7060 * HELPWANTEDADS
••• ,.. 'tol .... ,.. I l002 ....................... .. .................... .
'
m~-/lrvtnr , .. fialtg .
, I
4 • •
MOMTIM>l
Jn Newport•s ~'est f amlly area· .w/pools & tentllS. 4BR&. 2 'baths +.
famtly rJ;n./fdtchen comblnatlon.,
Don't. wait -a SUPER BUY!.
'QiseJaHanen 644"6200. CA63)
SCC~clllA.-&f.-~S • Thal lnl1lg11ing Word Germ• witlt o Cindie ------'..,GAY .. ,__ ____ _ ·=·:. ... tr" .. : :: ...................
I LOMYUE I
. ·1 11 I I I I _
I NECl(I j
I I I I If . .,
t ffORCA I"'' Alt~~ ..... • I. I' I (4 f:5i-~:;..r:-.:' -------. ... ... .........
I
-SEED 1;1 1 r...-.-.f11*'1 ..... 1 I I I I'_•~.:-...~--=' ---------.... .....,_ ~ N:"Ja..w. •
~
IACK IAY EAS&.ONMN&
Woodstream condo with 3
bedrooms, 2\.fa baths, large private
brick patio. Spacious master suite,,
attached double garaae. Near;
comm\Dllty pool, priced for quick
sale at $89,950 fee.
4 COLDWILL IAMlll CO.
644-1766.
21tt MN~NHtU..SftO,
IN NEWPOftf UHTfR
. ...
I I
• ..
j
f -
tt ...... s. ··-·-.---· •1111 .. "-·---·
VISTA CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS
WE ALSO HAYI Z.J •• 41e*--
ftoMes,
with or without acreage. What price
range do you pref er?
A SUP8l DUPUX IS A.I.SO AVAIL
1 Side bas 3 Bdrms & 2'h baths.
Approx. 1638 Sq. ft. of living space.
The other unit has approx. 1400 sq. ft.
with 3 Bdrms & 2 Baths. These units
are close into VISTA. and about 12
minutes driving lime to beach. Super
s harp! Great for the two family
situation or as rentals. $130,000.
OR A cozy 2 IR HOME w /SHA.ki
ROOF
and a charming little guest house.
StricUy pride of ownership. SSS,000.
URBAN SUBURBAN REALTY
1714) 727-4200 or 17141 727-0520
I r '' '' •
f. J t 1"' 1 \ II 1 'I I ~ I • • '
~•C:W..C..e
214 DtlMI•
This char ming 2 Br
home, bas a D>Oll Spec·
tacular .,view of ooean &
harbor JetlY. U you Uke
beamed dngs, anuques
& peacetuJ Ii vine. call to-day. •
D. IHdctffs IU+r
.. . ..
c::1 Walker & lee
Real Elrt.tte 95'5-0497 642·3263 ---------FRESH MEW Spyglass Tradewlnds, 29 USTIMG
Cu mbria. ocean view,
sngl story, 4br, 2'h ba. By CltEAM PUFF
owner. &W·l838 Sharp & most attractive ---------11 bdrm +den condo. WAHTB> ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~Home in Spyglass
Southport Mod~!
w/Catalina view. Will
p(Jy top dollar. Call Nick
Vrocin, 752·6521
Premium location. Cov'd
palio. Garage & xtra
street parking just steps
from your door. Ideal
starter home for young
or retired couple. Won't
last at $59.500. Call now
The fll!tost. draw in the Have something you want
Wesl. • .a Daily Pilot to sell'? Classified ads do
Classified Ad. 642·5678. 1t well. 642-5678.
SllK & FIND• COOKERS
C S T R A V C G Q Y U A I R S A I R T
I S D N E I R B T T R V M P L K E I R
E P A 0 0 P E A E A J C R L 0 K N 0 £
N G 1 S M E ~ l V M J 0 l E 0 R R R K
l E P A N C A 0 A C N R l 0 T T 0 r. 0
T N [ A R 0 H S P Q G J C I 0 S T L 0
£ T S U R A R £ l N R E H Y A l A I C
H D R T S E R I E l R J R E S 0 L 0 Y
GKECHCHVEUUOLGTCORR
E A K S G R 0 R S l Q F C Q E W C B F
N J 0 T E H 0 S H H f E N R R G R T P.
l N 0 Z C T E 8 E R Y f B R T I E B Y
A W C T 0 R A T A X Y I A R K T P H ~
0 C U t P M E W A Z K N H W A M W J 0
S 0 A H I B W 0 R R T H G I X B L A 0
Instruct om: HI wor 1 btlow 1ppc1r 1 Ide·
wwd, up. dO\IWI "' dl~1llv. Find tlM:fl ~ bo~ it In ...
Grill Barbeque Dutch Oven '
Roaster Percolator Corn Popper
Toaster fry-Cooker Pressure Cooker ~
Brofler Samovar Waffle Iron
Tomorrow : Acqu1sft1on
Sleek Coatdress
9434
SIZES 10Yz.:10Y1
llousc & separate apt. rOI' appt, to see. S<lS-9491
Corner H-z lots. 2 Dbl
garages. Apt has lower (~lfJfl\115ijjfjiJJ
bach unit. Sl69.500. . -· -···------
Owner, 640-7588. ReaJ FBt.alt'
Broad moor oeean view. PR.ICE IS RtGHT
:mGsQ.ft. 4 Bdrms. 2'h Pvt party, must sell one
ba . Lge l \v. rm ., of two properties on
5' par ate d 1 n · rm ·• Flower St. in t=ast C.M. l
spacious kit. & fam. rm. duplex or 1 lot w/2
opening out onto a Jge hous ...., """'2 backyard w/puttlng __ es_.6_•_»-Vo>_• __ _
green & pond situated on
greenbelt. Asking price
$270,000 By appt: 640·1286
CostoMna 1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ELEGANT
TRM..EVB.
MESA VERDE
nu.~ home 19 like buying
brand new. Interior com ·
plctely r ed ecor ated •
plush crpting, drps,
wallpaper even new
\'inyl. 4 big bdrms, huge
fmly rm w/frplc. frml
din. 3 balhs. 7S9·1SOl
Like new, by owner. 438
Princeton. 4Br, 2ba.
pool. $89.SOO. 642-3729 aft
$.
'
HANDYMAN'S
DREAM HOME
FanL~1t1c Gpportunity
for the handyman seek·
ing a large workshop al
home. Big separate
building in back suitable
for mechanic, wood
worker, electrician. or
??? Better hurry! Call
645-0303.
FOREST E
OLSON ...... ' ......
Cb~om• On Old Corona Del Mar Lot With Rental UnJt ln
Rear. 1'o Find ! Bedroom. 2
J;Jeltt ~ers' Untt W/Flr.eplac:e
And Large K itche n . Well. Decorated. NlceW Landscaped With
2 Sunny Patios. Convenient To
Tenn It Courts And Shopping.·
Priced J.t 11.54,000.
--·
** lta.thrrictp
l034 Royce LA.
CosteMHe
You are the winner or 2
free tickets worth $14 lo
HOUDAY OH ICE
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
Dec. 27th-Jan. Jsl
Free Tickets good for
Dec. 30th or 3 1s t performances. Call
642-5678, ext. 333, to
claim your tickets
**
SALEIYOWHH
3 Br, l Yl ba Condo. LI\•
rm, din rm & inside
laund rm. Upgraded. No common wall. 2 story.
$68,450 Pb 962-3527 NO
AGTS.
WOOOSYZSTY
Rustic arch1lecllltO with
abundant glass. Heavy
shake roof. vaulted ceil·
ings, sweeping master
and children 's wing.
Open hearth rireplace.
l\Jngailne pe rfect
kitchen. Muni_..purpo1>e
area. Jn thu $70's. One of
our newer homes Bkr
SJ6.!1311.
iHI 833-9781
[ Hester-Brown RIAl lO~S
WOOOIRIDGE
BROADMOOR, 4 BR,
fam. rm., pool & spa, all
lndscpi.. decking. fcnc·
ing, gorgeous improve·
ment11, m odel home
cond. Move-in ready.
Agent 6.W-5560
STONEWOOD
Mod el in d e \l r able
WOODBRIDGE PLACE.
On a corner location
gives the reeling or llvtn~
in the great outdoors.
Ready for Immediate
move-in. •Shown by ap.
poinunent.
f!j
•
... -
INVESTMENT ..
.. OPPORTUNITY; a
beauti(ul motel, heart or
Laguna Beach. Close to
beaches & parks. Xlnt
('Of'd. $750,000
*
~ Walker & l ce
Realbtate
HAR I OR
HIGHLANDS •
Sparklln1 Newl)ott
Beach ,ool home. 3
Bdrm, ram. rm. & din.
rm. Beautiful cal'\)et.s &
drapes. Priced for a Cut sale at $118,950. HWTY I
Ca II 540-115 l
""~-P HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
~YPll.O'r N
A&FHA
Tenns-$79,500
Extras fa l o r e!
Beaulifully1 andfcaped
Sum merf.teld home,
clean 3 bed.rm. L<>t.s oC
trees. Country lµt.chell,
dining area, brlck
llreplace. $79,500. BKR.
54().1720
~alityPlus
You d look gOod in this 3 1~~~~~~~~ ""# f lft Ctlltor.ia . RR home ne:.Ucd m quiet
Bluebird Cyn. on a 1'M!MONTF.G04br,2ba, WntniiMftr f091
poolslzed lot. Superbly ram rm. Ownr. 2015 Port ••••••••••••••••-•••••
built. ideal tor family. Chelsea. 640-1981 HERE'S YOUR CHANCE
Slti.S,OOO By Owner-Big Canyon Beaut 3 BB. home, S2SOO · ...;J/!.·J.:.~ Townhm.2Br,2ba.crpt. dn._Call now, 2•, hr " .IJ()'U,llt drps. $10,500. 833.ai:!l oc service846#79a,t.
640-<171i9. OtMt-RHI &tat• 11, , t .: ift '"
'IOI ,1 f I , . ~ "'. t j ..., • I,., ',1
4 '14 '14/'I -,,i ·i <J H•.
1076 .......................
loaded with oak trees in
the Cleveland Nat'!
fo'orest, So. of orange Co.
Municipal water. genUe
rolling knolls. beautiful
PltOFESSIOHAL view s ites. Owner will
IUILDIMG carry. Terms. BKR. (114) 676-5717 san aemente prot. bldg. oa m.2080
office ewtes avail. 1-8 ---------Rooms. Large parking
area. Rent al ssr per sq.
Ct. CoO(lder trades & terms. S2S2,500. 493-0'l3l.
LAGUJA IJIY!STllEITS. IIC.
Don't drop the baJJ ! Cet 3
job with a low-cost Daily
' 1 Pil'ot Classified Ad. m 494-~525
DESIGNERS DELIGHT
A complete store dedicated to·
furniture & i nterior design.
Commnecial & residential a
s peci a lty. Ca II us for a
complete tour .si.so.ooo '
~WI VIEW cONDO
Very attractive 2 bdrm, 2 bath
with an oversl~ed mest.er suite .
$79.900 1
'
Phone 84:?·5678. llOO
0'9 ' •CIC.It I 069 ••••• • • •• ••••••• •• •• •• • Newport ltCld I .._..,.,. Studio apt Ross moor
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• T Le0i W Id owcrs. sure or .
CE
110111 ILlllS ua.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERvrce
ILUFfS. GllA T IUY!
• I
Spectacular Townho use With
Spacious Bedrma. W /3' Baths Plus
Family Room. Many Cust om
Features Lrge. Covered 'Balcony.
Overlooks Pool An~ Ramada. Tho·
Home ls Vat11nt And Ready To-·
Move Into. ~t·a Go Inspect. Priced
Al $157.SOO. Subm'l Offer.
t'or sale or rent. Fa\1te
sacrifice. <194-31&7
CHdomh•'-••/T ow~ -...tor •• l700 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
2On1
2 1h~rp E/Cost~ Ntsa
boosts on 1 lot. O.e Is
POW, OH ls rebtlllt.
Owner Yer'f ANX!OUS.
1ubmlt all Ol'FERS. Call
lOWMs.1Z2'1
WA,·~
·w....,a.. i
, ,
( -ti
• ... 1914tt ....... h• C?Rdll t I I ... $ ......... i
" • '• ' &,., .. w • ....... , ... _ ...... .., ... z1••~ J4U ..................... Af•'5a...,...... •• , •II• r ltl...-.L.l.e:a..o.:•~ .... ,o ... 11 •1& I• .. .. 111119"'11' • ..........._..... •••1 -... _ .. ••••••·-~~ .. ......,. _... ••-•-M••• 1 ,.. A __ .__. ""'~ -..-~~-... ~-ffl-···.········-......... ............................ • .... l . .& ..... U&9V U= ........... ..._.-.... •111 ••Ill······· 91tt9ft01t lftt•t .......................... . ..... ~ J· .... '""""••••••tt•••• .. _._._.,..._ a-............. .._ .. __ W-. JIJ4 a-..;.......,_. •• NEEDAROOIUIATl:t
... .,.., .._. .. ---·-AUaau HB. Ad &a onb. .,.....,... .... ., ... ..,. ... -...-M\8 --............ -......... ~, ............... 8ylhf~ach1Br,1Y.Ba, over 40. Mllllon $ r c • ....... ........ ~ ...... Olt:lt'nleProteuSOnals ~~2l1Jt onlll ._.... W t ... ,.. (rple, beam ctlllnf1. raclLSet...ti)'1 alla.J>.plk. "-LrJllw,._,.,erfla..,., 1..-J'I tO •1,•br,I ,_ • ._ ..... ..._.of! NQ:•l-••&a Htlos' ~:ichtront hmM w Br u1a1ay pat.to, 11r. Trop caJ •tt 966-lMhvis. ~ " SZG 1n0.1 tblld OK. No ba, di• '"'• fflllc blc RadlOoTV ..._.•WWp . : b.i ~r=·•ltl Juw ruler~ ~ Una. Ocuo vie• Mat1.1~ fl., Z",.~• pe&a..m..J441,tcS-SUJ v le w . 11 o e ( to 'Jtmelluadne ~ ~ cw tlMUt 8 OKI ~c Muy ('()Mldcr CHllSTMAS :::::;· ,~:::iu:'.o .i:.·~· ... alw••• ,....... . ... --£1.U\dd n , J ... ..... ::.~o::;. :s~~ mo. ~OlAns UM..v.uTa>
>rlY HH)9'6·5B7l ....... im ta a brand m~. -.111t 1 • ••-••• .. •••••••••••••• GARDEN APTS · &act IQ'. EMt,..,71'1. • v • •cessruUySlnce lll1l
••• ~•aob a.ome. • . '4Aoahl... 3706 CORONAD~MAR pr.$300. ... 'lm Choke condo Ill IOU 83!-4134
Spticloul. 11PCt8Citd lhru· 3Rr, 2~b8. cpt 411 drps. ••••••-•••••••••••••• 2 a-'Jownhoae, trple. t, eouru; a BR, t ba., .
-. trplr., ·dbl. aar•Qe, Den. 1•mo rm, 2 frplc ·s. 1 Br, )'early $825 mo. Utu. Pool lecuUa. Some ooean ~~.::S 1a COit• \l...e&ed cell. •••· d ck, Rnum Meded.. Ocean vu, 3202 pvt. Jud. ChUdrC'ft " Onmi, mountain ac city. Incl. Avail. lmmed. as c•lalla.a \llewa CJose A.gt.~ ~ treee: pool. wsbr/dJ'>'tl'. upstatl"$, elem. $1.SO Jllo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• peU welcocne. O.n ll Wik to ·bch & twn 67S.92ZJ. toYauloohlA•i&l4liJle · .-1110.As\..49t-1S?t -..OlJ =~~frt~~ts ~=·s~·~~tu =rrz~:,,~~a::,'·2457· BACH. UTlL PD bnch. Abc>J Br.&M-21811 <~,:~l1'>9t1:~; ~...... 3152 STOP LOOK.ING! Mature
All areaa all prloes Gr 14&,uu. Fl/LL Krn::J1EN $ii.4(r1 •••••••••••• .. •••••• ••• rnalo ehve Nwpt Crest
s 11\pl ---------Mfnloft Yltfo 32' 1 $200 673-ltTS SpoUeu Walk to bClb. . Nlte 1 Ir 2 8r sass & up. furn Condo. Vu nr Hoac, S80lbr~\ne!iupd ••••••••••• .. •••••• .... •• CostoM.s. 3724 tBraBai'mrm210Clsqft LartUbr,lbe.We.llSdt, pod 6 rec :.OOm quiet :' amenlU,, lncl.JS2lS
$2252brklds&pel$ ~4;,,~ nt:O~ br~~ba·,.~~~ New4BR,2·aty, mt. 'llltw. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yrly.•Acac1a&U-704I fncd ~l.l~~!.~~j erta.83M7fe ' &!:~In ec/ an. $1503brrenttobuy r":"• • • Lnd scpd No pet• SSOWI-• •-. -no ~ -·-~ UFETIMESERVICE n&ht In. $39S. 963-4567• J425mo.'us.4oe4; .. -•vr ~---64W251 ...... ,., ...... 3169 Super3br coodo.J'r le
557·0822 Agent. no fee. 49341119 Sludto, l bedroom ftltap •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• pool ct' bhse NP •
--------•Exec utive home near Jataida.ervJce,pool ' ~ ~D& .. llll'.,ba. PAIUCHIWPoaT unok~--673-2'428 on· 1--------•1 4 bd 3 b f 237&Newport 81• C.M. rp • fnnl dla. thdl'1 Bachelors 1 or ! ---------------... 1 FORLEASE ocenn: . a •. am .... ,.... ... h 3269 548-975Sor6'S·3967 ap••TMENT . •r••· N71 ....... -..a-... ...... T:._.. ........... G ..... . nn. din rm. wet ba,r. fire ••••••••••••••••••••••. M Da,. • I~ ewu · __,._ • v-.,,_ ._. .... 4 350 3BR.SS7S/mo. ring, outdoor BBQ & LfVIO.., STUDIO 2 llr,1Ba,2 1Lory.Com---• l"romf,274.SO
55Acac1aTreeLa.. pool. $750/mo: Consldie n WEBCLYllATES tnunlty pool. 4352 Specbclllar 1pa, total ••••••••• .. ••••••••••••
3 BR, $$75/mo. lsetopt. 8'18·0707: 9911.4347 THE GOLF COURSE! l'Ull Kllcben "TV Shorecrest. S295 mo. SWta MICa recreatloa proirain, SJniJe 1arage overhead 428~, Be1ooia 811 Canyon TowlJhome. 2 Linens" Utilities 675-2311 ACT. Daya. NO (fMlllT.t«) POOi. IOdal procram. 7 POOi&. 8 door, S3S. No. 6. 131 W.
2 BR. view. $62$/mo. br. 2 ba $700 Per mo. CLOSETO<>J;EAN FEE •Lodlecltu. wllastor. tennluouru. At Fashion 18thSt, Cllr'13·7'187eve
1947PortCardJ/f * * 640-~4 RoydS..itHMohl ~ '*D/W paUo.lodrt,_ fllwl. Jamboree 4'San SlNGLEGARAGE 3fJs::hri::di~:· 92t4~ 4 br. 3 ba. ram rm. 3200 2M>N~ BJ1 vd, cr.1 2 Br 2 Ba, Uke new, a car ~~!9t»,::'::C~ •. '°i'f14~:.if'o0 .... ,_~orat«•~ ... ~ .. .,,
2 BR de sq.ft.1"4SantJago, N.8. -""" 1ar. wqher/dryr. ~ ·-.. ...,. ·~ .,...........,
• n, vaew.$600. lc6oa SlOOOmo.Agent •• SU·S032 mo. 759·1131 ;49'·21181 iubotwU.allpd. ... -------• 27 Montanas Este You are the winner of 2 SUS CASITAS •Adutta.oopeta. 0 Eut CM. dbl. Gar.
20UPortWeybridge freetlek~worthll•to f7!lO 3 br Condo. C1s to Ni<-ely furn. large & BIO coiy lbr, lrpl, pool. lBRIZSSmo.tomo. BACnROJ APJ Slorage only. S75. per
5 Bednn$780/Mo HOLIDAY o.-. ICE h 1hton JsJand. SIJort small l br. Adu.Its, only, 8ACl/maniecl cpJ. No 2323 Eldeo Ave. CJ(. ALL UTU.S PD! • mo. 64S-0733or631·1956
atlhe termonJy.7~-7 no pets. 2110 Newport pets/ctuJdSJS0,640.7030 ...__ JOO' from the ocean. Offlul..... 4400
5 UNITS ANAHEIM FtNa HOMI Blvd. Luxury lbr w/mloi ocean Priv~ bach. ~v/ref, some Semt-rurnlshed. Avail
COSTA MESA CONVENTION BIG CANYON. Abiqlutc-HwttflifJ• IHch 37 40 & Jetty view,, only stepe furn. No pets. 1 quiet now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. 6$• PB SO FT
~
I l " I\ --11 I \ I I '
]~Ill 11 . i., ·a ·.·1ae1M11
.......................
Two 2 bedroom, three l CENTER ly s mashing Augus ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• to China Cove. $450/mo. adlt. Nr Wstcllf Plua. nty, '230 per mo. NQ Hl7W~tcLlFF·NB tildroorn units in good Dec. 27th-Jan. Isl. Plan. A masterpiece of New Ocean View Bach. 67S.!SM fl75. tJtll pd60-0538 Ft~. CaJI: Sue at AGT.Ml·~
.. ntal a rea. Seller Free Tlcket.s &ood for dramatkdesiitnw1thun· Inc. utll. 848·8300 <Mike> ssS·'1707aoyttoie •---------
motivated. lalboa,enint41fo 3%07 Dec. JO t h or 3 1s t surpassed golf c:ourse 811,.s.a71 S'l2$per mo. JBr. 28•· ni ce. large, 5460 2 Br, S23S &$250. No pets,~~~~~~~~~ 1501 WHtcliff Dr. JJ :I ....................... performances. Call \'lew• 3 BR • den lno. 719 Po1n1tettia, teens 0 .1'. 360 Victoria. =""nanc:l·atc•-
Pl-•-3 ~r. ~Ba, dbl gar. over cla.1m your tickcts. u .... 11 .... GS&CO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------•---------• Ba.car.priorityto1mall Offic.Space Quall l ? 642·5678, ext. 333, lo s7951~tonth . "' . LCICJlnG lhoch 3748 673-2099 631-2177 BAY FRONT. lae 2 Br 2 ... ...
-• sned lot. Jmmar. nc .-.-" l Br. $230. 311 Mesa Dr. boat alp. $600. 833·9'42 CallonSileManaaer ProplPrti•a pets. Leaiie SS25/ mo. lit * REALTORS 640.5560 LAG UN~ BEACH MTR . Cotta MHa 1124 Avail Jan tst. Adults, no evs. <7l4) &U·3111 exl246
7S2•1920 1213)4 17-2410 3 BR. 2 BA. """I. ("'need INN. ~/wk. S2.50/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets.CaJl642·1694. 1---------i---------
1.&000UA1Lst.NIWll'OllTNACM """' " T~IS&llACH Maid Hrv. color TV, COSTA MESA -2140 bec..ti•eRowlK
--C:O....cW M• l.222 yard, 2 car aar .. clO!ie lo heated pool. <714 > Thurin Street. Brand --------· * • ts Urul.s, Bread & Butter. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.c.:hls & sh.Pt>. $395/mo. ~ Ar 2 Ba. Newport 494·52~. 985 N. Coast new deluxe 2 bedroom EASTSIDE DUPLf!X-2 Ole apace In Newport-
A nahelm, Pride of a BR, z ba .. beamed~eU. l:.t&la.i.t.673·4545. Shorh home. newly Hwy units. Lovelv an•clous Bedroom, pri•ale yard, J..DWtriodis Airport Area. RecepUon,
ownenh.lp. $19$,000 ask· den (rpl SS2S painted & decor'd. IMO --·-------, .... V. block to sboppblg & 25261 o..ttewt phoM 1erv., conference i~g. Submit all oHers. 4 BR, 2 ·ba., frplc., new Bi~e to bch from this IHc IJ'lO. 640-2981 loguno Miguel 3752 }::tiyhormoo~~~!~w/~o~ bus. Mauire adults. 110 ~Hlls rm, lcltch, secy serv, die· Call 962 2456 Cums Jn luxury twnhm w/v1ew or --••••••••••••••••••••••• -y wt r tatiog & copy machJne. tm ts. • carp. S paint. $600 lites at nhe. warm rrpk. NO FEE! Houses. condos. . . Q U A I 'L P L A C E pets. Refer. $250 mo. au are the nner o 2 From $290. (114)7S2·'117o vea en 28Rapt.C3thedralceil, Jacuni, pool. dbl 1ar. dup l exe s. Renla l Scentc .v iews, hi"ury PROPERTIES. JNC. Qu.ail Place Properties, lreetidtetawort.b$14lo
Cost M 0 -t b ad bright&airy.S3!1S Avail now. $19S mo. PavlHon,67S·4912Bkr. ddult ·~·furn & unf. (714> 752-1J20otS48-8553 Inc. (714) m.1t20 or HOUDAYOHICI ~·-1sums a esa °"3u Y. re SEA UON REALTY 2l3·926·2890 Near Regional Shopping flvenlncs or weekeods. at the -"• &butter.12 Unlts.Shows 873-5354 ' 4973388 LuxuryCondo,3bedrm.3 Center. Healed pool, R•....,.AL AGEN .. ON S41·&JS3 weeke•da. ... .. AHwnu Beautiful bldg. gd potqiual. Amenltlet · j · N All ~'"' • PteueMltforWanda. """ .,...... Personalized phone cov-incl pool, aJI units furn Re ally ne.at. 2 br, 1 ba, bath, deo. walk lD beach. acuu.1. r. corner cia PREMISES SAT &SUN. CONVENTION vi ~kln~ ,.· .... c. 000 "··bmit. J Br house. crpts, drps. ow. c ... •, klda/o.-t OK Pool, ten nit. $650/ mo. Pkwy & Paseo de Valen· C"""'"'•R eraae. secy Mt ce. cont. -""' r1 I s c.oo ..-,,_ a -· c.1'1£1:.. room, xeroit & more. of ers. Cuna lnve1l· ,,,.~~P,,,.,ilce . " . m o. $350.~Agt.nofee. Avail 1 inos. lease Ask eta. West Side·lBr. blt11s, Dec.%7th-.Ja.n.lsl Easy frwy access. Near ....., .. ...,. ....,..__ forJa1.A&ent.6'4-7270 ALJCJAPLAZA drps 1225 mo ••ail --Ti_._•-ood f mcnl.3 ...... -~4-· 2 br w11ar. S260. Cpt,. &VJu..A.G& 2 BR., 1 Ba duplex. CpU, • • u-"ae-I or So. Coast Plan. From VERY cozy 3 Br 2 Ba. 2 Water pd.· 2710 "A'" 581,!om Sll-61.30 drps, refrli. stv., encl 1+78 599 Hammon. Dee. 30lb or 31s t $22S.979·2l61 4PUXC.M. 5ty home. Wood paneled Delaware. 636·4UO WALK TO BEACH I gar. No pet.I $%70 mo. _541-__ 13_13 ______ perforniancea. Call ---------
F.xcellcnt rental area. J.J LR & Mstr bdr, fplc. l-Spm & tcnnii.. Ex cit1'n~2 Sorry, no pets. 646-1246 New 2 br, prdeq patio, 642·S678, ext. 333, to THE EFFtclEHT B~.2&.ZZBR.JBA+ small yarddbl gar.ideal Story,4 bdrms.Jba,i.un.Mewport1Hdt 3769 J)fWpool.adul · daimyourUcketa. ALTEAMATIVE
bac·h.$149.500.640·571 1 loc. $550. 759·0599 aft 4 Br P~ Ba.1 BLOCK TO det'k & atrium. &;75/mo .................... ,... FoxllolowVJ•• J29Av~~ .. -.~..a994 * * M
TIIESTArtNF.SCO. UP~f BEACH, atrium entry, be. S2l \V. Wllsone46·:?0tO ~ o. to mo. rent Incl:
• . fplc. erdnr. S-195 mo. PURNOR UNFURN LAMAMCHAAPTS Newport Shores. 4• Br, Rec e Pt . s e r v ., \."~~ 5 : ~WC 1~ ~~16 J~~~~":a~~~~·:r~~~ ~~~~ ·199·1~7: 983·8377 _ ~ ~ :E~ ;,l~ bo~t edo~k~ 8. •2br town home w/frpl Lge 2 ~garden apts & I ~~:'~~:Sosngl gar, :~:i~al~~~. P~:;.~e :a~j '
C"OMP1;-EX. Stroni:: o.c. tl-11).711(),t Condovacant.2br.2 buth. :! Story w/4 bdrms, tam t~e •Lge'!'1i~~~e~~j;arage br twnhse. Ds hwhr, · serv .• underground prkg
lut:. Unit.o. c.:ur renUy rent· ---d ishw11i1her . range & rm. din rm & pt1, al'Y Pool 1 11 bltns. encl. gar. gas bbq. $430. 3 Br, 2 ba, encl. gar . & more in Newport. ed . P rice Sfi24.000. 20r,1 ~1 .frph:,hd'4dt1rs. oven. Cpti.. drr~. pool. SJ2001 moll.<· &jacun ova · PoolGaspd.178ScoUP1. Blk tobeach.Balcony,no THE EXECUTlVE
Own er. 83 1·7:l04 or blln bk1•i.e. $325/m o. pvt patio. SC'curi ty LWO NORU b\!sl loca· 6'2·5073 pets. SUlTE,640·M70
195-5906. _ ~~~~;. til0·197o. ~ves SJ2Slmo.5S4-t 332 uon. Exec. 2 Bdrm, den. BIG! Wlolaad Vjllage O.OPobtt 3126 TSLMgmt 642·1603 00'..,...... d •COSTA.MESA• E/SIDE Sl'!CIAL Sharp. clt'an. Jbr, 2bu. inmg rm N~w 111 & out 8U Paulanno ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 3br, 2ba apt.. Sun· Deluxe office space w/
''UNITS 1'hill ls a charmer! home, crpts. drf)I!, bltns, S'.100/mo. Beautiful, new, adult Panora.ma view. new cln deck, 2 blks to bch. SJ2S, b ,., r
00... d 3B~.2ba.,den,Jrrplrs. dshwshr,gardropener, ON LIDO. Special 2 apts. Great location. 2 2br,2 ba + dea4·plex. mo. yrly. 204 43rd St . ::A.8!·.,<>;~~~tJ&:sqft. 1 '0 occupie !! Great Patio. SS25 Mo .. y"arly ... '50mo.Evs"""•.A...... bdrm++. Glamorous ~•s.2 1·acu.ulS. No-· M -1097 MLl~A .,..,...,U'Mo buy, mw.t bee. Call for PauJ MarUnRJtr .. ,,.. ""''MoU! ludeaway.SMO/mo GREAT RECREATION: MoveUlilllmediately .... -. rr-· ~ . _No._Colta ___ --.. -5-rm--803-
moreinfo. 6"4·1383 a75·562l 2br, l ~ba hae. Frplc, ON ....t..~ATER. Fabulous Swimming. s aunas. 2 1 ~lbapt,1arage, New Ir to.el)' duplex, 8 sq ft 13a1 m<> 4C2 sq ft ----------1 fnc'd yrd. $HS mo. VJr;w 2 Br w/beJut de· health cJubs. billiard6. Bac:betor$22$-SZ4S 1 ~e to btach. At Dana bdrm, z ba. Npt li,U Jg~ ~fe siss· mo. Ali -~ Cod•Mn« 3%24 962·7781or546-860'J ~~ft.noise. night·lightecl t ennis 1Bdrm t21SS427S Pouit493--0075 =~~o. 645·2111 or al"OUAdlloor,ltoftt.png.
9UlllWn 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• courts. Pro & pro shop. 2 Bdrm $29~$32$ · li/C ot bid t "'olf dn'v1· .. d range, party 2br, ll.f le modem. All nu • pr • f , e c • .JifB> NMOUM!lt:A4.TY WottrfronfHomt1 .. ..., Rental Office appl.lAwttedgar,cpctlc ATTRACTIVE 3br ~DOO I~ 6';S:S1e1..... CGl631·1400 ~~· ACTIVITIES : Open0ally9-8 drps. $295/mo. ~~ .~cpta.drps,bltm .... --.. -... -.... ---.. --.-45-0
Fulltime director. free TSL Management Eves. fl'jle,-1 ~ gu. nr. Hoag ... ••••••••••••• .. •••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
RNISHlD LOTS
!\Ix Iott ready to bu11d.
CM(lfc..ty trt1,1rir 2sso ....................... --------~!
Suoday brunch, BBQ's, __ 7_54_--008_l_or_64_2_·1_603 __ Hllfttis9•leecll ll40 :t:'::.=Ad.uJw.no 4D&UllOFC'S
trips, parL1es. sport ••••••••••••••••••••-• ' .~ Ooof. rm., teat 25. all
toornament.s & more! WlSTIA y n•UXIS SHARP 3 Br deluxe beach XTl4~GI111 paneled. am. wbse ln re-
BEA UTIFUL APTS: COSTA MESA uniL D/W, frplc. patio, Stept to beach. up· ar. l or 2 yr. lease. Lake
Sing1es. 1&2 bedrooms. BRAND NEW · i'r· Ava\1960-235& graded, bllns. 831.0167 Fores t are a. K ent
Furn. & unrurn. Models 1 8 P'ro S28G ..-. ~ Harluns. ~n daily 10 to 7. Room· r m · RA'-"'"" " SUIM.WI 714~·9393 2 Br P'rom $305. 3 Br apt/condos, conve· Br b l •---------mate service avail. No 3 Br. 2 Ba from~. nlenlloc, s units avl. '400 ;_,10• 2 , ~~rprooc, mcamraat· Approx. 400 sq. ft . C·2. Sub·le~, no dorloeil ~· lcnse. requ1 red. Sorry. up. 964.1507• 540-17$1 , You u;bave lut mo's AJC, at 130 E. l'Jlh St, •q_uqed .-Vall. iqa"'41. adults only, no'pets. Beautiful new 3 unit $1.'iOt mo, Doyle548·1168 3Z42 .~S·~U Bkr. Oakwood l>ulldings. Xlnt locaUon New deluxe twnhs apts Jg rent ft clepoett. JusUffS. \Air.~ CLIFF Garden Apartments hear So. Coast P laza. 3br Zb.a tplc bltna WD :=; ~ f 1~ ~oura. l S280 lse. Store.Office . ..-. '" Children welcome. No bk.up paUodbl attach car ft r · mme · 960sq ft under aor. 19478 4 BR. 2 . , fplc, fenced' -::O~in~~ pets, Reo&al office.,, ~545-380&.'63-4214 675-410• · '!!· BeacbSl.HB.842-2&34 yard, fruit trees, 2 car 645.0550 daily 10.s. 840 Bakers.&. I s.a-lifla 3176,_ _______ _
gar .. spacious. $600/ mo. .....,.... leeclV's-ttt blk w. ot Bn.tol. 1 BR. pet OK. '220 mo. aa8 ............ , ......... . ___ ...:;..., _____ , 14t & last. 67J.4SU. l700 J61'1. St. 557·5215 UU!St. ~:30 Sparlt1jq 2 Br~ Ba CO!ldo,
3244 SNCIAL <Dover at •~l IM'. dlll ocean "1ew,
3 Bt 2~ Ba condo. newly ·~~~64!~·~81~7o~~~j ~CASA l&.AMCA qui.t-ae• ~ •• $115mo. 8'3M7» (714) :=r~:~~ll,~anl.1 -..... t.,_.vt"9w ~J:.=~~::O =::-•anleo•pl. ~ ~'fa~A~ mo. llO-lZlt •UJ'J Ol"i3t-3f71 Bluffs l·level 2 BR, 2 ba. BACHELOR APT. over as, no P•t• or r--.1111..1-
1HE SHIPVARIJ
Sp.i~ avail. Newly re·
rurbiahed Lido Shjpyard
area. Unique. exciting
locat.ioo; marine orient·
ed buslftesses. Ample
parking.
Beaut. park location. Al,.LUTll..$.PDl childre n. Call Su•: l'a-.: • .1 Uill4Mrl -_,..... JIH
1QO' from the ocean. 558·7707 or Henry : 'llCft•MI .•~ ... ••••••••••••••••••••
Stmt.furnlshed. Avail 642-9137 N• U'2 bdrm luxury 2~ Bt. priv. bcb, small
now! 201 E . Balboa Blvd. ~It apta in 14 plan. yard, new cpts, ~y. No
Yrly. S2SO per mo. NO 2 Br b _,1 .. 1 ( (rom S26i + tooW. ._. Pltl.S295.41t-2S87 FEE Call· Sue at •2 a ... .,tns, rplc, nls. ••t.trfalla. pondil!
SSS-TIM anytime enc1. 1ar .• bakooy. From San Dtqo f'rwy T...._ JlfO A Dlvi'iionor
Bluffs 3 Br condo. nr ~~~~~~·~~~ Laundry rm. $325. drive NOC'th on Bead\ to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll1rbor Investment Co. pools, ahope & sctiool. -TSLMcmt 64%· McFedden then West on $240. UT1LtMa.D ~mo.Call644·0l92 2 Br. 1~ ba townlloua Mcr~ddell t.o -SUwinCI Wat.er, ·aas. electricity.
OCIAHFaOtifT w/patlo. flO Joann St. VUlag .m4••·Slte Unique 1 " 2 Br. forRent S.43Ssq f\ofof. Wes1_~urr 3br,. Zba, pool JBJl,Zba,yrty."95 Sm.II ............ -UVENear1'w8eath! Com&llete recreational i17ce 1paceh &1• stor5 age~t w -rv. ~at o. Mr pd. STIPS TO IEACH .--...., ,,_. ,._ .... .,~ fatiUU.. Adults oaly. l u Ana em t, c.,. ..
"50M0.549-8995 ..... t-... & .. br pt -...,.. ~·--·· seoomo.548-1097 .. 2Br1houseunt.f37s U'I° v ........... • • DeautJtu1AftllA11ta .a • ..a. .... BAYDHORES, Channing w/pooUrJaeu••i. Gb&Wa\trPald. ,-~.. ......A. Store.31MOE. Coast Hwy., 3 Br, 2 8a home, bltns MS.2'91 21661 BrooklA&nt,BB -~•'POf\ ve. 0.-ona del Mar; S3SO per
d11hwshr. fplc, beam V.VhMA,h t6U41l -ru.Un.Calltoda1: mo. P,aulMartin. RJtt.
cits, 1 blk bay. ,S60. 2m1ThwiD 132-&121 644·'7383 675·5821 211·~2'108 Brand Qew. large ~ br, Beieh ttudio duplex; 2 Af tw• fW Milled IRdillfrial Rtfttal 4500 --.-------·'Deluxe Condo, 21" brll. i i,; be tMmhouse wffarta BR, l't M., car .• patio. wMwii1lli1d HOO ..................... ..
21A ba. W/D. Gar. PQol. 3776 room.Xln\area.$350. nopet.SS25,8CS-"82 ....... •4'•••••• ........ 6400SqnofindU1trial9ro· Jacuzzi.~. 552·4449. S. Qe•ftfe TSL Mtrnt 642·1803 2 BR, 2 ba, frpl, D/W, far. 'DIE EXCITING pe;;{ w/1800 sq Ct of air
Sharp 4br, ~ba, form a\ ;~.·~.:t1•_:.:•:;0•:::~·J~= NEW z BEDROOM $ 3 2 s m o . 2 1 4 4 ~ PALM MISA APTS. co otcs. 546-1653. 2956
di ,,.. uu .,... -· .. ..., "' .. Br, aa:ra•e, A/", ,..11 "· Brookhurft. a74'5'19 MINUTBCHES TO NPT Randolph Ave, CM n. rm. rumpus rm.. 4'14000f ••~ ~11. or • .. ~ _ .... 2'70olq.ft~ bacltbay area. 498-01~ an 6 mo. 64S-46S6 f ' of•,..., Bach, ia.2 BR. J 2 o o s q f t . I n -
Aull l11tmN. IUO. Laree 3 Br Townhouse Be comfy coiy beside a fromS220. &up. dust/Comm'I. 2952 Ran-
Afa hqlft with patio, iarage + fire In spacious. dlx apt. Adults. No Pets dolph Ave, Cfrf Ca 11
Uwfw1111h•• pool. Quiet ,omp&eJri All units ~Opel"' oClct l56Uleaa Dr. _MS_.1_653_. -----3271 ....................... Adwls, J>O peU. $3$0. r,,r •• ha[con,y GI! pat.lo. (S Blk.s East of Newport ·'I-Ht/ h•al J102 ..-i•11U.. J.-aclry faoil natl. BJ'ld.) ., ...
. .. Chlldnn OK. Leadership 546-9880 ~• ••••••••••••••••••,.•-Families, small ~ a.al Estate M2·44M •-•••••••••••••••••••• 2br. C»ndo. Pool. el\doMd 1 up to 2 yrs, 2 Br apt. ~all .._ 4 .. .....,
..... Chit~. OK ... ,.. rmo. 'll117 Wallace Afe; -................ 0,11 ... , 5005 ~ Qrive, $30t M . CM. •2838 Binn with prqe. lt' H••••••41;o9•••••••••H•• caltM-l@!t TIQl Mona ..._fll!OtE4_'
.......... t ~: etll :..:~: 9!'M'! •• Pfl~~'::'mlaf. ........... ,...... ~ilfo~ tBr.twwffl:llMia~ AM• ik lnlac.t.a R•Una1 aft•l' 7 loold
Love11 •Br a~ • .._ 1 . p1a.-. -.... am~. c.. fear'L nn. locadola • w/vw. Lib~. MISAPD415 '1st.-> tn111 loelllld.tll~. dlentele.
mo.17s.eoet ~·~r,"-. ............. dJ •Pin. aBr. M~V w\tb lettcb ... , B~~.::,~Y
..... P 1fj tul•. =L~ ~·,:~•:t Frplc, bUM, •:..=· =-J~~s=~ 215Delllar GM1l1 .,................ ......c ' Slitl ~ r..-ct. W '* 1 ' Dail '• II~
......_,_.... ___ T!"'"'_1 OcEANrlONT datlt . .e-Uarta' A~ •• .-. =~~hQJD~a TllAVB.ACMHCY
-...arm C.M. CM .. Verd• Orivt .._ 1144 ..-. Le\ ua tbow you how to
..;;...:;..;.;;..;.;.;.;::..;;..;;..:....:.;;;;.;...;.n...,.•....._, 1tart an .,enc)'. Traiwtl
I
.. ,,. .. --
---------•exp. notnecfflary. Total
t lartup " operatlna
capttaJ required, $80,000.
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Add IL.Build Ht·:.9iaPtt lt ••. H mnwr n ... C.,_t :I lt. .. C:.ment lt. .• WU"e t. .. Hoe n ... ctean.n,,1.Mew
... ll .. Pftu lt ... Petot lt...Nall it... Piaster it! .. Fhflt ...
.ROof 1~ •• l1mttscape lt ... Tit~ tt ..• Trrm lt •.. Sewit ....• ;SE RV:., ICE -._.DIRECT!DR¥;.'.~tuJl\I> Jt ••• Patch n •.. Pape n ... Remoaea n~·· 111
~=-· ~Haul It... Add It ... Plant It, .. Alter lt.,.Leam It .....
---: -.---,,·~--=---.~ ....... :. .., '..,. .. _-' ..,~-'· •• 0 !!!::~~ ...... ~-~-~ .. -.... ~~~.::~!! ............ ~r.~.!'!2!'.::... ... !!~~!!'.: .. rJ __ .. ~".!!J-..... ·-··· !~.~ ..... !!_ .. ~, .............. ~~::=~~ .......... .
96.JA.PlliluceS.•. Shampoo" steam deaa.
1U.aiia..a•S.. ate KAl'fDYMAH:Carpeatey, SUMSH9e1tflll.S Brtuwon. Small Jc*. YOU'NO~r &rnexpr HOll.ESA.VBRS. P1aml>-Plne le Solid 01l1'
TR1P-CIIA.AGES10 Cclor briJbtwn; wilt 'a.&l'.C..O.AJt6Add, electrical, ph.imblDI 6 AUtniuUaaaae•.atN ~ O.ta M•a II ln wallc:owtrl•S· Free =~=r~aC:e waterbeda Complee.llne
11112$5.Mam,S A cpUlO mlnbMacb.CSua pattoel.,cablneu, Oot.n.PbiNt·2'111 eleanha• packaiu rrw..m.n?Sevee. •tl......,.AndY ni · BofA. M/C OX. &r acc. Ro•onabl~1·
56lm ~Mt• bv, d.an no. ha1U15. A•I formlca. NIW eoMt. Ree SAH'rA'SSEJlVICE.. SpedalAgtd,a.&wan: PrafPllftt'l•Pt_.. . ;;,.,.i:.ortn.0. Tur1'1 Nwpt ·8~
c.,1 Pa v rm S'150, coaeb $10. drr t.e:._•1. tu MU w Pt k d Jl ,. If Bonded/luuHd Free........, tni a.-. 'k .. ana IOGll1
....... -.............. '5. Ou.ar &llm 5'tt Odar. Llc•booded. ~/ ~P!wta. emt.s & instant Mr,,1c1 ........................ Fr~•· ••l ;'r,.o~· •••.... · .;;.;;._;..;;;.~-----~.~ ... ..
,,...,__,. t • Cpl repair. U fn ex~ ..... . 5'to-952S•552-024J HAVE VAN. Will do Ute us..43111 ' ..................... ..
_....,..a r,,. H1 type . Do work myaelt. Reta .... .--.~~·· "111111 movlni. £xpr'd, reu. 1 '.~ lU>O.,l'OBLESS ~,cl~~~ m..01oi. ~WVlcS -·•••••••••h•• .. ••• HaveacleaabauMfortbe Ride 112...._ al\ a:JO p .. y_.c_.. All t;y,.. li..ao awaU. :r' c . Ctlalwt 1'• CALLSllJllr,•lllALL $klploader. Dump truck. ~Se'l'be:e.: wkd.YS. __,.SXU'l8ttJpt6 ,..._eat. 'Uc/~'d. ln· , .................. _ .. ')IOBSIOClll H111Ua1. tree work, ~f iZi.zan e, . fstGr715U btr$dm lt~•iU..,.diltnt. DOORS, w1ndow1 . Fort.he oair.Ua!t.All , ~ 1redtn1, demo a.le reu rea. • 1PtM...,,lfHllit , Ptl•lndin.lrtJlallor anytime
cablaet), abelve a . oc cJ:f:e peuooal l .... U~•ntrk: lll·u::tf 'Ihelnu,Mcutateg~arUn1 .... ,..................~l1111'-1"14ilt. IOOtrs blltalltd ra~ =~~l~_h. Pa cku11 aervlce. cabana C.W· Ucmm __.,. Qo. VOUR SATl.SFAC· PETERSPAJNTING Udaam,Ttllm.1"5 direct· Mt&basyra.Qall ~;j: --------1 lnl~ El.F.cTR~tlAN-Pstoed "-'-• 'tlONGUAR.7-.orn Expr'd ..... RatH. MlalAl!LS PAJNTING• iiiniida-•• J=========• .....,__,_ all phuet re-ri b• -.. .. -· .. ••••-••• .... ••• . Frei Eat, Call Gen • • ,, -.---. · Ct•.,/Cu.u•le • ... n .. t1 .. mate oo '?'Nit/pl nt trttn Dependable. oWD trans. m.oGt ed. ltoutff 6 eomm. S.wlllg/tJt11 ml't• •• ~·•;· paUo tco';:r:, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Ol'nn.alljobl. move •varc1 c11:! ~ XJnt refs. Kelly 55-4890 , --~.C71.s1Claf\.$Pln. -•••••• .. •••••• .. ••••• ~ree es · e ·CEMENT WORK.. All Li~ l'1a.4aS tawn~Utemo:inl' .Cal1Sat6Sunonly. PROP'F.SSJONAL Paint· ...._........_,.·.a.e CtS!OM llWIN<l Xlllt
--------•kinds. Rusooable. Free SPICIAl.OFM Ml-5163 ' • i.na. Int«/EKW. Beu, . ~,...,... quality alto alteratlone,
Interior r emodel1ne. ests.caJJ7~ PostUlhtlnataU.d ~~O~~=f W'Gl'trl\lll'eGOm IP'ICW,. doUao&h.m.1170ev
peneh"J• c:1b•nelsj{''0m c e me n t work $60orl .. 8TJ.501J ~ ~:!~b B~: ~tal: St.erllnisuver'. nae Pablt'l~t 1 busy A .. .,. a Wnn Mn 9ZZ5 Th !!P!.!. uc on. vea Driveways, patios: Gc:r•itg . e&c.a--~e.u.l7o3 ' JO Yra eaper. Houses, prica. Try freeeal. aat.ltfadioo l'IU· Call •••••••N• ... N••••••••
_ .. _,..._ __ , _____ 1 walkways Reasonable -~ Real.ala YacbU . .,.571J Stlic/lDlr. a1Upm.Gar'1__, Oe · • ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• • ram.le tUee, tltca,.na, Woodwork, all types, rreeests. s.56-0757 WEEDING.a.l!ANUPS t111itdtm1J 1 °'leave mesaac• fl ph. Paintinc. Extr/lntr. ~ ....._~ bathroom•, &i entrya.
cabnta, pat101, late ALL Conttete work WeeklyMalD&eDaoce •••••••••"•••••••••••• numberforretu.rncall. Pl''d booest. aoat. reea. ....... -.... -••••••• Freeest.Ctwck~ ;..~Pr!°m";,~ ~~c·,:e~ Block, bnck, 1!_ump ,; Freeest "2·180'l Wu& a R,EALLY CLEAN H~bnlnc. 5 1R ex· Ue'dNHMSJMv1 vr.tt'V~TCH TreeSlnlM .
est.&G-11a concrete walls.--...--: .... ~I It Landscape Main-:t,.~~;~~~bam ~~Newport area In&ertor. exterior ~t,. Fr!o=. S:~t38 ...................... .
Bwldera.136-9lll tenance: Mow • Edee. ..-~·-831MO&i I n I . S u p t e m e Remoule,• tr•••l•I· ~.~ ........ Asphalt/Concrete " \ree Full malnt, baullng, AlicH Houaecleanln1. 1_.. .._ worttmUlbip. C.D .Jack PATCHP~EJllNG pruaiba. P'Ne elt. Uc'd,
,.. • ._.Man wUJlay youn removal & cleanups. clean-ups, rototllllng, Rea, reliable, refa. Own ,::;:;.!!!!! ........... 911-71N A II ')'pea • ~I e e tullyimured&G-JIU
-..-1 R I ' F_ree Est . 63~·5078. Free&t.67s:s511 lr&n1.4MJ.731n'orMM871 W-"--•'-I PROFESSIONAi.PREP eathnat-.Call~ or m ne . epa rs Licensed .... , -· new awns, f..a.l ~· lo t.h• d~I too! ~uar wor~ · SELL idle lt4ma with a Rosemarte•a Houseclean-aprlllers. Iron work . fr PAIN'l1NG EXTD. Have 50IDetblna you want 'W'.a. •• a J>ail1 pl)ot
$1.62 .-JIAY.
