HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-12-21 - Orange Coast Pilotl t
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DAILY PILOT Rocket. Launcher' Held;
* * * 10' * * * Coast Marine ArreSted
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 21, 1978 "'°' H ,ftO aa.tt>ICTIOlll.I -~AOI•
'
• • • • •
ort Approves Density Cuts
87 Aboard
Woman qac s
I .
Jet in Rlino~
MARION, Ill <AP> --A woman claimin~ to be rigged
with dynamite hijacked a Trans
World Airlines jet w1lh 87 people
aboard today, trying to force the
release ol a prison inmate. the
Federal Aviation Administration
said.
The woman. who said she had
s trapp,ed three sticks of dynamite to her body, forced the
Cops ~eize
Launcher for
Tank Rocket
What began as an arrest for
possession of a martial arts
weapon ended, police say. with
tne a1scovery of an anti-tank
rocket launcher in the apart·
ment of a Camp Pendleton
Marine.
Laguna Beach detective Mark
Everton was conducting a burglary investigation in a San
Clemente apartment complex
earlier this week when he al-
legedly spotted Cpl. J erome M.
Iverson, 21, on his balcony,
swinging a pair of nunchukas, a
martial arts" weapon somewhat
likea.hnln
Everton contacted sa·n
Clemente officers, and when
they entered the apartment at
111 Alameda Lane. they alleJ?ed·
I> found the somewhat more
deadly rocket launcher inside.
The ee millimeter weapon,
used to stop tanks, operates
somewhat like a bazooka. The newer models are light In weight
and diapoeable. After their one
projectile i.I fired, they are dis-
carded. lverton was arrested and
tra nsported to Orange County
JaU where his bail was set al
$25,000. The Marine. attached to the
First Marine Division at Camp
Pendleton, faces charges o( poueulon ot a deadly weapon
and po11ee1ion of a destructive
device.
Qlrietm88 Toys
Taken by Burglar
A 1rtncb·Uke bur1lar stole U ir.o worth of wrapped
Cbrtatmu toy• from the apart-ment ol a CO.la Meaa stl.ideM aomellme Weclnf1day, police
Hid.
MtcbMI JOlePh Joyce, 22, told
Police that a microwave oven
and a bltnder were allo tlktn
from hlt '91dence at 1307 Baker·
St., b~ the total lOll to WJO,
pilot to land at Williamson Coun-ty Airport in Marion, the FAA
said.
Fligh\ 541 from Louis ville to
Kansas City was hijacked short-
ly a!ter a scheduled stop in St.
Louis . Wh en il landed in
southern Illinois a short lime
later. an FBI spokesman said
agents at the airport were
negotiating with the woman.
State police said the woman
was demanding the release or in-mate Garrett Brock Trapnell,
who is on trial today with two
other Inmates in nearby Benton
for allegedly taking part ln a
prison escape last May during
which a woman was killed.
During the escape, Barbara A.
Oswald or St. Louis hijacked a
helicopter and forced the pilot at
gunpoant to fly to the federal
penitentiary at Marion. The pilot wrestled the gun a nd Mrs.
Oswald was shot to death.
Trapnell was to act as his own
attorney before a U.S. District
Court jury. A TWA spokesman in Chicago
s a i d the DC·9 carried 83 passengers and a crew of four.
"They're doing what the hi-
jacker is telling them to do,"
said John Leyden, an FAA
spokesman ln Washington. Joe Frets, an FAA spokesman
in Kansas City, said the jetliner
Wl\S hijacked on its approach to
Kansas City International
Airport.
Frets said the jetliner "pulled
up, s9uawked the proper ID for
a hiJacking and asked for
c le arance to Carbonda le ,"
which is served by the Marion
airport.
Frets said be did not know
whether more than one person was involved. The plane landed
in Marion at 8:48 a.m. PST.
Um'tBear
1hat Excwe
HOUSTON (A P> -Jon
Ogden was late for school,
but had this note from his
father:
"Pleue excuse Jon Cor
being late as a grlzzly
bear broke ln our house
and It required additional
time to subdue him."
Evelyn Plotkin, Jon'•
firth 1rade teacher, *•
cepted the excuae. Sbe
wrote in ~ly :
"Thank you Cor lett1n1
me know why Jon was
tardy today. Next tlme you ml1ht try grabbin1
that 1rtul,y bear by his
TAIL -thereby havlnc a
TA LE to bang onto."
~' .
'Thar She Blows' I
Chad McCallum. 10, looks like he's spotted
a big one on this "lake" at Adventure
Playground in University Park, Irvine.
Shipmate Ty Ramsey steers a clear
course while Corey Shoulter. 7. tries to
o.i1Y "*' ,.._."' o... •--
beat them solo. Youngsters took advan-
tage of early week's heavy rains. which
created the water body. and created a
new adventure for themselves on these
nat·bottomed vessels.
Airport Safety Pushed
FM. to, Upgrade Operational Procedures
WASIUNGTON CAP> -The Federal Aviation Administration
said today it intends to upgrade
sa(ety procedures and
machinery at the nation's major
airports.
It conceded that numerous
safety deficiencies were found at
the San Diego airport where a
comm ercial jetliner a nd a
private plane collided three
months ago: killing 144. l'' A A A d m t n 1 s t r a t o r
Lan1bonme Bond said the agen-
cy has ordered an 11-polnt pro-gram to improve operational
safety at San Diego and said
"imple men tation of these measures on a nationwide basis
are ap~rtate." .
He said the FAA will announce
details of lta plans for other airports next week.
Bond aaid he ordered atl In·
veaU1aUon ol 1alety procedures
at San Diet'>'• lJndberlh f'1eld after the Sept. 25 collision over
San Dieto fl a Paclftc: Southweat
Alrllnea 727 Jetliner and a
private CeUna aircraft. A total
of 144 ,er1on1 aboard the
Jetliner. the amall plane and on
the 1round were killed, maklna . it the wont aJr cruh ln North
AmeticL
A1 1 reeult of the cruh In·
veatlsauan. Bond aald, "there
I a
will be a good many changes" in
airport safety procedures
around the country. He declined
to say what specific airports
were being examined most
closely.
~tOrtkred
For Carter
WASHINGTON CAP)-
Presldent Cart.er canceled
hia appointment schedule
today and was ordered to
reat tn his living quarters
becauae of what was
described as an aggravat-
ed problem with hemor-
rholdt White House a11ociate
pre11 aecretary Claudia
Townaend said the preal·
dent was betns treated by
ht• peraonal phr•lcian,
Rear Adm. Wlll am M.
Luk11b. ,
Carter "hH had thlt
problem before altbou&h It
apparently wu never so
severe," Ms. Townsend
told a reporter.
..
Bond ·told a news conference
that the government has "been
lulled into too great a security"
concerning aerial collisions
because there had been no
similar accidents in the United
States for six years preceding
the San Diego tragedy. Bond Caulted his agency for
Jjving too much credit to exist-
ing radar systems. saying "the
success was more apparent than
real." At San Diego, Bond said, the
FAA investigation showed that
"there was fOme doubt" among
air traffic controllers of what
their responsiblllties were at the
time or the PSA colllsalon. -At a reeult, the FAA ordered
that air trafflc control pro·
cedurea be clarified at the con-
trol center at Miramar Naval
Air Station, wtucb handles
traffic ln and out of Lindbergh
Field.
9 HW1 in Bwts
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
(AP) -The Irish Republican Army bombed four hotel• in
Northern Ireland Wednesday
nllhl, lnJurinl n!ne pel'IOM, and army Hperl• were, defu1lna
bombs planted at two othen. _
Decision
_J
Mixed
Blessing
By JACKIE HYMA,N Of U. o.ity ...... Sbft
The Newport Beach City Coun-
cil capped almost a year and a hair of debate Wednesday by ap-
proving general plan amend-
ments that will cut density on
large undeveloped sites in the ci-
ty by as much as 35 percent.
The decision at the council's
last meeting of 1978 was greeted
with mixed reactions from a
spokesman ror the Irvine Co ..
which owns most of 'the parcels
afrected. The land company·l'i Robert
Shelton told the council that.
while the slashed densities seem
arbitrary, arter more than a
year of uncertainty. "we're
beginning to wonder if maybe
arbitrariness is better than in·
decision." • The cuts were approved 5·2.
with Mayor Paul Ryckorr and
Councilman Donald Strauss op· posing. Both srud they wanted
the council to lake more lime lo
look at each individual property
in order to forestall the possibili-
ty of having to make additional
changes in the near future.
However. Councilwoman
Jackie Heather apparently
spoke for the majority when she
said. "This is broad brush. but it
at least gives us some planning
base." The city's general plan sets
forth permitted uses on various
land areas. While a general plan
designation is less speci!io-than
zoning. the latter must be com· patible with the general plan
designation.
Commercial developments af-fected by Wednesday's decision
are Newport Center, Castaways.
Bayview Landing, San Diego
C r ee k Sit es and
(See DENSITY, Paget\%)
Coast
Weather
Sunny . a n d a Ii tt I e
warmer Friday with highs
60 lo 65. Lows tonight 32 to
40.
INSIDE TODAY
Caterer• in t1MI area wm
do mor~ than prepare the
menu -tht]l'll decorate,
provide nl"1oi,.mfftt and ...
co•rumed """"'° J>«01)le and even clean up tli4 me ... S«
Featurl"f1, Page Cl. ....
)
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...
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..
riz o11a To~n Flooded
nesses and 100 homes in the downtown
area were damaged. About 250 of the
town ·s 1,000 resi<klnts took shelter in the local
high school.
-------~"'\-o~ =-----
-hrftel Bomharded-
Lebanese Guerrillas S hell Town
TEL AVIV, llraol (AP> -
Ouerrillu In south rn Lebanon
fire d a volley of Katyu11h1
rocketa Into th l1ta U frontier
town or K1ryat Shmona tOday, klllloa one man and woundlna
seven peraoo In • 1plrallna eye.
for·an·eye fight between the
· Palestinians and faruol
The Palesllne 1.iberallon
OraanizatJon In Beirut fluid the
town was rocketed in rnlalluUon for Israeli .atr strlket on Pal·
estlnlan caml)S l2 houra e1trllor
After the four or five rockets
slammed into KJryat Shmona. in the northern Gulllce panhandle.
Israeli artillery opened tire on
Palestinian poslllons acroSWib
border. the mllllart comrrland
said in Tel Aviv
The army said five c-h1ldren In
Kiryat Shmona were treated tor
s hock after being evitcualed
from a buildJng hit by one of the
Soviel·deslgned rockets "Usually you cun hear
Katyushas." sutd ooe resident,
''hut this IJ)omm11 I didn't hear anything. JUSt a ma&11ive ex·
plosion and then I was covered
with dust. I took the children out
to an underground shelter "
wounded 1xpersons. Eaypt's Foretsn Ministry de·
oounced the l,araeli attaekl as "a threat to the current Em-
tlan-tsraeU peace process."
But CaJro. went ahead with
plans ~send Prime Minister Moabe ul1an and Seeretart ql
State Cyrus Vue:• thla weekend
for another 8'*.empt to 1et the
stalled peace necotlatlons going again.
'Di4n'.t Force Wife,'
Mate Says O:t Tl"ial
SALEM. Ore. CAP> -John
Rideout "hones\ly believed ir
you are married to a woman.
you have a right to sex.·· but did
not force his wife to have in·
tercourse. his attorney says.
Rideout is on trial oo a charge
of raping b.is wife. The prosecu
lion says Greta Rideout will
testify the intercourse took place
as their 21/i·year·old daughter
watched and cried, .. Mommy,
Mommy.''
"serious sexual problem." He
told jurors Mrs. Rideout knt-ed
her husband m the groin and
was slapped in the race Oct. 10,
the day ol the alleged rape at
their apartment.
Referring to a transcript of a
prefrial hearing, Burt 'said' Mrs.
Rideout testified she had an ar.
fair with her husband's step·
brother. He also said she told
her husb~nd the steP.brother
had r aped her, but later denied
the rape had taken place. ·w ater:> from the floochng Gila R1 ve1· flow
through the eastern Arizona town of Oun·
can after a dike broke Tuesday. Witnesses
e:;bmuted the water was about six feet
deep after the break, and that 10 busi-_:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
T he woman, Mrs . Sima Ben
David, Hve s next door to a
second-floor apartment. that was
demolished.
The charge was filed under a
1977 rev1s1on of Oregon·s rape
l a w that removed m arital
privilege as a defense against
rape. Attorneys for both sides
s ay the trial is the first in the na·
lion 1n which a husband 1s
charged with raping his wife
while they were living together.
Mrs. Rideout is seeking a
divorce.
Before opening arguments.
the Jury viewed the area outside
The Rideouts' Salem apartment,
and heard a recorchng of Mrs.
R1deout's telephone call to
police Oct. to. ,.,....,.~,.,
DENSITY PLAN ••.
MacArthur/Jamboree Sites.
Residential undeveloped sites
affected are We stbay ,
Newporter North, Freeway
Reservat.ton East, Fifth A venue
tiori'al and open space.
3 7 01. J bJ The military said the rocket • -10 0 ess attack was the first across the
Lebanese border since June.
Rat B J _ ~ when Israel withdrew an 1n e reaA8 vaslon force from southe rn
· Lebanon after a 90-day sweep to
County Record drive Palestinian guerrilla~
from the frontier
Rideout was indicted Oet. 18
on a charge or rtrst-degree rape
and is free on $5,000 bail. ff con-
v 1cted. he faces a maximum
sentence of 20 years in pnson
and a $2.500 rme
• Parcels, CalTrans West and
Beeco Property
A spokesman for the state
Department of Transportation,
who was not aware o r the
change until after the vote had
been taken. told the council
CalTrans has some objections,
which wiU be submitted m writ·
ing.
Orange County's unemploy-
~r1l rate reached its lowest re·
cording ever in November when
it dipped lo 3. 7 percent.
As unemployment in the coun-
ty reached a new low, the
number of those employed hit an
all time high of 962,400 job
holders.
Palestiruan source.-; in Beirut
said the Israeli rur attack al sun
dow n Wedne sdav kall<·d or wounded as many as 27 people
Israeli military officials said the
ra id was ordered m repris al for a
string of Palestinian bombings in
Israel that have killed four
civilians and wounded 70 since
Nov. l.
District Attorney Gar y
Gort maker told the rour·man.
eight woman JUry Wednesday
that 21·year-old Rideout chased
h1~ wire and repeatedly hit her
before the alleged rape He s aid
lest1 mony will show the couple
fought the rught before about ex·
tra marilaJ affairs.
Mr!" Ride out a clerical
worker. and her husband lived
together ror about four years
Rideout. c. cook. 1s laving with
his mother
The council generally agreed
with plannihg commission rec-
ommendations for across·the-board reductions, but disagreed
with a r ecommended increase
from 538 to 800 allowable res·
idential u nits in Newfort
<.:enter as a partial tradeof for
commercial cuts. T he council
voted to keep the figure at 538
units
After he a ring fro m the
chairman of the board and the
director of the Newport Harbor
Art Museum, the council did
agree to increase from 4,000 to
10,000 square feet the area the
museum can add. The area will
be used for storing the perma-
nent collection, for office space
and for classroom s, the
spokesmen sai6 .
One other parcel given special
treatment is the CalTrans West
parcel m West Newport.
Because Proposition 3 on the
November ballot now permits
the land to be acquired by other
s late agencies for possible
r ec-realion or open space
purposes . the coun ci l re·
designated that land from multi-
ra mi I y residential to r ecrea·
Pillows Recycled
At Hoag Hospital
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach has found a way
to cushion the impact or infla·
ti on.
The reductions in 'permitted
densities were initiated by the
city council because of concern
with traffic problems and possi-
ble overdevelopment of the city.
While sweeping, the changes
approved Wednesday night were
le&s.radical than some that had
been sug~ested during the lengthy revtew period, including
the idea of redesignating many
of the commercial s ites as res-
idential.
Youth Killed
As Cycle Hits
Road Divider
Charles Anthony Grein, 18,
died Wednesday afternoon. from
injuries be suffered when his motorcycle struck a road
divider and he was hurled into a
row of metal posts near his Hun·
t.ington Beach home.
The fatal crash occurred at
12:35 p.m. on Warner Avenue
between Scepter Lane and Los
Palos Drive where the teen-
ager, of 17342 Wild Rose Lane,
Jost control of his westbound
motorcycle.
The youth, who police said
wore complete protective riding
gear including a helmet, became
the 29th traffic fatality on Hunt·
inglon Beach roads this year.
Twelve of those fatalities in·
volved motorcycle crashes.
Tholi.e figures are the
highliglfts of the state Employ-
ment Development Depart·
ment's <EDD) monthly labor re· port.
The report went on to predict
that total em~loyment in Orange
County will hit another new high
in De~ember.
That prediction was based
chiefl y on what was then an-
ticipated Christmas season hir·
mg as well as "many new busi·
nesses planning lo open their
doors.''
The Israelis also reported
three persons slightly hurt in a
2renade attack in the Old City of
J e rusale m after nightfall
Wednesday. It was the second
bombing of the day in the Holy Ci·
ty. An earlier blast in the doorway
of a n Old City restaurant slightly
Shah's Foes
Set Demands On a more pessimistic note,
EDD's report noted that there is
. ~suaJly a slowdown in trade dur-
ing the fu'Sl quarter or a new TEHRAN, Iran CAP> -One of
year. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's
Sim ultaneouslv. however. veteran political opponents re. EDD analysts mentioned that the anticipated 1979 slowdown portedly has a~reed to form a
affecting employment figures civilian government, but leaders
could be offset by an e=ted or the anli-sheh movement have . spumed him. continuing surge in man actur· Informed sources said Golam-
ing attivity in the county. Hossein Sadiqi accepted the pre-
Wh en summed up, EDD's miership in a new government
m on thly labor study puts after the s hah agreed to a
Orange County in the forefront numberofpoliticalconditions.
of employment activity in the The sources, who refused to be
state with the lowest unemploy-identified, said Sadiqi's demands
ment rate and the fastest grow· included dissolution of the cur·
inf Job market. rent Parliament It was not im·
n the past 12 months, for ex-mediately known if that demand
ample, 48,600 new jobs have would be met. Under the con· been added lo county payrolls. a stitution, the government would ~-9 percent growth rate, accord-have to hold a general election
lllgtotheemploymentsummary. "--.....within six months after Parlia-
ment is dissolved. The shah had
already pledged Lo hold free elec·
lions next June. Quake Hits Idaho
But defense attorney Chari~
Burt says sex was alway5 a prob·
lem 1n the young couple'"
stormy marnage, and 1t wa!'
their custom to make up after a
fight by having intercourse
Burt told the Marion County
Circuib Court Jury that Rideout
admits to having intercours~
with his wife Oct. 10. but denies
using force. He said t~st1mony
will show Mrs Rideout inquired
about Oregon·s rapt l aw~ before
accusing her husband of rapt:
Burt said the rape accusation
stemmed from Mrs. R1deout's
Fa La La
Yourselves
A frightened Greentree
resident of Irvine called
police to report someone
was poWlding on her door
and wouldn't go away.
Officers sped to the
neighborhood. captured
the culprits. and informed the teen-agers they were
scaring the cheer out of
the woman. so they"d bet
ter move to the next house
to do their Christmas
caroling.
The carolers tunefully
complied.
Man Crushed
Under Truck
In Irvine
A truck dnver was <'rushed to
death under a wheel or his veh1
cle today while working on the
eng ine m a lot at the Armand
Ha mmer Technical Center m
Irvine ·
Th~ drtver. whose name was
withheld pendm·g notification ol
next of km. apparently had been work.In~ under the tilt-up cab of
the truck when the enginti
~lipped into gear
Pohce said they believe the
truck ;oiled backwards, causing
the cab to fall onto tbe driver,
pinning tus arm and head.
The man was dragged about
;5 feet The truck struck a curb,
pohce swd. and the impact ap-
parently knocked the driver free
of the cab but dumped him un·
der a wheel
He was taken to Tustin Com ·
munity H~p1tal. where he was
pronounced dead at 7:47 a .m., a
half hour after the accident.
Police said the man was an in
dependent truck operator work
ln(i! under contract for the Sully·
Miller Contracting Company of
Orange
He was deltvermg a load of
a5phalt for a new parking lot al
the Armand Ha mmer center.
2100 S.E Mam St. police said .
Officials there say they have
decided to switch from disposa-
ble pillows to the re-usable
variety, at an estimated savings
or $20,000 a year.
~rein was pronounced dead on
arrival at. Huntington lntel:com-
munity Hospital at 1: 15 p.m .
Funeral services are pending.
SALT LAKE CITY (APl -A
small earthquake measuring 4.2
on the Richter scale Wednesday shook residents or Malad City,
Idaho, but it caused no damage.
Wrap Up A During Our
More Price Hike.s Due?
Oil Cartel May Consider Further Increases
KUWAIT (AP) -The head of
OPEC said today the oil cartel
may consider furth.er l n ·
creases in the price or 011 m tne
first half of 1979 if the dollar
falls loo much and world infla-
tion continues strong.
At a meeting last weekend in
the Persian Gulf emirate of Abu
Dhabi. the l.'~·nation Organlza·
tion of Petroleum Exporting
C(luntrjes decided to raise world
OAANOE. COAST
DAILY PILOT
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crude oil prices by 14.5 percent
in four steps in 1979, beginning
with a 5 percent boost Jan. 1.
OPEC's secret ary-general.
Rene O(tlz of Ecuador, noted in
an interview toda y with
Kuwait's news agency KUNA
that the next semi-annual OPEC
meeting is scheduled for June.in
Geneva. Switzerland. "to con-
s ider any further decline in the
value of the U.S. dollar, and to
take proper measures to meet
this. ·•But if the international
economy deteriorates rapidly.
there is a possibility that an
emergency OPEC ministerial
meeting may be held before
then," he said. Ortiz rejected W estern
criticism aroused by the price
increase, calllng the hike a
"very moderate and responsible
move." He said it was justified as
partial compensation for the
losses suffered by OPEC COW\·
tries u a result of the decline in
the value of the dollar , the cur·
rency used in the oil trade, and
the addillonal erosion or oil
revenuee by world inflation. Weatern critics were hasty
and unjustified, Ortiz said. and
failed to evaluate the compelllng
reasons for the price h\ke,
·:which was reached after a
thorough study of the economic
situation in both the Industrial
and OPEC nations."
Tbe Carter admlnlatratlon
crittclied Uae unexpected ateep
price rlk, and Prealdeo,t Carter
ur1ed OPEC to rec:onalder. U.S.
offlciala allmated the OPEC ln·
creHt. _when combined with
other lnllatlooary fact.on, will
add 5 or a cents by late next year
lO the price Of a gallon of gasoline al pumps in the United
States. Similar rises are expect·
ed for other petroleum producL~.
The OPEC decision will raise
lhe basic price of $12. 70 per 42·
l{allon barrel of Arabian light
crude oil to$14.54 by next Oct. 1
aJChildren
Di.e in Bus,
Train Crash
SALAMANCA, Spain CAP>
A locomotive and a school bus
collided at a level crossing lo-
d ay, killing 20 youngsters.
railroad and hos pital sources
said. Another :l6 children were
reported injured.
All the victims were between 6
and 12 years old, sources said.
The 24 other children aboard
the bus apparently survived the
accident.
Some survivors told the police
they warned the bus driver
about the oncoming locomotive,
but saJd he told them: "Don't
worry. We have time enough to
go through."
The driver was among the in·
jured and was in serious condl·
Uo". The bus was smashed tnto
three part.a. tt wu taking the children to
school at Fuent H d e San
E1teb1n, tn western Spain 30 mllea (rom Salamanca. The ac· •
cldent occul'Nd just after lt lef'l
Munoz, a vtUace 10 miles from
Fuentes de San Esteben, where
It had picked up some children.
'
* I OO's of LA·l-IOYS
Oft dltplay
* .......... FUE .... ....,
• ....... ,.klMJ
' WHITE'S .. La.Zli!.Jt. )lJ< JH 'l Giff' .· I .:.J10ppc,.,.. .
--·---ry ~·~
-
-r ,;_... . .. ·"""" ~ -: : .. . . ,, ~-·· ·····1 '"'.......;.,__~ ·-~ :--.~ .... ~~ -~-----:.. ..
They rock. TMy 1wl•~. 11-y rec:IM. AMI w.•••
got tftftn al -••ery style of L.-z..loy ...,,
111acle. Al cmalable ht • ......_,., •siety of
fabrics md •lftyts la all YOlr fGYorfh colors. So
come In mad choose tM &..JAOy llMlt's rigllt
for you.
COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO
3et £. 17th St. ~ M,:tluertte Plly. I
tA(rou '"'"' A•I-It t .. 0 , Of 1<0ulfl E•\I .. 11twt 10 .,._,w C•ttf>dtnl ..... ll<t\I VOi"° 0 .. 1.-I
142-8657 495-MQ2
Mon •• ,rt. 1M ~.-ltt. tM
Sat. 10·5 .., t0.5
CIO .. d Sunday CloMd lund1y •
, ..
'
' . . .. . -.
Orang e Coast
• LDITI O N
Y our Hometown
D a lly NewNpap er
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T H URSDAY, DECEM BER 21, 1978 ,.. -
"'I
TEN CENTS{
-. . ?
·eeavy Traffic, Dr11nk Patrols Fo~ecast !
r llotQrilta lhould expect two l thln11 Frtd.,, tratfk J•m• Md
an abund.ace of C•llfornia
Hlfthw•y Patrol ottJeera who wi be watcbl.q few U.. d~
driver.
Lt. Marlow Jobneton. th
CHP'a Santa Ana dlvillon ea.
eeut.lve otncer, u&d UU1 mcwn·
in1 that lbe 1t•te'1 fre way
force wlll be deployln&
specifically acalnat the drlnktna
driver, especially durtna eve·
nlnJ and l•te·nl&hl houra l .. all· y~u. he utd. the
Hl1hw1U1 Patrol alone Jailed 2N
moto"'11 \n Oranae County wbo
were ~lleved to be drivlnl un-
der tbe ann~ between 8 p.m
Friday and 6 a.m. Tuelday. the
same rr1Ucal period lhll year.
The number may be 1reater
thla year, he coetjectured. The
CHP , U\ conjunction with the
Orange County Sherllf'• otnce.
haa ·•streamlined" booking pro-
... .,,........
Readt1 fqr Santa
Rick Stellwagen of Trevose, Pa., cleans soot out of a
chimney just outside Lititz in preparation for Santa
Claus who lends a hand. Actually Santa Is fellow sweep
John 'Sutton, who donned. the red suit for the holiday
season.
OC Employment
,Total Sets ·Record
Orange County's unemp\oy·
ment rate reached its lowest re· cording ever ln November when
ll dipped to 3. 7 percent.
As unemployment in the coun·
ty reached • new low1 • the number of t.bo6e employed rut an
all lime blth of 962,400 job
holders.
affectlng employment figures
could be offset by an expected
continuing surge In manllfaclur·
ing activity in the county.
When s ummed up, EDD's
monthly labor study puts
Orange County in the forefront
of employment activity in the
stale with the lowest unemploy-
ment rate and the fastest 1row-
lng job market.
'"
cedures thet ahouJd aet officers
back on the freeway fut.er than
in the put.
Mlldnal tboee snarl• with Fri· day attemoon partyaoers and
weekend holiday drinkers ls
almost euaranteed to offer law
e nforcement officers the
Christmas blues.
Motorists who find themselves
weaving a bit or demonstrating
"anythlng else unusual" may
fmd a red light flashing m their
rear-view mirror. Johnston said .
The Highway Patrol ia putting
all ollicen lnto the field over the
holiday.
Those driven who slur a bit or
apgear a Utt.le glassy eyed m~
en up t.aking the freeway-side
sobriety test.
Those who fall will be
handcuffed. placed ln a patrol
unit and whisked to Orange
County Jail where they will sub-
mit lo one of three sobriety
tests, urine. breath or blood
sampling. Refusal. of course,
leads automatically to a SUS·
pended driver's license.
Followin1 the lest. the
thotorist will be booked into the
jail until released on ball thal
could go as high as $500 or unUI
they see a judge the following
Tuesday morning, Johnston
warned.
All in all, he mused. it's not
too good a way to s pend
Christmas.
Johnston warned that cotmty
motorists should allow plenty of
driving time to reach weekend
hollw destinations as well as
watch lheir intake of booze and
drugs.
"It'll be a mess," he warned.
noting that Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport is predic\ing two-
hour·long waits in traffic just to
make the loop t hrough the
(SeeTRAFFIC, Paget\2)
War on Wilson Waged
Homeowners Rap Extension
By MICHAEL Pt\SKEVICH Of tile o.il'f .. , ... Si.ft Members of the Mesa West
Homeowners Association are
waging war against a plan to
one day extend Wilson Street across the Santa Ana River to
Huntington Beach.
"You know what the bridge
tratric bas done to Vlctor1a Street.'' says Bob Hammond.
president of the homeowners
group. "It's reallr, chopping up the neighbQrbood. •
"We want the plan taken off
the city master plan." says
Hammo nd , adding th at
homeowners are planninl( an in· itiative drive to block the span
if the City Council fails to sup·
port them. Two city council members.
Norma Hertzog and Dom Raciti.
said Wednesday they joln the homeowners in their concern for
protection or the residential
area.
The issue will come before the council for the first time at a
study session set for Monday.
Jan. 8,. with a report from city
Public Services Director Bruce Mattern:
The extension of Wilson ls one
or three proposed river crossing
on the city's master plan. Others are in chiefl y a commercial
area. 19th Street, and more res·
'Dynamite' Teen
Hijacks Airliner
MARION, W. (AP> -A teeo-
aged girl who claimed ahe had
three atJcks ol dynamite hijacked
a Trans World Airlines jet with 87 penona on board today and tried
to force the release of a federal
prisoner convicted or hijacking,
authorities said .
The plane "'!as diverted to this
southern Illinois town, site of a
federal prison.
Three hours after the plane
landed the FBI was negotiating
with tbe girl through control
tower communications. She re·
fused to allow an agent on
board, the FBI said. But at mid-
day she released five persons -a
mother. h er infant and three
elderly persons.
Flight 541 en route from
Louisville, Ky., to Kansas City,
Mo., wu com~ sbonly after a scheduled atop in St.
Louis.
Tbe teen·ager was demandiJu[
the release of Garrett Breci
Trapnell, who is on trial with two
other inmates accused of taking
part in a helicopter escape at-
tempt May 24 during which a
worn an was shot to death.
At tM titne, Trapnell was lo
prison for a 1972 hijacking in
which he unsuccessfully tried to
extort $306.000 from TWA .
During lhe escape attempt.
Barbara Oswald of St. Louis hi·
jacked a helicopter and forced
the pilot at gunpoint to fiy to the
penitentiary. The pilot wrestled
the eun and Mrs. Oswald was
shot to death. The hijacker today
(SeelDJt\CK, PageA2)
Newport Comp!etes
Rulings on Density
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI t• o.lly ...... SI.Mt
The Newport Beach City Coun·
cit carped almoet a year and a
half o debate Wednesday by ap-
proving general plan amend-
ments that will cut density on
large undeveloped sites in the ci·
ty by as much as 35 percent.
The decision at the council's
last meeting of 1978 was greeted
with mixed reactions from a
spokesman for the Irvine Co ..
which owns most of the parcels
affec ted.
Th~ land company's Robert
Shelton told the council that,
while the slashed densities seem
arbitrary, after more than a
year of uncertainty. "we'r e
beginning to wonder if maybe
arbitrariness is better than ln·
declslon."
The cut.a were approved 5-2,
wltb Mayor Paul Ryckoff and
Councilman Donald Straus• op-posinlJ. Both said they wanted
the council to lake more lime to
look at each individual property
In order to forestall the posslblll·
ty of havin& to make additional
changes in the near future.
However. Councilwoman
Jackie Heathe r a pparently
spoke for the majority when she
said. "This is broad brush. but it
al least gives us some planning
base."
The city's general plan sets
forth permitted uses on various
land areas. While a general plan
designation is less specifir than
zonin~. lbe latter must be rom-
patible with the general plan
designation.
Commercial devetorments af.
fected by Wednesday s decision
are Newport Center. Castaways,
Bayview Landing. San Die"o
Creek Sites and Creek Sites and
MacArthur I Jamboree Sites.
Residential undeveloped sites
a ff ec t e d a re Wes tb ay,
Ne wporte r North , Fr eeway
Reservation East. Flflh Avenue
Parcels. CalTrans West and
Beeco Property.
The council generally 'a" reed
wlth planning commission rec-
om mendatlons for across-the-
t>Oard reducUons. but dlH"reed
(See DENSrrY, Page A2)
idential Gisler Street.
Mattern said Wednesday that a group studying central Orange
County traffic circulation re·
cently recommended that all
three byways be linked to Hunt-
ington Beach "within the next five to 20 years."
The group, known as CEN·
TROCCS. is made up of
technical advisers who forward
suggestions for projects to the
Oran~e County Board o r Supervisors.
Although extension of 19th
Street is listed as a priority -
possibly as early as L982 -the
issue of Wilson Street has come to the community forefront.
That's because Roy Kendall
and Jack Thompson. partners in
Mesa Bluffs Development Com· pany have asked the city for
oermission to build 15 con-dominiums on the planned right
of war for the new bridge. The
parce is located where Wilson
Street now dead ends. The city planning commission
has delayed a decision on the
building request. MaUem says be may Mk U. City Council for
a four month moratorium to al·
low lbe city sWf to study the
future ol Wilson Street. "The worst t.blu is tbe stall· log." says MeU. Sluffa pel1Mr Jack ThOmDIOD. "Either buv us out (for the river crossing> or let
us go ahead with the rest of our
development ...
Thompson notes t hat c ity
purchase ol 100 feet or right of
way would leave him with .
enough remaining land "for a
strip bowling alley." Councilman Dom Raciti s~s
be isn't buying any rurther
bridge extensions that could rum residential neighborhoods.
"Victoria Street is already
lost. so why ruin a nother
neighborhood?" Raciti asks. He supports extension of 19th
Street and possibly 17th Streets
Man Crushe d
Unde r Truck
In Irvine
A truck driver was crushed to
death under a wheel of his vehi·
cle today while working on the
engine in a lot at the Armand
Hammer Technical Center in
Irvine. L The driver, Henry o; 1ravis, or
Orange. was apparenUy working
under the Ult-up cab of the truck
when tbeengineslloped l.ntogear.
Police said they believe ~e
truck jolted backwards. ca"!Smg the cab to (all onto the dnver.
pinning his arm and head.
The man was dragged about
75 feet. 11\e truck struck a curb,
police said. and the impact ap·
parenlly knocked the drive r rree
of the cab but dumped him un·
der a wheel. . He was taken to Tustin Com·
munlty H08pital, where be was
pronounced dead al 7:47 a .m., a
half hour alter the accident. Police said the man was an In·
dependent truck operator work·
ing under contract for the Sully·
Miiier ContracUng Company of
Orange. He was delivering a load of
asphalt for a new parkin1 lot at
the Armand Hammer center,
2100 S.E. Main St .• police said.
o.u, ...........
NEW AtvEA CROSSINGS?
Meny Meu na Saiy No
to HUllliMton Beach. ··we~ -known as the Hub of
the "aHM>r Area but how many more spokes do we want to have!" asks councilwoman
Norma Hertzog.
She. like the homeowners.
believes that it would be Hunt-
ington Beach drivers and not
Costa Mesans who would benefit
from the new river crossing. Mrs. Hertzog says the existing
river crossings a re primary
links between Huntington Beach
on the west and the Irvine In-dustrial complex east of Costa
Mesa. But problems co~ld arise even
if the city ~oes alon~ with re· moving Wilson Street from
consideration.
Under current guidelines. both
county officials and those in
Huntington 8'.each would have to
g<t_along ~th the elimination of
Wilson Bndge. Mattern says the city could be
1n d ange r o f los ing coun t y
matching funds for new roads if
the master plan is changed. either by city action or through
a n initiative passed by voters.
Homeowner Ham mond points
o u t t h at Newport Beach man aged to keep matc hing
funds when city voters passed
an initiative blocking the Pacifi c
Coast Freeway. However, Mattern notes that
the Newport initiative affected a
state road proposal and not one
that is handled by the county.
Homeowners want to stop
Wilson Bridge, any way posst·
ble. "All their traffic is being fer-
ried through us," says Ham·
mond . "Let t"e m go up
Brookhurst a nd lake the
freeway."
Coast
Weather
S unny and a little
warmer Friday with highs
· 60 to 65. Lows tonight 32 to
40.
Thou figure• •re the
hlghliihts of the state Employ·
meal Development Depart·
ment 'a <EDD> monthly labor re-
port.
The report went on to predict
tbat tGta1 empl~eot in Orange County w1ll hit another new hiJb
ln Dffetnber.
~ult· -mt List Oai1ned
INSIDE TODAY
Cot~ in tM art'O Will
Ov d Bo k do more than prepare the er ue 0 menu -lhf!'fl'll decorate,
provide entmainment alld
That prediction wH bued
chlefiy ~ whit wu then U ·
Uclpated a.rtatmu aeuon hlr·
Ina u well aa "many new bull·
Detlel plUDlq to open their door1:,
On a ~ pe11lml1t.lc note, J:DO'~ nOt.s that there lJ
uaually • slowdown In trade du.r· tn1 the nnt quarter ot a new
year.
SI multaaeou1ly, however t
EDD analJIU mentloaed thal
..... ~ Im •lowdown
Tempw Offreial Name• Goldwater, Stenm. D nal •265 co1tumfd ~people and
1£ e ty 41' even c,_. Mp IM meH. See
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dou1Jlu Peaturiflg, Page Cl.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Terri Buford, onetime rmanclal
manarer of &he lll·fated Peopl•
Temple, w•rned tod•y th at
aenaton Barry Goldw'lller ud I
John SteruUa were on a Temple
"hit U1t" and accuaed •ttomeY
Timothy Stoen of "maatermlnd·
in&" the cult'• lllqal acUvttle1. <Related~. M > .... Buford told ....... that
"every lllecal act, every plan
for violence was either lllltlated
or •pproved by Stoea.L.:_ who
Joined tM Temple ln ,...., and
waa • hl1h·rankln1 m•mber
befor• teavin1 the cburcb In
lt'M.
Ila . Bu ford 1l10 1ald
Callfonla Attor ney General
Eve lie Yoaqer and U .s. Al·
torae1 WUMalD Hmt« WIN on ... I •
the hU t=peopte to be kllled Beall la 1olng to pay '265 for 1.-x
ln c11e a ever happened hoardln« 32 overdue ~a,.want-~!"_...._ au =~ S! to cult 1e r Rev. Jim Jon11. ed back by the cit y library, ~I.~'' ~ ~-"'1 ~
She alle,ed that Stoen planned some tor more than two yean. ~.. 'ii _.... ~ cs.~
the 1dllln1 o( Rev. Lester T be 53.year·old automotlve ~· Di .. ".,._.,..... ..
