Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-23 - Orange Coast Pilot1 · I r':'•ti· R~d 1;1a1m.s _cr~d!t { , • • Hinshaw in Jail: Sadat Admits 'I'm Innocent, summit Talks Life Is Cheap' CoDid FBil ..... DAILY PILOT esa ea -on * * * 10< * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 23, 1977 ______ ras VOL. 70, HO. JS7,4 Sl!CTIOH$, M PAOl!S s I \ f Jail lntervi~ . --·-- • Hinshaw Hits Penal System By KATHY CLANCY Ol lhe O•lly l"llot Shfi Speaking from behind bars at Orange County J ail, former con- gressman Andrew J . Hinshaw insisted in a television interview • Thurdsday night that he is an in- nocent man. "I don't agree with the (guil- ty) verdict but I can accept it," Hinshaw said as he talked on KOCE-TV of the two 1976 convic- tions that landed him behind· bars. I The former Newport Beach I 1 Expectations Jn Mideast fflghfor Peace JSMAILIA, Egypt CAP) - President Anwar Sadat con· ·ceded today that his Christmas Day summit with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin could be a failure. But he prayed for peace at a mosque on. the banks of the Suez Canal. Expectations are high in Egypt and Israel that the two leaders can lay the foundation !or fast-moving negotiations that will end the 29-year-old Middle . .East conflict. • • Jaraell sources say Begin is bringing a new, still-secret pro- posal to the summit that sbc)uld stimulate progress on the PaJestinlanisaue. · "It ls a new plan and contains new thinking.'' the sources said. Israeli radio, quoting in· ,.!o~ed "80UJCes ln Cairo, said. Befin ml~end bJs stay in Jamailia Monday -it ii ' achedUled to ut only several houn -if talb drag on. laraeli sources denied th1.I was posalble, .however. Sadat's spokesman, Saad Zafhloul Nassar, aaid plans call tor nothina beyond Sunday eve- ning. But~ad.ded: Uhewant!to atay, wh)'not?" • Belin outlined his peace pro- • '(See SADAT, Paae AJ) Republican congressm an was convicted or bribery charges and illegal use of bis county-paid staff while Hinshaw was county assessor in 1972. "We fought a good fight and we lost." Hinshaw said. "I am stiU a believer in our criminal justice system." As h e insisted b e was wrongfully convicted and the victim or alleged unfair treat· ment by the district attorney, Hinshaw saved mos t of his words to criticize a penal system where he said "life ls cheap" and in s ome instances the system causes ex-convicts to re- peat their crimes. Hinshaw, who recently was re· turned to Orange County J ail a(ter spend.in!{ four months in state prison at Chino, hid one thing he will work to increase is the $200 allowance given in· mates upon release. Fellow inmates told the one· time assessor one reason they repeat their crimes is that for $200 they are expected to leave prison, ftnd a home, buy a car and get a job. .. • .,..., ""',...., ltldl9fW ~ STREET LIGHT ILLUMINATES SCENE OF A NOTHER COSTA MESA TRAFFIC FATALITY Accident on Placentia Avenue Thursday Continue• City's Hollclay Carnage Explosion Rocks Office "We need to make s ure persons have more money when ~~:Y t~~tn~ft\~.~~eJr:s~at!r0~0~~ Anti-Red Group Claima Miami Beach Bombing tinued. The former congressman said MIAMI BEACH. Fla. CAP) - h e plans to t a lk to s tate A powaful explosion rocked lhe legislators to see if the system . ofllce or a Venezuelan airline on can be remedied. · Miami Beach's swank hotel row "1 would make every job On early today, gouging a crater in prison) a reasonable job in thick concr ete a nd twisting ·terms of doUars," be explained. heavy metal door frames liJte-· (See HINSHAW, Page A%) stral\dsoltafCy. FOOTBALL 1 ·01 ON TV ~TONIGHT . TANGERINE BOWL Channel 13, 8 p.m. Ftotlde Stat• (t-2) va. Teqe Tech (r-4) The Taterlne Bowl left • aour t~ wi&b l;llllftY f an1 · wlt•D bOth teams were serec~ on a day theJ lott badly. However , the teamt It tSlDI& tbla year haY• lbown ~lotlve of. tenH•. Tech'• f&VOAd. (TapedelQ) Seebe&alll la 9perCI 8ecu. There were no reported ln .. juries, although cl\unks of twist· ed metal new 72 feet across Collins Avenue where pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion hit 1a few minutes past midnight. "It was lucky no one got hurt -there were pedeatrlans on the street," 111id patrolman Pele .Matthews. Windows were •battered 400 teet away, pOUce said. Dama1e wa1 euimated at $15,000 to $20t~ "'by an FBI aient wbo d~uned to clve bll ·name . • ··wereallydob' knoW who did Jt." ... .tded. Nearly lilt boan later, a ma with • beavy Spanlah accent e&W a.. Mlaml bunau of Tbe Aaloetated Prell and clailQOCI ~blllty for the blut. • 'Tbe _. tbat weM ofl*i lllaml Beach WM 1et by the •· tl-ComlllUDllt commabdo 1raup J:I Condor," the caller •~4. "W• J did it for our leader Orlando Bosch who is being held in · Venezuela. If they don't release him by Christmas something bigger is going to happen to the Venezuelan people.'' Bosch, a vehement anti-Castro Cuban exile. la being held by Venezuelan autborlUet in C0"4 nection with the bqmbing of a Cubana Airlines plane that crashed off Barbados on Oct. 6, 1978, kllllnl all 73 people aboard. • .El Ccodor and the Coord.i.na· lion of United &evolutionary OrgatnzaUons have claimed resl>QnaibW~ for the craab and several other bombinl Jncldenta, including tbe.ainkin-' of a Cbban trawler in CaJ••o. ~er4~ ln GOOD FOirl'UNE ENDS S4DLY August. The apparent target or today's attack was the office of Viasa Venezue lan International Airways situated between tic,ket offices of Delta and National Airlines in a complex of travel· oriented businesses. The exploeive device was set at the rear door of the Viau OI· ·flee in a cramped alley. The heavy, metal-plated commercial fire door was blasted from ita binges, the metal door !rame twisted and shredded. A crater 18 inches across Wl~. 1ouged throuib an eieht-incb·thick layer of reinforced concret~ stdewalk. Walls of the alley were pockmarked by fraiments. Seta of beavy metal doors 30 feet away•~ caVed in. A clock Jay •DM.JDI tbe l'\lbble Jn the alley, tbe baDds stopped at12:09 . "I'll tell 100 thla," 11.nsen GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP) Hid, "it tbere'd been people -A dnaalat, Carlot Q1U.Dto C'th.~ would ha~e bee ~:'°~~h~a aa...!1 .. ~ · WiJldc)ws'fm'9poppe4ootfna .,. a won •u..,OOO n number of butlae11e1. hotels tlM O=d Clldat.maa lot-and apartmeata bt tb• ana terJ, • tl• reported 'l'burs. :•l~ teeort ctt1•1 mam ------------------···, -~ ' ~~ Collison Injures Woman . A Santa Ana woman was killed and a Costa Mesa woJ'IUUt injured when their cars collided head-on Thursday in front of Estancia High School, Costa Mesa police said today. It was the fifth traffic fatality in Costa Mesa· within an eight· day period. Dead oo arrival at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital Thursday was Sylvia Rita Romero, 20, of Santa Ana. The other driver, Joan Williamson. 19, of 2083 Mandarin Drive, Costa Mesa, was listed In stable condition with cuts and bruises today at the same hospital. Police Investigator Dave Wal)cer said the accident ~ curred at 4:55 p.m. He aaid that. according to witnesses. tbe Romero car swerved suddenly in front of the Williamson car. The dead woman was ejected from ber Volkswagen aod ~ parently run over by. the other car, Walker said. InvesUs-tioo Into the fatal ac. cident cm Placentia Avenue Js continuing. The accident came during a period ~ Mesa traffic of. ficers have described as "the bloodiest ever" In the city. A total of 72 traffic accidents, in· volving four deaths and injuries to 28 others. were reportecl (See DFATll, Pace AZ> Co asc Weatller Partly clbudy and 10 percent chance of rain tA>nlgbt and Saturday. A liWe cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Blgbs Saturday In 605. " • I JU OM.YPI OT s f"rlday, C>ecembet 23. tt71 ..... Carter Agrees to Saturday Talk . PLAINS. Ga. .(AP) -Presi- dent Carter .,reed today to • meet with repreaentadvea of farmers bloe:king tbo m ain • street ol his home town with pickup trucks •d trecto'* in a ) demonstraUoo for hic.ber prices. " The meetin« will be at 8 a.m. local time Saturday at the preii· , dent's home. Carter telephoned one. of the .. demonstrators, Harold Israel, a Pla.&n1 farmer wbo la a J?CrtOnal friend, lo set up the m"Unl, ul4 WbJte House deputy presa aecretary Rex Granum. , "He feels it's hnPOrt•nt - that tbey do bay" problems," Granum said. He said Carter invited Israel to the meetine aJong with Georaia farm strike leader Tom· • ,.A •' • ''Oaristnaas Fur'lough "' Wate rgate figure .Jo hn D. Ehrlichman !~aves lhe F e deral Prison Camp ul SafforcJ . Ariz., to begin .a five· day furlough .from prison fo r the hotidays. Also home for Christmas will be f ellpw conspirator H. R. Haldeman. Pair Offer $10;000 Rew-ard for 'Killer' rn1 Keney of nearby Unadilla, and strike l e aders fr om ne1fhbo,ring ~lab4lm a and · F~rlda. ; The f armeris aroye their red, green arlCl blu~ tractpr$ to both end• of main street In downtown Plains thb roontln& and parked them. They cleared the str~et in front of the town's row of atores fo r a rally. . They wanted Carter to climb onto a fiatbed truck outfitted with a mJc.rophone and loudspeakers and speak to the demonstrators -o.r to meet wit h a s mall d el~getion representing the scores of pro- tes ters whq gathered in the downtown area. "We didn't think it would be appropriate that he go to the , d~onit.ralion," Gran'41D aaid. "Solely f>ecause there is a de· monstration, that does !tot necessarily mean that he needs to go and address the protesters. '!He hllS on a number of oc- casions expressed his concern a bout the farm proble m/' Granum added. A t S a Lu rd a y • s m e e t i n.g . Granum said, the president will "once again outline what the Carter administration has done already this year to lry and help the farmers." In a telegram Wednesday to a farm wife, Mrs. Eston Luke or Baxley, Ca., Carter said he bias increased farm loan levels and target prices in the 1977 farm laiU passed by Congress. establisbed farmer-owned grain reser'/es, linked income support levels. lo the cost of product.ion, and pro- vided $479 million in emer~ncy drou1ht loan.a. • During today's demonstration, farmers paraded tractors into town by the scQre and parked them along the state highway through Plains, slowing traffic. Many tractors aod tb.e pickup trucks behind them . bore. signs s uch as : "To hell with foreign policy. Support the farmer.'' ,Carter •on Thursday wacned striking farmers th at ·their pro- test could lead to a backlash from the public. WAVERLY, Minn. (AP) -"I'm not resigning frons anything. I may even join something," was Hubert H. Hum- phrey's response when asked whether he plans to resi&n from the U.S. Senate because of bis inoperable cancer. The Minnesota Democrat, who arrived home Thursday, said he planned to be back in Washington within 10 days. The four Humphrey children and.~r 10.&bildnen are ex- pected to join Humphrey and his iOift!, MunU, 'at Waverty on Christmas Day. "We're going to have ho~e movies, give the kids a chance lo see Lbeir patents wben..Uaey wece ilds," he Aid. '...: Hi added, '<:hllckllilg, •1t1aese a,e the' movies lh&t. uied to bore the living daylights out of my friends." SlaYDag S•speets .. ¥;. : . 1 $4. 75 Million Cut~-•.. . .:-r • .; •. In Ba.il Appttn,~d) .. Bail for Alexander a nd Elsie ~ · 1ublequent search of the Kulik, who face a variety of home at the La Colta Country state and federal charges stem-Club alleaedly uncovered a ming from the murder of cache of beroin. llore th.mi a T .4 -• ts Stephen John Bovan, was pound of It was nearly pure J.. OU7i /tlJSUJ lowered by $4.75 mlllion Thurs-omntaJ belWI, potlce clalm. An · d day · additional half-pound of low- .. F rotaPageAI ~~AN FRANCISCO CAP > ·-For the beginning," she a ded. Alfi rr. d The Kullks appeared before grade Mexican heroin was un- S an Fran cis co couple, Killerhelpedherrecover,she ter irf'IHe ."\/ federal Magistrate J . Edward covered,autboritiesallegec:t. Christmas won't be the same says, from her child's death in -e· '.l Harris in San Diego to enter in-"rhe discovery of the narcotics SAD .l. 1T without Killer -a missing mutt April 1974 from Tff~~-S~chs t~is· FORT BRAGG (AP) -With a nocent ~leas to federal charges led te a reyision of the b;! on . ~ ~. • '• who has prompted the offering ease • .a rar~ ~ 1ct1on .,at h I d o .. f pdssess. ion: .. o. r. ·rn:o, re.' •h•n a whic'1 ~"e ~~ cld. " "~v·•· J ' ,.,~. ,, ·~·1 t .nf a $10 000 rewar"' para.ly .... ., and resulls ,,. ... arty ,nelll-. ome, 9a ~ of .gifJ.a ~d · ~ !'It.'-' 1:.:: 1' r d.'J ~ .. t c S8 .-•n •?OR ~ . a a • ,..... ' u. · death .... ,..... ,_ ... seem~y endless compassion, ~unu o n"tow. sen . ing t o a a o .85 ~seCl':doo~" rieflng · ol the do~hha~Yi,!~~ldmf;~~~: ~f:~~ "To have a child with 8 ~his Uny co~taUown is opening ,Ball on thole charges, which million for.the state and . .IJ!deral Israeli p ... lial'lenl'a Foreign Af• June. Two we6's ago, the couple terminal problem and he him · its heart to ,a woman who were levi~ against the couple dan:wt•t!tM '1>\ ·hit•~ ~\i.ri'-X CoJnmiitee ran an ad in many Calitornia di\!· then go out'arttt try to 15ave J«:al'!led t.bllt .her. hJJSl>aruLwas •· .~ut ~~ .~ .... • fed~!al ,•l?Jld T~ h.Ve b6fb" en :·~.~qlll'tnltt.~·Jt(ijn.tJer;.Am~on '"daily newspapers· offering the llv~9 ~ause J\>l.{•couleb1't save 'n\ksing at ~a Bt'tbe.'same ID<>-Jury; was inlualfy·15~t ~t Ja.S trans~red ~o tJ}t! .fe.der~l 'Rn.~tttn; •· mealber'·of the '"teward. ·your own child's, then to have a ment her house 'was blll'_nint million eac'3. ~etrtj&;tahCdrrectJ6na1C:enter 'goVehltnent co81itidn, said late?' , The wire, who asks that she healthy animal taken away from down arolind her. A T~ursday, over the protests or m ~ine/e:~e slated to appear Begi.n's P.act makes "hea.~y cor:i- and her attorney husband not you -they might as well have If she had not been awakened sststant U. s .. Attorney Stephen before federal Circuit Judae cessions but caned It a fair be named for fear someone killed the animal in front of. by the 3 a.m. telephone call Nelso~, Harris set Alexand~r Leland Nellsen on Jan. 12 for a and reasonable plan." might steal another of their me," she said. a~ut her ~usband, she and her Kull~ s ball at $1S0,000 and his pretrial hearing on the narcotics Afterward, members of three dogs for ransom, says she She is convinced Killer was, cbil~ren might not have escaped wife s at $100,000. charges. parliament from his Llkud block became especially attached to abducted by someone. probably the ft.re. The Kuliks were arrested Dec. In addition to that court date and the allied Democratic Move- Killer during her emotional re· youngsters, but was sold or "It's oyerwhelming. I can't U in a ~arl&bad area con-the Kuliks are slated to be u; me~t for Change met separately covery from the death or her on-given to someone unaware of his believe 1t, people are doing dominlum ·Which police said Orange County Superior Court ~hind closed doors to bear out· 'ty child, a 19-month-old son. history. She is convinced he is everything," Carol Lackey said • Kulik rented under an assumed on Jan. 23 lo face th.e murder line~ ,-not full details -of Nothing else they have tried alive. · Tbursda)' u Coast Guard planes name. . conspiracy charges. . ... ·· Begin a proposals. It was report· has turned up Killer =--not visits The two-Inch by three-Inch ad . 1 and shi~ criss-cros.s~ Northern Mu. Kulik orlilnally was Only one of the elgbt."peopJe ed that the . two groups voted to psychics, not newspa~r ads, that ran in rtewspapers was ·.C'~forrua waters look1na for the booked on a murder conspiracy na med in t hat c.onaplracy overwhe~marigl_y lo s upport .'not hours spent walking city Ple'adllned, "$10,000 ltehrd!• It missing bOat bteased Red~~mer. warr4nt wbiqb charged tb"t she Joseph ·i'edorowald, ·rematns at Begin jn bis niis~}on~o Esypt. . blocks here a nci ets6wflete1 ask· ·d8<!r1Wd KUler as• hHinf' ... a '\~o~rd -~ere her s,k~pper was o~e ot elght peopl~ who large , · · , . As Sadat emergtd from ·,"11? children if they'v~ seen. a shet>lt4frtd look; a, a:otnpletely .. ~~and, ,Nick, ~d J ~ew~an, planned the death ot Bovan. Police allege that tb&'icufilcs tooate·prayers, ~~~as 'a.sked ~ .German shepherd type dog with golden head an(I... .a tJlack .baok" . ~·file Lopez-. . Bovan,.36, of Fountain Valley. Fedorwosld and their two ·busi: d,spit~ µie eupbC?aia the JUmont a friendly face and an eager· aYtd ur~ a~6be.·knoWidg the died Oct. 22 outside a Newport ness partners Roy Christopher could fail. · · · ·•pet me" look. de>g•s whereabotlts to write.Post ,.,.... Page Al Beach restaurant. He was 1hot Richard and Joseph Davia 111, •·)l~y~4:t why not;• Sadat After four years of finding Offlce Box 2895, San Franctiico nine times. hired three Huntington Beach ~~lied. .Maybe, beC8;USe there t\homes for aban<Joned <Jogs and 94126. At the tlm.e of their arrests, m en to kidnap and kill Bovan in .is, you. s~, a most important cats, the wife, 38, has closed Tt\e reward money, she says, DEATH Kulik had already been booked retaliation for an earlier kidnap-fact, .this u that we shall be v~ry down a non-profit service she wu put up by a benefactor of • • •" on the murder conspiracy ping of Kulik by Bovan. _candid, and we shall be putting 'ran sing'le-handedly after she her efforts. · · between Dec. 14 and 21. charges and freed after posting The three. alleged hit men, everythln' on the table, at least 'rescued puppy Killer from under "He ~as probably abandoned Police Lt. John Regan said at ball. J erry Peter Fiori 41 Anthon from my side. . a house. or sold to an innocent person and ~ea.at half the accidents were re· ·He WAIS booked at the Um~ or Marone, Jr., 23, and 'nevmondv ''After that.I am responsible to ·-"Emoti·onally , I can'l get may be in your area or home," lated to -"-=-kin... his wlfe's "-t for barbo"'-'" a 3 tell m pe I wh t had h p uau• • _...... •u.a Steven Resco, 28, were arrested r. opie a a • '"myself together to do any work the ad said. •o ~le were killed and a f¥itive. · four days·alter the·murder. pened, beadded. 'for animals. I have no desire to third ilij"ured in a three:tar col-__ ...._ ___________ ..;;..;;.;::..;:;.;;.::.::..;~~:.;::--:::..:::.=.;.;..:.----.....;..------..... .:.._;_ ''conUnue without him," she said. 2 Held in Chase lision Dec. JS on tM Victoria She used to find homes for Street bridge over the Santa Ana -some 500 dogs and cats a year, SAN'l'A BARBARA (AP) River, whJch divides C6sta M~a ~.but now 'Spends ~l"--tttneo-Pt>ttc!'··armed ~slfotta'M'IH• .. fr'GnHuntlngttt.Beach. · , ~earching for Killer. rested two young menJound hid· Last Sunday morning, l..,o : "A lot of people say, 'It's jbS' ~ ln the weeds ThltJ.'SOfY J!Jter pe.destri~ wer~ kill~d and a a dog. Go out and get another ·• 4,20-mile high.-peed""tusfr-\)<>Qr ·,·third senously ipju{ed on, 1~ :one.' But it's lijce ''id:it.~ ... clirte "eat ended.' Jn La foOl'·Cal" . Street when hit by a car.,.w)l\ch •chlld,"shesald. ~· · .... clJMh.~criticatt1' .. 'l1lj&lting a ·then fied the·s~en~. A •u•~t I "My husband;e,nd 'f 'i're ~ wOt/A~. • .... , ·• was later arril~ ...., • a._distrauiht. Our~' lives fl!pve it«' ~ f' ' · · -~een the saJDe s~~Jf(t. Aml· ,1 have' plenty of dogs.·fjut KUfir >w Bot. car· .--.~ , . ; · ...... 11 1was very tneanin ful. He was . . . °"A"Q' ~ ·,. • a , DAILY PILOT Ma&1 ive Spill Sioyi :Ttiiffic 1· . ~,. • ">-.. :-ll Trarn~ on the San Diego ~way ne~ ltrlnier.J.ion with the Glirden Grove Freeway .cam~ to • ~r .. &&ands~ .ttemoon WJ1eo a ftewbielJn&.'loUth· , .be .. nd truck spilled"il myttiniOUs subat'91el~to .tbe ,. ·roadway. • I"!',.. .-~ ! -·The tru&r~ drivet apparefl~4"tber didll't Jmollllon.JlllJ spill or wasW{lllng·W w!fte ofh.DIS JOSS. .. :~ · So, be continued on fia JOU111'1 witbo!t a~_p.Plnt. : ·• ,_ ~ .... ' T-· r.Jw~ Y ain~lill witfl 'Utt.· .. ~ de: ; .......,.i'Hlninuut t.>:...Gf lb~ ~wwden:.t~tilt.n~e .that ., ~Ued aci a r~way Yor •bdttltlttef·\lntfis of a mlle. ~eadnt'"• foat-~.'PQ.wdet mtzbt be a toxte .. cbemlcal, SW•.l>brlaiop Cllf.JliUWJ¥ offfolals,ordered five or the lreewd}t'S"Aiit iotl\llbbdnd ladt1 closed doWb at 1:30 .. ,J>.tb . ,.,.a ' I . .. -. . It OLD-FASHIONm G.REETING . • A TIMELESS WISH • MERRY CHRl~TM~ - AND HAPPINESS . IN.THE '.NEW'1YEAR . . ~ ,, ' . . . ' .. ... 7 .. ,, Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 357, 4' SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A ----· 'roda)''H Closing N.Y. toeks F R IDAY, DECEM BER 23, 1977 c Sadat Prays for Peace, ~Fears Failure \ Begin ()ff ers ~ecret Proposal? ISMAILIA, Egypt (AP) - President Anwar Sadat con· ceded today that his Christmas Day summit with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin could be a taUure. But he prayed for peace at a mosque on the banks of the Suez Canal. Expectations are hig h In Egypt and Israel that the two leaders can lay the foundation for fast-moving negotiations that will end the 29-year-old Middle East conflict. Israeli sources say Begin is bringing a new, still-secret pro· posal to the summit that should s timulate progress on the Palestinian issue. "lt is a new plan and contains new thinking." the sources said. Israeli radio, quoting in- formed sources in Cairo,-said Begin might extend his stay in Ismailia through Monday -it ls scheduled to last only several hours -if talks drag on. Israeli source.r denied this wss po5sible, however. Sadat's spokesman, Saad Zafhloul Nassar. said plans call for nothing beyond Sunday eve- ning. But he added: If he wants lo stay, whynot?" Begin outlined his peace pro- pos a ls in Jersualem today at a c losed-door briefing of the Is raeli parliament's Foreign Af· fairs and Security Committee. Cqmmittee member Amnon Rubenstein, a member of the government coalition, said later Begin's pact makes "heavy con- cessions" but calJed it ''a fair and reasonable plan." Afterward, me mbers ot parliament from his Llkud block and the allied Demo<:ratic Move- ment for Change met separately bebJnd closed doors to bear out· lines -not full details -of Begin 'a proposals. It was report· ed that the two groups voted overwhelmingly to support Begin in his mission lo Egypt. As Sadat emerged from today's prayers, he was asked if despite the euphoria the summit could fall. "Maybe, why not," Sadat replied. "Maybe, because there · is, you see, a m ost important fact, this is that we shall be very candid, and we shall be putting everything on the table, at least from my side . '""WI~ EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT SADAT BOWS IN TRADITIONAL MOSLEM PRAYER GESTURE Preparing for Chrlatmas Meeting Wtth larael's Begin on Middle Eaat Peace .Jailed Hinshaw Insists on Innocence· Oall,l'tW,.._ INSISTS HE'S INNOCENT Ex-Congressman Hinshaw By KATHY CLANCY OIU.Dall,_Sqff Spealong from behind bars al Orange County Jail, former con· gressman Andrew J . Hinshaw insisted in a television interview Thursday night that he is an in· nocent man. "I don't agree with the (guil· ty) verdict but I can accept it," Hinshaw said as he talked on KOCE·TV of the two 1976 convic- tions that landed him behind bars. The former Newport Beach Re publican congressman was convicted of bribery charges and illegal use of his county-paid staff while he was county assessor in 1972. ·'We fought a good fight and we lost," Hinshaw said. "I am still a believer in our criminal justice system." As lie Insisted he W'8S· wroogfuUy convicted and the victim oC alleged unfair treat· ment by the district attorney, Hinshaw saved most of his words to criticize a penal system where he said "life is cheap" Ex plosion Shatters Miami Beach Office MIAMI BEACll. Fla. <AP> - A powerful explosion rocked the office of a Venezuelan airline on Miami Beach's s wank hotel row early today, gouging a crater in thick concrete and twisting heavy metal door frames U~e · strands of taffy. There were no reported in· juries, although chunks of twist- ed m etal flew 72 feel across Co llins Avenu e where pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion hit a few minutes past midnight. "It was lucky no one got hurt -there were SHldestrians on the street,'' said patrolman Pete Matthews. Windows were shattered 400 feet away, police said. Damage was estimated al $15,l'OO lo $20,000 by an FBI agent who declined to give his name •·we really don't know who did it," he added. Nearly six hours later, a man with a heavy Spanish accent called lhe Miami bureau of The Associated Press and claimed reponsibility for the blast. "The bomb that went ofr on Miami Beach was set by the an· U-Communlst commando group El Condor," the caller said. "We dJd it for our leader Orlando Bosch who is beinr held In Venezuela. U they don't releue FOOTBALL ~ TANOEAINI! BOWL Channel 13, 8 p.m . Fkwtde--~2) va. TnnT~ (7-4) him by Christmas something bigger is going to happen to the Venezuelan people.'' Bosch, a vehement anti-Castro Cuban exile, is being held by . Venezuelan authorities in con· nection with the bombing of a Cubana Airlines plane that crashed off Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976, killing alt 73 people aboard. El Condor and the Coordina· lion of United Revolutionary Orgainiations have claimed responsibility for the crash and several other bombing incidents, including the sinking of a Cuban trawler in CaJho, P~ru: in August. The apparent target ot tooay's attack was the office of Vi asa Venezuelan International Airways situated between ticket offices of Delta and National Airlines in a complex of travel· oriented businesses. The explosive device was set at the rear door of the Viasa of. fice in a cramped alley. The heavy, metal-plated commercial fire door was blasted from its binges, the metal door frame twisted and shredded. A crater 18 inches across wa.s gouged through an elght-tnch·thick layer of reinforced concrete sidewalk. Machine Sparks Fire at Fairview A nre blamed on a maltunc· tlonJne copy machine sent up clouds ~ smoke and forced the e9acuaUon of part of the ad· mlnhtration buitdinJ at Palrvlew State Hospital Thurs· VY, Costsa Mesa fire officials said today. ·They listed damage to the copy m acbit'le at $2SO. No in· jutles were reported. oamagee Aaked JOHANNE$BURO, South Africa <AP) -Tbe famlty of black ~ SWVe Bllo, who dl..a ln HCWitY tollc• e~ ~. 11. ..i JeUeii tO two aov- uom ent. mln61t4r• toda)' de· mudml ...,.., amace1 t0f' b.11 death. tai4 tbe Olflte of In, atb>r'IMJ tor tlel •&DllJ. a nd in som e instances the system causes ex-convicts to re- peal their crimes. Hinshaw, who recently was re· turned to Orange County Jail after spendin£ four months in state prison at Chino, said one thing he will work to increase is the $200 allowance given in· m ates upon release. Fellow inmates told the one· time assessor one reason they repeat their crimes is t'at for $200 they are expected to leave prison, find a home , buy a car and get a job. "We need to make s ure persons have more money when they get out to see them through the transition," Hinshaw con· linued. The former congressman said h e p1ans to talk to s tate legislators to see if the system can be remedied. "I would make every job (in prison) a reasonable job in terms of dollars," he explained. The man who in 1972 unseated m averic k Republican J ohn Schmitz from the congressional seat he once held, said it was his prison-assigned job at Chino that led lo a racially inspired threat to his life. Hinshaw, saying he was treat· ed by prison officials just the same as fellow inmates, ex· plained his job was keeping track of bed assignments. He and prison authorities were told that' while i nma t es threatened lo kill him if any more blacks were admitted to a particular unit. ''Life is very cheap in prison," Hinshaw -said. "Persons could be killed for a couple of cartons of cigarettes. "I learned very quickly that stabbings are the order of be day," be continued, adding that fellow inmates t aught him "lo stay alive is the chailenge. "You have t o earn your respect in prison. If you try to maintain that you are no better than anyone else .•. if you abide by the code .•• you will get along," be said. The two-term congressman also had some harsh words for a criminal justice system that permits the district attorney to investigate and prosecute, then take part in sentencing proc~· in gs. Hinshaw's concurrent one to 10-year sentences recenUy were reduced to four more months by Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland, who also placed the former elected official on a work furlough J>ro· gram . During those proceedings Deputy Dis trict Attorney Michael Capizil argued against a reduced sentence. Hinshaw said the district at- torney "should be a gracious loser as he bad been a winner." Valiant Battle Ends Hinshaw when released from jaH in April wlll begin picking up the pieces of an ordeal he said lta8 cost him a half-million dollars "plus the intangibles." He said It ls most. likely that be wm ~me involved In hi• bi,.,,... Mimi millutacturing bmlnellf, Crash Victim of 1965 Dies in Laguna But be also hopes to make legislators aware of some of the By ANNE COOPER · Highway near Laguna Niguel. Of ... CWt'( ~ ... SCMf Funeral ser vices w ere Thecauseoflheaccidentwas planned today in Laguna Beach never determined. for Heather Lea Nichols, who Doctors at Hoag Hospital, was known in the community for where the critically injured girl her valiant 12-year struggle to was transferred from South overcome criticaJ injuries she Coast Hospital, said she bad sut- surrered in a car crash as a · fered serious brain dama~e and popular, pre tty high school would never recover. Her neck senior. was broke n, l e aving her Miss Nichols seemed to have paralyzed. everything going for her in high Nearly two months after the school, her mother said. She was accident, Miss Nichols remained named a homecoming princess in a coma. but her mother, a in her senior year and was look-former Army nurse, decided to Ing forward lo a career-.~~f\& her home. fashion model. "They said she would never But on March, 27, 1965, when come out of the coma, but I just she a nd a girlfriend were out for couldn't al£ow her to Ue there in a drive, their car careened out a hospital," Mrs. Nichols said. · or control and crashed into an Nurses attended the inert girl embankment on Pacific Coast around the clock at the Nichols· home, 2120Temple Hills Drive. Some time alter the accident <XJOD FOKI'UNE • ENDS SADLY GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP) -A druggist, Carlos Quinto Garcia, died of a heart attack when told he had won $112,000 in the Guayaquil Christmas Jot· tery, authorities reported Thurs· day. -Mrs. Nichols sajd she isn't sure when -her dauibter began lo respond, watching her mother move around the room. In 1974 the family began an in· tense J>rogram of patterning ex· erclses with Miss Nichols, work· ing 12 hours a day to impress on her damaged bra.\11 movements of the body. Many members of the South Coast community came to know Heather. Nichols as they Dot Cargo Massive Spill Swps Traflk • Traffic on the San Diego Freewar near lta intenecUon with the Garden Grove Freeway came to a three-hour 8landstill Thursday afternoon when a !rffwbeeUns south· bound truck spilled a mysterious substance onto the roadway. The truck's driver apparenUy either dlctn•t know of the spill or was willlng to write oil the loss. So, he continued on bis journe)' without 1t.opplne. THAT LEJT IDGBWAY officials with the task'ol de· term ining the identity of the ttd J>OWdery substance thlt spUJed across the freeway for about t.hree·tentha of a mlle. FearinC the foul-appearing powder mllht be a toxic chemical, State Division of Highway officials orilered fiv. of the freeway's six southbound lanes cJoted down at l :IO · p.m. . ACCOaDlNG TO A CaUfomla Hifhway P•trol 1poke1men, by 4 p.m. 1outhbound tratnc was backed up to Torranc•about 20 miles nortb of the ..,111. Tben, J\ wu learned ~ red powct.r wasn't lo:xlc at all, exc~pt to tboee who iniaht be tempted to tor,. tbtmMlftl on tacos. THE DREADED &'ED sabltcce thlt tUed motorist.a' palimM!e fOf' more than three bour'l wu. afttt all, notbln• tnore IW'mM than dey tacotadee·-teat.bl of a mil• of dry taco N\IC.. . . things that can be done to keep parllc1pated ~ volunteez:s. to ex-convicts from returning to help with th;~orous trallllJlg prison. (See H~ R. Page A2) • Mesa Collision 1Killed,1 Hurt In Head-on Crash A Santa Ana woman was killed and a Costa Mesa woman injured when their cars collided head-on Thursday in front of Estancia High School, Costa Mesa police said today. It w-as the f"lftb traffic fatality in Costa Mesa within an eight· day period. Dead on arrival at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital Thursday was Sylvia Rita Romero, 20, of Santa Ana. The other driver, Joan Williamson, 19, of 2083 Mandarin Drive, Costa Mesa,. was listed in st.able condition Child Hunted Near Redding RED.DING (AP) -About 100 people and a team ot dogs con· tinued t.o hunt today for an ts. month-old boy who wandered away from bis home during a bowling ~ and rainstorm, the state blgl\Way patrol l'e})Orts. The searchers were scouring a three-mile radjus west of here for Lee l\. Littlejohn, who walked off Tbunday with his 2~-year-old companion, Loy A. Ff>' . The Pry boy was picked up alone along a roadside l~r by a passing motorist. RILEY RECALLS PONY A.T fULE A1k Supervisor Tom Rlley wh at hit lavor1to Christmas.. metUries are and,,. reeaU1 lhe Cbrfltmu on Guadalcanal and U.. CJni1tmu be IOl a Shetland pony. Other Orance Coast reat- dtG&I talk about tbelt Cbritlmu memon. on Featurtn1. Pace Bl. . . . ' . with cuts and bruises today at the same hospital. Police Investigator Dave Walker said the accident oc· curred at 4:55 p.m. He said that, according t o witnesses, the Romero car swerved suddenly in front of the Willia mson car. The dead woman was ejected from her Volkswagen and ap- parently run over by the other car, Walker said. InvesUgaUon into the fatal ac- cident on Placentia Avenue is continuing. The accident came during a period Costa Mesa traffic of- ficers have described as "the bloodiest ever" in the city. A total of 72 traffic accidents, in· volving four deaths and injuries to 28 others, were reported (See DEATH, Page A2) Co ast Weathe r Partly cloudy and 10 percent chance of r ain tonight and Saturday. A llttJe cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Saturday in 605. INSIDE TODAY After the holiday r&l$h, treot· your•el/ to a gift of time -one of lhe 24-hour oetowa111 aug. geated on Poge CJ. •••ex AtY-Wvk• Al• MllLA~ at ... 1181 .. ,,_.,,,.. a.1• '-M ... ,.. "' Mllt.,.1 ,._, Al ...,_, .................... M.OJ 0111-• u 0r..,.. c..tr Al 0.•lllW 04-M ._,_.,.. CM OM!lk• (S lttf'I• ~ "' Cl'Mt..,.. Q ~ .... O.a191 Netk.. A1 lllell ....._ ..... ...... ..... "" lWWffU.. &I ···~ °',. ~ .. ,. U.• ,..,...... .... --.. ....... ·---~ . .._..... a•• '' C1<• - Oaristmas Furlough ' Watergate figure John D. Ehrlichman leaves the . -Federal Prison Camp at Safford, Ariz., to begin a five- ... day furlough from prison for the holidays. Also home for Christmas will be fell ow conspirator H. R. Haldeman. fl \ l E'ro,. Page Al .·HEATHER SUCCUMBS. • • prog ram. , In time Miss Nichols crawled ~d talked and even walked with a.$1>islance. It was the family's ,~ream that she would one day we.lk on her own. · On Tuesday Miss Nichols, now .~ had finfahed her lunch and was in her wheelchair, when she began to choke. Paramedics were called and worked rran- lfcally to try to get her breathing Valve Caused HB 'Noise' A r oa r in g so und h e ard throughout southeastern Hunt· ington Beach Thursday evening a pparently was caused by a safety valve at the Southern California Edison generating plant on Coast Highway, police said today. ., Edison Company officials ·were not available today to verify the source of the .noise, which started about 5:30 p.m. . and tasted about 10 minutes. · Ho\1rever, police told callers ftfat £He release of·~e safety1~e­vf· ce designed t01 ~tleff~t .ex· 1 1t} osions :it the plant was th.e !>ource of the noise. A column of ~('eam biOowing into the air above the generating pi9nt ac. ro:n panied the noise. Union to Vote ·0n Settlement LOS ANGELES CAP> -After seven days of nearly continuous bargaining, negotiators for 11lriking Lockheed machinists in (Lve states have agreed to let the union's rank and file decide whether to accept the com· pa~y's latest offer and end a bit· t.er a"d costly 73-day walkout. , tiJf the contract ft! 'llcc1?pt'ed , strikers would return to work on ·.h:Q. 3, Lockheed spokesman :Qiave Crowther said Thursday. •1.11ilut Neil Vandercook, a stk>kesman for the International Atnociatioo of Machinists here. slftd, ''I doubt iI the (the union) nerotlatora wm recommend &C'· ceptance of the proposal .n MISSION HILLS CAP) - ichael Bosio, 1..7, w.ho reatened his parelWf aa~ bu· · caded blmself in theJr 'houae · r i:>'lQl"J than three h06rs h• ot taimsell ln the he'-4 after• ally ~ming out, ~ sat~· e was listed in ·exfrernely itical condition at Granada ·11s CommunJty Hospital. OftANGa COAIT' c DAILY PILOT ·-... -~-.... -.tec\•.Cll'Wf . V!(9 ......... f .... ~--t • ..,..... ............ -....... 7:::.;.~ °"'t.:.=-~~::.-" . . again, her mother said. She was taken by ambulance to South Coast Community Hospital in Soutb Laguna, where she died. Today's funeral services were at St. Mary's Episcopat Church, . with the Reve rend Brad Karelius officiating. Burial was to be at Melrose Abbey Cemetery in Anaheim. McCo rmick Mortuary made funeral arrange. ments.· . · Miss Nichols is s urvived by her mother, Florence Nichols, oi the family home; by a sister, Holly Pettit of Laguna Beach; an aunt and two uncles. "Her high school friends scat· lered over the years," Mrs . Nichols said, "but they would drop by from time to time. There were a few who always stayed in 'touch. One good friend was coming home for Christmas and missed seeing Heather by just a few hours." .Mrs. Nichols asked that memorial donations be made 10 T1iiad .ConsultaAls, Neurol.oaital . RehapHitation, P.O. Box. 156, Willow Grove, Pa. 19090. ''The people at Triad gave H~~the{ .a ~Her. liie than she could ev~r have 'Mitt wlU1out lhem." said Mrs. Nlchols. IJragQueen J~lThief? VENTURA (AP> -Police say they are looking for a t ransvestite jewel thief on crutches who may also have posed as a pr egnant woman while committing another l"Qb· bery last week. A man on crutches wearing female clothing with a wig and painted fingernails and carrying a .357 magnum revolver stole $9,000 worth or diamonds from Genslei:-·Lee Diamonds here Thursday evening, po!ice sa~d- · ,, ~ .,~,•·:a '4 "''" ••.i ~lA·· •w • ·~ TI e A man accused on arrest of murdering a fellow farm worker in Costa Mesa has pleaded guilty to reduced charges, an Orange County deputy district a ttorney Hid today. ' Santos Rial, 24, of Mexico ii in Orallie County Jail awaiting sentencing Dec. 29 in Orange County Superior Court, said .Dis- t rl ct Attorney Richard Farnell. He said Rial p leaded guilty Wednesday 'to volun'tary manslaughter, whlcb c!a rrie5 a three-year prlSon term, and use of a ftrearm,. which carries a two-year term. Farnell said murder eharres were originally sought in the slaytng ot Adam Aguilar on Dec. 2 but that the charges •were ~ duced for several reasons . Tbe•e include the tact that a fight bad occurred betor eb1nd, that the suspect had been drink- ing heavily and that several wit- nesses who were illegal aliens have retur ned to Mexico, Fanlell said. He said a second suspect in the case, 23-year-old F rancisco Zarate Abundis of Mexico, was released because of Jnautcicient evidence. . T he 'shooting occurred at a (arm labor camp at 639 Sunrlower Ave., on the Costa Mesa-Santa Ana horde~. ·• Boy, 14, Dies In Auto Fire SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 14· year-old boy has died of burns suffered in a fire while be was locked inside a car with bis two younger brothers. Terence Villasensor's mother locked the car while she went Christmas shopping Saturday ir. Chula Vista, police said. The boys apparently were playing with matches. A passing man saw the fire, broke a win· dow with bis fist and pulled t he boys out. Terence died Thursday night in University Hospital. . . . W.uu1s.·.C~i Mr;Ul Searc'1-. SALT JAx'ii CITY fAP j ~ High winds ' a»d deep snow have forced aban- donment of a search for Christmas mail s trewn atQp a mountain here amid the wreckage of a United Airlines DC-8F cargo jet. United said the jet was carrying 1,200 pounds of Christmas mail and other cargo on a San Francisco to Chicago run when it crashed Sunday. Three crewmen died. "It's Just an impossible area to work in up there," said Henry Kueb~beck, pusta) supervisor in Salt Lake Citx. "The snow is four feet ~eep. We'd im- paJr, lives, th that bad.'' .. ' • • A Dl6ty ....................... STREET LIGHT ILLUMttQTES SCEttl ()tr ~R COSTA MESA TftAFFIC FATALITY • ,Acctdent on Plecentfa Avenue Ttu.1rid'ar COntlnuet City'• Holiday Carnage .. .. Kuliks' Bail Sliced . By $4. 7 5 Millio~ Bail for Alexander and Elsie At the time of their arrests. Kulik who face a variety of Kulik had already been booked state ~nd federal ~}l\rges stem· o n the mu~der coa~iracy ming fn>~ ~tti "ur~t."of"."' tharges an~ treed .afl.~r pUng Ste phen '11'o1'n B11van, wls bail. .,,. - lowered by $4. 75 mill Ion Thurs· He was booked at the ti~e or day. , his wife's anest for Nld>Qnng a The Kiliks appt~ ~for~ . fugitiv~. :-,. • . federal r,legist»aS.e!. J.-Edward~ A subSequ.eftt sealcb.. of the Harris in San Diego to enter in· home at the La Costa Country noeent 'pleas to federal charges Club allegedly u ncovered a of. possession oC more than a cache of heroin. More than a pound of heroin. . pound of it. was _nearl y pure Bail on those charges, which oriental heroin, pohce claim. An were levied against the couple additional half.pound of low- last week by a federal grand grade Mexicaq heroin was un- jury. was initially set al $2.5 covered, authorities alleged. million each. The discovery of the narcotics Thursday, over the protests of led to a revision of the bail on Assis liJtl U. S. Attorney Stephen which the couple were held, Nelsoif, Harris set Alexander sending it to a_ total of $8.85 Kulik 's bail at $150,000 and his million for the stale and federal wife's al $100,000. damages. The Kuliks were arrested Dec. The KulHcs have both been 14 in a Carlsbad area con· transferred to t he feder al dom inium which police s aid Metropolitan Correctional Center- Kulik rented under an assumed in San Die~o. . . . name. T b.,)' ate •lated to ap~ear .Mrs., K~lik originally was before :federal Cl~ooit' ludle. booked on a murder tommirscy Leland Neilsen on Jan. 12 for a , ,.-prrarK.wWch..cherg~· that she pretri.i bearjng on the narcotic,. wu one of eight people who charg~ • " " ~ -~ : ... • '') .. , s.>lan¥d,tbe death or .t!ova n . Jn addition to that court date. : ,.Bo¥~~,.¢ F~IJlltaio Valley. the K~e slated to be ln 1f1ed OcJ.-i-~ quts1de .a,Newport 0 0 nraugJa!.-10 .. 1,~~ •:·~each .rest~urant. He. was sbot 11 ~ nine times. conspiraty charges. Pair From Newport Sought in Slaying Murder warrants have been issued for a Newport Beach cou- ple charged wJth shooting two men and leaving them in a bum-fn g t r uck near Chowchllla earlier this month. 'A spokesman for the Mad.era County Sheriff's Depart~entsaid Sharon i~ Colman, 19, and Richa~ ftjll,\1,Rs, ·28~ are being soµgbt m ~OMecU011 With the De_c. 7 mcldeftt Ln which one vic- tJm 4i~· Accordihg to t he s he riH's ·spokesman, two patrolling dep- ut~s spotted a pickup lrucJt in n~es parked beside Highway 99 south of Chowchilla. .. . . . AN They found one man. Ronald Rose, 28, of West Covin a, beside the truck with burns over 45 per- cent of his body and five bullet wounds in bis abdom en. , The two deputies were driven away from the truck by, the flames and were P.nahte to rescue Rose's companiof>, J~ier identified as Bru~e Bartulis.,28, or Claremont. Investigators said they believe the two men met Mlss Colman and Phillips earlier in Southem California. They believe robbery was the moUve behind the shoot- ings. ,, OLD-F~HIONED .. GREETING .. A TIMELESS WISH • • • MERRY CHRISTMAS l AND HAPPINESS IN ·THE NEW YEAR I • • . ·DEN'S · t:ro•.Page Al . DEATH ••• between Dec. 14 and 21 .. Police Lt. John Regan said at least hall the accidents were re· lated to dj'inking. . T-.o N>Ple were:killed .and a third injured in a thtee!car col- lision Dec. 15 on the Victoria Street bri<lee-eyer t-e Santa .\na Rlfdk"' ..)ldUch If vidri ~~essa front Huntihgton 'Beach. ' Last Sunday morning, two p~f trians :"!Were kil. led_ w a t ly ,.~~17th S reet~t 1>y a ca1',~wbich then fled the-scene. A ~~ was lat.er arrested: · . · .. ... <Aner Agreea To Meet With Farnwr Group PLAINS, Ga. (AP) -P resi- dent Carter agreed t oda y to meet with representatives or farm ers blocking the main street of bis home town with pickut> "trucks and t~actol'fl.jln a demonatMU~.(ar bi&het,p.~ces • The meeting Will be •t 8 a.m. loeahJ~Sj(fOrday' ~tllfe 'Preli· dent's·home. earter telephoned one of \be -demeMttato~:'H'arqld llraet. a P.J.alns lwmei wboU 1l penonal friend,• to wt op 1be meeting. seid White Hbu!e lfepqtyi press secretary Rex Granum. "He feels it's itnportant - that they do have problems," Granum said. He said Carter invited Israel to the meeting along with Georgia farm strike leader Tom- my Kersey of nearby UnaaiUa, a nd s trike leader~ from neighboring Alabaqia a nd Florida. The fannent drove their red, green and blue t ractors to both ends of main street in downtown Plains this morning and parked them. They cleared the street in Crdnt of the town's row of stores for a rally. Tl}ey wa¢ed Carter to climb onto • na~bed truck outllLled w i.~t\ A microphone and lo~peaJcers and speak ~ the demonstrators -or to meet w~th a s mal l delegation • repreaentin~ .thf sc9res of pro- testers wtm aa.thered in the rlowntowo ar.ea. . . . ' .. • COSTA ME~. CALIF~ n~v . PHONE 6~6,~·31 ~ '"·235j , \ •• Ftfday. December 23 1917 DAILY PILOT -I ldag llS vers ~et -Attetitiod "--'-*-'."' .. l •• • By JOANNE aEYNOLDS presented ln court. between being under l CHECKING COORDINATION Costa Mesa µo lice officers demons trate one of' coordination tests given suspected drunk drivers. Some Orange Coast police depart - O•llf l'IMC ......... c.,., Alft-N menls film su::.pcct::. after bringing them Lo he<.1dquarters. Films <ire latei· shown to the suspects ~nd 'or their lawyers. 127 Charges Controller Flllds Own Nrune Listed Cella Trial Due To Begin Feb. 14 SACRAMENTO CAP> -State Controller Ken Cory, who over- sees unclaimed properly laws, found his own name on a list of unclaimed bank accounts re- ported to the controller's office by the Bank of America. Jn the list of accounts dormant for more than seven years at the bank's branch a block from the state Capitol. was that of "Cory . .I . Kenneth, State Capitol " The entry said there had been Sl09.ll in lhc account, inactive sin ce Jan. I. 1970, and that the bank had deducted $84 in service charges. leaving $25. ll to be paid to the state unde r lhe Unclaimed Property Act Ironically. Cory brought an SU million lawsuit against the Bank or America and Security Pa9ifio National Ba~k over Cory's claim that the banks should not be deducting service charges from unclaimed ac· counts. which are paid over to the stale after seven years. Part or Cory's contention IS that the banks are not really try- ing to locate the owners of un · <"l<1imcd accounts. and that se rvice c harges a ssess ed against such accounts before payment to the ~tale amount to a "ripbff." "Jf they can't find me a block away al the same lime I huve been pursuing an $Jl million dollar suit against then. then T assume that they have a great deal of difficulty locating Califo rnian s who live elsewhere ... Cory said Thurs· day Roy Toman. public relations manager for the Bank of America. acknowledged that the report wa!> :in "embarrass· ment.·• "Any officer in the state Capitol branch probably would have recoaruied Cory's name," Toman said. "but some clerk didn 't put two and two together." Toman aaid a new law will re· quire the bank to mall notices to the last known address of the owner of an uncJaJmed account, notilying him that the account ~s about to be paid to the state s1x months later. Or course, Toman said, Cory should &aye known about his uc· count because moottl,lY state- ments were mailed fOT a yellr after it became inqcUve. SAN DIEGO CAP ) --A Feb. 14 trial date was set for a complex case invol ving c harges of ma ssive embezzlement of hospital and state funds. Dr. Louis J . Cella Jr. faces 127 counL'i of conspiracy. forgery. grand theft and submission of fnlse Medi-Cal c laims. The February trial date was set by William Yale, presiding Judge of San Diego County Superior Co ur-t in a hearing Thursday. The trial was s hifted here from Orange County :.1ftcr <t Porno Board Accused of liking ·Duty ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. <AP> Several members of the city's anti·obscenity board were asked to review one film to decide whether it was pornographic. They also saw part of a second feature without being asked to watch it, a disgruntled board member says. "Those dirty old men just want to watch the movie," saJd board member Marcia Lubar as she lert the theater ahead of the other panel members. Not true says board member Gerald Villane. "There were five mo'(ies com- plained of at the theater. The chairman indicated he wanted to see if the next movie was one of those·. Whert we ascertained it was )lot, we left. J don't think we were in tbet'e mor e than 10 minutes." the board received a com· plaint about a movie entitled .. Peach Fuzz.·· The seven board members a reallor. priest, lawyer, retired miUlary officer. dentist. public relations ofCicer and engineer -watched "Peach Fuzz." Then some of them stayed as the second movie, "Night or Sub· mission," began. "Peach Fuzz" was declared a public nuisance. The theater has five days to stop showing it before court action begins. As for ''Night of Submission," no complaint was filed. Mrs . Lubar voted not lo declare "Peach Fuzz" obscene The men voted the other WliY Sund&i ··;Pjlot · Wr~ps ,.., .. . lliforillatiV.e Gifts When you are ftaiabed openi(lg the packages untt~ the tree. Chr\stmu day YoU wU1 flncl .an entertalnln1, ln!ormatl~. packaae In Ule Sunday's Dally' Pllot. ·~,_....door. Amona the upcomin1 features are: TACIWNG GIANTS -"Llt· . tle" Onoco, an fnd~lt ~ 9U company, takee on t. t bll tth• J and WfAI. Daily llo& staff writer JQfUUMI R91aold1 expl«IAI how the 'firm IUCC:eocb agaJ04t the uualUaat\oaall ln lhe oll· • ..... ~-·~·-·-ic-W,, THIN IS IN -Eating il a ma- jor American paatttme, and los- lci1 the welgbt added thereby has. b~ome a bla bualneu. Nowhere 1~ that ntar. tl'\)e U>an fn Calllomta and 'n)e AHoclat.ed Preas tak" a look 11t. the varitt¥. or met.)\odi for takltlf otr pounds . judge rejected an effort by Cella 's attorneys to negotiate a plea bargain agreement. Cella and three associates are accused or running a complex and interlocking system of hospitals and medical supply, construction and computer firms that allegedly siphoned off as much as $2 million from two Orange County hospitals and from slate and federal govern- ment. Orange County District Al· lorney Cecil Hicks charged that much of the money was chan- neled into political campaigns to develop what he called "a shadow ~ovemment" headed by Cella. The biggetit single beneficiary of Celia's contributions was state Controller Ken Cory, who received more than $290,000 ln contributions and lottns fr'dm Cella during Cory's successful J974 campaign. Grand jury records allege that most of the money came from funds Cella embezzled. Cella and Richard O'Neill. his partner. together put more than $500,000 into Cory's campaign, more than half the Democratic c andidate's total spending, records show. Cory is expected to seek re. election and his probable Republican challenger, ~s­ semblyman Dixon Arnett, has said Jfo will make Cory's ties to Cella a major part of his cam· . ~ pa1gn. Neither Cory nor O'Neill, a multimillionaire landowner and developer of Mission Viejo, bas been charged in the case. There have been demands that the St.ale Fair Political Prac- tices Commission investigate Cory's campaign accounts since he reportedly still owes Cella more than $200,000 for the 1974. loans. The commission bas re· fu sed. however, to take up the case. Presidential Quail Hunting Kept Secret . PLAINS, Ca. <AP > -AS· scx:iates say President Carter Js a successful hunter. But no °'9e is saytng how successful. The president tried his hand at quail bunUng Thursday during his Cbr1stmu holiday here. He bought bis hunting license al the town pharmacy. Asked for his driver's Ucense for idetl· tification. Carldr thumbed through his wallet, remarking. "l haven't had a state patrolman aak me for it in a long time." He uked about tbe price of the bunUn1 license. It COllU $4.2$. . "I havflft't been aboppln• so lona:• ~r aa.ld, "lt'a just amaslnc tbe way ,Prices have cb4R1ed." He paild for the llceue 1'lth five ODii • .ot back cban1e Ud at\)ck It.bl ill 'wallet. He put bll 'Plain• ...,._ -not U.. nJte House -oat tdl oew UcenH. .La"9r tn ~Ule dq, he b-..S with • l•iilb frlead, rr.-t. Chappell. Jltiporten were kiljt at a dlltaoc.. • t or .. Deltr,........ The driver, up to Ulla polot. oueocu of alcohol and Weavtns aJon1 tbe hiahwar. has had no opUom in dealln.« drunk. the motorlst. nlled wltb l'o~i" with the policeman. By law, he A persoa could be uodJilbe holiday cheer, ls obllvloua o \he must ,tA!p out of his car when innuence and not be subJMi1o police car that Is followtnf him 1'1'k~d. and be must. hand over arrest unless he or sbe ls d g until the otricer turns on hl1 hblicense. a car. But people wb e patrol car's red light. But be may refuse to toke the drunk-usually literally i It is the start of a process that field soblrety exam. It probably down drunk-a.re subject will be repeated hundreds of won't prevent )Us arrest, police rest any Ume they ardll p times this holiday season atone say. but he ts within his rights to The urest and bo tlle Ora.o'e Coast where police reluse. process is usuaUy a buml agencies are mounting lntenslve The most. common test aiven is experience end one that, b7 aw. campaigns to rid highways of the walking a straight Une, heel must last a minimum o four drunken drivers. to toe. Another is to have the hours. The exact procedure of arrest-driver stand with his feet Moat departments requlre lng someone suspected of driv-togetber, hands at his side and thelr officeT'S to handcuff alt peo- lAg wblle under the lnfiuen~ or bead tilted back to see If he pie arrested, includlng those be- alcobol ·varies slightly from sways. Other tests admlnJstered ing brought ln for drunken driv· agency to agency, but for the might be to have the drive recite ing. most part, tbe steps followed are the alphabet or to stand on one Once ln jail, the driver is re· 'Set by 1t,Jte law. foot whUeswinging the other. quired to take a chemical test t.o- UsuallY\ the ofCkel'$ say they A 11 the tests are geared establish the level of alcohol in stop a suspected drunk driver toward helping the officer bis blood. because ol erratic driving. Th.is establish the degree or coordina-Some departments will ad- can mean anything from the lion t.he driver can maintaln. minister the test whether or 1'10l weaving from lane lo lane to an If the driver shows that be the driver gives his consent. inability to maintain a constant hasn't got much coordination, Refusal to take either a breath. si>eed. Even the legal changing then he'll be arrested under see-blood or urine test, mea~tt- of tan~ may cause a patrolman lion 23l02a of the state Vehicle vocation o! the. driver's ll~ to become suspicious if It's done Code which makes it a rnisde· ror slx months. when there are no other cars on meanor offense to drive while Prisoners are stripped or ~ver- the road. under the influence of alcohol. ythlng but the basic outer gar- After ~topping a suspected The car becomes a problem at ments and put into a cell ~lh drunk driver, the officer will ask this point. Many departmenls other drunks. and drunken driv- th& motorist to step out of the will allow their officers. with the ing suspects. . -· car and hand over his driver's driver's permission, to park and There they stay until the four Ucense. lock the car. hours has elapsed and they can This ia done to give the If the drive r refuses pay their $440.SO ball. During policeman another opportunity permission, then a tow truck is that four hours. they have the to observe the suspected drunk called. which means that the right to make two phone callS.I driver. He looks to see how driver faces tow and storage IC they pay their bail, a c04lrt steady the person Is on his feet, charges that can run as high as date is set within the next seven ir he fumbles around trylng to $35 a day. working days. 11" find bis license and if the odor of If there is a passenger capable Jf they can't pay their bail. alcohol can be. detected. or driving, Uae car can be turned they stay in jail for 48 hours1\2ft# The officer also checks the over to that passenger. If the Ul they can be taken to co\ltt. driver's eyes to see if they are passenger also is under the in· That means a person arr~le'd bloodshot or watery and if the nuence of alcohol. the passenger on Thursday night stays in ~ail pupils are dilated. usually will be sent home in a until Monday morning. All of these observations-the cab. Young noted that the arrest driving, steadiness and condi· The passenger also faces ar· process for women is usuaJty tion or the eyes-help the officer rest iC the police determine he or more drawn out and "more to decide whether to go ahead she is drunk, a legal definition or traumatic" because most agen.- witb the next step, the field a person unable to care for cies book women into Orange .sobriety lest. himself. County Jail instead of city jails. Alm06t all police agencies ad· Trame investigator Larry "It's an identical process, but minister three separate tests as Young or Newport Beach ex· the humiliation factor incre~ groundwork for evidence to be plained that there is a difference quite a bit," he said. · Superfly BtUh Raided; Cops Nab Narcotics SAN FRANCISCO !AP) Police were the party.poopers ~b~o S~t:P.Yttr~d to celebrate his ~ "btrtll(fay' with platesful or illegal "munchies .. -heroin. cocaine and marijuana. · Ralph Dean, or Superl1y as he calls himself, and 23 guests were arrested by Police shortly before midnight Wednesday. Officers bad heard rumors of the big bash and decided lo bust it, fearing all the evidence might ~ consumed if they waited any longer. according to inspector Napoleon Hendrix of the narcotics squad. The raid netted about two ounces of heroin, an ounce and a quarter of cocaine and a quanU· ty of marijuana -taken from servlng djshes scattered around the opulent apartment, police said. Police also are holding onto a three·inch wide ring, piled with diamonds. Hendrix estimated it was worth more than $20,000 and said Dean planned to give it to himself after ~licing a huge cake decorated with a sugar outline of his blue and silver Cadillac. Police also Jound eiebt laree television sets in the apartment, which they said bad apparently beef used a s barter for narcofics. All those arrested were being questioned about a variety of narcoUcs violations. Con 'Consigliore' Life Set for Film ., Controversial ex.convict Tom "The Consigliore" Miller, who earned his law degree while in prison and spearheaded a jail reform movement earlier •this year, has signed a •tJntvtJrsal Studios' contract. to film his IHe story. · Ttre announcemt!nt. wtikh does not distlose the sum Jn · volved, was made by Mickey Freiberg. vice president of the Tony Ford Agency, Beverly Hills, fol lowing signing ol the contract. "It was very agreeable, much, much more than anticipated." s ays Miller. 33. whose life behind bars allowed him to rub shoulders with the most elite mobsters and other notorious names in crime. One or his anecdotes involves sitting up evenings in 1971 wllh vanished Teamsters Union boss Jimmy Hoffa in his cell at the federal p e nitentiary in Lewisburg. Pa., drihking ex- pensive liquors. Miller, an Orange Coast resi- dent, negotiated the deal over a four·month period, arriving at an option contract that offers Universal Studios two alternatives on a production time basis. SJnce he began receiving publicity early in 1976, be founded an organization promot· ing legal rights and prison re· form that resulted in hearings on condJUons at Orange County Jail. Subsequently, he was charg~ with possession of stolen prol)ef- ty and illegal wiretapping in· a comple>< case involving a forq:\~T associa~. J)aniel Portley, "'aji convicted burglar. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae has fet tt> rt!$0lve th¥ mat· \~r .~~r !ing, >t under •"*· =1s1foii'te ntly. ,.,11 • • No t.riaJ ate bas been set fqr Miller. who earned his LLB degree from a correspondence Jaw £chool while serving Ume. · MiUer has worked as a Ja~ clerk for several county at- torneys and earned his prisonyard nic)\name Tbe Consigliore because be says de provided legal counsel to many mobs ters and other inmates wl)o sought his advice. { He claims he was instrumen- tal in arranging Teamster boss HoHa 's eventual pardon by ~ federal government and onen was able to intervene and spare ·the lives or men marked fer death. Man Held in· Fraua LOS ANGELES (AP> 1,..,. Lester G. Hollis, SS, of Diamond Bar. a Pasadena engraving~ construction company offitial has been arrested for aUepdly trying to solicit a $262,000 briia> in exchange tor awarding an Oo- cidental Petroleum Co. pro.tees.. the FBI reported. "~" Hurry down while our selection lasts for a wi~e <:hoice of varieties in living Cbristma~ trees. W~ s.hll have just the right. tree for your hohdays. In h".mg trees, choose from the deep-green Mont~rey P1~e. the shapely Aleppo Pine. or the fast .growing Itnhnn Stone Pine. .. ·POINSETTIAS f'~aturina Eckespoint. C.l hybrid In blazing red,. hot plnk, or sno~ .wbJte. Tbe Ylvid colors rrom Usese toog·blossomana •~lme.ns w111 Jut 'W past New Year's. FoU wral)ped foe Christd'!_as 11vlng. . ·--, •s• ~ a9 .. Otl.'(6•Nsa.t44-... 14.ft .Price i:le~ Bl!GINNING O&C. 2'1tl . ALLHOUDAY ORNAMINTSmd DECORATIOMS . 40°/o G~F ~ StLF DELP -ti. M· fi!lf ·llP)>rovement ·lirareneta t• a 1rowtna UDl&.ed Stattt, an IOC • fd Pt~H' ttory di• clout. To help accommodate the 1Hlters ta a 1rowtn• ""mber Tbey could bear aboodlaa IDd • an unofficial ,1ource. wllo dedl•r to be JdiaUfted fol' ta• he would loH bl• launua, • privU..... aald tM pretldnt lilt a number~ ~rdi. othrJ*Ollittlln How many.-remalft.ct • Ible •Kr.it. I ' . ' Zero.Hotlr Approaches HO, 110 & HO: Today we t'eached the time in the Christmas season that I Jove beat. It la now time tor the Jast·m~te shopping apree. Clearly, tnost olk15 have already complet their shop- Ring chores and all the wrapping with ribbons and bows. Tradi· tionally, however. this is just. about the time I usually get st.arted. We're now down to the ' Jast few hours. Welt let's face it; almost anybody can do Yule shopping in Jale November. All the stores are stocked up to the ceilings. Gift varieties abound even- where. Smiting clerks 1reet you at the counters and are most ' helpful. I BUT NOW JS the time when Christmas shoppioJ beco111es 0 the great chaUence • • i You can always identify the I last-minute sboppU'. Face haggard, aUs mouth set in a grim line, he charges through the stores and dodges in and out of the aisles, his eyes ·darting furtively among the scraps and sagging yule dis- plays that are now scattered in . disarray upon the counter. ' Store clerks. of course, aren't really at their sharpest at this time. They have now s pent more than a month standing behind <·ountcrs and s miling at the customer who is always righL Now their eyes are glazed over. They mumble words. The smile is still there but it's more fixed-like somebody just paint- ed it on. . BUT EVEN IF the *rk does c appear to be i~te 'Of • shellshock, the las per persists as b'e ma ef"(i; frantic rounds. Yo\.\;can almost imagine the typical COGfenation I as Last-Minute approaches 1 Frazzled Clerk: Las t-ltrlnute rushes up to Fraz z l~d and opens with something like, "P~r(ion me. madam, but J was wondering if you h ave any Stere ophonic Phoobahs left in the store?" "We had some," she replies ' tonelessly. "I think we sold the last one yesterday. Or maybe H was Jast·week. What did you say it was?" ··A Stereophonic Pboobab. May be you s till have the demonstrator? .. "SURE WE DO. It's right over there under the packing crates. But it won't work. Three kids just filled it with bub- egum after they crossed up all e wiring .•. " .. What am 1 to do np,w," Last·· inute sobe on the ~tcr-' Frazzled Cler~ suddenly ightens up. . .••. "Slr. why.don't: yoti try Rapid tailers just dOWD .tbe street'? -ey carry Stereophonic i oobahs." 'I DON'T THINK they ran out til this afternoon." . Well, Phoobabs or not, it's. me to get an this final moment tlhopping over with. This is the l.\me for family, friends, warmth '!jnd good cheer. • Meny Cbmtmas to you a1L . ·~·------· ... ~ - NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Rtlouers bun'OW9d ~ ... d ..... tued concrete and~'twlltld •t.et today, looktnl tor 13 m.a fMftd• crushed In the rubble of~ mualve sraln alnat« aplotM Uaat.., b.ne killed u many u" ~· So far, ereW8 WOl'klnl ~ U., nlcbt under Mrte, ..,._lntemltt apotligbu had recovered 21 · bodies from tlwwreckace al·~ whJ u.. .n. W.W • ~ silos that blew up bl qukk IOIC• momlac 11.rtna ill dWa iUCtlaD ceulon Thursday. like iii;I aomua euci.a. TM Ten IQJured men Were tlbD to lnlu.1 tbeol'Y Named ~ local hospttala, •laere a1¥ ...,. ~ ~---cal'· ... IM • malned JD critiaa1 conclU.iae -. ~ hi" ft1ata1e ..,.,...._ ... day• ' I • ~ d&ll • " 1 0 . -.. ·~ • , THE Jll.SSING were Gdl'•wd Tint ~ANT tUeat ol U, trapped Under wreckage •bent ploelOll at ll'aln elevat.wl-11 IO • the elevatmc"a t'tfo.atory control •reat that evea telephones are bun~.-and tunobroom ot tbls 1pee.1•lll"·~ff..\l to :p~vw Continental Grain Comp'4Y:» .. •PA!'P· 1 • , elevator complex .used t~t be: • W'avei-ol a~ aeeoecl froJJa Tbe ba.ilding. wu f.alttenec,. J>y the' -aba(f~t~· •UN for lloura flying chunks of concrete and after tt.te. .Pl~ 11fe •xPloeto6s steel from a welgblng at.aUon . destro7ed 4$ -of tbe TS altos ,perched atop the UO.foot silos. which. atone. wJUl. the offl~e UnUl early today. the total of . buildlnga. made up the elevator dead and missing had been set complex. Mmn Eaters 3ail at 2S. But sheriff's-deputies said More titan 50 men were work· they increased the number of tng at Ule cbmplex when the ex.- possible victima to 34 after. re-ploaion came at 9:10 a .m., two Anne Seminoff gives her son, Peter, a h\lg ~fote start.. ce iving late reports or other hours after the shift bad ing a two-day jail term for making an improper lefl. turn missinf pem:ins who 9'ork~ tor c h 8 n g e d and de pa t,l ~ in Tucson, Ariz. Her visit to the Pima County facility subcontractors doing work at the workmen bad picked up tfteir was ordered when she said she was unable to p44y the elevator. • Christmas turke~. a tradWooal $23 fine. She s hould be home for Cbristma!l· \ • .. • ii'ederal; -state and local or-glft from the company. · · • -flcials J>egan investigations into Families of Ute .rni$!~ ~en I gathered albn• Ult! •ebyJUs· , • ; slaaire. River levee, some of Na'lly's $~e.~i1ing --~~1·:~.~ :~~i§.ijf~·[~ '.r.:1 wflo.se husbanrwas missing. Carte~~Proposes ReeOrd '19 D~fe.ns~:;.Bu((gei ~~tt=e0f~:O~~tir~! and Just hope bes alive." WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Carter's d efense budget proposal for next year will hit a record $126 billion but will s harply cut the Navy's costly ship· building plans. b eer up the anti-lank a nd a rtillery power of forces there. Carter 's decision on the budget followed meetings late la s t wee k with Defense Secretary Ha rold Brown and of· Cicials oC lhe White House Office of Management and Budget . THE PRESIDENT roughly about 20 percent.. -from 19 to lS s hips. DELA \'ED WERE A nuclear powered attack submarine; a nuclear powered cruiser, which was to be the first of a new class to carry the Aegis air defense missile system; a frigate; and a support ship. Wind Saves Life Of Artist Jumper Pentagon sources s aid the fis· cal 1979 total approved by Carter is about $9.3 billion more than Congress authorized for the current 1978 fiscal year, but $9.4 billion below what the Ford ad- ministration had projected fo r the coming year. split the difference between the Navy officials contend that NEW YORK <AP) -An artist jumped from the 86lh floor of somewhat more than $127 billion this ultimately will mean higher the Empire State Building in an attempt to kill himself, but landed recommended by Brown for the rosts because the ships are like· on a ledge lS feet below, police said. He then changed his mlnd and year and the $125 billion wb.ich ly to be in c lud~d in future crawled inside. INFLATION WILL a ccoun t for much of the increase , de· fense sources said. but the budget will JUll provide for uo.at 2 ~nt in wha t OMB had sottght11S'"a cetting. budgets. • Officers said Thom~s Helms, 27, of Mountain Vie.w, Hawaii. During his election campaign, lea.Ped from the 86th floor observation deck Thmday nJgbt and Carte r promised a defense The ~av~alag tOQk a ~ut of 12 laaded"Gill three·(oot·wide ledge on the 85th floor. "i~ts ~al growth'' in spending cut of ss billion to $1 planes o~'lts plait· to 1lGd to its . ·- billion. Defens~_officials contend fl eet orr-:I4fighlers. The action A ~E ~PlCBW SAID~$,»~ ao mUes ;m.!Wli~ ~rob· that although ~ 'fill pro_po.se. a .It?aves th~ Nayy ~ith !.l F~s in ably ta'Yed'the-artra'i'llle'f>Y blowiiifblni 8lick againSt the Suild- military assets. · Jn line !1~. the admirustra· lion's emp~ on s trengthen· ing U.S. conventional forces as· signed to Western Europe, the new budget is said to signifh:ant· ly increase funds for the Army to build war reserve stocks of weapons and ammunition and to record high budget, Oet~er ria npxt year 8 bui:fgel. • ibg after he jumped. , ' . !Deeting his commitmen Y sic· Army and Alr Force officials Helms lay stunned Nft.the IedJrtaM:ut lii\lf Wl 4oW' before be ing substantially bet.ow what expressed general satisfaction managed to opefti19~dt»~'i6-the N~ l'ev)~lQ,ll transmitter l'OOm i:ord had p_ubUcly proJe~e~ C~r ~th the out.come of tile J>udget· o, the 8St.tJ Ooor and C'tttl lrlslde abOU't :l~ p.D1:. police said. · fiscal 1979. ~ ' t-..." ,,. ,5 hapin .. Dt'OCe.aS,, •tt2lougb the-. IJtJiWfl ordered held for psychiatric examination. The N~~'"ali'lus l~ !)UV~. \At-my 4Jltared to c0ino-out'bet· Heftn! told poUce be bad been in New York for about a week ts ken the~ost severe lumps. Its ter than the Air F'orce. with lltUe money and bad been sleeping on subways. plans to bwld warships and sup· ---=---------------------------------=---===-po rt vessels we re trimmed Mystery Santa J"fi/ e Gets $1 Million in Gifts DALLAS (AP) -A $400,000 string of pearls and a $100,000 Russian sable coat are pa.rt of a Christmas treasure trove flown from Dallas to New Orleans. In all $1 million in gifts were loaded aboard a waiting jet airplane Thursday and dispatched "to an unidentified blG'~f ac· • cordinl to Neim~arcu. tbf(J>,P~cialty store. · . .te,1th NiJr, pufiU.C ~an for the .MQN'-. sf.id the ~~4'f.~ld store pet!ioQoe · bis pregn•nt wif~. ·Beyond ·• ~e buyg wanted ~ . • -not his n,me.,. addres& , or'OC'CJJP8tion. ':.. .. ,.' .. ,.._~: : ........ , ... ....... . .. ~ .. · . 'i .. TY:S.X10i.iii& p.Jt~*'8"1were· stac·ied on a-loading ·~act tn.:tbe sfMt.pe al;A ~mlilJ&lf'fhe floor-lenilb s'ble coat, ' h.U Jippers pennitUDS it to ~ tr~ed into a j'acket or sfree!-: len#tbfgannent. Otl\•itt:rna:rangecHar¥n a fur-trl~mec! cashmere robe and a cliamond clJW for a coral necklace to an 11tth century one-of.a-kind haridkerchif!. A man who knows tbe buyer's wife "-'89 fioWn here to select the gifts. The only hint be would drop was tllat tbe-bil spender is npt a Texan. - David Wolfe, Nt!lm an's fur buyer. was asked, ''Did ht!<charae all or that?" . · '. •'Oh, or course." replied Wolte. "We woul(ln't JoiO"tr w~t to do with cash." 1 • ' ,.· \nQ ·• •.. ~\LOT . . . . enterta,n ,. .... ~Qf.\\L ¥ r _ . · · . 'ormat\V.