Tbat .. ALL JOO pay Jara ·.:~
DAILY "1.0T
SERVICE
111£CTOIY
00 ITtlOW:
64J.1671 . at bigger savmp. FreE Have 11omelhin1 to aeJI! DalJyPUotauaifiedAd. ln1. Ref1, reas, own fountains. Llceaaed Reu/lnar. Lie. *"ii· toaell.T C\~adldo Cl .. lfl-4 Ad Jtiloae
est,MS-3846 ClaseifiedadsdoltweU, ~ tram.642-1403,~3439 1Jl-as3 FreeesL•71M lt..U.to5671. ....,.. • t-==:=:=:=:~-=~=·:!o-· ·-
'
"'C;!lwlty SOOS~.~.~ ... :.??!!~!~~ ..... ?!.~~~~~ ..... ?!!! ~!~~ ..... ?!~~~~~ ..... ?~!! ~~••!•.?!~ ~~~~!! ..... ?!!! ~~~ ..... ?!!C?a
••••••••••••••••••••••• D .... ,... .. v .. AN-o-r. Ufti~ #IOI-"' Nursln1 aide & so~ '* • Found tame bird, ACCOUNTANT CIVIL ..._... c;n .. """' ~ --" hselc •g for disabled fem., Seachrt-bch walk area. AVON EMritHllRIMG , Tlly AM.· Los Ancetea GUARDS Nwpt Bcb 548-1863 Exp P/ref'd but not ;~:' ' ~:rec~::;: 535-zm JUNIOR OISfGMB are~:a:o°:.':.·~M. f\Jll & p/time. work any LOAM PROCESSOR qulr' . u ve in or out.·
Minion Vl•io FOUND: Mao's watch VIC an.......... Exper'd in sub dfvislon shill. N.B. area. Uniform FHA·VA·Conv. ex per. P/T. 898-22.33 '
You are the Wll\Jler of ;: Goldenwest & ~arn~r. ACCQUNJANJ a.,a.. Mow wort. Apply to person, to O!UVlltY ~uni. ~ o~ '[;1eph req'd. Contact Cyndie Part1FUl1/Time. take or·.
freelicketsworth$l4to H.B. Call lo 1denufy ForAVOM Mr. Fuentes, Robert, Meueqer/Courie!' car req a .co. LaNler, ('114) 835-0S88, den & make deliveries. HOLIDAY OM ICE 84'1·5084 RB'llSIHTATIVES Bein, William Frost le 5 da)' wk. P/time am or ~P pay le benefits. Mu<Sn McDulfleCo. Ava $S.S7 per br. Must
alt.be fOUND: Sm Terrier mix, ResponsibWtles wtll In· Assoc.,1401QuailSt.NB. pm. Know Org Co. m.48N9am-2pm • . .u. ......... •..ar•u .. u.... bne reliable car 4c • elude eustomer Credit Best time to Mtablub m.31'9 blwn 8 & lOAM ._,., ~ ,.,._... ~·we train. Call The
ANAHEIM brwn collar, no tap, vie Ver1"flcatlon· and A"· customers. Ialerest.ed! ---------• ....._._. da p ... Ma .. ··-fuU •ime pvt B b C CONVENTION L' h I I nd CM> n -.. DENTAL .. .,. ... ISTA,._ ~-. ys. eraonause ........ • • er r tl. 0 . > r as IOn s a • ~130 counts Receivable col· Call "°'70'1 or. Zeattb CLASSIC Motorcyt'le n.><> ,... uracti " li t · dub. Benenta. Call Wed· 7S4-64'71 _, CENTER . 'l·l.159 re&toter, recomL Ir over· R.D.A.. eUg.lble, ortho ol-a . ve t.e ypang. Sun6'13-3515 ---·-----·-Dec. 27th~an. lht. Reward. Lost 2 M/F lrish lections. Our customen haul eog's., frames" ac· nee, cb&irslde exp. pref. DiDQel' House ex-p. pre-PAUTIME
Free Tickets good for Setters l2/18, F.V. area. are In virt11~~! ev~ ceuoriea. Fabricate Newport Beach. f! ~CllffVictorDr Hugo MANAGEMENT. s•-•v A.uy .~ Dec. 30th o r 3ls 1 847-6734 stale •cron LDC oatavu BabyslUar. my home, MIMl121 " .... -· • Lag. Pf)()PLEPERSON v.--,,., -f C II plus some foreign a c-Moo. Ulna Thun. z to ~ u req'd. from old BcbMon-P'rl.~SPll .Exec. needs p/Ume as· DriWl'todropbundlesot' per ormances. a J.OST: Ladies wide band COWi.ls. PasiUoo requires photos " diagrams to ~ ..,. ,.. 642-5678, t:•l. 333. le gold watch. Reward . a minimum or 2 years 6:30. CaJJ aft. 7; 7$9-0419 restore to orig. cond. ~·•L REC...-I Hohl nx "'-IOC. in wholesale supply, Daily Pilot to earners_
claim yourticket.:> ~-t· al v· w u.-3 ...... -p 40'-r-k "'-p.lnappt s" .. -..ullnc. 3 _11 :•opm7'"h··1.ft . Fully capltallzed. &tusthavevan or large -· 'X"n 1ment . 1c an:en college <Pftf• a decree> Babysitter (elderly "LUI· ,..v .... " n -·• CN\ "'""' • v 6GtS34 station wa1on + good '* * St/ Clearbro.ok. CM. and directly rela\ed ex· women or couple) to $l200 per mo. Apply at· &lns. Mustenjoydullna Airporterlnn Hotel, Con-· drivioa record. Call
I t ..... MS-'7237 perienceiDCreditCollec-supervise 3 children oc· Employment Deve . w/public. Sal open. tact Mr. Hannan, MAMICUllSTS 6'2-4321, ask for Harry , n•" *"" ti·ons. Send r-ume or ap· cas1onally on w~k~nds. Dept., Santa Ana, ad 54J.94ll. """'2770 1 Op fl ity 5015 Pft'IOMll 53:~ ""' ""' "" d ...,... · f/tlme for busy sa on. ~leyor Don Williams .. :.~ ................... ~............ plyto: NwptBch. 7!19-0503 pai forbyemployer DIETARY Asst. Immed. HOUSECLEANING Richard OUellette, 200 lfyou'renot gettinglJ.8'.~ Drinking problem? TRa.aD•T• BABYSITTER wanted In CU:llKTYPtST openings. Lido Conv. PERS,........_.~ NewportQ.rDr,NB Mus~':!w'"':~ployed. ;
return on your 111vcst· Call Alcohol Helplin ...,. ,,,. ,,,. CdM hme, required to Trainee position for Bill · Ctr., lSSS Superior Ave., Vl"'"lliao MATURE Woman to sit
ment, call Sandy llo:.s, 24 hrs a day 83.5-3830 CORP. stuyover nights at times. mg Clerk in Insurance _N_._e_. 64_6·_7'1_64_____ Em pl oyeea with or w/seml·lnvalld, hrs ncx-and free to work in my
Ajax Co. 837.3744 --l'-R-EGNA-NT~. ---Standard MemorfH 640-5143 Co. in Nw• Bcb. Good DISHW •ir.H-without trans portation ible. CdM. 640·7T4S, ima.U appliance buslness. ' , typinf skills. Salary to ,_ "" must be able to get to the 644-0'13& ot air treatment equip-· MoMytolomt 5025 Carau <'Onrl dential DMsloft BAKERExp'dorappren-ssoo & good company Wed t.hru Sat,Pl.lal\lrt.. of'ficeeach morning.Day ---------1menl. Mon·Fri 6 to l Q •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• rounseling & referral. An Applied Magneucs Co tlce. Call btwn. SAM & benefits. 833-8450 Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, or evening worlc avaiJa. MICHA.MIC/ PM. Or Mon-Thur 6to10
lst,2nd&lrdT.D.'s Abortion, adoption & 34QOW.Segerstrom noon.<t96-l4}0 . 661Qm~rSt.CM ble on ruJJ or part/time y••"'FOR ..... u.... PM+Sat9:30AMt.o2:3Q
k Sant.a An CA "'2704 -· c-T •tL -'"'"'"""' PM . ..,_ _,. mo. salary LOANS AVAl LA Bf.E eeping. a. " ~ "' Donut Shop, Night shi"ft. basis. Top Wages . E I d' l -..... A PCAR E 547 .,..,,3 <714) 540-3605 ext 213 w • .... ISS xper • n 1ese gas or profit sharing pro· Credit'not important. __ _ . ...,., n--'-'ng ~llK 25 •c Year"'. Full-Um*. 540·9525. The Sunshine i n~ ·"-ctJ t ._._ Equal Opportunity °"'uu , _ i .. ,. .. _ the t ...., • '"' Girl 1700 E G SA eng nes. n.:aP ..... , Y o gram, whichever you --1r.493-3102 UMD"'•VICKI E p1 M "' LOAMNOCESSIMG ...,arn n-... ~ mos l3SE.1'1t.b Sl,CM s. · ary, V.P. Sal commensurate prefer. No exp,. ~ m oyer /., excltin", g lamoroull. ----------i "'-ti " Out ~1 M ,..ERK 0 uAnir~ 11t• .... ~ w/exper. \.Al 1or appt, nec••••rY. Some ,• Money AvaUabl~. man.v C1111 GSSO«Je -highly paid profess. Day DRIVERS nvv.o11~-."'~ B · v ll .... _ I NB f I ran& resume. a ey mao.a~ement OP·,• source11, all project:.. Fortht N of it! IXQY Peasant .. o c or eve sessions. Place· u vno•r drivln• ..,.__. •-Partorful time. ......_ l La ds •-Xl al •-be r·•~ R al #-...... ~uou .. .....,, • -..Tl!S n cape, auC., ~uni es avail. Phone S50Kmin. 752-6052 Serv111g all Orange Co. Aceto" Bkknr1g nl s "" ne 1""· e ment assisL Good job OP· good, and you waal a ____ v_•-_151 ____ 1 1lll30 S. Yale. Santa Ana. nteniew after l Pll. it~ Trmt 835-7313 TEMPORARY ,... :ad vancement a vail. por. clean ru11 tl sqe Job HOUSEOOUNSELOBS 7lt/:5*19'1$. EqlAal Op. m.-;1. -~ 503'ir •MICHa 111:'5* a....:-t.er. Toda1 to.work T-~'~\...:YP!'. 50wpm . C:C.714/751..flt4 w/eoodpay.callm'·HU Marri .. d .. pi only. llO porl$aapAoyw8yCboice.•---------. -,., ....._.. """6"' •• ...e.....,..e • cuatomer So. Calil: Co c ktail .., ~ PASTIYCH• ••••••••••••••••••••••• on vanous accounuq .. contact. See Madeline Waitresses. Joe. 1'1922 J>~IVERS p/thne ff· children. live tn. MIDICAl.A'S~. lllu-Uoa. ..;o1_,,._. Outcalt Massage bqok~eepln& asaian· Dawson. 673-3130, Im· Sky Park Bl, Ste C. livery. Male or Fem. Supervise 8 teenage .....--~a. LOWEST l_OAM;iAM -• '1, ~1-446Z 'Ents. Work cl~se to pertal Savina.. & Loan, ,_,._& Ca9271• Mutt bave Id drivl ... sir la. £ape nses + Front ofc. 2$ Hrs a wk. decoraJ..or. Apply, Vlctoo . '-"'tfl! ~ home Figure ..... U YUJV .. -al Eiiper. nee. Contact Hugo Inn, 381 curt Dr .. Were .. Rahs Spiritual ...... , 1 .. · 3366ViaUdo,N.B. • rec. l9yn fsolder. 12.75 s ary. Judy,979-7'12. Laguna. BeachS..S Moo-'i
let T.D.'s, also 18»!· £1 Cu\l.P<>.S~l ~•'* .n~ef:d ~:~~~t Compan.ian for retired hr. AM • PM routes Oak=::mes MKSSMAD / Frl r. San menfch-f\tll.¥~ QranleCo. BARTENDER. COOK. lady , p /time, Ute open.548-0t70 ......,_,...__,
W T.D. Loans. Fo appt' G2-i~ , .. I . ·-Robert Half's C 0 C 'l< T A I L houseckeepin& &. cook---HOUSIKEEPER OffllCI ASST. Pinball• eJedronlc game . Faiw:;M~~c~~94!) __ O_ANi___;C.,;.E_O_F_P'mt ____ I .sots~::~: soi :u~~~:s~ rn~e~v~ew~ ~~~E~~=d." ~~=~·aerb to~ :~':'JI~= ~N:::a:.s flexible. =·~~me~~
64~2 l 7 I 545-061 l Btn nu.de git~ <14oce & No. ToWer,. u;uon Bank 24. Apply In pel"!lon. rear COOK F/C Bookkeepen t.<$1SK 3 da.ya wk, ftferencea, ---------i 963-3911 •
---------• rap :.ussio]l>. -iOAM to l•:l'heCltyoCOrange entrunce The San P'ran· Exper'd only. AU shifts. Des Ensr/Del • toSllK xlnt pay. Reply to PLUM~G • ~~end~r: ~~~ ~~g~.~ ~~~Id ~:h~ N. ·, 7141835-4103 clscnn 1617 Westclirf Dr. Good pav & benerits. Ap· Irvine Penionnel A1ency OauWecl Ad•J.Oa. Dally MOLD MAIER Experienced drain .. ·
A FREE SESSION W/AI> N.B. ply, Joliy Roger, 400 S. 488 E l'lthCosta Mesa PU~ PO Box 1560~p.ta beslf: "bu!'"' reciaton cleaner wanted. Earn etit.83'7·3744 ---------1 · Coast Hwy, Laguna Suit.eu.4 "2-u7o Meaa,Ca.928:28 '1
" • NI S400 t!' wk Call
&ll'AO <!' • l . llAUTY OPlllATOll ' 4'0 •• • • singe " mwt dvity • • RELAXING11U...,$AG~ APt M~ager cpl needed Assist. F/time for busy Beach ~ -----Hoaaekeeper wan&ed molds fOI.' transfer" In· 499""'621 lween8am&S .
A.rwtomcnwnb/ .BobJamea-Llc)t~ur w/rnatntena11ce. back· salon. 200 Newport Ctr c-. 111t•D FridayPencn.t.opaattor twice weekly, sen'I Jection mold machines. pm. -~~ Outcall9·9,494.SU1 ~i~or C~M~t(~~) Dr.N.B. Lim~-= e n u . ~~1':f!~'~~~ =::i ot i'~.,!rl f:1~~-~;.ork· PrinNowtinia~~·apppli/U~ca~' ••••••••••••••••••••••• MASSAM · 'MIL~ ••"'"'ERY WOIKERc supervisory skills. $5 hr, for appt. Beads area. s.Jary open. ST 05 H ~ .. "" ... _ Lo.t & F-.d 5300 FIGURE M_ ..... Ii' ~ .,.._ .. 6 days. Good fringes. Ap-Jil'ank (71'")593-25Zl AC WITC '"'-UOQI for Moo ff Tu• ....................... ~ W/traln, binde ry plyinperson,GuUlven Garderllt'neededforapt . l139BakerCoataMesa Dlibt•hitta.Apply9am·
Lost: Mon. 11/28. Seal ESCORTS !!DIDI 'J LEAD helpers, f/Ume, perma-kes tau~anl, 184"82 complex la ecet.a Mesa. lhwakeepef • .--.. T.a 549-3041 tpm, Pennyaaver, Ui60 Point Siamese cal, 1 yr. OUTCAUOMLY """'"' . nent P"illon. lmmed MacArthur Blvd, Irvine. <m>-...i ahifttnpstbame.CM. JDterviewineSaturday PlacenUaeo.taMeaa.
Id r I d • r bl J ll A' openl.np. C811 UM811 Betwn NilOam" ,. ...... tft llMLil'n8. lam-0000 6 ,_ ~ o • e ma e, spaye • 631·31 I 1 ..,·ama caec• -... . GENERALOPP'ICE :z:n::: Jloa.Frida19am-3pm RIALISTATI -~: =~g~~,:>ll~j~c~ ESCORT SERVICE ==~ ~i:; IOAT IUILDER COOi( Ut.e t,ypna 1c •al•. Full = for 2 &dWta, iwt F.qul Oppor Employer ProfeHlonat. licensed ·
Dr. Laguna. Beacb. MODELlNGOUTCALt ,wart or up to 10 ... MewProdllctU.. Part Ume. Some exper. orparttime.5S7-ol2$ I th. ~lady aalespeople ••nted to.-. Reward!! 4.94-9466 or 24 ltOW'll 847-6Sa0 miller Dayabilt Looklnl For Exper'd nee. Apply in pusoa. The ~ pref en 5VUU bome complete office 1talf. ~7al\5:30PM , ~ ... C~J-H· .... ~ Electricians Derby, 1262S.E. aruto1. tobigbwqes.~ MOTORROUTI Computerised U.Uap. .J
S ...... y'ilr ~,,,. :os ....... ~ ·~ Lall s GENERAL Daily Pilot r oute ln aenuoua t'Ommlnioar.0
• Lost: Female Puppy a * Anw .o11 • 1139MttCGe"9Maa ~u~e ers .A. Imme•llet• openinls full Newport Beacb. Aller· Advance trainiq.. cau1 mo'aShe~&?mlx.Gra)' mrI'CA~!_ASSAOE 1=·3041 COOK orp/Ume.Noexper.nec. noons Monday through forprivateinlerview. •
/tan l 9'1..--I t · · s t rd carpenters Rel et Shift ,.._.. •-• LABORERS Asel 17 thn.I 28• St!Mt41l. "'"id p1 ~-t rd I , ... 506• w . paws, wear n ervie ng a u ay Top pay, xJnt workinl I . '-Vrtwnen... MadaeCarp.. ri _, us ~ o ay ... -• .
1ng brown roll u r Sam-noon& cood.s&&oodbe.oeflts.<t Menu. Apply, Victor NeededlmmediatelJ ~~ay~gs$50.Gr'OS!h• C.tllwy21Crodlw'-·
Newport lights. Reward. •SllERI LEE• J\ton·Friday9am·3pm Dayweek. HUgo Inn, 381 Curr Dr. Looi & ahort tenn u Insurance ~.,ertJ 6 _..,de~ltr rU:::.ulr .. ed. ~~ 621 W. IM$t .. CM 1 642·2283. C-ertif1ed Masseuse F.q\lal Oppor El'l)pioyer AP PLY JN PERSON La£W)a Beach 3-S M'on· 1i&Dm1uta. Holiday 6 CaAalt)' Sec:retarY. Ex· ..--.. -uvuu
Lost: Small golden brown llow;e Calls. By Appt. DOWN EA.ST YACHTS Jil'i. ., a e a t J o D J I 'T per. neq. Xlal &enea. for ccilete student or 2nd Real Dtat.e Salee Peol>li ~
dog, while 5_. in left 838-6838 '100~ALTON,SA COOK r'el' f l .._ l101pltaJl11Uoa plaa FredS.lamesl.Dlurance income. Call &42·4321. wanted. Up to eonO'l ...,. .mEMBl.EI' . · ie • uu e • a••ilable.siart~yr Bkr, Lac Btll. Call AskforCirculaUon. comm. apllL Hwpt Bch .i eye. V1 c Talbert & Guy 29, 5'9", heavyset, &>at operators, 20 ton 10-broiler, Cllll btwn 1'1ill Maurine Bradley, 131.GIOO . "".. Beach. La.<1t seen Dec. O. but l0tiing weight rast. land license, all ahlfta lt-U'J>M,499-2271 . .-• 494·10&7 or 049·JOS8, MOTOlt,IOln'I
Reward. 847-1415. Meet nice gal for dates. T811g open. Write to Ad #93, C k , , d ~ .-j EOE. • DBJVaY * * * ~
LOST: Lt red sml Pek· P.O.Boxl148,G.G.92642 I~ Dally Pilot, P.O. Box ~oo a, u~ 11 tr To ~Iver large motor R••• -•TE ,il . els di . Needt!'d tmm lately 1560. Coeta M•• CA inlmum, •>'·n I t •• ...... ; Cllrtr' route m s. Laawaa and c.n.&.o c:.7aft ~ • aorese n u me cation. G.ar'CJia & Eustace I.Ong & short term as· mBl!lll • • • Ht. c,u Amelia's ,,.. _.,, • W"''Da "'louel. Must OPP~TUNITY .• crest & 4naln St. HB. MERRYCHRlSTMAS silnmenta. Holiday & a.taDrant.'42·9'34 5 .... 741 ... "'" -•
511-3262 •To wonderful folk• y'• t l' ll ~ n pa )' . Bookkee1>4tr, full cb:\[ Co9b overll. tr!ft train. <Acro11P'tom AD.., Ind, za:;:u.e have gooddnving record Progress ve yoa111 eo (
Found: Small female cat. LovoLo • xxu Ho~r.ltalbattoa plan Acct's pa1able~ ban D' I s'b w a 8 her 1 , Oran=Alrport) =rt~WlU tir,t::: =: ... ctes:::::i~·~~~~~ ~..r:.=,z~:=· :
Flea colla r. Vlclnit )' ~ lilvai · I r;.~ ~!{roll t prou1b waitresses, bosteasa A Equ.a ~ st.up kldlvtdul wist•· Por lnformatloo call expansive lrainin.r ~·-
RiverAve, NBfll.•9 PW1ottdSft"ficetS360 • ~r~"hl:.&s:X-:::. &IW~.be,IP· ~La blewrirldltor)'6.J.o.key IO<ttt?, uk I« Harry gr am over a 1 mo._ >
FOUN. o· s· Bel1t 1ur -••••••••••••••••••••••~ If poulble. P'ashlon Paz, 1Jisa1o.o Viejo. µ, GIHIRALQflflCI abWty.Appl71npenoa. SeeleJorDonWilllams period . Peraonallt
fboard · w/blue alrlpe, i Ialand,10.5.644-88a> :~n ~ilia Plan. J. Herbert He•••lf• Del""Y taught by an exper'd -
damaged, Bac:k Ba~ * '* 41C...SDriYe IOYS GotaLS ~~ua ~1~ Mature r•p. adult lor bro~errit"n:'.B;c0:· area.64~ ~015!~ 14M~ 12·18years~age. Even· See ~~~d~~ouae needs a,..,..._ to Rd. early AM d ellv. Must =~come. We blloq
Foond:rrt.bSetter.male. ,.. ~-a <Acrouravm Inf work. Obtain new ())unselorswanted Oat workiDUteolc.Varl~ty CoranadeUlar havetraos.M0-2751. to3Real&tateboardlai
Blwn Slater Ir Warner. Newport leech .. ~~Co·~1flfO subscriptions for the Dal· ~HomesstCM7M of duties.~-belprw. Janitorial. en. F"U NIGHT AUDITOR. deal ln all phases of the off Goldonwest. llB You are the winner of 2 .,... .. aJOppor mp oyer b' Pllol worklaC with an butwtlltrlin. Call~)'. time. Z..'cl ~ onl1; Eltpr'c1, part.time. App-Real F.atete baslness..
8C!·7266 freeUcketsworth$14to adult auperrisor. Earn COONTER GIRL P/tlm1 ,..U'79. S.UAaa•OeltaMaa. ly Ben Brown'• Motel Olllnowforaaapp&.
Found-SAMOYED. HOLIDAY OM ICI ~EMBLER TRAINEE $20 to S$O per week or farwkdJs&ISat. ••••• -· ~l'IHlll 11108 Coast )#wy. So. PAc.tc COAST ·,· attbe SANTAANit. men. Call WJ> -.oae m.-J---...~ Lquaa ,._...,_ f ' Harber •l•w homes ANAHEIM Call541~16. noon lo 5pm. (211) Ute tnlaa • bldtp•c. ~ '"" , W ..., ·--
area,NB.M0-18.n. CONVENTION --71.. fc>m.Qpaa. can 0-....t bllp.rPwml .poepl· Cell HS.HM lo~.!!: Pltlme. -.rte. t lln tleUTCLIRI *611;G4°'1fl'. ··1~ ""--"' f 1 •..: Se C"'l\l'T..-a Aut4aotiv. / COUed. Ion lloaa· r • II/ I • ta'YWy. N...,.n ·-11 .. ... ...., ... emae ... sh tter Dec.m:.:.i~ UL N.,, Dd&l1 s.aop Dleda • ~-....-AM ~ . ,.._ ... a.m.ana. an. 40 11( WHlt. • 'W*ff · · near Seaclllf Country Fr Ti ....... an.ood ·~ ..-. lal'J:l•a•.-•BrJ)IU ... 1111. TrntlMI•· UOI W. • •• Okab,.aoo. ee c .. .._ I ior ' '-..!:... . ..__..... ......... ' 01a•t u•lateaaace ~-.ltlB. -Ii..._,...., • . ---------t Dec. 30th or 311' °!WI .... .--.... --ODUrft'lll GerVPrWias .. '.JAlllTO&IAL,• la••· -..... ,. • WWWY&w~ ~
I l.Oli'l'~ Blue Heeler, bt.k performHCH. Call ............. ........ Pu.II:::......... 111aD.. H(I&. JG1a. OpetUg c:· ~ = ,.._, ih ?If l'llUNd t;lllalB A98 .. -
uwoct .,., s 'Ir old a•2.se11, ext. n:r. to Wttnb 1 •~up. awr dtnl.ldN. 0 1; llimad.cait: 1....,_ a......,... c•tl• '"'· ft VlJ• AOllWl• UalqM. MtaU Mii~ , • female. vie Kua 6 'c:lalmyour tlcketa. o atery -•ll'feotrt, II Ci\1"1'.-· ........ .,.. ·A 1 1 " • w..a.. ...... -.-.i.~,j-=-t !Q~ ._... ndl d"° cu& l..slvidum . croreu; s.nu· Au ** cbed(g-•• ·--.c.ir.·· · :.u~:.,·:~ ,--.~SIC &&n i:r-~_,.tor••••••••• dipt:'-' = R.ewudl ~ I T • ... u-tr.. atl('cK ,. CAI••• DCJVSllY¥tBN~ ~&c.tU.1. • :Pne. r·t Hta. , .. tu,!a IF/Umt,appl1blpenon. • .. 1!" .._ .. ·~:·'Qt"•· ,:~ . 1 t ,,_. ,~ ~-'· w..,...., ~ • ~t!'u~,.~ ... C CdJ(. , ::!&~ ~ ~ "111~,:~1\i ROG•-s•AltD ... ~~ ff~ -~:Iii.bi .. _ • -:<~:. __ 2 • • in•,· . • ~DJ>ll•~o·f .. Hoitlllat .u" !'!*' ~~· ~ e8Alii i ••·n*--. ""all. A"'7 Mt& 231>1 lap ........... Hilla F -·. -~ ........ ..-...... ....,.,"', .. _.,._.,ll~ •• .... • C111tr.1~·tan-r.DO ... -· hU 6 INU... .._ ---~~''\"!u ~NI. Jld.· j ::.:.,· tH·jlttt, Jll!W .. s~. '717'1·~ ~·w-.~-, .U! ffolt4ilM!I • Oa1blen. lftUrlf .. •"We•tmlmter. ahitt. 4:itPM·ll:~JC la._._,. U~' ' ., ·.CorenadtUlat ~ ••·~ ,,;:;L.e .. ~J ._.. ...... ~ .. ~ !~ "·~ "'·ilW. r ·~ =' '8 ,....,oo1,l at. ,Jl.awu.-.0121 No ctocl ~ R."9 ' ftrlD '8 Nit~.-. ..._AIDIS . "f' } --~·=~ t.. ~,:.:H' •• 'f..:!:'• ' -.... •: 8 t:. ·1~:,;.;,T. "!1i Poilmrm0a forC.L1IA. ::,.:-c:· ~ :::-~ ':r. r:~·.~ UCJSli~v.~' • ~~ J:20
5 "!9 ~ 1 Fer.-.« . "' . -, ...... llataoUa Ja".-Ul•Dt•> ~ a. N.B.. • ' ' . ..:,... ,-.-. ~ a.'-At ... " I.. ·. J...... NL I. ;.::-~::
h ....... -cat; ..._.!.~ 1.r a.ti ,c:.'if.S..:. .. .._.rr•titt•ll!ISpP. PWm. ,1uane.."901MOO 1'.*ld. uauar ... ,.,. . .._. 11 eotin•••• '° a.11:1t .1tut. AppJ7 ~r••'• 11ar-'" u1u.: v1c.1Hi a ...._ -~ '' ·:f•· •Ml ..-~-;--;;--awmo..!!-J7*i .,_ au.IA. w.,....~ ~ ""· ~ ftlot. tUJM• .. k w "" wt11t.fl!llff'.,,_.e ....,. "l
Mmoda.1••11 , , ..._. . .!. ., ... ·p '"JTtlll ! ~~I'• :~;~=11-o -' , •. • "i"& ----1 ,,0. ... •-c.ta II-. P••• l.ldo :.-.. ~ ~.i!
twftfft. • •• ,_ --,,,. •• .r-1"/1.•_ 111, :ii. .. , .. .. .... _,. ...t. .~ .. \ lllila,CA.-... a...~-" ............. Ala . r~~..:· 11.U~-· · ,_ ~. ~ ~ ~ • ,..m;, 11 M..~ ~ li '1t:l t:"~ai tD ·• ~f.: "!"' ~ ··~ p 1:... -'"-·f· --!"?.!) ·K•1
..-"'· " '' :.it11i9. c.u ua •ila· :-f.l:i = &.,!_, :111 • ~ ~ ~ 91 I:"'~""! r 1 ~ ... • ... , .. .:... .,.,;:, .U:• ~-.WIP.J 1'91if~~"jGai~wall& S IOllMiil .. _:__jjdt~ ....... ~ .-; •• ••-·-:r~ 14 ~ .11 in~,,. ..,. ~,~,If ,, --. j !.. --. , •• , ~,.. M. !!!IJifmlC1N~',..,~-:; ti:J.me .... ,c:11~-./~
.. ~~~~--~~-:::1; .. -•• ,lj;h:.!'.;. .• .,.~f,=.'-"'~...,_-~···~ ••• :--~ ~}-1 ......... e. ''··"""'""' ..... :~-,-,:;~ ·~~~' ,.,,..,_. ·"'-~'I; -.--~-... ,_.. ~-~ ---
' I Ii' I -·
.• .. liOlll•o..-11t.;;;v-."'•L•o•1------w.-..90n-..-az ... ,.· ...... o.MCe_..,.... .. .-..rioi•., ... 1m--. ~=: !!!.~ ~ ............. ~!~ ~-.-L .. ~! .. . ~ . ....... w.... 11 ...... w.... 7t w-.......... .,,.. II OED ........ •o• Pi..&O.;•• .... ~·· : ... -... ··--. ·-.. ..=:_ ... _ ~~~~ m 1:1~i.::::'': WA.MTED ...................... ....................... s.... ... ,
llJ "' w. Warner DI' ........... fecll.11MrltcWm·S98 TOP CASH DOLIA\R w .& ~o Baldwln Electro PlllDO, _ ...... -......... . w~ • M...i-8 ftta All '79-$1 p A 1 t> F 0 R y 0 u Jt A" I .. "1nt cood. saso. Wkdl'JI veral ..... wal tOIOC' ol~_;. Boat TdcpboaeSalt\ a a. old JEWELRY, WATCHD;, TOP CASH DOLLAR 640~ Eves a. wUda TV'S.•t&qp..SlrSTV. ina back~ belotul SALES TIMI . 10-t P'Cr ~~/Rcftil 1::1~.A~,~~ ~ota: ART OBJECTS, QOLD. PAID 1''01l YOUR 84M1SZ ao52 Newpon 8ttd. 91,
Mod rH•arn• to )I?: Urucaue retall nutaery ON THAT wnan:«-tsr.at13 rpe.yddlwts./:i~_;,~;~:r ~\~~&:u~~R~,~~: ~~EJ-~~J't~~~. SACRIFICE -Shafer CM.&tNMO
NewpcrtBlvd. N.B. nds clua aat andMdual. ...-.ouun>o. v"'"""' 11QUES. M.5-2200 SILVER SER VJCE console piano. Excellent _~ __ u ______ F/llme_~ylnpenon. I ...... _ d p ~ FINE FURN. "AN shape. Merry Chrlatmu • * S 11 tt JOB R e c o o d l t l o n .e d dof. nu. '/Ill' • ay EM ER AL D R in I & TIQUES. 6'5-2200 for $800. 213/i96·8184 W..W • L.1.-la:.TIOMIST IOGlll"S GAIDIHS IU.W Refrageruters, wasben apayina fee & ibota, $50. o e ck I ace w Im a 11 'I ian 6PM _.,. ~1 conv. hosp. Front 6000 & dryers. Freight Jllneu forcu ule. diamonds. Exqulslte~-LUGGAGE TAGS er . 26011 l1m1re ~~4:.i~:!. ~If>' 2301 Sbo :lda.qui.D JUllla damaged & Model Home 552-9247 tings. 631-1328, 631-1314 from your business card. ANTIQUE ORGAN S.. ..._ C_..•I
Corona del Mar BUOQJf returns. Guar/del. Also Dachshund puppy, AKC. 11..stodl ,075 8'ftd one nrd for each Good coodWon. You are ta._..... ot 2
IEC8"110MtST • new appliao<leS at ~t + male. If you want the :••••••••••••••••••••• tag plus one spare. we $*>0/ofr. 84&«?91 ""u!a~~y ,_.'t!I;:
homed.. F/Ume opeaina Seamstress, pay com· 10'7e. DUNLAP'S 10960 •ery beat. 6S1.a469, ~ Morpn mare, broke return per1naoently TUNING SCHOOL bu n-"' ""-
for sharp, personabl menaurate W/eiper. nn fs tM .... ht-Talbert (at EuclJd) FV. 548-2884 to ride & drive, blk sealed •Uractive tag A barca.ln priOIS upripts. at\be
PBX Rccept. w/varloo Sant.a Ana. CaU 549·Z4'1S. twtttiftg Ir fwt Mlfl 963-0721 OllQ..7 days. eldl strap. meeting airline some r eflnlsbed, all ANAHEJK oth~ ore duttes. Call SEAMSTRESS, cushlona w.a.O,...Co. We l~~~~~~~~~(m.toY• 1045 ~a::~::.f:~ng off) l.J), requirements. Pre· guaranteed z rra. COC~Olf
Irvine Savln&S. 752-6456. & canvas product.I, some s-••••••••••••••••••••••• l:&lOll vent 1065 & theft.I Por • 973-1809 Dec.17tb-lan. bt. F,,OE. exper necesaary. 4 days offer • bese pay. 0 Yemale Dalamatlon, personalized tac enclose---------...
RECEPTIONIST Jlr1gbt weelt.CM.area.631-3083 boCJOOcl c&o""'''•a1xlatt C_. •Mc*............__ spayed, 11 mo., lovea Ma h'nuy 107' ":.!,lalypaG~'~·..!!!>rrl;_ oer s..illgMa•• •otl t""::.T~e::: :~l:',.
llUI CGIU a • -~ peoplet68-12:53 • .. •••••••••••••-•••• ..., r-r-.,. w ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ndiv. for sm. architect.ii---------.,~to CJO along I Cherry La. QIAINSAW,M'' will back & trim your 1971 SINGER. Free arm, performanu ••. Call
ore. Gd. telephone man ...-.. •-1...-Free yellow Lab mlx pup. Ptooeer750 tags. Or try two card• stret cb·1t1' ch sewing 642-5678, oxt. iai. lo ner.Atlractivoappear.& SECRBARl£S w/ow staff betMflh. w•-py,3mo.old.needsyard ~ , 6-46-3006 backtobnck. nd claimyoutUcketa.
hie typmg req'd. Contal'I Ho door to door. Our You are the wmner of 2 6'13-661& -'~--------·• PRJCF.S· machines. $ltS. Bra * * Katby,64Z-067S & TYPI~ ofc .,_,.Is beautiM freellcketsworthS14lo S2eaor3/$S • ocw. fully guaranteecl.t---------'11~ .......--HOLIDAY OH ICE Free Old Enc/Shep mix II "'5'"'""'•'.60""'. St0/moor90dayscash. P Id mabol 8' lledit REGISTRATION Be particular & get the & no H~. MCHJ. atthe pups.willdel.Christmas Ml~-oa IOIO 6f9l;&;;i.so;;_ &J~Agency,5'8-6US eabineUoratereocompo-
ClERK besL Work temporary We..,.._ ANAHEllf eve. 515 10th St. HB •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• lOor more$1.40ea. _anyti__:;,_m_e_. ------• nents, ret'ords. Qn tv &
Co1tstline Community
College in f'''>unlain
Valley. On-0111, p/t1me
Aft.ns or eveis. $3.188 Pe
assignments with the SOUHDGOOD? CONVENTION Anytime FIREWOOD SalesTaxlncluded SporffacJGoo4s 1094 bar. Beaut, caned. ~!';~cy that worki> for Theft Cal CENT Ell FREE: Jl'emale black kit· $SS/cord delvd 962·2503 NO CARD? ••••••••••••••••••••••• sacrifice $1'5. AA 5pm,
... RUllER DUCIC Dec.2'th-Jan.lst . teo.13wksold. Pvt prty rnustsac,2 Rem· Draw your own or send Fiscber Super11au,_645-_785_7_. _____ _ HO FEES •t Free Tickets good for 646-2:7 name, address. phone & snowsJds l9S cm w/o .)~~095 D ec. 3 O t I\ or 31st 1 3 ington elect. typeWr1ters. we'll make one card per bdn<tt •• $75. MK·500 Wood IMts Ii Mcrile
-performances. Call CUTEl<ITTEHS ~!~~a~lle~.:~ tag.Add2S'each. 170cf'm w/Eckel bind· .........
hr. Coal>l Commumt) call Today!
<.:ollege District, 137 €0~ off ice • ,\dams /Ive, C.M. Costa
Mesa. ca 92626. <714> Q overload
556-5947. Equal Op
TIME-UFE 642·S678, ext. 333, to . 964-1.252 Send cbeclc oc mooeyor. lngs.$4S. Ski boOts-siies ••••-••·---i-
LllllARIES cla1myourticlcelll. dert.o: 6"'.t 7 81h 1o· $750 $25 lcH!h.M .. 11•1e/
t~mployer. 557·006 l t;qualOppEmp,lyrmtf • * Alps ror Cb.11atm.as! Sm. SCRg.LBS PILOTNJMTIMG s:JS &. s4's. (;tr'r; le~ S.,Vlu 9020
Germ. Shep/Setter mix. ANSWERS P .0. Box 1560 skates.Size SN. skate bag •••••••••-••-•••••• 4 ma)es, 2 fem. 642·9733 Costa Mesa, Ca. 92826 & skate dresa·slze 10 '1S Mm:un' Outboard 9.8
Pinball Foosball Videos (childf·all for $50. Call HP motor W/gas tank,
RESTAURAHT·PIZU 3723 Birch St. NB ---------1 Elect Clas.sic range w/top
rrucrowave oven. $450. f'\Jll & p/time opemni:s,._ _______ _
1or general rest. work••
near OC Airport. Mw.t
18 or over. ApfllY in
person.
T T t D · e 898-277'l, 827-3910 2 orphaned 4'h wit old ow. rue nvers x· pups, t•, moth er
per d. Top pay. Ap~ly, 12 'CU rt Hot point. Harvest Cockapeo. father smooth
G&W Towing, 1000 Irvme gold, 6 mo old. talker 493-S266
Volume -Mince-
Roach -Beside -
REMOVED
An X-rated movie Is Ave, NB642-12S2 $125. 960-3836
Small bJacit'&wtute rem. ~~~~:!~~::t~~ TIA.VB.A.GENT Washer/dryer , nr new, puppy, part Poodle&? soyou'tanseethepeople
New & used. guar. del. ~·0138. . xlnt cond, hardly used
$.'ISO. &up. 840-2341 DUCK HUNTERS! We $500/BestoCt.673-l75T
have 1ocr1 of Blinds avaU
Miscell.....,s In 33 locatJons thruout lolh. ...-.
W.ted 1011 Calif. For lnfo. Call Mr. lffll,.... 'OlO
••••••••••••••••••••••• Drake.s:;a...a636 •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• SG~1~f~:~N~1·s Exper'd only for tern· xlnt cond. $350/bolb. Good home. 642·4615 on the screen who have
porary in Jao. POliSible Briggs & Stratton gas ---REMOVED everylhino WANTF.O CL...1 .__5 ... Tillermaster auto &teer· 2300S.K Bristol r11tme pos. 754-15.">5 eng lawn mower $50 Lovable cockapoo, 2 yrs, .. SHOTGUN. nns...... ,-Cl ini, alroost new. ~anta J\na Heights -------Days 642-5027, aftt'r 6 spayed, 540·5001 days. else. 642-2073 Kawasaki Jet Skis & Apeko depth sounder,
549·HG74 5<.'<.'retary-Top person lu TYPIST/RECPT 552·3673 644--0577P~.Janey. 5 PcGlrl's8drmset,$250, ---------1 Hydrocrart Oynafolls new, in box. <Next to Mcl>onaJdi. l \ttractive mr1c t re Trans World Rec., 900 W. 7W Dinghy 931~13 i;;·-ualOnpor L,'mploy<'r operali.: onc·~trl market· ' ... e, n rr .... f Old En"lisb Sheeepdog includes lWJO bed Minic.al 8083 ,.. __ ntJlwy NB 631-4860 ___ ;;;_..;;_. ____ _ ..,.. ... r mg offit•c. Excellent typ rcpt1on1st w/ ront o 11·c 6 Yr old Fr1g1un1re re rig. ., · 640-lTlS IM~ """"' .• .
b f J In a Ii k 111 s •. r Ir m 1•xper. & good personah· od cond. 15,S cu.ft.. rrost pure bred. 4 yrs, very Restaurant elp or ack· ,., "' ... loving ll31 9829 ••••••••••••••••••••••• In-The-Box . immediate per sonality r equired. IY tog.reel V1SJlors &han· frcc.$100. 493-6724 __ ,_. __ . _____ Fur coal, French rabb1l. YAMAHA FLUTE 'IV, Rocio, loats.Pow.. 9040
J!;xrclle nt potential. dle busy phones. Mio. 60 Ii d--8020 ~--a..·-• 8050 $200/bcstoffer. HiR Stereo IOtl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~mtan•f?t~an '~~rseshi~~caalse3 S I $900 0 C WP:\1. SSSO·S6.'IO per mo. cy es ,..__,...... 673-0801 XLNTCONCDalllT91790~oc:7 ••••••;•••••••••••••••• FOR SALE!!! ........, """ ~ a ary +. . 556-8944 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------SSS. ,,.,., Co.mplet.e Sound System: '77 Sea Rav 2~ ft . :;ipply in per$0n. Airport area 833-81\SO for --USED BIKES STOREWIDESALE ReCrig. rrucrowave, Quad , • 385Kl7lhSI. appl n.~-d 8 11 tr-... -, system, storage unit, GibsonacousUcJ-4S,2yrs PioneerRec.SX-1010,100 .weekender with 70 l20SBakerSL. . ~vn. uy,se • nuc. New&usedfurn. appls. misc.631-1328or63H374 old w/hard case. Like watts p/chanl RMS; hours. Must sell; boughl
2:?35JlarborB1vd Secretary-Purchas1n~ WAJTRESSES Cycle&Co.2488Newport misc. Wilson's Bargain new. $275. Call Andy Technics direct dr~ve new boat. Prt. pty. Call ---------1 for prominent Orange Mature persons. adult Blvd. C.M.'942·7910 Noolc. 545 &'814 W. 19th,l•--------•I 645-3576 turntable SL·lSOO, with Jerry at
RETAIL
CLERKS
Coast Building firm resident r are ctr. Gd. CM.6'2·7930&548·3262 FANTASTIC Pike.ring SX·15/1200E 54" •asa I d T · PEUGEOT 10 spct, men'b K ood ... ocate in Ubt1 n . benef1ts.63l-3.55S 20''white.lakenew.l\lust CHRISTMAS PRESENT co.rtndge; two enw s .... 1200
Previous <'Onstruction s:ic. $8S. s.ig.7001 **I BUY** Beautiful hand pointed Office FunMtwre & 110 wall loud liJ>eakers or
ex per. required. Type W A.ITER ---------• Good used Furniture & ceramic poodle, aray. Ecp,...nt 8085 L K. 7 7 7 A ; Sans u i
60wpm .. no shorthand. P vl ctu b, Wcd·Sun Dnn Gurney MX 20" bike. Appliances~R I will •H••••••••••••··~··••• Reverberation amp SEA RAY'S Contact Peggy 83S-300l 673-3515 · $6.5. Schwinn Pixie. red, sell or SELL for You. Only $35.846-8579 Oak plan files, 2 drawer RA·SOO, & Sansui stereo
UTOTEM SECRET••y $35. 673-1933 MASTERS AUCTIOM 1--------flreproof files safes. Ex· cassette deck SC-737 All tt7I Models -WArTRESSES ecut1ve oak des k, ex· (w/dolby). Components Con...UenceM.-kets For Construction Co. Exper'd. Apply in Bike. mens 10 spd $65. 646--1616&133·9625 Fend. Band Mast. Lead ecutivedesk&cre<.lenza. in superb cond. $1300. 18'·30'
HelpWanted Near Brookhurs t & person. 9-IOam & 3.spm Gtrls 26" standard spd CASH PAID gtr. amp & cab. 12" Wood&:metaltbls,childs 848-9498aft.3pm H"'RRISo~~ 1st,2nd&3rdSh1fl~ Adams,ll.U.Callbtwn9 Mon thru Thurs. $35. Hoth like new. forgdusedfurn,anli· spk:rs,reverb.wow-wow desks. Hot/cold water . .. ~ n;a
...:o ex per. req'd. We Lrain /\M &5 P:'tl, 962·6683 Guill vers Hestaurnnt, &W-5675 ques & cir W 's, 957_8133 pd.I. oct. box & cords. $225 cooler w/refrig. new 2 Sacnf1ce 25 G.E. Col~~ SEA RA y tho!>e h1rro Applicanl.5 --JIWlt MucArthur Uh·d. ----------499.2393 drawer files 542.99. 4 Consol e. S275. 24
apply at Utotem Stores SECRETARY Irvin<' Schwinn IO speed. Ridden bcelteftf G ift!!! drowi.:r files SS!J .99 Magnavox. color console Z327So. Maln.S.A. t~al@dal Office ol continu1nr: --·-ont-e Sells new tor Sl6S. LYNDl'~~UGWELDER .Judgl' s lli·back elm •. ~5.Xlnt cond.640.02MI 54o.6SS5
111 Del Mar ,\ve. <: M c.'<lucat1on m Saddlebark WAITRESS will i;ell $125.628·9348 _ ~dd~· sx!~~~le ~~~ ~?1~ LIKE NEW S300. elect rir lypewriterl>. 35 wau Stereo umphOer & 3101 Co
63
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1:rJON. PaC'1flC'Cst llw~ Coll<'Re. M1sMon VicJu Wanted, ex1ier. fo'ull ~ 't .... 1 tr .... ~pd bk 1 k ___ 979·_9621 calc ulatotl> & co11.>' "~l/F' .. tun~r. Gr•al • .. l.a•!\Jna Beach . Typm" &sh rCft'd Exam D ·' <'n !> r u Y ., ~ I c mu t1plex tuner. 8 lrac h n L "" m .. ~ ---------,... ... part time ;\pph· at <Jn SJS Woml'n·., "Colum· "· turnl:11·le·"ll arc built· "INK STOLE th ma c 1 es · · r. · Ch · l -e t $110 26 Th d b d Wcurcanequal ""I he adm101:-.tl'rcd Carlos ft~lAlurant.2!.151• "' ·".. '"' . wor Wholes ale Otfice r!smaspr ...... n . · rt , un er ir
Th bia w b:iloon tires sis. 1n11-plus •wo custom .,..,.,,. \111·11 sell f11r S300 ., .. ,. ""0 7 F uJ <off bore) '"I 01>portun1ty cmploy<'I· Mon thru urs 1 :JOpm Bnstol. CM •-· ~· • Furniture 204-4 Placen· .,..., . ....., O!'m a s . • .w to JOpm~ Frt sam -Spm -------~·1331 Wl"OU&hl aron bar stools. Beaut. cond. 750-368S lla; C.~t . 631.2777 or Panosonic AM/Fftl stereo VS s. all navagataonat
<.'all bctwn 8 & 5. ll31 9700 WcrdtouH MartOCJff Boy·~ Schwinn Strm~ray Sharp! 581-7446. Lady'l> 3 spd b1cyclc. near 631·2570 r c v r . Turn l ab I e & gear & ground tackk RM surERVISOR
Must be dedicated \o
good patient care. Strong
leadership qualihcs. l
Wknd p(!r mo. Apply.
1'"5 Superior A\e. N.B
6'2·2'10
cxt302. Stuppmg, rece1vm~ & m B1 cyrle , reai.onablc Sohd walnut rollt.op d~k. N!W $70. 12" B/W TV . ----s peakers. Xlnl. $4S. Sleeps four. Under 50 S~nET:RY--,·entory control for ret•ul • l ... _ Pets 8087 .,A,, .,.,,1 boors used since new. Ii ~ "' Jewelry operation Mu11t 6"4·~ 4S' &·r~ 1• .,.,.uut. orig. ::-~w $50. N~Co;vt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'""'~ wheel traller included-
Typ\llt, Reeept. /\/Paya ha\'e C'xpcr. 556-0135 SCHWINN I 0 Spd & cond.. Sl200. 64().82'()8 S2.SO~~l · ac Male CockaleiJ 1 yr old, 3· Alt/FM Walnut con.wle also full canva1. Cati
ble Combo. Good typini:: --STARLET S60 & $40. Ph New c u s tom made ---------talks. w/lari;ce cage, sso. s tereo w /turntable. John Felter at6C2..00100t,
& gcn'I ofc skills req'd WAREJIOt;SI': 9ti2-7954 _ wrought iron bark art 2 Twin sz box spring & 548-0763 . ;•I ~a.crif\t~ •S100."9(!9·51143_,,_S40-82 __ 1L------
l':ngincering ofr in Santa SJ 00 lo $3.50 per hr wtth 2 glass sbeJyel> & 8 mattresses. New Sim· after6Pllil · t\naw/full benefits.Call 556·8944 Bicycles. New & UsL•d . bottle holdc r s·S7S: mons.$3Ssel.2Fullmat. Pie9105&0njans IOflJ r~ 28ft.UnUli&eSportfisher.
SALES J1mllayes,213/.t37-G101 -ALL GUARANTE~D Hlghback ca.,uul chair tresses only. SJO ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• IALDWIHOR.GA~ 1 o-.mer, in mint condi· SUPPLEMENT WELDER Restored Cruisers. Engl (ne(.'<is recovcnog)-S35 546-0768 New Brand Name Pianos $2l600 "67'31!l00 lion Ii loaded! Cust.om IO·
YOUR IHCOME Secy/Get'I. Offic• ~ta<'GregorYacht Corp Visco u n l l 0 ·S pd . CallS4Z·Ol3S. lO%overcost. terior. pilot, A.D.F.
