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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-22 - Orange Coast Pilotman Beaten to ea th DAILY PILOT 2 Irvine Businessmen * * * 10< * * * Heroes of Office Fire Tf'!URSDAV AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 22, 1977 VOL 7t, NO. >st,• SIC'TIOHS, » "-'Ol!I . II ' • • • • Mesa Sees 'Bloodiest Week' Saine Bay Tank Hostages Beat, Kill Gunnian SUBIC BAY. Philippines <AP> -Enraged by a Filipino gun. man's treat to burn a pregnant woman, male hostages beat and shot to death the man who held them captive for 48 hours inside a small bank building on the U.S. Naval Base at Subic Bay, oCficials said. Hostages Jater said they threw anything they could find al the wounded gunman, including .New Flu Vina Triggers Plan For V acctnes ATLANTA (AP> -Public health authorities, concerned about a new influenza virus in Russia and Hong Kong, met to- day to consider the possibility of a vaccine program similar in scope tQ last year's ill-fated swine nu program. Dr. William Foege, director of the Center for Disease Control, told the gathering of about 100 physicians, epidemiologists, medical school faculty and s~ Jtealtb officiall that he would hesitate t o predict a flu epidemic because of the nature of the dlsease. "But there ls a difference now ln forecastblg. We h ave the best lntematlooal surveying system I have seen. We feel that we have. totqtopredlct,' hesald. Tbe Russian virus was Iden· tified as HlNl, similar to a virus wblcll caused widespread out· breaks in the United States in the 1940s and 1950s. Other types of influenza, eltber A·Texu or A· Victoria, have been reported In about 11 states, said the CDC. Isolated cues were reported in Illinois, New Jersey, .North Carolina, Ore1on, Penns ylvani a, Wiaconsln. Teuesaee. Oregon, ....... md o.orcia. t ypew rite r s and adding machines, as he lay on the noor afler he was overpowered by a bookkeeper and shot by the bank manager. The captives said the gunman, who took over the bank Tuesday afternoon, told them he wanted to give the bank's money to the poor by dumping it from a helicopter which he demanded for bis escape. The gunman also threatened. to blow up the bank, oCficials said, but no explosives were found. Lt. Cmdr. Michael Sherman, the base public a((airs officer, said Navy officers conducting telephone negotiations with the gunman warned him he wouldn't receive any food unless be re· leased some hostages. "I think this angered the gun •. man, and be threatened to burn a young pregnant woman," Sherman said. ''The male hostages jumped in at that time, a nd we heard s hots and screams. The next thing we knew, people started running out or the bank." U.S. Marines rushed Into the white frame building, found the gunman unconscious and took him to the base hospital where he died two hours later, Sherman said. 'Lt. CoJ. Ernesto Venturina, commander of Pblllppine police here, said an autopsy showed the gunman had been shot al least once and his skull s hat· tered. · Sherman said only two of the 14 hostages were injured -bank manager Nicomedes VUlaluz. who suffered lacerations of the scalp, and a man who was bitten on an arm. A 11 the hostages were Filipinos. Sherman reported. Bank teller Corintbla Carabe- Jo, 31, said the gunman forced her to bum three bags of peso notes and dollars Wednesday night, apparently to s how authorities he could bum down the build.inc it he liked. for firellMIL .. They used tbls bullt·lll flrebOM to pretty much lmoct down tb9· nre prior to our .,... rival." TUit>evlll• aal4. n. .. ~ ....... .. tent to tMUlnllld ... ..... bf Claeom sratema be. a m•n.tbttlllWP· • Bu\ far their Hdoft, TUrbmU. 1al4, tbe ftn llUPt have~ to tlae rtlt !« tbl IMIUdtlal. "'*" JN N1Ued .t .,DOO. 'hrbmlJe Aid ll look~ I At Least Five Killed 14 Kil.led, .,..~~ ..... .....,.,,............_~~ 28 Hurt ·OnRoads ..... ,...... DENSE SMOKE BILLOWS FROM WRECKAGE OF GRAIN ELEVATOR NEAR NEW ORLEANS At Least five People Dead, 11 Others ln)untd In Loulalana Tragedy Explosion Kills Five al Missing as Bbt Rips Srorage Tower . NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A thundering explosion ripped through a storage silo or the ConUnenlal Grain Company in suburban Westwego today, klll· Ing at least five people, injuring at Jeut U others and leaving about 20 persons missing , Sheriff Al Cronvtch said. Cronvicb said five bodies had been recovered from the bum· ing 1raln elevator and It.a adJ•· cent offices, where aovemment inspeetonworted. At least 11 people were bolpltali-S, molt with bu .... A Cout Guard bell copter. maneuverinC tbrou1b bolling cloud• ot deue black smote, rescued one man fro119 tbe root ooly 10 mlmltee to flnl1b off the nr.t •blch callHd u estimated $15,000 damare. The 1ulte was sutted, he Mid. Pollee evaeuted · other ten, Uta in the two.ltOr'J buil41D1. wliO left tt 0 nludlilallr" .... ~·~ ....... -· ,..._ Pro ............ .... a 1moldlrlliK c~ thrown Into a wuw.i~ ~ville Mid. Papen IPli.A u• tb• fln" aprudWWlitp....,~• to~ ~ 'Of the bQlldlng. At least two of the injured were taken by helicopter to nearby bosplt.als. Others were picked up by ambulances. Cause of the blast was not known. The dust-filled air inside the cyllndHcaJ grain elevator is extremely volaUle. The explosion rocked the small town or Westweao and showered the area witb grain dust and heavy debris. Across FOOTBALL 1·0 '1 ONTV ~TONIGHT • •m1Ulilt (? ... ) ... ..., .... (7 ... ) TH fl.nl Rab ol Pame tilt. at Blrmla1bam. Ala .• palra two four·aame Jo1eu. altbo.aab lUn· neeoCa ..... IUeblsu. Waabln~ aad UCLA, aad •&rtland came oil .u.1,,cloiwn tbe ltnteb. MU7lilnd'1 a toucbdowD la~ ('hpeclela7) the Mississippi River at New Orleans' Audubon Park Zoo, animals cried and roared hysterically. The smoke poured rrom a gap. lng hole ripped in the concrete wall of the grai~levator. The silo was one of several sitting end·to-end ln a cluster at the company, but the fire and ex· plosion appeared confined to one elevator. The facility sits on tbe bank ot the river. Fireboats Joined the Westwego volunteer fire depart· ment and equipment from nearby areas. Ambulances ringed the place aDd Coast Guard beUcopt.era hove-red over the elevators, West Jefrenoa Ho.pital ~ ported 1eyen peraona admitted. most of them suffering ftom burns. Ochsner Medical Founda· tJon had four -one of them Jef. ferson Pariah deputy James L. Johnson, wbo 1utten=d a broken ankle at the acene. Conditions ot tbe burn victims were nCJt known. (lee mAST, .... AJ) Fll'e Kills Woman SAN DIEGO CAP.) -Flro s wept a Paclflc Beacb apart. meat earb ~' ~ Cber71 Lee Pat.oil, rr. and caualn1 an •1thnatecl iu.ooo damqe. police..,. By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of ... o.lty l'ilel Sl.lff A· stunning increase in the number of holiday season traffic accidents in Costa Mesa has led police to call it "the bloodiest week ever" in the city. During a one week period that · ended Wednesday at midnight, 72, traffic accidents have been reported, resulting in the deaths or four persons and injuries to 28 others. Police U . John Regan said t.cr day at least half of the 72 acci· dents in the city were related to drinking. Last year, during the same one weelc perloo, 58 traffic acci· dents were logged, resulting in 11 injuries and one death, Lt. Regan noted. He reported a major increase in the number of injury acci· dents, from 10 Jast year to 21 in 1977. "It's been the bloodiest week ever in Costa Mesa," he said. ••People are drinking, and driving too fast; they're just not being sensible," he declared. Two people were killed and a third injured last Thursday in a three-car collision on the Vic- toria Street Bridge over the San· ta Ana River, which divides Costa Mesa from Huntington Beach. Early Sunday morning, two pedestrians were killed and a third suffered serious injuries when they were struck down by a car on 17th Street. The driver was later arrested and has been charged with felony hit and run <See BLOODY, Page AZ) Coast Weather Eighty percent chance of rain tonight. diminishing to 50 percent chance Fri· day. Occasional winds oflO to 20 ~h. Lows tonight in 50s. Highs Friday in low to mlddleeos. INSIDE TODAY W1ai1AltJI BUI ii 4 ~ kind of old gnt'41man, and ma orriml tn the laoutehold m•ons 'Merrv Christmcu.' See Featuring, Page Cl. • No Ho Ho Here Fiflt'~n-mon th -o ld Robert Hi ggins wasn't having •m .vthing to <lo with Santa Claus when his mother put J11m on Santa's 1<.tp dur ing a Christmas party in Santa lforbm·a. Arvin Dusts Off After Dirty Winds J\llVIN CAP> Cleaning house for Christmas is going to be h;.mlPr an Arv in Lhan in mosl of America. Dust an inch thick, left behind by two days or hurricane· forc·c winds. couted rugs and furniture throughout this town of 7 .0110. ( l'lclalcd stories A5) "1 NEVF.:R DUSTED CHRISTMAS presents before," said ~haron Howard, whose husband is pastor of the local Pen· 11·rostal Church of God. "Our Christmas presents are covered '' ilh du1 We never had anything like this before." But the Howa rds were more fortunate than many residents of Arvrn, where roofs were blown off homes, trees toppled onto houses and huge chunks of brick and concrete were hurtled through windows. Ar vin was one of two areas in which states of emergency were declared Wednesday by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. •1 MOST OF ARVIN BLEW through Bakersfield on its way to Fresno last night," Bakersfield Mayor Donald M. Hart said Wednesday of the devastation. Bakersfield is 20 miles north of Arvin. The roof wati torn off the house next lo the Howards'. But the owner. a Los Angeles building contractor, had a new one ne arly installed by nightfall. S.tnd from recently plowed cotton fields drifted into piles two fl'el high against chain-link fences, and many persons bad trouble breathi ng the gritty air. ''I'VE TRIED SWEEPING the dust away, and you almost choke to death," one woman complained. Another resident, Stella Thillet, spent two nights at a Red Cross emergency facility set up at the high school because she feared the thick dust al home might give ber two-month-old son con~estion. "Wh en we woke up Tuesday, we were dying of suffoc:aUon -there was so much dirt," she said. MRS. TIDLLET RETURNED home Wednesday to c1ear uway the dust that had filtered around windows and doors into her home, but "without water, we couldn't do much," she said. Downro power Jin es left much of Arvin without electricity, including the local water district which needs power to pump . well water to its customers. By Wednesday, electricity and water had been restored lo some homes. .BUT DESPITE THE devastation and the lingering layer or •. ~rit, residents of Arvin were hoping to enjoy traditional Chr istmas celebrations. "As soon as we llet our homes straightened up we'll have a work day to clean the church," said Mrs. Howard. "I hope we get it cleaned up in lime for Christmas Sunday.'" )Jospital Suspended '.LOS ANGELES (AP>-The sjnte Health Department has s:(Js pended the licens e of a ~ldwin Park hospital to act as an acute-care facility after a newborn baby left on a coun· tertop died. Under Wednesday's tbmporary suspension, Baldwin Park Community Hospital will b'~ unable to admit patients. ORANG! COAST s .. DAILY PILOT .• .' .· Ero•PageAJ BLAST ••• .. Jt sounded like something fell on top of the building," said Nikki Glaub, 21, who was wor~ ing in an office of a nearby junkyard. ''The whole building shook and the lights went out for a second or two. One of the men lrom our yard said be heard a big boom and he looked over at the grain elevator, and he said it went up all in smoke and the elevator wasn't even standing any more." John AlJender, deputy director of the Audubon Park zoo, said the animal cages were showered with debris after the explosion. "It almost looked like a mushroom cloud and there was quite a bit of debris falllng when we got out of the omce. TM peacocks were screaming and yelling and flying. Moat of the anlmala were terribly upset.•• . 'BoolD8' Reported ATL,\NTIC CITY N.J. CAP> -Another aeries OJ myisterious atmospheric boom• Jlas been felt along the New JerHy cont. autboriUes uy. Police depe.rt· ments hl South Jersey from Bayville to Tuaertoa. lllel~ all or tont S.uh llldd. report. ed 1Uaht tremors lftd the IOUllill of explolionl lhortly before 'J p.m.W~. Gas Plan ~ej .ected Only Kitchen Sink Wanted Energy Program in Jeopardy? POnT LAVACA, Texas (AP> -A thlef couJd have walked away with every· thlo1 but tho kitchen sink after he broke down the d,oor lo o Port Lavaca home. But -you guessed it -the thlet only wanted the sink. police said. WASHINGTON (AP> -A House-Senate conference com- mittee today formally aban· doned efforts to reach agree. ment this year on the natural gas portion of President Carter's energy plan. By a vote or 16-2 Senate del- e gates to the conference reject- ed a natural gas compromise s ponsored by Sen. Bennett Johnstm. D·Da. The vote sends the deadloclted conferees back to the drawing boa rd and further jeopardizes chances for congressional passage of the toughest parts of Carter's energy program. The Johnston compromise was the result of three days of tough bargaining with House members Wet Street Crash Pins Two Teens Wet pavement was blamed to- day for a traffic colllsion Wednesday that left two teenagers pinned in the wreekage of their demolished car along westerly Pacific Coast Highway bluffs in Huntington Beach. Bruce Billinger. 17, and Steven Couttes, 15, both or Long Beach, remained patients at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach today with in· juries suffered in the accident. They were rescued from the wreckage or BilHnger's older imported compact car by police, firemen and paramedics follow- ing the 3:l.S p.qi. rear-end crash. Spokesmen at the hospital said today that both Billinger and Couttes are listed in good condi· ti on. Investigators said the youths were sitting In the parked car at the eastbound edge of the highway a half·mile west or Golden West Street when rammed from the rear. Morlorist Kenneth R. Sten- berg, 28, or La Puente, told police he lost control of his sedan when he applied the brakes and the vehicle went into a slide oo the we4 oily pave· ment. Stenberg was not cited, police said. Two Bandits Bit County Savings Firm Two men acting in unison at separate teller windows held up a savings and loan office in Buena Park Wednesday and escaped with $1,100, police said. Vlcllmlzed by the duo was Home Savings and Loan, 8010 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. According to police, the two bandits stood In separate lines at teller windows and reached the two women tellers at about the same time. Both men handed female tellers handwritten notes saying they were armed and demand- ing money. After being given an estimated $1.100. the men ran from the sawings and loan, police said. Witch Loses PmoorinL4 LOS ANGELES (AP) -A wand-wavina witch has !ailed to cast a spell over the City Council to make it repeal an ordinance banning fortune.telling busi· nesses and advertising. Although slx of the 10 council members present Wednesday were enchanted with the repeal proposal by Councilman Joel Wachs, the vote was two short ol the number needed to have the cJty attorney draft necessary legislaUon. The would-be speJJbinder -a mem bm: al the Slaterbood or the Wlcca -nailed her incense wand as part of a three•year bat- tle lo allow fortune·telling in Los Angeles. . BLOODY ••. and Celony manslaughter, police aatd. A number of people Will re· main bolpltali1ed throuch the Cbrbtmw eeaton.t with b\jurles 1temmhal frotn other Costa Jina t.nlftc accidents. a.,.,, ...... Ulat drlYenJ . almplf "slow down Md ptu )'OUr Umel01'1UMI"tbafttorwh." •• Aactmocsolf tlle4rtalltnf and 4rt•1n .. •• ,.. 8dded, un .. ,_too. blab a Driallto~.'' .. --.,1 • ' of the committee, who accepted it. But today's vote demonstrated that a persjstent 9-9 deadlock among Senate members on the emotional question or deregulat- ing gas prices remuins as firm as ever. "I have no parentage of this turkey after today,'' J ohnston said, acknowledging defeat in advance. Senate opponents of deregula· tion said the compromise was too generous to oil and gas pro- ducers. Opponents said it did not go fa r enough toward allowing the free market lo determine gas prices. The compromise was worked out during three days of in· formal secret n egotia tions among a small group or House and Senate coolerees. Jt had the eCfect ot uniting most of the House conferees with two Senate supporters of lifting federal controls. The most recent co mpromise effort began when President Carter personally urged key conferees last week to attempt to reach some agreement before Christmas. Today's vote will mean that when the conferees return from the holiday recess, they wm be no closer lo agree- ment than wh en they began their negotiations. Rep. Harley Staggers, D · W.Va., chairman of the con· lerence committee said that un· Jellis the deadlock among Senato conferees is broken, he wlll call no further meetings before the current congressional adjouma- ment ends Jan. 19. The s maller group ot eon· rerees had worked since last Thurs day to re ach a com· promise that they ,hoped would be agreeable to supporters and opponents of lifting federal price controls on gas. Late Tuesday, they produced the scheme. which provides for an indefinite continuation of fede ral controls coupled with much higher profits for pro· ducers than Carter asked. The compromise would allow prices to m ore than double over lhe next six years. Johns t on. c redited with negotiating the proposal with leaders of the House conference committee delegation. said Wed · neday he hoped conferees will change lheir minds on the plan over the Christmas holiday. When the conferees go back to work, Johnston said, "It will be passed by a coalition of the mid- dle." But dere~ul alion opponents among Senate conferees said the pricing formula gives too much to the oil producers. And s upporters of deregulation said it did not go far enough. Port Lavaca police said Wednesday that Julian Ybarra reported he couldn't find anything in the house dis\urbed except tbe door and the sink, whlch was banging pre- cariously Crom its plumb• ing. DetecUve Sgt. J oe P eha said the frustrated thief appa rently "just tried to te ar it a way from the wall .·' but failed. Youth Shot By Brother WillTTlER <AP) -A 13-year- old boy allegedl y s hot and killed his 10-year -old brother with a pistol alter an argument at the ir home, according to police. Coroner's inves~igators iden- tified the vi ctim of the incident Wednesday as Robin Martin. Office rs declined 'to say whether the older boy, whose name was not released. was be-ing held by j uvenile authorities. SONY. Gift Ideas From JVC SUP'H l'OllTAIU UDIO TV s20000 aADIO..C.ASSETrMICORDt.ll GIVE A GIFT FROM RCA Dlgltai . LED c.loclc rtMllo wl"' ~tro..k GCClll'Oc.)' tC, .c ••••. L•t to"'o"o•~t " ·"~ +'Qt bol{IO HIU 01 'l'C¥'........, fl<tt. •'•• ~.1~-c FM'AM C:IX11t, ' •l•tt lfil•• 1r.,.. ..,.;. l CO °'9' .. ~~ ""-'•• °*~Ar..t'" c: ... "hO• ICM' •DM>f·1'• •<F"\lfK\f ,...,, ... """'~ ~· o. .. '.,., YW '""'-'liON M_,, bn bOfA lhit ltooll •"'~ tM <onllCA. GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS CASIO CA LC ULA TORS -ff\• rt' ~··t m•t'll •'11 wr11.ci f+..o•o-..,, 111•1 \I " ,\ "'" ,., 0.. .,.. .. , " "Mltv. HtrJ $995 an ~~ ... H1n!f ""'d pnnlr• aM '"•d<rft • lune:'""' c;i.11 °"' M~"'°'" "' & thJI Aechlfgoal)jO oa11u1,.~ 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa Phone 642-8882 Store HOUIS Dally 9-6 Sat. 0-5:30 s.n-. "'9 H.,.._.ArM Slltc• t tH Ml ........... Tn• M•trct•l'll\lnt. IVM -.1it.e1i«t l•Y"'M·f!'tl,.110f..,"'{,,. Mt ' "~ .-'I ' ll fl (l(ilf' )'OM WAtOIANfY Ju I"\• 1 '•'~ Y & SHARP t) D"')' ,..~ .,,.,,. • "' .. ' ~ •• "• t'. J fl •• dff ,,._., , ..... ,.. ... .,.,~<.Cll'l-' .... 1_f't"'•'' ..... ~" .. .,,.~..,, '"' ... ,.., -.....~M"""w..J,,.. -.... -.....,. .... . ·.----,,,. .•.. --_... . ------ l _____ ._... __ .__ ____ __ Orange Coast . ED ITION Today' Closing N.Y.Stoeks VOL 70, NO. 356, 4 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES Six -Killed ' I ORA"4GE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A m . Grain THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1977 II C / TEN CENTS i Silo Blast 11 Hurt, 25 Mi.ssing in Loui.siana NEW ORLEANS CAP) -A chain.reaction explosion ripped through a 00-silo grain elevator which blew up like a string of Roman candles, leaving al least six persons dead and more than 20 missing. "We have 20 to 25 men unac- counted for." said David Borchert, manager of the huge Continental Grain Co. plant. Most of them were feared c rushed in the one.story control building and lunchroom, smashed Oat when a weighing station perched above the tops of · the silos shattered and fell 250 feet on top of it. "We don't have much hope for some of those men," said Harlan Ryan, dhision manager of the federal grain inspection service. More than 50 men were work- ing at the elevator when the blast happened, but many ap- parently escaped uninj ured. Eleven were taken to hospitals, most suffering from severe burns. The shift had changed two hours before the 9:10 a.m. blast. ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 I 1 1 with workers taking with them the traditio nal Christmas turkeys given each employee by the company. The turkeys for the oncoming shift were in a warehouse which escaped the blast and was turned into a makeshift morgue. In one of the more dramatic rescues, a Coast Guard helicopter dipped into the smoke and flames to lower a basket lo a man trapped on top of the 130-foot-tall elevators. He was so heavily dusted with the powdery while grain dust he looked almost like a snowman. Two inspectors were blown out of the weighing office and fell to the ground below. They were hospitalized in critical condition. Ryan said the explosion ap- parently started in the weighing office, commonly called the head house. No cause was known, although a repair crew was working on the grain con- veyor at the time. The fine grain dust in the silos is so volatile that even telephones are specially sealed --· : ·. . . Efnlpt Pledges Pe~ Huge posters with photos of Egypt's President Anwar Sadat and slogans s upporting his peace initiatives line a Cairo s treet. The posters support the scheduled meeting of Sadat with Israel Prime Minister Menahem Begin on Christmas Day. <Story Page A4.) 'Bloodiest Week' Hits Mesa Traffic By MICHAEL PASKEVICll "' .. Dellf ..... Sa.ff A stunning increase in the number of boUday season traffic accldents in Costa Mesa has led police to call it "the bloodiest week ever" in the city. During a one week period that ended Wednesday at midnight, 72 traffic accidents have ~n. reported, resulting ln the deaths Coast Weather Eighty percent chance or rain tonlJht, cUminlshing to 50 perceot chance Fri· day. Occuloaal winds or 10 t.o 20 mph. Lowa tonliht ln ao.. Rllbl Frtd&1 1n row to mlddletl)I. or four persons and injuries to 28 others. Police Lt. J ohn Regan said to- day at least half of the 72 acci· dents in the city were related to drinking. Last year, during the same one weelt perlod, 58 traffic accl· dents were logged, resultln& In 11 injuries and one death, Lt. Regan noted. . He reported a major increase in the number or lnjury acci- dents. from 10 last year to 21 in 1971. "It's been the bloodiest week ever in C.OSta Mesa," he said. "Peoplearedrinking, and driving too fast: they're just not being sensible," be declared. Two people were kllled and a third injured last Thursday in a three-car collision on the Vic- toria Street Bridee over the San· ta Ana River, •bicb divides Costa Meta from Huntlntton Beach. Early ~ 111onilitf, two pedestrians were killed and a third· sufter,d aerlotaa iajur(e. when they ~re struck down by a car oa l'ltb ltNet. The ,driver was later arrested and bu been charged With felClll)' hlt and run and felony manslaugh&er, pollce Hid. A number ol people wiU re- main bolpitalised throu&h the QrtltmU ...... •Wa bUuri• ate IQ attq from otlter Coe ta ~-tnale•eld••· ..... == "'8l °*iftl'I . ahupfy 0 alow MCI bla yOUl'I. Umeaoruilciia'tbavetorilh... . "AndlmlliiillrdfUiida1UIDI MCI dn.._Y.-M' ...... "lt'a J•t too-• bllb. '°2!1'. .'' lo prevent sparks from setting fires. The blast roared through two- lhi rds of the clustered silos, which sit 100 yards Crom the Mississippi River. Tops of the' cylinders were blown out, and the heavy concrete walls were shattered, leaving the giant honeycomb of tubes leaning askew. Thick gray smoke, laced with bright fire, poured from the top. It happened during the routine loading of a Norwegian grain ship, the Vesteroy, which was to take the grain to Germany. The ship was undamaged but was moved to make room for a fireboat, which pumped water through hoses laid over the levee. Six cranes moved in lo hoist a way heavy rubble. Rescue workers formed a human chain to hand back smaller chunks as they dug carefully into the ruins of the control room. .. ............ About a dozen ambul ances • were parked waiting. Calls went out for body bags. RESCUERS ASSIST A STRETCHER WITH AN INJURED MAN LlftED FROM HELICOPTER Victim• of New Or1ean• Grain Elevator Exploslon AHl•ted by Flremen Panel Rejects Energy Pact WA SHINGTON CAP) -A House·Senate conference com· mittee today formally aban· doned efforts to reach agree- ment this year on the natural gas portion ot President Carter's energy plan. By a vote of 16-2 Senate del· egates to the conference reject· ed a natural gas compromtM aponaore.d by Sen. Benn,tt Johnatm, D-La. Coanty Plants The vote sends the deadlocked conferees back to the drawing board and further jeopardizes chances for congressional passage of the toughest parts of Carter's energy program. The Johnston compromise was the result of three 'days of tough bargalnine with House members of tit• commltt.ee, who accepted It. . But today's vote-demonstrated Deadly Chemical Viewed/or Pests By KATHY CLANCY Of .. Oel,., ......... Fifty cases or a deadly chemical once earmarked for delivery to South American juneles now will be uaed to kill plant pests in Orange and other California counties. In addition. t.be Cypress man who tried lo dispose of the pesticide by dumping the cases in trash bins Monday night in Buena Park and Cypress will face no charges, Cypress police said today. Police explained Henry Davis of the Happiness Foundation Inc. had planned to ship the SO cases of methyl bromide to bis son. a Christian missionary in South America. When he was unable to flnd a shipping !irm to handle the transportation, however, be de· cided to dispose of the chemicals in dumpsters, officers said. Police and firemen in the two cities found the SO containers in a Monday evening search aft.er Davis was spotted by a resident depositing a small wooden crate Grid Drill,s Openai ·occ into a dumpster, Davis now bas donated the chemicals to Orange County agricultural specialists who plan to use Jt to kill plant pests. Some crates probably will be shipped to ot.ber counUes as well. of· ficiala said. Police 1ald Davis apparenUy was unaware of the hazard ln placing the chemicals in dumpsters and had no malicious intent. He aasisted officials Mon· day night ln rounding up the· crates. that a persistent 9-9 deadlock among Senate members on the emotional question or deregulal· ing gas prices remains as firm as ever. "I have no parent.age of this turkey after today," Johnston said, acknowledging defeat in advance. Seute ~ts of~--· tloe ..... C!0112protalM ... too generous to oil and RU pro- ducers. Opponents said it dld not go far eDOUlh toward allowing the free mlll'ket to determine gas prices. The compromise was worked out during three days of in· formal secret negotiations among a &mall group of House and Senate conferees. It bad tbe effect of uniting most of the House conrerees witb two Senate supporters of lifting rederal controls. The moat recent compromise effort began when President Cart'er personally urged key conferees last week to attempt to reach some agreement before Christmas. Today's vote will mean that when the conferees return from the holiday recess, they will be no closer to agree. ment than when they began their negotiatiorus. Rep. Harley Staggers, D· W.Va., chairman or the con· rerence committee said that un- less the deadlock among Senate conferees is broken, be will call no further meetings before the current congressional adjourna· ment ends Jan. 19. T he s maller group of con· ferees had worked since last Thursday to r each a com- promise that they hoped would be agreeable to supporters and opponents of lifting federal price controls on gas. Late Tuesday, they produced the scheme, which provides for an lnde!inlte continuation or , federal controls coupled with • much higher profits for pro- ducers than Carter asked. The compromise would allow prices to more than double over the next six years. FOOTBALL I': I ONTV ~ TONIGHT HALL OF FAME CLASSIC Channe~ 13. 8 p.m. MlnnMOta (7-4) va. Maryland (7·4) The first Hall of Fame tilt, a t Birmingham, Ala .• pairs two four-game losers, although Min· nesota defeated Michigan, Washington and UCLA, and Maryland came on strong down the stretch. Maryland's a touchdown favorite. (Tape delay) project Is Joint effort between the two cities. 'l1'e new slanals should be in ope.ra· tion ln about a qaonth, city officials said. ' ---................ ~ . . 2 DAILY PILOT C T"u flbum DaiBts 011 As. Dirty Wind Drops A RVlN (AP) Clea.nlna boust fOf Chrlatmaa 1s cotnc to be harder iD Arvin thl*o in 1D91l ol America. Dust an lncb thick, JM\ behlod by two d1y1 ol hurricaM· force wands, coat.t.-d rugs and furnlture throuahou\ t.b1a town or 7 .000. ( ttelated SlOrlt!S AS) "I NEVER DUSTED CHB.ISTMAS presenu before," said Sharon Howard, whose husband ls pa.st.or of the loeal Pen· lE't'Ostal Church or God. •'Our Christmas presents are covered with dart. We never had anythin( hke thh before." But lhe Howards were more fortunate than m~ny residents of Arvin, where roofs were blown off homes, trees toppled onto houses and huce chunks or brick and concrete were hurtled through windows. Arvin was one or two areas in which statea of emergency were declared Wednesday by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. ·•MOST OF ARVIN BLEW lhrouich Bakersfield on its way to Fresno last night," Bakersfield Mayor Donald M. Hart said Wednesdayofthedevastation. . Bakersfield is 20 miles north or Arvin. The roof was tom off the house ne>tt to the Howards'. But the owner, a Los Angeles building contractor, had a new one . nearly installed by nightfall. Sand from recently plowed cotton fields drifted into piles two feet high against chain-link fences. and many persons bad trouble breathing the gritty air. "I'VE TRIED SWEEPING lhe dust away, and you almost choke to death," one woman complained. Another resident, Stella Thillet, spent two nights at a Red Cross emergency facility set up at the high school because she feared lhe thick dust al home might give her two-month-old son congestion. ''When we woke up Tuesday, we were dyinJ of auffoea\lon -there wu so much dirt," abe said. • MM. 11DLLET RETURNED home Wednesday to clear away the dust that bad nlter~ around windowa and doors Into her home, but '.'without water, we couldn't do much," she said. Downed power lines left much or Arvin without electriclty, Including lhe local water district which needs power t°' pump weU witter to its customers. By Wednesday, electricity and wat.l" bad been restored to aome hom . BUT DESPITE THE devastation and the lingering layer of grit, residents of Arvin were hoping lo enjoy traditional Christmas celebrations. "As soon as we ~el our homes strllUtbtened up. we'll have a work day to clean the church,'' said Mn. Howard. "l hope we get it rle3ned up In Ume for Christmas Sunday." $5·.l Million · to Charity The James Irvine Foundation approved grants of more than $5.1milliont.o9l'charitable proj· ects and programs in California during its pa.st fiscal year, ac- cording to tbe foundation's an- nual report. P r esident Morris M . Doyle notes in the report, issued this week, that the grants were dis· cussed and decided upon despite the large amount of time direc- tors spent in selling the founda- tion's 54.5 percent interest in the Irvine Company. They were required t.o sell by provisions of the Feder:al Tax Reform Act of 1969. The sale after healed bidding to lhe Taubman-Allen-Irvine con· sorUum brouabt the foundation more than $184 million for its shares . Doyle also noted that the funds being distributed by the founda· tion have greaUy increased in recent years. The foundation gave out $2 million between 1938 and 1957, ~million between 1958 and 1967, and $34 million between 1968and1977. For jts fiscal year endin g last March 31, Irvine Foundation as· sets were listed at almost $162 million. A number of Orange County organliations were recipients of ~rant$. The fOlUldalion gave $25,000 lo the Laguna Beach School of Art and another $25,000 to the Laguna Beach Museum of Art. Also receivina funds were South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa •. $125,000; Providence Speech and Hearing Center in Orange, $75,000, and South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna .. $100,000. Girls Club qC North Orange County, Inc .• in Buena Park, •~s.ooo )telod)'land De.ltnquency Prevention Center in Anaheim. $20,000, and the YWCA of North Orange County jn Fullerton, $10,000. Also receiving grants were the Assistance League of Tustin, $25.000; Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana, $30,000; the Junior League of Newport Harbor, Inc., $40,000; and the Women's Law Centet' or Southern California in Tustin, . $7,500. Hostages Beat, Kill Gunman Additional grants went. to the Boya Club of Buena Park. $30,000; the Boys Club of Fullerton, $25,000 ; Boy& Club of La Habra, SB.000; Boys Club or the South Coast Area, Inc. in San Clemente, $25,000; and Boys Club-of Westminster, $10.000. Strike Averted VATICAN CITY CAP) -The Vatican has averted a priests' strike over Christmas in one of Italy's t raditional Catholic strongholds. But the rebellious churcbmen are determined to seek the repeal of a decree transferring their parishes to another diocese. SU BIC BAY, Philippines <AP> Enraged by a Filipino 5tun· man's threat to burn a pregnant woman, maJe hostages beat and :-.hot lo death the man who held them captive for 48 hours inside ~· s mall bank building on the l ' S. Naval Base at Subic Bay, officials said. I lostagcs later said they threw unvthing they could find at the \\'C;underl gunman, Including 1y11ewrllers and adding machines. as he lay on the floor ;1rtl'r he was overpowered by a hook kc<> per and shot by the bank manuger T he captives ~aid the gunman. 11 ho look o\'er the bank Tuesday afternoon, told them he wanted 10 give lhe bank's money to the poor hy dumping it fr om a hl•l1t·<•.ptt·1· \\h1ch he demanded ror hls escape. The gunman also threatened to blow up the bank, officials s aid. but no explosives were round. Lt. Cmdr. Michael Sherman. the base public affairs officer, said Navy officers conducting telephone negotiations with the gunman warned him he wouldn't receive any food unless he re- leased some hostages. "I think this angered the gun- man, and he threatened to bum a young pregn ant woman," S herman said. "The male hostages jurrtped in at that time. a nd w e heard s hots and screams. The next thing we knew, people started running out of the bank." U.S. Marines rushed into the white frame building, found the gunman unconscious and took him to the base hospital where he died two hours later, Sherman said. Orange Count11 to Nevada Lt. Col. Ernesto Venturina. commander or Philippine police here, said an autopsy showed the gunman had been shot at least once and bis skull shat· tered. Sherman said only two of the 14 hostages were injured -bank manager Nicomedes Villaluz, who suffered lacerations of the scalp, and a man who was bitten on an arm. All the hostages were Filipin06, Sherman reported. Bank teller Corinthia Carabe· jo, 31, said the gunman forced her to bum three bags of peso notes and dollars Wednesday night, apparently to s how authorities he could burn down the building if he liked. Although the bank is just in- side the main gate of the base 50 miles northwest of Manila, it is Airlines EJ_e Fare Cut. I . · 0 range County s upervisors Mant to be made a party to ef· rorts by two airline~ hoping t.o ~trer low-rare £lights between '{)range County Airport and 11/cvada. The board voted 4·1 Wednes- day to file petitions with the Cavil Aeronautics Board to join ·in proceedings initiated by Air California and Western Airlines. Supervisor Ralph Clark cast the lone "no" vote saying he was dissatisfied with the word· jng supervisors used in ordering -the pelilions. Clark said he wanted it clear ~hat s upervisors wer en't op· .posed to low-cost fares but only \o an increase in the number of ]lights and accompanying noise 'pt Orange County Airport. ~ Western Airlines doesn't use Jhe county airport, but Air :~alifornia does. Both airlines are asking for '.the new county-to-Nevada routes ps part of system-wide changes MESA'S TRASH PICKUP NORMAL Trash pickups wiJJ re· main on a reg ular scheudule in Costa Mesa during the holiday season. Sanitation workers will pick up trash Monday Dec. 26 and Jan.. 2, with normal pickup days to follow. lC~ DAILY PILOT being negotiated with the federal agencr. Cla rk contended that no mat-. ter what tbe outcome of the New Flu Virus Triggers Plan For Vaccines ATLANTA (AP> -Public health JlUthorities, concerned about a new influenza virus in Russia and Hoog Kong, met to- day to cpnsider the possibility or a vaccine program similar in scope to last yev's ill-fate~ swine nu pro1ram,. Dr. William Foege, director of the Center for Disease Control, told the gathering of about 100 physicians, epidemiologists, medical school faculty and state health officials that he would hesitate to predict a flu eridemlc because or the nature o the disease. "But there is a difference now in forecasting. We have the best internationaJ surveying system I have aeen. We feel that we have to try lo predict,' be said. The Russian virus was iden- tified u Hl.Nl, similar to a virus which caused widespread out- breaks in the United States in the 1940s and 1950s. Other types of influenza. either A-Texas or A-Victoria, have been reported ln about ll states, said the CDC. Isolated cases were reported in Illinois, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon, Penns ylvania, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Oregon, Florida and Georgia. Costa Mesa· 'Basketball Signups Set Slgnups are under way at Costa Maa City Hall for the Leisure Service Departsnent's Youth B11k~forboyaand lldllla tbroalb•lcthgrade. The nm...net M&IOll begiu Ju. f wttb a oUnte an balkttball f\mclammtm, Prac:tlcee wm be belcl after tehool. bl,umln• Jan. e. at the followla• 1cb~l1: Adami, KlUYbroon, WoodUnclt Collete Park, Bear StrMt ~ Wlllon.. Lucue play 'be-1na Jan. 21 with cam•• to be pll)'ed on Saturdays, Cott ol '5 per play~ includ• a T· ahirt, the buM&ball cllnlc aD4 a lrlJ'. t.o a \J8C buketball •ame. ,_ SlPllPI now are.,...._ t.Uta -room 305 ol City H~ '71 J'alr Drive. ht more dlfonll•tlOG cilt 551.QOO. agency's proceedings, Western would not be able t.o use Oranae County Ai rpo rt without supervisors' permission. Air California wouldn't be permitted to increase the· number of lts flights from the airport either, Clark continued. And S up ervi~or Ralph Diedrich said perbaps Air California would giv!.' up some rugbts it now bas elsewhere and replace them with the low-fare · flights to Las Vegas. Supervisor Thomas Riley, ' whose district Includes tbe airport, said, "It seems to me any thought of considering addi· tional routes involving Oranae County alrport. files in the face . . . of holding the level of con· f'idence or the people in the area." Warren Quits Sanitation . Panel in CM A seat on the Costa Mesa Sanitation District Board of Directors is open following the re- cent resignation of C. Thatcher Warren. Costa Mesans interested in join· ing the board of directors should send resumes or letters or interest to the district at P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa. The board of dl.rectors will then conductlntemews to appoint the mosl qualllled applicant. The board oversees trash and sewer service in Colla Mesa. Warren was appointed to the board in 1996 and was re-elected on Nov. 8, 19'17. He gave no specific reuon for bis resigna- tion. operated by the Prudential Bank and Trust Co. for the benefit of .l*'Hlpinos employed on the base, and no U.S. Navy funds are de· posited there. Donations were also given to the Girls Club of the Harbor Area in C-06la Mesa, $25,000; the Girls Club of Fountain Valley· H~ntlngton Beach, $51000; the SON~ Gift Ideas From JVC ~~ SUPH POltT AILE RADIO TY s20000 ...... R.ADIO.CASSETTi.aECORDB GIVE A GIFT FROM RCA non-.... RCA 12':...-black & white ~ .. ~ In a rw!~I. h«9 1 •II ..,o.. nNd 10 l<1'QW lilbOul atereo. fu<nlaotet.. FM/AM Sl .. eo radio•. tape r•cordars. at'\d IOH~•u. MarcNld uo lor 'IOU Dy -1• woo know .coustlCS and 1148CVOf\ocs •-DUI Wero 1•ktn0 1100c11 Softy COfll04ld llW.O. Anc:t '°" 00n1 -IO -no • mtnl IO ltl)P"llOll• " Coma In today. Lat u1 orve you ~ 0.ll'\0"5lnMIOn. And I ci..I you ve got I) NVIO~ Ol9ltat LfO clodr radio with dl~tronlc QCCllMICf ICf °CtltW. l •' 16"'Q'rt"' 0 t\rt0to.,<Q1 tr.teo lrM:it °' 'llNf ..._ ft •• , ~l•t.-c.lt "-1"41A"t , t 14\toO '• > ._,.. •'" uo a.. JI ,. ~ ...... ,._. . ~ .,...., ... ~ tlr(,pt fC, •t"O •1lt• alC(\ottf T • "i ............ ~··cw .... °'_... • .._. lf'i• lt~'Vl"I OJ\t•A" IJMtc.IQc;. • .JlhiltetJ"ilfOlilt. GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS CASIO CALCULATORS f h• OOt••I f'llW"' ad<l~l'M.'1• -..." """'"'O'•' ' _,,_~ ow-...~. *" SCJ95 11 •nd Mid pttnflt< •"" teadOUC. ' ,_,net.on !Nu• ~. llf~ •ti & out Rtcfl~ oan ...... '"'. '"',. f' (I.""" • .,.___.,._t~•r .,~"'Y -' t CM 0-... yf NAIUt.-lfH' .._"",._~t.,I Nall s299s SH.ARP ·. M °'f't .,._.,,....... ~IW\O_. • f\."-:""""' • ~ •, ,,. • .,., •.•• , .•• ,,..,~, ••h .,.,~, ........ Ml\ ........... . ....tUoJ• t••fftt ,., ... •·' . ............. ~ .. .,,.,., .. ....,..., \ .... .... o.11., ...... 1...,_ CATI"LE FIND SLIM PICKINGS ON IRVINE RANCH AFTER LONG DROUGHT Too Little Rain Fell Too Late for PHture Landa Along Orange Coast Drought Plagues Area· Dry. Grasslands Prodnce High Beef Prices By .JERRY CLAUSEN Ol IM 0.lf l"llo! Stall County ranchers, hat hard by drought, will be happy to keep the r ain that fell on parched grasslands and crops Wednes- day, but it sliU may be a case of too little, too late. literally s ucked the previous weekend's rain out of pasture land15. Gilbert Aguirre, vice presi- dent of r anch operations for Rancho Mission Viejo, San Juan . Capistrano, had reported .30 of a n inch of rain over the weekend. The mid-week winds . he conjectured, were "sucking up about four inches worth." sumer, the third continuous year or westem·states drought is ex- pected to mean higher beef prices, Aquirre predicted. "Producers are selling calves now for between 40 and SO cents a pound. Calves are going to be worth more thaQ 50 cents a pound next fall." Rancho Mission Viejo normal- 1 y brings in 4 ,000 head or .. stocker cattle'' for fattening on The s prinkles, measuring less than a 10th of an inch, followed two days of drying Santa An a w inds th;it onC' ranchf'r said And to the Orange County con-40,000 acres of range grasses e ach October. This year , Aguirre said, none were import· ed because of the poor rang~ conditions. And the ranch· s normal herd of 1,200 calf-bearing cows has been cut in half. Trash Bag Slayer 'Killed for Po-wer' RIVERSIDE 1J\P J Patrick Way ne Kearney, sentenced to life imprisonment ufler pleading guilty lo three or the SO·Called "trash bag m urdt.'rs. · · said the killings helped \'Cnt h1:-. frustra- tions and ga vC' him fo C'lings of power The lifting or a ~ag order Wednesday led to release of grisly details of the killings, 111cludmg Kearnev':-. inter\'1ews with two doctors· in which he said his vie· t ims often were people who had taken advantage of hi s good wal l. And prosecutors disclosed that K e a r n ey o ft e n ca m e dangerous ly closc to gelling caught. including the limes he locked himself out or his car while a trash-bagged body was inside or had a rial lire while carr) ang another v1ct1m Kearncv also s aid his case may ha,;f' inspired the recent H illside Strangler murders of I I young women "It sl'cms li kc that started a bout thl' time I got into the ne ws.·· Kearney s pecul ated Wednesd:n after his scnlencin~ for the f1r~L degree murders of Albe rt H1vera. 2 1. of Los Angeles. Arturo Marquez 24, of Oxnard and .John La May. 17, of El Segundo "Ma~be the publicity 1s harmful." Kearnc·y added. Kearney, 37, was a rrested last .July. The kiUmJ!s. linked lo homosexu a l a c ti vities. were te r m e d th e "tra s h ba g murders" bt>ca usc· many or tht> 15 victims wcr<• found dumped along highways an large plastic bags. Authoril1<':; haH: said Keame~ may be Link ed lo a:; many as 28 slayings. Kearney dec lined to com- ment Wednesday on the slay. ings, saying "I can't a llow myself to think about it much. It's loo painful." He said his former roommate, David Hill, 34. who was arrested with Kearney but not indicted. was neither involved in nqr aware of the killings. Superior Court Judge John Hews imposed the life term after Kearney requested 'im· mediate sentencing. Ja y Grossman, Kearney's attorney. said the ,Wlty plea was being made over his objections. Wtth the lifting of the gag or· der, prev\ously confidential re· ports in wbicb Kearney talked atiout his deedl were released. QuotlAI frOm the reports. the publilW PY today revealing that Kearnir uplalned to doc· tots that bll kUllngs vented his fruttratiml 9Dd 1ave him feel- ings of Jtower. .. .. ~-ho Hia Yktiml were UIUll'I:! w were t8'dnl adHntage of bis aood .m. or were like lbose who flad ~him u a child, K~a,,_.,, ~two doctora. He IOlcl."iine Goctor. Jojtn F. McM8Wn. that "be doe• not•~ lllmtelf u mentally ill." ..... ....._ In bl• report, gave d._. 61 Im Dee. 3 mterview •''* ~aney,, "He blandl1 deftt'IW~W he shot his vtc. tlm1 In UM head with a .22 c•liMt' = wtthou~ any anctr ~A .. totr•I'-. "l'ikeamer. ••• clffcribed 'by Jtlyeralcha Couftty ~ !JM.. tricl Attorney Daniel Bacalski as killing cooUy, but sometimes finding himself close to being caught. For example. he told in- vestigators how he had stuffed a body into a lrash bag, put it in his car. and was driving with ll in the desert when he got a nat tire. Bacals ki said. When he discovered his spare was also flat. Kearney got a.tow truck to haul his car to a gas st&· tion. The gas station attendant fax ed the tires. apparently never discovered the body in the car. and sent Kearney on his way. Bacalskl said. Another time, Kearney locked himself out or his car while a trash-bagged body was inside, He found a coat hanger and jim- mied the lock, but "he was kind or nervous," Bacalski s aid. Bacalski sald Kearney had morbid curiosity about the bodies of bis victim s . And sometimes. Bacalski s aid, "he committed sex acts on them after they were killed." When he killed, McMullin re· lated, ''the .act did give him a sense of maturity or power but he finds it hard to define this feeling.'' Kearney told the doctor he considered hims elf bisexual, having had occasional sexual re- lations with members of both sexes. He told another doctor, Seawright Anderson, that his feelipgs of homosexuality began when he was 7 years old and his first homosexual act occurred when he was 23. McMullin also talked with Kearney about his childhood. "He states that as a kid he was often beat up by others since he was •mall and called queer by his peers though he was interest- ed in girls," McMullin wrote in his report. to Judge Hews. Kearney told Anderson, "I weni tbroullla a period of frustra· tion through mY late teens and I ·was low to ll'OW. I wanted to 'et e,ven With people who wert• taking> advantaae ol me." · AJadenoo •aic\.'Keemey told him h1a vJctlms1 "were peoi>Je who we ... t.ryijig to get money out of him or had pulthed him a r o und when he wa s a teenager." In ract , one of the peQple he pleaded guilty to murdering, Rivera, was a childhood friend who apparenUy b" ~ome re- acquainted with 1tearoey and stayed with bim al 1'earney'1 Redondo U..cb bome tor a few days, according to •rand jury testh:non)'. Kearne1 told ,my be ~ed Rivera dUrini a taped lntervlew with lnv.Ucaton: "Be k1Dcl of turned dlt me M4I be IHtcame very unfriendly lbd demand· \ng." Kearney meaked up beyind Rivera IA U.• house, and shot him in the bact ol lhe head. Kenner •lfo r~porfedty anoiked up <in lnOtber ol Ute •IC· tlmt be WM CGtVlded fll kllllnc. LaMay. Bacalakl said LeMay was "cban&'lnl U.. daaDHI on the tel~ •• , • , .... .., •• hOIDe wben ICa..-Y ...... Up ...... --~ ...... 44!".,,~~~;.;<·~f)t!" The Irvine Company is facing similar problems, according to Fred Keller, the firm's agriculture vice president. "We must get some relier <rain) within the next 10 d ays or buy bay," he said. ''Wednes- day's rain was just enough to settle the dust. If we gel lhe cou· pie of inches they're predicting over the next week. we 'll be out of the woods." Irvine Company 1:-. running its normal 900-hcad herd of cows, but its stoc ker herd of 1,000 cal· lie is far below the 2.000 to 3,000 head oormolly g r azing the ranch's 40.000 acres ot' grass this time or yelir "I think everybody ib hurt· ing," l<cllcr said. "If we had known it wal> going to be this dry, we probably wouldn't have brought in any cattle this year." Kell e r l>a id long-range weather forecasts had predicted ·•a wetter than normal December... He said a normal December would bril\g tbree inches of rain. Approximately a hall-inch fell OQ Irvine pasture lands overtheweekend -theonly raip so (arlhls montb. Aguirre said. "To do us some good, it's going to have to rain between now and February - and I mean really rain. three inches quickly and then keep on raining." Fortunately. cattle aren't Rancho Mission Viejo's only pro- duct , Aguirre s aid. Approx - 1 m ately 40 p e rce nt o l the spread's income com es from citrus and g r apes, products nurtured with irrigation water. Unfortunately. though, the ranch depends on Its own well water for irrigation, and, said Aguir re , the underground basin's level is down an estimat· ed 12 feet. Rain is badly needed in the San Juan Creek area to replenish that ~roundwater basin, he said "Theoretically, these wells could be pumped dry ... Irvine Ranch depends somewhat on underground water for its citrus, avocado and row-crop irrigation, Keller said, but most of its waler is Imported via Metropolitan Water District from lbe Colorado River. Adcff.. Uonal water is piped in from three count)' sanitation district water reclamation ptoJects, he a aid. The •f;K>kesQieo for the coun· ty'( two largest ranch opera· ttons agreed that rain Is re- quired to brintr operations b~ck to normal -if to~ no other reason than the leaching or salts from citrue rootatructures. •In summing up the agriculture plight, Keller concluded: ·'A 11 l can add js, pray for rain .'' 3 Gunmen Rob 100 In Clwrc h COLLF.GEDALE, Tenn. <AP I -Three gunmen wearing slu masks invaded a church where more than 100 people were watching a children's Christmas pageant and .proceeded to rob the audience row by row, police said. The robbers forced the au- dience -many of them children -a· tendeng the performance WednHday night to dump their wallets and purses in a grocery sack in the back or the church, Ila milt.on County police said. Then the audience and cast members were led to a base· ment Sunday school room and ordered to s tay there while the bandit.a escaped. Craig Johnson. a police dis· patcher, said the gunmen were at large. He said the value of the item s tak en had not been l'alculated. • Officer J ohnny Morris, one of four policemen who invest igated the incident, said the robbery oc curred at about 8 p.m. at John'!. Memorial Missionary Baptist Church near Collegedale, a sub- urb east of Chattanooga. "Right after their introduc- tory prayer and a couple of young ladies had s ung, three make males wearing ski masks entered. Two or them had long guns, one or them had a pistol," Morris said. He said one of the robbers car· r ied a shotgun and told the group he and his cohorts were going to rob them. "He told them lo put their hands on lop or their heads , then one subject at the back of the church fired a s hot into the ceil· ing and advised them they weren 't kidding. The subject at the front "had them get up one ro1w at a time, like an offering. and go to the back and empty their cash into a grocery bag held by a third subject," Morris said . / The frightened victims were found huddled in the downstairs room by a late-arriving mem~r orthe audience, Morris said. Prince of a Lad Britain's Princess Anne holds her baby son, 37-day-old Peter Phillips, at christening ceremonies for the child at London's Buckingham Palace. The baby wore the same lace robe that has been used at the baptism of ever~· royal child since Edward VII. $89,000 Will Fee Cot to $15,000 LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ A j udge has reduced an $89,000 fee request by the California ad· m inis trat or of the Howard Hughes estate to $15,000, saying he was W\Sure the local estate contains enough moaey to cover the payment. Superior Court Judge Neil A. Lake authorized the $15,000 pay. ment resday lo Richard C. Gano, , oC Anaheim, who took a n earl retirement from his S20,000 year job with the Hughes Aircraft publications of. fice to help conduct a worldwide search for a Hughes will. he contended could be sold for $17,500 and stored jewelry worth $40,000. The attorney. Ronald Got.her. said it was the judge who or- dered the will search, but Lake s aid he couldn't unders tand why .. a volunteer" should receive 4h times his pre-retirement salary. Gano bad already received a S22,500 fee, approved last April, so his entire payment for work on Hughes' California holdings a mounted lo $40,SOO. A trial in Las Vegas to de· termine whether the so-called Mormon Will was written by Hughes is in recess until Jan. 4, when arguments begin on the ef· feet of a newly discovered docu· .. "They said the subject up front with the shotgun was very irrational -they thought he might begin shooting people any minute,'' Morris said. llis attorney said Gano spent 1.900 hours working with the estate, which included Hughes' country club membership which ment. .. .. SALE BEGINS MONDAY, DEC. 26th Bed Room, Dining Room and ccasional ·Furnitur 15% to 30% Off· All Lamps On Display • 15% OFF ACCESSORIES .All Acce$sories and Pictures l5% OFF r ... ,. Uph~lstered Sofas and Chairs ., ,; ' 15% to 25% OFF . GEHUIHE TOP GRAIH Leather Sofas and Chairs 20% OFF . All Area Rugs On Display 50% OFF ., ' ..... . 0 • DAil Y PtL. 0 T Thuttdrf, o.c.tnbef 22. 1117 4'•• ' .. fL' ,.• • .,..., -11 .. L .. , ....... ": .. r·· Tea · ~ldae Weather Or Not? I~~· •• :• EYE IN SKY: At our house, we have just had some (amily members who have fled this best of all possible coasts for a White Christmas in their native habitat of Vermont. No wonder. All you have to do is study the weather we've served up around here In recent days and you can understand bow It might befud- dle a visitor from the eastern seaboard. This time or year , they are u sed to lovely, contoured s nowdrifts cove ring the landscape in a gentle cascade of whiteness. Aod what do we give 'em? We give 'em photographs in our newspaper of t.ouples out in their front yard trying to dis- lodge tumbleweeds that have come visiting on the latest des- ert blow. THE EASTERN FOLKS think wistfully of ice-covered ponds were skat<.'rs can make Yuletide m<.'rriment. And what do we offer up? An ocean filled with red dust from the aforementioned hard blow. Sununit HOids Key. Mideast Peace 'Depends on Meeting' CAIRO, Egypt -The pre- liminary Cairo peace conference ended its fint phue today and suspended its work pending a decisive Christmas summit between the leaders of llrael and Egypt. "There are still dlsairee· ments, but we know where they are," said chie( Israeli delegate Eliahu Ben·Ellasar after a SO. minute plenary session. "We have deCined the areas or dis· agreement." HE MADE IT clear the next step depends on the talks Sun· day between Prime Minister Menahem Begin or Israel and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. "Everything depends on that meeting,,. added U.S. spokesman George Sherman. Egyptian spokesman Morsi One of Six Saad el-Din said "Definite prog- ress" had been made. "The gap has not been completely bridged, but partly bridged,·' he added. BEGIN AND SADAT plan t-0 upgrade the peace talu to the level or foreign ministers if they can narrow the dlfferences sum- cienlly to agree on a bais for ex- pand~M19liations, Egyptian of- ficials said. Sadat has rejected Begin's proposals for the West Bank. At the Vatican, Pope Paul VI hailed peace overtures between Egypt and Israel as "courageous to the point of ap- pearing audacious" and called for "all those responsible" io work together for a j\lSt and lut- ing peace in the Middle East. .. LOTS, LOTS. believe me U.S. Mom Selected Space Finalist As ~ ASH.IN<:;TON <APJ -The mother of a 7-year-old daughter is one ~f.s1x Amencans selected as finalists for a scientific assienment on a JOlnt U.S.-European space mission in 1980, the National Aeronautics and Space AdrnlniatraUon announced today. There will be seats for two scientists on the seven-person Spacelab l crew, one an American and one a European. lots" has changed, Sadat told re- porters Wednesday, apparenUy re(erring to Israel's otrer to withdraw from most of the Sinai desert. •'My people are pushine me now.'' However, he labeled "unac· ceptable" Begin's offer to, give self-rule to Palestinian Arabs on the West Bank of the Jordan River while maintaining an Israeli military presence there. His comments after meetings in lsmailia with Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizm an lndicat· ed he was sticking, at least in public. to the pan-Arab demand that Israel withdraw from all OC· r upied Arab land. HE ALSO SAID he discussed with Weizman ;.a com · prehensive settlement" that would include Jordan, Syria. Lebanon and the Palestinians, buttressine a promise not to abandon Egypt's Arab partners. partners. Saudi Arabia expressed guarded support for Sadat for the first tlme since he be1an bis peace overtures lo Israel. Crown Prince Fahd, the prime minister and strongman of the Saudi gov· ernment, in an interview called the Egyptian leader a "brother" and said the Saudis' "love and respect for t.he Egyptian people is beyond question." Sadat and Begin were expect- ed to approve the Israeli plans for further troop withdrawals from Sinai at their meeting Sun- day in lsmailia. ,. NATION /WORLD J;. Get a Reindeer Ed Challa, 23, alias Santa Claus, figured the best way to hi~ch rides from Seattle to New York was to try a Santa suit. So far, the North Seattle Community College stu- dent has had little luck. He spent several days at an on· ramp to Interstate 5, arranging rides for others and playing Santa for passing kids. There have been no rides for him yet, though. .. When you tell your eastern v1:.1tors that it's usually pretty nice in these parts and that the wind, dust, rain and varied ele- ments of recents days a re just a freak run, they tend to look at :-ou kind of funny. The other five crew members will be U.S. astronauts. The American woman finalist is Ann F . Whitaker of Huntsville. Ala. a physicist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Cenler. Cracks Ground Bombers You are reminded of Cowardly Lion from the m ovie "The Wizard of Oz, when he was flat on his back with legs pointed skyward in the poisoned poppy fi<.'ld as the good witch abruptly made the snows begin. Then he awakened, sat up and quipped. "Unusual weather we're havin'. ain't it?" AS FOR OUR OWN Orange Coast peculiarities. you can un· dersland the bewilde rment of visitors from elsewhere on Tues- day, when the heavy wi.nds struck. They hit the southern ex· tremity of our coastline. They howled upcoast in the Seal Beach region. Meanhile in inland Orange County, the blow was knocking over light poles. Meanwhile further, in the Sad· dleback Valley, the howlers were ripping tarpaper roofing from homes under construction. But the bafflement came in the Newport-Mesa harbor area and our central coast section where it seemed that the recion !;al In a comparative dead calm. When your eastern "isllors hear all or the reports from UP· coas t, downcoast and inland, and then looked outdoors in the Newport Harbor are!, it was just a bit difficult to explain. Make that read impossible. S INCE OUR RE CENT weather whackies, I've aban- doned most hope for any of the weather predictors. Once agair't I have turned to' my trusty weather guide, the Old Farmer's Almanac. Right there on P11e 128, it gives l#S solace. It •UJ· gests ·that tomorrow through Christmas, it's 1oin& to be hot in our region. Never mind that the Almanac's prediction Cor yester- day was fair. 1£ you can't trust the Old Farmer's weather predictions. there's nobody left to trust. MRS. WJDTAKE R, 38, said in a telephone interview from Huntsville that she is delighted at her selection. "I'm very happy. as are my hus band and 7-year-old daughter," she sai d . Her husband, also a physicist, works at the Army's Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville. She is already working on the Spacelab l mission, she said, n principal investigator on an ex- periment "dealing with the dfnamlc• and lubrication tn space or operating journal bear- ings." BUT EVEN 1r she ts selected for the night, she might not be the Cirst American woman in space. At least three others may have a chance before her. The other American finalists for the U.S.·European rtight are Dr. Craig L. Fischer, 40, of Jn. dian Weus. Call(., a doctor, Dr. Michael L . Lampton, 36, o! Berkeley, a .space physlclat; Byron K. Lichtenbe rg, 39, Natick, Mass .• a doctoral can- didate at the Massachusetts Institute of Ttthnology; Robert T. Menzies, 34. Pasadena, a ph ysicUt at NASA's .let Propulsion Laboratory; aJJd Dr. Richard J . Terrile. alto of Pasadena. a planetary scientist. NASA plan.a to name 40 new astronauts next m onth tor America'• next-generation or manned 1pace vehicle.U\e •P-!Ce stJuttle. THEY WILL BE divided equally aat'lng pilots and mis- sion specialists\ and 1outces re- port there will oe at least three women on the latter list. Mission specialists will deploy satellites, ser vice prbitlng satelliLes and operate laboratories. The first nitht of tbe shuttle. which will land back on earth like an airplane, ii scheduled for March 1979. ............ SPAQ! ;INALIST Ann F. Whitaker WASHJNGTON <AP> -Cracks In the engine cases of F-111 tighter-bombers and FB-111 bom bers are forcing the Air Force to ground some of the multimillion-dollar warplanes for as long as six months. Flight training probably will be cut back while possibly hundreds of faulty engine cases are replaced. MEANWlULE, THE Air Force is expected to shift defect·free engines from lower priority units lo assure that F-111 In England and FB-UlswiththeStrategicAir Command ire back Ln Cull opera· tlon as soon as possible. F·llls stationed in Europe constitute a major part of NATO's tactical air defense capability. The full dimensions of the prob- lem. one of the worst in the troubled-marked career of the swing.wmged war planes, are not yet clear, officials said. The Air Force is unable to de- Wind 'f opples 200 Homes in Tijuana TIJUANA. Mexico <AP> -Pre-Christmas windS' left 200 families homeless. damage exceeding SJ million and 20 people nurslne in- juries today. The leanup after the big blow continued. Emergency utility crews worked around the clock to repair about 100 power lines knocked .d09in and restore water to seven residential areas. homes were knocked down in the Rodolfo Hernandez Martinei, Rosarito Beach atea 21 mtles the city's preg relation$ direc. south or Tijuana . Five tourist tor1 said200 families were being camps along the Baja CaliCornia temporarily housed and fed by peninsula also rep0rted heavy the municipal government. . damage. In Colonia Obrera, about eight There was no estimate of miles southeast of here rumsy damage in Rosarlto Beach homes were bowled ~ve r or because it was so extensive, heavily damaged by winds. police said. About 10,000 U.S. <Relat.edstories, PaaeAS> citiiens Jive in that township of 38,000 people. . MEANWBILE. AN estimated Firemen in Tijuana put out "'?small businesses and a doien five major blazes and answered 70 alarms as the wind reached Fi-eeze, Dips Into South gusts up to 80 mph. High Winds Blow in Colonulo Rockies l'~per•t-res Mt a,o •K " ., ., 11 ,. ,. " n 41 .i. * t7 ... J.t ,. >• •• u 24 u 4 , ... ~ , ..... IS D M :I : ... u n :a • It M II M . " " ,, ... ,. ~ t1 " u • " " ,, .. . , .. ,. ,. ,. .. .. • .. S1 H .n ,.. ~ ,. ... 41 ... t1 » "' 3J .. • '. ' lerm ine the full impact of the engine defects untll lnspections or all 452 F-llls 'and FB· 11 ls and their spare engines are completed in mid.January, the Air Force said ln a statement Wednesday night. HOWEVER, IT WAS apparent that the difficulty was much greater than was indicated last Friday when the Air Force an· nounced it had started inspecting 1, 168 engines for the F· 111 aircraft. The Air Force first said the re- jection rate was about one-third of 113 engines checked. Later, the service said the rejection rate came to roughly SO percent of about 350engines checked. As or Wednesday, Ai r Force of· ficials said 399 planes were grounded and S3 had been cleared for return to night. These aircraft ranged in price from Sl6 million to $18.6 million apiece. Father Acquitted Of Hanning Girl PHILADELPHIA <AP> --The father of a crippled 14·year-old girl who weighed 24 pounds when police found her in a trash·!Uled house _i was acquitted Wednesday of recklessly endangering the child's welfare. "I'm gonna do the best 1 can now," said Thomas Pankowltz, 54. after a OO·minute trial befort: Family Court Judge Jerome A. Zaleski. His daughter. Helena Poole, was placed in the custody of the state Welfare Department last week in another Family Court bearing. Helena, a cerebral palsy vie· Um, was found in Pankowitz•s rowhouse by police Oct. 2S. Police said the girl was covered with rags and was lying on a urine-soaked, lice·inlested mat· tress in the unheated house. She was deloused and treated for malnutrition at Hahn emann Hospital. BEN JOSEPH, Pankowltz' at· tortiey, said his client "cared ror Helena under extraordinary circumstances" and "rejected &he easy option Of putting her jn an inaUtution." Some doctors testlfted that it was remarkable the girl has llved ao l~ with her aCnlcUon, and credited the father's lo"e and care, but said he was unable to glve hel' bospitaJ.qua\lty care. The Welfare Department (llrlstma$ Shopping In an unh1itded frienclly neighborhood l atmoHJhere Vlalt Santa on' t placed Helena in the care of a i woman neighbor who had been helping Pankowitz care for the girl. The girl was born out or wedlock to a woman Pankowitz later married but who since has died. DANCING HORSE ANGERS 'HOST' GARDEN CITY. Kan. <A P> - It was s hades of the Wtld West at the Graln Bin Saloon the other night. Someone -and the private club's management has a pretty good idea who -rode a horse in· to the club, pranced around a bit on the dance Ooor, lhen rode out. When police ari'lved, the horse and rider had gone. Tbe club's manager said he planned to press char ges and a suit for damages against the rider. T : ., .. CALIFORNIA· . . Devastation WUkspread Disaster Areas U oder State of Emergency • •1 'fte Auoela&ed Prea Hurricane-force winds that caused two days of destruction throu&hout California subsided. Wednesday nlaht, and ll&bt rain be&an to tum the duat-covered debris into muddy wrecka1e. Jn some secUona of Central and Nort,hem CaUtomla, snow showers blanketed wind·broken· homes and bmlMAtea. At least nine persons died 1n wind-related accidents and fira. · UTIUTY COMPANY workers were struggling to restore com- munications, electrical power and water supplies to tbe tiny San Joaquin Valley farming community ol Arvin, one of two areas where a state of emergen- cy was declared by Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown lr. because of widespreaddevutatlon. Much of the service was restored by Wednesday, but of- ficials doubted if it would be ful- ly restored before Christmas Eve. The other part of California placed under a slate of emergen- cy was Humboldt County, where giant redwoods were sent crashing down on homes and power lines and across "highways. TWO PERSONS WERE killed when one of the huge trees fell on their car. Nearly 65,000 of Humboldl County 's 100,000 homes were without electricity. Jn Bakersfield, 38,000 of the * * * * area'• 175,000 customers lost power, but about half had iL restored by Wedn~ay evening. DAMAGE TO SOUTHERN Calllomla's avocado crop alone may amount to $5 m!lllon to $10 million. the California Avocado Advlsory Council said. The council said 15 million to 20 million pounds or avocados were stripped from trees by the winds and that damage to the trees themselves could severely cut next year's production. Severe damage also was re· ported lo lemon, orange and tangelo orchards. At Gorman in the Tehachapi Mountains midway between Los Angeles and Bakersfield, an Icy s lush continued Lo hamper traf- fic on Interstate 5, the main artery through the center of the s tate. Winter officially began al 3:24 p.m. PST Wednesday. MOST OF THE THOUSANDS of persons stranded on that road by the storm Tuesday and Wednesday had made Uieir way to safety by Wednesday night, a highway patrol spokesman said, but the highway remained closed from the junction of State Route99 to Route because of high winds, dust and low visibility. Route 99 was open as Car as Bakersfield. and the CH P was recommending snow chains for anyone traveU,ng north. Route 58 was closed from Interstate 5 to Bakersfield, although phone * * * * FORT DRAGG (AP> -Furious winds which shrieked through Northern California carried cruel blows of tragedy for fisherman Nick Lackey, his wife and two young sons. Winds kicked up Tuesday afternoon while Lackey was fishing in Humboldt Bay with another man. The Coast Guard said neither men nor boat ·-the 38-foot Blessed Redeemer -have been seen s ince. Then, early Wednesday morning, a fire ignited in Lackey's small country home 10 miles outside of town. Officials said that firemen arrived to find the home reduced to ashes -a total loss. MRS. LACKEY MANAGED TO awake her two pre-school age boys and escape the inferno. The Lackeys' three pet dogs died In the blaze. Severe Catbaek Contra Costa Rations Water MARTINEZ (AP) -A day after one San Fran· clsco Bay area community relaxed restrictions on water consumption, another district decided to clamp down tighter than ever. Directors of the Contra Costa Water District. serving about 250,000 water u sers in the drought-stricken East Bay. voted Wednesday to cut the maximum al· lotment to an average of 50 g a lions a day p er person, effective Jan. 1. The rationing is much his legal allotment will be charged 10 times the normal rate. COAST .GUARD H ELI COPTERS and airplanes, meanwhile, pressed on in a wide· · ranging search for Lackey and fellow fisherman Ernest Lopez of Fort Bragg. Ages were unavaila· ble. A friend described the Lackeys as "30ish." "Other fishermen reported the boat was last seen at 3:30 Tuesday afternoon," said Coaal Guard duty officer 1.oran Sajovic. "That was just wben the winds started to pick up." Sajovic said searchers ranged up and down the northern California coast and· about 40 miles offshore. OFFICIALS SAID LACKEY and Lopez bad been fishing for crabs in the bay, which is about 8Q miles north of here. ' • · Howling winds wracked the region \f ednes.: day, toppling trees, knocking roofs off buildings and downing power lines. Officials said at least three deaths were blamed on the furious gusts, which blasted up to 80 miles an hour. Jnore severe than the district's 1977 cutback, when consumers were given a general order to use 30 percent less water than they had been. Jantzen with a gift suggestion THE NEW restriction also would cut the dis- trict's supplies to local industries 39 percent or normal, possibly caus- ing '•a severe reduction i n jobs," said dl.strict President Craig Ran- dall. Officials or local in- dustries estimate that 10,000 workers could be laid off because or plant shutdowns whicb could begin as early •• May unJesa more watel' becomes available. CONTU OOSTA'S ac· tion followed a vote T u e • d a'y by t h e Petaluma Clt1 Council to lltt a 30 pel'Ctllt water cutback imposed last .March because of the drou1b~ l COlltn. c.ta offic als eq>latbelt Ulllr Pa&Jwna waa able to ease Its reatrlcUoa beeauae l~ water eomea from the Soaorha Co'°'t7 Water Al6DCJ', wtdd& 1iU Jari• ateras• ..... tyotr• IA Nortbeni CaBfon'ala. n:~,~~fd ~t~~ co,t~tJ •upp!J ~mes frem Sb81ta Dan 1n the droualat·dry, · ~bern SacumaatoV~_. PuO'• W YIOlat.lng tbe -.:...-1:'\tay rule ~,.Any uttr • mulm\lm Storekeepers Mitch, Monte and Kevin are weating Jant~n sweaters, available in a variety of colors and styles made of wool and polytster. 18.00 and.22.00 • •• bj ...... Wl ... bll water raw .... led, -.....-~~-----~......;.;~~~ ...... ,.. 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Supcr·SpecYU -----. • t1 llvny la •• ,tllls """1al" ,rtct fW I ll"IU' 111111 Ollly! ~ • • CT Walle Color System with u ct.n!Ye ASC Cmu1try s3991s : ~~-'~~e~~~,c~;~~oo~;e s.!l'e1:!~:tf • T~001•110n Ctd ..Sloo Ul4f Twn•"« • Aoo111 l ¢ht 110111101 'll':=;:::;:;:c;;;;... ..-• S o•al speaku -• lelt1COCl1ft1 d"~ VIII & &#hf • ..,,., cumw uw 1111CM1$ . FOR ~YIS.-owtl'S • AWARD-WINNING FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE, (;All: SAS;.3431 ·:-:-:· -. ... "' ... .... ... "' .... .. · .. ·' .... .... li::::i ·.·.·.· ·.·.·.·· . .. . . .. . :::::::: ·.·.·.~r .... :=::~~ I . •' An .wr of saiaclty seems to ha'ng over the public ap. pearuces of Gov. Edmund Bl'OWD Jr. • He's charming. He atQCJs there. trimly dreaecl. a wry smile passing h1a bandaome face now ancl then. JtJs eestures are appropriate. ~ \'OCabw&rY 1f;pnaing. 