Klnsolvtna. a columnist lor the en1lneer aakl he ....i the boob • S! ~ _, •G
San Frandaeo Examiner, sent ln hls work. But Municipal IP ·~ ~=--ea death threats to bla wlle after Judie Richard Haoacom or· • "' ~,.. cv ..
she left UM Temple and isnuc· J derfijm TUeeday to pay the ~ 1:i w.ne-U.. t
aled $500.000 ln~: f 't $2C) • MO(\th and let
depo11tLo1Templ .tJt~. back' if \. 1 •J1 _,. .. .. II I .. ,,\,. • !~
l l t\ ) •
•
•
r
. __ Mesa Ge~g New
.,
COit.a M-.a ii aJowJnt niii>t· lime pink
Out aro th wbltbh mercury
~•por and 1n c*ndtac nl
atreetll&ht.t
Jn art th ro.y h11h pruaa.uNt
aodlum vapor llaihi.. U)'• Dru
MeUun. cit)' pubh<· rv1 t't>
dlr ctor.
Wbeo lbe Sou\b mi Calltom.la
Edlsoo Co romp) l.M Utbt·
Inf( cban~t'Over on au of the NIY'• m or arterl •bout 9()0
:itrt'C!t 1111 I• Coat• M • a'ti
tDwUdpal balll bUl ii( HpeNd tod~ ~-.)'fat. h • .,..
Aa aMial 1avtac• ol "'°"' than N0,000 la anUdpated wt..
tbt clty'a l '400 lncandHHnt
atretl llthll 11rvtn1 'an ral houa1n1 attu at tonvt•r lfd w
lht rosy 11ow. and Edison Co 1pok lmanaaJd
Conv U>n t'CH1 ta, bornt by
P!dlton throu1h tta nonn•l rate ttrurt~. re expet~ to be
more Utan otfHt by the 11vlt\t1
rt'lulttna from dot're11 ct oil
t.'Ocra)' MC'da, Uu: •OOk !Iman In
dtn'4d Nel~. eurr :!1l ll~·
td bf oldier' ·~ lt lnc: ete.nt lampt _.. f'l~ to be con·
nn.d t.o lbl llOdlum typee by
1980
Howevflr, thole boualn1 and
bu1lnn1 areas bathed now In
mercury vapor U1ht won't tee
red for probably 1tbout lour
yeara ata...t
While the lar1er todlum Upu ere a ... ~lve to ..-•t.t1 requtrlnt only 250 w1tt• or
power to put out 10 i>41rcent more
Haht than t.helr sodium v1Por
counterpart.. •malltr
ntl1hborhood 1hu are an ~onomlc tollup, th Edison Co. •Pokt1man notet.
Co•t• Meu. aaya Mattern. 11
about Lht first city In Oran11e
County to CQf1vert to the new
brlahter pink U1hta.
Uuntlnatoo Beech and Foun-
tal n Vafloy aro expected to
be1ln rfl)l.clns their mercury
vapor llahh with tbo pink
sodium 11ow next year. the
Edison Co. 11y1.
A P"lot on lrrine 'King'?-
•• ~N Counrdman Larry A•ran who JOrilY . n>yal"ta David Slllo Md Mrt Galdo erplalned her plan •-o..1t "*...,., re1ularl}' t1oda b mM:U 0 • Ued Arthur Anthony, al hls side. Wednesday She said that In
There·•• plot 1ain.t Lhe kine wltb Mrs Guido 00 the Uahl eod Silla nomln~ Vardoull1 for Ugbt of a rectnl voters' decision
m lrvhM. of a 3 2 aeaew aid he'd vote t,, his curttlll tum as mayor. An· to change the da~ of city coun.
CouncUwomao Ill ery Ann , dump vaa.rdouti11 and appoint 1 thony has been publlcly bollJle ell elections from March to June
Ga1do lntendi to fropc>$•. at th mayor wt~e term run• from toward.IS Ag.ran aocrMn. Galdo. of even-numbered years. the
Jan ti meetJn t> th" count'll, a JanualJ tu J•nuurv. rather than Mn Galdo broac~ed the sub-aelect~on of mayor-normally
plan that would del)()Sl' Mayor the currtnt Marc h to Marc jecl wltb Vardouhs in dlreet held Juat after election-may
Biii Vurdoullh 6Uld el~ct 11 new r.ialmeo laashlon. become even more PollUcaJ than
mayor Vardoull• 11 t ltiamln.i. and At • clOled session of tbe coun· Ills.
declarc.<d, Wed.n d•.v "Thtre'a M ell Tuelday, according to t.hoee Reacted Sills to news of the
Boal Parade
Contilllles
The Newport. Harbor
boat parade will continue
to ltght up the horbor
tonight through Saturday.
The 59th annual boat
parade begins al 6 o'clock
each evening and las ts
a bout three hours The
boats start al the Balboa
Is land Ferry and proceed
counter·clockwLSc around
the harbor.
About 200 hgbted boats
are participating ln the
event sponsored by the
N ewport Harbor Area
Cham bt!r of Commerce.
V1ewin' is available all
along the harbor, includ-
ing on Balboa hland
bcache11 and street cndb on
the Balboa Peninsula.
f 'rom Page A I
DENSITY ..•
with a recommended increase
from 538 to 800 allowable res·
idenUal unlta In New.yort ceni.r as • partlaJ tradeof for commeTclaJ cuts The council
voted to keep the f1gUl'c at 538
units
A Her hearing from the
chairman of lhc board and the
director of the Newport Harbor
Art Museum. the council did
agree lo mcrcru.e from 4,000 to
10,000 square reet the area the
museum can add. The area will
be used for stonng the permu
nent colleet1on. for office space
and ror c lassrooms. the
spokesmen said.
One other parcel given special
treatment Is the CalTrans West
parcel in West N"wport.
plot to aM nd ot th mayor " who were there. she looked the 1 .. 1 Id t d
"
.. "pnoar•. ho..,ever, to .. _ mayor ri"ht in the eye and said: P an: wou no • un er any "' .. ,,_ .. ... '-"" .,. d circumstances, be part of a 11afe on tus municipal thrOn4', "I think you oushl ~o step own. coup. We're not high school
with the re:st of the councJI mu· Bill. l think you re a lousy sophomores. going around mayor ·· Vardouli1 reportedly was dumping people out of office
Fro.. Page Al
TRAFFIC ...
termtnal area. .
.. A~d thtly are proJecling
absolut'11y no parking at LAX.
only in outlying areas surround
ing the aJrport ''
Orange County Airport, be
pre dic ted. wi ll be LAX 10
miniature.
"All main routes out of both
Orange and Los Angeles Coun-
ties will be jammed on Friday,"
he warned.
Trame ls expected to slack off
somewhat Saturday and Sunday
with a gradual buildup agaln
throughout Monday with more
Jllm m Ing expected from return-
ing motoris ts late that day.
And if it snow~ 1n the moun
tain a reas. which he said may
be a possibility 1-'riday, the
snarls wUI be compound~ as
motorists grind to stops al the
Grapevine and in Cajon Pass.
* * * Fair Weather
For Holiday
Period Seen
Fair skies and rising tem
peralures are_predicted for most
or Southern California over the
Christmas holiday1 according lo
the National Weatner Service in
Los Angeles.
Sun etnd tempe ratures into
the n1gn bOS are preo1cteo tor tht
local coastal nrea with night·
time lows dropping Into the up.
per 30s and lower 40s.
Mountain areas are expected
to reach into the upper 40a and
lower 50s during the days and
drop to between 15 and 25
degrees for the lowR.
speechlesa. · belore thelr terms are through. "I think Vardoulis has been He saJd Wednesday· having doing a good Job. J certainly
recovered his voice, "We were wouldn't voletoremoveh1m."
discussing the job performance Agran saJd a calendar year
evaluatioo of the city manager. mayor "would minimize the
when she blurted that out. My politicization of the mayor's of feeling WWI, what does lhal have rice ...
to do with the price of peas in Agran was the early victim or
China.·· a break with tradition in the way
f'ro111 P age A I
IIlJACK •••
was identified as her daughter,
Robin Oswald, 17.
U.S. marshals at the Benton
courthouse were on special alert
today because Trapnell was
scheduled lo argue on his behalf
before u U S. District Court
JUry.
Trapnell t-0ld a television re-
porter two months ago that he
would break out or the Marion
prison.
TWA said the DC-9 carried 83
passengers and a crew of four.
·'They're doing what the hi·
jacker is telling them to do,"
said John Leyden, an FAA
1pokeaman tn Wuhlnaton.
Joe Frets. an FAA 1pokesman
m Kansas City. said the jetliner
WIS hijacked on it.a approach to
Kanaas City International Airport.
Frets said the Jetliner "pulled
up. squawked the proper ID for
a hijacking and asked for
c learance to Carbondale."
which 1s served by the Marion
airport.
Frets said he did not know
whether more than one person
was Involved. The plane landed
In Marlon al 8:48 a.m. PST.
Trapnell is on trial in Benton,
aboul 20 miles from where the
airplane landed, with inmat~
Martin J . McNally and James
Kenneth John.son. ·
mayors have been selected 1n
Irvine. though It us a short-lived
tradition. considering the. city
waan'l lncorporated l1ll 1971.
Before Agran's election.
mayors had been selected from
the council on the basis of lhe
highest votegetter in the elec
lion. Though Agran was the
highest votegetter. two of the
council members-Vardouli ~
and newly elected Anthony
were openly sorry to M~c Agran
win.
They team~d to block h1~
becoming mayo r . and a lso
blocked Agran's compromise
choice for mayor. Mrs . Ga1do.
Sills joined with Vardoulis and
Anthony to accomplish the re·
election of VardouUs as mayor
and the election or Anthony as vice mayor.
Agran doesn't think the job
should be poliUcal.
"l see one Of the mayor's prin-
cipal resJ>OnllbiUUes as being an
effective presldtna omcer " he
said. "I don't think hla sel~tJon
should be made strictly m
response lo the prev a iling
political winds the day after lhe election.
· · r~ ought to be on a rotation
bas is If somebody were
particularly inept, perhaps that
would be cause for change, but tor the m06l part. J thlnJ< we ought
to share the responsibility tor pre-siding.
"The mayor has no lnherent
Powers that Justify a big up-
heaval. He Is just someone who
conducts meetln&s in a fair and
rt?Kponslble manner."
That's Bette r
' Former Secretarv or State Henry KJssmger Jooks up at
his paJnUng. as Kissinger rejected the f 1rst ~Hort The ~aint~ng was unveiled at the State Department m Wasbmgton, D.C.
Four Families Toi~
To, Quit Slide Area
By ANN£ COOPER Of ... o.lty ~ .... ti.Hf
Three retJred couples and "
widow wer served notice
Wednesday by owners or the
ShorecUffs Mobile Country Club
in San Clemente that their homes
are in ctanger and should be
moved immediately.
The four luxury mobile homes.
located at 92. 93. 94 and 95 Mira
Adelante. are the ones cl06est lo
lhe 60·root prec1p1ce created by .
a m assive landslide Monday
night . The homes belonsr to
Albert and Marianne Bates. Al
and AM Heimberg. Robert and
Rita Larkm and Mary Weber.
The notices from the Del
Prado Company said. "The
geologis t whom we have
employed to look into the failure
of the golf coune property ad·
jacent to our mobile home park
advises that your mobile home
should be moved immediately.
"lf not moved immediately.
your home Is In daoaer of being
severely damaged by any ex·
ten1ion of the golf course slope
failure." the notice concluded.
Mrs. Weber saJd sh.e has no in·
tention of moving. The three
couplet also aerved with a notice
said they have been unable so
far to locate any available
spaces for the homes, which are
valued at about S'T0.000 each.
In the meantime. the Larkins
are staying at a motel. the
Helmbergs with rrlenda. whale
the Bateses and Mrs. Weber re-
m aln in thelr threatened homes.
Meanwhlle. three miles south
of the ShorecWfs landallde. resl·
denu of Calle Nina are workin"
fra,..caJly to repair a similat
slope failure behind their hom~
before wmt.er rains set 1n A
geological firm hired by th!!
homeowners has aov1sed them
that If repairs are not made
they mta}lt lose their homes in ~
massive slide like the Oct 2
sUde m Laguna Beach
And at city haJl. d1Uerence5 of
opinion are surfacing among
San Clemente city officials a.<1 tci
poaslble imphcat1ons or recent
landslides. ·
Developer!' of nea rly s.ooo
acres on lhre~ San Clementi·
ranches are currtinlly reque:.i
ing va ri1tnces to the cily'-.
h11l s1de _g rad ing ord1nanct"
which protub1u development on
slopes wtth more than a JO per
cent grade.
Coyncilwoman Donn a
Wilkinson 11a1d Wednesday that
recent slope failures would not
Influence 4er 1n decadln)(
whether to approve developer:.
requests for vanances to tht.>
grading ordmance
Mrs. Wllltinlon aa1d an •~lent
land sUde apparently took place
on the Sborecliffs property
thousands of years ago. but lhf'
mobile home park was approvt'd
just 15 years ago by t'll)' or
ficlals. But a nothe r coun
cll member had a different
opinion.
'"That's exactly why s ut·h
projects should not be approved.··
said Councilman Howilrf't
Mushett. "We know we are df>1.1I
Ing with unstable land. and Coun
cilwoman 1 Myrtis> Wagner and r
have been voting again"''
variances to the hillside gradln~
ordinance for this very reason "
Because Proposition 3 on the
'Novti mber ballot now permits
the land to be acquired by other
s tate agencies for possible
r .. c reatlon or open srace
purposes. the coun c i r c -
deslfnated that land from multi·
ram ly residentJal to recrc:a·
llonal and open space. .
A spokesman for the state
Department of Transportation,
who was not aware o f the
change W>tll after the vote had
been taken, told the council
CalTrans has some ob1ectJon1>,
which will be submitted in wrH
m~.
Upper deserts <trc to be windy
with the hi ghs 10 the 50b and the
low!I between 2S and 3S degrees
Lower desert regions are to be
in the 60s during the days and
down to 3S 45during the nights.
During today's proceedings,
Trapnell left the courtroom
three times to talk with security
personnel outside the chambers.
When Judge Harold Baker re-
convened the trial Trapnell
asked for a delay because "I'm
1n a very emot1onaJ stale."
Wrap Up A During Our
The reductions in permit.led
densities were anillaled by the
City coWlcil because of concern
with traffic problems and p<)!li.1-
ble overdevelopment or the city.
While sweeping, the changes
upproved Wednesday night were
less radical than some that hud
been sug~ested during the leng~hy review period, including
the idea of redeslfnaling many
of the commercia alt.ea as res-idential
O"AHOE COAST l
DAILY PILOT
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•
20Children
Diein B us,
Trai.n CrWJh
SALAMANCA, Spain <APl
A locomotive and a school bus
collided at a i evel crossing to-
day, killing 20 youngsters. railroad and hospital sources
said. Another 36 chlldren were
reported injured.
All the vlcUms were between 6 and 12 years old, sources Hid.
The 24 other children abourd
the bus apparently aurvlved the accident.
Some survivors told the J>Ollce
lhey warned the bus cf river
about the oncomln1 locomotive
but said be told them : "Don't
worry. We have time enouah to go through."
The driver wu amona the jn.
jured and wu In aerJou1 condl· Uon .
The bua was smashed Jnto three parta.
lt waa tak1ng the chUdren to
school at Fuentes de Sen
Esteban. In weatern SpaJn 30
miles rrom SaJ1manca. The ac·
cldent occurred Jut1t alter it lell
Munoz, a vlJlage 10 miles from
f<'uentet de San Esteben where
It had pkked up aome chlidren.
Man'8 Body Fou~d
' BAKER (AP) -The bullet·
riddled body of a 30·Y••r·old H l"man hu been found by San
Bernardino County 1herlll'1
deputtee in hf• ear off Interstate 15
near the Nevada bord r. Deputies
1aJd the ma.n.1 idenltfted u Wylie
Boyd Hall or Vernal, Utah, wu
found Wedneaday lytn1 rac•down
In tbe b1c.kothlacarwlth mulUple
1un1hoc. WOUDda ln ble baad and c~eat.
Baker denied the request.
An FBI a1ent al Marion •a.id
sharpshooters and police dogs
were~ought to the courthouse.
A r rler asked Trapnell
what w happerung. He said. ··1
can't lelJ you except that there's
been an outalde threat.··
McNally Is serving two Jife
terms for taking over an
American Airlines Jet and de·
mandlng another plane. the first
was damaged whUe landing ln
St. Louil. McNaJly parachuted
over Peru, Ind., and wo cap·
t.ured five days later in Detroit.
TnpneU and McNally are
charged with cons~racy to
escape, attempted escape, and
aiding air ptrecy and kidnap·
pln1. Johnaoo baa pleaded guilty
to con•piracy to elC!lpe aod at·
tempted escape char1e1 but is
fl1hUn1 air piracy and kldnap·
pln1 char1e1.
The tr1al wu expected to go to
the Jury today. But before the
proaecutlon save lt• closina
ar1ument, Baker ordered tht
courtroom and courthouse
cleared of all but ofllclala and
report.era.
Oristlll88 Toys
Taken by Burglar
A 1rlnch·llke bur1lar •tole tuo wort h o f wrapped
Chrl1tmu toya from the •Part·
ment ol a Coeu ai .. a atudent
•omtUme Wedneaday, police Hid.
MlchMI Joteph Joyce, 22, told
police that • mlcrowue oven
and • blender were alao taken trom hit re.Jdence at 1301 Buer
St., brtnctnl the total Iota to "70. •
l
* I 0011 of LA·UOYS ..... , . .,
* ........... Fl.
dellYery
•AlllpleP..tdllg
WHITE'S
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COMI lft Giid chooH tt. &..Uoy fltart tftllt
fory0&
COSTA MEI A MlllfONVtf JO
•l.1'11fl ... 2*2 M~flt• Pky. 1~ ~' trom "••llfl\, ft ... ,, of 10.ll~ t••• • Moft .. M.r .. ~,. ~-CN\I VOllll) Oolt• I
14.2 .. 57 -.H02
Mott.•,rl.1CM Mon ·At tO-t tat.10.1 •• ,. '°''
CtoMd 141M•t CloaH lurw:t•Y
I
m. rrl•d la AUIUll, UH, l JHTliAIOH 14~no "
aep~ratedlutlli.reb. '·:-----------------------------------------------:---------------" • ..
•'
~ .
More Oil Ilikes? ,
OPEC to Study Falling Dollar
KUWAIT (AP) -Th rud ol OPEC la.Id l~-.Y lh o carttl
may conalder rurtb er ln -
cre&1• lA the Pl1c:• or ou an Ule flnt half ol 1t7t \f tht dolJ &t
f1l11 too much and world infl•· Uon coatlouel •lrool. At I meetlQI Lasf end in
the P r'lian GUlf emlral of Abu
Ob1bl, the IJ.nal oa Oraaniu tlon or Petroleum ExporUna
Countriea derided lo r vwwld
crud oO prlc by 1'.~ perctnt ln four alepl 1n 1979, ~lion.l.q
With a S ~t boolt Jan. l.
OPEC'a lecretary·teneral.
Beo4! Ortis ol F.cuacloli, noted tp
an i nterview today with Kuwait's news eaency KUNA
th1t the next 1 mi-annual OP
meeUoa la echeduled for June ln Geneva, Swlu Tland. "to ron-
alder any fu.rU\er decline an the
value ol the U.S. dollar, and to
take proper measurf!8 to meet this .
"But H the International ~cooomy deteriorates rapidly
there 11 a possibility that ari
emergency OPEC ministerial
meetlna may be held before then." be said.
Orth rejected Western ~rttlciam aroused by the price
increase, calling the bike a
"very moderate and responsible move."
He said It was )usUfied as
partial compensation for the
losses suffered by OPEC coun·
tries as a result of the decline in
the value of the dollar, the cur-
rency used in the oll trade and the additional erosion or oil
revenues by world inflation. West~rn ~rilics ~ere hasty
and unJustil1ed. Ortiz s aid, and
failed to evaluate the compelling
re11ona ror the prlct'! hike.
··whlch wu reached art&r •
thotouab tud)' ol lhc ffonomtc
1luallon &n both lh lndu.t.rtal
and OPF.C nat!Om." Tbf' Cert r admlnl1lratlon crlllclied tM unnpeded at p
pr ce n.M, and Prestd nt Carter
ur1ed OPEC to r«OOJlder. U S
omc11 fSUmatcod lht OPEC In creau, when comblned with
oUler nll1Uonary factors. will
add s or a cents b7 late next year
to the price 0 a 111100 or
1110llM ll pumpa In the United
States. 5'mHar ris · are xpeel·
Rest Ordered
For Carter
WASHTNGTON (AP >-
President Carter canceled
biJ appointment schedule
today and was ordered lo
rest in bia U vtng quarters
because or what was
described u an aggraval·
ed problem w:Ub hemor-
rhoids.
While House associate
press secretary Claudia
Townaeod said t.be presi-
dent was being treated by
bls personal physician,
Rear Adm. William M.
Luk ash.
Carter "has had lhls
problem belore alt.bough lt
apparently was never so
severe," Ms. Townsend
told a reporter.
ed for othftr petroleum producl3. .
The OPEC decusioo will raise
the b •le 1mce ol $12, 70 per 42.
a•llon barrtl of Arabian li1ht
crude oU toSl4.S. by next Oct. 1.
Anaheiin's
Cop F orce
Criticized
Altbou&h lt said "there is oo
clear evfdence of iodict1ble o(.
f ense&." the Orange County ,
Grand Jory gave Anaheim's
police a slap OD the wrist Thurs·
day for their handling or the
People's Park incident last sum-
mer.
In a letter to city manager
William Hopkins. the grand jury
said : •'There was some evidence to
suggest that undue force was used by some Anaheim police of.
ficers in answer to a situation caused by the public who acted
out their anger and frustration by throwing rocks and botUes."
The jury went on to make a
series of recommendations re-lated to police handling of situa-
tions similar to the People's
Park confrontation last July 30.
At thardme. a group or resi·
dents alleged that police called
to the park turned on those who sou~ht their aid and, in so doing,
ignited an ugly disturbance.
. 'Didn't Force Wife,'
Mate Says at Trial
In its letter lo Hopkins, the grand jury referred lo the inci·
dent as "a clear cut case of bad
communication between citizens
and t.bose persons hired to pro-
tect and serve." While tbe jury's sting was
directed chiefly al the police. it
reminded those citizens who were involved in t.be park Cracas
that they too "must share in the
blame for the melee ...
SALEM. Ore. CAP) -John
Rideout "honestly believed if
you are mamed to a woman,
you have a right to sex," bul did
not force hia wife to have lo·
tercourse. his attorney says.
Rideout is on trial on a charge
of raping his wUe. The prosecu-
tion says Greta Rideout will
t.estlf y the intercourse look place
as their 2""-a-year-old daughter
watched and cried, "Mommy,
Mommy."
The charge was filed under a
1977 rt-vision of Oregon's rape
law that removed marital
prlvilege as a defense against
rape. Attorneys for both sides
say the trial is the first in the na·
lion in which a hus band is
charged wit1' raping his wife
while they were living together.
Mrs . Rideout is seeking a
divorce.
District Attorney Gary
Gortmaker Lold the four-man,
eight-woman jury Wednesday
the 21-year-old Rideout chased
his wife and repeatedly hit her
before the alleged rape. He said
testimony will show the couple
fought the night before about ex··
tra·m antal affairs.
: But defense attorney Charles • ~ Burt says sex was always a prob·
l em in the young couple's
stormy marriage, and 1t was
their custom lo make up after a
fight by having intercourse.
Burt told the Marion County
Circuit Court jury that Rideout
admits to having intercourse
with his wife Oct. 10, but denies
using force. He said testimony
will show Mrs. Rideout inquired
about Oregon's rape laws before
accusing her hus band of rape.
Mexico Road
Open Again
TIJUANA, Mexico CAP)
Mexican authorities say thP
Transpenlnsular Highway, im·
passable sloce Tuesday south of
Ensenada because of rockslides
and flooding due to heavy rains,
has been reopened.
The highway. the sole link
between northern and southern
Baja California, washed out
south of Ensenada . Further
south , rockslides and flood
waters cut other sections of the
highway, isolating towns and
villages, the federal highway'
patrol said.
P olice said an unknown
number or tourists from the
United Stat.es were stranded for
about 24 hours belore roads
were cleared.
When making recommenda·
lions for averting similar inci·
dents. the grand jury recom-
mended:
-Continual r sycbological
evaluation of al officers as a means "to give adequate warn-
ing when an officer has become
so overwhelmed by bis job as to render him a danger to the peo.
pie be is sworn to protect and to
himself."
-Police involved in public
confrontations have their names and badge numbers in clear
view, a recommendation al med at making it possible to ideoUfy
officers who might be involved
in subsequent allegations.
-Police cars carry a number
imprinted in a contrasting color with letters at least four inches
high in plain view.
The grand jury's letter to the Anaheim city manager carries
no other weight than that at· tached to it by the public and the
concerned city officials.
Taiwan Visit Set
WASHINGTON (AP> -Depu·
ty Secretary or Stale Warren
Christopher will go lo Taiwan
next week to explain why the
United States has decided to end official relations with that coun-
try. administration sources said
today.
s Lesbian Loses Custody
' DENVER CAP> -A judge who denied a 36-year-old woman ~ ~uslOdy of her two children says ~ his decision was not affected by
• the mother's lesbianism.
:-Denver District Court Judge
"' Roger Cisneros aaid Wednesday
t.bat it was in tbe best interest of
• Audrey Lynn Stover, 8, and her ~ brother, Jesse. 6, . "lo be with
their father." Harold Stover, 41.
A rt!port by a Children's
Hospital investigative team in·
d icated, "Kathy C Kathryn
Stover) has needs that interfere
with her abilities lo cope as a
mother," Cisneros said.
"The court bas not considered
the lesbianism on t.be part or the
mother as central to its de-
cision." t.be judge said.
In a last-<lltcb effort to rebut
tuttmony challenging her
qualities as a mother, Mrs.
Stover took the stand Wednes·
day.
"What I've rebelled against ls
the housewife, homebound,
traditional view of women ....
I am the mother and I want lo
be the mother." sbe said.
"I like my children. I lhlnk
they're neat little kJda," Mrs.
Stover told the cou.rt. "I have
not been an untouehlns. unteei.
tng, uncartna penoo. ''
Asked lf w Jeablantam al!ect-
ed her children, Mra. Stover
replied, "It affect.a lbe Uvea ol all of us."
Asked tf she wanted her
children to be homosexuals. ahe
said abe wanted them "to have a
free choice of wbo they want lo
be as adult&."
After the declllon, tbe Stoven
ahoo~ hand.I and huaaed. then Mra."Stover broke lnlo tears. Sile ead lier Joy er. Aan
Ad1m11 botb DurHI, left wttll
'
----KAJHRYN ITOYIA CONIOLID 1Y UIBIAN LOVIR
FllttMJ Granted CUlllOdy Of r. Chtktfen
their a.ttorney, Ruth Buechler.
Mn. Stover refused to t1lk wtlb
reporltrl.
Ma. Adams. who moved ln
wl&b Mn . Stover after the
tepar.ut>n. aald, "What ll there
to 1a1t We lovt tM ebil*-aiil
wilb they eould be with UI. We'll
l
just have to set by.
"Thi• ls the best Chrl1tmaa
present I ever sot." Slover aaid
wllh a artn after the declalon.
The c~ bad lived wllb
their mother alnee the Stoven,
marr ied ID Au1u1t, tH5,
Mp.arated IMt March.
•
. '
-· OA!l.V pn..or A3 _
Freeze
Damages
Assessed
By .JEll8Y CLAUSEN °' .. ~ ..........
"Orange County really lucked
out," said agriculture
spokesman Wayne Appel this
mornin& as what is expected to
be the lut chill of 1918 moved
eastward.
"We got some cold weather
but very little damaee com·
pared to what they had iD San
Diego County and central
California," the deputy county
agriculture commissioner said
this morning.
Bob Anney of the A voe ado
• Growen Council in Fallbrook.
jus t south d Orange County. aaid
about 25 percent ol San Diego
County's 300-million-pound crop
likely will be loet.
.,.....,....
Behind the Times
An English gentleman in a bowler hat reads the 193·
year-old institution known as the London Times on Nov.
30. That was the last edition before the Times suspended
publication amid a labor dispute. No one expects it to reappear soon. <Story Page A9 ).
Cycle Crash Kills
Huntington Teen
Charles Anthony Grein. 18,
died Wednesday afternoon, from
injuries be suffered when his
motorcycle s truck a road
divider and be was burled into a
row of metal posts near bis Hun-tington Beach home.
The fatal crash occurred at
12:35 p.m. on Warner Avenue between Scepter Lane and Los
Palos Drive where the teen·
ager, of 17342 Wild Rose Lane,
lost control of bJs westbound motorcycle.
The youth, who police said
wore complete protective rirun.
gear including a be.huet. became the 29th traffic ratalily on Huot·
ington Beach roads this · year.
Twelve of those tatalit.les in·
volved motorcycle cruhee. Grein was pronounced dead OD
arrival at Hunttnaton Intercom-
munity Hospital at 1: 15 p.m.
Funeral servtces are pending.
Toilet Water
Dbo8es Flame
.\ Corona del Mar home de-
veloped an impromptu sprinkler
system Wednesday when a fire
lo a bathroom wastebaske~
cracked the° toilet which poured water onto the blaze and ex-
tineuished lt. Newport Beacb firemen aaid.
Tbey said the bleae beaan about 8: 15 ~.m. lo the home ~ Robena Tripoli, (04 lrb AYe.,
when some kind of hot object a~
parenUy kindled a fire 1n lb.e s econd -floo r bathroom
wastebasket.
And agncuJtural experts from
Fresno to the Mexican border
reported preliminary estimates
indicate that from 19 to 40 per-
cent of the citrus fruit now on trees hu been frost damaged.
Avocado and citrus growers ln
Orange County fired up orchard
beaters and turned on their wind
machines during midweek, but
temperatures never dropped
below 32 dearees. Appel said this
morning. And a five-day warm·
ing trend ls predicted. he noted
"Wind kept Orange County out
of trouble," Appel said of the
minor frost lhi.s week. He said the cold snap of Dec. 6-8
was more severe. with tem·
peratures dipping into the
mid-208,-.Even so. be said. little
damage was done lo crops other
lhan to tomatoes that had not been
harvested t.ben.
Fred Keller, agriculture vice
preside nt for Irvine Ranch
which is the county's largest
citrus and avocado grower, said
this momina lhat some orange,
l~mon and grapef ru.it trees suf·
rered damage Tuesday and
Wednesday and there was a liUle
rru1tloss.
"But it's not major at this
lime," Keller add~.
"We're sweating out January
now because it's predicted to be
fairly cold, colder than normal."
Freezin& weather In late January not only would
create citrus and avocado
problems. he said. but could badly
damage blooming strawberry
plants.
Talmadge Treated
JONESBORO, Oa. <AP> -
Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga~, waa treated al a locl.l hotpitaJ
early today after slipping on a
bar of soap in a bathtult and
brulslna bis chest and le11, an
aide safd.
ANNOUNCING OUR YEAR END
FLOOR SAMPLE SALE
On Sofas, Chairs & Sofa Beds
Save Up .to 3 ·0%
..... ;·"'9.
Your Favorite Dtetgner Wiii a. H~ To Meltt You .
H.J.GAl\RElT fU~Nll1J~E
PAOF!SSIONAL.
IHTEAIOA OESIGHER8
2211 HAllOl ILVD.
COSTA MU4 64Ml1S
.l
•
I
A4 DAILY PILOT
·Hijackers
· Give .ljp
In India
NEW D&UU. IM11 CAP) -
Two Yo.mt alr htJ•cken •bo dit-
mancled lhe "ltue of formier Prlmt 1111.nlttw ldra O....a&
from Jill 1urreodered lod11
after almost all tl•••r uo
holta1• nect out u.. JeW.Der'•
"" txll. Tbt blJM'k ... ' Mapoot tW9td
out to bl a lO}' platol ud a red cricket bell.
Na& GA.N'DIO "n"lMd lD Jall, and other otnriala ol her la·
dlra cooa ..... Party CblrtM lbe
hijacklne wu • plot to dlacn.odit lhe party
The hij ack rs were lake:n to
Lucknow. a&o mll 10UlhH1t ot
Ntw 0.UU Offtcial1 Hld they
would be allowed to ~d 1 news
coaftrtnce. thu. mtettn1 ooe ol
their demandl.
No one wu h"'1 ln tbe led·
dent Wedneld11. At ltaat bot:
American wu aboant the plane.
TR& ID.IACIDNG Wednelday
WH tho moet unu1ual occur-
rence In a day or violence
touched off by a parllamtntary
vote Tueaday that ouated Mn.
Gandhi from the eoe1 ln the
lowerhouleatMHwonlutmoath
and sent her tO Jill for the rest of
the currmt eeulon of Parlla·
ment, scheduled to end Jl'rid~.
Moro than 18,000 1upporters of
the former prtme mlnist.er were
reported arres~. many volun-
tarily to embarrau the 1overn
ment. and five persona were re·
ported killed.
Mrs. GandhJ, prime mlnJater
for 11 years until ousted la the lm elect.Ion, wu expelled from
Parliament and amt to Jall oa a
flndln1 that 1he bl~ked a 1975
parliamentary lavest.11ation of
the auto business started by her
son SanJay.
A RE&OLtmON by her llUC·
ce11or, Prime Mln1ster Morarji
Deul, found her guilty or con·
tempt ol Parliament and breach
or parliamentary privilege.
Free on Probation ............
Andrew Zlmmer, l~: convicted of settlng a fire that
kUJed 42 people at tne Maury County, Tenn .• jail, bas
won probation and been allowed to retum to his home in
Superior, Wis. ln a deal worked out in advance by
lawyers, his sentences in the arson and deaths were sus·
pended. Judge Jerry Scott saJd he had been punished
enough.
•
NATION I WORLD
JFK P ot llinted
Evide~e of F, ourth Shot Repo'rted
ORAHD RAPIDS, Mich. <AP)
-Ntw evlclenco In the In ·
veaU1aUoo of the Keo.nedy u ·
11ufn1tlon reportedly s hows
one shot waa flrtd from the area
of 1 1r111y knoll, In 1ddJUoo to
the three nrect from tho Texae
School Book Depolltory. dlaput·
Ina the lone ususln conclusion
or the Warren Comml11lon.
Tb• e.vldence ralae1 tbe
po11lbWty of • conaplracy In
Kennedy'• uaualnaUon, reJect·
ed by tbe warreo Comlmwion.
TRE COIOll88JON found Lee
Harvey Oswald acted alone in
kllUna the president and that on-
ly three ahot.t were fired, all
from the Book Depoeltory.
The oew acouatlcal evidence,
two members of the House u-
saaalnatlona panel said Wednes·
day. 1howa "beyond a reuoaa·
ble doubt" that four shot.a -
rrom two directions -rane out
ln DaUu 1$ years aeo.
The Waabtocton Poat. In
today's late ed1Uoos. quoted an
unidentified committee source
as saytna:
"THE WARREN Commiaaion
blew It. The commission said
there was no scientific evidence
of more than one gunman . . .
and therefore lbere waa no coo· aptracy. ·
"We've eatabUtbed that there
was a conaplracy. U we can't
ldenUfy tho second 1unman,
that's becaute lt'a l' yean later. I don't know what you do about
that now:• the IOU.ree said.
Rep. Harold Sawyer. R·M!cb,
Hid the acou1tlcal Hperta.
tettifylna before a private com-
mittee Miiion Monday, "coo ·
clude.d that there were rour
1bota, the third of which wu
fired from the grassy knoll." .
THE GllASSY KNOLL area
borders the route followed by
the Kennedy motorcade In 1963,
and has long been the subject or
unsu.bst.antiated reports as the
source of Cun.fire and the hidina
place of the second usa11ln.
Rep. Christopher Dodd, D·
Conn., who contlrmed Sawyer's
dl1clo1ure, said the evidence
raises serious questions about a
second gunman. But he said the
committee had not been able to
conclude rrom other evidence
that a second assassin was ln· volved.
Despite the new acoustical
study. Sawyer said there Is no
other phys ical evidence support·
ing the four-shot theory.
8A WYt.:a 8AID the oxperta
concluded ther waa a ts per. c~nt chance that tour abota were
fired at the Kennedy motorcade Nov. 22. 1983.
S•wyer Hid he could not r•
member the names of the U · perla.
"I 'don't know ot any reuon
not to accept It," Sawyer said
•bout the new evldente. He laid
the dladqeure "leavff me en·
tlrely up ln the aJr" about Ken· nedy'1 uausln.
IN WASHJNGTON, a commit·
tee apok man and otrlclala In
the office ol Rep. Loula Stokes,
D·Ohao, u sa11lnallona commit·
tee chalnnnn, reruaed comment.
on the <illcloeure..
But a knowled1eable wource
said. "I don't think Mr. Sawyer
would go Qo radio and lie.·•
Dederich
Re-arrested
In Arizona
$1.1 Million m Gold Missing
LAKE HAVASU CITY. Arit
(AP> -Synanon. rounder
Charles Dederich has been
placed ln custody at 'his home
after being re-arrested on a war-
rant sl&ned by Gov. Bruce Bab· bltt.
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Federal officlala say 325 pounds
or Uncle Sam's gold, worth
about $1.1 million, may have
gone up In a New York chimney
in s moke or out the door with a
thier.
They know it's gone, but they
don't know where.
"WE'LL NEVER BE able lo
a nswer all the questions," As·
s istaot Treasury Secretary Joe
Laitin acknowledged Wednes·
day night. '
Stokn or Melted Away? somebody has been s tealing,"
he said.
The U.S. Secret Service, the
Treas ury agency conducllng the
1nves tigatlon , h as b een
Babbitt signed a warrant
Wednesday charging Dederich w\th conspiracy and sollc1tation
to com nut murder.
U there were some way to de-
termine that it was all stolen.
officials said it might be the
lareest theft or goveroment-
owned gold from a federal
facility la the nation's history.
The eovernmeot isn't even
sure exactly bow much gold is
missing rrom its U.S. Assay Of.
fice in New York City. But it
estimated the amount at s.200
troy ounces Wednesday ln an an·
noun cement. s earching for a culprit for CALIFORNIA GOV. Edmund
months. he said. G. Brown Jr. told The Assoc1at-
M EANWRILE. IT Is still That investigation has led to ed Preas in Sacramento on
checking its books, as well as no arrests. altho ugh on e Wednesdayni&htheslgnedanex·
nooks and crannies of the bu.Lid· employee was caught trying to tradition warrant Monday that
ing In lower Manhattan where steal gold earlier this year and wasrela~e4toBabbill.
the asaay ofrtce ta housed. is in pnsoo. orricials said. Dederich had been rree on
Orticials say there are two $100 ,000 bond arter his arrest
basic problems In trying to pin· THE TREASURY Depart· two weeks ago in connection
point the amount or gold mies· ment began looking into the wtth a r attlesnake attack on Los
ing and where it went. matter about a year ago when AJ\geles attorney Pa ul Morantz,
First, the orfice records from Sen. William Proxmire. D·Wis. who won a civil judgme nt
the lime it opened in 1854 to received a letter alleging gold against the foundation.