Busy, fast growln.i co __ 1631Place~~.C:\t CIC'nranee s ale, g1ut WOODEN ROCKING &•achMusic~nter ZJ"RCAcolorTV console. V.H.F., sunlog, outrig-
$$$$ $$$$ near OC Airport h;r~ s a v1ngs. Ocea nfronl Brown Jordan 40x60 oval HORSES for Children's 1741>l Beach Blvd. H R S7S.. SmaU B/W port. S.W. gers, AC/DC natural gal>
PA.RT TIME orcmni:: lor maturl'. am M.rchandis• Bicydes. Balho~S~ tahk & 6 chairs Orii::. Christmas. S22 50. Ph 847·8536 • 543·9824 refrigeration & cooking. TELEPHONE WORK h1t1ou!> general 11tf1cc ••••••••••••••••••••••• , . _.. pril·e S1H7,5. Is l $500 t>l2-7m ----bi mini top w/enclosure. SEWIVES d crk m l person ofc Anti.,es 8005 SCHWINN 5 .s~-d. 2~ · takes! 1).1()~ Thomas transistQt Qrgan, Nearly new super stereo new Chrysler manifolds.
HOU Must have pleas ant ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good condition· s .• o. Diamond weddma band. model AL·2, fd ~JK11· s Y stem. Bet :i max nsers & elbows plus ex
COLLEGeSTUDEHTS telephone voice, i::ood PUIUCA.UCTIOH ~-_ New Spnng Aire ortho. Slz.e7.S100.wrougl1tiron lion. /\s iting l"40G. videotape recorder. Best tra fuel. Call Date al
( ;u a r a nteed Hour I Y lYP'l't. lite bkkpnf?. Call ,11.""' JTE""S OF .. 'lNE SCU WINN r. i :1. ie. 16· ', queen bed set. Cost S300 . l>Wag lump SJO. 640·7814 645-2745 't" otter. 494-8131 498-2i00 Wage Plus Bonus. 5:30 J k " ru,. ""' "' !><'II S250. 673·24':?8 ;.1fter 6pm
pm to 8: 30 pm. Ca 11 ~· ~'.~.:!.~.:L_ _ EST A TE J i::w F.LR v. tro ini n g wheels. ex · ---"-------~~ir~~~~~~t11r:;;i:lji;:;f!'!C!:"'.T:-::;:z-.~-:J.~rtJ:im ~-4223orcometo250E. • /\RT OBJECTS. Al'f ccllent condition S35. Yellow pnnt sofa $250. 2 KINGSIZE Posturped1c 1 ~
l7thSt., Costa Mesfl. t SEC'Y TIQUES. f'INE t~URN.. 5-'.9·2332 __ .gold velve\ ·chairs. S25 bed & frame.
Our t'Ompany is ~eekm.i: ETC. PHONE F'OR IN· G. I' S h st-.--ea. 673-6799 640-3319
SALt:SCAREER an eotbus1asllc l>cc'y FO. & BROCHURf: tr 5 c ~inn mgrey.
tuture management op-wt good typlng & dict:i-t>IS·2200 s.td cond. ~7532 partunity for qualified uon skills to aid an ex·i·-----------------person with soles or panding secr etari a l MUSICIOX~s Schwtnn3wh1$11S.Man's
public contact back· serv1cetotheC.M. area '" lluffy3spdS40. Bothxlnt
gr o u n d. Co 1 l e g e Must be dependable & a ClOCKS rond 548·3625
graduate or equivalent self-starte r . Pay rom· Slot t.faclUnes, Nickelo----------
ex per. 3 Vr com · mensurale w /s kills. deans . phon ogrnph1. Boy's·Schwlnn Stingray
prebensive training pro-~2982 World's largest 11elec IM.otocross style>. S30.
Aram. Initial 3 yr salary t 1 on A I s o I( 1 rt s . ~9083 _____ _ ~nd commlslllon plan. Service Sta Att~ndant. furn1turr. anti11ues. Boy's lO.tpd grn 24 .. Jr.
Starting salary up to exper'd. full or p/t1'mc Amcn~an lntcrnallonal: Schwinn Varsity. Like $18,000. Xlnt fringe /\ppb Arco Stal1on. 17th tl!O'l Kellermg: Irvine. new 673-7677 675.48:r;
benefits. Call Tom &_1_r_vl_n:.:E.M 7~·l777.0y1enWed.-Sat. __ . __ ...:._. ___ _
Bradley 83S-&50 E 0 E.
M/F
SA.LES EXEC'S
Opportunity to get mto
business for yourself
without anterfenng with
your present position &
without capital inves t·
cnent. 646-7989 for appt.
Serv1c~ Station Allen ~--~-~-C~rcn&
dnot, e xper'd. Uay &1•--•-----t:vcs f'ull & p/timt.• Ap STEWAITllOTH
ply. Shell Station. l7lh & AHTIQU!S
t_n_•ln_c_. NI!:_ •AMERICAN OAK•
Service Sta. Night AUend The largest most com·
2 Or 5 rules a wk. Apply, prebenslve inventory of
Shell, 17th &Irvine, NB American' Oak Antiques
E.,,...11t
m CaJ1r. We buy dtrect & lliiilmilll~~ Serv~Sta Help needed im pass t.be savinp on to Sales Lady, mature, med.J'uU or p/t. Apply, you. Also, Antique $279.18
Halhnark Gin Shop. Hrs 990 £.. est Hwy. Nwpl ReproductJons are avail •CHRISTMAS•
lncld some nig hts. _Bc_h. ___ .,..... ___ -t atttle very lowestpfioos. •SPECIAL• ~1557 Localcid at: l.8lens.
~
MONEY
750 E. DYER RD. S.A. Jmll!M!dlat.e Delivwy
<At The Newport Frwy)
751.a922
Open Sun-Wed l!M;
&Thura·Snt.10·8
We are pleased to announce Lhat
this newspaper will run the
HOLlOAY ON ICE ''Find Your
Name Contest" in the classified
section . beginning December, 16
thru December 26.
Readers whose names are listed.
<some where irt the classified ads>
will receive, absolutely free, two
reserved seat ti ckets to
HOLIDAY ON ICE opening at
Anaheim Convention Center. 800
W. Katella Ave .• Anaheim Calif.
December 27th and runnin g
through January Isl, 1978.
You mar find vour name
h i d d en 'a n y w h e re i n l h e
classified section preceded by
two stats C • * > making you
eligible to receive a pair of
tickets tor a night at HOLIDAY
ON JCE· as guest of the Daily
Pilot.
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_._. ~ ....... t•p~ A*ft UIM Wedneedey. 0.0.mbtr 21. 1f7'r • * OAfl. V PILOT •
...... ,__. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••··~·...... ...................... UMd
......... ~......... tlll 1'f:a:l::11 tlJ • .. •.• •• •.rtll••••••••••••9••7•0·'· Dll.-' 9711 r-.1at1 t7IO ~.' •• !:~.'!'., ..... ~.!~ ......... .. ··-················~·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' ~-9950 --.. -• •-....... _ r ••••• •••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .. u ,,.,.I"' ... • d VetYo 977' .-..,.-mW 9920 .--.-r
I
·---.. .,..,.,.,..1a1 , ~-·~ t t ti I 74n s., .... anna. r, t961PORSCHI -'·""""'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -""-... T , vuu• .... a.eta 1 ree ta1 S 00 k I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -wor. •·~ >t•ur '14 ltom. s:w>cc 4 cy_cl~. dwae bl.II . $800. C&U l4 Qr roo o o r . TM71tAnMeN 356COUPI ORANCECOUNTY'S 173 _ WbtOAwilmcreeLXlnt .._ IY .=1"&7l40C'~·S7ZS modela6cotoft h ucellent condlUo .. WVolvowa,.im,auto, '•Malibu. Coodtnjlu . H!WIST w craft c ntc-r l'OI\· 5IOO mi. $900/bst ofr. ~ Alfolto.-o 9701 All rw-•• · wltb factory cbrom• RllH, radlale. Orig. New r•dlal tires . LINCOLN-MERCURY
aole. tuw.-r, pulµ1t al Mi.wt..U.&4.20'7G 4...--Drl'YH fllO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wv-T~l wbeel1. (0624). MUST O'lnMt· Must.aee. ~-S800/ofr.*·3oS3'7 Dcale1"1>tupisoowOPEN
Dua Pnl launch ramp,. 11 Yamaha TY· 115, Jtlot ............. ~··•;••••• Sharp AHt•Ua GT, super -' _, Sll! 11 ..._5488 '67 CHEVELLE. f'd cond. RAY FLADEIOE
Priced r1cbl al $.9,500. cond. •sootofr. Also J.s "' handhng cur,mu.st1elll Lastcbanc:o fortantastlc SADOLllA.CK '71 Volva lf2, Auto. PIS. PJB. gd. tbruout. UNCOLN·MERCURY '721-1668 Ya!Qaha~Enclwo&111• Cl·S'a, CJ 0 7'1 , 67$9500C'./\.W!o;orr. &G·Ntlor :.<wtncsonallremalnlnl VAWYIMrOITI AM/FM, atr,,UIOO.CalJ SSQO tt.rm. 7Sl·'20a at\ ltH8AutoCenlerDr.
DIMGHY $!15/ofr '91-2393 Cherok .... W•1oneon. So.-... •77 models In atock. U I ·2040 4fMt4f MU')' 6*89TC or 844-7211 8Pll SDFwy-1.ake Yorest exll
I' flberct w1lh 2 hp ''17 KZ-1000 L.T.O. Xl.nt =i: .. s;'::~,!ti'~ A.Msff•HHley 9709 '6' SC, xlnt cond, alarm, 'te lmpaJa, z dr blk vnYl 113R"V71NOEO.O
Johnson outboard both t'Ond. Must sell, great warrantya avall'able. ~·•••••••••••••••:••••• slereo, luggage ruck, \bed top, ldras, ad cond. $53$.1----Y"-----
ueedonce. $350. 628·93'&8 buy.$2500.642·0202 C:ap.e•dMtnlltC 6Q AUST IN HEALY must sell $4800/Hst olr •....................... &18·3'113. 776l Votaa Dr, ._ 9951 """!El.st SAuaaN\I\ Classic, Convert, mdl -·~HARBOR BLVD. &MH1l3 .._._a. 9910 Apt.l,H.B. Mitt._.. .Moats Wanted : Com· '71XTS000Yomal'!a,600 .,.,., • ...... "OVUV 3000.$2800Xlnt!675-8344 ~ --••••••••••••••••••••••• mercial Jig .fis hing mi like nu must al bof 540-6410 540.~21J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---•-tt•I •ea GT P 1 t i
Boat. share basis pre· u i 25 . s12oo or otr. COST A MESA IMW t712 1:.V ~~i~eb:t~4·.;~t:; '68 Buick C/S, good cooodndl· =.r.:: .... ~ .... 0 !. Orta cond.11>iitu~te~:i~:
(erredb financially 5411-9611 • AMC & JEEP •••••••••••••••••••••••Rot 9725 beetotr.5'S-056i Uoo, clean, runs g • '11 COrdova, tully equip. w.&13.5
responsi le.548-~ '7" HD....,. End"ro. 1500 TOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,.,.. llntbody.'885.~1 1000mi's. ...:...::::..;;;: ______ _ " _, .. 55'-fVNTINENTAL Beblt '65 Must. Blue, 4 spd. A~t.ntion boat lovers! mi, Jlke new, helmet. MA.HY 1976 FIA.TXl/f aii, y ratored. '11 Estate Sta. Wan. CaUMS-3153 Hurst, Holly, 4:11 pos1,
19» 18' Chris Craft '590.499-3551 JEIPS With :stereo cuse~t.c & $S.Wftdy1M-002 ltfreo/tfpe, all pwr aharp.$900/orr.546·5976.
Cobra, 1ertous inqu.lriK --only 19,000 miles. eqpt.'11QO.MS-5089 9 3 ooJy.544.eeo5 Sacrifice '75 Honda ;\IUSTSELL10 t88'7PF1>. '11' ~ tH BJk, air,, Con.... f 'al ~fach I , lowner. New
XR 7• -• t co d .....,5 JEEPS BY Bl k a Sll'V1 .uur gd cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• tr"ris, $1495. firm. Da"", ~ R--A/ ' . "• ,..n n . -· . CHRISTMAS SA.DDLllACK au pun t caueue. "'·~~-. .. JU ~';' 9050 ~t~~~=$2SO.Plus PleaaeCall 1978BMW•s YAUEYIMPOITS i~othool.eal, :C,,~~~mwner. 77~ .... T-Top 634-4343ore,•es675-8230
••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-8023 831·2040 491-4949 . 0 P C Pie 99 15 Only 6000 mlles & with a.•bil• 9955 SEE THE CHRIST:\1AS '73 ~MX frame up re-252CHARBOR BLVD. HERE NOW! 1 onche 914, like new, .. ••••••••••••••••••••• rac:torY warranty to July ••••••••••••••••••••••• LITES. la' Kelch, s75 <.'Olldg . new sprockets, Cost.aMeu Spyder8501970. red ron-many xtrns, AM/Fii '18. Burrundy, lull '11Delt.a•2drHJT,AT,
nitdy inclds all. 646·4~ fenders. elc. !HIS·lOl!8 COMrLETE vert-. New top. Xlnt cass, muat aell <213) power, speed control, AC. xtra cleao. $1300.
INh.,SaH 9060 'H YAMAHA llD350~. ·~h?:'1~rc::..:·upa~~ IODYSHOP , shape.$925.87H 78S 429·3860 1t. • , t.ape",:1';ctoryequ1p-Dys556-4467.evs8S3-8719
show rm cond. 1600 mi. S e •ooo C 11 ..OWOPEN Hoftde 9727 Pancbe"74,911TatfLln· ment c. actory maa TORONAOO-Class1c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mus t see lo apprec. up r. • · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• dla Red. Blk rim. wheeb.Cl78TCP>. • 1966AC.Goodrond.Call
WA.HTRESULT57 S750'ofr.Dan642-8S60 675-2181. DCB.LINT ..-Mew77 · Leatb•r. Jmmac. OMlYSf775 Bobdys714-675-87U,e\I!\
Sell your boat thru ....... S k 100 t ··,;; Ford Ranger w/cmpr HOMDA Cars MH510. • Hawpwftr It Mtn TI4-640-<t99'J SOUTHWESTERN ~" uzu 1 cc, mus shell. auto, a/c, 32,000 SILECTIOH OF • ,...:..,.... l!MBHarbor, Costa Mesa ---------
YACHT SA.LES sell.Xlnt7~~9~ mi.536·99&1 IMWRESA.LES Milt.HY ...... t7H OrmQe_.., • 642·07'5 '70CuUassSupreme.
FUJl/MEWPORT ,,., We may have your next •••••••••-•••teH••••• S.vliteC .... er &oodtrans.car,rulb · . ·n Scout II lnter'I. Great car In our inventory. c.ill To ChooM Frot11l *1 D£Al£R IN US A • '75 Corvette; 1Uver/ red, good. $850. 963·4405
DEALERS 69 KAW SOO. New K·8l. & deal! Must see-Must U VERSITY • · · 1976 CA.Dtu.AC T·lop, 41,000 mi. loaded. b (714) 673-9211 batt. cln & stock. $475· sell. Tratle s mall truck us9• t3od1:2Y0! 40 ,.95•4949 Ml ~ ROY $7450, offer. 752-7521 SSOO Down. $75 mo. uy~ 673-5710; 5'16·6728. or car + cash con· ., OldaMOblle CARVER SIVILLI wkdays 1973 Cutlass. loaded,
COROHADO 25 Honda XLl2S, mint cond. s idered. 837-9710 or Honda Cars • GMC All leather1 a~eo tape, ' 645-0758,644-6868 WESCO s:l>-6686 ft 5 ROllS·IOYCl cruise COllU'OI le all the ,.__ 9tJ3 $490. Trailer 3 bike 5225. a · Trucb tMea!Mwft deluxe ex Lr as. ~ '620LDS ~:,t_:~l~os~.n~I~=t 833-8146 • Trw:ks 9560 2850Harbor Blvd. :?.r.'AH<a ''<GNRO). ....................... Runs xlnl., gd. trans.
Sell! '75 Huskie 250 WR. xln ••••••••••••••••••••••• &' sr., .. OAOWAY Costa Mesa 540·9640 QOllOIUNDAYS I . $9888 ·~J~~ ~t~~.:.n~~~(~~ car.S300.631.0141
15.'.-6449 957-0396 cond. Very lo mileage. St '63 GM.C 3• ton 4-~pd, SAMTA AMA ,75 Civic, radials, AM· <&> "7'11t"78Sevtlles mag w]ll s, landau lop, '68 Cullass Supreme, air,
PrivatePorty leaaJ.640-6828aft6. ~~~f~~c hftgate. ;)995 835·3171 FM. blue. Xlnl cond. 66 Rolla Royce, Sltve · ToCbooleFrom none nicer. Aft 5PM P/S, P /B, xlnt orig .
•• 75 Honda XR75. Lo mi. me uLTIMAltoAMNo MACHINE $2500. 642-2701 Shadow, xlnt cond. wkdys. all dy wknds. cond. $9SO/best offer. * * T&M pipe, s&W shocks. 1971 Ford Pickup for sail' *USED BMW's* n Red Honda, 7,600 mi, :~~· $ll,OOO. 63l-GK5 1'1...T....L.-846-4600 _64()._"34 __ 1 ____ _ H~ Let&and.r" s:l>Q/bstofr. 644-5874 Good cond . Re bl t ·115301 -t~pd286SEU ~-Owner. 644•5441 or 1 ~rs Dodge 9935 Piftto 9957
21322 lulLL-od Cr. -eng111e.Sl500. firm Call "77320rnS/R 177RSK 540-2372 LATE '73 Rolls Roye ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
._. '76 Honda XR75. Brand nu Mon-Fri 9 to 5, 751·J8..IO '76 '""".' •~pc1 s ll 401 PDP S1l00er Shadow, """""mi. Cad1•JJaC C l d d u.~ •-h d $400/bs f :\I '""•...., • """""' '7S o t 2 r, 4-sp , '14 Pinto Sqwre wagon -·-"""f"'on ... oc con . tor.· us "6S Ford T .7 "77Jllh4Sp013RTP K~Ghlo 9735 l owner , oil oplion AM/FM stereo cass. Luggo~ rack, ma" Yoo arc the winner of 2 sell.548·7364 'h on w/ 4 en~ •71·,c~1•1\S/R 712PQ... ••• •••••• -.ooo.831·2278 M i ., ---------1 &trans $950 .....,., m •••••••••••• •• _., 26lllJH.1rht1rBlvtJ . radial s. 34 m. wheels wide), tape freeticket.swort'-S14lo ·159.i534 CJ01~0nS..ndcrys Cm1JM~!>.1540-9IOO (055NK\'}S2100.6'1'S-5TIO. deck/radio, auto. low
HOLIDAY OH ICE MotorHonm5.W•/ * * Toyota 9765 , mlles.$l99Soroffer.Can
at the Rtttt/Storocp t 160 '75 Ford 4x4, auto, Hanger ORAHGE COUNTY'S Jim E..........-5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 68 RT Charger· 440 be seen in Costa .Mesa
ANAHEIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• XLT. xtra tank, C1b1e OLDEST .. ,..wn IEFOREYOU magnum. Loaded. Jluns Call!TIM56Horinfo.
CONVENTION Rent a 1977 Excuti\'e lighls, brus h guard & 11140 Pdol A.ve. SB.I. YOUR 1973 CADILLAC good. $300/ or of r .
CENTER Motorhome or Mini· SS.600.631-0813 Fo.taiRV•ey TOYOTA, COUPEDEVIW 988.3001 TS Runabout, 6 cyl. Elec
Dec. 27th-Jan. 1st. moto..tiome from Herb You are tbe winner of 2 Full ~wer & IJJ in nice ~ 9940 snroof. XJnt cond. $3100 Free Tickets good for Friedlander. Call ariY of ·n Courier long bed. 7000 f'reeticket.sworth$14lo See~ for a lop dollar condition. (979HEW) . .._..... 499-2393
Dec. 30th 0 r 31st th~enumbers mi. Make offer. 963·8091 HOLIDAY OM ICE estimate! Now reduced to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
performances. Call 191-6771 arter5:00. ~SalC!'.t·Srn·1cc·Lea:.mg attbe MAltQUISTOYOTA. OHLY$2395 ;-.. ,.. PHIL "72Runaboul.AM/FM.
642-5678. ext. 333, to \ 537.7777 Ccrver,lnc. ANAHEIM MISSION VIEJO s7so.
lai k '74 Courier w/shell. Xlnt 0 oycc BMW CONVENTION 31 2880 49rr:121 O SA.DDLBACIC LONG 498·2!»8 c m yourt1c ell>. 121-1811 shape, Fully equipped. 1540Jamborce I • ~ VALLEY IMPOttTS FORD * * 848 8606 CENTER t 9 '73 Panto Runabout. 2000 -----MOTOR HOMES . N1:wport Beach &l0-6444 'Dec. 27th-Jan. lst. '77 Celica GT Li.rtback, 831-2040 495-4 4 cc, disc, 4 spd, new \ires,
Columbia d1n~hy $500. 8' FOR RENT Vans 9570 --"CLASSIC" Free .Tickets 'good for 5-spd, radials, air, AM · . . ~-lug rack. 48.000 mi, great
black fiberglass hull. FromSlOO wk 770-0644 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dec 30\.,ll or 31st FM cua tape. Extreme· 74 Cad El Dorado. Ong. \~ h Sl500 645 6940 Salls, oars. trailer, can· · · 1976 Dodge Bubble Top 1970 BMW 2800CS perf~rmances. Call ly lo ml. Like nu. Wkdys owner. Loaded. $4800. ~· • .._ +:
8 a pe 1 AM · vas cover. All good cond. RENT Fireball 23• Self Van fully converted COUPE 4 s peed, sun· 642.5678, ext. 333, to 213..Sl4·5107, evs/wknds Call 759·&TS1. ,. ~ • .... _e_v_es_l_e_ar_y'------
67c. •100 · CC CB • · rool factor" air cond 714 559-6825 • "'· .. ----------•cont. Auto/air. . , many xlras. must sec 81 : kJ \M /F~i cla1myourlicket.s. · ,74 EL DORADO $3950. ,,._..,•'fl' '76 Runabout. 4 s pd .
ISLANDER JG. Uristol. stereo. sips 6 G45-228J $9,875. 552-5849 ste:e~~ ~:ct;ll' 'w;ndow~. * * '77 Corolla. Standard int. "Xlnl. cond. Fully loaded. . .-AM 1t•M st~reo tape .
loaded! Asking St2,500. 29 ft. Apollo motorhome. ·n GMC ~ton, long whl light ullo~· wheels & Mencia 9738 deluxe ext. Musl sell . 673·21642 ~~!.~C.::.,....~.;: $2400. Ph
492
·
1528
PP. 673-4220 Must see to appreciate! bnse, deluxe cab area N11chtblau blue w/tan in-••••••••••••••••••••••• M&-S74' afl 8 •76 Eldo, while In/out. '75 Pinto. Low miles. Air
12' Lehman, xlnt contli· Coll John Felter al w/high seat. 7,000 Miles , tenor. lne'<cellentcondl· . ·n Corona Deluxe, new Loaded. 16,000 mi's. '67 SHELBY Cobra, orig. cond, auto, xlnt cond .
tion, w/dolly. ssoo. 642-00lOor 540-82ll. under warranty. $5.500. tion thruoul & only 63.000 IM • tires. needs eng work, Showroom c 1 ea n . GT 350. Besl offer. 548-6439• G46·3045
968.2200 831·2278 miles! $10.999 or best of· • • $400. Robert898-5603 $9500/bsl. 552-8645 496-6127 af\6PM Ptywmuth 9960
Motor Hotne Reafal fer. Pri. ply. Call owner . •n•••••••••••••••••••• DINGHY 18'htol2' '73 Ford Van, Camper ut642·0138 t • 'ID Corona. Runs great. '76 Seville, lite gold. Im· •74 LTD 2-dr hit. Air •. 73 DUSTER P /S new
ti Fully selr contained CUSTOM in Xlnl. cond. .. Gd cond. Economical mac. All xlras. $9250. PS/PB. Xlnl cond. 1 1 Gd • " 8' berglass w1lh 2 hp Reserve now for Muslsell 644·5793 '76 BMW 3.0 Sl auto, sun· 2150 ~ & $485. Pb$46-l'2l Call 87s.2181. l2800 847-8880 aft 2 l res. 6 cy . . con.,.
Johnson outboard. both Ir 1 d & kends roof, AM/Fl\I stereo, xlnt C.... IUl&..-64• •700 · S1750. 831-2046
usedonce$350. 628·9348 ifEctNC::iOToR· "74 Ford F300 Van, P/B, cond. PIP640-097S ---T........ '767 "73 Cpe DeVIlle. loaded, Mcivtridl 9947 . loah. Slips/ HOMEREl'\T~ P /S, air cond., a uto HUDY-MOW AT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harvest yellow + lthr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14 Gold Ouster. full>
Docks 9070 925 N. Harbor Blvd, $.A. trans. MIRACLE MA.%DA i6 TR7. Loaded. 3600 m}. origownr67J..0444 '1~ Brwn Maverick. R&dl. ~~~~~-a9~~el y
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••531·2503•• $3500. Wl11{TiiE PURCHASE $4,995. 549·3985 afl , '76 Cpe DeVllle. Loaded, al.!'• PS, PB, deluxe, Jo ..;__ _______ _
$200 Reward for helpin~ T,...e;>;: Trcn_. 9170 AYtOA W-"d 9590 OF ANY NEW 213-532·50lOX·2258dys lo ml. PP. Sac. $fDOO. rru,$2950.673-7794 1974 Ply, Satellite Slo.
flnda shprentalfor a32 ....................... ....................... 1971MA.ZDA.GLC '74 TR6 Xlnt. cond. 9'19-8601or962·Z'll2 Mela., 9 950 Wag. 9 P~ .. PIS. P/B. ~~:t~~1-:·ci~:~r~1·J~::111ss Landcrlliser, 8x35' WEWILLIUY You will receive an AM/FMcaas.,lugerack, '77C.dCDV d'elegance •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ol~r~· ::~es;h~r:~::
Wkdys c714 > 983·96S7, Travel trlr. Dbl bed. lge YOUR DATSUH AM/FM ~tereo .. rollbar, 10 ~-546-8385 loaded, lo mi. mint cond'. trailer hitch. CB Radio
Wknds (714)981·96l7. ldtch, bath & show~r. PAIDFORORNOT IMWRESALES MEE . TR-6 '73,loml's,loaded. Takeovrlseor buy.Pvt ** incl. Good Cond. $1975. xlra Bdrm, easy llfl TOP DOLLAR or the cash eqwvalenl Xlnt cond. Must sell. pty, 494·S861. A.J. DeLoiJ.,-834-0899.
Wanted: slip ror 30' sail hitch. $2000 cash. 2191 •-thruC~ESa.y,TDecS.;,_L27Etb. Bestofr. '91·2073. '72 El Dor .. do.s_n. wht ------..L....1.--t....1---9-9_7_0 boat, Npl Bch or Dan &rbor Bl. CM, Sp 78 or "" • 1973 2002 ""'"' ,. ,. 3424 SHbreeu •--"" Pnt. temp or perm. Mar• call 642'2238 4 speed with sunroof. ENDS DEC. 27th Vollaw.,.., 9770 vinyl ~op, l* • lo mi, ConMMI def M• •••••••••••••••••••••••
ried cpl w/rcri;. Days 14.MtoS..-.lc• rarts (C505>. MIR.ACl.E ••••••••••-.. ••••••••• origownr.$2900.613-3994 Yoo are the winner or 2 J960 T·Bird, SS.000 mi.
640·3368, cvs/wknds &Accnsorin 9400 197l'l002tll MAZPA/REHAULT HUOESELECTION Sacrifice •77 El Dorado. freelicketsworth$1tto new tires, 8-trk. $1000. 1~1788 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 speed, air. cond. & 2l50Harbor Blvd..C.M. NEW&USEDCARS yellow,loaded.lomi .• as· HOLIDAYOHICE Call675-7420.
Boat slip wonted, 38' '64·'77 Used MUstang WE BUY stereo. 0 73GOE l. 64§.5700 sumelse$0dwn640-0248 al the VeCJG 9974 Bertra m. No parliers. Parts. 990 No. Parker, 19731AVA.RIA TopcashSSforyourVW. ANA.aEJM ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAH CARS .. speed. ~unroof & air M--...L..-•--97,.0 Paid for or not. Call '74 ELDO Wht wi red int. CONVENTION . 7 4 HAT C I' BA c v Live, bay club. 642·47 Orange. Call 997·2000 ~ .. ~ ..n& "' K 'th J "'-·-~• -•-t. d Lo ~ " or642-4097 &TRUCKS cond. t352JPS>. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · eiBO~WWkAMVW •••.mavua, ,.... con · CENTER Manual. radio, stl. bh
---------1100 VW Parts ror sale, 1973 BAVARIA '77 3000 Mercedes, 10,000 7600westminster Ave. ~'. ~ e:~~~M Besl Dec. !7lh-Ja~t..1 rads. 24000 mi. S1550.
PVT DOCK avail. llunt· some new. From 1957 to CONNELL Automalic, air cond. & miles. Take over Jeue. 89).7S5lorl38-1880 Free Tickets i or M<>4461 lngton Harbour, for very 1969, 994 Oak St. CM sunroof. (003N8Zl. 642-8987. '62 cad. Must sell this Dec. 30th or 31at ---------lge oft small boat. Nea ~12 1973 3 OCS B c t · ff performances. Call GetGREENcash --------CHEVROLET · . 3 u----a .. """'L, . 70 ug onver . 1m -week, $200 or o er. 6 .. ., ... ~78 , .,33 , the main channel. (714) 4 speed with s unroof. 7 .... :n.~es ......_ 1m· maculale, red & black, 60Cl3S e , •• .,,. • ex.. .. • • forWJDTEelepbants
898-1611 Alllolforsde 2828HarborBlvd. (261MCG >. mac. Wire wbJI, sky $2350orbstolr.497·3195 claimyourttcket.s. withaClassifiedAd
-.......... ~ & ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA 1974 l"V"RI" blue. Both 'tops. All "12ELOORADO * * C.11642·5678 -....,.......-,,_ ,. ,. xtras. $13,SOO. 675·2181. '73 Window Bus. Reblt, Lo ded &Sh ' Sid 908 GeMrol 9510 546-1200 Aulomatic, air cond. & .. .wi od Sl99S $29SO a a~-&421 ......_Hew 9800 Hew '800
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... --------• only 22 ,000 mi lea. '81S 22(SE, White. 2dr. air, -~nti49C·2tlo. •••••••••••••-••••• .... •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• WEPAYTOPDOLLAR (741KYQ>. AMI FM stereo. Days °'""'et 9920 Racing crart hull '&9. GREAT (4.2'7) w/tandem trlr. Ioli.
ot xtras. Must see lo ap-RATES AT prec. $4700. Ph: S46·4fi62. SOUTHWEST '75 Tahiti Jet boat
Cstm 455 Olds. BAMK Call ~-l24~nft 6
y,,_,, ortatiOft A Great Rat• For
UsedCor~ers ••••••••••••••••••••••• (The aame as or new Celf!ln. Sol•/
9120 cars.) ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ar. low as 9.95 annual
'71 VW Bubbl•top <Ad· percenta1e rate. venture> camper, 60K
mlles.$4300.5'8-9636 A Gnat Roh For
Molwi9ed1Mi .. 9140 MtwCwluyen ••••••••••••••••••••••• (Convenient, easy pro-
19'13 Yalll9ha Enduro 115 cesslog.)
Veey clean • low mUaae Ar. low as 9.95 annual $SS (8Hts&5) 8974.316
Like new 400 mi. red, 2
percentage rate.
spd + xtras. cost $4SO. A Gnat Rot~ sac $295. 873-3622 For HOMtOWMn
V.paCtaoM~.1976. ("Second Trust Deed ..
~e»nd. type equity loans.>
146-428'1 or~ U percent plus two PTS. lJMl CimaU aloped, 2000 pbaaSUO. mi. Good cond. 8.13.o846 tot n><>re Information STOP IN OR CALL
Bua Sprint Kart, Dual SOUTHWEST BANK
-.. rnount.s. 1 hg: two-EL TORO =. SUS/bst. o . 2'411 Rockfield Blvd.
830-3122
MatarcJ:.:'I tllO LAGUNA BEACH SHI IOOOleM~ . ...._. .........•.•.....
1'7' HO Ya mall• MX· 497-1771
=1t l'tont rortf, ~ft Jil~JONVIEJO , etc. U00o I
....-~r1!:"'· 281182Mar11.1crite Pkwy.
'95-6600
• '
FORTOPUSEOCARS 1974 3.0Sa 54-0-7422orE\•es675-1750 '73 WW 7 Pass BUS.•••••••••••••••••••••••
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC Automatic. air cond. & AM/FM, 8 track slereo. YEAR EID
·llYEITORY
.REDUGIOll
·SALE
or CLASSICS sunroof. l388KLF >. 1970 Mil 250 Xlnt rond. $3000. 675-1448
If your car is extra clean I 97 4 3.0So Aulomallc. air cond. & see us first. · f &. stereo. (479GBZ>. '68 VW BUI w/stereo .-., ,\utomalH". ~unroo dk A $1250 BAUER IUI~ 1 c a t h e r I n l c r i o r . tape . uto. . . 2925 Harbor Blvd. (ol88LNTl. 1975 Mil 280 Call 675-1530
Costa Mesa 979·2500 1975 5 j o1a SEDAN. Au~mallc. air '72 vw BUS. Clean.
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
~~:J
• ,~ ., , Ii f '· I • ~ I I l \. l
••11"4 ' l,.J(' f(I P\J !H A H
~ 1 , ' ' 11 I l I •
IMPORT CARS
AU.MOOILS
W!
~
CLIAM usmcus
MOW
CALLPUPY I S40·5630
4 speed wilh sunroof. l'Olld. & crwse control. Pr i v a t e p a r t y
<ERIN D>. 2 to choose (9S9NDM). $2000/Flrm . 673·301
from. SA.DDLHACK eves. V A.U:EY IMPORTS ..::;....:.;___~----1
.3'·2040 495.4949 131·2040 4tMt4t '63 Cbaais ·• llOOcc •n Baja Bui, t volt, new
Capri 9715 '66 ~SE, silver, PS, PB, tires, bucket seats, rol
••••••••••••••••••••••• e lec sunrf, AM/FM bar,xt.ruS&00.491~89
fl20 •••••••••••••••••••••••
*DRIVE A* * LITILE. •• *
SAVEALOT
SHOP&COMPARE
Ml%744SOSLC.
S pass, 1prta cpe, lmmac.
Fully eqpt ind fact elec
sorf. Stereo cass, leatb lotr. $17,500. PP
(71C >640-9323
MG 9741 .......................
'74 MlOGE1' red, 27350 --------1
ml. tonneau cov, S2700. &a"'531 Mon. Wed, l'ri, ~otba'dayS
....W77CMIY.
MOMIA MIUGI
16ZYW~ aw.o-211 .,. vw IMg
llealitlft4
•64VW~ ............. " '6SVW~ .......... _ ..
'70VW~ ~~·' ~ .., vw !41
.... 111'9-·-, ,,,,
'HVW~ ..... .,,.,...11
•74 fiat wr; .-...--·· ~ ?J YW 412 Wp. ""'°-rvo1.-. non
S9'S
$1295
$1,295
Sl.lt5
$1,4'5
Sl,595
Sl,H5
$16'5
S2.Jt5
2+1 HATCHIA.CIC 0¥8 Huse CAlS ... sroca
lt1ttM.. v--., air coed .• .,._7-,----c· ....... --, ... , ................... , .. 2-.s-,-, ... r:r.a,~~~{ :~.w~UOI C4I Jo~ A aQC!b more ! '72 •--Gw. SZ.H5 QJMZZ). , c.e.•oo • ......,..•1021 ........... ,4'91 •73 vw .... c~. -r. A,..i...,...ttliii ttQWAUQcvr.W •75 YWI_.... now. 6 QuU Stl...:... 2 t>t. "'"" •. ,..,c ...,, • ..._ ... NBW10aTa&A~ '75 YW ....._.. IJMHllJMI t6 . t0t.ev1eo.pM..,...,...,,.,,. ...... ,~
'7'YW .. 'Tl llONTE C&rlo, full . ,..,,io.-.ea11on
17'TotMlll~
Dia. ' -~ s.: --fllllll, .... " .. '741( __ .....
AlllO,.l/Jt. --.111191eal'lllk. --I ttol
SJ.291
SJ.495
Sl.4ts
SJ,HS
Sl.7'1
Sl.ffl
, .
.
Lip .... ~
~ JJ· OYER·
• L' ! FAdORY. 0 ... .. , . INYOICiE
f.350 p1QlUPS
.RA•CHEROS
1 'CUSIOM''
YA•.
co•VERSIO•S
,OFFER ENDS DECEMBER 3.lst
. -. ~-
lhct.y lrlelc•lllC ... '"'tM _......, H.....WI
A
LMK Al THESE USED CAR BUYS ·-
1 71 FORD
,OUO IWMAIOUT
' eyt. auto. ir-. -· .,..,.,. --all tlt'fl9. -co ..... Vinyl lnCenot I.le. t2tl09E Sn.. 1331A
175 FORD
MA V&ICI( 2 DI.
6 cylinder. -_..,,,., t8'iQ. tlMI«. _..,......,
vir>YI root. t~ oi-----. UL 1~ 8lk.
"""
..
'76 BUICK
QPEL
• cyl .• • 5-d, air ~t!on4119, rlMllo, llHttr. M:.s .'o._ rinli3..cib0 ...... Uc. ... 124 Siio •&46A.
53199
176 FIAT
I Xlt
4 eyt .. 4 -9d. AM/FM l"lldio + '--,,_.,,.,...,--., nillye-Uc. tl"4AOG Slk ,,,.,.
'74 PINTO
IUMAIOUT
4 sPMO. rldio. -· bn -ell! Uc. tOllOLVI 5111. t 309+A •
51799
'74 FORD
PIMTO IUMAloUT
4 cyt. 4 IOMd. rldio. -·..,,....,...Int. w!IMI-. Lie. t131Pl<E Slk. 111 A
51899
'76 FORD
, GRANADA 2 DA. v ... avlo. tr-., t.c..y air condltJonlno, -llftrlng, _. btlil<es, red .. , lllt.,, ~tewall tw.•. vlnyt rod, llntwd 1••· ~ co.a. UC. •MtMWO.Slk. •P10a ,
'73MG
IOADSTlll
4 cyt.. AM/FM lldlO. -· wttll ~ tlllye ..._. Vert llaro' IO Md. Uc. 1~180t SO. UNA
52299
'75VW
IAllfT 4 eyt.. 4 tOMd. AMlf'M r8dlO. ......,, ...... ......,,, 22.ooc> a Uc. t....U 8111. 1241A
,I
52799
-41111 Mo/~ Pord :.fofo( CO. •SAi.i~"· HOUfll• -~ ......... , ....
Sat; IA..M.tot,.M.,
81111;10A.M.tot,.M, •~a,AATI• MM-M; 7 A.M. to I P.M.
(0,... 111 t , ... lllellNYI • '""Tl°'" .• SAT IA.M.tot ,.M.
_... .. "
. . •
CALIFORNIA t .
--,
Hundng~n Beaeh
Fountain Valley Afteraooli
_N.y. ~aoek8
.
~OL. 70, NO. 3SS, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1977 TEN CENTS
Howling Wind Ki11s 5; Batters State
By The Associated PTess
Hurricane-rorce winds howl-
ing through Ca lifornia 's
a griculture-rich midsection al
more than 100 miles an hour
have left at least five persons
dead and a trail of destrucUon
from Bakersfield to the Mexican
border.
The violent winds blew down
barns and airplane hangars, top-
p I e d heavy truc ks, tossed
chunks of brick and roofing
through the windows of homes
'nd businesses. and whipped
brush fires out of control.
Hundreds of \tavelers were
marooned in cities throughout
the Central Valley and the Mo-
ja ve Desert, jamming hotels,
cafes and emergency evacuation
centers set up in churches and
schools.
An eslimated 30,000 homes, of-
H c e s and industries from
Bakersfield south s uffered
power outages, and thick clouds
of dust were reported as far
away as Stockton, about 200
miles to the north.
Ollly ...... Slaft .....
SALVATION ARMY'S DOROTliY BARKER SEEKS COINS
Collections Down This Year Arter Shopping Center Ban ... '
Banning of Kettles
Hurts Army's Effort
The barring of Salvation Army
collection kettles from two major t shopping centers and several
I sm aller ones is one of the key
reasons donations are down this
year countyw1de, Salvation Anny
officials said today.
Collections for the needy have
been excluded this year from
Fashion Island in Newport Beach
and The City shopping complex in
Orange. according to Capt. Allred
Van Clecf of the Army's Santa
Ana office.
Donations are down $6,000ln the
Santa· Ana-Tustin area alone, he
said. Van Cleef said contributions
were also down in the Orange
Coast area but figures were not
immediately available today.
The familiar Salvation Anny
kettle, with a man or woman ring-
ing a bell beside it, collects funds
lor food and toys for the poor dur-
ing lhe Christmas season, Van
Cleefsaid.
Tbe Salvation Army will dis·
tribute $20,000 this year for food
baskets, toys and gift boxes for
rest home patients in Orange
County.
In addition to funds, the Army
accepts toys.
Donations can be made by call·
ing 898-9332 or 542·9750, or by
mailing gifts and cbecka to the
Salvation Army at either lllOO
Garden Grove Blvd.. Garden
Grove, or g23 E. 3rd St.., Santa
Ana.
Hinshaw Reports
,
Prison Death · Threat
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain lncreas·
ing to 60 percent tonight
turning to showers Thurs-
day. Coole r Thursday.
Lows tonight 50 to SS.
Highs Thursday 60 to 65.
I INSIDE TODA 'Y
You don't J•ut 1tlr
Chrbtma1 irl the Poulter
MUllMld m Fountain Vclley.
You aa~ Chriatmot ChrlltmG.1
Chn1tmiu for the triplet• who
Uue thtre, along with thnr
five brothera and 1i1tera.
Pag1C1. .
Former Rep. Andrew J .
Hinthal''B life was threatened
while he was Imprisoned at
Chino State Prison on a bribery
charae. KOCE·TV reporter Jlm
CoopersaJdtoday.
An Interview Cooper conduct-
ed with Hinshaw wW be broad·
cast at 8 p .m. Thunday on
Channel~.
Cooper said Hinshaw told him
his ure had been endan1ered
before his transfer to Oran1e
County Jail and that tbe poliU-
cian plans to contact legislators
about prison reform.
The half-hour program cen·
ters on an interview with
Hinshaw at the jail, where he is
serving an eight-month sentence
on two counts of bribery.
Hinshaw bu since entered a
work furlough program that al· •
t lows him to Inv• Jan durint the
day to work. Coopeuaid. ·
The program ls entitled
"Hinshaw: From U.. lnllde."
Carter Hae Plan
WASHINGTON (AJ') -Preel·
dent carter, wttla rt1ln1 eMf'IY
co1t1 ln mtftd. Is 1endtn1 to
Conareu a prcll)Mal that 1"Uld
glve m• tNlllll ,,._.... ~uat
f oollnl wtlh JUshway con&tnae·
Uon In ihe competlllon for
federal dollars.
"It's the worst I 've ever
seen," said Caljfornia Highway
Patrol officer Jim Hill of
Bakersfield. "I've been at this
BIG STORM HITS
NORTH-AS
kind of work for 15 years, and I
thought I'd seen it all •. ., but
nothing like this.''
Almost all activity in
Bakersfield, population 80,000,
had come to a standstill by mld·
day Tuesday, the second day it
* * *
had been battered by the wlnds.
Power had been cut off to
much or the city as the 'Winds
tore down power lines, shattered
windows, and toss ed trees
across cars, houses and streets.
Visibility was cut to zero as a
thick, mustard·colored grit cov·
ered the city.
Some looting was reported.
In Arvin, a farm community
of 7 ,000 people 20 miles south of
~akersfield along Highway 99,
police said almost every home
suffered some damage. Store
* * *
fronts were ripped down, trees
were uprooted, and roors were
blown orr homes and businesses.
Wat.er, electricity and telephone
lines were cut of!, and transistor
radios were the only means ol
communicaUon.
A wind gauge atop the Arvin
police station registered gusts of
up to 101 mph before the gauge
blew apart.
The California National Guard
in Bakersfield was called into
active duty and rescued 35 peo. pie, including_ Kern County
* * *
Sherltrs Capt. Larry Klier, who
were huddled under a bridge on
Route 58 near Arvin to escape
the blinding dust storm. Klier's •
windshield had been blown out
by the stonn and his radio bad
been knocked out of operation.
The Red Cross and Salvation
Army were setting up emergen·
cy centers to care for homeless
res idents and hundreds of
s tranded travelers.
Tne winds also were blamed
for the death of a woman rear-
ended by a tanker truck.
* * *
Coast Due for Storm
)
I
Warnings Posted for Travelers, Boaters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.lly P'li.t e..tl•t Wrllff.
High northeast winds which
wreaked havoc in most of
Southern California Tuesday
miraculously bypassed the
Orange Coast but weather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers not to be
complacent.
The battle or the highs and
lows could bring a quick and
drastic change in the weather
pattern by nightfall, according
to National Weather Service.
Tbe freak Santa Ana condition
which brought northeast winds
roaring in over portions of
Southern California at velocities
of up to 100 miles an hour were
expected to diminish late today,
giving way to an intense low
pressure cold front that should
bring strong southeast winds
Death Hoax r ·.
Callers ~.
Not Kiih?
Victims of a cruel weekend
telephone hoax )Jaye &Gld Huot.
In gton Beacb police In-.
vestigators they believe ~be
callers were "deranged adults1"
not out-of-scbool 10ungaten seek·
Ing a thrUl.
Pollca DeteeUve Art Dro1 in·
tervtewed 15 of the hoax victims
Tuesday. They were among
about 100 called by someone
claiming to have news of a
"tragic accident" and the death
of a family member.
Droz said some of the vicUms
heard as many u three adult
voices, two males and one
female.
Victims of the hoax calls Fri·
day and Saturday said the calls
came at all Umes of the night
and even in the early morning
hours.
None of the recipients of the
calla actually lost any relatives,
police said.
The pranksters apparently
used a current telephone direc·
tory and called their victims in
alphabetical order, Droz said.
None or the victims received
more than one phone call -
making tt difficult to trace the
source of the messages, Droi
said.
I) roz is working with
telephone ci>mpany officials Ira
effort to track down the
perpetrators of the ghoulish
prank. He declined to discuss
the melh9d1 being employed in
the lnveJUgation.
Most of the hoax victims are
Huntington Beach residents, but
some live 1n Costa Mesa,.
Newport Beach and Fountain
Valley.
Droz said )le believes many
vlctJm1 did not report the hoax
calls to police.
"Many probably Just called a
relatlve to check out the 'death,•
but we will never know bow
many, .. he added.
Most ol the victims he ln-
tervlewed sald they beard what
soun_,ed Ute l)()ilce radios in the
back1toand. f>roi aald.
.~ .......
BORE HUGHES' CHILD?
ACCrHa Terry Moore
"
&byBom
ToActFess
Was Hughes'?
VANCOUVER,. British Colum-
bl a CAP> ...... Actress Terry
Moore, wbo claims she was
married to the late Howard
Hughes, says she bore a child by
lhe billionaire recluse, but the
baby was premature and died
wlthln 24 hours.
Miss Moore, 47. said in an in·
terview Tuesday that in Oc·
tober. 1951, she gave birth three
mort\bs prematurely to a girl
she named Lisa Marie. The in·
Cant died a day later of blood
poisoning, she said.
Her claim that she was mar-
ried to Hughes ls not new, and
she hinted a year ago that she
might have had a child by him.
The actress said Tuesday the
blrlh occurred while she was
maldn1 a fihn in Munich, West
.Germany. Stie said she married
Huche1 secreUy on a boat off the
west coast of Mexico ln No.
vember1M9.
Hughes was tn the United
States when the baby WN born
and decided not to 10 to West
<See RtJGBES, P11e AZ>
A.ctr-ea• Tied byi 5 · IJandiia
ROME (AP> -Five armed and masked bandits
crashed their way into the suburban vUla of Anita
Ekberg, Uad the Swed~h a~tress add fled with her
cash, jewels ..S fur coats, police reported t.odai,
The 46-year-olcl actress, who was the blond sex
goddea ol Fede11co Fellini'& 1980 film "La Dolce
VJta, •• was alone at her vUla tn Mentana, about 12
miles outatde Rome. at ~ Ume ol tbe robbery early
today.
The value ol tbe atofen 1oods was put at about
'9,000. 'lbe actreu freed herself ln -two bours and called police. ~
MJas Ekber1 ... ~l·tetlred exffpt4for minor IUP·
portln11rolesIn1um1 and oec•iODarteleY11ic-. ap-pearane., ba beell ij~ln& la ~'for m•)"eara.
with rain.
The high pressure condition
caus ing the strong northeast
winds is being sucked into the
low pressure trough, slowing the
front's progress toward the
coast.
The cold front was reported
less than 200 miles from the
coast earlier today and moving
east at a rate of 20 miles an <See WINO, .U>
Burns Kill
Man Hurt
fu Blast
A Lakewood m~ who "'t ertt4u.U1 ltll'.l'fl wM• 1•1ollne tanker tna1 expl=.J Huntjll~~~.3~morning at 00 lrvine Kallcai
Center.
HunUngW\ Beac:h fire officials
said tbal the victim, William L.
Dennis, 38, of 4458 Iroquois St.,
Lakewood, was fueling his truck
when it exploded in names.
He was hospitalized with
second and third degree burns
ove r most of his body, officials
said.
A coroner's spokesman said to.
day, that an autopsy would be
performedtoaeektheexactcause
of death.
Another worker suffered minor
burns in the inc.ldent , at the
Chevron Oil Company's
petroleum depot at Gothard
Street and Talbert Avenue.
City fire officials said today
that the engine of tbe tanker truck
was left running during the fuel·
ing operation.
Larry Marshburn, city fire
education specialist, said that~
meter on the tnlck apparenUy
malfunctioned and that gasoline
overflowed onto the ground after.
the tanker was rllled to capacity.
Marshburn said that the air ln·
take system ot the diesel tanker
apparenUy-6ueked fumes into the
engine and ignited the gasoline.
The blast and fire did $180,000
damage to the petroleum depot
and tankertruck.
Caner Family
Opens Holiday
ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE,
Ga. <AP) -President Carter
and his family arrived in
Geore)a today for a down·bome
Christmas.
In keeping with a Carter laml-
ly tradition, the president, his
wife Rosalynn, daughter Amy,
son Jeff and daughter-in-law An·
nette wm spend a quiet bolid~
in their hometown oC Plains.
C4ROL SINGERS
FREED ON &4.IL
JOHANNESBU{lG, Sooth
Africa (AP) -A tloman C.t.bollc
priest, four nuns and 39 wbtte men
and women were released on ball
here today after their arrest out-
side poUee beadquartera wblle
1in1ln1 Chrlatmaa carol• In
behalf otlmpriloned black ..