11e pokes in an outrageous statement here and~ to color his remarks. He reaches into tunnels of h1I mlDd and ex• plores topics of the widest range. What comes out of this speech or interview or preu -conference, however. more ofter) than not is murky, COG• fusing and contradictory. Sometimes it is pure gibberish. The governor put in a typical performance in a re- cent interview with The Associated Press. It was published in the Daily Pilot Monday. Speaking of a statewide land use plan -something like the Proposition 20 Coastal Commission operation - Brown said he was pushing very hard tor such a program and may have something to announce in a few weeks. Minutes later, he said, "I don•t see any big land use plan on the front or back bumet\.'' He cited the coastal co.nunis&ions as a major achieve- ment of bis adminlstratlon. Just before that, he had declared, "I'm very supportive of community control. I've had my fill of centraJ bureaucracies." He told the AP that state·imposed controls over sub- urban sprawn conflict with individual rights. In the next breath, be saw it differently: "Certa.io land is more appropriate for certain uses than for other uses and we have to strive for the best use of .land. The state has·a role in that." r In typical Brown style, he tossed in a few whimsies. Speaking of building homes on agricultural land, he asked rhetorically, "Happy people or happy vegetables?" It clidn 't mean anything, but it sounds like a profundity. So do a lot of Brownisms. The long and short of it is that Brown somehow puts on an impressive public appearance. but aJmost never ad· dresses himself to a substantive issue with answers anyone can und erstand. It's a matter of style, of course. Brown's spartan living habits. his modest demands for creature comforts and his rejection of pomp set him apart from most high office holders. We only wish that style included the ability to think in ll straight lin e and to explain those thoughts in simple, dcc:larativc sentences. Watch Mo-ped Rules Like it or not, il·s a fairly safe bet we'll be seeing a Jot more mo-peds on the r6ads after Christmas Day: They 're among the more popular of this year's girt items. Sl}1all wonder. They're ideal for people who can't af- ford the price or the upkeep of a car -especially young people. This is where the problems begin. The mo-ped craze has blossomed so rapidly there's been a deal of confusion about just who can and cannot ride them. So it's important for parents to know that the Depart- ment of Motor Vehicles has stiffened the rules on mo· peds since the last driver's handbook was pJJbllshed. The minimum age· for operating s mo-ped now is 15'f.l years. And the operator must have completed both driver education (in class) and driver training <on the road> and hold a valid learner's permit. Formerly a minimum age of 15 and enrollment in driver eclllcatiQJl clai;s was suffi- cient. ' Of course holders or regular driver's licenses also ' may operate mo-peds, but all operators are subject to all rules of the state vehicle code, including financial obliga. tion requirements. The DMV stresses that the motorized bikes are not suitable for gifts for 13-or 14-year-ollfs -and operators not meeti ng the age and licensing requiremebts can be cited. If the pressure is on for a mo-ped for Chrisbaas, • make it a gift certificate -to be honored when the gJftee has complied with all the requirements of the law. • Opinions expressed In the space above are thote of the a.fly Ptrot. Othef views expressed on this page are ~ of U.lr "1th0ra .,_. artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addreu The Oei'V ,Hot. P.O. Sox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92828. Phone (714) 842-4.!21. · Boyd/Eyes ByLM.BOYD Young lady, I( you want that fellow tQ notice the color of your eyes, wear a dress of a complementary color. Blue eyes are accented by an , orange dress, for Instance. 1 Green eyes, a red dress. Gray eyes, a blue dress. Brown "eyes, don't know, what color best accents brown? Anywhay, if yaur eyes are bloodshot, better not hi1bli1bt their red by wearing a green dress. And I suppose a gitl with eyt1 Jlke ralalns . ought not •eU-clotf\es tbe color ol bran. ''Actually, it would not hurt a baby if it never bad a bath,•• say British pbr,sicians Margaret Kerr and Gavin Arnell. My word! No bath? Ever? Q . 1 'What•1 a •swift wafker'?" A. That's what the earliest· of tbe import.e4 bicycles were: called. • Jn Algeria, ,eourt nnea can be paid in beer. Robert N. Wffd/Publlsti.r ThotnH Keevll/Edltor Barber• Krwlbjch/Edltortal P-oe Edftot" Carter Plans NeW Work Habits WASHINGTON-Hopes inside tM Cuter admJatatration for better thblp 1aext year have been booeted by th1I word ~ming out Of the 0¥81 Office: Jimmy Carter wants to rid himself of as much detail as pcuible la the aecood year of b1a presidency. That ii an unpubllclied New Year'• resolution both Carter cronies and key officials devoutly hope the President will not forget. The over!lowin& in-basket that bas become the trade-· -mark ol this' presidency. not only means Mr. Carter rnay be devoting too much time to the wrong activity, it is also viewed inside the administration and on Capitol Hill as a source of positive harm. Put blunUy, the President in solitary contempla- tion sometimes gets the wrong ideas about matters better left to the experts. This remarkable fact tells much about bitter disappoint- ments of the first Carter year felt by many of his supporters. Supremely confident of his own intellect, he has developed neither a top-notch White House staff nor a trusted kitchen cab I net of experienced counselors. This leaves no way to protect him from his own misin- terpretation of the facts. Accord- ingly. his New Year's resolution to step back from the deluge of details is welcome news in the admuustration. WHEN CARTER intimate Charles Kirbo visited here from Georgia recently saying how much older his friend looked, he e<:hoed a prevailing theme of Washington. While the conven- tional holiday wisdom of 1974 and 1975 was that President Ford ought to cancel his annual skiing vacation and get down to work,· the conventional wisdom today is that President Carter out to let up on his work and iet down to pJay. Actually, there Is divided opln· Ion in bl8 offtelal tamlly about the seriousness of the Pl'esJdent's workaholic afntctioo. Some or- ficiaJs Point out he ls seldom at his desk much after 5:30 p.m. and obviously et\ioys v.reekencta at Camp David. 8ut others note that wbeMv~ and wherever Mr. Carter takes Ume off, be carries that u blquitowl fUe folder bulging with work and actually plunges into it. What worrles eveeybody, In addition to whether the Presl· dent is working too hard, is whether be is doin' the wrong work. Beginnlnf with the economic atlmulation pacbse nearly a year ego, Mr. Cart.er has pi'obed and acrutJnbed every program \fit.h intenalve, solitary study. The procedure rellect& his massive self-confidence and engineerts belief that he can master any situation by himself. The danger of this is best shown by tax reform. Entering In step Nicholas Von Hoffman .> tbe presldency wttb his HM· P•lf.1.! litany that tbe tu intern is 'a di1Jgrace to the hueian race .. but with precious few de- tails, be became immenecl. in a self·taught cram courae °" tbe Internal Jle\<enue Code.. Accordlng to congresslonal tax experts, Mr. Carter got a few things wrong -dangerously wron1. The decision to set aside comprehensive tax reform because ol the needed qulck tax cut next year saves lllm from mOllt such mistakes. But lnslders rep>rt that. aa a Mlf-educated tax npert. the President had checked the wroeg box too many ilmea •the option lbeets. TBEllE AU bofdes of tu ex· perts at the Tre&aUJ'Y ud the Congreis wbo6e advice the Presl· dent could tap ... But t ask you,·· one expert told us. "who i8 going lo stand up to the President look him in the eye and tell him. 'Mr. President, you've got this stuff you studied all wrong'? .. Herein is reflected a deeper problem of the Carter presiden- cy. His White House staff ls re- garded as grossly deficient in or- ganization and partially deCicient in high-caliber talent. With Kirbo and Bert Lance both in Georgia, there is no peer who can look the President in the eye and tell him he iswroog. · Mr. carter is not happy over the way his lime bas been al.. located this year. He has ex- pressed dissatisfaction with the endless meelings selling the Panama Canal treaties and is now signalling that he really would like to delegate deskwork in a more traditional way. THE PROSPECT of President Carter spending less time in solitary contemplation cheers many officials. Looking further ahead, they would welcome more verbal give-and-take In the Oval Office and during Increasingly antiseptic cabinet meetings. But un{ortunately that does not ap- pear among his New Year's resolutions for 1978. Humphrey Gives Us a Lesson in Dying W ASRINGTON -The deaths 9f our most famous people come u a surprise. At one moment they are well and being taken for granted and in the next minute there is a slide with their photo on it behind John Chancellor telling us that some naroe that had been part of our social landscape is 1one. No advance warning is pro-· vJded ualess you count those •wf1d death watches out· ~---aJ cl e the h O't pit al It wbleb spring ~ r f . ::sn the TV .. ,.. when the auper famous .. .P,••• from Ploacaa. ·senator R•bert llmn- -.rey bas chosen another way. He bu let It be known that bis doctors cooaider him mortally lit. Terminal is the adjective used. lt's one of those shattering euphemlBms that is so much more depressing than the Anglo- Saxon saying, "The man is dy- ing." SOME SOCIETIES are insis- tent that the llvtng be separated from tbedead, and terminal with Its original Latin meaning of boundary does that. Since it also bas ·connotations of ·clinical Mepsls. ol stainless steel. of eyes over surgical masks looking throqb thick etaas. termlnal is more. than final, more of the end than the end . It is odd that this society, so many of whose members are practicing Christians, should favor words so bleak, so terminal. "Jn e>tpectation of life everlasting" Is how the prayer goes, but in public, at any rate, tew show signs of believing it. Senator Humphrey has. He has given us a role model for dying. The Greeks and the Romans spoke of the good death; they believed that part of living was learning how to die. We, who are assiduous in pro- viding role modela for ourselves for any number of act.ivilies moe't of us are not likeJy to engage in, have no model for dying the death which assuredly we.shall all do. In this the senator may be performing his most valuable service for us in a long career of doing much for which we ought to be grateful. THESE PAST fe months, people have increasingly re· ferred lo Mr. Humphrey as the "Happy Warrior," a sobriquet originally conferred on Al SmJtb by Franklin Roosevelt. Bowler Derby Al, whospenthlslastyears acting like a sourpuss, dldn 't de- serve ii. Sen. Humphrey does. . Against the cancer terrors he has been a Happy Warrior. You can ima11ne ho• other qes thought about the plaJue. or smallpox oc lubkcuJoans. rec. ognizing how we think about cancer. We are so terrified by the tbr-eat of that diagnosis that we are defeated by the very name. Sen. Humphrey, in bis com- posure, in bis steadfast good humor, is the Happy Warrior. He is teaching us a lesson we have forgotten: The spirit does not die. We have reached a point of de- testing death so utterly that we are debasing life with our fearing and turbulent emotions. We don't want to think about it, we shrink back from the dying and hlde them, as we occasionally and reproachfully remind ourselves, in curtained hospital corners. If the processes of life, one of which is dying, can be so hateful, then the life we bug in our terror is idiotically meaningless, then there is no spirit, no heritage but genetic, and we ourselves are but a statistically random occur- rence in a moronic infinity. EFFORTS ARE ,under way here to establish houses for the dying. It makes better sense than to have dying people in a hospital, given up for hopeless, terrifying the personnel so that, although. the staff can perform the mechanical services perhaps, they cannot give suc· cor. Such houses, sometimes called hospices, are a cflarac- teristlc Of our times . • •• the specialized institu'tion for yet another category of person. It may be a very worthwhile and needecJ idea. But it Is not the picture or the good death as earlier generations or Americans had imagined it and sometimes died it. It is not the ancestor rich in years and wisdom, his or her famlly gathered about the bedside right down to the great- grands, taking a genUe leave. The hospice suggests, alt.hough it isn't the intention of those working in them, a final procds- ing out of the human unit. Nol from ashes to ashes. not from dust to dust, but thou werl born under ceiling lights, surrounded · by tile walls, unto the bands of mass strangers and under the same nuorescence you shall be conducted by professionally qualified strangers into the idiot. void. TO DIE by means other than by being processed upon, by yet the last of the string or institu- tions through whkb the moving sidewalk has taken us, we cannot be passjve. Sen. Humphrey is showing us that death need not be as it is depicted on TV, something that comes to us, that is inflicted on us. done to us. n can be an act we do. It can be the capstone ol a Jife or meaning, and by doing it right impart meaning to others. In times past people spoke of an edlfYing death, an instructive death, tor he who shows us how to die shows us how to Uve. That is Hubert Humphrey's laat and best. gllt to us. God bless him. !Tax Confusion Cuts Across M Income Levels precise quote. But it ls not correct. Presidtnt Carter ll not the tint to parrot this poliUc•l bunkum. No wonder we. the people. are misled. Here are the nmben dlrec:t from the Internal R•nnue Service: The average person wllh a ~Al• tnc:ome of $1.0,000 a year pa.kl 10.3 percent in federal iacometaxe. THE AVSMOE perit0n with a taxable tncome of 1 million dollars a year paid ct.2 perc.nl Wb11e poUUc:lans protest that inaay rtch ~pay no lax• at all, the JM conft.nna tbt ....ae ln lb• $100,000 to $1 mlllloD bracket the ldt HdltM ,.er pald a tAUl of• BIWON in tin· c:ometuea. And Ute IRS ~flrm1 that moat tu_.,_.. an ID tM Wl· audited eebelon; tbat most tax cheaters make less tban $10,000 a year. SonowtheJRSis undertak· ing \0 audluome of them. One ot these cases is Helen, a waJtreu in a busy cafe, who did not keep track of her tips. When c:omputing her tax ~ turn 1he "pesstlmaled." She reported a total of tl90 in tips for the year. That would mean tba\ she received 16 cents an hour Jn µp.. -Tbe Tnhrrul Revenue Service dido 't buy that. The JRS peopJe recomputed and came up wltb their own guesstimate. They U1ured that tbla r partk\llar care•s credit card Hliil .--... u. evtrace Up,... meal wM W percenl Bffa .. WiaitrtNes customari-lr live_...,. a m of each UP; the IRS rtduffd that avera .. io 12.5 percent Then tho IRS computed average saJes per waJtttss P1f1:r hour and multipU~ that by U.S to get tips per waltren per bour. Tbat Is 6 .04. Helen Worked 1,833 hou~ Jaat year -indtcattn1 U1at she pocketed ln Ups -not a total of $290 -but a total of $3, 739. -- • Editorial Pf!fl.e .......................................................... -Robert N. Wted/Publl$MI' ThcMNs Keevfl/Edftor Berber• Krelbkh/EdftCWlll PIOI Editor ~vernor Charms WhiJe Confusll.ig An ah' of sagacity seems to hang over the public ap.- peatances of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. · He•s charming. He studs illere, trim))' dressed a wry smile passing his handsome face now and then. ma 1estures are appropriate. his vocabulary sttumlng. He pokes in an outrageous statement here and there to color his remarks. He reaches Into tunnels of h1a mind and ex· plores topics of the wJdest range. What comes out of this speech or interview or prey conference. however, more often than not is murky, ton· fusing and contradictory. Sometimes it is pure gibberish. The governor put in a typical performance in a re- cent interview with The Associated Press. It was published in the Daily Pilot Monday. Speaking of a statewide land use plan -somethine like the Proposition 20 Coastal Commission operation - Brown said he was pushing very hard for such a program and may have something to announce in a few weeks. Minutes later, he said. "I don't see any big land use plan on the front or back burner.•• He cited the coastal commissions as a major achieve- m ent of bis administration. Just before that, he had declared. "I'll) very supportive of community control. I 've had my fill of central bureaucracies." He told the AP that state-imPoSed controls over sub- urban sprawn conflict with individual rights. In the next breath, he saw it differently: "Certaio land is more appropriate for certain uses than for other uses and we have to strive for the best use of .land. The state has.a role in that." In typical Brown style, he tossed in a few whimsies. Speaking of building homes on agricultural land, he asked rhetorically, "Ha ppy people or happy vegetables?" It didn't mean anything, but it sounds like a profundity. So do a lot of Brownisms. The Jong and s hort of it is that Brown somehow puts on a n impressive public a ppearance, but almost never ad- dresses himself to a substantive issue with answers anyone can understand. It's a matte r of style, of course. Brown's spartan living ha bits, his modest dem ands for creature comforts and his rejection of pomp set him apart from most high office holders. We onl y wish that style included the ability to think in <J s traight line and to explain those thoughts in simple, declarative sentences. Watch Mo-ped Rules Like it or not. it's a fairly safe bet we'll be seeing a Jot more mo-peds on the roads after Christmas Day: They're among the more popular of this year's gift items. S91all wonder. They're ideal for people who can't af- ford tbc price or the upkeep of a car -especially young people. This is where the problems begin. The mo-ped craze has blossomed so rapidly there's been a deal or confusion about just who can and cannot ride them. So it's important for parents to know that the Depart- ment of Motor Vehicles has stiffened the rules on mo- peds since the last driver 's handbook was published. The mini mum age for operating a mo·J)ed now is 15~ years. And the operator must have completed both driver education <in class) and driver training <on the road) and bold a valid learner's permit. Formerly a minimum age of 15 and enrollment in driveT edpcatiQJl cta,s was sum. cient. '• Of course holders of regular driver's licenses also ' m ay operate mo-peds, but all operators are subject to all rules of the state vehicle code, including finaricial obliga- tion requirements. The OMV stresses that the motorized bikes are not suitable for gifts for 13· or 14·year·olds -and operators not m eeting the a ge and licensing rec:tuirements can be cited. If the pressure is on fo1· a mo-ped for Christ.mas •. make it a gift certificate -to be honored when the giftee has complied with all the requirements of the law. • Opinions expressed in the space above are thow of the Detty Plfot. Other views expressed on this page are thoM of their autttora end artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addreq The Deity Pfto'9 P.O. Sox 1560, Coata Mesa, CA 92628. Phone (714) 64~1. • Boyd/Eyes ByLM.BOVD Young lady, I( you want that fellow to notlce the color ot your eyea, wear a dress of a complementary color. Blue eyes are accented by an , orange dress, for instance. Green eyes. a red dress. Gray eyes. a blue dress. Brown -eyes, don't know, what color best accen,.ts brown? Anywhay, it your eyes are bloodshot, better not bl1hligbt their red by wearing a green dras. And I suppose a girl with e"' Jlke ralslns ought not •ear clothes th• color of bran. "Actually, it would not hurt a ba by if it never bad a bath," s ay British physicians Margaret Kerr and Gavin Arnell. My word! No bath? Ever? Q . ''What's a 'swift walker'?'' A. That's what the earliest• of the lmportecfbieyclea were: called. ln Algeria, cowt !Joes can be paid in beer. Q. "What book bolds the re- cord for receiving the most rejectioos before flnaUy be- ing taken bY a publisher?'' A. Could be a biography of the late actor Jifoaa&gomery Clift called "Monty" by Rqbert LaGuardl.,. It WH tamed don-~ four 1eanWcn~. ~ R owlmd. E vaiu /Roi.e ri No¥a· ' Carter Plans New Work Hal1its , WASIDNGTON -Ropes inside tM Carter admfnlatratJon !or bett.er th.lap Dat ~ar bave been booat.cl bf th1I TtON coming out oltbeon!Offtce: JiatlDYCarter wants to rid hlmself of as much detail u poaible lo tbe second )'earof bla presidency. That 1t an unpubllcl1ed New \',ear's ra.oJuUon boUl Carter' cronies and key offlclall devoutly bope t&e President will not forget. The overtlowina 1n·ba•ket that bas become the trade- -mart of this' presidency. not only means Vr. Carter may be devol.lng too much time to the wrong activity, it is also viewed inside the administration and on Capitol Hill as a source ofposltive harm. Put bluntly, the Preslcfent in solitary contempla- tion sometimes gets the wrong ideas about matters better le!t to the eX})el'ts. This remarkable !act tells much about bitter disap'Point- ments of the first Carter year felt by many of bls supporters. Supremely confident of his own intellect, he has developed neither a top-notcb White House staff nor a trusted kitchen cabinet of experienced counselors. This leaves no way lo protect him from bis own misin· terpretation of the facts. Accord- ingly, his New Year's resolution to step back from the deluge of deta ils is welcome news in the administration. WHEN CARTER intimate Charles KJrbo visited here from Georgia recently saying how much older his friend looked, he echoed a prevailing theme of Washington. While the conven- tional holiday wisdom or 1974 and 1975 was that President Ford ought to cancel his annual skiing vacation and get down to work,· the co;ventional wisdom today is that President Caner out to Jet up on hla work and tet down to play. Actually, Uaero f1 divided opln· Ion ln bis Cllftclal (amlly about the aerlOtlSness ot the President's work4bollc atructton. Some of· ftcials po(nt out be la seldom at his desk much after :S:30 p.m. and obviously enjoys weekends at Camp David. But others note that whenever and wherever Mr. Carter takes time off, be carries that ublqultom Ille folder bulging wlth work and actually plunges Into it. Wbat worries eveeybody, Jn addition to whether the Presl· dent ls workinf too bard, ii whether be is dolnc the wroni work. Begtonlaf' wltb the economic stimulation packaae nearty a year ago. Mr. Carter has probed and acrutJnJzed every program with intetUive, solitary study. The procedure rellect.s hiS massive selr·confldence and engineer's belief that he can master any situation by blmsel!. The danger of this is best shown by tax reform. Entering '" step Nicholas Von Hoffman th• pl'esldency wtth his edl• paJ~ UtaQy that U. tax s,aem ls •a dlsgrace to UM human race" but with precious fW de. tails, he became immenecl tn. a self·taulbt erun coune oa &be lDternaf Revenue Coda. According to eon1resslanal tax experts, Mr. Carter rot a few thlngs wront -dangeroUity wrong. The decialon to aet aside comprehenalve tax reform because ol the needed qulclt tax cut next year saves him from most such mi.Ii.tea. But iu1ders report that. u a eelf-eduuted tax expert. the President bad <:hectecl tbo wrong box too many timQGO tbo~abe«I. THEU AU boc'des'Of ta ex· perts at the TreuQl'1 aad the Congreaswboeeadvlce.the Prest· dent could tap. •·But I ask you,·• one expert told us, "who ii going to stand up to the President look him in the eye and Lell him, 'Mr. President, you've got this sturt you studied all wrong"!" Herein ls reflected a deeper problem of the Carter presiden- cy. Hls White House staff ls re- garded as grossly deficient in or- ganization and partially deficient in high.caliber talent. With Kitbo and Bert Lance both in Georgia, there ls no peer who can took.the President in lbe eye and tell blm heiswroog. · Mr. Carter is not happy over the way his time bas been al- located this year. He bas ex- pressed dissatisfaction with the endless meetings sellinc the Panama Canal tl'eaties and is now aignalUng that he rea11y would like to delegate deskwork in a more traditional way. THE PROSPECT of President Carter spending less time in solltary contemplation cheers many officials. Looking further ahead, they would welcome more verbal give·and·take fn tbe Oval Office and during increasingly antiseptic cabinet meetings. But un(ortunately that does not af!" pear among his .New Year s resolutions for 1978. Humphrey Gives Us a Lesson in Dying W ASmNGTON -The deaths of our most famous people come u a surprise. At one moment they are well and being taken for granted and ln the next minute there ls a slide with their photo on it behind John Chancellor telling · us that some name that had been part of our aocial landscape is a one. No advance warning is pro· · vlded. uQJess you count those awfcll death watches out-• l 4 e the b O't pit al wtUcb spring up.ft the TV aed Wbell the avper lamou.s P••• from tmoac1111. ·Senator Rabert llmn· llftrey hu chosen another way. ke bu let lt be known that bis doctors coaaider him mortally ut. Terminal is the adjective u.aed. tl's one of those shattering euphemisms that is so much more depressing than the Anglo· Sa)ton saying, "The man ls dy· ing." SO•E SOCIETIES are inaia· tent tbat lh4' Uvtng be separated from tbe dead. and terminal with ill orJgtnal Latin meaning of boundary does that. Since i.t also b .. ·eonnotalions of ·clinical aaepsls, ot stainlesa steel, of eyet over surgical masts looking tbroq.b tlllek tlua, terminal la Pablllarvey more· than final, more of the end than the end. It is odd that this society, so many of whose members are pracUcing Christians, should favor words so bleak, so ~rminal. "In expectation pf life everlasting" is bow the prayer goes, but in public, at any rate, few show signs of believing it. Senator Humphrey has. He has given us a role model for dying. The Greeks and the Romans s~ke of the good death; they bflieved that part of living was lea ming how to die. We , who are assiduous in pro- viding role models for ourselves for aiiy number or activities most of us are not Ukely to engage in, have no model for dying tbe death which assuredly wubaU all do. In this lhe senator may be performing his most valuable service for us in a Jong career of doing much for wh.ich we ought to be grat.e!ul. THESE PAST few months, people have increasingly re· !erred to Mr. Humphrey as the "Happy Warrior,'' a sobriquet originally conferred on Al Smith by Franklin Roosevelt. Bowler Derby Al, wbo a pent bis last years acting like a sourpuss, didn't de- serve it. Sen. Humphrey does. . Against the cancer terrors he bas been a Happy Warrtor. You can ima1ine bow other aies thought about t,be plague, Ot' smallpox or tubtrcuJosls. rec. ognizing bow we think about cancer. We are so terrified by the th~at of that diagnosis that we are defeated by the very name. Sen. Humphrey, in bis com· posure, in his steadfast good humor, is the Happy Warrior. He Js teaching us a lesson we have forgotten: The spirit does not die. We have reached a point of de- testing death so utterly that we are debasmg life with our fe aring and turbulent emotions. We don't want to think about it. we shrink back from the dying and hide them, as we occasionally and reproachfully remind ourselves. in curtained hospital corners. IC lhe processes of life, one of which is dying, can be so hateful, then the life we hug in our terror is idiotically meaningless, then there is no spirit, oo heritage but genetic, and we ourselves are but a statistically random occur· rence in a moronic infinity. EFFORTS ARE ,under way here to establish houses for the dying. It makes better sense than to have dying people in a hospital, given up for hopeless, terrifying the personnel so that. although the staff can perform th e m e chanical s ervices perhaps, they cannot give suc- cor. Such houses, sometimes called hospices, are a cflarac- teriatic of our times • • •• the apeciallzed institution for yet another category of person. lt Illa)' be a very worthwhile and n~ idea. But It la not the picture of the good death as earlier generations or Americans bad imagined it and sometimes died lt. It is nol tbe ancestor rich in years and wisdom, his or her family gathered about the bedside right down to the great- grands, taking a genUe leave. The hospice suggests, althouib it lsn 't the intention of those working in them, a final proceAs- ing out of lhe human unit. Not from ashes to ashes, not from dust to dust, but thou wert born under celling lights, surrounded ·by tile walls, unto the hands of mass strangers and under the same fluorescence you shall be conducted by professionally qualified strangers into the idiot. void. TO DIE by means other than by being processed upon, by yet the last of the string of institu- tions through which the moving sidewalk has taken us, we cannot be paasive. Sen. Humphrey is showing u.t that death need not be as it is depicted on TV. something that comes to us, that is inflicted on us, done to us. It can be an act we do. tt can be the capstone of a Ufe of meaning, and by doing it rfghl Impart meaning to others. In times put people spoke of an edifying death, an in.strucUve death, fbr he wbo shows u.a how to die shows us bow to live. that la Hubert Humphrey's lut aad best. gift to ua. God bless him. !fax Confusion Cuts Across All lncoine Levels preciaequote. But it is not correct. Pres1dent Cart.er II not the '1nlt ~ parrot tbls polltlcal bunkw:a. No wonder we. the people, a.re miaJed. Here are the numben direct from tbe Internal Rnenue Service: Tbe avera1e person wltb a ~~lncomeof $101000 • yur pe.ld 10.J percent In federal lacometax•. TUE AVDAOE person with a taxable Income or a mlllion doll an a year paid 4t.2 percent. While poUtlciana protest that maay rtch DtOPll pay no taxes at all, the IRS coftllnna tbt MOPI• in the $100,000 to '1 mUUoa bracket t.be last 1.utwd ,..ar pald a total of • BIWON ln in· c:omeu.ue; And tM IRS collllrma that moet tax e:m.t .. are ID tbe un- ' audited echelon; that m ost tax c~aten make less than $10,000 a year. So now the IRS is undertak· ing to audit some of them. One ol U.e cases is Helen. a waitress tn a busy care, who did not keep track of her Ups. When computing her tax re· tum abe ''cuessUmaled." She reported • total of $290 in tips for ~ year. That would mean that she received 16 cents an hour tn tiPs· ·The tnhrnal Revenue Servicedldn't buy that. · The IRS people recomouted and came up wl\h their own aae11ttmate. They fi1ured that tblt parttcular care'a credlt card ..... •bowtd a.-averap tJp per meal w•ll.tpercent. Beea-Waltl'laa custqma;t. ty. ii" baibo)'I a cut of Heb tJp. the JU Nduced that anra• to • 12.5 percent. Th e n the J RS computed average sales per waltress per hour and multiplied that by 12..5 to get tips per waltreH per bout. Thatiilll,CN. Helen' 'VOl'ked 1,833 hou"' t~ year -lndleatin1 \bat a~ poelceted ln tlpa -not J ... ot '290 -but a total or $.1119. I .. - AP .......... Surrerlders to Police Orlando Vasquez, Houston, Tex., ts guarded by officer I. H. Mars upon his sur· render after fi11e days hiding in an attic. According to police, Vasquez and three CQmpanions broke into a pawn shop in an attempted burglary. The three companions were captured in the shop, but Vasquez fled to the attic where he remained until h1s surrender. SF Park Pass Program Eyed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Thousands of San Franciscans will start the new year with a $10 chance 1n a sort of parking lottery that innovators hope will increase spaces for neighborhood resi· dents and encourage out-o(-towners to car-poC)l. City traffic experts say the experiment in parking_ control will be keenly watched by dozens of other American cities that face parking miseries. THE PROGRAM BEGINS JAN. 1 in North Beach, where residents complain the neighborhood, which includes Telegraph and Russian hills, has decayed into a parking lot for commutera. San Francisco traffic engineer Norman Bray says the parking program will work like this: Car owners who can prove they live in the 92. block sector being used in the program pay $10 per year for a small bumper sticker. • THE .BTICK'Eli TFi.Ls.'A MEtEB'mald thtlt the parked auto belongs to a resident and may be there for more than two hours. Any car without a sticker parked Car more than two houra will get a $10 cltaUoo. l>resently, there is no Wne limit on park.Ing on moat of the streets in the area . .. It is not our intent to penalize people who live here," says Nancy Katz, who led the neighborhood's battle for permit parking. "The thrust is to try and get the commuter to use other ways of gettlnB to town rather than one person per car. . ••fT'S UNFAIR THAT THEY should use our neighborhood streets for all-day parkins," adds Ms. Katz, who has lived in North Beach 25 yean. The city began work on the plan tbls year alter 1,200 residenta signed a petition demanding permit parking. According to Bray, omcials who conducted ear- ly studies found that 4,SOO cars were being crammed into the neighborhood'• f.)00Jeeal1treet parking spots each day. . · In a suney ()f the neJgbborl>ood'• 9,300 homes, the ao percent who responded favored permit park· lne by a 2-1 margin. liUT OPPONENTS ARE OUTRAGED at the l'ell\lt.s. They don't like the idea of having to pay SlO t.o park for more than two hours in their own 11elabborbood. "I don't think It's right that I should have to pay to park In front of my house," says Tony V"emale. who lives in a three·block area where a mJniature venlon of the experiment was tried. Bray says traffic experts from several cities -fnclu<l~ San Diego, Phoeqix and Denver -"are ~lttln• back· apd letting us be the trallbl'uers." Br'1 said the program may be extended to other areas of the ell$' UJt works in ~lorth Beach. STILL, omaALS .UE CAUnOUS in pre-d.leUne wbttJier th~ program will work. Sa19 las t ol&or.Jobn Molinari, wM drafted the permit parklnti legislaUon: "Even the residents may 10 bonkers ... deck ·.the halls ~. . . ~ with Christmas decorations A great reduction on all Chrlatmaa decoratlons1 except light sets and trM stands. A large assortment of garland, bows, wrap paper, bulbs, tree shirts and more. What a perfect time to get those almost forgotten Items.to lend the Christmas spirit we c•rry kettle cookeri ... , doitble your burger pleasure We have• ~rge .. 1~t1on of Webet 8 41 • . When QM Is not enough .•• Juat tyrn 21 a 8 kettle cookers In atock. Slack ~ on your 'Double Mac· by Hamilton 101<710. Reg. 78.$5 • Stmch and broil two burgers to CtMn, flU2f.710, .... lt.tS ............................... 7 4.95 perteclk>n fas II Reg. 26.99 • .. , _. ... .,..;;n;im ---~- doriuiS . for dunkera Ma~• piping hot, man-size doita In jU•t mloutn ... two at a tlm I ll'a f.,t, HIY tun and cf Ing up lo even .. ay1 Recipe boolc lnet. Reg. 24.95 1711 J pop •e to ut or sb'lng The 019.a ~ Popcorn Mechlnel RMdy to u• "~ and dlsplay. Self·bOtterlng flip. ·n Htw oover, And OuPon\ Tallon II IU1'face. o4 qt. ~aclty. 118-90. Reg. 22.95 1'8~~ . . holl~ay gift boxes multl·functlon cooker Hamllton Beach brlnga you the 'try-aM' deep fryer cooker tor meal• end anaeka In mlnutea. Reg. 17.99 14aa iwiiJ~ this gadget can sa,e your tte · SenM1 & alerta ~ at first alon of fire °' amoke, E..ity lnataltecs. Batter( ll\C6...Rtg. <4L85. 2488 • .. ' TI)urtday. December 22. l '477 ORANGE COUNTY ,... ______ ...,. ________ . County Reform Backed "-••Is by )oMphs Is Marching for diamonds and gematonea from private Ind vlduals and ~tea, Clreful • examination and evaluation by our ••'*1S· H6ghest prices paid. Cati 540-9066 1l~i dally, SJturday . 1<>.e,., SunClay clOMd. Mk ror BetW Grace 0, f:ranlC VandefW.111 iewels by ioseph South Coast Pfaza·~3333 Bristol, Costa MMe• 90e8 FOil.THE PROFISSIOHAL TOUCH: DECO INTERIORS IMTBIOR PLAHHING AND COMSULTIHG C ........ ~of • ..,.,.., ........... C..,..., ftoeriiMJ. ...... twy ............... _. ~ ... Visit Our Design Studio 211'2 ~ ......... MhAoil Yi.to ·-............ ~..,"""·Ml._ .. ,.,..._, 05-0102 M•dery ttw'll s.ew., / U0.0400 \\t:.lclirf C11~lom lailorin& and Men's Wear 1\32 IRVINC. AV(NU(, WESlCLIFF PLAZA, NEWPORr BEACH . . . ~Y Gowns by $18 sportsw~r_._1 ...... ~ . 61$.1904 ................. ..... ;.. Supervison Order Limits, Disclosure B7KATllYCLANCY °' .......... s.... A pr~ pOlitJcaJ campaign reform ordinance that would ltmlt donatJons but not campaign a,Pftdtng ln countywide races has woa tentative approval from Oranie Cc>unty Supehti.sor.s. • Atfer two days of wading throueh live proposals submitted for possible approval. aupervisorf ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper Wednes- day to draw up a meaaure that would: -LIMIT DONATIONS from lndl viduals, corporations or other groups to $1,000 per elec· tion. -Require candidates for county office to disclose the source ol all donations, no matter what the sum. -Create a fair campaign pracUces commission that would exami8e campaign flnnace rec~ orc1s as well as campaign literature and acUvities. -INCB.EASE THE number or words that may be contained in a candidate's statement of qualifications mailed· to reg. jstered voters from 200 to 400 words. Left out of the rt!form package was Superviaor Ralph Clark's proposal to encoural{e limits on cuipaign spending. His proposal would have permitted candidates to volun- tarily abide by a fair ci\rnPaJ&n pratllces commission code or et.bl~. ~8E ETHICS CODE would Umft campaign spendin& to 75 cents per registered votor in cowttywide races Jnd 15 cents per voter in supervisors' races. In addiUqo, such candidates would have the commission's logo affixed to their campaien material and would be allawed to mail printed material at county expense to yoters along' with re- gularly mailed ballot matel'ia.IJ. Clark cast the lone dissenting vole wben supervisors cut out those provisions. KUYPER SAID nlE proposal might be open to legal challenge and Supervisor Ralph Diedrich contended he was certain it would be unconstitutional. Board Chairman Tt\omas Riley asked, "If it isn't going to be legal, who are we fooling?" Clark argued, "We have been through this act here three or four times while I have been on this board. Now is the time de- finitely when we have to do something. 'Silent Forest' Star 61WE CAN FIND problems with anyt.blq that cqme• before us," he continued. But Supervisor Philip Anthor\y said, "Having people mak~ con- tracts with the •overoment to get ;special privtlegea ls extremely dangerous and un-Amerlcan. • • "Holy Toledb, •• Clark re.plied. "That is the Jut thing that 1 ever intended here. . "CERTAINLY IT IS un - American to be spending ludicrous aino~ts on campaigns and it is un-American to be ln· volved .•. monetarily t9 such a 1 d~cree thatitts almostshl!ul. .. Clark aaid he thought the voluntary nature of candidates" signing the code of et.hies would• avoid constitutional challenges. "You folks are all making syn. tbetic problems, hypothetical cases," be continued. BUT ANTHONY areued, "I Wnk it is a terrible approach." Left undecided by supervlaon was when the new ordinance might go into effect. Kuyper has warned enforce- ment might be difficult if the measure were effective for the 1978 elecUons, since' some supervisors already have cam- paign coffers with donations of ~ore than the proposed limits. .Seal Hooks Film-maker By JACKIE HYMAN Ot ... o.Hy ,.li.t Staff They l<>dk two fish hooks out of the seal's back and made her a star. · . This month, readers of Na- tional Geographic World can see photos of Fish Hook, the harbor seal, swimming off Catalina Island. The pictures were taken :{: as part of the filming of the half· hour documeQtary "Silent Forest," made by Lewis Trusty of Newport Beach and two as- sociates. AFTER THEY RESCVED the seal from its fish hook agony, Trusty said, "a complete bond ol friendship wu establlabed. She's the star character for my film." He said the mm, which took" more than two yean to make, follows Fish Hook through California's kelp beds, focusing on the interdependence or life. "It's basically about the web or life or the kelp bed communi- ty, and the harbor seal is only a vehicle we use to take you through the kelp beds," Trusty said. , AT ONE POINT durlnc lbe fllming, Fish Hook disappeared for fiv~ month.~. She th.en reap- peared with her pup and spent a day swimming with the crew, Trusty said. Fame may not mean much to a seal, but she's winning It • anyway. "Silent Forest" won first prize in the International Underwater Photographic Socie· ty com~Uoo this year and wm be dislriboted to high school and junior coUege classrooms. Truaty aaid he co-wrote th~ o.irr 1'119C S!Mf ,... .. BONO OF FRIENDSHIP Newport's lewis Trusty script with Kris Meier and filmed it, wiUibelpfrom Dr. Tom Cowell. It centers around Catalina Island with some.shots off Mon- tere~ andSanta Bitrbara. TllUS'I:Y, A .PAR'f-TIME Cinancial analy!\&. sto~kbroker and real estate agent, ~inanced the film itself, ~pendir\g about $20,000for materials. He direC!ted ~d. w,1th co- author Meier, edited the film himse)f, but credits much of its scientific accuracy to advice from a variety ot scientists at the University of Southern California Marine Lab and from Dr. Wheeler North at the Caltech K~rckhoff Marine Lab m Corona del Mar. Filming ''Silent Forest" in- volved plenty of adventure, Trusty acknowledges. AT ONE POINT, he and his crew were filming with' $10,000 worth of cameras on a 16-foot rubber boat when the vessel began to sink. Fortunately, a nearby fishing boat rescued the ca~eras anfi Trusty and friends manag~ to motor to shore although the boat had takenonalotofwater. T~e idea for shooting an un- derwater film came naturally to Trusty. 3$, who's lived in Orang~ Couo ty for ,lbe past 12 years. "I STARTEl1 •IVJNG when I was 10, diving for cOfns from the steamship that used to go te Catalina," Trusty said. "It wu something 1 always justloved." He also played with cameras while a teen-ager and later at- tended USC film school. ''Silent Forest" satisfies the require- ments for his master's degree . Trusty, who alread~ bas a master's in business adminlstra- . lion, Is considering going on foe a PhD in communications. But not right away. "I WANT TO STAY in educa- tional fllms. And we have a pro- posed book that several pubUtbers are interested in, also called 'Silent Forest,"' he said. So, •llhough she's freeb roaming the coast of California, Fish Hook is still swimmint; through Trusty's life. Perhaps, he admits, when he unbooked her. he got. booked himself. 40%ofl OD imported Christmas orn~nl8 & lights. Decorate your tree or give them as gifts. Umlted to .tock Oft hand through 12/2'/77 • R~ ~d«M • 6to.5ll00 S.an ~"et MIKAtlhW' • New,Mt Buch·--- Ag Association Applications Due ~· NMDtf'S "St1:51td!NR •&Nl(OF~• ~~·~~·~'$it¥$~·~ ~ 2 . Applications must be turned in before Christmas by people seeking positions on the board of directors of the 32nd District Agricultural Association of Orange County. The board oversees the Orange County Fair and fairgrounds ln Costa Mesa. Directors are appointed by the governor and. must attend monthly meetings and some commit· tee meetl.ngs. aaid Clint Hoose, board president • Members are not pa.kl. Information ls available from the fair office, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. A family of popular cocktail mixes for home entertainment i Utslc. ~ i ·-~---p t ~ . r > I I:. ''Type that, file these, and fire tb~ dart freak." "Got.a problem? Then wnle to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape. getting the answers. and. action you need to aolve mequ1tres m government and buSlnes.s. Mail your questions to P.al Dunn. At Your Service, Orange Coast l)ojly Pilot. P.O. Box 156(), Costa Me&a, CA 1t 92626. As many letter&. as pos1tble will be answered, I: but phDMd mquines or letters not including the • reader's full name. address and business hours' phone number cannot be considered. This column appears dai· 111 tzcept Saturdays.•• DEAR PAT: Al this time or the year one re· :elves so many "free'' gifts in the m ail -usually promoting one charity or another. Do these Items riave to be returned l o the sender if no contribuUon IS made·! J .C., Costa Mesa No. If you receive a free gift through the malls Ct's yours to keep. There can be, under California law, no further obligation to boy, unless the gift was requested by you as part of a larger purchase order. Don't Trip 011 Definition DEAR PAT: Would you please explain the dif· ference between a travel agent and a travel pro- moter. I'd also like to know how one can make aure.- he ls dealing with an agent rather than a promoter. L.P., Irvine A travel agent differs from a promoter 1n tbat be or she is appointed by a carrier (airline or ocean· 1ola1 vessel) lo represent them ln promoting and t elUng traruiportatlon. The agent receives an of· tlclal certlfJcate of appointment from each carrier represented, giving authorization to conduct busl· neas for them. A promoter, on Ule other band, ar; raages services, but does not have an official ap· pol9tmeet from a carrier. If an lndlvtdaal cl alma lo be an agent but you are in doubt, uk &o aee a eenlflca&eOl apP-O\ntment. Stepping Toward Safety · DEAR PAT: I am about ready to make some 'rocheted rugs for my bathroom. "Do you.know, or ~ould you rind out, if there Is a product available to put on the back or the rug to make it sup.proof? I h ave no idea where to look for such a product, or even if there is one available for home use. 1 E .G., Costa M esa. Victor Kemp Co., 1374 Logan, Costa i,esa, sug. "ests using "liquid latex" If your rugs will bave a 110Ud material backing. This product, available at P'emf'•, will provide the skid-resistance you want and I will not harm the rug material. Naga:bae Not Old EnoUflla 11 DEAR PAT: Can you tell me if a large collec· !(ion or old National Geognphic magazines would ,be worth anything? These magazines are dated\ rom 1955 through 1975. E.W., Costa Mesa The Americana Collectors Shop of Saata Ana, aper antique speciallsts, says tbat your collection Iii not yet old enough &o have any value. Magasblea paltllshed before 1920 are in demand, however. 'the f llop does not boy any books or magulnes , -,ubllabed before 1940, but an Individual collec&or tn1y be Interested In some particular copies of your eolledloo. The shop advises advertlalnl la tbe loeaJ l>reaa if you decide to sell these magailaea. DEAR PAT : Does an advertiser have to say if an item is used or defective ? I suspect this may be \that Is done when some exceptionally low-priced .ftroducts are advertised. '-C.G., Jrvlne ,., If a ltol'e advertises a washlDg machine, hr l!X• • \iapJe, a& 35 percent off for qakk sale, Rt )'OU ftad • Ht tt ii iAefectlve or und after )'ft ant.e 1t .. 'l&eret e"9l before a sale ii transacted tM la, 1111 "'"" prokea. •• • .STOCKl"G . lTUFFERS CAROLE INC. •FANTASY JEWELRY For the fantasy time of year, choose from a group of ceramic fantasy pms and necklaces·both pms and necklaces. ONLY s400 UGHTNING BOLT JEWELRY . We have in stock, the popular "Lightning Bolt" and "Juice" necklaces, in silver plate, gold plate and sterting silver. Bolt bracelets and earrings ·styles also available. Choose fro group of canv handbagsw' leaftler like i To wear with the newest tops or dress pants. these metal belts in gof with an assortment of buckles are perfect. Prices from '7°°-SSOO by.Accessocraft~.~~~~~Dlii~ . :. .. .. -, . . . Thurtd-.y. December 22. 1977 DAILY PILOT A• 'S SKATEBOARD SILKSCREEN HIRTS ' . Lev rs , LEVIS FOR BOYS / NATURAL COLOR WORISIURTS Easy Care 50% cotton/ SO<lb poly fabric. Limited Sizes SO HURRY! Reg. $11.00 NOW s599 WILD WEST LEAnttR WALLETS FOR •4• OUR ENTIBB STOCK ON SALE of genuine leather wallets and passcases. two fold. tri fold and money.clip style wallets in assorted leather grain'colors. 1650 -'850 VaTues$499 NOW ALL SEX I t ll COLOGNE BY ROMAINE J~i A very stimulating fragrance in 4 oz. splash or natural spray bottles at $6.50 to $7.50. ~oz. spl~h gift bottle also. s·t:·~ AVAILABLE $ 125 p . riS ATJUST ~ . ' SUSPENDERS BY LEEGIN BELT Great fat skiing or Just weating around. Wicle assonment of 50hd, atnpe and rainbow color styles. M and l sizes. JUST s5oo_s500 MDf S \ \ ----DENIM B~IJ.~ ., .. -.... --.... --:~ #'*.,--.. -:: l~-........ ' ,# •• -.._, "' ........ ~"',," ~ \ AT MOST ',./ I I OTHU STOit£$ \ \ '1~00 1199 '..~---NOW ........ _ ....... _ .... --::: ...... _ ...... :~"" ........ ,, .. WE'VE GOT LEVIS GREAT ACCESSORIES Choose from a-wide selection of ; Wallets, in Jea'ther and Denim, Belts, belt buckles, all kinds of bags and hats. PRICED F'JtOM AS LOW AS s5 WE RESTOCK~ OOR STORE TWICE EACH WEEK. OUR FAMOUS LADIES FASHION BOOTS All leather boots styled with todays lady in mind -shown is a fashionable • rust boot with X on shaft- these boots were regular11 priced at~5.00. Now reduced to Other COiors and styles available in our f:ootworks Department • ' a I • ' \ f I •'Type that, file these, and fire tbe dart freak." • :-~----------------~~~--------...... ' "Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers.and.action you need to aolve mequ1ties m government and busineS$. Mail your questions to Pat ~nn, At Your Service, Orang• Coast Doily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mew, CA 92626. As many letters.as possible will be.answer~. • but phoned inquiries or letters not includJng tht ; reader's full name. address. and business hours' phone number cannot be considered. Thiscolumnappearsdai· ly except Saturdays." '10 Return"• Necessary DEAR PAT: Al this time of the year one re· ~eives so many "free" gifts in the mail -usually promoting one charily or another. Do these llerns llove to be returned to the sender it no contribuUon IS m ade'? J .C .. Costa Mesa No. U you receive a free gift through the malls ~·s yours to keep. There can be, under Calllornla law, no further obligation to boy, unJus the gift was requested by yO\I as part of a larger purchase order. Don't Trip on Deflnltlo• DEAR PAT: W ould you please explain the dif· ference between a travel agent and a travel pro· roote r . I'd also like to know how one can make sure be is dealing with an agent rather than a promoter. L .P., Irvine A travel agent differs from a promoter In tbat be or she Is appointed by a carrier (airline or ~ean· &otai vessel) to represent them In promoting and selling transportation. The agent receives an of· flclal cerllflcate of appointment from each carrier represented, gJvlng authorization to conduct bual· neas for them. A promoter, on the other hand, •r .. , raages services, but does not have an official ap- \tolahnent from a carrier. If an ind.vldaal claims to be an agent but you are In doubt, aak to aee a certificate of ap_P.Olntment. Stepping Toi.Dorff Satet11 .. DEAR PAT: I am about ready to make some ftocheted rugs for my bathroom. l>o you'know, or could you find out, if. there is a product available to put on the back of the rug to make it slip·proof? I have no idea where to look for such a product, or even if there is one available for home use. E.G .. Costa Mesa. • Victor Kemp Co., 1374 Logan, Costa ¥esa, sug. •ests using "liquid latex" U your rugs will have a solid mat.erlal backing. This product, available at pcemf's, will provide the skid-resistance you want and I will not harm the rug material. Maga:lne Not Old E1tollflla f DEAR PAT: Can you tell me lf a large collec· on or old National Geographic magaiines would worth anything? These magazines are dated' rom 1955 through 1975. E. w .. Costa Mesa The Americana Collectors Sbop of Sota Aaa, If aper utique speclalls ts, says that your collec:llon II not yet old enough to have any value. Magaslnea •ubllabed before 1920 are In demand, however. The ~hep does not buy any books or magaalnes pabllslled before 1940, but an lndlvldaal collector ib•Y be tMerested In some partlcQJar coplu of your lrellectton. The shop advises advertlllng la the leeal I )treH U you decide to sell these ma1~11ne1. t~tee•• Maut Be Told DEAR PAT: Does an advertiser have to say if an item is used or defective? I suspect this may be \rhat Is done when some exceptionally low·priced broducts are advertised. . . ~ C.G.,lrvme 1 If a store advertises a wasbla1 macJWle, for flX· ._•pie, M 35 perceat off for qakk nle, .._yea ftlMI ._ tt la *fedlve or used after )'Oil anhe at --~ -· ~~ e"9 befwe a sale II tranuded &lie law Ila• __ ,,... • STOCKl"G lTOFFERS 'FANTASY JEWELRY For the fantasy time of year. choose from a group of ceramic fantasy pms and necklaces both pins and necklaces. ONLY s400 LIGHTNING BOLT JEWELRY We have in stock. the popular ''Lightning Bolt'' and "Juice" necklaces, in silver plate, gold plate and s1erfing silver. Bolt bracelets and earrings styles also available. FROM SCIRCOBAGS Choose from a group of canva handbags wit leather like tr' Prices ssoo_s BEAUTIFUL GOU> BELTS To wear with the newest tops or dress pants. these metal belts In gofd with an assortment of buckles are perfect. PrlcH from sro-sgao by Accessocraf~t. ¢~~~:?t:D;i!f Thurad-v. December 22. 1977' DAIL V PILOT A. BOY'S SKATEBOARD SIS SILKSCREEN T-SHIRTS Wld11 Assortment of Skateboard Acl1on Shots featuring the "SANTANA" Skateboard Team. S, M, L, XL Reg. '6.SO NOW s399 9 1 , LEVIS FOR BOYS : .,--. / NATURAL COLOR ~,.......~·~~=-~ WORKSIURTS Lev rs Easy Care 50% cotton/ 50% poly fabric. Limited Sizes SO HURRY! Reg. $11.00 NOW • s599 WILD WEST LEATHER WALLETS FOR '4" OUR ENTIBE STOCK ON SALE of genuine leather wallets end passcase.s. two fold, tri fold and money.clip style wallets in assorted leattrergrain1colors. '$650 • 5850 Values$499 NOW ALL SEX I ~ ll COLOGNE BY ROMAINE ~--. A very stimulating fragrance in 4 oz. splash or natural spray bottles at $6.50 to $7.50. ~oz. spl~h gift bottle also. · AVAILABLE s12s AT JUST SUSPENDERS BY LEEGIN BELT Great for sklon1 Of' just weMing around. Weqe assortment of solid, stripe and rainbow color styles. M and L sizes. • wsr s 500. ssoo WE'VE GOT LEVIS GREAT ACCESSORIES Choose from a wide selection of; Wallets. in lea.ther and Denim, Belts, belt buckles, all kinds of bags and hats. PRICED FROM AS LOW AS s5 WE RESTOCK~ OUR.STORE TWICE EACH WEEK. OUR FAMOUS LADIES FASHION BOOTS All leather boots styled with todays ladymmind -shown is a fashionable rust boot with X on shaft - these boots were regularfl P!iced at~5.00. Now reduced to s3199 Other colors and s1yles available in our f=ootworks Department. .. \ \ . Stuffed Animals j Favored SAN FRANCISCO <AP> ~~hen Stretch Armst g and G.J. Joe have g the way of the Evel nievel doll, there'll ll be room un- der the Christmas tree ' . OBITUARIES I NATIONAL: Imbibers About same ' NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. CAP> -CoUe1e 1l\1· dents are drinlting about as mucl\ u their ol4tr brothers and 1ister1. But a study also HJI daat heavy drinkin~may be declliililt. A report by the Rutgers Oenter tor ~cobol Studies aald ther1 la no aubst.anUal lncreue' Jn Ute percentage of college &t.udenta that drtAk aleoldlc beveragea. Women students prefer ,eplrlte, but rnoat m• still chooae beet as tbelr af\er-clau refreabmeat, the 1tudy &aya. tor Teddy Bear. says ;=~;;::;;:;iiiin;;;:;:;:::::;;;-:=~!t::======­stuffed )lnimal king Harold Nitamtan. Alread) he says, parents are turnina away from heavily ad- vertised , gaudily packaged cfOtls and toys in favor of huggable. squeezable ~~rs, dogs, cats and other animals in all sizes and WlCtures. NEID A LA WYllP' .... ~,... • Divorce • Banktvptcy * Criminal • Wlll .. Pl'obate • ln00f1)6ratlon • Aecldent.fnJucy * Eviction . . ACTRESS LINDA BLAIR ARRAIGNED ON DRUG CHARGES She Cov•r• Fac:e With Black, Floppy Hat "Parents waht to get c--=~-: •• __ J back to the ba.;1cs," says 640.2507 :I. Florida to Exiradite Nizamian, president or _..::::::========;:::'.'.~===========~ R. Dakin, the world's Actress· on Drug Rap? largest maker or stuffed animals. "They would rather have a "l'IJ.made teddy bear they know is perfectly s a le and docsn 't have a lot of t e levision pressure WILTON, Conn. CAP> -Florida of- ficials are asking for the extradition of 18-year·old movie and television ac· tress Linda Blair, charged ln connec· lion with a nationwide cocaine ring. Miss Blair, beat known tor her role as the devil-possessed child in ''The Exorcist," is free on bond after being charged Tuesday with conspiracy to' buy or sell cocaine, on a fugitive war- ranlissued in Jacksonville, Fla. innocent to that charge. Her case was behind al. continued until Jan.18. She wore a black, floppy hat puUed •·Even the kids are down over her fac&at the bearing. turning away fro11 more , realistic toys an4 going . CAPT. JOHN McCORMICK, a bark to fantasy fortns," Jacksonville vice squad officer, al-he adds. "Researrhers leged Miss Blair knew several people also have found t~t one arrested in the drug bust and that of the reasons a child will drugs bad been delivered to her in cling to a stuCCet toy New York last October by a Jackson· from his very •arty ville re~ident. years is that it is one part MERCURY SAVINGS '""' '"''"' """""iitf(tlf'I Exec~tlve Off/us: 7812 Edinger Ave., Hunti'!glon Beach, CA 92647 ---·-·--So111hem Colllotn/11 Regloflaf Olttces: 81155 Valley Vlew SI • Bu•rt• P11tk, CA 90820 207 15 S. Avalon Blvd., Car~ort, C'-90746 22821 Lake Fores1 Or., El Toro, CA 92630 1001 E. lmpct1c1I Hwy .• La Hobra, CA 90631 4140 Lorto Bcac;h 81vd .. Long Beach. CA 90801 1095 lrvlne Blvd. Tustin. CA 92680 23~ N. C11rus Ave., Wesl CoYlrta. CA 91793 Q l~l llOLl$1NO UHOU PETER GRUDEN, HEAD of the federal Drug Enforcement Ad - ministration in Connecticut, said the young actress was arrested al her leased Wilton home. She is a native of n eighboring Westport where her parents live. McCOMnick also alleged Miss Blair of his world he can con- made a drug contact that month while trol -he can tell it •hat attending a funeral tor members of to do." the Lynytd Skynyrd rock group killed _.=_=.:_ _______ ~:==:==============Z: in a plane crash in Mississippi. The DuvaJ County. Fla .. sheriff's of- fice asked for her extradition. Federal authorities in Florida said more than 30 people had been arrest- ed in Jacksonville, including John And Lynn Scarborough, the son and daughter of Florida state Sen. Dan Scarborough. More arrests are ex· pected. MISS BLAIR WAS r eleased on $2,500 bond in Stamford Common Pleas Court after her lawyer, Richard Gibbons of Westport, areued that she had no previous arrest record. Local police also charged her with .. 1>0asession of a narcotic substance after a "whiLe substance" was found in her possession. Miss Blair pleaded Authorities estimated that the ring sold more than $1 million worth of co· caine in eight months. In addition, co· calne worth $1.S million was seized when two Houston men were arrested and charged with selling three pounds of the d,nlg to agents at the Jackson· ville airport. MISS' lJLAIR ATTENDED local schools and was in the ninth grade when "Tbe Exorcist," her first film, was released. She be&an her career at age 6 with television commercials and modeling. Miss Blair recently performed in a sequel to "The Exorcist" and starred in severaJ made·for·TV movies, in· eluding "Sara T. -Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic." and "Born Inno- cent," the story of a jailed teen·age delinquent. ' ' . l&LllOAOWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broedwav Co$taM.sa 942·9i60 SMmt TV1MIJ. LAMe WISlCLWCHAl'I&. 427 E. 17th Sl CO.ta Mesa * &46-'4888 ·sama Ana ~1 518 N. Broedway Senta Ana• 547 .... 131 PIBClllcm.tl SMm4S' MOIYUMT 627 Main 8t. ' HuotingtOf\ Beach 53&&39 ... , ..... y COlOMIAL ..,_Al "~ 7901 8ol8 AY9. Westminster 8~H ~ =""' ., .... C1•1t11w~ ateef aeoo Pllctflc \tlew DrM Newport, c.&lfomla 944-1100 Photography. Unlimited ORANGE COUNTY'S NEW LEADING DISCOUNT PHOTOGRAPHY CENTER 0P£N UNTIL 10 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY OPEN TILL 10 P.I. Mon. Thru F. lllCllll ..a IOI A YllY UPPY -..oAY _.. This may Mtem llke a stranee plaee to put this sincere greeting among all of t commefdal price •ds, but we want you to k that we sincerely feet there is more to the holiday season than making a buck. Bes wishes to 111 ltl 'J 978. ' ~sALa.AFTUClllSTUSSAU There's no differtnde to us, we always have grea prices any time of the year. kiDll.INSTAiT CAMERA SALE •OOA• lll4 ~IC-e lH( HA .. Dl.t• llOd .. Hltt<ntC-a. UST~ «>Utt f'ttlCE SAVI• •unu c ..... 30%0 EK6 •••• 69.50 •••. 44.85 EK4 .••• 53.50 •••. 33.95 The Handle 39.95 ••••• 29.89 Stock up ti Christmas now. Along with your camera rebate of $5.00 from K~ you Will receive a sp,ecial $5.00 value offer on K Instant prin( film. · . KODAK INSTAMATIC CAMERAS Don't miss this chance to plclt up a Christmas mom. in~ cameu at these ~t prices. Trimhte 18 Ust Camera Price f'rlct Outlit ••. 26.95 •• 11.15 28 ...... 59.50 .• 43.11 608 ..... 34.95 ..... 38 ...... 72.50 •. SS.II 1oa ..... 99.so .. n.IS KODAK Tf'IMLITE INSTAMATIC <-• 18 Camere Outfit KOOAK CAR SEL SLIDE PROJECTORS At GREAT SAVINGS. Why wait tilt Christmas when you have a drawer full of slides now! 600H •• $7 6SOH •• Sll.7 7SOH .$11 760H .$1 850H .$150 KODAK CAROUSEL 860H • S201A J60H Projector ALL ,RICES AIE WI U.#S beause wt let you '"''' that choke EKTANAR 4 " Lens •• S15..05 . EKTANAR 5" Lens •• $15.05 ZOOM LENS 21h" .•. S3U5 SRT202 W/fl.7 MD R°"kor X ·SOmml.ens '22777 W/50mm Fl.8 Ltns '2 1818 PENTAX Ml W/!SOmm fl.7 a..rt. '24&· Nikon EL2 Chrome Body ONLY 133333 Ust510.00 Black Body add •1a The World's Christmas . Hours Most Shops Open Monday-Friday 9-9 Saturday 9·5 Last-Minute Gift Center . . . ·Newport's Favorite Drug Store 4 p • .1.... • • We, at Old World Art, would like to thank all our customers for their patronage and wish then:i a very Happy Christmas. &Chanuka ·1st Color Time Piece Vi•t-OOPlieza -0.0C" &1~17')0 Perfect For Holiday Part ies Pc>ut S•:>"'cly "'" w°" w.n,et "h'h1h~ c,.,, & fop~"' ,£2, ~~·-­(ff@'««YJi:-· /}/111f#1/ r4~1'-i v1aUdoPlua 3423 Vla Udo. Number \3 ,_._lo.._ .... ....i ·e15-03a1 ·I· I Thanks to everyooe who have made Olr Chrlltmas sud• a ~ great .. cceu .•.. Have a WGDClerfal Holiday Seaaon &ftcl ,_,.,.,very happy New v;•r SMJ W. I.Ille• VM I.Ille...._ Naapa.c ...... n .. J .. ~~ BIDTIQ~ Don't Panic!! Bidwell's Bidtique has some GREAT last minute gift suggestions!_ • Scarves -en assortment from $2.50 · • Jewelry -• wonderful selection from $3.00 • Sweaters -our basic pullover In a rainbow of colors, $11; or choose a cuddly fur blend from S24.00 • Rain jacke~ -•completely reversible Jacket, $16; vinyl sllcken at SS.00 and $6.00 • • Shawls -choose from lacy fringed shawls from $8.00 or wool blend plaids from S10.00 • Courtesy g ift wrap Open 'Tll 9 3417 Vi• Lido. 873-4510 Pattdng Lot Entrance For Holiday Giving Luxurious Gowns b y Christian Dior, Bill Tice, Barblzon, Odette Ba~, John Kloss & more Beautiful Bras bV Ball. Olga, Vasserette, Liiy of France & Hult We've Just Or>enecf! . r The details, the Styfe. the look. . combine to create a foshlonoble new feeling In pullovers. Lord ;Jeff puts five knitting tec hniques together for fhfs new expression of fashion in fine tailored knltweor. The RoyalJeff Jacquard RlngRugb>(. A selection of cOlors In carefree machine woshoble/dlyoble Orlon.•. $32.50 ·Ou Pont registered trodemalic. -/iec-fi.,;. MIN S STOHS 3487 VI• Lido, N~wport Beach CM1tmaa Hour$ Mon.-Frt. 1:30-1:00 ~ 9:30-5:30 0 Ttte City Center e>rut- GENEBUKfON ·sportswear Designer Faahtona 3411 VI• Udo• 9n.l250 Take Advantage Or Our Holiday Sale Boots & Shoes Save Up To $20 ...... ==:-w;· ....... Add al 1 % DtKount , On Sale Items Ad All Things Marine Holiday Fare • Nautfcal Sportswear• Gifts ....... e•THESHOEJIEE ~ ....... From , . ~We ~~~~E¥ From a single party tray ••• Toa totally prepantd meall • Foul Weather GHr • Books •Charts • Top Sider Shoes • Hardware •Jewelry VJaUdoPlua Ma Vie Uclo • Ne.,.,e 9Mclt • 11.s.eao Turquois~. · Sp~cta.Cular RINGS • •BACELETS •PENDANTS • BUCKl,ES .. f!p "? 75% Oji Supj>lies Of Food Plentiful . . .... (: LOCAl:. / NA TIGNAl.. I • Girl 'Meanest Thier SAN DIEGO CAP> -A youni.girJ ls a candidate for the meanest W et of the week -the one t hat stole a wheelchair from a crippled San Dteeo wom an just before Christmu. Ma ria Moore, 34, told pollce the $300 wheelchair w as take n (_rom her driveway this week. She needs it because she has been paralyzed from the waiatdown since birth. Neiebbors alerted to the problem notified olftcen TUesday when they spotted several children playing with tbe wheelchair . Police arrived, rescued the damaged chair, and were elven .,.._ name of a young girl who alleaedly swiped it. Sbe was being soucht, but they withheld her 6ame. WASHINGTON (AP) -In another or its mon-thly "food inarketlnc alerts•• for con.aumers. the Agriculture Depart- ment says that 1978 will ---------------------------~.., begin with plentiful sup- plies of beer, pork, cblcken and most other products. The de partment's Agricultural Marketing Service said that other foods expected to be plentiful next month in- clude eggl, milk, apples. grapefruit, raisins, some processed vegetables, peanuts and &rain. BY THE agency'• de. rwuon, plenWul means ••more than enough to meet requirement•" while adeqaate means "enough to meet needs.•• Wbeo described as light. a product la "less than adequate. not enough for forooliday f e.stivi ties ... o..y ""ID'f,.... normal needs.'' MOTt1ER ANXIOUS TO BRING SON, GREGORY, HOME FOR HOLIDAYS Orange products. Sharon Brett of Mission Viejo Tells Nurse Tommie Chllder• especlallyfrozenconcen· ----------trates are in thP 1hrht D l ed A.ITlJRNEy category for JatlACy. ·Home for 0 I ay su.reonE"JUnE"D aloncwithdrysplitJ)\. s • .;:,~EIJ.'UJEJ, A REPORT g ave special a ttention t o ·SC Hospital Patients 'Want Out' SAN FRANCISCO potatoes and onions, also (AP) -The state described in plentiCul Supreme Court bas sus-supply. By ANNE COOPER Of IM O•llY f'llel S~fl A hospital stay is seldom run, but at Ch ri stmas lime it can seem downright depressing. But at least two San Clemente General Hospital patients will be going home tor the holidavs. Sharon nrctt of Mission Viejo, a pa· licnt on the hospital's surgery floor, said sht• doesn't care what Christmas pay holds in store as long as she can be home. pended San Mateo at· The beef aupply next rooming in with her at the hospital. torney Forden At.beam month is expected to be T h e n ew m other d e ve loped for one-year for miaap-down 1 to3perceotlrom phlebitis, a vein inflamation, after the propriatiog a client's a year ago, but 2 percent birth of her son, Dec. 9. She bas been money. larger tb1n ave rage •• moved from the obstetrics floor to the Tbe court followed fl Grain fed beef supplies surgical floor, where the baby sleeps State Bar Disciplinary will be larger but not nexttoherin atinycribonwheels. Board recommendation. enough to oUaet a The court also said Albe s m a 11 er o u t p u t of MRS. BREIT IS able to do most of arn, who was admitted to grassfed beef. the basic caring for Gregory, rolling the bar ln California 21 However, the pork aup- his crib to a spot where she can watch years ago, must pass a ply wut be ups to 1 per- him from the comer of her eye or pick p r o I e s s i o n a l cent from last January himup. r espons ibility exam andbroilerchlekenswtll "I only have to call a nurse when I before resuming prac· be up 5 percent. the re· "THAT WILL BE celebration ·enough just to be home again." said tJie young mother, whose doctor has ;aid she can go home on Christmas Da y or maybe even on Christmas Eve. need something I can't reach," she lice. port said. said. ''Actually, I have more help -----------------~~------------------------~-~-~-=--=-available than l need. The nurses Jn lhc meantime, Mrs. Brett keeps 'lusier thnn most other patients. lier 1ewborn son, Gregory Joseph, is . .. . " ' DOgOwners Get Break Dog owners in Newport neach have been given a Christmas present by the city in lhe form of a two· month extension on. the deadline for renewal of h censes for their pets. Oave L a rs o n . c ity li cense supervisor said the 197R licenses will not be available until Feb. 1 and the deadline will not fall u ntil March 1. The r e· ncwal form!S wil l b e m ail e d t o own e r s of already licensed dogs. Normally licenses must be renewed by Dec. 31. Renewals wtll c06t $.S for do e s t hat have be en spayed or neutered and $10 for dogs that haven't. fi ght over who will help me give Gregory his bath.'' The high point of Christmas for the young mother will be a reunion with her 4-year-old son, Richard Charles, she said. A FAMILY REUNION was also on lhc mind or anolher patient, anxious to be home for Christmas Hilda Burtis. of San Clemente, has been in the hospital three weeks, since city fireme n brou,ghl her to the em ergency room after a fall in her home. Mrs. Burtis said she is looking fo rwa rd to s h aring Christm as festivities with her daughter and grandchildren, Laura, 13, and Mike, 9. "When m>' grandchildren came to visit , lhey liked my trapeze," the white-haired grandmother said. In· dicating a bar over her bed. which she used to pull herself into a sitting posl· lion. "They may like it here, but I'd ra ther see them at home. "l'M AWFULLY GLAD to be going home," she said. "I thought I'd never get out of here.·' "Being in the ,J\ospitat ls a little like being in jail," said her husband, who was helping her prepare for the trip home. "You go stJr crazy." M~n',!> Wear· 304 Marine Ave. Balboa Island 61$-1700 112 McFadden Pl., Newport Pier 6'13-3031 . . Buy her something special for the Christmas holidays ot d·. ~ :;;::;;emo;:::;;;;:;::::;:::;::;n r;:;:s A SPORTSWEAR 20tM.tHAff,. ..... l.a.4 '75-1904 SPAULDINGS ' JEWEL;ERS /or beauti/Ull!j designid ring• and jewelry gold chains 107 Marine • ~albo~. Island • 67J;OS20 ' WllM• ~y Cl\f!JllMI -LGM119'lnf1t.,, 11~n1,,.. ~·nd •II Ille briglll lrllll end tlllNI In &e!Wffn. Thia )' .. ,. captu<e an the cllRd-~ lk1111991C on KOOllK Color fl""-Aak 111 lor Ille ftl111 )'OU need. pllM qualtly KOOAK "Color ,rwc41N1119. MU•1111s Clvhhllll ~ keec>Mlce • .. The bright . new look in SPortswear and dresses 2 15 Marine Avenue 673-~50 Balboa Island Olstinctrve Gifts• Antiques Do Your Chrtstrnas Shopping Early .. . . . . . . ' . . .. 208'h Marine Ave. . Balboa Jsland • Jl:Wl:LmY. Fl~ FNELRY • SPECIAL ORDERS . & MANUFACTURtNG • WHa.fSAlE • REPAIR loX· 1sXOff .. . . . ... , • .Triples P~EOK INQUAIUER' ·--.,-----~- 'Thurtday, O.C.mber 22. 1011 DAILY PILOT AJ3 SadLBeback Adds Courses to Meet Demand NEW ORLgANS (AP> -The city aovernmeot has decidect to allow Mardi Gras parades through ttfe French Quarter this year for the first time since 1972. ByLAUlllE KASPER Ge•CNttJ,.... .... South Orange County realdents must have been really nady and Juat wa1Un1 for Saddleback Collectt.o oiler ita Forum Serl• program. . Both the counea. wblcb uaually are non~redit. ahort. lecture·type offertna1, ud partlcJpants ex- )>e(!ted during tbe comln1 •Prinl semester are more 'than three times creater than tbe numben iDYOlftd •hen the program wu bel\ID lut year. IT STARTED LAST 8PSING with about 2,000 people enrolled ln 21 counea. This put faU. aboUt S,000 people attended the 48 aertes offertnga. · Thls spring, there will be 80 programs oftered in the Forums for LearniDC aeries. And. Dr. Donald Rickner, community services educaUon ditect.or, expect.a 8,000to10,000 people will be enrolled. .. With such a new procram receJvtng aucb • strong response, you have to feel people need what we're puu.ui, out there,•• Rickner said. IN ADDmON TO PEOPLE signing up for the short courses, they have auuested others that could be offered • .. U we bad done all the programs requested, we could have had 250 programs ln the spring," the program director said. "It. aeem.s like people have suddenly discovered us." Rickner said people apparently also are willing t.o pay tbe price. During the fall was required for abou half the classes tt · courses w higher than those that were offered for free. Rickner sal optimistic projection for in· come from these courses was $22,500. •·we took in $32,500." DUlllNG THE SPRING, ABOUT 95 percent of the courses will require a fee. During the past semester, more tl)an 1,000 peo. pJe attended a series oo Health Care in the Mld- Seventies. Business seminars and fine arts pro- grams also attracted large number.s ol people.. More than 100 people signed up for a course on over- coming self-defeating behavior which was offered at1a.m. Lighter subjects also proved attractive. The college originally offered just one class on bridge but three additional sections bad to be opened to meet the demand for the course. ABOUT ZSO PEOPLE SAID they wanted to take a microwave oven course. Since only 100 of these people could be accommodated, two more courses are being offered thl.s spring. Communications for manacers. an lndlviduaJ Wait'll J Get You Home MANlTOWOC, Wis. (AP> -PollcereapOnding to a call found a 22-year-old man beating on his car with a tire iron. He was upset, he said, be<:ause the car, a 1967Chevelle, would not start. Told he wo1.1Jd be charged with dlsorderly con- duct tr he did not stop, he called a wrecker to tow the car home. He said he would resume taking out bis (rustraUonsoncebegotltintohisgarage. -·~ E~pe••lmental Sta•p Testing of a regular-l!sue postage stamp format providing SO addiUonal stamps per pane will begin with issuance ()f an ex· pe rimental stamp, with an 1877 Indian head penny as the central desfgn, Jan. 11. The Postal Service said future use of the small format. lf warranted by test results would produce significant cost aavinga. ' . HANDMADE PERSIAN & ORIENT AL RUGS &RUMNRS .. income tax workshop, Health and Self. Thinking Tb.in, antiques. cartooning, recreational vehicles, chess, sexual child abuse and marriage and family are just a few of I.be otMr oouraes planned fot the next semester. 1 A children's Saturday film series and an arts in the schools program alao bei.DI ttarted trus apring. '"PEOPLE JUST SEE COLLEGE dUferenUy now. lt.'a a llle-long process," Rlcknet saJd. "It &oes from child to old man and it reaches acroas the spectrum of the community ... "The real problem that made it advtsable tQ remove pat•ctes from the Quarter was tbe fear of vlolen~ that exlatC'd in the earJy '70s," ••ld Leon lrwilJ DI, chairman of a. m~r·s committee on the aubjec:t. ''lool'''ortl'-Satis:faction Guaranteed ·Replacement or Money Ref'thw BOYS' 20" HI-RISER BIKE 44.99 Coaster brakes. blac~ tires, banana saddle. reflector pedals. Partially a9Mmbled. ·, BOYS' 20" MOTO-CROSS BIKE 54.88 Real motocross styling with black knobby tires. coaster brakes, number l)lates, MX crossbar handlebars. moto grip. MEN'S 3-SPEED BICYaE ~'~~~! ~~~!!~!~!> 62. 99 handlebars. saddle. . , LUSH PLANTS FfCUI lltUA ............. I fJllL 2. 97 FtCUS 19CJA.w.A ....... 5 fJdL f.11 ASPARAGUS fBM •••••• 2 gal. 4.77 SEPARATILY: 29" •••••••••• 29.18 21· •••••••.•• 26.11 26" ........... 2l.18 24" .......... 17.11 151/J" Tote •••• 9 ... 14" rote •••••• 1.11 COTTON Flannelette GOWNS 4.27 TO 5.99 ilAUA S8IOlDI ........ 5 gal. 7.18 PHILODIMDllOM ........ 5 gal. 6.11 t--------~..&~ ... .o..:;;,iLM,;, _ _..__. AHORTID 6" FMMS AMD 6'" SHOW AMO HA...._ PLAHTS ........... J. 97 POINSITTIAS .••••. ] 99 ' ... . SANYO DH51TAL WATCH . IECOIDR 9.96 24.88 Ybr ~-Model no. M1540A · MEN'S SWEAT~ SHIRTS \ 6.99 Wear It anywflerer Zip front with fleecle llnlng. Cotton/- polyester. Assorted colors. KABUKI ROBE The Sor.ry Truth: Profits Are Paltry WARNING SOUNDED Arthur R. 8&.im• By JOHN C1.JNNI FF ... ..._~~ ~ ......... Repeated survey1 •bow that relatively few Americana un· dentand corporaa. ftnanc. and tho private enlerprlte 1)'1tem. .Many believe that what a com· pany lakes in ls used to line the pockets of a privileced few. Asked what perceola.(e of a dollar of sales ls kept aa proftt by moat com· ~' panles, many tndivlduals told John Q. Jennings, a I a b o r · management c ons ultant. that the figure was mor e than 30 per-cent. CUNfOPP The truth is that. manUfactur· in& companies in the first ha11 of the year retained u profit about ~'la cents of each dollar of sales. In 1967 lhe return was a nickel. l n 1957 lt was less than t.bat. Measured another way. as a percentage of shareholder money invested. these com- panies earned after-lax profits of 14 percent, 11.7 percent and 10.9 percent respectively for the same periods. NEITHER DO MANY people know bow the corporate pie is cut. This is the circular graph divided into wedges indicating the distribution of corporate revenues. Jn 1976, the world's largest rn aoufacturing corporation, General Motors, used 51 percent of its gross revenue to pay sup· pliers. Employees received 32.4 Fluor to Pay 30 Cents Dividend Follmm Report of Record Earnings Fluor Corp., Irvine, has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 30 cents a share on common stock, a 20 percent increase. This brings the annual di vidend rate to $1.20 per common share. The board nlso declared the regular quarterly rash dividend of 75 cents share on the Series B pre· fcrred stock. The dividends are payable Jan. 15, 1978, to holders of record at the close of business on Oer.30. Fluor has reported record net earnings of S75 466 000 or $4.48 a share, for the fiscal year ended Ortobe'r 31 , compared with earnings of $64.880,000, or SJ.88 a share, for fiscal year 1976. The 1977 r<'sults represent a 15.