~ .. · .. ·•r ·Saturo~ , .. .. . ,\f\, d on\Y '" 'JOU . . . . an . . ... . ... .. \ .. .. .. -~·-----'"""'"'"'' .... ··-~-.:::.. .... ' . " CALIFORNIA Frtdllt. Dec:ittnNr 23, 1977 • DAILY PILOT . A 5 Suspemion Include8 Famed Sex-cha'?ge Surgeon SACRAMENTO (AP) -FO\lr doc· ton. including one of Callfomta•s major practitioners of sex-change surgery, ar& being stripped ol their licenses by the state. But a lawyer for plastic surgeon John R, Brown called Brown a "pioneer·~ in tbe lleld of transsexual eursery and aald an attempt we>uld be IJlade in court. to bl~k19vocallon of his llceue. RJchard Spohn, director of th• state .Dep1utment ot Consumer Alf airs, an· nounced the revocations Thursday and declared that the year·old Board of Medical Quality Assurance, part of bis department, baa increased the state's vic»ance qalnst incompetent doctors: '"tBE NEW MEDICAL board la a~· 1reutvely rootinc'out the bicl coaldes.' Spohn said. notin6 that the bon in- cluded aome non-doeton. Leeper said that. out of mare tban 200 disciplinary cues this year, about 20 California doctors will. lose their licenaes. an jnc.rea.se over previou.a years. '1'8£ l'OUR DOCTORS whose 1Jcen1ea wW be revoked m different days next lllOnth are: -Brown, who bu J)racticec! ln San '.francilco and now bas an oftlce in Los Angeles. The bo•rd said he had failed to conduct proper physical and psychological screening of pa,\lents for the operation and had not arranged for proper poat-operatlve care. -Patrick Orrock of Brea. The board said bls llceAse was suspended this year after im~r treatment of a heart at· tack vJctUn who dJed, bot be moved to Rivenide and conUnued to practice. The down·and-Oitt, the transients and a few fort\Dlate passers· by h elp themselves to free sandwiches, cookies, milk and cigarettes at Fred Politz's van. To them, Fred Politz is Santa Claus. For the past 28 years, just before Christmas, Politz retums to San Fran· (isco's Sixth Street where he got hi~ start to show the forgotten Department spokesman Venon Leeper said Spohn plans to Ilk $.be Le1ialature next monf.b for the pe.er ol immediate suspension in extl'eaie cases, rather than leUini a doctor con-Un ue to practice for a year while r~vocatiml proceedbJgs are ,PendlDg. -SEYMOUR 1111. SOLOMON of San Francisco. The department said be bad plead9d no contest to J)06Sessipf herein and bad written three fraudulent pre- scriptions for money to support a beroin habit. -Raphael H.iey of La P\Jalte. The that someone remembers. ' Dke Plans Upset? Fossil Fuel Plants Backed SACBAMEbl'tO (AP> -Fossil fuel power plants .can be built in Calilomia, the sta'te an· ti5mo1 ehlef says in a report that t'Ould upset)>JOS lo build a nuclear power plant in the soutbeastem California desert. Tom Quinn, chairman of the Air Resources Board, said Thursday in a letter to Energy Com· mission Chairman Richard Maullin that the ARB strongly disagrees with "a!ways undocumented" -------.. claims that fossil fuel ( J plants, particularly oil or Sf ATE . coal, could not be built in .... _______ _._ California because of air pollution. Quinn said an oil· fired combined generation plant "most likely" can be built near El Centro in Imperial County. The report followed by a day the Energy Com· mission's decision that a desert site near Blythe could be used for a nuclear reactor in connection with San Diego Gas & Electric Co.'s proposed Sun- desert project. WomaR Banket-Arralgned SAN DIEGO CAP) -Mary Ellen Heam, 49, a bank vii;e president was charged d~qg ~~­ . ment in federal court Thursday, w1th embezzle. ment conspiracy in the disappearance of $162.50R from the vault of the Balboa Bank in Chula Vista. ' Strangler .Probe ' . Mentalist to Help Solve Caae? . LOS ANGELES (AP) - ' Police aay they have no prime suspects in their bunt for the HlJJstde Strangler -a man they ~an .. a good atuaent of potlce operations" -and may ask a mentalist to help them solve the case. Kreskin. a nightclub and television performer who has helped other police departments solve tricky crime cases, says he has been in contact with police here and expects to become involved in the oase . ASSISTANT POLICE Chief Darryl Gates acknowledged Thursday that he has been in contact with Kreskin, but said nothing firm had been decided. "We don't know exactly what he needs to know about the . case,'' Gates said, adding that the matter was being con· sidered. . Police had exp"8sed reluc- tance to call on a mentalist because they often "want to know too many confidential aspects of the case and we can't be sure how trustworthy they are," said police Lt. Dan Cooke. BUT KRESKJN, · who claims he "helps people use their im· aginations," says he would be able to help police not by magic but by helping witnesses recall facts they thought they didn't know. "Actually, we have been doing some of that kind of thing ourselves," said Gates, refer· ring to the hypnotism of some witnesses. Holiday Skies Fair Rain "Above ·No·r ·mal -1t • • I t t . . depar:ltnent aalcl be had been convtcttd of le>H conCsuet and failed to meet Qe terms ol h1I probation. Brown'• eue wu documented b1 tl\e board In a l3·P9C• complaint that .te .. tailed aeveral cues of paUenta wbo de- veloped serious compllcaUons after trama~auraery. · . TU OOMPIAINT ALSO aald Brown had allowed an unlicensed penoo to act as a doctor and to promote Bro\M's practice at ~rtles to which tram.aex .. uala were invited. • The board 1eld Brown sent would·be patients to a psychiatrist for an hour or two, then reserved the riabt to override their recommendation on whether to operate. • · ~ By ~trut, Stanford Universlt1•s hoapital. a maje)r center of transsexual surgery, requires a two-year waitlng period and extensive pb.ys~cal and peycholotical ~. tbe board aald. 'But Brown's lawyer. Franklin Laven, said Brown considered 1be stan· ford atandards needlessly nstrictiye. "' . . . An affidavit alleges that she took the money and left it in a car for a male friend now listed as a fugitive. The money was recovered, said Assistant U.S. Attorney James Wilson. G10I Collec tor F ine d Iii Northern Calilornia By Tbe Auoelated PnllS ing the snow depths the heaviest for this date since the drought began in the spring of lf17S. The distinctively styled Bert Paley hooded sweat shirt made of imported lamb suede and the genuine Jamb sherling coat provide comfort and enjoyment for a lifetime. A memorable gift. 185. and 290. HEAVY RAINS CONTINUED at Big Sur near the site of last sum· SAN FRANCISCO CAP} -A federal judge bas given one-year probation and a $5,000 fine to Stanley Mark Femwood, 30, Danville, ail antique gun collector who sold guns to would-be assassin Sara Jane Moore for failing to keep records and pay taxes on other weapons. The charges were not related to the gun Mrs. The fifth major storm of the season has dropped enough rain on northern CaHfonda to gh'e key weather sta· tions above normal readings for the date for the first time in three years of drought. More than a half·inch of rain fell Wednesday and Thursday in Oakland an~ Sacram~to. Jwhere the 1977 total stood at 5.84 inches, compllred to a normal figure of 5. 74 inches. Only 2 inches were recorded in 1976. · mer's disastrous 175,000-acre Marble Cone fire. The National Weather "-----------~•~ti:~ I028 Jrvine, N~wport Buch C.Mornia. Phone 642-7061 Moore used when she tried to shoot President Ford more than two years ago. Service in Redwood City rePorted m period late Thursday night on Chews _ ._.. .. four inches of raln in a four-hour BankAmtricard1~;!!~~;;: .. ~ Ar111ed Man Shot, Kiiied Ridge In the fire-ravaged area. Residents told the weather service· HAWAIIAN GARDENS CAP) -A young man was shot and killed by deputies resj>ondiq to a disturbance call when the man answered the door ·with a gun in his hand, authorities said Thursday. Oakland's seaJonal total rose to 6.lS inches, topping the normal of 6.11 andJast year's 2.58. that local creeks had risen to about a ---------------------------foot below their banks. and further Deputies said the wife .of Edward Mount, 25, telephoned pollce and reported ·ltloant had threatened her and their children WW. a gun.! When Mount answered the door with a gun ht fils band, deputies shot him five times, officials said. Moltro.,la Girl StafJlled The sbowen spread into Southern California and rain was reported throughout the area. up the coast at Pacifica, a rockslide blocked State Route 1. At least three deaths were attribut· ed directly to winds from the two-day . storm. A Humboldt County couple WARM, SUBTROPICAL Alll as· were crushed by a falling Redwood sociate<t with lbe latest storm caused and a 74-year-old man was elec· rain instead or snow tt1 fall on some troculed by severed high.voltage of the )ower slopes of the Sierra ski lines flailing in Ilia front yard. runs and moved the snow level up to T HE ~ATE o FnCE f E LOS ANGELES (AP> -Neck and bead 7,000 feet. -r O mergen· d ed th d th f ·7 ld M i cy, Services estimated more than wouo s caus e ea o a ·Year-<> onrov a However, state water otricials · 1 a.--bod 1 d h ho rd 15,000 Humboldt County homes and gar w1~ y was ioun near er me"' acco • were jubilant because the new rain in& to a coroner's autopsy. increased the water content of the 150 businesses suffered wind damage Lolita Miles died of "asphyxiation. due to snow, which means more run-off to_ and at least 20 barns were destroyed. aspiraUon of blood caU11ed by multiple cuWng fill reservoirs in the spring. . · Winds still were reported gusting wounds and stab wounds to the neck and facial The two-day storm total at both to 44 miles an hour at PUlar ·Point " J K j t t bief f th · and at San Francisco National are~, ame. ono, ass s an c o , e in· Echo Summit on U.S. Route 50 and l vestagaUon division of the county coroner s office, Norden on Interstate 80 r1·ed the Airport. bu the weatber service said id Thursd Tb t vid f ..,, high pressure was beginning to ap-aa . ay. ere was no apparen e ence o total anowpack on the ground to four pear, indicating mostly fair weather' sexual moleatatlon, he a aid. · i feet and ~ ~eet .respectively, mak· for the Christmas weekend. --..--~~---~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~---~ ~tl!pJleW SAN FRANCISOO ,(AP) -A ctty. charger; emendmel)t provldlnc that policemen and firefight.era who atrtke shall be diainissed from their jobs baa been upheld by the 1~ ,Court of Ap. •• ;,. I ~~-, ~ENERAL STORE & RESTAURANT presents ·a .NEW YEAR'S EVE ;& ,. DINNEll ;PARTY. A Yery Speeia_l Mena t' J-..1 for tTae OeCa.ion..- OtJJl GUAT Erttla'l'•INbS, TOUVELLE , ANO CHAM.PAGNE, HORS D'OElNRES, HAlS. NOISE MAKERS TO 'BRING IN ••• I INDOOR GREEN PLANTS I Sure to Pleue ~veiyone On Your Listi I ~~ "HOUSE PLANT CARE" f 1\ ~ Instruction lbeet. :.---Florlat Holl~ Olft Wr11P Traditional Cbriatmu Plan ta t'C ll'\--·· l'I I\~ F il• 1\t $Ill Oil Huge Selection n: B ...... ~ •~ JJ FTS: --· •t --. o-.tu;e ten, Tenvium1, =~~~I ({IJ;I M,1 FIMlt No.1 Ol'lllCk. Add a bow1ftltant pft. Fll0M$3.91 Bird Feeders, Bunts, Decoml'f9 Pote_.. ~la_Jt .. Oudenc. Plaat ~ Ouidoor Nun.y Plant.a,. <ludea Boob, Mvch M~ ORIGINAL DECORATIONS - ; • • • f,. Jl Ora~ Co 1 Daily Pilot Supervisor Bas A Short Memory I Charges brought agalrtst Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich last week by the county grand jury are by tar the most serious levied afalnst an elected public of. ficial since a wave of crlmina indictments hit the county three years ago. Simply put, the grand jury has accused Diedrich of enriching himself by at least $70,000 plus an_ $80,000 bankroll in return for whatever influence he could wield over a 1974 Board of Supervisors land use decision. Al this time, or course, Diedrich is guilty of nothing. The indictment simply accuses and does not indicate guilt or innocence. Nonetheless. county government has su!Cercd another black eye on a credibility face that already has been well pummeled in recent years. · It was disappoiniing lo see Diedrich respond to hls in- dictment by launching another tirade against the district attorney's office. , By this time. the public knows very well but cares lit· tie about what Diedrich thinks of District Attorney Cecil Hic ks and his staff. The public does, however. care a great deal about the integrity of its public officials and the sound operation of government. Diedrich will have his day in court. Until he does, he \\ ould be far m ore responsible and mature to tend to gov- ern m cnt business rather than to use his elected offi ce us th<• laund1in~ pad for senseless attacks on those he \'iews a~ his antagonists. Diedrich might think that's ;,1sking too much. But he net.'d onlv recall that when former Count ,. Assessor Jack \'ullcrg;.; in 1975 was indicted on far l<.>ss st'rious charges, Dit·drir h c~1 lll'd on Vallerga to abandon his elected office until tn('cl and led a heavy.handed unsuccessful Board of Supervisor!) attempt to put a caretaker in Vallcrga's post. Today, he is asking for far better treatment after finding himself in a similar predicament. ·· Be An ~arly Bird Students and other young people who hope to work ne:-..t summer would be well advised to spend part of the l'Urrcnt v&Jcation getting the show on the road. Across the nation there will be 10.000 summer jobs :1\';.ailablc in the National P a rk system and the U.S. F orest Se1Ticc. Thal sounds fine. But only about 1,000 of the jobs will he a' ailable in California. And the deadline for filing ap- plic :Jt ions is Jan . lS. That's close. ' I 11 addition to the direct government jobs. con- l'essionaircs in the national parks also will be looking for sum mer help. Interested young people can rind out about all this b y '''nting to lhe N ational Parks office, Box 30603, San Fran- • c·isco. and to the Forest Service office at 630 Sansome St.. San Francisco. ' These office6 ,PU pr<><:ess applications Cor-jobs and also can provide 'infor.mation about cont.acting con· \ cessionaircs who hire summer workers. l Taking time to drop them a line could make for a prof· it able andconst,nacUvestnnmer. Driver Testing Time T omorrow. <is we :.ill know. is a ,·ery s pecial evening Unfortunately. one of the special things about Dec 2-1 i:-. not so cheerful. During the last six hours of Christmas Eve. from 6 p.m . to midnig ht. the rate for fatal traffic accidents is fiv e times ~realer than during the rest of the Christmas holidar. Three out of four of the fatal accidents involve ex- ccssi \'C !)peed tor ro act and traffic conditions. ~l or<.• than half '"''01\'(? drinking drivers. One out of four involves a pedestrian who has been drinking. The lesson here is much more than. "Watch your s peed," and "Don't drive if you've been drinking." That's obvious. But a n accident can be just as bad if it's the other driver who's breaking tt<e Q&sic rules of the road. The lesson for those who do obey the rules is: U ~·ou 're driving on Christmas Eve, be extra careful. T}ti' $ is r.eally the time to practice everythin g you know about defensive driving. • Opinions expressed In the space above are !hose of the Daily Pi iot. ' Other views expressed on this page are those of their authOfHnd ar11s1s. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Piiot. P.O. Bo>e 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd/London Fog ByLM.BOYD Odd thing happened in Lon- don about 1S years ago. The old pea.soup fogs that used to • darken the city stop'ped, jui;t flat out stopped appearing. Hasn't been one sucl> there since. That's when t'he gov· ernment made Its first big push lo, clean up iqdustrial air pollution. I remember Lon- don very well after World War II. Took a long walk in Dear Gloomy 'Another Cbrl1tmaa cocktail party tonltbt- •blch we bav. to .. ave urly to to to another ..•• Ho, ho, ho! And • Hap-PJ New Year •to tie mull.facturen of ant~ aeJclet J.E.T, .... "''/°"c...,......,..,_. "'"•• ., ..... ,. ....... , ••••••ea~~­IQl,rr;,..~--· one of those pea-soup fogs. Just to get the feel or the place. In the company, it seemed, ot Samuel Johnson, Jack the Ripper and Sherlock Holmes. Don 't recall whatever happened to the trench coat and snap·brim hat, but the meeT1chaum pipe I affected at the Ume k~pt loosening my upper right In· cisor , so It would be in a shoebox someplace. Q . ''What's in 'German silver'?" A. Nickel, copper and zinc. NQ silver. Q. ••How did that candy called tbe 'lollypop' come tb beao aatnedT" A. Ther.e was a famous racebone known as Lolly Pop early in thJs century. But why the candy was named a!ter tt l don't know. Q. "All ri~, Lome, ll Yo'J know ao JQUch about hockey, idenlll7 tM onJy woman n• to lr9t• w name on tbe Stea.I Cup." A.~-UOWI 110 •uch '•bout hockeyt Not me. · Howtvtt, HAarc~ ttteall you rerer to Mar1uerlte Notrf e, prH,dHt of &be Detroit Red. WSnp b•ct tn 1954. • .... ~ ......... ·-· .. ,., .. W ASIUNGTON -From the Papago Indian reservation in Arizona, bwtgry cattle shoulder through a makeshift wooden gat~ ln the sagging, barbed·wiro fence and sraze at will in Me~lco. From the other direction, hungry Mexlcans slip through the sate and fan out through the United States ~Ing for job11. This typifies the sieve that the Mexican border hu become for millions of ll- 1 e gal wet· b a c k s desperate to eac•pe lhe poverty of their farm viii ages and city barrios. An u n • de rmanned U.S. border patrol haa been unable to cope with the growing flood of illegals. An estimated six lo eight million Mexicans have streamed across the border, melting silently Into M exlcn n·Ame ri.can neighborhoods. They can be found working for rock·bottom waces in the lemon groves of Arizona, the potato fields of Jdaho, the factories of lllinois, the restaurants of Manhattan. OBVIOUSLY, we can't erect a Berlin Wall along the l,tio Grande. Yet without a wall manned by armed guards, Art Hoppe the border haa no more meanln1 than a llne drawn on a map. Mllllona more Mexloans wtU be driven acrosa tM border 11 •urt· ly as their homeland 11 plalUed by overpopulation and poverty. The exodus b .. oaly ~£Wl. This means Mexico and tile United States, Ukt Slameae twins, cannol be separated. An 'conomlc blow to ooe will •end shooting pa'lru to the other. U.S. tomato growers. for ex~ ample, are lobb)'Sal-· viJOtQUlly to. restrict MeJj'cp. tOJ1'~~ .X· porb. Thlt J• easenUtr; they &rltfe, fo .Pr~ U.S. v~,1.~able product.ton. Y.ei without acrlcultural exports, the Mex· lean economy would Oounder- f nd new ·hordes of wetbacks would swarm across the border. WE SENT two reporters, Hal Bernton and Doug Foster. south of the border to Investigate the economic and sociological pres· sures that are impellin&: im· poverished Mexicans lo take to the road. Our reporters lived in the ramshackle viUaeea and worked in the fields with the campesinos . They spent two months checking out the story, which we wtU be pre1enting in a series of columns. It's a story or impoverished Mexican peasants, d riven off their land by an industrial revolu- tion. New fact9ries In thq cities have lured millions_ from Robert N. Weed/Pvbllsher TMm4ll knvll/!dltOf • 8'rbefl Kntlblth/Edhorlel PeQI ed4tot the vlllu• to tbe ~ Of crowded barrio•· L•i4 ,ft.t recreation bu becom• ao tear<!t in Mexico City tbat aoccer Qlldl have betn set up lo tb6 median 1trlp, which dividea the main lll1hway "1Mlnl north. THI& IS alto another .. Gr&pel' ot Wrat&•t •pie, a tale of ana,nymoua farn\ labottri who harveet vecetJbles for U.S. tables While the)' tbe.mH Jve• are often u.nderJourlahed. At the Hme ~me, ·tt.s. b•n1'lo.C la· tuedlharvest.~tbkl b'-. thet rt Investments to llilexJcan vege"ble plao£aUon1. And ~­U.S. aupermarket chains take dlreqt dellvtf>' from the Oeldl where campesiDOI work ~r '28 a week. The •l«Y baa three hu'.man lD· ~red!enta. The economic turmoU in M exlco has 'Produced n > hordes of factory workers who h ave been drawn from the villages to the conges~ed in- dustrial parks; (2) thousands of faceless men and women who awarm over the fields and pick the crops; and C3> great streams of Mexican wetbacks who now like human highways across the . border, skirting the settled areas and cutt:lng through the desert. In the last 20 years, U.S. busl· ness Interest.ti have invealed '3 billlon in Mexican enterprises. Mexico's Gross National Product has been rocketing upwuda at an . . .. ~rate up M> .... ,._ teat. Rudliedrot U.S. man\&fac:tllr· •~• (lrmt have been duwn IOUlh of the border to \de adnatqe of Mexloo'• cheap and abun4anl labor 1uPJ11. J.-ario lnduttrlal parka are 1trn1l the lepath of the border. At NQlalea, for lnltanee, Rockwell lnternatlonal, Foeter Grant and Samsolll~ lu1111e plant.I are boomlnc. The produtU \bat emerte aren't intended for Mexican \lie. Tbe)' are 1hlpped north tp the UnJted Staleit for a !•w (!ttltldhg touches. Jneteaalftaly. the uw brdild or Mexlcen·factory worker is find-inl bl~dependnt on the U.S. ece>00w, In tlmn of reeeasion, he may ~ h1.m.seJt ou' of work and may ~ aciws th• border lrt search ol einploylDent. The lf'I. dustrlal parki have also been a magnet for too mapy Job appll. cants. Those caught in the pool of the unemployed find it ea~y just to,keep~ nqrth. AFFLUENT Americans have also turned to their struggling nei&hbor to the south for their wtnter tomatoes, strawberries and othet fresh produce. Theim- w r&s are now so enormous that, when we sent Bernlon to in· vesUgat.e . lbe. coodiUon of mi- grant workers in Florida two years ago, be found the bosses cheating the workers on their wages, partly lo keep thelr labor cost.a competitive with Mexico's. The mon; competitive U.S. fields become, however, the more Mex- ican farm wotkers will cross the border. But it is the U.S. demand fOl" a more sinister product that is causing the most grief. This is the dirty brown heroin, which is known ln the back alleys of the United Stales as "Mexican mud.'' Its taproots are in the rugged Sierr a Nevada mountains of western Mexico where s mall farmers have found a lucrative crop by growing the opium pop- py. An entire rural mountain economy h as grown up around it. U .S. drug enforcement of- ficials say heroin traffic injects at least $500 miUion a year into the Mexican economy. With the urging a nd finanoiog of Washington, 'the Mexican gov- ernment dispatched a force or 10,000 troops to exterminate · heroin growing in the Sierra..'i. Thia has brought about a fierce confrontation between the growers and the soldiers. M ex i co's problem s . meanwhile, have become our problems. The All-purpose Miracle Gift Is Here! Been stewing over what to get for Christmas? Stew no more. The All·Purpose Combined Stereophonic Diet, Birth Con· trol, Food Processing, Phone Ariswering, Television Record· tog Machine & Home Recreation Center with Wet Bar Is here. This fantastic creation, known •a.s'• ''Miracle Helpmate," is by no m eans a · •, llew-.inven· ~ lio n . It is, _ ) rat h er , a • c lever T amal ga,ma-~ lion of all the ~ most popular ~ major elec- l r on i c ap - plian ces be· ' ing offered by our department stores this season lo commemorate the birth or Jesus. At $1499 it ·s a bargain. IC purchased separately, the com· ponents would run more than twice that. I love mine. As 'tooll as it was installed, I naturally invited my neighbor, Mr. Cran· nich, bver to eat b.is heartpu'- "How does it work?" aaked Crannlch. eying the six·.foot· .Sydney Barri.& long, four-foot -high box affixed over the kitchen counter. I placed two glasses under the spigots adjacent lo the .revolving tie rack. COid I mention it comes with a revolving tie rack?> I pushed a button. The kerp)unk of fa,lling lee was followed by the swish of Oowing gin and the hiss or a vermouth spray. Voita! A perfect martin\. "NOT B~D." Crannich ad· milted, "Now what?" Tonight, I am planning my favorite dinner, I said, "a shredded carrot and diced beet salad, a standing rib roast with French fries and string beans ' Julienne, and hom~·made strawberry ice cream sundae. Watch!" When I opened the lid. the machine struck U,P the overture to "I Wanna ltole Your Han." I quickly tossed ln a large chunk of meat, a bunch of carrots, beets, potatoes, string beans and atra,,.,berriea, ·a quart of cream and a bucket of rock salt. I pushed the proper buttons in the proper sequence; shred, dlc:e, medium rare, cold, hot, frette, etcetera. A symphony or grtndLne. chop- pio g noises came from the machine. Then it turned silent and a red light winked on. "Ah, it will be done in exactly 14 minutes now that the microwave is working on it,·· I explained .. "And if wt: open the door a crack, it will make us sterile." "Open U all the way." said Crannlcb. "WmLE WE'RE WAITING, would you like to play a litUe video tennis or engage in a fun World War Ill?" I asked. "Can't.'' said Crannich. "l got a trick knee." "Well, I 'll just hit some against the backboard to work up an appetite," I said. While I was whaling away electronically at the bouncing dot. the phone rang. "Shut up, I'm busy!" shouted the machine and from its innards \.he sound could be beard or a re<:eiver slamming down. "That's a fretly good phone answering device," conceded Cranaish. "It tella you wbat you missed on the t.ec-vee screen;• I slid. "Want to watch a replay oC the Pong hockey match the two de- livery men bad while I was in the other room? · • Before Ctannicti could answer, the machine emitted a series ot thumping noises and a bell clanged. "ll's done!" I cried, opening the door .•• "That was the trash compactor. •'Th a nk you.'' s aid the machine, ejecting a neatly wrapped, four-inch cube. Jt began whisUing, ''I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles'' amidst the sloshing noises of its self. cleaning operation. "TB ERE," I said; tossing the cube into the garbage. "It's pre· pared my favorite dinner and l haven't gained an ounce. Cran· nich, don 't you wish you had a diet conscious. birth-control· practicing, food·processing de· vice that answered your phone. told you what you missed on television and played games with you?" "I do "be said. "Dam," I sai<l. "Is it a Mira- cle Helpmate?" "No," hesajd "ll's a wife." ~est Your Meniory on This Odd Man Out Quiz 2. Irenics, diuretics, polemJcs, dJaleet.ICI, and foten.ICI. 3. Uocle Remus, LitUe Dorrit, G\lnl• Dln, Salty Lunn, and Peter Pan. , •· Blind.atop, muntin, part.ins bead, istool. arid f\rttock. • 5. ~~tawain, Af'loe, Fl&&ab, md.~~· · ·~ r. Saint• ¥attbew, Mark. Luke. Jolln, and l>aul. 7. AdNio, bapto, larao, pre- -~~ a. Mutt ail· .>err. Mark .-., ~radt, U.. &ad Pttt.. Mi.ale and JJps. Cuper and T.._ •• TUita. lbu1&. elaw~, •est· ete, carp.a. • tt. Cru1 HorH, Leatber : Stocktng. Hawkeye. Pathflndert and Deersla~er. ANSWEJLS: 1. AU ar• nursery rhyme characters, 91e.pt. \he Old Lady of Tbreadneeile Stre«. w!Ucb 11 ID epithet 1or tbe Bank of Eneland. 2. All ani modes of arsum~t or di.I~ ucept diut'edcs which are cSnap commonly UHd ln the \realm.rt of h~rteulon. J. All .,.. ftctlbnal characters, ucept Sally Lmln. an !lnglltb C.a-cab. 4. All are piU'W et al) QCld.inary windoW, ace1lt futtod, wbleb .. I a partotaahip. s. All are f ainous dogs, except Borak, \be horse that carried Mohammed to seventh heaven. 8. AU were bom Jews, except Luke. a Greek. 1. All are musical directions, except bagnto, an Italian brothel. 8. All arc old comk \Jtrips. ex· cot Mark and TrMe-. the fa~ on tht Smith BJ'Otl. ~ugh-drop box. f 9. AU are bones. exceet vesiclt, a 1mall bladder-like cell. 10. All are u.mu for Nau, Bumpeo • .Jarnes F.nlmor• Cooper. ftedonal Ure, Oillefl Craay Hol"M, an lndlan. . ·f I t t J • l t •. .. ' . . " . . .Tlab Jtlean• You No parking sign in Huntington Beach was ignored by driver of this three·wheeled chariot, despite st.ern w arning. Whimsical photographer noticed that chain fencing off. corner of parking lot was down and that trike was standin g defiantly by the sign. y ... , ..... ' tj, l•h4' For the Record· _Airport ·Bus Fare Birt ... Hike Approved MOAG MEMORIAl. MOS .. ITAL PRIHYTIRIAN "-"·"" Mr and Mrs. Georoe Parur, 111 Atnlgot Way,~ eeac11. 01r1 Mr. and Mr'-Not..-Goeltell. Ull2 SoulhPorl Sl,..I, L.-Hlll1. Qlrl Mr. •nCI ,,,.,,_ Mk""' Thwnen ... , F•lr Orlve· •204, Co>ta M<osa. 9lr1 Mr end M"-Martt Slapl-n, 10101 Mareo Lane, W<Hlmln\ler, bOy Mr. and M"-Brue• MMl>olwld. 10 Royal Salm ~ RO<ld, Newport Be•< hi boy Mr. •nCI Mrs. Oona Id Baker, tlJ Valmtl•·•l. C.0.1• Me••· bOy Mr. end Mrs. K•11nelh ku\I\. 44 Or•nve B1ouom. Irvine, boy Mr. •Ad Mrs. l/IClor CGOP"r. 3.1711 C•ll• ConeJo, $.In Juan C•ol>lr•no, l>Oy .......,.,.,.r 11. 1 '11 Mr .• ,.., Mrs. .Hrry W•bC>. 11371 Sand Ooller L•M, Hunllnqlon 8UCl't, 91r1 Mr. and Mn.. An<Jr•w Moro to•. 611 Arlan• Clrci.. H"""""''°" Ba.ch. l>Oy Mr. and Mr\. Cral9 Lynell, 110 Altilltlm A-116<.. COit.a l'oVu. Qlrt Mr. •nCI Mn. Alston Gil, 11101 Erwl11 L-, HIMC.,_. .. adl. t lt1 Mr. and Mn.. Wini .... McL-, 21071 El ltellro, NlllllMn Vie le. bOY Mr. •ncl MB. n.cw-lleairt. 421 u 111 Slr .. ~•C. Hunllnaton lle..:11. .,.., .......,..r1',1'11 Mr. and Mn. Oevld FttMld. an 001• Stl'ffl·•"" (Mia-... Qlr1 N<r. •nd Mn. Olll.-ra K•1Mdla, -41SI Loma Sl-t. lrYtM. bOY Death Nofi~e• Mr. al'ld Mrs. Genld Korshrw. 14'~1 llancho c1rc1a, 1rv1M. b01 Mr. •nd ~ J.,,.., 8<>Me< 8612 ~~~r0v cin:1e, Hwnllnoiori 80'"· The cost of taking a The stat e Pub Ii c · ......-,., 1tn bus from Orange County Utilities Commission bas Mr. and M"-Ge,.. 8urSO<>, •-A" rt t I """ A l ed f · Torrot• circ1e. Hunll"Vl"" 8 .. ,11. 1rpo o '""'t' nge es approv a are increase bOY International Airport ls from the present $4.25 to Mr .• ,,0 ~":, 11R.!:~11.ii.r~r. going up. $4.SS for Airport Service. 11134 a1ue A111um, ~1a1n valley, A 6.S percent increase .,.,., ... ,,.,...,...11• "77 SL -l ' was approved last June, Mr •nd M r\. w.,,,. Br•ol'tl, mo T~ teT S bringing the year's total or•M .. " 1, eosia Mew. bOY hike to 14.2 percent. The Mr. •nd M'1. RI''-" Herrls, 4101 b e111wor11t 0rt ... Hunrt"<lt"" Be•ctt, Ca.f,s Get us organization was 11••1 seeking a 23.6 percent in· Novef'l\tJer 11:, nn Mr. •nd ~-0o<>91.s o ·Nu1, 11oc crease. W111ttter ._...,..., eo.1a wu. 111rl Other fares that w1ll Mr and Mr\. (.hrlstOQr>er Jordan. 10th L ~ · ( lh · 14?• l'Orl Brl\IOI (lrcle, Newporl .,, • e rise rom elr present s .. t ... b01 level are: Orange Coun· N•w"*r "· ttn t A. rt •A A h I Mr •"d Mrs Charle\ Conner, 3 A n e w Animal . AS· y trpo "" na e m. 5oono•11mow,1r111 ... ,111r1 from $1.35 to $~ Mr. and Mt1. Ml<l*t'Slr<l"Q, IM sistapce League pro-Orange-·M Ai Port N''"'" Pl-.,.lllll'Orl a.ea.. gram. is jmeda~ving tp ·Long M Ai rt, ::: a nCI MrS. J~ V1r9n, ;m~ the, li'~,pf C t the f 2 ! } 5 tO ~2 0 ; '8 ft d wuh1n91..,.. s1.-H , H11ntin91on Orange COunty ·mal Orange County Airport ~~~:.;., ":~ 0.:-111 cat-"· r~ Shelter. to Laguna Hills, fl.OS t!b :~'.'':~~~7;0~~10 P91.-lla, 140 tha'~~~et~sa~~!fe~: nilll!! ... -;; Jam<H St.·• A. C::.U -.a, Qlr1 j · Mr. and Mu . ""'4afl IC•ll•, ... tli~mOftftls Old COuJd DOl ~~·~·,,:~.=, a::;::..;:.0':.s: be ·ado.,led out unless Alcohol s.nRu11no0r .• 1rv11W,Qlr1 r· • lhey bad been aJtered. Death Notlre11 the league says. The result was that Memb. ers many cats were killed CASTOlt ~IWU.1. even though people wanted to adopt them. Needed the league reports. HELEN "BILLIE'" CASTOR. rttl· MARY E ~EWELL, rHlclenl ol dent of Pico A•-•· C... Paned away Cott• Mesa. puwcl •wrt Oece...O.r Oft Oecatntier 12, 1911. Sur•ov•O DY her 21, 1971. She Is survived by h•r l\U\l>ancl °"'" .. Ca\IOI", 0.i>QM., ()oft. hu~ncl Fo.ler N. si.w.11 of ~·· "" H•n'• of CdM, &.rl><I•• O..Wllde of Mesa, 1 -· J«TY S.llez, Ron S..llar. Colla MeM, C:.., slst., Lois Calr1u of ~lanltY SallH, all Of Olllo, Oavld LH lle~•s. Ne•WA. Mary J•n• M•r11n S.llaa ot TH.as, W.-11 Sallaz, Fr.., of New•r-. Ca alMI survl...O by ,,.,. Sllewell and I<.,• Sllewell all of 9ranoc1111orel'I. Recll•tlon of lhe CallfOrl'll•, 2 ••uQhllrs. JanH!I Rotary and Mast of Cttrl\llan flurlal S<harnecNe of Ohio and ~· Or•-• 9 · 30 A M. S.lurday Oecetnber 24. lt77 Of North Hlthlaftlls. ca., -brother at Our Lac!V OAan of A"9411\ Calltollc Harold White of Ohio -3 Sitt .. ,, CllUrCll, io.. Mar Vlsla Or .• N __ , Ma•IM '""· Norm• Rhodel, ...a .&Heh, <;a. fnlormant P..:lllc llt.w Lucllla GotllarcS. all or Ohio, n Memorial Park. Pac111, lllew oran«llllclreft "'4 I QrHl-Qf"•llCld•llcS. Mortuary dlrecton "uneral ~ wlll •held.., Satw· ""°"IUI day at 2 PM hit 8f"OHWay Cltapel MAX e. MORRIS, <1419 u. r•lc!MI\ wllll ttt• ... ,,. 9,,_ kurrle oflfciallfl9. o1 Hu"'lltOIOfl llNch, ca. ,,...,,.,., aw•r l'rlvat• ,,,.-. .,,,_. rTMIY u1r °" O.umi.r n. 1•11. Suntl'""d by 111'1 et .... "'°"'*"' cln l'flday ' • 1130 wife Oorll Mofrh, tllrH brothert, PM. Ball ......_..,, MKl»arY Olr9f· Cwt11v Jerry and O•vld Monlt, •-ton. slU•r\, WlMle Oreper a nd Belly ••OM.ADO llfk ltofs encl nl04Nr &eufeh Morris. eLEANOR L 4t,EGAL.ADO, rn- S.nl<e win be held al Pen FatnllV of Colla Mna. ll9Sllld a\llay Oe<em· • ColOtllal F-al HotM C ... C>el S.IW· lie• JO. U17. SN Is s.1"'1w4 lay ·l Cley Oe<ambw 14. 1'11 at l0"3t A M. cN ..... len_ Diii/ia AiNMrrt ., C...IA aa1s1 M•n. Sll••lene Ellen Sawyer of Under the new pro· gram, if someone is ln· terested in adopting a particular cat, a volun· teer takes it to be fltered and then returns it to the shelter for adoption. UCI Hours Set UC Irvine ad · ministrative offices will be closed Friday and Monday for th e Christmas holiday, and oh Dec. 30 and Jan. 2 for lhe New Year cetebra· lion. Winter quarter classes begin Jan. 9. Persons interested in serving on the Alcohol Advisory B,oard of. Orange County are being askea to send in a re· sume and statement of interest to the board. Needed are persons witb a background in alcoholism services or with an interest in alcohoU.sm. About three bou~ ~ monlh are re· quired. Resumes cao be sent to David Kerr at the A lcoholiim Advi,ory Board . 1600 N . ~roadway_. Santa Ana. ~mRaPs SS Tax Hike By 0 . C. HUSTINGS OCU.Delty ...... .._ U. S. Representative Robert Badbam, R· Newport Beach, bas criticiied the new aoolal security tax hikes approved by Contreas, notin• that members ol Con1resa are exempt from payma such taxes. Al.lo exempt are federal workers and some state and local sovernment employees, Badham aaid. "I hOD8 that the American people will take the opportunity to let their representatives know their vlewa." be aaJd. Badbam vOUd against the bike . ••• . . THREE ORANGE Coast residents bave been appointed to a clUzens committee to advise U .S. Senator S.I. Hayakawa. R·Callfomia, on health is· a.ea. Na med to the. committee are Donald R. Steele, a Newport Beach dermatologist; Barbara G. Jessen, a Newport Beach neurologist and William D. Cox, chie/ of Physical therapy at Hoa1 Memorial Hospital ln Newport Beach. *** CONGRESSMAN CHARLES Wlgglngs. R· 'Fullerton, wlll discuss the Panama Canal treaty Jan. 12 at the annual luncheon meeting of Republican Aasoctat~ of Orange Count.y. The event is open to the public. For details con- tact the Republican Assooiates at 200 Town & Coun- try, 777 S. Maln St .• Orangit. Eveiyone needs o tun snoe. lrte Stlide and vour feet - the tme c:J lheS Irle! Wnfdlff ,._. • t61wpert IHdt , ........ MAROUl!RI TE REESE. '"fdent-' L•ouna Bead•, Julfe lte9•fade of ParaQOUfd, ""'-...0 a former r• tosta MaM, lier moll'ter WL Flor.nee lldent Of CO.ta_.._ ca. Pauao -•Y Kl~ltlrwr ol Ca&la -· 2 b<oll,.<> on ~ 20, 1971 at CM aQe o1 7J. Paul Afuander a ttd Jftnmy Al••· s.in.lllM by llW ~., a.ttv Giii-' ~. 2 shten,-'-Ot~..,··· Jun, Para1oulcl, Arken1u. Gravulee and 2 1r...xtt1-. Private famfly '------------------------ seMCl1 •Ill lie IWld ~klay December ,.rYICH --held ..... ptfvale lnl•r> U, 1t11 It l:to P.M. el Ille 5anl• Ana -""· llell lk"oadway Mor1Uary Olrec· c.-lffy. Smith Tlllltlll LAmb Colla ton. Mau M«turt dlNCIOR. ......._ MPl&RM IB.L .. OHWAY MOltTUAIY 1 tO Bf'Otldw•v Coet• MeSt &42·9160 S...nt 1VTNU. &.AMI wtm:LWCHAl'tl. '427 E. 17th St. Cost• Meet • M&-4888 Santa Ana Ch•pel &18 N. Broadway Stnt•Anll * 5'47-4131 PNRCl llOTHIH swmtS' MOl!VAIY 927 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 ,._l'AMILT COt.ONIA.L ,._UL MOMI . 7801 BotSI Ave. Wettmlntter 813-3521 PAC1'1C ..W ••1D11Af.t ... Cemet«Y Mof't'*Y SIOO Plol~ew DtMI ~. • catlfornla 144-2700 .---i Mec:OIMICIC I MOITUAlllS uouna Buch 404-9415 Laguna _Hiii• • 1M-093' Sin Juen Caot1tr9no 4ff.177t OOfCALD L. MEW9etU•, rftlcletot ef Newport IU•clt. P••Ud •w•~ Oe«mber 21, 1m. Ha 11 survl.,.... by wlle JHn Newlletft of Newport llea<h. 1 10nt, RkNl'tl L ,.._...,, and Oevkl A. Newtlenl, lllllll of New!*'l Be.ell, "'' "'9C"er Mn. t.utu Hewtlenl Of Saft. la AM. f-.1 MNkes Wlll be held "' TIMIMY ~ 27 et 1 PM •I C"41rcfl ,,, t..1., ... r Wnt• H-IJOf'f lleKtl wllll BltfloCI ~ SunwMrt of· llcl•tlllQ. Tl\-Wftlll"f "'IY COii• lrlbllta la Illa O.vlCI .AllMI Colle .. Pu11d t /o Home Ruld•11tt. 8tll e,..ttw•Y Mllttuety Olreclon. • .CHICAGO (AP > - Bt11top Tlmotbeoa. spiritual leader of the Greek' Orthodox Church 1n a alx-at.te area, died Wednesday. He had been lader lince 1961 of tbe 2D4 Arcbdioceee. "bieb· ~mpuses n-llDola, Wlacoaain, Jowa. Mtnnesota, M1uouri and part of Jndiana. OIHIY AT&.AVI ·BAlllUPTCY $95 llYORCE $95 Uncooteeted 640-2507 Last Minute Gifts Pine Pots Roger'• unique holiday pines combined with holly and ()(her coloriul plants make • year &orig !lift that will accent any home• patio or entry • Roq.-~• Ga,.,,.• 640·!°>!100 S.. ~llln •l MacAnhw • N-por1 B....:h 9am·6c>m Sea1ns. Jmtiup ... ~ A~~~)'~F~~At i w~~ ~ • Open Evenings ._ ~.,.,-·~*--·~~· .. r • l I "• OAllY PILO J . By JOHN C NNIFt· ..... w-...... ,ll , ... ,., ••• -i.. Commcnlators oftt!n use the term ··business interes ts." "Somelimcs pejoratively, as if the bu:ilness community speaka wlth one voice. It doesn't. It probably declares the National Small Business Association ln calling tor unity aaainst what it feels ls \be threat of big business 'Bigs,' 'Smalls' Show Few Common In teresis ~ever has; it likely never will. Still, there is a tendency to categorize the conflicts of And some of the bigs, with. grbss annual s ales-in nine figures, don't 1ee eye to eye with the giants. l~ mighty concerns that make up the first 100 or so of the Fortone dJrectory of the SOO largest industrials, some of which have sales in the billion of dol~rs. economy for the benefit of the bigs," permUUne a handful of facele111 but powerful men ... to a ffe ct the "infiltration of gover~nt agencies ... " bus 1ness as being between public and private e n- l e r pr ise, .be tween cor- pora l e CX · ecutives and go vernment burea uc rats 'and between cu"""'" management and labor. THE COMM I TTEE OF Public ly Owned Companies, many of whote members have s ales in the hwidreds of millions of dollars, argue that the giants are crowding them out of the stock market and competition tor in vestment dollars. THESE WORDS ARE from literature of the NSBA, which calls for an end to oppression by the bigs -big government, big labor and big business, which it feels olten merge their interests to the exclusion of s maller business. "The no rmal and proper workings or the marketphtce have been subverted," states a document of the association, whose officials concede their ideas might sound revolutionary. T h ey a r e fr i ghten e d Entrepre n e urs hip is being s mothe red . compe tition rrustrated. they maintain Little attention has been paid until recently to the conflict between big business and small. "General Motors and Smith'i; Machine Shop a re not the same.·· Few people are likely to guess the source of these fiery words: ·'We have condone4 and inadvertently encouraged the manipulation of t he national ,,-~~~~~~~~--.. MEED A. LAW~J: 'Tttket, Too TbDllDyau It works •.• • Divorce .. ftllAIJ.OFUS I ·. 0 I • Bankruplcy • Criminal • Wiiis-Probate .. • I ncorporatlon .. Accidenl-lnlury • Evicllon 640-2507 'h HR. CO~SU&.TATION-ftO Last Minute ·Gifts . , 66666666~ •. . . . Rogers Gift Certificates . :. 9!:!>9G>::!l999G>~ • • Gift.CertUlca~s Everybody appreciates a gift from Roger's ai>d with a gift • • certificate you taA let them select exactly what they need for their home or yard. AvAIJ-. h, abltf;, ~ll ~ns>mJnac;on. II Rogtu Gardms • 640-SSOO S•n Jo.aqul11 •• M<>eArthur • Newpon B••ch 9•m-6t>m Thin Dime Buys Plenty SEATILE <AP> -Got a long Christmas shop· ping list and an empty wallet? Don 't worry, there are plenty of gifts available for a dime or less. Reporter Richard Buck of the Seattle Times bought 60 items for a total of $4.24. But he found that you can'tjustdrop in any s tore. "I CAN'T UNDERSTAND anybody thinking like that," said one salesman when asked iC his store had any items for less than a dime. Among the budget items Buck found were: -A tiny clamshell. -A stick pin for mounting s tones. -A "donkey bead" good luck charm. A candy stick. A tree-shaped butter cookie. A one-foot piece of purple ribbon. A fishing bead. -A one-ounce fishing weight. Seven golf tees. A pencil. A blue balloon'. A lollipop with bubble·gumfilling. A IO·hour candle. A box of 24 birthday-cake candles. Ajuke box rendition of "White Cbristm~s.'' : ,-A postage'"paid postcard. IN ONE STORE, BUCK bought a party popper, two replacement Cbristmas·lghl bulbs, a picture' ' postcard and a green bow for a totafot47 cent.s. ' ' When he returned to his car·be found a $:l par1c· iag ticket. He had forgotten to put a dime in the meter. Mariners OKs Co~pany Merger Mariners Financial Corp., Santa Ana, and Fidelity Federal Savings and Loan Association, Glendale, have announced that directors have ex· ecuted an agreement for merger. Mariners is the holding company for the Newport Beach-based Mariners Savmgs and Loan Association. The acquisition will be made by exchanging Fidel~ty regular passbook savings accounts in amounts equal to $19.50 per share for each of 1,648,286 shareS of Mariners Financial. These accounts, which pay 5.25 percent annual lntere!lt. will be subject to certain restrtctlons as to withdrawal. • t • Dividend~ Due • ' Comprehensive Care Corp .• Newport Beach. bas aDnouoced a 6-cent semtanpual dividend on its common af.ock. . .Payment date is Feb. lS, 1978, to shareholders ol rec.on! Jan. 31. The company has reported net earnings or $248,000 or. 19 cents per share, for the secood . . quarter ended Nov. 30, compared with $186,000 for the Hke period last year. Net eamlngi year· to-date are 23 ce.nts a sb.,-e. compared wlth 28 cents for the like period last year. ~~~PUBLIC•,,.~ + AUCllON ~ HANDMADE PERSIAN Ir ORIENTAL RUGS ... , & RUNNERS NEW.~1f ALYSI~ They told Con~4ss t.hat in 1"°" s mall-and madlum·llae manufactl.lr~IW accounte4 for ~ perceqt ol b-*i as(etl and 41 percent. ol ~~ b1.tt. th•t the percinta1• h•<l tallen to ao and 28byJ.m • LJ &USI N•Sl .. ~ncentratlon tbey arauo, \t ••. .deldly H 1 b · u • r e a .. " e r a l i c gro)Nlh. w.i buainpis, the NS8A ariµ , a~te (01" 97 ~ent of cetbl prtpautidnt, 97 percent of ehewtni guYn, lJ)O ptrcent of ctcarettes •. lO~ perc~t of aluminwnprochs~ on. The 8la Threo o bl1 buslnes•. big 1overnment and bta labort oasoclatJon spokesmen assert, rule the country'and formulate t1. national Polley lbet: .. . .dlscollrages, handtcans . squeezes and ofte n d estroys small business. TheJr actions are counterproductive, lrtcestuous and self-servtn1 ln nature. As n result. only the scraps on the table a re Jett.tor everyone else ... ONE VOICE 1'9Jl business? It probably never will exist . Independent, self-concerned, proud and ambitious, the v~riOW\ layers of bwlineJ8*len are•joined on some iss1.1es, independ~nl oo others and openly antagonistic on the re!lt. . Whal worries and angers members of the Committee of Publicly Owned Companies is their belief that the giants are s opping up much of the available equity capital. starving the so-called second· and third-tier companies. The situation is not altogether the fault or the giants. but lies a lso in th~ increasingl y institutionalized nature of the investment business. PENSION AND m\.llual tund.J. , io•urers ~ bank·~dmlldstered trusts control much of lbe'eQuity capital avaUabfe. Belne larae. they rnust inv~t ln comp~_ies with swCICJent ewek outataodiq to .i>aorb t.be run.els. · Morflo\'er, the cecent· \nvestment climate has been uncertal"• l tadlne 01any portf ollo man 8$9 to seek the hl1h dl;.debd.s. •nd $~eurlty off qred bY. th~ nry· laraest co~poraUoe\l , As )l consequence, aay man•at'ti ol the. lets U~an &1-ot companies. ,t~ bl( ae~ b)gfer and expansion l& tbe rest •of the bualnesa wot-Iii 1• th.warted. • IF THERE IS any. •eneral agreement am<>nJ busine$s people ll is that Utey have a feeling or being Sl:?paraie~ from the larger c:ommuntty by cntlts. among them metnbers of the federal ealabUsbment. Business res"Ats tile polarization. lt fears the alienation. Jl insists it is a vital. integra l part of the n ational community. On that.. bus iness is in ~f(reement. 0 • APW ........ Mlp .... e Prope•e d Mexico·s proposed natureal gas · pipeline would run along the Gull of Mexico to the United States border. Pipeline construction work was stopped and 'Mexico an- nounced Thursday that it wlll not sell gas to the Unit - ed States because the coun- t r y w ould not m eet the price. Repl'ints Availallle By The Anoe lated Press "Give Yourself Credlt," an explanation of federal credit laws and rules and how they affect consumers, is again available. A lhinl printing of the book has been completed, accordin& to Rep. Frank Annunzio, D·Ill. He said people who asked for lhe volume when initial supplies were exhausted were placed on a wailing list and should receive their copies shortly. Single copies are available without charge from the Consumer Affairs Subcommittee, Room 212 Annex 1, 300 New Jersey Ave. SE, Washington, D.C. 20515. Over T he Counter MASO Ustings NMWt .. "9<1~< T~~ 8r'9'1f!' "" ltiW#tdP.· 0991!::?[ coa~•· Surv e< URe~n<o Stat Id Bell Arl<•8el ••Ill~ :~·,,. Dodpn JHAlrA" We"'911 FlallYllll 1( .. 110 . 1>1.-9rvT SIH• .... Tit Cp .. 10....W Hemll Lii DOOS l ast J S'• 2\.. 2'. I~ n \ \ • 1v. J " • 3V. 3\<c ,,,.. ••• 3~ .sv. 3:14 l>• 3~. 2 ? ChQ -J -i. -'· -·~ -"' _,..,. \I) -.... -~--''• -14 -1 ·-\') -~ -v. -~ -~ Ii. -~ -•;. -v. ""' -"' -'Al P<I. Up 29.1 Up 21.• Up 11 1 VP na Up U.7 Vp 14.l VP 14.J Up 17.S VP n .s up n.s Vp 11.S Vp 11.a VP 11.1 Vp II I Up II.I Vp 10.9 Up 10 S Up 10.S VP 10.• VP 10.0 Up 10.0 Up 10.0 Vp 10.0 Up 9 S P<L Oft 541.0 Off u.s Off 10.0 Off ro.o Off t.1 Ott t .1 Off t.I 8:: '·' ... Oii 1.l Off 1.1 Oft 77 Oft 7 I °'I 1 1 g:, 1.1 J 1 Off 1 I Off •• 1 Ott t ,7 Off •.J Otf 4.J g:' ...., .s.• Off 5.9 MUT UAL FU NDS INVESTING COMPANIES • NEW VORIC IA~l STOCKS I BUSINESS .. Friclliy'• Clo•ing Price! '· • I ' . ' • ........ .. ... •• . N r>Alt v PtLOT A. ~Offiees ~Often :K~ep \1'90 Muck _, I •• # By SYLVIA PORTER ---.. no.~ When• smaJI bualness or which l was a hall owner waa traruferred tolls employees and I wuforced lo 10 lhrolllb Lt.a records, I waa einbarrused to dlscover whal a paper cluU.er · hadbeenaccumul4ltedwhllottwasinmybands. • In lhe filea I found canoelled cbeekl daUng back m°"9 tl\an 20 years, job appllcatlom that had beeo tumod dOW'b more than a decade ago, correspondente that bad oo ,.._ evan ce to l.t7'7. Equally abocldna, I found several copies~ onecootract,aoout.-of-clateltwuanantlque. TYPICAL OWNEllS OF 8llALL bosineasei p:robtblf possesulmll•rcJutter. Tbua,uptdeJlnes; L.... One central file iJ ad"uate to protect a con~c:t perm~nUy. . 1 But remember that there are close to 1,000 feder .. :J. state regulaUons covering ret.cnUon of records. These .., widely on tax, unemployment and workmen's compenutii . So before diJposlng of tmwanted and needless rocO'nb', check with theatate tax comJnlssioner'1 o!fice. '.~ Dlstani aQdlt reports after 101ean: audit work pa~rs artertbreeyean. · .. Get rid or general 11•11 correspondence alter .I tiv• years and eliminate Money's 111 11 clualfiod documents -' ·" inventories, report& and Worth receipts -after 10 . :1 years. Dlspoee of contracts 20 years .U..r, ,etUeroent. AJS<> throw out requests for services artd tequt~ltions for sdppliers one year after the enll oftheflscalye.ar. n DISCARD ACCIDENT REPORTS. lnjury claims and, settlement papers SO years afterisetU~nt. :J I Eliminate appUcation~. chabg~«td terminations arter. .Jive years. Seven years, i' long enough to keep attendance: ·\-ecords: em~Jojree ijclivit.Y fil~ become more clutter lwO! ;·years after they have been.supeIISeded . · t Dispose or employee contracts six years after termina, lion. Getridof~tl~ds thr4*years after termination. 1 Oarr.lshments' can be elim~ated after five years; it(. aur•nc"e reeoJ'ds. for employees /ll"e needless 11 years after termination;tttne~ardS"gcrungtbe discard heap after three years; and union agree_lt).INl~*~~dinJ? to the Walsh-Healey Act, maybe thro <rill IJ't:erthlee y~ars. TRllOW etJT 8 UILDING AND maintenance reco alter 10 years, unless there are special reasons to save them Dispose of btds and awards three years after termln lion : price lists, when obsolete; purchase orders and requi lions, three years· after termination; and quotations, afl one year. According to the Code of Federal Regulations. you c destroy empfoyee withholding records, excise exempti certificates, excise reports in manufacturing and excise r ports at the retail level after four years. Copies of "Keeping Records. What to Discard," will sent to those who mail a postcard to Consumer lnformati Center, Dept. 625 E . Pueblo, Colo. 81009. lt has some valuab hints andit'sfree. Pre-holidaty Rally r.: . . Rolls· A,~iig 3rd Day )q-E! yotut (')\'}>) -Jl>'f1i~0~tock market. advance broadly.Fay in the third ff.Y of. a brisk pr~·Cbristm rally. • • ~ ... >r " .. ~· .:J: ~ -;;:r, The Dow Jcmeii average· or 3G.indualriits. up 15.69 points·· WednesdayandThuraday,rOHanotbec8.06to829.87.. -1 Gainers outnumbered losers by better than a 2·1 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed tssues. . . I ... I • . . . . .. -~ ..... ._ ... AJetwt." P1l o r LISC AT YOUR SERVICE I N~TIONAL ~llejfdtl9 DOtml PoUein EAR PAT: My aunt and 1 thlnlc l my late uncle may have bad veral small We insurance policie3 ch have been Jost. Can you repeat· e name of the organizatioo that ps trace missing policies? : G.K.,CostaMesa The l.n.stJtute or LUe lnsuraoee bu continued its missing policy ques· alre service due to a low Hccess tlae BuUD,._ Beacb area can be ob- talae4 by ,.._., that city'• Senk>r Cllllea c.ier a& 53t·ts87 or &3f.535Z. P-.i p..,.. P*Wleetlfl lights Examined Precautiom Reduce Fire Rula WAS HING TON (AP> -The Consume r Product S afety Com · mission has urged consumers to take a few minutes to examine and test their Christmas lights before plug. ging tbemorwiring thelrtrees. Just a few basic safety precautions can reduce the risk of fire or electric shock from defective lights, such as those with cracked sockets or frayed ~res, the commission auld, Thursday. sued about potential huarda. In one case, the commission said th :it Mark et Research Imports. Incline Vllla•e, Nev., is voluntarily withdrawing from sale certaln Christn}as light replacement bult:f lm· ported from Taiwan which m~ de- fective. .. IN THE OTBEB case, the com· 'misalon said New York Merchandise Co., New York City, voluntarily stopped selling certain Uebt sets that may have detective bulb sockets. te. IU warns that a private search or a missing policy or uaknown eflclary can be quite upeDSJve an lncllvtdual to undertake. One etbod involves contactlnJ the state partment of lnsu.rance ln whatever ates tbe deceased was known to ave resided. Request the names ud DEAR PAT: I'm laking my vaca· lion and doing some painting inside our house. Can you find out if there is any possible W!Y to J>OUr paint from one can into another w1tbout making a total mess? Using a funnel is the most semible solution, but I don't havetbepaUenceforthat. P . W., Mission Viejo There ls a trtck to tbJs, accorcllni to several prolenlorfa l painters con· tacted by AYS. Me. you pour paint MORI': THAN Z,200 injuries from holiday dc<'orntlons were treated last ycnr in h<>1pitul emergency rooms acr06s Ulc country, one·thlrd of them cuus('d by Christmas ltghta, ll said. The aacncy's words of cauUoo were acfompitnlod by two warnings it is· The replacement bulb~ involved have a thin strand of wire about one· ~ighth to one-favrth of an inch long, whicn may protrude from the solder tip at the base of the bulb. ''When they're finished singin', do we iust smile or clop or what?" addresses of cu.rrently Ucented in· 1urance companles ln each atate and write to each company. from one caa bato anotber caa or con· c . ___ .. .J p ked J &alaer, bold a clean wooden sUck rUIAJll, QC n acrcNa the open.la« of the can with the For Gay Fashions paJat la I~ Tit.la belpa tbe paint now freely aad euUy lnto the second can. Wben pourln& from a small eaa, grasp It with three fingers and a thumb, uabl& the badex finger to bold CHICAGO <AP> -People craned their necks the atlck verUc.ally ln place as you d ed r rward as the models strutted ln pour. WbeD poorlng from a large an press . o . CID, both bands must be used to lift fron~ of a Jam-packed aud1enc~ at the first gay the CID ud poar the paint. Keeping fashion show sponsored by a maJor refailer here. Another traclog method lnvol\IH checking &be ''Insurance" llstiDgs ln &be Yellow Pages phone directory (available at county libraries) of the cities where the deceaaed lived. Again. write letters of lnqu.lry to all tnsurance companies listed. Be sure to tndude the deceased person's full name for women as well as married>. date of birth, death and "guesa .. date of the time when the mystery policy Jllay ha_vt!been taken out. the suck ID place ls more dllflcult, · but It CID be doae. The furs were gorgeous and the models were stunning -both the fem ale models and lhe female impersonators. cut. 'fknior Shopper• Sa""'" 'UEAR PAT: I've heard that there l e a number of businesses that offer scounts to senior cituens and that rtain services also are discouqted for older persons. Is there any source for getting a list of these discounts in Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach? . DEAR PAT : I have a problem with THE SHOW, ORGANIZED BY gay members the Popular Science Book Club. We of the staff at Bonwit Teller Fur Salon and held at keep receiving bills for two furniture a popular gay nightspot, featured SO men's furs building books. We didn't order these plus specially selected women's fUr fashions. books, never r~ceived them and don't Jt was a benefit to help rai.c;e money for a gay want them shipped at this Uroe. My community cent.er dedicated to a gay bartender, letters ~rin~ ~o response, only_ Frank Rodde III, who was slain under mysterious anotherb1ll.Help. circumstances last spring. J .T .. ElToro · s .J .. Costa Mesa · Furs were selected because gays account for. No explanation was offered by the IO percent of the furs sold al Bonwit's and 2S percent book club's spokesma.n, but you.r •c· offur sales nationwide, the salon said. cOllDt will be adja.sted and billing!• The Costa Mesa ...,enlor Citizens Club will outline available dlscoanta In Costa Mesa If you phone 556-5391. Information about senior discounts in wtll ~~ as soon as the computes· IJlGHLIGlfl'SINCLUDEDawhite,floor·length catches up with the correctloo. fox fur ponc ho, a classically cul $15,000 golden sable. a $22,000 Alaska snow lynx cape and ·.Jimmy and Me Oh, How We TUJO Danced 6-year Sentence Imposed WASHINGTON CAP) -A $10,000-a·year gov- By JU RATE KAZICKAS emment clerk who ad· ._ •• l .. ,.,..... . d b 1 · W ASl"UNGTON -1 danced with the president m 1 tt e em e z z 1 n g . . $857,000 in federal mass· <>£ lhc Umte(j States the other ni.gbL transit funds laces a sis~ Jimmy Carter and I twirled around the floor of year stay in prison the East Room of .the White House at a Christmas · William Siber.t, 30, • • r U.S . District Court to all a $75,000 Russian sable. Salon owner Irwin Ware said some expressed , concern that the event would exploit gays for the sake of publicity. However, he said, he had more complaints from conservationists, who were con· cerned about endangered spicies, than from gay rights advocates. COMMUNITY CHURCH, CONGREGATIONAL 811 Hellotrope Avenue, Corona del Mar CHRISTMAS EVE CANDLELIGHT SERVICES 7:00 & 11:00 PM . Christmas Music by the Choir and Soloists. Christmas Carols CHRISTMAS DAY SERvtCE • 10:00 AM party for t~Washington 1m~~ carps. drew that sentence l.d THIS UNTRY BOT trrlOM GeorgJa danced earlier guilty plea. He s m oothly, llke an alu~nU! ot the Arthur Murray will begin serving the -;:===================== ~.chool, as the Ma.~rne Corps band played term after completing a ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH Moonlight ~renade. . . six-month term on an un· WELCOMES YOU The pres~dent danced Wltb anyone liberated related weapons charge. l209 YJa L.Wo. tttwport IHdt • '75-0ZIO · enough lo cut m. · Sally Steele of The Enid (Okla.> Daily News SIBERT, a financial CHRISTMAS EVE and Eagle started the mad whirl by sidling up lo assistant in tne Depart· 7:30 PM -FAMILY EUCHARIST• Carter as be dancea \Vilh his wife, Ros alynn, and ment of Transportation. 10:30 PM -CAROL SERVICE asking, "Are you ready a dmitting s pendin g 11:00PM-HOLYEUCHARIST to be tapped?" nearly all the money on ·•certainly," carter such items as a $60,000 CHRISTMAS DAY smiled. home , 12 1 u x u r Y 8:00 AM -HOLY EUCHARIST Mrs. Steele then did a u lo m o b i I e s • a 10:00 AM -HOLY EUCHARIST• • her bes t to fend ore houseboat and a topless rivals for the presi· b a r and g rill in ·cHILDCAREAVAILABLE dent's arms. When the downtown Washington. -======::;::===========:::-first of a long line of He was arrested Aug. 5 • CARTER women asked to cut in, as be stepped off an she said, "Al this mo· airliner in Las Vegas. mcnt. no." But, later, Nev. with $59,000 in his reluctantly, she gave possession. \.\ay. Feder al authorities J Colleagues sai d said they expect to r e· later they discussed the cover moot of the loss by M iddlc Eas t. energy getting deeds and titles and the economy as they to his property. two-s tepped with the IN A RECENT in· p:resid ent. I could onl y murmur "Merry terview with The Christmas" in his ear and ponder whether there Washington Post, Sibert was hair spray on the presidential hairdo before said be felt no remorse Carter was snatched away by a woman with a about bis crime. southern accent. "I don't feel Uke I've "I DIDN'T KNOW I WAS so popular," Carter said, as he fell into the arms of yet another partner. done a crime against the government," he said. ''I don't think it's a living thing. The government's CHRiSTMAS at CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH 760 Victoria St., Cost• Meta 831·1811 In W .. t Costa Meu -also Hrvlng Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley 1r.u Hamlflon •Ht lrom BrOOkhursU CHRISTMAS EVE Children's Service -7:00 p.m. Candlelight Choral Service -11 :00 p .m. CHRISTMAS DAY Worship In Word & Song -10:30 e.m. NURSERY CARE screwed so many people P••torr. L. v. Tornow a Etwtn KlllUI in so many different Minister of Mul4c: Rodney RelM 1~ Nol counting the time he danced with a group of Georgian cloggers on a stage on the South Lawn, the press party was only the,,ttiird occasion when Carter danced publicly at the'Wblte House. Once, the Carters spontaneously fox-trotted to a tango in the entrance ha ll of the White Hoa.se as the band welcomed gues~ arriving for a state dinner in h onor of Wes t German Ch•ncellor · Halmut ways that I don't feel ._ ___ ......,______________ .... Schmidt. • AND A FEW WEEKS AGO, when tbe state vlsil of Morocco's King Hassan II was canceled, there was an impromptu dinner dance for lhe senlor White House staff. But this administralion doesn't dance into the wee hours of the night after formal state dinners, like Gerald and Betty Ford did. As for the party, press corps veterans of White House Christmas bashes were appalled at the buffet which featured ham, roast beef, saltines, processed cheese spread and California wine. . ..IF JIE•S SUCH A P()PVUS'I' prealdtnt, he cooJd bave made this a bottle party," grumbled one rei>o?Wr. •'It would have been a lot snore f\m. · · And there was a lot of grumbllnc about lbt lon1 wall on the rtteivlng Une. the 1001 lines at the tables, the crush on the dance noor. Tnre: But then again, I danced With the pres!· deaf. the ottt.r n1Sht: I've hurt my govern· ment. The eovemment ls· not something that bas a feeUng.0 Sibert, who once served six years in a Maryland prison tor boueebreaklng, said he considered the covem· ment inept for trusting him to handle millions of dollars in public money. Rec.ord Travel SAN· DIEGO <AP> - 'l'hit was a record year for alr travelers at Lindbergh Field . Manager M .A . McDonald said more than five mWJon persona arrived or left the airport by early December. ~~ No SelleE Needed I I • MERftY CHRIS TtuS from DOUG'S FLOWER SHOP 1899 PARK AVE. ICof"'ner of Pork cmti I 'lt+i St t Costa Me\o Phone bll-3944 OP.EN FRI. & SAT. 9-8 OPEM CHRISTMAS -DAY 9 a.ill. to 3 p.nL ..... 631-3944 for < Some Rate Changes for PacificTelephone customers On December 13, 19'77, the California Public Utilities Commission authoriud. dwnges in the way Pacific Telephone charges for some oi its servic'f:S. These changes will go into effect December 24. Intrastate Long Distance Rates Rates for some intrastate long distance calls have been reduced slightly. The following chart shows the new rates. Rates for Intrastate Long Distance Calls (within California) lnlt¥ll Period Each Aoa!IOl'IOI Mnule Alrh StollOn D Pe!soo == DKi coo Operotor l'J Classes OI s.vice rofe I Mn points 1 Min. I Mil. 3 Mt\.-AI 0c¥-AI HOtJs Doy Ew1ilg ~ Doy ~ Nigtl4 0-8 $0.10(1) lso~l) l$0.o6(1) iSo.20(6' .20(5' $0.62(3) $1.22(3) 5006(1) $004{1) $0.QJ(I) &-12 .10(1) .08(1) .06(1) .62(3) 1.22(3) .06(\) .D4(1) .03(1) 13-16 .13(1) .1 1(1) .09(1) .25(5 ,SQ{l) 1.29(1) .oa 1)1 .Q5{1) 17· 20 .16(1) .14 .12(1) .35(5' .76(1) 1.36(1) .10 .09 .OS 21· 25 .19 .16 .15 .40(5) .83 1.43 .12 .11 .10 26-30 22 .18 .17 A5(5; .88 148 .13 .12 .II 31· 40 25 .21 .19 .50(5' 93 1.53 .14 .13 .12 41· 50 .28 23 .19 65 98 158 .15 .14 .12 51· 70 .31 .25 .19 .80 105 I 65 .17 .15 .12 71· 90 .34 27 .19 .95 112 172 .19 .16 .12 91-110 .37 .29 .19 105 1 19 179 21 .17(1) .12 111·130 .40 .JI .19 1.10 1.24 1.84 .22 .18(2) .12 131·150 A3 .32(1) .20 115 131 1.91 .24 .19(2) .13 151·170 A5 .32(1) .20 l.20 137 l.97 .26 .1~2) .13 171-196 .47 .32(1) .20 125 143 203 .28 .I 2) .13 196-220 .49 .33(1) .20 130 1A9 209 .30 ~3) .13 221·245 • .51 .J.XI) .20 135 1.55 2 15 .32 3) .l3 24&270 ·~1) 20 140 161 221 .34 .2.0(3) ··~ ~.~ [!t~!k1) . 1 , 771 .300 301·330 331·360 361·430 431-610 511-590 C>.«590 .5S • .21 u5 1.85 2.25 35 .21(3) 57 ..34(1) .21 150 1.71 231 .37 .21(3) .5$ . ~1) .21 t.65 1.77 237 '.39 .21(3) • 'J ~ .61 .36(1) 21 uo l.83 2A3 Al .2~2) 64 .35( I) .21 1.65 1.90 250 A3 .2~2) .66 .35(1) .2l 1.70 l.96 256 .45 2 2) 1>1 .35(2) .21 1.75 201 261 47 .24(4) The number in parentheses indicates I he number of cents reduction from the previous rate. Me~ge Unit Charges .i4 .14 .14 . ·.14 .14 .14 .14 Calls between points in the San Francisco-East Bay and Los Angeles metropolitan a~asthat have cost 5 message units for the first three minutes will now be bJled as intrastate long distance calls. The following rates will apply: ll'llt!OI Penod (Stooon) Eocn Addrtord Moo1e 00 Coo All ClasSllS ol 5eMce 1Mlf"t. I Mn I Min Doi Eveoog N~I 3 Min Day Evening Nigh! 16 .14 .12 35 .10 .09 08 Business Exchange Rates ln the Los Angeles, Orange County. Sacramento, San Dicto and " San Francisco-East Bay metropolitan areas measured individual line business and semi-public telephone monthly rates will be reduced by 50 cents and PBX trunk lines by 25 cents KeyTelephoneSy~ems There have been changes in the pricing of lines and stations. Certain rates and charges have been increased. Private Branch Exchange Service A surcharge of 7 percent will be applied in addition to the existing 15 percent surcharge on rates and charges for the NA4-09 PBX service. .Customer Provided Equipment Certain service visit charges involving customer provided equjpment have been increased. Service for the Deaf Busin(!fl organizations which tTansmi1t messagei for the deaf may subscn'be to wttimecl business message service for the number of active teletype ,. machincS at each business location equipped for sending m~es to the deaf. Such buainessa must furnish evidence of serving the deaf in order to qualify for untimed aervi~. Mobile Telephone Service There have been increases ln rates and charges for Mobile Telephone Service. Pacific lldephone has bter\ ~to replace its existing manually operated mobUe systemt by more modem equipment within two years. . Customns with this type of~ will receive more detailed information later. . lelephone Answering Service Certain rates and charges for switchboards 1md equipment furnished to • Telephon.Answerlng Service will be incruacd.. t I Other Changes Ram andc:N,..forcatain ~us equipment andtervice connectkll\ •and ~wm be lncrtated. However, the charge. for~ ltdu.tt(a~of ~to~CUltomer)h.avebecn rtduced. II~ Nin any ,....._about that changes, plt•contact your local ~ ClfRce.11-phone tunbe ii found in the front p1ge1 of your ~ .... @Pacific~ ' I . ~ • • . . . ' • . ~ ' • 1 • I . ... I '" ' INSIDE : •Sports •Television •Boating •Horoscope DAILY PILOT Featudg_~~·-·---~~ I ., Christmas Past Christmas is a time for children, people often say. The first glimpse of the glittering Christmas tree, the magic of still believing in Santa Claus, the wonder of the carols sung on Christmas eve: all are more beautiful In childhood. This year we asked Orange Coast residents about their favorite Christmas past. Most people looked back to childhood, byt one woman said the best was yet to come. -JudithOLson Thomas Riley Orange Cour1ty Supervisor 'f/tom.o.-. Riley said. ··My most memorable Chnstma.-. was when I got n Slletland pony named Jannice. l must llave been about 6. I was pret- ty young and my father used to have to saddle 1t up." Riley, who grew up in a small toum m V1rgmia, also said he unll never forget Christmas Eve on Guadalcanal dunng World War II. when his troops had a mrdmglit Mario Hromin Mrs. Richard Duncan Stewart hably the most emotional story while their parents Cl1ristm.as," he said. shop. nostalgic feeling, what was in our hearts. we we re a very clo se family." ''This has been my best Christmas!" ex· claimed Mario Hromin, a shepherd at Mattmatha Village, Santa Ana. "I've '>ecome a Christian and J 'm getting into a Chris· tian rock band. It's all coming together.,. Mrs. 0 . W. Richard, a long -time NewP,ort T . Duncan Stewart a Beach resident; so.id she Corona del Mor buiMer. r e m e m b e r s n o laughed when he thought particular Chriatma8, oJ his most memorable ju.st the warmth of them Yule. "It was almost dis· aU. illusionment," he said. .. Hanging stockings 1 mass with hidden candles. ''That was pro· Jlromin, who keeps vigil with two sheep, Sweetie and Ruby, tells children the Christmas was always rather in· "Santa Claus came into teresting. We got a lot of our living room and little things," she said. handed out popcorn "We lived in snow coun· balls. But I noticed he try in central Wiscon8in. had on my father's I just remember the old shoes." t Dr. Norman Watson Christmas was always a fami- ly ajfair w1tl1 "all the aunts, un- cles and cousins," recalls Dr. Norman Watson, chancellor oj the Coast Community College district. 1 Watson, wl1n wa.~ bom in San- 1 ta Ana. said tlw relatives alternated between his family's home m Tuslm and the aunts' Elinor Baggett Christmas memories, aU sorts of images come to mind. "One of my Jirst impressions is just seeing and smelling the boughs of the tree," she said. "There was a big red ball harig- ing at the end o'f one of the boughs. I must have1 been 2 or 3 and it was at · Qtnlt's hoµse. She told me . ' ~just gone -Loa Young teenager in Long Beach were the most beautiful. Long Beach waa f iUed with military personnel then and her family opened its doors to tl1e young men in uniform as well as . friends and relatives during the Christmas holidays. • and uncles' homes in the San Joaquin Valley. out the back Jfd there were toys tmder< ·. ' :• Ms. Baggett;on.~t. said her best Christmas is ]let to come, however. "In those days the emphasis was not on material things. The fellows were homesick and they would crowd around the table. What a nice ~xperience it ~· We didn't even know a lot of the boys," she said. The years the,11 celebrated the holidays m the Valley were m ost exciting. "They had big barns with all J..-inds of hay," he said. Wilen Elinor Baggett. pro· prietor of n Newport Beacl1 travel agency. describes her Loa Young, pre!ident of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District board of educa· tion, said the years during World War U when she waa a "Gifts were not important but meals with all the trimmings were. And being safe. That was w hat counted. "We're still in contact with some of the boys. They were all so handsome!" she added. .. .... /. ,,,.. .. f ,. •I ' i · .• · AV. Jorgensen ~~-- Christmas as a 7-year-old boy in Denmark is a highlight of A. Vincent Jorgensen's life. Jorgensen, former board presi- dent of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian, was born in the U.S. but spent a year and a half in Denmark with his f amity when he was a child. · "There. they don't decorate , the trees tmtu Christmas Eve." he said. "The adults do it. They close off the room ond when it's done they Jet everyone in." Jorgensen said real candles were used on the tree then and 1t was beautiJuL when they were aLL aglow. Rev. Don Maddox The Rev. Don Maddox. church relations associate for World Vision. recalls his f i r!t Christmas a8 a minister at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church as one of his most memorable. Prior to that he had been "between churches," working in the credit department of a large store. "At st. Andrew's I felt loved and affirmed. 1 remember that Christmas Eve service and what: a super' thing it was for me." he said. lee Steelman, a San Clemente resiClent, remembers baking springerle every Christmas in WesfFronfart, Jll. "My mother was of German back9round." Lee Steelman she said. ••And we baked the .cookies every 11ear. It was a real ;traditUm. "It took three days. The first day the dough was mi.red and a · real anise flavor started going through the house. Then the next day we pressed the dough. "Tile next day we baked them: • This was a big part of our Christmas npertence." i • Mrs. sttttman. who grew up · in a Quaker family. aaid her • father al3o conducted an amateur chorus oJ miners alJd '· Jarmers and every year the # group performed The Mesliah. ..That always started OU1" 'i Christmas season. They had lov-· etyvoices." Las Posadas ·- The tradlUonal Las ,, Posadas once again is' ~ bathing the aged walla of ~ Mission San Juan Capistrano wttb candlelight as members of the Mexican· American community act out the joumey o( Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem. Laa Posadas (the journeyJ conUnues a tradition that be1an more than 400 years qo. Franclacan mis• •lonarles, wantiq to 1· teacb the concept of . Cbrt1t•1 birth, enllltecl · ~ Indians to act out tbe event. r\ The proce11lon tbl1 • )'ear waa held on ' alternative evmlnp at ·...ii· St. Edward's pariah. The final proce11lon b tonight at 1 p.m. at St. Edwards. Father Paul Martin, • ml11lon admiobtrator, said the proce11ion weaves tbrouch the j hallways 1topplnc at several closed doors. "It's really almost a dramatbation," be aaya. • .. Joeepb .... ,. then l'OOID at tbe ~'lb wife CS.l'OMIWJ, ... ., I. ,,,,· • • s i i" 1 ·· l I I ! . f .... ... Ill CWL V PILOT . . . .. . . .. . ' Candy Man . Still at It • SAN MARCOS CAP) -The Candy Man •5 still at it after 72 years. this k A few friends dropped by wee , • and Larry Forshee served them about 90 pounds of freshly homemade n>lnts, cara'mels, creams, nuts and coconuts dipped in chocolate. l Although nobody counted, more ~ple were there than last year when Forshee in· vited in 123 people for an afternoon and evening of sweet-toothing. Forshee, 79, was 7 when he sta~ed making candy beside his mother at Flint, Mich. d In 1928 he started his own can Y· making co~pany in Huntington Beach and by World War II h ad a chain of candy · shops. . three g Forshee's wife died ~ears. a o, and he moved with his widowed sister m~o a_ mobile home in San Marcos. But, he still is a man who loves what he makes. , , .. ANN LANDERS /HOROSCOPE -. . I ' . ' ( with 1natertal at hand. S&TuaDAY,DEC.i4 I Steer aw&.y from sen.sa-. BJ SYDNEY OMAR& t 1 o n a 1 is m , c be a p Aall:S <March 21·· pt1bUcity. . April 19): Land, home, . SCORPIO <Oct. 23· •ecurity, deallnis with Nov. 21): Your range of oaewhoillnab~fworld interests broadens . otfantuj-thia&partof Travel, reading are like· a cnle. Pisces, Virgo ly to be involved. Your in· could~ prominent.-tellectual cur1osity J,y. Steer away from ele· roams far and wide. You ment of decepllon. Be meet energetic, dynamfo sure you are correctly people. Change, self· . quot.in• others -and in· expression are featured. aiat Qn same courtesy for SAGITrA.RJUS (Nov . )'o\&lMlf. 22-Dec. 21): Wtrat bad 'I' AV&UA (April 20· been taken !or gfanted llQ _,): ~ccent on vis-now becomes more Im· ltl abort journeys, rel·' port~rnt than you im-~=-wbQ. tal~ about. agined. Yes, family is in· aac!es, comoutments, wived -domestic ad- retponsibllities. Cancer. j u a t m en t f i g u r e s Capri com persons figure prominently. Taurus, 1n scenario. You get re-Scor_pio and Libra in· 1ult.s; persona who had dividualsarepartofyour been indifferent now personal soenarto. Make seem to take an avid in· intelligent concession to terestinyou.raffairs. Jovedone. GEMINI CMay21-June CAPRICORN (Dec. Larry Forshee is still sw;etening thif!gS with his homemade candy. "Oh yes," says Forshee of candy. I ' .. love it, always have. 20): Get rid of losing 22.J an. 19): Check sttuattoo. Your shQu.lder JegaUt.ies. be aware of de· ls worth more than sires or partner, mate. something to cry on by Let others send signals, those who constantly direct traffic. Be a good ' whine. ,'\lac>, you have a receiver. See what Is, not right to know what you 're merely what you dream, getting for yo~r ~oney. hope, wish. The dreams Views are vindicated. are important, but you You receive accolade must substantiate them from a distance. with solid base. • f I • Elderly's I By LEE UNDER I PHILADELPHIA I <AP> -The young and th e middle-ag ed I generally get regular checkups to help keep • j them in good health. But CANCER (.J~':'e . 21 · AQlJA.RllJS (Jan. 2;0· 111nesses Often Ignored July 22): Take m1~1a~1 ve; Feb. 18): Obtain valid s tr ess creat1v1.t y, hint from Caprjcorn originality, determ1na· message. Clear ~away tion to imprint style. tasks, details which re- Dance lo your own tune. eenUy have been isnored Member ot. opposite sex pr put asl,ae. You wW !ind makes declBion -you w a y s to i m ~ o v c either gain an ally or let services, to eli inatc dJseaseofold age which find out all about strikes one of evei,y five yourself so that yol.l can persons over 65 -the s leep peacefully." cent.er,nidltlabopedtbe go of situation that has budget leaks and a!ety battery of tests will result run its course. hazards. in a shorter testing pro-LEO (July23-Aug. 22): PISCES (Feb. 19- cedure "that will reach You do have a right to be March 20): Accent on thousands ofolder ~ple optimistic -intuiU ve in· p u r s u its which t es L acrossthecountry. tellecl is strongly honed. c r~ativity, build con. the elderly very often ! wait until they arc ac-j tually sick before they , see a doctor. 1 "They don't bother to c e n t er ob t a in e d a •·A lot of people are $200,000 grant for a brushed aside because pioneering three-year they are in their 70S and study to examine the 80s " Ward said. "We've best way to tr c at fou'nd undiagnosed ill· America's g rowing nesses like diabetes, senior citizen popula· h eart damage, brain tion, which today num· tumor, glaucoma and bers 22 million persons certain physical condi- over 65. lions which make it What begins as an ap· f)d.ence, massage ego. . "Part of the prob.lem · parent selb~ck is due to 'Your popularity in· \I ts not en~g~ physicians boomerangmyourfavor. creases; electricity of ta~~ genatrics se~ous-Cancer, Sagittarius and personal magnetism ll> Jy, . Cohen sa.ld1 • dAn~ Aquarius persons pl~y very much an evidence. 1 1 1 investigate an ache or pain medically because ' when they reel lousy l they consider it part or . I getting old," said Dr. L Morton Ward, medical d i r e c t o r o f t h e. Philadelphia Geriatic Center, where a com- plaint ls conslderea a problem. "Sometimes the prob· dangerous for an older lem is with the family. person lo continue living er his environment, not alone." the patient," Ward said. The experimental Sam found out, after a facility, which handles week of tests, X-rays only three patients a and consultations, that week, bas been calJed a worry over his wife's ill· -Mayo Clinic for th• ness created a mental elderly. strain that . led to the But the emphasis at brief blackout. the Baer Consultation medical schoo ~ on significant roles. Remain spend enough U~~ on free Crom family dis· If Dec. 24 ls rour.blrth· teaching geralrics. pules. day, your voice 1s un- VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sept. us ual, pleasant and c.om· 22): Stress versatility -mandang, comp,elhng. diversify, make new You h~~e a . sweet social contacts. Accent t oo th , e DJ OY, the on sociability, ability to ple~sures and treasures enlaree horizons without __:_oI_liI_e._~ _____ __ losing track · of basic.