All 4' .,.,.. cbAr1&ed wltb Mid·
ln1 anlllefaJ gathering UJMJer~
ri«)tou1 .... mblles aet.
Tb• ll'OUP pthtnd outltde the
police tt.atkln al John Votaw
square bere Tue.day nlght llnl·
t.nc cUOll il\albow of eoltdartt.y
wiLb the more Utan 100 people, moctly black.I, dec.alMd Yltbaut
trial.
Al'~ •J
PERISHES IN FIRE
Base Commander Turner
Vandenberg's
COPerUhes
In Raging Fire
VANDENBERG AIR FGRCE
BASE CAP> -A fire -whipped
out of control by the same bur·
rtcane-force winds that toppled a
high-voltage tower and sent.
sparks ralning into parched brush
-kUled the base commander and
at least two other people as they
tried to fight it. It'still raged outol
control today but firemen were
being aided by a lingt rain.
"The fire seems like it's going
to continue as long as the high
winds do. It just keepsjumping,"
Air Force Sgt. Dan Anderson said
late Tuesday.
The fire, blown from ridge to
ridge on this sprawling mllitary
complex by erratic 70 mph winds,
s pread in a patchwork of names
over several square miles of the
150-square mile base 50 miles
northwest of Santa Barbara. One
thousand acres were blackened.
More than 300 firefighters bat·
tied lhe blaze thl'oughout tbe
night. and the strong winds con-
tinued through today but at a
lower pitch.
Killed were Col. Joseph Turner,
48, the base commander; Base
Fire Chief Billy !Jen, 44; and As-
sistant Base Fire Chief Eugene
Cooper, 45; from Vandenberg
Village.
A fourth reported death bad not
been confirmed by base
authorities.
Base spokesman Capt. Leonard ·
Brady said Turner, a veteran oC
the Korean and Vietnam wars,
was directing the flrefighUng
operation when flames sur.
rounded hls jeep. Tumer tried to
runtosafe,ybutwasovertakenby
the flames and bumed tp death.
Brady said.
Tu"'er, 48, was io cbarce of
ope rattans at the 11,000-mao base,
but was outranked by two
pnerals.
'Charter Meet Set
The Huntincton Beacb CU,y·
CouneU 1rill hold a public hear·
ln1 tomaht on reeommend~
chaac• 6' the db' cbuter. Tbe
hea.rina oa 1'Yil1ona aQd upclat~
lot of tbe charter will •tart at
8:30 p.tb. In city council dwft. · , ·be.rt.
1\2 DAILY P1LOT
Viejo CyctfAi-·
Lives Afier · ; ~ -
Slammiiig Van
/\ Mission Viejo man, at first
helic•ved by police to be possibly
fatally injured. is lucky to be
a li ve today, after ramming bis
motorcycle into the rear of a van
on Pacific Coast Highway in
llunt4lg&c>n Beacti Tuesday.
InveStiiators said, llowever,
that>·Douglas Roy Lee, 24, of
26151 ~~e. De Leo, isn't out of
the WOQOS yet, since he was cited
on drunken driving cbarges.
Officer John Berens said in-
ve s tigators who found Lee.
s prawled in a heap on the -
Pacific Coast highway and
Beach Boulevard indeed
believed he was dead. ~
He was first taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach, then to UC Irvine
Medical Center in Orange,
where he was treated for his in·
juries and released, .
Police said Lel) and David A.
Draper, 25, of Anaheim, were
both headed wes t on the
highway when th& motorcycle
hurtled into the rear of Draper's
van.
Draper said he felt a jolting
collision and looked in the rear
' iew mirror to see a shower of
s parks as Lee and the . 'cycle
),kidded, bounced and tumbl~
down the pavement.
Police said Lee was released
on his own recognizance on the
drunken driving cba.rge due to
the fact he was injured.
Man Knifedr
In Family
Flap in NB .
A knifin~ in the s o-called
:\fotown district of central Hunt-
tni?ton Beach Tuesday night has
le ft one man nursing minor
wounds and the U.S. Border
Pal rol al San Ysidro on watch
for his allc~t·d assailant.
Police s aid suspect Efraim
n.nto, a Lon~ Beach resident
who worked al a nortl\ Hunt-
ington Beach coffee !>hop, was
believed heading for Mexico
based on information they were
given.
I le was accused by a cousin.
R'oberto Brito, as the assailant'.
"'ho inflicted knife wounds oo
him to climax a quarrel at 1782
Koledo Lane, an apartm~nt
complex.
Paramedics <:ailed to patch up
the wounded man notified police
when it became apparent he had
hecn intentionally atta·cked and-
<·ut wilh a knife.
'Ihief Ransacks
Former American fndepen·
dent Party presidential can-
didate John Schmitz confirmed
today he will run for the state
senate aeat being vacated next
Y••r-by Sen. D~nrl&.Carpenterr a.
Newport Beach.
Jo1n1ng S c hmitz in th e
RepubUcan primary next June
will be Huntingt.Qn Beach bust·
nessman Steve Holden. who has
announced his intention t.o seek
the senall! post.
And Fountain Valley Clty
Councllman George Scott said
todi:w he is considerinJ a try for
the-OOP nomination in Uie 36tb
Senatorial District.
The 36tb district covers
coastal Orange County from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and
extends inland to include the
SaddJeback Valley and the Santa
/\na Mountains. lt alsp extends
a long the coast to Oceanside in
San Diego County. The district is
coinsidered a Republican
stronghold.
Carpenter announced his re-
tirement earlier this month,
almost a year before be will
leave office.
Schmitz. 47, ts a Coton a del
Mar re$ident. Ho Leaches at San-
ta Ana College. He is a con-
servat1ve and a member of the
John Birch Soticty.
Holden. 46. is a former trustee
of the Huntington Beach City
<elementary) School District.
He operates a llunt..i'r\gtQn Beach
insurape& agCTIQY. ~ "
Holdeirhas saicthe would tum
his energies toward properly tax
reform, reduction .oL govern-
ment spending aad la" reliefr if elected'.~ . "
Schmitz held the state senete
seal for five years before being
elected to the U.S. House of
Hcpresentatives in 1970.
lie lost his congressional seat lo
Andrew Hinshaw in 1972. the
same year he ran unsuccessfully
for president on the American
Independent ticke.I..
Schmitz said he would hope to
he lp forge a new coalition
between Hepublicans and con·
scrvative Democrats if elected to
the state senate.
.. 1 am not going to kid myself
or anyol)c else that I am going to
turn the course of Sacramento
around." Schmitz said.
Schmitz safd tie ~oesn't
belie\re his service on the ultra-
c o n s er v a ti v e John Birch
Society's national council would
become a cam~aign issue.
FroMPageAJ
HUGHES ...
Germany, she said.
"He didn't want a child," said
Miss Moore, "He didn't want
anyone lo have a claiQl on his
estate, and he saw to it Uial l
didn't get pregnant again. I real·
ly wanted a child and was
heartbroken when our daughter
died.
"l thought he was belng
selfish," Miss Moore said. ''But
he argued that un~ss you were
around children eopstantly to
c reate and mold them. they
would hurt your lmage, blacken
your pame." .
Mis$ Moore said that at the
lime she met Hughes, he was 43
and she was 18.
A~er a one-year courtship,
she said they were married by
the .. master of a boat Hughes
chartered. She said her mother
and Hughes aide Noah .Dietrich
were witnesses, but that Hughes Huntington Home later destroyed the ship's log -
the only legal record of th~ mar-A burglar who apparently riagc.
Yaulted the rear wall of a Hunt· She said the marriage was
ington Beach cul-de-sac home legal in California and Mexico
and pried opeo a sliding glass and that they were never
door stole nearly Sl ,000 worth of divorced but that she left him
stereo gear and jewelry Tues· after eight years.
day. Miss Moore, who·~as married Joe Martin of 5942 .Franmar thr ee other ·urrtes, flow lives
Circle told investigators in addi· with her children in Brentwood,
tion to the stereo sound system, Calif., where she is writing her
the intruder made off with a, autobiography. She said it is
prized jade bracelet. -· ·~ mainly about Hughes.
-• "' •. Iqtervlewed last year a week ORANG£ COAST
DAILY PILOT
w~. --erter Hughes died, she told the · • Fort Lauderdale <Fla.> News
that she was secretly married to
'""'°'_eo.,1o.11,"'1o1 ""'"-"'"-him but did not plan to file a .,......,, ......... "'•" "°""''-"'""°'-claim against hrs estate. ~~:.~·~~~:':::;;:o~:~,'t~'°'l~:: Mlss Moore said in the News ~v:~,-;~~,~~~~ ;~':::=::: .. ":::~~ interview that there ''may have ~~::.~~~,~~~·.,:::-~·;:. been'' children from the alleged ri;:;~c:,:::~;~~1;.1.~~~1~.,~!.1° "''' 84• mar'rlage, but :relused to be
-. ... 1111.WH<t more specific. .,,.,,.,..,...., """''...., She sllld in Uie· l'tews interview
JKU.CwltT that "Howard was the &reatesl 1110"""'*"'•""°"-•'MI.....,. lover 1 ever .had. fie was the '~:~,:,-'' best." .
T";::;9~'T.r::• She is to ap~ar as a witness
C10MM11.1.-111c .... o .... 11 in Lu Vegu in litigation over
A""'•"'""""''"""'"~ the blllional re's so-ca 11 ed llljltt,~:=:=~•"" Mormon will, whJch she c1atrhs
HU11ttMtott .. ed!OMcie is a fake. Mf'"~~~~~.-"He only ever wrote one will,,. °"'°" sbe said Tuesday, "and that ~~~·~ .. :~::.H' directed all his money t.o hls ' --:~J,~~'""' , m~i Ll~wt•,.be ct.reamed of
' !l141 • ' se ~· • • et•=~~~··"'·"\' at's alt mt ev\r talked ,,_...,..o.-~~·• about, even on our wedding
l40-tuq , nhlbt.. That wu his reason for
'-"1:: m• °'= ~ -!!"1'3.= livlnc,'' sbe 1ald. "I think his =:,., or"'t':v:Jti\•"-l':'':~ ~ : real Will WU' de&trGred by hJl ;::;::~·.·-'""'., .. -.. ..., .. aU1e1: The)' pardtd bitn nllbt ~tM ,,.,. "''•r. .... ~ ""''• ,...,., a.ndday.TowardltbeendHoward c.11~ .. ,._ •0·~· '11'" .., Hrrlff " ,. • was controlled by the people be ..,...,lily; tY "'•" '' >f -~'" mttil••r ~11N1•°"''""-ftf~tv. ' tnecUobetp."
-
f I
Out for Chrbtnaas
Watergate figure H. R. Haldeman leaves the Federal
Correctional Institution in Lompoc for a six-day holiday
furlough, wishing fellow inmates and reporters, "Have a
m e rry Christmas." He's serving a 21h to eight·year sen-
tence for conspiracy, obstruction of justice and perjury.
Father, Son Burt
In BB Home Blaze
A Huntington Beach father
and son were injured early to-
day while reacting to a fire in
their home reportedly caused by
a lighted candle.
Officials said the blaze started
after Bryan Poulsem, 18, Lit a
candle in his' second-story
bedroom at9902 VoyaJ(erCircle.
The youth nodded off to sleep
while reading. He was awakened
about two hours later after his
bed covers caught fire.
"lie was awakened by the
heat," Fire ~ucatlon SpeciaUst
Larry Marshburn said, .. and
took a flying leap right through
a closed plate glass window."
munity Hospital and released.
The fire caused about S40,000
damage tothe contents and struc-
ture of the home that Is shared by
the father and son in the
southeaslem part of the city,
Marsh bum said.
Marshburn said that the inci·
dent was a classic example of
how not to act in a fire.
He said there were no smoke
detector alarms and pre·
planning of escape routes had
not been worked out.
He also said the father tried to
com bat names with a garden hose
instead of calling the fire depart-
'men.t. A neighbor fin~lly,did.
~"°"'ft•fJfAJ·
wi"' , ' ND ••• ·
boy_r . · Tb front wu npeelf4 to
bring rain with wtnds 15 to 30 .
knots by late ~ay, switching to.•
the southwest and west on Thurs-
day.
The battle of the fronts Tues-
day.was the most freakish in the
memQry of oldtimers here.
Wh.lle northeast winds or more
than 70 miles an hour were
lashln& San Bernardino and
Riverside counties and wreaking
death and damage In Kem Coun·
t y. a southeast gale of 40 knots
virtually closed San Dlego
Harbor and was felt 4£5 far north
as Dana Point.
While all this was going on to
the south and north, the Orange
Coast was looked in a dead calm
with an overcast of dust that re-
duced viaibill~ to as low as one
mile offshore; Vi sibility at
Avalon, Catalina Island, was
down to one mile in dust by
midaftemoon. Visibility offstyore
at Newport Beach was three to
five miles.
The southeast gale south of
San Diego caused extensive
damage as fur south as Rosnrito
Beach in Baja California.
Oldtimers called it the worst
storm since 1939. A special
wea ther bulletin warned
pleasure boaters to slay out ol
the area and shipping was
slow~ lo a near balt.
Boaters who ventured onto the
water at Dana Point were hit by
a strong easterly wind. A small
boat and a catamaran were
overtumed at the height of lhe
blow.
Power Unes were down in
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and
San Clemente and burglar
alarms set oU by the damage
kept p6lice in all three com-
munities rushing lo answer false
alarms.
"Weird .. ~& e~ord 'JJetlhy
most ob6ervt;IY' lo det~lhe
freakish calm cd'lditions which
prevailed from Ne~rt B~b
to Seal Beach whlle other ards
of the county were being lashed
by howling winds from every
quadrant.
J. Sherman Denny, a lifelong
weather buff, said, "It certainly
is strange. all right. Freakish."
lie added that this has been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. John
Montrella listened to reports
that winds were playing havoc
in 'nearby Los Alamlto& and were
"blowing t.o beat the band" while
he looked out a dead calm that
was "still as glass."
AWOL Canine
Bade Bil tob·
LAREDO. Texas <API
-"Smokey," the mari-
juana-snifCing dog that
escaped last week. is back
on the job after several
days taking in the sights
and smells or Mexico.
U.S. Customs officials
said the German shepherd
was discovered by a
Nuevo Laredo resident ln
·the market plaza of the
Mexican city Just across
the border from Laredo.
The residont collected a
SlOO reward.
Another pol·sniffing
canine got loose a few
years ago and attacked a
local resident who had
some marijuana in h is
pocket. .
OPEC Chiefs·
Siill Split
On Oil Price
CARABALLEDA. Venezuela,
<AP> -The OP!:C oil ministers,
divided over whether to freeze
crude oil prices in 1978, wound ,
up their meeting today without 1 immediate word on whether
·they reS<>lved the split.
The Libyan representallve
earlier predicted a double·level:
price system for a second' year
in a row. 1
••I thjnk there is going to be a •
difference on prices and a split 1 ~s we had a' Doha last year,",
Li by aa Oil Minister Ezzedin
Mabrouk told a television in-
terviewer.
After the meeting ended,• a V4tne1<,uelJn p~ss officer
described 1be windup as "very
friendly and cordial." He said a
communique was being drafted.
'At t~ Organization of·
Petroleum Exporting Countries'
price setting meeting in Doha,
Qatar. last December, Saudi
Arabia and the Uriited Arab
Emirates opted for o lower price
than the OPEC majority.
Every 5 percent increase in
the OPEC price costs U.S.
motorists a half-cent more at the
gasoUne pump, experts say.
Blast in Beirut
BEI~trr. Lebanon <AP> -An
explosion caused heavy damage
to an empty, unClnished building
next lo the Egyptian Embassy in
.eirut early today.
His rather •. yordon, was
awakened by shqula and tried to
rescue his son whom tie thought
was still trapped in the fire.
While trying to reach his son,
Poulsem crashed through the
top or the patio cover and
sprained his knee in the fall.
·'Save $230°0
The son suffered a lacerated
foot, leg and hand in his leap
through the window. His hair
also was singed.
M arsbbum said the son was
treated at Huntington Intercom-
Gibson Quits
Huntington
Plan Board
Chuck Gibson, 31, announced
his resignation from the Hunt·
ington Beach Planning Com·
mission this week because or a
number or pressing activities.
Gibson said he is holding
meetings in the community re·
garding hjs intentions to run for
lhe 13rd Assembly District next
year. He say& he Is holding off a
formal announcement on that
campaign until the first of the
year.
He was appointed lo a four-
:9en r term on the planning com-
mission in June of 1976.
He is a legislative analyst for
the Los Angeles City Council.
Israeli Troop
Withdrawal
IAscussed
CAIRO . Egypt (AP) -
Israel's defense minister dis-
.cussed the withdrawal of Israeli
troops from the Sinal D~~ert
with President Anwar $a4at ~
his defense mlnislet for ttie
second day today.
Defenu Minister Eier
Weizmao flew to lsmailla,
midway down the Suez Canal, to
see Sadat 1.1.in after oveolieht
mectinp With ~&Ypl's ~illt.ary
cblef, Gen. Mobamrped ~~l •
Gbani el G•muy, at an air base
south of Alexandria,
· After meeting with Sadat,
Welu:nan shutUed t.o Almaaa air
base on tbe ed1e of Cairo,
briet.ed the llraeU deletaUon tQ
the Cairo peace talks. and then
new home t.o 1-rael,
Paintings Stolen .
LOS ANGELES <AP)--na..
men ttole • .,ainUnJI vaJUed 8t
a total of $115,000 from a weet
Lo• Ana•l•• art 9allery.
on this fine Heritage Console
...
I
, ..
, •.. "!''.
OnJy Chandler's
could offer a value like this one.
Heritage Classic Court Hall Console in rich,
pecans with simulated marble top W32", 014", H. 49"
Reg. '459. NOW i22900
Hurry, No phone orders please.
The Store of Famous N"ames
• Professional lntetlOr Design without Ob4igMlon
Comfortable Parking · Convenient FlNoc.ing
1514 NORTH MAIN
SANTA ANA • 541-4391
Tues. Wed. Ttb"s_ and Sat~ 9.JO 10 5:30
Mon . 12 to 9 ·fn~9JO10 9.00
a,.ncaer·s (eatutt the Onell from Dn••tl. Htrttagt . Htnredon. Century. B4kt r. Welma n. Sherrill. Stanlon·Coo~r. Woodmark.
Marge Carson. Alrtloom S.ddlnQ. Shlflt-. Marbro. Chandler Custom Dra~rl<'s (, C.tr~ltng as ... ,u as other famous namt¥.
•
f.
CALIFORNlA WedneMtay. OKember 21, 1977 DAIL y PILOT A3
South Storm
Kills Trucker
North Battered by Win(rl
• . RAMONA <AP> -Broken trees and power
lines today lay acrOS!i sections of Southern
Califorrua whipped by winds reaching 100 mph.
The dama&e to farm crops as the wind lel up
was sporadic but widespread. Citrus and avocado
groves were reported hardest hit, mainly in
north em San Diego County.
A number of animals died.
A BIG TRtJCK RIG WAS SWEPT oft ln·
terstnte 8 at Buckman Sprincs grade and down an
embankment Tuesday, kllUng driver Russell
Velozler. 19, of Spokane, Wash.
Because or that accident 40 miles east or El
Cajon, the busy freeway was closed from Alpine to
El Centro. lt finally reopened around midnight.
A s1x·car smashup injured three persons on
California 67 near Ramona. That state road was
closed but later reopened as was the Valley Center
Grade near Escondido.
LIGHT PLANES WERE grounded, and
several boats broke away from moorings along the
coast.
In Camp Pendleton, a brush fire burned 750
acres of land. Fifty acres of brush were scorched
in northern San Diego, west of PenasQ uitos.
By 'Jbe Associated Press
Howling 80 mile an hour winds
blew the roofs ott Humboldt
County area buildln1s. knocked
~ut power for an eattmated
lS0,000 residents and was dlrect·
ly responsible for two deaths ear·
Jy today, authorities report.
The winds blew the roofs oH
the grandstand at the county
fairgrounds and a 1rocery store
and sent a tree crashine down
onto a truck on Highway 36 near.
Eureka, kllUng two people. of·
fJcials said.
All major roads reportedly
were blocked by fallen trees and
other debris. A fishing boat
capsized al Humboldt Bay Bar
but its smaJI crew was pulled .. ';~~~~P-~!"':.. rrom the water when a Coast \: Guard vessel reached the scene.
4 PACl nc GAS & Electric eo:
IN WAKE OF WINO -Milan Di~l;hin~ bad no estimate of when power would be restored.
spects toppled tree which smashed into The National Weather Service
living room of his home in R a m ona reported u .S. 101, "The
northeast o f San Diego. There was Redwood Highway," was closed
widespread damage from winds Tuesday from San Francisco to the
across Southern California. Oregon border because of Callen
--------------------trees blocking the road. A fire was burning in the Alms
G~ Supplies Decline
Ridge area or the Los Padres
National Forest near Big Sur,
but it was not clear if lhe inclem·
ent weather caused the blaze.
THE U.S. FOREST Service In
King City received an uncon·
firmed report that the fire start·
ed in a structure in the forest.
About 120 acres had burned by
this morning in the same area as
the huge Marble Cone fire of last
summer.
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Southern California's
natural gas supplies are
expected to decline
about lS percent during
1978, compared with this
year, according to gas
company officials.
But Southern
California Gas Co. said
Tuesday that the outlook
Pot Groivers
Sentenced
is b etter than earlier
forecasts indicated.
The cutback will con·
tinue lo bite into the gas
supplies of large in·
dustries and com·
mercial customers who
have alternate fuel sup·
plies. officials said.
HOWEVER, TH ERE
would still be enough
gas to fill the needs or
the hi g h.priority
customers: residences
and small business
which lack the ability to
bum other fuels, such as
oil.
The gas company said
the region is expected to
recel ve a total of 663
billion cubic feel of gas
during 1978, compared
with 783 billion feet dur-
ing 1977.
The decline stems
from the continuing
depletion or natural gas
fields in Texa s,
Oklahoma and New
Mexico.
S O UTHERN
Callfomla is served by
LONG BEACH <A P l
-A doctor has been
sentenced to 00 days in
jail after his 11-year·old
:.tepson led police to a
garage full of m:.irijuana
plants uflcr hl•arin~ an
... ~ two major suppliers
~ . \;:'' from the Southwest: El ·~"\. ! Paso Natural Gas Co.
a n d Transwes t e rn
Pipeline Co., a subsidiary
of Texas Eastern Corp.
ant1·druJo? lecture.
· Superior Court Judge
Ellsworth neun also
lined 33-ycar·old Chynel
I'~. Henning $1,000 and
p laced him on three
years' probation Tues·
day. Hennlng's wife,
Karen, 32, was sen·
tenced to 60 days in jail
and placed on three
years' probation.
They were convicted
Nov. 18 or possessing
marijuana for sale, •
cultivation of the plant Married
and possession or
hashish oil.
Police suid Mrs. Hen·
ning's son. Gabrahn
Verdult, who lives with
hi s father in Irvine, led
offi cers lo the garage
after a visit to her
house. The boy said he·
had recently allendcd a
school lecture on how to
identify marijuana
plants.
Ac'tre ss Sa lly
Strut hers. 29, who
plays the daughter,
Glona, in CBS·TV's
"All in the Family"
se ri es, married
p sych iatrist-authot
William C. Rader,
39 , at Westwood
United Methodist
Church.
Forecasts prepared a
Fuhing
A shirt from our town
few months ago had pro-
jected lower available
galf supplies. Since then,
pr6spects for El Paso's
ability to deliver gas to
the Southern California
market have improved,
the gas company said. An estimated 75,000 homes
POCKD RA•
This SONY AM/FM pocket radio feolur11s
•el11s<opinq 0'1ler1n0, slide-Nie 1"'41r, "l/i" dynomoc
~ahv. ord a hondJOme brushed olurrinum
case: (O<T>es comp1ete with a~ on:i
·t arrying sttap.
and businesses from the Santa
Clara Valley to the northern San
Francisco Peninsula lost power
early today when howling winds
downed treet and volt.age lines,
the utility reported.
PG&E spokesman t'rilz
Draeger said lbe winds touched
off a series or outages starUng at
1 :15 a.m. and stretching from
Gilroy north to Milpitas and from
the Lawrence Expressway east to
·San Jose.
BESIDES THE PROBLEMS
cau&ed by falling treea and
branches, Draeger said it ap.
peared power lines were "arc·
ing" -shorting out after
brushing up against each 041er
and sending sparks into the
wind.
Extra work crews were being
called in lo find and repair the
damage, and Draeger s aid the
company hoped to rotore po'f'er
to the stricken areas by noon to-
day, "asl>umlng we don't htve
anv more stron1 winds or raia."
Some li1ht drizzle had faUen
on the Bay and Peninsula areas
by 5 a.m. today, but the ma.for storm fronl predicted for
Wednesd~ remained stationary
otf tbe coasl, the weather se"ice
:reported.
FORECASTERS SAID the
rains would probably move west.
In the form or sporadic showers.
There was an 80 percent chance
of rain by lonitht for lhe Bay
area, where temperatures were
expected to ranae from the low
60s to lhe high 40s.
In the Sacramento Valley.
showers and a chance of tbun·
dershowers were predicted
through Thursday with hi~bs in
the mid·50s and lows in the40s.
... ... ll-
Stranded Tourists
Hole Up in Mojave
MOJAVE <AP) -Motels were
jammed, diners were crammed
and semi·lrailers clogged the
narrow streets of this sleepy
town.
Hundreds of tourists and
truckers today played a waiting
game with a killer wind storm
that raked Southern California
Tuesday and continued today.
The California Highway
Patrol had stopped hundreds of
trucks northwest of here, and re-
ported that more than a half
dozen semis had been flipped on
their sides, blocking traffic.
The dozen motels in this town
were filled by early afternoon
Tuesday, a rare occurrence, ac-
cording to one motel owner.
SONY AM/FM clod: rod10 tells time with LEO
d1gitol numerals. features pr11c1s1on time
od1uslm!lf'I, repeal ba, bult-in /If(. ord many
orher con--enences.
T"E BIG PIOURE A LmLE SONY
Stor~keeper Kevin Beck is wearing a kettle
cloth sport shirt printed wit}, famous
Newport Beach scenes. Natural1gt'Ound
with navy, red, or brown print. 23 .. 00
102& lrvlnt. Newport Beach
ulifoml.a, l"hone 041-I061
. •
·' This is the bqgest, briqhtetl SONY-· 21 inches
of T rtnitron -Plus. measured dioqooolly, plus
electrOf'ic 1emote ccnllol. This is the SONY you've
been wat~ for.
This SONY S" jd.oq.) bbck & who10 T'I is
llflQineered l:ir bti~. crilp. hi<ontrO\I dcwity.
Feotures flAt VHF & UHF channel selec11on.
AC/ DC. open:llion. and weiqlls iust 7 !bl.. 11 OL
WE~RE #1
THE LARGEST INDEPENDENT . JV & APPLIAN<E DEALER
IN THE HARBOR AREA.
STORE HOURS:
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I
Safety Standards
Not Entire Answer
!\lemb('r~ of the Huntington Deach Airport Commit
\('C ~eC'm to he m;1king cautious progress on the con·
lro\'t'rsial lSSUl' or Mcudowlurk Airport
Thl· l'oinm1tll'l' in\'JlC'd t•xpcrh from the ::,late Depart·
m l"nt of A(•romnat1cs and the Federal A\'iation Ad·
ministration to a hearing recently
The officials Wl't'C asked to testif v in order to set the
!'<:cord straight :incl to divort'c emot1 imalism from the is·
:.ue as much as possible.
The experts ruled that tht· pnvate airfie ld is conform·
mg lo their safNv stand ards
They omitted the biggest concern of all. however.
Anrl that is, how s ulc 1:-. the airport for the <:1t1lens of Hun-
t111gton Bl·ach"
Cound lm<.in H1charcl Siebert. chairman of the com ·
millet'. is <:orrc•ct 111 ::.ceking a <:lose look ~•t the sufet~·
<1~P<'<.'l'i as the~ uppl~· lo till' airport a nd its neigh bors.
.Ju:-.l hl'l'<lll:-.1• 11 mc1..•L!> feckral and s tate rectuircments
nn rum\·a~ ll•ngl h hl·tall!>C of a grandfa the r C'lausc is not
\ l'I ~ rea!>:-.unng tu those \\ho live nearby.
T he most l'lll'Ouruglng sign for a safer operation of
lht.' uirport. hmn'\'L'I'. lit·s in lhl' att1ludc of the pilot~
thl•m-.,clve:-.
They a r c calling for several n ew safety featutes and
promise a C'rackdown on pilots who violate rules.
Their l'fforls may well hold the key to the future of
:\l c:.id owlark. IC thl'Y take their respons ibilities in·
lelligenll~ ;.111d SNiou:-.ly tlwy may be able to fly to their
neigh l>or~ · ~<.it 1sfaction.
School Board Losses
\nuthl'r llunt ington lkal'h L'nion Jligh School Dis·
ll'ld trustet· ha-., cflocultod to u:-c tht• :-.chool board as a st ep·
ping ~tom· for higher oll1t·e.
. John K. ll undle~. lhl' ncw<'sl m e mber of the five-
pl'1·soi1 board. has thrown tus hat into the ring for the 73rd
i\sscmbly District :-,eat.
Eurlier this year. board President Don MacAllister
<1nnounccll his candidacy for Hunt ington Beach City
Counc11.
Ir 1•1lht•r or hoth m en are s uccess fut ·fn their political
Iii els nl':-.1 't·:11·. ~mot her dis trict s pecial election will pro-
bu bh hl' h1·ld !>Ill<'(' the remainin~ board members seem too
d1,·1d1'<I in thl'll' polilt('<Jl opinion:-. to agree on appointing a
n'pl;1<•t•rm·nl lrustcC'.
I .cw.11 t:i\pa,\ l'r!.> \\ill ha\ e lo bear the cosl of the e le('·
t ion.
It 1 ... 1101 11n1""u~tl lor "l·hool board members to seek
h1ghl·r "" H'c' It ha:-ot<·t11Tl'd frl'quent ly in Huntington
nl'adl
But ''"ulrln t 11 he l'hcaper for local taxpayers if
..,l'h1111I bn.11'11 mc·mbNs C'ould fill the n1canc ies by ap·
poi n l nwnt"
.\net in 'IL'\\ nf llunc!IL•\ ·:-.s ho rt time on lhe board
"llH'l' '.\lard1 \\oulcln't it iie better if trustees knew their
.1rnhitions before they signed on'.'
Guidelines Needed
~
I l u11t1nµlon nenc h Mayor Ron Pa~tinson abstained
I mm 'ollng on a <:ontro\'erswl zoning issue this week afte r
t•unc·l'rns \\'l'n• ra1st.•d about his relationship "Ith the land
d1.•\ dopl'r 111\ oh ed.
Pallm~m1 m•1dc the ri~ht decigion.
1 h· \H1:-. till' formN partnN with the de\'eloper in a real
1.·:-.tate tompany. llC' abo tontinlH:s to sell some of the de·
\'C'IOPl'r·s projects.
Olten 1t seem :-. that \\hat the public percci\'eS is more
Important than what may actually transpire.
J->.,cn though thl· propriety of Pattin~on's s ituation is
not ~pcllecl out one \\a~· or the other by c ity policy, som e
"""'his role as not m lhl' public interest.
This situation tn\'Ol\'ing Pattinson spells out a need for
gu1cll'lincs 111 conflict of interest cases.
\\'hat do persons do in s uc h circumstances? Do they
how out or the meeting altogether? Do they announce their
m~rest and abstain from discus~ion entirely as did Pal·
Lrnson?
Or do they s urrender the gavel and express their views
;;s a m ember of the public'!
Obviously it is liml' for clear-cut guidelines.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those ol their authors and
artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Bloodhounds
By L.~1. BOYD
Question a rises as to
whether trained bloodhounds
could track down eriminals
in a big city the way they can
out in the countr ys ide
Definitely. Those dogs are
unbellevable. In a New York
City test once, a bloodhound
followed the trail of a man
througli a park area where
just previously 55,000 people
had attended a rock concert.
Incidentally. the only sort or
human beings that baffle
•t
Dear
Gloomy
How abQ\lt remind!ne ...
our friends out there
that the Huntington Beach City Council
meet.s twice a month on
, Moaday nights 11nd resi-
bloodhounds are Identical
twins. Their odors are iden·
tical. But the odors of all
others are each unique, and
trained bloodhounds can
perceive these differences.
Takes less time to fly from
Hong Kong to San Francisco
than vice versa. About three
hours less time. in fact.
You're travenng opposite the
rotation of the earth, that's
why.
Did I tell you that 80 per·
cent of the cheese in this
c ountry winds up in
sandwiches?
• dent• have a ri8ht tQ • lr•e(:ee 11QJnu\• , 1peec &uncU h.ttea
tl~···G 'I Ou.ec ~ it1· . •
l .C.
---
' Robert N. Weed/Publlshet' ThOmH Keevll/Edltor .
Wt<fnttday, Dec•mbttr 21 . 1 an Barbara Krelbi(h Editorial P~ Editor
Rowland Evam/Robert Novak
U.S. No Longer 'Israel's Attorney'
WASHING TON -Prime
Minister Menahem Begin's s ur-
prise visit here was viewed by
U S. officials as an Israeli effort
lo hold on to the old dependent
relationship with Washington
which h as been radically
transformed -perhaps ended -
by the dramatic Sadat-Begin
diplomacy.
By rushing here to discuss his
new peace plan for President
Anwar Sadpt,
Begi n was
t e llin g the
Ameri cans.
no thing has
ch1:tngcd, we
s t ill rely on
yo u. In word
and nuance,
the Amer ·
1 c a n s
here were
r eplyin g : everything has
changed; you now stand on your
reel face-to-face with the Arabs;
tell them your proposals for a
Mideas t settlement.
Two days before the Prime
·M i nister arrived h e re .
n ews paper ac eo unts in
J erusalem hinted that Begin's
visit was part of a broader
lsraeli·E1.typt1an scheme. When
It becaml' cleur Sadat was as
surprised as the U.S . officials
here Wl're so annoyed lhat this
word w<1s quietly passed: liegin
is coming totally on his own in·
1tiativc, with no Egyptian con·
nivancc .
T HAT IS just one clue to the
new relationship bet.ween the
U.S. and Israel. Although lhe
U.S. naturally looks to Israel as
its intimate frie nd in the
Mideast. dire<:t Is raeli-Egyptian
negotiations have suddenly
ended a full decade during
which Washington a lone spoke
for Israel in negotiations.
This tc•rminates a long period.
with only limited steps toward
peace. durin){ which the U.S.
aeled (in the phrase or former
Mailbox
De f ense Secr e tary Melvin
Laird > a!> "Israel's attorney "
The sudden termination has led
the Israeli government to seek
new ways to keep the U S
bitched to its side in negotiating
with the Arabs . That is un-
derstandable, but it is something
President Carter does not want.
At his press conference, Mr.
Carter carefully circumscn bed
any effort by Begin Lo pin down
the U.S. as a negotiating partner
at tbe Cairo conference
But conrticting with Mr .
Carter's wise refusal to put the
U.S. back in the Mideast um-
pire's seat is growing pressure
from Israel's potent pollti.cal al-
lies in this country to resist any
U.S. move to a truly neutral
posture. That helps explain the
President's quick assent to
Begin's surprising self-invitation
'
\\Don't s~+ too comfottAbk?. II
to Washington and Mr. Carter's
request aner the first. Carter
Begin meeting Friday for Begin
lo stay an extra day for an~er
meeting.
As one Mideast plannet told
us: "The last thing Carter w:mts
is to give Begin, lsrae.l or the
American Jewish community
the impression that Begio got
the bum's rush here."
Begin holds high cards in his
s hrewd maneuvers to make it
~appear that the U.S. and the
Carter administration arc still
"Israel's attorney" even though
direct talks have started with
Egypt. During lunch at Blair
House Friday. Begin conrided
det ails or his new peace plan to
four of Is rae l ·s s taunches t
friends in the U.S. Senate: Jacob
J a\'its, Richard Stone. Henry M.
Jackson and Clifford Case.
THIS PRECEDED direct
Isr aeli word to Sadat or Begin's
·plan. News was rushed to Cairo
not by the Israelis. according to
administration officials, but by
telephone from the While House
immediately following the first
Carter-Begin talk on Friday.
The obvious explanation or
Begin ·s decision to confide hii;
· plan to Mr. Carter and four U.S
Senators before explainin~ it lo
President Sadat : maintain the
pretense that the l.!.S. is still in
its old role as Israel's attorney.
Mr. Carter 's intent is dif·
fl'rent. lie wants to maintain u
certain di stance from Israel
(and . of course. the Arabs)
while exploring s everal new
ideas with his own advisers.
With Israel facing E gypt
directly aeross the bargaining
t able, Mr. Carter is comfortable
with his new role or lndepen-
dl'nce. lie seems to be distincUy
enjoying the prospect of Israel
now currying the responsibility
for hammering out peace on its
own. a responsibility not affect·
t•d hy Pnme Min11;ter Begin's
~uddcn \'1s1t.
Think Twice About a Pet for Christmas
To the Editor
Perhaps you are considering
giving a puppy or kitteo as a
Christmas gift. The volunteer
animal workers as k you to
please reconsider. These small
c reatures are a s erious
responsibility. Consider the con-
rusion in tbe average home at
Christmas time. It is hardly the
place to bring a pet that needs
plenty of sleep and a quiet place
as refuge.
Few of us have time during
th e holidays to prope rl y
housebreak a puppy or to feed a
pet at regular interval s.
Children often pressure their
parents into purchasing a puppy
or kitten by promising to feed,
groom and clean up after it.
When the child doesn't perform
these duties, the parents will
often gel rid of the pet.
IF ONLY a puppy or kitten
will do as a gift. do consider a
gift certificate to be honored
after the holidays when the
household returns to a normal
schedule.
Before obtaining a pct any
time, a family should consider
the following:
1. Are you committed to car-
ing for the pet for its lifetime, or
just until your children tire of
their new toy?
2. Are you willing and able to
pay for altering your pet to pre·
vent the birth or more animals
in a nation already saturated
with pets?
3. Are you willing and able to
pay for all inoculations, yearly
check ups and any emergency
treatment the pet may need?
4. When choosing a dog, are
you keeping in mind that the
cute little puppy of unknown
parentage could within a year
outgrow your small yard?
5. Do you really want the extra
work and sometimes the
destnaction that having a pet.
especially a puppy, entails?
6. Are you willing to control
your pets so as not to annoy
your neighbors? Remember, not
e:veryone loves animals.
7. If you are renting a home.
apartment etc .. do you have
your landlord's permission to
own a pet?
HAZeL MORTENSEN
' ~halrman, United
HumanilarfansofOrf!ngeCounty
I
st)ould have an S8 billion portfolio
when our taxes have increased 25
percent this year.
Why cannot some of the S8
billion be used to reduce our tax·
es. f'd appreciate an explana-
tton.
RUTHS. CHAMDEHLAIN
The tCll' collector-treasurer off ice
acts as a "bank" for 170 taxing agen-
cies m tlu> county. mcludmg 34 school
and college dutncts. The $8 bJll.ton
Jigure represents cash flow rather
than investments. In j1scal J976·n
the oj/1ce handled $1.179 brllion of
new money of which $757 million
came from property lazes. the re-
mainder from other revenue sources,
including state and federal funds.
The lax collector-treasurer invests
the money and returns it lo the tar·
ing agencies as needed. plus interest.
l.<ut year $43.3 million m interest
was distributed to the 170 ta.nng
agencies to enable them to hold doum
their tax rcues. Editor.
DotdJfe S tandard
To the Editor:
I am strongly opposed lo the
main idea of the article in the
Dec. 12 Pilot titled, "Boy, 3,
Killed by Dog."
My point is, if we kill this dog,
which undoubtedly killed the
boy, how come we don 'l do
som ething equally drastic to the
people who are out on the streets
again after having killed one or
two people?
Before destroying the dog. why
don't they find out if the family
has been treating the dog unfair
ly in any way?
LINDA McKIN NEY
Scar~d
To the Editor:
I am really scared of all the
plane wre<:ks In this section of
Huntington Beach. Why is the
city so helpless? Don't we have
any men in town lo handle this'> r don't know much about law.
but I know l was In danger when
a plane crashed and smashed an
elbctrical pole and live wires
sparked around my car. Isn 't the
city too crowded in 1977 for these
1920 stunts? Please help us!
MARY JANE WEKEL
•E,..tl011' lucltled
To the Editor:
Could it be that air crashes
have become so C'Ommonplacc In
Hunllngton Beach and its en·
vlrons, that they arc no longer
newawort}\y! Tbe b'IOlt bizarre
of the five m0tt rttt'nt droppings
from the sky, was dismissed as
merely "a claselc booboo" by
one of the two pilots ln the plan~
a mere mix-up as to "whow-s
minding the store·• 1t lhe t.IJne
perhaps7
So, in. rew moath•, five planes
have cruhed <six Jn vol vtd ). And
wben we paiftt. out Ult potential
dangers, we ue accused o(
"emotionaUzing," by pilots de·
fending the indefensible.
..Emotion .. means "having the
feelin gs aroused to the point of
awareness." That is easily re·
cognized as legitimate and sensi-
ble. when' facts, such as the
above. are chroniC'led ; when the
potential dangers are ever pre-
sent ; when the low-rty1ng , noisy
Joyrides. in a relatively Ii mited
circular pattern. over our homes
and schools. beat down like the
continual drippinJ! or the ancient
tort ure t«;>sl ; when tberc is con·
tinual talk of self-policing by
pilots and reforms by the airport
owners who refuse to observe
' safety practices and require-
ments. etc. etc.
NOW, one of the recurring
arguments used by pilots is that
··the airport was her e• firl>l"
<which may be debatableJ. and
that "the homeowners knew or
its existence before they bought
in lhe area." some pilots going so
far to suggest we move if we don't
like the way the airport operates.
Let's review the facts: 18 and
more years ago. when many of us
moved here. there were probably
less than one-third the numbers
of planes as arc now regularly
usinjt the Mea<lo'' lark airport,
today. Furthermore. the flight
patterns were not over the areas
where we purchased our homes.
The fli ght patterns were over
what is now Huntington Harbour.
but was then only an uninhabited
bog. So. we ask, why the change
an the flight patterns?
Had the airport continued to
operate as when we moved here.
there would be fewer complaints.
<unless more pilots and co-pilots
forget whose turn it is at the "joy
stiek").
Are the children and homes
a nd schools in Huntington
Harbour that much more pre-
ci.o us than our homes and
children and schools, that the
former are insulated against the
perpetual noise; lhe clipping of
live wires; the crash-landings:
the infringements upon the rights
lo a peaceful and sare existence'!
Perish the thought.
No. we are not emotionalizing
when our feelings are aroused to
the point of awareness, as dem·
ons trated in the foregoing.
Rather, emotionalisrp describes
those who attempt to defend the
exis ting unsatisfactory opera.
lions of Meadowlark airport
without the awareness that stems
from concern and commonsense.
13 F. BORCOMAN
Nee a 'Lat0'
To the Editor: .
Th SO·callel "gr~dfathcr
law" ia not a Jaw at aJI. This Is a
slang laymon term. Jl Is u.!!ed to
explain some bulldlf\8, or use, or
situation· that existed bd'ore
s afety requirements c.11me lnto etrect.
This docs not mean that a
dangerous situation has a law to
protect 1t. Where hfe or limb i:.
1n jt!opardy the gove rning
authorities should override the
so-called grandfather la"
Meadowlark airport is under
such a grandfather law.
JOHN DRYER
ERA lnforiflatlon
To the Editor ·
I must speak out. It has been
two days since I read the letter
from Mary 0 . Moore <Dec. J.I
Mailbox ) an<l I am still fuming
from her inaccura te charac-
t erizations and less than indirect
innuendoes about a fine person
and hard worker for all human
rights not onl y women.
Vivian Hall and her husband or
30 some odd years certainly do Clo
use Ms. Moore's words) "hold
dear the family eonccpt and the
lo\'e and devotion between a man
and a wo man."
I would like to comment on
each point or Ms. Moore·s letter
because 1t is rife with insC'nsilive
perceptions of important issues.
However. I wi ll limit myself to
tr yi ng to make clear one point
that the anti-ERA forces have
l'Ont1nuouslv tried to mis
represent. Wh~1t I am about to sav
has been slated manv times. but
e\'ldenlly not enough. ir even one
pt•rson. such as Ms. Moore. is
stall "confu~ed."
RATIFICATION of the Equal
Rights Amendment will provide
equal rights under the law for
both men and women. Period. lt
does not legislate what a per.son
holds lo be true in their privale
li ves.
People who would like to have
more information, fact as op·
posed to some popular myths,
s hould avai l the mselves of
services offered by Orange Coun-
ty ERA Coalition. They have a
speakers bureau llnd wi ll send
someone, free of charge. to your
group or organization to discuss
what the ERA wi ll and will not
accomplish. There is also a 24·
hour answering scr\'ice for the
coalition which will direct your
inquiry to the appropriate
person. The number is 639-8807.
My point in all of this is,
believe wtlat you will. it is your
right. But please. base that bellet
on facts and not raise assumptioa
and unsubstantiated conclusions.
BARBARA L. HAMMERMAN
\ .
Ldterr /rom reader1 are welcome.
The right to condenH ltfter1 to /ft
~ or eUmmott libel i( rturotd,
l...fft.,-1 of )()(} wordr or ~ wUI be
gi~ PT'/'1tnct. All frltll'r• mut in·
cleldf ftona1"re and mail.tng oddrus
btJt names mou be wf:tflllfld on ,.,. que.t If tuf/icitnt rtoaon ta ~mt.
P~'ll unll not be publllhed.
TRAVEL
Concorde Jet
Luxury IJner
Of Airways
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
A""'9<1411CM-11qf1 •
LONDON -No doubt it's the nostalgia craze
gone awry at double Mach speed, but the supersonic
Concorde is beating its drum In proud sonic
boomlets lo evoke the ~rand era of the grand
trani;atlantic luxury liners. Her advertising copy
writers, putting a patina of prestige on the $797.JS
one-way ticket, hail the flt.!el, ungainly bird as the
new holder of the "Blue Riband," the gill and silver
trophy once awarded for lhe quickest Atlantic
crossing by a passenger ship.
ALSO CALLED THE HALES Trophy, after
ilenry Kcates Hales, the British member of Parlia·
menl for Sheffield who thought up lhe idea, the Blue
R1band passed from the old four-stack Mauretania
to the Bremen in 19'l9 when a crossing of 4 days, 17
hours and 42 minutes ushered in the miracle of the
··rour-dny boat."
The ill-fated Normandie, in the spirit of
Napoleon's great cheer leader, Capt. Chauvin, un·
furled a JO.meter-long blue pennant la IJleler for
each knot of her specdJ from her top aft mast as she
swept past Ambrose ~• • J ~1ghl to claim the trophy 4--in the summer of 1935. Stew But the Blue Rlband,
which unlike British
Airways today the haughty Cunard Line never deigned lo recognize,
was permanently retired July 7, 1952, when the liner
United States on he r maiden voyage, with Margaret
Truman tooting the whistle as the ship passed
Bishop's Rock, crossed to England In 3 days, 10
hours and 40 minutes. The new champion pierced
gale winds to beat the Queen Mary's 14-year-old
record by more than 10 hours.
NOW THE CONCORDE TAKES as many hours
--3 1,'J -as the United Slates took days to cross the
ocean. and only the gorgeous mohair s teamer
blank els handed out by the stewardesses lo jet lag
t;lumberers look anything like anything out or the
mothballed grand lady's grand past.
Still, some oC London's luxury hotels have caught
the magic or Concorde's record-shredding Atlantic
hops.
Over the concierge's desk in
the Savoy Hotel is a call board
m arked "Atlantic Crossings,"
which used to list the Aquatania.
th e America , the Queen
Elizabeth. the Nl e uw
Amsterdam, the France and
-2 other queens of the deep going
all the way back to the Titanic
and the Lusitania.
-..1111011uT TRUMAN Now it lists the Concorde. de·
parting at 11 :15 a.m. every Tuesday, Thursday and
Sunday.
THE ONLY OTHER SHIP ON the call board's
horizon that day was the Christmas Caribbean
cruise of the QE2.
Roy C.J . Dobbs, the head porter at Claridge's,
l(ot>s out to Heathrow Airport to assist Concorde
passengers with their Gucci cases and Mark Cross
d uffle bags, the way he used to go down lo
Southampton on the boat train to lend a hand with
the steamer trunks and poodles In wicker baskets.
flying the Concorde for the first time, this
bereaved lover of the old luxury liners found almost
the same shipboard cam araderie among the 90-odd
passengers. Passing the speed of sound apparently 1 ~ a shared experience that compels conversation.
"ABOUT THR EE HOURS I N these illy-bitty
s eals is all a body could take," drawled the Texas
oilma;i across the aisle. shattering the awkward
silence that obtains on most subsonic flights.
"Like flying tourist class on Trans-Texas."
agreed his seat mate, peering out the tiny window at
the rapidly vanishing Bristol channel as the
machometer on the wall in front of us edged toward
.96. A s light vibration stirred our martinis.
The stew popped a bottle or Dom Perignon '70 as
we passed the speed of sound, as if to muHle the
sonic boom over Land's End. and explained there
. would be no in-night movie because "the aircraft
isn't configured that way.'·
"YOU MEAN IT AI N'T big enough for a screen?"
suggested another member or the oil fraternity, and
she went off mumbling about there only being lime
to s erve the meal and fill out the immigration form.
Seasoned Concorde travelers bragged about hav·
ing "flown the Frenchman .. on the Washington run,
the way the dowagers in deckchairs used to count
their crossing on the old Franconia or the
l\11 ch aelangelo.
After the barquettes of caviar and dressed crab,
served at 10 miles up as we accelerated to our top
speed or Mach 2.03, lunch was a choice or Roast Sad·
ctlc or English Lamb, Breast or Chicken Epicure
and Medallions of Veal Smitane. topped off with
Chateau Brane Canlenac '71 and Pullgny Mon·
trechet '75.
"WHAT, NO STEAK?" EXPWDED the man
across the aisle, who had been in Libya for two
years and "had enough mutton for a lifetime." He
assured us his "hangover broke up at Mach 2," and
the "best thing about getting there twice as fast is
you only_drink half as much."
QUEENIE Bv Phil lnterlandl
"
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ne preclsl11 "state of t•• art" t11tr·
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wl1' ••pie '"'" reserve 'a .. lew dis· tortln 1t 11ul11•• 11(J1t .•• c111· sldera'1r Im nu 1 J..
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llutton ud pro1r1111 indicator
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t,. DAILY PlLOT S H f
Answers Denied
GOvemor Screem Questions
!Ii: ASHVILLE. Tenn. <AP> Gov
!ta)' Blanton. uuder fire as a big
spender, has a new rule for s tule
house reporters : Think vositi ve und
write positive. Those who don't ,
Blanton says, positively won"t get
their qu~st1ons 1tnswered.
''If )'OU report the positive side of
an issue, then I will respond to all the
negative questions you might ask,"
he i.aid.