~ percent in· t•rease in eammgs per sha re over last year and the .tni;q11e Lovers! illeet me on 31st Street Over 20 Delightful · Shops To Find The Perfect Gift! fifth consecutive year that the company has i i:i· creased net earnings. Consqlidated rev~nues for the 12 months in 1977 were $1,996,050,000, t:ompared with $1,801,761,000 for the same period the previous year. New orders during the period totaled $2,827,000,000, compared with $3,211,000,000 for the same period a year ago. Fluor's backlog of un. completed work as of Oct. 31, was $12,800,000,000, compared with $8,751,000,0<>q for 1976. According to the company, new order and backlog figures for 1977 include $475.000,000 and $4,400,000,000, respec· tively, contributed by Daniel International Corp., which was purchased and included in Fluor·s re· suits for the last five months of lhe ftscal year. Fourth quarter operations generated net earn- ings of $19,519,000, or $1.15 a share, compared to net earnings of $17 ,397,000, or $1.04 a share, for the same period the previous year. Revenues for the quarter were $624,095,000, compared with $416,387,000 for the same three months in 1976. Jtllf!rodata ••• lraterat Microdata Corp., Irvine, has announced con· clusion of a transaction to aC'luire a majority in· terest in Computer Machinery Ltd. of Hemel Hempstead near London, England. The transaction provided for acquisition by Microdala of 75 percent of the common stock or the company and product distribution agreements for equipment in the United Kingdom and several other countries. Computer Machinery Ltd. had revenues or a pproximately $16 milUon in the year ended Dec. 31, 1976. The purchase price for lbe 7S percent interest was $4 milUon, including a promissory note for $1 million. \'eacport Subsidiary f'ornaed Short Brothers Limited, manufacturer of pro- duction aircraf( with headquarters in Belfast. Northern Ireland, has announced the incorporation of a wholly owned United St.ates subsidiary, Short Brothers <USA) Inc. with headquarters in Newport Beach. The subsidiary bas been formed to consolidate Shorts• marketing and support services for its com- muter airliner ln the United States and Canada. Loma Office Open• Capitol Home Loan Co. of Los Angeles has opened a regional headquarters office at 3130 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa. Regional manager Larry Richardson directs operations of staff in tbe 2,000.square-foot facility. Assoriatlon to Moee Home Savings and Loan Association plans to relocate its offices in Newport Cent.er. Newport Beach, to a site across tbe street from its current locatlon. Tbe association will build a 12,000-flquare-foot building. 1'be property for the expansion. leased from the Irvine Company. is located on Newport Center Drive. DR. SANTA CLAU~? HERE'S HOW IT WORKS: STEP Whether you l'leve grown·up ST!P Thlt temperature uniformity 1n 3 Individual rooms savee up lltO 30,ro on heating costs It Sane. Claus had not • gotten into the to)' and etrt line of work we are qu1te sta. he would have been a dQctor , pharmacist , nurs e, dentist. or other health professional. It Julit seems to go along with h ts personalit y cheerful. sympatbellr. helpful to othen and a larae capacity for love. 1 children li\llng 1wey -or young chlldron llvlr19 et home •.• very hkely there ate room• in your nomo tho\ are aeldomly usod. It so. hoar 11 waited In tho~e rooms every day. Becavae, with a central hating fumaoe. tttere's no ~ Of conttolllng heat In I~ dMdual rocma except bv cloa- lng the dtmS*I whlcl'I dotsonty part of • fob. 6TEP INTERHERM r..1t1no PfOVfdet 2 tht nearest floor·to-ctlllng oorn- fort In Individual rooma of all heating method• teated. STEP So aafe for children -you can 4 covtr heaters with blankets with ab601ute $ale!}>. STEP l he hot water temperatures pro· 5 yide cleanest IS well ea health· lest heat In home. STEP There ate portable, ptu.g-ln 8 models fqr single, COid rooms. S'tEP There ere pennanentty lnetalled 7 model• for entire hornet. STEP Simple to buy for your fndwktu.r 8 rooms, 1ntlrt homM, 1p1rt· mtnla. etc. More tt11n ont mll· non have bell'I 801d: Al Christmas Ume thi!I year we would like to remind )'Ou of a wonderful em you can give 1ouraeU -good he.Ith. Schedule an aMu•t checkup for your Wh~~family, ' Ml:llJ\Y CHlUSTMAS TO ALL AND TO ALL -GOOD R&\LTll. vbu OR \'OUR . DOC10R CA~ PHONE US wbOfl you oeed a · d.ellvery. We.will deliver. pre>m.,Uy without extra ~harae. A arot mllny ptople re,ly on us for tht!lr health Medt. We w•lpome requests tor d'llvt'r Y u rvl<.-e 11nd c"•rac .1ccounb. . ... PAS.LIDO PMA .... CY,~ ..... . Ml II ';:' .. 'iw· ,...~ •• ,, J11_ ... lfll,! Despite Polls, Pockets Get Little Lining percent., lucea 8.~ percent. Depreciation acoount.ed for 2 per. cent, and 2.7 perc,mt was used In the buslneas. Thal accounted for 96.6 per. ce nt.. The reft went to share~. the people who put• up the y to keep the opera· tion solvent. BUSINESSMEN OFTEN com· plaln that popUlar arithmetic, if it ever arrive& •~ this stage lo analytlng the corporate dollar, seldom goeB be)'OOd. To divide that 3.4 pel"l'ent br the 1,229,406 sbareboldent. {or example. In 1976, GM profits of $2.9 billion averaged out to $2,372 when divided by the number of shareholders. If the total were divided by the number of shares. 1t w1>uld come out to $10.08 a s hare. Neither, say business ex· cecotlves, do many people stop to think of who those shareholders are: pension l\.tnds , employees, other small investors and the like, as well as speculators and the rich who are sa.Jd to line their pockets. BUT ALL TIUS arithmetic stiJJ does not tell a complete story. In spite or what appears to be solid profits, some businessmen are complaining about the erosion of profits. Arthur F. Bums, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, most recently sounded the warning. The figures do not tell of infia· lion's. devast.ation, said Bums. When companies seek to replace inventories and build new plants they will be in trouble. he said. In a speech, Burns said that replacement or plants and inven· tories last year alone came to $50 billion more than corporations were able to claim for tax purposes. HAROLD WILLIAMS, chainn~ of the SecuriU~s and ( NEWSANALY I ) Exchange Commission, also believes the big profits report· ed In W17 were deceptive. In re· alily, be said, they were "dangerously low." Jack Carlson, vice president and economist of lhe Chamber or Commerce of lhe United States. agreeing with Burns and Williams. observes lbat corpora· lions have been unable t-0 afford replacements for their worn pbysJial assets. Walter Ranson, bead of Peat. Marwick, Mitchel & Co., the public accountants. comments that corporate profits as a percentage of national income have fallen from 16.S percent to 8.5 percent over the past decade. THE DECLINE OF true tor porate profits, said Hanson, is re· lated to the .inability or com panies to generate the capital they need to r eplace old facilities and expand to acquire new busi· ness. unNc coses INCREASE • 7o/o LOS ANGELES <AP) -The cost of living in Los Angeles and Orange counties incr eased .7 percent .in Novem ber, pushing the consumer price index to a record 182.9, the Federal Bureau of labor Statistics said. The C05t hike was higher than the national inc rease of .5 per· cent, according to Wednesday's report. The local boost m eans goods and services that cost $10 a de· cade ago, now cost $18.29. In November, purchaslng power of a dollar was equivalent to lhe 01967 purc.hasing power of S4. 7 cents, the department said. Over The Counter NASO Listi'")' LOW PROFITS CITED SEC'1 Harold Wllllems "Our tax code completely fails to take into account the substan· tial increase in r eplacement costs brought about by infla· lion." he said. The purpose of depreciation as a tax deduction is to set aside money for the replacement of equipment. be re· minds people. But, a study by T. Rowe Price, lbe investment advisers, shows that ir adjusted for depreciation based not on the purchase price of assets but on the cost or replacement. many companies would have lillle or no profits at all Among lhem it named Alcoa, Bethlehem. Chrysler, Goodyear, International Harvester and Tex- aco. All apparently living a statistical illusion. storing up problems for the future -theirs and the country's. MUTUAL FUNDS ... STOCKS I BUSINESS Thur8day'1 Closillf( Pric NYSE COMPOSITE .. TRANSACTIONS Sooft !lot SIH> "" ~I ti.o.• Clew (t-1 , I '""'' Cw C•'I Pt•tH ID 1 0 II • "° =Iler .tO • II 17">, 0 p., Or .4011 UO •v. 1~ tit 1 )t 7~ • • ::~-:~ ~I~!:=•~ rE.'JU!lflUl ~+ '• PtlPll I) IU ,,... \\ lr.eo 1.§6 • ! ,,,,. "' ..... ,,... ,. 1 • ..~ "' =··" I " • 1 1"--~ .. 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P11rlt11l"A 4 1' 1-Va T.,,11<0 l 1 401 JI .. .. Pu,.ltr I.JO • 11 21'1:t-"" Ten11< pU.50 .. I 11' ... . ~-0 1.0. t ""' 21V.+ v. T•-o .11 .. •n I V.+ v. ~~t.~·~·•1lri 1lk!>v, Tl:c:11·1h1~ ;~• ~ Ov•M• 1.n 1 » 211to+ ~ .. cm u211 se •~· t. O\ietlOf .l014 17' Slit-V. •x£\I J. IO e UI 4:11.'J-~ -a-41 -TxETpf 2.40 .. IOI 27~ v. RCA 1.lO t 575 ~ V. Tal!Tf U1.. 1 ~Ito R(Apl 1.JD •• &10 4J -V. THG 2.4111 I 4J 4JV.-1~ AT! .40 t SS I""+ ~ Tullld ID 6 1S """-\ro Rel\Pll• .5010 37t IJV.-"" Texlnil , "IS "5 1•V. +I"' AeMH .litU m 4 • .. .. Texlnl 11 \t6 10 ....• Atll<O I.CM 1 7 ~ ~ Te.oci~ .2t 10 )f) ~Ill!+ 11111 A•pldAm S U2 SV...... TllP<Lcl .3Se 14 1 --lo\ ~-".w 1P11,..!.; 1>1 ?"1., .• 1 ~ T .. uUI 1.40 t 410 21~~ Yo "•ylt1 _, • • ~ ~ Te~ll 1,:IOIS JU """ • '" ==~~::" ;.: ~ fl~:~ ~:~~,.~ 1:· n ~ ~ "9Nlet' I e I" 14 .. .. . t .. 1...,, IAI t Ill tw. ..... •ectm•n S 1111 4 ... .. Tulrpl t GI .. IU "' 1? "1 A .. ocp AO • 11 '"' + 'lo T .. lr pf I 40.. , u v ...... 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Tl'MOf' .» > .. 141'1+ V. =::"'" :: 6 ~ :m= ~ Tr-1.a t t<1 S.\11+ ... A .. n pf t.a... » SI • 21' Trt11U11 1.n • )9 J;W.-.... Aeyl'lfn J.50 1 »I 5' + V. TW.4 • ' n1 •'l'I + ~ lleylll Pl2 U 4 .. TWA pl J •. 33 II "". AeyMll 1:50·; 61 ~··),4 ~.::.:i 1_:.; .~ :~·+·y; lteyM pfUO .. 10 .. +211') T I 1 .. AeyMplJ~ .. 2 W,,_->4 T~~~1:10 ·i 1i1 m:.:.::y; ltnnS. . .o. t 4l ,..._ .... • Tre11sc11 f, t u 1 ~+ "' Al<ltCo 1.106 11 1S~+ V. TGP__., s 1 -'· •~ AlcltM•t .to t .. 23•..,. + ... r "' •. I 60 .... -. .. Thutadey, December 22. 1977 DAILY PILOT AJ5 Home Files Need . Periodic Checks 8y SYLVIA PORTEil "''"'" ...... ~ Millions o( individulllS and bu.slneu ownns aro exag geraled su"crs of pap rs and record.a. receipts and can· celled cheeks. This is an excellent tlme to get rid of nonessenllals. But while pamphlclll und even books have been written about whnt records to keep, little reliable fwdance eve?' la giv~ on whaHodtscard. AS ONE ILLUSTRATION, while you should k~ep checks and other receipts that may be needed tor incomt tax rurposes as proof ot payment. it lsn 't important to keep :.11 cancelled checks. It's even silly. ln discarding records at home: · -Concentrate on the most importa.nt documents. A family filing system that is e!fielcdt ~d helpful is possible with little equipment and a modest outlay. A fillnsr boll con· taining manila folders and a small sate deposit box, wbicb Is tax deductible, will pro· vide sufficient home file storage spare. Dispose of salary statements aft.sir check· ing Lhem against annual W-2 wage forms. Lighten riles by Money's Worth using a cancelled check as a record for an entry J)D the lax return. Unless you fear that the nature of a medical expense 1s ambiguous, for example. tbe cancelled check to the physi- cian is adequate evidence that you have paid for a specific medical service. This can eliminate the nei!d for saving physicians' statements and other bills identified by checks. Don't throw out bills from the drugstore. The IRS may request proof of deductible drugs. -AS A RULE OF THU~US. dispose ot persona& tax records after six years. Federal tax statutes make tax re· 1 urns vulnerable to challenge up lo three years under normal circumstances. The six year period is considered the lime frame for checking returns on which income has been un· derslated by more than 25 percent. Those who use income averaging should d1scerd re- turns over five years old. The IRS usually retains personal returns for six years and can supply copies at a moderate cost -Aft.er recording the year'& total dividend payments, discard these papers on receipt or the &.l}nual dividend t.allv supplied by the company. Be sure, tbough, to retain a record of capital-gain distribution dividends ~ause they must be reported for tax purposes when the shares are sold. -DISCARD CHECKS WRITJ'EN FOR maintenance costs on your house, unless you plan to sell it soon. Keep permanent improvement records that add to the value of your property, such as the addition of central air· conditioning. Periodically check warranties and guarantees: if they're out of dale. discard them. Throw out health main· lenance certificates that have expired. Next Discarding bu.rineu record$. Stock Rally Sparked By Dollar's Surge NEW YORK (AP> -Stock prices chalked up another solid gain today, drawing s upportfroma rally by the dollar in foreign-exchange markets. r The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 7.71 points Wednesday, rose anolher7 .83to821.81. Gainers outdistanced losers by close to a 2-1 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. The dollar rallied in value against leading foreign cur· rencies today after a protracted slump. Sto<-kll In Thr Spot II git« NEW YORK IAPI S.ltt, 4 p,m prlo 11111 net <"""91 OI tM 1111•11 m••I "<llw. New York Slock ERIMl"99 ••Wtt. ~~:3','!:'ploNlly et ~.~n :J,,, + H. MerrlOll . l41S,'IOO 11'> + '• P•PSICo • le.. tOO 11' o • '• ~ MOIOl'S. 21t,100 •l'h • - s~&e:~n<>-P> ,.,,.., Oow·J-•ver•ga• ~ MIOh Low Clo.e CllQ ••L.S1n.s.u11s.n 111.11+ 1.11 tlJ Sii 116.74 Jlt.11 JU 11 + 2.sf IM.4' 111.11 lot.'IO 110.lt-0.04 m.u m" tt1.•s n..JI+ 1.n lO 1110 70 Trn U Ull •S S111 llldu\ Trtr1 Utlll 65 $tk ............ .•.• 1,ltj!OI> S7t,IOO »7,JllD J,IJl,.00 EHi Kode• ?SS.SCIO St •I Oow Cll.... 141,SOO JHo • '• .-----------------Ryder s~. >••.OOO ·~ ..... Citicorp • .. 204,'IOO 2111, , ~. K•~col! . 201,'IOO n • " Enon . . . . 100.000 .. ~ .... Mertll FlelCI 190,'IOO JI + 1 ... MlnnMM .... IM,100 '1·~ + 1-. BIACk 0.,lt, . 111,400 IHI '• • Gtll FOOCI,, 117,400 31 , ._ Holldty Inn . 11•,100 1' 1 '' What .'ifoeob Did NEW YOAIC IAPl AOvenceel ~11- AleQelT I.SO S 21 HV.+ V. TrGPpf ...... r210 -..... AloGre n j 1 6 t:• V. TrGPpf 2.50.. 2 Zl'h+ .,.., A...,, Tre11son .n • 1s u + :i. A -.1. • ,..._ ..,,,,,,. · · ... l • .... 1,.,, .. ., uo 1 J1 iw.-v. ~.-.can 11.J~aw.:-r• :::::.:: l.~:~ ffl J:+·i,; Tmln 1.Jt 6 "' JO!\ .... . lHI< ll•noe<I Tote! hSllH New 1'17 Noh• ..... 1'11 !OW> AOOlll\ 1.10 t 41 Jl'lt • 14 Trewlr pl 1.. 1J l6 .... . Aobll'I• .JJIO 17' 9i\+. t'o Tr1COfl2.1 .... -ZOVJ+ y, Roell() 1.40 I u 2I _ .,._ TrlCnpf 2.IO.. a ~ t,\ =~~t1.:;·;11: 1:~·;..; l~.:= .011 :: f, ;~~·~ Aocllowr ·• ' 11 12''•-loo T•••P•< .IO s 1t1 u21-. + ~, Trlntyl" t • l2 ~-"' Aockwl 2.JO 1 lff 2'\11 .... • 'troe>1ce11 1 U Sl a1~-'Iii Akl11tof 4.7S.. s n l'J+ .... Tucll!G 1.,. • 5' " -.... llOllmH U• t 136 JO~ ~ T=: .10 j U4 J1lll+ V. Roflrllld 21 " 1V...... Tw 110• -' ti ... Aolllns ,fOIO t7 1t~ '" • .... "" •· AOlllOll l4 Jiit TvcoLel> .4111 • ti uv ...... A0e>er 1.60. j 12 26.,.,.:.:.· ~ TyltrCp .60 1 '2 U ' .. • " ROf'et' M " 310 IW. + \4o TYll'lsllr -i2_.r -Ult\ .... Ro..,.le .SO. U 162 20 -,._ UAL .60 4 'U '°"+ V1 R-•ll .1211 l'O 29 ..... UGI 1.:1 a 4% 12 -.. NEW YORK IAP)· S.IH. 4 11 m l>'tC~ •lld Ml <""'9o of IM ten mou •<ll1<e Amerlc111 ~toe-Exe""-luUH. lrllCllng ,,.,,.,... .. .,•I mor• 1,..n 11 W•lno<Oll 701 l00 IJ •I'• KAiier Incl 111,800 • 1 . HCklOllM . . 111100 JI'• .. Fly Ole 011 101,400 21'. + I • CA\llet11 lr>c! ~.seo • • •, Sy11IH Coro u.100 n 1, 0.leproc:I •J,000 16•0 , Io ~~Z',P P'!t ~::: ~I• .. ~. Susquena pf 31.•00 II'.• lip• and Do1D11• AoyCGOI , • 21 II .... , u~ , 1 _ ......... RoyfO USe S 543 ~-V. ' 'i ~ --· . llublltm MU S2 Ullo-V. U I.to J.C 11'~+ Ye NEW YORI( l•Pl -The lollowlno 1151 lt11»TM .1. t lJ UV.-v. 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" ""''"" :I ,. tJ.t .. ••» .. :~ '"" , ... ~ • -" yin' .. ,._" 'rr ·.a 1 ti 1 ••••• w di t > '7 • " rL "A l .I , Wlnttr~ 1 • •U ,.~-~ • ~1114 J •: t 1 t'~: ~ ,, ' l ,., .......... • O.lelldar lfledel Twn ty·thous and calendars featuring a picture of Dixy Lee Ray superimposed on an orange sunset are being distributed as hQliday gifts from the governor. Life Set In Di's Slaying SAN DIEGO CAP> -A 27-year-old avowed les· bian has been sentenced to life in state prison for the bludgeon slaying of a Marine drill instructor July 21. Natha Mary DePew was described Wednes- day by Superior Court Judge William T. Low as a "danger to society." Low said the slaying or Sgt. Davis Hargis, 23, or San Diego was "certain- ly bizarre. "SHE REALLY was just the girl next door when s he was ap- proached by Mrs. Hargis to kill Davis Hargis," the judge said. "Over three weeks. they discussed sever al plots. I jotted down 12 plots, including the one she Miss DePew remembered, putting bullets in the carburetor. I have beard a lot of murder cases, but I 've never heard that one before." Mrs. DePew pleaded guilty Nov. 23 to beating Hargis to death with a 6 1h-pound window weight and dumping his body in a dry creek bed near Ramona. T H E SLAIN Marlne's wife . Carol Louise Hargis, was convicted of first-degree murder Dec. 7. She will be sentenced by Low on Jan. 4. . During testimony at Mrs. Hargis' trial, Miss DePew told of plans to kill the young Marine "just for the money," in· e luding (1) lacing his french toast with LSD, (2) slipping the poison sac of a tarantula into a piece of blackberry pie and (3) putting bullets into the carburetor of his truck. Conditions Improving For Skiing By Tbe Associated Press .. . ·skiing conditions were reported improving for the upcoming weekend in the Sierra Nevada. Her e are the condl· Uon1 as provided to the C a l ifornia State Automobile Association: ~ ..... -.,... 24 lf!Cfln,, ,_.=:,:::a::..~ "='~ii.. ........ ( .... ,....,, '-cMln. two "'"'-'"'" 9"ff .... -..... lflCNt. .-ck .. ""'*'• -(Mfrs, lr"MI, .,...,... ........ -._ ,,.. ltlcllts~ f'KilMd...-,pecll,llxlHts. .............. -... i>-S1 In- diet, pe(Md ,.......,, -(,!Mlfrs. ..... ,,, ... ..... ,,...., a ,....., ... , -1,to0 ....,•llOflo S4 llw;NS, PKlil<I ~. U IHIJ. •.-.. .-.ellOfl, S tncti.s. .............. """" -a-» u.:i... ~"-to.If IHtt.. tr..,... sal k ... -leM )6 IMll .. , ~ .......... , ... ~-------4'1ft<MI. ~.......,,JNlts. ~ ........ -._ ... ,,... ~"'-"" .. ... --1t '""'"· .............. ..... -..... IMMI,, .....,s ... -. ' ."' ..... ..,.... _._ J4 In. ................ .,...,.u ..... . . . . '. Tnur.a..y, DlK.ember 22, 1877 CONSUMER I CALIFORNIA Conso•ners Warned of blfhi Bulb Defects when electrical current ls flnt ap- plied, the Con.sumer Product Safe- ty Commission said Wedbesday. Taiwan. sclaaors or pilers. Or the consumer may choose to return the bulbs to the place of purchase for exchange or refund. · Replacement Bulbi, MRI, also ap. pear on the package. The bulbs were aold four to a package for about $1 or less na· tionwlde. WASHINGTON (AP) - Conaumers who have bouebt l'eplacement bulbs for their Christmas Ugbta have been ad· med to inspect them for a possJble detect conslsUng of a very 1bor .. lhl.o 11rand or wire at the base or the bulb. The defect could cause the bulb to shatter witm7o exploslve force TUE ADVICE CAME with an an· nouncement from the commission that Market Research Imports, lncli.Jle Village, Nev., is voluntarily wlUftlrawing from sale certain im- ported replacement bulbs made in Tho bulbs have a thin atrand of wire approximately one-ei&hth to one-fourth of an inch long which may prolnlde from the soldered tip al the base or the bulb, the com· mission said. It said the defect may be safely removed by simply soJpping oil the protruclio& wire with a pair of TWO MODELS OF bulbs are sub· ject to the defect and are identified on the package as item No. LC·9004, size 9'4 and item No. LC-7004, size 7~. The wo~ds, · Other distributors may have lm· ported the same bulbs from Taiwan and may be sellin~ them under dUferent brand names, the commlssJ<JO said. FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL HUGHIE . . . RESIDENCE 32 Hugh ie is one . of 43 clients, from 18 to 66 years of age, who live in Residence 32 at Fairview State Hospital;' like everyone living there he is developmentally disabled, his mental capacity vvon't grow much beyond that of a normal five-year-old He is 37 years old and has spent the last 23 years in state institutions. His physical appearance is pleasant, though his blond nair is thinning and he is developing a bit of a paunch; quite generally he appears comparable to anyone approaching the middle years of life. He is, llowever, an epileptic, and he was born with damage to the left side of his brain causing him to have a stroke-like inoopacity with a slight shuffle of the right leg and a somewhat limited function Qf the right arm. A typical day finds him rising at 6:30 A.M. and by 7:00 AM. he's completed his personal hygiene chores and he's ready to dress; he'll usually wear an open-neck sportshirt, a pair of faded cord bell bottoms, and sneakers. He'll often choose to be accompanied by his Mickey fh>use doll which he carries in the right front pocket of his ieans. Hughie (and Mickey) have breakfast and are soon ready for their usual 8 hQurs of school and/or organized instruction in such diverse subiects as arts and aafts, communications, table manners, and personal hygiene. He returns from his busy school schedule at about 5:00 P .M. and immediately proceeds to listen to his portable radio; during the next hour, until dinner, he'll listen to every possible sports program that he can tune to. You see, Hughie is the resident sports fan and he mrks hard at making himself capable of reciting volumes of little known facts from the world of sports, facts like knowing by name the various team doctors in the National Football League. And he's rarely wrong. To this fX)int in Hughie's day, and through dinner which is served about 6:00 P.M., he and his peers have enioyed a fruitful day; they've found their classes challenging and their day has been filled with "normalization"" activities, cx:tivities which will help them to behaviorally adiust to the "outside 'NOrld'' whenever they are fortunate enough to go on a trip away from Fairview. But after dinner Hughie's productjve day takes a potential step backwards. During that time of the day that you and I ore relaxing in the comfortable social setting of our homes, Hughie and his friends spend their time in a large rather sterile room that is filled only with institutional-type chairs lined up against the wall, all of which face the single T.V. set that is hung some 8 feet off the tiled floor. Hughie may listen to his radio, and a few of his friends may watch T.V., but most iust sit languidly by and store into space. It is during these "social hours" ·:that every professional employee at Fairview believes that the greatest advances could be made in their clients' behavior. If Hughie and his friends had a normal living area that included couches, chairs, tables, lamps, rugs, etc., then they could learn about life's social graces, they could learn acceptable behavior in surroundings that have been normal to you and I since we were tots. Hughie and his peers would hove a chance to be more accepted wheri they mode occasional trips to the "outsi de."··But funds aren't' available for such "frills"·:as chairs and couches and rockers; the budget is limited and such purchases simply can't be made. Nt:Jny donations are mode by charitable people in the community but such a:mtributions are usually directed to the "little kids"··-not to the big guys like Hughie. ijut, boy, do they need help. They're the "forgotten clients" ··at Fairview. If you 've got just a tiny bit of charity laying around in your purse or tucked away in your wallet, then how about helping to put a lamp, or a chair, or a rocker, into the life of Hughie and his friends in Residence 32? Just before you relax in your "nbrmalizotion" ·· area, write a check for anything you can afford and send it to: . HUGHIE, VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR RESIDENCE 32 FAIRVIEW STA TE HOSPITAL 2501 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 .: • 44 f8shion island, newport center 644-5070 - 1 t 1 -. INSIDE: •Movies •Television a. .. mo11 .. ~mszmmm ....... ~ ................. Thu.r·ada·~-Dece .. m·bft·~-·.19·77----~~DA.ILV·P·IL.OT~---~-.. ~~~~ •I Snrl.th Fires Blast at Cincinnati Coacli CHAPEL HILL, N.C. CAP> - North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith says Cincinnati coach Gale Catlett was "trying lo blast the orriclal to cover up his own mis take" after last week's game between the two teams. Catlett was sharply critical of both Smith and the officials after the Tar Heels defeated Cin- cinnati 67-59 Saturday in Greensboro, N.C., Catlett ac· cused Smith of talking to the Cincinnati bench several times during the game. and admitted he voiced an obscenity at the Tar Heel coach late In the game. Catlett also said bis team had been '•homered" in the loss. "This is not the first time coach Catlett has used the of- ficials as an excuse for a loss. I remember reading in t.be last two years where he· blamed bis team's l06s at Louisville on of- ficiating,'' Smith said in a response released Wednesday night. . Smith ·said be also saw CaUetl Sports in Brief Apps Sc~res 4 As Kings Romp INGLEWOOD <AP ) --Syl Apps scored four goals, three in the final period, and added two assists to spark the Los Angeles Kings to an 8·1 rout of the Min· nesota North Stars m a National Hockey League game Wednes- day night. Apps, who cume lo the Kings from Pittsburgh in a trade last month, lied tllllft:club record for most points in~ne game set by Butch Goring in 1972. The 30-year-old center con. • nected for his fourth goal of the game with 3:08 left to play on a 1 Los Angeles power play. It was his 13th 1:oal of the season. Tonner Lo11f•!f M J-:LBOL:RNE. i\u!>l ralia 1 To1>-l>Cl'<.lcd Vilas (;l·rulaitis of lht' l'nil(•d swtc.•s hr('(•1cd into th(• second round of the· S200.000 Australian Oµc.•n today. but dt' fending c·hamp1on Roscoe Tan· ner lost and fumed at sugges- tions that he hadn't tried to win Gerulaitis defeated John Marks 7·5, 6·0, 6·1 in an easy workout on the center court. Then Chris Lewis of New Zealand stunned Tanner 3·6, 6-3. 6·2, 1·6, 6·4 in another first round match. When someone mused that Tanner might have been Anteaters T est Oregon EUGENE. Ore.-UC Irvine's bask ct b a LI te a m faces i l s toughest obstacle of the young season tonight when the Ant· 'eat ers in vade Mac Arthur Court. h e r e. to battle the \\;ni vcrs1ty of Oregon. A crowd of l0,000 1s expected and Oregon's Ducks will be favored lo run their season rec- ord to 7 · l. t.:Cl comes into the game with a 4·3 record after a 73 ·68 setback lo Portland 1 lln1vcrs1ly Tuesday night. The Ducks are led h y 6·10 sophomore center Dan .cHartshorne. who is averaging 13 .7 p o ints per ga m e. 6 ·7 frcshman forwurd Phil Barner 112.5 points per game> and 6·8 junior fo rward Kelvin Small ( 10 l points>. The Anteaters counter with a passing.game offense that is led by Wayne Smith. who 1s hitting 19 points per outing. more interested in getting home for the holidays than in winning the tourney. he replied: "I think that's an insult. H I wanted to lose 1 could have defaulted and said I had a headache." Also upset was third-seeded Tony Roche. beaten 4-6, 4·6, 6·3, 6·3, 6·2, by Richard Lewis of Bri· ta in. Verb.,. Dd Win• LOUISVILLE -Ballard failed to score in the final six seconds and lost to Los Angeles Verbum Del 69·68 in the Ken· lucky Classic prep basketball games here Wednesday. Balla rd's Jerry Eaves had brought the Bruins to within a point with a field goal seconds l'arhcr. but lhC' Louisville team cou ld not get off a s hot although ll had possession or the ball in the closing seconds. DeMalha, Md .. had defeated Shelby County in the opening ~ame of the Classic 75·64. Ballard led the Californians twice by nine points, the last lime at 28-19 before being out- s cored 10·0, as Verbum Dei moved on to a 31·30 halftime ad- vantage. B~la'e Sign• SEATTLE -B.ruce Boehle. heir apparent in left field, has signed a three-year contrac!t with the Seattle Mariners worth an estimated $300,000·plus, mak- ing him the highest salaried Mariner, a team spokesman !>aid. Bochte. 27. was the Mariners· prize selection in the recent free agent sweepstakes. He hit .301 last season for California and Cleveland. Football Re~ord MISSION, Kan. -Football fans turned out in record num· bers al college games this year. according to statistics released Wednesday by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Attendance totaled 32.9 milUon al all of the 638 four-year col· leges in the United States where football is played, the NCAA said . That was an increase of 893,000 spectators Crom 1976, or about 1.5 percent more t.han last year. The attendance increase was the biggest since 1971, when most colleges went to an 11· game schedule. AIA, Michigan Vie Cage Duel Tonight in Anaheim When the University of Michigan basketball team tan~les with Athletes In Action tonight (7:30> at the Anaheim Convention Center, any resemblance to the team that was rated No. 1 in the country a year ago will be purely coincidental. · The Michigan Wolverines lost All-American guard Rickey Green, Steve Grote and John Robinson to graduation. Then center Phil Hubbard injured a knee dUrinsr the summer while playing in the University Games in Bulgaria and is out for the season. He underwent knee surgery. · Michigan coach Johnny Orr says of the 6-7 center and member or th e U .S . Olympic basketball team ln 1976 : "He's probably the best basketball player in the country al both ends of the floor '' ~t ichigan has lost only two of seven game!i this season bul may • be out of its class against the bigger AlA team. ''They're big and fast and we're little and fast,," the 1977 coach of the year, Orr, said. "We're hoping they won't be able to find us. ·'These guys are good. Mike Robinson (formerly of Michigan Stale) is a s ub. If l had him, I know we'd wln the Big 10." quoted in a national magazine as s aying foreign officials kept his Metro-Seven all-stars from win· nine in an International Cup game. "He made that statement after one of their losses, a 20 or 30-point defeat to Italy," Smith said. Catlett was reportedly heard to curse Smith during the game by television viewers in Cincin- nati. A local station there had wired the Cincinnati coach for sound during the telecast. ••Evidently, he was .upset . about the technical foul called on his team late in the game. Apparently, be was trying to blast the official to cover up his own mistake of not forcing ac· tion.'' Smith said. North Carolina and CinciMali were tied al 57 with 4:59 remain- lng when the Bearcats were charged with a technical. Smith said Catlett was arguing with an official about the call when he approached the discussion, and Catlett then cursed Smith. Smith said he listened to the conversation between Catlett and the omclat because rules prohlbit a discussion between one coach and · an official. "Coach Catlett asked us to leave. I did not because I thought the discussion con- cer 1d our team as well as his," Smith said. Smith said there was another confrontation when Catlett com- plained abdut a television timeout. · "l very calmJ¥ said to him, 'Gale, it was youtowq television 'I ' station.· acting throu1h you atbletlc department. that asklid for tbe two timeouts':· Sm1 said .• SmlU\ also said Catlett had been warned by officials that bls players must come out alter the Nort.4 Carolina players that bad slowed down the gam.Q. "Coach Catlett obviously forgot about the earlier warning," .he said. ·•tn fact, his own television~ had hi.m telling his team during that particular timeout to lay back until the officials made them come play!' ' Vikings Try Wanning Up _i In Ar.izona ~·~~ \ ~ BLOOMINGTON'. Minn. (AP) -The Minnesota Vikings worked out briefly at Metropolitan Stadium WedneJS- day, despite freezing tem- peratures in the high 10s and a biting northwest wind of up to 2S m.p.h. The Vikings leave today for Arizona. where they will conduct the bulk of their preparations for thetr first round National Foot- b a 11 I,.eag ue playoff game against the Los Angeles Rllms. Kickoff is at 3 Monday. • Although the Rams and \vf. kings are meeting in the playoffs for the fourth time in nine years, it's t.he first Ume the Rams have held the home field advantage. The Rams, who walloped the Vikings 35·3 during the regular season on the West Coast. have lo!>t all three playoff games lo Minnesota. .. If there's any revenge, it's probably on their side." says Vik in gs coach Bud Grant, "because we have knocked them out of three pla~rrs · · Beeause of· the wintry weather, the Vikir\gs have been unable to practice «>n a full fiek1 for more than a OJOnUl. "It's important that we kind of hon e up everytHin~." said Grant, "to do all the siill things 1 that we are not able to dct here in our weather . .it makes it almost mandatoty that we get to some place where we can get out and .: do some of those things." ... MICHIGAN S CURT STEPHENSON (85) STRETCHES OUT QB RICK LEACH. Grant is particularly con· eeroed that the Vikini:s' kick\ coverage has suffered becau!le ~ of the w13vailability of a full Rugged Work~uts Set Michigan Begins Rose Bowl Training Ordeal, LOS ANGELES <AP> -Bo Schembcchler and his Michigan Wolverines have arrived in Southern California for their Jan. 2 Rose Bowl date with Washington. and coach Schem· bechler wasted no time getting down to work. "We're going to hit it hard the first three days out here," Schem· bechler said Wednesday after Mi chigan's charter fli ght ar- rived. "We didn't get anything done at home because of exams." The Big Ten co-champion Wolverines were whisked to nearby Citrus College, where they'll prepare for the Rose JJowl, and Schembechler whistled short a scheduled media photo and in- terview session with the team. After the Michigan players - some of them In mid-interview - heeded the coach's whistle. he had them running laps and drill· ing on the misty, chilly afternoon. practices will be open to .. everyone but Michigan," securi· ty guards atthe Wolverines' prac- tice field kept everyone but media members from the workout, and reporters were barred from the team's locker room. Schembechler. returning for the Pasadena classic for the rourth time in his nine years at Michigan, is still looking for his first Rose Bowl victory and s11 id he intends lo try a s lightly dif· ferent approach.this lime. "In the past 1 lhink we peaked a litlletooearly," he said. "Butthis time we're going to gel our hard work out of the way early and try to be a tour best Corthe game. How our practices go will determine how we play." In the Wolverines' 1972 Rose Bowl trip, a 13·12 loss to Stanford, Schembechler had trouble keep· ing his practice schedule because Southern California had a The Wolverines• camp was in marked contrast to that of Washington's Huskies, who ar· , rived the/revious day and are statione at Or'&nge Coast College. Washington .coach Don James' pla)'t!rs spent mqst of Tuesday afternoon being photo· graphed and Interviewed and held no organized drills. And while James said Huskies Bills Coach Ousted BUFFALO, N.Y. -Owner Ralph Wilson of the Buffalo BiUs announced today that Jim Ringo won't return next $eason as head coach. particularly rainy December. At almost the precise moment Schembechler stepped off the plane Wednesday, a sho'l\'er began. "There·s that httl<' black cloud again ," he said.· 'Tell me this rain isn •t going to last.·· Michigan. 10·1. will go into the Rose Bowl a two-touc hdown favorite over the 7-4 Jlusk1cs But Schembcchler said he didn't bel icve that spread was realistic "Fourteen points 1s loo much, iudJ?ing on the ba s is or Washmgton's last seven games.·· he remarked. "On the basis ot those. Washington ranks among the best teams in the country.·· Schembechler was asked how his Wolverines would probably at· lack the Huskies· defense. "As an associate of mine might s ay." he said with a grin , alluding to Woody Hayes, "a good general never g1vesout his game plan." practi ce field. Rookie Eddie Payton of the Detroit Lions re- turned a kickoff and punt for touchdowns when the Vikings defeated the Lions 30·21 In their regular !leason finale. The football field at lt\el Stadium has been covered by a tarpaulin and half of it was r~ moved for the Vikings' workout. Flame throwers were used to ' dry a portion of the field. which 1 is very muddy Bob Lee, who has seen oc· caslonal spat duty during two stints with the Minnesota Vi· kings, will be the.quarterback on lh~spot Monday. The 32-year-old Lee has spent sc\'en of his nine years in the National Football League with the Vikings. lie was drafted by the Vikings but was traded to Atlanta in 1973, along with mid· . die linebacker Lonnie Warwick ' for backup quarte rback Bob Berry and a first-round draft choice. The lanky Pacific University graduate will be starting his . · .,,econd playoff game for thf' Vi· kings. He was the starting quartcrback on Christmas Day 1971 when the Viktngs dropped a 20-12 decis ion to the Dallas Cowboys. Chris Evert Clean the ~ t . FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. AP) -Chris Evert says she as a great time with boyfriend immy Connon but has no plans· marry tbe volatile tennis star e's dated for aix years. ''I don't have anythln1 Juicy to 11 you," J!:yert .. 1d WidMlday ahe obaerved ber 23rd birtb- ay relaxln1 amona f eadve brl1tmu decoraUon1 at b•r mlly'• bona• here. W•'r• tlQt ven clOM to 1etUn1 married." • Sbe saicl 11\e called '" lm· promptu press 1atherin.1 after hearing a rash of rumors tbat sbe and Connors bad wed. uwe hHe a lot of fun together and enjoy beinl tocetber and I see no reMOG for it to 1top," she said. "I only Yttl•h people would accept tbe r.elaUonahlp for what •t l• ud stop trylnl \0 make it into somethlnJ tt la '*· .. SIM CCJDILrmed lhe and eon. . non h•d been totethtr reeently ln S~. Louts and In Newpc>rt I »each, but added: ''We've never s\Opped seeing each other in aix )ledrs." Sh• saJd she and Connors simply -.Joy each other'a com· pany. "We're very contpaUble, we have so mud\ In comrnon," Evert aald. "We have a great time tosether, ll's • good rel•· tlonthip, not a cuual run1. &ut J'rll to afntd ol mania1e these . 4a19. :v., few seem to ""'· at least or tbcMt I'm surrounded by." D ( LARRY BUDGEN Fountain Valley BRYAN CALOWELL Fountain Valley DON BARKER Newport Harbor ' . FOOTBALL /BASKETBALL Gittens Player of Year; Seven Others Honored Fountain Valley HJgh's WilUe Olttens is the CIF Division I foot· ball player or the year as selected by the Cit.zem Savings Athletic Foundation board. Division I encompasses the Big Five Conference. Southern Con· ference, Coastal Conference and Eastern Conference. Free Throws Do It Gittens, the most prolific scorer in Orange Coast area his· tory with S2 touCbdowns in his career at Fountain Valley, which included the last four games of the 1975 season, led the Barons to 10 straight wins before a 21·20 double overtime loss to Loyola <Los Angeles> High cut short Fountain Valley's season. The 175-pound tailback scored 28 touchdowna this year and ran for 1,408 yards and a 7 .4 aver age. The statistka are deceiving- Fountain Valley usually bad an insurmountable halftime lead and Gittens wa.s on the sidelines watching the reserves many times. Vikes Nail Loara, 77-70 '. By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of IM D•llr .. llee S••ll Marina High of Huntington Beach had to rely on perfect free throw shooting in the closing minutes to score a come·from· behind 77-70 victory over Loara Jflgh (Anaheim) Wednesday night in non·league baskelball at the Marina gym. The Vikings sank eight free throws without a miss in the last 1 :27 and finished the night with a sizzling 87 percent record of success from the foul line. Sophomore Keith Dawson con· ,·ertcd fou r of the crucial free throws. Hi s firs t pair gave Marina a 71·70 lead with 1: 27 re· maining and when he added the other two with 31 seconds left it put the Vikings in front 75-70. Center Randy Heidenreich. playing with a face mask or the type a hockey goalie would wea r , also sank two charity shots in the closing seconds. He finished with 21 points to lead th~ Vikings. , H eidenreich wears the mask to protect a jaw fracture in· purred in a fight 18 days ago during a game with Long Beach Millikan. Neither Heidenreich no r Dawson were in the starling Hneup, but each came off the bepch to provide some badly needed firepower for Marina. Loara was making good use of a fast break offense and con-' rolling the offensive boards. The Saxons led by as much as 11 points. in.the third quarter. Dawson's 20-foot set shot al tbe close of the third period climaxed a determined come- b,ck for Marina and gave the Vik· >aws a 54-53 lead . ... The· game was a dogfight to tbe finish. The lead changed pands 13 times and the game was lied on five occasions. Liberty Wins; CVC Dumped RIVERSIDE-Liberty Chris· tiOln of Huntington Beach posted jtil first victory of the season !While Capistrano Valley Chris· ~an blew an 11-point halftime eed to suffer its fourth defeat in pening round action Wednes· ay of the Christian League basketball tournament. r ~reg Goodnight clicked on 15 ,,;; 25 shots from the field for 30 ~olnts to lead Liberty pas t !Bethel Christian of Garden \G rove. 89-41, and snap a six· ~ame losing streak. Capistr ano, cruis ing at halftime. 37·26, went ice cold in the second half and dropped a 64·60 decision to American Christian <Pomona), despite a ~·point performance by Ron nailey. The two winners square off .tonight (6) at Riverside Chris· tian's gym while the losers met in an aftemoon game. ~~ ... ...-Oll'ht .... •t . .,.~:m':::"'.,,,.~~ J, t1GPt11M n. tf4Nttme-C.JWrtr '"''· ' ~~64,C....V....,awtellail .. Cetie-Mi.t •• -..n •. GnMll u, Jol'ftNn 2, l.Mfltltoftf,.,..._ .. Me11Urne-a.-S7·». Loara 's biggest advantage was its ll·point bulge in the third period. and Marina's best lead was the final score, a seven- point difference. . The teams took turns gomg hot and cold. Loara outscored Marina 12·2 in one stretch, and Marina answered it by an even more impressive 19·5 surge. Jn the end, 1l was foul trouble that hurl Loara. Four of its players were within one whistle of fouling out in the final two minutes, and Marina was turn- ing every trip to the free throw line into a pair of points. "-•11') ,, " .. ., M9rt1n S o • 10 Mc,..,,.,., 2 1 a 1 Fella s 1 S 17 M<~ s 2 1 n PJulmer 4 • • 14 llocll,.. 0 0 , 0 Lndrimyr • l s 10 cn)aunu f9",. • Bruce • 2 l 10 loflm 1 2 o • Tleul J J l 1J $91 ... ., i 2 •• M1•0<o 1 I I l OIMI\ 0 0 1 0 tl•ldenf91CI\ 1 7 • 21 H•UOll 1 2 2 4 D•wton a a :a 1• Tol•IS 1' '• 1a 1' Tot•IS JS 21 1' n Sa<-tltyQu.I~ 19 ll ,, 11-10 " ,, " D-11 0•11• ,.lot ....... ..., ,..llf~ll 0'0-11 Gittens' coach, Bruce Pickford, says this of his star: "W)len Willie was a sophomore he w as the best back in th1a school's history." Seven other Orange Coast area players are among the three squads. incl uding firs t team selecti.ons Larry Budgen and Bryan Caldwell o f Fountain Valley and Newport Harbor High 's Don Barker. Budgen, a two-way standout for two years at Fountain Valley, was one or the primary reasons for the holes Gittens was running through at guard. As a linebacker he had 24 unassisted tackles and 45 assists. Llke Git- tens, be was called up to the varsity near the end of his sophomore season. Caldwell, the Sunset League's lineman of the year, was also a two-way star-but his forte was at defensive tackle where he dominated the line of scrim· mage. At 6·6 and 220 pounds, Caldwell is extremely agile and is being heavily recruited by the major colleges. Barke r of Newport Har- bor led his mates to a 9.3 season and Into the Big Five semifinals. He had 189 tackles to his credit-including a.n utound- i~g 150 unassJsted tackles. CIF DIVISION I PLAYER OF THE YEAR WILLIE GITTENS. Barker also intercepted two passes, returning one 54 yards for a touchdown and caused four fumbles, recovering two. Other standouts honored are second team choice Mike Camp of Estancia (Costa Mesa) High, and third team selections John Gleason of Mater Dei (Santa Ana), Jell Hyder of Edison <Hun· tington Beach) and Kent Tucker of Marina High (Huntington Beach). Camp, a 6-4, 195-pound r e- ceiver, caught 41 passea for 588 yards, including three game- winners. Also a basketball ace and shot putter in track, Camp was considered Estancia's best blocking lineman. Hyder intercepted four puses and had 78 tackles from his spot <See Gl'ITENS, Page 83) Gre en Sparks Gauchos Sad&eback Wins, 120-102; Ht;Jsts Rustl,ers By CRAIG SHEFF Of .. ,..., ...... '"'" Artie Green was anxious to get home for the Chrlstmas weekend Wednesday night, but you couldn't tell it the way he played· basketball. Green. a 6·2 freshman guard from the Bronx, NY. scored 27 points and had a bundle or as· sists in sparking Saddleback College to its 10th victory in 11 games, a 120-102 rout of host Santa Ana College. Green, who caught this mom· ing's r ed-eye flight for New York, was marvelous - especially in the opening half. He scored from in close· and 12 seconds later stole another San· ta Ana pass and hit still another Jayup. He added a free throw when fouled on the play. That got the Gauchos in gear. They outscored Santa Ana 8-1 in the next minute lo zoom ahead 48-39. And the rout was on. "That was Artie's best game," sa id Gauchos coac h Bill Mulligan. "I told him iC he plays Jtke that the rest of the season we'll win the state cham· pionship. He just played hard tonight. "As a team we played as well as we have all season. Somehow we were ready to play tonight. And we played wJth intensity;• said Mulliga11. Saddleback's press bothered the Dons extensively with Santa Ana turning the ball over 32 times. And the Dons also had foul problems with four players going to the bench with five personals. The Gauchos also received a fine effort from guard Rodney Mille r , who pumped in 24 points-with most of his 12 field goals coming from Jong range. LELAND BRUCE (21) FIGHTS FOR THE BALL. He scored 20 points before the interml.s8ion and bad five steals. In one spree late in the hall, the former h igh 'School All· American tallied 10 of 12 Sad- dleback points-and set up the other basket with a steal. Las Vegas Wms So tonight the Gauchos bid for win No. 11. hosting Golden West at8. Diablos Dealt 77-74 Loss LAS VEGAS -Earl Evans' tip·in with two seconds remain· ing gave host Nevada-Las Vegas an 85-84 victory over Iowa in the championship game or the second annual Rebel Roundup. BURBANK -De spite a brilliant shooting performance by senior forward Mike Boster, Mission Viejo High dropped a 77·74 decision to Simi Valley here Wednesday night in the opening round of the Burroughs basketball tournament. Boster connected on 16 or 22 Cield goal attempts and added a pair of free throws for a game- high 34 points, more than double his season scoring average . But the Diablos could not hold on lo an 11-point third quarter lead and went down to their third def eat ln seven ouUngs. Simi Valley took the lead for good at 68-66 and though Mission came within one point three times. it never regained control. The Diablos played Burbank's Bellarmine Jefferson this after- That spurt came with 7:45 lo go in the half and the Gauchos down, 31·28. Green scored two free throws, hit another one 20 seconds later and added a layup after a steal. Ten seconds later he had noon. Mlu1Mvi.1e11o another steal, feeding to Rich "",. • "•'<"' o 1 1 , McElrath for two points. ~::: 1~ l ! ~ :=~~ i ; ! ~: D;:aatfo':t:!~itw~31~e~:~ !a1;.~ · o.c.-.-2 o s • Tatel• u " u 10 answered points lo go in front. lare"o..Nn 38 35 MIQIOll Vlofo 1' 24 20 '4-ft • • The Hawkeyes took an 84-83 lead over the unbeaten, ninth· ranked Rebels with 13 seconds remaining on a foul shot by Ron· nie Lester. UNLV's Tony Smith missed a jump shot with four seconds to go but Ev1ns was there for the winning shot. 11m1 v.u., 20 11 u ~ Then Green took over a.rain. 9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ____ __ e HRISTMAS $Hf1Mllctl 0•1 (1t0 ...... ,, " ,. .. ft " " • MclElretll • I I • Mn•f'll • ' s 1J Orffft 10 1 3 27 Wl<llllll• 7 f S IS ICftl9lll :I 2 3 8 Joffwwn S f S IS SN• a 4 1 :10 Ollrl• '0 0 S 0 $i.hl • 0 2 • ,..,.,., 6 0 ' 11 Lloy 3 1 2 a Rltll•rdson 1 o 1 • Miiier 12 0 2 2• NtllliOft 1 I 3 IS P•lltrM>ft I 0 ) 2 Tr•ylor • • 2 IS BKMI 0 0 0 0 H•lrst"" • 0 0 I Helm 2 1 I ' P... 2 2 I • M.-rM Hiii 2 o o • Jonn o o t o V•nde••• 1 2 0 4 TOl•I• 45 12 30 'Kn Milot Hiii 0 1 0 1 ,,.pO 0 0 l 0 Tol•ll SO 20" 110 . l Basketball Scores SPECIALS ' FROM THE OUTBOARD SUPERMARKET Start a new yeor right with a new Mercury outboard for ··your sail or shore boat. · The' beat is not always the IM1t without .tier 1ale1 service. We have factory trained mechanics and l 0 v-on experiente in Newport Beuch. . ADAM W. METHUEN Cypr• OrangeCounty•aoldett . Llncoln-mercury OeaJerahlp ( .. D .. .. ~· BASKETBALL I FOOTBALL ; MISCELLANY DAILY PILOT ·~ Thureday. December 22. 1971. ~.;;;.......:.....;:......:~---=~~--,;__--------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------- fM 12 Vletory Volleyball Toomey Set Oatatand.lnc gJrls volleyball DlaYers from across the nation &ad Canada wll1 be competing ln tbe third annual American Na- tional Volleyball AsaoclaUon (ANV A> t.ouriiament at Ensign Middle School <Newport), Corooa del Mar High and Huntington Beach HJgh Tuesday through Fri- day. Sailors Hold Off Fired Up Mesans Tbe boat Orange County Volleyball Club (OCVBC) will enter two teams 1n each division <JWlior, 14-and-under, and senior, 19-and-under >. Playing for the Blue team will be Cheryl Johnston, Dale Keough and AileenSemonsen from CdM; Kori and Kari Pulaski, Kari Rush and Marie L\mdie from Newport; and Chris Lawson or Laguna Beach High. Competing from out or the area are teams from Portland. Ore .• El Paso, Tex., Chicago, Atlanta and British Columbia, along with others Crom California. In addition to the four teams from OCVBC, the Balboa Bay Club (Newport Beach) and Hobie Sports (CdM) will also be playing in the tour-day tournament. Pool competition begins Tues· day with the quarterfinals at Ensign Middle School Friday morning: the semifinals at CdM High 1n the afternoon and the championship games for both divisions at Huntington Beach High Friday night. The junior ftnals are at 6 and the seniors at 8. By JlOGER CARLSON oe t• o.t1, ,.. ... saa" Newport Harbor Hlgb's Sailors are off to their best start since 1969 with an 8·3 record, but you'll have a bard time convinc- ing Costa Mesa Higb's Mustangs tbe Sailors are anything special. Mesa. winless in five atam, lost a 64--62 non-league decision as the host Sailors connected on 9 of 11 free throws in tbe fourth quarter to hold ore the upset· minded Mustangs of coach Joe Dominic Wednesday nlgbt. Apparently still flushed with their 55-54 victory over Corona del Mar Tuesday night, the Sailors appeared to only be go- ing through the motions. while Costa Mesa played with intensi- ty-battling taller Newport to a 31-31 rebound count. A tipoff to Newport's lethargic effort came at the end of the third period when Brian Freeman's 26-footer was good with no lime left to put Newport back in front, 45-44. Freeman's effort was greeted with a response akin to a funeral march. The Mustangs bounced back into the lead when Dave Dawe converted a technical foul into a free throw and Scott Miller hit from outside to make lt 47 -45. Coach Jerry DeBusk's Sailors retaliated, but were still down by a 54-51 count on Chris Beasley's layup with 4: 39 lefL But the Sailors took the lead for good with 3: 18 to go on Pat Baker's two free throws to make it 55.54 and lben Baker and Dan Stekol took turns stepping to the free throw line to bold off Mesa's upset bid. Mesa bad one last chance with four seconds to go. but Miller's 40-root shot missed with no time left. Newport shooters made 26 or .54 from the field (48.1 percent) against Mesa's tight zone, tak· ing advantage of medium range jumpers from the baseline. Costa Mesa hit 50 percent or its 5 4 attempts. Ceti."'"-IUI (64)~ ft ft .... ,, It,. • Stavrfcos t 0 0 2 Stellol 1 ' 2 20 Dawe , ' 1 • Putm111 t t , 3 Bluatt ' , I 10 Mire vie" ' 0 2 12 Miiier • 0 ' " Beller ' 3 ) s Felh 3 I 3 1 Freem•11 • 0 I • Beuley • 1 l 17 s ...... 1 0 0 " Hltc:O<k 0 0 I 0 Pequ111 0 2 I , 54Jti.rlleld I 0 I 2 StrMI 0 0 I 0 Tol .. s ,, • 14 '1 Tot ell 241111'4 Sc.er•"' o...n." Coste Mesa H II ,. " 62 H•wPOrt Harbor n ,. 12 19 ... Alamitos Race Results ......... , ~,Tr1<1l,.a1t •lll$T ltACtf-JSOyarCIS. 2 YHf old,,,.,_ Pune $3000. Run Fun8er CW1lionl 9 00 S 00 3 40 Noliylu 10.eoerl IHO uo umac 81 .. MI" CUptlaml 3 10 Tl!M-17 .... Alw 111111 -Brll\CIV Go. Sw~I Cop. Ptt Oall, Ba'fOU ~I• 01wn, Tne FurlH, lmJo PIQe,Cl•uv Reb. ~r•l<1'10 -N•ll-.Mlld U tf .. c.., -MtUtl f1111 Bir " t- Nehy T11. f'..WlllUt. StfCONO ltACE -3SO Y<1rd\ 3 yur OICI• .. up. Cl•lmlno. PYr'l• 0300. 1C1uem•ll CDelom.,.I • 40 3 00 7 60 Leo Prl•ll\ CCMdol•l 7 80 7 70 Cllarllt Gr.., IKnlQllO 2.IO Time -11..0l. AIM> ltilfl-Tr11CUl)IC10 Reel> LU<''· $<ret"*l-UIUeTlnyGo. THlllD RAC• -lJO yards. 3 yHr old~ Al'-*. P\lr .. UIOO • ... ,_ CTreflure) .l.IO 2 80 2 ~ Mid Aoc:kette CKelly) 20.te> 1.00 flM(S &Ka I Banks) 4 10 Ttone-11.-. Al.lo Aen -'Tiny N1DDln. !>H Hemp, 5111 81tnk, Tl,.,. For Ca11s.. AllOvepar. FINIPllY..-1. S<r•t<l'leel -51,_ &« M®n U tfH<t.I -).Nel._,.. & l·Mld 11.cllell•. "*~.JO. fOUll'nl llACtf -«IO y1rd• J V••r olds.ClelmlnQ, Pllr'MUlOO. 1...otot Jtl IH•rtl 4.10 2 IO 2 Ml Aullah AocJtet CNlc_... .. .,] 20 2 IO Go ~llerry 1c;.rr•I l 40 Tlme-20,6'. AIM> Ran -Jen B•v. Bo H•la, SunwtZYkl. No totratc.M~ Plf1TM llACtf -350 V••ds. 3 vur old\ & up. c1a1m1no. P\.lri.e ~. Sul\Sfllne 10.lomtwil ll.00 14 IO 1 60 Mr Ell•bO CTreuurel 1.20 2 IO Nlvtlt ~ IAdllrl I 00 TllM-17.71 AllO 11111 -Golei, Turt•1 HOile, Mr ~Pff. SuperSOJrcMrQe, 01!\Cly O•n•. SS •Hcta-.. S. Sltl,,. & 4-Mr El· u-..f'•l•$UU1. SI JC fH RACE -400 yards. 3 year old\ & up. Clll,.,.lllQ. PUr\• "4200. OulO HUlllM IN l<odemul) 1' 00 t 60 A 40 W111ke11 Llf'll CClerlsMI l 60 1 IO Yorty CW.nil 7.t10 Tlme-20.10. Als.o 11 ... -MIClnlt• SC>«•••. Too eu11s. Mlan~ ~.Bero Klno. No S< ratchet.. S•V•NTM llAC• -110 Y•rCls. 3 YMr old\ & 1.111. Clalmlno. ""'" UJOO. MofUILo<ll C8roo!!lleld) 1.40 4.40 2.60 .tudy•s Men lNlcocl9tnutl t .60 • 00 Oecldy Miu IMylttl 1 40 Tlme-•S.7'. "''° R.,, -Royel PIH, Miu B•rred Limit. Awo She GoH, Gold Pollcy, ld.ahoGo,MrBlrO--a. Ho Kr•~ U IE H<131 -).""9r111 l.edl & '• JllllJ'I M.-. f'MOlnJI. EIGHTH llACe-HOy..-dl. lyHr 01~ & up. Al-.e. PuneseoGO. D1ck•V\S~ ICuclOUI) 3.40 3.00 7.40 Acu Count (Aclelrl 6.00 3 60 DH -81•1r. N HI tMll<llelll 2.N DH-TuOhfU.,,..ml l .00 T•me n 50. Al•o A•n -Olckevs Fire Risk, Sunsllln• Jet, A1ur• One, C>eoroes Boy, Jtl C~i.ln, A•I» Tl\t Roof U IE •Ula -•·Sn•wb•111l & 2· ar11411111,,.. "* *· .. · Alle'lcl•nc• -56~ •GRAND OPENING• Special Men's Hooded Sweat Shirt NIHS.111.l,d Rec). S20 I I I $11 I ! South Coast Plaza Second Fcoor obon Hie carollHI 540.6121 . Nowata Great Price. The -Great Whisky Made Like Great Wm~ ·. •n 3095 llllfll1f ""' I) 3195 "'19/M ,.,.,. (-Ml 11111' ,.,..11~1 34so r.%1"' Sports Calendar G11·1'ENS LAUDED ••• (Continued From Pace B!) in the Edison secondary. He knocked down 14 pas.sea and as a receiver, he caught 32 passea for 503 yards and five touchdowns. Tucker, a two-way starter , was the primary force for Greg Karman's big ye~ at Marina. Karman was a first team All· "'"'T-~• Te-oerrellJ«dM, Pl"' lt 2«> sr. Ae<-0.11 i..uter. LMAllol 110 SI'. Re<-0•11 Fl4el,c.tnerltlo 200 Sr. 'T -JohnNlurrev,Lovol• ,., "Sr. T -Dev• MM!ulll, WHt Govin• 190 Sr. G -CerlOC.lctenl .. , LB Mlllllle11 110 St. 0 -urry._..,,,......ve11ey 1M Sr. c -st-Marlin. VIII• P•l"ll 11S Sr. • -*lllleOltllltt,,........ Veller 11S Sr • 8 -M11tAMy,t..osAllO\ IU Sr. 8 -T h•I eow.ri, St. Ptul 17S SI'. 8 -JOlln Hiil. l.OSAllOI 210 Sr. 8 -A"*-Pelge. s.n1e M• v.11.., 200 Sr. 8 -Kevlll Ae)'llolds, SM!ta Mol\k• 110 Sr. I( -Chrlt Schremm, TIIOusand O.kt 1•S Sr. "1rtlT_o.f_ llM-Kevtn llklley. WHI T«ral!C• 211 Sr. Ll-EC19er Mac-, Lyn-210 St, u ... _.ry# C.Nwtll, r..c.111 Veli.y 1M Sr. Line-Walt Voortlli, 8U<Tvugll\ 203 SI'. Llllt-0.tlt o.idlww11\, South Hiiis 220 Sr. LI ... ~ ~.S..-vHe 210 Sr. L8~ M1111. Pelot Veron 20S Sr. ~8-0011..,._,,.__.H.,.... 1ff .... 1...8-Rlclt SM-. Lo\AlemlW. 20S Sr. 1...8-V.llO Kel9'Sle0tf, l!I R.wocllO 1'0 Sr. LB-Ste ... lAhor,CNHey 20 Sr. 08-Tom Brur.-mllv. West Govin• 21S Sr. 08-Cll..Cll Wllllo, Sl. P.ul 1111 Sr. OB-Steve Simmon., South Pl...:1•11• 115 Sr. 08-Tom Hol,,_. C,.K•llU lllllly llS Sr. 0 8-M1'11 CM\luiles. &¥stow 115 51'. 08-LH Mlle.hell. ComPlon llS 51'. Sec:Ofld T""' Ofle!IM T E-Mlke Peulllo. (il~I• 200 5'. ltec-ll&e ~. htM<» ns Ir. Re<-Mllle WWd, c:r.tc.etita VellW 1IO 5'. 'T -Jollr\MICKentle, Aolllng Hll .. 2U Sr. T -Slew 8elllfl9w, CMnarlllo 203 Sr. G -Gr99~ l'leCIMlllll ttS s.r • G -Chrlt L.o4~ Troy 2ts Sr. c -ctlnt~llNilr 2lS Sr. 8 " -Urry~,RlwnldePolJ 1IO 5'. 8 -Brllldon t.AUt.arv. Gntpl 195 sr. 8 -Me"'411Wllltams.0Wlon 1IO Jr, 8 -Marte IC.llwl. VIII• Pe.1l 1/S Sr, 8 -JIMMY Smith, Gom!llOll llS Sr. 8 -Tom TKnchllk, lak-.f 110 sr. I( -f'r•nll Nellvldacl, LQ)AllM 113 Sr. C71/14 Orange County selection and avera&ed 7.4 yards a crack, usually through the space creat· ed by Tucker, a205-pounder. Gleuon, a 205-pound defensiv& tackle, was credited with 43 un· assisted tackles and 26 assists and was a two-year AU·Angelus Leacue selection. s.-IOI T_ .,_..... l.l,,.-l'IUUSll....-thorn. F-.... 20S Jr. Ll-Peul Ptlrellls. Olelldel• HoOWr iss Sr. Ll~evel.e114r. VIiie P_,. ns Sr. Ll-8~ a.a, Lovol• 230 Sr, U-Cllar1•U-y, L8 Poly ,. St. L8-0ewT-ley. Tl!OuSendO.lls 170 Sr. Ll-0.w PlllH'~. Temple Clly 115 Sr. L8-0.vlCISl'41er,$0UthPa-. • 175 Sr, L8-Jev Felrm.n. t..os Altos 1«1 Jr. L8-5<ott CM-Ill. 5ant• Monie• 20S Sr. 08-Tom&Mes,LMAllOS Ill> Sr. 08-0rwit Per1(ef. S.v-115 Sr. 08-Jeft AllClouel. O~le Hoover 11S Sr. • 08-John o.i-onirno. North Torrance HO Jr. DI-Terry F....cfl, LotAl.,..11'1$ 170 Sr. T1*f T-OIMll• TE-Todd Ulnwl, v.11 .. Pefll :101 Sr. AK-SliwlMendnln, AINMbrl 1IO St. Re<-RldtMtGl""'9. South TOff..Ce 1IO Sr. T -8ruc. ~IN-#1. Arcldle no Jr. T _. .... ,.......~ .. 2tS Sr. G -Ml-• Ollncl•. CrHGenta Vall•J lfS Sr. G -Porler Norton. SMI Marino 115 SI'. c · -ArwN ~l,SerVll• 2lS Sr. 8 -MlkeJelll<IM.loilulr 115 Sr. 8 _,.~~.Loyol• 200 Sr. 8 -R kll V•lenLUel•, st. P•ul 110 Sr. 8 -Hfflrv e.11, St. Fr•nc" 'lOS Sr. 8 -D1vldW1ten, Lynwood '-1 Sr. 8 -8111 ClnllcD, El Jll~hO 1• !Ir. I( -Nwm~. Pldttc. 1'° Sr. 1111,.. Tum Delt11M Llne-J°"" McAflliter. ComptOll 11S Sr. u.....,.....~-..o.i 2tS Sr. L.IM-Cllel'ltv G«Oon. c.merlllo ?JO Sr. Ll....-M1rk ,..,.. .. I, TempleClly tlO Sr. Llne-St.ve MGM, Rlvet5'de Poly 11S SI'. La-Jollll S.-1~ WedCovl11• no Sr. Lll-firlc ~. L VllWOOll 201 Sr. L8-J4ft Flti.verald, ~I 204 Sr, L8-8rtlt H~. 5'1'\fty Hllll 200 Sr. · L8-#MrltFef9*11,S...taNteVe11~ 210 Sr. Dl-TomWJ111 ... c ..... D._,,.,I M.,.,, tf.U- Dll-Kevl11 Moel!, Rolll"9 Hiiia 08-TIM Col-. Servile 08-Mol'ltt Zmuda. Werrtft ''° Sr. 11t Sr. 1IO Jr. 1as Sr. ,., Jr. RAISED WHITE LETTER TIRES ........ ........... __ _. ........... ""'""''. OUR BEST BRAKE PACK AG!& -.. · .. --···· • OU11 ttat ,_ l •Olll r•DI • NIW 011~--t •tAU • n/RN 110• ~'?~L· ntev~ I) CAl14'1'1'1' • Cl<-"<: ~•Ill. • N~llC!ll W.lltl l(,Nllo ......... 69" IOUACUOl ••••••• ... ""' ' anu •0•111111"0..... '7--.. ___ ._ ... ,.-. ..... ..... MOft ............... _.., __ _ n••....,,.. .J .. Sf CMIL Y PILOT Top Community Perf 01mers Hatted Thit ii Uie Jourlh bl a Hr'N• of /hHt colwnru te· rM1Dfno the JleaT J9T1 tn theo.ter along the Orange COGIC. Time now for a final curtain caJI -for those actors and actresses whose performances on com· munlty theater stages during 1971 Unger moat warmly in the memory as the calendar winds down to another new year. Among the community groups along the Orange Coaat, the Laguna Moulton Playhouse bas come up with the greatest number of dlstingulabed performances. Figuring five hooOl'eeS in each or four acting categories, Laguna ia credited wllh 10 individual accompllsbmenta. T,.;,~111'.~[;ri..o The field of candidates was whitUed down this year because or the llmlted number of producUons from two local playhouses and the tact that this column was unable lo viBJt the San Clemente Com- BEST ACTOR Mike Blelltz :,,..-. .. munity Theater during the year, an oversight we o.itY ,.....,.... ..-. will att.er:npt lo rffuty in 1978. BEST ACTRESS Nevertheless, there were a significant number Carol Flllan of distinguished performances in community --------------------theater during 1977. Here are this column's selec- tions tor the cream of the crop: NYB~ival A Screeching 'Saint Joan' By WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -Lynn Redgrave tackles the considerable emotional challenges of George Bernard Shaw's "Saint J oan" with more pluck than luck in the production which opened on Broadway this week. The limited success of the Circle in the Square Theater exhtbit is not just a matter or the British star's oddly screechy and con· stricted interpretation. The ~ company around this maid of Orleans could have been picked by blindfold test, so ill·assorted are the component talents. Miss Redgrave's husband, John Clark, has directed -this is the couple's fourth such joint outing with palpable devotion that intermsttcntly achieves the arresting grandeur latent in tile script. THIS COMES THROUGH most serenely ln the first confronlation between the sardonically pragmatic Earl or Warwick, leader of the lSth cen· tury English invasion of France, and the well· jntenlioned yet pliant Ilishop ot Beauvails, who brings J oan lo trial after her batUefield triumphs. Then, later, Miss Redgrave bas her lineal mo- ments as, with heartbreaking spirit, she spurns the recantation that would save her from the names but doom her to imprisonment. Most favorable around her are Philip Bosco as Warwick, Paul Shyre's bishop, an unusually sub- dued Tom Aldredge as an archbishop, and Robert Lu Pone, a most cpicene Dauprun. FOR THE RECORD, rather than for commen· d alion, are Joseph Bova 's clanlcy Dunois and Paul Sparer's pedestrian Inquisitor. The Circle's impossible rectangular stage area has been trimmed down by David Jenkins with a movable board pali sade through which the royal bedchamber and a courtroom set are noisily trundled. Zack Drown provides a lavish assortment of costumes for the secular lords and clerical prelates, a melange of ma il and armor drawn from several com bat eras for the warriors. John McLain supplies deft li ghting adjuncts. .. Saint Joan" ranks as one of Shaw's most in· tellectually stimulating and humorously an&rY plays, with a rtne measure of spectator reward even in circumstances that themselves only merit qualified approval. MATINEES. SATURDAY & SUNDAY "Cl OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG) llOX ()fflCE Of'EN8 10"-M. ONLY 1 I 4~ 1~10:46 "SA TU ROA 'f NIGHT FEVE~" CR) "LOOKING FOR MR. GOOOBAR" (R) "1900" (R) "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE DEEP" (PO) "BOBBY DEERFIB.O" (PG) "ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE" WAUD48*Ya ·"PETE'S DRAGONS" "FAN1ASY ON SKIS" "THE HEROES""° .. THE OTHER SID! OF THE MOUNTAIN" "OH GOO:. (PG) "GUMBAU RALL r "SMOKEY ANO THE BANDtT'' 10 ''THE STING" "THE GAUNTLET" CR) ''FFJEEBEE I THE BEAN" DAILY PILOT BEST Acroa -·Mlke Biellti, "An IMpector Calla," Saddleback Valley Community Theater. Runner-up, Jack Byron, "God'a Favorite," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Honorable mention -Mark Hendrickson, "The Rainmaker," Westminster Comrnunlt~ Theater; Joe Cordio, "Don't Drink the Water, · Saddleback Valley Community Theater; Mike Frym, "Barefoot In the Park," Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. BEST ACTRESS -Carol Fillan, "Forty Carata," Westminster Community Theater. Run· A Movie 'lheater 'Present' Intermission Tom Titus ne r·up, Jean Koba, "Death of a Salesman," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Honorable mention -Monka Wyatt, "The Rainmaker," Westminster Community Theater; Belay Paul, "The Royal Family," Laguna Moulton Playhouse; Jane Nigh Davidson, "Light Up the Sky," Saddleback Valley Community Theater. BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR -Steve DeNaut, "God's Favorite," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Runner.up, George Woods, "For the Use of the Hall," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Hornorable mention -Chuck Staneart, ''The Rainmaker," Westminster Community Theater; Jake Gardiner, "The Royal Family," Laguna Moulton Playhouse; Joseph Pawlak, "Deat.h or a Salesman," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS -Teri Clran· na, "For the Use of the Hall," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Runner-up, Joan Sidell, "An Inspector Calls,'' Saddle back Valley Community Theater. Honorable mention -Marthella Randall, "For the Use of the Hall," Laguna Moulton Playhouse; Joanne Applegett, "Light Up the Sky," Saddleback Valley Community Theater; Olive Riches, "You Can't Take Jt With You," Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. This completes our yearend retrospective on theatrical activity along the Orange Coast in 1977, except for one final column. This one, on Friday, will honor the Daily Pilot's fourth annual man and woma noftheyearin local theater. CU'ff~~\!000 (A) ''THE GAUNTtET:_soNDM LOCKE .... ., IUlll llllrR"' lllG SMl'IJa • ,..., air QIUT ir... Ir 1211 Wtm • lllsi .wt Ill•· 1MM5D• • C. Ir 111•• ENTERTAINMENT I THEATER cwon MSINU .iod USlU l'IASICY p:.- RJ CHARD BURTON ;1QUUS" [1TE~=-R=--Fl_,_ill8] .......... ·COLIN BLAKELY JOAN PLOWRJGHT · HARRY ANDR.E\VS EILEEN ATKJNS ..iJENNY AGUlTER x-.-.,bo"1'£TlR ~lflR ~'4>'1'""v ~·.,...,ttv l'lTlR SHAfltR """""' tJCHMOa()()p,O'Mfi\!n l'-.ctdbf usm l'(RSl(Y rd WJOITKASn.llR AO..V.t..,.,,,.,.<f'wl<_, °'"'"'ttv S4D~lY WMLt T United Alttsts i;;;;_:J......;=-::.===:=-..i • A"---u ""'-r Mil~~J -- 8110()KHllH~T cuM unwooo OAUHTllT llJ Al 'ACIMO • MAl'T* PWI IOHY OHamLD IPOI """' IOSI OAIDIN C•I WOCleT ~UN · ANHll HAU (NI "'"' ,,.. ~t srms MAIN CN> OfOIOI -• IOt#f Df HVll · OM 0001 IPOI '"" OUMIALL IALL Y CPO! SIM .. TOUGH Cll 100 Yl~NAHCI 'NO 'AIHI IOtlN TUYOlTA SATUaDAY NIOMT FIVll(ll) ""' FllAftaNtTY IOW l"OI .,.,,_,,ITIMO ft"'4>1tr OltllZl., , .. , PtUI DAY Of JHI ANtMAL.S CllOI "' .. ' WllCtfl MHOISl'OI P\ut THI STIN0"91 ERTAINMENT I M OVIES Thursday. CJecomber 22, 19n DAIL V Pit.OT 8$ . . 'Great Chefs' a Delleious Movie ·~-·....-· SEGAL ANO BISSET IN 'GREAT CHEFS' Produc•r Makes Debut With Mystery 'Annie Hall' Wins Another Tribute By BOB THOMAS PARIS <AP) -When George Segal first came to Pa ril 2S years ago, he was an exchange student llvinf on the Left Bank. • Pam was dltrerent then," he recalls. ''There were still very few cars on the street. l was board- ing in a little room with a toilet down 'the hall. The food? The bii? treat was wht n QUr teacher boiled potatoes in oil." Returning lo Paris as a movie star in 1977, Segal Is ensconsed with his wife and two daughters at the Hotel Raphael , one half block from the Arc de Triomphe. And he is eating hii h on the bog. SEGAL IS STARRING with Jacquellne Bisset. Robert Morley and a distinguished group of French a nd Italian actors in •'Someone Is Kllllni the Great Chefs of Europe." The film may be picketed by w.elght Watchers. Along with a murder mystery. it will serve up a gastronomical feaat such as the screen has never provided. "It's staggering," says Segal, who has been tast!ng the delights In the top restaurants of Venice, Par1s and London, location sites of "Great Chefs." The $7 million production, co-sponsored by Hollywood and Munich companies, is a large responslbillty t.o place in the hands of a 33-year-old · man who has never produced a movie before. "The Choirboys." Aldrich learned that Paramount had optioned "Great Chefs'• and dropped it. Tbut be coul~ make a toujtber deal for the film rithta, declining the authors' request to write the screen play. They are reportedly peeved by Peter Stone's script. FINANCING FILMS IS A tricky matter no~adays, but Aldrich found a soluJJon. Aldrich· Lonmar had been assoclated with Bavarian Films with "TwUght's Last Gleaming." The erstwhile producer had the "GtJ?at Chefs" script translated into German and took il to Munich for a readine. The result: 50 percent Of the financing from Geria Productions, a German tax-shelter concern 45 from Lorimer, five from Bavaria Films. ' "Selecting the director waa Important to this picture," Aldrich remarked. "We bad to make it in 1977 because or tax reasons. and dad wasn't availa· ble. Anyway, he understood that I wanted to get a way and do my own picture. ''Alfred Hitchcock would have been Ideal, since he ls a gourmet and the master of suspe.nse. I negotiated with his agent, who admitted it would be two years before 'liHch • would be ready to shoot. I couldn't wail." CANADIAN TED KOTCHEFF proved ideal. He helped attract Segal, whom he directed in "Fun with Dick and Jane." And Kotcheff's family had HE IS WILLIAM ALDRICH, a tall, quiet-been in the restaurant business. spo~en .gra~uate of the University of Southern Aldrich picked a tough one for bis first produc- Cahforrua him school. He has ~n around movie lion. Filming in four countries interiors will be shot sets all his life, his father being Robert Aldrich, in Munich, requires imme~e logistics and new maker ot "The Dirty Dozen," "Whatever Happened movie crews at each siop. So far the weather has to Baby Jane?" and "The Longest Yard." The fayored shooting, and no language problems have younger Aldrich started working on his father's arisen. films as bit player, ''gofer ,'' handyman, and served "Movie workers everywhere manage to com· NEW YONK (AP) -For the second time this as associate producer on "The Choirboys." munlcate," observed Segal. "Here in Paris we week, Woody Allen's ''Annie Hall '' took top Like many sons In the shadows of their tamous speak partly in Enalish, partly in French, and when awards Wednesday in a film critics' poll. fathers, Aldrich wanted to branch out on his own. that fails, in a middle area of reaching for words The New York Film Critics' Circle, made up of I le saw the chance last September when an agency that convey the meaning but don't exist." newspaper and magazine critics working here, sent h1m the 1974 novel by Nan and Ivan Lyons, V?ilm Canceled named "Annie Hall " the best film of 1977 and gave "Someone ls Killlngthe GrealChefsofEurope." I' I Allen the best director award. "I got the book on a T uesday, read it·on Wed-TORONTO <AP> - Ills co-star, Diane Keaton, won the award for nesday, and, on Thursday · morning, made the Public screening of the · best a ctre3s, and the citation for best screenplay deal,"saidAldrich. Sl 8 millio n m ovie was won by Alle n and co-author Mars hall He could act swiftly because of the Aldrich · ' M o h a m m e d , : Brickman. Company's close connection with Lorimar Produc-Messenger of God," has On Monday, the National Society of Film tions. partners in "Twlight's Last Gleaming'' and been canceled. C~ics, wh~e membe~hip~m~hdoffrla~-~~~~=~~~~~~~~ii~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ that of the New York grop, also picked "Annie Hall" as best rilm of the year, gave Miss Keaton its best actress award and gave the screenwriting award to Allen and Brickman. C.11 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. lllr>tttUI $46 1111 '"l'AHIOC '"SAfUUAY Ht•HT HYM'" •1 DAl&.Y I :41-l:4S..l:SO. 8:00-10:00 S . COAST PLAZA "ClOSI IMCOUMTHS Of TMI TMtaD IUMD" trf~I 1111 S-1 .. J.t:IJ.7.fJ.1 .. ll U.fl -IJ:Je AM41111 & M1M, IUUt bMI AMM• tJ) lNI llllHtlltlC "TELE'OH" DAILY I : JO.l:Jo.1: I 0. 7:0CM:50. I 0:40 11451. ... ..,. ,;_ "THI OTHllt SIDI ~OF MIDMlfi.Hr• UU DAILY 2:11-lllM:fl •• FOUMfAIMYAWY ...................... : ... llt·llOO CIMTUU 21 ................................ 77Z·HOJ MISSION YIE.JO ••......•.•.•••••••••••••.•••• IJ04HO CIMIMA WIST ........•...•......•.••.•••.•• 8t1·44tJ HAllOI aH1MA ........................... , 64'-017J OllAMGI ~ .......................... , •• , 6J7.fJ42 IRU rtJ.IA • • • ••.•• · .••.•...•..•....•••.••• IH·IJJt STADIUM D.I ................................. Uf•7'60 LA MIRADA D.I .......................... ••••· tZl·ttt6 "ONE OF THE BESr PICTURES OF mE YEAR!' TIME MAGAZINE fTir;1 ~ a RASTAR Feature • ~by~ Laba m l!:!:!J ,,_.,.... ... 0 -" .............. "' .... ......_... • ....... ~, ........ Dally at Cinema 2:00, 4:00 6:00, 8:00 10:15 -..Cl 0. THI ACnotot" INI ,_ ...... .,., MAUCI OOISH'f LIYI 181 AHYMOU" ...,.,.,,.. "FIRE SALE" IPGJ L>O·k•I>-- "THE U.fE SHOW" t;to.N• "HEROES" .,~, Whn Ill 54Mrthem C.llfoml• ¥1!111 ~STUDIO• TOUR -----~~ From the outrage.ous No.1 Best-Seller TIECHDIRBM edwards LIDO CINEMA NEWPORT ILVD. A. T VIA. LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-8350 '~ '}K ' , ~~ I*!~~ ... NOW PLAYING ORANGE COUNTY '1>NEOFTHE BEST PICTURF.S Of 11IE VEAR." Shlrfey MacLalne Stanlfte IUcllerd 0..yfUH •ncl Mentie MHon at the Cinema, Costa Mesa ~ ~ IAHtKL\'G FOii JIU. GOOUILUC .. 81 DAlL Y PILOT Telerision TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS 1111 t<..,1).\\ IVI*«) e:oo I Clll NEWS • NIW8 DotPOEHCV ONll wt11n oaoe • ~ to Q1'1t • tour of Raroc>af1 HcMipltal IP ldlool chll- dten, Ml llnd• that It tall• lllOf• tllll\ blllloona and IM.tbblegU!ft to Nllafy the lnqu191llw yoonottal'I. 0 HOa<EY Chicago Blade Htwkt vw. Loe Angelel l<lnga Q) THE 8AAOY BUNCH Wedding day f•llvlll• progt-. llTIOOlhly fo( • widower with !hr .. -mwrytng • widow With lllf• daugtl..,. unta UMt f Mlily pees object. • THE AOOt<lf.S Mltl•'• M09" ,_ pertrW It found ~ hit oft. houf9 caryYtng out • per- aonlll vendetta egaln1t putMrS. • ZOOM 6D A8 MAN BEHAVES "Nervoua Syatem: Biofeedback" 9 A8CNEW8 l;30 8 MO\llE The Jet Set Lance Kerwin teams up with a rich, un- flappable classmate <Daniel Tamm. right) who dupes him into walking out or a department store with a canoe on James at 15, tonight at 9 on NBC, Chan· nel 4. *** "A DrH m For Chrlatm•·· ( 1973) Harl RhOclee, BMll Rlc:h11td1. A pHtor find• that th• Churc:fl In hie·,_ pwlett II soon to be tom down to m•k• Wrf fOf a lhopplng cent«. (1 hr., 30 min.) fD MACHEJL/LEHRER REPORT that wlll give him the mon-- ly needed 10 become completely fr• of debt. D CHIPS OJ '11'1THREE80H8 Sieve Oouo'-geta a park- lllQ ticket from Robbie'• girl and tl'len flunk• hla driving IMI. 6D EARTH. SEA AND SKY "Predlctlng w .. thet" "Aweigh We Oo" Ottleer'a Ponch end Baker ar• dlvwted from their purault of profenlonal truck thll!Yal wn.n • women and ~ become trapped In • car hanging Oft the edge of • c:lttt. ()) TO TEU. THE TRUTH 7:30 0 OLENOA.l.E SYMPHONY m OVEAEA8Y GuMt: Cermen McCrM . 6D GROWING YEARS ··r11e Growing tnfAl'lt" (I) C88HEW8 D NEWLYWED GAME 0 THE GONG SHOW Im MERV OAlfflN Gueeta: Cttartea Nelton RelHy, JllCl!le Muon. OJ THE BRADY 8UHCH Peter, using 1 tepe reoor· der to eevetdrop on hi•• b<Olnetl 8lld sls1Wt, ~ ea the lamlly to enipt with suspk:iofl and feuding. D MO\/IE *** "Son Of Franlt.,._ •leln .. ( 1939) Botta Kanoff. BHll Ratllbon•. Aller being uved from death by hinging, • men plota to 111talri r-. from the )IKora ""'° Mntenctd him 10 die. (2 tn.) 7:00 0 HBC NEWS 0 UAASCLUB Q ABCNEWS ID I LOVE LUCY ··cut>an Pal" Q) LET"S MAKE A OEAt.. fD LA. IHTERCHAHOE ··~xt Exit" '1i) N£WSCHECK Q) AOAM-12 Officer Malloy. a part-time university ttudenl. 