-------~-, values. Gemini, Sagit· tarius persons fi gure in . name WU Jenwq..lel~ C ""'ft! rr· • --'i ~.: ~:~ ;t t, •l. ..i • one patient! whose nr Cnhen CQict&l':~ ~r . ~ttl~~~~srm:e~~allo~ed 81 lot of dt -tl t . ass1sta'itt director h~~t when she walked. ferent pills daily, but who is ap~.roachlng 70 Another, nam_ed Sam, were these symptoms of himself. Too ~any . .fen1*t{lidn't know she and Diapcstic center is bl• +aJHJar disease, a n o t on p b 1 I l c a 1 swollen thyroid, and diagnosis alone. The that a rash occurred mental, emotional and because she worried too social areas also are much about her married evaluated. The end re· children. suit: a super examina· In rural areas, especially, there's a great need for geriatric services, Cohen said. "Doctors consider it a too time-consuming practice because most elderly want somebody to talk to them besides getting treatment.'' He said smallpox, tuberculosis, diphttieria and polio are diseases medicine has con- quered, "but we still scenario. A wish is a·· fulfilled. Seed planieairi . ·. - LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et.' l . . reeent'l>ast bears fruit. ·~ · 22> : one-step.at-a -time· -= -e"'"r _n_o-=::cn==;';=-s went blank for ·• few old age? A warn.Ing of t b I Ii gs hav e e en minutes at a cocktail stroke? Cancer? Heart. brushed under the rug party and all he had attack? with the comment, had t~ drink was ginger "You can't bla1!'!e ~11 'Your'e ol.d;, what do "l feel like I was born lion. . again a new me:· Jen-I)r. William Whelihan, nie ;aid after her chief clinical research checkup. "It's great to . psychologis t at the ·don't have enoug h answers to many dis- eases of the elderly." approach actually gets you where you are going. Those who advocate otherwise are not really ale illness on old age. said you ex_pect. .. Both were past 65, and . Dr. J . J. Cohen, the cen· To hght senahty -the concerned with y9ur wesrcu~FPL/IZA BAU!OAl~LAND progress. be s pec1f1c Newport 8e0<h m Ma"'811.e about details -do your. 54114121 111s.1<i01 homework, be familiar-.. ________ _ Posadas Loss Of Christmas Spirit? <From Page Bl) is with child.'. and the f I ' ,. •• fl I " . H, ,, DEAR ANN LANDERS: About 10 · years ago you ran a col- umn from a reader who mourned tbe loss of the true Christmas spirit. Hunt it up and run it again. We need it more now than we did then. - A GYPSY FROM POUGHKEEPSIE DEAR GYPSY: Here it Is .-and I'm afraid you are right. Dear Ann Landers: Someone circulated an essay around the office written by a man named William Kirchoff, whom A•• Lattclers p r essed my views perfeGlly. Kirch o ff s ays Christmas is dead. The American people have s\ood it up against the wall and executed it. From its grave, a ghost has r isen. The ghost calla itself "Christmas," but it's a poor imitation of the real thing. the nylon beard and the red satin suit that retails !or $14.96. He comes rid· ing lnlo town, not on a sleigh with reindeer, but in an open-lop converti· b~. surrounded by six half·naked beauty con· test winners. A month early. When the kiddies sit on bis knee, he listens to Christmas tree was what they want, then green and itsl'l)elled like tells them where to drag a tree. The ornaments their parents to buy were pretty. Some were these goodies. Santa has home-made. Today, a gone sJight.ly com · green Christmas tree -mercial. a live one -is rare. The Worst of afl, the spirit "in" tree is white, silver of Christ[])as is gone. or ,pink,. It sparkles with Family aet·togethers sprayed-on stuff. The are now out of the ques· lights blink lo keep time Uon because people are with a b1dden stereo that bUly with oft1ce parties. plays Cb.rtstmas mualc .. And that'• another And this brinp me to story. Booze flowa like the next -hie change. lt'a be1q ptped 1n from "Sllent Nlebt" Just the city l'elen01r. Steno------------------~-doe an• t rn a k e l t grapben smooch behind Weddmg Cl11d mgo.gement announcft!NftU ""' on anymore. It bu to be water eoolen and fll.ln.1 . l don't. know. He'• a ' .friend of someone who works here. I can't. quote the essay verbatim because I don't have it, but it ell- The change that bit me finit was the tree. When I .was a boy, a Sunday tn the Daily Pilot. F<lr'TTU are a~ at all ' sexy, like "I Saw Mom· cablneta wltb men Daily Pilot of/ices or by calling the F'toJw11 Depart· m y Ki as in I Sant a whose ftnt names they ment,642-4321. .. Claua." The wont ln· wouldn't dare uae any To avoid disappointment. prwptetlvt brldt• are. dJ1nity ls "Santa Baby." other day of the year. ~t~ io have their ~g ltone.t, with a black· It , comes back every All th1a 1n the name of. and·WhUe QWslJI of the bride or of the couple._ lo the year, Uke an itch. Chrtatmu. Fta1uru Department on.t ~ek before the Wfdding. Poor old Sant.a is no Chrlatmaa, the one . b4ock nd . 1 on I er the Jo via 1 day of tbe year set ulde ·I Engagemettt announcement•. tWh ~ ,,; aenUemen who put.a can-. for Peace on Earth . t0hite glouJI of the f~ure bride or l'M covpl4, muat d y c an ea l n t b e Good Wlll Toward Men'. tteftwJd by the Features DepartfM'fll liz wetlu ~for•· ., chtldten't stockings. Ho, They coulcln •t leave lt ~;:"'-=wedcfing===dat:;=e.;;:=:=:::::=:=:=:=::=:=~ ho, ho. He 11 the guy alone. TbeJ bid to ro -Crom Central Caltinl in lll, • 1\1 ,.. ,.. ,.. r-,.. r-r-r-r-r-,... r-r-r-,.. ,.. r-,.. ·"' I 5~ ~ ~ : ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ' .,.. • ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i!,,, :t~~ ,,.. ,,.. "' ,,, ,,, ,,, .,, "" "' m m "' "' "'m .. , nt ~;:op~~»~~;:o;:o;:o~;:o~~~;:o~» 9 o... l:t ,... ,.. ,.. r;; r-r-r-r-,,. r-i-,... ,.. ,.. .... ,.. ,.. ,.. ~h ~ ~:. ~ : ~ )lo ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~ " ... ; ~ :ill ~ ~ ):) l1 ;:a ."O ;:o l1 ;:a ;:a '° '°,,,, ,,,, ,,,, ~ ~ ,..,..,..,_,..,..,..,..,..,_,..,_~,..,..~,..,_ ~s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~!~~~~~~~!~~!m~!i~~~ l.JN 13EL 1li t and kill it. response is. 'we have no room'" D E A R A N N He explains that at the LANDERS: ! happen to time a Roman festival have the 1111Sfortune of was going on in the city. having the very same "It was like trying to eet name as a very f~mous Into San Juan Capi.stl'ano pe~son. You can t tm-on the swallows day," he ag1ne what effect thls laughed. has 0!1 peo~le I m~t ~or. The procession travels the rm1t time. 1t s l!l· down the south wing and credible the stupid finally ends up at Serra things they . say· What Chapel, where the doors amazes me is that they are opened joyously. seem to think they are being original. Martin says that in I know I'm going to past years students from have to put up with this the mission school's forever but I'm writting eighth grade were in the hope that you ~ill. chosen to Pc;>rtray the ..!.~~·~ ·Send Last Minute Gifts By Wire -publish my letter !or the, r o 1 e s. Tb u ye a r, benefit of others who however, the Mexican· A 0 share the problem . Americaa!amilies in the 6f.,,A .~?-"'.AI · Maybe the boobs out community made tbe ar· v-_!._ there wbo think they are rangement.s. . · being clever will learn While St. Edwards ls ~!!~S..i'°9q~~-~·•~1~MacA11~~h~ur~~·Nwi~~"'°'~"~Bfte~m~9~·,"'~-6p~m~!!· ~ aomethlne today. handlinl the final Las..: Th an ks , Ann. -Posadu thi1 evening, DALLAS TEXAS Misalon San Juan ~'-:Jl'VRV>r .,.I' D~AB' TEX'.: Here's· Capistrano, which wlll you leUer IMd don't H· be celebrating its 201st pect It te ellaace Christmu will present a u7tblq. Clods die bard 1peclal choral perform· ~ _ •pedlll)' . .-e wllo a nee of Handel 'a 'Twas three days before .:tb=l=•k:..&be=y:...are=.:..:.;,_:.::...;•Y:..· __ M_e_s_si_ab. ___ ---:--, Christmas and all through the store , 50 % off' Decorations, Ornaments and more FOR CHRISTMAS LIVE and PERMANENT •Wreaths · • Center Pieces •Wall Decorations Imported Hend M•d• OANAMEN-'fa, PUTH!RID IHAD8, 91LK l'LOWEM "°"' 'A.ROUND 1HE WORLD. UNUSUAL GIP'T and IJllCQI' l'ftMS .. • • d ~ ~: •• ••• " 1 ..... - TONIGHT'S LA TEST· LISTINGS Te ' • : l \ '1 ..,. .... ~~ ......... 19 ~that -,,....... ""' """ .... ..,.,. tor -llnO!tlW. (At*Mled) ·~m&T wtlK .. ~In Fine An ... Gwat: Morloft Stllilmen. ~ -rltlantlQllM. t:00• ~lllLD • .,,. OMdly ~· Jim la clllPed br •*"t • ...-io· ly ............ (~ UIWlll) who putt him thr«K19h an elab«•t• ........... under. 01M Of 111¥ ue'~ • ~ • 9 JOHMDINYIR •• flloc*y Mountain ant- ,,. .. Vlllwte ...,,_, Ol- '11a NewtOfl•Jolln and ... ...... ... "°"" 0--lnttlle~ ... cla' llllNd "' Color9do. (fQ .JllBN ...... GullCs l<ltlty McNchol. Ralpfl C.,,_, .._.._. Faltla Fi..St. Olb9't. Gaelftet liMtglr, • .litMP/~ .V**9 George C. Scott s'tars as the staunch believer Abraham in the three hour and 20-minute movie special "The. Bible," airing tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel2. "TM "**"" °' The Open Heatth" Jeal\ """"*d"• noee.lglc Po'-frall llbout .. cir.-Of .,.,,.,.,. °' a .... town 111n11y. Ralph dream• abol.lt tlking • beautJtul gVI IO tne ptWI\, lather aboUt a tonune to be made and mother wi.... !Of dllhea from tne IOMI OrpMum. .. * * "The Blble" (1HI) Geof've c. Scott, ,,..., O'Toot.. JOfln Hu.ton nar.,.IH Ille look ol a.n.la, r9COOntlnQ "*''' c:re9tlOn, tall, IUl'Vfval, llnd lndomll•ble llllth In the fvture.(R) 0 UTTL.f DAUMMEA &at An Ofl>h.ned drummer boy er"-•t the IMl'9W °' the Chftllt Child tuet .. tine klnge .,. on.tng tNlt gHl8 end ,.... he hu nOUllng lo ol¥9 --.pc. eon;.(~ (R) • MOVm ***~ "BIU. lklH" ( tMe) Fred Allen. llnO Cfoeby. If-Mo ....... Pf()- ...... Ole aocwe In trlll ~ ftled ,.,.,... CIO!Mdy. (2 In.) • F1flllHG LINE 10:00 0 QUINCY "Sullad Be Thy N~" Wiien a priell who~ CfUMded agllnat • por. nograplly publlltMf (Jotln Saxon) dlaa In • brOthel, CMncy becofttaa llwolved In • ~ QOntro--.y,jA) •co.•mir MltCIETIAlL ......... "* ,..,,,. "' UClA 8r\llna ea MCNIM ...aAL "E\19 Of etwtatm. £w" An --*"tlon of h ..... of Ole WOf1d _, h MUon .... ~ 1971. D MOVIE Oaa•11el Lbtl11g• 8 l<NXT (CBS) Los Angelea 8 l<NBC (NBC) Los Angeles • 9 DONNY & MANI Peul Lynde ION Donny and Marla and 1111 Olmond den for a gala llll'llly ltYle l'lolldey °"" tlrftlon. The Mormon Tal>- ernacte Cflolt .... Mo be leetured. • • • "Kam8fadeehaft" 0932) Directed by G.W. Pabet. Frend! mlMf'I are aided by Ulalt a.m.n counterf;>arte If'! a coal mine on the FrllnCO-Oer· rrtenbord«. I KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles KASC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles I KFMB (CBS) San Diego KH.J-lV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCST (NBC) Sart Diego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles e KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles ·CAAC>l~ ANDFNIMDe au.at: Alen Alda. • TANCHAINa IOWL Florida State UnlYwlllty VI. Texu Tech UnlV«llty fll G WASHINGTON WUK IN REVIEW t0:209 Ne#I 10:IOI NEWI LATINO C0ff80RTIUM • KOCE·TV (PSS) Huntington Beach 8:30 D THE FOURTH KIHO Anlrnal1 of IM lorett IOllOw • brllllant etar to Be1hle- "P•lhe In The WUoer-" A llltual ~ on the lmplW)1 ol Klno'a dlecov9t- les end etudlee of nor1h- ~Hew Spain. Million 'Lost' Nielsen Dials ·Turning O ff? NEW YORK <AP ) -New figures confirm the loss of more than 1.1 million bouseholds from the t elevision· audience na- tionwide from a year ago, A. C. Nielsen Company said Thursday. But the Wlexplained decline may beebblng. The company said diaries kept by 100,000 families from all the · country's major cllles last month' verify tbe accuracy of a downward trend in the fi gure for homes using television. or HUT. Obtained from ratings meters on the aets or 1,200 Nielsen families. the HUT fiturea have indlcated an el1bt percent decline daytime and three percent decline n i&htUme between March and November. DIA&IEI AllE ISSUED durioi th• ao·called "a wee pa" to measure local audiences, and they were used tut month to de- • termlne whether the trend de· tect.ed by tbe meters was actual lnatead of the result or a com· puter or sample error. .. Ttaat'1 wbat I have re1arded u the principal problem, the ~llblllt¥ that 1omethin1 was wron1," CBS research chief. Arnold Becker remarked. "I thlDk that a reuonable person bN to take the "1Utude that, in· deed, Ht1'1'leve1'are down." However, ABC Vice President Paul Scnkln dlsall"eed. .. Jt'a bard to say it's a real eba:nge and there's somet.blng wrong with television when we 're s till investigating it," he declared. "As far as we 're con- cerned, the jury is still out." B U T SONKIN n oted that figures provided by the Arbitron rating organization have but- tressed the Nielsen numbers . According to Nielsen, the loss was 870,000 households daytime and 260,000 households at night. While questioning th e ·significance of HUTs, NBC re· search bead Bill Rubens said that figures so Car this month nearly match those or last December. He added that that average time individuals watch television each day bas cllm bed from four hours and 43 minutes since 1951 to a relatively stable six hours and 23 minutes lutseason. "WHAT WE'RE DEALING with is a very high commitment in terms ot bow'& ol viewing - but verY consistent in the last four years," Rubens said. He also described as probably aberraUonal HUT figures for years in which ratings break re- cords with auch programs as the summer Olympics, "Gone with the Wind" and "Roots." Referring to defect.s in the Nielsen computer program and sample that brought down HUTs in 1975, the NBC executive con· eluded. "These lblngs don't exist now. They have put in many more coot.rob." Wnrld Yu le Special T1M PBS Network wW present • teebnlcal tour de force on Cbriltmu Eve, •hell lb produc-Uon of ••aan.tmu AroUad taa. ·WorN"wUI *II ft YI I Htelllte. The ~.1. at '10 on kCIC'l', Qa11111l JI. Will feature Jin n- mote1 from Bethlehem and JerwaJem In. t.111 Hor, Wad, New helud,......,. Bayarta, Lon· •oa:, rrance'a Loire Valley, Jamalea ln the Brltlala W..t In.:. dl••.t. and Columbia, Soutb, CU'O.ue. World" 11 Ju1t part of a worldnle llftort. In all1~tb• pro- aram wlll .,. ~ iocall)' ln atdut.-...ut•. AP WI,._.. l'•leSpedaf. Singer 'John Denver is the host for a Rocky Mountain Christmas with guest stars Valerie Harper , Olivia Newton -John a nd Steve Martin tonight at 9 on ABC, Channel 7. Want an Old TVGWde? $810/orAll RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -Want lo know the first lime Donald Duck sq ua wked about Mic'lcey 's popularity on the Mickey Mouse Club? How about tbe first time Ricky Nelson 1ang In the college malt shop on the Onie and Har- riet show? Trivia buffs will be thrilled with TV Guide's announcement Thund"f that it has microfilmed every paged every edition it was pubU1hed from lta start In April 1953 through 1978. An esUmated 12 million paaes or lllfonnaUoo representlne a cauarter-centu.rJ of televlalon bis· tory bave betrl mJcroftlmed on 3Smm fOllMnck rolll, accordlnf fo Jam• Haupton, TV Gu¥te 1poket1nan. Th• mJcrolUm recordl, wblcb took three years to COlllJ>ilt, In· elude tbe m.,u1De'1 re1loul edlllona, whleb eurreath numbertc. The entire ebronolo•y II available for -.O. whUe a alqle · ed.lUon fer 9IQY year betfleea 1153 and 197ttclltl$N, Ha~tan1aald. TtJBE TOPPERS. CBS &' 8:00 -''The Bible." John Huston's epic movie of the book of Genesis features Michael Parks, Peter O'Toole, George C. Scott and Huston himself as Noah. NBC IJ 8 :00 -.. Little Drummer Boy.'• An animated version of the popular Christmas song, followed at 8:30 by "The Fourth King," another animated special about animals following the star to Bethlehem. KTLA I' 8:00 -"Blue Skies.•• An Irving Berlin musical from 1946 with Bing Crosby and Fred ~taire heading the singing and dancing c~t. . KCET 9 9:00 -"The Phantom of the Open Hearth." A retJrise of Jean SbeP.herd's nostalgic reminiscence of a steel town family In the Forties. NBC f!J 1 :00 -Midnight Special. Christmas music is f ea tu red on this edl· tion as host Pat Boone welcomes bis sing- ing family, Phoebe Snow and Emerson, Lake and Palmer . 1'*1n-- • ·~ ''The Wiid And The Innocent" (1ffe) AIJdle Murphy, t.ndr• o.. The "ourtll of July prO¥W to be. an exouee for a tur ttadar and a mountlln wall to oalebf .... ~ In.} • THI OCX>CCOPLI Whan Fetlll ,._ '° land OIOW money to baok an ln"9ntlon, 0Kat find• MOttllt ._,, of getting the money. • HONeVMOOHIM loMell'I ttllll he ta tM Ned of Na~ "8lpet b.-tflat he GM bftftO .... "'-* --~ .. • OO<OAWTT Oueet: Jolin ChMver, MlttlOt °' "'*°""· .. ,, •• Cl) ... 11:30 0 TONeGKT ~ tloet.: Jofln De'lld-aon. ~ Victor Buono, Pet Boone. elll MNTTA "Tiii• 81-tw Ain't No Coualn" Tony le cortfTonl- ed by an 1r1QtY ghelto nun (Edith DIN) wMl'I one of hef 11reet kid• It llMenoed 10 keep him trom telklng to 11141 polloe. (R) • NEW8 • GET...,.,..,. SIT\llft le aaelOned to '°"'9 th• dlHPP••r•na. Of OONTAOL agents. • CAPTIONED MC HEW8 • MACl9.I L8WR ~ 1t:I08(1) M•A•t•tt Atlk.-..IMlttnep(nurM ,.... the need fOf male ~lftd .... keye II nomlnar.d br CM other nur.. to PfO'Ma It. IRI MON•eG 12:00. t.WWWfT'HA A 11¥9 oonoart.........,. fie group o....I ,... lftd Engll1h alfte-. Jo"" hf*y. • lllPCJMl~Wl'9l• ANMOOO Mel'• .. II In -.,: ~-...w--....., ......... 91Mer ... anUP1;t1 111..-... • MOYIR **~ "The Conatant Husband" (tt54) Ra Harrleoft, ~ ICandll.: A mM ...... fnlm• ..... Of ~to dlloowr lw llM ...,.,.. ..... (1 tw ... 30 min.) 12:219 ()) cm LA'tl MOYll * * 14 "Tfle MalteH 81PPf' (1MI) Den Rowen. Dick Martin. A pelt of ~ "*'-IOCUI their _...,_ 11on on a pr9(ty C04d 11v- 1ng In thelf llC)llrtlNnt bulldlng, ~· that the le a.,..._.,, (R) 12.-IO. NA:~ Of'THC WUK 11:1'1. STARTIME ...,,. llgllCtt 09(' Oeorve ................... ... MOV!a • .,. -n. <Mr-,,.... Cllfll ..... ,,,..,. ,,.,... Weltet .... ..._ ,,... ,...,.,A.._ .. __. T_,....,_. ...,. ..... _._ .... . ~ ... ..... ... ............... .. W.0.(111r ... ~ 1:00• ......,-..:w, .__ ........ ca..: The ......... ...... ................ ....... ~ ...... .MCMI * *" "OtlliltM.. tft Ccw• u tlllill"" c-. .... .... ....,.... .,..... Morpin. A Mi•lO.., ur ......... 1111•m•1 f _, .............. .................. .. Ollttl••-.... , • ... .... lfilft.) ...... ..... "*""" ..... .... Moloacen and 1111 .......,.,. .. ~ ........ .., ....... .............. .MCMI ••• ...,,. ~~The LAIU"(tM?) ~........., ganwy, l.aGn "'-' A ---~ ... , .. , ............... ....,,.,.,......,.,...,., ..... .............. -catnl , •• MCNll •• "0..-And ~ .. (1M2) Guy ~ Don llUmMt. The ---batw••n two yo11no ~ ....... ""'" mm..., t1 t1t .. '° "*'·) 1-m•--a:oo• UOV8 *** H,._.,,.,..... (1t4e) Merle OllerOfl, TurNn 191¥. A you111 """-renown tor,........._ ................... =.. ..... ...,. ..... ···~·· ..... ,.,,.,. <*'>-. ..... . v.... ...... ,.,..... __ ... ,,.. .... .. _... ............ . ····---OWft ~,,,., ... ....., &tO. TAUCMIOlrf o..m Howwd Jenta, ~Gt ttl9&.-,.,.. ... ~ OWMtl Aal'JMeon ... ~ JoM L. Mar11r18 of tne LOI ~~tor Lew Md~ ..... "" tanam'• rtght• "'· the .lafdDrd't flgtltl. 1:111 NIWe . Z:fl NIWe •:00• MOYIE • ''The llwlalble Ray'' ( 1NI} 8cwta l(andf, Marte WllOn....,.... In Alrtca dlaoo.er a wey to k• et Iha touch d a~. (1hr .. 30 min.) D . Zoo1ning to Stardom Yoimg Acf:Ors of 'fl/ Series Guarded By ARNOLD ZEITLIN BOSTON CAP> -They are television stars known only by first names: Amy, Carolyn, . Chee. John, Nicholas, Susan, . Shona. They are stars who aren't al-· lowed to read their fan mall. "We don't want them to get swell· headed." said their producer , Terri Payne Francis. They are stars who shine for nine months, then di m lo ob- scurity. They are seven youngsters ranging in age from 9 to l2. selected last summer to appear as stars or the children's TV series, "Z.OOm." PRODUCED BY WGBH-TV. Boston's public station, "Zoom" is seen in 272 towns -otherwise known in commercial televl.alon as markets ..._ in tbe United Statea and Canada. "Zoom" has been on the air :;even years. The 49 previous Zoomers still appear on reruns shown alona wilb the programs being made this season for the first time by the latest batch. They a)) wear red and blue rugby Jerseys, part of the produc- tion stairs etrort to melt them in- to a team. '"lbe kids are at their beat when all aeven are working together," said director Bob Glover. They slng, dance, perform skits and read jokes, re· clpes and brieht ideas from their audience for 30 minutes. THE PROGRAM once sent out individual photos of Zoomens. The staff now malls requesUng youngsters only group pbotot. ln an average week, the kids get • 1,000 Jetta'S, aome posted with supermarket stamps or stamps drawn carefully by their •enders. ''We set eveey. cblld.lJb 1crawl which Jandl bi tbe Bolton Post Office," ~ Ba~bara Petersen. who rum UM mail i'OOlll wblch also P•YI po1ta1e due. Some weeks, they handle aa many u u.ooo letters. The mall ii Important bec:a~ the ~ staff ... It for procrat Idea. When money for the mall room ran out In ltT5, "Zoom'' limply went off the air. By ccnLract with paNatl, the prosram la forbidden '° di1cloM famllJ .aamea, pennlt 1Dd1ytdual .U.te,..._, Ml the ebUd...-Nad all their maU+ lllchadlna _.mar· rtaae propoeall, ol" provide the gemaot ...... lalodaaUonTV , ........... --.. YOUNG STARS OF 'ZOOM' DO THEIR THING Only Flrat Name• end No Fan Mall read 25 Nancy Drew mysteries. The young fans are not told which of theae Boston area television stars is from a broken home, which one has an occasional asthma attack and what they do with their earnings, about SllO for a 20-hour workweek. •'These kids a r e coming through it," said Glover. "They're not talda& themselves too aerlouaJy. ••we wonder, how much are they 1oi.nl lo change now that they are on television? WeH1 they're prett.Y much their naturat aelve1.' • 'lmaalne," aald Ml.II Francia, a Lot Anaeles native who la pro- ducing ••Zoom" for the first Ume, ••the time you Ii" up as a kid to do the lbow. the mapltude of betnl Oft natfonal telev'falon. I could never have dealt with It as akld." posed lo the program, theY. are hopelessly bitten by the need to perform. , Most of t h e time, •the ' youngsters are sealed in a hlppy, world of kids. ' T he letters they see col.tam gems similar lo that contrilhited by Elaie Commings of, "!Jew Orleans whose "knock, knDck" joke punchline ls: "Cant.ilope Who? cantalope tonJ1ht, fa&t.er•s watcbJ.nC." Almoet all the rJ old Zoomers who responded to a re- cent poll by the station wen try- ing to get bact into abow•IMlli· Dell. EVEN SElllO" letters.¥ ... a kld'• f1a.lr -llke0ne younlfter's aera•lld complaint from O_.o on the st.ate of the televislon ~: "I think we hne little VUOfltl· .. The 7.oomers take occQloaat alde trlpg to a &rimmer rialltY. dlacuulnJ divorce. luU.._ Ul· nesa and other more aelious topics In "rap" sesslou. ~of althouOi none has re.nee t.be requeat of a viewer om • The ••••••l• eboHD are .. "9Nlrf ...... "'tJMtr eomtri .. aDd of tbt WQa=.•. wldcb Mr The Ullltiad' ..... prOdaedoh . eeople celebrate ChrJltmaa. There will b&a Hlcb Mui at Ule Cburcb of the Natlvlly In Bethlehem; tbe Armenian Chriltmas Polk t .. Uyal at St. Jim ... Square ID Jerusalem; a Maori dancln• Cbrl1tmas celebraUoD ID New Zealand; a Germ a.n bo1• • choir tln•lng Cbrl1tmu carols In Southern Bavaria; the Brttlsh Cathedral CbOlr 11nlln&.ln Wettmln1ter Ab· b•YL~. uttclau pJa1tn1 17th· CtnlW7 mllllc on anUque loA.ru· mentl tn _, cbat.eau in Fraoee'• Lolre ValleJ~ a 1teel band aDd dancers pel'fon:Dinl Cbrittmas folk IOGll fftND Jamaica; and tbe UnlvenltY of Bout.ta Carolina ~bolt ureq_adlaa lut-tralnute Chriltm• Uopperl "' • lbop. p{ni mall •l .. p .DL Od auittmal' lN m "18UCITY about Ute WU ffbOed Mark Twain, ~.,,,. Pii'f•..,.., t119 ltat.lon clildCIMI hporie ot __,.· demlie u•e ..._ tbat Nlcbolu plant to tadde • J11a1o taatllDll linid thatAlllJ Pd DESPITE THE 1urf1ce. ap· pearance or regular klda, the Zoomen are more special than most. The curreo.t crop, as the otber11, are .elected in a Hria of audlUoas from 1,000 y~pters who tumed up at the 1'0Bff 1tudtoe looting for Jobi. The lone requJrement: Tbey had to live 1rtthin IO mlnattl ol tbe atudlo. Mott bave MVer performed ~ Butmce tbe7'Te ~-- the eubjeda come h-om ~· Mlchl1an who wrote: "I'm lS and go&q to • a baby. WOUld you liaTe a 411. cualon about that. t •• I!' ••culat.mH Aro.and tb• Ete. , .. 'lil. . . ' ' ' o.lly ...... M.tiff ....... AIA'S RALPH DROLLINGER, JOEL THOMPSON (20) VIE. Bradf,ey to Pros? -.... ., , AIA Has Height To Stop Michigan half. The lead changed bands 12 times and neither could open up an advantage of more than four points. Each team shot 5' percent from the floor in the first half. testimony to the closeness of the matchup. Although AIA bad more height with Drollinger filling the mid- dle, Michigan balanced it with blazing speed. Four starters In the Wolverines lineup can nm the 100-yard dash in 10.0 or bet- ter. In the second half the tide sud- denly turned. as the Athletes in Action decided to bleat·Mlchigan at Us own game-nmning. AIA 's fast break continually beat Michigan down the floor and enabled it to gradually pull away. After five minutes AIA had built a IO.point lead, and with 11:80 left in the game the advantage bulged to 14 points. Michigan could never come eloser than nine points after that. ............ """" Mtwmt•n a o • ' ,,_..... • 2 1'2 SC.ton ' 6 •" .... » 0 220 Ulllw 0 2 t 2 JoM-2146 M<GM •S1H HMIV 6 o 4 t2 .... _ 0010 ..,_,. 2 0 I 4 .,.,,.....Adle ...... """""" 1 • a • ........ 2 0 .t .. Mlttfly .. • t • Gotllt 2 0 t • .,~ ,, 2 22' H411 0112) .,,,.._ • 1 a • °"''.....,. sn •22 w.ieaty 3 0 • ' .HdllOlt I 0 4 2 TM " t7 a 9S Tot• · "' a 21 100 H•lfllfne; At1Mt• l1t Action, SM?. ·on TV Tonight 7:55 p.m. (9) -NBA BAS&ETB.\J.L -The Lakers mee' the Trail Blazers in Portland. 8 p.m. 08) -TANGBWJNB BOWL -The Texas Tech Reel BaidenJ meet the Florida State Semtnotes Ill tbe Tanaerlne Bowl from Orlando, Fla. Taped. Clllarlerbacb nmnini the optioll offeaee. But Allison hu plelll)' of ,..peet tor &be PSU defeue. "'Tbey are real fat and tbelr sec:oadarr paays deep," be ..,.. "'rbe7 remind ut a lot of Arkauu." wblch beet TAllcb 1"1·14 la Soutbw.t Confermce , . .,. . ·Alllaoa, a l·U, t•poanct Hralllbllr, btak8 bll Jel Ja tlli9 thlid ~ "' &be ..... 1M& LOS ANGELES <AP> -Los An1eles Rams coach Chuck Knox says experience is not what happens to a man. It's wbat a man does witb what bap- pem to bim. Knox believes that's the key to tbe success story of young Los Angeles quarterback Pat Haden. "Some people thtnk elt· pertence is a synonym for a term of years on a job, but it isn't ," said Knox Thursday. "Jn any profession. you'll find aome 20·year men who learned rapidly for three years and have been coasting for 17. 'Bruins Rip San Jose LOS ANGELES <AP> -Brad ffoltand led a balanced UCLA attack that produced an easy 107 ·69 non-conference college basketball victory over visiting San Jose State at Pauley Pavilion Thursday night. The eighth-ranked Bruins im- proved their record to 7·1 while the Spartans, who held an early cight·point lead, fell to 2·7. Holland came off the bench to lead the Bruins with 19 points. He was one of three reserves who made significant cootribu· lions to the UCLA triumph. Holland. baekup center Dar· rell Allums and reserve forward James Wilkes entered the came after some six minutes and sparked UCLA to 20 consecutive points. The surge catapulted the Bruins from a 20-12 deficit to an advantage they held the rest of the way. $AN JO$E -R ... lc u. Heynes '· Hiii 12. Jonnson •. L.-. 4, Pntd •ll 7, o.vla 2. Moftlt "· lllU9U\I 3, Mey$ 4, M(Koy t, W11114me 7, ~I 4. Tot•ls 71 tl-2169. UCLA -~ 17, v .. 111e1'"9fle10, Sims 1, T-n~ I, Hamilton U, Wllkn 4, Alllll'M 8, Holl•l>d 1', TilomM 11, A-MW\ I, LIPC19't O, Kelly 1, ~ t. TCIQ!s 41 27...W Wit. H•lllf,.,.. -UCLA 41, Sen Jow SC. 3S. Fouled out R~ Pritcllell, Mly~ Tot•I louls -~ J-SI. l3. UCLA, 23. Te<hnlc•ll -SM! .Jos,e Sl•I• Co•h <Nov••· A -t .01' * * * USC Tops USC COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP> -The University of South Carolina Gamecocks scored the first seven points in overtime TJ:ulrs· . day night to defeat Southern California, 65-58, in the opening game of the fourth and fmal Carolina Classic basketball tournament. South Carolina lifted its record to S-4 and will play Oklahoma, an 80·74 wiruler ove r Penn, tonight. Southern Cal has an identical S-4 record and plays Penn tonight. Jim Graziano controlled the opening tip in overtime and hit a short jumper to break the 52-52 deadlock at the end of regula· tioo. · Jackie Gilloon, who led the · Gamecocks with 25 points, hit three free throws and Golie Augustus scored a field goal to give South Carolina control of the game, 59·52, with 2: 13 to play. U$C (51)-.....,_2',#llll!MrW,.....,_ 1, C.rtllo,, s. Sm1t116. ""-" 21 u-. S. CA~HA W) -'*'*' 12. AllQllllWI 4 OrHl•M '· Olll9o!t u, Dorie 2. w.._. " A.-,nolds 10. T~ 22 21-23 6S. H•lltlme -S. Gwllllflll 21, S. Qllfoniia 2z. A .. vtelloft-&. ~ sa., $. c;.rolWie .SU. ~led out -!t. Smltll, Mli41"'8f0ft, HendlrSOn. Tot•l IOUfs-S. CllllfOml4tM, S.C«Oll"9 U,A- .l,JIS. A "Pat bas matured quietly because be learns inatanUy from lbe things that happen to him - from the things that go wrmi:· continued Knox. "First be bu t.be self-ueurance to admit a mistake and aecood be baa the intelllgence to act on it im- tnedlately. And enthusiastically. "A man like tbat can become an experienced NFL quarterback in a couple of years with the Rams, who hope he can lead them to a berth in the Super Bowl, something many National Football League onlookers say can't be done by an ''Inexperienced quarterbeck." .. Haden mine eloH last year when. as a rookie, be called alpall u Los Anaeles nipped Dallas 1'·12 before loliDC to lfin.. neeota ~13 in the NFC eham- pionablp pme, Hade anct the Rams belin what they hope is a m.arcb tot.be Super Bowl Monday aftSDOOD agalnst the Vikings. "I've~ ludcy," said Raden about hls current altaatlon. "Above all. ot coune. l'~e had very lood ooacbJq. I bow I'm QB in the playol11 prlniartl1 because ot our defemive team, and I realize I walked into tads job as the Rams were Jelling ID about the fifth week of tM season. "But I also think that If rte , come alc:mg faster than otber quarterbacks, much of lt la due to my mind." added the tormer standout at Southern Cal "Not that I'm owrly ~lllgent. •• I think d myself a a pel'SOQ GI average intelllcence who ex· ercises his mind. keeps lt active at all times and doee his best to use all tbe intelli1enee he b-. .. ,. ......... GRIEF-STRICKEN DAVID Fl.OWERS KEPT GOING DESPITE DAD'S DEATH. 98-pound Heart Kept Going for Dad MIAMI CAP> -Even before the white towel was thrown on th,. mat to signify the end of the wrestllog match, spectators started applauding 17.year-old David Flowers. . Tbe grieving wrestler bad just won his championship match -for bis dad. Flowers burst into tears. His father had died ~ a heart at· tack the day before as he rushed out of the stands to con· gratulate his son on a victory in the opening round of the touma. ment. "He's only a lOS.pounder. but 98 of them must be heart," a spectator said. The 11.year~Jd Flowers wiped away the tears to accept his trophy Wednesday night and honor as the tournament's most valuable 'fll'eStler. Then he and the crowd bowed beads in a mo- ment of silent prayer. ''He just told me be wanted'° do it for bis dad," said David Solderbolm, a teammate at Palmetto HJgh School. Palmetto eoacb Larry Morts said he bad decided to pull bis team out of the tournament after the elder Flowe.rs died, but David, state champion for t.be past two years iD the 100.pound weight class, wanted to keep wresWng. "He felt that's the way his father would want it." Morts said. "His father was his greatest fan. He was alway• con- cerned about David's wrestling, about him doing well with it. 'And David loved him. They were very close." Defense Aids Maryland Bowl Victory BIRMINGHAM, Ala. <AP> - It took Charlie Johnson and his Maryland teammates only one quarter to resolve their prob- lems with the Minnesota of- fense. They simply shut down the Gopher s' attack after one pe'riod and enabled Maryland to register a 17-7 college football victory in the inaugural Hall of Fame game. Minnesota, relying on the quickness of quarterback Wen- dell Avery, had bolted to a 1.0 lead early in the game and threatened again in the opening quarter bet.re the Terps defense took charge. Johnson, a 250-pouncl ~ tackle from BalUDiore. "*9 tbe ' leader, participating Ja 16 tackles, lncludblg foor tor losses totallnc l9 yards. He also caused two fumbles and reco•ered another that set up a Maeylalld Day to Forget for Moon touchdown. · For bis effort, be was a Deer' unanimous choice as tbe0 aame•s outstanding defensive performer, but he didn't bow it Husldes QB Retunu ro Site of HumiliOtWn BJ DAVB CUNNINGllAJI GI .. Dlllty ...... """ When the Universlt1 of W aahlngton football team trotted cnto the fleld at Orange Coast Collq-e Wednesday for its first Rose Bowl practice, quarterback Warren Moon may have felt a twinge off amlliarity. Unlike the other Huskies, Moon has played there before. It was Nov. 30, 1974. Moon was quarterback for the West LA Oilers, who were facing Orange Coast In the state Junior college playoff semifinals. The good-natured Wasbfngt.oo quarterback wwJd just as IOOO forftettbat day. . • Yeah, well we cot beMell pretty badl1." he recalll. ••1 had • pretty ataod nlgbt mJM)f,. but u a teu:a we ,at beat by a lot. I don't like to Wnk about It much.'' came bad: ftwe weeb lat«. Allllaa's CCMlterJ)arta OD tbe Se ml no le team from Ta1Jaa111ee are Walb' W ...... m The score was 62·15. Orange Coast completely shut down West LA's running game, nr- rendering just 23 net yards on tlle ground. But Moon's memory l8 ae-- curate. He did have a good in· diridual performance, complet. .i.Qg 23 cl 48 passes for 210 yanb and one touchdown. But an the other side of tbe eoin, he was sacked eight times and gave up three interceptions. The sacb gave him an unim· pressive night rushing -10 ear· ries for minus 50 yards. Orange Coast's resounding victory put the Pirates in tbe state cbampiomhlp, wbere they were beaten by Groamollt:M-17. Grw1moat was quarterbMked by the late Joe ROth, wbo w.eat Oil to play for Cal <Be.rk.eley). Slnce tran1ferrln1 to Wublnatas, Koon ha rolled up a string fl attompllshments which makes it easy to lbqet Nov.30,1974. He rants third In career pass-h1 g and total offense at Wuhlqtm, behind Sonny Six· killer and Dan Heinrlcb. TbJs teUOD lloon was wted the Pae-8 co-player of the year and completed U3 of 199 passes . (57peftellt)for1.SN Y8J'.'da and 11 touchdowns. · His premiel" individual efforts of the seuon include a 11-ymd to'Gcbdawn run against USC and a M·yanl scoring pass to Spider Gaines against Minnesota. Moon aYerapd 1' yards per comp'fe. doll Ud ... iBt.ercepted just ~times all )'al'. Although ralaecl In Loa Agel-. wbere he became an All·Amerlca at Hamilton High and W.t LA Junior colleae. Moon l• fsmillar wlth the Otani• eo.t area. "I baft relatiYel In Santa Ana so I-Ve been around this area a Jot," be..,._ "Orange Cout b&9 a fine'=· Thia II a good plaeeto ce." Hi• stats and national ex- poaure with the Rose Bowl •ould MelD to make MOOD a eandldat.e fGf the KaUonal J'oot... ball Leacu•. but black qurtetMeD .,.. a rare ~ modlty In tbe NPL. ••t•m DOC .... 1"lt mv 1'hole lfe Gil tt," Jl.oGll ~ .i·1•4 like ra.: ~-:;a~ eeewtuit~·· durine the public ceremoalea immediately after the game. Due to a foulup, the def..S- award winner was annoaeed as being ~and Unebacbr Brad Carr, but be relillquiaW the trophy later in tbe dreabag room when be learned of tile of• ficial vote. 0 1 thought I pla,ed a pretty good game,.. Jobmon said. Maryland got a ~ field goal of 32 yarc!s from Mike Socbko and then deliver*' the final scores of the game wttadn a 2:11 span of the second quarter when George Scott scored touchdowns on runs of 2 and 1 yards. Scott's first score eGlll*l a 69-yard drive, most of Wblela came on ooe play, a PMI flQal Larry Dick to Eric Sienra C!OY- erinl S1 yards and carrJiltl to the MiJme8ota 1. Hnskies Practieee Open to Public The Un'iver•UJ of Wubinaton's football Dftdlem at Orange Coast Collete are open to the public, but Uniwni· ty officials will check ldelltiftca- tion of all those deslriq to be admitted. ....... ....... occ s.t. o.c. _, _,, .. """'.ake ~.OK.2S-Moft.Oec.a-z ... ""~ ""'-· o.c:. f1 .... ... ..._ o.c.•-a°""',.._.. T11wS. o.c.e-s"""•-*-Frl. OK.. -a !Miio •llCtlc:e SM.O.C.1t-1 ....... ..-•• ....... , ....... ....,_l-ltOS&AI*. BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY •• Fr1day, Oec.mber 23, 1977 DAILY PILOT 8$ MV Rolls; Mustangs, Irvin~ Lose Mission Viejo and Capistrano Valley Christian posted tourna- ment victor ies while Costa Mesa, Irvine and Liberty Chn s- t Ia n <Hunlincto n B e a c h > absorbed defeats in high school b asketball action Thurs day night. Pete DeCaaas and Mi ke Roberts scored 19 points each as Mi s sion Vi ejo whippe d B e llarmin e J e ff e r s on <Burbaak>, 85·52, in the Bur: roucha tournament in Burbank. The Diablos played Harvard <North Holl ywood) this after- noon for the consolation title .. In the Christian L eague tournament in Riverside, Ron Bailey and Rick Gruen com- • bined for 60 points t o lead C1pistrano Valley Christi an past Bethel <Garden Grove), 78-42. Bailey scored 32 points and Gruen 28 for the Eagles, who m et Inland Christian of San Bernardino today for the con- solation title. Liberty Christian fell behind 51-16 at hal/Ume and was never in its championship semifinal game of the same tou rnament against American Christian, los- ing 86-36. The Minutemen play Hesperia Christian tonight (6) for third place. Costa Mesa pulled to within five points of powerful Servile CAnaheim ) in the third quarter be(ore a press sent lhe Mustangs dpwn to their sixth straight loss, 93-68. CMla,...MI lerV!ttltsl ""•"' Stewlcos l o o 2 Witt o.-2 0 4 4 9v.<Nla Fllk• 4 1 l 10 Montl•I e .. ,1.., • 3 a u Sl"9k $Utl9rlleld 4 0 2 I FlyM Wlllll>Qf\am 0 0 J 0 S.lll0¥1<h Etno11 O 1 O 2 Oay Bluett 1 o o 2 H~m• Miller S 0 4 10 Syl\MI Rlc11ard_, 1 o o • Ro111n1 Hiscock . 3 s J 11 Wlwm•n Tot•ll 21112 20 Ml Totals S<ere lty °"""'" "",.. ) 0 3 t• I 2 0 II S I 1 11 1 2 0 ,, 0 0 • 0 s 0 • 10 s 1 2 ,, 1 0 1 t 1 I 1 J l 2 0 ' 0 • 2 ' 40 IJ 1t tl 10 1S ,. ...... 1' 28 24 JI-., Al•••nder 80\lt< Cummln9 o.c .. o felcM Kr•uitr Mlu lOf\ Vlei. tUI ,, "pf • l 2 • I Roberts 4 I 0 q 1011 1 1 o • V•uoM ~121'80w•• 3 0 O b flynn 3 o o b lot•" Sc.,..•rO...r1en Minion Vlefo 6•11 J•ll I) 11 lrvl,,.1>61 t I 1 1t 0 1 7 7 I l 7 4 0 1 0 1 l 0 1 b JI> ll 14 II> 11 11 ll>-45 I) 10 11-.SZ ft ft llJf llJ Davos o O 1 o Oclclen l 0 4 4 Miiier 1 0 1 1 Kresller 1 4 l • R..OV S 1 S It Mon1eve,... 3 o J 6 ""'°'u\Clo o J O J Wtlw 2 0 1 • total\ 14 8 11 3& Sc-lty~ '""'ne a '' • .-:i. ~..... » u 22 20-71 ~u..-T-mffl a..~111-111 ... 11 Amer1c.,. Clwlstt .. M, u--.. ow1,11.,.,. l.lberty-<;ood111011t 11. l.09•n 2. PuQll I . Hoe>klM 2. ~r>2. Hlloo..> 4. H•llllme-"'4!rlc•n Sl·16 CMJe141tMll Mft\lllN ll C1po Vall.., Orltd.M 11 •.. _ 42 C•oo-B•lley 32. Gru•n 21, S~ 6..- Roc:1r19ue1 7. NeliOn I, Bamell 1. H•llU~•20. Coach Hired PRINCETON. N.J. -Frank Navarro. who built little Wabash College in Indiana inlo an NCAA Division Ill football power after six years at Columbia, has been hired as head coach at Princeton University. .. , Sports in Brief .Gooljian Hits Kings Rip -Chictigi > Gre~ Goorjian ot Crescents Valley mgh School hit 64 points to lead his team to the cham- pionship of the Thousand O.U tournament Thursday night with a 92-85 v.ictory over Buena HJ'b <Ventura). T he Crescenta Valley guard hit 29 field goals in 53 attempts and scored six at the free throw line. Goorjian had 51 Wednesday night in an 86-72 semifinals vic· tory over Newbury Park. He Ls the leading prep scorer in the Southland. Kings llol~ 4.6 CHICAGO (AP) -"We juat can't seem to play well at bopie 'following a good road tdp," complained Chic a go Black Hawks coach Bob Pulford. "I tust don't know what the answer 1$." Pulford and tbe Hawks will have quite a bit of lime to ponder Thursday night's 4·0 home-ice shutout by the Los Angeles Kings. They don't get back into Nationa l Hockey League action until Tuesday t.tigbt a t Atlanla. The win was the 44lb NHL 1hutout for Los Angeles goalie Rogatien Vachon. No.._Sellotd Rama, a Vikings spokesman here said. McClanahan, a s-root-10, IQ2- pounder. carried 95 times fol' 324 yards and one touchdown this season. He'll be replaced in tbe Minnesota line up by Robqt Miller, a S·ll, 204·pounde~· carried .s times for 152 this aeaaon. l!Rbotmt• 1t'I• MELBOURNE. Australt• Two t ennis unkno wn• Zealander Chris Lewll Robin Drys da le or Brl emerged as threats to players after the seconc1 of the $200,000 Australian at Kooyong today. But .. oldti m e r " Newcombe showed that b-man to beat as be chargeit Caal-serving Australia n Dibley M . Hi, ~3. • LeYt'is, 20, who was I' 107th on the Association nls Professionals compute ing only a month ago, sho his 6-0, 6-3, 6·3 victory over Masters that b~ is full fidence. Manpeette £o•n LOUISVILLE -The went out for Marquette. Tbe Warriors <ranked nationally) lost their first ~ ball 1ameof the season Th~ when they were dumped 61·60 by. Dally f'li.t ~ ~. GefY ....... GWC'S TODD 2:1RBEL {RIGHT) IS GUARDED BY CRAIG STAHL, TIM SHAW (32). LOS ANGELES-A Los Angeles Rams spokesman said Thursday that 11,000 tickets ~ malned unsold for Monday's Na· tional Footba ll Conference playoff game with the Minnesota Vikings in the LA Coliseum and that there was little hope at that time or the game being televised in the area. Louisville. · Bui the e tghth-ranA•<\ Cardinals were plagued all 'eh· ning by errors and Butch Lee..itlo almost pulled the game out tor Marq~eintheclosingminutes. ·Gaucho's Shaw Sizzles Ffllkrton on 'l'op f~ Saddleback Star Scores 30 in 93-79 Win The game wlll be t elecast across the nation by the CBS network beginning at 3 o'clock but unless the remaining tickets were sold before 3 this after- noon, it will be blacked out in the Los Angeles area. PORTLAND. Ore.-G~g Bunch or Cal State CFullerlctl> led all scorers with 22 PoUds Thursday nigbl and his baskot · ball team beat Portland Staie 80-62 to take lhe cham pionship of the Portland Slate holiday By CRAJG SHEFF Of U. o.llJ PUM St.all Tim Shaw got off to a slow s tart this basketball season because of a nagging stress frac- ture in a leg. But the Saddleback College standout. last year 's Mission Conference player of the year. showed he was fully recovered Thursday night as be fired in 30 points in leading the Gauchos to a 93-79 win over visiting Golden West Colleee. The victory was Saddlebadc's ~11th in 12 games. Shaw, who had scored 20 points in each of the last two .l'(aincs. was near-perfect from lhe field -hitting his fi rst seven shots, 10 of 12 in the opening half and 14 or 16 for the game. And most of them came from the 12-16-foot range. Shaw's 22 points in the first hatf staked coach Bill Mulligan's club to a commimdin& 51-34 lead at the intermission -and it ap- peared it would be a cakewalk the rest of the way -espe<:ially when SaddJe back took a 63-43 edge with 16: 30 to go. But the Rustlers. behind the s hoot in g of r eserves Wi ll Fletcher and Larry Pettis, came alive, cutting the Saddleback lead to 79-73 with 7:25 to go. At that juncture Mulligan elected to do something quite un- common in his coaching style - delay. The mane uver slowed Golden West's momentum and allowed the Gauchos to P\fll away in the waning minutes. S ~ddl~back Qutscore d the Rastle1'8> 10·21 in the final three minutes with the Gauchos' Tim. Knight hitt in~ three of tbe buckets on baseline drives. Golden West was s parked by Todd. Zirbel, who had 16 first half points and 22 for lhe game before running into foul trouble mid way through lhe s econd half. Saddleback. behind Shaw's splendid shooting, sizzled from the floor -bitting 62 percent of >ts shots. And Golde n West fin ished with a S4 percent mark. "We did a good job coming back," said GWC coach Dick Stricklin, "but we m ade too many little mistakes in the fi rst UCI Cagers Fall to Oregon EUGENE, Ore.-UC Irvine's fir s t b as k e tba ll vis it t o McArthur Court here Thursday night was anythjng but memora- ble. Before the 74th consecutive sellout at "The Pit'', the Ant- eaters were outscored 20-0 dur- ing a nine·minute span in the fi rs t half and dropped a 77-62 non-conference basketball de· cision. Wayne Smith scored on three long jumpers to give Irvine a brief 11·10 lead at the 14 :40 mark before Oregon went to a trap- ping defense that completely disrµpted the Anteaters' offense. Dan Hartshorne and Felton Sealey each scored six points for the Ducks during tbe streak, which was aided by 11 Irvine tu m overs. Oregon also canned 11 of 12 free throws during the spurt. Kirk Christ. led lrvine, now 4-4 on the season. with 14 points. T he game, played before a standing room·only crowd of 10,500, was Irvine's first again.st . a Pacific-SCon.ferenceteam. UCl""'94'11 .. ft .... Sfnll" 4 , a ,, J11rll ._..,, 1 o 2 t AoctQan °'rltt s 4 c 14 Sf PP QrlOll 2 • 1 • arow" st..... , 2 0 ..... McGul,. O 4 a 4 Totela Hal ftlfM-Or'F" 4 Mi. 0 0 2 0 0 0 • 0 0 • 1 • t a ' 1 0 ' • , '711a46t Corona del Mar~ Westminster Collide Coroba del Mar High's Sea Kinas, seekina to sn•l> out of a 3·5 overall basketbaJI record, travel to We•tmlnster HIJb toalgbl (8) te duet the Lionif in noJl·lt.,ue action. AltbOUgb coach J•c• Enion's Sea Xiop share tbe South CoNt t.ea,ue l• Ytit.b .,..tsuoa V~o (2-0), Oorooa ~ Mar will be \l'yUas to bOudCe bact after a ....,. noa•lea1ue Jou to· rtval Newport Harbor Tueeday nl&bt. half. It's hard to come back when you're down that much. And they shot very well." Oeldefl Wt1t C1'tl (tll SHl!llta<ll tournament. ~ SMl<Mr• Lu•r llrbel ROOQert Slrkllll" f'CtetclMr Pelll• CllemlllllS GlbH ,, It pf " I 0 0 2 1 0 1 1 102 4 22 • 1 J 1J 7 • 1 14 J • ',. 3 2 • • 1 0 0 2 0 2 l 2 McElr•lll SMw SW.I Knight l.IOY 94KOI\ Mlllff PaltertOft Helm v...-r .. Total! 34 11 11 7' Total• H•lfllmt: S.O.t0kll,Sl44. · " tt ... "' I 2 2 ~ ,.,,,., s • 1 14 7 J • 17 • 0 2 • ' 0 ' 6 s 0 3 10 I 0 S 7 0 0 2 0 , 0 , 2 ., 11 2• 93 LOS ANGELES -Brent McClanahan, a starting running back for the Minnesota Vikings. underwent knee surgery Thurs· day and thus will be lost to the l e.am fo r Monday's National Football Confe rence playoff game against lhe Loa Angeles Fullerton led 33-32 at halrtl~ then applied a strong defens~ gradually draw away during ltie· second half. The team made S1 percent cl its field goal attempts during the first half but in· creased Ila pel'centage to 75 for the 1econd haU. . :la ***********•* : HOUD.Y : College Basketball Results .-cl.f..dANcE sALE• Pan~lll>.~U.111 ·: ISSTILLON! ~ UCL.A 1ot, Sall Josa st.•• jlll\111H In Action IOI, Mf<lll~ fS US1U 61, ...,._-.,, S4 UC Rlvenlcte n. AUIW• 1111.)" Houl!M ICM, H-all '8 Orec:ion n, UC lrvlneU (lwlpman ltl, Sa<> Fra11CllC0St.1>1 Sl•nloro 1•. Rhode lllaftd 14 C•lllorn•• '°· USF .. SI. Mary's M. Chko St. 4J CS StM1111-II. Claremont M..ckl IO IO¥tttl-I • Provldeft« n. CS ~e"ti.ld 70 R11I ..... '9, ManhallMI >4 Vlll-v• 16. ~ >O 9teWftl:l,RlmrlO Plltlbw,.,, 12, WllM4fft9 '4 Hohlrt IO. Stonelllll 71 F•lrlelgl'I Olc~lnson 61. Nortl't C.rollM A&T lo! 51..,. '2. w.,,.,., 11 l.oulsvlll• 61. Marquette 60 Meml>llls St. 111, Georol• st. 11 Vlrgllt/a Tedi 7,, V....,Clltf IS NE LIMllll-17, Oelt. St. 5' LSU f7. Rlc .. I KanMS St. It, Hor1fl TIHl St. 71 WI-'" CMllw.I f7, Tulu 74 .,_,,..,a Loyola 10.1~1 11 12 o-llmatl A'11a11S.tS 1t, l(-.s 7' TOU•MMtrlfTS ~ • ..... LAwtt ... Nabers * Wlll.,,,eltt 11, seetU. P«lfk '6 Jt ._. lcllampiOMlllllJI ~ o.oroe ~a.......,. ...,st• •. AUTO CENTER * lllllrd pltcel it-lf. .::C,, :,. Div. of Nabers Cadillac * N•vacta lleNI n, llob.St." Jt 1425 IAKER ST. ld•llO SI .... TCU '1 •• ACRO$ FROM FEDCO • v-.. ,.. COSTA MESA • lc~I •• PoreMd St. U • 54"9 I 09 ·• E. ~ ...... f1, Cll Sl. LA. ., ~ /If' ~~~-) ***********~· . I .1 ADVERT1St:M t:N'f 48 Area Athletes Selected Winners o,·, The ninth annual South Coast Plaza "Player-Of-The-Month,. Awar~ as selected~ the participating 24 area high echool coaches, were announced today by South Coast A au ·: Award winners chosen for September-November, 1977, will receive large actiO!t photo blow-ups and award pins at a spring banquet sponsored by South Coast Plaq;: Name School Name School .... Pat Mumford • . . • • • • • • • • • Canyon H.S. Greg Karman ••••••••••••• Marina Jt.$. Mike Monnahan ..•••••••• Canyon H.S. Kent Tucker ••••••••••••• Marina H~. Eric Raff ..••....• Corona Del Mar H.S. Dave Goniales •••••••••• Mater Dei B.S. Kurt Brockman ..• Corona Del Mar H.S. Greg Scherf •••••••••••• Mater Dei .as. Steve Finch .••.•••••.• Costa Mesa H.S. Mike Ochoa ••••••••• ~ion Viejo U.S. Dale Amburgey . . . . . . . Costa Mesa H.S. Scott Spear .•..•••••• Mission Viejo U.S. Tom Thornton .......... Dana Hills H.S. Don Barker •.••.• NeWJ>ort Harbor B.~. Mitch McGregor ........ Dana Hills H.S. Bob Brown ••••.•• Newport Harbor H.~. Jeff Heikes ..........•..•. Edison H.S. Kevin V andagrilf. ••.••• Saddleback H.S. John Bogdan •....•..••.... Edison H.S. George Garcia ••••••••• Saddlehack JU. Geo~ge Jacobo .....••.••• El Toro H.S. Mark McElroy .•••• :. San ~lemente H.~ Dennis Driml ..•••••••••• El Toro H.S. Michael Wade ••••••• San Clemente H.S . Mike Camp ...••..••..••• Estancia B.S. Dan Baldwin ••••••••••• Santa Ana~­ Dave Je~o ••••••• ·~ ••• &tancia B.S. John Carlyle •••••••••••• Santa Ana .. Rob Moore •••••.•••••••• Foothill H.S. Joe Henry .................. Tustin :S. Jim Bremer ............... Foothill H.S. Doug Finney •••••••••••••• Tmtin H.S. Ron Padilla ..•..•• Fountain Valley H.S. Steve T'illes ••••••••••• Univenity H.S. Dan Dennis •.•.••• Fountain V;illey H.S. Steve English •••••••••• Univenity-B.S. Bruce McCinley ..•.• Garden Grove H.S. Andrew Paige .••••••••..••. Valley 111:~. Tim Golia •...... ~ •• Garden Grove H.S. Mark Ftrguson ..••.•...... Valley H.S. Marco Pagnanelli Huntington Beach H.S. Mark Kahn .....•....... Villa Park U:S. Scott Brummett Huntiugton Beach 1LS. Jeff Bieller ••••.•••.•••. Villa Park H. . Bill Gompf ......•.. Laguna Beach H.S. Mitch Siemens •••.• , .. Westminster ll.S. John Miller ....•.••. Laguna B~ach H.S. David Jacinto .•••••••• Westminste~ ~-. Beiween now and mid-J~ury. action photoa of the winnen will be di.played in the Care)~) · Coutt oC South ~aat Plaza. Winnen ~Ye action pbotoe at apdng ban<(llet. . ~ · ' ) t I -""'~a_·-~-~~~-~~~-~--=--~~--=-=---------------.. ...__... ·_1L \. ~'~ -- '. -OAIL Y PILOT Jlanquet R eport A lamitos Race Results ~VllilMWMltll V.nlty-11 MMI V•I-• 8'.i P•r ... r: M<KI l11W11r•ll.,..I Joe W••l>•r. C~'-'"' Todd Fullodo>. •nd Ron Ven. PellrHm. Mou lmprowed . S.•n J9'\.ll\l; 5dlolw Al~e: RDft ..,.., ~urMm end Giwy COa, Iron m•n P•I StonllJtev .... A-•• of,,,. v .. , e...ce """. Out>u.ndtno 0.l•n•• Ye U M,,..,.: Joe W•ll•r; Oubt-ln9 Dtle11slv• !leek A•ndy Co11ln>; Ouh1Andln9 Ofltn1lve l lntm•n Ste .. EntiQl!t: Ou!S~lno Olrenslw ...,,,...., a..,,, ...... •1aST ll&e• -)jO yarCM. ll yeor OI•• (te1m1119 l'WM U IOO. ~tllMowJel IMll<llelll 3 10 1 60 2 lO Hevoo. ltoyal IU..,..m) 160 J 10 Jollln' J• IHarU J..O Tlmt -11.tl AIM> r., -Ctll<ll.., !or D1,,,,..., Mldwev Mlso.y, UnelrculelMI, Cupod'• Mon, Penny's Umll, "'"'* """ Go, CIYlc Conltr, S<r•l<hOd -Allcestor, Stlony Go, Ml. Most t r, fltUkln Gtrl. 11e<;k: AoOln Cl\Arlu. t.J ... , .. _,...,...MOW .Jet & 4- J•lwVN'lllyf'MtNU H.V•Nlleyl4,P•l4SU .... Mosl va1.-.: 'II"'' C0411ns; Mo>t lt1•Pll••loM1: o. .. Af<lluleto; Cop-SECOHD llAC• -3SO yards. 3 .., .. , t•lro: Jim e....v111er ond Or99 Wet· old>&up-Cl.O.lmlno.Purs.suoo. ty; Mosl tmswovecl; Ken Grirtllh; J ov• O.Clt 011l•1Andl119 OfltMlve l..lnem•n t8onk1I 10 60 S.20 3M! G•ry FratMtl; Oubt.ncllnQ Ofltn"w Tl\ol Tript•H•wlt 1Clerll!oe)4.00 3.40 8tdc: II-rt C•H, Outst•ndln1>0 .. ot Sllol Cute Bat CIClllQN I o.40 0.1 ... .i ... u_.._: Jol\n O.l•••. Tlmo-11.os. OuUllll'IClll'IQ o.ftnJlw 80<11: Greg AIM> ,.,, -Ollck Doolin, FINI., Wtlly. Ouc1t, TOP Mmn 5tlort, Mr. ZJ ng. Fr.....,......,...11 Notertl<llH. MOii VolUObte: Erlr Fow; Moil lnH1lrotlonot: Kris Sl\•rror; (..tp. u •••ct• -J·Tlle Purl & I• ta Ins: 8111 Per'lter -Stew Oolne1; ,._...,, ,...,....._ ~ lmprowo: Kim Kramer end Kevl11 Swlnlco. OUls..,..lftll Oltonslw Lineman: Brue. Bootmon; Oulltond- 1119 ll•cel-: Gem 8ry011t; Oullt•nd- lng Ofl ... tl .. t..clll Sle¥e GolMS; Oul•l•ndlno O.t1n1lve lln•m•n : Ot•t Marol\vl<; Outllondln9 U nellectcer: Biii Por!CM; Oull......,lno Defon'1w Bock: tom Hobie, Area GoH MEN.SOOLf' utuu .. tcll low net tOIJf,,._nt t i C.sla 0.1 Sol Goll Club IMlulon vi.Joi uslno tl\rff ChlbS end o pUltU. A FllQl'lt-t. N &SIOf'I (.,_U -S51; 1. Cnarltt AV<ler. Jr. (/0.1'-stl. 3. •tlel Geor9e Fowler c.-.n-S1). Cn•rlts Kaul,.,.... 00.ll-Sll. 8 Flloht-1. Wall""'" (68·16 Sll: ? Sidney Newcomb 110.16 -S~I ; J. FrMk RtQ<WI ITJ.11 501. C: Fll91\1 ··1 Lynn C•ll\c•rl 110-10· SO), 2. G•orge HOii '1J 21 51 1, 3. Htrm•n !>chw•b 11• 11-u1 o f'll9n1 -1. Jullan Gobi• flt ·U -Sll; 7 Larry Mc La111 •/'1-l5-S41. 3. llltl Ausw11 lre1...ct •1'1-l~SI, 8 lll 8•1lev (j().JS-SS). TMlllD aAC& -l50 Verdi. 1 ve•r Old1. Collf·er.CI. •Iden O.lmlng. P\lrteUIOO. Tiie Pee rt IWardl S.00 3.lO 2 . .0 4 lltpo1M<1 (Horii MO UO Mory C... ICordo.i.ol Tlme-11.1'. 2.20 Aho ran -Brucute limits, Dusters eo., Friar lloO, Slrtll•, Den- dy TlmOI, Tiny BenJo. Noterotcllff. u Eucta -J·Tllt Purl & 6· ........... .i. .. .-. FOUllTH ltAC• -110 y.,ds. 3 year oldl I. upward. Clolmlng. Purse $4 • :IOO. Prlnl Me Royal I IClerlue I 1.00 ~.00 3.IO Mr. WlllowSofl119s (ROUQh) UO 3.20 01\Cllarve IWordl 2.IO Tim•-•s.n . Al\o r•n Magict•••on, Wild Cl\erry Brondy, Quarl•r !Hnder, Zip's Son. No.cra1cn111. ,.I l'TH llACI! -S.IO yards. 3 YHr olds up. Slarl..-Al._an<e. P\lrlO WOQ. Moil AoYol LEASE 1978 MALIBU 4 cloer S... G4iE~ •• I Cap S$t!>8 RH l 2&94. Dep 121>&< Tott oll410 •ee21 8" 3e mon Q:..,endl .. s.< 05030.Slk 166 ·ALL 1978 MODB.S ARE : . HERE AND READY FOR • · · -IMMEDIATE DBJVERY LeaH & Commercl•I S•IH .. . C•ll Ut • we·u Come To You ... · 6125 MANCHESTER s-to AN Fwy. of Artftla Cail lob Kelly I Oftbt ...... 44, IUEH lltill 522-2881 B. TOIO .. 768-05931 IAJll\Ofll IUO 1.f/O aM e1911.,_a1 ... ~rl .... tAI .. m•IOl (~I uo Time ..-J1.9$ Aho ra11 -KlrtellV a., Ml e\lddle, Tony Nol•, 'Tl• lougll,, Didio llut Good. NoM:r~ Mlu~-l•MIM • .....,, .. D••• ..... ,.,....,., .... Area Basketball . ._, __ ~ ...... ,ca. .... ••l-1t,Senlte4J Edlwn-Mo41na I, Leo t. H•rkw 12, BankS '· Tokushl •. llerglund •. 8oytl' ~ .......... Morino ~lftg-Borcklov I, F•r• row 1, Gllne I, .._.,. t. Hollley S, ....., '· O'Oonrwll 2. ,.._ 2, si-2, TovlouM 6, Tl'ov•lo ll. ...unme: !Mflno, 1w. I , Jorda119, COUiter 17. • H•llllm&--t!dtM>ll3S-H. ""'--1.,, CtnM.., Mar •1 ~PlaoGom• N••porl-Antho<ly S, S.uerbrtV 1, ...... -' ..-u. 1.tUft<lo" NeltlOI 14, Ewrlla<t IJ, Cramm 7. I.II· Newpor~ls 13, E«I•• 4, U• •· Clac.clo2. UnW.y 11. Yardl•V 1', Dr<*• 7. Stekol corona <let Mar-8erth6, Spln11 JS, 2 L von• 4, Prl• 11. Hou 4. Esttn<l•·<DrnP 12, All•v u . Smltlt Holfllme-c.or-J0.1s. u. 8urcllorCll4, Aledtnl Halftlme---1n.21 All·tourn•menl t e•m-Scott Harker, Todd COUller tEdlwnl, Tom M<Grey IServllel, BHI Yardley IN••POtl .... -1. Miko Turner lH uni lnflon 8ucitl. •.i-T-w1IOllC ~l'IMIS "lllltl ... • INCll ff, Meter 0.1 st CM\'tAT--ltetelloU,MOtwDelU Mater o.1-s-11 7, 0.1_.,. I, CM1t1•r •. DonoY•11 J. eowm ... u. Burke 1. w..,,,... 2, Fr1tot •. Hallllmo-tc.IOll• ~u. PllOS.C eASttEHAll. CM,_T--1 Uftlwersltytt, ltollelto • Unlver•lly sGOrln9-Morvl<k ll. Campbell t , T~lletl to, GenH 4, Slmp10n •. Mcl..oUQlllln 1 Halltlme: un1 .. rs11y, JH•. Prep Wrestling 11..io-T---.TourMm..,t Caplstuno Valley pl.cu: II pound1-(My Ao.I ms. \tCOlld ploC~. •s Paul Orllr. fourth plao; 1Jl LOUIS Juare1, foutO't Pl•c.tt, f 1•!t Tr.nl McConnell,lourtl\plK• u .. 1.,.r.ity48.SMC...,,.....l7 Son C~JI 2, Hevroti 1. Lucl\enl li, 1-4, 1<111111 i. Hlelllns. 6, Btker 2. Oefllt._ S. Uftl•ersltv-#JIQOOCI t, Brvh&Y .C. Gr999 2, ZlkOIUs 17 • .._YClllS 11. Tllotr\H 1, 1(-tO. • Halt time: Uftl,..nlty, 2'-IJ.. N...,.-i...,._•7,ti-.doU(oO Newport-0..rltM I, Antr.ony •. Souerbr•r 10, Nott!n I, EYerlwrt 20, Cr•mm l. Uddle IO.Ct.«lo2. E stonclo-Etotood 12. U ""'°" 3, Hall U , Sperkl 11, $ompM>tl It, 0.UQKl'I 3, Hl»n 1. Aeouietlon-*5'. Pro Score~ N•tteMl ........ tl Auecloll .. Cle¥elond 111, New York 100 New OrtHnl lll. New J9'sey 110 K•nws City 113. Cl\I'-110 O.troll 111. Mllwauk" 112 Seatlle 1n. BcKtcn '9 M•OC!ftal Hochy League NY htendeo 6, St. l oul• 3 Pitht>ur91\ J. Bull•lo 3 !tlel lo• AAQel~ ~. Cl\ICt90 0 --.... 0 p1::1~11 t. W:.1~t·1 0 BUY or LEASE FIAT <?flt.> ~ rlNAL2DAYS I DAY BACINO ENDS SATURDAY! '225,000 GOLDEN Sl'ATI l'1JTURITY ·POST TIME B:ft HORSE RACING/ MISCELLANY / BOATING 8_Jaipslaape? With overnight temperatures near zero, a erewman on the fishing boat Seven Seas works to clear the ice-covered deck before taking the boat out from Boston's Fish Pier. Kialoa and Pass~e ' I Squaring Off Again, SYDNEY <AP> -Two giant · American yachts, whose long- standing rivalry led to a spec- tacular collis.ion off Sydney last weekend, are squaring off again for one of the world's toughest ocean races, tbe 630-nautical· mile Sydney-to-Hobart race. At noon Monday, the 79-foot Kialoa and 72·foot Windward Passage will join a record 134 Australian and foreign yachts in the scramble to cross the starting line in Sydney Harbor. Police and naval craft will have to contend with a waterborne gallery of up to 20,800 persons maneuvering for a front· line view of the start. The spec· tator fleet plays havoc with com· pelit.ors who must sail a tricky dog-leg cours e through the harbor entrance to reach the open se~. "IT'LL BE LIKE a giant •washing machine out there, .. faid Fritz Johnson, the 29·year· old skipper-owner of Windward Passage, a ketch out of Portland, Ore. ''The waler is so churned up by all the boats in the harbor, that's the only way to describe it. It's really an incredible scene. For the Windward Passage, the race offers another op· portunity to square a year-long rivalry with the Kialoa, a ketch from Newport Beach, Calif., skippered by Jim Kilroy. Klaloa owns the 1975 record of two days, 14 hours, 36 minutes, six seconds for the Sydney-to-Hobart race. The two million dollar yachts a re in a racing class by themselves, hea'fily han- dicapped against the smaller boats in the neet. They follow each other around the world. rac- Seattle Bids For Visit b y 'Tall Ships' ing each other for the title of the world's fastest ocean-going yacht. Expensive refinements by one skipper are quickly matched by the other. LAST SUNDAY, the friendly riv;llry led to a collision during the opening day of a preliminary race in the Southern Cross series which culminates in the Sydney- to-Hobart r ace. Both vessels were heavily damaged and spent the week high and dry, making expensive repairs to get them back in the running. The two yachts were engaged in a tight battle for the lead when, in .a disput'~ right of way Jn the fourth mark of an Olympic course, Windward Passage plowed into the port side of Kialoa, momentarily pinning Kilroy under the steering wheel and sending two crewmen over- board. Kilroy bas spent an estimated $10,000 oo replacing a two-foot square aluminum bull and deck plate. Johnson spent an equal amount repairing the twisted bows prit of the Windward Passage. FOR BOTll SKIPPERS, the competition between the two yachts ls the most exciting part of racing. "It's strange to be two or three days ahead in a race where all the other boats are smaller," Kilroy said. "If you don't have another boat it's like a runner heaving along all by himself. Without the rivalry;how can you maximizeperfo1manee'? .. ••For me, this kind of race ls· more and more of a passlltg thing," said Johnson, .. The Kialoa and the ·windward Passage are probably the best matched ocean-racing yachts in the world. We're the last of the great ones. "It's getting to be so expensive that it's a dying thing." * * * Co astal Activity 'Beached ' By ALMON LOCK.ABEY °"''" ........ ., ...... Orange Coaat yachtsmen will take a rare respite ••on the beach" for the next two ·weekends as no regattas are scheduled from San Dieao to San· ta Barbara. Even tbe cnaislng types who normally spend the bolldQa afloat may be nmalAln• secure at their dOcb if current weather condlUoaa conti.n.ue. Premier yachtlnl intenlt Oft.I' the bollday1 will be centered 1everal thouund miles awq bl Sydney, Amtralia. Wber9 four .America yachts have joined 1ome of the top racers from "down wwltr" for the Soutbent. ~ss Series which eOllcludes Die. 26 with the rugged 882-mile Sydney, Australia, to Hobart. Tasmania. THE AMERICAN team e<JD. sists of Jim Kllroy•1 Kialoa. Mark ·and Fritz Johnson's Windward Passage, Tony Delfino and Charles P filer's Phantom and Irving Loobe's Bravura. Ki a lo a and Windward Passage, damaged in a colllslon off Sydney in the first race or th'e series last Sunday, are reported to be back in condition for the finale. But the holiday respite for local yachtsmen wlll be brief. First action-scheduled in the new year will be the second race of Balboa Yacht Club's three-nee SunklstSeriesJan. 8-9. SEVERAL LOCAL yachts have been entered in San Dleeo Yacht Club's second biennial r ace to Manzanillo, Mexico, scheduled to get under way Feb. 4. Nearly 50 ocean-racing yachts are expected to start in the 1,1400-mile race which kicks oft the Mexican Ocean Racing Con· ference <MEXORC) along Mex· 1co's "gold coasl" from M anzanillo to Acapulco. The firsl big event on the Southern CaUfornia yachting scene will be the Southern California Midwinter Regatta in mid-February, drawing more than 1,000 sailboats of all classes and traditionally kicking off the new yacht.iag season. Following the Midwinters, the pace will get torrid with such ma- jor offsbore activity as Newport • Harbor Yacht Club's Ahmanson Series, Los Angeles Yacht Club's Whitney and Los Angeles Times series and California Yacht Club's Overton Series. SEVERAL LOCAL yachts are also entered in Florida's annual Southern Ocean Racing Con- ference <SORC), frequently re- fe r red to as a designer's showcase and the "wofld's largest outdoor tank test' for new yachts. First race of this series is Jan. 28 out of St. Petersburg. Other major events on the Southern California calendar during the winter and spring are the Lipton Challe)lge sudden de- ath race to be held in Newport sometime in March, Loni Bea.ch Yacht Club'.s international match racing series for the Congressioaal Olp in March. the giant NCWJ;l<>rt 'io Eilaenada race in April, and Balboa Yacbt Club's annQal'round trip around Guadalupe Island. ~everal local yachtsmen are also eying the biennial Newport. R .I. tQ Bermuda race in Jone, and the Transpacific Yacht. Club's 3,a>o-mile Los Angeles to Tahjtl race, also carded in June.. SEA'M'LE (AP> -Seattle bas taken one more step in its pre· paralions to host the regal "Tall Ships" as part of the 1978 Seafare Marine Festival. Passage a Winner The Port Commission has ap· proved an agreement with Seafair to provide $40,000 worth of services and facilities for the ships. Most of the services wm be moorages for the seven to 11 ships, plus the 60 smaller schooners, brigs, brigantines, k.etche5, yawls and cutters that will accompany them. The "Tall Ships" and their escorts have named Seattle a 'pbrt of call on the 1978 Pacinc In· ternatlonal Race of the Sail Training Association. ~~:Z:::;!!l!li::ll~ SWl making last minute re· pairs on the wa.y w the starting line, Windward Passage, skip- pered by Fritz Johnson of Portland. Ore., was first to fini$h in the third race of tbe Southern Cross series out of Sydney. Australia. Passage finished the »mile course ooe minute and 50 seconds ahead of Jim Kllroy's Kialoa, also fresh out of the shipyard after the two yachts collided in the first race of the series last Suhday. Jobmon said his crew was still installing a bobstay on the bow when the gun sounded for the atartof~race. Johnson and Kilroy agreed that both yachts would be on band for the start of the naect 682-mile Sydney to Hobart raee on Monday: Both yachts un- derwent extensive repairs after their collision in the first race. People who need People That's what the DAJLYPILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY iullabout! •••• . PHlltlPS ARIN STORES . .,. the liroest and most complete marine hal'dMr9 store Tn. NeWport Beach lpecletty Gift ...,,.. · /fpr the Holdaya • >1e1em Qocb l INSIDE : •Movies • Celebrity Interview •Comics • E ntertalnment Getting away on a weekend inspires thoughts of such faraway places as Afghanistan, but I can't run that fa st and the water's too deep for m y galoshes. So we enjoy meandering through the Southland, just tak· ing in the seasonal scenery, esp~cially along the Central Ca lifornia coast around Morro Bay, Cambria and San Si· meon, or heading inland toward th~ vast majesty of the de· sert. • l M y favorite place out there is\Parrumph, a little tiny town near Death Valley. lt ~s not ve~'( far away from Zzyzzx. we go out there and hunt Parrump" eggs and catch a lot of Zzzs. l One time we were poking aro~d and I found an old bi lliard ball and told my son Scott, ~o was real llttle at the time that It was a Parrumph egg. He lleved me. You can get a hell of a hamburg at a little cafe called Bun Boy's. You can taste It still for~OO miles on down the ·road. They get a lot of m ileage out oft elr heartburn. Robert Barker No one dislikes Los Angeles more th• I. I lltvold the place like the plague. Even close my eyes when I have to go,to the airport. Which la difficult when I'm at the wheel. \ But my wife and I have this paHlon for\good foreign movlH. Not the dirty ones, but the classics by Renolr;,wurtmuller, Truffaut, Disney. \ The secret to noncongested movle·golndi In Los AngelH, of course, Is to hit the mid-day matinees. LA ls\usually empty at 1 p.m . on a Saturday, so you can whip on up the fteeway In less than an hour, sit In a nearty-empty theater aurrounded by other pHudo· fllm Intellectuals, and get back home weU before "'e dinner hour. I woukf llke to recommend some qu1lnt, off.-..reet reat1urants where you might dine by candlelight and dlacuH the auteur theory l of film wtth your date or mite, but I can't. · I As soon as the credit• are off the acreen, l'm.on my way out of town. But I"ve got to give LA credit. They sure show aome good flicks. Steve Mitchell Saturday outings, or any outings for that matter, are limited when you have small children. The drive to get there can't be too long and whatever awaits better have some en- l tertainment value. For us, It's breakfast on Balboa Island, a stroll over to the ferry and a r ide to the Fun Zone. It's not elegant, but It Is fun and can be Inexpensive. We usually set out before 9 a.m. Our kids -ages three and five -are not known for their patience In re.staurants. After that hour most tend to get full and service bog.s down a little. After breakfast we head down to South"'Bay Front and turn right. The ferry's a good way down -a dozen blocks - so If you have toddlef's, a stroller Is a good thing to have on hand. Round trip fare on the ferry is nominal, about 60 cents tor a family of two adults and two children, and It Is a pleasant boat r ide to the Balboa side. Once there, the kids may want to dive Into the penny arcades that line Edgewater, although parents should be aware that nothing works for a penny. They ought to be called quarter arcades. If the Fun Zone Is operating, there are plenty of games to play and rides to enjoy. During the winter, when It's closed, it's a short walk down Main Street to the beach and the Balboa pier beyond. If all that sounds like a bit too much to walk, you can always drive from the restaurants on Marine Avenue on the island down to Agate Avenue where the ferry Is located. Parklno is seldom a problem In the winter. In the sum· mer you may have to hunt around a block or two, but If you. go In the morning, you should have few problems. ' Joanne Reynolds Dow to Spe;nd; A Gift of Time .j Staffers Tell Favorite Saturday Destinations /\s the holiday rush comes to a close. 1f you had a spare day, "here would ~·ou spend it"! Dally Pilot photographers caught these Orange Coast :-,ports enthusiasts enjoying their outdoor pastimes. St aff writers were asked to recommend favorite Jaunts or family activities. Price was not considered. Perhaps it speaks well for the lure and caliber of recreation spots from Huntington Beach to Mission Viejo that few "travelers" ventured far from home and only one crossed the border. ~' , ,. nephew and nfece in Santa Ana make famfly visits falrly easy -and enJoya~le. Raymond Estrada ,,_, ..... Truty, you are made to feel Hone of th• Farrell f1mlly, whl ortglnal9d throup • atorybooa rom1nce tale too long to go Int ....... LIN• Rkety Join JOU •t yo.wt•• overtooldng the ..... blue colored aea. Anel If you Ofder her a glH• of cognac, ••a odda-ott bet ahe can be pereuaded to rattle the reftera by atn "Jalfaco,''the•nth•'"ofherhomeatate. Long. tow squadron• Qf 8Wffe>mely graceful peflclfta c ll"chea above th• offahor• •lter Ilk• llnH of carefully-met poetry, allhouetted a99lnst the m .. low, red.gold sunHt on twlflght petrol. ~ ftunta Banda toom1 blue acroH the Bay of All Sainte and•--.. I• peece 1nd contentment. Until manana ... when we croaa the border headed nOfth. Arthur A. VI There are lots of places I Uke to go on Saturdays. Anet Greece. Middle Earth. Hollywood In theearlydaysotfllm. Sometimes I go to a famous fashion designers' spt1 show and eye the latest fashions. Or Osten to Rot>ttrt Redf tell what he's rea11v.t1ke. You've realized by now that I could only be tatklno a a llbr•a or a bookstore, and I am. I 'II take either, Mariner s Library Is Just a mile or so from my. apartm and U..t's Where r can often be found. Libraries don't Just carry books, of course. They carry the la"5t magazines <a big budget saver> and records Which~ (an either tape or listen to I~ enough to decide If YOU WMt to buy the dl$C. . But Jlbrarl9s are malnty pfaces Where I find boc*s. Mv· own tKtlnlque ts to broWle tM MCt1on that Interests me to- day -ldeftc• fiction, biography, women's Issues, ancient history, cooking, fK whatever. The reference tlbrarlans can be quite helpful If t have an obscure question that needs to be answered. They'll look up Just about anyU.lng, and can usually find It. By the 'wey, r.,_; t.rence lfbrarfaftl ere ttappy to help over the phone too. l Mariner's •ao puts up art and artifacts cotlectlons oft • 1 dfsplay, and malnt.tfns audiovisual materials that can be f ctteckld out OftfnfQht. And en engraving pen so you can pu\ J your driven flcente number• all your valuables. .I <SeeGrnorTIME. Pa1eC.> ~· \ . . i I I I f I I I ( 'Well, you see, I've reached a plateau that I've never been on in my life. For the first time in my life I'm absolutely free." "I know I had promise or I wouldn't have left the house. It's a mill/on rriles from the living room to the stage where the light is on you alone." • "You don't tell a housewife with five kids that she should be In show business. Only your husband does that • .ah-ha-ha, it's incredible." "There's a·certain kind of face that is not a ~t face. If you re pretty you don't look good in hats. An angular face is a hat face." 'Shapeless' Phyllis Diller a Cutup Hy DENNIS McLELLAN Ol llM OaU~ Pll•I SIMI A visitor to Phyllis Diher's Brentwood home rang the doorbell of the stately 65-year-old mansion. wh1('h is s urrounded by a well· manicured expanse of lawn and trees. Within seconds the yapping sound or the 3 comedienne's Lhasa Apso dog, Phearless, could l be heard bell.ind the door, which was opened by one of Diller's secretaries. THE SECRETARY, who reassured that Phearless is harmless, led the way through the large ('ntry hall and into the massive, high· ( • ceilinged Bob Hope room. <It's named that ·1 because a large portrait of Hope, Diller's : • ..patron samt. .. <.·ommands the place or honor.) , As Phearless. sporting two pink bows in well· I; coiffed blonde hair, sniffed the visitor's pantsleg, the familiar Mage laugh of her mistress filled the room . t ·· Ah·ha·ha," Phyllis Diller cracked through · a broad smile as she walked lhrough the room. l She was wearing a fake Cur house robe and a , turban. whi ch formed into roses on top. Il is one of :. ~omc 300 hats in her ward robe. While she's noted for her feight wigs on _ _!t agc, Diller wears a hat when she wants to look ]. '. her best. "I can't stand wigs," she said, now seated on a love seat. ''I have a mad haller in Chicago who for about 16 years has been making hats for me. "There's a certain kind of face that is not a bat face. If you're pretty you don't look good in hats. If you have an angular face, that's a hat face." With or without a hat, Diller has never looked better. Her well-publicized face lift m akes her look years younger than the age of 60, which she just turned. ALTHOUG H SHE'S ON the road three quarters of the year. she's home for the holidays and for her engagement at Knott 's Berry Farm Monday through t~riday, Dec. 30 and Jan. 1 and 2. Diller is divorced and her five children are all on their own. And while she relishes living alone, she says "the minute I'm alone it just starts happening: every day is jammed." She's in demand for Hollywood Squares, Tat· lletales. TV pilots, guests spots, social events and interviews -"ll 's j us l endless." It wasn't that way 23 years ago. Diller, then 37, was a typical suburban San Francisco housewife living in a split-level, three-bedroom, double garage stucco house. While s he feels h er entry into show business was destined...:.She always broke up the kids in school and won the funny parts in school shows -it was never planned, she says. Even as an adult she fractured friends at parties and at the supermarket with her com- ments -"it's just my adjustment to llie. ••But it wasn't her friends who suggested she become a comic. "You don't tell a housewife with five kids that she should be in show business," she says. "Only your husband does that...ah-ha·ha, it's in-credible isl\'t it? "Milton Berle had just signed that SlO million contract and he (her husband) was really thinking of that money. I fought it a long time. Finally, after arguing about it for two years I said okay.'' ASKED WHY A MOTHER of five would step orrto a stage for the first lime, at the Purple Onion in San Francisco, she replied with one word: "necessity.·' She added, "There was a lot of mouths to feed and shoes to buy." Was she an Instant hit? "There is no such thing as a good beginning ~ NOW!! J ,,, .. ' ~ ., "HAPPY HOLIDAY" Our Special Christmas Menu BOB WHITE PWS LISTZ & COMPANY •· l . •• . . • • 1 Y<M own whole bird c.1Md at )QI' table. 4 Of more. By Res. Only. rrttM IJb of..., ........ a.9S Hew Y ortt SkfcHn •••••••• 8.95 Sword filh •........... 7.95 Balled Vfrtlnka Ham. . . . . 7 .9S Includes Fruit and Nuts on the table. Candied Yams. Veg. Soup or Salad and Dessert. SPlCW.11£1' YW1 Ol PACUIE MAXW£L[~ By the sea -Huntington 8eactJ Pier Real cantonese food ••f here or t•k• horn. STAG CHINESE CASINO 11J 21st Pl., Newport BHch ORlole 3-"'4' ..._to M ....... D.ity-W..._. Uwtll 1:00..,.. o•• al '1111114 --Mu SERVED DAILY UNTIL 7:00 P. M. IVCCEPT SAT\JROAY) A. SHRIMP ltMP'URA end SESAME CHICl<CN A peJate pltulng combination of marln11.M1 chlcllen Md lhrlmp tempura S4.95 8. TEMPURA SEAFOOD DINNER Buller11y 111111119 tnd fllet ol IOI• dipped In a baUer and ci.ep..lried 10 a goldt'1 perlecl1on '$4.95 C. YAKI NIKU Thin allc91 ol beef, prepwecl with onion, aoy uuce 1 and le'ien condlmen11 13.tS o: sltAk TEltlYAltl , Clloleeet beef tnagnlfleenlly broiled lo plHae your dlacrlmlnallng latte Paul Case, Drwns DANCING AND IHTHT AIMMENT TUE. THRU SAT. 9 P.M. TO 2 A.M. S..MffoMI! Fllli.,oH! luf allow In Hie C-tyt We cowtd ••• ell th••• ~-······ Al we ..y_h c_. ... Me ,....... We MiDa:.t:' .... Mell..... . .................. ,..... ........... ···r.