1973 are so bad it's bard to say thefts and turned the letter over Dederich's doctors apparently
exactly bow much gold was to the Treasury. told authorities Wednesday he
supposed to be there in 1973, waa too ill to be moved from tu!>
when record·keeplng pro · home. An armed guard was
Border 'Seal' Urged
Panel: Tighten Law io Curb Illegal Entries cedures were Improved. Potted In hla bedroom.
THAT UISES THE poe1lblli· Flynt Fails AUTllO&JTIES SAJD two in·
WASJUNGTON <AP> -Say-
ing tbe United States can no
longer be a "safety valve" for
Mexico and other developing na·
lions wtth burgeonJng popul•·
lions. a House comm1tlff u rec.
om mending tighter laws to hall
the now of illegal aliens Into lh1.a
country,
The House Select Committee
on Population released a report
Wednesday that also urged bet·
1l/UANA COPS
Jff N RAISES
TIJUANA, Mexico <AP) -
Police are getting a :;o percent
pay ralae ''to atop the attempts
lo bribe them.'' s a ys a city :>pokesman
T h e a nnounce me nt s aid ~al araes or the soo police o(ficers
Wiii go from a minimum Of
about $195 monthly lo $292, start-
ing J an L The lop wage wtU be
about$440. .
In the U.S. city or San Diego,
bl'parated from Tijuana by the
internatJonal border. police pay
averages mo re than $1,000
monthly.
ttt effort.a to ••seal'' the U.S.·
Mexican border by devotlog
more federal mOM'Y and law en-
forcement penoonel to keeping
out Illegal aliens.
REP. JAMES II. Scheuer, D·
N. Y ., the committee cbainnan,
said 60 percent of the "hundreds
or thousands" of Illegal aliens
who come to the UnJted States
each year are from Mexico.
"They come for the simple
reason that Job opportunities and
income are belt.er here. and lliuo
easy to cross our borders llle1al·
ly. • • Scheuer eaJd at a news con·
rerence.
The United States bu a
"chaotic non-policy" of keeping
track of rorelcn visitors who
come to this nation temporarily
to study, do business or see the
sights. Scheuer s aid.
THAT MEANS THERE Is no
reliable record or bow many
forelenen illegaJly r emain In
the United States. he 11td.
He estimated that 40 percent
of the UJe,al alleM enter the
country le1ally as 1tudeotl or
tourt1t1, overstay their vlaa
limits ln vtolallon or the law,
and then melt into the lmmi·
grant community.
Although the committee re-
port taid there ls no accurate
record of bow many Ulegal aliens
are in the United Slates. ll said
estimates r~~l between two mllJiooand12 on.
ty that the amount mlaaing dependent phyalclans would ex-
slnce then might be more than ~O Stop Tri·al amine Dederich today to see 1f announced, or a bit less. he can be moved to the Mohave
Second, the office's main task ATLANTA (AP> _ Hustler County Jail or Mohave General is not storing gold but melting Hospital ln Kingman.
down such golden objects as magazine owner Larry Flynt Dederich, 65, Jen a Phoenix
necklaces or nugeets. Some must stand trial on obsceruty hospital last week against the
gold ls lost routinely in the fiery charges brought against him in urging of his doctor and ramily.
refining process. September lirrl, 8 district court His doctors saJd he was being
Judge has ruled. treated for exha"•tion and men-"The laws or standard com-Judge n..__.h Be l ....,, UVJVI. Y as ey over· tal depression. TO aEDUCE TflE likelihood merclal practlceri." Indicate ruled motions by Flynt's at·
that lllegaJ immigrants w1u be nearly hair the 5•200 ounces tomeys, who sought to quash the DEOEalCR'S attorney told
able to rind jobs in the United would have been lost in refining charges. claiming Georgia's ob· Mohave Countv Attorney Dave
States, the committee reco m· since 1973• Laltln said. Other scenily law was unconslltu-Babbllt and Superior Courl
mended setting up a fraudulent-ounces may be s mudged on llonal. Judie Leonard Langford they
document laboratory In the Im· waUs or lodged in cracks. he Fulton County Solicitor Hinson would fight Dedertch's extrad1·
migration and Naturallialion said . McAuliffe. who filed the lion to Californla, where he was
Service to control the large charges. saJd pretrial hearings ordered to stand trial with two
market for counterrelt Social ••BUT WE'RE NOT overlook· In the case probably will be Synanon members in the snake Securl~c~.~~~rtific~~-l_n_g_t_h_e __ P_o_s_s_i_b_1_1_1t_y_t_h_a_t __ s_c_he_d_u_l_ed_in_JM_u_a_ry_. ______ at~t~a~ck~·~-------~
and drivers licences used by ll·
lesal allem.
The committee a lso urged
Congress t-0 pass a law making
U S. sponsors or legal imml·
Rrant8 financially responsible
for them
Among other recommend&·
tloru1, the committee also wants
a touchening or regulations to
prevent visa abu.ses.
Much of-Nation Freezes
.HeaVy Snow, Gale W aming1 Up in EOJJt
Te11111 Prat...a .... ,. ......... Pll,..r---------""
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l llll• lt0t~ L~Af199lft
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H-Orl11• HtwYor-Olila. (It,
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1 .. 1 jlllll!VMll119 11110 ,,_. >Ch Ill
l4Mltl•tnl c.11-· '"''""' ~ '"' 1tt11t Ill~ l'llOUfltellll.
,trUttltF\ •ho ••H<l t 01"e
l•UllM l*'tN•"••l'f w"'°' OI U .. Jt """ Ill ...,....,.,. c.lllOmle -.
tefllt lt111f11'1WICI l'rlOl'f
ffle (tlllOrllle HIQllW•'f li'tltfl
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SuM y 4lllCI • llftlt wtrmer Nlllf'•
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l 10111 ¥•tlelltt WlllO• flltllt 411\d
mor11l"t houn Hl9"t Frlde'f t2 to•'· ' C•••l•I ,....,,.,.1uro Wiii ...... betw••n O •no U lfllAfld 1•11'·
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.... Tiit Wtltr ..,.,,.., .. ",. wlll M ... .., .. ..,n.-
TMURIOAY
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ltcelld l-• °''·"'· '·' ,•IDA't
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MMll rl1t1 It ,. • m , ••• It U
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HUfltlflti!M Miii ,..._-I llH d lHl w .... -......... ~·IOl\t ...,
PlnePota
Rogm' unlqut holiday
pin• combined wtth holly
and otha-colodul .,..,, ..
make• luting gtft that wtll
ec:Ctnt •nv home'• pado or
ttlfty.
Giant PolMettla1
Roter'• Giant Edee PolnMt· dM haw MWr bftl\ men
beautiful. They •r• avail· ..,.. wtth ~ bloomt ln
elthtt Chrl1tm11 red-or
.Athc.
Ideas
Our exciting anav of
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elant• make perfect
Chltltmat..,.. for fam· dy ...... and.,_.._ ••ocla._ becw they a.re lifta that keep Oft IM"8~ .... ,..,.
And, don't forget
Roten Gallery, full of
unique omamente and
decorator Heme or
Roten Fl«JNt for that
· c.tom bolW., floral
uran1ement your
9ue1U wlll n e ver
foreet .
••
Decorator Items
The Gall try 11 full of very
unique gtft Item• from
Imported omamcnt.t and
Italian miniature tight• to
exqultlt• European deeoratlone, Olr111ma1
garland and much, much
morel
• Sen Joequln HW• ~et MacArthur Blvd., Newport ~ach. (714) 640·5800
Open Dally 9am • 6pm
CloM4 ChrMbUe o.,. N .. Yqn Dev ancl January I, 1'79
1 '
..
•
• • . ,. ..
CALIFORNIA ThW'ldey,Oeceml>er21, 1978
Jones Hit Man in SF?
Plan To Kill Defectors, Officials Revealed·
..............
SAN PRANCJSCO (AP) -A
lead t ol an u1u lnatloo team
111l1ned by the Rev. Jtm Jooes
to klll Paoplea Temple defectors
and pubUc offlclala remalns
aJlve lo San Franclaco, attomey
Mark Lane 1ald be wu told by a
reporUld Jones' conttdant.
Lane told r porters Wednes-
day lbat h1I cllent Terri Buford,
wbo be aald left Jonestown three
weeks before the m&M murder-
1uJcldet in Guyana, knows the name ot the penon.
ASKED WHO was involved in
lbe plan, Lane replied, "Those
who played the role of guard in
Jonestown and those people who
remained here ln San Francisco.
And Terri Buford says she
knows the name of the person
wbo is bere in San Francisco
who bad the responsibility to
Catt)' out the program.'•
Lane, however, declined to
idenWy the person.
Those who might have been
marked for assassination before
Jones ordered the deaths of
Oaildren, ltlotlaer Resrued Woman Gets
3Years in
FraudClUe
Mary Ortb reaches for her son Ernie Jr., 1~. after
she and three youngsters were rescued by a California
Highway Patrol helicopter from the snow near La Porte in
the northern Sierra. Andy Anderson, center. carries
Monica Guerrero, one of the other two children rescued. They had been trapped in a camper pickup truck in the snow four days.
Asbestos Workers
:Ask ·Medical Exams
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
24-year-old woman, convicted o!
welfare fraud in Ventura Coun-
ty, has been sentenced to three
years in prison for her role in a
welfare scheme that netted
$123,000 from Los Angeles County.
Patty Mouton, 24, who pleaded
guilty t.o four cotmts of forgery
and welfare fraud in the Los
Angeles case, was sentenced
W_ednesday by Superior Court
Judge Leslie W. Light, who also
placed her on nine years proba-tion.
SAN PEDRO (AP) -A union representing 2,400 workers bas
asked government agencies to force Todd Pacific Shipyards to pro-
vide annual medical exams to auanl a1ainat dilease caused by
· asbestos.
. • .,
Local 9 of the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding
Workers of America filed complaints Wednesday with the state
and federal departments of occupational safety.
All workers at the shipyard are affected by asbestos "because
the asbestos particles become airborne and float throughout the
yard," said Steve Roberts, executive secretary of the union.
ROBEBTS SAID TBAT allhougb only shipwrights and joiners
work directly with asbestos, all craftsmen at the shipyard are cov-
ered in the complaints -marine macbiniats, boilermakers,
pipefitters, welders, s h1p fitters and riggers.
A union request for checkups in July was rejected by the com·
pany. Roberts said.
Noting that the Navy announced ln July it would provide
medical exams for military and civilian personnel exposed to
asbestos, Roberts said, "It seems like we in the private sector are
second-class citizens. They (Todd officials) say we are not entitled
to a medical screening program."
1) I estimate my home's value at
2) Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
4) Balance I still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligi~le to borrow {subtract 4 from 3)
6) Amount I'd like to borrow
A 45-COUNT complaint issued
last September charged Miss
Mouton and two co-defendants
with cheating Los Angeles Coun·
ty out or $122,957 between May
1976 and October 1977 by receiv-
ing aid for 66 non-existent
children. The same three were
. convicted of bilking Ventura
County out or $14,000 in a similar
scheme.
Prosecutors said the def en-
da nts used counterfeit birth
certificates for themselves and
the fictitious children.
With a Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California, you
may qualify to borrow from $3,000 to $30,000 (or even ·more!) to use
for your chtldren's education, travel, other worthwhile Investments -
almost any purpose you can name.
Calculate your borrowing powe~ adjust that amount to your needs
and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your
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Ncwpon O#nch C>Mtt. 1401 Dove Stmt, Ncwpon Beach 92663. (714) 833-351 I
• """-"""-'C--.. i;• ...._,O•C:
more than 900 persons In
Jonestown have not been public·
ly ldenWied.
Lane commented to reporters
as the woman testlfled before a
federal grand Jury lnvestJgating
the ambush slaying of Rep. Leo
Ryan. who wu •euoned down
with four other persons at an
airstrip before the mass deaths
took place. .
WbJle none ·of the teltimony
was made pul>llc, Lane slid ahe
had answered aU-1he grand
jury's questions and did not take
the Fifth Amendment or ask for
immunit.y.
Lane said sbe had already
turned over Peoples Temple
bank aceotmt records showing
that the cult had more than $7.S
m lllion in the account in Swiss
banks in Panama, and that she
bad no information about Ryan's
death.
Lane also said that a message
from a controversial figure in
the Peoples Temple case de·
livered to Jones may have
touched ott the mass deaths.
Lane aald that Th:nothy Stoen,
a defector from the temple, sent
a measage to Jones warning that
any defections prompted by
Ryan's visit to Jonestown would
"mean the total destruction ot
Jim Jones aqd Jonestown."
Lane. whd escaped Jonestown
at tbe start ot tbe death ritual,
said be was present when the
message was delivered verbally
by a temple member to Jones
Nov. 17, the niaht before the
airstrip ambush. • •
Stoen, unavailable for com·
ment, kn~ how to manipulate
the cult leader, according to
Lane. who said Jones distrusted
Stoen fearing he was a govern-
ment agent.
Stoen ls a former Calllomla
prosecutor who is now a private
lawyer representing former
Peoples Temple members wbo
are au.i.ng the cult. Stoen's son
was •I.DODI those wbo died at
Jonestown.
Meanwhile. a California at·
tomey general's tuk force is
looking lnt.o allegations that
Stoen, who beaded the San Fran-
claco district att.omey's voter
fraud lmit, covered up a probe
involving the Peop.les Temple in
1976.
IJ AS MANY as 1,000 temple
members were s hipped from
Los Angeles and Mendocino
counties t.o San Francisco to
vote ln the city's 1975 municipal
election, according to published
reports.
Arter being a temple member
more than slx years, Stoen left
in 1977. He bad served as aasis-
tant prosecutor lo Mendocino
County during the period. and in
1976 was named a deputy dis-
trict attorney in San Francisco.
Small Plane Crashes at LAX
LOS ANGELES <AP > -
Turbulens:e from a nearby
jetliner may have slammed a
s mall charter plane onto a
runway at Intematiooal Airport.
injuring both meo aboard, one of
the men says.
Pilot John Howerton, 25, or
Burbank. was listed ln critical
condition at Hawthorne Hospital
after Wednesday evening's
'"'crash, which occurred as th~
CaWornia Air Charter Cherokee
Lance was landing.
Passenger John Thomas
Howell, 25, of Valencia. also a
licensed pilot. was in good coodl·
tion. a hospital spokeswoman
said .
"An airliner just in front of us
-a jet, a 727. I think -set up
turbulence that slammed us into
the ground." Howell said.
Gilt of Protnt
SACRAMENTO <AP>-lt was
a Christmas gift of protest from
a group of militant wellare recip-
ients t.o Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.: Jars symbolizing blood and
ashes.
Kevin Aslanian, an un·
e mployed San Jose man who
gets welfare for his wife and
three children, led the group to
Brown's office Wednesday. Asia·
nian is head of the Welfare
Recipients League. Aslanian said
~e group bu flied a sult accusinf
( STATE J
the state of not implementing a
law requiring emergency aid in
casesofoeed.
Seal Ba.II• Stolen
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police
are looking for several cases of
potentially dangerous .. seal
bombs" stolen from the tuna
seiner Mermaid at the Street
Pier, omcers said.
The small explosive devices
are used to "shock or frighten"
seals in tuna ftshing waters and,
according to fire department of·
ficials, could "kill or severely
injure" humans. Frank Correia.
owner and captain or the
Mermaid, round 1.872 or the
bombs missing Tuesday.
Con1'ktion Changed
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -The
felony conviction or a Palm
Springs psychiatrist for sollcita·
tioo for burglary of another pbysi · cian ·s office bu been reduced to a
misdemeanor... ..
However. despite the reduc-
tion Wednesday in Riverside
County Superior Court. the sen-
tence was unchanged for Dr.
Morton Kurland. former mental
More Parking Places!
For
south coast Plaza
customers .
The day
after Thanksgiving
and everv weekend
'til Christmas, our
2800 employees wm
be bused to the PlaZa
sothatyou,
our custo~, wtll have
more convenient and
close-In parking.
~
,health director of the Desert
Hospital here -two years pro-
bation and a ~.ooo fine in con-
nection with the burglary of the
office of Dr. James O'Connor of
Yucca ValJey.
Tankft-B~ Do"'11
LONG BEACH <AP> -The Atlantic Conqueror. an 800-foot
tanker loaded with 81,000 tons of
crude oil was being towed
toward this port today after its
main engine broke down about
125 miles southwest of here.
A Seattle towing tug reached
the Liberian-registered tanker
Wednesday. Fears that the wind
and current might force the dis-
abled vessel ont.o Bishop Rock.
about 100 miles west or San
Diego, and cause an oil spill had
prompted the earlier dis·
patching of the Long Beach
harbor tug Spartan to hold it in
place.
Bodfl of Dl.,.r Found
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The body
of J oho Andreoli, 38, who
jumped to hls death off the
Ocean Beach pier last week
while wearing a weighted scuba
diver's belt bu been found noat·
ing in the surf, the coroner's of.
fice said.
SOUTH C~ PlAZA
NZra trom SOUtn cxmt Pla:la wage,
artsto1 & san otego FrefNr.rol
' ' • A I
. .
•
•
f . • ' t •
• • • z • :
Bay Cleanup Cost
A .Public Concern
NrWA -Th Newport-Irvine Waale·Mah11emenl
Agencl -isn't a group lhat people ael r ally xciled
about. ll'a o consortium of tocaJ 11encl that surround
the Upper N ""J)Ort Bay. ·
Jt.s purpose to come up with a plan to cl an up nol
onJy the bay, but th waterwl)'I that empty lnto It and h y Pollutt'd it
NIWA' work ouaht to be of conalderable Inter t to
residents of N wport Beach, Costa M a nd Irvine
becau those clU . are m emben along with lb Irvin
R anch W tcr 01 trlct and tale and county
r('tpre1'entotiv Und r a plan ~Uy put out by NIWA.
the c t or not only cleaning up the bay but Jtio
preventJon ot future PolluUon, la going to be born by
taxpayers
The primary source 0( pollution 1n the Upper Bay ts
sill thot's rupJdlr f11Ung •n the waterway. The tale, a
owner or th bay ~ ccololicaJ p~erve, is go ng to have to
pay for dredama what's there now.
But control or future siltation ls where there's a split
between NIWA memben.. One aroup holds that It's nearly
impo sible to hult the ruoorr of mud-bearing waters from
upstream construction sites. This majority viewpoint also
contends that IOme attempts at slit control should be
surticient since complete containment would be loo costly
for builders.
The other school of thought is thot silt containment is
m andatory. Let tho builder pay the cost of controlling the
silt (including construction o! "8 d eslltlng basin south of
San Diego Freeway) lm;tead of letting it flow into the bay
where the public pays to dredge it out, the minority
m embers say.
The NIWA plan reflecting the majority viewpoint is
available for public comment. Eventually a rlan must be
a pproved by the federal Environmenta Protection
Agency.
Since either plan will cost the pubUc millions. it
behooves residents to educate themselves, then s hare
their views with their city officials.
Loss for Schools
I Donald Smaijwood will be sorely missed on the
Newport-Mesa School Board.
SmaJlwood. a local attorney who's served on the
board since 1971 and currently is its president, is
resigning in Januar y.
He has cited frustration with eroding local control as
one of the reasons for his departure. In addition, the
death of his wife, Costa Mesa City Councilwoman Mary
Smallwood, in October has taken some of the e njoyment
out of civic activities for him.
Smallwood's intelligence, liveliness. genuine concern
for the people he served and hard work have made a
significant contribution to the school board and to local
citizens.
We wish him well as he turns his attention to his law
firm and private life.
And we can't . help hoping that someday once again
he'll choose to bring his energy and discerRment to
enrich the public scene.
Oiristmas Spirit
Former actor·stuntman John "Monty" Ryan lost his
$307 Social Security payment to bandits in a Newport
Beach parking lot early this month.
The Costa Mesa man, crippled by a stroke that has
left him unable to work s ince 1970, figured he'd never get
the money back -money that left his family short of
making its $.185 monthly rent payment.
But Ryan had forgotten the power of Christmas
s pirit.
His loss was returned five-fold .
Orange Countians have pitched in directly or through
the Newport Beach Police Department to aid Ryan, his
wife and their three children.
When Mrs. Ryan learned last week that the fund had
reached $885 she pleaded for Daily Pilot readers lO send
their donations elsewhere.
"You've got to call this off," she urged. "It's needed
more now by other people."
But the money continued to dribble in -the fund
finally topping $2,000.
Christmas will be merry, indeed, for a family whose
burdens have been somewhat lightened this year by the
generosity or others.
Mrs. Ryan said she had forgotten how really
"wonderful" people ca,n be, that this year's Christmas
has proved something special.
It is special. Not only for the Ryans. but for those who
made it special for them.
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of lhe Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-.q21.
Boyd/Sony
ByLM.BOYD
Original name of the mulU·
b11lion-doUar Sony Corpora·
lion In Japan was "Tokyo
Tsushin Kogyo." Westerners
found It dilficult to say. So its
chief executive Aldo Morita
tinkered with new-name no-tions. Finally, he combined
the LaUn "sonu.s" meaninj
sound with t he highly
American "Sonny Boy" as
popularlied by Al Jolson and
came up with Sony.
t
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
If the City Councll in
Costa Mesa plans to do
away with all tbe
town• 1 eyeeon1, u per
the column on Sid
Soffer'• yardful of
Cadillacs. tbo council
hH a fuJl·Ume Job on lta buct..
J.V.
01 ..... , 0.. <-• .,. .... ........ ., ,. ... ,. ...... "" ..c-'ty_,.,,..... .. ...
:.::;'~'C.~ ....... .
ChrtJtmas in Yugoslavia is
preeeded by another holiday
called Ochichi. Youngsters
on that day traditionally
grab their fathers, lie them
to beds and chairs, and
decline to release same until
sald elcters promise to de·
liver the reque s ted
Christmas presenta.
.t Adolf Hitler always put a
oeapln1 spoontul of sugar ln
bis wlne.
At least nine U.S. preal·
dents had at one time or
another owned slaves.
Q. "What'• Alzheimer'•
Disease?"
A. Tbe *bnical term tor a
brain aliment that moat peo-
•le call senility. .
Q. "In skateboard llnao,
what'• ·sooty foot'?"
A. A ride wtth. the rl1ht foot
ahead of the left.
The fouaclers of Jericho,
Mlnn, were a rell1iou1
bunch. They named tbelr
town tn honor of the Biblical
River. But tbey weren't
atraltlaced. They rtnanced
their pubUc ~et with 1
municipally 11l0on.
!1
\
Robed N. We.ed/Puhllsher Thomal KKYllt2dltot
~. Decernb9r 21, 1978 p_!MJe ........................................................
Rowland Evam/Robert Novak
China: The Lifestyle Changes
TACIONO. China -Tention
bet,wten a generation of state-
1 m poaed conformity and the new
1llrn1'1 toward personal
fre dom ln ChJ.na helps explaJn
the retp()nle of a 17·year-old girl
to controlled but aignirlcant
c:hanaca ht!r •
Wt w re taken to vlslt the Im·
maculate cramped quarters o( a
alx ·member
famlly Uvina
and workln1
wlth a hair·
million other
C hinese at
th Tacblng
oil fields. The
head or the
f1mily was a
1 m 111 n g.
archetypal
"model worker" who as a driller
helped open these fields In the
late 1950s but now does the
lighter work or watch repairing.
Arter som e p e rfun c t ory
aloscaneerinJ( from this worker,
we asked his eldest child. 17,
about her plans after finishing
middle school.
"Whatever the state wants. me to do." she replied automatical-
ly. We persisted: surely, you
must have some desire of your
own. She giggled. Then after
brier hesitation, she said. "My
father repairs watches, and I
would like to work m aking
watches."
THAT MAY seem a modest
statement of independence, but
it could not have happened mere
weeks ago. In the presence of
important cadres from the oil
fi elds, this simple girl was re·
vealing something important:
she has ambitions and desires of
her OWn and lS not a mefe pawn
of the state.
The brave Chinese who put
up wall posters in Peking calling
on Jimmy Carter to investigate
human rights Jn China (and
pasted them up again after they
were torn down) are the tip of
the ice'::ilfi Beneath them are
untold · oos whose personal
lives were disrupted more than
the outer world imagines by
China's last decade or p0litical
tumult and now are cautiously
Mailbox
aeeklnl( a leH fettered ex·
lst.enoe.
Apart from dramatic wall
posters and the realsi'le's
headlong rush toward lnduttrlal
modernization, the human story
ot China 11 the quiet. aradual re·
moval o( the Maolst straitjacket.
While West.em diplo~ats rear
this may be followed by iron
repression. the needs or Teng
Hslao·plne's government are
geared to liberalization. Teng ls
committed to U~ with the West
and a shakeup of the Immense
bureaucracy -goals that run
counter to Red Guard dlc·
tatorshlp.
NOTHING BETTER il·
lustr ates his than the re-gime's decision, unprecedented
for a communist country. to
send young people to Western
universities. Students in the U.S.
and Western Europe will soon
reach the thousands.
Simultaneous ly, Peking
University and other Chinese
--------
colleges are experlenclng their
own tranaformatlon. Closed
down for five years by the
Cultural RevoluUon and then
constricted intellec tually for
another five years by Maoist
radicals. the universities have
been reborn.
Their st~ts arc now select·
ed by nationwide competJUoo.
·and the Cultural Revolution's re·
qulremeot that m iddle school
graduates mus t work In the
countryside before continuing
their education has been quietly
dropped: Peking University stu·
dents are prominent amona the
younc people who gained the
world's attention with their
demonstrations for rree speech.
The university's English read·
ing room otters uncensored U.S.
newspapers and magazines. One
foreign ministry interpreter ac·
companying us was reading that
old anti-communist periQcUcal,
the Reader's Digest. Another in·
terpreter was deep into the Cinal
(and overtly anti-communist>
volume of Winston Churchill'•
memoln. At the Hsl Tan "wall of
posters, young Chlnese told us
bow m,Uch they enjoy the Voice
of America ln "special English"
(limited vocabulary. slow do·
livery).
WESTERN CLASSICAL
music and ancle.n.t Chinese
opera, banned from Cblna for
ov~r a decade, are back. When
we attended the ope ra, the
theater wu packed wlt.b men
and wome n in Communfst
ChJna·s "blue ants" costume but
there were exceP.tions -such as
one woman wath a rur coat,
brighUy colored scarf and curly
hairdo.
Dresses a re lo be Sf'en in
China, especially in Sban~ai.
and s uch non·conformity may
spread to men. "Our clothing is
much too stereotyped." one
young party cadre told us. ad-
d Ing he thought traditional
Chinese dress should be rein·
.rodrJced for certain occasions
Creeping individualis m can
;pread from dress to political
thought. Liu Shao-chi. the
rormer chlef of state purged by
Mao Tse-tung (and now believed
dead). is still excoriated as a
·revisionist" one briefing
at Tachlng. But at the Hsi Tan
wall in Peking, posters demand
his rehabilitation.
What is a self·rcrspecling
cadre to do? He gets no
gu1dance from Teng himself
who in hi'° interview with lls
side·stepped a question about re·
habilitaling Liu. "So many
things have been said about Liu
that it's bard to know what to
believe," a lower-level foreign
ministry official told us After a
pause. he added: "Things are
complicated.··
The idea that life as "com·
pllcated" without explication by
official dogma is in itself new to
Communist China. Although this
country's tradition o f cen-
tralized authoritarianism will
certainly not give way to de·
m oc r acy, the rush t oward
modernization is changing the
way Chinese think and live -
and raster than anybody deemed
possible.
'Tests' Can't Change OC Airport Facts
To the Edit.or :
Thanks to Mrs. Reynolds for
her fine Dec. 17 story on "dirty"
ntghts from the Orange County
Airport. Thanks a lso for your
paper's continuing coverage of
the main problem that faces
Newport Beach in its right for
survival.
Your story on the dangerous
cutback altitudes being forced
upon the airline pilots by their
m a nagement serves to show
that the current "lest" utilizing
three·engine Boeing 727 aircraft
by Hughes Airwest is an invalid
evaluation of its possible lessened
noise Impact.
The current "test " is
significantly being conducted
durlng our coldest months or the
year when noise tends to t>e mut·
ed. with reduced payloads so
that takeorr angle can be higher,
and when engine cutback can be
accomplished at lower altitudes.
IF A VAUD test were to be
undertaken. wouldn't it be better
conducted during the summer
months when those or us under
the infernal ntght·path are most
aware of the noise? In the sum·
mertlme, the passenger load is
more near capacity levels, the
warmer temperatures require a
4·d egree decrease in takeoff
angle, and the 1,00().foot cutback
would be mandatory.
I am distressed that we are
being "tested'' without our con·
sent with loaded dlce. I know of
no other human experimentation
In this country that gambles
with the health and well-being of
people without their express
permission.
Our Board of Supervisors, 12
years ago, declared "the Orange
County Airport is not a jet
capability airport," yet the
board conUnues to expand the
jet flights out o r it. The
supervieors in these acta ~rove
tbelr poUUcal and economic in·
tereats outweigh their regard lor
the human constltuenta they
were elected to serve.
on the residential areas or the
county.
In the meantime, under no
'cir cumstances, s hould any
further expansion or the present
airport be allowed or condoned,
even under the guise or "an ex-
perimental test."
RICHARDS. JONAS, M.D.
AU1'1•tOltefl
To the Editor:
I strenuously object to the
move by the Costa Meaa
Ch amber of Commerce to
tamper with our hard·woo sign
ordinance. When the law was
passed ln 1974, after couotless
bout's of sweat. study and arau·
ment by concemed citizens, it
was generally accepted by all
parties, pro and con, and con-
sidered to be not only a model
ordlnance but an emlnenUy fair
one. Jn particular, its provision
allowing owners of illegal or
non-conforming signs an equita-
ble a mount ol amortization tJme
to replace tbese signs was -and
still remains -a compassionate
and fair means of bearing the
cost without undue strain.
Now we have the Chamber or
Commerce proposing a run·
damental change In this or-
d inance, namely to allow owners
or non·conforming signs eretted
with a permit before the or-
dinance was passed to extend
their amortlzation periods ap-
parently indefinitely. My un-
derstanding of the le1al prin·
clples this country is founded oo
is that the law applies equally to
all. It does not mean, either in
the letter or spirit, that some are
exempt aodfC!me are not. What
ls tbe point or a la w that pla.Ys
lavorit.ea?
JUST CONSIDER which
particular •lgn1 would be de·
layed ln their replacem ent.
Among the mott prominent are
the huge, sky·bllh •utomobUe
dealer algns pockmarklnt
Harbor Boulevard aa well u
other equally tall lnaults to the
eye. Are we to believe that J'-'ll
because of their longevity they
should remal.D lndeflnltely7
The burden of proof should
reat on the Board oC Supervlaon.
the airport, and the alrllnea that"
by fiylna Jet.a over my head it ls
not harming me. As It la now. 1
am belne required to prove It u No way! What the chamber Is
h1rmln1 me and my clty-Tbls l 11kln1. behind Its Innocent
have no resources available to phraaea, ll nothlnt leu than a
do. srandf atber clause. Simply
IL la h1(Jh Ume the people of because certain SllN were bere
thla county and their elect.cS of. for yean, it contena, they must
flclals face the fact that the have a prtor right over everyqne
Oran1e County Airport Is not tlae's, ls t.h1J fair to t.hote bull·
and will never be the answer to neaata which havt brought t.Mlr
Oran1e County air transport trade , tax paymonll and
needs. A.notMr airport mun be p8"yroll1 to Cotta Meaa ln more
built. ll must be located ao that recent yean?
ll hu mlnlmwn adverse lmpad There lt ample time allowed
' • I . ,
... .
for every non·contorming busJ·
ness to meet the ordinance
schedule without an inordinate
financial burden. As a citizen
who lives and works here, and
who takes pride in having had a
hand In the struggle to secure
the ordinance, I am exercising
my right to demand that the law
be observed equally by all.
Either all are equal before the
law or else the law is a mockery.
( TIIOMASJ.MURRAY
.4WB~'Rl9'11•'
To the F.ditor:
Re Tom Murphine's article on
.. ConstltutionaJist" Sid Soffer
and bis three "aging" Cadillacs
<Dec. 12 Pilot) : For Tom's lDlormation, there
are seven (count 'em!> roWng.
rust.lne old Caddies in Sid's front
yard. It is known locally as Sid's
Junk Yard. t
AS LONG AS Sid is now in·
tereated in con.sUtuUonal rights,
and knowing he is such a good
human being, I'm sure he'll con·
alder the rights or hJs cl0&est
neighbors. They dldn 't overlook a
junk yard when they bou1ht their
homes. Two have tried to sell
their houses but prospective
buyers aren't interested, once
they see the old cars as a "view"
from the properties.
Don't move the cars. Sid! J ust
plant some fast-growing plant.ci
around the edges so no one will
have to see your junk. There are
many of your neighbors who en·
joy Ii ving graciously. Constitu-
tional rights are for e veryone!
HELEN BECKER
a.new ~ld"fl
To the F.ditor:
Yecch! I Just re-read Mrs.
Shirley Sheppard's condemna·
lion or the worklna mother (Mailbox, Nov. 30). What a total
lack of human cbaril)'. For the
nke of Mn. Sheppard J alncere-
ly hope God is not a reader ot
the Daily Pilot.
SANDY BOOSTROM ...,,..,,ltefl
To the Editor:
Altbou&h I'm not an admirer
of EveUe \'ounaer, I found the
crlUdsm for bia rent lncre8aes
on hi• fourplex quite annoying.
JI bla taxes on his 2·bedroom
property were S2,3CM>, surely il as
not a nmdown dump.
And Lr his rent.a have bffn only
$230 ror two years and the place
la reasanably well maintained,
hl1 rent.a were far too low and an
lncreate to l2$0 was certainly
JutUnable.
•'
There is a tendency to as-
sume these days that a ll rents
a r e too high, a nd people
categorize all landlords in the
"Jroup of rent gougers.
Too many renters think that
all landlords should refund tax
savings, whether they've kept
up the place and rented for very
lo w rates, or operated an
eyesore and charged too much.
BOB EDWARDS
O....l90ppe.., ....
To the Editor: The Dally Pilot editorial of
Dec. 3 that newly elected State
Senator John Schmitz ••couJd be
an effective representative" is
commendable and appropriate.
Yet, the con ::1enl of dlsagree-
ment on "son c issues -notablY
his churoh·rooted views against
abortion and any rotm of gun
control" seems to be unfairly
highlighted. Most of the promi·
n e nt Orange Coast political
figures -Marian Bergeson.
Tom Rile)', Bob Badham, Den·
nis Carpenter and Tom Rogers
are opposed to abortion as well
as to gun control.
Surely a paper as Infl uential
as the Pilot has a right to favor
abortion, but why single out Ou~
iss ue a nd imply th a t Mr.
Schmltz's position stands alone?
IS OPPOSITION to abortion
wrong because it is "church·
rooted"? Anti-abortion views
are rooted from and can honest·
ly be supported by the Jewish
a nd N ew T estame nt. Un·
fortunately, to many people the
scriptures have little appUcatioo
in this permissive era of "rel·
alive morality," "situation
ethics"· and "doing your own
thing." Opposition to abort.ion is
also b ased o n medical .
psychological and soclologlcal
grounds in addjUon to theology.
Furthermore, does the Pilot ad·
vocate the continuance of state
rinan clna or this abomination
that many consider to be a form
of murder?
Perhaps for the uke of an
enllehtened dialogue on tbls con·
troveraial aubject the Pilot can
make Its p0sitlon better UD·
deratood In a future editorial.
CHRIS'roPHER STIEL
• Litlltn from reodeT• ore tudcorrw.
Tiit ngltr ro condnu I.ff rm lo tu
lp(ICt or tlfmmort dbff u rewrwd..
L.dre11 of 300 wordl or Ina todl I»
gnHm prtf11rnct. All l«Ct~muat in-
clvM tfgllal1.r1 oftd ~ flldlmu
~ "°'"" mo11 bt -*Miid °" r•
QMI« •J rufJkkltl ""'°""ClllPG'""'· Podrr wW "°' be,,.~ · ~
-....,... _________ ....,..,.. ____ _
....
t
MORE OPINION --------__;=-----------~-Ototmbt i 1978 DAILY PILOT ,t f
• Niek Thimme8ch , ,, .
·Another Abortion Risk
WASHINGTON -Tbf 1cour1e
or abort.Ion hat been wllh us for
cenluri ~ l ru too m\K'h .or It now. And, "ven at pro.Ut
aroupra wt.a poUdralJy, there wUI
always be tome abortion.
1 abboe-:!:Jrl•b traatdy. one which be llrauou.al.y
avoided and
n e v e r paid
for by federal
fund a . And
yet the effort
•h ould not
amount to 1
c r uaade t o
'wlp e out
abortion now
and forever
(that ·wo n't
ha.ppen), but how to reduce Uua
lethality of convenience to a.n
absolute" mlrumum.
The aoaJ can best be attalned
by c haoglng the bouraeoiate
m entalily of abort.ion. and that
• is done by constant review and
reporting of facts.
A RECENT symposium on the "Psychological Aspe<:ts of Abor·
t1on" held in Chicago, with
Loyola University as sponsor,
offers new evidence that abor·
t ion is bad for the unborn and
already born alike.
A r eport on post-abortive
' psychoses by Dr. Myre Sim of
Birmingham, England. and Dr.
Robert Neiss« of Israel, con-
cludes that when there is a pre-
vious history of mental illness, a
"so-called 'therapeutic' abortion
can be dangerous."
Some mental patients who un-
dergo abortions fall into a worse
m ental state, some even at·
tempting suicide, according to
this report. Dr Sim noted that
doctors who refuse abortion to
m ental patients are attlng in
their best interest.
Dr. Conrad W. Bears, a San
Antonio psychiatrist, terms the
m e ntally Ul as "unafOrmed
Sydney Harris
~rson .. An Induced aborOon.
ht al)la. caUJ thcae lmmalurc
peopl(.' to fttl 6\IC'D more worth
leu and lnad u.te.
TH •E bad ftellne• '*ere
described by many women who
m•d• ol • Preanancy Al·
ter matb H ~lpllne in MUwa&ak~
Or. Monte I{ Ll bma.n reported
that "•ull\" wu lh me>1t com· moo POJl·•bortlon reacllon. and
that mlQY d11treued callers f It
lb y were milled or unintormed
about what abort.ion was.
tt ustlln11 womenl Hptcially
tc.-t'n o.get'll, tnto aoortlon has
become common. Accord ns to
Or. Matthew J. Bullin of Fort
La uderdale, Fla .. leu or
uta.trophet rrom tak1os the
pill, stresa o n social and
economic 1ndependeoce. \llnd
fear or dchvertng a retardc.'d or
mongoloid chUd are the leadinl
pressures causlne women to get
abortions.
He believes that the stress
ought to be on the mental and
physical dangers tn abortion,
especially when teen-agers are
"vulnerable to the blandish·
ments of lhe 'lunch hour' abor·
tion cllnic ... "
ONE ARGUMENT is that a
liberal abortion policy ls needed
to cope with rape and incest, and
to prevent child abuse. This
symposium ofrered evidence
that rape or incest rarely pro-
duce a pregnancy. Moreover,
Dr. Philip G. Ney of Canada, re-
ports that since abortion-on·
demand became law, child bat·
tering has increased 20 percent
annually, and that 90 percent ot
these abused children came
from "wanted" pregnancies.