11nd1 htmMlf In the middle ol a campu1rlot. ()) IH SEARCH OF ..• "'Tile Loet Dutdvnan" 9 MATCHOAMEP.U. • 9 Wl!1.00Me MQ(, KO'TT!R 1:00 8 ()) THE WAl. TONS John Watton tak• on a huge tono.poat contract "S-t Wort!" HOl'lll8dc beCOmM uncontrotlable w'*1 he auddenly lhlnae u a r.Olo atat. Channel Listing• B KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles D KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles 0 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angelos (J) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles ®) KCST (NBC) San Diego G) KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles g) KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles fl) KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles OJ CAAOL BURNETT AHOFRJEH08 Ouest1: Joan Rlvert, Vln-- C«ll Price. Q) HAU OF FAME BOWL Mlnneeola University ~. Unlvertlly Of Maryland fl) OHCE UPON A Cl.A881C 6Il> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach "Robin Hood'' King Rlcft. ard •«~• hi• enemlea after NC:retly returning to England; th• Bl1hop'• murderer •• elq)OMd; Sir Guy•• elater lullltla a \ Test for TV News Nettrorks Impressive in lsr<Wl Talks By DAN LEWIS TV D•t• S.rvlc• T hose towerin g a nd his t oric sessions in lsrael, the incredible sight of Anwar Sadat, president of Egypt. warmly shaking the hand of his lifelong, sworn enemy, Menahem Begin, prime minister of Israel; the genuine warmth of the greetings of Golda Meir, former Israeli prime minister, and Moshe JJhyan, the hero of Is rael's 1967 victory over the Arabs; the astonishing display of the Egyptian nag being raised alongside the Star of David at the Israeli Knesset. These miraculous visions, beamed via satellite to a world that now finds itself an ever-present witness to his- tory in its making, may very well h ave new hsitoric significance that stresses television's monumental in- volvement, not merely as a communi- cant of the news a5 it develops, but as a conducting agent with massive Political stature. IT WAS EVIDEN:r FROM Israel that the two leaders of these warring nations who met in quest of peace were totally aware of television cameras that focused on their every step and recorded every available ut· ' terance. So much of what they did during this breathtaking race-to-race confrontation was largely orchestrat- ed to gain maximum benefits from a worldwide television audience. Never before have beads of state made themselves as accessible to the TV cameras and the network newspersons. Both Sadat and Begin gave equal Ume to t.be American networks. Sadat gave "exclmlve .. interviews to the lead anchorpersons, Walter Cronkite o! CBS, John Chancellor of NBC and Barbara Walters of ABC. THAT WAS ON Saturday as his I plane made its hfstorfC fi1ght to Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Avlv. On Sunday, following the speeches at the Knesset and private sessions. the same three newshawks were given, once more, "eJtclusive" in- ltrviewa, this Ume u the two leaders sat In ,._tot them. W.bat a monumental tribute to the importance ol Amerlca'a television indutrJ that. ot tbe ~ ~tooo M more correepondant.I lrom au ovel" the world wtto conversed oa tbe Holy Land, three network reporters repreMDUDI Amerlun television ahould be permitted to lnten'0'9te the leaden, each oo bll own. IN GBNSML, TB£ American networks reeponded wltb a hltb derree ol competence In a dlMcult attuatton. notably 1hort notlee. But tbl1 la telemlon'a baekbooe,JU abill- ~ to Ned 41mek11 for l.ftltantan.oua ~. • workmanlik e. s trong and authoritative. NBC's Chancellor was typically lowkeyed, and ABC and Barbara Walters was highly dramatic and theatrically motivated. Jn her interviews, Miss Walters con- tinues to assume the role of someone trying to make the news, rather than cover it. Her interviews are punctual· ed by questions that are presented as dramatic overtures, pressing for a monumental response to every in· quiry. IN ITS DESPERATE effort to gain news ratings -which has been an un· successful performance to date - ABC was not averse to declaring that Barbara Walters had conducted "ex- clusive, historic Interviews." This self-acclaim blared over the ABC betwork despite the fact every· obe knew the rival networks got the same interviews and similar answers. ABC gives the impression that It has obligated itself to these immodest tributes lo Miss Walters to convince itself that she's worth the million·a· * year she's being paid. THE BIGGEST MYSTERY is why NBC held back on Chancellor's in- terview with Sadat and Begin until Monday morning for the ''Today .. show, some 14 hours after Walters was on the air first. and 12 hours after Cronkite's session that opened the regular Sunday "60 Minutes" series. Of all the historic moments of Sadat's 48 hours in Israel, the most astonishing was to have him seated beside Begin and answering questions together. That moment waa too ma~cent to have been delayed; NBC s wait was almost inexcusable. Viewers Pick Bowl Winners On Sweepstakes The Rose Bowl sweepstake& '18. hosted by Jobnny Gllbert, a one hour live televiaian special. will be seen on KCOP·'IV, Cllannel 13, Dec. 28, at 8 p.m. Tbe procnm which la cHpomored by Wettem,A.lrllnel and Credit Unk>n NaUonal Auoc.tattoo (CUNA), la • combinatlaa ot a telethon and a came ebow. alriJll CID a number of ltatiODI in tho state. u we.._ u Wublqton, Oregon ad ~evada. Tbe vlewlal audience 1"11 be uted to predict wbom they think will win eaeb ot the four maJor bowl cam• to be plQ..t oa Jan. 2 -th• Oranc• Bowl, tbe Sular Bowl. tbe Ooa.on Bowl and the ROM aowt. At tbe ._.. ume. u.e, an lllbd to nom••• Wt.O t11e1 fffl duenea lb• Utle of ••cone.. FOotball Pla1er 0( t.be Ynr." • ~-(hit 12 of 12) ti) INTERVIEW Convl<l•CI torm•r co11- 9r.um•11 -HlnW. lslnttf'vi.-. 1:10•«1 WH.\re HAl't'£HfNOll "Bleclt Arrd Whtte ~ .. RaJ, R4INn end OW1lyne bOrTow a ,_ color T\/ Mt from their dlutoti to watc:n •n lmportlnt football game. then panic when they °"» It and dllCOVtf It d-·· '<NOfl(. • TAUTliOA COH8EQUEHCES • THE IE.IT OF EANIE KOVACS ~ va. atettw: Mlkloe Molnar 9'ld • tiug·~ view of Ille worid. G ~EASY ou.t: Cennen Meer•. t:OO 9 ()) HAWAII fM-0 ~··entire~ lion .. duPld by • phony tldal-wav• elert engl· -.o by unlYerllty atu- dente ... ~ few • multMnlllon dollel' jew9ly ,......_ D JAME8AT1S "FMt And L.ooM" A _,... 9yed J-la wtlbked • CfOIM)OUrltry to c.tifomla end ~t up In the Jet• ... wNf1 by • rich a- nwt• wtlO c:onYlnQee him that .n tanlMlea wera -•tobe~ 8 0 BARNEY Miu.ER "'The a.nit" Ari C>Ytraged CiUzlln cr9111M e dlslur• banoe wMn lie ~ ..... depoelt .. • epedellziad medleel bank hM bMrt accidentally deattoyed. G 1AON81DE ., MERV ORlf'flN Ouet~ Ctt.,... Netaon Reily, Jackie Muon. Tari Garr. Chip Hand. • 8PECW. "A Chlld'I CMatmM tn Wal11" Sir Mlchaet Redgra\19 nerret• thla dramellutlon of Oy1en TllcllMI' poM'I ~IQ tll9~1nw--.per. formed by the Nllllonel TIIMtre of .. Dell. • l.tAOU °' MJltQ •·A Matter Of Agtl' lncMd- uel ~ about egil1CI -explored with the UM Of fllm end v\deotepe matenell. t:30 8 al CARTER COUNTRY "By The Ughl Of• The Moonlight" Wiien a di• pule over a holldey loan oeta out of hind, the pwtl- Clpente -the mayor; °""' Roy and Deputy Curtla - lpend Olwiltm8e Ew In Jell. ~. ()) IWINA8V JONel. -TUBE TOPPERS KTLA 0 8:00 -''Son of Franken st ein." Basil Rathbone takes over as the mad scientist and Boris Karloff returns as the monster in this 1939 sequel to the horror classic. KOCE 9 8 :00 -Hinshaw In· terview. Channel SO's Jim Cooper in· . terviews convicted former congressman Andrew Hins haw from the Orange County Jail. KCET 9 9:00 -"A Child's Christmas in Wales." Michael Redgrave narrates a dramatization of Dylan· Thomas' poem about his own boyhood in Wales. • c~ fJ 11:30 -·~agles over Lon· don.•' The British retreat from Dunkirk is the subject of this 1972 war movie with Van Johnson and Frederick Stafford. rMppeert, eemetly la caught In the "'*'-of ... l.ud Ind murder. • Cl.Al80f'• ''TM a-DfMrnera .. Two IChlrrWIO gnidUelae. tment Oft llWIJng lot• at IT'IOMY· .,. ofNred ...... food ftancNM with .. klndl of etrlllOI ~ • COlLEGle 8A8Q11W.L 61111 JoMw. UC\A 8 al MDOf<»CX au.es: Jltn Nabon, Tim Thomel1011, Rip f8YIOf. G NEWI • MASTEAN()E THEATM "I, Cleudluc ~ Of HeWtn" Tlberlul dlup. poSltl ltla egil1CI lMe with hie·~ rwlgn. white s.ter-INllntelna tM ..... poww In tlle...,... ~ dlue ~ an odd t9C1U11t IRlm NI ~ ""°"*· • IOCC8'MADe .. OSllNtt .., I Nl!WI 11:00 ~(J)tll NEWS *** "Thi• Heppy feeing.. (1961) Debbie Aeynolda. CUrt Jurgena. A tellred llOtOf retumt to IM atage after corM ICll 19 • young -to fl"'9 him up. (2tn.) 4D THE 000 COUf>IJ! Felix remembers ttw hecUc _,,, that led up to Otcw'• marriage wllen they ... both In the Army AeMlw. Oufft: JOHptl Papp. t<Mlder and ~ Of the ....,Yortc ~e Featl'4. tlD MACNEll./ LEHAEA MPORT U:ao 8 ()) C8I LA ft MOVIE **"" "Eagl•• Over London,. (11172) Ven ~ eon, Fredf1dl 8tlllonl. Tiie Ncla leuncll It'* ...... blltzkrleg; Ute Brltleh '°"* .,. drMn to ..,. Ml; ltla ~ from DuMlrt! hM beglA D TOHIGKT °'*' float: Joflft o.vld- -~John 8dluck, Kip ~ 8ernedMI• Pe«er'I.. 8 9 POUCE8TOR'I "Flrio-Pfinr" A pollce V91· -In the lll*1t pnntll dMllon .. dllacourllg9d """' ... lob. untl -~ oomDelt ..,.. ~ • new peill)ecilwe. E.-t Hollrnln, Tim ....,_ eol\ ... Tlllot8'.-t .... ;NlW8 e GETaMART The robot, Hymie, re lilledlld to tac*» • KA.OS klll•r beoeuH h• le Immune to elM and c:Nrm. • CAPTIOtE>NIC NEW8 MOANING' 12:00 8 lWUJOKT ZONE '-0.-Of The Hiie" • FOMVER RNMIOOO TM Hartman houMtlold -gee on lnaantty; • aurprlM gueet pullMe a... cM of ... CiltlllftMy. • MOYIE King"' (IMO) Joan Colline. Rlcllw"d £oan. A ~ l'Nlldefl. dloMrl by the IOng Of ~ to ,...,._ Ille torlner ~. triee IO hlM tM perMCUtlon of ,_ people. ( 1 hr .. 30 nin.l 1a.e MOVIE *** ''&JllNan'a Ttallllla" ( tt41) Joel McCrea, \/eronlcli Lalce. A dlreclcw begllla .,, elllc:ltlng adwn.- ture -'*t he Mt• out to dlecovw Oie mMnlng of life. ( 1 hr •• 65 min.) I CAOM-W1T8 12.:17 9 THUASOAY NIGHT IPl!CIAL "The Lou R.-Speclal" Lou "-wlll peyt tribute to Loula Nmltrong, SIWl"I Codie and Net IOng Cole end tnioae hll own rnulic9 roota beck lo Me ewty deys on Chlolioo'• South Side. ~ flMM, Cfylt8I ~. Kip AddaCta and The flnotlona -~ (R) 1:00 D TOMOMOW DIMd Ekenner wtll ~ hi• tranaltlon from • ~ wriler of doournen- 11111M to• etend~ ~ dlal'I. 0 t8PV Aobll-..on end Scott ,_ ~ time 1n their effort to lt!wwt • plot to aver• throw the Moroccan ~·· **. "Count Three And Prey'' ( t965) Van Heflln, J~ Wooctwwd. A CMI Ww veteran becornee • Mlt-ordMled mlnleter end Mt• about '900rlatruotlng • deltroy9d Ghuroh. (2 hn.) 1:308 NEWS • MOVIE **~ ''Red Sundown" (1966) Rory Clhlun, Mar· tM Hyer. A lherlft la aided In hie fight agMiel e NU.- ,._ i.ldawl'ier and • kller by • r9'omled gunallrlglir. ( 1 "' .. 30 mil\.) 2:001'!::8 * *" "'Tiie Poppy II Aleo • A Aowtt'' (19ee) T- Howlwd, l!.O ........... A pW of nercotlca egtnb .,_ the Journey ol Illegal dNQ9 from the P<>P9Y fleld9 to an~ wrest. (2 In.. 4 min.) **~ "LoYwa And LDlll-pope" (195e) Lof1 Mwc:fl., Cathy Dunn. The romano. between • young widow and .,, engU-i. c:ompll- cated by the woman'• reeentful d.ugtitw. (2 hre.) 2:058 MOVIE .,, .. embNlltng ~ tunda but ~ - ll'OU06e ttlM ~ " l\rl.) 1:211 HIW9 2:to MOVIE ··" ''Son Of Or .... (1948. Lon °'*ltlY Jt .. ~°'*Albtltton.·A ~ fUI~-~. • vemplte after menytng • , myttartoue oount. ( 1 llr., 30 min.) • 1lt "Weird Won'l•!I" ( 1944) Lon Cheney k .. Ellalyn Ankert. A pro'-t and hll wife .,. vlottmad by . highly JNIOUa-. p hr., 30 min.) a:00 m uovie •••• ''Oyl'i. ........ Country" (1862) ~ lM, Sidney Poitier. ~ Oy brlngt • btaok "*' and • wNt• men 1ogett1s • frtendl In trOUbled 8ou&h AfrlclL (2 In.. 30 mft.) • NEWS 4.'06 9 NOONTIME Frfdatf• Da11tlme Morie• 1t MOANING r: •.30 G * 1lt th "The RedhMd ) From Wyoming'" (1952) Mau~ O'Heta. Ala Hlool. The manager of e c;attte c:teartno ho!.-gltl Into • lot of trouble before lhe """'* .,. ...m. ~ • hr.,30mln.) 10:00• *** ''TheSlgnOf The Cro." ( 11132) FNdelio March, Claudette Colbert. A Romen MtlOCHt eecd- k;ea hie polltlon end ,,_. -iont IOI' IM lo\l9 at a Chrlatlan gll1. (2 hra.. ~ min.I ' N'TEAHOON 12:00 8) * * * ''The Shop Around The Corna,.. (t940l Jam .. s1 .. ert. Margaret Sullivan. TWo lonely people find _... other through their...._ (2 In.. 20 "*'·) • 2:008 **''VenuaMaetl11- 8on Of HerQMs"' (1te:8 Aogef Browne. JM;lqe· ~ Hercutee' eor.9· the. wrath of the T I after aiding a omc-; J hrs.) 3:009 ··~··~C)f ... , Company" (1991) FfWCI Aatelre. Debbie -.... The bride' a ...,.; ;:~ I pointed wltfl '* dlOk)e of a mete end Mta out to bfMk up the~.. ~ (211ra.) , S:30G ***lh"Fentaatlc ' voyage" (1"8) stepnin• r. Boyd, Raquel We6ch. &Qr.1 11 geone and their equ~ I .,.. reduoed to mlaobe, .CZ. In order to l*1Clml • delcet• operation lneldt When th• glrl wflo ~ • fwnlly -.s • HOHlYMOONEA8 An ~ IUl'IVnON from tM N Plfllol Relpt\. • DO<CAVETT *. * "EIOllt ""' ,,. ••~ "The Outlldef" '1987) Darren MoGeY\n, Shlt1ey Knight. Ari axoQOl'I twMcl private eye. II hired to tllld out tr a young WUM- the lnln of • famout edentllt. ( 1 "' .. 30 lllln.) • .... SADAT AND BEGIN EXCHANGE CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION Televl1lon Network• Responded Strongly, and Prec:Uct•bly Another flaw was the translations of both Sadat's and Begin's speecbb at the Knesset. All three networks bad their problems here. CBS's translator kept it goina fiuidly, but, as reports later Indicated, there were too many inaccuracies. TBEBE IS ONE final footnote to th1a moment ID hlatory: On the afternoon of Sadat'a arrival fD brae!. Mi-81l 8.DCl Ohio State were involved in a titanic football clash for the privilege of going to the Rose Bowl. ABC interrupted in the early momenta of that game for a live report on the Sadat visit. Not everyone ID th1a country was in. terestecl in Sadat's meeting with Begin. ABC received several thouaand protA!llt calla from around the country from angry football fans became ol tbe lnternapt.lon. C'est la guerret I WI' CHRIST BACK lN YOUR CHRm'MAS :BY SHOPPING AT MARANATHA VILLAGE WE HONOR 9flBIST ALL YEAR LONG Girl's Ordeal OnTVMovit! .... . ...... I i1;i£ <l..1 • 1n:I' .. , • le On Christmas Eve, s ix years ago, a jet airllnet.Jf-. with 92 passengers aboard crashed into the Amai.ou'1 ti jungle just 30-minutes after takeoff. Only one ~ '14 vivor, a 17-year old girl walked away from that dis-1 aster only t.o face 11 more days of terror i.Q the 1 jungle before she was finally rescued. '11 • KTLA. Channel s, will telecast .. Miracles SW1 "' Happen," a different kind of Christmas story, about ' Susan Panhaligon's fight for survival Saturda, atGlfl p.m. I 11 .Tullane Koepcke stars as Susan. Paul Muller 1 plays her anguished father, awaiting word of hit .q daughter's fate. -•h C?f An exclusive 1V interview '."' IJVJimCooper .. 1t from theOrange County.Jal ·:~b with ")1:0 1•111 convicted.fonner~ Andrevy Hinshaw . , .q i • . . . NATIONAL / MUSIC PEOPLE Escapee Drea~ Jail Dollar. Regains Strength Joan Little: 'I'd Rather Die Than Return' From AP Dl~p•tcbea Two years after her acqu.lltal in a sensational ll'lurder cue and two months after her escape from prison , .1ou· LUtle said that she would rather die -than return tojall !11 North Carolina. "J know when I go back through those gates. I ·go Into dead isolation,'' she declared ln an interview with The Associated Press a l Rikers Island (N.Y.J j_.il. ''There's no telling what will happen to me." Mias Little was recaptured in New York on Bee. 7 and is hoping.that Gov. Hugh L. Carey will deny North Carolin a · s request for her extradition. She spoke animatedly -even acted some roles -about he r escape, her notoriety, the man who in· formed an her and her capture. • A 70·year-old retired California newspaper publisher filed a federal court suit aimed at forcing tbc FBI and the CIA to tum over all their reeords ~pt on him since 1942. • Si mon C asady,--------....... former publisher of the ( J fil Cajon Valley News PEOPLE now the El Cajon Daily Californian, wants com----------- p)ete records kept on ham b}' the two agencies and 1s seeking an injunction 'Meatloaf' 'Real Name Kept Secret liy U SA ROBINSON Fl .. cl H...,,.,.,... Sy-•I• Meatloaf 1s not your ordinary rock star. From a Texas family of Southern gospel :.ingers. he was lead s inger on Ted Nugent's LP, ''F ree For All " lie portrayed Eddie -a slick 'SOS defect -an the "Hocky Horror Picture Show," and, wi Lh his current songwriter /collaborator Jim Stein· rQ nn, was involved with the National Lampoon Show. iii. He also has shoulder-length blond hair , w~ well over 200 pounds, and performs in a tuxedo. "I REFUSE TO DISCLOSE MY real name," he said. "l got the> n1cknC:1me 'Meatloal' in Texas, play- ing footbull. und it just stuck. Eventually it became so common to me I hat I called myself that. I joined uhions and things with 11'1111 name, and while ---------.... s ome legal documents Q i,~ Tops in Pops @ . ure under my real name, ~ ~any a r e u n d c r · ________ _.. 'Meatloaf' ... ·· "Do you want to know how I got my name?" asked J im Steinman ... People just started calling me that ... " Mcall oaf -the nam e of the band as well as the star -is on tour to coincide with the release of their LP. "Bat Out of Hell." And if the wildly enthusiastic response at NY's Bottom Line was any indication, they will be noticed. "WHAT WE 00 DOESN'T really fit into most of the music that's Happening right now," says Steinman <who. in addition lo wnting the songs, pl\IYS keyboards during the show). "It's not homogenized Pop like Fleetwood Mac or Peter Frampton, and it 's not posed or conceptual, like punk rock. It's really primal, and it has a strong energy. "My songs are real romantic. 1 think they're probably cxcessltote. . .excessively romatic ..• but not embarrassing. It can't be embarrassing to bo romantic.'· against ~rn from t'ompiling further do&siers. Under the Freedom of Jnlormation Act, Casady obtained edited copies of his rtles, but now he wants to learn about the deleted information beeuuse of LONDON (AP) -Thi" several "misstatements" in the documentb. r dollar rose sharply on • Europe's major money Sara Dylan, ex·wife of singer-songwriter Bob marke ts t oday, and Dylan, pleaded Innocent to charges of attacking a dealers said President 1 • teacher at a private school Carter's announced plan I where she went to take custody to stabilize the currency of four of her five children. after its recent decline The plea to one misde· was the major reason for meanor count each or battery 'the rise. and willfully disrupting a In London, the pound classroom was entered in dropped in value from M umcipal Court in Malibu. $1.88325 at the close of Mrs. Dylan, 38, of Beverly business Wednesday to HllJs went w1th the three detec-$1.8580 around midday. IMl.DYU.M lives to the Point Dume Elemen-a loss ol more than 2• :.t tary School on Nov. 8 to get the cents. chUdren after she obtained a court order granting The dollar also gained her temporary custody. in Frankfurt and Zurich, • but dealers said trading A misdemeanor charge against comedian· was subdued because of activist Dick Gregory, arrested Thanksgiving Day the coming Christmas for demonstrating within 500 and New Year holidays. feet of the South African em- bassy, was dismissed when the government declined to pro- secute the case. · Hike A voided CA RACAS, Venezuela (AP) -The United States a nd other customers of the world oil cartel are bein g s pared a price hike, Gregory, who spent one night in jail, was not required to be in court when lhe government told Superior Court Judge Wllllam Goodrich in Washington that it did not want to prosecute. Gregory, his wife and • perhap:; for the next six months, because mem· bers of the Organiiation of Petroleum Exporting Countries are producing about 2 million more barrels a day than they can sell. Massachusetts Stale Sen. WUllam Owens de· nounced American corporate involvement in South Africa at a news conference in front of the White House before going to the embassy to demonstrate against that country's racial policies. • • California's top agriculture official says he'll consider creation of a su~rgrade of fruit and t vegetables -riper and tasuer llOMIHGl:lt than the ones shipped back East -for sale to Californians. "I think it could be r;omething that would appeal to consumers," said Richard Rom· Inger, director of t.b e state Department of Food and Agriculture. The supergrade was sug- gested by a task force which sought ways to roster family farms in Cali fornia. It found that present marketing methods are geared to producing food picked green and packed ( iN SI/ORT J OPEC's 13 members fail ed to agree on a price increase at their annual winter meeting Tuesday and Wednes- day. Rather than repeat last year's split. they left the base price a t Sl2.70 a 42·gallon barrel, the price since July l , until their next meeting, scheduled for June lS. for distant shipment. • RulJ•fl A wait f>d Nell Humphrey, who only three months ago left his job as chancellor or the University of Nevada to OKLAHOMA CITY head the University of Alaska system, has resigned. <AP} -A foderal judge In a telephone interview from his Faribanks who ordered an end to home, Humphrey, 49, said he resigned because of a federal restrictions on .. no-win" battle wilh Alaska's legislature. Laetrile imports heard "The animesiUes between the univenity and one day of testimony the legislature are so severe that I concluded that I and then adjourneli did not want to be responsible for such a polCkized c o u rt Wed n es d a Y system," Humphrey said. without saying how or • when be will rule on a Six persons have bee n indicted in an lntema· government request to tional beefalo stock scheme which allegedly bilked stay his order. buyers of more than $1 million, Mendocino County The Food and Drug DistnctAttomey Duncan James announced. Adm inislration h as Two accused ringleaders of the fraud involving asked U.S. 0 ls tr i c t the hybrid cross between a cow and a buffalo were Judge Luther Bohanon a rrestedoobenchwarrantsattheFederaiBuilding to postpone the !m- in San Francisco officials said. plementation of his Dec. They were idenUlied as Oliver Hemphill. a 5 order pending the out- rancher and Conner Air Force pilot, and A • .Jackson come of the FDA's ap· Kelly, a former Pan American World Airways vice p~al .to the 10th U.S. president. C1reu1l Court ol Appeals • ln Denver. Deputy Agriculture Secretary John White is the Thurtday, O.Cember 22. t9n DAILY PILOT 87 SOCIAL SECURITY TAX, BENEFITS INCREASE President Carter Used Two Green Pens on Law APWI ........ $30 to $3,046: Tax Bite Jumps Since '37 WA SHINGTON <A P > -Thetoptax of about $3.046 that a higher-paid worker is likely to pay in 1987 under the new Social Security law signed by President Carter on Tuesday com- pares with the maximum $30 anyone paid in 1937 when the program's financing began. By 1987, the madmum amount of the tax itself will be about $46 more than the entire amount or annual earnings -$.1,000 -that was s ub· jected to tax in 1937. The earnings figure. called the wage base, is ex- pected to reach $42,600 in 1987. THE WORKER'S 1 PERCENT tax rate that existed in 1937 will become 7.15 percent in 1987, with employers paying matching amounts. The lop annual tax per worker, which went above $100 in 1959, iB to go beyond the $1,000 level next year and move past $2,000 in 1982. The new law provides lor tax in· creases beyond those that had been scheduled to automatically apply in the coming years. The bike under the new law is more than $6,250 steeper for higher-income workers over the coming decade that It would have been under the old law, $21,457 com· pared with $15,200. · GENERALLY, THE TAX rates and wage bases increased over the years as the Social Security umbrella cov· c red more people and provided broader benefits, and as the programs for the disabled and for Medicare health-insurance were added. This year, the total Social Security payroll tax rate was 11. 7 percent - half of it, 5.85 P.41rcent, paid by the worker and the o\her half paid by his or her employer -while the amount of each worker's annual earnings sub· ject lo this lax r~ached $16,500. THAT MEANS A TOP Social Security tax of $965.25 must be paid by each worker at the upper limit of the wage base, while the employer must pa~ a matching amount. Next year, the rate will go to a total 12.1 percent -half on the worker. at 6.05 percent, and the other half on the employer. The wage bue will reach $17,700, meaning a top Social Security tax or $1,070.85 for the worker and a m atcbing amowit tor the employer. THE IMPACT OF the new Jaw will come in 1979, when the rate becomes 12.26 percent -6.lJ. percent each for the worker and the employer. The wage base will go to $22,900 and the top tmc for employees and employers ea ch will be $1,403. 77. The worker's top Social Security t ax per year rose from $30 in 1937 to $15 In 1950, $S4 in 1951, $72 in 1954, $84 in 1955, $94.50 in 1957, $120 i,-i 1959, $144 in 1960, $150 in 1962, $174 in 1963, $227.20 in 1966, $290.40 in 1967, $.143.20 in 1968, $374.40 in 1969, $405.60 in 1971. S468 in 1972. $631.80 in 1973, $772.20 in 1974, $824.85in1975, $895.05in1976 and $965.25in1977. Nation's Air Cleaner But Far.From Healthy 'WASHINGTON CAP> -The na· lion's air is cleaner than in 1970, but s ome pollutants are increasing de&pite emissions control efforts, the Environmental Protection Agency says. particulate levels violating health standards decreased from 60 percent in 1970 to zero percent in 1976," the EPA said. "We're real theathcal," adds Meatloaf, •'but actually lhN1tr1cal and dramatic are twc different things. ~ere arc theatrics like smoke bombs or putting nakc around your neck. Then you have dram a com in,:: from the stage leadin candidate lo s ucceed Kenneth Curtis as Gaarantee chairman or the Democratic Na· Nfzed The worst pollutant appears to be THE AGENCY SAID Chicago re· ported a decrease ol 33 percent while Denver dropped 9 percent. tion al Committee, informed PLAINS, Ga. <AP) - sources said. President Carter, facing "WHEN I SING JIM'S SONGS, each song has a ddrerent character . It's a thing that happens, but it i~kind or like acting. I think about who this cl'>jlracter is, where he's coming from, why ls he s~glng this. You go through that, and that's dtamatic. Other possibilities are the prospect of a dem- for m e r California party onstration by s trikin_g chairman Chuck Mannatt and f a r m e r s i n h i s White House aide Timothy h o m e t o w n • Krall, they said. acknowledges that crops But While Is the most likely in some states are a to emerge as President Carter's "disaster" but says he •'I'm not saying that rock and roll bands all use ctfup theatrics,·• he continues. "but some do. And i ~thal sense we're different. We deal more d tn.atic than theatrical, if you can understand t t . . . if I understand it. .. choice,theysaid. h as s tarted policy '* . changes to give farmers Camilla C. Frost was elected to the board of •·a decent break." direct.ors of Security Pacific Corp. and its principal However, Carter says subsidiary, Seeurlly Pacific Bank. he cannot guarantee }_ How much of what they do is serious, and bow ~eh is tongue· in-cheek? Mrs. Frost. of Pasadena, is a trustee of the farmers a profit. Caliromia Institute or Technology. a vice president and trustee of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and a trustee of Wellesley college in Wellesley, Mass. ''Oh, I think we're both," Jim says. ., "Serious tongue-in "cheek," adds Meatloaf. • • " ""SOMETJUNG THAT IS SO intense and serious a~passionate as our music has lo be, by definition. l ue-in-cheek," s ays Jim. "It goes so far to an ex· tr4! e that it has lo be able to go back on itself and ll! a little bit funny.'' 4 Has it taken them a Jong time to get the act t.OJ•ther? Rolf Benirschke, the San Diego Chargers• rec- ord field goal kicker, says he will donate part. of his football salary to the San Diego Zoo. • "Oh," says Jim, "we've been up since eight q)eJock this morning ... " A zooloey graduate of UC Davis, the 22-year-old Benirschke is ~tudylng r eproduction of porpoises. His Cather, Dr. Kurt Benlrscbke, is director of re· search at the zoo. Girl's ONROVIA CAP) -.An atpsy was planned today to d tmine the cause of death or 7· ar-old Lolita Miles, whose body was fow\d after a 26-bour search. Sberilf'a deputies said the dead girl was found Wednesday night lying face down, partially clad and partia\b covered by leaves, in lbe beekyard ot •home iwodoorslrorn berown houeo. She had been severely beaten around the bead and face and apparently had» b .. n kllled ~l&ewhere, t'hon dumped in the backyard, deputies uld. Delee· tJyea said the 1tayin1 dtllnltely ,._ not related to the Hillllde S&analer cue. "' ... ...,, ... lldap LOS ANGELES (AP) -A blt· 1 72-day t trlke a«1in1t the kbeed Co. will cause aub- ' tlaJ producuoo delaya nut year lor tbe clant aeroapace finn, one ol the n1lloa•1 ml)or ptoducel"I of commercial aod Death Probed ( SI'A.TE J mllltary aircraft, a compan~ spokesman says. "Even if the atrike ended to- day. we would spend most or 1911 catmtni up and trying to get back on •chedule " J..octheed a pokeaman Jlm Ra1adale tald Wednesday. However, the outlook for a quJck eetUemeot w~ not opUmlatlc. r,.w,o..ms.w SACRAMENTO CAP> -Richard Mellon Scalte, &· Pennsyl van la J>"bllaber and banker, has purcbaaed 50 ~rcent in&ereat in the Sierra Publlahin1 · Co.. owner of The Sacramento Union. The tranuctton wu an· noueced We4ne1d1y. Term• werenotdlldoled. Tbe purcbaH bdnfl 8C!alfe In- to bualn .. wiUa Jahn P. McOolf chief uecuti" officer ol hn Corp .• which publishes dally and weekly newspapers In Mlt'bigan Florida, Illlnol1, Maryland, In: diana and Virginia. · N ... t~I-Clo•ed SAN M-'TEO CAP> -"Easy Street... a San M oleo nightclub noted few ~erforma.DC"M, has been ordere periri-a...atly· closed. San Mateo Superior Court Judae W. Howard ffariJey or- dered the closing Wednesday UD· d e r Red Light Abatement. Proceedings. . .,...,.,. a.ped, Slal•. BELLFLOWER CAP) -The parUally nude body or 21-year· old Pamela Sperry wos round lat4 Wedne.dey in her apart,· meat. wt.ere 1be apparently had bee a raped . and atraoaled. aMrUre deputl• reported. However, authorltlea aald· lhe 1la'1ns did not ap~ar nlat.- ed to the Hllllld• SUU,ler cqe. • 1 RJglat• Sought UNITED NATIONS <AP ) -U .S . Am - bassador Andrew Young urged U .N . delegates heading home from the Gen eral Assembly's 32nd session lo make the next one a "high point" in the fi ght for human rights. He also criUc\Jed U.N. spending. The session ended Wednesday with adop· tion or a record 1978-79 budget or $815,913,000 - $197 .5 mllllon higher than the 1976-'17 budget. The vote was 119-9 with the Soviet Union and close allies opposing and the United States. Cuba, Romania, I srael. France and Italy ab- staining. ..... t• OK'd WASHINGTON (AP) -President Carter is opening the way to ex- panded trans·Atlantlc • alr trawl with his ap- p r ova I of non-atop iJervlc• to Europe from 11 more U.S. cities, in- cludlnt the capital of Georgia_. !'lls home state . In tutnt the action Wednetda.r, Carter also ruled li81ns t Pan Americ a n World Airways on one route. promptin• Pan Am Chairman William T . Seawell to express out-raic aver what bo caJled "political manlpul • tioD..'' smog, produced when hydrocarbons and nitroR:en dioxide are exposed to sunlight. Nearly every urban area in the United States is violating health standards for smog, the EPA said. "URBAN SMOG LEVE~ remain high and are even increasing sUghlly in s ome areas," said EPA Ad· ministrator Douglas M. Costle. Cos tie noted, however. that levels of such air pollutants as sulphur dioxide, carbon monoxide and particulate matter have decreased substantially the past six years. "America's air is getting cleaner," he said. "But we're still a long way from having healthy air throughout the country." Costle issued his statement follow· ing the release of EPA 's 1976 National Air Quality and Emissions Trends Report. THE REPORT SHOWED that Crom 1970 to 1976 sulphur dioxide levels dropped Z1 percent, carbon monoxide levels lell 20 percent and particulates <smoke and dust) decreased 12 per· cent. PAR'nCUIATE EMl9810NS from man-made sources decreased 7 per- cent from 1975 to 1976. The report. noted major improve. m e nls in particulate levels in metropolitan New York. Chlcago and Denver. · •'The greatest improvem ent OC· curred lo t.be New York area, where the percen&age of peop~e ~xposed_ to S]CSeeking Senior Panel San Juan Capistrano city or- flclaJs are seeking elderly city residents to serve on an 11· member Senior Citisena Ad Hoc Ad\liSOry Committee. Appointments to tbe commit. tee wlU be m.,de at the Jan. 11 Parka and Recreation Com- miulon meelln1. lntercsted seniors abould call '83•1171 tor further lnlonnatlon. AppUcatlorus can be obtained at city oUlcea, 32400 Paaeo Adelanto. However, a number of areas in the country reported increased levels of particulates in the air. This was at· tribuled primarily lo the drought, which resulted in Increased levels of wind-blown dust. the EPA said. The Jong-terni decrease in carbon nonoxide was attributed to auto emission controls. COSTLE CITED SPECIFIC in· . dustries as contributing to the na- tion's air pollution problem. "Sorne industries s uch as st.eel, cop- per, petroleum and electric utilities sUll are lagging In pollution controls," he said . The report focused on the overall. nationwide trend. It did not provide a city·by-city breakdown of pollution problems. College Center Introduces New . 'Quiet' Rock NEW YORK CAP) -Bursting al the eardrums lrom hard rock, punk rock and acid rock, Brooklyn CoUege has introduced "quiet" rock. The school's Center to.r the Performing Arts bas announced that in the future rock bands will have to keep those heavy '°'1nds to below 105 decibels. For some groups, the re- gulation would mean as much as a .U-declbel cutbact. "Medical evidence shows that ex· poaure lo pressures over ll5 decibels, ,about the intensity a jet produces at 10 yards, causes a cumulative de· generative eflect on the human bear· ing mechqism," a spokesman said. ruture contracta with rock bands wlll give the house aoundman pennls!!lon to unplug the power If the noiao level exceeds the llmlt, and, if that happens, tbt band wlll be Hable tor a $SOC) penalty. For com91ratlvo analyais, the SST takeoffs at Kennedy Airport were meaaured al bet•een 9t and lOI de· ct be la; a atnet.Jackhammer .i _,and the compectlq 1ea.r oa lbe rear ol • 1arba,. truck at I. I J ) • ( . . ' . ·----------- -~ILYPltOT Wishboae Eueky Sk unk Given Temporary R eprieve CHICAGO <AP I 8111 Stanton think~ he's °"on a bureaucratic repri~v.e for "Wish~ne," a skunk which wandered into his home, s hared Thankse1ving dinner and won the hearts or his family State offlc1als told him ut first that he was breaking the law by keeping the skunk. and that he'd be breaking the la" 1f he let 1t go. They said his only cho1c•c was to have the animal destroyC'd BUT NOW, J'HE lllino1s Conserva tion Departml!nt kas agreed to t.ake "Wishbone" to a game farm until spring. and then they will let him go. "I said I want to go with him," Stan· ton said he told a department official. .. Every step of the way. I want to go with you to the farm. And then in the sprmg when you let him go I want to go out there and watch you do it ·' "I Al.SO TOLD them T wanted a written !)tatement agreerng to all this," Stanton said. "This skunk has mude a monkey out of the state. and 1 "ant to make sure he doesn't get thrown under a truck somewhere." Stanton said the department agreed to his condations and he expects the skunk lo be picked up later in the week. Project For We lls Abandoned A study to determine the feasibility of using wells to tap water for Laguna Beach came up dry this month, accord· ing to the Laguna Beach County Water District board of di rectors The board made that determination following the completion of a re- port made by a research h ydrologist com missioned by the· water dis trict. · D ISTRICT general manager J oseph Process Stores E nergy SC HENECTADY. N.J. CAPI Officials of t be GeneraJ Elt:ctric Co. have announced what they say is a breakthrough m the pro- blem or storing solar energy for use on cloudy days. But they say tbe new process won't be availA· ble to the public for at least four years, and that many other details re- main to be worked out The new process, now beginning a JO-month testing program, in· volves the use of a salt. Glauber's salt. to store heat from the sun, ac- cording to James B. Comly, manal'(er of the energy science branch of the GE Research and Development Center here. The salt 1s the cheapest and most effi· cienl way of s toring solar heat. but it has tended to cake as it solidifies and returns to the liquid sta~e. a proce ss n('ces!)arv to store and re tease the heal, Comly said. LOCAL I NATIONAL , Pilot Logbook Gift of Time's Precious ISy JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tile 0•11' ~li.t Swtf Annie Eaton thinks this column ought to be called, "Sorry, somebody's al my door " She says It's a phrase a lot of the "oldies ... who read the Daily Pilot will recognize ANNIE IS 79 -ALMOST~. she'll tell you and she lives alone. She Is nol looking for ward to Christmas. Her family is off to spend the holidays in New York and most of her rriends a re dead or they've moved away. But that's not the worst or it. as far as Annie can see. lt 's the few friends that are s till around that got to her the other day. She had a glass or RIYHOl.OS sherry lo think it over and called to tell me about it. "I CALLED. T HIS FRIEND of miDe- because I wanted a little sympathy and I figured it was my nickel , so I could say what I wanted," she explained. But that's not the way the conversation worked out. Annie wailed patiently while her friend related all the good news she could think of about her family and her plans for the holidays. When there was a break in the conversa· lion, Annie decided it was her turn, so she started in t alking about her troubles. SHE DIDN'T GET FAR. "I 'm sorry An· nie," the friend replied. "There's someone at my door." She huog up, leaving Annie a bit more lonely than before. Annie, who calls herself and her conlem- porarles oldies. admits that it's hard for peo· pie even other oldsters to listen to the elderly complain. ·'The people over at lhe senior citizens club say you're not supposed to call people like that, but who else have l got to talk to?" IT'S SOMETIONG TO TIDNK about when we're all in such a rush to be spreading holi- day cheer. Time is as precious a gift as we can give. Is it more important lo have "somebody at the door" or is it possible to give just a little m ore tim¥o listen to Annie? Woman Stabbed • ID Church OMAHA, Neb. (AP > A worn an stabbed ~even times while attending church services was reported in fair condition al a hospital today following sur- gery. Neva G. Richards, 59, ap- parenlly lost a large amount of blood after being stabbed in the ~boulder, chest and stomach. Police Sgt. donald Stauf£acher said. Mark Richards, 23. said his m other had moved across the aisle when the man sat next to her in the back of the Pathwa,· of Light Cathedral. Richard's said he had just left his mother to go to the front of the church when the man rushed across the aisle and attacked her. Sweaney said the city --------------------------------------------------- ,.,, . ....,..... Two ColJurns could recover up to 10 percent or the current de- mands in the dis trict, but said there are so m any negative factors that the board decided to aban· don the plan. Shallow wells were in use m ore than 50 years ago in the Laguna Can- yon area. Swean ey said. but were aban- doned in the 1920s du<' to s ilting and other pro· blems. Al'lor .James Coburn stands in front of poster of himself in character as private t'YC J l<.1milton Nash at a party celebrating C'ompletion of new CBS-TV series, "The l>ain Curse." in New York. Series. based on <1 novel bv Dashiell Hammett, will be broad('ast in spring Some homeowners in Laguna Canyon are s till pumping water from --------------------s h a 11 ow we 11 s for S ovie t s D evelop Ene1~gy-ray Gun? LONDON (AP> The Soviet Union may be \\Orking on a "lightnin~·like" energy-ray weapon l°l'markahly hkt• th~ "ray gun" or science fiction. lhe editor of "Jane's WC"npon System" claims in the forward to the 1978 edition published today. Analyzing the delicate halance or strength bet ween superpowers, editor Ronald T. Pretty also :-;aid it is vital for the United States to proceed with development or the neutron bomb until there is eon- rrl'tc e\'idence the Sov1C'l Union has no plans lo <IC'ploy a s imilar weapon. "THE BOXER WHO ENTERS the ring with one hand tied behind his back for whatever high moral purpose gets no bonus points from the 1udges, and al~o stands a very good chance of losing the bout." Pretty wrote The neutron bomb 1s a small warhead whi ch produc<'s twic<' the radiation of a conventional nuclear bomb but less than a tenth as much ex- plosive power. heal and fallout. This means it can ki ll people while causing little damage to buildings. The warhead is designed to replace the approx- imately 7,000 nuclear warheads now deployed in Europe. PRETI'Y ALSO WROTE THAT America's al- lies in Western Europe need their own stockpile of lJ .S. cruise missiles. The 1.()00-page "Jane's Weapon Systems" is one of a series of reference works on military and civilian transport and weapons. It is compiled by Pretty and his editorial staff from official and unor- ficial sources. Addressing the e me rgence of a new ray-li ke de- vice that could obliter ate a target with a powerful oeam of energy, Pretty said a U.S. Air Force scien- tific intelligence committee is reported to have evidence that components of the Soviet weapon a lready have been tested, but conclusive d ata Is lacking. The existence of a completed "directed energy weapon" is unconfirmed and U.S. defense experts disagree on what progress the Soviets are making, he added. -SMOKE 7JIJNS IN CONGRESS .WASIDNGTON (AP) -Three out or four members of Congress who res~ to a ques· tionnab-e said they have· quit smoking or never bad the-habit, the Pb,ysl- clans Radio Net~' an- nounced. . · The broadcast senrice, which provides apeclal, radio programs for the medical coromunlty,· said 121 members of the House .ntt Se~ate, or 2• perc~nt, retJM>nded to Its amoklns quHtionnatre or follow-up telephtne calls. or the m. eo a.id ~·r ..... •moPd+ 1$ Hid ~were••-~~ DMicl~~l nmlf. • . (y) a " • landscape watering and agriculture purposes. BUT THE report pre· pared by r esearcher David A. Phoenix said the only source of replenishment for the proposed wells would be rainfall. Therefore. water from the wells would fluctuate with the seasons. The report a lso con- c I ud ed that the well wate r is highl y mineralized and would require cosUy treatment before it could even be used for irri gation purposes. The researche r did in· dicate that private well owners could continue to u se the wate r for landscape use a nd for agri culture product s that are not sensilivE" to boron. RIGIHS UP HEW SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The California Supreme Court has up- held the right of a gov- ernmental unit to sue a public employee union for damages allegedly stemming from a strike . The court announced that it unanimously re· fused to bear an appeal by the Pasadena Federa- tion of Teachers or a lower court r uling that the Pasadena School Dis- trict could sue the union for $330,000 in alleged dam ages from a one-day teachers' strike 1n 1974. • Giant Poinsettias Rosier'• Giant Ecke l>oll'lttt· o.. h8Y!I ntYtt been more beautiful. Th~y are avail· ~ \!14th mukJplt ~m• In ellher Chrl.atm•• Hd or whltt. . - QUART REGULAR PRICE $7.50 REDUCED TO $6.99 1.7 5 L. (59.211. 01.) REGULAR PRICE $13.75 REDUCED TO s11.99 Stngtnm·s Ext?n Dry Gin Stngmm:s V.O. 1. 7.5 L. (59.2 fl. oz ) REGULAR PRICE $10.99 REDUCED TO s919 Benchmark Bourbon 1. 7 5 L. (59.2 fl. o z.) REGULAR PRICE $18.49 REDUCED TO s17.49 750 ml. (25.4 fl. oz.) REGULAR PRICE $7.99 REDUCED TO $6.99 sz60 750 ml. (25.4 fl. oz. J (25.4 fl. oz.) SA Aft act' i. 1 sL. ...,..,...,.., (59.2 fl. oz .) (25.4fl. oz.) , ( INSIDE : •Christmastime . ' ' ,j I • f ' i I I I •Ann Landers •Erma Bombeck •Classified ... .. . . ILYPILOT Featuring_._._. ___ CJ D•llY ~lie« PllM•..., Ort.,,.,_ Coaeh Skeie ' ,. . '. 'Athletics and physical education have generally taken on an all-time high. We have more people involved than ever.' By mERYL ROMO Ol .. D.lllrll'li.t~ Leon SJteie comes to work every mornbfg before the sun comes up. He does it he says because he wants to give himself a girt of life. Good physical condition means good health to the 35-year-old Orange Coast College assistant professor of physical eduration and the recipient of the national Teacher's Hall of Fame Award in 1974. At 5:15 a .m. L eon Skeie works out in the weight room. "My bobby is working out," said the head athletic trainer and strength coach. "To me it is like a gift I give myself and I feel cheat· ed if I don't. Even though I like working with people -I like to be alone a lot. A part of me is a loner, and the mornings are the best time in the world, the sun's just comingup ... " Coach Skeie stated that after he completes his own daily workout, he can concentrate on "what needs to be done to get along with everyope else." involved in and had a love for athletics. .i . , 4 "When I went to school I ma- jored in agriculture because •,: everyone expected you to do that," . I said the man who was born and raised in Story City, Iowa (popula- tion 2,000), where most of the citizens are of Norwegian descent and where Scandinavian holidays are stlll cel~brated. Blond. bloe-eyed Skeie, who was senior class president or his high school graduating class of 23, soon realized he was unhappy. "I found, after a year, I still cared about athletics, so I joined the Marine Corps -what a way to go. I came back and changed my major." While attending Iowa Stat.e he had bis first expos ure t o an athletic training program and knew he had found his niche. He graduated with a B.S. degree in physical education and biological science and a master's degree in the philosophy of education. Coach Leon Skeie and student: 'If you are involved with people who are neat, it makes the job easier.' A transplanted mid-westerner, who now lives in Newport Beach with his wife, Cheryl, and their two daughters, Stacey and Kim, Skeie admittea he's always been Arter leaving school, the coach landed a job as an athletic trainer at Corona del Mar High Schobl, worked there one year, and vias then hired by OCC to t each (See COACH, Page C2) CHOC-ettes From left, Bets y and Theresa Gazda, Cindy Handleman and Laura Vausbindcr were among the carolers at a recent Chrismtas party for the CHOC-ettes, the Junior Auxiliary of Punch and Judy Guild of Children's Hospital of Orange County. The party was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore E . Gazda of Mesa Verde . The CHOC-ettes have donated several hundred dollars to the out-patient clinic at the hospital through fund-raisers. A Better Bellda11 A little glrl from La Rumorosa, Mexico, ls having a happier holi· day because Pacmc Mutual employees traveled from Newport Center to the rural toMJ with aifts for poor' families. The employees, who have been doing tbis for five years, filled a truck, camper, motorbome, two vans and an automobile with clothing, toys, candr. IOllP. 800 pounds of flour, rice and beans. Employees of Paclllc<Mutual collected Ule goods under the chairmanship of Rasbeedah Wadood ftd Manny A~ata. The program was lhe idea of Rleb.ard Thompson, who is still involved -i. with the project. · ' Call It No.I Men who use it 'operate differently,' says the creator of the fragrance. By JUDITH OLSON Of ,,_ D•llY Pllol StMf Gene Pantuso is trying to get men lo "clean up their act." To aid them, he has introduced a new line of men's toiletries, carefully designed to have a clean, brisk, masculine, sensual but subtle fra. grance. Called No. 1, the new scent is geared to making men feel that they are No. 1 in their Ii ves and thus enabling them to think more positively about themselves. Pantuso. a Newport Beach resident, is ta k· ing on the giants in the cosmeUc industry with his new fragrance but he believes he can match them or beat them. The secret, he said during an interview in his Irvine office, is that he uses only the finest ingredients and does not compromise on quality. _ •'There is a way to build a better product in this industry-if you want to take the time and spend the money,•· he asserted. Pantuso, in the toiletries business for 13 years, spent 30 months working with chemists to develop his No. 1 fragrance. It is, he noted, carefully blended to "bum off" so that the scent remains the same all day. "It's a masterpiece." Pantuso said proudly. "There are 96 different ingredients. It was dif· flcult to formulate them in such a way that they will diffuse and liftin harmony." Pantuso's dream is to convince men that they should stick to one fragrance for a total concept rather than use seven or eight different scents each day as they shower, shave, groom or shampoo their hair and finish with cologne. "No. 1 men operate differently," he noted. "They start with No. 1 soap. Then they use No. 1 shampoo, No. 1 conditioner, cologne, deodorant and hair spray." The line includes every product a m an needs for his toilet, except conditioning and cos- metic items, which Pantuso plans to introduce next year . Pantuso is no stranger to the toiletries in· duslry, having started his career as a sales representative for Revlon and later manufac· luring his own line of lower-priced toiletrieS' and a sha mpoo. lie started his new company 13 years ago when Revlon asked him to move to New York. He had spent many weekends in the East and didn't relish the thought or making it his perma- nent home so he started his own business in his garage. "I used to sell In the d'yUme, then come back to my magnificent manufacturlng faclllty -my garage," he said. "I did everything. I bot- tled, sealed, put on the stickers, delivered ln my station wagon and made up my own invoices." He "just kept plugging away" at his busi· ness, he said, and now has his own manufactur· ing facility in Irvine. . The new line, geared to luxury and special- ty stores, was introduced because Pantuso felt there was a need for it and the time was right. "It's my oplnlon that we're ready for a big surge forward," be said. "There are two (See NO. I. Pare C2) Whiskey BUI He always says 'God ble_ss you' when we see him and we feel the same way about him. By CHERYL &OMO Dllltr ................. His name wu "WhiJkey &lll0 durlng hla hell·ralai~ daya. Now they call him "Uncle BW" -because be doelll'tdrink tbe bard atuft anymore. But he can awl down a six paclc'at a alt· tlag In the local tanm -and he's 1tUI cbaalng the ladies <though at a tlower Pace since his hernia operation). Btll ls my grandf•tber and he's 8T yean old. He lov• to tell you stories about the ltard Umta ID the old da)'I wbm be Hved CID a farm and he It.ill letl emotlonai when be telli tbe stmJ about bebll liftn to anothtr lamlly after his father Ktpped-.. and left bis motber to fend for......,adbtlorllJjllill ....... aad Uttte NW. • # • "J(i worked ~.a l~nn~~nd (~tb no wages) unW he ran away to Chicago where, at the ripe ace of 12, be went to work In a shoe factory maklnl shoes. Later he became a rry cook, and, sWl in his teens, married a pretty, fratile. looking young woman. While be was ht the Army in World War I his pretty wlle dled, be says, of a ''broken heart" because 1be milled him. He sllll carries her picture and the letter from her father telling Bill of her death. Later. bitter, be beca~e a gambler, a · card·playtna man and • dandy of sorts. lie married my grandmother, a simple .. man Who aerubbed floon for a Uvint add ate too much candy. Dqmar, my Norweti~andmotl\er. IOOll bore him •IOI!,..., ·. CIMIOLO,Papdj . Gene Pantuso: From a ga;age to his own factory. • I . . . -f, (2 DAILY PILOT Writer's Philosophy: 'To Reme~r Me'· .. OEAR ANN· I want to .s h a r e w i t h y o u aomething written by Robert N. Test, or the Cinclnnati Post. I know you will find it as inspir· ing and as beautiful as 1 did. Sincerely yours J .S.K., ATLANTA _DEAR J .S.K .: Be1atlful indeed. I re· celved permission today from tbe author to share bis philosophy with my readers and here It ls: TO REMEMBER ME Aaa Lallden Life, and let my body be taken from it to help others lead fuller lives. my bones, every mus· c le, every fiber and nerve in my body and find a way ·to make a crippled child ~alk. Explore every comer of my bralo. Take my cells, if necessary, and let them grow so that, someday, a speechless boy wm shout at the crack of. a bat and a deaf girl will heat the sound of rain against her win· dow. som ething, let lt be my faults, my weaknesses and all prejudice against my r~ow mih. If, by chance, you w~sh to remember me, do it witb a.kind deed or word to someone wbo needs you. If you do all I have asked, 1 wm live forevel'. pend1 qn it. -e,OWNG WlTH THE PuNCHF.S D EA.a tfLLING : Haa1 U.. ptper tow• lb~ ..... ••>'you h••• tilt toUet paper, dear. Cctia11a&eecy la • vlrtu4&. DEAR ANN: You 're gotns to decide this one. :I'm too mad to think straight. I was browsing in a• glft $bop today and my sleeve accidentally bnathed against a glass flower. It fell off the shell and broke. J dld not break tbt piece intentionally. Ac· cldents DO happen. I told ber '°· Sbe replied. "See the elgn?" al\d pointed to 1ometbla1 that read. ••it tou break it, it's you11." t dld hand over $8.es (plus tax.! > but I feel a& It I've been ha<t .. What would YOU do~ ..... S'Jl:AMINO D'l:A& STEAM: U I brOke some~tac .19 a store I'd offer &o pay f.r It wlU.O.t belac aboW9 a slp.Of~ttwu 'Dot)'t Pull . Santa's· MO ref l\\rell! ~urts tlitleftJt' a The . _ fNI SMte I 'at the ~Center Mall to vlllt the Kidd• Phc*>s avallabl• on NQu.tL Beach Bl\'d. & Edinger at the San Qiegc>Fwy .. The day will come when my body will lie .upon a white sheet neat· ly lucked under four cor- ners or a mattress locat- ed in a hospital busily occupied with the living and the dying . At a cer tain moment a doctor will determine thal m y brain has ceased t o function and that, for all intents and purposes, my life has stopped. Give my sight to the man who has never seen a sunrise, a baby's face, or love in the eyes of a woman. Give my heart to a person whose own heart has caused nothing but endless days of J]ain. G1vc my blood to the teenager who was pulled from the wreckage of his car, so that be might live to see his grandchildren play. Give my kldneys to one who depends on a machine to exist. Take Burn what is left of me and scatter the ashes to the winds to help the flowers grow. DEAR ANN : l'<{ow that you have solved ~he most important pto)>lem in the' world -boW' to bang toilet paper -will you advise me on the proper way to place the paper towels in tihe kitchen? Please hurry. M¥ whole marriage de· The saleswoman came over and said with a fake smile, ''That will cost $8.95." not ln&eadoaal, but peo. --------- pie ahoald expect to pay 1""'11111111111---------~ If you must bury for tllelr "m.latakea. • • Group Seeks Food for the·.Poor When that happens, do not attempt to insti ll artificial life into my body by the use of a machine. And don't call BySUSANS. WARD SACRAMENTO (AP) -Homer Fahrner reg- ularly goes begging for food in a big way. He goes after tons of it. Often the 75-year-old Fahrner, a former San Francisco stockbroker, is out driving the • backroads of the rich Sacramento Valley -f looking for tons o · walnuts, tomatoes, eher· ries, apricots, sweet potatoes, apples. He ls part of.a maaaive, informal network ot non· prof it groups that scrounge for food in ftis my deathbed. Let it Jc c alled the Bed or r .. ~skey Bill I From Page Cl ) 1 With a family to s upport, Bill joined the carpenters· union and during the Depression made gaming tables for the ~peakeasies. At night he worked as a ~hill. Arter Prohibition, he went back to be ing a carpenter in the newly· reorganized union. S olo By Cheryl Romo CaU!omJa, where a fifth th~ harvest. of the nation'I food and It ls food that hu fallen fiber is produced. · through the cracks in the· They seek food lbr the marketing system -ex· old, sick and have-nots cess or odd-sized pro· that would otherwise be duce, dairy products too wasted -thrown out by old to sell but still good distributors, processors · enough to eat, food in and grocery stores or left damaged containers. to be plowed under alter · In many cases the fpod is' lJiere for the taking, So after the meeting he like several row• in a began Senlor Gleaners. puch orchard that a Last year, he says, the farmer declded be can't group got about 200 tons seu. The groupi check offoodfromthefieldalast everythlngtheygatber to year .and dispensed it to make sure It's edible. its 1,600 members ancl 30 Some of these scroung. other charities. lng groups have been "I amalwayasollcltng. around for years, often I just 10 out and knock !fnked wtth churches, but door to door. If I get m the last two or three tu111ed down 10 times, I yean more groups have figure I've done a day's jol.aed . the search in a work, and I go home systematic way. pooped," Fahrner said. Th,tr names vary -Senior Gle&l\.ers shares like Golden Harvest ~n wbatit gets -ia one Sup. Merced, Gra.ndvlew 10 day the group picked Q6 Pasad~a. Neighborhood · tons Q( onions oe;ir went and got him. We didn't have much House ID 51? Diego,~ Stockton -with other . room in our tiny house, so I found Fa b r Der s Se Dior groups across the state,'. grandpa a place nearby where they Glea.ner.s. • and they share with, would fix his meals, do his housekeep· Fabmer'• effort bet.an l'abrner. · ing, and he could come and go as he aboutt~years~~w~en . "Different surplus pleased. he ran an adverUSemen( hou:;es get surplus from . Later on he look his family to the ''Golden Land of Opportunity" - (:alifornia. Wh en my father grew up, fnarricd, and I came alo~g. Bill would (ell grandma he was taking me down to much or the handsome man who always wore a hat to conceal his baldness. Christmas or 1974 was the most ~a.local newspaper say. their immediate area.· beautilul in my life. Grandpa Bill sat in mg 1f20peoplewouldcon· we tradewithSacramen· the old rocking chair, watching his two tacthimabouttbehunger to for cherries We get great-grandchildren open their presents, problem, he'd call a grapefruit fro.m down and chaJlenging any visitors to arm meeting. . south in t he Imperial wrestling. "I'd seen hungry kids. Valley. Sweet potatoes f.hc corner for a paper. And then we ·ould sneak into a tavern so he could wet his whistll'." Wben grandma died, Bill started dat· ing a younger woman. My mother thought his behavior was ''just disgust· ing," but I, secretly, was very proud or him. Together we watched the fire in the One kid comes in with a from Merced " said fireplace burn the new-cut log~ tnto em-sandwich and· twenty Michael Alexander of the be rs and the Christmas li ghts casting kids look at the kid . Then Community Food Coun· · their shadows onto the ceiling. Bill slept I drove in the count!?' and cil in Santa Cruz. : on the couch tha,Utight and In the morn-saw all the food," sa1d the ing I found him'Sitting in the backyar<t short, small man, his lookingatthesky. eyes sparkling from Call 642-5678. Put • few word• to work for ou. LUMINIZE CONClTIONING • Cj>UIS nott Do I f>o.19 to "°"9 1 hiqhliohfi119 with tho Clairol 'Uniniio coudtiouio~ Mr$. M. Hvnt1119'on Beach AMSWR: No, you c:on ho... ·all !he benefit\ al the lumrue , cond111on1119 W11hoo1 1he tolor . c+.onq.. 11\ a h~• procen 1ho1 q•"'fl\ Y""' ho" \Ileen, tond.llO<WIQ ord moltes rt lotter_ 9 UlSTIOtt i. ~ po$\lblo to hove o ~· and lumirize '(°" ho.r 01 !tie \aM l>me? t...do. Cmlo Meso :AMSWH.: Yes. 0kmnile is a' conditioner lhot coots the hoW ond ., -ho.... 0 dlen*d• proceu thot would effect petmal!Ofll~ hew. Soif you ore morned. iincje, diYCteecl Ot IV'' o 1wi"91', you con ttil sl-ine • ..._ ..... ___ .... C;41VA~~, i __ ... 1HAIRSTYLTS:r. 2630 Avon. Suite MO" Newport Beach (714) 6'4S-7290 ~Grandma didn't allow liquor in the ousc: so w1de·eyed and pigtailed, sit· ng on a barstool. I would listen in m azetnent to Blll 's cronies telling stories about the old days in Chicago. 1'hen they would give me a shiny dime not to tell grandma where we had 'been. "ll 'sour secret." they said with a wink. A few years later. my father died and mother put Bill into a nursing home where he wasn 'l allowed to go out and "wet his whistle." J didn't see him for awhile because I had my own problems Since then, IJlll has been with us behindhisglasses. enry~~mas,MdmMyoth~tim~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ as well. It has been good. He always says · · -but we did write to each other. .l My mother didn't like Bill. She thought qe was .. low class." During the middle part or my childhood, I didn't see too One November day, BUI sent me a note and said he couldn't stand It anymore. I packed my children into our car Md we .. God bless you" when we see him and ' we feel the same way about him. He bas ' brought much joy into our lives - especially mine. I • • .Coach <From Page Cl) physical education and to serve as :.(n athletic trainer. r During his fi rst year , he in· t~oduced three new programs at t e community college -one or t em weight training for women, "on the national teacher's aw.ard, and, ln 1975, led OCC 's football team to the national cham· nionship. The next year, the coach c!ompleled his book on flexibility training, "Hang Loose and Slay lJappy ... • "A lot of thmgs have happened to me since coming here. If you are involved with people wllo are neat, it m.akes the job easier," he said. But, he added, his greatest re- ward comes when he sees a stu- dmt improve physically. He cited a woman, wbo lost 7Q ~di in his weigh~ training class as an exam- ple. Recently he introduced a co· educational athletic training pro. gram. Nine of his student§ are· women, who are learning how to be trainers for both male and female teams. Currently, he stat· ed, the school has 25 different · sports activities. Skeie, who had never even seen an athlete tape his ankles before he went to college, said he is pleased with the turnaround in at- 'titudes about physical fitness in the past few years: . "AthleUe11 ·and physical educa· lion have generally taken on an all-time high. We have more people involved than ever before. Stu- dents are asklng more questions than they were 30 years ago and that's good. "They want to know why some things work and they have ~ore confidence. Students today are taught to look at athletics from a scientific standpoint -so, if they go into coaching, they wUl un- derstand what they are doing and why." He explained that a coach's job is not a "typical 8 to S'er. H someone wants that, It •s not going to happen (as a coach). I would Tather work 80 boura a week al something I Jove to do, than work 40 hours a week at something I don't.'' His f amlly ls also involved in sports; he -said, and admitted the only time be ever gets sick is when he stops exercising: "I've been accused of being too intense about my job ... but it's part or me ... I work out six days a week and never on SUnday -i\'s the Lord's Day. You have to have one day when you don't -and that's goin~ forev~rythlng.'' ~.,,_v"v~.,,_ ~ 'Twas three d~ys be/ ore ( Christmas and ·au through the store , 50 % off' Decorations. Ornaments and more FOR CHRISTMAS LIVE and PERMANENT •Wreaths · • Cent.rr Pieces •Wall Decorations 'Imported Hand Mede ORNAMENTI, • FEATHERI D BIRDI , l lLK FLOW1"8 from , • . AROUND THI WORLD. UNUIUAL °'" aftd • , DICOR ITIM8 I .. OPEN 10 ··"'· to.j ""'" thru ieturc19r ••• No.I I From Page Cl) reasons. Women's liberation has in effect liberal· ed men and there is not so much importance placed on being 'macho.' "And then 13 Y.i years ago a freak phenomenon happened -Jade East came on Che market. It was the most sensational fra- grance." Aller Jade East was introduced some 400 different fragrances sprung up, Pantuso said, bolstered by "a tremendous amount or advertis- ing" which he said ''raised consumer conscious- ness." Men, Pantuso explained, became more con- scious or their grooming than ever before, Md the youths who were first exposed to the plethora of advertising are now in the highly marketable age bracket. "Men are more comfortabl~ trying new items now," Pantuso added. "They want to look good, feel good, smell good and feel clean. Women have made men 'clean up their act. ... Before putU.ng No. 1 on the market.be sent a questionnaire to 1,100 women asking them what they like in the way or men's grooming. His line was formulated from the answers because he felt that women are the ones who innuence what a man buys. By making a complete line, Pantuso hopes be is "educating the American man to better grooming habits." He is a good example of his own salesmanship, immaculately dressed and groomed to the hilt. "A charismatic quality emanates from a No. 1 guy," Pantuso says. flubina a cbarasmaUc smile. Holiday. Houn: Mon.·Frl. 10'9; Sat. lf>.I: Sun. 12-5 4535 C.mpu1 Drive, Irvin• 955.19n ANTIQUES 'N ACCENTS .TOYS 'N TINSEL .GIFTS GALORE ' .• ,, si.llTSl\'Tf ~om our Boys Dept. ~ 'I , .. . Stohkttper QtStomer J. R. S vatore is wearing I.zod's khaki pant! with a burgundy/ navy/cream st-ripe shirt. Both are made of polyester and cqtton for ea,y care ... Pants 15.50-16.50 Shirt 13.50 ; " . ". . EAMA BOMBECK / HOROSCOPE -. O.oly "''",_.. .. Illy '•l•lcll 0 '0.-11 aM O.t' -'"*- Doug France of the Rams with David Brown, 7, from Orange. Lion Country Safari lion visits with Dinh Thanh, 11. Thursday. December 22, 1977 DAILY PILOT C3 Disneyland characters entertain Brett Rickard, 11, from Orange who had his tonsils removed. Dan Maniaci of the Fountarn Valley Club, left. and Billy Meeks, right, of the Costa Mesa Boys' Club. v1s1t with Ken- ny McConaha, patient. A Gift Patients at the Children's Hospital of Orange County hove been treated to visits by groups dOring the Christmas week. Recently characters from Disneyland came in for a party and visited some of the children in the wards. On another evening, the Boys' Club of Orange County brought toys, treats and entertainment. Doug France of the Los Angeles Rams accom· panied Boys' Club members. along with a magician and a ··uon" from Lion Country Safari. · .. r r rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr "1"1111"1"1"1"1"1"1"1 "1"1"1"1"1"1"1"1"1"1, >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ~-;-;-;-;-;~-;~-;~~~~~~~~-;-;~ xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx "' "' ,,, "' "' "' m "' "' "' m ,,, "' "' "1 "' "1 "' "' "1 L :0:0 :0:0:0:0:0:0:0 :0:0:0:0:0:0:0 :0:0:0:0 rrrr rrrrrrrrrrrrrrr r "'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"' >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> -;-;~~~~-;~-;-;-;-;~-;-;-1-;-;-;~' xxx ~xxxxxx xx xxx xxx xx "'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"""'"'"""""'"'"'' :0:0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 1 1 rrrrrrrrrrrr rrr rrrr r l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~-i-;-;-; ~ -1 -1 ~-;-; -1 -1 ~ -'4-1 -1 ~-; -11 xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx "'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'rn111mml'l'lmmm :0:0:0:0:0 :0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 l.JN 'BEL Vi IN WESTPORT SQUARE 369 E. 17th ST., COST A MESA 141·5533 ~'I Fine Things -_ ~ HAS MOVED TO antique guild plaza • FINE BRASS Over 80 Selections • FINE HAND· E~JBROIDERY , • FINE LEATHER BATIK. Purses and wallets ( Horoscope ) Ye Olde Office Party • GIFTS S• to $400 Award Winning Bronze & Silver J ewelry FRIDAY, DEC. 23 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <March 21 -April 19J: Relatives im· p1nge themselves on your consciousness. Key is to be considerate without wasting time. money or sympathy You do have a life of your own to hve. TAURUS <April 20-May 201 Accent on get· ting what you want at the "right price." Stick to number 7. See as is -have fun with illusion. romance. but don't deceive yourself. Yes. someone you know is charming, persuasive, but you have bad enough intrigue. GEMINI <May 21-June 20 >. Cycle bigh take advantage of opportunities. Don't pro· crastinate. Finish what you !:tart -display responsibility, authority and power. The most noticeable change that has come as a result o( so many employed women these days has been in the of. rice Christmas party. I overhqard our neighbor, Frdd, and my husband discussing it yesterday morning. .. What time did Kay get home last night?" asked my husband. "IL was arter mid- night. I was In bed. Kay had to lak e Mark home." "Who's Mark?'' a bout a s uccessful woman who refuses lo grow old. It's pathetic. They take advantage of a boy's ambition." ·•Jt may be a way out of the mail room ... but will s he respect him in the mornin~ " ''Thal'!. beautiful. have to work. It's an ego "Get s erious. Called Where did y ou hear thing." the President of the that~· .. "I think office parties company Gloria'! I sup· "F'rom Kay. She read should be legally out· pose Debbie Fransworlh it on a restroom wall. .. lawed. Whal purpose do was cruising around. ---------- they serve ?" Marriage certainly "Kay says it's a nice hasn't settled her thing to do, but I don't down." Timllltl,. 1twwa ... RllAl.lfl=US DESIGNERS AND DECORATORS WELCOME Display Showroom -1805-K Antique Guild Plaza Off Newport Fwy. -Oyer Road / 546·6600 OPEN EVERYDAY 10·5 s 100 DOLLAR DAY PACKAGE 1. MASSAGE 2. SAUNA 3. FACIAL 4. SCALP & HAIR TREATMENT 5. HA IRQJT 6. HAIRSTYLE 7. MANICURE 8. PEDICURE 9. EYEBROW ARCH CANCER <June 21·July 22): Security btankel is removed: you rinish project, perhaps you gain new perspective on a relationship. Ac· cent on dreams. conrinement. institutions, film . illusion. univers al appeal. "You know the 1itUe redhead secrelary t.o Ms . Hamsteln in Res~arch and Development." know. Women turn into "Kay says she's dat· beasts when they've had ing less but she left with a drink. Can you im· a new office boy. She's aginc those women ex-old enough to. be his ecutives plying all those mother." • 10. COMPLETE MAKE UP ,, LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on creativity, fresh concepts, new starts -and love. Your vitolity makes a comeback. People come into your lire who inspire and bring happi- ness. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: Emphasis on career, ambition, relations with superiors. Your policies are vindicated -or at least you are ~iven opportunity to instigate plans, concepts Your "psychic abilities" are highlighted. In· dividual who taught you in past makes reap- pearance. LIBRA !Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Diversiry welcome change of pace, socialize. Write. publish and advertise. Gemini, Sagittarius persons play key roles . Look ahead project and prophesy. SCOR PIO <Oct 23-Nov. 21 l. Emphas1s on moderation, getting job done, being specific. direct -and honest. Don't permit yourself to weasel out or commitments. Keep your word to yourself. ' SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Spotlight on legal arrangements, rights and permissions. Study clauses, leases -become aware or poten- tial and res trictions. "Public relations" becomes more than a casual phrase. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·J an. 19): Moderation should be keynoted -win rather than force your way. Utilize powers or persuasion. AQUARUJS <Jan: 20·Feb. 18): Rip thro'Ugh pretense -call shots as you see them. Acce·nt on creativity, chanae of scenery, doing what you do ~ell. PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20): This is a power day. You get facts, set policy, draw line. You learn where you stand in personal and pro· ressional sense. "You mean he 'had loo much to drink?" struggling clerks with "There's something drinks they're not used -------------------to? Why, even Cecil --~Sevlnoo G-Hflr 1 R-.i ~G•f109f1,-<' "Kay told me he was running around with a Cadillac hood ornament in his hand shouting, ·Anyone here lose a Krugerrand?' " Frampton was doing the hustle." "You're kidding." "Kay said he really has a nice figure. He just hides it under those leisure suits. By the end of the evening he was ca lling M s . Hath · cock .•. Gloria! .. Ju~l Arrl\ed' Anliqlll' und P1.mo<I .Jewelrv One·Of·i\ Kind ,Jf.'\\Clrv Ca11k'cts" From Sl<!.JIJ · RK=HAAD ~LlfTTE "Disgusting. He's married, isn't he?" "Sure. He probably should be al home with the kids. He doesn't •, I'; ., s· ,, r ofa P,,r!!!f:~, oftJ. llPI Wntrlllf Or . ='-•• PQr1 &O<tl.1131 ~11 10 o1 Mond11y Sahard1.t for Christmas ... SALON & COSMETICS For M..-&-.n J OO MIWP'OIT CIMTH DllVf pu1 lovers and cardiqans ava1lable 1n both mens an d wom ens s12es . In m:J awn home iri Ireland I hand-knitted theee garments. I hope that their we.ari~ will give ~u the J?leasure their knitting saVe-. w.,e,forwe are vety proud of our harrlcraf t kn1lt.ing. d&~'~ 6444671 I ll . ., If 11 • ~1 I 11 OAA.Y Pu.or t loodless Violence 4ttacked W J\SHINGTON (J\P) The lJloodlcs:+ way in which tl'lc' 1:-.ion uction 1shows depict murder and mavhem misleads the pul)lic about the suffer- ing and pain of violence, says a l>tudy by the U.S. Conference of M ayors. J ohn Gunther. cx- rcuti ve dir<!ctor of con· rerence, said u study of police shows round they portray violence in an ant iscplil' manner with littlt• 'blood or guts ... TEl.E\'lSlON charac- lcr:-u:-11;tlly di<' quickly and <1111l'll,\' or nut of ramc•ra ran~l'. Gunther ,aul Tlw .... tud) focused on 7J hours of prime time relc\ iswn ac:twn . nurini;: lht' 73 hours. t>4H wt•1.11)Qns. :16 deaths . .md 11 1nJurics were rt.1s hl'd across the '\Crt•rn. There was an ·\~t'ragc or a bout one death for every two hours n( viewing. Handg uns 1~trc the most common weapon. ACCURACY WAS not l hc s t rong point or the tt'lev1sinn ch:iracters us· mg guns. whether they \\'Cre cops or robbers. .Some 346 s hots wt>r e 1-ounled . and only 17 Pl'f· l'\'lll hit their I Jr~l'ts 1\ :.. m a n \ a :-4 3 \(•c apons 'including --<!l ub s. knive s. {pt>arg uns, bolllcs, wrenches, rocks. brnss J.\nucklcs. a nd even a ro 11 in g pin and a n ashtray appeared in one hour's v1cwinc. the report said. WHILE THE study did "\Ot lrv to assess the im- ;1al'l of lclcv1~ed violence on viewers. 1l found that r ritics paint an exag- ~craled ima~c of count• less TV murders, replete with blood and gore. "This represents dis- tortio n of the m ost .;erious · nature," Gun- ther 1>aid. "Viewers mus t be made aware lhal oain , s uffering and trauma result from a bullet or slab wound.'' PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOU$ •USINHS NAME STATIMIENT T iit to11owtng _,.... •• oolno bu•I· nt \S a \ LfONINE ENTERPRISES, JS~ Victoria Slf~I INO 11, Cost• M«>•. CA .,.,, Prl«lll• tlleen 0,,.,, 311 \lie lorll ~lrHI I No , I, Co•t• Mes•. CA •lUI Thh buslnHJ Is C-..CI"" by en '"' dtvldu•I Pmcllll E.Orto nut ~t.9-""D llltd wlllt troe County Clwt. Of Ot '""9t C.0....1 y on OK. ll,197'. .... , .. Putllished Or-Co.s1 O•llY Piiot. DK. U, 2).19. 1'n,JM1.S, ltll PUBLIC NOTICE PubllSNCI Or~ Olotst D.lltv PllOI Oe<. 22. 2', 1m JM.s. u. "'' "4"17, PUBLIC ~OTICE P\JBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PIJBUC NOTICE NATIONAL I LEGALS PUBUC NOTJCE ..... Ill N•ll• <*1111' 01' n.