HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-28 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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J{.nife-wielder Rapes
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBE R 28, 1977
esa WOman, Takes $9
VOL. 7t, NO.»*.• MCTl«*I. • l'M•• '
• • • •
• untmgton Attorneys • m ~lftsh
-Rains Soak .
Jorange Coast
\ By JACKIE HYMAN Orange Coast today was in San
011No.i1t~1.uutt Clemente, where mud slides•
Partial clearing is forecast for have periodically closed some
Thursday in a storm that has lanes on Pacific Coast Highway.
du{llped between an inch and 6.7 However, the slides were be-
indhes of rain on various parts ing cleared and tcaffic was not
of Orange County, the National completely stopped et any point,
Wpather Service said today. police said.
'.fhe rains caused no major The Huntington Beach Publlc
datnage, local officials reported, Works Department report ed
but were blamed for numerous some minor fioodini and said
minor traffic accidents and have · they are getting ready in d!se '
affected construction projects there's more rain.
and attendance at amusement "After so many days of rain,
parks. They also reportedly had the ~round won't take any ,
an unpleasant effect on a cat more," a spokesman said.
etuck in a Laguna Beach storm In Laguna Beach today, drain today. animal control officers were
Most officials and farmers. working-on-Bluebird .Canyon
said the rains were welcome. Drive lo free a cal who somehow
But that t>.lcture could chan&~l! got_&.uck in a stonn drain. The
a o er s orm the weather (SeeBAIN,P afeA2)
bureau is watching off the
Washington coast heads this
way Friday, bringing more rain.
The. Orange County Harbor
Department recorded 1.02 in·
cbes of rain for the storm in
Newport Beach. Orange County
Flood Control District figures to-
day range Crom 1.38 inches in
Santa Ana to 6. 7 inches at San·
tiago Peak.
. Jn Laguna Beach, Bill Shields
of Laguna Beach Hardware re·
~rled a storm total of 1.17 ln· (fl es today.
Kmfe-Jfielder
~sMes~
Ro~ Her.of $9
Costa Mesa police today began
a search for a man ti{essed in
brown who allegedly threatened
a 58-year-old woman with a.
knife before he raped her and
robbed her of $8.
SDow Job's Big
Residents of BuCfalo, hit by 200 inches of
snow last winter, today either shook their
heads with amazement or glee -or their
shovels, like Connie Piepsiny, 12, is doing.
She's got a s mall start, and it's still a
matter of faith that'sbe will find the fami-
ly car buried beneath all the snow. A
storm dumped two feet here Tuesday.
Another· Blast Kills 9
·Rubble Marks 2nd Si lo ~xplosion in 5 Days
oboe said.
Office
Scuffle
Erupts
By ROBERT BARKER
OI .. DeltJ ...._ llMf
A long·&tandlslg feud between
two H\IDt.ingtoo Beach city at-
torneY\t ef¥pted into a physical
altercation between the two
principals Tuesday evening.
Deputy City Attorney John
O'Connor and City Attorney Don
Bonfa have filed complaints or
assault and battery against each
other, poUce said.
A police department
spokesman said that both com·
plaints would be taken to the
Orange County District Attorney
this morning.
Bonfa first broke word of the
altercaUon when he calJed the
police to report the unwitnessed
incident at 6 p.m.
While offlcers were taking·
Bonra•s telephone call, O'Connor
appeared at the station to file his
report. .
Police sorted out details of the
incident this morning but re-
fused to disclose the statements
by O'Connor and Bonfa.
However, O'Connor said over
the t elephone that he was sitting
in b.Js office in the fourth floor of
city hall at 5:46 p.m. when the
skirmish toot place.
.. Bonfa tried to choke .me. He
tore my shirt and twisted my
neck," O'Connor said this morn·
ing.
O'Connor said that he was
treated in the emergency room
at Pacifica HospiW because of
pain.
Bonfa was in court today and
not available for comment.
However, he reportedly told a
colleague that O'Connor was the
ai:gressor in the incident. •
! 1
I
-·
'The weather service sald Los·
Angeles rainfall totalled 2. 75 in·
eh.es, bringing the season's total
to 5.96 inches. Normal rainfall at
this time is 4.41 inches. Parched
Qatalina Island has recorded
2."3 inches since Saturday.
.The only ma,Jor rain damage
reported to roads along the
Investigators said the assault
occurred' Friday night at. an
apartment com plex in the 300
block ot Avoeacfo Street, but was
not reperWcl uatil>late-MondaY.
The vlctim•told police ebe'was
confronted bT a '!Dan holding a
knife IS she was entering her
apartment 11e man reportedly
shoved her 1hro01h her doorway
and onto the ltvtng room floor
where be raped her •
GALVFSI'ON, Texas CAP) -
Rescuers dug through the rubble
of a grain elevator today seeking
survivors of a thunder<ous ex-
plosion that rl)>Ped through the
structure, killing at least nine
~pie and injuring 23. The blast
was heard 70 miles away.
apparently occurred ln a tunnel.
that coMected the elevator to a
loading dock. Two ships were
unloading grain at. the Ume but
were towed away by the Coast
Guard.
The facility includes 40 silos
and has a capacity of 3.5 million
·bushels of grain.
The force of Tuesday night's
blast at the Farmer's Export
Grain Co., which was heard 70
miles away, tore two gaping
boles in the side or the 13-st.ory
main elevator.--.
He reportedly said that O'Con•
nor grabbed him around the col·
(See BONFA, Page A%) •
1. He Suggests • .
~Pigeon Drop
RENO, Nev. <AP> -
Stephen Gaddis has taken
the Harolds Club's $100
prise !or the best idea tor cU1coangmg p'-eons from · roo1t1na on the famous
Reno arcll, pteway to the
do•ntnn c!iilinodlstriet.
· • Gaddis, a Harold•'
_ worker sugJeated that the
eity piace swivel bau;
across the len,U. ot th•
aroh. U a pii pe~bed
• on the tun rodl U • would fall ol , Gaddie reMCIMCt Tbe ldn Is to be turnadJ over to tbe ctb'.
Tlae Club 8'arted tbe COD·
te•l an.• tlre, attributed
1 to a buildup of pl1eon
:3t.~~·-~
The ....-t, deMribell u a
white aw. Ill tilt 811 ..tua •neat
mustaebe, allO took '8 from tbe
victim before be fied, polb:!e aaia.
T h e w om a n was not
bospitatiled. Police said tbey
are looldnt for a mm 1lbout six
feet tall with brown balr and
eyes.
The ._ .. w wewf au
·l>ra.n ek""'al.at tile ti.Ill• o the att.Mk. ·
A man and a woman were
p\ltt~ from beneath ·the twtsted
''eel and hunks of concrete
1bortly after midnight, but
pel.lce Mld seven more people
were belleYed mis5mg, including
three federal grain inspectors.
Choklne conctete dust and
smoke batnpered search efforts,·
ovel'comin& at least 15 rescue
workenr. ""Tbere may be others in there
and our search goes on.•• said GaWettAln Police Lt. D. K. J,.ack.
. FBI .•poknmea aald. agents
were on the tteDe ln a liaison
capactltf, prlmarllJ to ofter Jabora&ory aeelatance.
Au tborlUea clecllned to fPeCUl-1e on whateauaed the
l)last, the~ exfloelon at an Amerlemt cratn ele'flltef in five d •Y•~ Atl exp.01100 hit an
•l•vator eomplft ln New
Orleeu on Tlaun4•Y. klllln1 3' peepae, ~ . ...,.,,.."' are still eomblN ta.. rubble for a miss( ~ ... 'l1lie H"8te of tit.at ex·
.... --.... dMlrroined. ·~ ..... t¥ b, .. t here
Graln elevators such as the
one at Galv~ton contain highly
volatile grahi dust that can ig·
nite and explode from even the
smallest spark.
State and local police, fearing
other blasts ml«bt be triggered
by a sWl·amoldering fire, closed
off the nortb end of Galv~ton
JsJarld. ••n •a sun a dapge~s sltua·
lion,'' flre Chiet Hugh O'Don·
UMITA.TJON SET
ONM4RIUAGE
NICOSIA Cypnaa (AP) -The
United Ar~ Emltates, •orried
about t~e ''pbenomeaon•• of
eld eTly oil barons marrytni
yoane forttp Iida, bu decided
to draft a IMW law to outlaw It.
The Emirates eabfnet formed
a at>Mlal commltt.ee from the
ministriel of ?ellllon. inlerlor,
i.~ and forelp atfaln to write
the new law, tM Qatar HW1.
areney riPoi'ted.
Automobile-s1zed chunks or
concrete were thrown more than
200 !ee< and a railroad switch
engine was twisted into a tangle
of steel. Windows were shat·
tered a mile away i n t he
downlo'Ml section of this port cl·
t y o! 65,000 about 50 miles
IOQtbeasto(Houston.
"l saw-a fiasb co up and then tbere wu a ble concussloo."
said a security 1uard at Todd
Shfl>yards, about a half mile
from the facWty. ''A bi& glob of
fire IP~ o\let the top of the
bulletins across the way and
soon small nres crew into one
massive name.'' Barbara Ai.raves, 30, who
lives about silt blocks from the
site, said: "I wu talking on the
telephone and allot the 1\addtn
t.be hOUM wtftt 1&.ral1ht up la t.be
alr and plopped. back down. It
broke moat of the windows -4
knocked out eTery IJPt la Ibo
plaff.•• <a.BLUr, .... ~)
Coast
We at•er
Chance of rain decreas·
Ing to SO percent tonlebt
and 30 percent Thursday.
Continued cool. Lows
tonight in mid·50s. Higp ·
Thursda)' in low to
mid·60s. •
. IMllBETG•A.Y
If JIOU'r• loolcfng for Ntta
Year'• Eu. pa:rt11 /are ~. ate Food, POQt Cl. J .
~
. \2 DAILY PILOT s ..
Big Bear Cave-in
t' Kills 1, Injures 3
~ By The Aasoclaled Press the area through tonight. . Carl JC!~ Me>nauni: 46, was ~' noad crews scraped mud and ~ut the highway c~ews met k~lled, orf1c1als sald, adding that
heaved boulders orr Southern their multh TUl!Sday .night when his hanc~. Donna Lee Bu~eu. I California roads today to keep the side of a mountam ~cur the 32, the driver, was hospitab~ed
the highways open, despite a Uig Bear resort caved m on a at R.edlands c.om mun1ty
tropical storm that was expect· car carrying four people from Hospital along with he~ two
cd Lo continue dumping rain on Norwalk. sons, Lawrence, 11, and Er1k, 8.
' >--.....
I
Mitchell Leaves Prison
FormC'r Attorney General John Mitchell. right. leaves
the f<.'cleral prison camp at Maxwell Air Force Hase in
'.\lonli!omcry, Ala .. today on a medical furlough. At left
1s Ira Det\lcnt, who was U.S. attorney in Montgomery
whl·n Mitchell was attorney general.
Attempted Eviction
Ends With 2 Dead
ATLANTA CA P} -A marshal
I rying to serve an eviction notice
at a hous e on the cily's
.southwC'st side was shot to death
today by someone in the dwell-
in~. police said.
In lhe enswng gun battle. one
person in the house was killed
and the marshal's deputy was
wounded.
Atlanta Public Safety Com-
missioner Reginald Eaves said
the 1-'ulton County marshal, who
was not immediately identified,
Skier Found;
lost for 3 Days
SQUAW VALLEY CAP) -A
cross-country skier is recover·
ing from exposure after nearly
three days In s now-covered
mountains southwest of here,
sherifC's deputies say.
was shot by one or two men who
had barricaded themselves in·
side the house.
Dur~g a two-hour stand-off
between the occupants and
police, several shots were fired
and police fired several rounds
of tear gas into the dwelling. The
house caught fire during the bat-
tle.
One man inside the house was
shot to death, an oHicer on the
scene sajd, and the other man
was taken into custody. Eaves
said several witnesses were
taken to police headquarters.
The marshal's body lay on the
sidewalk or the house as the gun-
fight raged between (llose insi~
and police who surrounded the
structure.
Iran Meetings
TEHRAN, Iran <AP) -Presi·
. dent Carter will hold separate
meetings with Shah Mohammed
Reza Pahlavi and Jordan's King
Hussein In Iran this weekend,
Ira nian orric1als said today£
Iranian newspapers reported
that a prime topic or discussion
for both meetings will be Middle
East peace diplomacy.
''Jt'll take 12 hours to clear the
road. more lf the bad weather ·
continues," said California
Highway Patrol officer Jam~a
Roberts. '
A CHP spokeswoman said,
"The whole side of the mountain
came down on Highway 38 near
Angelus Oaks," 20 miles
northeast ot Redlands. "It Just
buried the car."
The winding road through the
San Bernardino Mountains
would rettia.ln clo~ between
Big Bear and Forest Falla R.Oad .
until the rockslide was cleared,
Hoberts said.
He also reported Highway 39
in the San Gabriel Mountains
was closed from Crystal Lake
north to its j11Dct1on wit.b State
Route 2 because of bazllrdous
driving conditions.
Highway 41 in San Luis Obispo
County and Sturgis Road across
the flatlands near Oxnard in
Ventura County were closed, ac·
cordin1 to a CHP spokeswoman.
San Bernardino sheriff's dep·
uties blamed rain-loosened·
shale and rock for the death
Tuesday of a 19-year-old Long
Beach girl climbing a waterfall
near Mount Baldy.
Tammy Cook died while
nearby hikers clawed for five
minutes at a pile of rocks that
buried her in the slide.
Her 12-year-old brother, Todd,
was reported in stable condition
at San Antonio Community
Hospital in Upland, suffering
from/an injured ankle.
The two were al the 4,000.foot
level of San Antonio Falla when
the ground gave way beneath
them, authorities said.
ln Santa Barbara, the site of
the disastrous Sycamore Canyon
fire that destroyed more than
250 homes last July, residents
were put on evacuation notice
Tuesday but no one was ordered
away, as moderate rain fell on
the city throughout the day.
Santa Barbara Battalion Chief
Al Faoro said his crews
responded to a dozen calls for
help ln removing mud .and sludge from garages and hlllalde
homes, but onJy one call came
from the Sycamore Canyon
area, where fire officials helped
four families. Faoro also report-
ed the roof caved in on a
downtown drugstore.
Road crews worked feverishly
in Alhambra to hold up a section
of Mission Road that was col·
lapsing as rainwater and runoff
from a broken pipeline un·
dermined the soggy earth
beneath it.
Scheuren Road in Malibu was
closed temporarily Tuesday
while crews hacked away at a
giant boulder that tumbled down
a hillside and blocked traffic.
The Southern California
Automobile Club received 600
calls an hour from stranded
motorists and bandied 8,000 calJs
by the end of the day Tuesday.
The normal number is about
"3;-200, s-atd spoknm11n Dtck
Roodzant.
Although the storm made a
major dent in Southern
California's drought, the rain
fell more lightly in the northern
half of the state, where the
drought has been more serious.
However, weather watchers
were generally optimistic about
the effects of the rain, noting
that the Sierra snowpack -
which provides spring runaff -
is now 60 inches at 6,000 feet,
compared to a normal of 30
inches at that elevaUoo for this time of year.
E ric Schine, 26, became
separated from rus companions
while skiing from Squaw Peak toward Picayune Valley on
Chris tmas Eve, said Placer
County Sheriff's Capt. Marvin
Jacinto.
A search party, which in·
el uded about 40 people on skis
and in snowmobiles, found him
Tuesday about 10 miles from
Squaw Valley. Deputies said
Schine seemed to be in satlsfac·
tory condition.
* Fro• Page A.1 *
ORANOE COAST s
DAILY PILOT
RAIN SOAKS COAST. • •
results of that rescue operation
were not. available by midmorn-
ing.
In the north county, some
local flooding was reported in
Brea, which received a heavy
4.2 inches from the storm.
Disneyland bad to close early
Monday but stayed open Ull mid-
night Tuesday, a spokesman
said. He said attendance was off
slightly but that exact figures
are not available until the end of
the season.
Knoll's Berry Farm reported
no lalloff In attendance. "Tbe
rain really doesn't seem to faici
people too much," a spokesman
said.
Information on Lion Country
Safari was not available early
today. .
The Southern California
Edis9n Companr reported no
major l>lackouls in the past 24
hours.
However, a spokesman
warned that more raJn mltbt al·
feet under1round vaults, ii
atotm drains back up.
The Paclllc Telepl'lone Com.
pany also reported no rain
. dam ace but wind was causlnt
some dela.yed d'al tones.
M1n9r tljatlic accldenta were
reported all along the coast, but
a trafflc fatality in Newport
Beach was attributed·to a faulty
sigpal light, not raln, police
said. Motnrists were cauUooed
to allow extra time and drive
carefully.
tn Mlssion Viejo, w'here Lake
Mission Viejo roee 2.S Inches
during the rain, a week's delay
in bulldlna a condominium
,project was reported.
The Cordova School slte ol the
Cap\strano Unilled School Dis·
trict was also affected by the
rain, wltb buildiJlf dela}ted ou
day tor each jlay of rain. Other
school dlstrlcts reported tbat
building. under construcUon are
already l'OOftcl 8¥ were not af.
fected. ~
Th• downpour wu wele«*Md
by farmera and flref&1h\en
acroH the cout.
A R•ncbo IUnloa Vl•Jo
sl)Okaman termed lt a "mm._,
dollar rmn." He aald a atonn
total ol L1 lDcbet hM bMa re-
corded on the ranoh aa4 la
leachlna out tbe 18ltl caUHd br .
lrrlf1Ucb.
llow•••r. an Irvine Ranela
1pok"man said, "It'• tuat .._.
lnf Ute dntl out of UI, He 1U4
at least two mare lneb• are
netded'fw U1 ~ aood.
.,~
GRAIN ELEVATOR RIPPED APART BY BLAST
·Where 9 Died and 23 Were Seriously Hurt
Sen. Proxmire
Spelllb Day as
Trash Hauler
NEW YORK CAP> -The
garbage truck crew was sur-
prised that Sen. William Prox-
mire wanted to ride around all
day with sanitalion workers, but
they said be was a pretty good
earba"man.
pressed in woolen clothes, the
Wisconsin Democrat boarded a
truck in Brooklyn on Tueselay
and went to work in 20·degrec
weather.
"We didn't know what he had
in mind -h e just loaded
garbafe with us," said Louis
Carde la, driver or . the truck.
''He also too~ a ride to the dump
and found out how that worked."
A spokeswoman for the
. senator said Proxmire wanted in
part to team first-hand about the
operations of the S~nitation
Department. Proxmire, head of
the Senate Banking Committee
which oversees federal aid to
New York City, has often
criticized city spending prac-
tices.
"He really held his own, ..
garbageman JaJneS Cardiello
said. "He told us he was a jog·
ger, someth!n' like 10 or 15
miles a da.y.''
Fro• Page Al
BLAST •••
Don McCoy, a spokesman for
John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo-
ple were treated at the hospilal
for bums. Two were listed in
critical condition.
Carter Tells
Party Choice
WASHINGTON <AP> -Presl·
dent Carter named John White,
a s hrewd and gregarious Texan,
today as his choice to run the
debt-ridden Democratic Party
and told him the upcoming con·
gressional election year will be
"a good challenge.''
Carter met with White, deputy
secretary or agrJculture, and
Kenneth Curtis, who is quitting
as party boss, in the Oval Office
at the wiyte House. The presi·
dent s hook hands with both men.
He thanked Curtis for his
service to the party, and CUrtis,
a former governor of Maine,
replied: "Thank you. I've en.
joyed it very much." Carter told
White he appreciated hls efforts
at the Agriculture Department.
adding: "This (new job> will be
a good challenge in the future.''
·Wages: SOot
Chimney Nabs Thief
llOUSTON <AP) -Scott Sullivan, 29, was sur·
prised when be heard someone talking in bis
fireplace. . "Hey, anybody out there? I'm in the chimney,"
a lll&n's volce said.
Sullivan ~aid the man explained he had climbed
Into the chimney to burglarip? the house but got
stuck. }Je called the. fire department. • •
••They dldn 't believe me, so J called po·
lice." Sullivan said.
the 'police "didn't believe him either, Sullivan saldl but decided to investigate afler calling back to
cont rm the report. Investigators arrived and then
called firemen again, who removed a 20·yen-old
IOOt·coveACI man from the chimney.
"I was Just walking along and thought I'd climb
ln and try to burglarlz.e the house," the man told ln·
ve1il1aton, addinf that he had never tried ahythlng
llke It before and had no plans to try again.
Police said burglary ch rges would be filed.
Fre. P•ge A I
BONFA •••
Jar and slammed blm against a
Molle~ ~!• lllfllt laclant t>.tween • ~,two •• ..,,,_,.. .. uy waa
toac'bed olf ">' • demand by , -O'C'*'°" fo• lk>nf• to put do1m guJclellntl tor crlmlnaJ pf"OMCUJ
ti09'J0ll .. , I
1. A t~lll'ff· ••Id th't Bonla te-1~9'1 t{> do thll, app~ntb' reel· ._, U.11 O'Oaluior na tnm1 to
lllJJa: ~•taaid tbl Jt wu the ~tlfl--.. ....." of \be dty _. .... o~ w :r to tet'iip • eont'tonta-
tlon with 9onf a.
0 'Connor said this morning that be couldn't fathom the
reason for the alleced attack.
"I .asked Bonfa why be dJdn't
respond to my request fo'r the
criminal prosecution policy,"
O'Connor said. "Bonla became
unglued."
O'Connor said lhalBonta "has
arms like.telephone poles and is
verr strong."
"Something has to be done,••
he observed, "the employees are
not safe.
"I now feel threatened and in·
secure and physically afraid,"
O'Connor said.
O'Connor and Bonfa have been
feuding since Bonfa wrote a
performance evaluaUon critical
of 0 'Connor In December of
1974.
O'Connor said the evaluation
statement wat not really an
evalualioo but waa an abusive
diatribe.
The matter proceeded before
the city's grievance bearing pro-
cedures.
Bonfa was directed to remove
portions of the evaluation from
O'Connor's record by the city's
personnel board.
Most of the evaluation was aJ.
lowed to stand, however, and
O'ConnOt" was given a chance to
rebut some or the statements
and entertbem In hia file.
6.6 Temblor
Hits Red Sea;
I.and Unhurt
By t1'e Associated Preas
An earthquake registering 6.6
on the Richter scale struck in the
Red Sea today, the U.S.
Geoklgical Survey reported.
.. We don't ex~l any damage
because or its location, .. said a
spokesman for the survey's Na·
tional Earthquake 1nrormation
Servibe at Golden, Colo.
The service said the quake •
struck at 17.2 degrees north and
39.9 degrees east.. which would
place it between Saudi Arabia
and Ethiopia in the Red Sea.
about 155 miles north of
Asmara, Ethiopia.
The quake hit at 6:4S p.m.
PST Tuesday, the service said.
lt said quakes of that magnitude
have occurred previously In the
Red Sea but that they are not
common.
The' Vienna Meteorological
Institute also recorded the
quake at 6.6 on the Richter
scale, and lran•s Tehran
University Geophysics Institute
measured it at 6.8.
The scale is a measure or
ground motion as recorded by.
seismographs. An increase of:
one on the scale corresponds to a
tenrotd Increase in magnitude. A
quake registering 6 can cause '3ttere damag& in-a populated
area.
Link Probed
In Slayings .
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Possible
connections between the beating
deaths or a on~·year-old San.
Diego boy four months ago and
of his 20-year-old mother-whose
body was found Friday are be·
ing probed by sheriff's homicide
detectives.
Elizabeth Ann Heldt had been
free on $15,000 bond awaiting
trial on charges of abusing and
murdering her son, Shawn
Michael Heldt, a sberiH's
sPokesman said Monday.
Investigators are looklng for a
man Miss Heidt lived with last
Aug. 31 when the baby was•
taken to a hoepital In critical
condition with bead and facial
bruises. The mother and the ,
man sh waa llviDI with save dU-
rering accounts of bow the infant.
was hurt, authorities said.
Witness Backs
I.Q. Testing .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Standanlbed JQ tests are "r~
markably good predictors" of a
child's educational ability, the
state ol California claimed iJl
federal CO\lrt.
. Durlq the state's Openinc
ar1ument Tuesday ln a lawsuit
brouaht on behalf o( five black
youn11~ wboae parents claim
the)' were placed lJl ''educable
mentally retarded" classes
becaute ol low IQ acores, deputy
attorney teneral Joanne Condu
sald the te1t1 ••predict the
acblevement.s equally well ror
both black and white chlldrenr."
Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Closing
N.Y.Stoeks
l -V~O~L~.7~0~,~N~0~·~36~2~,~~~S~E~CT~IO~N~S~,~38;..;..P_A~G-E_s __ _.. ....... ______________ o_R_A_N_G_e __ co __ u~N~TY--,CA--L_l_F_o_R_N_1_A ______ w_e_o_N __ e_so __ A_Y_,_o_e_c_e_M_e_e_R __ 2e_,_19_7_7 ____ w_c ____ T_E_N_c_e_N __ f~
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of ... o.11, ...........
Partial clearing is forecast for
Thursday in a storm that bas
dumped between an if\ch and 6.7 inches of rain on various parts
of Orange County, the National
Weather Service said today.
The ralns caused no major
damage, local officials reported,
but were blamed for numerous
minor traffic accidents and have
affected· construcUon projects·
a nd attendance at amusement
parks. They also reportedly bad
an unpleasant effect on a cat
stuck ln a Laguna Beach storm
drain today.
Most officials and farmers
said the rains were welcome.
But that picture could change if
a nother storm the weather
bureau is watching off the
Washington coas t heads this
way Friday, bringln_g more rain.
The Orange County Harbor
Department recorded 1.02 in-
ches of rain for the storm in
Newport Beach. Orange County
Flood Cootrol District figures to-
day range from 1.38 inches in
Santa Ana to 6. 7 inches at San·
tiago Peak.
In Laguna Beach, Bill Shields
of Laguna Beach f{ardware re-
ported a storm total of 1.17 in·
cbestoday.
The weather service said Los·
Angeles raln!all totalled 2.75 ln-
cbee, brlnOng the season's total
to 5.96 iDcbes. Normal rainfall at
tbls time is 4.U Inches. Parched
Catutna Island bas recorded
2JS31ncbea since Saturday.
Tbe only major rain damage
reported to roada along the
Oraa1e Coast today was in San
Clemente, where mud slides
• •
for
have perlodicaJly closed some
lanes on Paclflc Coast J{jghway.
However, the slides were be-
ing cleared and traffic was not
completely stopped at any wJ.nt,
police said. ·
The Huntington Beach Public
Works Department reported
some minor flooding and said
they are getting ready in case
there's more rain.
"After so many days of rain.
Coast
the ground won't t ake any
more," a spokesman said.
In Laguna Beach today,
animal control officers were
worklng on Bluebird Canyon
Drive to free a cat who somehow
got stuck in a storm drain. The
results of that rescue operation
were not available by midmorn· ing.
Jn the north county. some
(See RAIN, Page AZ)
Another Silo · Explodes; 12 Die
Big B e ar
Cave-in
I Kills 1
I By The Associated Press
Road crews scraped mud and
heaved boulders off Southern
California roads today to keep
the highways open. despite a
tropical storm that was expect.
ed to continue dumping rain on
the area through tonighl.
But the highway crews met
their match Tuesday night when
the side of a mountain near the
Big Bear resort caved in on a
car carrying tour people from
Norwalk.
Carl John Mon auni, 46, was
killed, officials said, adding that
his fiancee, Donna. Lee Burnett,
32, the driver, was hospitalized
• at Redlands Community l Hospital along with her two
' ·sons, Lawrence, 11, and Erik, 8.
' "It'll take 12 hours to clear the
road, more if the bad weather
continues." said California
Highway Patrol officer J ames
Roberts.
A CHP spokeswoman said,
"The whole side of the mountain
came down on Hi ghway 38 near
Angelus Oaks," 20 miles
nqrtheast or Redlands. "It jusl
lfuried the car.'"
· The winding road through the
San Bernardino Mountains
would remain closed between
Blg Bear and Forest Falis Road
until the rockslide was cleared,
Roberts said.
He also reported Highway 39 I in the San Gabriel Mountains I was closed from Crystal Lake
1 north to il.s junction with State
Route 2 because or hazardous ·
driving conditions.
Highway 41 in San Luis Obispo
County a11d Sturgts Road across-
the flatlands near Oxnard in
Ventura County were closed, ac-
cording to a CHP spokeswoman.
San ·Bernardino sheriff's dep-
\1 ties blamed rain-loosened «hale and rock for the death
Tuesday of a 19-year-old Long
Beach girl climbing a waterfall
Jttar Mowit Baldy.
Tammy Cook died whlle
nearby hikers clawed for five
minutes at a pile or rocks that
bµried he-r in the slide.
. Her 12-year-old brother, Todd,
was reported in stable condition
at San Antonio Community
Hosptt:al in Upland, suffering
from an injured ankle.
The two were at the .C,000-foot
level of San Anton.lo Falls when
the ground gave way beneath
tbem, authorities aald.
Jn 88Qta Barf>ara, the site of
the cn...trous Sycamore Canyon
flre tbat destroyed more than
250 bomes last July, realdents
were put on evacuation notice
~but no one was ordered
pay, u moderate rain f~ on
tbe city throughout the day.
Santa Barbara Battalion Chief
Al P aoto aald bis crews
~ to a dolen ealla for
=la remo•lDI mud and • ,... ....... bll\alde
l~m-. bal anl7 .. eell eame ......... si;.amoN CanJOll ~..... aftltl•Je ....... ....... ,. ,._ .. """"' ...... root ..... la ... ................
:.: CWCA ........ AI)
'BANGED MY HEAD'
City Atty. Bonfa
'TRIED TO CHOKE ME'
Deputy Atty. O'Connor
Feuding Attorneys
Cltuh in Huntington
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ... O.Uy ~llet IUH
A long-standing feud between
two Huntington Beach city at·
torneys broke out into a physical
altercation Tuesday evening.
Deputy City Attorney John
O'Connor said be was attacked
by City Attorney Don Bonfa.
Bonf a said h~ was attacked by
O'Connor.
Police said both filed cr06S·
complaints of assault and bat·
lery against each other.
A police d e partmen t
spokesman said that both com··
1
EIR Decision
Delayed by O C
Fair Board
pl aints would be taken to the
Orange County District Attorney
today.
Bonfa said today that O'Con-
nor has been placed upon im·
·Jl)ediate suspension without pay
and that O'Connor will be fired.
Bonfa first broke news of the
altercatioa when be called police
shortly after 6 p.m. There were
no witnesses. While officers were taking
Bonfa's telephone call, O'Connor
appeared at the station to file bis
version of the skirmish. O'Con·
nor said over the telephone to-
day that he was sitting in bis of·
lice in the fourth floor or the city
hall at 5:45 p.m. when the tussle
took place.
"Bonfa trled to choke me. He
tore my shirt and twisted 1111
neck," O'Connor said.
O'Connor said that be was
t reated at Pacifica Hos])ital
because or the pain in bis neck.
<SeeCLASH. Page AZ>
Rescuers
Slowed
By Dust
/
GALVESTON, Texu (AP> -R~cuers dua throuCb the rubble
of a craln elevator today seeking
survivors of a thundvous ~
ploslon that ripped throu1b the
structure, kiiliil& at least 12
people and injuring 23. The blast
was heard 70 miles away.
A man and a woman were ...
pulled from beneath the twisted
steel and bunks of concrete
shortly after midniebt, but
police: said five more people
were believed milalq, including
three fecJeral griiD lllspectora.
CboklDI coacrete dust and
smoke hampered March efforts.
overeemlaa at leut 15 NICue
workers. · .......... ~-.-.1n UaeN
-Mr eeareb aeee OD," said Galvestca Nee Lt. D. K. Laet.
FBI •P"kftmea aald aeeats were on the scene lo a llaieon
capacJt1. prlmarlly to oUer
laboratory Ullst.ance.
A u~rltles declined to
speculate on what caused the
blast, the second explo.ion at an
American grain elevator in five
days An explosion bit a n
elev~tior complex In New
Orleam on Thursday. killlnW3'
peopl~, and searchers are still
combing the rubPle fo-r a JD.iss..
inl man. Tbe cause -ol tbat ex·
plosioa luia Mt bell!D ~rmined.
Authorities said the blast here apparently occurred lD a tUJJDe1
that cenneCted the elevaCor to a
Joadln« doek. Two ablps were
uaload.ine grala at the time but
were towed away by the coast
Guartl.
Grain elnaters such as the
one at G.aveltoe contain b1gbly
•olatile grain d.t that can Ig-
nite and explode from even the
smallest apatk.
Stde and loeal police, fearing
other blaata might be triggered
by a aWl·smoldering flre, cleeed
off the aortb end of Galveston
lalan1&ee BLAST, Page AZ)
Hammett Declining . .
Mesa Re-election
By MICllAEL PASKEVICB
OtllllDeilyPllll .....
•
"~~ BURIED BY RUBBLE IN ELEVATOR EXPLOSION
R~ Worltet9 '911 Woman From Wreckage
~P~ir Still in Jail
Despite Bail Cut
By GAllY GRANV1LLE Of .. OllllY ..........
The bail game being played
against the backdrop of a
Newport Beach JDurder and the
bigll n11q Orllqe Cont drug
set came down to earthly figures
Tuesday when~ colleetive bail
set for Alexander. and Elsie
Kulik-dropped dramatically.
By the end of (be day.
however, 27·year-old Alexender
Kulik wu SUll ln custody pend.
lug tbe posting ot $1.lS million
ball.
Slnce arrest Oct. 22 on heroin
charges and later linked to the
slaying of Stephen John Bovan,
Kulik's bail bas ranged as bJgh
as $6 million.
It was when his bail stood at
$7SO,OOO that the key figure in
Knife-wielder
8.aPea Mesan,
·Robs Her of $9
Costa Mesa police today began
a search for a man dressed in
brown who allegedly threatened
a Sl·ye•r-old woman with a
knife before be raped her and
robbed ber ol $8,
lnnstigat«a said the assault
occurred Fri<!ay niebt at an :f!nment complex In the 300 k ~ Avoc.to Street. but was
DOt reported unw late .. .,..
Tbe mtim Wld polJoe abe 1'U ~ bf a ~an beldlna a
ladle • •.._ wu eateriGI ber ya~ -'111111 man l"el*Wl1 ~ .... tlmJqb her a.orw.y
aad aato tie llvln1 room l1oo.c' when• taped her. . ne IAlll*t, detertbed u • wbit.e;•• ba Ida 40I wrth a neat m~ llllo took '8 from the 'rietlm bele>re he lied, police
tlkt.
The woman was not
hOtpitallted. Police aaid they
.,. ~ for a man aboU.t six
tMl UI ~ bro.a Mil' and
9191, !)e ...oat,,., we...tn« all ...,......._,. &Mtlae oltbe ......
t r
the bizarre murder-drug case
gained notoriety and temporary
freedom by posting that much in
cash.
But Kulik's frndom was
sllort·llved wh~n be was re•
arrested a few weeks later while
hldlng out ln a La {;osta ccm-
dominlum with bls then fugitive
wife.
KuUk•s difficulties wltb the
Jaw continued to mount wbeo ar-,
resting officials purportedly ·
found a heroin stash -valued at
more than $1 mUllon -bidden
in the air cleaner of a vehide
parked near the condo.
That discovery Jed to a federal
m agistrate sl apping a $2.S
million hold on Kulik..
El sie Kulik was held fn
custody on the same amount of
bail arter both she and her
husband were named in a
federal Grenet Jury indlctmen~
centering oo the heroin stash.
But M.rs. Kulik also obtained
relief of sorts Tuesday when the
amount of federal ball was re-
dllceCI to $100.000 and ber Orqo
(See BAIL, Page AZ)
Co ast
We a ther
Chance of rain decreas·
Ing to 50 percent tonight
and 30 percent Thursday •
Continued cool. Lows
tonight in mld·SOS. Highs
Th ursda7 in l ow to
mid-605.
INllDETODAY
lf t1ou're iooldng for New 1 Year'• EH por'tJI fare fdeoa. , ' an Food, Page CJ.
I
t2 DAil Y Pl\..OT N
Temblor
Hits Red
Sea Area
By the Aaaoclatff Presa
An earthquake re1istertng I.I
on tbe Riebter acale 11.ruck In the
Red Sea today, tbe U.S.
Geolosical Survey reported.
. ·•we don't expect any dam1tge
because of its location," allid 8 spokesman ''lr the survey's N•
tional Earthquake lnformaUoa
Service at Golden, Colo.
The suvlce said the quake
struck at 17.2 degrees north and
39.9 degrees east. which would
place it between Saudi Arabia
and Ethlopla in the Red Sea
a bout 155 miles north of
Asmara, Ethiopia.
'l'l\e quake hit at 6:45 p.m.
PST. Tuesday, the service said.
It said quakes of that magnitude
have occurred previously in the
Red Sea but that they are not
common.
Tbe Vienna Meteorological
Institute also recorded the
quake at 6.8 on tbe Richter
s cale, and Iran's Tehran
University Geophysics Jnstitute
measured it at 6.8.
The scale is a measure o!
gr~und motion as recorded by
seusmographs. An increase or
one on the scale corresponds to a
tenfold increase In mainttude .. A
quake registering 6 can cause
severe damage in a populated
area.
Big Canyon
Fire Damage
About $1,200
A Big Canyon woman might
h&ve bffn a little too neat and
tidy, according to Newport
Beach firemen who were called
to her home Tuesday night. to
put out a garage fire.
Firemen said the blaze, which
did an estimated $1,200 damage
to the garage al 9 Rue de Ville,
apparently got started ln a pile
of fireplace ashes which ignited
a plastic trash can into which
they had been dumped.
The home's oceupant, Daken
Broadhead, told firemen she had
cleaned out. the flrel)Jace shortly
before she·dlscovered the fire at
5:30p.m.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said the ashes ap-
parently were still hot enough to
ignite the other trash in the
trash can.
"We suggest that when clean-
ing out fireplaces, ashes be put
into metal containers with a lid
:rnd then put outside," Morton·
said.
.. Or they make good compost
fo r the garden. Just don't put
them into plastic trash cans that
have other trast-in them."
f'rom Page Al
FAIR •..
a s ucressful ccurt challenge
would be necessary to block the
fair'g expansionj>lans,. which ln·.
cluae construction or a 3,000 seat
a m philheater and a new.
equestrian center.
The fair board wm still bold a
regular meeting Thursday at 7
p.m. in the fairgrounds ad-
mlniatration building. Hoose
uid the main order of bU5iaes8
will bo conaideraUon of the lair's
1078 budget.
Iran Meetings
TEHRAN, iran CAP) -Presi·
dPnt Carter will hold separate
meetings with Shah Mohammed
Rera Pahlavi and Jordan's King
Husaem in Iran thla weekend,
Iranian ofltctals said today.
Iranian newt.!papers rePorted
that a prime topic ol dlacusslon
for both meettngs will be Middle·
East peace diplomacy.
I
DAILY PILOT
..
CLASH •••
._,a toW an entlreb' dlt·
1 ............ •-o•o...-1a1t bll temPtt aDlt
U1a•h.ed me Ud battered m•,"
be said.
''He grabbed me by the collar
and Ue and banged my head
against the wail. I dldn 'l lay a
·finger oo him," Bonfa declared.
"There is no room for this un-
c iv llbed, bootlga n type 01
behavior," Bon.fa said.
The latest episode between the
two men apparently was
toucbed off by a demand by
O'Connor for Bonfa to put down
guidelanes for eriminal prosecu-
tion policies.
A source iD the lecaJ depart-
ment said Donia refused to do
this, apparently feeUnc that
O'Connor was trying to provoke
a confrontation.
O'Connor said today that he 1
couldn't fathom the reason for
the alleged attack.
,.,I asked Bonfa why he didn't
respond lo my request for the
erimioal prosecution policy ...
O'Connor said. "He came un·
glued." O'Connor said that Bon-
f a "bas arms like telephone ·
polea and is very strong.''
"Something bas to be done "
he said, • 'the employees are not
safe. I now feel threatened and
insecure and I am /hysically
afraid," O'Connor aal .
Bonla said that he was '
grabbed by O'Connor when Bon-
f a tried to leave bis olllce. "I
tried to get out the door and
O'Connor ·•lammed It," Bonfa
said.
"I told hlm to take hia bands
~f me. l said what are you go-
ing to do, bit me?
''He (O'Connor> said maybe I
should, I can't stand you," Bon-
!a alleged.
Bonf a said be eventually went to hia office 'and locked the door
and called police.
O'Connor and Bonla have been
feuding since Bonfa wrote a
performance evaluation critical
of O'Connor in December of
1974.
O'Connor contended that the
evaluation was not really a
performance evaluation but
was an abusive diatribe. ' .
The dispute proceede d
through city grievance pro-
cedures.
Bonfa was directed to remove
portions of the evaluation from'
O'Connor's files by. the city's
personnel board.
.. ., . I ··SI' t· . . . ''·
Most of the evaluation was al·
lowed to at.anct, however. and
O'Connor was given a chan~ to S finn...-.• SHd_ ing rebut statements and enter them r r -• D
in his me.
F ro• Page Al
BLAST •••
E_i~hlet:n·year-old Michael Winn tried a tcsl walk for his
high w1r~ act at Knoll's Berry Farm Tuesday when a
heavy ram squall struck. Spectators ran for cover Winn
bar kcd down off the wire to safety. All's well tha·t ends well. '
"It's still a dangerous si tua-~~!;~Jj~e Chier Hugh o ·0on-Avalon Reservo1·r .
The facility includes 40 silos
and has a capacity of 3.5 million -
bushels of grain. E
The force 91 Tuesday night's mpty After Ra1·n blast at the Farmer's Export
Grain Co., which was heard 70
miles away, tore two gaplr:g
holes in the side of the 13-story
main devator.
Automoblle-slzed chunks of
concrete were-thro\\-:t more than
200 feet. and a railroad switch
engind was twisted into a tangle
of steel. Windows were shat-
tered a mile away in the
downtown ·'8CticJn of-this ,,ort-d--
ty of 65,000 about SO miles
soutbeoatolHouston.
"I saw n flash go up and then
there was a big concusslon,"
said a security guard at Todd
Shipyards, about a half mile
from the facility. "A big glob of
fire spread over the top of the
building across the way and
soon small fires grew Into one
In spite of the fact that more ·
than two inches of raln has
fallen on Avalon. the parched
residents of Catalina Island
have not got any water in tbe.ir
empty reservoir today.
A spokesman for the Southern
California Edison Company.
which handles all utilities for the
islana, saf<rlhe r41n1trat" bas
been falling there since Satur-
day bas all soaked into the
ground.
"There has been no runoff.
None at all," the spokesman
commented.
Rainfall at the Avalon Harbor
Department office was recorded
at 2.36 inches for the storm. At
Middle Ranch, ln the interior of
the island near the reservoir
rainfall was 1.26 inches for th~
storm. making the December
total 1.80 inches.
The Edison spokesman said
th& ~ompany is encouraged that
the rainfall may Indicate an end
LO the dt\IUti:ht and an eventual
filling of the 1s1and's reservoir.
"Last year at this time. we'd
only had a lolaJ of . 74 inches,"
the spokesman said.
* * * * * * Fro• Page AJ
massive flame."
Rarbara Agraves, 30, who RAIN SO A K S CO AST liver. about six blocks from the • • •
slte, said: "l was talking on the
telephon<' and all of the sudden
the house went straight up In the
air and plopped back down. It
broke most of the windows and
knocked out every light in the
ylace."
Don J.fcCoy, a spokesman for
John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo-•
pie w~re treated at the hospital
for bums. 1"No were listed In
critical condiUon.
West Newport
Home Burgled
A West Newport man, who left
his home locked -with the ex·
cepUon ot Ofte QOOr-returned.
from his bolicla)r -.eekend to ftM
thlent had taken two sets of
,olf elD lnll bla stereo. J>oU~e aaJd tbe bWalMS prob•bly aot ln lllroub the-~dbl.-etu. do(>r •b•~·h tbe OCCllp•d\, Gut'g
JotnJloa. M, blld to lta\te un·
·Jocked because tbe lock Yt'&ti 'bro~en. .. . Jobuon ..Uma~ the vl!.ie ot ~• mlulQ ltem1 at •~.07$ tn a report IUed IJ'uesd•Y wltb
police.
local floodini was reported in trict was also arre.cted bv the
Brea. which roceltied a heavy rain, •ith building delayed one
4.2 inches from the-51.0rm . day for each day of rain. tlther
Disneyland had to ~fose early school d1str1cls reported that
Monday but stayed open till mid-buildings under construction are
night Tuesday. a spokesman already roofed and were not af-
said. He said attendance was off reeled.
slightly but that cuct flgures The downpour was we!comed
are not available untd tbe end of by farmers and llrefighters
the 1euon. :icroH the coast.
Knott's Berry Farm reported A Rancho Mission Viejo
no falloff in attendance. "The spokesman termed it a "mlllioo·
rain really doesn't seem to faze dollar rain." He said a storm
people too much," a spokesman total of 1.7 Inches has been re·
aaJd. corded on the ranch and ls
Information on Lion Country leaching out the salts caused by
Safari wu not available early irrigation.
today. • How,ver, an Irvine Ranch
The Southern California spokesman said, "It's just teas-
Edl1on Company rep0rted no ing the devil out of us." He said
major blackouts ln the past 24 at least two more inches are boun. needed for any longterm good.
However, a spok~sman :· A apokesmin for the Ora.nee
warned tbat Ulon rain mfcht a!·. County FlJ'e.State Forestry st.a·
feet undeqroand vaults, U · tioo aalct \hat altho\.\ib the fire •tonl\ dnlM JNlckup. season doesn'~ offlciall)' encl 'ID·
Tb• Patiltc Telephone Com· tll Dec. 31, • We've closed· our
P•PY alt" reported no rain wtldland fire stations and laJd aamaae w wind wu eaualng off seasonal persont1el. aom~ ~elayed dlal tones. "We're not lolnl to bave &l\Y
' M'i::Ol tt~ accJden~ were more problenu. We'\lt bad
reportet' aJl al()ng the copt, but enouah rain to cet the crass
a tramc fataJlty in Newport •rowlna and brlng everythtns
Beach was attributed to a faulty back to lUe out theTe,"
stanal J1gbt, not rain,' police aaid. Motoriata were cauUontd
to allow ava t.lme and drlvo
carefully. ·
lJ) lltNlon Vl~. wbere Lale
UIHIOO Vl~o l'OH 2.5 Inches·
duritti the Hin, a weet•1 "'18.Y
1n buUcuaa a eoeaomtnham
J)l'OJ•c:t ... iepOrt.eid.
Tb• Cordofa lebOol alte ~\be
Capl1trmo Ualfli4 School Dia-•
£Ill Inadequate
t.OS ANGELES (AP) -A
Superior Cowt Jada• .. ,. an
envtronmeotal •tadJ preJll&l'8d ti1 tiJ"M dtl• inlenltecl ln ba:I·
1na tbe Holl1wood· BurbHk
Airport la 9dequat.e aacl prob-
ablywalft'tevtnneeded.
~
I
.
Court Reve rs es
Maheu Damages
SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) -The
9tb U.S. Court of Appeals today
reveraed the $2.8 million
damage awa"9 aiven Re>bert
Maheu against Summa Corp. for
deltrnat.ory statements made by
the late Howard Hughes.
In • «>-pace cteclalon, it re-versed ancf sent &act for a new
trial part ol a U.S. District Court
judfmeni b.aadecl down in Los
Angeles Dec. 24, 1974.
Bat lt affirmed part of the
lower court'• order which rrant-
ed Summa about $470,000 plus
accrued interest on its claim
against Maheu.
"We have no choice but to re-
verse the judgment on the
groltJld that the trial court's one-
sjded characterization of Maheu
came close to directing a verdict
ln bis favor, tbus cteaytnc Sum-
ma a fair trlat,•• aaid the court.
The Judge was. referriq to the
comment made by U.S. District
Court Judge Harry Pregerson to
the jury prior to its retiring for
deliberations.
The appellate court said
Pregerson described Maheu as
''affable, intelligen t, im-
aginative, articulate ... a
fr_iendly m~n with irnPortant friends in higb places,'' and ·'a
man of enormous energy and
drive" with the "ability to eet.
things done." >
Ob Dec. S, 1970, Hughes dis·
charged Maheu, endlna a l.4·
year relationship. Mabeu filed
suit in Nevada to relaid his posi·
tion, claiming Huebel bad been
coerced Into firlna him or
someoaeelaeordered it. ·
Late in 1971. a major publlaber
announced plans to publilh a·
Hughes autoblocrapby
p .,..r,..e A l
BAIL •••
County bail dropped from
$250,000 to $1.S0,000, meaning it
will take $250,000 to free her .
from jail.
During the day, Mrs. Kulik
also came up with an attorney o(
her own.
Until then, both Kullks were
represented by fiery San Diego
altorney Phillip DeMusa.
Tuesday, however, John
Tremblatt became the attorney
of r~cord for Mrs. Kulik.
Like her husband and now six
others. she is named in the
Grand Jury indictment covering
Bovan's shooting death outside a
Newport Beach restaurant.
However, the number of de·
fendants in the case dropped by
one last week when Roy
Christopher Richard-. 28, who
was once head of the Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna temple,
agreed lo become a prosecution
witness in return for immunity
from pr05ecution.
Both Kullks are being held ln
the federal Metropolitan Correc·
tional Center in San Diego.
Like their co-defendants, they
are slated to appear in Orange
County Superior Court on Jan. 23
to face trial on the murder
charges. ·
The ~ly suspect remaining at
large-is -Joseph_Fedorowski a
one-time business partneri of
Richard and Kulik.
purportedly based upon personal
Interviews with the billionaire by Clifford Irving.
To establish that Irving's book
was not authentic, Hughes ar-
ran1ed a telephone news con-
ference on Jan. 7. 1972 from the
Bahamas to newsmen in Los Angeles.
The court said during this
news conference Hughes was
asked why Maheu was fired and
answered in part "Because he's .
a no-good, dishonest son of a
bitch. and he stole me blind."
The s~atements he made. the
c~rt said, form the basis for lbe
suit. Summa admitted the de-
famatory statement was made
by Hughes and assumed legal
.responsibility for ll. Summa re-
lied solely upon the defense of
tnat.b and it asawned the burden ot proving truth.
The court noted Hughes bad ~ome an eccentric, would not
appear in any court and "Maheu
knew that Hughes would not
testify and he took advantane of this. to hlm, happy situation.
The ;ury first returned a verdict m tbe liability phase then
subsequently awardea damages.
Part of the award to Summa
was made by the trial judge.
The appeal court noted
Maheu's credibility "was the
crucial factor in the whole case.
Time after time the resolution of
a critical factual issue came
down lo a choice between
Maheu 's version and either
directly contrary testimony by
other witnesses or by Maheu
himself ... " The court said the judge·s
comment on Maheu "was not a
carefully balanced appraisal of
the voluminous conflicting
evid ence, or o f Maheu·s
credibility ... "
•'While that description may
have been accurate, not all the
evidence supported that view.
Yet, the only negative traits
which the court mentioned were
that Maheu was "talkative,
somewhat naive, artless. care-
less. imprecise," the decision
said.
f'ro•PageAJ
CAVE-IN •••
Road crews worked feverishly ·
in Alhambra to hold up a section
of Mission Road that was col-
lapsing as rainwater and runoff
from a broken pipeline un-
de rmined the soggy earth
beneath it.
Scheuren Road in Malibu was
closed temporarily Tuesday
while crews hacked away at a
giant boulder that tumbled down
a hillside and blocked traffic.
The Southern California
Automobile Club received 600
calls an hour Crom stranded
motorists and handled 8,000 calls
by the end of the day Tuesday.
The normal number is about
3,200, said spokesm an Dick
Roodzant.
Although the storm made a
major dent .in Southern
California's drought, the rain
fell more lightly in the northern
hair of the state. wbeu the
drought has been more serious.
;
Wednad.y. December 28, 1977 CAIL Y PILOT 113
•
ort's '77 ~ally Nears 2 Milllon
8 ) KATHY CLANCY Of .. 0.0,, ,,..,...,.
Fuller aarcratt leaving Oran1e
County Airport ~ccount for the
expected 344,000 increase in
airport passengers for 1977,
airport Manager Robert
Bresnahan said today.
Airport st.atistics through No-
v ember s howed 1 ,983,869
passengers arrived at or depart·
ed from the airport for the first
11 months this year, up 18.6 per-
cent from the 1,673,173 for the
first 11 months of 1976.
By the end of December an
estimated 2,169,042 pa.ssen1ers
wiJl have used the airport, up
from the 1976 totala of 1,825,423.
.... , .......
UTILE LISA CELEBRATES LATE CHRISTMAS
Abandoned Glrl, 4, Home In California
Late ~hristmas
Abandoned Tot Comes Home
CHULA VISTA <AP> -Lisa was late for Christmas.
A note in the pocket of her blue parka told why :
"This 1s Lisa Lynn Roech," read nurses in an Englewood.
N .I . ho!.pil:.il where the blond 4-year-old girl was left by her
father Dec. 22.
"I CASNOT AFFORD TO send her back to California on
my own. I don't have any way of taking care of her. Please con·
tact her grandparents in Chula Vista, California."
Abandoned is the word Lisa remembers hearing the people
in the while coals say.
ln the letter in her parka, Lisa's father, Norman Roech, re-
linquished custody to her maternal grandparents. Ivan and
Alice Abner. police say. Roech. who is divorced from Lisa's
mother. ,J,m1cc Abner of San Diego, had won custody two years
ago.
AFTER TllE ABNERS ANSWERED their telephone and
arranged for their granddaughter's flight Tuesday, Lisa said
l>he learned this about being abandoned -"It's when they take
you to a party with Santa Claus and Rive you lots of toys and all
the hamburgers you can eat "
The doctors and nurses cheered her up ar\d then put her on
the plane.
The J\bners met their granddaughter, carrying only the
clothing on her back. at the airport in San Diego. Lisa had last
seen them Nov 2 when her father took her for a trip to Canada
in his van.
SO EVEN THOUGH SHE spent Christmas Day as a ward or
the county in New J ersey, Lisa's real Christmas dawned bright
and happy two days later with the grandparents and an aunt
with whom she has spent much of her life.
She got a new bicycle. dolls, stuffed animals and· a party
dress, under a slightly wilted Christmas tree -and word that.
her mother w:.is coming to join them.
"I'm happy," Lis a said with a smile.
Dlf f erences Separate
Joint U.S. Church
Group Finds Unity
NEW YORK (AP> -A joint bodies. and on the pastoral ro'e
Rom an Catholic-Episcopal of bishops.
church group in the United The group identified four
States, whHe acknowledging dif· '"Problem areas" which were ~
ferences continue to separate recommended to the 1pcJlllOl'tni
the two churches, said It bas churches for further inveaUI•·
found "a significant and sub· tion, including:
stanllal unity'' between them. -Authority in the cburcb,' in·
Re1>0rtlng 00 12 years or work cludln1 the role of. pope and
by 'he national Romao Catholic· bishops, but eaid furtber work
Anlllcan consu'ltation, particl· may permit drawln1 Ut> a Mt of
pants Tuesday advocated that mutual alflrmatlona abo.rt the
th.ls "unity be given espruslon ministry of the Bishop ol. Rome,
j . edi d the pope. D an Imm ate re1pon ing _ The uCl'OWlftl claims of
totfther" in various ways of Chrfetian women for full
work and worship. participation and partaenhip ~n tbe re.port, summarblng wltb men ln tbe life of the
the resuli. of 19 meeUngs, the church and the world." The
jOlftt dialogue groqp said the two Episcopal Churcb now admit.a
darches "agree at the level of women to the priesthood i
f'ltl" on •~b buic matters• Roman Cathollci•ra does Mt.
b6)>U1m, \he.Bible as the word of -The reJatloa between
Ooct. Holy Communion or tbe •'normative tradition end in·
ltucharitt. prte&&bood and or. dl vid•al consele.,te. jD our
dln1Uon, ethlcs .ml penon.r Ille reJpe~ ehurches."
In Christ. the Datu ... anc1 mttak>n • -A •'-41 ct "tba ~ ot
a(__ the ca.rth. unity U~l eacll Of u feital ~e ,UUClpent.i n1.-l4ld the nec .. •917 a •rer~ulalt• to I saonso11a1 bodlea approo ••crametttal sflerlnt tn com·
eltablllhen1ent of any or all ot munion. '' ·
flve joint laak forces in the Co·cl\alrQMIO 0( tM poap we
following areH~ Evan1elnm, Roman Catholic Blshop
prayer and 1piritu1llty, world Raymood W. IMlard ot Sava·
huncer, ''covenants" or c~pera· nah, Ga., apc1 EIMcol>at Blahop
lion belween Catholic a nd Art.bur A. Voetl -of KU.11 Qty,
Epitcopal p.,1thn and otbu Mo.
Bresnahan said the reason tor
the increase is fuller planes,
which now are running at about
80 percent of capacity.
· The January through No·
vember airport statistics show
there were 26, 710 commercial
take-offs and landings compared
with 25,671 for the same 11
months ln 1976.
Coastal
Bandit .
Sought
FBI aa:ents and Seal Beach
police today are tracking a
stocky bandit who netted $1,024
in a bank holdup Tuesday after-
noon.
The bandit struck Seat Beach
branch of United California
Bank, 13916 Seal Beach Blvd., at
3 p.m .. police said.
The caucasian, clean-shaven
holdup man pointed a finger
through his beige jacket pocket,
simulaUnc a pistol. and threw a
note demanding money In front
of a bank teller.
The bandit, who appeared to
What is referred to as general
aviation, or private take-offs
and landings, totaled 558,337 for
the first 11 months this year, up
from 531,436 for the same period
a year earlier.
Many of those operations are.
so-called touch and go nights, or
racllce take-offs and landln1s.
lfhe airport staUatics showed
be about 29.years old, stuffed the
cash in his pockets and Oed out
the bank front door. witnesses •
told police.
there have been 966 military
rli&hli at the airPort so tar. up
from 730 an the first 11 months of
1976.
Airport parkins lols have
handled 275,389 vehicles through
the end or November, up sliahUy
from the 274,786 autos parked
in the same period e year
earlier.
Airport facilities also have
processed a,223 tons or air cargo,
up from 2 ,0!51 tooa a year
earlier. ' l n addition, airporL culdes
have conducted 212 tours of the
raclllLy durtn• the first 11
months or 1m, down from t.be.
228 Loun durin& the same period -
in 19'76.
Deity l'tt .. Slillff ......
Wltnes.ses. mos tly elderl_y
Lejsure World residents, did not
see a get-away car and could not
tell authorities in which <Urec-
tion the bandit fied, according to
Seal Beach Police Sgt. Leonard
Frisbee.
SPORTS CAR MANGLED IN CRASH THAT KILLED ONE, INJURED TWO
Roof H•d To Be Cut Off Auto After Noontime Colllslon In Newport
An FBI official said agents
will work with local police in
their manhunt.
Four Marines
Get Hearing
ln ·Capo Heist-
Four Ca mp Pendleton
Marines were scheduled for a
hearing in South Orange County
Municipal Court today on
c harges stemming from a
Christmas Eve residential
burglary In Caplst.rano Buch.
Charged with recelvJng stolen
property, bur~lary and auto
theft are Patrick W. Sullivan.
21 ; David L. Lounsberry. 22 ;
David L. Burris, 20; and Walter
I. Woodford, 25. Two girls picked
up with the suspects were later
released by police.
Orange County Sheriff's in·
.vesttgators allege tbe four men
broke into a home at 34532
Ca mino Capistrano in
Capistrano Beach at 11 : 24 p.m.
Christmas Eve.
Investigators claim the four
m e n fled the residence in a
stolen car which was located
Christmas morning at a north
San Clemente coin-operated car
wash. The marines were still
with the car, Police said.
The four are being held in
Orange C<lunty Jail on Sl0.000
bail.
Wurt Backs
Spanking Law
ST. LOUIS (AP> -The Mis·
souri Court of Appeals has ruled
that common law dictates that
public school teachers have the
right to spank pupils for miscon-
duct and the right supersedes
the wiahes of parents when the
punishment is needed to "secure
the education of the child."
The city school board policy
prohibiting spankings unless
granted by written permission of
parents was described by the ap-
peals court Tuesday as "in the
nature of municipal ordinances
• . . and contrpy to the com·
mon law lo tbe slate.'·
Legal Aid Socfety lawyers
filed suit Jn 1972 for tl\e mother
of a 12-year·old clrl, Haley
Streeter, who waa apanked while
a pupn at Chouteau Elementaey
SC boo I.
Coart Permits
SALEM, Mua. (AP) -Ester·
Piotrowlca, w bose llfe·.
sustaWftl et\aipment wu abut:
otf t'1VO cl•Y• aso wltb court!
perm w ion, bu died at Salem•
Hoapital, omc1.i.111d. I
lln. Plotrowlcz, 55, .,.. l~
••vtry poor'' condltion altar the .. ulpnaent wa• dlaconneeted
Monday uatU her death at J0:20 e.m. Tu.daJ, tbeboeplt.i •Uct.
She WU placed OD tbe Uf•
au1tainlnc equlpment a week
.. 0 after ··~ • beart .. tatk. Sbe bad bem lll a coma for near)r tlrQ.,,,_,. and bact belD
bq,pli8lllild Ible• AYPlt tm.
Car-van Crash Kills I
Newpprt Woma~ Mesan Injured in NB Wreck
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of llW CUiiy t'li.t Si.ff
A &rinding collision that killed
one woman and injured two
other people, also sent a Police
officer who was taking a routine
traffic report, scrambling for bis
life Tuesday in Newport Beach.
The drivers of the two cars in-
volved in the crash were report-
ed in fair condition today at
Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Killed in the noontime acci·
dent was Andrea Renee Qualls.
70, of Monterey Park. Police said
she was a passenger in the auto
driven by Yvonne Donaher, 55.
of 2431 Vista Nobleza. Newport
Beach.
Tenant Tough
On Landlord
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A
lendlord's attempt to collect
rent took a strange twist when
his tenant and two men kid·
napped and robbed him, police
said today.
Joao DaSilva told ofrit:ers the
renter and two companions held
him at gunpoint Tuesday and de·
manded $4,500 to ensure the
safety of his mother in Daly
City. ...
DaSllva said his captors then
took him to a bank where he
withdrew $2,500 and handed it
over. The landlord said he
escaped while en route to the
apartment by leaping from the
car at an-intersection.
Gem
Talk
By J. C. HUMPHRIES
G1mologl$I
ln the spirit of the holiday
season, 1 wish to pass along to
you the nostalgic poem on the
right, in the hope that it will
give you the same pleasure that
. it has given to me.
Grandfather clocks; as weU as
similar flnc mantel clocks, have
faced down the challenge o f
plastics and modern d~lgn, so
that, today, such clocks will, in
f:tct• betomc true heirlooms
tomorrow.
To all our wonderful
customers, whom we consider
friends, thank& for a fine l 977,
and best wishes to you :.It for
1978.
According to police reports,
Mrs. Donaher was driving a
sports car northbound on Jam·
boree Road and was attempting
to make a left turn onto
Eastbluff Drive when her car
collided with a bakery delivery
van driven by Franz Laelsch, 52.
of 2361 eolgate Drive, Costa
Mesa. ·
The impact of the crash --the
speed limJt on Jamboree is 55
mph -sent Mrs. Donahef's car
careening through the inlersec·
lion and into a parked car. The
van spun into a light s tandard.
Police Officer Ken Weigand
said he had to run for his life to
avoid the out-of-control autos.
Weigand was standing at the
side or JambQree Road just
south of the intersection taking a
report of a minor traffic acci·
dent that happened moments
before the fatal collision oc· curred. Ile said he was standing
beside the par1ced car that Mrs.
Donaher's auto crashed into.
Firemen and two teams of
paramedics, all under the com-
m and of Battalion Chief, Phil
Hayden. were called to the
scene.
The department's special
power tool, the jaws of life, had
to be used to cut off the roof of
the crumpled SPorts car so that
Prisoner Escapes
TRACY (APl Gunner N.
Johnson, 27, a prisoner serving a
life term for murders has escaped
from the Deuel Vocational
Institution, authorities say.
medics could get at the two in·
JUred women.
Police said Mrs. Qualls was so
s everely Injured that
paramedics could detect no
signs of life. She was declared
dead on arrival at the hospital.
Police said they are continu·
ing their investigation of the
crash. They noted that the lanes
ror traffic turning left from
Jamboree to Ea.stbluff had been
hlocked off for repairs.
With those lanes closed, traffic
turning left did not have use of
the left-tum arrow traffic lights,
and police said they believe Mrs.
Donaher may have been trying
to turn left on the signal that
controls through traffic when
the mishap occurred.
Thief Steals
$600 in Food
Residents of a Costa Mesa con·
"alescent home are minus S600
worth of food today arter a thief
broke into the guest home early
Monday and made off with a sup-
ply of eggs and meats, Police re-
ported. •
The thief apparently removed
a loclt.lroma ear.!Be lo enter the
Costa Mesa Guest lfome at 2S11t
Orange Avenue, police said.
The missing food, including
fru~ chickens and tur:keys, was
reported by a guest home
employee Monday. ·
Winding the Clock
When I waa • lltde led, my old grendfather 11ld Thet
none should wind the clock but he, and ao et time for bed
He'd fumble for the curiout key kept high upon the thetf
And set Hide thlt llttte task entirely for himMlf.
In time grendfather pes5td ew.y and so thet dUty fell
Unto my father who performed the weekly cultom well;
>ft held that doclca wer. not to be by C8felen penon1 wound
And he alone should turn the key or mo't9 the hinds around.
I anvled him thst little task and wished that I might be
The one to be entrusted with the turning of UM key.
But YHr by ye~ the dock was hit exolusive bit of care
Untll the day the engeb came and smoothed his sliver hair.
Today the taak ls mine to do, Ilk• thoN who've gone before,
I 1m a Jtalou1 guardian of that round and gleuy door.
And until 1t my chamber door God'• messenger shall knock
To me alone shell be reserved the right to wind the dod<.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA
OONVENIENT TERMS BankAmert~-cnarve
30 YCAAS IN THE SAME LOCATION · PHONE 5'1o3A01
l
I
lf OA1L Y Pn.OT W~y. ~a. tt17
SUMMER GAMES: Lots or
people have been fretting about
water these last few days. Like
how to stop it from pouring
through the hole in the roof. Or
hbw to get from sidewalk to auto
without having the stuff up to
your knees.
For about 200 sports persons
along our coast, however, the
worries have been entirely over
another kind of waler. Ocean
water. And will the surf be up?
You would think in this kind of
weather, the only people who
would be worried about s urf con·
dilions would be those living on
the edge of the sand or over a
cliff.
Not so.
The start of the All American
National Surfing Championships
was scheduled for today in Hunt-
ington Beach at the pier ..
OFFICIALS SAID surfers
would take to the sea come rain
or shine. Early on, it appe.ared
they were going to get more of the
form er than the latter.
Surfers from all across the na-
tion are scheduled to gather in
Huntington Beach for this na-
tional competition after · more
than 200 or them competed in
elimination contests. Our own
coastline is represented by young
competitors from Seal Beach to
San Clemente.
And when were they scheduled
lo st art all this? At 6 a.m. today,
that's when. I was amaied wben
I heard the hour. Isn't it st.ill dark
al 6 a.m.? Would they even be
able to find the Pacific al that
time ?
This isn't a contest. It's an ex-
amination for night blindness.
NO MATl'ER. You learn from
the oCCicial program that
.chivalry isn't dead yet. Officials
announced that after the 6 a.m.
opening ceremonies on the
beach. the women surfers get to
leap into the water first and
begin the competition.
After checking the hour and
weather. you might have some
strong suspicions on whether or
not this Ladles First act was
really one o( manners or simply
male self ·preservation.
Regardless, you have to band It
to these young people today.
They've turned surfing into a
year-arotmd sport. Many moons
ago, when your correspondent
was among them, it was hardly
that way. You stowed away surf-
!ing equipment at the first chill or
September.
How well I can remember my
own ,father's attitude toward
surfing. He figured it was okay to
-bit the beach some time during
the noon hour while on your sum-
• mer job or maybe for a few hours
on the weekend.
LOLUNG AROUND the sand
after Labor Day. however, was
tn his vi ew like doing the work of
the devil.
On the more pr actical side,·
. however, it should be noted that
the rubberized wetauit, which in
this modern era of surfing gives
the competitors some warmth
and comfort, hadn •t been invent-
ed yet.
Wetsuits or not, you still have
lo give a Up or YoUr raincap to the
Hardy Boys and Hardy Girls who
are going to try for a ride to glory
in Huntington Beach this week.
And the Wrong Thinkers will
still try to tell you that today's
youth is going soft.
JERUSALEM (AP> -Prime
M inl4ter Menabem Beci n
declared today he "will not sur-
render" to International pres-
sure to accept Eeypt's peace
terms. .
lo Cairo, Eayptian President
Anwar Sadat said he would
"derlnlt.ely not" agree to a con-
tinued Israeli military presence
on the West Banlc or continued
lsraellcootrolof East Jerusalem.
THE STATEMENTS were
further evidence of the wide gap
separating the two countrles
after the Inconclusive Sadat-
Begin summit. But both leaders
have said they believe the gap
can be bridged. .
"It is clear to me that we have
adopted the correct road to
peace ... there is no doubt
that the only way to peace is the
path chosen by the govern-
m ent," Beain told the Israeli
Parliament, or Knesset'.
"We have done our share. We
have made · our contribution ..
Now it is the turn of the other
side."
HE SAID HE HAD support
.from President Carter, con·
gressional leaders and the
American public, and was not
expecting any pressure from
them to change the plan.
"Even if there was pressure,
it would be to no avail," Begin
said. "We are used to pressure
and we will not surrender.··
Begin outlined for the first
time in public the plan be pre-
sented to Sadat in lsmaHia on
Trade Deficit
For November
Misses Record
WASHINGTON <AP > -The
United States bought $2.08
billion more than it sold to other
countries last month, but the
monthly trade deficit fell short
or the record $3.09 billion set the
month before, the Commerce
Depa rtment said today. .
Imports fell from $12.2 billion
to $11.4 bilUon, their lowest level
in 10 months, while exports grew
from $9.2 billion to $9.3 billion.
Economist attributed part of
the trends for the past two
months to a month·long dock
strike on the East and Gulf
coasts.
THE TRADE DEFICIT for the
year is $24.S billion, far in ex-
cess or the $5.9 billion deficit ln
1976.
A trade deficit means that
more dollars are leaving the
country to pay for foreign goods
than the United States is earning
from sale of its goods abtoad. It
can cut into e mployment and
production at home.
The November drop in im·
potts occurred entirely in the
shipping indu.5try, indicating im-
porters may have anticipa~ed a
longer strike than actually oc-
curred and withheld some or-
ders.
T HE WALK OUT OF con·
t.ainerized shipping workers last-
ed from Oct.1-31.
Government officials have
said a trade deficit is inevitable
as long as the United St.ates re-
mains heavily dependent on oil
imports. P etroleum imports
totaled $3.53 billion, more than
one·third the total, and declined
slightly from the $3.56 billion in
October.
Among large declines in im-
ports were a 10 percent d rop in
machinery and transport equip.
ment, a 4.4 percent decline in
manufactured goods and
decrease in food, beverages and
tobacco and chemicals.
Christmas Day. It calls for
Palestinian self·rule on the West
Bank or the Jordan River and
the Gaza Strip and a continued
Israeli military presence lo the
territories. Sadat's counterproposals call
for a Palestinian slate in the
West Bank and Gaza.
SADAT TOLD AN Associated
Press reporter in Cairo tqday
that Egypt would not agree lo
tbe presence of Israeli security
forces on the West Bank. "The
security of the area should be in
the hands of the people living in
the area," he said.
He also said he would not ac·
cept limits on Egyptian troop
movements in the Sinai Desert
under any peace plan. Begin's
proposals would restrict Egyp-
tian forces to the western Sinai.
The Egyptian leader said his
country is willing to dlscuss both
issues in the joint Israeli·
EgypUan mllltary and Political
committees that begln ta'lks next
month to try to resolve dlt-
ferences.
AT A NEWS conference
earlier today, Sadat sald any
Middle East peace agreement
must relUm Eut Jerusalem to
Arab sovereignty.
"No one in the Arab world -
Moslem or Christian -will
agree to Israeli sovereignty UP·
on the Arab sectloo of
J erusalem," he said. .
Beain's 1>lan would provide for free access to holy places but
does not mention the return ol
East Jerusalem to the Arabs.
WHILE SADAT. reported some
progress oo Israeli withdrawal
Crom Sinai, he and Begin were
deeply divided over the PalesUn-
ian Issue. The Knesset will vote
on Begin's plan, and despite
some opposition in the ranks of
Korea Evidence Due
From Solon's Aide
W ASmNGTON (AP) -A congressman's secretary, accused or per·
jury by the House Ethics Committee's special counsel, is wllUnt to
testify before the panel about what she knows about a card file con-
taining· the name of South Korean businessman Tengsun .P..-Jc.,-her at· torney says.
Gei:ald Walpin, attorney for
Bonnie Robinson, s aid the
secretary to Rep. Lester Wolff
has "offered to testify before the
committee as lo all matters and
to allow the committee to decide
on the basis or that testimony
wh ether she's testifying truthfully."
SpeciAl Counsel Leon
Jaworski said Tuesday that Mrs.
Robinson committed perjury
when she denied removing
Park's card from the New York
Democrat's office files.
fJFO Probe Nlzed
WASHING TON (AP) -The
nation's space agency has
turned down a White House re~
quest lo reopen a government in·
vestigation into unidentified fly·
ing objects because it says there
is no tangible evjdence on which
to base a study. '
Such an investigation would be
·•wasteful and probably un·
productive," the Na ti on al
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration said in a letter to
President Carter's science ad-viser, Dr. Frank Press.
Dri~ Capture d '
ATLANTA (AP > -Buddy
Subway Crash
Injures 30
NEW YORK <AP> -A sub··
way motorman who apparently
.. blacked out" drove his train at
10 mph into the rear of a second
train stopped at • midtown !wf~battan s£atiori early today.
10Juring about 30 of the 300
passengers aboard the two
trains, police repcrted.
Most or the injuries appeared
to be minor. Some or the injured
were treated at Roosevelt, St.
Clare's, Bellevue and Lenox Hill
hospitals, but none of the
hospitals reported any of the in-
jured being admitted.
The Transit Authoricy blamed
a .. human problem, '1 and said
the cause of the crash was under
investigation.
A city police s pokesman.
however, said the motorman or
an "F" train apparently
"blacked out," causing bis train
to hit an .. E" train stopped in
the IND line station at S3rd
Street and Firth A venue about
5;15 a.m. local time.
(_1_'iv_SH_O_R_T ___ ]
Cochran, who escaped from the
jall where he was being held for
driving his car into a packed Ku
Klux Klan rally, was back in'
custody·today after 11 hours or
freedom:·
Cachran was picked up before
he could keep an appointment
with television newsmen to ex-
plain why he broke out. He
plowed his sports car through a
rally in President Carter's
hometown last summer, injuring
32 peop~e.
FlreTeHRbe•
PROVIDENCE R.I. <AP> -Two 18-year-old Connecticut
women who were severely
burned in the Providence
College dormitory fLh have
died, bringing the fiTe's death toll to nine.
Dorothy A. Widman of
Cheshire died Monday night at
Roger Williams bospit.al.
Sallyann Garvey of Enfield died
Tuesday morning at Brooke
Arn\)' Medical Center in San An-
tonio,. Texas. They were among
15 injured in the fire Dec. 13 on
the ro~rth f1oor of Aquinas Hall.
Snow Dumped in )Juffalo
New York City Emergency Roo1m1 Packed
"' ... he u 5
4J J7
4L%1 • Joi,, I ....
J4 ,,..
•S 11 aa ,,
.. tt .. ., » u ,, '' ... '° .. n • M ... tr ., " . .eta .. "
" 1J ,. . , . • • ...
t t •I ",..
l
Becln,s own Llkud Party, he
seemed certain to get a ma-
jority.
Forei1n Minister Mos he
Dayan was al bis accustomed
seat in the Knesset after a
mysterlous absence on Tuesday.
Isaraell preaa reports said today
he new secretly to Iran to report
to the shah on Mideast develop·
menta and seek his influence in
drawing Jordan into the peace
talks. .
In Tehran, Iranian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Parvis Adle
today called the report a "base·
less rumor.''
IN IDS REMARKS before the
Knesset, Begin clearly implied
that the plan made major con·
cessions and wu a fitting reply
to Sadat's breakthrough visit lo
Jerusalem last month. where he
called on Israel to take "hard
NATION I WORLD
decisions."
But Begin added the autonom)"''
plan did not mean Israel was re-
linquishing· lts claim to sov-
ereignty over the West Bank and Gaza.·
• '1We have a rightful claim lo
this part of the land or Israel,".
he said. "It ls our land."
BUT llE acknowledged that -
both Jordan and the PalesUn-
lau and conflicting claims to
the same land. •
For that reason, Begin said,
Israel was suggestine that the
question of sovereignty over the
West Bank and Gaza remain
open until tht; claims can be re-
solved.
"If these conntcting claims re·
main. and if there ls no answer
to this conflict, an agreement
will not be possible with the
Arab states," Begln said. .
-onestg Rewarded
B_rian Carlson, lJ, of _Des Plaines, Ill., gets a kiss from
his mother, Marilyn, m reward for his hooesty. Brian, a
bllsboy at a tollway restaurant, found S22,861 in a shaving
kit left behind by a traveler. He turned the money over to
Illinois State Police. It belonged to Joseph T. Faust, 71, of
Marathon, Fla.
Winter
Furniture
sae
Come see what the
wolid or distinctive home
furnishings is 1111 about •••
Now al uvings from I 0 lo
50'-•.Take advantage of un·
bell~able savings on current and
d!scontloued II~ throughout our
enure store ••• in all departments. You'll see room
eltef room of dl$tlnctWe home fumlshlngs ell completely
~•led. all ac:ceuoflzed. Yes, a visit to our store can be
the start of a whole oew life style for you.
~prtce_...,ilofN~ll-wtof«tto""°' .....
1514 NORTH MAIN
SArn'A ANA · 541-4391
Tues. Wtd. Thura., and Sat.: 9:.30 to ~.JO
Mon.: 12 to 9 • Fri.: 9-JO to 9:00
I
I
•• DAIL y PILOT Aq CALIFORNIA
LA.Paper
Bought
By Flynt
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP ) -Hustler
magazine owner Larry
Flynt has purchased the,
Los Angeles Free Press
for an undisclosed sum.
his company confirmed
today.
Joann Fairchild,
public r e lations and
trade relations director
for Larry f'lynt Pubhco.·
tions, confirmed that the
company will take over
operation of the f'ret:
Press Jan. 1.
SHE SAJD FLYNT in ·
tends to retain the pres·
enl staff. Family Reunited ... _,...,.. ..
Jay Levin of New
York has been named
publisher, Ms. Fairchild
said.
No other details were
available.
Fisherman Nick Lackey poses with his wife Caro~, d~ughte~
Crvstal, lcft, and son J ade Star after he was reunited with ~1.s fam1·
ly ·on Christmas Eve. Lackey was re?cu~d from the Pac.1flc by a
passing freighter after four days adrift m a r aft from hls storm-
swamped fi shing boat.
.Dumped in Canyen .
Vista Couple
Found Slain
OCEANSIDE (AP J A young Palomar
College student and his wife were shot to death
and foWld dumped into a canyon wesl of Interstate
15, the sheriff's office s aid today.
George Ruth Murch, 24. and his wife, Kil Sooa,
28, both of Vista, were found sprawled against
thick underbrush Tut•sday by an employee or
Valley Tree Service of Escondido, deputies said.
Murch had been !I bot
( J at least twice and his
.. fttl'ATE wife once with a small _ caliber weapon, a cor-..._ ______ ___, oner 's spokesman said.
The couple appeared lo
have been dead more th an one day.
\t'aH llouie-n Out on Bail
LOS ANGELES <AP J -For the first lime in
eight years, former Charles Manson follower
Leslie Van Houten is out of jaH.
The 28-year·old Miss Van Houten, awaiting her
third trial in the g risly Tate-LaBianca killings,
was released Tuesday on $200,000 ball posted by
two bonding companie~ .
.NASA. State Work Together
SACRAMENTO <AP1 Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. has sign{•d a "memorandum of understanding"
with the National Aeronautics and Space Ad·
·ministration to use space technology on state
problems. Brown 's office s aid Tuesday.
The announcement said NASA find the state
will work to~cther on projects of mutual interest
such as earthquake predictions and emergency
satellite communications m case of floods, fires
and earthquakes.
Co1111aleseent Hospital• Fined
LOS ANGELES <A P> --The State Depart-
ment of Health has requested court affirmation of
• more than $15,000 in penalties against three con••
valescent hospitals accused of allowing patients to
develop bedsores.
Fines or $8,100 were asked against Crensltaw
View Convalescent Hospital; SS,000 against Golden
Haven Convalcscenl Hospital of Long Beach; and
$2,500 against Mirada Hill s Convalescent and
Rehabilitation Hospital in La Mirada.
itlental lle alth a Priority
w.dnelday, Dtctmt>er 28. 19n
Sclwol Aid Ov"erturned?l
Serrano Calls Bill 'Gigantic Fraud'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
man whose lawsuit prompted a
$4.3 billion school aid bin aimed
a t e liminating financial dif·
ferences a mong school districts
has asked the state Supreme
Court to overturn the bill
because he doesn't think it does
what it promises.
Attorneys for John Serrano Jr.
filed the action Tuesday, calling
the bill signed last September by
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr ... a
gigantic fraud on the tax.
payers."
John E. McDermott of the
Western Center on Law and Pov·
erty said the bill does not re·
move financial inequalities
a mong the state's 1,000 school
districts.
THE BILL WAS PASSED by
the Legislature in response to a
s late Supreme Court decision in
Serrano's lirst s uit, which con-
tended it was unconstitutional to
allow some school districts to
spend more tax money on educa·
tion thanotherdistrlcls.
Serrano 's attorneys had
argued that in wealthier areas
high praperty values enabled the
school districts to raise more
money than districts with low
property valuH. Hence. the suit
argued, inequalities in education
arose.
The Legislature's bill, which
takes effect in five stages from
1977 through 1981, wa~r designed
to provide more stale aid to the
poorer diatricts and reduce the
spending differences among dis-
tricts that enroll about 80 percent
or the state's 4.3 million students.
McDERMOTT POINTED out
that enormous spending dif-
ferences continue to exist
between many districts, such as
Beverly Hills and Baldwin Park,
where a $1,178 per pupil dlf·
ference would occur under the
new measure.
Without the measure, Beverly
Hills residents each would pay a
general purpose tax of $2.42 to
raise $2,089 per student, whUe '
Baldwin Park residents woul~ •
pay $4.76 apiece tor-$1,544 1>eft
s tudent.
The rates would chanee und~~
the bill to $2.79 for $2,870 per st"'d
dent in Beverly Hills to $.1.39 (Ol;f
$1,692 per student in Baldwin
Pftk.
SERRANO'S LATEST actioo
asks the state Supreme Court to
order districts which spend
large amounts on public educa·
lion to raise their tax rates by
local voles to provide extr-.
money for poorer districts.
Serrano's lawyers also have
asked the court to halt state aid
payments to more affluent di~
tricts and urged that the pay-
ments be redistributed to the
districts with lower assessed pro-
perty values. ·
The attorneys have also r~
queated a court order changint
boundary lines between districts
to eliminate funding differences.
We'll Gladly 9uote Prices!! =E 968-3329 '~··u:11
HO COMMISSIOMB>
SALUMIM
MUMS •••
llGGER
SAVINGS!!.
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1rs .A1c·s .AMMuAL
SALE OF SALES!! A
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19° DIAGONAL COLORTRAK
FR& DBJYERY & SET .UP
..... c ....