But if a reporter has not reported
what Blanton called the positive side,
he said he will answer no questions
whate\'cr
''II' YOU DON'T know what the
pos1l1ve side of a n issue is, you can't
ask an intelligent question," Blanton
said.
Blanton said there was not one re·
porler at his news confer1.:nce Mon·
day who t•ould qualify as a wntcr of
pos itive news.
Blanton refused to respond to Bill
Tlenn<'lt. Nashville correspondent for
the Th<' Commerc1al Appeal, who
said he had a list of questions about
s pending by Blanton a s reported in
a ser ies in the Memphis nl'wspapcr.
THE COMME RCIAL APPEAL re.
ported that Blanton and his staff ran
up a $2,035 bill during a five-day stay
in Tokyo in October. The tnp, which
irtcluded s lops in Switzerland.
England, Germany and Japan, was
to promote trade between Tennc!>sec
und foreign nations.
"Thal 's <Jll nt•g ativ(•," Blanton said
o( the newspa1wr report.
The Comml·rc1al Appeal sem~s on
Ill an t on's spl'ndi ng, a Ion~ with
c·riti<:ism by Sen. Victor As ht'. R
Knox v11lt'. was published und broad·
l'as r during the weekend.
ASHE llAS BEEN a persistent
critic o! the Democratic governor's
adm 1nistration.
Ashe said stute records s how pay·
ments totaling more than Sl7,000 for
hmousiO<'s, tuxedos and hotel rooms
APWlnplwle
NEGATIVE QUE5TIONS
Gov. Ray Blanton
during trips t<> Washington <;1nce
April 1975 A:.ht.• ..,aid th{' stall' paid
$12.419 to three Ii mousinc c·ompanlC!>
in Washington for the transportation
of Gov. and Mrs Blanton
As he· last wct•k w roll' James
O'Hara. district director of the In·
t ernal Reve nue Service, lis ting
rt1ghls on 11tatc a1rcr11£t by Blanton
family members and friends.
Bl~ANTON S;\10 Tiit: I RS 11lready
was auditing his int·oml' t<1x. al his
n·quest. and, "I can assure you that
mv taxt•s an· then• " i~lanton told r<·porll-'r'i he 1s sug
gcsting that Prcsuknt Curtt•r <ind all
other l'lcctt•d offil'ials in tht· nation
follow ~> -;imilar policy a bout 1><i~1tt' e
questioning l ie ~a id he has eom
municalcd his feelings lo the pn·s1
dent.
"I 've come to the conclusion that
thPre has lo be a turn·<iround ," he
said. "The message I'm getting is
the public is tired of the negativism
of the news media "
National Parts
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Domestic • Foreign
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• '•r Yo1JrCefltffftl•1te•·O,.n 5'1n'oy ,
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SO HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION!
W ~ WI II •~ Clottftl S••· llf'r. :l:J
a•ll W Ill lh Opf'•
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. DEC. 24, 1977 JJl011. fhf•. 28,, h• to 611m.
~ THE SHOWER ffiftSSftGE
byWaterPik'
• A mm•ge with •very shower!
• fNtures pulntlnt bursts that
m.1Sa98, M>Othe, stimulate.
• fully •djustablt, easy to Install.
WALL MOUNT MODEL
OUR REG. 19.99
!Ill
EA.
ahop-vac·
WET /DRY VACUUM
N o.SM·2 • No heavy duty clMn up job is too tough!
HAND HELD MODEL • Picks up wher• other v.c:uums fa1l ... po-r
cleans -t or dry ... verAUle 11nd hght-l9ht.
=~: ::':~t ~(kagc; bot II J 14" ii iiories.
59.89 ::::1::1
OUR REG 29.99
!l!I SAVE
f201
()JCWQI
DRILL PRESS STAND
with TILT TABLE
WORKMATES From Black & Decker·
• A·-··~ m,, ... ,,, .... _., ~
for thote exactl"9 do-1t·yoursetf jobs! ~
• Converts portable drolls Into precmon
controlled drill J)t'ess ... flu most 1/4"
.nd 3/8" electric drolls.
• Depth control mnsuring device.
• Rot•ting scale determines ••act engle.
• Drills n•1l1ble et Angels low pr1ces.
SA VE $10.00! ~
OUR REG. 29.99 ~
ASSORTED HRISTMAS
TREE NOVELTIES
• Hurry for bflt
sel•cllonl
• While quanllt•n
litlt sorry no
r•tnChKks1 n~~
ANGELS LOW, LOW PRICES!
I
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: ~~~:,":.!·~:I:;•· ~ --• gauge 2" diameter ::I
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grate. EA
OUR REG. 44.99 No.HG·74
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Metric or SAE.
• Drop forgtd llMI
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drive.
OUR REG. 9.99
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1w ...... c:ompltt1 with
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OUR REG. 24.98
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ting speed ... 2 318" cuts at 900, 1 7/8" at 450.
• FeaturH n-Safety Switch •nd Guard Stop.
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OUR
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34.99
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complete W1th 5 year tu••·
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centers. goant VIM and uw-
hors.s all-in-one!
• Sturdy steel base.
DUAL HEIGHT
• Ant iqued we.thered buss
fin1sh ... co1n9lete with all
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• Full 1 year guarentH.
SA VB •aB.00!
OUR REG. 67.99 ·'! ~~
... ~.f. ... · .. ,, .. ?. ... 59.99 EA.
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JIG SAW
• Cuts metal •nd plnt1cs,
wood & compositions.
Calibr•ted tilting shoe.
Double 1nsul•ted.
SA VB .:J.001
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' !~ ~~Black & Decker-~ 0 3/8" DRlll
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gearing for h1g.h-
power drilling.
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OUR REG. 13.99
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SAl'B 14.Ht
tvoL. 70, NO. 355, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
..
q r
Toilay's ~los._g
N.Y.Stoeks
Howling Wind Kills 5;
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1977 TEN CENT~'
·Batters State ·
... '
. .
By The Associated Press
Hurricane-force winds howl·
ing throug h California's
agriculture·rich midsection at
more than 100 miles an hour
Mlve Jert at least five persons
dead and a trail or destruction
from Bakersfield to the Mexican
border.
The violent winds blew down
barns. and airplane hangars, top-
pled heavy trucks. tossed
chunks or brick and roofing
through the windows of homes
and businesses, and whipped
brush firesoutofcontrol.
Hundreds of travelers were
m arooned in cities throu8)lout
the Central Valley and the Mo·
jave Desert, jamming hotels,
cafes and emergency evacuaUon
centers set up in churches and
schools.
An estimated 30,000 homes, ot-
f ices and industries from
Bakersfield south s uffered
power outages, and thick clouds
of dust were reported as far
away as Stocklo~ about 200
miles lo the north.
.,..., .................
SALVATION ARMY'S DOROTHY BARKER SEEKS COIN$ J Collections Down This Year After Shopping Center Ban
I 11 ;collections Lower
iF or· Salvation Army
The barring of Salvation Army
collection kettles from two major
shopping centers and several
smaller ones is one of the key
reasons donations arc down this
year countywide, Salvation Army
officials said today.
Collections for the needy have
been excluded this year from
Fashion Island in Newport Beach
and The City shopping complex in
Orange. according to Capt. Alfred
Van Clecf of the Army'~ Santa
Anaorrice.
Donations are down $6,000in the
Santa Ana·Tustin area alone, he
said. Van Cleef said contributions
were also down in the Orange
Coast area but figures were not
immediately available today.
The familiar Salvation Army
kettle with a man or woman ring·
ing a ~11 beside it, collects funds
for food and toys for the poor dur·
ing the Christmas season, Van
Cleef1aid.
The Salvation Army will dis-
tribute $20,000 this year for food ·
baskets, toys and girt boxes for
rest home patients in Orange
County.
In addition to funds, the Army
accepts toys.
Donations can be made by call-
ing 898-9332 or 542-9150, or by
mailing gifts and checks· to the
Salvation Army at either 8100
Garden Grove Blvd., Garden
Grove, or 818 E . 3rd St., Santa
Ana.
John Schmitz Ku,is
M
For State Senate
Former American Indepen·
dent Party presidential can-
didate John Schmitz conllrmed
today he will run for the state
senate seat being vacated nut
year by Sen. Dennis Carpenter, R.
Newport Beach.
Joining Schmitz in ihe
Republican primary next June
will be Huntington Beach busl·
nessman Steve Holden, who has
announced his intention to seek
the senate p()8t, And Fountain Valley City
Councilman George &con said
today be Is considering a lr)' for
lhe GOP nomlnaUori In the a6th
Senatorial District.
The 36th dlatrlct covers
coastal Orange County from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and
extends inland to include the
Sa.ddleback Valley and t.be S.Ota
Ana Mountains. It also extends
alone the eoQl to Oceaulde ln
Saa Diego County. The dlatrlct ls .
considered a Republlcan
atroncbold. Carpenter ennouncM bil n-
ti rem ent earlier tbb monthi
aknost a year Mfore he wil
leave office.
Schmlta. 4' Ls a Co1'0D8 del Mar r•ident. He teacHI at San·
ta Ana Coll•I•· He ta a con-
servative ad a member ol the
Jobn Blftb lodet;.
Hol~. 46, ls a former trustee
of the HunUnaton Beach City
(elementary> Scbool District.
He operates .~ Huatington Beach
insurance aaency.
Holden bas sald he would tum
his eMl'lfes toward property tax
retorm, reduction or 1ovem·
ment 1pendin1 and tax relief, lf
elected.
Schmits held the state senate
seat for Rve ya,n belort beiDC
elected to the U.S. J(ouae of
Repr..maUv• ID 1"10.
He lOltldl~r9ALonal ... tto
Andrew Hlula'iw la Ina. the
same ,.... .. NSl uUUIC•ihUJ
for p~ "' tM AIMIS$ ·1nd-c: ... Uetet. Sc inb aald be ... bOD9 to
help lo~•~ a aew Hillf\len
betw ... •. llepubUeaat and CGI• ""auw Demoer1t1U eleet.d to UM .......
"It's the worst I 've ever
seen,'' said California Highway
Patrol officer J im Hlll of
Bakersfield. "I've been at this
BIG STORM HITS
NORTH -AS
kind of work for 15 years, and l
thought I'd seen 1l all ••• but
nothlng like this."
Almost all activity in
Bakersfield, population 80,000,
had come to a standstill by mid-
day Tuesday, the second day it
* * *
bad been battered by the winds.
Power had been cut orr to
much of the city as the winds
tore down power lines, shattered
windows, and toss ed t.,rees
across cars, houses and streets.
Visibility was cut to zero as a
thick, mustard-colored grit cov-
ered the city.
Some looting was reported.
IJ} Arvin. a farm community
of 7 ,000 people 20 miles south of
'Baker1fleld along Highway 99,
}>Olice said almost every home
suffered some damage. Store
* . * *
fronts were ripped down,"l.rees
were uprooted, and roofs were
blown off homes and businesses. Water, electricity and telephone
Une:;. were cut otr, and transistor
radios were the only means of
comm unicatlon.
A wind· gauge atop the Arvin
police station registered gusts of
up to 101 mph before the gauge
blew apart.
The California National Guard
in Bakersfield was called into
active dutv and rescued 35 peo. pie, including_ Kern County
* * *
Sheriff's Capt .• Larry KU er, who
were b~ed under a bridge on
Route near Arvin to escape.
the bli & dust storm. Kller's
wlDdsbleld bad been blown out
by the storm and his radio bad
been knocked out or operation.
The Red Cross and Salvation
Army were setting up emergen·
cy cen~ to care f6f homeless
reaidenta and hundreds of
stranded travelers.
The winds also were blamed
for the death •of a woman rear·
ended by a tanker truck.
* * *
Coast Due for Storm
Warnings Posted for Trave~rs, Boaters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.11'1' ~ ...... u ... Wrllff
Hi gh northeast winds which
wreaked havoc in most of
Southern California Tuesday
miraculous ly bypassed the
Orange Coast but weather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers not to be
complacent.
The battle of the highs and
lows could bring a quick and
drastic change in the weather
pattern by nightfall, according
to National Weather Ser vice.
The freak Santa Ana condition
which brought northeast ~nds
roaring in over portions of
Southern California at velocities
of up to 100 miles an hour were
expected to diminish late today,
giving way to an intense low
pressure cold front that should
bring strong southeast winds
with rain.
The bieh pressure condition caustng the strong northeast
winds ls being sucked into the
low pressure trough, slowing the
front's proeress tQward the
coast .
The cold front waa reported
less than 200 miles from the
coast earlier today and moving
east at a rate or 20--miles an
hour. The front was expected to
bring rain with winds 15 to 30
knots by late today, switching to
the southwest and west on Thurs·
day.
The baUle of the fronts Tues·
day was the most freakish in the
memory of oldtimers here.
While northeast winds of more ·
than 70 miles an hour were
lashing San Bernardino and
Riverside counties and wreaking
death and damage in Kem Coun-
ty, a s~theast gale of 40 knots
Electrical
Short Came
Of ConJO Fire
An electrical short in an ex· tension cord for a water bed
appeared tp be the cause of a
fire that burned two upstairs
bedrooms of an Irvine con·
domlnium Tuesday night, coun-
ty firemen said.
One ol three residents inside
the home, tt 4 Rockrose Way,
spffered minor bums to his face,
and one fireman sustained first.
and secmd degree burns on his
netk and. wrists.
Firemen estimated the blue
caused $20.000 damage, half of
that to the contents of t wo
bedrooma to which firemen con·
tabJed the fire.
Firemen u.ld the injured resi·
dent, Albert Dostal, was burned
while rou1in1 his sleeping
brother from one of the bedrooms.
poatai, n, was treated at
Tustin Communlty Hospital and
released. • Injured ftreman Don Hayden -wu reported ln good condition.
Some 22 firemen responded to
the fire, which was reported by
a nelahbor. The blue was ex·
Ungufshed within 18 minutes,
firemen said.
Carter Eamily .
·0pe,., Hmiday'
..
• DelfY .............. Mltdlllt I
HIGH WINDS BRING YARD FULL OF TUMBLEWEEDS TO LAGUNA NIGUEL COUPLE
Mr. end Mrs. K. A. Lehner Have aeanup Problem at 24522 Los•S.rreno1
virtually closed San Diego
Harbor and was fell as far north
as Dana Point.
While all this was going on to
the south and north, the Orange
Coast was locked in a dead calm
with an overcast of dust that re-
duced visibility to as low as one
mile offshore. Vis ibility at
Avalon, €atalina Island,, was
Hughes' Child?
down to one mile in dust by
midafternoon. Visibility offshore
at Newport Beach was three to
five miles.
The southeast gale south of
San Diego caused extensive
damage as far south as Rosarito
Beach in Baja California.
Oldtlmers called it the worst
storm since 1939. A special
Terry Moore Tells
Of Daughter'sBirth
VANCOUVER, British Colum-
bia (AP> -Actress Terry
Moore, who claims she was
married to lbe late Howard
Hughes, says she bore a child by
the billionaire recluse, but the
baby was premature and died
within 24 hours. " .. Miss Moore, 47, said in hn in·
terview Tuesday that in Oc·
tober, 1951, she gave birth three
months prematurely to a girl
she named Lisa Marie. The in·
Cant died a day later of blood
poisoning, she said.
Her claim that she was mar-
ried to Hughes is not new, and
she blnt.ed a year ago that she
might have had a child by bjm.
The actress said Tuesday the
birth occurred while s he was
making a film in Munich, West
Germany. She said she married
Hugbea secretly on a boat off the
. west coast or Mexico in No-
vember 1M9.
Hughes was in the United
States when the babJ was born
and decided not to 10 to W'5t
Germuy, abe uld. ••ne clidn't want a child," said
Mias lloore, "Be didn't want
anyone to have a claim on hli
estate, and be saw to It tbat 1
dldn 't 1et. pretnant •caln. I real·
ly wanted a chUd aod was
heartbroken when our da~ter
died,
"l thou1bt be waa betae
Mltllb/; ll&a Moore 1ald. "But
be arped tUt llli1ell you were
uoaad elllldl'eD ~tantJ1 to
create and lDolct "•m, tbey ,,.,d a.mt ~ lniM•. bl·~JOUl' Dame.''
)UQ', ~';aw tlaat lit the ~---iliiil ll\icllel ..........
• ••• 11 ...,.,,.,,..,,.,,. ........,,., .. ~= )"'
,.,. .........
BORE! HUGHES' CHILD?
Actreu Terry Moor•
weather bulletin warned
pleasure boaters to stay out or
the area and shipping was
slowed to a near ball.
Boaters who ventured onto the
water at Dana Point were hit by
a strong easterly wind. A small
boat and a catamaran were
overturned at the height of the
blow. • '
Power Jines were down in
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and '
San Clemente and burglar t
alarms set off by the damage ~
kept police in all three com-
munities rushing to answer false
alarms.
"Weird" was the word used by
most observers to describe the
freakish calm conditions which
prevailed from Newport Beach
to Seal Beach while other areas
of the county were being lashed
by bowling winds from every
quadrant.
J. Sherman Denny, a lifelong
weather buff, said, "lt certainly
is strange, all right. Freakish."
He added that this has been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
<SeeWIND, A2)
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain increas·
ing to 00 percent tonight
turning to showers Tht.Crs-
d ay. Cooter Thursday.
Lows tonight so to 55.
Highs Th~ar oo to 65.
J INSIDE TODAY
You d~n't ju1t soy
Chri1tma1 in the Poulter
houlthold fn Fountain Vallet/.
Y °" '°II C1a1'1dmcu CJtNtma. Chriatmaa for tM triplm who
'lioe tlwrw, along "1ith tMir
Jive brothn1 and 1ilter1.
Page CJ.
r
••
~ .
DAILY PILOT Wedn!!d!r. Oat I,... t+;<ttn
,.,.WI .......
PERISHES IN FIRE
Baae Commander Turner ·
Death.Hoax
l .
Callers
VANDENBERG AlR FORCE
BA$g<Ar>-AISn -~
out of ooDtrol by tM aam11 tiW·
ricane-fC>Re _.~toppled a
bigh·voltage tower and aent.
sparks raining into parched brush
-killed the base comaiuder and at least two otb« people q they
tried to fight it. lt still raged out or
control today.
"The fire seems lik~ it's going
lo e90tiQue as long aa the high
* * * Fro•PageAI
WIND •••
seat Beachiu'egaatd Lt: John
Montr.flJa listened to reports
that tVinds were playing nvoc
in nearby Los Alamitos and •ere·
"b&Pwi.Dg to beat the band" wblle
he •Jpt;iked out q, dea.d.. c$ tbat
was.!'still as glass." ... ·. ·•
Huntington Beach State
Lilesuard Supervisor Blll Kran ~e.ned the dead CJ!llni in his fl~-· lo the eye or ~,hur.r~ane, . :nunUngton :Beaolt' tifegiiard
!l;tJ:Wll Richardson gazed out at
the calm sea and the pall of:dusl
stretching to Catalina Island and .co.xnmenled: "It's re{llly:SJ,range
'ituff." I (, ·small craft ad~ls6rles' re-
mained ·~n effect· today rfrom
Point ~nceplion to the Mepcan
border with predicµons o f
south.east wip~s of up to 40
knpts. Gale w«t'I1ings. were in ef·
feet IJOrth of )topterey.
LlglU .r,ain was falling in San
Fec.oando Valley th.ii Jll9rning
and was expect~d t o spr ead
south later in the day.
; . .
wtnd1 do. It just keeps jumping,"
AJr Force Sgt. Dan Andenoa' said
late Tuesday.
The fire, blown lrom ridJe to
ridge on this sprawling military
complex by erratic 70 mph winds,
s pread in a patchwork or names
over several square mUes of the
150-square mile base 50 miles
northwest of Santa Barbara. One
thousand acres were blackened.
More than 300 firefighters bat·
tied the blaze throughout the
night, and the strong winds COD·
tlnued through today but at a
lower pitch.
Killed were Col. Joseph Turner,
48: the base com..,ander~ Base ·~r• Chief Billy Bell, '4; and >J..
OPEC Meetbag
sistant Base fire Chlel Euaene
Cooper, 45, from Vandenberg
• Villace.
A fourth reported death had not
been confi rmed by base
authorities.
Base spokesman Capt. Leonard
Brady said Turner , a veteran of
the Korean and Vietnam wars.
was directing the firefighting
operation when flam es sur·
rounded his jeep. Turner tried to
run to safety but was overtaken by
tbe names and.burned to death,
Bradysajd.
Turner, 48, was in charge or
operations at the 11,000·m an base.
but was outranked by two
generals.
Crude Oil Price
FP.eeze Remains
CARABALLEDA,-1,. Venezuela
(AP ) -The vP.EC oil
Q)toisten wound up tbelr prlce-
aetting meeting .today" without
U>.aking a decision, in effect
leaving the current worlcfl crude
oit price frozen until the cartel
meets again ~n the question. .
• The current price is $12.70 per
42.gallon barrel
here, the oil ministers were
divided over whether to freeze
crude oil prices in 1978.
· At tbe Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries•
price selling meeting in Doha,
Qatar, last Decembe r , Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates opted for a lower price
than the OPEC majority.
E very 5 percent increase ln
the OPEC price costs U.S.
motorists a half.cent more at lhe
gasoline pump, ex.perts say.
-
. . ' . Out tor Oaristmcu • l •
W,at~~gat~ fi'gure H. R. 'Haldeman leaves the Federal
Cottectional Institution in. Lompoc for a six-day holiday
ftirtoagfjl wlshing fell ow jnmales and reporters, "Have a meTrY' C!)rlstmas." He's ~rving a ~1• l! to eight.year sen·
tence fot" eonspiracy, obstruction or justice and perjury.
Not Kids?
Victims of a cruel weekend
telephone hoax have told Hunt·
1n gton Beach pol.ice in·.
vestigators they believe the
callers were "deranged adults," not out-of-school youngsters seek·
ing a thril I.
Meanwhile, the National
Weather Service continued warnio~s to travelers ~ tJ:u; nott~~&J windj continued tQ
blow fo San Bernardino,
Riverside and Kem Counties at
up to 60 Qliles per boqr.
The next regularly scheduled
semi-annual m eeting of the
Organization of P~trolewn Ex·
porting Countries is June is. but an OPEC spokesman said an ex-
traoi:dinary meeting could be
conv•ned at«ny time.
Mi.Disters earlier today men-
tioned the possibility'Of calling a
special price meeting in about
three months.
Swiss Vaults .Bid · Fails
· Spokesman Hamfd Zaheri did
Police Detective Art Droz in·
terviewed 15 of the hoax victims
T uesday. They were among
about 100 called by someone
claiming to have news of a
.. tragic accident" and the dea\h or .e family member.
Sup ¢ondllhnt~~~Jon1C' tbe Orange &ast rem8llft!(I retative-
ly calm today as the northeast
winds apparently knoeked down
the waves generated by the cold
front. As the winds diminished
the forecast was for surf from
five to seven feet later in the day
and.:Thursd'ay.
· not elaborate on whether or
when a meeting might be held.
'Droz said some of the victims
heard as many as three adult
voices, two males and one
fe male.
Proa Page Al
Victims of the hoax calls Fri-
dny and Saturday said the calls
ca me al all times of the. night
and even in the early monUllg
hours.
HUGHES ••.
None of the recipients of the
calls actually lost any relatives,
· ~lice said. The pranksters apparently
used a current telephone direc·
tory and called their vicfu;ns in
alphabetical order, Droz sa1d.
· None of the victims received
more than one phone call -
making 1t difficult to trace the
... ourct• or the messages, Droz
:-.:iid Dr oz is working wilh
tcJephonc company omcials in
e ff o rt to trac k d ow l) the
1wrpctrators of the ghoulish
prank. lie declined to discuss
thl' methods being employed in
the investigation.
Most of the hoax vict.ims are
Huntington Beach residents. but
som c Ii vc in Costa Mesa.
Newport Beach and Fountaia
Vallev.
Droz said he believes many
Yiclims did not report the hoax
C'\lls lo police. "Many probably just called a
relative to check out the 'death,'
but we will never know how ·
many," he added.
Most of the victims he in·
l~rviewcd said they heard what
<;0unded like police radios in the
background, Droz said.
Inmates to Leave
LA PAZ, Bolivia <AP> -The
United States and Bolivia have
reached agTeement in principle
to allow Americans Imprisoned
here on cocaine charges to serve
out their sentences in their own
country. Of the 32 l).S. citizens
now held, however, only about
six are expected to be able to
leave immediate ly when the
treaty takes effecL
~Uis Moore, who was married
three other times, now lives
wtth ber children in Brentwood,
Calif., where she is writing ber
autioblography: She sa1d it is
mainly about Hughes.
Interviewed last year a week
after Hughes died, she told the
Fort Lauderdale <Fla.) News
that she was secretly married lo
him but did not plan to file a
claim against his estate.
Miss Moore said in the News
interview that there "may have
been" children from the alleged
marriage, but refused to be
more spedfic.
She said ift the News interview
that "Howard was the greatest
lover I ever bad. He was the
best."
She is to appear as a witness
in Las Vegas in litigation over
the billionaire's so ·ca lled Mormon will, which sne c1a1ms
is a fake.
"He only ever wrote one will,"
s he said Tuesda y, "and that
directed all his money to his
medical institute he dreamed of
setting up.
"That's all he ever talked
a bout, even on our wedding
night. That was bis reason for
living," she said. "'I think nis
real will was destroyed by his
aides. They guarded him night
and day. Towards the end Howard
was controlled by the people he
tried to help."
H1,1ghes was divow:ced Crom
Houston socialite Ella Rice in
1929 and married actress Jean
Peters in 1957. They w e re
divorced in 1971.
Israeli. ~roop
WithdraWal,
<~·DUJcrused
t ·:J;; CAIRO. En»P, <AP> DAILY PILOT
JK•ll.~ • Yi<.e~ff-Al•"41--~
.,_.~ lel1or T,.._.A.---~ ... llllW
OeftftM.'--~,..IUll jl)\lll ... , w ..... ,,. ......
omc.e c.Mlt•WI: UOWUI 8'\tSll'Mt u-k•~: ""~"""' H"""llltfM .. Kll tltll .. •11-..... .... '":~~~~:;~"'·-
T ........... (114)..,_,
Ct ...... .W.ooll••MN111
.......-<•Y .......... ~
\ JVael •s defense m'lnl,ster dis·
cussed the withdrawal of Israeli
troops •from the Sinai Desert
with President Anwar Sadat and
his .defense mlnlater for the
second day today.
Defense J1Un1Ster Eur
Weizman flew to lsmam~.
midway down the Suez Canal, to
see Sarurt again arter overfnlht
meeUnks with Egypt's mlll~ry
chief, Gen. Mohammed Abdel
Ghani el Gamasy, at an alt base
south of Alexandria. After meeting with Sa_dat,
Wetzman shuttled to Alman air
base on the edge of Cairo.
bnefecMhe Israeli del.,adon to
lh• Cairo peace talks, and ~
flew bome to Israel.
A Veneuzeulan press officer
described the windup as 1•very
friendly and cordial." A final
communique noted only that the
regular meeting was scheduled
for June. ·,
During the two·day session
Chess 'MoOO'
A Protest?
BE LGRADE,
Yugoslavia CAP>-Boris
Spassky failed lo show up
fo r play in the world
ch ampionship semi·final
chess match in apparent
protest of the removal of a
demonstration board from
t he game area. The apparent boycott by
the Soviet player. who de-
pended heavily on t he
board, threw the touma·
m ent into a procedural
crisis and the game was
postponed until Friday.
The former world cham·
pion, who is trailing oppo-
nent Viktor Korchnoi
6.5·3.S with one adjourned
game, did not show up to
resume play in the 12th
ga m e of the 20.game
match. which will de·
termine a challenger to
play world ch a mpion
Anatoly Karpov next year
for the crown.
Plane Turns
Back Safely
' '
An Air California Lockheed
E l ectra propjet w i t h 94
passengers aboard made a pre·
cautionary -and safe -return h~ndin g t!> Oran ge dounty
Airport this morning shortly
. after takeoff. .
Air'Cal omcial$ said a smoke
Indicator light went on in the
pilot's cabin, pr!)mpting the
aborted fiight.
Airport tower personnel te·
ported no prob\.e~ on the
turnaround 18nding or Flight l.S,
which was bound for San Jose
and Lake Tahoe.
Paintinp Stolen~
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Three
men stole 90 p11intings valued at
a total ot $115,000 from a west
Los Angeles art gallery.
CAROL SINGE~
FBEEDON&UL
JOHANNESBUR(l, South
Afdca (A.P>-ARomanCathoUc
.,rteat:four nuns and 39 wblte men
. . ftlld y.tomen were releued Ola ball
· here todaJ after thel1' arreat out.-
aid• police ...._arten wbU•
alnslftl Chrlatmaa earol• in.
behalf olllftprboned blacks.
• • ..
Business Recortb Held bY Grand Jury
A bid by officials of Swiss
Vaults Inc. to have Uleir busi·
ness records returned by grand
jury investigators failed Tues-
duy in Orange County Municipal
Court when Judge lryne Black
was told the county Grand J ury
is s till investigatin g Swi ss
Vault's business machinations.
Al the forefront of that grand
jury probe Is what operators of
Swiss Vaults claim was a $1.5
million robbery or silver bullion
and gold coins at their Santa
Ana storage vaults last July.
tha.o a cove_rup .for the embtnle·
ment of customers"·silver and
gold.
Tuesday, Deputy District At·
tomey Charles McFarland told
Judge Blac k the jury's In ·
vestlgation will be completed by
• Jan. 5.
Si multane-0us ly, McFarland
asked that the judge delay mak·
ing a dedsibn on the request for
return of Swiss Vault business
records until the probe is com·
plet.ed.
tum of tbe business records as
well as a motion to 4:auash still
outs tanding search warrants.
It was on a Saturday afternoon
last July \hat Swiss vault prin·
cipal Vlncef\.l Carrano c'alled
police to the firm and reported c.
the alleged $1.S million thert .
Carrano said he went to his
Santa Ana office in response to a
call from an wiknown customer
who said he wanted lo make a
deposit of silver bullion.
Santa Ana police investigators Judge Black agreed to the
have indicated they suspect the postp()nement and set Jan. 9 l~
It was when be opened the
door to let the customer in that
Carrano said be faced a revolver
and was bound and eaued while
the robbers made off with the ,
haul. alleged robbery was little more I the date to hear the plea for a Te-..
Save $230°0
on this fine Heritage Console
Only Chandler's
could offer a value like this one.
Heritage Classic Court Ha11,7onso~~ in ric~;
pecans with simulated marble top W32 . 014 • H. 49
1 Reg. '459. NOW '2~900
Hurry, No phon. orders please.
1514 NORTH MAIN
SANTA MA · 54t..t39t
•14110 • ·\ ... T~ TheJt:fold
' An Irvine aVlindler proffered a
Pil<NaJ invoic• at Amo Adbellve 'rapes, 1701 Kala•r Ave., anC1
All '4 were ebarcect wi&b bOld-
inl an m.,a11atberlq UllW the
.. riotous aaewnbllet act.
Tlie :•t.bend outakte tbe · pollce at John Vonter
aquare Tutild11 ntabt ....
Tues. ~d. Thurs. and Sat • 9:30 to ~.30
Mon 12 to 9 • Fri 9 30 to 9'00
• cariect oft l.a.8 l'lllt of thM:l
t.pe, did lnlatala~UM1ec1m
Pant ripONd 1'MICla1 Offtdala
Hid tbe tape WU won.b $3,•
I
Jat_,OarOll ~••bow ol ~ with tbt mor. I.bu .,.. ;Mple. _.u,blM8,61tnMitwm a
trlat
•
Lalf1111a /South Coast Afteraooa
N.Y .. Stoeks.
OL. 70, NO. 355, 4 SECTIONS 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESQAY, DECEMBER 21, 1977 TEN CENTS ~
'Howling Wind Ki11~ 5; Sl ate
By Tbe Assocla&ed Prea~
Hurricane-force winds howl·
Ing through California's
agriculture-rich midsection at
more than 100 miles an hour
h ave left at least five persons
dead and a trail of destruction
from Bakersfield to the Mexican
border.
The violent winds blew down
barns and airplane hangars, top.
pied heavy trucks , tossed
·chunks of brick and roofing
through the windows of homes
and businesses; and whipped
brush fires out of control.
Hundreds of travelers were
m arooned in cities throughout
the Central Valley and the Mo-
jave Desert, jamming hoteJs,
cares and emergency evacuation
centers set up in churches. and
schools.
An estimated 30,000 homes, of-
fices and industries from
Bakersfield south suffered
power outages, and thick clouds
of dust were reported as far
away as Stockton, about 200
miles tothe north.
10ut lor.Clarbt•••
t Watergate figure H. R. Haldeman leaves the Federal ! Correctional Institution in Lompoc for a six-day holiday
furlough. wishing fell ow inmates and reporters, "Have a
merry Christm as." He's serving a 2~ to eight-year sen-
tence for .conspiracy. obstruction of justice and perjury.
I
1John ~Schmitz Runs
For State Senate
Former American Indepen-
dent Party presidential can-
didate John Schmitz confirmed
today he will run for the state
senate scat being vacated next
year by Sen. Dennis Carpenter, ft.
Newport Beach.
J o 1n1ng Schmitz in .the
Republican primary next-lune
will be Huntington Beach busi ..
nessman Steve Holden, who bas
announced his Intention ft> seiek
the senate post.
And Fountain Valley City
C-0uncilman George Scott said
today he is considering a try for
the GOP nomination in the 36th
Senatorial District.
The 36th dis trict covers
coastal Orange County from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and
extends Inland to include the
Saddleback Valley and the Santa
Ana Mountains. It also extends
along lhe coast to Oceanside in
San Dieao County. The dlstricU1
considered a Republican ·
stronghold. ·
Carpenter announced his r•
tirement earlier this monthl
almost a year before h" wll
leave effice.
Schmitz, <47, is a Corona del
Mar residenL He teaches at San-
ta Ana College. He ls a con·
aervatlve and a memb«' of the
John Birch Society1.
Holden, 46,.ka.former trustee
. o? the, Huntiftgtqn B4Sach City
<elementary) SChool District.
He ope.rat.es a Huntfngton Beach
lnlurance agency.
Holdm has said '1e would tum
hll energies toward property tax
reforru, reductlon of govern-
ment" s~·AD41 tax relief, if
elected. ·
Schmits held the stale senate
seat tot five yean be/ore belng
elect.a to the U.S. Bouse of
~epresentatrves in 1970.
Me IOll hil coqresslonal seat to
Andrew Hinsuw In 1$72, the · <See SENATE, Pae AJ)
"It's lhe worst I've ever
s~en," said CaWomla Highway
Patrol office r Jim Hill of
Bakersfield. "l 've been at this
BIG STORM HITS
NORTH -AS
kind of work for IS years, and I
thought I'd seen il all ••• but
nothing like this."
Almost all activity in
Bakersfield, population 80,000,
had come to a standsllll by mid-
day Tuesday, the second day it
* * *
had been battered by the winds.
Power had been cul off to
much of the cily as the winds
tore down power lines, shattered
windows, and t ossed trees
across cars, houses and streets.
Visibility was cut to zero as a
thick, mustard·colored grit cov-
ered the city.
Some looting was reported.
ln Arvin, a farm community
of 7 ,000 people 20 miles south or
Bakenlleld along Highway 99,
police said almost every home
suffered some damage. Store
* * *
fronts were ripped down, trees
were uprooted, and roofs were
blown orr homes and businesses.
Water, electricity and telephone
. lines were cut off, and transistor
radios were the only means of
comm uni cation.
A wind gauge atop the Arvin
police station registered gusts or
up to 101 mph before the gauge
blew a part.
The California National Guard
in Bakersfield was called into
active duty and rescued 35 peo. ple, including_ Kern County
* * *
Sheritrl Cap_t. Larry Klier, who
were buddied under a bridge on
noute 58 neer Arvin to escape
Uie blinding dust storm. Kller's
windshield had been blown out
by the 11tqrm and his r adio had
been.k.noc,ked.out of operation. The Red Cross and Salvation
Army were setting up emergen-
cy centers to care for homeless
r esidents and hundreds of
stranded travelers.
The winds al.lo were blamed
for the death of a woman rear·
ended by a tanker truck.
* * *
Coast Due· for ·storm
(" .
Warnings Posted for Travelers, Boaters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.ltr ~..,. ... tl111 Writer
Hig h northeast winds which
wreaked havoc in most of
Southern Califor nia Tuesday
miraculous ly bypassed the
Orange Coast but weather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers nol to be
complacent.
The battle of the highs and
lows could bring a quick and
drastic change in the weather
pattern by nightfall, according
to National Weather Service.
The freak Santa Ana condition
which brought northeast winds
roaring in over portions of
Southern California at velocities
of up to 100 miles an hour were
expected to diminish late today,
giving way to an intense low
pressure cold front that should
bring strong southeast winds
with rain.
The high pressure condition
c4u1in1 Ute 1troa1 northeast winds is being sucked Into the
low preasu.re trough, slowing the
front's pro1ress ioward tbe
coast.
The cold lront WU reported
less than 200 miles from the
coast earlier today and moving
east at a rate or 20 miles an
hour.
The front w as expected to
bring rain with winds 15 to 30
knots by late today, switching to
the southwest and west on Thurs-
day.
The battle of the fronts Tues-
day was the most freakish in the
memory or oldtimers here.
While northeaat winds or more
than 70 miles an hour were
lashing San Bernardino and
Riverside counties and wreaking
death and damage In Kem Coun·
lf, a eoutbeast gale or 40 knots
llLagunam
Potentials in
l:ounci,l Race
Eleven Laguna Beach resi·
Jients have taken out papers for
the ltlarcb 7 City Council elec-
tion, including a two-time coun-
cil candidate, a taxi cab com-
pany operator and an office
·manager joining the race.
Ttie latest trio of petition
gatherers took out papers for
candidacy from the city clerk's
office this week, joining eight
other p0tentlal council caQ·
didates.
The new entries include
Wayne Baglin, director or In·
ternational compensations at the
Fluor Company in Irvine. Baglin
ran unsucceufully for City
Council lb 19'l2 and again in 1974.
He has llvtl,d ln Laguna Beach
for eight years. ,
Ann G. ··oraham, a Laguna
Beach re1ldent for the past year
and a ball, manages the offices
<See ELEVEN, Page AZ>
C.4.ROL SINGERS
FREEDON IWL
· JOHANNESBURG , South
Africa <AP> -A Roman Catholic
priest, four nuns and 89 white men
and women were released on bail
here today after thelr attfftOUL-
nde police tMadquarttn wblle
alngln1 Cbrl1tma1 carols ln
behalf of lmprl.aned bl a ca.
All 44 wen cllarled wttJa bold·
101 aa l~~ .-:_UWto• andtfthe-. not.. .. nt.
Tb• ..,...I M outald•tbe polee .. .-.. at JOlln VfM'lllter
r::~~~·=~:ry·
wttb tbe men &han M 1pe6plt.
mostly blam, detained w~ trtal. ..
~ ......... ~ .... 1111-...
HIGH WINOS BRING YARD FULL OF TUMBLEWEEDS TO LAGUNA NIGUEL COUPLE
Mr. and..,,._ K. A. Lehner H.v• Cleanup Problem at 24522 Loa Sef'r8noe
virtually closed San Diego
Harbor and was felt as far north
as Dana Point.
While all this was aoing on to
the south and north, the Orange
Coast was locked in a dead calm
with an overcast of dust that re-
duced visibility to as low as one
mile o!fsbore. Visibility at
Avalon, Catalina lsland, was
down to one mile in dust by
midaftemoon. Visibility offshore
at Newport Beach was three to
five miles.
The southeast gale south or
San Diego caused extensive
damage as far south as Rosarito
Beach in Baja California.
Old timers called it the , wont
storm stnce 1939. A special
we ather bulletin W"arned !
pleasure boaters to stay out of •1 the area and s hipping was 'J
slowed to a near halt. ;;
Boaters who ventured onto the ~
water al Dana Point were bit by ~.
a strong easterly wind. A sanaU l
boat and a catamaran were ,
overturned at the height of the
blow. J
Terry ·Moore Tells
Of Daughter'sBirth
Power lines were down in
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and
San Clemente a nd bul"llar •
alarms set off by the damage
kept police in all three com· ·
munities rushing to answer false
alarms.
"Weird" was the word used by
most observers lo describe the
freakish calm conditions which
prevailed from Newport Beach
to Seal Beach while other areas
of the county were being lashed
by bowling winds from en~ry
quadrant.
J. Sherman Denny, a lifelong
• weather bufft said, .. It certainly
is strange, aJl right. Freakish."
He added that this has been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
(See WIND, A2 )
Coast
Weath er
Chanbe ot rain increas-
ing to 60 percent tonight
turning to showers Thurs-
d ay. Cooler Thursday.
Lows tonight so to SS.
Highs Thursday 60 to 65.
INSIDE TODAY .,,......,
BORE HUOHl!S' CHILD?
You d on't jut say
Chrlatmiu in the Poulter
horuthol4 In Fountain Valley.
You 1011 Chnnnuu Chmtmat
Chriltmai /or the tripltt1 who
Actre• Teny Moor•
· Uve there, along with their
Jive brother& and sisters.
Page CI .
lad~x
.,
Trustees Serena~d
Shorecli ffs J unior High School 'in San Clemente was on
\'acation Mondav but members of the advanced chorus
..,a ng Chn ~tmas· 'carols. for Capisfrano Unified .S<:~ool
District tru~lc<.'!>. After !our songs the youngsters 10v1~ed.
the audience to join in. ..
. . Front Page AJ
Qeath Hoax HuGHES.· .•
Callers
Not Kids?
Victims of a cruel weekend
telephone hoax have told Hunt·
1n g t o n Beac h p o l ice in ~
'e,sligators t hey beli eve the
«oilers were .. deranged adults,"
not out-of-school youngsters seek-
ing a thrill.
Police Detective Art Droz in·
I l'1'Viewed 15 of the hoax victims
I uesday. They we re among
:il1out JOO called by someone
t l21i ming to have news of a
··tragic accident" and the death
of a family member.
Droz said some of tbe victims
lll'::ird as many as three adult
'oices, two males and one
fe male.
Victims of the hoax calls Fri-
day and Saturday said the calls
<·ame al all limes of the night
;rnd even in the early morning
hours. ,
None of the recipidts of the
l·a lls actually lost any relatives,
police said.
The pranksters apparently
used a current telephone ~c
tory and called their victims• in
~tlphabetical order, Droz said.
None of the victims recei~
m-0re than one phone call -
making 1t diffi cult to trace the
-.oun·e of the messages, Droz
~aid
D ro1. 1s wor kinl! with
l<'lcphonl' company offi cials in
dfort t o track down the
J•t·rpctrators of the ghoulish
prank. lie d<·clined to discuss
1 he m cthods being-employed \n
the investigation.
.Most of the hoax vict\ms are
II untinglon Beach residents, but
~ome li ve in Cos ta Mesa,
Newport Beach and Fountain
\' allev.
Droz said he believes many
\lclims did not report the hoax
t'J.lls to police.
··Many probably just called a
relative to check out the 'deaUt, ·
but we will never know how
many," he added.
it1osl or the victims he in-
terviewed said they heard what
-.ounded like police radios in the
h<•ckground. Droz said.
Fire Kills Woman
MERCED <AP ) -A 74-year-
old blind and crippled woman,
Ventura Pimentel, died Tuesday
or burns over 00 percent or her
body. the coroner reported. She
was severely burned at her
home at Palanada east of here
Monday night when a gas stove
burner caught her nylon robe on
fite, fircri ghters reported.
•
~· Miss Moore, who was married
thre~ ·other times, now li ves
with her. children In BrentwOOd,
Calif., where she is writing her
a utobiography. She said it is
mainly about Hugh~.
lnte(Vieyied last ~r ·a w~k
after R~es dled, ibe told the ·
Fort Lauderdale (Fla.>• News
that she· was secretly married to
him b.llt clid DQi pJ:at1~ to .tile a claim.a:t~t bb estatt.
Miss Moore said in the News
interview that there "may have
bten" children from the alleged
marriage . but-·refused to be
more specific.
She !'aid in the News interview
that "Howard was the great.est
lover I ever had. He was the
best."
She is· to appear as a witness
in Las Vegas in litigation over
the . billionaire's so-called
Mormon will, which sbe c1aun.s
is a rake.
"He only ever wrote one will,"
she said Tuesday, "and {bat
directed all his money to his
medical institute he dreamed or
setting up.
•'That. 's all he evep talk~ a~out, even on our wedding
ni~bt. That was bis reason for
living," she said. "I think his
r~al will was ~est~oyed by hls
aides'. '.I'heY guarded him night
and day. Towards the end Howard
was controlled by the people he
tried to help."
FrontPageAJ
ELEVE·N •••
of her husband, Dr. S. Robert
Grah am at his SOuth Laguna
medical practice.
And Richard Scott, manager ot the Checker Cab Company in
Laguna Beach has also taken
out papers.
The tt)ree new potential can-
didates join eight others in the
race for three seats on the
Laguna Beach City Council.
Those seats are currently held
by Mayor J on Brand, Coun-
cilwoman Phyllis Sweeney and
Councilman Carl Johnson. Non<'
of the three council members
has a nnounced whether or not
they will seek r e-election.
Other residents taking out
petitions include:
Stockbroker Howard Dawson,
retired business man John
Gabriels, planning commission
chairman Diana Dike, taxi
driver Tom Adams , busi-
nessman Kelly Boyd, law stu-
dent .fa~es W. Bl8hop, graphic
artist f.'dena A. Gay and
housewife Maggie Meggs.
V ANDENBERO AIR FORCE
BASE CAP> -A fire -whipped
oul or control by the same bur·
rlcane-force winds that toppled a
high-voltage tower and sent.
s parks raining into parched brush
-killed the base com mender and
at least two other people a s they
t ried to flghlit. It still raged out of
coolrbl today.
'.'Tb• fire seems like It's going
to:'oonlinue as long a.s the big~
wlads do. It just keeps jumping,"
Air Force Sgt. Dan Anderson said
late Tuesday.
The fire, blown from ridie to
ridge on this sprawling military
complex by erratic 70 m..pb winds,
spread in a patchwork of flames
over several square mUes of.the
t50·square mUe base 50 miles
northwest or Santa Barbar&-One
ttaousand acres were blackened.
More than 300 firefighten bat..
tled the blaze throughout the
night, and the strong winds con-
tinued through today buti at a
lower pitch.
Killed were Col. Joseph Turner,
48,""the base commander; Bad
Fire Chief Billy Bell, 44; and A.s-
i;lstant Base'"Fire Chier Eugene
Cooper , 45, from Vandenberg
Village. ·
Laguna Snake
Seized After
Owner Jailed .
..... ... .
A fourth reported death had not
been confirmed by b ase
aulboriUes.
Base spokesman Capt. ~onard
Brady said Tumer, a veteran of
the Korean and Vietnam wars,
was dtrecttng the flrertghtlng
operation when fla mes sur-
rounded bis jeep. Turner tried to
run to safety tnat was overtaken by
the flames ad buriaed to death,'
Bradyaald.
Turner, 48, was in charge of
operations at the 11,000·m •n base,
but was outranked b y two
gener als.
* * *
l'ro.PageAJ
WIND •••
Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. John
Montrella listened to reports
that winds were playing hjlvqc
in nearby Los Alamitos and were'
•·blowing to beat the band" while
he looked out a dead ~aim that
was ••still as glass."
Huntington Beach State
Lifeguard Supervisor Bill Kran
likened the dead calm in his
area to the eye of a hurricane.
Huntington Beach Lifeguard
Lt. Bill Richardson gazed out at
the calm sea and the pall or dust
stretching to Catalina Island and
commented: .. It's really strange
stuff."
Small craft advisories r e-
mained in effect today from
Point Conception to the Mexitan
border with predictions of
Animal servtces officers ~ southeast winds of up to 40
moved a six-foot boa constrictor knots. Gale warnings were in ef.
,from the home of a suspected feet north or Monterey.
burglar Wednesday a fternoon, Light raln was falling in San
less than 24 hours after the Fernando Valley this morning
owner was incarcerated. ~ and was expected to spread
· Police said they w.ere notified south later in t.he day.
by neighbors that the large /Me anwhile, the National
snake was left unattended aft.er Weather Service continued
ofrtcers from three ag~ncles ar-warnings to travelers a s the
rested Jay Lee Parker, 32, at a northeast winds continued to
friend's home in South Laguna blow in San Bernardino,
Actreu 'IJied by 5 Bandit.
ROME CAP ) -Five armed and masked bandits
crashed their wav into the suburban v illa or Anita
Ekberg, tied the S wedish actress and fled with her
cash . jewels and fur coats, police reported today.
The 46-year-old actress, who was the blond sex
goddess or Federico Fellini's 1960 film "La Dolce
Vita," was alone at her villa in Mentana, a bout 12
miles outside Rome, at the time of the robbery early
today.
Th~ value or the s tolen gbods was put al about
$9,00(). The a ctress freed herself in two hours and
called police. ·
Miss Ekberg. semi-retired except for minor sup-
porling roles in films and occasional tele vision ap·
pearances. has been living in Rome for som-e years.
Pier ~ Bow-I Petition
Seeks Batlot Issue
A petiUoli with 1,800 signatures
will be presented to the San
Clemente City Council tonight,
asking that the pier.bowl re-
development issue be placed on
the Mar$,7ballot.
The ett.Y Council meeUng will
be1tn • 7:30 p.m. in council
ch~mbers at city hall, 100 Ave.
Prfsldlo. ·
The ballOt petition wlll be pre·
sent.ed)>y.Howard Mushett, presi•
dent ol tbe San Clemente
Homeown~m ~ation. lf city
councilmen fOllow a staff recom-
mendation ~ht "to receive
and rue" the . tion, the a!socla-
tion '• only recourse would be to pursue a recall, Mushett said.
A re q u ea tr fro m t h-e
homeowners• group in No·
vember to put the pier-bowl re-
development i.sfue to 4 cit~e
vote was ",recei~and f'11ct't>y
the City Council.· , • . •
"That means they threw it
a way," said Mushett.
Th~ Novem~r request waa not
accompanied bY a petftion.
In July the City Councll, sitting
as the redevelopment agency·
board of directors, approved
moderate commercial develop-
ment or the municipal pier and
th~ surrounding inland ''bowl"
area.
1'he homeowners association
has con.sl.st.enUy maintained that
Ute citizens of San Clemente have
been mlaled to think redevelop-
ment of the pier· bowl area would
result.in a park rather than com-m~ri!'tal development.