··--•• ,. ••d•r•t• •••r•t• ~ ........... KONALANES Hn HARIOl ILVD. COST A MESA \.• 545-1112 L. M. BOYD ) IHFOAMS In the DAILY PILOT comic," she said. "The beet you can do is sbow promise. "J knew I had promise or I wouldn't have lelt the house. It'a a million miles from the living room to the st.age where the light ls on you alone. It's lbeteltby fire." silE OBVJOlJSLY BARNED enough Jauabs that n!Jht to make her want to continue. rtgbt? "Wh)', I bad friends there the flnt abow:• she confe.Med. "My God, then COmtJ the second abow. I bad oo second act. U )'OU want to bear about flop 1weat .. " · Diller attributes following the prtnclples ou\- lined in a book called "The Magic or Believmg ' as the key to her show business success. "If I had never read that book I wouldn't have made it," she says simply. . It actually took several years before Phyllis Diller as we know her today fully evol ved. She started out by looking like she was: a normal suburban housewife who bad dark red hair and wore normal clothes. "Then I got hold of a dressmaker who dressed me in very bad taste. A circus is what lt was. Flnally I got on the right track wlth the <See DILLER, Page C4 > SUNDAY BRUNCH AT THE ARCHES "Newport's Finest" 10:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M • Pacific Coast Hwy. At Newport Sh,d • 645-7077 A NEW DINING ADVENTURE . mAnDAn1n CHINESE Geurmet . cu1s1Ne· PEKING •SHANGHAI · . . ·-... ~ SZECHWAN •HUNAN '£ -oauy Lunch · -• And Dinner 4 ~ YwrHolt ... H~-­a6t-41tma..1 . ~ (Formtr Chef of the JO Twin Orago~helm) 1500 ADAMS A VE. tAt ......_...., COSTA MISA l40-1tj7. b :. it~NO~ RESTAURANT.AND LOUNGE Now Under New · ; OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT REMODELED AND REDECORATED LUNCH DAILY -w.. ten frl ....... "'-SI.fl DI ... sava MGMTLY s .. 10,... -...,...,.. ..... ' ......... ...w. fllh ••• From $5.25 ...,_TAIMMIMT AM» 'bAMCIH• MlflHTLT , ... CLAllllO & .. C..••'X Tuelday thru Saturday •••••••••• ILAI .. HAIDtM • "-SOnday and Monday ) tNTERMISSION ·Best in Theater Named OC's Top Man, Woman Bos8e8 qf Pro Stage MANOFTHEYEAR EmleVerre Williams Concerts Slated Paul Williams will ap- pear in concert at 8:30 p.m. Monday and Tues- day at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion or the Los Angeles Music Center. The concerts are makeups or originally scheduled Oct. 24 and 25 dates, postponed because of illqcss. Williams is a versatile perfonner with success .as a film and television actor, composer-lyricist, vocalist, t elevision variety show artist and :screenwriter. BE BAS won .numerous entertainment awards including an Oscar for the song .. Evergreen."' · Tickets purchased for the original October dales may be exchanged. at the Music Center box office. Tickets for the Mon - day and TuC'sduy shows are $8.75, $7.75 and ~.75. This i.'r the laat fn a serio .of Jive columM reuiewing the 11ear JDTI *1t theater along the Orang~Ct>a4t. When Orange Coast playgoers' talk turned lo professional theater, there was, for a good many years, onlyonesuch entity along the Orange Coast -the estimable South Coast Repertory. Then, in the fall or 1973, a new concept (at least on the West Coast) was born when the build- ing which once housed the local Moose lodge was converted to a dinner theater in San Clemente. Sebastian's Wcsl Dinner Playhouse grew and nourished -and a year ago it joined SCR in the ranks of Equity theaters. Clearly, the market for s uchoperations was therein abundance. THEN CAME 1977, THE year of the dinner theater. Sebastian's expanded its operations by startmg another showplace at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. And just north or the Costa Mesa city limits, after three years of growing pains, the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse was born. Both Sebastian's, with its lengthy en1age- ments, and the Harlequin, with its briefer runs, established firm beachheads among the Intermission Tom Titus theatergoing populace along the coast this year Whi ch is why the people behind lbe operations Ernie Verre of Sebastian's and Barbara Hampton of the Harlequin -arc the Daily Pilot's man and worn an of the year in theater. For Ernie Verre. president of California Din- ner Playhouses. Inc , which owns the two Sebas- tian's operations, the opening of the San Clemente facility in 1973 represented the culmination or a 12-yeardream. The Chicago-born Verre harbored an ambition to be in show business from hi s high school days when he sang with a dance band al a dinner playhouse in the Windy City after school. His first full-time job was bell hopping at the plush Chicago Club -where hi s father was head chef. During World War I I, he put shows together for con vaJescing G Is . AFl'ER A STINT ON THE Chicago Sun Times. Verrejoined a graphic arts corporation in Chicago and eventually became regional sales manager. covering 14 states. Thatled to a transfer to Newport Beach in 1969 and a renewed interest in thedinnertheater field . Verre left his job and spent a year formulating Christmas Sunday Brunch llJAM :H'M Christmas Dinner SPM IOPM Ri>setvatlon~ 77'2 '1' ll K 1 New Year's Eve Dinner 6PM·lll'M New Year's Eve Dinner Dance $3{)<1e~person includes unlimited beveragiU. dinner. dancing & favors I hghel>L ~ual.ny 1'iaL1ve Mexican Food!> plans forwbatisSebasUan'a West. Finally, after a skirmish with the co14tal commission which de- layed matters f\lrtber, the theater-restaurant opened in November of 1973 with a month· long · producUonor "Oklahoma ... Popular musicals such as "Fiddler on the Roof," "A Funny Thlng Happened on the Way to the Forum," "Man of La Mancha" and "Dames at Sea" -all directed by Orange Coast College's John Ferzacca -followed and built an enviable reputation for Sebastian's in its first year. Then ln September, 1974. Verre brought bis nephew, Dan Verre, west from a similar operation in Florida and the younger Verre became the theater's a rtistic director, staging the San Clemente theater's last 17 shows. Earlier this year Sebastian's opened a second dinner theater at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim, with Dan Verre also directing each production - thus far, •'Hello Dolly," "Carnival" and ··cabaret." LESS THAN A YEAR after Sebastian's opened in San Clemente, Barbara Hampton and her co-producer bus band Al were in the process of remodeling an industrial buuding in south Santa Ana a mile north of the San Diego Freeway just orr Harbor Boulevard for their personal lffetime dream, the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. Halfway into the construction process, a carpenter's strike and a loss of financing thwart- ed their plans for a September, 1974, opening. But Barbara and Al held on -for three long years -· and finally, in April, 1977, the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse became a reali ty when the curtain went upon the comedy "Forty Carats." Barbara and AJ have their roots in New York. and Maryland. They came tq Orange County in 1968 with the idea or openJng a restaurant and cocktail lounge eventually. A trip back east in 1970 changed all that they were invited by chance to a dinner theater <:1nd, Barbara recalJs, "We decided tha~ was it.·· ALTHOUGH IT WAS TO BE seven years before they were able to put their project into operation, the Hamptons pursued their goal with determination. In the nine months that the Harlequin has been open, the Hamplons have presented seven productions. three or them for the first t,ime on a local stage. Their next three shows will be popular comedies -"Last of the Red Hot Lovers," ''Never Too Late'' and "Goodbye Charlie" · which will round out the first year of the Harlequin with 10 productions. Barbara and Al Hampton and Ernie Verre symbolize success in one of the most difficult forms of theater, the dinner playhouse. Both Sebastian's and the Harlequin have contributed highly to the Orange Coast entertainment picture. and for both 1977 is really only the beginning. All SPORTS EVENT GIANT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN: • R~crvallon Required 772.5900 Mon.-Thur. 11 :30 o.m. to 10 p.m. 6) Anaheim Hyatt House 1700 S. Harbor Blvd .. Anaheim (CM!ctlyOppoelte Disney\clnd) Fri. & !>at. 11 :30 o.m. to 11 p.m. (QCKT Al LS ~Undoy 4 p.m. lo 10 p.m. 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 Merry Christmas We're celebrating with a Special Christmas Menu. Seatings at 1p.m.,3 p.m., 5 p.m., 7 p.m. reservations .... 833-2770 ·New Years Eve Gala Special Menu Seatings at 5 p .m., 7 p.m., 9 p.m. (HATS, HORNS & NOISEMAKERS) dancing to Jimmie Boggio Fiascos reservations ... 833-2770 Fe.aturing ...• •SAME GREAT STEAICAND SEAFOOD •.• Fnday,Oecember23, 1977 DAILY P!LoT Q WOMAN OF THE YEAR Barbara Hampton 'Beatles' Slaiben EWJntSUJa1 Tieket.s are on sale for '1BeaUemanl11" ' Broadway musical which bee1nl pertona with tho ortgl.nal New York cut. Satu.nlq, . 1'8ttheShubertTbeater1nOenturyClty. Performances of "BeaUemula .. scheduled Tuesday through Friday at I p. Saturday at 'l and .10 p.m. and Sun~ at 2 p.m. Tickets are available at the SbQ))trt Theatre box office, Ticket:ron and Muwal ..... cles, and by telephone, 5S3·6009. ~ Make the Holidays Even Brighter. Join us for a merry Christmas Day dinner. Feast on tender roast turkey with all the trimmiflgs or choose from other selected favorites f ram the regular menu. All delicious. And all very sensibly priced. Chrislmas Day at the Turtle. In Newport Beach, at 59 Fashion Island on Newport Center Dr., 644-5313. Also in Fullerton, at 1450 N. Harbor,. 7ust north of Brea Blvd. 871-9340. Reservations accepted. We honor Amcrkan Ex pres.~ el other maior crnd1 t cards. CROWN HOUSE Rt!STAURANT 32'02 COAST tf1W. LAGUNA MOUEL (At c.-V-.Y lt.,-..eyl 499-2626 496-Snl IVY HOOSE RESTAURANT 384 FOREST AVE. LAGUNA BEACH ,,~,,..~- Ample Free Parl1.1ng 494-9491 752-8558. . LUNCH•OtttNER DAILY •FoodtOTlkeOUt 1.1:30AM.to10 P.M. ·211J .......... COSTAMISA '4J.716Z •·64'-ttU COME JOIN US AT OUR New Year's Eve Party! Sal• cloy. Dec1..._ 31 21112 PACIFIC COASTHWY.·:t · $ 4 0 °0 per coupl• .• includes: DINNER (tax & gratuity) Served 8:00 to 11:00 p.m. SPLIT OF CHAMPAGNE For each two people DANCING TO GERMAINE • & CLEAR DA VS 9:00 to 1 :30 a.rm • PARTY FAVORS DINNER MENU: SOUP OR SALAD CHOICE OF: TOURNADOES OF BEEF SCAMPI • LOBSTER TAIL PRIME RIB BAKED POTATO OR RICE PILAF BOSTON CREAM PIE COFFEE. TEA. OR MILK Lounge (for Cocktails Only) SS per c .... H•W ...... ( •speciai room rates for NeWYear ·s Eve I ••• AT THE SAME GREAT PRIGS •SAME GREAT COCKTAILS •.• Viour team scores AGAIN SPICW. MEW YIAll'S OVBMl•HT P~CIAGE $63",.,.-... the Management & Staff of · tJ:le ~irporter C/nn Cf/otel Wishes you a Happy Holiday Season ••• AT lHE SAME PRICES • ENTERTAINMENT . • HATS, HORNS, rn: 0RESERVATloNS 111. 7:30 DAILY PILOT ,. . ... (f'roaa Page CJ) • EVE CEL..EBRATIONS Greetings · t.l'hey're not dreaming or snow in the West Indies. But Jamaican singe rs, mimes and dancers will join revelers from six other coun· , tries Christmas Eve on the live Public BroadcaalinJ Service Special, ·'Christmas Around the World.'' During the one· hour show· aa~llltes will beam celebrations from Bethlehem, Jerusalem, southern Dav aria, London, the Loire Valleyi Jamaica and New Zealand. The U.S. segment of the 10 p. rn. Channe 28 program, underwritten by the Sun Co.1. will feature the University of South Carollna concert cbolr serenaaing last·miilute shoppers in Columbia, S.C. LA CAVE Din~ In Our Romantic Cellor ·~ GIFT OF-TIME. • • Make Reservations Early For New Years Eve Dinner! Celebratiom on Land and Sea t1911 i,1 .• Catalina's Casino Ballroom wiQ. be e or a gala New Ye~s Eve ration featuring the m~ of Wells and "That Big Band.'" fie SlS per person price for the "'~ includes a breakfast; bullet. agnc and party favo~ •. · ll ce boat wilt !depart erth 96, Ca alina Terro.ipal, San at 7 p.m. . turday, Dec. 31. . fun:lilledcountdown to midnight. The musical celebrities and their respective stages will include Minnie Ripperton a.qd Meco, Space Stage ; Roy Ayers Ubiq&lfty, Tomorrowland Terrace and' Louie BeUson and the Big IJ'aqd Exp11>sion, P1dia Gardens. Tickets, prlced' a t $10 pre. purchased or $12 t'1at ~ht, will enli· tie holders to unlimited use of par'k at· tracUons and all the a'dded eptel'tab'i· menL ' tum boat wil sail from 'Avalon a.m. on Sun y, Jan. 1. Round- at tnmsport tion is $10 per . Boal and da ce reservations re available through ickctfon. · * * * ' ' 'I'he.. Sylvers rocJc groujt win · headline the New Yea~s !ve ta}fl1t lineup at Knott's Berry F,arm .. ~ .. tb.c. ~ BowlJ>ow:Ml'Mnl\tersitY Qf Michigan band will be part of the celebration. •• G&\inning!rom8· p.m. to2:30a.m .• eyland's ual New Year's Eve 'iRlf/t~ will o er top-name artists and a ~ (. . . . A Great Christmas r . r· Dinner. .. At Tlie Marriott A~· is a 1rad itiu11, m1r old fas/iio11ed Turkey Dtrmtr, willl 1/ie 1rimmj11 s, will be available on Cltrlst'f1 s. You 'II carvt! your own turf. and the lefl'oYifS belong to;,, ·. --------------------- . . . .. ,.. !'II Tasteful Holiday Gifts from ... t " . I 'm not saying I wouldn't prefer a r eal trip to Greece, or a chat w1tt1·a real hobbJt. But In the' meantime, I 'II take the library. • Jackie Hyman Uu mo9t alngle-p•rent famllln where th• moth•r wortca fula.tlme, my chlldren and I are generally on a hectle ach~. My 15-yHr~ld son and 12-yHr-old daught81 .. ott•n bu~ with their own llvea-.emlndlng me that aoon they wlll be grown and~. I lov• to go .-1ne 1n th• winter and.for y,ara I've left the c::hlldren .,Ith their grandmother think- ing they .. re too amall or too much .~ to take. Bui Ifft year I found out twea wrorw; e.t,h of my children, •kll~ for th• fl~t tlm-• toefr•ll,llke duckatowat.ef' •. ,_. : .. i' Now ..... .,.,.our pennl ... pool~ vy awHte,., eocks a(ld long u~rwear ii111·9akl- lng whenner we can. We •._ya takfllili. own food 61\d my ~Hdren tent their equipment • Serving From 5:00 to 12;QO The Very Best Prime Rib, Steaks, Lobater, Shrimp, Crab 646-7944 . 1695l'i lrvlne COSTA MESA AMPLE FREE PARKING 494-IOll/t J .. t.COASTHWT,_ la~.IUall ·' 0,.24~ It'• a beautiful ahartng expet'fence fo ... n\y two Y.~ struggling to ~ up wttb JM on the ~:~ng tull weH'that l'U be \at1V19MtiSJ to k••lt \Ip. them aoot\&. We .. ugh ftletMr when II• down and compare brvl ... ~t ", --------,... .... ..... ...... the end of.._ d., to determine who the "RHI Hot Call &42-5671. Dog" Is. Put • lew word a Afterwards, when the aun am, we drtnlc hot to work lor ou . chocolate and look out at the snow. It'• • won· q.rtul fMffng to find yoursetf growing doser to ~ur chlldren n they. and you, grow up ... ' Cheryl Romo In these davs of planned communities, computerized education and canned music, a strol 1 on San Clemente's old wood pfer can be a1 r efreshing reminder of fife's diversity - even In Southern California. Little boys tn odds and ends of clothing flfh off the pier with their Dads' cast-off f ishing gear. A more seasoned angler Is llketv to have established hln,self in a comfortable folding chair with a favorite rod propP,ed agalnstttwraUlng.,d a fisf'I or two swimming ina R~Stlcbucket~thisettiow. Somewhere n ~he p•er ~ fl.Q~ ot1 1 youngster~ r.omps mohg pigeons,, .nemate-/ ty trying t.Q, catch4a bird or runni~. f.JSm them, screa~ng w ,th ftlbned terror. Two 'or-th M;irlries, speakl09-ln down- home accents,. y be gatt)ered ar~ the telescope, di deep In their pockets tor dimes, so they can get a good look at the seals on , Seal Rock -or the bathing beauties closer at hand on the beach. Near the concession stand a young faml· ly has bought the children popeorn to feed the pigeons. A school-age child Is fascinated by the' bird which perches on his shoulder, but the toddler wants no part of the aQaresslve pesJs andcllngstomother'sneck. A lifeguard suddenly. sprints from his Pier tower and Is gone over the railing -a streak of tan and bright trunks to aid a foun- dering swimmer. There is a buzz of excitement near the end of the pier as one of the small boy flstlermen brings up a squid. No two trips to the San Clemente pier are alike fA. stroll U> tt\e end of the pier and beck can ~-xcitlng when the lifeguards go i~ • action or ai, unusual sea creature •s naupeo ~ 'up. More'often, it will be relaxing and~ re- minder tnat\vhlle mfnY things chang~ ~U!=~ thatlsgoodr.emaivsttt~ .... ; ~ .. · • ' · Anne Cooper (f'roa Page C2) DJ;U..Elt DEUGl{.fS. ¥ shaSMless ,t.b.ing,. Thea when ~ mia1 c~ in. that did it: we i:ulbed that was,,the rtgb\ l•sth • -. t.omake mef~y." " · BY 1959 s he, was ~eiv'-&-natlonwi4iatt~n-• tion, th~ to llel'appearancea on the Jack Paar Shot.tUteT that io!i\I~ sl$e did Neord· brea ng busin e9 wbere'sbjt went. ' the -agfi'fJ1Jb byJlis l)i1Ijr says s\le has · .touc <all the bpses'Jn show )nasine11, ~~ahe t ays, !~e's never been haJ>pie. l • · NOW OPEN Breakfast and Lunch as well as· Dinner I.days ~week ' ... ~ ' co,,,.enj&y-our . ·' varied menu and savor 'the view MAXWll£~ By the sea -Huntington Beach Pier IJeginJ• . Newhr ,~ Wilh _\\o~aotr =1 In tht PtciflC' $allroorn for $83,00 f)4r~pf~ \ . ';MirriOtr • Steak and lobster • Unlimited Cocktails • Olampagne at Midniftit • Fevors • Continuous music wi th "The Society for the Prnerntion of Big B•nds" and "The Brewen" In ttl• Capriccio C•f• fOf $78.00 per coupfe •The Pacific Ballroom package with the W•llv Ruth Ou•r•t from 9:00 p.m. "1ell~ YoU see, I've re,caa~ a plate~u that ·( rve never been o in m y life. li'of' the first Ume in 1 ·my llfttl'm absol tefy free. · 1 • • "Tfiere are no children around the house. I, for the first time, am sinele. I'm able to put. myaeUNo. l. I've never been in that position." rx;r& lennis Club_ -· ..,~·-·--..._...• ·~ llllO,..,.ponV.-11<. .· Wltt about retirement? "I Have to quote my son," she says: ''The only w•ytostop an old comic is toshoothim." <·Malle reservations NOW! -From 9 00 a.M. 10 5 00 pm. P11onf! 17141 640.4op<l lPr1ces lnchJde tax lit gratuily) Advance deposit reou,,ed In the tCing's Wharf for $35.00 per coupfe ··l>11me Rib • Olampagr1e at Midnight • Ot~CO J COMICS I CROSSWORD by Br1d Anderson BOOMER 1 t ()1t11u. .. ,......,.~.......... tz.·Z.; 1 "Some Christmas present --it's not even 1 gift-wrapped!" I• l ;F UN KY WINKERBEAN AND NOUl TO CLO!>€ 1Hl6 CHRl5TMA~ CDNCSRT : .. MOON MU LLI NS GERIATRIX !'L.L NEve.R UNOelZ- SfAND MOW Nt~OLSON GET9 A CAN Cf=- COFFeE:: IN HE::JZ PUIZ'5e~ MISS PEACH -·--4. ... GORDO by Tom Batiuk n 's CALL.ED 'THE uTn£ lU6A soc;,! ~ 'V . . . . by Mell MOTLEY'S CREW by Gus Arriola DAii. Y l'ILOT CJ - 1111 "" ........... 1,.w ...... t .. by Roger Bradfield wet..i.., 1~ Yoo CA.N'i': R E!A.P 1'He e01"'1"0.M &,..ION, c.-e-r's TRY 1'Ml!i= TOP L-ION, TARZAN t I by Templeton and Forrriatn TODAY'S CIOSSIDID PVZZL ACROSS .cc eoti.aaue UNITED Feature Syndicate , 4SSudc*I outt>urat 46 Virtuous 49 Thinga thll f Strike 5H1d reantv 9CUy l11 Turkey llllUM ~'+-+~~+'-+'~ l'!+'~'"t 14 Hold • S3 Swlftneta atance 54 Prefix !Of 15 Emerald Isle wlllle 1 8 Comt>lnatlol'I 55 Not one 17 Module 56 Adtu11 18 lrlsh lake 57 E1ay ga11 19WNHI 58Lamb 20 Gawe back paeudonym E N 0 22 Ma~H !lrm 59 Le1rns lrom ----~n....Tf'!I" 23 Olatorttd bOoka lhl truth 60 Etbe 24 French tributary region 61 Encamo 25 String of bead a DOWN ~~ ~= soort 1 Stimulate N""ht" ... ,1 2 UnlttQuented ._ w• 3 "1tteemS•• 33Dhl;race .. 34 lnQueet ~ ~~1111 ottic:lal: 5 Gardened 35 ~=;.uon e U11d poor 36 At··-·: In Judgment 7 Bark Jeopairdy 8 Comoau pl. 37 Soll with 9 L.oc1l l1io: 2 l'lud WOfdt 38 Pfot .. slonal 10 Removed 39 i':.oot •d •trlOQ,S .tO S*'•' 11 So. 1nili.u watlfcourses 'I ~o-. 12 Kitchen Item ducUont t 3 P11mlres 43 came 21 bpos. e SI· togerner 22 ..... de . "'°" 42End 43 Summon '1000$ 25 E. Ind 1n-45 Quebee strumcnt oenlnsula 26Swao 27 Summarize '6 Cleaning 28 Catclles woman Illes 47 Not tnlirm 29 Hockey 48 Nick 1 maneuver Charles'~ 30Eur.narion 49CFLand l 31 Rapacious NFL olayers, desire 50 Sea wan • 33 Oigreas SI Blue~r t' : 3& Phnth Olg ' I 37 Severe t>oss 52 Garmen 39 C1garet1e oart oart• 54 Sam 40 "bsence of reacher-~ • I I I ft 1)-'JL V PILOT " ·Top Albums Reviewed Discs Good Idea for Last-minute Gifts By MICHAEL PASKEVICJl Ol llW OD1ty Pl'-4 IW" Unless vou're a masoctust who thrives on waiting until the Iai.t ~ccond for holiday shop. ping, this overview of borne of the year's best albums µiay not do a lol or i?ood. But let's face it. C<!rtain people <often p-a·r· t'·O·t·s> have a knack for gaggmg the Christmas i-.pirit by presentin~ such recorded wonders as "Abbott and Cos tello Meet Barry Manllow," or The Captain & Tennille ... Songs to Make It Hail." Remember . smill' and say thanks, then as)C for a receipt. Don't open the album and throw ) ourself at the mercy of your nearest record de· .11pr. Some sugge:;ted alternatives: Be Bop Deluxe, "l.ive Jn The Air Age," IBarvestSKB 11666 ). . The year 's best lrvc album Crom a vasUy un- d6k'rated British quartet. The group's intriguing btand of progressive pop/rock reaches majestic heights at times due to the shimmering solo gtJitar work of leud singer Bill Nelson. This s~uld have been another "Comes Alive." J. Al DIMeola, "t;iegant Gypsy," Columbia (r C 2 34461). • A heavy doi.e of Jazz fusion and classical IC\tin, but DiMeola's clcclnc guitar sol~s have tl\f: rock impact. of Carlos Santana at bis best. ()fle listen to "Ml'd1tcrranean Sundance," an a~ustic duct with flam enco master Pablo De LOci u, will show why this album was voted "Best G)ilitar Album of J977" in the Guitar Player re- a4ers' poll. ' Eagl<'s, "Jlott•I f'alHornia." Asylum '1E·t084 >. *~ Played lo <.Jcath on radio, but still the band 's h t effort to date. /\ brttcr, yet highly melodic I k at Southern California lifestyles. Fleetwood Mac, "Rumors," Warner Bros. <fSK 3010). , State of the arl pop/rock for the '70s from an o (.fit that has found its commercial and dance- :.il>le niche. Potentially the biggest selling album ofqll timc: no need to say more. The Kinks , "Sleepwalker," Artlsta 1"106 ). • A groat comeback from one of the few sur· vfvin~ bands of the c;uly '60s ··British Invasion .·· Classic straight-ahead rockers, decent ballads, Jnd of course, the vocal lyrical charm of Ray Davies. Little Feat, '1'1me "'°""A Hero," Warner Broa. <BSK 3015) Leader Lowell George talces a back seat here to the emergence of keyboardist Billy Pa~ne and i.econd guitarist Paul Barre.re. The r esulL is fo'eat's most accessible and enjoyable effort since "Feats Don'L Fail Me Now." Soulful blues and boggic. Linda Ronstadt, "Simple Dreams," Asylum <6E 10<&). America's most popular females.inget work· 1ng with a fine selectiOI) of material and a Steady :-.upport from producer Prter Astier, Her vocals continue to grow more donfldenl and graceful with each album. t Doz Scag11, "Down n.-o Then Left," Colum· bla <JC:W729). Sophisticated soul romanticism from a master voca11't. As on "Sil_k Degrees" and "Slow Dancer," Scaggs• music cuts throu&h confining labels and or any age barners. His potential ap- pears unlimited.' l Sex Pistols, "Never Mind 1be Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols,'" Warner Bros. <BSK 3147). Despite all the promotional babble, this is a truly great record that captures the anger and frustration behind the punk movement. Johnny Rotten 's venomo1,1s vocals are matched only by the furious power chords and muscular rhythm support or hjs band. Not for the weak·hearted. Steely Dan, '1Aja,'' ABC <AB 1006). . Slicker and more j azz-orient<..>d than previous l'fforls. but there's.no hiding Becker and Fagen ·s fla11· for offbeat lyrics or their trademark vocals. This one takes a few Us tens Rod Stewart, "Foot Loose & Fancy Fr~e." WarnerBroa. <BSK309.2l. The high-energy material chums with re· newed energy and confidence. however, its on ballads like "You're In My Heart" and "I Was Only Joking .. where Stewart's vocals are mo~t dfeclive. This is very ~oli<I album from rock'~ fmest vocalist I 'SIMPLE DREAMS' Uhda Ronatadl .. • .. • " • I • .. ~ TOP ALBUMS -~Uminaiia · Eve Neupon, Mission Viejo Eve11t,s .. Al least two Orange Coast area communJlies will celebrate the lrad1· tional Luminarias observance of Christmas Saturday night. RESIDENTS OF Galaxle Dnve in Newport Beuch have been placing the sacked Ugbtcd candles in front of their homes for 10 years. The event is also scheduled on the streel•and sidewalks of Mission Viejo Christmas eve. Can dles arc placed in <i white paper bag with one to two inches of sand in the bottom. At· sundown, the <'andles are lighted and placed along the streets and sidewalks. Albuquerque. N.M. holds a large Luminaries event each year Tht' Mission VieJO celebration is supported by communlty activities com m ittee and Mission VieJO Beautiful. 'Dr and Mrs. J .R. Betson initiated the Galax1e Drive event 10 years ago when they moved to the Dover Shores location from Albuquerque. MRS. BETSON estimates 350 randies ure used an front of their Spanish home Several thousand candles are used when many in the neighborhood pa rlic1pate, she said. Puppet Show Slated ' The observance originated in Mex- ico as a s yrpbol or light leading the 1 three wise ,men to the baby Jesus. The candles are lighted al Sp m. and often bum until 6 or 7 a. m. Christmas day. according to Mrs. Betson. The Mulb erry Thunder Bridge Puppets with the Goat Hill Strag· glers String B:.ind will perform post-Christmas family ente rtainment Monday through Thurs· day in Long Beach. Performances by the Costa Mesa-based group arc scheduled for 1 and 3 p.m . each day at the Found "Theater, 7th and Orange. Live mui;ic. ori~inal fables and a udience pa r tlcipation are featured. Admission is $t. ~ THEY LEAD 1llE LEAGUE IN SCORING ... AFTER nlE GAME! ,7~ SF Symphony Official Quits ~ .......... ...:...... $2.50 ANY TIME PLUS (PGI '!D •1,()\1~ , .1nd l>E.tnr ... W<><>DY .\U.I~~ edwards MESA CINEMA HEWPOAT IL VD AT I '1T"4 \ T COST A MES~---_ ~~6-·S02~ 01.\~E ·E. TC~ SAN FRANCISC O <AP J -Joseph Scafidi, executive director of the San Francisco Sym- phony. has resigned cf· Cast Told For Film LOS ANGELES <AP J Billy Barty has been signed for the role of a door-to -door Bible sa lesman in "Foul Play ... which stars Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase. Barty has made over 120 screen appearances since his debut in 1928 at the age of five. rcctive June 1, and wrll be succeeded by Peter Pastreich. who holds a s imilar Position with lhe St. Louis Symphony. At the announcement he re las t week. sy m · ph o n y Pr es ident Lawrence W Metca lf said, "The association and the community owe o g reut de bl to l\1 r . Scafldi. We hold him In deep respect.'' Scufid1 was USSOCii:ltCd with the symphony for 38 years and was promoted to executive director In 1974. Pastrcich comes to San Francisco after 12 .,err.. DIVID MD•a~ • llICUA 1m:1111 Rio IUll UDllJll · Dll 111nam1111 .Ill.I. CUDllll ~ .......... o -... ·-· .... •.. .... .. I 111-18111• ~ Hl-WAYJ9 ~ DRIVEIN ltacll llvd. St. ti Ganltn Gm• F!wy. W11tllll11111t • 534·6282 M10 l rtalol $1rMI CN\a ..... • 548-2711 years with the St. Louis ----------------------------- Symphony. AL ,. .ACIHO "'" "IOllY DHUIUD" Anybody who could turn Lot's wife into a pl.llar of salt, incinerate Sodom and Gomorrah and lnake it rain for _fortj ·d~ys and forty nights has got to be a fun guy. ., is it~ ••• (PG) ' • • 4 ROCK TAU< TIMES. PLACES Friday, O.eember 23, 1971 DAILY PILOT C~ New Wave's Stardom: N@t S,o Bright Idea By USA ROBINSON Billy ldol 1s 19 years old, bas unnaturally blond hrur in the punk rock style. and wears black leather jacket and trousers along with his white shoes and yellow socks. His band. Gener:.ahon X, was about to malce its second appearance on BBC-TV's "Tops oC the Pops" show. and he almost apologetically ex- plained t.o me that they'd Jip.synch along to its new slngle, "Wild Youth ." "You should really come aJong and i.ee us do a proper gig," muttered bassist Tony James, "l kind of feel like a fool doing this ... '' The punk rock scene in England has changed. A year aeo I saw the Sex Pistols, The Club, Buzzcocks and Heartbreakers in Manchester, EngJand. I saw a band called Eater <wlth a lS·year·old drummer named Dee Generate) play In a tiny pub called The Hope and Anchor. I saw X Ray Specs -whose girl sax - opbone player wore army fatieues and a v.eil cov· ering her face -in the basement or a Kings Road pub called the Roebuck. At that Ume I was impressed With the energy of the music, the almost euphoric excitement of the.kids who came to see the shows, and the spmt and camaraderie among the bands, I wondered then what. would happen if these groups -most of whom were not signed to re- cord labels-:got deals, mad~ money. and b.ecame. Stars. Would they willingly jump into llmousrnes and ~tart guuling the Dom Perignon? • There wasn't much chance of that happening then. The Sex Pistols had been tossed orf EMI for making "obscene" statements on llve British television, and were hqving trouble getting another record company t.o back them. The Clash were signed to CBS, but most A & R de- partments or English comeanies were hesitant to sign any or the new, young bands that seemed to keep popping up <almost overnight) ln London. Then the Sex Pistols singles went to- No. 1. The Clash sold out a sbow al the Rainbow. Christmastime In a world gone mad ... who needs a funny, fabulous love story? YOU DO! Events· on Tap 'Fi11di11~ tl1e olle you love ... is timti11g yoursc(t: 1-1151Kt1ES ~TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTl01' "HEROES" Co·st,1rnng HARRISON FORD·Wntten by JAMESCARABATSOS :Vlus1c bv JACK NITZSCHI:. and RICHARD HAZARD D1rel1t·d bv JLRFMY PAUL KAGAN · Produced by DAVID fOSTER .ind LAWRL'.NC t TURMAN· A UNIVERSAL PICT~Rl ·TECH:--!ICOlOI< .. (PG) ••lttot of MocAlttNt Santa A"• 640-7 444 -CITV CENTRE W CI NEMA I •• '"'"" t1u Sf\~,.,. Cf'"''• Ot.-,...•'"i"'l.~ttl:'I BRIJOKltUHSI e,.H •• .... ..._._,..., •·---1n ... .- TONIGHT, OllCUlllUI U LIGHTED IOAT f'AllAOI! An· null FHllVll of Ll;tlh Peracle •I N••P<>rl HlrDor beglnnlr>g a1 •·JO o'<llKk "'HI ol the 811~ hlend Ferry LandlACJ and preodl119 UOl,lnd LICIO lilMld -_,. .... H ll s•O. of BaU.0. ,,.lliMula. ''THa DEVIL'S OtSCIPL£" TIHIMl•Y' tl><OUQI> Sund•v•. 1.30 p.m •• M•rk l •per Forum, Mu'te Center. LOS AnQ•I•• Tl\ursd<IY• <lnCI S•turd•v• mahnteS 11 7·30 ThrOUQI\ Jan. ,, T•<k•I• ltll'PllOnl' 1ll·•11· au 1 nl orm•l•On <a ll J ll•t1J.llll. SATUllOAY,Ol!CllMIEllU ANNUAL lUMIHAltlA 1'£Sf1VAL -C•ndl•• lilt tl\r°"91\0ut MIHIOn V•e10 from 7 pm To.._ 137~ tor dtltol\ CHIUSTMAS LUMIHAlllAS IHlur· 11111 1>om• a..:oratlOM and Cll$J>l•Y• 1>4llt<"Md •llli' At~q ... ·, "La lltos•da ... M••:ic•" Chrhtm•s eelebrallon. s o.m •I""'! G•••••• Orl•f, N ... oort !Ha<h. Ttl•P""M ._._Sl90forci.ta!ls. "A CHltlSTMASCAllOL"7 )Op m IO<lay, Mo<Klly thrOUQll Friday. Al!oO 7 lO p.m IOCS.y, Noonelly, Wednesday ~ Ft..,.., M MMt1 Taper For11m. Music Centw, Los A1191leL 1'1Cll.ets f'. u ... d-.s.t. "--.Uper oenon tor 9rQUflS of JO or more. ,. ... .,.,_ 21M72·7l1'. MONDAY. o•c•M••lt u PAUL WILLIAMS In c-.rt IOClly and TwMlay, l :lO p.m. ti the Oototlly CNndltr PavUlon, Los AnQelK~ Ctnttr. Tlc~ets SI.JS, $1,15, ... n. Tlclleh Pll•<NMd fororl911\11 ()(t.14, 's .-s un .,. uc:......., et M1151c Cent•• bOa ottkt. ''CINOl!lllLLA" ballot by,,,. Los An9w10 8•11•1 Comp111y 2 p,m. Utroutf' O«. JO at ti. Am!IA- Audll«lum, P-. Tld••ll .,,.. lnformetlon S77·S!l 1. Movies Cast LOS ANGELES <APl --Roger Moore stars in .. Ath~na Crises " in _ _.;,. _____________ .....:..~--....~--~--------Greece after "The Wild ' . . THEY'LLD.O ANYTHING TOSI OP .~,, • ., . The· operation that can trigger 51 human time bombs. G ese" co mpletes filQ\ing in Africa. David Nive'n also stars ... Marjoe Gortner will s tar in the $4.5 milllon space adventure "Starcrash" Will Sampson. Robe r t Fors t er and C huc k Connors have been signed to star in Quinn Ma1'tln's NBC moVie "Legend at Sundown" . British act.or Dinsdale Landen has been cast in MGM's "International Velvet " Contract OK'd LOS ANGELES <AP> -The Board of Airport Supervisors has ap· proved a precedent· setting contract granting Host International. Inc, the food and beverage concession at Los Angeles International Airport. Under the con· tract approved by a 13--0 vote, Host agreed to the percentage of minimum guarantees set by the airport . , NIUL•EllllY THUNOlll llUOOll _.,.IS from Or-County •t the ~ 8tl(ll ,,_ Thffler, 1th - Or•nv•, LOftQ ~., t"""'9h Tllun· <l•Y Sllowtlmes t -, p.m. Tk k•U $1. lnlormellonS41·sa.7. TU•SDAY,OEC•Ma•1111 MOLIDAYO-ICI! llVougllJ.,. 1 •t •"•"""' Con,.entlen Center. Ma1ln•es ~ p.m. OK. ». Dec. 31 •nd J 111. 1. E""'ll)ll ~es al a tonlohl thfouQh o.c. » -6 p.m . Dec. 31 -JMo, 1. Tl<ll•b l/, '6 an4 \$. U>ihlnn 11 •nd unoet, SI oll, Tielo.1t 1nlormatlon6lS·SOOO. YOUTH ~E ... llTOllY TM•ATaA Four 1)1•~ tn repe<tory Tun4o lllfOUO/I Sl!ur ... y al Ll9UNt -..11on P1ey110u11. ~ LAQune c.nvon Roaci, L.Vulla &each. Mallne.\ et ,.:IO pm. Twuday •nd S..lurday of "Plnoc <lllo ... "Ulllv Ouckll1111" WedllltSd•Y •I l JO. "Lltl!e Reel RldlnQ -·~ Polpourrt .. ThunO•v. l .30 and "Aladdln and Iha Wonderful Ump;• 7:» pm. Fr.O..,. ~al ..,mi.soon '1.SO • MOVIE RA11NGS FOR PAREN1S AND WUNOPBlPl.E ,.. ....... ., ................. -___ ,,,...,.._,., _c_,.,.......,.,_c_M. Ml MU AOllllllO '4MfiJ~I\ ·:: .. ®10 ti(~· ~I 6'11tn• 1 ........ ,...,..., 1ft(tr\l 1A tl'tl\) t·n-I ,; "FIRE SALE" <PGI L>l-"4'-•.11 "THE LATE SHOW" ..... , • .H "HEROES" IP•I ..... ,,, .. S<M.1:M-- F~A!.~ 'f~hl-E Y .. -•...... r •• " .~ ,. -·~, .. -... "PETE'S DRAGON" 11:#1:.H-SM ,. .... ,_ ""ICI! Of THI Acnotl" lNI ,......,.._ •ALJct DOISWf LIYI ... AHYMOU" -- The Bntisb music weeklies wrote·about nothini but punk rock. lt was happening. and _with a rush unlike anything that had happened an England ~ince the. Beatles and Stones days oC the mid·l960s. AU or a sudden, every A & R man was instructed to "find a, band like that." .. Eut perhaps the d1sappolnung aspect o! the newly .-tmergin1: :,uccess or this scene ls that these bands do consider themselves Stars, there Is much bitchy, petty jealousy among the various groups, and in many cases, so much attention has really gone to the heads oti kids barely out 1 of school who now can afford lo move away from mum and dad. I I I ~ , • Ou/ck Look at the Movies • 'Fever' Catches Youth By BOB THOMAS flwn.~i. ... ,.,.... "SATURDAY NIGHT EV ER" murks the mergence or John ravolta as a film star much the same man· ~r as Sylvester Stallone ~nd "Rocky ." lbrbarino, of "Welcome Back, Kotter" emerges '5 an actor of comedic · ,Utality and he's an elect· ~ying dancer as well. • lSe plays a paint shop :~sman whose life re- : ':olves around his disco ·'!llghts. The music is l:DSld, the talk raunchy. (lie sex animal is tic. l)lrector ;John Badham bas captured the beat •d the milieu, as the young crowd will ruognize. The film is almed at them, not the tnature and squeamish. threatens to drop a girl from a rooftop; ne is dis· suaded but not even chided for the near· murder. Rated R. "l'IETa·s OltAOOff" II u .. Olwwy l>•Clta(Je I~ lhe l'IOl~n • ..,cl •n• 99,. .. ble gift II IL TM t•SI 11 telenl· Ml •1141 troll~: ''"'"Y A-. .. tltn Redcfy. Reel llultonl, Jim O•I•, Sllell•Y Wlnlef'I, Jim 8.tckus •net 59.., AUr1'1aH, wl'O b Pett. Tiit rNI at.tr It Elllott. a *IMlrlQ. IS.loot ltC· lor .. 1111 scales, *lnG'. tonv tall •net llot brttth. He ts • clauk 01-y crHllon, hit.......,_.~· ll'IQ for arl4 ,_tcllft 111 ttw fllm. Al Kasha end Joel Hln cl\llot"n con- trlbutt Illa ro411cktl'IQ ~. R..tt4"1 G. .. TIELl!~OH .. h Jamu llond pl.tytcl wltllOut lon11u• In che•k. O..rlu 8ranl0fl r-.1ns stral9'11 - or rtllltr stony.faced thrCIUllll U.. fer- let<-•PY..,,....l"'e. W•areasklHlto bllltvt Ill.ti loony Donald Pl-...ce •II••• Jemes <••11 I• • t•""• .,.1tr~rle11 .._ wtte I• IH'utaltr r•feel •Od nwr-1 .. v1nt 111m wllll • slNlt -. luJotct and c .. n evMl~llr ,,... patM. but ttWI rOifct UMIN IA _I,.,.. i.cllous.. Tl'l..-e It IPlendld t111de11 pi.otOQl'ep/IY of tl>e clu\ly Wnt end fl•-• ot grlltr r• •lltm thet crut• • <onvlnclng POrtrall ot IN er•. R•IMI R "LOOICINO l'Olt MW. GOODllti." c•pll.I'" wtUI ltrrlfylng eccurecy t"9 vecant "orld of NSY dOpe •nd •Hitt" ~· In the big elty. Olene KHlon I• tottlly btllevable •• the dtdl<•ltd tMcher II'( day tnd IN lfffd•r tor quick pl .. wrel ellflt" .Ughtlall. The' .. 1. Is llaMCI Ol"I an ect"81 UM. 11411 Miiiier Ille Jldth Rou,,.,. nowt nor ftlc:J\anl a..-1' IUlptnplalM tUel• ty wtly tflt gltltOOll HOWWIOIM¥1 .... bit We9"Y· A -of dooftl per¥aclet IN fttm, ...s Ille brutal cllmH wlll "'"' ·--....... 110tnKllt. Olrec.• tor eroou l'lasdone well with ctlftlcult mattrl•I. ...s ICNlon Is /utt aoCM1t perfect -• clncll OM.er nomlnall°"' R•ted R. t,,......,,_ltoncocelne, pol, ·boote encl M• IMll.a II oH.JlmllJ IOI"' Yo<lftlSlerS. "M)llY OIEIUll'teLD" <OfnbiMI e l>tttors•eet lo.,. st~ wltll aulo rec· /119 .tlld l"9 Dl-ISSUl"PflSl119ly elft<• Uve. Al Pclno Is en Anwt"tcan r.ce ctrtwr whO l\ffM<ome en M>OllONI •utomtllon In orcter to tuNlw . H• visits e 1>¥elYIC c-rede In• $WISS .. 11lltrh1m and e11co111\IW• a ,.,.n betuly WhO , ............ lllel\ lntr'911H lllm. A laltd,_cleYe~.Alvln s.,11<1nt'• K•illt Ii r~t• wltl'l l'l•PPY surprlMI, and S'fdney Pollectt ell-ti wlltl " fine plctorltl •..-; • balloon u cen\1011 Is 1tunnln9. Tiie rel•· llon"'lp llt'-PclllO end -11>1 Keller w01"111; nellNr e.-peared lO at· traulwty wt,,...IOI•. Ratt<I PG. but tllt film Ml -nudity, MJI end rouoh ••"1111191· "JUL.IA" It• l\tUfltlnt evocation of ,...mory. Uulen Hellm.wt'1 racotlK· !Ian of her frlencb/llp •Ill\ • 11lfled KhMltltl -klNll"" lad lier to tr•~Y In .._ti GeNNl'y. Fred Zill- nem•11n ("From Her• to Elvntty ... ''Tiie Nun's Slory"I displays -w his Mnslllvlty In ""'-retat10Mhlpi. J ene FOftcl.t Is perfection es,,.. YO""ll Hellman. dtllllN111'1Q lltr IN«llritles, lier '9mlnlty, lier llUslon IOI' UUtH. <•n recite R-., Fnal'1 "mllesto90 -------------------------betore 111-"owrttwt~­ <•UM no<mel Clll,_ to bl-llP cit· te11M lns1a11111i-ea ~ of M al>- sotete Rusllan plGC. ICG8 .t9eftC l..ff Rtml<k Ml lo stop l\lm before a nu<IHr war slarts.. t>nbellevab'-7 V"Y· AllO y9t Oolt Sl1911 lt .. P!i l/W !>ff• brlllt Mid ar-1-..111 _,. It PG. .. WHICH WAY 15 U"" Is a sollt· ,_ ptra., bell'!! • bfeclt 11tmon of tl\e 11.tll..,·-''TM Sectvctlon ol Mimi." The recipe cto.Jn'I work. Rlcllarct Pryor conCl,,.,.s to lml>'tsS u •n outraoeausty ln.,...Uve <omk. but he 1, required to cto loo ll\IKh (he pl•ps ll>rte rol•1I wllll loo llllle. There er• a few hll•rla.a moments In this l•lt of • fruit picker who becomn en unwitting tellot' hero, then • <omp;ony ,,,.n, 8ut It's too ctls- /olnllld llke 11 ~ri.s of uncMSOre<I ttlevlslon ~•l<hff. R•llcl R, the fllm Is replete with M•. vulgarity •nd recl•I iiurs. ...... IHA PU.IA •.••••.•.••••. ut .. llt flOllMf ... •Al.U'f ~ ••••.•.•••..•..... tH·IMe --• C .. fWY If .............. 11Uff1 oe. .... ~MM.I. .......... 6J14)4l .. MOMYIUO ~·········-·······.....,. -~-c ..... war ...... ,.~ •. "1...,, con.-. ~=.. .. ..... ,. ........................... tlt•t'96 ........... HA-t.&. .............. Ut·"61 S~NACH IOUMOU ........ IJUl•1-tt MOVIE REVIEWS " "'Julia' is a gem. Fret! ZinnemanD has directed a masterful movie. Jane Fonda in her finest role ... Vanessa Redgrave is glorious. Jason Robards gives one of the year's most memorable performances." (PG) -Gene Shallt, NBC-TV Based on a true story. 20lll CUJURHOX P1esea1s A RICHARD ROTH Presenlalion nl A FRED ZINNEMANN F;lm JANE FONDA VANESSA REDGRAVE JULIA ~:~11ng JASON ROBARDS HAL HOlBROOK ROSEW\RY MURPHY a~ MAXIMILIAN SCHELL·~~nn" SCHEDULE DAILY AT 2:00, 4:30 7:00, 9:30 ' .I " '" • lflf'' )', 'NJ:\VPOTIT . t..~· ,, . ' NEWPORT1tAIHM>M 11&.AND N!.PORT CENTP 8ETWHN McARTHUR AND JMtllORU AT PACl"C COAST HIOHWAV '44-0180 ' I ''SEMl·TOUGll" SUf· r~r s from a s plit personality, attempting 4> satirize the joCk life ~ encounter groups in ~ raucous package. It ~sn 't work. There is a ij~<l·breathing effort to wrench laughs from fbjlr·letter punchlines aqd outrageous situa-: tlons, such as a church rtlel ee after a failed "'dding. If anyone can P\Ul off this sort of thing, at 1s cool Burt Reynolds. dlit even Burt can't rise above the crudity of the material. Example: a 11tandertha1 lineman .. ANOTHER MAH, ,UfOTHl!R CHANCE" t•H en unuwel took •t IN Old Wnt lllrOUllll lhe eyes ol a FrenchmMI. Ol~IOr·wrthlr Claude Leloucl'le. bKt known for his "A M<tn enct • w-." brl"O' Ills -l•t c11.t1mtoll\l1ll'llf19Ul1'11Uil•~two _.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~l plonffr'-~lne 8ujolcl Is • r•· belflous F~ 11e..ny -n.ns off to Amffl<A will\ ,,.,, ptiotog,...,.,. '°"''· Tiiey tNrry ..... 110 _. 11'1' w•tOll ll"alll. but joletio lurks OUTUOIOUI •1 MIT·MUll THE CHOlllOYS t•> CllNT WTWOOO GAUNT\1T111 ouruoaous • , un sau• THI CHOIUOYS ,., ,, ... ,.,. .... ''" 11100 ....... JOtlN ftAYOlflt "~ SAlUIDAT MOMt ftVtl Cll f~/UMUt PlUOl**ll: t"t:e. • "U • .. u e 1:0. tt:e. ._.;,?Jo to~:L=:: .. ~!ol ... ~~~I • ntl CllCMllOTS .., '"" THICM OIM&A-....... ""ml"l .................. OUIUAIOUlf , CMOlllOJI C11t NM .. .... GALLERIES LUJOn kASTNEI Mid U57U IUSKY Pl$fll {R) ruCHARDBURTON ~'EQUUS" !PETER FIRTHl·COLIN BLAKELY ·JOAN Pl.OWRJGHT HARRY ANDREWS· EILEEN ATKINS ·Mid JENNY AGLITTER Dally at Cinema Center 2:15, 4:45 7:15, 9:45 A,..h1lm •772-6446 "'The Goodbye Girl' is a joyous comedy- just what the doctor onlered. Neil Simon makes feeling good legal ... " GENE SHAUT, NBC-TV "Dreyfuss and Mason have a sp~cial chemistry that is absolutely dynamite." PAT COLLINS, CBS-TV Wea1'ers 1Hspla9 The weavings of Rita Pynoos are on dis- play at the Bird's Eye View Gallery. 3420 Via Oporto No. 3, Lido Village, Newport Beach, through Jan. 4. Miss Pynoos is one of 11 artists displaying weavil;lgs at the ex· hit.lit. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. Serigraphs Oli Display COIUTA KENT -Collection of watercolors and serigraphs through Jan. 8 at Muirhead Galleries, South Coast Plau, Costa Mesa. Hours 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays and noon to 5 p.m. Sun· day. GllANDMA'S Kn'CllEN -Nostalgic dis- play of cooking utensils, recipes, appliances and clothes relating to .. grandtna's era." Through Marcb, 1B78 at Museum of North Oranae County, Galleries I Exhibits 301 N. Pomona, Fullerton. Hours Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, 10 a.m. to S p.m., Sunday, noon to S p.m. Guided tours by appointment. Telephone 992·2233. COSTA MESA ARIJ' LEAGUE -Oils and aeryllca by Virginia Kling and watercolors by Nancy WlWams are on d.laplay this month at Glendale Federal Sa¥lna• and Loan, 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Hours are9a.m.to4p.m. weekdays. TWO AaTlSTS -Selected cJaalcit by Aalel Adams .aid new Ultlan landsca,pes aD4 Amllb country pbotognDlts ~1 • Georse A. Tice, Tuesdays through Tluand.,., 11 a.m. to s p.m •• Fridays and Saturdays, 11a.m.to6 p.m. throuJh Jan. 7 at Susan Spirllus Gallery, 3336 Via Lldo, Newport Beach. AQUARELLES, COLLAGES and drawings by Herbert Schneider through Jan. s at West Coast Gallery, 2700 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Hours 11a.m.to6 p. m . Mondays throuah Saturdays, Fridays until 9 p.m., Su.n· days 1 tosp.m. HOLOGRAMS INSTALLATIONS run through Jan. 14 at the Newport Harbor Art Museum. Hours noon to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays, Friday njghts 6 to 9. Dancers on 1V Valery and Galina Panov, dancers from the Russian Kirov Ballet, will make guest ap· pearances on KNBC·TV's "Sunday Show" at 4 p.m. Sunday. The dancers gained wide recopltlon ln t.belr struggle to leave the Soviet Uaion to 1am artisUc freedom. The Panovs are appeariq with the San Diego Ballet in "The Nutcracker" at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium throQ&b Jan.1. "ONE OF TIIE BEST PIC1tJB£S Of 111£ \'EAR!' r~auo"""'' JOHN DENVER OEOROE BURNS LEE REMICK · ,..,..,., I I• j DAILY P.tlOT / World's at Her Skates U.S. -Dutch ·,Champ Leads Holiday S how Dianne de Leeuw. lhe 1976 Olympic Silver Medalist is a citizen of both sides or the Atlan- tic Ocean -the United States and The Netherlands. Born of Dutch immigran t parents, Dianne holds that citizenship as well as American, having been born m California. Her early training was in the United Stales: her competitive s kating for lhe Netherlands. Durin~ her 18-year skating career, s he trained with United States pros, and competed for the Neth erland s 1n countries throughout Europe, in AustraJia, . J apan and Canada. As national champion for The Netherlands, 1971-1976, Dianne was chosen for the 1972 Olympic skating team in which she placed 16th that year. Her choice to compete in The Netherlands was based on an op- portunity to be recognized and to excel in the smaller count ry. Ac · cording to Dianne. only three U.S. competitors would make it to the Olympics out of a very la11ge country of many excellent skat(.'rS. In 1975. the name de- Leeuw was a(•claim(.'d worldwide a.s Dianne became World Cham JXion and was awarded "Sports Woman of The Year" by the European TV sportscasters . . She tou r ed the U.S. and Canada and did shows and TV specials in Australia. France. London, Switzerland. Vienna and J apan. Jn the Olympic year 1976 this Cin e ly disciplined skater was judged "Champion of Europe" in Geneva and brought home the silv(.'r medal from Innsbruck in her St'cond appearance at the Olympr<':-., as.:ain a:-a member of the l>utc:h :-.katrng teum That year, sht' t'ndl'CI her am;.ill!ur caret•r by signing a two-year con- tral't with the llollday On Ice show DIANNE deLEEUW AT ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Ownnc and the whole Holiday on Ice troupt• will bP appeanng at th<' Anaheim Convention Ct•ntcr for nine performances Tucsd ay through Sunday. Jan 1. Show times arc 8 p.m . Tuesday through Friday, 6 p.m . Saturday and Supday with 2 p.m. matinees Friday through Sunday. lets and Mutual agencies. For further '1etails, call the conven- tion center, 635-5000. The two and a half hour pro- duction will feature Jimmy Crockett, the world's fastest· .•pinncr on skates; a "Sesame Street" revue, champions Almut Le hmann and Herbert Wis inger. Kathy Mormile and Greg Taylor dancing waltz to jazz. solo~ Patrick McKilligan and the c~mv. ' lier couch the pai.t six years, and the man who helped her to the realization of her Olympic dream is Doug Chapman, a n English s kating talent who also became her husband in 1976 Tickets, pricedrat $5, $6 and $7 are a vailable at the convention center box office, Ticketron out-ed)' team of Biddy itnd Badd.v.~ l .. BEE GEES IFY.OU THINK YOU LOVE THEIR MUSIC NOW, AFTER TODAY, IT'LL BE A PART OF YOU. CATCH THE FEVER IF YOU 'RE NOT SURE YOU HAVE THE FEVER NOW, AFTER TODAY, YOU'LL SAY YOU ALWAYS DID. lM ... Catch it rARAMOUNT PICTURES PRtsENTS A ROBtRT STIGWO® PRODUCTION JOHN TRA VOLT A KA~EN LYNN GORNEY "SATUkDA Y NIGHT FEVER" Screenplay b>.'. NORMAN WEXLER · Orrecte;d by JOHN BADHAM Executive Producer KEVIN McCORMICK Proouced by ROBERT STIGWOOO , Ot!AM mvtic WIMltrt Mid""'°"""' 11\1 ll>t k!e C.0.. Soooftdt•M• AllllH!l awllMle Ofl U0 "9<0tdt ~J&"1!¢1 CXJ!D1UYmn~(4' --- • HOLIDAY ON ICE .. ,.~· . . ~.... ... ~~~ . Lanette McKee · Mar~ret Averf·. A St~ Kranlz Pr001clim · &reenp~y by Carl Golllieb and f.ecil Brown · Music score Paul Riser and Mark Davis.-Oirecled by Michael Schull z ·Produced by Sle~ Kranlz R RESTRICTED ~:- Dally at Bristol 1:15-3:15-5:15 7:15-9:15-1h15 ...... ,~........,...,,...,&!,.;I~ crtn 1.1Mvt"'5.A+.. c111 &tuo u~ ,, ... l Single available eaclu~1vely on MCA Rei 010~ I Wbelt .,: ~~1hem Calif om la visit ... .;' II.... Dt•1H'4JINp111•1e11w.1w1~:c·1~•N Daily at Plitt 1 :00-2:45-4:30 6:20-8:15-10:05 • • ' • ( t .> • I 1 I • I I ' i I . I f • Friday, December 23, 1977 OAILV PILOT \ ( \ "I ., I ,1 •• Brin g the Kids to MEET· SANT A Today from 5:00p:.m:~ to ·9::00p.m. . . FREE GIFTS TO ALL CHILDREN UNDER 10 • UNIVERSITY's "Family Christmas Special" • . Brand New 1978 OLDS . ,61 "!'f7 IMMEDIAfE A~!,~!~dit~~.~~~.~~d . . 11<., tAXrJ~NSE DELIVERY brakes, tilt steering wheel. (3L69R8C120969) (6353) ~ · . \ ~ • '. ' See them, ' ~ in, our · ~ ·n· Showroom, ... . ~ I I ·:.l • , I -DAllYPILOf • •uauc NOTICE P BUCNOTlC£ 0•0tl64llt(1 MO.,,., 4411 Alt 0•0t1tANC1 OP Tltl c.nv ·~•YIM&lllfYCN'A&UIOCHIMellT CIOVN(IL. 04J lMa QTY Of' COH4 WllMOf' llil&_IA, CA&.ll"OlttOA. P•llONINO PICT&TlOUIMnlNlll N.AMI ClltY41N UNl~POIUHD fllt TIW 1.i ...... 119 ........ -.. ... ~ 1111 TOlt Y AOJ OlNINO fltl CITY ~Ille -el U. !lctlliwt -~t 90UNOA•Y l'tlOM COUNTY at YO ftAtne P000t.i11ft COll'OaATION CITY IU. _. •U• A"-'e .....,.,..,._, 1'1111trtel\, THE CITY COUNCii. OF TMI! CITY Calllw.W. 01' COSTA MESA 00£S MCIHIY 'fli.lktlti-~,-,_..,,.. .. OltOAINASFOl.C.OWS .. AMve -U ... Ill llle C-Ct of llC:TIC* 1. ""'"'.,.I 10 .. , .. .,, Or~ •Jilt Cellfoml•~-IC:-the 1'000 •NGINl!ElllNO ANO folleWlllO-l1beOY11l11t~a1..f , .. OESIOMIO SYSTEMS, INC., a '-' P•OHny IO<•led ., ,,., l'ac:tllc Otltfen!IH ........... , lhtn .. e, Auenor Parcel N .. .,,.,., fllt1~-c-te01>yFood 11).021·11 per mal)lol 1'1MI, ''~ft¥ l11tl11Mrl,. ...., Ottlped 6ts'9mt, tll•<.O end lnclllOtcl Int._ Rt 1011e, to l~ulGelllomlU.,..,.e&ion. •Ill J_A....,., t.ot•otlrectNo 4'J•H-n•• P~ m111 recordt<I In 8ooll It, Peoe d If Tiiis ''".,_ -llttd ••Ill tile MIK•ll•...-Mept, rl(O(ch Of OrAl\94 Colin IY ,..,. If Ore-Co~inty on ~ntr.ce11rorr11.. HO .. mw-.1m. HCTION 1. Tiii• Ordlnenc:t •NII 01'-llaTllllOoLWAY ••kt elfetl -i. In fl.Ill torte lhlrly AlteNey • _ __. f>O> dtrl from •ncJ •lier Ill 08•"80e, .. ,,._.,._.. .... ..,......., '"°Prior 10 the ••~llon OI ltfl..,, &AtA......_~ ..... CUI d•Y\ ~om lhe~ tlWlrotOI, p ."'7' SMll l>t PUt>lllhecl once '" t11t O••n~ P""""*' 0..-. Calst Delly Pltol. Coell 0•11 y P1101, • ,,. .. ,,,.,,., or o.<e~ t, It., 22. a, 1"1 s 111-11 qener•I ctrc .. 1•11011. prlnled e~d .,..llllSl>ed '" '"" City OI Cone Me~. , ... ,,..,with'"'~ 01 llltft\t"">eo OflhtCllY~ll¥Oll"Qtorend~llUI ...... ,.. .. PASSED ANO ADOPTED lhl~ ltlll O.r010ec....,.1t,, NOtWt• He'1U>9 ~oftr. City of COlt• Mh.a ATTEST: .l ..... P.PN,.,,.., ~tyClentoflht CttyofCoslA- STATf OFCALIFOltNIA COUNTY OF ORANGE CITYOFCOSTAMUA ) l SS I. 1!11.EEN P. PHINNEY. City Cle rk 9"41 ta.oflkto Cl.,.•., 1119 Clly COuntll ot tlte City ol Coll• Mew. "•••bw (fftlly ,,,., ,,,. ·-...., ,.,......,. Ordln•tlCt ~ 11·'1w•S lntrodlKH- <Oftileler..O H<lfOtl by -"°" .ti • •• "'""' rnettlno OI wild Clly Councll hotd Oii tM Slh d.ly OI Oectml»r, ltll, •nd 11\erteller ""'\Md Mid .tdoc>led H • whOtt •I• r19Uter-lt1Qol wktClly Councll held o~ Ille '"" dty OI Oecom1>4r, If/I, by IN! tollowlnv •oll <•H vott. AYES: Couno:ll Mftmb<'1> HNllO<J, Htrnrntll, lt..clll, ~ F ••1...,d NOES· Counc11~m0tr• No,.., A BSEN T Council Mtmbffi Sm•llwOOd IN WITNESS WHEREOf. t l'llvt llertunlo ~ rnv lwr>d end afll•td lllt 5"11 ol tt.e Cllv ol CO\t• Mt~• ttl" 101n tleyol Oec~, 1'11 EILEENP PHINNEY Cely(~rll •no ••·9'•l<IOCMtrll 01 IMCllVCouncllol lhf' C1tvof~t• Mew P"bll\hed Or.no-Co;o>t 0011~ Pllol ~•rnt>tr2l, nn u.s .. 11 PUBLIC NOTICE SU ,.llUO..C:OUltTO,THE !>TATEO,CAl.l,OltNIA,Olt THECOUNTYO,O«ANOE NO.AM10$ OltOEllTOSltOWCAUSE l"Olt CHAN0£0 1"HAM( "' Int M.tller of ""' APC)ll<Ollo" OI ROBYN LITTLER, lor Ch•n11e OI N•me Tn• •PC>ll<ollonol ROOYN LIT~LER lor ch•nll* o1 ......... t>.tvlnq btt" lol.O '" 'our!, •nd II -•rlllQ l•om ••Id •P· llllUllOtl 1 ... 1 ROBYN LlllLER M \ lllt<I •" •PC>llcatlOtl prOpO\fng that her n •me be changed to R OBYN IARL.ENEMARSHALL Now, triere,,,,.e, It I\ hereby orct~""' •no cttre< ted, lllat all ~rsons lnlft~le<I In >Aid rn<llltr do appe .. r ""'°'* IPll> <OV<l '" Oeporl,.,..,.I l on 111<1 l hi da' of Januuv. 1971 •t II 00 o'clock• m , ol N fd O•v lo •llow <•11•~ *"~ w.:n •P Rllc.tlon lor <'-91 ol n•me >hOuld "°' be11ra nled. ' I' I\ IU•I""' Of'd...-lld that• <oe>V ol 1n1, Qroer To ShowC...w-beP<il>ff._,,.,,,. 1'ellv Piiot. a rie-01 oorner•I c 1rc .. 1at1on, 11<1nteo In ~·d '°""''· "' fN >I once ..Cit..,..,.. tor lour >ucctulve .,_., > oreor lotlleeloyof •••O he•• 1"11 O•t.O l"ttt?ndctoyol Dt>Hrnlll!r. "" L'"'IPrV..-.l•l_,.l'IO.,.. J udQeolwld !>uoe rlor Court STl:PHEltA.OltOOME, ISO 1JO Ntw-10ttoW Ori ... S..ltoJOt .... ,.,, ._.., c.tlf«ftl••U6t Tel 1714 I 7,._Ull Att-,l•A4'fll•<•"' Put>llsflOHI Or-eo.st O..ly ,.llot, De<. ll, J0, 1'11 .no J-".•· ll, 1t11 ~71 PUBLIC NOTICE P\JBUC NOTlCI: P\JBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTJCf; PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PtTBUC NOTICE SKIING I ANALYSIS I PEOPLE . .. r Nixon Gives $1,000 Check From AP Dispatches Former President Rlcbard Nixon donated Sl.000 to the Hubert Hampbrey Institute of Public Affairs. Jobn Whaley, project director for the institute, acknowledged receipt of the gift, which be said wu not solicited . by anyone associat.ed with the in· stllute 's fund-raising effort. The institute, to be built on the University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis, wlll be named after Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D·Minn., who was vice president in the administration of LyaclM B. Johnson. Nixon defeated Humphrey in the 1968 pre4 sidentiaJ contest. Humphrey is suffering from inoperable cancer. * . As Ralph W. Cramer walked through the board· ing gate in Sacramento for Pacific Southwest Airlines, a computer once dubbed the H~py Booker flashed word that PSA's seven millionth passenger had arrived. ~ As he climbed aboard( ) the San Diego-bound 'flil 'FE plane, Cramer was given PEvPIJ ~~ Da•a..6ad . . . ONLY PILOT ., • NY Bank Outbid$ . • Itself • , NEWPORT, JU. <AP,> -The Chemical Bank Of New York put the 1Je.. foot brigantine · Encban· tress on tbe auction block. bopJng to recoup oo a defaulted modPle Joan, but ended up u the bilh bldder fw tbe aail- inC ship. Bank officer Salvatore Ribando said the vessel will be moved to Loog Island, N.Y., where ~­ forts will be mlide to Wt it privately. ABOUT 150 persons gathered at the puu·iJ;\a where the Encbantnais has been moored ainc,e being repossessed Mun COACH LEE AUCKENTHALER CARRIES TIRED SKIER Another Youngster Trfes Squaw Valley Slopes "'"•1,... a set of champagne----------· -.3.,.,,. ~ -.~ el asses, champagne, a Angeim'a Padilla, 30, of Arvin stands in the plaque bearing his hastily engraved name, and a wreckage of her store, which was to open • David Kent two monU.S ago. Kent Jost the vess~l after missing payments on the $•42.0QJ> mortgage. set of future rught tickets. · ed · th h Spectacular Conditions Return: to Ski Slopes When lbe plane landed, C.-amer was ktased by this week. The roof collaps m e ur- two stewardesses and an airline vice president rican-force winds that swept much of shook bia hand. California e·aruer this week. · • "Let's get rid or it," said Mayor Frank L. Rluo ---------------"'!9"--- arter bis brother, the fire commissjoner, said a Christmas tree in the City Hall Pl c h ~:~:~J.•on room was a fire ane ras He spent three yea$ and $100,000 building the E nchantress for charter THE AUCl'JON iras opened by Chief Federal Marshal Georg e Douglas who was met with a :JO.second slleti~e until Ribando mumbed a $200 ,000 offer to .'get things going. But he was topped by a $210,000 bid from charter boat cap- tain Mike Anderson of Camden, Maine. SQUAWVALLEY <AP) -Afterone of the bleakest periods in the history of the sport in the Sierra, spectacular skiing returned to the slopes this week as winter bowed in. Veteran skiers agreed that condi· lions on lhe slopes this week were the best since 1974 -and predictions called for more snow. Fott several re- sorts, it was a reprieve from financial ruin. AT SQUAW VALLEY.' one of the biggest ski a reas in the country where the 1960 Winter Olympics were held, a relatively small but happy Christmas holiday throng hugged each other in dis belief over the result of last weekend's intense storm: The sno~ supply tripled, and packed powder and powder was almost everywhere. "I didn't think it would ever happen again," said lift attendant Sally Moran as she checked tickets at lhe Squaw 1 chairlift. SHE REFERRED TO two years of bad to nearly impossible skiing which coincided with the epic Northern California drought. Fire Commissioner Joseph . On Monday, early morning tem· peratures plunged to zero from the . lodge at 6,200 feel to E migrant Peak at 8,700. The snow was so dry it squeaked under the skis on fast downhill runs. Once in a while an ex- uberant yell bounced among the high peaks as some speeding shussboomer hot-dogged down the slopes. Rizzo was s tandin1 Deal' the 'Douglas fir during a party for K•JJ s children of Philadelphia ) S even· ·policemen and firemen killed on GOING VP ONE of the 24 lifts, Bill Stream of Tahoe City banged at his freezing ears and laughed it up. "Great. It's never been better. I 'd al most forgot." Indeed, a skier standing under one of the chairlifts u it hoisted coU.ples up·mountain, noted a reverent hush settled where the chairs rode among stately firs with snow-laden branches. That's no time for talking. lllUO ·duty. He noticed that needles were falling oil the tree. "It was extremely dry, and I went over and told my brother," the commissioner said. The mayor stationed -officers near the tree for the duration of the party, then ordered il removed. * Comedian Jerry Van Dyke was married to a singer in his show at Stateline Nev. Van Dyke, the "6-year-old brother of actor-comedian Dick Van Dyke, married Shirley Ann Jones, 25, a native or Malvern, Ark. The marriage was the second for Van Dyke and the first for Miss Jones. Van Dyke's pet macaw, THERETURNOFfinesnow condi· ''R osi e,'' witnessed the ceremony and perched itself on tions, on the eve of the big Christmas the bride's shoulder for pboto- weekend, which often makes the graphs afterward. nuvvaNDYKll season's financial -difference, was * g reeted with broad smiles from ski. Gov. George c. Wallace, who ls beina preaaed JUNCTION CITY, Ore. (AP> -A search for seven bodiea'scattered around the smoldering rub· ble of a twin-engine plane was hampered today by the heavily wooded, steep terrain. Police said no one survived tbe crash of the Aero Commander, which was registered in Canada. IdentiLies were not released. Investigators said they ·would look for clues today as to why the plane nose-dived into the l · ) Oregon_ hillside a nd IN SHORT erupted m flames shortly _ . after 8 p.m. Thursday. Slain Maa ldetttlfied Ri bando offered $250,000, but the bidders remained silent. Douglas gaveled the a u ction closed and awarded Chemical Bank its own boat. 'Praise The Lord,'. OLONGAPO CITY. Philippines <AP> -Sign Says · Authorities identi£.ted today the gunman killed by host.ages he held in a bank on the U.S. Navy's NASHVILLE, Tenn. Su.hie Bay base as 30-year-old Phil Brillo. They · . s aid be wor~ed seven years at the sprawling naval <AP> -A rur~ W1I.so..tt complex! . · · County couple will be al-. . l owed t o keep theµ-~perators. . for "substantial alimony" by bis estraqed wife, • · Cornelia. submitted affidavit. to an Alabama court F d Fut _.. listing personal assets of some ~.102. AuthociUes used fingerprints and base rec9~ . lU.bl.lieal verse on w to. identlfy Bi:illO'. They said bis last job at the· I • barnroof that can bt· facUity, SO mil~ southwest of Manila, ~as as a sw' lrooi nearby In· Or JD ...... -,, In response to questions fifed in Montgomery ... .::::;-• Circuit Court by his wife's attorneys, Wallace also cashier at a Navy employees' cafeteria. It was terstate2' . terminated in 1974. 1980 Campaign a .Major Issue ByW"LTER R. MEARS Al'S,.Cl.i~t WASIONGTON -Jerry Ford was reflecting on retirement the other night, and saying he likes it a lot. Sometimes. The skiing al Vail is super, 72 inches of snow beckoning Ford and his rami· ly for the holidays. AND PRF.SIDENT Carter wiJJ be spending bis New Year's at work, on an overseas mission, · all business. There'• not much snow in Riyadh; mostly sand. Sometimes, Ford said, he wonders who re&uy won. Carter did. And of'r the platforJD, Ford sounds a bit more wistful about it. Vail may be more fun than Tehran or New Delhi, but Ford, at 64. is not ready to caJJ it a career. NOT THAT HE'S necesaarily going to run again; the odds would appear to be heavily against it. ·But be doesn't t s ay no, just ti~~~ ma.ybe. And whatever happens, he obviously in- tends to have a Jot ta 'fay about who • does run for the Republican party in1980. .. I. want a gOOd candidate, and at tl:Ua stage, .1am1'1ot golog to pass judgment on who is and who lsn 't. :• But J'ord certainly sounds as though he fieures he'd be in the right category il he decided to have another ,go. WBATE~ 'I'll}; glories cl tefire- nlent. on a presSdentlaJ, congressional and military pension and other . bllielltl that lldd up to at leaK $102,000 a Hr1 Ford ltUl loob back at wbat btu"been. · • Joob at tbe breab .• ~ haft m.ie blm ~ld•t bf_ elecUaa l.a1tead of former prHldenl·b1- ~~oa bad been a week later .• .'"be said. .. We aot ~ood eeoaomlo 1tattatlot wtttiln a . or 10 418)'1 after the electlon •• , TirBN 'l'llDW w Al bit pardon ol Ric~ II. NI.ion. tu. ptf• over 6ov> i.t lon:ea 1n Poland. \be clalnal• done bJ eJwc9 ot flUnclal lm~ety, ~ wronc bVt no\ until they had loomtd ova the campal,n for two dJf. finlt ...... l\IMt bl tbe ad.It Wll 10 clGM, IO ~llH 'o.at It'• bani to tell wblell ot a .... tblDP mlpt Uff tumid tbe •outc0• &be O&her:w.aJ. :. Aet••llr, tlae po1t·•leet1on eeoeomtc repoftl w~ 't all . tbat ... ( NEWSANALYSIS J good. Unemployment was up one· tenth of a point, to 7 .9 percent. The wholesale price index went up .6 per- cent. Consumer prices rose .3 per- cent, the smallest increase ln seven months . THERE IS AN echo of Hubert H. Humphrey, who tried ao often and lost so narrowly in 1968, in ford's look back at the final days of the 1976 cam- paign. It is not the analysis or an elder statesman content to retire for good. Ford said he has logged 200,000 miles, to 23 states, since be left the White House. He lick& off bis Republican fundraising missions. says there will be more. "I INTEND TO keep it up, helping candidates particularly in any way I. can, without being a candldafe mysell." Wit.bout being a candidate in im. that is. The real campaign comes two years later, wben Carter WUl be up for re-elecUoa. "I'm certainty not going to make any decision unW 19'79," said Ford. Ford ii trim. tanned, relaxed and apparently ready to take on Carter economics, energy 'and other l!Olicies in the off.year campaign. ' HE'S AT ODDS wtth his party's contervatives on the Panama Canal treaty, and as far as be ii concerned, if a. would-be candidate wants ~ build ~ 1880 platform on opposition to that pact, it wlll be futile. "U the Republican party is a one- issue party, such as on the Panama • Canal, tbel'l the Republican nomlna· ttoia won't be worth anything ln lM>," heutd. denied having any add1tional funds deposited tn foreign bank accounts. And he said no funds or pro- perty are being held in trust for bUn by others. In an apparent attempt to &Mess Wallace's financial health, attorneys for Mn. Wallace posed 43 questions to the 58-year·old eovemor about his personal and campaign finances. * WUlla.m Loeb, publisher of the Manchester <N.H. > Union Leader, says his wile MteMY was paralyzed from the waist down from injuries reeeived in a highway accident in Nevada. The Union Leader quoted Loeb aa saying . his wile was paralyzed, unable to speak, and breathing with a respirator. Mrs. Loeb, 53, was reported In. serious condition· at the Washoe Medical Center tn Reno. Her hus band, 72, also· hospitalized, was reported In satisfactory condition. LOii• Their four-wbffl drive wagon skidded on ice, went off the road and overturned on a highway near Reno. * The governor's plan to make California the first stale lo own space on a communication satellite -was launched politically before a handful ol key legislators In Menlo Park. Nae England Get•. A id WASHINGTON (AP) -The regional alloca- tion of federal aid has shifted in favor of the New England states in response to local economic needs, a federal study concludes. A key reason for the recent boost in per capita federal aid to the Northeast is the region's large welfare rolls and high unemployment, according to the study, released Thursday. CaJifomia was among states showing a decline. Booau Pauzle Otlldab ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Those mysterious booms high in the sky orr the Atlantic Coaat could be caused by exploding gas bubbling up from underwater garbage dumps, says one adentist. That is one theory. Others speculate that they are sonic booms or come from outer space. New explosions were heard Wednesday night by several residents along the New Jersey coastline. Steel Bike GeteeraUzed PITTSBURGH (AP) -The oallon 's leading steelmakers have followed tradition and fallen in line witli 5.5 percent price bikes on most sheet producta, the second major price boost announced this year. The federal Council on Wage and Price Stabili· ty said Thursday it would not criticize the hike. It sald the inevitable increase in the cost or ap- pliances and autos Will be consiltent with current inflat.ion. The verse, painted on Lhe r oof by Mr. and Mrs. John Hamblen of M't.. Juliet, was saJd to be ii· legal outdoor advertis· i n g by the stat e Transportation Depart· ment, which ordered it removed. BUT TRANS · portation Commissioner Eddie Shaw said the sicn will be allowed to remain and, as far as be is con- cerned, lbe case is closed. "Praise the Lor d/• Mrs. Hamblen sa1d when told or the cfe- cision. "I knew the sllll had to stay.'' TUE SIGN re ad$~ ••Repent & be baptised everyone of you in the nam~ of Jesus Christ. Acts. 2:38." "We feel we are not in a position to question Ule constitutional rights of this individual," Sha'N said. "It appears it ls quite harmless at. Ws time..'• Former Apollo astronaut Baa$¥ Sdnretckut. Gov. Ed· mud G. Brown'• assistant ror science-and technoloay. Jotned other staff memben ladetallinl the proposal to members of the Aasembly and Senate money soewalatHT .eom~~roposal eans' lot Rape Sapeet -eapes Calllonua to a.pend about s.1 mllllon to buy space Oft --"'---------------&satellite to be launched in lJIO u part of the NASA spaceSbuttleprot.ram. • , Fear Back in Suburb Dr, Walter C. MclD&otb fias been named acting • president of Los Angel• Soutirnst Community LOUISVILLE, Ky. <AP> _The College, replacins ~r. Fraoklbta. Turner. ~ho had women of-Villa Ana lived tn fear for headedthescboohmce 19'73: , . a year. Some of them armed . Mcintosh~ has been the col~ege s a~alstantehitd'r,tb.emlelves and sealed the windows of tnat.ructioo m charge of the night di vu)oa. # ...: tn tbetr bomea to protect themselves Tumer. resigned to accept the newly-create(! from an intruder who sexually 88. poatofp~1dent-at-large. saulted u women tn tbe suburban Loulsville nellhborboocl and nearby. In July, .,...ce cbaried a Jeacnan CountJ cldlo(lradar w1tb lllDe coanta ol ~rape ud 11 ~ eharcet ill~ Vlllll Apa -..it.. No lllCn "'"~ad Ibo women Ht aide tbelr fear. IA8T WBU:. TBE man ecemed of Use VUJa Ana r.,_ eeeaped from the JelftllOD c.o.ntY J.U Wltb tbrM hamatee. ud Ole Dearly totaOtt& fears ol the women ot Villa Ana wen r••ived. .,I •• drlvinf home Wltb 11l1 ta.n· ace dauaMW wben we ll•ard tt on the udlo.'' Hlct 8etlt Cotten, ae. 0 1 loolrH at ':ii:' Jooked at me, and an UDeMY came over•·•• SbeuM...._wu 11;entnlu,n.. euin•'' Ill .. Mf&bbol'bood wber\ • PoUee laid ...... '· Hood. • ball -..,.11..a- the rape charges and was await.illg trial, .scbeduted·Jan. 19. Commonwealth's Attorney Davil! L . Armstrong said the trial was postponed once after Hood fired b1B first attorney. His new attorney asked that Hood undergo psychiatl1c examinaUon. One examination was completed shortly before Hoo~ escaped, Armstrong said. A nationwide alert was pat oat. -4 the FBI wu called into tb6 .earch 1or Hood and nro other escapees -'"> remained at large. One bad been.._ captured. .JEPJ'EUON COUNTY poll~ Aki priority had been pot on Hood's• prebeosioa, but they believed be Md t.be others fled the state. 0 ~ A nelgbbor, 35-year.otd ~ Hutchinson, said ... I'm ltlll tee&ildil a loaded gun la the house.•• ~· ti a hoUlewl!e whole -~ worn ll niibt.. She said tbo -..... of her home are atlll 1crewe4 lbe2 rem.lllder of tho year.-. va .. er # tbe VW• Ana raplat. ~ Moat u1aul14 occurNcl la •• e .onalnt .._ the victlma' t 1 It •1.4 were DOt bome. Bada _.~ U. & uck.er lbreaCmed the ·~'I cbilclren unleu Ibo submitted. I • I ... FANTASTIC S IR Th•i bcuuliful family hom~. with an xln[ view. &s m top condition ! Carpet· mg, pair .. & drape:> are new. WeU landscaped, poolsiicd yard. Located in prestigious LaVita area of Laguna Niguel. S.157,500 759-0811 G....... I oollG...,... I 002 ······················~······················· PENJMSUL.4 POINT 4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities. Lovely area, few s teps to beach. $189,500 LIDO ISLE Newly r em odeled 4 bdrm.. den. 4 baths, living rm. wicathedral ceiling. (, : Lge. master bdrm. s uite. $224,950 llG C4MYON ; ·' 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated B1·oadmoor Plan 3. on extra large lot. $325,000 ... BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Ruy\1dt• 0 11v•' N B b l >· 6161 HA VI YOU SUM SIA VIEW? Unique has several excellent lisUngs on beautiful homes by Broadmoor in a setting overloo.king Newport Beach. A variety of floor plans , all with views and all are located on quie\ cul·de- sacs with easy access to community pools, jacuzzi and tennis. Priced from $237,000. U~ IVUJ: ti()Mt:S REALTORS , 676·6000 2443' East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde. Jt 546 ·5990 G....... 1002,GHer.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WLSI.l.Y '.'4 TAYLOR CO. HE/\ l.TOHS .... 1111 ,. I ~Hf> 14Ll04 ISLAMD-$119,500 What a great fun place to live! Steps to beach, quaint restaurants & unique shops! Lovely 3 BR Corner home incl spac. mstr BR with study. Corner F . P ., 3 baths, south patio. WESLEY M. T4YLOI CO., REALTORS -------Geweral I 002 2111 S-J-.. Hlh load .. ' ••• $ •• 2.0. ·o·o· .D •• o.·w···::··· HEWPORT CENTClt. ..... • 64#" 0 ~. BlRORS: 4dnrtisers ,... •...,. = ~ chedc their ads Want to see little bucks,,.______. 1002 daily mtd report .,._ tum into big bucks. It's ...........,... I 002 GeM,., rws 1.-.cllately. The simple, buy this cute 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful Jand is availuble to you from a ll level to a knoll with a 360 degree· view. All planta ble. Call us for prices .., & locations. WE ALSO H4YE2,l,&4~ ~ .. with or without acreage. Wh14t price range do you prefer? A SUPER DUPLEX IS ALSO A.VAIL I Side has 3 Bdrms & 2\2 baths. Approx. 1638 Sq. ft. ot Jiving s pace. The other unit has approx. 1400 sq. ft. with 3 Bdrms & 2 Baths. These units are clos& into VISTA. and about 12 minutes driving time to beach. Super s harp! Great for the two family s ituation or as rentals. SJ.30,000. OR 4 COZY 2 IR HOME W /SH41CI ROOF and a charming little guest house. Strictly pride of ownel."Sh.ip. SSS,000. . URBAN SUBURBAN REALTY· (714) 727·4200 or c11•>727-0520 I GeMral 1002:G....-.. , 1002 ·······················-······················· MANAGER-4tEAl ESTATE NEWPORT BEACH 4 BR, lrplc, very clean. S'11.'195. Approx 1S50sq ft. Owner out of state. MMlU. ~ Walker l~ lt!e Hl'W USTtM6S! CHIMA COVE ..... T.LC•e On Shell St •• Corona del Real ~tate 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba~$65.000 Mar ; n ewly , pr 0 • New Condos, 2 Br, 2~ Ba. Close to Golden West fesslonally d~raled, 2 2 lrplc's, reramJc tUe College & shopping cen- bdt'ln. +,tn •a baths . 3 kitchens & bolh. Pool & ten. Open Sun 1·5. 15841 ho ""· eJ Carrie Lone. story .,.,/ evator: ·spa.61.W9J.21k'OJter SOCALIFORNIA RLTY aourmet kitch • all teak cabi{tets Ir flOOl', wet bar, IJIMOOll.IO 546-5605 trp~c. Some bay view. llAUTY OM 4 · S&S Resale Specla.U1ts. too. Steps to beach & COlMIR 3,4 o~ 5 bdrm models bay ~MESA You'lllM:·c•when you avail. s ome w /pooJs. K V I E W :=. 3 t!:;~f~~~:; ~itoo Properties E. S BR, 2\A w/warm eartbtonea. ec~ bJt.Jo s, Huge cov'd patio length brick A-pie., upgraded of home. can add-on for carpets, 2 laodscaped income. Phone today OD· pattoa, pool area. ly.,5000 545-9'91 '94,990! ..,. . . OCIAHVIEW! ~ Walker & lt!e Steps to ocean; deluxe duplex, 4 & 2 bdrm. units. Real Estate Park 3 cars. $189,000! ---------• Will trade toe ho1De Dear rRICI IS llGHT the bay. Pvt party, must sell one UDO SANDS • of two properties' on Hop, skip or jump to Flower St. in East C.M. 1 ocean : like new 3 duplex or 1 lol w /2 bdrms., 2 baths, used houses. 673-6372 brick rrptc., new kitchen Mesa Verde Golf Club & all appliances, carpets, drapes. Only 5 Br, fantastic view. \6 Acre. ~.ooo. Shown by $145,000! _,. -1u 1790 p ** lobwt ... cher 133 L 16th St. Cotta Met• You are the winner of 2 Cree tickets worth Sl~ to HOUD4 Y OM ICE atlhc ANAH EIM CONVENTION CF.NTt:H. Dec. ~th-Jan. l.st. Free Tirkets good fo r De <'. 30th o r 3 1s t pe rformance:.. Cal l ti42·5678. e xt. 333, to chum your tickets. ** COIOM4D&M41t d;:' v•u.J· • anay Ocean ~ide or hwy, de· A"' 54<>-0608 5.a.•E IY OW .... ER li&htfully charming 2 ----='"-·----~ """ ho 3 Br, 11~ ba Condo. L1\' BR. me.tnearnew4·-------· rm, din rm & insid~ A prime opportwlity with an outstand-Bit apt. car garage. IARGAlHll laund rm. Pvt. patio, ing real estate organization + high $185,000! pool & gar. Upgraded. earnings! Expe rien ce is a must. ..._ .. ,,..op. ~··2 baths;com-NocomrnonwaJl.2story. •~ remodeled, room Prestigious location . AU applicatfons ~ oc l¥>at1 1c eampers; a S68.4~ Ph 962-3527 NO held in strictest confidence. Please * 41,5-7060 * must see; . Easts1de _A_G_TS_. ------ INCOME!!! reply to Ad #68, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box Costa Mesa. cau WOOOSY z STY BALBOA PEN IN. 5 Cos M CA92626 Wood floors, wood Yea.rs you no; duplex, 3 1560, ta esa, Rustu: architecture with DAJLY PILOT casames BR home for only $52,500. JiaWity for th flnt ift. Low down & cheap pay· 5 BR & 2 BA cornet iMertiOfl Oftly. mcntsS40.3666 shingle roof, fireplace, •~ 3 d " ·d i....:· • ·-_,.' • abundant glass. Heavy bl $6 00 U1> ut own ; ocean si e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~ shake roof. vaulted ~6il-d e garage. 4,5 · ol blvd. Pride of .: · ~" GI/FHA f111ancing avail. h I • I mgs, sweeping master .......... ,-L-•1 o..1-.uce•. SantaAnanearWarner. owners IP property: GeMral 1002 GeMt'OI 1001 and children's wing . ...-..._-....vn good rental history . "OH"' ... .,. ... .,,,., f All real estate advertised Roy Mc:Ccrdle $189,000 Including land! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• H • • .. ....,.,....,.," Open hearth irepl acc. l... b -· I ~tAJ. TOJt ' M a g a z i n e p e r ( e c t in ms newspaper ll> !