• .... rw
SACRAMENTO <A P ) -After his second
straight Christmas visit to a state mental hospital,
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says he is convinced the
slate must spend more money on mental health anamustcfack down on the dnrg-PCP. -
17'' DIAGONAL
RCAXL-100
"Among the competing programs, mental
health is going lo rate high in 1978," Brown said in
an interview Tuesday after recounting his visit
Sunday to Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk.
Killings Copy
Of Strangler?
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Los Angeles police
say they are more certain than ever that two men
held in the weekend stranglings of two young
women are not connected with the Hillside
Strangler, and Pasadena police finally say they
agree.
Los Angeles Assis tant Police Chier Daryl
Gates told a news conrerence Tuesday that. Los
• Angeles police investigators believe the two
women may have been victims of "copycat kill·
ings."
He said there were "too many dissimilarities''
to classify Carolyn Williams, 21, as a Hillside
Strangler victim.
PASADENA POLICE HAD SAID her (riend, ~aula Gwen Ward, 18, was probably the 12th 9ic· llm. Tuesday, they shirted their position to agree
with that or Los Angeles polke .
.. We now feel we can eliminate Paula Ward u
a No. 12 at this point;• John McAllster,\Pasadena
police spokesman, said Tuesday. ·But be said that
conclusion could cbanae if new evidence ii found.
The two women were seen together last Fri·
day. Their partJally.nude bodies were diacovered
at ae1arate locations Saturday.
' . lllSS WILUAMs· BODY WIS found tn a
Wllahlre District parking lot and Mlaa Ward'• body
near the l\0$e Bo,rl ln Pasadena •. Neither, ap. ~al'.ed to have beo.n sexuall)' molested. Two men, Thomas Davls, 2', and Stephen
I>evezln1 40, were taktD lnto custody for lnvesds•· U~nr ot l'llW"der after the)' wen traced thl'Ouch an abtomoblt~ license number fl'Om a motet where an
employee t"ep(>rted seeing a man carry a blanktt-
wrapMd 'ftOman to a car Frtday night.
., ...
B.ECTROMIC
TUM ER
2511 DIAGONAL TABLE
MODELS RCA COLORTRAK·.
P11J.1W flUOWl
ILICftOHIC ruta llMOTI COMT'lOL
THE YaY •EST FROM RC.A
PRICED TO CLEAR!! •
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THE YaY IEST FROM IC.Al!
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PHoMi
llOR
LOW
PllCU
I~·~ Ll ..
'the lice.nae number w11 dilcovend throuP
Uae efforts ot K.NBC·TV reJ)Ol'ter Warne WU~
•hom Gat" erataed Tae1da1 at .,Sberloet
Holmet Wlllon • for bt1 lnftsU1aUve work * l~ii1iiiliimii1ililiii1ii11i .. ilifllillliiil•••••••l!ll•-.lillmlllili•m~ ..... -illllillllil•••llli~~~~~~--lll aervlcetothecommunJty.
)
.. •••
Wedntsday, December 2a. t977
Robert N. Weed/Publl$her
orangeeo.s1 oa11~ P1101 Editorial Pge ..................................................... Bartwlt• Krelb1c.h/£dltorlet Pege Editor
Scandals ·shadow
County's Pluses
Whale\ l'r good happened durin~ 1977 in <:ounty gov
eromcnt in Orange County was overshadowed by a con·
tlnuation of a seemingly endless series of political scan·
d a ls that began in 1974.
That's too bad because as government operations go
Or a nge County's for the most part is well managed and ef ·
ficiently run.
Yardsticks arc available to s upport that conclusion.
First, there is the county property tax rat e, the lowest
in any of the state ·s 58 counties. Additionally, county gov·
t'rnm ent here hus few<'r employees for each 1.000 popula·
lion than any county in t he state
And in mo~t inst:.inccs, le\'cls of public srrvices arc al
least <.tCCcptablt'.
Moreover, county go\'ernment here is fortunate to be
guided by a goodly number of elected and uppointed of·
ficials who <.ll't.' both dedicated und capable.
Jn that <:atcgory, among nam~s that immediatelv
come to mind arc Auditor-Controller Vic Heim, Tax
Coll ector-Treasurer Robert Citron, Administrative Officer
Robert Thomas and Public Def ender Frank Williams.
So. taking the O\•erall view and putting things in their
proper perspccli\'C, county government in Orange County
has far more pluses than minuses.
Unfortunately, those pluses a re dimmed by the few
political figures who try to mix government with their own
ambitions.
It's u s hame that in 1977, a s has been the case since
1974, scandal dominuted the news about government in
OranI:e County. As governments go, il deserved better.
Down to ReaJisDI
Not surµrisingly, then· was no miracle at ls mailia on
Chl'islmas Da'.
But if Eg) pti:rn President Anwar Sadat and Pri~e
Minister Menahem Begin of Israel did nol advance the tr
peace-m aking efforts as far as some had hoped, their
meeting still left room for optimism .
Obviously Sadat, us the principal target of Arab ex-
lremiMs. was not 111 a position to yield immediately to
Begin·~ proposals for a :\lideast settlement.
But 1f Egypt and Israel eventually can come to terms.
rlw <:hances of support from the more conservaliye Arab
1wtions ~hould be good and the smaller Arab dissidents
may find thl·m~l'l,·cs hard pressed lo continue their dis rup·
lion
,\:-. one F.g_,·ptian diplomat comm ented, it may be as
"t•ll that the initial peace e uphoria is cooling a little so that
tht· negot iations can become "more realistic about the
n·n· hard work th al still has to be done."
·That hard work will be undertaken next m onth by the
t" o committees. military and political, which Sadat and
Beg in ugrccd to set up during the Is m am a meeting.
1'.:qually s ignificant. they agreed further to upgrade
lhe ongoing Cairo peace discussions which have bee n con·
du('ted by lower.echelon envoys. to cabinet level.
This is by no m eans the end. Clearly the participants
intend to go on talking peace and that, after three decades
of war and n<.'ar-war. is ;.ibout as welcome a 1\ew Year de·
'clupmenl a~ one could wish for.
~slannner' Works
Pan nb and others who huve an uncomfortable feeling
that suspension I rom school can sometimes be more of a (
rc\vard than a punishment may be interested in a n
alternate 1dl·a lhey'ye been using at the junior-senior high
.,chool in Solon, Iowa .
Ins tead of being sent home for three days, students
"ho violate the school's discipline code once too often are
required lo work on their daily assignments in a "sus·
pens ion room" -a 15 by 20-f oot area adjacent to the
t<!achcrs' lounge where they are checked every 30 minutes
throughoutthe school day.
The kids call the isolation chamber "The Slammer ,·· a
term that roused some anxiety when parents first heard
about it.
Dul school officials say most parents who've ins pected
the room, which has a window, a sink a nd an adjoining
bathroom. have decided it's not a bad idea.
The students kcep up with their work. instead of miss·
ing three d ays of instruction and the school reports most
seem lo settle down after a session in "The Slammer."
Since the old practice of keeping recalcitrant students
a fter school no longer seems feasible. and sending them
home when both parents are out working can lead to even
more trouble, it could be that a "Slammer" ·-perhaps
with a nicer name might be a practical installation for
more schools.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Delly Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642·'321. ·
Boyd I Origin
ByLM.BOYD
Argument continues over
I.he OJ'lgin oC the phrase "kick
the bucket" to mean die. A
kindly client Insists it's• from
the EgYPUan "kihk" meaning
to overturn, thus to Jet Ufe run
completely out. Death in
many ancient Egyptian
tombs ls depict.ed by Upped
vessels. say~ this scholar.
Dear
Gloomy
Gm
Could you gJvo me In·
form atton for whore I
could get the device di,.
connected on my car
that cauaef traffic
1lpall to tum Nd at my
approaeb?
The bi,gger the fish, the
faster it can swim. Typically,
typically. The rule doesn't ap-
ply to all tlsh, not by any
means. Bat in general, a fish
can swim about eight miles
per hour fer each foot of lls
body leneth.
One hundred years ago, the
etiquette e'Jtpert.s considered
it Improper to pl4ce a book by
a (emale aut.bOr on the shelf
next to a book by a male
author unJesa thole two
writers were man1ed to each
other.
Small characterlutlon:
"Re was the kind of guy who
could nut lnto lb• back of an ·
oncoming car.••
Rowland Evans/Robert Novak
Begin: Moderation of a ZealQ.t ·
W ASJilNGTON -Despite the
appearance of a bare minimum
of concessions. Prime Minister
Menahem Begin ot Is rael bas in
fact modified a lifetime of
prejudicial thinking on relations
with the Arabs -a development
of vast importance forecast by a
confidential State Department
memorandum six weeks ago.
The memo, drafted for
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance
before peace
talks between
Egyr.l and lsrae , traced
an e volution
in Beg in 's
political
thinking that
wa s in con ·
ceivable
b e fore b is
e l ec tion as
Israeli· prime minister last
s pring. Written by Mideast.
experts in the State
Earl Waters
Department's intelligence
. branch, the anaJysis accurately
foresaw what even bard-nosed
realists in the administration
.now concede.
Thus, the private sour reac.'
tion here to Begin's sell-Invited
visit ls sweetening considerably.
For the first time since Egyp.
tlan President Anwar Sadat's
pilgrimage lo Jerusalem Nov.
19, the Carter administration's
highest officials now see a real
chance for an Israeli-Egyptian
peace and a separate settle·
ment for the one million Arabs
in the West Bank and Gan.
THE INTELLIGENCE
analysis for Vance predicted
Begin would move by steps
toward the long-held position of
Begin's foreign minister, Moshe
Dayan. The Dayan plan encom·
passes limite d aut onomy
-self-government without
military or foreig.n poli.cy
powers -for Palestinian Arab6.
vaguely tied to Jordan but with
commercial links to Israel.
ln the privacy of Preside.nt
Carter's White House omce,
Begin took the "Mr. Floxlble"
role played by Day~ in past
Labor governments. The prime
minister ouUined a concept ol
"autonomy" calling for a re·
gional legislature. But the
Israeli army would hold PoSi·
lions throughout the West Bank.
"BEGIN, the zealot who would
never move a millimeter, has
moved several millimeters," a
diplomat here told us. "In fact,
he has already offered the West
Bank more autonomous power
over their own affairs than the
Hasbemite kingdom or Hussein
.ever offered during 20 years or
control oC the West Bank."
Begin's milUmeters of move·
ment are merely the starting
point. He cannot withdr:_a~ fi:om
them. no matt.er bow Sadat re-
acts. Rather, the .extremely
cauUous concesaionl Bell.ft baa made -which are not even
cJoae to Sadat'• demands. for
West Bank statehood withi fUll
sovereignty -must be alo\ltly
built. upon it the peace mom•ll•
tum ls to continue.
Assessments both wltbJn the.
State Department and, to a
lesser extent, the National
Security Council (NSC> staff
saw this slartlni to happen when
Sadat and Begin met iJl E~ on Christmas Day. Begins
popularity, these analysts feel,
is still waxing inside Israel and
he ls now irrevocably com· milte d" to a pro-peace line.
which implies the inevitability of
concessions.
POLLS TAKEN bl lsra~·a Opinion Research lnstJ.tute show
the prime minister cllmbinl
from 55.8 percent in October to
61.2 percent in November to '78..I
percent in mld·December. Illa
greatest strength, over 80 per·
cent, Is among blue·collar, low-
income Oriental Jews (responsj.
ble for his election) and 18·29-
year-old voters.
Begin faces problems,
including his repeated promises
of new Jewish settlements on the
West Bank. Indeed, despite
Pre:;1dent Carter's contrary de·
mand, Begin insisted here that
Jews must matnlairi full rights
to create new settlements. His
alternative offer to let Arabs
.. settle" In Israel is meanmt~·
less.
Nevertheless, Sadat's pette
orrensi ve has drastically
changed Israeli public opinion
on the West Bank settlements,
and Begin knows it. Since
Sadat's arrival in Jerusalem,
prospective settlers are limited .
to Jews motivated by strong re·
·llgious convictions s uch as the
Gush Emunim -a tiny fraction
of the population. •
As forecast by the Stat~
Department analysis, the fierce .
Old Testa.ment prophet that wa"
Men ahem Begin bas softened.!-Thal truly changes everything in ·
the Middle East.
,r
The New Concept of 'Leisure Sharing',
Mr. WatersinonuacaJ1on
fli3column todayi&wntten by
SENATOR JAMES MILLS
President Protem
California Senate
If someone offered you a choice
of foregoing your next pay raise
and putting the money aside to
pay for more time off, how would
you react? Interested, perhaps.
Suppose you were given all the
necessary job guarantees such as
no loss of fr.
inge benefits,
seniority, et
cetera, while
you were off
work for an
extra month
each year .
Still with me.
and perhaps
more fhan
jus t Interest·
ed al this point?
Suppose that the extra time
you and other workers taJce off
resulted in new job opportunities
for persoos out or work.
Now. of course, you're really
interested because all this time
Charles McCabe
you've been paying taxes to sup·
port welfare and here's a chance
to r educe welfare rolls by helping
create jobs while you get some
additional time off.
Sounds a little radical doesn't
it? But it's not.
What I've just oullined is a new
concept called "leisure·sharing"
to deal with our chronic un·
employment problems while of·
fering the chance to work shorter
hours. have more days off or take
longer vacations.
FOR MANY years we've relied
on the traditional economic
growth and labor-intensity
methods of dealing w1!h un.
employment. But they are failing
us and we can't continually be
H, in a firm employing 100
persons, 35 Of them parliCI pate in
a voluntary program of trading
some of their income for added
leisure. they could lake off three
months every three years. This
means there are always three
persons on leave and the
employer has to increase the·
workforce to 103 persons to main·
lain productivity -a net three percent gain in employment.
If just one percent or the pres·
e nt hours of work could be
traded around for new jobs
through a "leisure-sharing" pro·
gra m , in California about 100,000
new jobs would be created, while
nationally the figure would be
about one million.
falling back on government pro-SI NCE IT lakes 250.000 addi· grams u a st1nroraiuoecau~e~--...,1=onaifobnvery yeirrjustwkeep
their inflationary effects. unemployment from rising, any
"Leisure-sharing" becomes at· concept that orrers those job·
trac tive because or its im· creation possibilities deserves in·
pressive potential for creating vestigation.
jobs while appearing to be im· Herore anyone gels the wrong
mune to the ailments or tradi· impression, I'm not talking about
tional methods or perking the job-sharing or giving someone a
economy. temporary job .
Nor is this concept a
harebrained scheme that has
been dreamed up by some
brilliant social engineer . To tbe ·
contrary, American workers are·
already showing their willing-
ness and desire for more Ume off.
Right here in California.. in the
Bay area, programs have been
under way for some tJme where
employees can take more time
off and someone steps in behind
them to do their work.
A SPECIAL Senate committee
has held one hearing on this sub--
ject and I plan to introduce
legislation next year to lmple·
ment a pilot project In the state.
The proposal hu been well re·
ce1ved so far by both business
and laoor. alUiougb both are
naturally skeptical for their own
reasons.
My feeling is that it's time to
question our belief in the live·
day, 40.hour week if we want to
do something concrete about cut-
ting unemployment.
Amateur Shrinkery Can Leave Unhealed Wounds·
There's a lot of what I call
bookkeeping of tbe arrectibns go;
ing on these days. People seem
to carry around with them a aort
of emotional thermometer. They
aep1Y it frequently each day to
find out exacUy how they feel,
and 01 thb W1'JI minut~.
Thls unfortunate hablt,, wben
exercised on a person living
alone, a can
only lead to a
mUd form ol
emotional
paranoia, do-
ing no great.
harm t o
anyone but
htm1elf. When lt ls in·
du11ea 'by one
or both.
parsons involved emotionally,
tbe r..ultl can be cataatrot>hlc.
ThQ' are, and dally, and by tht
tbou11nds. •
The ......... to th ~
posed above 11 neuty alwa,__ ·~ ... n. kM4'·~· .. -.~ ... ,........,~ ~,~ ....... .,. .....
t1ild ot:~• WM wut hd; er
at.h-dlilty ........
ften the ahiioet aatom1Uc
real$on is nearly always the
same -t.be gOOd old m ate. A
certain dangerous point is
reached, and the mates start
talking. This is in truth often a
point. or no return.
intend to mobt just now: but I
suggest that the amateur varie-
ty has broken up more emo·
tional deals than almost any
other factor.
1 AMATEVR SHIUNKERY has
one paramount feature, its em·
phasis on what is called "hones·
ty.'' This is usually another
word for denunciation. un·
spoken. quiet or highly vocal.
Once the man, say. decidea he
feels rotten, he sets upon a list·
ing of lhe emotional shOrtcom·
Inga or t\is mate. This procedure
has the double benefit ol ex·
culpat.ing himself from his rot·
tenness. and t.he sadistic delight
of puttinJ down his current lady.
Often these dii;courses are
couched in terms liko "trying to
work things out" or ''reconcilia-
tion" or "repairing the ·mar·
riage. •• Mostly. they are nothing
of the sort. They ar~ outright
and bl'\ltll assault& on all the
vulnerabWUes or thelr partner.
eapeelaUy on the aelf~sleem of
that partner. .
A11d all in lbe nAmo of
hhon•ty."
lo decline in California (147,451
in 1976, a drop of almost five
percent from the previous year),
and the number of divorces
!!leadlly increases <129,300, up •
four percent.)
IN TRUTH. all these honesty
trips just pvt the couples far
beyond the point of reconcilia·
tion. A couple of udly bruised
egos flail away at each other to
the point where they a.re emo-
tionally out of commission, and
then part.
~ .... ,--.. ·~·· aam•1._ ~ ,-~,,~_.,._-,., .......... ,,,._~~
ft b no accident that it has
been recenUy reported that the
numb« of ma.rrl~a coritlnuea
Wounds are not· left to heal. ·
They are dellberately exacer~at· •• ,
ed until they reach the mottal
stage. It ls said that people com· :
munlcate more in the year before ~
the dl vorce Utan al ~ny other time •
in the marriage. But what hideou''
comm\UllcatJon it isl Tbe e.fforta•
on both aides seem desitned ~
rnak'e certain that both partles .
.... walldag wounded by the Ume
they fJnalty split. The idea that a
1uccenful marrlat• ti oee that·
r.ranacenda a lot ol pa)n appears
almost impolllbltt to a wallow. All'
too oti.n. tho wile bu one ra•r· rtace, and t.h• husband another. .and t.be twaln, never do cet to
m.et.
• I
NATIONAL
..
w.dnelday, Oeoember 28. 1977 DAILY PILOT A f
\
'Wordy Congress Costs Taxpayers MERCURY SAVINGS
1111tl fltM& mt.1tt>ri111m,.
I
WASHINGTON <AP > -Words, words. words.
Is it po1>1.1blo that even such practiced talkers as the
mea>bers ol' lbe U.S. House and Senate said so
much \be tUl day \hey were in session in 1977?
"rne 6>nkresS\ooal Record for that single day
·runs three volumes, more lban 600 pages, al a cost
of $322 a page, to record the words allegedly spoken
on the floor of the two chambers.
•' NOT EVEN THE BEST Senate filibusterer
t'ould read aloud lhat much material in less than 48
~oure. Yet, the House was in sesaioo that day for6~
nourJ, th'e Senate for seven. · . A let ot those words went tmsald. They were
statements "submitted for the record" by members
of Congress and Inserted as though they were part
of the debate.
Some people want to change that practice. Sen.
Bob Packwood, R·Ore., has campaigned, without
much success, to win approval of a measure to re-
quire that the record clearly show which material
was spoken on the floor and which was merely in·
serted.
THERE IS A PLACE IN the record for state-
ments. It's called "extensions of remarks" and ap-
pears at the end of each day's issue.
Every member of Congress is allowed to fill
two pages a day in the extensions section,
something which few do. IC a member wants to in-
sert material that runs more than two pages he
tnust obtain permission on lhe floor, permission
which is routinely granted.
But he also must state publicly, for the record,
that he1ntends lo insert umpteen pages of material
at a cost of $322 a page.
What sort of material is placed in extensions or
remarks?
THE LAST DAY OF THE session produced the
expected statements on issues ranging from Social
Security and crime to energy, jobs and whether the
Crown of St. Stephen should be returned to
Hungary.
SEEKS CHANGE
Bob Packwood
'EASY TASK'
S.I. Hayakawa·
Budget 'Easy'
For Jlayakawa
\..
WASHINGTON CAP> -Sen.SJ. Hayakawa. R·
Calif., says he thought his appointment to the
Senate-Budget Committee was a bad idea ''because
I have the greatest difficulty balancing my own
checkbook."
"Putting me on the Budget Committee when I
don't understand money at ell seemed to me appal-
ingly irresponsible," said Hayakawa, a former un-
i,versity prcisidcntand semanticist.
, BUT UE SAYS HIS rears were for naught
because the job requires only simple addition and,
''You don 'l even have lo know subtraction."
Writing in the January 1978 issue of Harper's
M'aga~ine, Hayakawa says being on lhe committee
is easy because it doesn't involve complicated de-
cisions about specific appropriations but rather
overall totals.
---And he said the numbers turned out to be sim-ple bet:ause they always involve billions or hun-
dreds of millions, nothing smaller.
"THEREFORE, WHEN WE SAY 1.0, that
means $1 billion," Hayakawa said. "Then we have
.1; that means $100 million -and that's the
stnalJest figure we ever deal with in tbe Budget
Committee.
"A member of the committee will say, for in-
5lence. 'Here's an appropriation for such-and-such.
ll was 1.7 for 1977. So for the 1978 budget we ought to
~ke it.2.9."'
"So all we do is add 1.2; that's not hard.
"THE NEXT ITEM IS 2.5. The members dis-
cuss it back and forth, and somebody says, 'Let's
raise it to3.7. "'
"T~ey.Jook aroultcJ at eacholher. 'Everybody in
favor?''Yes. sir. Okay."'
"So ih five minutes we have disposed of $2
billion bucks -2 billion, not 2 million.
, ''I never realized it could be so easy.··
THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane
. . ' . . . . . , I
There also was a brief tribute to the Alcoa
(Tenn. J hJgh school football team which won the
slate Class A championship, and Rep. Larry
Pressler, R-S.D , informed colleagues that Jars of
South Dakota honey, contnbuted by Alvin C.
Zietlow of Rapid City, would be found on the tables
or House restaurants.
There were nice words about the University of
Michifan football team. as well as about Nick San-
toro o Reading, Pa., a member of the Pennsylvania
State Athletic Commission tor 36 years, and
Emerson Street, who is retiring a s business
representative for the Santa Clara County, Calif.,
Central Labor Council.
AMONG THE WOBDS SPOKEN on the Senate
floor that final day were by Sen. S.I. Hayakawa, R-
Calif .. who offered two resoluhons. One of them
would designate Memphis. Tenn .. as "The Home of
the Blues." and the other would recognize blues
singer Memphis Slim as an ambassador-at-lar&e of
goodwill.
Both resolutions were adopted with the hearty
support of the two senators from Tennessee, neither
or whom explalned why a Californian had emerged
as a champion of blues singing In Tennessee. .
The last word was from Sen. Daniel P.atrick
Moynihan, D·'J.Y., who was presiding. Moynihan
noted that "we have just congratulated a blues
slnger for spreading good cheer."
NOW
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E1tec;1,1t1ve Oft1c;es 7812 £d1nger Ave .• Hunt1~gton Beach, CA 92647
Sl1ulh1nn C;:l1lorn111 n'"]IOll JI 0''" "\ 119~~ VJtlay V1<tw !>t, U\J'''"' PJ1k. CA '10620 2071~ S ~v11lon Blvd, C111~on, t.A \1014b
na21 Lake Foro~t Or, El Tu10, CA \12&30
1001 E. Imperial Hwy. L.i Habu1, CA 90E>J1
41 ~o Long Boach Blvd . Lon11 Oouch, CA 9080/
1095 1t111no Blvd. Tu511n, CA 92680
235 N. Clllus Ava., West Co111ne. CA 91793
GE BUILT-IN
DISHWASHER
• GT·Matic Color System with
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Chassis ••• 100% Solid·Slale
• Dark-lite Malrlx Picture Tllbe
• 70.Position Click-Stop
UHF Channel Selector
• Room Light Monitor
• Twin s· oval speakers
• 2S" Di11onal Dark-lite• Exclusive ASC Circuitry 50 Black Matrix !Automatic Sharpness Picture Tube Control)
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!els you COOi: 1 ..,,Y': q•> •ly by "Time,"
by "T emp<"<Ollllt None," 01 slowfy w11'1 tl>e
"Simmer 'N Coolcfl set,.,·oq. Come~ with a,
own S1ont'W<ll'r Cow'loll'I fo, liow-cooliing
• ond •.clwve Memoty fn1ry/Recoll 10 store
o complete ,oo1c.ig proqom.
• •• DAil Y PllOT
ter e . r1stmas-.
JCPenney, Fashion Island Store Only, Newport Beach Sale starts thursday
1 O a.m.-December 29
Go to
blazers.
Sale 29.88
Family Outwear Sale:·
'•l lb-.
1 Save 30°/o
JCPenney Slac~
Reg. $14. The
JCPenney stack with
If ore feg styling,
special shirt·hugger
waistband and other
popular features
Woven textur1zod
Forlrel 11. polyostor 1n
handsome solids
Sizes 30-42
SALE 9.80
'/,,,..-' , . t · ,
\
\
Men's & women's
'
Reg. $45.
The fastest fashion roula
to good looks, great style
the blazer. Timeless tailor-
ing in texturized woven
polyester wllh flapped
patch pockets. notched tapers. and center vent.
Handsome sohda 1n
regular, short. and rong .
sizes.
SALE Now Going On
Men's & Women's
Great looking
vested suits
at great
low prices.
Sale 69.88
Reg. $110.
Traditional vested
suit of polyesteriWool hemng·
bone. Straight flap pockets.
blufl«td edges a(ld soft
shoulder. Center vent.
Grey or brown hemng-
bono 1n most men s
sizes.
Shoe Clearance
Sale 5.99
Orig. 16.99. Women's shoes
Broken sizes
Sale 4.99
Orig. 15.99. Men's shoes
Broken sizes
SALE Now Going On
30o/o off
all bras and girdles.
First time ever!
Come in and save
now on our enttre stock of bras and
grrdles. Training bras. too. The
subtle shaping you want for today's
styles. Easy care fabrics with Lycra •
spandex for stretch. Some in colors.
All sizes.
Glrla Bra.s 30% ott
SALE Now Going On
F-a II Sweate r__-U~ Sale 19.99 ·
-A~Men's and-
Ladles· Pencron Watches.
Shock and water resistant
17 jewel. Limited Quantities
Clearance
Sale 8.99
Reg. $18. to $24 .
., Women's hooded and
cardigan prints
Sale 12.9~
·Reg. $20$
Men's Shetland sweaters
Women's
.. \. .
' I ' " \ ..... '\, ' #"
r• .: ,::< .J· I '"'I "' • •. ,. r·"
s ·ave 50°/o
..
~aPs~~!1~! inB · 99 Men's and women's knit hats and
gloves.
Misses and Junior Sizes.
Women's
Sale 3.99
Reg. 5.50 women's tops. Flannel plaids,
hooded knits and T-shirts.
.. .. , l
'
Save 50°/o
Women's sleepwear coordinates.
Short and long gowns.
. l ~
, '.
I '\' \
Sale 34.99 Sale 10.88
Reg. $52. to $56. Women's R0Q. $16. to $20. Pre-
coats and jackets. Misses school girts' 1ackets.
and juniors.
I Sale 13.88 Sale 24.99
Reg. $36. to $40. Selected Reg. $21. Girls' Dae II Jackets.
styles of women's coats Size 7-1 4.
and jackets. Sale 15.88 Sale 44.99 Reg. $23. Boys' Dae II
Reg. $69. to $75. Ladies' Jackets.
better coats and topper~. Sale 6.88 Sale 13.99 Dae II Boys· vest
. Reg. $20. Men's Dae II
Sale 7.88 vests.
LIMITED QUANTITIES Dae 11 Girls' vest
..
Men'
Dress· Shirts
Save 30°/o
Men's
Ultressa
Dress shirts
Choose from
a selection
of long and
short sleeves.
• SALE Now Going On
Sale 3.99
Reg. 6.50. Mon's reversible
Dress Belts.
Now 30°/o off
,.,
.. Reg. $9. to $10. Men's solid color sport
...
• 'Shirt. 100% polyester, short and
long sleeve. -
."!
STORE HOURS
MON.-IAT. 10 A.M.·t P.M.
SUN.12-5
~
. '
'
I
---... ---·--. -·;----=---------= ;--T -
Wednesday December 28, 1977 DAILY PILOT Al
ite 00
Now .Going On!
Sale 2.96
Reg. S-"· 'Laura' floral print sheets of
cotton/polyeste< percale. Pretty colors.
Full flat or fitted, reg. 4.99, S•I• 3.11
Queen flat or fitted. reg. 8.49, Sale e.ee
King flat or lilted, reg. 10.49, Sale l.M
King pillow cases. reg. 4.79, Sale S.M •
Standard pillow c~ses. reg. 3.99. 8•1• 3.06
• -...
.. • f ... \ .
twin flat
or fitted
(X
f'
•I
J l r ' .... ................ -
vent
The famous ·
JCPenney towel!
Sale s4
Reg. $5 .
Our greatest towel
value ever Is now on sale'
Thars right our
own soft absorbent
lowels of combed
cotton1po1yes1er that
are as big and beaut1·
ful as towel& lhat sell
elsewhere for much .
much more' Choose
several in exc11tng
decorator colors
bath
towel . •
... .. . ~· '"°t :_ •• \. · ..
\ ' I
,.
Hand Towel. Reg. 3.50. Sale 2.80
Wash cloth. Reg. 1.50. Sale 1.20
i • ~ t
.l t I
Sale 1.99
Reg. 2.79. No-iron white muslin sheets.
Long wesrlng cotton/polyester.
twin flat
or fitted
Full flat or l1lled. reg 3.59. Sele 2.tt
Standard pillow cases. reg. 2.09. Sele 1.99
White percale no-iron cotton/pory,ster sheets
Twin flat or fitted. reg 3 79. Sale 2.93
Full flat or lilted. reg 4 79, Sele 3.93
Standard pillow cases.
reg. 2.99. Sele 2.83
.I Sa le· 12. 80 1w1n blonk••
} Reg. $16. W~nderful Ve llux Blankets a•t Full size. reg. $19 ............ ! .............. Saf,e 15.20
.. • Queen size. reg. $25. . ....................... Sale $20.
King size. reg. $28. . ....................... Sale 22.40
..
twin flat
or fitted
Aag. 2.". Colorfuf'Carohne· pattemed
no·iron cotton/poly~ter percale,
Full flat or fitted, reg. 3.99, Sele 5.99
Queen flat or lilted, reg. 7.99. Sale 5.tt
"King rrafOr JilTea;reg. :99. SeliT.lr
King plllow cases. reg. 3.99, Sele 3.29
Standard pillow cases, reg. 2.99. Sele 2.29
Sale 2 for 4. 70
Reg. 2 for 5.88. S1and1rd size bed
pillow. 100% polyester.
Queen size, reg. 2 for 8.88 a.le 2 tor 5.50
King size, reg. 2 for 7.88 Sale 2tor1.30
'
Sale 3.20 ~:!~1
Reg. 4. ·matrix· sheared towels in solid fashion
colors with comtemporary sheared jacquard pattern.
Cotton/polyester. ..
Hand towel. Reg. 2. 75. Sale 2.20 I
Wash cloth. Reg. 1.75. Sale 1.40
Sale 2.40 ~:::.1
Reg. $3. 'Paradise· towel ensemble of cotton/polyester
velour with fringed Jacquard borders. Decorator pastels.
Hand towel. Reg. 2.20. Sale 1. 76
Wash cloth. Reg. 1 10. Sale 88'
( .... ------·· .. -·~~·---· "';"""'~ ~ ..... .,,.._
Ii' ~-----~::~.-=-· ., , ,._,. --...... \
I • • I ···:. . '::: . · .. l ~ ·~-:11: ·.--..::-.. · . .-·: I 1 : : a-:.-: ... ..:... -.. ·--i !f 1 ~ ~i~ r -, r~,l
[ / ·~ ~' ) \ j ' l li •l I .\...-~f
'l ~ .... ~r ...
{ ~
1 I . . ~ . . I
\ \ ... ;. . .. /'!' I }i I \ .-... :-··/ ~.. . . .!) "'·~ ...... --"""' "..:. .... _ .... .,,---··--"
Sale 4.40 21x24" contour rug
Re9. 5.50 "ParfalT" BATH ENSEMBLE. .
24' x36" oblong, reg. 5.50 ...................... Sale 4.40
27"x45" oblong, reg. 9.00. . . .................. Sale 7.20
34''x36" oval fringe. reg. 6.00 .................. Sale 4.IO
Universal Lid. reg. 2.99 ........................ Sale 2.39.
~
, . ~
-
$TORE HOURS
MON.-8AT. 10 A.M.·I P.M.
IUN. 12..S
I
J
I
I
JeOAJlYPll.OT ~IY,0.c:./Tlbet 21, 1917
;Holiday Cards Delayed ScMdu/,es
Signups .
Personal Delivery Needed/or Greetings Residents of Newport
Beac h can sign ro r From AP Dllpatches
lt '~ not loo late to get a Chnslmas card from
Utah's governor, but you 'II have to pick it up at his
oHtce.
An aide to Gov. Scott Matheson says some 300
cards remain in a basket at the Capitol. Those not
1picked up may become memo pads, a 1ubemat.orial·
aide said.
Matheson ordered some 3,5()0 cards. He ended
·up paying $350 for them out of his own pocket when
the state Board or Examiners voted not to .._im·
•burse him for the order.
ln a book, rormer Sen. Frao.k E. Moss of Utah recreaUon classes from 6
contends that one or lhe biggest Cai.lures of the na-lo 8 P m. Jan. 3, with non-
lion 's social system is that it r esidents ' r egistration!
does not encourage older people at the same time on Jan.
to s tay in their homes. 4.
The 66-year-old Moss. now Registration wilt be
practicmg law in Washington, is conducted at the Parks,
the author of "Too Old, T oo Sick, Beaches and Recre ation
Too Bad." Department at City Hall, In the book, Moss s ays the ........................ " 3300 Newport 8lvd., on
psychological shock to an elder-----------the 32nd Street aide.
ly person taken out of a familiar Activities range from
\
PEOPLE I OBITUARiE~
QUEENIE
• The governor malled some to friends and bad
'others delivered to department heads for distribu-
tion to state employees. The remainder are in the
'basket.
hom e setting can be too nim.11,.1....... tennis and sailing to
traumatic. But he notes that ,..U.Ofm stained I.lass techniques •----'""·---some people need continuous care and cannot cope and quilting. Inform a-.,_ ______ ..-.-..;.;;.;;;....;...,,,,........, __ ...,..,,..,.. ...
with home living anymore. --tion ls available by call· "Every year the bl1ketball 1eaaon rolla around we have
• ing 640-2271. to 1lam.<funk our 1uue1lions!" • Jn the Rev. Elsebeth Jana• sermon, God is not
ihe father of J esus Chris t. 1 .. As a matter or fact, I don't define God's sex at 1an on Uus occasion," she sald. '•'But normally I do
r e f e r to G od a s a ___ ··-------
woman." ( ) The minister, one or PEOPLE
90 female vicars in Den· _
m a rk's Lutheran Church, ----------
h as stirred up a minor
c ontroversy with efforts to erase the traditional im·
age of God as a man. She is vicar of the twin
p a ris hes of Solrocd and Havdrup, south of
Copenhagen.
* President Carter announced he will nominate
Acting Budget Director J ames T. Mcintyre Jr. to
replace Bert Lance, who re·
~i~ncd as budget director during
a controversy over his banking
practices.
M c I n't y r e , 3 7 • h a d
super vised day-to-day budget
operations as Lance's deputy in
the first months of Carter's ad-
ministration while Lance served
as the president's close adviser
and ambassador to the business
community.
When Lance stepped down Sept. 21. Mcintyre
b ecam e acting director or the Office of Manage.
m ent and Budget a nd guided preparations or the ad·
ministration's 1977 budget.
* Mayor Abraham D. Beame of New York City,
assis ted by a woman in a wheelchair , snipped a red
ribbon lo open City Ha ll's first
elevator.
"For 16:5 -Yecrl3-ou~~'c:n:~
have waited for this uplifting ex·
pcriencc," Beame quipped ... It
has an up, down and a panic but-
ton for Kol'h," Beame said. re-
frrring to lhe mayor-elect, Rep.
Edward Koch, D·N. Y.
The $200,000 elevator, built
with federal money, was de·
auME signed to provide a way for ban-
d icappcd persons to attend hearings on the second
floor of the building. · .
Death Notice• Death Notle!es
WILSON Memorl•t P•rlt H•wport 8-M:ll. In
!USAN WILSON, r11•1dt111 of Costa lleu of flo..n IMnllp wl~ conlrlbu-Mew. Co. Pa"4!d ewo Oii Oe<M11ber 1-. lo llllnd CNtdr.,.., C.f\S.r, 4120
1s. "" •I !Tie -of ll. Survl.,.d by 11Mra1r.on. LOS ..._ltt, c.. .. or !be ..... IN''""" Mr ... ""'"· R-r• Wll>Ofl L""9 Auocl•tion °' (1Wtllle$ of .,...,,. ot l o• A•I.-,, C.. F...,.r•I M•v1<u chOlce. P11<•fo<: V...., Mortu.ry Olrec·
... 111 rw "•kl Frt<Ur <>-<•-JO. tt17 1or1.
•I 11 00 AM •I Ml. S4n.tl Morlwor'( NIWOIJIST
Cl\Apel In _,,,_ Hiits, c... w1111 1... LINA llEATAC. NEWOUIST, resl-
termt nl el Ml ~n.tl INm«lel Perk. lltnl of C°'I• MHA. e>eWtd away Dec.
Sm•lh Tullllll l amb Co•I• Mo e H . 1tn. Survtwcl II'( lier san Cllflord
Moriuerydi•ecl°" ~ HewQuhl of ln9lewood, Charin
lllNG Ray-Newqvl~ of lr>Q.._. S4'le
DAVID EDWARD RING. rnldeftl of I• elM> "''"'-"" .,,.. .. brolhen •l'ld
Nowl>Of1 llM<h, C.... ~·-•way on two ,,, .. ,., ~awMcM Mrvlc.n wlll be
Oau mbaf' 24, m1. Survl-by his held Wed. o.<. H. "n et 11AM et
wllo Marlen W. RlftQ of Newp0rt Gtandvl"' Mo"-1•1 Peril 111 Cilen-
S.acll. C•. Utl'!o<ll'I si....-A. Wllll· d•le, Ce. Smith Tullllll Lamb
t11191on of Hon9 Kon9, two 11e..-Morwarr ~-eon._..., dOU9flte,.. NaN: y $ 8""' of •ruwlle, SieMOll
Ce. and S...... K. MeUW.. Of Mercer OVA.NE DARWIN SIGNOR, resi-
h l&nd. W~lnQlon. bf'other Ed• .. rd cMnl ot N-1 ~ach, IMl•...S •••Y
Rlno of Hyothvllle, M.oryland and Dec. 26, i.n « llw ~Of 7'. 8t -rd
f\lne oranckhlldren, Mau of the Chrll· husb<lnd of Ser ... SI_., l•U..r Allen
llan 8url•I wa s hold Mondoy SI-from Port H_,,,., C... Alto
OMtmber ,._ 1•11 .ti I 00 P.M. '" SI. survived by wwn or#tdUl!ldran & •-J oethlm C.thollc Church, latemtenl 9,.a111r•ndchlldrett. F.,...r•I Mntl<H
G-Shepherd Cemetery. In llev of will be Mid Wtd. Dec. 27. 1917 et tAM
tlowe" contribution\ moy ... meao 10 el Smith Tutlllll U mb COiia MIMI
Ho;io Memorlal Ho'4>H•I ~'°"'"""' Mortuuv Chepel. wllll Or. Doneld Oepul,,.,enl lnl1!"11 .. ~Unit. 8•11' SIUrQOCHI officiating. lnl~I will be
Der9eron F..,...rel "°"'9 Gotlw MelO el Forut Lawn AM..-lel Peril In' Olrr<IOfs. Cyorus . 5mllh TuU\111 Lamb Cost.
MONCUll MelO MortU¥Y DI-tors ...........
. JANE Ell~A8ETH MONCUR. rul-MclUNSTRY
·s en. WUllam Proxmire, D-Wis., who takes a
very h~rd look at how government agencies spend
money, was compa r e d to
Scrooge in a recent newspaper
column.
So Prox mire showed up at &
Capitol Hill party wearing a
nametag which read: "Senator
Scrooge."
Two or Proxmire's aides
also a tte n ded a nd wore
namctags, one of which read,
"Bah," the other, "Humbug."
* The judge who will try the divorce suits filed by
Gov. George C. Wallace and his wife, Cornella,
ruled tha t any testimony con·
cernlng the governor's financial
a ffairs must be heard in open
court. ,
Circuit Judge Joseph D.
Phelps decided, however, that
t estimony concerning the
grounds of divorce would be kept
private.
Wa ll ace is asking for a
divorce on grounds of "incom-
• ~·•Au.Ace: -patability'' and an "irretrieva-
ble breakdown" of the 7-year marriage.
His wife charged "cruelty and actual violence''
a nd the refusal to give her enough money to meet
"even the basic needs of a wife."
•
A UQem t>Y a California man Is one of nine that
will be read at the Japanese emperor'$ annual ne w-
ycar imperial poetry reading party.
The poem, on this year's theme of motherhood
was ':Vritten by Mlnoru Fujita, 61. a Japanese:
Ame rican gardener from Rosemead. 'I'he other
winners were J apanese. All the poets are invited to
the p arty, lhe palace said.
The court cer emony, which follows an 800-year-
old custom. is to be attended J an. 12 at the Imperial
Palace by Emperor Hirohito and Empress Nagako.
Careers
Class Set
careers.
Spring classes begin
Feb.6.
The four programs are
Ward Cle rk, Medical
Records Clerk, Medical
Insurance Cle r k, and
Medical Transcriber.
For information about
the programs, phone
556-5540.
d""I of S.nt• Ana, Ce. Pan ed away on MAE F"AAHCIS McKINSTRY, tftf.
December 25, "17 al Ille A94I of 1t. de11I ol s.nt. """· ,_sad away O.C.
B•loveo ;1$11• or Dr. R-rt HolO..I>'( 26, lt11. A~ 12. 8•1ond wife ol
ol c111uoo. 111. F.,...ral '""'ltH will H.,old Mt Klnstry ot Santa""•· lovl119
be loeld o.come.r 71. 1'17 •I 2;00 P.M. mother 01 H¥l>ld E. M<Kln$1ry of S...·
•I Plymoutll C<1n9r~llOMI 011irch ••• All•. c;alllofle Pl'•~· -vices Wiii
NtwC>O•l IJea<ll. a . wl1'1 Rn. John be ~ Wed. Oe<. ». ~n ~ ?PM. at. U M
l111d.,.ll olllclallflG. Smltll Tutlllll S mllll T11llllll Le mll Santa A11e •=-=-"···~--. ., -re
Commemorating Tovatt's 52nd
Anniversary_ ol fhelr first opening In
Hngton Beach. Featuring ••• noTOn1'i
flte very lowest prices, bul the MOST
PROTECTIVE Guarantees ever offered by a fine, reliable TV and appliance
l •mbCosUIMHeMortu«ydlrec:-.. Cllao•I. lftlerment wlll b• et -~~' ._...... FalrM-Mlmori.tl ..... S-a Ma.
• MATTIIRWS Smit" lulblll Lemll. Se111e Ane
MARK "LLISOH MATTHEWS MOrt,..ry Dlntcci>rs..s.t7~1l1, CHICAGO (AP) -!P•-'· --ew•' 0ec:em11er H, WAIUNIK<*A Laura F•rml 70 best lt11. 8.....,........,. ef ltallel I"., 8Allt9AAA 8 . W•l<INEICONA. "" ' ' t•tr•rotMer<i..~r11.Jr.,MC1Rk1t,1tn1<M111 o1e1 roro,c11..t0e<.2stft. known for her book
brotllH 01 •. Horman Suu, Belo.,.. wl!e of """'" we111n0one, "Atoms in the Family,''
grendlet-of 1 -fr\efld to n..n,. lovlftQ moe-of UIMWI, Befber.. ' ( h lJ( Me m orlel urvl<U ThUfldey Alla11, l.u & Lee-Ann Weklnelull\e, aD aCCOunt 0 er 8
O.omber 2' .. I PM Peclfk View l"Ufl etet U rvlcu Wed. •nnlng With h e r h U S b 3 n d
-----------7:JOPM et Ille Cl\epel of O'Connor l En I •
SMrnf lVTMU. LAMI
COSTA MISA CHAPll.
427 E. 17th St.
·Costa Mesa• 648-4888
Santa Ana Chapel
518 N. Broadway
Santa Ana• 541.,..131
PfBCIUOl'MHS
SMITHS' MOttTUAIY 627 Main St.
Huntington Beach
63M539 ,.., ..... .,
COU>MAL FUMBAL
NOMI
7801 Bolaa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
PACMCY11W
t•10tt.IAL PAllC
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pldflc View Orfve Newport.
Caalbnf.
844-2700
W.COIW:.I MOllTUAllH
Leouna Beach
'49+9415
Laguna Hill•
76&-0933
San Juan Capistrano
•95-1716
1.a.n• .. OM
N•ALHOMI •
Corona cM1 Mar 8'1'34490
Costa Mele e.24a4
-.a.llOADWAT MOllYUAAY
110 Broedwlv Cott•~ 642-91GO
L•oun• Hiiis Mortu«v. 25301 •11<1a nuclear sclent st r co
P••llw•r. t1<e family -'•ts ...,_ Fermi, and the evenl3 tlot\stoAnw1<.~~;rSot.1ei.,. leading up to the first
VELMA LIKILLE IAILEY, resl· atomic bomb, died Mon• =~!'i..':':'.1~ •• ~:.:'i~~ ~ day. valeKelll Hospital. Suntl...., by two
deutlllen Dorothy L-Of Oxnard,
ca. end Nola c:oop.r Of H11ntl"910ft
8ta(I\, C.. -MIA Joe Balley of FO\ln•
lel11 Valley. Ge., -brol-Roy C.
WlllOll Of HuntlllQlon llHcll, OI. end
sllter Cora ClpsotMr of Hunllnvton
8 eacll. Ca .. seven 11rendclllldran,
Grevtslde ...,IUS will be held Tllun-
dey o.c.-tt, 1m et 11:00 A.M. at
Weslmlnsler Memerlal Pertt with Rev.
Or...-ofll<i.t.,... flllfftnant wlll w
at WU tmlrister Memorlal Perk,
Pierce lrolllen Smlllli' Mortuerw
dlrectOf'S. -'<*H MAGGIE JOHH, l'ftldettt of Seftle
Al\A, C.. PAMtd -•'I' Oft Oet:•-27. 1'11 at IN •1119 Of 17. 8el0,,.d
mottwr of Ollvff -ot Sante AN, Ca. l"VMrel IWVl<es •N ""41no et
SA'lltll Tullllll Limb Sant• An• Mort ... ,., w~m.
PORTLAND, Maine
(AP> -beraard
Langlais. 56, a sculptor
known for hJs outsize
wood carvin gs o f
animals and who was
awar<led a Guggenheim
Foundation f ellowship
five yeara ago in rec-
ognition of hia work,
died Tuesday.
BUENOS ARIES,
Ar gen Un a (AP ). -
AJben GaJma Pas, 78,
one of Latln America's
b est-known joumailsts
and publiaber·lof the
prestlgloua newspaper
LaPz:ensa,dledMonday.
CINCINNATI <Al»
Alber& M. S&elaer, 8Z,
co-founder of Kenner
Products Co., dled
Saturday of heart laJlure
complicated by asthma.
store.
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Unconditional Warranty
on all new television picture tubes
2 Years
Unco_nditional Warranty
on all parts 8fttl (S.nlce) labor
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{
Wiie May Clal• Social .Securi I y
DEAR PAT: My husband Isn't going to retire
for several more years. Although l haven't worked
tor some lime, I was wondering 1£ 1 have enough
Social Security credit to get,etlrement benefits
based on my own work record. How much credit do I need?
L. C .. Huntington Beach
"Cot a probLem? Then wnt• to Pal Dunn. Pat wdl
cur red tcpe, getting the answera and action you Mtd
to 1olue ineqwt~1 in govermn'"t Oltd buaine11. Mod
uour quutiOriSTo Pal Dunn, Al Your Sero1c:e. Orano-
Coa1t Daily P1lot. P.O. Boz 1560, Co1ta Me"1, CA
92626. As many letter1 4$ pos11ble wtll be a118Wered,
hut phoned mquines or letters not including the
reader's /ull name. addre&s and bulrneS& houri' phone
11um beT ca11not be con:ndered. This column oppeori dol·
l11 erc(>f)I Saturdays "
Opportunity Act," Federal Trade Commission,
Consumer lnlormalion Center, Dept. 598E, Pueblo,
Colo. 81009; "Women, Credit Bureaus and the
F.qual Credit Opportunity Act," Associated Credlt
Bureaus Inc .. 6767 Southwest Freeway, Houston,
Texas 77074, and "Credit Handbook for Women,"
American Express Co., Box 927, New York, N.Y.
10010.
'Rana' a lli•toric Handle
Wednesday, ~mber 28, 1917 DAILY PILOT A J J
When Dr. Flanzer Says
110pen Wide .. H• Isn't .
Talking About Your
Poc~etbook
Because Dr. Flanzer Is a dentist. You
know: crowns, dentures. fillings -a
whole mouthful of services. The
good news: you might not have to
dig so deep to handle Or. Flanzer's
fees. And If yo u h ave dental
insurance It might not cost you
anything. Now, open not-so-wide.
Say, "Ahhhhhh. Very good. Now.
Call Dr. Ftanzer for an appointment.
~GnHllfl
The exact amount or Social Security credit you
need depends on when you reach age 62. rr you are
62 In 1977, ror example, you need credit for she and
one-half years of work covered under Social Securi-
ty to be eligible for retirement benerus. No one e ver
needs credit for more than 10 years or work to be In·
s ured for retirement ch~ks. Any Social Security of·
fief' can tell you if you have worked long enough to
get benefits based on your work record.
DEAR PAT: Everyone knows that the CB radio
got its name from citizens band, but where did the · term "HAM'' radio come from? Dr.· Arnold H. Flarizer.
310 E. I ~th St. ln interview
publi s h ed in
C o p c n h a g t' n · s
P o I i t i k c n . \\' t' s l
German n ovc l1 ~t
L. E .. Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa
·Guenther Grass sars.
"It may become
highly dangerous l o
neighboring coun -
tries if they go on im·
puting a new fascism
lo us. It may prompt a
W0111en'• Credit Rtcks Outlbted
The most popular origination story has it that
Albert E. Hyman, Bob Almay and Reg Murray
operated one of the first wireless stations in J900.
They used their last na!D es as the station code, tap.
ping out the abbreviation, "fly.AJ.Mu." Due to con. ·64i-o 112_
.
DEAR PAT; I know a lot ot changes have taken
place regarding women and credit. Although l 've
read about some of those I 'd like lo find a complete
rundown, rather than bits and pieces of informa·
lion. Do youknowofasource? C.F., Irvine
fusion over the airways because there was a Mex·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~icans~pnamedt~''Halm~··~etriochan~dt~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
call letters to "HAM." A few years later Hyman ap. (
peared before the U.S. Congress In defense of
amateur radio operators who were being accused of
clogging the airwaves. Ile won the flgbt for his ART HOPPE SATIRIZES
counter reaction.·· The following free publications on women's
credit rights should prove helpful: "Equal Credit "llAM " station and the word became a synonym L:.:-_::_-_:~-!1:~-E,-_:-_:-_::-_::-:::.:::::~:=.!..:!:.:.:LC::.:...:....Jlllillllll for amateur radio operators and their equipment.
3-year certificate*
IRA/ INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT
ACCOUNTS.
The IRA Plan is for employees not cov-
ered by a pension or profit-sharing plan.
If you qualify, you may deposit up to 15% .'
maximum $1500,of your annual salary in a
Gibraltar retirement account and earn our
high H~ % interest You may deduct the
amount you deposit from your Federal
and State tax returns, and also dftfer Fed-
eral and State taxes on the interest earned.
KEOGH/SELF-EMPLOYED
RETIREMENT PLANS.
The Keogh Plan is for self-employed
people. II you qualify, each year you
may deduct up to 15%, maximum $7500,
from earned income on your Federal tax,
and up to 10%, maximum $2500. from
your California State tax when funds are
deposited into your Gibraltar-Keogh
account. The high 73/4 % interest your
account earns may also be deferred until
retirement.
As a non-employed wife. you may also
now participate in an IRA Retirement Plan,
together with your husband if he qualifies.
A new law permits you to increase the
annual deposit-tax-deferred-to 15% of
earned income, maximum $1750, pro-
vided the amount is divided equally in
separate accounts.
Both the annual deposit and the interest
Oit1raltar pays you are tax-deferred until
retirement. Look into it. Call toll-free for
details.
•Effective yield 8 0&•~ per year whtn ell lunde are lell 10
accumulate Wlthdr11wal1 on 1rnnc1pal prior lo maturity
art sub1ec1 by ltw to 1ubt1ant111 Jnttrett penalties
Act now I Open your account
by December 31
for tax deductions this year.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ANO
BROCHURE. CALL TOLL-FREE
IN CALIFORNIA.
'
WE PAY YOU MORE ON INSURED
SAVINGS THAN ANY BANK
---.,,.~ .. ~:!!::!
.. 011r ,,,onefl
U. fetflJ • ftflfl
'" Cl..af -fJ ·~@ • cw • 00ubl8 YoUf t,\Of\fJY • (J, G11:>taltat gzoo<l In your ~ n\neyencs.
000 grows to CH91 11 tund• remain
Eec" $1 c;ett\Uc:.&~e 'llJ\-" •
SAVINOS 1NSUM O
TO 140,000
lntnrMI COl'l)l'IOU1'df•d d•ily on
Jlf occoun1' thu• 1nc1H11nq
annual y•tlO In amounta •hown "h'•n t>a•oncf\ r~rnums tor ono
Y""' Funo• r11c111veO by 101n ot
me"'" earn from \1t wh(tn h(1ttt to QIJ.1•1111 I •nO Noto By FMer•I
I \w ._ ;trly w1t"<11t1wat\ on crr11r1c111'l
8n•J bf''1U4 occoun1.., .,. aubtcu;'
101ubst•nt111l U\INC .. t PCin~tf, '
OTH!R CERTIFICATl AOCOUNTS:
7 79% annual y leld on 7 50%
• Minimum $1,000. 4 years. •
6 98% annual yield on 6 75~i)
• Minimum S1.000,30 months. •
6 7 2 % annual yield on 6 SQ'Jo
• M1n1mumS1.ooo.12 monlhe. •
EXTRA BONUS ACCOUNT:
5 92% annual yleld on 5.75~0 • Minimum $1,000.90 days -FLl!XIBLf M SS800K ACCOUNT:
5 399" annual yield on 5 25u
• 0 Deposu or withdraw any time • ,,
Earn day-in to day•out interest No penalties
STATEMENT SAVINGS. You receive de1a1led monthly s1atemen1s when transacltons
have occurred plus regular quanerly slatemenl Savings Card
sNves a~ your passbook tor all deposits wllhdrawa1s and 1crv1ces
WE GIVE YOU MORE THAN ANY BANK
~
fllll~E ! I 11111111•t 11111
l"i111111cial 11e1•cic(1N
----Wllll SS mltlimum b•l11ne•-
• SOCIAL SECURITY DIRECT DEPOSIT SERVICE
-----With S!OOO inlnl"""" ~llltnce -----
• SAFE DEPOSIT BOX • PHOTOCOPYING OF
• AMERICAN EXPRESS IMPORT ANT DOCUMENT
TRAVELERS CHECKS • AMERICAN EXPRESS
(we pay feel MONEY ORDERS
•NOTARY SERVICE (We pay fee)
• TRUST DEED NOTE COLLECTIONS
-----Wllll S200t lftln1-balMCe-----
• c+iECl<ING ACCOUNT through major bank.
Ho~ lea/lt>eh•Oa f'" t!Odl c/ledo.t.
-----W1UIUOOOll'li!l"""'911111------
• CHECK-A-MONTH PLAN. Monthly lnl01'911 checks
mailed lo whomever you designate.
' TWO DFRCES IN SANTA ANl/CDITA MESA
14 Santa Ana Fashion Square 13925 S. Brlatol St.
834-0717 979, 7580
Ol'Dt Pl'ICMIYS TIU, 7:00
*THiil 7-0AYl·A-WelK O,,ICU Of'IN IUNDAYI:
Torr•nee: Del IVrro FeaniOn Square (1112-oppo&ite W•rd'•) • 542-7771 c.,_ ..... (1110-nelU to Sefra) ·632·1911
ltlennen Olli91 FashiOn Squ•re (#31 midway IOUlh entrance)· 990-3080 w oocll..,. ""'•: 22960 Victory Oj)Pofllt Seats • 88~ -0160
Hllfttlnttoft ..._, Hont1ng1on Cenlef (~1 nf Barkera) • (71') 808·*6
• } 'I '
YOUR IDLE BANK CHECKING FUNDS
EARN DAILY INTEREST WITH
GIBRALTAR'S FREE TELEPHONE
TRANSFER SERVICE
2411011r1111 tlag
7 tlays 11 1ceel~.
No need to go to yo ur bank. Once your account·
ia eslablished, pick up the phone to lransrer
money from your bank checking account-
which earns no Interest-to your Glbralter
Telephone Transfer savings account-which
earna 5 V4 % compounded daily. Funds also
returned to your bank by phone.
Call toll-tree anytime, day or night, lrom any
part ot lhe State. This time-saving. money-
earning service is tree when you mainla1n a minimum
S 1000 balance In your Telephone Trans fer accoun1.
Minimum transfer amount S 100.
For more l'ldormatlon---------·-
011 TO ESTABUSH YOUR JUfPHoNE TRANSFER ACCOUNT ( 8 0 0) 2 5 2 0194 Calltoll-lree •
OR VISIT YOUR HEAJl[ST CIBl!AlTAR OfTICE. -----------
EXTENDED HOURS
Monday-T11ursdag 9:00 To 5:30
Frhlag . . . . . . . . 9:00 TO 6:00
SATl!BBAY . 9:30 TO 4:00
*SlfNDAY .......... 11:00 ro 4:00
THllE 7·DAVS.A·WEH Of'11CH O~!'N IUNDAYS:
•TOIUIAMCf. Oel NM FMNon Square
Ol'a lfl0Hn1~10-,.: IM.t:».4.
•CAaOM IUU. He.i tD Sean °"" MCM4'f9• ~to-,..; -l:IM. •"""'1Mr• KACM """~ o.nl<lf
OHN Melfnt llllM,,.M fO --.._ ,.._
•SMl•lN ,._.. '"""'°" 1<1u ... Ol'INlllOHTl·~.tt--.
IM.HM.
"waoDlAMt HILi ()pj>oll•• "•"'"'*Sqll ... ...... n. .• 1:te;MI .. : lat.I~
IUHDAY NllVIC! et Wlllt~/~ • ...-... ......
.... ..,.._, .......... ..,..,.... ...... ,....,.,.., ........... ""'' "' ..
......
COMICS I CROSSWOAO
bylfldAAdtnon BOOMER by-Wm F. Browa and.Mel Casson
"He thought he'd avoid the Christmas rush
and mail It after Christmas!''
.FUNKY WINKE RBEAN
roACH, HOW 00 ~
FEEL ABOOT PLJ¥..'tRS
1AKIN6 CHEAP 6HOT&~
CASEY ·
t . I:
~. ___ .u__._-.;_..
-MOON MULLINS
I DON'T WANT iO
SEE AN'Y OF rf¥.)
~EN&A6ED
IN DIRW rooT8ALl !
GERlATRIX
1 TOl..0 6LAOY.5 we ~M0Al<RA55
WOUt..0 8€ TH~t: 'YOU?
f'IEW Y~AR'~ lWe,
6-UT YOU BETTeR
NOT ~Ml3A~AA?5
Mf; THIS YEAR l
DENNIS THE MENACE
LINOA, WOMEtJ
....::;....;;;,+-~ COthrloL.. 1He
me.ALL fH~
MOtJey' I~ -nf£
COOITT~'I' AM9
;~~{ 1..1v'e
1.0N6~~ 1HA~
'l'MA'f llM ,....,_."':>
IN -nle
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MISS PEACH
M~N '70, 100 .•
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7
Tet..l-Mt, O,AINMUlr
WMAT WILi. W! 00 WM"IN
WI FINl~M TMI' ~~&.. CHAPT~
IN n41i SOOK OF Lt,r! ?
•
by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD
By Chlfltt Rodrtgu11 •
. ~~LADIES A..r>-DR.SMOCK
~ENT L~M&.,.,
THE OiJILl>IH(t,,
IS OH Fl~I" .. ~
,...,..y SIGN IS
M~e 6 XPl.-ICl-r 1"H ._,, ~UFtS, CTO~ t..1.JM
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
.,, ......... -.._. ---
GORDO
13tirtle
Tami·
~tat
JUDGE P~RKCR -
Ot<AY, I'LL ~E YOU DORING
OOR LUNCH PERIOD
TOMORROW! I'VE GOT
TO AANG UP NOW!
~ MOTLEY'S CREW
1 6U OlitUD6E ~>t"T"
Fl6UR'eD OUT' HOW TO
U6e 1'He CHR~5 · ~6eHf we Gor HIM. ,
..
PEANUTS by Charles M. SCIMll1
by Melt
by Roger Bradfield
1 here~ resolve
to re hice 10 -rr,e\ma-
lo shower her with kindness,
ob~ her it1$f°<tnt~,
and -to cater to
her every whim .
I
• I
or e.tse.
O tt11_,_...,_.
HOSPITAL:
e::::;:'\ I ~ •I ~··' ~, . . , fu.I ,,~
. ®~OO§@§
. ·il/1JEt!Eiil[Jj/Jfffi!J . .·
,
by Gus Arriola
by George Lemont
e>LJ1'" :! POt-J'"T"'
L.IKE: -ro .ACCeP1'" R lc>eS FROM
S"fRAN6eRs ·'
by Templeton and Forman
•.
TDDAY~S CRDISWDBD PUZZLE
' ., . .
by Ernie Bushmltler
I r
CAN t HAVE MY
CHEWING GUM
BACK ? o
~
,z
MANY INVESTMENTS HAVE UPS AID DOWNS. ,
A -HOME SAVINGS ACCOUNT ONLY HAS UPS.
of your savings account. But so is the risk. And the fact
of the matter is, that over the long run a savings account
offers a better net return than many other investments.
There are many things you can invest your money in ...
treasury bills, stocks, bonds, real estate. Unfortunately,
they have their ups and downs. When you put your
money in an insured-savings a~count it can never go
down. It can only go up. Few other investments ·are
---What's-mt)re, few other investIDent-s-are as
that safe. That secure.
When your money is in a savings account you
needn't worry about stock market or bond market
quotations. The value of your insured sav ...
ings account is positively fixed. And even
if you incur an interest penalty for re ...
·movif!g your money from a certificate
account early, your principal can
never be touched. Not even treasury
bills offer that security.
The rate of return on many in ...
vestments may seem greater than that
.. . .
convenient as a savings account. There are no coupons
to clip, no charges for buying or selling, no hassles or
wasted time.
And with a Home Savings account you get all the
· v~luable services you'd expect to get at
America's largest savings and loan.
So if you've been thinking about
investing your money in something
other than a savings account, maybe
you should reconsider. After all, for
peace of mind, there's no safety like
savings and there's no place like
Home ..
•
'
AJ ;j DAil Y P\l.OT Business
Leg al Trivia Add Up to Millions a Year
By MILTON MO "KOWltt
Lawyers se.:m to revet in the
kind of trivia that would drive
most of us up the wall.
l''ranciaco h~b no serious prob·
lem11
THE PEOPL~ WUO we~
really delighted with this suit
were the lawyers wbo work for
General Mills. They aot JeMer
to come to San Francisco for it
press conference where he In·
slsted that he d id too eat
Wheaties.
ness." One hesitates to think or
what mJght have happened if
Freitas had won the suit. In·
ve11llgators would be hired to
discover if Anita Bryant has
fro%en orange Juice in her ·
refrigerator. Lawyers would
check to see if Bob Hope fllls up
with Texaco. And Joe DiMaggio
might have been asked to swear
on a stack or Louisville sluggers
that he uses Mr. Coffee.
Joseph Freitas. the district al
torney of Sar .Francisco. sued
General Mills for false adverUs·
ing because the cereal maker
claims that Olympic decathlon
champion Bruce Jenner trained
on Wheaties. The action must
surely have convinced people in
the rest of the country that San
So Freitas dropped the s uit,
attributing it to •·overzealous· It's not that the Freitas suit
CAPITOLIZE
WITH
CAP ITOL
Series of Lectures
Accents Retirement
CAPIHl.IZATION MfANS 'ro
CONVERT CAPIHl TO CASH
A four-part lecture
series that provides a
do-it yourself approach to
'pre-retirement financial
planning will be offered
at Orange Coast College.
Costa Mesa, during
January.
ment. Gl aser spent 35
yea rs in foreign and
domestic industry.
He will present a step·
by-s tep. do·tl-yourself
approach to solving the
too-little. too·lale prob·
lems of retirement.
will be shown ' how to
project a retirement
lifestyle and to compare
retirement objectives
with avallable}ncome. "rou _.,, 000 10 1$0 000 c .. ~ ..,,.,
~ o-n a "°"" °' ot"4N P'OP*UI'
Of,d '°' °' "'" l•t CAPllOL HO~~ t.OAN err1no• to c1011ohte your
On Jan. 20 tilaser will
discuss "Retirement -
Make It Happen or Let it
Happen." The dis·
cus s ion will cover
career assessment. af·
fording one's present
lifestyle, personal Inna.
lion rate and how to plan
next year's cash now.
eQu'ty '"'O a ...,. loen .... ~ IUI •"" ... _.., __
Tit led .. Pr e
R e tirement
Planning." th e
series will meet on suc·
cessive Fridays begin·
ning Jan. 6, from 7 : 30 to
10 p.m. in OCC's science
lecture hall 2-Admission
The opening session.
lilied "The Inevitability
of Retirement," will ex·
amine the conditioning
and disciplines involved
in the personal planning
process.
Capitol is free \
LECTURER JACK
Glaser will detail how tc
plan and execute retire
''PLANNING YOUR
Retirement , Your
Responsibility." is the
title of the Jan. 13
session. Participants
The final lecture on
Jan. 27 will chart the
basics of long-range·
planning. The session
will cover forecasting
Income and' expense
factors, scheduling and
pricing progressive ob~
jectives and preparation
for estate planning.
Home Loan
One of c.tif a le•l)ltlf loan 8r0kerage FHn,. MAKE YOUI vUa EHD CHAllTAI LI.
GIFT COUNT! Cell O~ Of OV1 ~ c:O"lv~·•"111 ~ated Ofil(.a IQt tn. lotell
We'd
Really like to help
The•Hd-
1977-71 Youltt wortc $55,000 .
Swlwu•o; pool ettcao.... $21,000 w .... ·, Fftnels C...ter $5,000 c....,...,.ss.ooo
More information
a bout the series is
available at the college,
556·5880.
COSfA MlSA CASH -REAL EST ATE -SICUltlTIES
n.lcltoyau
ftwarkl ••. 3tl0 ,...,aor e -a 1u •O-••n
AN.V~l:IM y" C• ........ dlfhNttcel SllpPClrl r-Cl z:atlty YMCA
ORANGE COAST YMCA Rll All m= us • 23Jt W Lill(.Q'n tt.._4 7~\718 J A50
lOt.C 6(AC" ~14( Oe4Amo81,a ,tJ421·9l3l 2 J 00 ""''enlty Dri•• Hewpori lcecll, C. '26'0 ,.._. '42·fHO
I
_.,..-.... ,MCA!
TRUSTEE FEES
TO SAVE FOR YOUR RETIREMENT?
These days. nearly every bank and sav·
ings and loan is talking about retirement
plans to shelter 1977 income. They're
good plan~. lndivtd11at Retlremen~c
counts (IRAs) for people who don't have
a retirement plan where they work And
Keogh accounts for people who are self·
employed
The fact 1s. each retirement plan re·
Quires a trustee And a trustee usually
wants a fee Which 1s what a lot of banks
and savings and roans don't talk about
Fidelity Federal offers standard IRA
and Keogh accounts. too You can shelter
up to $1500 a year In our IRA, and up to
S7500 a year in our Keogh. In both cases.
the contribution and the interest it earns
are tax-deductible until you retire.
The ditterence 11... .
We wont charge you an annual trustee
fee. Every dollar you set aside tor your
retirement goes for your retirement.
Which is hCM rt l>hOUld be.
We can talk about other differences. too.
For example, was your spouse em·
ployed last year? If not. you can add an-
other S250 to your IRA contribution. The
total you set aside can be as much as
S1750 spht Into two accounts .. with no
trustee fee on either of them.
Another dltterence ...
WG'll e'7Ulla-ccept stocl\youve accuma-
lated from a previous corporate pension
or profit-sharing plan. we·11 roll 1t over
into a tax-sheltered IRA for you. Again , at
no fee
Keogh accounts? Sure. Trustee fee? Of
course not
Whether you choose an IRA or a Keogh,
your funds can begin earning 7~% imme-
diately. With daily compounding, it comes
to an annual yield of 8.06%. You've heard
about federal regulations which reQuire
substantial interest penalties in the event
of early withdrawals. At Fidelity Federal,
these penalties are waived when you
meet the Qualifications for retirement.
Act before Dec. 31st ...
If you~e thinking about an I RA 9r a
Keogh. talk to us. If you already have one
someplace else. talk to us. You must do
it before Oeo. 31 to get maximum 1977 tax
sheltered benefits.And the sooner you do,
the more money you'll be able to shelter.
We think you'll like the ways we're dif-
ferent. We know you·11 like the savings.
U1YFE
... where services make the difference
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA OFFICEI
• Gi.ncs.le: 600 No. Brand • Bellflow•: Alondr• & 8etltlowet Blvd1. • 811 ..., i.M:
Inte rlaken Shopping Center • Btu. Jay: Blue Jay Mall • Costa ti. ... ·N..,oti a.ch:
1855 Harbor Blvd. • Culver C"y: Ra lntree Plau. 1078• Jeffereon Blvd, • llullMon: 011 No.
Harbor Blvd. • Qtendora-Awu: College Center, 1173 East Alosta Ave. • &.°"I 11,MeN ~5 wt Ocean Blvd. • Lont leeoti Int: Bucby Plaza. 67157 Pacific Cout ,..lghwiay • "*1h
Hollywood: Valley Pina. 855\ L'aurel Canvd'n Blvd. • San Pedn>: 29000 So. West tn Ave
• lentt Ane..Orenoe: 2700 No Mein Street • IMmwln Otks: 141501 Ventura Blvd.• ltanton-
Gatdeft Orov« 12000 Be•~h BNd. • lbf'tence: 24020 Hawthorne Blvd. at Pacific C<>aet Hfgh•
wey • 'ftn Nuys: 14645 Victory Blvd
FldelltY FedtfJI Savlngt and loan AMoc1etlon
• •
wa1 unique. He has no lock on
legal 1illlness. Earlier thla year
Ralston Purina. the big pet food
makeri;, sued Quaker Oats after
Quaker lntroduced a new dog
food. Tender Chunks. Ralston's
lawyers argued that Quaker
should not be allowed to uae thls
name because Ralston bas a cat
food called Tender Vittles.
Campbell, char1ln1 that
Campbell w .. ualo1 ille11l tac·
tics to dominate the soup bull·
ness. Just about everybody re·
allie1 I.hat CampboU trounces Helna in the soup business.
However, the whlppinl ls so
overwhelming that th~ Hein1
lawyers must think they have a
caaae for acUoo. ,
Money
Tree
BudwelJtr, Schiltz LiJht and
Heileman Premium Light,
amona other brands ualng the
word, "Ucnt"
RECOGNIZJNG A ridlculoU3
suil·Wh n they see one, Quaker's
But the Campbell lawyers
know how to play this game loo.
They have now ret-0rled with a
1ult of thelr own n•aln1t Hebli.
You know Helni ketchup bottles
you usually aee In . restaurants?
Well. CJmpbell char1ea that
Heinz forces restaurant
operators to buy other product.I
If they want to have the ketchup.
In other words: no baked beans
orders. no ketchup.
Moving up to the Supreme
Court is another momentous
case. Miller Brewing, a Philip
Morris subsidiary, has scored
heavily in the beer market with
Its low-calorie brew. Lite. It has
been copied. or course. We now
have Natural Lia ht from
WELL, \'OU GUESSED it,
Miller b13 1one to court claim·
ln1 that lt 'a the only one with the
rlaht to u&e the name "liibl" on
a beer, even thouah It spells It
"Ille." A U.S. appeals court In
Chicago, hearing the case
against Heileman, uid that was
nonaenu. anyone can use lhJs
word . Miller has asked the
Supreme court to review this-de·
clslon.
Now you tan understand why
some of our major corporations
have legal fees in excess of $1
million a year.
HO,E DIMAGGIO
Chrysler Recalls
1.3 Million Cars
lawyers charged into court
pointing out lhat nowhere Is It
written that Ralston Purina
owns the word "tender.·· And as
long as they were drawing up a
legal brief, Quaker's lawyers in·
eluded some cpunter-charges
Ralston, they s aid, was engaged
in a n illegal cons piracy lo
monop()lize the pet food market.
DETROIT CAP> -Chrysler Corp. is recalling 1.3 million cars lo
check possible engine-stalling problems in the biggest recall In !ta his·
lory.
Chrysler officials said they had received Z7 reports of accidents as-
sociated wtlh the stalling problem on 1975. 1976 and 1977 Dodge Darts,
Plymouth Valiants. Dodge
Aspens and Plymouth Volares.
Ther.e were injuries ln seven ac·
cidents.
The cars have 225-cubic·inch,
six·cyllnder engines or 318-cublc·
inch V-8englnes.
lated lo safety.
However. the National
Highway Trarfic Safety Ad·
ministration asked Chrysler
after the newspaper's story to re·
call the cars "in the interest of
safety."
Having had their fun. t.he
lawyers then agreed to call it a
day. Both actions were dropped.
A similar cat -and-dog fight
has broken out between
Campbell Soup and JI. J . Heinz.
two companies that also make
pet foods, although their legal
squabbles are over other items.
THE DETROIT FREE Press
reported earUer this month that
Chrysler discovered tbe problem
io 1976 and told dealers, but did
not tell car owners. Chrysler con·
tended the staUing was an in·
dustrywide problem and not re·
Chrysler officials said Tuesday
there were "a number of people
who called after the news
stories" and the company had
been "somewhat surprlsed by
the breadth of the problem." A YEAR AGO Heinz sued
Over 1~be Counter
MASO U1ffng1
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Big Spenders
Close Out Year
By JOHN CUNNU'F
·~---Melnl
Americans reAlly went on a spend.inc btnce la tho linal
weeks ol the year, and there are lndlcaUons that a a_ood
percentaee or the purchases didn't end up under the
Christmu tree. ·
They were con.sumed instead, literally swallowed, 1n •
tho I Mm of food and drlnk. Or so it would seem .
FINAL FIGt1R£S WON'T BE available for a couple or
mo~ weeks, but we do know this: Food store sales ln Nov-
ember rose 2.9 percent over thole of October, sun es Una AA amazing increase in lntakc.
True, some of these purc_bues rnltht have made 11.&.
but astolber set of stallalic1 1uqests otherw1'e. November
sales at eating and drin.klof places le.t.,..t 2.l pereent alter
having been weak in October.
E conomis ts are studying 11uch
statistics to find out wbat they can about
tho behavior of the sometimes uapredk-
1 able consumer. They ha ve already
drawn someco11clusions:
-~public was in more or a buy.
ing mood than was generally foreseen.
The bl.O'lng began unusually early; Oc· to~r retaiJ sales leaped 2. 7 percent over
September. a nd November added
another l.S over October.
-EARLY REP'ORTS OF A l.S percent lncreue in tho 4
dollar value of automotive pun:hases for November are sua-• ~~ :
• 'Therct is n possibility that r~visions will trim the Nov· f
ember auto component of retail sales,•• Citibank comments. •
For one t.b1ng, it questions that unit aaJes would be down but t
dollar sales up so much.
-Shoppers apparently were not reluctant to use credit.
That, at least, was the trend that seemed lo be setting in ear-
ly ln the final quarterorthe year.
CONTRARY TO WUAT SOME people might expect.
consumers assume credit burdens when they feel confident.
not when tbe absence of ready cash leaves them no other
choice. .
Personal incomes were up; people were confident: they
took on credit.
Th.ls burst of comwner activity presents analysts with
the queatioa of bow much loo.ger it might coaUnue. Some
credit critics say the burden of repayments could hamper
sales in 1978..
AN0111Ell SCHOOL OF THOUGHT, however. ob·
serves that consumers are stlll able to repay their borrow-
ings on time. They reel that 1978 sales might indeed be ar.
fected by activity this year, but merely becauae consumers have already purcbased many of the items they need .
Whatever, the indomitable coasumer has again sur.
prised some or those who clalm the tltle or expert, and has
almost made certain a continuation ot the eltpansion into a fourth year.
He might have done it wltb food and drink and a lot or
gifts that the recipient is inclined. to return. but that's Lhe way t.be economy t.um.s.
SWck 'Prices Droop
-ODer Trade Deficit
NEW YORK {AP) -Stock prices aag1ed a bit today
ns the market absorbed the D8WI ot another larp U.S.
trade deficit.
Tbe Dow Jones average ol .30 lDdustrials was down 3.30
pointa to829. 70.
Declines outnumbeted advanees by about a 4-3 maram
amonc New York Stock Bxchang•liltecl bsuet.
The government reported that U.S. Imports exceeded
exports by $2.08 billion in November. That deficit was
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INSIDE : •Movies
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!Michigan r.
ll Drought
To End?
I F . or many reasons, memones
rof football bowl games are more ~like nightmares for University
of Michigan coach Bo Schem-
' becbler: 1 Schembechler's bowl baptism was ln 1970 when the Wolverines
came to the Rose Bowl to play ! USC. Before the game began.
1 Mlc~can was hard hit by in·
'
juries with such stars as Glenn
Doughty out of action. l Then on the day of the game 1t
[was announced that Schem-
bechler had been hospitalized j with a heart attack. The many
t adversities were too much and
Michigan fell, 10·3. 1 Two years later Michigan lost.
'to Stanford, 13-12, on a field goal i by Rod Garcia in the closing
t
seconds of the game.
Oklahoma shut down
Michi11an's offense in the 1976
Orange Bowl lilt, 14-6, and USC ~passed the Wolverines into s ub-
1 ~
WHITE .
' WASH
t --------..-~~
GLE .. N WHITC
I mission in the '77 Ro~e Bowl bat-
tle, 14-6.
Clearly, bowl games have not
been Schembechlcr's cup of tea.
In four bowl appearances un-
der his coaching. Michigan
teams have gone into the post.
season duels averaging 33 points
la game, yet no Michigan team J has scored more than 13 in a J bowl since Schcmbechler
l became head coach.
f There is some speculation.
f however, that 1978 will bring a
close to Schembechlcr's bowl
• anxieties. l His Wolverines get to play a
\team <Washington) thal has lost
four times.
Further, Michigan will be
, playin~ before the eyes of his I worship Gerald R. Ford. He may
be best remembered as a former
Miehigancenter.
1 He was also President of the
United States.
He wiU offer-the blessing and
1 benediction to Michigan Friday
1 noon at the annual kickoff
i luncheon. Ford gets a free lunch
and five m inutes to speak
because he is the grand marshal
t of the upcoming Rose Parade.
Whoopie!
At any rate. his presence
figures to provide much inspira-
tion to Michigan players, who
are trying hard not to follow in
the footsteps of their immediate
Wolverines predecessors.
Better they would like to
perform like the Mi chigan Rose
Bowl teams that pounded Stan-
ford (49-0), USC C49-0) and
Oregon State (34·7).
With Washington playing in
the game and Ford presiding. ·
~Schembechler may al Jong last
i get the bowl monkey off his l back.
~ Jabhar-Scott I Reunion Keys
I Easy Victory ..
OAKLAND (AP) -· Los
Angeles center Kareem AbduJ-
J a bbar had a reunion with
• childhood friend Charlie SC'otl to
the chagrin of the Golden State
1 Warriors.
"It's the first time we've
played together since the streets
'of Harlem," said Abdul-Jabbar f after the Lakers captured a
l 123-82 National Basketball As-
sociation victory Tuesday night.
Scott, who came to the Lakers
earlier in the day from Boston in
• a trade for Don Chaney and 1 Kermit Washington, joined lhe team just three hours before lhe
·tip off.
.. I'll do what.ever is necessary
to win," said Scott, who scored
12 points, grabbed three re-
t boUnds and led the team with _ nine assists even though he
didn't have much Ume to discuss
Laker strategy with coach Jerry
West • . . HHe'• a fine basketball
pla1er, .. aaicl West.
The Scott trade 1¥U the la\elt
ln a leriel ol dealln•• that have
left tbe Liken with Only three ol
the 12 pla)'era wbo 1ave the
Lakera the belt winninf percen·
t..1• in the lea&u• lut 1ea1M. Asked about rebuildlnl the
team durinl the reaular 1eNOO, West laid ••we have one lhini in
mind -we want to make the
plQcilr&."
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' ••
Wednesday. ~mber 28. 1977 DAILY PILOT BJ
Bowl Games Old Bat for Huskies' James
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM
OI .._CHAI<[ fl ... IC.H
True, the University of
Washington's Don James has
never coached a Rose Bowl
game before, but some
aspects of the Jan. 2 game
won't be entirely new to the
Huskies mentor.
For one, he has fell bowl-
game jitters before, having
coached teams in the Liberty
Bowl, Gator Bowl, 'I'angfl"ioe
Rowl and All -ArherJcan '4"
Bowl.
And two, he~ somewhat ,. .
famlliar with his opponent,
even though Washington
hasn't played Michigan since
1970, five years before James
took the helm.
Jam es direc~ the defense
at Michigan in 1966 and 1967 durin~ his rise in lhe college
coaching ranlts.
"Almost all the people I
knew at Michigan are gone now.'~ James s~s. "and the ,
t etmibology\•M&.-·c hanged "
coml)let:ely, tsut their" basic
•PhilosopliJLiS th, *JUne."'
. Jktnes paus~o consider ...
Favored Sunday
Th t.• Hcno Turf Club has
establis hed defl'nding Super
Bowl champion Oakland as a
31 ~ point fa vont<' over Denver
uncl Dallas an l t-po1nt pick over
Minnesota 1n the National Foot-
ball League's conference cham
pionship games Sunday.
The Oakland-Denver game.
set ror Denver. will begin at 1 l
a .m. <Channel 4 ) with the Dallas
Cowboys hosting Minnesota at
2:30 (Channel 2>.
Broum!I Pick Coach
CLEVELAND Sam
Rutigliano. receiver coach of the
New Orleans Saints, was select-
ed coach of the Cleveland
Browns or the National Football
League Tut'!-.day.
Rutigliano. 45, succeeds For-
rest Gres:g. who resigned under
i>rcssurc on Dec. 13. The Browns
lost six of their last seven
games. and finished the s eason
wilh a 6-8 record.
Gendoitis Wi11s
MELBOURNE. Australia
Vilas Gerulait1s beat Dick
Borhnsledt. 6-4, 6-4. 6·4 today.
advancing to the quarterfinals of
the Australian Open.