• If 4 Ta°' CALI llO!tttlA f'O. f"I COUNfYOf'MAll•I ......... " Ill 1119 Mallff' ol 1'-lt'91t t i H, llORNA Tl.I' RAM,.TOH, .. ,. ~­., M,ll , ltAM .. TOH , .,.. e t l'OltNA 1'US lllAMftTOH, C>M.••*· NoU<• ,, _..,., ., ... fl ID f•edlttn M~l"f ctei-... kltl IN Mid 9'<• 19tftl to 111• ~ d Mm\ In U.. .tl!U el .... """ Of ~ .. ., .... d ,_, w 10 tlfe""'' then\ le h llMtrSltl\ff at IM olllu ol fHOMA' "'· 0185f.•. VlltTUE & SCHECK , IN C.Oltli'ORATaO, JIO ~ C:.ntw Qrlve, P.O. !lo• 1"0, ""'-l le.Kil, CA •tMA. wlliUI l•IW ttllO h lbUll«t of 11\1\1 ... u of IM .. ~ .itM• In e ll melter\ '9•1M""'9 lo ..i<t "t.tt. s .. o <lelmc •llft 1119 _...,.,. v-l•tt• PUJWC NOTICE "" -J Jld'-11 mull 11t 11tH « ~fduMteHtd PUBUC NOTlCE wllhlll , ... , tnOlllht ..... Ille llnl 1--------------~l~OlllWI Ol lhl\ llOl!n. MA"V J, ltAMpl()N Edf;lllrl•of, .. Wlll olO.C-t T .. Ol1Ull M. Ot•NI• AllOfMy .. y., VIR1UI AHOSCM•at, lltC . 111 ... .....,. c..w Dn•• ... o .... ... ... ~ 9Mal,c:Amte Publlatlff OrM!Oe CO.K o .... , Pllol. ~.I. IS. 11, 2•. 1'11 )l)t )/ PUBUC NOTICE NOTIC:a TOCWIDI TORS IUPl"l°"COUltT~THI SfAfE~U.Uf'OANIA POA TH a COUflln" OP OlllA•OE ....... ,,.411 Etlale ol CICILE l A11£1'E WANDEi.i.. l>Kteiecl. NOTICE IS HEREBY CIV EH lo ttw crect11Dn ol 1.,. -MMecl Cle<.0.1'1 IMI all --IWlvll>CI clalmi "9'1ln•I '"" salo OKeOtnl art rl!Qulr•d to 1111 lllem, wlll• uw ... un.,Y YO<ICllH~ In tf\e ofllct of ""'l~k ol Ille -... '"" 1111.0 court, 0t to-nt tMm, "'"" U•• MCHUtt WUC:Nrl. to Ille -Slone<! •I STEVf;N T. DEL.81t1DGE, Al · TO"NEV AT LAW, 11m lrvl,.. Bl•d .. Suite N. f\nllft, CA '1'80, wllkl> h 11\t DCau 01 Minon ol t,. ••ldito'91\d In oil 1111Uw• s-ri.lnlno to tl\9 '"~'• o• ")d dectdMC, wfClll11 '-"*1111• et•r lho flnl ..-.1u11ofto111111-ke. Dated~._ 1'11 lrvl11Wllll_W_ll ln<.ubrol IM Wltlol 111t..._ntmtdoot.-.1 tTIV•N T. OIUltlOOE AIUr .. tAU.- UtU ll'Yl ........ ,s.lle .. "t .. 11,CA,_ cuo ,,,.,,.,, AtwM'rNt•-- lllC'flTIOUI •ustMIU M,,,...l"TATa...._., .,,,. ,......,... __,_ 114111"1 M l Mta•: M I NUTl!M.AN ,.REI$, tOOJ lttY"*'41 Wey, S..lt ~ l!I l«o, ~ ... Rk llW• A.°'"'"'· tctg ~All• -·· Mla.ien \lltlo. CA fUIS Tiii\ ........ " IJ conduele4 tlY efl In Olvlol ... I Al<llMOA.~' ll1I\ U411-wa. ti\ .. Woll\ Ill• Co.,.,11' Cl .. k of O<-°""'''on NO'r. •• 1911 ..... ,. Publl&MG Oranoe CoHI DtllV Pllel De< I, I. IS, 12. lt71 PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSINIU NAME STATIMllNT l nt lollowlflO '"'"OM ue doing bu'lntu .. EL TACO •S4. 1101 H•rtlor Blvd CMI• Mtw, CA t'lt71 Jovll• SMcl\9l, 14' Hemllleft SI (0$11 MtMI. CAnt17 Tllis bu"...u 11 <onclU<ted .,Y an In dl•IOUal. Jouf'-SetlcMl Tllh \l•'-1 •• llleO wlllt Ill<' COl.IMY Cieri< o4 0• ... County on OK. 19, 1'11. ,.,.., PubllsMcf ()rt119t Cotst O•llY PH•I." o.c :n. 2', 1917,Jan. s. n. 1t11 l'ICTITIOUS •u•u•IU """"•SfATIMENT 51'~11 Tiie foUOW\flll pe<l\Otl " clO•l\9 bli\I· ,.,,.,. PtJbtllMd 0--CHSI Daily P iiot OK, a, IS. U. H, lf71 GOROIE'SDEll.1lSW.l•ker~t . --------------1 S\e. c. Cl>lta Mt••· C.A 91616 PUBUC NOTJCE Weller Ray l •'IOlinal,, 1'U Che\1"<11 A,.. • CO\l• MtH, CA-~ --------------1 This ""'"''"' I\ •-<led by en in· PUM rtAT•M•NlOPWll'MO"AWAL 'ltOM .. All~IRMttr Tiit ........ llQl'led /tef'flbl' sllt\H: t. 't ... fklltlout btJMMU neme Of llw partner.Np ls ~U..W•, ConWI· tallU .. t Tllo llcllUO\I\ bll\lntU nam~ >!ti .. ment ol tl'lt parlNnlllp ••• 11141<1 111 Or •n.-County on M61'tll It, lt77 3. Tiit prlnclpal pl.-;t or buslnou ol 111e putnerst1IP I• localed ti IMSJ MtCA!\IWr 81¥4., trvlne, c.1110'1\le t211S, 4. f/M partner withdrawing fror11 Ille parl11trsl>lp 11 _,..,.. J. llel.-. !t· siding at :i-. .Ac~t'o Drive, Dana POlnt, Collfomte92'1'. SIR..01.P•llenc>n Gentra1 Penrwr Slattm..-1111.0 wtln Ille Coun1y Cl•rtc ot Oranoe t.ouniyon November JO. ttn. KOrlNV ANOfl'OWILl .AltorflfYl-' Lew 100111 ·-II' Sanlt AM, c.tllenlle '1791 PuOlhhocl Or-C:O." Dally Piiot, De< 8, IS, 22. :tt. 1'17 SISJ.77 PUBLIC NOTICE , .. d•Yld61•1 Walter Aay UllQll...,•• T hlS •l•l-• .... llttO .... h \OW Cou,,ly Clerll 01 Or-County en Nov •• 1971 ,_,, Publls""" Ore119t Coe•l Dally Piiot 0.C. 1,a, IS,22.1'77 >091 II PUBUC NOTICE PICTIT10UI ffSlltlU NAM« STATfM£NT TM followlng pettoll tl 4tellng bvt• ....... PAECISIO .. OATA, '17 F . "l•tr\l<lt 0. ., N-POrt B•tcll, CA "'43 TIM>m• I.Hiii'. 100 E. Oc .. n Fl , N•wPOt1 .._,,,CA n..1 Tiii• ltlvilnbJ Is conOIK.ted by an ,,.. dlvldu11 • "-'as Le...., Tiii\ •tat-was llltcl wltll l"e Counlr cr-otOrMOI Countrew> Nov. ,., 1'17 .,...., Publislled OrenQl' Coast D•llw llllol, On 1, •. u, n. 1t11 WJ .. ,, PUBLIC NOTICE COMICS I CROSSWORD ~RMADUKE MISS PEACH "He's giving you these bones for Christmas. What are you going to give him?'• "FUNKY WINKERBEAN CASEY MOON MULLINS AA6N1TYoV t:,ATIN~, l-0~ P.? GERIATRIX I CAN HE-~ TME: WHEEL? iU~NING, ~AT /4Sl.E YOU ... , 1NVE"1T1NG II NOW? by Tom Batiuk By Chari .. Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson ® 1lu. PRACTICE A BJrON.MY V/Ot.IN .. GORDO JUDGE PARKER NANCY . ., ____ _ .. __ Hl1ACe. ~IN& E:XCr11N6-HAF'PEN WHll.£1 WAS AWAY? by Wm. F. Brown and M•I Casson MJ:(ee YOU'I? 8e$ g~llJ@f}j ~~ 1"!!,~UCfQIS DOOLEY'S WORLD NO, ~ PON'"'T" WANT 'TO 'T'At..K 'T'O A PAPBR -rowet- SAL-eSMAN ,I leL..t.. HIM "f"O see: ouR PURCHASING A6C:N"T".' Y-YOLJ T-"f"S:L-1.-HIM I C>-POC'TOR P-POWNE:R ! by Mell by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux. ' llllndlly, o.c:e...-2Z. 1fn DAit. Y Pfl.OT PEANUTS IM MAVING A FEW F~ OVER,sc.E .. by C~rlts M. Schull by Roger Bradfie'd by Templeton and Forman TODAY'S CIDSSWDRD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 StrugQle 5 ltahan island tOThrowoff u Author --- W11ler l 5 Tear 111r1Cer 16EPOC11al l 7 S. Oak. ranoe ~2 WOfdS 19 Spanish hall 20Pasl 21 In a deadly manne< 23 Hard to find 25K1ngot Israel 26 Wedding lorone. 2 words 30 Made afler ta~es J4 L•cOf'lce llavored seed 35 Trial 37 Unsoecillfld number 38KtnfOlk 39 leane51 42 Orlglnally namt d 43 Otgrls 45 Ao.rl lrcm Iha I 46Esttmatld 48 Bind by attection SO Rulers 52 Mr Speaker 54 Orink1 deliutely 550elends 59Jolned loge I her 630ecoy 64Wuwell UNITED feature Syndicate Wed~ld1y's Puute Sollled' dreu ed: 2 ~~~ words 66German river E7 Cale patron 68 p,.n11ng r::r::r%t-~~- Slyle Abbr. Htl~~liilliiir!"trli:'tl' •-_,..., 89Mrs Dick Tracy 70 Packs neatly 71 Give uo DOWN I Baseballer Tv -·· 2 Liiie a wise Old 1!1td 3 Wamoum 4 Demands tor more 5Stlck 6 81ac1e b1rd 1 Medicine tabla I 8 Paris ot1yad 9 Moments lO Aernoves N11CI 11 011hl' mouth 1;> Season 1 3 Assail wllh cr11rc1sm 18 Cards 22 Vietnam oort 24 lnnl'r' Anal · 26 Sew lighlly 27 SkuJl 001n1 28Scotlad 29 L1cor11c 31 Lone ~anger's Sidekick 32 Arab noble 33 T h1ngs done 3€ Aooears 40 /11,,en1a'l s1a1esrnan 41 Fl'artul 44 Dogs 47 Poison 49 · · vou ready?" 51 Highland mus1c11ns 53Erm1rte 55ScMrne 56 Unrefined 57 Mine yield' 58 E•olOrtr Hernando de •..• 600uo1e 61 Mod1l1ed organism 62Takeout €5 Lonoon's • J Gardens . . g ·oAtt.v PILOT Thv?d!y. ~ 22. "" I ~!!.~~.~ ........ ~!!.~:.~'!! ....... ~!!.~~ ......• J~!!.~~·•••••• ~.~~••••••• ,_._....._ ... ._'-..._....,.S. He.tftFwS. • ...,._, 1001 o, .. ,.. 100 o ... re1 IOOZ G••rlil 1002 C:...... ... Mtr' 1022 DAILY PllOT a A.SSIFIED ADS ••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••· .. .... ,.. 1002 o ... ,.. 1002 ~·1:~~~ if~i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• VISTA CHRISTMAS gstllice. Apt baa lower bach unh. $119,SOO. Owner. 640-7S88. ~COATS & WALLACE ~RE AL ESTATE. INC. ~!.~.~ ....... ,~!~!.~.~ ...... . G...,... t 002 G...,... I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 HOMES -ONE LOT tn the heart of quaint Corona del Mar. a n x lnt property for home & investment, or jusl for investment; lovely patio separates the two homes; each one is in very good condition. For a double property. this price of S'l.49,500 is exceptional! 759-0811 4!:.0NlV.l'OHT CCNTLH lJHIV( 1!1!10611 S IEDROOMS OM T .. WATH Actually, OVER the water '(when the tide is int), sits this 5 bedroom beach h o use with funky d ecor , s unny kitchen, artist's studio and top-of·the·world sun roof. Don't let the words fool you, this home is solid -red wood and adjacent to China Cove beach. Truly Unique at $395,000. U~lf)Ut: ti()'"t:S REAL TORS', 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar Jlso m Mesa VmcJ1•. JI 546 5990 ' !!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! ~~!'! .......... ~~~ ~!'! •......... !!~~ GeMrOI 1001'G.....-a1 1002 ----.... 11111111111111111111!'~~~~~~- •••• ....... ·::.:~~:·::;;· ····:· ······ ~ ~ 4 Bdrm .. 2 ba. home. All amemt1es. -_ Lovely area. flow st('ps to beach. S18H.500 • LIDO ISLE N<.•wlv remodeled 'I hdrm .. <.ten. 4 b~1lhs'. ll\'HlJ.: rm. w <."athcdral C'eiling . Lge rnastt•r bdrm :-.uite. $224.950 BIG CAMYOH ~ BIL fam rm . :.1 baths Be autifuJly dccornlt•d Broaclmoor Plan 3. on extra large lot. S325.000 llG CAHYOM TOWMHOME $ Million view of fairway in 2 cl i rections. Choice end unil Pinehurst model. 2 Bdrms, den. 3 baths. closed dbl gar age. l mm ed . possession . Comm. pool, jacuzzi & tennis. $198,500 WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 21 11 San Joetqldft HHh load NEWPORT CENTEtt, M.I. 644.49 I 0 PRESENTS Beuutiful land is avutlablc to you from a ll level to a knoll with a 3'i0 degree view. All plantable. Cc.ill us tor prices & locations. WE ALSO HA VE J, J, Ir 4 le*oom Homes, with or without acreage. Wt\at price range do you pref er? A sura DUPLEX IS ALSO AVAIL l Side has 3 Bdrms & 2~~ baths . Approx. 1638 Sq. rt. of Jiving space. The other unit has approx. 1400~. ft. with 3 B<inns ~ 2 Baths. These units are close into VISTA. and about 12 minutes driving time to beach. Super sharp! Great for the two family situation or as rentals. Sl30,000 OR A COZY 2 U HOME W /SHA.Kl IOOF and a char ming little gues t house. Strictly pride of ownership. SS.5,000. URBAN SUBURBAN REALTY 1714) 727-4200 or 17141 727-0520 Generd I 002 GHW'Clll I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , .................. !. CHRIS TM A$ CLEAAAHCE PRICE SLASHED Ta.ke udvantage of lh!! seller's "pre-Christmas" 1>ale on lh1s llke new 3 bd. ~ ba 1'~ountoin Plan !\ IUU l OW~l ll '.0"11'11 N\ )llf'llNl: iltl '>0Ul tt t.;OASI ~HP '>llfft l')r.J MISTUTOE. Let ocean spray kl~& ~ur brow dally ln this OCEANFRONT DUPLEX. Graceful coolinuo1,1s now ot s pace in this excellently located newer reve,nue producing property. Hurry, W ATERFROl'IT homes are scarce. Owner wiH assist in financing. C_. 64Ml4t. GltlAT FAMILY HOMI -this beautiful redecorated home is newly carpeted with pl~b carpets, repainted inside and out and newly refinished ltitchen cabinets. This bright and cheery home with 4 bedrms, 2 baths is only t>S,500. Call 546-4141. Se•.,,ing Costa M esa-Irvine Huntington Reach-NPwport R r-ilc h Broadmoor ocean view. 3300lq I\. 4 ikh'ms. 2'• b•. Lie liv . rm ., separate d ln. rm .• spacious kit. & fam. rm openlrlJI out onto • lgc backyard w /putUng ereeri & pontt tltuaied on greenbelt. Askine price $270,000 By appt: 640-1286 IOZ4 ....................... .. . .,.,,. OFTIM?MISA WOOOSPOot. HOMI See thi.~ gorfeous 2 ·~ beauty w/fmly rm & rrrnt din rm , Fabulous side yrd & pc>Oa area that flow& from Ii v rm w/vaulted cellin..(S . & kitcht-n. 0.11 today lo In· ~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 ·Pttt· 54.S-!M91 '1002 G._.. .. 1002 c;:3 Walker 1; lee • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• lock lay COlldo Carefree 2 bed.rms, l~ baths, fireplace & prlvute patio. Fully l~uluted homei double garage--el'Ol.llldS ~sh & Immacula te. Putting gr~n shufOe board, bad· mlnton , pools. etc. $76,500. PETE BARRETT -REA~-u UZ.SHO Real Estate Uko new, by ~· 438 Princeton. 4Br, 2bd, pool. $88,IOO. MW'l» art 6. POOLHOME!I $5',900!1 VATlltMS Tremendous 3 br home w/oversi~ ram rm ai•---.......,.-.. ----u-.. -.-. massive brick frplc on ...... ~ ~ - quiet, secluded at. Seller COlbm LOT , ~t move In a tuJrry & Sbarp 4 bdrm + tmJ.Y rm will entertain any re~. home w/ahake roof. oUet. Great Ooor plan which is 754.7100 one of lrgest roodels in atea. New self·c:leanlng ovens. New no.wax fl oors both bai'bs & kitchen. Cnll t.oday for apl)t. Recently reduced $.'t,100 lo seU ! 545-9491 REOCARPJT" special. Lovely yard --------· ~lahVl.-w ~ Walker & Lee LOWDOWN! atrium. Short walk lo lf you vc been longmg BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bay~1dP Orovt-' N 8 675 6161 Starter home in great GeMrat 1002 G~af 1002 area! Large yard ! Low pool & clubhou s e fa cilities. Give y our family a Happy New Year w/tbls delightful Of· (er1ng. On ly $67,SOO! LAKE ARROWHEAD Custom built chalet. 3000 sq.ft .• luxuriously turn., 3 bedrm, 3 bath, form. dine rm. heated dble garage. Security gate, private dock. $2SQ.OOQ. for a 3 bedrm horne with Real Estate viewo( enttre harbor and New Cond<l6. 2 Br, 2~ Ba. Catalina sunset-1, come 2 frplc's ceramic tile see '!tis one -Thitnday kitchens & bath. Pool & everung fro,m 7 lo 8 CO«' a 5..,., 675.41912 Broker ~~~~~~~~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• price! VA or FllA terms. too Getterat 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2000DOWN Want to M'l' lltllc hu1·"" turn inlo h1g hm·k-. It -. :-.1mplc. llu) 1111 ... ('ll ll' :1 Lil( homl' tor •ml~ S5i!,500 I .ow down & t'hl·ap pay· llll'nb.. 540·3666 GOLF COURSE HOME Soper 5 BR. 3 BA, :1 l':tr J?ar Lr!:. i"lt stone frpk. pat111 on r:i1rwa } lurl'H'r \'1ew 52 1<1.000 LAKEfRONT CONDO VA TERMS OML Y $61,500 &•,1 huy in the area. Air roml1 t1uncr und som e otht•r mn• xlra's. Calling w. 1s a mus t The dug bltt.'!>' 1\ CIUJl'k l'Sl'OW iJOd lh1 i. ye ar ·,, best Chris tmas present 1s yours 546-l!llJ 1••. .; • , ' > ~. t MARVB.OUS MONACO I, I <.:all us about this 1m· ma\·ulatc one owner. 2 bedroom. con,·crt1 blc <trn home in llarhor V1t'"' H o m t•s Th e Lu'l:un 3 HI{, 2 B,\, lri.: owner 's mct11:ulo11s tare dl•n. :.i.~ I.It lrplt :>.r to c\·cn marnlt·nance d uhllQUM..'. MT i.:atl'" need wilt 1mpn·s:. you. lorevcr \IC'\lo SlllO UIMI And the h1,:?hh l'Offi · pa REL J>t!llll\l' prtl'C ol Sl36,500. .&a. lee will ple ase your 'W•f' pocketbook. Yw'ALKER Cdl 644-7211 &1~1~ IB ....... '1!lllti )) Price R~ed! Corona de l Mar ~--DUPLEX, 2 bedrm, EASTSIDE COSTA MESA flrt!place . front unit, cnclost.>d yurd. Upper un- it-beamed l'eilings. l bedrm Walk lo shopping & beac h $149.500. &W 7270 "4tUt SHI.id t;~'fll«U REALTORS BenutHul 5 year old duplex. t:uch u rut . ha!'o l..mg sized bedrooms. upslair i-. plu s 2 uown!'olalrs Euch ha wood burning l1rc plucc. IJulll 1n elcdr1l'al UP· 11ltances Just ltkc a home $1<16.500 Will ti~··I~~~~~~~~~ chan~e r COL£ OF NEWPORT REALTOnS 67S-551 I Want Ad llelp·• ~:~;~!'1~·~·;·~··~·;··~·~·;··~·~·;·:1:!!!:!!!!!!!!!:~~ ma en ab I Irvine realty LIGHT, AIRY IA YCREST HOME Move in ready! All new neutral -carpNinJ!, custom papers, paint & window coverings . Cha rming patio. 4BRs. formal dining rm .. fam il y rm .. Oona Chit hester 642-823.5. <A64 l 642·1235 644-6200 901 Dover Drive Har~ View Center trvlM at C•m$1US va1i.v c.ena.r 752-1'14 THE MOS'f IN A MONACO An exclusive presentation tor Ute - discflminating couple or bachelor. a Bedrooms, Den 1>lning Rm . on a corner lot wldcckl ng, Jacuui and trees ror privl(cy. SlCS,000 •·ee. IRVIHE EXECUTIVE SPECIAL Near new Irvine ex · eculi\'e home W/4 bdrms, 3 baths, new cpts. cstm drps, circular brick oul· side entry, pnrquet en· trance hull, mstr bdrm Home & Income Deluxe Duplex. gotr course view. 2 Bedrm each. Private, quiet. large garages. Only '110.000 CaJI 540·1 l51 ~ .. HERITAGE • • REALTORS i.wte. Sunken h v rm & ~~~~~~~~~ fmly rm. Raised rrml din - rm. Seit cleaning oven. ---------trash compactor. Too many xtras to list. Same model jus t sold for $14,000 more than you can have this one for ! 646-7711 AFTER CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Everybody dii1counts and bargain s at Christmas. Our s ellers are no exception about their 4 bdrm. A lot or nkc features to turn you on and a good location. So take advantage! 546·2313 Of'(N 111 <>•HSIUtl10 Ii( N'(C' HAHGIO 3 Br. 1 ba furnished house nr W. Oceanfront. Obi gar. $125,000. Burr Whit\! U\!itll~r 1901 fllPwpon Blvcl NB ii 1 4 I 6 I<, 4f.30 WTSIDE BACH PAD $69,200 Large, level lot. frull trees, 2 bedrms, 2 baths, garage. A great fixer up· , ... ~ftllP.t!t! ~~:~::~::~.1:~11~::~ ~~~~I IACKIAY HEATED POOL $81.900 VETS! Mo\'c up! Use your G.I. Benefits! Fanlatsllc bedroom! Corner lot! Only $7'.!.500! Call now! l<~EE SI M PLE duplex, J lxlrms .. 2 bal.hs each un· it. One extra large front owner's unit. Bll·ins. frplc. Priced at$175,000. BAY AVE. duplex. 2 Bdrm. home + 1-bdrm. over go.rage: in xlnl loca- tion. Priced at Sl7S.OOO 673·3663 642-2253 Eves associated IHIOKE RS REiil rrw•. 2 : . ,., & .. ' ' ~ ! ~' ANANCING MADE EASY! 2 Choice properties available. ~ M_.... leal Estatt 440.:1'357 Three bedroom Newport , ________ _ Riviera two story. Huie -·5•8•1-&-2-8•A-• dining room or family room. Gigantic patio. Wood floors. wood Walk to private lcnnii1 shingle roof, fireplace. courts. 0!11982-7788. dble garage. $64 ,500. i.Q. KE:Y Gt/FHA financing nvail. V:I P.E:ALTOAS A Santa Aoa near Warntr. T ry a Daily P 1l o l Oasslfied Ad to buy, sell or rent solt)elhing. loyMcC•d• 1110 Newport ••d. Coeta w... 541.7729 CHINA COVE On Shell St., Corona del Mar : n ewly , pro · fess1onally decorated, 2 bdrm. + den · 3 baths • 3 story home w/elevator ; gourmet kit · all &eak cabibeU It (loor. wet bar, frplc. Some bay view. loo! Stell$ to beach 4i bay. $299,SOO! .._.lcryProp. ....... *675-7060 * 646-771l 400Lll" -RIUU C.MdfJNbt MW ~SUME LOAN rare treat. Enjoy the,_...r-_ __.,. _____ _ Parade of Lights while UPGllADID COHDO seeing this special fomi· MISA VERDE ly home. $269,500. 911 Kings Rd .. ~wpt Bch VILLA Cllffhaven-on th~ Bluff Motivated seller ha:. open bous1:Thul'117·9pm pu!'i:ha!ICd another new PETE BARRETT home & says ~ubm1t your offer on this sharp .! -REA' ·rv-bdrm beauty. Close to ._ schools & shopping. Onl.v 642·5200 or VA no down. B<>aut1ful ~~ C! lx'<lrm. adult occupied · -- - CHEAP CONDO! S 5 !I . \10 0 . Ca 11 n ow . 545-!WJI • CONVENIENT SkOl'PINC ANO SCWINC (OUIO[ FOR THE CAlOH THE CO SO to $2500 mO\'CS you in Call for immediate info. 54HM25Agt. 1006 WATERMOHT HME S450,000 Two individual unit.<. on So. Bayfronl w1lb 3 & 'J bdrmi.. A<:ro:.i. fro m Pa,·ihoo. VIEW. Owner will exchange Sdisbsy Redty c.1673·6900 Real F;s tat.e PRICE 15 RIGHT Pvt party, must sell one of two properties on Fiower St. in East C.M. I duplex or 1 lot w /C! how.cs. 673-G372 ** R-2 ** ROOM TO BUILD . Recently remodeled 2 bedroom homt> on R ·2 lot! Great income pot.en tlal. $117 .500 Doll Plus Do1hes ~~~~~.!?.'.~ l!5 i Five for Schoof! 9028 SIZES 2-8 "" 1fftv.;-1ffw.-r .... ~t fltf rtady foi school in '78 with tllh Qutc~ quintet ol WPlfltes. Ve.Slblt Sid• sht. bow·hed lumt t~ blouse. pa1ts. Plft Vest too . Punted Plttetn 902.&: Chl4d's Sires 2. 4, 6. 8. Size 6 111-.r. P'"ts 114 ywds 60-indl. bleUte l yard U-incll fabflt. S.11d SUS I« tldl ,..., ... ~ tor tlCll pattn .. fi11t•<'-•!Mil, ,....._ S.11d •: MAalM MAITI" OCEAN VIEW 2 br. frpl, 1.n-tt20 1~ q u I e t s l • C 1 :f l o ''°° ou111ur. NlW'°9J HACH beach/schl. Rm for.boat, Mesa Verde Golf Club RV. etc. $85,000. Prtn On· 5· Br, fantastic view. '• ly . 493·:>472 Acre. $295,000. Shown by C.... def Mer 1022 uppt. only. 1790 P anay •••••••••••••••••• • •••• Cir. Agt. 540-0608 HOUSE ALONE is worth this price. But._ _______ _ you can I Ive near the beach in Corona del Mar & have tenants hel p pay ... St75.000. MORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 * SIJ,450DOWN CORONA DEL MAR 2 BR. 1 BA home on R·2 lot Live in fronl unit. while building 2nd unit on rear of lot. Outstttnd· Ing inves tment Onl)' Sl.34.500 CALL 955-0350 '-"' t/'11" l ',,, ' f Jr/ti •fl .... ,~, ,, 1 ' , '', • t 1 v t '>« •t &.-~ ·, RUSTIC CHARM ON BLUFF $74,900 ONE OF A KJNO! Hca\'y wooden, open bei.lmcd cealing bl&hllghts this Cll.'5tom home. Complete with 3 large bedrms. 2 full baths. and oversized living rm. 8500 sq.fl estate site lot. 7,oned R·4 NOW VACANT for im- mediate occupancy a nd priced for fast. sale ! llurry, call now! 963-8961 Colonial Real &tale RIDUCID SI 0,000. Fantastic 4 BR Mesa 4! Ve rde home. A rea l Spyglass Trnd wlndll_. 29 bar0 aln for the wise in-Cambri a, ocean view. • ~ngl story. 4br. 2 • w bn By _v_es_l_or_._A_gt_._64_5_·1_1_03 __ owner. 644-1838 LARGECOHDO WAMTB> Sst.500 Ho me i n S pyglass. Twostory,48r,3ba,dbl Sou t b po r l M o d e I gar & wkshp, lg patJo. w/catalina view. Will bu.ill-1m. acres gardens . pay top dollar. Call Nick play areas. 1wim pool Vracin , 752·6S21 Owner 545-4S218. C... dtt Mar I 022'CoroM clel M• I 022 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• cae:· :111111 ILlllS aa. OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE HOME & RENTAL UNIT Charming Home On Old Corona Del Mar Dupfox Lot With Re ntal Unlt ln Rear. Hard To Find 3 Bedroom. 2 Buth Owners' Unit W/Fireplaco . And Large Kitc h e n . Well . Decorated, Nlccly LJAndscaped Wlth 2 Sunny Patios. Convenient To Tennis Ct>urts And Shopping. Priced At Sl54,000. W....ferw. ' ~r••ol btole Thunday, o.C.mber 22. 1977 OAIL '( PILOT ....................... ······•···••••••·••·•·· .....•..•.........••••• ·············~ ......... ·····················~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• CoroM c1et M• l I 2Z .._... Unfunllthed HomH U ...... lhed .,...._ ..... Fwnb hed • C....W.. I OJ i.,. 1044 So.tttL...-IOU s.tlt....... 1016 ~llh • • ............... •••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••.•••••••••• for 1411• 1300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IY OWMlill ~ cle.an :s Br, :: b.a fa.m rm. on ~II.let cul t.lt' &ac. Nr 20lb & Ir' inr Altract.h-e 3 Bdrm +dl•n MI lo be .a c b :-> l' ... h1.~~l0£ $1.S,000 Qfr MHOOS Wri Ev~Cent Bi&andexpt:nSt\'e hom1•1 Pl~ty ol room for l'\ 1·r }'One. • bodroom~. mull! pie baths, formal d1111n~. farruJy & rec roomi., :! h r epl:t-<H.l». Gui ~1·•1ui. Colonial blylc, 111'.H . ~1720 TARBEU. "~I Ill CaMfomlo" ----HIMtilM#an leach I 040 ..•...•••••••.......... 4 BR, frplc. \cry c.:lcu11 S7 l,795 Appro" 1550,.q ft Owner out of ~l.cll' !ltiO-·IHI. FIXER UPPER! 3 Bdrm, 2 LIJ ~h5 noo CIOSl' ltl Goldt•n Wt''' College & shopprni: C'l•n ler:.. Open Sun t-S lf>li 11 C'Jrne Lane. ~OCAUl-'ORl'IA Hl.n ~5605 ------ S&S Resole Spec1u1i,1 ... J,•1 or 5 bdrm mntll•b a" ail. s o me v. vuCJh ~4602 POPULAR CREEKSIDE A ~li/t o1m11 1 ,. rnod•·I ,.,..,1t1bl<' m ,.(lbruery • bfdroom_,, Huc1 on ii l:iri:t pal! :.haPt'<I lol CllOO~t-: \'oUll OWN lJfll\'~ aml dru~. Onl)' $101 ,UOO Ranchbalty 551 -2000 FANTASTIC LOCATION For ~h111 1mm.a1·uJ<.ttc ttn<I I o t a I I y u p i: r a cl 1• d 1>t-:1-:1w1 ..:1.0 3 twdr1141m l o w n h o m 1· O n ,, h1-.1utaful 1?• •···nlll'll W.1lk to c·o111111unll\ p11ol' i.p.1 .1 11d pat k arcll~ \:nw $11.'>.900 RANCH REAL TY 551-2000 MEAR ALISO IEACH -R•lu It. thb LacJ-a chanMt-Wit an fH lot. Cny IM..cJ room wittt firepl9ce and op•n beam ceUJn9. ratio, 9"•.. ocHn view~. 225,000. '<ll 111 l .. H.l :\,\ Hl!J· 1!1:11 497.3331 l.Mil'NA NJGl'1':L 1!15· l 72H lMNA 1'01;\IT 4!1:1 ISll12 ........................ SI ud io 11 pl, Hou 1noor 'fo"1·n., l.k1i.utv World. For :.alt> or rent. U.l..ite )ac.:rlfwc W4 3167 1800 ·············•········• 2On1 2 s harp 1-: 'Costa Mesa houseb cin I lot Ont> 1s nt.'w , one I!> rl·bu1ll. Owner v•ry ANXIOUS. bUbrrut all Ot'FEHS. Call OOWIHS·73:.!1 :l HK. hlock & 1,. lo lwh. ttwilhM)tOft9"ch•l240 Miewpottlffch 1269 ••'-3740 ~) ...........•..•.•.•• , .. ·········••··•········· •.............•••••..•. 644 1100 FIMB HOM! ' w °''~1m View 8ud1 1 ---IHch l 141 .. ~RY BIG CANYON l\bttolute· lnr ulll ~-8300 Ollkc 1 -r--"'s;n 871~711225 per mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHRISTMAS ly :un ashlnA Au"u"ta CllAll:'\IF.R. lhr W'J:lll'~l PIBO. A mastePl)lt!<!l' of CICJlllMlleoch 3748 hi.I' S350 far!>t & lu$t + !:>pc:nl.I 19711 In a brand rlrumul.lc de:.1gn with un •••••••••••• •• •• •• •••• • cl1·p A\·:111 1/15 78 new hi:ac.:h home :.ur1ni1;st'd ~olf eouise AR<a: 1manac turn ~18131 Spar1ou~. upgraded lhru-view! 3 BR & den. bachelor Loth o( room. uul, frpk , dbl. gJrag<'. S7tStMonlh blk to beach. $2bS/ mo LOCJIMCIHICJl'el l lSZ 11,t. yar<I . Children & HAST04GSliCO. .uH~11. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pt:ls wl'll•oml' Onl)' RE.ALTOIS 640.55,01------. -.-~cw Jbr, den, Jb,1. ~hort J.\2.5 mu St.-e daalv 1 s. -----L \GUNA lll':A(ll MTR. 1lnvc Sea. fwy, ~r lake. 513 l7th St. Agt !tdO tlltll Lwtwy Condo, 3 bcdrm. 3 INN. SOS wk. WOttno 85.<,0/mo. 831-3128 or 846 1311 bath, den, walk lo beach. ~bid Mln'. color TV. - - ---Pool, tennis. $650/mo . heated p11 <1l. 17 14 1 H.wport leach 3169 -A\'ajl 18 mos. lt>ase. A1>k 494·S2'J.I, 985 N. Co11i.L ••••••••••••••••••••••• l:;xecut1ve home near lorJay.Agent.644-i270 llwy flt.•aulaful Wl':>l Newport ocean· 4 bd, 3 ba, fom l>euc.:h!ront hl>ml•. S.6 Ur. rm, din rm. wel har. f1n·l---------•ILG9'M Hlgitel 3752 :.! ba. Specwl low rate for ran.:. outdoor R BQ & WAl...K TO Bt:ACll. pool ••••••••••••••• •••••••• G mo. l1>e. May c.:onsu.lcr pool. $750· mo: C(ln81der & t ennis. ~xcitlni; 2 Sceni<' \'luwi.. luxury W-td· fff • .....__ >:!°I>' ~4)956 Strll ISt'/Opt. g.&11-0707; 968--13-17 Story, -I bdrm:.. 3 b.i, ~Un· udu!t apt,,, (urn & uol. ~ ·-·1 dl't k & atraurn $675/mo Near Regional Shoppmi; ----HouMS Unfurnl11Md 3 BR. 2 BA. pool, lenced li.e Cenll'r. Ht>ated pool. LllCJl'"a Beach I 048 Mr#port leach I 069 lncOMt Pr-operty 2000 ....................... yard, 2 l'ar car .. l"lrn.c to l. I\ 1, Ci L' h 0 01 ~ 0 ,, jacuzzi. Nr. coriwr Ahi•ia ••• •• •• • • •• ••• • •••••• •• ••••••••••• •• •• •• • •• ••• •••• •• ••••••••••• •• •• • • Glft--al lZ02 "l·hl· & •h"" $""'51 n10 ' "' " d v I -~-~ .. ,.... "" . WATER with boat dock, Pkwy & Paseo c a co SPA.MISH STYLE SE.A VIEW NEWPORT HEIGHTS ••••••••••••••• •••••• •• lsl & IW>l. 673-4,S.W cu.1 ------2 Story w/4 bdrms. him · Hl·t.I Ule root, archi:d :'\l'W upgrad ed, Uur DUPLEX llOMEt'INUERS Bake to bl·h frpm thai. lgl' rm. dm rm & pnvacy ,\I.let,\ Pl.\~A portico cntr.>; 2 BR .. II\ llurbor, best vil'w, room Extra ~arp 2 Ufl. units, 1'houunds or Henlub lu.,ur\' twnhm w \'tew ot S """/ • &Vll.1.1\(if: m W I" y w· d & f 1 ~"" ooo I h · J"""' mo die 581·'?151 .~01 -61·•11 r · ~J in uw or poo . .....,, t'S!'I t ,m both w/privulc patao:.. 1\11 an•us all pncea; hlt'S ut nile. warm frpk, ft v ''° " frpl l>1111nl! rm ~µJcaou" mark ct a l $250 .ooo Owner wlll help finance Sample JJcuz1.1. pool, cthl g;1r. UDO NO D belit Iota~ Sorrv. no l>\'l' rt>;ar ~rouncl .. S.·.-lcltl<.ty 044-4597 C4 955-0350 SRO lbf' mobile ulll pd ,\\'a al now S l!l~ mo. lion. Exe1·. 2 Bdrm. d1·n. --. at ~11111,0CMI l lu11} • :s22S 2br kid' & ~t." 213·9'.!ti ~> d1run~ rm. New m & out Hewport leach 17 6' M1ss1onlk;.1lty l!JIU731 NEWPORTHTS Sl50:#lrr1·nttobuy ---S700J mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Three l:ldrm, 2 ba hunlc LIJ>'ETIM t;St;RVICt~ 2 br w/gar. S2t)() Cpls. ON LIUU. Special 21---------Lease Option! E'r•·r11·nc·e th1:-. di!· -.1i.;ncr :-. clt•laghl foutu r In~ c1:ly & nltt• \'II~. rl"<lwrl. gb,.\ & '>mart use of mirror~ & ~k\ htt•s 3 1111 51119,500 ( 18!J) Ko/an on tropleally planlt-tl lol 557-0822 Waler pcl 21111 '"/\"bdrm++. Clamoroui. One of a kmd W111lmG ----Ucl..iwurc. b3ti·4120 h1dcaw11y.$ll601mo for :..c :.pcc1al pt:rl>un. UELUXI:: TRlrLJo;X an ---------•! t-5prn. ON WATElt. t'abulous Des1(1ned for fun ltYI01'. C.:.l\I . W/O"ne1'1J Ullll, ForR...tarL•a~• v11-:w 2 Br w,IJcuul de 675-4001. frplt'. 'lhake roof. Nr. 3 8R ,$57S/mo. 4Br ti~. Ba,1 81.0CKTO <'Or$6{JO/mobe. THE CA.LLISOM CO. .., ho P' y fo.: i\ U t·; H ~Acac1aTree La. BEACH. :itrium entry. 28t9;\;e"1>0rlBhd.NB HE,\LT\ s.5tilit71 3BR.$575/mo. fplc. grdnr. $495 mo 428'2 Begonia 499-l50'7; 963-83'7? Waterfroet Homes Call 631°1400 OH THE WATER M•wport leach Jld,1x & \\Jlc·h lhl· "un TRIPLEX, C.M. 2 Bil. view, $525/mo. 1947 Port Cnrdiff Condo \'Uc.mt. 2 br, :! halh,1---------• d1shwa-.hcr, rnnJ!l' & --- ovt'll. <.:pt-;, drpe., pool. New Seanew. 3 Br, 2 ba. live BIG! WHERE ELSE... lil'l lrom your l<.trJ.;l' patio GrC'ul Easlslde 101•. OC\\ C'r Jbr, 2ba, fr pk. ) <I 12) 2br. Iba, pallub. ('ncl gar. Slb.'>.000 pvt patio. Security. Pool, tennu. Jae . GREATRECREATION $325/ mo . 554·1332 or $Hi5i mo.yrly67S-0562 Swimming, saunas. 2 R 1·,1• f,1,11,. 1111 900 Citi·11111·~11· S/11•1•/ 4 94 9473 54 9·U31b can you rand u I l>drm , O\'l'rlookin~ thl• hay & ·10' Tom I .Cl'. ltll r , ti t2 11;03 ---------•I 21,-, l>.1lh homcwalh Ml. & h<Jal shp~ Thal! 1'arc on J.;Olf murse \1ew~. cum •--Hilli 1050 lhl•wall'r home• has 3 Gooc:IWrfteOff! 3 BR. den, view. $975. 2125 Yacht Radiant :! BR. den. view. $600 Z1 Montanas Eble 2M2 Port Weybrid~e 5 lk:drm $7!!0/ l\lo 842-2644 health clubs, billiards, -------Sharp Ha r bor View nighl ·lighted hnn1~ SALE IY OWNER 3 Br, 11: ba Condo l.1' rm, din rm & 1ni.11l1• laund rm Llpi:rad1•cl N•1 common wall 2 -.ton $68,450 Ph 962 '~7 NO AGTS. murut)' pool 41 Jac.:uu1 ::-;:::::•••••••••••••••• lx'<lroom.o.. :! li.cthi. and 1" Gre<.tt rl'nt.il :11 l'J :.! tcum~. hikl' trJ"IS .}OU ruwnhorm• :1 Br. rl10 rm, c h!!>l' IOsc.:huol... Tnplci<eb, Ii unit-., .ill "'"1:''' at th1!1 t:om1· ha:. It\. rm. 21).•. ttiO<I Ml 11 1£ jQuail ~ Wr,l'ibu.$235,000 1l.l-<'t'lnnd,too.$100.950 Si:>.lnl 5511231 Pia~• . So.~~i,oo~alty Fl~Ell L'Pl'EH w a .. !>um Prap1trt1•a ---luao. 3 Rr. 2 ba l'rin~d lu 7'2·19'20 ti t.mts, Hread & Huller. ~ l l'"'tl l<l\I " .. ' .. \ ' 7)1) l Cm!~., C111~ ~rl "" Sharp, clean. 3br, :lba, :\lonaco 3 Br. nr pool. In-court.~. l'ro & pro shop, home. crpt.:., drp:,, hlln...,, l'I grdor. Avail now. dshwbhr, gar dr uptmer, fi-W.,.728 golf dnving range, party $450mo. Evs962-42:!.I --------1 room. ---o ---Suh-lease. no deposit re· FUN AC::TI V IT I ES : 2br, 1 •.~ha hsu Frplc, <1u1r~. nvu11. 1mmed. Fulltime director, fret . fnc"d yrd. S3fiS m o. 675--&912 Bkr. Sunday brunch. BBQ's, ---• 9G2-771f7or546·8609 WESTC' "FF trips. parl1c:.. s port !><'II \gt ?l;>l·f'IUOR 1400 OUAll SI NIW,Oaf llACH ,\nu h C 1 m , pr j d c Of WOODSY 2 STY 11wner~h1p. $1~15,000 a::.k· l<U!>llC an·hatci:tur•• "alh WOODBRIDGE l.ogwta Ml~~ I 052 ~41 1-'t bayfront, •l BH. rtcll, m&. Submit all offers. lalboaPetNMula 3207 "' touroaments&morc! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vacant-Jun 1·3 ~clrm. 2 4 BR, 2 BA, fplc, fenced DEAUTJFULAPTS: J nr. 2 Ba. dbl ~ur, over ba, crpls, drps, fcm·ed yard. fruit trees. 2 car Singles. !&2 bedrooms siled lot. Im mac. no yard. $395. !Hi3· 1567 ftllr. s pacious. $600/mo. Furn. & unfurn. Modeb ..illwtdant gla::.:1 ill'J \) RllO \OMOOll, 4 Oil. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pier, on P<'nm!>ula Call 9f.2 2-156 Cunts In· .shake roof. 'aullccl teal fam. rm , pool & sp<.t. all J\l.ar.,hall Rltr l;ij -.ltiOU '~tments pets Leosc $525/ mo Agent. no!~ Isl & last. 613·454_5. ___ open daily 10 lo 7. !loom· 111"~ . .sw1·l'p1n•· m :1.,tt·r lndi.t•pJ.:. tlt•d.i11g, tem· MONARCH San Cl--£• I 076 ---" " "'"-"'"' COsta :.tcsa IJ('aut). hrcno and children's w1111• 111K. J.:•>rt:t·oui. 1mpro\l' SUMMIT ••••••••••••••••••••••• &liullcr. l2 Unit:..Sho~·.s ~~~4-47_·2410 Modern 2 BR. 2 Ba, frplc, SPECIAL mate scrvu.-e an11I No Opt·n hl'ur lh rarcpl.11 t' ffil'lll:> moclt•I huml' .. 13edroom:. plu'I dl'u. -oFESSl~"'L d 1 , l \I a g a 1.1 n c Pe' I ,. ' I 1·011<1 :\In"' 11111•,111\. r" "'""' J! polcnl1a . nmcn11c::. Corofta c1e4 Mer 3222 incl gar, walk_~ l>ch. no 3 Br 212 Ba condo. newly lease required . Sorr_\. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. $375. 536-1398 __ dccor'd. Opt ava.i!, J an 1. adullsonly. no pets. "11 h oct•an views. In-incl pool ·'I unali. furn t..nc.:hcn. :\lult1 -p11r1mw AKt•nt i;.io-ssw IUILDIHG · '" · · lcraor & exteriors up-"-'lung $325,000. Submit J BR, 2 ba., beamed ce1l, den, frpl. SS25 2 BR 2 Ba Townhouse nr $52.5 mo. 640-2981___ 0Akwood tx:h ,' adull:'i over ·10. Spa, Blwrs l -level 2 BR 2 ba. G arden Aparlmer\ts arcu. Jn the S70's. 0111· of -W .......,. TO S "'VE i.:rud.ed. Jo~i<<'ell<'nl loi·a· San Clemente prof. bid!(. ;Jll offers. Curtis Invest· our nc"cr homes Ukr An1 "' 11tf1c·c suites avail. I 8 ..... _9311_ SSS t1onnear1·luhhuu::.t•,pool Roo 1 k mcnlS!fG:!-2456 4 BR. 2 ba., frplc .. new carp. S paint $600 pool. tennis, ':"0 rk :.ho~, Beaut. purk loc0ation. M..,..t IHcll/...,.... ""'' ;.,, 1,11•uui St 12.ooo rn'I ,argc par 1ng area. Hent at 55' per sq fl Consider lrades & tv.rm~. S252,500 4~3-0233 4PLEXC.M. :! BR apt. Collhedral ce1l, bnght & airy. S395 2-t hr :.~curaty. Avail. S650 Agent1H4-UJ3 880 Jrvint• tat l7lh) Jan. 1. 963--1179 l'VC!> --· ......;::.______ G4S-OSSO ---------•I A gn·.11 :J Ult, I"'• II.\ Co\ ere'<! µauu. many , . .., VA or FHA trru. l'los1• to!'\ t•r) t11111g. Spa rkllnit Suns h ine \lakt-an) ;.,(fl'r J\!>l.lllK 3Mon.in·h Bay Plat.:1 home with large dt111111.? sx:;.!IOll l.:ii:una N11t11el rm, l3 • bath!>. 3 hr " '"'6 7222 831 08 36 Cover ed patio, hltll·k VAUEY 640-9900 .. • • wall, cornC'r lul A bt"aury -~-----....... .......,.......,,.,..,,. atS73.900 ~\ ~ ~~~q ~1-5800.CVc!>S!ll 'l4!Jl -qol £s \O e hlt1 Rf Hriwortc PRIVACY Foothill µallo home 2 Jkdruom~. lotallv 1m- rnacul<.tl.I.'. ~urrnumlcd IJy l!rccnhdt lo<"alcd on 1-orner nl 11ulf·l r11l <ll• sac.:. l'n t l'd lo 'l'll at 1042 ........••.....•....... SUGATE DEEPWATER ~llSI': Lowest pnc·c watt·rfront .it only $1W.:-,OO. C:ill to· day. PURCF.1.1. REA I.TY islti~ 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAIMT&SAVE 3 BR needs' help, bul it has a super IOC'ataon & ~• \'ery moth alt!d :.ellcr. $114.900. v JUWA.RD ... JCl,LIARU. }Ci.. 1l s worth repl'at1ng , lh1:. V1llal(~ lownhou11c 1n · elude'\ the land . buj':c stuclm-tvpc honu5 robm walh 3 lxlrm~ . 2 b<.t\h.'I. dmmi: rm. C'<.tn be }Our:. forll1~500 red hill ~· 55 2-7500 ~~1:10 1 ·::Ko/an ,,., ·'' t .... 1.1tt· 1111 J ,j' I,., I· Ii:~ ,,, ,,,, 6b1 llb1 dJl J888 Miuion Vifio I 06 7 San Juan C•str.o 1078 ..........•.••......... WHY PAY MORE? Ju:.l $81,000. Dig lWO :.tor)' ho ane with :J lldr ms .. 2 11 baths, family-d1nin1: room, wood r o 11r . hral'k fireplace, tall.' kitchen . trash compactor. elcc- lnc garage door opener, etc:. By owner. Call 498-2709. i----------...................... . 1--------iS-.AM 1080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SMOKETREE HJUTOP VIEW 2 Bdrm . 2 ba ehurmcr Sec the .sparkling l1les llA & fffA from thi.s 4 bdrm home 111 I Completely decorated in lot r c a. l ( a m i 1 Y T $ 9 S nch l'Urlh lOOl'~. Ideal nl'IJ.:hborhood . Only erms-7 • 00 c>nd unit, i.:reenbcll loca· S79,900. 7S.Vi800:igt. Extra. s g a Io re ! taon cl&.ic to rccreataonnl 1---------111111 Beautifully landi.capc d f:lcalihes It c:in be yours S ummerf iel d home. for$74.000 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. carpet. clean J bedrm. Lots of tlrps, pat1<), landM·11pcd. trcei1. Country kitchen. ln1·d. h(•autiful \kw. dini ng area . brick 547 -~l ur ~3725 firepluce. SW.500. BK H. Newport leoch 1069 ~1720 J>:xcellent rent:il area. 1·3 BR. 2 Ba. 2·2 BH . 1 HA + bal'h. $14~1.500. 640-~71 l n11-;sTARNES co --HVH 4 Br, Fam Rm, He.,_t IHcll/S-"' tLH~ 1242 clean. upgraded. park 1700 16th !'t XI t d ""75 (Dover al 16th) •••••••••••••• •• ••••• •• view. n ('OO • -mo. ,,.2_8170 3 8 h ·' . 644-2185 .... St.:A LION REAL TY "'a.5354 497 -3388 r ou~e. crpu., urp:., WnJk &oShops-:fDr. 21:Ra, ---------II~~~~~~~~~ DUPLEX t 1rcptace S500. mo . pool, Jac.:uu1. A!lk tor Westcliff 3br, 2ba, pooll- t>l()..8208 l\lury f;llen 840-1789 or w/ser v. patio.. wtr pd.I-•-------· Now wtdet' can1truc· Jusmm<' Crt•ek Pl:in II 3 846-t:m a~t. S6SOmo.M8-0M}5 BACHELOR APT. tlon Br. 2 Ba. Co.Lil after 5PM lniM 3244 B \YSHORES, charming ALL UTILS Pb! ~u b~~~x~ ~t~;;ir~~~ !»> 7MCM__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Rr. 2 Ba home, bltns. 100' from t he ocean. each with family room, 2Br. mu. frplc, hflwd nrs. Umv l'k 111. 3 Br 2h Ua , dshwshr, fvll'. beam Semi-furni!'lhed. Arnal fireplace. & approx. 2.000 blln bkrsc $:125 mo. + bonus rm, Oxford, t'IJ,ts, 1 l>lk bay, S560. now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. "Q· ft. Kitchen overlooks r>ay ... 640-1370, Eves $525. S47-7°'4: 833·:lil5 213-545-2108 _ _ Yrly $250 per mo. NO lo\ely i:ardcn area -831'-844~ RENTALS [)('luxe Condo, 2 lrg brs. FEE . Call: Sue al completely landscaped. -----2 .,R 11/; ~ 2,. ba. w D. Gar. Pool. 5.56-7707 anytime Th"s1·~aeh:-rm---! u u 15 • ,.._ ________ _ ~ ~ ., "' ' · · · · · · · · · · Jucuzzi. S450. 5.'i2-4-M!l. •• 1£ jQuaH ~ :~BR.2 ha .. den.J frpks . ~BR+ .2ba ..... ssoo --------• Place l':illo. $525 Mo .. yearly. 38R.2 Ba .... " .MTS/535 Sharp 4br, 2ba, formal1---------• p rti Paul \lartm Hllr 3 BR, 2~ bta ••••• $475/495 din. r m . rumpus rm., OCEANFRONT rap:;.:;Jt• 644-7:183 • 675-5621 •IBR,21l>a .... ~/~ 2'7005q.ft.,backbaynrca 3BR.2ba,yrly.$595 ••OOOUAIUl.H~~ Spacious cx<'c & famUy 4 RR.3 Ba ....... S600/8!5 A\'ail lmmed. $650. STEPSTOIEACH 5 BR, 3 lla ........... SH15 t!A'>,!1567 2 B l r $375 E/SIDESPECIAL home. 3Br. 3ba, lge fam. 3BH2'2baHVHms $650 .,...._________ r, iouseun . 19 U ..... ITS rm frplc, pvt patios. etc. San Jllalt " &M-2979 Eve:. JOO'C. occupied!' Great -----Caplstr.o ··U71 buy. mu~l see. Call t'or Costa Mes. • 32 24 ••••••••••••••••••••••• more info. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• Prlv. eommunity c~ndo. 3 SP!ClAL BR. 2 ba. AdulLs only. 5 Br 3 Ba home on golf S400. Sea Lion Realty associated ll lH)Kfll'J IHl\I TORS 101'> W 8olbno 6'' f6ti 1 course. Opt a \·ail. now. • 497·3388 673-5354 8UtUIAllrs ·~~ oHNHOuK 111•1.tv S895mo.640·2981 SAN' JUAN Vill age. -r.-~ ....... ~ 11&.30n"99c°''"111... 3 ..__,,A 1 · 1 Brnnd new 2 br, 1 ba _.,.....,,._.... 645-9161 . · "' ._..,....ge, PoO • Jacuzz ' townhouse for only $350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• d1shwas~~ .. ::i~ltsonly. IJ523CAMNSDl:IRVINE p e r mo. H ayward · G.-.al 3102 1WO 4-Plexes In Mesa del Walwn R.E. 731·5S81 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mar. Sl4X,OOO. cu ch. E. Broudway3 Br . lBa, no ~erock 4 br, ram rm. . 2br. condo. Pool. enclosed Agenl.64S·ll03 gur, nl'W paint. cpls, dinrm,2ba,vlcwof UC I. 3 Br, 2 ba condo. Village gar. Child. OK. Refs. ------drps.$425/mo.64S-448l Av:iil. Jan. 3rd. Lse. SanJuan.nrlake,pool,2 Garden Grove, $300 mo. TIU.PLEX Grdnr, water, asson . car J1ar . $385/ mo. Call848·1188, Tim Moran ••••••••••••••••••••••• E/Side Costa Meta 2 Br. cpts, d.rps, kids OK. dues pd by owner. $575. _49S-__ 57_oo ______ _ WOOOIRIDGE 1--------i1'1'AAllB I 1 no dogs, fplc. gar. $285 Agt.541·5032 lcAoaP.._.a 3107 IEMITYOHLY H R OR I~ .. 1 yr. old. lg 2 br, 1 2-2 mo ~2274 Soutttl.oglllta 3216 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIS 50 A I ba. uruts. ~-unit ha:. · U~v. Park area. Com·e-••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRONT • 0 HIGHLANDS ''#I lfa Califonria frpl, frml dmang & lndry 3 Oil. 2 Ba, frplc, bllns . ruenUy located nr Irv. In· Charming 3 Br hse, lrg Quiet bach $230 incl ulll Nearly new. This ell•gant ~523 CA,.,PtlSDt·fRVINE , k 11 g New port areas. 5 garage ~paces. 885 Senate St. $425 mo. dustMal Park. 3br, 2ba. i;undk. Ocean vu, frplc, 1 00 ts 673•6372 1•nd W\Jl hai; upgraded · pur n . SouthLGCJllfla 1086 $185.000 . h gt. Days ; l~l&lru;t+11ec.833·9305 frplc, fncd palm. $500 blk from pvt bch. Adlts. person, pe · c.:rptml( & m;iny other l.acJlno leoch I 048 ~:~~ ,;~ol r!~ ~ ~~1~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 552-0434 ~vea~ 552-0507 mo. Wkdy 213·61'1·5107, $41.S incl util. 499-4171. Coroeo cW Mtr 3822 '<lra::. 2 hag hdrmb. 2 ••••••••••••••••• •••••• rm Beaul1ful carpels & OWNER WIU For lease, $425/mo. incld evs/wknds 714·SS2·9673 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b al h ~ Ell· ll u 11 l C,....,.SIDER --------gardener. kads/pel OK. Wnfnlinster 3291·-.--------Townh~me. 7S9-150l WOULD l'OU clrapes. Priced for a fast "'" SUPER INCOME Avail. 1·15-78. Drive by Walnut Square Condo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '" 11,·1n.i 1 block to the <.:all540-11Sl on this beautiful 2 DR unitslni.uperloc.Askmg own er /agenl Chuck new.2 br,gar .• pool.No w/fplc, OW & cpts. I lit•ach. with 2 Bdrms . 2 eav·~L:..~alac 1 r!,c,a home. SJS(),000. J::vereli559-4026 pel'l.S3J0.551·2885. pre s l i g i 0 u 6 Ti :f~r,c$'._ hnths. rrivan . n1cf' "'"'"' cet ngs, mir· neighborh ood $47S .t,." = = ~-Real ~tat<• CONSIDER 'ale at $118,950. Hurry! LEASE/OPTION Tax s helter, new btog. s .'i95 Fayette Cir . Call Jusl remodeled! Like Ahnostnew,4bedrm,2ha re ~:;- nl'aJ:hbors & flex1hlc.> rorcd wardrobe, adult . Spac. Brookview Condo, Sharp 4 bedrm, 2 bu • · _ . • $158,500 tl'rms? Would you con· ·-------• comm~ty. $87,500.1 ~@~-----1iiif--.-.j end unit. 3 Br. 2'h ba, W/cpt.s, fenced yard. _963-4567. Agent. no fee. GARDEN APTS i.id<•r o ur o y .Q for J; "'.....,..Ho••--< • WESTSIDE frplc. 2 patios, near super area. $395. 963-4567 C:O.ldomhliuMs CORONA DEL MAR Deane home-U niv. S8.5500 ~ _._s 848-2323 pool/tennis crl. $495. Agent.nofee. UnfwnlsMcl 3425 2 Br Townhouse, Crplc. Park "Kensington" mdl. · IM1MONTF.GO4br , 2ba, .,J, '";~;;-~~:;-~! 846-94()3 w/pool. jacunr & air. MORIMS REALTY ram rm. Ownr. 2015 Port IHYIS1MEMT'S • ----------•Orange.tree, new 1 bdrm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool, tennis. Some ocean Cstm. pool decklJI". 2250 * 49 .. 0057 * Chelsca.640-1_981__ __ C714) 4f'-711 I Montello Complex: Condo w/lofl. Brown cpl, sci(-LANDMARK. Ma~nolia-& Catalana \'iews. Close sq. ft. Min I· bil n d s ____ -ro_ -Balboa, 7 Ulllts, Steps to 38r, 2Ba, avail Jan 1: cleaning oven. Avail. AU anta JIB. ,Adults only, lo t 'ashion lsl:lnd & fine hr Cor. C k 4-Pll!x . IOOfl fromoceun; W 1._. 1098 bch. (6) 2 beds. 1 bach. S400rno.Lst/lstS52-l322 now.$325/mo. over 40. Million$ rec beach.AlsolBr.644-2611 I uout, ning oo · IHVESTMEMT.. S2'8000W 'land ' "' • Pool.$45CMOO.By0wner. .,.,"7""" fac1·1.c-·rily,-'l "ppl1·c.l•--------lop stove, lullh atrium. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ....v .,.,,.. "'""'u ..... auto. sprinklers & htei.. ~oaurlJPfuJORmToUtcNl.lhTeYar;t. o:if l\l..u-sh:ill IUty 675-4600 HERE'SYOURCHANCE 20%Down.64S.~1. 4Br. 2Ba. College Pk. 960-l.366e\·es. 0 ~ frplc. kids pets OK, $4 On the Lake. Woodbridiie wnr/ Agt. 540-4646 Lu~una Beaeh. Close to IUY OWMEll Beaut 3 BR hom e, $2500 C I 2 B N U ..... 1 .. '"'RI( beach~ & parks Xlnt Cli ff lhavC'n exec. hme dn .. Call now, 24 hr LahforW• 2200 mo. $46-8477 ros~ neg. b r . r . Apcrhntnh FurwilMd Spotless. Walk to b eh. 4Br 38a Fm r m 2lOOsqrt Yrly, 500 Acaela G45·71>-l8 " ., • 846-Ql79 gt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beac :lu • $600/mo. •••••••••••••••••• .... ST!M. OHLY rood. $750.000 W/ftU<'Sl house. sunken _!!~1ce · 3 · A·3 LOT Near So. Coast P laz:i, CalJ 551-1234 lcAoa Ill.ct j 70, ... ,.-.... _ ... -.... _ ... -.... ._ ... -.... ~--,,.-..-. ... -- $" 95 h\'. rm, form. din. rm., 3 4Br. 2 story, ram rm, Lvly 2_ swry l~~nh<>usc. r.;#. ~©Il~"l:"7 l'le~anl'C' :1 Bdrm ii. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• <;an build 13-14 units. pool 11cr vlce. $650 roo . Lagimo leach 3248 l Br , yearly $325 mo. Util. • 0. m·· " n~nc~H?ID .F. r P I <' ' s & q u I e t Othlr R9Gll lat .. ~ COST A MESA pool. 2600 sq rt. Includes ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHARP APARTMENT •~In mint eond1tion. 3 or 4 u hnths $156.950. 646-0931 Mobile Hamtl $235.000. Dove545·7506 ••••••••••••••••••••••• incl. A val I. i m m ed. hdrms, 2 frpl<'S, noor to •99•29oo 11.5Pttatc rtd.N.B. ForW. 1100 C•9SS.Ol50 4 BR 2 ba nr Ward's 28rhouse.closetobeach. _67_5_9229_. ______ 1 ~ei li ng books bel ves, ------••••••••••••••••••••••• ~i: yar<l,.ki~ OK. •w.;. t-150/ mo. Aft 6ptn, lalboaPai-.. .. • 3707 2 Br. I Ha, 2 story. Com· lum i no us cellin g in Newport leach I 06 Newport leCKh t06 l.2x"4' New Skyline. l br. • • ., ~ 4971492ordays 499 2101 mu n 1ty p ool . 4352 kitchen •• 2 bal conies. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• od 1 R mo. 645-5120eves · · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shorccrei;t. $295 mo seel u d ed co'4.rl Yr<L go oc. ens rent . HOUO"'Y.r•ICl"'L 3Br. 21~ba. <'Pl & drps. Lite 4 br upper , all appl. 67S-231l AGT. Days. NO Comm pool. 75!M50l Priced tosell~S41t.7891. "" ~ "' Dm. game rm. 2 frplc's. Across from bch. Winter FEE ~ Walker & ltrn WOODBRIDGE t CRO!mNG T he Village of Wood· bridge. The bat of both worlds. ArchUecturally unJque U1S 'bdrm at. lacbed Ii detached ~· 11ldenct1 lrom $96,990. &lt8l Woodbrfdfe 2 Br + den, 2 ba , B r o ad m oot w/1trium, cor. nt J11ke; ~..t tennll. 1107,000. umY.r:R.Srl'Y PAR It Ox· ford. a er, a~ &.a. bot1U3 mt. DIG 1qft. Nt'W cpJA, ~ •• ....,_ Crom rn\J. lnimWt . pool. ~tr. A .. au tm,.c,d. su2,oqo. .............. CE Traller~pacc 8x36 adult CHOICEVJEWLOT spadoas3Br.J ba .. fam Ocean,moontain&clty. only.$525/mo.962·1904 ~ k N 111 G 11 R h r m, frplc, bltns, nu crpt, W 1 k t o b c h & t w n par · 541!·62'73 e c a anc · atLached. gar, lncd yrd. $700/mo. Agt 497.2467, Bach Apt. furn. Steps lo 2 Br 2 Ba. like new, 2 car , thCheansalgecioln !~l·ant.ss'~":rees. Nopets.$4SOmo.5'9·1438 Qwar(ll3)585·35S7 bch. S225 Per mo. Yrl,y gar, washer/dryr . $t4S 110111 ILlllS aD ~for1al• 1200 v.. ot63J·U66 lease.~3051. mo 750·1131·494·29811 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• hilJtop oqlMll an Jot. 85' LAkt Forest 3255 · · . 1 x Ul5" level area. Prin Eastalde 3 br, 2 ba. ra m ••••••••••••••••••••••• c..ta M.sa 3724 BIG cozy lbr, frpJ, pool. FIVE ACRE$ only. Askins $99,500. P h rm. $425. mo. On thG Lake. New 3br, 2ba •••-•••••••••••••··~·· S ngl/ married cpl. No OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE IWFFS. GREAT IUY! ·s pectacul ar T ownhou!;e Wi th' Spacious .Bcdrms. W/3' Baths Plus Jo"amil y Room . Moay Custom· · FcaLures Lrgo. Coveted Balcony:· Overlooks Pool And Ramada. Tbe- flomc ls Vacant And ReJtdY To · Move Into. Let's Go lnspett. Prit:ed At $157,500. Sub'mil Orf er. loaded with oak tre. In &'ll·2180eves. 548-01 deuched Twnhme. Cpts SSO ~ & UP pcts/cbild$350. 640-7030 the Cl evela•d Nan Qllitef c.-ty lBt, au . Wal« pd $240 & drpa, Private apa orr Slucho. l bedroom Luxury lbr w/m1nl ()('Un Foreet.89.0fOranaeCo. PToptrfJ ZHO MUttl.nopetl MMW m aster b d rm. Cl ub Maid ffrv1ce.poo! .. &1·euyv1ews.only11t~~ Municipal wai.t, •enUe , ... , .................. th:.:•~-~ faciliUes.871-3889 2376Newport81.C.m. T'Olllna knol.la be uUf 1 -~--------' ----548 IJ755or&U-0067 to China Cove. $450/mo. vlew sites. Owoe~ w~I MWltwlt;it(YMw i a-. huge bonU. roam.,....,......_.. 326' . ..;67.....;5-;__WS;__·;__ ____ _ carry. Terrnt. BKR. Sml home o n 5 Ile. w/frplc, blf lot. 2062 ••"••••••••••••••••••• wtit-r;:~~TIS Lg 28r, tDa, freshly (714) 1176-5717 Swodiah frplc. l'lE:ch. Wallace. 350. m o . UYIOt4 . "'·U KJ .. _ •·TV .,.,.;nted !ilo\•e .. r•frl" ORm.2090 r o•• 1 ardeo. r\lrt, ..___ ---· •co• .. s1! ru tcncO... __. . • -.. .. .. Almond •tr.ea. ornl, .,..,__ ,..__.,. v" UMn8 &UtUltles south of hwy, adult..s, ao FIVE.ACRES chl~ken house. Oa ly BT.,. 3UJ Bi6'Can)'onTownhome.2 CLOSl!:TOOCEAN ~'Smo.87S·S69S __ ...... "'-.. "'~A '31.980/l•rnu. Call Mr t•••••••••••••••••••••• ~~4t1a $700 .,.,. mo. Royal S..tht Motel J Br apt, Crplc. gar. S. or n .. v to uuu uv ... pro-Frt,y 5'2-344$. Ben Super, lov•l.)' 3 br, 2 ba, 208Q NewporlBlvd,CM Hwy.$$00/mo. petty, Braoch•3BR.2 tUnkleR.E. fplc crpt leoccd yd , br 3 ba ram rm ........, 642-llU\ 61J.5767after6PM HA bomc Kuie fomlly Id ' • 1 S30 • • • ' ...,., --------room. w.i bat, trplc., 3 ' Peoplewboneed People ~Wt' romeie 5' 14.rt. l"4 Sanliaao, N.B. SUS CAStTAS Met• Jtl4 car 1aruc. Wo1,.t l utl 'Oaat'awbaUIM ,Agent, no •· SlOOO mo.Aaent.MJ"°32 Nlcely lu rn. l•rG'• It··-•••-•••••••••••••• 'BKR. DAILY Ptl.OT ~· cuatom lBr. lBa, NOFEEI llouMI ~ndOll ~ 1 br Adults, only , U 1J bdrm opts. In ~· (714Hm·56tl S£1lV!CE,OlR~\' alr,attach ear,spaclowl, dup le.u. R e ntai no peta. 2ll0 Newport \ltf\lcnlloc11tlonSltW2'B OllS22-<ml> 11 .Uabolltf SlMOmo.5"·100 P•v1lloo.47Mll281cr. 81vd. ~at.~ T . ! ' Tn\.lrtOay, u.c.mt. 22, tt/1 Add 1t .. Build 1t • Diaper 11 • H~mmer It Carpet It. Cement 1t .Wire 11 .. Hoo 1t Cl~an It .. Move IL.Press it.. .Pa1nt 1t ... Nail 1t Plaster 1t ... F1x it.. SERVICE DIRECTORY P um t. .. Patch 1pe emo e 1 ••• Roof It... Landscape it. .. Tile it ... Trim 1t...Sewit ... Haul it. .. Add it... Plant IL. Alter 1t...Learn It.. . ...... ce ..... C..,.t Senk. ~/~• Bectrical Housede.Mt HcMed•efncJ Pailllffng/P.ntuJ PaWincJ/P.n"9 Rooflftt ••.••••.••...•.•.....•.....•...•..•..•.•.........••••....•••••••.....•.....•••.•.•...••.•••. ·············•········· ....................... ···•·•··•·····•·•······ ··········•·•····•····· ····~·················· B&JAp~19nc·~n arpetM01nw1llluyyour~ ALL Concretl' w ork HubbcrdSl'dric Wnnt&REALL\'Cl.t:AN Dt•pcndabll•, own tr11n11. PETERSPAlNTINC MICHAELS PAINTI NG. ROOFS 1ru.lalled fatlCJty TRIPCHARGE$l0 or mane Kep111ri. & (Uucl.. brark. i.lump & Lic327136 &15·t>97a llOUSt-:·~ Call Ginghom Xlnt rufi1 Kelly m·4890 t-:xpr 'd . Rh11 Ralu 1.·xl. hou11cs & comm. dln:l"t: est11b lS yrs. Call 202SS. Nam.~ A c.'learun~ too ' Ciu.ir work 1.-oncrete walls. 'c:<·urlty - - -Gari. 1-'ree ei>t 645 Sl23 Call Sat &Sunonly. F1 ee E¥t. Call Gene bJQg\). b15 5141 .ift. Spm HlArold Gunn S49·2961 ~l.3-2422 9S7-0109 at b11u;er 1'J\Uljl1> l"rt'e Bwh.ler.. 834·9118 -------552·04.Sll -------------------ei.t.645-364d ----GcrdtNftCJ Ahce11 Hou .. eclt'an1ng. lfousecleamng. 5 yrs ex· -Pt•hr/Repoir s.wiftcVAlt....tioe1 Wt~ -A.\pha.lt C.:om·rctc & tree ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reas. reliable. ref~. Own penum:e. Newport area PROFESSIONAL Paint· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Sh.tmpoo&i.tcamcle11n 1emnv.il & rlt'JnUP• WEt::DLl\JG-CLEANl'PS _traru.00-7207or646·\1!71 preft-rred.8JGO()ij6 mg. lnler/Exter fle:.i~. Vt:R\'NEA1'PATCll CUSTOM SEWING Xlnt W111Mtdtild~n6mo's to Color brighteners; whl Fret' l-.:i.t 631 ·5071$. WecklyM11mWnunce -~orkguar642·0386 JOBS&.TEXT\JHE ··'t I alt .. _ U -"' "'-• 2 9007 Ros1:man"'s Hou"e"le"n ...___ qu;ua )'. :1 :i.o erauvo•, Ii Y~. my C<>l>ta M t'!lil c1Jt5 10 min bleach CIC' an cens.-u .-• ee e:.l 61 -" " ~ " ....._,. r Free l'l>t 8"3 \ 139 doll loth , .. n19 1070 ho 1ng. Hefs. n:as, 0" n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Palnlin". Exlr lntr. Ex· q ·.. l' l!o,, • cv rne.548-IS4711 hv. din rm. hall $1~. Avi: ,.,...,.,._od-•1 " $7 50 h $ o h ~ «' Otg It Landlicapc " am· tnu~. 6'tl·l<i03. 64S-34J<J Brickwork. Small johs. pr'd, hOfltj,t, nent. nrns. PATI::H PLAST~ltlNG Tl• c:.,..,,.er k,~ Guor' ~~~ vc: OdrQ/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lcnant·e: Mow & Edge. SU .... SHI ---NeWl>Ort. C()!sta Mesa & l.o1c'dll64-10.ts Dave \ 11 t Y Pe s . 1'" r i: c ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'pt rcp;.ur. IS yr~ expr R J lluffma11 & Son, Gen Full maint. hllulang, " HE GIRLS lrnne. 67~-3t7Se\ei;. --e:.ttmutt•s Call~O-~S Ccr:.111\lc tiles. kitchell.) C.arpentry, any lype. Do work myMM. Refs C'ontr CustomAlt&Add. l'leun·ups, roto11llrna: Alltypesofhome&offlce lntenor, exterior paint-bathroomi.. & entr)'1 Panel. doors. l'l<'. abo 53l-OlOI µat 1 o s, l' .i b 1 n eh. fo'rt-t: &.t. b75·SS16 cl e an111 g packages. Mo•lftg 1 11 g S u P r e m l' ~ftCJ l')'cc t!lll. Chuck S.W·s.10~ "'Omnl°I, 111•1 c1ot. 548·2719 ---lormat:.i. Nt•w con:.t fies - - -Special Apts & R. E w k ••••••••••••••••••••••• workm:ulShap. Call Jack ••••••••••••••••••••• • • ,i.1ltS Caterift9 & t·omm'I. 64S 4liH or GrodhtcJ Bonded/insured. ,.,o:e~ HAVE VAN Will do lite \'168.7894__ _ llOMES1\VEHS. Plumb· Tree Senlce ------••••••••••••••••••••••• :>t.t!·-l~l Lw & bondecl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ts & instant service moving. Expr"d, rea5. PROFl::SSIO:-.;,\L PflEP mg & Heating. Frt'\l C'st. ••••••••••••••••••••••• () 00. RS· w I n do w s · For the o~n Jlr affJ1r. All 8--0..::cal-Skaploader. Dump truck. ~9525 & 552-0245 Hick 1134!·55611. ult :1· 30 & PAINTING EXT ER. $10 hr Honest & reliable ttcmo" als, lr1mm1ng, i·ub111cts. ~hl'l\'es ocl'3l>IOn per:.onal 9'.•n tta ul1n1:. tree ~ork . wkdy:. Reasllns r Lil' i:!:lo7·H l>~\'il't~ BofA. M'C UK prunmg. l<'reeest. Llc'd Hough/finish. Pickup !>en ·ace CJbuna Cater. ••••••••••••••••••.•j ••• grading, demo e t c ThelmmaculateCleanang -f'reeest.63S·7394 7Sl-3150or8"7-0JIJJ tuJl)'Ul!luredS42.2~ work 642-67113 ang64S·98.58 ELECTRICAL SEKVIC'E 831-1257 Co. YOUR SATISFAC-Pamtmg/PoperinCJ ------CALLS SlS hr,&. SMALL --'--_TIONGUAR. 759.0377 ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUNG ;lAN. s yrs cxpr RoofiftCJ Wat.._. Interior remodt!linj!. C-nt/Concrete JOBS&i28233 Haut .. .., in walkovcran~ Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• punehn!l. eahmets. room ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIYA.KO Housecleaning Paint Your Castle est-> ~8576 Andy ROOFS FOR LESS p 1 n c & s 0 11 d o :l k reproduction Eves Cl' m c 0 1 w 11 r k SPECIALOFFIER TrC'el pl;int t ram or re-Serv1ce.Wmdowi.,Wallb, 1\\'erageExtr 1StrySJ9S All lH>t:s. fanan U\Jll "alt:r~Compldellne 1>7S.cJW7 OrivewJ):., µatan s, P~tLlghtinstulled mo\'e Yard t·leanup:.. Crystal. Sterhng SilH•r i:!Slory$54.5,lntr$45rm Profpamt'g&puperhang-~'ree est, hc/bond'cl, an· & ace R easonllble walkways neasonablc. S60 or h.-ss 673-501:1 lawn work I.ate mo,•ang. 10 Yrs ex per. ffou~e~. Pnces incl matrl labor ang. t1ean. v.ork gu:.ir. 11r. Scauor nl1t\'n~ dabcnl. Terry · i. N w pl· Ba ~ Tiw la-">lt?::.t drav. rn lhc frl~esl:. 550075i :>-18·5863 Rentals, Yachts. 646-5719 Guar/lnsr-Frei:est l''rl'e est !+f\7 -09"1 , ~HH.21 anytaml' 642-0161 0,,11,. 1,1101 --ELECTHICIA:-.;·Pru·cd or lea\•e ml>ssage & ph Lic~l. Ted 6.16-7085 5JtHJR3 -----Wci.t a u • HD h 11., rai:ht-lrt·e l'1>t1matt• un OCC STUDENT fhi.: •'1 00 f c·1a~~1f1ed \d ·rhonc w ~omt:'t ang tu sc . lur~cor ~m.illJobi. ton truck. Tra::.h, tram, num r or plturncall. -f'tnd what yoo want an SELL. idle atemi. with a t;.li:!·Sti78. Cl:u.s1lled ads do at well l.ll't:'nM~d tii3.0359 t:ll:. Randy 0-12.5703 Oasslfied Ads 642·5678 Want Ads Call 642-5678 Want Ad Re:.ulb &12·5678 Daily Pilot Cla~s1rieds. Daily Pilot Clasi.1fied Ad Apartments lJnfww. Apartments Unfur'ft. Apartments Unfwft. Rooms 4000 PtrSonal1 515o'Penonals 5350 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Erroloymtnt & Preparation Help Wantf'd 7100 Help Wantf'd 7100 Costa Mesa 3824 Costa Mesa 3824 lnine 3844 Room wt kitchenette • •• ••••• •• ••• •• ••• •• •. •• •• $50 week & up. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••• 548·97S5 t'OSTA i\f ESA 214 0 E1\.'iTSIOE lg 2 br, 2 ba, Orruigetree. new 1 bdrm Thuran Street. Brand lrpl, frml din. lndn w loft Brown carpet. Ambas:.ador Inn in Costa nl'w dl'luxe 2 bedroom urea. SJ75 mo. Ai;t selr·c l e ani.ng O\'cn. Me::.a. 22T1 Harbor. Cen· unit~. Lovely -.pac1oui. Days SS2-043-l eve'I · Avail now s325. trally located, 23S rooms. town home type with 5.52 0507 552 7552 MANY with kitchen. IJnUI) rooms S350 mo -S UPIER HICE--Loc)una Beoch 3848 phone & TV. Swimming l) u A I L P I. A C' f: ••••••••••••••••••••••• PoQI. jacuui. and rec l'l'OPl·'.RTlt-:s, 1:-.0T QUIET· ... OPOOL o I & kl ' · · " Luxury penthouse, 2 br, ;i room. a1 Y wee Y ; 11 1 75:! l!J:!O or 518 ss.;;1 • l,1wkl'd gar. w lg 1otor. ral~ ~t.trting Crom S"8 u "''t•n1111:~ or wcd•t·nd' •01 W. patao, lndry rm bJ, din rm. frplr, bag week I( 1-;:-JT \ L J\ G f;'\ T < l :'I: •Sn.·c1:.il cabml'l space ,. 1 e w H I o l' k I o ,,_ downtown $475 mo l'HK\11:..ES :..,.\T It. SL"\ •(;J-., heal. llU~ l'("ll..lllA • .:~1:-. hot water all pd 4!>I 2379 eve:.. 957·0282 · Sleep111g rros S75·Sl05 mo. • BIL I lki duple' Cph. ilrp:. n·trag, i.t1 l'O• I ... tr '111 l>l'l" $2711 rTh) •·lh 12u, •\dult!>.nopl'l:. Choice !'Ondo -JI 1:oll ~I SSO. wk. Share kit/· I RRS255 mo tu mo t·our'le , 3 BR . 4! b:.i, bat~. Sh~wn ~ton-Sat. :!123 Eldl'n An'. C ~I ,·aulh .. -d ccil. litl' deck. Ref~ rcq d. SS6·0058 or HAPPY 21st Birthday Holly I love You 4450 Lost & Fouttd 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobs Wanted, ' 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnvute Duly Nurse l.1 ve an or out. 64S-21~ Room no. 22 Help W..t.d 71 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUNTANT JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A.SSEM Bl.ER TRAIN EE CIVIL SANTA ANA EHGIMHAIM& Call S49·247S. DtSl<iMIR Automoti\'e Exper'd m s.ub division New Det.aal Shop needs work. Apply in person. to help. Mr. Fuentes, Robert. Top wages paid. Engine Bein. Wilham Frost & Stl'amers, eng painters. Assoc .. H-01 Quall Sl, NB. buHers & polishers, UP· i----------hol~tery s~ampooers, CLASSIC Motorcycle check out, pick·UP & de-restorer reconst & over-h"ery Apply at ·.. · 2059 Harbor 81. CM ha~ en~ !i., Cr~mes & ae sis 1030 cessori es I'·• bra ca le · parts as rcq'd. from old 1---------•1 phot<>!> & diagrams to AVON restorl' lo orig. cond 6-16-00Jl tr<.'\..,,, PoOI . wshr dr)cr :>18-~ - 2 I.Ir. S23S & S25o No pcb., S-'50 :'>to. Agt. 494·7571! Vocation Rentals 4250 4 D&UXE OFC'S lt~'n" o I\ JOO \'tl'loraa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Conf. rm .. seat 25. all Foxhollow Vi1109e f'"und. Small female cut. Flea collar . V1cin1ty R1\'er Ave. NB 631·3019 Responsib1h11c' will 10 rl ude Customer Crecltt Vtr1 rlcat ion and Ac Christmas Eamin91 counts Rcce1vuble col let)in Mow :'llan. 3 yrs exp .. 40 hr wk S1200 per mo. Apply at . Employment Deve Uepl . Santa Ana. ad paid for by employer .. :~I\\ \\'ll~on tilti :!010 1'1 'll'l OH liNFUHN ·:!lir lo\\n home v. lrpl l)JI ~li7 Super I br. lrg, unique paneled. sm. whse in re· fl'aturcb, ocean \'icw, blk c:ibm, Bag Bear. :.Ip!> 4•18 ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lakc lect1ons. Our l'UStomcrs For A VON •I ,g1' pall() & i·nP. garJge • \dulLc. onh l llr, S2JO. 311 ~le!>a Or to bch. Adil:.. No pets :r~pl r~~~~I. <'Ir t v, Forest area. K ent 1\va1I .l:.ili bt. Adults, no $350. 494·3280499·3900. P · · Harkins. Found-SAMOYED. Harbor view homes area. NB. 640.1857. are an \'lrtually every stale acr~s lhe nation REPRIESEHT ATIVES aencal plus l>Ome foreign ac· Besl time to establish l'0<1l "°Fll.Ulfl :11 ail _JX'Lo,. Call 642 lfi9~ 2br upper lge ro~ R...tals to Shere 4300 1 ___ 7_14_·_58_1_-9_39_3 __ lx>ams ,.1~w $J9S W·alk ••••••••••••••••••••••• 400 f C 2 Found female Irish Setter t"<>unts. Position requ1 res customer:.. I nteresled? Merry a minimum of 2 years Call !H0-7041 or Zenith Christmas colleg~ <prefer a degree> 7-1359 Woodland Village ' . . ' NEED A ROOMl\t ATE? Approx. sq. t. . ' S l1 ff Co ntry u\.<;TSJDE DUPLEX-2 bch. twn & JI e1:.ler . . 1: AIC, at 130 E. 17lh Sl, near eac u and directly related ex-l•---------1 To All O! You From penencemCred1tCollec· Babyi.iller. substitute Rila. Chris, Michelle, ~I~ l':rnlanno Bed m pri ·atl• "arc! 497 :JIO!I Call The Profess1ona s Sl50/mo. Doyle s.Ml·ll6S Oub. SJ0.3100. roo • ' )· · -you'veseen &heardof! lh'.IUlllUI . nl'\I. aclult ••l•h (;n•:Jt IOl'Ul1111l 2 f•tllfo,, :! J.tl'Ulll" ·~ hloc:·k to :.hopping & Loc)unoNICJUef 3852 Radio-TV $2110 lse. Store-Orrice. hu,,. :\laturc ad11lt1>. no ••• ••••••••••••••••••• • Tame Magazme·Press ~q ft under 3C>. 19-178 Lo6t: Blk/Whlte l''em Sib. llusky "Zari ". Corona del Mar. 640·4490. &l-0-4491 lions. mother needed for 17 mo. Connie, Sally & Carey of old baby girl, Mon thru Coastal PenoNttl \1•1\\' 1111mnit:d1all'ly pct~. Refer. s2so mo :'\ice 1 & :? Br. $:>.65 & up. QuLs ·CI2An.s ~TU> Beach Bl, HS. 842·2834 l/uaal Place l'ro~rtae~. pool & re{' room, quiet E Accounts Fri. 7:30 to 5 :30. My ACJIWCY 54M055 Payable Clerk home or yours. Must be 2790 Harbor, O f Inc 17141 752-1920 or area.8317766 !:iuce11sfullySinccl971 ~414-8553 weckcndl> s:rl-4~ ll.11 ht'lor S225 S2-l:l • 1 lid rm s:.iu;; S:!i :; .!. U<lrm S:!95·S:l:!:> l<~·ntal Otrlt•,• Open Dally9 t. TSL :\1 anugl'1111•111 if>! ~I or&l2 lt)():I WIESTIA Y TRIPLEXES COST,\ M F.S \ BRA:-.;D ~;i.:w 1 Br l'rom S280. 2 Or From S:J05 :1 lir. 2 Ha From $395. Plt•asc ai.k for Wanda. Newport Beach 3869 Weq S1de·l Ur. bltn,,. drp:-.. !>.!.25 mo J\ ail I J.ifl ~!19 llam lllon 5-1R. 7313 New 2 br. garden patio. D W. pool. adults 329 AVO<':.ido, 5-18·8994 LA MANCHA APTS Lile 2 br garden apts & 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PA.RK NEWPORT Rachl'lors. 1 or 2 Bcdroorru. & Townhouloc:. l"rom S2i4.50 Speetacular ::.pa. total rcc.'reataon program. :.ocaal program. 7 pool!>, 8 tennis courts. At Fashion Island. Jamboree & San Joaqwn Hills Road. C7 I 4t 644·1900 br lwnhse. D~hwhr.1---------­ bltns. encl. g~ir. !las bbq.1---------- Rmml n~ed. Oceon vu. upi,taar ... clean. Sl50 mo 835-6012 :-;wµt E BluJ r. 2 straight prof. men !leek 3rd to i.hare li;e ocn vu home w/pool. S300/mo. incl utal .. maid & grdnr 6'W~ Rmmte needed. Ft:malc. Share 2 bdrm 2 ba apl . CM. Must be neat. Relia· ble. 556·29-l-O bcf 11 : 00 AM &aflti.00 PM. Gene Pool Ga:. pd. 778 Sl·oll l'I. BACHELOR APT Bl•aolaful new :I unit &t25073 • lnuldan~~-XJnt locallon ----b-ALL UTILS PO! F'~m. Roommate to :.hare m·Jr So CoJst PIJL:J CHILDRIEM K 100' from the ocean Jbr.$163mo. C'hlldn•n welcome :'\o 2Br from Sl90 mo to mo. Sl'mi·furnisht!d. Avail ___ s7S·SS39Cd~I __ P'-"" llt>nlal oHil·e open Someuttl pd No rit:l.s. now• 201 E. Balbo:.i Blvd. ~5 d:ulylOS.S-IOBakerSt.I 2450Nc"portBhd,CM Yrly. $250 rit:r mo. NO forltent 4350 ltlk \\1 of Bri!>tol t>l2·7678 f' 1': E. Cal I : Su c a t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 557·521:> - - -556-7707 an)11me s 1 h d ---------1L1tc 2 hr. 2 ha studio. mg e garage over ea ---------• Coi.ta ;\lesa $29.'i. mo. door. $35. No. 6. 731 W. LA CASA ILA.MCA A\·.111. Jan. 2nd. 998 0659 Newport Shores. 4 Br. lllthSl, CM 673-7787 eve loch, I Br·A •I How 0mta Point -3 82°'6 dplx~~I~ ~Sosngl gar. SINGLE GARAGE \II utab pd .. <'~L'" cl rps. ••••••••••••••• • •• • ••• • $500 · Car or ~torage. 11ool. lqrlry. far s. Aclull~ Panorama view new cl11 $430 3 Dr 2 ba cnrl gar SJS/mo 962-3533 11 \t•r :is. no pdo; or · · · h · · · ,.hildrl."n. Call Sue: 2br, 2 ba +den I plcx. Blktobeac .&lcony,no East CM, dbl. Gar. ~56-7707 or ll ('nry · Nopet.s. Mgr496·l097 pets. 6421603 Storage only. $75. per "42·9137 1 Bedroom apt. garage, TSL Mgml . mo. StS-0733 or631-l956 ---------1 1 mile to beach, At Dana Large 3br. 2ba apt. Sun· Office Rental 4400 ., Br 2 ba all blln!> frplc Poant493-0075 deck. 2 blks to bch. $325. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ' • • · mo yrly 204 43rd St l'llCI. gar .• balcony. 2br. lge&modern. All nu 494~ • · 65•PHSQFT !.;!undry r m. $325. appl. Co,·ered gar, cpls & 16\7 WESTCLIFf'·NB l~L Mgmt 642·1603 dr1>5. $295/mo. 498-0318 New & lo\'ely duplex, 3 AGT. 541·5032 :! Hr. I' 2 ba townhoust? .:\es. bdrm, 2 ba. Npt Hgl!> w patio. 610 Joann St. HuntincJton leach 3840 ~Uc,;10. 64S-21l1 or 150 I Wntcflff Dr. ..,mall pets. 5-MI· 7638 ••••••••• •••••• •• ••••• • •----------• Newport Financial Ctr 2 br townhse. 2 br :.iptS1-IARP3Brdeluxebeach ATTRACT I VE 3b r lealiftCJOfficeSpoce w pool &Jacuua unit. D'W. frplc. patio, twnhse. cpts. drps, bltns. Call on Site Manager 645.21198 itar. Avuil 960-2358 frpll'.1 car gar. nr Hoag (714 I 642-31Uexl246 Hcx,pital. $42S. Adults. no Villa Vista Apts BRAND NIEW pets. 548·~5: 642·4387 2078 Thurin 3 Br apt/condos. ronvl'· r.""'E BrJnd new. large 2 br. ruent loc. 5unats avl. S400 SUB-l~ I': ba townhouse w/fom1_u..:..p_.964 __ ·1_507_,_64_0._1_7_5_1 __ 3 Br, 2 ba. frplc. garage. room. XJnl area. $350. patio. Losl r oommate. nil. Mgmt 642-1603 Qulri-O""'°Aclts You can have last mo's Near beach & shops. 2 Br rent & deposit. Just $475. NEW 2 BEDROOM 2 Ba, pvt patio, gar, $310 mo. yrly & 1ls yours 2 .! Br, garage. A/C. $31S. mo. 960-1279 blks bch. Avail. immed. mo. 64S·46SS ---------675-4230 aft. 6 pm. , _____ ...;;_ ___ ~I l.;uge 3 Br Townhou5c • with patio. garage + pool. Quiet complex. \dulls. n() pets. S3SO. 645-3381 or rn-5949 families. small chUdrcn up lo 2 yrs. 2 Br apt. $235 mo. 2077 Wallace Ave. CM. 646·2826 N~~J"t!~l~~x8ury ~:i:.~!'!! ..... !~.~~ adult apts an 14 plans pa.rkJin~ 2 Br 2 Ba co!'do. from $265 + pools. ten· gnr , mml ocean view, nls. waterfalls. ponds t S32S mo. 633-4720 (714 l From San Diego Frwy . drh·e North on Beach to 1 Br. $1115 per mo. Uti! pd. McFadden then West on Walk to everything McFadd~n lo Seawind 492-8637 an 6Pm Vlllage. ('7Hl893-5198 South LGCJMH 38'6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• &KUtin Row Inc Ofc spnce in Newport· Airport Area. Recept'l"tm, phone serv., conrerence rm. kitcb, secy serv, die· tating & copy m achine. F'rom$290. (714>752-7170 THE EFFICIENT ALTERNATIVE Mo. lo mo. rent incl: Recepl. se r v .• personalized phone cov- erage, con{. rm, moil scrv .• underground prkg & more in Newport. TIIE EXECUTIVE SUITE, 640-5470 •C:OST A MUA * Deluxe office space w I wet bar. 830sq ft 30" sq fl. ldastrial Retttal 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t>IOO SQ rt. of andu:.trial pro- perty w 1800 i.q rt of air t·ond ofcs. S.16· I ti53. 2956 Handolph A\'t·. C!\t ---- 3200 Sq ft . dusl Comm 'I 2!152 dolph A\ e C;\J 5-16-1653. lusiness/lnYest/ Finance I n · Ran· Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• lusinns Opportunity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SA.H Cl.IEMEHTE Pct Shop & Grooming. Retiring after 7 good years. Fine localion & chentele. BERTHA HENRY El EAL TORS 215 Del l\lar 492·4121 OCF.ANFRO NT l\IARKE1' Must !>ell ! Net $3S,000 yr Agenl. St2-4758 Dnting, escort & s hare rentals. Sell or l ake partner. 646.Q.t20 .... " ....... OpportuMty 5015 ·········~········· If you're not getting l3.8'"l. relurn on your inv~sl· ment, call Sandy Ross. Ajax Co. 837 .3744 Money to Loan 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ht, 2ad Ir 3rd T.D.'• LOANS AV A1LA BLE Credil 'oot. lmportanL. lrolcer, 4'3·3102 Money Available. many sources. all projects. SSOK min. 752-6052 ~Tnnt DHdi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOWEST lnhnstllcrt•1 I st T.D. 'a. at10 2"d T.D. Loona. Fairest Terms since 1949 Sattler Mt,. C:o. 64~2171 545·061 t At least I year o(•\';lrled dependable & ha\'e refs.1---------• accounts puyable ex-_6_7s-_:n_36_or5_59_·538_7___ ClSUCA.L pcnence "ilh some ex· REWARD posure to computerized Babysitter, my home. Good t,ypang. sh optional i.p t1.·m~ Will malch Mon thru Thurs. 2 to :'ll uth aptitude. P hone _ , c 11 d 0 r !> · 1n,.01 c "'s ti·~ Call an 7: ;59.0419 !>loll:. & abilily to aceep1 FOUND. Mile Squure agJ1n:.1 purrhasc• or b h -k -resp. m fast moving elec For return of whale loni: haired male cat. LOi>l 12115. Vic 19lh & ~lonrovaa. 646·S908 Ba y:.ltlt:r i se pr tronics businCl>s. Apply Park. Sun. Dec. 18. clt·r~ rccct\lng reports •tature nonUc ""rson to · " • ,... ~ . Avnet Electronic:., 35-0 ladies gold rang Call Compult> discount~ and ~arc for 7 mo old child, McCormick Ave, CM 631·3119after S reb:iteh. verify ex-litehsework. PIT, hours 754~1. tension~. clc Prepare nexiblc. i.alary open, my - -Jo'ound tame bard. Seachff·bch walk area. 536-2797 FOUND: !\Jan's watch\ 1c Goldenwest & Warner. H.B. Call to identify 847-5-084 and monitor input out-home. 835-2200 X·382 dys. Cl~IC "L put d~umenu.. prepJrC 552 4588 ~ ""' cht'ck:. and do some fil. · en, ---Night shift, Spm-1:30llm. ing. Typing and an ubili· BAKER Exp'd or appren· Finan<:la1 firm seeks ac ty to operate lO·key a t1ce. Call btwn. SAM & cur. indiv. w/figure ap must Send resume or ap. _noon __ . 49!>_·_1_11_0 ____ -1 titude. Xlnt benefits. Ex- ply Lo. ptr. ht:lpful. CPI, 180 ---------•!Newpor t Ctr Dr. NB. FO~D : Sm Temer max. TREHDAT A Banlung 64+4360, ask for :;andy brwn collar,.no tags. vie CORP. LOA.HHOCESSIHG ,_Col_e. ______ _ Fashion Island. IHO-OIJO ClERK COClCT A.IL R d Los 2 ,11u I . h Standard Memories Busy pleasant N.B. ofc W"tTaESS ewar · t " r ris Di•ision :'(Int sal & benefits. Real ""'''" Setters l2/lB. F.V. al'ea. An Applied Magnetics Co advancement avail. Learn in 40 hrs the mosl 1147-'734 3400W.Segerslrom Must t y p e SOwpm . exciting. gla morous. highly paid profess. Da)' Found 12'15 young male Santa Ana. CA 9Zi04 Telephone & customer or t:\•e s~slons. Place husky, hlack walh white. (7\41 540.asdS cxt 21:l conlact. See M adehne menl asblsl. Good job op Vic. Be a c h & In . Equal Opportunity Dawson. 673·3130. Im · por dianapolls.HB.968·7870 EmployerM/F penal Savings & Loan, C•7141751•9194 --------•I 3366 Via Udo, N.D. Foundfemalelrish Setter So. Calif. Cocktail 12/21. Vic. Brookhurst &1__________ Waitresses, Inc. 17922 Adams.HB.968·3442 Acctng Bkk BARTENDER, COOK. Sk)' Park Bl, Ste C . T"""-"•oa "RY pog C 0 C K T A I L lrvine, CaJml4 i'~ou nd . dog s mall .......-1'A WAITRESSE S & Ion g h a i r b I k I w ht Register Today lo work BUSBOYS. Interviews Companian ~or retired Fate hes, fem. Vic. So. on various accounting & 2-4. Apply In person. rear I ad Y, PI t.1 me, 11 t t> Coast Plaza . S .A. bookkeeping ass ign-enlranceTbeSan Fran· houseckeeplng & cook 537-3997or545-1819. menls. Work close lo cisean 1617 WeslcliCf Or. ing. Vic_ ofNwpl Blvd & ---------• your home. Figure N.B. 20thSt. Eves646·648S Found, Weimar aner, Clerks to Sr. Accoun----------- brown, male, Vic. La Paz tants needed lhruout IUUTY OPERATOR COOK &S.D. f'rwy, Lag. Hills. OrangeCo. Assist. F/lime for busy i68·1129 Robert Half's salon. 200 Newport Ctr Exper"d only. All shafts Good pay & benefils. Ap ply, Jolly Roger. 400 S Coast Hwy. Lagun:1 Beach Penonal1 5350 Accountempc; Dr. N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drinking problem., Call AlcohOI Helpbne 24 hrs a day 835-3830 SOOS. Ma1n.Sle501 No. Tower, tmion Bank llMDERY WORKERS. tnTheCityofOrange W/tra in. bindery COOK · 714/835-4103 helpers. Mame, perma nenl posallon. Immed openings. Call 833-981 1 Part time. Some exper nee. Apply in person. The Derby. 1262 S.E. Bnstol, S.A. PREGNANT? Car ing. confide11tlal Answering Service Oprs counseling & referral. needed immed. p/time. Abo~tion, adoption & Xlntpay. Phone494-975S keepmg. APCARE 547·2563 Apt MMager, cpl needed U ... 0 ,. •VICKI w/malntenance. back· " "'• ground for 55 unit com· OutcallMas~ plex in C .M. (213> Fortt. ,_of HI _865-_385_1 ____ _ Serving nil Orange Co. BOAT BUILDER tWw ProdYct Line COOK Looking For Exper'd Relief Shift. Continental Electncians Menu. Apply. Victor Engine lnslallers Hugo tnn, 361 ctm Dr. Plumbers Laguna Beach 3-5 Mon· Carpenters Jo'ri Top pay. xlnt working --·-------- conds & good beoef1t11. 4 COOK. reher. saute & Day week b ro i I e r • C a I l bl w n ll'l'EMBLY LEAD . APPLY IN PERSON 3-UP:\1,499-2271 •MICHELLE·s• ~ ooWNEASTVAcHTS Out.call Massage A .. embly of sm:.ill eler· 700 EAST AL TON. SA Cooks , exp' d J y r SJS.7313 ·~ minimum. day-n1 gh1 Retired couple bas money 10AM·2AM 731-4462 lro-melcbanical dc\'ICes Boat operators. 20 ton 10• 5 hilt. ca 11 A m el 111 · s lo lend. 1st & 2nd T D. 's 1rpin'a...,j R•-..1-Req's exper. in directing land hcen~e. all shifts Rest:iurant, 6"2·9434 Agent 837 3744 • -_,.. work of up to tO ai.-open. Wnte lo Ad #93. -_ • __:___ 1815So. El Camino Real semblers. Daphifl. Daily Pilot. r o Box Cooks. over 18. wlll lraln F:.\STSIOE coJ:y 2 br. patio. garage. bltns S275. 1602ti.tSt. 5"8·2127 LIVE Near The Beach' COHdel Sol Beautiful Adult Apts Gas & Water P111d. 21661 Brookhurst. HB 96~6653 2•1 Br. pnv bch. small 642-4400642·7604 ..,_....,..._/ yard, new cpt.s, co7.y. No .,_MJ lewtd 4450 P..-.Js/ SanOemente. Fully he. STA.COSWITCH IMC lS60. roi.ta Mesa. <'A Di s h w a s h e r s For appt. 492· 7296 1139 Baker C06lll M e!'u 92626 waitresse11. hostesses & MESA PINES 549·3041 general hel p. 25254 Lo DANCE OF FUN Bookkeeper. rull chg, Pai:. Mission Viejo. 1n Btn nude girls dance & lnt.erviewlngSatu.rdoy Accl's payable, bank Mission Hills Pinta. pets. S29S. 499·258_7 ---•••••••••••••••••••••• • • \Mt Ir fMd T•• 38901----------==;.1; .. ·1ioo 'lew sludio apt $230. 1 Br S285. Avail. Jan. lat. ••••••••• •• •• •• • •• ••• •• lHI SHIPY AID Pool. jacuzzi & laundry $240. UTIL IHCLD rm. Adults, no pets. Open Beach studio duplex; 2 w e1 ri It (faily. """" Harla Ave. BR, 1"'-ba., gar .• patio, ater. gas, ec:t c y. ""~ \Jnique l & 2 Br. C.M. <Mesa Verde Drive no pet. $325. 645-l6S2 tomplete recrealional East off Harbor Blvd). 2 BR. 2 ba, fr;pl. D/W, g-.r. faciUUes, Adults only. ~2'47. S3 2 6 mo . a 164 2 Sorry,nopets. 2 br unfum. $240 mo. \ 1_Brook __ h_W'8_t._SS7_-45_7I__ c:.llforftl• Aph c .. 'ld no peta 1'93:2 Newport Ave. '"' ' 646-Usl Fib d•t Fplc'• Tustin. Qall today: --------·1 Be comfy coiy beside a 832·8122 Space avaU. Newly re· furbished Lido Shipyard area. Unique. excitin g location ; marine orient· ed businesses. Ample parking. I "1 8am-ooon & r ap sess on. lOA.. to rec .• payroll through Sln-8440 2A M Mon·Sal 625 N . :Mon-Frlday9am-3pm trtal balance. Prefer --------- Euclid Ana.h SS9·61SO F.qual Oppor Employer home rumishin1ts ex per. COUNSELORS SCRAM-1.:ETS FREES£SSIONW/AD 1r possible. Jo'uhlon See our ad for House at::1 ·~NG .... ""SAGL' Island.10·5.644·8860 Counselors wanted. Oak •~WERS ~ fl&l'Q ,... --....;...------• Tree Hornes 540-4754 NW &bJames·Uc: Masseur 1---------•lcarpenter, finish work on·•--------- Garble -Patch -OutcaU M, --~111 •~SEMBLER ly. Exp'd only need app-COUNTER GIRL P /time Rli°Lc~*',:'t -MASSAGE IWTRAJNEES. ~~7zt.~S7, Brian or focwkdysltl~:~ lnllation bu made ut all MUii MOOB.S CASHIER c.oonter help. Perm. po1i· s u l> er m ' r •k et ISCORTS Needed lmmedlately We "re now opening a I.Ion Mon· Fri. M / r . archaeologiaU. The firtl Lone & short te.rm as· .. .,., .......... .., •• """l A k lhln1 we do b dlg our OUTCALL OHLY 1lgnmenla. Holiday & new Del Taco & are still ('"£1 or .,.....,..., 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lrg 2bf. tV.ba. l yr new. Adull• only. no pell!. J.1127·24~ nre ln 1:pacious. dhc apl. ·--------- All units w/prlv eneld ltf 1¥91h~ g11r •. balcony or patio. •U.,..1!111Md ltOQ t.ndry taco avllll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• waydowntothcboltt>m 6Jl·lllt vacatio n p ay . In nee d of Hos t. °"rRoberto A t>lvi!>lon of IU)'et PJ\JCeTAG -Ho•pllaliutlon pl an Hostesses le Cashiers. COUNTER Girl/Prlntinc llorbor rn,~tment Co -·--&';C()ftTSEl\VICE 1va!lh blJ, Stal'\ l«lal l Apply In penoo only at, shop, Npt. 8th. Oi:M-n1ng l.rg 2br, btt:ns. crpc... 41'118. S245 mo. t chlld OK. No l)t'ta-. 132>3"8, 145-SU 7 Chlldret1 O'°'. Le.11erahl p ntE EXCJTINO Real Eslate 842·"466 PALM MISA A'1S. W.3lll M1Nl11'ESTO NPT BCH. Bach.1''2 BR. from $220. & u:p. Adult.. No Peu UllMesaDr. (6 Blu Eatl or Newport Blvd.> • Ml-9180 1 ________ 11 Lolt&'-d 5300 \tODEUNOOUTCALL --• -20921 Magnolia. Hunt. avl. immcd Call • •••••••••••••••••••••• 24Houra 847·~ I ri:•l= Bcb . !Co rn er of 8'W·8233fora pt. For Ren\ S,.435 sq ft or of· f'OUND: 8' Belae :1ur· • "' r.taanolla & All11nta> --- lice space & IJ\otaaie at fboard w/bhae str ipe. • SAJleY'S • Mon-Fri belwo a&Spm HOTICI 1711 Anabcirn St. C.M damaaed, Back 80 OtrreALLM~SAOt: 3141 =Drf•t -lfY l)Qw Dail.Y Pllot Clau $800 mo. 5'48·1097 area. 6'W4ZZ 973-0329 _ 1 .. ._ 741 OU In.ct adl dJsplay their .., bav• a service to offer or rnp1aces wllb leclbllll.) Store, 3C>eO E C:Oa t Hwy., FoUncl: lrbhSellet", muJe. G'-Y 11. $'f'. buvyaet. (Acroti 1\-om ~to sell. place an ad a~ Impart? Our ada. we Coronadcl~ar :N50per 8l'W'D Slat« 6 W•mer. bui folllAI wetl}lt f.ut Or~•Co Alrpottl 10 tbe Dally Ptlot are proud to ll)I. reall)' mo. PalilMltrtln.JUt.r of( Go1dHweat, HD. Mtcl nlc. ~I for dates l'.cnmlOp11CrltrnplQYt r Clautfttd S.CUon ••• aet r esults. Phone "4-1&1 87Wal Mt-7* PO.Bodi ,Q G 9*2 I~~~~~~~~ Pbone&U-5678. GU-~78. ' ' - ) -~- ~.~~·.~~.:: .. ~ ... ~~.~.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~ ..... !!~! ~~~ .. :~.!!.~! ~!.~.~: .... !!.~~ ~~~ ....... ~?.'.~ 1nu'9day, Oeciember 22. 1917 DAILY PILOT aJ ltHturlltYISOlt , Swltthbo1rd Op<·r11tor1 .J\. O>Jd&pot frostfrl'c Fvntlture 1050 Jewelry 1070 MiKefl...,, 1010 Must be d~dlc11ted to fuil &pt hmc.Wllltraln. frig, like new S180 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "oudpaU~t care.Stroni: (i4S..8772.. Unusual iron pa t1 Q **I BUY** w·NTED Dinln& rm set, ll\1ng rm CUSTOMa SfltYICE/ Slal'TUY GUARDS MOTQaROUTl OBJYRT ~~e " typmlt u fo\lll a. p tune Work 11ny per~. Lttc bkk1W11C· Co )lluh N B Jrc'a l1nlforr.n *•led near OC Airport IWll Ht'ttn-d ok. Teleph ~TIM>O. &. Ciir req'd. N1tl 'I co To ddivc:r large motor route in S. La,1unu 1uid Lngunu Nlauel. Must have good drivlna record 8.00 dcpendMble llUlO. $50 cu~h deposit r equired Yor Infor mation call ti42 43Zl, ask for Harry ~ley or Don Willlam:1 leadership qualltlea. l fumlturu, lgc umbrella. A chall'S, 250 motorcycle Wknd per mo. Apply, TUCHEAS 64.S-46853'tt'r Sl'M Good wu-d f"urnllUHl & T OP CAS H DOLLAR Qoodcond. 