>U • v & TERMS 1810 Newport lfycl OH w.a.y-.... w~ IEST IUY Ject lo the f'\'<.lcr:il Fair "" BALBOA PENIN. Just "" ~""" ,... ~c::'~ kitchen. Multi.purpose Jloui.i ng /\l'l of 1961! ONLY $62,500 Costa Mesa 541-7729 redurcd' 6 Units, five 2 SI 25,000 3 Bedroom with mBijsive 64()-'7000 area. Jn the $70's . One of wtuch makes •l tlll•gal to Best buy in lhe area. Airl~~~~~~~~~I bdrm.~. & I 1-bdrm .. on 2 Unobstructed VIEW con· stone fireplace & ex-... w.d I 00, 1-----·----· our newer homes. Bkr advertise ··any µre· condll1oner a nd some lots. J uJ>t J>lcps to beach. do with 2 bdrms. Adult, pa nded living room,••••••••---••••••••••••• RB>UCB>SIO,OOO. _536_·93_11_· ____ _ Wftela11 Ill.Al (SfAtl ference. hm1tation. or other nice xtra's. Calling Owner motivated! prestige. security. formal dining room .,._ _______ _ dL~cnmmat ion bast'd on IL'i is a must --The dog 6 warm country kitchen.1• .Fantastic 4 BR Mesa , race. color. rehgitm. sex, bites~ A quick cscow and ·~~ FEE SIMPLE duplex. a -WATCRFRONT Located on a large lot W4TaFIOMT HME Verde home. A real or national or1 Rin, or an t h 1 s ye a r 's bes t ILi bdrlllll .• 2 baths each un· HOME:.S with RV uccess. Close to $450,000 bargain ror the wi!le 10• intention to make any Christ mas present b it. Orte extra larf!e front REAL ESTATE sbo.,pl.ng, ·& Newport· Two indlvlduaJ units on vestor. Agt.64.5-1103 surh prcrerence. l1m1t11 yours. !'>l6·231J owner 's unit. Dll·ins, 631·1400 Mesa Schools. Priced at So. Bayfront with 3 & 2 VA or FHA Sp arkling S uns hrnL' home with !urge dinini.: rm, l:Y• baths. J br'!>~ Cover ed patio, bloc k wall. corner Jot. A beauty at$73,900. l•;tion.ordiscrimmation." "'''1 '11"·11 s 1u1110MN •• REDCARPET' frplc.PncedatS175,ooo. j~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;1 3 low $64,900. CALL bdrma. Acrou from LAltGECOMDO I~ lt~ll i I• ~2660.. Pavilion. VIEW. Owner $59,500 ~~1:oi;w~~;t:a~~e~~ll ann°~ ··?j !till LOWDOWHt 2~Ym AhVomt: ... d+upl~bdexr.m2. .. MCI IAY CSELECT . will~ll•~ Two~~..:-•bBr,J3gba, dt.bl 9la dvert1slng for _rt>al _ ----·!!~~ Startec home In 1reat ~rlfarage7in xlntloca-5 Coldem~~~el;r.1y~.pgreawdepdroinf·. T'PROPERTl~S 'Cll'1w;OO ~t!itf.~J~ ga~~~~: estate whtch 1!> in viola· --aA!a ! ~e y ;u-d ! Low 11on,Priced .. t$175,000 "'"u ~ 1'! ~areu, swim "°°'·'~~~~~~~~~ ttoooflhe law. WantAds Call642·5678 pric:e!VAocfllAterJD s, .,.., •. ...,,,.., M2·2a53Eves landscp . 3, Be drm. \IJ• 1_..!rc"'.,. -.. ~ .. - ----u•~ t u s ed bri ... l'Vi'I' ' ~. -l•el'tAan'' 531·5800, eves 894·9491 W1REH.+w~ .. " cus om r c 11.. '1..'..L • \_•• 'k._.t '!"JI" Geweral 1002 GtMral 1002 VETS! ' fireplace+ many more .~.DeUTm,i~oa 1.AJ1WO. C"8111r-leocla 1018 IYOWHH 1042 -··~··••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••-·•••.··~·· }love-up! ~ ,.._ .. G.l. new teausres. A mu~t see New carpets . & paint. ••••••••••••••--.••••••• Soper clean 3 Br, 2 ba, 'f·~•e,411 • •'•••••• macnab I Irvine realty FINER HOMES FROM $46,000 TO $895,000 IAYCREST TREASURE Mint condition . Ivan Wells built smgle·owner GEM ! Enter thru private gates, past the manicured, s prinklered mini.gardens & cozy view patios. T his 4 BR + spacious family rm w//ireplace home is a· s uper buy at 5212,000 rec. It features· a I~. living rm + formal dining rm,· 4 baths, island kitchen & cabineted 2-car ~aragc. Av ail. for new semester occupancy. Tom Allinson 642·8235. (8 -11 ) FREHCH DOORS & WIHDOWS." and brick every where! Traditional c harm w 1sycamor e trees & marvelous brick & tile jacuzzi out- side master BR. Lovely 4 BR, 3 bath home w lg. family rm. A buy at $162.500 leasehold. Barbara Aune 642-8235. (B-12). . LAST CHAHCE THIS YIARI Benefits! Fantatsttc 3 lo ~eaJly_ a ppre ciate. End unit lacing . green OCEAN VIEW 2 br, 'trpt, lam mi. oo quiet eul·de-$11t.a.G .a.TE bedroom ! Corner Jot! Asking $llS,SOO. 644-727o area. Hurry, won l Jast. q u let st. CI s to sac. Nr20th& Irvtne. -"" Only $72,500! Call now! ~5880 beach/schJ. Rm for boat, . DEEPWATER TNHSE 754-1202 MESA VERDE REDUCED Roomy 3 bedroom, 2 bath with craclcling brick fireplace. Supe r Mesa Verde location. Close to schools. s hopping & freeways. New paint & decor. The owner ts anx· ious to sell. F\J II price. now is $79,900. CA LL 751·3191. t;::SELECT I PROPERTIES HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM EASTSIDE ANANCING ·MADE EASY! J Choice properties available. ~ Marten ltffl Est ... 640-5357 COSTA MESA Beautiflll 5 year old ,.FICT HOME dupln. Each unit has FOl THI king &lied bedrooms, 8 ENl'lll FAMH.. Y ~s .... HERITAGE • REALTORS RV, etc. $85,000. Prin 011• Attractive 3 , Bdrm+den. Lowest price waterfront ty.493.5472 Ml to beach . New ;at only $199,500. Call to· ---------•landscaping. $85,000/ofr. day. CoroMdelM• 1022 557.2005 PURCELLREALTY I~~~~~~~~~ r·--------....................... Worth 846.2848 1H4MG 10 .• Sl3,450DOWH a 8.r, 1 ba tarnished CORONA DEL MAR house nr W. Oceanfront. 2 BR. J BA hope on R-2 Dbl gu. $125,000. lot. Live in front unit t\urr Wh1t l· lkilt ~r ''I01 '-'""'Purl Blvd NB I ~ 1 4 1 ft • •, lh j(; while building 2nd unit on rear of lot. Outstand- ing Inves tment. Only $134,500. l~~~~~~I CALL 955-0350 . ' . ' ' ' ... . . ~~ •H " • I ">r II• Evety Cent ~~ •••••••••••• !~.~~ Big and expensive home! Plenty of room for ever - yone. 4 bedrooms. multi- ple baths, formal dining. family & rec rooms, 2 fireplaces. G oq~eous Colonial style, BK!t, 540-1720 P4tHT&SAVE 3 BR needs help. but tl htlS a super location & a very motivated seller . $114,900. v ~ll ~acnab I trvrne · ?-realty . a: To take advantage of this Wlusual offering . . . lovely 2 BR + den (3BR ) home w /pool & jacuzzi locat-: ed in one of Newport's best n eighborhoods. Owner will consider' reasonable offers -flexible financ-' lng -don't miss this! Bob Lane· 644-6200. <B·l3) u p a t a i r s p I u s 2 Lovely 4 bdrm. Edinboro downstairs. Each bas Model, located on a larie wood burning fireplace, I'-', hillh up in the Niguel built·in electd~al · ap· Hills. with a fantaaUc pliances. lust like a 1 view of the hills; all·thls DREAM HOME IMMACUL.4 TE! Spacious 4 BR Baycrest home on lg. corner lot. Brand n ew kitchen w /top-of -line appli ances. Lg. pool, attractively fenced. Jeanette Havens 644-6200. CB-14) CAMEO SHOtn V1IW! Panoramic ocean view & steps td private beach. Beautiful, single·. story 4 or S BR home w /sunken con· versation area. Free-now pool in' ·enclosed courtyard. Appt. only.· $349,500. Donna Godsh all 644-6200.· • (B-15) · ' IAYCllST'114Uni AJl new decor -reedy tor you,. NOW! New cpl, papers, dining chandelier, klt.chen tloor & patio awning. 4 BR home w /hlgh beamed ceilln~ + lndi.rect Uahlin8 ln llvin1· rm " I amily no w /fireplace. Dona Chichester 642·~· <B·l6) home. $146,500. WIU ex· lu3 more , for only change. .900 COLI OF HIWPORT REALTORS 675-5511 . ' . . . OCUM AMD1 HARIOlt -Plus nlle lights, tool And that'I not al) ••. F~h ,doors, Private patfoe, Pool, WOOd decltJng and a mast.er ~room suite with libra ry com· pl,le the pic&ure. ~.ooo. Deerfield Park Home w/4 BRs & 3 ·full baths -on f{reenbelt! Every upgrade p<>ssible + other custom features! Unbelievably beautiful landscaping incl. ponds, waterfalf. fountain & huge rdwd deck. You must see tbis! SI41.950. Forrest Powers 752-1414. c B-17 ) • VACATI~ RITUAT Gorgeous 4 BR home in beaUliful .:village or "Tlle Ranch". Huge pool + 'jacuzzi, f ountaln, gas fireplt, lg. ·covered patio Ii boat slorage. So 'clean you'll think it's brand new! $112,500. LUa Harpe r 7S2·U14, .r (B-19) \ 642·12JS .. , ~4!:!:!!.4!';~ ....... ~~.~~.!:!~~~...... Frtd!Y,Deoember 23. 1977 • DA.ILV PU.OT :_.. 5 Wffl J 1tw I O'I CM of eo.ty tt--H UftfwWsMd ...._ .. Ua....,.Md ~· U•t..W.111. ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ,.., 2110 •••••••••••• , •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·················~.-..,.··· 1l£.RE'SVOUR CHANO& .... ~ ............ C..t•Mao 32%4 lr¥M 3244 Ht.,....IHch l2'9 &aut 3 BR hom~. S2M>O ._... R9Ch w /Yt.w •••••••••••••••••• •••• • •••••••••••• •• ••• •• • ••• •••••••••••••••••-•• WATCH SANTA FAMILY CHRISTMAS New, luxtirious 4 bdrm wtth complete landtico.p1ng & ready to move in. Fr~tih natw'al ~un lighted rarnily room & dmiot: room & in addition the twinkle of lights in the night time v lcw. $139.500 dn. Call now. _24 hr Sml home on 5 IH'. MonttUo Complex Condo. Univ Pk m. 3 Bf zu, Ba. WestclUC 3br. 2ba, pool 5ef'\Jce~ ttlft. Swedish frpit, l.C pcm:h. 3Rr, 2Ba. avail J an 1 + bonuK rm, Ox Cord, W/terV, patio. wtr pd rose ga rden . t-~rut I. lotOO mo bl/Isl ~2 3322 $S2S. S4'7·7M4; ~ 32U ss:;omo. ~ 8995 See Sanla gu from ho~e to boW>e from the livm.: room & bdrm \lew~ overlooking La1otun<1 3 Bdrm, 21 ;! baths with pr1v~1cy & st!clusion $149,500. Othef'Rtd Estate Almon<! trees . Corrul, l HHTALS BAYSHORES. chorrnin.i ••••••••••••••••••••••• t hlck\ln house. Only 4Br, !Bu. Col e&e Pk, z BR, l & ...... , 1345 3 &', 2 Ba home, bttns. Mobae Homu s;Jtl.~/lernu Call Mr ftlllc. klda pel.'I OK, 5450 ZBR + 0,2bu. ...w• dabwd\r, fplc, be•m ForSGle 1100 l"rey SU 3456. Hen mo.5411-8477 3BR 2 .... ""75..,.,.,1w rlga, 1 blk bay, $560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lllnkle R.E. Near So. Coast Pla11, ' a..······.. 213~08 OM l wl ""-AD ( 3BR,21\b1& ....• $47&/495 _,;__....;__ _____ _ ECOH Y L Y Mw Red •hlh ..... r. 2 story, am rm. 4 BR. 2•,, ba • $500/625 Otluxe Condo, 2 Lr1 bri. S4:veral Honw11 prkecl Wcmhd 2900 pool, 2800 sq ft. lncludet1 4 BR. 3 Ba ..... $600/875 2'~ ba. W/D. Gar. Pool. from $9.750. to $15,250. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool service, $650 mo. 5 BR. 3 Bti .......•.. $375 Jacuul $450. 552.4449, Adult Park, Orange OWN Pro erty in .Q.aveMS-7506 3BR2~~bullVllmJi $650•----·"----- County. f~rk rent und:er Inglewood, ~awlhoroe 4 BR, 2 ba, nr. Ward's. Sharp 4br, 2ba. formal SWIMMING IN DECEMBER 0 CK Ranch style 4 bdrm. 3 bath witp ocean view & heatt."<i swimming pool hiviting all year entertainment. Warm & gracious for your enjoyment. $175,000 CORPO RATlON 380 GLENNEYRE LAGUNA BEACH {714) 494•2148 $100. RetU'Ulg or Clxed In· or So. Bay area? Fr 1 anl .. , .. _OK ,.,.00 din. rm. rumpus rm .. come, let us show you P ' Y • iu.... · ~ ""'""""' ft b ck bay area how You Can I I've com· WILLPA,Y CASHll mo. 54S-Sl.20eves .,,.,....... ... a · . Avail immed. $650 fortably at a pri<:e you Pb. Tom 0 AllessanC:Vo HOUDA Y SPECIAL 6'2·9567 can afford. Pacific Coast T.D. PROPHTIES PANORAMIC SUNSfl VIEW Resales Inc. 2ms E. Ball 1213)674·6907 or (714) Spacious 3 Br. 2 ba .. fam Rd, Anahe1m. 1/991-8600' 546-8201 anytime or rm. frplc, blt.ns. nu crpl, OCUMFROMTAGE ~~laft.Spm Trailerama 1964, 20x45' Rcntalls ,.. ..... Cap11tnmo 1271 Large u1Lcrior atrlum for your ravorite flowers & hanging plants. center ed a round 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home Ocean view from dining room. livin~ room & master suite. High enough to see Palos Verdes & Catalina sunsets. $210,000 LOCJ-o Ml.... I 052 I LAlgillM H'cptl I 052 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• w/10x30' closed porrh ••••••••••••••••••••••• Choice site. Adlts. Pvt. Hoellet Funtithed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnv. community con® 3 BR. 2 bli. Adults only. 1----------1 $400. Sea Lton Really Party. For appt & info (TI4)499-1737. Turtlerock 4 br, ram rm. 491·3383 s1s,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.o.P.-.....o 3107 -lBr-, g-as-•--w-...... -r-..... -. ..,-... 0-. dj.nt1Jl,2ba, viewofUCI. SAN JUAN Village .,. .. ..,. ..,... ....,,. Avail. Jan. 3rd. Lse. Br--" br 1 b Acreage for sale 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults, no pets. 548-4135 Grdor wate r aason ....... new a • u ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRONT 4 br, 2 ba Eves642-083S 646-6423 dues pd by o,.,;er. Sn5: lOWnbouse for only $350d Promise her anything, BUT Give her a home for Chn~lma~' home avall. for yrly rcn· • Agt.5'1..SQ32 per mo. Hayw ar · FIVE ACRES tal. Ftplc, wush/dry, 2 &. huge bonus room Wat.son R.E. 731-5581 Hard to find horse pro· dshwhr. 2 car gar. No w/frplc, big lot. 2062 U~v. Park area. Convt· 3 Br 2 bl coodo Villagt> ....-y.BrandnewSBR.2 ~.644'9582 Wallac e. $350. mo . ruenUylocatednrlrv.ln· "'"-·J lak;.pool ., JM A y 0 c COlll'O K l\TI ON 380 GLENNEYRE LAGUNA BEACH (714) 494·2146 K VIEW TOWHHOME a.auftftli all HW. spocac-toW11hw with o •l•w, OH story, 2 ~. p(Ya deft mM1 many quality f• ...... s...,109.SOO. 499-4551 ' D/\NA POINT 4113·8812 LAG UNA BEACH 497.3331 .,.... -=----------1 642-028'l dustnaJ Park. 3br, 2ba • .:>111• uan. nr ... ·.~ HA home. Huge family eo.-.. .. M• 3122 frplc. focd patio. $500 car a ar. f38 SI mo. room, wet bar, frplc .. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3brlba nu cpt/pnt/drp mo. Wltdy 213·814·5107, 1_~_s_760 _____ _ car garage. Won't lasl! 2 Blt, block & ~to bch. fncdyd,kidsOK.$375 evs/wkndS71'·SS2·9673 BKR. ss:l(l. 943Conaress. 751-6905 s.ta AM 3210 (714) 677·56\H 644.Jltl() Sharp 4 bednn, 2 ba .. ••••••••••••••••••••. ORS22·0530 4B~2BA.newcpts,&util W/cpls, fenced yard, Super value, 3 br 2 bu. Apmlwnts L.arJlnoleoch 3141 ~!1!:.,.SA45gt0/mo. Call 1Auperarea,.$395.963-t567 fplc,DW,carpets.'Kids & for sal~ 1300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• O>J<Y'C»<N. • gent. no ee. t OK $385 963-4567 <,1iA RMER, lbr w/guest ~ · f · ••••••••••••••••••••••• hse $350 fif!ll & lust + 4 Br, 3 ba, 2200 sq ft. Orangetree, new 1 bdrm •>eent, no tie. Irvine 1044 LCICJlnoBeac:h 1048 Studio apt, Rossmoor de p . Avui·I. 1115178 Corner lot. 3105 L.o~en w/lofi: J,Jrown cpt, setr· ~l.aglmlo 3 86 ••••·\~.~~;;;1;;,~~·l~;:••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loguno leoch 1048 LoiJllMI MiCJIMI I 052 Towers, Leisure World. 494.8131 Ln. $17S m.o. Fa~ea. clean1n11 e>VJn • .Avail. ·~··••••••••• .. •• ... LAGUNA N IGU~;(, 495·1720 ,. 1 ,0SSINll ••••••••••••••••••••••• For sale or rent. Es late -545-7506 now. $325/mo. ""----'"i 3 Br .... e Jlr" " , ••••••••••••••••••••••• sacrifice. 4~·3167 l.olJuno MICJM' 3152 2 Br 1 ba duplex. Bltns 562·7162 · ~~~ocean v::' ri1 le~ The Vi ll age or Wunrt GOLFERS . ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . WIUA • hridsc The bt"•l of hoth MIGUEL SHORES o.lens/ lge encl. y:u-d. SIJ\ele car On the Lake. Woodbridge blk from pvt bcb. A I.!>. worlds Arrl11teeturall) Self·clng. ovens. i:tar. dr G.ARDEM HOME OnihHle 1800 New 3br, den, 3ba, short garage, washer/dryer Crossing. 2 Br. Nr. $475tnclutil.-499··U71- un1que'2&3 bdrm al oi:iener. washcr-dryl•r c ••••••••••••••••••••••• dnve Sea, fwy, Nr lake. book-up, kids & pets ok. Beach Club. StiOO/mo. 3~98 tachcd & detachud n.>· and a mrnull's v Jlk lo a <Jct•an i.idc 0 highway $550/mo. 83l·3128 752·2962. Gary. Call 551·1234 ' Wes ..... hr 6 ·ind ~"'ns1t1onally de 2 Q 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• siden"eS from S!Jti,9!IO «real 18 hol"' n t tleck • .~" . n 5:'B·UGl & , 11 of t'h'c -:uur-.ll corM~.·cl. Ye ry private Me.-.rtleoch 3169 3 Br. fan\ rm, frplc, Universltyl>ark Terrace Almostnew,4bedrm,2ba ---$7'J.OOOt.a90• <:ourtyarW, walb 32' pool. 2 sharp E/Costa Me:.a ••••:::;•••••••••••••••• dibwhr, new crpts. drps twnhme, 3Br. 2ba. frplc.. w/fplc. OW & cpti:.. WOODIRIDGE 2 Bdrm.&den,2,baths · & paint . Mesa Verde. dbl gar. $475/mo. pre s t 1 g i o u :. PHESCOTT new. one is rebut I~. beacbfront home. S-6 Br. ~·mo. v . ~ ne1g or oo . . 6/an show!! like a oiodel. houses on 1 lot. One I» Beaubfol West New~rt ~c 540-6757 A au CC'>7896 hb h d S475 Le.st Woodbridge home. 5 Sl64.500 Owner very ANXIOUS. 2 ba Special low rate for 1115 ~ h«lt 3248 9C-4567. Agenl. no fee. ~?i'i~,.~:: ~ ~'. ~ iP l ( ~ ~ 3 Mona"h Bay rim =~~~~~n'El\6. Call ~r~"d~:)9~~~'1clonslder Su~!!':! ••••••••••• ~?.~~ ·~~j:~;~\:~:~~ ~~· =71::~t.P1~: 1\ll Upf'rdcd Mrx1can Laguna Niguel Houses Uftfurnithed fppelAr •• clorvpetl.y r3enbcre.d2 ybda •• 497-H92ordays 499·2101. _f_ee_. _____ _ pa,ers tile A'C Lt\· thn US~ LIVING 496.7222 831 0836 ... rrru.. 3 bath 3 l'.1r gJr 111 th•~ l'ai.v·t:J•"•• ::! WEEl<Et-IDER? • ....................... ktds/pets welcome. $395. 3Br, 2~ba, cpl & drps. c-da ... '-'ts Nr park W:allr ln l.tkl· H<lrm .• :• huth ·0 .y 0 an We have one. walk to General 3202 963-4567,Agent, noCee. Den, game rm. 2 frplc's . u..twWslwd 3425 Sl 86.000. Hrkr t>wnr l'a:-y "alk lo ;>.!aan heach&markcts . an am · WestdfffR•alty ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean. mountain & city. ••••••••••••••t•••••••• 5S2 41U or~~JS:l:i lkach i-;.,,.,y term~ with maculale c·hurmt.'r with Mi1sionViefo 1067 HOMEFlNOERS Twnhsecustom2Br.~Ba, Wik t o b c h & \wn LANDMARK,Mai:nolia l:'lllVl':llSIT\' P/\llK lh pr,. al .. t111urH't01l. at·,, cxpani.1011 ,,o,,.,1 1111t11t·:-........................ "9cOIMProperty 2000 Thou:.andsorRcntals air,attachgar.S1>ac1ous, $700/mo. Agt 497·2457, AUanta HB.Adults~nl). h Thi• pr1t•· ''right · ••••••••••••••••••••••• /\llareasallpncc:. $340mo.544·1041 Ownr (213 l585·35S7 over ~o. M1'll1on "'"' rord. 2 ll1 . ;i• ~ lla, bonu:-c•:t'' '" :-"'' 1 ts vai·anl SI 15 000 S I .. • ~ rm. 22i•' :-nfl N1•w c·pt~. protH't'lv Only S!!;,,500. . UNITS .. LLTOP VIEW NEWPORT HEtGHTS ....,.. lbr m:bn:~~1l pd 11Matll'9• •och 3240 3 Bd 2 b atrium fac1l. Security, wll apph<: ·• ' r . DUPLEX ...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• f lrm, a , 1 l I . 960-1300 eves. urps, '''P' rnrn m.11 <"nnvi•n it·nt Nort ll S<.>e the sparklmg Illes $2'l52brk~ds&pels rp c, comp e e Y --gr<.-'C'nbt.'1• ~pool Owrll'r HOUSE .ALONE La~uoa 1ncati1Jn pro· from this 4 bdrm home an Extra sharp 2 BR units, Sl503br rent to buy remdld. Walk to beach & .,....._" U..funt 3600 Avail unm,·J $11:! tllHI " worth this prtc(• llut \'ide-. l'U»Y act·c~~ & l'U:-y gr e at r u m i I y both w/P.rivate patios. LIFETIMt:SEHVICE MERRY town. $800/mQ. Pb ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5.'>211-'»17 ,\l•U <·"11 ll\l' m·ar lhl' ren1ah1hty. This cJuplt.'x neigh borhoocJ . Only Ownerwtllhelpfinance. 557·0822 640-7020 t~·J<'li '" l'urana dcl ~I ar I~ ideal for the owner IOC· $79.900. 754-7800 agl. Call 955-0350 CHRISTMAS • -L-E---t 3255 WHERE ELSE ... can you f1ml J .1 htlr111 . :.!'~bath homl' with '11 & golf cour:.~· \ ll'W,, 1·0111 rnunlly pool & )Jl u/Lt. tennis. hlk1• 1r;11h \OU name It · th~ f\om<' ti~: at. l"ee land, LOQ!,311ft1-~9So 1ranm.:J1 ---- WOODBRIDGE URO\l>:\IOOH. 4 Bil ram. rm . pool & c;pa ... 11 lncbrp)! d1•l·k1nl!. f1•1u· mg, gori:rou.., 1m1>ro\" nwnt-. mndl•I h n11H 1·ond \Im 1• 1n n ·J<ly \g1•11t fi40 ~!'>··~ l.)!1.' 2hr home u1 .. 1ul l:.rndH;1p1nl( lli.':tCI \' lt OlO\'tJ·tn Sll(l,(KIO. ~l5!11131~ W.AHT TO S.A VE SSS /\ srcat :J HR. 111 U/\ Covered patio, many e>t· tras. Close lo ("Yerylh.lng. ~take an,Y offer. Aakifl .... -4 BDRM. 2J' Ba. home. w1lh ove large enough for you llOLlOAY turkey Formal dtn. rm • lari.t enough ror all your din ner guests & large ram rm. off kit.. Ideal ro children's ente rtain men\. Lots or patio nrca low mainl. landscaping. .incJ h.o\l' rear tl'n.1111>-......,.. ~ hdJl l•·•Y 5175.000 cu pant who wants a _ _ _ ForR~ L Spend 1978 in a brand ...... ••••••••••••••••• hedi;:t· agail\.'>t mflataon. 3 Bdrm. 4! ba, carpel, "'"°" NH n e w beach home . ~Macnab-Irvine COMPLETELY RESTORB> Old Spanish mJ~111n with an occao V•'t"'tt li11· th one male to una Pom(Monnll.J $2l:i ooo SlM9,500. • clrps. patio. laodl>Cll~. 3 BR. $575/mo. Spacious. upgraded thru· On t.[\e Lake. New Sbr , 2bn 1 Flll:R fncd. beautiful view. . SSAcnc1aTrccLa. out. ftplc .• dbl. garage. del,fcbedp't~l\lne . .Cp~ :'ll~aMlU •t br u the 5"7·~8»3'25 • DELUXE 'TRIPLEX. In SBR.$575/mo.. pyt: yard. Children & "1ir'pJc nlt'ate spa() o•RTHEl•t" _ ...... ~ •· II .. 428~Begonla pets "'elcom~·. Only m~~te r bdrm . Club -. . _..__eventual -... -.;:1a•9' C.M.,w/owo~r·s..u.nit, e B .. vlew.--'mo. ---."" ..... a~'l·5. f,acibtles.871·388t 'Tomove intoth1s ne.wb hnd the ween shmRle . • o frplc, s.&alte roOC. Nr. "' _, .,.,.....,".., """" '"T · d I d 2·stoi;y. 2 bdrm. hou:.: ••••••o••··~··•••••••• shops. YJ:;AGER 1947PortCardifr Sl317thSt.~gt.~181 . .,.,~I ~o ee • spac,10~~ 'e"en ho~ a -hascmcnt IMlMONTEG04br, 2ba, REALTY. s.56-6171. -!lBtt;~, vlew<!tfW7ti or848-l.31L tWwport.._. JJ'9 ~[g w/!,.~~ sr'm 3 S13l.500 · · ram rm. Ownr. 20L5 Port 2125Yaoht RadtaM ••••-••••••• ... ti$'••• ~plir~ wet bat * 494-8057 * RIVIERA EXCLUSIVES Chelsea. 640-1981 TRIPLEX. C.M. 2 BR, den, view. 9&00: .,_ . b UVE 0... G , • . h Great Ea s tside loc, 27Mont.anasEste ~ecut1ve ome near " reat.or""' y wtt in N d d B (2) 2b lba t ' l 5 Bedrm. $780/ mo. rm.. r • .... • 1 Big Canyon Town.borne .., ac n · " 0 Iii Ylf!J• tlarewboru.p.!~la v1:w·. roo3~ r. 'pa ios, enc · 2019Yacht Resolute ring, outdoor BBQ & br 2 .__ rt()() '~ (8-2X)) -~ SU VIEW br 2b f 1 d 2042Port Weybridae ocean: 4 bd. 3 ba. ram THEGOLFCOUlSAt 1~w. Nd~hopping ~ ~ newer 3 • a . rp c. Y · " din m ....,t bar f're be h t S7501•·1 ..,.,.. gar. $165,000. __. $750/mo Con 'de ,,.;,, c.,.,4"" •• per mo. eeue Ch-·A Lee",, .......... ,,,. .. ,,,,_ for pool. $25,000 less than Tom Lee. Rltr. 642·1603 4 BR. fam rm. din rm. ......,.. : si r ...........,, ._ ... • ~ 111<:11 IN T ill:: SKY. 3 lfOSN.CoonHwy.,Loguno market at $250,000. V1ew ........ S97S/mo. lse/opt.848-0707; 968-4347 hrt.rm~ & tlcn. fanta•aic 494-1177 644-4597 CORONA DEL MAR 1K"cJJ1 & city news! Xlnl 31601"-...... s t lll!v ._.4°99it .._._4Y5"9'1 avuno --~onu90RT LI1'S DUPL~ * * tll't~hhQrhood. close to "sn.-n, ,(·hools. Sec today al ---Three Bdrm. 2 ba home SUper pnde of ownership Jock Afford !iilW.500 , __ HHI• I 050 units with fireplaces, 1577 E. Oc--II d. _.,....-• on tropically planted lot. enclosed garages. shake ._. " ••••••••••••••••••••••• One of a kind Wailing robes & have been com· ~ llOME & INCOME. 6 Townhomc. 3 Br. din rm, for u s pecial person. plet.elyrerurbished! • .......__,--1.L. . ..10 1207 You are the wiru'!er of 2 Units. downtown Laguna liv. rm. 2ba. 1600 :.q ft. De i""'ed f r n u....l·ng ---C • k h $14 Bearh. 3 Commercial. 3 $75 000. 551-1234 67:-4961 or u rn . I£ IQ ·~ ....................... reeouuc et.s worto to restdl•ntial. Fantastic · ---THECAUISOM CO. , Pluaac• 3 Br, 2 Ba, dbl gar, over H DaAtYtbe MICE occunviews.$595.000 FIXERUPPERw/assum sized lot. l mmac. no loan. Super buy at 2819NewportBlvd.N.B. Prap...tln , pets. Lease SS2S/mo. ANAHElM OPPORTUNITY OF A $58,900. S !:Jr, 2 ba. Agt 60 Ft bayfronl 4 BR den 7S2•1920 (2131447·2410 CONVENTION ~ 1 1-.i..tl t<t\11' )~I~ t ~Ull H•! f.u•IOI dr' M1• 4 br. 3 ba. fam rm, 3200 sq.ft. 1444 Santiago. N.8. •h•••hr9ishld $1000 mo. Agent, 541-5032 ••••••••·-,; ••• _. •••••••• -...... , ......... 3707 FIMB HOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG CANY~N. Absolute· Lge 4 br upper, all appl ly smashing A';'gui.ta Across from bcb. Wintl.'r Plan. ~ mas\erpaece of only, ~/mo. 962.1904 dramatic deslgn with un· - surpassed golf course Bllch Apt. furn. Steps tu view! 3 BR. & den. bch. $225 Per mo, Ytl> $795/Montb lease. 64.!'>-3051. HASTINGS & CO. eo.ta Melo 37'24 REALTORS 640·5560 •••••••••••••••••••• •• LIFETIME! Oceanrro.nt 768·500A pier .. onPenlnSula • • 1400QUA1Ut.N1w uu.c" CoronodelM 1222 CENTER rejU1uran\ he~rt of M ball Rltr 675 4600 ar Dec. 27th-.Jan. tst. ~ ee~'.h. All q . ~ ~ I 052 ars · · TWO 4-Plexes In Mesa del ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free TicketB good Cor NO FEE! Houses. condos. $50 WB·& UP eqrupr:ent.~.000 ew •••••••~•••••••••••• 4-Plex,tOOrt.fromocean: Mar. SUl,000: each. 3BR.2ba.,beamed cell, Dec. ~Olb or 3lst duplexes. Rental Studio.lbedroomt .., ·' -.. IMLOVaY $248.oolW/laftdf Agent.~U03 dcn,frpl.$525 performanees. Call Pav1Uon.675-4912Bkr. Maid1erv1ce,pool' Mys Tl C HJ LL::; • ·l'ttl!Sl14MOUS MarshaltRJty '675-4600 TIM'LIX 4 BR, 2 ba .. frplc .. new 642·5678, ext. 333, to 2316 Newport Bl, C.1'4 ~~ls~~k:tgc~~sg~~j . S~,_IACE I OWHER E/Skt.CodaMHa ~°irlt!&t~·l=ral ceil, claimyour~~els. ~d~:~~::S~::'c'h~ -5'8·9'1S5or 64s.396'1t designed s bdrm. home Sharp 3 B~·.1900 sq. ft. Cliff Haven exec. hme 1 yr. old, lg 2 br. 11/a-2 bnght&alry. S39S Pool. tennis. $650/mo. STUDIO A rare opporlumly at hm. Ameo1t1ts Include w/guest house sunken ba. units. Ea. unit has SEA J..lON REALTY 3 BR. 2 M. pool, fenced Avail 18 mos. lease. Ask WIEIQ.Y -.,.TES $375, 000 pnv~Le beach access, ltv. rm .. form. d'in. rm .. 3 Crpl. frml dimng & lndry 673-5354 497·3388 yard, 2 car gar .. close to ror Jay, Agent, 644·7270 Full Kitchen&. TV le!1rus couna & swim· Fr P 1 c • 5 & q u 1 e l areas. s garage s paces. schls & sbps. $395/mo. Linens & Utilities .J MAGNIFICENT3200 sq. mmgpools.Sl47.500. elegance • 3 Bdrms 2 $185,000. Agt. Days: 3 Br ~e. crpts. drps. lst&last.673-4545.. CLOSETOOCEAN' fl .. 4 bdrm .. 4': bath J; AMCHORAGI baths. $1Ss,950. 646·0031 552-0434 eves: 552-0507 !~~~ce . $500. m o . Bike to.._.. from th•" tge WALK TO BEEACH. pool R~ S.itH Mot~ home. Finest oceanfront 415 Pl l Rd N B '""""'"" uu• ... & tennis. xcil1ng 2 Lo d f IMYESTM~S ra e · · · lllXlU'Y twnbm wtview or c•~. 4 bdrm•. 3 ba, sun· 2(8) ewport Bl vd, C f community. a so ex· _.. • ••mea a~COME nus 1s a charmer! ii•-t •t r 1 .,...,, ~ " ..... 2611 ~ • 1714) 49'L77 I I s. ca...... I 07 6 ~-" ...., a. ru e, warm rp C, deck & atrium. $615/mo ...... . tras. $350,000 -bl 3 BR. 2 ba .. den, 3 frplcs. ,·acu··i·. pool, dbl gar. 1 1 ~========!.1 ······················· Tax shelter. n~w dg. 8 pt' •ltf>C M I .... se susc·1r.1T'"'S ..... .1 k a 10. _. o., year y. Avail now. SOS mo. · llWI "' 1 BUILDER'S allt.'ntlon: ' PllOFESSIO"AL units an super oc. As mg Paul Martin Rltr 213-926-2190 LA R G E . home on Nicely furn. larg~ & two R-2 lots. heart or Here It Is! IUILDIHG $350,000. 944.7383 675·5621 WATER with boat dock. small 1 br. Adults, Oftly. Dann Point. Both for San Clem~nte prof. bldg. . r ll 2 br w/gar. $260. Cpts. 2 Story w/4 bdrms, fam no pets. 2110 Newpe>rl $85.000 otrice s uites avail. 1-81@ liiUt l' Spacious exec & am Y Water _pd. 2710 "A" rm. din rm & privacy Blvd. Roo ...... Large parking ,• .wrf'ft'IDE • home. 38r, 3ba. lge ram. Delaware. 838·4120 $1200/molse 1--------4~ IN v EST .M ENT op· are~~Rent at 55< per sq . nwUa_2323 " rm. Crph!, pvt patios, etc. 1-spm. uoo NORD best loca· HMIMgt• leoch l7i 0 portunity: a beautiful ft. Consider trades & 644·2979 Eves. lion. Exec. 2 Bdrm, den, •••••••••••••••••••• motel, heart of Laguna l _,, """ 493 0233 -4Br1" Ba, 1 BLOCK TO dinin · N Oc VI B Beach. Close to beaches crms. _,2,...,.,. . . Exec & Family Home Up· BEACH atrium entry g r m. New In & out ew ean ew · bch. (6) 2 bec:b. l bach. 3ba. fam rm, very 499-tsm· 963-837'7 ON LIDO. Special 2 871-347l~per mo. S7SO,OOO (.0. Pool.$450,000.ByOwner, spacious.644·2979eves, ' b~rm++. Clamorous ...,_.leoclt 3 & parks. 'Xlnt cond. ~ Balboa, 7 Untts, Steps t<> graded. landscaped. 3Br, (pie, g;dnr. $495 mo: $700/fDO. inc. uW. 848-8300 CM' m~"-T'C>dl. ~111~4."J::;..t 20% Down. 64s.3051. CosN Mes 1.,.24 ~vacant, 2 br, 2 bath, hideaway. $850/mo ••••••••••••••••••• ~u u.::iu-t1\Ml7 ~ :"'• Cl ,. dishwasher , range & ON WATER. Fobulous LARGE lmmac. f 523 C ••••••••••••••••••••••• oven. Cp•a, drps, pool, VIEW B I d u. .,. .. a.a.1\.....fnul""E 2 u.----I Lot· "'M "" 2 r w beaut c· b~c'" ... or. Lo•·s of r ~ ""'~llll:' " .. " ~""9·280..... A' ~--ir.•ECl'"'L • . s It .. °"' "' .... v _ ,~ .. , --__ ~ "' pv. patio. ecur y . corSSSO/molse. blk to beach. S26S/ 0 ,1 • __ lt.-eclSll),000 5 Br 3 Ba home on golf S32S/mo 554 1332 or OWNER'S PRID,E Clallsified Ads sell big 'n'ade yat1r old stulf for S. a. Owner said "SELL lT... course. Opt avail. now. 842-21644 · • Wattrfr•t ~· 1-6'-86-_l_l_. ----4-lte~. amaJl items or new goodies with a C l•..a 1078 2 spaciou s 3 Bdrll) 1896mo.fl40·2981 ,.._,. 631•1400 LAGUNA BEACH M It .... vl.tem 00 5678 Cl"••lf1ed.ad ..... """"8 • ...-houses. ~Id. beamo6 Sharp, clean, 3br, 2ba, -I""". _.fl./wk. $250/*o A neal 3 bedroom POO ,....., · . · --_ ...... _ · ......,...., ' •••--•••••••••••••• •• • • •. ' ., 3 .... Nrlt~ I · I ho ts dr bltn ,, " -"' ccil'g.s & MORE 1 Submit ..,. ·~ae, poo • JllCUU • me, crp • ps, s, _ Mald serv. color l"'. lfome wd/.2ba tbs Newport leocla I 06 Mewport•d 106 WHY PAY MO.I? Offer. d.lahwuhcr. adultaooly. dshwsbr. car d.r opener, .. ,_ .. Seavi·-. 3 Br, 2 ba. heated 1)001 . C7 4 1 separate 1ning room. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Jusl •••,oooc 81• two ., • ., "•""' ••""'mo Ev• 962-4224 ''"""" .... N c k _. • " .....,.."'"0 _,., • " Pool . tennis, ,·a c. 494·5294. 985 · st Near fri!cway access. Bdrm•. 2 in baths, POOL & T84MIS 2br, l~ba hse. nple, S87S/mo. yrly675-0562 wy. Jf OCIM toacboola & par • 1tor1 h eme w ith 3 ~ •• '::tJt• #.,_ H Alldat$112.tl00. CE t•mlly·dlnlng room, 1 ..... uHc 4 & fomRm 3 Ba con· fnc'd yrd. $365 mo. . •-..__. 3152 "' --.. ,·. u' 962-7787 or 546-8609 Sharp ll• r bo't v 1 e w -.--,,_,..... wood roof . b'tlck dO .... epvtpa o,rtcrm: Mooaco3Br,nrpool,ln· ••••••••·~··•••••••n•• ) fireplace, tile kitche n, etc. $410. 8'73·7317 • Vacant.Jan 1-3 bedrm. 2 cl grdnr. Avail now. cenlc views, lux Y .·110111 ILll . S· aa.·. ~-:~arc:~~~=: LohWU. 2200 ~~ B ~c~ll~.I~~~ 644.ma =::i;,,,~1b:pi:~ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• c..~way3 r,1Ba,b~ Alllot,nofee. 9.lb-lease, no depoelt re· Center. Heated P.~1 . l·l LOT (tat, new palnt, Cll>ta, q\IJred, avail. lmmed. jacuul. Nr. corner AtWln 0VER50YEARSOf~ERVICE IOIO COSTAMHA drJls,ti25Jmo.~l Modcra 2 BR,%Ba,..frp1c, 17M11.2Bkr. Pkwy&PllseodeV n· .............. ,, .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPAMIHJTYLI • ·a.ct tile tool. arehed ~fOU'Y: 2 BR .. Uv. rre. w/baY wU1dow at trpl. D\alna rm. Spaclou. rear llJ'OUftda. See today II SlOl.000• lluny t Mlulioa llealt.¥ 41M-073l ~ Spectacular Town,,o_µse With.: Spacious Bedrms. W /3 Ballfl. Plus Family Rooft\. Many Cu1tom' Features Lrge. Co•ered' Balto~Y· · · Overlooks Poo\ And Ramada. 'J'hC· Home Js \lacr.n~ -*6nd 1-ady l'o Move lnto. Let 1 Ge f lttt*t. Priced • At $157.SOO. SutJmlt Offer. OlnbuDd lJ.-.14Uni\S. Br, cpts, dJiil, kids OK, Ind pr, waUcto beb, no WISTCUFf cia .. szssooo no doll fplc ·""' $285 ~.$375.536-1398 ALICIA PLAZA ,,. .... ,1·~·10 mo.M&.m4 • ,· 2Bn 2ea""--.. ~--nr 'BR. 2 BX, tpft, l•ced &VJLL/\GE ~ D-U-'liJ r -&VWIUIU"'le o yafd. fNJl treelf, 2 C&r 581-6151 581· BR. 2 Ba, ftplc, bltna, bch. Mtullt over 40· Spa, pr., .apacious. '6()0/mo. Sorry, no w. • senate St. f(25 mo. 'POOi, team., work shops. lit& f .. t. STMSfS. LStftl ut +sec. w.9305 jt br ceeuritt. Avall.1---'---------1 .... _ _. Jan. l. 98M1~ evet. SPICIAL .. leue, $42Sfn>O. locld Townbouff 2 br 2 ba 3 Br i~ ~ condo, newly .__.._ ___ _..._ 11 Y(/l!r Pnll_.. aarden.:t. kids/pet OK. °"'end mut Adult ovor decot'4· Opt •"•II• Ja~ l . ---· -~--·-. HON~ REJ,>AtRS• Avail. 1-15-18. Orlve by -~ .862"'"54 •mo.e40-298l Old ..-know you can 59$ fayctte <.;lr. Call Ott pa.d'; cJ-''*l •d ln ownor/aaenL. Clutok ,..... llhir.1-lnel 2 BR 2 b1. the D.il1 Pi.19' Stl'Vlcc ~Mt~ _ ,...,._. 3241 Beau\. park loc11tlon. l)lrertor)' for • wbol • Brookvtnt' Coedo, ..... ~··••••••••••• "30. ApntMUP __ mon\h for' a Llttl•. •• -1 ult 3 Br, 2~ ba, Wlllsl0Sllaila4Br, 2~. llVH -4 Br, Fa~ Rm, 11.a per da1:J« "' 1,,,10• 2 patios, Har ]IGOI. \tU:"· A1k for cl..,,, up1radid, park '1onn~ =:nn\1 fl'l, t't5 ~-. M0-1'* or =.i•Col!IJ. smo. ., ~9¢e-... c.,.tS.+ke c t _... lu f1 ' I ft•tdncif ! ,.........,.,.,Mt ,....._,,.,.,... 1toof11MJ · k-Yk• .............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 8 ~ J Applianre St-n. Ca.rpcUlao will l•Y .YOUJ"I R.J.Huttman A Sao. Oen WEEDING-CLEANUPS trt._..u. ... E GIRLS • PPJJ'JtRS PAINTING Palllt y om" Cot•• ROOFS FOR LESS Retnov all, lrl m mt n g, TRlPCllARC.t:SlO or mine. Re-pain 6 Conar.o.tomAJUcAdd, Wtekl)'MaiAteoance ~t -1 · ,.. (fl Expr'd. Reaa JhtH. Aver•••0 _._15 •• .,.-c All typa, flnao avall. Pl'Wlinl· Fffe eat. L1c'd, 20Z$S . .lllaio,S.A 'ie..U,io0019'lar wort g;;J:•i...c:ablnell, Free..t 642-9907 nu1 71*1 .abomek ... o ce Fret Ett. Call 'Geno 2i:t~•~,.•-·-w~c~m" ~eat, Uc/bond'd. in· f\.ilb'l.nll&ttd&e2624 ~ 9S7-0'Ul9 • b1uer l&YIQ&I. l'ree ...... cout. a.. c ea.n n• pac aaes. ~ -1--.uu& -11'.Scoiorcltiienadlacol.. Wal__...._ • ---------1 •t.e63N8 fr comm'l ~ or Serlk" SpecialAsits•R.Ework. Prioe11il>clma&rl/labor ~anytjme ,,.. .... Mpltttwg ~ ue• bonded. ....................... Jk>nded1lo1UJ'ed. Free PROFF.SS.IONAL P•lnt-Guar/lnlJ'.f'reeett. ••••••••• ............. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sham])OO ~ st.um ~eaa. · . HANDYMAN: Carpentry, ests & lnstant service. ing. Inltt/EJtter. Reas, Llc1Z0881, TedW-708$ ROOFS lnstalJed f•ctory Pl n e • So 11 d Oak Babygittln1 my horoe, EJ Color bright.enel"I, wbt 8edltc4 electrical. plumbiAI & 541Mll12Ur55J.O'M5 work1Uar"2-0386 MICHAELS PAINTING· dlrertj estab SS yn. Call wa&a-bodl Complete line Toro, Lake Forft\ area cptalOmiobleacb.Clean -· .. •--•• .. •••••• noon Pb847..zt81 lmmacub Cl anln ext bOl.l • • HaroloGwm$G-2Ml •acct. 'Jleuonable. Wk.Jy,wlcnda,overnlgbi llv,dJ.llrm,ball$1.5.Ava ELECTRJCALSERVJCE • Co YOUR S~TJSFA<f-~I· Eltr/Int.r. Ex· bldi'1.'7::katt~::.· c-a....1•M .. ._ Terr y'• Nwpt•Ba~ .&emergencies 581.5720 nn $7.50, couch $10, cbr CALLS SIS hr &SMALL Gnl 1a · .., cl, hoftett. neat. roe.. --.-• -• SG<>Ill ------·----1 SS. Guar elim pet odor. JOBSso.8233' ................ ••••••• TIONGUAR.758-0371 Uc'dlNK-1CM5Dave ....... ,..,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- Will I.it children 6 mo'• to Cpl repair. 15 yrs expr. Skis*>ader. Dump t:Ack. Dependable own trans Interior exterior &Int .. ••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTO!I SEWING Xln& i--------- 6 yrs, my C:O.t.a Mesa Do work myaelf. Refa IM hrd lhctrfc Haullae. Lroe work, Xlnt rel•. Kelly 4'Mllu0 1 0 .' S u P ,. : m ~ VERYNl.1AT PATCK quaUty, also aJteraUona, bome.548-8418 sn-0101. Uc327136 6'.M814 1radln1. demo etc OlllSatlr&tnoal)'. woJIDUJMip. call .lack JOBSl&TEXTURE dotldot.hes9'7&-10'70ov ·,,.._ t C411aM) ELECTJUCIAN Prtced &11·1Z5'7 t · 9111-156 P°t'•.t. 893-HSD Th -,.. " ........................ rlgbt ' ti -t I I • •• I 6 , . • ..................... . $1.62 per DAY ••••••••••-•••-•••••• ,.,._,..._ _, __ ,. lr All • ree es ma• on II ....................... PROFESSIONAL PREP PA'IalPLASTERlNG ml W ..,,t .. _ DOOR . d r ........ openauaua • lqeoramalljom. _ ...... •••••••••••••• Brf•'---k S ll •ob &PAINT1NG£XTltR All typos Free <;era c ff, lM c ..... ns, ·• . S, win ows, occasion personal Ueenl«I 171-03Se Tree/plant trim or re· 'Ne';::::! Co.f.a'Af.C:... ~ Reaa/tnar .. Uc. 2367U. •Umat.Cll.CallMo.ea2s bathrooms, & entrya. cab1ne~s! she~vea. service. C&bana Cat41r· move. Yard cleaoupe, irvtM.e7s.:i11se~. Free•t.SM-'156 . Free•l<lluck~ ~~=h. P ickup ing84S-889 SPICIA&.OFFM lawn wcrk. Lite movlDa, Pl! ft •1 ----------ic:-.t/ec.cr.t PoetLl&btlnstaJled :wa.5863 ........ YOUNG MAN. 5 yn expr ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY Jnterlor remodeling,•••••••••••••••••~••••• $60orlesa673-SOU OOC STUDENT BJ '6 ... •••••••••••••••••••• in wa1lcovorln1C. Free HOMESA.Y!:RS. Plumb· HOWISTHITIMI paoeling, ca~inets, 'l"OOm LL Concrete work. too truck. Traah ~m KAYE VAN. WI.II do lllc ~ta.&U-8576Andy int Is ffMdn&. free eat. f« job seekers to check reproduchon. Evea. Block. bnck. slump & Gar•-. otc. Rand.yBG-S7oi ' movlna. ~rd, u~.•· .Profpa.lnt'•&papethaag. tiO br. Hooeetlneliablc w:n~~l>:.s:;:t~°.ttt~Jft 87~ ~crete walls. Securlly ••••••••••••••••••••-• !~~· ' 1tR 3•30 Ina. Qean. •ork au11r. Ml"Yke. BorA, M/C OK. the job you wanl is not WOO~ORKS, all types, Builders~~U8 Dig It Landscape Main· lh iacltK'l I Free Ht t57·09U, '75HlS>orl47..-:S there you mJ1&btconalder cabinets, patios, lite Asphalt/Concrete & tree ~ce: Mow & Edge. •••••••••••••••!••••••• 11'9 rut•t draw ta the ~ Any plumblnc. water of!ering yout services VO tr HOWJ 642-5671 , remdls, aome elee, bl· removal & cleanups. F\lU malat, hauling, Want a REALLY CLEAN W•t •. ·• Vally Pllul Havo &0mcthlng you w•nt serv. Jean, ~atbroom with an ad in the Job qual. Prompt ave, free i-~ree Eat. 631·50'18. clean-ups, rototlllln~. HOUSE? Call Ginlh•m Clluu1ltl1d Ad. Phone to aell? ChwLf&.ed ads do end. ~amlc tiie. Reu. Wanted cate1ory. Phone est. 642-1738 lJoemed. Free Est. 675-Ml& Girl. Free flit MS-5123 Ml-5871. lt well. M2·1i678. _83W468 ________ 1 ~84U67~~8~-----ll=========== Apal tnte1th ,...siled Apa tweats u.r.w. ·. Apa l•at1 ""'--. AfHwi•••• u.t... ·············~································ ............................................. . Office a...tal 4400 Office • ...., 4400 W.frial Rtwttl 4500 Lost & Fo.cl 5300 ~ W..ttd 7100 ................................................................................................................... Newport leach 312' t ""'M9• leoch 3140 3 2 o o s q t t • I n • FOUND: Mao•s watch Vic ~~~ruBLERS ··~··~·;·;··~·;•;··~·;·;··~·;·~··~·~·~·~·,i•iliiliilM~,~~illlliillllllillilliiliiiiiililiili~···•••••••-••••••••••• EXECUTIVE R. OW, lnC. dusttComm1. 29S2 Ran· Goldenweat & Warner, ~ • IRAMDHEW dolph Ave. CM Call H.B. Call to identify s.m,sbift. Various pro· live , BIG! 3 Br apt/coodol. conve-Pre1tlglou1 office apace In Newport pi6S3. ~ 8'1..aiM duct assembly. Good nient loc, s wlita avl. $400 Sch/Airport area. Tasteful receptJon lob-......._/IHHt/ FOUND: Sm Terrier mJx, working conds. Long up.9M-1.S0'7,640-17ll by, telephone meHage aet'Vlce, con-Flnmc• brwn collar. no tngs, vie term •sal1Dp>ents. can A winning comblnotloo New deluxe twnhs a-· Jg ference rooma, kitchen, beverane, fn-:...-:~:·•••••••••••••• Fashion Islalld. 6'0·<1130 Today I ~ HIS ot o<lutt opolfment homes ..... 1 -• -nv wtfhlwnuyappolntmen1sond 3br 2ba fple blt.m WD outgongmallaervlce,dlctatJng6copy O,pwllmlitr 5005 Reward.Lost2M1Firisb ~O~ offi • supem recreoflon of 0 premium bkuppat!odbl attach aar machines, travel consultant•, com-••••••••••••••••••••••• Setters 12/lB, F. v. area. Ce location. Tennis• gym . fherapy s:BS.5'5-360t, 963-4.219 puterlzed' typeaettlng. Complete SA.HCUMEHTE 817~3' 0 overload SMftSHlnO! · spa. swimming. blUlords. t'---: .. d Yilfag secretarial •ervlces avalleble aa Pet Shop & Grooming. Found 12/IS young male One&Two8edrooms,One8al'1 '3 '1GCIWUI I e needed.From$290permo. Retiring a!ter 7 good husky, black with wbite. ~:?-t06st,.N8 GREATRECREATION: New 162 bdrm lu.1UJ')' C• 1714175J.7170 years. Fine locaUoa &LV~ic~.~B~e~a~c!b~&~~lnu·~~~~·~rc~~~~ Swimming, saunas, 2 • ._.....,. ·~~Vltfs adult apts 1.o 14 plans d.ientele. dianapolls,HB.988-7870 heal lb clubs, billiards' G) ,ow r • fromnLS' ·• w.J265a•-rf+allspoola, po' ntdse~o-. BE!~TOHENRSRY Found female i:;ub Setter h I. h d t · 550PaulorlnoAwt .• CostaMao 751-tttl "" a-LL. .. Q.LIUJ .._ ______ _ nag t-ag te eno1 s -· From San Diego Fr ,.,_ lw•t1 u..t... --toSMre .. 300 2l5DelMar "92-4121 12/21. Vic. Brookburst &P" courts. Prt> & pro shop, drive North on Beach to •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• -·•••••••••••••••••••• * ... Adams, HB. 968-3442 ·~SEMBLER golf driving range, party 3824 McFadden then West oo Me...,.....t leac.. 3169 Rmm1e needed. Female. .. IW room. Colta Meta 3824 Cotta Mao McFadden to Seawlnd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sh.are 2 bdrm 2 ba apt, C. Holey o u Pd• dog s ma 11 TRAINEES FUN ACTIVITIES: ... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Villaae.(714)893-5198 Large3br 2ba apt. Sun· CM.Mustbeneat.Reha-24801lAtoCr. longhair bJk/wht Fulll1me director, Cree OSTA MESA -2140 deck, 2 bfkS to bcb. $325. hie. 5*2940bet11 :00 AM Mlulolt Vie'-CFa0t.clles3 8 t •pf cl ma z. aV.ic5 .• SAo.. Needed I.aunediately Sunday brunch, BBQ's, Thurin Street. Bra nd MESAPtHES LlVENearTheBeach! mo. yrly. 204 4ard St. ~aft6:00PM.Geno JV Long & short term as- trips, parties, sport new deluxe 2 bedr?Om New studio apt $230. I Br Caso def Sol ~ Fe.m. Roommate to share You are t.he winner of 2 537·3997or545-1819 . signments. Holiday & toumaments&more! uruts. Lovely s pacious $285. Avail. Jan. tst. BeauUfulAdultApts freeticlcetsworth$14to Found Weimaraner vacation pay . UEAlITll:"ULAPTS: townhome type with Pool, jacuzzi & laundry Gaa&WaterPald. New & lovely duplex, a Jbr.$16Jmo. HOUDAYOMICI! brown.'ma!e,Vic.LaP~ Hospltaliutioa plan Saogles, l&2 bedrooms. farruly rooms. $350/mo. rm. Adults, no pets. Open 21661 Broolchursl. HB bdrm, 2 ba. Npt Hgts 67S.5S39CdM ANaAHt thEeJM & S.O. Frwy, Lag. Hills .• available. Sta.rt t.oda ! 1-\Jm. & un/urn. Models QUA l L PLACE ~~~'c~ ~~:o~v;~ 962.6653 =0 • 645-2111 or Needagreat roommate? CONVENTION 768-1129 ~ • open daily 10 to 7. Room· PROPERTIES, INC. EaAt off Harbor Blvd). Cutlivl.ngexpenses! CENTER · .1 N (714)752·l920orS48-8553 BR.2ba,!rpl,D/W,gar. CalJTheOrange Lost vicinity Bushard & mate service avai · 0 everungs or weekends. 549·2447· $ 3 2 5 mo . 2 1 6 4 2 SUl-lEASE County Professionals Dec. ?7th-Jan.1st. Ellis, F.V. Male German ~~dauslets onlreqyuinroedpe. tsSorry • RENTAL AG ENT 5 ON 2 br un!urn. $240 mo. 1 Brookburst, SS7-4579 3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, garage, ~=.,Mat•• Unltd DFree T31c0klehts good31fort Shepard. Tan with some 38uc..,..Drtw. 546-4741 ·(Across From Orange Co. Airport) F.qual Oppor Employer ~ • · PREMISESSAT& UN. · patio. Lost roommate. .._ • ec . or s black on !ace. 12-16-77. OAkwood child,no~~l F*"-'Fpk•s You ran have last mo's 832-4134 performances. Call 962·2581 Garden Apartments 2 BR. 1 Ba duplex. Cpts, Be comfy ccny beside a rent & deposit. Just $475. Dcpendablesince1971 642·5678, ext. 333, to --------- M•...,...leocWMortlt drps, refng, stv .. encl Lrg2br,bltns,crpt.s,drps. fire in spacious, dlx apt. mo. yrly & Its yours. 2 claamyourbckets. Lost: &rey/wht Puppy. 880 Irvine (al 17th I gar. No peis $270 mo. $245 mo. l child OK. No All units w/priv encld blks bch. Avail. immed. Gell ages * * brown marking on head 645-0550 646-l.US peta.832-3448,64S-3417 gar., balcony or patio. 67~aft.6pm. for"R..t 4350 & ean.....No collar. Vic. M•..,...le«W5°""' 1 FoxhollowVIU Lodry facil avail. -.. .. 1 ... RGE2IR ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRONT Cypress St. S.A. Hts. ASSEMBLERTRAJNEE 1700 16th St. og. Eastslde 2 BR, 1 Ba, near Chlldn?n OK Leadership A• --Single garage overhead . .MARKET 979-533$ S.\NTA.AN4 (Doveratt6thl 621W.Wil50D64&-2010 BacltBay.Enclrearyrd, Real Estate 842·4'66 Steps t o beach, up· door $3S No 6 731 w Mustsell!Net$3S,000yr. ''"°"* 5350 Call549·M75. 642·8170 FURN OR UNFURN gar. $300. 548-7933 5a6-3l.81 araded, bltna. 631·0167 18th St, CM 613-ria'T eve · AgenL &aa-4758 ••"••••••••••••••••••· •---------•Zbr town homew /frpl . -=------------:-:r;:::.1-=~~~~=~::::_ iAUWIJJOlive ~~~~~~~~~I •Jlepatio&enc. garage t, 2 &3 bdrm apts. rn con· Bdrm with aarage Nr W Nwpt Bch-3Br, 2Ba, S.INGLEGARAGE Dating. escort & s hare Drinkineproblem? New Det.ail Shop needs • •Adulllonly. !~~1~~ort$19S-$275 beach.$260/mo. dspar tly furn, ftbltns, Caroratorage. r=·~0or take Cal~~oodbol~p38301ine help. OCEANFRONT 3 BR. 2 ba. yrly. $59S -• STEPS TO IEACH 2 Br, houseunr. $375 associated B II 0 lo: E Pc; -11 E II LT<• I> S l J1'. ~ llo !nu ~11 .60 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• .General 3802 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool &jacuui avail. "6'· .,_ . ......., Call 962-3533 hwshr, 1600 sq .. cpts. $35fmo 962-3533 P · · U 1¥118 ay.......,.. Top wages paid. Enitne e2br, 1 ba. Westside. New dlx 4Plex 38r. frplc, y~l~pJ550 mo. lmeshlltnt PREGNANT? Steamers, eng painters, Woodland Village fnC<I patio. dish wuher, Frplc bltns w/d hkp 842-256Sa 6 East CM, dbl. Gar. Oppoctunity 5015 Cariog confidential buffers & polishers, up· 845 Paularino no childreo/pets Call yard,' aar $39s 545-3604.: DUPLEX 2 br + den. I :.r~!-'Ji.~9~er ••••••••••••••••••••••• counselint & referral. =e~ s:i~~~e:i!: Beautiful. new, adult 648-S:!Sl 962-4218 Blk to beach. Yearly lfyou'renotgeUinfl3.8% Abortion, adoption & livery.Applyat apt.s. G.reat location. 2 .,. .. "'TSIOE lg 2 br, 2 ba, •-•---L 38~8 leue.$495/mo.631-1032 ~R...td 4400 return on your invest· keeping. 2059Harbor81,CM I 2 ~ __,_.... ~ ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ment. call Sandy Ross, APCARE 547·2563 pooM s, ~a~uzzased .. t 1 frpl, frml din. lndry ....................... S.Qa•nt• 3876 6S•PER<ft FT Ajax Co 837.3744 ---------645-1030 . ovem imm 13 e Y area. $375 mo. Agt. penthouse, 2 br 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -r · UMDA&VICKI •--------- BachelorS225-$2•S Days: 552·0434 eves: ba. dln rm, frplc, blg Sparlding2Br2Bacondo, 1617WESTCLJFF-NB MoMyto&.o.t 5025 OukallMm1C19P .._ _______ .. 1 BdrmS26S-S275 552·050'7 view BI o c It to gar, mhli ocean view, AGT. SU·S032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fortt. F.. of it! AVON 213d.!m$295-$32.5 SUPSl MICE downtown. S475 mo. $32Smo.633-472IO <714> 1501 'Westclff Dr. 151, 2-dlr 3rd T.D.'s ' Serving all OranKe Co. 49f.23'7'9eves; 957.()282 Br Utll N .,..._A_ i tc•-LOANS AVAILABLE . 8$-7313 RentalO!fice Opeo Daily9-6 TSL Management 754--0081 or 642-1603 ~---~---- QUIET·HO POOL l , $185 per mo. pd. ewport ~ U&AUC a ... Q-edit 'not. Porta •Lockedgar.w/Jiat« Choice condo at golf Walk to everything. LeasilllgOfflc.eSpoc• sm ot. *MICHELLE'S* •D/W,paUo,lndryrm course; 3. BR, 2 ba., .m.863'7aft6pm. Callon SiteManager ..._.,49J.ll02 •Special cabinet space vault«I cell, lge. deck, Tmffa 3190 (714) 60-3lll ext 246 Mcoey Available, many 1~~1 Miw;f;""462 Cllris"""Elnia95 legillMow ForAVOM •Gas beat, gu cooklog, trees; pool, wsbr/dryer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE EFFICln.aT sources, all projects. gas bot water all pd. 5'50 Mo. Agt. 4M-7578 $240. UT1L IMCLD '"" $50K min. '1S2-4i052 Spirit.al Reader ~&r~iif.°'t>·~'i~ WUllAYTllPLEXES *1:'at.l~~iomo ~per I br. Ire. unlque Water, au, e1ectriclty •. ALTERNATIVE ~T,.... 1Bl.5So.FJ CamJooReal .G~nGrove.$300mo. COSTAMESA. 23Z3EldeDAve,CM l~oceaaview,blk Unique 1 • 2 Br. Mo. to mo. reot incl: Deedi 5035 S...Qemente..UUylic. REPRESENTATIVES Best time to establish customers. lntere1ted? Call 540-70'1 or Zenith 7.taSl) . call Ml-ll88, Tlm Koran BRAND NEW 646-0032 • • to bdL Adlta. No pets. Complete recreational R e c e p t • • e r v • , •••-•••-••-••••••• For appt. 492-7296 ._ _______ _ llcAoaP---• 3807 · ~=~~:=: $3:iO • ...aJ048NllOO. facllitJa. Adulta only. ~phone co~j LOWEST __ D_AN__..;C;...:;E_O_F_FUN ___ \-t-8.!.t-b-~-l"-1'-co--Aba--U-t-nt-e ~.;.~.~•••••••••••••••• 3Br,2BaFrom$395. ~it~\~~=: br upper, lee rooms, Son7c•'oc(~-· ... ..,,, :::_~·.;.;;;~ ;!.t, Btll nude girls daoce le ~ff1/ttrmo. OCEANFRONT beams, view '395· Walk ,...... "'r•.. &marelnNewport. ............ rap session. lOAM to old baby &irl. KOft Ulru !Quletbach,'2301ncluti1. Beau&lful n ew 3 unit 63l·2l'17 bcb, twn & Heisler. 14932Newpor:tAve: TREEXECUTIVE lstT.O:s.Clbo 2AM Mon-Sat 625 N. Fri. 1:30 to $:30. My l~person,nopeta.673-6372 bulldlnp. Xlat locaUoo t .Br, $230. 311 Mesa Dr. 497.3109 ~~ay . SUJTE.~70 -...T.D.•-· EucUdAnah559-6150 homede !fbyoorsh. llust1be near So Coast Plata Avail Jan lat. Adults no _..,._. ..,_ ---FREE SESSION W I AD pen~a le & avo re s. "'I be b $190 R • • • ...... HIC)lltl JIS2 FaireetTermu1nce1949 67S.3736or~ t• dice U 1c1 ~ N · esp. Children welcome. No pet.a. C&UM2-198t. • ...................... AB l~Ms '9....,shed SINGLE to Broom suitet c...-_....., Co. R""' AXJNG "'"ASSAGE ; a L t ,..... o pets. l pets. Rental office open _,,..or ~fa tlfalled 3900 avail. Nr OC Airport. _........-.... 'P ~ '" • E. Bay Ave, apt9. ·daily lO..S. IMO Balter St, l Nice 1 • 2 Br, $265 & up, ••••••••••••••••••••••• FUU services avaU. in· 642-2171 545-0611 Bob James-Lie Masseur BMabyslthter, Tbmy bo2m e . • ,.~-......... M 3822 bllc w. of Brlatol. EASl'SCDE DUPLEX-2 pool I& rec room, quiet clud recept. to answer ---------Outcall 9-9, 494·5111 on. t ru urs, to .._.__ er S57·S2l5 Bedroom. private yard, ~a.831·i166 THEEXCJTJNG phones. Conference Retired couple has money ----------16::l>.Callaft.7; 759-0'19 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .~ bl k ·-ho l.n ·-, •• u .......... "' ""·() 1--..a "-d T M .. SS .. GE va oc ..., a 'PP g .,. Hewporta..h 3169 --"'"' . room, Xerox macb. ru to ~ ..... lat"' 2n .D.'s "' "' Babysitter/bsekpr. bus. Mature adult.I, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• HINUrESTONPT secyserv. forlofo.pleaat Agent, 837-374 FIGURE MODELS Mature, genUe person to pets. Refer. $250 mo. rARKHEWPORT Bach,BCH.laABR. call7lt/m-a840. Sold my home in Laguna ESCORTS care for 1 mo old cblld. Quail Place Properties, -.. lite bsewo.rk P/T 1*.trs Inc. (7l4) 752.1920 or Bachelors, I or 2 from$220.&up. llnlMMR..ttl ,.450 Be ach. Will sell .my OUTCA.U.OMLY • • 5'8·8563 weekeod a. Bedrooms&Townhouaes Adults, No Pets ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• $29,550 2nd T.D. for . . 631·381 I fiexible.aalaryopen, my PleaseaskforWanda From$Zl4.50 l:i61MeeaDr.. 4DILUXIOFC'S $23,000. cub. Call Kem, ~~83s.2200e·-X-382dys, · Spectacular apa, total (5BlkaEulofNewpart Cool. rm., seat zs. all ~ · ESCORTSERVJCE .....,._,.,., •0 ~~~~~~~~~I recreation proiram, Blvd.) paneled, am. whte in re· 6J•a •=-•/ MODELINGOUTCALL BAKER Exp•dorappren· =~.~~.At7POOlaaablOD•8 .__· ~ ar.1br2yr.leue.Lake p.,,_rj1/ XHow's M'l-6520 tlce. C.U btwn. 8A11 & ""'"'.. taabl 4000 Foreat area. Kea •__..II!.-.:_.. ooon.a.HlO Jalaod, Jamboree & San u --kins. -~ · '*SANDY'S * Jfuln Hilla Road. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• D4I& 714-S814393 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUl'CALL MASSAGE --------L 11•'6 .... 1900 Roomw/titebenette *•-=••at1 5100 BaokipC ,., ..... $SOweelt&up. Approx. .oc> sq. ft." C-2, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9'73-0329 LOANPROCISSIM• ** 54M755 AIC, at 180 E. 17th St. . WIPLAYMUSIC WITCHY HOLI DAY CUltl Ambauedor lnn In Costa Sl!iO/QlO.DoyleHJ·l.168 Bavtniapartyorgettiol PLAYMATE SOUGHT. Busy pleajanl N.B. olc Mesa, %Zf7 Harbor. Cen· $280 lse. Store·Office. =~: ~~l i~~d':>'!:r occ. PETER. M5-S?9S XJnt sal 4t'"benerua. Real trallJ~ated.235rooms. 960lq ft under 30'. 19478 music, •eraatile 5 piece advancement avail. MANY with kitchen, _Be_a_ch_Bl_,HB __ .8'2__,-2834 __ -i band, 1 vocalist. JobaWC!lthd, 7075 Mu1t type 50wpm. phone & TV. Swlmmlng l f526-296S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Telephone Cc customer pool, jacuul, and rec.1•--------:1~==~-----Pn te Out N contact. See Madeline room. Daily le weekly 1MI S ... YAID Lost & fomd 5300 Llve in 0~ ou~~e Oaw1on, 673·3130, Im· rates starting from f48 a Space •vaJl. Newly re· -••••••••••••••••••••• 646-ZlCM Room no. 22 perial Savings & Loan. week. fUrbi.ebed Lldo Shipyard scnau 'ETS -------1 3366V1aLldo,N.B. 6'.S-4840 area. Unlque. exclUnC M"'1. HllpW_.... 7100~~~~~~~~ ---------•location; marine orient· •••••••••••••••••••••••BARTENDER, COOK . Yoooe prol M/F. Pa.rlt ~oeaaea, Ample ANSWERS c o c K T A l L ~:f'ifft"!, ~1::1.:i~ &iretJ-MoUf -Acdllg Bkltt>Q& WA IT R BS SE S & cbf 67M... Hablt-GenUo-TIMPORAIY BUSBOYS. Interviews • HARBOR HUSTLE Begtata' 1'od.a1' to wOl't 2-4.~lbperaon.. rear ~ lft a diowntown ells-on vllrioa eccountln1 le entrance '!be San Fran-cotbecaue: "hi C.se of bookkHPiDI H•llD· ciscan 1817 W•tcliff Dr. FJre llUSTLE to the menta. Work close to N.8 . NureatE&lt." your home. Flgur e •---------to---------1· Clerks to Sr. Accoun-llAUTY ormtATOlt t1&nt1 needed thruout Assis&.. F/tbne (or bU4y Oru19 Co. salon. 200 NCIWJ*t Ct.r Robe.rt Half's Dr,N.B. Accouotemps ---------. 500$. Main, Ste 501 &at ooer'aton, 20 tClll tn-IEWARD No. Tower, Un.ion Bonk land llcenH. an alaitts Far nsturll ol wbtte long Jn Tho City or Orange open. W*e \o Ad f93. ""'---------tbaired •ale cat. Lost 714/83S-4.103 Daily Pit~ ~.O. Box 12/15. Vlc 19th Ii 1560, C.0.ta »na.. CA. M.onrovta. ~ Anlrftrint Service o.>ra _ .. _______ ~ OUND: Mlle Square needed lJn.aied. p/Ume. Book~eepet, full cbJr. --------~•Park, Sun. Du. 18. Xlntpay. Pbofte~SS Acct• puabl~1 baok JadJeJ JOJd rin1. CalJ •rec., payroll UlfOtlih D1·3lthfttt5 Apt Manaaer, cpl n ed t.rl•l balance. Prefer w/malotanance back-llome fW'lltablao ftter. "-d..,_blrd, ~for 6J uDlt com· If poHlbl•. l'Hblo11 SUclilf·bcl»w•lk•r... pin Jn C • .M. (2U) blad.J.6.&.....- • ..,,,., ---Ml MMm . . ..... W...... 7 ...., W..e.d 7100 .... W Wmhcl 7100 ....... W...... 7 I 00 ........ 1001 Frio.y. DeceinW 23, 1977 DAILY PILOT IJ7 ~~-;T ................ !.. ······················· ....... ~ ..... ?!!~ ......................................... ~ ............................ .._. 0 ,... 1050 ,,.,,,,.., 1070 u-.--.. PUIUC AUCTIOM -r-• I02 ... , • •• ••••••••••··~··•••••••• 111AUCA-eepe.t, m•ture. 1·3 •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• IOYS .QllU DafVBY •hill ln 11.1 l home. CM. PRODUCTION ~T~E~=~~[:fyE ~ .. Schwinn ~per Sport Sl'OREWJDF.SALt.: WANTED U-11 J'e&l'W ohae. 1o;, t n llteK r Coun-.r &46 me. ART OBJECTS. AN: lO apd, Uh now $9<>. New & u.aed f~rn, appl's, TOP CASH DOLLAR \nJ.:ork Obtain nev.• $ dlJy wk. Ptumo am or , __ ....... ,,_,.1 f 11 TlQU_,, p ... t.,. FURN.. M()..11211 ml.sc. Wlbon a Baraa 10 PA 1 0 F 0 R y 0 U .R .... ,,..,....,,_ ... •Das f: Know Ora Co UUJ,QQUato o.--n&s u . ~ ,..,.._ ~_._ iuc•ai. W l"°'- .... ...,_ ... -"' ........ bt 8"lO"M orp/Ume No e.aper nee TYPIST ETC PHONE P&K IN c • i-. -' nwt:LRY, WATCHES. 1Y P'llol work.l.na v.ub itll -,.,.., wn ° Aaea 17 thn.s 28. ~ FO .. It BROCJIUR E :~:.:s;-•I CM.1U-793Ut:54&·3262 ART OBJECTS. GOLD, • ..Sult supervi.or Earn DENT AL ASSlS1'. Ex per Manne Corp. ~2200 •H•••••• ••••••••••• -----•fftlll SILVER SERVICE. S20 t.o ~ ~U>w,.!!11.,..!! nee. Fi ume. X ray cert .... IBM SELECTRIC II s•L -,~t ........ lODI cuato m FINF. FURN & AN• mare. "'9.U.. ....,.._..,, Call~ Janitorial. l'/T , fo'ull Ta TIQUES 6"S-2200 noon to $pm · (213 > tune. fo:Xp'd odulta only. Experienced accurate Typist needed MUSIC IOXES padded portable bar with · -..at73. $pm'9pm. Cllll Desk cle rk, weekend SaruaAna&C011taMt1Ba, Immediately. ?Owpm (must) Q.OQ(S multiplex \W\er. 8 track EMERALD Rinf & C.oUoct. days. Ambassador Inn, evenmp. 979-3923 Part Tl me Slot Mactunce, Nlckclo-"t1.1rntable-all are bwlt-. no ck la c e w I m an Y ,..__ "-·-h ... 2909 So. Bristol, SA Th"-d'"' •· Friday Day Shltt deona. phono "ra ph•. Ins -plua two c us lo m dJamonds Exquisite set· ---~Ler, 1uua wor .. on ----JANITORIAL ... ,. ~ "' ., wrought lroo bar stools. · ting 6Sl-132S 63H 374 ly. Exp'd only need upp· DISHWASHd P/time. Moo-Frl. 3 Hrs Salurdny Night Shirt World's largest aelec·jliiiiliiiliiii Sharp! 581-7'48. ' ly. 499-3057, Brian or Wed thru Sat. PM i1hlft. per day. San Clem. area. Excellent Working Conditions t I 0 n · A 1 so ~I rt 5 • S21t.ll U,_tock I075 l /'127·3448 Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, $3Hr. Call540-7812. Apply in Person ~~~~~ei'nt!:nta~!~t •CHRISTMAS• **I BUY** ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASHIER 861 Center St, CM LEGAL SECY 1802 Kellerina: Irvine. •SPECIAL• Good used FUmiture & Rea. ~orfan mare. brok<' bt • Sh Ni ht h·n 754-tm. Open Wed.·Sal. l.81ens. Appliances-OR 1 . will to ride & drl ve, blk n e are now opening a Donut op, g s 1 · Sm. bu.sinesa llt1gatlon lmmedlateO.llvery sellorSELLforYou. parade Morgan ietding, new Del Taco&. are 11L11l 25.-45 Years. Full·hme. firm m Npt Cnlr aeeks Or C t D •1 PH t MASTllS AUCTION . Eng, Western (114 > in n eed of B o Ii l • 135 E 17th St, CM_ exper. legal aecy. Must Cll'ICJe OGS GI Y 0 ~ · 6,.1. .,1 , tt i• •.f,2I 338·1011 _ Hoateaaes & Cashiers. have x Int s k I 11 s. WHOLESALE · .,_ • .,., · Apply in person only at. DRAPERY Shorthand req. Submit TO THE TRADEi CAsH PAID Mltctle•••••••...-••••••'•••••l••O•l•O• 20921 Maenolia, Hunt WORKROOM resume In confidence to 330 Wtst lay St., Cotta Mesa u99.- B c h . ( c 0 r n e r I) t Nl't°dl. exper'd, self s tart· Ad !1987, Daily Pilot, Ask for Pau1 Ward ............... Ltd. A_,,, I~ For gd used furn. anli· w· ......... ED Magnolia & At lantul in i: employee full or P.O. Box 1560, Costa An Equal Opportunity Employer t 52'21ohoCl.aca ques &clrTV's,9~T-8133 ~"' Mon·Frlbetwn3&5pm pume Apply.1835 Wh1t · Mesa.CA,92626 H.L 1714tlfl·750t 474E.l7tttSt.,CM New custom made TOP CASH DOLLAR uert\ve,B7.CM oreall 1714)642·1012 wro1.11ht iron bark.rt PAID FOR YOUR CIVIL ENGINEER I HG 642·1M3. LOAH PROCESSOR with 2 &lass shelves & 8 JEWELRY. WATCHES. FHA-VA·Conv. t>xper. HelpW..e.d 7100 Hlllp Wmhd 711>0 .....,.Cft 1010 Calumet 22" view bottle holders-$75; ART OBJECTS, GOLD. DESIGHE.R Exper'd in sub d1v1111o n work. Apply in person. to Mr. Fuentes , Robert. Bein. Wilham Frost & Assoc., 1401 Quail St, NB Fibenjass MoklhuJ Trainee. 548·5591! req'd. Contact Cyndie••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• cunera."'5,neverused. Hlghback casual chair SILVER SERVICE. LaNler. (714) 835-0588, FRGHT DAM AGE 0 $105.Gf-5318Steve (needs recover1n1>·S3S. FINE FURN. & AN- Mason McDuffie Co. HAL !ST A TE SICalTARY HOTPO. INT SALE. 3308 ,,.~ IO•S Call 642·0138. TIQUES. 845-2200 Food Service Asst Professional, licensed w w H bo _. ~ ~:.:.=..:::::::.:=:..:....----·1---::--:---:::-::--::---:::-:::-Substftute MAIMTEHAHCEMAN salespeople wanted, OrderCoordinalor s · a.mer nr ar r , •••••••••••••••··~··•••SolJdwalnutrolltopdesk, LUGGAGETAGS ()n.CJU Basis. 2.212 hrs Mature, fu.11 time, pvt &enerous commlsa1oru;. Regional sales ore for antaAna. 979·2921 Rec. Slacnese k1tteoa 48" S-roll. beaut. ong. tl"om your business card. per day. SJ.10 per hr. Ap· club. Benefits. Call Wed-Advance training. Uus world wide manuf. CASH PAID (Seal Point) $175. cond. $1200. 640-8208 Send one card for each CLASSIC Motorcyc le restorer. reconat. & over haul eng's., frames & ac ceuorles. Fabricate part& as req'd. from old photos & diasrams to restore to orig. cond. Min. 3yrs exp., 40 hr wk .. $1200 per mo. Apply at· Employment Oevc Dept.. SantJ Ana, ad paid for by employer Ply to Irvine Unifle _Su_n_673_·35_:is ______ 1 642-5062 has an openioa for a For Wahr/Dryn/Refrt& 776-0987 l&I plus one spare. We sales aecy/coordioator. ... t 9 .. 7 •1 • .,. 1040 Brown Jordan .OX60 oval tl School Uistn et, <27941) MANAGEMENT . Cmlwy 21 Crocker Pos. req's accurate tYP· wor .. 1ntorno ,, ..., <iN Dogs ta~le & 6 chain. Ong. !:~'!:;oat~ea~v~n~anf r Allon Ave, lrnne. 14 PEOPLE PERSON 621W.19th., CM ing & good telephone 8~-;:•;·~·~·;::••;:K•C price, $1875. lsl $500. strap. meeting airline 5.'16-490CI E 1 E;xec. needs p/t1m e as-rommunicatlon skills. Rec o o d l t i o n e d Registered Champion talces . 640-8208 l.D. requirements. Pre· r,qual (_>ppor_ ,mp O}cr stx:. an wholesale !'lupply. Reill Estate Sales People Exn.or. pref'd. but we R f · t b ' ... -e nger a era, waa er1 sired. $50. 8'7-0688 Yellow print sofa S2~. 2 vent loss & then t F'or a 1-'riduv Per:.on.top sal fo Fully capitali ze d . wanted. U.P to 90/10% will train the right & d es F e ight personali¥edtag enclo.sl' ·' ,, ... 634 lit N l B h d I & d ryedr •. M. odrl H DOG TRAINING gold velvet chairs, $25 .. top person w1top skill-. l "'"''1 · ~:"~ sp · wp c c:rson. Goo sa 11 amng .. e ome . ea 673.8799 wullpaper, fabr1c o r Girl ofr. l'all 213/592.;Nt'' MATU RE Woman to ii1l ___::__ nefits. For appl. en returns. Guar/del. Also Your Pl.ace or Mine . -"Duy Glo" paper & WP tor ap~ _ _ __ w/seml·invahd. hrs ncx· RECEPTIONIST 493-45039am-5pm new appliances al COlll + John Marlin 548-0059 Antq. Dining H m Sell ti will back k trim your Gardener needed for ap ible. CdM . 640-7746, lmmed. l''/time opening Potte:'t':~i:~~ld Div 10%. DUNLAP'S 1096 nNY TOY white Poodles ctm1. 1 leaf. W11lnul. uig.s.. Or try two card~ C'omplPX in Costa Mesa 644.(T739_ -for sharp. personable 26181 Avenida Talbert (al Euclid) FV. for Christmas male & Good cond. Sti50 /ofr' back to back. <213 lfl65·385 l M E 0 1 CAL R F. C P T PBX Recept. w Iv arious Aeropuerto 963-0721 Opn 7 days. fem. 673-0719 o~ 751·~588 846-029l __ ----$2 ea or ~/~CES: -:=~~------·~...;;....;;.._____ oLher ore duties. Call SanJuanCapiatrano -LScun Cold.spotfrostfree a·encal Salary o pe n . frinic c Irvine Savingi., 752.6456. ,;-ft alOp E 1 -Lhau Apso, l 'h yrs old, .· · . 4/5tags$1.60ea. benefi ts.Spanish helpful. LAtu por mp oyer white w /red spots, frig. like . new $18~. 6/9tiig.s $1.50ea. Merry GENERAL Br1 :.t ol P ar k Me d . EOE. * * pedigreed all shots & Unus u al iron patio lOor more$1.40ea LABORERS Group. 722 Baker, CM. Resuiurant help for Jack-Se<y/Gee. Office lcwtMI-Swl•t spayed. IAvable, quiet & furruture. ll(e umbrella Sales Tax Included Cluistmas MEftlC"L "SST ln·The-Box, immediate Busy, fast growing co. 17756P .. _ftto ed w/chlldren. Outdoor 64S-4685 afte_r_s_P_M___ NOCARD? To All Of You From Net'ded Immediately 1i¥ • "' • openings on all shltts at 3 near OC Airport bas l"ifte dog. Nds yard. Pay 'h Gwogt Sale 1055 Draw your own or s end Rita, Cbras, Michelle, Long & short term as· Front ok. 25 Hrs a wk Costa Mesa stores Please opening for mature, am-Yoo are the winner or a~g fee & shots, sso .... •••••••••••••••••••• name. address. phone &: Qinrue, Sally &Carry of s1gnment~. Holiday & Ex per. nee. Contact apply m person: b1t1ous eeneral offlce free tickets worth $14 to Illness forces s ale. ..UIUC AUCTION we'll make one card per Coastal PenoNtef v a c a t 1 o n p a y . _J_ud-'-y._9_79-_76_1_2___ 38S E. 17th St, clerk 1n 1 person ore. 552·9247 MANY FINE ITEMS OF tag. Add 25t each.. A_,, 540.6055 Hosp1t ahiution pla n MESSENGER/ l206BakerSt. Mu s t have pleasant HOLIDAY OH ICE ESTATE JEWELRY, Send cbeck or money or· T'··-r available StartToday! 'iiiii223511iiiiiHiiariiiboiiiriiBlii\ii•dii.iiiiiil telephone voice, good attbe Da~hund puppy, AKC, ART OBJECTS. AN· dcn o: ~~2790~Har~~bo~r~. C~M~~I OfftCE ASST. 11 typist, Ute bkkpog. Call ANAHEIM male. lf you want the TIQUES, FlNE FURN.. PILOT PRIHTIHG -P /time. Hrs flexible Jaclcie,SS7·lO'Tl. CONVENTION very best. 55?·8469 · ETC. PllONE FOR JN-P.O. Box 1560 CLERICAL VOLT Call M0-5505. RET All CENTER 548-2884 FO. & BR OC HURE. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 SEC'Y Dec 27th-Jan. lst. 645-2200 Cood typmg, sh optional Math aptitude. Phone skill1 & ability to accept resp. in fast moving elcc· tronics business. Apply. 'Avnet Electronics, 350 ·McCormick Ave, CM fa~AAV !KAVICl:..'9 3841 Campus Orin 5 46-4741 MOTHER'S H E LPER Uve in. Newborn & S yr old. Own room. En&i. spk'g. 557.9797 CLERKS Free Ticket~ &ood ro Afgan M/F as is, needs,_______ PUILICAUCTIOH Our rompany is seekmg Dec. 30th or Jls grooming, SlOOea: Show The Stutz Bearcat Sun MANYITEMS-OFnNE an entbusiaslic s ec'y performances. Cal orpet.64t).354-0Jube God "RA"t 7 Je wel ESTATE JEWELRY. w/good typing & dicta-642-5678. ext. 333, t Christmas Cutles·! Toy Wallham8day clock.19" A RT OBJECTS. AN· (Across f'rom Orange Co. Airport) F.qual Oppor Employer MOTOR ROUTE UTOTIM COR•..-..C• Mart&eb Help Wanted lion skills to aid an ex· claimyourllckets. Poodle puppies, 5 wks port cir TV. 5 pc dlo rm TIQUES. FINE FURN .. pand ing s e cr e tari al • • old, 3 males. 1 fem s«.Love seat.R1ne.7pc ETC. PHONE FOR JN 754-6061. Daily Pilot r oute in Newport Beach. After· Lst, 2nd & 3rd Sh Ills Noexper. req 'd. We train tho6e hired. Applicants apply at Utotem Stores localed at: service to the C.M. area. -----------1 (apricot.silver). 963-5961 fire screen sel. Clarinet. FO. & BROCHURE . Must be dependable & a WA NT E 0 : Apt s 1 z 642-61.35 645-2200 GENERAL OFFICE noons Monday th.rough CLERICAL J Herbert Friday plus Saturday & self·starter. Pay com· refrigerator, 24" wide, II you know Labs, I have --.-----------------me nsurate w /ski II s. ri&ht hinge, left handle. nn extremely intelligent Antique phones, toy~. bot· Pinball Foos ball Videos Night shill, Spm·t ·30am Hall Jewellers Sunday mornings. Gross fo'tnancial firm seeks ::ic Jn So. Coast Plaza $400 per month. $S0 cash 546-2982 Must be clean and in one, pedigree, fine blood Lies, insulators & many New & used, guar. del. good rondltion. Need IM line registered female more collect1ble items. $350. & up. 840-2341 cur. indl v. w/fi.:urc a p net'Cis a resp. person to deposit requlred. Good t1Ludc. XJnt bc ncf1Ls. 1-:x work m the ofc. Variety for college student or 2nd per. helpful. CPI, 180 of duties. Expcr helpful, income. Call 642·4321. Newport Ctr Ur. N ll but w1ll tru111 Call Betsy, Ask for Circulation. 111 Del Mar Ave, C.M. 1390 N. Pacific Cst Hwy Lacuna Beach Ser vice Sta. Attendant, exper'd. FUii or p/tlme. Apply Arro Station, 17th & Irvine. C. M. MEDIATELY ! 536·3645 7 ~ .. black Lab. Cali Fri 2-5, Sat 9·1. 715 Vic· -----'---------------1 The! ma 546-4366 torla. C. M. 642-SG49 Pvt. prty must sac, 2 Rem· We are an equal opportunity employer Sacrifice! 19cu.ft. upright lngt.on elect. typewrilerf.. freezer. 4 mo old . $175. Pedlgree Golden La b S.ale. furn. lampg. misc. Cost over $600 ea. Will Kenmore washer/dryer, Retriever. 11 mo old. items. 20621 Sandpiper take $250ea. Call 846-8692 644-4360. ask for SJndy 549 1379. ---------Cole;. -------MOTOR ROUTE GENERAL OFFICE Lite typmf( & bkkp'g. Call 675·1636 for In· terv1ew. Newport F1oor Co\·ennj( _ _ _ Service St ation Allen-4 mo old. $500/both. Fem. $90. 644-6141 Ln. H.B. S3tl·l888 RH 7·3:30 ~.~·. F:1fe;.~·u~:.y A:. 960-SM.1 aft SP M me to Y• 8045 .-P"-re---to-.pos--l -C-hr-,s-tm_a_sl i--•F•A•NT_AS_T•I•C--DalVERY Cl.StK TYPIST Trainee poe it.ion for 8111· mg Clerk in Insurance Co. in Nwpl Bch. Good typing skills. Salary to To deliver large motor route In S. Laguna and Laguna Niguel. Must have good dnving record and dependable auto. $50 cash deposit r equired. For information call 642-4321. ask for Harry Seeley or Don Williams Cou n try Club C on v · ply, Sbetl Station. 17th & 6 Yr old Frltlda1re refnf. •••••••••••••••••··~··· sale! All items in xlnl CHRISTMAS PRF.SENT Home.549·3061 lrvlne,NB. gd cond. LS.S cu.ft. frost Female Dalamal1on, rond. Fantast.lc prices: autilw band painted S ,. 1 e.s free. $100. 49~24 spllyed, U mo .• loves Toys to h.sew11re. Kialoa ceramic poodle, gray. _ """ Service Sta. Night Attend people9fl8.82S3 Court, N. 8 . Newport SUPPLEMEHT 2 0r 5 nit.esawk.Apply, Refrlg., Coldspot, good FemalelrisbSet•-~ Crest oft Supe rior, OnlySJS.846-8579 $SOO & good company Gen 'I Mai ntenance, benefits. 833-8450 gardener. Hard worker for gen·1 work English YOUR INCOME Shell.17th & lrvme, NB shape. $40. Leave your ~ behind tt>nn1s couru.1~~~~~~~~~ message at 64s-6239 l year old ~ 1~ $$$$ $$$$ Serv. Sta Help needed im· 54.5-3047 -=.--------1 T _ d PilTTIME med. F\tll or p/l. Apply. Hann 1060 Fend. Band Mast . ..,.,a TB.EPHOHE WORK 990 E. est Hwy, Nwpt Lady Kenmore washer&: Pt. St. Bernard, part ••••••••••••••••••••••• gtr. amp & cab. 12' COCKTAIL spealcmg. Xlnt benefits. WAITRESS A p p I y 1 n P e r s o n • Learn in 40 hrs the mo!ll Sandpiper Inn & Tennis ·exciting. glamor ou :., Club. 2101 E. Coasl Hwy, highly paid profess. Day CdM Newport Stat1oners. Inc. needs theatre ticket clerk for mutual agency. F\IU or p/time. Phone for apl)t. 557·9212 ask for Mr. West. Bch. gas dryer, $250 . German Sbep, F .• Andal usian <Spanis h •J*n, reverb, wow·WO"' HOUSEWIVES Whirlpool washer $SO. apa.yed , 4 yrs. aood Mare) Pure while, 3 yrs pdl. oc:t. box & cords. $22:. or eve sessions . Place· .,_....,_..._... .... ,..._,.....,....., COLLEGISTUDEHTS SHIP/RECEIVING Kenmore waaher $75. w/kids84MOl2 old. Gentle . $50 0. ----2393------- Guaranteed Hourly Apply in Person, CPC, PortabledlsllwuherSSO. Free puppies, German 673-0719. LYNDEMIGWELDER menL assist. Good Job op· por. Ware Plua Bonus. 5:30 3362Harvard.SantaAna G teed546-8672 · lt Mal UKENEW $300 pm to 8:30 pm. Call uaran Shep DUX 7 w a. 7 ea New Ctosby Prix Des Na· · · Ccl 714,751-9194 So. Call . Coc ktail Waitresses. Inc. 17922 Sky Park Bl. Ste C, lrvine. Ca 92714 Hew1,.,-Dellyery Mature resp. adult for early AM deltv. Must have trans. 840-2756. ~or come to 2SO E. 7·ll STORE, Full or Part &2 Fem. M5-643S lions jump saddle w /fit· 979•962l 17thSt.,CoetaMesa. Time Clerk. Apply in REFRIGERATOR. Apt naer.longhalredfemkil· tings & case. $300 flnn. MINK ~TOLE. worth person. 28933 Crown size. Good running order. ten, 8 wk.a old. Adorable. .842·5622., or 827-4580 ask $400. Will sell for $300. SALES Valley Prkwy, Lag. $50. Ph 536·0069 645-9109 for Pat Beaut. cond. 750·3685 R•RESEHTATIVES Niguel. Auction Bishop Graphics draft-Switchboard Operators ••••••••••••••••••••••• , NIGHT AUDITOR · Companian for retired lady. p /time, lite Lu•PYHOLIDAYS houseckeeping & cook· """'" Exper'd, part·time. APP· ly· Ben Brown's Motel 31106 Coast Hwy, So. Laguna. Ing supply center ne~ds a full & p/time. Will lrain.1 ________ _ salesperson wltll direct ~ PUBLIC FURNITURE sales exp. lo service & ---·-------: ing.~vic of Nwpl Blvd. & Irvine Personnel Agency 20th Sl. Eves 646_6485 488 E 17th Costa Mesa create new accounts in Tet~ Sates ' •AUCTION* ----------1 Sulle224 642·1470 the Orange County area. Want lo make money? · HIGHT CLERK Dependable transports· Can you sell on the To.lte 7:l0 P.M. COOK Exper'd only. All shins. Cood pay & benefits. Ap ply, Jolly Roger. 400 S Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach COOK Part time. Some exper. nee. Apply In person. The Derby, 1262 S.E. Bristol, S.A. Man . 40 hr week . lion & knowledge of phone? Top Sin our busi· ll>e*t Wtk.-t HOUSECLEANING Travelodge, 6208 W, Drafting & Enaineering ness. 6'6-3030, ask for REPOS PERSONNEL CoutHwy, NB. aida d411irable. We offer _R_a..:.Y.,..· -------STOCK LIQUIDATIONS Employees with o r ---------1 salary car allowance. without transportation HURSESAIDES com~sslon, protected Ta.EPHOHESALES Lovel y bdr m aeta, mustbeabletogetlothe territory & fr inge Tiredoftberoutlne? armolres. cheats, twln offtceeacbmommg. Day &OllDERLIES bene fits. Unlimite d Thisjob iaforyou ! ~..: dMtbkl. bookha'1!'.,elvrese, or eve work available. Xlnt benefits. includ . growth polenlial for Call Us Now Al C1w1a, s, c .... . full or p/llme basis. Top sick pay. Bayview Conv. ca r eer onented i n cord cabinet, cat tree. wages. 540-9525. The 2055Thunn, CM 642-3505 d1vidual wtlltng to com· 133-8095 coffee & end tbls, lamps. TIME·LIFE pictures, TV, occusiona Sunslune Girb. HOO 8 NURSES AIDES · mil to 8 public corpora LIBRARIES chrs. rockers, washer. Gary, SA ___ 7·3:30 & 3-ll:JO. Exper. ~;'~~~~da, 979-8952 EqualOppEmplyrm/f dryer. refrig, PLU COOK HOUSECLEANING pref'd. Country Club LOTSOFMISC. ~~:U.5~~P~~nt~,ec'l1:: Partorrull ume. eonv. Home. S49·306L s:,~r:::~rre::~ e,·,~xc~err;: Telephone Sales J~ :!?~ t~l.A J~. Hugo Inn. 361 Cliff or, ____ 6_73-8_1_58___ Nursing aide & s ome SanlaAna.CallS49·2475. We will train. Earn LaiUna Beach 3.5 Mon· hsekp'g fordisabledfem. Chris tmu money. Cashier's Che cks & HOU~E COUNSELORS Exp /.ref'd but not re· Salary and commission. CASH. No per sonal _Frl_·--------1 Married cpl only,. no quir' . Live ln or out. Secretsln/G. Ofc Call: checks PLEASE! Food Cooks , exp'd 1 yr chtldr.en , li v e 1n . P/T.898-2233 HAPPYHOLIDAYS 6Jl-0337,askfor0on available. Items subject minimum , day.night Supervise 6 teenage We wlJI reopen on Jan lopresale. shift. Call Amelia's girls . Exp en ses + Part/F\111/Time, take or· ~to start you In your Tow Truck Drivers ex-. Merry Chn•stmas Relllaurant,642·9434 salary. ders & make deliveries. NewYear'scareer. per'd. Top pay. Apply, ---------1 OakTree Homes Ava SS-fl per hr. Must EmployersPayAJIFees G&WTowing,lOOOlrvine & Cookl, over 18, will train. 540-4754 have reliable car & Liz RelndersAgeocy Ave,NB&l2·1252 D I s h w a a h e r s , phone. We train. Call The · 4020 Birch, Ste 104 waitreaael, hostesses & HOUSIK•HS Fu 11 er B r u s h c 0 . Newport Beach 833-8190 WAITRESSES Happy New Year general help. 25254 La No exper. nee. Xlnt 754-6471. Mature persons. adull Pu. Mlaalon Viejo. in benefits Inch.ad. sick pay. T resident care ctr. Gd. TO All Mlaalon Hills Plaza. Bayview Conv. 2055 PARTTJMI Secretary· op penon lo benefits.631-3SS5 511-3440 Thurin. CM 642-3505. SUHDA y OHL y operate one.girl market· MASTBS AUCTIOH Driver to drop bundles of Ing olflce. Excellent typ· WAITRESS wan led 2075~ Newport Blvd CM COUNSELORS HOUSEKEEPER Daily Pilot lo carriers. In a a k 111 s & f Ir m S.9PM. or UAM t.o 2PM. Glll2S ~ See our ad for House Woman. mature, exper Must have van or large personality required. Apply Tino's Pizza, 30242 1~~~~~~~~~~ Oounaelors'Wanted. Oak todoallhouseholdwork. station wagon + &ood Excellent potential. Crown Valley Pkwyl· TreeKomesStcM764 3 days wk, references, dri ving r ecord. Call Salary $900 +. O.C. Laguna Niguel. licydet 1020 Xlnl Pay Re ply lo Alrportarea ""'"""..,,.for ••••••••••••••••••••••• COUNTER GIRL P/lime Oassified Adtt02, Dally 642-432l. uk for Harry •wt· . -WILD& USED BIKES f« wkd>'l "Sat. Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa Seeley or Don Williams MacGttaor Yacht Corp. Rerood. Buy, aell, trade. 873-5385 Mesa, Ca. 92626 p ASTRY CHIF SECRET ARY 16.11 Placentia, CM Cycle & Co. 2488 Newport OJuDtet help. Perm. poal· Housekeeper Hve ln. E~· 1 Man operation. Skllled ~~r.reo;;~~u:~~:stc. ....... 1005 Blvd. C.M. tc-7910 ~on-Prl, M /F . per'd. Some English. decorat«.Apply,Vlctor Adaml,H.B.caUblwn9 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• O.OGume)'llXIO"blke. ,,_11n~1 Ask Soc. Sec card nee. Refs ~~ .. ~nnBe, 38cb1 ~L5rrMDnr, A1Ur5PM,98U681 ~ Scbwlnn Plxle, red, ·-_... checked.552·9708. ~--· a .,. 0 • STIWAITROTH $3$.171-1933 --------i ..... SICllR'AlT ~-------• CUSTO..-s•VICI/ HOUSEKEEPER. Live PrlntiJ'lg Collat.er p/Ume omce of contlH lna AMTIOUIS ScbwtnnlOap.ed. Bidden SICalTAIY 1n. ~ed lady Engl.lab Now accept.ln1 'appllca: educaUon ln Saddleback •AMERICAN OAK• mee. &eUil 1MW , .. '18S, ~. •. lnlnt H · apeakioJ. 6 d)'I. Refs re· t1ofa1 tor Mon le Tuea College, Mission VleJo. ~:'10i:'!:o.;S:; wtn..U SLIS. • ... r;.:t· Llta *,lTi'· Co quired. NB. 673~ nllb\ iblfta. Apply h M· 'l"YPbla • •h req'd. Exam Amertcan OakAntlqu• Blc:1cl•. New ai Uaed. ,._'lfJIOMuOC rport . Houseman " mtida 4ptn, Pennyuver, 1660 WUI be admJnlat.ered. tnCallf. WebuYdlrecU t ALL GUARANTEED. • n eeded. Apply Be n PlacientlaCOltaMeaa, MOO lhru Thun 1:30pm paaa tbe aavlnp °" to R.eltored Cn.Uon, £nil l)IUVERYMENlorear· Brown'a Motel, 311Ge ·to l Opm, rrt tam ·fpm. rou . _Also. Ant1qut! Vluou at'lO·•p cf. 11 AM LA Tlm• home Cout Uwy~ Sooth n. • .am. ,.._,.lrll ~~wn a •s, 83t·97oo Keproduetlona are avall. Cle.ran~ aale, 1lant •~llv•r1 rout4, mu1t Latun•· --'J "911 atJ.ho\'erylowt1tprka. uvln1a. Oeean!ront a.a .. e«J11M> car, adult.I ~ SICl.lf ARY Located at; Blcycl•, Balboa 115-a10 CllllYl l~hndQ,no col· USITHI ~ f lfwUt.Roetpt.A/Ps:•· 780t.OYD RD.S.A . ......._lkpd-M"Jr l•ct .01. WHtmloater, DAILY PILOT ~ \l!)ta co. '*"combo. Oood t (Al TbeNew'P!)t't Plwy) Sdi';n .. vUiit,.. Like H.B. aru. -.Olli -,AST nciedl ~ d i>enon I« ar .-·1 otc aldlla nt' 111..,JI MW. D'NTT, m.- 0.ll ve rymen fo r LA .•-••-ooiMl•ti•th • t.Uu, ~1otcln 8anta ()pn8'lD<Wed1M ... C u __., cl ......... tm'9dlOD~ Aniw/tull be:pellb. Call lsnun.S.UN llOCo CrOl9 n., nla· 'n.. .. !f. •"'· Sll'8CI -1liDI .. Mll:-!_!"'A Jlm ~.ZU/"1-l401. ,._ ,...._, _. t.tr.. ,...._ P/UIM. $350/$'00 -Toa• ,.....e.u-. --re• ~ 6 -'-• .... .-.o.•tHO. -' H•• to PO loJt fl, $ec.._tar')' lor Npt Be.h MM>llSa. ~ --- (bealn..s Adi HU blC ....... · NewP,Ort ... ~, Ca markltlnf r oor ct-awe, Pl•• Hooe .. r, 0..-= x; llpd • .._, ••all l&.e_. or hnk•c.I ~ ftnD.