Ken Rosewall, 43, battled for
three hours. 50 minutes before
beating Allan Stone, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4,
4-6, 9.7,,
Bill Scanlon wus no match for
big serving John Alexander. The
21-year-old Scanlon lost 7-6, 6-7,
6·1. 6·2.
Ray· Ruff els overcame Tim
Gulltkson 6-3, 3·6, 6-4, 6-3, in
third round play.
Bruin to Return
LOS ANGELES -UCLA
guard Raymond Townsend. who
su ffe red a c r acked upper
.iawbone it1'lil....scufflc during the Bruins' gam~gainst San Jose
State last week, may be a ble to
pl ay when his team faces
Arizona Thursday night, coach
Gary eunningham-nid "Tues--
day.
''The doctors say there's a
slight chance he'll be able to
play agamst Arizona," said Cun-
ningham. "I 'll just do what the
doctors tell me. He may only be
able to play five or 10 minutes, l
don't know ··
Kno~ Selected
NEW YORK Ted
Marchibroda and Chuck Knox
were selected Tuesday as the
coaches for the eighth annual
AFC·NFC Pro Bowl at Tampa
Stadium Monday night, Jan. 23.
Marchibroda, whose
Baltimore Coils were eliminated
from the playo ffs by th e
Oakland Raiders Saturday, will
handle the American Conference
squad while Knox. whose Los
Angeles Rams were upset by
Minnesota Monday, will coach
the National Conference.
8135 I or Tf~ket
AUSTIN, Texas -Scalpers'
prices for tickets lo the Jan. 2
Cotton Bowl game between Tex·
as and Notre Dame range from1
S40 for an end zone seal to 5135
for 10-lo-20-yard line seats. a
newspaper survey shows.
The Austin Citizen did not
quote prices for seats closer to
midfield. but sflats from the
20-yard-line to the 50-yard-line
presumably would be much
higher.
Cager Killed
ORTHEZ. France Dave
Russel, 24, of Hagerstown, Md ..
who had come to Europe to play
basketball, was killed early lo·
day when the car he was driving
left the road on a curve and
plowed into a ditch.
Russel. who played basketball
at Shepherds College in
S hepherdstown, W.Va., was
killed instantly. A French girl in
the car was seriously hurt.
" YasMhenko Tabbed
MOSCOW -Young high jump
r ecord -setter Vladimir Yashclnmko has ""been seteeted
Soviet Athlete of the Year in a
' poll of sportswriters in the US-
SR, Tass said Wednesday.
·-t .•
his road to the Rose Bowl
during practice at Orange
Coast College, where the
Huskies have set up camp.
"Ce_rtainly, we're glad lo
be here. It's got to be one or
the biggest thrills ot m y
life," James says. "But a Jot
of people are say ing
Michigan is going to run an
over us, and we're not pre-
pared to let that happen."
Alt.hough the Huskies are
definite underdogs, they do
have momentum, if such a
thing exists In football.
Once the not-so-proud
own e r or a 4·4 record ,
Washington closed tbe reg·
ular season· with convincing
victories over California
< B erk e 1 e y ) • ',USC and
W asbington State. The scores
were S0.38, 28-10 and 35-15.
• Thal prompted Michigan
coach Bo Sch.e01becbler to
comment, "Right n.ow,
Washington is playing foot-
ball as well as any team in the country.··
To stop an explosive team
like Michigan, James'
Hu skies will need·•
Herculean defensive effort,
and the head coach ~s creden-
tials indicate he's capable of
inspiring it.
During a seven-year stint
as defensive coordinator for
Florida State University,
James created a reputation
for giving away points like a
s tarving man gives away
food ... almosl never.
In 30 of 40 games, James·
l ea ms surrendered one
touchdown or less, recorded
J3 shutouts and consistently
ranked among the nation's
lop 20 teams defensively.
Thal record enabled him to
move on to Michigan and
later Colorado as a defensive
coordinator. and he landed
his first head coachlng spot
at Kent State in 1971.
All James did at Kent Stale
was tum a losing program
into a winner. His first team
was 3-8, but by 1973 he was able to produce the best rec·
ord in Kent State his tory,
9-2. That team broke 36 in-
d1 vidual. club a nd season
records.
At Washington. it appears
James is on the road to
another success story.
Jn a conference dominated
by USC and UCLA. most of
lb~ naUon was scucely
aware that there was a
University or Waahington
football team.
In his first two tu~asons
James was 1Ml, bi.at caretul
observers noted that six of
those 11 defeats came at the
hands of teams that even·
tually earned bowl blds.
In his first year at
Washington. the Huskies !Were the onl y team tQ beat
loth Rose Bowl champion
UCLA and Liberty Bowl
champ use.
And thia Rose Bowl berth,
the first for Washington In 14
years, will he lp placate
athletic director Mike Lude,
who selected James because
he demands excellence.
''We must be more then
just participatory in foot-
ball,'' Lude says. "We must
excel, and that means being
competitive ror conference
championships and it means
consistent rankings in the top
20."
ll 's a tall bill lo fill in the
Pac-8, but. James appears to '
have Washington well on its
way .
WASHINGTON COACH DON JAMES YELLS INSTRUCTIONS.
Michigan More Relaxed
Wolverines Accustomed to SWTo~ngs
I
PASADENA (AP ) --
Michigan's Wolverines aim to
end their football bowl game
drought with concentration in -
terspersed with relaxation.
All-American center Wall
Downing commented, "A lot of
_guys aren't so interested in see-
ing s ights ilUs time. We"ve been
·here before and we're used to
the surroundings. The club is
much more relaxed than a year
ago.".
Downing said coach Bo
Schembechler also was more re-
laxed and "pleased with what's
happening on the-practice field.
J know the offensiv~ players are
excited and looking forward to
the game."
Schembechler a year ago
worked his club harder and then
lost to Southern California 14·6,
his fourth loss without a victory
in a bowl game.
Defensive captain Dwight
Hicks, a senlOt" and three.year
letterman, said, "I like this
practice better because it's a lit-
tle more relaxed. Bb feels that
it's the second Ume here. and be
doesn't have to be as hard on "5·
We're relaxed but we're PJote
confident than a year ago.
"I was ready to play a year
ago when we got out here. 1'16
ready now. We've got to keep
the rt1ht menial attitude. .
-"The defeat last ~ear butt me
and everyone on the team. I
thoucbt we made a very Sood ef-
fort and it'• not true \hat .-e
couidn 't deaJ with Pacific~ and
\,heir style ot play like some jn
them~Hid,
"We're not looking for re-
venge as such, we're coming out
determined and confident we
will win."
Right then. Downing inter·
rupted to say, "Same as last
year, but more confident.··
Sclle.mbechlei:, whQ attended
the Tuesday news conference
with Hicks. Downing and
Quarterback Rick Leach. said,
"The Rose Bowl means every-
thing to the Big Ten players
and teams. GeUlng out here is a
Jot of fun but not winning takes
somethlng away from it."
Although Schembechler a
week ago appeared most
serious, he was relaxed and jok-
ing during the news conference.
He did say the games against
Ohio Stale in the Big Ten were
the ulUmate for his club.
"In all bonelllY, since the na·
tional championship Is not at
slake here, the OSU game was 1
more important.
''But you're looking at a coach j
and team that hasn't won out 1
here. I would particularly like a ~
victory £or this team because.of l
the way it responded during the .,
season to get us here."
Mi chigan finished its season 1
wffh a 1~-lt vtct.ory over Ohip
State to earn the right lo return t
to the Rose Bowl.
Although his squad is fairly
well set, except at tailback, the
offense has been beset by in-
juries much of this season.
Schembechler said two things
came or that. First, quarterback
Leach had to throw more than in
pas t seasons and second, "de-
fense is the strongest point on
our team. There haven't been
many injuries there. The de-
fense always has been pretty
consist~nt this year and that's
helped us."
Michigan Plates, but No Spies
Murmurs Uiat spies from the University of Michigan were.pres·
ent circulated briefly at Orange Coast College recepllY as the
University of Washington practiced for its date in the Rose Bowl.
A at.at.loo wagon bearlnc Michigan license plales and loaded
. wit!\ football gear was parked on the rim or the field .
The car was so obVJbu. that Washington athletic director Mike
Lude 1aid sarcastically. ''That's the ~realest bit of cloak and dai· ger work l'Ye ever seen. .Maybe it's Bo's car," referring to
Mlchi1an coach lk> Sc.hembechler.
But It tumeiO out the car was a Joaner from a local dealer and
was being used by Waahingtoo eqwpment man Sam Aquino. The
de•ler apparenQy thought It would be amusing to loan a car with
Michigan plates to the W asbington team.
Wbeo Lode lelfned Ute truth, he laughed and said, "Well.
aomeone'a•otn1to1etamemoaboutlhat.'' . '
~ .
• T~gh announced by both Knox and the
Bams Jn October, the slfnint has been held up by
~hat both .,a.rtles say is a disagreement over the
euct......,e.
TIM contract would replace a ftve-year con. l
tract Kiio~ signed arter the 1975 season.
The Rams, who won the NFC's Weatem
Dlvl11• tlUe for the filth Ume ln as many tries J since Knox became the team's coach prior to the
19'73 ·~ were eliminated from Super Bowl coat~tlln bJ tlirulesota Monday 1'· 7.
Tbe ,...de to tbe Vlldnp at t.be muddy Los
An1elts CoUleum kept the Ram1• r~rd perfecit
"under Knox -ftve years in the plQOtr1, but Dd ap-
pearDell~Super Bowl. It after tttllnal run went off that
WOril ...... apte•d both in print and OG the air &U\1'Da will be elsewhere ill U7t.
)
/
}
l
ft DAil. Y PflOT
McKay Had
God Image
-Hertel
HOUSTON (AP >-The deified
aura of the bead coaching posi·
lion at Southern Cal departed
with John McKay, USC starting
quarterback Rob Hertel feels.
"I personally talked lo coach
McKay three limes In two years
. at USC," said Hertel, scheduled
lo lead the Trojans against Tex-
as A&M Saturday night In the
19th annual Bluebonnet Bowl in
the Astrodome.
The Troj&ns ar rived Tuesday
nleht and went directly to the
Astrodome for a workout to
m ake up for practice time lost in
Los Angeles because of heavy
rains.
"He was more like a god im-
age,·· Hertel said of his former
coach. now head coach or lhe
National Football League Tam·
pa Bay Buccaneers. ··we had alt
our team meetings with our as.
shtant coac h es . But a t
workouts, we always knew he
CMcKay) was above ~omewhere
watching."
John Robinson stepped in
after McKay went to the pro
ranks and last year guided the
Trojans to an 11-1 record and a
\'lctory over Michigan In the
Rose Bowl.
This season Robi n~on went
with Hertel as his quarterback
and a lthough the Trojans s lipped
to a 7-4 record. they came back
with a thrilling last.second vic-
tory over UCLA to earn the
Bluebonnet Bowl berth
"He d idn't really coach."
Hertel said or McKay. "Ile del·
egated authority to his assis-
t ants and he stood back and
watched. Coach Robinson gets
right in the middle of every·
thing."
Hertel, who established three
school records this season, also
has definite feelings about the
Trojans team this season.
"When we are really playing
our game. I feel we are the best
team In the nation." Hertel said.
··w e've bee n hurl by in -
consistency."
In the Trojans· regular season
finale against arch-rival UCLA.
He rtel directed a desperation
drive in the final seconds that
ended with Frank Jordan kick-
ing a 38-yard field goal with two
seconds to play for a 29-27 vie·
tory.
l( UCLA had won. the Trojans
would not have received the
BlucboMel Bowl bid.
"We looked al that as our
Rose Bowl game and that's the
way we prepared for it." Hertel
said.
As for the upcoming duel wilt:
the Aggies Saturday. Hertel
said. "It's going to be a heck of
a game. I know that. Obviously,
we'd rather be playing in the
Rose Rowl again but we're look-
ing forward to com ing to
Houston very much " use. with a 16·6 post-season
record. boasts the winningest
howl record in the country. The
Trojans are 15-6 In Rose Bowl
gam es and two years ago beat
the Aggies 20·0 In the Liberty
Bowl.
Boes, SCC
Eke Out Wins
Orange Coast College went into
overtime to defeat Cuesta <San
Luis Obis po >. 81 ·78. while
Southern California College or
Costa Mesa needed a last-second
basket to edge Biola College,
80·78, In non-conference basket-
ball Tuesday night.
Pete Neumann scored eight of
his 21 points in overtime lo lead
Orange Coast to an opening
round victory in the Palomar
tournament in San Marcos.
Neumann wound up hilling eight
or 12 shots Crom the field for the
Pirates, who face Paloma r
toni8hl <8: 15) in second round ac·
lion.
Paul Anderson 's baseline
jumper rrom 20 reet out and Just
two seconds left on the clock lifted
host Southern California to
Its sixth win in eight outings. An·
derson led all scorers with 26
points.
Or•-CNI' ('11 ........
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llol•lileed • 0 • •
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M<NHI 1 J • '
Tolett JO 10 t4 •
. I J
•
0.11, ~tee ,..,..., lly •lclleN 1(-f«
SAN CLEMENTE'S JOHN CARSON REBOUNDS IN FRONT OF TEAMMATE MARK KLEIN.
San Clemente Falls, 88·59
27 Turnovers Frustrate Triwns
By ROG ER CARLSON cr-o .. ,, ~ ... 'i." San Clemente High,s Tritons
found out the hard way Tuesday
night that 18 more turnovers than
an opponent means nothing but
trouble.
The Tritons were guilty of 27
miscues during their first round
collision with Anaheim's Loara
High in the Katella Klass1c
basketball tournament and as a
result they are in consolation ac-
t ion today C5:30) at Katella
<Anaheim) High against Beverly
Hills. a 52-47 loser to Long Beach
Wilson.
Loara j u mped o n San
Clemente, 66·59, with the help or
17 San Clemente turnovers in the
first half-as opposed to two
Loara mistakes.
Coach Rich Skelton's San
Clemente quintet shot a sl~zling
60 percent Crom the f-te1d in the
decisive first hair <12 of 20 ). yet
trailed 36-27 due to the rash or
turnovers. Jf Loara was not steal-
ing the ball, San Clemente •
players were throwing it away,
especially In frustrating at-
tempts to penetrate the interior.
It just wasn't San Cle mente's
night. The Trltons were socked
with a technical foul for having a
player in the game with the
Rustlers Play
Golden West College opens
play In the Fullerton basketball
tournament tonight at 8:30,
tangling with the host Hornets.
number on h1s jersey not cor·
responding to the scorebook and
Loar a converted ror a free throw.
And 6-4 Mark Klein, who
scored 17 points for the night for
San Clemente, lost a bucket in
the first period wh e n the
scorekeeper had Klein with only
three bas kets.
Klein scored San Clemente's
rirst two buckets. added a four·
footer with 3:57 spent and hit
from eight feet out with 1 :43 left
in the first period to pull San
Clemente to within 19-14.
But when the second period
started Loara had a 23-14 bulge .
San Clemente could hardly argue
the point, it didn 'l even have a
scorekeeper. The Tritons cut the
Loara advantage lo 51·48 with
5: 03 left, but the Saxons pulled
away with three quick buckets
and the closest San Clemente
could get after that was 68·53 with
2:25 left on Klein's three-point
play.
* * * 1.9¥• "" .. ft ....
locllM I D 1 7
F•tl• 7 0 1 U
IC•MHy 0 1 0 1
Mac,arl...O 1 3 J 1
!Mrtln J 1 1 11
Mcc ... non 1 , • "
Plulnter t • ' I
'Tolels 16 u 11 "
tstl s.n c1e-.
" ft ..... 0'10ft s , ] ,,
Geclno• • o 1 •
ICl•I" • 1 1 u 8 .MwltlQ<ln 1 O 0 •
S19'fttll' l 1 l U
W-I J 4 S
U1313ff
ke,.i.,o..anen
L.oera
Sen Clemente
23 1l 10 ~-..
10 13 11 21~
Diablos Win;
Artists Lose
P e te DeCuas and ·Mike
Roberts keyed a third quarter
rally that propelled Mission Vie·
jo past La Quinta <Gard en
Grove), 69-59, in the Brea basket·
ball tournament Tuesday nl&ht.
The Diablos played Troy of
Fullerton in an afternoon second
round dash today.
DeCuas, who wound up with
21 points, and Roberts each
scored seven points in a 22-point ttilrd quarter that helped Minton
Viejo take an elcht·polnt lead
after traillng by one at .halftime.
Rick Kreuzer conti'lbuted 15
points and lOrebounds.
In a cont0latlon bracket same.
Lagun1 Beach went HOreleu in
the overthne ptriod to drop a
59·5'3 decisl°" to AJ'abelm. The loH eUminated the Artt.ta. ............ "'. .. .,,. . "~·-. -0 111 Hl<tlela 0 0 I 0 ~1-.i I 0 I It Ql .. rw ... I I t t
""""' ' t •• ........ • • 1.0 ,. .... _ I I J J ,..... u •• .,
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~ •I IQ %t1111 t I 0 4 ,...,. .. , .. ..............
i'NM+flt -.. ' ,. ,, .......
............ t2 u 11 " ...., ... ., .......
"""~ II II ti .......
BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY
Bags State C'rotc11
Problems Solved
By Rustlers Boss
By CJlAIG SHEFF
Of .. o.lty l'llel $t1H
Golden West College compiled
a 17·3·2 record Jn soccer this
past soason and climaxed It by
capturing the state ch a m -
pionsh.lp.
But most or the season was a
coaching nightmare tor the
Rustlers' Gregory Ghica-one
he hopes be won't have to live
through again.
• "We had so many problems, 1
was going bananas.•· says Ghlca.
a Hun garian . "I was
reading books on human behavior
and psychology trying to get this
team together. At the end of the
season I considered myself totally
ment all y exhausted."
T he first problem, Ghica says,
came early in the season.
"We had five players from
Newport Harbor and four from
Edison <Huntington Beach > and
it was a problem getting them to
work together. It wasn't Lhat the
Newport kids didn't like the
Edison kids and vice versa ... it
was just the opposite. Our
Newport kids couldn't get along
with the Newport kids and the
Edison players didn 'l like each
other. either.
··w e had days and days or
man.to-man discussions and il
took us a month to finally get
together," says Ghica.
"And most or these kids were
very childish ... they were just
socially immature.
"Bul the more we won, the
more they came together. And
the strange thing about all these
problems was that I only had
about five or six absences dur-
ing all our practices. And I
never had such a ha rd-working
g r oup in all my yea rs or
coaching. They always gave 100
percent on the field. Off the field
they were a bunch of animals,"
says Ghica.
Ghica also had a goalie prob·
lem --and it came at a critical
time.
"My No. 1 goalie CJ ohn Ben·
bow > left half way through the
season for France lo play with
the national junior team. l had
to kick our No. 2 goalie orr the
team because he arrived 15
minutes late for our rirs t
GREGORY GHICA
OnJ"CSeene
Southe rn Callrornlo playoff
gam e with Southwestern," 'says
Ghlca.
But the Rustlers coach still
had ono more aco up hls slet>ve.
··1 asked Kelly Dunn, one or
our fullbacks, lf he would train
at foal-keeper. He agreed to lt
an did an outstanding job In the
stale tournament. I think he's
going to be a great pro prospeet
as a goalie." says Ghlca.
Golden West defeate d El
Camino In the stale title game,
the tbird time the RusUers had
toppled the Warriors.
"El Camino was ranked No. 1
for most or the season and we
beat them three times, so we
had to be the best," says Ghica.
"I look back now on the season
and I Jaugh about it. How we
could have so many problems,
yet win so many honors was
quite an accomplishment."
If he had to do it agaln, what
would he do dltferently?
"I really don 'l know. I do
know that in soccer coachlnc is
about 25 percent and the rest is
psychological. Knowing your
people is Important. but that
takes limo and we don't have
that much time.
"I don't know what I would do
to change it for the better. But I
hope I don't have to live through
all the problems we had. If I bad
to do It again, I thlnk I would
check Into a mental insUluUon."
says Ghica.
Estancia, MD
Rolling High
In Las Vegas
LAS VEGAS -Mater Dei
<Snnta Ana> and Estancia <Cost.a
Mesa> won their opening round
games of the Las Vegas Rancho
basketball tournament with ease
Tuesday.
Ma tcr Dei. paced by John
Garcia's 20 points, whipped Vo·
Tech (Las Vegas), 89·55, to ad-
vance to the second round of ac-
llon tonight <6:30) against the
No. 1 ranked prep S(luad in
Nevada, Chaparra l.
Est ancia, led by Dou1 Jar-
dlne's 18 points and eight re-
bounds, drilled Clark of Las •
Vegas. 68-56, lo earn a shot at
host Rancho in an early after·
noon clash.
J ohn Carrtdo handed out eight
assists for Estancia which upped
its season record to 4·3. ••'"< .. , .. , -.o.1"" ,, ft.... .. fl.
Jardine I 2 2 ti COOi< o J 3
Cooper 0 7 I 2 Allen t 0 •
Price ' ' l 11 Sc'"'"' 7 1 S M..SdOO S I 1 11 .-C.•rtl• 1 • 10
Carrloo , 1 3 l SIMI• s ' ''
MlllOl\ey 0 I 1 7 MH<Mlfl 1 O 7
Lerlmer 0 1 O 1 M<Cr•• s o 10
C1mp J 4 • tO PullOcly 1 1 16
Krollf!l•ldt 1 0 0 > S.vlldars s O 10
I(" .omU>oS 1 1 0 J NeltlOft 1 1 l 811uMOOf'1 1 0 1 • .., Tol1ls 7S 1t 11 M Toll!S lS "69
El l•n<I•
Clal'll ILi/i
$<Me .. ., 0.r1~ 1t " 23...a
1 u n n~
M1lerOel S<-ltyCNa~ 181 2S U-49
11ou1llon1t Tedi I U 14 lt~S
Coaching Changes
Hit South Coast
Checking the college scene:
The South Coast Conference
wlll have a definite new look
next football season with threi?
new coaches on the scene.
The search for coaches at Cer-
ritos and Santa Ana colleges will
end near Feb. 1, while Gross·
mont already has a new coach ln
Jack Miyamoto.
Miyamoto, Grossmont's de·
fensi ve co-ordinator , replaces
-CRAIG
SHEFF rr----~ ~
Dave Jo~an, the former Corona
del Mar High assistant.
Jordan was demoted to an as·
sist.ant poeltlon by Grossmont
president Erv Metzger, because
"we're not in the business of
producina professional football
players.'' -
Jordan1 a highly.rated coach,
la appeabng the decision.
Mecnwhile. Johnson <Cer·
ritoa> waa demoted to the
claaaroom and Howard Black
(Santa Ana> reslped. Cerrltot
board presktent Lou Banas •aY•
a new head coach won't be
selected untU late January. "We'n aolns to take a look at the overall adlletlc pro1r1m, Jmt
to ... it ~ .. nmn1nl
tmootbly, •• 1111 Banu.
LA Barber Coll•r• already
•a•, a ••• loo&bat c .. ea. la
G4'orge Swade while East LA
coach Al Padllla has stepped
down.
Swade, an assistant at Harbor
for ·ntne years. replaces Blll
Young, who quit after four
seasons.
SKIPPlN' AROUND-Jim An·
drus. who played two years at
Golden West, finished 22nd in
the nation In total offense tor
NCAA Division I rootball teams.
Andrus. Wic hita State's
quarterback, gained 1,684 yards
passing and another 192 rushing
this past season ... Another
former GWC gridder, Tony Mad·
docks, led lhe PCAA In pass re·
cciving with 35. Maddocks plays
for Cnl State <Long Beach ). .. if
Orange Coast College wins one
mor e bas ketball game, the
Pirates C9·3> will be off lo their
best start s ince the 1967-68
season.
A a LA Harbor release lists
Orange Coast as the No. 1 JC
baseball leam in the nation. .
OCC coach Mike Mayae 1s ex·
peeled to have a powerhQUSe,
but it 's much too e arly to be
ca lltng the Pirates No .
t . . .JoAnae Greene, 24, baa
been selected as Saddleback
College's women's awlmmtng
and dlvlng coach ... Dne
Gleasoa, an asslatant football
coach, haa been tabbed to dlreict.
OCC ·a women '1 basketball
team.
Bob Newmaa, UC lrvltM'I
crew coach, report.a bla oanlDeD
)'lave looked veey lm~ve
thus far. "We've been rowtna
very well and we have a aoocl
ITOUp of fTHbmtn, .... ,.
N~wman.
.. "'
'
....... ~. ·--· . -----~--·~
MISCELLANY
Los.AI
Ei1tries
lit
119
'" 11• Jtlesa Verde Winners
•
Stopped
ELSINO R E-
Capistrano Valley High
e njoyed a laugher while
Irvine Htgb suffered a
h ea rlbreaker in
Tuesday's opening round
action of the Elsinore bas~etball tournament.. t--PUBU ___ C_N_OTJ_C_E __
Both had early after· noon games today. 1---,.-,CT-tTI_au_s_e_u_11_M_us __ _
Behind Bob Charles' 28 MAMHTA1'SMllNT
points, Capi s trano ... ;.":::"IOwllll.--eredollleWll·
Valley cruised to 8D 83-48 BEACH CITIES Sl!ltVICI! m ..
victory over Rim of the ~~~st•,..."" HW111nac. eaao..
World, the streaking Ralllft M. LAnt....-, w-. 01a.
! Cougars' ;Si>cth in the last Pa1i;::~~=::::c:..t~'* seven outings. Palm•.H~~CA"'47
Irvine, despite a 27. n11 IMl'llMu 11 <OMli<lM ltf •
point. 17·rebound per· veMr•1 =:~111em1w 119
111
11• 11l 1n
119
r o r m a o c e by D a n n.11 at.i-i ... •1.-wtttt E loise Greshner llefl> won the Mesa Monteverde, lost to San ~~.c1e111e10rMQ1tc-tyono.c.
Verde Country Club women's president's Jacinto,~. when the Pvt11hlled0r-..c.oaaoa1tr"P~:
•ouant aAC:a -., v.,.ds. *
"""oldl. ~. f'\lna MlOQ. cup championship recenlly. Runnerup in Vaqueros failed to score o.c.H.21.2',1m,.1an.c,lf7t s1u.11 lbe match play compe tition was Cele in overtime.
Brown. Andy Oddom had Tlftr Nllll-.S !Ha<tl 119
TllM ~ ca.i. IMllic:helll 119 ...., ~ l~lly) 11•
SM Mmitt IUptwm) 11• ---------------------~iven Irvine its only lead ~ 9adt ,....,, ''' Tlnor ....... IM\l ... l '" Two Area Girls
Share Plaudits
SIXTH llACI! -4<IO y.,"1. l yur
okb a. uP. CIM<nl119, Pur .. ~. Claiming prlu lAOQO.
TMI Roan lllltonl H•'• A Tri• la.nltal
D\1119'1 Asltnlll fTrMsure> c;.. MM! Go(~)
Hot $llOt C..-S. IK11lgbU
La<rema OeCIM*er IHarll o.. casi. IMllr> 119
119
UVl!MT'N llACa -'10 ytnls. 3
Yffr olds & IHI. Cl•lmlng. Purs.
$l2tQ. Cl.-...0 prlca '1)00.
... ttl .. 1LM18ani<sl Ge Oh Tory IGrece I ,.,,. 1.Nvlri IMllChelll
014 v ........ ICler'l~I
Rocle!" SH ICre~rl Oetibi. 0oo CMyle\ I
Un C,..rge fUPl\eml
Ztp•n Go ftwrtl
Lllll•GoFleet IROUQlll
, .. nz
lit
11? ...
"' ...
111
119
l!IGMTM llACE-'40 ,drd\ l vur
olds & up. All-anc;• Pur~ ")Of)·
Ofle Fl"" Day ICMdot•I I 17
Helwrtxan 18""~)) 110
Tu Ott (Lipham) 119
Oii Twl\I !H<>rO t 19
""""'• Dea fTrNsur•I 119 81alr'n HI (MllCMltl 11'1
Hwle Hop l~rl UO
NINTH llAC11 -"° \l•rd9. 3 vur olds. Fllll~ c.&almtng, PurM iuoo.
Clalmlng price UOOO.
OUHft Tu IMllCMll) s-t Aettwt fH.1r0
Lark o.<.11 fOarbw I 5-tltAS~ fKnl9hl)
Fair Roan lAd\I IWMsonl
Mag TllrM lc.clou) TeU llow (My!M)
Run Kiity (Ad.olr)
M IClw•yMluy tLlpl\dml
119 11'1
119
119'
119
119
119
171
11'1
Che ryl Johnston of
Corona del Mar High
and Marie Lundie of
Newport Harbor were
selected co.players of
the year on the CIF 4·A
gi rls volJoyball team
that was dominated by
Oran ge Coast area
players.
Of the nine players
selected for the first
team, eight hail from
the Orange Coast area
with Cd M 's cham ·
p1onsttip Sea Kings plac-
ing four on the first
team <1nd Newport's
run n e ru p Sai l o r :.
garnering three spots
Nancy Tresselt, c:ap-
t a in of the La g una
Beach High Artists and
Anne Cunningham of
Mira Costa High, were
the only other players to
gain a place on the first
team.
Joining J ohnson, a
j unior, on the first team
from CdM were Aileen
Semonsen, a junior, and
sophomores Susie Crone
and Marcie Wurts.
Joining Lundie . a
senior . on the first team
from Newport are senior
Karen O l se n and
so phomore K ori
Pulaski. The Sailors abo
placed sophomores Kris
Pulaski and Kari
Rush on the second unit.
Linda Robertson , a
s e nior from Laguna
Beach, is the only other
a re a pl ayer on the
second squad.
111-CIF •·A"'"' Tum Chtryl John-.tan •Coron. Oi'I M •rl.
M•rt• Lund•~ •N.,wport H•rbor ),
Pl•Y"r\ ot thf' ve•r; Atleen
5,.."'0"\"n Su\•P Cfon•. M•r<I•
Wutl\. 1CdMl, KOf't Pul•31kl l(•ren
01 .... n NfwPQrt .,.•rbor J N.-ncy
rrt<'i\f'll •ldQUM 8fottCrt), Annt• (.un
runQhdtTl M1rd C°"te>
Se<•nd Te•m
Ktt\ Pu•~\•1. ic.,, Ru\h tNttWPO,.t
H11lrl>OO, Lindd RQber'hoo fltlQUlht
8.-ac.n). K•t"y R«t•~ tMira ((t\I•).
Karen G riffith 1S.in Mi1rcoi•;
Therua Weber IAvl•llonl; Cindy <;oue11n IGIH>d~tel. Pe911y Weber
181•1\op Mont11D~ry1.
Basketball
FrHl!rnlltt ~.u .. 11
NEFF TOURNAMENT
FlntR-
D•n• MIU• SI, Nafl ••
OaM t<•ll• Sc"w•o • $'1•111•~ 8
Rl~rer 4, Rrntroe> U H•rt1Qdn l
l\OWt" t'J, !>mt .... 9'; • ~('11 l 4
llAllttme 11 ll
.Los Alamitos Results
l'wT-r a.w.., T•an ,._.,
l'l•ST •ACI! -400 Ylrlh. t ye•r
o1cK. Clalmiftl. F« ,,,,..._,, Pune
'2400.
Blue, Double Dfn, Vt.I'd le ll;tt.
Cll.,9ln FOOi, Fuu P•t, Cr•n Son.
Scraltl'ltd -Fatl\om Go. Rocky
V•llCly, H.oll lo 0-\" M ia• ~II.
Ntldln No41«1 O~Kdl Kloty Voo 0oo
SJ 1uci. -•o.m•1 Dlamottd & uo 1«1 11.10 .,..'71" 0-..,,...,UM.»,
i lrooll lleld I 11.60 S 10 ~ryl(•tt~lne fTre•Jurtl 2.40
Tlma-2'1.0I
Also ran -Red ~" Slllllle, Fut
Jellow•y, Bold l.:oml>, 8ru11n9
Blrdi.. Redl WMp, First S1rol<e, The!
HOOP Dl•mond. Scr•lt hed -H<>wn Shake•, MIU S<w. F•tr..r JoM Dee, Co Alrm•11 Co, •
U Encl.I -t·N•kl•n Hollo~ & J. 1Cl11tvvoooee,,.1c1t11t.to.
SECOND llACI! 400 r•rd•. ?
YHr old\, Clalml119. PurM U600.
P•dr0<>e
tH•rtl 1' 60 1 IO •.<IO .s 10 3.10
3.10
Rabel.,o ICr'l-rl
U ll• Old Times (llel\ltll
Time -10.n "''° ,.,, -My PIUlldtor, Give Em
Time, Go Kiiiy C•I Go, E••••lls
8111.rottt, Lueky 71 ..
HoSU•tdwa
. TIO RD llAa -U> v•rcfl. 3 .,._
l'OUltTH ltACE -3ll0 yards. 2 yur old•. O.lml119. For ,,,.iclen5.
Purse S2600.
B•m•doo
fKnl9lltl 9.00 5.00 MO
Bound To P1Nw IMllC.~111 S.60 •.10
Oupllt•I• O.rt IClerln• I ) 60
Time -1•. II Al><> r•n -Totll$ Oell9hf, Pow•r By Bu9, Cllltha Shado•. Jett•oo
New•, Ima Cute C•I. Sugo1"
C1prlcor11, Rhym<! N RU'°n
Scrattl>ed HIQMr Tym4!, Only
F ... t•, Otvll FIQlltor, l'ruclt.le To M•
l'll'TM llACE -400 yords. 2 yur
Ol<h. Cl•lmlng. Pw~ Ul>OO.
BObV•n-
fWard) 15.60 7 00 S IO
Sll•k• Alon9 fC.nlorol 1.10 4 IO
GuWh•t.O.Cutte 10.rtuel 6.10
Time -10.'1
Also ran -Qlept.r Et..,..,, Wu
TrtKltle, Ruth (.oc>y, VI• CorlO, Jet•
D••lre, Too can Olerger.
NOS<U ldlH
..._ ClalniltJQ. PUrM u•. s' aaacu -i.-v._..._ & t-OW1t1'1.Di.ner.s , 20. SMlteAIOfll.~_sztl..M. t.U.lrl • Ml .S 60 • ~a-.! (~aq) 1.10 s 10 SIXTH •Aa -310.Y•rcls. 3 y.ar
AIK .. tw (0....,..-) 1,IO Old• & up. Cl•tmlll!J. Purw ....00.
Tl--1U1 Nl!lhl SP"d
Alto ,-.,. -Plut• Pus. V• Got IAdalrl 160 • .., 2.IO
Basketball Scores
MIUIUlllPI 64, $ MlHIHlppl 60 l•ylor '7, Dr•• 11
Ceflt Mlcllloefl ti, Wl•Mllw•ukee I•
ClnclMMI n, Florida St 1S
CntlOhlOll 71, Wl<lllla St 10 ca1 Poly ($LOI 117, LaV•r ..... l'orlllncl SI 100, SI.~,,., ti s-J-St, .. Callloml• 1'
S.ta Oar• n. ColumOI• u • Ut-"9',W.r$1•
C'MMlllOClt, ttawell, ts, Hayward St
f2
I m A ~mooth Jel I AOUQh I • tO 1 llO
Too Bull\ CCMOOL•l ) IO
Tlme -1&11
AIM> r•n -Go 11 ... PO<lltc. Jtl
0011, 8--.cloe~. ~Surch.r99. No ltr•lt.IWs
SEVl!NTM llACE -110 Y•td' 3
yur old• a. uo. Clelmln9 Purs.
'4600.
Over Ere
IC.rdor• I • IO J IO 3 •O Aotlfl T•sl ICl<!r1~1el •IO • 10
O•NIY D•n• IMYl9\) •IO
Time -•7.13
Al\O r•n -M•;lslr•I~. Pol> N
Rocket, Tollle 11o9tl, H•nd P•(l•d.
Sot.onooooo. Wiid Cherrv Srandv,
Mr Willow Sl><IAQ'\..
!irr.ir~ -SI Alt l\rovrld, !>focond
Chor\n~ T *ndief" W•H•("lf"
u E Uct• -1.0V•r EH • 2· Roehl
Te•l,P••OllS.00.
E IOHTM llACE JMI yard\ J
ytar oldi & ue> Ct•lm1no Puoe
~·oo IClttOQu• Jr,
IKn19hll •O 00 11 •O 610
D•t N .. I 8.r IC..rdotal • .0 S .0
Dully Se>eil•\ (C1.,1>wl • .0
Time -1110
Also rMt -Just Jim O•ndy, Cio Ore9 8rMtt, MOoft Fty.,, Glad B•q,
Mr 9•rl•"•· Lotw Lucky. ~OKrtkllM,
when he sank a pair of
free throws with 21
:.econds left in regula·
· tion. But San Jacinto
scored a basket 14
:-econds later and came
up with two free throws
in overtime for the win·
nm!? margin.
The Vaqueros are now
J· 7 on the season.
Capistrano. now 6·3,
was never threatened .
The Cougars led by 43
points a fter three
periods befor~ reeervea
took oYer.
Charles' outburst gave·
him 226 points in nine
games, a spark.ling 25.1
average.
c..l•tr-V•U.., IUl
II C"••tn
A C1141rl••
~·"Wflll• O'M•llor•n
Bry""t S"•'~'> f)ri1un
~Ill\
COii in\
'Stril i..lano
Oumv1n
TOl•I•
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PUBLIC NOTICE '
DAILY PILOT Jl3
l'ICTI1'10US llUMNl!S6
MAMSS1'AT&Ml!M1'
n.. '°''°"""" ...,._ b .......... MUU: '° CA TAUNA WM ltooc-CO,. ....
Superior Aw•11uo. CHta Mt\a. Celltwnla '9U7 •
Paul T'_,.,at,41SAc.claA\IWIW. c:or-•1 Mttr, Col.._.,.zs
Tiiis OIMI-• II~ lll'f • lno dMdllal.
Pu Tortorice Tiiis st.-WM flied .,..,.,,..
Coulll\I c1 .. 11 of Otango Govnt\I on O.c.em-2.1'77. --Pubtl$11ed Or.,. Coast Dally f>ilot,
0.c.erRlllr 7, 14. u. 211.1m Jbfl-11
I
PUBUC NOTICE t
....
NOTICS 1'0Cal!Ol1'0115
MO.A .. )111
IUN .. oa COU•TOl'TM•
IT• \'W CMl CA&.l l'OttM IA l'OJl, TM• CllM*TY or:oaAMOI!
1 ,,
I
Daily at
2:00, 4:00, 6:00
8:00, 10:1 5
HUNTINGTON CINEMA
IEACHA.TEUIS,H.I.
847-9608 847-6017
ENTERTAINMENT
By BOB THOMAS
LOS ANGELF.S <AP) -.. lnever thou1ht orthe
tramp in terms of appeal. He was m~self, a
comic spirit, something within me that I aald I
must expreu."
Charlie Chaplin in U66 recalled hls enormous
early auceeu in film comedy, which be almOlt
single-handedly developed into an art form.
TO MILLIONS OF AMERICANS and
filmgoers around the world during the silent era,
he was the tramp, a spunky underdog beset by
overbearing cops, snappin• mongrels and Yukon
blizzards.
Often defeated, he neverlhelsess tripped
hopefully down a dusty road to new adventure.
Chaplin's death in Switzerland evoked indelible
memories or his comU: &enius -also of his
sometimes exasperaUng personality off ·screen..
Mary Pickford once said: "Charlie was the
greatest or all comedians. He was also a stinker."
She and Chaplin were partners in United
Artists, and she liked neither bis business melboda
nor his politics.
OVER THE YEARS, CHAPLIN bas been the
most analyzed of movie performers. But the most
incisive analysis bas come from his own words.
About the tramp's popularity: "One cannot do
humor without great sympathy for one's fellow
man. As the tramp I think I endeared myself
through his terrific humility -the humility which
J am sure is a universal thing -of somebody
without money.
''As a youth, I was very unhappy, soullully
unhappy, not so much from being deprived or
hungry •.. there was always plenty of bread and ~=:=::=:::::=====-•••••••••••---~butter around. It is the humiliation of poverty which is so distressing. I bad to go through the
streets with my mother, who was insane, and so
weak, staggering from one side to the Other as
.though she were dnmk. Th?se sorts of things.••
CATCH THE FEVER
IF YOU'RE NOT SURE YOU HAVE THE FEVER NOW,
AFJ'ER TODAY, YOU'LL SAY, YOU ALWAYS DID.
B OW BE CHEATED: "I WORKED damned
hard on the set to make a film. and everythlng I
did was 'con a more,' with my heart and soul and with
a terrine enth\ISiasm. One might say that my
work had invention. I don 't think I'm a genius.
Things come hard to me. I think they must come
easier to other people."
START THE NEW YEAR OUT RLGHT I
SPENO NEW YEARS DAY with us
ANOHAVEA ...
"SPECIAL" NEW YEARS DAY BUFFET DINNER
I
ANO SEE ... .
THE GHAT llOADWAY MU$1CAl '' ...... • • •••
''
BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY
ADULTS '" .. , CHILDREN (I I or undetl '9"
INCLUDES: DINNER, SHOW, COFFE I TAX
ooon <>nN Sp.111.-0INNEI F•Of-:' 6-<UltTAIN 7:•0
FOR INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
Coll (714) 492·9950, or at the box offlte
1.tO AVE PICO, SAN CLEMENTE
t I •
-·~ --• -• - -,.. j -~
~ -w7u N tR £ W Cl,.EMA I
' ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday, December 28, 1977 DAIL V PILOT
Q: I Uke the way Burt Reyaolcb looks, tM way
be'• baUt, tlus way lie talks Hd Ute way he keeps bis
feet on die 1roud. 11 all tk.11 • ,..e or doe• be really
bave a bealtby pbJlosopby? -Mrt. LilUam G.,
Baltimore.
A: During an interview on the set of "Smokey
and the .Oandlt." Burt indulged ln some sensible
self-analysis.
'Glad You Asked That'
by Mority11 ..cl Hy G ......
''Large crowds can be a danaer." he points out,
then .cites an example in Georgia while fUmlng
"Smokey." Friends Insisted everything would be
cool, and promised the club they'd vialt would be a
&mall one. So he let himself be sban«ihaled.
THE WT EDL08IVE PICIUREOP THEYl!ARI
"I'm not In the Presley-Tom Jones category,"
he mused. •·people don't want my sweaty socks or a
piece of my shirt. They just seem to want a brief,
honest exchange . If you have some fun with them,
rap a little and give the fans some'dignity, then it's
a positive thing. What 1 hate most to see la an actor
signing autographs with that air of condescenllon
or hauteur some of them have."
"Within two minutes" Burt grimaced,
"someone whispered in my ear 'Burt Reynolds ls -------------------.-
here.• Then I was sort of carried up on stage and
FACING BIG CJlOWDS, even friendly ones, is
something that bugs Burt.
"ONE OF DIE BEST
ICTURES OF mE VEAR!'
TIME MAGAZINE
"The Goodbye G irl'
is a joyous comedy-
just what the doctor onlen!d.
Nell Simon makes
feeling good legal ...
GENE SHALIT. NBC· TV
(PG)
A RAV STARK PROOUCTlON OF A HtRBl:RT ROS.S ALM
NEil SIMON'S
MTHE GOODBYE GIRC
RICHARD DREYFUSS· MARSHA MASON
dnd lolroducing QUINN QJMMJNGS ~ Lucy
Wrlllen by NOL SIMON • Proruccd by RAV STARK
ecled by HERBEKT RQSS • M.1!i1c Sconx1 nnd ~by MIE
Sorg "Goocb,ieGlrf" ~and F\>rformed by [W.110 GATES
d RASTAR Feature• Pms by MGM Labs
Schedule Dally at Edwards Cinema
2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:15 t----==
several hundred people closed~·" ·
What ls Reynold's ambition? He says he hopes
that hJs •'future in the movie induatry is as a di rec·
· tor.
"THERE ARE MANY
things I nave wanted to do in a
fl Im. but couldn't do as a
performer. Writing and direct-
ing, 1 can fulfill some of those
desires. For instance, I've
always wanted to have the male
star tell the leading lady that be
loves her. But rather than being
HYNOLDS left pliant and preenant in a
burning field, she'd reply, 'BJg deal! I'm apUUing
for New York!"'
A REALIST, nus ACl'OR sincerely believes
'.'there is no star In this business who can deliver a
good enough performance to Justify our enormous
salaries!"
Sure money talks, but Reynolds talks louder!
Q: When I was a girl, Rudy Vallee was our
Sinatra, P resley and Tom Jones rolled Into one. Do
bis audiences 11tlll swoon when he performs? -
Adele Marsh, Hollywood, Cal.
A: "They stlll enjoy m y songs and quips," the
venerable Vallee tells us, "But the reaction Is
more nostalgic ... I don't attract the squealers
who throw their keys, bras and panties onstage.
My fans toss their bearing aids. support st.ock.ings
and Medicare cards!"
Q: Wasa•t Jack Warden ooce a Ulepard? -
Mrs. T. Cbllclera, Minneapolis.
A: Yes -in the Indoor pool of what was then
known as the Park Central Hotel on Times Square.
Fortunately, he didn't have to save anyone from
drowning and had time to rest and to read scripts
tor upcoming Broadway play~.
Al the time. Warden was still recovering from a
broken leg he got bailing out or a plane In 1944 when
he was with the lOlst Air borne Division 'Jr one of the
most decorated·outfits in World War 11 t11!1tory .
Q: Can you tell us a little about John Carradine
-scion of the acting family? Is be a moody man or
does be hue a sense of humor? -D.B.L, Knox·
ville, Tenn.
A: This anecdote paints n fair portrait of him.
Carradine used to look so much like Lincoln
that the late comedian, Ken Murray, once cast him
to play Honest Abe in a segment of his TV show. The
part caused great anguish for the act.or. Because,
when he got to Lincoln's address on the field of bat·
tie, time forced the director to eliminate the scene
without the actor being aware of the cutoff. Later,
Ken overheard Carradine on a backstage wall
telephone. still in his Lincoln make-up <ltigb hat,
shawl and beard), tell a friend: "I'm glad you liked
the s how ...-: but they cut me off right in the middle of
my Gettysburg Address."
Carradine was so thin in those days be was
described as "two profiles in search of a face."
Stnd your qiultlons to Hu Gonbaer, "Glad You
Asked That," cart o/ thu ~. P.O. Boz 1560,
Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hu.Gaf'dnn will~ as
many questions. ca they «;an in ther column, but IM
volume o/ mail~· personal replle• fmpoufb~.
From the outr~us
No.1 Best-seller
Trotte r s
Make Hope
A Member
'ANNIE
HALl'
THE ClllRllYS HOLLYWOOD <AP> -
Bob Hope is an honorary
member of the Harlem
Globetrotters. And,-after
shooting a few baskets
_with the team, he said
he's ready to batUe for ·a
starting position.
Stan Greeson, presi-
d ent or the basketball
t eam, s aid Hope de-
served the honor
because he had traveled
to the 94 countries where
the Globetrotters
performed and like the
team seeks to spread
love and laughter ·
throughout the world. , .
lWl'S so. COAST rWA DAILY =·'= ( I09IY I I :JO.J:JO.l:lO '*"" te0 ,..._ 7:JO.t:IO .......
MAll'S ""SAYUIDAY MleMT
SO. COAST PWA N Y• ..
cav... IOlaY ' ' DALY ~e;:c 1 ... ,.... 1:41-Ml-Wt Mt IW . .....
MANN'S
CINEMAUMD MMk..,_
klttlll
QI.""
MATINllS DAILYf ,,.
&WM a l """'ifr
<INN a l
A" '"m Ill w ~) ;4
' ' • ~ I ~ •
.-.i1HOUI •t ---• fMI CMG Ill on t11t ........ .........
......
• ---=-· _.......,.
IAJUmAY ........
~--... _,, ............. ..... ""' .... Gnm_Of ... ..., .......... =. .....
I I
f .
-DAil. V P\1.0T
'. ' • .. ! \ •• -·· ... ,C:.NIWI ..... ---:IC'f ON!I n..,.,...,......,..,
~~·by• MW.~~NI• tllllon CClmfn#lder. -~ *** "Mr. lll111dln9 Bullde Hiit Orlllltn ~tffMI> Ceiy Giant, M)1fna
Loy. A man "om Mllllllet-
tan -hie fMllly tom. countiy --. ha ttlaa to
"'*' • ..,.__ (2 '"·' • n.E IAAOV IUNCH -,,_be allerglo '° '*' . ...... «.,,. dov·
eTHEAOC>t<a
,.... .. ctttlcelly 11\jurad
.... tie " .... '° c.p(ute
the IMder of • rnllltanl Loup.
ii =.FORTHE
MODERN ,AMILY
"MMI Marl(et" 9 AICNEWS a:308 MOVIE **'" "M•n On The Out.ide" (1973> Elizabeth
M ontgomery, Loren
or--. Wtien • private eye
Is ll'ICNdered for no 8PP8f·
ent reuon, hi• father, e
re\lted po4IOa lleuienent,
baglr19 IOollJng t« • due Ill
the oaa.. on which hi• IOI\ wu wortctng. and uncovera.
a lot more than the killer
ln\endt,. ( 1 Iv .• 30 min,)
• "1V THREE 80H8 ~ ,.ll.-Chip get• • date wltl't •
movie •tarlet tor e publlclty
•tunt.
0) 0V£AEA8V
P•t O'Brien; •hlsh-kabob;
crime prevention J : o
nlghlcl\Jb mlnger.
Noella North examines a poisonous spider in
"Tar antulas: The Deadly Cargo, .. tonight at
9 on Channel 2.
fl!) FAMILY PORTRAIT
"PrMChool bp«ienee"
(() CBSNEWS
®) MERV GRIFFIN
Gue•ta: Roger Miiier,
Nomi Croeby, O•k Ridge
Soya.
7:00 D N8C NEWS
cflme apree In a IOvOI''•
lane.
tzl) MACNfll I LEHRER
REPORT
6!) YOGA WTTH
MADELINE
(() TO TELL THE TRUTH
I LIAMCLU8
A8CNEW8
G) ILOVELUCV
"LIJay'• Scnedufe ..
Gt AOAM-12
7:IOG SHANANA
Officers R-i and Maltoy
tr11ek down a eumpect
wanted •• a rnult of a
au.t: Fr.,. OoflHn.
8 NEWLVWEDGAM£ D THEY 8TlU. 8AV I DO
A look al COUt11ng, IMng
tog9(1\9r end marri.ge In
ttltNYenl ....
Channel f..lsting•
IJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
D KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles 8 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(() KFMB (CBS) San Diego
G KHJ.TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 0 KCST (NBC) San Diego
• KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles m KGOP·TV (Ind.) Los Aogeles
9 KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles
GI KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntingt~n Beach
ID THE 8AAOY 8UHCH
Bobby tries to prOYe to hi•
family thlt he la a lot big·· oer lhan hie stza.. a> LET'S MAKE A DEAL C)LA.~E
"SnapehOta"
Gl 8PEQAl.
''Sller!t Night'' The Vienna
Boys' Choir and • rnu9lcal
enNmble pertonn a Mteo-
tlon ot Chrletmu muelo.
Cl) 1121.000 OUE8TION 9 FAMILY FEUD
l!008G•Cll«1 INTERVIEW WITH
PRESIDENT CARTER
ll•pe<kl.,-)
D MOVIE *** ''Two Yeare Before The Maat" (194&) Alan
le<ld, 8rlan ~-The
son of e merct\Mlt la
Shanghaied aboard one of
his father'• ship .. (2 hf•.l
Q JOK£A'8 WILD
G) CAAOL 8URHE1T
ANOFRIEND6
Guut•: The Pointer
6181era. ..,..,.~
SWl!EPllAKES
• PICC-4DM. • y OIROUI ....... .._. .. (Pwt 2)
·Noel~·--*" ...... ~ oir-Mng In ~ pew.
eny In a bol(dlnt hou•
and dreMllng of fame end
fortune. G MAGIC OIF OIL
"AIH"l'IHO "flofll"
~I OOHCIHTMTIOH a.oea.wrra
OYafAllY
Pit O'lrten: lhltn-k•bob;
ctlme Pl'..,.,lkH'I 3; • nietltdub lllrlg9r.
t:008 eee~
..,.~ The o.dly
c:ar,o'' ~) Clalde
Alline. a.t. R9nk. A
hof'de °' dMCly f*'1lntUIM, unllMhed In the crMfl of a cervo Pl8M. ...s tenor
and ...... ln .......
tttey -. unctiectted
throu;t\ • Southwellem•
town. 8 a.ACl<IHUP
90UAOAON
"The Hawlt Flle• On ~· Peppy and an
Army '"*" (Seen o.rt-
IOI\) -MelQned to leed •
nlilllllon ~ ... top
J.,.,,... OOiiii•.W. but
IMrrl hit plafla .,.._ .,..
bMfl ~by
T .J.'a lll'8lt "-Mtnb ..-=.
ANGii.i
"Angel'• "' ,.,.....
Chatlle ltH beeft kllfllllPl*f 9nd ,.. .,.
killed ..... the Angtlt
folloW the lnMNollone at •
~om.~
natned Leilani. Fr~
Nuy9n. Art Metr9n0, Nor-
man Fell, Don Ho gueet
elar. (R)(Two•llour
epleode) a IM>HSIOI! ..The Lat CotllNon .. . m tlllE1W GRlf'F\N
Ou .. 11: AOQ9f' Miiier,
Norm Croeby, a. Ridge
Boys, Fred Tr~ Olen
c.tnpbell, Rhonda Bldea.
• GET8MMT
8lnCe 8ftwt .. the ~
wltneM who cen Identify a
KAOS epy, M .. metkad
for ...... by KA08.
• AU8TIN aTY UMtT8 .. Jimmy Buftlt ..
(() MOVIE *. * "Mwrlege On The Roclta" (1H6) o .. n
Martin, Frank 61n•tra.
A'1er • quarrel and a
qulcl(le divonle In MexJoo •
woman lriea to 1'9"18t'fY •
husbend Md f'lnde lehe ..
mwrled to hie beet fnend.
(2 hra.)
t:30Gt ~BIJ<O
··911to'• Nt«W'
.QMA,J ••
Pf.AFOAMAMCES
...... OlractloM In Denoe
Wlltt Tbe Plloball.-Denoe
~ F«W .,.., end
two WOIMft ... ~
TUBE TOPPERS
KOCE 8 7:30 -"Silent'Night" The
Vienna Boys' Choir and musical ensem-
ble provide a concert of Christmas music.
f)OfJCSXlq) 8:00 -President Carter
. willheJnlen'iewedby the networks for a
year -end program broadcast from the
White House.
KCET 9 8 :00 -Piccadilly Circus
presents "Ballet Shoes.·· Noel Streat·
fietd·s classic about three orphaned girls
livin,g in genteel poverty. Second of two parts.
Kl\'XT f) 9:00 -.. Tarantulas: The
Deadly Cargo .. stars Claude Akins .
Charles Frank, Deborah Winters, Sandy
.'McPeak, Bert Remsen and Pat Hingle.
(See story this page>
"The Tattoo"
G MOVIE *** "Mt. Blanding
Builds Hl9 OrMrn Houee"
( 1948) Caty Grant, Myrna
t.oy. A man ffom Mantwl·
tart mcMe .... ~ fO""'
~ Where he tttee .,
build • houee. (2 tws.)
•THEOOOCOUPl..e
Fella ftnda -atnolWe hoe • vrto..__.
MORNINca
12.'00 8 TWIUOHT ZONE
·~ty-Two"
• fOAEVER FBNWOOO
• MOYie ** "The PIUndenrl" (1te0) ... ai.nc..r. Joe.
8--. A ntrdWll Md a
Chi ...... oppoee
.
TONIGHT'S LA TEST LISTINGS
~ ,,.,, Ylltotlo 0. ................. ,. .,,..., ............
~ -MalM 9'1*11 ............ ... Md.,...,....~
for .. ~ (1 .....
min.) • '** •'ffoUM 0( ,..,.. c 113t) Wllllillft ~
.,.,.. ~. "' .., effur\ '° IOlwe. --...... delectlve PC1M1 U a
pn>duolr, ~. ~1119 ei.' .,....., ...........
-~(111r .. ac.1
min.) -~ ··~"'TM~ .,..,. .. , ... '-°*"' .Jt.Clllllt ...... ANlt ................ dlaltto .. .,.,. ........ "'*' -.0 ~ll IMd , 111m1n-.u111r.ao~ • .,1 ::r *" .. KronW' (1957) ,,,,, Morrow, 8arb1ta.
&.--. ~.,.
uallelialn d-~·~ bottoal "'Ofllltr lllhO
lloWlde ttwouglt --.... oldll ........ -.t11w .. ao~
TIMlnA•9· ........ .,la
Carter
Appears Teacher Herds Crawly Cast
WASlflNGTON CAP>
-President Carter will
be interviewed by the
television networks
tonight in an hour-long,
year-end program
broadcast from the
White House.
The interview will
begin at8p.m. PST.
Part of the interview is
expected to look ahead
into 1978 ~.; -Carter's
trip to Europe, India and
the Near East. The presl·
d e nt and his wife,
Rosalynn, leave on the
ltip early Thursday.
The four questioners.
selected by their respec·
ti ve networks, are
Barbara Walters, ABC;
DISCREET SCREECH FOR ·srAR W~A~R·s"'·---=e~~:.~~:!i
Ca.rrte Asher Steraln 'Sheba' on Saturday BobSchieffer,CBS.
Carrie's Baek
After 'Star Wars' It's 'Slwba:'
HOLLYWOOD (APJ -New Year's
!!ve ls when many people drink. lt
also is wbeirNBC, for reasons known
to only its deities, airs a TV version of.
.. Come Back Little Sheba." It co-stars
Carrie iiaber, 2L
The daughter ol Eddie Fisher and
l>ebble Reynolds, she la accustomed
by now to living with ~e fact sbe
played the Imperiled heroine of the bit
movie "'Star Wars" and· will play
same again in a sequel.
WREN SHE ARRIVED at a.
.restaurant here .for a "Sheba" in~.
terview. she'd just finiabed po1tne for
"Star Wars" pictures toutini "Star Wars" knicknacks. She seemed a·
bSlte weary. but not Jaded.
Miss Fisher, wbo has a deadpan.
tardonlc 1en1e of humor akin to that
GI Eve .. Our M1alJ Broou .. Arden, ~as
uked how many "Star Wan" ln:
~ews sbe'a d9n•· Sbe atartecl ad· dmlt!aemup.
SHE SAID SHE got it because of her
work in her only other film, "Sham·
poo," done when she was 17, just
before she began a formal study at acting at England's School !or Speech
and Drama.
Sbe taped Hf1beba•• -wlddt atan
Lord Lavenee Ollvter nd Joane
Woodward. beth ofwbom abepraiaed
hflhly, ln EnalandJut January, well
before all tlie hoopla over ''Star
Wan" began.
· Hollywood mo1uls tend to typo.east
thespians who've been m a box-offlco
hit. But no such Ultng bas happened to
14ia• Fisher, who began In chow biz at
11, working in her mothet's niahi club
act.
"I WAS OFFERED a part u a re-
' tardtd penoo -which I tbougbt was
apt -but no 'Star Wan' stuff;0 lbe
aaid, almoltiD relief..
By JAY SHARBUTT .
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Warren
Estes is a schoolieacber wilb a different
kind or s ecood job. He's one or
Hollywood's few insect, spider and rep--
tile herders. Three hundred of b1s
troops are on CBS toniCbt. (Channel 2, 9
p.m.>
All are tarantulas. They eo-star in
"Tarantulas: The Deadly Cargo.'• It's
about what happens wben a DC-3 carry·
ing a deadly variety of the little
beas ties crashes near a s mall
Southwest town.
ESTES, 51, WHO lives in Joshua Tree
in California's high desert country, was
in charge of geltlng the co-stars
together, maldn1 aure tbe1 aot to work
on time and didn't get UJM!er{oot.
The~ wraaf!:• who teaches
astronomy and oat education for
the Rlvenlfi school system, aot Into bis
Other career tbaakt to a long·Um•
friend, clDem• craplaerTea ~
cllebam.
He says thene tooled uoun4 with
splden ud anates ever •in~._ were
kids. A le• yean aco. Middlebam
· needed some crawling extras for "The
Hellstrom Chronicles." Estes supplied
and oversaw same.
RE'S BEEN AT ft ever since. As lbe
tarantula casting director for "Cargo,••
he says be bad 100 shipped from outside
California. got another 100 from pet
shops and ,tcted up thtt rest locally.
One thing about tarantulas: even
the nice oaes can't be told when an<l
how to act. So Estes has to serve as
their prompter. Example: They like to
climb. So be puts them in situations
wbere.tJiey'll climb.
"And when the cameras roll, I'll
shoot a little air blast down on them,"
he adds. Tbe reason: It makes them
move ri&ht smartly.
"IT PltOB.t.BL Y RESEMBLES what
they feel when tbeJr natural enemy, the
tarantula haw~ actually a large wasp,
flies down for an atiaek -tbe beating
of'UiiU' ;rmo. ']ii apra.aua.~
He sad wbell bla aaa• OniMed the1I' acting, be bad no problems retfirniog
them to t.beir •J>lder motels: •tyou just
plct tllem up. Tarantulas are extremely
NOW PLAYING
.... . .............................. ........ ,.....,
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.. Ob.1117Gocl ••• aoo? .. 1beaDL
Sbe bu otber ODtlaas available. 8be
can stu, evea wofted at •1• 15 Ill &be c:bOrul line of 0 1rene0 oa Bl'Olldwa1
wbn bet mother •tan.cl ha it. A.Mi ~~!!!!!!!!!!!! 11ae•1 thlDkfna ot a staae role ear.17 :..
nest7ear.
"I'm probably foinf to do a lbow at Joe Pappe',1 Public Theater tn New
York next Marc:b, an oriitnal mulletl
by a tirl aam.cS Sa.rah Kernocban," •~• •aid. A wee amile tuutd at the +>rn•r& oDer .mouth. . 1•Jt.'1 called, ah,
·~...saown.••• •
docile." He had help from the movie
crew.
When be picks tarantulas up. be
added, "'I just place them on my body.
one at a ti.me. then take them off when I
get to an area where I have IUtJe bues 1 keep them in. ..
BEING. FESTOONED Wl'DI taran-
tulas causes some attention, oo?
"Yes, and you can imagine tbe reac-
tion," Estes laughed.
He said the species he med didn't
•have a fatal bite. But a doctor and
nurse bung around just Jn eue-. T
weren't needed. No bites.
Boy tarantulas are smaller and fas
Utan girl tarantulas. Thia la nec~u:ir.
When tarantulas mate Jene. tlae
must immediately flee. ou.rwlle.
lady will c:cmsider him a 1.-la • as a lover.
Bt1T mnE WDB NO ~~-arintu& remanees wliiif''CiiiOn
filmed. F.stes said. ''beeuse,..
them separated.••
In fact, .. 300 .... bft ......
antU ealled to ~ct.
"CLO
OF THE THf.RQ KINl;J" (PG)
Ul .O:•
•$A TURDAY NIGHT FEVE(t" OU
''LOOKING FOR
MR. GOODBAR" (R)
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
"THE DEEP''. (PG)
t
.--.--....-..... . ----. ---~~ ............ -~~
' . . .
·~M __ u_s_1c ______________________________ :::----------------------------------------------------------------Wld--~--~y~.o.e.---m-·t>e_,_2_s.~1-en ________ _:o~~~Lv.:...:..~~Lo~T:.._=•~1=-
i
1 ! _1977: A Big Year for Country Musk
I NASlMU.E, Tenn. <AP> -In
country music, 1977 was the year
Dolly Parton "went Hollywood," f Waylon Jennings eot arrested
: and Ronnie Milsap won the most f major awuds. ~ · Miss Parton, a staunch country
: muslc traditionalist when she
~teamed with -:P o r t e r ~Wagoner a
tfew year s
: ago, hired a
: new band and
!gave her
: music more or
! a pop flavor.
: She also hired :ca I Horni a
: management M•u•,.
: and began appearing on national
•television shows from the West
, Coast like the "Tonight" show.
! Jennings was arrested in
: Nashville in August on charges of
~cocaine possesslon, but the
~ char1es were later dis missed.
Milsap, a blind singer who once
~fell off a stage, won a Grammy
: Award for his single, 'Tm A
Stand By My Woman Man," was
named entertainer or the year by
the County Music Association
and was chosen male vocalist ol
the year for the third time by the
CMA.
OTHER GRAMMY WINNERS 1
in country music were Emmylou
Ha rris for her "Elite Hotel," the
Am azing Rhythm Aces for "The End Is Not In Sight The
Cowboy Tune," Chet Atkins and
Les Paul for "Chester and
Lester" and Larry Gatlin for
"Broken Lady.'.'
The year also marked the
emergence of Crystal Gayle,
Loretta Lynn's younger sister, as
a major country music star. She
was selected top female vocalis t
over Miss Parton and others by
the CMA and her "Don't It Make
My Brown Eyes Blue" was one of
the year's big bil.6. And her im·
age as a bashful, wholesome
youngster was changed Instantly
when she appeared braless on lhe
··Tonight" show.
THE ACADEMY OF Country
Mu sic named Mickey Gilley its
big winner. He won entertainer
·of the year and male vocalist of
the year while Miss Gayle was
fem a le vocalist of the year.
In another awards cortipeti-
llon, Charley Pride was voted
No. l male country singer and
Miss Lynn was named top female
vocalist at the American Music
Awards, which are voted on by
the public.
It a lso was a big year for Ken-
ny Rogers, whose recording 1>f
"Lucille" was chosen single ot
tho year by the CMA. He was a
finalis t for entertainer of the
year and male vocalist of the·
year.
A Your Dally Pilot
can be
Recycled.
o.c.c. oper•t•• otflcl., c.nter
for CoM• ....
Anybody who could turn Lot's wife
Into a pillar of salt;i incinerate Sodom
and Gomorrah and make it rain for
forty days and forty nights has got
to be a fu~ guy.
(PG)
j'l,
c.M~l "()\\~
A JERRY WEINTRAUB PRODUCTION
GEORGE BURNS ·JOHN DENVER ·"OH, GOD!''
TERI GARR • DONALD PLEASENCE
Based on the Novel by AVERY CORMAN ·Screenplay by LARRY GELBART
ALTHOUGH JENNINGS had
problems with the law. he re-
mained one oC the top country
music stars. His recordlng of
"Luckenbach, Texas." Jolned
''Lucllle" and "Don't It Make My'
Brown Eyes Blue" as lhe year's
biggest country songs.
Me rle Travis. a pioneer
guitarist who wrote the classic
"Sixteen Tons," became the 30th
member of the Country Muslc
Hall of Fame.
In June, Miss Lynn sold the
motlon picture rlghts lo her
swift-selling autobiography,
"C9al Miner's Daughter," lo
UD.lversal Studios. At year's end
abe w~ reviewing U!_e script.
'tHE COUNTRY MUSIC ln·
dustry and fans were shocked at
the death ot Elvis Presley. who
got b\s start in country music.
After hai death, bis former
records zipped up the country
charts again. ·
Death aJso claimed veteran
bluegrass fiddler Stoney Cooper,
58, who with his wife: Wilma Lee,
was a pioneer ln country music.
Grand Ole Opry star Jeannie
Seely was seriously injured ln a
June traffic acc ide nt in
Nashville, but recovered and re-
sumed her cp.reer.
. . ... ~
MUS'C POP-FLAVORED
Dolly Penon Altera Style
"Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave are close to perfection.
'Julia' is moving in its glowing commitment to the power
of friendship. "-Newsweek Mapzine
'
"'Julia' is a movie that has everything. Jane Fonda gives
an impassioned, complex and almost agonizingly
dedicated performance. Vanessa Redgrave seizes the
screen with her vibrant performance. 'Julia' is
. WOnderf ul." -Rex Reed. Syndicated Columnlst'
20i llmJR'HOX Pr~ A RICHARD ROTH Presen!alion of A FRED ZINNEMANN Film
JANE FONDA VANESSA REDGRAVE
SCHEDULE
DAILY AT
2:00-4:30
7:00-9:30
JULIA
NEWPORT 'ASHtON Ill.AND
Newpoft oenter
betwMn McMrnfU .. A JAMBOREE
AT l'AClflC COAST HIGHWAY 144-0TIO
. ---------------------
"The Year's Best Movie
Now on the largest screen west of New York at
Edwards beautiful Newport Cinema. Presented in full
70 mm and Dolby 6 track stereo to totally envelope you
in sight and sound -the most dynamic motion picture
of the decade is now at the most dynamic theater. See
it again for the first tlm.e at Edwards Newport Cinema.
Now.In full
70mm, 6
Track
Dolby
Stereo,
St~
And on the
largest movie
screen west
of New
York!
MARK HAMILL ftAPJlJSON FORD CAAPJE FlSHER
• PETER CUSHING
. end
Al£C GUINNESS
I I
J
I
(
~..,,......-............... _ ---. -. ' . .:.· -~
.. CW\. Y P1LOT .... W9dneSday, December 28, 1977
Pressure UlffWr OCC to Present
Of Blood ~ ... ,ye-:;~~: Series on Aging
~ . .":1·'.': ~~ll : ·... . A tour-part le~ture series on coplnJ with Explained;· . ;.,~:~'{:;~~-·:;i:: :.; ..... : middle age will be offered free beginning Jan. 5 at Iii ·. ";, ·:·. -;-i:f>C:::i:-~:.:·.1.":·:· Orange Coast College. ~ ... :· .::·~~:.:!·~.=-:.;,.. Ti~~ "Middle Essence, The Second Identity
• ByDll.STEINCROHN '~.: · · ·'.:·:~· · ~~$· ··:: Crlala, the sessions wm. be. he.Id on succeulve
D Dr "•-tn b • .., . -, ,. .;. "· Thur&day everunp lrom 7 • .30 to.9~30 ln lhe camp1.1s ear-· ~ cro n. <.: •. .:~~·: ·, ....... ·.,, ,; Fine Arts HaJI, room 119. My blood pressure was ..... ··· · · ' 1 • • • • normal most of my life. For further tnformalion, phone 556-5880.
Then, in my 40s it sud-
denly got hi gh. My doc·
tor says l will n eed
special studies to find the
reason why it's high. Is
all this fuss necessary? I
thought most of the time
there was n o known
reasonforil.-Mrs. U.
COMMENT : Il's true
that esse nt ia l
hypertension has its on-
set us ually before the
age of 35 to 40. We find no
special reason for it. And
when high blood pres·
s ure comes on much
later in life, it's likely it
may be secondar y to
kidney disease.
ln some rare cases,
when 1t comes on sud-
denly and with extreme·
l y hi g h press ur e
alternating <for no ap-
parent reason ) with
normal readings, we
think or the possibility
that an adrenal tumor
called pheochromoc:y-
toma is the cause.
SOMETIM ES a throm-
bosis of an artery lead-
ing to the kidney may be
the cause or the high
bl oo d pr ess ur e.
Sometimes, during ex -
amination of the retina
(back or the eye) the
r DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
smaller blood vessels
show changes which in·
d ie ate th at
ath e r osc le r osis or
d iabetes is the cause.
Thrifty Has
DISCOUNT TICKETS
to the
Greater Los Angeles
AUTO SHOW
L.A. CONVENTION CENTER
JANUARY 7 thru JANUARY 1 S
· Bring all your Holiday
film to Thrifty for fine 1
PHOTOFINISHING .._.,....,..., ... ,._!A
SALE 119 PRICE · · -
~ !'f! :l' 20 EXPOSURE
110 COL·OR FILM
SALE OF
Language
New Class
Classes in conversa-
tional and classic Arabic
have been added to the
Orange Coast Colleee
schedule rorapriDa.
Spring elasses begin
Feb. 6. Call s:ie-57" tor
more information.
HEALTH
Son's Killer Paroled
Capitol News Service
SACRAMENTO -"It's a travesty
of justice to think that s uch a person
can walk the streets again in two
years while my son lies dead,"
Charles Fournier wrote to Chairman
Howard Way of the Community
Rele ase Board.
'Richard G. Fournier, 24~ was Jdlle.d
after being sexually abused and
beaten by Edward Romo and others
.. _ .. ,...._. ___ ,.... .. ,,_
BRADLEY'S DELUXE
BLENDED
WHISKEY
RETAIL PRICE 3>1 lfFECTIYl JAN. 1 ............ .
750 Ml
{25.4-0Z.) 19
on New Year's Eve four years &JO.
Romo, convicted of second-dearee
murder, was dlschar1ed frQm parole
Jast week following a two-year prison
sentence. Co-defendant Cameron
DeWitt, 2S, was convicted of first.
degree murder io the killing ant\ was
given a We sentence. Ile will be ellgl·
ble. f~ p.arQ}e in May, 1981, after
serving a minimum seven-year sen· •
tence.
MONOGRAM
STRAIGHT
BOURBON
RETAIL PRICI 3n tfftCTIVE JAN. 1 . .. . . .. . . . . . .. .
750 Ml
(25.4-oz.) 19
FINE QUALITY
JALTA ·VODKA
:Nt~'f:... 1 ...•...•....... 3"
La boratory tests of
urin e and blood may
s h o w evid e nc e of
d\abetes or renal dis-
e ase. Other blood tests
may show further clues:
either high blood sugar
or tests that indicate
ther e is some kidney
trouble as the underlying
reason for hi gh blood
pressure.
I N SOME insta nces
there is overactivity of
the adrenal gland pro·
ducing Cushing's syn·
drome: in which the
blood pressure is very
high and the patient·
b e comes ex tre m <'ly
obese'.
SCllESIY BARE SEAGRAM'S V.O. -SEAGUM'S 1 ~·' ISTllO Gii
Oll CROW
BOIRBBN I
Intravenous pyelo·
grams may tell the
story. A rapid injection
of contrast medium out-
lines the kidneys by
films taken as rapidly as
30 to 180 seconds aft.er
the or ganic dye has been
injected.
THIS MAY reveal that
the blood supply to one
k1ctney is insufficient·
due to narrowing of the
main artery. This, in
turn, tncreases renln ac·
tivily followed by hlgh
blood pressure.
Occasionally, the X·
ray lilms may show the
presence of horseshoe
kidneys, polycysUc dis·
ease or kidney stones -
all in some way tied ln
with hypertension.
Whatever the nature of
the abnormality dis-
covered, rem\)ving lt (if
possible> by surgery or
medlc;atton, improves
the high blood pressure.
I hope, Mrs. U., that You can now understand
wby your doctor wants to
ferret out the real reason
why your blood pressure
has suddenly risen.
MEDICALETl'ES
For Mn. L.: I receive
many letters from
readers who have
cataract. 8nd are in fear
of operation. Here is a
Jetter from one who will
give you the courage you
need to have surgery:
Dear Dr. SCdaerolta~
At age 38 I already have
had one cataract opeta·
tlon. Hopefully, wltblD
six moat.bl, I wUl have
my other eye operated
on. Let me please usure
those who are afraid or
hesitant for some rUlocl to have tlala 1ur1ery.
· The operaUon was a Jantaatlc auccen. ltfJ. vtalon is 20/20. The •ur· cery, and Ua• ~ ift.er, ii worth It~.'
f "·
411
flfflf
SCDTCI WllSIY WHISIY CROWi WRISIE
699 699
FlrtM OUHT
CITIY SAii
SCITCI WISD
)99 pe
• 4<
t.-11,,:1. f".<: :-750 Ml .a ·· lll.4 eL) QUART .. 't.
CllJO'S RY •• WAUD llSSlfl F•
•sm.LEI Gii .. um SCGTCI --WRISIEY
,
)
llTA& NICI
lffl<1M WI. I . S.2t
IAllSS .. •••
411
QUART
IU CIA•AI
IDIRIDI
7$fMl
C7S.•·ei.J
: . ' ..
t•
\
' l
I
i
l,NSIDE: •Featuring... •Recipes
•Club Calendar •Ann Landers
Caviar
If your home is the place where tnends
gather on New Year's Day, why not have a
festive champagne brunch to celebrate the OC·
casion. Crepes that offer a variety of holiday fill·
ings are just the thing to serve. And they'll give
you a chance to use your elegant crepe pan, too.
For a really luxurious brunch try the
gourmet combination in Mushroom·Caviar
Crepes. The filling consists of sauteed
mushrooms and onions blended with sour cream,
caviar and a little lemon juice and brandy. You
simply spread h cup of the mixture onto each
crepe. roll it up and secure with wooden picks.
Then save the filling that remains to use as the
topping.
4 whole eggs
4 egg yolks
CREPES
11'~ cups sifted all-purpose flour
1 cup milk
1 tablespoon s alad oil
Combine all ingredients in bowl and beat un-
til smooth. Cover and refrigerate for 2 hours.
Heal an 8-inch skillet or crepe pan over
moderately high heat. Grease lightly. Measure
1<. cup baller for each crepe. Pour batter into pan
and tilt pan in all directions to cover evenly.
When the crepe is golden brown on one side, nip
over with a spatula and brown the other side.
Remove the crepe lo a plate. Continue with rest'
of batter, greasing pan as necessary and stack·
ing crepes between waxed paper or paper towels.
Yield: 12 crepes.
MUSHROOM·CAVIAR CREPES
1 pound mushrooms
6 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided
l,,:z c up chopped onion
2 cups Cl pint) sour cream, divided
2 jars (4 ounces each ) red caviar, divided
I tablespoon lemon juice
l tablespoon brandy
12 crepes
Reser ve 12 s mall mushroom caps for
garnish. Chop stems and remaining mushrooms.
Melt 3 tablespoons butter in large skillet; add
chopped mushrooms and onion: cook until
tender. Remove from heat. Reserve 1 2 cup sour
cream and 2 tablespoons caviar for garnish. Add
remaining l':.. cups sour cream and caviar to
mushrooms with lemon juice and brandy; mix
well. Saute reserved mushroom caps in l lables-
poon butler. To fill crepes. spoon v .. cup
mushroom-caviar mixture onto center of each
crepe and spread to within ~2 inch of edge. Roll
up and secure with wooden picks. Reserve re·
muinlng mushroom-caviar mixture for sauce.
At serving time, melt remaining 2 tables-
poons butter in crepe pan over canned heat . Add
as many crepes as the pan will accommodate
and brown on both sides. Remove crepes as
browned and continue with remaining crepes.
Spoon mushroom-caviar sauce over crepes to
serve and garnish plates with sauteed mushroom
caps filled with reserved 1 2 cup sour cream and
topped with reserved 2 tablespoons caviar.
Yield: 12 crepes; 6 ser vings.
APRICOT SAUSAGE CREPES
2 pounds link sausages
1 can <17 ounces) apricot halves
<See CREPES, PageC2l
New Year's Crepes.
W11d11eeday, December 21. um
Citrus sparks Sno"'!caps, Punch and Egg Nog.
Football Food
For the millions of football fans New Year's
Day is the grandest of them all for all the rous-
ing hometown games or the thrill of the giant
Bowl events.
If you're planning to feed a household of
resident football fans and their friends on New
Year's Day, hot, hearty stews which simmer on
the range and keep warm in chafing dish, while
you join in on the spectating. will fortify your
menu.
A British Isles Stew is one chunky version
made with cubed beef. onions. tomatoes and
seasonings all married in the most robust gravy
made with beer. British Isles Stew can be
served invitingly from a chafing dish.
Super Bowl Soup ls a meal in a bowl with
real gusto, a tasty yet inexpensive way to feed
your gang of Super Bowl watchers.
You can make this spicy soup in advance,
heal it during halfllme and tum it into a chafing
dish, kept warm over canned heat. A crusty
bread, crisp green salad and favorite beverages
will hdp to keep up the rooting spirits or foot-
ball fans.
BRITISH ISLES STEW
6 tablespoons flour
21,2 teaspoons salt, divided
' • teaspoon pepper
2 pounds boneless beef chuck, cut in l·
inch cubes
3 tablcspoons salad oil
2 medium onions, cut in eight>-'
1 clove garlic, minced
l can () pound) whole peeled tomatoes
J ·~l cups (12 ounces I beer
1-1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 bay leaf
1<t cup chopped parsley, divided
2 cups hot mashed Potatoes
l tablespoon butter or margarine
1 2 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
Mix flour, 2 teaspoons salt and pepper. Coat
meal cubes with mixture. Heat oil in large
saucepan; add beef and brown on all sides. Add
onion and garlic; cook until onion is tender. Stir
in any remaining flour. Add tomatoes. beer, cin·
namon, bay leaf and 2 tablespoons parsley. Cov·
er and cook over low heat for 2 hours or until
meat is tender. Turn into chafing dish and keep
warm. Combine potatoes, butter, remaining 11
teaspoon salt, cheese and remainlng 2 table-
spoons parsley. Spoon potato mixture around in·
side edge or chafing dish on top of stew. Yield 4
ser(tings.
SUPER BOWL SOUP
12 pound Italian sweet sausage
I cup chopped onion
2 ctovenarrrc. mlll~ed
2 cupsl:hopped peeled tomatoes
1 cup diced turnips
I cup sliced carrots
1 can 05 ounces ) pinto beans
1 cup water
I 'h teaspoons soil
1~ teaspoon dried lea! basil
In large saucepan lightly brown sausage
and remove. Pour off all but 1 tablespoon or \he
sausage drippings. Add onion and garlic: cook
until onion is transparent. Cut sausage into 1,-i-
inch s lices. Add sausage and remaining ingre-
dients to saucepan. Bring soup to a boil. Reduce
heat; cover and simmer for 15 minutes. Turn In·
to a chafing dish and keep warm. Yield 6 serv-
ings.
Zesty Cheese Cake
Brighten your New Year's hors d'oeuvres
table wi~ a Golden Appetizer Cheesecake. This
unusual cheesecake has a hint or mustard to de·
light the appetite, while olives and pimiento add
an Interesting flavor complement.
Th.ls do-ahead appetizer is the perfect solu·
lion for the busy hostess -or host .. It can be
prepared ahead, serves a lar&e crowd, and is
quite ecuiomlcal, too. Best or all, its zesty
Oavor ls compatlble with IO many other foods.
Savory Tklbtts, made from an envelope of
mubed potMo 1runales, will provide an ideal accom~ment to tbe dMelecake. .Rolled in
either c ..... or almondl, tbele navorful little
baJll are fWed with bit.I ot ham and celery.
Tber also can be prepared in advance. Jult
bate a few minutes before •ervinc for a new tutetreaL
OOLDENAPPETID&CllEESECAKE
· .. cup condlake oramlle Gr ft.n• dry bread
erumbl · a tablMPOOM butter or margarine, aott-enedatr-._....,.abiNI • .._ ........
. 1~~·--p1-Un1 1 peel!:.... <a... eacb1 cream cheese,
lofteMd at ~::r"*res ~cup ,.._ muatard .... ..,_ ..
l ..... rl,. ..... ehopptd
• •OblP•i ~1-.0
Combine crumbs and butter· press into bot-
tom of ungreased 9-inch spring-/onn pan. Com-
bine water. and gelatin Jn small saucepan; heat
3 minutes over medium heat, until gelatin is dis·
solved. Beat together until s mooth cream
cheese, mustard, mayonnaise,.and.the.dlssot ved
geJatin. Stir In olives and pimiento. Spoon into
prepared pan. Cbut 3 to 4 hours or ovemlght.
Cut Into thin slices to serve. Makes about 30
servings.
If p~ed, omlt crumbs and sonened but-
ter. Pour cbeele-1elatin mixture lnto 1 or l~
quart oiled mold.
SAVO&Y TIDBITS
1 envelope (5 aervinp) Idaho mashed
po.tato granul•
1 eu. •Jllbtly beaten ~ cup mayoanaiae
l cup very fiAely dlffd cOoked ham
~ cup very ftnel1 dtffd e.Mry
\4 cup Ver/ flnelJ dleect IWfet pickle
P'lnel)' cliopped routed allDOftdl _ .... • ,,_~ ... "' Grated parmesan cheese
Paprika
Pr.-re Potatoes followtni-d.(recl.ions on
packa1e, except decrease water to .. cup
<potatoes will be •tl'Y 1Wf>. Cool all;tatlJ: 1Ur
.in eH:_!Dl.YOMala!z basq, ~. 184 fiMJe.