"We appeal l;O your sense of
res ponsibility, call upon your con-
s cience, beg you, in concordance
with the sthlcture or our dem-
oc r a tlc system," wrote
Mushett in a letter to accompany
tne ballot petition, "to respect the
will ol lhe people and their right to
be beard. "Let us join, once and for all, to
lay this matter to rest by placing it
on the March 7lh ballot," he
wrote, .. ... · ·.' p,..;. Pqe Al
SENATE ••• . . ".. .
same year he ran unsuccessfully
for president on the American
Independent tickeL ·
Tuesday night. Riverside and Kern Counties at LB Sh Loo. ' d Parker, of 430 Ruby Place, up to 60 miles per hour. Op •e
Schmit; said )le would ho~ to
help forge a new coalition
between Republicans and con·
servative Democrats if elected to
tbe state senate. was in Orange County Jail this Surr conditions along the Thieves looted a pastry shop
11\0rt\ing with bail set at $10,000. Orange Coast remained relative. in Laguna B.each sometime "I am not going to kid myself ·
or anyone else that J am going to
.tum the course or Sacramento
around," Schmitz said,
He is to be arraigned in Soulb ly calm today as the northeast between last Sunday and Tues-
Oranae County Municipal Court winds apparenUy knocked down day, -taking $88 in ca~h and a
Thursday on drug and burglary the wav~ generated by the cold cusett• recofde!,r.!.Clnerato~ of
cbf.t'ges. front. As the 9'inds diminished Andr.;.11'j>~&y ~~~ SouUa S~,t\mitz sa.ld he doesn't
believe bis aervice on th~ ultra-Lt. Al Olson said Parker is the forecast was for surf from Coast HI1hway, reported tbe charged with theft of more than five to seven feet later ln the day total $178 loss to police Tuesday c o o s er v a tl v e John Dircb
Society's natlo.qal council would _ $10,000 in Bolivian artifacts, al-and Thursday. momint.
legedly fo~d bl! officerr in his ~-=:;:jj~p:::;::;;j~..-~;;;p:B~=====::::::;;::::::;;::=::;:;:~::::;;::::::;;::--:-JT=i~-..=....--==;::;;;:=' become a ~ampaign Issue.
bdme Tuesday evening'.
The artifact&, including hand·
woven garments made of costly
alpaca. we re believed stolen
from the home of Hugo Jose
Soria of 32122 South Coas t
Highway, South Laguna, last
February.
Police said they also found a
fountain piece in the shape of a
goat's head, along with 60 doses
of LSD and three grams of
hashish in Parker's home.
Parker is to be arraigned on
charges of suspicion of receiving
s tolen property, suspicion of
s ales of a controlled substance
a nd possession or hashish.
San Juan Slates
Holiday Schedule
San Juan Capistrano children
seeking holiday season activities
c an participate in the city's
special Christmas playground
schedule.
Holiday playgrounds will be
conducted through Friday and
aga in from Dec. 2 to 30 from noon
to s p. m. at the San Juan Elemen·
tary School multi-purpose r<>?m
and t"e Marco Forster Jr. High
Cafetorium.
Blast in Beirut
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -An
explosion caused heavy d4mage
to an:empty, unfinlshed building
next to the Emtlan Embassy in
Beirut early today~ .
•
Save $230°0
on this fine Heritage Console
Only Chandler's
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Heritage Classic Court Hall Console in rich,
pecans with ~imufated.marbte top W32", 014". H. 49.,
Reg. '459. NOW '22900
Hurry, Na phone orders please.
1514 NOlmf MAIN
SANTA ANA · 5414391
Tues~ Wt'd~ Tl'luts.. ond S«.: 9-.JO to 5:30
Mon.; 12 to g • Frt 9:30 to 9:00
~-fMWre• the fintat from [)fcicel. Heritage. Henttdon. Century. e.k.eT; \\leiman. Sheffl\I. Stanton·Cooptt. ~motk. ~ c..... Alro'6ootn 8edd4ng. Sutnt. /l\a~fo. Chondlcr Cuttom Ora~•~ Carpeting os weH os other fon'IOU$ names .
' . 8 use Edit ri I .. Robert N W~!Pub11$htr Thomas Keevll 'Edltot
' Oronge Coa~I Daily Pilot 0 a ...-age Wedneld1y. December 2t, 1977 Barbdra KrelblCh/Edltorlol Pac;ieA:dltor ~~~~~ ~~~~~1-N•"·~---------------
• ot Appreciated·
Luguna Dl·arh <'ll)' officials sometime!> havl! a hard
time getting through lo th<.> California Department of
Trans port at ion
But alter t•it) <:oun<'ll action la!-.t w(•ek , they're pretty
s ure CulTrans Director Adnuna Gianturco will get the
word.
This tinw. the message ton('C'rns some imprudent
pruning on lht• part of CalTrans crews of a stand of
e ucalyptus tn·t:s along Broadway in downtown Laguna
Bcu<'h
Th<.'il' scH•rc slicing did little to improve the looks
or appurcnt hl·ulth of th<' trees along that roadway.
The usually hl.lrcly n 1riet y of tree has a tough lime of 1t
•along the coastline. what with severe winds. cold air and
heavy closes of salt on the lea\ ('S.
So councilnwn are prcparrng a damage claim against
the-st ate ,1gcnc·y to make sure the dis pleasure reaches
the top
Ancl . tlw~ ·n· abo sl•nding <.ilong a photogrnph of the
\\'Ork C'l'l''"' ·s labors.
A ltllle <·onsu Ital ion \\ ilh city hall before the chopping
J<>I; got undl·r '' :1y would have saved tempers, time. effort
and po-.:-.ihh :-onw tn·es that may h<' ')evrrely
damag1•cl .
:Too Late for Pier Vote
1\11 t·h·H ·nlh hour request lo put San Clemente's pier-
ho\\ I rL·<h.•\"l•lopnH.'tH on the l\lttrl'h 7 ballot isn't without
. merit. hut 1t ('otnes too late to be pructical.
Tht• San Clemente 1 lomcowncrs Association' has an·
nouncccl it will present a petition signed by 1.000 reg·
isten'd city votC'rs lo the city council tonight. An accom-
panying letter asks t•ounC'ilm<•n "to lay this matter to rest
by placing it on the i\l arch 7 hallot. ..
San CI em l' n l l' · s r c-d c v e Io pm c n l agency was
estublished in January, 1!>75, to improve the appearance
of the munic ipal pier entrance and to eliminate blight in
tlw ~urrounding "bowl" area.
l ' nti I recent months very lilllc measurable progress
hu:-. heen made-toward red<>velopmenl. as lhe agency
engaged in t·ounlles:-puhla(' meetings and hearings on the
pmjcel. Within the pus t fi,·c months, the project h<:is
grnnNI momentum. us ugency directors arrived at a
rrta:-.t<.•r plan and initiated-a search for a developer.
Tht.' public has lrnd its ~ay. A ballot measure al lhis
point \\oulrl undo n·tl'nt progress and !>tall redevelop-
m 1•111 Ii~ rm111t h~
Project Justified
L:.i guna Beach l'OUncll members have approved an
environmental impatt report and funding for a $65,000
murinc s afC'ly fadlit~· on Mam Reach Park.
That ma~· seem a conflict of sorts. considering the
"Catcway to lht• S(•t1" wus originally constructed to keep
buildings c:lcar of the S7 million park.
Bul councilmen arc looking at a low-profile structure
that will not c ut off the \tiew from Const Highway.
' An<I arguments that the new s tructure will take up
v<lluahll• p41rk land that could otherwise be used by the
public urc maccur:.itc.•
Th(• nc\\ facility, to be built atop a pump station, in-
cludes u µublicobservaliondeckon top of the building.
Since sightseers and visitors to the Art Colony did not
have ac.·ccss to the pump station, the obser vation deck
"111 actual!)· mean additional open s pace.
The building will be constructed with money left over
from a bond issue supporting the park.
Th(• facllillcs arc need ed and they apparently will not
cl1:-t urb lhl' .,ccncry rn our book, it ·s a worthwhile pro-
Jl't:I.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
W't1s1s Reader oomment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P 0 .
Sox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Bloodhounds
By L.M. BOYD
Questioo arises as. to
whether trained bloodhounds
could trnck down criminals l" a big city the way they can
out in the count r ys irle.
Definitely. Those dogs are
unbelievable. In a New York
Cit y tes t once, a bloodhound
followed the trail of a man
through a park area where
just previously SS.000 people
had attended a rock concert
lncidenlally, ttie only sort of
human beings that bafCle
blqodhounds are identical
twrns. Theit odors are iden·
dea l. But .the odors of all
others are each unique, and
trained blpodhounds can
perceive these differences.
·Seasoned citizens wil l re
call o lime in this country
when the Federal Govern·
Dear
Gloo tny
Gu
Supermarket• won't
tlko checks in their ex-
prese lanes to a~ up
tbe ttlfflc. I propose
they Just five th eir aroceriea away and and eUmlnmtbe....,...
CllWed b; Ca.lb tnm8c·
t.iau. "'
m ent proh ibited a ny ace
cream maker from turning
out more than 20 flavors. On
May l , 1942, it was. Why I
don't know. Sounds a little
like that War Production
Board recommendation to
farmers that would have bad
them remove the s hoes of
their horses each night to
, -save the metal.
Those people who analyze
handwriting contend that
folks who use a circle instead
of a doL over the ''i" usually
possess calm dispositions.
Takes less time lo fly from
Hong Kong to San Francisco
than vice versa. About three
hours Jess time, In fact.
You're traveling opposite the
rotation of the earth, that's
why.
••
U.S. No Longer 'Israel's Attorney'
WASHINGTON -Prime
Minister Menahem Begin's sur·
prise visit here was viewed by
U.S. officials as an Israeli effort
to hold on lo the old dependent
relationship with Washington
which has been radically
transformed -perhaps ended -
by the dramatic Sadat.Begin
diplomacy.
By rushing here to discuss his
new peace plan for President
Anwar Sadat.
Begin wa s
telling the
Americans,
nothing has
changed. we
sti 11 rely on
you. In word
and nuance.
the A·mer ·
i c a n s
here w ere
replying : everyth ing has
changed; you now stand on your
feet face·tO·facc with the Arabs.
tell them your propo!:>als for a
Mideast settlement
Two days before the Prime
M i n ister arrived h ere,
n ewspaper accounts in
Jerusalem hinted that Begin's
visit was part of a broader
Israeli· Egyptian scheme When
it became clear Sadat was as
surprised as the U.S ;-officials
here were so annoyed that this
word was quietly passed Begin
is coming totally on his own in-
itiative, with no Egyptian con·
nivance.
THAT IS just one clue to the
new relationship between the
U.S . and Israel Although the
U.S. naturally looks to Israel as
its intimate friend in the
Mideast. dlre(l lsraeli·Egyptian
negotiations ha ve s uddenly
ended a full decade during
which Washington alone spoke
(or Israel in negotiations
This terminates a long period.
with only limited steps toward
peace, during which the U.S.
acted <in the phrase of former
Mailbox . ~ ...
Def ense Secretary Melvin
Laird) as "Israel's attorney."
The sudden termination has led
the Israeli government to seek
new ways to keep the U.S.
hitched to iL'I side in negotiating
with the Arabs. That is un-
derstandable, but it is something
President Carter does not want.
At his press conference. Mr.
Carter carefully circumscribed
any effort by Begin to pin down
the U S. as a negotiatmg partner
ul th e Cairo t:onference.
But confl icting with Mr.
Carter's wise refusal to put the
U.S. back in the Mideast um·
pire's seat is growing pressure
from lsrael's potent political al -
lies in this country lo resist any
U.S. move to a truly neutral
posture. Thal helps exphun lhc
President's quick assent to
Begin's surprising self-invitation
\\Don't get too comfottAbk?. ''
f
I
to Was tungton and Mr. Cart~r·s
request after the first Carter·
Hegan meeting Friday ror Begin
to stay an extra day for another
meeting.
As one Mideast planner told
us: "The last thing Carter wants
1s to give Begin, Israel or the
American Jewis h community
the impression that Begin got
the bum's rush here."
Begin holds high c1trds in bis
shrewd mwteuvcrs to 111ake 1t
appear that the U.S. -nd the
Carter administration are still
"Israel's attorney" even lhou'h
direct talks have started with
Egypt. During lunch at Blair
llouse Friday. Begin confided
details of his new peace plan to
four or Is rael 's staun chest
friends in the U.S. Senate: Jacob
Javits, Richard Stone. Henry M.
Jackson and Clifford Case.
THIS PRECEDED dtreC't
Israeli word to Sadat of Begin's
plan. News was rushed to Cairo
not by the Israelis. according to
administration offil'ials, but bv
telephone from the While lloU!>I.'
1m mediately following the first
Carter Begm wlk on Friday.
The obvious explanation of
Begin's decision to confide his
plan to Mr. Cattcr and four U.S.
Senators before explaining it to
President Sadat: maintain the
pretense that the U .$. is still Ill
its old roJe as lsrael'a attorney.
Mr. Carter's intent is dif-
ferent. He wants to maintain a
certain distance from rsracl
land. of course, the Ar abs>
while exploring several new
ideas with his own advisers.
With Israel facing Egypt
d irectly across the bari:aintn~
table. Mr. Carter is comfortable
\I. 1th his new role of indepen-
rh'nCl'. Ill' seems to be distinctlv
enJ oy1ng the prospect of Israel
now l'arrying the responsibility
for h:immerinJ{ out peace on its
own. a respons1b1lity not affect·
ed by Prime Minister Begin'-;
!>Udden visit.
Think Twice About a Pet for ChristlIUls 1
To the Editor:
Perhaps you are considering
giving a puppy or kitten as a
Christmas gift. The volunteer
a nimal workers ask you to
please rec90sider. These small
c reatures are a se r ious
respoosibillly. Consider the con-
fusl9n in \he average home at
Christmas tJme. ll is hardly the
place lo bri.ng a pet that needs
plenty or sleep and a quiet place
as refuge.
Few of us have time during
the holidays lo properly
housebreak a puppy or to feed a
pet at regular intervals.
Children often pressure their
parents into purehasing a puppy
or kitten by promising to feed,
groom and clean up after it.
When the child doesn 'l perform
these dllttts, the parents will
often get rid of the pet.
IF ONLY a puppy or kitten
will do as a gift, do consider a
gift certificate to be honored
a fter t he holidays when the
household returns to a normal
schedule.
Before obtaining a pet any
time. a family should consider
the following:
1. At'e you committed to car·
ing for the pet fol" its lifetime. or
Just until your children Ure of
their new toy?
2. Are you willing and able to
pay for altering your pet to pre·
vent the birth of more animals
in a nation a)teady saturated
with eets?
3. Kr~ )'Oll willing and able to
pay' for all inoculations, yearly
cbeck ups and any emergency
treatment the peL may need?
4. When chooslng a dog, are
you keeping in mind that Ute
cute little puppy or unknown
parentage could within a year
outgrow your small yard?
S. Do you really want the extra
.work and sometimes the
destruction that having a pet,
especially a puppy, entails?
6. Are you ·wilUng to control
your pets .o as not to annoy
your neighbors? Remember, not
everyone loves animals.
7. If you •e renUng a home,
apartment etc., do )"O'U hovo
your landl9fd's per mission to
own a pet?
HAZEL MORTENSEN
• Chairman. United
Hum1nitari.lnlo(OrangeCoW1ty
s hould have an $8 billlon portfolio
when our taxes have increased 25
percent this year.
Why canllot some of the S8
billion be used to reduce our tax-
es. l 'd appreciate an explana-
tion.
Rt.ITH S. CHAMBERLAIN
The ta.r coll~tor-trea.aurer of /ice
cct1 c1 c "bank" for 170 lazing agen·
clea in the county. including 34 school
and colkge diltrlct1. The S8 bllhcm
figure represent• c<Uh flow rotller
than investrrwmtl. In /1&cal 1976·77
the o/fice handled Sl.179 billion of
new money of which $757 mil/ton
came from property taxe1. the re·
mainder /Tom other revenue sources.
including 1tote end f ttleral f undl
The ta.r collecto,·trea.surer invests
the money and retum1 1t 10 the ta.r-
ing ag~a <U uechd. plus anleresl
Last ~ $43.3 million tn mtere~t
WQ8 diltributed to the 170 tClilng
• (ij1'1mcies to eJIQble them to hold down
fh eir to.z rctft1. Editor:
Dotlble Standard
To the Editor 1
J am s~rongly .opposed lo the
main idea or tile article in the
Dec. 12 Pilot titled, "Boy, 3,
Killed by Dog."
My point is, tr we kill this dog,
which undoubtedly killed the
boy. how come we don 't do
something equaJly drastic to the
people who are out on the slreels
again after having killed one or
two people?
Befort destroying the dog. why
don't they find out if the family
has beeh treating the dpg unfair· l,y In any woyf
IJNDA McKINNEY .
Oppo•e• Road
To the Edtlar:
l'he boua of> 11-ustees of the
C.aguna Greenbelt, Inc. at jts
monthly"m.eeitng Dec. 6. voted
unanhnou.'tf)' to ask the Laguna
Beach Cit.y iouncil to deny any
recornmerntltions it miflhl re·
ceive to build a ro.d of any kind
between Top or the World and
Arch B~ach Itetgbts.
This request is based on the
corruption of open spice such a
road would bring: It iJ based up-
on a conviction that such a road
would -Ip the foreseeable future
-lead to housing development,
plans ror which are already on
the boards. It is (\lrthet based up-
on the belief that tile approved
w•ler conduit between the areas
woGld and cou~wovide water to
totect lhe area fro m fire
ards.
ut mlndlbJ of the need for ut-
Quotes
ler pro~tion. the board u.lso in-
structed me to uq~e that the city
council establish a fire house lo
guard the An·h Be11ch Heights
area .
Your consi~eration of the
board's recommendations is ap-
preciated.
TOM ALEXANDER
President.
the Laguna Greenbelt. Inc
Siren• Wel~o•e
To the Editor:
I amhopmgC.\'. ICloomyGu!-..
Dec. 9J, was bt•mg facet1ou:r1 with
the remarks about livin~ next to
a fire station. We hope he will
never need help. but if he ever
does he11 find the Sl>Und of those
sirens the l:iWeetes l sound he's
ever heard
Mv husband had a cardiac ar.
rest· an Julv. When I coulci hear
the sirens in the distance, 1t \I.Us
m u s i c Th e C o ~t a M es a
paramedics and fir<'men calmly
and cffi<'iently worked hard to
s ave has life ancl succeeded.
C.V. didn't have lo move next
to a fire station. We'd be ~lad to.
G M. andSlllRLEY ROBINSON
We suspecl C V. was laking a
·"dewoys poke at folk who move next
to airports. then grumble about
norse All praise to the poramecllcs'
f:d1tor.
Bulne#s CU 111ate
To the Edilor ;
Recent government attitudes
;rnd policies appear to be creat-
ing a dangerous business climate
for the future of the private sec·
tor. T he recent government
endorsed Social Security M d
labor union decisions have been
par ticularly disconcerting. We
reruse to recognize the in-
disputable trend or modern in-
dustry away from labor intensive
production and towards capital
intensive, more efficient in-
dustry. We contlJlue to adopt
short term politically acceptable
solutions for presslng long term
problems.
FO IU~SIG HT dictates we
become more competitive, not
bar the competition. However,
political cons\deratlons continue
to blur our e«>nomic foresight.
As in the ~eel indus try: the solu-
tion lies In incre~il\£ cepitatln·
vestment to become more em-
clent and thus more competitive,
and not in lnvpkin&. trade tariffs
to simply bar competition. We
can run bUt we cannot hide.
I cannot reconcile eovernment
deci11lons which allow us to
vlrtuall7 creat e D quasi·
governmtf\tal corporatloo In
1.ockbeed. at the same limo we
will not allow OUl" mqgt eWcl~t
businessman. the Ame rican
rarmer, to mak~ effn a Jniolmal
profit.
President Carter 1>1ed1td to
trim lbe federal bureaucracy;
but the number of federttl ·
employei?s has Increased under
his administration.
Recent government rhetoric 1s
lead in~ us in a sense of etonomic
s tability that is without technical
founclation in the private seetor.
the life blood of oor economy.
GREGORY V. HUZlCKA
ER A lnfornaatlon
To the Edito r :
I must speak out. It has been
two days smce I read the letter
lrom Ma ry 0 Moore Wee. 11
Mail box> and I am still fumms::
from her maccurale char ac·
terizauons and less lhan mdire<'t
innuend<>.cs about a fine person
and hard worker for all humC1n
rights ·-not only women.
Vi \'Ian llall and her hus band or
30 some odd ye<i n; cerlamly do Ito
11.,(' Ms. Moore's wordsJ "hold
dear the l;.am1b l'Onl'ept and the
love and rlt'volion bet \I. een <i man
and a woman ..
I would likl• to commcnl on
each point of Mi-. Moore's letter
because 1t 1:-rite with inscns1tivc
perception-. or important issuei;
However. I will hm1t my11clf to
tryi n~ to makt• cle:ir one poml
that the anll·ERA forces have
t'ont1nuously trierl l o mis-
represent What I am about to say
has hcen stated many times, but
evidently not enough if even onl'
person, such as Ms. Moore, I'>
still "confused."
RATIFICATION of the Equal
Rights Amendment will provide
equal rights under the law for
l)qth men and women Period. It
does not Jeiusl ate what a person
holds to be true in their privah·
lives.
People who would like to have
more information. fact a'i op·
posed to some popular myth:i;,
s hould avail thcmsel ves of •
services offered by Orange Coun
ty' ERA' Coalition. They have a
speakers bureau and will send
someojle, free of char ge, to your
groupw or ganization to discuss
what the ERA will and will not
accomplish. There is also a 24-
hour aMwerin~ ser vice for the
coalition which will direct your
inquiry to the appropriate
person. The number ls 639 -8807
My point in all or this is.
~j~e wt\al you wm. it is your
rlJhl. But please, base that belief
on fact$ and not false assumption
and unsubstantiated conclusions.
BARBARA L. HAMMERMAN
• Lfltcrt /rom readers are Wflcome The rtght to con.dense lrlttrs to fit
ft»C or elimtnote hbtl 11 re1~. L.4ftqr oJ 300 words or l11u wtu b. ~f/nmce. AU ldt.T~"""' tit-f cla.tN .ri"'9Qt11,... afld m~ oddrtu
but "°7Mf mcv be ~ Oii r~
qudt t/ It.if /lcfflt'lt rtGtofl Ca appa~t.
PoG111 will not b« publUW
---
f.
CALIFORNIA w.dnesday. C>.cember 21 . t9n DAILY PILOT ... $
BeauClese d
· South Stonn North Battered by Win<J
Kills Trucker .~~~r'Ai~ . RAMONA <AP } -Broken trees and power
lines today lay across se ctions of Southern
Callfornla whipped by winds reaching 100 mph.
The damage to !arm crops as the wind let up
was sporadic but widespread. Citrus and avocado
groves were reported hardest hJt, mainly in
northem San DiegG County.
A number or animals died.
A BIG TRUCK RIG WAS SWEPT off In·
terstate 8 at Buckman Springs grade and down an
embankment Tuesday, kllling driver Russell
VeJozier, 19, or Spokane, Wash.
Because or that accident 40 miles east of EJ
Cajon, the busy freeway was closed from Alpine to
El Centro. It finally reopened around midnight.
8y The Associated Pre11
Howling 80 mile an hour wtnds
blew the roofs off Humboldt
County area buildings, knocked
.>ut power for an estimated
150,000 residents and was direct·
ly responsible for two deaths ear·
ly today, authoriUes report.
The winds blew the rooCs off
the grandstand at the county
fairgrounds and a grocery store
and sent a tree crashing down
onto a truck on Hlghway 36 near.
Eureka. killing two people, of·
ficials aaid.
All major roads reportedly
were blocked by fallen lrffS and
other debris. A fishing boat
capsized at Humboldt Bay Bar
but its small crew was pulled
from the water when a Coast
Guard vessel reached the scene.
PACIFIC GAS & Electric Co.
A six·car smashup injured three persons on
California 67 near Ramona. That state road was
closed but later reopened as was the Valley Center
Grade near Escondido.
LIGHT PLANES WERE grounded. and
several boats broke away from moorings along the
coast.
Jn Camp Pendleton. a brush fire burned 750
acres or land. Fifty acres of brush were scorched
in northern San Diego, west of PenasQultos.
IN WAKE OF WIND -Milan Di~i;hln~ !~~ld~e:~~~.of when power
spects toppled tree which smashed into Tbe National Weather Service
living room of his home in Ramona reported U .S. 101, "The
northeast of San Di ego. The re was Redwood Highway," wu closed
widespread damage from winds Tuesday from San Francisco to the across Southern California. Oregon border because of fallen
--------------------trees blocking the road. A fire was burning io the Alms
G~ Supplies Decline
Ridge area of the Los Padres
National Forest near Big Sur,
but it was not clear if the lnclem·
ent weather caused the blaze.
THE U.S. FOREST Service in
King City received an uncon·
firmed report that the fire start·
ed in a structure in the forest.
About 120 acres had burned by
this momln( in the same area as
the huge Marble Cone fire of last
summer.
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Southern California's
natural gas supplies are
expected to decline
about 15 percent during
1978, compared with this
year, according to gas
company officials.
But Southern
California Gas Co. said
Tuesday that the outlook
Pot Growers
Sentenced
LONG BEACH <APJ
-A doctor has been
sentenced to 90 days in
jail after hi s ll·year-old
:.tcpson led police to a
garage full of marijuana
plants after hearing an
anli·drug lecture.
· Superior Court J udge
Ellsworth Bean al s o
fined 33·year-old Chynel
F. Henning $1,000 and
placed him on three
years' probation Tues·
day. Henning's wife,
Karen, 32, was sen·
tenced to~ days in jail
and placed on three
years' probation.
They were convicted
Nov. 18 of possessing
marijuana for sale.
cultivation of the plant
and poss ess ion of
hashish oil.
Police said Mrs. Hen·
nin g's son, Gibrahn
Verdult, who lives with
his father in Irvine, led
officers to the garage
after a visit to her
house. The boy said he·
had recently attended a
school lecture on how to
identify marijuana
plants.
is better than earlier burn other fuels, such as
forecasts indicated. oil.
The cutback will con· The gas company said
tinue to bite into the gas the region is expected to
supplies of large in· receive a total of 663
d u s t r i es and com • bllliqn cubic feet of gas
mercial customers who during 1978, compared
have alternate fuel sup-with 783 billion feet du~·
plies, officials said. ing 1977.
HOWEVER THERE The decline stems
would s till be enough from the continuing
gas to fill the needs oi depletion of natural gas
the high·priorlty fields in Texa s ,
c ustomers: residences Okl ahoma and New
and s mall business Mexico.
. which lack the ability lo S 0 U T H E R N
California is served by
~ two major suppliers
\i.. ~ l from the Southwest: El
" Paso Natural Gas Co.
Ma~d APWI...,.....'
Actre ss Sally
Struthers, 29, who
plays the daughter.
Gloria, in CBS-TV's
"All in the Family"
se ri es, marrie d
psy chi atris t·author
William C. Rader,
39, at Westwood
United Methodist
Church.
and Trans western
Pipeline Co., a subsidiary
of Texas Eastern Corp.
Forecasts prepared a
Fishing
A shirt from our town
few months ago had pro·
jectcd lower a vailable
gas supplies. Since then,
prospects for El Paso's
ability to deliver gas to
the Southern California
market have improved,
the gas company said. An eaUmated 75,000 homes
POCKD RADIO
This SONY AM/FM pocket radio feohns
telescoping antenna. slide-rule tuner. 'llz" ~ ~er, ad a hcrdsome brushed ofumi1UTl
case. Comes compfele with eaphol'e arid
·carrying Slrap.
111 Ill PlalRE
Thit is the~. bricjilelt SONY""'· 21 ~
of Trinilrori -1ttus, mea"11ed ~. plui
ole<lranic remote control. This;, the SONY you've
been woltinc) for.
and buainesses from the Santa
Clara Valley to the northern San
Francisco Peninsula lost power
early today when howUng winds
downed trees and voltage Unes,
the utility reported.
PG&E spokes man l<'ritz
Draeger said the winds touched
off a series or outages starting at
1: 15 a.m. and stretching from
Gilroy north to Milpitas and from
:the Lawrence Expressway east. to
·San Jose.
BESIDES THE PROBLEMS
caused by faJHng trees and
branches, Draeger said it ap·
peared power lines were "arc·
ing" -shorting out after
brushing up against each other
and sending sparks into the
wind.
Extra work crews were being
called in to flnd and repair the
damage, and Draeger said the
.... .... ....
company hoped to restore powier
to the stricken areas by noon to-
day, ''assuming we don't ba\'e an:v more strong winds or ra~"
Some light drizzle had !allitn
on the Bay and Peninsul a areas
by S a.m. today, but the major storm front predicted for
:Wednesday remained stationary
·off the coast, the weather serllce
:reported.
FORECASTERS SAID the
rains would probably move weit.
in the rorm or sporadic showers.
There was an 80 percent chance
of rain by tonight for the Bay
aren, where temperatures were
expected to range from the low
60s to the high 40s.
In the Sacramento Valley,
showers and a chance of thun·
dershowers were predicted
through Thursday with bij{hs irt
the mid·SOi and lows in lhe40s.
Stranded Tourists
Hole Up in Mojave
MOJAVE (AP) -Motels were
jammed, diners were crammed
and semi·trailers clogged the
n arrow streets of this sleepy
town.
Hundreds or tourists and
truckers today played a waiting
game with a ki!Jer wind storm
that raked Southern California
Tuesday and continued today.
The California Highway
Patrol had stopped hundreds of
trucks northwest oC here, and re·
ported that more than a half
dozen semis had been nipped on
their sides, blocking traffic.
The dozen motels in this town
were filled by early a!temoon
Tuesday, a rare occurrence, ac·
cording to one motel owner.
DllRAL .-UD
CLOCK U.
SONY AM/FM dodt radio tells time with LEO
d1gi1of numerals. feo lures precision lime
od1uslrnenl, repeat bor, buih.;n AK. ond many
other conveneoce"'
A lRTLE SOllY
This SONY s·· (d1oq.) block & ...n.1e N is
engineered br b<•!Jhl. OlJP• f.;<ontrost clon1y.
Features fiJI VHF & UHF channel selet1100,
AC/DC Cf*Olion, ond we1cjls just 7 lbs. 11 OL
STORE HOURS: FOR DA VtS•IROWN'S
AWARD· WINNING
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
SERVICE. CALI.:
s~ l<evth Beck is we~ a ~ttle
cloth spoq shirt printed witt. famous
1']ewpo(t Beach· scenes.· Natural ground
with navy, red, or brown print. 23 . .00
• •
DAILY 9 • 9
SATURDAY ,_, 548-3437
Orange Coast
ED I TION
T oday's Closing l
N.Y. Stoeks
·,1
v_o __ L_.1_0~,_N~0~·~35~5~,~4 ~S~E~C~T~IO~N~S~,~4~2 ~P~A~G~E~S--------------------·-o_R_A_N_G_E __ c_o_u_N_T_Y_,_t_A_L_IF_O_R __ N_1A _________ w_E_D __ N_e_s_p_A_v_,_o_e_c_E_M_B_E __ R_2_1,_1_9_77 ___ N ____ T_GN ___ c_E_N_T_~1
• Howling Wind Kills 5; Batters State
By The Associated Press
Hurricane-force winds howl-
in g lh rou~h Ca li forni a's
agriculture-rich midsection. at
more than 100 mil es an hour
have lcrt al lca~l fi ve persons
dead and a trail of destruction
from Bakersfield to the Mexican
border.
The violent winds blew down
barns and airplane hangars, top-
p I e d heavy t rucks , t ossed
chunks of brick and roofing
through the windows or homes
and businesses. and whipped
brush fires out of control.
Hundreds of travelers were
marooned In cities throughout
the Central Vall ey and the Mo-
jave Desert, jamming hotels,
cares and emergency evacuation
centers set up in churches and
schools.
An estimated 30,000 homes, of-
fic es a nd i ndus tries from
Bakers field south suffered
powe r outages, and thick clouds
of dust were reported as far
away as Stockton, about 200
miles to the north.
. Del., ...............
SALVATION ARMY'S DOROTHY BARKER SEEKS COINS
Collections Down Thia Ye•r Aft4ff ..... 9Pplnt C.nter Ben
Colle ctions Lower
For S alvatioll Anny
The barring of Salvation Army
collection kettles from two major
shopping cent ers and several "
!;mailer ones is one of the key
reasons donations arc down this
year countywidc, Salvation Army
offi cials said today.
Collections for the needy have
been excluded this year from
Fashion Island in Newport Beach
and The Caty shopping complex in
Orange. according to Capt. Alfred
Van Cl<~ef of the Army's Santa
Ana offi ce. Don ataons a re down $6,000 in the
Santa Ana-Tustin area alone, he
said. Van Cleef said contributions
were also down in the Orange
Coast area but fi gures were not
immediately available today.
The familiar Salvation Army
kettle, with a man or woman ring-
ing a bell beside it, collects funds
for food and toys for the poor dur-
ing the Christmas season, Van
Cleefsaid.
The Salvation Army will dis-
tribute $20,000 this year for food
baskets, toys and gift boxes for
rest home patients In Orange
County.
In addition to funds, the Army
accepts toys.
Donations can be made by call-
ing 898-9332 or 542-9750, or by
mailing gilts and chec"6 to the
Salvation Army at either 8100
Garden Grove Blvd., Garden
Grove, ot 818 E . 3rd St., Santa
Ana.
John Schmitz Ruiis
' For State Senate
Former American lndepen·
dent Party presidential can-
di date John Schmitz confirmed
today he will run for the state
senate seal being vacated next
year by Sen . Dennis Carpenter, R.
Newport Beach.
J oinin g Sc hmi tz ln the
Republican primary next June
will be Huntington Beach busl·
nessman Steve Holden, who has
announced his intention to seek
the senate post. ·
And Fountain Valley City
Councilman George Scott said
today he is conslderlna a try for
the GOP nominat\on in the 36th
Senatorial District. '
The 36th district cove r s
coasta l Orange County from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and
extends inland to Include the
Saddleback Valley and the Santa
Ana Me>Unt.alns. ti also extend.a
along the coast to'" Oceanside In
San DieRO County. The diatrlct is
conelde red a Republlcan
1tron1hold. . Carpenter aMOUnced bla r.
tirement earlier this monthl almost a year before be wtl
leave otnce.
Schmlt.J, 4T, ls a Corona del
Mar resident. Ho leaches at Sa.
ta Ana CoUece. He la a con·
1trvaUve and a rqe mber o( 1M
.?olul Blrch Society.
Holden, 46, is a former' trustee
or Uie Huntington Beach City
(elementary> School District.
He operates a Huntington Beach
insurance agency.
Holden bas said he would tum
his energies toward property tax
retorm, r educllon of govern-
ment spe,nding and tax relier, if
elected.
Schmitz held the si.te senate
seat for five years btfore being
elected to the U.S. House of
Repre1ent.tlves ln 1070.
He lost his contreaalo1ull Nat to
Andrew Rinabaw in 1172, lhe
same year be ran untUCeeufUUY
for ptesideat on tbe American
·tndePende tJoket.
Schmit.I said be would hope to
help tori• a a•• nalltlon bet•ffl\ .Republican• and con-
servatl.e Democrata If elec~ to
the •tate ... te .
"It's the wor st I've ever
seen," said California Highway
P atrol offi cer J i m Hill of
Bakersfield. "I've been al thls
BIG STORM HITS
NORTH -AS
kind of work for 15 years. and l
thought I'd seen it all ... but
nothing like this."
Almost a l l acti vi t y in
Bake rsfield, population 80,000,
had come to a standstill by mid-
day Tuesday, the second day it
* * *
had been battered by the winds.
Power had been cut off to
much or the city as the winds
tore down power lines, shattered
wi ndows, aod tossed trees
across cars, houses and streets.
Visibility was cut to zero as a
thick, mustard.colored grit cov-
ered the city.
Some looting was reported.
In Arvin. a farm community
of 7,000 people 20 miles south of
Bakersfield along Highway 99,
police said almost every home
suffered some damage. Store
* * *
fronts were ripped down, trees
were uprooted, and roofs were
blown off homes and businesses.
Water, electricity and telephone
lines were cut off, and transistor
radios were the only means of
communication.
A win~ gauge atop the Arvin
police station registered gusts of
up to 101 mph before the gauge
blew apart.
The Califo rnia National Guard
in Bakersfield was called into
active duty and rescued 35 peo. pie, including_ Kern County
* * *
Sherm 's Capt. Larry Klier, who
were huddled under a bridge on
Route 58 near Arvin to escape
lhe blinding dust storm. Klier's
windshield bad been blown out
by the storm and his radio had
bffn knocked out or operation.
The Red Cross and Salvation
Army were setting up emergen-
cy centers to care for homeless
res id ent s and hundre ds of
stranded travelers.
The winds also were blamed
for the death or a woman rear.
ended by a tanker truck .
* * *
Coast Due for Storm
Warnings Posted for · Travekrs, Boaters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.lty l'llM ... 11,.t Writ.,.
Hig h northeast wands which
wr eaked havoc i n most of
Southern California Tuesday
mira culous ly by passed the
Ora nge Coast but weather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers not to be
complacent. The batUe of the highs and
lows could brmg a quick and
drastic change in the weather
patte rn by nightfall. according
to Na tional Weather Service.
The freak Santa Ana condition
which brought northeast winds
roaring in over portions of
Southern Cali fornia at velocities
of up to 100 miles an hour were
expected to diminish late today,
giving way to an intense low
pressure cold front that should
brin.g st rong southeast winds
wilh rain.
The high pressure condition
caus ing the s trong northeast
winds is being sucked into the
low pressure trough, slow~g the front's progreu towar d the
~e cold front was reported
less than 200 miles from the
cdast earlier today and moving
east at a rate of 20 miles an..
hour. The front was expected to
bring rain with winds 15 to 30
kpots by late today, s witching to
the southwest and west on Thurs·
day.
The battle of the fronts Tues-
day was the most freakish in the
memory of oldtimers here.
While northeast winds of more ·
than 70 miles an hour were
lashing San Berna rdino and
Rivers ide counties and wreaking
death and damage ln Kern Coun-
ty, a S<?~lhea"sl gale or 40 knots
Ne wport Girl
Saves Family
In Home Fire
A 9-year-old Newport Beach
girl who awoke today to find her
room filled with smoke roused
her family by screaming and
escaped unharpied.
Attorney Thomas Baldikoski
said his stepdaughter, Heather
McNeil , managed to fl ee and
wake him and his wife, in their
downstairs bedroom when she
discovered the fire at 6 a.m. in
their home at 427 Vista Trucha.
No one was injured, he said.
Flre otriclals estimated the
damaee al $6,000 and said the
fire apparently began in the wall
adjacent to a dow ns tai rs
fireplace in Baldikoskis· home in
the Blutts:
The fire then spread through
the wall to an ups tai r s
bathroom, where it burned
fiberglass Insulation around the
tub and ftlled the upstairs with
s moke. Fite officials said the
cauae o( the blaze is under in·
vestlgation. No fire was lit in the
·fireplace at the time, Baldikoski
said. ·
Carter Family
·Opens Holiday
ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE,
Ga. (AP) -President tarter
and his family arrived ln
Geor1ia Wda1 for a down·bOme
Qu'iltmu.
ID keePni with a Carter f 111d· •
ly lradl\lon, t.be prealdeot. lllt
wlle Ralalynn, daapter Ast.y,
son Jeff Ind d1u1hter·ln·law An· nette will spend a quiet bollday
ln their hometown of Pllins. !~ ..
...., ........... ., ..... Mlk ... 11 J
HIGH WINDS BRINO YARD FULL OF TUMBLEWEEDS TO LAGUNA NIGUEi., COUPLE '
Mr. and Mra. K. A. Lehner Have cteanup Problem at 24522 Loa Serrano•
.
virtua lly closed S a n Diego
Harbor and was Celt as far north
as Dana Point.
While all this was going on to
the south and north, the Orange
Coa st was locked in a dead cairn
with an overcast of dust that re-
duced v\sibility to as low as one
m il e offshor e. Vis ibility at
Avalon, Catallna Island, was
OPEC Meeting
,
down to one mile in dust by
midaftemoon . Visibility offshore
at Newport Beach was three to
five miles.
The southeast gale south of
San Diego caused extensive
damage as far south as Rosarito
Beach in Baj a Califor nia.
Oldtimers called it the worst
storm since 1939. A SP.ectal
Crude Oil Price
Freeze Remains
CARABALLED~ Venezuela
<AP ) -T h e u P EC oi l
ministers wound up their price-
settlng meeting today without
making a decision, in errect
leaving the current world crude
oil price rrozen until the cartel
meets again on the question.
The current price is $12. 70 per
42-gallon barrel.
t he next regularly scheduled
s emi-annual meeting of the
Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries is June 15, but
an OPEC spokesman said an ex-
traordinary meeting could be
convened at any time.
Ministers earlier today men·
tioned the possibility or calling a
special price m~eting in about
three months.
Spokesman Hamid Zaheri did
not e la borate on whether or
when a meeting might be held.
A Veneuzeulan press officer
described th~ windup I,.' "very
friendly and cordial" A fin al
communique noted only that the
regular meeting was scheduled
. for June.
'Papa' D1Jg1'es?
Terry Moore Says Yes
VANCOUVER, British Col um· Hughes secr~y on a boat oft the
bia <AP) -Actress Terry west coast or Mexico in No-
Moore, who claims t he was vember l949.
married to the la te Howard Hughes was in the United
Hughes, say• she bore a child by · States when the baby was bom
the bllllonalre recluse, but the and decided not to go to West
baby was premature and died Germany, she said.
within 24 boul'S. "He didn't want a d1tld," said
Ml11 Moore, 47, s aid In an In· Mi ss Moore, "He didn't want
terview Tuesday that in Oc· anyone to have a claim on hJs
tober, lflCJl, 1he gave blrtb three est.ate, and he saw to it that I
months prem•lurely to • clrl didn't get pregnant apin. t nal·
she named Un M•ri6.. Tbe In· ly wanted a chlld and was
rant dJed a day i.ter of blood heartbtoken when our dau-"ter
J>Oltonlna. ehe said. died.
Her etalm that. •be was tnar-''I thought b e was belnc
rled &o H"'lbet lt not new, and selfish," Miss ¥oore .. id. "But
she hlD&ed ·a year A10 that IM he araued &bat llllleas you were
inl•t have had a ddld bJ hlm. around cblldren coo1tanU1 to 'fbe adresa said 'hesda1 Ute · create and mold them, the)"
birth oo.euned, wlille sbe •• would hurt your tm .. e, bladten1 makln1 a mm hi lfuliicb; Wtlt your nme." •
Germany. She •ii• IM manted cSee HUGllES, Pal• A.I) . .
w ea tbe r bull e t in warned •
pleasure boaters to stay out of
t he a r ea a nd s hipping was
slowed to a near halt.
Boaters who ventured onto the
water at Dana Point were bit by
a strong easterly wind. A small
bC)a t an<t a catamaran were
overturned at the height of the
blow.
Power lines we re down in
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and
San Cl emente and bur glar
alarms set off by the damage
kept poUce in all three com·
munities roshing to answer false
alarms.
"Weird" was the word used by
most observers to describe the
freakish calm conditions which
prevailed from Newport Beach
to Seal Beach while other areas
of the county were being lashed
by howling winds from every
quadrant.
J. Sherman Denny. a lifelong
weather buff, said, "It certainly
is strange, all rtgh~. Freakish."
He added that this has been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
(See WIND, A2)
Co a s t
Weath er
Chance of rain increas-
ing to 60 percent tonight
turning to showers Thurs-
day . Cooler T hursd a y.
Lows tonight so to SS.
Highs Thursday 60 to 65.
I NSIDE TODAY
You don 't j u s t s ay
Chrls t mcn in the Poulter
household fn rountain Valley.
You say Christma& Chrbtma8
Chf'Utmas for the triplet• who
·live there, along with their
five brothers and sialers.
Page Ct .
•
.
O.Hy PllillC $Cati ,....
THIS WAS SCENE AT NEWPORT BEACH HOME AFTER EARLY MORNING CRASH •
Driver Wasn't Hurt, But House at Windward Lane and Irvine Avenue Was
Front Page Al
HUGHES ...
Mi ss Moore !>:ml that at the
11mc she met llughl!s, he was 43
;1nd ~he was 18
Explosion Averted
In Newport Crash
i\fter a om•-vcar l'Ourbh1p. ~he said they \Ycre married by
the master of a boat Hughes
<'hartered. She said her mother
and Hughes aide Noah D1etnch
were witnesses, but that Hughes
!:Iler destroyed the !ihip's log -·
the only legal record of the mar-
riage.
She said the marriage was
h·gal in California and Mexico
.ind that they were never
<l1vo rced but that she left him
after e1~hl years.
Southern California Gas Com-
pany workers and Newport
Beach firemen labored for two
hours early today to prevent an
explosion after a Cfr smashed
into' a garage abd cut a gas
main. •
I\ rrested on S}!Spicion of
drunkel') driving wu Micheel
Scott JMorris, 18, or ·1407 Not•
llngham Road, Newport Beach
the driver of the car. '
Police Sgt. George Coelho said
Morris lost control of his car :'.1iss Moore, who was married
three <>lher times, now li ves
\\1 th her ch1lclren in Brentwood.
c4 tif., "'here she is wriling her 65 Cited .1ulob1ogrnphy. She said it is
111ainlv about Hughes.
about 2 a.m. while making a left
turn from Irvine Avenue into
Windward Lane.
Morris' small foreign car
jumped the curb and crashed in.
to a garage at 2200 Windward
Lane, Coelho said.
He said no one was home at
the time. The house belongs ·to
Hal Bay, accor<Jing to police re-
ports.
Firemen and gas company
workers finally got the severed
gas main shut orr about 4 11.m.,
Coelho said. '
lnt<>.rvi<>wed last year a week
after Hughes died, she told the
Fort Lauderdale <Fla.) News
that s he was secretly married to
him but did not plan to file a
daim against his estate.
Miss Moore said in the News
interview that there .. mjly have
been'· children from the alleged ~
Newport Athletes
Receive Awards
marriage~ but . refllsed to be : Sixty-ti ve •young Newport
more SP':Cl~c. . . • ~·. Beach athletes received awards She,,sa1d m the News u~terv1ew Tuesday from the city's Parks,
that Howard was th~ greatesl Beaches and Recreation Com· lover I ever had. He was the
best." .
She is to appear as a witness
1n Las Vega:s in hligation over
th<' billionaire's s o-c alled
:\lormon will, which she c1a1ms
l"t ;i fake'
"Ill' on ly ('vcr wrolc one \\-Ill.''
~he su1d Tuesday, "ctnd that
d1 rec•ted al l his money to his .
ml'dical inst1t4le he dreamed of
w ltml-( up.
.. That's all he ever talked
.1bout, even on our wedding
night That was hi!! reason for
lt\tng," she said. "l think rus
r('al will was destroyed by his
a1del\. They guarded him night
and duy. Towards the end Howard
''us controlled by the people he
tried lo hetp."
Hu~hes was divorced from
I louston socialite Ella Rice in
1929 and married actress Jean
T'f'tt'rs in 1957. They were
d ivorced in 1971.
Dam Trouble
Hints Alleged,
ATLANTA CAP> -Proper in·
~peclion could have spotted trou-
ble al a damn hcfore it coUapsed
Nov. 6, unleashing a 40-acre lake
that tore through Toccoa Falls
Bible College and killed 39
persons. a federal investigative
board said today.
The report, however. said the
board "could not determine a
sole cause or failure" and fixed
no blame for the collapse of the
Kelley Barnes dam.
mis~ion.
A specihl presentation was
made to world class swimmer
Alice Browne, a Corona del Mar
high School coed who began her
career in a Newport Beach swim
program and now competes for
the l\11ssion VieJo Nadadores.
The other athletes were rec-
ognized fo r their ability,
sportsmanship and leadership in
CVSDBoard
OKs Computer
Purchase Plan
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict trustees have authorized
district administrators to buy
rive years worth of computer
services from the Newport-Mesa
Unified district for S.527,000.
Among the services covered
by the agreement are high
school class scheduling, re~
card preparation, personnel and
business office record keeping
and scoring of tests, said
Truman Ben edict, deputy
superintendent.
Trus tees also told ad-
ministrators to draw up bid
specifications for computers to
be installed at CUSD omces and
in the district's three high
schools ..
School board .members ap-
proved both item~ on 5·0 votes
with trustees Robert Bachelor of
Laguna Niguel and Ted Kopp or
Coplstrano Beach absent.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT " -1 "l think this move to com-
J?Uters is long overdue," said
trUBtee Jan Overton of Dana
Pe)J\t, wbo has worked as a com·
puter Prottamm~.
"The school dlslrict is, in eC-
fect, a $29.4 million corporation
with 21 subsidiaries, using out·
dated business methods.''
.......... -Pthlcttlll--1-,M. lt.0..W. Vlt.,.._, ___ ~
• ""-" llWYll Edl!Or ,,.._,,,..__,.....
"'41"f0!"91•11t
<Mfln "·..... ·~ ... ,.,,, lo\i.l\Ylll IM""l"' IOll•t
Mrs. Overton said the advan·
tage of working out an agree·
menl . with the Newport·Meaa
district is that it will aUow lbe
Capislr-ano district to have ac-
cess to a sophisticated computer
system without having to buy
the system or employ additional
personnel aL this time.
The agreement will make
available to ~very Capistrano
school teacher a bank of student
objectives and test quesliQP3 de·
vetoped. by the Newport-Meta
district qvcr a 10 ye,r period,
Mrs. Ovetton aaid., , .
t ' •• ,. . •
Blast in Beirut
city programs. They were
chosen from more than 2,000
participants.
Honored for their efforts on
tbe city s~m team were Shawn
Davis, Todd Lincoln, Kelly
Long , Rob Mihalko, Audrey
Woolfolk and Chris Woolfolk.
Given awards in girl s
volleyball and vollcytennis were
Lara Asper, Chrissy Bond,
Melanie Brown, Jill Curtiss,
Joanne Doedon s , Kristy
Harmon , Nicole Hatch ,
Stephanie Hom. Barbara Perry,
Tanya Reinertson and Mary
Sullivan.
Boys flag football honorees
were Tod Bearbower, Greg
Boston, Jason Cagle, Richard
Geib, Brad Gilpin, Joe Holden,
Scott Loos, Todd Marinovich,
Mark Osgood, David Powell.
Bryant Riley, Erik Rood, Andy
Sheppard, Sam Sprague, Tom
Temple and Robbie Webber.
Also honored were Harbor
Area baseball participants from
last summer. These included
Brandon Carr, Ken Carr, Travis
Carr, Jerr Conover, Ben Davis,
Kevin Fell, Keith Flanders, J eff
Grant, Chris Hecker, Jimmy
Hersh, Mike Hess, Gregory
Jacobs, Eric Jaye , Rudy
Jiminez, Fred Johnston and
Doug Kilmer .
Additional baseball team
members receiving awards
were Drew Krum, Andrew Mac·
Millan, Tom Mahoney, Clint
Moncata, Jim Murphy, Paul
Nordland, Eric Oberg, Mike
Perisi, David Rohde, Jeff
Sewell, Bill Westrem, Greg
Wynn, Tom Zuzag, Steve
Zweber and Tim Zweber.
Threatened in
Chino Prison?
F'ormer Rep. Andrew J .
HJnshaw's Ure wu threatened
while he was imprisoned at
Chino State Prtson on a bribery
charge,· KOCE-TV reporter J.i.m
Cooper aaid today.
An interview Cooper conduct-·
ed with IUnahaw will be bro.ad·
cast at 8 p.m. Thursday on
Channel SO.