~oppor.Xlat Par~u•t top hble. lOlfd • Jdll. eoo4 1am.:-..ra: ~Nllnt.3H NDllreq'd.m~ ta-lMT .......... • We are pleased to announce that this newspaper will run the HOLIDAY ON ICE "Find Your Name Contest" in the classified section beginning December 16 thru December 26. R eaders whose names are listed , <so me where in the class ified ads> will receive, absolutely free, two r eser ved seat tickets to HO LIDAY ON ICE opening al Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim Calif. December 27th and running through J a.nuary Isl, 1978. You may find your name h idd e n anyw here in the classified section preceded by two stars C • • > making you eligible to receive a pair of tickets for a night at HOLIDAY ON ICE as guest of the Daily Pilot. . ..... . . . 81 OAal.Y PILOT • -----..;...--·---.:.".:.::"Cl::'f:!:·~D-.:::::,:mt>w:=.!:23~tt~n ....._. tto..t. Sftle/ ..._ W..tM 9590 ....... 1..-te•i 4Mto1. lm""'9d blot, lntporled A.toa, UMd ..... __ 1010 ...... ..... w .... ,s...... tl60 ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,;;-.-;. ........................................ . •••••••••••••••••••••• .. 5ttir-eo '°'' 90 • 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~BUY °"-9720 ~ 9746 Y'.J..... 9772 "-'-9935 .. ••••••••••• • ••••• •• • • ...... t Jt77 E t •••••••••••••••••••• _,...,, .... o ---r KING!:>lZE Po11urped 1c ••••••••••••••••••••••• COIONADO 25 "-• xcut ve Cl M CAIS ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • lxd&c fr.amt-WESCO !loto,.bome or Mini· &nUCICS Ta.'711 ..... H..-. Dlx '76,auto,AM/fM, IBIOIEYOU '68 HT CharJ:e r . H O ....... -... ~orbome lro111 Herb rdl 1 1.. bs , --d-" R ,._ .... ,.. • • XJ.01 cond1h on, many l'X f'riedlaoder. Call an,y ol AD ll10dcls & colors. s, o mi. •nu t SB.1. YOUI maai1um . ....,.. ''"· un'i r .. &u1 Lr~ WITH St.JP ~ust llk1:1enu.mbrra CONNRL 1-cffof• oCr.~-=· YOLYO, ~~I $300/or orr. F'or S.&Jc Wood & ~l.u~ rflall ~ture counter Ii: globe ly~ hghl fottur~:. 11'e Top Or~wl'r, Balbuo lsland, C:i II 833-3622 or 6t4-801& 2770) ~Hwy ~~ Y.S7 0300 ltt.6777 Dttl•wy Today! See us for • top dollur -- S-..._ C...Utr.o Pm•U~ Party 5'17·7777 CHEVROLET -/2 Rill.lye 4 spd, AM /f'M. tlmate' You u e the wlnner ol 2 ---IZMHI Last chan~ for Cantnslic rlldlals, new '"-tt. brklj, MARQUIS VOLVO l'Clrd 9940 lreeudceL, worth $1<1 to 2828 liarbor Blvd savinp on all remaining muff. 26·29 re.i: gas. MISSION Vt£JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUOAYOHICE * * RENT Flreball 23· Self C~l'AMl!:SA 'T70l0deltinstock. ~~PS)673·5710; I J t.iHO•tS-IZIO .PHIL \fUST &10VE ! Selling 6 allbe R. ........... cont. Auto/a.ir. cc. CB, 546-1200 rooms full or exrep c~AJENIETlroN 9fl21ffbp•Dr. stereo,&IP1 6 845-2283 _WE_P_A_Y_T_O_P_DO_L_LA_R_ '~ 9750 Auto.. Used FQLONADG Uonlllly nice 1odoor & <.:ENTER f ... 1114'01thoch 29 ft. Apollo motorhome. FORTOPUSl!:DCAJlS ............................................. . 0 u t d 0 or il 0 o d • · De 27th You are the winner or 2 Muat let to appreclutel FOREIGN, DOMESTIC · 284SJIAR80R,8LVD. '84 SC, xlnt cond, alarm, Mck 9f I 0 EveryUung in xlnt cond. Free ':rick<>;'~~t.for frectlcketa worthS14 to Call J ohn Felter at or CLASSICS S40.64tO 540.0213 stereo. lu1u1age rack, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Deep lreezc, $2SO; gas Dec . lOt h or lls t HOUDAYOMICE 6CZ-0010or54CHWJ. Uyourcarisextraclcun --------'..;..;:;-must 11eU $4800/B&t otr. '7G Century, Indy JIOO ~,., stove, Early Amer. sofa f th &eeusflfSt . 646-171.'.l replica, aJI pwr, AM /1-'M ~ .,,. SlOO. Must see! 753 W. per ormaoces. C;.i ll nl e MoNr.._l ... al IAUERIUICK , stereo 8-trk, Cl'uiso cou 'iio0 ·"' 19th St. Apt. D, C.M.cl 64aJ2·5678, exkt. 333, to COANNV~lNETllMON 11'/Jto 32' 'WY>rHarbor u1.,·• S.S CONT~ENTAL Reblt lrol. $3,695. 55:?·9700 -..~ ~32 myourt1c et.s. .-. ""'""' u .u •77 Cleoraftce eng., partially restored. ---'--'------Tl' ---------r * • CENT EH f\!Uy sell contained Costa Mesa 9W·2SOO $3,150/ofr. Wkdy 754.().1 22 Cadilloc 991 5 For Sale: lO spd Racer (23 Dec. 27U1-J an. lst Reserve now !or WE Demo & executive snle ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~::~~e;~:= lbs) $180, Skis w/Nevada ~watt Stereo amplifier & Free Tickets good for Holidays & weekends. now going on-flurry ! • 77 If.I 924 BJ k , air , bindings, like new $110, AM/FM tuner. Gre:it Dec. JOth o r J l i.l REGENCY MOTOR HEED 88800VESTRE~T Blaupunkt ca ssette. Sk1Sw/Nevadabindm~s. Christmas present. $110. pel'fo rman ces. Call HOME RENTALS CLE.1o1o..1 (NearMocArthurBlvd. (795TMJ) Horizon Leai.· fir $4S. Ski boots, sz 9~,. 846-2.487 64~·5678, ext. 333, to 9'l5N.HarborBlvd,S.A. tiOA" &Jnmboree Road> ing759-~ ~~~c:kr~:s stS~~· 8' AM/FM Walnut console claun your ~•c:et:s. HSJJ-~3** US:>o~RS NE\~1;°tf3i~ACH -.7-0_P_ors_c_be_9_14-.-li-k_e_n_e_w-.1 SJO , both like' new'. ~t~rco w/turntable. , , -T~ Trcr.,.f 9170 CALL PAPPY many xtras, AM/FM • Acousllc Guitar S2S CB Sacnftce $100. 960-5843 TT, 30 Clipper Manne, full ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7S 280Z, 2+ 2, auto. cass. must sell (213 ) Rad.lo $30. Ph: 673'.5641 a/ter6PM head room, loa1Jl'll. l955 Landcrwser, 8x35' 540-5630 loaded. 21.000 mi. Xlnt 429-3860 On.geCOUltty's eves. IAJ.DWIH ORGAN 8.17-26+1 Tr:ivel trJr. Dbl bed, !ge I hlf ltil\«C..'f'lXf CCllld. S.S.950/ofl'. 499-49~ Porsd>e '74, 911 Targa. In-S.•ih C...ttr King Sz OAK Waterbed. ~ 573·~ DINGHY ~~~~11·s~~1~. &e:::~~~i ni~nnm• ·~~~~~~~~i ~i:arbe:r. Bf':n ::~~: lt76C~DILLAC Compl W/htr, llne r ,23"RCAcolorTVconsole 8' fiberglass with 2 hp hitch. $2000 cash. 2191 2626HAltlORILVD. 540-U'79. 644'"'510. pedesla.I, shee~ & pad. $75. Small B/W port. $40: Johnson ootboard. both Harbor BJ. CM, Sp 70 or COSTA MESA --------SlYIUE dAs is $163150. 1c97hris 837-2200 543-9824 used once $350. 628·9348 call 642-2238; 646-&77 '66 Datsun Sta Wag. '7Z 914 @J.f mi, Weber's, ·All .leather, stereo tape, Y! or ·2 eves -~ WE IUY Oean. runs well. $400. reblt & w/recpts., air, 8 cruise control &. all the ? • Neuly new super stereo ~ Slips/ Auto Service, Paris USB> CARS! 213/438-7161 extras. $4815 494-2130 d e I u x e o x t r u i. . -.Seu or skis w/boots. 1 system. Be t am ax Docks 9070 &AcCffsoriH 9400 . . (629NR0). Set Hawkeye ice skates, videotape recorder. Best ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• We're the new Chevrolet '75 Datsun 610 Wagon. Lo •12PORSCHE914 59888 boys n 12. 645-2899. offer . '494-8131 $200 Reward for hl•lprn~ '64· '77 Used Must nn g dealership in the Irvine nu's. Must sell. $3000. Mags, AM/FM 8 track, find a sUp rental for a 32 Parts 990 N p k Auto Center. We need Call 963-4870. reblt eng., new tires, (5) '77 & '76.SevJJles Akai S tereo Tape Must s acrifice. Peavey Islander. Be am Jl'l ", Orangc.Call~7.2~ er, yourused car! manyextras.Mus t seeto To Ch~el-'rorn Recorder &. Ovation Mus ician Amp. $254. vcrt1clc rJe<1ra11t·c 46'. JOE '73 240Z, auto, air, 1ru1gs, apprec .... """. 770GMH. Gwtar r ..... 1 6 h 1 p FM. lo miles, s:noo. <IJ"'vv -c Call S73.3756 """ter c annc .A. & Wkdys (71'1) !IM:l !Jtl57, .&--Sal MAC PHERSO.._. 675.8638 Eves. Call 842·4909 before 5 Mitchell cabinets. S554. Wknds {71<1) !187-0017 Autos..__ e " pm: After 5 pm 846·6523 Eves. 548·0<$79 or davs ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHEVROLET c Mink ('Oa t, full length J Bo t 1. c! 38 .... ~ I .,Qt 9725 . 77 ,. 92 • A 1 t a.I A I e 14 642-6835 a s 1P wante ·· -.nques 21 Auto Center Drive ••••••••••••••••••••••• '2 ... ssum e s e. nu ur l"<> ian. si.1, · Bertram. No part1ers. Classics 9520 IRVINE Loaded, mint cond. Cop-'~ppr $1500. ~~~'"~ $950. Pioneer Car S t er eo Live. b;iy club. f>.12·•1736 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 768-7222 Spyder 850 1970, red con. per metallic. 686· 5 280 1 P ~1·3339· 640 ·8 6 .'il cassette deck, KP JOI, or642·40'.l7 FOR SOMEONE vcrt. New top. Xlnl drs 6?J.lS85 evs 2600 11.irhor Bl~J. MisceflCIM'Oels FM I Doi by w I P · l 6 L . -shape. $925. 675·7788 ' (0,1.1 Mn J 540·1J I UO Nabers Cadillac '67 SHELBY Cobra, orig. GT 350. Best ofter. 495-6727 al\ 6P M '74 LTD 2-dr hit . Air, PS/PB. Xlnt cond. $2800. M7.a!!O aft 2 "72 LTD. air, xJnt cond. New brakes, s hocks . s@.0083 or 67J.S354 196lFOID RANCH WAGON Hurst noor shln. small VS economy & io excep. Uonally good con<l1tion. (295HPDl. Mow °"'Y $6' 5 ~.,-ff Mfrs l!Jm Harbor, Costa Mesa 642·0795 '74 Gran Torino, company car, maint. by dealer. 1mmac. Metallic blue. vinyl top, A<.:, PS, PB. $247S. 642-710<$ W-............ 8081 speakers. Must sacrifice. PVf DOCK avrul. llunt· WHO HAS Aldos. lntported L.l....-..1-9 '68 Porsche 911, 5 spd, ~~~~~~~~~I• l---'-.....-ru o~ off tn•!lon 11 ·r""ur fc11· 'cry EVERYTHING ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._ 727 mu.st sell mn .. e oUer · ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,,,t er. 673·9262 alt. 1 .. •-" '-'11" bo. N ...... _ •-0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• """ll.28 ' .... · 4pm ge "' :.ma at. ear flare Collectors Items IVTV"-·-9705 -.r-'76 Eldo, white in/out. ~··•••••••••••••••••••• WANTED: the main cha1111el. (71'1) 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brmd Mew '77 Luaded. 16,000 mi's. 77 Llncoln Cont mental SJ!?,;_207Gu3N. r~~...1 9010 898-1611 5 NASH·HEALY 19'76redAllaSpider . Ex-H RalaRoyce 9756 Show room cleon . 4dr, $7195. Whit e 9945 """' _.-w Coupe or Convert cellent co nd. Ori ~. ONDA Cars ••••••••••••••••••••••• $9500/bst. 5S2·8645 w/burg\rndy int. Xlnt pt; 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boats. S~d & Bayside Villg 675·2095 owner. AM /FM stereo, lo MAHY #} DEALER IN U.S.A. . c: on d . B y o w n e r • •~•••••••••••••••~.·~ Avon red s hank, used 6 5'ci 9080 R Cl . . mileage 968-0863 T hoose frOfft '76 Cpe DeViJlc. Loaded, 714-7S2-l.S24 • umes, Oill'S, pump, xlnt ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• 1v1era· ass1c Design · o C I ~ ROY lo nu, PP. Sac. $6000. r---------flnches & Cananes for cond. Must sell SS95. '75Tahrt1 Jet boat. 1964· XJnt mech.. cond. IMW 9712 UNIVERSITY CARVER 979-M>Jor962-2712 Meno.rick 9947 s ale, _friendly pr ice. 548-0220. Cslm455 0ltls Many new parts , new ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROlLS·RO\'C[ ••••••••••••••••••••••• A\lery also. 548·5436. • ea11 54IH2"I Jrt 6 tires. Best O\•er $1500. ~tmbAe i.wuim~ '77 Ced CDV, d'eleg11ncc. '75 Brwn Maverick R&H Boats. Maentenan~e/ 6<&2"9'l24 · Hoftda C.-s • GMC ..... "°"au"' loaded, lo ml, mint cond. air, I'S, PB, del~e. 1~ Rabbit hutch, lgc, auto Senice 9 020 R---...:onal Trucks ~ Take ovr lse or buy, p,.t ml, $C!950. 6?3-7'794 wutersys $25. SJS-4142 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Transporfotion __,.,......., pty. 494-5861. \Rabbits, Cheap! i 5 Mere r Ou boa d 9 fl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vehidtt 2850 Harbor Bl vd. ClOSEO SUNDAYS Mercury 9950 •· & n.-8090 rrP u y t r k. Motori1ed like~ 9140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 540 9640 LATE '73 Rolls Royce 'i2 El Dorado, grn, wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• r1anos -·':fans motor w/gas tan . . · vinyl ton loaded I · ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• xJnt cond hardly used ••••••••••••••••••••••• Convt 4 seat street legal 77 Red Honda, 7,600 mi, Silver Shadow,~ mi. -'" • o m1, OnANGECOUNTY'S New Br;.md Name Pianos SSOO/Bcst~fr. 673·1757 Vc:.pa C10lo Moped, 1976. dune buggy. $800. Call 1978 BMW's s;'.J600. Owner. 644.5441 or I owne r, all options ongownr. $2900. 673·3994 MEW~ST lO'"o over cost · Xlnt cond. S29.S.'86 540-2372 $30.000. 83l·22?B Sacrifice '77 El Dorado, UNCOl.N·M ERCUH y 8c~1thMus1cCe1~tcr ~Man,:;e 9030 646-42670"646·055-I 4WMdDri•es 9550 HERE NOW! KcrrnannGhio 9735 '66 R.R. Silver Shadow, yellow,loaded,lomi.,as-Dealersh1pls nowOPEN l74<>tBca('hBlvd,H.O. fH'R Used ci·m~tiMll"'d .,,.,.,,••••••••••••••••••••••• x l n t eond . Wht sumelse$0dwn640·0248 RA'ffLADEBOE • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ca JI"''". • ~vvv COMPLETE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 841·R536 mi. Good L'Ond. H:lJ 0846 JEEPS u77u $18.000/best ofr. 631·0545 '74 ELDO Wht w/ted Int. LJNCOLN·l\IERCUR\' 'I'h · *ZODIAC for more information c J • c J BODY SHOP Robin StJn._..f, xlnt. cond. Lo if;. JS Auto Center Dr. m~ef ~~~:,1s~~[ i:;;nad~· Port·A·Manne S Che;~~e:s: Wag~n7e~:s: MOW OPEN 1r • Toyota 9765 mCfuuy equlp'd. Best SDI-'wy.Lake Forest exit l A k $4 0 Inflatable Boats Bug print Karl, Dual p1·,.k·U"", up to $1.200 di's· J. Altdenon ofr. 495-6727 aJt GP.M JRVJNE ion. !> ing O 2925 Collei:e <.; M cng. mounLc; 7 hp. two· ' ,.... 9141 BYtf'CMA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 830..7000 645-Z74S C714)540.i010 . ~!~_o7~; Sl25tbs t. ofr. =~t~s~v~~e.mile S~~3F Foum•Vatle;'· l~R~~~: '62 Cad. Must sell th1s1--------- Baltlwin ~lcl'lro Piano, loots, Power 9040 """ ...,.. Copefmtd Mfrs Inc IMW RESALES You are the winner of 2 ~~tis $200 or offer. xlnt cond. $850. Wkdays ••••••••••••••••••••••• 197ti C:ira bell;i l\fol)€d 2001E1st, SA 558-8000 Cree tickets worth $14 to TOYOTA. * * &W-5940 Eves & wknd:. FORS "'LE'.'··' S250 We may have your next HOUDA y OM ICE See us for a top dollar "72 EL DORADO Dcrtid Mogff 640-6182 A 675·'"'<" COST· ues.. car in our Inventory. Call estimate~ Lo ded Sh 483 ....,, __ , ..... c-ftd ---------1 '77 Se:.i Ray 2 1 ft. '°"" "rt "' us today! at the ...... ~UIS TOYOTA a & arp! """""''··~ , •• " SACRIFICE -Shafer Week e nde r with 70 MOPED: slightly used AMC & JEEP 831·2040 495-4949 ANAHEIM """-'T S29SO 644·6421 ConwtoddMcr console piano. Excellent hours. Must .s.ell; bought Hata\'U.S,. black, 370 m1. TOO co~i~NJ~ON e1r.~~f4~~~10 '72 El Do. lllue W/wht You are the winnt'r or 2 shape. Merry Chrl.slmu Jn:!., bo.ut t. Pn. pty. Call Excellent cond. 968-""''.. WAMTtO TO IUY vinyl top, aJI xtras Xlnt rn.-e tickets worth St4 to for ssoo. 213/696·8184 _ • ., UV<N MANY ~ 21th~an. lst. HOLIDAY OM ICE after 6PM 544 1111958 PEUG T J11:~s Quality used BM Ws. Fr ee Tickets i;iood fo r '77 Celi ca GT Llrtback, l'Ond. S2.995. 1>'73-4743 -v EU MOPED, 1-;x. ......-ROY CAIYSt IMW o 30 a. 31 S.spd, radials, air. A~I -atthe or 546-1200 cellent cond, 1,300 mi. MUST SELL 70 e c · l u 0 r s t · 7 6 C p e o e Vi 11 e ANAJIF:IM ANTIQUE ORGAN •W><, u".7545 JEEPS BY 1540Jamboree Road pe rformance s C al I FM cass tape. Extreme. D El CO''VE 0 Good ,.,..nd1t1'on. _________ ,.......,""" NEWPORTBEACH lylo rru· Llke nu Wkd e t'"ance. lmmac ,, NTJ N '""" CLfRlST~"AS 642·5678, ext. 333, lo . . ys "'·II l r d CENTER '""""tofr. 0 A"·0291 SEA RAY'S ' '" 64" L444 I i k 213-614·5107, evstwknds ru Y oa ed. Assume lse ~ .,..... '76 Fox1 Moi>t.>d. 2 sc11ter, Please Call u-o c aim your l c ets. 71._559-6825 w/lo residual or pay-off. Dec 27th-Jan. Isl TUNING SCHOOL. has x.Jnt cond, $350 best of. 549-8023 * * ~ Free Tickets good for bargain price uprights. Al11978Modets fer.Must sell !675-4547 2.SitJIARBORBLVD. Maida 9738 '77 Corolla. Standard int. -._--..1_... 9920 Dec. 30th or 3 1st S r. h d II deluxe ext. Must sell. ~ .. r-UI,.... ptrform3n ce s . Call omc re 1n1s e . a I 8'-30' Moped Garelll, Super CostaMcsa •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• 54&S7"4art6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 . 5678 , ext. 333 , tu g uar a nteed 2 yrs. Sport, Motorcycle de· & 973-1808 HARRISON'S sign, oil Injector sys. 1 '7S Ford Ranger w/cmpr r ST • H OAOWAY Triwnplt 9767 daim your lrckets. SEA RA y mo old. 1-'orced to sell shell. auto, a/c, 32,000 SANTA AICA ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .. • * PIANO SALE S420Drig.$560.s52-t293 m1.5J6.9964 835-3171 ·1sTR1. Loaded. 3600m1. * • act.nDbile 9955 THIS WE11:K ONLY! 2327 So. Main, S.A. '77 "'-··t II lnter'I. Great TWf. vmw.n o111v1No MACMIHf 549-3985 aft. 5, 213·532-5010 ... .. 540.6555 '77 Cimatti Moped, 6 wks .x.vu x -ad ... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• UPTUGl-ITS FHOM $495 3101 Coast Hwy, N.D. new. Cost '500Take $310. deal! Must see-Must *USED BMW's* z I 50 ff4rW lhd. . ........, ys • it '72 Delta 88 2dr HIT. AT, 6'SQ.GRAND$950 631 ·2547 645·6680 seJI. Trade smnll truck '77530i4..'lpd286.5EU ColfaM.M••S.S700 '74 TR6 Xlnt. cond. it * AC, xtra clean. S1300. ~EINWAY, A·l $149S 1---.:.:.:.:.::.:.~---1:::-:--::--::--;--:-=-·_--:--=-::::I or car + cash con-'77320iaS/R 177RSK AM/FM cass., lugg rack, • It D)'S 556-4467, cvs 833-8719 Pbul'sPlanoShop,_ 26 f t . Thunderbird Pu~h$290Maxl Morx:d. 1100 s idercd. 837 ·9710 or '7620024spdS/R401PDP HURRY-How.ar roUbar,lomi.546·6385 • * h r-F I D'll 830-6686 aft. 5 '77 320i 4 sp 013RTP °" ... SSOO Down, $75 mo. buys 7 2SW. l9t CM 548·7272 o~mu 3 CoCCs~ore>.-351 · 494-6167 '76530i.ASJR 712PQM MIRACLE MAZDA TR-6 '73, lo mi's. loaded. ..... • 1973 Cutlass. loaded, GULIRAHSEM VS 5 • .~11 nav~g~tloknlal .............._ d '73 Toyota Land Cruiser. Closed 0.. S....dava WlTitTHE PURCHASE )(.Int cond . Must sell. ... • ! 64.S-{1758, 644-6868 gear "' groun ac e. ~yaes/ PTO winch, $3800 or ofr. ' OF ANY NEW Bcslofr. 497·2073. ., ~ SPIHET ORGAH Sleeps four._ Under 50 Xooters 91 SO 548·2826. ORANGE COUNTY'S 1971 MAZDA GLC • it-'68 CuUass Supreme, air. Two manual horses hoe houris used smce new. 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.,.. Yallmwcrgee 9770 AOGER ••iLLERSAYS P/S, P JB, xlnt orig. cons ole W/butlt i n wheel t railer included· 1974 2SO Yamaha MX· Trsb 9560 -&DEST YAM0',1:.1~tler':.:celve an ··~~·.•G•E••s•E•L••E•CT•••I•O•N•••• ... .__""1y~ .... .,.· ~?""~.;.l$750/bcs t offer. rhythm box & scparat also full canvas. Call Terry kit front fork Bog ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-•n ° = nv ___..-..-""",.. '""""...,.. Leslie speaker cabinet. John Felter at 6<&2-0010 or shocks, etc. $500.' Call 1971 Ford Pickup for sale. ''FltH" NEW & USED CARS 49 ... 1 Ill 546-ff671--------- Beaut1ru1 sound. $705. 54().QU. 962·9898a1ter7 p.m. Good cond . Re bit or the cash equivalent '70 Toron a do Cus t. ~2562 encJoe.Sl500. firm.Call . lhru Tuesdny, Dec. 27th. Top cash $S for your YW. Absolutely Jmmae. Orii:r ----------128 ft. Unlfll_tcS~rtfishe~. '74 Honda SSOcc 4 cycle. Moo·Fri9to5,751·3840 Sales·Servic~Leasing CONTEST SALE Pa id for or not. Call owner. $1850. Call French Provincial l owner. m mint cond1· Wixoa wind.scrun XJnt · Roy Carver Inc. ENDSDEC.27th KelthorJerry. 640-6199. Wurlitzer Spinet, xlnt Uon&load~I Custom in· 5600 mi. $900/bsi olr: '74 Courier w/.sbell: Xlnt rt ' MIRACLE BOB WITHAMVW 1Piftto-------- 9 - 9 - 5 - 7 - rood.S'950.840·2957 ter1or , pilot, A .O.~, Mustsell.642-0762 shape, Fully eqwpped. Rolls~~~~-boreeBMW ...., ........... 1.~ ... ULT 7600WestminsterAve. V.H.F., sunlog, outng-IM8-8606 ...... ~" '"""" 893-755l or 638-7880 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sewing M~ 8093 gers, AC/OC natural gas 76 Yamaha TY 175, x.lnt Newport Beach 640·6444 2150 Harbor Blvd. C.M. '74 Pmlo Squire w;.igon _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• refrigeration & cooking, cond. $500/ofr. Als o '77 GMC PU, i,~ Ton .. ,.1 "'~SIC" 645-5700 '68 VW Bug w/stereo & Luggage rack, mag b · 1 to I 1 y ab 250 E d · sbrtbed. low miles & ex-~ • ft .... A t ~ .,"" h J.m SINGER. t'ree arm, urun p w enc osure, am a n uro as 1s ... pe..... u o. ~.....,. w eels (wide), tape s tretch·stich s ewing new Chrysler manifolds, $315/ofr499·2393 lras.Call64G·0422· 1970 BM W ZSOOCS Mm-c:edffleM 9740 Call67S-1630 deck/rndlo. auto, low machines. Sl4S. Brand ~u~I el~~s };~)! e;; '77 XT SOOD Yamaha. 600 YGM 9570 ~~~~"ar~P~~~· c:~t ;·:;;,~·~;;;c·~·:s:·;;:;;, 1 ·12 yw Bus. Cle an . •MEW 77 CHEV. :~e!~ ~~~e\1~~ new, fully guaranteed. 498-2709 · nu, like nu, must sl beC •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Blau punk t AM I F M miles Take over lease Pr 1 v a t e p a r t y . MOMU MIRAGE Call 870-4564 for mfo. $10/rnoorOOdaya cash. P · 12 /25. $1200 or ofr 1976-Dodge Bubble Top steteo, electric windows. 6<&2-8987 · $2000/Firrn. 673-3012 2+2 HATCHIACK ~ ... :Of"x Agency, 5484425 'I'hr...eelec. Bay boats.17', 548.·9611 Van, fully converted, light a lloy wheels & • e\'es. Auto. trans .. air cond., 75 Runabout, 6 cyl. Elec. -v .. me. nds work . Take your many xl-ras, must see Nachtblau blue wttan in-'66~E. White, 2d r, air. -. ---.-.-----pwr. steering & brakes, snroof. Xlnt cond. $3100 S,0.URgGooda 8094 pick.673-8624 '76.J~ 250 Enduro, 1500 $9,875.S52-58(t terior.lnexcellentcondi· AM /FM 11tereo. Days 63 ~as1s 68 lGOOcc eng radio, special new paint ~2393 ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1, hke new, helmet, lion thruout & only 6J,OOO 540-74220r Eves 675.1750 ~Ja Bug. 6 volt, new --------- 23' Seacra/t. Center con-$590.499·3551 ·n OMC ~ton, long whl miles! SlO 999 or best of-ttres, bucket seats, roll job & muc h more I '7ZRunnbout, AM /Fl\1, Fische r Supergloss solo, tower pulpit at ---------1 base, deluxe cab area fer. rn·. p'ty. Call owner '66250SE,silvcr, PS, PD, bar.xtras$900.497..3t89 <U.S.ZZ>. $750. s nowskis. 19S cm w lo Dana Pnt 1a'unch r o'mp. '74 YAMAHA RD3SOB, w/high seat 7 ooo Miles ..._._w ~ S"998 Ano .... uo · • · at.642·0138. e l ec s unrf, AM/FM •70 cam-r Mee" rl "" _...., " -0 ~ bdnp.·$75. MK·SOO Wood Prieod right at $9.500. show rm cond. 1600 mi. under warranty. $.'S,500. ---------stereo, 4 spd, clean, must Body :ds~ · w rk"· Mpea · HOWARD Chevrofet 170cm w /Eckel bin d· 728-7668 Must see lo appr ec. 831 2278 '76 n &Kw 3 0 SI .. o ny '73 Pinto Runabout, 2000 in ...... ,,"'. ~ .. i boota-a1'zes $750/ofr. Dan 842 a .... " • IW• • auto, s un-sell $42'7S/0Cr. 536-0943 --as. $1000. S48·9S3· 1 Dove & Quail Sts. d. A pd t' -"" .,.. ._ , root', AM/FM stereo, xlnt ...u NEWPORT BEACH cc, ISC, .. s , new ires, 6~7.s~.10;$7.S0,$25, DIMGHY . .,.,KAW soo N Ks •-7CUST03 Ford Van, Camper cood.Pt P64G-0975 '712805.E. ,71 vw 8 W tf 1 . a~~ .. 55583 ~0116 lugrock,48,000mi,grcat $35 & $4S. Girl '• ice 8' flbergl with 2 hp "" · ew · l , °' · M ln Xlnt. ct>nd. Xlnt cond. Make offcr. us, es a ra ~-.,... shape $1500. 645-6940 ~ue 5N, slate bag J ohnsoo outboard both batt, cln & stock. $47S. Must sell 644-5793 '77 3201. AH/FM, cass.. 631·2617 Camper, rebll eng, like . 7 7 M 0 NT E Ca r I o ev~/early AM & skate dre11-1Jze 10 usedonce.$350.628·9348 673-5710;~. ..,4 Ford F300 Vnn, P/B, drkgmw/beigelnt. P/P new. Make offer. $2850. ----"------( child) all 'or •en "'-'l 4921•"" M-'74"50SLC. 536·6862 o r eve s AM /FM stereo tape. '76 Runabout. 4 spd. 642-0138. ,, _.., ~ • 7 3 SE AR A Y 2 4 • Honda ~12S, mint cond. P/S, air cond .• auto . ....,. •"' "' <2l3>592<6023ZORAN ni. Cruise, much more! Top AM /FM stereo lGpe ---------rweekend e r . Galley, $490.Trailer.,3blke$225. t.ram. 5pa.ss,sprtscpe,lmmac. ~TS.""5tbS H B ma1nt. Honestly like S2400.Ph 492·7S28 • ~.,., .,. F\tl!y eqpt incl Cacl elec .-vn • _.., t. · · new. 49" ...,..., DUCK HUNTERS I We head, s-'m step m·m .........,,._ $3500. 646-2503 1975 IMW SlOi """"" ba ' Bl ... ' sod. Stereo cass, leath '76 VW Bno Coovert.Ible '75 Pinto. Low miles. Air in v~l~a~in~:Uv:J: ~·~FM. XJnt. •'75 ~a XR75. Lo ~~· '72 Ford V8, PS, PB, cust Arctic ~luc .with brown in t r . Sl 7, 5 00. PP red w/blk-top, AM/Fl'+i NEAR CLASSJC.'60 Chev cond, auto. xlnt cond. Calif. For info. Call Mr . · T&M pipe, S&W shoe~. inttt., spoke whls, AM· leather mt.enor. Sunroor. {714)640-9323 sttteo cassette 14 000 w agon. Good c ond. 548-6439,846.3().1 6 ........... e ca. -Attention boat lovers'· $.'m/bst ofr. 644-!i874 FM 8 tn, clean. 642·ZW9 automaUc 4c \n excellent · I ha ' .ua"" Needs mecb work. $200. ---------..,._ ........_ coodition. (S020789>. 1976 Mercedes 3000, nu. c ean s rp, ~· • ~!~ l S' ~hri ~ C~~ft '76Honda Xn75. Brand nu ~---w-.a...~ 9590 sU er drk bl int lo ded 6.1l.oo35 96G-JSS2 ~ 9960 cart.'-t C..-lftl ~a. senous mqwnes -.,.._ ONLY $9195 v ' ' a • , "-"bu Good ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1C lri J ~ki & ooly 544-9805 cond. ~/bat ofr. Must ••••• .. ••••• .. ••••••••• IOY CAIV-IMW xl7.!~nd $14,100. PP, '73 Bus, rblt. good Ures, 68Nemw...,r a'd ,. a I teinrgemsc .. '74 Gold Duster. Cull y u!wdr.o 1 c.raft eDtyna r1olla . · aeU.$41.7JM WIWl&.LIUY -....._ $1795 I d I ,,,.,, 'Tb T"' ... JMO Ja mboree Road · ,._ $600/ofr '94-3537 equ ppc • abso utely Tr-World Rec:,. 900 W. e , :-orou,1"bred ol 1973 Kawasaki 7$cc Mini· YOUI D.ATSUH NEW PO.RT BEACH '69 2IOSL. Wblte. Top ""'ll .f.94.2130 . perf ea $2850. 955-2689 eo..&Hwy .• NB.631-4880 :o•t•bb 1r Centu? Trail. Llke new $225. PAJOFORORNOT 64°"6444 abape, ff/T. SH50 .or '70VWVAN CAMPER '67CHEVEU.E,gdcond. 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. unt a du L. com p • '751-3896 TOPDOUAR hlghestofr.Nf.2136d19 Loadedt XJnt cood.. P/S, P/B, gd. thruout. W 9 P /S p Goll clubl!. 10 mat cbed res ore • l"O rmerl y POITOPCAIS ~ 9711 , MB 90 xl l $3000.Pb49-M600 $500 firm. 751.4203 af\ ag, pass., • /B, h oas It ;s wooda H S. owned b7 famous pilot . '73 Su1ukl TSUl5, $300. ..•••••••••• .. ••••••••• GO l: , nt n/out. 6PM Air, Gd. tires, trans. H,7U wooda S5 u . ~erttorbayor lsland MultSell.Goodcood. '73, V6', ••pd 49.art Xlot $4000.bestottcr. • '10 vw with It ..,3 Rblt Cooler. Air a hoc:ts, --n.m.SSS00.6'2·9224 CaU8'24181 cond. 1 Own er .' cau S7M863 motor. R cpt•. Good '68 4DrJmpaJa.Eitcellent Ira.tier hitch. CB Radio ... VYJl-&1utar--S-k-ls-.-O-'l'-.-J -r 1 ...... / '72 HONDA si,70, good &4M2S'Jor~. MG 974z CODd. Sl300CalJ64Z-4797 condition. Make ofter . Ind . Good Cond. $Uns. ·~ 170 Ca( '25-1 60 Qm... . tOSO con.d., muylltraa. Make '71 ....................... YalYo 9771 CaUMS-$035. _83t_-<8 __ . _____ _ CM 1'/bladloca $40 ........ -............... orrer.&t0-5"8, '1at•l 9l9 :TOP __.Co!,.ri· ~c eng. 4• '74 MU>d~ r.i, 27840 ....................... ~ ttzs 'lllmdetblrd 9970 •et•I d t t 1120 SE£ Tilt CHJUSTMAS s.,... ..-concL SllOO/best. ml, tonneau cov, moo. Olt.+MI COUNTY ........................ , ................... .. ______ e_e_c_o_r ___ •• ura. 38' l(.ttcll, t ?.S ~~~1:~o:l'~~c':C:: DOI.UR e'13,7!Ml ~Mon, Wed, Fri, t VOLVO ..,., Cont9va, fully CQ\llp. 'TS T·Blr d Loaded , .......__ ......... aitAllylftCldu1.~", withtqatkJt.G3.S-J4' PAID .,.._ 9720 646-5063 othcrdaya l!:.XCLVSIV!LYVOLVO 1000mi's. 24,000mt. mint cond., -;;" _. '"' ... W 9060 FOA CLl i\N ••••••••••••••••••••••• MGI t'7 44 Larcett Volvo Du tta' Catl IMS-3153 ~.SOO/ofr. 49M954 ................ , ...... " ....... -. .. •••••••••• t1Yamahti80 cbappyx\nl •DIJYIA * •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• in~CcNnt~I '71 l'fewport. Fully 1976 Thunderbird. Ca a t.om Mad e WAN'rUSUlTS7 :t· tm~~d~ *I ...... L. * 'aMGB GT, _.~w oalnt, 8~,~t; cqulpped..AM/FM. Very Loaded.Must .sell.$CSOO. dOWCASES. Solld ~= . -""1•1 11iii uPfd • Urce. Maio oC· dee.~3'948,963-99J9 675-2913 ....,.. ir•m wood. Sil .. ._..,w., s•v•• tor ,.r. Mu•t. ••1•. $2150.1-~f.~ c.n.... ''J2 ~.,. ,,.,4 • t,ne. S', '4'• no.-!•CHT•:..•-._,/SI•• tl60 ~,ozro•:~•v <21Uu>. ~ • ' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• platt top. Brau ... ~--:_ -·• ... ••••••••••••••• ., ... ..,,.. "'"" <( ll bJ=1 flll.ll/I :Oli P0R'l'S.caG5UlSt.t(.& ' '1SC«velt.e, 1ilvtt/ red 'H HATCH BA.CK ... ~ Jj!r i.o:: ~ S S. Min leS1l!t T·top. 4l,OOO mt, loadtd1 Manual, radi.,, ,ti. bit. pp...._ m•>fTUllU 1:;:s~~~7 Anaheim 760~ ~~offer. 7~2·732i ~~000 ml. $USO. .. : ·'· ~/I~·,..,, II uAf\U1' ft I ,' I ·~ l) I , '~ ---- . . . I D1•ntlngton Beach Fountain Valley ' EDITION 1\ t ernoon N.Y.StoekS ·\ VOL. 70, NO. 357, 4 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1977 TEN C~NTS ; .Sadat Prays for Peace, Fears -Fail11re ISMAILIA, Egypt CAP) - President Anwar Sadat con· ceded today that his Christmas Day sumhlil with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin could be a failure. But he prayed for peace al a mosque on lhe banks of the Suez Canal. Expectations are high in Egypt and Israel that the two leaders can lay the foundation lor fast-moving negotiations lhat will end the 29-year-old Middle East conflict. Israeli sources say Begin is bringing a new, sUll·secrel pro- posal Lo the summit that should slim ulale progress on the Palestinian issue. · 'll is a new plan and contains new thinking.'' the sources said. Israeli r adio, quoting in· formed sources In Cairo, said Begin might extend his stay in Jsmallia through Monday -it is scheduled Lo last only several hours -ii talks drag on. Israeli sources denied this was possible, however. Sadat's s pok esman, Saad Zaf'hloul Nassar. said plans call for nothing beyond Sunday eve· ning. But he added: If be wants to slay, why not?" Begin ouUined hls peace pro- posals in Jersualem today at a closed-door brie fing or the Israeli parliament's Foreign Af· fairs and Security Committee. Committee member Amnon Rubenstein, a member of lhe government coalition, said later Begin's pact makes "heavy con· cessions" but called it "a fair and reasonable plan.'' Afterward, members of parliament from his Llkud block and the allied Democratic Move· ment for Change met separately behind closed doors to hear out· lines -not full details -or Begin's proposals. It was r eport· ed that the two groups voted overwhelming ly to support Begin in his mission to Egypt. Mianll Beach Office Bo Jail Interv iew Hinshaw Hits Penal System .. O.lly .. 11 .. ~ .. INSISTS HE'S INNOCENT Ex-Congressman Hinshaw tro Privates ound After W3ek Trip HOUSTON CAP) -Two young rmy privates trapped for two eeks in a cargo ship's hull without food or water were in poor condition at a hospital to- .day. ship orricials said. An offic ial for Se a-Land Services Inc .• owner of the ship Economy, said Dennis Feathers, 17. of Memphis, Tenn., and Ran· dy Boutain. age and address un· known, stowed away in a large cargo container loaded into the hull of the ship, which sailed Jrom Rotterdam , The .N ethe.rland:>. "They were on the ship ap· proximately two weeks," Larry Wofford, Sea-Land terminal manager, said Thursday. "They had climbed into an em pty con· tainer and lhen held the door shut while it was being loaded. "When it was put below deck, th e door evidently became lodged against another con· ta in e r and they couldn 'l get out." Wofford said the ship is more than 900 feet long and can bold 733 containers each the size or a Jar gei ~1anl-trailer. FOOTBALL I 6>" ·1 ON .TV ~.TONIGHT TANGERINE SOWL Cha l'n•t 13, 8 p.m. f1ot1d9 ..... (9-2) yt. TeKMTec .. (7-4) Tbc Tao1erine Bow! letl a sour tMte with many fans wben both teams were 1elected on a day they lost bad ly. However, the teams 1t Umea this year have shown explosJvo ol· fen111. T•ch'I favorod. (Ta~ cwl.,s) SeeOdalll ....... Sed* By KATHY CLANCY OttM o.lty f'tlel ST~ Speaking from behind bars at Orange County J ail, former COO· gressman"""Andrew J . Hinshaw insisted in a television interview Thurdsday night that he is an in· nocent man. "I don't agree with the Cguil· . ly > verdict but I can accept it," Hinshaw said as he talked on KOCE·TV of the two 1976 convic· lions that landed him behind bars. The former Newport Beach Republican congressman was convicted of bribery charges and illegal use or his county.paid staff while he was county assessor in 1972. "We !ought a good fight and we lost.•• Hinshaw said. "I am sUIJ a believer in our criminal justi~e system." As he insisted h e was wrongfully convicted and the victim of alleged unfair treat· ment by the district attorney, Hinshaw s aved most of his words to criticize a penal system where he said "life is cheap" a nd in some instances the system causes ex-convicts to re· peat their crimes. Hinshaw, who recently was re· turned to Orange County Jail after spendin~ four months in stale prison at Chino, said one thing he will work lo increase is the $200 allowance given ·in· mates upon release. Fellow inmates told the one· time assessor one reason they repeat their crimes is that for $200 they are expected to leave prison, find a home, buy a car and get a job. "We need l o make s ure persons have more money when <See HINSHAW, Page A2> Valve Caused HB 'Noise' A roaring s ound h eard throughout southeastern Hunt· ington Beach Thursday evening apparently was caused by a safety valve at the Southern California Edison generating plant on Coast Highway, police said today. Edison Company orricials were not available today to verify lhe source oC the noise, which started about 5:30 p.m. and lasted about 10 minutes. However. police told callers that the release of the safety de· vice designed to prevent ex· plosions al the plant was lhe source of the noise. A column of steam billowing into the air above the generating plant ac· companied lhe noise. Sneak Thief Get,s Turkey The Grloch who s toic Christmas apparently came back for the yuletide turkey at one Huntington Beach home while the lady of the house wu momen\arily out of tbe kitchen Wednesday .. Police 1a1d Mn. D.H. Nelson, of Worcettttr Lant· j n t he central ~ sedor, w.s tla•.Snc lhe bird U1 the ltitcbtn 1ink wb«l a burl)ar tneaked tn toathow and splrtt4d it awa,y. l Jnv•tlcaton Hkl llf'l. Nelson told Lbem lbl WM lDclHd In the boGle the wMle Ume ln fiblcb tbe froien twitey van1shed. Where's tlae Action? A replica of a tricer~tops dinosaur looks ready for action as. wearing a University of Washington football helmet, it greets visiting members of the school's team Thursday. The encounter was part« the.- team's visit to Lion Country Safari in Irvine. Team members also toured the wildlife preserve and participated In a hippo pedal·boat relay race. Carter Agrees To Meet With Farmer Group Slaying Saspeets PLAINS, Ga. (AP) -Presi- dent Carter agreed today ·to meet with representatives of farmers blocking the main street of his home town with pickup trucks and tractors in a demonstratlon for higher prices. $4. 75 Million Cut In Bail Approved The meeting will be at 8 a.m. local time Saturday at the presi· dent's home. Carter telephoned one or the demonstrators, Harold Israel, a Plains farmer who is a personal friend, to sel up the meeting, said White House deputy press secretary Rex Granum. "He feels It's important - lhat they do have problems," Granum said. He said Carter invited Jsr~el to the meeting along with Georgia farm strike leader Tom· my Kersey of nearby Unadilla, a nd s trike l eaders from neighboring Alabama and Florida. . The Carmen drove their red, green and blue tractors to both en<ls of main street in downtown Phains this morning and parked them. They cleared the street. in (See FARM ERS, Page A2) Bail fo r Alexander and Elsie Kulik, who face a variety or state and federal charges stem· ming from the murder or Stephen John Bovan, was lowered by $4.75 million Thurs· day. The Kuliks appeared before federal Magistrate J . Edward Harris in San Diego Lo enter ln· oocent pleas Lo federal charges of possession or more than a pound or heroin. Bail on those charges, which were levied agalnsl the couple last week by a federal grand jury, was initially set al $2.5 million each. Thursday, over the protests of Assistant U.S. Attorney Siephen Nelson, Harris set Alexander Kulik's bail at $150,000 and hls wife's at $100,000. The Kuliks were arrested Dec. 14 in a Carlsbad area con· dominium which police said Kulik rented under an assumed name. Mrs. Kulik originally was Dot Cargo Massive Spill Stop• Traffic Traffic on the San Diego Preeway near lls lntersecUon with the Garden Grove Freeway came to a tbree-bour standstill Thursday afternoon when a freewbeelin1 south· bound truck spilled a mysterious aubltaoce onto tbe roadway. The ll'Uclc'• driver apparen~ either didb't lmow cl the splll or was willlne to write oil t,Lae l01s. So, be conttnued on hit journey without stoppin1. THAT LEFI' WGHWAY officials with the task ol de· termlning the identity of the red powdery aubltance that spilled across Lbe freeway for about thl'M<tatbl of a mlle. , Fearing the fout-appearfnC powdet ml1bt be a toi1e che mlcaJ, State Division pt ~11 pft'.ldall ordered nv. of tht freevJay's slx southbouDil W1M cloled dovm at 1:*> );>.... . Af;t'OaDltifG TO A CaUfoml a Hl•h••Y Patl'ol 1PtkMalln~ • p.m. ~bolmcl.traffte was becked up to Toi'TaMI • 20 mlles north at tbe spill. Tbm. it ~u learned tbe re4 powder wnn'\ toxic at aU1 e~. to tbole Who mleht be tempted to IOl'll . Uaem-.I~• &acot. bool<ed on a murder conspiracy w,_rrant which charged that she was one of eight people who planned the death of Bovan. Bovan, 36, of Fountain Valley. died Oct. 22 outside a Newport Beach restaurant. He was shot nine times. At the lime of their arrests, Kulik bad already been booked on the murder conspiracy charges and freed after posting bail. He was booked at the time or his wife's aJTest for harboring a fugitive. A subsequent search of t he home al the La Costa Country Club allegedly uncovered a cache of heroin. More than a pound or it was nearly pure oriental heroin, police claim. An additional half-pound of low· grade Mexican heroin was UD· covered. authorities alleged. The discovery of the narcotics led to a revision of the bail on which the couple were held , sending it to a total of $8.85 million for the state and federal damages. The Kuliks have both been transfer red to the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Dieg<?: T hey are slated to appear before federal Circuit Judge Leland Neilsen on Jan. 12 for a pretrial bearing on the riarcotics charees. Jn addition to that court date. the Kuliks are slated lo be in Orange County Superior Court oh J an.' Z) to face the murder conspiracy charges. Only ooe of the eight people named 1.n that conspiracy, Joeepb Fedorowski, remains at larae. ClJOD .FOKl'UNE . . 'ENDS $IDLY. GUAYAQUIL, Ec9:8dor (AP) -A d'd!J.iat, Carlos Quinto Oarcla, of a heart attack when told he blld won $112,000 In tbt Guayaqull Christmas lot· ....,., aatborttJel report.cl Tinin· c1a,. As Sadat emerged fr om today's prayers, he was asked if despite the euphoria the summit could fail. "Maybe, why not," Sadat replied. "Maybe, because there is, you see, a most important fact, this is that we shall be very candid, and we shaU be putting everything on the table, at least from my side. Anti-Red Group Blamed MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) - A powerful explosion rocked the office ol a Venezuelan airline on· Miami Beach's swank hotel row early today, gouging a cr ater in thick concrete and twisting heavy metal door frames like str ands of taffy. There were no reported in- juries, although chunks or twist· ed metal flew 72 feet across Co llin s Avenue where pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion hit a few minutes past midnight. ''It was lucky no one got hurt -there were pedestrians on the street ," said patrofman Pete Matthews. Windows were shattered 400 feet a way, police said. Damage was estimated a t $15,000 to $20,000 by an FBI agent who declined to give his name "We really don't know who did it '~ 11.e .Jlldded 'Netl'IJ 911 °bodrs latft, a man with a fieavy SpanJsh accent called the Miami bureau of The Associated Press and claimed reponsibility for the blast "The bomb that went orr on Mi ami Beach was set by the an- ti·Communlsl commando group E l Condor," the caller said. "We did it for our leader Orlando Bosch who is being held in Venezuela. If lhey don't release him by Christm as som ething bigger is going lo happen to the Venezuelan people." Bosch, a vehement anti-Castro Cuban exile, is being held by Venezuelan authorities in con· ncction with the bombing of a Cuba na Airlines plane that crashed off Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976, killing all 73 people aboard. El Condor and the Coordina· lion of United ' Revolutionary Orgainzations have claimed responsibility for lhe crash and several other bombing incidents, including the sinking or a Cuban • trawler in CallQo. P~rui in August. The apparent target or today's attack was the office of Vi asa Venezuelan International Airways situated between ticket offices of Delta and National Airlines in a complex of travel· oriented businesses. The explosive device was set at the rear door of the Vi asa of- fice in a cramped alley. The heavy, metal-plated commercial fire door was blasted from its hinges, the metal door frame twisted and shredded. A crater 18 inches across w~s gouged th r ough ·an eight-inch·thick layer of reinforced co~crete sidewalk. Co ast Weathe r Parlly clOudy and 10 pe rcent chance or rain tonight and Saturday. A little cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Hi ghs Saturday in 60s. INSIDE TODA 'Y After the hOliday r,uih, treat you11elf to a gift of tfme -one of the 24-hout getaways aug· gc1ttd on POiie Cl. la•ex: M 't-le'*-Aft All!!~ at ........ .. MellMI Cit-M LM..... M .._......... M .... _. »f Mttl_. ....... M ,OJ CANf4Wtd A• Or-.. OMllY Al a......... .,._,. ...._.. CM ~' CS l'ft~• ....,_ At 00..._. cs... .... ::r. .... .., ... ......_ .... ...... .. Tttfttt11111 • .. • ...,.,, ••• o.• ~ ~ ._..... ••.a-... :...."::.. :; =: .. -~..__.-__ _ -----=-----=--___ - ----= --• ,,, -~ 'f!"~ -~ -~ ;\: Fuula COiicel r.. Mai.I Search •I . ,, SALT LAKE CITY (AP) • High wm<b an4 deep snow ha"~ forced a ban· donment of a search for Christmas mail atrewn atop a mountain her e amid the wrecka&e or a United Airlines DC-81'"' car10 Jet. •''' Uni~ said the jet was carryln~ 1,200 pound1 ot Christmas mail and other cargo on a San Jl'r'ancis'co to Cbicaao run wh\m it crashed Sunday. Three. crewmen dled. ... "It's Just an lmPOss.ible area to work in up Utere," said Henry Kuebelbeck. postal supervisor in Salt Lake City. "The snow ls four feet deep. We 'd im~ pair lives, it's that bad." ·~··' II I C. ..... , E'ro•PageAl .. tlllNSHA W. • "\hey get out to see them through the transition." Hinshaw con- ··· tinued. The former congressman said he p lans to tulk t o s tale · legis lators to sec if the system can be remedied. "I would make every job On prison ) a r easonable job in terms of dollars," he explained. The man who in 1972 unseated m a v e rick Republican J'ohn .Schmitz from the congressional .seat he once held, said it was his · . prison-assigned job at Chino that led lo a racially insplt4d threat 1to his life. Hinshaw, saying be was t!'eal· •Hed by prison officials just the 1t•1same as fe llow inmates, ex· ·~rplained hill job W'&S keeping traok of bed assignment.Ir.· ,, , He and prison authorities were ·told that white in.mates threatened to kill him if any more blacks were admitted to a particular unit. . "Life is very cheap in prison,'' Hinshaw said. "Persons could be killed for a couple of cartons of cigarettes. "l learned very quickly that stabbings . ar~ the order of he day," he continued, adding that fellow inmates taught him "to stay alive is the challenge. , "You h ave lo .earn your ... respect in prison. J.f you. try to maintain that ~oQ are no better than anyone else. • ·.if rou abide •. 11 by the code .•.• · .)1011 .. wlll get. ; · along," he said. .,..,,...... Watergate fig ure J ohn D . "Ehrlicl\ma n leaves thl' Federal Pris on Camp at Safford. Ariz .. to begin a five- day furlough from prison for the holidays. Also home for . '.Chris tma<; will be fell~w conspkator H. R. Haldoman. · The tw,o-t,rai congreio4man aJ~o ~ad so_me b~i;s.~J~rt1J.or a 11, IT'ii " ~ •• "-' _,:orr. ~·Ji> 1 . ~ cnm~nalf ust{~~· ~i 'G. '\hat, ,. " .. Pl . ~ . 1Nj 80J •. perm1~ , e dJ~. ~t a ~8 Y to . . He8$1\ec Nlc:boh• ·• invesll~ and r~ecute, then . take part m senl~nc\f\& proceed· in gs. , • Hinshaw's concurrerlf one lo 10-year sentences recently were reduced to four rpore ~onths by Orange County . Superior Court Judge Robe rt Kneel.tind, who also plaC'ed the former elected offici al on a work furlough pro- gram. Du ring those proceedings . · D e puty Distr ict Attorney Michael Capizzi argued against a reduced sentence. .. . Hinshaw said the district at- torney "should be a· gracious·. , . loser as he had been a winner." , . Hinshaw when released from (~,;ail in AS?fil ~ll ~$, ~~lng up the pieces ot '1n ordeal he. said has cost him a lfalf;mUlion · .. dollars "plus the hltanglbles." · He said it is •most likely that he will become involved in his brother's lamp manufacturing business. .BB Burglar Gets RECENT PHOTOGRAPH Heather Nichols '' be S>eople at Triad ••ve Heetber • better Ufe than 1he could ever have had without them," tald Mrs. Nicholl. In Mesa Teen Jogger Hit by Bike SAN DIEGO (AP) -The body of the ninth apparent suicide off the San Diego-Coronado Bay Bridge this year was recovered Thursday. .. . .. .. . . .. . , AN ; ... ,-,.,.~. :: . HUMPfff)EY. VP MONDALE ARRIVE IN MINNESOTA , ... '1 ~ C?-rrles On Despite Inoperable Cancer -, . HHH Undeterred by Caneer WAVERLY, Minn. <AP > ''I'm not resigning from anything. I ma~ even jpin something,~ was Hubert H. Hum- phre:Y':s Tesponse whe.. asked whether ne plani to resign from the U.S. Senate because of his inoperable cancer. The Minnesota Democrat, who arrived home Thursday, said he planned to be.back in Washington wilhin 10 ~ays. The fbur Humpb.rey children ·ac'ld their to children are. ex· peeled to joln Humphrey and his wife, Muriel, at Waverly on Christmas Day. "We're going to have home movies, give the kids a chance to see their Pl!....r"entS'when they were'kids:" t\e said, • • " Ke addeQ, Ohutkling, "These 're·the movies that used to bOre the living daylights out of mY.. friends." . . , , ~ i '.J '"'\ ft lf I l . . Pftit-:·=Fr.Om ·New.p9ri . . Sought in Slaying Murder warrants have been They found one man. Ronald issued for a Newport Beach cou-Rose, 28, of West Covina, beside pie charged with shooting two the truck with bums over 45 per. men and leaving them in a burn-cent of his body and five bullet ing truck near Chowchilla woundsinhisabdomen. earlier this month. The two deputies were driven A spokescnan foe the Madera away from the truck by the CountySheriff'sDeparlmentsaid rtamea a nd were unable to S~a.(on L~":". Colman, lW,, ~d fies.c ue Rose's compapi'?Jl• later !!:~~ m'1=!7oi9!fh~t~: ,; · lr~~~:;t.8r:u~e .. ~~Ulls. 28, Dec. 7 inci<jent in which onf vic- ti~~iecJ. ;.-;Ji j Investigators said they believe AOcMdin-g .Mt ,.~--"&fiefiff's ~"the two men me& Mis9' Cotman spok.esman, two patrRPi.n$ dep-·and :Ph1Jlips earlier in Southern . uties spotted a pickup-truck in CaliJomJa. They believe robbery names parked beside · Highway was the motive behind the shoot-99 south of Chowchilla. ings. Guard Saves Woman From Irvine Rape An Irvine Ranch security dep- uty, routinely patrolling Orange groves early today gave a Westminster woman· tl\e chance to escape bet' wourd-l1e. raphlt . The Wtegt!d 8bduMtlf1wKb-con· fronttid ·her ·at' knlfet>C>intr-in her apattment cOtnJ>l•x' parking lot about 11· p.m. sped away in his ear in the confusion as the r anch guard comforted the hysterical 22-yeat'·old department store clerk. Orange County Sheriff's dep· uties alerted by radio spotted the vehicle in the TusUn area and went into a high epeed pursuit which ended when the driver lost control and swrn out. S b e riff 'a deput y Lan in Grossochme "'.as credited with the capture of James R. Gega. 2l, of Perris, who was '11 custody , ot Orange County Jeil l<>day on a , 'V1u«ety ·or eh;u:l?J!s •pending the ·iss1,1i.,g· of formol compl"ints by ..the ()range County District Al· torney's office. Cbarges ~o be sought were ex· peeled to include kidnapping and attempted rape, according to police. The unidentified Irvine ranch guard was patrolling the ora.i:ige gr ove in the area of Irvine Boulevard and Trabuco Road near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station when he spotted the sus· pect's car and shined bis light into the vehicle. OLD·f ~HIONm G.REETING · A TIMUESS WISH • MERRY CHRISTMAS A~D HAPPINESS · IN Tiit ·i'NEW YEAR . .. # • I t . . • COSTA MESA. CALIP. 92627 • PHONE 6 .. 6.,838 -6 .. 6·23SS Irvine EDITION Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks VOL 70, NO. 357, 4 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1977 TEN CENTS, Sadat Prays for Peace, Fears Fail11re. ISMAILIA, Egypt (AP) - President Anwar Sadat con- ceded today that hla Christmas Day summit with Israeli Prime Minister Menabem Begin could be a failure. But he prayed for peace at a mosque on the banks of the Suez Canal. Expectations are high in Egypt and Israel that lbe two leaders can lay the foundation for faat·movlng ne1otlati°"s that will end the 29-year-old Mlddle East conflict. Israeli sources say Begin is bringing a new, atill·aecret pro- posal to ~ summit that s hould stimulate progress on the Palestinian Issue. •'It is a new plan and contains new thinking," the sources said. Israeli radio, quoting in· formed sources ln Cairo.· sald Begin might extend his stay in lsmailia through Monday -it is scheduled to last only several hours -if talks drag on. Israeli sources derued lhis was possible, however. Sadat's spokes m an , Saad Zafhloul Nassar. said plans call for nothing beyond Sunday eve· ning. But be added: 1f he wants to stay, why not?" Begin ouWned bis peace .pro- posals in Jersualem today at a closed-door briefing of the Israeli parliament's Foreign Af. fairs and Security Committee. Committee member Amnon Rubenstein, a member or the government coalition, said later Begin's pact makes "heavy con- cessions" but called it "a raJr and reasonable plan." Afterward, members of parliament from his Llkud block and the allied Democratic Move- ment ror Change met separately behind closed doors to bear out- lines -not full details -of Begin's proposals. It was report· ed that the two groups voted overwhelmingly to support Begin in his mission to Egypt. Miami Beach Office Bo .Jail lntermeu, Hinshaw Hits Penal System By KATKY CLANCY Of Ille Dally Pl ... St•fl Speaking from behind bars at Orange County Jail, former con· gressman Andrew J . Hinshaw insisted in a television interview Thursday njght that he is an in· nocent man. "I don't agree with the (guil- . ty > verdict but J can accept it," ' Hinshaw said as he talked on KOCE·TV of the two 1976 convic· lions that landed him behind bars. The former Newport Beach Republican congressman was convicted of bribery charges and illegal use of bis county-paid staff while he was county assessor in 1972. R'laere's the Action? O.llyl'llet ...... INSISTS HE'S INNOCENT Ex-Congressman Hinshaw Council Eyes 'Skateboard Fence Plan · A compromise plan to fence off the University Park . skateboard course in Irvine to avoid a homeowners' lawsuit seeking to close it would cost taxpayers $19,845, if the City Council agrees. That's what it will cost, aC·· cording to Assistant City Mana·ger Paul Brady Jr. 's estimate, to: -Build a 335-foot masonry wall eight feet high between the skateboard course and the Parkcrest Community Associa· tion property line ($11,600). -Plant landscaping between the wall and the property line ($7,200 ). -Pay for s taff engineering and s upervision ($940). -Amend posted rules and re- -Amend posted rules and reg. ulations signs to include a pro- in or around the course ($105). City administration and the homeowners already have agreed to the plan. Brady said. It will be submitted for approval by the councU next month. Brady sald the plan la less ex· pensive than pnvi~ proposals to relocate the course away from the Parkcrest homes, (See FENCE, Page A.%) FOOTBALL lgJ • "ONTV' TONIGHT TANGERINE BOWL Chennee 13, e'p.m. Fbtda ..... (W) va. T• .... Tectt C7-'> The Tangerine Bowl left a sour taste wfth many fua when both teams were selected on a day they lost badly. However, the teams at Umes thil year have abown expto.l•t ot. fenaea. Teeh'• favored. CI'ape del_,> See Dltalll • I .. ~e.dlla "We fought a good right and we lost." Hinshaw said. "I am still a believer in our criminal jusUce systeui.'' Aa be insisted he was. wrongfully convicted and the victim of alleged unfair treat· ment by I.be district attorney, Hinshaw Aved most of his words to criticize a penal system where be sald "life is cheap" and In some instances the system causes ex·convicta tQ re- peat their crimes. Hinshaw, who recently was re- turned to Orange County Jail after spendiJur four months in state prison al Chino, sald one thing be will work to increase is the $200 allowance given in· mates upon release. Fellow inmates told the one- time assessor one reason they. repeat their crimes is that for $200 they are expected to leave prison, flnd a home, buy a car and get a job. "We need to make sure persons have more money when they get out lo see them through the transition," Hinshaw con· tinued. · The former congressman said. he plans to talk to state legislators to see if the system can be remedied. "l would make every job (in prison) a r easonable job in terms of dollars," he explained. <See HINSHAW, Page A2) Long Struggle Ends in Death ForLagun~ By ANNE COOPER Ol IM o.lly ""' S4Mf Funeral services were planned today in Laguna Beach . for Heat.her Lea Nichols, who was known in the communlty for her valiant 12·year struggle to overcome critical Injuries she aulf ered ·in a car crash as a popular, pretty high school senior. M 111 Ntchols &Mll\ed to have everytlalng golng for her ln hiCb 1chool, her mother said. She was nmed 1 homecominc princess tn her senior year and.was look- in1 ·forward to a career a.a a fashion model. But on March, 27, 1965, when 1b1 anct a girlfriend were out for • dnve, t6elr car careened. out of control and crubed into an embukmeDt on Pacific Cout HJ1hway nMr Lacuna NiSUel. The (IUM ol the accldeat was never detennlnel. Doctor• al Uoac Hotpl~!J where U.. eriUeally lnJuncl pn wa1 lraufer,.d trom Seutb Co11l ROipUal, 141fl Ille bad auf· 1..-.d ....... -...;4amue and. would .,.... NCOter. Har n.ck <BMDA~P ... AJ> A replica of a triceratops dinosaur looks ready for action as, wearing a University of Washington football helmet , it greets visiting members of the school's team Thursday. The encounter was part of the team's visit to Lion Country Safari in Irvine. Team members also toured the wildlife preserve and participated in a hippo pedal-boat relay race. <Related story, Page B4> Guard Saves Woman From Irvine Rape An Irvine Ranch security dep- uty routinely patrolling Orange · groves early today gave a Westminster woman the chance to escape her would·be rapist. The alleged abductor who con· fronted her at knifepoint in her apartment complex parking Jot about 11 p.m. sped away in his car in the confusion as the ranch guard comforted the hysterical 22.year·old department store clerk. Orange County Sheriff's dep. uties alerted by radio spotted the vehicle in the Tustin area and went into a high speed pursuit which ended when the driver lost control and spun out. Sheriff's deputy L,anin Grossoehme was credited with the capture of James R. Gega, 21, or Perris, who was in custody at Orange County Jail today on a variety of charges pending the issuing or formal complaints by the Orange County District At- torney's office. Charges to be sought were ex· peeled to include kidn appin~ and attempted rape, according to police. The unidentified Irvine ranch guard was patrolling the orange grove in the area or Irvint: Boulevard and Trabuco Road• near El Toro Marine Corps Air .Station when he spotted the sus· pect's car and shined his light into the vehicle. . Investigators said the sudden distraction enabled the naked woman to wrestle free and escape. Young Fire Victims Buried DETROIT (AP) -"ln all my 25 years of pastoring, this is the saddest thing I have ever been ·through,.. said Brother David Tarrance as he addressed the small congtegation at the Church of God in Prophecy. Five small white caskets, closed and bound with red rib- bons, were at the front of the church for Thursday's service. Dot (;argo Massive Spill Stops Traffic Traffic on the San Diego Freeway near its lntenecUoo with the Garden Grove Freeway came to a three-hour standstill Thursday afternoon when a freewheeling south· bound truck spilled a mysterious substance onto Uie roadway. The truck's driver apparently either didn't know ol the splll or wu willing to write off the loss. So, be cooUnued on bis journey without stopping. • THAT LEFT WGHWAY officials with the tuk of d~ termlning the identity or the red p<>wdery substance that spilled across the freeway for about three-tenths of a mUe. Fearing the foul·appearlng powder mt1ht be • toxic chemical. State Division of Highway otriciaJs ordered trve of the freew_,•a six southbound lanes cloced down at 1:30 pm. ACCORDING TO A Callfornla Hlghwa1 Patrol 1poke1man, by' p.m. southbound traffic was backed up U, Torranee about 20 mUea north of tM aplll. Then, lt waa learned the red powder wasn't toxic at all, except to those who miSht be tempted to 1or1e themselves on tacos. THE D8EADED BED subltanee that tned motortafa• patience for more than three bom'I Wd1 after all, nGtbinl mon barmtW than di')' taco 11uce -~the of a mJle of dry tacouuce . Bail Reduced For Two Held In Slaying Bail for Alexander and Elsie Kulik, who face a variety of state and federal charges stem· ming from the murder of Stephen John Bovan, was lowered by $4.75 million Thurs· day. The Kuliks appeared before federal Magistrate J . Edward Harris in San Diego to enter In· nocent pleas to federal charges of possession of more than a pound of heroin. Bail on those charges, which were levied against the couple last week by a federal grand jury, was initially set at $2.5 million each. Thursday, over the protests of Assistant U. S. Attorney Stephen Nelson, Harris set Alexander Kulik's ball at $150,000 and bJs wife's at $100,000. The Kuliks were arrested Dec. 14 in a Carlsbad area con- dominium which police said Kulik rented under an assumed name. Mrs. Kulik originally was booked on a murder conspiracy warrant which charged that sbe was one of eight people who planned the death of Bovan. Bovan, 36, or Fountain Valley. died Oct. 22 outside a Newport Beach restaurant. He was -shot nine limes. · At the time of their arrests, Kulik bad already been booked on the murder conspiracy charges and freed after posting ball. He,was booked at the time of his wife's arrest for harboring a fugitive. A subsequent search ot the home at the La Costa Country Club allegedly uncovered a cache ~ heroin. More than a pound of it was nearly pure ori~ntal heroin, police claim. An additional halt-pound of low. grade Mexican heroin was un- covered, authorities alleged. The dlscovery of the narcotics led to a revision of the ball on wblcb tbe coupl• .were held, aendln« tt to a total of t8.85 mUllon for the state and federal dam ares. The Kulllts h•ve botb been transferred to tbo rede'ral Metropolitan CorwtctJonal Center in Saa °"910. . Tbey are slated to appear before federal Circuit Jud1• Leland Nellserl on Jan. l2 for a pretrial beariq on the narcoUca • . (SeeMIL.P .. •AJ) As Sadat emerged from today's prayers, he was asked if despite the euphoria lbe summlt could fail. .. Maybe, why not," Sadat replied. "Maybe, because there is, you see, a ma,,t important fact, this is that we shall be very candid, and we shall be putllJlg everything on the table, at least from my side. Anti-Red Group Blamed MIAMI JEACH. Fla. <AP) - A powerful explosion rocked the . office of a Venetuelan airline on · Miami Beacb'a awak &otel row early today, gouging a crater in thick con.crete and twisting heavy metal door frames like strands of taffy. Tbere were no reported in· juries, although chunks of twist· ed metal flew 72 feet across Collins Avenue where pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion bit a few minutes past midnight. "It was lucky no one got hurt -there were pedestrians on the street," said patrolman Pete Matthews. Windows were shattered 400 ·feet away, police said. Damage was estimated at $15,000 to $20,000 by an FBl agent who declined to give his name "We really don't know who did it, .. he added. Nearly six hours later, a man with a heavy Spanish accent called 1he Miaml bureau of The Associated Press and claimed repons1bilit:y for the blast. "The bomb that went of! on Miami Beach was set by the an- ti-Commlmi.st commando group El Condor," the caller said. "We did it for our leader Orlando Bosch who is being held .in - Venezuela. H they don't release him by Christmas something bigger is eoing to happen to the Veneaielan people." . Bosch. a vehement anU·Castro Cuban' exile, is being held by Venezuelan authorities in con· nection with the bombing of a Cubana Airlines plane that crashed off Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976, killing all 78 people aboard. El Condor and the Coordina- tion of United Revolutionary Orgainutions have claimed responsibility for the crash and several other bombing incidents, including the sinking of a Cuban trawler in Ca)IAo, Peru, in August. The apparent target 01 today's attack was the office of · Viasa Venezuelan International Airways situated between ticket offices of Delta and National Airlines in a complex of travel- oriented businesses. The explosive device was set at the rear door of the Viasa of· fice in a cramped alley. The heavy. metal· plated commercial fire door was blasted from its hinges, the metal door frame twisted and shredded. A crater 18 inches across wa_~ gouged through an eigbt-ioch-tbkk layer or reinforced concrete sidewalk. Coast Weather Partly cloudy and 10 percent chance or rain tonight and Saturday. A little cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. High5 Saturday in 60s. ~~-------------------- I •. J>l.AJMS. Oa CAP> -Prest· de11l Carter agreed today to meet with representall ves fill ·farmers blocking the m ain • 1l11eet of his home town with · · pktup trucks and tractors in a · · demonstration for higher prices • The mooting wlll be lit. 8 a.m. 1 l~al lime Saturday at the presi· dent's home. •I : ' Carter telephoned .one of the · demonstratore, Harold Israel, a ' 'Plains farmer who is a personal PICTURED IN 1965 Heather Nichols RECENT PHOTOGRAPH Heather Nichols friend~ to Ht up Ute 01.,unf, .said Whitt ff°'* 4ePutJ Prell secretary Rex Granum. "He feels It's Important that they do have problems," Graniim said. He aald Carter invited Israel to the meeting a long with Georgia farm strike leader Tom- my Kersey of nearby. Unadma. and strike Jeadera from n eighboring Ala bama and Florida. The farmers drove their 'red, p .. md ~HAJ'MLon to both •ell el ma&ia ati'..t In downtowl:l Plalm WI menalnl and parked tbtm1•Tbey•l•ar.t theatre« In front or the town's row of stores · for a rally. testers who 1athered ln the iowntowa vea • .. w .. dldh't Ullnk It would be appropriate that he go to the demonstration," Gran um said. "Solely because there is a de· mons tratlon, that does not They wanted Carter to cllmb necessarily mean that he needs lo onto a fl atbed truck outfitted · ioandaddresslbe protesters. with a microphone and "He has on a n1npber of OC· loudspeakers and speak to the -.CJl.s.ions expresse4. hts CQSl~ de monstrator• -or tb meet al)oi.it the Carai. protdem," • ·W itb a •mat!' dele•atton Granum added. , representing the' scores of pro-At Sal\lrday"I' m eettog, E',.._PageAJ Granum sald,1 '*be_ ptesideht will. "once agatn 'oGUJa• wbat.. tht Carter admintitiitloa bu done already this year le>~ and help the farmers." HEATHER SUCCUMBS. • • Jn a tele1ram Wednesda~ to a farm wife, Mrs. Estoo LUke of Baxley, Ga., Carter said he .has increased farm loan levels and target prices in the 1977 farm bill paased by Congresa, established farmer-owned grain reserves. ijnked income support levels to the cost of production, and pro- vided $479 million in emerfency drought loans. • wa s broken, leaving her paralyi:ed. Nearly two months alter the accident, Miss Nichols remained in a coma, but her mother. a former Army nurse, decided lo bring her home. "They said she would never come out of the coma. but I Just couldn't allow her to lie there in a hospital.'' Mrs. Nichola said. Nurses attended the Inert girl around the clock at the Nichois·• home, 2120 Temple Hills Drive. Some time after the accident -Mrs. Nichols said she isn'l sure when -he r daughte r began to respond, watching her mother move around the room. In 1974 the family began an in· tense program of patterning ex- erciaes with Miss Nichols, work- ing 12 hours a day to Impress on her damaged brain movements of the body. Many members of the South Coast community came to know He a th er Nie ho ls as they participated as volunteers to help with the rigorous training program. In time Miss Nichols crawled and talked and even walked with assistance. It was the family's dream that she would one day walk on her own. On Tuesday Miss Nichols, now 30, had finished her lunch and was in her wheelchair, when she began to choke. Paramedics were called and. worked fran- , t~lally lo try to get 6et bteatlllng again, her mother said. She was taken by ambulance -to South Coast Comjnui\ity )iosgltal in Soµth Lfgun•. wflere she died. Today's funeral services were al St. ft{ary 's Episcopal Church, wilb the R eve r e nd Brad Karelius officiating. Burial was to be at Melrose Abbey Cemetery in Anaheim. McCormick Mortuary made funeral arrange- ments. · Miss Nichol& is Hrvived b~ her m other, Florence Nlchou. or the family home; by a sister,· Holly PetUt or Laauna Beach; an aunt and two uncles. . ''Her high school friends scat· tered over the· years," Mrs. Nichols said, ''but th'ey would ·drop by from time to time. There were a few who always stayed in toucb. One 1ood friend was cbmlna botne for Christmas and missed seeing Heather by just a few hours .... · M rs. Nic hols asked that memorial donations be made to Triad Consultants, Neurolo~ical Rehabilitation, P .O. Bo~ 156, Willow Grove, Pa. 19090. .. The people at Triad ·gave Heather a better llJe than she could ever have had without them," said Mrs. Nichols. During today's demonatration, farmen paraded tractors into town by the score and park~ them along the state highway through Plains, slowjng traffic. Many tractors and the pickup trucks behind them bore signs such as: "To hell with foreign policy. SuPport the farmer." Carter on Thursday warned striking farmers that thelr pro· test could lead to a backlash Crom the public. l Killed, 1 Hurl In HeQil,.on Crash " A Sa"nta ·Ana woman was killed and a Costa Mesa woman injured when their cue collided head·on ThurJday in front of Estancia H.igb School, Costa Mesa police said today. It was the fifth tramc fatality i~ .Costa Me~ 'lit.Nu . ~ eight-~Ay period. . Dead on arrival at Costa Mesa · Ml'morial Hosp\td.l . Tbur.:rday was~SylviA Rita Rbtnero: 2d, or Santa Ana. The other driver, Joan Williamson, 19, of ..2083 •Mandarin DritJe, Cos\a •Mesa, was listed in stable condition with cuts and bruises today al the same hospital. Police Inves tigator . Dave Walker said the accident oc· curred at 4:55 p.m. He said that. according t o witnesses, the Romero car swened SIJddenly in front otU. Williamson c:ar. car, Walker said. Investigation into the fatal ac· ciden~ on Placentia Avenue is continuing .. The accident came during a period Costa Mesa traffic of· ficers , have described as "the bloodiest ever" in the city. A total of 12 traffic accidents, in· volving four deaths and injuries to 28 ' others, were reported between Dec. 14 and 21. Police Lt. John Regan said at least half the accidents were re- lated to drinking. Two people. were killed and a third injured in a three-car col- lision Dec.. 15 on the Victoria Street bridge over the Santa Ana River, which divides ~ta Mesa from HwlUngton Beach. Fro•Page Al ......... HUMPHR!Y, VP "'ONDALE ARRIVE IN MINNISOTA Senator Carr1•• On Deaptte Inoperable Cencer Qy~iveUp?· -IHIH Undeterred by Cancer WAVERLY, Minn. (AP) -.. I'm not !"eSiPinl from anything. I may e ven join something," was Hubert H. Hum- phrey's response when asked whether he plans .lO reslp from the U.S. Senate because o( his inoperable cancer. The Minnesota Democrat, who •rrived home Tbunday, said he planned to t>tt back in Washingtonili'thin 10 days. The four Bumphtey children and .Uae ~· fhildren are ~x­ pected to join Humphrey and b1a wUe, unel, al W-averlJ CIO Christmas Day. · "We're going to have home movies, gtye Ute tlds a chance to see their parents.when they werektds,": he said. . He added, chuckling, "These are the movies that used to bore the living dayli&hts out ot my friends~" '-~~~~~-----.--------~.~~--~.--~--------__,. ... .. .. Pair From N~w.port . Sought in Slaying Murder warrants have been issued for a Newport Beach cou- ple charged .with shc><;>ling two men and leavmg them an a bum·· ing truck near Chowchilla earlier this month. A spokesman for the Madera County Sheriff's Department said Sharon Lynn Colman, 19, and Richard Phillips, 28, are being sougbt ·in connection wlth the Dec. 7 incident in which one vie· lim died. According to tbe s he r iff's spokesman, two patrolling dep- uties spotted a = .\i;ucJ< ln names parked !iflbWay 99 south 'of Cho\ft!ftfta ..... -.. the truck with bUJ1ll over U per• cent or his body and five bullet woundsinhia abdomen. The two deputies were driven away from the truck by the flames and were unable to rescue Rose's companion, later identified as Bruce Bartulla, 28, 6l Clanunoot. lavatigatora said they beUne the two men met Min ~­and Phillips earlier in Southern Call!omia. They believe robber7 . was the motive behind tbe ~ • ings. .. lnNS H AW iNTERVIEW. • • The dead woman was ejected from her Volkswagen and ap- parently nm over by the .other Last SunditY morning, two pedest.riaps were killed and a U\,ird ~<lWllY lnJ1,1red ·on 17th Street when hit by a car, which then fled the scene. A suspect .:.t>'as laier~rrel!\.00· They found one man. Ronald Rose, 28, of West Covina, beside Wmds Cancel Mail Search The man who in 1972 unseated maverick Republican John Schmitz from the congressional · seal he once held, said it was his .,. prison·assigned job at Chino that · led to a racially inspired threat · · to his life. Hinshaw, saying he was treat- . ed by prison officials just the same as fellow inmates, ex· , plained his job was keeping track of bed assignments. He and prison authorities were told t h at white inmates threatened to kill him if any more blacks were admitted to a . particular unit. ;:. "Llfe is very cheaR in prison,·· Hinshaw said. "Persons could be killed for a couple of cartons . or cigarettes. "l learned very quickly that stabbings a re the order or he day," he continued, adding that fellow inmates taught h.im "to stay alive is the ch allenge. ''You have to earn your respect in prison. If you try to maintain that you are no better th11n anyone ehle .. ~.If you abide )·by the code .•. you will get "along," he said. ~ The two-term cong ressman I also had some barsi. wor,<ls lRt-• crimlhal jusUce sysi,.m-ttt-at permiti the d1Bttict sttQrney to ~ investigate and prosecu1e, then r take part in sentencina t>roceect: hogs. · • -i Hinshaw•s concurrent one to 110.year sentences recently were 1 ...... -.. ' 'i ti.Or-C.d o.tl'f ::i:::-···-· ' _u. ... -...-...... "'"-°'-1. °'""-'"""'~~-... ~ =~~.:=...... ... ~ I ttl" V•lln. H.,I ... , .... ~=='~¥ ... "-..... ,...,...CoM111.A _,. -.. -·---'""' .. " ""' t ,,_,.,., _.,,,~.....:-~~Wltl ... ...... c:.......... ... ........... .., .... ,-..__ ... ._~. ~'" ...................... _._. DAILY PILOT reduced to four more months by Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland, who also placed the former elected official on a work furlough pro-gram. $10,000 for Lost Dog During those proceedings Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizzi argued again.st a reduced sentence. ·San .Francisco Couple Want 'Ki fler' Back Hinshaw said the district at- torney "should be a gracious Joser as he had beeir a Winner ... Hinshaw when released from jail in April will begin plckine up the piecea ol an ord~al be said has cost him a balf-mllllon dollars "plus the intan·rtbles." He said it is most likely that he will become involved in his brother's Jamp manufacturing business. E'roa Page AJ SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -For a San Fl"ancisco cou.pl e. Christmas won't be the aame without Killer -a mis3ing mutt who has prompted the offering of a $10,000 reward. The 4·year-old-mixed breed dog has been miss1ng since June. Two weeks ago, the couple ran an ad in many California daily newspapers offering the reward. The wife, who. uks that -she and her attorney husband not be named for fear someone might steal another of .Uielr three dogs for ransom, says she became especially attached to BAIL · Killer dUrlnJ her emottoul re- • • • covery from the deatb of her on· charges. · · ly child, a 19-month-old s0n. In addit1onTOUiat court "daie7°'~othlnt"etse the)'~ha~ '*1'1~ the ·Kµliks are slated. to be in· has tu med up 1Ciller -n.ot '\'kits Orange County Supe'J."fot C-0\ltt to psych1ca, not .new_p,~r ~· on Jan. 23 to .f~e tlie ~niurdlf' ' pol houn spent walldne tity coDJpiracy cbari~ ~, . , _ •blocka lih and easewh~e, fiSk· _ •. • ~.. _ lnK chlldttm~ If .. they've l!Jeett a ·Only one of the eight ·pqle Germ• ~llvnt t.YPe dog '¥th · ,na111ed in that conapiracy, a frleP<!ly lace aJ\d ·ao t•er Jos~ Fedorowskl, rema.lna at "pet m•" le!M-• · • ', . 1&tb.J· Arter four ,ears of finding bomes for-1JHedoned docs and' Police allege that the Kuliks, call, • WU.,_.._. bas cl~ed Fedorwoski and therr two busi· "'"A Jot~ ~leaay. 'It's~ust ness partners, ·:Roy• Christopher Richard and Joeeph Davis Ill, hired three Huntington ·Beach men to kidnap and kill Bovan in retaliation for an earlier kidoaJ>- ping of Kulik by Bovan. • -· -.. _ . t . , i . . . O/fittr, StoR .. , • , a dog .. Go out and get another one.' But it's like a kidnapped child." she saJd. down a non-profit service she ran single-handedly after she rescued puppy Killer from under a house. "Emotionally, l can't get myself together to do any work for animals. I have no desire to continue without him," she said. She wied to rmd homes for some 509 dogs and cats a year, but now spends her lim e searching for Killer. "My b1,15band and I are both distrausht. Our lives havt! not been the same since he left. And • f • • ... : 'AN I have plenty of dogs. But Killer was very meaningful. He was the beginning," she added. Killer helped her recover, she says, from her child's death in April 1974 from Tay-Sachs dls· ease, a rare affllctton that paralyzes and results in early death. "To ha1'e a child with a term in al problem and see him die, then go out and try to save llves because you couldn't save your own child's, then to have a healthy animal taken away from you -they might as well have killed the animal in front of me," she said. • ... OLD-FASHIONED G'.REETING · A TIMELESS WISH • • • I .MERRY· CHRISTMAS~ AND HAPPINESS IN THE .. NEW YEAR • COST A M!SA, CAllf. ''6117 • SALT LAKE CITY (AP> -Rigb winch and deep snow have forced aban- donment of a search fo r Chris tmas mall 1trewo atop a mountain here am Id the wreckage of a United Alrllnea DC·8F cargo jet. United said the jet was carrying 1,200 pounds of Christmas mail and other cargo on a San Frandsco to Chicago nm when 1t crashed Sunday. Tbre~ crewmen died. "It's just an Impossible area to work in up there," said Henry Kuebelbeck. postal supervisor in Salt Late City. "The snow ls ur feet deep. We'd im- p r lives, it'1 lbat bad." ' - L_ag11na/ South Coast Afternoon N.Y . S'oeks VOL. 70, NO. 357, 4 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES Sadat Prays lSMAILIA, Egypt (AP) - President Anwar Sadat con· ceded today that his Christmas Day summit with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin could be a failure. But he prayed for peace at a mosque on the banks of the Suez Canal. Expectations are high in Egypt and Israel that the two leaders can lay the foundation for fast-moving negotiations that will end the 29-year-old Middle East conflict. Israeli sources say Begin is bringing a new, still-secret pro- posal to the summit that should s timulate progress on the Palestinian issue. · · u is a new plan and contains new thinking," the sources said. Is raeli radio, quoting in· ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1977 TEN CENT~ 1 for Peace, Fears Fail11re formed sources in Cairo,· said Begin might extend his stay in lsmailla through Monday -it is scheduled t.o last only several hours -if talks drag on. Israeli sources denied this was possible, however. Sadat's s pokes man, Saad ZarhlouJ Nru;sar. said plans call for nothing beyond Sunday eve- ning. But he added : Ir he wants to stay, why not ?" Begin outlined his peace pro- posals in J ersualem today at a closed-door briefing ot the Israeli parliament's Foreign Af· fairs and Security Cbmmlttee. Committee member Amnon Rubenstein. a member of the government coalition, said later Begin's pa~ makes "heavy COO· cessions" but called it "a fair and reasonable plan." Afterward , members of parliament from his Likud block and the allied Democratic Move- ment for Change met separately behind closed doors to hear out- lines -not full details -of Begin's proposals. It was report- ed that the two groups voted overwhelmingly to support Begin in his mission to Egypt. As Sadat emerged from today's prayers, he was asked if despite the euphoria the summit could Cail. "Maybe, why not," Sadat replied. "Maybe, because there is, you see, a most important fact, this is that we shall be very candid, and we shall be pulling everything on the table, at least from my side. Miami Beach Office Bo Jail lntervieae Hinshaw Hits Penal System l I I ' Dally~ .... ~ INSISTS HE'S INNOCENT Ex-Congressman Hinshaw jBail R educed f~r Two Held :In Slaying Bail for Alexander and Elsie Kulik. who face a variety of state and federal charges stem- ming from the murder of Stephen John Bovan, was lowered by $4. 