Shape uno small ba111, Ul)ftf a rounded 11*1111'11 for eaeh. Ml IOIDe In llmoada and some ln
cbene ~ aprihkle li1btlJ wllb paprika. Arrance
OD buttered MldDI~ ......... Bake ln 400 cleeree
oven 10 to ·,~;ifl*IMl1 iUDIP ·aid• brri'll. Makes abait.8doain bon a•oeUftti; _ . . .. ' . . . . .. -. . . . . .
Punehy
P1•nch
U your New Year's Day entertalrung plans
call for an open house party, no doubt you'll be
host to quite a gathering.
Party punches are still the best we,y to pro-
vide drinks for a crowd since guests can help
them selves to the refreshments, leaving you
free to mingle.
Fresh citrus fruits arc always popular this
lime of year especial!; in decorative fruit
bowls. But the flavors o Florida citrus give a
marvelous holiday lift to party punches, too.
A very elegant choice ls Orange-Grapefruit
Snowcaps. It's a rich, creamy punch topped
with mounds of meringue. Freshly squeezed
orange and grapefruit juices add a true holiday
touch to the delicate flavor of this punch.
..
Another punch you'll like to try is
Grapefruit Pitcher Punch, a cool, spicy
refresher with grapefruit sections. We call it a
Pitcher Punch to emphasize the fact that you 1
don't have to buy a large punch bowl to serve "
punch. A pitcher can work just as weU.
Egg Nog is pretty much or a tradition for
New Year's Day, but you can flavor It up a little
more and make an Orange Egg Nog. Frozen
concentrated orange juice gives this punch a def·
inite party flavor and makes a nice change from
the usual.
ORANGE·GRAPEFRUITSNOWCAPS
3 eggs, separated
'ti cup and 11,. cup sugar. d1v1ded
1 cup heavy cream
2 cups orange juice
J cup grapefruit juice
t tablespoon grated orange rind
In small mixing bowl beat egg yolks until
well mixed; gradually beat In ·~ cup sugar and
beat until thick. SU r in heavy cream, orange
juice. grapefruit juice and orange rind. Cover
and chill. When ready to serve, beat egg whites
until foamy, gradually beat in remaining V. cup
sugar and beat until stiff peaks form. Stir half
of meringue into juice mixture. Pour Into punch
bowl. Spoon remaining m eringue on top of ,
punch. Garnish with quartered orange sliee5.
Yield: 8 servings.
GRAPEFRUIT PITCHER PUNCH
3 cups hal\ed grapefruit sections \3
grapefrwt )
!! cans 16 ounces each) frozen 'oncentr:il·
cd grapetru1t juice, thawed, undiluted
tScePUNCll, PageC21
British Isles Stew for a football crowd.
1
. " -
'
t • ('2 DAILY PILOT
••• P1•11eh
<From Pase Cl>
a 2 cans <18 ounces eacla> unsweetened
pilft!apple juice
111 teaspoon ground ginger
1 • teaspoon ground cloves
2'3 cup very fine granulated suaar
1 quart club soda, chilled
To section grapefruit, cut slice from lop, ·
1 then cut off peel In strips from top to bottom,
.-cutting deep enough to remove white mem·
· • brane. Or cut off peel round and round spiral
• fashion. Go over fruit again to remove any re-
.... maining white membrane. Cut along side or
each divicllng membrane from outside to middle
of core. Remove section by section. Cut sections
in half. Mix remaining ingredients in pitcher,
add grapefruit sections and chill. Yield: 2'h'
quarts.
;·
ORANGE EGGNOG
2 quarts milk
6eggs
1'2 cup sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 can (6 ounces J frozen concentrated
orange juice, thawed, undiluted.
Scald milk in top of double boiler. Beat eggs
with s ugar; stir in about 1 cup of hot milk.
Quickly stir into .remaining hot milk in double
boiler and cook, stirring constantly, over sim·
mering water until mixture thickens and coats a
metal spoon. Remove from hot water and add
vanilla; chill. Add undiluted concentrated
orange juice. Serve sprinkled with nutmeg.
Yield: 18 1h·cup servings .
••• Crepes
c From Page Cl>
2 tablespoons finely chopped onion
2 teaspoons sugar
1 1 cup wine vinegar
12 crepcs
2 tablespoons butler or margarine
Cul sausages into thin slices; place In large
:-.killet and cook until lightly browned ; drain off
fat. Drain apricot halves and reserve syrup ;
t·hop apricots. Add apricots, syrup, onion, sugar
and vinegar lo cooked sausage; mix well. Spoon
' 1 cup sausage mixture onto center of each
t·repc; spread to within ·~ inch of edge. Roll up
and secure with wooden picks. Reserve remain-
ing sausage mixture for sauce. Al serving time.
ml'lt butter in crepe pan over canned heat. Add
a!> many crepes as the pan will accommodate
and brown on both sides. Remove crepes as
browned and continue with remaining crepes.
!float reserved sausage mixture and spoon over
tort•pt•!. toserve. Yield: 12 crepes; 6servings.
BLUE CHEESE CREPES
4 cups (2 pounds> creamed cottage cheese
4 ounces blue cheese, crumbled U cup>
1 tablespoon sugar
2 teaspoons chopped chives
2 teaspoons brandy
12crepcs
In large bowl of electric mixer, beat cottage
cheese until smooth. Add blue cheese, sugar.
rh1ves and brandy; mix well. Spoon 1,4 cup
t·heesc mixture onto center of each crepe and
~pread to within lh inch of edge. Roll up and
i.ccure with wooden picks. Reserve remaining
filling for sauee.
Scallops
on almond
rice with
cheese
mushroom
sauce.
Best Idea Since
Shopping Carts
. -
~~w you can do a week's shopping
<:;; 1r v ·without forgetting a single
item! Use pre-printed
shopping lists
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
UO .. perltt• printed ltem1,
plua 9ddltlon•I 19ecH you
cen flll In your .. lf.
34 ltepfH
21 Yegetebtea
,. Ff\llts
I lalcetyhema
5 .. Yer ....
,. Meet•nd
flltt entries
11 O.ry Item•
20 -.c.tteneoua
'
FOOD
Quick Dish
SCALLOPS IN CHEESE lrlUSWlOOM SAUCE
ON ALMOND RICE
1 container (12 ounces) scallops. fresh or
frozen
11 cup water .
112 cup dry white wine
V.. cup margarine or butter
\.ii cup chopped green onions
~ pound small fresh mushrooms
3 t,blespoons nour
1 cup half and half
~ cup shredded Swiss cheese
1 tablespoon catsup
'Al tea.spoon salt
4 dashes Uquld hot pepper sauce
2 tablespoons coa.rsely chopped pimientos
Almond Rice
Thaw scallops if frozen. cut lnrge scallops
in half. Combine water. wine, and scallops ln
saucepan. Bring to the bolling point; boil 3
m(nutes or until scallops begin to shrink. Drain
scallops and keep warm, reserving liquid. Pour
liquid into measuring cup and add water as
needed to brin~ to the 1 cup level. Melt
margarine or butter m saucepan or skillet
Add onions and mushrooms; cook until onions
are tender. slirrinJ? often. Stir in flour. Add re-
served liquids and half and half: cook over
IJ'loderatc heat until thickened, stirring con·
slantly. Stfr In chet?se. catsup, salt, and liquid
hot pepper sauce: heat. Fold in scallops and pi-
mientos; heat.
HIGH PROTEIN
.LOW CALORIE
THOUSANDS OF DISCOUNT PRICES •••
,,,,,, ......
I
I'
~ .,}
FOOD ' . WednM<f1y. December 28. 1977 DAll V PILOT Q
1 -·-· Fresh Still Wins Out Over Con;v:enience Food
ByLO ISECOOK TM USDA looked at macaroni products anci statistics, the USDA cheese which are tbesharetakenbyproc· frozen dinners. entrees,
Auoclated PttU Writer what happens to every oils that are cured. found that the percen· described the govern· esa cheese -a blend soups and juices; rice,
Amencans still lSpend $100 you spend on food. frozen. canned. dtied or tagc of money spent on ment as "modl/ied." The that may include some poluto chips and fresh
the blageat chunk or Here 'a how the 1975 only slightly riflned. the first three categories share or the food dollar noncheese flavorings vegetables not counting
nour and Ice cream.
their food dollar:. for breakdown worked out: $17.31. -fresh foods, mixes and taken by these Items in· went up 113 percent in potatoes.
,. fresh , unproces!>ed • Fresh, unprocessed • Modified products mixtures a nd frozen . creased 11 percent from thesameperlod. llems tbal lost ground
.; items. despite the an foods <milk, cream , wi'lhsugarorsomeother canned, cured, etc. pro· 196Sto1975. O\'erthedecadelncluded
Lesa than half or the
rood dollar actually aoes
for food. Most of your
dollar goes to cover
m 11 rketing costs -
transportation. process·
Ing and distribution. A
study by Andrew Wetnr
of the USDA's economic
research service showed
that consumers spent
$172.3 billion on U.S.
·fram-produced fuoods in uns.
+ ·creasing availability of meat. poultry. seafood. minor ingredient added: qucts -had decreased A look at individual Other items that took a .condensed milk, lard, 1 convenience foods. 0nuts. eggs, vegetables $9.27. slightly over the decade. items within the five biaeer share of the food fresh cream\ butter.
l • • • •
That's one or the find· 1and fruit>: $45. 75. • Accessories like cof· Spending for accessories categories showed some dollar in 1975 Lhan they ·evaporated m lk. corn·
ings of a U.S. Depart· • Mixeaand mixtures, ree. lea, cocoa, soft increasedsUghtly. s ha rp c hanges. The did 10 years earlier in· .meal. dry bean s
ment of Agriculture described as ready·lo· drinks and condiments: Tbebiglncreasecame· amountofthefooddollar e luded oils, s ugar, .and peas, ready.to-eat
study based on survt'ys eat or ready-to-heat: $7.69. in the category of items going to presweetened margarine. ready-to.eat sweet bakery goods,
c o n d u c t e d b y $19.98. When the figures were like frankfurters, peanut cocoa increased 120 per-cereal, natural cheese, egas~ fresh potatoes,
:Supermarkellng, a trade • Foods like bacon. comp&;red with 1965 butte.r a nd process cent from 1965 to 1975 ; dry tnWc, salad dresses, canned pork and beans,
publication, 1n 1965 ana r-------------------------=------------------~-------=-----------------------__:. ____________ ~--~----~~.....;.----~----------------------~~
1975.
Quick
Recipe~
JUNGLE BARS
For devotee s of
coconut and chocolate.
~ cup all-purpose
flour .
114.i teaspoon baking
powder
lh teaspoon salt
14 cup butter or
margarine
l cup s ugar
1 large egg
1 tablespoon milk
1 teaspoon grated
orange rind
1 cup flaked coconut
4 squares 14 ounces)
semi-sweet chocolate,
melted
Stir together the flour,
baking powder and salt.
Cream butter and sugar;
beat in egg, mUk and
orange rind. Stir in flour
mixture and coconut.
Spread ln an 8 by 8 by
2·inch cake pan that has
been greased, lined on
the bottom with wax
paper a nd the paper
greased . Bake in a
pr eheated 350·degree
oven until lightly
browned 30 minutes.
Turn out on a wire rack.
remove paper. Al once
s pread with th e
chocolate. Cool. Chill
hriefly to set chocolate.
Cul into small bars .
Makes40.
PHYU:S MINT SAUCE
l It's garden.fresh.
, \4 cup firmly packed
! light brown sugar
'I. cup water
1,2 cup cider vinegar
1,4 c u p f i n e I y
chopped fresh mint
leaves, packed down
fairly well.
In a small saucepan
bring the sugar , water
and vinegar to a boil,
stirring until the sugar
dissolves; pour over the
mint. Cover tightly and
chill for a few days to
allow the mint flavor to
develop. Makes about l
cup.
BACON KALE
It's southern style.
4 slices lean bacon,
diced 1 ·s m al l o n ion,
coarsely chopped < 1A lo
1 ~ cup)
10 ounce package
frozen leaf kale ·
1 cup boiling water
Pepper to taste
Jn a.medium saucepan
cook the bacon and onioo
until the bacon is crisp
anirthe onion softened.
Add the kale and the
water. Cook according to
the directions on the kale
package. Add pepper.
Makes 4 servings.
HOME MAYONNAISE
Afraid of making
mayon n aise? O ur
method may help you.
2 yolks, from large
eggs
1 tablespoon
prepared Dijon-style
mustard
l ir.t tabl espoon s
lemoojuice
~teaspoon salt
1'°' cup olive oil ~cup corn oil
Use a dee p 1-quart
bowl and a band-held
portable electric beater.
Have the olive oil ln a
1-cup g lass liquid
meuare; when it has
been used, pour the corn
oll into the s ame
·measure. Beat together
the yolks, salt, mustard
and Ill tablespoon of the
lem911 juice JU.st until
blended. At low 1peed
.beat in the oUve all, ~
teUJ)OCllD at a time, Just
until u, 11 no loqer
visible an.r eaeb ad·
d.ltloe. •
Pour the oil toward tH
beaters with )'OV ltft hand and rotat• tbt
beater itaelt Wttb JCM&r
rl1bt . hand. Do not onrbeat. S, ._ time
the mi.xtUN wUl be Ude*. Beat m t.be com ou, clrlb--
bUJI It ln drop by drop
u you pour it from tM
measure, In tbe aam• • .,.~wtUbl
· ~ery thlek. Do aot oyerbeat. A•• \be rematnmc 1 'tablespoca lemCle~·~tM.t• ua.W -~· Muei· ~u1p~
Wrung out by the old?
Ring in th~ new!
...
Obviously you, and customers like you, want
what we offer.
Growth? Like &.beanstalk!
\.
in 1978.
considered the effort It takes, just so you can af •
ford the kind of menu you want for dinner tonight.
Look Into the crystal ball.
'
Resolved: no resolutions.
Resolutions are made to be broken, so we don't
want to get caught in that trap. But we've done
our yearly summing up, looking over the past
year, trying to gain a peek into what future might
bring. A fast flurry of phone calls brought us up to
date with areas of our company that we usually
take for granted ... folks like Trucking and
Engineering and Personnel.
And It's meant one huge investment after
another. like tractors and trailers of sundry sizes.
Some refrigerated, some not. Each at $50,000 to
$60,000 a pop. Times 20! That investment in
transportation helped us to travel about a million
miles a month, keeping our stores supplied,
Including the 8 new ones we've built all over the
Southwest. We remodeled 8 stores. We've built a
bakery, a completely automated frozen food
warehouse and a ch~\cal factory that will help
us keep prices down on our own la~ soaps and
bleaches. We've hired over 400 additional
employees to keep It all moving. Bet you never
We plan to build 9 new stores in the Southwest in
1978. We'll expand our dairy warehousing as well
as our dell and produce warehousing. We'll remodel
6 more stores, in our regular ongoing upgrade
program . And of course that means we'll travel
Here's how it stacks up:
As you may know, we're a pretty large
supermarket chain. We got that way by offering
the customer a fair shake with prlc~s on name
brand merchandise. We offer food, of course, and
at our larger discount centers, a whole line of
clothing and domestics and other supplies.
Fresh Meats
OONELE5S
WHOLE HAM
FVU. V COOKED
CUDAHY !!·nm . Ill AICf\ A[)()( D
lHM\H+I fl 0 1.00..TUI
~89
FARMER JOHN OR
HOFFY HAM 13 8 ruu. V COOl\lO OO!K·IH ••••••••••• La
FULLY COOKED
HAM
~HANK. HI.Lr •••••••. LD
ounPORTION
OF HAM
r\JUVCOOKCD .. . tD
CP.OSS RIO P.OAST
llOllfll»OOHOCOOfIJ Cl«.OI ..... lO. 1 .48
~~~.~.l~~~~ .. UI 1.5&
cONtEO om o~sm 0 llC._.11 AllO WI ).HM .... IA 1. 8
OOMIWS II.UMP P.OAST ~(111.IO>CJ(Otar ............ 1.38
OOHEl.nS TIP P.OAST
OOHOIP NU l\OUllO .............. UI. 1 , 58
TOf' P.OOHD STEAK llO•ClO.UOl~Ollt# •. : ......... UI 1 • 68
TOP SIN..OIH ST£AK
OO••IWH0-1191111°", ••• ,. I.I 1. 98
EXTM LEAH GP.OUHD HU
=;'~';~~.~ ......... lt. 1.38
T ·OOH( STt.AK llOflba>lltl l.()llO .. ... 1 • 7 9
Fii.DH OYSTtM
•t'IOI ~ 1.19
Fresh Meats
Fii.ESH P.OASTIHG CHICKEN
lAOY )110~ , . , ..... i.O. • 78
COP.NISH GAME HEN l'nON.UlOA~• • .. 1001 1.28
~JOH~ S~~?!-. ~4'9
HOF'FY SUC£D OACOH
............. HOOM.G. 1.19
SMOKED SAUSAGE HWH~l.OIU~POUM lll. 1.48
LAOV LE'E SUCED DACON 1 14 ••••••••• •LO~ •
Canned&Packaged
GRAPEFRUIT J:JUICE
11\lU'l/££1 t<AIUl\Al 5 5 01\PINK
.... 460l CAN •
Canned& Packaged
P lAWRYSALAO DRESSING b o..c.w•1i;,.-•0001\1.<NO eoz OIL .55
P TOMATOJUICE ~9 b 00M()oflt • J10l 01\ ....
b ~~?.~1.E?_.~~!01.M .69
P CUT GREEN DEANS ..,, 1 0 -4 t&OZ CA14 oV
L ~~-~.~~ s~~~z 1All 1.49
Health & Beauty Aids
P.OSEMILK fl SKIN CARE CREAM
b l\f.'GlMI\ ~49 U~~~~£D . •&OZ -.
b ffiEHOL TAOS >W"• 2 _59
1 ~A~ES~~.~.6~!~~~ .77
L ~~'°~~~~~l.(~ . 11
b ~~~Ll_<F~a:l~~~ 1.49
Household & Pet
P NKEN SOFTTOILET TtsSUE 79 b ltl·O>lCllljNO'..I -~""""" + r PAPE'. TO"EU ir.9 0 11\UOAlt •03"MU. ,J
I' Kl.E(HEX TISSUE 0 IAC'AI. ltOCJ 80• • 7 'l
1 ~,J£DET~GEN!zor011.1 1.03
t ~~~MiEHT '°°' OO• 1.4'4
p AJAX D~GENT 2 i ~ b -... OlOOlt , ~
p Al.PO DOG FOOD ~ eu10<0lt<$ • •• ... Ol (AH ,33
even more miles, pay more taxes, create even more .
jobs, hire even more folk. And just generally do our
best to spread prosperity around, by keeping our
operations effklent and prices to the customer, low.
Like the ones in this ad. So, on the whole, it's not a
bad future. And when you come right down to lt,
for us as well as for you, a prosperous future is
what discount is all about.
Delicatessen
blAOYLEE
DIPS 35 <6 v AA1£11rn
........ &OZ.CUP e
~,.~ .49
b ~~-l~S ~IGHT.~~~o~ 1 .89
CHEESt LOGS ll /NUTS
•AIJICMl'U>"4... • ••••• •101 l<X'> 1 . 99
I' CHEESt CUPS
/::, ~U-:..IJ•o.A~UOf1VAAJr'(Sl 1:io1 1.J9
~ SUCEO SALAMI 0 G..aO . • JOt ••C. .65
P POTATO SALAD 6 ._.. ~101 (l>I 1 . 19
Dairy & Frozen
Liquor
~ t0"4 buy11>f't0\e1
Pike t!f!e<llve 1rvv D«embv< J 1, 1977
P SfAGMMS 7 CROWN 6 .,. ~eo""-., 1w~ on. 11 . 99
p TEH HIGH OOOPJ)()H
6 "-.AllOPllOO< ... • mltl el\. 9. 99
_, .(ANADWtO.UD WISK'r 9 b c.-w.Heotl'k. • mrt1oii:·17 .4'
P J60 SCOTCH WHISKY 0 eot!IOOI ••••••• t.])llUI\. 18,45
P OEEfEATEP. GIN b '>4"1\()Qf •••••••• t HUii Oil. 15.49
p aow.. P.USSE VO[)t(A 99 b eC>P'IOOf t Hllll O'\ 8.
I' CHP.IST\Atol DP.OS. DMND'C 99 0 80"'00' , t l)ll~ Oil 1 1 •
LUCKYVOOKA
eo-..oor . • • , 1>•m OIL 7 .22
LUCKY OOUP.OOH
•"" Ot.D60llftOOI 1 l>1t!\ Oil 9 , 7 7
LUCKY SCOTCH
40""°°" t IW-DI\ 9, 99
AHOP.E CHAMPAGNE
N6 -COO.DOU...-. 1>0"' 01\. 2.29
P DLOOOY MAP.Y MIX 1 79 6 -.c.-• . V.~01\ •
!+CW " !ht> time tO Modi up on yo.I< ro-ltt> blond. MOii Key Ouy hen"4 ......
~ io fe9Ub< con"'*<! P*• Jonuoty
1. t07"
'Produce
WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT
••••• &lD. CUlO DAG
AVOCAOOS
1>1\Co( WntATlMOOI>!
CtfEP.P.YTOMATOES noz llAlllV. .... . . •
TANGELOS
M.CI ~ IUCI' • .
.68
, •. 29
, •. 49
.. • lO .29
L[M()t(S 6 LIMES """'l!l'Ct. ... . . . ••• 09
P.USSl'T '°1'ATO£S
!UNO. • ..,_JllZl ............... ll. • 19
WCKYWILL 0£ OPEH
HEW YEA"'S EVE & HEW YEAR'S DAY
REGUW HOURS
WE 1/lll DE aOSED MONDAY. JAH. 2
.. -.
• I
1 I
I
• •
Wednesday, o.<:ember 28. 1an FOOD . . .
Is Giant EoonomJ Siz.1f~({Beeome ·Extinct?
LOS ANGELES(AP> poaed or ono or two s poiled food 'n the featurerecipesandcook-stllutesinsteade>fbuylng Betty.uapplesauceor nerwaretoyour"basic" ferentdiJheawblch can
-With households get-persons. garbage because we lng tlps for one and two. an item which won't be baked. kitchen. be frozen.
ling in creasingly "We'renowpartofthe couldn't ·use the large and s1\e's teac hin g used up and may spoil. • \-or faster thawing •Slockuponseasontng • Buy mulU~urpose
smaller, that venerable majority and It 1s boped sizes fast enough;' she gourmet cooking classes For example, ketchup and cooking, freeze foods blends. These eliminate equipment scnled to
American Lnstitutlon, the that will mean we have says. "Perhaps we'll be fo r singles and couples at works for tomato sauce; s uch as hamburger and the need for a shelf full of small quantity cooking.
filant economy size. is more c lout in th e more vocal In the future Lawry's Foods here. chocolate chifcs are good hl k 1 1 1 1 exotic. seldom used For lns•"nce, a ~even-
t I 11 A h . ~ c c en n s ng e serv ng I d h Ii lh ""' " hreatened with extlnc-markelp ace, espec a y and the food processors mong er taps 1or alternatives or squares portions. sp ces an t ey ven e tnch alope-sldcd covered
tlon, says a Los Angeles when it com tt t o will accommodate our making economical and and cocoa. r taste or the most or-skUlet double• 88 an
home ecooomlc:s COJlSUI-purchasing food," she wishes wlth packaged satlsCylng meals for one •Buy foods ln the most •Cultivate a specialty, dlnary dish. omelet pan, crepe pan,
tant and specialist on says. portionsforoneortwo." ortwove: versatile form. A lemon such as Mexican , Italian. • Fo 11 ·Packaged saucepanorsauteJ>ID.
'cooklngtoroneortwo. "For years, singles In the meantime, Ms. • Maintain a basi<! provides juice, i Uces, French or Chinese food, seasoning mixes are a
••Manufacturers of and couples hav&stood Swain is dolngherp•rt stockofstaple!oodltems wedges,twtata·andpeel. for entertaining good addition to ba$ic •Use. a blender for
products, particularly by and watched the to help out. She's cur-sultedto yourindlvldual A fresh apple can be purposes. Add the stockbecausethcy have chopping,mlxing,blend-
food Items, are going to dollars go down the rently pre parin& a taste. eaten whQle or used in a neceuary condiments, a long life and can be ing, crumbint. Saves
have tore-evaluate their ,,...d_r_a_i_n_,_a_s_w_e_t_o_u_e_d_c_o_o_k_b_o_o_k_w_h_lc_h_w_ll_l __ ·_L_ea_m __ to_u_s_e_s_u_b_-_w_a_ld_o_rm_sal __ a_d.;..,_ro_r_a.:..p.:...pl_e_e_q_u_ip_m_e_n_t_a_n_d_d_i_n_-_u_s_e_d_to_cook __ s_e_v_er_al_d_lr_-_u_·_m_e_a_n_d_cl_e_an_u_p_._~-
1arge quantity sizes,"
sa¥s Balbara Swain;
hetsetr a single.
Ms. Swain points to
Census Bureau figures
indicating that
'hovseholds <1f one or two
peisons account for 51 .2
percent of the nation's
r e sidences. or that
number, 21 percent arc
occupied b y single
persons and the bureau
predicts that by 1990, 56
per~ent or the country's
households will be com-
To Cook
A Roast
A perfectly cooked
beef rump roast makes a
dew xe party offering.
Properly handled, this
corppact boneless roast
will be just as tender and
s ucculent as prime rib. A
roasting technique de-
veloped by the California
Beef Council consumer
specialists works
perfectly with this cut. It
results ln a crusty brown
exterior and evenly rare
interior. Before roasting
t he beer is coated with
flo ur a nd generously
s prinkled with Italian
seasonings . Then It's
roasted at 500 degrees
for 20 minutt.4! -this
high te mperature as-
sures getting the rich
surface browning. Then
the heat is reduced to 325
degr ees for the re-
mainder of the roasting
period. When the meal
thermometer registers
120 to 125 degrees, the
beef will be beautifully
rare inside. The pan
drippings are used to
. .make an elegant sauce
fl a vored with white
wine. Garnished with
souWed potatoes and
thinly sUced carrots, this
roast is special enough
for a ny occasion.
CALIFORNIA BEEF
&UMP ROAST
4 pound boneless
beef rump roast
Garlic salt and pep-
per
l lh tablespoons
Italian season in g,•
crumbled
Flour
~cup water
14 cup while wine
2 tablespoons flour
•07 :l~ teaspool'heach
basil a nd thyme,
crumbled
Generously sprinkle
beef with garlic salt,
pepper and 1.talia~
seasoning. Dust with
nour, coating en re sur-
fac e. Insert m e at
thermometer into center
of roast. Place on rack in 9x13-inch baking pan.
Roast, Wlcovered in 500
degree oven for 20
minutes. Reduce oven
temperature to 325
degrees. Continue to
cook 1 hour or until in-
ternal temperature reg-
isters desired '"degree of
doneneaa. (For rare,
tbermom·eter· sddutd·
r.ead 125 degrees.>
Remove roast (tom pan.
Skim off melted fat. Add
water, wine and flour to
remaining pan j uices.
Stir unUl smooth. Cook
stirring over medium
beat until sauce boils and
thickens. Season with
salt and pepper a s
desired. Serve with
allced beef roasL Makes .e s.ttVlng.s.. . ..•.
ROAST: Choose com-
.Pact 21Aa-3 pound roast. Place on microwave
raek in dlsb. Cook with
full power in microwave
oven 4·5 mia•tea per
pouad. 1'lrD beef over der 5 mlrnatee. Rotate
dllb '1"lr/ 2-1 mlautel' durtnc rtlt ot cooklaa·
time. ~ coot Um•
10.15 mlnuta) RemOYe tlrom oven. Jnaert meat
tbennometet into center .ot Wck•t ~· Internal
temperature sbouldi
b• 100 decrees. Let
Let stand 10 m•utes. Co.er to Del> surface
from fOOUq • ._ tem·
•.-rature II 125 dea~
roast ii rare. U tem· ........... ,...
._ao•1h, remo••
.............. and cook Nm...._ more.-.
~tbe.n.t.Dto~. ~........... .
J.
.... the
waywilli
•
Southern-Whole
Fresh Fryers
28
9"f Chuck·Blade Cut
Clllck
Rollt
Weter Added
':.II
cam~ 11U1111111Ham
Golden Premium Meats
pef
lb.
79
usoA ·All Ralphs BHf _. .. ks ancl Roasts
CHOICE are USDA Choice excluslwely ·
USOA IMIChllcll
CWQltl 7 -Bone AOllt
JuSDAl a..tCIMtt.ClodClll
l£!!!W Family Steak
~ B.ii"~-w
~~Rt~
D Y.i~
D G;;;nd·chuck
Super Bakery
~ .89 ~ P'or1'Ste1k
~ 111 ~ Bor.'iii11 ~AoMt
:r ;n o rn'Hin
111 0 ,...... ........... , ..... ~ Bone1111 Ham
2•• 0 " ..... ,__.....,......., i::; Smoked Saullge
~ 121 D c~shrilq»
89 0 , .........
~ • Cooked Lablllr
Super Deli
.~.58
::t .35 ~-Sllld
~' .88 ~ B.;irai'rltol
:t.78 os;;ctdar
'::· .79 ~&;9Julcl
~ .43 ~-Nag
,., 1'' "· ,,. ,,.
':. , ..
~ 2••
':.' 411
• ... 111 ,. ..
~.98
.... ea ,.._ a'1ill
,,__ ... --Super Ice
RalpM-froun Onnge
Julcl -·
Olori.tt.·Ctnned
Tomato
JUiee
4&oz. II can
for 1oz. II pkg.
09Mt10rown Whlll
·· Grapefndt alb. c.:11
Pantry Fillers SupeT Produce
~t;gi"Piit.d Olivel ~=-.53
~~.c_,., •• ._ Papar Napkinl -:: .23
~~, ..... ....,.., Pretzel Twills l'tOL 49 ,., ..
~~p~ 2t:· .89
D.._., ... , .....
. Or1ando TMgllol
D,,..,. .... .w.n
Pln11ppl•
~ .......... ~Brown Onions
~ ''"" ltlkl ~Greene~
~.29
~ .251'
2 ~.25
':. .10
D ~Pelrllll ,~ .... 99 Health & Beauty
~ 14'111111M-tMc' ,,... ':.: .79 Hi HoCrackn
~,,..._._,.,. ·::-.58 Qrape61it Juice
~~ .............. ~ •~n .59 HamSprl1d
, ..... 99 ... . ti& 147 '*·
Super Floral
Frozen Foods ~.89
~·99 =· .79
:::.59
~.18
Home ·N Leisure
~ c..._......,., ..... •""""'
l\!:J Jan egg Roll ---.-,.41
~WTaqUitol ,~ ... 19
Reduced Prices ~~-· & lplrlts Ptul eddltionll 10% off e11e (when allowlble by law). We accept
BankAmlrtem'd for yow liquor purctm1.
,...._, .... C_..o..dl., 1JI ColdO\lchrWlli1ur'lftk
Chlmplgnl ~ Andre Ch&n.,agt19*
~.....C_.._.., ,.. ColdOvctl0tWlllletfl'IM
Crwnpegne* Mii Lejon Ch&n.,agt19
OklCrOWicubon· !: 411 ~'S'Mk'Scolch•
Mm allclfeDlc.811v•~ 1m
,, "21 .... ,-
" 8"
11111 311
= 7"
...
, t
I
lb.
USDA Choice Beef
Blade Cut.
Smok-A Roma
(Water Added) s 98
lb.
· POTATO CHIPS
Party Pride
Fresti And Cnsp
-------
TOP
SIRLOIN
STEAKS
USDA Choice Beef Loin
Boneless
,....&. ~-·~~ Farmer a-oz. 49c UI" ~ Jo tin Links l'llg.
7-Bone Roast g;~~ Ill. 99c
Sliced Salami 0s~t~~~~a ~:: '~"
Sliced Ham 1~~~r~!J ~C::· ggc
PARTY DIPS
,._ l Lucerne •;.l !Except Cl:im ~ y & Guacamole) ~ e-oz. 39c ~Carton
ORANGE JUICE .
~ Trop1cana ;....;i~ Ch•ll ..
i,: 84-oz. 99c ~ . Carton
HAMBURGER BUNS
Mrs Wrignt's
or Hot Dog Buns
Checkerboard Farms Grade 'A'
Frozen 20-oz. Size
Cooked Slriup ~~~:~ ',;.· •1~·
CUre 81 Ham e~:.:;s a. '211
Wiison Hams ~·~~:~~~~ce •· •3••
u...m Pattie-S sareway 11-oz. ,141 qa Fully COOk'id Cllft.
-SWISS CHEESE
Lucerne Sliced
,,
~ GOLDEN CORN
• Highway
'\. yacuum Pack •
OSAFEWAYS~ t·· ARE .OPEN • SU~AY,JAl.111 AID~
MOIDAY, JU. 2nd "
~~;e .. !:fggc
~.~~!:?69°-.
Sour Creaml-!59c
Lucerne .................... PlllClrtlll
!~!~ ..... ~49°
~~~ ..... ~49°
•
ALMADEIMT.
NECTAR
' I
Margarine • • • • • • &9c
Fleiaclunann'li, with com oil! l lb
Spaghettini • • • • 39c
Globe A·l -6 min. cooking-12 oz
Tomato Sauce •• 12c
Rich, thick Springfield -8 oa
SNACK 69 CRACKERS c
Nabisco-all varititiei.-8 oz pkg
Corn Chips ooos • • 59c
Regular or King Sizo-12 oz pkg
Imo m. ....••.• _39c
lostead cl sour cream -16 oz ctn
Soup Mi~es :~ 55c
Onion, Onion-Mushroom! twin pack
MAYONNAISE
Sprlncfield tor
taste, nlue and
economy! QUART 79c
Pickles :.CWIDll ••• 59c
Koeher, Polish or No Garlic -24 oz
Pepsi-Cola:. ••• 5119 ·
Reg., Diet or Light -J 2 oz canll
Sweet Pickles .• 79 c
Del Monte ... whole ... 22 oz jar
Dinner Napkins • 49c
Chiffon -assorted -package of 60
Crapefru~t
JUICE
T reesweet pure juice-46 oz
Seven Up 21 oz• ••• 39C
Hegular or Diet -the Uncolo !
Coffee •.••.•••• 5299
Maxwell Hou&e -all grinds -1 lb
Gorton's Clams. 75c
Chopped orMinced-61/2 oz can
Ginger Ale, Soda or Tonic -28 oz NR
Brawny Towels • 55c·
Decorated -thirsty.and st.rang! roll
RALSTON'S CiiEi 69(
Rice (12 oz) Wheat US _,
CORN -H • -ftc __
SMOKID $159 TURKEY •
.Plump El Rancho hens ••• ready to
·alice·and eerve ••• and enjoy!
Hant 1m PCllt10I ••••• s 12!
El Rancho's own ••. (nter ~
!
...
....,. _El_Ranch_o_s_1_0_9 ·' ,~ Fresh Beef $1· 29
HAM =:' .. · Brisket ..
SelecUKl and cured eepeclally b El Bonet--and U.S.D.A. Choice
Rancho ••• lean!,...., lllM) ••• .mole or baJf at tbie price ----------------~ .1
Cure 81 Ham ••• s29!. Ham Slices .... s21!
Hormel's boneleas .•• whole er half El Rancbo'e-thickot'thin-we
Put ... life • ,. party ••• ..,, me • ,. flinC ••• 1we -.. .. ,... Pll'tr 11uttet ••• 1et 1t • ... • u
.... -.. end wittl a ..,, .. Year! -II year!
New York ftrifJ =---~--~lll .,,
Mouth watering tendernesa in this magnificent loin cut of USDA Choice beef! Serve &lices for your party buffet!
l
"} ...... ~·· I ti 1 .. ,, MIL I ~
(8 to 4 PtUadena atoreJ · •
CIJSll ... , JAi 2
~ i ~.,~Ji'
~l ' .. N1w York Si1ak = ....... !l51 .
.St.eak at it's best! Naturally aged •.•
0
cut from tender loin8 of USDA ChoU:e beef! Start the Now Year with atilfactiionl .. :... . j ~ .. .,., '\ \ .,. ~
••
Ch&1aubrianl o:J: ... ~ .......... ~l.11
Gourmets delight! Naturally aged beef tenderloin that will be 60 tender, 80 juicy, 80 flavorful! ••• fore New Year'a feast
Sausage rrAUM mu: • s l 3i Chicken •• :s •• s241 Cooked Shrimp • s35!
Authent.ically "old world" seasoning! Stuffed Cordon Bleu etyle ' CocJrtaDebe-forJOQrPUW!
Bratwurst nlMCllO's. s1 3i Mushrooms mm1 s24! Ground beef ~s11!.
Pork, milk-fed veal and aeasoning Cordon Bleu style! 6-8 per pound Lean ••• doel not esceed 22% fat
Sliced Bacon ••• SJ o~
El Rancho's thicker "ranch etyle"
Crab Legs • • • . s21!
Meatyl ••• from Alaskan crabs
CHOICE BEEF
DIAMOIJ JIM
ROAST
U.S.D.A. Choice 'l'op Sirloin roei;t
Wingens aw1u F.s • s1°9
In TeriyalU Sauce ••. 10 ounce package
Rumaki E1WlU nm •• s 129
Delicious hors d'oeuvrea! 61h oz pkg
Lego'
PORK
Fresh! Choose whole or shank half.
Super Fresh
Ground Beef llllST s1 31
Doee not exceed 159' fat content
Chopped SteaksSl 3!
Leaneet-doea not exceed 15% fat
FRESH!
OY'STms s 1 &9
iight oi ju 1Wt*11 ••• SUt)
llvociltlus ~: .... ~.1,,1/
California's finest ... they'll be great in your special salad ••• or, 88fYe an avocado dip
Fresh · 29(
Lemons ab.
Juicy! ~ngy! California
CUCUMBERS
Large and
green for
crisp slices! 2i29C
Wl Wll I( OPIJU lt 1
SllAY1 JlllMY 1
(8 tt 4 ,...._ St.re)
Navel 4kS1 Onmges s
Sweet and juicy! California!
0
\)
.
PARfY PLATTERS
Relnl Let aa do it for you! We'll u -.
range a epread that will be a sight to'
behold -a treat to enjoy -and a •
bleuin1 to your budget! For an in· ·
ti.mate party or a hungry horde -
count on El Rancho!
P1A11DS 10 Ill' Y• IUDS •••
Y1MI mE ... YOll PAim ....
CHAMPAGllE
s1"
Ja~ee Bonet ••• your choice of Es
tra Dry, Pink or Cold Duck! fifth
.. ..
Chan1pagne •••• 5349
Le Domaioe Extra Dry-Fifth
Bacardi Rum •• s11 3s
Silver or Amber-Save 1.<>0! 1.76ltr
Canadian Club •• ss99
Smooth Whiskey reduced 61t fifth
Seven Crown ••• 5699 ·
Seacram'a Blended -reduced
Gordon's Gin ••• 1991
Tbe L 76 liter aiu reduced U>O!
J & B Scotch •• s1g45
You •ve LliOon the half-gallon ..
Wines SOAS11ll •••• s3 21
Buriundy, Chablia, Vin Roee! ~pl
SAVE SOC Oii
HOLIAY ms $699 VODKA
Charooel filtered! 1.75 liter
Frozen Food ClOSO MMAY JMmlY 2
Prices in effect Delicatessen
Vegetables CREEll GIANT 49c
<.:hOOM Niblel8 Corn. Mixed Vegetables or Medjum Peas ... 10 01 packeiie
Dec. 27.Jon. 1
Orange Juice ••• g5e
Minute Maid Crom Florida -12 oa
Jeno's Pizzas ••• age
Cheeae, Pepperoni or Sausage-13 ox
Snack Tray ••••• 9gc
Jeno'a Uttle Piuu-7 V. en pkg
Macaroni •ana • _33 c
Van de Kamp'11oodness-JO oz
lemonade •••••• 45c Egg Beater •••.•• ggc ~
Minute Maid Reg or Pink ...t..12 oz Fle~bnumn•uubttitU\e -plot ,
Canned ham~:· sg•s
That famoua "Armour Star" •.. lean and so tenderly deliciou11! Great anytime!
Polish Ham ••••• s559
Polka -,uuanteed lean-3 lb can
Sliced Ham •••• 39c
Two convenient ii.--4os pkg
Wine Herring ••• 5159
Or.,_ creem -LMc:co-12 ounce size
Party Dips • • • • • • 39c
Pen• Quill -8ounce CMcall ••• 49c) , ~
Cheddar Spread s1 s9'
Plum Creek Sharp, Brandy, Onion 12oz
Cheese Spread • age,:
Laughlns Cow-6 oz wrapped wedges • .---------.:
Cheese 'n' NutS 198 . : BAllS -·~
' ! Herklmw 12 oi (-UW 1 a Ut) " ___________ .... ,
. • I
..
"
t .
~~~;~'IJ,~~ .. • .. • .. • ............. Wld .. "Mda .. y•.0eoe ... m.~.'~ ... 1.an ........ DAl .. L•V •~~.o.r .. .
Learn Outside School
By CONNIE GRZELKA
NEW YORK IA P > -Prompted by
symptoms common lo many children. namely
slugslshness and a blank stare after school,
Sara AM Friedman decided to spend ll day In
her son's third-grade classroom. "by the end or
the class," she recalls, "l was ready to thro w
spitballs myself."
Just one day In thnl "uninspired, un-
lmaglnntive " classroom led Mrs. Friedman to
other concerned parents who thought they'd do
some further investigating, only to be told by
the school board that parents had "no business
In the education of their children."
That was 13 years ago. Mrs. Friedman, now
42 and the mother of three teen-agers, long ago
queslloned whether her children were learning
in school as well as they should.
Some of the answers, she team ed. were
right In her own home. Her solution was simply
one of extending the clas sroom into the home,
which she illustrate. In her recenlly pubh~hed
book ''How Was School Today, Dear'!" "Fine.
What's For DlM e r?" publlsbed by Reader's
D1iCest Press.
"They didn"t expect so much from the
school system when we were kids. Now they ex·
peel more and gel les~. •·she laments.
A New Yorker and a product of a private
school herself. Mrs. Friedman rates her own
education as "good ...
But, she adds. the system or learning •
public or private school, basic or innovalive
methods -dosen'Lmatter.
''What's important are curiosity. a love ot
learning <ind self.respect. They are totally
transferable to the rest of a child's ure. regard·
less of the teaching method.
"In life, real learning is of greater value
than just achievement in school. Thinking s kills
are more important than rote mechanical
skills." she asserts.
If Her Boss Cheats, She Can, Too 04 ~o~'JJ~•C;..%l I ~ . ~·
'
DEAR J\N N
LANDERS: That lett<'r
from ''Third Eye" ticked meo rr.
I am using company
pnper to write this letter.
I'm also using thl' com·
pany's typewriter and
the company's time. but I
don't feel the lrast hi t
guilty. Why ?
As long as my boss can
spend several hours look·
11'\g for a new wa te r
h ealer , o r read
G'agazines on huntini:
during workin~ hours.
and play tennis at 2
p. m .. J think my rhea ling
is as justified as his.
Sorry I am not able lo
sisn m y name to this h·t·
1 t&r but I n eed m y
paycheck on Friday. A
WOMAN WJIO HATES
HYPOCHITF..S
DEAR W0 ~1A N,
Sorry, I don't agree.
Rank has its prlvilegei.,
Ann
Landers
dear. Thebosscandolots
o f things you can't
b.-caus.-he has earned or
inherited the right. With
your altitude. Ruttercup,
you 'II never be a b-Oi.s.
D EAR ANN
LANDERS · Pl e a se
ch<'ck with your hi ~h·
cla::.s medit•al e'<per ts
and g1 ve me the facts. If I
take 50 sleeping pills and
ten tranquilizers, would
that be enough to kill me.,
Calendar
JUNIOR F.BELL CLUB OF IRVINE: The
group will hold a N<.'w Year's Eve Party Y.'ilh
<'Ocktails al 8 p.m . and dinne r at 9 p m. Satur-
day. Dec. 31, in the South Coast Plaza Hotel.
FRIENDS OF OASIS: The senior citizen
center will give a New Year's Ev(' Party at 8
p .m . Saturday, Dec. 31, at the center in Corona
del Mar. For information, call 759·9471
BAJUA CORINTHIAN YACHT CLUB: The
group will hold a New Year's Eve Party with
cocktails al 7 p.m. and dinner al 8:30 on Satur-
day, Dec. 31. in the cluhhouse, Corona del Ma r.
For reservations. call 644-9530.
DAR: lbe Clara Barton Chapter will meet
at 7:15 p."1'. Tuesday. J an. 3. at the Mercury
Savings and Loan Community Room. Hunt·
jnglon Beach.
DAR: The Pati<'ncc Wright Chapter will
meet at noon Tuesday. Jan. 3. in the Capri
Room or the Hotel Laguna. Laguna Beach.
SOUTII COAST JUNIOR WO.MF.N 'S CLU B:
The group will hold a Federation Night at 7:30
p.m . Tuesday, Jan. 3. in the Fountain Valley
Community Center.
1
I NSURANCE WOMEN OF ORANGE I COUNTY: Kathy Alls will speak to the group at
a meeting Wednesday, Jan. 4, at the Revere
House In Tustin. Cocktails are at 6 p.m.: dinner
at 7 p .m. Make reservations with Dyanne Ellls
of Allsl:lte Insurance Company in Brea.
WOMEN'S FELLOWSHIP, ST. ANDREW'S
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: The group will
meet at 11 :30 a .m. Wednesday, Jan. 4, at the
church.
SCRIPPS COLLEGE ALUMNAE: The
01ange Coast chapter will hold a theater party
aQd lecture seminar. The group will attend the
Jan. S performance of ''The Doll House .. at the
Sf>uth Coast Repertor y Theatre. Professor
-<layle Green will give the lecture on Jan. 12, at
tbe Community Room aL Glendale Federal Sav·
ings, NewportCcnter.
AAUW: The Laguna Beach branch will
meet at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 5, at the
Laguna .Beach Neighborhood Congregational
Church.
ADVENTURES WITH THE BIBLE: A
•1 s eries of Bible Brunches will be held from 10 to
11:30 a.m. Fridays, Jan. 6, 13, 20 and 27 at the
Balboa Bay Club, Newport Beach. The brunches
are designed to answer your qucst.ion.s about the
relevancy of the Bible. For Information and res-
ervations call Sue NewmaM, 63'7-7229 ; Julie
Pope, '1»9185: or Helen Mundy: 673·1698.
Or do I have lo drink a
fifth of whiskey to make
sure I finish myself for
good ? I am sick and tired
of this lousy, slinking
world a nd thinking
s eriously of killing
m yself. Almost ever y ·
thing I've ever done in
my whole life has been
wrong. I don't want to
botch my last job. Please
don 'l suggest that I jump
out of a window or use a
gun. I hate messes. <P.S.
This is no joke from Yale.
I am serious and need
your advice.) -GOOD·.
BYE ALL
DEAR ALL: Sorry, I
try to help people stay
alive. You'll bave to go
elsewhere for Inform•·
lion on how to kill
yourself. The money
you'd have to put out for
the pills and booze could
be better spent on a
session with a counselor.
Remember that once
you'r~ dead, tt's·too late
to try anytblng else.
( __ H_o_r_o_s_c_o_p_e_~)
T HURSDAY, DEC.29
By SYDNEY 01\IARR
ARIES <March 21 -April 19>: Social life ac·
ccleratcs opportunities arc present. much
more so than in recent past. Key is lo be selec·
ti ve. to keep eye on future. to be aware of poten-
tial. Yes. that "joll y" person is on the level and
favorable news follows.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20 >: Your position
1 ~ strong. but need not be rigid. Bonds or restric-
tion are due to be broken -s tudy Aries
messa~c. Line up alternatives. Aquarius. Leo
and Scorpio persons figure prominently. Older
individual is on your side, but worries about fine
points -print.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20>: Movement,
vnrlety, travel, ability to communicate major
points -these are accented. You receive call.
note or messa~e which buoys spirits. You know
now that you are "~olng_places .. and it ls.flood!
CANCER <June 2J -July 22>: Money and
family s ituation grabs spotlight. You gain in·
s ights Into moves -and love. Taurus, Libra
and Scorpio individuals figure prominently.
Yes. a member of your family will concede,
make amends. prove sincerity.
LEO !July 23·Aug. 22): Cycle is s uch that
you seek perfection and come close to attaining
it. Pisces, Virgo persons figure in scenario. Ac·
cent on appearance, personality, Initiative,
s howmanship. Yes, you will win -following a
delay.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): ~u are given
more authority following a "private con-
ference.·• Older Individual can open doors,
make path easier as you approach goal. But do
keep in mind that you get nothing for nothing.
Yes, there ls a price tag.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Flnlsh rather
than initiate. projects. Deal with Aries in-
dividual. Accent on friendship that blossoms In·
to a meaningful relationship. Desire is fulfilled
once you let go or an obviously losing proposi·
tion.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): New ways to
achieve goals -these are emphasized. Yes,
love is in picture. Your creative energies find
contructive, productive outlets. Leo, Aquarius
persons figure prominently. You receive special
·praise in pursuit of honor, profession.
SAGITIARIVS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Look and
plan ahead. Be sensitive to potential. Aquart~s.
Gemini and Leo are part of scenario. Long.
distance!' communication can "set things
straight." Read, write, advertise and publish.
You are going to be "recognized."
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Dig for In·
formation. Brush aside false pride. Yes, partner
or male is on your side despite recent money
dispute. You make marvelous contact at social
affair. Opportunity springs forth and practically
beats down your door.
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Being too
restricted ~ a temporary condition -legal.
terminology will be clari!ied and you'll be free.
Another Aquarian -and a Scorpio -figure
prominently. Be thorough enough to note
loopholes, trick clauses, leues that contain
"iml>Ofsible" condiUona.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): You get writ·
ten confirmation of legtl rights, permissions.
Gemini, Virgo and Sagittarius persOhs ligure
prominenUy. Accent on employment. pet care.
general health and abUity to Improve basic
services. Jp maJters of speculation, at.ick to
numbers.
DEAR ANN: I am a
so.year·old divorced
woman. Many p eople
who don't know my age
think I am in my early
forties.
A year ago I met a very
attractive divorced man
who is 45 years old. We
have been goinQ together
for a year and are in love.
He wants to marry me
and honeym oon in
Europe. Several times he
has asked me my age and
I've avoided telling him
by saying, "That's m y
secr et." I am not a n
American citizen and
have a foreign passport.
Is it possible to keep m y
age a secret under these
circumstances? Am I
headed for trouble not
lelljng him how old I am '?
Your answer will be a
great help. -NOT
FORTH
DEAR NOT : Tell him
your age-andquil being
coy. U he ls put off by a
number, he's nol lhe man
for you.
DEAR ANN: I'm 44 ,
husband same age I swell
~uy >. We get along OK -
no drinking, no gambl·
in~. no skirt chasing. lie
has a good job and our
home ls paid for. Our four
children are healthy and
normal. They do well in
school and the three older
ones <teen-agers) have
never caused us any lrou·
ble.
So why am I writing?
Because my lire is blah.
Something is miss ing.
W eddlng and engage·
ment announcement.t run
on Sll1lday m the Daily
Pilot. F'arm.s are avatlable
ot all Doily Pilot o//lcea or
. by calling the Features
Department, 642-4321
To avoid disappoint·
ment, pro8J)ective brides
ore reminded to hove their
wedding stories. with a
black-ond·white glouy of
the bride or o/ the couple.
lo the Features Depart·
; ment one week be/ore the
wedding.
Club Calendar run1 each
Wednesday in the Dally
Pilot and contains notices
of women's and service
club meetings and events
/or the f ollowlng week -
Thuraday throogh Wednes·
day. Send notices to Club
Calmdar, Datly Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA
9!628. Be sure to include
your name and phone
number. Notices mu.st be
in our hmld.s two ~ek1 in
advance.
To request a picture,
write or call the FeOlure&
Department, U2..:121. Pie·
""" ar1 llmlttd to fund· railers open to the public.
Til•llllllJll ttwna ...
RllAlllf US e .._.,.
-ickA
"E!peciaUy for Women"
ESTATE P.LANNING
& WILLS SEMINAR
..• and a ~
SALE! ~~o~ I ., "'~/>
A 'ANIL WIU DllCUll UN13EL Oi -ve-rno--n-•s
IPOfla~f
It's like stew without salt.
I feel a certain empti·
ness. What Is it?
MARGE
2 ~ All Sale Merchandise
")I.) 25°/o -75o/o Off
) Ane Feminine Faahtona
0 -~ DEAR 1\1 : The empll·
ness Is In your head, dear.
Any woman who has a
"swell guy" husband,
four normal, well ·
behaved kids and no
money proble ms has a Jot
to be thankful for. You
need lo do volunteer work
In a hospital for the ~an·
dlcapped or a home for
the aged. It will give you a
healthier perspective on
yourownUfe.
1 "Including E vening Wear For That ! s~c;;$l~;u" e
~ 3467 Via Lido. Newport Beach ,.: Par10fl9 Lot Entrance .. """ .,,.,.*11 MUletCNt,e Oe~o~~•2.%
~ fine stationery corona del mar
It only happens twice
a year-OUr excJtinQ.
seml-annua Shoe
clearance! There are
tantutlc uvtngs on our
fantastic collectlon of
Joyce·Stftly shoes ,
from the latnt casual
sport·abouts to yummy
ewnlng snsatsf Come
In today for the widest
aellction of colon.
aim and st)iesl
Wl're ..-ng for you
•.. at Joyce·Setby
Shoes!
-joyce·selby shoes
South eoat't: LM!I. ~=-MM791
. .
I
C8 DAILY PILOT
Creole Dish
For Party
S upe r b party (a rc,
J a mbalaya can be pre-
.pa r ed ahead of lime,
cooked until near ly
d on e. t h en reheated
.whe n New Year 's guests
arrivt>
JAMBALAYA
3 cups water
2 tcaspoonl> -.alt ,
d1v1ded
I teaspoon Tubasco
pepper sauce. di\11dcd
l bay leaf
l ri b celery with
.1eaves
J 1 pound !.helled and
,,deveincd raw shrimp ;r 1 , .c u p butler or
margarine
12 cup <'hopped
onion
':: c up chopped
green pepper
I gar li c c l ove .
minced
l cup uncooked n·
gular n c('
I can 11 pounrl 1
tomatoes
•11 cup bouillon
1 1:: c-up~ rl1cc<I
tookcd ham
To prcparc :1hr 1mµ.
put water, l tca!.poon of
t he salt and 1 :: teaspoon
Tabasco in saucepan.
Add bay leaf a nd celery.
Brin g to a hotl : ad d
shrimp. Return to boil
a n d cook 3 minutes.
Dr ain !.hrimp and l'OOI
quickly Melt butter in a
la rge s killet Add onion,
gredi pepper and garlic.
Cook until tender but not
b r own. St ir 1n rice.
tom atoes. bouillon. rc-
maininlo! 1 teaspoon salt
and 12 teaspoon
Tabaseo Quickly bring
m i xture to a boil .
Reduce heat and cover
sk illet . Simmer 25
minutes Add ham and
shrimp: cover and cook
5 minutes longer or until
liquid is absorbed. If de-
sired. serve with addi·
t1 onal Tabasco sauce.
Y I ELD: 4 to 6 servings.
CHEESE CORN
STICKS
I puckage 1 12
ounces> corn muffin mix
1 cup shredded pro·
ccss American l'h~csc
':.. teaspoon Tatwsco
pepper sauce
Prepare l'Orn muffin
m i x ,, l' l' CJ r <I i n g t o
paekagl' dirl·C
t 1 o n !. . o r u ~ c ~ 1) u r
favorite cornbread re·
l'1pe , a<ld s hreddrd
c-heese to the dry ingre-
dients and Tabasco pep
per sauce to the wet in·
i?rcdients. Pour batter
into greased corn-stick·
mold~. or 9-inch square
pan. Bake in 400 degree
oven for 15 minutes or
until golden brown.
Yield 14 corn slicks.
..
Jambalaya makes superb party fare.
An EaSy, Elegant Looking Cake
,
Continental Pear Cake.
You might find 1L difficult lo believe that a
c-a kc that looks as 1f 1t iust arrived from thl
kitchen of a famous F n •nc.h chef can be prepar ed
~o easily. But thl're il is. with IL-; deep chocolate
outside hiding u hcurt of cream and fresh fruit
La bonne cuisine of France gives you this dev·
1lishly good Continentul Pear Cake. California's
nch orchard country gives you the lender, sweet
and juicy Rarllctt pears that join with bright red
raspberries 1n lhC' l'rl'umy filling. and the
marvelous convcnienC<' of cake mix and gelatin
J.!l\'CS you the tool. for "hipping thas superb
d<·ssert mlo hcing in almQ:-t ll'ss time than 11
takes lo tl•ll about it
Whale the cake coob. you can prepare the
filling De c;urc to select your fresh Califorma
Bartlett pl•ar-; on the firm side. and fold the
cubed fruit in" 1th a gentle hand !.incc part of the
beauty of your Continental Pe<ir Cake lakes in the
<•ontrasl of the sc1uarcs of white pear fles h set orr
aj!:unst the round nubbiness of the red raspber-
rics.
CONTINENTAL PEAR CAKE
I package 19·ounces) chocolate cake m ix•
1, cup light r um
I cup whipping crea m
2 teas poons unflavored gelatin
21 nblespoons wat<'r ·
::! tablespoons sugur
:? medium -size fresh California Bartlett
pears. pared. cored a nd diced
:i • cup fresh raspberries <or, thawed and
rlr:nned frozen berrie~ l
Chocolule Frosting
P repare cake m ix as package dir ects. sub·
slltuting 2 tublcspoons rum for pa rt of the water .
Rake in greased 8·inch layer cake pan. Turn out
onto wire rack and coot. When cold, cut a 6-inch
t1rcle from center of cake leaving a l·inc h edge
all around I/\ saucer or s m all saucepan lid may
ht' used as a guide for cutting.) Re move the
<'enter c1rcl1:. and cut it in half hor izontally.
Replace the bot:tom half in center of cake rim.
forming a well Turn cr eam into mixing bowl.
and let stand at room temperature while pre par-
ing ~elatm
Soften gelatin 1n 2 tables poons water . Dis·
... olve over hot water Cool to room tem perature
Whip cream with sugar and remaining 2 ta ble·
-;poons rum. t'old in gela tin. then pears and
raspberne~. Spoon into center well of cake. and
top with the rcmainin~ cakt: circle. Chill. Frost
top and sades of cake with Chocolate Frosting
~I akes 8 to 12 scrvin~s .
Chocolate Frosting: Me lt 2 < 1 ounce> s quares
unsweetened chocolate over hot water. Slir in 1 :i
cup sifted powdered sugar. 11 ~ tablespoons hot
water and 2 teaspoons r um. Beat until s mooth.
Beal in an additional 1•2 c up sifted powder ed sug·
ar, 2 lightly beaten egi;i yolks and 2 tablespoons
soft butter . Sel over ice water , and beat until
thick enough to spread .
•or prepare 1 (1 pou nd 21 2 ounce> package
chocolate cake m ix. a nd bake in 2 (8-inch) layer
cake pans. Use one fo r t he Pear Cake. Reserve
!-.econd layer for another dessert.
New Microwave .for Christmas?
By DOROTHY WENCK OI'....-CMMy .._ Mvl-
W as a micro w ave
o v e n amo n g your
Christmas gifts? U so,
you probably are finding
that you have a lot or
(~_Q&_A_J
le arning to do to use it learn from experience,
• ~rrectively. and not make the sam e
r,ticrowave cooking Is mistake twice.
different. Since foods You will find that with
cook so quickly, you s o m e rood s , th e
can 't be as cuual about microwa ve is truly
,. the timing as &'OU are in faster and more conven·
oven or top or lhe ·range ient. Butyou will alsoCind
cooking. that with many other
You need to follow foods, your traditional
your ins truction book cookin& methods give
carefully, lhen make ad· .better results and may
j ust.ment.s to sult your even be easier.
" needs. A rule or thumb For exampl~. m eats
is to undercook roods, ca n be cooked quickly in l healing for a s hort time, the mic rpwa ve com ·
• and h ea l m o r e i f pa red to in the oven. But
necessary. they do not tenderize. a s
If you did not. get a they do in a long slow
complete cookbook with "pot roasting." nor do
your mlcrow.ve, you they develop as much
may need to buy one in Clavor. Ov ercooking
order to have all the meat in lhe microwave
necessary instruction. . can result in an un·
You might also con· pleas antly tough pro-
sider taking a class in duct.
1 microwave cooking. Yo u may conclude.
These are of!ered after trying various
through many blgh m e a ts in y ou r
school adult education microwave, that some
and community college· -whtch are basically
programs. Check with tencler -will do well in
your local d~trict for a ll, and others should be
class schedule. cooked by some other
A• you learn to use rfielhod.
your microwave, 1'St It How4ver, you may on all thl dlfferent kinds Clnd the tnicrowave han·
of foods that you cook. dy for reheating -ln a x.., a brief diary, not· maLLer of minutes
lA1 kind and quant.lty of meats that already have
food tlme or tt1n ' betn cooked, puatun, results, and For tom• foods. there ~dum1e1 to be .. no 1dY1Dlage at all ln
~ Uile. utln1 Uae microwave ~ la ... ""." JOG cmn ; blllicauae cooking \lme is ,.
' •
Meta l foil is a lso used
s pecifically to k eep
m icrowaves of! of some
a reas that might cook
too m uch such as
wing tips or dr umstick
ends of poultry.
PUBLIC NOTfCE
......... ...... ,................ ·······••······•••·····
aaoas· Ad'YertfMn GeMr~ 1 ooz . ·················~····· .._....check ttMir.. APPRECIATE "1~
dllly ..d r.,.,+ er-BEACH HOUSE $91,SOO
ron a-•.t.ty. The
D•ILY PILOT LEASE BEACH'HOUSE ,.. n.-i "A" FRAME $650/Yrly
llabllity for ffle flnt lft. Pe& Broms. Al\. 645-153l con-Kt~'*Y·
P'MbU1htr'1 NoHc•:
All real estalc advertised
m this newspaper is sub·
Ject to the Federal Fair Hous ing Act or 1968
which makes it Illegal to
adver llse "uoy pre·
terence, limitation. or
dbcrl.mtnation based on ruce, ~lor. religion. sex.
or nallonol ongin. or an
intention to make uny
such preference, hm1ta·
t1on. or d11cnmmal1on."
This newspaper will not
know1n1tlY accept uny
ad\•crt1s1n& for real
estate which IS 1n viola
lion of the lnw
HoMSn for Sal• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COMMERCIAL
LEASE
COROMA DEL MAR
"'In the heart of Corona
dcl Mar. Approximately
4000 square feel ""
ground noor plui. 2 i.mall
apartments Parking for
up to JO automobilCll. 65'
Per square foot.
COLE Of NEWPORT
REALTORS
675-5511
CORONA
DILMAA
3 11\lie BR. a lUe BA,
den, dlnln& rm, 2 s ty w/26' open beam ceil·
In its, Ule entry. frplc..
wet bar, laundry rm.
overslied dbl gar. 3000
Sq. n. or very unique liv-
mg s pace.
$149,500
JACOIS REALTY
675-6670
IESTIUY
3 Bedroom with massive
stone hreplace-& ex·
ponded living room,
for mal dining r oom , warm country ~ltcben.
Located on a large lot
with RV access. Close to s hopping, & Newport·
Mesa Schools. Priced at
a low $64,900. CALL
556--2660.
«=SELECT
I PROPERTIES
South of HlcJhway
Newly remodeled. Split
level. 4 bt.'<lrms. 3 baths.
O\•ers1ted lot with poten-
tial to bwld large addi·
t10nal units with swim·
m ini( pool t o boot !
$167,SOO. 644·1270.
IMCOME!!
Balboa Penm. Just re. I~;;======= duccd ! 6 Units. five 2
bdrms. & one l·bdrm. on 1---------2 lots. J ui.t !>lc ps to
beac h Owner
motl\·atcd!
6i3·30ti3 IH2 2253 r-:n•s
associated
BROK EA S--A E Al TORS
lOl', W 8alboo 6 71 )l>b J
EASTILUFF
Y Plan condo: 3 bdrms ..
din. rm .. fam. rm. off
country kitch Vi(•w of
g reenbelt. s1:1s .ooo
Wiland' C..F. COLES WORTHY
REAL TORS 640-0020
HAMGIO
3 Br . 1 ba furnished
how.e nr W. Oceanfront.
Dbl gar. $125,000.
Burr Whit l! n~al t~r
2901 Newport Blvd N B
(714) 675·4630
MODEL HOME
PRICE SLASHED
$3000
~ven month old home m
most desirable area of
Costa Mesa. Mas te r
bedr oo m o p e n s t o
tropi cal a trium.
Pr ofessio n a ll y -
landscaped &decorated.
Hurry. Lake advantage
call 9ti2· 7788.
Q.. KE:Y
Vf\E:ALTOf\sR
MORE CLASSIFIED -01
~!'! .......... !~~~I~~!'! .... ~ ..... !~~~
file~.'~~.!~~
EMERALD IAY
Attractive 4 bedroom, fa mily room,
formal d inini;! room. view home in
private community. Walk to private
beach. 6 tennis courts, 4 pools.
Bea me d cei lin gs. Recentl y
r edecora ted. Qui el Cu l -de·-S~
location. $329,000.
A COLDWEU IANKY CO.
644-1766
2161 SANVOAQUINHllLSRO.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
~~~~!'! .......... !~~~!=!'! .... : ..... !!~!·
macnab I lrvtne
realty
$50,5001!
In beautiful D eAnza Bayside
Village ('n·mobile ; 112-house). Just
s teps to water & private beach. 2
·BRs + family rm. HURRY! Lois
Mille r 642·8235. (8 -44)
642-823S 644·6200
901 Dover Drive Hart>M View c.nter
Irvine at Campus Valley Center
7S2·1414
S~\\~~-~£~s·
That lnfri911in9 Word Game wi#/r o Chudle
.-4 111\i CU. T L POUAlf
• =-'':'!"...i,1:7!..'! ~
low 10 lor1t1 fwr al""ple --en
LAT WUN I l I
I TtRTA '
I I* I 11 t
I HAWET I' . -, I I' I I • •'Ve *" '"'""'na °' "*'" ~ latlno my llouM. After 1 :: found whel It wCMltct OD1C I
.. 1 ... :: ... "-...;-E::x:.;..F-...;-A::l:::1 ::'did-. to I weettlllltrlp
. I' I I I I .• ~~.::: ~ .. ~-=t _ ........ _._ ...... _'"-...._~~ ..... "--..... i ......
I I
l
~
I
11 • I
--------~ -•199 -...... ---------.,. ..._ ---,,...
ADDITIONAL
CLASSIFIED-PAGE ca
u~ .. __ • ...... _ H • , s...1~ ...... ~l\Mday. December 28. 1071 * DAILY PILOT OJ~ ....._.,... ~ Ho.Mt ..... S-. ~ff rvr ~ OVIH or -.:.;-~;,:;;.;;.:;.:.; . .;;;,.:..;.;......;.....;..;.... __ ...... ________ _..,,..
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • ••• • • • • • • • ••• • ••• • • • •• •• •• • •• • • • • • • • • •• .... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • •••••• ....... for w. "°"'" For s. ............. s. ,,,..
&••rill 1002 Gwr• 1002 Cle"',.. 1002 eo.t.Mes41 1024 •••••• ! ................ ••••••••••••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••••••• ......... .. • •• •••••• • •• ••••••••••• ••••• • ••• • ••• ••-•••••• • ••••••••••-••• •••••• ••••••••••••••• •• •••••• c:-to w... I 024 ~ M1,..t I 052 L11g11Mt........ l 051
GREAT SPAlKUM' MIW ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -····················· ~.~.~······~~·~·~······· Ge•r• 100 G1Mr.. 1001 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
GREAT Sl29,500 VALUE!
Have you seen the lovely homes on the
"@(RI)., streets or Mesa Verde,
adjolnJng tho golf course? This 3
bdrm., family rm. home has a formal
dining rm., 3 car garal(e, 2195 sq. ft. &
has been upgraded both inside & out.
Security system & sprinkler system
also.
> ... ..
4 IB>ROOMS IN WESTCUFF
A perfect family home! Large lol
<83xlll ), a s pacious floor plan (2300 sq
ft>, .a roomy_ f a mlly room with
fireplace and a location close to
schools, parks and the Library. This
fine home has just been painted and
carpeted througho ut. A Unique
offering at Sl75,000.
REAL TORS', 675 6000
• 2443 East Coast H1qhwJy, Corona del Mar
di~ m Mcsd Vcrclt!, .11 546 5990
General I002G......e 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MANAGER-iEAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
A prime opportunity with an outstand·
ing real csl~1tc onwnazation + high
ear nin~s ! Ex pl'fic n ce is a mus t.
Prestigious lotation. /\II applications
held m strit'll'sl l'Onfidcnce. Please
reply to Ad #68. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box
1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626
~~ .......... ~~~~!~!'! .......... !~.~~
COSTA MESA -$67,500
:J Bdrms., 3 patios, one enclosed.
Hcfrigcrat or & matching stove &
many extras intluded; huge yard.
Submit your lt•rms.
NEWPORT BEACH
2 Bdrm .. 2 bath condo; upgraded
("U rpets & drapes. End unit. Pool.
Walk to everything. Hurry! Lovely
Wcstcliff area.
G__,.al
(7 14) 6'15-2411
hiso" 644-5046
nterpriset Real Estate Dirisiom
617 .Westdur Drive, Newport 8eada
{"A 92660 .
t002 ..............................................
3 IDRM-$78,950
The owners are anxious • LAKE ARROWHEAD They will include lhc
759-0811
4&0NEWPORT CENTER DR IVE 7!'>9·0811
IOOJ &.....-ol IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
P&tlMSULA rOIMT
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. hom e. All amenities.
Lovely area, few steps to beach.
SI89,500
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4
baths, living rm. w/cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. 5224,950
llG CAMYON
4 BR, fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large Jot. S325,000
Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR
34 1 Boy\ode Orov.-N B 675 blbl
GttMral I 002 ~rol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
f·:SI.t·:Y !\'
~YLOR CO
l{EALT<>HS ~1 1 wt· l ~Ht
IA YROHT APT-fOI LEASE
Lovely 3 bdrm 2 bath triplex
apartment for lease. Plush cptng, l~e
rms. Terrific bay view & on sandy
beach. Close-in loc. walk to shops. $"/50
mo.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
21 I I San Joaquin Hiiis Rood
NEWPORT C&tTER, H.I . 644-4910
1002 GHWal 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
IOACRES
Rancho CaliCornla.
Prime avocado coun·
try!! Great income
potential. Good terms
avail. Con1ider ex·
change. sso.ooo. Call
540-llSl
4'~:6-.. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
ABANDONED
GIANT
$87,500
rl:'fn gcralor, washer, CUstombuiltchalet,3000
clrvcr and or course the sq.ft .• l·Jxuriously furn.,
kitchen !-Ink' Lar~c 3 bedrm, 3 bath, form.1--------• ma;.tl:'r bdrm and 3 dine rm. heated dble 1 ________ _
Huge 4 Bdrm le 3 bath.
30'x21' fa mily room.
Massive Palos Verde
rock fireplace in family
rm. Used bnck m 1Jv111g
room. Wet bar & much
much more! Vacated.
owner desperate. Take
ad\'anlage NOW. k1 tchen·d1n1ng area. garage ... _~ekc~~000gate,
546-2313 pnvate""" . _,, . J.C.MASHRLTaS
540.5101
I RATES AT BUYERS CtfOlCE OF IY OWMa
SOUTHWEST COLORS xw under 51.1 ...... cleao 3 br. 2 ba,
Con.lr"Cl o n -tbia ,_. "' lam rm oo quiet cul-de· BANK custom 3 bedroom, 2 sac. Nr 20lh/lrvloe. bath home with f1repla~ Drive by 2038 Aliso & call
& fenced yard is ln lovcly 5'8-9897 or (213)43'7-1809 Easts ade area. Unga A Gnat Rattt For
Uaed c .. 8-yen
(The 11ame as (cw new
C8J1i.)
As low as 9.95 annual
percentage rate.
'>.Great Rat. FOf" ..._c .. 1wyen
(Convenient, ~iisy pro-
cessins. >
As low as 9.95 annual
perc.ent.aee..i-ata._
A Great Rat•
For HOlllHWMN
("Second Trust Deed"
lype equity loans.)
9.5 percent plus two PTS.
plus$150.
STOP IN OR CALL
SOUTHWEST BANK
EL TORO
2AC17 Rocklield Bl \1d.
830-31.22
LAGUNA BEACH
800 Glennyre
497-l771
Mls:ilON Vl EJO
28662 Marguerite Pkwy.
495-6600
$50.950
2 Bedrm. 11~ bath Condo.
New carpets & paint.
End unil fai:in~ green
area. Hurry, won't last.
s-16-5880
~__.HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOUSE ALONE
is worth this price! But
you can live near the
beach in Corona del Mar
and ha\'e rear t enanl.8
help pay. $175.000.
MORn-.s REAL TY * 494-8057 *
$13.450 DOWN
CORONA DEL MAR
2 BR. 1 BA home on R-2
lot. Live in front unit
while building 2nd unit
on rear or lot. Outstand·
ing inveistment. Only
$134,500.
'-' c 'fl\.Vl c._1n , nrvu~.<""41"
RL Al_T{~~~. (lf vt t (_)Pin•,
WAMTED .
Home in Spyglass!
Southport Mod e
w/CataJina view. Will
pay top dollar. Qill Nick
Vracin. Agt 752·6521
C.!5-l
1•00 QUAjL '1. NtWPOlf aucH
Mesa Verde Golf Club
5 Br, fanwtlc view. ~
Acre. $295,000. Shown by
appt. ()C)ly. 1190 Pan.r
ctr.
Af. 54().0608 '
TIJPW
IHMISAVBDE
1'hcac unJ\I are freshly
p;&\nt-.'d inside & out &
are located In a super
arelt. Private patios &
•eparate laundry rms ln
all apt.s. Walk to shop·
J)lng. Great Investment
lor 1978. Call now to seel
MS-9'91.
RulEsran
SEA TERRACE
-ftome with clftfer ..,......, ltHhcl -4
filtered pool. 2 be*OOMt, .Mt .... p ....
• .,, .... $9'7,000.
t.AGUNA
NlCUlo;L
495-1129
499.455 I
DANA
POINT
493·8812'
LAGUNA
BEACH
497.3331
IJ
DECOIATOR 'S I,.. I 044 DRIAM Real &tale Hatlltwl• •11e1t I 040 ........ · ............. ..
e= Walker & Lee
$74,500 ---.-EC-Bm.--Y---a ••••••••••••••••••••••• VACAMT
Fastidiously clean & RIMODElB> la LOMB. Y rompletely rt!<lccorated. SALE IY OWMER
F'eatunn& OC'f" cpls, drps READY FOR YOU! 3 Br, l'' ba Condo. Liv
& appl. Spacious bdrms Sharp 4 bdrm + fmly rm rm, din rm & Jns1de
& formal dJning. Ex-home w /slaake r oof. laund rm. Pvt. patio,
pans1ve lush eround incl. Great noor plan which is pool & gar. ur.gradL'<I.
r mil h d & I tti one of largest models in aJ
Thls pretty 2 BR studio
type condo needs an
owner. Terrific lnino
locauon. Priced ror fast
a yore ar a ce area. New self·cleanin" Norommonw .2story .
greenhouse. AU this + ovens. New no-wa~ $68.450 Pb 962·3527 NO
VA terms. Call today floors both baths & _A_G_TS_·------·i.o MG-7171
sale. $76,750.
VAWY 640.9900
on: 1119, ,, s ,..,.., roet :on• kitchen. Call today fot WOODSY 2 STY [;_e' IMM =r:oo.:::.~~~"· ~&~~:?:?.;:]·::.;.
. --·=•i== -ings, s weeping master
and childre n 's wing.
CHOICE
~TSIDE
O WNF.R S ARE
ANX IOUS!! This .
RANCH REALTY
551 .2000
Real Estate Open hearth fireplace.
UPGUDB> M a g a z I n e fer f e ct kitchen. Mult -purpose CORNER BEAUTY area. ln the $70's. One or
You'll go ~a-ga when you our nowcr home:;. Bkr inspect lhlS tastefully de· $36-93\1, corated 3 bdrm beauty ~-------.....
w/warm e arth-tones. Hwil1'qon
An'INTIOHFHA
&VJ.BUYERS
MESA VERDE
SEAGATE
DEEPWATER TNHSE
Lowest price waterfront
at only $199,500. Call to-
day.
PURCELL REALTY
846·2848
.,.... 1044
VILU ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motivated seller has WOOD ... IDGE purchased another new -home &sayssubm1t your BROADMOOR. 4 BR.
offer on this sllarp 2 fam. rm., pool & spa. all
bdrm beauty. Submit lndsepg .• decking, fonc·
your FHA or VA offer. ing, gorgeous improve·
Only S59,900. Call now. ments. model home 545.g..19i. cond. Move-in ready.
· Agent 640·5560 BIKE r~1wtt1H§lflrnM WHERE ELSE...
WOODAJDGE
PRESCOTf
Lgst Woodbridge home. S
Bdrm or 4 Bdrm+den.
O\'ersued lot, fully
lndscpd. Ideal for pool.
All up~rded. Mexican
paver:. tile. A/C. Liv, din
rms. 3 bath. 3 Car gar .
l"r park. Walk to lake.
$186,000. Brkr/Ownr
552-4121or835·3535
Real Dtate .. can you find a 4 bdrm .• To BEACH I 034 2YJ bath home with Ml. & 1 _..,a. h FOM!ltaln Valley gotr course views. com· __,....-ac
•••-•••••••••••••••••• munity pool & jacuz.zi, ••••••••••••••••-•••••
104'1
$63 500 1---------1 tennis. bike trails .. you RIVIERA ' EXTRA NICE name it • lhia home has EXCLUSIVES Private enclosed fron it. Fee land, tool $109,950
Courtyard enhances cu 4 B e d r m • 2 Y:i m .. I 3 Bdrm & family room. baths. 'Meadow home. Rm(f'
Ttlr access. Unusual lo Surrounded by new _ ~~·-price for area. Veter homes. Walk lo schools. ; • offers encouraged. Tak Call tosee.
advantage. IJl116f4~C:~;l(1r:10 LET US J.C.Hash Rffffors I -·-·~-·-----.. Introduce you to one or 540-5101 962·4471 =-: 546..atOl Irvine's new develop· ~---=:...:..::....:...:..:...:___~1---------..,1 men~.'TURTLEROCK EASTSIDE FIXER
3 Bdrm house. Umt over
garage. Alley entrance.
Super locauon !
GLEN PATIO HOMES.
We have 3 & 4 bdrm.
homes. All upgraded,
plus outstanding recrea·
tional fac1llt1es; ranging
in pnce from $l57,500 to
I
HIGH IN THE SKY, 3 bdrms. & den, fantastic
oet!an It city views! Xlnt
neighborhood, close to
schools. See today at
$1111,500
HOME & INCOME. 6
Uruts. downtown Laguna
Beach. 3 Commercial. 3
residential . Fantastic
ocean views. $595,000 """ .. '"" .,.,, .. " " 400:~:JM [~·lff!H\I u~ Happy Holidays! , ________ Costa Meso I 024
COSTA MESA
BROOKVIEW
TOWNHOUSE, 3 BR, 2\.2
ba .. all e lcc. blt·ins,
brick frplc., upgraded
carpets, 2 landscaped
patios , pool area.
$94,990!
aUIUIAllT'S
EXEC TOWMHOME
Upgraded, ideally local·
ed. 3 br, 2'h ba in Foun· ta1n Valley. Convenient
to shopping & schools.
Conv, FHA or VA terms. $}59,500
OPPORTUNITY OF A
LIFETIME! Oceanfront
restaurant, beart or
Laguna Beach. All new
VA TERMS ~~~ ONLY $62,500 EL TORO
' Best buy in the area. Air Pri<.'1? down. must sell! conditioner nnd some b h • olh<'r nice xtra 's, Calling Sharp 2 Bedrm. l 'h at • us ls a must -The dol( Condo. Fast escrow. C
• bites! A qwck escow and Model with private
· t h i s y e a r ' s b c s t garage entry· $S9,900.
: Christmas present is PETE BARRETT.
SERVING:
Costa Mesa-trvlne
Huntington Bench
NeWl)OrtBeach
• yours. 546-2313 v
• C"'f .. lft9-Jl~llJ.,,0141M<I! -REALT,-1 lmmed.
lailboa lay Prop.
Realtors * 675-7060 *
SBR&2BA
••••••••••••••••••••••• ON .. HOUll MALTY
F• &. S SSS ,J;6> '103°"'11941·eo.1·-A bargain! Call for de· · • equipment. $850,000
1x ave . ~ 545.91 st Use your imagination! •
Wilh paint. carpet and ~-t-tal
some fix in• you can turn ~
tails.
531-5800. eves.963-0391
W'I RE H.tworil
this large 4 bedrm, fa mi-Top Hat & Tails
I y h o m e .i n t o a Exeatin Custom Huntington a.och I 040
showplace. Bag family Across from Mesa Verde •••••••••••••••••••••••
room, pool size back Golf &Tennis Club. Huge OOM"TREAD
yard, 3 car ga~age, ~ s quare footage, 4 owch more! I Ttlls won l bedrooms, family rm & THIS AD
last! Call now 645--0303. recreation rm. formal
FORESTE
OLSON ...............
•· dining, Franciscan tiled
entry. Privacy & beauty!
For an appointment,
BKR, call 540-1720
MYST I C HILLS. ~Overlooking Laguna,
3,000 sq. I\. Chris Abel
designed 5 bdrm. home.
A rare opportunity at
$375,000
MAGNIF1CENT 3200 sq.
~ •• 4 bdrm., •~ bath ---------1 home. Finest oceanfront
ELCHEAPO community. Loads of ex~ tras. $350,000 , [~•I! ~~6~42·~s200~~ Occupncy
· -.,.._port Shom
MES ,.y-.1u!. UPGRADES 3 Bed rm, 2 bath,
Wood rt oors. wood
shingle roof, fireplace, dble garage. $64,500. .:..· _:•:..."_~ _____ c:--__ ._
GI/FHA financing avail.
Santa Ana near Warner.
unless your looking ror a
4 BR, 2 BA home that is
immac! Super H.B. loca·
t1on. it-yoq ean find-a
home equal to thl5 one, at
a belt.er 'price, buy it.
ST.J.950.
Quiet cuJ-de·sac. Warm
& cozy liv in g r oom
w.!brkk lrplc. Sunk.is
country lutchen w /wall
of glass. Tuck away
master s uite. It won't
last at only $82,500. Call
BllILDER~ attention:.
two R·2 tots. heart of
Dana Poinl. Both lor
$85,000
"" 9'wio GALORE! breakfast nook, dble $82,500 This 4 BR home hu all gar., newly painted. new
• Freshly painted home the extras! Air condition· carpets & drapes. Under
• with a u sed b r 1 ck ing. beautlCul landscap-$1.J0,000.
Roy McCardl•
1110 M.wpori llYd.
Cotta Mft«I 548.7729 fireplace & 3 bdrms. ing, sprinklers, mirrored LocJma •och
Soper xtrM In this Cami· walls. cul de sac location Above Laguna with 180 1---------• ly home. It's a new list-in MJSsion Viejo, with a deg. view. One year new . ._ _______ _
mg & a new year · let's · Pri d t b .. A ood 1-i?el you together with gorgeous view. ce a 2 bedrm. 2 at... g llG COROMA..
each. 546-2313 $85.000 buy atSll2•000· .. Beach is one house
BUOY THE
HOLIDAY
SEASON
in this 4 BR bome.