Dr . Ney argues that
permissive abortion decreases
the social taboo against aggress-
ing the defenseless, devalues
children, and therefore concern
tor them, and increases bad feel·
Ln11 In atamlly, thereby causing
children to become acapeaoats.
Indeed . Proteuor Paul
Cameron ol Puade.na, Callt .•
aludled 2,251 persona and related
abort.Ion to increuina level.a of
"le\haUl1." He declares that
fn ortnc aboc'Uon often cauaes
people to support lethallty In
other area• aucb H caP.ilal
punlahment. "M • class,• be
11ld "aborters t•led as more
lethal ln aocial policy
phlloaopby, self-abuse, in social
conce rn ... " So 1t'1 easy to understand why
a Dr. Bernard Nathanson. a
New York doctor who ch1m-
ploned and performed many
abortlon1, had a.o abrupt change
of heart when be realized ooe
day, by hill own admission. that
those were human lives he bad
t aken.
IT 18 WISE to consider the
evidence on abortion as it comes
in. So many politicians are glib
about abortion, passing it off as
some vague civil right. Senator
E dward Kennedy, tor example,
a nd even a J esuit Roman
Ca th o li c pri est like
Cougressman Robert Drinan,
will tell Catholics how much
they oppose abortion, but turn
around and vote to fund it, argu·
tng, with sophistry, that the poor
have the right to share this
dreadful event with the rich.
What a shame that Supreme
Court Justice Harry A .
Blackmun made the monumen-
tal mistake of federalizing,
therefore politicizing, the abor·
lion question. This matter
s hould have been left to the
medical boards or the states,
where a resultant conservative
approach would have been
followed. Instead, we must go
through the paintul process ot
inducing understanding about
the personal and societal perils
of lnduced abortion.
The Trouble With Show Business
There's no business like show
business, and here's why:
No other business has so many
so much private malice with its
little head.
~-... >artners who haven't spoken to
No other bus iness passes
the buck for failure so crassly -
the director blaming the writer,
the writer blaming the producer.
the producer blaming the press
agent, the press agent blaming
the critic ...
each other for
ye ars. No
other busi-
ness is so rid·
di e d with
l aws uit s.
t'laims and
c o u n
t e r c laims.
broke n con·
t r acts. dis·
honor ed ob·
ligations, threats. curses, feuds.
and interminable petty bicker-
ings
No other business could treat
•ls customers so cavalierly and
get away Wlth it
No other business entrusts its
solvency to one persona lity,
whose whims can wreck the en-
tire structure of an organization.
No other business ls so cruel to
the people it no longer n~.
No other business engages In
so much public boasting about
1ts "big heart" and indulges in
NO OTHER bus iness is so
frightened of the new, the novel,
the different; while American
industry is stimulated by radical
innovations that are o~en years
ahead of lhe public, American
show business tiptoes timidly
behind the public, s niffing
cautiously for "trends."
No other business (with the
possible exception of com-
mercialized sports) is so infest-
ed with char acters who have
crawled out of the woodwork to
live in rich parasitism on the
bodies of talented individuals.
No other business tells such
extravagant lies about the
prices it pays, the salaries it
gives, the hardships it endW'es,
and the sacrifices it makes for
the community.
This pendant combines
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J. C. .JJump~rUl6 JewefertJ
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY ~
1823 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA
No other business is s o
chaotically unplanned to meet
future contingencies, or to an-
ticipate changing public stand·
ards and demands.
No other business so ruthless-
ly exploits the young, the ig-
norant and the emotionally un-
derprivileged with such bland
disregard for the canons of taste
and decency.
There's no business like show
business -and it's a good thing
there isn't.
CONVENIENT TERMS BtnkAmertC*d-= ~ °"'99
32 YEARS IN THE SMfE LOCATION . PHONE 941 3401
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"I'd I"" Ake you to know, Aoee, that If you .-fllt 'JOAJ'd ... to OM
Into troubte, I'd be perfectty wWlng to ICend by 'JOAJ ••• "
Charles McCabe
An ExaminatWn of the
History of the Term 'Gay'
John Simon is a New York
journalist and drama criUc whO
bas made a considerable reputa-
tion out of belng a literary cad.
Simon's Idea of run ls to kick the
bejabbers out of an Jbeen pro-
duction because the leading
woman has acne. And to dwell
lovingly oo this unpleasant fact.
Simon also fancies himself as an amateur lexicographer and
writes a col·
umn on words
for Eaqufre.
He recently
devoted some
space to what
he called "the
wanton and
shoc kin g
destruction of
the good and
nece ssary
English word gay." On that he
will gel no argument from this
quarter.
WHAT SIMON does seem to
have totally WJ'Ol1I is where this
noxious word, in lts denotation
of homosexual. ca me Crom . He
accepts the view that the "pre-
sumable source" or the term ts
gay boy, Australian slang for
homosexual. Where, be asks, did
the Aussies get it?
"As Eric Partridge's A Dfc.
tionorv of Slang and UllCOn~
Englilh makes clear, the word
comes from early nineteenth·
century British slang, wbere the
adjective gay referred to
·women leading .•. a harlot's
life.' Acconllngly gay bit was a
whore; gay bouae a brothel.
What kind of honorific, then, is
0011?"
I RAVE a considerable in·
terest in slang, and no excess of
respect for dictionaries of slang,
Partridge's included. The ooly
exception l know of ia the ad·
mirable The Amnicon TMaourua of Slang by Lest.er V. Berry and
Melvin Van DenBark (Crowell,
194.2). This dictionary does not
include the word "gay" as a
synonym for homosexual, most-
ly because the whole thing hap-
pened after 1942.
I have adverted to my own
theory of the history ot "Gay" in
an earlier column. I revert to it
largely because I have become
increasingly convinced of its
authenticity. The many attribu-
tions, by homosexual writers.
which bring the word back to
Elizabethan times and earlier.
a re just so much Ingenious
blarney.
I FIRST heard the word in con-
nection wilh homosexuality in lhe
late '305orearly '40s. It was then a
term used by the underworld of
New York rught life. ln those
days. when sodomy carried a one
to life penalty in most stale$, and
was enforced. homosexuality was
a sensitive matter.
There were a handful of
places in Greenwich Vllla1e that
catered to the homosexual
trade. These were nearly all
owned by Latin types who were
sexually llnJlht as doornails.
One of these owners, Lord knows
who, rant described b1a place as
a 1ay joint. This secret Cmore or
leu) eode word was adopted by
bis colleagues. It was a way ol
saying that the place catered to
siMply u~
t I • I
queers, without using that pe-
jorative.
At no time did J hear
homosexuals, as such, refer to
themselves u gay. A friend who
ran such a joint In North Beach
in the 'SOs bas the same recollec-
tion. Gay described a PLACE
where bomosexuala gathered.
lt wu not until the late '60s,
when the gay rights movement
got off the ground, that
homosexuals transrixed the
meaning of the word. Instead of
referring to a place, it began to
be used of the kind of people who
frequented euch places.
TRIS, I am quite certain, is
the true history of tbls defini·
lion. The use of the word as a
synonym for homosexual is one
of the many tactical blunders
made by homosexual politicians.
Reaction against it is growing
not merely in straight circles,
which bate the corruc~n of a
good and useful Eng word.
but a mone homosexuals
themselves. Quite a few such
have expressed themselves on
this subject to me.
Whatever it is that the
bomoeexuala want from the rest
of us, and I am by no means eer·
lain what that ls rrom day to • '
day. I feel certain they would
get it faster and with more
graciousness if they abandoned
the foolisb word that bu come
to characterize those of their
sexual persuasion. As Simon
pointed out, homosexual ts "a
precise and dignified word."
Why not let it go at that?
"AaHION llAZAAft
\\
I ,.
I
The former home of' Sant. Ana phy lcian Julius A. Crane,
who helped start the Orang Coun~y Medical N;aocialion
tn the 18908, ls bcmg' refurbished to serve as the ,Civic Cent~r office of anta Ana First Federal Savino. The
house at 6th and Broadwuy, ucross the treet from the old '
County Courthouse, Is nearly 100 years old. For years lt
was a funeral parlor and had been scheduled for demoli·
ti on to make way for u cou.n,ty parking f aclllty until local
hu;torlani; complained and nrst Federal bought the pro-perty ·
Probation Officers
Get More Charges
Orange County probation of.
ricers in charge of supervising
juvenile court wards placed out·
side their homes will be 'bandl·
ing 50 r ather than 35 cases
apiece. county supervisors de·
c1ded t.hls week.
The young offenders Involved
are those who have been placed
by the court in private facilities,
group homes and foeter homes.
Supervisors approved the
caseload increase after saying a
recent evaluation falJed to prove
that lower cMeloads result in
improved probation department
monitoring or in fewer cases of
repeat offenses.
another few months before a de·
clsion was.made.
However , increasing
caseloads wtU allow county to
save $68,000 t.hla year in person-
nel costs.
SUP~RVJ80R Philip Anthony
cast what be called "a soft no"
vote on increasing caseloads
now, saying he would prefer to
await addJUonal evaluation.
Latimore said a likely result
will be less monitoring of fn.
dividual cases by probation of-
ficers and som e d e l ay in
responding to problems.
Oranf County health officials
pnd•c tbat • flu fpldemlc
whlrh bu it.ruck down as many
u 50 to 80 percent or the atu·
dent. at IOme td'OOll wUI peak
around Chriltmu Day. Dr. Morton Nelton, the coun·
ly '• health omcer. aald the
tpldemlc 11 expecttid to taper off
durtn1 the hoUday aeaaon and be
In lta llnal throes when children
return to 1cbool.
Or. Nelton Hid It ls not possJ.
bl to accurately record the
epld mlc'a impact with acbool1
closed for the Chrl1tmas a.ad
Ne w Year'• hoUdaya.
IVT AUENTEE18M rates ot
up to eo per~t were beloa re·
corded when the schools cl<>Hd
F'rlday, be aald.
County OKs
Strengthening
Of Security
Revised procedures aimed at
Ugbtening Otange County eov·
emment's security and inven·
tory practices have beem ap-
proved by county supervisors.
As recommended by county
Auditor.controller Vic Heim, the
new procedures set forth the
duties or property officers ln
each county department and
suggest such things as using
sl1n·out cards for items costing
more than $300.
In addition. the guidelines call
for prompt invesUgation and
follow.up reports on security
problems when county property
turns up mialing and caJls upon
Sheriff Brad Gates to offer ad-
vice on Improving security wben
problems arise.
Supervtaors ordered a review
of security and Inventory prac·
tices In October alter.writing off
$24,765 worth of property report.
ed lost or stolen from various of·
fices over \he past two years.
DONALD F. Latimore. the
probatlon department's dlrect,or
of placement aod evaluauon,
said about 250 youl)gsters are in-
volved jn the placement pro·
gram.
He faulted the recent evalua·
tion for Calling to break down re·
s uits of lower caseloads bY
various offenses committed and
said he would have preferred
lbat the evaluation continue
A.Cting. Chief Gets
Vote of Confidence
Salter Joins
History Unit
Citrus rancher Edmund H.
Salter. 75, of Orange has been
named to the Orange County
Historical Commission by
Supervisor Ralph Clark.
Salter is a member or tbe
Orange City Library Board and
i s a former trus tee or the
Fullerton Union High School
District.
His family moved into the
Orange area in 1889. He has
operated citrus groves
throughout the county and
served as manage~ of the San-
tiago Orange Growers Assocla·
tion . He is a member or the
Orange County Pioneers Club.
o.lly Pli.t SWtt P911tt PERFORMANCE BACKED
Agency Chief Orter
Margaret Grier was given a
vote of coofidence Wednesda
when Orange County
supervisors said they would con-
sider only county employees
when making the permanent ap.
polntment of director of the
County's Human Services
Agency.
Miss Grier bas held the post
since May. Prior to that, sbe
was chief or the county's Proba·
lion Department.
BOARD OF Supervisors
Chairman Thomas Riley noted
that Miss Grier bas served as
acting director and that a
permanent appointment would
have to be made by February.
He suggested recruitment tor
that appointment be kept to the
ranks or county employees
"based oo the work Miss Grier
has done."
"IS nus AN impUed vote of
confidence?" asked Supervisor
Laurence SchmJt.
Riley agreed that It was.
I I
.,
-Plu lm't the only problem con·
ORANGE COUNTY
percent -S42 cues ln 1978 and
638 caaes In urn. froaUn1 Oran1e County's -health
offlcen u 1t'1t draws t.o a close.
Dr. Nelson said the lncldence
or ayphi1U1 hu jumped from 360
casea t.o 683 betw~n Jan. 1 and
Dec. 1 -a hike oC 62 percent.
OTHER STATtmcs tabul•t·
ed by t.be county health depart·
ment include:
-Salmonelloell is up by 12
percent from last year. The In·
testlnal Ulnes11 ls caused by the
ln1e1Uon oC l.nlected foods.
-Whoopln1 coueh is up t.o 19
casea from the nine recorded in
1977. The Increase surprised
health officials who point to the
ease with which children can be
Immunized againat the lnfecUon.
-Ten.day measles dropped
from 397 cases recorded 1n lm to 19 th.ls year. 'Health orncers
attributed the dramaUc decll.M
to a countyw1de immunh:aUoo · program.
HE BLAMED prostitution for
that particular Increase in
venereal dlaeMe.
All children enterlns county
schools are required to tak&
shots protecting them aga.in8t
this most common form of
measles, also known aa rubeola.
SyphllUs' stable mate. gonor·
reah, alao ahowed an lncreue In
1978. Healthotficencounled7,251
cases and recorded a climb or 12
precent from the level ot 7.<YT1
shown a year ago.
"That's significant. We're
worried about that particular in·
crease." Nelson said.
-Typhoid ls down to three
cases rrom the five reported ln
1977. Like Salmonella, the dis·
ease is cauaed by impure foods
or poor hygiene.
-German measles (rubella>
waa down to 46 cases tn 1978 ~
from the 58 cues reported ln
1977. This form or meules ls
identified M the infection that
often causes pregnant women to
give birth to deformed children. HEPATITIS 18 down by 20
'
Johnston & Murphy
"After Hours" Casuals
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for a full refund .
"Aller Hours" are carefully crafted
of soft glove leather w1lh full
glove leather hning. Soft padded
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insure great walking-0n·air
feel ing. White, bone. brown. black
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silverwoods
Gl\'E TllE GIFT OF FASIDO~
SILVERWOODS
PRESENTS THE
S20 CHALLENGE
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Guaranteed to be the most
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wom, or"""" them
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Try oo a pair of theSe Haggaf Expend-0-Mahc
SlaCks Q>mlor1 IS built rlgt)t IO W!lti a
unq,e. rnSlde elas11C waistband that bends
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slacks are smartlY tailored ol machine
washable. stain-retease ~ ~.The r89UCI
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~WORLD rnATION-----a.AIL'{ ~LOT A_• _ _,..~
Life Without 'Times' Not the Same
B)' lllCBA.EL "1'!81'
LON'DON (AP) -It'• been a~ mooth for
drowaJ M•. Cl'OUword pual 9dcUcta, aeU rt of
boaib·proof can aod buy noltlu.tftd bHY ra
'fbe TlaMe ol L.oodola 1~ publlcat on
Nov. 30 and fw tnandNdl of thoulandl of Brililben. lif Juatbunotbeeftlbeaamt.
UNTIL TR Ct.08 ·DOWN, Encland without
The Ttm. WM • •tMM•ble u Holmea without
Wat.Ma or 8'c Bee ~c.a.ovt ~blma.
•'No paper la &be world ...,....ll Ila COWltey
Uke Tbe 'J1ma." It.a a.i. OWMr, Canadian·boro
Prwl ••••• Ao, Thom .... once aajd ''To me, ~Tl ... la Nall,y like u.. BriUab n., ... Tbe 11mH will to• f..ver." H~~u Wl"Oq. The unthinkable happened
-.hen ""' 1'3-year-old newspaper abut down in ddinJt.t.y afttt 1 labor dilpute the paper claimed
cott It four miWon copl lbLs 1e1T.
" A ntE VOi E OF WllAT, ln Vlctonan da)'ll
waa knowft u The 'fliunderer fell silent. It.a 29'l,71'
mainly upper crual readert brat'ed and look It with typical Encliah atitr upper lip.
t ··Please, pl~aae do not back down a t the last
ment. or eve.a appear to do IO," Wl'Ole Wcbard
Holdawortb from Cold Bath Road in the
ntrtbem resort town of Harro1ate in a letter in the ~v. 30luue.
. U. II. SaJewlti of London looted to better
Uines.
.. • lhal1 be wearlna a rose ln my buttonhole on
happy day after lbe dismal period of sus-
loa when The Times will once more appear." e wrote.
BUT BENEATH TBE STO'F upper Ups the
emotion ls visible, and It la evident the loss of The
Tlmes la keenly fell.
Gentlemen In the fmanclal district known as
tie City appear Improperly dreued when their un-ti>rm ol derby hat, rolled umbrella and pinstriped
••It cannot be completed by a copy ol The Times
c'rried rolled beneath the arm.
None of London's other eight dally newspapers
somehow seems to fill the bill -be It the tabloid
~n with Ha bare-breasted girls, the Daily Mirror
with its support ror the Labortte government, the
Uberal-leaning Guardian the commwtlat Morning ~ar, even the highly Conservative Dally Tele·
graph. All lack that sartorial aomethlna. •
IN THE GENTLEMEN'S CLUBS of London
'J)e Times is also sorely mi.ased. Members, noble
and commoner alike, are traditionally reputed to
P,ef er the outspread pages of The Times to all
~r ~ for reading -and aomeUmes ff.>r sluml>eriq beneath -after hmcbing well.
• At lbe-Albenaeum Club 1n Pall Mall, which is
noted for the large number of politicians and
Ghurch of Eogland bishops among its members,
tJie secretary. Gerald Llndow, reported: "It is
g'.teatly m.iased. Its dlsappearance is accepted With
rtsignatkm and It ls hoped it will return shortly.•·
He said members bad turned to The Daily Tele·
graph, the Guardian and American papers on sale ib London. ·
• At the Garrick Club, home away from home of
prominent actors, lbey were so affllcled that no
one wu willing to comment, and the same was
true at the House of Commons library.
BOOK PVBUSHERS ARE SUFFERING even
Qtore. 1be disappearance of The Times and its
-respected book reviews bas hit them in the pocket.
' ' \
II I •
Poor Santa
He Needs Exercise
HOUSTON <AP) -Santa Claus is overweight,
doesn't get enough exercise and eats too many
«weets.
~ So says Dr. E. Don Webb, president or Harris
County Medical Soclety.
That nose like a cherry, Webb says in a
tongue.in-cheek medical profile, could point to
broken corpuscles and alcohol abuse. Or It might
ii-lean hlgb blood pressure or windburn.
WEBB IS W08RIED ABOUT the "belly that
shakes when be laughs Uke a bowl full of jelly,"
seeing "all kinds of problems, from heart disease
to stroke."
Santa probably doesn't exercise, Webb said.
"The more active the individual, we find, the
better able the person can tolerate prolonged
~plsodes of stress and activity .... Santa leads a
pretty sedentary life. That ooe night of delivering
gifts would seem to be very bard on him."
· BUT WEBB SAYS THE outlook isn't all that
grim.
, "He's survived .a lot of years despite a
negative medical profile. I would say that be and
oiiiy be will continue to do so." . .
.. • .
• ' • i
"Wt are terribly aad about It," aal4 a
1poltt1man for Jonathan Cape Ltd .• one of lri·
taln'a IOldlnl book publlahen. "The Times bein1 a
powerful orcan. lta cllaappearance does hav• an ef. feet on aal ...
Tho 11.1m 1oe1 for theater producers but
oobody could name the &um It was coallna him.
Cro11word pu11le buffs miss The Times'
pu111 .. for their braln-1tr tchlng clues, often
drawn trom clualcal Gr.U and Roman literature
and the Bible. On Nov.~ The Times, contrary to
tradltlont printed the aolutlon to tbat day's
cro11woro ln the aanie taaue Just ao addicts abould not be dll~ted.
•ANY BA VE SWJTCllED TO doina the Daily
Motidale
Mailings
Cost More •1 FliNK coa111Ea
WASffiNGTON (AP)
-It's easy to get the
Idea that aides to Vice
President Walter F . Mon·
dale are e trifle senallive
about th e cost of
Christmas cards malled
lbia year by Mondale IDd
bis wife, Joan.
The sensitivity
reflects the fact that -
lo a one-to-one com·
pariaoo -the Mondale
cards cost three times
more than the greetings
malled by the President
and Mn. Carter.
IT TOOK three re-
portorial inquiries to
Mondale's office to pry
loose the fact that lbe
vice-presidential cards
cost sUgbUy more than
40 centa apiece.
A While House
spokeswoman said the
Carter cards cost 13
cents each.
Telesraph'a puuJe but complaln lt ll too euy
compared to The nmes.
Also aorry about the departure of The 'nmt1
are the personal column advert.lien Hite tbe mu
who Nov. 30 advertised a "completely bomb-ud
bullet-proofed" llmoualne. Obvloualy, like aaotbet
man who ln the same iuue edvertlsed "Wanted -
&lulled beavers." he cona1dered 'lbe Tlmes b1a
beat bet to reach particular readers.
Now thole. a~t colulDDI are clOMd to tbem
and are likely to stay ao fOC' many ...U or
mootbl. Tbe present owner ol The nlM9, Lord
Thomson's son Kenneth, bu promlaed tbere la no
queation of clolina the newspaper fOC' aood· But the
editor. William Rees·Motl. bu warned: "There ll
no Ukelibood ol an early return."
LEVI'S
WA1J.£TS
In denim and
leather twofold-.
trlfold•, and
MCntaor7 w..U.U
'9.00-'13.50
RAINBOW W ALLEYS:
NJloa wallete In __.... colan with
..........
w ... 1.GOP
Mayor Edward
Koch and other offlclals of Dem6craUc New
York City are
ur1tn1 Republlcans to
stage their 1980
convention
there.
One re880D the Mon-
dale card cost more per
copy is the fact lbat only
5,000 were malled,
whereas the Carter card
went lo 100,000 homes. WESTERN HA TS BY EDDY BROS.
€'-&-a Mlecdon of faJt and
•elcro c1-an •s.oo-•10.00
THAT MEANT the
cost of making printing
plates to reproduce the
painting on the Mondale
card had to be appor-
tioned among far fewer
copies. ·
In both cases, the cost
or cards aod postage ts
being paid by the
Democratic National
Committee.
There are simlliritlea
between the Cart.er and
Mondale carda.
oc;c Sets
Student
Sign-ups
Orange Coast College
iwlll issue spring reglstr a·
Ilion appolntments begin·
ning Jan. 2, so officials
are urging students to
stop by the admissions of·
fice aa aoon as possible.
Registration by ap·
polntment runs Jan.
10·30, wilb drop-ln re·
glstratloo Jan. 31-Feb. 9.
Information Is available
by call.lng 556-5735.
Admission office ·
hours are 8:30 a .m . to
7 : 30 p .m . Mondays
through Thursdays and
8 :30 a .m . to 2 p.m .
Fridays.
The peifect gift ...
etraw • ...,..... hata.'11.00-'13.00
BOY'S FELT HATS 16.00
I
SEX I AND SEX II
COLOGNE
4 oa. spluh
.. oa. .,..a,
(Musk and er ... oumo
a•ailable)
lA'fi eoclu c.aeual &
crew 1port 1tyle eoclu
in .-t.cl colon
'2.50 & '3.25
(KEEPERS SPORT
$0CKBACS)
not .a.own • eockt in
Mda .... Jt.s. IOM
Now '8.40
CIVEHER
A BOX OF
'6.50
'7.50
CANDIES FOR CHRISTMAS
Cands.. thoM In the ....... , .......
and..,_ ...... ewlr ;:::...m.u.-at all WIW Weet ....._ the .t,inel c..... ............ (otlMn Inna
'19.00-'22.00)
LEECIN
Hand-.a..I Wall.ta of
pnulne ... tber 'I 1.00
---,,.
I
~ ·-•• ,J •• ~
LEVI BEL TSi Select from a Mlec:tJon of dr ... and casual jM.n belts.
Thate two
•12.00 S..our lars-
Mlection of
Bonnie Doon
eockt In eolWa
and pattwne
from
'2.50
to
'4.50
Popular conlwoy bas with
bunboo trim few Sino at
'16.00
(Plu• m&n)' other ac:c-1 .. lncludlnc flthnet IC.U'YMt .Uk,J
Karft9 .ad fun jewelry).
The tlflllh c1ouWe..,. Wt In ten l..ther
..... &M.L
.. •10.00
i OUf ciosllo lmpofted Sootllh
COShmele V·neci<.
AYolloble In 12 OObll.
'~ .
-..
.
Saata Spirit
Amy Schwanstein (left) and Katy Wilcoxen, 12·year-old students
at Thurston Junior High in Laguna Beach, show off Santa mobiles
they created.in preparation for the big day.
State Pharmacies Sue
Over State Drug Rule
SACRAJIENTO (AP) -A group of
pharmacies ls suing to block new
state rules tbat would require
pbarmadata to tell customers bow to
uae preacriptlon drup.
Superior COUl't Judge Frances
Newell Carr is scheduled to rule
Tuesday on whether to stop the rules
rrom taking effect Jan. l, Stephen
Boutin, a lawYer for the pharmacies,
said Wednesday. ·
THE RULES, PASSED by the
state Board of Pharmacy, require
pbarmacista, when selling prescrip-
tion items, to "orally explain direc·
lions for use and any addltimal ln·
formaUon deemed necessary by the
pbarmaclat to promote tbe •P· • proprlate utilisation of the medica·
tion or device prescribed.·•
Boutin, representing pharmacies
at Rele.Ys markets and two other
local phrmacies, said the suit
challenges the rules as vague.
SPEAKING OF THE language
about "any additional information,"
he said. "We have talked to
numerous pharmacists and tbey
shouldn't have to guess what tile law
means."
The suit also objects to a provision
of the n.i.les requiring pharmacists to
set up a toll·free telephone number
for consumer information if they de.
liver more than hair thelr prescrip-
tions outside the pharmacy.
l'rSREUGION
BY ANY NAME
EASI' LANSING, Mich. (AP> -
Some students at Michigan State
University seem to know what de-
nomination they belong to. but not
bow to spell it.
Lutbenn campus minister Marge Zibbel reports numerous spelling
variations of "Lutheran" on rellgi<>us
preference cards filled out by i.ncom·
ing students. including:
t have no idea what it means. You
• • Lutbern," ••Lu tbren,"
"Lutbran," "Luterean," "Luthurn,"
• • Lurthern. '' • • Leutheran, ·•
•'Lu thuran ,' • •'Luth a ran,•'
'• Lurthurn, '' • 'Lutberean, ''
"Lutheroo," and "Lutbrun." • • • •
.. ,
" • t
E t • • ~ .
{
t
j
DAVIS-BROWN IS MICROWAVE OVEN HEADQUARTERS
MICROWAVE DEMOMSTRATIOM SATURDAY I 2-4
oe OUMJTY_, COIMT9n'a. -•w ovu.""" oe ~,__. ... -~
SAVI PIN MOii .,.._
OUI
CHRISTMAS SALE
Prices stwt • low • s249
7 wm to veraatll• mlcrowavry Including
Cook Oode ..
Litton Memorymattc mlcrc~
wave Ollen ~ perlect
meel• at the touch of 1
finger.
CONSUMER /LOCAL
Ten"1erizing Beef a Shocker ·
WASHINGTON (AP) -The covern·
ment 11 doUla eome •&»ocklna U\1np to beef to make lt mOI'• tender.
·Of coune at'& all very aclenWlc. 1ay1
tb• Atriculturt Department, wblch
h•lP9 nnuc-reM&rcb aimed at hn·
provla1 farm production and the farm
products CCIOlwners buy.
oa. H. aUllELL crou. who work•
at th• departm•t'• retearcb cealer' la
hlltvlUe, lld., Hyl CivlQI electric
1hoek treatments to beef carcuae1 pro-
duces more-tender meat than tJ1e tradl·
Uooal practlce ot ctullln1
"A two-to three-mmute abode applied
shortly after slaughter accelerate. the
onaet Of muscle sutrerun1 and prevents
the excessive shortening of muscle
flben that results an touaher meat." the
.,ency uid ln a report.
In bil research, Croes applies the
shock by pualna electricity between
probes ln eacb end of the carcua. ac· cordln1 to the department's Science and
Educatim AdminiatraUon.
BlJT THE aEPOaT also warns that
"if cattle are frightened or stressed in
aome other way before slaughter, etec·
tric ahock h8' DO effect on meat tender· nea1."
In other research linking cattle and
electriciiy. 1eienU.ts al tbe Unlvenlty
of Illinois' experiment staUoo ml1ht want to keep the report's warning ln
mind and UH care when fltUng elec·
tronlc "transponders" -small radio
unats carried in collars wom by catUe.
The department recently announced a
'100,000 research grant for a rour.year
study of the equipment, which
transmit. the identJty of each cow to a
computer and aives Lnlormatioo that
may indicate when a cow II ready lor
breeding or ls 1ufferln1 from diM ....
THE AGENCY WO tbat may help •1
dairy farmen with ha1tt berdl 1lnce
"miaaed breeding periods, bllh ln·
cidences of mutltla or other dlleues
and poor milk producUon may result
from overloadin1 of daJry farmers·
memories of each cow.•'
Moreover, the experiment -ti even·
tually translated into evet)'day practice
among c[alry farmers -may p.fOVlde a
cow with a better reeUn1 oJ ldenUty.
Or as the USDA a1eocy pull it,
"Each CtTW, which may have her own
norm, can be treated aa 1an iodlvtdual
under the computer monltorlnf' ••
system."
I
Bre a ... COlll~ True
Jennifer Conner, 21h, seems to have found
her personal paradise as she nestles ln the
arms of Santa at the Murdy Fire Station
in Huntington Beach . Santa Claus, Merle
Grider, visits Huntington Beach, Fountain
Valley and Westminster each year and
has visited more than 71,000 kids in nine
years.
Coast Lawman
Gets New Post
A Huntington Beach man with a varied back·
~round in law enfqrcement hu been promoted to
commander of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
divhnon ol field operatJons east.
Commander Jerry L. Harper, 36, is one of
three otncers named to higher posts within his ad·
mlnistratJon by Sheriff Peter J . Pitchess.
PREVIOUSLY, HARPER SEllVED AS an ex·
ecutlve assistant to Pitchess.
A resident of Huntington Beach several years,
the newly promoted lawman has previous ex-
perience ln s uch LASO divislona as patrol, special
enforcement detail, <SEO> detectives, corrections
division, tranaportaUon and training bureau.
One of hll previous &'81gnments wu com·
mander of the sherttrs ln!ormalion bureau.
Harper's post carries resporuilbillty for over
seeing the department's entire division.
IN ADDITION TO SUPERVISING sheriffs
.stations In East Los Angeles, City of Industry.
Pico Rivera. Lakewood, and Avalon. on Catalina
J al and. Harper has other duUes.
His usignment Includes being In charge of the
s heriff's aero bureau, special enforcement detail
and emergency services divisions, Pitches& sa.ld.
l'(e and his wife Rebecca have a son Scott, 10,
and Harper holds a Master of Science degree from
Cal State Los Angeles.
Classes to Open
For Young Tots
Registration Is opening in Huntington Beach's
Ocean View School District for youngsters too young
to qualify for kindergarten four months ago who
don't want t.o wait ror next September t.ostart getting
an education.
Children who will bes on or before next May 2
are eligible for the dlstrlct'a early kindergarten
enrollment program.
S1gnups begin at neighborhood schools Jan. 2
and they will troop to school Jan. 29 lo start their
accelerated formal learning.
Registration la at a family's closes t
neighborhood school, but if their klndergarten la
full bus rides will be provided t.o other acboola with
kindergarten openings.
Bible Class Uphe ld
SALT LAKE CJTY <AP> -A U.S. District
Court judge hH ruled that public schools cannot
give credit toward graduaUon for Bible classes
given ln church. educaUon programs, but upheld
the right of students to attend those cluses during
the school day.
Judge Clarence Brlmmer's decision could af.
feet 85,000 students taklng rellcioua cluaes taught
by the Church of Jeaua Cbrlat of LaUA!r-day Salnts
<Mormon> ln alx-Westem states.
An unknown number of studentl take clasMI
taug6t by other denomlnaUOM in Utah.
Punch
"l'w l9lln to ~-Md • • oomtWomlle _.,. ,.... to tnf.'I off a I IPMM for a mlillll
FOX CRAFT
AUTO RAMPS
14~
1 lt2 TON ROLUNG HYDRAUUCJACK
.398~ ...
The thlDg la. aa they t.il me. a tock Uke thJ• for
the price la fantaetk. What do J lmow? Muat be
90, they roll out the doof,
PUROLATOR
XSV OIL FILTER
133
Ae tbe '"'9 roll .,, my brcdo
gON e&Owlf bato d9lldOu decllDe, bUt back to tbe oU
flltw. It la CIDd lt wwb.
SCHAUER 4 AMP MANUAL
BATTERY
CHARGER
1444
•••
I
WftERl:S 1ltE
TIES?
I
OXWALL
DRILL PRESS STAND
1597
Cou•.-ta JOU' poww cblll lnto a
pn ctlkaa illW peea In ... -de lfo
_.. aoobd laolee or bowaoe marb.
HOUSEHOLD
EXTENSION CORDS
I PL ••••••••.••• 29'
lft. •...•...... ·~·· 11n ...•....... 49'
II ft. •..•••.•••. 89'
TIGHT WATT
BULB
·699
#7100
OXWALL
MITREBOX
11 97
SAWMATE ~-
TABLE GUIDE b .< ~
3 88 ~i 6 .-~
STc>C
Gt.. yoar DOltaWe pawn eaw the~ ty
ac:cmacr Uk. a table ecnr. Straight cuta''._
Rllt~l ~··1
It'• the best bask: tod gift ldea fdr ,a..
bocMow1M1 wbo n....a a Utt!. mon c4
drtlL
Jut gNGt. lfo high 3 997 wl~, DO permit 3 lJTt • • • ~ '
·JI I ~ ~.: lltrlDg tbeaa 5997
oolor ew.&de, IDGp-I UTI! • • • ./~·I
,_. c:oaaectsou. I UTI
uee llttle ,...,. rd.a ... 6997
I
I
r
. ' -
BJECTTO
:~.ONHAllO
pPd 1fJ1bne,
~ .
F!so
bohbrlstor ~tflDagood
3'1 PC. ~SET
...,
·~the rest of
......... f ... D
i,oxBAKD
FIVE GALLON
PIANTS
3 !o~CBOICE
SOIJECf TO STOCK Oii BUD
Cltnia, Ferm. Aaa1.eaa. Aralla
and oth.n.. <Hot too bad for a
kid from Detroit. bey.) Are ther all 8J)elled right?
JOBE'S TREE
FOOD SPIKES
5 •• ECOKOMY
PHOF20
Feed your tzwe, pound the 11119!1!1 MrtU1aer lnto tU ground. Faat.
aad 9GllJ• You'll loYe lt.
. ' .
WHPoPiE..1 A
~All. ... AND '"
P.E~NY TC ·soor
BLACK & DECKER
WORKMATES
STANDARD
DELUXE
If I were thinJdng of a gift rd like to
receive this would be it. It• a a table, a
vise. a clamp, a aawhorae. a lot of
things. Folda up Oat to take, anywhe
BIACK AND DECKER
5112" CIRCULAR
SAW I
RUBBERMAID
ORGANIZERS
..... ther had eometh1Dg '-:e to hele_ me g•t
Cll'gCID.l...cL (.KMp IDO'fblg,
more ad8 OD tbe board.)
BROOM AND MOP
HOLDER
#2328
. CLEAR
Get one. JOU penon you. IJght lt, ... tbe tt:ae
3 9 loftly colon with tbe .,.UOW warm flame. !lot too c ·~ ...,__bod. __ eh._Get_two. ________ -t N ~
IRONING ORGANIZER
#2329
CLEAN-UP CADDY
#2320
POTBELLY
STOVES
~~~ tr ......... 19.88
3r ...••.••• 29.88
12"x24"
DARK CORK LIMlTtD QUMJITIES
. 97P~OF4 w.u. wbat ... cork do b
~? Doee It~ eoaad
Cl lltti. .... lt look ....
doM It ..... Dice. Right OD
all3qudOM
I PUFFY TOILET. SEATS
'3 9!
I I WRAP•BAG
ORGANIZER
#2321
97
'$
"'
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1 .
JAi• OAllYPiLOT' ----"Thuf'idlY, 0.C.fftblrt1, t?I ---,....,....~~--,,..---,........~-----------------CONSUMER /LOCAL -~ -
Santa Spirit
Amy Schwarzstein <left) and Katy Wilcoxen, 12-year-old students
at Thurston Junior High in Laguna Beach, show off Santa mobiles
they created in preparation for the big day.
State Pharmacies Sue
Over State Drug Rule
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A group of
pharmacies ls suing to block new
state rules that would r equire
pharmacists t.o tell customers bow to
use prescription drugs.
Superior Court Judge Frances
Newell Carr is scheduled t.o rule
Tuesday on whether to st.op the rules
from ta.kine effect. Jan. 1, Stephen
Boutin, a lawyer for the pharmacies,
said Wednesday.
THE RULES, PASSED by the
state Board of Pharmacy, require
pharmacists, when selling prescrip.
lion items, to "orally explain direc·
lions for use and any additional ln·
formation deemed necessary by the
pharmacist to promote the ap·
propriate utlli.zatioo of the medic&·
lion or device prescribed."
Boutin, representing pharmacies
at Raleys markets and two other
local pharmacies, said the suit
challenges the rules as vape.
SPEAK.ING OF THE language
about "any additional information,"
he said, "We ha ve talked to
numerous pharmacis ts and they
have no idea what it means. You
~ OUMln-T COUllTlRTOt' -·VI!°"°" Wini QI: MICA(). 'llfOIMO-TUr COlft 1101.
shouldn't have t.o guess what the law
means." The auit also objects to a provision
of the rules requiring pharmacists t.o
set up a toll-free telephone nwnlM!r
for consumer information it they de-
liver more than half their prescrip-
tions outside the pharmacy.
IT'S REUGION
BYANYN.4ME
EAST LANSING, Mich. <AP> -
Some students at Michigan State
University aeem to know what de-
nomlnatio11 they belong t.o, but not
bow t.o spell it.
Lutheran campus miniater Marge
Zibbel reports numerous spelling
variations of "Lutheran" on relleioua
preference cards filled out by incom·
ing students, including:
'• Luthern , • • • • Lu thren,"
"Luth ran," "Luterean," "Luthurn,"
••Lu rthern, •' • • Leutheran,"
•• Luthuran, '' ''Lutheran,''
•'Lu rth urn,'' • • Lutberean,''
"Lutheroa," and "Luthrun."
SAYE PIN=~ DUii._
CHRISTMAS SALE
Prices .... • low -5249
7 WllYI to verMtti. mtc:rowavrY lnclud Ing
CookCod••
. .