7~ 911tO 1445 Superior J\v4:, N.b We are looking for a n in· J\pphancea--OR I will PA I 0 f' 0 R Y 0 U R -oo.2410 dustnal arts teacher to AMcHon 8015 aelJorSEl,,I,forYou. JF.WELRY. WATCllF,S, Man'-1 d ia mond ring . dtre(.'l lhe training center ••••••••••••••••••••••• MASTERS AUCTION ART OBJECTS. COLO. small pickup shell wtlh --------...i w top p.iy & benefits. t'.Jll g,lJ-4WJ ~llm 2pm SALE:S SUPPLEMENT YOURIHCOME ssss $$$$ ,AATTIME TB.EPHOME WORK 111 our corporate head· 6..._.616 & lll·tUS SI t VE n S Jo: R V IC E. boot. &S6-7010rter 5 PM qua rters Pla n pro PUBLIC FURNlTtJRE 1-'IN E F'URN & AN· MUST MOVE' Selling DA:TAEMTIY OPEllATOR IOt.leM, days. Personable <1llracti\'e & lite typing. 011u1t'r House exp. pre· f d Apply Victor llul:O Inn, Jill Chi! l>r, Lug. 8rh Mon· 1''rl. :i ~l'.M gr ams. evaluate pro *AUCTION* Yellow pnnt sofa S2SO. 2 TlQUES. 645-2200 -rooms full ot cxcep gress & make recom ~~J1n;~~~l chams, S25 EMERA L 0 n' n g & t1onally nir c indoor & HeWSfNll*" Defl•ery Mature resp. adult for early AM dellv. Must have Lrans. 8'&0-2756. m e nd a t1 o n s f o r 1Friday7:30PMJ c · 1\1.'Cklace w /mao y ou td oor .:oo d s employee placement. Wl• Deciien Wekome Antq. Dining Rm Set/ti dlamoods. Exnubue bCl· E\'erytJung in iclnl cond . A day shift po!o1tlon b now 11va1.lable lor u Data Entry Operator with pru v ~ous kc)•pun c h e ll perience, Inrorex ex pen ence r>relcrrcd HOUSEWIVES COUEG&STUDEHTS Guar a nteed H ou ri ~ Wage Plus Bonus. 5·30 ptn to 8 :30 pm. Call 646-4223 or come to 250 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Will t r ain you in our I r w .... Dee frttl:e $250 service & merchandtllc HEPOS chrs 1 ea . olnut. tm15. ll.ll l328. 631·131'1 P . . ga .. STOCK l.IQUlDATIONS Good cond. $650/ofr, ---stovt', Earl} Amer. sofa ---sa I es t ech n i q u e 1> • MASTEtlS ACUTIOM 846-0'.<!!ll $100. Must ,;ee ! 753 w 556-0135 21175•,"zNcwportBlvd CM BEOO;--dbl l r$60-2 tw-n LI•ntock 8075 19th St. Apt. D, C . .M Please t·all for appointmenl Nancy Beckh11m (714) 759-4871 Hotet PIX Opr. :1·1 1 31Jpm s h if t. Atrportcr 11111 llotel, Con· \act M t ll i1 nn a n , IW-2770 NIG HT AUD ITOR· Exper'd, parl·lime. App. ly Ben Brown's Motel 31106 Coas t llwy, So. l...aguna. TBIPHOME SALES 8J3..9625 646-8686 6 mo: like ~ew sf.O. ea. •••••••••••••••••••• ... _645-00l2_ - TiredofU>erouunc" sofa bd, gm naugh $40 lleg Morgun mnrc.-, broke Broan 's C"hut·k wagon This job ls for you! licydes 1020 673-5710. to rnle & Jrl vc · btk rllllge hood/blower 1100 Uu pnrade Morgan geld1n~. cc/gun new $200/be!.l Co s Now AL •••••••••••••••••• ... ••• CASH PAI D E ng, We s t er n (7 J 4 ) tK8 9"ll3 HOUSECLEAMIMG MIGHT CLERK Seamstress. pay com · 83).1095 USED BIKES f'or gd used rum. anti· 331H011 ~~·~----- Man. 40 h r wee k . ~ensurate w/expe r . TIME-Llf't: Rerond. lluy,sell,trade. ques&clrTV's,95Hll33 --STANDING BAR w /'2 GRliTWESTERM PERSOMMEL SAVINGS fo~mpl oyel'S w ith o r w1t'hout transµOrtation mui.t bt! able lo get to the olflee cJch morrung. Day or l.'Vcning work a va1la hlc on lull or parl tame ha'>lh T o p Wages . 540 •1:;25 The Sunshine (;1r1, 1700 E Gnry. SA Travelodge, 6208 w . SantaAna.Call549·2475. U BRARJES Cycle t:c <:o.2488Newport N ew c us tom m o d e s~s. New. Very goocl Coast Hwy. NB. SEAMSTRESS, cushions Equal Opp Emplyr mtr Blvd. C.M. 642·7910 wrought iron bar k art Mil«l..eous 8010 pnce. 556-3918 450 NewPort Center Dr Newport Beach. CA Bo ' S •th 2 I h I *-••••••••••••••••••••••• NURSES AIDES & canvas products, some Tow Truck Ori vers ex-Y s chwinn Stringruy WI g ass s e ves "' ~ For Sale: 10 spd Racer {2:! & ORDEAUES exper neces1rn.ry. 4 da~a per'd. Top pay. Apply, 81 cyc ~c. reason able b?t ti c hol de~s ·S7.~. WANTED lbs) Sl80, Skis w/Nevada An Equal Opportunity/ AU.rmauvc Action Employer Male/ Female week.CM.area.631·3083 G&WTowtnrr,JOOOlrvrnc 644-5086_ Highback casual chair TOP CASH DOLLAR bindings like new $110 Needed to give tender " ---<needs recovering).$35. ' d b d. , · loving care to lhe elderly 1---------•I Ave, NB642·L252 Bicycles. New & Used. Call 64.2·0138 PA I D F 0 R Y 0 U R Skis w/Neva a 1" m~:- pa t1ents . Will t r ain •Seaefarin $16K ALL GUARANT E ED. . . JEWELRY, WATCHES, S4S, Skt booLs, SL gi,_ qu alified per so n n el . TooManyTo Llstl!! TR~VELAGEMT RestorL'<i Cr uisers, J::ngl Sol~~ ~alnut rolltop desk. ART OBJECTS, GOLD, N~rd.ica yellows $60 ~rn Whtie you learn. All E I p II F Ex per ~ only for tcm· Vi scoun t l 0 . s µ d . 48 S·roll, bca~t. orig. S l L VER SER VI CE. Richhe ski ~ls, sz 10, :.h1fts ova1l. Apply 1445 ~~~~~::Ser!YA~enc~cs ~~ary '"Jan. Pos.s1ble Clearance sa le, j:!1a nt t'Ond.Sl20l2.640·ll20A FINE FURN. & AN· $30, both .l1 ko ne w Supenor.N.B 402t&rch,Stel04 tlunepos. 7s.i iss5. saving:.. Oceanrron L Brown Jordan 40xli0 oval TIQVES.~2200 Acousllc Guitar S2S. CU DE.LIVERY MEN lor ear ly AM LA Times home HOUSEClUMIMG d eliver)' r l>Ute, must 1':.irt or full lime h11vc t'cono e:1r, adults fi73 Hl5H ---Newport Beach 833-8190 Bacycles, Balboa 675 .. 6510 table & r. ch;ur~. Orig. ,, Radio $30. Ph: 673·5641 NURSESAIDE.S Callfor Appt/Est.ab '65 TYPIST/R~PT Dan Gurncy MX 20'T"bike, price $1875. h t $500. 20 B~ke St4• Stereo c. _e_ves_. _____ _ only, 21 a hrs day, no col· - ------ lectmg. Westminster, I IOUS E COUNS ELORS 11.B. area. 638~12G Marrit•d cpl <i nly . no & ORDERLIES Attr~ct1vc, e rflc1ent r e-$60. Schwinn Pme, red, takes' 640-8208 ___ ~]~~!e~~f~~:1~~~ Klng St OAK Waterbed. XJot benefits. includ. cept.ionillt w/f'iOn~ ofhce $35.673·1933 $25 & $95, Ms.61142 aft Compl w/hlr, lin e r-., t• h 1 I d r c n . J 1 v e i n . Sup<'rv1se 6 teenaj.(c j!1rls. 1-;xpe ns cs + salary. i.1ck pay. Bayview Conv. SECRETARY exper. & ~ood personall· Excellent Gift!!! 6pm pedestal. sheeta & pad 20.sS Thunn, CM 542.3505 For Construction Co. ly to greet VISttors & han Schwinn lOspecd. Ridden Sh fl. long r us t o m -As 1s $150. Chris 837·2200 Nea r Brookhurs t & dle bw.y phones.Min.60 once.Sells ncwfor$165, padded portable bar wilh P1nballFoosbal1Vldeos dysor631·2197eves Deliveryman, L.A. T imes Home deltvery, Newport Beach, 3:30 /\M lo 6 :0<J AM. $450per mo. 646·1413 or673-2515 Oak Tree llomes S..10-4754 HURSES AIDES 3Sh1ft.or; avail. LICLVN F/T. 3-11 :30 s hift. Apply 642·8044 as k for Mrs lsuacson, P a r k Lido c.:onv. llosp, 40IJ Flagsh ip Adams, 11.B. Call btwn 9 WPM. $550-S650 per mo. w1ll scll $l25.628·9348 multiplex tuner, 8 track New &U5ed,guar.del. . AM &s PM. 962·6683 556-8944 Girl's Schwinn Slingrey, & turntuble-.all arc built· $350. &up. 840-2341 2 Sets of sklS ~/boots. 1 d d $36 ins .plus two custom Set Hawkeye ice skates. DELIVERY --... - llouw kcepcr ll\e in Ex· pcr'tl. Some Eni.tl•i.h. Soc. Sec urd nee. Hcfi; l'ilN'kc.'<I. 552·!J708. SECRETARIES & TYPISTS · Mat:::.~~s~Sadull g con '54i75.12 =:~k~~:ar stools. ~~~~~~\~~·;rn:~: z.:.212.::2899 __ . __ resident care ctr. Gd. Schwinn 3 whl $ll5. Man's --Cost over $600 ea. Will WGRt': " 8011 Mes!>engt-r/Co11ncr 5 day wk. P/l1ml• J nt or pm. K11o w Uri.: Cv 835-3149 bl wn 11,l(i 10/\ :'II benefits. 631·355S Huffy :l spd $40. Both xlnt Geroge Sale 8055 • ...!._ake l2SO ea. CaH 846""8692 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAITRESS condS48·3t~ -••••••••••••••••••••••• F\Jrcoal. French rabbit, WANTED· HOUSEKEEPlRS Nurs1nK aide & i.omc :;: r~cu~art & get the Wanted ex per Full & Boy's Schwmn Stin~ray PUILIC AUCTIOH $200/bes t offer. SHOTGUN. De li verymen rnr L A 'o l·xper . noc Xlnt h.'1ekp'dord1i.abled fem. as:1gnmo:nts e:1~r~~~ µart l11~e. Appiy at non <Motocross style!), $30. MANY 1'~~NE !TE~1S0f. 673-0801 642·2073 Hd.NB limci. in N.l! & C.~l l1t.•111'f1L., indud . sick pa) f.xp prcf'd but not re· agency that works ror Carlos Restaurant. 2956 846-9083 ~~~A '6;J ~~~;.L! ~: Perm. p/timt•. SJ~/S-10< nuyv1cw Con v. 2055 ciwr'd. Live 111 or out. you. Bnstol,C.M. _ Boy's lO·spd grn 24" Jr. TIQUES, FINE FURN., prr mo. 548·17·10 Thun1l. C.M "A". 0 •"5 P/T. 898-2233 ... 0 FEES 0 Reing, rrucrowave, Quad Mldicd system, storage unit, lns.,._nts 8013 misc. 631·1328 or tS31·1374 ••••••••••••••••••••••. ""''""""' "" Warehouse Man~r Schw~nn Varsity. Like blC. PH NE FOR IN· OF-"IT,\l,ASSIST.\NT 1, "-"·-ll/T---.. -.. -Call Today' Shi ppi·nn, recei·vi'n" •·In· new.673·7677,675·4837 __ FO. & BROCHU R E . ....._ ________ GlbsonacousticJ-4S,2yra R ()A ehgihlt', ortho of llCJUSI-:KEEl'ER art/ru 1mc. t.._..c or· ., ,. .,. ,. hcc. chairside exp. prl'I Wo man. m•llure. ex per ders & make deli veries. ~Q~ office • vent.ory control foc retail l\toto Cr~s Bike, rein· 645-2200 FANTASTIC old w/hard case. Like l'cwport Bca(•h to do aJI household work, Avg $5-$7 per hr. Must 0 OVe 1 d jewelry operation . .Mu&l forced frame, new ores Used lapidary equipment, CHRI.STMAS PRESENT new. $275. Call Andy G-10·01:!1 :J days wk, rPfcrences. ha ve reliable c a r & r Oa haveexper. 556-0135 &painl.$35. 962.6368 nr nu 10" grinder, ul-Beautiful band painted 1-6'5-857--6------ ----"(In t pa y . R ep ly t o phone. We tr ain. Call The 557 "O'I WAREHOUSE ,. __ & trason ic tumbler in ceramic poodle, gray. Offkefvnffwelr Dml'AL ASSl~T.r:xpcr C1ass1fied Ad'*l02,Daily Full e r Brus h Co. -~ cart.on.27"vibraJap,12" Only$35 &...z--6 1085 nC"l'. 1''lt1me. X·ray cert Pilot, PO Box 1560, Costa 754 6471. 3723 BirTh St. NB ~o s3.5o per hr. EqulptMnt 8030 bull whl sander , casling ·846-8579 •• ::?:;.:::; ••••••••••• Cill~S-0453. ::1es11.~.92626 •---,-A-R_T_T_l_M_E---I·--------· ••••••••••••••••••••••• u nit, 4 0 lb ba r r e l Oak plan files, 2 drawer DEtn'AL RECEPT llouHkeeper wante d SUNDAY ONLY Secretary-Top person to WB.DEA ld~l lbler,hlnm saw,hglem -Fe-nd-.-Ba-nd-.. -M-aa-t.-Le-a-d fireproof files sales. Ex L' , I .• 1 L kl 'I operate onc·nirl market· MacGreg-':.YachtCorp. r1 • sp ere mac ne, ecutive oak desk, e x 1:.Xp.111;1pp.hc \euu111 g, WICC w ee y. gen Driverto dropbundles of . rr L' eJI "" t bl b I gtr. a mp & cab. 12" & 'I t d 1 I & 1 d r ing o ice . .o:.xc ent typ. 1'"'1 Placentia, CM misc um er arre s. ecuUve desk & credenza ins. ,, us enJOY l'a m i.: l' l.'arung aun ry or D"ily Pilot to carri·ers. k . 11 "" t t spkrs reverb wow wow u 1 n g s 1 s & ( i r m an 1quc sonora w a er • • · Wood & metal tbls, child~ w/public. S al o pen family or :i. Newport ~'lust ha\•e V"'n or Jargc 't oft n pd1 oct box&cords 5225 j n~ h 1 ·• .. pe rsona l! y required. s ner, sz range. ice ..... ·......,.;. · desks. Hot/cold wate1 ~.I !J..l3l. °"Jc areJ ~a ary open. station wa0 on + 0 ood h Lh I N ......-~ ----------Frank C7!4IS93.2521 ,. .. i-:iccelle nt pote ntial. c esb, o er tcms o cooler w/refng, new i DISHWASHER driving r ecord. Call Salary $900 +. o.c. AntiqitH 8005 culls on Sat. Please . LYNDE MIG WELDER drawer files $42.99. 4 Wt..'<l thni Stit. P.M shill. llol1.,.,ckcep<'r, mulur~. 7.3 ~12·4321 , ask for Har ry Airport are a. 833-8850 for ••••••••••••••••••••••• $279.81 Tyler. 361 Ralcam Pl, d r a wer fi les $69.99 Mes11 'ienle-€0fW. Hosv i.luft m i.:ucst homl.'. CM. secteyorDonWilliams appt. PUWCAUCTION •CH RJSTMA.<i • CM,646·1455 UKEN~:9621 $300.; Judge's Hi·back chr!> t>hlCt·n~St.c:t__ ~-6716 ,artTineO...y SEC.RET ... RY MANY ITEMSOFFIN1'! •SPECIAL• The Stutz Bearcal Sun electric t ypewriter !>. •t be I -·• "' ESTATu J ""WELltY 1.8lens. God "RA". 7 Jewe l MINK STOL E , wor th c a lc ulator s & cop) Dooul Shop, :-.1ght shu t. Jmmt.'<llatl' opcn111gs rull •• u11l now emp oy ... "U Office of c on tinuin j! "' ... · lmmechate Delivery .;., · · $400, Will sell for $300. m a c h ines . C. !:: . 2545 Years. Jo'ull-l1me. or p1t1m£>. No ex per. nee. and free to work in my l>ducation in Saddlebuck ART OliJ ECTS. AN· wrulh:im Sd3 Y clock. l 9" Beaut. cond. 750-3685 Who I e s a I e 0ff1 c" 135 ~.,;.17th St, CM AgC'S 17 thru 28. 5,!0·4448. small apphan,·e business College, Mission Viejo. TlQUES. FTNE FUltN .. Qq port cir TV. 5 pc din rm Furniture 2044 Pla cen -UKArl:K-,-l\larin~Corp. ____ or air treatment equip· Typing &sh req'd.Exa m ETC. PHONE F OR IN· i seL.Love scat.Hine.7pc Lady's3spdbicyc)e,near taa, C.M. 631•2771 o r WORl(Ro ment. Mon·1"ri 6 to 10 wlll be a dministered. FO. & BROCH URE. • fire screen set. Clarinet. new $70. 12" 8 /W TV, 631·2570 N....,-OM Insura nce P roper ty & PM. Or Mon· Thur 6to 10 Mon lhru Thurs l :JOpm &.l.5-2200 ,.,e's 642-6135 near ncw$50. New Convt ....;,,;,------------~ exper'd , self start· Cu!iualty Secretary. Ex· PM + Sat 9:30 AM to 2:30 to lOpm 1''ri Sam 5pm A"~ An 1 ho bo dshwshr. cost $340. Sac ,Its 8087 1n1 employee full or per nee. Xlnt henes. PM. 5280 ""r mo. salary · · · \ quc P nes, toys, t-~Cl\ uu ont\A ••••••••••••••••••••••• P/•·me Apply J"""Wh1t L"--·' s J I .--Call betwn 8 & s. 831-9700 MUSIC BOXES u-. •-·ulato-•-many .....,.,. _...,.,.,. . ... . . .,...., . .......... . ames nsurance or profit sharmg pro· 302 4741!. ....., ....., ... "' Finches & C f !i.e~l~~,!l.• . .1}7.<;M or cull likr, Lag Heh. Call gram, whichever you ext . ----CICKELODEOHS, 17thSt.,CM more collec.'tible Items. WOODEN ROCKING . ananes. or """"--'"-"------1 Maurin c Br ad l ey ' Prefer . No ex P . SECRET ... RY PHO ... OGR ... PH S . 17141642--1012 Fri 2·5, Sat 9·1. 715 Vic· HORSES for cr,ndren's sa le, friendly ~n ee . 9 087 9 ' , "' "" "' t.ona C M 642-SM9 Ch . S2 Ph Avery also. 548·5436. DRIVt:llS 4 4· l or 54 ·3058, n e c es s a r Y . S om e Typist, Recept. A/Par a· . Wort's lcrcJHt sefec-Cots 8035 , . . 642~~~fas. .so. . . If your driving record iii EOE. m a n a g e m ent o P . ble Combo. Good typing ti on. Also gifts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~e. Cum. lamps, misc. Rabbit hutch, lgc. auto good, and you want 3 J :uutonal. Pr r. Foll ~~~i:e!~r~~r~~~~ & gen'I ofc skills r eq 'd. f\lnllt•re, antiques. Reg. Siamese kittens ~ti·a~~andpiper KINGSIZE Posturpedic wa~!ri,~~·\~:~~ clean ful l lim e Job t1ml.'. Exp'd adults onl~. 979·3861. Engineering ofc in Santa American lnterna· (Seal Point! Sl7S. . . . l bed&frame. . . W/l!ood pay, call 557·14 14 . S'aiit'iiXha & C'<>Sla m sa,•---------Ano w/full benefits . Call tional· 1802 Ketterfn • --776·0987 Horses 8060 646·3319 PIC9IOI & OrgaM 8090 DRIVERS p/t1 m c de. ~ngs.9'79·3923 ,ASTRY CHEF JimH.ayes,2131437-6401. lr•in·•· 754.1711: DoCj5 8040 ••••••••••••••••••••.••• For Sale: Wood & glass •••••••••nd•••••••••.••••• li t't!ry Male or Fe m J -...... ITORl ... L I Man operation. Skilled Secretary ror Npt Bch "'---W.....11 Sat •••••••••••••••••••••••Andal usian (Spanish retail store count.er & New Bra Name Pianos Must ·ba"e gd dflvmg "'"" ,~~ decorator.Apply.Victor marketin g r esearc h _,...... • ._. • Boxe r pu p s , i\K C Mare)Purewh1te,3yrs globe type lightfixtures. 10%overcost. rec. 19 yrs .SC.older. 52.75 1 Pt t.une. l\lon-r n . _ 3 Hrs Hdgo· 1nn, 361 Cliff Dr, firm. Growth oppor. Xlnl Registered. Cham~ion ol d . Gent I e. S 500. The Top Drawer, .&alboa BeachMus~c Center hr. A~t ·& 'rM routc:i ~r day. San Clom . ar~a. Laguna . Beach 3.5 Mon· skiUS req'd. 751-0266 sired. $50. ~7_0688 673-0719. Island, Call 833•3622 or 17404 Beach olvd, H.B. open.5-iS..(»70 llr.Calls.io.1s12. _ .. _~_;. _______ ·--------STEW ... •TROTH 644-8018. 847-8536 ""' DOGTRAINING New Crosby Prix Des Na·---------• ,,_....,,.. .... .....,_......,_...__.JANITORI AL, laun · PrintingCollater,p/time. SECRETARY AHTl~ES Yoo rPlaeeor Mlne tiomjUmpsadd~/fit• Aka 1 S t e r e o Ta p e 'nlomas transist.or organ, ExeeSccy's to$14K dromat cleanup, retired Now accepting applica-OrderCoordlnator . •AMERICAN OAK• JohnMa.rtin 548•0059 tings & case. $300 firm. Recorder & Ovation model AL=:!,-C<l cond 1" Accounllng Clerks 5750 couple p r ef. Ft V I~-. t1ons for Mon & Tues Regional sales ofc for The largest most com· 8<12-5622. or 827·4580 ask Gwlar. t lon . As k ing $400. 1"/C Bookkeepers' to$15K Westm. area. 847·:$058 night shins. Apply 9am · tiUs world wide manuf. prehensivo inventory of TINY TOY white Poodles 1-;;fo;;;r;;;P!jjap;l~;;;;;;;;;;jp;;;;~;;;;;;;;C;al;ltii67j9;;3·;;;;j~iii56iWw~l.;;645-;;27;;;4;S;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;-DeS Engr/Deg to $18K LEGAL SECY 4pm. Pennysaver, 1660 has an opening for 8 American Oak Antiques for Christmas, male & I• Irvine Personnel Agency Sm business llligalion Placentia Costa Mesa. sales secy/coordinator. in Colir. We buy direct & fern. 673-0719 or75l·SS88 488E17th Costa Mesa firm in Npt Cntr seeks Rr ... a r.:'.T ... TE Pos. req's accurate typ-pass Lhe savings on to I.has A Id Su1le 23t 6-'2·1-170 cxper. legal secy. Must l:Aao~ "' ing & good telephone you. Also, Antique h.at pso. 1""d-yrs 0 ............ _ ~~~~~~~~~ Professiona l, licensed communication skills . Reproductions are avail. w '· e w/r e s pots . -" -ha vc x I n l II k i 11 s. salespeople wanted to Exper. pref'd, but we at the very lowest prices. pedigreed, all shots & Food Service Asst Shorthand rcq. Submit complete ofri ce sta ff. Located at . spayed. Lovable. quiet & Substitute rhume in confidence lo Computerized listings, ;~~1s:!~1Go~~e Sr; r h~ 750 E. DYER RD. S.A. gd wt children. Outdoor ... -~·•-:::."'!:JI On.cail Ba i 2 2, h Ad 1!987. Dall y Pilot, i:enerous commissions. benefits. For appt. call CAlThe NewportFrwy) dog .. Nds yard. Pay ·~ •~•-·,...._ 5 5 · • 3 rs P.O. Box 1560, Costa Advance training. Call 751.a922 spaytng fee & shol'I, $50. per day. $3.l.O per hr: ".'P· Mesa, CA, 92626 for private interview. 493-4.so39am·Spm Ope Su Wed lO. 1 llness Corces s a I e . ply lo Irvine Unified -64,..5062 AMF, INC. n n· 6 ;,52.9247 School Dis.lrict, 2941 LOANPROCESSOR ~ Potter&BrumfieldDiv &Thurs·SallO-S ---------1 Alton J\ve, lrvme. (714 ) 1''11A-VA-Conv. e xper . Century 21 Crocker 26181Avenida ~~~~~~~~~jDachsbund puppy, AKC. 556--4900. req'd. Contact Cyndie 621 W. l,thSt .. CM Aeropuerto male. IC you want lhc Equal Oppor .Employer LaNier, (7l4) 835·0588, San Juan Capistrano WHOLESALE very bes t . 5S7·8469. Mason McDuffie Co. cal EBtate Sales People Equal Oppor Employer SCS.2884 Friday.Person, top sal for wanted. Up to 90/10% T011iET~DE top person w/top skills. 1 MAIMTEHAMCE MA..a comm. split. Nwpt Bch Sundowa ~Ltd. Algao M/F as Is, needs Girl ofc. Coll 213/592·2469 Mature, full l ame, pvt 631-0000 Secy/Gen. Offlc• I 5292 loha CMc• grooming, $100 ea. Show fOI' appt. t'lub. Benefit.a. Call Wed· 1----------Busy, last growing co. H.I. C7 I 4) 893-7509 or pet. 646-3540 Julie Gardener ncoded for apt Sun67J.351.5 w!~.S=~ront · nea~ OC Air port h aa Christmas Culies ! Toy .complex in Costa Mesa. MANAGEMENT. office appearance. Boat-o~rung for mature, am-OAK HOOSIER. Drafting Poodle puppies. 5 wks {218)865-3851 PEOPLE PERSON ing background helpful. b1t1ou~ gener al office Table, Pine Hoosler, old, 3 ma les. 1 f em ----... ----i Exec. needs p/time as· Send r esume to 2122 ~~:l •:.;epe;~::s~f~t P a rquet. top table. (aprlcot,allver ).963-5961 GENERAL LABOR EIS soc. ln wholeule supply. Newport Blvd. N.B. 92663 telephone voice, good e4v7347 If you lcnow Labs, J have f' u 11 Y ca P 1 t a Ii zed. 673-8511 : typlst.. Ute bkkpog. Call Aflllll..c.es 80 Io an extremely intelUgent &l2-1634. RECEPTIONIST Jackie, 957·1071. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ooe, pedigree, l ine blood MANICURISTS Needed Immedlalely F/Ume for biay salon. Long & short term as· R' h d o II signmenls . Holiday & ic ar ue ette, 200 Busy conv. hosp. Front SEC'Y FRGHT DAMAG E D line. registered, female , 1 HorPOlNT SALE. 3308 7 mos., black Lab. Call f_:~Su~~1l!1~~. ~~ Y' Our company is seelclng W. Warner nr Harbor, Thelma 546-4366 a n entbuataallc sec'y SantaAna.979-29Zl. fnetoY• 1045 REC8'110MIST w/good cypine & dicta-cacru PAID •••••••••••••••••••••• I ed. F / I a. • lion skills to aid an ex· na>.n v a c a tl o n p a y . 1-N_cwport_,__Ctr __ Dr_, N_B __ Hospitalizatio n plan MAroRE Woman to sit available. St.art, Today! w/aemi·invalid, hrs flex· mJn t. me vpemng pandinll secretari'al For Wsbr/l>ryn/Refi:lg Female Dalamation, ~.iks~pt:;~:~~= service to the C.M. area. wontniornott57-8133 s payed, 11 mo., loves VOLT •t~•*\ltll\ll o ·u 1• .. •t •'• 3141 ea .... Drl•• 546-4741 CAcroaFrom Orange Co. Airport> .Equal Oppor Employer ible. Cd M . 640-77'5, ~ Musl be de--ndable •~ a•-.--------_peo_pl_e_968-8253 _____ _ ot her ofc duties. Call ..-• •• M EDlC AL R ECPT . Irvine Savings, 7U.6456. self·stuter. Pay com-Rec 0 n d 1ti 0 n e d FREE: Femalebl•cltklt· EOE. mensurate w/slrtlls . Re,_,, l b ten.13wbold. Salary ope n . fringe1---------. 546-2982 . ..,gera en, Wa5 era 646-12'73 bcneflts,Spanlshhelpful. ReslaunnthelpforJack· & drye re. Freight ---------• Bristol Park Med. ln·The-Box. Immediate Service Sta. Attendant. damaged.&Mode1Hoiu1> CUTllCmEMS Group, 722 Baker, CM. openings on all shifts al 3 exper'd. Full or p/lhn~ retuma. Guar/del. Alao 964-1262 u-ic ... L ... irsT Cella ~lesa stores Ple11e Apply Arco Station. 11th new apPllaoce:s •t cost + ---------• -"' ,..., • applytnperson: "li'vine,C.M. 10,;,. DUNLAP'S 10960 Pups for Chhslmas! Sm. ---------t Front clc. 25 Hrs a wk. 385E, 17t~St, Service Station Atten-Tillbert (at. Euclid) FV. Germ. Shep/Sett~ ml•. OENERALOFFICE &xper . nee. Contat t l.20$8akerSt . d t 'd D " 9G<r1210polda)'ll. 4males,2fem.6'#9733 Lit.e t,yping •sales. Full Judy, 979-7612· 2235Harbor Blvd. · ~°.: ~if8£ p/llm:.YAP· 2 cwpbaned 41n wk old «l*l Ume. 557--082S MESSIMGH/ · pty1ShellStation,11th ft l2 cu ft Rotpotnt, Hanesl p U>p 1. F . mo l b u •••a\1.0MCI OfflCIASST. 'RETAIL U'Wle,NB. aold,&moolcl, C-ock.,oo. tatbeum.oot.b J. Rerbert P/Ume. Hra fiexlble. 8ervlc!e Sta. Nl&)lt Attend $12:J. MN131 \allktr.,._ HlJ.lJe,wetJ.-. Call~. Cl.nlS 2 Ors nit• a wk. AJ>~7. uber/dryu., .. ~ .. ae,,, Smal Mack• white fem. JnSo.CoutPtau UI ·Sbell.17\b•li'vioe,~B xlnt c:ond. "°O/botb. PQPPY. pWt Poodle It? needa a~ penoo to .. .i Br1Q1 •..strat• lat Ooodhome.M2-4615 "°"" ln Uitt ofc. Vari~ty MOLD MAIER UTOTIM 131rv."'9HelP Meded Im-eoa. lawn mqwtr "°· of dudes. BJcw, help{UJ, =· ._ ..... 1d prec'-lon C11tt q'mu M..ats med. fttll or p/t. Apt>l1. Days M2·S027, after e 1-fil=• coc:k•PQO. ~ rrs, but wtll trab> .. Cati Betay, ..,_, • .,... ii c u Uel w. aotecl 990 ~ Cit. H•1. Nwpt &3813 , ,M>-500J .a,., a..im. 1ln e ,·• mutt# ca._Ylt)' lit :l•P,.. ..._..Sb' .. -Belt. • PM. Jan6)'! • _______ _. or tram.er -in-.anc1-~ u... WANTED : Apt ••• , ........ ,_.. ______ _ •mALOfflCI jectioo mold machines. Notxps.'"'ct. WetraJn SHr/UCllVIM6 ...rttierator, 11•• wide, Old EoJl.lab Sheeepdog, Ute t1pl11 " bkkO'S. Small abop. Good work-tboae ~~Applicant.a APDlY lo PertCIO. CP~. rtiflt b.lnp, left llandle. i::bnicl~yn. very Oall 815-teH fe>r in· l~conda.l>ayaon1y. ~~~ ...... ,defftr¥U'd,8antaAna M\aat ~ cl4'&D and tn ~-~ ~v~·. N•,, .~ P'lc>or STACOIWITCH IMC lU Oil~ A voe, CJ&. 7·U STORE, !'\all or Part M~ condlAT~lony 1' ~~!?i· •--F-emal..___e_lril_h_5e_Utt __ ""'"" ... __ , ; 113DBakff~\a)feaa 1*N.l'~floc::atHwt nme Clerk, APP\1 In E#&I" ~ --1,yearold o .. ~. ••l nt.enance. 54f.J041 .......... adl Pft'IOD • ..,., Crown Saertfil'lll lku.ft.. Qpriaht 545-a047 orctener. Herd WOl'ltet' ~~=:rday We .. aneq~.al ~•lit)' ftkwy. Laa. r~. 4 mo old. $115. ,...... 8010 f01t -·1 W'ork. Encllsb lfA.FrichJt !3Pln ~t1Df16YW pt. Kenmore washer/dryer, .... ••••••••••••••••••• )Ont ~6efttl. Equ-1 Oppor E•:pl01er Yoo don't Meet a . to' t mo old. UOO/boUt. sroaEWJO£SALE A'!lL"' P•r•oo ,..i~~~~~~~~f~'tdh)p tMbaUl Otta '"dra;r t•t" ..J:"' 10ll 91).S141afl6PIC Nft•uted furn, •ppt•a. S• llllper Inn• Tf!'ol.t'1· 11*.W.a~..,Deily plue • .s lo u.. DilllJ 8Ytof4.Prllidalrerefrtc. mllc. Wlllon'1 Bar1ata Oob..%101 E. Coutn'W'J, LMnp fMtwith DailT >not Cla11Ultd Ad. ~WmitMll Call now .. CGrid. 11.1 ea.ft.. &oft Noak. 5'Ut 81' W. ltlh, OOI'. PllotWaatAda. PbcinelC2-!671. -'4W171. fnt.Sl.00.-..TK Ot.Ma>1930•~ i' I I We are pleased to announce that t his n ewspaper will run th e HOLIDAY ON ICE "Find Your Name Contest" in the classified s ection beginning December 16 thru December 26. Readers whose na mes are lis ted. <some where in the classified ads> will receive, absolutely free. two r es erve d se a t tickets to HOLIDAY ON ICE opening at Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave .. Anaheim Calif. December 27th and running through Ja,nuary lst, 1978. '°'You may find your na me hidden anywhere in the classified s~ction preceded by two stars (* • > making you e ligible to receive a pair or tickets for a night at HOLIDAY ON ICE ;rs guest o( the Daily Pilot. I ~\ ·-....... .. _C_J_e_OM._v_P_1L_o_r_..,.... ___ ~ ... ~::.:.:.·~0eoe.:::;;.:.;mbel:::;;.· ::22.::..:.::"':.:.:n 4 ~ Driv" '9550 Mttot. haport.c:f A.tot, '"'porW A.tot. Uud A.tOs. t111porW ...._. UMd ...... , ..•••••.......•..•...........•.........•••••••............................................•.....••..•........•......•......••••....••••... ......... ~ .. !~ ~!.~~ ..... !?.~~ ·~~~:-' t 150 ~~-a bw .. ~•oter, IMW 9712 Flat 9725 0,.. 9746 Vcho t77Z a.w.w 9920 ~ ~AV wu1C, ~or f. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• &ldwln t:ll'c'tro Piano. FOISAL.ln! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5til-28218. lt76flATXl/9 '70 Ort:L. Kad~u Wan 1977VOlVO • :11.Jnt 1.vnd S8:.o Wkd.i&)i. '77 Sea Ray 24 rt 16 Yamaha TY 175, xlnl Tl"'Cb 9560 With stereo cassette & AM/FM at@rt!O, gd cond. 26~Lw•A"'"" ~ attVELl.E. tfd road. b40 SIMO t:\e6 & wkndl! W " d th 70 d ••001 ( Al o nly 19 000 11 lo ml $800 644-5385 -A~" rlS. P/8, gd, \.hnaoul. 640-6lS2 t!e-.. cn l!r w1 l'On •" o r . so ••••••••••••••••••••••• • m cs · · F\lllyequlpped lncludln& $500 firm 751 4203 aft l'lowil Must11l1ll: bcluicht Y:11mlh&~Endutoub '63 GMC :i.-. ton ,.spd ·&•sr AHOADWAY (887PS~1D).DLEl•CI( '72Rallye4spci.AM/FM, sttteo cassette 4' mag 6PM . • SACRIFICE Shafer nt'W boul. Pn Pl>. (;all S3'15lofr<lll'J·2393 hydrallc llfl0 ale $995° · A A radials, new ball, brks. wbcels. (0038). Cao -.---------Jury.tl . .. • . u'"" AN• v·• • ~ , eu0r1 _, Ex •• t console piano F.x<-ell1·nl 54 .._.151 "77 XT 5000 Yamaha, GOO ~ 835.3171 ~•IM ORTS muff. 26 29 reg gas lease. m., .. a. ce en r::~s~er~3~~~·:~~~:~ or 546--1200 ~· llku nu, mu.st sJ ~r um Ford Pickup for sale. THt UlflMAlf OJllVl"O MACHINE 83 I ·2040 49S.49 49 $1195. (!i2AKP$) 673·5'110, SADDLUACI ~~ltloa. •take oner. a1ttt6PM ~~11 51200 or ofr. G o~d con d . Re b It •USED IMW's* S46-67?.8 VAWY IMPORTS l S65-503S. • eng1oe.$1SOO. firm.Call 'nSJOi~pd286.SEU FIA'T 124 Ponce.. 9750 lll·l04049S-494t Cilryll• 9925 ANTIQUE ORGAN Good cond!Uoo SEA RAY 'S '76 lfl) :e.5<l t:nduro, 1500 Mon-Fra 9 to5, 751 ·3840 '77 320ia S1R177RSK SPIDY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · n h 1 t CO..VERTllLES 1965 PORSCHE AMtos. Ut9Cf ·n Cordova, fully equlp. All 1971Modtf1 m1 , I e new, e me • '68Ford ~Tonw/'74 eog '7G20024spdS/R40H'1>r m ToChooscFrom 356C0• .. 1 .:,:~:~··•••••••••••••••• 1000ml'1. SSOO 499·~1 & trans $950 '77 320i 41P oi3n·n• '74, '75, '76 & '77 YT" --9910 Call 64.S-31S3 18'-30' Sacrifice '75 ll onda '759.j534 '70S30iAS/lt712PQM Allwithlowm1len~e&1n In excellent condit ion ••••••••••••••••••••••·--------- $400/ofr ~6·0291 TUNING SCHOOL hns bargain price uprighl.., Some rcf1ni'lh1•d. 1111 g uaran teed 2 y r ~. XR 75 I t d $275 CJ01.ci On S..ftdav. 11 h with factory c hrome , S '71 Newport. Fu 11y HARRISON'S · ' x n con · '75 Ford 4x4, auto. Ranger --~-exc<:: ent s owroom con-wheels. (0G2·t). MUST ~Buick C/ • aood conda· equipped, i\M /FM. Very SEA RAY 3 Rall TraLler $250. Plus XLT. xtra tank. C1b1e ORANGE COUNTY'S d1tion. (81973), SEE!!! t1on. clean, runs good, cleo.n. f>45.3946, 008-~19 tl73·UI08 xtras.640-0048 ll&hts. brush guard. OLDEST l'ric.dtoSElU SADDLHAa< xlntbody.$995.963-0441 2327 So. Mam. S.i\. '73 360MX frame up re· SS,600. 63Hl813 &. v•LLEY IMP TS '13 E t t St W Con-.... 9'l2 PIA 54().6555 ~-" k A OR s a e a. gn, ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO SALE 3101 <;oaslltwy. N.B. (vnu'g., new sproc elS, 'TT Courier long bed. 7000 8 3 1·2040 495-4949 stereo/ tape, all pwr ·1~ Cor l II d THIS WEEK OMLY! 631-2547 lenders, etc 548·1088 mi. Make offer. 963-8091 eqpt. $1800. 645-5089 ., ve le. s '!er / r e • UPRIGHTS FHOM $495 26 f1 . Thunderbird '74 YAMAJlA RD350B, after5:oo. Sales-Servlce·Leaslng Spyder 8SO 1970, red con· ·~!~o~~~g';~~e a~'!:c~'. '76 Century. Indy soo i1m.•~mr~17~~~::~i 6' SQ GRAND $950 show rm cond. 1600 mi. ,74 Couner w/shell. Xlnl must sell $4800"'/Bst ofr. replica, all pwr, AM/FM wkdays STEINWAY,/\ 1$1495 f ormula (offshore>. 351 Mu sl sec t o apprec. shape, l"UUy eqwpped. R~Cc:rver,lnc. vert. New t op. Xlnt '""-1713 stereo 8-trk. cruise coo·D°*Jt----=------,-9-l-S Paul., Pi-s~ V8's, all nav1,,at1onal $7'"''/ofr D"n ,,,., uu:n. Rolls oyce u~1w shape. $925. 675-7788 .,...,.. ·-· S3 ""'5 SS2 9708 -·-rr-gear & ground" tackle. oAJ • " "'""""""" fl48.8606 " uvo. ·""' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 728 W.l9thCMS48-727'.! Sleeps four. Under 501977Suzuk1 100 cc, must ,77 G"'*C PU •L Ton N 154rtOBeJamhbor;.!'n Honda 972 7 '5.5CONTINENTll ALRcblt Codlllac 99tS •7c: Colt 2 dr , 4-spd, ell ,., n ewpo ac .,..,,..644-1 ••••••••••••••• • • • •• • • • eng partia y restored " ., GULIRANSEN hours used since new. 6 :. .Xlntt-on~. shrtbed, low ~ales & ex· ·· · ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/Ff.{ stereo c:as11. SPINET ORGAM wheel trailer included· 759-9346 tras. Call S46·M22. "CLASSIC " Brand Hew •77 $.1.ISOtofr. Wkdy754-0422 r a d l a Is. 301 m I. 1\vo manual horseshoe ~~ :.~::e::~~~oo~~: ·w KAW 500. New K·81, & VClftl 9570 h~7u0pf.!1 :;,e!3.0 ~~n~ HONDA Cars ·1;a~'Jp;;:t ~~ks.SC~~~: s · (OS5NKV)$2l00..6'7S· 5710 · c•onsolc w /built 1n 54Q.B21l. ball. cl n &. ~lO<'k. S475. ••••••••••••••••••••••• roof. factory air c·ond.. MAMY (795TMJ ) Honzon Leas-'68 RT Charge r . 440 rhythm bol< & separate -bi3·57IO;S..16-ti728. 1976 Dodge Bubble Top Bluupunkl i\M /FM T Choos Ft-a mg75!!-1252 magnum. Loadod. Runs Leshe bpeaker cabinet. 28 ft. Unimte Sporlfisher. ------d-v r 11 d ster·~ elect · · .• 0 • om. good. $300/or oh'. Beauuful sound $795 l OWTier Ill mml cond1 -llOndd XL12S. mint l'On . an, u y converte . ...v, nl' winuows, u11..11vERSITY 968-:.xll ti46,2S62 · · tton&lo;ded! Custom m· $490. TraLler, 3 bike $225. many l<tras, must see light alloy wheels & " '70 Porsche 914, like new. • •--------- -tenor, pilot , i\.1> F, _!133-81~ $9,875.552-5849 Nachlblaubluew/tantn· ~..,bile many xtra$, AM /t'M OrancJeC.......,'s Ford French Provincia l VHF I t tcnor.lnexccllenlcondi· Honda Ccrs • GMC cass, must sell (2 13) _ .. , Wurlitzer Spinet, dnl · ·· su'! og. ou rig-'75 llu.-.k1c 250 WR. xlnl ·n GMC ~. ton, long wbl I.ton thruout & only 63.000 429-3860 S.•111• Center l'Ond. $950. 840-29S7 gers, AC/DC natural ~as <'<lnd. Very lo mileage. St base, deluxe cab area mlles! $10,999 or best of· Trucks • tf 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------1 refngerat1on & rooking. legal. !H0-0828 afl 6. w/h.tgh seat. 7,000 l\l1les, fer. Pri. ply. Call owner 2850 Harbor Bl vd. Porsche '74, 911 Targa. In· 1976 CADILLAC ~winC]MadliltH 8093 bmuru top w/eoclosure, under warranty $5500 Costa Mesa 540.9640 d1 a Red. Blk trim . ••••••••••••••••••••••• new Chrysler manifolds, •'75 Honda XR75. Lo m1. 831·2278 · ' · atG42-0lJ8. Le ather. lmmac. All lealhScErV.l5~terEeo tape, , . risers & elbows plus ex-T&M pipe. S&W ~hocks '76 BMW 3.0 SI auto, sun· TT Red Honda, 7.600 mi, &W-4510. J.m SINGER. Free arm, tra fuel. Call Dale al ~/bslofr. 644·5874 '73 Ford Van, Camper roof. AM/FM stereo. xlnt $3000. Owner. 64-4·5441 or ---------I en.use control & all the ,1relch st1ch sewing 498-2709. CUSTOM in X1nl. cond. cond. p 1p 640,0975 540.2372 '72 914 49M ml, Weber's. d c I u x e ex l r as. mJchmcs. $1'15. Brand --'76 llonda XR75. Brand nu Must scll 644·5793 . rcblt & w/rccpls., air, 8 (629NR0). new, fully 1:uaranteed. Three clec. Bay boats, 17'. cond S4001bst ofr. Must Mmdet 9738 extras. $4695. 494·21"!0 $9888 SlO moor90d;iyscash I' nds work. Take your scll.548·7364 '74 Ford F300 Van, P /B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• &J Cox/\gency.548-"425 pick.673-8621 P/$, air cond .. auto '77\~ 924. A5'Sume lse. C5)'77 &'76Sevilles .1n)11mc 1973 Kawfiloak1 75cc Mini trans. Loaded, mint cond. Cnp· To Choose From -----loah. Rent/ Trail. L1ko new $24!5. $.1500. per metallic. 686·5280 SportirM)Goods 8094 Chcrtet" 9050 751·3W6 d)"l>,673-158S evs Nabers Cadillac l•••·····--s...~,., ..... &Jff.-..AlilleC...... )....._.. ••••••••• •• •• •• •••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••• • '72 Ford V8. PS. PB. cust 1"1!>1:her Supe rgla s:-.SEE TllE CllRISTMAS '73 Suwk1 TSl lS5, S300 inter, spoke "his. AM· Roll1 Royce 9756 ~nowsk1s. t95 cm w/o LITES. 38' Kelch, $75 MustScll.Coodcond. F M8trk clean 642·2249 2150 H..t»or llvcL ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 SHEL.BY Cobra, orlri. GT 350. Best offer. 495-6727 af\.6PM 1icJ.ni;:s. $75. MK·SOO Wood nit.ely inctds all. 646-4005 Call 842-0861 ' BMW RESALES Coda Mno"64S.S700 #}DEALER IN U.S.A. 170crn w 1 Eckel bind· • -Autos Wmttfll 9590 m ROY ' ·n~·S.15 Ski bools·SIZes loats. Sait 9060 ·n llONDA SL·70, good ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ii'·"· 7, 11\-z, 10; $7 SO, S25, ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond .. many xtras. Make WE WILL IUY ..,3:-, & $-15 Girl's ice WAMTRESULTS? orrer.640-S448.759·t9l9 YOURDATSUM ..,kJlcs Sile SN. skate bag Sell your boat thru Motor Homes, Sale/ PAID FOR OR NOT & ~kute dress-size 10 SOUTHWESTERH Rfttt/Storage 9 t 60 TOP DOLLAR ~1·.tulll.l·all for $SO. Call YACHT SALES ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR TOP CARS ti42-0I~ FUJI/NEWPORT Rent a 1977 Excutlve l>LCK llUNTEllSI Wl' D"'"'LERS Motorhom e o r Mini· ~ molorhome from Herb han• ioo·~ cif Blinds avail (714 l 673-921 l J.'m'<ilandcr. Call any of 1n 33 locallons thruout --------- I '.1hL For info. Call Mr. CORONADO 2 5 lh~e numbers 1>r.1kt'. 5S8·8631i WESCO 898-6 777 Xlnl t'Qnf11liun. many ex 537.7777 Christmas Special tra.., WITll SLIP. Must 828-8188 l\.1~a-.,1k1 Jt•t Skis & Sell' ----- llydrnaart 1Jynafo1h 75l-&l<19 957 03'Jti ;\10TORJIOMl':S r:ans World ~<·c., 900 W. Pn,·atl' l'arly FOR HENT ( oastHwy . NB GJ\.4860 ----- --From$100. wk. 770-06-l4 • -----Columlua dmJlhv $500 8' ----(,olf clubs; 1U matched black fibcr.:lass hull. RENT Fireball 23' Self BARWICK DATSUN ... ' I I I' 11 I ~ q 1 I" t ' . "I" 8 31 -137S 49 3.3375 WE BUY ClEAMCJt.RS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHMOLET ~r~1'!s & 3 woods $35. Sails, oars. trailer, can· cont. Auto/ air. CC. CB. •"ti: 1&9 ~oods $5 ea va.H•ovcr. All "ood cond. stereo, sips 600·2283 2828 llarbor Blvd. !.136-9589 ° COSTA MESA _67_S_-6_1_60 ______ 29 f\ Apollo motorhomc. 546--1200 Store, RH taurmd, DIMGHY Must sec to appreciate! ---------lcr 8095 Call J o hn F ell er al WE PAYTOPDOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8' fiberglass with 2 hp 642-0010or540-8211. FORTOPUSEDCARS (.; u s t o m M a <I c Johnson outboard, both ---------FOREIGN. DOME.STIC SHOWC/\S ES. Sol id usedoncc$350. 528·9348 Motor Home Rental or CLASSICS natural grain wood. Sit loots. Slips/ I 8 1/2 to 32' If your car IS cxl.ra clean down type. 5', I/•" non· Docks 9070 FUiiy self conlamc<l see us first. r.t lare plJte lop. Brass ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reserve now for IAUY IUICK l~~_rdwarc. 4 available. S200 Reward for helpm~ llohdays & weekends. 2925 Harbor 81\'d. :s:!50 each or all for $900 find a shp rental for u 32· Rt::GENC:Y MOTOR Costa .Mesa 979.~)() l'P!>49·3850 Islander. Ileum 11 '1", llOMERENT/\LS TV Rad:o verticlc clcar anre 46'. 925 N. Harbor Blvd, S.A. HiR St~ 8098 Wkdys (714 I 983·9G57, o S.11·2503• • ••••••;•••••••••••••••• Wknds (7141987-9617. Trailft"S, TrGYel 9170 Sc,·eral beautiful color Wanted: shp for 30' s ail ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'IYS, $99 & up. S & S TV. boat. Npt Bch or Dana 1955 Landcruiser. 8x35' 2052 Newport Blvd, 118, Pnt, temp or perm. Mar· Travel trlr. Obi bed. lge CM. 642·5340 ried rpl w/refs. Days k1lch, buth & show~r. 640·3368. cvs/wknds xtr a Bdrm, easy hft Complete Sound System: 752-1786 hitch. $2000 cash. 2191 Pioneer Rec. SX-1010, 100 Harbor Bl. CM, Sp 70 or watts p/chanl RMS: Boal slip wanted, 38' cal1642·2238 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR CLEAN ~ 1BlllS BEAC HBLVO HUNTI NG T0N Bf AC H 84} 7'81 '>>10 0.J I.' Techn1cs direct drive Bertram. No pa rl1crs. ---------1 turntable SL·1500, with Ll\'e, bay club. 642-4736 Auto Servic:e, Perts IMPORT CARS 1'1kc r1ng SX·15/1200E or642·4097 & Accnsorin 9400 ALL MODELS t•artnd~c: two Kenwood ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- 110 wall loud speakers J'.Vf DOCK avail. Hunt· '64·'77 Used Mus tang I. K. 7 7 7 A ; san s u j mgton Harbour, for very Parts. 990 No. Parker, Hl'ver ber a tion amp lge & ~mall boat. Near Orange.Ca0997-2000 RA·500. & Sansui stereo the maUl channel. (714) --=-------- cassette deck SC-737 &-1611 100 VW Parts for s ale, Cw/dolby). Components loah, s--1 & some new. From 1957 to in superb cond. $1300. Sid ,....-9010 ~94 Oak Sl. CM 848-9498 aft. 3pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------I Sacrifice 25" G.E. Color '75TahltiJctboat. AlltoaforSale Console. $275. 24 ·' Cstm4.5501ds. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Magnavox, color console Call 548·1.241afl6 .._.__1 WE HEED CLEAN USB>CARS MOW CAUPAIPY 540-5630 IOll~SO~ & so~ • U NCOLN·MERCURY $275. XJnl cond. 640-0248 -C~ 9520 35 watt Stereo amplifier & T~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2626 HARIOR BLVD. AM/ FM tuner. Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR SOMEONE COSTA MESA _ Christmas present. $110. Motoriud likn 9 140 WHO HAS 846-2487 •••••••••• •• •• • • • • • • • • • WE IUY --------11973 Yamaha Enduro 175 EYERYTHIHG USB>CARS! R' AM/FM Walnut console Very clean . low milage Rare Collectors Items We're t.he new Chevrolel stereo w/turnla ble . $395(8H9S65)897·43l6 53MASH-HEALY dealership in the Irvine SflacnhPcMe $100. 960·5843 UJ< 400 . ~... 2 Coupeor Convert Auto Center. We need a er 6 e new nu, r .. 'U, Ba 'd v·u 675 2095 ,,..., .. used car! spd + xtras. cost $450. ys1 e 1 g • • 1- 1973 2002 4 speed with sunroof. (6505). 1973 2002tii 4 s peed. air cond. & stereo. (173GOE). 1973 BAVARIA 4 speed. ~unroof & air cond. IJSl!J PS). 19731AVARIA Automatic, air cond. & sunroof. <OOJN BZ). 1973 3.0CS 4 !'peed with sunroof. 1261MCG I. HURRY-MOWAT MIRACLE MAZDA WITI-1 TIIE PURCHASE 01''/\.NYNEW 1978 MAZDA GLC You will receive a n AM/FM stereo "FREE" or the cash equivalent Lhru Tuesday. Dec. 27lh. COMTEST SALE ENDS DEC 27th MIRACLE MAZl>A/REMAUL T 2l50Harhor Blvd C M. 1974 BAVARIA Automatic. ulr cond. & ___ 6_4_5-_5_7_0_0 __ onl y 22,000 miles. M«-cednlem 9740 (7411\.J'Q) ••••••••••••••••••••••• 197 4 3.oSa '72 280SE 4.5 Automatic, afr cond. & A classic Mercedes Benz l>UMOOC. (3118KLF>. · which shows superb care 1974 l .OSa & 1s luxury equipped. Automatic, s unroof & (422EllAJ. l e a t b c r i o t e r i o r . MAKE OFFER (4881.NT). 1975 5 30ia 4 s peed w1lh sunroof. (ERIN 0 ) 2 lo ch()().';e from. 831·2040 495-49 49 Capri 97'5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75MB%280 SEDAN. Tobacco brown & 10 immaculate cond1 lion. (22'J~ffW ). Mus t St.'C to a!)prccwh'. Mow Only $9995 '75MBI280C '73. VG, 4·spd. 49M. Xlnt A s upcrlJ car w ilh cond. l Owner. Call /\M/FM stereo casselle, 646-4267 or 646-0554. cruise control & very low miles. (105302 >. ·n Capri, t600cc eng. 4· spd, gd cond. $1100/besl. 673-2241 We have a good selection of other models and _ 9720 years to select from. ••••••••••••••••••••••• *DRIVE A* * LITILE. •• * SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMP/\RE BARWICK DA TSUH ·...,,Ill l 1J,Jfl 4 ,I pl' ff .lf\11 831· 1375 493.3375 MISSION VIEJO IM P0111S ••• • • ! ••• -• .... , .. ,, .... BJ I -I 148 495 1104 ·n 300D Mercedes. 10.000 miles. Take over lease. 642-8987. '73 Merredcs 450SL, im m ac. Wire whls, sky blue. Both tops. All xtras. $13.500. 67~2181. '66 220SE. While. 2dr, air, AM /Fl\1 stereo. Days 540-7422 or Eves 675-1750 TM '78s Are Here All models & colors. 8-diat• Delivery Today! 1970MBZ250 Last chance for fantastic Automatic, air cond. & savings on all remaining stereo. C479GBZ). ·n models ln stock. COSTA MESA DATSUN 2.845HARBOR BLVD. 540.6410 540.921 l NEWPORT DATSUN 1975 MIZ280 SEDAN. Automatic, air ronct: & crwse control. (9S9NDM). SADDLEIACK V AU.Ff IMPORTS 831·2040 495.4949 IALDWIN ORGAH sac$295. 673-3622 RecreaHoMI JOE $2600 673-6900 Vespa Ciao Moped, L97s. Vehidn 9530 MAC PHERSON •77 CleanlftCe 23"RC/\colorTVconsole, Xlntcond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHEVROLET Demo & executive s aJe '66 250SE. silver, PS, PB. elcc sunrf, AM /F~l stereo. 4 spd. clean, must sell $4275/0fr. 536-0943 $15. Small B/W port. $40. 6*-t26'l or 646-0554 Convt 4 scat slrect legal 21 Auto Center Drive now g0~·n on-hurry! 548-9824 dune buggy. $800. Call IRVlNE ----------1Used Cimall Moped, 2000 529-8486 888 VESTREET Nearly new super stereo ml. Good cond. 833-0846 __.Ori 9 0 768-7222 (Near MacArthur Blvd. system. Betamax formoreinlormation 4n-Yft 55 ... ~ .___.td &JamboreeRoad) '71280S.E. Xlnl cond. Make of for. 631·2617 videotape recorder Best . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -...,.-. • NEWPORT BEACH otfer. '94.Sl3l ' Bug Sprint Kart. Dual JEEPS "77" •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 83).1300 M1% '74 450 SLC. R CARVER r ROllS;ROYCE 1S40JambOree Newpon8Htll ,,_ __ _, MCH.444 CLOSED SUNDAYS 66 Rolls Royce, Silver Shadow. xlnt cond. . Wlute. $18,000. 631-0545, RoblO 2600 I l.11 hur Olv<l. Cu~t.1 Mt:~.1 540-9100 '74 LTD 2·dr h/t. Air. PS/PB. X1nt cond. $2800. 841-8880 art 2 1973 CADILLAC '72 LTD, air, xlnt cond. COUPE DE VILLE New brakes, shocks. F\Jll power & is In nice _ss&-0083 ___ or_~_.;._53M;..;.__ __ _ condition. CsttHEW). lt63FORD Now reduced to RAHCH W Jt.GOH OHL Y $2 39 5 Hurst noor shift, small SADDLEIACK vs economy & in excep- LAT E '73 Rolls Royce VALLEY IMPORTS tionally good condition. Silver Shadow11. ~mi. 831·2040 495.4949 ~:wDl~yS695 l ow ner. a options ,_ """ U>.000. 831-2278 '76 Eldo, white. In/ out. M.wporter II Mtn Toyota 976 5 Loaded. 16.000 mi's. l.!IOOHarbor,Cost.aMesa ••••••••••••••••• •••••• Sho wr oom c I ea n . 642-0795 lffOltE YOU S9500/bst. 552•8645 •-------- '76 Se ·11 1· Id I Maverick HU SELL YOUR v1 e. 1le go . m· ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOY OT A., mac. All xlras. $9250. '75 Brwn Maverick R&Ji 0111675-2181. n;,. PS PB del' I' See us for a top dollar ---------1 .... • • • uxe, o estimate! '73 Cpe DeVille, loaded, mi, $2950. 673-7794 MARQUIS TOY OT A Harvest yellow + ltbr, Mel cwy 9950 .MISSJONVIEJO origownr673-0444 •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• 83 I ·2880 49S. I 2 I 0 '76 Cpe De Ville. Loaded, ORANGE COUNTY'S lo rni, PP. Soc. $6900. NEWEST 'TT Ccllca GT Liftback, S.spd. radials, air, AM· FM cass tape. Extreme· ly lo nu. Like nu. Wkdys 213·6U·5107, evs/wknds ;14.559.6825 979-8601or962·2712 LINCOLN·MERCURV ., '77 Cid cov: d'eleaance, DealershipisnowOPEN loaded. lo mi, mint cond .. RAY FLADEIOE Take ovr lsc or buy, Pvt LINCOLN·MERCURV pt,y. 494·5861. 16· 18 Auto Center Dr. SDFwy-Lake Forest exit 'TT Corolla. Standard int, '72 El Dorado, grn. whl JRVJNE deluxe ext Must sell. vinyl top, loaded, lo ml, 830.7000 546-5744 aft G orig ownr. $2900. 673·3994 1--------- T".,_.. 9767 S 'fi '77 El Do d MllStancJ · 9952 _,.,... acn ice ra o, ••••••••••••••• •• •••••. ••••••••••••••••••••••• yellow, loaded, lo ml.. as· , . 'i6 TR7. Loaded. 3600 mi. sume lsc$0dwn840-0248 66 .GT. Pony Interior. $4,995. 549-3985 art 5, . Ong cond. Must 1ell. 213·532-50!0 X·22S8 dys '74 ELDO Wht w/red mt.1_642-8 __ 135 ______ _ Sunroof, xlnt. cond. Lo -.&.-bl 9955 ·74 TR6 Xlnl. cond. rru, fully equip'd. Best -• ofr. 495-6727 aft 6PM ••••••••••••••••-•••.,. AM/FM cass., lugg rock, ---------i ..... "'-ltn 88 2dr H/T, AT, roll bar, lo mi. 546-6385 •4 """ .. '62 Cad. Must sell this AC. xtra clean. $1300. TR-6 '73. lo mi's, loaded. week, $200 or olfer . Dys 556-4467, evs 833·8719 Xlnl cond. Must sell . 642-613.S Destorr.497·2073. ---------1 'lOCutla.ssSupremc. '72ELDORADO good trans. car, runs Volcswagett 9770 Loaded &Sharp! good. $850. 963-4405 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $2950 644 '"'6421 HU $500 Down. $75 mo. buys GESELECTION '72 El Do. Blue w/wht 1973 Cullass, loaded, NEW & USED CARS vinyl lop, all xtra.s. Xlnl 645-0758, ~ · T h $$ r VW cond. $2,995. 673-4743 o~ cas or your . '68 cutlass Supreme, air. Pa.id for or not. Call a..rolet 9920 P/S P /B, x lnt ori&. Ke1lhorJerry. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. S7SO/beat offer. BOB Wl'r~tAM VW . M0-5341 7600 Weslmmster Ave. _ _..;.. ______ _ tm.-7551 or 638· 7880 it • Pinto 99 S 7 • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 70 Bug Convert. Im· macu1ate, red & black, $2350or bstofr. 497·3195 it • '74 Pinto Squire wagon - ._ Lugga1e raclt, mag ,.. ! wheels (wide), tape '73 Window Bus. Rebll, • ,. deck /raclio, auto, low good cond. $1995. ,.. miles. $1995 °'offer. Can Call 494·2130. .... , !I be seen In Costa Mesa ---------1 ... It, Call 870-4564 lor ln!o. '68 VW Bu~ w/stereo & lt Jt.' -----------' tapedk. Auto. $1250. .., it) 15 Runabout. 6 eyl. Elec. Call 675·1530 • It-snroof. Xlnt cond. $3100 ' VW S Cl ROGER MILLER SAYS,. _499-_239l ______ _ 72 . BU • can . uor~IY ~ '72Ru bout AM/F•I P r 1 v a t e p a r t y . -,..,,_ na . " • $2000/Firm. 673-3012 494-1131 546-9967. .J;.~ eves. '63 Chasis '68 1600cc eng Baja Bug, 6 voll, new tires. bucket seats. roll bar. xtras $900. 497-3189 '73 Pinto Runabout, 2000 cc.. disc. 4 spd, new Ure&, lug rack, 48,000 ml, great abape $1500. 845·69•0 eves/early AM ---------t eng. mounts. 7 hp. two-, , AHo Rowao 9705 ---------s pass, sprts cpe, immac. loclh & w.iM stroke. $125/bst. ofr. C J · 5 s • C J · 7 5 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 DJt.TSUH F\llly eq_pt incl fact elcc '70 camper .. Mech. perf. &c,11....... 548-7364 Cherok~. Wagonee~s, Sharp Al!etta GT, super 1-ZIOCOUPE snrf. Stereo cass, leath Body ods work. Many '76 Runabout. 4 a pd. •••••••• .. •••••••...... Pick-ups. up to $1.200 d~s· handling car, must sell ! 2 Door. 4 s~...1 l.rans. & int r . $1 7 •SO o. PP xtras. SlOOO. 548·9531 ____ .z;.____ AMI FM s tereo t ape, ..... ~ Mzk'eis•cfc 1976Carabella Moped counts. 5 yr ~.ooo mile .°""" or otr. 6'2-6441 or ~ <7lA)'"" 9323 $2400. Ph'9'b1S28 ~le-• OZO $250 worranlys available. ~ low miles. In excellent "' .....,. '71 VW Bus. Westfall a ---------l:-:'-:-:-:-----:-:---:- •• :::.: •• •••••••••••••• 675-2856 CopelmtdMtn hoc oondltiool <233NDN>. ~076 Mercedes 300D, Olmper. reblt eog, like •tf!EW'77 CHIV. "IS Pinto. Low miles. Air ,75 M"'r"'U"' Outboard 9.8 MOPED: sligblly used 2001Eut.SASS8.SOOO 1976 red Alfa Spider. Ex· MAl<IOFHR sil ver, drk bl int, loaded, new. Make offer. $2850. MONZA MIRAGE ~-a~~· ..... xJ.,nt c:ond . .. "·1 1---------· celleol cond. Ori a. 1 t 0 d $14100 pp 536-6662 or eves _____ •;...""°"""'°------HP motor w/gas ~nk. Batavus, black. 370 mi COSTA MESA OWJ\er.A.Dll/FMstereo,lo 1977DATSUM ~~n • • . (213)592·5023ZORAN IM· 2 +2HATCHIACK pt '"9 9960 xJnt condotr, hard3-ly used Excellent c:ond. 968-0863 AMC • JEEP -"cage.""" IW>ft'> .,1...,.~ .. 1 •tc.,UP PORTS, 420 Sth st. 11. a. Auto. trans.. air cood. ,ftl• • e<N\/n... t 67 1757 °... ,,,_.._ ~ ~A "" "' ,....,..., st~-'ng •-br-'---, ••-••••••••••••••••••• _.., ""'1 ' PEUGEOT MOPED. E"· TOO --971 • I b b l '69 280SL. White. Top ... -. ""'' "' ..,..,.a " _" 6 wt camper s e I .. s shape, H/T. s9950 or Volvo 9772 radio, special new pain\ '73 DUSTER P/S, new loeh.M9ilte cellent cond. 1,300 mi, ................ •-•••• •peedt.rans .. ractoryair highestorr 646.2136dys •••••••• ... •••••••••••••job .tc much more l tires, 8 cyl. Gd. tond. Ec,11..... t030 $425.552-7545 MANY cond. & AM/FM stereo · llfORIYOU (125422). $l7S0..831-2CMS · ......................... JEB'S tape. OE47sn>. s• •yAI.. ..a-...~s .. tt• · TOJennasttt outo steer· "16 Foxi Moped, 2 aeater, MUSTSELL1o MAl<IOFFR ~ 9742 --." ,._.,., -r .. •74 Gold Dutter, fully 1ng alMOlllncw xlnt cond, $350. best of· JEEPSBY ..... •••••••••••••••••• VOLVO, HOWARDca..¥Nlet eqtd pped, absolutely Apdco depth sounder, fer.Muat selll&7$-4S47 CHRISTMAS ''l' MIDGET red, 27350 See us foe a top dollar DovelcQuailSta. • perfect$ZISb.95W1889 new, In box. Molwc~/ Pleaae C.U mi $2700 esUmat.et NEWPORT BEACH ~ 7W"'-.. bv.63!--0813 Su tUO 54t· •oz• '~ cov~ . ~UISVOLVO IJJ.OlllllJ..0116 1974 • Satellite Sta. u .... , .. ~ 642-4537 .. on, W.u, Fri, Wac. paa., 'i-/S! PJB. IMh.Peww 9040 ......................... 252U IARBORBLVD. 1978 IMW'I "715lOStaWgiuhlft,yell, ~rcbys IONVl&JO "73 MONTE carto, ntl1 Alr, Gd. tlres. uaaa. -•••••••••••••••••••• 1974 250 Yamaha )IX· Coltall•a radio. suoo. H6·920l, • lll•lll049S.1210 pwr,AJC, t1ery ad. eood. Cooler . air a1socks, DIM9HY 1'm7 ldl,.... rortc, aoa '7• n...t-c.4 Pu N Hal MOW! m.t82JS 9744 s=o. 831-2046 tra1W bitch~ a ad1o ahoeb, etc. $500. ean ........,. · · " ........................ 09tAHGI COUMTY lad.. Ooo4 $1975. I' llber11 wltb a 1b 'ea.llalafter'lp ID wbla, Urea " patnt. coMPUTI "1U>mun1200SportCpe .•• MOB GT, new paio' VOLVO •71 MONTE C ar l o ~--~!!=-------=::e.==-ts48 •ta SIO llX y~~aba . ..;~..;.;u;..;p-.•-.r .... : _•_•_3_oo_._0_•_1_• 1 " IOOYsHOP Orta. OWQOI'. f1300. Call upbal 6 tires. Make oi: EXCL\JSIVELY VOLVO ~!.~:::i;::..t,•1~ Tiatft 11114 tt70 l!luptrcJe:anl $4IOO MOWOf'IM •1519• fer. llu.at 1011. $2850. LOrgestVoh'ODH lct malot . Honu~ Jilte ... ., ................... .. Attention boat lovor11 .....-• "15 Ford Ran.c.r W/cm11r :•ee Datnn St a wa,. S»tesa or •vcs (213) lnOranceCau.ntyl new.-..& lNO T·Blrcl. SS,000 rnJ. 19SI 11' Cbr la Craft abell, auto, a/a, 32,000 0 ,;;;;-__ a ..... nma well. $400. 6H·5023 ZO RAM IM· BUYorLEASE ~ t.~ $1000 Cdlra. aertou loqulrl BONDAZIOUDIWoacsd. ml_.... -'' 21114Jl.'J'W. fOftTS ..... St.B.B. D1REC'l' NEA.R ~SIC·"eOCheV ~8'15-'7420. • ' oab'.MUI05 Perf;J:.' ~i:: ... chUd. _ ..__... D ._._,_ G-a• SILltTIOM OP 97•6 wagon. Good c o n d . _, ._ ,. -""'• -... ·~ • --m ... 1• is Dll&IUD 810 w.-. .. Lo • .. Nelda 1DtCb -t. -""'-. H74 -.. __ .. ~ dMll Must ...-Mu•t _...,, "" -_.,,. u .... --'1-•-.......... ---•••••••• .. --.. .., --.nu.. ..__.. .. --'-·-·" We .., haw,..-oest uu • •-· -• _...,. • -.assa --···~ .. ··••• .wo&e, tower, polplt, at ':M --.. 4 qcJe. .0. Trwlo .--... tnclr -.. oarh•mt.orW.C&U Cll1904l'10. • Olx'11,aato.AM/Fll, 't• Rlt.TCH BACK J>1iDa i.llaneb nmp. .._wt .. s :em. :Ila&. or car + uall eon· ;;......,, ,.. ':"94 rdlt.loml,Utaut.t "II Mallbti. Good~ 11.....a. ncUo. au. bit Pr\_. nOI. M .. ~ ,_ml. •to0l btat Ol.r. 1ldered. 111·1110 or Ul .... 4'Mtff U.ve ~to ..UT ott.21M•IDtlfk• • _ _._._. -w:n_2011 New radl al Uru. racta. MOOG ml. SUSQ. .,._ ..... IGO'lll --.a.• au&U1edacta d0ta1{911. nu•5141 .~--..-:.." '~ ·-·-$800/otr.41WSW ....... ·----....-~ Huntington Beach FountaiQ Vro1~SY Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks ~ VOL. 70, NO. 356, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES 'ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1977 TEN CENTJ f ............ TOPS OF SILOS AT NEW ORLEANS GRAIN ELEVATOR BLOWN OFF BY EXPLOSION Aremen Battle Kiiier Blast, Attempt to Rescue Many Trapped lnalde Huntington ! Fire01en I . I Aid Needy Santa Claus' big red sleigh ar· rives in Huntington Beach two ' nights early this evening. It will be dra wn through the darkened streets by a 365 horsepowet diesel engine, not eight tiny rein· deer. And the elves aboard it will wear blue uniforms, heavy coats and fi re helmets. Tonight, the Huntington Beach Firemen's Association says, as many off-duty volunteers as . they can get aboard one big fire engine along with Santa Claus will be going along for the ride. i "We've located 10 needy 1 families throug h the LYNN (Love Your Neighbor Now> Center downto wn ," says Fireman Randy Goodman. "We're going to be distribut· ing gifts and rood to them, .. adds Goodman, who was the depart· m ent 's chief Christmas shopper this year. "We've got two or three gifts for every child and you're talk· ing about something like 25 kids. They ranee in age from a little girl eight months old to a 15· year-old boy," says Goodman. "We picked out presents geared to each kid 's age." Goodman and the rest of the • -Association's elves also have l rounded up food supplies to as· s ure what, for ma ny hungry mouths, will be a memorable • Christmas dinner. "Most or the food we've got is canned goods," says Goodman, whose Christmas budget isn't exha\lst.ed yet. "I'm still shopping around for turkeys. But 1 'm looking for a good deal." Blasts Rock Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two explosions rocked widely Rparated parts of the city early today, causing total damage estimated at nearly $150,000, authorities say. One of the blasts blew out the rear of JJ's market in Van Nuys, causing an estimated $100.000 damu1e, police said. The windows of nearby build· lngs were also sbaUered in the explosion. FOOTBALL I ~I ONTV . • TONIGHT HALL OF FAM CLASSIC Channel 13, a p.m. r ......... (1-4) .. ...,....(1~ The flrit HctJ ol Fame Ult. at Blrmtn1h1m, Ala., pairs two four-aame loaera, althouch Mln· ..-.u difeiited lilkb.11aa. •••hlelll~ and UCLA , and Maryland came on •lNftl down lbe stretch. llaeyJMd•1 a toUcbdown fa.orite. lt•pe delay> • BB Heliport Bracero Camp Eyed For Police Copter Huntington Beach city of· ficials are considering the site of a former bracero camp in the central part of the city as a new base for its police he licopter operations. The land that ttie city is con· sidering is a three-acre parcel immediately north of the Gothard Street Fire Station. The city's police helicopters currently are based on Talbert A venue north of the Central Library. Officials say that the heliport landing pad and hangar are s inking in unstable soil and that a new location should be found . The helicopters have been fly. ing from the present site for about seven years. If the city is successful in ac· quiring the property, it would house maintenance garages and storage space for the police and Cjre departments. The emergency field hospital (or civil defense also would be stored in one or the existing five metal buildings on the property. The field hospital which is de· C'Atunty Plants signed for first aid treatment is presently located in Los Alamitos. Recreation apparatus from the parks and recreation depart· ment also would be stored at the new s ite. Director of Public Works Bill Jlartge said that an apprainl and soil test of the property will commence aft.er the first of the year. Hartge saJd that the city ls hoping to buy the property from Fujita Farms for about $250,000. He said the location for a heliport seems to be ideal because of good soH conditions. It also is in an industrial area wher e residen ts would be bothered by aircraft, be said. Hartge said the city bas S75,000 on band towards the purchase price. He added that the city is hoping to seU surplus property it holds to pay for the rest of the costs. Hartge said that the site was formerly a bracero camp and that the farm laborers lived in a bunk house on the property. Deadly Chemical Viewed for Pests By KATHY CLANCY Of tll9 o.lly 1'11.C Staff Firty cases of a deadly chemical once earmarked for d elivery to South American New Flu Vina Triggers Plan For Vaccines ATLANTA CAP> -Public health authorities, concerned about a new influenza virus in Russia and Hong Kong, met to- day to coosider the possibility of a vaccine profram simUar in scope to 1Ht year's ill-fated swine flu program. Dr. William Foege, director of the Center for Disease Control, told the gathering of about 100 physicians, epidemiologists , medical school faculty and state health officials that he would healtate to predict a flu epidemic because ol. the nature of the diseate. ''But there is a difference now ln rorecastin1. We have the best international surveying system I have seen. We feel thlt we have· to try to predict,• beaald. . The Rusalan vtnaa WU \den- Ufied as HlNl, •imllar to a vlrus whkh cauMd wldea:rread ~ bre.kl In the Unit States ln the 1"°' and 19$0a. Other ,,,.. of lnflueaaa, ather A·Texa1 or A·VJetoria, have beeD tepOrt..s Ill Moul U at.at•. said tM CDC. 19ol-.cl casea were reported 1n lllinols, New JerseJ, North Cal'Olina, Ore1on. P1aa11 l vaal~ jungles 'now will be used to kill plant pests In Orange and other California counties. In addition, the Cypress man who tried to dispose or the pesticide by dumping the cases in trash bins Monday night in Buena Park and Cypresa will face no charges, Cypress police said today. Police expJained Henry Davis of the Happiness Foundation Inc. bad planned to ship the 50 cases of methyl bromide to hls son, a Christian misaJonary ln South America. When he was unable to find a shipping firm to handle the lransportatJon, however, he de· cided to dlspoee of the cbt!micals ln dunapsters, ottlcers said. Police and Oremen in the two cit.Jes found the 50 containers 1n a MoadQ eveablc search aft.er Davis was a,otted by a reaideat depositing a small wooden crate into a dwnpeWr. Davia now has donated tllle chemicals to Ora n1e COUDty aark:uttural 9"dalllta "'° .... to UH it to kUJ plat peeta. SO.. 1 nates probebly will be shtpped ' to other counties as well, "'"· (iclala aa1d. Police aakl Davia apparent),. waa unawan of the buard ID plaeln11 tb• chemicals i• •umptlerl Md Md no malldoul Intent. lie 81111ted ollldall Maa- day nlabt 1D tcwdlal up u.· crat•. . ' WIRonaln, 7'i:illl1M1 <>nCaft, ,.._---...-----.~ 1'1 J'lorlda aad ~ I ' GrOin Tower Blast. ExplosiOn Kills ~Five; 20 Missing NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A thundering exp&oaion ripped through a storage silo of the Continental Grain Company in suburban Westwego today, kill· inc at least five people, injuring at least 11 others and leaving about 20 persons missing, Sheriff Al Cronvtch said. Cronvicb said five bodies had been recovered from the bum· ing grain elevator and its adja· cent offices, where government inspectors worked. At least 11 people were bospltali&ed, most wllb bums. A Coast Guard helicopter, maneuvering through boiling clouds of dense black smoke, rescued one man from the roof of the building. At least two ot the injured were taken by helicopter to nearby hospitals. Others were picked up by ambulances. Cause of the blast was not known. 'Ibe dust·filled air inside the cylindrical grain elevator is extremely volatile . The explosion rocked the small town of Weatwego and showered the area with grain dust and heavy debris. Acro5s the Mississippi River at New Orleans' Audubon Park Zoo, anim a ls cried and roared hysterically. The smoke poured from a gap- ing hole ripped in the concrete wall of the grain elevator. The sUo was one of several sitting end·to-end lD a cluster at the com,..,, but the fire and ex· ploslen appeared confined to one elevator. The facility sltf on the bank ~ Uae ........ Flrtboatl Joined the Westweco vohmteer ffre depart· ment and e quipment from nearby areas. Ambulances ringed the place and , Coast Guard helicopters hovered over the elevators. West Jefferson Hospital re· ported seven persons admitted, m ost or them suffering from bums. Oebsner Medical Founda· lion bad four -one of them Jef. fenon Parish deputy J ames L. JohRSOll, who suffered a broken ankle at the scene. Cenditioos of the bum victims were not P,own. "ll IMlllded like semetblng fell on top of the building,·• said Nitti Glaub, 21, who was work· Witch Loses · P~rinL4 LOS ANGELES <AP> ..:_ A wand·waving witch has failed to cast a spell over the City Council to make it repeal an ordinance banning fortune·telling busi· nessea and advertising. Although six of the 10 council members present Wednesday were enchanted with the repeal proposal by Councilman Joel Wachs, the vote was two short of the number needed to have the city attorney draft necessary leglllation. The would-be spellbinder - a membef of the Sisterhood of the Wicca -flailed her incense wand as part of a three-year bat· tie to allow fortune-telling in Los Angeles. Grid Drill.s OpenatOCC ing ln an office of a nearby junkyard. "The whole building shook and the lights went out ror a second or lwo. One of the men from our yard said he heard a big boom and be looked over at the grain elevator, and he said it went up all in smoke and the elevator wasn't even s t anding any more." John Allender, deputy director of the Audubon Park zoo, said the animal cages were showered with debris after the explosion. "Jl almost looked like a mushroom cloud and there was quite a bit of debris falling when we got out of the office. The peacocks were screaming and yelling and flying. Most of the animals were terribly upset." Job Threatened HB Treasurer Vows To Battle Charter Deity,... ..... ,.... SAYS HE'U. FIGHT City TreHurer Hall Energy Pact Rejected for 1977 Passage WASHINGTON CAP) -A House-Senate conference com- mittee today formally aban· doned efforts to reach agree· ment this year on the natural gas portion of President Carter's energy plan. By a vote of 16·2 Senate del· egates to lbe conference reject· ed a natural gas compromise s ponsored by Sen. Bennett Johnston, D·Da. The vote sends the deadlocked conferees back to the drawing board and further jeopardizes c h a nces for con gressional passage of the toughest parts of Carter's energy program. The Johnston compromise was the result of three days of tough bargaining with House members of the committee, who accepted iL But today's vote demonstrated that a persistent 9·9 deadlock among Senate members on the emotional questJon of deregulat· ing gas prices remains as firm as ever. "I have no parentage of this turkey alter today," Johnston · said, acknowledging defeat in advance. Senate opponents or dereiuta· tlon said the compromise was too generous to oil and gas pro- ducers. Opponents said it did not go far enough toward allowing the free market to determine gas prices. The compromise was worked out during three days or in· form al secret negotiations among a smaJI group of House and Senate con.f erees. It bad the effect of uniting most of the House conferees wilb two Senate aupporten of Un&n1 federal controls. The most recent compromlae effort began when President Carter personally ur1ed key conferees last week to attempt to reach aome a1reement before Cbrlatmu. Today's vote will mean that when the confereea return from tbe hoUday receaa, lMJ will be no closer to agree- m_ept tbao when tbey be1an tbelr ae,otlaUom .... . . By ROBERT BARKER Of Ille O.lly l'llOI $1111 Recomm e nd ations for ch a nges in· the Huntington Beach City Charter received general s upport Wednesday night with one notable excep· tion. Treasurer Warren Hall, whose job would be eliminated under proposed changes in the "con· stitution" of the city, threatened "to do everything in my power lo right the approval or the charter." .. Hall said he is battling a r ec. ommendation by the city's charter revision committee to place the entire package or pro- posed changes on the April citywide ballot with a single yes or no vote determining the fate ·• o( the package. Hall said individual issues are crucial to residents and should be voted on separately. The city council has not de- C'ided how the proposed charter revisions will be presented to the public. Another public hearing is scheduled Jan. 9. "llnless proposed changes are voted on separately, I will or- ganize any opposition I can and there will be lots or help," Hall told city council members dur· ing Wednesday's lightly at· tended hearing. Hall said that key department heads are not identified in the proposed revisions, lhe oHice o( treasurer would be eliminated by arbitrary action and that de· partment heads would be re· moved from protection of the personnel system. He dedared that the latter rec· ommendation could result in a possible patronage machine. "Department heads could be ap- pointed as the city administrator pleases," he said. Representatives of the 54· m e mbe r Huntin ~ton Beach M a nagement Employees Organization also said that re· moval of department h eads from the personne l system would be detrimental to the city. George Williams, chairman of the city Library Board, also criticized the proposed removal of the library board and other boards and commissions from the c harter. He said the proposed change would violate constitutional (SeeCHARTKR, Page 2) Coast Weather Eighty percent chance of rain tonight, diminishing · to 50 percent chance Fri· day. Occasional winds of 10 to 20 mph. Lows tonight in 50s. Highs Friday in low to middle60s. INSIDE TODAY Whukey BiU is a special° kind of old gentleman, and hia anioal in the household m•ana 'M'"l/ Chrbtmai. • See Featuring, Page CI. - . I ~ SS.I MllHon Trruh Day Not Changed Hostages Slay Bank Gunman ... ~~-PENGUIN CHICK NESTLES IN PALM OF HANO One of Many at San Diego Research Center Chilly Debut Baby Penguins Hatched SAN DIEGO (AP> -Looking like ugly ducklings, ~ fledg· hng Adclie penguins are snuggling close to mom and dad in a sub· lero freezer after being hatched the last 10 days al the Hubbs-Sea World ResearchCenler. The parent penguins were flown here from Antarctica last vC'ar und h\'l' with their new chicks in a building kept at subzero iempcralurcs where 6,000 pounds of flaked ice is produced cl ally. ANOTHER 80 A DELI ES ARRIVED a few weeks ago and all will be used for further breeding, behavioral and biological i.tudles. · 1 · b h ThN<' ar<' more of the downy htt e chicks, ut rcsearc ers <·an 't ll'll V<'l how many The i1ule birds are h and·fed a baby formula devised by !-.C'naor avaculturisl Frank Twohy. It consists of half and half ~·ream. zooplankton brought from Alaska, lots of vitamins, brine .,hramp and herring Javers, roe (fish eggs> and some salt water. THE HATCHING IS THE FIRST time any substantial nu mber of the non-nying birds have been born away from the world's coldest continent, according to Frank S. Todd, senior re· !>('a rch fcollow at the institute. . • . Colored embroidery thread tied to one of the babies wings ident ifies them. .. Wf! were f!oin~ lo try to paint their toenails with different co lors of finf!ernail polish because we have to change the thread so oft<'n :is they grow." said Scott Drieschman, assistant curator of birds at Sea World. THERE ARE THREE TOES on each of the little penguins' wC'bhed feet. Todd said th<'rc are plans for public display or the birds around 1980. But for how, he said, all efforts are being devoted to th e National Science Foundation project aimed al establishing a penguin colony for soientlfic research. Grove Man Nabbed • . in Kidnap, The/~ J BOULDER CITY, Nev. <AP) L /\ man from Garden Grove. e alif.. wanted on charges or kld- lfapping. assault wi•h a ~eadly ea po n , auto t,heH and a aumber Of Other COU.nls WO,$ cap· Mired here this morning. { Authorities identified the ~US· peel as Jesse Bishop, 44. He was Ule object of an lntensfve all- ~ghl search after he allegedly ole two cars and hijacked a nited Parcel Service truck and a U.S. Mail truck, taking two ~eople hostage during a spree wnich police say began Tuesday DiJ:tht with a $238 holdup of a Qbange girl at the El Morocco Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. J..Bishop was found about 7:30 . Woman Raped, Put in Trunk : VACAVILLE CAP) -A eollceman who stopped a car ~cause of a mechanical vtola• lJon heard a knockine sound Cli)mlng from the back. He found a 3S·year-old woman Uu1lde the trunk who said the driver had beaten and raped her, Police Capt. Bill McCord Jilld. • Booked Into Jail Wednesday (or inveaUgallon of rape and as- $ault was Randall Wurtz, 22, of S.cramento. O"ANOE COAIT M/~ DAILY PILOT a.m. under a mobile home here, and was returned to Las Vegas where formal charges are ex· peeled to be lodged later today. Metropolitan police said Bishop, who at one lime had vowed to shoot it out with authorlUcs, gave up without a struggle. Bishop is betteved to be the bandit who tried to rob the El Morocco at gunpoint Tuesday night. Two people were shot by the rob'ber as he fled the casino, both men were seriously wounded. The man fled in a green car, which wp found Wednesday af- ternoort at the ·Frontier Hotel. Records in the car indicated the auto was purchased Dec. 12 in CaUfornla, and that the buyer made a 15 down payment. The balance of $6,200 owed on the car was to have been paid withln 30 days, according to police. Late Wednesday morning. a manlittb'lg the description ot the suspect in the El Morocco incl· dept robbed a man at the Union Plaia Hotel In downtown Lu Ve~as and stole the man'a car. ACter abandoning the stolen car, the suspect allegedly atole a pickup truck. Police said Bishop ts wanted in California in connection with the holdup of a pharmacy in Garden Grove on Dec. 5, and another holdup at a supermarket in Anaheim. Burglan Hit SDClwrchet . Gifts Reported Traab wlU be c0Uected on a regular schedule next week in HW1tington Beach and FountaJn Valley. By Foundation Stan Pkaciyk, vice pres- ident of the Rainbow Dis · Posal Company which pl'o· vides service for the two citiei;, nid workers will be orr Christmas Day. Th•Y will return Monday and collect trash through 1''ri- day. SUBIC BAY, Philippines (AP> The James 1rvine Foundation approved grants or more than $5.1 million to 9l'charitable proj- ects and programs in California during its past fiscal year, ac- cording to the foundation's an- nual report. President Morris M. Doyle notes in tbe report, issued this week, that the grants were dis· cussed and decided upon despite the large amount of time direc- tors spent in selUng the founda· lion's 54.5 percent interest in the Irvine Company. They were required to sell by provisions ot the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The sale alter heated bidding to the Taubman·Allcn-lrvine con- sortium brought the foundation more than $184 million for its shares. Doyle also noted that the funds being distributed by the founda· lion have greatly increased in recent years. The foundation gave out S2 milUon between 1938 and 1957, $5 million between 1958 and 1967, and $34 million between 1968 and 1977. For its fiscal year ending last March 31. Irvine Foundation as- sets were listed at almost $162 million. A number of Orange County organizations were recipients of grants. The foundation gave $25,000 to the Laguna Beach Sc .:>ol of Art and anothe r $25,000 to the Front Page Al CHARTER. • guarantees of citizen partiiipa- tion. "We need the opinions of citizens al all levels," he said. Williams also called for an in· crease in the tax limit for librnry uses. Most of those testifying We dnesday night expressed general agree ment with the charter revision recommenda- tions. Nearly all occurred that the city attorney should s tay elected. Incumbent City Attorney Don Bonfa s aid the office should re- main the way it is in order lo in- s ure balance and independence. Bonfa also agreed with the committee that his salary should be set by someone other than the c ity council "because of the danger of playing politics with his pay." However, the Huntington Beach Management Employees Organization called for the ~ity attorney to be appointed by the city council. Other speakers said that the city clerk should be elected. The charter committee urges ap· pointment. Resident Ben Borcomon also called for the city administrator to be elected. The city council will de· termine which recoinmenda- llons to put on the ballot. Any changes in the 10-year-old docu· ment mus t be a pproved by voters. Rites Today For Pilot P.Lubchenko Funeral services were scheduled today for United Air Lines pilot Peter C. Lubche.nko, a 13·year Huntington Beach resi· dent who died Tuesday after I long illness. Rites tor Mr. Lubchenl<o, 43, were !iel for 3 p.Jll . at Westminster :Memorial Park Chapel. The jetliner copilot and hla family moved to north Hunt· in1non Beach 13 years ago and he bad been wlth the airline for 15 years. after Navy duty. During his Navy career, Mr. Lubcbenko piloted P2V Neptune patrol bombers. Survivors include his wife Marcia; sons Chuck. and Rick; hls father, Peter C. Lubchenko Sr .• and hls rnother, Mrs. Gladys Lohman. The family suggests memorial contribuUons in his name to the American Cancer SOclety. Laguna Beach Museum of Art. Also recelvtng funds were South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa, $125,000; Providence Speech and Hearing Center In Orange, $75,000, and South Coast Community Hoiplta l in South Laguna, $100,000. Additlonal &rants went to the Boys Club of Buena Park, $30,000; the Boys Club of Fullerton, $25,000; Boys Club of La Habra. $8,000; Boys Club of the South Coast Area, Inc. in San Clemente, $25,000; and Boys Club of Westminster, $10,000. Donations were also given to the Girls Club or the Harbor Area in Costa Mesa, $25,000; the Girls Club of Fountain Valley. Huntington Beach, $5,000; the Girls Club of North Orange County, Inc., in Buena Park, $15,000 Melodyland Delinquency Prevention Center in Anaheim, $20,000, and the YWCA of North Orange County in Fullerton, $10,000. Also receiving grants were the Assistance League of Tustin, $25,000; Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana, S30,000 ; the Junior League of Newport Harbor, Inc., $40,000; and the Women's Law Center of Southern California in Tustin, $7,500. Pkaciyk also said thJt trash pickups will be on the regular schedule in Sunset Beach. 1 City olfices in both Hun- tington Beach and Foun· lain Valley will be closed Monday, Dec. 26. They'll reopen on Tuesday. County to Assist Huntington Parks Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to spend $50,000 from the county's share of federal revenue sharing to help buy equipment for six neighborhood parks in Hunt· ington Beach. They include Marina Com· munity Park, northeast of Graham Street and Edinger Avenue: Roblnwood Park, 5172 McFadden Ave.; Pleasant View Park, 16692 Landau Lane; Terry Park, Taylor Drive at Delaware Street ; Hawes Park, 9682 Yellowstone Drive, and Newland Park, 8787 Dolphin Drive. -Enr~ged by a FiUplno gun- man's treat to burn a pregnant woman, male hostages beat and shot to death the man who held them captive for 48 hours inside a small bank building on the U.S. Naval Base at Subic Bay, officials said. Hostages later said they threw anything t.My could find at the wounded gunman, Including typewriters and adding machines, as he lay on the floor after he was overpowered by a bookkeeper and shot by the bank manager . The captives said the gunman, who took over the bank Tuesday afternoon, told them he wanted to give the bank's money lo the poor by dumping it from a helicopter which he demanded Cor his escape. The gunman also threatened lo blow up the bank, officials said. but no explosives were found. Lt. Cmdr. Michael Sherman, the base public affairs officer, said Navy officers conducting telephone negotiations with the gunman warned him he wouldn't receive any food unless he re- leased some hoslages. "I think this angered the gun- man. and he threatened to bum a young pregnant woman," Sherman said . SONY. Gift Ideas From JVC l~ SUPER PORT .ULI RADIO TY ,,.._ bt"""',..... ,,,.,,. ..... ff""fft JV("" ~ ., .• ;~7-~~ :_.-.. .,..• "·~ .~· .• 0 o-'.; ho-'' ~ "n""' it• ) · .,. .. ..,, 6 &-•lAJ•l•Oit ''"ifib.,.COif'tf•(!f\ ft~ "°" I 0 .... '" u,.Cl AC ~ ... ,..,,,.~. O' ·~· ••t ......... . ""'""° .. ,.,.,.OM>. s20000 ~ ~ ---.;•:...111•• '-lY~r­~ " , Tiie Sony Betama• A Jape ' .. '-"' ~ recotder that rocorda T.V -any " snow ycu wanl. UP to 2 hours r-.iiiiiil!!iii;;J JVC long (up to e hoors long by n~ -spring with longer tape and changer). 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Blind Transit Passes Nixed SAN Dl"OO <AP> -On a day Jas.t "'onth when three paues to rid• transit buses were f lven three new members o 'the tranalt board, a blind man asked for tho same prh11010 for the blind. 