Professionally decorated
& beaut. park-like yard.
Vacant & ready for you 1
540-3666
Wftelc-.11
VAWY 640-9900
(!11oMli
4 BR. frplc, very clean.
$71,795. Approx 1550sq fl.
Owner out. of state.
960-4144.
752-1700 ' • INVESTMENT op·
Ol'fN 111q·11 s ruNro111 NICI • portunlty; a beautiful
[;e:IH<l ~~?iu~.~~
VIEW+ m· . ..--"-~ PRESTIGE ·. : ~~
. 4119·2800 2 Sty, formal dining rm, '[i'1:ttt!'~u:~•ol?lzn"~'1s ~E.tr . .a·. FORJM r:~ri:~°:m~~~~W~i~~ "t~~~< ~~~:~·~· 1.1!!~~~~!!!~~,r~!'a~-.~·~·~:g:~llllli...~~~I in Corona dcl Mar. 5 ~ .. , ) : • 1 Bdrms., each with own 1---------1 . --•-1•:11e11••~ bath; family rm. with Uke new, by owner. 438
RIAl E~TAfl MeechT.LCcre
3 Bdrm, 2 Ba-$65.000
Close to Golden West
College & shopping cen·
ters. Opeo Sun 1·5. lS84l
Carrie Lane.
lrg. family room w/cozy1---------
frplc. 4 Lrg. B~'s. You ~Ja£ ~~~a:~1:_ r~!:
choice of carpeting. Bes La" A... Evs 492-1420 Turtle Rock location. --"'"'--'6;;...._•· -----
M a k e you r o ff er · Btand new 3 bednn home {• INVESTOR'S frpl c., magnirlcent Princeton. 4Br, 2ba,
SPEC',. 1 4 •ux IRAMD HEW mahogany pane II n g pool. $89.900. 642-3729 aR ~ ....-$64,900 4 •+POOL tbruout. Owners moving 5.
2 YEAllS HEW Towering, mature tree out oC area & priced this ~ Walker & Lee SO CALIFORNIA RLTY
546-5605 MEAR OCEAM lined streeL Huge sun $55,000 lovely home below
$45.000 Dow.... 8 park 1 in g fa m 11 y Bike to beach from th.ls replacement at $330,000
" h l i d beautiflll garden home. Pride o( ownership uolt.a kite en. 3 K ng s ie ~ bl.l1 ln Huntlngton
with tantastlc s tone bdrms. pool sized lo~. Br.~h. $2300 down or as·
fireplaces. Enclosed Trailer access tool Don t awne '240 monthly P•Y·
garages. All beautiful, w::N~•~1.~~~~.,~r· m ents. Hurr1l Call spacious unlta. Owner v ~ 963-6'117 ~n~:l~~~t~:~.[ 1~·==~~'~*~~!!11~.w~·'~'~:~t1~~. ~.I: 1~9:J! •II s Am ION:OC:f'
opportunlUes. Call oow 1.:·' · .:m•==• • .. •
96-1-7881 S49,950 ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..~~~~~~
. '
THE REAL
ESTATE RS -.
OlfN '" ~· 11 ~ rUN ro11r NICI' I~ [ ~ I Beautifully malnlained ~ ltillri = ~~Lu!~=°ii~
MAlYB.OUS
MONACO
Call ut at>out tbil Im·
maculate ooe owner. 2
go wrong w/this btll
piece of property & a&Aeh
a low price. 6'8-Tlll.
bedroom, convertible EeaJ DIAlle den home l• Harf>or1.---------
~ Walkt:1 t: l 1:1:
Vlew Homes, The CM'l'llMI
owner'• rnetlculOG1 cani On thll tJt.n abld-1• ,_
to every malnt•n•nce ranch acyle famlly home. nt\ed ~lll lmptHI you. bd 2 b f I And the hl1[l\1t.y com· 3 ' •· m 1 rm w/\oed& ot cement work, peUtlve pMCi! of St3UOO. pl tor -.. ... cov tee wlll pleaso "0Ut an artM • vll . " eNd pat.io. Also fenced ~~~,.:.. .. 7111 dot run, tie ehlldrna
-_. play houH "play yard. Only STt,5001 Our ex·
ctu.ift.M>••t.
New Condos, 2 Br, 2~ Ba.
2 frplc's, ceramic tile Real n.tate kitchens & bath. Pool & S4cS Resale Specialists.
spa. 6754912 Broker Mesa del Mar 4 br1 2 ba, 3.4 or 5 bdrm mode.ls
Near ahops, schoo11. ten· av all. some w /pools.
PlllCllS RIGHT nls, U0,500. owner 968-460'2
Pvt party, must sell one 557-4086 Penningtoa Properties
of two properties on 102 •. ,.~ .. u-1022 F1ower St. in East C.M. 1 C.... .. M• &. -_.
duplex or 1 lot w /2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
houses. 67M372.
HANDYMAN'S
DREAM HOME
Fantastl c· opportunity
lot the handyman •eek· inl a large worbbop 1t l)ome. 811 Hparate
bulldlnl ill back aultlbJe for mecbanlc. wood ttGrter, electrician, or '11 8etw luln')'l Call e.s.-m
f. UJ._H_ •_, T f-
OL 50 N
••
111111 ILlllS aa.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
HOMI Is llMT AL UNIT
O\armln=Home On Old Corona Del Mar Du ex Lot With Rental Unjt In
iw.. d To Flnd 3 Bedroom. 2
Bath Owners' Unit. W /Fireplace
And Lft,rge K!tcben. Welt Deoorat·
ed. Nicety Landscaped With 2 Sun·
· ny Patios. Convenient To Tennis
Courts And Shopping. Priced At
$154.000.
$185.000. O w /spectacular ocean
VALLEY 640-9' View ln prime N. Laguna
loc. Plus additional
-iilJNAMt house to help w/pymnta. ~'~ r~ Owner motivated. Sub-~ mlt all ofCers. World ~ -Wide Brokers,673-4545.
&..,.. IHcll l 04' ...,.. IHcll l ~4' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• cae:
111111 ILlllf S aa.
.OVER 50 YEAFJS,Of SERVIC,E
VllW HOME
THRH ARCH IAY
SOUTH LAGUNA. Architect
Designed. Custom Built. 'l'wo
Years Young. Magnificent 4 Br &
FR Home With A Forever Ocean·
View From Nearly Every Room. A
Delightfully Bright And Cheerful
Contemporary With Vaulted
Collings. f;xqulsitc Decor,.
Expensive Honey·Belge
Carpeting. Splendid Use Of Glau
And Wood. Priced $318,000
llilmMtA u........... u ...... ,
••••••••••••••••••••••• .................. Aeet• 8 .... , I , • JJ07 ._. ............... .. ........... s-. 'w.. ...... .... s-. . ...."'' ,.., 2000 ......... ' •• ! ... : ....... ,......_ .. .,.... 3240 " ..... Uaf ..... d ....................... ..,.. ...... ...... ····•········•····•··· .....•.•........••..... ....•.••......•........ ....................... . ...................... ····················~· ............................................. .
..._.._.. IOU t6ta,.t lw.ll IO" .......... tOtl COWUTILY saJ8:ef f:t. ~~cov:~ Me..,....leocll 32'9 ...,_, .. _. 3106 Corwl .. Mw 3122 ······················· ······················· ···········~·········· us~• ia LI --·5i H"'11PY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAS ""•4LJTYDUPW.-liERE'SYOl!RCJtMiCt: '""' \':i · J" ·-mo. lfll4T UftOH Nlcellte cheery 2br 1un---------y LIVIMG ..,.. -BR .. A Old Spal'l•b man1lon U>44'T· 10 NEW YE ... 1 dck quiet adulti no
lo \bas euy-nro 2 l! ew duplu .. lrom Beaut 3 .... ine, DlOO wh.banoceanvlew.3u.n· Ye.at Round. 3 Br, 2 ba. A lHIGOLfCOUlSI! sieu:S37:itl'fs.4394 '
Bdrm., 2 t...lh O·Y·O: an St7t,ooo. Prime Nwpt dn. Call now• M br IU·Oae mile to Dana CJ>t$/drps stove refrif Spend 11'71 In a bnnd Btccanyon Townbom•. 2 .:.---'-------
usy walk to Main H1ta locatlon. All 3 1crviceMfi..C1V•il· PolnlMarina.sa~ooo. $500/mo. •839•9317 an 6 new beach home. br, 2 ba JTOO pe.t m.o. lalMHIP-...ao 3707
'"-1(,Sli.'!r.~·-
·acach. Euy terms w1th bdrm. 2\-1 botb units MOllHS RIAi.TY pm. Spaclout, uparaded thru· 64G-S274 •••••••••••••••••••••••
pnvate f1nanclnlf; 1t'a f'int u..cr dcpreclatmo. Ott.rled&t .. • 49,. •057 oot. frplc., dbl. garage, . L~e 4 br up~r. all appl. GARD!i.N APTS
Hay to see th1" 'acorn Top quality conslruchon ••••••••••••••••••••••• * .... * Coroft• det Mw 3222 pvt. yard. Children & " br, 3 ba. fam rm, 3200 Acro5~ fro1n beb. Wlot.et
propt'rty.OnJySHS,500 Lotsofutru.Joato th•· MobhHoftw• ..... ~RTHll,,,,._HTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet1 welcome. Only aq.Ct.14"Santiaao.N.8. only.$52.S/mo.062·1~ CORONA DEL MAR
2 Br Townhouse. frplc
Pool. tennis. Some ocun
& Cato.Jina views. Clo:1e
to Faabk>n Island & fine
beach. AJso 1 Br. 644·2611
NORIHSREALTY wut<·r . lfc11 l buy In Forl* 1100 "•""" w ThislBacharmer! $.S2S/mo. Sec dally M . $1000mo.A&ent,54l·~ * 49..,.057 * ~:;/:! ~11~ 7~;11 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLIX nJ a BR. 2 ba., den, 3 frpla. 513~lh St. Agt. 96().6161 FIMIA HOME BEACH. ~ic~le~lJt!•
r.i-tN ?.f.,~~~ i .;, ~llf 1, 1• OC!AM FROHTAG! ~tra •harp 2 BR u I.I, PoUo. '52S Mo., yearly. or 1311' BIO CANYON. Absolute· 54u 50t ·1'1
1
. prd . 3. o 3 L• .' both w/priVate paU01. p uJ Manin RlLr .... SPAHISH STYLI l• I I Trlilleraaw 1004, 20x45' 0wnerwtll help fiMflce. a ly s mashing A1:1gusta Edgewater. (1 )871·2868
1\ed. tile root, arched .. ,t:Ul i! 111 w/10x30' cl09ed porch. c•tll-OllO &W·'13¥3 • 875·562l Executive home near Plun. A mastcrptece of
portico entry; 2 BR .. llv. ~f:\i ;ti Choice site. Adlts. Pvt. Spuious exec & family ooeao: ' bd, 3 ba, ram dramatic design with un· Coroftodtt M• 3722 rm. w/bay window & =-Party. For nppl & lnCo ho 38 3bl !f!' rm, din rm w't bar, fire aurp11aed aolf counc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spotless. Walk to bcb. ,
, .... 1. Dinl111rm.Spac1ou1 (714?499-1737. mer. I r. ' e am. e· outdoor BBQ & vlewl 3 BR. & den. lbr ape. on tho beach, pvt •BrSBa Fmrm2100sqft ~... rm. 11)iC, pvt pa • etc. _.,. c ld M ... IJ y I '"""'A I ,,,.,, 7°'8 rear rrounds. See today 4-Plex. 100 rt. from ocean; Tr .1 pac 8 36 dult 6'4·2979 Eves. • .,...,/mo: ons er f195/ OOw• street. eec. 1ate. Ava r y, _,, cac a-..-a&.$108,000. llurl")' ! sz.a,OOOW/land! &JUI ex • /O\)t.848-070T;"8-434T HASTIMGS&CO. foryearrOWldOCcupan·
M4llon Realty 494-0731 Marshall Rlty 815-4600 park. •u" .,17.. 11•LIX.,. ....... Spac 2 sty, 3 br, 2 ba 3 BR 2 a& .......a 1 _ _.. RIALTOllS 640-5560 cy. $350 mo. 213·92S-lM4
2 Br 2 Ba, like aew, 2 car
Great Gazebo
O!dar & &laat with oak
flrs, 2 fplcs, wine cellnr, Ii
fl. Roman tub. lrul·k
lighting. vu & very p\ t 3
BR. $198.SOO 1495 I
~--
L.pla Hlls I OSO •••••••••••••••••••••••
Townhome. 3 Br. din rm.
llv, rm, 2ba. 1600 i.q ft.
$75,000. SSl-1234
homed trnnsfer torctis
11eller to reduce this
:sharp J\/C, Jlir. 2ba to
S82,500, 21;'J pls for l''HA
-• ~-home. cathedral beamed -··1 ~ ........ en"~ aar. washer/dryr. "45 Mewport Ce>1ta~cM4w~lch Great Eutlld• loc, cellinp, fplc, dbl ear., yara,2car1ar.,clotetoNOFEE!House.,condos, CostoMeu 3724 mo.759-1131:494·2966
DOUBLEWJ
.,. newt1'3br,2ba.Crplc,yd. yard.$52S.67U700. ~~t'-lf!L•87bf!'~"!;85/mo. duplex es. Rental ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG f
C do "" <2> 2br, lbl. paUoe, eocl. -• -........,, P UI 67'" A& 2 Bk $10 WHaC & UP coiy lbr, rpl PoOI. Oft LlJXURY HOME gar. $16S,OOO. S ycJass Hill View SBr. av on. ...... .. 1 r. , Sn&:llmarrled cpl. No $79,500. Lo\'ely 2 Br " bath In Tom Lee, Rllr,842·1603 fam rm. $1000/mo lncl'g 2W~t:'r'':~: r7~0 <?~·.Luxury Condo, 3 bedrm. 3 ~,t:.~~~~~~~=I peU/chlld~.840-7030
'•Block to Westcliff ~~~te~\:tar!·,~~::fuj SUMITS gardener.644-8L84 Delaware. 636·'120 bath,den,walktobeach. 2376Newport81,C.M. Luxurylbrw/mlniocean ~.1,~~ w~~hyp~olBe~1::: lodacp'g, Very private COSTAMHA CottoM... 3224 l·Spm ~:!i l~e:'c!::1:!~!~k ~975SorMS.3967 ~j~rn:·~~e~~~~L~~~
buy. <;all now. 645-7221 porch & patio w/plenly ot Two 2 bedroom, three 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br 1~ llo, 1 BLOCK TO for Jay, Agent. 644·7Z70 STUDIO biS.2S3S
S , Gr"fftlft nowers. roses. climbers, bedroom units In aood MISA WOODS BEACH. atrium entry. WUKL Y RA TIS --------~ • CJI hummingbird reedera, rental area. Seller 3 BR. 2 BA, bil Cenced (pie, grdnr. $495 mo. t•\111Kltchen&.TV Lg 2Br. lBa, Creshly FROM etc. PLUS swimminf -~•vated. 499·LS07; 963-8377 WALK TO BEACH, pool Unena" UUblit!lj painted. 11tove & reCng .• =tJ·~~tl~u!i~~r:i jl IQ ~I ~:2r5~~:nlh~1 CA1~L vacant·Jan 1.3 bedrm. 2 ~~::!i·r,!~~~!~:un~ cLOSETOOCt:AN :°~~h;:·~=s no i~t~~iACIF1C • P::. . 751-::EsA VERDE ~!'rct'.1'~39t~·6~~~~t~ :S:.k "' atrium. S67
5
/mo ~°t~wS::~~M
· Mobile Home Realty Prap•rtl.. 4 BR, 2 BA, fenced yard, Agent. no fee. LARGE b om e on ____ IK2-_2&_l-:1:-:-:--1r~ ...... _..__,.....,....,.._,...,
W ntcliffRHlty 2706Harbor,Sulte208 712•1t20 new paint & carpeting. · WATER with boat dock, SUSCASITAS ~ ~ CALL540-5937 woo~stN• MACH S525/montb. CALL Townhouse, 2 br, 2 ba, 2 Story w/4 bdrms, fam Nicely rurn. large & PRIME LOCATION
OCEAN VIEW $100/Mo.Rent.. forSal• 2 200 ~2660. :W~n:.=~;~.~t~ver rm, din rm & privacy small 1 br. Adults. only. 1. 2 & 3 bdrms . $295. to
COMDO, REDUCED COSTA MISA ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:: SELECT Sl200/mo lse. no pets. 2110 Newport 5495. per mo. 675-23ll •
S THOUSAMDS $ 1!)78 Skyline. 2Br. 2 ba. R·3 LOT 'T' PROPERT IES 2 Br. I 'I• ba. cpls, drps, 2 LIDO NORD best loca· Blvd. AGT. Days. NO FEE.
Reduced for n lost :.ale. plush patio porch for that COSTA MESA cart d1ar., lge $fn3c5e0d/ yd, ~~· Exec. N2 Bdrlm,&den, L-• leach 37 48 ~__,......~
Vacant & ~l'llcr is anx-special couple or person c;unbulld l3-l4units'. SP!CIAL cu • e-s ac. mo. wntnl rm. ew n out .~;•••••••••••••••••
iou-.. llc.iulll'ul 2 br end who enjoys luxury. Love-$2 ooo S Br 3 Ba home on "olf <213>797·3-l26 $700/mo. u111l w lplt. Community ~. . ON LIDO Special " LARGE immac. furn . CostaMffCI 3824 pool, :.Juna' & jacu.w. i\t ly location, swimming Call 955·0350 course. Opt a\'all. now. Attractive, clean. 2 Br l'h · 6 bnchelor. Lots of room.••••••••••••••••••••• .. Hu:. price ll "on't la~I ! pool.etc. 150813)$23,900. $1t95mo.640-2981 ba condo. $295. Pools, bdrm++. Glamorous hlk lO bead1 $265/mo., BR, 1 B~ dupl ... x. Cp•o,
L-a Ml .... .t I 0 52 CALil''ORNlA PACIFIC I !I 873 9463 hideaway. 5850/mo ~ .. "' .. • :;:-;; •••• :. ••••••••••• llurry!CalllH5·0JOJ. Mobile Home Realty 3brcottage,pool,jacuzzl, pay area.. ' ---ON WATER. Fabuloui> -~~ -----drp!;. reCrig. &tv .• encl PRESTIGIOUS :!706Harbor. Sulte208 dishwasher. adults only. 2 Br. I~ ba Condo. 2 yrs VlEW 2 Br w/beaut de· LAG UNA BEACll MTR ia~. No pets $270 mo.
finan's. Agt 768 sooR
CALL540-S937 645-2498 old. Pool, laundry, aar. cor$650/molao. INN. S65twk. $250/mo . ...,.646-_;._;=~;__8 _____ _
SEA TERRACE $360/mo963·6256 l\l,ud serv. color TV. Foxhoftow Vllage
621 W. W11son646-2010
FURNORUNFURN
'2br town home w /frpl
3 BR & family room ~~.~.·!~ .. ~~.~~ . t
1
HA WAii 1 k l~Rg!:i:· J[P~1~'. Spac Brookview Condo, Waterlr...t tto-1 4h94e~,,t29ct. ~,?5°k (c7
0
1
8
4}
homo. Gu;1rded J!llle ~·c--o-c-Cho ce acrea~eover oo • lat&lut +sec. 833-9305 end un1t. 3Br. 2~ ba, Ctll 631·1400 " 0
D community. Pri \'U le _....;..... ______ , FIVE ACRES ln1 the Pacific. $6500 per frplc 2 patio•. N r _J._lwy-=---. -------1
beach aoces'I, pools. ten· MEWPORT CONDO Hard to find bone pro-acre. One ~ three acre lBr, 135 & water pd. $240. pool ft en n I a. $ 49 5. N .,_A_ .. _ a. b SltlS furn small co~y bach.
ms courts. Priced below Sl 6,500 perty. Brand new 3 BR. 2 J>lirccls available. Hurry Adults, no pets. 548-4135 846-9403 ftW ,._.y..,w, 3 °'• 2 a. N b h 1 pd n roarke~at~l47,500. . Lovely Do\'er Village 1 BA home. Huge family forbcstselectloo. Eves642-0835,646-6423 Pool, tennis, Ja e. r c • uu . ea
•LgepaUo&eoc. 1arage
•Adults only.
Pool &jacuul &\'ail.
ANCHORAGE blk lo Westclirr Plaza. room. wet bar. frplc .. 3 891-7155 NEW 3 br, 2 ba, ram rm 2 $875/mo. yrly 675-0562 empld adJt. 494-~
Cozy 2br home w/frpl. car garage. Won't last! sty, quJet4 nr schls, f"f'N 3244 Sharp Harbor View 1.0CJ1ftaM191.t 375
IMVUTMEMTS Lg rec rm, pool. sauna, BKR. m icro wav e . days •••••••••••••••••••••• Monaco 3 Br. nr _P.<>Ol. In· •••••••••••••••••••••• Woodland Village
f714t 496-771 1 dbl gar. J\ppl645-60ll1 (714)677-5&H 83S-3437.eves673·8484 ruv Pk lll. 3 Br 2th Ba. C'I grdnr. Avail now. Scenic views. luxury OR52'.!-0530 + bonuL rm oxrord 644 •723 adult :iplS. furn & unf
C •MEO SHORES ---2 Br. huge bonus room ~ · · • ... N n 1 "h ~ ~nh-----Ready to build on lot, fan· w/frplc• big lot. 2062 ~. SH ·70.14: 833·3'.!IS Sub-lease, no dep0sit re· C~~~c/g;~~~t;/~~1~f.
845 Paularino
Beaul1£ul. new, adult apt-.. Grl'at localion. 2
pools. 2JaCU.l:ZIS.
One orthe mo:.t chur!fl· for1ale 1300 lo:.l1c oceanview&walk Wallace. $3SO. mo. RIHTALS quired. avail. immed. pcuu1.~r.corncr/\liciu
mg homes "'1lh large hv· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo beach, La~unu. l>t2·0282 Pkwy & Paseo de Valen· rni: rlml ·. fnrmf_al dining Studio apt, Hossmoor Owner/agentti73-7296 2BR.1B11 .......... $345 67s.4912Bkr. c1a
Move In immediately
Forever View!
Overwhelmin~ l'alalmu
"un:.eL'i. /\ \ ll'W :to I urge
ll mui.t be llCl·O lo he brhcvcd. Th1'I. roupl<'rl
\\1th an crnmal·11lall' :.I Bil
home on ~• hui:c lot ,
oereales vour <lro am
<'"late. (36)
rm. 1 1r.1r}, am rm. 3 T L . w ltl --& BR 2 BA. new cpts, & util 2 BR+ D. 2 bu. · · · SSOO WESTCLIFF
Ar. •HIOO sq It. Hus l''owers. lelllur~. or . OutofCOUftty paid. $450/mo. Call 3HR,2Ua ....... ~el751535
iio q :cuu:. otcun view. s·1~:in~ea 4~ .3167 st n t e Property 25 50 556-2660. Agt.. 3 BRn. 2\A:i ba ..... S475/495 "yaBrdR,. 2fruB1.At. tfrpelecs •. fe2ncccadr
Pool & jut, Shown daily • · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 B • 2'iA1 ba .... $.'i00/625 1·4PM.4G33PerhamDr. Dupl.x~s/ MlnlRlltChw/Vlew I Br , 3 ba, 2200 sq ft. 48R,3Ba ....... $600/875 gar .. spae1ous, S6001mo.
&16·7414 llkr. or 645·2848 Onitllal• 1800 Comer lot. 3105 Loren S BR. 3 Ba ........... $875 1st & last. 673-4S4S.
/\LlCli\ PLAZA
& VILLAGf:
581 ·til!il 5111 61:11
Sorry. no pets.
.,..wport leoch 37 69
••••••••••••••••••••••
Bachelor $225-$245
l Bdrm Sl!tiS-$275
2 Bdrm $295-$32.'>
Rental Offi<-e
Open Daily 9·6
TSL Management
754-0081or642-1603 ask for Lotuse Baker. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~!h0~lc~fg ~:c~: ~7:s mo. Famlllea. 3 BR2'h ba HVllms $USO SPECIAL
'lcwtwnhse,3Br,2h ba. Q 1 rose garden. Fruit, 3Br2"'1Baeondo.newly
Choos e colors. Park, 2 n Almond trees. Corral, <! Br. 1 ba duplex. Bltn1, decor'd. Opt avail. Jan 1. • pool, JBCUUI. Helow mkl. chicken hou1e. Only lge encl. yard. Single car $525 mo. 640-2981 n ~TIAY TRIPLEXES ssi.uoo. 557.1046 or Builder mustsell 2sharp S38,980/terms. Call Mr garage, washer/dryer ~e COSTA M~A Kolait
It• I f . I 1[1• ,, "
, r,J..,,,,,1 ,, li.1r-f'J,111
hh 1 1 tt ol tiJ I 388H
075--074S. E/Cotita Mesa houses on Frey 542·3456. Ben hook-up, kids & pets ok. Bluffs 1-level 2 BR, 2 ba. lJRAND NEW
1----------1 l lot. One 111 new, ooo 11 Hinkle R.E. 752-2162. Gary. Beaut. park location. 1 Br FromS280.
WATERFRONT! rebuilt. Submit all OF· ~.Agent644-U33 2BrFromS305
Sit hack and relax-FERS.Callnow645·722l Rlfttals MWPTHllGHTS HVH 4 Br. Fam Jtm, BIG' 3 Br.2BaFromms. Unobstructed oeean vww,
Monarch Sum n11l Jur nr
:! & den ... ale or be.
wutch the i.un 11et from Season's G r...tfngs ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. upgraded. park I -3 Bdrm 2 bath lge fam Beautiful new 3 unit )Our large pallo over· Houtes Furftl1tt.d ' 1 • ' 't5Z3 CAMn.1,ft-,f,..'l"'E \flew. Xlnl cond. $675 mo. .I bwldinJl•. Xlnt l~auon
look ,. th b &40. bo t rm .. poo, many xtras. "'" ~ ".., " ., .. 21ac , .,., in., c ay • a , ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.H5/mo. 962-9734 •---------'""" "" I near So. Coast Plaza.
Mfsslott Viejo I 0 67 -.hp' This rare on-the· ! Costa MH• 3 114 l'urtlerock 4 br. ram rm, BAYSHORES b I Children welcome. No
••••••••••••••••••••••• w11ter h ome h us 3 i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~pac1ous 3 BR, 2'~ Ba dmrm,2ba.v1ewofUCI. 3 Br, 2 Ba ho:iiear, ~t~: GREAT RECREATION: peL'i. Rental oHice open
lx.'<irooms.2baths.and1s WestcllffR....U.. Lgc Bach unit. SU(). Pvt Condo. nearSoutbCoa~t Avail. Jan. 3rd. Lse. ds hws hr. Cpl c. beam Swimming, saunas, da1lylG-S.840BakerSt.1
SlJS.000. Ow11r -l~i 1177
.Jrl~~;~u!. ~~~d~~,:~~~: cloc;Ho :.chools. ._,, patio, bltns. no children Plaza. Upgr~ded, air Grdnr. water' ass on. clgs. 1 blk bay, $560. health ~lu~s. b1lhard1. blk W. or Bnstol.
fncd. beuuliful viow. lnc:omtPtoperty 2000 or pets. 1110 Victoria. cood. all appU s, pool & dues pd by owner. $575. 213·54.S-2'108 n1ght·l g t ed tenn1 557.5215
·
547
.5550 or 830.:rn_s __ I£ .Quail ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-3197 tenniA. $485. mo . 640-342" Aft. 541.5032 courts. Pro & pro shop ... 11 ________ _
Pl
Sharp 4br. 2ba, formal golf dnvint range, partvi ~ hach I 0 69 ac• Balboa. 7 Units. Steps to ~Oft 3 Br. ram rm, frplc, Orangetree. new l bdrm d. room. LA CASA ILAMCA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prap•rtiea bPcool·ll. <$46~000~d8s. 1
0
buch. HcriM*r 3142 ds&hpainwhrt. newMcrptsV, drps w/loft. Brown cpl. self· ~.~.'.b'~c'kt~~:r'!1w'. t'UN ACTIVITIES : loch. llr-AYIMow
LOWEST
112-11120 . ""• • Y wncr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • esa erd~. cleanln1 oven. Avail. Av)lll lmmed. $650. Fulltime director. rre Al II pd d
••oo OOAIL st Ntwl'Ou lllAC g ;1,, Down. 645·3051. New Lavishly rurolshed & S46S. mo. 540-6757 Avail. now. $325/mo. 642-9~ 1 ut s ., cpts, rps. PRICED IN NEWPORT d"""rnted 2 Br. den/of· l/1.S .. ., .. _7rc.. __ OIO...;._'------Sunday brunch, BBQ's, pool, lndry. fac'a. Adults
dtl SmtCI--" I07L DUPL•v """' ..-. .,..... trips. parties, spor over 35. no pets or ~ BR, 2 BA, > wide cor· .... -me v ti;A flee. 2'Al ba townhouse cm 0 c ea n t r o n t Home, d ~ ne.r lot, adult pork. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UftderCon1tn1ctl0tt water w/boat slip, ten· Z BR, den, Country Club On the Lake. Woodbridge paneled. shutters, crpt. tournament.<1&more! chil ren. Call Sue: ~.500. PROFISSIOMAL Two deluxe 3 bedroom. nls, pool, Jacuai. Villa condo In Mesa Crossing. 2 Br. Nr. Yrly lse. 2 Br, 1 ba, gar. BEAUTIF'ULAPTS: 556·7707 or Henry ;
H ALPlHCHIM IUILDIH~ 2,,-:i but.h. 2 ,tory units Complete & model Verde. Dbl gar, patio, Beach Club. $600/mo. 87S-2537or(1)784.oeeg. Singles, 1&2 bedrooms.1~642~·9~13~7~~~~~~ nl''ALTOll perfect. sooo ""r mo. Al pool, adults only. $42$. Call 551-1234 l'Urn. & unfum. Model11:
67
•
5 439 2
Sun Clemente pror blda. each with family room. J hn 840 A.,..724 Call 815-6670or 546-0183. s Br. spacious. w/pool, lo ope dally 10to1 R m • olflce suites avail. 1·8 fireplac~. &npprox. 2,000 ° son. .., · University Park Terrace maint yard. Will rent to n ·
00
• 2 Br, 2 ba. all bltns, frpk.
Rooms. Large parking sq. fl. Ktlchen overlooks L-leach 314a Exec Home nr So. Coast twnhme. lBr. 2ba. frplc, family or sngl mnture mat.e service avail. N encl. ear., balcony.
IMVEST INVEST arl'a !tent at ss-per sq. lovely ~nrtlen nren -.~;-;•••••••••••••••• Plaza. L1e 3 Br, 2 ba. dbl gar. s475 /mo . adlts $900mo 556_0975 lease required. Sorry, Lnundryrm.$325. lMV EST rt. <:on!>!der trades & complctelylandscoped. CHARMER lb / t Garden kitchen/Cam rm. M2·'7898 · · adultc;only, no pets. . TSLMgmt 642-1603
Xlnt rnves t ment op-term:.. S252,~. 493-0Z33. I'· •Q.uali-1 hse. $350 c'1rsl r&wl~~e~ ~i:s':T~ ~a~n~r:'a gu~ Rent or Lease. New 2 Br, M.wport Shorfl Gard!!~';a.~m.cnt5 2 Br, l~ ba townhouse
\'IOl1Unily.Bluffs Plaia,4 ~ Plac• dep.3Avall. l /l 5/78 landscap ed walled 2~ba.Herita1ePrk,off ~.~;~fub~oo!:. ~ls~ .. _,.,.IHdl/.._.., s~J:~Ls~~~~n St.
BR, ne.w cpt . .Bel!t po:m · ~a1'S Prapmrtl•a 494·81 1 · bkyrd, 2 paUoe Bu.es to Walnut. Up1radea. ocean & tennii. No pets. 880 Irvine <al 17th>
blo frn:incln~. Call for d.11~ .n2·tt.JO · · "*JllMHICJIMI Jll2 All Newport/Mesa pop ular earthtonea. Idealforfamily.S510mo 645-0SSO 2 br townhse. 2 br apt
!'Ohowmg.SllS.SOO. J°A1 ~ ""~1 MOOOUAtUt.Nl ""°' .................... , •• achool1. ln~~~· A1vall UH/mo. 7U·68811 leue. avl l /3. Schworer. .._,.,.heclVs..tti w/pool&jacuul.
VALLEY 640-900 . 11~-,,.,,. New 3br, den. 3ba, short ~!1°_ .... ~~t. _,.,/mo ie. Own/Alf.. 71H73-26M 1700 18th;it. 64S-2A98
HURRY HURRY
I BR condo in the pre·
~tlg10\l! Bluff!I. Clo!!e to
Bnck Bny & Fashion
l~land. Private locallon.
'-MTl':I .. _. r-fwv N I ke .-,,.... ({)over at 16th> i1\ff1 2Honet-I Lot-CM .... ve .,.,a, -n r a · Univ. Parle area. COnve· Westcllff 3 Bdrm, 2 ba 642·8170 V511aVlsto Aph --'-'------'-::.-~• Rect.c.aSI0,000 $SSO/mo.831·3128 3Br2Ba,rocl<fplc,k1da& nienUytocatednrirv.In· w/pool palio water 2078Thurln
Smt Ju• Owner 11ld ''SELL IT". Newport letlch 3169 peta OK. $475 mo, 2475 dustrial Park. 3 Br. 2 ba. paid. S65ot mo. Ms..e995 Brand new. lar1e 2 br, ~1tw-C1110 1078 2 spacious 3 Bdrm ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• OranireAve.5'6-7945 frplc, fncd patio, lYabatownhousew/fam
••••••••••••••••••••••• houses. Frplcs. beamed Beautiful Wesl Newport J Br 2 Ba, dbl rar. encl $500/mo. 552"9673 S.. JMan BACHELOR APT. room. Xlnt area. $350.
WHY PAY MORE? S99c e.i~'&ib~ll~}r~r~ E ! bebach
5
front
1
h
1
o
1
me. 5·t8 Brr. paUo. cpta, drpl, bltM. Shnl'l> 3 br. 2 ba, fpl c, DW .•• ~~!!':~ ..... !~?.~ ALLUTll.<; poi TSL Mgmt 642·1603 Ju~t S84.000. BiJ t wo 2 u. pee a owrae or pool. kids ok . No fncd yard super area. W ~t u ry ho me wllh
3
6 mo. lse. May cormder pets.$365mo.6444486 1415. 9634567, Agent. n 3 Br, 2 ba condo. V1llag~ JOO' rrom lht· ocean. NE 2BEDROOM ..,.rt aeal latate yrly. (714)956-5871 re• San Juan. nr lake. pool. 2 Semi-furni1hed. Avail 2 Br. aarage, A/C. $315.
Bdrms .. i•~ baths . Asslditn 3Brl~Ba,1500sq.ft..,on 05• car gar. $3~S /mo . now!:!OlE.BalboaBl\'d. _mo_._64_5-_4655 _____ _ ~:'d~Y ·~~n0tg ~~?~k 1114)145-MU NEAR BEACH 2 br. 2 ba, Gibraltar. Yard malnl. Jbr, 2ba, Prc11ldent Home 495-5760 Vrly, ~ per f!!O. NO Larjle 3 Br Townhouse sus.soo. VAi.U Y f
tcorage & yrd. $650 per tncld. No pets. 751·9662 In Turtle Rock Hills . r -&..-..t.--JZIO FEE. Cnll : S ue 11t "'Ith patio, garagA +
!replace. Liie kitchen.~~~~~~~~~ mo.645-891.4 forlnfo. $800.9~2088 ~-M6i707onytlm«! " " trash compactor. elec· = ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · pool. Quiel complex . .... ~I uic garage door opener:. DUPLIX BLUFFS CONDO, 'Br, 3 Br. aar, cpts, drpa, Woodbridge New 3Br, din Super value. 3 br, 2 ba Adults, no pets. $350.
etc. By owner . Call NEWPORT 2ba "Z'' P l an. Nr stove, $305 mo. 642-5468 !~tam rm, atrium. fplc,DW,carpets.Kids& 64S-338lor67S.S849
640-9900
498-2708. 1cbool1. shops & boy'a or645-4483 ~·Ph (7H >4SM·2458 pet OK. $395. 963-4567 OCEANFRONT EASTSJDE cozy 2 br. HEIGHTS club. Avail. Feb-Sept. a -f 1 • -•--1. 32,,.1 Agent, no fee. 8 BR, 2 ba, yrly. $595 patio, garace, bltns. ===~.;_,;..__;. __ , $850/mo. 8"·1755 3 Br\ 2 .... am rm. poo _,.._ __... "' STEPS TO HACH HVH MONTEGO 4br, 2ba, HOllSI COUHTlY Like a doll house, 2 tab e , dbl 1ar, beaut ....................... Wtilw .. tfw 3291 $275. 1602lltSt. 548..2127
fam rm. Ownr. :!015 Port Elbow room lo the bedroom completely re· ....___ .Lfl _ • ....., yard. SUS. 6'2-5466 or 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. atrium, ....................... 2 Br, hou11eunf. S37S M••" Pl ..... Er Ol'lebea M0-1981 meadows and rolling done, PLUS a sparklln1 ,._..,.. .,.._ 645-6488 frplc, completely Almo1t ,bedrm 2 b 3BR,2ba,unf.$42S ~"" "-" _.;,_._· ______ , hills or fabled San Juan new 3 bedroom studio ••••••••••••••••••••••• remdld Walle to beach • f new, · • • New atud.lo apt $2.30. 1 Br
.-wPORT HTS capiltrano. 4 Bedrooms, Two baths each, cozy G1111rll 3202 Colle&e Park, 3 Br. 2ba, town.· UOO/ mo. Ph ;' /!c; ~r' g ~ !PJ•~ 1285. Avail. Ju. lat.
'lbree Bdrm. z bn home 4 bath ranch home under fire.place~ & kltchena ••••••••o•••• .. ••••••• den. frptc, crptl/drpa, no 840-TOZO neigh borbood. 547 5• Pool. jacuul & laundry
qa U'O~cally planted lot. con1t.ruct1on on a one you U love. $185.000. pete, $330/mo. 963-4189 963-4581 Arent, no fee rm. Adul~. no pets. Open "'--a klnd Waltln1 I ... --a__,,or•--· 2 Br l~Ba.fptc,vlew.n ' • dally. 2650 Harla Ave, ~ · ac:r~ s tc on a. pnvate I£ I=:::!~ ,..._. _., ~ SBr, 1 ba. New cpts/dJ'"PI. to bch & sho No t.s CM (M V rd Ori l~ a specie I per1on. lane. Large r~m1ly room. • a BR, ~75/mo. Frplc. 4$8 Broadway. Adults $4lO Pl· 494.~ · Beaut. 2 ttory home. 3 br, · · eu e e ve Dtslglted for run hvma. beamed ee1hngs, top ~AcaCJaTreeLa S400 Ph64S·'4el · mo. 2 ba, w/fplc. DW. cpt.s. East off Harbor Blvd>. ~I. quality construction w1lh Pt opmrtlea 2 BR, view. ~/mo. ' &ApM Mkjutt 1252 $450. 963-4561 A(tnt, no Nwpt t:/Bluff, 2 1troigh1 _549_·24_4_7_. -----
"rHE CALLISOH CO. all amerul1es. $335,000
1440
OVArLsst~~o 1t'°4 '21V1 Begonia •Toro 3232 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftt prof men aeek 3rd to west Slde·lBr . bltns. 2819 Newport Blvd. N.B. _______ _....._ Z 81\. den. $625/mo. •• .. •••••••••••••~••••• t..ovely 3Br, 2ba, rncd yd, Real nioe. 3 br. 2 ba, fplc. share lge ocn vu home drp1. $225 mo. avail C5J Coldwell Boni.er
3 Monu-th Bay Pl an
Laguna Niguel
4t6-7W lll.0136
4-PLEXIS l~TdPort~diff Qaper, lovely 3 br, 2 b:a, sprinklers, car opener, Cll>ls. kids/pet OK. sass. w/pool. $300/mo. incl 1 1·78 599 Hamilton.
Hunt Bch, Covtnitoni, •:a.sv:i;i~S:~· fS::;·~;J:.!:~~'. nodopS450/mo.497-3148 963-4567, Agent. noree. :U14a.. maid & grdnr ...;548-....;...7...;3...;;.13;.... ____ _
prime location. l m"'*c. JBR,deft,view,MOO. lllM$87,Acent.oof". L*,_...t J2H New 2 br 1arclen patio, Htgh Income. Pvt tTMontanuEIUI ....... _ ............. C +•Jw D/W,pooi,adult.s.
pty/ Agen_ t. $185,000 eAch, 5 BR. $180/mo. ~cu.tom IBr, IBa, On u.. Lake. New 3br, 2ba ~:"~ 1-;:= 3,,.25 Unfw1lhhe4 329 Avocado, Ml.fl8G4
S4G-4464 20&2 Pon We1brldae elr, attach Pf11pacloul, dtUched Twoh , "t.s -• :e.-u "' :&f
2
• ........_ H.... 11 B.R faro r m din rm SMO mo. 164-1041 m ' ... ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• •H••••••••••••H•••••• LA MAMCH.A APTS utUPe ....,,. View $97S/rno. · • drpa. Private •J>~ off LANDMARK Mairnoua ,_.,_.. 3107 L(e 2 br 1arden ai>U Ii 3
wlth ~wo 181' aalt1. 10l9YaCJ.a.o1.ut. f'• ••• .., Jll4 f~~er mbd.~ l ub AUaota HB.'Adultl only,••••••••••••••••••••••• br twnbae. D1hwh r,
Channlnl Trt·plu r.,... ••••••••H••H••••• .. •• •· over 40. Million $ fee lee bRch. $190. Resp. bl'-I bbq
\yonthemarktt.Nro.c . Lit O r, Wt1tmont. MIN*V~ ~2'7 facU.Securttr,tJlappUc. adlt.Utilpd.Nopet.a.100 p;;(l4:cp(t~;;il:uPI:
l'all'rroandlltcttJ Halt. Bent, yrd , rtfrlli •• .. ••••• .. •••••••••••• 980-1386evea. E.Bav Ave,apt9. 642·5078
131 Cltatbroolc L"'•· Wlhr/drJr ,lncl'd. Aval , ••Ba new bom• Can· · -...;..;'--'-------CM. •121,000. Atilt· 1/l/78. MIO in«>-sa.3834, tuUc ~lew mlrr'ored To...,••• C.W .. Mw 3122 Lge 2 br, 2 bu studio.
(71,)523-8850 tr1·7ee8 doors fplc bhna. avl Im· 0wf.1 i1M4 JS21 ....................... Costa Mesa. $295. mo.
t Br 2 Bl. eptt, drpt, fplc, &Md. M8&Nmo. lat ar last. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lae !bi: apt. Groat toe. Nu A\•ail. Jnn. 2nd. 998·00."9
..,Opermo. S200U'C. ancy, S4f.aG40 llent or le11e option. ahutlcr11. Oar. Avail 2Br Duplex l mi from
l.zu.Mf.aatM orl'75-ll5jl Brand new townbom•. 3 lll/78. S300. 213·421>-~o:n oceon. wtr & iardner pd,
1t1•liih•leeclt J r..c nu 4 or abr + bol'u& bdrm. 3 ba. frptc. A/C. 2 tncdbkyd6T3-61511
S.mll4e: ".............. 240 rm. 1900 aq n.. Upgrado recreaUonal cent era Topla-..-•rm ..... aace =..a~··"br,"""""'l'd paUo. "61llt,tum.uUlpd. ...... , thr\lo<.'420.Al·Mtl w/pool.a fl t.tnnll. Xlnt .. .,,,__ """ ..__. ... ... a7U 8r ft'te Q\il. !If Ice I Br C..clo. l \t &ocaUon near So. O>ut before t.he wr • carport. •dlll, DO -· idii:i: kW.. pet.I ....... fnle, Yl/D .. u.. 'l1le f..wt draw lo lM Pia.a. Bent tnl/JDO « J'Udi.aipubUC, pet.I mo.OS.S.2095
t arpor(, C•'iJa•:1:,· Wa .. a J>aUy Pilot 81JOO w/retn" •ubsr 6 l>bont l br +den, gae lo1 lrptr • ... f-.o. •ll • aualfltd Ad. Pbone clrJtr. -.nu w.au • oallyPUot Mal. a4lta, uo pet& • ..._ ta>f17L • Lee Real •tate Ou.slned, l4WITI Eutlidc. S23S. "2..cM41
* DAILY PH.OT a.S
.. Add it...Bulld It Diaper ,t...Hammer It •. Carpet
lt .. Cement it .. Wire H ... H oe it ... Clean 1t .• Move
it..Press it. .. Paint it ... NaU it... Plaste r 1t...Fix it... SERVICE·-·-DIRECTORY PlumD n ... Patch 1t ... P1p~ u ... Remoaea It •••. ;, Roof lt ... Landscape it ... Tlle •t ... Trim lt .•• Sewl~1
_ ., . Haul rt. .. Add It... Plant it. .. Alter it ... Learn It... ·.,·a11...... C.,...S..k.. CHhedw Ge• •1 H•1tl1••1 P~P........ ........,,..,..., ......,.,..,. Th .................... ~·~ ....................................................................... ······••··············· ........................................................................................... ..
B It I APPtlancc Sc!rv CarlM'\ tiilan wW lay you.rs R.J.Hulfman " son, Ceo W!:EDING-Cl.EAN\JPS SUMSHIMI GIRLS PETERS PAlJllTING iYO\JNG MAN. 5 yrs e.xpr PATCH PLASTERING Ceramic ttl.es, kltchona.
TIUPOIARGESJO or mloo Rep:un ' Coolr. eusiom Alt.&Add, Wet!ltly Maintenance Eitiir'd. ReaJ Ratti. ln wallcovcrlna. 1'~ee Al 1 t y P• •. 1'' roe batbrooma, Ii ealry$. ZillZSS. Mam. S.A cleanln, tool Gu.a.r work pat I ot c 1t b In o ta, P°l'oeest &U-9907 All typeaotborn•&olfice Free Eat. Call Gent ~.6'5-85'7&.\bdy etU0>ata. ca.u5'0-682.5 '"'°• Cbuclt5tl l305
S..Jm 951-0181 at blttf,.:r Hviqa. J"ree lomuca. New coast. Res GwralS...k:H $!,:d:,'~:ta'l•:.~•JC:t 552-008 TrHS....k• c.., t• ~"5-al48 & comm'l. &tS-4644 or ....................... Bonded/tnaure<J. Free PROFF.SSJONAL Pabst· P .. Ya.rCetle P4 I ht ............... n. .... -
•••••-•••••••••••••• ... ~Mpoo • 1t.eam deu. :MS-4Stl. Uc&bonded. HANDYMAN: Carpentry, est.s & lost.ant. aervlce. l.n&. !Ater/~. Beu. AWT ... Extr18tryS-•••••••••••••••••••••••Removal•. trimmlns.
DOORS. wudows Co&or bri~ra ; wbl ................ _..... electrical, plumbins & 540-9525&~$ wortaiuar~ 28tory'545,lntr"5rm HOM~AVKRS. Plumb-·prunina. ,.._._.\.. Uc'd .
c abinet ii 1 b e I ve11 cptt tOmm ble•ch. Clean -noons.IM7·2"l87, 557-4504 Pricalncl IDAttl/labor 1nl ei HuUna. rre. eat. full)' lnaured961M129S Roa b/fin 1b. Pkku Uv, d.lD ml, hall SU. Ava •••••••••••••••••u•••• M.IKE'SSCRUB-A·DUB Painting. Extr/lntr. Jl;x. Guar/lur·t'l-eeest. $1.0br Monell\ le rcllablel-~-------~MZ.f1713 1
' rm fl~. couch 110, chr ELl?XI'RICAL SERVICE ...... Oeanlnl Set~lce. Bual· pr'd, honelt. Dt•t. reu. ucaaa.1.Ted63lo'108S ..-ri~ B>IA. tl!C 01' w ....... ----------1 SS. Guar elim pet odor. CALLStl.6 hr. &SMALL ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• neuea-kome1-Bental1. Uc'd*610'5Dave lllalAELB PAJNTJNO· m.ai&OorM'1.Q381 • ••••• .. ••••••••--
WOODWORKS, all tnes Cpl repair. lS y,. ex~. JO&CJSG-1213 Skiploader. Dump truck. Wi11dowa A Specialty, · • Pine & Solld Oak
cabineta, patio•, lit.4 Do work myseU. Bela ... • _. ~ Hauling, tree work, "Nobody Does It Beiter" Interior. exterior paint· ~J,:, bo.:ae• •aft.comm. Ill... waterbeds Complete Uoo
remdll, aome elec. hi 531-0101 . .,._ _ _.,c gradlna. d e mo etc: Free&tlmate.Mt--08h. ~ ·~Pci1~ JrnJ -•· W141 lpm. ........... --••••••• • acc. Beatonable. ~ecz.~cntlt svc. f._ c.teiitg Lic327µS MS-e974 831-1257 HOUSICLIAMl"6 968-~ J c:.to.P.._ ROOl'Sl'ORL~ Terry's M•Pl·B•~ ----------1 ....................... ELECI'RICIAN·Pri~ HcmlincJ • Call64$-74:W PBOl'ESSIONALPRBP ......... Specldhl. All ~·u!}'1.!:ct~'!:1;6C-OU~~l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; c.p.tSet-Ylu · Forthe~ai.rafrair.All ngbt·free estimate on ....................... M•a• &PAINTJNGEXTBR. J.!)TI local rers. Lied ~~cltlaenadilcnt ...
••••••••••••••••••••••• occasion personal largeorsmalljobe. OCC STUDENT Bl ,.,_ JY R 11 LI --•L bo"'ded 1nard & auar DOYOU g -.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eu nsr. c. _.,, .. • , 9M-0421a.n-1-e o-•-aASERVI-• Steam Chao·ROllday service. Cabana Cater· Llceued 673-0359 k T .h trl Freee11t.-1ae. wortl.Preeeeta.Wootbe I..... rrir.n v.r.. Special. Cpt & Uphol. ing 64S-88S8 ton true · ra& • m, Brickwork. Small jobs. -underbid. a.t08l. ROOFS Installed fa«ory Leu.be public know Wilb
Uc/insrd/ guar. 3 rm, n, Sf'ICIAL 0FFB. ~c Randy 642·5703 N8WlJOrt, Cotta Mesa " Prof painl'g. paperbanJ· dlreet tab as yn Call an ad lo the Daily PIJot
:.z hmil $25.95 halls & C.• .. /CaHnl• Post Light installed Jrvine. 67S.317Seve1. ;ng. Clean. woi-k auar. ,J8 ; ea 549 zi Service Directory. It can
bathrm free.' L-I·fo~.f'.: ........................ S60or less~3-5013 H.aede•lng Free est 957-0941 • ....._.,"'.,.r HaroldGunn • 1 Cl06tyouulittleu$1,4)
Sya tem s 631 · S3SO , ALL Concrete work. . •••••••••••••••n•••••• The fast.est d.raw m the ~ ....................... .EA.STSlDEROOFlNG per day. FO!t' more ln-
M:>-3939aft6. Block, brick, alump & TrY, a D a 11 Y P dot Want a REALLY CLEAN West ... a Dally PUot VERY NEAT PATCH SpedallJe in repairs & fonnation and eoarp&ete
concrete walls. Securl\y Oasslfied Ad to buy, aeU HOUSE? Call Gingham Claaalfled Ad. Phone Find what you want lo JOBSe\TEXTURE sblnlles. Beu. free esL ratAllul.lecz.5678.
aasallied Ads 642·5618 Builders. 1134-9118 or rent something Girl. Free est 66-5123 64U6'18. ~ PtJo& aualliedJ. Free..._ 883-1'39 6'8-890
Af*lwww .. su.fwta. A.pwl .. .tsu.t.n. ROOftll 4000 "*51rialR...td 4500 L.-t&..-5300 HiflaW..W 7100 tWpW-*4 7100 ~!:'~ ..... ?!.!!~~== ..... !l~! ,...................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ~()()I( '
c.taMeta 3824 l ... llwqonlMdl 3140 Ambassador Inn i.n C.Osta 3 2 O O Sq l t · r 0 • BABYSITTING f or Part ti So 8 xper. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa, 2271 Harbor. Cen· dust/Comm'!. 2952 Ran· U>st: Dog. Saturday. 10 Acctnt Bkk.PDI Teacher In own home. .i. .. ~e.ln~ ~ • sruwL
trally located, 23Srooms. dolph Ave, CM Call Iba. Silky Terrier, TIMPOlt.AlY NB. 7:30AMto•PM, Ute i::t,"" ~S.E. Bri.toa tft
COST/\ MESA-2140 A.~ .... Cl•an MANY wit h kitchen, 546-1653. spayed. ndJI medication. hglstet' Today to wort bousekeep'J. May brinl SA. 1• , ' LABORERS
Tburin Street . Brand 2Br2Ba.newcpL<i/drps. phon!l &TV.Swamming Rental WCIJ9hd 460Cl Reward. Please please onvariouaaccount1n1& ownamlcblld. Provldei--·--------1
new deluxe 2 bedroom gar, patio, nr beach & pool. jacuzzi, and rec. • ••••• : ................ call 979·1206 bookkeeping aultn· own trans. r efs. call COOK. Lunch Wall.reaa, Needed lmmedlately
uruts. Lovely, spacious shopping, $310 mo. room. Daily & weekly REWARD!! ment.s. Work close to 6'B-8529 Bartender, all p/tlme. Long ck short term as· townhome type with 960-1279 .. t~st~ ... mgfrom$48a Divor ced man 32, your home. Figure , Apply, San Franclscan, slgnments. Holiday &t family rooms. $3SO/mo. ----r<. '"" .., • employed, dependable & Jnlo or return or long Clerks to Sr. Accoun· BAKER Exp·d or appren· 1617westcliff Dr, NB v a c a ti on pa y •
Quall Place Properties, 1 Br. bltns .. gur . n.r week. 645-4840 quiet nds sleeping room haired white male cat.. tants needed thruout Uce. call btwn. 8A.M It HospltaU:salion plan
Inc. Ask for Teddy. Beach/G3rf1eld. $265 -to$L20/mo.Call646·4871 Ulstl2/1S.646-5908. OranseCo. noon.496·1410 CUstomerServ to$10,400 avai~·.TJajble .• Slnrt!IToda ! •
752-1920. mo.~·7210 _ Sunny Room E/bluff un-Lost: Fem. spayed long RobertHall'• BARMAID-NIGHTS FWn.~
New 2 Br 2 Ba and 1 Br, llliDY HOW• rum, pvt bath, kit. pnv. lusineu/h1•t1t/ haired Calico Cal. Vi c Accouotemps SEXY GETS TOP PAY to your career goals &
d bl xJ l B t~-' t .d $125 + 640-2810 -FManC• Dana Vista Dr, Dana Pt. SOOS. Main. Ste 501 Port 17 646-3666CM aid clients for t op co. cpt.s, rps, tns. nt oc. 2 r. pn o:u, cps. rps. ---:,:.:::_~·.••••••••••••••• <193-63\S. REWARD' No. Tower, Uolon Bank • seeking delightful Jndlv. 1767 Orange. 646-1993 or lba. Gas st v . .l\dlts, no LONESOME HOOM ' ~ ln'nleCttyofOrange llAUTY ASSIST. CaJICarol, 848·1288. Den-3141C..,..Dl"lv.
642·1"5 pets. $250/mo. 425 "A" Needs single lady to n..--..-1ty 5005 714/835-4103 '""·"-p/tw/ .. ·ture.~op nis & Deonls Pers.oonel 546-4741 • ~ 12th St. warm it up. Offers kit & ._,.,.... ·-· r........ IU r }I Adulls,nopets,1 Br$195.-----bath pnv. Close to ....................... ftft'S•llt 5350 Wages. 837·42SO or Service o uotiogton (AcrouFrom
!\vi 1/1 /78. 311 W. BacbaptdowntownJlB 1 schools&shoppmg. Call SAMCLEMEHTE ....................... A /PayTme to~ 837-3179. Beacb,16168Beach. Oran=Airport)
~ Walson,631·2171 afl5~~ person, n~~f135. Teri 552.7703 Pet Shop & Grooming. Drinklngproblem? '78-NoBetterTtme Bkkpr/ofc mgr Publlab. CUSTOMB SBYICE/ F.q\W Employer
LRe 2 Br,l'1'lBa&l Bt.l hed C Jo' -Retiring after 1 good C811Alcobol)lelpline Corcareeraeekerto.start Co. S.A. Unique career. SIClllTAJtY
Ye,.rnew.'"'dul•·only.no 2 8runfumapts.Startm" Pumis .NrU .. I. ern years. Fine location & 24 hraad1y83S-3830 ooroadto1uccesaw/flne 89'7.f443~4-4040 ..,_.-"---•· typ'"g e ... r~orc toS9600 ~ ~ .., .. to share w/young career chentele. co. 1n anat post! Call ----'';........_____ ........ .,...,.,.., '"' "' " ~
pets. 1·827·2479 u t $24 5. Ch 1 Id r e n woman. Rent reduct 10 BERTHA HENRY PREGNANT? Pat, 8411-!288. Dennis &t Boat carpenter. capable per nee. Lite bkkpog. Co le A Good Sport!
I II &k-we lcome. no pets exchange ror hou.sehold REAL.TORS Caring confiden tial Denni's P e r sonn"'I ol ..... _.,workon'"••tom locatednearOCAirport. Versatile person sought JBrapt, ge v.rm. tl '""IY>n7•·6J6·M91 d · 552 SAS Ii •· f I " uc...u .. _ .....,.........,.. b .... eti ori •--'(' & d. p I O'IV"""" .,. u t 1 es. · l .. or 215 Del Mar 492·4121 counse ng '"' re err a . Service of Huntington yacbt.s. Good bellefitt1. ..,.,,.,_..,. Y awu c en._. trm ~~7m8:.ea. oo · 548.7924 152.2975 Barbara. Abortion, adoption & Beach, 18168 Peach. The Wlllard Co. E.O.E. 0., rvaay o•tv-todacefill• .k848ey .• i!'!·. ~nn9;''!~ L l«ach 3148 For SaJe Pacific Heating keeping L c M """"-" -.u;oo u.. ....... 2 & 3 Bdrm apts. close to •~•••••••••••••••• VacatloftR...tah 4250 Sheet Metal business. APCARE 547-2563 Apt Manager, cpl needed 7113~0~a..!l 80 • • ' AUTO PARTS Dennis Personnel1 s hop p 1 n g. po o I & Luxury penthou&o 2 br 2 C•••b••••B•••::••••1•••:•1•3• 4.94·974Sor 837·2000. w/ mainten ance back· .:_.-.... Male or female. Gd driv· Service of Huntington
<-h Id en's play area b d f '1 b a m. ig ...,ar, i. ps.. · LIMDA & VICKI ground for SS unit com· Bookkeeper/Typist ing record. Apply Beacb. l6168Beacb. , 1 ~ 38So · a. in rm. rp c, 1R $35 up. Pool thl, cir tv, ln•nfmeftt o.+c•..-ass:ri plex Jn C .M. (~13 l for CPA office in Corona Beacon Auto Part.a. <480 ' 642·9760or64.2· Attt v' e w . Bl or k lo dbtrrpl.494-8611 Opportunity 5015 For ...... -... _of I 86S-38Sl del Mar, Salary open. No Newport.Blvd NB
C b h . t ts downtown. S475 mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,_,._ . ' OenOffloc to$700 :~fts~cuti~u~~~1~0ri35'. -194·2379 eves:9S7.o282 ~~~!!!>.?~ .. !!.~~ lfyou're notgettingl3.8% ServingallOrangeCo. A/Rec to$750 615-2070 Dtllnf'y/Newa.plfllY StudiolecepticMUst
64&9249<irter6PM Super l br. lrg, unique eed d F 1 return on your invest· 835·7313 Precise indiv wlll be in IOYS·GIRLS Permanentpart·timejob Lights & action await.
f'OUR SEASONS A PTS reatures, ocean view, hlk ~~:;~ 2n bdr~ •2 ;am!P~· ment. caJI Sandy Ross. •MICHELLE'S* complete charge of Im· U.16 yeart or aae. Even· delivering early morning talented indiv. w/all ttar
Spacious 2 br twnhse. l '<.i to brh. ~dlts. No pets CM. Must be neat. Relia: Ajax Co. 837 .3744 -Outcall Massage porlant functions. call ing work. Obtain new LA TI mes to homes ln co. Call Willa. 833-2100 .
... ~. ..,.,,.,1, P'1. pau·o. s m $350. '194·3280 499·3900. ble. """2940 bef 11 :OO AM ~to• __ 5025 lOAM·ZA,... 731-4462 Cari, 833-2100. Dennis & suti.ttipUoos for the Dai· Irvine/NB areaa. Mt\ st Deon.is & Dennis Person.-"" ..-~ .,._ ,...._.,. r _.., "' Den n I ti Pe rs o o n e l ly Pilot working with an be reliable & have depen· nel Service of Irvine. 2082 1·hlld O.K. No. pets. S275 1 Bdrm Apt. Patio. Quiet &aft 6:00 PM. Gene ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service oC lrvlne. 2082 adult supervisor. Earn dable transportation. Michelson.
7:i5 Joann648·7483 $300/mo . 794 8943 , ., ht,2nd&lrdT.D.'t SpirthtdRNCler Michelson. ..,.. to • ..,,. per week or Salary•"""mo.546-0235. 1---------79 3'4 7842236 NeedagreatroommatC!. 1815So.EtCaminoReal _. _. ......, J.RG I Dr, pool. nr ~hops. ~· 1 • . Cut livn1gexpcnses' rpAN~AVAILABLE San Clemente. Fullylic. more. Call <213) 596·0296 y M Nf ~----~
.ldl•·,n11 , ....... Ut1I pd.L-aHi-....i 385~ CallTheOranoe t:reditnot•mPortunt. F •927296 "'~S--..ILYLme•o n~on to Spm. (213 ) DEIJVER A orear· "' r"' --r-· Y-' 4 "' lroktt' 493 3101 orappt ... · ,_ _.. -498-2473. Spm-9pm. Call ly AM Times Rte. No. 1884 Monrovia. 548·0336 ••••••••••••••••••••••• <.:ounty Professional'! • • Assembly of small elec· Collect. C.M./11.B. area. Call
-N" 1 & 2 ll $265 & Hou..-Mcrtes Unltd DANCE OF FUN lro-h j al d I -M6..f.481 Eas t s1de of Newport ice, & r. ~Pt 832 4134 Money Available. many BUI nude girls dance & mec an c. dlev c~s. ---·----
Townhouse 2 br. l ', ba: poo rec ~oom. quic De d bi 1971 sources. all projects. rap .session. l OA M to Reefs exper. m recting IUSIOY DEUYBY
f'A. gar., fplc, vacant. area. 831.1766 - --pc!! a_e.!!.~ -$SOK mm. 7S2·60S2 2A M Mon· Sat 625 N . work or up to JO as· must be 18. Apply Tuea & semblers. 1 Messenger/Courier Agenl548·1168. Newport leoclt-3869 Share 2 bdrm t bt: upstrs Mortgoges. Trust Eudid Anah 559·6150 STACOSWJTCH IMC Thurs. 3-4PM. Char ey 5 day wk. P/time am or
-12 b lb V t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 2 blk to bch in NB. D.-S S035 FREESEs.slONW/A{)\ Brown'1, 16160 Beach pm. Know Org Co. ·"&ll:i!JI~~ Severh~d OrK. bal. acRa/nO. PARK NEWPORT Bernie. 956·9300 work. ••••••••••••••••••••••• RE' • v"NG •t•"'SAGE 1139 BakerCoeta Mesa Blvd., H.B. 835-3149btwn 8&10AM -~. -l c u • tn · 631·1057 home s1s1.50 + ~ "no. 549-3041 HA.PPYHOUOAYS
-.. ... .. . -
$250/mo.Agt548·1168. Bachelors , 1 or 2 uul LOWEST BobJames-LicMasseur 1"~ualOpporEmployer Qui>enter,ftnishworkon· "'__._..., 57200 Bedrooms & Townhouses _ Outcalt 9.9, 494.5111 ""'"' ly. Exp'd only need app· .,_. •me I.rvine Penionnel A&ency
Sl65. lbr, cozy, private. FromS274.50 Gcrogn lnhnst Rates ly. 499.3057, Brian or Terrific opply awaits 488El7thCostaMesa
includes ulll. Nr Npt Spectacular spa, total forlt...t 4350 MASSAGE l/127-lHI eager lndiv ln well est.ab. Suite224 642-1470
llgts 642--0647 __ recreation program. ....................... htT.D.'s. also FIGURE MODELS practice. Eodless varie· ~~
Lge ;Jbr, 2ba. Bltns. nu ~~~~~~~~.°:\t7fa:~~~~ s~~ ~~a;~. r~~~e~~ Fair~T~~'-::1!M9 ESCORTS ASSEMBLER ~~t~~,~:~0• ~~~~1s8:!;:;:.: ~~l~~~t ~~w:c-l'rpts.No~~i77 Island .. Jamboree & S<1n 18th St. CM 673·'1787 eve SattlerMtcJ. Co. OUTCAU ONLY 5.f0-3280 nelServt~ofHuntlngton ave. s, -er
--Joaquin Hills Road ----642-2171 545-061 I 63 I ·311 I TRAINEES Chauffeurs P /U.me. male Beacll, 16168 Beach. Hr. 67Ul.10
Quiet 2br h.'e in tn plcx. 17141644-1900 SINGLEGARAGE Neededlmrnediately or fem. Exper. Dot nee. OENTAL/ORTHO recep· ---------
Hespon. adllli. no pets. Car or storage. Retired couple has money ESCORT SERVICE Long It abort term 44• for llmouaine service. Uonist. Nwpt.. Benefits, HOUSECLEANING
non·smkr.$250.646·2323 SM/mo 962·3533 to lend. lst & 2nd T.D.'s MODELJNGOUTCALL signment.I. Holida1 le Mecbaoical ex per. dental expr rcq: Ortho PERSONNEL
2 Br unlum. adults. nr BACHELOR APT. Offk•R...tal 4400 Aitent.8:?7·3744 ~Hours 847~ v a cat lo n Pay . helpful Call belwn 10.1 exprpre(.642-2626 Employees with or
Harbor/Walso.n. Avail ALLUTILSPD! •••••••••••••••••••••••Sold my home In Laguna 5•a..aoy~ Hospitalization plan forappt, 714/710-2689. -.H'SIST E . witbobeut. trblansportta~~~ * """ • "* available. Start toda,. 0CM'O .l AL,..., . xper. must a e toge to un:s 117/78.$290mo.631·3751 100· from the ocean. 6'S•PERSQFT Reach. Will sell my Otn'OALLMASSAGE CML nec.F/llme.X·raycert. officaeachmoming.Oay
uft6pm __ Semi.furnished. Avail 1617WESTCLIFF·NB S2!l.550 2nd T .O . for 9730329 ·~~·~!J · !MCMMmlMG CaJl54S-0453. or eve work available, now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. AGT. 541 ·5032 6S27~·~~ cash. Call Ken, · % full or p/time basis. Top
Dmt0Poiat 3826 Vrly. S250 per mo NO ....._., Guy 29, 5'9". heavyset. fo fa DESIGHB Dft19Mr/Drcrftsw wages. 5<40·9525. The
••••••••••••••••••••••• FEE. Call : Sue at 1501 Westcllff Dr. but l~ng weight fast. l841C:r,;Drin Exper'd ln sub division for electrical consulting Sunshine Girls. 1100 E.
556·7707 anytime Newport Financial Ctr AmouncftMnb/ M~t"nice gal for dates work. Appl1 in person. to <>noineers ofc. Expr. in l';ary, SA Panorama view, new clo · 54 741 Mr. Fuentes, Robert, ...... -_..;..'--------2br. 2 ba +den 4·plex. LeasilM)OfffceSpoc. P""'11ftdt/ P.O.Boxl148,G.G.92642 Jt'g, pwr, dlst & comm .
• 1 ""'"l097 8 b 1 ,.._11 on Si'te M""ager Lott & FoUnd (Acroa From Bein, William Frost & systms. Send brief re-Housecleaning service No pets. " gr 4.npo $430. 3 r. 2 a, enc . gar. .,., .... Or•n•e Co. Airport) Auoc., 1'01 Quail St., NB. 1 .. _,. to .· Dale Karjala •-needs Eng,..-, gal full. . N Blktobeach. Balcony.no t114)642·31Uext246 ;::•t•&··~:_-.;•••••5·~·0•0• .. .,_.._! -.. w .. " .,. II' ..... 2 Br duplex w/v1ew. ew-pets _. ~ .a ~ F.qual Oppor Employer Auo<:. 2700 E Coast Hwy, p/t Car nee. Top $.
ly redec .. crpts & drps. TSL.Mgmt 642·1600 b.cvti¥e Row Inc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.akTYPIST Ste 1,. Corona del Mar. _557_-0609 __ • _____ _
SJOO/mo. 64S·OllO days or OCc spa<-e in Newport-~t: Mon. 11/28. Seal JoM W..ted.. 7075 Automotive Trainee position for Bill· CA 92625 or call m4> HOUSBCmaas
499-4215eves. Large 3br. 2ba apt. Sun· Airport .l\rea. Reception. Point Siamese cat, 1 yr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Det.all Shop needs ing Qerk In Jnsurance 644.a660 ~ •xP"..--AeC. Xlnt.-
SPARKLJNG 2 br, den. 2 :i~·.,2r?y1~52~ b~·;~d$3~t phon~ serv .• conCeren.ce old, . female, s payed, Companion. Nuning, will ~he~ -. Co. lD N"pt Bcb. Good Desk clerk, weekend benefits inchJd. sick pay. ha lwnhse. ocean vu. dbl 49-t~ rm, k1tch, secy serv. die· wcanne flea collar. Vl_c. travel. Ntrbal>r, di.Ila Tap-wqes paid. ~gme tYIJlng skills. Salary to days. Ambauador Inn, Bayview Conv. 2055
i:ar $375. Cheri 661·1811. ---------taung & copy machine. Rockledge and Victona care. Excellent re· Steamers, eng painters, $500 & Sood company 2909So.Btistol,SA Thurin,CM642·3505 • .a93.6575 XTR*L ... Rl'!...E 2BR FromS290. (714 )752-7170 Or . Laguna Beach. ferences.CallS44-0830 buffen le polit hera, up· benefita.833-84.50 -'--------"" "" ., Reward !! 494·9466 or bolstery shampooers, DRAf'ERY Housekeeper. ~· on~
Steps to bear h. up-THEEfFICIEHT 494·U17aft5:30PM HelpW..ted 7100 checkout,plck·up&de· COCICTAIL WORKROOM aweek.NeedspLcncpa
graded. bll~·Ol67 -ALTERN "'TIVE ••••••••••••••••••••••• livery. Apply at. w·--s . lady to keep our bomf! Hwttifttton leach 3840 A Lost vicinity Bushard & 2069Harbor Bl, CM .u•~ Needs exper d, self atart· tbe same. Couple. East, ••••••••••••••••••••••• V. Nwpt Bch-3Br. 2Ba, Mo. to mo. rent incl: Ellis. 1-·.v. Male Gei:man ACCOUNTING 6'S·l030 Learn in .0 hrs lbe most ing employee Cu!,!-or C.M. ?S2-0893or646-5138. SHARP3Brdeluxebea<-h p3rtly furn. bltns. Re ce pt . serv .. Shepard.Tan with some excltln~ clamorous, p/Ume.Apply,183S wolt·
unit. D/W, frplc, patio. dshwshr. 1600ssq ft0 .. cpt11, personall7ied phone cov1· black on face. 12·16·77. JUNIOR hl.gbly P _ _<!_~eaap.1Day lier Ave, B-1, CM or call Housemen & 1maBids gar.Avail94!0-2358 frplc. yrly 55 mo. eraf(e, conf. rm. ma1 962·2581 or eve..,....,,.... ace· 642,1843. needed. App y en ....;;... ________ , 642-2565aft6PM serv., underground prkg ACCOUMTAMT AYON OMIDUUl.st.Goodjobop-Brown's afot.el, 31106
3 Br ~~~~~onve· Jwpt Hgts, lovt"IY 2 Br. &~Ei~~ic~VE .. :,~u~ts~"~1e~~a:~~'. ~~~~0u,:rw~:e:S:t ..... 1C•7141751·flf4 to ~~:~~S(~~r~es. ~;!!.Hwy, South
ruentloc,Sunltsavl.$400 new <"pta, no pets. $295 SUJTE.640.5470 Call496·9338. Verification and Ac· leCJlllt.-W So. Calli. Cocktail StorPll & i;treet racks.
up.964·1507,640-1751 mo.494·3223or 548·5804 SlNGLE to 3 room suites Found Womens Green 3 counts R eceivable For •y.......,. Waltre11ea, Inc. 17922 Must be over 111, i • .::·e lmmed~iate :peninp ML _..:.. ________ , i ff 1 3b be Collec•lon•. Our ~ ~ Sky Park Bl, Ste c. van or pickup, also orpf me. oexper.nec.
N .... deluxe twn .. -ap•· 1~ r oag. xy ri ams, av11il. Nr OC Airport. spd. bike, vie Tuatln nr. " 11 bl''t · A" T ... _. 28 5'0-4448... "-"" ..., 2 b ' I "'··tom ... -are in •lrtual· ltftESIMTATIVIS Irvine,C.92714 a ,1 y i nsurance. .ea u~ • 3br 2ba fplc bltns W a, am rm, rp c, nu Joull services avail. in-22nd. St. 642·1695. ..._ -· u9 .,.,~D ... O E Appl" uan'ne Corp ' pnt, cpt. quiet adlts. no clud rece"". to answet' ly every mte acroas lbe Dul time to e1tablltb c-S ... bet·-·8 """'30· .:5 p' M " "' ·
hkuppaUodbl allach.gtr pell.$400. 548·2695 phones. ll'Co nfe rence FOUND: ~mall black natjon plua aoine foreian customers. lnt.ereated? -~:.!.w:.ee=.:.n:..::.:.::::..:"'::.::.:..::.::·:-..-11---------
$395. 545-3604, 963·4218 S Cl Rte 3876 room Xerox mach. l'Ull Fem. Spaniel, OCC area. accounts. Position r e• Call M0-10'1 or Zenith Breakfaat, Lunch. din• IMPOllTa
l BR, pet OK. $220 mo. 328 •• • •••• :!':'! ••••••••••••• secyserv. for Info. please 557·2719 dyg,6'7·3418evs. quires a minlmum ol 2 7-1.B ner. kperM'd. BApplky ~n l!:v.IDITOR c J years colle1e (prefer • penon, 8 ar er 5 EMPLOYMEMT ~ lJthSt.Call a t5:30 1 Br. $185 mo. Utll pd. cal 714/833·3640. Found lnsh Seit.er pup, dearee> and dlrec.ily r e· Babyaitler, iub•tilute ~ant. 212 E. 17th COUHSll.OR
960-4982 Walk to everything. omce Suite new build· rem. vie Yorktown & lated experience In mot.berDitedtd for 17 mo. St. C.M. If you have t.be ablllty & Negotiate and upedlte
Se • dVill 498-1709.211Granada. lng4blockSfromocean Beach Blvd. H .B . CreditCoUectlont. °'dbAi.~ .. 1...i Montbru COC)t( lhedesiretoworkw/peo-lmportatton of auto awln ID'I 1··-iU.. ~·90 In °downtown H . B 968--0859 a>q _.. pl h h d al parts, handle lnterna· rt --II SOOS ft •cc-.a-s FrL 7:30 to 6:30. My Exper'd only. All ahlft.t. e &c ave a ti es ex· Uonal sales agre@lent.. New 1&2 bdrm luxury ••••••••••••••••••••••• SlZS/mo + ut · q. · Lo8t: Fem. Pitball dog, ~ ""'"' home or )'OUn. Must be ~ P•J.lc benefits. Ap. per. we will train you. bills of ladin 1 o(
ildult apta In 14 plans $240.UTlLIMCLD 54IHSS7 lite brwn hair. Vic. PAYAILICLIRK dependable "haveref1. ply, Jolly Roeer. 400 s. We are the nation's credit., etc. U:·E=. &:
from a26S + poola, ten· Water gas electricJty ....... It ...... 4450 Trubuco & Los Alltos. Atlealtt)'ea.rolnrled 175-S731or5'9431'7 Coast Hwy, La1una largestwith over500of· Middle Eut. Buy parts'
nls, waterfalls, pondJ! Uniq'u e j " ~ Br'.••••••••••••••••••••••• MV. REWARD $75. accoaota pa1able ex· Babysl.ltlr. TUet • Frt 8 Beach nees~o:r!::e~~r for forel1n e arJJ . ~':N5:AJ. ~t_.~~~ eo1 m1 P.~ete redc:lcatio~al 4DILUX!OFC'S 76S·58IM perieoce wltll l()me tit-to$. 1 yr old boy. My COOKforc:rewof'8aWns Jack Danie 5.f0.500l 1pecl•llzin1 to Fiat
McPaddtn then Wett on ac lilies. A u ta on y. Conf. rm .. seat 25, all F o u nd : Germ. poture to computei1t.ed borne, own trans. to Acapulco Jan 15. Ex· S~lllng&SneUlnaof parts. Some saleawork
McFadden to S.a•ind Sorry, no pet.:J peneled, am. whse In re-She.p/blck/tan. malt, "9tnll. WtU match ven· ~ .,.._ • air rare bome Newport Beach Agency Supervlstnf, tmporta·
VUlase. (114)-.$1" CallfoNlm1 Apb ar. l or 2 yr. leue. Lake chain on ned:. Hamilton· don' lnvolu• a1alnat s-Ml. ~ &o Clualfied --"-------tkln, and auto parta expr.
1G32NewPottAve. 1''orut. area . Kent /Bushrd~ purcbaM ...,./Neef¥· Bab11ltter/bteltpr. AdnM c/oDailyPUot, FroatOfc FeePald require d. 2 y r 11
UVE Near'l'be Beach I Tu.st.in. Call today: Harkins. Fou.od: Miniature (Tiny) 1n1 ftPOl'\I, ComP\lie dla· Mature. 1enUe ~ to PO ao'x 1580 • Coat a ataptl1altt minhnurn. ~/wk. App C:... .. Sel 832·8122 114·581-9393 Poodle. Be rmuda/ co11bla and rebatee, C#9 It# 7 mo old cbllcl. M•a.CA9l18:!1 ExclUqc career ebead If E..E.D. 551-4544. Ad BeautlluJAduJtApta verify utemtou, etc. Ute hlnor'k. Prr. bours for polled tndl• aecklna paidfotbyemplOJer.
Ou6W ... PakS. Arw•••Fll""shetl Approx. 400 aq. n. C·Z. Glaler.CM.MW802 ~aocllOODttoJin• nextbl'e,a~opeo.my COOIF/TIMI nper frlendly co.~~~~~~~~
21881 Btoe>IEh•J'llt, HB orU.faw19'tM 1900 A/C, al 100 E. 17th Sl. pulloutput ~Qaeatt, bocne.aas.221ociX·ISUtl. Sat• $u km-2:30pm, w/creat bemt Call Can· -··•
''
• ...... 1• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl.50/mo Do)'lt541-U68 Found: SIC, l2/M. Vale pnpere c•a and do -...... .Wed thru Frl 10am· dace, 148-1291. AIM> Fee •-·-·1-·1 -a THE EXCITING . whlt•l •t•f Cotltapoo. 1111-T pl d d u._. .. _. "
6.1-~,, ,., , ...... MIS* ·-$a80 tae, Sto re·Ofllce. Oatareetc Jen eye, IOlnt wu., >' Rf an ~ tJ:t. mylrvtne l :IOpm. Me.ta Ver • Jobe. Dermll • Dennis alCllYl"6 ~ i uunu wu ,., • .,e .. ,r -A~•~. ~ ft under » lM78 cltpt*J • ....-r. an abWcy to ~de 11>-1 no.Q.-~:.,. for l·S ff Coav. Hot~ Ml CerW:r Penonnel Service of • IMWIC1'0.
beaeh. ==-ms MlNUT~ :0 NP'1' Blach Bl. RB. ta·ia:u Reward ~ tor at.oleo l kcJ unuat. • dllld 's days w.-11 ht St. Cl( Stl-$595. H1.mt.inl\CO Beaeb, 11168 I I .~ b .....i.. • c.u t13.aeM. . . --------111 Beach. · ~'!'c~\~el r .!' cm:ld~~I 8ach.1&2SR. St.cn,30'0 E. CO..Ulw.Y .. moold S&QfoT.V., touc Send.._....ora,......, t.o. ,--. _____ ......,_
Ntw dlx 4PJn. 38r. Crom'22().tlue. torona•l.Mu; S3$0pet tu.nlnJ fl~l82. Call • COOi OardeMr netded for apt pnta for o lectro-·
lo"rpic, bltM. •Id hltp, Adulta NoPeta mo.PtulMarlln,Rltt. MZ-5634 TIB4DATA NoZX,..-.!feeenarr ciompluinCOltaMaa. mech.antcal dt•lcea. yard. 1ar tat5 MS·3804, U61Met•1'r. 144-1313 tB-5'21 l ItYOllfPNf..._ APfibriaJ*IOlft (JU)..._l Worldol howled10 or
9124211 <&Blka EaalofNe'fiSIOrt LOST ~ Male S mo1. COIP. •· '.i HOH llltPAWt ~Atl«JPM ., YH.5 t.rue po1lUollla1
Blvd > ........,. .. ...,... 4IOO German Shep. Ana~ An~lbpeUe-<» Did,-.. biow roca • Tlil -.11 .. M iMt aen.a c,....IDM llft{'d. lltOlidmt .. ol l·BR, 1 ba .. cars»et•~ ~ ....................... ·~·'. Hamiltcie • Mil61f. I•• .,.. ''Dlace • dalaU'lld 8' ln ,,· .t::=-::. NB ........ Hist ~I lutra:meota
*ti*, Nd ... ..,..._ ~-6400-..ftiiUQdcwtrtaJ pro. llqtr St. CM. ll fCMUld sema·Au.CA"* the Dai\1 Pilot :_ -.. --... .,.,.. ,....._.,,.. UJ ot ~·d '!"';91S011o.-.i~ ._ 4000 ::j'wl1M 9q (t of elr C!fl.W.Aen I : ('JU)....-.-uu DINCtOl'T f()r • ......... T. n:w·;..:.. wla a:i.; STACOSWTfCHIMe •••NIW ....................... <alts. M&-IW. 29st l.OSTi YoiklMNTe'Tt•. • wtb few .. l~1 ~ <l..an.d eds Mil bll brancl\; Call .. rl>a.ra, lUIBO•Colt&ll..,.
1 I. J w'a.a. fl/P _.\. Room htfteU.t llandolpbAv~. CM Nr !Ola • Chlpel M a: s..a&~ -1i 11.D per cl97f P'ct' _.. H.tllil{ ••I&& lt.e.aa °' l3W700. De.aalt fl De-1,f Mt·lMI _, ~pr. itona im. • .. • .,.•=• "P· I ,J> ~ H .B . o a l 21tt/1 f 't• 'i!-· J=':W fllll' I L~ all ~· l QJ t••· Jal& call nit PenoeoeC Servtee o( EquJ 0poot ._ .. , .. -
< •·nti ( > -----I . ~&DlAdl;llilp!_ .... ...,. Rftvdt-.a&.. . l 60-5171 ' I ..... ~ lrvlne.a:tMlchtbon. ----... .., -.,,......,..,.. • ··1 .. \__ ,.-••. f' .11; ., -. .. . -
•
I
,
... -
* DAILY PILOT
'"Add it . But Id 1t Diaper 11 ••• Hammer it ... Carpet
IL.Cement tt .. Wu~ 1t.. Hoe lt ... Ctean 1t. .Move
.. 1L .• Press it.. Paint it. .Nail 1t ... Plaster It... Fix it ... SERVICE DIR,ECTiORY Plumb n ... Patch tt ••• Ptpe 1t ••• Remoe1e1 It. •• , Roof lt ... Landscapc tt .•. Tlle it ... Trlm it ••• sewit ... ;
., · Haul It... Add it. .. Plant It ... Al ter' it ... Learn It .•.