75 million Thurs- day. The Kuliks appeared before federal Magistrale J. Edward Harris in San Diego to enter in· nocent pleas to federal charges or possession or more than a pound or heroin. Ball on those charges, which were levied against the couple las t week by a federal grand jury, was initially set al $2.5 million each. Thursday, over the protests of Assistant U. S. Attorney Stephen Nelson, Harris set Al exander Kulik's bail at $150,000 and his wife's at $100,000. The Kullks were arrested Dec. 14 in a Carlsbad area con- dominium which police s aid Kulik rented under an assumed name. Mrs. Kulik oricinally was booked on a murder conspiracy warrant which charged that she was one of eight people who planned the death of Bovan. (See BAIL, P a•e A2 > By KATHY CLANCY Ol h o.llf ...... $T ... Speaking from behind bars at Orange County Jail, former con· gressman Andrew J . Hinshaw insisted in a television interview Thurdsday night that he is an in· nocent man. "I don't agree with the (guil- . ty > verdict but I can accept it," Hinshaw said as he talked on KOCE·TV of the two 1976 convic· tions that landed him behind bars. The former Newport Beach Re publican congressman was convicted of bribery charges and illegaJ use of bis county· paid start whit~ he was county assessor in 1972. "We fought a good fiaht and we lost ... Hinshaw said. "I am still a believer in our criminal justice system." A s he insisted he was wrongfully convicted and the victim of alleged unfair treat- ment by the district attorney, Hin s haw saved most of his words lo critlciz.e a penal system where he said "life is cheap" and in some instances the system causes ex-convicts to re· peat their crimes. Hinshaw, who recently was re: turned lo Orange County Jail after spend.in~ four months in state prison at Chino. said ohe thing he will work to increase is the $200 atlowance given in· males upon release. Fellow inmates told the one- time assessor one reason they repeat their crimes is that for $200 they are e)Cpected to leave prison, find~me, buy a car and get a job ''_~~ to make sure tJFtSOns hav"l/more money when they get out to see them through the transition," Hinshaw con· linued . The former congressman said he plans to t a lk to state legislators to see jf the system can be remedied. "I would make every job (in prison) a reasonable job in terms of dollars," he explained. The man who in 1972 unsealed maverick Republican John Schmitz from the congressional seat he once held. said it was bis prison-assigned job at Chino that led to a racially inspired threat to his life. . Hinshaw, saying he was treat· ed by prison oUiclals just the same as fellow lnmates, ex· plained his job was keeping track of bed assignments. He and prison authorities were told that white inmates threatened to kill him If any <See HINSHAW, Page AZ> -F-0~0-T_B_A...;..ll;L----.;; , Drag Queen · Q Jeu:el~f? ONTV. • · TONtGHT VENTURA <AP) -Police say they are looking for a transvestite jewel thief on TANGERINE BOWL Channel 13, a p.m. Flortdll llate ( .. 2) YI . Teaee Tech (7-4) crutches who may also have posed as a prepant woman while committing another rob- bery 1.aat week. A man on crutches wearing female clothing with a wig and painted fingemailt and carrying a Jll7 mqnam ...-1ver stole $8,000 worth OI cllamon'-from Gtnaler-Lu Diamonds bere Thu'"-1 • .......,t police aald. Tbq *" UMy bellne he might be tbe nDM penon who held up U. Oxnard olllce ot tM Soutlle,.. Callfornt• Edleon Conal>llQ °" Frlday. dNSMd .,· •PN...-nt~ Where's the A~tion? A replica of a triceratop.s dinosaur looks ready for action as, wearing a University of W asb.i.niton football helmet. it .greets visiting members of the school's team Thursday. The encounter was part of the team 's visit lo Lion Country Safari in Irvine. Team m e mbers a lso toured the wU4lile pr:e.erve and particip.ated in a hippo pedal-boat relay race. Valiant Battle Ends Crash Victim of 1965 Dies in Laguna By ANNE COOPER OI II• ~llf P'llGt Slaff F un e ral services were planned today in Laguna Beach for Heather Lea Nichols, who was known in the community for her valiant 12-year struggle to overcome critical injuries she suffered in a car crash as a popular, pretty high school senior. Miss Nichols seemed lo have eve rything going for her in high school, her mother said. She was named a homecoming princess in her senior year and was look· ing forward to a career as a fashion model. But on March, 27, 1965, when she and a girlfriend were out for a drive, their car careene<J out · of control and crashed into an embankment on Pacific Coast Highway near Laguna Niguel. The cause of the accident was never determined. Doctors at Hoag Hospital where the critically injured girl was transferred from South Coast Hospital, said she had suf. fered serious brain damage and would never recover. Her neck was broken, l eaving her paralyzed. Nearly two months after the accident. Miss Nichols remained ln a coma, but her mother, a former Army nurse, decided to bring her home. •'They said .she would never come out of the coma. but I just couldn't allow her to lie tbere in a hospital," Mrs. Nichols said. Nuraes attended the inert girl around the clock at the Nichols home, 2120Temple Hills Drive. Some tJme after the accident -Mrs. Nichols said she isn't sure when -her daughter began to respond, watching bet mother move around the room. In 1974 the f amity began an in· tense program of patterning ex· erclses with Mlss Nichols, work· tng 12 hours a day to impress on her damaged brain movementa of the body. Many members of the South Coa•t community came to know Heather Nlchola as they participated as volunteers to ttelp with the n,orous tralnlnl pro, ram. lri tlmt Mill NlcbolJ crawled and talked and even walked with aaalatance. It was tbe ramlly'* dream that abe would one d&J walk•betown. On T&aeirday Mll• NJcbol1 , now (8" llBATllSS, .... AJ) PICTURED IN 1985 Heather Nichols RECENT PHOTOGRAPH Heather Nichols Long-time Lagunan James ~eeley Dies could jump over the volleyball net." He served as president of the Three Arch Bay Recreation Association for seven years. _ No services are planned, a family spokesman said. Youths Saved From Oce an LA JOLLA <AP) -A Coast Guard helicopter plucked two 14·Ye~r·old bo)ts from the water and new them to safety after their 16·foot outboard boa t capsized, officials said. Kevin Dorris and Phillip Hall were clln,ing to their over· turned craft when the chopper arrtved just before noon Thtlrl· day ln the Bird Rock area ol La Jolla. The two youths were reported In •ood ,onditlon at Scripps Memorial Hoepital. Anti-Red Group Blamed MIAMI BEACH. Fla. CAP) - A powerful explosion rocked the office of a Venezuelan airline on Miami Beach's swank hotel row early today, gouging a crater in thick concrete and twisting heavy metal door frames like strands or tarry. There were no reported in· juries, although chunks of twist· cd metal flew 72 feet across Co ll ins Avenue wher e pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion hit a few minutes past midnight. "It was lucky no one got hurt -there were pedestrians on the s treet," said patrolman Pete Matthews. Windows were shattered 400 feel away, police said. Damage was estimated at $15,000 to $20.000 by an FBI agent who dcdined to give his name "We really don 'l know who did it," he added. Nearly six hours later, a man with a heavy Spanish accent called the Miami bureau of The Associated Press and claimed reponslbility for the blast. "The bomb that went ore on Miami Beach was set by the an· ti-CommWl.isl commando group El Condor," the caller said. "We did it for our leader Orlando Bosch who is being held in Venezuela. If they don 't release him by Christmas something bigger Is going to happen Jo the Venezuelan people." Bosch, a vehement anti-Castro Cuba n exile, is being helfl by Venezuelan authorities in con· nection with the bombing of a Cubana Airlines plane that crashed off Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976, killing all 73 people aboard. El Condor and the Coordina· lion of United Revolutionary Orgainzations have claimed responsibility for the crash and several other bombing incidents, including the sinking of a Cuban trawler in Call"o, PP,ru ~ in August. The apparent target or today's attack was the office of Viasa Venezue lan International Airways situated between ticket offices of Della and National Ai rlines in a complex of travel· oriented businesses. The explosive device was set at the rear door of the Viasa of- fi ce in a cramped alley. The heavy, metal·platcd commercial fire door was blasted from its hinges. the metal door frame twisted and shredded. A crater 111 inches across was gouged through an eight-inch-thick layer or reinforced concrete sidewalk. C o ast Weath e r Partly cloudy and 10 pe rcent chance or rain tonight and Saturday. A little cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. lligbs Saturday in 60s . I NSIDE TODAY Alter the holfdo.y rwh, treat 11ourself to a gift of time -one of the 2f.hot.ir getaways sug· gested on Page Cl . l •tlex Al Y-S.0W. AM -&..1-. aJ ... ti... M ,..,,.._ C:..M L..M.h.,. M ........ ~ M lllMMtt AM IUll-1""""' M,DJ C.llf•lll• AJ t:::..::" c: CMUlllM D4-M ....... ......._ c-kt cs ..... ~• .---"' °"''""' a 5 ..,. ONtlt tMtlt• AJ • ..._. »-t ... .., ........ M ........ , lb •M•tal-C.te TIIMWn C:..M ....... a1.i...._ M =:.-.. :I =-::-~ I ........ __._. .... r ,u o.\IL. Y PILOT L C FtlGI 'I • I Traffic on the San Diego YreewU near UI lllttrMCtlon with thf' Garden Grove Freeway camf to a t.hJ'tle..hour standstul Thursday afternoon when a freewheeling south· bound truck spilled a mysterious substance onto the road~·ay. Tbe t.Nck'1 driver apparently either didn't know ol the spill or w ru; willing to write oCI the loss. . So, he continued on his journey without stopping. THAT LEFT HJGHWA Y officials with the task ()f de· termining the Identity of the red powdery substance that spilled across the freeway for about three-tenths of a mUt:· lncumbclnt San Clemente city councilman Tony DIG iovannl announced Thursday he will run for re·elcctlon March 7, mak}ng hlm the only lncumbent in lho · race tor three Olty Council seats. I I Fearing the foul·appearing powder might be a to~1c chemical, State Division of Highway officials ordered five or the freeway's six' southbound lanes closed down at 1:30 p.m. DiGlovanni, 56, has lived in San Clemente 23 years. He owns a locksmith business at 217 S. El Camino Real and is cbatrman or tl\e board of the Bank of San Cletnente. He and his wifo live at 909 Ave. Presidio and are the parents of two rrown daughters. ACCORDI NG TO A California Highway Patrol spokesman. by 4 p.m . southbound traffic was backed up to Torrance about 20 miles north of the spill. Then. it was learned the red powder wasn't toxic at :!11, except to those who might be tempted lo gor~ themselves on tacos. THE DREADED RED substance that taxed tnotorists' patience for more than three hours was. after all. nothing more harmful than dry taco sauce -three-tenths of a mile of ctry taco sauce. · Radio Alert Guard Saves Woman From lroine Rape An I rvmc Hanch st•rurily dep- uty routmely patrolling Orange gro\'e!> c-arly today gave a Weslmin!>lcr woman the chance ···to escape her would-be rapist. · The alleged abductor who con- fronted her at knifepoint in her apartment complex parking lot about 11 p.m. sped away in his car in the confusion as the ranch guard comforted the hysterical 22-year-old department store clerk. and attempted rape. according to poUce. The wtidentilied Irvine ranch g.uard was patrolling the orange grov,e in the area of Irvine Boulevard and Trabuco Road near El Toro Marine Corp& Air Station when he spotted the sus- pect 's car and shlr)ed bis light into the vehicle. Investigators said the sudden distraction enabled the naked woman to wrestle free and escape. 1 le took out election papers Thursday and has until Dec. 29 to me. Incumbent councilmen Patrick Lane and Thomas O'Keefe have said they will not seek re-ele<;llon. Candidates who have filed election papers Jor the March 7 City ColDlcll contest are store manager Roy Harnm, busi- news broadcaster Ed Dieden. real es~te appraiser and former Other San Clemente residents to have taken out election p'apers, but not yet filed, are de- veloper and city planning com- miss ioner Allan Wulfeck, retired lecl signatures of at least 20 reg- istered San Clemente residents· city councilman Charles Fox, environmental planning consul· tant Boyd Ames, buyer and col· lege student David Dodson.,tlusi· nessman Fredrick Divel and ci- ty maintenance worker l>avid Ban·gston. Would-be cand,i<tates rnust col- lect signatures of. "t l~'st 20 registered San 'Clemente resi- dents supporting their candidacy in ordertoflleelection papers. Filing deadlin~ for non· incumbent candidates Is noon onJan.3. Orange County Sheriff's dep- uties alerted by radio spotted the \'Chicle 1n the Tustin area and went into a high speed pursuit which ended when the driver lost control and spun out. Fro• Page A J S heriff's deputy Lanin <irossochme wa!'I credited with the capture of James R. Gega, :.!I , of Perris. who was in custody at Orange County Jail today Of\ a variety ot charges pending the issuing of form:.I complaints by the Orange County District At· torney's office. ffiNSHA W INTERVIEW. • • more blacks were admitted to a But he also hopes to make particular unit. legis lators aware of some of the "Life is very cheap in prison," things that can be done to keep HinstJaw said. "Persons could ex-convicts from returning to be killed for a couple of cartons prison. of cigarettes.. · · • ·. ·\ • "I learned wry quickly that ----------- Jovan, 38, of. Founlaln Valley, died Qct. 22 outside a Newpor1 Beoch Tfttaurut. He wa& shot ntne·Umes. At tb time of their arr~t.s. Kulik had already been ~ed on \b• .murder conapiracy ' ch1t',a and freed after posUna bill. "'"' d~ HUMPHREY, VP MONDALE ARRIVE IN "'INNESOTA Senator Carrie• On Oetpfte tnoperabJe CanCft . ~ :lHlH Urukterred by Cancer }Je was book~ at the time or h.is,wlfe's arNst for harborinc a fuaiOve. A , 1ubffquent surch of the Mtf!O 't thQ La. Costa Oounlr)' Clul> a1legedly Uhcovcred a cache of heroin. More lb.an a pound or Jt "was nearly pu.re oriental berolli, pollc~ tlalm. An addition_, hall·Polln<! of low· 1rade· Mtll.lcart heroin ,, .. UD• covered, autborltles alle~~· The dlscovery of the narcotics led to a revtsion of the ball on whlch the couple were held, sending it to a total of $8.85 cnillion for the state and federal damages. The Kuliks have both been tr a nsferred to the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Diego. They are slated to appear before federal Circuit Judge Leland Neilsen on Jan. 12 for a pretrial bearin& on the narcotics ~harges. WAVERLY. Minn. !AP) _ "I'm not resigning from In addition lo that court date. the Kuliks are slated to be in anything. 1 may even join something," was Hubert H. Hum· 0 Co s · c rt phrey's response when asked whether he plans to resign from range unty uperior ou the U.S. Senate because or his inoperable cancer. on Jan. 23 to face the murder The Minnesota Democrat. who arrived home Thursday, conspiracy charges. said he planned to be back in Washinaton within lJ) days. Qr\}y Ol'le of the eight people The four Humphrey children and.their 10 children are ex· named in that. conspiracy. pected to join Humphrey and his wife, Muriel. at Waverly on J oseph Fedorowski, remains at Christmas Dy. , large. .. ~~nc to have home movies, -eive'tht kids a Chance T~c f.6r• alletci4 hil men. to see parertU when they were kids,•• bl! raid. • . .Terr~ Peter Flort, 41. Antbonv He added, chuckllna. "These are the movies that used to Marone, Jr., 23. and Raymond bore the living daylillbts out of my friends." Steven.R~, 28, were arrested ~ T ~ ~ ,. • • • , • • Co~ 49.S • eJI ~ m~~ ~fl0,000 for Lost Dog San Francisco Couple Want 'Killer' Btrek SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -For a San Francisco coup le, Christmas won 't be the same without Killer -a missing mutt )VhO has prompted the offering ~l a $10,000 reward. The 4-year·old mixed breed dog h as been missing since June. Two weeks ago. the couple ran an ad in many California daily newspapers offering the • reward. 1 " ' .. My husband and 1 are both distraught. Our lives have not been the same since he left. And I have plenty of dogs. But Killer was very meaningful. He was the beginning," she added. Killer helped her recover, she says, from her child's death in April 1974 from Tay.Sachs dis· ease, a •tre afflictiOlltlhat paU"'W Ind( ;cl;"btlf' In ~arly death. abducted by someone, probably youngsters. but was s old or given to someone unaware of bis history. She is convinced he is alive. Charges lo be sought were ex- rpected to include kidnapping Homeowners 1jr Plan Vote stabbings are the order or he f'F)! _ _._ c· l day," he continued.' adding that . w lruLS. . a~ fellow inmates taukht hinr •·t~· ., slay alive is the challenge. ·'You have to earn your respect in prison. IC you try to maintain that you are l\O better than anyone else •• .if·you abide' ' · by the· code .•. you will ge( along," he said. Mail Search SAL'f LAI<£ Cl'Pllf'!•CAP) .,._ High• winds and deep snow have forced aban- donment or a search !or Christmas mail strewn atop a mountain here amid the wreckage of a United Airlines DC-SF cargo jet. The wife. who asks ttfat she and her attorney husband not be named for fear someone ·might steal another of their ..• \hree,dog:i for J"ansom. uy-s she ... became pspec.iQllY attached to Killer during her ~motional re- ."To have a c hild wJth a term in al problem and see him die. then go out and try to save lives because you couldn;t save yo1.14~~l4.:~J.lltn.lc1 b6ve a h~l~J'abiinaf-ftlkeli •~om you -they might as well have killed the anhrtat in front. or me." she said. The two-inch by three·inch ad thal ran in newspapers was headlined, ''$10,000 Reward.,. It described Klller •s having ••a shepherd look. p. (ODH>Jetely g~~n h~9<l ·and 11 bl•*'-back'• aDd :'41'11., MYPP' Q~Nll the dol'a whereabouts to write Poet Office Box 2895. San Francisco 94126. The reward money, sbe says, 1wu• put up.J>y • bentfaet.or of ·her efforts.. .. • ·• • · ·• ~'>'Jffe· wu probably abandoned or eold to an l.nnocent penon lnd may be In your area or home, .. the ad said. ,, On SC Recall The two·term congressman also had some harsh words for a criminal justice system that T h e S an C 1 e m en t e permits the district attorney to Homeowners Association board investigate and prosecute, then or directors voted unanimously take part in sentencing proceed· Thursday to call for a vote of its ings. · membership on whether to in-Hinshaw's concurrent one lo itlate recall proceedings against lO·year sent.ences recently were , Mayor Donna Wilkinson and reduced to four more months by Councilman William Walker. Orange County Superior Court If two-thirds of the associa-Judge Robert Kneeland, who tion 's members agree by Dec. also placed the former elected . 30, recall proceedings will be official on a work furlough pro· .'. started, said Howard Mushett. gram. ·.• president. During those proceedings • ' The basis for the a:;sociation's Deputy Dis\.ric.t. Attor.ney " grievance with the two coun· Michael Capiui.argue¢ against . cilm e n is the City Council's. ~ red'-'ced sentence. · . ,, unanimous vote this week nol to H~n~haw 11aid the dlat.rict at- .. comply with an auociatimr r e-torn~1 "should be !l· grJcious ~~:C:,uesl to put pler-bbW'l ~evelop· loser as he had be~n a wtnner." meot to a citywide vote in Hi~aw when released from • March.. . · jatl in April will begltl ,p{cklng .,,. Mr.s. Wllkmson and Walker up the pieces of an prdeal he are the only two ~ounoilmen who said has cost him a h,.U·mlllJon are not up for re-election in dollars "plus the iatangibles." United said the jet was carryin~ 1,200 pounds of Christmas mail and other cargo on a San Francisco to Chicago run when it crashed Sunday. Three . crewmen died. "It's just an impossible area to work In up there," said Henry KuebeU>eck, postal JJUpervisor in Sall i Lake City. ';Th~ Sl'l&Vt' ts four feet d~p. We'.d irft· pair Uv:es, Ws ihat b$d." ~olice Slay · Armed Thief ·· March. Councilmen Patrick He said it is most likely that Lane and Thomas O'Keefe have he will become involved in his CHULA VISTA C~l>>-Police announced they will not seek re-brother's lamp manufacturing shot and killed a ski-masked election. Councilman Tony business. man early today after be al- DiGiovanni will be running for a legedly pointed a uwed-off d le ..-...-ho\tun .Mo .ofticen outside a ~ secon rm. · · -• ~ • 'f'roa Pa(IC! A J -restaurant that had Just l:>een I . . . ...~ ... ~... . •. robbed,..officera~a.std. •• , .,, Flu Hits Russia · .:HEATHET.!r . ~J •• The woman drl~~r ·.of .• the • .L".ENEVA S ittlrla d .(Al?> · ft• f •. getaway c~t', t>~uff · R'uth . ·"' • w n • ~ · • ~· • • •• , Pomalia~ wa1 wouftded V1 a -A .new ·tyJ)O:of lntru~rf11l HU . 30, iuid finished her hmcl(.1Jld ball of ~ and •.third _sus- spread throu.s.t}..~e So~let U~. was i~ her wheelchair, whe'ft 6hQ peel, a· sl.;-o\itsked ~ma.te.; got affecting all ha maJoMltlesy(be began to choke. Paramedics a~ay. World Health .}>rua~~tion• re· • \V.eJ'l .called and worked ftan· ,. : · · ' ~ portcl! today. ulno.Lriy • a WHO "1fUlr'Y to try to get her breathing •-· • ' " spokesman, said the new virus is again, her mother said. ~~Jrtmeiit a mild variety.. She was taken by ambulance • •< • " 0 ........... -.. -utC lo South Coast Community Dc .. nd~ by Fir~ """""~ .. ._. Hospital in South La.iuna, where ~ ~"'~ • she died. )'Ire oAsecJ· an estlmtted Today's fwteral services were $4,.500 darp• ~•n apartitent at St. Mary's Ep;scopal ·churchtt.....: (t. U78 Gl~re'St. in Lapa ~,:~~~~.·r.::i:;:.::::~~ with the Reverend Braa-·-iJeatb 'rhJ'l"lday, ooeelbly s~ off =:.=·::,~~:":tt~~::-:::.~: Karelius officiating. Burial was • byf an e1~·Qiceneater~ ac-::Trv'!f~.~:'~~· toreatMeltMe~~YC!°1Dete~ ..... cotdlQ4rto a prellminqy rep0rt. ~=~t,=::n~;;:.. : .· lti A_naheim. McCortnick ' by,theelt,)'finnna.raai., • .. ;::;~~:.!:'L~!:'..a~~r;o;;~ "'• Mortuary made funeral arrange-· l'hrH eN&ne .-cosnpantts 1Uld "-........ ments. · t Jh(ramealca respaded to the --... ",.,._ Miss Nichols is survivett lft structUl'e .'ftte Ill tbe 'hotn.e of v1e11~~,~~=--her mother, Florence NichOll,,at· a.rll 1.Mnent. Flam~s ~ere ..,_..l!c~.-ther tamit, 'home;~by ·•~la~_ br.oulbt, Under ~lrol 'within .,..._,. M..,..,._ .... -Hatt1 Petttt--et bll'ftte »each: ft9e D\Jinit:es, lltemei:a said.A" ,.................. -·-... .. • 111ft'8111bt and t"°'9elee........ ... . ., .. ,, •. . . 'r...:... a...."'LMf.·:e·,... t "Her .. , ..... ~ r£'~ sa· ..,. ~ '" · . \ Alil«elll.... -r..ueu, •• • • ·~· Thi """".· l•llfOfl tered over 1.be_ye TJ· jl~-e eves . . ,,.oltMWtf•,... L._ Nichols said. "l&it~ w lei! ~ 1 ,...1tfftt•-.h1111•0·"•*'.,.. dfop, by trom Ume ... to time ... b.i........!C • -;f':ft~-~~ ..... •-=·-· Th•t• we..-: a tew who alwa}'I · ~e ID~~·~ "t::.'1.::~ ... ,,•1~~~~ ata1ed In touch. Oae ca.ct fr_f41nd ·', 'Pollet( are tiYl.nf t.o detenblne DAILY PILOT covery from the death of her on- ly child, a 19·month-0ld son. She is convin"ced Killer' was Nothing else they have tried has turned up Killer -not visits J.o psychics, not newspaper ads, not hours spent walk ing city blocks here ana elsewhere, ask- ipll children if thev've seen a German shepherd type dog with a friendly face and an eager "pet me" look. First LB Candidate Afte r four years of finding homes for abandoned dogs and cats, the wife. 38, has closed down a non·profit service .11he ran single-handedly after she rescued puppy Killer from under ~house. Files for Council ''Emoiionally, I c;an 't get myself t.Qgett\er to (lQ a,ny work for animals. l h11-ve no ~eslre to continue w.itbout him." slle said. . She used to find homes for some 500 dogs and cats a year. but 'now spends her time searching for Killer. "A lot of people say, ·It's just a dog. Go out and get another one.' But it's like a kidnapped child." she said. AN Laguna Beach housewife Mag- gie Meggs is the first to file for the March 7 City Council elec· lion, although 11 city residents b~ve taken out papers. • Council seats -curleritlt held b:Y Mayor Jon JJr'and, Coun· cilwoman Pyllis Sweeney' and Councilman Carl Johnson will be decided in March. Among those to have taken out election papers are stockbroker Howard Dawson, retired busi- nessman .John Gabrlels, city planning committee chairman OLD.f ASHIONED .. ' . G.REETING A TIMELESS WISH ~ • • MERRY CHRISTMAS ! AND. HAPPINESS IN THE NEW YEAR • • .. Diana Dike, cab driver Tom Adams and clothing store operator Kelly Boyd. · · llaw student James Bishop. ' artist Odena Oay, medical office lhaneger Ann Graham, business executive Wayne Baglin and .Checker Cab Company manager Richard Stott also have taken out papers . Candidates have until Dec. 29 to file petitions, unless any of the three incumbents does not seek 1re-eleelton. In that event, the deadline will be extended to Jan. 3. ••'-"oi.'NI · ~ • w~• co~!E' for Chrlib6'U' 'bbw t.hlevel eirterect. a L-twa T1='3Fr'J'l': and m int•lfl'ttlter by BeacK'· bu1ine11 WedneS:.a)', a11 •• ...._ Jutt a few ~ • 1:1" • ...... -: ··"Where tll*1 nMMtt o9 WStb l"'4 in. • ~· ""~ .. • Uq~ • DE-N'S : .. ~ .. " ·" Triad , , -'U1e WWI.-· • ts&, G re· ~ ..., °'":;;:a...:·...-.~ · aebablll , • • ~ , • MrUd tbe loa of a.no-= , .,T.,.:!r..,~~":"~ ... ., ~ ·' wtll6w G~, -Uque mlrron, a br • ::.,a::-" wu111tll\ •~1•1 "!"''"''*' et ' ' • ''Tbe 1190Ple &C ve ti• aad er~1aalla Ute . -.. .. UC. N9· 1~22 : 1iiitallat1iia·:~custani· draperiss linoleum •·wood floor l l ( '"'~',i;.:.,"":'. -: .. ~ori..i ,--:o,,,..;.,or~. '"..;:=;.., ... "'' •1 c.oie fli. .. ;nm.., a· bttter We than • abop WedQmd~ W.-no "'''•"''' l••mltu ... lllt etm-* u ~ evtr haY• w WU~ ..... ., ... ~ ar-. ·::=..'ti.=-em, n ..m .... Pfmszns. 4 • rived loinvmU,atetbebreak·in. ..1.---------------------------------.• • • ., • r ;' f STOCKS I BUSINESS ' - 0.. 0,. 't ~ a.. I p I= (,.. (~ p t t-= ,.t = 0.. ~ Al' ~ ACI 1."·:1-t" VI .~u J lfl:·+·v. :!:~ ti: n UV: (t '1 I~· 1'1. , ~~! u I~ '·!. I ~ im· a 1=~r J'ltlf 'ff ~~···i. 1=r~: ::·: ·~ '!"'~ ~ ~:~ .,.,. ·•· ~.~J..: u~;.c r· '. ·~ 'tlt·::·: ~cl,.~;~ 1 ... -;·~ P'!10;,. ,~,.:·~ '\•"41". r' I~." =1E::.1'·4)t., t~ ·i~:;; ::.: ·: ! ~ 1111 ~-h .n•: 2 ~1.--~ I ~~. I~.,] .. ..;. ......... ,., I :::;! .. ~Jj~ ',.1 !11•1,!!..•.: m· ~. ~I 'R '1~'·...._.· .. ~ ATO ! S ,. ..... 1.• ~: f 'l: ~~=11 •, ... , 1 ,,?f,t _tr to .. t >• w i~(X" , 110 U-+ ~ ffefo .1 ., J ,,,.--~ Alltlll.ll ' " 1i "'~· ... 1· I " .. t ~ '1 -"' Ill'' '. , .. _ii •• 'I ICW ..... "4111411•1 I •-Pl 1.1 .. I Ac,,..c It It~• " I 11 b ~ • ~ 1T ~ + + 1£ • 1 20 t 201\ v. I • 1 J ' ~ + ~ ueco J I S14 J1 • • A~911 .cw • > ......... J 11.... ,. 11' 1 UU·.. • r I t IMll • ll r ·'° J 10 , ... _ 14' ltedm1111 5 io. , ..... ~ ncm 1.221, JI ~h • ~ Adol!a1.I~. ',.~ ...... ~.~u~ ~; ,:•1 :: ~. ;~ ,,..ic,: ,, ., mu~ =. .... rn.~ .. ~~!~ ~·&P1if'I '" '"·.:.·u ~--\'J,t~ .. m iJ~t tt ~O~ .,_. "' ~;11, .a'J ,. •. ''1 U U'•·· •• INC.0 AO I 21' 11 .. •• Ml'1!.r. uen ~ t't+ ~ ~efc1ffi~si& f ""' alrr UI.. t ~lie AOllrst lOot • 41 1'1'1..... ·"" ,.. rt 6 61 )1 • • ll'CCOO ... g J •'I M011J; UO ~ + \t A• t.\' 1 ···11 t•G tAO I l3 Jl;:-,.. .. ~·~:·.:~ie !!~;:: ~::;;~. ._·;·~ ~····' J iJ~!.~ 1=1~··lh ~: ='J~·:=lt ::::~ ;:1.~-'~1 ·;. •I~ ·:~:"'t1l11'!.ll ._~·~ n , tt. ,,~ , • J t! .. 1.20 ' 11t 4 .. t \'> ll\CllNlt ·~ t ;M. .• !ill-t: •• o~ . .. It ~ .. ._ C' l ... ,. ~-~ :.~",;e;:· ~"!JU:!·~ r:~t't~r · ifi":::~ ::e: ~u~:'~ ~~• t.tl "' ;~ '"' !!·~.! "'~:!~ ::~."t' ·. ·: .• H 1m~:~ :~~ f1:l 1 lit ~:~J •~,...,. . ••· u 11 ,H I.\ • 1, 1 .,.. " J o< • ., I :ittlAI ~ :Jl·• ~ •=ti l'lT, \a ~ ~-t; RtM~1il1 .. i ~ '1,1.:.'«' J .. ~ 1~ a .. 'ffi' + ~ ~::ga~'' '·.,.• ,~~ ~~~·w :ri2·i· .. ·.~:·.· ·~ :111ir.:. ~ 1 "° .~; ~ l;,r11eTt1 ~~ f 1 •:.!. ~ 1 ·J, I~ ~! ~ rJ~i· 1 ... ~ 1 " f::.l'9fl.,, !..., J1 ·+·H Al .. _ 11 Mi > 1· ... G .! -E• U t 2011 t 1~~+ ~ ~I ~-I.\ uel '1 'J ... , :!Al\ .lO Iii HI• .. ~ ... •• • .,. !I='"'.:': .., :~:;; ~r~ •• .,11 "' u~: 14 lrr~'.t: .. ~ i ~ ,~~'<;"' 4 lf"::: 11• Ji ,~ ~ .Ofii ·•1 14 1 -"' ~r~~· Ub J~.·~ At<•llA 1.40. t:H _.,. oCp ·r s r.i:: .....• ~," A01f ~ i~. ~ ln'41'C .-.:· ~ ttllo-~ fi .2.l I it: ~2 .. (~.411~ I ~t ~ ll'IOM8 .. '" 37 ••,. Alcostd ..., • ,, ' •••• ..._ Ctl•"'• f o 16 o~-•,r. l"'I 1 ) ff -1& l"'""•Tr 1"'-~ t t ~ t 11-...., ~ '"~''ti 'i 1 g ~ f"'m111 .~ 1 S II.I'+ ~ A • c o " 1. b " • , ...... ~!'~·"·" . 1;. , 01 > to2:::_ ..• ., I'"' °' e . .o .. -111 "l991ft .•. , ,..,._"' ~" , . 10 • • .,.,_ ~ ,_ • .,on 1 -""'Jw 1. t tu ti\.\ ..... 2 I 2 t t "' ...... .. -w .,...,., .to. r • Ill n tll5e 1 "" 1 H~ Mur YO t l ~ , .. ,.. II•• ft i .. "' llrllty • 7 I V.-.... Al .. dr .«)I M , ....... !] Cu ... It i " 1 1.\+""' v•nof I.AO .• ' u·~· I• l"lt'Cf • L., ,. ::.:: 1!1101 '· •• • ~-w ll•1111rll • ' "IU J l<M ljO I IS , ..... "' AllO~ .60A S tl 5'•+ ~ ~nSoW,.2' t 11 l4 t Vo E~CtlO 1.«I 71070 ?• + '"' n HC Div l4 1' S M.,.tt . A 14 ..... ltt'l'll I\ I I + • !Hair • ff! nY,-llit Allol..• 1-2111 10 'ltt\..... nH ....... , ,..., .... E•<IV 1.ne., u ""t '• '"'''~ 1 •, 21 21~=-~ _ .. _ -AeyMll uo 1 ,.. ll ..... y, TIO«rlllt • ,,, "'• (\ All~•pl l .. U 41J111t-lit nllll IAllO tt II • .. l!UOfl 2 IHI "Vi • '"" IBM II .)1tSl6St 2'•~'11 t l't N<:R .IO t ,.. 40' .. • lt.'11 AeyM Ill• >0 • .. +I Tlmtl!I I J ".._" AIQ 2 19 l'I 111~-V. Cnll.tpt t C1 llOJO JO•-, ... -,_ -111tFl•v s.tt 11 t2v. + y, Nl.llld I.ti • 2SI 1~-llo AonSo .-' -0 1' ....... TlmeM I t IS tffll+ \\ Allg .. 1.n·i 65 '°'•• ... Cen11Ps 1:n ·i II 14«• .... FMC 1.20' , .. n ....... ln•H•••jlO. llt tt•\ ljl.T ,,. , m 14 +"' "~$1.10 ' l IS• ........ t lmlu\t.10•. IO ., ...... 14 AllenGp .•7 • 11111 ••••• C.11L•El.AOI 1t 21~ ••••• FMCol US .•. l l3"9 ..... lntMln 1'.t06 IJ t0v.::::: m" I.UIS t s.-.-1.\ llG rit J ll-t,Q fi,...llllHI n I "'' AlltrJl•n SOIS 16 34'•+ 'I• C-MPw l.64 9 II lt"' .. ·i· Ftbr99 .fO t 1' 10 t I.lo 11\IMlnrpl 4 1 .. 1.iKo ,,111 a ff -~ "!§:' I I 14 t~' ~ lnP •• 51\ ...•• AlldCh . 2 ... , 0''11. " Ce11)0r· 10 ll Ill If + iAo FtllrlCtr .20 1 1 H\..... ln1Mulll , ·• u llU~ .... M; Ito • " t "'t ""' A r•fl • 7 tf .... -~ T sr, . . fo u~. ~ ,t,lldMril .n 1 , 111 .... ,. C•nh '·'°' ., JSl/t + .... FtcelEnt .. 1t •I~ ., lnlP•per J' )OJ f.J\.'i• ._ l rtO • 4 "' ~ Alo rpf 'l .. -TO Ed•J. 1.11 l u - Alldll'd' AOeb" " fqH A c.t\1'°411 I' .. I~ ..... FalrCm IO U IOJ 14'•+ ~. 1n•Ae<ll 2017 l ,.,._ \.. •Ji\ut I 1 " "~~ \It AlltAld .321 "° ,, .. "' Tonk•.C•.4111 0 th ••••• ~11•1o0SS~~p 1.10.6 ?J) 21~.·-.'.llo. Crl leecl .IS I 11 n .. • '4 Fair I nil 1 10 SJ 16\f'J. .. • . lllT T • J 7 flt 31\1• + 1~ NatAlrJ .511116 .# vt>llt + \lo llOllii,,.., I 10 10 19 t2t~ • ~· ~Toot Roi ,~ I .,! llh t.'11 ~ v , ,,. c .. ~., I " 7 ~ ,, .... v. f'1lnt11' • 'l t JO\\ .. • l"ITTplM 4 l 51\f'J • ..., ....... .709 . ,. 20V. + ~ AoC>l\11 t.IO ' l ,.,.,_ ,.. (t(O( • <V Ul4 .. 14 A111,c11 , JO ~ 11221 f'"· .. "" ~mrB '·j! ' "111. ~ '••~. ! , • .. " .. ~ "ITT plJ , · ,, $2•· .. ,.. Sfg;c." J 1 " ff~· " 11~M .:12 10 i 't"'• 11. ,.,,.0 I ~ ... ~, ... 4 Allr•u MJ!>S llf t"-•·,. "' I ., • ,,~ .. ~ ''*'1" • d ih-14' lftTTpllC ••• 111 )l~t .. 1/1.,1. 1 ~ a-Yi Att~O 1..01 t :;.··· ,."II . 1 n .. A•phPrr ,,. • 1 lll • ~ N"' P . • ,, 11 .•... ~1,.., , .. ... . 1"'ff S0 s , Ml·~.\.; "' Ii • i. 11..t n 1.12 ,.~ ~ A ' • ~ Alcoa l.IOt )16 0'9+ Vt i•,'l.J,.·',U 54* .•1!_···~·· ~tOders .. • .•.. l"j p tu'· ,, 31'11H.,.., NICYI.. il 4 -V. Roe OIO(r.• • ''"'··•i: T Allf J .. j l'l-V. AmlS1i9 I 2, *"+ .. ". I • • • '" ~o t~ f 4 fi .. -e " p '511'. 60 5' • ·~ HIO+tr 1.51 ' , .. 14~. ~ llOC-WI 2,20 1 61 ,.~ ..... TWAPf 1 • .0.. I •". "' Attt.. Ut\6 7 + '111 1Fd .tOe.. tv.-ot • I -In rpre I tt j U t Ho-V. a•IO~ IAO 1 1J 11!..... .. 11-lnlflll 4.75.. t 1tlh "" Tran\191 l/11 1 dO.I !' -+ ~ Am.,p11.u .. t + v. '""I.to, t1 Jltt+ 14 IMt f "I .... 1nhlPwt'o, 1 1• , •• 01n •.U •• 1100 71Yr ... , .. A-lnt•llU,. l 1t1t .•• r: Tt1nlncj·"·i itt H + ~ AMlapf 1 JI 41"'1..... MIT •. 1S l'ot .,._ F 8 .tO 1 U4 IJ', 111Pwpl 221 .• ztoO ~~ alPl Ui 11)7 2M-'" AOllMM .It t j .... " TranlCI ·s Ill - AMBAC I.JO t lS ]I .... "' c ... ·~· .40 1 • 1 • " FdSltnl ""° ' ,, 15'. -•ot •o•a8t ill s -lo\ "'~Fi UI!. ., dUh-'" AOll<IM " ,,,._ "' l""'i . S2 tl't+ ... Amcord .IO. ,, H"-+ "' '""' y , • • 4l -~ l't.aOSt '*''' UJ ~. a. IOWIEI ··11. n 1 + It Nitt p I.Alt I ., 1).\6-\c. ll•lllM .5010 I~+ " rGP .. • dl10 .,..._ •• ~ Amrce I.JO 7 St + 14 CllN Dll.t 1. II f-"'+ 'ii fe,,o 1.64 f ,l1 21+•-'I) IO•llG I I 19 n-·" Sil "I · 41 I -.... RonMll •t I~-"' rOP t .... ''n ~···j.: 4'Men .IOI>• IOt t + ._. (1Wl4_." ... , 11t 1141• "-l'lllrllbd .• '' 11-. .. \4 •-•f'Lt 4 • 19 V>-1-' h4I .4t t IO t ..... R-r UO n~•"' rOP lll.i H.-t"' AMeJPf J.50 . l U'h .. ~ Cntult 2.tt 60 ,,y._ "' f 41U"\ • fO 1 10 lb + v. low•PS I ., ' 1 1 v .. " dCr ... I ... U)t ~ " Aofer ... • ' ... .• . • r11u ~ IJ\t t " AAlrl'IH .04 I •I II"••'" Cl\IBrl t ,eo. 1 j1 f1111• )2 '4:r, I •• , It Y,.;. IA lpcoHp '1t11 160 1V•-!ft NM.OEn ,• I 11u16'~• V. Aourlo.'°9 U 4' 20•'t+ l'f Tr•nwy I. ~· .... AmAlr 4 11tJ llHG. + ...... CIWPMT 111 2 24V1 + V• llt•tl 7 I I •-•,\ llOCp . JI U• JE• i.. NMl,..5v ··~ 11 17'Mt + \~ AowfO . 12 It 34 'I~ t.'11 Trolrs 1, I • " .. AmAlr wl .. SO >~ + \/. Cl1,F11ll ,-1ns.ne 71 S 11 n• • + " H~ICr u 7 219 ,,_. + 14 N~lf'rett I. 9 " -~ RoyC~ol I U I .. t ~ Tr•velr pl SO V> t "• AAlrpl 2 11 • 7S 11 \~ · IJ 11 4 ._ -''II i '"l"•d ! i 6) ,,Ii-\11 lltl p 1.u . 14 S\'-\.'o N Ml'fll< It$ I''')..... Aoy!O Ute 151 J6YI l4 Tri~°" 1,).. • 14 20~ • \ ... A••~~· '10 ' ' H"\• "' cl.<11c11 1 1+ 11o,..... 1ru1r 1. u1 ~· •· _ J--' _ IC -crll4 .• 11 '"' .. "' R111>br"' .60'' ,. h>1t• " 'tr pf, ill . J JO" ,_. A8rnd~ )04 t D '2"-• .... C"'°'"tl I S U II~+ ~-10\r • ~ + ~ J•mo" I 20!0 10 H V.• '" HSI-1 t6 • IJ 11 1 R11uTOQ It t ,•\1 UV)+ '°' olrl M , 14 1 .. -I) AB rd Pl 1,70. 4 U.,_ t ~ Cflrom• pl > · • J ..... le. l"•IClllC 1 1 11$ 11" t Yo Jent1en .IOIO 11 I•~+ V. HSltclt l.Oll7 102 ,44'1 + .j\ AyderS .fO 6 llS q~4 Yo 'tr •Ind ,01j. 1 11 1""-\\ A8dn l 1.40 J 176 '°'-···i: Chrt11tr I 1 "3 ltl'o •••• · """'" UOIO II 0 . •. JtP61\F Me 39 IV.-v. NtllSll 2.1011 n 31'1o • v. -S-C -Trl•P•c .IO > 13 lllYI-l\ ABHIM .60 8 ~ ul4~ !-.,... ChurCI\ .Ii() II 10 ;i4'i1. • ·, • FllMIU .tO 6 •U 10 + 'ilo Jtlll'Hol .tt .• 19 IOW• V. Nelam 1.60!> • »t l'l.\4o + 1'< ~A I) Ill Slit+ V. Trlntyln I 6 13 11.Y. t 'Ml AmC•n 2.SO 1 ''° tt • ~ ClnBtll 1.~ 1 11 ,.,. ..... 1• ""' .. • I.• 1 SA ,.,_. • \& JerCol ' 130 .. .,.. y. NtlMpl •·i · T '1» • "' .. I s dt ti~ Troplc111 I 12 SU ftV.; II'> AC•npl I.IS . I 1J'I• • V. ClnnCE l k 1 11 U V.+ l'e FINSl8n 2 7 I 14 • '!o J•welC 1.30 ·; tt6 11'"1-\& N .. lwn. , ' Ult+ Vt 'f ·'° ' • 1•11t."t\ TuunO 1.16 t M tll• \, ACenlry .. 60 J ... ClnMll 1.IOI I 1 '°"• ..... F\IP• I J2 9 .. , ......... Jt-ICor J I 3' .... ~vi'• I·' , IO M"-~ !o.tblne .)610 l4 ~· ... TwtnCll .70 i IC! n~ 14 ACr..it 130~ 11 11"'•" ~11.lcrp l.Clt 7111111UI)+~ FtPOl\tg ,. lJ '"°·· JMM•n ttOt IOJ '71.11"' "'~ •. I tl't+'"' ultclln ti' ._.1'.,tlt+~ t•lnDs ·: "I'"•~ ACy•n I so 9 11'0 ttv.-"' lllH5V ) t ., 5111. •..• FstUllRrt.Oht 1' u • ,.. JlllnJn 14019 11• IS'1• -s ~II • f.J H ... '• S.l••Y I n _. .. ~ ~OUlll . M •ll'lt .. AmOl\tl ' • ~ llyln• ., ' .. IJh . . . FIV•8k .A) I xl:I ··~ '' JOl\nE F 201 20 , • ., • • Ell '·s ] 30 I~.... ... CP ' 1 ·.IO , .... "' YlffCp • 1 49 if'' "' AOT 'ill>ll II• , •••• 1 • C1ty1r1 .. w1 41 ~ ., ... "!WI'(. 1.76 I IJ ,... •• Jol\nCn eoi3 IJ.I " • ;,, '" •• .. • i.-'"' ~o~n I ''io. )(II.II+ {r, TyM\hf 11 " -.... 4'0u41VI •. 6 •'• • 11\o Cltylnpl 1 . 11 )41\ .••.• ~ KhM I.JO a 70 2q -''• Jonlgn .60C> 1 •" 13.,., v. NEnl J. • • ~ • '• 1•1.SeF Ui8"7 9 ~lit I.\ -u~ -Af:IPw 1.1110 1n '"""•"" "''""' 1.IO .• 1t II~• It Fjllll'ds .601 1< ,,..., ....... Jorven 1.106 ,. U-'4+ ... N'.!;5 GUO. ", ......... P1111 lint •• a.14 It -\i UAl. .604 Mt.'°~···~ 4'me.r. 1.4011 ,.. at. • .. c~··~··~0E11•.~ '• ~J01 JJ1.~~ ~ Pr.hf~.» a 21 l'-"• 1-. J01ten' ttt 2 u11.1 1t N•511f uo, 1 dO lllf .. ~ 111.,._P \.n a 101 >0 •••.• UGj •·• 1 ff'"+ AFem1y.to• •t l~•l141 • -... ~.,. ll'ltel .nl.!t S2 _.,_,A Jo1Ml9l.'°I 7121 ...... §w"ell •• 1 S 1t,1.llt~ Sfl~ Al 7 ™i-\\ UOlpl 2.U .. l'2SO -AMFnSys S 1' 4'"• ,... I I• I~ fl'llll'll • a '1 I~ • V. -·--Wftl~ AW 204 I I\+ '"' ktf\lill} .60 I 1" 1'¥1-i.; UMC l"I I t 11 .... A018d I .... 4l 21~-~ t 0 S S 4 l4o I. I "ul\• 1 I' It\\... I( m .. t • .5612 •• * + 'II ''" 39 141-Ill SOttOe 1'.J& I 11M U'tl • Yo UMET Tr •. 11 3 •••. AOnCv I U .. .., 1f • °' Cle\PEI 2.M 1 ti JIV.. ··t: Fllllkl I to. 9 42 lt'l>o 1 "· KtlsrAI I • I :io. "+ "' aM U.C IU Ult\-I"' SJ11anll .fft 11 20 1~..... UOP .7'0 f l?J tJ17 + , .. AOenlnl .90 S !7 2t'• • 1/to ~ltYEl"I •• U 11\IH" FleliCll 14 1t " -,_ l(al\Cm .t4 • !1 S''• • l't NitMof UO •• LIO 38~ ••••• s.noerl •. 1J Ji,.c,+ 11t UVlnd I 10 10\• t Vo /401npl I..,., as lO • V; lvEtol 7,40 •. 11000 ""'-·-··· Fl•C.u I.JI) 1 ... ,..~. )I; IC•IYM I.JO s llJ ~. 14 l'i.1•M11f s..is .. llQ Sl•,o ••••. 1 ·1114. 2.20 1 JfO 40 t ~ UAACO l )11 I 10'A-v. AHtrlllf .)Ii I all 1\41..... 111£1 pl 11 .. 00 120 .. •t: Fl•Pl 1.7. I "' 26·~. \~ IC•MMll .•• 21] ,.~... • N ?.: •. "' .. 11000 .. "··I ,.. n~ .JO .. ., •W• + " unarc:o .10 • 1 lo>I.. v.. "mHobl I • 41 "V• + 'A Clevepll .IO I • • -n l'l~P~w fj 1 D ~·~ 1-I" k•~•D .6011 9'I li"' • t\ H Ma 11.,, •• lllO llS ••• • • 'lnl • .-, 1 6°' uJT + 111o Unll'IV a. ... • l~ tJll> • :-" AHom• l.l'OIS 4"' 11.\\.ot ~ ~1«1 o:.., .·!!! t,1 '?! 11n•. t ~ F1~11 U h; .•••• KClyPI. t" t JO 1111 + 1t "I• 1111 1.rz •• UO n"''···· in •I M utt\.'t+ ~ Unllnc:o .a. t , 1\-,.. AmHMP '":I l7' :itlo'{t ~ m~ .., ~ I ~'" F Co • I x l4 '> KCPI. Pl4 )CJ 110 -I H aQSll .t7t.. S ~ ... ,. ulllE .. U 4V., •.•• Utam• 1.IOIO K7 .. ,, • " "mlnv~t .1' I I S-\\ I tlPpl 1.1 tOl•lllll lo) Fd alf • S 2t t" l((Plp12:~:: • fl"•.. Nkor 2l2 7 10 J1-.+ .... $ev01p i; 17 '"' .... llnC1rb UO 1 ,. 41V•• V. AMI ... 6 HI 11"'1-\\ CSI \O& 30 ~ ..0 U\4 + \\ l'oottC I 20 8 t 11''>-·~ KC5tlJ1 l,JOI 6 lJ 11'~ • ~ Nor!Wn IM 1 )It ~~-1'> SavOnO 2t 1 • IV. ,._ UnCmrtt 12 7t , -Yo ' AMdcp .SOD 10 JHl 20'•-~ CSI 0 pit.IS -· 9' 19 .... • t: FoMIM j·'° 4 11) 0 k•nOIE t ID I U JO'A NOf'llll 1.40 S S 731.\-1 • i!!li ! I .a1 ll -'11 UftlCWIC:. • .. S'-. •• ·• AmMolr& Jt 2J2 Jlo+ Vo C\I Gpll.19 .1 S U~~· " For•I( .10 6 StJ 11 I' K•nNb ' .... 7 tt U,, ... il, ~·fit I f ~ 111' ... l't ' t. .. • :m-~ UnElec: 1.36 t .. U°'-"' ANalA 2IO I SI w .. "" Coc•llll .«llJ IJ! t ··•r ,-Ml( pf .IO .• It 11"•• '• K•nPl.1110 1 2t 10111..... Cffl .. I 4 1 -¥1 • •111'8 m· ~ Un!lpf tfO .. lllO "11'•-lYI ASlllp .6Qe 6 lt IS'" V. C:ooCI l.S.14 4U JI ~ '> FtOur \.24.. 1 .... • \.lo IC•PL plJ U t ,.'IT-.. OAMll ., U• 4 •+ \lo S.ron I .st S •.... Un I Pl 111 •• I H•~ •• ASI-7 1 SS JIV.t .... Co••w&k .~ , s n"'-"" FIHO!lfP .ee10 u Jl"l• ~ Ktlvlr.d . .• • •'IJ t t.\ OAPlll 1.~. • t7l'l 1 '"' Scllatfet II ' ..... U~OCtl 1.20. m SOllt. -\\ ASltrll .JOU 91 ,., •• ""' ColtN•I ,IQ • It II'/•. "' FOJWll .tloa ' J6 ,,.. • • K•ly I . •• t1r.• "' HICAlr .Ii ' 111 ...... ~ Schrf•lo 1,lt ' '" "". ~ uoca pf?,!O . • u-1 .. 'I AmSt" 210' 11 ""'···. Coltco • II w .. "' Folomal ·'°. Jt '"• "' Kalll , ·ao i IU4 •• '" Mo<:tAlrwt •• ' tV.• I,\ SOllll .. ,, 11' ·11~."' UPacC 111 JS• .. v..1·~ A TT '10 ' 111 60'". .. ColtP•I 110 111 f l 111 t .... "o•bro I so • JI .... •• K•ul pl I '° . 1 11•1. • • • NontUll 02 • 11• 10'\0o t v. S<hlMO l.IO , ,., '1 • Yo Unlrov•• '° • 42' , ..... .. A TT pl 4 . >JI tJ"' ·• Co .. All< •• 1 16 Ill.\• "' F,.n_M .30 4 ~ 814 t 1, IC•wtCLl09 ] J2 .,...,_ "-NC•l$1. .10 S 9 IJ\ft+ •• SCOA.ln I S 11 II t 11. Unlry&lpf I UO 12'~ ... . A TT p4 l t.4 •V 49..,_ t ''II ColllnF .14 6 44 "°"'· FrpMln 1 6011 IS9 .... . iCe-JO 6 J• 10'~, .... NlnOPS I ill 9 «I l' • 1\ ScetLH .J6U 21 49--~ UnBr-1 70 7h-.... A TT pl l 14 •• all SO'. -'II Col Penn I 9' II ttl(o,.,., Frl!llm .IOe 17 11 ·~ .• 1<~11.r .~ 7 1 llV. + ~ NotHO\ I 411 1 1' ll141 t II\ ScolFel 1 . .00 I J3 ?tto ,. • Un&rd pl . . I 11\0o + ~ 4'W•IW-,. ' II ll•'>. ' co1ns1 I", J 1'~··1·· Fr ... M 1 . u ,,~ ~ Ktlioog 11013 ,., 2•1'114 ..., ~NGplJ,JO .. tlCIO .. v.."" S<olll'Ot I. 11. ,, ...... UnllCp ~. 107 100, .•• AW•I pl I 4J uo "'" ... Col\lnd J.1J • JO 1"•... fllQu• .«> s ff ..... ~ IC•ll•f ·" • IU 21 -"' SI .... ct • .,., "". I& Scollf' .1. t 11.5 13\\. "· UEr,A• 1.n ' SS ni... '. Amoron ·1·• I 11 .... v. co1cu t .u1 u ttl'I• '' -0-0 -K•llmll u 1110 1 ,. .. '"'•.,. N ""Fl'~' ··~ff4t•I"' suno ·"' n "'"'• ~ ul'ncal .60 • 1s ''"'··· Amt\D ,.I() S It 11>'• • Col(;\ pfS.61 · • llt )f • • · · · GAF .60 .. 9t 10'\ • l(eMCI . .0.12 SJI tt . , . . . N PTw ·~ "1 ., I !1' Scovlll t . .O 1 109 U~.. ... Un 11 c. 1 rnlr 1 .11,.• 0 1 ~ IJ, .... • • AMtlt-16010 74 31'11+ '1 • C.olC•PIS .... 2dS1 -v. GAf pf 1.20 .. t• It .•... IC•Ulll 19'• 11 J~ ...•• NI>' t • j •--.. Sclldder IJ Ml '"'+ .... U um ..,, •.,.~+It. Al~lt( ,,. n It~-... Col11Plct 1 "" 111 .. -" GA'l'X I.,,, ™ u~. 1. l(;,,Gll ·"°. IS 11"--.... Hllll~I•, •• 4 ••..• k""'' .71o.. J '""'····· Unltlnd .IOI> • • 201h .. Ill' AMIC .10 4 I) U'1t-\°' Col$0ft 2.D 1 ?t 1''--\.\ GC,t, .Ille t tf I + '°' K•"M 1 U 9 nt 4'V•··· ,. IC• 4 '°"" ll• SHCon1 lO t 112 16 ·• V. Uftlllnn .II I fO ..... • , ... AMPlnc •u 210 1•\· •••• ComDC. .10t10 u " -... lov • " 1 • "' KotCftl SOI N•t1 lrl ill' 1lO 2J4.• ,, SullCL 2 20 s " ii~ ..... UJer8-1 04' • 11 .... "' 14MPCO 60 f •I 17' • • ''II CmbEft I.lb t lS Ji~•-'• " !Eop .Ole 1 I S'4 •\ t t O ,_. - \ .. 0 Nwl8c;p 1.04 I 110 14 • \o SMllWA 4 414 ..... . • . UNucl I toe 1'I Jtll> t '" Ampn 10 Ill 10 • '• CMbEq .100,. IOI 2111>•1'> •Mt ~· 2 •· 1\ Kl-W1«14 )4 27 ..... NwlE,,,?201 SS JI~,~ Suht 17•1 Jt lSl •t .... UnP,Mn •• It It\,.,,, AmropCp • ~ ........ CMWIE '.0' '6S H~~-"' ams-I.,, 2.5 ,..... ... ICIC!Ot PrB / ·• ~~,.. Wl.lll.1. 4 tt~ i • IHgrm ~. 0 11-. •... Unllelg M ' ,. U lt "i. !~~~4:1 .! #~ 11!~: .. i~ ~UJ l'.4.,: ~ ~~::-;,r ~ti•PS•:"·~ 1 ',n'; ~! ~ ~:~~~~,H:· ~: ~t'~·.-·v; ., il1.'i"'.: 111 · 1~ t:r~· ··~ ~ r m~: ~ ~t~r1~.,~~·s ,~ m~. ~ AM•l.0 2.60 t ~O SI>'• t 1 • Cwlpl • I U~-t,i HdOn .1t1• tr•'t • ~ klmbCI 1. i UI i .. T ~*lhJ), 4.tolj JU \4 2:i' tellfl~ .Ul1 "" II + V. ~S~ t.tO t .. 12~ • '°' ~~~hCrlH•f I so1 11 tit ?•,:•,• ~ Cw pf I.JI.. U '"''~-\'\ ttlln• 1·04' '1 19\\ 1 14 1Cl1191>51 . I ll l \r. t .. •NILi fe I 11'""• \ Seara .~ 10 1407 ,.,,,. 1\ S .J• t It 1 ..... "'~ , ~ ~ Cw pf ,.Jt . I ,,.._.. •. • ·~•< .20 J IJ'' • 'A 1<lr)(ll \ 10 •s 1• \It Hortofl 2 I U .0 ..... .. S.ttrelfl I ff '"" • ~ US Ind .SJ r 111 '"-· •. , . Ar>Qehct .30 1 ,. • . CwlE pt .•.• .. """'• \t lr.t .Ille ... •. IC1111!llld I llSJ JI •• ,, NOf'Slm ·'"' , ..... , ·-~dcolnc >O I It] 3814 • ·~ US~•to •• s Ill ,,_.. "' Anl•ler 24 1 1 11 • 1 '• Comwl «I I 17' lO ••••• C..,llrt .tOlf lS 4;1'\t '\ Kotflr•n .IO 1 U I~•"' NorlSpl I to.~ ~··-\> '911ll 11G11 5 n o• .... '4 US Illy ., .• S -~ An,ulCo Sll 14 I '" , .. CoMutwd .. '-! 19..-•. !t Gelto .10 I 41 n-.. t,.. IC<>PP+tal.10 10 l1 n~ lie NIK« .Mr 11-+ l'o S•Cplfl\• U t 3 •\; USSl>oe 1.20 • 41 H + 14 AN<lla IO II •" 19"° • ''J Com PS 1.1' 1 J ~ .. .. C..mCa . II II... •. . . Kor•<P .Ue 4 14 I -l't -0 -~wml lJO 7 91 2l"• . it; USSl .. 1 2.20 t 1tl 11'.t + ~I Al>(oOll II )6 491 •• ~ C.Om1>9r .JI 11 .. ... "' ~"''" 1.ioa.. • l~-.... l(r•ll J.JI • ~ «I'll. .. Ol(C I.lo J " II • I.\ u.-r :.. 1 I ·~ •• ,. us tObC I 41111 117 ff .... ,,., ~PpDIPwd0 r>,:•·n 1,l'1'!07•"'iJs•-.·'•'~ CompScl 10 HO V•-.,. Alnv I.Uc .• 20 10'4 .••. Kroehlr .15e .. 2 10 -V• Odlh41 .• l)t tt\IJ •.,. kltt 50 9 •3, 4;111.,11-. un1'ccnU07 171 ).., .. ~ .., It,. , • ·• COllAQr IS 2 I IMI+ '-'• nt.mO .6019 'I' JJ•\t"" Kr00tr UO 6 129 2711\+ '"' Odpt I IS.. I •t -\It 11 a p·e 1 1 11 t o UT(tlpl 732.i I I + l~ APPIMO II U l'• C-MI UO S S1 ll"• II\ Gn9ol\ ,IQ' 0 II''•-'Ir 1(11hlm 10.> 1 14 14'11 •.•.. 0.'11tP 1.1110 I 111 ... + 11• l •IS I I .. ; It\ UnlTel 1.JI !1> l,\t '4 McaleN .1• 1 11 11111-·~ Conoolm .tO I 131 JI""• 14 C..bl• 12 I JS I) .. , "• Kytor I 1 3J t»ii. OcclPtl 1'.U I 14' Ul'lt •••. sn .. rH ilOI 3 JI S't• '• Unllrod .10 t U 10~+ \.\ ArChrO .20bl0 t1 19 -l't COllnM l.t014 61 JO')+ ~') nma .• t 11 -• _. -1.~ -Occl"91wl •. II It'•-I\ ~~I .I IO 7 111 ll'• t "'4 Univ•• ·s I J • ._ ••••• Ar<tlcElll 11 4 •''o .... COflr•< .80 1 IS 11"•+ Ill or" . 5 >4S 0 '• • 14 I.Ml'"" I 111. •••• Oc<lf' lltl• .. " I JIW+ V. I itt ~ I >t•• Uniwfo I. 9 11 2'~ ... ,. Arh .. r 14 • ···-·-CO<!Ed J s UI 2$\'<..... E 1.2011 ..... , ...... I.TV 174 ·~· '"' Occtl>pltAO •• I H •I I ·i s « !._.:·io; UnLul I 1 6 Jj\\ ... ,, ArilPS u.1 , 1$6 10.-.... CO<IEpf '·· l ll4'o-.,, "' 1.M •O . "'"'·" tTVC•pt , , . ..,"~ v. OcUP~tl ·· 1 w,:-Y> I _., -H Upro" 1.1011 • ~ ... /4rM8SI liO I I ,,...,_ ~ ConEp1 4.U .. 1f0 Sl\/1-~ Giii l.'4et• 10 IJ~• !,\ eMS. t.z ·; 11 ltY'/ ..•.. O.C1• .. 1 +WI Ill 1, ;·, ~~li: US !Fl ...lot ( 16" l~,.,11 ArWl.Cs 1 ' h 10. ~ • C~lil!~ lj I SS ,.,.. .. '.4 r.°'' .601" • ) • + "" l•MBry .IO 1 1 ""'. VII m lP .12 •• I' a . 'It "' "''"pt •. . 'll ~-" U•• teF .... . . 8 11v.-n ArltJnAty . 9' 3 '. : COllf! ~ . 'l s u -"" "'' .400 • '" 71114 t 1/1 L•nl•r .10.13 9 Jt'h..... ell •• J ~ '5\b. "' jerPr l ~ t . .. , ....... "' UlaPL 1 •• 11 .. 1914-... Arm•d• t 2 ''" •.. ConFrgl · ' Ill U Y>+ iMI IMlrpt J.. I 1134'"' YI L••ICh «llJ UO t + 14 lltt! 1.11.1 • ""'-1 9(ia • a Jl~f ~ U!PLpf tJO.. 4 11fli •..•• Armco 18010 t111'•• ·~ ConNG J.11• !.o •V. nMe4 .f07 H 141\+"ll Lu.SO .eo s 16 Ul't+°" lal!dl.1tY 11'6 1"'-···· Sor.ode! t)OS ,.,~_,.., -v_.- ArMPI 2.10. t&du•.-·~ Coll\Pw t.I • ,, • '4 111 111 22t >t • ~ 1.urSlll\.»·· IS .e • ~ Oh,d .. U4,. rtlOO U't-~ ;,,,.,.e< t 111 I'•• ~ VF Cp t J' •J II''\• •\ ArM\10 110 ,. 11'\tr... . CnPw plU •• ,, •• -1 GMot • Ille 11m ~ II ...... .IO • 1J •JO • \t °" ... •lt:e1. ftO ~·~ mm ( "' )I It-\\. VSI CP u-.. \II Armc pl) IS • doJO 10'> ·~ Cnl'w ph .ill .. 1100 ..... ,., GMol pl s ' ' 10·~. 'A l.H<UN n II • 1•V·. ... Ofl plA " .• _.1!1 In•• .. ". mpPll 12 :I06 11 .... ; i\ V•fl•yln . 11 10 7~. " ArmR11 110 J • 11'~ • ''o Cn~w pl•.» .. 1.JSOO S.~• I~ On~orl 110.te it 10'1' ..•.• Lff""' t t l 1'1\ '"' ()llPpfF i . do 1t1•i . .•.• •r ·.o 5 llS H' .... lo\ Vtrlan .Cl12 3' to t t.'11 Arw111 t 4 •2 18•• ·~ CnPwttll.d .. 1100 et ti topu ,16 I it a1 ..•.. 1.e11\/elly 6 IA l .. ._ '<\ 0111.0•1. t 111 lt~-\\ llnQrjlf .. IO t Vero .-4 SO I~-"" 14r•l•pl ? , l 19'• '• c,,p,. pl7.71 .. r300 "'"· j Gollelr ·~·· u •~+"" 1.v1np1 1111.. 1 m-, ..... OlllOlgl .. vtOO • ~ S¥oo' ·70io so .,...:;·;;. vondo •• 11 • '-~ "'•rcO .IOl1 366 IS -'"' CnPw pit M .. 1100 tS ~ V• OnS1on1 . 12 IS 27Vd ~ Lellmn t.is. .. lO 10\1.t-"' OllleN 2 6 'l J•I'•• 11.t Mrll Cl! .ioe 1 JI n _lie V""lte .ISJ •• 11 1Va lie A\111011 , & IS JI ... C:nPw prJ.U .• • ...... \\ Gftl .. 1 ' >t • -"' I.en,,., 10 tt 7\' •• "" °"'•" wl ., uU••·· " S«rllllf .4011 1S H·~ .... VHISe 1.07• 1· • 14 ........ . A\dOG I lO ~ JI 1S --'• CnPw f,11.U .. U )"4o-"' GlelEJ 1.14 I 04 JI • '"' Ltnoc I 9 .10 JS" VJ Olin • > I If • · · ·• ~11t14' I 4 30 U'll \'o VI.Com 20 S UI 10 • Yo Athlone IO s 10 U\<i • .... ContA r .He 7 ,,. '~"'• ~ GTlpl tA .• 100 H '"' 1.esF•v .400 • 11 1~ • .... 011"11tl11.B 1 U M"t-~ $11'1 flint .n t " J4"•, , .. VaEPw I,, I Ut 14"'-, .. •lt<OMIO ~ ?• " ConlCop >( J\\ V. GTFlpl 1 2S HOO U\O Lt•FdC 11 II"• ~ Omatll . t 6 ""'· .14 Smlkln 11011 UI .. " VeEPpff 20 •• :J: Sii\• I A,.•,c,.ylE(~ .. ,,.~ )l/? ?',~·. ·.·. CftlCpl 1.15 . 140 11'•-'"' GTFlpl1.>0::1'10 IS .. '• LtvFln ,,.,_ J .......... ()pellkt •• 1 10:.i.. tnillttT, ;,., 20 "-"···-, V•EPpl s .. («I .. -v. A " • • , ~ ~O<lllCp l 1 2t U'\ 4 "-i lre t.~ 4 201 2?' .. + .... LevlSlr I 20 S Ill l'l'o t '"' Oran A• I. 10 • l . ,, $M\1Cllff ., ' ti 11~-.... V•EP pfT.7l., &JO I~ +I AllAcpl JIS .. rJOOO SO'·• '• nllOrp2.201 u Jl'lll..... ~· • ., • . Lev•l•F ,?OI• ll ,,.,.,, ·~ Of•noe .ro., •i1 f?;+ .. Stllffft ,,,~_ .... V•EPpftllO •• '-"~-~ AllRt~ 2.IO . II bl'•.. . "'Gppr 7.. I "'"····· 11Pl1 .tOls IOI lS'o+ .... L§F 2•. '" 1~+ ¥.. OtJtMar Uo :16 ....... ~yCp .o'7e t) 12•• 1 ..•.. "'•EpfJ 1.71 •• &JO ... -" ....... • ~· 1)1 •• v. COllllll 1.:n I lllSI uv •• "' ~ I 11 UJ 21\iAo. v. t F pf • IS J se~-l4 °""'''° fO t ,, :ti-\lo Lin, .... 1 s .. l'\. ... V0<n•d0 • l3 J". \'f AuloO • 4011 Ill fl••-' 1 Cen!llP I.tilt 17• 11'1\..... e wplt S2 .. tot ff\'O •• , !>rlyCfl ,61 ·7 0 14 • "-()vetl\Or .60 I I 4 ~ ,rl!O ., ,. I 13 II"-'°' VulcnM 110 , I It-It Aulmlll .40 1 I 11 • \, tonllllll · ., tt 1"'··· •· OIPw P1J~$ .. ll 2f\IJ + 1111 tjll<ltl.n 6 l1 1 -''t OwtrnltT I l I " ~e? IOflot '! • 1 11"11 -W--h <OClll 4 Ill 11''0 • • CMllOll l.«1 '°' ~· \'\ OaP'•• .• "'100 I 11't • ~ OOt'I t lll 1 II~ ,..... . . J)wrSll ••• ~ Mi+ V• Wll It ll'· .. ··l_.; W•bHll .«> • 1 1114 , , Av<opl JlO. 10 ... ., 'o C.0.,thl I ... t JI• !Sl'!t ~ ~re ,1 t f ~ I~+ '' tlllylll 1.UIJ 470 JI'~• l~ Owec1C 112017 W -'-ftpf t :· 1 JI~ .... W.o<l\o., tO t 11 1•-+ 'I\ A•<OPI 420 •. II Sit-.•, .. CllOola .IS t l4' ,..,. n 0.rller 1.AOll ff~.\\ lll(NI 2 6 llS 34~)• \4 0-nlll l,GI I + t·, Bk •• tt , .... ••, W.o<llofJ20 .. 69 .. -t ~' ~v·~~r 1.e0 IOt 1>•1 U'• '• Cr!Otpt •·s· · 1120 ~~r-J.t GeK~ 2.-12 .. 00 -4 1.lnc:Ntpl I . 4 61"H \.'! 0.lnllll .nt S I + \ .. SoCal£ 1·14 7 '1J ? • '• W•(lllllr •• ti 4't . ., • "·-11'\• V. Conwd '· • t -•\Ii §Ii lli'c MM 19 1•,r. ••• Un<PI t.n• .. t 19V.-" -P'-4 -SovlhCoi·w 1 "° 11-.+ ,,.. wa1M1r .11u 21 101 ... ~ ,.,...., 1 .O•• S<I 411A1 •.•. COOllUll ·' I S. l ··••• 111,tGll • 'l I' ... ., Llonel .OI t 314 H ..... P .. 8MI .)Otl4 I 'I~•··•• SolnOE .1°.>a 6 IS 19~+ ''> W•ltr11 1.10 I 20 ""'• 'I• .... -Ceoplft l.OllO IU '"~····· ••• so. 68 I + V• l.lllon .JllJO :rt) I ..... -'A PPG uo 6 11• 2 lh+ ~ 5aMtl•• '·•I 1 .. u + tr.; w•-•A l.fOa. 60 '714+ ... er Mtg .. II 1'• '" C-L•b .2011 2tt ""t" Gl''QHlll ·'°. II I)" .. v. LlllOnpl '·· 2 ~-"' ~--u ,. ~ ..... s.H,&hl a. J1 • + It Wall8u& .1.. • ~,, .. ·~ B•O<• I so.tu 11 SI"'+ ... C-fll .ID, Jt Uft .... G ii UD t uo 2J1t ••••• Loc•t.0 ' 111 I~· 411 l'K.111 l,H .t 4 1>'11-It IOUPtc 2., 1 11 al"-" WtlUm '·'°' u ,.,._ ~ .. B•<M fO .. 38 S'--.... c_ .... ,,. 7 j 20 + VI 0 -"' 11 •2 I~• "' Loe Ille ., .. , 102 7:1--I• Pa<O! 2 412 2:J\4+ .... Soully 2:.0 1 11 SI'~ . Wert!Fd • • ' •• + '"' e.~ .... 11 "'" U2 •• -.... ~-"'° 1.20 • It ..... 0 .D 7 • u .. -'" Loe•t 12111 • n 'lS"-•• , P•<Llg I ID I ll ~ \'o Sovllypf ill 1 •'llo. '• W•fll•<O .• 4' ti\-.... B•ldOM IO S 1 14 -.... ordwe .3013 n' .!~-~ I) •r ~ 21J 10~+ V. LomFn ;,_ I JI '*-'I• P.o<l.m t..01J JO ifSYr •• 11: $ttUICo 1Mi> 16 341~.... WtrnS I 40 I ti 2•~+ \it BallCp I . 2 " ••• lltftO I.MIO ... "' .. Mi G~ll I .,, ,. •.• l.omM 1.tse .• 11 ,.... •. P•<P•I "JIQ Jlil ..... Wutlnf ·*to 54 U•l'e .•••• Wrncom ·'°, 2IS ,, .... ,1, 8•11yMI 1011 .. 11 • v. COrtBlk 110 lltli• ~ 0 ~" ·'° '0 11 + 'lo LnSI ... 1.10 1 " 11\'o ..... PKP_,., l.~10 n ~·"' """•'' .• , 12 .s• .. .,., WrnCPl 4.n .. 11 IU .. . BellGI!. 1 ... 10 41 h.,.• '" C11\1SIM ., I 1V. ..••• Col pf .18 .• U 8 ..... LILCo 1.63 7 236 11 ........ Pt<TT 1.ilO 1 31 , • .,. SwlAlr zt 1 7 2i~o+ \.'o WrnCpf I.ts,. 2 U +Iii) B•ncl•9 .40 ~ •M Ul. 1 '·°' Cowie$ .711 12 U"•., ... Coodrll I 32 4 t•7 ?ti ... + \lo Lll.ptlC 8.30 .• LIO tll't-H1i P•c1'Tpf • .. 1300 1Jlo'•····· Sw 8sll 1'.10 1 13 2SV<• "11 W•fhrL 11017 370 26'1't• V. ~:::v.':.7'dt~ '! ~~~.:. ··~ c~:1~' :~: ·: 0 1 m:: •.. ~ =·, ':?.> ·, m ~~:~···;,. t:t::~ rn:: "! m~: ~ ~~10:~ if.~ ~ 1,~1 ~ irr.~11:lt' ·~ f~::: ~:~~!r~ a i i:v.: t: BnkNY l.31 6 10 .JO>to. ~ ,.,,. uo , ""' .,. Ofte• .a m ,. ..... II\ 1.onoor .1614 II Uilo. -,.11,.,5( 4 Ml ... •P'6f, to I ... ~ WU N pll.JO •• I M\11+ .. 81ro1Va ... II S 14'•-,.. fldlP Ji 6 I '"• ~ Grelnor .S.14 II JO"-"' t Drt lCp .to I 111 11 ...... Pemlf.a . 211 II n'I + Yo IF ·1 l , I ., .... ill W~Sllt JO • II tilt-l·1 ean~Am ... ' m H + " C•oON~I ... ISi 2). + ,. OrenlM l ' a 11 ... ·~ •Lt nd '10 • J2I n • .... PanAm' .. ""'• "' '°" • J '"". '"' W•llWI I.I... t U't+ i ... B•11H r J 1 ,. Jl''" IOI Cr•dH '·· 21 ...-.-" gflIOr ' tSll».t\•I\\ 1.•P.c ·-·,, "£•"' PanEP1•·1 d im-141 r H . • 11•-.-v. W•st•M .40,2 3S !l"'o •.• ,, Blrlrof J so .. ,, ~' ... •-:Yo Cl'Ofl!P .90. , '"'···u Pc .10ezo .,, ..... ~ LOUVOI ..... X20 z• •+ ~ Paprcfl 7 -v. ~ry~"pl •• I 11'-• .. W•l-lnJ ,., I '" IOY,+ ... ::~:; ::!!H ~ fi~:_~ ~~ZHftla::.: J1 1,i: .. :!~ g1~~~1:iI 1li 0fin·:~~ t~f:·~;l!1i li u~.~.~ ~m* :ill ~2 ~~~!~ ~Sb~~~l'::J ,! ·~ n:1 ~ E~~~\e;~ :f· ii:!·~ 8arOCR .2t1J 2SS '"" • ~ Crw ~ 1'90 I 4 ; •"' Gl'l'OIUld 4 S 10~• ._ LUCllOW ,Cl I 41 1\f>+ 1\ P•ll'11 I.! ~ 'i +Vo ulllll Ofl' lt9 14 -~ Wel~Mkl ,$J e K\4+ \t 8••n1G11 .90 7 1 "' • . • Cr11Z Pl 4 20 •. ll10 llUI\ • 11> GOian! I Cll IJ • 1110 ••.•• 1.uk•nS I 60 1 1 11'i + \lo P•YISll• .!Cl I I + y, la.lo ·al U nv. . Wei lF 1.U 7 1tllf h~ • l, 8••1< Ill< I.JO. ll 20•1o .. , CrtiM'F In s .. " . .. . . Grtyft 1 00 1 m ., .. v. l,.yk" 20J.. IO •I'.. ... l>Hlldf _,., 1 ••• •: ~I§ I. I .. "•. I, Wtl "'l.17•11 I '"•· •.•. B•l«lMI I021 .. 42,.. ~ Cul!WO l.l? • 6 ,, ••.•• Grevhl'dWI 1 ·-11·16 •• Lr-•pl 2.SO.. ,, 1"' •... ..... .... 'j t 1' ... Sid pf~· •• '* ff...,_'' WIPP llf'-ID •• llOO 51ft+1 8•11Khl.l «1t1 ,.., .... '' ~w111r,11 ~ • ,•a 111'1···:.: orewc: .-1 )9 •l· .... LynCSy• .•' 6 ,._. ~ P•t.. l· 1 ? H ... ., stl . '' ·u -YI WtptPt t 40 • s 36"• '" But Tr. .3011 1t1 JI>,• '• ~llrrt1?f' ':JS • If ~ • ,. Orllff\11'1 1 S ~ 1711.o . .. -~ -'•J;t~ . .. 110 Vt+ .. st• otlt .40 t 1 '''·· .,. Wn4'1r~ ., t •I J' + )2 :B: .. ~crsl~:: •. ·!! ~. ,~ 1~~~ •• .. :~ c::rr'~1~01:1Q ·~ ,~ l;~:: :;.: xr:~~I~ 11 ~ .q H~.:. ~ =l:xL i~ ~ .,: ~ : :,: ~:PLpl UL !~ 10 v.: ~ ~:g:~i;: t1:;.«> ~ ::: ~:~; ~ ~~;"tc uo. i J aw1 .:!. ~ "' -' • )tl'J-,,., CvttW .60 I • -~ ,_ :! ~ IW•I •. nr •. , ... l·H• MEI .2Dt ' lS •Vt• 14 Pa Pl of u'f'J UJ\t-~ "011011 • II ,., 1m. ~ Wn o.t.,,fOll • 1&1~ ,...., .... a .. 1Fch .9'11 111 ,....,,. ') C11t1ffH t.40 • 4'I ... t ~ G•IWM i.lr.. J .. "'_Vt MO c .• '" 14 + -~wli 1 JI ..... SOO!lllf 1 •• m .oi. ..... wn 1el":f14 19' u • .. BeOmn ·"IS .. 3)·~ I ~ C1clp I 10e s s 20T'o. II> Gll\lilol 1JO.. ~cw ...... Mac AF .ltOIJ 31 II~-.. p_, .. I.! :m-"' $IP0<Cpn.40 s s •Yi-~ wnPvOI 11 .,, ,~, ••• * 8e<tn0 .n 11 ... 19 n . . . .. CyPtu• 1 «172 J:J lf\P)+ ~ OMtt Pr . • 1 1 ••.•• Mac On J?e ' S4 t f\-l't ~pOr • J ... " at Pr.st ..OIQ fO •l'I+ 1 .. wu11ton I. t t1 1'4.;. '·' 8 ff<ll I llltl I St i.•~+ \~ -0-0 -~ G ~ll 1.90 6 $74 lf~t ~ Macke . .0 7 11 "' ••• l"90P0i, '" • , .... S1Pct14 ... 12 13 •''>-''II W11\Jn~']·· 2•U -1 Beker ... t \1 ••t• DPll 1 JI .... i. ti 111 101 + ~ M•<Mlll .M I_.. 11"'--II\ P..,MCo 901l t:IOS '1V,_. "' Stir!• I 7 5 20'\\ • \• WU10 I. •• JI u•\• ~\ eettoP l 6 1110 J 1'1-.. °"'"°" .20.. • "41-"' u' Iii ·'°·· . II'. M6<y I so 1 s ,, .... t.. PffklnE .fOIS R ~· y, u I~ I IJ n .v.+ I'< WU Ip• •. •• ~-... Belden 1.:n f> 1 l9'1t + '• ~nlllv .'2 6 ll ~+ '-' O IR Pll.60 •• lfl1J~ MdSFd .Mt.. SI llVt • Vo Perle< II 107 11 •·· •• s·1: rel po I 2 1) -'" Wtt QIEI ,,I 6 :lat 17'14+ Vt BtlOnH ~ 9 " 1 + " l~CDl,J4 6 J1 1 6 ~ G ~IVI 1·'4 I '1 '-+ t.'11 MeglcCI ,fO S 70 I~+ Vt Ptllnt I.tot 221 U~• ,,._ $1 Mvtlnv •. 11 )111 .... W\t9pl 3'0 •. l'IO S4 -~ 8t!1How· .Mt• 14t U~. · · · · an ti .m1 II I t -Gii ,ptl.111 •• 1100 S .... Mtllr1 1.20jl .!+' -~ + W "-ilncpf 1.;' J ul7ft• ~ SJeMSI 1.0S.# •.S 11'\..... W'lv.c 'i ' " flftt+ .. Betit,.. .n • tt •""'" IM I tat + OU M .n It ll>t+ '" l\lltlofiH .14 o ~ n~ "-,..1.,p1,, J j =• .,. lteulCn uo ttt "'""' ''I weyt rnr I &11 2714+1 &allCd 4 OI • , ... ~.. • • Pl .. , ~ ··;..: G11I.... .10 I ,. ·~-"' Menl\ln ·* l • '"'····· ,..,,,. Is t'o-I\ St•rtlll '.,... . • •t .. -1\ wnrpl. ., IS " + -8eml' 1 70 1 I JI'~• \Ir Dll•Gtft 11 J1 4fltlt + .. -M--MlrHan 2.0I 4 n• 3,J"+ VI P.iro1., I -" Slt"Dll !OIO ISJ 1.-., t ~. -IF 11 I • JO~ t 1't 8-•· 2.• 7 » 3'V.-v, g:••tnt 'i •• H -.. EMW ! IO 11•. . MA PCO I 101J SS .,, ~ P••o~ 'ti" n1 ....... '"'~,.. ... I M • .-.... W?IMIPll •. JD ••••• BenlC• IAO. '3 11 .. -141 "1~d-1J • "· ~ ~~"' ~ ' ... "• M•rAIM .lO I 2S 11 ···= !"9tA1pf, u "'···11 Slffftllftl .... ' u .. "'W?it•~·1~t .. ozo ,, ........ Benelpf 4.:IO., 1 '°"-It _.," I.ill) ,. ~,. 111 'I . I '2 ""~ ~ M•ttlO 2.10 1 lO n 6 1'1fllr 1 ..+ 'ft si~11.J 1.10 S tc ~·" , ~IPI pf •• llOO 31\\-\1 8nlS. IM ·i J 2 • ..•• Oty•PL .... • " I v. + Yo 11• w~ \· I ~, l'IH .. ll&littml • • 4 I ... ~1'4) ~ I 111 ..... s IWW• '·'° 1 6 + "' r•pl uo. ut n-t+ \ol x:~!:P·O.,b J; lft:.:·~ g:.~l"~.~·t'Wl"f ~IV. ~!t"J'\· .. ~: ~:.:.'ii: =::Ml~.~,; 2lJ 11-..~.~~ Phlla£I f s~~· l n . :~..-2':~tlft.. fl:~.~ =-~l;M\,IOt J ,, 2~n~.~ BetlPO .oee • 1:a 1•h •..•• OetM.,, l.!2 • 122 1~-~ Hr.i;,P 1..... • t ....... M1rL°C'1'1' ~ • 4 "t• 14 gt t~.. 1.... ont~ us 1 Yr V..+ "" Wll llno 1.eo1T 12 32l,I, •• 8,,,.s1, 1 '" 20~. 141 0.1,.,.P 1 .... • 21 u ,.. '"' H"41tmn ... 1 u ,,...,_.,. Me•••t 1 , ,. ,, • "" 11 j .. t000 • It+~ ii ,..i ~ I Yr-6 n.11, 1 ·~ 1•" .. .,.. Bl9Tllr .oi4 n lJtlo-v. Otli.Alr .10. '" '9111. ~ Hi'" ~ 1 II u • •..... Marriot .IJll .,,, II ... I .. ..."' I ( ....... H .. 1 .20S }1lt• h Bl•ckOr All sn 'j + V. Otte< ti 'i 11:.:···u ~ 1, • 11 11 • 'Ill Mrll!M L«llS 1IO n1• ~ • ""' I' + ! ldt ~J 11 1'4 • ~ lllalrJ n 1 S SJ I + n OelW •· $ .. -.. I ' 11 >7\lo~1 • Mrlll' U41S 77' -.. + I aml :l ~ 1~+1 BllUL lb 1 11 I \'o+ I\ O.nMI UC 6 I ,, ··•1..: 1 rJ '·"' 7 S IM'\+ 1" ~~M UO • loll )~t , f • W r 1 ... ISllrO .I 7• 11l• " Bl<_ .. ,. 1.1511 Ill 'I t "' De~\ ,IO~ w Ith Z! :'1''' ..• l HO i1v.+ ~ IM I( ·"° t 3' I ... ., " ., • ...~ )I( ... o '· II '°. 11.-. 4' 811198 1.20 • 71 2 "• I.\ Oen ~tr ·• 2' ~+ ... 1111 f T ~ ~ •.. ~ Mrl C:11 ·1' 49 ~' , •• , & + w , at ~ W "f: o 14 2SO ,_,. V. 81119bfd AO 7 't S~+ ~ 8: ,.40 ,,• n'J• 1-. ...... r 'r. II . 4 lll!OCO • " ,, 1•~·· • ' '''k I. 'J'! .i: J 1. Jiit .!.!~· ., =r:o .. , ,·1 •1• ~s::~·: Dtl ., t.··n.. ,· 1m:::Y.i H:,,... u., 'i• ·~ ..... =:=11,~-,•1 tJ ;~.,;• ~: 1 • : " , • a ~'""' : :. J~'f H im~.~ llolMtC: MO. ,. •h ~ Dlptl .n. It 7~· rz HU''' tit ........... "' .. rt I ... 11 ... -f. 1 t "'" f• ., • ~ ~ KPL l;tt'° 10 "''-tt ::~ti: Zf : {; Bret:: .•• »1 ~~'"" ar,m. 1:#, J tt~.·.~ ~~Inc . '.' ~ j~·~ Pllft!l_lfl ! " (~·r: r ii7' llits' ~ ~··~ :,:::s l:u'j '} If~!.; 8CH'lflll\S 17 1t JV. ••••• 01e1CP It 1J ....... a~f:ir11 .IOI) 13"1411•• ... 1t1MB0 t It tJ -Plltr" •el ' ft M _,+ ltll WlltrO Mei ,14, 11,.-" Boa£0 2.4411 30 U'\11 + Yt g •lnl t.20. 2 ~"'· ~ AllSo '·""" • "~'"" •11•1 Ill ·~· ' Plll•lll. ' ..... 11•1 , ..., • ._ WoltrW .1. ,,. ,.. .. ~ 8o•£pr1,17 •• I 1t -~ It.MS .,.171 j,': ~'°"°!.., Wjllt!I ' 1.0J MayO~ 1.16 t 160, ~t ~ Pt.allflK -~ 011 ,IO 1• -JI ~Cf . .0 t 25 1 ••••• 80 ,1 "' 1 _.... 10 u•4 -.. I \ 2' ~ .. J• 1 t It)., . v. Mav•rQ .t010 s -\Ii t!ri"11 1.. • iiO .» t. Ml+ " "WOOdP j'O l I+ "" &ra•lll .:io • ..fl1 tV1+ ,,. < ~· ~ ~ ~ ... ,, H~ tL9' I ~, ~· V. MtyUW 11 K • \it ~ t 2 .. + ,Ill f\ ""4~ lh1•111 '\. & I + "' Br•"". C ~H » ~-i. t • 1 f .. .,.._ • H• ·-• v~····· Ma~o i.60lt1 st • t'> .t\ltiW . 14 21 '"• 14 ro ,.,., .. ·a' -..: \\ woiww11 1 t •1 -t 8rl9SI • I ~ ..... ,. '6,, ... , .14 t ~ ""• ~ fl\C lrf 111 st + * E ' t I~·~ anll lt 6 u.v.-~ Wol'ldAlr • 141-Brl"M .10 +-" ...... ~·1~•... ltM ~" I a'":''l 1M r 'f 111 + \S 4 .!J ··"' ,. ,, 1~~·"'4 WY1j1y j , .. 10 '--l!lrl~I .a1 ···~ ~ ·•··· ~' ·r,i ~ ' l~ , = 1 IPf 1 • ""' wild tt ;; • .., ~ 11 " 1,.,-: •• Jt "ii"' di ~ ..... =~~: ?i' i :Ii: 1,3, ':1:U •·' f~ ti 1 ; ~ 5,_.: it ~t ~, 1 1~ !! ~5 i~~Aj; u }ni:::~ v~ ,jTf!·2-1~: ~ :fa~.:;, it' 1; \'~:1~i' 8f0wll .ltj , \lo...... • ,, ., -it .rl1 ~-,M McOld MO. ,. .. ..... ~ t-" ?i 1;\;..... ;ilflatd 1 t =r "" 4 .. ~1· B•llGts .uo mu"' .cs It, ta+ •'t u • ~ ~«»M •1' ,. 11 ..... 1 . •t'm •t:t... .. ··· ~11,,,, ,. • ~ .... ., !!ttJ• t..01t ., ... • '•""" ·• ,....... •1a .. ., • , " • ""''"'"" i ti• t -:t 1 • "' rr.;•'" .. ,..., ·'°' 14 "' 9•.1• 1U n'4• ~ IJ:~~ ·.c:: "It"~·~ t.J :liii ~ f.:'-... ~.~ q .,~~·~=~!. ~: 'J J ~... ,u •. ·~ .,"~:"' ~-.f',jij t ... ": .... ~, il::7 ... =~~~.::: "i: ~: ~ ~ :i. I ,, :r·i , lti·i ·11 •h~.~ =~:r.' ·Af'i j ft ... "' "·· a "d it· .. le .. J . ~.": 1." ... ·~..::--=~:t,~J J' 11Ya:;::-; Ei~ \-ii' .11. t " 1' .. ~~·ij m:-,,js •• u , '° ... " , "'t K l ~··~ ~1 ~~ , -: ~ ~·· ·• .,l ~~P =~y·'t, .. ·• 11~:..:.·~ ~~ 11!1 J .• , ,. ,' ... , :. t:r.:J:• 1' ":.::tt ,,,_ ,. i It:": ... cwt;'. .. l·~ ¥"11 .-ti, l~.li.-~M 1... · 21~+ .. .... .-: »J ~· *" TJ + t t ~I' 111 •• 11 -~... • '"'*"• I H 11 .. + I.\ tttf. ~ _; ~: ~ .HIJ 2 ht ..• }! .-.Wlvlllt ... f -"' M '! ,, ......... . j::!1)!'1, :I a:: ~ 11' 1: ~t~m, ~.~ i~f ~ ~.ii~~~ i!fil'nc/I,! .i " • ~ J iii Jm~ ~ w::.~~IP",. deci..IM \~,~~I' 1Jt ~,~~'·i£ ~ t-~l 1t~.~. ' ~t; i'{' !:~ •lt"tt) ~ r.~;I.. ;:_ '1 t!"';::~ bj ! ~aner, nJstrat\on four :m\ll l11J t ~ l ' m+ (i ,.,1 t ··•1 'I + I• 1··•• mOd M --to 'rt Ck 01\ WHeOt Pl"O-Mf'tlll 11• •1 '" • -" + • -, + •• -_. I dU" -~--.a ap-ant ,_be h .... •111m .... I ., 1..-.+ . ~· ~·-I 1 I n :: ... ~·i .. : • 'i; • .. IWJR ,_ -"' •v• 11 ,:;,t.'1..,.""fM-" . ~ tiii:;;;; 1• \,;~ "' 11 ~ ..... L. 1j .! ' t lril all~~. tb naw IOV· ,,. , 1 • ' ... • --a -1 111 ,.... .. ~ .. 1J t-lt P'iil • 1 ' 1 .. 1 er'flm,.Ul•u'*~ f~.., .' ..; ~+·u ~t0 fi' *'j 1 ::.~ ,.u· ., "" ntt:.~ • lt u -a f;= 1 .t' .... J Farm...-PIM' 48.l naU.lJ9tlJCAt 'T '~it ... IJ:! ~ • ~ • • 1 " ll Ii \4 •' l '4! ~.~ . t1 +·i·· ol win~ WM tbla l•ll r6t' •t ff"'"" :. , u~+ ~ f •• .'I u.,..~" , n • \C 1umnt1t'~~H , i dtclitte ."!J.'lf NA Fii • ..... , ~· ' j U'4! I • 1 : ! o, i • .,.,~ •• mill.Lon ,-at.a ' - ,.. 1 • .. • 1 ,. t; • ~·.. • . ~ -.. 1t. • .. -• rea.raeo ~~s~lt11~t.M ~t.c-3·~ ! !fi 1~.. :~ .. ~ 3 T.21 ,:i" q i It::~=~~~: 1J 'll rn t-. ft!;.. '~J Jj'i, Alr1culty.re ~tat Aid~- • J • .. ... ~~ 1t. ,. l\.et \'I Mll'f I ·"'1 .? H --• "U 41Jt._ . .... ... --_, J -......... • tt : ·~··~ adieJ' .... U I -1-f -• Mtllllflt M 6 -•• + ~-1 , ' I ( 8 DA.IL Y PILOT .4. .Paper Bunlea .. ornc~s ·Often Keep To~ Much By8YLVIA~Jt.?Ell l ...... u .. When a am all buslnesa ol wbtoh I was a hill owner••• tranafured t.o &ts employeea and I waa forced l.O 10 through t"' nscords, 1 wu •mbarrassed to db~ver what a piper clutter had bffJl accumuJ a led whlle lt Was lh my band:s. Jn lbe filOI I found cancelled checks daUn1 batk morq than ao 1ean1. Job appJlca\lort.1 thl' bad been turned dow~ more lhan a decade •101 ~ce lbat had no Nl· evance t.o 1m. Equally 1~. I found several copi• ol oneco11tract11oout-of·dateltwd.artanUqoe. . ,, -. TYPICAL OWNlllS Of''SllfAL.L bualneaHI probabl,y pone111hntlar clutter. Thus, 41 ,Uhlellftts: ~ One cont.._l me ts adlQuate tt> protect a COl\trati. permantntly. But remeraber that th~ amcloe~1to 1,000 fedeul and state ~gulaUons covering Ht.e-nUoo otrecords. These vaey widely on tax, u.nemp&oyrnent and workmen's compenaatlon. So before disposing of Wlwanted and needless records, check with the state tax com mlastoner'a office. Dt8catd audit rep<>rta after 10 years; audlt work pape\lf. arterthree yea rt. Get rid ot general ~orrespondence after ftve years and eliminate cluslned documents - lnventorles, ·l'JepOrts and receipts -after 10 years. • Dispose of contracts Money's Worth 20 yean after settlement. Also throw out requests for. tiervlces and requisitions for supplieni one year after the '1~ oflhe fiscal year. I DISCARD ACCIDENT REPORTS, inJuty clijms anj settlement papers 30 years aftersetllernent. Ellmlnate applications, changes and terminations afte , five years. Sev~n years is long ehou1h to keep attendance records; employee activity files become more clutter two years after1hey have been $u11erseded. Dispose of employee contracts-six years arter terminit- tion. Get ndoffidelily bonds ll\Neyftrs aflel'l~tmlnatfon .. Garnishments can be eliminated after five years; in- surance recoros for empl<)Jees are needless 11 y.ears a termination: Hmc cards go intq.lh.e discard heap af\er th years· and' union agreemen~ accordinJ? to the Wal Jtea le) Act,'may~ thrown out aJter tbree y~ars. . " THROW OUT 11\JILDING AND maintenance recor after lO years, unless tbere arespecial reasons to save the~ Dispose of bids and awal'd&.thre4! years after term~ lion: price list§ . .when obsolete: purchase orders nnd requ1 lions three yeors·._rter t<!tmlnatJon~ and quotations. aft . . ~ oneyear. . • • · · AccordlnJt to the Code o( Federnl Regulations, you ~ destroy employee withholding records, ~xcisc exe~pU certificates, excise reports in manufactunng and "xc1se r ports atthe retaillevel afterfour years. . .. . Copies of "Keeping Reoordl, Whut lo Discard, wall sent to those who mail a postcard Lo Consumer Informal} Center. Dept. 625 E. Pueblo, Colo. 81009. ltbas some valuab hints and il's rree Countiam Win ~ Ho~-Bt./vbs -J Lowell Hayes, Mission Viejo, has joined WestlandSi Bank as commercial loan officer. Former owner of al mortgage loan business, he has also handled constructionl lending for UnJted Calltorrua Bank and has served a~ branch manaser for Imperial Bank In Or'ange, joining ~ office before constru~tlon 'was. completed and coordlna~1 the various activities altendant tOdHnlng a bank office. 0 \ ' I\ I Richard M. Banistert Dana Polnl. of Holmet1 Ir Nan ~ Inc., California. bas been promo(ed, to manager ot ~ power cycle analysis group In the power systems dlvlalo . He will be rt!t>QnsJbl.e. for the revie" and approval of ~ coal burnln1 tur,blo~ ,stud1. the liriH . la performing ~1 Alaskl lnte~itatlt>)taHnduslf'w. , He will retami\Js pi>tltlon u·pro~ct manager for tttel Royal lnduStrlee lfsl loop pJplttf project. lie waa prevlou~lfi Involved wUh ·1ttM! · ~On(eplual de.l1n for the Ener~ Research ancl.l)e'Veloprnenl Adminl•tratlon 's I now. Dept ment of Ener~y > nu~le~ wHte lsol•Uon pilot plant. · • . I The Callfvnila Land1t1pe • lrrigaUon Counclly Inc. hair elected 11e~tffc-ers for 1978: Morton .lf, :Htrf.talb'1 of lr:ldustrial Tur(, Inc., pres! dent, succHO\ng JollO R. Carl9on of Carlsor:i's Landacat> in1, Fountain Valley ;. il&au Ablen of Carlac10 Landscape Inc .. Pla"entfa, presldetlt·elecl; Brul!e Royer or :o c Landscape Conttruction. Inc., Fullerton; Leonard ., of Acme Sprinkler Co .. T0rrance: and Charles R_. Jo .. of California Laodscape. Inc. Canoga Park vice pres dents; Ne.We LHtld or Valley Crest Landscape, Int?, Santa Ana dlVislon, aecretary.treasurer. •• David II', Popp, Hon.tin1ton Beech, has joined Llo)'d Bank CaUfortlla IU vice pfesidenl el the Los Angele!I head quarters corporate office. rJ A banker for 11 yean, Ht wa11 formerly with Golde l State Bank. 1 Dave ·Knutsen, Misslon ~lejo, 'has been appolnt4'd asJ slstitnl manager and operations office r or the El Toro Ban~ of America. . , -He bad setnd ~ operations officer of the Cap1strano1 Palludes omcie ln Siin Clement.e since April 1976. He pre~ vlously was o~raUons··a111islanl at Laguna Beach for .~ vear having Joined the bank as an operaUonl5 traJnee n'( .I t I li1•. I • * I Jlarvey Swindall of Fountain.Valley, manager of Co•s~ Federal Sa-vlap aa• Loan Assoclatlon•s oftie!e in Hunt~ in•lon Beach1 tuu been ap}>Ott\ted aaslslant vlc president. 1 H• Joined Cou\ In 1913 ~d serv~ as s~clal projects coonlinator in tbe system• and computer services depart~ me~. ' I . . . ' Jerry Hetnem1nn, Huntington Bet<!h, has been nam~ crtdlt manaiet' for the LOI Angeles dlvl1lon or IUl1b~ 'r1b•abpply Cf:1 • wbQUY owtied .1ubsldlaty or lhe Fluo~ c.)ie Is rom;e~ assl1t1nt' credit manager for RObtn.J Con&olldated-~\lltri•, Cll1 or Industry. J' ' . ~at.Mrine Stodrdale, manager of Co11t Federal Sav ln11 altd Loin Asaoclatlon's office in Huntington Beach, h been apPQlnt.tid a vice pres ldtnt. I lht JolMd the at tcltlhb. fJa 1978 with 20 years· ex; petiftlee ln lJW••vtAc• and joali industry. j • l DoQtU tn1er. S~ Cl.rnedt~ bu bffn named dle'ft tor bt tiuallt; asallnri~o lot Bfflr•a• laain•e•&a a.c. 11\aJtt~. Rt la t'l'Jl.,..ib1W ~or monitorfnJt lht tnainMlihf an mati11fadu.rtna quaU\Y of new compan.)' product.I. WI 8~cl~an alnc• 1960. be tuved aa prod11ct N111.r an-.aer rw UM compan.-'1 1clent1fic bialnan\ent.e ell• llAd Mml\ lr75 . AJtDAILY PllOf L/9C Lights Exa•lned ~,..Reduce Fire Riala AT YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL W ASlll NOTON (AP> -T he C'on au mc r Product Safet y Com· mlaalon has urged consumers to take ft row minutes lo examine and test thfllr Christmas lights before plug· stnai them or wiring their trees. sued about potenU1J hazard&. fP._*i_ D..,.. PelJde• DEAR PAT: My aunt and I Utlnk at my la te uncle may have had everal sm all life insurance policies hich have been !oat. Can you repeat· the n ame of the organization that 'helps trace missing policies? tM S...,._ Beacb area CH be ob· t•bae4 bf pboalag that city'• S.atof' Cltizen Cater at ~·NIT or 531-1311. Pm•C Paten rn-tee•IW J Ullt u Ct!w basic safety precautions cun red u('e the riisk of fire or electric •hock rrom dtJrective li ghts, such as thu1w wlU1 cracked sockets or frayed wlru11, thecommis11ion said, T hursday. In one case, the commiaalon said that Market Resear ch Imports, Inclloe VlUage, Nev., ls voluntarily with d r awin g from sale certain ChristD}as light replacement bulbs im· ported from Taiwan which m~ be de- fective. G.K.,CottaMes a Tbe Institute of Life Insurance bas discontinued Its missing policy ques· llonnalre service due to a low success rate. IU warns tbat a private search for a missing policy or unknown beneficiary can be quite expensive for an individual to undertake. One "'et hod lnvol ves contacting the state department or Insurance ln whatever states the deceased was known to bave resided. Request the names and addresses or currently licensed In· surance companJes lo each state ud write to each company. DEAR PAT: I'm taking my vau:lt· tlon and dolng some palnlln~ ln11hl• our house. Can vou find out It thtJ"' h& any possible w•y to J>Our paint from one can into another without muklntc a total mess? Using u funnel Is the most sensible solutlon. but I don't have the patience for that. MORK TUAN Z,%00 injuries from hulld uy decorations were t reated last ycur In hoepltul emergency rooms ucrou the country, one -thlrd of them cau8cd by Christmas lights, it said. IN THE OTHER case, the com· 'mission said New York Mer<:handise Co., Ne w York City, voluntarily stopped selling certain light sets that may have defective bulb sockets. P.W., Mission VltJjo The ugency'8 words of caution were uccompanit.'tl. by two warnings it is· The replacement bulbs involved ha ve a thin stra nd of wire about one- eighth to one-fourth of an inch long, which may protrude from the solder ~ip at the base of the bulb. · "When fhe)t're finished singin', do we jud smile or clop or what?" There b a trick to thls, accordlnl to several professional palnter11 con- tacted by AYS. When you pour paint from one caD into another un or con· c .~ _ .. J p k d J talDer, hold. • clean wooden stick rul.A}(l; ac e n across the openiD« or the can wttb tbe palDt ln it. TbJs helps the palDt now freely and easily lnto tbe ~d can. WbeD pourlnt from a s mall can, graap It witb three fingers and a For Gay Fashions Another tracing method involv~ cbecklDg the "Insurance" llstlngs in the Y eUow Pages phone directory (available at county libraries) of the cities wher e the dec eased lived . Again, write letters of Inquiry to all ins urance companies lis ted. ~ sure to Include the deceased pe rson 1 full name for women as well as married), date of birth~ death and "guess" dale of the time when the m ystery policy may ba~~beentakenout. thumb, uslDi the index finger to bold ClllCAGO <AP> _ People craned their necks the s tick vertically ID place as you d essed forward as the models strutted in pour. When pouring from a large an pr . di h r· t both h ds t be ed to Uft rront of a Jam-packed au ence at t e irs gay ~::·can andanpour~:! pain':~ Keeping fashion show sponsored by a major refailer here. the s tick ln place 1B more difficult,· The furs were gorgeous and the models were but it can be done. stunning -both the fem ale models and the female out. Snalor Shopper• Sa.,lng D EAR PAT: I have a problem with the Popular Science Book Club. We keep receiving bills for two furniture building books. We didn't order these books. never received them and don't want them shipped a t this tim e. My le tte r s brin~ no respons e, only impersonal.ors. TllE SHOW, ORGANIZED BY gay members of the staff at Bonwit Teller Fur Salon and held at a popular gay nightspot, featured 50 men's furs plus specially select~ women's fur fashions. It was a benefit to help raise money for a gay community center dedicated to a gay bartender, Frank Rodde Ill, who was s lain under mysterious another bill. Help! J .T .. El Toro circumstances last s pring. DEAR P/\T: I've heard that there a re a number of businesses that offer discounts to senior citizens and that certain services also are discounted for older persons. Is there any source for getting a list of these discounts in Costa Mesa a nd Huntington Beach? S .J ., Costa Mesa The Costa Mesa 03enlor Citizens Club wUl outline available discounts in Costa Mesa if you phone 556·5391. Information about senior discounts in Furs we re selected because gays account for. No explanation was offered by the 10 percent of the furs sold at Bonwit's and 25 percent book club's spokesman, but your ac· offur salesnationwide the salonsaid count will be adjus ted and bllllng~; ' · will stop as soon as the computer catches up with the correction. HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDED a white, floor-length fox fur p on cho, a classically .c ut $15,000 golden sable, a $22,000 Alaska snow lynx cape and a $75.000 Russian sable. ·Jimmy and Me Oh, How We Tiro Danced 6-year Semence Imposed Salon owner Irwin Ware s aid some expressed concern that the event would exploit gays for the sake of publicity. However , he said, he had m ore complaints from cons ervationists, who were con- cerned .about endangered spicies, than from gay r ights advocates. By J URATE KAZICKAS Aue<1a1.c1 """wrlw WASlllNGTON -I danced with the president ol the United States the other night. J immy Carter and I twirled around the floor of the East Room of the White House <tl a Christmas party for the Washington press corps. WASHINGTON (AP ) -A $10,000·a-yea r gov· ernm ent clerk who ad- mitte d e mbe z z ling $857 .000 in federal m ass· transit funds faces a s ix· year stay in prison. Willia m S ibe r t , 30, dre w that sentence in U.S. District Court to an COMMUNITY CHURCH, CONGREGATIONAL 811 Heliotrope Avenue, Corone del Mer CHRISTMAS EVE CANDLELIGHT SERVICES 7:00 A 11:00 PM Christmas Music by the Choir and Soloists· Christmas Ca rols CHRISTMAS DAY SERVICE -10:00 AM \ THIS COUNTRY BOY FROM Georgia danced smoothly, like an alumnus of the Arthur Murray t'c ho9I, as t he Ma r in e Corps ba nd played .,.Moonlight Serenade." earlier guilty plea. He -;::==================:;-will begin serving the .. The president danced with anyone liberated · enough to cut in. Sally Steele or The E nid <Okla.