Lifton Memorymetlc mien>
waYe OYer'I P.!OOrams perfect
"*811 It tNt touch of 1
finger.
Tenderizing_ B~ef a Sho~ker
WASHINGTON CAP> -Tbe_pern. meat at do(na aome shocklnl wnaa t.o bMI t.o mue lt more tender.
OI COUl'M 1t'1 all very 1clentlftc, aay1
~· A1rtculture Departmeqt. wbicb ~1p1 ftnanc. NHarch aimed at lm·
provln• farm productlon and the farm
product.a cooaumera buy.
oa. H. aUSSELL Cross, who works
at the department's research center in
BeltavlUe, Md., a.aya &lvina electric
aboek treatments to beef carcuses pro-duces .,...tender meat than the tradi·
Uooal practice ol cbilllng.
"A two-t.o tllNe-mmute abock applied
abortly aft« alauahter accelerates the 001et ol mU1Cle atllfen.lng and prevents
the exc ... lve aborten.iDg of muscle flben that reeulta m tougher meat " the
aaeocy aald ln a report. ·
Jn hll research. Cross applies the
shock by passing electricity between
probel lo each end of the carcus. ac·
eordln& t.o the department'• ~ence and EducaUon Admin.l.atratlon.
BUT TllE aEPOaT a1ao warns that "ll cattle are frightened or stressed in some ether way before slaughter, elec·
trtc shock has no effect on meat tender·
ness."
In other research linking cattle and
electricity, scleotlata at. the Unlvenity
of lllinola' experiment station might
want t.o keep t.be report's warn.tng in
mind and use care when fitting elec·
tronic "transponders" -small radio
unat.a carried in collars worn by cattle.
Tbe department recently announced a
$100,000 research grant for a four-year
study of the equipment, which
tran1mlts the ldeatlty of each cow t.o a
computer and •lvea ln!ormaUon that
may Indicate when a cow la ready (or
breedlnl or la 1ufferlDC from dlleue. ·
THE AGENCY SAID that may belp
dairy farmers with bqe berds a1a(ce
"mined breedln1 perloda, high bl·
cidences ol mutllll or other diseases
and poor milk production may result
from overloadlog of dairy farmers'
memories of each cow."
Moreover, the expe~ -if even· tually translated into everyday practice
among dairy farmers -may provide a
cow with a better feeling of identity.
Or as the USDA agency puts it,
"Each cow, which may have her own
norm, can be treated as an individual
unde r the computer monltorin!'
system."
I
..
SACRAM~ (AP> -A ataa. of. mor• Until t.hl• year. the at1t1
Ocial ~new leclal&Uon wut permit 1utom1Ucally •t.ol>Pf'd Medi Cal and
more ctiaabMd penou to hold Jobi homem&ker·chore bC!ncflt.a at that
oext y.,. wtthout loeln• Med.I Cal tlm too.
and homemaker-c~ benefata. A alat Jaw that. took effect lhla
The Clftldal, R.-,ab1UtaU• Dlrec· year allowed H vorely dlubled
tor Ed Roberu. hlmaelf •hetkbit· ,.., .... na. who need t J ut ~ ~·-1 bound, t.ald a newt tonfe~ that ., .. wv ,.,.., •
CallfOfllla tau.. ftrat at.ate wtt.b lft'I week or more o1 lltomemUtr·chore
to eneourqe the cllaableid t.o WOri. Hrvlc•. lO lta)' °" MMl·Cal ~.·set In home •ttendut ure on • •Ud1na
.. tJNnL NOW. Df A•LSD in-ICllt d~& on their Job lncom&.
dlvlduall have bffn uuyht betwec.-n
a rock and a hard platt f lbey tried A LAW GOINO INTO tfftct next
to 1et • decftlt )ob." Roberti ta!d. yt11r. from AB 288C> by Auemblyman
He rtlferred to a fed ral law t.bat Frank Vic nt a, D·Bellflower, re-cut.a welfare benetlts after nine • mov the 20-bour atandard.
-,
.nd MC!di·Cal mean) "th dlfferenc
between beln1 pbyalcally tnd
economlc1Jly dependent or not."
He Hid he bad to tum down a
number of job otfera for fear ot lotlnl
the stale beneflbl.
BUT THE DISABLED wUI atlll
toe fC!d rtt1 Sus>s>lemental Security
Income ot up to S30'1 a month. in most
CHH, alter rune months of work and
0 three-month ar•ce period. There
ure propotala In Congress to modlly
that law.
Tltur1ldly,Otctfnber21, 1878 DAILY PILOT Al J
GRAND PIANOS
workers draw 1., aid and pay more
taxet.
He uld be ha reporta ot 5Z d41·
abled Callfornlau boldlnt Jobi under
the year-0ld law. But he said many
dlaabled peraona and aome otnclall
, are unaware of tbe new law.
CONSOLF.S e SPINETS
•KAWAI
•KNAIE .• •AUGUST FORSTO
•llACH .
•CAI&.£
•WlllR
•WURLITZER
HE ttl'EO A STORY recounted OD (}ualUy ca&
the "Sixty Minutes" televilloo pro-ieruuJ. prleu
gram ln which a disabled Southern
California woman killed herself when ~LINE OF HAMMO#O ~
welfare officials discovered her UD· llAMMAMD ...aa11 & BIAllA CEliD reported Job. .._...,.. VftWIWI r.,....,
Neither the woman nor the otnclala 2154 E. Coast Hwy., CorOM clel Mw
monUat ol wortr at 1140 a month or Roberta aald homemelr•r·cbore
Roberta aaJd that even though
Calltornla'• laws liberalize ellglblli·
y. they lbould save money because knew that the new Jaw allowed ber to · 1 '(714) 644-8930 ·
keep the Job. be said. ..•••lllllil••--------·
Mutilation
Trial, to
Be Moved
MODESTO CAP) -A
merchant seaman
charged with the rape·
mutilation of a lS·year-
old Las Vegas runaway
whose arms were
chopped off has been
granted a change of
venue.
Supertor Court Judge
Francis Halley agreed
that the trial or
Lawrence Singleton, 51,
s hould be moved to
another county because
o f publicity here .
However, Halley said b~
will retain Jurisdiction
t o h e a r m· o t I o n s
acbeduJed next month.
BALLEY WILL select • the county where the
trial will be held from
three that wtll be recom·
mended by the state
judlclal council. The
trial tentatively is set to
begin Feb. 26.
Singlet.on Is accused of
assaulting Mary Vincent
along a rural road west
of here Sept. 30. The girl
was found wandering
nude and in a daze near
Interstate 5 with her
arms cut off below the
elbows.
T HE GIRL told the
county grand jury that
indicted Singleton that
her arms were chopped
off with an ax wielded
by a man from whom
she had accepted a ride
in the San Francisco
Bay Area. She told of be·
ing forced to submit to
sev.eraJ sex acts before
she was mutilated.
Singleton waa arrest·
ed Oct. 9 at his ex-wife's
home io $parks, Nev.
...
Sambo's
Sues for
License
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP> --Sambo's
restaurant chain, under
fire in Massachusetts
because of claims its
name is derogatory to
blacks, has sued the
town of Reading to force
the opening of its
$600,000 restaurant
which bas been ready
for nine weeks.
Judge WlHlam O .
Young of Middlesex
County Superior Court
took under advisement
the motion to order
Reading to grant a
license to operate.
The town's selectmen
voted ln October to deny
a llcenae because of
claim• the name de·
meaned blaclta.
The daai.Ddtaqed Ute
name of one of Its
reatauranll near New
Bedford, Mau., to the
Jolly nser but lnll•ll
the DlllM Sambo'• is not
demeanlna and wu
formed by comblnlng
the namea of It.a foun·
dera, Sam Battlatone
and Newell Bobnett.
ca11 .. t-NT1. "'' ., ....... towor9' for
COLECO
LIL GENIS 618
Real calculator.
with math
•'
HAT AMO
SCAIF.SR 411 ..
helps
Knitted hat~ acarl Mt in aaat OOIOf1.
\I
Quantities lmited to stock
on hand. Prices effective
throucJh Dec. 24th.
vour choice
Choose from LA Machine or General
Electric Food Processor. •sa rebate
on General Electric Food Processor.
Animal Plush AsSOt Intent
112u IASKETIALL IACK IOAID 20% OFF ... Prkft
Juke Box
Jamboree
29!~
Compleh wfftl goat
BARIB.L SET
IOOPCMMd
2 speed phonograph with 7"
plastic turntable and 4" speakers.
Solid State.
Model 1597-98
EMERAL ELECTRIC MEMS LCD OR
SMOKE ALARM LADIES LED 911 91&
Model 8201 Choice of aty1es
COMAIR GAM•OP
$14
$18
CLAIROL
9911
AM-Fm Stereo radio and
record changer all in
one convenient un11
Modle 22A5
AUDmON
CLOCK RADIO
SKIM" MACHINE 1711 7~1
AM·FM radio With alarm
For cleaner smoot.her and digital ciodc.
complexion Model 1288
IMllALILICTll DISH
PRO 1000 PAYDAY STIAM/DIY IRON GAID8'S 444· 1011 911 211
1000 watta or drying Make earning money Severe! stytes to cnooee
oower from Conalr ~nd paying bills fun Model F.e3 from
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
A huge assortment of animal plush
characters all at 20% off regular prices.
20% OFF
Men's and Ladies'
FRAGRANCES
CllcloW from CNr .... Wlltd SOng. c.ctiet.
tor ledlft Ind 8rltilh StMOng. Old Spice
tor "*' tnc1 IOt more tor llOttt men. end
ledln.
WONDERFUL
WATaFUU.
211
Asst. games for kids 5
and IJp
ILOOMDG
POIMSITTIAS
199·
Beautiful blooming
polnaelllff make the perfect Qlft.
TELETOME
PHOHOCHAPH
1888
3-speed pho~ with dulk QOll'll'
OMM-1.
IATTUSTAll
GALAcnA 911
Colonial Warrior or
Cyton c.ntunan Doett.
---[ Ill ....... _till ..... .... ..,_
•
\
e I
I ---
·.
. . .
" •
LEVI'S
llLL IOTTOM
CORDS
STIAIGHTLM
LEVIS
IEll IOTTOM
JEANS
11• llLL
JEAN
There's Something for
Everyone on yow ll1t.
512"
HARBOR CENTER
545-8203
Giff ldlas
GIFT . WRAPPING
FOR All
HARBOR CENTER
STORES
AVAILABLE AT
JCPenney
For A Nominal Fee .
•
CHARIOtt CIEH'TIYt STOQ OML YI
...
rsidCPenney
HARIOR SHOPPINC5
CENTER STORE ONLY
'
2300 HARBOR• COSTA MESA HARIOI
AT
WILSOM
Giff ldias
Select fl'OM a Co ... I ...
U...of
• ·LINGERIE .
• SPORTSWEAR
• DRESSES
• AcassoRIES
• COATS
All for Her •••
for • occcnloft•
TIS
'10to'l9 . tc~=--T.W..
SPOIT SHIRTS
'8 to '18
*c4=r ,,...
SOCKS
3,. $2.97
e.twwo ....
IC~
swunas
19 to 120
Giff ldias
Jton vtniie·
f!llti<lalo and /Fo•"'°'4
Announcing
Our
New Location
In
Harbor Center
Inner Mall
t
_,
'
I
r
Glftldias
For Her •••
DEARFOAM
SLIPPERS
• Large Selection
• Many Colors
• Comfy Fashion
• Washable. Too
4so _ 5so
irtlCPenney
H.rlNwe......··eotta ....
2lOOH__....,
ca.u
Topliders
Stacy Aclmn
AfhrHOS'I
Mike
Pro I ..
Peclwtn
Glltldias
FINE ART
AND
SB.ECTED CRAFTS SHOW
Some of the finest artists from many
areas of the world will be displaying
their work In the WORLD WIDE
ARTISTS Fine Art and Selected Crafts
Show at HARBOR SHOPPING
CENTER for 3 days only, December
22·23-24 .
Specialized artists will display therr
work In media which Includes oils.
watercolors. oriental acrylics. wood
carvings, pen and Ink drawtnga and
graphlc:s.
I
Craftsmen have been selected for the
unlQueneu and fl~ workm.tnshlp In
their particular field. The very best In
metal sculpture. weavlngs. pottery,
paper tole, etc .. will bi shown.
J
(
I
l
I
( •
y
D ~
I
st
hr
11)
b1
w
In
lb
)'(
NATlON ~.Oeotmber21 , 1978
,~
DAILY PILOT Al.
ACLU Hits 11ling rav-w~-
Promoted =: .... ~
Admir a l
Stanafl ld Turner will re· tire lrom th
Navy at
month11 nd
but wtU ttmaln
H directQi of lbe Cmtral In· telll1 e ncc
Agency; a CIA spokesman
I Gld. •
PROVJDl:NCE. R.I. (AP> -
A rullo1 that rernov11 two
children frorn the cuatody of
pareatl dwsfd wllh obtcenlt.y
vlol1tl0at hu been crlUclaed by
the local American Civil
Ubertle9 Union II •• I threat to
the lntecrilY ol the family" and ••a dua-c-precedftt ••
Michael B. Oolltn1er,
••.cutJve dlNCtor of the atate ACLU cbaDter. 11.id Wedfteed1y
a F1mUy Court Judaie·s d~lalon
to temporarily remove lhe two
you.n1sten from lhelr parenu•
custody ".W pennlt lh llat• to
break up famlUea and like
children away from parent•
whenever 1ome 1overnment
offlclal or Jud11 doea not
•PP rove of the parents'
Uleatyle.''
THE CABE INVOLV&s two
children of ¥1xlmllll1n and
Su1an Leblovlc, who were
arreated Dfc. 4 l.n a raid on a
rented n tate In Jamestown.
After U. arreet, the atlte railed
lbe queeUoft '!_ cuatody.
AutbortUes say the oceanatde
house was used as a studio
where sexually explicit
photosrapbl were produced for
national pubUcatlorit. The state
claimed th e Leblovlc•
maintained an unllt atmotpbere
for tbelr children.
On Tuesday. after a four-day
heartna, Judge Edward V.
Nealey ruled that the children,
Michael, 10, and Shana, e,
should stay wllh their maternal
arandparenta for the time beina
becauae of "depravity on tho
part of both parente."
TESTIMONY RAD SHOWN
that Michael reads below arade
level and cannot spell b1I last
name. The children have been
tutored at home alx hourt a week but have not attended 8 ~vy F.nllpotDouH dll school. · •UIT'l1, IOG ai9id
In bla atatement Wednesd1y M. and Ray R. Murray
Do 11 l nae r noted th at ~ of lUI Port Ta11art.
p1ycbl1tmt wbo examined the Newport Beacb, baa
children found DO emotional or beeo commJ.utoaed up-
psy c holoslcal problems, and oa 1raduaUon from Of· Dollln1er al.lo pointed out that fleer Candidate School,
the p1ycbl atrl1t and tbe at Newport, R.I.
cblldren'1 court-appointed He la a 1974 &rlduate
suardlan recommended the of Corona del Mar.HJlh
Judge return the you.npten co Sc boo 1 a o d a U 7 8 tbelr parent.a. graduate o1 UC Irvine.
Ms. Labioger also aald the c.u u2-1111. Leblovlca would probably Puta few word•
appeal the dectslon. · to wotk tor ou.
CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE
Starts Friday 9 A.M. -
J
30% off
Misses and Junior Blouses
Ruffled neck blouse
Mock vested shirt
Brushed print shirt.
Victorian challis smock
Cotton print blouse
D~slgner india blouse
Mandarin collar tunics
' Grandfather shirt tops
.Solid v~neck slouch T
orig. $16
orig. $13
orig. $15
orig. $18
orig. 10.99
orig. $19
orig. $22
orig. $18
orig. $8
30% off
Misses and Junior Pants
Pleated poplin trouser
Tunnel waist denim pant
Poly elastic back slack
Belted designer pant
Corduroy jean '
Brushed cord slack
orig. $18
orig. $18
orig. $16
orig. $24
orig. S15
orig. $21
30% off
Misses and Junior Skirts
Peasant print skirt
Apron front skirt
Challis print skirt
Lacy knit skirt
Matching lacy tunic top
Polished damask skirt
Matching scoop neck top
'
orig. $15
orig. $19
orig. $14
orig. $17
orig. $23
orig. $15
orig. $14
MEN'S APPAREL
30% off
Men's Casual & Dress Pants
" Solld poly dress slack orig. s14
Fashion prewash jean orig. s1a
Stitched pre wash Jean orig. s1s
Wide wale corduroy Jean orig. s11
Leather look Inset denim Jean orig. s18
Matching denim vest ·and orig. s14
M atchlng sport jacket or19. s14
A th letlc satl n shorts orig. s1 a
Store Hours
Mon.-Frt.
9 •.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Saturdey .
9 •.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Sunday .
10 •.m. to I p.m.
\
Now 10.88
Now 8.88
Now 10.88
Now 10.50
Now 6.88
Now 12.88
Now 14.88
Now 12.80
Now 5.60
Now 12.60
N.ow 12.60
Now 11 .20-
Now 16.80
Ndw 10.50
Now 14.70 ·
Now 10.50
Now 12.88
Now 9.80
Now 11.88
Now 13.88
Now 10.50
Now 9.sO
Now 9.80 .
Now 12.60
Now 10.50
Now 11 .90
Now 12.60
Now 9.ao
Now 35.00
Now 1.44
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
· 50%· off
Holiday Evening Separates
Satin camisoles
Satin blouses
Satin shirts & pants
Satin & lace tops
Crepe & lace tunics
orig. $9
orig. $24
orig. $16
orig. $17
orig. $21
Now 4.44
Now 11 .99
Now 7.99
Now 7.88
Now 10.44
,
30% to 50% off
Misses and Junior Sweaters
~ohalr pullovers
Pocketed cardigan
Suede trim, hooded
Designer collection
Sherpa look pullover
Striped turtleaecks
Polntelle drawstring vest
Ditto® button neck
orig. $40
orig. $20
orig. $27
orig. $29
-· orig. $19
orig. $7
orig. $16
oria. $20
30% off
Crinkle Cotton Coordinates
Side tie pants
Pullover tops
Vest
Wrap skirt or pants
orig. $14
orig. $12
orig. $11
orig. $14
• Women's Holiday Accessories
• Women's vinyl or leather boots
• Women's casual or dressy heels
•Misses or junior disco dresses
MEN'S APPAREL
Now 18.99
Novi 9.99
Now 13.88
Now 10.99
Now 12.88
Now 3.99
Now 7.99
Now 14.99
Now 9.80
Now 8 .40
Now 7 .70
Now 9.80
30% .off
30%-50% off
30%-50% off
50% off
30% to 50% off ·
Men's Clothing
Patterned 3 pc. suit orig. $120
3 pc. vested eult orig. $1 00
Plald sport coats orig. sss
Quad suit orig. $11 0
Solld 3 pc. s uit orig. S85
• Men's leather llghtwelghts ong. S35
• Men's better dress shoe ong. 49.95
Now84.00
Now 70.00
Now 13.88
Now 77.00
Now 37.50
Now 17.88
Now 34.95
-rr~CPenney
ril~~
FASHION ISLAND
STORE ONLY
844-2313
• •
......
~AJ" DAILY PILOT Thut'ld1y, Dec•mber 2t. 1t78 ..
Gmae iilles fferea-
On Store Franchis s . -
WASHINGTON <AP > -Tb•
Federal Trade Commllllon bu 1'·
•ued 1WcMUne1 to force eompanlet to
l•ll peopM •bout lbo mu lnvolved In
btlylat franchlle •torea
CON. IJMER
C • E IC -Ow1Md by Dr. x.m.tb K.ron.lck of Culver City. "See me to He" la tbe
optometrill'1 way ot promotJnc b1a ~I.wt. With fraod\lted opeuUOna bunt· tna on&o the aceno ln ver~locrtutna
num bt'r9 the FTC l&aued • recuJ•· lion w;dnesday that wm "9quirt
comp&s»et to make detailed lnlorm.a
Uon avallable to thole wbo want to
buy local ouUeta for aucb eaterpri.Hs
•• reatauranu, photo 1torea aJ)d
Tit• d.llcl~ur 1tatem.nt would
alto incluc:kt the hualn • OKpertence
and lJtl11Uon Md b&nkruptey hlltory
of tbe cocnpany aod lta key mAnAf -----------------
m nt pet"llOMel
norbt ahope •
.. FA& TOO MANY conaumera
have tnv led tbdr lit~ Hvit\p ln
bu Int• ventures aboot wb!cb I.bey
h11d vtry UUle .olld lnformaUoa."
uld Albert Kramer. head of the
aaency'1 Bureau of Consumer
Protection.
Kramer aald the rule, which wUJ
take efft"Cl July 21. "will provide
would·bt' lnvestora with lbe factual
lnformauon they need to make an ln rormed investment decision."
When made final, lhe rule will
carry the force or law. Violaton will
be s ubject to llnea of up to Sl0,000 per
violation.
A FRANCIUSE IS a bu.ttmesa ln
which the parent company sells
someone the right lo do business under
its name rn a certain area. Many pro-
vide tralning and assistanci! to the
local busrness and sell it the necasary
supplies.
The buyer gets lhe benefit of the
national name and adverusing"of the
parent company as well as the
management assistance and other
help it gives hlm.
Under the rule, companies oCCerlng
franchises will have to give prospe-c.
t1ve buyers a discl06ure statement at
least 10 days before a contract is
, signed or any money changes bands.
IN ADDmON, THE rule forbids
the company to make any general
claims about actual or potential sales
or profits' unless the claims can be
substantiated in a second detailed
statement.
Class Set
In Folk
Dancing
Protpectlve lnveaton alao mual be
informed ol lb• eotta involved ln
• partlclpatlna ln lb francblao.
Tho pr mary probJc11n1 In the In·
du.try are bued on lack of reliable
and eueoUaJ lnlormalJon that pro.
tpttllve rtanch1tee1 hav~. oxJ)la.lned
FTC lawy« Joh.n M. Tltrord.
''LACK OF INFOaMATION . ms
to bC' the thre.'ihhdld problem. froc:n
which othtr problem• ca n 1tern." he
said "Without thl1 information
they're <the franchlae buyer) just
booting In I.he dark. Juat accepUns
sta tements from lbe franchisor or hla
salesman ~ lbey have no way to
verify the lriformaUon alvcn. ''
TUford saJd the dlscloeure 1tato-
01enta "will alao have a somewhat
cleansing ertecl," explaining that a
salesman will be reluctant to make
false stat.emenua when he knows the
accurate information Is available to
his chenL
The franchising industry has un·
dergone tremea*>us growth the la.at
lS to 20 years, "l'tfford noted. He sald
1976 retail sales through franchises
were estimated at $248 billion. This
means that one of every three retail
sales in the United States Is made by
a franchisee, Tifford said.
I
HE DECLINED TO pinpoint any
particular type or franchise opera-
tion as having more problems than
others, and added that complaints re-
ceived by the commission have been
fairly evenly distributed across· the
country.
Information disclosures similar to
that wb.icb will now be required in
sales of franchises have proved
helpful in interstate land sales, be
said.
SWEATERS
crews, v-necks o r cardi-
gans-make great gifts-
gelect from lambswool,
camel hair o r c.ashmere
171h Ir lrvi~ Ave., Newport Beuh, C..lif. 1714) 6'>0792
2l4J "AH Slrttl Downtown, S.n ~o 1714) 232-6191
Beautiful Christmas plants
with huge velvet-hke blooms.
With holiday wrap and bow
IN uraery Special I · .....
HOUY Pl.ANTS
O utdoor evergreen
p lant. Grow your own
holly for years of holiday
decorating.
NATION
Beautiful and practical Art
.. Brass lamps cr eat e a
festive holideY glow
GREAT
GIFTS FROM I 5.50
PllOlll
54W525
I GAL '
.... 2.tl·
-YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE
RECYCLED. Orange Coast College
operates the official recycling
center for Costa Mesa. 556-5981
Laguna Beach's staid
City Council chambers
will be turned into a
festive dance hall come
Junuary when the Sad·
d l eback College
1<;meritus Institute will
sponsor an international
folk dancing class.
VIA LIDO AT NEWPORT BLVD.
The class will com·
mence Jan. 23 and is
scheduled to be orrered
each Tuesday from
11 :30 a .m. to 2:30 p.m.
in the council chambers.
In s truc tor Mikki
Revenaugh will offer
participants an "easy· .
paced introduction lo
the best·loved dances or
regions around the
world."
Reizistratlon for the course is under way at
Saddleback College's
Mission Viejo campus.
For further informs·
lion, phone 831-9700
Ne w Law
Rote Set
By Bailey
NEW YORK (AP> -
F . Lee Balley. who
became one or the most
famous lawyers In the
world by defending such
big-name clients as
Patricia Hearst, used a
tiny, front-page ad lo &n·
no u o c e t hat be I.a
branchin g o ut from
criminal law.
In an advertisement
that a ppeared in small
prtnt at tbe bottom of
The New York Thnes,
Ba ll ey and A a r o n .
Broder, a New York at-
torney, aald they were
open tn1 an omce to
specialize in personal in·
jury and death cases in
aircraft diauten
\ WARSAW, N.Y. (AP>
-Potato farm e r
Tbomu E. Ayen bu
been sentenced to three
years in AtUca prllon
for fa tally sbootln• a
fellow member of tb•
Pike Town Board a year
ago.
Ayers , 29 was
charged with 1hootina
David We>lcott, 30,
follo• tnc an araumeftl
out1ldt tb• victim'• pocery It.en.
Merry Christmas from
/" ~orite ' ~
+e ' ~.LIDO DRUGS•-
I 00'1 Of LAST MIMUTI GlnS TO CMOOS1 ROMI
• Hallmortc Cards
• Fine Perfume
• Gold Jewefry
~ Photo Supplies
• Timex Watches
• Stuffed Animals
• Tree Ornomenh
• Clock Rocho\
• Hair Dryers
J44S Via Udo, Hewpcri
73-316 a PASIO
PALMDESllT
C7J4J Ha.1005
675-0110
LAST MINUTE
GIFTS AT
BIDWEll'S
BID11QUE!
• Super eeted!Of' of gloves, acerls. & hats -'""' S4.00
• Rainwear -~ jackets. coe1s. umbrellas -,,..17 ...
• Great sefeciion ol 1"K charms-,..._ SIJ.00 ~
tr... SJUO
• Lace Y99tS -the perfect aoce990I v-s 16
• The tab sleeve s1lkh1na shirt -the shirt for every
<><:<:asron In cream or white -SJO
fili~ll~
BID11QUE
3467 Via Lido -Newport Beach Plrtdng Lot Entrance
• 873-4610
3441 VIAUDO
~RACH.CA.
(714) 671-1460
IMPOSSIBLE TO GET! • • •
Calphalon Cookware Has
Arrived In Our Store!
• E~quhl~ copper
moldl~in
SUii&Nrland
• Delldo&u purmea
61/l ,,.. ... ,,.tut.
ro orrler
119500
(Reg. 822500)
BA'ITERIE DE CUISINE
"l8 ~·· mod com,,t.N cviu..,., ,,.,. _.,,, ,,_, ........ ••IN
~OIN US FOR SOME ROUDAY CBEERl
CrossCreek
cotton knit
a wife <A111 '°11e.
Introducing the
Qualitized® shirt. The first ·
all-cotton knit that's trulv
durable press. ·
A tailored-collar. half.
sleeved shirt of 100°)> cwo-
ply DureneQP cotton lisle, it
retains its wrinkle-free
shape, softness and body
(or life, through
wash afte r wash
after wash.
Keeps its luster
and color longer. too, and is
guaranteed not to shrink
out of fit .
Come sec It now in any of
8 solid colors. including
White, Beige. Maize,
Llght Blue, Canton Blue.
Olina Red. Navy, Ginger,
and treat yourself to
The Exceptional
Shirt at an
acceptable
$17
~ (]OiSCRIB(•
M t•ll'TllNAI 'll!lfl •
MEN'S STORE
t---------- -• AT YOUR SERVICE I CALIFORNIA
I
"Oot o problnn' Tht1t wrltt lo Pol Dvnn Pot wall
nc rfd t . ~tmg th• a~1 and octlOft "°" ~
lo i olt attqenllt• '" go.,_,.,.,,.,,., Oltd burmtu Med
~ur qtWttlDftl ro Pct ~nn, At Your Scn:nct. Orcngt
C'ocut Oml11 l"llot. f' 0 Boz 15'0. Co.to M 11a. CA mu Al '"°"~ Z.t(.,. OI J)Otf1blf wtll ,,. OIUwtTcd,
b1't ~ 1nqii1ne1 ., W t.,, Ml htclwbrtfl I~
rtod.r't /Wl no"'•· odd"'' a"'1 buimfu llollre' phoM
numbfrCGMOC bt'l'(mtidrrl'd Tlwcolumn~rsdo'· /~ UC'.,,C Soturdo1,11 "
N,.to ,,.. .,........ Paf'rt-p,....pta Cltllffl 11,.,,,...,..,.
DEAR PAT· Our !'on, who 11 of le1al aae. has
Sen. Robert Griffin, ked UJ lo 11n a releue rorm required by the
M·yeor-old Mlchlgan \ikor Liie Eicleni.1on Foundation. Thll la a cryoruc Republican who w <1 'uspt'n ton or1anu.aUM Lhat freezes bodies after d e re a t e d tor r e -ath ror "restoration" to lift> at ~me later tam e e t e c t l 0 n l n N 0 Ht' 'hu paJd a $1,000 membeft)tup fee and ia taking
vemb<'r will t ke 8 out a ~.000 111 Insurance policy in their name
• We w nt to,. find out rnore about this roundaUon temporary Job as u ht-fore we r.rgn any release form. but don't know senlo~Cellow at the how to contact anyone in authority
Amt:r Enterprise M.F .• Costa Mesa
lnsh ute for Public Cryon.lc 1upea1lon orgaobaUou are not ~·
R e s e a r e h i n 1wat~ or llceued by C11e t&ate, as are f.,...eral
Washington. dlrec:ton and embalmers. Wlaea ooe pboHs Akor,
· a recorded mtfi3age advtae. ~at U tills la an
emerg~y. aJMKber call ahouJd be placed &o the
Saa f'raadHO are. &o reacb "Trana-Time." O.e la
told to leave bJs a.me, pbone aumber aad Ume Ille
un be reached. The me1aage tben statea, "I will lllne a bwnan return you call u sooa u posa(.
bfe." A phone call &o S.n Fraaclsco reacbes an
aa•wertng 8t'rvlce. Con&actlng u olflclal or tbe
roudaUoa ia DOt that easy.
Assembly
Gets Paid
Days Off
SACRAMf:NTO CAP)
-The 900 ~mployees or
the state Assembly will
get four extra dayg of
paid vacation next
week, but their Senate
counterparts will be
working.
"In the s pirit of
Christmas and the holi· day period, our hard·
workin.c staff is ge>ing to
get some time on. said
Assemblyman Lou
Papan, J>.Millbrae.
PAPAN 18 chairman
of the Assembly Rules
Committee, which de·
cided that lhe lower
house's staff can take
off the four days follow·
ing Christmas.
But Dere~o~. a
spokesman for Senate
President Pro T e m
James Mills, D-San
D iego, said Senate
employees could have
next week off only as part of their regular
vacaUon time.
"THE SENATE will
be working next week,"
he said.
The Legislature is in
recess. having met Dec.
4 and S to get organized
and begin introducing
bills. Members return Jan. 2.
Assembl y employees
formerly got the week
after Christmas off, but
Speaker Leo McCarthy,
D-San Francisco, halted
the practice when he
took over four years ago
Just Call
F o r Trees
Capitol Newa Service
SACRAM ENTO -
Christmas t rees by
telephone? Not exactly.
but if you want t.o save
money. get some fresh
air. and be able t o
ch<>Qse from a variety or
living trees, you can call
toll·free 1·800-952-5272 for a list or over 100
Christmas tree farmers
around California
The number ls pro·
vided by the direct
marketin( program of
the State J)epartment of
Food and Agriculture.
Bad Bargain
FREMONT <AP> -A state watchdog agency
has ruled that the Pre·
mont school district
bargained in bad fa.Ith
with teachers during the
impasse that led to a
three.week strike last
year.
A YSftnaJJy spoke toArtQuaJfeofTrua·Tlmeln
Berkeley. He explalns lbat a foundation member ls
"booked ap" to a beart/fung resucltator Im ·
mediately atterdeatb, trpo11lble. Tbebloodlscooled
to sero degrees C before the "paUeat Is placed bl a
catpsule filled wflb minus 320 de1rees F lJquld
ni\rogea. Storage ls ln the San Franclaco area. No de·
rlolte lnlormatlon was given re1ardiac bow soon
post-death treatment could be arran1ed, but Tl"'9M·
Tl me ls incbarge afterdeatb.
' Qualle says Alcor now bas 21 suspension mem·
hers and a number of associate members "wbo
are interested, but bnen'& taken tbe big plunge."
He adds that signing the release form ls aot
absolutely necessary, but AJcor prefen Jt bttause
"once a patient ls placed la supeulon, aome re-
latives decide they are not In aympatby wltb
cryonlcs, or tbey want to get tbe member's
money." Alc:or's president, Laurence Gale, cu be
contacted by wrttlng'&o P.O. Box 312, Glendale,
Calif. 91209. • ·
A YS advises reminding your son tbat Alcor's
relative release form states; "I realise and accept
the fact that tlae berelo proposed treatment of
Cryonlc Supenslon 11 new, experimental, WI·
perfected, and not consistent witb contemporary
mHlcalormortuary prac:Ucet.
C'l111fJltg Sa nta'• a I.a te c .. no
DEAR PAT: My children have asked me how
we "kaow" Santa is fat. I have no idea what t.o tell them. Do you? They've also asked me how Santa
Claus got bis name, and I'm not sure ol tbat either.
E.G .. Fountain Valley Aatbor Washington Irving, la tbe UH
''Knlckerboeker's History of New York," ls
believed to be the flrst to describe St. Nick as a
jolly fellow weartng a broad·brtmmed bat and bu1e
brettbes and amoklng a loq pipe. Saata'a TOIY·
poly Image came to full nower In an 1837 palallal
by arti.at Robert Welr and, la tbe 18Ms, la a
popular terlH of drawtnga by c:anooa.ttt Tbomas Naat.
Aa almost everyone knows, tbe mythical •·Saa·
ta'' began We as a real person, St. Nlcbolaa, a
bishop in Asia MJnor ln lbe 3"8. A klad.ly mu wbo
took presents to the needy, Nlcbolaa came &o be
known as lbe patron saint of sailors, travelers,
bakers and merchants, bat especially of cblldren
The custom of giving gllts to celebrate bla feast
day, Dec. 6, grew lo Europe untU Nicholas became
widely attepted as the gift.giver at Cbrtatrnu
time.
Early Dukb settlers lo New York brqpgbt the
custom with them, but Nlcbolu' Duwb name, SID·
terklau, wu bard to pronOUJ1ce and be became
known as "Saaty Claus" and "Suta Clau," ac·
cording to &he World Book Encycloped.la.
Cooker ln•t ru~tlon• Nred e d
DEAR PAT: When my neighbor moved she
gave me a pressure cooker she had used. All it has
on it is "Maid of Honor." Can you tell me how to
locate the manufacturer so l can request an in·
struction booklet?
G.D., Costa Mesa
Write letters or inquiry to the Direct SelUng
A11oc:latton, 1730 M St. N.W., Wasblastoa, D.C. ·
20036 and to Metal Cookware Manulactaren As·
sociaUon, P.O. Box D, Fontana, Wls. 53US. DCA
can provide the manufacturer's name and address
if the pres8utt cooker was parcbaaed rrom a door·
to-door sales peno11. and MCMA can flelp lf tbe
cooker wu bought at a retaU outlet.
/fff n d Man ners Mind• B Offte
DEAR PAT: We have retired relatives who
plan on wintering. in Southern California. Tiley
would like to house sit for anyone on vacation. The
Dally Pilot had an article about two Orange Coun·
ty women who started a house eitchange business.
but I misplaced it. Can you find out how t can con· tact them?
A.P., Fountain Valley
Mlad Vocu Manners Inc. housealtU.• 1enlce1
can be coolactH by writing to P.O. Box 51t5,
Fuller&oa, Calif. 92t35, or by pboDIDg 87f.51tl.
THI
IECOftD
GltlftCI
/ilf-e
junio r
app a re l
~
Ttuldey, Oeoembe, 21 1978 OAILY H.QT A IS
..--------------~--...
HURRY ! ONLY A ;EW DAYS
LEFT ! MOST STORES OPEN
CHRISTMAS EVE. 10-6 PM
LAST MINUTE
.
SYSTEM SEVEN -BIG SOUND, MINI SIZE
·----~'
by Realistic®
·Reg. ~peril•
ltema Price
32910
• STA ·l AM/FM Stereo Recenuu .
Only 3'//" High! 10 W•tts pet
ch•nnel. min1mum RMS •t 8
ohms from 10-20.000 H1. with
no '""'e th•n 0 5% tot•/
h11rmonic d11ttHt1on
•Two Mm1mus• .7 Two-W11y
Spe11lte1 Syrrems"' 7'11•"
C11st Aluminum Enclo11u1u
•LAB.SJ ThtH·SpHd Ch1111ger
wit h Bue. Magn111c C11rtt1dge
11nd Dust Cover
BASE CB GOES MOBILE TOO !
Navaho·~ TRC-431 by Realistic
95
21 1544
CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES) ~ VISA. ~-_J
If Emerg Ch 9 is used only once 1h1s w1nt P.r a
Real1st1c CB pays lor 11self1 Help·s 1us1 a call away'
f ind ou1 aboul road hazards up ahead Up.front
speake,, AC , DC cables
.
STEREO PHONO SYSTEM WITH PEDESTAL WAKE TO AM/FM DIGITAL ALARM CLOCK
Clartnette~>-12 by Aeall1tlc ---:-----::=-----
~--Chronom1Uc !l-209 by ReaUsUc
49!~.
Reg.59n
Pedestal holds speak·
ers or doubles as rec-
ord rack. 2 -spee d
manual record player
has 45 RPM adapter.
Speakers sep. to 18'
With dust cover.
42!~. Reg.
47.s
SAVE
s5
Rise ro music or buzzer alarm! 01911ron display,
snooze. fast/slow r1me ser. 3'•1" speaker. sltde·rule
dial. earphone 1ack
MORE HOLIDAY GIFT BARGAINS-UNDER s100-0NLY AT THE SHACK ·! ·
CASSETTE
RECORDER
RECORD THE SOUNDS OF CHRISTMAS ! r------.6-IN-l TV GAM ES
Blank Tape by Realistic TV Scoreboard ·~·
by Radio Shack ' CTR·t2 by RHll•I~
29!~., 40-fltlNUTE B·TRACK 60 ·MINUTE CASSETTE
159 Reg.
44·840 1" 126 Reg.