.... ........ c.,.ts..a CNI cdw h"•U.1 . H .......... ,, ,....,, ... ,.. PJl;lal'P••rfat ...... ,,..,. n. ····················••4 ............................................................................................ ··•··•·•·•••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••·•• ...................... .
B "J ~lance St-rv Clll"J* Man wUI l1y youn ft.J.Hl.lltmao le Son, Oen WEEDINQ..CLEANUPS SUMSHIMI GllLS PETERS PA.lNTINO iVOtJNO MAN. 5 yrs Cllpr PATCH PLASTERING ICeramic Wes, kllchen •
TRIPCRARGESJO or Dllne Repairs fs Cootr. CustomAJtll!Add, WeeklyMalntenance Allt otbo •· rn Expr'd. Reu RatH. in wallcovorlnlJ. Free Alt type 1 , Fro c bathroom.a, Ir entrys.
202SS.lh1n,S.A clea.nln1 too! Guar work pialloa. cabloet1, Freeesl 642-9907 1 Y.,. meko ce Free Est. Call Otne .ia.eu.&s78Jl.bd1 Cltlmatet.Call~ Frweet.CbuclcHlt30! ~ ~1 Olai at blgu IHlap, J"re.: fornUCI. New COML Rh G•a .... S..-.ic" ~.:.::u~·:.Ea~c:.t 5S2-0&SI p·...&-ay c-M-lf,...S.,..tc.
ll"'crw11 t• mt,64$-31M6 & comm 'l, &45-46f4 or ....................... Bonded/insured. Free PROFESSIONAL P aint· -W ..,... A 0 •1 ••••••••••••••-··--_,, 541-4541. Llc&bonded. A--•-""-•-• cu--... •••••••••••••••••••• Shampoo. at.earn cleu. HANDYMAN: Carpentry, ests & lnatant service. tni. later/Exter. aeu. ·---OAW A<n&T-................... -•• Rornov&I•. trl mmln1.
DOORS •• w •ndowa . Color brilbtenen; wbt 8edric4ll electrical, plurnblni & 540-9S25&5S2-0245 workeuarsu..oaM ~=la:.~ HOMESAVERS. Pluntb-"prwlinJ. f'tee .. t. Llc'd,
cab In et 1, 1 be I v cs cpta 10 min b!eacb. Qean floors.147-2787, 551 .. :504 ,.."'"''SSCRU"A DUB p-•-tt.... .,.-•·/"-•• •-11.~/"--!°!.ee ~ 1n1 4' Reatllli. J"r.-at. Mly wured 968-929$ Bou b II · b P J liv, dl.n rm, hall Sl.5. Av1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "~ o-• ........... °""" uiw. ,..... ...,.... ._,..,r _._ *'O br. Hoaeat •reliable _ _;:,,. ______ _ ~~' ckui rm fl.SO. eouch SIO. chr ELY.CTR.ICAL SERVICE Gt.... cteanlng Service. Busl· pr'd, honest, neat. HU. IJcDlm,1W631-10IS :r.vtce &>CA. MIC OK. w...-.. ----------1 $$. Guar elim ~odor. CALL8S15br, It SMALL··~···················· DC!alU·ffomes-Renuls. Llc'd96t-llMSDav• lllt:BA.EL& ~ m.al50orM1~ ···············-·· WOODWORKS, all types Cpt Rpair. 15 yrs upr. JOBSIOIZU SkiplCMlder. Dump truck. Wlnclowa A Specialty, p G: Plne & Solld Oak
cabinets, patios, lilt Do work myaelf Bela 1 -.............. Haullnc , tree work, "NobodyDoesltBelter" Interior. exterior .,.tnt-ext.,bousta •comm. lu.. waterbedsComplet411ino
remdls, .some eJec, hi 531-4101 . • 1.&•n......-nc gradlni, demo etc FreeEIUmaf41.541.QU1 1 0 I· Su Pr 0 me bidga.f7MWatl.ipm. .......... _.: ...... i. aoc. Reasonable.
QUaL Prompt ave, lret: c.e.t.cJ Llc1Z7138 MM97' 831-1257 HOUS~IAMIM9 =:.anahlA Call JJck c.to.P..... ROOfSl!'ORLESS Terry'a Nwpt·Ba~ ~t.642·1738 ....................... ELECt'IUCIAN·Priced HllllliR9 • C.11645-7434 ......... S~l All \)'pee, Clnan avail. _&e_G_--O_~_S_l _____ _
c.,..+Servlce . Forlhee>pen81t'affair.All n1ht·frff estimate on ....................... " PROFESSIONAL PREP l!yn local i'etl Llc'd F(ee eat, Ue/bood'd. ln·i---------••••••••••••••••••••••• • l larce ors--"jobll ...-a• 'I &PAINTING EXTER. .__.a_ ,_ rd ;_ ar. Senior'citi.iensdlac:nt. DO YOU occasion p ersona UIAIU 6"" N>rn occ STIJOENT. Bi".~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ReAt/lnsr. Lie. 23e?Cl. ~~:!ta w·oo•·ut~ -•LIU-...... 'me Steam Cfean·ROirday SUVJce. Cabana cater· l.Jcenaed ,.,..,,._, ,. .._ ... .,.__ u. ~ ... ,,.. 0Fl"ERASERV1CE!
Special. Cpt & Upbol. ang645-88S¥ ~--r·L-· t.oo true:. Trash, tnm, Brickwork. Small Jobs. Freeeal.'31H39C underbMLas.lOu ROOFS lnatalled fam>ry Let.thepubllolt:nowwith
Llc/inard/guar. 3 rm, no ---. • vrr-. etc. Ran y642·5703 Newport, Colla Mesis" l>rofpalnt'g&papetbaQI~ direct; estab 35 yrs. Call an ad 1D the Daily Pilot
sz limit. $25.95, balls & c....t/Co.crete P06tLlehtinataJled lrvtne.675·3115eve.&. Ing. Clean, work suar. HaroldGunn5'9-296l ServlceDlrectory.Itcan
bathrm free. L·l·t~.i:; ••••••••••••••••••••••• · $60or lesa613-S013 ~ Free est 957·01141, ....... , • .,... eostyouaaHttleu$1.15
Syst ems 631 ·5350,ALL. Concrete work. . •••••••••••••••••••••••The fastest draw in the 536-43113 -·•••••••••••-.. •••• EASI'SlDEBOOFING per day. POI" more in-64S-~aft6. Block, brick, •lump & Try a Duly PJlot WantaREALLYCLt:AN West ..• a Dally Pilot VERYNl!ATPATCft Special.be lo repairs & formation and complete ---------1 coocrete walls. Security OasslJied Ad lo buy. sell HOUSE? Call Gingham Cla11iried Ad. Phone Find what yuu want. io JOBS4TJaTUR& sblndes. a.a. (ree esL ra\Allcall6Q..$678.
OauifLedAd& 642·5678 Builders.834-9118 orrentaomethlng Girl.Free'est64S-5123 643-5678. DaUyPU~Qualfledl. ~--• 893-1'89 M6-8N9
..... tM1 ... 1u.fww. Apelaahu.tw.. ROOfttl " 4000 WntrialR...tal 4500 Lo.t•Pwd 5300 twpW.-. 7100 HelpVI... 7100 ~-'!~!~ ..... ~!!~~~ ..... ?~!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... C:()(MC .
CostaMna 3824 l .... lltwJoaa.octt 3140 Amba.saador Inn in Costu Ji o ~Sq 'I It 52 ~ n . UJ&t· Dog Saturday 10 A ctn BkkPll BABYSITTING for Part time. Some exper .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa, 2ZT1 Harbor. Cen· d~~h ~~e.' ~\1 c!~i Iba .. s1(ky Terri.er. c l.M.ouaY ~~~lM:':P~~:, nee. Apply lnpenon. The • GENEIAL
COST A M ESA-2140 A.~et.Cl•an trally loca~. 235 rooms. 546-1653 spayed, ndll medication. &iJ.ster Today to work bou&ekeep'c. May brine Dert>y, 13Q S.E. BiUtol, LABORERS
Thurin Street. Brand 2 Br2 Ba.oew cpts/drps. MANY Wllh kitchen, . Reward. Please please onvarioua accountin1& own •ml child. Provide S.A. '
new deluxe 2 bedroom gar . patio, nr beach & ~l.0 J·&a"TVuu··,,S'!'n1mdmrlencg. Rt'fltalaW..t.d 4600 call979·ll06 bookkeeping aul1n· own trana, ref&. Call COOK. Lunch Waitress, Neededlmm.edlately
,....,...., ... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.. I I --·-hort ·--units. Lovely, spacious s hopping, $310 mo. room. Dally & weekly Di·vorced man 3 ••• REWAllD!l menu. Wora cF~se to 613-8G29 Bartender, all p/llme. 1.NDI • s .... m aB·
townhome type with 960-1279 le& slartmg from S48 "' your home. 1g u re , Apply. San Franciscan, sianmeots. Holiday &. family rooms. $350/mo. --caeek 8 employed, dependable & Into or return or long Clerks to Sr . Accoun· BAKER Exp·ct or appren. 1617 Westclllf Dr, NB v a c a t i o n p a y •
Quall Place Properues, l Br. bltns. gar, nr w · qwetnds &leeping room ha.ll'ed whJte male cat. tants needed tbruout tice. call btwn. SAM "•-------'----•Hospltalisahon plaA
l nc. Ai.k for Teddy, Beach/Garfield. s2s:, 645-4340 -to$120/mo. Cal1646-4871 Lost12/15.646•5008. OranaeCo. nooo.'96-JUO CustomerSe.rv to Sl0,400 available.Start Toda !
7sz.Ul20. _mo.554·7210 Sunny Room E/blulf un· l.o11t: Fem. spayed long RobertHatf'a BARMAJD·NIG.lrrs FIRdTMSoa..tion
READY HOW' furn, pvt bath, kit. priv. lusiness/tn .. st/ haJred Calico Cat. Vic Accouot~mps SEXYGETSTOP PAY to your career goals &
New 2 Br 2 Ba and 1 Br, • $125 + 64().2810 FiftcMCe Dana Vista Or, Dana Pt. 500S. Ma.In, Ste SOI PortlT M&-38e6CM aid clients for top co. cpts, drps, bltns, xlnt loc. 2Br. pnted. cpts. drps, --••••••••••••••••••••••• 493-6318 REWARD' No. Tower. Union &nit • seeking dellghtM Jndiv. 1767 Orange. 646-7993 or lba. Gas stv Adlts, no LONESOME ROOM ! ...._., · lnTbeClt.yotOrange U.UTY ASSIST. CallCarol,848-1288. Den·
ti42·ll55 JX.'ts. $250/mo. 425 "A" Needs single lady to ~'I SOOS 714/83.5-4103 -·"orp/•w/f\lture.Top nis & Dennis Personnel ~ lllbSt. warm it up. ()(fers kit & -rm c\UI " Se r H t at Adults, no pels, 1 Br $195. --- -bath p r iv. Close to ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ptf"SClllals 5350 Wages. 837·4250 or rv1ce o uol n,..on
!\vi 1/1/78. 311 W.Bach aptdowntownHB.l schoots&shopping.C:sll SAMCLEMEHTE ••••••••••••••••••••••• A/PayTme lole.'iO 837-1'1'19. Beach,16168Beacb.
• Wllson, 631·2177 aft 5~~ person. no pets. SI 35. Teri S52·1703 Pet Shop & Grooming. Drinking problem? '78-No Bett.erTlme · Bkkpr/olc OJI!' Publlab. CUSTOMB SBVtCI/
3141C...-Drfv.
546-4741
(Across From
Orange Co. Airport>
Equal OppQr Employer
saf).8531 -Retiring a fter 7 good CaU Alcohol.ffelpline torcareeraeekerto1tart Co. s.• Unique ... -. $..,.. .• IJ••y Lgc 2 Br, H'J & & l Br, I --------furnished. Nr U.C.J. Fem Fl I ti & .. _ d "'"r3830 r n. ------
year new. l\dults only. 00 2 Br un!um npts. Startins: lo share W/young career ~~~ie1~. ne oca on 24 .... a •)'........ :.rrnd ~reS:C::t~' c1:i~ 97"'43. ZU474-4040 Telephone." typing ex· Gen .. Of~ ""--~ s~
pcts.1.s27·2479 at $2 4 5. C hi Id re n woman. Rent reduct in BERTHA HENRY PREGNANT? Pa~ Ml-1288• Dennis & Boat carpenter, capable pet' nee. Lite bkkpog. Co ~ -r-••
-. -welcome. no pc ls. exchange for household REALTORS Caring conriden tial Dennis personnel ot detail work on C111tom located near OC Airport. VersaUJo person s~ht IBr~pt.lgehv.rm.&k1t. 846-mo7&636-0891 duties. SS2·1548 or 21SDelMar 492-4121 counseling & referral. Service or Huntlnston yacht.a. Ooocl beneflls. M0-7800. byalhleticorlenledf1rm ~~7;::.ca. Pool. 548·7924 752·297S Barbara. S· P· ·c1 H ti Abortion, adoption & Beach 16168 Beacl\. 1be WUlard Co. E.O.E. O&IVBY DRIVER lo fill key poa. Call Can. L-ale-h 3848 v-....... ~R--"'...as 4250 For ale aca c ea ng keeping. ' 1300 Losan c M dace, 848·1288. Dennis & ~· ----'""'91 APCARE c: .. 7."u." Apt Manager, cpl "---'ed . ' ' • .a.UTO P "'RTS Denn,· s Per 1 on n n l 2 & 3 Ddrm apts dose to ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sheet Metal busrness. "" ~ ........ 714 548-9822. ,.., • ~
shop p 1 n g , po o I & Luxury penthouse, 2 hr, 2 ~·~···~~··;••••;··~·1~· 494·9745or837-2000. w/mafntenance back· · Male or female. Gd driv· Service of Huntington
t>hlldr en ·~. play area. ba, din rm, frplc. big !u'nu.p. agPoolatrb. l1>, psclr ·tv, •-v-"--...a. LIMDA & VICKI ground for 55 unit com· Bookkeeper/Typist Ing record. A pp! y Beach, 18168Beach.
""'97cn.o ""2.,..=Agt "I k _., m ••ffTW''" o.tc•Mas1:ri plex Jn C.M. (213) iorCP .. offlcelnO>rona Beacoo Auto Parts.~ "":. "" r.,... . ......., _ v 1 e w . o o c t o dbl frpl. 494-8611 ~l.h. SO I S " d t own $475 o ~ ...... , FortheMof I 86S-38Sl ~~~Oar. Salary open. No.Newport.Blvd.NB GenOfr1·"'e toS700 C · b-h t ts own · m · ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,,.,....,, " .ozl.ylt ac t"q,u1.c '1no$pelJS. <194·2379eves;957-0282 R...talstos-. 4300 lfyou'renotaetUng13.8% ServingaJI OrangeCo. A~Ree toS750 ... ...11•-/~-~ 5a.. ..... u-Rec....&1-11t "' s, u ' inc , . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., . 835 7313 .,.. ... ' "•-w...u ... ,.. ....... 646·9249afler6PM Super I br, lrg, unique eed d F 1 return on your invest· · eci&e indiv will be in IOYS·GllLS Permaoentpart-t me job Lights & action awail.
' t blk Rmmte n e • ema 0 • menl call Sandy Ross •MICHELLE~* complete charee or im· '"16 .,..,. ol aae. Even· dellverioa early morning talented indiv. w/aJ I star "'OUR SEA"ONS APTS ,ea ures, ocean view, Sh~re 2 bdrm 2 ba apt, AJ·~v :,.._ 837......... ' ~ I Call ~ JW •
r '"" t b h Adlts N t.s .., ..,.'I.A,, .,,.... pe>rtant funcl ons. inc work. Obtaln new LA Times lo homes \n co. Call Willa, 833-2700. Spac1ou!.2brtwnhse.1•<i ~c.i9"i-3280<t99·~ · CM.Must be neat. Reha· · Out<'allManagc Carl, SJl.2700. Denoia & sut.cnptionsforlbeDal· Irvine/NB areu. MGal Dennis&DennisPerson·
h..e. pool. pvt patro. sm · · ble 556 .. 2940bef11 :00 AM Mofteyto LoaR 5025 10AM·2AM 731-4462 0ennI1 P e r 1 on n e l Jy Pilot working with an be reliable &havedepen· nelServiceoflrvine,2082
• hlld 0 K. Nn pets .. $275. 1 Ddrm Apt. Patio. Quiet. & aft 6:00 PM. Gene ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service o{ lrvlne, 2082 adult aupervlsor. Earn dable transportation. Michelson ..
i:l..5 Joann646-7483 $300/ mo . 794 -8943, Need a great roommate? lat, 2nd& 3rd T.D.'s lR~~~~~=eal l\tlehelson. :,~ ~ rz~)wu Salary$300mo.546·0235. 1-----------
1.RC. I Br. pool, nr shops, 793·3l44•784·2236 -Cutllvlog expenses' 1.P~~~AVAlLABLE SanOemente.Fullylic. ~n to 5pm. (Z l 3 ) DELIVERYMANforear· ............,.-~~ Jdlll>1no pets Ut1I pd . LOCJllnoHiCJMI 3852 CnllTheOrangr Cr 1 notimpe>rlant FOl'appt.492·7296 ASSEMILYLEAD I AM Times Rte No . 1~ :\1onro\ 1a. S48·03J6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• county Profess1onal:1 lrolutr, 493-3102 2473. Spm·9pm. Call Y • C 11· DANCE OF FUN Assembly or small elec· Collect C.M./H.B. area. a Eas ts1de of Newport. N1re l & 2 lir. $26S & up. Hou1e-Motes Ul'tttd Money Available. many Blll nude girls dance & tro-mechanical devices. . --546-4481. -
Townhousr :! br, 11" ba. pool & rec room, quiet De l~i4134 1971 sources, all projects. rap .session. 10AM to Req's exper. in dlrectinf IUSIOY D&IVERY
FA, gar., fplc, vacant. urea.S3l·7766 _____ pen a esancc -$50Kmtn.7S2·60.52 2AM Mon·Sat 625 N. :e~~l~. up to lO as· muatbe18.ApplyTues& Messenger/Courier
Agent 548·1168. Hewpori .. ec:h 3869 Share 2 bdrm l ht; upstrs Mori~s. Tnast Euclid Anah 55!).6150 STACOSWITCH IMC Thurs. 3_.PM. Charley 5 day wk. P/Ume am or ,
Se 12 b b v t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'2 blk to bch in NB. 0.-5015 t'REESESSlON W/AD' Brown't, 16160 Beach pm. Know Ore Co. lv~~~d OK~ ~itna~afh: Pilk_..EW,ORT Bernie. 956·9300 work.••••••••••••••••••••••• RELAXING MASSAGE 113985~9.~~tMeu Blvd.,H.B. lm-31"9btwn8&10AM •
'$250/mo.Agt.541Hl68. Bache lors , 1 or 2 ~·1057 home. SIS? so+ BobJames·LicMasseur Carpenter,fmiahworkol). 0 HUf'l'HOUDAYS
Bedrooms &Townhouses utal. LOWEST Outcall 9·9. 494·5111 Equal ()ppor Employer ly. Exp'd only need app-~ ~,.,.. $720 Irvine Personnel Aten<')'
Sl65. lbr, coly, private. From$2'7t.50 WcrOIJ" lnhnltRat ly. 499·30S7. Brian or Terrific oppty awaits 488El7thCo5taMesa
in dudes ulll. Nr Npt Specta<'~l ar spa, total forltlftt 4350 fl MASSACiE l/721-3448 ·eager lndlv In well es~b. SulteZU 642-1470
llgts.642·0647 recreation program. ....................... l1tT.D.'1,al10 FIGUREMODELS practice. Endless vane· ~~ l~~ep~~~o 2peb~ Blln~~ n~ ~~~~~~.~l\~~i~~ S~~ A;~aJ~. t~~~e~Vd Fai~T~~'"::"c!'1949 ESCORTS ASSEMBLER ~~t~-~~t'n. g:;~~<i:~is 8:8~~: HlJoste$~~~ &$3.~~c-l~land.' Ja.mboree & San 18th St. CM 673·1787 eve 5.....,. MlfJ. Co. OUTCALL OHLY 540-3280 nelServiceofHunttngton ve. s, er
-557.8177 -Joaquin Hills Road. · -------642-2171 545-0611 TRAINEES Cbaulfeun P/Ume, male Beach.l&l&8Beach. Hr. 673-6110
l)wct 2br h'e tn tr1.plr't 1714t644·1900 SINGLEGARAGE 63l·lll I Neededlmmedlately or fem. Exper. not nee. OENTAL/ORTUO recep· ---------
Hl:spon udlt.'>, no pets. Carorstorai:e. Retired couple has money ESCORT SERVICE Long " short term U· for limousine service. UonisL Nwpt. Benefits, HOUSECLEANING
mm-smkr.S2S0.646-ZJ23 S3S/mo 962·3533 tolend.l!lt&2ndT.D.'s MODELlNGOUTCALL elgnment.a. Holiday" Mechanical exper. dental expr req: Ortbo PERSONNEL BlCffElOR APT. OfflceR--"'al 440'" Agent,837·3744 24Hours 847~ vacation pa y, helpful. Call betwn 10-1 "' ....... ef.642-2626 Employees with or :? Br unfurn, adults. nr " """ 1\1 H it II t 'o pla fi Nft#71~/.,_...,.... r~.,. without traosPorlation Harbor/Walson. Avail ALLUTJLSPD! •••••••••••••••••••••••SoldmyhomeinLaguna •SAMDY'S* osp1ta s'taart'.!1., __ n ora.,., .... ,,.,.._. OENTALASSlST.Exper. mustbeabletoget.lothe 1'7118. S290 mo. 631-3751 100' from the ocean. BS•PER SQ FT Beach. Wiil sell my •vallable. ..,..... C om ch · D
uft6pm ___ Semii(urnlshed. Avail l617WESTCLIFF·NB $29,550 2nd T.D. for OUTOALLMASSAGE I~~ ~~ · ...=.rMG ~=: X·ray cert. or :,:awo~t·abri,
now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. AGT 541.5032 $23.000. cash. Call Kt!n, 973-0329 I • full or p/time basis. Top
Dana Point 3826 Yrly. $250 per mo. NO · 673-4545 Guy 29. 5'9''. heavyset,@ f DISIGMB D ........ /Draft,.... wages. 540-9525. The
••••••••••••••••••••••• FEE. Call 1 Sue at 150 I Wntdlff Dr. but losing weight fast. 3141 C ..... Drf•t Exper'd ln sub di vi.lion ror electrical consulting Sunshine Girls. 1700 E .
Panorama \lew, new cln SS6-7707anytimc Newport Financial Ctr AMouftcemtftt1/ Meet nice gal for dates. 54._,.741 ;,"·..t':~{!'.~r\~ engineers ofc. Expr. in1_G_ary-"-,_S_A _____ _
2br, 2 ba + den 4·plex. LHIMcJ Office Space P«'Wftals/ P.O .Box 1148. G.G. 92642 Fr 1_ ,,.._ Fr lt'g, pwr, dlst & comm H 1 . .
'
1097 B I Call On SI.le Manager • -t Ir E.-.:.-..1 (Acrou om Be..,. Wuuam Oil It: svc:.t-·. Send brief re· ousec ean1ng service No pets. :'t gr 496-~. 3 r, 2 ba, enc . gar . _. ~ Or Co "''---rt) Aaaoc. HOl n..Aa St NB ,_ ,_,. eeds En ...._., al full
0 d 1 -N Blklobeach.Balcony.no t714)642·3lllext248 ....................... Eaao,-.t&r ar>Jf ·~.-• ~ • • aumelo :Dalo Karjala & n gst""'6g • 2 ur upexw/111ew. ew· pets Lolt&Fo...d 5300 ·~ EquaJOpporEmployer Aasoc.27ooECoastHwy, p/l Car nee. Top $.
ly redcc., crpts & drps. TSL.Mgmt 642·1603 becutf•t Row lftc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cl.llKTYPIST Ste 1,. Corona del Mar, _6.S_7_-0609 __ • _____ _
SJOO/mo. 645·0110 days or Ofc !\pace in Newport· Lost: Mon. 11/28. Seal Jobs W..t.d. 7075 Automotive Trainee POSWoa lor BUI· CA 92625 or call <714 ) HOUSEK&PIERS
499-4215evc:.. Large Jl5r. 2ba apt. SUrr· Airport Arca. Reception. Pomt Siamese cat. 1 yr. •••••H•n ... •••••Hu• .New Dt1ailJ>~ need.a -.log Clerk JJl Jullr&Jlce &M-3660 No eJtpttr. nee. Xlot
SPARKLING 2 br, den. 2 deck. 2 blks to bch. $325. phon~ serv • conferen<'e old. female, s payed, Companion, Nursing, will • he•P· Co. ln Nwpt Bcb. Good Desk clerk, weekend benefits includ. slclt pay.
ha twnhse. oeean vu. dbl mo. yrly. 204 43rd St. rm. k1tch, secy serv. dac· weanng flea collar. Vic. travel. New baby, child Top .wa1es pale!. Dieine tYJlinl •till.a. Sa.Lary to days. Ambanador Inn, Bayview Conv. ZOSS
i:ar S375. Chen 661-18\l. ~ taUng & c-0py machine. Rockledge and Victoria care. Excellent re· Steamers, enc palnten, $500 & 1ood company 2909So.Brist.ol,SA Thurin.C}ff>4Z.3505. 9365~5 XTR" 1 .. RG"-ZIR FromS290. (714 >752·7170 Dr. Laguna Beach. ferencea.Calls.A-0830 bul(ers & pe>Uahen. up. benefit.I.~
" • -•· ----"' -s; Reward!! 494·9466 or holstery s hampooers, DRAPERY Kousekeeper, perm. once,
Steps to beach. up· THEEFFICIEMT 494-2maft5:30PM HetpW..ted 7100 cheekout.plck·up"'de· COCKTAii. WOIUCROOM aweek.Needsplcn1p.a1J1
graded. bltns. 631 ·011>7_ .A.LTERMATIYE ••••••••••••••••••••••• livery. Apply at WAnlllSS . lady lo keep our home HurtffftcJtOft hoch 3840 A Lost v1cm1ly Bushard & ~Harbor Bl, CM Needs exper d, self start· the same. Couple. East,
••••••••••••••••••••••• V. Nwpl Bch·3Br. 2Ba. Mo. to mo. rent incl: Ellis. F V. Male Gei:man ACCOUNTING &45-l030 Learn lo 40 m the most in~ employee full_or C.M. 7SMl89.1or646-S138. SHARP a Br deluxe beach partly furn · bltns · Rec e Pt. s er v .• Shepard Tan with some excittnc. clamorous, p/time. Apply, 1835Wlilt· ---------
unit. O/W. frplc. patio. d'!hwshr.1600sq fl.. cpts, personah7.ed phone cov. black on face. 12·16·77. JU .... IOR hltblY paid profess. Day tier Ave, B·7, CM or call Housemen & maid s
gar.AvallfHI0.2358 frplc. yrly $550 mo. erage, coaC. rm. mail 962·2581 " 'YON «eve aeulooa. Place· 642-1843. needed. Apply Ben
642·2565aft6PM serv., underground prkg ACCOUNTANT ,. mentaullt.Goodjobop-Ae•uERS(':n Brown's Motel, 3110& IRAHDHEW &morelnNewport. Found Cocker Spaniel, in Por· _,y • ,_ Const Hwy , Soutn lwpt Hgts. lovely 2 Br, THEEXECUTtV~ vie Mission Glen. SJ C. ResponsibWUes will · C.714f.751·91t4 to deliver .A Times. La"""'a. 3 Br apt/condos, conve· new cpts. no pets. $295 SUJTE ,,.." u 10 Call 496 9338 elude Customer Credit ........ .,._ •. t t k 1--·~-·--.,..-----mentloc, 5 units avl. $400 ·'""".,., · · Verification a nd Ac· a.....a....-w So. Call. Cocktail .,...,,Ml ... l'ree rac s. Up.""···""".'""1751 mo.494·3223 orMll·SSOt count• R e .. elvabl e -.,.. Waltresaea, Inc. 17922 Must be over 111, ;,.;:·t lmmediate openings full ..... M>V• .....,. SINGLE to 3 room suites Found Women.' Green 3 " ... ~ "'V....... I k ls orpt•'me Noexper nee 1 H w 1 3b be ms 1 Collectlona . Our ,......,.., """ Sky PHk Bl, Ste C, van or P c up, a 0 "" • · • Newdeluxetwnhsaptsl~ ;boat xy r/ la n~ avail. Nr OC Airport. 11pd. bke. vlc Tuslln nr. -··tomenaretnvlrtual· lftlSIMTATIYIS Irvine,Ca92714 liability insurance. Agesl7thruZ8.54CM«8.. 3br 2ba epic bltns W a. am rm, rp c. Full services avail. in· 22nd. St. 642·1695. ..._ ....... ouo .,. o E Apply M·'"'ne r,.,.. '
I h pnl, cpt, quiet ad Its, no clud recept. to answer Jy every state across the Best time to e1tabll1b c-s ~-·8 "'30· .~ 5 p' M .. , """1'"
hkup patio db attac gar pets. $400. 548-2695 phones. Conference FOUND: Small black nation plus some forelin cuat.omera. Interested? -.:~=w::een::=:.::::,:::::.:..: ... :.:...:...:.::.:·--11---------S395. 545.aso.. 963-4218 room. Xerox mach. Full Fem. Spaniel, OCC area. account.a. Position re· Call 540-'70'1 or Zenith Breakfaat.. lAancb, dln• IMPORT&
J BR, pet OK. $220 mo. 326 ?~~~!'!~ ..... !!!.~ secy serv. for Info. please 557-2719 dys, 8'7-3418 eva. quires a minimum o( 2 1-1359 ner. Elpcr'd. Apply la
hs II r "" all7 .,,..,.. ...... " years collece (""'erer a peraoo, Ma Barker'• EMrLOYMEHT EXPEDITOR 13t t. C!" ~!~:..., l Br. $185 mo. UUl pd. c 1• ....... ......,. Found Irish Setter pup, d ,.. Reltaurut. 212 E 17th
.....,......... Walk to everyth ing. ornc• Suite, new build· fem. vac Yorktown & dearee> an dlrectly r.e· Babyaltter, substitute St.CM ' COUMSILOR Negotiate and n --"tte ---------i v B ac h Bl d n B loaled exper ience in motberneededior17mo • ..;.......;....·-·------•Ir you have the ability & .,.. •• Se • d v·11 498-1709. 211 Granada. Ina 4 blocks from ocean e v · · CreditCollectlona. old baby "''rl, Mon thru COC)t( thedesltetowork w/peo· I mportatlon ot auto awm I aoe .... _&&.. ~1to In 'downtown H. B 968-0859 .. h d I parts, handle lnterna·
bd I• ,......,. • SJ2St uW 800Sq ft ._CC_....,5 Fri. 7:30 to 5:30. My Exper'd only. AU ablfta. pie & have a 111 es ex· tlobal sales aareeoenta. New 1&2 rm uxury ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo + · · · Lost: Fen\, Pltball dog, "' vvn1 home oc yours. Muat be ~paJ. & benefits. Ap-per. we will train you. din
adult a~t.a in H plans S240.UT1LIMCLD 548·1557 llto brwn hair. Vic. PAYAILICLIRK cSependablolcbaverefa. ply,Jolly-itoser,4005. We are the nation's ~~~~c.J·i:~.~:
from $265 + pools, ten· Water gas electrlclly ............... 4450 Trubuco & Los Allsoa. Al least 1 )'Ur or .. ried 175-17aor5594ll7 toast Hwy, L•1una largest with over 500 of· Middle East. Buy parts'
nls, waterfalls, ponds ! Unlq'u e i 4 a Br' ••n••n••••••••••••••• MV. REWARD $75. a~ooot• t•vable ex· Bab-It•-. TUes. Fri I Beacb ficescoasltocoast. fo r foreign cars, From San DMlo Ftwy Comrite•e recrea•l.onat' ~ DILU"I _,.... 768-58N , ,,y ,._ • Please C&ll I II I I Ft t drive North on Beach lo " .. "" " ~ ~ perience w b 1<11ne ell• to$. 1 yr old bo)t. My C00Kforcnwof4tallln1 Jade Bame 540-5001 1pec • z ng n a McFadden tMn Wett on facll ties. Adults only. Conf. rm.. seat 25. all F o u n d : G e r m , poeure to computerlzed home• ow Q tr an'. to Aupulco Jan u. Ell· Snelling &Snelling of parts. Some saleswork.
McFadden to 8eawlod SorTy,nf;.!;J paneled, am. whH In re· Sbep/blck/tan, male, a~wm. Wllliuatchven· ~ PtOMS fs air tan bome NewportBeacbAleD<'Y Supervising, lmporta· vui11e. (714).,.51.91 CCIII Apts •r. 1or2 yr . lo•••· Lake chain oo n~t. Hamllton· don' lovo\c• a1aln1t paid. Reply &o QUllfied Uon. and auto parta expr.
l4932NewportAve. Porut uea. Kent /SU.,hrd~ purch-. OC'dtn/r"9lv· Babyaitter /bnllpr. AdnM.c/oDallyPllot. FrootOfc Fe.Paid roqulred , 2 yrs
L1VE NearTbe Beach! TusUn. Qill today: Harldm. Found : Mlniature <Tlny) Ina report.I. Compute db· Mature. paLle penon &o PO Box UH, Cotta RH1pff111ltt minimum. 430G/wk. App-C.. .. W 832·tl22 714·511'93113 Poodle. Bermuda / couMa aftd rebates, car. for 7 mo old cblld. MtH.CAaae:M Excltloc c•rttr ahead ly E.E.D. ~. Ad
Beaut1tu1AdultAptll .__1................. ·~· ...... ·~· ... C·., Glaler.CM.541--l802 verily •lltta1lon1, etc. UtehM•~.:!IT• ~ ror polled indlv neklng1·pa~ld~f~or~b~y~e~m~pl~o~yc~r~. ~ Gau, water Paid. .....-• 0 n ...., n .. Pnpttre and ll)Ola!tQI" tn-ftttlble,•~,, open. my COOKP/TIMI super frleodly co.1: . 21661Brookbdrs~HB orU.tMw_.... ~•o C. at 130 · 1'7tb St, t-'ound SIC 12/2' NJ put/output dOcumeni., home.&35-2200X.ad11, Sil• SU tam.21J8pm, w/creat be111I Call Can· • f6U,IJ ••••• .. •:•••••••••••••• Sl.50/mo.Doyle54f.1JU whlt~/l~•f Coeka~o~ prepar't cbeca and clo -...."' .we4 tbru Prl lOam· dace, 841-1211. Alao P'Ml••pedton-------·
,:.: ~~~~ $280 Jae. Store·Olflce. Oatarack Jell ere, IOIDt Cillnt. T)'Slinl and ISABYSmER. n:u' tniM t :IOpm. lltaa Verde Jobi. Dconlt • Dennis W RICllYIHG
2 Bdrm wftb 1ara1e. Nr Mr:NUT-;;TO NPT • ~ I\ under JO', 1H'78 dipped. -.aoe7. an abillty to operate 10-home care for 1.1 yr Qmv. Bol~ Ml Center Per•onnel ServJce of tMWICTOI
beach.GeO/cno. BCH· BHchBt.HB.142·211.M n-A .... f.:'-·•-i-a kef&l'OUllt.. chlld 'idaysW.-Ptir lt.CN..,.ml. MuntingklnDeach,1'188 11 1 1 Qill 9G·353.'S . """ .. ..,.. ,.,, -..... • .._ · • Beach. . S m a pr e o 1 o I\
8acb.1"2BR. $t.on,3060E.eoa,tJJwy.1 moold 1nyo1tV •• touch Sendrawnurapplyto: eaum. C~ ., . maehlned It molded1
New dhc •Plex. 38r. from$220, •up. Coronadtl M•r; sa50 per tunltll •1ff04M2. Call • "'," ~ Oat'dentr needed fot apt parts for olectro-
f)'plc, bltu. w/d hkp, Adul~,NoPeu rno. P.uUlartln, Ritt. ea..,. 1'18eATA JllOtifir.N«enary compl4',lltaColtaMen. mecbanlcal dnlces:
yard, 1ar S3l5 NS-3604, ise1meeaOr. ..._. fT5.5Gt LOST ·. ""al .. "' mo•, ~..-• laYourPlolml• i AR!btnpenon (JlJ)-.:1151 Workln1 tnowled10 of MZ..nl CS Blb EaatoCNl'*'POrt m "' ._ ~. HOllE ~&PAIUT • i -~SPJI Y\4.5 true poalUoolna
1 BR 1 b t • Blvd ) .. ' .,......... 4100 Gtrman Shep. Au: AnAllPlttdll~C!90o Did JOU ltilcPiW J08 c.11 --. ................. Qen.,ttcTra!OM pref'd, llr'Ofident .. Of
• • a • carp• 1• ...... tllO . •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• "Scnoltt)'", Hamilton • M ,W .___ place • eladllJed H .II ·-.... I ..11t meaaurinaa 1 inatnlm•n" drapa...L.~"•·••••• ...... ~6'001ca~Oft"4altrfatpro-Meyer st. CM. u touad ~Ani:cA'in; u. .OallJ PUot 1tnte1 •w.o..t8'it'7.NB Cheerfwr::.•:::'°1>eof· ~·d rum.~ Mo. •·UU ,..._ 4000 pert,y w/1• It n of air c:all, ete-6.WJ Cn4) NJ.18116 at 2lt Directory for • •Mia nclaJ lt'MWr In bllt)' ST ACOIWllCN IMC
•ANDMIW ....................... ~-o:'~· .. a..cltsM3. 2t!if LOtrr Y•lr.lattr.Terrter. mooth lot u UU. ••cl..,... ,.. MU M1 brancb. Call Barbara. 11.9a.wo.ta11 ..
t, 2.1111' uni.I. PIP, Wt-Room •I kttt~ ... -,... nve, • Nr Ellll 6 Chapel ,.... '1:1~1l/P 1 Sl.• per U,t f'of ... .._..,, 1..U ..... • m.270d. l>taoU fl Den· 14t-JM I 1n.aar.rro .. m• 110w.lk•up. 1i... .... _, ....... ._ 11.a . u u 1u111 1~m·~~ ~ ur •le•., .. , eall nt.Pt&'9CIBDll&rvl~oi £4oaJOppor~ • tl2·1T17 • _, .___ J 1wlntAd_p, •' -·· Rnardl-lmE\<tl !ii~ _._,. '' ' --.,. trvine.•UlldMlaocl. ...' .,.._..,,_ ~ • .." • •'t. r l -., ·~ ·--
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1)..1 0Al1.;v Pit or • Wednnctn. Dteftn~r n . 1tn j ~~~.~ ..... !!.~~ ~!~~ ....... !~.'.~
..... W..e.G 7100 HitpWwed 710 0 ....,w..., 7100 ~Wtjh4 7'00 SEWINO)JACHlNGOPR Mlsctfl ..... ~ 1010 ,,......,.. .. ,_ 4 Whfff Drins 9 550 •• . • ... •• . ••• . .. • • . . • • • • ••••••••••• ••••••••••• • ••••• ..... •• •••• •• •••• ............. .......... ,,,..,,,. ""'"'•ri•I -aa..: .... ~:.;;:'r!'JI!: .. ,~. • •••••••••••••.••••••.• ;;;.;;;::du:::·. ;i 40 ···con1:M1SA .. . $ $ Mr....,_. Otlf ywy ~l\ Opt' Sr.r.Jiht Ar· ..-orklng or ooU57 t33 WANTED ••••••••••••••••• ••• ••.
lutun! ~P aduh for rowMllnM, WIH41G TOP CASH DOt.l.AR iG f'o.¥1 l\loped. 2 •1•.111r1 A.MC & Jllft I\\ \.'T 'i VL 1!
4
rly AM d~ll\ Mu'lt Ml STORE, Full o.r Part l•R•e-c•o-n•d•l-l •t •o•n-e•d•I PA l 0 F 0 R V 0 R 'tlnt cond $350 bc~t of TOO
' h \'1.'tran. ..
840~ 'fjmf' Clt>tli. Apply In Refngoral r•. wujber. JJ:.'WELkY WATC'U,F~. su Mu11t~ell 1 1i':!l ~S47 MANY $125 . $200 Wk MUl$1SAIDES eerson. 28033 Crown & dryert. fo'rttiMht ART 08JECTS. GOl.D. JllPS
&oaoaues N~'~:t Prkwy l. 1 darruiged&ModelHomc ~·~~~E:u:~HlJ~~·~l,~!'1 91 50 \Jl;STSELr.;o
Xlnt bl!nd1ts in d ud .rcturiu. Guar/del. Also TlQUES. ~2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J EEPS BY We will train }'OU to work J.S to 25 hn. a wk \ 1a our
Lr1u111portat1on
l>lck pay. Hit )'\'ICW Con\' STUDENT rte,w appliances .~t cMt + , 1974 250 Yllmuha MX NEW \'f:AK'S
20MThur1n,CM642·3505 Pltime young men ll! W r. DUNLAI S 10960z Jet pwrd surf brd1. Terrykittroolfork'Bo1t Pltbt>Call
..... UlSES .... ,Dilts yri. + ror dellverie5 & Talbert (Qt ~ucltd) FV. Great 1>haJlow WU\er t.h<ltk etc $~ I Cull 549-IOZJ
n ~ ~ warehouse.Apply, Party ·963~·~·~~~2~l~Opn~7~d~a~y~s~·~~I Vet.S<l ·SCUBA & 962·.:Salte;;p.m: ~JIARQOBBLVD. Ptttme, 1111 shift:<. Purk World. 2025 Newport Bl, _ snorkeling. $7SO ea. --CaetaMe~a Salary + Bonus Lido Con\'. Hosp, 466 C<Mita Mesa. 213:435·22SS '14 YA MAHA R0350B. ---------
Jo'l 111Jflh1p Rd, N.u ~~~~~~o:IY~~1~~0~1.:t LUG'-.&1!!..R.J..&.'-S ~how rm cond. 1600 m1. TrucJ&s 9560
1\4:!..ij()W, T.eephcNMt Sal" ...,"~ "'• Must s ee to apprec. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Gl!HHAL Ell CTRIC
IUILDER'S C ENTER
For murein/o: 558·0693
-.. -URH S A IDES • w,mt to make monoy? cond. $300/both. 993·057o from your busine95 caret. $7SO/ofr. Dan 64.2-85&0 _ ,75 Toyotu Truck.
4
spd.
Can you se.ll on th~ Was her & dryer, S50. Send one card for uch 9T3 K kl .. 5 l\tl 1 RadiQ/htr Good cond. 7 3
·30 & 3·11'30. Exper pbooe?Toplsnourbu111· Good condilion. Must tag plus one spare. We 1 awa~l\I 'cc n · <:all8420UiOufl5pm. pref'd. Country Club ness. 646·9030, ask for seU.497·2235 r eturn permanently J'ru.11. Like new $225. -
l<l!HNB. HELr
Wknd llve·1n. Some wkd}
work. 5"0·"234
Conv Home, 5'19-JO.;t Or C t D ii PH f Hay. sealed attractive tag & ~ v... 9570
Nursing aide & SO(llt' an9~ OCIS a y 0 *MICROWAVE, s harp strap, m.eeting ulrllnc '611H.D.Shovel lleud, (ul· ••••••••••••••••••••••• hsekp'g for disabled fem •t•eJ•e•pho-•ne•S•aJ-es____ Carousel model. l.D. reqwremenlJI. Pre· iy custom 1976 Oodgo Bubble Top
Eicp pref'd but nut re 330 Weit lay St., Cotto Meaa S22S ___!59_-_1808_ vent loss & theft! For a 846~ Von. lully converted.
qu1r'd. l.H I.' Ill or (•Ul Ask for ra "1 Ward A FUNNY i>entonalized tag e nclose -many xtras. mu!lt l'!l'\'
t> T 1198-2233 .. licwdet 1020 wallpape r, fabric or '7JHooda3SOwltbhelmel. S9.87S.552·~9 KEY,UMCH --An Equal Opportunity Employer THING ••• :................... "Day Glo" paper & we Goodcond. -----Data Entry Opr U uy (}ff1cj ~l ach111c :\I ;i1n1 USED BIKES will back & trim your $:!00. 763-00'J3 '73 Dodge Van 6 C.) I, sh ift In llou:.I.' Com Re pairman Salary tags. Or try two cnrds custom.
puters Heq·~ !>J*l'd & uc range SS 951$7.20. Mm. 5 HAPPENED Recond. Buy, sell, trade. backt.oback. MotorHotma. Sfll•/ 846·6385
curacy. Key to d1i.c ex yrs experience in bus1· H.IDWClltted 7100 HelpW..t.d 7100 fil:cle&Co.%488Newport PRlCF.S· R""/Stor• J '60 -----
per helpful. Sal opeq OCS!'.1 & office machines •••••••••••••••-.•••••••••••••••••••••••••"••• ON THE WAJ vd.C.M 642·7910 S2eaor3/SS . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SHARPSHARr* Xlnt benefits & working repair occupation req'd. ,__________________ CClh 1035 4/5lags$1.80ea. Rent a 1977 Excuuve '71 VoUuwagon
conds . Apply, Nation:il Appl y in person or call RETAIL SECRETARIES TQ WORK. ••••••••••••••••n ••••• 6f9tags$1.SOea. Motorhome or :Mini· Wcst~halia Syslem'i Corp • 4361 Saddl e back Valley Reg. Siam ese kittens 10ormore$1.40ea. motorhome rrom Her b CAMP ~VAN .
Birch St. NB <!'Ir OC Unified School Distnet. &TYPISTS IOION'J 1SealPolnt)$J7S. SaJesTaxlncluded Frledlander.Ckllany of AM/FM.radtals:p~int· .Airport I EOE__ 25 6 31 D 1 s en o )I . v. CLERKS 776--09fl7 NO CARD? these oumbecs Must see to appreciate
iJtchen & Counter llelp _586-_l_234_._______ Be particular & get the WANT JO GO ---------1 Draw your own or send tte.67n SACS2995. 642·4241
'd f b r r l UTO-°".. best. Work temporary 10 wks Seal Point Male nam, e. address, phone & 537.7777 .... ....._.... W-"-...1
9590
c xper . o r u e Ophlhalmologist seekse.<· ,..,... H ' G d ll _... d -....,._
r<>staurant o~ning in 2 per'd front o!c recept. ass1gnmenlS with the Im a I a yooda n -1. r aTn we Amdd"!!:. onehcar per IZl-1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wks at Fashion bland M w.t know billing & bk· Coftveniettce Mwb ts agency that works for If yOM'r9 ltOt Cb amp. bl tnes. op tag. <..r eac . WE WILL IUY
f\Jll & P/t1me ,.·or Cooks. kpng. Some typm". Call Help Wanted you. .._ .. '-' ........_ show c1uallty, 830·9891 or Send check or money or· MOTOR HOM ES
Dishwashers. Ru s boy11 , ~HS53 " t:.t.?nd&JrdShifts MOFEES -._,,..,. 837·1475 derto: F'ORREN'I' YOURDATSUM
Counter Help .\lusl be Noexpcr.rcq'd.Wctraln callToday! wondn9or11mld119 n..---9-0-4-0-1 PILOT,.ltlNTING 1''romSIOO.wk.7iO·Otl-H PAIDFORORNOT IR 1,1 II those hired. Apphcanti; ~-ney """I'" po Box i c"" T,_DOlLAR
1;75 4779 or 673·0333 apply at Ulolcm Store1> O 1 Ce • CALL US FOH B 0 x er I> u P... . .. K C COtita Mesa, Cu 92621> RE~T Flreb;1ll 23 ' Sell FORT~ CAIS
over ca~t' t«1 >rderDe:.k toSl0,400 ~Q~ ff. .,.,_ •. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · .,.,., _.. .
Talk Of The Towft lo<•ulcd al l d AN INTERVl~W ., " cont. Auto/111r. CC. CB.
I ..t.IOR .... TORY Cl)mmunic11lor Will r111d Ill Del Mar Ave. C.:\l 0 over oa auE,.AY + ltc~islcred . 0688Champlon Aka i s l e r e 0 T a p c SlCI'('(), :.lpio. 6645·22R3 ~ " l)l•rf. \'aricl~· spot wiwcll 1390N. Pacific Cst Hwy -sired $50 847· Recorder & Ovation -----Clinical known firm. Call Carol. 557-0061 COMM + IONUSES ' · ·------Guitar 29 fl. Apullo motorhorrte V N TE •t IW8 121111. Dl'nnls & Den· \~c~~uren~nlk>c<81uc~I J723 Birch St. NB long Distance Lines DOG THAIN ING Cull 673·.,.,·" Must see to 11pprccinte! L.. .N. or H. . or .c. ... u u u h y Pia ,. op ••in" "' "''
1 ni:, P1m,onncl Service of Casual, FunAtmosp ere our c ... • "' " -Call John Fe tcr at ~~~l~n:l~~e o;x·::t1f!':J~I Huntington Beach. 16168 opportunity employer Secretary lo $900 FUM-TIME John Martin 548·0059 SCRAM 'EJS 6-t.2-00IOot 54Q..821 I.
for appt. 640·0140 Beach. fntertoiftflltnt Co. r ART· TIME Springer Spnniel. Blk & "L Motor Home R-..tat
.,egalSec toSlO,BOO Part Time Only ~a1lmakin1:. "tint opporl. I a m orous pos . for If you read well, like to wh1te.12wks. AKC. S200. ANSWERS Ill/a to
32
, for s a1lmak1ng career . 1 k' talk on the phone & want Ph64S·5764 Start '78 Right!! Must now be emt?loyed wtold ei.lablu.hed firm. v ety over see ing un-toen.ioy your job ... Call ---------1 Walnut -Trait . foully self cont:uncd
w'presligous firm seek <1nd free to work in my &l2·?23S 1que co Call Wendy, PUP PC ES. Austra\1an Wheat-flaxen _ lleserve now for an~ re&p ind1 v de&mng small nppliance business - -gJJ.27()0, Dennis & Oen· TIME/LIFE Cattle Dogs. 6 Wks old WALLET Holidays & weekends.
enchanting career . Call of air treatment equip· Sales Chemicals r~~1~:.;n~\:::.~~. of CallSS7-12SS. l'\'e been thinking or in· REGENCY MOTOR
Amy, 848·1283. Denni-. & menl. Mon·f'r
1
6 to 10 S 12K + comm + car LIBRARIES INC sulating my house. Alter HOME RENTALS 0 en n Is I' e r son n c I P:\1. Or. :\fon·Thur 6 lo 10 Fee Pntd Poslll\'e at· Secret-to $950 German Shrthair Pointer I found what it would. 9'lS N. Harbor Blvd, S f\
Service of Huntington P:\l+Sat 9.30AM~2:30 tttude soup:ht 10 service 1-'ree. N~ more bo·hum 833-8~ AKC.B m~ale,p,'\pty. cost l dc.cided to ••S3l·2503 ••_
Beach. 16168 Beach PM. $280 per _mo. salary indust. accounts Call davs In this variety """· <.:at1 499·264.4. w eath ers l r Ip m y ............ s-.·c •• •-.. or profit sharing pro· Bill 833.2700 Al~o Fee ., """' Equal Opp E plyr m tr r-..,._ y
10
..
5
WALLET -.... • ,._,. LEGALSECY gr a m. v.h1c ~ever you Jo~. Dennis & Dennis assis ting contr oller. n--to CMt .. • &AccfllOriH 9400
Sm bul>ml'!.!> hllAullon Prefe r l" 0 .l' x P · Per~onnel Sen ice of Learn some of the ••••••••••••••••••••••• P( & """'--8090
firm 1n Npt C'nlr :.t•t•ki. nl'l'l'!-. ... a r ) S ome lnme.2082 M1chclson personnelfunctions.XJnt TelenhoneSales Mi xed Boxer puppy. ClftOS _,,,_..,
t•xpt•r leJtul !-.l'('Y :'olu-.t ma n a ge m c n t op -advancement oppor. in t'.'.' mall.'. w1dog hse. Good •••••••••••••••••••••••
h av1· '<I n t -.J.11 1 ~ portumt1es avail. Phone SALES EXEC'S tlustopco.\li/lovelyofcs. We will train. Earn heallh,all sho~.631·2339 NewBrandNamePianos
'h h 1 s b t for 111ternewaftcrlP:\I Also Fee Jobs . Call Chr i s tmas mone y . ----lO°'oovercOllt S ort Jn« n·11 . u m1 Opportunity to i:et into Ch ,,.10 6055 Co t 1 d . Punple:.. male & rem. Jleach Music Center rt:-sumc· in t•onf1dent·c to 979 JR61 business for yours cH ns. ~ · • · as a Salary an comm1ss1on "
:__·_ --f'npco I AuenC\' 2790 · · m1xt-d hrt•ed, Lab & 17404 BeuchBlvd.ll B. ·\d lf987, IJ.11 I.' Pll1Jt . .. __ t rl · • th '"'" nnc " · · Call:
r ---------1 Wll11vU ante e ring WI ll<irbor, CM Samoyed 775·0208 847 8536
•••••••••••••••••••••••
64 ·'77 Use<1 M usl a nR
Partb. 990 No Parker
Orange. C11ll !19'7·2000
PO l:fox 1.'iti(J, Coi.la •our present Po~1tion & _ ____ 631-0.'J37.askforDon -·-·-____ :_
Me!>:i.t',\.n2f1:w Plus tic lnjeetmn ~vlthout capital ln\'eSl· Secr.tmovTl"ain•e --.--:--Fumitur• 8050 Fre n c h Pro v1nc1al
Moldini: menl 6-16 7989 for uppt - ' Tow Truck Drn ers ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wurlitzer Spinet. xint 4 USA Mag Wheel'-14 ·, 7' LEG/\LSl'X:ru ;T,\l!Y SET-UP MAH · . · ---Fee Paid F 0 . Rerpt per'd. Top pay. Apply, ORF. OE , I .,
to work in qu11•1 ott· 111 f:xrwr 'd. 2nd Sh1fl Salesm ;m in advcrt1sin". Great spot for congenial G&W Towing. 1000 Irvine ST ·.WJ SA,!!; · cond. S9SO. 84().2957 hole pattC"rn ;;.41,, ·• Luu
... · k · A NB 2 252 New & used furn, appl 's. •~I I ,,.5 9"''" Tustin. Gd typing .,kills, FOREMAN Yngangresslvepcrso11to person who 1s see Ing ve. 64 ·l r-··'--Mochin•s 8093 nu.., nc ·"" · • ..,.,
'67 Ca maro 327 V H 3 ii;pd
All parti. + bod y
Everything siue:.. Call
lm-0730
"' ...... c I ls f l' ' m«Sc. Wilson's Bargain _........, • rcccpt exp. & Ille bkkp'i;. E"pcr'd. Jr(! Shift t•aJI on accts for trade '""">' o c W/ o o ac &VI· Nook. 545 &. 8,4 W. !9th, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Legul :.ecrcl~1ry expprc MAINT.HELPER publication Sal,.;t r y ly. Call Ca ndace , TrcrnfAqt toSIOOO CM.642·7930 &548-3262 Kenmoresewing machenc AutotforSalt
f · d Ca 11 fl) r ,1p1H +-comm. 714·956·26&7 848·1288. Also Fee Jobs. f'ree. If you've had 3 yrs ·-------and wood cab w/cams & •••••••••••••••••••••••
IS.12·7311 . tst Shit\ ------Dennis & Dennis Person· exper. in domestic~ i!1t:! 512 ft. long custom padded attaehmenlS250. 840.4403 GtMral 95 l'O
OPERA. TORS SALES ncl Service of Huntington travel this 1s the tnp P 0 rt ab I e b a r w ith ---------••••••••••• ••• ••• ••. ••• LOAHPROCISSOR All Shifts REPRESEMTATIVES Bcach, l6168Beach. ror Y.ou. Help munuge s muJtiplex tuner. 8 track Spotiiftc)Goods 1094
FHA·VA·Conv. ex per Apply Bishop Graphics draft· SECRETARY penon ore m this fun & turntable.all are bulll· ••••••••••••••••••••••• req'd. Gontal'l Cyndi(' Oran~t'Coa.'itPlusttc~ mgsupply centernecdsa fllled agency. Xlnt bens 1ns·plus two custom F is c h e r Supergla:,~
UIN1 er. !714 > 835 05811, 8.50 \\' 18lh St. C.M salesperson with direct For Cons truction Co. & growth potent. Also wrought iron bar Ktools snowskis. 195 l'm w o
\Jason i\lcOu!n<>Co ---------sall'S exp lo service & Ne ar Brookhur st & Fee Jobs. Call Connie Sharp• 581•7446 ' bdngs .. s;s MK·SOOWood
l'rintmJ( Coll1.tter. p lime. create new accounts m Adams. H.B. Cnll htwn 9 540--0055. Coastal Person· · l 70c m w I E ckel bind
LUMIER SALESMAN Now act·cptm}l apphca · the Orange County are11. AM &5 P:'t!. 962-6683 nel Agency, 2790 II arbor. **I BUY** mgs·$45. Ski boot.s·s1zes
i-:xpr'd for re~a1l l~m~r 11011.'> for .\1.on & Tut's Dependable transporta· Secretanaltoff1ce clerk 4 CM Good used Furniture & 6•2, 7. &•2, 10; S7.SO. $25. l(~~~,!~c~10·~~7 •r
0
night shifts. Apply 9um-lion & kno~ic,dl(e of hrs per day, afternoons. TaAYEl AGENT Apphance:.--Ort
1
will SJS & S45. Grr l 's ice
.ipm, Pennys a H:r. 1660 Draft mg & f...ngm cenng typln" reqwred. $3.25 hr . Exper'd only for tem· :.ell or SELL for You. !Skates-Siie SN. skate bag
Ploc.oent1a Costa .\1esa. aids desirable. We offer Call Judy 83.l-8680 por""" in Jan, Possible M ... rTERS AUCTIOM & s kate dress·s1ze 10 -____.. salary. car a llowance. -J -khild>·all for SSO. Call
--------comm1ss100. protected SECRETARY f/timc pos. 754~ 646-1616 & lll-9625 64.2--0138.
LYM's 7.3
GREAT
RATES AT
SOUTHWEST
BANK
A Gncrt Rote For
UsedCwluv~
<The 11ame a:i; for nPv.
cars >
I' ti me . Mc d1 cat1on!.
11 7 F ume ChurJ!t•duly.
t:ood sal & fnn.l(e bcni.
\le;u Verde Conv. llosp.
tifl l Cent er S t . CM
548-5585
Ouall•ty Control t c r n 1 or y & r r 1 n g c Top night secretary. 20 l'me Recept Fee Pd CNiH PAID Trail m aster 200 5
with
ben efits Unl~m1tcd Hrsperwk.Reply tobox RiRaln'TMM•w L• d _ _. ! Sala mo n bindings & Ai. low as !UIS nnnual • • growlh potential for 1771, Irvine, Ca 92713 Fan~Jc front ofc """ cor ~-1°5~. u9r57n •. 8a1n33ti·
1
$7
5
C
11
...
1
.-....
6
percent.aee rak. Manager career oriented In· . ,....,~ ques ... c r .... s. po es .. a"°, ....
dividoal willing lo com· Secretary for Npt Bch will dazzle eager lndlv. • AGreatltatefoe-Aerospace prOducts co. rrut to 8 public corpora. marketing r esearch A great secty s tart Bloc:id ding rm set, ge. TV. Radio,
BARWICK DATSUN
·, • 1 I 1 1 i ~ 1 1 1 • , r
831·1375 493.3375
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLL.AH
FOR TOP USED CAH :-..
FOREIGN, OO~tESTH'
orCLA5SI CS
If )our car I!> extra <'11':111
!iCCU5 fin.t
BAUER BUICK
2'J25 llurbor Bh·d C~t a :\ll·:-.a !1711·2.'><lO
TOP
DOLL.AR
PAID
FORCL.l::t\N
~~
,811 !'.Bf Al.H 'il \ilJ
•11"Ht"4c,•ON Hf Al H
fl.\.' "!P '>-1(' O~ t;>
IMPORT CARS
ALL MODELS
WE
NEED
CLEAN
USB> CARS
NOW
CALL PAPPY
540 -5630
needs exper'd person for tton Call Linda 979.8952 firm. Growth oppor. Xlnt awaits you. Call Sue1 nu1ne wood. lncludei; Hifl, Stweo 1091 M.w C• luy..-1 ---------1 non-destructive testing, ( : t i · sltllls req'd 751•0266 848-1288. Also Fee Job&. buffet. table & 6 chairs. ....................... <Convemeot, ca11y pro·
Machinist dimensional inspection & or in er v ew. i.: • Dennis & Dennis Pc.rson· 847-4666 Must sell before the I sl, cessing. > 2626HAR80R BLVD,
MOLD MAKER working to MIL-Q 98S8A ----------1 Sf;CY /BKKP'R, eltp Uitu nel Service offfunUngton . beaut. s olid ma hog 8' COSTA MESA
Design & build small pre: procedu res. Send re · SALES frial bal. Client contact, Beacl\, 16168 Beach. Twin Med. sofas, bot.h $85. Medit cabinet. Carved, As low as 9.95 u~nual --WE IUY ..:
IOll~SO~ & so~
• LINCOLN-MERCURY
d !.ion s ingle & multi sums lo PO Box R. assume respon to meet Lge Med. Cocktail tbl shelves, can be used tor percentage rate.
rav1ly molds for transfer New port Bench. Ca SLAP A SMILE deadlines, sat open. Typist, exper'd 'kerox 800 $40. 552·8878 aft 6pm stereo components, re· USB> CARS!
& i nject ion mo Id 92860. 759-1721 dys, l>40-tst3 evs. dual tape system. Must MISC PURNITURE cords, s m. 1V & bar A Gnat Rot• We're the new Chevrolet hn
"m II shop ~~~~~~~~~ ON YOUR FACE befast&accurate &like ·, . S ·r· $lJS C 11 d
1
~· · th
1
· mac i es.,., a . . -------•--1 variety. Heavy gen'l or JncldgDtningRm acr 1 ice . a ForHomto'Wfters eaers ip m e rvme t;ood working conds. REAL EST A TE SICRIT .... •y specialized ofc back· & Bedroom 645-7851 aft Spm. !"Second Trust Dce<.1" Auto enter We nee1l
l>ayi. only· & A BULGE "'" Se•· 993 0570 I ) your used car ! STACOSWITCH IMC Professional, licensed Order Coordinator ground. Airport area. • ....,, · loafs & Mae type equity 011.ns. JOE
llJ9 BakerCostnMesa salespeople wanted , INYOURWALL[J Regional sales oft for TbeOffice,752--0893. GcnMJIS• 1055 Ecp,.....t 9.S percentpluslwoPTS. M.._CPHERSO ... 549•3041 f:?enerous commiss ions. this world wl~e rnanul. WAITRESS waftted ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• A ,...
F.;nu3I ()ppm--Employer-Adv~oc.e tr.aminL.. -""TI1'ttE7LtP"E has-an opening.. for a S-9P"M". oTif..U.I £o 2PM. e, furn, tam~. muc. G.wal 90 I 0 plus $150. CHEYll.QLEJ -
. ., 642-5062 LIBRARIES sales sefy/coord1notor. Apply Tino's Piua 3024.2 Items. 20621 Sandpiper •n•••••••••••••••••••• STOP IN OR C,\t.l.
\lANAGEMENT .
PEOPLE PERSON
Exec. needs p/t1mc as·
'\(){', In wholesale 11upply
Fully capitullted .
642·1634
Century21 Cl"Odter Hasbolhfull&part Pos. reqs accurate lyp. Crown Valley Pkwy U\,H.B.53&·1888 Sportyak If 7 ft. double SOtrnlWESTBANK 621 W 19th. CM l. ..,.., . ., nsav ·1 Ing & iood telephone La N. el hull heavy plastic • • ime...,uiuo 81 · communication skills. guna igu · --.Mw~ 8070 d1'ng1hy. With motor 4 Fun loving articulate -1 Real ~tate Sales People
wanted. Up to 90/10'(.
comm. spilt. Nwpt Bch
631--0900
individuals who are Exper. prefd. but we WAITRESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• mount and oars. $50. 6 or
eagertoleamhow will train the right Weekends only, lunch, WANTED 12voltelectticmot.ol'$l5. ak •-•••••••s pe r son. Gpod sal & b kf $3 so h MI-1387 to m e ..... p_ bene.fit.s. For appt. call rea ast · r . TOP CAS H DOLLAR ---------
WE Off!R.: 493-45039am.spm 673-3SlS p It I D FOR YOUR lcttlh. Pow.,-9040
Ho.fJSal.-y AMF, INC. Young female 10 galher JEWELRY. WATCHES. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Gu--. Coftwni1sioft1 PoUer&Brumfleld Div research for health ART OBJECTS, GOLD. SEA RAY'S IM:..tiYe low.Ha 26181 Avenida directory. 673-4697. S l L VER S ERV IC E ,
Aeropuert.o FINE FURN & AN· CALL Us TODAY SanJuanCapistrano Merc"-clM TIQUES.64S·2200 Al 1971Models
Equal Opp0r Employer •••••••••••••••••••··~·r---------ANO START ~ 1005 U•ntock 101s 1 a•.30•
EL TORO
24417 Rock field Bh d
83()..3122
LAGUNA BEACH
800 Glennyre
497-1771
MISSION VIEJO
28662 Marguentc llkwy.
495-6600
21 Auto Center Dn' e
JR VINE
768-7222
•••••••••••••••••••••••
A.Ha Romeo 9705 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1976 red Alfa Spider. Ex
cellent cond. Orig.
owner. AMtFM stereo.1<1
mileage. 968-0863
AJfa Romeo '76 GT,
SMILIN Sec'y/gen ofc. Kiss Lhe -••••••••,•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARRISON'S-Pri•ate Auto Sale
Receptionist/Order Desk. lrvlne Corp. worJd good. Reg. Morgan mare, broke SEA RA y 300 SL MBZ : Yellow .........
1 Good w/numbers. peo. bye ror quiet CdM loca. MUSIC IOXIS to ride " drive •. bl k roadsw. $29
1
000. -9707
pie, phone contact. typ. G"l"l on95 Mfgr rep. needs pleasant CLOCKS parade Morgon geldU1g, 2327 So. Main, S.A. ~ SL Black Roadster, •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ing. Needs to be neat & ChJtJ"8U telephone P<?rsonallty for Slot Machines, Nickelo· Eng. Wes tern (714 > 540.6555 $25,000 1973 AUDI
perfect. Reasonable.
494·2406
plensant.540·1144. TIME/UFI l girlofc.Litetyping,(il. deons , phonographs. G38·1011 3101CoastHwy.N.B. 300SEL6.3MBZS8500 IOOLS4DOOR
UllAllES, IMC. lne & interest in high World's largest selec. Mfscel....,. IOIO 63S·ZS47 '67 Corvette f"astback ?'\ew engine. autorn.atit' Rpe1cei>tloni$t&telephon~: EquaJOppEmplyrm/f " technology products. tion . Also gift s,••••••••••••••••••••••• 26 ft Thun derbJrd S8JOO trans. air cond. easant appearance "' 675-5090 furniture, antiques. · '61 Corvette S8SOO CALL AM/FM stereo & sun
pe.rsonaJlty, Real Estate American J\'sternatlonaJ ; 19" Color '1'V Portable, Fo~mula <offshore). 3Sl 64().()019 eves. or 640•1850 oor p · n !ilnl'I Cal o(flces, Airport area. Seatnstres11 needed for SEC'Y 1803 Kettering: Irvine. RCA. $175. Black Ir white V8 s, all navigatfonal days, Scott. r · n . p&y.-.-l
Llte typing. 833-2237 sail making and canvH 7M-177'l. Open Wed.-Sat. port TV, S30. Play good. gear & ground tackle. Pncea subject to change 494-6618 evenlnp. ~ucts. 642·7238 OUr company is seeking 646-lm Slffps follf. Under 50 without notice. Models. (2) n eeded for Restaurant-;Cooks. de· Cln entfiusla1Uc s ec'y hours used since new.·~~~~~~~~~ IMW rotor brochure. SlOO/per livery dnver1. P /Lime SecSlUSO.~eePald w/good typln" fc did•· Su"""BowlTlcketa wheel trailer lncJllded·I·
;,..,. ' o.... •-... ....t....-1....l-A-....-.t.1 •~st ills " ... ~ ... -&! I ••••••••••••••••••••••· hr. J .W. Lau L andJlcap. open_._ or w ... en '"' A-.wwn•• ,_ . Uon sk to aid an ex· WHOLESALE 2 Tickets, ptaoe fare 3 al.so full canvaa. Call NM .. 11
inJ67S-8450alterSPM me n with outgoinJ Your ~rofessional &t· pandln& aecrelariaJ TOnlETRADE day hotel &t meals. JohnFellerat642-0010or Cliatks
9712
MOTHER'S HELPER ~~me~!;~J!~~ ~~~·In 1::o~::t ~ ~~~t~~~:11>1:'i~ S.d•w• ....... Lhl. $1000/orolfer.645-1126 540-8211: . .. •• !~-;;;~~;;; ....
Uve ln, Newborn It S yr 21 & able to WOC'lt eves, wtrant•atic adv 1 can self·•tarter. Pay COO>• 11292 ..... ca.Ice SKIS, Yahoo, 2 by He•d, 28 ft. tJmrute Sportfiaher. Nds cornpl restoration.
old.Ownroom&talary. S2.70-S3 t.o start. Apply Pit, 641-1288. Also Fee meusurale w /sklll1. H.&.' (7141nJ.7S09 110. brand new, Un· 1 owner, in mint condl· Enlloetru.1\$
492
·2."83 Engl. spk'g. ~'1·9797 all 5pm daily, Me N Eds Jot.. Denni, & Denni• S46-'2i182 mounted, lUS. US Map, Uon &t loaded! Ci&atom ln· · -
UTI family Plua Parlor. '10 Pehonnel, Servlce of Toyota, 13", s et of 4, terlor. pilot, A.D.F . ~
MOTOl. ltO E.17\hSt, O.M. HunUnetOl"I Beach, leUl8 Servi~ S\a. Atundant. STIWAIT IQTH m tbtl ofr. Bdrm comet V .H.F., sunlog, outrhr· V.wdet fSJO
Oalty Pilot route In WTA' .. •Nf Beach. e,cpe.r d. F\l)J or p/tlme. ANfl9UIS set. w/FM·AM rad lo gen, AC/DC natural gas ••-••••••••••••••••••• Newport Buch, Aller· ... _ Am Arco Statton, 17th bltn. $75/bat ofl", good relri.pralion " ~Int, vt 4 ae.at •litreei legal noons Monday lln'ouafl Matute Penon for Minch secret.,y-Putche1in1 lt.lrvf.oe, C.81. A abJpment Cl Amerfcan ~.1163-2203 bhninl top w/tnd'Ohr~, 4uoe bqgy. S800. Call n-l<Say phu Salurday 4t Buffet. 11~t\llc:e Ill dbUn1 tor -omlnent Onn1• OP antlque1 .,._ Juat •r· new Ch""'Jtt manlfOlda -.......
&.anday momin11. Qron .room. APJ!rOit 3-c hn.POr Coui. BuJJdln t nr 111 S.r vJce Station Atten· rlv•d from tb.e l!ut Orttlnal carbon copy of rim"S ,;"eitiows plus eX: ----------
$400 per mont.h. S50 tA.sb day.AJ>J>lYto.FoodM1r, aocued Jn Tu tin. dant, expe.r'd. Day • CoHt. Open 10·6PM' tbe book "BA TTLE tra fuel Call t>ale at 4W....Ai•H tSSO · ~It requi .. ed. Oood Hotel L .. 111na, 425 s. Prevlou1 coa•tt11ouon J!:•. ~U • 6/tJme. ~ datl1. . CRY" bf lAOb M. \JIU. f88..2708 • ...................... . f~:':.1ec'~\~~~~:1~ ~::~ J..~ls1. J.e auna tseer. ~eqw~. T1" ~~~~Uon, 11lll 6 7~~l~~· ::~.~~JI Mk, ... W 9040 .lm-5 •77u
Alk f-CircuJaUon. ---------• = 1' DO ,_... (IA thefftwport hy) H•••••••••••• .. ••• .. •• CJ· s ' 1 • C J • 1 ' s • --'--------1R4latau.r..,t IMJp f« J,ct, ,ffY, Servle!'t ~· Nl111t Attend 711 .. 922 TJRE CHAINS, USED WAMf USUl.TS7 ' etierotees, Waaoneera,
Jo·Th•·Box tu.dt.w l <W 5~. wk. Apply, ONCE, J ·70-15; L'lt-U; Plck.u ... uPlOS1,200dl&·
• ij.bln.t •••ila1sil9"0ll lf!!:!·l~6!rv•••·NB ··--· IOIO K70·15: L78·U $17. ~,...:;\':;. counts.'.,, ao,ooo mile HAPPYBCJtlt>A\tS ~ llatJoo ~nt -.................. ...._, warrantn av•IJ•blc.
SADDLEBACK
~k
C '
1978 BMW•s
HERE NOW!
COMPLITI
IODYs.HOP
MOW~IH •
UC&U!NT
SIUCTIOHOF
IMWltUALIS
Wo may have your n xt
carinou.riove1lt.ory. C•ll
115\oday! W• di~ Jq larUYablft. 48'11 Cam· P'ROHT DA MAogD lland ~Ivory cbe., YACHTSALll C..._.Mtnhtc ':};! ·-· ~·.·Or . .1 ff.I . COl'aer !i<>TwPOTNTS.U.KE. ~ 1tt. from Jndla Very FUJ?!.~S-aoot°ELat,SA558-8000 ._ -~ • • ........... _. '"'" arner nr &rUVT, Oma~ -m .. us-ms -All r-. ---s.nta Ana 971...tMt "'-. • ---.-,-....--""""'~~1
R Ml.;'..,.. .ltallelpa..dedlm· ''73" ~" c.t nmole tootn1 (?lOITS-t:bt Don'tdroptheball'G t1 tuslfled ads sell b111 ... .,......,._,,! ~ •;PIL A&*Y a..L icn. bD wrth a Hil boilt. lnddia I d t.,.,. Muat Sdl 23' loop •llllp Job wttb a l01tt·COM Daily 1tenu, s mall it.ems or
,,..,, .... _. • £.. Cal lht1, ffwPt WY...._O..ll*IAd nel craft tran1mltCer, Movfn~ to ~"er. A k Piiot Clustfted Ad •nY item. Just call
lll.Z040 495-4949
lrh. ""*71. .-s;21..a:•ZZ55 for Billf4.5.ro81 Phootld·sr.8
1
_M.2_·Sf'11 __ _
' . ... . . . . .
'.Jul to .
• tod
'bea
.....aJl..
. ,,.
• ....... ,_,.11ec1 .....-.-; Uiid ' . L..&...;.. · UM4 • ...................... ~ * DAILY Pit.OT •.t.,.
...._ '' .................... , ..........•..............
Aaltos, l•porhd Aadoa, l•porhtd !:=!~ ......... ?.~ O.~et 9920 M9cllry 9950 A.tot, Uat'd AMto., UMd Autos. Uffd · ••••••••••••••••••••·····••••••••••• .. •••••••• urrs vw •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••····••••••••••••••••••••• ......... iwhd •••••••••••••••••••••• -..W , t7U ..._. '727 Xl.ntcood. • 1'67 MIRCUlY PWo 9957 ..,..,... 9960 9960
..... •••• •••• • • • •• •• •• •••••••••• •• •••••••• ••• ••••••••••• •• •••••••••• cau 979 .. 1010 or 675·1.. ~ MONTC-1.Allt 4 Cl.I ~··•••••••• • ••••••• ••• • ••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••• ••••••• •••••• ••••
IMW
Tl Red H d 7600 ml -. --It Hardtop Only 7S 000 oc 7t PITito. Xlnt treni p. &171...,_d LanJe S .. edlon
'77 3201, AMl f'M, CU!ll(, $J1100 ~r~'s.W.~1 o; 'IJ) VW Bug. New radJal .. tual miJes, locul car & ~ Rblt eng. PP. ~/b!il V ..... S..-tr.cl Mew 1971
drk Cl'1l w bel•• Int. &t ~ tlres., ~ work. $600/btt • • Me owner car. Ready to otr. 546-2:963 V 8 • a u t o a a l I ~ n YMOUTH
__ ol_r_. Pt P ·'tH'22 olr. 003-2203 it ,..1 r o I l h i r u b b • r • Ptyw.outtli · tt60 · ttaaamlulon. Radio & tl
•76HondoW91 1970VWSqrbck, ,._ <UOG909l ....................... lleaw. P ower S~. YOU ECOUPI
'74 BMW 2002. R e d , $IW 673-6801 Clean.$1600. it Mow0nly$775 1114 Ply. Satellite Sta. ~·ak~11.alr I Automatic lrunam1S~1on.
AM /PM stereo, air . . 6.\2-~~"8-727& • M~wporter II Mtn Waa. 9 PUS . PIS, P/8, ttooln1. \: 111yl top m CID en&lllt'. 6 C)'I, ~~clal IJ\llgs Xtr a cln. Mcuda 9738 , >t-1900 Jlaroor.CostaMlli>a Air. Gd. tire:., trans. <8TOR8V) · tinted winds hield , IMWRESALES llSt orrMu1>ti;ell.640094<1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 38VW&g.l\llrxlnlcond. lt 642-0795 Cooler . u1r shocks. $3795 bumper guards front & between9-5 Uody damage frnt ..... --trailer hltt>h CB H"do rear. power 1>teet1f\J. frnder, u'le. S400. ~ . 1 Good '. .. 1 spliceSaVLngspure !Sc.r 1973 2002 C--' 9715 ~l 351U ROGER MILLER SAYS 1915 ~fonarch. air. vm top, tnc . Cond. $1975. t !U.aCBB m:m I ATLAS CHRYSl!R .. !!peed wtth :.unroor ...,... ...UAa I"' ~ .... E,; etc. good cond. S3450. PP. !134·re99. $4095 P~YMO UTH (65CJS) ••••••••••••••••••••••• '08 Westphalia Camper. _. ' r-fT'WI." 846-1440 or S40·9264
lf73IAVARIA '71 Capr1. 4 spd , nu Nu fat'l. eni:. Xtr.a cln. 494-llll 146-9967 "1•"-·" "1\7 loaded& L-..StfKtlott ()penDallyltSunday
4 speed. f & I radials, tape dck, runs . 2150 H.taor llvd. 6SM.$1995/b,l.494·2130 ;., ~t arcond. Jo' -••-. l ...-Mew 1971 'lillOPM ~ ,aszj~~~ 8 r gd. S7SOl l>l::.t !i7!i·7~ eon MHa '45-5700 0..::' ...... :... rLYMOUTH 2129Harbor Blvd . · 1973 _ '65 Baja Dug. New el\JI, ...... -er ..... ~. ~1-n V"' ..... 1 W .... GO... ""--"•ll-a IAVARIA Data. 97%0 6000 mi wnrr. New Huja v,.... -~ " '--.....
AutomatJc, air cond. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• k1t. New brk.s. Xlnt run· ,,......... L.a~ •ts• ·v1n1l i>ette-h seat, .. 6-ltU sunroof. (003NBZI MIR.dnt.a 9740 n ing cood. $900/bst. ---1t aut.omatit transm1ssion ----------1 1973 3.0CS * DRIVE A * ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. 548-5824 ••••••••••H•••••0 •••• radio, 6 cyl. engine, t int: 1977 l'tyn1H1th
4 speed with sunroof. * Ll'n"LE ••• * 1970MIZ250 'atVW.Gd cond. Runsgd. ·~~J:l~l~01~~a~'&i:.f~· :'a.'~.if!n~~:~!~'& YolGNWop <261MCGl. Automatic, air cond. & Moving. m"~t .. eU. ""II $1850 C l I VS, autom atic
.ATLAS CHRYSll •
PIYMOU '.,
~f>attyt\ Sund-.,
'UI lOPM
2929 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa
546-1934 1974 IAVARIA SAVE A LOT stereo. (479GBZ>. 831-0157 .... " '""' ~~~1~.' · •, ='~=~r· <Ser ttanamlalon. Radio ~
Automatic, .i1r cond & SllOP&COMPARE --Heater.PowcrSteenna i---..:..------
only 22.000 mil es. 1975Ml%210 '66 Baja Bug, cleun & -Pinto 9957 $5195 a nd Power Brakes.
(74JK\'Q 1. SEDAN. Autom atic, air sharp '74 Impala Cstm 2 Or. ••••••••••••••••••••••• While-Side· Wall tires. Pontf.c: 9Ml 1974 3 OS c II,.., .. 37c.c. .. · ""'-Air condhlon1ng Jug-••••••••••••••••••·--. a <'ond. & cruise control. a ....,.,. -Cream. Lo m1 , well 74 nuto Squire wagon ..-gage racks. (304RS\V) '77 CAN AM . Ltd. Ed1U1Qa,
Automallt>, ;ur conct & <959N0l\1). VotYo 9772 equipped, Miot. New· Lugaaae rack, mag S•Str Lo mi, good equip~
sunroof. (388KLF 1 TM ,78s;..,. H«e SADDLEIACX ••••••••••••••••••••••• MicheJins. Sac, leaving whet ls ~w ide>. Upe ~ mets sunroof. Must ell.
1974 3.0Cso VALLEY IM,.ORTS a-RR YOU ~nt.ry. $2695. 499-3702_ de~/ radio, auto, low Open Dally II Sunday aU offers cons1de~.
A t t r & \II models & color!> 831_2040 495 ... 9 .. 9 ........., ,.; miles. $1995 or offet. Can 'Ul lOPM 3789 u oma It>, !>unroo · lmmtdiat.. ... ... SELLYOUR be aeen ln "-ta Mesa m4>497· I eat ht' r 1nter111 r . .. C._...I '925 """' 2929 Harbor Blvd. ----(488LNTl DeCiv-Todoy! 1976 Mercedes JOO D, VOLVO, •• r• er CaU87~forlnfo. "-~ta Mesa v-997 ..
--, ••••••••••••••••••••••• '-Al:t ~~ • 1975 SJOia silver, drk bl int.. loaded, ~'t! us for a top dollar L-StfKtioft '73 Pinto Sunabout, 2000 546· If 34 ~n Dally & Sunday -•••••••••••••••••••••
4 speed w11h 1>unrnof. L.i..,t ch:ince1f1orfana.itasttc xlnt cond $14,100. l'P. ~umate! .~:i... 1978 cc,dlao,4spd,newtires,1---------'tillOPM "76 Vega w agon, 6300
<ERIN D>. 2 to choo~c 1-.ivangsona rem ntng 768·850'l MARQUIS VOLVO -""' tuirack,.,a,ooomt,great '74 Gold Duster. fully 29:29 HarborBlvd. miles. Showroom clean.
from. ·n models in stock. MISSION VIEJO · CHltYSLE.R shape SUOO. 645·6940 equipped, absolutely Qlsta Mesa R/H s spd P /P $3000 ~crccdes Benz, '73 280 3 2880 495 121 0 CORDOIA eve1/e~ A?r.1 perfect "28$0. 955-2689 §~L I fJ~ S56-14lT . 'I
U l-2040 49s-.t949 COSTA MESA
DATSUN
St;L, mint, Jo m1, 8 1-• _ .... ~ 556 O!nS Bucket seat.I>, auto trana, ~..a.-... U--.a
CREVIER
Q I St • IROADWAY
SArHA A"A
835·3171
2t14S HARBOR BLVD
540-6410 540-02 I 3
NEWPORT DATSUN
'77 Clecrance
Classic red '72 350.'IL, 2
tops. Sll,750. Ph 846--0291
t1l 8P~t
MGI 9744 .•.............•....•.. THf ULTIMATt OlllVlllG MACHINE •USED BMW•s* Ucmo & executive sale '00 MGB GT, new p;unt. MWHOingon-hurry' uphol & t1n•s. l\1ukc of·
"7-120021\ 710U8C 888 OOVESTREl:-:T fer. Mus t .sell. S2GSO.