> Daily News a nd Eagle started t he m ad whirl by sidling up to Carter as he dancea with his wife, Rosalynn. and as king, .. Are you ready to be tapped?·· "Certainly," Carter smiled. term after completing a s ix-m onth term on an un - related weapons charge. SIBERT, a financial assistant in lne De part· ment of Transportation, ad mi ttin g s p e ndi n g nearly all the money on such items as a $60,000 h o m e. 12 l u x ur y autom o bil es . a houseboat and a topless ba r a nd g ri ll in ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES YOU 320f Via Udo. Hewporl IHcla • 675-0210 CHRISTMAS EVE 7:30 PM -FAMILY EUCHARIST• 10:30 PM -CAROL SERVICE 11 :00 PM -HOLY EUCHARIST CHRISTMAS DAY 8:00 AM -HOLY EUCHARIST 10:00 AM -HOLY EUCHARIST• 'CHILD CARE AVAILABLE Mrs. Steele then did h er best to fend off rivals for the presi· de nt's arms. When the first of a long line of women asked t o c ut in, she said, "At this mo- ment. no." But, later, reluc tantly, s he gave way. downtown Washington. ~==================:-He was arrested Aug. 5 r C olle agu es said la ter they discussed the Midd le East , e h ergy and the economy as they two-stepped with the p r es ident. I c ould o n ly murmur "Merry Christmas" in his ear a nd ponder whether there was hair spray on the presidential hairdo before Carter was snatched away by a woman with a southern accent. "I DIDN'T KNOW I WAS so popular," Carter said, as he fell into the arms of yet another partner. Nol counting the time he danced with a group of Georgian cloggcrs on a stage on the South Lawn, the press party was only the third occasion when Carter danced publicly at the White House. as h e stepped off an airliner in Las Vegas, Nev. with $59,000 in his possession. F e d e ral autho rities said they expect to re· cover most of the loss by geCting deeds and titles to his property. IN A REC ENT in· t erv i ew with The Washington Post. Sibert said he fell no remorse about his crime. CHRISTMAS at CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH 760 Victoria SL, Coate MeH 63'1·1111 In Weit Costa Me1a -elao 1ervlng Huntington Beach end Fountain Valley IT•llt H•mllton ... 11rom ilnlc*hutSll CHRISTMAS EVE Children's Service -7:00 p.m. Candlelight Choral Service -11 :00 p.m. CHRISTMAS DAY Worship In Word & Song -10:30 a .m. NURSERY CARE PHtor1: L. V. Tornow A Erwin l<t.hth Minister ol Mu1lc: Rodney RelM Once, the Ca rters spontaneously fox-trotted to a tango in the.entrance hall of the White House as the ba nd welcomed guests arriving for a state dinner in h on or of West Germ a n Chancellor Halmut Schmidt. "I don't feel like I've done a crime against the government." he s aid. "I don 't think it's a Ii vlng thing. The government 's screwed so many people in so m an y different ways that I don't feel I've hurt m y govern· --------------------- AND A FEW WEEKS AGO, when the state visit of Morocco's King Hassan II was canceled, there was an impromptu dinner dance for the senior White House staff. But this administration doesn't da nce into the wee hours or the night after formal state dinners, like Gerald and Belly Ford did. As for the party. press corps veterans of White House Christmas bashes were appalled at the buffet which featured ham. r oast beef, saltines, processed cheese S}>read and California wine. "IF HE'S SUCH A POPUUST president, he could ha ve i,nade this a botUe party," arumbled one re]>Orler. "It WO\f lei ba ve been a lot more tun." And there was a Jot or grumbUna about the Iona wait on the re~iving line, the Iona lines at the tables. the crush 01} the dance noor. T rue. But then again, I danc..a with the presl· dent the other niaht. ment. The government is not something that has a feeling." Sibe rt, who o n ce ser ved six years in a Maryla nd prison for housebreaking, said he considered the govern· ment inept for trusting him to handle millions of dollars in public money. Record Travel SAN· DIEGO (AP) - Thia was a record year for a i r travelers at ,.L indberg h Fiel d . Man2'ge r M .A . McDonald said m or e than five m11Uon persons arrived or le ft the airport b y ear l y December. Nol Seller Needed SUN CITY, Aris. CAP) -Clara "Wlleeler rewmed home to ftDd Uaat IOIDeoH held her pra1e Hit ~tbDut hu .. Sh• planned a aaJt tor u.. r~ daJ t»ult 1ppar•nUy a neltbbor'• 'autoipatJc cara~ opener trt1· J,nd ber dool' IO ~b)''HW W • J • • •· 1ar•f• Hie'• 1lp1 and helped \be~elvea, •he said. No one waa in the ••r••• -.hen ahe atthed IMae Wt I tall.J Of items told and prk9 paid awaited Mr. All ittma ..-~lted for ud U.. aakil total r.H Stt.G but Lb• cub amomt.t to ·~--- MERRY CttRISTMAS from DOUG'S FLOWER SHOP 1899 PARK AVE. ICorn~r of Pork ond I 9t+i St I Costa Mesa Phone 6l1 -3944 OPEN FRI. & SAT. 9-8 OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. ...... 631-Jt44 for SpeclalO,.... ..,,... . ......... ..................... ..... ... Ctml!Mil . ' DAY ' DBJYBtY. We W ..... Melftr C e.•rt•• PerH"•I c .. , ... Some Rate Changes for " Pacific Telephone customers On December 13, 1977, the California Public Utilities Commission authorized changes in the way ~c Telephone charges for some of Its servkes. These changes will go into effect December 24. Intrastate Long Distance Rates Rates for some intrastate long distance calls have been reduced slightly. The following chart shows the new rates. Rates for Intrastate Long Distance Calls (within California) lnitd Peood Each Addi!~ Mnrte Alte Station Pelson ::::=, Dtal Coin Operator ,., Clo$$8S of s.Mce rote POfllS l Mn. 1 Mn. lMin 3 Mil.-,., Oaf.i-All ~ Doy Ewq ~ Ooy ~· NQl'll (). 8 so 10(1) $0.08(1) IS0.06(1) $0.20(5 $062(3) s 1.22(3) S006(l) $0.()4(1) $003(1) g. 12 13-16 17. 20 21-25 26-30 31· 40 41· 60 51· 70 71-90 91 ·110 111·130 13 1-150 15 1-170 171.195 196220 221-245 246-270 271·300 301·330 331·360 361430 431 -510 611-590 O.U590 10(1) .08(1) .D6(1) 20(5 62(3) 1 22(3) 06(1) 04( l) .13(1) .11(1) .o9( l) .25(5, .69(1) l.29(1) 08 JJ7 .16( I) 14 .12(1) 35(5' 76( l) 1.36(1) .10 09 .19 16 15 40(5 .83 143 .12 .11 .22 .18 .17 A5(5 .B8 1.48 .13 .12 .25 21 .19 .50(5) 93 153 .14 .13 28 23 .19 65 .98 158 .15 .14 .3 l 25 .19 .80 105 165 .17 .15 34 • 27 .19 95 112 1.72 .19 .16 .37 29 .19 1 05 1 19 179 .21 .17(1) AO .31 .19 1.10 l.24 1.84 .22 .18(2) .43 .32( l) .20 115 131 1.91 .24 .19(2) 45 32(1) .20 120 137 l.97 .26 .19(2) 47 32(1) .20 1.25 1.43 2.03 .28 .19(2) 49 33(1) .20 130 149 I 209 30 .20(3) . 51 33(1) .20 1.35 155 215 .32 .20(3) .53 .33( I) .20 1.40 161 221 .34 .20(3) 55 .34(1) .21 145 165 225 .35 .21(3) 57 .34( 1) 21 150 171 231 .37 .21(3) .59 !/ • .34< l) .21 [M 177 237 .39 .21(3) . 61 .35(1) 21 160 183 I 243 Al .24(2) 64 35(1) 21 1.65 190 I 250 A3 .24(2) 66 .35(1) .21 :uo 196 2~ A5 .24(2) 67 .35(2) .21 175 201 • 261 47 .24(4) The number in parentheses indicates the number of cents reduction from the previous rate. Me~ge Unit Charges .03(1) JJ5(1) .08 .10 .1 1 .12 .12 .12 .12 .12 .12 .13 1 .13 .13 .13 .13 .13 .14 .14 ,14 .14 .14 .14 .14 Calls bet\.Yeen points in the San Francisco-East Bay and Los Angdes metropolitan areas that have cost 5 message units for the first three minutes will now be billed as intrastate Ion~ distance calls. The following rates will aprly: lnihol Peood (SIOhOll) 11 Eocti Add1tonot MITTute ----01()1 Com All C IOSS6S O I 5elVIC0 ---- l Min. 1 Mrl 1 Min Doy Evening N!Qtll 3M1n. Doy f\<en1ng Nigh I 16 14 .12 .35 10 09 08 Busin~ Exchange Rates In the Los A ngeles, Orange Co unty, Sacramento, San Diego anJ San Francisco-East Bay metropolitan areas measured individual line business and ~mj·public telephone monthly rates will be reduced by 50 cents and PBX trunk lines by 25 cents. KeyTelephoneSy~ems There have been changes in the pricing of lines and stations. Certain rates and charges have been increased. Private Branch Exchange Service A surcharge of 7 percent w~I be applied in addition to the existing 15 percent surcharge on rates and charges for the NA4-09 PBX service. Cµstomer Provided Equipment Certain service visit charges involving customer provided equipment have been increased. • Service for the Deaf Business organizations which transmit mmages for the deaf may subscribe to untimed business message service for the n1,1mbe.r of active teletype machines at each business location equipped for sendil\g messages to the deaf. Such busin~ must furnish evidence of serving the de.af in order to qualify for untimed servi«:1!. · 1"obileTelephoneService There have been !nae.a.rs in rata and charges for Mobile Telephone Service. Pacific Telephone has been directed to rep!~ its existing manually opented mobile systems by m~ modem equipment within two years. . Customers with this~ of savke will receive more detailed information later. Telephon~ Answering Service Certain rata and char.pt for switchboards and equipment furnished to Telephone Answering Servict V4J be tnaused. oiher c.hanges Ra• and ch.Ugel fol'~ mltcellaneous equipment and lel'Vice connec:tiot\, move and~ Ill~ lnaeased.. Howeve~ the chargee for super- Mdure(a a..ftrol~to~C\lltQmCr) have ~ttduced. Jf you have any quationl,bolat tN. changes, pleale contact your local b\dfneee offb. The phone nmh'it found in the front pllft of your phone book. ' . @Racific l8lephone I I , • • 'I • J L c ~ ' l Orange Coast · EDITION 'l~uda)·'s Closlag N.Y.Stoeb VOL. 70, NO. 357, ~SECTIONS, 3' PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1977 N Sadat Prays for Peace, Fears Fail.11re.· &gin Offers Secret PropOsal? ISMAILIA, Egypt (AP) - President Anwar Sadat con· ceded today that his Christmas Day summit with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin could be a failure. But he prayed for peace at a mosque on the banks of the Suez Canal. Expectations are high in Egypt and Israel that the two leaders can lay the foundation tor fast-moving negotiations that will end the 29-year·old Middle East conflict. Israeli sources say Begin is bringing a new, still·secret pro- posal to the summit that should slim ulate progress on the Palestinian issue. "It is a new plan and contains new thinking," the sources said. Israeli radio, quoting in· formed sources in Cairo; said Begin might extend his stay in lsmailia through Monday -it is scheduled to last only several hours -if talks drag on. Israeli sources denied this was possible, however. Sadat's spokesman, Saad Zafhloul Nassar. said plans call for nothing beyond Sunday eve· ning. But be added: U he wants to slay, why not?" Begin outlined his peace pro- posals in Jersualem today at a closed·door briefing or the Is raeli parliament's Foreign AI· fairs and Security Committee. Committee member Amnon Rubenateln, a member of the government coalition, said later Begin's pact makes "heavy con· cessions" but called it "a fair and reasonable plan." . Afterward, m e mbers of parliament from his Likud block and the allied Democratic Move· ment for Change met separately behind closed doors to hear out· lines -not full details -of Begin's proposals. It was report· ed that the two groups voted overwhelmingly to s upport Bef?in in his mission to Egypt. As Sadat emerged from today's prayers, he was asked if despite the euphoria the summit could fail. "Maybe, why not," Sadat replied. ''Maybe, because there is, you see, a most important fact, this is that we shall be very candid, and we shall be putting everything on lhe table, at least from my side. . ............. .....,)~"'""' ~ Al'WI,..._ EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT SADAT BOWS IN TRADITIONAL MOSLEM PRAYER GESTURE Preparing for Christmas Meeting With Israel'• Begin on Mlddte East Peace .Jailed Hinsham Insists· on lnnocenee O.llyl"llet ....... INSISTS HE'S INNOCENT t Ex-Congre11man Hinshaw By KATHY CLANCY OI IM DellY l'I ... M.tf Speaking from behind bars at Orange County Jail, former con· gressman Andrew J . Hinshaw insisted in a television interview Thursday night that he is an in· nocent man. "I don't. agree wilh the (guil· . ty ) verdict but I can accept it," Hinshaw sald as he talked on KOCE·TV of Uie two 1976 convic- tions thal landed him behind bars. The former Newport Beach Republican congressman was convicted or bribery charges and illegal use of his county.paid staff while he was county assessor in 1972. "We fought a good fight and we lost." Hinshaw said. "I am still a believer in our criminal justice system." As he insisted he was wrongfully convicted and the victim or alleged unfair treat- ment by the district aUomey, Hi nshaw saved most of his words to criticize a penal system where he said "life is cheap" Explosion Shatters Miami Beach Office MIAMI BEACH. Fla. CAP) - A powerful explosion rocked the office of a Venezuelan airline on Miami Beach 's swank hotel row early today, gouging a crater in thick concrete and twisting heavy metal door frames like· strands of taffy. There were no reported in· juries, although chunks of twist· ed metal flew 72 feel across Collins Avenue where pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion hit a few minutes past midnight. "It was lucky no one got hurt -there were pedestrians on the street." said patrolman Pete Matthews. Windows were shattered 400 feet away, police said. Damage was estimated st $15,000 to $20,000 by a n FBI agent who declined to give his name "We really don't know who did it," he added. Nearly six hours later. a man with a heavy Spanish accent called the Miami bureau of The Associated Press and claimed reponsibility for the blast. "The bornb that went ofC on Miami Beach was set by the an· ti-Communist commando group El Condor," the caller said. "We did it for our leader Orlando Bosch wbo is being held tn Venezuela. U they don•t re.lease FOOTBALL Ir:. I ONTV ~ TONIGHT. TANGERINE BOWL Channel M, I p.m. ..... , .. Flortde .... C•2> VI., .... Teet. (7-4) him by Christmas something bigger is going to happen to the Venezuelan people.'' Bosch. a vehement anti-Castro Cuban exile, is being held by Venezuelan authorities in con· nection with the bombing of a Cubana Airlines plane that crashed off Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976, killing all 73 people aboard. El Condor and the Coordina· lion of United Revolutionary Orgainzations have claimed responsibility for the crash and several other bottlbing incidents, including the sinking or a Cuban trawler in Calho, Peru. in August. · · · The apparent target or today's attack was the office or Viasa Venezuelan International Airways situated between ticket offices or Delta and National Airlines in a complex of travel· oriented businesses. The explosive device was set at the rear door of the Viasa of· lice in a cramped alley. The heavy, metal-plated cotpmercial fire door was blasted from its binges, the metal door frame twisted and shredded. A crater 18 inches .across wa_~ gouged through an eight-inch-thick layer of reinforced concrete sidewall<. Machine Sparks Fire at Fairview A fire blamed on a malfWlc· tloolng copy machine sent up clouds of smoke and forced the evacuaUon of part of the ad· mtntstration building at Fairview State Hospital TbW'I· 'day1 COltaa Mesa fire officlala saia tod&Y. ·They listed damage to the copy machlne at $250. No in· Jurlet were tepe>rted. The Tanterine Bowl left a sour taste with many fans Da. m,•ae8 Asked when botb teams were " selected on a day they lost .10HANNESBURG, Squth badly. However, the •AfrtC'a CAP> -Tht family of teams at Umea this year black activist Steve Biko, who have ahown exploll)te of. died in ~wity police cu.s\ody tenses. Teeh•a favortd. Sept. lJ, MUt letten to two IOV· (Tape delay) erament ml11l1tera today d•· See De&a1l8 • ~IDO"Maf7 dama1es for i. _... leCdlm his 4• Hid tM ottlce of an. _____ ............... ..-.---attoratY . t.bt flJllU)', and in 5"0me installce-s the system causes ex·convicts to re· peat their crimes. Hinshaw. who recently was re· turned to Orange County Jail after spendi.ru! four months in state prison al Chino. said one thing he will work to increase is the $200 allowance given in· mates upon release. Fellow inmates told the one· time assessor one reason they repeat their crimes is that for $200 they are expected to leave prison, find a home, buy a car and get a job. "We need to make s ure persons have more money when they get out lo see them through lhe transition," Hinshaw con· tinued. The former conuessman said h e plans to talk to state legislators to see if the system can be remedied. "I would make every job (in prison > a reasonable job in terms or dollars, .. he explained. The man who in 1972 unseated maverick Republican John Schmitz from the congressional seat be once held, said it was his prison-assigned job at Chino that led to a racially inspired threat to his lire. Hinshaw, saying he was treat· ed by prison officials just the same as fellow inmates, ex- plained his job was keeping track of bed assignments. He and prison authorities were told that white inmates threatened to kill him if any more blacks were admitted to a particular unit. ''Life is very cheap in prison:• Hinshaw said. "Persons could be killed for a couple of cartons of ciga~ttes. "I teamed very quickly that stabbings are the order of he day." he continued, adding that fellow inmates taught him "to stay alive is the challenge. "You have to earn your respect in prison. If you try to mamtain that you are no better than anyone else .•. if you abide by the code .•. you will get along," be said. The two·term congressman also had some harsh words for a criminal justice system that permits the district attorney to investigate and prosecute. then take part in sentencing proceed- ings. Hinshaw•s concurrent one to 10-year sentences recently were reduced to four more months by Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland, who also placed the former elected orricial on a work furlough pro· gram. During those proceedings Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizzi argued against a reduced sentence. Hinshaw said lhe district at- torney "should be a gracious loser as be had been a winner . ., Valiant Battle Ends Hinshaw when released from jail in April will begin picking up the pieces of an ordeal he said has cost him a half.million doUa.rs .. plus the intangibles... • He said it is most likely that he will become involved in his brother's lamp manufacturing bua--. t Crash Victim of 1965 Dies in Laguna »ut he a.ISO boJMtS to make legislators aware of some or the things that can be done te keep ex~convicts from returning to prison. By ANNE COOPER Ol IN DllllY ~Ii.I Sl.tfl Funeral s e rvices were planned today in Laguna Beach for Heather Lea Nichols, who was known in the communjty for her valiant 12·year struggle to overcome critical injuries she suffered in a car crash as a popular, pretty high school senior. Miss Nichols seemed to have everything going for her in ·high school, her mother said. She was named a homecoming princess in her senior year and was look· ing forward to a career as a fashion model. But on March, 27, 1965, when she and a girlfriend were out for a drive, their car careened out · of control and crashed into an embankment on Pacific Coast GOOD FOKI'UNE " ENDS S4.DLY GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador CAP> -A druggist, Carlos Quinto Garcia, died of a heart attack when told he had won $112,000 in the Guayaquil Christmas lot· tery, authorities reported Thurs· day. Highway near Laguna Niguel. The cause or the accident was never determined. Doctors at Hoag Hospital, where the critically injured girl was transferred Crom South Coast Hospital, said she bad auf· fered serious brain dama~e and would never recover. Her neck was broken, leaving her paralyzed. Nearly two months after the accident, Miss Nichols remained in a coma, but her mot.her, a former Anny nurse, decided to bring her home. "They said she would never come out of the coma, but I just couldn't allow her to lie there in a hospital," Mrs. Nichols said. Nurses attended the inert girl around the clock al the Nichols· home, 2120Temple Hills Drive. Some time after the accident -Mrs. Nichols said she Isn't sure when -her daughter began to respond, watching her mother move around the room. In 1974 the family began an in· tense program or patterning ex- ercises with Mjss Nichols, work· ing 12 hours a day to impresn on her damaged brain movements of the body. Many members or the South Coast community came to know Heather Nichols as they Bot Cargo Massive Spill Stops Tra/ftc Traffic on the San Diego Freeway near its intersection with the Garden Grove Freeway came to a three-hour standstill Thursday anemoon when a freewheeling south- bound truck. s pilled a mysterious substance onto the ro~w~ . The truck's driver apparenUy either didn't know of the spill or wu willing to write off the loss. So, be cQDtinued on b1a journey wlthoutstopping. THAT LEFT HIGHWAY officials with the task of de. terminlng the identity of the red powdery subltance that spilled acl'Qls the freeway for about three-tent.hi of a mile. · FearinJ the foul-appearing powder mJght be a toxic chemical, ~ate Division of 1D1hway oMclals ordered live of the frteWay's six southbpund lanes closed doTID at 1~30 p.m.. ACCOUlNG TO A Callfonlia Hipwar Patrol· apoketJD8$l, by 4 p.m. southbound trafnc wu backed up to Torrance abo\lt 20 miles nortb bf I.he spill. Then, lt waa learned the red powder waan't toxic at· all, except to those who ml1h.t bt temJllled to COJ'le themselves on taeo11. . TRE DaEABED RED substance that taxed motort1ts• patience tor more than th"'9 boun was, after all. DOO\lnr more harmt\11 u.an dJ")' taco sauce -~~ ot a mlle of di')' taeoaauce. • participated as volunteers to help with the rigorous training (See HEATHER, Page A2) Kuliks' Bail Sliced By $4. 7 5 Million Bail for Alexander and Elsie Kulik, who face a variety of state and federal charges stem· ming from the murder of Stephen John Bovan, was lowered by $4 .75 million Thurs- day. The Kullks appeared before federal Magistrate J . Edward Harm in San Diego to enter in· nocent pleas to federal charges of possession of more than a pound or heroin. Ball on those charges, which were levied against the couple last week by a federal grand jury, was initially set at $2.5 million each. Thursday, over the.protests of Assistant U. S. Attorney Stephen Nelson, Harris set Alexander Kulik's bail at $150,000 and his wife's at $100,000. . The Kuliks were arrested Dec. 14 in a Carlsbad area con· dominlum which police said Kulik rented under an assumed name. , · •Mrs. Kulik originally was booked on a murder conspiracy warrant which charged that she was one of eight peQPle who planned the death of Bovan. • Bovan,36, of Fountain Valley# died Oct. 22 outside a lllewport Beach restaurant. He was shot nlnetlmes. At the tJme of their arrests, Kulik bad already been booked on the murder conspiracy charges and freed after posting ball.· He •as booked at the Uroe of bil wife•s arrest tor harboring a fugitive. .8JLEY RECALLS PONY AT YULE A subsequent search or the home at the La Costa Country Club allegedly uncovered a cache of heroin. More than a pound of il was nearly pure oriental heroin. police claim. An additional half-pound of Jow- grade Mexican heroin was un- covered, authorities alleged. The discovery or the narcotics led t-0 a revision of the bail on which the couple were held, sending it to a total of $8.85 million for Ute state and federal damages. The Kuliks have both been. tr~nsferred to the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Diego. : They are slated to appear before federal Circuit Judge Leland Neilsen on Jan. 12 for a pretrial hearing on the narcoti~ charges. In addition to that court date. the Kuliks are slated to be in <See BAIL, Page A2) Coast Weather . Partly clOudy and 10 percent chance of rain tonight and Saturday. A liUle cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Saturday in 60s. INSIDE TODAY Aftn-the holiday nuh, trtot" yourielf to a gift of time -one of the 24-hour getaways ft.lg· geated on Page Cl. l•dex Aile Supervisor Tom RHey ~'is.me. \': =~1';:_,.. a.~: what '1ls favorite Christmas ~.:-.,. .:_: :'::,:.'.~= ...._~ memories are and be recalls tbe c:.tH-•• •• °'..,.. o-t~ ., Cbrialmu oo Guadalcanal and =~ cw.~ :;::.~..::, er, the Christ.mu be sot a SbetJ.and ~ a ._" ... ,.. .. _ Or Co t I o.. "..._ ,,, lilc11....,,.,,,.. .._, .PODY· V\l1'lT an1e as res • ... ...,.. ..._ M T....,.... . ., deata talk about their Christmas •••~--a.11 .,...... °'" ~~ F t··-'-p ......... •W ~ M mem--(Ill e& wnulf• lie • ..... IC#e 1U __ ..... ~ ·Bl. • ....,,...... a ...... ..-a.11 I I ·a...u~ .... Furlollflla .... ...__ · ·Watergate figure John D. Ehrlichman leaves the ·Federal Prison Camp at Safford, Ariz., to begin a five. day furlough from prison for the holidays. Also b.orne tor Christmas will be f ello:w conspirator H. R. Haldeman. ~uling Stirs More ConflictiDg Claims Both Stanley Hirschberg and the City of Newport Beach are ciaiminf victory in the latest ,wund o their Jong-running bat· 1le over Hirschberg's demotion and firinc. The conflicting claims stem from a ruling banded down last week by the Fourth District Court of Appeal. It had beard a city appeal of an Orange County Superior Court ruling in the case that dates back to 1973. Hirschberg, al that time, was the supervisor of the city's busi- ness license division. He was de- moted to a post as a stock clerk 10 the city yard for alleged in· s ubordination and because he al- Jegedly irked local businessmen , with overly aggressive tactics in enforcing licensing regulations. A year later he was fired from the stock cJerlc position. Hirschberg took bJs ease to Superior Court wben City .. Manager Robert Wynn jgnored the city Civil Service Board's recommendaUon that Hirschberg be reinstated tobis.Ucensf ob, . Jn 191§ri J,.l,Jdge J~~e. ~paner backed Qle Civil Se~lc Board ·and ordered the city to pay Hirschberg back pay and fringe benefits from h.is $11,000 salary as license supervisor dating lo the October 1973 demotion. Uon. He also ordered the city to pay $1 ,500 oC Hirschberg's legal ex- penses. But the city appealed that rul- ing to the appeals court in San Bernardino which handed down its decision Dec. 13. Auonting to· Wynn, the city emerged victorious becaus~ the appeals court deleted the re- quirement that the city pay Hirschberg his back pay and fringe benefits. He said the court also refused to comment on Hirschberg's fir· ing. According to Wynn, the city only has to change its persoMel records to list Hirschberg as the license supervisor during the period of his demotion and pay him the $1,500. Wynn also said he believes Hirschberg will have to pay the costs incurred by the city in fil. ing the appeal. But Hirschberg said he doesn't see the decision that way, He said the ruling on· the transfer supported his· contention tbat Wynh '• llction·was•arbitra"Y .md he indicated he may seek addi· lion court action t,o force the city ~o r~instate h>Wr Wynn said ..b'e has .. aftered Hirschberg otber posts in the ci· ty that he qualifies for by educa· tion and experience~ in keeping with earlier rulings. He noted that Hirschberg has declined those jobs which in· eluded jailer. police dispatcher and groundsman. . Hirschberg currently is manager o{ the swap meet.a nm by the Orange County Fair. 5 NeWport Panels Get New Members • • t" • ' ! I On Jan. 1. the five cltisen ad--CommunJiy Dnelepmtiftt: HEATHER •.• pl'Ofl'~. . ·i In \lme Miss Nichols ctaw~ed and Wked and even wt.J.k'~.with asal.ltance. It was the f.mt(y's dr:ealll that ahe would QQe day w~ on her own.· ~ On~ Mils Mcbpls. now 3Q• had flniabed ber lunch and wa1 in her wbeetcb81r, when she beeu to choke. Paramedics were called and worked !ran· tically to t.ry to &el her breathing agaln. her mother 2'aid. She was taken by aro.bulance to South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna. wbere she died. Today's funeral services were at St. Mary•s ~pi.scop'1 Cb\ltcb, wltb the. Reverenc} Brad Karelius officiating. Burial was to be at Melrose Abbey Cemetery in Anaheim. McCormick Mortuary made funeral .rrange· rnents. . . · . Miss Nichols ts surviv.ed by her mother, Floreace Nie.bola, oi the family borne; by a sister, Holly Pet\il of L .. una Beach; ao aunt and twoJU\i!les. · . to tile IDHU.n1 aloni with downtown area: farm 1lrlke leader Tom· "We didn't think it would '* 1D7 ol i>Nrby Uoao..llla. appropriate that he 10 to the ke leadera from demonstration.'' Granum aaid. neighboring Ala bama and "'Solely because there LI a de· J'lorlda. . monstration, tbat. does not The fannen drove their red, necesaartly mean that heneeda to green and blue tractors to both go and address the protesters. ends of main s~in downtown "He bas on a number ot oe· Plains th.is monlin1 and parked casions expressed tu. CObcem tbem. They cleared the aU'eet in about the t•rm problem." front of U>e town 'f TOW of it.ores Granum added. IOT or~ • At Saturday•• meeting They Carter to climb Granum aaid, the president will onto a Ila · truck ou&fitted •'once again outline wh•t t.be with a m CTOPbope a~d · Carter MJnilli,8&.ration· baa done loudspeakers '1nl apeat to. tbe .. alread.1tbla YeU"to &ry Del help demoutrators -or tp meet the tarmen. •' · with •·small deteratton In &telegram Wednesday toll representing tbe scores of WO· farm .ue. Mrs. EatoD L\lb ol testers who gathered in the Baxley, Ga., Carter ta.id he bu .............. HU~EY, VP MONDALE ARRIVE IN MINNESOTA Senator Cerr1ea On Despite Inoperable Cancer Why Give Up? :IHIH Undeterred by Cancer "Her high school friends scat- tered over the years.'' Mrs. Nichols said, "but they would . drop by from time to time. There were a few who always stayed in touch. One good friend was coming home for Christmas and missed seeing Heather by WAVERLY, Minn. CAP> -"I'm not resigning from just a few hours." anything. I may even join something," was Hubert H. Hum. Mrs. Niehols aaked that phrey's response when asked whether he plans to resign from memorial donations be made to the U.S. Senate because of bis inoperable cancer. Triad Consultants, Neurological The Minnesota Deroocrat, who arrived home ThUflSday. Rehabilitation, P.O. Box, l.56. said he planned to be back in Washington within 10 daya. Willow Grove,.Pa. l.9090. . • ,, 1 The four Humphrey children and their 10 children are ex- ''The peop~ at. .. ~Lad gave pecte~tp join Humphrey and his wife" Muriel, at Waverly Qn .,l(e~ther .-•. ~~r: li(' than she •.. CbrJi u.~fll: . . : ~-· · • · ':"" : • · ~· ~ -· could ever··fiave had wiUlout I 1 e1re gOfug to have home movies, give the kids a chance them." said Mrs. Nichols. lo see their parents when they were kids," he said. Rec .!P~gram .. Signups Set He added, chuckling, "These are the movies th11t ~to bore the ll~lng d~)"lighta ou~ of my frieods ... '.tvening registration for recreation classes will be held Jan. 3 and 4 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Newport Beach Parks. Bt\aches and Recreation Depart- ment. Pair From Newport Sought in Slaying The department is located at · Murder warrants have been City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd. issued for a Newport Beach cou- All activities begin the week or pie charged with shooting two .!an. 9. Subjects inclu<te sailing, men and leay.lng them Jn a burn- lennl11. danc~. ce~amlcs, skiing. ing truck near Chowchilla ftytDnasUcs. needJe crafts. paint-earli,er: ~ ~ontb. ~~g, self defense a~ ~og obe-A spokesman for the Madera Qienc,e. ., · , , • County Sheri.Cf's DepaJ1,ment aaid A romplete brochure.~ av~a· Sharon Ly~_. Colmiµi, J.9, and ble.•t lhe d4!i>~ent ,an\:l ~i.c1ty , .Richar4 Pbllllps, 28, are being ti~rarles. Dlt~rAtatlon c~be.Ph-aougbt ~ ~ection with the tmied by c~g ~2271. pee. 7 j,ncident in which one vic- tim died. They found one man. Ronald Rose, 28, of West Covina, beside the truck with bums over 45 per- cent of his body and five bullet wounds in bis abdomen. The two deputies were driven away from tbe truck by the flames and were \lnable to reacue Rose's companion. later identified as Bruce Bartulla. 28, or Claremonl ,. visory commltl~es th•t belp Barbara Stabler, Willard Wade, . Newport Beach city councilmen Charlotte Wood, C4mnle .)(um- 'witb programs rauglng frorn Ut-ford, Granl Howald. Joe :'8r to new roads, will go to work Amid<m, William Morns. Joan ~ Queen .~ith tome new memben. Petty, Jeanne Wanlass. R11th Councilmen, in a aeries of ap-Kahn and Fern Pirkle. New ·According to the sheriff's spokesman.' two patrolling dep. uties spotted a .Pickup truck in flames parked beside Highway 99 south of Chowchilla. Investiga~ said"tbey believe the two men met Misa Cotman and Phillips earlier in Southern California. They believe robbery was the motive behind the shoot· in gs. J>Ointments made during their members are Eileen Schrader. ]4 l Thief? meetings this mQlltb, reapJ>OJnt-Joan Carlton and AJex Bowie. elOO , ed some members and named -Envlronmeataf Gaaflty: some new people to the commit· Hal Thomas, Dennis Re1d, ~ VENTURA (AP> -Police say uie. whose 14 members 1erve Riteh. Anita F~ 'Pftlmlf-tilt·y are ... TirOtT'ft'1 ... rO'• a 4br one-year terms. Lee. J,phns, Roger Postolka, Seth tranevestite 14'wel. ~ief 1>n • The appointments are: --O~rr. Jr .• Miles S~ Jerry crutches who tn~ .. &lie-,, h.Ve -Bicycle TraUa: Dr. Hugo · ~b)g. Bernard ..Pegg ~-, posed as .a pregnaqt .wo~ bmidt, Marilyn Henddcbolt. Wqeruu-. New. tbem)>e~a are ~. •hue com,mlttlng another rqb- onaJd Foster, Gunter .Ma!'et.. B91r?rf1Dar and Frint JJ.~1 , • 'bery la.atw~t ". , . '.: : etay Carpenter MacKenzw. JoV;t&M Control: Jo ~ • . . .... ·• avid Skilling, nr. Frtc, BoeW, Wlllla~itter, Hal Pinc · n,"' A.:pian Oi Ct"Utcties ~'~g r. s~e.pben Sholkoff, Jtobert Louh~ ley. John Shea, Galt fel.liale cl~ w1-...a wiil ewcooib and Gerard' Van Hov: · ~-iltj~A atthew Coleaworthy, palnttd flnlernaits-ud ear g n. The new members will be GorClon Kilmer. Charlu a ~f m~reV'Olfet' a e · Im Dodds, Thomas C. Moore Paskerian, Cindy Houston and $9,oe w.ortll dllmondl f nd William Bousch. Margaret ·Sangstet". Ne# mem-Gen•ler·r....~""Dtamonds het-e: ........... A•c~ H bers are Na.DU)' MC)Ot~ Betty "'1~rsday ~ ~ce s~ "'"....... ._, Hogaa and Kent Johnson. · .. •.•· t;• .. -;, ... ,, DAILY PILOT ~T1:11••po,&.aUoa Plaa: · .. • ~ ....... : • : Wchard Clucas: Merril 51ru11.... "-.--·-·~-·~ .. !"· .. ~ ... -~--............. , . ~' .... r. John Haskell, WiWa~ I). Lusk. ' David Tosh, Jean Watt, Virtlnla . --Vo•burccRC>MN ·&to~aeJ. Cakitt-MCLaugblln and .J~· uCotdano. New members are Hal Pinchin: Ron~· fan Gilliland ana Bud er. •• J ,, • . . ~ ' • .... •• ~ t , ... !.i • • -' J ., ... .. ""-~---~ ....... ---·}~"he" :._ .. ,_ • ..,. .. • • . &.u .... -ea .. ~ .. ~~l'Ml .. ..... ~JI 7 ".-1:-:rz:-:: . . . . .._,:~ ,c Clllllllt.=. • .:*1:.~.~ · In Auto F~1\.<1 '-' .. . .. . · ·;"I '.; } SMf, DIEGO ·(AP) -k .1t4 . :=:iJM'I ~ abffend ln ·• fire whHt be ft& ... AN ~ :· .. OLD·FASHIONED , G.,~EET .1 NG . · A TIMELESS WISH • • .~ MERRY ·CHRISTMAS AND HAPPINESS IN THE NEW YEAR • • F ..... P ... AJ· BAIL ••.• Oran1e County Superior Comt on Jan. 23 to face the murder conspiracy cbarees. Only one ol the eleht people na~ed in that conaplraey. Joseph Fedorowstt. J'emalna at Jaree. · Police alleee that the kullb, Fedorwoski and their two bull· ness partners. Roy Christopher' Richard and Joseph Davia m. hired three Huntington Beach men to kidnap and kill Bovan in retaliati<>o for.an earlier kidnap. ping of Kulik by Bovan. The three alle~ed hit pea. J~ry .P.et:er Fiori. 4.1.. ~otboov Maro.re. Jr., 23, an4 Raymond Steven Resco, 28, were arrested four days aner the murder. . ' ' • .. • j i>On N~ewbern 'f' t : • 4 Rites Tues~y In ~Newport Funeral services will be held Tuesday in Newport Beach for businessman Donald-L. Newbem who died Wednesday at the age of 46. A H-year resident of California, Mr. Newbern wu the executive vice president of Southport Development Corp. of Newport Beach. 1 He leaves h1s wile, Jean,_ of the family home.1207 Berkablre Lane and two sons, Richard ancl David o( Newport Beach, and .'hi.a motlier; Mrs.~ Newbern ofSantaAnL Services will be conducted at l p :m. a~ ,tl\e C,llycJl., ot .Jesus Christ or ~tl&-.day s.ints ao1 Dover Drlve, NeWPOrt BeiclL . Uni.on to Vote On Settlement LOS ANGELES (AP) -After seven days or nearly continuous bargaining, negotiators for striking Lockheed macblnlsls in five states have agreed to let the unlon 's rank and file 4~cfde whether to · acc~P.t tb.e com. pany'.s latest offer and end a bit.- ter and costly ~3-da~ walkout. If t?:e contract Is accepted. !trikers w~µld return to woik on Ja9. a. !.Ockheed spokesman Dave Crowther said Thursdav. • But Nell Vandercook~ a spokesman for the lntematfonal Association of Machlnlsts here,. • .eaid, "I doubt it the Cthe union) negotiators will recommend ac· cept'ance or the proposal ... 4~1!=., ,. · year.-CS· boy h• dMd. of obarM :=.:~.:--: locked ~.:r ~two . • • ~ YOUDfer • • • • .I .;::,. • ... Ttl•••·-~tet!'.:.' .... -:-~ ·toc~~ • -~111W1C M""-4-,. Cllriltmal~!.fj!C . .!I -r Chula Vllti ,.,, O!!!P!. ~°""' · Tbe bo:i • ' ' .,~'rn;",;,;,. ,_..ie:,;-. : • :.11lnf m~ iiiilill :ii::•--.. _ ........... " ~ •=: • • • W nnr, e a DEN'S :iiiii81iit1aii:·~~stom d1aJ,8;; •• · .linoleum • wood floor ~ t . . ~~~=:;.~*~·. ----~. ......... u---.. 111.&bt ill tTDivenitJ lfolPU,l. • COSTA M!SA. CAltf, 92617 '• PliOH! 646 ... 139-6'6-23S.$ • • ' , Saddlebaek EDITION ACternoon N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 357,' SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUHT'Y, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1977 TEN CENTS 1Sadat Prays for Peace, Fears Failure I lSMAILIA, Egypt (AP) - 'President Anwar Sadat con· ceded ~ that his C~tmu Day summit with Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin could be a failure. But be prayed for peace at a mosque on the banks of the Suez Canal. 1 Expectations are high in Egypt and Israel that the two leaders can lay the foundation for fast-moving negotiations.that will end the 29-year-old Middle East conflict. Israeli sources say Begin is bringing a new, still-secret pro- posal to the summit that should slim ulate· progress on the Palestinian issue. "It is a new plan and contains new thinking," the sources said. I s raeli radio, quoting in- formed sources in Cairo.· said Begin might extend his stay in Is m a ilia through Monday -it scheduled to last only seve1 ,. hours -if talks drag on. lsraP . sources denied this was possibk . however. Sadat's spokesm an, Saad ZafhlouJ Nassar. said plans call for nothing beyond Sunday eve- ning. But be added: IC he wants to st{ly, whynot?" Begin outlined his peace pro- posals in Jersualem today al a c.1-0sed-door briefing of the Is raeli parliament's Forel1n Af. fairs and Security Committee. Committee member Amnon Rubenstein, a member or the government coalition, said later Begin's pact makes "heavy con- cessions" but caJled it "a fair and reasonable plan." Afterward, members of parliament from his Likud block and the allied Democratic Move· ment for Change met separately behind closed doors to hear out· lines -not full details -of Begin's proposals. It was report· ed that the two groups voted overwhelmingly to s upport Begin in his mission to EgypL Miami Beach Air Office Bo As Sadat emerged from today's prayers, he was asked if despite the euphoria the summit could fail. ''Maybe, why not," Sadat replied. ''Maybe, because there ls, you see, a most important fact, this Is lbal we shall be very candid, and we shall be putting everything on the table, al least from my side. Jail lnterl'ieae -... ~i Anti-Red Hinshaw Hits l Group Penal System o.i1,.~•tet- INSISTS HE'S INNOCENT Ex-Congressman Hinshaw Carter Agrees To Meet With Farmer Group PLAINS, Ga. (AP) -Presi- dent Carter agreed today to· meet with representatives of farmers blocking the main street of his home town with pickup trucks and tractors in a demonstration for higher prices. The meeting will be at 8 a.m. local time Saturday al the presi· dent's home. Carter telephoned one of the demonstrators, Harold Israel, a Plains farmer who is a personal friend, to set up the meeting, said White House deputy press secretary Rex Granum. "He feels it's tmportant - that they do have problems," Gran um said. He said Carter invited Israel to the meeting along with 'Georgia farm strike leader Tom- my Kersey of nearby Unadilla, and strike l eaders from neighboring Alabama and Florida. .- The farmers drove their red, green and blue tractors to both ends of main street In downtown Plains this morning and parked them. They cleared the street in front of the town's row or stores tor a rally. <See FARMERS, Pa1e A!) FOOTBALL I ·Q . I ONTV ~TONIGHT. TANGERINE BOWL Chennel 13, a p.m. floflda .... Ct-2) va. Texat Tech (7-4) The Tangerine 8owl left I sour tute with many /1n1 when both teams were selected on a day they lost badly . However. the teams at times thlt year have abown nploelve or- f ens ea. Tech'• favored. (Tape delay) SeeDetallt ....... Seca. By KATHY CLANCY OfU.Oally l'lloUlaif Speakmg from behind bars at Orange County Jail, former con- gressman Andrew J. Hinshaw insisted in a television interview Thursday night that he is an in - nocent man. "I don't agree with the (guil- . ty) verdict but I can accept it," Hinshaw said as he talked on KOCE-TV of the two 1976 convic· lions that landed him behind bars. The former Newport Beach Republican congressman was convicted of bribery charges and illegal use of his county.paid s taff while he was county assessor in 1972. "We fought a good fight and we lost," Hinshaw said . "I am still a believer in our criminal justice sy,tem.." ~ As he ins iste'd h e wa s wrongfully convicted and the vlct.Un <>t alleged unfair treat- ment by.the district attorney, Hins haw sa\>ed most or his words to criticize a penal system where be said "life is cheap" and in some instances the system causes ex·convlcts to re- peat their crimes. Hinshaw, who recently was re- turned to Orange County Jail after spendin2 four months in state prison at Chino, said one thing he will work to increase is the $200 alle>wance given in- mates upon release. Fellow i.nmates told t+ae one· time assessor one reason they repeat their crimes is that for $200 they are expected to leave prison, find a home, buy a car and get a job. "We need. to make s ure persons haye more money when they gel out to see them through the transition," Hinshaw con· tinued. The former congressman said he plans to taJ k t o state legislators to see if the system can be remedied. "I would make every job (in prison) a reasonable job in terms or dollars, .. he explained. The man who in 1972 unsealed maverick Republican J ohn Schmitz from the congressional seat he once held, said it was his prison-assigned job at Chino that <See HINSHAW, Page A2) Where's the A~tion? A replica of a triceratop!-. dinosaur looks ready for action as. wearing a University of Washington football hel met . it greets visiting member s of the school's team Thursday. The encounter was part of the team's visit to Lion Country Safari in Irvine. Team members also toured the wildlife preserve and participated in a hippo pedal-boat relay race. <Rel at ed stor y, Page B4 > Kulik's Bail .Sliced By $4. 7 5 Million Bail for Alexander and Elsie Kulik , who face a var iety of state and federal charges stem- ming from the murder of S tephe n Jo hn Bovan , was lowered by $4.75 million Thurs· day. The Kullks appeared before federal Magistrate J . Edward Harris in San Diego to enter in- nocent pleas to federal charges of possession of more than a pound or heroin. Bail on those charges, which were levied against the couple last week by a federal grand jury, was initiaUy set at $2:5 million each. Thursday, over the protests 0£ Assistant U. S. Attorney Stephen Nelson, Harris set Alexander Kulik's bail at $150,000 and his wife's al $100,000. The Kuliks were arrested Dec. 14 in a Carlsbad area con- d om inium which police said Kulik rented under an assumed name. Mrs. Kulik originally was booked on a murder cons piracy warrant which charged that she was one of eight people who planned the death of Bovan. Bovan, 36, of Fountain Valley. died Oct. 22 outside a Newport Beach restaurant. He was shot nine times. At the time of their arrests, Kulik had already been booked on ttie ·murder conspiracy charges and freed after posting bail. He was booked at the time of his wife's arrest for harboring a fugitive. A subsequent search of the holne at the La Costa Country e1ub allegedly uncovered a cache of heroin. More than a pound of it was nearly pllre oriental heroin, police claim. An additional half-pound of low· grade Mexican heroin was un- covered, authorities alleged. The discovery of the narcotics led to a revision or the bail on which lbe couple were held, sending it to a total of $8.85 million for the state and federal damages. <See BAIL, Pace A2) Long Struggle Ends in Death ForL~an By ANNE COOPER Ol tlllt O.lly ...... SUff Funeral services were planned today in Laguna Beach for Heather Lea Nichols, who was known in the community for her valiant 12-year struggle to overcome critical injuries she suffered Jn a car crash as a popular, pretty high school senior .. Hiss Nichols seemed to have everything going for her in hlgh school, her mother said. She was named a homecoming princess In her senior year and was look· ing forward to a career as a fashion model. But on March, Z'T, 1965, when she and a girlfriend were'out for a drive, their car careened out · of control and crashed Into an embankment on Pacific Coast Highway near Laguna Niguel. The cause of the accident was never determined. Doctors at Hoag Hospital, where the critically injured girl waa trJlQsferred from South Coast Hospital, said she had suf- fered serious brain damage and would never recover. Her neck was broken, leaving her paralyzed. Nearly two months after the accident, Miss Nichols remained in a coma. but her mother, a former Army nurse. decided to bring her home. ''They said she would never come out or the coma, but I just couldn't allow her to lie there in a hospital," Mrs. Nichols said. Nurses attended the inert girl around the clock at the Nlcbola home, 2120Temple Hills Drive. Some time after the accident -Mn. Nichols said she isn't sure when -her daughter began to respond, watching ber mother move around the room. In W74 the family began an in· tense proeram of pattemlng ex· erclaes with Miss Nichols. work· lng 12 hours a day to impress on her damaged brain movements of the body. Many members of the South Coast community came to know Heather Nichols as they partlclpated as volunteers to help with the rigorous training Pro&ram. Mission VieJo High School band members IUled Jcilln ~. Ostoich 'a Lagun• HUis den- tal office with special muslo as a 26th an· niversary surpdse from Ostolch'a wife, Anne, Thursday. The special pttformance was provided by band members who are raising funds for needed ~cal lnst.,,. men ts. In Ume MUs Nichols crawled and talked and tven walked with aal1tuce. It was the famlly's dream that •he would one day walk on her own. ( ... JQ'ATRt:a, Pa1e Al) Blamed MIAMI BEACH. Fla. CAP> - A powerful explosion rocked the orrice or a Venezuelan airline on Miami Beach's swank hotel row early today, gouging a crater in thick concrete and twis ting heavy metal door frames Uke strands or taffy. There were no reported in· juries, although chunks of twist· ed metal Clew 72 feet across Co llin s Av enue where pedestrians still sauntered when the explosion hit a few minutes past midnight. "ll was lucky no one got hurt -there were pedestrians on the street," said patrolman Pete Matthews. Windows were shattered 400 feet away, police said. Damage was estimated al $15,000 to $20,000 by an FBI agent who declined to give his name "We really don't know who did • it," he added. Nearly six hours later, a man with a heavy Spanish accent called the Miami bureau or The Associated Press and claim• reponsibllity for the blast. "The bomb that went off on Miami Beach was set by the an- ti-Communist commando group El Condor," the caller said. "We did it for our leader Orlando Bosch who is being held in Venezuela. If they don't release him by Christmas something bigger is going lo happen to the Venezuelan people." Bosch, a vehement anti·Castro Cuban exile, is being held by Venezuelan authorities in con- nection with the bombing or a Cubana Airlines plane that crashed ore Barbados on OcL 6, 1976; killing all 73 people aboard. El Condor and the Coordina· tion of United Revolutionary Orgainzations have claimed responsibility for the crash and several other bombing incidents, including the sinking of a Cuban trawler in Callao. P~ru. in August. · The apparent target of today's attack was the office of Viasa Venezue lan Inte rnational Airways situated between ticket offices of Delta and National Airlines in a complex of travel- oriented businesses. The explosive device was set at the rear door of the Viasa of· fice In a cramped alley. The heavy, metal·plated commercial fire door was blasted from its hinges, the m etal door frame twisted and shredded. A crater 18 Inches across wa.s· gouged through an eight-inch-thick laye r of reinforced concrete sidewalk. Coast Weather Partly cloudy and 10 percent chance of rain tonight and Saturday. A little cooler. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Saturday in 60s. INSIDE TODAY After the! holiday rush, treat' Jl(»lrtel/ to a gift of Ume -one of the Uhm.Ir getaways sug- guted on Page C 1. lll•ex Al Y!ilowW:e A1t AM U....,.. e2 .... .. ~··· C..tt L M. Yf M Mlll•f ,,..... M ..,.._. • AM lf•ll-1-M.DI Cellllntfe Al Ore .... c.-tr A1 ClnllttM D+1t ""'--Q.4 ee.k:e Cl lytwe _., At ~ CJ '""' IM-6 o......-.. A1 IM<ll ~ .... .......... ,._ M T.Crtl.._ • al ......... _.... Q.tt T9IMMn °'" ~........ ·~t ~ A( __._ aa __ ....,. M.DI .....,_..._ a w1111us1u ct-" , l .• DA•L Y ru .. Ol se ay WILLIA• RODO I Cit ,.... o..i, "' ... ,..,.. ~cunty al the Laeuna Hills Mall lSn'l Mmply a matter of ·1 cops und robbers . After all. there are plenty of "lost ctuldren and patrons who ·Joie track ot their automobile'• pa rktng place. And the guatda 60ft't even wear 8UOB. • ''Most of their tltnt Is •l*lt walking up and down tht mall looking for mothers," says mall 1.tliirector Pee-gy Uehrens. "The ~1thing we have the most problem ,,., W..._ 1J la9t thUdNI: t.hett '~ at lriil • ~ ..... • dar. ''TQiday .. w , • .., 10:1t lltll mormaa .•• The rash of lost chlldren, however. does not ipdlcate a lack ol ahopWUn• at the mall. "lt 's hard to tell exactly how much goes on becauae each ol the stores report it themselves," Ms . Behttna explain ••we Clon't aet involved W))~f,.th• ~tor. re· quests it, like if Uie,.wtre bavtng a problem d e taining a shoplifter." She believe• a hillb profile Dot Cargo Massive Spill Stops Traffic Traffic on the San Dle"o Freeway near Its lntersecUon with the Garden Grove Freeway came to a three-hour standstill Thursday afternoon when a freewheeling south- bound truck spllled a mysterious substance onLo the roadway. The lruck'!!I driver apparently either didn't know~ the ~pill or was wilting to write o(( lhe loss. So, he conUnued on his journey without &topping. THAT LEF7 llJGHWA Y officials with the task of de- termining the identity of the red powdery s ubstance that :.pill<'d across tho freeway for about three-tenths of a mile. .Fearing the foul-appearing powder might be a toxic chemical, State Division of Highway officials ordered five of the freeway's six southbowid lanes closed down at 1 :30 p.m ACCORDING TO A Califor nia Highway Patrol spokesman, by 4 p.m . southbound trafflc was backed up to Torrancl' about 20 miles north of the spill. Then, it was learned the red powder waan't toxic at a ll, except to those who might be tempted to aorge themselves on tacos. TllE DREADED RED substance that taxed motorist.a' pat H·nce for more lhan three hourt was, afttr all, nothing more harmful than dry taco sauce -three-tenths or a mile of cl ry taco sauce. ·Five Take Posts Wi th SACC· Board Fi' t' people were unanimollsly t•l•·ctl·d to th\l Saddleback Area • < ·1,onlinuling Council (SACC> exc·cull vc hoard Wednesday. Eaeh or the five had been nomirrnted by 11 committee of · comm unity lt>aderl'i The new officers 1tre: Mary Cornt•lius. from the United · Lai?una lhlls Mutual al Lel'"n e \\ 11rld : Cary Stn•cd, an active 'wo·mbt•r of lhe South Laguna llilb llomeo.,..ncr Association, <i nd llarry Sprlnaer, a director of . itlc l.u,.:una Niguel Commwtity .. A~soc 1;1t wn. The r>lher new officers are Jlowurd Ben nett, president of . th<' Moulton ParkwKy Residents As~oc1atio11. und Mildred H11\l1uni:>. pn:s1llc11t of the Lake Fun•!it 11 Hortwowners Assoda· ~!\'" 1 S \CC members also were n url prnposed changes in the or- t;..in11 al11m 's hyluws . These new . bylirn!I 11 ill h~ read 1tl{ain and vot- . . ~d oa during the Eebri.fuy rt'kel· Jng .. ~ : -· ... Copies ol the proposed bylaws are available at the l)Oulh county office. 23011 Moulton Parkway, Suite A-3, Laguna Hills Young Fire Victims Bu.,ied DETROIT <AP) -1,',i.n aJJ my 25 years of pastoring, tt>is s the saddest ihing I have ever been through," said Brother David Tarrance as he addressed the s mall congregation at the Church of God 1n Prophecy. Five small white cas kets, closed and bound with red rib- bons, were at the front or the church tor Thursday's service . \ ~ ~ ~·RECENT PHOTOGRAPH Heather Nichole F,.._Pa,,eAJ_ BAIL ••• ' •at~ ... U1e Oran~ Cowl· Dip&. uar u...man :lt1 tl1&1Dal HalOD lllaa \b•uted ... ; •Oidd·k .... Utters. "Professiona.Ls won't hit the mall if t.Jiere are police pres- ent," abe says. "Tbe Sheriff's extra patrols in the area are making a bii dll!etence." Neverthle111, mall 1eourlty - al least lbe extent of lt -Is HasonaL "We increase our security Corces in &vember, •• Ms .. Behrens says. "We have a park- ing Jot patrol mainly to keep down any potential car thefts. ThJs year we haven't even had one/ tolen bicycle." · O the mall's 1tore1, the btg department 1tores are the most aggressiveaboulahC?PWters. "They'll pick up a ehopllfter ln thelr atore with merehandJse from other •tores around the mall," says Miss Behrens. "We !~~n bave a itoN lhat ollwt a "° ftwar'd tf emr,loyees for eatehlil ahDDlltters. • And wUJa the atores providing their own security, a lot or mall security's headaches are re· dueed. "We really have relatively few security problems here," she says. "We have more nwa,rice 1'4nda of thfn11 l#k• kids ()D s kateboards or with bean· shooters. "A lot oC'l)arents think of the m a ll as • t>.a);ntttei Qnd sometimes ·tbat e•u~ea ptnb· lems." Misa Behrens playa•wn 'be idea that aecurity means a poUtle force isoperatin1 ln the mall. "We don't want to Rive the hn· age of a police force -that's not what they are," s he uys; "They're here first of all to eliminate any danger to the customer wherever poss Ible. "They're here lo help." E'ro• P a9e A J IDNSHA W I NTERVIEW. • • )ed to a racially inspired threat to his life. Hinshaw, saying he was treat- ed by prison officials just the sam e as fellow inmates, ex- plained his job was 1teeping track of bed assignments. He and prison authorities were told that white Inmates But he also hopes to make 1e~islators aware of some of the things that can be done to keep ex-convicts from returning to prison. Frot11PageAJ threatened to klH him U any FARMERS more blacks were admllted to a • particular unit. , • "Liie 111 very cheap in prison," . They wait~ Carter lo climb Hinshaw said. "Persons could onto a fialbed truck outrllt~ be kUled for a couple of cartons w it h a m I c r O..P ho Q e and or cl1arette11. loudllpea\ers an.d speak ·\o the "I learned very quiekly that de monstr ators -or to meet stabbings are the order of he w Ith o s ma) 1 de 1 e g a ti on day," he continued, adding that representing the scores or pro-reJlow inmates taught him "to testers who gathered i n the t Ji i h h 11 dt>wntoWn area. · s ay a ve st e c a enge. "We didn't thlnk It would be "You have to earn your respect ln prison. If ypu try to appropriate that he go lo the maintain that you are no better demonstration," Oranum sald. than anyone else ... If you abide "Solely becauae there ls a de- by the code ... you wlll get monstratlon, that does not ulong," he said. necessarily m ean that he netda to •The two-term eortgl'!lla tman go and addressthe protesters. also had some·harsh words ror a "He has on a numbe r of oc- crimlnal JusUce &.)'Slem .. Utat caslons expressed his concern per.mtts Ute dlsltlct,At~9 to about the farm problem," lnvettigate and pro111eeute, then Gronum added. take part in sentencin3 procJted· Al S Alu r d a Y · s m e e ting. in gs l \ .... • , ~ • Granum sald, the president will Hihshow·s "concurrent one to ·•once again outline what the lO·year sentences recently were Carter administration has done reduced to four more months by already this year t.o try and help Orange County Superior Court th~ farmers." Judge Robert Kneeland,. who In a telegram Wednesday to a also placed the former elected farm wife. M rs. Eston Luke of official on a work furlough pro-Baxley. Ga .. Carter said he has gram. increased farm loan levels and Dpring those proceedings target prices in the 1977 farm bill Deputy District · Attorn'ey · ·pbssed by Congr~s. established Micha~l Capizzi arguld against farmer-owned grain reserves, a reduced 1ent~h)ce. linked income StlPPort levets to Hi111hew said the · stricl at-the cost ol production. and pro- torney "shouid be a gracious vided $479 mHllon in emergency loser as he had been a winner." droufthtloans. Hinshaw when released from During today·s demonstration. jail in April will begin picking farmers paraded tractors Into up the pieces of an ordeal he town by the score and parked said has cost him a half-million them along the state highway dollars "plus the intangibles." through Plains. slow mg lrafflc. He said It Is most likely that he will become in volved ln hJs brother's lamp l't\anuCac·turing business. F roa Page Al · ~olice Slay Armed Thief CHULA VISTA CAP>-Pollce ehot and killed a ski-masked man early today arter he ft). legedly pointed a sawed-off shotgun at officers ou t!lde a restaurant that had just been robbed, officers 1&id. The wo man driver of the getaway ca r , Daisy Ruth Pomalla, 27, was wounded ln a hail of gunfire and 9 third sus- pect, a skl·masked male, got away. « .. . . AN u .......... HOMflttft!Y, VP MONDALE AitAIVE tN MINNl!SOTA Senatc)t Ca.rtlea 0 8 Despite lno.,.rable Cane., •Ji Give Up? HHH Untkten-ed by Cancer WAVERLY, Minn. <A-P ) "I'm not reaignint from anything. I may even joio something," was Hubert H. Hum· phrey's response when asked whether be plans to resirn from the U.S. Senate because of his inoperable cancer. The Minnesota Democrat, who arrived home Thursday, said he planned tO'be back in Washington witllin 10 days. The four Humphrey children and their 10 chilclreh al'e ex· peeled lo joln Humphrey and hia wife, Muriel. at Waverly on Cbrl11tmu Day. ~ . "Wt'r& gdlng to have home movies, ,l~e the lddi a cbance to see their parentS when they were kH:is, • he said. He added, chuckling, "These are the movies that used to bore the living daylights oul or my friends." t Guard Saves .Woman From Irvine ·Rape An Irvine Ranch security dep· uty rolltinely patroUing Orange groves early today gave a Westminster woman the chance to escape her would•be rapist. The alleged abdui:t~r who con- fronted her at knifewint in her apartment complex parkins lot about 11 p.m. aped away lo his car in Ute confusion as the ranch guard comforted the hysterical 22-yeer-old department store clerk. Orang-e County Sheriff's dep- uties alerted by rad io spotted the ve!llcle._ in the TttlJti.Jl: atea a nd • weitf .. n'to .1 bl11U~ftd pursuit wblch ended when the driver lost control and spun out. SherilC's ·deputy litnin Drag Queen Jeiool Thief! VENTURA <AP) -Police say t h ey are looking for a tra nsvestite j ewel thle! on crutches . who may a lso have posed as a pregnant woman while commJtting another rob· bery la~t week. A man on crutches wearing female ~lothlng wlth a wig and painted fingernails and carrying a .357 magnum re•olver .stole $9,000 worth of diamonds from Gensler-Lee Diamonds here Thursday evening, police said. They added they belle-..e he might be the same person who held up the Oxnard office <1t the Southern California Edison Company on Friday. dressed as a }>regnant woman. & GtoHoehme was eredll~ with the capture ot James R. 'Gega, 21, of Perris, who was In custody at Orana-county J all t.odar on a variety ol char11ea pending the lssulng of rorm'al' cbtnp\-,h;~ts by the Orattge County t>itlrlH At- torney't ortlfe-.. . • ~ Chu1es to be 11ou1ht wen ex- pected to Include kldnappln1 and au.empted tape, accordib1 to poUce. The unJdentlfied lrvlne ranch 1Juard waa palroWna the orante grove In the uea ol Irvine BQule~ard Hd. Ttab\teo .Road near El .Toro. M arllle. Corpe Air Station when he spotted tbe aw;- pect 'a car and abioed bis -llcht intp i)l•.~fole., . ·, lnve~lti~lors s aid i he sudden dlstracljon enabled the naked woman to wrestle free and escape. Boy, I 4 , Die s In Auto· Fire SAN DIEGO '(AP) -A 14· y~lll"·Old boy has died' Of bums suffe red in a fire while he was tocked lnsld~ 11 cAr with his two young!!" brothers. Terence Vlllasensor'a mother locked the cu while sbe went. Christmas shopping S•turday in Chula Vista, poUce 11id. The boys apparently we~e playing With mat~hea. A pasalng man saw the fire, broke a Win- dow with his riat and pulled the boys oul Terence died Thursday night in University Hospital O LD-f~HIONm G.REETING . .. ' I A TIMELESS WISH • MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPINESS IN THE ~EW YEA8 ~BEN'S ,,.. : lnsfillitJiw:··custom diap1riss. llnOI .. • wood tioor ~ · : : COSTA 0 MESA, CALIF: 92621 • PHON'e 646·d38 -.6~~·ri5s t , STOCKS /BUSINESS DAILY PILOT ~~. . . .. ,Keep Too Much • ' 1101" • Miii 81 SYtVtA PORTEil ~flt) .. ~.,.,...~ When a1~l.bu•ineas otwblcb J wu a half owner';Wts tra.n,ale~t,Q iJ,t employees and I 1td lorced to 10 thr()uafl i~ r~cords, l was em~rrassed to dlscbver what a paper clilt\f' bad ~en acc~ulated while it_.nllln IV hands. ~ ln Lbe tiles I found canc411ed ch«b dafin1 baek i~e than 20 years, job appllcat.l• that bad been turnod 4 DlPf,41 than a -d~ade ago, porresponden~ that bad no • • ~vance to im. Y.qually' 111«1d111. I found several c:opi"'1 one contrl\ct• SOOUt·Of ·date it WU lD antique. ,, _, TYPICAi. O~ERS o~ SMALL businesses prob4l>J)-l)OSSessalmllar du.lt4f. TbU, as,uldelloes: A One c~tral tile is adtquate to protect ¥ cont!,f:ct perm anenUy. . ~'P But remember that there are close to l ,000 federal nd state regulati6nS covering ret~ntion of records. These=. wU!etyontax\\8\emptoymentan<tworkmen'scompensa So berote dlSposing of unwanted and need.less .rec • che~k with the-state tax commlssiooe.r's-o!fice. Discard-audit reports a Mr 10 years; audit work pai>fb atterthreeyears. . ~ Get·rfd or-~ .. • ~ 6 ......... . •, • e.otrdpoll.\lf~~ afle~_ fl - live ytars and e11mtnll\e Money's r J classi led dOClfments ~ t f 'tnven~ries, reports and Wor.th 1 · receipts -after l~ · ~\ .. ,. ye&rsJ · ·I D spose of c.ontracu .r 20 ye~rs after settlement. Aleo throw out requests f~ servi<;.es and requisitions for suppliers one year after the en of the ~iscal year. -.. .';·Ct»"*1tU,Rs ..... Win • fh .... ~.. • -~ .. ·-e' HOllors cit Jobs - ~ . ..... • .4 f.DNl 'f PILOT s , AT YOUR SERVICE I NATlbNAL •,,.._.._ ________________________________________ -"'!' ________ ~ &~ \?@(!!]({ ~@l?W~©@ Precautioru Reduce Fire RU/a WASHINGTON (AP ).-The Consumer Product Safety Com· mission has urged consumers to ta.Ice a few minutes to examine and test their Christmas lights before plug. Jing them or wiring their trees. sued aboutpotentla! baurds. ~me.tra.ia D..,. P •Uf!fa EAR PAT: My aunt and I think t my late uncle may have had era! small life insurance p0llcies ch have been lost. Can you repeat the Bu t.tact-Beacb area can be ob· talaed by pllMlnc that city'• Senior Cttiaea Cemer at W.9387 or 531-SSSZ. Pal11t P••n P erl eeClfl . Just a Cew basic safety precautions can reduce the risk ot lire or electric shock from defective lights, such aa those with cracked sockets or frayed ~!res, the'commlssionsaid, Thursday. fn one case, lbe commiasloo said that Market Reaearcb Imports, Incline Village, Nev., la voluntarily wttbdrawios from sale certain ChrlstD)aa light replacement bulbs lm· ported from Taiwan which may be de-fective. e name of the organization that lps trace missing pollcie1:> , G.K .. Costa Mesa The Institute of Life Insurance baa continued Its missing policy ques- nnalre service due to a low Hccess te. IU wams that a private searcb DEAR.PAT: I'm taking my vaca· tion and doing some painting inside our house. Can .vou find out if there is 80)' possible W!Y to j>OUr paint from one can into another without making a lotaJ mesJS ? Using a funnel is the most .sensible solution, but I don't have the patience for that. MORE THAN z.200 injuries from holiday decorations were treated last year in hospital emergency rooms across the country, one·lhird of them caused by Chri.stmts lights, it said. I N THE cne.ER case the com· · 'mission said New York Men:handlse Co., New York City, voluntarily a topped selling certain. light sets that may have derecuve bulb sockets. r a mlaslng policy or unbon neficiary can be qult.e expensive · Jor aa individual to undertake. One P .W., Mjssion Viejo The agency's wore!s of caution were accompanied by two warnings it ls- The replacement bulbs involved have a thin strand of wire 1lbout one. eighth to one-rourth of an lncb long, wblcb may protrude from the solder "When they're finished singin', do we just smile or clap or what?" t etbod Involves contacttnc &be state partment of lnaurance ta wbatever ftate1 the deceaaed wa1 known to iave resided. Request the names and addresses of currently Jlceuecl ln· 1uraace companies ln each state and Tlaere la a trick to Uala, acc=ordl.D1 to several prolealoDaJ p~inters COD· t.cted by AYS. Wltea you pour palat from one cu lato another can or COD· talner, bold a cleu wooden stick acrosa the opening of tbe can with lbe paint in It. 1'b.la belpa the paint now freely and euUy into the aecoad can. When poaring from a small can, grasp It with three fingers and a thumb, asbag the inde:1 flnger to hold ~P at the hue of the bulb. · Wl'ite to each company. CroiVd Packed In For Gay fashions the stick vertlcaUy In place as you CHICAGO CAP> -People craned their neckt pour. When pouring from a Jarge and pressed forward as ·t~e models strutted ln can, both buds must be used to lift Cron~ of a jam-packed audience at the fint gay the can ud pour the paint. Keeping fashion show sponsored by a major refaller here. the sUdt In place ls more cllfOcult, · The furs were gorgeous and the models were but U can be done. stunning -both the female models and the female Another traclng method tnvolves thecking the "Insurance" llstlags in &he Yellow Pages plloae directory (avaUable at county libraries) of lbe cltles where the deceased lived. Agaln, write Jette.-. of Inquiry to all .Insurance companlet Uated. Be sure to lnclude the deceased perlOll's full bame for women as weJJ H married), date or birth, death and "guess" date of the Ume when the mystery policy ptay ha,v~beentake~out. ~ilO. Ifill C'o..e impersonators. · ~t. . DEAR PAT: I have a pr~blem with · THE SHOW. ORGANIZED BY gay members ~r Shopper• Sa .,1119 the Popular Science Book Club. We of the stalf at Bonwit Teller Fur Salon and held at keep receiving bills for two furniture a popular gay nJghtspot, featured SO men's furs ; DEAR PAT: I've heard that there building books. We didn't order these plus specially selected women's fur fashi<?ns. are a number of businesses that offer books, never r~eived the~ ~nd don't It was a benefit to help raise money for a •'-Y 4Jscounts to senior citizens and that want them .shipped at this time. My community center <ledicated to a gay bartender, t ertain services also are discounted letter s ~ring n,o response, only Frank Rodde Ill, who was slain UQder myst.erious (or oider persons. Is there any source another bill.Help. circumstances last spring. for getting a list of these discounts in J .T.,ElToro Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach? · Furs were selected because gays account for. I 5 .J.,Costa Mesa No explanation was offered by the 10percentoftheJurssoldatBonwil's and2.spercent Tbe Costa Mesa ..,ea lor Cltluns book club's spokesman. but your ac· offursalesnationwide, the salon said. Club wUl outline available dlscoants count will be adjuted and bUlla«t• l Costa Mesa if you phone 551-5391. wUI stop as soon as &be computet· HIGllLIGlfl'S INCLUDED a white, noor·length rformatloa about senior ~lscoqata la catcbes up wltb the correction. fox fur poncho, a classically .cut $15,000 ----------------------------golden sable, a $22,000 Alaska snow lynx cape and I a $75,000 Russian sable. i Salon owner Irwin Ware said some expressed Natlonal Parts System ~ Air Filters Most ·ears: $1 59 -· . . , .. Oil filters All Cars ' ' concern that the event would exploit gays for the sake of publicity. However, he said, he bad more complaints from conservationists, who were con· cerned about endangered spicies, than from gay rights advocates. . COMMUNITY CHURCH, <;ONGREGATIONAL 611 Hellottope Avenue, Corona det Mer .. CHRISTMAS EVE CANDLELIGHT SERVICES 7:00. 11:00 ... Christmas M usic by the Choir and Soloists· Christmas carols CHRISTMAS DAY SERVICE -10:00 AM · ST. JAMES EPlSCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMl:S YOU J2otVMS.W.. ........ INdl·'7W210 · CHRISTMAS EVE . 7:30-PM -FAMILY EUCHARIS'f- 10:30 PM -CAROL SERVICE 11 :00 PM -HOLY EUCHARIST CHRISTMAS DAY 8:00 AM -HOLY EUCHARIST 10:00.AM -HOLY EUCHARIST* •cHILt> CARE AVAILABLE ~ CHRISTMAS . at ·CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH 790 Victoria at., Co•t• Me .. 131-1111 In West Costa M .. a -aflO •ermt Huntlnaton Beach and Fountain Valley rr6M HM!lttoft ""from e.~1 CHRISTMAS EVE Children's Ser1lce -7:00 p.m. • Candlelight Choral Ser1lce -11:00 p.m. CHRISTMAS DAY Worahlp In Word & Song -10:30 a.m. NURSERY CARE Pa8ton: L. v. T'omow a llWfn KWUt Mlnlttet Of Mu•k* RodMy RelM MERRY CHRISTMAS from Some Rate Changes for PacificTulephone customers On Deamber 13, 19'11, the California Public Utilities Commission authorlud changes in the way Pacific Telephone charges for some of its servicei. These changes will go into effect ~mber 24. Intrastate Long Distance Rates· Rates for some intrastate long distance calls have bttn reduced slightly. The following chart shows the new rates. Rates for Intrastate Long Distance Calls (within California) lnrtid Period Each AddllDlal MnJ!e Aih S1aliln I Person "*°08 ~ Coin ()pef<JIOI If CICm8s of SeM::e belWeen rot& poills (). 8 9-12 13-16 17. 20 21· 25 26-~ 31· 40 41· 50 51· 70 71· 90 91·110 111·1~ 131·160 151·170 l7H96 196-220 221·245 2M)-,270 271-300 30l·330 331.JSO 361~30 431-610 511-690 0..590 I Mi\. 1 Min. IMn. 3 Mh-lf l»,'s-AI Hous Doy Mrq Oat EwWlQ Nglt $0.10(1)° SO.D8(1) $006(1) $0.20(5 $062(3) SI 22(3) ~0.()6(1) S004(1) .10(1) .()6(1) .()6(1) .20(5 .62(3) 122(3) .()6(1) ..04(1) .13(1) .I 1(1) .Q9(1) .25(5 .69(1) 1.29(1) .()8 ~7 .16(1) .14 .12(1) .35(5 .. 76(1) 1.36(1) .10 .09 .19 .16 .15 A0(5 .83 143 .12 .11 .22 .18 .17 A~5 .88 1A8 .13 .12 .25 .21 .19 .50(6' .93 1.63 .14 .13 .28 23 .19 .65 ., .98 1.&8 .15 .14 .3 I .25 .19 .80 1.05 1.65 .17 .15 .34 .27 .19 .95 1.12 172 .19 .18 .37 .29 .19 1.05 1.19 1.79 .21 .17(1) AO .31 .19 1.10 1.24 1.84 .22 .18(2) A3 .32(1) .20 1.15 131 1.91 .24 .19(2) A5 .32(1) .20 1.20 1.37 1.97 26 .19(2) A1 .32(1) .20 1.25 1.43 2.03 .28 .19(2) A9 .'.33( 1) .20 1.30 1.49 2.()9 .30 .20(3) • .51 .33(1) .20 1.35 1..55 2.16 .32 ..20(3) b3 '~I) .20 IAO 1.61 2.21 .3' 20(3) .65 .34(1) .21 1A5 1.65 2.25 .35 .21(3) .51 34(1) .21 u;o 1.71 231 .37 .21(3) .59 3'(1) .21 1.66 1.77 2.37 .39 .21(3) 61 .35(1) .21 160 1.83 2A3 Al :24(2) 64 .35(1) .21 1.65 1.90 250 .43 .24(2) .66 .35(1) .21 170 1.96 266 A5 .24(2) ~1 .35(2) .21 1.75 201 261 A7 .24(4) The number in parentheses indicates the number of cents reduction from the previous rate. M~e Unit Charges Night $000(1) 00(1) D6(1) J)8 .10 .11 .12 .12 .12 .12 .12 .12 .13 .13 .13 .13 ,13 .1a .14 .14 .14 . .14 .14 .14 .14 Ca Us between points in the San Francisce>-East Bay and Los Angcles • metropolitan areas that have cost 5 message Wlits for the first three minutes will now be billed as intrastate long distance calls. The following rates will apply: SloNon) fochM111onol Mrore Coin All C10s9eS of SeMce .35 . Hu .09 08 B~~ Exchange Rates . In the Los Angeles, Orange County, Sacramento, San Diego and San Prancisco-&st Bay ~li~ areas measured individual line business and semi-public telephone monthly rates will be reduced by 50 cents and PBX trunk lines by 25 cents • Key Telephone Systems There have been changes in the pricing of lines and stations. Certain rates and charges have been increased. Private Branch Exchange Service A surcharge oE 7 percent will be applied in addition to the ~isting 15 percent surcharge on rates and charges for the NA4-09 PBX 1etVice. Customer Provided Equipment Certain service visit charges involving customer provided equipment have been increased. Service for the Deaf 8usiness organizations which transmit me1Sages for the deef may 6Ubsatbe to untimed busines.s message service for the number of acti~ teletype machines at each business location equipped for sending me51age to the deaf. Such buaineAa must furnish evidence of «tVl.ng the deaf in order to qualify for untimed eervi~. . Mobile Telephone Service Theft haw been lncreatet In rates and charges for Mobile Telephone Setvkle. Pacific Telephone has~ directed to replace its existing manually operated mobile systems by more modem equipment within two yun. CUltomefs with thil type ol service wm receive more detailed. Wonnation lat~