44 602 1"
CUT20°/o CUT 25%
90·MINUTE CASSETTE
1164 Reg.
.l,44-603 2··
CUT 25°/o
Reg . 39°
SAVE 25°/o
14·842 3195 CUT ~~~; 20°/o
8·TRACK/AM/FM STEREO SYSTEM
Pistol. remote con-
trol Target prac·
t 1ce . h ockey.
squash. skeet 1en·
n1s
• Req 6 AA .. b•tts Modulette ·8 by Realistic
AC ADAPTER 4n 60·3053
• 12 1402 999~ SAVE 26% ON VIDEO FUN! Only 8x6V•x3 W'I Auto·
Level. Auto·Stop 120V
AC.
8995 Reg.
~~~~~~~ SAVE 110 TV Scoreboard by Radio Shack
• Req 4 ··c " b•tts.
• 12V DC •d11pter. S6 95 14.944
LAB KIT WiTH SPACE AGE PROJ ECTS !
COT.13°/o
by Science Fair~
19!!,
Reg.22u
Everything you
need for 75-in· 1
projects! Req. 9V. 2 .. AA .. betts.
PAT110lMAN*C1·6 lllUltl·IAND
AC/DC IADIO 6995 Reg. by Re .. 1tk 990 12.1t1
SAVE 1 30
40 CB channels, AM /
FM. em~rg./wt1thtr
tervice on UHF, VHF
Hi/lo. Reci. 4 "C" bans.·
...... ""' \H ....... _..u ..... . ... .., -~ .............. -...... 14'\ll ........ .
Buill ·•n dUIO manual
lclpe player. 10 .. ra ll
Speakers St:p up 10 10'
Compac1 tor dorms
Squash. hockev. 2J95 practice. tennis 60·3060
Req batts Reg.29H
4·KEY MEMQRY
CALCULATOR
EC·243 by Rldl• Sheck
logs~:?;
H ·l18A
SAVE28%
Error/memory keys.
'E•l'f to tead di~itron
dleptey. With 2 'AA"
be us .
...
ELECTRONIC
NULTITESTER
by Mlcronta•
-Ill . '
2695 Reg.
29H
22·103
SAVI 100/o
30.000 ohms/volt.
27 ranges. 411'" me·
ter. With leeds/bans .
AM llKE RADIO
WITH HORN
by Arctltr Aoed Patrol·
1595 ~;~ ..
12·193
SAVE 11%
Fits any handlebar.
Push·button horn.>"'
safety reflector. Req.
2 .. C .. bans.
IMAlfT SANTAS SHOf' THI SHACK• •.• MOST STORES Ol'EN LATE NIOHTS 'TIL CHRISTMA$r 11,: ::~~ FOU'U:~LEY HUNT~~.!~ACH MISSION YllJO SAN JUAN ""'° Sheca II•,.......:=.,..., ... , _...... .. ............ ,_., CA,.ITftANO 0 .. 1."
,.::-:..,.., .,.._ LAGUNA HACH NlWPORf H ACH n•t °"""' ~ Looll IOf th•t
... ,.. '1"' w c.. ...,, COST" MIS" ''"" '" YoV' '"''"' c.... "'" (*"-t ......... , .. .. " COJOJ!~ ~ :,trt SAN CLIMINTI LAGUNA NIOUI• '::.=I:: "•Qhtlof"°"-.. _____ ...
A DIVISION OF TANOY COAPO~~IO~ c.... • .., MDI (l'M'I v..., ,.,, PRICES MA'( VAP.V AT INOIVIOUAL STOAES
• '
f 8 DAILY PILOT
Award
For Pap r
Coast Report. Oranac oo t Coll ae i. atudent
nn.1paper, "'tm lhtt top
awar4 for tabloid
ocwap•per "'" etli~nr
omon• lar1e l'Ollf'U
nl'.., paper' a t the
SoutbMn aecUun con·
f r enc or Lhl'
Journa.11.sm A scM·1 lion
o( Community C<11Jl'I
1n Santa Mootr•
J'tn Pond o( co u
M aa, Cont Report
dllor. "'OD nrst pna ln
1he b t ne ton C'Om ·
~lltloo an<t John a .. r
o( Corona d•l Mar ram ..
in fi rst for r mooruoa
PIJJUJC
fllCTITIOln IUllM $\
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PUBUC N01'1 ~
•OTIC!I. 'fO~ICMTon
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NOTIC
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PUBU NOTICE
P BU NOTl<:t:
NOllC~ 0' OIUOLUTIOM
Of' l'allTNl.Rl"tP """'" ...,., .. " _., ...... ""'' lt l N O lf l l<U~ t MKf~tH)
PUBU NOTICE
WC1Jfl0U,Jl\IJl"r MA.Mtl ifA\'Uliallt
'"• 1011ow1,.. ""o"' •r• 00111• ""'' ... " .. llf/MAJI Of lllVINf', INC tl4 C
11th \lfHt SouK• Ill C.0.te Mf'M (A .,.,.
Ill /MAK O f con• Mf SA
ll!VIH( N(WIOOl'T 8ta('H INC
7l4 ( •1111 \lrHt wit~ Ill. Co\te
Mev Cll '1'11
f,.I\ bv>l,_\ 0\ <ondUtled bY •I~
POt•llOI<
IU MAllOI CO\fAMf!.!>A 1•Vlloj
NCWll04'T llf ACM INC'
Thi\ \lal ......... I Wiit 111.0 Wllh I .... cou"'" C1t1• 01 o .. no. coun111 °" De< 4 .. ,..
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P11011-Of ..... (.Oa•I O"lly PllOI.
0cot I U . 11.11. 1911
PUBUC NOTICE
"CTI nous IUllNltU
NMl'a ITATIMlNT
T,,. I0110w111Q '*'°"' •r• dolllQ OU\I ,.. ... ,
KCR INOUSYltlAl GllOUP, 1tU
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Ge•••d w !!"°"'"· 91'1 vo11"
C.••den C.•-. CA '1'" L•"" t <,r1111 ... 9?91 v on.,I
G•rde" C.row. CA '26-41
\l•n °"''· '17'1 l/Ofl\, C••d•n G•-.t A"1M1
Tiii\ 11¥\1,..U I\ tc1ndu( I~ bY •
~··• ,,.rt,.....'\No
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICtO,UL.t •TTrO
If\ •tc0t9#Wo ""'" '"" l!'oYlllOn\ ti '"' H'J•OO•• -N•vl~lun "* al\CI
,,.. •"'"' Coot el '"' S1e1• o•
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li. .. ,. Celllon11-on I,.. IOlll CS.y Of
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OBITUARIES
P VBUC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE -----------·~---~---~ rtCTITIOUS IUSINlfU
.MAMa.S T41.l.Mtlf'T I fl• 101iow1119 per\01\\ er11 do 110
.... , ...... I\
Cl.AY'IOH WI LllAM~ COM·
PANY. '°91 T•ltlerl AWl\\lt • 1. f'-
1111" v.11 .. v ( .. llol'ftlA '77-
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CA '1•1• lOCPWM\Qr'n •• Inc •• C:.IHONll•
c.ot11e1tellOI', liU Mew V•r•, C...1• Mt\e, (A.,.,.
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us•• RtQ No (FtlSl(N. llotQO\ltOfOO ·---------PUBUC NOTICE Own•r .J.,.,,.,GorclOflWelUr. Amounl
OvU12tOOO RIO()lfYACHI aNI')
•,MIP8AOIC Ell\
• C aCllOlnl• P..rt..,.rvup
&w J-ROddl• Publl\l'W!O Or&llQe C4e\I O•llY 1>1101,
o..<emDer 11, 1'1t -..n It
PUBLIC NOTICE
ttl(TITIOUS 8U'1NISS NAME STATIMUtT
T "• IOllO\olftO l)ettOn\ ••• dOlllQ ""''""n ., RE/MAK OF NEWPORT BEACH
PUBLIC N01'1C2
, ....... ~ .................. 11.
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er llHAllOV'> S(HAAG( JOHAN
NI '• 0 1 KO:l II -Hl(001l VA" • ... ,.. Lil N VI I H ,,..,.1otor11 CIOlnQ l)u"""" L<lt•ldW 11*'1l INC .. ))4 E. 17111 SI ..... Suite 117,
Co\I• Mt ... c• mn
JUUOFFAM
FORCOSPEL
NASHVILLE. Tenn
<AP l Ge>ipel lntct•r
t.ou•se Camp of
Bakers(leld. Cab( . h&:s
b~en chosen national
chairman of a commll·
l.\"e to raise $2 mlllioo for
a Gospel Musac Hall of
Jo"ume.
The ball would hou11e a
gospel music llbri.ry.
chapel. theater e nd
museum besides display
ureas memortalhlng
those induclt."1 It would
ll\e f'lllll• .. llW ._. al ,.,. •I.OW ~n
llUH l f'ln. Or • ., • ....,, !Mm wottl
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O.C••Jtb<t• 21. • "11 ...o J•nu.try •. II, .. ,. ,.., ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
lt0'1Ct tO~lll:O"OlU ,.,..,_, rn. 11\lil'W. lorn• ,..,,.. •"° ClllATIOflOtt hltl• 0 1 MOl l AHO AMEl>l(.a $~CUll11'YINTl•t•T t MA•l !> CH At I •I 1.,.t A-'\11"
U-U..+14oM ( ••• •I Mf\\1011 Vl•IU counly or ~lelC-O••noe. <>co.it-Of C61•10fnl•. dod on IM
... , Tr..,tfen 011\ O•Y of °"""'°"' 1•71, D~ !'•\llU<ll l o•lll-l'Oldl•OQ<IA1m,.,1.,on•l llW (Oll~fll Oi•-llwt '9MI P<lfl,..t\ht>
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CO•AIN f LEVAf()ft (OAP . I~ Du•I-OAT l 0 AT l •0 ""• H 111,,
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neme ol lht \.cured P•tlY I• •t....clt'lkutErt. .......
l'IA TfOHAL At'CEPTANCf COM· OURANTI, EU..SWOitlH & $HUP•
PANY OJ' CJ>llJ'OANIA. tM~llle" AftwMn
Mldrn• OI 1t. -uro4 -1't 1\ I09tO HJI) U MC ...... 111Jt1
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C•lllorn•e . '° ••• •~ 1, i..-to ,,.. Pl;bll\f'td Or~ Cot\I Otlty PllOI.
\<D<Yt•d """'"· ~ dlb4or .,., u...O IM OKernller n. 1'71 IOllOWlllQ Of~ DuMM"I\ ,...,,. • .nCI -
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U0?-/1
PUBLIC NOTICE
Rf/MAK O F COSTA MESA
IRVIHE, IH:WPOAT BEACH, IN(.
l~ E 11t11 '>1•"1. ~Ii. 11', Coo.le
-w.CA~71
Thi\ t>u\l...U h <-...t..o &., • <M
por•llon
Af'/MAllol
COSTA MESA. I llV11'C
NEWPORT 8EA<;H,'IN< PtJBUC NOTICE T"" \1111-1 ••• lllfod .. .,,. !IW
(OUlllW (l•r-of Orenoo C:OUlllY Oii P'ICTIT'lOUSaUSINISS OH A, 1t7' NOTICETOCRlOITOtlS
ICAMl\TATEMINT ttl0ff14 SUP .. llOltCOORTOttTtll
TM lollowlfl0Pltf'WllU••004nobll>J Puoll•-Or~ 01.ut 0.;Nly Piiot STATEOf'CALIP'OtlNIA ll'Otl
~u· o.<. 1. u. 21. a . 1971 TMI COUNTY Ott OtlAHOE MA'>TER BUl lOERS. ll"J s..tt.11 .... ;M7ttt Flo<~ 51 ..... """llftt!Oll Be«ll, E1l•t• of ESTHEL 8 HAZLITT al<• C•hlO<nl•..,.,.. ESfH E l 8UFOAO HAZLITT ,
Ro• Men111. ,.,., FIOtlcU st .. u , PUBLIC NOTICE Oe<HW<S. Hlltlllf1910!!8H<".C.lllOnll<t'2W NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IC>"'"
Pettr "'<--4U ~"Im« We;. -------------c..olton ol Ille Mlo¥e M.....0 __ , • 8·101. C0tlt~w. C..lllornl;o9't1-ttlCTITIOUS I USINESS lt\el ell ~ "-""'9 <lfltn\ -ln\I
T"I\ llu>lntts I\ lOllOll<leG Dy • MAW"$TATIMENT IM '-elO dK-Me requlftel lo Ille OHWtil~. ' TM fOllOWtnQ .,..._,I\ -nq bu$!· 11 .. m. wltll lt.e '-<ftYtY llOU(l'litf\. Ill
RovMMt•n n.n "' • IM offk• of IN c•rll of tM abOw "n PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiii\ ,,_ ... "'4K "'"' .. mi,.,. VIC TOA COMMUNICATIONS ltlled coun. OI lo.,,_, ....... '""' ----------·---CounlYCl•n.alO.-~yoncult INC .. 1UO a .. ,~ SI., Nt•porl tM M CH\MV vou<he", 10 IM,.,.. SUPlatOllCOURTOPTME
O.Cemaer 11. lf1'. S.~11 CA~ o.n191*1 .i SSS Soutll F_, Str..e1, STATE Of'CALIFOaMIA '011 CP.1'H be located ucross the •onu TOc1110tTOtti street from the Country Ott euuc TU.Nsttu
Fttt1J• Victor Mettl•. 1'20 &.\\-~ l.,M AnQeift. Ga,-" h ""'p4~• ol THIE COUNTY OF OllAMOE
P\iblhlled Or-CcN•I O•llv PllOI. NewPOtl BH<Jl.CA~ bu~lne\\ol 1"9 llf\Oe"q>ed ln•ll tn<tt MO. A"°'7
8u.,,..u H•"'" WESTEANCQRN
01<,TR t8 UTO'I PUBLIC NOTICE
Musi c Hall of fo'ame ca.cultl-4t01u.c..c.1
TM P•-1Y to ~ Wllle<ttcl 10 ""
-"'"• ,,. .... ._,,. ,_ toeetoc1 "' '"n !a S.nc!C""'Kll'· 1rv1,..,c.111om1 ..
TME STATl!OI' 0e<•mllllr21, 2'. 197'•nO Jen ... ry '· 11, TllO\ bli\11\t'\' •• <olldueleel Dy ... II\ 1••• e>el1•1nlnQ IO Ille nt•t• ol .. ..i -N 0 TI c I 0,, "I' A 111H0 0,
fq/'9 dlvlclU•I ttOflt\f, within to..r "'°""'' "41"' ll"ot Pl' TITIOH F()tt PROtlATE OP WILL Hollef' h he••by olvell 10 Ille a long Nashville's Music creo11or~ 01 CAAL w f•Sfie A. Row T•.,.•l•f'Of. _... buMl>h> llddr•u •• 1"" J)t-ly lo~ woi.ct'"' 10 INo
MC Y•ll• onl••••I ""'" .,.. Clhttlb94
""",.,_.,.., ~ •U turnttunt., h;rn1'°h•"O". m.cl\1 ... ry, fQUIOl'IWflt. IOoh, IOOhnQ
l••lu•~" motorv...ic~. tr8'1K~ ,,,,..n
t0<v ot """t••l•h, ~•In orc1t~" ~
NEW HAMPSHIRE
C RAFTO N, u . COURT O F Vl<IOIMat11 .. ,PrMkMM 11,.1 pvOllUCIOllol tllllflOtl<.•. •NO L.l'TTlfllS TESTAM•NTA•Y,
04ted 0e< ~. 1'71 FOR AUTHORlllATtOM TO AO· PROBATE ___ . ___________ 11111 Ptnc .... ua. Cltv ol C~le Mew,
Counly ol 0.-. '""'• ot C.11-•. tl\el 1> bulk tr..,\ll't I• •DOut lo bl>
f 0 WN>rn II Mey Cone""'
WHEREAS, JM l<O l 8.111~• Of PUBUC NOTICE
T"'' .... ,tr"Of't -~ lllfO .. llh IM
County Clrr-of Ot~ County Ott
°"<emoer •I. "71.
I ,
Deatlu
Elsew#u:re
BOULEVARD (AP)_\
Rancher James L. Mc·
Caln has died of a heart
attack while carrying a
cross in the funeral pro-
cession of a friend. Mc-
Cain. 83. was born on the
M anzanila Ranch which
hi s gran df a th er
homesteaded in the 1860s
and hved on ll all his hfe.
M OSCOW CAP)
A l eksandr/\.
Arkbangellk,y, a pioneer
Soviel aircraft designer,
has died at the age of BS,
t he newspaper Socialist
Industry reported today.
LOftOWOltTM C Hlll \TIE E LE AN O ll
l ONGWOR TM, ~\klent ot N•wPOt1 S.•< II C•. •11<1 • tvr"""r rO\l(lolnt Of S11nte An•. C11 P11 Hed ew~y on
Oe<emlleo 10. 1q71 di '"" -ol IS 8tlO••O molM• of 8'-lly W•h" of
Co•on• Oii Mar. Ce """ IM'IO,..d \l\lt< of F rroerl<k l onqworl,. ol SorlnQ V•ll•Y. C11 1Mn Cto<l\tle wit\ II \C'-4
I••'"•' •or Ille \11111a An• Unflle4 !.<llOOI Ol\lrlCI tor J& v•er\ She w•• ,,1..., .,, •«OtnPlt\IW'G pl"""' .ind or
IN"•'' •ftd ll6d o••vl'O tor "'"I<~ .i ..... OCll 0.•~ (.Ouf'll¥ IOC•llOn\ f UMtdl _,,l<n will 119 l\old nn Fri
d•r. Dec•-17, 1918 "' 7 00 PM •' the Mel•OH ADllPV M•u\Oltym rhe Ptl, 1303 S M.tntl•••O•r /\v~ .
An•ll•1m. CAI l•lle<"""nl wl11 ~ "' Mel•o~ A--, NW•r'Orl•I Piork Smllll
I ullull L•mll MOf't...,ry dOfM 1or•. '11
E 11th 51. C0>141 Mo .. ,,_. ....
HOUGH
MABEL HOUGH. 'IOI> U , 11 l~yoe•
,.,,1otn1 o1 Hun1ono1on BP"<"· C•. P~W!d -"Y Oft Do!<•""""' 10, 197t In •M H11nlonQ\on 8'ac" Con,.••Hconl
HO•P•l•I Beloved molM• ol Or. nn11111n M Houoh ol Hu111111r;iton n~"'"· c. .. v., .. -yo OI HYnllnqton "••In. C• •nd Herold Houoh 01 M11nllalt. Penn\ylvanl•, .. 1.0 •
Ot•ncHhlldren And 7 o rl'•I
r;ir•l'd<llold<"en Fri""°' m.tY <•II al Pl•ru BrOIMn Slftlll>\ Mo•h•••V
DelWttfl 1·00 PM -• 00 PM Oft TllYr\Oay, Ou~mD•• 21, 1971 .
(,rA~e\l.S._.,l(e\Wlll be Ull\CIU( llld al
11 00 Moll Oft l"rlOroy Al '"" f P\Qlewood
P•rk Ce-let¥ wllh l!tv lOwl'll
'iotllOl•r officl<tllf'IO. Pier~ Broftottl
~llh•'Mol'-Ydl•l'<tOC'\ S,._.»t NIEi.SOM
IU\llH NEL...OH. -... r9'~fl1 I.II H~wpC)n 8'1(11. Ce. MAIO• u.<; Air
m<td• 10 Aoneld P-tKk. '"'""•"~ w~ buwne<.s aoor"" h 11• Gov· .,,,.,, 5''"'· 0111 ol ~1• Mew, c-.
1Y ol Or~. Slale of C:.1Hor1'1A '"" p.._,-. '° 1111 ...... .i.,,.., I• CltkrlllllO In .,_ .. M All llOO lft
1r.O.. fhc1~ -~1 and 9DOCI
will ol INI ln1erlor Oe<OfMlllO 5nclp
bu\IMU k,_ •• "SOUTH COAST
INTERIORS" ...0 IOUtM •1 1171
Pl•<t<1tle. Oty Of eo.1t MeM, c-\y
Of O.•noe. Sia!• Of ceiHOtnl ..
The &ult. tr.,,\lf" """ lllt CO<IWl'I· mal•O Oft .... ,, •• ,,,. JIU d•y Of
Dt<•mo~r. 1•11 d i 10 00 II m WESTFAN MUTUAL E\CAOW. ~ -~•I\ 17300 E 11'91 \1'"1,
Tu>lln. C.Hlol"lll<t VMIQ, Alln Ardith
Au•~ll
So tar••/\ known to I~ T•~ftr~. 1111 bu\1""1.> ,.._,....., Mldt~WK u~
bv t~ T,.,,,~ for 11><> ""'' ,,.,.,. ........ , .. , .. ,,..,,..
0.led Ck-17, lt71
RoneldP...i«ll
Tr~-
WE$TE RN MUTUAL ESCROW
l7• IE. '"" Rrwt, •0 TllMIA,CellftntM ... uc,.•-~tt1f·A Pvbllw.d Or-Coeu 0.llY Piie!,
OKem~ t1. t'1t
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTtClf IHVll'UfO •tOS
•to IT1!M NO. 41' NOTICE IS HEREBY CIVEH 11\tl ,,..1..., pt'OOOWls .,,11 lie rec.i ... d b'I'
,,,.. City OI Cot\t Mtw. lo Wit. TM Ci·
1y Council. P. o. 80• uoo. Cottle Mew, C.tllornl•. on .,, bitlorf ll>f ,_, of
II oo • rn .. Oii Frid.Iv. Jen...,y S, "" 11 'h"ll bf' th!' r-slbllll' ol 11'9 bid· d&r 10 O•llver Iii\ bid lo lllO City Cl•••'\ Office C>v ,,,. Pl'-• -ed II-Olchwlll O.PUl>lkl'~, • .a •loud •I II 00 • rn , Of •• \OOll the•uller e\ P"e<llc•bl•. on Frld•Y.
J•nu•f y S. 191'9, Ill ltw Count II Chem twrs, Cl1" M.,11, 11 F•lr Otlve, CO\ta
M,.w c rtlllomi•, 10. ttw fumhHno al •MOW I NO UNIT.) GANG.
AOdlllONM WO Of I ... 'll«lfk dllot"
rn•y b<> OOUMl\ed .. fl\I' Ofll<e of ""' P urrl1•\lfl0 A04'nt. 11 F•lr Orlve. Coste Mew. C.lllomi•. BIO• •t'IO<>ld IMt rPlurn .. 11 lo ~ •11..,lfOfl of Ille Cltv CINk, IM • 'W!all'd Hl.,.lope ldOt>lllO'"' °" tllt' ouh rdot ...,,,. 81<1 llem Humber
and t~ OoPt>l"O 061 ..
F•<" Bid \Mii \~11¥ fJ«" And ~,..,, 11em .u .. 1 tonh In,,.... \l)ll<lloc•
llon>. Any -•II e•<f«>flon• 10 '"'" \ll('CltlcetlOM """1 Ot <l•••IY \l.oled
In '"" 010 lltld lellu"' IO WI '°''" .,.,, ll~rn In Ille \IM<lllcahOfl\ •Mii be
orou11<11 lor ~le<tlon OI -II.a
Eetft bid t.Nlll ~I toflh Ille lull
NmO\ <tnd t91idttn<H of all IM~S
•lld parll~ l""rr.IC!<I In ,,,. pt'Oj)C)\191\
•I l>tln<lpel\ Ill C.W of C<l'PCH'•llOm,
lnch1<1• ti.. ,,.~ Of the Pr"kMnl,
S«ret<tr'f, ,,..._.,., -~,
TM City Cbuntll al Ille Cllv of Cotle
Mflw ,.._. ttt. •19"1 to reje<I "'"
or •II Did\
DAT I!' 0 · 0..Ct'f'lltltr!9, 1911 PuDll\l\ed OrenQe Coatl Oelly Piiot,
()eceMl)er 71, 1911
-~~-~~~~~~--
PUBLIC NOTICE
lll\llMd Ol)Od1i. -~'·' '"'tw>Olbl•'· ..,,., tlW bulk l•.,,•le• bv wayol Ctfftlon
OI • Mo<urtty lnl-1 It to be ,_.,,.,.
meted tt Int office Of NA TIONAl AC·
CEP f A NCE COM PA N Y 01'
CALIFORNIA. I0960 Wll~llire 81¥0.,
Su•t• n10, "''" Al>Oel•t. c.1110-nlf, CM or ef1erJ9"11MYS.1m
0.tea· OeurnCer I I, mt
Se<....OP.-1y
NATIONAl ACCEPTANCC
COMPANY
OF CALIFORNIA
Bv 8¥ryA GroWNoll,
Vlu~ICltnl
Nel ..... IA<~• CMll,._.y .. G.i....,...
1 .... WllslMrell...._,s.HfeJ:t!O
1.o ........... Cellfonll•t0014
Publl\Md ()re,..,.. C:O.ll O,,.ty PllO!.
O.cernllltr11, ,,-,. '167HI
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOflCE TOCOHTaACTOllS
CAU.1 NO ttott •t OS
NOTICF IS HEREBY G IVEN IMI
IM Oc:e•n V-5(flOOI Ot\ltlC:I Of Hllll-llflOlon S.«11 wlll receive \Hied suo-
l>ld• on -.<II ol IM IOl-1"9· c•tpen-lrv. cer•ttlk 11,., •tecl<lc.I, lntlell• tlon ot lloor coverlnQ, P•l,.flno.
Ofu<nOlllO, l\eet"'G end ...,,lil•llftQ lot ..... 1 ... .iions ... bl>lldlflQS lol<itltd ., 16~0 8 Str..el, Huntll\Qlon 8••<11,
C•litornl•. BlO\ wlll I» recelveO in tilt
81111nen Otllell. OceMO V,.• ScllOOI
Oht•lct •I .,,.n w ...... A-. Hunl l"Olon 8'r«h. CA .,.... • UP lo bCll llO ,,,...,. tl\On 1 00 o rn • on J..,...,., S,
tt1t, •I \uch ti-llW P"OPOWI\ will ~
01141llOll """ rNd COr,.ttu<llon do<umMIS dre "V<lllrl-bl~ •I lht ()(Hfl VlllW Sc'-4 01\fri<t Bu~IM\\ Office, ~ W.nwr A,...nw.
Hun11nqlon BN<11. CA n.A1
E ec l'I Old sll<ltt DI! «<omotn<ed b't
ttte ~urlly ref.,rfld lo lro IM cOfll•.KI
do<umenh -by ,,;. 11•1 ol pr~
wb< on Ir ..c '°"" Tiit! DISTRICT r_,...., lite rlOM 10 rtlttl MIV Of •II ~ or to .......... ,..,
lrreQulerlt~ or lnlONNllll~ '" trty Oldl Of In 11\e IMddlnQ T~ Ol~TRICT Ms OC>IAlr>td ltOft>
111t Olfec let al ""' Oe!Mrlr en1 of In dY\lrlAI Alfl8110n\ II\!' ~rw>,.tl Ortv•ol· lllQ ••l• 1)1 Ptr Olem ..,_ on lltt lo<•lt-
tv In whic h lhl\ work 0\ 10 01'
OPr1ormf!d '"' t .o<n <•Ml 0t IYlll' ot
workmen -to •d(lll~ '"" (Oft ltot<t H••~ ral~ er• on Ille <II I""
OISTlllCT olflc~ .,, 1911 Wlirn•r
Awnue. MunllrtQtell 6e&efl. CA '7&oet.
COPlll\ rn•y Ot OCllll,,.., Oft tt•o_,.\I A
<OllY of ,,..,,. r•"' """I Ot -!ff _.
lht 1~\lle.
If shall Ot m.tnd6lory ._,,,,.CON·
TRACTOR to Whom '"" ~Ofllf<KI I\
ewMded, -uPOtt •n• Wb<.0<1tr1Ktot
under hom to Prt't' not ~• ._, '"" 'MJIO \PKifled r"lt'I lo ell worta.....,
.... PIOV.d D'Y Cllef!' lfl the UKll110fl Of
Ille <Olllr«I
Ho Oldder ""'V _,"*tw llll IMO IM
• pedOO Of Thirty 1:101 d•Y\ •lier 1119
dale >di lor the _.,.P\O of b<O\
A peyrnent -• ..., • .,.._. bOftd w O II I» 1'9qUlrtd prior IO H IKU-
11011 01 fhp conlt«I rot •II conlre<I\
uc .. dl119 UiOCl.00 ~ pay"""' bOlld
"'"" be In 1ne torm ~ '°'11'1 1n ,,,. contrA<t dO<urnmH.
Wood\toctc •n \el<! County ,,., lllf>d 1n ••M7•
Ille Proo.te Olllu lor wud County.""' NOTICE TO CltEOITORS
potllllon, ·~ orlQIMI ol .... 1c .. ,, Oft .... 0, euuc TRANSP'E R In wld C-1-..,..v .,. • ..,,,1nooo by cseo .•,..._.t01u c .c.1
lnter••l•d J)e•tl•t. P••Ylno. 10 Holo<t I\ 11ereDy 0 1011 to Ille
i.rrnln•1•ttle0fft'flt61 riOM•OI Artlll<! c,. 0 11 or. ol u NI v EA., AL
l . MtyO 0...,. fOOll M.eyo, R E p R 0 0 U C T I 0 H S • I N C ,
You .,. l'9retw <lltd '° tOCMl"f M • lrMl\lerorlll. ~ llu•ll""" .o<lr9'• Court ol PtO!Nlt 10 De llOlden ''I" st14 81«k-l<IP• !atrttt. cv1vwr Have,11111 111 ,...., c-tv. on ltot 11111 c nv, c-t• o1 LAI' "l'O''"· S•••t of
O.y of J-y. 1'1t. MJll, •I 1·30 C•tllornl•, IMI • bulk lr .. n\l•r •s
P "'·· lo "'°"' <euw. II.,,,"°",. • .,.. 4bo"I 10 b• m•dt 10 vn1verul
.rhy Ille --t1'I be Of_,,,.0 l!eprOOuctlOl>'I Soutfl • GolllOt'n<• cor ~Id !Miit-I\ ~ ... o 10 wrve por•liOfl, ,,..,,,+.t"..,.l•I • ..-°""' lhl\ <ll•tlori D'Y uuW>Q nw wrnt' IO Dt' ,,..,, .aciren I\ 1~1 S.Y Patil CIHl<r,
.,..bll\!Wd ~· N<ll -"tor two-· lfY'"*· CO<lllty of 0r.-•• Sl•1t of
'"'•Ive -• 111 '"" O.oly Piiot, • Celltornl• n~w•P•~' pt lnlfld "' Co•I• M•~• Tn• .,._,., to be ,,..,,,.,,.d I\
CAtolorno•. ltll' l<t'·I OUOl1<•100ll to be •I loc•ttd •I t,q41 ~llV P•ri. C••<I•
le•\I ~.,.ncMro-••MdCoun 1rv1no. C.11Ho•n•• •t l14. 10• N
Ginn •I He..,.rMI, on W•d c;OU'\11 ol Gla\Wll. Or-CftlllOfnl"• County 01
GraflOfl, Sidi~ Of Htw Hamo'""•· '"" O•¬ \tat•olC<1lllOflll•
8tll do ol l:>e«mbl!•. A O. lWI. S..ld prooettv I\ dr'><•IDMI '" QeN-rel
8y oro.r Of lhp Court, "' "" \loO ,,. 1•-. llirturH. "1U•~ B•rDa•• J Forti.1, menl and oood wlll of 1"41 ••P"OOUC•
ReQisler toon bu\lneu i.nown o Untvtr.,.1
Publl\hed Or~ Cot'4 0.11'1' Piiot AeprOdu< llOfl, Inc . all of _,,,. h
Oec.11,lt, 1971 --~ IO<dlt!d"' 17"'41 Sl<v Puk Cir<lt,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ottl'ICE OP' TNI' SNElttl'r •
COAOftlER
COUNTY Ott OltANGE
.. OTtCE 01' SALE UNDER OEC•ltE CW ll'OltlCLOSUll« Ne.nno
COLLEGE PARIC·WAlNU r
VILLAGE COMM UNITY A \· SOC I A TIOH, Pl..,.tlff
V\,
OWEN MAWl.EY, eftl. 0.felld.nl.
I, lh• ullder•l-d, Brad ""''\· SNtlll CorOf\l'r, CO<MIY of O•<lft~.
!>1•1• ot Calofof'nl•. do hHllb't <..,lh
'"'I by ¥trtut 01 DK,_ of For~low,.
•lld Salot I" 1119 ~tlOI COUt'I Of -Countv ot Or-. ~"'•of Cell•or-n••.
elltHed on Jyly 10, 1911, ..cl fe(O(-
Ofl Jyty 10. 1971 lfl ,,,. •Dow enlltled
eel-. "'"""''n COlieo. Per' W•lnut
VllleQt CornmunllY A\\O(l•llOll llW
"bov• Mme<I "'"Infill"'· oDlAlned " 1\ldQnltlll one! de<rff of lorfo<IO'UrP
.,,., wl• -·ntt ~ H ..... ,,. SIWrrY
Hawl•v Oftenclenh. tor I~ sum of SO•
-~ -V .,,,, H/100 Ooll•tt. ••wtul ,,_...of""" Unllecl Stein • ...0
1rvlnt Mid I09 H GMSWll, Or&n~.
COunly Of o.~. ~111~ Of C•llfo•n•• Tiie bulk lr.,,'111!' will Dr (Of\Wtn·
m•leO on Or .nter ,,.. )t\I d.., ol
DH •rnO•r. 1'11 al l ;OO a"' •I Unln•UI ~Od\1(11.,.... SOIJlll 11'141
S•v Perk Clrc1t. lrYIM, Counly OI
0r•fl9P. s 1.iealC.lllO'n••
So ••r •' ""o wtt to th• Tt•Ml•rMhl. ell.,.,._.,...,,,.., .tnd .o<lrt\Ml uwd l>'I TrMISl.,.ort\I for
I~ lllrtt ¥eel'\ le>I l>e\I, ••P ,_.. OateO C>eombotr 11, 1•7' un1,..rw Al'Pf0011tllon>
"""'" "(Allfor1ll•(Ot'llO'<lhO~ e .. ,., • ~\Oii.
Prt'\-
frM't\;fHt"f
l'llEEMAN, FREEMAN
-SMILEY
Ce11111ryP-C...-
Svl1t •50 t't11 W Pico at'Wd.,
Le.s AtWtelft, CA 900:JS Afh" 0,...U.S It. ,,........,.
Publl111ed 0..""9 C.0.\1 Od•IY Pilot, Oecem~r 21, 1•11
PUBLIC NOTICE
by vlrlUf' of a wrrl ol .,,iorc...,....I 1n -----------wld e<llOll llwe!d Oft Nowmtirr ,.,
1918. I <!lft CorntNtndl!d IO S#lt •II IM
l>'O!H"rlv In ll'tf CoufllY ol O•<tllQI>,
St•t" of C•t•rorno• • .,..\Cllbf'd •\
IOll°"'\
Loi •• Of Tr«I 7&6S. i" IN' City Of lrvollP, County ot Ori•n~. St"'" ol C•llfornl•. ,,. Ill'' ,....,, record4td In
8-»I, ,,_ 4A i · lll<kr.IW Of M111011a-Map!., ttw Ofll<• of Ille Counlv R~ Wi<I County
P,0e>er1v ""'°"' <om"-'• •-n · •••11 Meyltll Avtn.w. lnlne,
C•lllornl•.
TC>QelM!f #1111 •II -tlnQul., I~ tenemenls. totreclltarnenn •"'1 ftP·
ourte<1enc ... llltreunto lllllonOlnO 0# '" MIVWI~ ~elhlf!O
PU8LIC NOTICE IS M£AE8Y
GIVEN T"'9t Oft FdGlly, J&nourv 17.
1'7' "' fO·OOo'<lock, A,M. of'""' d•y •I ~111 lOCJb¥. c-lltOUW. 100 Clvl<
C.., .. , Orlw WtM. CllY of 511111• An~ I wrll \tll tlW-. do!•1ultle0 Pfot>erlv. ""°"' t•ld -" tnO OttrH, or •o much lll4!rl'ol •• mttV I>-ftl'(~M"' lo \•ll•IY
said i~..-i ""'" 1n1•"""' ""°co"'· to '"" lllOllH1.l>ld<IH. tor c ••"In ltwtUI
FI061 ..
P11Dll\llfo0 Or-Co.t•I O"oly PllOI
°"< 11. n. 197', J•n.A. tt, 1979 S6)t.,.
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICI TO CRIOITOR'
SUPlfltlOR COUltT OI' THE $TATl!~CAt..IPOllMIA l'O• TNECOUNTYO,O•AMG£ .... ......,.
E'lete of DANIEL S. MAllZIAlE
•II• OAl'itEL SAMUEL MARZIALE
O.Cut<td NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN tcl I""
c~I\«' Of !he -.,.,.,_de<-
IMI •II """°"' ...... 1111 <l•lm• eo-•' Ille <eld •-.,. requlrtO lo Ill•
11ttm. wllll II• lll'CA!~-Y vou<hefl, In
'"" offlc• ol ""' <....., of '"" IM>Ove '" tllleO <Ollf'I. Qr 10 ~ IMrn, wtll't
11141 ne<HW'Y -.Cfll!N, 10 IM ~
der•lon•O et 30t Prln<e10<1 Orin,
Costa Mew, CA. wflkh I•""' 11•«-• Of ~lnen Of me u1111en1Qned In en rn••·
ten oert•1111no 10 '"" •Jt.i• of wio di" c~I. wllllln lour -alter IN
lint put>lluekltl Of IN\ f\011<•
O•led o.< ). 1m CMt T Sttllet
E-ulJOrot-Wl"of INtl>oW ..-~t
ROalEllT T. MAR0\.0
M6 Prlft< ..... DrfW -•Offk• .. •2"214 c.stt Mew. CA '262' T .. :-...... AttffMT IW Ea<-Publl\IWJO Or._ Co1ul '.>611V PllOt
De<. I, 14,21,1', l't71
PUBLIC NOTICE
r orr ~ rel ~'•tCh P""Cl•nQ H•rbor • I ewn Mount Otlorf MorlUMy dire< tor~ RS7410
MOTICEO'
TltUSTEE'S SAlE
HO.nat
c~N NO. r .1 11tu1
GCM1rnlno Boero
8t' Jullo "J•y" Rt Wt• ,.,..,'°'""' '"°""'Of '""Unit~ 5tlltt\ D•ltd •I S.nla An•. C•lllor111•, )olO W14
... CllAOTMIAS
SMmt'S MOITUAIY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
53&-6539 .... ,~,
C°'-°"A&. fUMBAL
HOti41
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
'•CJAC •llW
MIMC>lt4l f'AH
cemeltlfY Mortuary
Chapel
3600 Pacific View Ortve
Newport Beach
644-2700
MccotlMtCI MOITU.UtH
lltQUnl Beach
4~1 5
L&Quna Hilla
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1778
11J.n.Rfftl0tl
NSALHOMI
846-2424
COSt• Mesa
873-9450
On Jiii •• 1'79 Of II O'ctoO A M ....
the Soulll Iron! ...CrM><• 10 IM ol<I
Of-~ Cot.ri-loc•led "" Ille 200 81ocll of Wu t S.nle A,,.
lloultverd 1'°""9'1Y ~I tlh 51'"11.