Cooeer said Hinshaw told him
his life bad been endangered
before. hiJ tranifer t.o Oran,e
.County 'Jail ~d that the poUU-
clan plans ~tact leatslat.ort
about. priljlll reform.
The half-hour PfOtram ~*'n" ten on an lntervlew with
Wnahew et the )all, ~Mre be la
setvlng an el1tlt·montb •-.~.
on two~ of bribery.
. 1't VaadelalJerg
CO Perishes
In Base Fire
VANDENBERG Alll. FORCE
BASE CAP > -A fire -whipped
out of control by the same hur-
ricane-force winds that toppled a
high-voltage lower and sent
sparks raining into parched brush
-killed the base commander and
* * * ,..,.,,_Page Al
WIND ••.
Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. John
Monlrello lis tened to reports
that winds were playing havoc
in nearby Los Alamitos and were
"blowing to beat the band" while
he looked out a dead calm that
was "still as glass."
Huntington Beach State
Lifeguard Supervisor Bil) Kran
likened the dead ·calm in his
<.1rea to the eye of a hurricane.
JI untington Beach Lifeguard
Lt. Bill Richardson gazed out at
the calm sea and the pall of dust
stretching to Catalina Island and
commented: "It's really strange
stuff."
Small craft advisories re-
mained in effect today from
Point Conception lo the Mexican
border with predictions of
southeast winds of up to 40
kn•ts. GaJe warnings were in ef·
feet nerth of Monterey.
Light rain was falling in San
Fernando Valley this morning
a nd was expected to spread
south later in the day.
Meanwhile, the Na lion al
Weather Service continued
warnings to travelers as the
northeast winds continued to
blow in San Bernardino,
Riverside and Kern Counties al
up to 60 miles per hour.
Surf conditions along the
Orange Coast remained relative-
ly calm today as the northeast
winds apparently knocked down
the waves generated by the cold
front. As the wlnds diminished
the forecast was for surf from
five to seven feet later in the day
and Thursday.
Paintings Stolen
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Three
men stole 90 paintings valued al
a total of $115,000 from a west
Los Anl(eles art gallerY-:.
at. least lwo oU>er people as they
tried tofigbtit. ltsUU raged oulof control today.
"The tire seems like it's going ~ continue as long as the high
w!nds do. It just keeps jumping,"
A1 r Force Sgt. Dan Anderson said
late Tuesday.
. The fire. blown from ridge lo·
ridge on this sprawlinl{ military
complex by erratic 70 mph windS
spread in a patchwork of flam~
over several square miles of the
150-square mile base 50 miles
northwest o( Santa Barbara. One
thousand acres were blackened.
More than 300 llrefighters bat.
lied the blaze throughout the
night, and the strong winds con-
tinued through today but at a
lower pitch.
Killed were Col. Joseph Turner,
48, the base commander; Base
Fire Chier Billy Bell, 44; and As-
sistant Base Fire Chief Eugene
Cooper, 45, from Vandenberg
Village.
A fourth reported death bad not
bee n confirmed by base
authorities.
Base spokesman Capt. Leonard
Brady said Turner, a veteran of
the Korean and Vietnam wars,
was directin1 the firefighting
operation whe'n flames sur-
rounded his jeep. Turner tried to
run to safety but was overtaken by
the flames and burned to death,
Brady said.
Turner, 48, was in charge of
operations at the ll,000-man base,
but was outranked by two
generals.
Plane Turns
Back Safely .
An Air California Lockheed
Electra propjet witb 94
pass~ngers aboard made a pre·
cautionary -and sale -return
landing to Oran ge County
Airport this morning shortly after takeoff.
Air Cal officials said a smoke
indicator light went on in the
pilot's cabin, prompting the
aborted flight.
Airport tower personnel Te·
ported no problems on the
turnaround landing ot FUgbt IS,
which waa bound for San Jose
and Lake Tahoe.
POLICE DRAWING
NB Bracelet Thief
Composite
Aids NB
Gem, Probe
Newport Beach police said to-
day they have no suspects yet in
the then or n $59,000 diamond
bracelet from a Fashion Island
jewelry store, but they have re-
leased a drawing of the robber
made from descriptions supplied by store personnel.
Sgt. Tony Vllla said police also
are checking through photo-
graphs of possible suspects to
see if witnesses at A.H. Weinert
Fine J ewels can identify the rob-
ber.
The bracelet was stolen Mon-
day night by a man in his 20s
who told a clerk he was shopping
for a glft for his mother.
The man had re1>0rtedly flrst
visited the st.o~ Monday after·
noon with a woman he said we
his wife. He returned alone
later, acc0rding to atbre person-
nel.
He then reportedly asked lf he
could try on the bracelet. When
a clerk agreed, the robber
moved from one mirror to
anothet-until he was near the
door, then called out something
about seeing his father in \he mall
and ran out, disappearing Into a
crowd or ChriBtmas shoppers .
Terrorist Nabbed
BERN, Switzerland <AP> -A
26-year·old West German
woman arrested in a shootout
wUh Swiss cwitom guards was
one ot the terrorists who raided
the OPEC meeting in Vienna
two years ago, the Swiss JUsUce
Ministry announced today.
.. Save $230°0
on this fine Heritage Console
Only Chandler's
. could offer a value like this one.
Heritage Classic Court Hall Console in rich,
pecans with simulated marble top W32", 014'', H. 49"
Reg. 1459. NOW s22goo
Hurry, No phone orders please:
PrafttJlonal lnttrlor Duign without Obi~
ComfCNUl>lc P•rklniJ • COl\11t:nifnt Fin.tncing
1514 NORTH MAIN
SANTA ANA · 541-4391
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -An
explosloo ~ed heavy dam.,e
to an elnp&y, unllalsbed bu!kUnJ
Detltt lo the ~ypUan Embusy ln
Beirut early today.
· Hlnlbaw hu 11.Pce entered a ~ork rurlouah PJ'Olf•m that at. . The Store of Famous Names low• hlrJt to leave Jan durina the
Tuts~ Wtd... lhur$.. .,nd 5.lt. 9.30 to:>)()
Mon.: 12 to 9 ·Fri: 9:30 to 9 00
day to work. COQl)eraaJd. I ' T"e protram l• entltl•d I .Chandler's reeture1 the flMJt from t>roel. Hf'nte>g~. Henr~on. Century. Baker. \\4eimMI. Sl\ctrlJI, St<11ncon·COO~r. Woodmark.
"ffinabaw: From the Inside." 1 Mar~e Cors011. A11tloom Bedding, St1fllt., Morbro. Chandler Cua tom Oro1per1cs & C.rpeung as well as other lomou\ n;smu. ..
..
:\I Ed.ltorial Pa11..111111 ________________ R_~_,t_N_. w.".cl./P·U-bl.l&ti.·r-·T·hom-•s.l(·M·ll·ll·/E.dl_'°' •• .,;:::::; • Wednflday, O.C•mber 21, 1977 Barbara Kreiblch/Edilorlal P~ Editor
County No .Help
In Density Curb
List 'H't:k, l'\t!\\ port Beach city councllmen ended a lon~-runnin~ battle with developers of the Versailles-on-
the ·Bluffs con<..lum1mums and reluctunUy c.igreed to ap-
prove H 1 t2-u111t t•xµanswn of the development near Hoa~
'.\I ~monal Ilospll al
' Thost• 442 unib will lit• l'rammt'd onto :::!O atres of land
and by the time land for stn•ets and open space is deduct·
t.•d. 11-w new Vt·rsuallcs will (•om e in at about JO units per
~1rn· wt•lt O\'t•J' thl' cit) 's m<Jximum of 15 unatl) per acre.
Tht.• probl<.·m \\ ith the project 1::. that city officials
hU\'C hap littk tontrol O\'Cr the ust.• of the land since the
oa~·-; when thl' ongin;.il plan::. for the existing units were
filed
Like otlwr propl'.'rty near the hospital. lhal land was
on t·C' in coa11Hv lr rnlory. The t•ount~· 's allO\\ able den~i tics
ar1 t.•ons1<lcl'alJI.'· higher than the city ·s a nd therein lies
I hr :-ourc·C' of pl'111Jlems like the ones surrounding the
\'l•rsa1lll'S
B{•c·:.111st· l'ounty ol f IC' ta ls arc unwilling to cooper al\:
w ith tht• t·at~· h~ attempting lo keep projects built on county
l~nd lh«JI will one d<.1y become city l and · al a density
matching the t'itr's. n·sidt•nls of Newport 13each can look
I orw a rel to mu1l'1>roJ~tls with clcns1t~· like thl' \' 1•rsa11lt.·">
Liff' t·;111 ht• Jll"I pla111 puanful <il time:-;.
Another Traffic Stall?
Traff1t· l'llllgl•:-.tion <ind lat'k of parking s pace:. al'('
c·onstant prnbkrns in :\<.'Wporl lkuth, "·h1c:h prob<1bly (!:\
plains \\fl\ llw11· ha\'l' LH.:(!n so man~ ... 111cht•s of those suli·
1N·h nwdt• I)\ or for tht' eal\'.
'J'hl' lalt·~t one. an SIM,000 effort lw Wilbur Smith and
A::.sot·wles. "as 1·omm1ssioned by c·our1cllmcn prior ln or-
g:.11llzing a solution lo p:.1rking problt•ms th<Jt plague lhe
.1re:.1 stn·lC'hin~ from Lacio Village lotht· Newport Pier.
Pha:-.l' onl' of the stud~· as a dl'f1n1tion of the problem
and a l'11rsw v look al possible solutions. That w<.1s dc-
l1wn•cl to µ!:.inning commissioner~ Jc.isl week. Phase two,
v:hieh is to ht.• a recommendation 'of the precise m elhoq
I ur '>ol\·ing lh<· problems <'rcc.tted by loo many cars :rnd
loo((•\\' parking :-pacrs, wall bt' forthcoming.
It hus ht·t·n said that eity politadans 111 :'\ewport
B1 ·ach ~Pl'lld loo mt1th tinw studying traffic and p:.irking
1H11l>l1·ms ~111d loo littlt• timl' doing something to solve
t hu-.\• 1nohh•m-.
\ '11lor1w1.1t1·I.'. tht• l1rsl phase of lht:' Smith stu<I~
'' tJldd lt•nd 111 -.u pport I h ;1t lht·on It contains s uch gt•m :-
of 1nt11rin;it11J11 um·un•recl utte1· :1 great ck<d of sc1t•11
t 1t 11· df11rt ".1-. 1•\pt•11citod lh~1t (lt•uk dC'mand for park·
11\g 111 c·1•1ll1 al '.\'l'\\ port 1:-on Saturdays during the sum
1hl'I' ancl I hat -.h11p1><·r-.. clitwr" and workers in centr:JI
~t'\\ 1111/'I d1111 ·1 111..1• \(I 11:1\l• to w:dk long dislanccs lo get lo
t h<·11· <'a rs
\\'t• hlllH' phcl">l' I \\0 \\ 111 ('Omt• lip With SOme suggc:-.
IHlll"> th;11 lhl· t·it.'· c·ouru·il <'an at'l 011 ~omcthing that
m11-!ht d1sµl·I lhl' not1on:-. t lwt most trarri(' and parkirig
~ud11•s an· wort hie:,~ ;incl that th('Y a r e onlv com-
rni..;:-wrwd h~· ('llllllt'ilmt•fl i.IS <.I Slall lactlc to cfC'lay .m <tking
d<.·<:1:-.11111:-. lh;1t might not IJl• polilit·all~· popular.
Worth Waiting For
~{'\\port Heal·h re~1clents "ho ha,·e been looking
for\} anl t o hannJ! a library in Newport Center are going
to Ji:i\·e 10 bt• 1nilic>nt just a little longer. We think their
~ a1t will be \\('Jl rcwarcll'<I.
The lonJ! cicla~ ed hhrar~· was re\'icwed b y coun-
C'll mt•n last "<'l'k and thry eke id eel lo delay construct1on
h~· another two monlhs in order lo redesign the facility. fl
W\IS a \\ ISl' dc.•tision.
Wh11<· it would han: been nil'e to ha\'C had a librarv
t1mkr construction. the pla ns rt'Jected by councilmen
"11uld not han• he('n a good buy for city tax dollars. Thl'
1ww cksign may dl'la~ eonstruclion. but it will be more
t•<·onomi<':il to build and maintain Those arc <'OnsHlera
1111n-. th<1l out" cii.:11 l hl· t 11nc factor
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those ol lhe Darly Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those ot their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited Address• The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box t560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 •) 642-4321
Boyd/Bloodhounds
8y l • .IH. 80\'D
Queslton arises a!> to
whether trained bloodhounds
could track down criminals
in a big city the way they can
out in the cou nlrvsiclt'.
Definitely. Those dogs a re
unbelievable. ln a New York
City test once, a bloodhound
followed the trail or a man
throu~h a park area where
just previously· 55,000 people
had attended a rock concert.
IncidentalJy, the only sort of
humun beings that baffle
bloodhounds are idcntlcal
twlM, 'rhcir odors arc iden·
tical. But the odors or all
otlters are each unique, and
trtllned bloodhounds ean
percefve these dirfere1\'ces .
:
0f'ar
Gloo1ny
Gu
Did I tell you that 80 per·
cent of the cheese in this
coun try winds up in
sandwiches?
Seasoned citizens will re·
call a time in this country
whe n the Federal Govern
ment prohibited any ice
cream maker from turnini:l
out more than 20 fl avors. On
May 1, 1942. it was. Why r
don 't know. SQunds a little
like that War Production
Board recommendation to
farmers tllat would have had
them remove th<' shoes of
their horses each night to
save the metal.
Those people who analyze
h14ndwrlting conte nd that
(O\ks WhO USe a circle instead ot a dot over the "i " usually
possess calm dispositions.
Q. "ff<Sw did that little
town in southwest Aritona
gel the na me of 'Why'?"
A . Its founder. P eggy
Kut~r . 10 named it. Its
popu laUoh i8 l~ now. But
•hen a~ flrst set up a gas ~utlon on her homestead ther~. nobody else was
"arouDd. •nd·1ler friends fro"'
upetaC. npeatedly uked
her. ''\Vb}'?"' ' ..
Q. ·~ wtft Marie A& ttw'• l•t Wontaf A. ''P'1d0a me, mooaie\lr,
I dkta« IDUll to do lt. ••
Rowland Evans/Robert Novak
U.S. No Longer 'ls:cael's Attorney'
WA SHINGTON -Pri m e
Minister Menahem Begin's sur-
prise visit here was viewed by
U.S. official~ as an Israeli effort
to hold on to the old dependent
rela tions hip with Washington
which h as been r adically
transformed perhapi; ended -
by the dramatic Sadat-Begin
diplomacy.
By rushing here to di!>cuss his
new peace pl an for President
Anwar Sadat,
Beg in was
telling the
Americans,
nothing has
c hanged, we
~till rely on
vou. Jn word
and nuance,
the A m l'r -
1 c a n s
h ere were
rcplyin~· everyt hin g has
c hanged : you now stand on your
feet face-to.face with the Arabs:
tell them your propo::.al!> for a
M 1deast scttll•mcnt.
T"' o d<irs before the Praml•
M1n1stcr arriv ed here ,
n c w s p a p t' r a c I.' o u n t s 1 n
J l•rusalem' hintt.>d that liegin's
visit wa,s part of a broa cl~r
braeh·EJ.!yplian scheme. When
it became clear Sadat "'as as
~urpnsed as the U S .. officials
here Wt'rc i;o annoyed that this
word was quietly passed : Begin
1s coming totally on his own in
1t1a tive, with no Egyptian con·
n1vancc.
THAT IS JUSl one clue to the
new relationship between the
U S. and Isr ael. Although the
U.S. naturally looks to Is rael as
1lb intim ate friend in the
M 1dcast. direct Israeli· Egyptian
negotiations h ave suddenly
ended a full decade durin~
which Washington alone spoke
for Israel in negotiations
Defense Secretary Me lv tn
Laird > as "Israel's attorney."
The sudden termination has led
the Israeli government to seek
new ways to keep the U.S.
hitc hed to Its side in negotiating
with the Arabs. That is un
derstandable, but it 1s something
President Carter does not want.
A\ his press conference, Mr.
Car ter carefully circumscribe<1
uny e ffort by Begin to pin down
the U.S. as a negotiating partner
ut lbe Cair o con(erence.
But conrlictin g with Mr.
Carter 's wise rerusal to put the
U.S. back in the Mideast um pin~ 's scat Is growing pressure
from Israel's potent political al·
lies in U1js country lo resist any
U.S. move to a truly neutral
posture. That helps explain the
President's quit'k assent to
Begin's surprising self-invitation
to Washington anct Mr Carter's
request after lhc first Carter-
Be~in m~ting t'rlduy for Begin
to s tay Jn cxtrn day for another
meet1nl{
As onl' Mideast planner told
us "The laa;t thing Carter wants
is to ,;ht' Hcgln. Israel or the
Amcrac;rn Jewish community
the impression that Begin gol
lh<' bum·-. rush here."
Be1?in hold11 hiS:h cards in his
shrewd maneuvers to make it
appear that the U.S. a nd the
Carter administration a re sbll
"Isr ael's attorney" even though
diret'I talks have started with
Egypt. During lunch at Blair
House Friday. Hcgin confided
details of his new peace plan lo
rour of Israel's s t aunchest
friend:. in the U.S. Senate: Jacob
Ja\'1ts. Richard Stone. Henry M.
Jacbon and CIUford Case
TlllS PRF:C'l-:DED direct
brat•h \~Ord to Sndat of Bt•gan 's
plan News was rushed to Cairo
not by the Jsraclis, according to
udm1n1strat1on offic1als, but b\·
t<>lt>ph(lnt• Crom the While llou!>e ·
1mml•rliatcl~ following the f1r~t
Car\l'r· Begin talk on Friday.
Tht• obvious l'X pl a nation of
Beg in·._ decision lo confide has
plan 10 Mr Carter and four V S
Senators bcfor<' explaining it to
PrC's1dcnt. Sadat: maintain the
pr('li'nst• !hat the U.S. is still in
1ls old roll· as Israel's attorney.
Mr. C•1rter's intent is dif·
ferent. II<' wants to maintum a
certain distance from Israel
(and . of course, the Arabs/
while t•xplorin,:t several new
1dt·a~ with his own advisers.
Tht5 terminates a long period.
with onl y hm1ted llteps toward
1ware. during which th e U.S.
.1cled (in the phrase or forme. \\Don't get too comfortAb\e . /1
W1lh Israel fucm~ t.:gypt
d1rel'lly acro:-.s the bargaining
tabll', Mr. C<irlC'r is comfortable
\\'Ith h1s nl'W role or indepen-
tl1•nt:C I k s l'ems to be distinctly
t•n 10 In~ lhL' prospect or Israel
no\\ carryin~ the responsibility
for h<>mmt•ring out peace on its
nwn. a respons1b1hty not affect·
l'd b~ l'rime Minister Degin's
suddl•n '1s1t. •
Ma~
Think Twice About
To the EditJr:
Perhaps you are cons idering
giving a puppy or kitten as a
Christmas gift. The volunteer
animal workers as k you to
please reconsider . These small
c r ea tures ar e a se r ious
res ponsibility. Consider the con -
ruslon in the average home at
Christmas time. lt is hardly the
place to bring a pet that needs
plenty or sleep and a quiet place
· as refuge.
Few of us have time durini!
the holidays to properl y
housebreak a puppy or to feed a
pet at regular interval s .
C'hildren often pressure their
parenL-; into purchasing a puppy
nr kitten by promising to feed,
groom and clean up after it.
When the child does n't perform
these duties. the parents will
oflt•n get rid of the pct.
If ONLY a puppy or IHtten
will do as a gifl. do consider a
gift certificate Lo be honored
arter the holidays when the
household returns lo a normal
~chedule.
Before obtaining a pet any
time. a family should consider
the following:
1. Are you committed to car-
ing for the pet for its lifetime, or
Just until your childre n tire of
their new toy?
2. Are you willing and able lo
pay for altering your pet to pre-
vent the birth of more animals
in a nation already saturated
with pets?
3. Are you willing and able to
pay for all inoculations. yearly
c heck ups and any emergency
treatment tKe pet may need?
4. Wheh choosing a dog, are
you keeping in mind that the
c ute little puppy or unknown
parentage could within a year ·
outgrow your small yard?
5. Do you really want the extra
work a nd sometimes the
de:tttu¢tlon that having a pet,
especially a puppy, entails?
6. Are you willing to control
your pets so as not to annoy
your neighbon? Remember, not
ever yone loves animab.
7. JC you are renting a home,
apartment etc .. do you have
your landlord's permission to
own a pet?
HAZEL MORTENSEN
Chairman, United
HumanitllriansorOrangeCounty
T-.da9I ..
ro the Editor;
An articl e ln the preu
stote . that' County
T x Collector;..Trreuurer
llOberi Cltraa ,....... lO eollert
'965 inltKcin ...... •1·,..,.. ~be ume ,aftlcle 1ta'8 that
CltrOn, 1'tild &"• ol in· vataieall ma I ~ ~ office .... ,,..,. .. • '6lflGlt dollan
•rear," ij J\ I• dlflloalt for mt to t'Ompr.bend Wb) bt1 Offlce
should have an S8 billion portfolio
when our taxes have mcreased ZS
percent this y~r. , ,
Why cannot some of the S8
billion bl• used to reduce our lax-
es. I 'd apprecia te an explana·
lion.
RUTHS. CHAMBERLAIN
The ta.r collector-treo.~urer Qffice
acts as a "bank" for 170 tariT19 agen-
cies in the county. including 34 school
and college dl8tncl8. The 18 tnlhon
figure represents cash /tow rather
than investments. I n fiscal 1976-77
the olf 1ce handled SI .179 billion o/
new money of which f1S7 m1Uton
came from property ta.res. the re-
mainder from other revenue sources,
including state and federal funds
The ta.c collector-trewmrer mvesrs
the money and return& at lo the ta.z
mg agencies as needed. plus interest
lAut year $«3.3 mdlion an interest
wa11 distributed to the 170 tcu:mg
agencies to ~ble them lo hold doum
their tor-rot~•. Editor.
DoufJI• St,.ndard
To the Editor:
I am strongly opposed to the
main idea of the articl<' in the
Dec. 12 Pilot titled, "Bo). J.
K.Jll ed by Dog."
My point is, if we kill this dog,
whic h undoubtedly k i lied the
boy, how come we tlon 't do
something equally drastic to the
people who are out on the streets
again after having killed one or
two people?
Before destroying the dog. why
don 't they (ind out if the family
has been treating the dog unfair ·
ly in any way?
LINDA McKI NNEY
R•dTa,w
To the Editor:
I couldn't believe what I heard
wher> my mother told me the
policy that people have to tolerate
when they are eligible for rederal
rent subsidy, yet have to wait al
least six monlbs before getting it.
It seems there is Just so much
allocated. You wait until some-
one drops dead or moves, and
then get moved up on the list. Jn
these limes of housing shortages.
the only real emergency measure tor people whocan't a(ford to buy or even rent is rt?nt subsidy. It
s hould be implemen ted im-
mediately without o Jot of red
tape.
..
a Pet · for Christtnas
Pcopl<• are either clig1bll• or
lhey an· not. and 1f lhey arc,
they should gel it immediatoly.
lt should apply lo everyone. not
just who gets there firi."1
I s uggest we tell our
l:iwmak<.'rs that af thev \\ant to ~el re·<'lectcd they Lak·e fast UC'
lion on this dire µroblcm .
F. HANSE.'-;
Siren• Welf"ome
To thl' Editor·
I am hoping C.\'. <t;loomy G11s.
Dec 9 ), was hein~ facel1oui. \\Ith
1 he remarks about II \'tnC next to
a fire s tation. We hope he ,,,11
never need help. but if hl' e\'C'r
does hc·11 find the sound of lho~c
sirens thto swC'clt'st sound he's
en•r h <.'ard.
My husband h:.id a cardiac• ar
rest in .July. When I could hl·ar
tht• siren!> in the di~t:.inre. 11 wa:.
music . The Cos t a Mes a
1>ar:.a medics and firemen «:.ilmh·
and cff1cienU\' worked hard to
S:J\'C hl~ hfe and SU('l't:eded.
C.\'. didn't have to move ne."\t
to a fire station. Wl•'d be glad lo.
G. ~1 and SHIRi.EV ROUINSON
I\' c Sll.\pt'd (' \: U.)(18 taking a
.'1deway.'I poke al folk who move 11ert
to airports, tilen qrumble about
noise All prom:> tn lht' paramedics'
f.;rl1lor
B ... ine1r• Clh,.at~
To the Eflitor:
Ret·ent government at11tud<•s
and policies appear to be creat
ing a dangerous bus iness climatr
for the future of lhc private ~cc··
tor The recent i.iovern ment
t'ndors('(I Social Security .inrt
labor union derisions have' lx.•1•11
partic ularly disconterting Wt·
refuse to recognize thl' in
disputable trend of modern in-
dustry awa~ from lubor intcn~1\ e
production and to"' ards ca111tt~l
intensive, more efficient iri ·
dus try. W<' \'Ontinue to adopt
short term politically acceptable
solutions (or pressing long term
problems.
FORESIGHT d ictatei. we
b<'come more competitive. not
bar the competition. However,
political considerations continue
to blur our economic foresight.
As in the steel Industry : the solu
tion lies In increasing capitol in-
vestment lo become more effi·
cient and thus more competitive.
and not in invoking trad~ tariffs
to simply bar competition. We
can run but wc cannot hide.
I cannot reconcile government
d~cisions whlc'h nllow us to
v1 rtuolly trcate a quasl -
1tovernmental corpor:~too in
Lockheed, •.t the same i1m e we
will not ulJow our most ltfficlent
busin~ssman. th~ Aine rtcan
farmer, lo mokc twcn a 'mWmal
profit.
Preslcfcnt Carter pied ed to
trim the (edera.l bureaucracy;
but th<' n umbl.'r o f federal -
employees has Increased under
his administration.
H ('l'L'nl govl'rnmcnl rhetoric is
lt'ad111u us in a sc·nsc of economic
stability that 1s "11hout technical
foundation in the prirntt! sector;
the Ille blood of our ec·onomy.
t;RJ:-:GOHY V HUZJCKA
E R A lnfor•atlon
To th<' F.:chtor:
I must !ipeak out. Tl has be<'n
two davs since I real.I the letter
from Mar" 0 . Moore <Dec 14
:\1.ulbox 1 and I am s till fuming
from her inal·cur!lle charac·
terizat1ons and less than indirect
innul•nclocs about a fine person
and hard workl·r for all human
l'I J!ht:. not only \\omen.
V1v1<1n llall :.ind her hushand of ;m ~om1• <><Id years C<'rtainly do <to
USl' M !'. ~oon•s wor ds > "hold
dear the fam1I~ c•tm l'ept and the
lo\·l' a nc1 tll•\·ot 1111\ lw\\~ ee n J man
.ind ,1 "'oman "
I ''ouhl l1k1· lo eommcnl on
l':Jl'h point of M!-. Moore's letter
bccaU!-.C 1l i-. nfe with msen!>1t1ve
per<'l(pllon-. of important issues .
Jin\\ t'\t'r , I will hm1l my!>elf to
trying to makl' dear one point
that thl' anti ER/\ forces have
c ont1nuous f\ tried lo m1 s -
repref't•nt. What I am about to s ay
has bcl'n slated many times. but ~v1dently not enough. if even onf'
pc•rson , such us M ~. Moore, is
still "l'Onfused "
RATIFICATION of the Equal
Rights Amcndmc:nt will provide
<.'qunl rights undN the law for
b<ith men and women. Period. It
docs not legislate what a person
hollls tu h<' true >n their private
l n es
People who wou ld like to have
more informatwn. fact as op-
posed to some popu1ar m yths.
s hould avall themselves of
i;l'rv1('es offered by Orange Coun·
ty ERA Coalition. They have a
speakers bureau and will send
someone, free or charge, to your
group or organi7.at1on to di11cuss
what the ERA will and will not
uccomplis h. There is also a 24·
hour answering service for the
coalition which \\ill direct your
inquiry t o t he appropriate
person. The number as 639 -8807.
My poinl in all of this is,
believe what you w ill, it is Your
ri~ht But please, base that belief
on facts and not false assumptioo
und unsubstantiated conclusions.
BARBf\RA L. llAMMER MAN
• LAltn• from rtodf!ri art wt'lcomt
Tht nght to condt,.se U'ttm to fit
lfJO.Ct ~r tliminatt li~l i• rtttrved.
LAttcn of 300 word1 or ~., will ~
Qfwn prt/trtflct AU ldtf!N mull ffl,
cludt ti9Mt1Jrt Oftd mmling oddrtu
but namt1 mo¥ ~ wfthlwld on rt· ~ff i/ ru/flcl~t noaon u apparent. J>~,.,, will not bt pu8nahed..
~~ •... -..... ~~ ... ----: .. -··----
CALIFORNIA
South Storm
Kills Trucker • . RAMONA (AP) -Broken trees and power
lines today lay across sect ions of Southern :
California whipped by winds reachlnc 100 mph.
The damage to farm crops liS the wind lel up
was sporadic but widespread. Citrus and avocado
groves were r eported hardest hll, mainly in
northern San Diego County.
A number of animah died.
A BIG TRUCK RIG WAS SWEPT off ln·
terslate 8 at. Buckman Springs grade and down an
embankment. Tuesd ay, killing driver Russell
Velozier, 19, oC Spokane, Wash.
Because of that accident 40 miles east of El
Cajon, the bw;y freeway was closed from Alpine to
El Centro. It finally reopened around midnight.
I.
wednnday, 09Cember 21, t9n DAii. y PILOT A 5
North Battered by Wind
By The Associated Press
Howlin&i 80 mile an hour winds
blew the roofs otr Humboldt
County area buildings, knocked
;,ut power for an estimated
150,000 residents and was direct·
ly responsible for two deaths ear-
ly today, authorities report.
The winds blew lhe roofs of(
the grandstand at the county
fairgrowtds and a grocery store
and sent a tree crasbjng down
onto a lruck on Highway 36 near.
Eureka, killing two people, of·
ricials said.
All major roads reportedly
were blocked by Callen trees and
other debris. A fishing boat
capsized at Humboldt Bay Bar
but its small crew wu pulled
from the water when a Coast
Guard vessel reached the scene.
and buslnessK from the Santa
Clara Valley to the northern San
Francisco Penmsula lost power
early today when tu>wlj.ng winds
downed trees and voltaee Une8,
the utility reported.
PG&E s pokesman •·rah
Draeaer said the winds touched
off a series or outagu starting at
1: lS a.m. and stretching from
Gilroy north to Milpitas and from
.the Lawrence Expressway easl l-0
·SanJoae.
BESIDES THE PROBLEMS
caused by falllng trees and
braocbeti, Draeger s aid it ap.
peared power lines were "arc-
ing" -shorting out arter
brushing up against. each other
and sending sparks inlo the
wind.
company hoped to restore power
to the strtcken areas by nooo to-
day, "assuming we don't have
anv more strong winds or r.-ln."
Some light dnule had f.Uen
on the Bay and Peninsula areas
by S a.m. today. but the ma..jor storm front predicted for
·Wednesday remained slat.icmary
·off the coast, the weather service
:reported.
FORECASTERS SAID lbe
rains would probably move west.
in the form of sporadic showers.
There was an 80 percent chance
of rain b)' tonight. for the Bay
area, where temperatures were
expected to range from lhe low
60s to the high 40s.
A six-car smashup injured three persons on
California 67 near Ramona. That state road was
closed but later reopened as was the Valley Center
Grade near Escondido.
... \.. . PACJnc GAS & Electric Co.
had no estimate of when power
would be restored.
Extra work crews were being
called in to find and repair the
damage, and Draeger said· the
In the Sacramento Valley,
showers and a chance of thun-
der showers we re predicted
lhrougb Thursday with hl~bs in
the mid·SOs and lows in tbe•Qs.
LIGHT PLANES WERE g rounded, and
several boats broke away from moorings along the
coast.
.,.., ..........
IN WAKE OF WfNO -Mihm Dimich in-
spects toppled tree which smashed into
living room of his h ome in Ramon a
northeas t of San Diego. T h ere was
widespread damage fro m winds Tuesd ay
across Southern California.
The National Weather Service
reported U .S. 101, "The
Redwood Highway," was closed
from San Francisco to t.be
Oregon border because of fallen
.. .. ..
In Camp Pendleton, a brush fire burned 750
a cres of land. Fifty acres of brush were scorched
in northern San Diego, west of PenasquJtos. --------------------trees blocking the road.
Stranded Tourists
Hole Up in Mojave A fire was burning in lhe Alms
Gas Supplies Decline
Ridge area of the Los Padres
National Forest near Big Sur,
but it was not. clear if the inclem·
ent weathercauaed the blaze.
THE U.S. FOREST Service in
King City received an uncon-
firmed report that the fire start·
ed in a structure in the forest.
About 120 acres had burned by
this morning in the same area as
the huge Marble Cone fire of last
summer.
MOJAVE CAP) -Motels were
jammed, diners were crammed
a nd semi-trailers clogged the
na rrow streets oC this s leepy
town.
The California Highway
Patrol had stopped hundreds o(
trucks northwest or here, and re·
ported that more than a half
dozen semis had been flipped on
their sides, blocking traffic.
LOS ANGELES !AP l
-Southern CaliCorma's
natural gas supplies arc
ex pected t o decline
a bout 15 percent during
1978, compared with this
year, according to gas
company offi cials.
But So uth e rn
Calilomla Gas Co. said
Tuesday that the outlook
Pot Growers
Semenced
LONG BEACH !AP >
-A doctor has been
s('ntl'ncl·d to 90 days in
Jail a fter his l l·ycar·old
~tepson led pohl·e to a
g<ira~e full of marijuuna
plunts afte r hc:anng an
anti·drug lecture.
Superior Court J udge
E lls worth Bean a lso
fined JJ.yeatw>ld Chynel
F . Henning $1,000 and
placed him on three
years' probation Tues·
day . Henning's wife,
Karen, 32. was sen ·
tenced to 60 days in Jail
and placed on three
years' probation.
They were convicted
Nov. 18 0£ possessing
m a rijua na fo r s a le ,
cultivation of the plant
and p o s se ssi o n of
hashish oil.
Police said Mrs. Hen·
n1 ng's son , Cib r a hn
Verdult. who lives with
his father in I rv\ne, led
officers to the garage
a fter a vis it to he r
house. The boy said he
had recently attended a
school lecture on how to
identify m a rijua na
plants.
is better than earlier
forecasts indicated.
The cutback will con·
tinue to bite into the gas
s u pp lies o( large in·
dus t ries and com-
mercial customers who
have alternate fuel sup·
plies, officials sald.
burn olher fuels, such as
oil.
The gas company said
the region is expected to
receive a total of 663
billion cubic feet of gas
during 1978, compared
witb 783 billion feet dur-
ing 1977.
The decline s tems
from the continuing
depletion of natural gas
fields in T exa s ,
Oklahoma and New
Me:dco.
HOWEVER, THERE
would s till be enough
gas to fill the needs of
th e high -priority
customers: residences
and s mall bus iness
which lack the ability to SOUTHERN
California is served by
.,1 two major s upp li er s
l from the Soulhwcl>t : El
Paso Natura l Gas Co.
and Tran s we s t e rn
Pipe line Co., a sub:.1diary
ltfarried
A c tre ss S ally
Struthers, 29 , who
pla ys the d uughter.
Gl oria . in CBS-TV's
"/\II m the Family"
seric>s, ma rr ied
ps ych i a lris t ·a uthor
Will iam C. Rade r .
39, at We s t wood
U ni ted M etho d ist
Chu rch.
• ofTexas EasternCorp.
Forecasts prepared a
Fuhing
A shirt from our town
••
St~keeper Kevin Beck is weari~ a kettle
cloth sport shirt printed with famous
Newport Beach sames. Natural ground
with navy, red, or brown print. 23 .. 00
•
few months ago had pro·
Jecled lower availa ble
gas supplies. Since then,
pros pects for El Paso's
ability to deliver gas lo
the Southern C~lifornia
market have improved,
the gas company said. An estimated 7S,000 homes
This SONY l'IM/FM podet radio features
te!Mcopng antenna, ~""1• tuner, 'lf>" dynomic
'Peoker, and o hond50m9 brWied ~
co••· (omftt complero w1rh earphone ond
• corryinq strop.
THE BIG PKllRE
This is the bi990st, brightest SON't' .,.,, 21 inches
ol T flrtitron Plus, measured ~y. plus
electrontC: •omota conlrol. flu is the SONY you·ve
been wOllofl9 for.
Hundreds of tour is ts and
truckers today played a waiting
game with a killer wind storm
that raked Southern California
Tuesday and conUnued today.
The dozen motels In this town
were filled by early afternoon
Tuesday, a rare occurrence. ac-
cording to one motel owner.
SONY MA/FM dock rodiq talk time with L£D
digital numerols. leolures pr11cision limo
od1Uitment, repeat b:it, blilr~ AK. crd rr.ont
other cOiMIR8nC8$.
A LmLE SONY
This SONY S" (d'oq.) block & wliito TV i1
~ed br bnqlit. Cl<!.p, hi<an11cw dority.
Feotures hJI VHF & UHF chomel selec1ion,
K./OC operolion. and -rr 1ust 7 ho. 11 OL
WE'RE #1 STORE HOURS: FOR DAVIS•IROWN1S
AWARD-WIHHIHG
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
SERVICE. CAU.: THE LARGEST INDEPENDENT
TV & APPLIANCE DEALER ·
IN THE HARBOR AREA.
DAILY .9 • 9
SATURDAY
9-6 548-3437
7
Saddlellaek ;
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
Afterneon
N.Y.Stoeks
Howling Wind Ki11 S 5; Batters State
By The Associated Prell
Hurricane-force winds howl·
ing through California's
agriculture-rich midsection at
more than 100 miles an hour
have left at least five persons
dead and a trail or destruction
from Bakersfield to the Mexican
border.
The violent winds blew down
barns and airplane hangars. top-
pled heavy trucks, t ossed
chunks of brick and roofing
through the windows or homes
and businesses, and whipped
Hugh es'
Baby
Claimed
VANCOUVER, British Colum-
hi a (AP ) -Actress Terry.
Moore, who claims she was
married to the late Howard
Hughes, says she bore a child by
the billionaire recluse, but the
baby was premature and died
wrthin 24 hours.
,,?Miss Moore, 47, said in an in·
t irvie w Tuesday that in Oc-
tober , 1951. she gave birth three
months prem aturely to a girl
:.he named Lisa Marie. The in-
fant died a day later of blood
1)oison1ng, she said.
He r claim that she was mar·
ried to Hughes is not new. and
:.he hinted a year ago that she
might IHHC had a child by him.
The actress said Tuesday the
birth occurred while she was
making a film in Munich, West
Germany. She said she married
Hughes secretly on a boat off the
west coast of Mexico in No·
vem ber 1949.
Hughes was in the United
States when the baby was born
• and decided not to go to West
Germany. she said.
"He didn't want a child," said
Miss Moore, "lie didn't want
anyone to have a claim on his
es tate, and he saw lo it Ulal I
didn't get pregnant agaln. I real-
ly wanted a child and was
heartbroken when our daughter
died.
"I thought he was being
selfish." Miss Moore said. "But
he argued that unless you were
a round children cons tantly to
cr e ate and mold them, they
would hurt your image, blacken
your name."
Miss Moore said that al the
time she met Hu ghes, he was 43
and she was 18.
Arter a one-year courtship,
she said they wore married by
the master or a boat Hughes
chartered. She said her mother
and Hughes aide Noah Dietrich
were witnesses, but that Hughes
later destroyed the ship's Jog -
the only legal record ot the mar-
riage .
She said the marriage was
legal in California and Mexico
a nd that they were n ever
divorced but that she left him
after ei~ht years.
Miss Moore, who was married
three other times, now lives
with her children in Brentwood,
Calif., where she is writing her
autobiography. She sald it is
mainly about Hughes.
Interviewed last year a week
after Hughes died, she told the
Fort Lauderdale <Fla.) News
that she was secretly married to
him but did not plan to file a
claim against his estate.
Mlss Moore said in the News
interview that lhere "may have
been" children from the alleced
. marrtage, but refused to be
<See HUGHES, P .. e. A.I)
brush Ci res out of control.
Hundreds of travelers were
marooned ln Cities tb.rougbout
the Central Valley and the Mo-
jave Desert, jammina botels,
cafes and emergency evacuation
centers set up in churehea and
schools.
An estimated 30,000 homes, of-
fices a nd industries from
Bakersfield south s uffered
power outages, and thick clouds
of dust were reported as far
away as Stockton, about 200
miles to the north.
Chess 'Move'
A Protest?
BELGRADE.
Yugoslavia (AP )-Boris
Spassky failed to show up
for play in the world
championship se~i-final
chess match in apparent
protest of the removal or a
demonstration board from
the game area.
The apparent boycott by
the Soviet player, who de·
pended heavily on the
board, threw the tourna-
ment into a procedural crisis and the game was
postponed until Friday.
The fonner world cham·
pion, who is trailing oppo·
nent Viktor Korchnoi
6.5-3.5 with one adjourned
game, did not show up to
resume play in the 12th
gam e or the 20-game
match, which will de -
termine a challenger to
play world c hampion
Anatoly Karpov next year
for the crown.
Schmitz Set
For State
Senate Run
Former American lndepen·
dent Party presidential can··
dldate John Schmitz confirmed
today he will run for the state
senate seat 1>em. vacated next
year by Sen. DermtsCarpenter, R.
Newport Beach.
Joining Schmitz in the
Republican ~mary next June
will be Huntip~ Beach busl·
nessman Steve llolden, who has
announced bi& lntqUon to seek
the senate poet.
And Fountain Valley City
Councilman Geotge Scott sa.id
today he ls considering a try for
the GOP nomination tn the 3f;lh
Senatorial Dlatrict.
The 38t~ district covers
coastal Orange County from
Seal Beaeh to San Clemente and.
extends inland to include Ule
Saddleback Valley and the Santa
Ana MOtllltaios. It also extends
along the coast to Oceanside in
San·DleRO COUftty. The district ls
consld&red a RepubUc-.n
stro,i&bold •
Carpent.ef announced his r~
tiremeot earlier this month,
almost a year before he will
leave office.
Scbmtb, •1, i• a Corona del
Mar resident. He teaches at Sall'
. ta Ana Collete. Re ls a eon·
servatlve and a member of the
John Blrch Soclety.
. \!Olden, ~. ls a former trustee
of the Huntington Beach City
(elementary) School Dlatrict.
•He o~ratet• a Huntington Bee.ch
insurance agency. w
Holden hu Hid be would tum
hls enetoes toward property tu
reform, red~ctlota of govern·
ment •pendine and tax rellet, ll
elected. •
SehmlU ~Id the 1tate.1enate
Mat fOf' live years bdWe beibC
elected to the U.S. Hou ot
Reprqentattves ta 1"0.
He I01thl9~NllJ•a!Matto .Andrew Hlnlbaw iD 1971, ~
Nm• 1W M ru wad11lfally tor prut.._ en ~ AIMrlua lDdt.,.....lldet,·
Sebmij.t iat lte would .baDe to
help for1!,:• new co•Utlcm
betWffll RePubliran1 and t'Ga· Hrvatlve DemOerata ti elected to theatate ... .,.,
•'It's the worst I 've ever
seen," said CaJifomia Highway
Patrol officer Jim Hill of
Bakersfield. "I've been al this
BIO STORM HITS
NORTH-AS
kind of work for 15 years, and I
thought I'd s~n it au ••• but
nothing like this."
Al most all activity in
Bakersfield, population 80,000,
had come to a standstill by mid-
day Tuesday, the second day it
* * *
had been battered by the winds.
Power ha.it been cut off lo
much of the city as the winds
tore down power lines, shattered
windows, and tossed trees
across cars, houses and streets.
Visibility was cut to zero as a
thick, mustard-colored gtit cov·
ered the city.
Some loot.ing was reported.
In Arvin, a farm community
of 1,000 people 20 miles south of
Bakersfield along Highway 99,
police said almost every home
s uffered some damage. Store
* * *
fronts were ripped down, trees
were uprooted, and roofs were
blown off homes and businesses.
Water, electricity and telep.booe
lines were ~t off, and transistor
radios were the only m eans or
communication.
A wind gauge atop the Arvin
police station registered gusts of
up to 101 mph before tbe gauge
blew apart.
The California Natlonal Guard
in Bakersfield was called into
active dutv and rescued 35 peo.
p le, including_ Kern County
* * *
• SberLtt'a Capt. Larry Klier, MIO
were huddled un<ter a bridge on
Route S8 near Arvin to escape the blinding dust storm. lOiel'•s
windahlekl bad been blown out
by the storm and his radio had.
beetl knocked out or q>eration.
The Red Cross and Salvation
Army were setting up emergen. ey centers to eare for homeless
resldenta and hundred& of
stra11ded travelers.
The wiAds also were blamed
for the death Qf a woman rear•
ended by a tanker truck.
* ~ *
Coast Due for Storm •
Warnings Posted for Travekrs, Boaters
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.lly Pllet ... llftt Writ.,.
High northeas~ winds which
wreaked havoc in mos t or
Southern California Tuesday
miraculously bypassed the
Orange Coas t but weather
forecasters warn boaters and
would-be travelers not lo be
complacent. .
The battle or the highs and
lows could bring a quick and
drastic change in the weather
pattern by nightfall, according
to National Weather Service.
The freak Santa Ana condition
which brought northeast winds
roaring in over portions of
Southern California at velocities
of up to 100 miles an hour were
expected to diminish late today,
giving way to an intense low
pressure cold front that should
bring strong southeast winds
with rain.
The high pressure condition
causing the strong northeast
winds is being sucked into the
low pressure trough, slowing the
front's progress toward ~be
coast.
The cold front was reported
less than 200 miles from the
coast earlier today and moving
east at a rate or 20 miles an
bour. The front was expected to
bring rain with winds 15 to 30
knots by late today, switching to
the south'¥est and west on Thurs-, day.
The battle or the fronts Tues-
day was the mos t freakish In the
memory o( oldtimers here.
While northeast winds of more
than 10 miles an hour were
lashing San Bernardino and
Riverside counties and wreaking
death and damage in Kern Coun-
ty, a southeast gale of 40 knots
Viejo Cyclist
Cheats Deat h
But Not Law
A Mlssioa Viejo man, at first
believed by police to be possibly
fatally injured, is lucky to be
alive todu, after ramming his
motorcycte.tnto the rear of a van
on Pacific Coast Highway in
Huntington Beach Tuesday.
lnvesUgators said, however,
that Douglas Roy Lee, 24, of
38151 Ave. De Leo, isn't out of
the woods yet, since he was cited
on drunken driving charges.
Officer' John Berens said in·
ve.stlgators who found Lee
sprawled ln a heap on the
Pacific Coast highway and
Beach Boulevard indeed
believed be was dead.
He was first taken lo Hoag
Memorl-1 Hospital in Newport
Beach, then to UC Irvine
Medical Cenier in Or ange,
where he was treated for his in-
juries and relea.Nd.
Police aaid Lee and David A.
])raper, 25, ot Anaheim, were
botb heade d wes t on the
hlgbwa.y when the motorcycle
burlled Into the rear of Draper's
van.
Dr-.pel' said be felt a jolting
collision and looked in the rear
view mirror to see a shower of sparks as Lee and the . 'cycle
skidded, bounced and tumbled
down the pavement.
Police said tee was r<eleased
on hJs own l'eOOIAisance on the
drunken drivtn1 ch•ae dUe to
the fact ht wu injured.
•
virtually closed San Diego
Harbor and was felt as far north
as Dana Point.
While all this was golng on to
the south and north, the Orange
Coast was locked In a dead calm
with an overcast of dust that re·
duced visibility to as low as one
mile offshore. Visibility at
Avalon, Catalina Island, was
down to one mile in dust by
midaftemoon. Visibility offshore
at Newport Beach was three to
fi ve mlles4 The soulheast gale south of
San Diego cause d extensive
damage as far south as Rosarito
Be ach in Baja California.
Oldtimers called it the worst
s torm since 1939. A special
Anita Robbed
Aca ess Twd by5 Bandi u
ROME <AP> -Five armed and masked bandits
crashed their way into the suburban villa of Anita
Ekberg, tied the Swedi sh actress and fled with her
cash, jewels and fur coats, police reported today.
The 46-year-old actress, who was the blond sex
goddess of Federico Fellini's 1960 film "La Dolce
Vita," was alone at her vill a in Menlana , about 12
miles outside Rome, at the time of the robbery early
today.
The value of the stolen goods was put at about
$9,000. The actress freed herself in two hours and
called ipolicc.
Miss Ekberg, semi-retired except !or minor sup·
porting roles in films and occasional television ap-
pearances1 has been living in Rome for some years ..
SACC S t ud11 Soug•t
Cityll~od Pushed .
By Leisure World
By 1.AtJBIE KASPER
Of•OllllY ........
A t.eiaure World committee
h•s re.sunect~ ita request (M a
study of 1o•ernmenlal
a(temaUvM, lnchadin,s citybood,
for the S.d4Jel>Kk 'Valley.
The Qqvemance Committee, a
group formed about 18 moal.hs
a10 by the retlrem• .. t com·
munlt.Y'• '9eden to ehdy Jocal
govenunf:l\t, will ult tlte s.t>-
d I ebnk Art• CoordhaaUnt
CouncU (SA.CC) to ~ueet • .,....
llmlJlary study by tbe c09mty'•
1..oe•l Af,enc:1_ Formatloa Com-
miuloe <LAJl'C).
Tlalt tame co"'mlttee pro4
poltd .artier tldl ,ear t.bat tbe ~ anante a more fttenlive
1&udy ol fOlllbl• fom1lmtata out of Its ..,.,.. hmcL
Although SACC supported the
idea, County Supervisor Thomas
Riley said funding could only
come from the county service
areas budgei.. But represen·
taUves of the service areu split
on this plan and the propoaal for
a study seemed to dJe.
The Governance Committee,
however, continued tbeir lo·
terest and recently ulrecl for a
report on government
potSlbilities from Robert Prl~ •
one of the'r mmbert •nd a
(otlher city admlnlatrator wbo
currenUy albs on the ccunmitt ..
and '5 director of •pedal P"OJ·
cell for L hure World '• management. Price aaJd there are toar
alternltlws for the fu1Wl!-
(8ee 8TUDY, Pa" J)
~
weathe r bulletin warned 1
pleasure boaters to stay oat of
the a rea and s hippJng was
slowed to a near halt.
Boaters who ventured onto the
water at Dana Point were hit by
a strong easterly wind. A small
boat and a cat amaran were
overturned at the height or the
blow.
Power lines were down in
Laguna Beach, Dana Point and
San Clemente a nd burglar"
alarms set off by the damage
kept police in an three com-
munities rushing to answer false
alarms.
"Weird" was the word used by
most observers to describe the
freakish calm conditions which .
prevaUed from Newport Beacll
to Seal Beach while other areas.
9f the county were being las hed
by howling winds from every
quadrant.
J . Sherman Denny, a lifelong
weather buff, said, "Jt certainly
is strange, all right. Freakish ...
He added that this bas been the
strangest weather year in his
memory.