'iS 2002A Ser. 22:16 <..'Jear MacArthur lll"d. 536·6662 or eves (213 )
'762002 tspdS/R401POP &JamboreeHoad) 592·SO:l3 ZOHAN IM·
:16 530iA S/ ll 712PQKM NEWPORT BEACH PORTS. 4205th St.11.11.
773201.AS/H inns 833-1300 Cfosed Oft Sundays '74 ~tGB. XJnt cond. 30,000
-'73 2-tOZ, auto, oir, mags, nu. AM/FM, must sell.
ORAMGE COUNTY'S FM, lo miles. $3700. 89'Z·2t74 aft 6pm.
.
$. Aal
675
...,. Ev ... 9725 ~= .......... !?~~
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1965 PORSCHE
1976FIATXl/9 356COUPE
Sak.,·~n 1<:!!·Lc.1:.in~ With stereo cassette & Jn excellent cond1t1on
Ro~Ccrver,lnc. only 19,000 miles. with factory chr ome
1887PFI>, wheels . (0624 ). MUST
. Rolls O)'('\' OMW SADDLllAa< S~E! ! !
is.io.Jamoorec VALLEY IMPORTS SADDLUACK
: '\ewport l~arh _6<IO r..i~ 831-2040 495.4949 VAUEY IMPORTS
"CLASSIC" ---831-2040 495-4949
1970 BMW 2 1iOOCS Honda 9721 --------
COUPE 4 :.pcc·d . sun·••••••••••••••••••••••• n Vl4, factory sunroof,
roof, fatiory air com.I , Brand New •77 AM/FM cass. m11t.s. bra, BJ au punk t ,\ :II / F l\J cover, aasume balance of
stereo. elcetr1c wan\lowi, HONDA Cars xlnt lse. Call Terry,
Habt alloy wheel:>. • MANY ~23.973.2571 X36 days;
Nachtblau blue witan in T Choo L. t 151·5006evt!S.
terlor. ln exceUcnt rondi O H n-om. tlon thruoul & only 63, UNIVERSITY 1970 911T, s spd. alloy!!, s • miles! Sl0,9'J9 or best of opt. Xlnt c~nd. SGSOO fer. Pri. pty. Call own otdsMObile 631·0600 dys,1·526·12"7
at 642-0138. Honda Can • GMC,_eva_. -------
Trucks Porsche '74 911 Targa.
Flnd what you wa nt in 2850 Harbor Blvd. «K ml. India red/blk
Dally Pilot Classifieds. Costa :\tesa 540-9640 trim, leather . Jmmac
Autos, M•w 9100 Autot, Hew 9I001-64ii_-4_s_io _____ _
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19771/291 IS
YEAR END:
~
INVENTORY:·
REDUmotl
SALE:
'78'·s
Under 3,000 m i. H as
everything, w/fac. wm·
ty. l\lustsell. 631-1.304
WsRoyc• 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #l DEALER IN U.S.A.
ROY
CARVER
ROUS· ROYCE
IWOJant..,.._ .... port .. a<ll \.._ _ __. .........
ClOSEO ~UNOATS
'68 lt.R. Sliver Shadow.
xlnt c ond . Wh t
$18.000/best ofr. 631-05-15
.Robin
Oyota t765 ••••••••••••••••••••••
IEFOREY6U
Siu.YOUR
TOYOTA.
1977 VOLVO 360 CID eng, V8, remote ,__ _., ........ UM4 · Autoa. Used Alltos. UH4 265GL WAGON control mirrors, bod y ••••••••••••••.•~••••-.•• ••••••••••-.•••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••••••••••••·~··••••••
FUily equipped lncl..tlng aide m oldings, s tr1 pe
Sll•reo ca1>Sette & mag deck Jld, protective
I C 11tnpS front & rear, aut-0 whee s. <0038). a n s""edcontrol,Ultwheel, lease .--1 andau v 1n yl roof . SADDLEIACK A~t/ FM ster eo. wire VALLEY IMPORTS wheel covel's, buc ket
831-2040 495-4949 scats. power steerinit &
------brakes, factory air con· ORAHGE COUMTY dltlontng. tinted glaaa.
VOLVO <Ser•~JaR 1266112>
EXCl~USIVl':LYVOLVO $6495
Largest Voh·o Dealer
in Orani.:e Coonly !
BUY or LEASt:
DIHECT
~~,.
2025 S. Manchester
Anaheim 750-2011
ATLAS Ct!HYSHR
PLYMOUTH
Open Daily & Sunday
'tll IOPM
2929 Harbor Blvd.
Co.ta Mesa
546·1934
'68 Volvo 1'12. Auto. Mus 1976 Cordoba, silver Ii
sell this week. Will deal. white vin top leather'
642·7149 bucket seals, center COO·
sole. Crwsc control. etc.
Autos, Us@d x.lnt t>ond. $4950. 846·1440
•. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • or 54()..9'l64 AMC 9905 --···············••4'••••• .. . . '75 AMC Hornet Cpe. Conette 9fU
16.000 mi, air, loaded, •••••••••••••••••••••••
$2005. Call 675·7687. '75 Corvette. s ilver/ red,
8uidc 9910 T·t.op, 41,000 mi. loaded.
••••••••••••••••••••••• S7kd4SO. offer. 752·7&21 w ays 1973 Regal. All power .---''"------
AM·FM, 49000 ml. S27 Do4'p t9JI
call Bob 642-5010 •••••••••••••••••• • ••••
Ca•ac ttlS lt7'Do44Jt ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:harger
•
•
I 976 CADHJ,.AC
SEYIW
All leather. 1t.ereo tape,
cndae <!Ontrol & oil the
d e l uxe extra&.
(629NR0).
$9888
(5 > •n & '76 SevlUes
To Choose From
Nabers
Cadillac
2600 H.trhor Blvd. Co~t.i Mc~J s.io-9100
V8, automatic, r adio,
heater, power steerin1.
power brakes, air cond.
vinyl top & W/S/W tires.
C9SlRDll
$3195
I
ATLAS CltRY~I £R
PLYMOUrH
Open Dally Ir &Jnday
'til 10 P•t 2929Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
_546·193~
Ford 9940
Johnson & Son
Low Blue Book SALE!
ALL OF THESE CARS WILL BE OFFERED AT
LOW BLUE BOOK THROUGH DEC. 31, I 977
MODEL
LUXURY CARS
'Jl UHCC>Ut TOWN COUPI
Full Powe<. leather lntenor. power sunroof. (999.JOY)
• 74 UMCOU4 4 DI.. COHTIMIHfA.L .
Full power, leath• Interior. extra clean. (360LUVl
76 Utec:Ol.M MAB 1¥
Full power, leather interior. soht oower seats. (084NXN)
•77 UHC°"4 MAU V
Bill Blass Designer Model. Full power & even a POWer
moonroor. (729RSCJ •
..,, cAolu.Ac IUft'WOOo
Full power lncludlng sotlt PQwer seata & cloth rnterior.
(~4MVE)
74 CAINU.AC en. DIYIW
Full power. exceptionally clean & low miles. (424NXN)
•7) CADIU.AC CPI. DfflW
Full power, extra clean Interior & a one owner car. (632GVOl
•H C40IU.AC CPI. DIYIW Full power including split power aeats & cloth Interior
(836NR0)
'• 77 OLDS TOIOM4DO
Full PoMr, AMIFM stMeo t1dlo and Landau toP. (701315J
MERCURYS
76 MllCUIY c:ou9AI •1 ,. V-8, auto. ,,.,,.,, fectory air conditioning, ~r steering.
oowr disc brlkes. oower windows. AM/FM w/taoe. (526464)
7J MHCUH MAIQUfS 4 DR. • • v.a. •tJlo. trans.. factory air conditioning, power steering,
Power dltc brakes. AM/FM w/tape. (~1GLV) •n MHCURY COU.Al Xl7
V-8. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. AM/FM radio.
C300GNJ)
'7' MUCUlY' MOMAlCH 4 DL v.a. auto. trans .. facto__ry air conditioning, pawer atMr1ng.
Power dl9c bnll<Bs. AM~ Wlt-*{919SlS)
FORDS
-,I POU LTD HOUGHAM
~U•Hf''tf'd A~,r~ OUR PRICE
R,taol 81u' llooli !>~lflf A•fr oq•
Whol'•~P lllLlf loc••
53930
$5185
59900
'I 2,225
58395
15~75
54235
$8370
·saots
sssoo
'2600
53030
s44z5
'3000
54050
58750
5 10,40
568~5
54275
53225 -
56850
1428
'337
ALL MODELS
LARGE SELECTION
See us for :a lop dollar '!!!~!!~!!~~ ettlmate! .:l
V-8, auto. trans.. factory air conditioning, DOW•r steering.
power dlac brakes. Power windows, power se111, radio,
heater. vt~ roof. sunroof. (126035)
'4135· s3190
IMMEDIATE .
DEUYERY
'62 YW~ ...... ~ 211
$tt5
'64 YWhg .... ,,,. $1291
'64YW~ .... -.. .. $1.291
'61YW~ ....... -.. Sl,3tl
'70YW~ .-..~., ' Sl,491
'6tYw~ .... ~11111..... .,.,, Sl,stl
.,9VW~ St.'91 , .... ~ . ., \ '74,.•wr; 11691 ........ -.. w. '7J YW 412 p. U .Jtl lw!O..f'oell'lldl. ...
~iY4iUIS TOYOTA lONVJEJO
131·288Q 49S.1210
'TT Celica GT Liftback,
S.Cpd. radials, air. AM ·
FM cass tape. Extre me·
ly Jo mi. Like nu. 549-6825
'75 El Dorado. Low
mileage. xlnl cond.
Loaded w/equipment,
options. 1 car owner.
$6350. Ph 645-7100
u.., ___ oie,., ...... , .... ___ ,.,......
..,, Gran Tortno, company
car. maint. by de.ter,
immac. Metallic blue,
vinyl top, AC, PS, PB.
$2475. &U-7106
75 Ford Oran Torino
Bl'OC.libam. va. air, PIS.
P /B, AMIFM etereo tape, loaded. $3200/ortcr.
832-4765
75 POU ntUMD1UtU
V-8, auto. trans., fact()rf air conditioning, full power, vlnyt roor.
(706NPO)
76 POllD LTD 4 DOOi v.a. auto. trans., fact()rf aaroonditioning, vinyt roor. (587NPI)
?4 POllD &ITI
V·8, auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. Landau too .
(~8~)
OTHERS
'7J POH114C MAND IAFAal WM.
V-8. auto. trans... factory air conditioning, power atffftng, oower tnlces. power wtndowa. (131El T)
'71OLOl~A141.0M
V-8, auto. trana.. J>OWer dlao bralC9I. AM/FM 1ttre0 radio,
vtnyt roof. (888MVI) '76 AMC NAf A.DOit .
V-8, auto. trans., power disc brakes. vlnyt roof. (339PFB)
•71 CHlY'IUR coaoolA • v.a. auto. trans .. factory all' conditioning, power tt"'1no.
power .dllo brakes, oorwir wlndowl, AM/FM radio w/tape.
Landau tQb. (522NLOI '71 PL YMOUtlfDUITtl .
Two-tOl\e' OrHn. e cy,., auto. trans.. ractory air conditioning,
pow9f' at-.1no. tK1W9r dleo braMe.. t'ldlo. (581NOP) •
'71 DODM DAlf 4 DI. e CYI .. eoto. ttant.. ~wer •tHrlng, power dlec brakes, vinyl
roof. (801NILJ
?1 DODM Asnt4 ~e.ON
V.f, 9UtO,, trans., ftctory elr eondltlonlri9, power steering,
~,.Cite brakes: rlldlo, roof rM:k. (~KA)
'II C...,. Ml'tW9.IT V4. ..io. ""'+· lectary air oonct1tton1nv. powef' ateering,
POwet dtec bralldlt. reoto. ~nyt roof. ~) ..,, ... , . ., '
4 cYl. 4 tpMd, dito .._..NI/FM rldlo wlcaaett•. heater.
(04*4) . •.
11•~1 (1\N
I .llJu , ... I
54135
13535
'1870
53915
'~280
'5640
13295
'3475
'5275
'1735
s4730
s4925
'3125
'2625
'1225
52850
12425
54425
12425
'2575
s4075
s101s·
'3625·
I
I
• .
LID ll's .
~ 0 OYER
FAOORY 0 -1r.1vo1cE
. f-350 '""'''
RANCHEROS ..
''CiSIOM''
YAN
CONVERSIONS·
OFFER ENDS DECEMBER 31st
-LMK AT THESE USED .CAR BUYS-
171 FORD
PIHTO I UMAIOUT
4 eyt . I UIO. Ir-. l'90t0, llM!er. wN\ewalt !It ... -covera. vu>yt lnlenor Uc. 12MOllE 9lk. t3e2A
171 FORD
MUSTAH661AHDI
V ... IVIO. "-·""" -1no. """·-.rt""....-. II• cond , A~FM -vlnl't root. IOw -Uc. 11208SX Sii<. 1936.\1
s2299
174 FORD
s2999
•75 FORD
174 FORD . 174 PINTO
PIHTOWAGOH :~~~"J~ ~·.·~ '*"°• '**· •uoo-o• rid<. Uc.
IUHAIOUT
4 -· ,_ l>M!er. Ulfl ,_ caf1 UC. IDeOlVI Siii. ·~
52ft9 -~. ·52399 52599 -
51899
175 FORD
LTD 2 DI . H.T.
v .................. l8clOry .... -""'"""· -st..W.0. __ bt ___ ................ ~rooc.
-ei-. --.. Uc. I063N.llH
52599
176 FORD
53599
-~-
o .. y ~f!Glrr IJy F'ord .\IMor Co.
•SAU DEl'l'. HOURI • Mon-Fl1: aA.M. totl".M. s.r. .............. ..
SIM: tOA.M.to tP.M.
1 KllV~ a PARTS• ~1: 1 A.M. IO t l".M.
fOpeft ......... llloftdef)
•PARTS otn.• SAT. t A.M. to t fl.II.
Huntington Beach
Fountalb WaJley
EDlTlON
_ __._. __
VOL. 70, NO. 362, '4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES: ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . WEONESDAY,O~CEMB~R2~1n7
111:1 .Attorn~us (JlaSh · ·
O'Connor said. "He came un·~
glued." O'Connor said thal Bon·
fa "has arms like telephone
poles and ls very strong."
'BANGED MY HEAD'
City Atty. Bonfa
By ROBERT SAllKER
Ofltlto.lt't ............
A long-standine feud between
two Hunll~gton Beach city al·
torneys broke out Into a pbyslcal
altercation Tuesday evening.
Deputy City Allornet John
O'Connor said he was attacked
by City Attorney Don Bonfa. ·
Bonra said be was attacked by
O'Connor.
Police said both filed cross·
complaints or assa~lt and bat·
tery against each other.
A police department
spokesman said that both com·
plaints would be taken to the
Orange County District Attorney
today.
Bonra said today that O'Con·
nor has been placed upon Im·
mediate suspensloo without pay
and that O'Connor will be fired.
Boni~ first broke news of the
altercaUoo when be called police
shortly after 6 p.m. There were
no wltnessetS.
While officetfW.ere taking
Bonfa's telephone call, O'Connor
appeared at the station to file his
version ol the skirmish. O'Con·
nor s aid over the telephone to·
day that he was silting in his of·
fice in the follrth floor of the city
hall at 5:45 p.m. when the tussle
look place.
"Bonfa tried to choke me. He
lore my shirt and twisted my
neck," O'Connor said.
O'Connor s aid that he was
treated at Pacifica Hospital
because of the pain in his neck.
Bonfa told an entirely dif·
ferent version.
''O'Connor lost his temper and
-assaulted me and battered me,"
he said.
"He grabbed me by lhe collar
and tie and banged my head
aeainst the wall. l didn 'l lay a
finger on hJm," Bonra declared,
''There is no room for this un ·
civilized, hooligan ty pe of
behavior," Bonfa said.
The latest episode between the two men apparentl y was
touched olf by a demand by
O'Connor for Bonfa to put down
guidelines tor criminal prosecu·
lion policies.
A sot.U"ce In the legal depart·
ment said Bonflf refused to do
this, apparently feeling that
O'Connor was trying to provoke
a confrontation.
0 "Connor said today that he
couldn't fathom the reason (or
the alleged attack.
''I asked Bonfa why he didn't
respond lo my request for the c rim in al prosecution policy,"
"SomelhJng bas lo be done,"
he said, "the employees are not
safe. l now feel threatened and
insecure and I am physically.
afraid," O'Connor said.
Bonfa said that he was
grab9ed by O'Connor when Bon·
fa lried lo leave his oHice. "1
tried lo get out the door and
. 0 'Connor slammed it," Bonfa
said.
"I told bim to take his hands
off me. I said wbat are you go-
ing to do, hit me?
"He (O'Connor> said maybe I
should, I can't stand you," Bon·
fa alleged.
Bonra said he eventually went
to his office and locked the door
<See CLASH, Page AZ)
'TRIED TO CHOKE ME'
Deputy Atty. O'Connor
u\noth~~ _ ~$ilo Explodes; 9 Dead
~-.............. ...... .. --
•t Surfin' in the Rain -
Julie Johnson, 23, of Huntington Beach..takes off trying
to work some puny surf near her hometown .pier early
. today in All American Surfing Championships. Women's
'heats were scheduled today1 men "'TbunclaJ,. It.w• wet , a1l around. from above and oelow. .
between the occupinte ana
Police, soveral ebGta ~re fired
ancl police fired aevenl 1'0WMll
ol tear 1• leto tM ~I· The bo\Mte e,upt ftN ~die t>at-
tle.
Man Held
In Valley
Assault
Fountain Valley police arrest·
ed a 34·year-old transient early
today after the man had alleged·
ly held a couple al gunpoint in
their home for two hours.
The Fountain Valley residents faked sleep to escape their cap·
tor, police said. .
Arrested was John James
HeJenek. Hele,nek has been
charged with false Imprison·
ment..-auault witb -a deadly
weapon-and buratary. No •hots
were fired, police said.
William and Linda Rose, of
9433 Siskin A venue, told police
Helenek, a former friend, was
kicked out or their home where
he had resided until Dec. l.
llelenek had apparently re·
turned when he became despon·
dent over his eviction, said ar·
resting officer Greg McClure.
McClure said the Roses re·
turned home at I a.m. from a
holiday tMp lo New York and
found Helenek's belongings in
their three-bedroom house.
A ft er the Roses began
searching for their former
boarder, Helenek allegedly con·
fronted the couple and
threatened them with a .38
caliber revolver and a .380 semi·
automatic pistol, McClure said.
McClure said the Roses told
Helenek they were going lo
sleep. Helenek then reportedly
fell asleep at about 3 a.m. still
holding the two pistols.
The couple crept out the back
door and telephoned police from
a neatby gas station.
McClure and Officer Jim
Montgomery arrived et the Rose
<See ASSAULT, Page A2)
6.6Tembi(Jr
Hiia Red.Sea; •
No Damages
A~WI .........
BURIED BY RUBBLE IN ELEVATOR EXPLOSION
Rescue Workers Pull Woman From Wreckage
Welcome Rain
Par-lial Clea!!ing
Viewed Thursday
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of ti. !Mllr ~lle4 Slaff ' Partial clearing is forecast for
Thursday in a storm that has
dumped between an inch and 6.7 inches or rain on various parts
or Orange County, the National
Weather Service said today.
The rains caused no major
damage, local officials reported,
but were blamed for numerous
minor traffic accidents and have
af!e.c-ted construction projects
and attendance at amusement
parks. ,They also reportedly bad
an unpleasant effect on a cat
stuck in a Laguna Beach storm
drain today.
Most officials and farmers
said the rains were welcome.
But that picture could change if
another storm tbe weather
bureau is watchine off the
W ashi.01ton coast heads this
way Frf~ax, briQging-more rain. ne Orllqe County Harbor
l>eparttDen" recorded 1.02 in·
ftel ol rain for the storm in
New~ Beach. Orange County
Floqd ~ Dlatrict figures lo-
daY" r~ ·from 1.38 inches in
Sanaa Ana \o 1.1 inebea al San-
tlqo Peak.
la L._. Beach. Bill Sblelds
of Laema BelCb Hardware re-
ported a atora. total of 1.17 in·
cbeetodlr.
Tll• wutber Hl'Yice aald Los· t\o..-nlnfall totalled 2.1s in·
................ the 9eUCIO'I total
te I.ti ~Narmal ralntall at
tldl tme.114.Cl ....... Parched
CataUn bland U. recorded 2.ea tndlea •lnee Saturday.
Tile only mlJor raln 'damace rtpor~ to road• alone tbe
Oran•e Cout aod•1 was in San Cl•m•te, wbve mad slides
UH ~alb doted IOIDe
Janee OD Paetnc Coat Hl1bw11. Jio1rftW', &1111 aDdM Wete Mo
ing cleared and traffic was not
complete,ly stopped at any point,
police said.
The Huntington Beach Public
Works Department reported
some minor flooding and said
they are getting ready in case
there's more rain.
"After so many days of rain,
tbe ground won't take any
more," a spokesman said.
In Laguna Beach today,
animal control o(ficers were
working on Bluebird Canyon
Drive to free a cat who somehow
got stuck in a storm drain. The
results or that rescue operation
were not available by midmorn·
ing.
In the north 'county, some
local flooding was reported in
Brea, which received a heavy
4.2 inches from ~e storm.
Disneyland had to close early
Monday but stayed open till mid·
night Tuesday, a spokesman
said. He said attendance was orr
slightly but that exact figures
are not available until the end ol
the season.
Knoll's Berry Farm r~ported
no falloff in attendance. "The
rain really doesn't seem to faie
people too much." a spokesman
said.
InlonnaUoo oa Lion Country
Safari was not available early
today.
Tbe Southern Callforala
Edison CompaJLy reported no
major ~ Jn tbe put. M
hours.
However, a spokesman
warned that more rain ml•ht af·
feel underground vaults, it
1torm drains back up.
'the Pacific Telephone Com·
pany alao reported no rain
damace but wind was cautlfti
some delayed dial tones.
<lee JlAIN, .... A!)
Rescuers
Slowed
By Dust
• GALVESTON, Texas (AP>
Rescuers dug through the tubble
or a grain elevator today seeking
survivors of a thunderous ex·
plosion that ripped through the
structure, killing at least nine
people and injuring 23. The blast
was heard 70 miles away.
A man itnd a woman were
pulled from beneath the twisted
steel and bunks of concrete
s)lorlly Ja{ter midnight, but
police satd seven more people
were believed missing, including
three federal er~n ~spectors.
Chpkl*!1"_.co.11crete du s~, and
smok• ~M ltardti tlforts,
overconiing at least lS rescue
workers.
"There may be others in there
and our search goes on," said
Galveston Police Lt. D. K . Lack.
FBI spokes men said agents
were on the scene in a liaison
capacity, primarily to -offer
laboratory assistance.
Autt)orities declined to
speculate on what caused the
blast, the second explosion at an
American grain elevator in five
days. An explosion bit an
elev a tor compl ex in New
Orleans on Tb4rsday, killing 34
people, and searehers are still
combing lbe rubble for a miss·
ing man. The cause of that ex-
plos.ionhas not.been determined.
Authorities said the blast here
apparently occurred in a tunnel
that cOMected the elevator to a
loading dock. Two ships were
unloading grain al the time but
were towed away by the Coast •
Guard.
Grain elevators such as the
one al Galveston contain highly
volatile grain dust that ·can ig·
nite and explode from even the
smallest spark.
Stale and local police, fearing
other blasts might be triggered
by a still-smoldering fire, closed
off the north end of Galveston
Island.
"It's still a dangerous sltua·
tion," fire Chief Hugh O'Don·
ohoesald.
The tacillty includes 40 silos
and bas a capacity of 3.5 million
bushels or grain.
(See BLAST, Page AZ)
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain decreas-
ing to 50 percent tonight
and 30 percent Thursday.
Continued cool. Lows
tonight in mid-505. Hlghs
Tbursda~ in low to
mid·&Os.
I . INSIDETeDAY
If Woll',.._ looking for N.w Year'• EN Parer fare ideal,
ueFood,Pag.C1..
• .
I
t
1i
I
' I ,.
s
.
":\2 DAIL V PILOT H F
Bail Cut
DUln't
Help Pair
By GARV GRANVILLE
Ol IM o.llr l'llet fuH
The bail eame beinl played
again1t the backdrop ot a
Newport Beach murder and the
blah tlylng Orange Coast drug seI came down to earthly figures
Tuesday when lbe collective ball
set for Alexander and Elale
Kulik dropped dramatically.
By the end of the day,
however, 27-year-old Alexander
Kulllt was sWl in custody pend·
ing the posting of $1.lS m1llion
bail.
Since arrest Oct. 22 on heroin
charges and later linked to the
slaying of Stephen John Bovan,
Kulik'• bail bas ranged as high
as $6 million.
It was when his bail stood at
$750,000 that the key figure in
the bizarre murder-drug case
gained notoriety and temporary
freedom by posting that much in
cash.
But Kulik's freedom was
s hort-lived when he was re-
arrested a few weeks later while
hiding out in a La Costa con·
dominium with his then fugitive
wife.
Kulik's difficulties with the
law continued to mount when ar·
r es ting officials purportedly ·
found a heroin atash -valued at
more than $1 million -hidden
JO the air cleaner or a vehicle
parked near the condo.
Thal discovery led to a federal
·magis trate slapping a $2.5
million hold on Kulik.
Elsie Kulik wa s held in
custody on the same amount of
bail after both s he and her
husband were name d in a
federal Grand Jury indictment
centering on the heroin stash.
But Mrs. Kullk also obtained
relief of sorts Tuesday when the
:1mount or federal bail was re-
duced to $100,000 and her Orange
County bail dropped from
S250,000 to $150,000 , meaning it
will take $250,000 to free her
from jail.
During the day, Mrs. Kulik
•ilso came up with an attorney of
her own.
Until then, both Kuliks were
represented by fiery San Diego
attorney Phillip DeMassa.
Tuesday, however, John
Tremblatt became the attorney ·or record for Mrs. Kulik.
1 Like her husband and now six
others, she ls named in the
Grand Jury indictment covering
Dov an 's shooting death outside a
Newport Beach restaurant.
Howev~, the .. m~m.ber Qf de·
fendanta in the case dropped by
on e l ast week when R oy
Christopher Richard, 28, who
was once head of the Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna temple,
agreed to become a prosecution
witness in return for Immunity
from prosecution.
Both Kuliks are being held in
the federal Metropolitan Cort"ec·
tional Center in San Diego.
Like their co-defendants, J!hey
are slated to appear in Orange
County Superior Court on Jan. 23
to face trial on the murder
charges.
The only suspect remaining at
large i& J oseph Fedorowski, a
one-time business partner of
Richard and Kulik.
Witness Backs
I.Q. Testing
SAN FRANCISCO CAP>
Standardized IQ test! are "re-
m arkabty good predictors" of a
child's educational abtllty, the
state of Califom1a claimed in r ederal court.
During the state's opening
argument Tuesday in a lawsuit
broµght on behalf or five black
youngsters whose parents claim
they were placed in ''educable
mentally retarded" classes
because of low IQ scores, deputy
attomey 1eneral Joanne Coodas
said the tests "predict the
a chievements equally well for
both black and white children."
OftANOR COAST H/~
DAILY PILOT
..
oallJ ,..._.SU",,_
Fro• P.aflf!! A J
BLAST •• ~
The force ot Tuesday nl&bl's
blast at the Farmer's Export
Grain Co., which was heard 70
miles away, tore two gaping
holes in the side of the 13-story
main elevator.
Automobile-sized chunks of
concrete were thrown more than
200 feet and a railroad switch
engine was twisted into a tangle
of steel. Windows were tbat-
tered a mile awar. ln the
downtown section of this port ci-
ty of 65,000 ab out 50 miles
southeast of Houston.
"I saw a flash 10 up and tben
there was a bll concussion,,. -
said a security guard at Todd
Shipyards, about a half mile
from the facility. "A big glob of
fire spread over the top of \be
building across the way and
soon small tires grew inlo one
massive flame."
Barbara Agraves, 30. who
lives about six blocks from the
site, said: "I was talking on the
telephone and all of the s udden
the house went straight up ln the
air and plopped back down. It
broke most of the windows and
knocked out every light in the
place."
Don McCoy, a spokesman for
John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo·
pie were treated at the hospital
for bums. Two were listed in
critical condition.
Fro• Page Al
CLASH •••
and called police.
UNDETERRED BY RAIN, MAN ANO DOG TAKE MORNING RUN
•Lawrence Dobbin And Sham Don't Mind Moisture On Newl•nd
O'Connor and Bonfa have been
feuding since Bonfa wrote a
performance evaluation critical
of O'Connor in Decernber of
1974.
O'Connor contended that the
evaluation was not really a
performance evaluation, but
was an abusive diatribe. Cave-in Kills
One, Hurts 3
At Big Bear
By The Associated Press
Road crews scraped mud and
heaved boulders off Southern
California roads today lo keep
the highways open, despite a
tropical storm that was expect-
ed to continue dumping rain on
the area through tonight.
But the highway crews met
their match Tuesday night when
the side of a mountain near the
Big Bear resort caved in on a
car carrying four people from
Norwalk.
Carl John Monauni, 46, was
killed, officials said, adding that
his fiancee. Donna Lee Burnett,
32, tbe driver, was hospitalized
al Redlands Communi t y
Hospital along with her two
sons, Lawrence, 11, and Erik, 8.
"It'll take 12 hours to clear the
road, more if the bad weather
continues," s aid California
Highway Patrol officer James
Roberts.
A CHP spokesw~man said,
"The whole side of the mountain
came down on Highway 38 near
Angelus Oaks." 20 miles
northeast of Redlands. "It just
buried the car."
The winding road through the
Sa n Bernardino Mountains
would remain closed between
Big Bear and Forest Falls Road
until the rockslide was cleared,
Roberts said.
He also reported Highway 39
in the San Gabriel Mountains
was closed from Crystal Lake
north to its junction with State
Route 2 because of hazardous
driving conditions.
Highway 41 in San Luis Obispo
County and Sturgis Road across
the flatlands near Oxnard in
Ventura County were closed, ac-
cording to a CHP spokeswoman.
San Bernardino sheriff's dep·
11ties blamed rain-loosened
shale and rock for the death
Tuesday of a 19-year-old Lons
Beach girl climbing a waterfall
near Mount Baldy.
Tammy Cook died while
nearby bikers clawed for live
minutes at a pile of rocks that
buried her in the slide.
Her 12-year-Old brother, Todd,
was reported in stable condition
at San Antonio Community
Hospital in Upland, s uCferlng
from an injured ankle.
The two were al the 4,000-foot.
level of San Antonio Falls when
lhe ground gave way beneath
them, authorities said.
In Santa Barbara, the si~ ot
the disastrous Sycamore Clll\Yon
fire that destroyed more than
250 homes last July, resident&
were put on evacuation noUce
Tuesday but no one was ordered
away, as moderate rain fell on .
the clty throuthout the day.
SaJtta Barbara Battalion Chief
Al Faoro said h is crew•·
respoQded to a dozen calls for
h elp in removing mud ind
slud1e trom garages and billalde homa, but Gilb' one call came
from the Sycamo~e C•nroo we.a. When fire official• helped four famWe1. Faoro al.lo report-
ed the roof caved 1n on a
downtown dnlptore.
Fro•PageAJ
RAIN •••
Minor traffic accidents were
reported all along the coast, but
a traffic fatality in Newport
Beach was attributed~to a faulty
s ignal light, not rain, police
said. Mof.orisls were cautioned
to allow extra time and drive
carefully.
In Mission Viejo, where Lake
Mission Viejo rose 2.5 inches
durin$! the rain, a week's delay
in building a condominium
project was reported.
The Cordova School site o! the
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict was also affected by the
rain, with building delayed one
day for each lclay of rain. Other
school districts reported that
buildings under construction are
already roofed and were not af.
fected
The downpour was welcomed
by farmers and firefighters
across the coast.
A R ancho Mission Viejo
spokesman termed it a "million·
dollar rain." He said a storm
total of 1. 7 inches has been re-
corded &n l he ranch and is
leuchjn~ out the salts caused by
irrigallon.
However, a n Irvine Ranch
spokesman said, "It's just teas·
ing the devil out of us." He said
at least two more inches are
needed for any longterm good.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Fire-State Forestry sta-
tion said that although the fire
season does~ oCficiallY end un-
til Dec. 31, "We've closed our
wildland fire stations aod laid
off s easonal personnel.
"We're not going to have any
more problems. We've had·
enough rain to get the grass
growing and bring everything
back to lire out there."
The dispute proceeded
through city grievance p ro·
cedures.
Bonfa was directed to remove
portions of the evaluation from
O'Connor's files by the city's
personnel board.
Most of the evaluation was al·
lowed to stand, however, and
O'Co nnor was given a chance to
rebut statements and enter them
in his file.
U.S. Weapons
Blasted Again
MOSCOW CAP> -The Soviet
Union bas, renewed its criticism
or U.S. armaments and wamed
that deployment of the cruise
missile or neutron bomb in
forward bases of Wes tern
Europe would endanger future
arms agreements.
"Neither cruise missiles nor
neutron bombs nor new types of
weapon can intimidate the So-
viet Union," the Communist Par·
ty newspaper Pravda 'said Tues·
day.
It said if such weapons are
dep loyed at U.S. 'bases in
Europe or with E uropean allies,
the Soviet Union would have the
right to inject the issue into
future arms talks because it
would be vulnerable to attack
from these bases.
Bombings Kill 2
NAIROBT, Kenya (AP)
Ethiopian jet fighters bombed
t he cities of Hargeisa and
Berbera in northwestern
Somalia oo Tuesday, killing two
children and wounding 13 other
persons, SomaJla's ollicial radio
reported today.
It wa1 b~Jn a day for: auntannlna on lhe RunUnatOri Beach 1 e ear?J todly aa Dale Ferrari of Seat
'Beach (left) aDd Carol)'n Kramer of Whittler fought the
·Road c.-.wa worked f everisbly
ln Albembra to bold up a aecUoo ot MIMSoo Rolld that ..,., tot·
Japsla1 • ralnwaw ud nmoff
from • brok91' plpellae an· ·
dermlned the 10111 earlb ,.._......,-.;:.....;. ___ ....__,,,, • belleatb k. elementa. Tbey're Judsea in the All American Surfin&
Cbampiombips. . .
Slippery SHdi119
Eighteen-year-old Michael Winn tried a test walk for' his
high wire act at Knott's Berry Farm Tuesday when a
heavy rain squall struck. Spectators ran for cover. Winn
backed down off the wire to safety. All's well that ends
well.
Avalon Reservoir
Empty After Rain
In spite of the fact that more
than two iocbea of rain has
fallen on Avalon, the parched
residents of Catalina Island
have not got any water in their
empty reservoir today.
A spokesman for tbe Southern
-f"roaPa~AJ
ASSAULT •••
house an'a entered without wak·
ing lbe suspect.
Police found Helenek steeping
with one weapon in his belt and
the other on his arm, McClure
asserted.
Two other officers entered lhe
house before the suspect was
taken ~to custody at 3: 36 a. m.
McClure said Helenek was ac-
cidentally s truck by an officer's
g un while he was being
handcuffed and received a
wound on the bead.
Police found jewelry and
clothing packed in ba1s belong-
ing to the Roses.
McClure said Helenek bad told
the couple be had planned to re·
lease them in the morning.
California Edison Company.
which handles all utilities for the
island, said the rain that -bas
been falling there since Saiur-
d ay has all soaked into the
ground.
"There has been no runoff.
None at all," the spokesman
commented.
Rainfall at tbeAvalon Harbor
Department office was recorded '
at 2.36 inches for lbe storm. At
Middle Ranch, in the interior of
the island near the reservoir,
rainfall was 1.26 inches for the
storm, making the December
total 1.M> inches.
The Edison spokesman· sai4.
the company is encouraged tbat-
the rainfall may indicate an end
to the drought and an eventual
filling of the island's r eservoir.
"Last year at this Ume, we'd
·only had a total of .74 inches,"
the spokesman said.
Holiday Toll Low
SACRAMENTO CAP)-The
weekend highway death toll of 40
In CaUCornla was the lowest for
a three-day Christmas weekend
since 1960, the hiJbway patrol
says.
Wages: Soot
Chimney Nabs Thief
HOUSTON (AP) -Scott Sullivan, 29, was sur-
prised when he heard someone talking in his
fireplace.
•'Hey, anybody out there? I'm in the chimney,''
a man's voice said.
Sullivan said the man explained he had climbed f nto the chimney to burglarize the house but got
stuck. He called the fire department.
••They didn't believe me, so I called po-
lice," Sullivan a aid. ""
Tbe poUce ~didn't believe him either, Sullivan
said, but decided to investigate aner calling back to
confirm the report. Investigators arrived and then called firemen again, who removed a 20-yeat-Old
soot-covered man from the chimney.
.. I was just walkln1 along and thouaht I'd climb
in and try to burglarize the house," the man told in,
veatigatcn, addinl that h!ll had never tried anything ,
like it before and had no plans to try aeain.
Police said burclary charges would be filed.
VOL. 70, NO. 362: .t SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1977 TEN CENTS.
llB Attorneys Clash . ..
'BANGED MY HEAD'
City Atty. Bonfa
By ROBERT BARKER --......... .,...., ...... , .... --
A long-standing feud between
two Huntington Beach city at-
torneys broke out Into a physlcal
altercation Tuesday evening.
Deputy City Attorney John
O'Connor s,Jd he was attacked
by City Attorney Don Bonra.
Bonfa said he was attacked by
O'Connor.
Police said both m ed cross-
com plalnts of assault and bat·
tery against each other. ·
A police department
spokesman said that both com-
plaints would be taken to the
Orange County District Attorney today.
Bonra said today that O'Con-
nor has been placed upon im-
mediate suspension without pay
and that O'Connor will be fired.
Bonfa first broke news of the · "He grabbed me by the collar
alt~realioo-when he c-alled poUee • and-ti~ CHI -b~nged my head
shortly after 6 p.m. There were against the wall. I didn't lay a
no witnesses. finger on him," Bonfa declared.
While officers were taking "There ls no room for this un-
Bonfa's telephone call, O'Connor civilized, hooUean type of
appeared at the station to file bis behavior," Bonla said.
version or the skirmish. O'Con-The Jatest episode between the
nor said over the telephone to-two m en apparently was
day that he was sitting in his or-touched oft by a demand by
fice in the fourth floor of the city O'Connor for Bonfa to put down
hall at 5:45 p.m. when the tussle guidelines for criminal prosecu-
took place. lion policies.
"Bonia tried to choke me. He A source in the legal depart-
tore my shirt and twisted my ment said Ronfa refused to do
neck." O'Connor said. this, apparently feeling that
0 'Connor said that he was O'Connor was trying to provoke
treated at Pacifica Hospital a confrontation.
because or the pain in his neck. O'Connor said today that he
Bonfa told an entirely dif-couldn't fathom the reason for
ferent version. the alleged attack.
"O'Connor lost his te mper and· "I asked Bonfa why he didn't
assaulted me and battered me," respond to my request for the
he said. criminal prosecution policy,"
O'Connor said. ..He cam& un.~
glued." -O'Ceonor-&aid that Bon·
fa "bas arms like telephone
poles and is very strong."
"Something has to be done,"
he said, "the employees are not
safe. I now feel threatened and
insecure and I am physically
afraid," O'Connor said.
Bonfa said that he was
grabbed by O'Connor when Bon·
fa tried to leave his office. "I
tried lo get out the door and
O'Connor slammed it," Bonfa
said.
"I told him to take his hands
off me. I said what are you go-
ing to do, hit me?
"He <O'Connor) said maybe I
should, I can't stand you," Bon-
fa a lleged.
Bonfa said he eventually went
to his office and locked the door
(SeeCLASH, PageA2)
•TRIED TO CHOKE ME'
DepUty Atty. O'Connor
Another Silo Explodes; 9 Dead
. .
(]Cl l'i~tinas
Trio Charged
With ·Assault
By P IULIP ROSMARIN
Of Ille O•llf Pllol St.ti
Mi sdemeanor charges were
file d Tuesday agains t three
Irvine carpenters in connection
with an Oct. 28 assault upon
1 three UC Irvine students, one of
' whom was s tabbed with · a
J broken beer botU e.
~ Victor G. Labrecque, 20, James E. Reisinger, 21, and 1 Mic h ael E . E gan, 19, are
scheduled to enter pleas to the
charges al an arraignment Jan.
10 in Harbor Municipal Court.
Labrecque was charged with
assault with a deadly weapon;
Egan was charged with assault
and battery: each or the three
were charged with disturbing
{he peace by fi ghting in a public·
place.
legedly one-sided fight in the
parking lot of an Irvine liquor
store.
The victims, students Ron
Cruz, Ernesto Lopez and J uan
Nunez, claim they were going
about their business al the store
when they were accosted by
three men who chued them into
the parking lot.
They said they were
challenged to fight and when
they refused, Nl,Ulez was stabbed
in the chest with a broken bottle
and Cria was punched in the
mouth. Lopez escaped serious
injury. '
Because the stu,Slents a re
Ch icano. the a tt ac k was
labeled racist by some members
or the UCl faculty ·and student
government. .
Prior to the arres ts Dec. 7, the
s tude nt coun<;il approved a
$1,000 reward for the arrest and
If convicted, Labrecque would
face up to a year in jail, Egan up
lo six months, and Reisinger up
to 90 days.
The charges stein from an al-' <See TRIO, Page A2)
1
Irvine Tallies ~our
Announced Hopef~s
With less than a week before
the filing deadline, there are
four o'l"iclally declared can-
didates for the March 7 election
of two Irvine C!ty Council mem-
bers.
Announced contenders are
forfner Irvine mayor Art An-
thony, planning commissio!'lers
Ellen Freund and Larry Hofl.
man, and Vivian Hall, a high
school teacher who has cam-
paigned for national office.
Those who have signaled their
Intentions to run by taking out
nomination papers are biologist
Don Murphy, private. in·
vestigator Carol Effenberaer •.
UC Irvine s tudent Pamela
I>av>dson and community
services commissioner Robel'l
Moore.
' Others are. attorneys Larry
Agran, David Warren and Jerry
Shaw.
. Incumbents ln the election are
Gabrielle Pryor and John
Maheu Award
Reversed by
I
Appeal Court
Bueton, both founding members
or the council Mrs. Pryor has
declared she will not run a'aln;
Burton has remained s1lenl
about what he will do ..
Deadline for candidates to file
nomination documents is noon
next Tu~ay.
Ruth Farrar
Final R i tes
' Se( Tlwrsday
Funeral services ror Ruth M .
Farrar, past president of the
Irvine Coaat Republican
Womel\'S Club and nine.year
resid ent or Irvine who dled
Christmas Eve. are scheduled
for 12 ~30 p.m. Thursday in HoU7~ood Hills.
Services are at Forest Lawn,
in Hollywood Hilla in Old North
Church.
Mrs. Farrar was 75. She died
in a Santa Ana convalescent
hospital.
She was born ln_Delaware.
)In. Farrar WM an executive aec-., for a 1eara with the
Loe A••l61es thiapteT of the
American Red Croes.
Partial
Clearing
Forecast
By JACKIE HY MAN
Of -O•ily Pli.t $1•11
Partial clearing is forecast for
Thursday in a storm that has
dumped between an inch and 6.7 inches of rain on various parts
of Orungc County, the Nallonal
Weather Service said today.
The rams caused no major
dama~e. local oHicials rep<)rted,
but were blamed for numerous
minor traffic accidents ancthave
arrected construction projects
and attendance at amusement
parks. They also reportedly had
an unpleasant effect on a cat
stuck in a Laguna Beach storm
drain today.
Most otficials a nd farmers
said the rains were welcome.
But that picture could change if
a no ther storm the weather .
bureau is watching oH t he
Washington coast heads this
way Friday, bringing more rain.
The Orange County Harbor
Department recorded 1.02 in·
ches or rain for the storm in
Newport Beach. Orange County
Flood Control District fi guies to-
day range from 1.38 inches in
Santa Ana to 6.7 inchu at San-
tiago Peak.
ln Laguna Beach, Bill Shields
of Laguna Beach Hardware re-
ported a storm total of 1.17 in·
ches today.
The weather service said Los·
Angeles rainiall totalled 2.75 in-
ches, bringing Che s-eason'~total
to 5.96 inches. Normal rainfall at
this time is 4.41 inches. Parched
Catalina Island has recorded
2.63 inches since Saturday.
<See RAIN, Page A2)
* * *
CWly "9C MM "'9t9
UNDETERReo·av RAIN, MAN ANO DOG TAkE MORNING RUN
Lawrence Dobbin And Sham Don't Mind Moisture On Newland
Man Killed ·m, Cave-in
Road Creta1 Work to Ckar Storm's DebriJI
By The Associated Press
Road crews scraped mud and
heaved boulders off Southern
California roads today to lteep
th~ highways open, despite a
troplce' storm that was exped-
ed lo contir.ue dumping r~in on
the area throug!• tonight.
But the highway c,.ews met
their match Tuesday night when
the side of a mountain near the
Big Bear resort caved in on a
* * *
car carrying four people from
Norwalk.
Cati John Monauni, 46, was
killed, officia~ said, adding that
his fiancee. Donna Lee Burnett,
32, the driver, was hospitaU:zed
at Redlands Comm""nHy
Hospital along wit.h her two
sons, Lawrence, 11, and Erik, 8.
''It'll take 12 hours to clear the
road, more jl the ~d weather
continues," said California
* * * Avalon Reserv;Qir
' 'I
Empty After R&in ·
• I
Highway Patrol officer James
Roberts.
A CHP spo.keswoman said,
"The whole side of the mountain
came down on Highwu 38 near
Angelus Oaks," 20 miles
nQrtheast or Redlands. "It just
bur1ea ll>e-cn:--
The winding toad through the
San Ber.nardino Mountains
would remain cloaed between
Big Bear and Forest Falls Road
until the rockslide was cleared,
Roberts said.
. He also reported Highway 39
in the San Gabriel Mbunt.U.S
was clo&ed from CrystaJ ,Lake
north to its junction with State
Route 2 becauise ot huardous
driving CICIOditiCJn&. I
Rescuers
Slowed
By Dust
GALVESTON, Texas <AP) -
Rescuers dug through the rubble
of a grain elevator today seeking
survivors or a thunderous ex·
plosion that ripped through the
structure, killing at least nine
people and injuring 23. The blast
was heard 70 miles away.
A m an and a woman were
pulled from beneath the twisted
steel and bunks of concrete
s!Jo rtly after midnight, but
p61ice said seven more people
were believed missing, including
three federal grain inspectors.
Chokins concrete dust and
s moke hampered search efforts,
overcoming at leas~ 15 rescue
work.,rs.
"There may be others in there
and our search goes on," said
Galveston Police Lt. D. K . Lack.
FBI spokes men said agents
were on the scene in a li aison
capacity, primarily to offer
laboratory assistance.
Authorities declined lo
~peculate on what caused the
blast, the second explosion at an
American grain elevator in five
days. An explosion h it an
e revator complex in New
Orleans on Thursday, killing 34
people, and searchers are still
combing the rubble for a miss-
ing man. The cause of ,that ex1
plosion has not been determined.
Authorities said the blast here
appar ently occurred in a tunnel
· that connected the elevator lo a
loading dock. Two ships were
unloatiing grain at. t~me but-
we1·e towed away by the Coast
Guard.
Gr ain elevators such as the
one at Galveston contain highly
volatile grain dust that can ig·
nite and explode from even the
s maJlesl spark.
State and local police, fearing
other blasts might be triggered
by a still-smoldering fire, closed
off the north end of Galveston
lsland.
"It's still a dangerous situa~
liol)," (ire Chief Hugh O'Don·
ohoesaid.
The facility includes 40 silos
and has a capacity of 3.5 million
bushels of grain.
(See BLAST, Page A2)
Co ast
Weath er
Chance of rain decreas·
Jng to 50 percent tonight
and 30 percent Thursday.
Continued cool. Lows
tonight ln mid-505. Highs
Thursday in low to
mid-608. S h e ls s u rvived by her
buaa..od, Jlaymood ; a son,
R onald. of Wdodland Hllls;
daushter Jeanne A Snyder of
j.C'~adla; a 1lai•r and six
tn aplte or the fact that more
than two inches or raltl has
fallen on 'Avalon, th~ parched
residents or Catalin a Island'
have--not rot any water In their
empty reservoir today.
Highway .fl in Sao Luis Obispo
County and StUJ'li• Road act'Gll the 'flatUUtdi ,near O:itn•rd ln
Ventura Coun&y were cJQSed, ac·
c4)rdinV to a CHP spok~woman.
San Bernardino sheriff's dep-
u Uea blamed rain·loosened
ituale Md r.ock for the death
Tuesday of a 19-year-<)Jd Long
Beech girl cllmblng a waterfall
INSIDE TeDAY
If t1otl'~ looking for New
Yeorr• Eve party fort fdeaa,
aet Food, Page CJ.
I
"';:,..~at F""oreat'wwn.
A spokesman for the ScMlt.bem
CalUomia Edison Com,,ny.
which bandlee all utlUUea for the
Island, Mid the rala tbat bas
been rallin1 there since S.tur-
day b11 illl soaked Into t be around. ''Tbere bq been DO runoff.
~--at all." LM apok .......... COIDID ......
..... llouDt1'ald1. •
hmtny Cook d ied whUe ne~ bllen ~lawed fot ft\fe
• mlnut• at a pile of roeu a.hat
buried her ln U. slide.
Her 12~)9.r-old brotber. TOdd.·
wu r~ ln It.QI•~ at San Aatonlo Conam111dl7 .-e&B-IK.P~Ul
I.
l .. e x
Pair Remain .
lri Custody
By GARY GRANVILLE ~ UW DMlr iiliof I LI If
The bail game being played
ag aln s.t the backdr op of a
Newport Beach murder and the
hi gh flying Orange Coast drug
set came down to earthly figures
Titesday when the collective bail
set !or Alexander and EUiie
Kulik dropped dramatically. •
By the end of the day,
however. 27-year-old Alexander
Kulik was still in custody pend·
ing the posting of $1.15 million
bail.
Since arrest Oct. 22 on heroin
charges and later linked to the
slaying of Stephen J ohn Bovan,
Kulik 's bail bas ranged as high
as $6 million.
husband were named in a federal Grand Jury Indictment
centering on the heroin stash.
But Mrs. Kulik also obtalned
relief or sorts·Tuesch,y when the a mount or federal ball was re-duced to $100,000 and her Orange
Coun ty ball dropped from
$250,000 to $150,000, meaning it.
will takd $250,000 to free ht¥' ~ from jail.
During the day, Mrs. kullk
also came up with an attorney ol.
her own.
Until then, both Kuliks were
r epresented by fiery San Diego
a ttorney Phillip DeMassa,
T u esday, however, John
TremblaU became the attorney
of record for Mrs. Kulik.
Like her husband and now six
others, she is named in the
Grand Jury indictment covering
Bovan's shooting death outside a
Newport Beach restaurant.
BLAST •••
•The foree of Tuesday nlpt•1
blJlt at the P'armer'a Export
Graln Co .. whicb wu heard 70
miles away, lore lwo gaping
holes in the side of the 13-story
main elevator.
Automobile-sized chunks of concrete were thrown more than
200 feet and a railroad switch
en1lne was twisted into a tanale
of steel. Wlndows were ahat.
tered a mile away ln the
downtown aeeUon ol this port ci· ty of 85,000 about 60 mlleiJ
tOUtbeutotHouaton.
"l saw a flash BO up and therl
there was a biC coacuutoo," said a seeurity guard at Todd
St!!J>yard.al about a half mile
from lMfacUltf.T'ADli j\O Of -
fire spread over the top ol the building acrou the way and
aoon small fires grew into one
massive ftame."
Barbara Agraves. 30, who
lives about a.ix blocks from the
site, said: ''I was talklna on the
telephone and all of the sudden
the house went straight up in the
air and plopped back down. It
broke most of the windows and
knocked out every light in the place."
It was when his bail stood al
$750,000 that the key figure in
the bizarre murder-drug case
gained notoriety and temporary
freedom by posting that much in
cash.
But Kulik's freedom was
short-lived when be was re-
arrested a few weeks later while
hiding out in a La Costa con-
However, the number of de-
fendants in the case dropped by
on e I ast week when Roy Christopher Richard, 28, who
was once head of the Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna temple,
agreed to become a prosecution
witness in return for immunity
.,..'"'-'-
BURIED BY RUBBLE IN ELEVATOR EXPLOSION
Rescue Workers Pull Woman From Wreckage
Don McCoy, 'a spokesman for
John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo. pie were treated at the hospital
for burns. Two were listed in
crltical cood.lUon.
' dominium with bis then fugitive wife.
Fro•PageAJ
,.,.w .........
Bert and Buyer Kulik's difficulties with the
law continued to mount when ar-
resting officials purportedly
found a heroin stash -valued at
more than $1 million -=-hidden
in the air cleaner of a vehicle
parked near the condo.
from prosecution. RAIN SOAKS COAST. • • 6.6Temblor
Hita Red Sea;
No Damages
Former budget director
Bert Lance moves away
fro m the t able a nd lets
Saudi Arabian businessman
, Ghaith R. Phar;:ion .speak at
news conference in Allanta
Tuesday. Phar<Jon hopes t o
buy Lance's banking in-
terest.
That discovery led to a federal
magistnte slapping a $2.5 million bold on Kulik.
Elsie Kulik was held in
custody on the same amount of
bail after both she and her
Wages: Soot
Cmmney Nabs Thief
HOUSTON <AP} -Scott Sullivan, 29, was sur-
prised when he heard someone talking in bis fireplace.
"Hey, anybody out there? I'm in the chimney,"
a man's vojce .said.
Sullivan said the m an explained he had climbed
into the chimney to burglarize the house but got
stuck. He call ed the fire department.
"They didn't belie ve me, so I called po-
lice," Sullivan said.
The police ·didn't believe him either, Sullivan
said, but decided to investigate after calling back to
confirm the report. Investigators arrived and then
call ed firemen again, who removed a 20-year-old
soot-covered man from the chimney.
"I was just walking along and thought I'd climb
in a nd try to burglarize the house, .. the man told in-
vestigators, adding that he had never tried anything
like it before and had no plans to try again.
Police said burglary charges would be filed.
TQro 'Housing Unit
Destroyed by Fire
Fire destroyed three rooms of
an El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station !amUy housing unit early ·
Wednesday and sent a Marine to
the base dispensary for smoke· inhalaUon treatment.
A Marine Corps spokesman
said the 12:05 a.m. blaze also re·
sulted in smoke damage to the
unit's other two rooms and
water· damage to an adjoining
unit in the fourplex .
Residents Sgt. Juan N. Car·
rillo Velazquez, his wife and their three children escaped the
h ome without injury, the
s pokesman sald. However, Cpl,
Stephen R. Harper of the same
Wherry-type housing tract
owned by the government, was
overcome by smoke when he
stopped to aid ln flre·fighUng.ac-tivity. •
The Marine Corps spokesman said cause o! the fire Is sUll un-
der lnvestlgatlon and that an
estimate of damaae ts still un-
available.
Three Marine Corps fire ..
fighting units responded to the
e arly-morning blaze, the
spokesman said, and an Orange
County Fire Department
spokesman said that while coun·
ty units were standing by. none
was ordered into action.
Frot11 Page Al
TRIO ••.
conviction of the suspects. .
J oho Lundberg, Berkeiey
general counsel to the UC re-gents, since has said the reward offer .constitutes an improper use
of student funds.
Irvine police, meantime. have
denied allegations by some stu-.
dents and UCI lecturer John
Gerassl that their investigation of
the crime was influenced by the
vtcUms' race. ·
Lt. Jerry Boyd said the in·
vestleatJon was conducted
Both Kuliks are being held in The only major rain damage
the federal Metropolitan Correc· r eported to roads along the
tional Center in San Diego. Orange Coast today was in San
Like their co-defenda.nts, they Cle mente, where mud slides
are slated to appear In Ortinge· have periodically closed some
Cou nty Superior Court on Jan. 23 Janes on Pacific Coast Hi ghway.
to face trial on the murder · However, the slides were be·
charges. ing cleared and traffic was not
The only suspect remaining at completely stopped et any point, large is Joseph FedorowslU, a police said.
one-time business partner of The Huntington Beach Public
Richard and Kulik. Works De partment reported
RULING •••
against Maheu.
"We have no cboJce but to re-
verse the judgment on the
ground that the trial court's one·
sided characterization ot Maheu
came close to directing a verdJct
in bis favor, thus denying Sum·
ma a fair trial," said the court.
The judge was Jtefening to tbe
comment made by U.S. District
Court Judge Harry Pregerson to
the jury prior to its retiring for deliberations. ·
The appellate court said Pregenon described Maheu as
••affable. intelligent, im-
aginative, articulate ••• a
friendly man wlth important friends in high places," and "a
man of enormous energy and
drive" with the "ability lo get
things done." ·
On Dec. s, 1970, Hughes dis·
charged Maheu, ending a 14·
year relationship. Maheu filed
suit in Nevada to retain his poei·
tion, clalming Hughes had been
coerced into firing him or
someone else ordered it. ·
Late in 1971, a major publisher
announced plans to publish a
Hug hes autobiogr~phy
purportedly based upon personal
interviews with the billionaire
by Clllford Irving.
To establlah that Irving's book
was not aulbeotlc, Hughes ar-
ran1ed a telephone news COO·
ference on Jan. 7, 1972 from the
Babamu to newsmen in Los
Anaeles.
The court said durina this
news contercmce Huihes wu
asked why Maheu was fired and
answered in part "Because be's
a no-good, dishonest son of a bitch, and be stole me blind."
The s tatements he made, the
court said, form the basis for the
suit. Summa admitted the de.
famatory statement was made
by Hughes and usumed Jegal
responslbillty for It. Summa re-
lied solely upon the defense of
truth and it assumed the b\U'den
of proving truth. '
U.S. Weapons
I
Bl~ted Again
some minor flooding and said
they are getting ready in case
·there's more r ain.
.. After so many days of rain,
the ground won 't take any
more," a spokesman said.
In Laguna Beach today,
animal control officers were
working on Bluebird Canyon
Drive to free a cat who somehow got stuck in a storm drain. The
results of that rescue operation
were not available by midmorn-
ing.
In the north county, some local flOO<ling was reported in
Brea, which received a heavy
4.2 inches from the storm.
Disneyland had to close early
Monday but stayed open till mid-
night Tuesday, a spokesman
* * * Frmtt Page Al
CAVE-IN ...
Hospital in Upland, suffering
from an injured ankle.
The two were at the 4,000·foot
level of San Antonio 1''alls when
the ground gave way beneath
them, authorities said.
lo Santa Barbara, the site or
the disastrous Sycamore Canyon
fire that destroyed more than
250 homes last July, residents
were put on evacuation notice
Tuesday but no one was ordered
away, as moderate rain fell on
the city throughout the day.
Santa Barbara Battalion <:IUet
Al Faoro said his crews
responded to a dozen calls for
help in removlng mud and
sludge from garages and hUl51de
homes, but only one call came
Crom the Sycamore Canyon
area, where fire olllcials helped
four families. Faoro also report-
ed the roor caved in on a
downtown drugstore.
Road crews worked reverishly
in Alhambra to hold up a section
of Mission Road that was col·
lapsing as rainwater and runoff
from a broken pipeline un ·
dermlned the soggy earth beneath it.
Scheuren Road in Malibu was
closed temporarily Tuesday
while crews hacked away at a
giant boulder that tumbled down
a hillside and blocked traffic.
DAILY PILOT
without respect to ethnic back· MOSCOW <AP> -'lbe Soviet
ground. • Union bu renewed its 'Crltlc!Jm
of U.S. arma111enta and warned
that deployment of tbe crulae
mi11Ue or neutron bomb in
forward bases of Western
Europe would endanser future arms agreements.
The Southern California
Automobile Club received 600
calls an hour from atranded
motorbts and handled 8,000 cells
by the end of the day luesday.
Tbe normal number is about
3,200, said spokesman Dick
Roodzant.
F,...PageAI
CLASH •••
and called Police. o•eoanor and Bonfa have been
feudlilg 1tnce Bonfa wrote a
.,.rtormance evaluatloc critical
of o •Contiot' in December of
lt'l4.
O'Comnor canteaded that the
evaluation waa not really a
performance evaluation, but wu an abusive diatribe.
Tbe dl•pute p(oceeded
tbroa1b ctty frleYtace pro-
ctdures.
"Neither Cndle mluilea nor
neutron bombe nor De# typet ol
weapon can lnUmldate the So-
viet Union," the Communist Par-
ty newspaper Pravda Hid Tues·
day.
It said U lucb weapou are
deployed at U.S. bates In
Europe or with European alll•,
th4l Sovtet Union would have the rl•ht to inject tbe laue hlto
future arms tallt1 because it
would be vuloerable to attack
from these basel.
• ••
Although the storm made a
major dent in Southern
California's drought, the rain
fell more llghUy in the northern
half of the state, where the
ctrou~t baa been more serious.
However, weather watchers
were generally opUmtstic about
the eUec:ts of the rain. notmc
that the SJerra 1nowpad: -
wblch provides •Prlnl runoff -ls now 60 inches at 8,000 feet,
compared to a normal of 30 inches at tbat elevation tor th1a
tlmeof.Yeat.
Iran Meeting&
TEHRAN, lran (AP) -Preti·
dent Carter will bOld 1e~ute
m .. tlnp with Sbab Mobannned
Baa Pab.laW and Jorde11 •1 Ian•
Huueln in Iran W. WMkeod,
IrolaQ omclal1 Hid today. lrulu new1papera report.cl
u..t, a'llrime topic o1 d.bcumoa ·
for botll~ iNetlnp wJU be lllddl9
,Eut~diplomacy.
said . He said attendance was off
slightly but that exact figures
are not available until the end of. the season.
Knoll's Berry Farm reported
no fallofr in attendance. "The
rain really doesn't seem to fate
people too much," a spokesman said.
Information on Lion Country
Safari was not available early
today.
The Southern California
Edison Company reported no
major blackouts in the past 24 hours. .
H owever . a s pokesman
warned that more rain might af.
feet underground vaults. i! storm drains back up.
The Pacific Telephone Com-
pany also reported no rain
damage but wind was causing
some delayed dial tones.
Minor traffic accidents were
reported all along the coast, but
a traffic fatality in Newport
Beach was attributed to a faulty
signal light. not rain, police
said. Motorists were cautioned
to allow extra lime and drive
carefully.
In Mission Viejo, where Lake
Mission Viejo rose 2.5 lncbes
during the rain, a week's delay
in building a condominium
project was reported. •
The Cordova School site of the
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict was also affected by tbe
rain, with building delayed one
day for each day of rain. Other
school djstricts reported that
buildings under construction are
already roofed and were not af·
fected.
The downpour was welcomed
by rarmers and firefighters
across the coast.
A Rancho Miss ion Viejo
spokesman termed it a 1'mlllion-
dollar rain." He said a storm
total of 1.7 inches bas been re·
corded on the ranch and ls
leaching out the salts caused by
irrigation.
However, an Irvine R~ch spokesman said, "It's Just teas-
ing the devil out of us." He said
a t least two more .Inches are
needed for eny-loogt«m toed.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Ftre-State Forestry ata·
tion said that although the fire
season doesn't officially end UD·
til Dec. 31, "We've closed our
wildland fire stations and laid
off seasonal personnel.
"We're not going to have any
more problems. We've bad
e nough rain to get the grass
growing and bring everything
back to life out there."
Man's Appearance -Neat-Partially
A man in a gray thre•plece
s uit, dress shoes and neatly
knoUed Ue tapped on tbe outatde
of a Skypark Boulevard omce
window in western Irvine Tuel-
d a y , causing a startled
secretary to call police.
His trousers were at hall· mast, police said.
By &be Allocla&ed Press
An earthquake registering 6.6
oo the Richter scale struck in the
Red Sea today, the U.S.
Geolo1lcaJ Survey repo~.
• "We don't expect any damage
because of its location," said a
spokesman for the survey's Na-
tional Ell'UiQum-1ruormation
Service at Golden, Colo .
The service said the quake
struck at 17.2 degrees north and
39.9 degrees east. which would
place it between Saudi Arabia
and Ethlopia in the Red Sea,
about 155 miles north of Asmara, Ethiopia.
The quake hit at 6:45 p.m.
PST Tuesday. the service said.
It said quakes of that magnit.ude
have occurred previously in the
Red Sea but that they are not
common.
The Vienna Meteorological
Institute also recorded the
quake at 6.6 on the Richter s cale, and Iran's Tehran
University Geopbysica lmtitute -
measured it at 6.8.
The acale ls a measure ot.
ground motion as recorded by
seismographs. An increase of
one on the scale corresponds to a
tenfold increase in magnitude. A
quake registering 6 can cause
severe damage in a populated
area.
Witness Backs
!l.Q. Testing
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Standardized IQ tests are ''re-
markabJy good predlctors•• of a
child's educational ability, the state ot Calitornia claimed in
federal court.
Durln1 the state's openJng
argument Tuesday in a lawsuit
brought on behalf of five black
youngsters whoee parents claim
they were place(! rn "ecf acable
mentally retarded" classes because of low IQ scores, deputy
attorney general Joanne Con4u ~·
said the tests "predict the "
achievements equally well for
both black and white children. ..
I.ink Probed
In Slayings
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Possible
connectiml between the beating
deaths of a one·year·old San
Diego boy four months ago-ud' .
of his »year-old moth•r4Wbose ,
body wu found Friday are be-·-. ing probed by aberifra homicide
detecttvea.
Elizabeth Ann Jleldt had been free on $15,000 bond awaiting
trtal on charges or abwstna and
murdering her son. Shawn
·Michael Heidt, a sheriff's
apokeaman Mid Monday.
Lively~at
...
SC Mortuary Swings
THE SWINGING SOUNDS of llve band music
that prompted a San Clemente resident to complain
to police Tuesday came from an unlUcely spot -the
Lesneski Mortuary.
Mr. Lesnesldt c().ntaeted by police officersl did
.net seetb taollnea to ha Ye his son and I ellow oand
members atop t.be1t playing. the police log recorded ••
THE COllPL\INING PARTY did not choose to
alfn a foi'mal complaiit, 10 tbere waa nothing to do,
90lice sa1d, but lel ~e music eonUnue 6 the funeral
home. ,
' .
.
' .· lo••
STOCKS /BUSINESS ' .
. dn &day'
Closing Pri NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSAG'110NS
r DAIL v PILOT A JS
Big Spellders
Close Out Year
B,y JOUN CUNNIFF AP....,._AA#y'I&
Americans really went on a 1pendloa blnte in the final
weelus ot the year, and there are indlcatlont that • 1ood
percentage of the purch<asc:s didn't end up under t.be
Cbriatmas tree. •
They were wnsumed Instead. literally swallowed, Jn
the form of food and drink. Or so lt would seem.
PINAL F1GtJRES WON'T BE available for a couple ol
more weeks, but we do know t.bis: Food store sales in Nov-
em bcr rose 2.9 percent over those ol October, sugge:sting an
_runaiinltin_c.reMe in iJltalte.
True, some of these purchases mlghfhave made glt\s,
but another set of statistics s u11tests otherwlse. November
sales at eating and drinking plac" lell)ed 2.1 pereel\t alter
having been weak in October.
Economis ts are studying such J:;
staUsUcs to find out what they can about /j
the behavior of the sometimes unprUic-
table consumer. They have already \ ii[tllll!I[;~~ drawn some conclusions: <II!
-The public was in more of a buy-
• ing mood lhan was generally foreseen.
The buying began unus ually early; Oc·
t.ober retail sales leaped 2. 7 percent over
September, and November added
another 1.5 over October. CUNNll'I'
• -EARLY REPORTS OF I\ 1.s percent Increase ln the'
dollar value Of automotive purchases for November are SUS•
pect.
"There is a possibility that revisions will trim the Nov-
ember auto component of retail.sales,·' Citibank comments.
Forotte thing, it questions that unit sales would be down but
dollar sales up so much.
-Shoppers _apparently were not reluctant to use credit.
That. at least, was the trend that seemed to be setting in ear-
ly in thermal quarter of the year.
CONTRARY TO WHAT SOME people might expect,
consumers assume credit burdens when they feel confident
-not when t.be absence or ready cash leaves them no other
choice.
Personal incomes were up; people were confident; they
took on credit. ..
This burst of consumer activity presents analysts with
the 9uest.ion of how much longer it might continue. Some
crecht critics say the burden of repayments could hamper
&ales in 1978.
ANOO'HER SCHOOL OF THOUGHT. however, ob-
serves that consumers are slill able to repay t.beir borrow-
ings on time. They feel that 1978 sales might indeed be af·
fected by activity this year. but merely because consumers
have already purchased many of the items they need.
, Whatever, the indomitable consumer has again sur-
prised some or those who claim the title o! expert, and has
almost made certain a continuation or the expansion into a fourth year.
He might have done it with food and drink and a lot of
gifts that the recipient is inclined to return, but t.bat's the way the economy turns.
StoCk Prices Droop
Over Trade Deficit
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices sagged a bit today
as the market absqrbed the news of another large U.S.
trade deflclt. •
The Dow Jones average of 30 indust:rll.ls was dowa 3.30
poln\ato829.70.
Declines outnumbered advances by about a 4-3 m gin
a mong New York Stock"l:xchange-listed Issues.
The government reported that U.S .. imports exceeded
exports by $2.08 bill.ion in November. That deficit was
down considerably from the record ot $3.1 biUion posted in
October, but still Jarge by historical standards.
SCoelu la Tiu!
Spot llglac DoM',onn~"•rllfll!•
s~t'C.ls°""~API Fl,.., Oow.Jonn•.,.r•o-•
()i-HfQll Low C10Se C"9 30 Ind ~ .... &JHJ m.n m.ro ••..•. :10 Tm 211.U fll at. 2U.JI 216.74-0.0S 1S un no.• 111.•1 no.n 110AS+ o,.
6S Slk '21t.SI 117.•• 114.4' ~+ 0 11 ,,..,, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '·"'"'°' ~~r.~ :::::::.:::::::·::::·: ~~:= 6S S!k • • • • • . . •• • • • .. • .. • • . .. • 2,Jll.000
What St~b Did
NEW YO"~ (Al")
SALU
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wfll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
'illtU.T AMEJt 010
NEW \'OftlC IAP)
Actv11M»d
Oe<llMd Unclltllllld Tottl ISSud H•w lt17 hilllls P#w lt71 ...
AM•X SAl.~S
Due to late transmfssfon
today's listing will not appear In the Dally Piiot.
---·
' i >.
TOOTHPASTE
MOUTHWASH '""
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32 oz.
1.39
SAV-ON BRANO
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ALCOHOL DOUBLE TIPPED
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{\[§~
Volume C 10°. By 29 PAK 99c 16 oz. of 400 ,
DI-GEL ANTACID
.ORANGE/LEMON
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100 Tablets or 11 1 12 oz. Liquid
EA. •
Proti-THIN
SLENDER .PLAN
R:k~i~et. 5 99
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Binoculars Binoculars
Twice As Fast
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60 TABLETS
Jim Beam
BOURBON
80 Proof 10 99 1.75 Liter •
__,,_,_ Scoresby
SCOTCH
~t~~~I 5.99
Seagram's V.O.
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86.8 Proof 17 49 1.15 Liter •
CHAMPAGNE
PINK, ORY, 1 49 or COLO DUCK
750 ml. •
Kessler
WHISKEY ~~t~r' 4.99
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80 Proof 8 98 1.15 Liter •
Tanqueray
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RED LABEL
SCOTCH 199 86J Proof FIFTH I
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~~,~~:er 6.69
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BOURBON ~,~ru:er 1.69
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Laguna/South Coast Aft eraooa
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 362, o4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • .ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1977
'BANGED MY HEAD'
Ctty Atty. Bonfa
RB Att~eys Clash
-By ROBERT BARKER • --B;;fa first broke news of the "Het;:ab~ ;; by the coll ar O'Con.nOr s aid.· ''He cameUn-~
oe .. Diii!' ,........,.. altercation when be called police and tie and banged my head glued." O'Connor said &bat Bon-
A long-standing feud between shortly after 6 p.m. There were against the wall. I didn't lay a fa "has arms like telephone
Un B 1. i no witnesses. finger on him," Bonfa declared. poles and Is very strong." two Hun gton eac,. c ty at-While officers were taking "There is no room for this un-"Somethlng bas to be done," torneys broke out tnto a physical altercation TuesdlU' evening. Bonfa's telephone call, O'Connor civilized, hooligan t ype or be said, "the employeea are not appeared at the station to file his behavior," Bonfa said. safe. I now feel threatened and Deputy City Attorney John verslon of the skirmish. O'Con-The latest episode between the insecure and I am /hysically O'Connor said be was attacked by City Attorney Don Bonra.. nor said over the telephone to-two m en appare ntl y was afraid.'' O'Connorsai .
Bonfa said be was attacked by day that he was sitting in his of-touched ore by a demand by Bonfa said that he w as
O'Connor. fice in the fourth floor of the city O'Connor for Bonla to put down grabbed by O'Connor when Bon· ' hall at 5:45 p.m. when the tussle guidelines for criminal prosecu-ra tried to leave hjs office. "J
Police said both filed cross-took place. lion polit!ies. tried lo get out the door and
complaints of assaUlt and 'bat· "Bonfa tried to choke me. He A source in the legal depart-O'Connor slammed it," Bonfa
tery againSt each other. tore my shirt and twisted my ment said Bonfa refused to do said.
A Po 11 c e de Part men t neck," O'Connor said. this, apparently feeling that "I told him to take his bands
spokesman said that both com· O'Connor said that he was O'Connor was trying to provoke ore me. I said what are you go.
plaints would be taken to the treated al Pacifica Hospital a confrontation. ing lo do, hit me?
Orange County District Attorney because of the pain in his neck. O'Connor said today that he "He <O'Connor) said maybe I
today. Bonfa told a n entirely dif· couldn't fathom the reason for should, I can't stand you." Bon·
Bonfa said today that O'Con-ferent version. the alleged attack. fa alleged.
nor has been placed upon im-"O'Coonor lost his temper and "I asked Bonfa why he didn't Bonfa said he eventually went
mediate suspension without pay assaulted me and battered me," respond to my request for the to bis office and locked the door
and that O'Connor will be fired, be said. criminal prosecution policy," (See CLASH. PaieAZ)
'TRIED TO CHOKE M E'
Deputy Atty. O'Connor
Another Silo Explodes; . 9 D~ad
..
I
Lively Beat
s(J. Mortuary Swings
TUE SWINGING SOUl\'DS of Jive band music
that prompted a San Clemente resident to complain
to police Tuesday came from an unlikely spot --the
Lesneski Mortuary.
Mr. Lesneski. contacted by police officers. did
net seem inc lined to have his son and fellow band
m embers stop their playing, the police log recorded.
T HE COMPLAINING PARTY did not choose to
sign a formal complaint, so there was nothing to do,
police s aid, but let the music continue at the funeral
home. ·
Partial
Clearing
Forecast
By JACKIE HYMAN Ol IM D<MIJ l'li.t Swll
Partial clearing is forecast for
Thursday in a storm that has
dumped between an inch and 6.7 inches of rain on various parts
of Orange County, the National
Weather Service said today,
Rescuers
.Slowed
By Dust
GALVESTON, Texas (A~) ....
Rescuers dug through the rubble
of a grain elevator today seeking
survivors of a thunderous ex-
plosion that ripped through the
structure, killing at least nine
people and injuring 23. The blast
was heard 70 miles away.
!· Laguna lnculnbent
The rains caused no major
damage, local offM:ials reported,
but were blamed for numerous
minor traffic accidents and have
affected construction projects
and attendance at amusement
parks. They also reportedly had
an unpleasant effect on a cat
stuck in a Laguna Beach storm
drain today.
A man and a wom an were
pulled from beneath the twlsted
steel and hunks of concrete
sh ortly-after midnight, but
ponce eald seven more people
were believed missing, including
three federal grain inspectors.
C~ng concrete d~st and
s =••Nd seareh efforts, ov o at least 15 rescue
workers. Deadline Nearing
Laguna Beach mayor J on
Brand confirmed today be will
not seek re·election to City Coun-
cil on March 7, but the can·
didacy of his two fellow incum·
bents eppears to hang in the
balance as Thursday's filing
deadline nears.
Phyllis Sweeney, who was ap-
pointed to City Council in 1972
and elected in 1974, has taken
oiJt electiQn papers. Mrs .
Sweeney must collect al least 20
signatures of Laguna Beach reg-·
istered voters a nd file her
papers by noon on Thursday in
order for her name lo appear on
the March t>allot, according to a
spokesman for the city clerk.
Two-term councilman Carl
Johnson said today he has not
made a definite decision
whether to run for a third term
in' March, but he s ajd the
chances of his seeking re-
election are "extremely slim."
"I want to see whether there
are reasonable people running
-that's my m ain concern," he
said.
Two non·incumbent can·
d1dates have filed e lection
papers, making them official Cl· •
ty Council candidates. Tbey are
cily planning commisalon
chairman Diana Dike and
housewife Maggie Meggs.
Non·incumbents have unUl
11oon on Jan. 3 to file for the
* * * SJC's Nash
Won't Run;
Cit.es Danger
March eleetion, the clly clerk
said. ·
Other nori·incumbents who
have taken out election papers
a re: businesswoman Barbara
Smith, stockbroker Howard
Dawson, retlred businessman
John Gabriels, taxi driver Tom
Adams, store operator .Kelly
Boyd and law student James
Bishop.
In addition, graphic artist
Adena Gay, .office manager Ann
Graham, Fluor executive Wayne
Baglln ahd t axi operator
Richard Scott have also taken
out election papers.
* * * 3 lnc11mbents
Slow to File
For SC Ballot.
Most orricials and farmers
said the rains were welcome.
But that picture could change)!
another storm the weather
bureau is watching off the
Washington coast heads this
way lt'riday, bringing more rain.
The Orange County Harbor
Department recorded 1.02 in·
ehes or l'ain for the storm In
Newport Beach. Orange County
Flood Control District flg'ures to-
d ay range from 1.38 inches in
Santa Ana to 6.7 inches at San-
tiago Peak.
In Laguna Beach, Bill Shi elds
of Laguna Beach Hardware re-
ported a storm total of 1.17 in·
ches today.
The weather service said Los
Angeles rainfall totalled 2.75 in·
ches, bringing the season's total
to 5.96 inches. Normal rainfall at
this time is 4.41 inches. Parched
Catalina Island has recorded
2.63 inches since Saturday.
The only major rain damage
reported to roads a long the
Orange Coast today was in San
Clemente, where mud slides
have periodically closed some
Janes on Pacific Coast ffighway.
However, the slides were be-
ing cleared and traffic was not
completely stopped et any point,
police said.
The Huntington Beach Public
Works Depar tment r eported
some minor flooding and said
they are geWng ready in case
there's more rain.
(See RAIN, Page AZ)
* * *
f
.,..,, ...... SUff .......
NOEL ARRIVED LATE -BUT IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS
Appaloo•a Fiiiy Is 'Prettier than Her Momma'
Rejoiee ~oel
Filly Foaled for Yul.e
Noel was a month overdue when she arrived Christmas
morning in a Laguna Beach stable - a purebred black Ap.
pallosa filly, born on a bed or straw and warmed by her
mother's breath. "I found h'er when I came out to the stable at 3 o'clock on
Christmas morning," said Eva Leslie. "She was about half an
hour old. Her mother had given birth without help and with no
com plicaUons. ••
Miss Leslie lives at the Lazy Creek Saddle Club, 20491
Laguna Laguna Canyon Road, where she oversees operations at
the riding stables owned by her mother, Sally Leslie.
The filly's first sight past her mother's solicitously prodding
nose may have been of Christmas decorations put up in an·
ticipation of her arrival by the Leslie family.
"She was due a month ago," said Miss Leslie, .. but we
always said she would come for Christmas."
' The filly's birth is the result of an accident, but the chance
maUng of a stallion running loose and a mare used for riding
lessons has produced a possible show horse.
"She's a real beauty -prettier than her momma," said
M~ Leslie. Besides, abe com~ with Christmas blessings.
'.'There may be others in there
and our search goes on," said
Galveston Police Lt. D. K. Lack.
FBI spokesmen said agents
were on the scene in a liaison
capacity, prima rily to ·ocrer
laboratory assistance.
Authorities declined to
speculate on what caused the
blast, the second explosion at an
American grain elevator in five
days. An explos ion hit an
e l evatot complex in New
Orleans on Thursday, killlng 34
people. and searchers are still
combing the rubble for a miss-
ing man. The cause o( that ex·
plosion has not been determined.
Authorities said the blast here
:rpparenUy occurred in a tunnel
· that connected the elevator to a
loading dock. Two ships were
unloading grain at the time but
were towed away by the Coast
Guard ..
Grain elevators such as the
one a t Galveston contain highly
volatile grain dust that. can ig-
nite and explode from even the
s mallest spark. ·
State and local police, rearing
other blasts mlght be triggered
by a sUll-smoldering fire. closed.
oft the north end o( Galveston
Island.
"It's still a dangerous situa·
tion," fire Chief Hugh O'Don·
oboe said.
The facility includes ~o silos
and has a capacity of 3.5 million
bushels Or grain.
(See BLAST, Page A2)
Man Killed in Cave-in
Road Cream Work ID Ckar Srorm'a DebrU
By Tiie Aaoctated Pre11
• Rolld crews 1craped mud and
•heaved boulders off Southern
California roadl today to keep ·th• blOwaya open. deaplt. a
tropical atorm that wu expect·
eel to ~lnue dumpinl rain on
tbe area ~toN&bt. · But Pae 'flQ crews met their makh ay n.llbt wbell
the 1lde of a mountain near the Bta Bear NIOtt. caved ln on a
ear ca111mc four people trom
Norwalk; . Carl .16 ........ .,. WU
1dllld1 Oftlclill a-.idL acldlq that
16 flane.e, Donna 1A9 B•~ a, U.e drinr1 wa boqltalbecl al &e4l aada Commualty
HMpltal alCMaf Witll her two
Miii, ~u;;• ~ ~ ~i-...1 ..........
road. men 1t the bad weather •
continue•:• tald Callfornia
Hlpway Patrol oftlcer James
Roberta.
A CBP •Pokes.t'oman said, • .,,.. whole 1hte of the mountain
came clawn OD Hllbway • near 1•l a1 Oalra, .. 20 mllea
~ of RMJ..S.. •11t Juat buried tbe ear.••
Tbe wtndlnf road throutb the
San Bernardino Mou ntains
-"ould . remain olOHd between Bll Bear and Forest Falla Road
untU the roeUUde •aa cleared.
Roberti aaid. He allo reported Hl1hway 39
In tbe San Gabriel Mountainl wu claled from Cryatal Lake nortll to It.a Jmcdon •llh State
Rom. J beca .. ol baurdoul ilil•IAI c:andit.loOI.
Hlgllway '1 bi San Lull Obispo
County and Sturtia Road acrou
the fiaUands near Oxnard ln
Ventura ~ty were closed. ac·
cordlq to a CllP apokenomu.