In t,,. City ot Setll• rlnt, C•lllomle.
L05 ANGElf'S TITLE ANO
A85lRACT CORPORAllON ••
TrUSIM, undtt' ttlt dffd ol lnl\1 ,,,_
l)y KENNETH W KNIGHT, f \lftQlt
m•"· •llO OOREEN A DAGAN, • wlOOW. ...0 t9C°"*I Se!>femDct r II•,
1,77, es IMt~nf No. ~ In 8o04I
111~. P-ai. Of Olfklel Re,cord\ Of
Ot•flCICt COIMllY. c.+ttomt11. olWfl to
M<ll•• •n lndfO'~U Ill 1•¥0t Of l.M
N Foql.-,q ""° lles•oe J $1olnner.
'\Oft end moti.r. '" lolnt i-nh, by
reeto11 Of iw-11 of ctneln OIMIO•llOll• u«urf'd llw"'O'O\I• noflo ot #111<1'1 ..,.,
rt'<OrlleO AuQ\151 n , t911 "\ ln•lrY"-t
HO ]197~ In 8ook 1'91~ P-0-1~ al
wld Oflkltl Af<ot'O\
LOS ANGELES TtTll' AHO
A8$TRACT CORPORATION, "'
hu\lee wllt vii Ill l)Ulllk -lion lo
11\e lltOM\I blddH IOI' <4Kll, PolY•blt Ill
141Wful _., ol ti. United M•es "' uw time ot wr.. ~ • .,.,9111y ••
lo 1111e, CIC>''"'"'°" °' ---... 11\e llltt<esl COftWYeO to Mid -Mid
b¥ \•Id lrvi ... ll!IClel' s.ld Oteo Of '""'· '"end ...... lollOWlllCI ~ •lbl!O prop.riv, ICl<•l.0 II\ '"" Cour\ly 01 Of~. Sleteofc:.tll!Ofnl•, 16-wll
l'" n. or Tre<1 •101. r. .,., rneci r•·
to•Clfocl 1n f!oolt M. p_, n. n. M>O
13 OI M h<•ll-Mell\. In 11\t ott~•
ol 1¥ C-'Y ""'°'°"Of Hlcl ONnfr. Propeny ,,,.,,. <-'Y ,._ H •
I l 11111 Ori,,.., ,,..,.,,., C#litonll•
TM u~ T~ dl\Ctelrnt
eny ll•INlllV tor ""~ lfleofnt<tMH Of .... ,,,.~t ...... -othtf <Ol'llmOf\
llHIOMllon. H -· ,,_. ....,.,,., For IN .,..,,... ot PtYl"t 04tl~
llon\ I>• '6fO ONO of Ttvtt, Wtclutllflo
'"'\· c11trou ~ UPMMI of Ille frU\IM , ~ K Mty, llfldtf tf\t
,.,,..,, 01 W11C1 OeeCI ol TrU\I. lfttet'lllt
llMlttOfl fllCI t),AS '1 lfl ..,,.kl pfift.
flool .. Ult,..._*"'" ll't 1fld OMO
Of ''""· .... 111 ._..... ~ ,....., JUM U, "11 (Ml 1°' lltf -et In
MIO l\Ote IN lloy lfw Pf'8'/IOM.
O•led Oet-t •· 1'71 L°'AlllOllLU Tl~U ANO
•l'•TllCACT t Oltll'O•A'l'IOH , ......
~,. L Motfllleff, ,.,......,,.
.. ll!lllr.1'911 Or...,. CM.M Dall\> l'llOI
Oft. u , "· •• "" ,~,.
Puelll\N<I OrCW'f9e C:O.st O•llY Piiot,
O.Cemller 21, a, 1971
PUBLIC NOTICE
R~ NOTICE OF SALE Gr
REAL PROPERTY AT
f'ltlVATE SA.I.IE
..._P••m
SUPERIOR COUltT 0 1' THE
ST A TE OF CALI ttOtl NI A FO•
TME COUHTY Ott
LOSANOEl.H
Oe<-llt• 1, lt7I.
RAAOC.ATES.
SM<lfl-CO.-r
c-.1volOrM\Ol'.C411for111"
ByJ.OeVe<ll"U1,(41c>f•ln
L" M. o.,.,e 1Slt Nonll ..... atvf., $It, ,,.
,.ullert .... CA ma PUBLIC NOTICE
Publl•lltd Or.noe Coe11 O•lly Pllol, --------------
OK. t4, 11, •· 1t?I
PUBLIC NOTICE
unu ftOTICS ~~I 0 ..
ltEAL~lfRTYAT I
PatVATESAl.I H0.'1fM tn IM Metler ot ,.,. E•l•I• •nd ---------IN THESUP£1110flCOURT0'1
THlfSTAfEOttC&Lll'OflNIAIN
AMO,OllTHICOUNTYO,O•ANGI
Conurv•t onlllp 01 WILLIAM
EDWARD V.NO. Con-"•ltt NOTICE I~ MEACBY GIV(N lllet
,,,. -r\IQllHI will ~II •I P•lvel•
Hie on or •I"' IM 761fl dO of Ou~mbPr. 1'7e, "' '"" Olllt e OI l AUl'EN M HANOLEY', 00
Cr•"'"•• Boultve•d •lOJ, Los a119111e1, Cll/Homl• tOOOI. c_,,, OI
Los A119t1lf'\, St .. t Of C:.UIOrnl•. lo lt>t
111oneu -11111 l>IOI»•. -•uoi.<t 10 conllrrnellol't b'I' MIO 5uoer'°' Courl,
<111 '"' r IQftf, !Ille ""'1 1n1.., .. 1 Of Mid Con .. rW'etMt, In enct to •II lflCI cttf•lll
llEAL pt'OCltf'ly \11 ... t.O lfl 11\e City ol
lfunll11910ll llN<ll. CountY ot Of.noe.
\tal• ot C•lllern••. P•rllc11l•rtv
dotJ<rlDH '"fOlklwn, to-wll,
An 11NllYIOtCl-'l\etl IV,l 111lee 1
Of Trect ~ M per rntP •f<OtdeO
1n 800k 111, ~\)) -J4 Of rnlt
Oii-\ Mtlj)fo If\ lhe ofllU OI '"' C111111ty lle<Onlt• of OrtnQe CO\lflly,
Sttll ol C•llforn1e, 4lflO commonly
kllOWll "• "'" E•OI• L•M , HUlll· ltiOIOll lieA<ll, (llll!Of'Yll<t. h'm' ot ule cetl't lfl t ... 111 ,,_v
ol tllt United swi.. on con11mi.11or1 OI
ult, or II"' (•tll •1111 D•l•n<•
• .,1oe11ce• "' nol• HCu••O Dy
MOrto.tOt., ''"'' OMO on"" proii.r· ly 10 Mid. Ttfl Plf'('eftt Of -t lllO
to llit ~.WWII" 1114, ellt\ Of ~ 10 .. ,,, wntlf'IO tllll
will lie _, ... ft tM ~ olfk•
•t eny u-..-tlW fltfll lfl'bl lot Ion
11treot •no...,.. tie!• o1 .....
Ottt<I Oet-• 2, t•tt.
l!tlMeot
Wlllltrn [dwMO l.Af19. '*"-"•"" AQl'nUWIO,
Ctrttff\lelOI' t..AUalM M. HAHOUY
UUCrtttotMwlfW.•_, .... -....-.ea ....
l' .. , CIUIM*1
AttwM'ter~...,
,..,..,....., Or-c;a..-°"'"' llli.t OK 1•. U. tt. 1'1t s.1 .. 1e
"CTtTIOUI aU51NISS
HAMS STAT•MINT
TM loll-lllQ --· •n 001"9 bufiflKl•l
HOltrMft'OOOS ASSOCIATE$.
L TO., 'O'f2 Tell>tft A¥t, •I. '°Ollllt•ln
VelltY, CA "IOI
J•mtt L Cl•Ylon. "'°' ,. .... lonll•, LOS AlMl'lllo\, CA .ano 9,,0f\ t... WllllMM. 11'1• Strti•
C« Ill• Cir •• ~!tlft VAiiey, CA ttrtl
'SI•"•" J. 'Shit'-". !U .. Mt
A<kef'man Cir .. "-leln \lelley, CA
ft70I
Tiii• llU\1119\1 I• (Of\Cl\Ktff llY •
t1m11eo """_.,,....
J-L Cl•111111
Tiii• \t~ ., .. 11..0 wllll Ille
Cou111y Cl•tll Of o •• ,. CO\lf!IY on
Oe< .•• 1'11. .. ,...a.
.... Dll""° Or ... Coatt DitllY Pllet.
Oec. , • "· 21 ... 1'1t
PVUJC NOTICE
f'IC'TITIOUS austNIH
HAIH ITAT•M•"T
TM fOHO'#lfl9 "'"°"' ere 001119 b\IJIMU 4IJ' OA•OI H view ASSOCIATES
LTO .,.,., Telbftf A-•7. F_.
tel!\ Velln, c.i11or"'• f710I
J•rnts L Cl•y-. 11'1>1 ~·~II•, 1. °' Al.tm!IO\. C•lllO<nl• '°"° llrron L. Wlllletn\, itttt S•nt•
Ceclll• Ctr<le. l"cwnl•I" V•ll•Y.
C •lltor111• '110t
'"" llU\IM\\ h co-ttO DY • llmllllCI .,..._1illf P
JIWM\L """'°" Tiii\ ,,,._, WA\ 111-0 '"'" .... County Cl.rk ot Oul\OI! County Ofl
NoveMl>tl 2' "" """" l'l/bll~ Or-C'OHI OtllV PllOI
No .... rnw1 IQ, end°'",,..,., 1, 14, >t
11111" M .. ...,off,,.l\Wlwot El SAC "•""'"· •-. ~DeNlf. 8 RUH0f , 0• (L\A BRUNl:>f, MH .. & 11-•ld
Oe<uwo A Profeu'-1 CorMr-'lotl
Noho ,, l>t<'te>y O'vtn tl\el '"" Ull· AltWMO •11.~W O.nlQntCI will wll •I llflv•t• •Ill•. to,,,. ... NN,eft C-0.ION,
lliONll tnOOMl IMCldt,, WC>ft<l lo<on s.iwtUJ llrrn•llon ol w.a S-.IOt Coo.rt on or .._,.,.._,CA,_
•\le• I~ lrGO.yof J-ry, 1•~. •11119 PvOllsMO Or.rioot tAle\I 0"11' 1'11of
olfl<• ol Be111•rn111 to•n••n, hJI De<. 7, 14. tt,79, 1'19
C•lllorn1• Av•11u•, Soutn G•t•.
C•lllornl• "°*· Coumt Of Or•noe. Sl•l•Of~ tlllOmt<t. •II llw rlQl>t, 111i..,..i
lfll•tHI 01 \tie!,,.._ lft -to •II I,.,.
Otfflft rHl .,,,..rlr l•IWtt II• IM
C:ountv Of Or-. "4"4• 01 (AlllOrnl•.
IUl'lltul•rty Oottc•IOllV •• IOltow\, to
wll: lof 1 ol Tr«I • , ... lft ,,.. CllY Of
Newport llee<h. C_.IY ol O•..,Ot.
St••• at ('e11tom1•. ••,_,on• m~ IMr~ot re<onlf(I Ill -,, • Pe<)OI 10, ~lt<tllt-Mep>, Ae<Ofd\ Of "''d Or•~ COUflly. mo<•tommonlY •nown
el UOI l ..,,..I Pl.Ce, Newj)Or I Bee<ll,
C•lll0<11I•
T errn\., Ml• c_,.111 lfWlul n>c>n.., 01
tM u1111.o ~t-'ft on conflrmtt'OI\ ot Ult,Otjl<lft~end"-!~e•vlderi<ecl
by rto!t -ur<NI 111¥ Mon~ tw Trull 0..0 .., t~ pr~¥ \O tOld Ten PH
(00111 Of ..,,_,. bid 10 lie "'"Ill ltd "''"' DICI
lllot or~\ 10 1111 kt Wf'lfl"O-Wlll
be rectl-•• •,,.•1-.. ICloflk••• tft'
11 .... •'l•r ttw flrt.t PUOllcttlOll "''"' """ _.,9" cMteot ....
0.ted lllh 111110.Y OI 0.Cetn"9r "" aoetRl Nlf.t..SfiNJR
P .. ll~oftllt ' ""'"Of Q('(t•w.Jof \""411Hl~t'Ojltf1V
lll"JAMIM!tANSIN attw,..,.......,_
llUIC•tl_..A_
IM\110. ... c:allfWlll•,_ l'llell""°...,,,. Coe\I 0•11' Piiot o-en111e•tt.n.a. im
P UBLIC NOTICE
1m ~II
• I
S.)'0.11
CIW...CUA. M•tllll M I N I S T I' • U If 0 I' • T N E
E...clllor ol ftW Wiii flf INOE PlNOUIT AOMIM!iTRATIOM °' "'°'-N"""'--01' I STATES ACT. TMllEN. MAIUUM. .E•lale o1 ELSE M. MAY. 611• ELSE
JOHNSON & 1a100U MANDELBAUM MAY, Dice~.
ay ~ G. P'Wlt NOTICE l~ HERE9Y GIVEN l"'"I
USSMtll,,___ UNION BANIC. • CelHon\I• <CWPGr•
1...-.__...,GA Wl11 llOfl, n•\ filed -eln • ci-fltlon too
T .. : llh) '27-Pt11bfte of Wiii ..cl tetlfft Tell-· A..,,..ytwli~ l•rv •nd tOf eu1,.o r1tet10" to •d P\IOllsNd Or.-.oe Coe\t Deity Piiot, m ini•••• .-, Ille lftdeClftNMlll <td
OK. I, 1•· 71, 19. 1'7t m lnl•lr•11cto o1 estetes •t. , ... ''"""
$m ·1I 10 '"'"'<" •• m•d• lor t vrt11•• o•rllcul&o, end IMt ,,.. ti,... -
Die<• of -lnO Ille ~me l\e\ bHft"" ,,.. J•nu•rv '· 1m, ., 10·00 •. m. 111
Ille C1>1.l'I,_.. ol ~Ill No 3 OI Mid courl, flt IOO CIYI( Cenltr Ori~
We\I. I" '"' Cit' ol S•nl• And,
C•lltorf\1•
PUBUC NOTICE -------------,ICTITIOUS IUSIMESS
NAM« STATEMENT
TM foll°"'lnq ~"°"' ••• Oolnr;i
bu\llW"\,.\
50UTl1WEST ASSOCIATE~._,
l•lbf't'I •-D1, FOUlll•lll V•llllY
C•totOfnoe 'n>OI
L Cl•ylOfl, 11901 P•"'tO 8ottl Alernttoo., CelllOmit 90710
• L w1111""''· '"" s.n1• (•< llt• Corel.,, Fo1111t•1" V•ll•v.
CAllfornoe~
GleM ( ICierllHO. 6oll1~ Sort.,1
Covrt. OUClll'o, UClfoml• ·~ Lff C¥nl!NI\. 111n ........ SOolll•
F-te111 Val..,.,,, C•llfor'ftl• '1'7llt
Joyce Hayw•rd. ~IS !>tU l•ll
C-'. Oll!lllfl. Otli!Oml<t '45'a
Herold (~Iller • .OIS !.c.trl111
Covrl, Oubllfl, c.itfot'ftl;, '4,SM
£•1< 0 .......... 7'I01 Wiii~•'• L•
P ...... 8.Cel"-•.n
'"'' b•"ll•n •• condlKted o• • -·•I petf...,,,,..p ~
J..,,..LC!evton Thi\ , .. , ........... "'"' lli.G with In. Counly Cl_ al Or~ COClflly on No•
""llllt 1'1. IT71.
1"1""1>
Pvllth""" Or...,. Cot\1 l>allv PllOI.
H-ber lO -oec...-. 1, 1•. 11.
1"7t
·---------PUBUC NOTICE
·--------~---~--~
I '
0.IH OK-r 11 t'ITI
WILU-E $1 JOHN,
CounlyClo!n
HICKEY & Nl!UUIHO
UHi l..1"*"1 SC-I s.1 .. ,..
(I Teto.~•, ....
Tel 7 ... 71111
AMtMJIW,_~
P110llM\e<I OrolnCll' Coast Delly Piiot, Oe<e~ 21, ?2. M. 1•11t
~------~---PUBUC NOTICE
_}4191•
PUBLIC NOTICE
-~------------PUBUC NOTICE
-~-----------~ NOTICIJ TO CRIJOITO•S
~IJPlltlOR COUAT Ott TNE
STATE OttCALll'OllNIA flOR
THIE COUNTY 01' OllANOI
MO.A"71W e"•" •f auaY aovr• G0t.,OTHWAIT£ OIE IRUESTE ....
RUBY OE IRUESTE •ke RUBY BOYER oe tAUllSTE ... RUBY 8 .
DC tAUESTe, OK .. Md. NCH ICE I~ MERE8Y GIV£H IO IN
(r.Ollors Ol lllt -.. llenwd Clt<edPn• 111•1 ell l)"t'°"' NYll\t Wiim\ tQ•IMI
Ille ,..14 tlf(f'Olf>I .,. ..-Ind to ""' IMm , wllh II• ~t~ry ¥0\K .... n. In
'""' olfi(I' al '"" (,._ " ,,,. .0o ... .... 1111.0 ceun. fl' 10 twHeflt ll!Ofl'I, with
111e ne<nwry -i..n. IO ,,,. un
lier llO,,..S, flt One Wll\lllrt OullCllllQ. Wll~itlfe •f ~'•ftd, l ot Allct•I•\.
Celil9flllll, Oflll<ll I' INt ptKe OI Ml•
ne•t Of tlle ~ 111 •II mettffs
parl•lnlno ta Ille ••ltlot of wld ~ Otflt, •hNfl feMr ~.,., 1119 flrtl
PllbflUtlOnol lfll•'-'lu·
O•lff OC'IOCltr ''· "11 'Tll .. ln~•ftd
TrU1t Comc>ellY,
• Calllornl• (OfJl(Wtllon
{ -utorOf"" Wiii 011 ... ....,.. ,._,OK"'°'' O•YOtlM, HA•atNOtOM & \WAaT1
OM Wlltlllt't hlldlllt
$1111• l OJ ""'"'" .. ~-l•• A .... , .. ~-·7 A...,,..f W lllK-
Publll ... Or .... coe.4 Delly PllOt,
Ot<. J, U, ti,,.. 1'11
,. I \
CALlfORNIA I NATION Thurlday, Oeeembe• 2l 1918 DAii. y PILOT A I 7
Security Guard Admits Theft of 3 Monets WANT~D
81AllONDS • GE/flSTONES
SANTA BARBARA <AP> -A
tecurity JU&rd at the Santa BarbMI
MUMUm °'Art hu pluded Cu.illy lo
• charte ot er nd th l ln eot Uoa
with Jut month's mu. «>um tJwof\ ol
lhre~ Claude Monel pamllDp \IWued
at oea.rly Sl 1rulhon.
Rooold ~>u~o11n ~. ~ntcrt'<i lhe
S>lca Wt'd1w:ttl.I\' tfur lnJ a hedrtna
NEW TRIAL SET?
Dr. Cart Coppolino
Slayer
Seeldng
New Trial
FORT MYERS. f'la.
<AP) -Dr. Carl Cop-
polino. convict e d o n
charges he injected his
first wife with a lethal
a mount of muscle relax-
a nt , s·ays he has sur-
v1 ved a dozen years
behJnd bars because of
"a suitcase full of values
a nd a n extraordinary
wife and familv "
Coppolino was <'OR·
victed or second-degree
murder following a
sensational Florida trial
12 years ago and sen
tenced to life imprison-
ment. but he's hoping
this year in prison wilt
be his last.
He said in a copyright-
ed story in the Fort'
My e r s. F la., N ews .
Press that he hopes he
can get a ne w trial,
because witnesses al-
legedly ti ed.
Coppolino said he
can't say what caused
his first wife's death.
"I can only say thfit I
did not kill her I'm not
bitter I just want out of
this place so I ('an go
home and pick up the
pieces of my life ..
I'm ready to go home
for the ni&:hlmare to
end."
TIA Asks
Flights
To China
WASHINGTON CAP)
Trans Intern ational
Airlmes has asked the
Civil Aeronautics Board
for a uthority to operate
a sc h edule d pla n e
ser vice between the
Un ited States and the
People's Republlc of
Chm a.
If the board approves
the request. TIA would
have t o obtai n
permission from the
Chinese government.
·'The establishment of
diplo m atic relation s
bet ween the two coun-
tries creates a vas t
pote ntial for tourism
both t o a nd from
mainland China,•· the
Ti A president, Henry P .
Huff, said Wednesday.
TIA said il would soon
fi l e with the CAB
sch edules. fares and
other information about
its proposed service.
TI A is the w orld 's
largest charter carrier.
~ aciti
, k\\c·lry ( omp•rny
C )Jn' n
f\'l'f\
'll"(';I\'
I I 11t ii
l ht1 .. t111;a ..
Your
Oe1/lj PllOt
can be
Roe ye led.
~ ~ ... ~ .. -otCE•. _re.,,_.
IOteo./ll ~ SM-agar
bf(ort MULO('lp.-1 Court Jud&«! Jam~
Shaler condahonally ~ccepled by Slater. but
be<·au•C! It lnvolvei. &t felony, actual
acntcncl.n" will be handed down by M
SupQrlor Court JUdKt> 0 ·c 28
mh111i ng. Ho had returned the oils to
th" museum's board of d irect.ors,
saylnai he had proqtin'Ci not to dis·
close the nume of lite person from
whom 41.> r eceaved the palntin&.!J.
Jowols by 1osephs is searching tor diamonds and
gem51ones from pnvate mdlv1dua1s and eslotes, Careful
eom1natlon and evaluation by our expens Highest
pnces paid Call ~9086 10-9 dally. SaturdtV 1o-e,
Sunday do9ed As'°' Betty Grace Of Frank Van<*Wall
I
•Ol180URl8' ATTORNEY Ja111
Wtslwkk, ant lh»t under MD awr e
m nl rnt'ht-d wtlh thf' dl11tnct ~l
tornt'y'a offl<'e. Mou ouc '" v.ould
Another l'hilri~ of burglury waa
<hopped
T h e 11tolen works i n cluded
"Bordlghera," which the French im·
presalonist painted in the llulian
Riviera resort town In 1884.
iewels by ioseph erve no more than one )'t:ur m Sl\J'\&,l.a
fh1rbaro C-ounl) Jell
Tbc 11 .. nlt·nclnK 111rt-1 mtint wu
..
MOU80URIS, t 'R £E ON $7,000
ball, w 11.rreitod Nov. 27, one day
.tter lhl· puintlnas were discovered
LIFESAVER DOLL
South Coast Pl*a • 3333 Bristol Costa Mesa • 540·0066
Fairview State Hospital
Residence 33
Ever see a·ufesover doll? It's made with o roll of lifesavers, a bit of yam, o
piece of taffeta. and some stick-on sequins; usually they're specialties of
schools and clubs. My Mom started making them when she ioined the crofts
group at the Senior Citizens Club o few years ago. First she made them for all
the grandchildren, then for all the kids in the neighborhood, and finally she
went promoter and came up with the great idea of making them in bunches,
and selling them to o retailer (me) at wholesale, and we would then reap
great profits. The truth was that the dolls were on easy buy but o touQh sell ;
however, she was always told that the r~lt was o sellout. Each year V'le
ended up with a big box of mark-dcMtn Lifesaver dolls on the desk . . . until
just a couple oL years ago, and that's when we remembered the kids at
Fairview State Hospital; we were aware of these kids because each year our
stores, with strong support from outside contributors, presented one of
Fairview's residences with o living area to include TV's, couches, chairs, tables,
lamps, etc. Each of the thirty or more residences at Fairview usually
accommodates about 45 clients whose only social area within the residence is
normally filled with budget-limited institutional furniture ; if these clients vvere
ever to learn life's social graces they needed home-like surroundings in which
to learn them. So once o year, in the Doily Pilot, we tell a story about the
needs of a particular residence and \Ne suggest, to ihose interested, how
contributions may be forwarded.
Anyway we gave the kids the dolls, and they were a huge sucx:ess . . .
but it turned out to be the last year the dolls were made because early in
the following ·spring, Mom was walking home from a sijopping trip when the
wheel of her grocery cart caught the curb and she fell and broke her hip. She
lost a good battle to regain her prideful self-core status but she spent her last
year in a nursing home. I visited her iust before she died this past spring and
of the few, simple, personal possessions in her room the one that stood out
was the single Lifesaver doll she'd hung over her bed; it hod been her intent,
of course, to start manufacturing as soon as she was able. I thought then that
I'd seen the last of those dolls but a recent visit to Residence 33 at Fairvie-H
proved me wrong. Residence 33 is home to 47 women from the ages of 16 to
56, all of whom ore developmentally disabled and are destined to spend the
rest of their lives under institutional core; and it is the residence we found to
be most in need of o home-like social setting. During this visit I met Hilda, a
56-year old Down 's-syndrome client, who is the senior lady on 33. Hilda and I
had a delightful conversation during which she took me into her confidence as
fully as her 8-yeor old mind would allow, and she told me about her school,.
her 'NOrk, her sister, Santa Claus, what she wanted for Christmas, and that
she always celebrated her birthday on "the 42nd." Then she took me to see
her room just across the hall and the Lifesaver doll hanging over her bed
seemed to pronounce a tacit, yet absolute approval , of our newest project, the
social" furnishing of Residence 33. The quality wasn't quite as good but of
course I've been spoiled ... I bought and (almost) sold the best for years. Put
the accent where you like but be a Lifesaver doll and send a check to:
I .. VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR RESIDENCE 33
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL
2501 HARBOR BOULEVARD
COSTAMESA,CA.92626
@)~o@@)~~
44 fashk>n ialand;newport center 644-5070
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Jiii ONLY PlLOT Thurtda~. O.c:ember 21 , 1t11
AUSTlN, T•au <AP) A state
tourt b ov rtumed the coovltUoo
of Elm r Wa,)tn H nley lour years
afttr he wu l t'nt need to alx Uf
l rma ln a ca al mman1 from 2"I
sex·lorture klllm11 an th• Houston
•rea
chance ol vtnue from Houston -
11ln, oo JN>Unda of lhfl wld• att n
Oalvt'slon. and In th East TexQ
plno foresll north of llouaton
tlon lhe 1ri1ly t' 1ltrot'tcd
MANY OF TIU; younic victims
woru rrom llenley'11 nclahborhood.
und ht eventually was convicted ol
klllJna "lx of lh~m.
The Tnaa Court of CrtmlnaJ Ap-
pHb ord red l.h case r turned Wed·
ne•day to SMn Antonio on 1rou.nda
lhat tht' tnal <'OOrl th re had not
1lven enouah conald rel on to a te·
queal tor • chanAC• of v~nue The d
fem e dmmM 11ublkl)' In San An·
tonlo would pn•Judlt''° lht' Jury
The cue unfolded In 1m wht-n
Henley, a Paudrna hlih arhool
dropout who wld lhl'n &8. tel ·phonfd
pollce and told lhom h had hot and
~Ul d D 1n A. orll, h ad ol a
hom01eJCual torture rin& A tMn •&t
atrl abo told officer• ah• had bet•n
strapped nud lo 1 l.raie board bd
lortur d Jual b f0'41 Corti waa
killod
However, th appe1J1 rourt found
he w111 dtnJed du~ proc 111 when Olt·
trlrl Judge Preston H. Dial refUlled
to allow him lo prc..'lcnl evidence ~o
support lhti claim thlll the trial
tthould ~ moved Imm Sun Antooio
Thul n•rwual. thr oppealtt <'ourt 111.1\d,
"pn•dudC'<l a <lc•lermlnutlon ol th •
rom munlty otliludt•" towurd llenloy
Poller arn•f'led Hen I ·y. who. ovt'r
lkONIC'i\LLY, TH C'A t: had
~ •n tum lo ~t.lll Antonio al\cr ._
• period <-A day . ltd offlcf'ra to lht•
bodlt of %7 maJ burlt'd m a bout
hed ln llouaton. on a bt•ut•h near Tht• appt'a.l1t Ju1tllet'" uhm volcl'd
·1H<:lJS • By BU Keane
"Who mixed all the burned-out bul:>s In with
the good OMS?"
Yule Gifts
Elvis Pays Bonnses
MEMPHIS. Tenn. IAP> -The late Elvis
Pres ley through his estate -will give
Chris tmas bonuses to employees of Graceland
mans ion this year, as he d1d during bis life.
Probate Court Judge Joseph Evans approved
the payments equal to two weeks' pay -from
the s inger's estate
Drunkermess Outlawed
MORONE, Comoro Islands <AP) -The gov· 1 '
ernment of this cluster of islands in the Indian -
Ocean has announced it as outlawing public
drunkenness and liquor s alj}ll!I in retail stores.
The announcem~id offenders would be
lined or jwled, and all bars, excepl those in tourist
hotels in the mainly Moslem nation, would be
closed.
HEADQUARTERS ,-FOR I
I HIS OR HER I
\ CHRISTMAS l -
' . . ' .
' .All Photograp!Tlo.
TypoQtlPhlcal, Ci.t1cal
encl Printing frron Ate
lut>i.ct to Correotton
NI Sele lietnt Are ~b)ac:t • to St~ on H•nd • •
Magnavox Video
Cassette Recorder
Don't ml .. your favonte program• Jul1
becauae you're not home! The
Magnavox Video Cassette Recorder
features up to 4 houra of contlnuoua
recording. The programmable
clock/timer system permits unattended
recording of 4 programs and can be
pre-set seven days In advance. It turna
the unit on and off and changes chan-
nels automatically. Just set and forget!
REG. 12&0.00
WHIU OUUTITIU LAST
"d t p concl'rn" over Henley's con·
ttnllon h w " denied 11 flJr trial
whl'n th roort relu"f'd to aequ ter
lhfl )ury und overruled h111 obje<:Uon
to pln<'lna n wsmcn within the bar.
Building Converted
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The San
FranC'l11ro Rt•development Agency
hH volc..od to a II th Goodman Build·
Ing. IOC(lted on Oellry Boulevard. for
ronver"lon l"to 1ub1dzed apartmenll.
A l(roup of low lnrom(• arll8ta llving
In the 8lruelure would be iclven an
OJJpOrtlmlty to return to the building
t1ftc>r It 111 renovated
~~ ~!l.#' SKiS , ALL~ by # TENNIS ~ : ~~~':tHOL
be your
own atarl
fhe ~•onavox Vldeoc111etta Recorder
COior Camera 11 ju1t tht thing for miking
your ow11 1.....,111on p1ogram11 r eature• •
prec:IM opttoal viewfinder. built In c;on•
<ltnHr microphone, a1y11g111 fitter tor
rllCIOl'Cllng outooou lll'ld an automatto 1r11 tor
Ind()()( UM •• no nMCS IOf lllltl llghflllll
Reg Ii& 00
the ultimate
video game
I TOGS ' • MOLHAP. • K·2 \ and I • PP.E·SKI ~EQUIPMEN~-.
SKI BOOT~ SUR~,
• NOP.~~CA • s~-EQUIPMENT~
• GAP.MONT • LANGE I and WET SUIT~I ;foi-,. \ O'N~t nd l ,FEATURING~ ~RIPCU~,
jROLLER SKA TESl C.._LO_l_N I a~ AU THI G '~~rstNFf',' : =ER
•· ~ , •SEMC
E
i
849°0
The OdylMY 2, by Magnavox la ev.n more
1ophlltk:"9d than mott arc•d• game• Per·
tormt c;ompl•• etec1ronto lunc:t1on1 to keep
you entenatntld for many °'"" Slmpi. to
Nt up •nd o~•t• Reg 179 95
16995
NATION
MERCURY SAVINGS~
naah your
own bumper
Sel up your own arcade with one atop at
Ke<m Rime! Thia Home Ptnblll Game will Ht
your llghll 11 .. hlng and your befit ringing.
Hourt of fun for kldt Who c1tn get the •dult•
eway from It. Reg. 159.95
12995
' ; ---... --.. .
I
'
INSIDE: •Outdoors •Business
•Stocks
'Thurldly, DlotmbeT 21 , ft78 DAILY PILOT BJ
1llrar @Jauta • •
By ERNIE CASTILLO OI .. Delly"*",__.,
A red slelgh abandoned Off the northbound San Ofego Freeway ~nd
loaded down with athletic gear contained the following letters, the v alidi-
ty of which have not been established :
Dear Mr. Claus:
l hate to keep nagging you but
i 'm still waiting for last year's order.
You know, the 7-3 pre·med major.
Look, I've been good If that's what
you're worried about. You don't see
any NCAA investigators snooping
around here, do you? And I've been
patient. Boy, have I been patient. But
the alumni, all 12 of them, are
getting restless so I'd appreciate It if
you could fill the stocking that
matches a size ts shoe.
P .S. Do you have any spare
gyms lying around?
TtmmyTtft,
UC lrvlDe
Dear Santo:
This ls to inform you that your
last package, while being everything
I always wanted, arrived late as
usual. Not that another Avocado
Bowl wasn't nice, understand. It's
just that in football arithmetic, 0-2
plus 9-0 does not equal No. 1. And by
the way, where is that new stadium
you've been promising?
Mr.S.C.:
Butch Sbacldelord
Golden West
Thanks for giving me everything
I asked for last year. Now all 1 need
Is a set of carbon copies. P .S. I saved
you a team trophy you wiJI ftnd next
to the cookies and milk.
Hey Claus:
Bracey Pkkfonl
Fountalo Valley W&b
You must have missed my house
again because everything I was
hoping for wound u p witb the
neighbors down the freeway.
Albert Sdaatt
Su Clememe fb&b
Dear Santa Claus:
You were two upsets abort lo my
laat order, but thanb anyway. How
about leaving some offerue to ao with
lbe Bis p next tall? ..._ __ ,_
8UIJ11D1Ca
Newpon Harber Rip
Dear Sant A Klaus:
J uked 4 aum good lux lut yeer
and u send me sum grate ones-et.eve
and bill. U u hav anymoor, I would
Uke 2 hav lotsa lux. Thanx.
Santa:
Tomat)' f'relttll
eo.&a Mesa Hlch
S4"1d me anything you got over
6-10.
......
Dam .....
. . . .. . . . , .
Nick: Send me anything you got over
6·2.
Santa Baby:
Joey Doml.nlc
Costa Mesa Blab
How about just one more
basketball LlUe for old limes' sake?
Three's company, I know, but Kathy
Doyle, bless her heart, doesn't know
what it is like to lose and I'd hate to
see her nol go out a winner. If you
can arrange a couple of transfers
with speed and good height, it surely
would help.
Nicholas:
Joanie Kellog«
Huntington Be1cb Wgb
What are you. som e t ype or
llbber or something? Haven't you
heard of equal rights for men? How
about giving the boys' basketball
team here ooe of those CJF trophies.
Heck. the girls have gotten two and
we haven't even woo "One league title
in that time. Can we also have our
own gym?
Roy Boy MllJer
llu.aUac&oe Beacla lllgb
Dear Santa:
Based upon last season, there's
not much I need except for a 10..week supply of bandages, cuts, crutches,
Contact capsules and a doctor to Jolo
the booeter club. But lf you could, I'll
take another ooe or those Mater Del
"trans/ers".
Claus:
WWleWorkmM
Edlloe ll1<
Nothing agalnat those reindeer
you sent Jut year aa a substitute. but
when 1 asked for bones t meant the
kind that wear helmets and run over
anybody that standl ln lbelr way.
Try it again, Santa.
Claaelde Soteabal tmaeRlcJa
Mr.Claus:
My stocking runneth over. I've
got more studs than I can use so I've
declded to take a r'1n check this
season-redeemable, of course, the
rollowlng season when everybody
graduates.
I •" ,4 -II ,.-
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Mr. Information
Garfinkel: No. 1 on Recruiting Scene
By RED ROTllENB£RG ,.~...,,.Wti-
,, for no other reuon, Howle
Garfinkel Is special because he
can quJetly tell Bobby KnJght
where to go and the fiery In-
diana coach will listen.
reportl and phone lnformaUon
on playera the schools are
speciflcaU.~ interested In or Ups
from Oarf\nkel on players tbe
schools should be lntereated ln.
"So I'll wU them about a Mike
Macky from Mid wood High
School In Brooklyn. 11·ast, 5-10
guard. Excellent floor leader.
Communicates. Passes well with
either hand. Fair shooter . His
grades call for a Division II
s chool, so I'll call my sub-
scribers who can accept him.
Knl&ht listens because he con-
alders Garfinkel tbe most impor-
tant man in college basketball
recruiting, and there are many
other people in the game who
agree.
'I'm like a guidance
counselor.'' Garfinkel aald. "I
want to be able to pinpoint
players to t.earns. Everyone
"In my mind, that's a service.
Fottrtll ol ''"• Part•
I'm saving everybody Involved a
lot of time. I wanna help the kid.
1 wanna help the school. You won't find Mike Macky's name
on any other list in the country." • GARFINKEL IS NOT a coach,
nor he ls a member or any scout·
ing staff. What he is la a basket-
ball addict who invenled the
numerical rating system for
high school players. He has a
keen eye for their talent and
potential and a sixth sense about
their desire and altitude.
know1 t.be 58 and the la, It 's the
2s. 31 and ts that take the
ability." Along with his helper. Ton1
Konchalald, Ganlllkel is a high
school gym fixture, evaluaUng
talent, talking to the coaches
and players. "U a kid tells me
he wants to stay in the East. I
won't call Washington State. U
he tells me be wants to stud.)'
forestry, I'm not gonna call St.
John's . A lot of this is my jud&·
ment."
Garfinkel. 49, provides in·
form atioo on hundreds of hlgh
school seolors in his High School
Basketball Illustrated < HSBI)
Report, whlch ia bought by col-
leges acl'O&s the country. He also
Is CO·director of the Five Star
Basketball Camp, where top
high school players gather for
instruction, competition and to
be seen by college coaches.
It's thes e middle-ranked
players who receive the most-
oeeded attention from being rat·
e d by Garfinkel. And s ince
scholarshlps l:iave been reduced
to 15 for any four.year period,
coaches can't afford many mlS-
la kes and rely heavily o n
Garfinkel's evaluation of the
middle-range players.
SACRED HEART University
is a small school In Connecticut,
whk h has no chance at the SS.
BUT WHAT IF HE under-
rates a kid? Isn't he hurting his
See GARFINKEL, Page 82 ..
"If I were r~ruiting a player
in the East. Howard's opinion
would weigh heavily oo my
thinking," said Knight, who
guided Indiana to the national ti-
tle in 1976. "If Howard said the
kid couldn't play for me I
wouldn't go after him."
KNIGHT IS KNOWN as a high-strun~ motivator. an ap-
proach which doesn't work oo
every psyche. "Howard Is a
f re at evaluator of talent. but
'm not sure Christ could judge
attitude." Kni"ht said. "But ii
he said the kid was sensitive, l
would accept h.is advice. He's
not in(aJlible. but the guy's the
best at what he does."