275 East 17th St. ·co1ta Mesa All warranfles handled by "5 - rfght h•re at the store. Ma1ter Cwcp VISA--d,tet paymenh orr•pd Th• request w11 made by J{arold Canady wbo Hid all.ht· Jc11 -people find ll difficult to ftsh about for eolna while Mldlnc a dog'• leub br pach1es. General Manager Tom Pryor say• th• board reJected Canady'• requut Wednesday because, l, ll bad _been •P· proved, ,.We'd be •Ired to otfu fl'ff"P ..... to-may otben •bo are lrucBeaJ'I*' ,-.nJ1." .......... :._ 1..-w ... .,. ~- PhoM 642·&eaz S10fe Hour1 Dally M Sat. 9-6:JO ... ......... .--.......... ,-• Prot•• ..... io11al ,,.,., ••·•· •01· ;•II '0111· ho111 .. 1·l c•c•l ro11ic·-.. c: .. .. Irvine EDITION .. VOL. 70, NO. 356, 4 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today· Cio!!llng N.Y.Stoeks THURSOAY,DECEMBER 2~1W7 TEN CENTSI lbwn Dusts Off As Dirty Wind ARYJN (AP) -Cleaning house for Christmas is going to be harder in Arvin than In most of America. Dust an inch thick. left behind by two days of ~urricane­ force winds, coaled rugs and futniture throughout this town of 7,000. (Related stories AS) "I NEVER DUSTED CHRISTMAS presents before," said Sharon Howard, whose husband _is pastor of the local Pen- tecostal Church of God. "Our Chnstmas presents are covered with d irt. We never had anything like this before." . But the Howards were more fortunate than many resident! of Ar vin where roofs were blown off homes, trees toppled onto houses ~d huge chunks of brick and concrete were hurtled through windows. . . Arvin was one of two areas in which stales of emergency were declared Wednesday by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. "MOST OF ARVIN BLEW through Bakersfield on its way to Fresno last night." Bakersfield Mayor Donald M. Hart said Wednesday of the devastation. Bakersfield is 2i> miles north of Arvin. The roof was torn off the house next to the Howards'. But the owner. a Los Angeles building contractor, had a new one nearly installed by nightfall. Sand from recently plowed cotton fields drifted into piles two feet high against chain-link fences, and many persons had trouble breathing the gritty air. ~ "l 'VE TRIED SWEEPING the dust away, and you almost choke to death," one woman complained. Another resident, Stella Thillet, spent two nights at a Red Cross emergency facility set up at the high school because she feared the thick dust at home might give her two-month-old son congestion. "When we woke up Tuesday, we were dying of suffocation -there was so much dirt," she said. MRS. TID.LLET RETUllNED home Wednesday to clear away lbe dust that had filtered around windows and doors into her home, but "without water, we couldn't do much," she said. Downed power lines left muc.h or Arvin without electricity, including the local water district. which needs power to pump well water to its customers. By Wednesday, electricity and water had been restored to some homes. BUT DESPITE THE devastation and the lingering layer of grit, residents of Aryin were hoping to enjoy traditional Christmas celebrations. "As soon as we ~el our homes strai~htened up we'll have a work day to clean the church," said Mrs. Howard. "l hope we get it cleaned up in time for Christmas Sunday." .Grain Storage 0 A,.WI..,.... RESCUERS ASSIST A STRETCHER WITH AN INJURED MAN LIFTED FROM HELICOPTER Victims of New Orteana Grain Elevator Explosion Asalated by Aremen Hostages Slay Gunm&n Bandit Beaten to. Death in Philippine Bank SUBIC BAY, Philippines (AP) -Enraged by a Filipino gun- man's treat to bum a pregnant woman, male hostages beat and shot to death the man who held them captive for 48 hours inside a small bank building on the U.S. Naval Base at Subic Bay, officials said. Hostages later said they threw anything they could find at the wounded gunman, inc luding i t y pewrite r s and adding {Tlachines. as he lay on the floor after he was overpowered by a bookkeeper and sbot by the bank· manager. · The captives said the gunman, who took over the bank Tuesday afternoon, told them he wanted to give the bank's money to the poor by dumping it from a helicopter which be demanded for his escape. · The gunman also threatened lo blow up· the bank, officials . said. but no explosives were found. Lt. Cmdr. Michael Sherman, the base public affairs officer, said Navy officers conducting telephone negotiations with the gunman warned him he wouldn't receive any food unless he re- leased some hostages. "I think this angered the gun- man, and he threatened to burn a young pregnant woman." Sherman said. "The male ·noose-Senate Unit Dumps Energy Plan WASHINGTON CAP) -A House-Senate conference com- mittee today formally aban· doned efforts to reach agree- ment this year on the natural gas portion or President Carter's· ·energy plan. By a vote or 16-2 Senate del- egates to the conference rejec~. ed a natural gas compromise . .sponsored by Sen. Bennett · passage o( the toughest parts or Carter's energy program. · The Johnston compromise was the result or three days of tough bargaining With House members of the committee, who accepted it. But today's vote demonstrated (See ENERGY, Page A2) hostages jumped in at that time, and we he ard s hots and s creams. The next thing we knew, people started running out or the bank." U.S. Marines rushed into the .while (rame b4ilding, found the gunman unconscious and took him to the base hospital where h e died two hours later, Sherman said. Lt. Col. Ernesto Venturina, commander of Philippine police here, said an autopsy showed the gunman had been shot at least ooce and his skull shat· tered. Sherman said only two of the 14 hostages were injured -bank manager Nicom·edes Villaluz, who suffered lacerations of the scalp, and a man who was bitten· on an arm. A 11 the hostages were Filipinos, Sherman reported. Bank teller Corinthia Carabe- jo, 31, said the gunman forced her to bum three bags or peso notes and dollars Wednesday night, apparently to show authorities be could bum down the building if he liked. Although the bank is just in· side the main gate of the base so miles northwest of Manila, it is operated by the Prudential Bank • and Trust Co. for the benefit or 'Filipinos employed on the base. and no U.S. Navy funds are de· posited there. Johnston, D-La. · $5.1 Million la Year 6 Killed, 11 H 111~t ~ In Silo Explosion NEW ORLEANS (A P) -·A thundering explosion shattered more than a dozen storage silos of the Continental Grain Com- pany in suburban Westwego to- day, killing at least six people. More than 20 others were re- ported missing, and at least 11 were hos pitalized, most with burns, authorities said. J e fferson Parish Sherirf Al Cronvich said five bodies had been recovered from the burn- ing grain elevators and adjacent offices, where government in- spectors worked. Rescue teams were hampered by heavy s moke and dust as they looked for bodies in the concrete rubble at the bank or the Mis· siasippl River. Cauae of the blast was not known, but dust-filled air inside the crlindricaJ grain elevato~ is extremely volatilo. "I was standing on the ship a couple oC hundred a yards away from the main head hous~." said Michael Gavron, 24, of Wil- mington, Del. "I heard an ex- plosion and turned around. The only thlng l saw was big flames jumping up from the top or the whole elevator. "In a matter or seconds, the Grid Drills OpenatOCC University oC Washington Huskies foot- ball practice sessions at Orange Coast College in . Costa Mesa are open to the general public, as long as identification is shown, according to word today · from the school's public relations department. The Huskies are prepar-• ing for their Rose Bowl dale with the University of Michigan and will hold morning sessions al 10 o'clock Friday and 11 o'clock Saturday. Afternoon workouts at 2 o'clock (3 o'clock on Fri- day) will be staged Mon- day through Saturday. No workouts are set for Christmas Day, Tuesday or Sunday, Jan. 1. main head house or the elevator had Callen to the ground, and it looked like the inspection lab and control room where they have all their scale equipment was completely leveled. ·•All I can say is this structure is tons and tons of reinforced concrete and steel and it was down to the ground in little bits and pieces, lilUe rocks." The huge elevator had a capacity of slx million bushels, and the explosion apparently oc· curred while a ship was being loaded, authorities said. Harlan Ryan, regional direc· tor. of th& federal grain inspec.. lion service. said he lost eight or <See BLAST, Page A2) Irvine Bminessmen Foil Building Fire Two businessmen who grabbed a small emergency fire hose to beat down a fire in an Irvine commercial building Wednesday were credited by county firemen with preventing destruction of most of tbe build· ing. · County Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville s aid the men, Sandy Rodgers and Wally Turner, managed to confine the fire to a single suite in the building, at 2182 Dupont Drive, while waiting for fire men. "They used this built-In firehose to pretty much knock down the fire prior to our ar· rival," Turbeville said. The men work in a suite adja• -cent to the damaged suite owned by Clncom Systems Inc. a marketing group. But for their action, Turbeville said. the nre might have spread to the rest oC the building, which he valued at $865,000. Turbeville said it took rll'emen only 10 minutes to finish off the fire, which caused an estimated $15,000 damage. The suite was gutted, he said, Police evacuated other ten· ants in the two-story. building, who left. it "reluctantly" despite police warnines, according to re- ports. Probable cause of the fire was a smoldering cigaret throwp into a wastebasket, Turbeville said. Papers ignited and the fire· spread while the tenants were out to lunch. lrrine Arrideat Trash Truck Flips; Driver Rescued · Orange County firemen and paramedics sliced open the roof .or a garbage truck cab and s oipped a steering wheel ln two Wednesday to free the driver trapped in the overturned vehi· cle on an Irvine road. The driver of the Great Western Reclamation garbaie hauler, David S. Garza Jr •• 26, of Santa Ana, suffered apparent minor injuries. It took ftremen 25 minutes to get him out. The right side tires climbed up the embankment and the truck spilled over onto its leCt side. A refuse company dispatcher said Garza had radioed that he was out of gas. The dispatcher said be told Garza to park the truck on the side of the road and hike to the dump entrance for assistance. • Coast The vote sends the deadlocked conferees back to the drawing board and further Jeopardizes chances for congressional FOOTBAL'L Foundation Tallks Gifts He was hospitaliiecl at Tustin Community Hospital, where he was reported in satisfactory con· diti<?n today. Weather Eighty percent chance of rain toolght, diminishing to 50 percent chance Fri· day. Occ.aslonal winds of 10 to 20 mph. Lows tonight in 50s. Highs Friday 1n low to 1 ·0 I ONTV ~ :t'ONIGtrr: HALL OF FAME CLASSIC Ch•nnet 13, I p.m. ...... eote (7-4) Ya • ...,.MCI (7 ... ) The nnt Hall of Fame Wt, at Blrmln1bam, Ala., palu two four-.. m• loHrt, altb:ou•la. Min· ..... ., .. lid ....... . WHbt•stoa ... ttCLA. and Maryland cam• oa 1tron1 down tM ttntch. Maryland's a toacbdown · favorite. (Tapa delm)') Tbe James Irvine FoundaUon appro~ grut.t of more than $5.1 pillion to tl'charitable proj: ~ti and procrama ln C.uton:Ua durlne Its put. fiscal year, ac- cording to tl\e loundauon•s an- nual report. Doyle also noted thai the funds being di.ltributed by tbe found•· Uo.a have greatly lncreued In recent. years. The foundation gave out $2 million between 1931 and 19S7, $5 million between 19:18 ·and 1967, and $34 million betweai 1188and197'1. Preslckmt Morris M. Doyle · notes ln the report. issued this . week, that the grants were dis· For 1t.s fiscal year endinf iut cusaed and decided upol\ de.pit.e March 31, Irvine Foundation U• the larp amoant of U... dlNc· tetl weN listed at. alml>lt. $1G ton 1peat in Hllini the tounda· million. lion'• 5'.5 pere.t Interest Jn the A number of Oranae County Jrvlne ~. orca.nbaUou were reci~lenta ~ TIMJ ,_. ....._. to MU bf 4R1tta • .p~ GI U. ,._... Ta The lomdallan 1ave $15.000 to ·Reform Ad Ill-. UM La.-a BMeti Scbool ~Art T1M1aleaft#.Matedblddlnet0 ·and another sz,,ooo to the the Taubmu·.<lla-lrvine con· · La1una Beach Mu.tum of Art~ iortiwn blWPt the fouadMlali Alto recelvlnl fund.a we .... men thM '* mlWoa tor' lta SOuth Oout RepertGrJ ta Oolla 1bare.. llHa,.. '125,000; Pro•ld•ne• . . . ' .speech and Hearing cent~r ln Oran1e, $75,000, and South Coast Community Hospital 1n South Laguna, $100,000. Firemen said Garza•s feet were pinned ln the crumpled • truck cab. 1bey said be com· plained of pain in hls neck, back • and left arm. Additional grants went to the Boys Club of Buena Park, ·uo,ooo; tbe Boys Club of Fullerton, $25,000; Boys Club of· La Habra, $8,000; Boys Club of Ga~ told police be wu driv· ing the truck up the long arade of Coyote C,anyon Road, near Bonita Canyon Road, on bis ••Y to unload at the Coyote Canyon . landfill dump. · 'ttre South Coast Area. Jnc. in San Clemente, $25,000; and 8071 Club of Weltmlnat.er, $101000. Donationa were aJeo liven to • Ho said the t.nack repeatedly the Olrll Club of the Harbor :J!~:1~.:;;:h h~= Are• 1n Colla Meta, SZ5,000l_the off, the brakes failed and the Girls Club of Founta.ln Vauey-truck rolled backwards. Huntl~ Beach, $$,000; the . G1rza sald be steered the Girl• Cltab .of North Ounae · truck into an embankment to Coa.nt1. Jne:, ln Buena Put, avoid colllaion with any eart $15,000 Melod)'land Delinquency that. mf&bt have come up tbe (SMGll'l'S, Pa••.U) .road. . . t • mlddte&Os. · INSIDE TODAY Whf.tbrl Bill is a ~cial kind of old ~. and .Iris orritlal ill the houaehold mean• 'M~ Christmas.• &e F~, Page Cl. . . I • ) A'" Wl'"'""9 Ladies First? Gr togs don'l seem to provide comfort fo r u female soldie r ut Fort Leonard Wood. Mo., one of thousands lining up for buses \\'ailing-to trans port them to more com- tortablc surroundings as they head home for the holidays. From Page rl I BLAST ... JO men in the explosion. The in- spection orrice was al the bottom of a silo which collapsed, he ~aid. The governml'nt inspectors, who took over from private in· !>pcctors after the bsg grain :-.candals in which d ebris was mixed with forei~n shipments nf grain, watch the flow of grain 111 and out of thl' factl1ly "It "as raining concrete," said Allus Foret, 52, a workman who was outside the elevator and was knocked flat by the hlasl. lie was hospitalized with burns. The c"plosion roc ked the small town of Westwego and showered the area with grain du:-.t and heavv debrii.. Across lht' M1ssissipp.i River al New Orlt•ans · Audubon Park Zoo, a nimal s cried ilnd r oared hy,terically. The smoke poured from a gap- ing hol<' ripped in the concrete Willi of the grain elevator. The silo was one of several sitting end-to-end in a cluster at the company, but the fire and ex· plosion appeared confined lo one elevator. The facility sits on the bank of tbe river. Fireboals jolned the Westwego volunteer fire depart· l"(lcnl and equipment fr'om nearby areas. Ambula nces ringed the place and Coast Guard helicopters hovered over I.be elevators. ·Wes t Jefferson Hospital re· Ported seven persons admitted, most of them suffering from b\Jrns. Ochsner Medical Founda· tfon had four -one of them J ef· f~rson Parish deputy J ames L . Jphnson. who suffered a broken ankle at the scene. Conditions of the burn victims \\'ere not known. "ll sounded like something fell on top of the building," s aid Nikki Glaub, 21, who was work· fog in an office of a nearby Junkyard. ·'The whole building shook and the lights went out for a second Or two. One or the m en from oor y\ird said he heard a big boom and he looked over at the grain lilevator, and he sajd it went up 411 in smoke and the elevator '¥asn 't even standing any more." • John Allender, deputy director or the Audubon Park zoo, said Ute animal cages were showered ~ith debris after the explosion. ' "It almost looked like a IJlUShroom cloud and there was quite a bit of debris falling when 'e got out or the office. The teacocks were screaming and elling and flying. Most or the njmals were terribly upset." ORANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Bigfoot's Howl.s Resemble Coyotes'? SEATI'LE (AP) -The elusive s asquatch may be mimicking coyote howls in its quest lo re· main anonymous, says the head of a Seattle organization ~tudy- 1ng the legendary Bigfoot. Suspected sasquatch yowls on tape r eco rdin gs fr om Washington, South Dakota and California were s upplied to Univers ity of Was hington zoology professor Gordon Orians for a nalysis. says Jon Beckjord, who heads Project Grendel. "If these arc sounds of sas· qualches then they sound re- m a~kably like coyotes," Ori ans Two Bandits Hit County Savings Firm Two men acting in unison at separate teller windows held up a savings and loan office in Buena Pa rk Wednesday and escaped with Sl.100. police said. Vi ctimized by the duo was Home Savings and Loan, 8010 Beach Blvd . Buena Park. According to police, the two bandits stood in separate lines at teller windows and reached the two women tellers at about the sam(' time. ·Both m en handed female tellers handwritten notes saying they were armed and demand- ing money. Afler being given an estimated Sl.100, the m en ran from the savings and loan, police said. Damaged Ship Due SAN FRANCISCO CAP} -The storm-battered Panamahian freighter Malasia Permai was expected lo limp into the San Francisco Bay at mid-morning today. escorted by the Coast Guard cutter Resolute. THIEVES FELL SPRUCED TREE · ONSTED, Mich. CAP) Thieves with the Christmas spirit just couldn't pass up a 10-foot blue spruce in Patricia Kruse's front yard. She told Lenawee County sheriff's deputies two men felled the fully decorated tree and drove off as she watched. Countg Plants said. He concluded the sounds may or m ay not be Bigfoot. The recordings were played on a s ound s pectograph, which makes a printed record in hopes of finding similarities and dif· fe rences in the sounds. Orians s aid he uses the machine lo analyze bird calls. A possible Bigfoot yowl from Little Eag l e, S.D., was ctescribed by Beckjord as like "a c0yo t e pac k goin g crazy s imultaneously at outrageously loud volume mixed in with monkey chatter." Another sounded like car tires squealing around a corner or maybe a fingernail going down a blackboard. At the end of one r ecording, made on the Lummi Indian Reservation near Bellingham 18 months ago, was a sound that Orians said he never heard before. New Flu Virus Triggers Plan For Vaccines ATLANTA (AP) -Public he alth authorities, concerned about a new influenza virus in Russia and Hong Kong. mel to· day to consider the possibility or a vaccine program s imilar in scope to last year's ill-fated swine nu program. Dr. William Foege, director of the Center for Disease Control, told the gathering or about 100 physicians, epidemiologists, medical school faculty and state health officials that he would hesitate to predict a flu epidemic because of the nature of the disease. "But there is a difference now m forecasting. We have the best international surveying system .I have seen. We feel that we have lo try to predict,• he said. The Russian virus was iden- tified as HlNl, similar to a virus which caused widespread out- breaks in the United Slates in the 1940s and 1950s. Other types of influenza, either A-Texas or A-Victoria, have been reported in about 11 states, said the CDC. Isolated cases were reported in Illinois, N ew Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Oregon, Florida and Georgia. Deadly (:hemical Viewed for Pests By KATHY CLANCY ot ... Delly N• Ii.ff Fifty cases of a deadly chemical once earmarked for delivery to South American jungles now will be used to kill plant. pest.s in Oranae and other California counties. In addiUon, the Cypress man who tried to dispose of the r.esUclde by dumpm1 the cues n t.raab bins Monday night in Buena Park and Cyprua will tac• no charges, Cypreis Police 1ald today. • . l>olico explalned Heney I>avls of the Happlne11 'li'oundaUon Inc. bad planued to ship tho 50 cases of methyl bromide to his aon, a ChrtaUan miaslonary In South America. When he was unable to llnd a 1Sblpptn1 nrm to hand1' &he transportation, bowe-ver, he de- cided to dispoae of the chemicals in dumpsters, officers said. Police and firemen in the two cities found the 50 container• in a Monday evening aurch aft.er Davis was spot.led by a resident depositing a small wooden crate Into a dumpster. Davis now baa donated the chemicals to Ounce County agricultural 1peclalll\I JibO p\JD to use lt to ldll plant peats. Some crates probab\f will be shipped to other countlta as well, oS. flclalt said. Police said Davia apparentlY was unaware of tb• ban.rd In p l acln1 the chemleal s ln dumpsters md had no mallcloul intent. He uallted olfklalt KOG·. day nf&)ll 1n roundinl up ~e crates. Fare Cut Efforts Backed Orange County supervisors want to be made a party to ef· forts by two airlines hoping to offer low-fare flights between Orange County Airport and Nevada. The board voted 4-1 Wednes· day to tile petitions with the Civil Aeronautics Board to join in proceedings initiated by Air California and Western Airlines. Supervisor Ralph Clark cast the lone •·no" vote saying he was dissatisfied with the word· ing supervisors used in ordering the petitions. : Clark said he wanted it clear that supervisors weren't op· posed to low-cost fures but only to an increase in the number or flights and accompanying noise at Orange County Airport. Western Airlines doesn't use the county airport, but Air California does. Both airlines are asking for the new county-lo-Nevada routes as part or system-wide changes being negotiated with the federal agency. Clark contended that no mat· ter what the outcome of th~ agency's proceedings, Western would not be able lo use Orange Co unty Airport without supervisors' permission. Fro• Page A J ENERGY ••• that a persiistenl 9·9 deadlock amon.1 Senate members on Lbe emotlonal question of deregulat· ing gas prices remains as firm as ever. "I have no parentage of this turkey aCler today." J ohnston said, acknowledging defeat in advance. Senate opponents of deregula· tion said the compromise was too generous to oil and gas pro- ducers. Opponents said It did nol go far enough toward allowinc the free market to determine gas prices. The compromise was worked out during three days of in- fo rm al s ecret negotiatio ns among a small group of House and Senate conferees. It bad the effect of uniting most or the House conferees with two Senate supporters or lifting federal controls. The most recent compromise efCort began when Pres ident Carter personally urged ke! conferees last week to attempt to reach some agreement before Christmas. Today's vole will mean that when the conferees return from the holiday recess, they will be no closer to agree· ment than when they began their negotiations. Rep. Harley Staggers, D· W.Va., chairman Of the COO· ference committee said that un- less the deadlock among Senate conferees is broken. he will call .no further meetings before the current congressional adjouma- ment ends Jan. 19. Only Kitchen Sink Wanted l>ORT LAVACA, Texas CAP> -A thief could have walked away with every- thing but lhe kitchen sink after he broke down the door lo a Port Lavaca home. But -you guessed 1t -the thlef only wanted the sink, police said. Porl Lavaca police said Wednesday that Julian Ybarra reported be couldn 'L find anythjng in tbe house disturbed except the door and tbc sink. which was Hanging pre- cariously frorn its plumb- ing. Deteclive Sgt. Joe Pena said the frustrated thief a ppnrenUy ••just tried to tear it away from lhe wall," but failed. Fro•Pa~AJ GIFfS •.. Prevention Center in Anaheim, $20,000, and the YWCA of North Oran~e County in Fullerton, $10,000. Also receiving grants were the Assistance League of Tustin,· $25,000; Goodwill Indus tries of Orange County in Santa Ana, $30,000; the Junior League or Newport Harbor, lnc .. $40,000; and the Women's Law Center of Southern California in Tustin, $7,SOO. SONY. Gift Ideas From JVC SUPER PORT AILE RADIO TV '"• V.tna ,...., f >tt.-:•v ''C"" ./\ •ltt• t""l AM •M Jl:,,1,1 1.11~;, r4 ~ ~ ~·•O~ ~I:~• '~o-:;...,}''J '•P~o11 CW ••r<eo..c tt . h""" · 'o ~· ~•C-'f''1 ar t·.>i,.. to"•"I Of' fOQUOl\M) !~ar~e .. 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RoM pl4.SO •. 10 6' + t \> J••ntm .IO 1 1>17 ISll• + \,lo RtyMpUl7 .. t 4114-~ ,~:~~~l:~b 1H fit.~:v; A•v11S. .40A t O l'A .. . • Tr•nK11 .SJ t 1'1 •~ + -. lllCllCo 1.10 & 11 ISV.+ "' 1"r"GPpf6.6$., n.o 71'11-2lt AkllMtt 'D t 9' »'II+ 4' TOP t Ri.ITl.S05 11 It\<.+"" ' Pl 64..12109'~ ..... Periodic Checks By SYLVIA PORT£R ,I~, .. ~~ MiWons o( mdivlduals and business owners are nag. geraled suvcrs or papers und records, receipts and can- celled cb(l(kS. Thll Is an excellent tlme to gel rid of nonessenUal.5. But while pampblt!ls .ind even books have been written about what recor ds lo keep, little reliable guidance ever is &iven on whal to discard. AS ON£ ILLUSTR ATION. wh.lle you should keep checks and other receiplll that may ~ needed for income tax purposes as proof of payment, it isn't imPortant to keep all cancelled checks. ll 's even silly. In discarding records at homo: -Concentrate on the most Important documents. A famtly filing system that 1s efficient and helpful is possible with little equipment and a modest ouUay. A filing box con. tainlng manila folders and a s mall sate deposit box. which Is tax deducllble, will pro- vide sufficient home file storage space. -Dispose of salary statements after check- ing them against annual ·w-2 wage forms. Lighten tiles by Money's Worth using n cancelled check as a recol'd for an entry on the tax return. Unless you fear that the nature of a medical expen!>e is ambiguous, for example, the cancelled check to the physi- cia n is adequate evidence that you have paid ~r a specific medical service. This can eliminate the need for saving physicians' statements and other bills identified by check~. Don't throw out bills from the drugstore. The IRS may request proof of deductible drugs. -AS A RULE OF T HUM.lS. dispose ot personat tax records after six years. Federal lax statutes make tax re- turns vulnerable to challenge up to three yo~ under normal circumstances. The six-year period is considered the time frame for check ing returns on which income has been un- derstated b y more than 25 percent, -Those who use incom e averaging should discard re· turns over five years old. The IRS usually retains personal returns for six years and can supply copies at a moderate cost. -After recording the year 's total dividend payments, discard these papers on receipt of the annual dividend t,allv supplied by the compa ny. Be sure, though. to retain a record of capital-gain distribution dividends because they must be reported for tax purposeswhent.l\eshares are sold. -DISCARD CHECKS WRITTEN FOR maintenance costs on your house, unless you plan lo sell it soon. Keep permanent improvement records that add to the value or your property. s uch as the addition or central air· conditioning. -·Periodically check warranties and guarantees; if they're out of date. discard them. Throw out health main- tenance certifi cates that have explr~. Next : Discarding bus1neas record!. Stock Rally Sparked By Dollar's Surge NEW YORK (AP} -Stock prices chalked up another solid gain today, drawine support from a rally by the dollar in foreign-exchange markets. The Dow J ones average or 30 industrials, up 7.71 points Wednesday, roseanother7 .88to821.81. Gainers outdistanced losers by close lo a 2-1 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. The dollar rallied in value against leading foreign cur- rencies today after a protracted slump. _ Stock# In The Spotlight NEW YORK IAPI· Sai... 4 11-m. '°"'" M>d net <1111'9' ol the 1111-mott .ell ... N-York Sloe.. E•C,.._ '"""· ~-:i1~,':,~~1.1y •I ""°'~J~n ~V.. + O'o M.orrlotl .. . . 3'5,too 111/) + ..-. Ptptl(o • . "'-'00 211" • U1 c;.,. Mol~.. 291,100 •111r ... -\. EUI l(oela... 2n,soo SI .. . Oow Cl\..... 241,lOO 11'"' .. ~ ~1ll'c":.:~'. ~:= ~i~ ·;·~ Kelln<r<Oll 201,900 71 • ~ Euo11 ,.... 200.000 A6l-. •.• M.orU. F ltld 1'0,too 31 _. ,._ MIMMM . 1M,100 41'" + 1'o Bl•c" oeo.. 111.-'"' '• C..rt FOOd. . 171,«IO .n , '• Holldly '"" 176,700 t• + "" Do1DJ011e•A l.'era~• New YotltlAPl FIN I Do~4"9f.OllH STOCKS ~ Hlglt I.ow c._ Cl\Q JO 1no •11.n m .u e1s.l1121.11+ 1M 10 T•11 211.SI 21t 14 JIJ.10 21S n+ 2.st U Ull 110At 111.11 109.tO 110 It-o.cw 6S Stk 2SJ.14 2'S" 7'1.9S llUI • US lllCIU' ..................... , 2, 1'S,SOO Trlft • . . • . . • . . • . • • . . . . S1t,IOO UU11 ••.•...•..•.. Ul,>00 •S St• , • . • • . . . . . . • . . . • . . . • !I, 131,.600 M'hat S tocb Did HEW YORK IAPI AloOran :: 1 • Jl'Ai+ i,_ TrC.Ppf 2.50.. 7 ltV>+ v. "'-"" "Tr•""°" .n ' 1'-" • ~ A -1 • d -'P1 · · .. 1~ ... 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W•lnoc: 011. • . . 201,lOO tJ + I~ Keh er llld.... •• 111.IOO •"• ..•. • HouOUM •••. • 111,SOO 31'• -~ FlyOI• 011... . . 107,400 1'1• 11, C.lllfln IM.. . $4,j()() 4 I\ SVntu Corp . .53, 100 21 • ''> OaltfWOCI •. • • •1.000 16~ • '" C"'mp Ho.. 40.JOO 1 Gt8H Pt!. . . . l4 . .00 7''1 + '• Sllsquelt• pl. 31,000 "''' .... IJp • a11d Do1D11• RoylO 4 7~ s S4l 56~' ., UGI pf 2 '5 •. d.50 30"" ....• • llubOtm. 6011 S1 uV:: 1: UMC 1·20 • lol 11•.r. + ..... NEW VOlll( IAPl -ft>e lollowl"ll tis! RuuTo0 .76 ' )J 11V. v. UMET ,, .. It , -..... SllOWI IM ..... Y0tk SloO Eoc~oe A~CHl'S • .0 '2160 1~. .• . . UOVPnd .10 I l3 l"1!+ "' tlOCkl •n<I ••tittrtllll l~I ll••t Q01M up _ l-4 _ U I I S 21' '°""· · · · · ,.,. most eno down lht most !)fstd on A I) 246 ~....... VARCO ••• • 21 20~. v. i:•un .,. <·---r~rdleH ol VOIUfll• ~ UVl11pf S.10,. 2 e.> -4' 1 ~ .._ ~ .i:i : 7J; m:: ~ U11•rco .10 • 1 10\IJ. .... N/;.";;l';~ trecllng belOw " •r~ tn<I· S1blne ,$610 JI ,....,_ 14 IJnlNV JAte • I Sl • ••' • Wed. 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Cfd 0.Cllll<'d U11<"•11veo Totl l IUUU N•w 1'71 nlQI\\ N-It/I lows AMIX SAi.ES Prtv Too.v day 3lt H I ,., ,.. l9' JOI 1014 ~ ts IJ 1 • Oue to late transmission today's listing w ill not appear In the Dally Pilot. Due lo late transmission today's l isting w ill not appear in the Daily Piiot. EVE ... 1.M.. 4 UV.+ v. Unlttnn ,. 1 ,... ,.,. 20 .......... "' ,..... + ..... vBM .«I 6 4'I i ttlt+ .._ UJtrBk 1.CW 7 21 1111)-V. • Namt L.t I CllO p I t xon • ~ Jl'f+ \II UHllCI 1.JOI 7 1IO 2'V-~ I NIM ).tOIJI ~II. -·~ Oii c 10 ' S y•fJols ,,..,., 11 • •" UnPllMn •. D tM .... 2 lle11lce Ind 2~ v. 011 • s llrltlo 1.tJ 9 541 2t'.'o+'\4i Uu"t~•IO .M ' I• 141/•-V. ' 3 Aro CO<p 20'" -l'IJ 011 6 9 Ill S61Hlntull. OIVIOENOS; Ati lMu•I Sclllllr ,Mlf t4 11 -l4t re' t,nt · · 14 lS\ti ~ ''• 4 AmSlllllll IS -I Oii 6.3 ""'"\ ot""""''~ la.tltlllecl: 1•1111111 e•lr.o ID'"'" 1.101 tn 1 9'+ " u FlciG 1"' S t» l1~• "' s GMRProo t 1 • Ott s' lb! •CIM.O er P<l•O 10 t•r 1111s yur,,.. , .. 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Jt t '4'.:::: : ..rav 1~· ~J~" 1 I~ • iJ; ~jl lot "I .1 elf ft + \'t ,....,.., .UtJ i + 1' tell l • •Im+) '"!l i Ml'tt·~ ;• ..::. , " • Jttt -. ... 11 1'110 Uttt _ti • \t-" ' -.-. • ••I • • C.:. • • "' ,._. n a11t. .. u• , 111+ ~ r , tN..... 1:1t N ,,_._" L . 6 m .... , Mtt.ft'J '6 llS U t IMI M t lit 1~+ '- l ) AJ•DAILY PtlOf --~ AP'WI,..,.... adellcla.r Model Twnty-thousand calendars featuring a picture of Dixy Lee Ray superimposed on on orange sunset are being distributed as holiday gifts from the governor. Life Set In Di's Slaying SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 27-year-old avowed les· bian has been sentenced to life 1n state prison for the bludgeon slaying of a Marine drill instructor July 21. Natha Mary DePew was described Wednes· day by Superior Court Judge William T. Low as a "danger to society." Low said the slaying of Sg_t. Davis Hargis, 231 of 5all Diego was "certain· ly bizarre. "SHE REALLY was just the girl next door when s he was ap· proachcd by Mrs. Hargis to kill Davis Hargis," the judge said. "Over three weeks. they di!'lcussed ~everal plots. I jolted down 12 plots, including the one she Miss DePew remembered, putting bullets in the carburetor. I have heard a lot of murder cases, but I've never heard that one before." Mrs. DePew pleaded guilty Nov. 23 to beating Hargis to death with a 6 ~·pound window weight and dumping his body in a dry creek bed near Ramona. TllE SLAIN Marine's wife, Carol Lo uise Hargis, was convicted of first-degree murder Dec. 7. She will be sentenced by Low on Jan. 4. During testimony at Mrs. Hargis' trial, Miss DePew told of plans to kill the young Marine ''just Coe the money," in· eluding (1 ) lacing his Crench toast with LSD, (2) slipping the poison sac of a tarantula into a piece of blackberry pie and (3) putting bullets into the carburetor of his truck. Conditiom Improving For Skiing By The Associated Press 'Skiing conditions were reported improving for the upcoming weekend in the Sierra Nevada. Here a re the condi· lions as provided to the California Slate Automobile Association: BUM8Saler SAN PRANCISCO (AP> -Crime on Ul• ., ... .,.. hM Ma eat more tban ~ ·t1wat1 to a ,,.. elal MCUld•• Pl'Oll'lm, lluar ~ MGlcone' .w~~·~u.. *OP lo a new lluni tut .~ -I. Thurtday. O.C.mw 22. 1977 CONSUMER I CALIFORNIA £onsu1ners Warned of Light Bulb Defects . WASHINGTON (AP) - Coo1umer1 who have bouabt replacement bulb• for their Cbrlatmaa Ughu have been ad· viled to inspect them for a possible defect C<IO.Sisting or a very sbor., lbln strand of wire al the base of the bulb. wbeo electrical current II flrat ap. plied, the Consumer Product Safe- ty Commlaalon said W edneeday. THE ADVICE CAME with an an· nouncement from the commission that Market Research Imports, Incline Village, Nev., ls voluntarily withdrawing from sale certaln im· ported replacement bulbs made in Taiwan. The bul .. have a thln strand or wire approximately one-eiahth to one-lowth of an Inch lone which may protrude from the soldered tip at the base of the bulb, the com· mission said. It said the defect may be safely removed by simply snipping orr the protruding wire with a pair of scissors or pliers. Or the consumer may choose to return the bulbs to the place of purchase for exchange orreCund. TWO MODE~ OF bulbs are sub· ject to the defect and are identified on the package as item No. LC-9004, size 914 and item No. LC-7004, size 7'h. The wo~ds, The defect could cause the bulb to shatter witm% explosive force . ~ FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL HUGHIE . • . RESIDENCE. 32 Hughie is one . of 43 clients, from 18 to 66 years of age, who live in Residence 32 at Fairview State Hospital; like everyone living there he is developmentally disabled, his mental capacity won't grow much beyond that of a normal five-year-old. He is 37 years old and has spent the last 23 yecrs in state institutions. His physical appearance is pleasant, though his blond hair is thinning and he is developing a bit of a paunch; quite generally he appears comparable to anyone approaching the middle years of life. He is, however, on epileptic, and he was born with damage to the left side of his brain causing him to have a stroke-like incapacity with a slight shuffle of the right leg and a somewhat limited function of the right arm. A typical day finds him rising at 6:30 A.M. and by 7:00 A.M. he's completed his personal hygiene chores. and he's ready to dress; he' II usually wear an open-neck sportshirt, a pair of faded cord bell bottoms, and sneakers. He'll often choose to be accompanied by his Mickey Moose doll which he carries in the right front pocket of his ieans. Hughie (and Mickey) have breakfast and ore soon ready for their vsuol 8 hours of school and/or organized instruction in such diverse subjects as arts and crafts, communications, table manners, and personal hygiene. He returns from his busy school schedule at about 5:00 P .M. and immediately proceeds to listen to his portable radio; during the next hour, until dinner, he'll listen to every possible sports program that he can tune to. You see, Hughie is the resident sports fan and he 'NOrks hard at making himself capable of reciting volumes of little known facts from the world of sports, facts like knowing by name the various team doctors in the Notional football League. And he's rarely wrong. To this ~int in Hughie's day, and through dinner which is served about 6:00 P.M., he and his peers have enioyed a fruitful day; they've found their classes challenging and their day has been filled with "normalization"·· activities, octivities which will help them to behaviorally adiust to the "outside world" vvhenever they are fortunate enough to go on a trip away from Fairview. But after dinner Hughie's· product.ive day takes a potential step backwards. During that time of the day that you and I are relaxing in the comfortable social setting of our homes, Hughie and his friends spend their time in a large rather sterile room that is filled only with institutional-type chairs lined up against the wall, all of which face the single T.V. set that is hung some 8 feet off the tiled floor. Hughie may listen to his radio, and a few of his friends may watch T.V., but most just sit languidly by and stare into space. It is during these "social hours" ··that every professional employee at Fairview believes that the greatest advances could be made in their clients' behavior. If Hughie and his friends had a normal living area that included couches, chairs, tables, lamps, rugs, etc., then they could learn about life's social graces, they could learn acceptable behavior in surroundings that have been normal to you and I since we were tots. Hughie and his peers would have a chance to be more accepted when they made occasional trips to the "outside." ·:But funds aren't available for such "frills" ·:as choirs and couches and rockers; the budget is limited and such purchases ·simply can't be mode. Nv:Jny donations are made by charitable people in the community but such rontributions are usually directed to the "little kids"·· -not to the big guys like Hughie. But, boy, do they need help. They're the "forgotten clients" ··at Fairview. If you 've got just a tiny bit of charity laying around in your purse er tucked a-Nay in your wallet, then how about helping to put a lamp, or a chair, or a rocker, into the life of Hughie and his friends in Residence 32? Just before you relax in your "normalization"·· area, write a check for anything you can afford and send it to: • HUGHIE, VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR RESIDENCE 32 FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL 2501 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 Replacement BulbS, MRI, also ap. pear on the package. The bulbs were sold four to a package for about $1 or less na- tionwide. Other distributors may have im· ported the same bulbs from Taiwan and may be selling them under different brand names, the commission said. 44 fashiOn island, ~rt center 644-5070 , . I ........ ~/South coast ~ VOL. 70, NO. 356, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA _ THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1977 Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS! School Project Nothing But Trouble By ANNE COOPER Of .... OMtr Pllel SUH A contractor wbo called his Shor eclltfs school construction job in San Clemente "the pits" because or obstacles he encoun· t ered took a final blow this week, when he was penalized $9, 700 for running over lhe a uthorized completion date. "Thirty days into the project we had to shut down because of an accident." s aid Michael Harwick, of liarwick and Son, Newport Beach general contrac· tors ... Neighborhood kids van· dalized lbe site repeatedly - well, the problems just broke the spirit of the project." Despite Harwick's plea, the school board voted S·O to support a recommendation from Truman Benedict, deputy s upe rintendent, to withhold ' $9,700 from the firm -$100 for each of 97 days tbe company ran · overtime ln completing the school. · The penalty was supported by all trustees except board presi- dent Ted Kopp or Capistrano Beach and Robert Bachelor of Laguna Niguel, who did not at- tend this week's board meeting. The $1.9 million SborecllCfs school at 240 Yia Socorro was to ............ TOPS OF SILOS AT NEW ORLEANS GRAIN ELEVATOR BLOWN OFF ttY EXPLOSION Aremen Battle Kiiier Bla1t. Attempt to Rescue Many Trapped lnalct. SC 'Shelves' Petition /merest 'Nil' in Pier-bowl Meetinga By ANNE COOPER • OI tM o.ll't Pit« Si.ff A petition signed by 1,908 San 1 Clemente residents, asking the ' City Council to put pier·bowl re· development to a vote on March 7, was accepted with a comment that few citizens showed such in- terest during 21 public meetings on the project. The pe tition containing signatures of nearly 15 percent of the city workers, was present- ed by Joseph Barton, or 620 Calle Vicente, on behalf of the San Clemente Homeowners Associa· lion. "There have been at least 21 submttted bt c on s ulta nts leeisker.Jobnson, councilmen approved a modification of the most intense commercial de- velopment of the pier· bowl area. At that time, councilmen said they chose commercial develop· ment over more passive de· velopment in order that people enjoying San Clemente's pier and beaches would help to sup· port maintenance of the old woodenp~r. San Clemente Homeowners Association president Howard Mushett accused councilmen of "hoodwinking" the citizens or San Clemente on the redevelop.. ' ment project. M u s bett said moat San Clemente residents thought the purpose of the pier-bowl project was to clear the area for a seaside park, like Manl Beach Park in Laguna Beach. "For the councilmen lo refuse even to discuss a petillon signed · by 1,908 citizens shows a lack ol respect for the democratic proc- <See PETITION, Page A2) open Sept. 12. When it became apparent the school would not be ready !or students by then, 720 seventh and eighth graders were bused to Marco Forster Junior High lo San Juan Capistrano, where the two schools operated on double session until Nov. 14. Harwick said the City of San Clemente prohibited access to the job site until an alternate ac· cess route was developed. The alternate route was inadequate and caused problems when vehicles couldn't pass on it or. sot stuck in the mud. Rerouting the access road meant the site could not be ade· quately fenced, Harwick said, making the school building a target for vandals as it neared completion. . .. "A portion or each and every week that we have been on this .Grain Storage job has been devoted to the re. pair or reP,lacement of some vandalized item," Harwick said. Some ol tbe vandalism may· · have been caused by neighbors who were opposed to the school's location, he said. "In order to bid competitively on a construction project, a con· tractor cannot take into account con tin ge n cies o r thi s <See FINE, Pag-e AZ> 5 Killed, 11 Hurt ~ In Silo Explosion NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A thundering explosion shattered mo.re than a dozen storage silos or the Continental Grain Com· pany in suburban Westwego to· day, killing at least five people. More than 20 others were re· ported missing, and at least 11 were hospitalized, most with bums, authorities said. Jefferson Parish Sheriff Al Cronvich said five bodies had been recovered from the bum· ing grain elevators and adjacent offices, where government in· spectors worked. Rescue teams were hampered by heavy smoke and dust as they looked for bodies in the concrete rubble at the bank of the Mis· slssippl River. Cause of the blast was not known, but dust·fllled air inside \.be uliadrical arain elevators ia extnmely wlatlle. "I waa standing on the ship a couple ol hundred a yards away fro• tea. mam ..... hou.sf,'' aaid Michael Gavron, 24 , of Wil· mingtqn, Del. ++I beard an ex· ploslon and turned around. The only thing I saw was big names jumping up from the top of the whole elevator. "ln a matter of seconds, the main head house of the elevator had fa.llen to the ground, and it looked like the inspection lab and control room where they have all their scale equipment was completely leveled. "All I can say is this structure is tons and tons of reinforced concrete and steel and It was down to the ground in little bits and pieces, little rocks." The huge elevator h a d a capacity of six million bushels, and the explosion a pparently oc· curred while a ship was being loaded, authorities said. Harlan Ryan, regional dire<:· tor of the federal grain inspec· tion service, said he lost eight or 10 men in the explosion. Ttle in· speclion office was at the bottom or a silo wbich collapsed, he said. The government inspectors, who look over from private in- spectors after the big g rain scandals in which debris was mhced with foreign shipments of grain, watch the flow of grain io and out of the facility. ·'It was raining concrete," said Allus Foret, 52, a workman who was outside the elevator and was knocked flat by the blast. He was hospitalized with burns. '. The explosion rocked the small town or Westwego and showered the area with grain dust and heavy debris. Across the Mississippi River at New (See BLAST, Page A%) public meetings on this sub· · ject," Council m a n Tony 1 1 DiGiovanni told Bart.on. "I find no record of you or your group voicing an oplnion at these meet- February Benefit . Young Laguna Clemente Accepts Cellist Wins ings." City councilmen voted 5-0 to "receive and file" the petiUon, taking no action to put the re- de velopment of the pier·bowl area on the March ballot. Progr8m of Opera ~~'::,1:,~1 ••• A previous request. from the A February program of opera homeowners' association in No· ·music, performed by soloists vember was also received and from the Metropolitan Opera in filed by the City Council. That New York and other opera com· request was not accompanied by panles, has received the nod a petition. from San Clemente councilmen T he assoclation has taken is-· to benefit the city and the sue with the City Council's ap.. Orange County Music Center. proval in July of moderate corn·. Barlt&e. William Olvis, a San . m ercial development of the· Clemente resident, asked the Ci· neighborhood immediately in· ty Council Wednesday to lend land from the ml4Qlclpal pier. the clty'1 name to the project in or three redevelopment plans . . exchange for 20 percent of the · concert's gross profits. .------------. Olvis suggested. lbe money Coast Weather Eighty pen:ent chance or rain tonight, diminishing , to SO pereent chance Fri· day. Occasional winds oflO to 20 mph. Lows tonJght In SOI. Rllbl l'rldQ ta low to mlcldl••· Bigfoot Howls Said ro Sound Like Coyote~' SEA'ITLE (AP) -Th9 elusive •uquatda mat IM mlmktba.S · ~coyote bowl9.lD lta queist to re-• IM1n ....,.., •&Yt tbe'heed . of • SeatlSe oqalut.loa ltdd.y· m. tbe &ec..Ury Blctoot. . : · Smpeetecl •uquateb yowll • tape recordlnt• from W ashlngt.cm. Soatb Dakota and California were supplied to · • Un.lver~ Wa1btacton. IOOlOIY OordoD Oriana . for analJU. aaya Joa Bec~td, · .who beldi ProJeet O~l. ' "lf' tbeM are iOmdl ol tU• Beach, winner of Orange Coast Coll ege's .. Young Artis t Award," has received $3,282 in scholarships for young string players. The Corona del Mar High School student was recently awarded the Julia Klumpkey award, sponsored by the San Franeiaco Conservatory of Music, for bis talents with the "llo. Curt.ls won the OCC award last spring and performed with the college's Community Symphony Orebestta this month. Ile was guest soloist, 'performing the Concerto for Cello and Orchestra by A. Dvorak. He also won the Gregor Piatigonky Memorial Prize and the Joseph Schuster Memorial Scholarship. FOOTBALL I .r>.1 ONTV · ~TONIGHT HAU. OF ,Alie ClASSIC ~13,lp.m. .......... (7 ... ) Ylt.~(7-4) o.ltyl'll9ls..ff""'9 CONNIE MERRITT AND HER FRAGRANT YULE CARDS Lagunan Hand• Out Treee to Hlllalde Neighbors Tradition Lives Laguna Wo~ Gives Trees By SfEVE MITCHELL Ot Ult O.fly PIMt Staff Connie Merritt is continuing a tradition s he started four Christmases ago by delivering live pine trees to about 400 friends and neighbors in the bills near her Laguna Beach home. Instead of sending out Christmas cards, the 30.year.old realtor as11ociate takes eight· inch pine trees around the neig.J:iborbood . To date, she's passed out more than 1,000 ol the prickly Yule sifts to residents ln Mystic Hills •nd Bluebird Canyon. "But don't ask me how many of them are still alive," she laughed. "It's just my way of getting lo the Christmas spirit · and doing something for the · ecology," the businesswoman 1hru11ed. Admitting that she's mo:re sue· ceaatul with indoor plants, Miu Merritt Uid s he's been ex· perimenttnJ wltb different varleUe1 ol pine in ber annual· • 1lft.1llvfna t.rekt. ~ ••&Jack plae1 didn't do too weU. IM. caurt or lloDt.ref .. . . pines seem to like the coast," s he said. "But I'm n o horticulturist," she added. Some of her neighbors -and potential real estate customers -look forward to her annual door·to-doorvisits. "Sometimes they take me into their back yards and show me trees I gave them three or four years ago," she sald. "Some of tbem are five and six feet tell now." And in 10 or 15 years, Connie . Merritt's live Christmas cards should be a pretty impressive sight. WO PUCE UKEHOME' A hospital stay ls seldom fun, · but at Christmas time lt can really be depressing. But at least two San Clement• General · .ltc>dpltal patient.a will be 1oin1 bome fortbe boliday•. Storv P•.,.e Al.2. .,, ·- ( ~LY PILOT ___ ,,_ ... _ .. ..,,., . . . . , . ... ~ ,_;- . .,, . .. I~ t • < ( • •• • ? Energy Program in Jeopardy? WASHINGTON (AP > -A House·Senate conference com· mittee today formally aban· doned efforts to reach agree· ment this year on the natural gas portion of President Carter's energy plan. By a vot~ of 16·2 Senate del· egates to the conference rejed· ed a natural gas compromise sponsored by Sen. Bennelt Johnston, D-Da. The vote sends the deadlocked conferees back to tM drawlnc board a:nct further JeopardJt4f chances for conareui onai.. Mall Delayed?.· Beul Weather Stays Courien WASIDNGTON <A P) -Bad weather in parts of the country is frustrating postal officials trying to get all Christmas m ajl delivered by Sunday . passage of the touahest pal"ls of Carter's eneray progra_m. The Jobnllton comprornlse was the r~sult of three days of tough baraalnlng with House members of the committee, wh~ accepted 1t. . JJut todayf s vote deQlonstrated that ,. perabtent 9-9 deadlock nmonf sthate membets on the ~motlooal 4'*1tloa ot c'ler~uiwat· 101 gas prices ttiniins aa firm as•ver. "I have no parentage o! this turkey after toda.y ,•• Jobn.ston said, aclolowledging defeat in advance . COMMERCIAL REDEVELOPMENT AT PIER FOUGHT BY HOMEOWNERS Consultants' Sketch Shows Plan Approved by San Clemente Coul_'cllmen "For mail that is in the system now, whether we get it delivered by Christmas Day depends in part on the weather," a Postal Service spokesman said Wednesday. The bigges t weather problem was the · s nowstorm that moved across the Midwest on Tues· day and Wednesday, dumping nine inches of snow on Chicago and closing O'Hare Airport. Senate opponents of dereewa· tion said the compromise was too generoua to oil and gas pro- ducers. Opponents said it did not go far enough toward allowing the free market to determine gas prices. Tbe compromise was worked out during th~ee days of in- form al secret negotiations among a small group of House and Senate conferees. rrvine Foundation Gives $5.1 Million The James Irvine Foundation pprove<t grants or more than u million to 91 'charitable proj- cts and programs in California uring its past fiscal year, ac· :>rding to the foundation 's an- ual report. President Morris M. Doyle otes in the report, issued this ·eek, that the grants were dis· ussed and decided upon despite 1e la r11e amount of time direc· >rs spent in selling the Counda· on's :W.S percent interest in the rvine Company. They were required to sell by rovisions or the Federal Tax :eform Act of 1969. The sale after healed bidding lo ,~ Taubman-Allen-Irvine con- ortium brought the foundation :iore than $184 million for ils hares. Doyle also noted that the funds :icing distributed by the founda· t ion have greatly increased in :-ecent years. The foundation t{ave out $2 million between 1938 and 1957, $5 million between 1958 and 1967, and $34 million bd,ween 1968 and 1977. : t'or ils fiscal year ending last ~arch 31, Irvine Foundation as- sets were listed at almost $162 lJlillion. number of Orange CouMy clrganizations were recipient. of ;ftants. The foundation gave $25,000 to fie Laguna Beach $chool ot Art tnd anothe r $25•,ooo to the C,aguna Beach Museum of Art. ~Also receiving funds wer e lulh Coast Repertory in Costa esa .. $125,000; Providence eech and Hearing Center in ange, $75,000, and South Coast ~mmunlty Hospital in Sou.th ~guna. $100,000. • Additional grants went to the ~ys Club of Buena Park, 0,000; the Boys Club of llerton, $25,000; Boys Club or Habra, $8,000; Boys Club oC e South Coast Area, Inc. in San Wemenle, $25,000; and Boys <llub ot Westminster, $10,000. bDonations were also given to Ute Girls Club of the Harbor Area in Costa Mesa, $25,000; the G'lrls Club of Fountain Valley- ]Juntington Beach, $S,000; the !!rls Club of North Oran1e vuoty, Inc., in Buena Park, r l' Fro•PageAJ " flNE ... · Jllagnitude," tie told trustees. <: The school dJstrict granted a \19-day extension to the ortsinal •s-day contract, but refused to "°mpromise on the 97·day over- ige. ~ The contractinf fJrm was l terted at least twice that addi· ~nal labor would be required to m plete the school on ~chedule. e dlstrict'.a architect UJd. Of'ANGI COA8T DAILY PILOT $15,000 Melodyland Delinquency Prevention Center in Anaheim, $20,000. and the YWCA or North Orange County in Fullerton, $10,000. Also receiving grants were the Assistance League of Tustin, $25,000; Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana, $30,000; the Junior League of Newport Harbor, Inc., $40,000; and the Women's Law Center or Southern California in Tustin, $7,500. Auto Crash Victim Walks For Assistance An Anaheim motorist , who highway patrolmen say fUpped his car on Laguna Canyon Road early this morning, apparently walked and hitchhiked to an emergency telephone where he called for assistance. Ol"ange County paramedics and LaJ!una Beach firemen found Marc Brian Rockw ell. 18, at the phone booth at the junc-· ti on of l!:l ,-oro 1Bo8d and Laguna Canyon Road at about 2 a.m. The lone motorist was treated and transported to Saddleback Community Hospital, where of. ficials said t.hls morning he was treated for back injuries and re· leased. California Highway Patrol of· ficials said Rockwell was driv· ing on the transition road Crom the San Diego Freeway when he apparently losi control of his 1970 sedan and struck a dirt em- bankment on Laguna Canyon Road, nipping the vehicle. Fro•PageAJ HOWLS •.• of finding similarities and dif· ferences-in the sounds. Orians said he us~ the machine to analyie bird calls. A possible Bigfoot yowl from Little Eagle , S . D., was described by Beckjord as like "a coyote pack going c raiy simultaneously at outrageously loud volume mixed in witb monkey chatter.'' Another sounded like car tires squealing around a comer or maybe a fingernail going down a blackboard. At the end of one recording, made on the Lummi Indian Reservation near Bellingham 18 months ago, was a sound that Oriana said be ·never heard ~fore. ... But t could show you bird calls that look exactly like this," Orians said, eyeing the spectro· graph chart. Orians later played a. record· ing of a coyote and th1m made some comparisons. The coyote sound and the South Dakota sound were at the same pitch bbt the suspected sasquatch re· cord1ng.a were "very, very weak" and difficult to di s- tinguish. .Beckjord acknowledied some recordings sounded Uke coyotes. But he explained that sasquatcb sometinies mimics other animals and could be m(micldnc ~yotea. ke said a Lumml Indian • R~servation police officer played a &asquatch recording . over hls car loud speaker once and two saaquat.cbes wandered. oot of th~ woods. B eck:jord sai.tl be tried the same trick bl.ft •1tbe)< didn't l'elpcmd to me. I won't say &hls ... , wort, but St didn't wort for me. Maybe 1 smelled wronif to them or maybe they thoulbt t.My wee Cooled once but not atain.0 ~~~:.e vol~ ·-~ we!'a. f 'rota Page A l PETITION. • ess," Mushettsaidtoday. The homeowners' associa· lion's board will meet Friday to dis cuss possible recall action against Mayor Donna Wilkinson a nd Councilman William Walker, Mushett said. In the meantime, Mushett took out election papers early today to run for City Council in March, when three seals will be at stake. "Afte r Wednesday's City Council meeting, taking out paper s seemed the only r e- course," he said. Fro•Page A l BLAST ••. Orleans' Audubon Park Zoo. ani m als c ried and roared hysterically. The smoke poured from a gap· ing hole ripped in the concrete wall or the grain elevator. The silo was one of several sitting end·to·end in a cluster at the company, but the fire and ex· ploslon appeared confined to one elevator. Much of the mail that would normaUy go through O'Hare, a main transf,er point for items moving cross country, had to be ,re-routed, spokesman Lou Eberhardt said. · High winds in California have been· another prob· lem. In some places, with winds up to 80 miles an hour. carriers had to be called off their routes because or s wirling dust, he said. ' . It had the effect of uniting most of the House conferees with two Senate supporters of llft\ng federal controls. The most recent compromise eHott began when President Carter personally urged key, conferees last week to aUempt to reach some agreement be{ore Christmas. SONY.- Gift Ideas From· JVC SU,.ER f'ORT AIU RADIO TV T~" bfat'ld ,.,,,.. 00'1-'0 ~ Jvt~ r:.~~ ~~=--,..-:~,~~ '= Pllflo •<lV"ld~lt .. ~ .Qlt ... , •t .. ••· t""' t.h~cQ"lott lo M.,,... ~­ \ ~\~' Dlgltal The facility sits on the bank of the river. Fireboals joined the West.wego volunteer fire dep~­ment a nd equipment from nearby a reas. Ambulances ringed tbe place and Coast Guard hellcopten hovered on r I.be elevators. • ,, 6 0 I .if 1"'3 ,. """' If .._\~....._Th• Sony Betamu. A tape LED dock radio with 91..tectroftlc. fufll'nl -,, "lgltYl•I t~Q4'0&4 .._ ,.."'-"' D#f'tfl'V r•.Jr. ~•"":-\; recorder that record• T.V. -•l'IY iiiiiilli~ JVC .B 9how :J'(N 'wtnl. up 10 2 hours eCC.llNCJ West Jefferson Hospital re· ported seven persons admitted. most of them suffering from burns. Ochsner Medical Founda- tion had four -one of tbem Jef. ferson Parish deputy James L. Johnson, who suffered a broken ankle at the scene. Conditions of the bum victims were not known. "It sounded like something'fell on top or t,tle buildiog." said Nikki Glaub, 21, who was work· ing in an office of a nearby. j unkyard. ''The whole building shook and the lights went out for a second or two. One or the men from our yard said he heard a big boom and he looked over at the grain elevator, and he said it went up all in smoke and the elevator. was n 't even standing any more." John Allender, deputy director of the Audubon Puk 1.00, said the a ntmal cages were showered with debris after the explosion. "It almost looked like a mushroom cloud and there was quite a bit of debris falling when we got out or the office. Tbe peacocks were screaming and yellin g and flying. Most of the animals were terribly upset." Laguiia Men"s Store Robbed For$SO Loot A man armed with a six·lncf\ blue steel revolver held up a store clerk at a men's clotb.ing shop in Laguna Beach W ednes· day'. evening, escaping on f~ with $50 in cash. The clerk at His Place, 1110 South Coast Highway, told police the bandit, wearing a blue sweater and a black cap, ap. proacbed him at the counter o( the store at about 8:15 p.m. an4 showed him the revolver. "Hand the money over. Alf. of · ' lt," the robber deaiaaded. , The bandit scooped up the · cash and q~ckly walked out ot the store and north on Coas~ .Highway, accol'dlng to the police H porl. The clerlc aacribed the gun. man Ds about 5-fett, 10-incbet tall, weighing 17$ pound• and;. ab~ut 25 years ot ace wltJr stret1bt black halr. • CIA: Aide Named WASHINGTON <AP) -FranlC Carlucci, U .S. ambassador tO Portu1a11 hail u b.-ehoMn tt HJ"Ve " ""1tY director of tbt CIA, It was Jeam~ Wtdntselat ~ . . . . . s20000 -;J,ipl !Ong [lip 10 e '-ours Ieng by ""' Y 1Pr1M ¥f1th longer tao. and cht11ger). Play what you've recorded baci( wh•n-r yoo FM AM SWI SW2 Sn.EO · want 10. You can even record one show while you walch .NC.,.,,,._...., .... -.-..... -~. nowt We think vou will love u :'.:' ~.~-;:•:.= ",~ "'.::'t'!' :.;.:::; . and alto our Betarnax telling ~ .. " f#O blif'"'hf"I c~ ,...~ -package.. IC:f ·Ct llW. l .. t tOM U01-a ttQll'IOt,._.._firl(:. "'wtll,lf' ..__. ,,.,, e ,,.,~,~ r MtAt/ co ,, ttO-o ..... 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Mllefled uo tor ~ by ~· -II.now acou11iel .,,g 1Mttron1c:s '""ae out. W. re taHuno aboul Sooy comQaOI sttt.o. N>d W"O<J c1on'1 t.ave lo 3l)Ond a "'"" to ~"• 11 Come If! 11oa•v l 111 u• give vou ,, demonslrtl on Alld e 0011 you vo 001 10 ~1011t11--. •• GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS CASIO CALCULA TOIS 1"" ~ , ••• ~ ldd IUDlt •t4• t t Wfee "°"'Oiply'°' I "''"''°"I· °"'.,...,.,.,..,.."' , ... ,. ~lc1o•"'fn l ... .,tJfr,llJt.(t"""flllllyf1plpl•. ,.,.,..."""' 11'1 • C'U4 ~ .,. • ., WARAANTV,Mt "'-'•'-•1.,A SHARP ~~;;~~ A SUPER Ii IUY AT 129800 -......... ~-.i- RCA 15'.,_ Xli100 port.bte color TV ., o..~ .-c•.,.u: 11""""9 , ··~·~I • ~ •"-r) ll'"'J ,, . ., .. ,,,.,, . ., .. ,,,. HJ ...., t ~""''"'' .. "'".,., ....... !... "'"' .• ,,. .. . •""""""•4"' ............. . . . -- DAILY PILOT use \;. "',,: ... -. # ..r . . . . , .. ... .I · •. COMMERCIAL REDEVELOPMENT AT PIER FOUGHT BY HOMEOWNERS Consultants' Sketch Shows Plan Approved by San Clemente Cou~cllmen rrvine Foundation Gives $5.1 Million The James Irvine Foundation pproved grants of more than ;.1 million to 91' charitable proj- cls and programs in California uring its past fiscal year. ac- :>rding to the foundation's an- ual report. President Morris M. Doyle otes in the report, issued this ·eek, that lhe grants were dis- ussed and decided upon despite le large amount or time direc· >rs spent in selling the !ounda· on 's 54.5 percent interest in the r vine Company. They were required to sell by rovisions of the Federal Tax ~eform Act of 1969. The sale after heated bidding to ie Taubman-Allen-Irvine con- ortium brought the foundation no re than $184 million for its hares. Doyle also noted that the funds :1eing distributed by the founda- 1 ion have greatly increased in :-ecent years. The foundation gave out $2 million between 1938 • and 1957, $5 millton between 1958 a nd 1967, and $34 million b~ween 1968 and 1917. : For Its fiscal year ending last "¥arch 31, lrvine Foundation as- sets were listed at almost $162 .rnillfon. number of Orange Cow.tr Jrranizalions were recipienll of :ff ants. -The foundation gave $25,000 to fie Laguna Beach ~hoof of Art (nd another S25•,000 to the t.aguna Beach Museum of Art. · Also receiving funds were luth Coast Repertory in Costa esa .. $125,000; Providenc.e eech and Hearing Center in ange. $75,000, and South Coast mmunity Hos pital in South guna. $100,000. Additional grants went to the ys Club of Buena Park, 0 ,000 ; the Boys C lub of llerton, $25,000; Boys Club of Habra, $8,000; Boys Club of e South Coast Area, Inc. in San emente, $25,000; and Boys ub of Westminster, $10,000. ~Donations were also given to tile Girls Club of the Harbor A~ea in Costa Mes a, $25,000; the Girls Club of Fountain VaUey- JtunUngton Beach, $5,000; the ~rJs Clob of North Orange 'runty, Inc., in Buena Park, ) .. flNE .•. piagnltude," he told trustees. f The school district granted a U9-day extension to the original ti6S-day contract. but refused to ~mprom1se on the 97·day over-~ge. . !The contracting firm was erted at leaat twice that addi- onal labor would be required to mplete the school on schedule ~e district's architect said. ' OftANQI! COAST 1.1$C DAILY PILOT $15,000 Melodyland Delinquency Prevention Center in Anaheim, $20,000, and the YWCA of North Orange County in Fullerton, Sl0.000. Also receiving grants were the Assistance League of Tust in, $25,000; Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana. SJ0,000; the Junior League of Newport Harbor, Inc., $40,000; and the Women's Law Center of Southern California in Tustin, $7,500. Auto Crash Victim W alk.s For Assistance An Anaheim motoris t, who highway patrolmen s ay flipped his car on Laguna Canyon Road early this morning, apparently walked a nd hitchhiked to an emergency telephone where he called for assistance. OTange County paramedics and La~una Beach firemen found Marc Brian Rockwell. 18, at the phone booth at lbe junc- tion of YA. 'l'oro lload and Laguna Canyon Road at about 2 a .m . The lone motorist was treated and transported to Saddleback Comrnunity Hospital, where of- ficials said this morning he was treated for back injuries and re- leased. California Highway Patrol of- ficials said Rockwell was driv· ing on the transition road from the San Diego Freeway when he apparently lost control of his 1970 sedan and struck a dirt em· bankment on Laguna Canyon Road, flipping the vehicle. Fro• Page A l HOWLS ••• or finding similarities and dll- ferences in tbe sounds. Orians said he uses the machine to' analyze bird calls. A possible Bigfoot yowl from Little Eagle, S .D., was described by Beckjord as like "a coyote p ack going crazy simultaneously at outrageously loud volume mixed in witb monkey chatter.•• Another sounded like car tires squealing around a comer or m aybe a fingernail going down a blackboard. At the end or one recording. made on the Lummi Indian Reservation near Bellingham 18 months ago, was a sound that Orians said he never heard before. "But I could show you bltd caUs that look exactly Uke this," Orians said, eyeing the spectro- graph thart. Oriaos later played a record- ing or a coyote and th•m made some comparisons. The coyote sound and the South Dakota sound were at the same pitch but the suspected sasquatch re- cordings were'' very. very weak'' and difficult to dis- tinguish. Beekjord acknowledced some recordings sounded like coyotes. But he explained that sasquatch som ettmes mimics other animals and could be mimic~ ~yotes. He said a Lummi I ndian RQservation poHce officer played a sasquatch rei:ordtn1 over bis cat' loud speaker on~ and two saequatches wandered. dat or the woods. BRkJord said. he tried the aam• trtck but ''the)t dlcm't t•pond io me. l won't •l>' UlU won't won, bul tt didn't wonc for me. lll\ybe t smelled w'f'OIWJ to them or maybe th•Y thou-"t they •ere fooled once but not aJaln." .. :f.~ . .µr l the voice tuta -..,. • l~¥e. • • ft'ro• Page A l PETITION. • ess," Mushettsaidtoday. The homeowners• associa- tion 's board will meet Friday to discuss possible recall action against Mayor Donna Wilkinson a nd Coun cilm an William Wa lker, Mushett said. Jn the meantime, Mushett took out election papers early today to run for City Council in March, when three seals will be at stake. "A Her Wednesday's City Council meeting, taking out papers seemed the only re- course," he said. Fro,.. Page A l BLAST ••.. Orleans' Audubon Park Zoo, animals cried and roared hysterically. The smoke poured from a gap· ing hole ripped in the concrete wall of the grain elevator. The s ilo was one of several sitting end-to-end in a cluster at the company. but the fire and ex- plosion appeared confined to one elevator. The facility sits on the bank of the river. Fireboat.s joined the Westwego volunteer fire depart- ment a nd equipment from nearby areas. Ambulances ringed tbe place and Coast Guard helicopters hovered ftet' tbe elevators. West Jefferson Hospital re- ported seven persons adm\lted, most of them suffering from burns. Ochsner Medical Founda- tion had four -one of them Jef. ferson Parish deputy James L. Johnson, who suffered a broken ankle at the scene. Conditions of the burn victims were not known. ·'It sounded like something'fell on top of Ule building," said Nikki Glaub, 21, who was work- ing in an office of a nearby. Junkyard. , "The whole building shook and the lights went out for a second or two. One or the men from our yard said he heard a big boom and he looked over at the grain elevator. and he s aid it went up all in smoke and the elevator. was n't even s tanding any more." John Allender, deputy director of the Audubon Park zoo, said the animal cages were showered with debris after the explosion. "It almost looked like a mushroom cloud and there wa.s quite a bit of debris falling when we got out of the office. The peacocks were screamlng and yeJling and flying. Most of lhe animals were terribly upset." Laguna Menes Store Robbed For$50 Loot A man armed with a six-inch blue steel revolver held up a store clerk at a men's clot.bing s hop in Laguna Beach Wednes· day·. evening, escaping on foot with $50 In cash. The clerk at liis Place, lllO South Coast Highway, told police the bandit, wearine a b lue sweater and • black cap, ·a proacbed hlm at the counter the store at about 8:15 p.m. en showed him the revolver. "Hand the money over. ~ o( it,'' the robber demaaded. The bandit scooped up the cash and quicklY walked out o( t he store and north ou Coast .Highway, according to the police report. The clerk described the gun. rnan as about 5-feet, 10-inchet tall, weighing 1'7$ PoUMI and.. about 25 years of aae wlUt 1trelpt J>lack hair. CIA Aide Named W ASHJNGTON <AP) -!'rd CarJuccl, U.S. ambuaador to Poriu1al, bM u b9a eboMn ~ serve • ~ d~ of tM ClA. It was JelU'IWMS Wtdntldat • a&p&..-_ .... _...., Energy Progra.rn in Jeopardy? WASHINGTON <AP ) -A House-Senate conference com- ml ttee today formally aban- doned efforts lo reach agree· ment this year on the natural gas portion oC President Carter's energy plan. By a vot~ of 16·2 Senate del- egates to the conference rejed· ed a natural gas compromise s ponsored by Sen. Bennett Johnston, 0 -0a. The vote send.is the O.adlocktd conferees bo.ck to the drawlJW board ahd further Jeopardi• chances for conaressiqnU Mall Delayed?. Bad Weather Stays Couriers WASIDNGTON <AP) -Bad weather in parts of the country is frustrating postal orricials trying to get all Christmas mail delivered by Sunday. "For mail that is in the system now, whether we get it delivered by Christmas Day depends in part on the weather," a Postal Service spokesman said Wednesday. The biggest weather problem was the · snowstorm that moved across the Midwest on Tues- day and Wednesday, dumping nine inches of snow on Chicago and closing O'Hare Airport. Much of the mail that would normally go through O'Hare, a main transfer point for items moving cross country, had to be re-routed, spokesman Lou Eberhardt said. · · High winds in California have been another prob- lem. In some places, with winds up to 80 miles-an hour. carriers had to be call~d off their rout~s because of swirling dust, he said. · passage of the toughest parts of Carter's eoeriy pro1ram. The Johnston compromise was the result oC three days of touth bargaining with House members ol tho committee, whq accepted u. . But ~ayts vote d•Olonstrated tbat a periiltent 9'9 deadlock among> Senate members on the emotional 4uet0oa ol derefulat- ing gas ptfcta .-.mains as firm as ever. · 4•1 bave no parentage of this turkey a(ter today," Jotmston said, aclmowJedglng defeat la advan~e . Senate opponents of deregula- tion said the compromise was too generous lo oil and gas pro· ducers. Opponents said it did not go far enough toward allowing the free market to determine gas prices. The cornpron;llse was wQrked out during three days of in- form a l secret negotiations among a small group of House and Senate conferees. It had the effect of uniting most of the House conferees with two Senate supporters of lifting federal controls. The most recent compromise e!rort began when Preaiden~ Carter personally urced ke~ conferees last week to attempt to' reach some 2'greement be{ore Christmas. SONY. Gift Ideas From· JVC SUP'ER P'ORT .AI LI! RADIO TY ft'h< bf".,,., rW'w CJ0'1.., lrOl'ft ./ll'C. 1W'fl~ f"i..t AM ,M ,... '*-""' .... :·~~~ ~ ~~ .& • '!;!. .. 91 . .,.0.W•f"' t ..... 6 f'...cl• I .,..,It • M lfl- • "I 6 0 • ,, ~..,, llt(f ,. ~ • <'.>''""• , &o•· .n.1, ·~o•• ., ""~ IW'..V ........ s20000 RADIO.CASSlTTt-llCOIDH A " • ., •·~·~ '" 'tOO"''"'•f.0 ~"0 '""' ·~~. H'~ a ~.;.::·,~:=:r"°"'oo::1~ae·.r-::. .~ .. •a.t ~tOfM•ftltQl'M-;~ 4 ~f\Q flJl"9f'. U'*kl• ...... "••lbl• m.••n.o •tofllfY. nftill • J!ttOl't••lllCll.., 141(1(• ttal'I•'°"'' ""k~ ""'"' tutt wto"lbO •uid "'""'0'f •ttvl""' 101 • """" •ltt)(!llQN'Jl wt ~·0~ C It\'""""~· .nd Dll'•P••""'• "'°"" •c••> Pt4/-IWl/SWJ/ JVC GIVE A GIFT FROM RCA. I~ Dl9ftal LED dock redio wl"' ~tr'Olllc eec~ GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS CASIO C.ALCU&.A TORS '0 ~ ~,..~ .,,..,... ,. ·~~i ··" ··~··*" •• .., •• d .. c.,,..., ''~'· :-1, "" .................... ~ ... .,_.,,. t• ia,tM \-4, t tt _ ............. ,,,..... . .. ' ( f ) Orange Coast EDITrON Todn)· .. ·; losing ·, N. Y. Stoeks '' VOL 70, .NO. 356, 'SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A THURSDAY,DECEMBER2~1n7 N Six Killed • m Grain Silo Blast 11 Hurt, 25 Missing in Louisiana NEW ORLEANS GP) -A chain-reaction explosion ripped through a OO·silo grain elevator which blew up like a string or Roman candles, leaving at least six persons dead and more than 20 missing. "We have 20 to 2S men unac· co unted for," s aid David Borchert, manager of the huge Continental Grain Co. plant. Most of them were feared crushed in the one-story control building and lunchroom, smashed flat when a weighing station perched above the tops of the silos shattered and fell 250 feet on top of il. "We don't have much hope for some of those men." s aid Harlan Ryan, division manager of the federal grain inspection service. More than 50 men were work- ing at the elevator when the blast happened, but many ap- parently escaped uninjured. Eleven were taken to hospitals, m ost suffering from severe burns. The shift had changed two hours before the 9:10 a.m. blast, with workers taking with them the traditional Christmas turkeys given each employee by the company. The turkeys for the oncoming s hift were in a warehouse which escaped the blast and was turned into a makeshift morgue. In one of the more dramatic re1cues, a Coast Guard helicopter dipped into the smoke and flames to lower a bask~l to a man trapped on top of the lJO.foot·taJI elevators. He was so heavily dusted with the powdery white grain dust he looked almost like a snowman. Two inspectors were blown out or the weighing omce and fell to the ground below. They were hospitalized in critical condition. Ryan said the explosion ap- parently started in the weighing office, commonly called the head house. No cause was known. although a repair crew was working on the grain con· veyor at the time. The fine grain dust in the silos is so volatile that even telephones are specially sealed ... 2:1' -· • : I ~ ' f.~· .. . . \ ·. .. . .. . .. . .. .. , .~ I : .. , , ! ... ' .. • ' ( ~ ·.: . ·~ ! I ! • . _j ...:. • .. i •. . • F4flpt Pledges PelU!e "'wir.,..... Huge posters with photos of Egypt's President Anwar Sadat and slogans supporting his peace initiatives line a Cairo street. The posters s upport the scheduled meeting of Sadat with Israel Prime Minister Menahem Begin on Chris tmas Day. (Story Page A4.