San Bernardino lbaift'9 dep.
1'tlH blamed raln·looseaed
abale and rock for tbe deatla
Tuetdar ~a lf.JeU'..old LoU
Beach strt cllmbln1 a wat...,all
near Mowit Baldy,
tammy Coot died wbll•
nearby hlkft'I cJawM for five
minutes at a plle of rocks tbat
burled ber In the 1Hde.
Her 12-year...otd broUI~. Todd, ·
was reported In •table coodltJon
at San Asitonlo Communit y
Hoapltal in11Vpland. 1afferlll1 from an ln]ured'ankle,
The two were at Ule '-oot>.foot
<leeCAVS.IN; Pa;. Al)
Weather
Chance ol raln decreas· tng to 50 percent tonight
and 30 percent Thursday.
Continued cool. Lows
tonight in mid·SOs. Highs
Thursday in low lo
mid-608.
IN819ETeDAY
If ,._•re lookillg for N.w
Ytar:• Eoe PQrtJI fore tdea.,
ut Food, Pooe Cl.
l••e Jr:
12
DECLINES TO RUN
CouncUman NHh
F,.._PageAJ
NASH ••.
Nash -predicted non-resident
builders and landowners would
pour vast amounts of money into
San Juan council campaigns
next March lo change the city's
growth management policies.
"The building industry is pay.
ing very close attention to what
goes on in San Juan," he said.
"The Building Industry Associa·
tion (BlA) will be heavily in·
fluencing our next election."
The former mayor also an·
nounced the formation of the
San Juan Civic Assn. which
"will be registering with the
stale and will be collecting and
expending funds" in support of
council candidates and Issues.
"Our main objective is to
educate resident voters of the
communitv to the issues and to
the candidates." Nash said in a
prepared sta tement. The San
Juan Civic Association will be
"d edicated to r etaining our
~m all -town "illagc atmosphere.
thro ug h continue d growth
management, environmental
protection and rural and his·
tone al preservation."
Nash will be presid ent of the
organization.
Two of the association's mem·
hers may also be involved in San
Juan ·s March elections as a can·
didate or a candidate's wife. Dee
Ty l e r , a San Juan bus i ·
nesswoman who has taken out
nomination papers, and Roberta
Berns, whose husband has taken
out nomination papers, are also
members.
· Nash said his decision not to·
seek re-<?leclion was based on
his accomplishments as a coun·
cilm an and a need to spend
more lime with bis personal af.
fairs.
P.air Remain
In Custody
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of u. o.11r l>fi.t se.tt
The baJI game being played
a gains t the backdrop of a
Newport Beach murder and the
high flying Orange Coas~ drug
set came down to earthly .flgure.s
Tuesday when lbe collective bail
set for Alexander and Elsie
Kulik dropped dramatically.
By the end of the day,
however, 27-year-old Alexander
Kulik was still in custody pend·
ing the posting of $1.15 million
bail. h . Since arrest Oct. 22 on erom
charges and later linked to the
s laying of Stephen John Bov:rn.
Kulik's bail has ranged as h1gh
as $6 million.
It was when his bail ~tood ~l
$750,000 that the key fi gure in
the bizarre murder-drug case
gained notoriety and tempora~y
freedom by posting that much in
cash.
But Kulik's freedom was
short-lived when he was ~e ·
arrested a few weeks later while
hiding out in a La Costa .c~n·
dominium with his then fug1t1vc
wife.
Kulik's .difficulties with the
law continued to mount when ar·
res ting officials purportedly
found a heroin stash -valued at
m ore than S1 million -hidden
in the air cleaner of a vehicle
parked near the condo.
That discovery led to a federal
magistrate slapping a $2.5
million hold on Kulik.
Els ie Kulik was held in
custody on the same amount of
bail after both she and her
husband were n amed in a
federal Grand Jury indictment
centering on the heroin stash.
But Mrs. Kulik also obtained
relief of sorts Tuesday when the
a mount of federal bail was re·
duced lo $100,000 and her Orange
Cou nty bail dropped from
$250,000 to $150,000, meaning it
will take .$250,000 to free her
from jail.
During the day, Mrs. Kulik
also came up with an attorney of
her own.
Until then, both Kuliks were
represented by fiery San Diego
attorney Phillip DeMassa.
Tuesday, however, John
. TremblaU became the attorney ot record for Mrs. Kulik.
Like her ·husband and now sJx
others, she ts named in the
Grand Jury indictment covering
Bovan's ahootiog death outside u
Newport Beach restaurant.
FroaPageA1
BLAST •••
The force of Tuesday night's
blast at the Farmer's Export
Grain Co., which was heard '70
miles away, tore two gaping
holes in the side of the 13-story
main elevator.
Automobile-sized chunk& of
concrete were thrown m ore than
200 feet and a railroad switch
engine was twisted into a tangle
of steel. Windows were shat·
tered a mile away ln the
downtown section of this po~ ci-
ty of 65,000 a bout 50 miles
outheastofHouston.
''I saw a flash go up and then
there was a big concussion,"
said a security guard at T~d
Shipyards. about a half mile
from the facility. "A big glob of
fire spread over the top of the
building across the way and
soon small fires grew lnto one
massive flame."
Barbara Agraves, 30, who
lives about six blocks from the
site, said: "I was talking on the
telephone and all of the sudden
the house went straight up in the
air and plopped back down. It
broke most of the windows and
knocked out every light in the
place."
Don McCoy, a spokesman for
John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo.
pie were treated at the hospital
for bums. Two were listed in
critical condition.
LB Students
UmGeiFund
Data]an, ·5
San Juan Hopefuls
Deadline Nearing
Laguna Beach HJgh School
seniors interested lo competing
for Festival of Arta scholarships
can receive an explanaUoo of
the fund program Jan. Son cam-
pus._
Festival scholarship commit·_
tee members Glenn Vedder and
Helen Keeley will be on band in
the career center to offer advice
on scholarships in the field of arts
and crafts, dance, drama, music,
writing and photography.
photography.
Most candidate .nomination
paper s for San Juan
Capis'trano's March City Council
elections have not been returned
to the City Clerk's orrtce but the
Dec. 29 deadline will most likely
be extended for ooh-incumbent ·
candidates •.
Tuesday's announcement by
incumbent councilman Douglas
Nash that he will not seek re-
e I ec lion would m ean non·
incumbents have until noon Jan.
3 to file nomination papers.
And th e r e are 11 non.
incumbent candidates who have
taken out papers lo run in the
March 7 City Council elections.
Those who have obtal)led
papers include: Michael Berns,
26921 Canyon Crest Road: S~an
L . Cummings. 31191 Calle Del
Campo; Robert Davies, 293
Edgewood Drlve; Jimmy
Larsen, 32031 Paseo de Allesan-
dro: James F . Thorpe, 27952
Ca lle Santa Ynez; George R.
Vraney, 32742 Alipaz St., Space
109; Charles H. Ward, 26432 Pep.
perwood Lane; Edward P.
Wendkos, 25921 Ave. Cabrillo;
Marilyn Williams, 29931 Camino
Capistr an o ; Gary L .
Hausdorfer, 26851 Calle Canto;
and Dee Tyler, 26982 Via Ban-
dei:as.
Two non-incumbents have
already filed nomination papers.
They are Erwin E . "Jerry"
Drake 31151 Via Cordova and
OAANGI COMT
DAILY PILOT
Al Arps, 32802 Valle Road, Space
95. . . . The two remaining incum·
bents, Mayor ·Yvon Heckscher
and John B. Sweeney, have both
taken out nomination papers but
have not returned them. To be
candidates, they must file by
noon Thursday.
Sweeney has said he plans to
Reek re-election.
Last year 74 grants totalling
$39,400 went to Laguna Beach
High School seniors.
The two festival board mem·
bers will be on campus from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m.
TOldfl r..-.ter'a l......-9
If you didll't rec0gnl%e IJttle Red Rldlnl Hood, abe's on
the rllbt J>l~ed by Bunky Jones. Byroa Beet.ham fl a
Zapple. 'lbey re In "IJttle Red Rldinl HOOd'e'PotPoUni., to be abown at 2:30 p.m . Thureday at Lquna Moulton Community Playhouse. Performed by ttte Youtb
Repertory' Theater directed and adapted by LlKa
Sarette. tbe·•ll'OUP also will perform ••Ata~ and The
Wonderfal Lamp,., 7:30 p.m;, Friday, and •Ptnocch1o'~
Satarda7 at2:30 p .in.
CMltr ""'s-.......
UNDETERRED BY RAfN, MAN AND DOG TAKE MORNING RUN
·Lawrence Dobbin And Shem Don't Mind Moisture On Newland
Fro• Page Al
RAIN SOAKS COAST. • •
"Alter so many days of rain,
the ground won 't. t ake any
more," a spokesman said.
In Lag una Beach today,
animal control office rs were
working on Blue bird Canyon
Drive lo free o cat who somehow
got stuck in a storm drain. The
results of that r escue operation
were not available by midmorn·
ing.
In the north county, some
local flooding was reported in
Brea, which r~eived a heavy
4.2 inches from the storm .
Disneyland bad to close early
Monday but stayed open till m1d·
night Tuesday, a spokes man
said. He said attendance was off
slightly but that exact figures
are not available until the end of
the season.
Knoll's Berry Farm reported
no falloff in attendance. "The
rain really doesn't seem to faze
people too much," a spokesman
said.
Information on Lion Country
Safari was not available early
today.
T h e Southe rn California
Edison Company reported no
major blackouts ln the past 24
hours.
Howeve r , a s pokes man
warned that more rain might af·
feet underg r ound vaults , if
storm drains back up.
The Pacific Telephone Com·
pany a lso reported oo r .ain
damage but wind was causing
some delayed dial tones.
Minor traffic accidents were
reported all along the coast, but
a traffic fatality in Newport
Beach was attributed to a faulty
signal light, not raln, police
s aid. Motorists were cautJoned
to allow extra Ume and drive carefully.
In Mission Viejo, where Lake
Mission Viejo rose 2.S inches
during the rain, a week's delay
in building a c ondominium
'.Project was reported.
Health Care,
English Topic
Of Classes
'Two new cluses will be of·
fered to Laguna Beach senior
citizens beginning ln January,
including basic English (ram·
mar and Health care ln the
home. •
Bob Porter wiJJ t e ach the
English course, to help older
·citizens improve writlnl skills
be&lnnlng Jan. $ at 10 a .m. in
the Senior Annex, 450 Ocean
Ave.
The health care class begtM
Jan. 25 at 3:30 p.m. ln the annex.
It •ill be taught by Pauline
W alplD of South Coaat Communi-
ty HOJplt.al and t.be courH will atreaa hel~ for a1Un1 membera
of the faml.ly.
For more information on
eltber cl_,, call Bob Porter at
41T·24'1.
Uranium Plant
.JOHANNESBURG. South
Africa <AP>-&utb Africa rnay
bellP wqrk aooa OD lu own
uranluoi torlcbment plant, \be
Rand o.lly Mui NPOried today. TH newtpapll" aaf4 a declaion
on whether to build the plant la
'expected early next year.
The Cordova School site of the
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict was also aff~ted by 1.he
rain, with building delayed one
day for each day of rain. Other
sc hoot districts reported that
buildings under construction are
a lready roofed and were not af-
fected.
The downpour was welcomed
by fa rmers and firefighters
across the coast.
A Rancho Mission Vi ejo
spokesman termed it a "million·
dollar rain." He said a storm
total of 1.7 inches has been re·
corded on the ranch and is
leaching out the salts clused by
it'Tigatlon.
However, an Irvine Ranch
s pokesman said, "It's just le~··
ing the devil out of us ." He said
at least two more inches are
needed for any·tongterm good.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Fire-Slate Forestry sta·
lion said that although the fire
season doesn't officially end un·
U1 Dec. 31, •twe've closed our
wlldland fire stations and laid
off seasonal personnel.
"We're not going to have any
more proble ms. We've had·
e nough rain to get the grass
growing and bring everything
back to life out there."
* * *
FroaPageA1
CAVE-IN •••
level ot San Antonio Falls when
the gr9U0d gave way beneath
them, authorities said.
In Santa Barbara, the site of
the disastrou.1 Sycamore Canyon
fire lbat destroyed more than
250 homes last July, residents
w~re put on evacuaUon notice
Tuesday but no one was ordered
away, as moderate rain fell on
the city throughout the day.
Santa Barbara Battalion Chier Al F aoro said his crews
responded to a dozen calla for
help In removing mud and ·
sludge Crom garages and hUlalde
homes, 'but only one call came
from the Sycamore Canyon
area, where fire offfclala helped
four families. Faoro also report.
ed the roof caved in.on a
downtown drugstore.
Road crews worked feverishly
in Alhambra to hold up a section
of Mission Road that was col·
lapsing as rainwater and nmorr
from a broken pipellne un·
dermined the soggy earth
beneathJt.
Seheu.ren Road tn MaUbQ waa
closed temporarily Tueaday
while crews hacked •••y at a . giant boulder tbat tumbled down
a hillside and blocked trafttc.
'J'be Southern California
Automobile Club recetved eoo
calls an hour fro111 •tr•nded
motorltta and handled 1,000 calls
by the eel ot the day 'l'Uead'1.
Tb• normal aamber la 1bout
3,200, said s pokt1man Dlck
Roodzant.
Altboqh the atonn made a
major dent ln So11tben
Callfornla'1 drought, •t.M raln
fell more UptlY ill the ilortbem
halt of the state. wbere the
droaabt bat bMll more Mlioul.
Howeftr, weather watchen were ,__.ally .,._mllllc about
tbe eUecta ol tbe raJa. oo'1DI •
tb1t the Sierra •no.pact -
wblell ~ •"'1.Di ruaoft -ll DOW IO IJlclMil at 8,000 feet;
compared to a normal ot 30
incbet at that elevaUon for th1I
Llm• of year. I
'
F,.._P~AJ
CLASH •••
and ealled police.
O'Connor and BOhfa bave been
· reudlng since Bonfa wrole a
perlorrnance evaluation critical
or O'Connor in December of
1974.
O'Connor cooteoded lbat the
evaluation was not r eally a
performance evaluation, but
was an abualv• diatribe.
The dhpute proceeded
throu1b city •rlevance pro-ceduret.
Bonta waa directed to remove
e<>rtlona Ot the e\taluatlon from ·
O'Connor'• fllea by the clty'a pertonnd board.
Moel of the evaluaUon was al-
lowed to stand however, and
O'Connor wu 1lven a cbance to
rebut atatementa and enler them 1n b.1s rue.
F,....Pa99AJ
BALLOT •••
-PoliUcian Robert RuslD. 247
Ave. del Mar, Apt. B.
-Retiree John Brown, 3361
Paseo Halcon.
-Environmental planning
consultant Boyd Ames, Jr .• ot
405 Ave. Vaquero. ·
-Retired news broadcaster
Ed Dieden, 234 Ave. Santa Barbara#2.
-Buyer and co11ege student
David Dodson, 1531 Ave. Buena
Vbta #E.
-Businessman Fredrick
Divel, 125 Ave. San Fernando.
-City maintenance 'workel' Da~id Bangat.on, 3382 La Veta.
Clothing, Cash
Taken From
Laguna Visitor
A holiday visit.or to Laguna
Beach from Montreal, Quebec,
told police he had $14,187 in
• cJothtne. luggage and cash
stolen from his motel room Tuesday morning.
Wilford Sykes, who was stay.
Ing at the Surf and Sand Hotel,
1555 South Coast Highway, said
his belongings were taken from
his room between 8:15 and 9:30
a.m.
There was no evidence or
forced entry to the motel room,
said police U . John Zelko, so the
lhief may have found a key
Sykes saJd he misplaced over
the Christmas weekend.
Among tbe items missing
were two men's au·tts, •
handcrafted cllf lugpae, an al·
llgator attache case and cub.
Zelko said.
LB Council
For.Agi,ng
Set.s Classes
The Laguna Beach Council on
Aging will offer 13 classes
tallored for senior citizens
beginning in January.
Continuing courses include
macrame, Spanish, physical
conditioning, creative writing,
sewing, T'al Chi, French, water
exercises and CoUcdancing~ ~ew •
courses include baaic grammar,
tap dancing, art and health care
in the home. .. ·
The Council on Aging also of-
fers free legal service, free
blood pressure checks, trips at
low coet, free movies and a dis·
count program in which 55
Laguna Beach merchants
partJclpate.
For more information, call
(97·2441.'
Schools Plan
Adult Classes
For Laguna~s
Nearly 60 adult education
classes are being offered during
the winter trimester tl\rouib the
Laguna Beach Unified School
District.
Trimester classes begin Jan. I
at a dot.en locations in La(UDa
Beach. Tuition is $5 per
trimester and must be paid at
the time ot reclstratlon. ·
Courses range Crom docent
training at the Lacuna Museum ot Art, to French, German.
Greek, Italian, Latin and
Spanish language.
For more information, call
49'.f.S46.
UMITATION SET
ONMARRL4.GE
NICOSIA, Cnmal (AP) ~1"
United Arab Emlrat.. wonied about the "phenoJDene>n" of
e lderly oll baron• 111~rr11D1
youn1 Conlp prla, bu dtelded lo dr~ a new law to o\ltlaw It.
· Tbe Emlra$ee eablaet formed a 1~ial ~mltt.ee from tbe
mhdalriee ot nU"°'9. Jat.tor,
labor and fonlp .aaJ.n to write
the n• law, Ute Qam news .. ency rfPOli.ed. J
:.
Orange Coast
EDITION
VOL. 70, NO. 362, ' SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1977 TENCEN~
_ Partial Clearing F otecast for COast
By JACKIE HYMAN I OI .. Oeif't ...... ,'-"
I Partial clearing Js forecast for
Thursday ln a storm that has
dumped between an inch and 6.7 iA~bes of rain on various earts
ot Orange County, the National
Weather Service said today.
The rains caused no major
damage, local officials reported,
but were blamed for numerous
minor traffic accidents and have
affected· construction projects·
and attendance al amusement
parks. They also reportedly bad
an unpleasant effect on a cat
stuck in a Laguna Beach storm
drain today.
Most officials and farmers
said the rains were welcome.
But that picture could change if
another storm the weather
bu11eau is watching off the
Washington coast beads this
way Friday, bringing more rain.
The Orange County Harbor
Department recorded 1.02 in·
cbes of rain for the atonn in
Newport Beach. Orange County
Flood Control District figures to-
day range from 1.38 inches in
Santa Ana to 6. 7 inches at San·
tiago Peak.
In Laguna Beach, Bill Shields
ol Laguna Beach Hardware n.
ported a storm total of 1.17 in·
. .
cbes today.
't)le weather servlce aald Loe·
Angeles ralnfall totalled 2.'15 fn.
cbes, brinain& tbe aeuon 'a total
to 5.M lDchee. Normal falnfall at
this Ume ii 4.'1 lnches. Parched
Catalma Island bu recorded
2.43 inches since Saturday.
The -, major rain damage
reported to roads along the
Orange Cout today was in ~
Clemente, where mud slides
have periodicatty closed iOme
laHs on·Paclfic CoaatHi1Jlway.
However, the slides were be-
ing cleared and traffic wa1 not
completely stopped at any pplnt.,
pollce sald. ·
The Huntington Beach Public
Works Department reported
some minor Oooding ud said
they are getting ready in case
there's more rain:.
"After ao many days ol rain.
. -.
--the (round won't tako any
more," a spokesman said.
In La1una Beach today.
animal control officers were
working on Bluebird Canyon
Drive to I~ a cat who somehow
got stuck in a storm drain. Tbe
results of that rescue operation
were not available by midD)orn-lng.
In the north county. some
(See RAIN, Page A2)
I 1 AD.other Silo · E91o:tl~; 12 Die
I
7
~ t
1·
/Jig Bear
Cave-in
Kills 1
By The Assoclaled Press
Road crews scraped mud and
heaved boulders oft Southern
California roads today to keep
the highways open, despite a
tropical storm that was expect·
ed to continue dumping rain on
the area through tonight.
But the highway crews met
their match Tuesday night when
the side of a mountain near the
Big Bear resort caved in on a
car carrying lour people from
Norwalk.
Rescuers
~sto~ed
.By:·DU$t
'BANGED MY HEAD'
Cfty Atty. Bonfa
'TRIED TO CHOKE ME'
Deputy Atty. O'Connor
Feruling Attorneys
Clash in Huntington
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol U. 0 ... f PltM 14.eft
A long.standing feud between
two Huntington Beach city at·
torneys broke out into a physical
altercation Tuesday evening.
Deputy City Attorney John
O'Connor said he was attacked
by City Attorney Don Bon!a.
Bonfa said be was attacked by
O'Connor.
Police said both filed cross·
complaints of assault and bat·
tery against each other.
A police department
spokesman said that both com·
EIR Decision
Delayed by OC
Fair Board
Th e Orange County Fair
Board will delay a decision on
an environmental impact report
regarding the lair's $16 million
expansion plan until Jan. 19,
board president Clint Hoose said
today.
The draft EIR has come under
fire from Cos ta Mesa and
Orange Coast College ofticlals
becauae ol a proposal to place a
skateboard park, a recreauon c~ter and food outleta at the
comer ol Arlln8ton Drive and
Fairview Road.
Costa Mesa clty offlclall are
alao coacemed about' lbe falr
board '1 plans to close Vanguard
Way at Fair Drive, thu1
elimlnaUng a shortcut acrou
the west ecad ol the 110-ac:re fall'·
irounds. "We're not tryh11 to ruab. ,an~ through:' aald Home.
who~ that there baa been
little community oppomdoo to the
falr'1apmw!.MtplU.
Tbe etlu•IDllll1I hQect re-pert Wa to laaYe HeD COD•
1'41nd • ~ Dlllal'• hlr ................. Mid
tM .... W •UllHl'J to ecloo .• lllld•••• --tile SIB
plaints would be taken to the
Orange County District Attorney
today. Bonfa said today that O'Con-
nor has been placed upon im·
mediate suspension without pay
and that O'Connor will be fired.
Bonfa first broke news of the
altercation when he called police·
shortly after 6 p.m. There were
no witnesses.
While officers were taking
Bon!a's telephone call, O'Connor
appeared at the station to fil e bis
version of the skirmish. O'Con·
nor said over the telephone loo
day th'at he was sitting in his of·
flee in the fourth floor ot the city'
ball at 5:45 p.m. when the tussle
took place.
"Bon!a tried to choke me. He
tore my shirt and twisted my
neck," O'Connor said.
0 'Connor said that be was
treated at Pacifica Hospital
because of the paln in bis neck.
(See CLASH. Page AZ)
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCB
Clf•OeM• ........
GALVESl'ON, Texas <AP> -
Reseuen due~ the nbWe
of a grain elentclr todQ 1....ttaa
survivcn ol a lbUDderous ex-
plosion that ripped through the
structure, tllffill at least 13
people and lnJarinl 23. Tbe blut
was heard 70 nilles away.
A mall and' a woman were
pulled from beMath-Ole twllted
s teel and hunks of eoncrete
shortly aftef mldnl~bt, but
police said fiVfl m•e people
were believed mluU.,, lllelDdln1
three t.deral cralD wpeeton.
Cbeldn1 eoaerete clu1t and
smoke ............ search effarta,
overeomlal al laat 15 l'elC1le
wor•en. ''Tb-. may be others ln there
and our M8l'eb ~ Oil," said O~==IIJA.J>.~Lad. Inell said •teats
w•re aa tbe ecene in a liailon capacity, primarily to offer
laboratmy ~ ..
AUlWUiliH de1Uned to speculate GD wbM ensed ... blast, tba lecoad explol!on al an
Amerlcan &rain elevator in f'lve
d ays Ao explosion bit an
e levator com,lex In New
Orleans cm "l'liunday. kllliq 34
people, and 1earcbers are still
combing the rubble for a miss·
iDC man.. Tbe cause. of that ex·
plOliOD .... not Meli MtermlDed.
Authoritlel 1ald 1.be blut here
apparently occurred ln a tunnel
that connected the elevator to a
loading· doek. Tw• 1Mps were
unloadlnl iratn .t tb• time but
were towecl away by the Coast
Guanl.
Grain eleotlltm'S Hell as the
mie .at Galvesten contain hllhlY voJaWe grain dust that can If ..
nite and explode from even the
1maUestapark.
State and local police, fearing
other bluta might be trlllered
by a 1Wl-eme&dertng tlre, closed
off the north end of Gal*tao
lslan1S-BLAST, Paae ,U)
•
Pair Still in Jail
Despite Bail Cut
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of •Olltr NllMlll
Tbe 1Jai1 game belng played
aealnst tu baetdrop of a
Newport Be.cla 11H1nler nd the
JligJi fbing_Qrang_e Coast drug
set came down to earthly figures
Tuesday when the eolleetive l>all
set for Alexander. and Elsle
Kulik dropped dramatically.
B y the end of tbe day.
boweftl', 27-year..old Alexander
Kalik was still iD custody pend·
Ing tbe posting ol $1.lS m1ll.len
bail.
Since arrest Oc:t. 22 on heroln
charges-and later linked to the
slaying d Stepbea John Bovan,
Kulik's ball bas ranged .., high
as $6 million.
It was when bis ball stood at
flS0,000 that the key figure Lu
'the ·bizarre murder-drug case
gained notoriety and temporary
freedom by posting that much in
cash.
But Kullt's freedoui was
short-lived when be was re-arr..ied alew weeks later while
hldlng eut In a Lal Cosfa ~
domilllum with b1s then fugitive
wtf e.
Kullk's difficulties '1rith the
law continued to mount when ar· •
resting officials purportedly
found a hen>i.n atasb -valued at
more than $1 million -hidden
in the air cleaoer of a vehicle
parked near the condo.
That discovery led to a f edel'al
m agistrate slapping a $2.S
million hold 0t1 Kulik.
Elsie Kulik was held in
custody oo the same amount of
ball after both she and her
husband were named in a
federal Grand Jury indictment
centering on the heroin stash.
But ~rs. Kulik also obtained
reUel of sorts Tuesday when the
a moUbt of federal bail was re-
duced to $100,000 and her Oran(o
0Me BAIL, P .. e AZ)
Coast
Weather
Chance ol rain decreas•
lng to 50 percent tonight
and 30 pereent Thursday.
Contlnaed cool. Lows
tonlgbt ln mid.SOS. Highs
Thursda1 in low to
mid-eos.
INSDETODAY
lf ,att'N loo1dno for New
Year'• Bw party Jan tcfeal.
tn Food,~Cl,
&•es:
• l.f DA.ll 't' PILOT
Tembl,or
Hits Red
SeaA.rea
By c.be ABsoclaled Presa
An earthquake recistertnf 8 6
on the Richter acaJe atruck in the
Red ~ea today, the U.S.
Geological Survey reported.
"We don't expect any dam,.ie
because of Its location," sotld 4 spokesman ":ir the survey'a N•
tfona l Earthquake InlormaUon
Service at Golden, Colo.
The suvJce said the quake
struck at 17.2 degrees north and
39.9 degrees east, which would
place it between Saudi Arabia
and Ethiopia in the Red Sea
a bout lSS males n o rth of
Asmara, Ethiopia.
The quake hit al 6:45 p.m.
CLASH •••
...,. tokl an ••ttlre)T dif.
( ..........
1-0'CIM!r IMt. Im leper-'
Ul8QMec) ftM .... battered ft)., ti
he said.
.. He grabbed me by the colltr
and tie and banged my head
against the wall. I didn't lay a
finger on tµm," Bonta declared.
"There is ao room for thfs un-
civilised, booUgan type 01
behavior," Bonfasald.
The latest eplsode between the
two men apparently was
touched off by a demand by
O'Connor for Donia to put down
guidelines for criminal prosecu·
tioa pc.Udes.
A source lo the legal depart·
ment said Bonfa refused to do
this, apparently feelinc that
O'Connor was trying lo provoke
a confrontation.
O'Connor said today that he
couJdn 't fathom the reason for
the alleged attack.
.• y , ·'
PST Tuesday, the ser vice said
It said quakes or that magnitud~
have occurred previously in the
Red Sea but that they are not. com mon.
Tb.e Vienna Meteorological
Institute also recorded the
q uake a t 6.6 on the Richter
s cale , and Iran's Tehran
University Geophysics Institute
measured it at 6.8.
"I asked Bonta why he didn't
respond to my request for the
criminal prosecution policy "
O'Connor said ... He came un-
glued." O'Connor s~d &hat Bon·
fa .. bas arms like telel>hone ·
polea and is very strong."
"Something has to be done,"
he said, "the employees are not
safe. I now feel threatened and
insecure and I am /hyaically afraid," O'Connor sai .
The scale is a measure ol
g round motlon as recorded by
seismographs. An Increase of
one on the scale correapoods to a
tenfold increase In magnitude .. A
quake registering 6 can cause
severe damage in a populated area.
Big Canyon
Fire Damage
A.bout $1,200
A Big Canyon woman mJ&bt
h~ve be-en a liUle too neat and
tidy. according to Newport
Deach fireme.n who were called
to her home Tuesday night to put out a garage fire.
Firemen said the blaze, which
did an estimated $1,200 damage
to the garage al 9 Rue de Ville,
apparently got started in a pUe
of fireplace ashes whlch Ignited
a plastic trash can into which
they had been dumped.
The home's occupant, Daken
Broadhead, told firemen she had
cleaned out the fireplace shortly
before she cllicovered the fire at
5:30 p.m.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said the ashes ap-
parently were still hot enough to
ignite the other trash in the
trash can.
.. We suggest that when clean-
in g out fireplaces, ashes be put
rnto metal containers with a lid
and then put outside," Morton·
said.
.. Or they make good compost
ror the garden. Just don't put
them into plast1c trash cans that
have other trast-in them."
From Page Al
Bonfa said that h e waa
grabbed by O'Connor when Bon·
fa tried to leave bis ortice. "I
tried to get out the door and
O'Connor .slammed it," Bonta said.
··1 told him to take his hands
oft me. I said what are you go-
ing to do, rut me?
''He (O'Connor) said maybe I
should, I can't atand you," Bon·
fa alleged.
Donia &aid be eventually went
to hia oftice and locked lbe door and called police.
O'Connor and Bonfa have been
feuding al.nee Bonfa wrote a
performance evaluation critical
of O'Connor in December or
1974.
O'Connor contended that the
evaluation was not really a
performance evaluation but
was an abusive diatribe. ' .
The dis pute proceeded
through city grievance pro·
cedures.
Bon!a was directed to remove,
portions ol the evaluation from
O'Connor•s files by. the city's personnel board.
Most ol the evaluation was al-
lowed to stand, however. and
O'Connor wu given a chance to
rebut statements and enter them
in his tile.
E'ro• Page Al
BLAST ••.
"ll 's still a dangerous situa-
tion," fire Chier Hugh O'Don·
oboe said.
The facility includu 40 silos·
and has a capacity of 3.5 million
bushels of grain.
The force of Tuesday night's
blast at lbe Farmer's Export
Grain Co., which was heard 10
miles away, tore two gaplr.g
holes in the side of the 13-story
main ~levator.
Automobile·sized chunks of FAIR •••
a sucressful ccurt challeng~
would be necessary to block the
fair'g expansion plans, which in-.
elude construction of a 3 000 seat
a mphitheater and 'a new.
equestrian center.
.. concrete were thro"-n more.than
200 fefl. and a railroad switch
engind was twisted into a tangle
of steel. Windows were shat-
t ert'd a mile away in the
downtown !lection of this port cl·
ty or 65,000 about so miles
soutbeutof Houston.
The fair board wltt still hold a
regular meeting Thursday at 7
p.m. in the fairgrounds ad·
mlni1tr1Uon building. Hoose
said the main order or business
will ho conslderaUon of the fafr's
J 978 budget.
Iran Meetings
TEHRAN, iran CAP> -Ptesl·
dent Carter will hold separate
mfftlngs with Shah Mohammed
Rcra Pahlavi and Jordan's King
Husse"' tn Iran this weekend,
lran~an t'fffclals sald to4ay.
lreaaan newspapers reported
that a prime topic ol dllcuulon
for both meetings will be Middle·
East peace diplomacy.
I
DAILY PILOT
"I saw a flash go up and then
tb!re was a big concussion,"
aa1d a security guard at Todd
Shipyards, about a half mile
from the facility. "A blg glob of
fire spread over the lop of the
building across the way and
soon small fires grew into one
massive flame."
• Barbara Agraves, 30, who
live.' about six blocks from the
site. said: "I wu talking on the tel~Clru.'..and all or the sudden
the house went straight up in the
air and ptoppeq back down. It
broke most of the wlndpw.s and
knocked out every light in the
l>lace."
Don McCoy. a spokesman for John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo-'
pie wtte treated at the hospital
fOI' bums. Two were listed ln
critical condition.
West Newport
Home Burgled
A West Newport man, wtio lert
his home loaed -wilb the ex·
eeptlon of ooe aoor-rettu'1\ed.
. from bis boUclll1 weekend to tmd
We't'a luld taken two sets ol
foll ~hdlf anc\ h1a stereo. Police
aaS4 tbe baraJara probabl1 •ot tn ·t.b!W.ii the ~cUAJ 11aat doOc' wbl~la the occupant. Ore•
JofutlOD, 3'. hect to 1 .. ve •· ·tockfld becaase tbe Jock wall broken. . ..
Jobnloe ..Umated the Yalue ot tll• alltfn.I ltema ~ '1.0TS Sn
a rtport 'flied" Toe1dli1 w1th
pollce.
'j .. ,
Otll' l'li.t Sllll ,.,_.
E.ighte~n-year·old Mich ael Winn tried a test walk for his
high wir~ act al Knott"s Berry Farm Tuesday when a
heavy ram squall struck. Spectators ran for cover Winn
backed down off the wire to safely. All's well tha·l ends
well.
Avalon Reservoir
Empty After Rain
Jn spite of the fact that more ·
than lwo inches of rain has
fall~n <'n Avalon, the parched
residents of ~t · a Is land·
have not got a ater in their
empty reser voir ay.
A spokesman for the Southern
Ca~ifornia Edison Company,
which handles all utilities for the
island, said the rain that bas
been Calling there since Satur-
day bas all soaked into the
ground.
"There has been no runoff.
None al all," the spokesman commented.
Rainfall at the Avaton Harbor
Department oUice was recorded
at 2.36 inches for the storm. At
Middle Ranch. in the interior of
the island near the reservoir
ra infall was 1.26 inches for th~
storm, making the December
total 1.80 inches.
T he Edison spokesman said
the company iB encouraeed that
the rainfall may indicate an end
to the dr,'\.la?ht and an eventual
filling of the is1and 's reser voir.
"Last year at this time. we'd
only had a total of . 74 inches."
t he spokesman said.
* * * * * * Fro• Page Al
RAIN SOAKS COAST. • •
local floodina was reported in lrict was also affected bv the
Brea, which received 1l beavy ra;n, ~ith building delayt!d one
4.2 Inches from th.-'lto:-m. day for each day of rain. l'ther
Disneyland had tt' (fose early school dastr1cts reported thllt
Monday but stayed opeb WJ mid· buildings under coMtruction are
night Tuesday. a spokesman already roofed and were not at.
said. He said atteoduce was off fected.
slightly but that cuct figures The downpour was we!comed
are not •"allablo unW tbe end of by farmers and firefighters
lbe aeucn.. ncross the. coast.
Knott'• Berry Farm reported A itancho Mission Viejo
no tatloff in atteodance. "The spokesman tenne<! lt a ••million·
rain really doesn't seem to fue dollar rain." He said a storm
people too much," a spokesman total of 1.7 inches hu beer. ,...
aald. corded on the ranch and Is
Jntonnation on Lion Country leaclung out the salts caused by
Safari waa not available early irrigation.
today. .. However, an Irvine Ranch
The Soutbern California spokesman said, "It's just leas·
Edlaoo Company reported no ing the devil out of us." He said
me,Jor blackouts In t.be past 24 at least two more inches are
hours. · needed for any lontterm good.
However, a spokesman :· A apokesmin for the Oranie
warn.ct tblt men .taln allgbt af.. Cowity Flft.State Forestry at.a·
feet u.nderpoaad vaulu. i!· tlon salcl that alt.boutb the nre
ttonn .._baek11p. sea.on doesn't off1clall.Y e.nd Wl· The Pdtc Telephone Com· tll Dec. 31, "We've dosed· our
pal'J al•ft rtpor\ed no rain wUdland fire staUoni and laid
damqe IN\ wind ... ca~ orr seasonal ~et.
aomt' f!elayed dial tones. ..We're not. Colnf io "a\"e any
'1&:2ot trafftc accldut.s were more problem&. We've ••d
report«' all alon1 the coast, but enou&b ra1n to iet the 1rai•
a traff'le fatallty ln Newport growlnl and bring everyt.hing ~acb wu aUtlbutod to a faulty back to llle ouf t.here."
•l•n•I llfht, not uln, poUu
sald. Motorilta were cautioned •
to allow utra Ume and drive FJR lned~te careftallJ.
i., 10akll ~. wlMre !.ale LOS ANGELa CAP) -A
llbtloo vteJo NH a.I Inches· Superior Court Jud•• 18'9 an dviq tbe ,.., a ._., dllay en•lrOGllMDlal atildJ prepared
ta balldl111 • cottdomJ•hnn '' tbree el"-J.liltehlted la llaJ-jM"Ojectw•,...aned. • in1 the BoU1WOod·Burballlt
TIM Ciairdova lcboOl ilia of ... Airport 11 ildequte Nd prob-
Caplatrmo Uldft .. 8ebool t>li.-ablJWANl'tn.Mede_d.
•{ •
$2.8111111•~
Court Reverses
MaheuD -es
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The 9lh•U.S. Court ol Appeals toda,y
revers.ed .the '2.8 million
damage award given Robert
Maheu again.st Summa Corp. tor
def amatory .statements made by
the late Howard Hughes.
In a ..O.pa# decision, it re-
veraed and sent back for a new
trial part of a U.S. District Court
judgment handed down in Los
Angeles Dec. 24, 1974.
But It alflrmed part of the
lower court's order which grant.
ed Sumrna about. $470,000 plus
accrued interest on its claim
against Maheu. ·•we have bo choice but to re·
verse the judgment on the
ground that the trial court's one.
sided characterization of Maheu
came close to directing a verdict
in h1s favor, thus denying Sum·
ma a fair trial," said the court.
The judge was referrinr to the
comment made by U.S. District
Coui:t Ju~~ Harry Pregerson to
the Jury prior to its retiring for
deliberations.
The appellate court said
Pregerson described Maheu as
'·affable, intelligent, Im·
aginative. a rticulate ... a
friendly man wtth important
friends in high places," and "a
man of enormous energy and
drive" with the "ability to get
things done." '
On Dec. 5, 1970, Hughes dls·
charged Maheu, endin& a 14·
year relationship. Maheu filed
suit in Nevada to retain his poel-
Uon, claiming Hugh.es bad been
c oerced into firing ·him or
someoaeelaeordered it. ·
Late ln 1971, a major publlaher
announced plans to publish a
Hughes autobiography
E'ro• Page Al
BAIL ••.
County bail dropped from
$250,000 to $150,000, meaning it
wi ll take $250,000 to free her .
from jaH.
During the day, Mr's. Kulik
a lso came up with an attorney of
her own.
Until then, both Kuliks were
represented by fiery Sal1 Diego
a uorney Phillip DeMassa.
Tuesday, however, John
Tremblatt becam e the attorney
of record for Mn. Kulik
Like her husband and now six
others. she is named in the
Grand Jury indictment covering
Bo van's shooting death outside a
Newport Beach restaurant.
However, the number or de·
fendants in the case dropped by
one las t week when Roy
Christopher Richard, 28, who
was once head of the Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna temple,
agreed to become a prosecution
witness in return for immunity
from prosecution.
Both Kuliks are being held in
the federaJ Metropolitan Correc·
tional Center in San Diego.
Like their co-defendants, they
are slated to appear In Orange
County Superior Co urt on J an. 23
to face trial on the murder
charges.
The ?JllY suspect remaining at
large-1s Joseph Fedorowski a
one-time business partner' of
Ri chard and Kulik.
purportedly based upon personal
inttrvlewa with lbe billionaire
by CUlrord Irving.
To eatabUsb Utat lrvinr'a book
was not autbenUc, Hughes ar-r~nged a telephone news con-
ference Oft Jan. 7, urn from the
Bahamas to newsmen in Los
Anreles.
The court said during tbi~
news conference Hughes was·
asked why Maheu was ttred and
answered In part "Becat0e he's
a no.good, dishonest son of a
bitch, and be stole me blind."
The statements he made, the '
court said, form the basis for the
suit. Summa admitted the de-
f amatory statement was made
' by Hughes and assumed legal
responsibility for it. Summa re-
lied solely upon the defense of
truth aod it assumed the burden
o( proving truth.
The court noted Hutbes had
become an eccentric, would not
appear in any court and "Maheu
knew that Hughes would not
testify and he took advanta~e of this. to him, happy situation.
T he jury first returned a
verdict in the liability phase then
subsequently awarded damages.
Part of the award to Summa
was made by the trial judge.
The appeal court n oted
Maheu's credibility "was the
crucial factor in the whole case.
Time after time tbe resolution of
a critical factual issue came
down to a c hoice be tween
Mah eu's version and either
direcUy contrary testimony by
other witnesses or by Maheu
himself ... "
The court said the judge's
comment on Maheu "was not a
carefully baJanced appraisal ot
the volumi nous conflicting.
ev id e nce, or of Maheu 's
credibility ... "
"While that description may
have been accurate, not all the
evidence supported that view.·
Yet, the only negative traits
which the court mentioned were
thaJ. Maheu was "talkative,.
so mewhat naive, artless, care~
less, imprecise," the decision
said.
Fro• Page Al
CAVE-IN ••.
Road crews worked feverishly, '
in >\lhambra to hold up a section!
of Mission Road that was col-
lapsing as rainwater and runoff
from a broken pipeline un-
dermined the soggy earth
beneath it.
Scheuren Road in Malibu was
closed temporarily Tues day
while crews hacked away at a
giant boulder that tumbled down
a hillside and blocke<! traffic.
The Southern California
Automobile Club received 600
calla an hour from stranded
motorists and handled 8,000 calls
by the end or the day Tuesday.
The normal number ls about
3.200, said spokes man Dick
Roodzant.
Although J.he storm made a
m ajor dent in South e r n
California 's drought, the rain
fell more lightly in the northern
half of the state, where the
drought has been more serious.
Former ~ General John Mitchell. rl&bt1 leave$ the federal prilOD cainp at Ma"well Air Force Bue in
Mo11taomer1. Ala .• today on a medical f\lrlough. At left
is Ira DeMenlt who wu U.S. attorney in Montgomery
.·
when Mitchell was attorney 1eneral. ·
I
I
1
•
SaddlebaCk Mteraoon
N.Y. Stoeka
I. VOL. 70, NO. 362, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 19n
'BANGED MY HEAD'
City Atty. Bonfa
BB Attorneys Clash
By ROBERT BARKEA Of_.,...Pf ... fteff
A long-standing feud between
two HunUngtoo Beach city at-
torneys broke out into a physical
altercation Tuesday evening.
Deputy City Attorney John
O'Connor said he was attacked
by City Attorney Don Bonfa. ·
Bonfa said he was attacked by
O'Connor.
Police said both filed cros~
complaints or assault and bat·
tery against each other.
A poUce department
spokesman said that both com·
plaints would be taken to the
Orange County District Attorney
today.
Bonra said today th~t O'Con·
nor has been placed upon im-
m ediate suspension without pay
and that O'CoMor will be fired.
Bonfa first broke news of the
a lte rcaUoo when he called police
shortly after 6 p.m . There were
no witnesses.
While omcers were taldng
Bonfa's telephone call, O'CoMOr
appeared at the station to file his
version of the skirmish. O'Con·
nor said over the telephone to-
day that he was sitting in bis of·
fice in the fourth floor of the city
hall at 5:45 p.m. when the tussle
took place.
"Bonfa tried to choke me. He
tore my shirt and twisted my
neck," O'Connor said.
0 'Connor said that he was
treated at Pacifica Hospital
because of the pain in his neck.
Bonfa told an entirely dif-
ferent version.
"O'Connor lost his temper and
assaulted me and battered me,·~
he said.
''He grabbed me by the collar
and tie and banged my head
against. the wall. I didn't lay a
finger on him," Bonfa declared.
•'There is no room for this un-
civilized , hooligan type of
behavior," Bonfa said.
The latest episode between the
two men apparently w as
touched off by a demand by
O'Connor for Bonra to put down
guidelines for criminal prosecu·
lion policies.
A source in the legal depart·
ment said Bonra refused to do
this, appa,renlly. feeling that
0 'Connor was trying to provoke
a confrontation.
O'Connor said today that he
couldn't fathom the reason for
the alleged attack.
"I asked Bon!a why be didn't
respond to my request for the
criminal prosecution policy," . .
O'Connor said. "He came un-~
glued." O'Connor said that Bon·
fa "has arms like telephone
poles and is very strong."
• 'SomeUUng bas t.o be done,"
he said, "the emptoyees are not
safe. I now feel threatened and
insecure and I am physically
afraid," O'Connor said.
Bonfa said that he was
grabbed by O'Connor when Bon·
fa tried to leave his office. "I
tried to get out the door and
O'Connor slammed it," Bonfa
said.
"I told him to take his hands
o(( me. I said what are you go-
ing to do, hit me?
"He (O'CoMor) said maybe I
shQuld, I can't stand you," Bon·
fa alleged.
Bonfa said he eventually went
to his office and locked the door
<See CLASH, Page A2)
'TRIED TO CHOKE ME'
Deputy Atty. O'Connor
Another Silo Explodes; 9 Dead
Lively Beat
SC Mortuary Swings
THE SWINGING SOUNDS of Jive band music
that prompted a San Clemente resident to complain
to police Tul·~day came from an unlikely s pot -the
Lesneski Mortuary.
Mr. Lesneski, contacted by police officers, did
net seem inclined to h ave his son and fellow band
members slop their playing, the police Jog recorded.
T HE COMPLAINING PARTY did not choose to
sign a formal complaint, so there was nothing to do,
police said, but let the music continue at the flineral
home.
Toro .Housing Unit
:Destroyed by Fire
Fire d~lroyed three r~ms of an El Toro Marine Cor: s Air
,Station family housing u it early
Wednesday and sent a Marine to U}e base dispensary for smoke·
Reduced Bail I .. ·
1 llasn't Helped . . .
Kulik Couple
·, By GARY GRANVILLE
Of .. o.+ty l'iMt Staff
The bail game being played
against the b ackdrop of a
Newport Beach murder and the
!Ugh flying Orange Coast drug
set came down to earthly figures
Tuesday when \he collective bail
set for Alexander and Elsie
Kulik dropped dramatically.
B y the end of the day.
h9wever, 27-year·old Alexander
·Kulik was still in custody pend-
·lng the posting or $1.lS milllon
:bat I.
Since arrest Oct. 22 on heroin
:charges and l_aier linked to the
'!Slaying or St~en J ohn Bovan,
Xullk's bail has ranged as high
as $6 million.
· · It .was when his bail stood at
$750,000 that the key figure in
\be bizarre murder-drug case
. pined notoriety and temporary
freedom by posting that. much in
ca.ab.
• But Kulik'a freedom was
abort-lived when be was re-
. arrested a few weeks later while
: biding out in a La Costa con-
. OOminium with bis then fugitive ·wife.
Kulik's dilficultiea with the
law continued to mount when ar-
• restlng o((icials purportedly
·found a heroln ata.ab-vahaed at
more tban St mlWOll -blddetl · 1tl the a1r cleaner of a vehicle ~ed near U.con~ 'hat dl*°9ery led co • hdtnl
tn•1l1trate alappln• a f2.5
'1Dllllon hold on le\lllk. . •
-·1Jtlll• Kulik wH held In taMOdy Cll tbe....,. amout ol
lrell •lt•r bctth 1he and ber
hw t bend were nlmea tn a
federal Grand Jury lndlctmeftt
etpterinf °" the heroin atnh.
Of< • .Btat Mrs. ICGUk alao obtatned ~tef ol IOHI Tuffday wben ~ euDt Of tlid4ihl ball w .. ~
tkl to tiao.• 8Dd be!' Oraqe aty It~~ dropped from
................... tt ~ taMP,•to ·,_ ...
• .. ... ~Al)'
inhalation treatment.
A Marine Corps spokesman
said the 12:05 a.m. blaze also re-
sulted ln smoke damage to .the
unit's other two rooms and
water damage to an adjoining
unit In the Courplex.
Residents Sgt. Juan N. Car-
rillo Velazquez, his wife and
their three children escaped the ·home without inj ury, the
spokesman said. However, Cpl.
Stephen R. Harper or \he same
Whe rry-type housing tract
owned by the government, was
overcome by smoke when he
stopped to aid in fire-lighting ac-
tivlty ~
The Marine Corps spokesman
said cause or the fire is sUU un-
de r investigation and that an
estimate or damage is still un·
available.
Three Marine Corps fire-
fighting units responded to the
earl y-morning blaze, the
spokesman said, and an Orange
County Fire Department
spokesman said that while coun-
ty units were standing by, none
was ordered into action.
Woman Strangled
SAN FRANC1$CO <AP> -The
body of a young woman who bad
been strangled was found dis-
ca rd ed in a v4cant lot on
Potrero Hill. police said today.
The unidentified woman bad
been strangled wltb a wire,
police said.
Florida.Hit
By Freeze
Partial
Clearing
Forecast
By JACKIE H VMAN •
Ol llM D•llY Pllol Stall
Partial clearing is forecast for
Thursday in a storm that has
dumped between an inch and 6. 7 inches or rain on various parts
of Orange County, the National
Weather Servke said today.
The rains caused no major
damage, local officials reported,
but were blamed for numerous
minor traffic accidents and have
affected construction projects and attendance at arnuseJDent
parks, They also reportedly had
.an unpleasant effect on a cat
stuck in a Laguna Beach storm
drain today.
Most officials and farmers
said the rains were welcome.
But that picture could change if
another storm the weather
bureau is watching of( the
Washington coast heads this
way Friday, bringing more rain.
The Orange County Harbor
Department recorded 1.02 in·
ches of rain for the storm in
Newport Beach. Orange County
Flood Control District figures to-
day r ange from 1.38 inches in
Santa Ana to 6. 7 inches at San-
tiago Peak.
In Laguna Beach, Bill Shields
of Laguna Beach Hardware re-
ported a storm total or 1.17 in·
ches today.
1'be weather service said Los
Angeles rainfall totalled 2.7S in·
ches, bringing the season..'s total
to 5.96 inches. Normal rainfall at
this time is 4.41 inches. Parched
Catalina Island has recorded
2.63 inches since Saturday.
<See RAIN, Page A2)
* * *
o.ltf ........... ......
UNDETERRED av JlAlN, MAN AND O()G>-"1T~A<111K .. 1!1-t1Ml9j0~R1t1N ... ING-Rtm
Lawrence Dobbin And Sham Don't Mind Molature On Newland
Man Killed in Cave-in
Road Creia Work to Clear Storm's Debris
By 1be Associated Preas
Road crews scraped mud ~d
heaved boulders off Southern
Calitornia roads today to keep
the J>ighways open, despite a
tropical storm that was expect·
ed to continua dumpln& r~ on
· the area through tonight.
But the highway crews met
tbelr match Tuesday night when
the s ide of a mountain near the
Bia Bear resort caved in on a
* * *
car carrying four people from
Norwalk.
Carl' John Monaunl, 48, was
killed, officials said, adding that
bis fiancee, Donna Lee Burnett,
32, the driver, was hospitalized
at Redlands Com niunlty
Hospital along with her two
sons, Lawrence, 11, ind Erik, 8.
"It'll take 12 hours to clear the
road, more if the bad weather
continues,•• said California
* * * Avalon Reservoir
Emptf After-Raii;t ·
Rainl.all at tile Avalon.Harbor.
Departta• alftce Wat r~rded.
at 2.36 1ndles for the storm . At Ml~llancb, In tM interior ol . th., I• near the Hlel'Volt,
ra1nf a "8 1,af Ulcbes fior the
, storm. ~ tbe Decem"r
total 1.80~.
Tbe ld1IM apoketinan aald
the como-1 LI eneouraced that
tbe raJ.ntalJ1may indicate an end
to 1't dl'Wlht and an evatual . M1!ic Of the~·· ..... rvo1.r. •1,~ at.' dala Um•. we'd . 4*li • tCUI at .7' ~ ..
... ~~Hl4. •
Highway Patrol officer James
Roberts.
A CHP sp0keswoman said,
"The whole side of the mountaln
came down on Highway 38 near
Angelus Oaks," 20 miles
northeast of RecllandlJ. '"'It just
burled the car."
The winding road through the
San Bernardino Mountains
would remain closed between
Big Bear and Forest Falls Road
until the rock.slide was cl~ared,
RoberU said.
He also reported Highway 39
In the San Gabriel Mountains
was clOled from Crystal Lake
north to its function with State
Route 2 because of buardous
driving conditlons.
Hi&hway 41,in &an Lula Ohta~
COWllY· and Sturgis Roacl acrou
the fiatla.ftds near O,xnard ki
Ventura Cowity were closed, ac-
COl'dhlg,to a CHP 1pokea1'0man.
San Bernardino sheriff's dep.
p tM!a blamed ratn.loosene<J
ahale and rock for the death
· TuQday of a 19-yeu-olcl .t,.ong
Beach cirl cllmbina a wa_tedall
near Mount Baldy.
Tammy Cook died wblle
nearby hil(en clawed for five
• minutet at a pile of roc:U that
burled her in the llict.' . Hu U>year-old brother. Todd. ... ,..,... ....... Ooedttklo
• at Saa A.nt09Jo Oom••Dlt.1
<8eeCAVMN. ~All
?
Rescuers
Slowed
.
By Dust
GALVESTON, Texas CAP > -
Rescuers dug through the rubble
of a grain elevator today seeking
survivors of a thunderous ex-
plosion that ripped through the
structure, killing at least nine
people and injuring 23. The blast.
was beard 70 miles away.
A man and a woman were
pullect from beneath the twisted
steel a1'd hunks or concrete
shortly after midnight, but
police nld seven more people •
were believed missing, including
three federal grain inspectors.
Choking concrete dust and
smoke hampered search efforts,
overcoming at least 15 r escue
workers.
"There m ay be others in there
and our search goes on," said
Galveston Police Lt. D. K. Lack.
FBI spokesmen said agents
were on the scene in a liaison
capacity, prima rily to offer
laboratory assistance.
Authorities declined to
speculate on what caused the
blast, the second explosion at an
Amer ican grain elevator in five
days. An explosion hit a n
elevator complex in New
Orleans oo Thursday, killing 34
people, and searchers are still
combing the rubble for a miss·
ing man. The cause oC that ex·
plosion has not been determined.
Authorities s aid the blast here
apparently occurred in a tunnel
that connected the elevator to a
loading dock. Two ships were
unloading grain at Ufe tlrne tfut
were towed away by the Coast
Guard.·
Grain elevators such as the
one at Galveston contain bigbly
volatile grain dust that ·can ig-
nite and explode from even the
smallest spark.
State and local police, fearing
other blasts might be triggered
by a still-smoldering fire, closed
off the north end or Galveston
Island.
"It's still a dangel'Ous situa•
tlon," (ire Chief Hugh O'Don·
oboe said.
The facllity Includes 40 silos and bas a capacity of 3.S milliOQ
buahels of grain.
(See BLAST. Pace A.2)
Coast
Weather
Chance oC rain decreas-
ing to 50 percent tonight
and 30 J)etcent Thursday.
Continue d cool. Lows
tonight in mid·SOs. Highs
Thursday in low to mld~.
IN811tE TeDA Y
I/' p 're Jooldn{I. for Nev>
Year'• Eoe parlJI Jar• ideal,
Hf.Food, Poof Cl. ·
-~-....... BURIED BY RUBBLE IN ELEVATOR EXPLOSION
Rescue ~orkers Pull Woman From Wreckage
6.6Temblor
Hit,s Red Sea;
No Damages
By the Associated Press
An earthquake registering 6.6
on the Richter scale struck in the
Red Sea today, the U.S.
Geological Survey reported.
. ..We don't expect any damage
because of its location," said a
spokesman for the survey's Na.
t1onal Earthquake Information
SC'rvice al Golden, Colo.
The sernce said the quake
:-truck at 17.2 degrees north and
39.9 de~n~<'1' east, which would
place it lx-lwecn Saudi Arabia
and Ethiopia in the Red Sea ,
a bout 155 miles north of
Asmara, Ethiopia.
The quake hit at 6 :45 p.m.
PST Tuesday, the service said.
lt said quakes of that magnitude
have occurred previously in the
Red Sea but that they are not common.
The Vienna Meteorological
Institute also recorded the
quake at 6.6 on the Richter
s cale, and Iran's Tehran
• University Geophysics Institute
measured it at 6.8.
The scale is a measure of
ground motion as recorded by
seismol'?raphs. An increase of
one on the scaJe corresponds to a
tenfold increase in magnitude. A
quake registering 6 can cause
severe damage in a populated area.
MV Organizes
Parent Group
A new chapter of Parents
Anonymous, a natiQnaJ self help
group for people who find it dif·
ficult to control what could be
~busive behavior toward their
children, is being formed in Mis· ·
s ion Viejo.
The group's first meeting has
been scheduled al 8 a.m. Tues·
day, Jan. 3, in the P.resbyterian
Church of the Master, at
Marguerite and Oso parkways.
Ira Gorman, diredor of Fami-
ly Conciliation Services, and
l,.inda Booklns, ·director of
Problem Talk Shop, will lead the
new group which requires no
fees.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 492·TALK or
894-4.242.
Damages Sought
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The
grain elevator explosion that
killed at least 34 people last
week has produced its first
damage suit -one seeking $2 9
million lot a critically burn~. s urvivor. .
DAILY PILOT
•• •
Fro.. Page Al
BLAST •.•
The force of Tuesday night's
blast flt the Farmer's Export
Grain Co., which was heard 70
miles away, tore two gaping
holes in the side of the l3·story
main elevator.
Automobile-sized chunks of
concrete were thrown more than
200 feet and a railroad switch
engine was twisted into a tangle
of steel. Windows were shat·
tered a mile away in the
downtown seetion of this port ci·
ty of 65,000 about 50 miles
southeastofHouston.
"I saw a flash go up and then
there was a big concussion,"
s aid a security guard at Todd
Shipyards, about a half mlle
from the facility. "A big glob of
fire spread over the top o( the
building across the way and
soon small fires grew into one
massive name." 1
Barbara Agraves, 30, who
lives about six blocks from the
site, said: "I was talking on the
telephone and all or the sudden
the house went .. traigbt up in the
air and plopped back down. It
broke most or the windows and
knocked out every light in the
place."
Don McCoy, a spokesman for
John Sealy Hospital, said 23 peo-
ple were treated at the hospital
for bums. Two were listed in
critical condition.
Fro•PageAJ -BAIL ••.•
from jail.
During the day, Mrs. Kulik
also came up with an attorney of
her own.
Until then, both Kuliks were
represented by fiery San Diego
attorney Phillip DeMassa.
Tuesday, however, Jo"n
Tremblatt became the attorney
of record for Mrs. Kulik.
Like her husband and now six
others)...she is named in the
Grand Jury indictment covering
Bovan'sshooting death outside a
Newport Beach restaurant.
However, the number of de-
fendants in the case dropped by
one last week when Roy
Cbristopb,er Richard, 28, who
was once head of the Laguna
Beach Hare Krishna t emple,
agreed to become a proseeution
witness in return for immunity
from prosecution.
Both Kullks are being held in
the federal Metropolil!en Correc-
tional Center in San Diego. . I
Like their co·defendant.s, they
are slated to appear in Orange
County Superior Court on Jan. 23
to face trial on the murder charges.
The only suspect remalning at
large is Joseph Fedorowak.i, a
one-time business partner of
Richard and Kulik.
Carter Tells
Party Choice
WA81DNGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Carter named John White,
a 1hrewd and tresarlOUt Teun.
today as hi.I choice to nm tho
debt-ridden Democratic Party
uc1 told blm u.e upeom1.na eon· sresalGDal e1eet1on , .... 1ri11 be "a 1ooct c::ballqe ...
can. met~ White, 4epat;J secretary of acrtculture, nd Kenneth Curt.Lt. Who it qutttiea
at paf11 bou, in Ute OYal Oftlte
at tbe White ffous4). Tbe prelf.
dent lhook bands With both men.
Be Ulu.ked Curtla for bl1
MrYta to the part7, and C\IJ'tit,
a formet pernor of Maine.
ttpUed: 1"111at 100. I've •· jOftcl k ...., 1119eb. •• cuter told
,"'*e be.llPPnct.atell Ida lffons
at .... ~·J>epUun....... .,,. ~.•)Ob).Wtll be
•Sood ....... bl lhj f\it.un.0
Th• GnJy IQjor l'ahl damqe
reported to road• aloni tbe
Oran1• Cout today w• lD San
Clemente, where mud alldes
have periodlcally closed some
Janes on Pacific Coast Highway.
However. tbe slides were be·
Ing cleared and traffic was not
completely slopped et any point,
police said.
The Huntington Beach Public
Works Department reported
some minor flooding and said
they are getting ready in cue
there's more rain.
••After so many days of rain,
lhe ground won't take any
more," a spokesman 1ald.
Jn Laguna Beach today.
a nimal control officers were
working on Bluebird Canyon
Drive to free a cat who somehow
got stuck Jn a storm drain. The
results or that rescue operation
~ere not available by midmorn·
tng.
In the north county, some
local floodJng was reported in
Brea, whlch received a heavy
4.2 inches frbm the storm.
Disneyland had to close early
Monday but stayed open tlU mid·
night Tuesday, a spokesman
said. He said attendance was off#
slightly but that exact figures
are not available until the end of the season.
Knoll's Berry Farm reported
no f allolf in attendance. "The
r ain really doesn't seem to faze
people too much," a spokesman
said.
Information on Lion Country
SaCarl was not available early today.
The Southern California
Edison Company reported no
major blackouts in the past 24
hours.
However, a s pokesman·
warned that more rain might af.
feet underground vaults, it
storm drains back up.
The Pacific Telephone Com·
pany also reported no rain
damage but wind wu causing
some delayed dial tones.
Minor traffic accidents were
reported all along the coast, but
a traffic fatality in Newport
Beach was attributed to a faulty
signal light, not rain, police
said. Motorists were cautioned
to allow extra time and drive
carefully.
In Mission Viejo, where Lake
Mission Viejo rose 2.S inches
during the rain, a week's delay
in building a condominium .Project was reported.
The Cordova School site of the
Caplatrano Unified School Dis·
trict was also affected by the
rain, with buJlding delayed· one
day for each day of rain. Other
school dlstrlcts reported that
buildings under construction are
already roofed and were not af.
lected.
The downpour was welcomed
by farmers and firefighters
across the coast.
A Rancho Mission Vi(!jo
s pokesman termed it a "million.
dollar rain." He said a storm
total or 1.7 inches bas been re.
corded on the ranch and is
leaching out the salts caused by
irrigation.
However, an Irvine Ranch spokesman aa.ld, "It's just teas-
ing the devil out of us." He said
at least two more inches are
needed for any longterm good.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Fire-State Forestry sta-
tion said that although the fire
season doesn't officially end un·
tll Dec. 31," "We've closed our
wildland fire stations and Jaid
oft seasonal personnel.
"We're not.goiq to have any
more problems. We've had'
enough rain to get ~e grass
growing and bring everything
back to li!e out there."
U.S. Weapons
Blasted Again
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union bas renewed its criticism
of U.S. armaments and waroed
that deployment of the cruise
missile or neutron bomb in
forward bases of Western
Europe would endanser future
arms &greement.9.
"Neither cn&lle mtaalles nor
neutron bombe nor new types ~
weapon can lntimldate the So-
viet Union," the Commwmt Par-
t)' newspaper Pravda Hid Tues·
day.
It aald 1f aucb weapons are
deployed at U.S. bases in
Europe or with European allies,
the Soviet UniOll would have the rlght to inject the issue into
future arm1 talks because lt
would be vuloerable to attack
from these bases.
link Probed
· 1n Slaying.
SAN DIEOO <AP) -Poul\ile
couecttoN between the beatJnc
deaths of a ~rear-old San . Dlero boy fOQJ' montfli aao and'
of hle 20-year.old motber ..... c
body WQ found Jl'riday aro be-
tn1 probld by •berta'• bomlttde ~u ....
DUbetb Am Bet.It Mel been fl"ff OD "5,GOO tioiid AW<tna
tn&I OD eMrilil of ......... ..a·
murdertal"_ .. la'er 1011~ .8fii•"'1
'Michael Heldt, a ••erllf'a .,...,.Nici lfaiidq.
'
°""""' ......... NOEL ARRIVED LATE -BUT IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS
Appalooea Fiiiy I• 'Prettier than Her Momma'
Rejoice Noel
Filly Foaled/or Yule
Noel was a month overdue when she arrived Christmas
mornin~ in a Laguna Beach stable -a purebred black Ap-
pallosa filly. born on a bed or straw and wanned by her mother's breath. .
"I found her when I came out to the stable at 3 o'clock Clb
Christmas momfog," said Eva Leslie. ''She wu about ball ao
hour old. Her mother had given birth without help and with no
complications."
Miss Leslie lives at the Lazy Creek Saddle Club, 20491
Laguna Laguna Canyon Road, where she oversees operations at
the riding stables owned by her mother, Sally Leslie.
The filly's first sight pa&t her mother's solicitously prodding
nose may have ,been of Christmas decorations put up in an·
ticipation of her arrival by the Leslie family.
"She was due a month ago," s.Ud Miss Leslie, "but we
alw3ys said she would come for Christmas."
The filly 's birth is the result of an accident, but the chance
mating of a stallion running loose and a mare used for riding
lessons has produced a possible show horse.
"She's a real beauty -prettier than her momma," said
Miss Leslie. Besides, she comes with Christmas blessings.
Student Stabbed
Three Men Charged
In Irvine Assault
By PIULIP ROSMARIN
Of U. O.tly l'tt.t ii.ft
Misdemeanor charges were
filed Tuesday against three
Irvine carpenters in connection
with an Oct. 28 assault upon
• three UC Irvine students, one ot
whom was stabbed with a
broken beer bottle.
Victor G. Labrecque, 20
James E. Reisinger, 21, and
Michael E. Egan, 19, are
scheduled to enter pleas to the
charges at an arraignment Jan.
10 in Harbor MunicJpal Court.
Labrecque was charged with assault with a deadly weapon;
Egan was charged with assault.
and battery; each of the three
were charged with disturbing
the peace by fighting in a public
place.
IC convicted, Labrecque would
face up to a year in jaJl, Egan up
to six months, and Reisinger up
to90days.
Tbe charges stem from an al·
legedly one-sided fight f n the
parking lot "Of an lrvlne liquor
a tore.
The victims. students Ron
Cruz, Ernesto Lopez and Juan
Nunez, claim they were going
about their business at the store
when they were accosted by
three men who chased them into
the Partioa lot.
They aald they were
cballenged to fipt and when
they refused. Nune,: was stabbed in the cheat with a broten bottle
and Cru was punched ln. the
mouth. Lopez escaped serious
injury.
• Because the students are
Chicano, the attack was
labeled racist by some members·
or the UCI faculty and student
government.
Prior to the arrests Dec. 7, the
stude.nt col,lncil approved a
Sl.000 reward fo.r the arrest and
conviction of the suspects.
John Lundberg, Berkeley
general counsel to the UC re·
gents, since has said the reward
ofCer constitutes an improper use
of studentCunds.
Irvine police, meantime, have
denied allegati~ by some 1tu·
aenfs amt" uct ll!C!turer John
Gerassi that their investigation ot
the crime was influenced by the
victims' race. ·
Lt. Jerry Boyd said the in·
vestlgation was conducted
without respect to ethnic back-ground.
Iran Meetings
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -Presi·
dent Carter will hold separate
meeUnga with Shah Mohammed
Reza Pablavi and Jordan's King
Hussein 1n Iran this weekend,
Iranian officials said today.
Iranian ·newspapers reported
that a prime topic of d.Jscuqlqa
for both meetings wW be Middle ·
East peace dit>lomacy,
Wages: Soot
Chimney Nabs Thief
ijOUSTON <AP> -Scott Sullivan, 29, was sur-
prised when he heard someone talking ln his
nreplace.
.. Hey, anybody oat there? I'm in the chimney:• a man's voice said.
Sullivan said tbe man explained he had climbed
Into the chimney to burglarize the hoµse but got
stuck. He called the fire department. , .
"Th")' dldn't believe me, so I caUed po-
lice,•• Sullivan said.
The Police 'didn't beUevc hJm either, Sullivan
saJd, but decided lo Investigate after calling back to
confirm the report. Investigators arrived and then
calJed firemen agaln, who removed a 20·year-old
soot·eovered man from the chimney.
"I wu Just w1lkin1 along and thought I'd climb
1n and try to bur'1arlze the house," the man tDld Jn·
veaU,aton, addi.nf thai he had never tried a.nything
like lt belore and bad no plans to tey a1atn.
Police said burglary charges would be meet
t . ' I
9 Viejo
Residents
Eye MAC ,
Nine Mlssioo Viejo resident.a
' hove obtained nomination
papers for three Municipal Ad-
visory CouncU aeata up for grabs
in elceUona next March.
Unleu lwo 9f three incunt·
bent1 -JamH Dodge and
Kathleen Kelly -tall to fue, tbf
deadllne for return ot no~ UOQ papen b noon Thursdif, . -
So far, lour ol tbe nlne bav~
returned candidacy pape~
Tiley aro John Butler. 2t822 Magdalena Laae; Fruit Wooct.
27072 MarJ•••I Lane; Gery
Stoney. 27391 Via Caudaloao;
and Ray Crin1lcy. 235'2 Via
Bepabente.
Stoney, an incumbent, i. the
only reaJ.deot to file tor the unu-
plred two-year Lenn at stake iit
the election. .
Five oUier residents, 1n.cludlna two hicumbent.I, have taken 0\¢
papert but not returned t.beai to
the cOW1ty Rectatrar of Voterc.
They aro L. G. ..Gerry" Wat.
22612 La Vina Drive: Kathleeo
Kelly, 2'252 Catahana Circle':
Charles Kenney, 26581 Fresno
Drive; James Dodge, *82 Car.
ranza Drive: and George
Simons, 27864 Via Sarasate.
FroaPageAI
CAVE-IN ••.
Hospital in Upland, suffering
from an injured ankle.
The two were at the 4,000·loot
level of San Antonio ••ans when
the ground gave •a.J beneath them, autboritles said.
In Santa Barbara. the site ot
the dbastrous Sycamore Canyon
fire that destroyed more than
2SO homes la.st July, residents
were put on evacuation notice
Tuesday but no one was ordered
away, as moderate rain fell on
lhe city throughout the day.
Santn Barbara Battalion Chief
Al 1',aoro said h is crews
responded to a dozen calls for
help in removing mud and
sludge from garages and hillside
homes, but only one call came
from the Sycamore Canyon
area, where fire officials helped
four families. Faoro also report.
ed the roof caved in on a
downtown dn.agsoore.
Road crews worked !everisbl}'
in Alhambra to hold up a secdora
of Mission Road that was col·
lapsing as rainwater and nmotf
from a broken plpeUne un~
dermined the soggy eart}\
beneath it.
Scheuren Road in Malibu was
closed temporarily Tuesday
while crews hacked away at a
giant boulder that tumbled down
a hillside and blocked traffic.
The Southern California
Automobile Club received 600
calls an hour from stranded
motorist& and handled 8,000 tails
by the end or the day Tuesday.
The normal number is about
3,200, said spokesman Dick
RoodzanL
Although the storm made a
major dent in Southern
California's drought, the rain
fell more lightly in the northern
half of the state, where the
drought has been more serious.
However, weather watcherS
were generally optimistic about
the effects of tbe rain, noting
that the Sierra snowpack -
which provides spring runoff -
la DOW 60 inches at 6,000 fee4
compared to a normal oI 30
incbes at that elevation for this
Umeofyear. . p,... Page AJ · ~.
CLASH •••
and caUed police.
O'Connor and Bonfa have been
feuding since Bonfa wrote a
performance evaluaUon critical
of O'Connor in December or
1974.
O'Connor contended that the
evaluation was not really a
performance evaluation, but
was an abusive diatribe. .
The dispute proceeded
through cJty 1rievance pro-
cedures.
Bonfa was directed to remove
portions of the evaluatton from
O'Connor's files by the. city's
personnel board.
Most of the evaluation was al·
lowed to stand, however, and
O'Connor was given a chance to
rebut 1tat.ement.s and enier them
in bis file.
Witness Backs
11.Q •. Testing
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
Standardised IQ tests are ''re-
markably good predictors" ol a
child'• educational ablUty, Ute.
atate ot California claimed in
lederal cou.rt.
Durln1 I.ht state's openlog
araument Tu~ay in a Jawault
broucht on behalf o! five black
youn11ttt1 wbote parents clal.m
I.he)' were placed ln °educa~
mentally retarded'' claaaea· becauM ol low JQ seoru, deputy
attorney 1enera1 Joann• CoDcld
said the teats ''predlct tho acbleYemtnu equall1 wen f~
both bl.u aDd wbJto cblldreo. n
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s
Big Spenders
a ·ose Out Year
8 7 JOHN C NNIFF Af'hllMttMMy•
Americans really went on a apendlo-' binge in the final
week1 of lho rear, and there are lndJcaUons that a good
· p~rcentage o the pure bases dido 't. end up under the
Cha·istmas tree.
• They were •consllmelS 1.nltne!; llteral~ swallowed, 1n
the form ol food and drink. Orso It wou.ldaeem.
' FINAL ftGVR.ES WON'T BE 1Yail1ble r~ a couple or
more weeu. but we. do know this: Food store sales ln Nov-'
erober rose 2.9 pcreent over those ot October. 1uaeetin1 a.n ~
amazing increase In lntalrc. J True. some of these purchases rolsbt have made glf'ts,
but another set of 1tatiltlca suagest.s otherwise. November
sales at eating and drlnkt"g places leaped 2.1 percent afttr 3
having been weak in October. )
Economis ts a r c studying such ~
statistics to ftnd out what they can about • the behaVior o( the sometimes unpredlc· ~
table consumer. They have already \ ~
drawn som e conclusions: ~
-The public was In more or a buy· ~
fng mood thaif was generally foreseen. ~
The buying began unusually early; 'Oc-~
tober retail a ales leaped 2. 7 percent over ~
September, and Novem ber added :
anotherL5overOctober. cu""'"" !
-RUU.Y REPORTS OF t\ LS percent increase in thi
dollar value of automotive purchases tor November are sus-
pect.
"There is a posslblUty that revisions will trim the Nov-
ember auto component or retail sales." Citibank comments.
For one thing, it questions that unit sales would be down but
dollar sales up so much.
-Shoppers apparcrUly were not teluctant to use credit
That. at least. was the trend that seemed to be setting In ear
ly in the final quarter of the year.
CONTRARY TO WHAT SOME people might expect.
consumers assume credit burdens when they feel confident.
-not when the absence of ready casb leaves them no other
choice. ·
Personal incomes were up; people were confident; they took on credit.
This burst of consumer activity presents analysts with
the question of how much Jonger it might continue. Some
credit critics say the burden of repayments could hamper
sales in 1978.
AN<Yl'HER SCHOOL OF TIIOVGHT, however , ob·
!ierves that consUlJlers are still able to repay their borrow·
ings on time. They feel that 1978 sales might indeed be af·
fected by activity this year, but merely because cons umers
have already purchase~ many or the items they need.
• • ~
(
Whatever, the indomitable consumer has again sur· .. ,
prised some of those who claim the title of expert, and has
almost made certain a conlinuaUon or the expansion into a
fourth year.
He might have done it with food and drink and a lot or
gifts that the recipient is i nclined to return, but that's the
;;;:itar Pl~Wl l
RB Celebration
Balloon rides and square dance.$ will highligbt the
grand opening restivitles at Gibraltar Savings' new Hunt·
ington Center office through J an. 10.
Located in Huntington Center near Barker Brothers.
the office is Gibraltar's fifth in Orange County.
OTHER OP ENING FEATURES include free Betty
Crocker bookpaJu, carlcatur~ of visitors to the office, wine
and cheese tasting parties and other events.
Batoon rides al'e scheduled for Jan. 6, 1 and 8; square
dances are scheduled for J an. 7 and 8.
. The rides will be held during tour sessions: on Jan.6 from, ,..m. to noon, and again frpm S to 9 p.m.; on Jan. 7
from 9a.m . lonoon, and Jan. Sfrom 11 a~m. tolp.m.
FEATURING DANCERS FROM the Huntington Beach
and Westminster areas. live country music by the Harold
Hensley All.Stars and caller Bruce Collinger, Gibraltar·~
square dance jamboree will be held Jan. 7 and 8 from noon
to<t:OOp.m.
Caricaturists will be in the Gibraltar office Friday,
from noon to 5 p.m .; Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Jan. 6
from noon to's p.m.; Jan. 7from10 a.rn. to3 p.m. and Jan. 8
from lla.m. to4p.m. ..
Wine and cheese tasting parties are sCbeduled for Fn·
day from noon to5 p. m . and on Saturday from noon to3p.m.
. Business hours at the office are from 10 a.m . to 9 p.m .
Mondays through Fridays, 9:30 a.m. to4 p.m.. on Saturdays
and 11 a.m . to4 p.m. on Sundays.
Rodney Staatz is branch manager .
Association Opens
Branch in Niguel
San Diego Federal Savings and Loan AssoclaUon has
OJ>t!Ded its newest omce, and third in Orange County. in
Laeuna Niguel.
lt ls located on Crown Valley Parkway next to the
Crown Valley Mall Ruth E. Dillon. ualst.lmt. vice president,
ii bnnch manager. ·
The ornco is opc1n Mondays throu1b Thursdays from 9
a.m . to4p:m. and, on Fridays, from 9 a.m. to5:SO p.m . ltls
the first of San Dieeo Federal 's Orange County olflces to be open on Saturdays -Crom lOa.m. to2p.m . ·
· Visfton to the ne'*braneh will recein a Cree booklet en·
titled 0 Houseplant1, Herbs and Plurt•ra" by James Gick.
Io addition, fr" retrubment.t are belnl otrered, and a
11rater color exhiblL by J. Arthur Drlelsma ot Capistrano
Beach will be dlsplayed throu,gh theend of December.
GOiden West Tells
I
·u1 ill ~:::ii -=.t~a~ 31·5 ma~ ~ if.~
:ci "'!.Ii -~ i ;11 •.. al ..'lt! .~ ~:~ lt~Prl.! am ]ff !!I &cor~ fo~ Quarter '~:li I ... i:lr ·'T.' I ~·a a. 3 :a ·e· II . Goldtft We&t u--. Santa An• Ms repMted lh tll ··~ ' . '"°1 H ·•··• taf! .J • " 1:......... ht,hest secon.d-(luat1er and sb·IDODu.' salaa an~ earnlns" I , .. a ln ll b1storJ • •
l:=1J 1· " Economic Gloom Reoorted Tbe company's directors declared a 3-for·i atodr apUt "' • •• !.:.I' PARIS (AP) -WHlern In· and a 29-cent lbare caab d.Jvldend for the aecond quarter or · it ... ~ duurlaUud aaUoa1 face • frim naeal11'11. , ~ .anomic ,.... in ma, darUDe4 by
• ~ 1lt.t,1l1b 1ro"lb a ad rlAa• Wl· l'or U. MC!Clad quarter ended No11. 2' net lncotne ftom I " ••PloJllMllt. &!le Or1uludclil (ar ~Unalna--Uaaa lAcreued 111 percen1 to $1,541.000. or
4' ~-CooplratioD ad Dl111Dp. ....... c:iocDMncl "Wl fm .ooo, or 50 ctQtl, In the MCOD4 .. t ..,._ qurter "ftteal 1'". Sales f«tbequarter laereued 78&*'-
• een& to .... 000. coippared wt&h•H, 'llD,OCIO &.at1Ql'.' . ...
t •
6.4 oz. TUBE
ANTISEPTIC
MOUTHWASH . .._
& GARGLE
32 oz.
1.39
SAV-ON BRAND
ISOPROPYL O·TIPS
ALCOHOL
10°. By 29 Volume C
16 02.
DOUBLE TIPPED
COTTON SWABS
PAK 99c of 400
-===-~--=-~.:::::.:...--::---------
01-GEL ANTACID
• ORAN CE/LEMON
.MINT Flavors
100 Tablets or 11 1 12 oz. Liquid
EA. a
---
PLANTERS
~~ Peanuts
Delicious
Blanched or 3 3 9 Spanish blend.
3y, lb. EA. a
"CRATE"
Decanter SET
''CRATE"
Coaster s£T
El&hl •ood
coasters with t I 5 COfk Inserts in • an atlmlive
walnut finish.
BUSHNELL
ALL PURPOSE
BUSHNELL
WIDE ANGLE
Binoculars
7 aS5 C£lnR FOCUS
SU' FllN ol v~'-, ~cnei.c-.
· #1WS5l
Binoculars
1 POIEft. 35M 10· For 1wttpl111 visibility. ltllll.C wide 52$' fltN.
#11-736\
37.95
BUFFERIN ·
ANALGESIC
Twice As Fast
As Aspirin/
60 TABLETS
Jim Beam
BOURBON
80 Proof 10 99 1.15 Liter •
Seagram's V.O.
! WHISKY
86J Proof 17 49 1J5 Liter a
Bronco
CHAMPAGNE
PINK, ORY, 1 49 or COLO DUCK
750 ml. I
Kessler
WHISKEY ~::~~' 4.99
Christian Brothers .
VODKA
80 Proof 8 98 1.15 Liter a
Tanqueray
GIN
9UProof 6 89 750 •I. •
Johnnie Walker
RED LABEL
SCOTCH 7 99 8U Proof
FIFTH 1
Ronrico
RUM
Ll&ht or ~mProot 4 99
FIFTK I
SHAMPOO
4 oz. TUBE or
7 oz. LOTION
99~
.WHISKEY
80 Proof 9 99 1.75 Liter •
WHISKY
SU Proof 6 99 . 750 •L •
Seagram's i Crown
WHISKEY
f,~r~ 11.99
ri~taMr. & Mrs.'T'
BLOODY MARY
:~~•;.,.MIX
FIFTH 79c
DURAFLAME1
3-HOUR LOG
fi##A
Flames
Bum Colors
Sllofta l ~t.
SINGLE ROLL
CARNATION
CHUNK WHITE
Albacore TUNA
n.--.....;.-DJSPOSABLE
GLASSWARE
./.
9 oz. -Pack of 20 F
6~ oi. CANS
ANTl·PERSPIRANT
Contains "o 119 F lu0tocMolls.
s oz. •
....
•
NABISCO
ASSORTED
Snack Crackers --I':.
ASSORTED I &"' WEIGHTS 'I
EA.
I ~~1!S. 2§$1
" ettvtfofet per '°x.
: Old Fashion Glasses, 2 $1 HI.Sall Glasses1 o
10 oz. -Pack °' 16 "
BEER or 77t ICE TEA (14 oz..) PAK OF 15 •liliilliiiiiiiiiilll ..........
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Plates & Platters . , , e on
Wiii not bend or 2F$1 10 Fry Pan become sow. 0 N ti .. o s c11, no-scour
PAK OF 10 " · Black Telfon II OI\ 1 I 9 ! even heallnc . e:;;~F~~Snack Q " .~m... •
Trays 2 ~$1 ~ MIRRO "Kitchen Pride'"
PAK OF 12
A • ~ Tea Kettle
PLAsT1c Spoons
11 Whlstlln1 . & Forks -C Tea Kettle 2 88
PAK OF 100 . 'lYa QT. -•
NEW YEARS EVE
Table ENSEMBLE
21 GI. SIZE
BOTTLES
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SOUN DESIGN
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