(See WIND, AZ)
Coast
Weath er
Chance or rain increa~·
ing to 60 percent tonight
turning to showers Thurs-
day. Cooler Thursday •
Lows tonight 50 to :SS.
Highs Thursday 60 to 65 .
INSIDE T ODA. Y
You don't just so.y
Chri1lma1 in the Po'41ter
houuhold in Fountain Valley.
You tay Chfittrr141 Chriltma:
Chriltrr141 /or tM triplet• who
'live thn-e, along wUh their
flue brothers and sisters.
PaoeC1.
I
A! O.A.ll't' Pll OT SB wecsn.ecs.y 0.C.ITIJ)9r 21. , rn
AF ·-
..... w, ..........
PERISHES IN FIRE
Base Commander Turner
Death Hoax
Callers
NOt Kids?
Victims of a cruel weekend
telephone hoax have told Hunt-
i rt gt on Be ach police in -.
v~sligators they believe the
cMlers were ''deranged adults,"
not out-of-school youngsters seek-
ing a thrill.
Police Detective Art Droz in·
terviewed 15 of the hoax victims
Tuesday. They we re among
about 100 call ed by someone
claiming to have news of a
··t'ragic accident" and the death
of a family member.
Droz said some of the victims
heard as many as three adult
voices, two males and one
female.
Victims of the hoax calls Fri-
day and Saturday said the calls
came at all times or the night
and even in the early morning
hours.
None of the recipients or the
ca;11s actually lost any rela{ives,
police said.
The pranksters apparently
used a current telephone dir,ec-
tol'y and called their victims in
alphabetical order, Droz said. None of the victims received
more than one. phone call -
making it difficult lo trace the
~ourcc of the messages, Droz
~aid. ·
Dro z i s workin g with
telephone company officials in
f.'ffort lo trac k down the
pcrpd rators of lhe ghoulish
prank. lie declined to discuss
the methods being employed in
the investigation.
1\lost of the hoax victims are
Huntington Beach residents, but
so m e live in Cos ta Mes a ,
Newport Beach and Fountain
Vallev.
'Droz said he believes many
vit!tims did not report the hoax
calls to police.
VA.Nl>ENBERO AIR FORCE
BASE (AP> -A fire -YrlUJ'l*i
out of control bf \be 1uie hllr·
ricane·force winds tbat toppled • high-voltage tower ancr seol
sparks raining lnto parched brush
killed the base commander and
at least two other people as they
tried to rtght it. It still raged out of
control today.
"The fire seem~ like it's going
to continue as long as the high
* * * Fro• Page AJ
WIND .•.
Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. John
MontreJta listened to ~~
that winds were playing havoc
in neatby Los Alamitos and were•
.. blowing to beat the band" while
he Jbo"ked out .a d~ad calm that
w"* "still as glass.••
Huntington Beach State
~ifeJuard Supervisor ~ill Kran
llJvj:?ned the dead calm in his
ap:a to the eye of a hurricane.
· ttuntlngton Beach 'Ltfeguard
I;t. lhJI Richardson gazed out at
the calm sea and the pall of dust
strelcbing to Catalina bland and
commented: "It's really at.range
stuff." ·
Sm all craft advisories re-
mained in effect today .from
Point Conception to the Mexican
6ordet: with predictions of
southeast winds of up to 40
knots. Gale wamings Were in ef·
feet nbrt.h of Mohterey.
Light rain was falling in San
F ernando Valley this morning
<i nd .was expected to spread
south later in the day.
Meanwhile, the National
Weather Service continued
war11ipcs-to tra.yelers as the northew winds .. continued to
blow in San Bernardino,
Riversitie and Kem Counties at
up to 60 miles per hour.
SurJ .. conditlons along the
Orange Coast remained relativ~
ly calm today as the northeast
winds apparently knocked down
the waves generated by the cold
front. As the winds diminished
the forecast was for surf from
five to seven feet later In the day
and Thursday.
Day Camp Slated
After Christmas
The Saddleback Valley YMCA
is sponsoring a Christmas Day
Camp program the week !ollnw·
ing Christmas.
Day•long sessions, running
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. will be
held Dec. 26 through so. The
camp is designed for first
thtough sixth grade· children and
features trips to many areas of
local interest. Included is a trip
to the Los Angeles Zoo. For
more information, phone
830·9622.
Fire Kills Woman
MERCED <AP> -A 74·year·
old blind and crippled woman,
Ventura Pimentel, died Tuesday
of burns over 90 percent of her
body, the coroner reported. She
was severely burned. at her
home at Palanada east of here
Monday night when a gas stove
burner caught her nylon robe on
fire, firefighters reported. ,
Earlier Too
windl'do. lt tu.st t eeps jurnpini."
Air FotceSgt. DanAndersonaald la~'l\aesday. '
The fire, blown lrom ridge t(>
ridge on this sprawling military
complex by e~ralic 70 mph winds,
spread in a patchwork of flames
over several square miles of the
150-square mile base 50 miles
northwest of Santa Barbara. One
thousand acres were blackened.
More than 300 firefight.era bat·
tled the blaze throughout tho night, and the stroo1 winds con-
tinued through today but at a
lower pitch.
Killed were Col. Joseph Tu.rnei:.
48, the base commander; Base
Fire Chief Billy Bell, 44; and As,.
OPEC Meeting
sistapt Base Fire Chief Eugene Cooper. 45, f~m Vandenberg
Villace.
A fourth reported death had not
been confirmed b y base
authorities.
Base spokesman Capt. Leonard
Brady said Turner, a veteran or
the Korean and Vietnam wars,
was dlrecling the firefighting
operation when flames sur-
rounded bl& jeep. Turn'r tried to
run to safety but was overtaken by
the flames and burned to death Brady said. '
Turner, 48, was in charge of
operations at thell,OOO·man base,
but was outt.awked by two
generals.
Crude Oil Price
Freeze Remains
CA RABALLED~. Venezuela
(AP> -The OPE.G oil
mfnisters wound up their price-
setUag meeting today without
ml\ldng a decision, in effect
leaving the current world crude·
oil price frozen until the cartel
meets again on the question.
The current price is $12.70 per
42-gallon barrel.
The next regularly scheduled
semi-annual meeting of the
Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries is June 15, but
an OPEC spokesman aald an ex-
F.-...PageA1
STUDY •••
One possibility is a large city
covering the entire Saddteback
Valley, something SACC has
seemed to favor in the past.
Price said another is four
separate cities for Mission Vie.
jo, Laguna Niguel, Lake Forest-
El Toro and the Leisure World
and South Laguna Hills area.
A third possibility is a city
formed from Leisure World, its
neighboring residential areas
and the Laguna Hills Mall. Price
said be doubts that LAFC would
ever approve this plan.
Another possibility, which
Price said can't be overlooked,
is lo continue with the existing
service areas. He said there
may be no need for a city or
cities in the area.
traordinary meeting could be
convened at any time.
Ministers earlier today men·
tioned the possibility of calling a
special price meeting in about
three months.
Spokesman Hamid Zaheri did
not elaborate on whether or
when a meeting might be held.
A Veneuzeulan press officer
described the windup as "very
· friendly and cordial." A final
communique noted only that the
regular meeting was scheduled
for June.
During the two-day session
here, the oil ministers were
divided over whether to freeze
crude oil prices in 1978.
At the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries'
price setting meeting in Doha,
Qatar, last December, Saudi
Arabi" and the United Arab
Emirates opted for a lower price
than the OPEC majority.
Every 5 percent increase in the OPEC price costs U.S.
motorists a h alf-cent more at the
gasoline pump, experts say.
Talks Falter
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Meet-
ings 'between school and civil
rights officials on the city's pro·
J>OSed desegregation plan have
broken down, making it appear
the conflict would be settled onJy
after lengthy court hearings, it
was reported today.
o.11, Pt ... sw" ,..._
SALVATION ARMY'S DOROTHY BARKER SEEKS COINS
ColJectlons Down This Veer After SJ'topplng Center Ban
BanQing of Kettles
Hiliils ArmY' s Effort
The barring of Salvation Army
collection ketUes from two major
shopping centers and several
smaller ones is one ol the key
reasons donatioa.s are down this
year countywide, Salvation Anny
officials said t.Oday.
Collections for the needy have
been excJ4ded Uiis ~ear (roto Fashicsn Island iD Newport Beach
and The City shopping complex in
Orange, according to Capt. Alfred
Van Cleef of the Army's Santa
Ana office.
Donations are down $6,000 in the
Santa Ana-Tustin area alone, he
said. Van Cleef said contributions
were also down in the Orange
Coast area but figures were not
immediately a vaila hie today.
The familiar Salvation Aravy
ketUe, with a man or woman ring-
ing a bell beside it, collects funds
for food and toys for the poor dur·
ing the Christmas season, Van
Cleefsaid.
The Salvation Army will dis-
tribute $20,000 this year for food
baskets, toys and girt boxes for
rest home patients in Orange
CounLy.. , . . .
Ih ad9,itiol\.l.O funds, the Army accept!toys.
Donations can be made by call-
ing 898·9+12 \or, 54,3-9750, or by
mailing gifts' and checks to the
Salvation Army at either 8100
Garden Grove Blvd., Garden
Grove, or 818 E. 3rd St., Santa Ana.
Museum Bid Nixed
LONDON (AP> -The board
of directors at Madame
Tussaud's London's famous wax-
works museum, has rejected a
$20 miUion takeover bid. Shares
in the publicly owned company
soared on the London Stock Ex·
change when the owners an·
nounced their decision Tuesday. -
But Price said the missing
link in his proposed alternatives is that ''nobody has the facts."
He said no one knows what the
area's tax base might be or what
services would be taken over by
the city.
Save $230°0
He said the Leisure World
committee is proposing the
study only so that facts are
available if and when area resi-
dents consider incorporation.
"People can draw conclusions
after they have the facts," be
said.
Price said the preliminary
study could be done by LAFC's
existing staff and community
volunteers. He said further
studies, and the funding, could
be determined after this Initial
report is completed.
on this fine Heritage Console
.
!
1"Many probably just called a'
relative to check out the 'death1'
but we will never know how
many," he added.
'Most of the victlms he ln· td~viewed said th~y heard what
sounded Jike police radios in the
background, Droz said.
Inmates to Leave
Valley's Christmas
Sales on Increase
. .
By OUVE BARLEY
Of U• o.lly PttM Slaff
Christmas shoppers in the
Saddleback and Capistrano
Valleys are spending more
money this year and doing their
shopping earlier, spot checks
reveal.
LA PAZ. Bolivia (AP> -The
United States and Bolivia have
reached agreement in principle
to allow Americans imprisoned
here on cocaine charges to serve
out their sentences in their own
country. Of the 32 U.S. citizens
now held, however, only about
six are expected to be able to
leave immediately when the
treaty takes effect.
Martha Hanson, assistant
manager or Laguna Hills Mall.
the area's largest shopping com-
,.. 11tex, said this week that sales
.----------.........:.-. • ·~re up and shopping has moved
"'• ~t ' more moderate, prolonged
• •,• t..4t)ac:!~. DAILY PILOT .,: .• . 'Other business sources reneet·
n..o.-CMo• o.iiv ~ ...... ~ .. un:. • e~ lier th.inking by saying that "'*"-""-·~··""''"'*'_""._°'_ crowda don't seem as luge, but CH•l-11111 ... Comil•"Y.llDof.W-••,.. I 1 °""".,,.., Mo ... , •~•ouat1 ,,,d.., :J:'• sa es vo ume is greater. ::ir.:e~~~.~:~~':i':=':•"tV: Part of the Increase in dollar ~=~~~';..":19~;:; spending is attributed to higher
;;;::~~=:.!'.'M'~~.:,..,. -a.,
11-N.-l'rHICMflt .... ll'llOll-
,«lt •. cwtrJ Vk• '°fffl<loflt•OCI Ge-II~-
TMMe• ll....tl IOAI«
~···~ IMMtlflt€.illtr
~ ......... MdmN~.-· A"'1mntMt ........ Cd ....
lladdtebecll V~Offtoe
ti»\ I.II~_ .. _°""""-"
Office• C.ll l•'t\111 UIW.tl ... ~ HWl\IHIO!Ofl .. H~! 1n1J'"'1t8'ul«Nrd ~ ... 0 1 \1160""-'tMr•
T1t1Jtl•ft• {?Ht .. U21 Cl~Adwartl .... M-511'
.....-.Cll lf•Ht't """"'°" ...
••.• •1~10 .' '' ,.,.,.. .... 0.-~
.....-0
=:'To =.o:.: .. ~,~~ "'"""' •r ··~~''""ot• .,.,.,. ,..., ': ~::;.~::..:. "' ..-.<•11 _,.,\II_
.. ~ .... , .... -·-...... Cotl• ........ =•!lie lloH<tlelleo " to.,14• H M -TJ-.·1. -~~ .... ~,,. "'"'''"'
,
p,.._p~Al
HUGHES •••
more specific. ·
Sbe said in the New. interview
that "Howard was the greatest
lover I ever had. He was tbo
best." .
She is to appear as a witness
in L'1• Vega.a in UUgaUon over
the bllllonalre's 10-calfed Morrnoo wm, wlilcb sbe chums is a fake. .
\, ~~eionly e~r ~one will,"
she said Tuetday ... and that
directed ·all bll money to bU medl~ institute he dre•med of
aeltJll& up. . •
''That's all lle ••• talbd about, even ou our w~c
nl"ht. That WU hit HllOO for
llvln&," she a.aid.
;
prices than last year, most
agree. However, most loven-
torjes indicate that sales also
ha.Je increased.
Bob Wineman, tnanager of
Wineman's Department Store,
Mt!Mion Viejo, re~ hls sales
are approximatelf 3lJ' p4~ent
over last year aJ Cbriltmutime.
Spokesmea ~for-Gemco,~K
Mart, Sav-on Drug, Viejo Liq-
uor, Windmill Florist and Ax·
line Shoe Store ln the Mission
VieJo area all report sales in-
creases and agree that shoppers
aren't waiting until the tradi-
tional 'ttas\ minute" to do their
Cbri.ltmu 1h0pplng.
. Diane MoUey, T·K Toy Corral
manager. says sales are "better
than lut year" and repotts a
•ban> decline in lay·•way sales.
"People seem to have more cash
available," she says.
The only IOW' note came from
Lorraine Sherman of Shaw's
Sweet Tooth candy shop. She
say• candy 1ales In her !Acuna
JUlla thop have been slow 10 far.
But, sbe 1aya. that•• not really
too unusual because moat buyen put candY at .,. bottom
of their liaL
Jim K1mbroolb of DeNault'1
Hardware and Home Center in
San .Juan C•a>IJt.rano, ••YI bf
probably could have predicted
thia year's Quiatmu salea ln·
creases.
Klmbroulh says the number
of wboletafe orders placed at a
recent bu.)'er'1 1how In Cblca10 hldtcat.d a 1bopplnt 1ur1e that
ht believes MU eont1Due tbJ"OUCh W.weekend..
..
Only Chandler's
could offer a value like this one.
Heritage Classic Court Hall Console in rich,
pecans with simulated marble top W32", 014". H. 49''
1 Reg. '459. NOW '22900
Hurry, No phone orders please.
1514 NORlll MAIM
SANTA~· ~1-"4391
Tues~ Wed~ Thurs~ and Sat~ 9.JO to :>:30
Mon.: 12 to 9 ·Fri: 9;JO 10 9:00
Ch1ridler'1 fHt~I lhe finest from Drexel. Httrta~. Henr•don. Ctntury. Boker. ~Iman. Sherrm. Stanton (oopt>r. Woodmorll.
M.rge C.raon. Aittloom Bedding. S ttffle, M•rt>ro. Chandler Custom On1per1es & Carl)f'lrnq as Y.t'll .,, ott'lcr l.imOYs nnmc~
f ' , t •
I
lfJ sa ~di ri I p Robert N. W~ed Publlsher Tllomas Ket·vll Editor
Orange Coa s t Daily Pilot .ll:J' to a ou..e ________ W_ed·n···s<S·"·V·· o.·.(;.·.m·be-r 2.'.·.1.97·7·-------·e·a·r·t>a-ra·K·r.e1·b·''·h·/·E·d·lt·o·r·la·l ·P·a·ge·E·<S·ll·O·'--
Solar Opposition ·
Seems Out of Step
:\11!-l!'lton \"il'I" n •'>tdl•nts Sam and Patricia O'An gelo
h:.t' c.· t·omc.· up :1g<11n~l sonw problems in their ene rgy con -
scn· atwn t•ftort '>
Tlw c.·oupll' 111~lalled a -.olar-powered pool h eatin g
s:~'lll'nl 111 tlll'tl' home la st Otlllht>r without the approval o(
tnl·1r lo<·;..11 hunwo\\-ner ussocwtion. And, subsequently the
.M ;ulnd Fon• llomcownc rs Assotiatio1\ board h as ruled
th ~1t llw :-.olar p;uwls arc offensive to the community's
<lt's t hl'l 11·s
• Thi" rs :111 irn111t Juug mc11t m nC\\' of growing conc .. ern 9' l' r t'tll't'g~ s hort ag c.•s.
Tlt1· I )' \ngc.•lo:.. mindful of community aesthetics,
tuol.. g n ·:.it 1wms lo integrate.· the system into an addition
on I heir hom(• '' htl'h was approved I)\ the homeov."ne r
grn\lp SL·H·r;1l :.I all' l'nergy <>ffic-ials. the Mission Viejo
~l unie1p:tl 1\cl\·1sor~ Council O I AC > and the t\l\ssion Viejo
('o ha \t' <·omplt11w1Ht•d the tasteful))-in!'.lalled solar
s~ -.tt·rn
Hut I h<· ho lllt'O\\ tll'l'!-1 ;1s sot1at1on pt'rs1:-.ts in Sl'Cking a
l;i wsu 11 to l on·t· I tw I)' Angelos Lo tca1· their sys tem down.
l>c•s pitc.' the· 1·:<1>t•n :-.c.• of th<: suit lo Madrid Fore
h111lWO\\'lll'l's, !ft(• ;1t•t111n could casilv ba<'kfire . In times of
'c·:1n·l· l'tll'I i.:~ .1 t·ourt 1-. liabll·' to decide lh:.it Miiar
:-.' '>lt:n h an• in the pul>la· interest pu\'ing the way for
111-.ta ll:.ilion:-. much ll'!'l!-1 c!l--.1rable than this one.
Thc asscwi:11 ton mig ht consid(·r spelling out criteria
for !'\Olar tll!'lt:tll;tlton ..;. Allt•r ;di, they may one day be
m ;111dator~ But ptd rn1g on the D'Angc los strikes us ws
bcmg cont 1 ;.1r \· and out of :>tcµ with the limes
Enough of Skateboards
SlrnH•hoa rel :-. ha n• het•n w1 issue for a n untomforta bly
lo11i.: It 111l' 1n 1 IH' <'ti' ot I r\'lnc.
Tlw 1·tt~· c·ou11c:11 <ltd t :1kl· s t t•ps to but Id a special course
:11,. 1·nI\1·rs1t' Park las t 'ear :-.o skatehoarders would n 't
11;1\ (' ln rntnJH'I(• with s lrel'l lraffic. Cnhapptly, it proved
<'11!-llh and a lt llll' shorlsi~hled .
( '11\ otf 1nals !o.hould ha,·e anticipated homeowners
\1 lto-.c llt''' ltouM·s were beinj;( buill about the sam e time
n1•\t door to tht• park would sul· lo close it down.
\tl1·r n11mlh'> of le g a l maneu\'cring a nd out-of-court
11t·g1111.1111111 . lit<· homt'O\\ncrs a nd city administrators a p -
pa11·111 h 11:1\l' n ·adlL'd a compromise that will keep the
>-l-a t1 ·h11,11d 1·1n11"sL' opl'n und fence it off from the
h 111111·11\\ flt•r·-. ·..,,~ht :111d hearing.
'l'lw 1·111111l'tl ~ho\lld '' a ... te no lime in signi n~ an agrec-
mt•nt .111d ~l'l :.l,;11 Plmarcling off the council agenda, out of
1·11u1 t .• 111d li.u·k 111to lhc pC1rk where it belongs.
Compromise on Park
l'lu· p101><>!-1(•cl II!'\ l'lopmcnt of '' .:\lission Viejo
ll('tg lthorhood purl.. has ratM~d the ire of homeowners a nd
thL· :\lunil"ip.d i\<lv1sory Council's !MAC> parks a nd
n •<T l'illtun commattc.·l'.
Al the t·onlro,·er.s~ ·s center arc feelings by Cordova
h11mc·m\ nt·r.., that thc.• proposed Cordova Park should be a
"'1w ss 1\'t"' ~1rca with g rassy fi e lds, pic nic benches and
Jll'l' sC'hool pla~· <'<rllipmenl.
J>;1rks und rC'CrC'ation commissioners and the MAC's
Youth i\thlC'lic Coordin a t ing Council tYACC> want at
l<'as t t '' o haschall fields a nd othe r r ecreation-related
fat'il1t1<':0.
fn 1h:s ta~w. the Cordova hom eowne rs have the
s t n >ng t•r ;irguml•rtl.
l'htl<ln:n in the <.'or<IO\ a area are youn~c pre-school-
a gt• tots Thl·~"re going 10 benefit from the "passi\'e"
\.\Pl' of p<Jrk rt•qu('s lf..•d b~ lhc homeowners. They are also
th<• grnup that would be in danger from inc reased auto
1 raffi(· m lht• ;.irt'a as .1 result of organized competition al
ath \('t iC' fl.lcilit ies.
Y.\CC :ind '.\!AC. however, do have som e legitimalC'
l"nnccrns in wantin~ to r elieve a lready overcrowded
futilitil·~ in olh('r Mi!'ls ion Viejo areas .
How ahout plaC'ing one baseball fi eld in the Cordova
1';,.1rk and developing the r est for pass ive use? T here's
nothing wrnng with a gooctcompromise.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot
Other views expressed on this page are those or their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd/Bloodhounds
By L.M. BOYD
Question arises as to
whether trained bloodhounds
could track down criminals
in a big city the way they can
o u t in the coµntrys ide
Definitely. Those d,ogs are
unb~ll evable. In a New York
City test once. a bloodhound
followed the t rait of a man
through a park area where
j ust previously 55,000 people
had attended a rock concert.
Incidentally, the only !lorl of
huma n beings that baffle
bloodhounds are ide nllc al
twins. Their odors are iden·
tlul. But. the odors of all
o~hers nre oarh unique. and
Dear
Gloomy
Gu
,
Supermarkets won't
lake che("s in their ex·
preu lane.' to speed up
the traffic. l propotc
·they Just glvo tb1!lr
1r0terie5 away and and
•llmlna~ the slowdown cauaed by cull tnuK· Uonl. •
• RY..
trained bloodhounds c an
perceive these differences.
Se8$oned citizens will re-
call o time in this country
when the Federal Govern-
ment prohibited· a ny ice
cream maker Crom turning
out more than 20 flavors. On
Mey 1. 194.2. it was. Why r
don't know. Sounds a little
Ii. that War Production
Board r ecommendation to
farme rs that would have had
them remove the s hoes of
their horses each night to
save the metal.
Rowland E vaD8/Robert Novak
U.S. No Longer 'Israel's Attorney'
WASHI NGTON -Prime
Minister Menahem Begin's s ur-
prise visit here was viewed by
U.S. oCCicials as an Israeli effort
lo hold on to the old dependent
relationship with Was hington
which has been r a dic ally
transformed -perhaps ended -
by the dramatic Sadat-Begin
diplomacy.
By rushing here to discuss his
new peace plan tor Pres ident
Anwar Sadat,
Begin WU
telling th e
A m ericans,
nothing h:is
ch an g<:d, we
still rely on
you. In word
and nuance,
the /\mer ·
i c a n s
h ere w ere
r e ply i n g : ever ythin g h a ll
changed ; you now stand on your
feel face-to-face with the Arabs ,
tell them your propoi . .als for <i
Mideast settlement.
Two days before the Prime
Mini s te r arrive d h e re ,
n ewspa p e r acc ounts in
J erusalem hinted that Begin's
v isit was part oC a broader
lsraeli-Egypllan sche me. When
il became clear Sadat was as
surprised as the U.S., officials
here were so annoyed that this
word was quietly pas11cd: Begin
is coming totally on hrs own in·
iliutive, with no Egyptian con-
nivance.
THAT IS j ust one clue to the·
new relationship between the
U.S. and Israel. Although the
U.S. naturally looks t o Israel as
its int imate friend in the
Mideast, direct Isr aeli-Egyptian
negotiations h ave 1ud d en•y
ended a full d~cade during
which Washington a lone spoke
for Is rael in negotiations.
This lerminales a long period,
with only limited steps toward
peace, during which the U.S.
acted <in the phrase of former
Mailbox
D e f e n se Secr e tary M elv1n
Laird l as "lsruel 's attorney.''
The sudden termination has led
the Israeli government to seek
n ~w ways to keep the U.S.
hitched to its side in negotiating
w ith the Arabs. Thal ls UJ\·
derst andable, but it \s something
!>res ident Cacter does not want.
Al his press conference, M.r.
Curter careruJiy circumscribed
any effort by Begin to pin down
•
the U.S. as a negotiating partnl!J'
:il lhe Cairo conference.
8 ut conflicting with Mr.
Carter's wise refusal lo put the
U.S. back In the Mideast um-
J)ire's seat is growing pressure lrom Israel's potent political al·
lies tn ~ country lo resist any
U.S. fllQ\le to a truly neutral
posture. That helps expl;.un the
President's quick assent to
Begin 'a surprising self-invitation
"Don't get too comfotlA~le."
to Washington and Mr. Carter's
request altc.'r the first Carter·
Begin meeting f·riday for Begin
to slay an extra day ror another
meeting.
As one Mideast planner told
us: "The last thing Carter wants
is lo give Begin. Is rael or the
American Je\vish community
the impression that Begin got
the bum's rush Jlere:·
Begin holds high cardii in hb
shrewd mancuvurs to tnake it
appear that thl! U.S. aod thl'
Carter administratJon ate still
"Israel's attorney" even though
direct talks ha\ e s tarted with
Egypt. During luneh at Blair
!louse Fridny, Begin confided
details of his new peace plan to
four of Is rael's staunchell t
Cr1cnds in the US. Senate : Jacob
Juvits. Richard Stone. Henry M .
Jackson and Chfrord Case .
T UIS PRECEDED direct
1:-.r aeh word to Sadat of Bt·gm'll
plan. News wall rushed to Cairo
not by the (Hachs . according to
admin1strat1on officials. but by
telephone Crom the White llousc
immediately following the first
Ca rter-Be~an talk on Friday.
The obvious explanation of
s.?gin 's decision to '-'O nfide his
plan to Mr. Carter and four U.S
Senators before cxpla1mni: it to
President Sadat : maintain thc
prete nse that the U.S. is stilt m
its old role as Israel's attorney.
Mr. Carter 's intent rs dif.
ferent. He wants to m<lintain a
certuin d is tance from Israel
Cand. of courlle, the Arab!\)
while exploring sC'veral new
ideas wilh hrs own advisers.
Wi th Israel racing Egypt
directly across the bargaining
table, Mr. Carter is tomfortablc
with his new role of indepen.
dcnC't' I IC' sc~mi. to be distinctly
en1oying Uw prospect of Israel
now currymg the responsibility
for hammering out peace on its
own. a rcs1xmsibility not affect-
ed by Prime Minis ter Begin's
sudden visit.
Think Twice About a Pet ~fOr Christmas
To the Editor:
Perhaps you are considering
giving n puppy or kitten as a
Christmas gitl. The volunteer
.. ani mal workers a s k you to
please re(OOSider. These .$tnall
cre al~res are a ser ious
responsibility. Consider the con-
fusioJl in the average home at
Christma.c; time. It is hardly the
place lo bring a pet that needs
. plenty or sleep and a quiet place
as refuge.
Few of us have Lime during
the h olidays to pro perly
housebreak a puppy or lo feed a
p et at regular \ntervals.
Childre n often pressure their
parents into purchasing a puppy
or kitten by promising to feed.
groQtn and clean up after it.
When the child doesn't perform
these duties. the parents will
often get rid of the pet.
IF ONLY a puppy or kitten
"'ill do as o gift. do consider a
gift certificate to be honpred
after the holidays when the
household returns to a normal
schedule.
Befor e obtaining a pet any
time, a fa mily should consider
the following :
I. Are you committed to car-
ing for the pet for jts lifetime. or
just until your children t ire of
their new toy?
2. Are you willing and able to
pay for altering your pet to pre·
vent the birth of more animals
In a nation already saturated
1with pets? " .
.3. A re you willing and able to
pay for all lnoculations, yearly
check ups and any emergency
tteatmenl the.pet naay need?
4. When chooslnt a dog, are
you keeping in mind that the
cute little puppy or unknown
parentage could within a year
outgrow your small yard?
5. Do you reall y want the extra
work lind sometimes the
deslfuclfon that having a pet,
esr>ttially a pupw. entalls?
6. Are you willing to control
your pets so as not lo annoy ,
your neljhbon? Remember, not ,
everyone foves enimats.
1. Ir you ~· renting a home,
apartment etc., do )'OU have
your landlord's permission to
own a pet? '
HAZEL MORTENSEN
Chairman. United
Uumanlt.aJ1HSo!OrangeCounty
should have an $8 billion portfolio
when our taxes have increased 25
percent this year .
Why cannot some of the $8
billion be us ed lo reduce our taJC ·
es. I'd appre'-'iate an explana-
tion. Rutns. CHAMBERLAIN
The tax ctUector-trea1turer off ice.
act& as a "bank" for 170 to.zing agen·
c1es in the county, including 34 school
and college di3trict11. The SB btlllon
/igure repre1en11 caah /low ralher
than lnvesllfumts. I n /ilcal 1976-71
the olfice handled $1.179 ballwn of
n~w money o/ which f157 m1llion
came from property tazes. the re-
mainder from other revenue sources.
including &late and federal funm
The tcu coUecwr-lreasurer mve3IB
the money'and return$ II to the tcu:-
mg agt'Tleie8 as needed, plus mterest
Last year $43.3 mdlcon in interest
wa& dtsCributed to the J70 lo.nng
og,enciei to enable them to hold dow11
their to.:rrcte1. Editor.
Do11bl~ Standard
To the Editor:
1 a m strongly opposed to the
main idea of the article In the
Dec. it Pilot titled, "Boy. :i,
Killed by Dog."
My point is, if we 1<\11 lhis dog,
which undou~tedly klllcd the
boy. how come we don't do
something equally drastic lo the
people wbo are out on the str~ts
again after having killed one or
lwopeople?
Before destroying the dog. why
dor\'l they find out if the family
has been treating the dog unfair·
ly b\ any way?
LlNDA McKINNEY
..,rape
To the F.dilor:
I couldn't be)leve what I heard
when my mother told me the
policy that people have lo tolerate
when they are eligible for federal
rent aubetdy, yet have to wait at
leasts Ix months before getting it.
It seems ther e is just so much
allocated. You wait until some-
one drops dead or moves, and
then get moved up on the list. In
these times of housing•hortages. the only real emergency m easure
for people who can't aftorcl to buy
or even r~nt is rent subsidy. lt
anouJd bo Implemented Im-
mediately without a lot of red
tape.
P~ople are eit.t\er eligible or
they arc net. and if they are.
they should gel it immediately.
Jt should apply to everyone, not
j ust who gets tMre fint.
I uggest we tell ou r
la..,m 11kers that tf they want to
get ro-f!}ected they take fast a<··
t1qn on thjs dire problem .
F . HANSE:\
Sir~n• Wel<-0111e
To the Editor:
I am hoping CV. I Gloomy Gus.
Dec. 9 >.was being facetious with
the remarks about li vi ng next t el
a fire station. We hope he will
never nee<! help, but if he ever
docs he'll fi nd the sound or tho::.c
si rens the sweetest sound he's
<'Ver heard
My husband had a cardiac ar·
rest In July. When I could heur
the sirens in the distance. 1t was
music . The Co s ta M esa
paramedics and firemen calmly
and c·fficicntly worked hard lo
:;ave his life and succet'ded.
C. V didn't ha vc to move next
fo a fare station. Wr'd be glad to.
G. M . andSHIRLEY ROBI NSON
We Sl.ISp('CI c v. was taking 0
!lrdewaus poke at folk who move nett
to airports. the11 ~rumble about
noise All praise I<> the paramedics!
r:d1tor
Beulne•• Cll•ate
To the Editor;
Rceent government attitudes
.-.nd policies appear to be creat·
ing a dangerous business climate
for the future or the private sec
tor . The recen~ government·
endoded Social Security and
labor union decisions have been
particularly disconcerting . We
r efuse to recognize the in·
disputeble trend or modern in-
dustry away from labor intensive
prolluction and towards capital
lnten1ive. more efficient in·
dulitr)I. We continue to adopt
short term politically acceptable
solutloh:s for pressing long term
problem!.
FORESIGHT dictat es we
become more compeUl\ve, not
bar the compet1Uon. However,
political considerations conUnuc
to blur our economic foresight
As in the steel industry; the solu·
tlon Hes in Increasing capital' in-
vestment to betome more ectl·
cient and thw1 more competitive,
llnd not In invoking trade tariffs
to i;lmply bat ..-om~tition . 'Wt?
can run but we cnonol hide.
l cannot rcc:onclJc government
dccblons which allow ua to
virtually crtale fA qu ul-
govcrnmenlal corporJtJon In
Lockheed. 11t the um• Um~ we
will not allow our me>J' efflcicnt
bu1iJ\eu man, Oie American
farmer. to make tven • m1nhna1
profit.
President Cnrter pled1cct to
trim lh federal burc•ucracy,
but the n umber o r federal -
employees has incr eased under
his administration. .
Recent government rhetoric is
leading us in a sense or eronomit
slab1l11 y th.it is without teehnical
found:1uon in the privule sector.
the life bloocl of QUr economy.
(;IH;GOHY V. RUZlCKA
ER1t lralorntalion
To the E<1itor :
I must speak out. It has been
h\ o days since l read the letter
from Marv 0 . Moore <Dec. 14
Mail box > und I am stall fuming
from her inaccura te charac-
lt'rizat1ons and lc~s than indirect
innuendoes about a fine person
and hard worker for all human
rights not onl y woml'n.
Vivian H:ill and her husband of
30 somcodd years cer t:iinlydo <to
ust' Ms. Moore's wordsJ ''hold
dear the family concept and the
love and d('Votion ht'tween a man
and a woman."
I would like lo comment on
l'<tl'h point of M ~ Moore's Jetter
bc<"auM' 1t as rifr \\Ith insensrt1ve
pcrcc•plaon:-. of 1mrmrtant if.sues.
Howt•H·r. I ,,111 limit myself to
tr ying to make dear one point
that lht' :mti-EH/\ forces ha\'e
cont i nu o us I \' I r i e d to mi s·
represent. What l um about to say
ha-; beL·n st<1tcd mam t1mcs. but
'-'Vldently not enoui;:h. 1f even one
pe rson. such as Ms. Moore•. as
still "l'onfused ...
RATIFIC'ATION of lhe Equal
Rights Amcndm<'nl will provide
equttl righLc; under the law for
both men and women. Period. It
does nol legislate what a person
holds to be true m lhl.'1r pnvato
li ves.
People who would lake to have
more mformatwn, fact as op·
Posed to some popular myths,
shoul d avnll thems elves of
services offered by Orange Coun.
ty ERA Coalition Thl'Y have a
speakers bureau and wi ll sen~
somoone, free of charl{c. to your
group or or1wnizat1on to discuss
what lhe ER/\ will a nd will not
accomplish. Th('rt' 1s also a 2'1·
hour answering s l'rvicc for the
coalition which will direct your
Inquiry t o thl' appropriatf'
p ~rs on. The nu m bcr as 639-8807.
My point an ult or this hs,
believe what you "111 . it 1s your
rit:ht. But please. hasc that btllicf
on facts and not false assumption
and uns ubstontrntcd conclusions.
BARBAftA L. HAMME RMAN
• lAtttti from rtadua ore w.lcome
Tht ngtil to co,ldl'n.~t' lf'tltr' to /ft
~t or ellminat" libel u re&t'rW'd.
Lfttn1 of JOO wordl or ttu WfU be oWlft pre~ence. All ldteri ml< bl· clwU aignoture ond masting oddN'lt
blil . ""'" may b4t w11hhdd on rt quit If JU/ficttnl reoton i1 apporen1.
Poctrr wtlt not bt publttM.d..
I.
CALIFORNIA DAIL y PILOT AS
CltMJ ti
SouthStonn
Kills Trucker
North Battered by Wind
~~~M~ RAMONA (AP) --Broken trees and power lines today lay across sections or Southern
California whipped by winds reaching 100 mph.
The damage to farm crops as the wind let up
was sporadic but wjdespread. Citrus and avocado
groves were reported hardest hit, mainly In
norlhem San Diego County.
A number of animala died.
A BIG TRUCK RIG WAS SWEPT off ln·
terstate 8 at Buckman Springs grade and down an
embankment Tuesday, killlng driver Russell Velozler, 19, of Spokane, Wash.
Because of that accident 40 miles east or El
Cajon, the busy freeway was closed from Alpine to
El Centro. It fmally reopened around midnight.
A six-car smashup injured three persons on
California 87 near Ramona. That state road was
closed but later reopened as was the Valley Center
Grade near Escondido.
LIGHT PLANES WERE grounded, and
several boats broke away from moorings along the
coast.
-""~ IN WAKE OF WIND -Milan Dimich in-
spects toppled tree which smashed into
living room of his home in Ramona
northeast of San Diego. There was
widespread damage from winds Tuesday
across Southern California.
By The Assotlated Preti
Howline 80 mile an hour winds
blew the roofs otf Humboldt
County area buildings, knocked
;:>Ut power for an estimated
150,000 residents and was direct-
ly responsible for two deaths ear-
ly today, authorities report.
The winds blew the roofs off
the grandstand at the county
Cairgrounds and a grocery store
and sent a tree crashing down
onto a truck on Highway 36 near.
Eureka, killing two people, of-
ficials ~alcJ. '
All major roads reportedly
were blocked by fallen trees and
other debris. A fishing boat
capsized at Humboldt Bay Bar
but its small crew was pulled
from the water when a Coast
Guard vessel reached the scene.
PACIFIC GAS & Electric Co.
had no estimate of when power
would be rdtored.
The National Weather Service
reported U.S. 101, "The
Redwood Highway," was closed
from San Francisco to the
Oregon border because or fallen In Camp Pendleton, a brush fire burned 750
acres of land. Fifty acres of brush were scorched
in northern San Diego, west of Penasquitos. --------------------trees blocking the road.
Gas Supplies Decline
LOS ANGELES CAP )
-Southern California ·s
natural gas supplies are
expected to declin e
about 15 percent during
1978, compared with this
year, according to gas
company officials.
But So uthern
California Gas Co. said
Tuesday that the outlook
Pot Growers
Sentenced
LONG BEACH CAP)
-A doctor has been
sentenced to 90 days in
jail after his 11 -year·old
stepson led police to a
garage full of marijuana
plants after hearing an
anti-drug lecture
· Superior Court Judge
Ells worth Bean abo
fined JJ.ycar-old Chynel
F. Henning Sl,000 and
placed him on three
years• probation Tues·
day. Hennlng 's wife,
Karen , 32, was s en -
tenced to 60 days in jail
and placed on three
years· probation.
is better than earlier burn other fuels, such as
forecasts indicated. oil. •
The cutback will con· The gas company said
tinue to bite into the gas the region is expected to
s upplies of large in-receive a total of 663
dus t r i cs and com -billion cubic feet of gas
mercial customers who d1,1ring 1978, compared
have allemate fuel sup· with 783 blllion feet dur-
plies. officials said. ing 1977.
HOWEVER, THERE The decline stems
would still be enougti fro m . the continuing
gas to fill the needs or depletion of natural gas
the high-priority' fields in Texas,
customers: residences Oklahoma and New
and s mall business Mexico.
which lack the ability to 8 O·U T H E R N
California is served by
two major s uppliers
from the Southwest: El
, Paso N.tural Gas Co. and Transwestern
Pipt§line Co., a subsidiary
of Texas Eastern Corp.
Forecasts prepared a
F~hing
few months ago had pro-
jected lower available
gas supplies. Since then,
prospects for El Paso's
abihty to deliver gas to
the Southern California
market have improved,
the gas company said.
A fire was bumi.og in the Alma
Ridge area of the Los Padres
National Forest near Big Sur,
but it was not clear if the \nclem-
ent weather caused the blaze.
THE U.S. FOREST Service in
King City received an uncon-
firmed report that the fire start-
ed in a structure in the forest.
About 120 acres had burned by
this morning in the same area as
the huge Marble Cone fire of last
summer.
An estimated 75,000 homes
and businesses from the Santa
Clara Valley to tl1e northern San
Francisco Peninsula losL power
early today when howling winds
downed trees and voltage lines,
the uliht,y reported.
PG&E s pokesman l''riti
Draeger said the winds touched
off a series of outages starting at
1: lS a.m. and stretching from
Gilroy north to Milpitas and from
the Lawrence Expressway easL to
·San Jose.
BESIDES THE PROBLEMS
caused by falling trees and
branches, Draeger said it ap-
peared power lines were "arc·
ing'' -shorting out after
brushing up against each other
and sending sparks into the
wind.
Extra work crews were being
called in to find and repair the
damage, and Draeger said the
company .hoped to restore power
to the strlcken areas by nOOA to-
day, •·assuming we don 'l ttave
any more strong winds or rafb."
Some light driule had fallen
on the Bay and Peninsula areas
by S a.m. today, bul the malor slor m front predicted· tor
:Wednesday remained staUonary
·off the coast, the weather sel'\rice
.reported.
FORECASTERS SAID tbe
rains would probably move wesL
in the form of sporadic showers.
There was an 80 percent chance
of rain by tonight for the Bay
area. where temperatures WOl'e
expected to range from the low
606 to the high 40s.
In the Sacramento Valley,
showers and a chance of thun-
ders bowers were predicted
through Thursday with hiRhs in
tbe mid-SOs and lows in the4Qs.
Stranded Tourists
Hole Up in Mojave
MOJAVE (AP> -Motels were
jammed, diners were crammed
and semi-trailers clogged the
narrow streets of this sleepy
town.
Hundreds of tourists and
truckers today played a waiting
game with a killer wind storm
that raked Southern California
Tuesday and continued today.
The California Highway
Patrol had stopped hundreds of
trucks northwest of here, and re-
ported that more than a }Jal!
dozen semis had been flipped on
their sides, blocking traffic.
The dozen motels in this town
were filled by early afternoon
Tuesday, a rare occurrence, ac-
cording to one mot~l owner.
They were convicted
Nov. 18 of possessing
m arijuana for sale,
cultivation of the plant
n nd pos sess ion o f
hashish oil.
Police said Mrs. Hen·
ning 's son, Gibrahn
Verdult, who Jives with
his father in Irvine, led
officers to the gara~e
after a visit to her
house. The boy said he
had recently attended a
school lecture on how to
identify marijuana
plants.
A SONY:" ____ ----
A shirt from our town
.. ~. ·: t.;~'
St~keeper Kevin. Beck is we~ a kettle
cloth sport shirt printed with famoU9
Newport Beach scenes. Natural ground
with navy, red, or brewn print. 23 .. 00
POCKD RADIO
This SONY AM/FM pocket rodio fea1ure1
loleKopng anlonno, slide-rule tuner. 'JW ' ~c
!ipOOlet. and a handsome bW>ad olllnnum
case. Comes complele wilfl earphone ond
• corryir>C) strop.
1"E Ill PIOURE
This is tile biwest, bigfllesl SON'( 9'1'9, 21 inches
of Trinitron Plus, measured dio<,)Onolly. plus
electrOf!IC remole comol. Ttn il the SON'( 'fO.J've
been wOlllng for.
SONY AM/FM doer rodio rolls 1irne wirh lED
d1q1tol numerals. foo1ures precis.ion lime
odiU1tmerl, repeat bar, builr.m If(. and many
Olflet coover'iences.
A Lltn.E SONY
Tt11s SONY S" (diog.l blod & .....,.)e TV ii
eng~ed br bti<1it, cri~. ti..contr0$1 claity,
Feotll!es f.Jl VHF & UHF cl!onnel sel«1ion,
A(./OC Qflllrction, and weiqhs j111t 7 lbs. 11 o.z.
WE'RE #1 STORE HOURS: FOR DAVIS•IROWM1S
AWARD-WIHNIHG
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SERVICE. CALL:
' THE LARGEST INDEPENDENT
TV & APPLIANCE DEALER
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
~dnesday~A NYSE
2 p.m. (EDT) Prj~s: COMPOSfl'E
DAILY PllOT
Wedneedey. e>.cembet 21. ten s DAILY PILOT A J 7
.Credit Given
·wome~Fail to Apply
By SYLVIA PORT£R
Between last June 1 and Oct. 1. more than 300 million
notices informing women of their rightJl to have jolntly used
accounts listed in their own name.s wue sent out by b&nlu,
department stores, oil companJes and otber crediton. The
malling waa required by lu.w. A spot survey by Lbe Com·
roerlcal Credit Corp. disc lo ed an overall response rat. ol 9
percent on average.
MUliona of women are still vaiue or lpotant about
JeaaJ Jilhll r~garclln1 cred.lt. While tho f~eral Equal
Credit Oppor't.WUty Act of 1975 has been widely pubUclJed,
cUKrbnmaUon ln th• srantiJ:la ol uecli\ to womeu coatlnues oau alarm.ina1Y extemlve scale.
"f £1', tlGBTS GUAM~ED TO woine.n by Ulil law
coaldooedaybeUfe-savinJl.11u'oughelLberdutbord1vorce.
sorbe 85 percent of married women will at some Point be
sin.le again. Wbeo this change occurs, those who never have
bad credit In their own names will tace a struggle for finan·
,elalaorvival.
Under the law, the following are specifically pro-
hibited:
(1) Ref'uah\i a married woman a separate account, even
thougbSbewouldquallfy lf she were single.
(2) Deeandint financial information about the spouse
whttn the appllcanus credit worthy indl viduaUy.
(3) lWualnc credit " becaoae ol a change ln ,_, _______ _
marital status.
(4) Refusing a mar-
ried woman credit
because of the credit
ratlng of her spouse, un-
less the application is
for a Joint account.
Money's
Worth
{5) BeCWltng to consider alimony and child-support pay-
ment.a aa bona fide income.
(I) ASIQNG AN APPLICANT ABOlJT birth control
practices or child-bearing plans.
(7) Refuslne to con.sider a wife's income when she and
her husband apply for credlt jolntlY.
(8) Refusing to conslder regular part·Ume employment
or retirement benefits as income.
(9) Refuslng to recognize a married person's legal
na1Ue.
(11) TEJlMINATING, BEVl.SING OB requiring re-
appUcaUoo of a credit transactlOll because of retirement or-
a change in the borrower's marital status.
(11) Requiring a spouse or anyone else to ce>-sign for an
unsecured loan, if the applicant is creditworthy.
(12) Refusing to extend or coot.i.nue credit because age
makes you ineligible for credit insurance.
TJte Equal Credit Opportunity law represented a vital
breakthrough for America's women. 1
BlJT OF WHAT WORTH IS um law if women do not
know tbe\.r rifhts or uercise them? Can yoi.a, for inst.ance.
answer the following?
-A woman must prove that dlscrlmination by a credit
lnatituUoo wu Intentional. <Answer: NO.)
-Lendlng institutions are compelled by law to reveal
grounds on whicbcreditiadenied. (Answer: YES.)
--Dl8CailllNAftON INVOLVING amounts of less
than $100 doea DOt juaWy a law sult under federal law;
tAn.lwer: NQ. Any amount JusUfies act.loo.>
-Any appllcatloa that uka marital atat\ls for credit
purposes must state that an answer ii optional. <Answer:
YES.) • -U a woman la eamlng sufficient income toquaU!y for a
loan, but her husband is unemployed, she can be turned down
fora loan becawseofberspou.se'a pJ!gbt. <Al!.Sw~r: NO.>
COilege Offers
1Series on Money
"Money Talks-With You,•• a lecture series exploring
the money market and financial Industry, will be offered
by CoaaWne Community Co"eie from 7 to 9 p.m .
Tuesd~. Jan. 10, 17, 24, l1 and Feb. 7, at the Fullerton
Savinp and Loan, 18020 Brookbunt St., Fountain Valley.
Tbe lecturer ts John Herrick, fonMrly a broker in
stocks and commodities. He bas been teaching classes on
financial affairs for the pa.st 1D years.
. There is no cbttge fOt' tb6 series. Students may reg-
ister at thefirstsesslon and attend any or all sessions.
Included in the discussion will be a look at where the
mal'keta are and where they may be beaded, banks and
savings lnatilutions, understanding financial data and in·
ternational money conditions.
Further information is available from Coastline Com·
munity College, 963-0811, extension 2-56.
'llet' l•f'e•taM!llt• Cited
The three businesses predicted to be the "hottest new
Jow investment businesses of 1978" are chronicled in the
December Issue ol loternaUonal Entrepreneurs, a monthly
buainesa opportunity magulne published by the Interna-
tional Entrepreneurs A•soclation.
The three, selected by the aasoc.lation 's editors and re-
aearcbera in a year-end POil, are keycbain photos, used
boOkselling and "hot candies."
The ke:ychain photo business involves an investment of
Jess than $500 and
several of those in·
( Ta .t VJNG J voJved in it have shown ~ a before tax profit ot STOCK :!°.,o':'. the magazine ....___________________ Used bookselllng ~
a business that involves
an Investment of less than SS,000 with a potential yearly
profltof cloeeto"5,000, accordJnetothe report.
The "bot candle" business takes less than $1,000 to
enter with an "unlimited" market and lhoae in the busi-~s net $:500 and more for a weekend's work, the macattne aaya.
ae.e • ....._.,,_ier~•tSeld
Char~ Rivez.zo, principal owner or the tRC Corp.,
operator o( Maxwell's Restaurant, baa reported sale of hla
intereat to La Schroeder, 785 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna
Beach; WUllamSebrocder, 9336Hazen Drive. Beverly Rills,
and Paul Wimmer, 29742 Ana Maria, Laguna Niguel. .
Escrow abould closo approximately Jan. l. The
l"ellaunnt wtU be open for breakfast and lunch aa well u
dinner.
--.r Appreeed
Newport Research Corp., Fountain Valley. bu an-
noUJ,\ced tti.t its shareholders havo approved the mer1or
wit.h J amet Dole Corp., Redwood City.
· NCJt al'° l.llGOQDCed for the fint fllcal quart.er ended
Od. 31. ...,_ were $1.222,540 and net lncosne after taxes
amounted to $133,931. Thi.I comparet with net Income ot
fl.30,'91 la the tame quarter ol las\ yur.
TM Dole ttockboldnw will wee on \he merftl' at their mual ._.HDC Jn San Frucltco wblcb l8 to ti. beld oo Dec..•.
,,, • t NRC mamaf ldw'M yibl'atiob Jaoltted table 11.iems
... 1Mill' =tkm IMttunMntl.. DoM maulacwr. • .,._ to t.M lood ca••na •. loft clrink. meat -·~IDctmt-. j
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