> Cut in Air Fares Gets OC Backing Orange County supervisors want to be made a party lo ef- forts by lwo airlines hoping lo offer low-fare flights between Orange County Airport and Nevada. The board voted 4·1 Wednes· day lo file petitions with the Civil Aeronautics Board to join in proceedings tniUated by Air California and West-em Airlines. Coast Weatlaer Eighty percent chance or rain tonllbt. dlmlnlsblng to so percent chance Fri· day. Occasional winds of 10 &o 20 mpb.. Lowl tmllbt lo SOI. ffllha Frt-la I01J to· middle IOI. • IN81DETeD.4Y WhuU, 8'Jl M o ')*6ol kind of old ~. and hu arHoai m Uw Jtou.""14 "'""' • Mfn'JI Olan rt mat.' &re Feed..,.., ,,. Cl. Supervisor Ralph Clark cast the lone "no" vote saying he was dissatisfied with the word· ing supervisors used in ordering the petitions. Clark said he wanted it clear that supervisors weren't op· posed to low-cost fares but only to an increase in the number of flights and accompanying noise at Orange County Airport. Western Airlines doesn't use the county airport, but Air Calltomla does. Both airlines are asking for the new county-to-Nenda routes as part of system-wide changes being negotiated with the federal aiency. Clark contended that no mat· ter what the outcome of the a1enc1's proceedines, Western would not be able to use Orange. County Al.rport wltbout 1upervi8on' penniaaiOD. Air CaUfornla wouldn't. be permitted to h)crease tbe number ot its flights frotn tbe airport either, Clark conUnued. to prevent sparks from setting fires. The blast roared through two. thirds of the clustered silos, which sit 100 yards from the Mississippi River. Tops of the cylinders were blown out, and the heavy concrete walls were shattered, leaving the giant honeycomb of tubes leaning askew. Thick gray smoke, laced with bright fire, poured from the lop. It happened during the routine loading of a Norwegian grain ship, the Vesteroy, which was lo take the grain to Germapy. The shjp was undamAged but was moved to make room for a fireboat, which pumped water through hoses laid over the levee. Six cranes moved In to hoist away heavy rubble. Rescue workers formed a human chain to hand back smaller chunks as they dug carefully into the ruins of the control room. ,., ............ About a dozen ambulances were parked waiting. Calls went out for body bags. RESCUERS ASSIST A STRETCHER WITH AN INJURED MAN LIFTED FROM HELICOPTER Victim• of New Orteans Grain Elevator Explolion Aaalsted by Firemen Panel Rejects Energy Pact WASHINGTON (AP) A House-Senate conference com- mittee today formally aban- doned efforts lo reach agree- ment this year on the natural gas portion of President Carter's energy plan. By a vote of 16·2 Senate del- egates to the conference reject- ed a natural gas compromile sponsored by Sen. Bennett Jobnstop, D-La. County Plants The vote sends the deadlocked conferees back lo the drawing board and further jeopardizes chances for congressional passage or the toughest parts of Carter's energy program. The Johnston compromise was the result of three days of tough bargaining with House members ol tile committee, wbo accepted ll. But today's vote demonstrated Deadly Chemical Viewed/or Pests By KATHY CLANCY Olllleo.ltrl'ti.tlUff Fifty cases or a deadly chemical once earmarked for deli very to South Amf.I'ican jungles now will be used to kill plant pests 1n Orange and other California counties In addition, the Cypress man who tried to dispose or the pesticide by dumping the cases in trash bins Monday night in Buena Park and Cypress will face no charges, Cypress police said today. Police explained Henry Davis of the Happiness Foundation Inc. bad planned to sbJp the 50 cases of methyl bromide to his son, a Christian missionary ill South America. When he was unable to find a shipping firm to handle the transportation, however, he de· cided to dispose of the chemicals in dumpsters, officers said. Police and firemen 1n the two cities found the 50 containers in a Monday evening search after Davis was spotted by a resident depositing a small wooden crate GridDrilh OpenatOCC into a dumpster. Davis now has donated the chemicals to Orange County agricultural specialists who plan to use it to kill plant pests. Some crates probably will be shipped to other counties as well. of· ficials said. Police said Davis apparently was unaware of the hazard in placing the chemicals in dumpsters and had no malicious intent. He assisted officials Mon - day night in rounding up the· crates. ) ... that a persistent 9-9 deadlock among Senate members on the emotional question or deregulat· ing gas prices remains as firm as ever. ··1 have no parentage or this turkey after today," Johnston said, acknowledging defeat in advance. Senate opponents of dereguta. tioo said the compromise was too generous to oil a.nd gas pro- ducers. C>pponents said it did not go far enough toward allowtni the free market to determine gas prices. The compromise was worked out during t.bree days or in· formal secret negotiations among a small group of House and Senate conferees. It bad the effect of uniting most of the House conferees with two Senate supporters or lifting federal controls. The most recent compromise effort began when President Carter personally urged key conferees last week to attempt to reach some agreement before Christmas. Today's vote will mean that when the conferees return from the holiday recess, they will be no closer to agree- ment than when they began their negotiations. Rep. Harley Staggers, D· W.Va., chairman of the con· ference committee said that un· less the deadlock among Senate conferees is broken, he will call no further meetings before the current congressional adjouma- ment ends Jan. 19. The smaller group of con- ferees had worked since last Thursday to reach a com· promise that they hoped would be agreeable to supporters and opponents of lifting federal price controls on gas. Late Tuesday, they produced the scheme, which provides for an indefinite continuation or federal controls coupled with ' much higher profits for pro. ducers than Carte r asked. Th& compromise would allow prices to more than double over the next six years. FOOTBALL I': I ONTV '\:J-TONIGHT HALL OF FAME CLASSIC Channel 13, 8 p.m. Mlnneaota (7-4) ve. Maryl•nd (7·4) The first Hall of Fame till, at Birmingham, Ala., pairs two four-game losers, allhough Min· nesota defeated Michigan, Washington and UCLA, and Maryland came on strong down the stretch. Maryland's a touchdown favorite. <Tape delay) project ls· joint effort between tho two ciUes. 'nle new signals should be in opera Uon In about a month, city officials said , , I f, I OAILV PIL.OT 11'1 22. 1977 10um Dusts OR ~s mrty '1!ind Drops ARVIN <AP> Cteaninl hoUM IOr Cht\ltmu ii &o&ftl lo be bnder m Arvin Uuus U) m l ol America. Dust an lneh thick. left belUnd b)' two days ol burrie&M- forcc winds, <'Oated ruts and furnltun tbroulbQul OU. town ol 7.000 <Related stones AS> "I NEVER DUSTED CHJUSTMAS presents before," said Sharon Howard, who11e husband ls paswr of the local Pen· tecostal Ctlurch ol God. "Our Chrialmas presents are covered with dirt. We never had anything like this before." But lhe Howards were more fortunate than many residents or Arvin, where roofs were blown off homes. trees toppled onto houses and huge chunks of brick and concrete were hurtled through windows. Arvin was one or two areas in which stales of emergency were declared Wednesday by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. "MOST OF ARVIN BLEW throui;th Bakersfield on ita way to Fresno last night,'' Bakersfield Mayor Donald M. Hart sald Wednesday of the dev astalion. Bakersfield is 20 miles north of Arvin. The roor was tom off the house next to the Howards'. But the owner. a Los Angeles building contractor, had a new one nearly instaJlcd by nightfall. Sand from recently plowed cotton fields drilled fnt.o piles two feet high against chain-link fences, and many persons bad trouble breathing the gritty air. "'l'VE TRIED SWEEPING the dust away, and you almost choke to death," one woman complained. Another resident, Stella Thillet, spent two n1&bt.s at a Red Cross emergency facility set up at the high school because she feared the thick dust al home might give her two-month-old son congestion. ''When ~e woke up Tuesday. we were dylnt of aultocatJon -there .., 80 much dirt.'' ahe said. Mas. THILLET aETUJlNED bom• Wedneaday to clear away the dust that had filtered around windows and doors into her home, but "without water, we couldn't do much," she said. Downed power Jines left much of Arvin without electricity, including lhe local water district which needs power to pump • well water Lo tta cust5men. By Wednesday, electricily and watu Ud been restored to aomo bo.rnes. BUT Dt.8PJTE TRE deva.¢atlon and the llngennc layer of grit. residents of Arvin were hoping lo enjoy traditional Christmas celebrations. "As soon u we }let our homes stra1J(htened upJ we'll huv\l a work day t.o clean the church," said Mrs. Howaro. "l hope we &et it cleaned up in time for Chrtstmas SW\day ... $5.1 Mi11ion to Charity The Jnmes Irvine FoundaUon approved grants of more than, $5.1millionto91'charitable proj.' ects and programs in California during its past fiscal year, ac· cording to the foundation's an- nual reP?rt. . President Morris M . Doyle notes In the report, issued this . week, that the grants were dis· cussed and decided upon despite the large amount of time direc· tors spent in seJllng the founda- tion's 54.S percent interest in lhe Irvine Company. They were required to sell by provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The saJe after heated bidding to the Taubman·Allen-Irvine con· sorlium brought the foundation more than $184 milllon for its sha res. Doyle also noted that the funds being distributed by the founda· lion have greatly increased in recent years. The foundation gave out S2 million between 1938 and 1957. $5 million between 19:18 and 1967, and $34 million between 1968 and 1977. F or its fiscal year ending last March 31, Irvine F6\lndation as· sets were listed al almost $162 million. A number of Orange County organizations were reclplents1of irants. · The foundation gave $25,000 to the Laguna Beach School of Art a nd another $25,000 to the Laguna Beach Museum of Art. Also receiving funds were South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa .. $125,000; Providence Speech and Hearing Center m Orange, $75,000, and South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna, $100,000. Oiris Club of North Orange County, Inc .. in Buena Park. SlS,000 Melodyland Delinquency Prevention Center 1n Anaheim, $20,GOO. and the YWCA or North Orange County in Fullerton $10,000. • Also receiving grants were the Assistance League or Tustin, $25,000; Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana, $30.000; the Junior League of Newport Harbor, Inc., $40,000; and the Women's Law Center of Southern California in Tustin, $7,500. Hostages Beat, Kill Gunman Additional grants went to the Boys Club of Buena P ark. $30,000; the Boys Club or Fullerton, $25,000; Boys Club or La Habra, $8,000; Boys Club of t he South Coast Area, Inc. in San Clemente, $25,000; and Boys Club of Westminster, $10,000. Strike Averted VATICAN CITY (AP> -The Vatican has averted a priests' strike over Christmas in one of Italy's traditional Catholic strongholds. But the rebellious churchmen are determined to seek the repeal of a decree transferring their parishes to another diocese. SUBIC BAY, Philippines (AP) -Enraged by a Filipino gun· man's threat to burn a pregnant woman, male hostages beat and shot to death the man who held them captive for 4a hours inside a small bank building on the U.S. Naval Base al Subic Bay, officials said. Hostages later said they threw anything they could find al the wounded gunmun, rncluding NB Libraries CwseEarly The Newport Beach Public Ubraric5 will close at noon Saturday und Dec. 31. !lours both days at the Balboa, Corona clel Mar an d Mariners branches will be 9 a.m. lo noon . The West Newport Children's branch will be open from 10 a.m. to noon. ty pewrite r s and addin g machines, as he lay on the floor after be was overpowered by a bookkeeper and shot by the bank manager. The captives said the gunman, who took over the bank Tuesday afternoon, told them he wanted to give the bank's money to the poor by dumping it from a helicopter which he demanded for his escape. The gunman a lso threatened to blow up the bank, officials said. but no explosives were found. Lt. Cmdr. Michael Sherman. the base public affai rs omcer. said Navy officers conducting telephone negotiations with the gunman warned him he wouldn't receive any food unless he re· leased some hostages. "l think this angered the gun· man. and he threatened to burn a young pregnant woman," S he rman said . "The m ale hostages jumped in at that time. and we heard s hots and screams. The n ext thing we knew, peopJe started running out of the bank." U.S. Marines rushed into the .white frame b4ilding, found the gunman unconscious and took him to the base hospital where he died two hours later, Sherman said. Lt. Col. Ernesto Venturina, commander of Philippine police here. said an autopsy showed the gunman bad been shot at least once and bis skull shat- tered. Sherman said only two or lhe 14 hoslai,!es were injured -bank manai;ter Nicomedes Vill aluz, who suffered lacer ations of the scalp, and a man who was J>ilten on an arm. All the hos tages were Filipinos, Sherman reported. Bank teller Corinthia Carabe- jo. 31 , said the gunman forced her to bum three bags of peso notes and dollars Wednesday night, apparently to show authorities he could burn down the building if he liked. Although the bank is just in· side the main gate of the base 50 miles northwest ot Manila, it is operated by the Prudential Bank and Trust Co. for the benefit of ·Filipinos employed on the base, and no U.S. Navy funds are de· posited there. Donations were also given lo the Girls Club of the Harbor Area in Costa Mesa, $25,000 ; the Girls Club ot Fountain Valley· Huntington Beach, $5,000; the SONY. Gift Ideas From J VC sure roRTuu UDIO TY 1·--The librar ies will be closed Dec. 27 and Jan. 2. However. books can be re. turned in the book drops. Services Offered TM __ .,.,,_ ~-.M; __ ,..,.,..,.,._"" 3 ·-c11190'W TV .ti W'l t 1tO ••· Ot N-a ~ firOllJ' "' r ..,,.,. ' M'C*al ·~I I~ '°"'OI-' ~tJll"lot 0 ~t\ 6 Dc.t I c., o-"U At ,..,,.,.. tuH•nt Of lnottnin.tJ tKrt•t-tbt• Dl9ltal . LIO dock redJo wltti ~lrotllc ac c vroc., Trash Pickup Off for Next Two Mondays • Newport Beach city refuse col- lectors will not work Monday, Dec. 26 or Monday, Jan. 2. Jnstead. residents whose trash is usually collected on Mondays wjll have lo wail until their next regular pickup day, Thu rsday, to get rid of their holiday trash. Jacob Mynderse, the city's gtneral services director, said ctlristmas trees can be placed wtth regular trash during lhe t~o weeks after Christmas if they are cut into lengths o( no more than four feet. 'TempQrary tree stands should be removed and placed ln reg·· ula r lr ash containers. 'No tree burn sites will be d~signated this year by the fire d-.partment for safety reasons, l\f yndcrSe said. He also suggest- ed that residents put out trees for collection immediately after Christmas, pointing out that. as t;ees dry out. they may present serious fire hazards. Quake Toll Rises TEHRAN. Iran (At') -Tor- rential ralna interrupted earth· quake relief operations in Iran's c()al basin today as the official tc?ll rose to 584 dead and 1,000 in· )W"ed. O"ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT ......... -~1-1'\#llMr Viet~.-,;,= .. -.. ,_~ ••• .,.._, .. ....,.... ~~•11t••• ~~-- " Newport Seniors Newport Beach senior citizens will have a variety or services open to them in January, rang· ing from free eye examinations to help in finding low·cosl hous- ing. The programs are being sponsored by the city's senior c itizen center at Fifth and New Flu Virus ·Triggers Plan For ·vaccines ATLANTA (AP> -Public health authorities, concerned about a new influenza virus in Russia and Hong Kong. met to- day t.o consider the possibility of a vaccine proaram similar in scope to last year's ill-fated swine nu program. Dr. William Foege, director of the Center for Disease Control, told the gathering of about 100 physicians, epidemiologis ts, medical school faculty and state health officials that he would hesitate to p redict a flu epidemic because or the nature of the disease. "But there is a difference now in forecasting. We have the best international surveying system I have seen. We feel that we have to try to predict,' be said. The Russian virUa was iden· tlfled as HlNl, similar to a vin.ts which caused widespread out· breaks in the United States in the 19'05 and 1950s. Other types of influenza, either A-Texas or A·Victorla, have been reported in about 11 states, said the CDC. Isolated cases were reported in Illinois, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania. Wlaconsln, Tennessee. Oregon • Florida and Georgia. Bed Stolen In Newport Tlmotl\Y Cbave1 wu look:lna fonrard fo a 1ooct m1ht'1 ateep WedneldlY when he.Ntlamtd to Ida eentr.i Newport Beach home aft.r a two-daf •bHDH. To Ida dllmaJ, IM found tha~ JMar,lan beat bitn to hll bed. Cllaft& told pollce the tatcb to the door ol hie amaU home at seoo Rlwr Ave. had been pried off and &be Wev" bad w-1.ked off wltb b.la Md f ram•. box 1prio1 apd ma&&nu ....... bit cbelt ofdrawen. Tile total loll w•tldmated.t~· r M arguerit.e avenues in Corona del Mar. Jan. 3, Dr. Marjorie Mosier will offer free eye exams from 3 p.m. to S p.m. Appointments must be made in advance by calling lhe center at 759-9471. On Jan. 6, a representative of the county's Welfare Depart- ment will be on hand from noon to 1:30 p.m . to acquaint seniors with benefits they may be eligi- ble for. Jan. 11 from noon to 2 p.m., u part of the center's continuing Jeeal seminar, attorney Jim McDonald will discusa taxes and estate planning. Jan. 18 from noon to 2 p.m., representatives or the Orange County Housing and Rent As- aiatance OCfice will be at the center to conduct interviews and provide lntormation. NeotaMeyer Dead at 67 Visitation will be held Friday for lon~ime Balboa resident Neota S. Meyer who died Wednesday at the ageof67. Hours for the via1tation will be 4 to 9 p.m. at Pacific View .Mortuary ln Now port Beach. Mrs. Meyer lived on tbP Balboa Peninsula for 20 years. She served as a Red Cross Volunteer tor lS~ean. Survivort are her husband, Leo, and daughtet' Lee Howard of Los Angeles. Private family services will be held Saturday. Another Steel Hike Bared PITTSBURGK (AP) -U.S. Steel, the n.Uoa'• lar1•t 1te11 maker, annouaced tod11 tbat tt was talllnl prlc. an aver.,• of 5.5 pe~l oa 1DOlt of ltt pro- duct line. lDcludlq ateel UHCl la can. QlllialM* and oil rtp. The~· ta UM aam•ID-creaae 9D!M!pMed um weell ~ Bethlebem Steel. tH No. 2 ~ ducer. WbHlln1•Pltt1b~r1b, &M1oda-....-~ • 1 percmt lac,.... • but rolled that back to 5.5 percent alur U.S. Steel's UAOUncement. Cblc.,o-baMd Inland St .. 1. the nation'• sixth-largest pro- ducer. and tome amaller itteel eompame. followed a.tblebem'• lead. and ana'11ta s•ld lt wu llke\y the lnd\lltl'1 woold Mt1le .,.u,. ..... ·...---- RJ.DtO.CJ.SSETTl·HCORDER GIVE A GIFT FROM RCA .. f. In a nul!lhell, here"• all )'Oii nMd ro know a1>ou1 sle<eo. l urnla1>le1, FM/AM '""'o radios. raoe '"orders. and to••k•n. Mllctled UO lot l'OU bV oeDQIO whO k'IOW ac:ousiict and eteclton1C9 1n111C1& C>YI. Wt'ro llllkin" about Sony compacl &ltweo. And VO<I don1 l\IYtl 10 ipencl t m•nl lo llPQ<eciltlt 11. Come In 1oci1y. Ler 111 give you • ciemOMll'lllon. And a d ... )'OU .... got 10 Mar lo Delleva. ttf.c 111w let to""'"' •, ·~~ ....... ~ ol. if,...._ lt.;t • 1 ...Cron. r~ Ay u , tj,d.., , ..... .,,_. *""'lUI ~..; ,.._.,ji'" "" ... ,~~ R.tM c hol ,.,. •• , • .,, ·'• •cun•:r A"'t" .-.,, ,.,._ fff J9 ... c. .... .,... "~~,... .. .,..""'°'"'.,,.~ .. ....,""'.,.'l" GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS CASIO .CALCULA TOltS - TM D(l(•tlt"""" ~11 <.10llt'I T~• Ml,,O•ft'lf_,I , A.111 1t~t I ~ 1•• '°tt' ""'' .. f 't • "'"'°.~'''ot\' • ' • ,,,.._"" •• ,, 1•1 .. "'" 1,, .. "' f+ ti •AtitHANfV, Ml"' t•t•2 Q.'t HeU s995 Mell• s2995 SHARP .I.I· JUST I . ---:- s999s 1!,a// -l lU -.. , ... •o Ooo'I _ .... -s ¥et--. •••• ,,..-• .,,... flotl d•cl••I tJ'U-. .. --·--e •• ,,... •""'' '*''*' '" _ .. __ _ , l Saddlehaek EDI Tl ON ' Afteraooa .Y.Stoeks .. VOL. 70, NO. 356, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER22, 1977 TEN CENT Hayride Carols: By LAURIE KASPER Ol 1 .. ~., ........... Christmas is coming a little early for Carol Wesson. As far as she's concerned, it will be Friday night, when she and 15 friends hop aboard a horse.drawn hay wagon and go caroling through the streets or Mission Viejo's retirement com- munity, Casta del Sol. Holiday cheer will probably surge through th°"e wbo bear their seasonal songs and see the old.fashioned, pony-powered conveyance. But it. means much more to Mrs. Wesson. It's a dream this 29-year-old Mission Viejo resident bas held inside herself for "so Jong." Now, she's determined to make it come true as a Chtistmas present for herself. "To me, it's what Christmas is all about this year," sbe said. .. I'm jW1t aoing t.o be in seventh heaven Friday." As a chUd, she explained, she first went caroling in a big truck. Alter that, sbe spent time on a farm and learned about bay rides. She combined the two ac- tivities mentally and. since then, has simply wanted to go carol· ing on a hay wagon. She explained that it just AP~ RESCUERS ASSIST A STRETCHER WITH AN INJURED MAN LIFTED FROM HELICOPTER Victims of New Otleans Grain Elevator Explo1lon Assisted by Firemen - Hostages Slay Gunman Bandit Beaten to Death in Phillppine Bank SUBIC BAY, Philippines (AP) -Enraged by a Filipino gun- man's treat to bum a pregnant woman. male hosta~s beat and shot to death the man who held them captive for 48 hours inside a s mall bank building on the U.S. Naval Base at Subic Bay, officials said. Hostages later said they ttm!w anything they could find at the wounded gunman, including typewriters a nd adding machines, as he Jay on the floor after be was overpowered by a bookkeeper and shot by the bank manager. The captives said the gunman. who took over the bank Tuesday afternoon, told them he wanted to give the bank's money to the , poor by dumping it from a helicopter which he demanded for bis escape. · The gunman also threatened to blow up the bank, officials said, but no explosives ••te found, Lt. Cmdr. Michael Sberap. the base public affairs offJeer, . said Navy officers conducting ·telephone negotl•lions with the gunman warned him he wouldn't receive any fOOd unless he re- leased some hostages. ''I think this angered the gun. man, and be threatened to bum a young pregnant wo1;11an," Sherman sald. "The male hostages jumped in at that time, and we beard shots and screams. The next thing we knew, people atarted runninc out· of the bank. ti U.S. Marines rushed into the· white frame bqilding, found the Grid Drills OpenatOCC guom an unconsc1ous and took him to the base hospital where he died two hours later, Sherman said. · Lt. Col. Ernesto Venturina, commander of Philippine police here, said an autopsy showed the gunman had been shot at least once and his skull shat- tered. Sherman said only two of the 14 hostages were injured -bank manacer . Nicomedes Villaluz, who suffered lacerations of the scalp, and a man who was bitten on an arm. All the hostages were Filiplnoe, Sherman reported. Rank teller Corintbia Carabe· jo, 31. said the gunman forced her to bum three bags of peso notes and dollars Wednesday night, apparently to .show authorities he could bum down the building if he liked. Bigf oot's Howl Resemble Coyotes' SEA'ITLE (AP> -The elusive aasquatcb may be mimicking coyote bowls ill its quest to re. main anonymous, says the bead of a SeaWe organization study· ing the legendary Bigfoot. Suspected aasquatcb yowls on tape recordings from W ashingtoo, South Dakota and California were supplled to University of Washington zoology professor Gordon Orians for analysis, says Jon Beckjord, who heads Project Grendel. "Ir these are sounds of sas- quatcbe. then they sound re· markabl,y like coyotes, 0 O.rians said. He coneluded the sounds may or may not be Btitoot. The recordinp were played on a sound spectograph, whlcb makes a printed record in hopes of finding similarities and dif. ferences in the sounds. Orians aald be uses the machine lo analyze bird calls. A possible BJgfoot yowl from Little Eagle, S.D., was -described by Becldord as like "a · coyote pack going crazy simultaneously al outrageously loud volume mixed in with monkeychaUer." Another sounded like car tires squealing around a corner or maybe a f"mgeman going down a blackboard. At lbe end of one recording, made on the Lumml Indian Reservation near BeJlingbam 18 mo,nt.bs ago, was a sound that Oriana aaid he never beard before. "But I could abow y~ bird (See BOWLS, Page AZ) seems like Christmas • • • · the clippity clop of the horses, jingle of bells. cold crisp air and peo- ple cuddling together as -they sing a happy holiday tune. "I guess I'm a romantic.'' Mrs. Wesson said. She had never .mentioned this desire to anyone before. But now, she explained, she is going through a divorce and figuring out who she is. Friday's caroling trip will be I Comes True .. a symbol, for me, ot breaking away, of doing what I want to do for me for a change.'' she ex· plained. When she finally revealed her dream to friends and relatives on Thanksgiving, she found they, too, felt it would be a ter· rific idea. She got busy with a phone un• til she found bGrses and waioo she could rent. Then, she asked permi.ssloo to carol tn Leisure World and was refused. The residents there. she was told, would not appreciate her etf orts. Refusing to give up, she looted elsewhere. Finally, on Monday afternoon, she got permlsslcn to go into Casta del Sol. Now nothing, not even rain, will dampen her enthusiasm. ''There Is DO way anybody is go- ing t-0 atop this, ti she vowed. .Grain Storage 6 Killed, 11 Hu1·t In ~ilo Explosion ~ . . NEW ORLEANS (AP> ~ A thundering explosion shattered more than a dozen storage silos of the Continental Grain Com· pany in suburban Westwego to- . day, kilting at least six people. More than 20 others were re· ported missing, and at least 11 were hospitalized, most with bums, authorities said. Jefferson Parish Sheriff Al Cronvich said five bodies had been r~overed from the burn- ing grain elevators and adjacent offices, where government in- spectors worked. Rescue teams were hampered by heavy smoke and dust aa they looked for bodies in the concrete rubble at the bank of the Mis· sisslppi River. Cause or the blast was not knowu, but dust.fllled ail' in.side the cylindrical grain elevators is extremely volatile. "I was standlnl oa the ship a coaple ot bandrecl a yards away from the main bead bows~:· said Michael Ganon, 24, of. Wil· mington, Del. "I beard an ex- plosion and turned around. The only t.bine I saw was big flames jumping up from the top of the whole elevator. .. In a matter of seconds, the main bead bOuse of the elevator had fallen to the ground, and it looked like the inspection lab an4 control room where they have all their scale equipment was completely leveled. "All I call say is this structure ts tons and tons of reinforced concrete and steel and it was down to the ground in little bits Energy Pact Rejected for 1977 Passage and pieces, little rocks." The huge elevator bad a capacity of six million bushels, and the explosion apparently oc· curred while a ship was being loaded, authorities said. Harlan Ryan, regional dJrec· tor of the federal grain inspec· tion service, sald he lost eight or 10 men in the explosion. The in· speclion office was at the bottom of a silo which collapsed, he said. The government inspectors, who took over from private in· apectors aCter the big grain scauda.b in which debris was mixed with foreign shipments ot grain, watch the now of grain Jn and out of the facility • ..It was raining concrete," said Allus Foret, 52, a workman who was outside the elevator and was knocked flat by the bla,st. He was hospitalized with burns. • The explosion rocked \he small town of Westwego and showered the area with grain (See BLAST, Page AZ) Mail Delayed? Bad Weather Stays ·Couriers WASHINGTON <AP> -Bad weather in parts of the ~is tt119tratlalf postal officials trying te get all tmas mail defivered by Sunday. "For mail that is in the system now, whether we get it delivered by Christmas Day depends in part on the weather,•• a Postal Service apokesman said Wednesday. · The biggest weather problem was the snowstorm that moved across the Midwest on Tues· day and Wednesday, dumping nine in<:hes of snow on Chicago and closing O'Hare Airport. Much of the mail that would normaJly go through O'Hare, a main transfer point for items moving cross country, had to be re-routed, spokesman Lou Eberhardt said. . . High winds in Calif omia have been another prob· lem. ln some places, with winds up to 80 miles an hour, carriers had to be called off their routes because of swirling dust, he said. Studnats Vote Hawk Syrnbolizes wAsa1NGToN <AP> -A T .ogiina Hills High House.senate conference com· _. mittee today formally aban- doned efforts to reacb agree-Future Laguna Hills Wgh · ment this year on the natural gas portion of President Carter's School students have chosen the energy plan. hawk -a bird native to the hills By a vote of 16·2 Senate del· where the school is being buill -as their mascoL .egates to the conference reject· Thomas Tullar, principal, said ed a natural gas compromise the hawk will be the Jcllool'a 1u>onsored by Sen. !Jennett· . graphic symbol of noblllty, Johnston. J>.La. b · dJ 'd lis d.,. The vote sends the deadlocked' ravery, 10 Vl ua m, _ace, strength and resourcefulness. conferees back to ~e dra~g He said the students also have board and Curtber Jeopardizes selected brown gold and white chances for conrresslonal as tbe omctai colors for the passag~ of the toughest parts of school which will open to about Carter s energy program. 900 freshmen, sophomores and The Johnston compromise was juniors ln the fall. the r~ of three days aJ tough Several choices for the mascot bargaining with House members and colors were proposed by a ~I the committee, who accepted student advisory group and tbefl it.. voted upoo by students who will <See ENERGY, Pase AZ) • attend tbe school. be said. The new school's principal salcl. his student advisers will conUnue meeting to decide 4he .schoo1•1 theme, student ac· tiviUea, student government, FOOTBALL I ·0.~ I ON TV ~TONIGHT "I HALL OF FAME CLASSIC CNiin~ 13, I p.m. •. elecUoo procedures, SQQI and yell leaders ~drill team.. He Hid t.be tcbool. currently under c:oasUuctiocl on Pueo de Valencia oear Ule deadend ol. Alicia Parttway, will open. lrith a full complement ct du.tea ad student adh1ties. Tim Sullivan, currently the ac· t.lvUles dlredor at lliaslon Vle]o . · High School, will do the ume job at the new ldaool. · .Jon Jobnson, m EJ Toro Rip School sclence teulaer, bu been named ebalnnm ot u.e ICMnce departmmt and Garth Roam. a . ·matb hatwetut .tJlJuloll Viejo Blab, bu,... Mleeted to ... th• math deput.aMmt at t»new 9ChooL Sue Fnlm. dlilftun ol Bl Ttn'•• ··~- accepted the same job at Laguna Hills. Erik Frost. Et Toro's activities director, will be chairman of the new school's Technical Education Depart. ment. TuJlar said Ule remainder ot his staff, including about (0 teachers and 25 classified employees, will be selected in February and March. f • Coast Weather Eighty percent chance or raln tonight, diminisbing to 50 pereettt chance Fri· day. Occaalonal winds of 10 to 20 mph. Lows tonight in :;os. H.lghs Friday in low to mlddleeos. INSIDE TODAY W1ridarv mu & o ap.ciaZ 1dnd of oM ,enti.m., ond . It& °'"""-"' ,,.. houthold :mean. 'Meny Chrlltmar.• SH F~. Page Cl. .. AP ........ PENGUIN CHICK NESTLES IN PALM OF HAND One of Many at San Diego RHearch Center Chilly Debut Baby Penguim Hatched SAN DIEGO (AP) -Looking like ugly ducklings, S6 Oedg· ling Adelie penguins are snuggling close to mom and dad in a sub· zero freezer after being hatched the last 10 days at the I lubbs-Sea World Resea.rch Center. The parent penguins were flown here from Antarctica last vear and live with their new chicks in a building kept al subzero iempcraturcs where 6,000 pounds of naked ice js produced ctaily. ANOTHER 80 ADE LIES ARRIVED a few weeks ago and all will be used for further breeding, behavioral and biological studies. There are more or the downy little chicks, but researchers can't tell yet how many. The litUe birds are hand-fed a baby formula devised by senior aviculturist Frank Twohy. ll consists of half and half cream, zooplankton brought from Alaska. lots of vitamins, brine shrimp and herring livers, roe (fish eggs) and some salt water. THE HATCIONG IS THE FIRST lime any substantial number of the non·rlying birds have been born away from the world's coldest continent. according to Frank S. Todd, senior re· search fellow at the institute. Colored embroidery thread tied to one of the babies' wings identifies them. ,.. We were going to try to paint their toenails with different colors of fingernail polish because we have to change the thread so often as they grow,•• said Scott Drieschman, assistant cu rator of birds al Sea World. THERE ARE THREE TOES on each of the little penguins' webbed-feet. Todd said there are plans for public display of the birds around 1980. But for how, he said, all efforts are being devoted to the National Science Foundation project aimed at establishing a penguin colony for scientific research. Grove Man Nabbed ~ ln Kidnap, Theft e BOULDER CITY, Nev. (AP> California, and that the buyer ~ A man from Garden Grove, made a $S down payment. The ~lif.. wanted on charges or kid·· balance or $6,200 owed on the car tapping, assault with a deadly was to have been paid within 30 .\ea pon, auto theft and a days. according to police. $Umber or ot~er counts was cap-Lat~ ~edneaday morning, a red here this morning. man filling the deSCfiption of the Authorities identified the SUS· suspect in the El Morocco inci· tct as Jesse Bishop, 44. He was dent robbed a man at the Union e object of an intensive all· Plaza Hotel in downtown Las ght search after he allegedly Veias and stole the man's car. ~e two cars and hijacked a After. abandoning the stolen 1ted Parcel Service truck and car, the suspect allegedly stole a ~U.S. Mail truck. taking two pickup truck. ~pie hostage during a spree Palice said Bishop is wanted ~ 1ch police say began Tuesday in Calitomia in connection with ght with a $238 holdup or a the holdup of a · pharmacy in ange girl at the El Morocco Garden Grove on Dec. 5, and -<8sino on the Las Vegas Strip. a n other h o ld u p at a :·Bishop was found about 7:30 supermarket in Anaheim. F ro• P a ge Al .m. under a mobile home here, elld was returned to Las Vegas f.here formal charges are ex· aitcted to be lodged later today. "Metropolitan police said BLAST •sboit. who at one time had • • • ~wed to shoot it out with clathorities, gave up without a 4'fuggle. 1" Bishop is believed to be the ~. ndit who tried to rob the El orocco at gunpoint Tuesday ght. Two people were shot by e robber as he fled the casino, ~~th men were seriousl y ~unded. tThe man ned in a areen car, ich was round Wednesday af. rnoon at the Frontier Hotel. cords in the car indicated the to was purchased Dec. 12 in . OttANOI COMT DAILY PILOT dust and heavy debris. Across the Mississippi River at New Orleans' Audubon Park Zoo, animals cried and r oar ed hysterically. The smoke poured from a gap- ing hole ripped in the concrete wall of the graln elevator. The silo was one of several sitting end·to·end in a cluster. at the company, but the fire and ex· plosion appeared confined to one elevator. 'the facility sits on the bank of t.he river. Fireboats joined the Westwego volunteer fire depart- ment and equipment from nearby areas. Ambulances ringed the place and Coast Guard helicopters hovered over the elevators. West. Jefferson Hospital re· ported seven persons admitted, most of them suffedng from burns. Ochsner Medical Founda- tion bad four -one of them Jef. ferson Parish deputy James L. Jobnt0n, who suffered a broken ankle 'It the-scene. • Conditions of tbe bum 'Victims wue not known. "It ~ded like someth1ns fell on top of tbe bulldlna." said1 Nlkkl 9 1aub, 21, who was work· lnl in an offlce of a nearby fUft~fard. · "l'b• wtwle bulldlna shook end the lights went out for a aecond or two. One of the rpen from qur nrct said ht be&nl a bli ~ add "6 looted ~ver at &he 1raln ellv•tor, and M aald lt. went up ah tn smoke and lhe eltvatcr wa1n't even atandlns any more." Fare CU.i:. Efforts Backed Orange County supervisors want lo be made a party to ef· forts by two airlines hoping to orfer lOW·fare flights between ·oranate County Airport and Nevada. The board voted 4·1 Wednes· day to m e petitions with the Civil Aeronautic• Board to join in proceedings ln.iUated by Air California and Weatern Airlines. Supervisor Ralph Clark cast the lone "no" vote saying he was dissatisfied with the word· ing supervisors used in ordering the petitions. Cla rk said be wanted it clear that supervisors we ren't op· posed lo low-cost fares but only to an increase in the number of nights and accompanying noise at Orange County Airport. Western Airlines doesn't use the county airport, but Air California does. Both airlines are asking for the new county-to-Nevada routes as part of system·wide changes being negotiated with the federal agency. Clark contended that no mat· ter what the outcome of the agency's proceedings, Western would not be able lo use Orange County Airport without supervisors' permission. Air California wouldn't be permitted to increase the number or its fllght.s from the airport either. Clark continued. And Supt?rvisor Ralph Died rich s aid perhaps Air California would give up some flights it now has elsewhere and replace them with the low.fare flights to Las Vegas. Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose district includes the airport, said, "It seems to me any thought of considering addi· tional routes involving Orange County airport flies in the face . . . of holding lhe level of con- fidence of the people in the area." F ro• Page A l ENERGY ••• But today's vote demonstrated that a persistent 9.9 deadlock among Senate memoors on the emotional question of deregulat· Ing gas prices remalns as fi.rm as ever. "I have no parentage or lhi• turkey after today," Johnston said, acknowledging defeat in advance. Senate opponents or deregula· tion said the compromise was too generous to oil and gas pro· duce rs. Opponents said lt did not go tar enough toward allowing the free market to determine gas prices. The compromise was worked out during three days or in· formal secret negotiations among a small group of House an<l Senate conferees. It had the effect o' uniting most or the House conferees with two Senate supporters o( lifting federal controls. The most recent compromise effort began when President Carter personally urged key conferees last week to attempt to reach some agreement before Christmas. Today's vote will mean that when the conferees return from the holiday recess, they will be no closer to agree· ment than when they began their negotiations. Rep. Harley Staggers, D· W.Va., chairman of the con- ference committee sald that un• less the deadlock among Senate conferees is broken. he will call no further meetings before the current congressional adjouma~ ment ends Jan. 19. The smaller group of con- ferees had worked since last. Thursday to reach a com~ promise that they hoped would. be agreeable to supporters and opponents of lirting federal price controls on gas. Lale Tuesday, they produced the scheme, which provides for an indefinite conUnuatlon of federal controls coupled with much hlgher profits for pro· ducers than Carter asked. The compromise would allow prices to more than double over the next six years. Johnston, credited with negotiating the proposal with leaders of the House conference committee delegation, said Wed· neday he hoped conferees will change their minds on the plan over the ChriAtmu holiday. When tbe conferees go a>ack to work. Johnston said. "It wtU be pane4 by a coalltlon of the mid· dle." C4RESHOCKS J'IE/0 DOCTOR Jolan Allender, deputy dir.tor of the A ••oe Plirtr IOO, l8'cl &Mlabnal ............ . ~--~..;;;.:.-....;.;..._.........: .... ~ .. t .............. : ... .., ... .. OidyKitcM n Sink Wanted PORT LAVACA. Texas <AP) -A t.bJet could have walked away with every. thing but tho kitchen sink after he broke down the door to a Port Lavaca home. But -·you guessed it -the thief only wanted the &ink, police said. Port Lavac• police said Wednesday lbat Julian · Ybarra reported h e couldn't find anything In the house diaturbed except the door and the sink, which was ban1lng pre- cariously from its plumb· ing. Detective Sgt. Joe P ena said the fruslrat.ed thief apparently "just tried to tear lt away from the wall," but falled. f'ro• Page AJ HOWLS ••• calls that look exactly like thls," Orjan1 said, eyeing the spectro- graph chart. Orians later played a · record- ing of a coyote and th•?n made some comparisons. The coyote sound and the South Dakota sound were at the same pitch but the suspected sasquatch re· cordings were "very, very weak" and difficult to dis - tinguish. Beckjord acknowledeed some recordings sounded like coyotes. . Gifts Reported By Foundation The James Irvine Foundation approved grants or more than $5.1 million to 9l'charitable proj· eels and programs In California during ill past fiscal year, ac· cording to the foundaUon'a an· nual report. President Morris 'M. Doyle notes in the report, issued this week, that lbe grants wete dis· cussed and decided upon desptte the large amount of time direc· tors spent in selling the founda· lion's 54.S percent interest In the Irvine Company. They were required to sell by provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The sale aft.er heated bidding to the Taubman·Allen-Irvine con· sortium brought the foundation more than $184 million for its shares. Doyle also noted that the funds being distributed by the founda· tlon bave greaUy increased in recent ·years. The foundation gave out $2 million between 1938 and 1957, $S mUUon between 1958 and 1967, and $3' million between 1968 and 19'17. • For its fiscal year ending last March 31, Irvine Foundation as· sets were listed at alm.osL $182 ~million. A number of Orance County organizations were recipients of Rrants. The roundation gave $25,000 to the Laguna Beach School of Art and · another $25,000 to tbe La1una Beach Muaeum of Art. Al10 receiving funds were -South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa,. $125,000; Providence Speech and Hearin1 Center in Or1n1e, '75,000, and SouthCoa.st Community Hospital ln South Laguna, $100,000. Addltiona\ grant.a went to the Boys Club of Buena Park, $30,000; the Boyft Club of Fullerton, $25,000; Boys Club of La Habra, $8,000; Boys Club of the South Coast Area, Inc. In San Clemente, $25,000; and Boya Club or Westminster, $10,000. Donations were also given to the Girls Club of the Harbor Area in Costa Mesa, $25,000; the Girls Club of Fountain VaUey- Huntington Beach, $5,000; the Girls Club of North Orange County, Inc., in Buena Park, $15,000 Melodyland Delinquency Prevention Center In Anaheim, $20,000. and the YWCA or North Orange County in Fullerton, $10,000. Also receiving grants we!'$ the Assistance League of Tustin, $25,000; Goodwill Industries of Orange County in Santa Ana, $30.000; the Junior League of Newport Harbor, Inc., S.0.000; and the Women's Law Center of Southern Callfornla lo Tustin, $7,500. SONY: Gift Idea s From JVC SU,IR PORT AIU RADIO TV s20000 RA DIO·CASstnE.aECORDU MOHL ICU ) flWAW SWl/IWI/ JVC GIVE A GIFT FROM RCA non ......... GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS '"'" 0 .... ""'"' •en \ur-0.,1 ......... 111,,.i\• • 11'1••"'• rv ~,, . .,,,..,,~,,. Hend ~ Dt•nlfN' ;;.t\d ..-OO'VI 4 "'"''"°" ' .... ~ ~•~v "' & ~v• AKIWllOMOf• D•tleh.._ f "flt "'It t n •,..I ft I o\dd ~tit'!' ...... ~....,,.....,_"' ~-""°""., • ""' 0--. Yfl'ff' WAHMANJ'f Ju•I ''H1"•l ~ M - I 0.l"~f .... ,..,._ ... '-"'-'"" I ~ •t f •'' "''' ... ,.. .. ,,., .. .. ,,.,. .. ·~"""'' ..._,,. ... , •••• , . .,... l'""' f&ftl ... .. .. ...., ..... '~"' . ...., STOCKS I BUSINESS • ---------- Thunday'a NYSE . eoMPOSffE 2 p • .O. (EDT) Prices TRANSA:COONS w.. .... .... .... 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Co•nS1 1.0 7 9 It~.·· , Fl•Pl 1.1• a Ill 7""'··· · · Jewe1cor J 12 3"-. •• • . NMlneSv .56 IJ -0 11¥1+ '-II <llMer . .0 • 46 22>i&. + v. TrGPpf J.lO .. 2 2'Y>+ \.lo Amsl•• I H a 3'I 11', Coll Ind 2 H 6 ).I 411\11 • V. l'llPo• t .41 1 12 31.._ V. JllnM•n 1.60 9 f10 31 -"" "I Prest I.SO • ll1 '911. • ~ Rle,,elT I.SO 5 It 1'~• Ito Ttafllo/\ .:a 4 O U • ._ Am\I pl f>11 J 8' • Coll pl 160 ' 14'11. • "-Fl•Sll !.2014 S 1lv1 JOllnJn I 40 It 411 1S • lh Nls.tnlc 22 171 It\'>• V, Alo(;raJ'I .tO 1 • U\\+ ~ Tranwy 1.60 1 22 2>'1'-._ Am\I~ 2 .c> I 14 S6'. Co1G,u 1 24 1 44 ll lo'l+ 14 l'lllOr~ I.JO I !Gt 31 • \lo .JOMEF .:IOI.. JO ~ .... NhtlllCI M 1 no IJ4' • " lllo(lrpf AO .. ., 1)\4 + V. Tre•ln UI 6 US ~-V. Aml•I .. ll 1J 1', ColC.s ptHi 4 st H FCIF•lt .20 S •I S ··· Jo/\ftCn 8012 S1 2'-\\ NSI-1.1' 7 IO llV.-\\ lllleAkS .3211 1'1 1"-····· Tr•...irpf 2.. S J6 •••.. Anc11rH 1 lO 1 <0 ,.,_ • •· ~::~~1~\s" 1 14; ~~~_;. v. ~=~~ ~;: ~ ~ !:tit: ~ 1:t:::..;'°'t~ n: ~~ :z ~!:rtr. l:~l~ l1I ~~:, ~. 11*11w 1.1010 ~ " • "" Trtcon 2.t .... 2:M 200,c.. •r. AnctClay I I 24 71'> J ... .... ~orMK l.10. 90 ,""' .. '"' .... JS • l02 31 I llobUn t.7910 u 21 • "' TrlCflpf 2.)0.. 3 ~-" ~nven ·t'~· .·~ 1' '°'• s,"·.· .. '". Co•soso", p22 I 1' 2,,, + ·~ M~ pf IO • 2.~ .... .JoJO~~n• 1.10, ,•, l.s, ··~ .... ;,'. ........ ,u0tl60 ,. 21 + ~ AOl>IM .ll • t3 914 + .... Tr1SoM .. u , ..... , ... ~nr•1 ~ •• Co D • 4 • • ..,_ •• ... • • .,. + .ttni. .,.,. w Nalm P 1. . • • + .,. R0<11G 1.00 I U 211.'t..... Trlalnd .011.. 14 1¥11 ••••• AMulCo ·"'. II ...... + 1. ComllC 70tl0 90 l2'h-v. l'IOHr l.JL . 1l 1•11>. ... . JoyMtQ 1.SO • t.S lJIJli. I Hepl-.60 • u 14\lo..... llO<llOpf "· 1 &100 111 . . . •. Tn•P•c .. ' ltlO l4t.\ll + -AINIClle .1010 !OS 19 • l, Cml>Er> 160' n• 11 +,.. l'IH-P ·••O 49 n v...... -1(-t( -Nev-1.1• 1 14 34-\lo Ro<llTr 1.ll' 21 I~ ..... Trll'llYln I. 11 2111o ... ,. ApeoOll 11 Sl 48-1, CmllEQ .IOllU 111> 11>41• " l'otWll -1~ t 1J7 2' ····· I( Mert .5'12 llU JM+ \It NevPof I 60 . r30 II • -"' llo<llowr M 6 IJ IJ""• V. Tr09lun Ill 2' :i;a~+ w ApPw pit 17 110 dt1' I '' CmwE , "° • 350 21''>-'" Folorn•t .so I lO ..... . • • • K•l .. AI '·"° I S02 ,, ...... HevP pf J.JO .. 1100 ,. -\., llO<ll.WI 2.10 1 IU ,. .... ~. fllClnG 1.16 ' "2 " -"' APl<IDl11 . 1i 10 H -; ... cmwEwtll .. s ·-.... Poirllf'O I.to I lS .. i.. -K•IAlpf 4.17.. I S.Y> ••••• HevPpf l.tS , 21V.•"" Allllllpf 4.7S.. 1 n ..... v. T .... llCll .10 4 ,., tt"4+ v. ApplMO 11 1t Jlo CwEpf UO.. • n o.. ..... l'ra-.JO S ID ...... Kal'6c>f 4.1S.. 2 '1'4-1"1 NEntEll ... ' st ?J • ''l AOllmH I.JI 9 ~ ~ ''411 fwlnOl . .0 1 • 111,.,,,. Arul•N ,. I ,. 17\oo .:-.~ twe01 1.. , 2µ.+ .... PrpMln 1.6012 110 '"-' ''> K•l•Cm .... IJ7 IS -~ NE11GE I .. 1 " "'"···· llol\rllld 21 lS 711o ..... h<•l•b .40 1 IS U"'o-Vt Artt>rO .lODIO ISO 19 • + '• CwE of 2 17 • • ll~. "· · 1Fr'9tm . !Oe II JO ''•• •• • K•IC.. llf1.SO.. 2 J6 + -. NEnPpf2 16 . · ) 2'V. • 'l Aotllr>t .SOii S6 20 • "' Tyle<Cp .60 7 11 U¥o + V. s OAll.YPil.OT .4)5 Home Files Need Periodic .Checks Mima. of l.Ddlvidu.all and hnslne11 owners are ezai· ,erated aavets of papen and recordl. rec:elpt.a ud can· Cd.led thecb. · Tbl,s b an exodlcnt tJ me to get rid of nOllesaenUals. But while pamphlets a.n.d even boob have been wrlt.tecl about what records to lteep, little rellabl• suJd,aace ever ll 11Ten on wbattodlacard. AS ON» ILLUSTJtA TION. wblle YoU sbowd keep cbeca and ot.her'teceipts that may be needed for income tax PW'PC>Sett as ptoof of pay met, it tan "t important Jo kff P all cancelledchecks. lt's evenai.Uy. Jn disc!arding records at home! -Concentrate on the most hnportaai documents. A family filing system tha t Is elliclent and helprut ls possible with UtUe equipm~nt and a rnode!t outlay. A fillDI box con- talntue manila folders and a s mall a.Ce deposit box, whiob ls tax deductible, wllJ pro- vide sufficient home file storage space. -Dispose of salary 'Statements after check· ln& them against annual Money's Worth w.2 wage forms. l -Ughten files by '-...-~1....-----' using a cancelled check as a record for 81\. entry on the taic return. Unless you fear lb al the nature of a medical expense is ambiguous. for example. tbe cancelled cb~k to the pbysf. clan is adequate evidence that YoU have paid for a specific medical service. This can elimlnate the need for saving physicians' statements and other bills identified by c.hecka. Don't throw out bills from the drugstore. The IRS may req uesl proof of deductible drugs. -AS A RULE OF THUMB. dispose ot personal tait records after six years. Federal tax statutes make tax re· turns vulnerable to challenge up to three years under normal circumstances. The six-year period ls.considered the time f'rame for checking returns on whic h income bas been un- derstated by more than 25 percent -'Ibose who use income averaging should discard re· turns over five years old. The IRS uaually retains personal returns for six years and can supply copies at a moderate cost. -After recording the year's total dividend payments, discard these papers on receipt of the al).Oualhdividend t,allv supplied by the company. Be sure, thoug • to retain a record of capital-gain distribution dividends because they must be reported for tax purposes when the s hares are sold. -DISCARD CHECKS WRITrEN FOR maintenance costs on your house, unless you plan to sell it soon . Keep permanent improvement records that add to the value or your properly. s uch as the addition of central air· conditioning. -Periodic ally check warranties and guarantees; if they're out of date, discard them. Throw out health main- tenance certificates that have expired. Nezt : Discardirig bwincu records. Construction Firni Buys FV Property Ar<tk Ent 12 o t >41 t •.. Comsal 1 . ..0 I .. tt&\-Vt Pr11e11f 2 • ff 21'111 + Yll IC•ISrSt I.SO S JIJ U .. + ~ NEllO'T' 2.• t 11 JS ..... Aont.on .. 10 31'> ..•.. Tymlllr 17 4' 21~•+ i,. Arhlfr 14 tt. S • Comsatwd . 10 7"• ..... FUQ11<1 . .i> 1 f4' 1"-..... K.,>eMl1 ,lt I '4 7"•····· N~SEO 1.60 9 11 1-...+ 1• A-r 1.60 S s ,....,_"' _ U-U _ ArlzPs i . .-i ist 21'\ •.. comP$ 1.7' , io 104't-'· -0-4 -Kene11 .1o010 120 u~.... NV "' 1.11 .. t200 42•~ ..... "°'•' .w 11 v1 '""• v. UAL ,60 4 ,., '°'"•-. J.A. Deutsch & Co., a Westminster-based construction Arlt8st .t.o s 11 ••• .. 'c~:::~P ~1 ·•:: ,: ':~ :-: &~~ol 1~·· ~ U :_ ~ Kt C t lo' l2 :4 .,!; • ~ N't' pl 2.12 .. t 20'•-o,. Aos•rlo .~14 Ill f(I -~ UGI 1.41, ,. nv.-.,., ArlllC.5 2 ' ., 34''0 . '· • .,,, 107 2s~. ,,, .......... ,.It II " • •. . 11-•n .llll 14 ,. ...... ~ UOI pt JJ S •• OIO 31 + Ii firm' has purchased three parcels or land in the Fountain "rfenRty 11~ 1'• . ConA11r I S 34 It' 1..... 4TX ~ -KCPLp4•.SO .. I.JO S4 -ll'r ,..._..,, M21 l2J llV. ••• • RoyCCot I a II ltv.+ '°' UNIC 1.20 a " 17\lt ••••• jlrmad• I S •'• • '• (ONMI 1 llO S .. ..:a~ .. ~ GCA .IOe • ti I + ,, KCPLpt2.33 ·· 4 V V.-.... ...._,,. 4.511 .. > """• I.'> lloytl> •ts. S lloO s.-.-1111 UMET Tr • . S l''o .. ,.. Valley indUStriaf area and has begun CORStrUCUOn or three A•m<o l.IOIO Ill> 71,.. " Con90lm .611 a lri 21~ + lt GOV • S4 1 •· • • • ltCSoln I.SOI 6 1 J6 " '" Newpr• I 0 1'·~ •• • ·• lt11bortn ..60 U Cl """·.... UDP .70 t " U'4..... 1 d be Id At1n p1 110 1 "" -•• connM 1.60u .. 70• ... .,.. GF eqp ... 1 s Sflo •.••. KCSoupf 1 .. ao 11~ .. • ,..,.,...p 1.:w 1 " uv. .. 1" •11ur09 .1• 9 • 11v.-" uvin11 1 sos :iovt•...., buildings on tho land, twoofwhichhavea rea y en so . ,.,m,1c11 "' 111 17\oo . conr•c-; .ao 1 • u -"' co.msk 1.«110 » N ••••• 1(•110E' tAO • " ~ • .,. Nl•Mr 3-60 .. 11.0 39 -'4 A,....,, .40 • 10c ·~····· u•11co 1.:JO • 21 1'14 • ~ Two of the parcels, one 50,880 square feet and the other JlrmRu I ~ 3 31 23'"• '• ~onEd 7 S 760 U V.-\.lo O.nrieltl,201S 221 :17'~+ tt K•nNb t ... 7 14 22V.-V. NIMp 11.ts,. t60 11' -1 -S-4 -Onatco .10 6 1 IO'h .••.. AroCorp lb ft •IS 201 • 11 '1 onE DI •.. s f2''1-11• ~pStr .. 24 • 31 II~+ l(anPU 1.10 1 " 10\9 ..... "41M~ 10.60 .. "° 109 ••••• SCA u ,,. SIMI ••••• UnlNV J.4'11 • I s.J ..... 48 000 square fe•t are }""ated on Young ·River Street The Arvin 1 4 101 " -•· onEp1 s.. u ~r"'···i,\ g:~~ 1~1~ ~ u~:..t! ~ ~:r.~~ua.4 ~ ~ ~ ~::,5'1 ;'~·, r. i~:Z:: :~ SCM 1 s 1" 1114 ••••• un&MP .M • ns u"'····· • " ' "" · · · · ~~~:' ~1; ~ ~::. t l:~~~ !.~ ~ "~ 6.l>ti!•v, G••Svc 1.20 • ,. ,,.... v. K•••DI 1.~., , , ... , .. ,..~pf'·'°·· , Jo,..."• ~:1,.. ::i! ;~ ~::::·i-l ~~.; ~-=~:: ~~:: third parcel, 45,781 square feet, is located on Mt. ~ynne. M1110t1 , ',,. »' '• conFr111 90 1 u u •""' 0.1 .... v ·-4 1 I•••""' K•u•flr .10, .,, s"'• '-HorlWf' ,_.. 1 liS ,..... • .. "1"'" "1 » ~ Ut1CMr ,1 :ia 1 Pricesorthethreepurchaseswerenotreleased. AMIDG llOI 110 w:· C0t1NO 2.1'6 .. 41-... a .. rhrt AU "-····· ICaulpf uo •. l ""'~\It ~fin 1.40 s 20 l~-·· Salewy LlOIO ff 40Yt:.::ii: Unlonc: ... sv.+"~ The lh..ol)d1"ngs under construction will create 42,000 Athlone IO s " u·, -• • loMPw 2.12 • 305 n • .. + \\ o.ico .10 I m 22~"' Ko•ec:k ..JDe 1 7 17-111 Notrls .J s " "'°' • •..., »l&Cp ..ai. 1 14 1~ ¥a V.Et« l.J6.t to ,.~ v. ,., ... AllcoMl9 ., ,. , . CllPw pl4 JO .. nlO .. -~ GAlllV l.%2e.. IS 10~· \<\ t<etl'le .JO. .. I0'-11 .... , e!' .. ' ,, 10 2•'1•···" SJoMn t.30. IM ....... "' U•Elpf .... .rJO .. -141 square feel or industrial s pace. One has been sold to Auscal AIC.yEI 1 UIO IS 721•• " C11Pw pll.C.S ., tl10 tlO ~ ~ GflAMO AOll ftt JI + ~ IC•ll•' .20 1 14 If > 14 ~~O I . ..:·,· '!! ,~,.,.-~ SIJoLP t.2010 4 UllJ • Vo U11Et pf t.'2 .. I ,.,,., .... li f' th t uf l A11ce pu., 1 I•'>."' C:nPw p1r.n .. 1100 1o1~-1.-, GnecJll ·'° • 21 ""' • •• ~·.•,•,-1 .. ~1,J 1,", . .P,~· .... ,.. ~~"r .... -~ s.LS.F ,.so 1 41 :it.\r'o. v. u.oc.1 uo • u1 so~-.,.. Enterprises. Inc ., a n Austra an irm a man ac ures AURlch 7'9 uJ SQ>,,'> CnPwpl1,~ .. r2020&SV.+ "• Otlc.bl•A2 I ~ 1211 .. •• " wcf •• "' ~ ~ NoCAlr ,IJ S S1 ~-\\ SP•ul 1.02t .... 11\lo +" UOC..Df2.JD •• 4 M •.... Th db "Id" Allll<ot 1.. 4 111>.. ..... c11Pwpru1 •. u ""'• '"' ocinm• ·• • 101 JOVt•l .... Kenmtt 1.0110 1 ,._ ,,_ NoCaA•r•t • n 1........ s 1R99P 1.72 , 60 '°""' ~ uPac:C no 1se ~-i.:. home and industrtal protection devices. e secon w mg Alllllcp12111 101 i.1• •• ·~ CllPw 1112 «>. • 2S'' . o.t!DY" s ,. 4.SVH 1• Kennet .60en 163:1 U'l't • "' No .. 1u11..cn • l41 IO'll.... s1A-1 l 1> u tro 1 .so• 210 "" h b Id l · d " "d I J W tre Atl•sCp • 11 1s•o. '• contAlr .u. 11cno 11 •• , .... ~11 2..2011 "" .. ".II\ l(yum '·" • m 2lh •"' PKatfiL .so s u 121..+ "" s.1;,;"1"' •32 ·5 tJ 1..,,::::: u~1,..,:f111 1 •. r20 .,~:.::~ a s eenso o an tn 1v1 ua . OD o . A11100•• -11 J11 ,. • •• ColltCop . v ~-"" onFcn 14410 1tt0 l 1'4+ Yi icerrots ·"° 1 tt UY>• '-NlndPS 1.5' • 1n " • "" •· bo ~, ·-1~ ·~ ~11 .... 1 :Ill -J A Deutsch & Co purchased the three parcels from ,...,,min ;;; I 11 12 • '• ConUCp 3 1 111 ~. \(j GnGtll ,_ .... ,. 20 u~ v. KeHM 1.U •• , ...... -NorHGS2.40 I 2S4 "° ........ s-o~~Es ,.::-I Q I~"" a'd.t • ta~···~ . • • CnllGrp 2.20 1 ., 12~ •• \\ G11Holl .60nS l2 9 -'• k•yl(nt.SOl.. 1 '°"'··· .. NoHG Pl•.40 .. 1150 """• '"' 'TV -., r p . . # -K·M Fountain Valley Development Compan y ' Irvine. ~=~:~r 320.~ 10 : ~; -... CnlGppr ? .. '2SV•-""' Gnlnst ·-.,.. 21\h"" KlcldeWl.40. 10) J1V• ..... NoflGpflA •. z30 IOOV.+1-. ~~=~ ·"'~~ ~ :~:z :: ~ ~1~ ;':t;·; '~ ;~-~ • 4vto pl '·'°.. 21 SI'".... Conllll 1.n 1 211 26 + v. OntnltYDI l • I 's + V. ~ldmdep1re2 .J -~ 1,12 ~!t: ~ NoStPw 2 ... ' '1 2114-I.\ SFelncl 2 20 1 121 39\lt • "' IJIFIM:wl .llO El t R D Avery '410 M 1' t •• ConlllP 1.2'Jt JS I~-~ GtnMed ,«) 1 :SO II'~ •.••• "' llCI ..,, • ..,,. ... NOf'Tel .72 t U 2i ····· SFelnr .JO. I 10'1>+ Yt 4 7 1 1 6 ~ + IA .-..... • eVeNll# rO'JIS Avnet 70 6 170 U '\, '• ConlllRI .. d ~ .. '4 G11Mllls I II 2S'I ISf't+ ~ IClll'OIOSl .t0 t02 ll''-~\ Nl"9•1e,llt . 3S 4 -\/. S~etn AOb t , .. , SP4+2\4 VllGrnty .ltt S C U + t\ •v~ • 401• ... , " • 1 1 con1011 1 40 • "' 21...,. v. o Moi ,,.,. • 1760 '""• "' l(lrsc11 11 '°' 24..., • 'h ,.. .. frp 1.10 ' ns 1•11>. ·• • sF 1 1 1 •• ui1"° ,.,., u111 1 ... 1 10 -v. General Automa•:on, Inc., Anaheim, has reported lbat " -· ' '" ConlTt ll.W. 9 4U IS.. ..... OMot pl S. 4 10••-~ Knl9llld 11 tJt l7V,. ~ NwstAlfl .jJ) 4 1112 ll"•+ ''" s,o1•W.1"" .to·; 1 JS~ ti! Ulllt'f:. .tOO 6 :JO M = "° w • 11r M19 -.... ,, , ••.... c110•1e 1st m ,._.., .,_ o ., P or 1 " · 1 o • kotfltln .., 1 JJ tt -\It Hwtl<fl ''°' • Jt 2:1\/i. "' s.u1~E •. n 4V.-"' un1u11p1 .o .. 1 n v.+ "' reve nues for the first quarter of fiscal 1978 ended Oct. 29 ::~ 1·~:~ ~ s~!: . • ~~8!. ~,: i 11 : 5g ~. ~ h~ 1~1~ e \l~ it -:! ~="ii: 1 : ~ 'f'"~ .:~ ~:/,,":,J:~ ~ 4~ ~~ ! ~ t:~~lf .Jt 1~ J; :~.: ~ ~~~·~~; 1:: ~ 'n 1l!';!. ~ were $18.981,000, compared with $20,926,000 for the same e.i.r1nu .&•U 1so ., , '' Coop•n 1.ae10 12 "'\/\.··~ GnRelr .10... » • • "' Kreft i.» • 10S '4~...; Nwtlnd us 1 223 -· '"' SaYt!IP 111 1 u 11"'+ .,_ u ...... c1 1.20t 1 tn 2t'fi..... period the previous year. . 8•1d0H .IO S 11> 141,,_ 'lo CoopLeb .7010 428 " • GnS19111 .8012 IQ,' 26-'t+ :\\ aroelllr .21e •. 11 I01A ~ itt NW\llldwt •• S » + ''I S.vE pl 1.2'.. 4 ll~ ..... UnPllMll .. 11 11\..... { d " ll•llCp 1. I• 19 •• C-TA .IO l 21 1J.ld.+ G n s I e. In ~ 2 I ·-· 1-'0 6 Z30 21 .... ~ ..... "'pf uo •. 4 U4Vo+l'I, s. IM •• l9t 14"9 "' u A I M. " U V. \'+ OperaUonsresultedinane tincomebe oreextraor mary •ea .. llyMEf 2::m 1 : ll,~-; ;: ~::.~ ':~h ~ l~·04 t.fetEt f.2~ a tr\ '1i~-~ IC~~,:,' ::'J s: m:=: ~:Jr. J.:u ~ n~~ t: Sa~ . a m .... ~ ... U;F:s•l.Jle •· 11 I~; v. credits of $122,000 Or 5 cents a Share for the quarter, COm· 8en~•I .MIU 4' 1''.• '-C-wdl,20 • 31 11'1•+ V. GT~,., 7.JO .• S JJ:\t-1• ICysor I 7 2:7 tll'H Vt N= 2 I '1 41 +.,.. ~:::il!\n'; ,ft~::~~=::: 1~ ftW.:,:·~ 1-11 .«>, 511 11'•• '• Cord11r• JOU >0 a\>-~ ~EDI 2.• .• 10 tt14..... -L~ -, m .1 .. 11sos ,~. :i. S<,,111, ... 1, 1~ 11~ ..... vsovot '1'J·• 7 1411'1..... pared with $676,000 or 27 cents a share the year before. An -Pnt )0 • 1' 22'-1, CornG U81o ,., su-.+ " Tit• uo • S9 ~. '"' LFE 10 n .__ ~ Her p1 uo.. 21 u ....,. ~ s""'"'~ t.10 1 ->i111 .. '"' usu-. 6 -1·~~ '" traordinary credi·t or •An 000 or 2 cents a s hare a·ncreased la11P pf t.1S •. l 2''>-'" Corr81k 110 24 lllli•... •• S<O .. .5' 4 • .. • • LMI Inv •• 11 2'1<.-Vt NllCOr .a6 7 SIS 2~ ~ SCOAI';, 1 S ")4 11 + ~ usenCi" .52 7 ii) 1.I;.~.,., ex .-.v, &anPpf 2 .. 1 71'••• \~ cousins .. '° 1'-+ .. Genslr 1.~1s .! t4~···:: lTTv -·· 2121 ~6v ••.. 1~ . -0-0-.. S<otlacl .lU! n f ..... USLH•O ·'°, nm ... ._"" n e tincometo$162,000or lri-H't' 2 32 • .. lO + I·· Cowl8 .nll , 1S<ll. ..... Gt1111PIS .... s -"-· .. t VA ...... • .. OKC t.10. SI 11 + ... S<Otl'•I ,..., • It* MV. •..•• us Aly . • """ • .,.. 7 ts h in 1978 kOIV• :.11 ' H 1"t..... CoaBd<I .'5 9 J :n"'"· . GaP•( 111 w 21 ... 14 TVCppl s. I 4 ·-~ o.:•nd .5021 .. , It + ~ $<0111'« I • ,. JI~-.~ us~ f.10 • 4$ ,, + "-cen a s a re ' •llllAM .t4' "' 72'•• IO C••IQ .so 4 .,, II~•\\ Gaf>wpl2.S2 .. • 2~ II. \A<GH t.IO . J v.-"' 0. pf f.IS .. t «> ..... ScOllP .7' .... u ..... ~ VSSI ... uo I '1J ~·"' compared with an ex-•llllTr J 7 61 JS~ ... I~ er-I.AO 1 SJ ~·' GaPwpU.7S •• ,. ,..,,._"' Lams. I.JI 7 n ... .. o.rie .. 1.1210 l 17f'll .•••. Scoltyt .J411 47 ,.~. ~ VSTotx 1A11 ,, 1'Vo-... ( NG J ::~~:n.~:: I~ J:~~ :: ~~~~ I::: l~ 2~~-·--8~."11ir.·; ffl ~~·!; ~::l'Y.1:1~ n n::: ~ ~l~.:Wl5 .·10~~ ~~: ~ ~=, '·'° 1~ ~ 2~;: 8n~~ ,.,_~ .. ; ,U""; ~ TAKI traordinary credit of ,1 .,.,,., •1o" n "'•-'• croc•Npt 1 .. n «iv·-~ o.r11er 1.«112 112 ~"' u..,c,, .4013 '1 ~" 0tc1P1112.1' .. 1 »•••'Ao S<IHlftf .11 ... u 9111+ ~ uTc11pt1.n •• 20101l'r+1~ $11$,000 or 5 cents a 8•r11tr 1.6011 u :rt'•+'• CromplC' .90 4 34 I~• \l.o ~Hy 2.ao.12 4l t12 H L.•er59 .60 J tu 14h + !-'\ OcclPpf),to. t )NJ+~ SHCOlll .:sot 91 is~ v. untTel 1.211 Ill ,..,_ .. ,,.. STOCK h 'n 1· g t • B•roc it .7tn 10. u1<o -'• crouHI .'IOt 121 11~ ..... GlantPC .60J7 27 Ht ...... l.eersp12.n .. J J<IV.-•4 ~~1Pp1 • .. • 131A+ll4 S.•llCL uo s ,~..,,. '4 unll•od ,109 11 10 _,... s are1 c reasn ne rn· 8•rntGD 90 7 JO 19 -VO CrwnCk I U7 2.S""+ \'t OllirFln ·-4 oll 10.+ .... L.usw l,M) a 52 lO"'>+ ~ c1P•l2.JO., II ,._IA S.ellWA 3 441 OH i. Unlvfr .S6 7 11 • +\It COme to $795,000 or 32 e.s1c1n,tlo• JI ?O~>+ v. Crwtt1 uo I "331~+"" g1c11.ew .J06 9f '°" .. i. LHdsN .'110 44 2414..... < l>'111U2 .. U 2ll'o•"" s..111 1.u a 10 JS"··•·· llnl•Fd t.2' • u 2'111• ,.., ••tesMI .11120 .. ""'. "' Cr11mF 1.n s o ""'• v. lfldH1t1 ·'° • ., l41'o• .., Lu•ona 1 • 11 1fl....... OodM '·'° s n W'>-~ s.19rm .n , IM 1111>. -Unl..e•' 1• 1 • "'~-v. cents a shar e in lhe Baus(llL I -O ii 111 O', • "' Cu111ro U1 • I 11 ..... Glllell• IJO t 241 J,4 ..... !-·.~"'V~ly.4b .• 12'S1 120~.• .. "°. OfilOEd 1.7• • 240 It~ ••••. S.avrv .10t • II IO''t + \\ Up)olln 1.lOU J4' U"'+ 1, sa-e __....od in fis cal 1977, lloaalTrv .JO 17 77' 37'4 + '• C11lll11•n ... I 1l llV. • "• Cil-111< 10 • I • · • •• ~ " .. f • ...., ~ Qf!Edpf l .90 •• 110 cJ.-+ • .._ Saar... I 1 I 1• .. • V. USLI FE .U 7 wi 11'~ + t' .. , I"''• aavco1 P . 3, 7.,,_ • c11me11 1 ... 4 ,. • ..,_ ~ <iloasw .u 1 n 12Vt ••••• 1.an ... , 10 s 1 ••• 011ep110.1t .. ooo1u .. ,...., s.ar1e0 .s112 «u 11\'t+ v. u,.,,.,.. ...... 4 ""'-v. Lawrence A. Goshorn, pt"'•ident and chairman, said ••vStO I... • • 11'. ... C111111D~o .1S ,, s ·~-v. Glo4>Mtf' .. 107 'm:-:-"' l..etlO• 1 • 11' 2.Sl't+ "' Of\PpfC 1.60 •. '"° IS"'o-v. SHn .'610 "" ~· 'lo UtaPL '·~" 10) ,..,... .... ...... ... kc1.,. .... • , 1 ....•••• c11rr•nc 1.io s s nYo+ "" o•o11u 11 1 7 so t ····· Luf'•Y .40b 9 14 7v. .•.•. ,Ppf1~ H •• l,IJO '1?'1~· v.,, s .. '"'"' • ~ '"'• ~ u1Ptp' 1.80.. ' st~+"" net 1'ncom~ for the quarter was on plan for fiscal 1978, with tlMrlllQ .6010 4 2'.\4+ 14 C11rlW .Ml I ~ llV• +Yo OldwFn ,60 a 2' 171!11• l'o l.Av)ldC .. " 111"-• "' .-p .-14 l«I • ••+ t SedcOlllC ~I M Ja~.,. U.. f 10-I ""' EtFd• .9'11 437 24'• .. ~ cur1w 11 l •. i "'"· .• ,, r:;dWpl .re .. • 111~-l':. uv1s1r 1.20 s in ,. + ~ ao e U4 ·; m ,...., • "' s.11 1.t 1.iob s J UYi..... 0 :... ;;_,, -'···· revenues slightly below plan. kmn .'415 120 33•1 .. -.. CullvH 1.40 • 17 »"-~ "' 1,32 • a~ 2 .. .. ... lalrlt1F .20I • 14 Ut+-'" G~ot .eo •. 1100 I~,"' S>v<;plnl ·'' • , ~-.... v,. Cp I.to 1 lO ta -"' tcl1'D .nil 1Sl » + "' Cy<IP 1.:io. s II '°"'"'" yr 1.lll. 796 11 -Vii LOI' ,. s t41 ,. • ~ •NG 2 ' " iltw• .. ·Ao S.rvtn1 I.JO. ,.. nYo ..... VSI O> .so. I 12V.• 14 JI .t--of "'r-di~ E-c-.Jl-.JI ••ell l.'IOtl. «I 7'lL.,. Cypnu 1.A022 49 ,~ .... ~.i.Jw ..$?. al ,, • -l.ltlr1)1Cit ... 1 Jt ""'· •HC1wi,~ 411JJ • S/\ell ..... 7 • IV..-"' Vat~lfl .«111 " 1\.'t-"' &Al1'e 'a; -.:; • -"""••lllltCW 80er 14' m .... · -~ -0.Vld I,• I 426 •11o1-" Ullrty\.llJ t ;j' 11J".+. ..... II 1 1~ !?:.! • ~ $1\atil" ,to t 14 4l14 .. -V•rltn .40 IJ 461 lO + It laltoP ''so~ ..... OPF 7 11. +v.,&!:Tdpfl.»,. 2 21\'/ .•.•. UOMI ,SO) (,; nkT1\, .,... ..... ;:=it .10J u '"'"··· varo .toe• l2 ,~... AJt«Corp.,Af)ahelm,hasinforatatlyagreedtoacquire l~n I". ,, 1"" .. \• o.tnoft .20 ,, " s~ .... ,_ '·'° 1 220 ~""· v. LlllyEll 1 • .012 ,,..,. •tlf .• • • 'JO ... + .. rH ... J 111 J.\4 ..... v....cie .. • • ..... ......1 u r ed" f c k N . I B k f bo dftH .M, e ''"····· o.11R1" .7t • n 11-\.. •l:rer .»M s t: ... " u11CN1 2 • 1 a.1t . .,., ~ ~ • 11 mu v. ~" ,..., .., "' r111>-t!; ven•'9 .uJ .. 21 21/Ui'l!I a secu • ..,.. neo er it rom roe er at1ona an or r · w.:i,· :ri 1~ ;;. '!~·;·v. g:r.1P~1:.1f lX ~~tt~.;; g~rT~~l It :: Jt:.-: ... ti:=:ir.n!:: ·; ;:.~-;·w-~ lli:;o10 1: 1:::-~ it' 1•11•6 I ttv.-VetlS.!.07•·· ' u........ rowfng~ofypto$4.5mJllioo,lbetlrmunounced. ICd 4.Qf t I iv, .. \It Peill It 4' 3511•-.,. G~Pc .IOtJO t$4 114···;.: Uonet .II t 2'J S ···•· 11' f .«>"f Jt ~: V. ro:.n.::?. n ~~~:::: ~~ d~~ !ff ~~'i: Altec'SCUrrent unsecured lineoh:reditexpires'l>ec:. 31 . ...... IS 1.JO 1 1• -t ~ oa t •• II ~ ~ G D .10. 40 ,.~ ... l lttlofo .JtllO WS ~· }\ ~.JO . 10 ,......... rw 2.20 .• 144 21 + ~ "'• ltPf•.n .• l20 SI + YI llil'idh• 2.,. 1 '°' ll-t.. o. *" 11 1U .,..., + '!t G1 '"' 1.io.11 ' 14~ ... 1 uu Pt< !If • • ,. J1v.-t ~ .60 • • 2012"'• ~ S11rwp1 '·'°·. zso sM+ • va P ,,4.., .. 1100 to + "' Allee also aMounced that ill directors have decided not etftlCp UO • '4 •..•• 0. tP/lt U 11 l'YI+ 14 GV .. H!l 1.lO 1 441 "-"'+ \Ii Uttonpf 2.. 1 ~..... I ' 31 • ., SiffPK t.10 t W W4+ Vo Ppft.TS .. iJO i.v. + ~ • d f d ' etMtpt 4.JO.. n sov...... o.v<o .-• 1 is....+ " G1wf<1n ·" s no nv. ..... uc1111d • 1u M~-v. ~ts11 ,JOit • n 1•:ie+ ..,. s19.,., , .. 1 11 11\'t+ .,.. V•E~2 • .a .. 21 JIM+ "' to extend the exercise ate or its ou.tstan mg warrants, tMl!Mfof s.so .• lJO ''"'····· O.yt"'9 IA. :m 411\+"" G1Ws1u7 • i !flh .. L.AMll• .t41J I~ n--. v. nC 1.,2110 Ill .,~ .. \II Slonocle 1.)2. s l1:W.+ ..... V41t:I' I.JI.I •• DIOO.. •••.• W·hi .. h evpire May 1. • 9M_$1M . . ~j II\. I~ mY1PI.. ti' "'° 111'1 ..... GfW:f ... . l olV.+ .... 1.-S 1.10 4 11 J.Sllt+ ... nlll ''°' , " 2~+ "' $1mPrec .20 • st 7\11+ 14 Vor •• 120 .... "' " ... aano111 .~ t so ,,,,_"' ·t.11t • •• 1.40 .. -tll) GGI• t .oan 11 P"'····· um"" .sa • u ~-"' 1111 pu.1s.. • " +2 simm '·"" u 1~+ v. V\llcnM 1.10, ., tt.\1-14 William F. Garmon, president •nd chief exee1.1Uve or. BerlieyP 10 n 11,1o .. ~ lllfl .•• z1J01111'i .... Orey 1.04 7 llt$ Mt;.~ L.otnM 1.Ue •. t120\.i+14' ~ll\.6Jr S !t ~+Ii. Sl'l\PPal .5012 tst tit\+~ -W-W-d led fM 968 ld f ._1PoJ1ta•us 20-.1'; •• ,~ .. 101 m~-14 o,.v,,t1c1-wt •. ~tt.IH··" Ln5ler t.101u11ti .... , -1"-4-si110., .60sno ttv.+ .. WllMNI AO• • 1211o+l4 ncer,saidthewarrants. a aso ayl,l ,prove or ~Stl 1,. M> Hlfl+ v. OtlM<Ht I ... • H ~+ 14 Or-C .Gi 1 ~ r-.. ~ tfl.Co I.ta 1 60 t•l'f+ '141 ... l~I .SO. ... II *ti ..... Slnttltf ),so.. 2 --..... W.cf\Ov AO t 20 -..• ., th i.. f t k t$17 share !!"1''' ·•" uo :mi. .•... o.1mP 1.20 • ., u~ ..... G"'"''" 1 s • t + lt>fP a.u .. 12 v-"' f'PO ,.., • ,,. 'f"• ~ Sir,.., .10t0 " 1 .... "" wac"•' uo.. 1 ..... ,.. e purcnase o commons oc 8' a • 1ie<11Df' . .e1J ,.,. 1~"' o.1 1a"1' .10 • 211 a v.+ "' Gvuo•n .n 1 ' ui.. .•... 1.JLptO '-'1•• 4 21">-"' !>SA tt " t\ ..... ~" u .IQe r 20 'i"-'-.. wac11R1r ·• ,. H'+ "' The warrants are traded on the American Stock Ex· elalr,111 1 s n " + 14 0t1111t ~ 11 u~ ...... OtfW'•tn ·• 4 lSl 1111t-Yt LAnODr .~14 n 24Vt+ \It '6c.AS t.2•,~ 41 1 -.,. 'f.11111 .tou g 1 + '-wat~, .11u u 20\'t+ '4 etlul 111 7 • , .... "' Otllolla •• J2 s~ .. I~ Gf!Wwt ... , t-111 ...... l.of•ICP ·'°. Ill 2111>+ to\ Pk~ t I .,. U~t ~ !""' I • ~ .. 4.. W•IOf'" 1.10. 0 17~.... change. ~It 1.25 ll '1 l24\+ \1i OtnMI U4 6 t 27 •••1• ~lfWM U1. · l st~ ..... l.al.6fld I.JO t llJT 12111. ·•• • f'ac to 1; 1 12 ~,.. 1111nt ,rr t Ill+ ! Wln4 t.«la I 16 27"' + VI 11 uo • 12~ \.'ll 0.11110 .11111 11 ia + .. G•l'WPI uo JO~ .•••. uP•< .«111 • '" 11:w-1-t Pt< 1. 13 2 ""'-"' kt11 1.10•• ,,. 14+ wa11e11t .r• • 2 ~ ... vo n--__ ~o•panfl A-qulr-.a llfd .10 1 It ~... .. Otnt$91Y .I011 M jl'lo+ ~ G""A Pr 'f 2 -" LOllYGS I ... 9 14 'l,,.._ I.Ii J'K et • JO SS ~S\'H .. SMhllTr ,70 S 13 I + W.tlM<.I 1..20 J a 2~ .-V'ruRIJJ" .... '-W::U. ... ,,:•r ,··, ~J~; ~ g:~~· 1'.fi: ,r. 1:ltl~ .•. g~:~~ "i1t ~) n~ ~ t:;:,i"~Iili2 ~: ~~--~ t~r.r l:l17 '~ '~"'; ~ t::.t:' .to f at '~k2! = :::"'"' :·: .~ a: It:!,'-Flow General lnc .. McLean .. Va., haS announced lhl'l ac • ..... c t.16 6 ii u\\ .. ~ .. o.1mp1 s.50 •• ~ /'O'lo+.,. oumt•• .10.. ' ,, -4' l11tkvs ·''°' " '"'"-~ ~"". •·· l20 ~""····· ~c. .01eu ns 6iZ10 .• war'il'J .. 11 ~ i... ?iu1"sltlon of th• envlronm"'nt"l ,,rou·p of Bower lndus'""'es ...,._,, l"' 1 ..,._,,. l>ttll!pt 7M .. r1 at•+-., °"l'Rpft.30 .• II t~+ V. Llldtow ·•I Ht 7\'h 11.i PtcTin 60 1 S 12 -" 5o0 llll .& 1 • ~· .-. 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Life Set In Di's ·Slaying SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 27-year-old avowed les- bian has been sentenced to life in state prison for the bludgeon slaying or a Marine drill instructor July 21. Natha Mary DePew was described Wednes- day by Superior Court J udge William T. Low as a "danger to society." Low said the slaying of Sgt. Davis Hargis, 23, of San Diego was "certain· ly bizarre. ''SH E REALLY was just the girl next door when s h e wa s ap- proached by Mrs. Hargis to kill Davis Hargis," the judge said. "Over three weeks . they discussed several plots. I jotted down 12 plots, including the one she Miss DePew remembered, pulling bullets in the carburetor. I have heard a lot of murder cases, but I've neve r heard thal one before." Mrs. DePew pleaded guilty Nov. 23 to beating Hargis to death with a 6 ~-pound window weight and dumping his body in a dry creek bed near Ramona. T H E SLAIN Marine's wife. Carol Louis e Hargis, was convicted of first.degree murder Dec. 7. She will be sentenced by Low on Jan. 4. During testimony at Mrs. Hargis' trial, Miss DePew told of plans lo kill the young Marine "just for the money," in- cluding U> lacing his trench toast with LSD, (2) s lipping the poison sac of a tarantula into a piece of blackberry pie and (3) pu,l:ting bullets :-mto the carburetor of his truck. Conditions Improving For Skiing B7 The Associated Preas 'Skiing conditions were reported improving for tbe upcoming weekend in the Sierra Nevada. Her e are the condi- Uons as provided to the C alifornia St ale Automoblle Association: La-. ,,__ -9-t• IMllH, ~PGWllll'.-'ftl. lhrwtowl. ~ .............. -a-•• ,.. dies. tNKlle' ~ ,.._ c"91rt. .... liftl, MOW! .... .... , ..... -8-M ,.... llKN•, ~ pcMl!lff, -clNtlrs. lrem, ~ ... ~ ... -._ ..... llttll91, '9(1l llM """'*'---SI• 11111. ,,....... ......... _._n.n1,.. t':e 11'::."" powder, _., c~rs. ._.. Y.., a,...,.,, -a.• ....,•d4WI. 54 lllctles, PKM41,..._r, U ""'' 6,200 ele4tetlCM1, S lnc ... 1, ~~-... Mhlclltt, ~ t•chelrt.,..,,,lfts,nm. •., ... itKI ... -.... J6 1~"91, .-::::•:: . .:...~ ..... """"' ~ar,Htb._ ...... .... If "=i"!~·. -........ ... ... ... t• lll<1let, ,.....,Sllfll. . I .. ......__ .... ,,....._ ::t . ...-...... ,.,.,._, n · ) . Thurtday, O.eember 22. 1tn I . ryo CONSUMER I CALIFORNIA WASHINGTON (A P) - Consumers who have boucbt replacement bulbs for their Christmas Ughts bave beea ad- vised to inspect them for a ,POISlble detect consl1Un1 ol a very sbor., thin strand or wire at the base of the bulb. when electrical current 11 tint ap. plied, the Consumer Product Safe- ty Commls&ion 1ald Wednetday. THE ADVICE CAME with an an- nouncement from tbe commission that Market Research Imports, Incline Village, Nev •• ls voluntarily withdrawing from sale certain im- ported replaceDlent bulbl made ln Taiwan. The bulba have a thin strand of wire approximately one-eighth to one-fourth of an inch long which may protrude from the soldered tip at the base of the bulb, the com- mlsslon said. It said the defect may be safely removed by limply anJpping off the protr ud.1n1 wire with a pair of aclaeora or pliers. Or tbe consumer may choose to return the bulbs to the place or purchase for exchange orreCu.nd. TWO MODELS OF bulbs are sub- ject to the defect and are ideoUfled on the package as item No. LC-9004, size 914 and item No. LC-70N, alze 7¥.a. The woi:ds. Replacement Bulbi, MRI. alao ap.o pear on the package. The bulbs were sold four to a packa1e for about $1 or leu na· tionwide. · Other distributors may have im· ported the same bulbs from Taiwan and may be selline them under different brand names, the commluloo aald. The defect could cau.e the bulb to shatter witm% explosive force ... FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL HUGHIE . • . RESIDENCE. 32 Hughie is one . of 43 clients, from 18 to 66 years of age, who live in Residence 32 at Fairview State Hospital; like everyone living there he is developmentally disabled, his mental capacity won't' grow much beyo11d that of a normal five-year-old. He is 37 years old and has spent the last 23 years in state institutions. His physical appearance is pleasant, though his blond hair is thinning and he is developing a bit of a paunch; quite generally he appears comparable to anyone approaching the middle years of life. He is, however, an epileptic, and he was born with damage to the left side of his brain causing him to have a stroke-like incapacity with a slight shuffle of the right leg and a somewhat limited function of the right arm. A typical day finds him rising at 6:30 AM. and by 7:00 AM. he's completed his personal hygiene chores and he's ready to dress; he' II usually wear an. open-neck sportshirt, a pair of faded cord bell bottoms, and sneakers. He'll often choose to be acoompanied by his Mickey Mouse doll which he carries in the right front pocket of his jeans. Hughie (and Mickey) have breakfast and are soon ready for their usual 8 hours of school and/« organized instruction in such diverse subiects as arts and crofts, communications, table manners, and personal hygiene. He returns from his busy school schedule at about 5:00 P .M. and immediately proceeds to listen to his portable radio; during the next hour, until dinner, he'll listen to every possible sports program that he con tune to. You see, Hughie is the resident sports fan and he works hard at making himself capable of reciting volumes of little known facts from the world of sports, facts like knowing by name the various team doctors in the Notional football League. And he's rarely wrong. To this ix:>int in Hughie's· day, and through dinner which is served about 6:00 P.M., he and his peers hove enjoyed a fruitful day; they'v~ found their classes challenging and their day ~ been filled with "normalization"·· activities, . activities which will help them to behaviorally adiust to the "outside vvorld" whenever they are fortunate enough to go on a trip away from FoirviENV. But ofter dinner Hughie's· productjve day tokes a potential step backwards. During that time of the day that you and I are relaxing in the comfortable social setting of our homes, Hughie and his friends spend their t ime in a large rather sterile room that is filled only with institutional -type chpirs lined up against the wall, all of wh ich face the single T.V. set that is hung some 8 feet off the t iled floor. Hughie may listen to his radio, and a few of his friends may watch T.V., but most just sit languidly by and store into space. It is during these "social hours" ·:t hat every professional employee at Fairview believes that the greatest advances could be mode .in their clients' behavior. If Hughie and his friends had a normal living area that included couches, chairs, tables, lamps, rugs, etc., then they could learn about life's Soc:iol graces, they could learn acceptable behavior in surroundings that hove been normal to you and I since we were tots. Hughie and his peers muld hove a chance to be more accepted when they mode occasional trips to the "outside." ·:But funds aren't available for such "frills" ·:as choirs and couches and rockers; the budget is limited and such purchases simply can't be made. Nr:Jny donations are mode by charitable people in the community but such cootributions are usually directed to the "little kids"··-not to the big guys like Hughie. But, boy, do they need help. They're the "forgotten clients" .. at Fairview. If you've got iust a t iny bit of charity laying around in your purse a-tucked ovvoy in your woflet, then how about helping to put a lamp, or a choir, or a rocker, into the life of Hughie and his f riends in Residence 32? JYSt before you relax in your "normalization"·· area, write a check for anything you con afford and send it to: .. . 1 HUGHIE, VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR RESIDENCE 32 f AIRVIEW STATE HOSPIT Al 2501 HARBOR BOULEVARD COST A MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 \