There are other baskefbaU re-
ports -Bill Croneauer puts one
out in St. Petersburg, Fla .. and
Dave Bones does one from
Toledo, Oh.io -but Knight says
what sets Garfinkel apart from
the rest is his concern for the
player he rat.es and the coach
who buys h1.s service.
"He doesn't Just· have an in·
tereat ln the outstanding athlete •
the aupentar." Ko1ght aald. "He
does all he can to help the kid
who can't play at the major
scboola."
GARFINKEL, A CHAIN
smoker and chain talker. says
the focus of his efforts has shill·
ed from the reports to his camp.
He used to put out a more de·
tailed report, listing the player's
position. size. school, coach.
grade point, SAT scores and
race -plus long descriptions of
the player's ability, ending with
Garfinkel's assessment of his
prospective level of college ban.
His ratings go from 1 <small
college> to 5 (big.time>. with
pluses and minuses providing 15
possible levels . He once sald
Adrian DanUey was an 8.
°"41f ...... ~" o.r., ,.,,,.,....
Four years ago. he gave a
high school player In New
Jersey a s and was mocked by
his peers. •'The kid had no
speed, no quicl<neas and was
turned down by many of the big
time schools that saw him. Alt
he had was the best basketball
miod since Bill Bradley, and I
said so." Tota l Co nrentration
The player ls Jim Spanarkel of
Duke.
TODAY, FOR $200, sub·
11crlber1 get shorter published
Estancia's Dan Maddock is a picture of concentration as
he prepares to shoot over the outstretched arm or
Edison's Larry Hirst (35). The two area powers met Wed-
nesday night in non-league action. For )*'>ry , see page 82.
It's Not a Pat Situation
FmrbankJ Returns -At Least/or PlayoJJs
FOXBORO. Mass. <AP> -Coach Chuck
Falrbank5, grim, drawn and tired after a sus·
pension of allghUy more than 48 bours, tried to
plck up the pieces today lo getting his New
England Patriots ready for the NaUooal Football
Leaaue playoffs.
FalrbanU, suspended without pay Just before
the regular season finale at Miami after admitting
he had accepted the head coacbillg Job at the
University ot Colorado, wu reinstated by the
Patrlota Wednesday lo another sequel to a wild
chain of eveota cballeagln1 any soap opera.
"I WILL DEVOTE all my energy to sueceu lb
the pla)'off11," the <45-year-old Fatrbanki said,
while obvioualy sun hoping for aolf. skllng and
other luxuries in the Rockies u coach at Colorado.
"We are happy to have him back here to get
the team ready tor the btaseet chapter in the hiJ·
tory of tbe Patriots," 1aJd club owner BUI Su.IUvao,
who suspended Fairbanks oo the &round.I tbat "no
man can serve two mutert" alter a meeUna In
Miami Mooday Just boun before • nat.loaally
televlJed game with tbe Dols>blna.
Falrbanka wu retumed to acUve duty in Ume
to get the Palriotl ready for tbelr playoff 1a01e
a11lnat either Denver or Houston bere O.C. 31,
after Sullivan app~vtd an qreemeat reached
between Falrbanb' attorney, Jobn C. Ruuell, and
, ibe owner's ton, Chuck SuWvan, an altomey. lo
N-:,w York.
llOWEVEa. PAJaBAND' rut.Lire, wb1ch la·
elude. four years remainlnl oa a contract tt·
ne1ottated ln luly 1t'T7, remained clouded.
He wu Nlnttated after MDd~ a i.etecram to
the Uni....tty ot Colorado, 11)'1.N be wu not "ln a
S>OtlUon at thJ1 Um' to eqqe ln any furtbtr
....
negotlaUons with you or or to execute a contract
with you.'
Later, at a news conference, he emphasized
that he had not rejected the Colorado offer.
Colorado AthJetJc Direct.or Eddie Cl"Owder said the
same tblog while wlabtn1 Fairbanks and the
Patrtoti aucceaa in the playofrs.
SULLIVAN, WHO f.URED Fairbanks from
the college ranks at Oklahom• for a reported
SlS0.000 a year in 1973, stood b1a JfOUnd as owner.
He said of Fairbanks' contract. "We'll cro1s that
brid1e after Jan. 21 (Super Bowl dale)." Later
Sullivan told The Associated Preas, "We won't lose
blm without a contest."
After the reinatatement. Chuck Sullivan' 11aid
ln New York that Fairbanks Is "the most Impor-
tant llHt our compaay bu'' and "my father and l
teel . . . lb.al our belt hope of Settina to t.be Super
Bowl I.I bavtns Chuck Fairbanks on t.6e sidelines.••
Fairbankl, who challenied the owner's 1ua-
pen1lon by trylq to rally hls players• a&Jpport in _
the dNlll!DC room before tho 23-3 lOll 1n Miami.
returned to the Jf)b aol•mnlY aft.er a 40.mlnute
meet.l.nl w1lb the elder Sullivan.
0 1 llA VE 8IX YEAU ot my life and work In·
veal~ ln lhiJ team," he told a new. conlerenct. "1
don't know ot anyoM who wlll 1lve more than 1
wUI." Amid reports ot pou•bte te1a1 acUon by the
Patr1ota &1alnat Fairbanks and UM Unlvenlty ot
Colorldo, the elder Sullivan retnatated bla coach
and 1enerll manacer, who led tbe club to U.a tlnt
NFL divtalonll UUe In t.&e Amertun Conlerence
East with an 11,s record, lncludlna the M1aml \e>11.
New En&Jancl'• only other dlvlalon champlon1blp
w11 ln 118.'1 ln the old American Football Leape.
I •
.... "' .. "•' ... -• •l ,. .: ........ . , . . , ... , .. _ ... ·,. .· .... ' •••.. '1tl_ .' . . . .. .. . . . .. . . ..
... ''
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. . ..
..
\
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_az ____ DA1 __ Lv_~_L_o_, __________ 1n~~-~d-•~~·_0_9"M __ t>e __ ra_•_.,_•11 ______________________________________________ -........~------------------------~8AS;:;,_;,~K-E~T-B~A~L~L~/~F~O~O~T.;..;;.B~A~L~L ,...... ...... ---
ANTA. • •
Aggies,-............
A C8"Ule Report '""" tM Wond of ~I
Mulroy to
As Acad mi
Honor
AU-Am
d
• r1can
Fonner N"'POM Harbor l D.&h It.Ar Vance • Mulroy wUl be amona a l"""P tA ~ foot· •
baU pl~ to be bonon!d S hirda_y at halt'llme
of t bt Sun BowtJ:me bet ween Tuu and
Maryland u an ff mk All Amertcan.
Mulroy, an All CIP' rettlvtr for Newport Harbor
and a C'WTt'Dt m mbf>r of lbe Stanford Cardinals. wtll lb lO El Paso Saturday lO KC~ the •ward .
The pme It H t foT 10 a m S.tur·
day oa O\annd 2.
Mulroy wtU mum lO Tnu Doc 31
wht'n the Cardinal• and Oeorata aquan
off lo lbe llhH'bonMt Bowl In ftouatoo .
Abo due f1rit tu m laW"tll from
Slanford I.I UMman Jim Stephens Tbe
1917 St anford wlnn~rs were James
Lofton and (Aay ~jamin.
The award and Bluebonnet Bowl
cap an ot.Mrwtae fruatraltna uuca for
Muuov Mulroy, "'ho hu been plaiued wttb ln·
juries slntt t.be •tart ol the aeuon.
An an.k.1~ sprain knocked bJm out ol \he 1tarUnc UMvp
pnor to I.he Oklahoma 1ame and &ftet' catth!Dt five puaes
for 103 yards aaalnst Oregon State, he was knocked out of
the startln~ Uneup again pr1or lO the USC aame with a
hum11tr1ng lnJury
11r------q..c~ Of dw D•w-----
Oakland Ralder general manacer Al Oavla, lo·
tent on stoppu1g the team 's &Ude: "The Roman Em·
ptre feU, the Yankees fell and the CelUcs feH. and all
of lhem didn't look good dolna It. Somehow, I've 1ot
to prevent us from f aWnc. J'vegot to."
.....,, O.rps Allrr T•••rl•g I'••
Houston forward Bkk Barry cbarged Into m the stands after a t.aunting fan W ay night '
al the conclusion of the Rocketa' = victory
over the host New Jersey Nets , in National ·
Basketball Asan. act.Ion. Barry, who scored 18 points
didn't catch u1> lO the younaater who bad bMn taunUni
him ... Jolaa Drew scored a aea.son·hllb 44 points to
lead the Atlant.a Hawks to a 121-112 win over the New York
Knlcks ... Gecqe McGlull pound ln
39 points and D•vld Tltom,._ added 32
more to pace Denver to a 121-112 victo,Y
over New Orleans ... Geerae ~
pumped in 29 pointa and James SUu
had 14 in a 40-point third quarter as the
San Antonio Spurs c lobbered tbe
Chicago Bulls, 131-102 • . • Rookie 8Wy
McKinney, starting in place ol injured
PbU Ford, scored 23 points to lead the
Kansas City Kings to a 114·95 win over
th e injury .riddled Seattle
&&HY SuperSooks ..•. Cit.rt• Ford put ln 32
points and Mania Bantea added '"22-seuoa hllbs for
both-to lead the Boston CehJcs to a 121·105 victory over
the lndiana Pace rs ... Bob Daadr141te and El•la
Hayu helped Washington hold off a Pboenlx comeback tn
the third quarter and lbe Bulleta huq oo to beat the Suns 137·129. •
Ra,.,,n-• Ead Sa•,..•' lt'l••I•• St N'alc
Dean TaJ•foas snapped a nine-game score-~ less streak with two goals Wednesd1y night. ,
carrying the New York Rangers lO a 6-3 Na·
liona l Hockey League triumph over Buffalo
ending lhe Sabres' seven.game win streak ~nder new
Coach BW lnglls ... Dale McCoart scored three goals and
rookie Wlllie Haber added a palt as the Det.tott Red Wings
romped to a 7·2 victory over the Vancouver Canuclts ...
Steve Shutt scored twice and had an aaslst aa Montreal
struck for three first-period goals and buni on to beat
Chicago. 5-3 ••• Pat BoateU.e'• ninth goal or lhe seuon
gave Toronto a 3·1 lead and the Maple Leafs went oo to de·
feat the Minnesota North St.an, 4·2.
Mlddgan A veragrd I 04.1)48 Per Ga•e
M lchigan drew a record IOC,9'8 spect.ators m per football game the pas t season, ~ivtng the
Wolverines their fourth straight national al· •9 •
tendance crown . . . Fired Colorado football
Coa ch BUI Mallory s ays he will "definitely sue the
University of Colorado, if necessary" to collect the ~
maining 2112 years due him on his contract ... Boler
Staab•cb of Dallas was lhe passing leader. Earl Campbell
, of Houston woo lbe rushing title e.nd
Rickey Yoang of Minnesota took the
pass r eceiving crown in final 1978
statistics announced by the National
Football League ... Walt MJc:taaeia of
the New York Jets and Dick Nolu of
the New Orleans Saints, two head
coaches with teams on the upswing this
year , have been selected as t.be North
and South coaches, respectively, for the
30th annual Senior Bowl . . . The
suuUCH Baltimore Colts have shrned Bee "Go
Go .. G•rry , a running b ac k . Garry Is a
2 01 -p o und e r o ut o f th e U niv e r s ity o f
Mi ssissippi who sat out the 1978 season when the two
parties couldn't come to terms ... The Minnesota Vikings
have placed com erback Na&e Wrigbt on the injured re·
ser ve llst and signed NeltOD M•aey to replace him.
Zlrflel S~orn 23 I• Hiio ~o••
OTHER SPORTS -Former Edison Hilb and Golden
West College standout Todd ZlrW paced bJa University of
Hawail-ltilo teammates wltb 23 points in a 56-54 loss to
Westmont College. The loss was Hllo's t;rst of the season
. . . Chicago Cubs first baseman BUJ
BHkoet, negot.iallng oo his own, re·
portedly hu agreed to a rour·year ex·
tension of his contract and will earn up
to $1.4 million over the next five sell003
... Gerd Maeller, the "natlon1I
bomber" who helped lead Weal
Germany to the 1974 World Cup soccer
crown, Is retiring al the end of this
seuon . . . Slugger Jim Bice of the
Boston Red Sox, the American Leape's
a.Hu most valuable player, was named rec:lp·
lent of the first Henry Aaron award u major leque
baseball'• man of the year ... Jack NAeklau was named
Sports llluatrated'a Sportsman of tbe Yur for the flrsl
time In his Ulustriout career ... UCLA Athletic Dtrector
J . D. MorJH underwent successful open heart 1ur1ery at
the UCLA Medical Center Wednesday.
T~~Radlo
aADIO: Bu keibatl -K.anau at use, a p.m .. KFI (S.0). Tom Kelly, Pete Newell report· Alabama vs .
Alhletet In Action at Loni Beach, I p.m .• KYMS (IOI P'M).
Hockey -Plttlburch at Klnc•. '7:50 p.m .• KRLA nuo>.
Bob MIUer, Peter Weber report.
TV: No event.a scheduled.
. . .. .. ' •
cellar. Send h~lp, u much Ml
poulble K•lthl, •lae. 1peed,
1tren1th and 111Brt1. In bol'I
qua Uty and quanUty.
Lapa• .. ae~ RlctaSt.n
Santa·
J appredat..e what you've dofte
for me 1n I.be put but It hu b9en
t h ree 1eara oow alnce you
droppf)d otf a national ch•m ·
plonth lp. '1·3 doesn't c ut It
around here, you know. Be lair
tblt H MOO. Ooa't dl'OP olf all
tbe 1itnL1 down the Mtcbbon" cbJmoeya.
OkWeTllCbr Oraac•C.u&~•
To wbom it m ay coacern :
Tb la lt an emer1enc1. Pleaae n od us one ot ever)'lhln1 rrom
your toot batl. b aske tball ,
bueball a nd c heerle ade r
catalote\Mll. And hurry.
Vai"'*J lllD~lllal l&aft
Dear S.Uta:
Uke bookend.I. championships
IOOk betttt tf you've Col two ot
them . < Hlnt. hint, hint.>
JHkieA.ntoa
Cena1clel Mar ffll1t
Dear SMta eta us:
T he runners and the 1unners
you keep aendina me are 1real.
But pleaae. How about just ONE
playoff win?
BllbM.WCaa
SaddlebaekCoUeae
Sent.a Dear: Do you have any more Cheryl
Johpatoas that can set. splke,
die and lead cheers at the &1me
time? We're als o s hopping
around for a new coach to keep
our volleyball program one step
ahead of the Joneses, Sailors
and Artists.
KJUyBuhler
Coroaa del Mar llJ&b
Mr.Claus:
Would it be possible for you to
give us a little more Ink about
wom e n 's a thl e tics? Our
volleyball team la the best kept
secret since TWe IX. <Copies
sent to the Dally Pilot, Los
Angeles Times, Santa Ana
Register.>
Saint C:
Jule BU1Hdorf OraageCoaatCollete
Seeing how w e'r e som e
of your biggest tans, how aDOUt
another John Huarte? After all,
you owe us ooe for recalling .,
Mike .Dotterer.
Dear Sant.a:
W1yneCodaran
Mat.er Del W«ib
J\llt a friendly reminder that
lbia ls the year we're supposed
to set IOCDe senJon. But if you
can flod aome reward for three
years of patient waiting. a
Bionic Jock will do. Keqylloata
Ocean View High
Hans KrinkJe :
I know it's bard to figure out
what to get the tthool that needs
ever)'thi.n«, tO let's start at the
top. No ni>re Sjlont Nights from
~ur football offense. a t least
.,hree wiM men on the basketball
court and, it you can work a deal
out with Mother Nature, no high
aurf durinl bueball aeu on.
Dua 111111 lll&b coacbJas staff
Dear Santa:
Mtr ............ 0-, .........
UP IN A.AMS -Edison's Larry Hint outrebounds Estan.
cia's StevC-Van Horn in first half action Wednesdav
night. Both player s led their r espective teams in scoring
as Hirst tallied 22 points and Van Horn had 23 and 17 re ·
bounds . Looking or\ is Edison's Steve Davis.
Eagles Colleet
Van .Hom Paces 55-53 Win
By ROGER CARLSON
OI IN D.tlly f'He4 Sbtff
E s tancia High 's Eag les.
although connecUng on only 41
percent of their s hots from the
field,, came up wilh the winning
s hots with three seconds left
Wednesday night as host Edison
dropped a 55.53 non·league
basketball decision.
Steve Van Hom . a 6·4 Junior
who connected for 23 points in
all, his seventh straight 20·point
production. hit a pair from the
charily stripe with three tickl\
left to snap a S3·a ll situation and
hand the Eagles their faflh win
in seven decisions.
"IT WAS OUR BEST win of
the season-<>r at least equal to
our victory over Mission Viejo."
said Estancia Coach Larry Sun·
derman.
Edison made but 22 of 55 from
the fie ld C 40 percent> and blew
sev e ral easy scori ng op·
portuniUes in the early gou1g.
Lar ry Hirst was EdJson·s scor·
mg gun. netting 22 points.
Despite a quintet boasting two
6·5 and two 6-4 starters. Edison
could not contain Van Horn on
the boards. Van Horn picked off
a dozen defe~1ve carom~ and
rave offensive rebounds
EDISON'S LA~'T moment of
control came wath 3:57 to go a.-.
Kregg Kanemaru sank a pair of
free throws to give the Chargers
a 4744 lead.
But Van Horn came back with
a rour·footer. then J eff Gasper
hit Van Hom with a good inside
pass lo set up another two·
pointer. On the 12th day of Christmas,
will you please send to me: 12
flankers le aping, 11 tackles
snarlln'. 10 guards a·pullin'. nine
'backers trutzin'. eight safelles
s wipin'. seven ends a ·snaggin'.
six rovers roamln', five golden
toes; four refs on our slde, three
tailbacks, two subs deep and a
QB t.aUer than a tree.
"Craig Keup and Tony Camp
' d id a job for us." added lht'
Estancia coach.
T im Krohnfeldt connected
from outside lO gave Estancia :.i
50,47 edge. the Chargers fought
back to lie at 53. then Van Horn
did h is work at the free throw
line.
Eddie Bia.Moll
E1&ucl1 Hip
Seal{ings
Victorious
The game was tied or the lead
changed hands 20 times before
Edison's Rex McDonald knotted
the game at S3 with 35 Rttonds
left on a 16-foot shot.
THE EAGLES called timeout
with 20 seronds left to set up a
play-looking lowfrd Va n Hom.
Van Hom was fouled and hit
both pressure shots lO ensure the
victory.
"We haven't been playing well
and we were getting away with
the close ones." said Edison
Coach Barry Leigh. "But IL
caught up with m tonight "
T he biggest lead of the second
ha lf was an Estancia margin of
36·32 on Camp·s steal and ensu·
ing rour·foot twister.
h t-w fut IU I-CUI .. ""' .. ",. ,.,,,0 ••·110 M-• t< •Oft/M~IOI
Y11m111tn"t
V•f't HO,.-,,
GA\Pf"f'
fOt•h
\ • ti llt•l"l'f"'•'" ) 1 I
1 1 • M• Oo"<liO 1 () •
1 0 • ...... ii 0 77
t O b D•tt•' t I S
O () 11 U"'04" 1 1 •
• I 11 "°"'"" I 0 • 1"1"i' )I tl \\ s.c. ...... ~tn
I 1 • 11 I \I
[\!4M1• '' tJ ·~ I~ \\ [ 01\0f' 10 14 te I). H
fol41l IOUI' ltlM'<tlt I\ [di\Qn It fOUN'(J 0'11
MfOOO<• tE'l-141, 01tYI\ 11 Oi!oOnl
l'ro• Page Bl ·
Dickey
Win Big
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (AP) -
"I don't know If he's lhe best I
t-ver played against. because
I've played against Sima. but
ht 's one of the best I've ever
played at'Binat, ·• Hid defen.slve
end Rick White of Iowa Sta te.
The Cyclone star was t alking
about Curtis Dickey, a junior a~edsttt who destroyed Iowa
State with 276 yards on 34 cir·
rlea Wednesday night as he led
Texas A&M to a 28-12 victory In
the Hall of Fame Bowl ga me.
WHITE, WHO RAD 12 tackles
3n d was named the top de·
rensive player In the game, com·
pared the A&M star with Uds
year 's Heisman Trophy winner,
Biiiy Sims of Oklahoma .
Sims gained slightly more
than 200 yards against Iowa
State earlier this year , but sat
out much of the final quarter.
Dickey. a 20S·pounder who
won the NCAA indoor 60·yard
das h last Ma r c h a nd the
Southwest Conference 100.meter
dash last spring. applied the kill·
Ing blow to the Cyclones when he
scored on a 19-yard run e arly in
the final quarter to give lbe Ag·
gies a 21-12 advantage.
"WE DIDN"T PLAN to give
the ba ll to Dickey any more than
usual." said A&M Coach Tom
Wiison. "He just had a hot hand.
so we tned to get him the ball as
much as possible. He's the best
I've ever seen."
· Dickey had 184 yards in the
first half and r~orded a hatr
dozen runs ol 12 yards or more.
including a 54·yard scamper In
the first quarter that failed to produce points.
A&M 's other scoring came on a
one·yard run by David Brothers.
the lead blocker during m08l of
· Dickey's 34 carries in the game:
on Make Mosley·s four·yard pass
to Gerald Carter. and on a fi ve·
y<.1rd run by Adger Armstrong .
DICKEY'S OUTSTANDING
perfor man.ce o vershadowed a
brilliant effort by Iowa State
senior Dexter Green. who scored
both Cyclone touchdowns and
rus hed tor 148 yards on 21 car·
nes.
G reeo scored on a 28·Y ard run
on a fourth·and·two situation
and on a five.yard pass from
Waller Grant, who kept the
crowd buzzmg throughout the
gam e with long passes. most or
which were unsuccessful.
Iowa State's downfall came in
its ktcking game.
The Cyclones missed an extra
point because of a bad snap,
rumbled away a punt at thei r fi ve
and also interfered with a fair
catch. settmg in motion one of
A& M's scoring drives.
Dickey saad Iowa state was
"tough and quick, but my of·
fensive line opened some big
holes. I got a little tired out
there toward the end. but I
didn't mind carrying the ball so
m uch ··
seottee YOUA•TE•S
lnA,A&M 0 I• 0 U 111
10-A \IAI~ 0 • II (). 11
1\V (;1....., SOttH ,,...., G•-h k • lflledi
A,_M R<omo-t , I,..,. IF,..,,.1.., UOI
A;.M (41'ffl • O•H\ frOM MO\leV "'•Mlklttl
"''"' •!.V -G'"°" 19 run lpe\\ ltlllf'OI
A4M Dkff•••n.n1#'1MtUlt1 l11ckl
A&NI • Ar_I_ '""' IFr<..,.li,,"<'> A •I 110
OAMa SYATISTICS
AA/VI ISV
F 11\1 Oo•I'\ t8 10 fl"'""' ••'"' )f·l17 ... ,,o P•"\ll'Q y~ 44 11 \
l>~tUtftO~ 0 I
P•nn '100 9,. O Pu111~ I •7 I JI
I' umb•~• ID\I 1 I J 1 P~ .. '"" \ Y'1"0 ) 11 1 3> INOIYIOVAL LfilOE•I
l>VSH•NC. 11 '"' A,_M 0•0•¥ l f 71•
A•M\lfOnQ 9 JI> iow<t Sl.>11'. C.r•M 1f.f ... (,r.1111 .. ,,,
PASSING -T .. u A&M. Nlo'ley '10~-lf '°"'• St•t•. c,,.,.. ._1' 0-11\ l>fCC•VING ,. ••• A&M. C••lt• , 18.
W,.11-11 1·11 IOWe SI .. •. Mlann J..?e, "'nlcn
111, (;rt•n 1 I) Corona del Mar improved Its
record to 8-1 and annexed the
Troy Basketball Tournament
championship with a 74·61
triumph over the host Warriors
Wednesday night.
All five starters scored In dou·
ble figw-es for Corona del Mar.
the first time that has happened
thla sea.son .
GARFINKEL NO. 1 ON RECRUITING • • •
"That really speaks well for
the players giving up lhe ball to
the man with the best shot ...
saJd Sea Kings Coach J ack Er·
rlon. "Todd Pickett and Chris
Joboalon played good, steady
g1mes. but It was our most
bal•nced victory of the season.
Everybody contributed."
Jobnaton and Dive Koehler
each scored 18 to pace the Sea
Kings, who burst out to o 17·8
lead In the first quarter and
never looked back.
Koehler and Shawn Ahearn
were c hosen for t h e all·
tournament team. and the Sea 1
Kini• now have two tournament
honors on their wall ln thls
youn1 aeuoo-tbe Troy crown
and the contolatlon c ha m ·
plontblp ot the tous h M ulna
tourney.
'"""" c ..... •MHtt•>
C)vfft o .......... ..... ,
0·111·111 .... ( ... ,
~o·~ ,., .. "' , .....
.. ft .. ,, , it
• 0 •
I 0 1
\ , "
' 0 ' t 0 •
I I 1
I t f
.. ...
Al•H rt• f t IO ,,_"M r 4 It IU11410f1 J • 11
ICo.f>ltr • 0 11
,_IOtll 4 4 1'
SIMl'ltl I 0 f
V ... Jl .. ~y .. I 0 t
21 1.. , .....
k-"¥0iMlftfft Tm • It ti ti I ~ ... Mer " ti 11 ,._,. T.t .. f9111t· C.W-.., MM tt. ,,., " ,..,._.
wt1 -· f et"ftl&. CtrtM dtt Mllr llHl!ll
chances for a scholarship'!
·'T he only kid I can ever hurt
1is t he on e t h a t h as on e scholarship offer and I tell that
sohool to stay away, and l'dnever
do that. There's a school for every
kid. provided the coach and kid
a re on the ball, provtded he
a nswers letter!! ond behoves
himself.
"If a kid has • shaky attitude. t have an obligation to tell my
subscribers the truth. I have to
protect the schools that buy my
r e ports from s u ccessfully
recruitina players who have no
chance of lasting there
.. My track record !!peaks for
IL'!ell. I like to bnt .800. and I do
Otherwise. the coachell wouldn't
coll me. I 'm not Ood ; I'm
good."
BlJT '111AT INFLUENCE does
not sit weU with some coaches -
Dave Gavitt. for example. "I'm
opposed to any foreign body be·
Inc Involved ln the recrumni •
proceaa." said the 1980 Olympic
coach, who will be retiring as
Providence's coach after t his
eeaaon . "We don 't tok o
. anybody' a report.1."
But Oavitt'• lon1t1mc ual11·
t.ant, Nick Muarchuk, did take
the r~port for Providence from
I '
... ,,,.. . ..
HOWARD QARF1NK!L
. • . ... . ..
1g73 77 when ho left lo become
head coach at Conl!11u!\
Som au-aest that GarrtnJccl
mt1hC lnlluence a player to go to
A school that uses hls reporu
over one that doesn't ,
,
.. I'd likelOdo lt, bu t I don't," he
sa 1d. "I certainly root for that kid
inwardly to l?O to one of my
schools. But when most kids In the
N cw Y w;Juu"ea get down lO ti ve or
six sctrOols~ percent of them are
llSBI s ubscribers."
HE 8AVS HE NEVEll offers
advice to players. but will volun·
leer info rmation when as ked .
Several yea rs ago, Adrla n
Dantley asked.
"With his coach's consent
<Morgan Wootten of DeMalha>.
I talked to him. He mentioned
four or fi ve schoolJ, a nd I gave
him the strengths and weak·
nesi>e.s of each. He selected
Notre Dame, which wa11 the only
one of hls choices that didn't buy
my report al the time."
Ga rfinkel says the biggest
blunder he ever m ade w•s with
Heyward Dotson, who wu 11
great 1 u1rd for Columbla'll
s uper teams a decade aco. "He
was 1 mechanical centel' with
hla back to the baaket who had
nothina." Oarflnlcel re me m ·
bc red. "I d ldn 't aoe a back
courtman. l blew lt."
MOJtF. TYPICAL of hla ac·
curacy la Bobby Wlllla, a guard
See GA&JINKEL. Pa1e BS
'
. , ... .. . . . . . . , ' . . ' -,, , , .. J ' .......... ~ . . . . . . -.. . ~ .~ -. ' . . . .... . . .. '
_ ..
.., .
WAtER POLO I BASKETBA L 1 VOLLEYBALL
OF Water Polo
... Sailors ' Bergeson
Player of the Year ..
Jam 1Jer1eson of lwo Umtt
IF •·A w1lor ~o cbamploo
NeWJ)On Harbor lit,b. who ••• •co.cu· l>ll.Y rot tl\e Yur u •
J 01uor. tS tbct l978 Cl F' Player ot
the Ynr u chosc-n by SouthJand
<'OIC'h
BHSt!llOn lftd the Ballon to an
undel ated campa.110 IDd ls OOt"
ol a even Newport Harbor
pl17er1 hmottd on the A11.Cff
4·A MlectJon1
Al10 Hnwia tlrtt tum laattls
from the Orange Cout aru 1tt
Newport Harbor's Mike Grftr
and "rom TalYlor and Joe Orake
of Est&Mla H.a•h ~.eofl FullS and Graha m
Devrjes ol NcWpOrt we-~ n·amed
Lo tbe MCOnd team v.bde lhJrd
team honors went to Newport'i.
Gres Slenns and C1IH AfliM>n.
Edl8on'1 Uncbey RJlty and Rob
Wyatt ol Estancia.
Coach " the year Is Chaffey Hlsb '1 George Harris
AU.QP4·A Wa~r Poto
t'tl"ATeam
James Bergeson <Newport
Harbor}; MJke Greer <Newport
Harbor>; Tam Taylor <Newport
Harbor>. Steve McKallan <Chai·
to t Mar~ Scully 1<.:haff~y);
John Var1111 (1.us Alto.). David
Abthltr <Sunny llUI >; J ohn
0 Brl~n (Sunny Hlllt): Joo
On ls <Sunny Hilla>; Trevor
Dodaon <LB Wilson). Curll a
Hansl <Ooa Pu bl08); JM Orab
<E1tand1>.
SttoMTc1m
O ~o rt Fults <Newport
Harbor•. Graham 0 6Vrlea
t Newpo rt H1rbor>: D1vld
Geor& <LB Wll:»on ), Mark Bock
<Mlr1 Cocla >. J•m Lone ceo. P u ~bto1). Jert Brahler
<Downey), Dave Kthlal <Sunny
lllllS), Mike Spicer (Sunny
lllllt>. Bobby Caldtira <Chaffey),
RotM!rt Al\IWano (Loi Al&ol) i
Jim Ba.rdstlJ <~ Allol).
TblrdTeam
G r e g Steve na (New porl
Harbor>; Giles Anders on
<Newport Harbor>: Peter
Neu1bel (Dos Pueblos): Grcai
Anderson <Sunny Hilla >.
Undaey Riley <Edison>: Randy
H 11so11 (LB M llllkan > ; Larry
Randall <Mira Costa); Mark
Gordin <LB Wilson>: Terry Klng
tChaHe y >. Sang Kim
cDowney). Rob Wyatt <Estan-cia).
Fr-.• Pap 82
GARFINKEL NO. I MAN. • •
for James Monroe in the Bronx
with no following. Garfinkel saw
him play in a scrimmage and
loved him. He also loved his at-
titude and Intellect.
"The report wasn't coming out
for a couple ot wee ks, s o
whenever 1 talked to my good
scholastic schools, I talked up
WIUls. I said he was a 5, 'the
grea~est sleeper s ince Rip van
Wln.,le.' Within two weeks he-
had 25 inquines. and his career
was 1aunched. He became heavl·
ly r ecruited, eventually signed
with Peon and now Is one of the
best guards in the Easl."
Garfinkel, also on the selec-
t 1 on com mitte e of the
McDonald's All-American team.
FmalNFL
Statistics
LEADING RUSHIUU
Altl Y ~lA'tt. TO.
C•m110C!ll, ~tori JO? lejO A.I U
Pav•°"· Clll<-"90 l:U u•s •.2 11
• Oof~ll, Oan.-1'IO U?S A.4 1
Wllll•m•. Mtam1 7'2 U5t •.• t Motlt90,,,.rv. Pt111 Ut 1no • 1 •
M•OOleton, ~ 8 0 21• 111' l t II
H<trrl\, PlmbUrQfl JIO 1081 3 S I
V•n Eeg,..,,, O.~leno 110 lllell 4.0 t
Mlll<'r. 111/ffato 1• 1060 ._!I 1
fl<'t'd, IC•~CllY * IOU S.I S P1gglnJ, 'W6~1"'110fl 141 101• A. I ~.
l.EADINO PAUl!RS
PA PC v-. TO AY ..
!>1•ubil<ll, Oall•} •ll n 1 a1eo 2s 1 n II•-"-· Pl""''"O" 3be 101 ,.U ll 1 ., r O<llJ, S•n OIMJO lit '114 ,.., 1• 111 Ci•I~~. M1am1 1lS 141 1~1 11 I U
M•nnt1>q,NewOrle.tn\ •71 ,.I JAii> 11 1a SI~. Ct--3" m ~ 11 1.7' Morton, Oen....,. 7t7 ,.., 1907 II •.H
0<1n .. 1son, Oelroo lSt '" n~ " 6 SA l ,,,n, SH iii<' .. l 241 3713 IS 1 41
FtrgUW!>, Bufl<tlO 130 11S ?l:i. 1' t 41
Ll!AOINC Rl!C[IVl!RS
PC Tfi. AYe. TO
Vou,,11. MINll!'IOl8 Ila 704 • 0 \
Get1><u 111. N•w OrlMM 14 181 1 t )
L <1r9e"t. Se4ftlt' 1t 11'1 •• S I A•~llad. Ml,_-.OI• 1>1> 16' 11 I @
Tlll4!V. SI LOull •1 'IOO 14 S l
C•'tWr. O•t-•1 IS? U 7 • Swen.., Pill~ " NO 14 4 11 '°'"m•n. Ml-~• bl 3'6 t> S 1 ~1ICMll. Sat\ 0.f<JO SI '°° I 8 I
Jelle"°"· Sen Olevo -.. 1001 11.• 1J LUOINC PUNTl!•S Ne.Yft.A,.._
Nit ln•llv, C1n<1Mtll ti >tit •3 I Guv. O•~•-11 lAt.1 •1 1 ~ • ..,.,, •. ~'°'' .. l.S• .., )
Jt nn•r>Ql . NY Cio•nh ts :iees C . 1 e iencl\ard, ...,.., Or•~•"' I« "32 «1 O
l.IAOING PUNT •ITU•Nl•I
U11<llurc11. Den1ter H.,~,. Hew Yotll Jet)
MoodV. OuttaoO
Well•O LM AllQt~l
P•ylo,,, IC.-CllY
No.Yfl.A"9.
JI> rt> Ill lO 371 ,,.
It 2.00 ". st .,. ". )) ,.,. I I .
works out or a small apartment
in New York City. Tbe moW is
early basketball, with file
cabinets and a desk as the living
room's centerpiece. On top or
the desk are stacks of unoJSened
mail, camp cards, ashtrays. col-Cee cups and a very busy
telephone.
A LOT OF ntE CALLS he re·
celves are from high school kids
who want to go to his summer
camps. whkh have two sites -
Honesdale, Pa. and Pittsburgh
·-and are co-dir ected by
Garfinkel's partner, Will Klein.
The camps, which have been
sold out for the last eight years,
have a total of five sessions this
summer .
The Instructors who teach and
lecture and officiate games are
mostly high school coaches, ex-
cept for the few college or pro
coaches who have been with the
camp for many years. Hubie
Brown, for example. who now
coaches the Atlanta Hawks, was
at Five Star's first session in
1965, and has been there ever since.
THE NCAA FORBIDS college
coaches from contacting players
al camps like Garfmkel's, so the
charge has been made that the
college coaches who are oo the
staff have a recruiting edge. "I trust my coaches, and
they're not geUlng an edge."
said Garfinkel. ''The No. 1 rule
which we stress is that they
can't talk recruiting to any col·
lege coach. And my staff and the
visiting coaches are told that
recruiting is verboten."
David Berst. the NCAA's
director or enforcement, says
Garfinkel ''does a real good job
of policing the coaches."
When the remark was relayed
to Garfinkel, bis face lit up.
"It means a lot to me that peo.
pie notice we're doing things
right," said the single most im·
portant man in college recruit·
mg. "I really don't want that
power. Who do you think l am?
Walter Winchell?"
Friday: What can and what
does the NCAA do about recruit·
ing?
JAMES BEAOEION
Johnston
TopsAll-CIF
Volleyball
Cheryl JobJ'.'}lton of Corona del
Mar High leads a bevy of
Orange Coast area volleyball
starlets on the All·CIF 4·A selec-
tions as Player of the Year aft.er
leading her teammates to the
CIF 4·A crown.
Abo earning first team honors
from Corona del Mar are Alleen
Semonsen, Marcie Wurts and
Susie Crooe, all of wbom were
first team selections in 1977.
_Johnston and Semonseo are
seniors while two teammates
are Juniors.
Others honored are Camllle
Chalmers and Karen Lynch or
Laguna Beach and the Newport
Harbor duo of Kari Rush and
Kori Pulaski, two juniors.
All.Cl, 4-A V .. t.yNll
Jea,.,.e Beeul>fl!v, Minion Viejo Sr C•mlll•C,,..men.~O.ac" ~r.
Sulle CrOfte, CONiN Ml Mar Jr Su'"" H•"*l--.y, ~la F• Sr
CIMtryl JOl)n\11111, Corona Oel M•r Sr
Kar1tn lvn<ll. ~N 0.ach Sr
ll"Cla Mc~. s... Marco• S•
Kori Pulua.l. Ne-1 HJ<'bor Jr
K•rl Ru\h, H-1 H•~ Jr
_ AllH:" s-. Conina ot4 Mar Sr There••-·· A¥1allon \f MarcleWum.Con11w-Mar Jr
Gauchos Drop
Overtime Loss
To Harbor
WJLMINGTON-Saddleback
College let a atx-point lead slip
away In the second ball, then
lost in overtime, 99-98, to spoil
the Gauchos' hopes or upsetting
Los Angeles Harbor College in
JC basketball Wednesday night.
Randy Wbleldon scored 19
points, including six ln the over·
Ume period; to spearhead the
Saddleback effort but LA
Harbor got 42 points from Ken
Anderson an,d Chris Thomas.
and six crucial overtime points
from guard Randy Allred.
A Saddleback 17-foot jump
shot at the buzzer fell short. and
the Gauchos' record dropped to
9.4 whUe Harbor's Improved to
11·2.
Saddleback will next lake its
show to Golden West Friday
(7 :30).
s.Hdlelliadl I'll I.A MetW lttl
PatrlO 6•rMll
Wllltlclon
LaVallte
Hooiward
McC:O..rt
lffck•I Norri•
G,tlte
Httltng•
Total\
..ft.~ .. ". • I 11 Ander!IO" I • 10
1 t 1l F .. r-enu ' o 11 8 l It MOC>us 1 1 6
1 1 11 Tllomu 10 ' n 1 • Alklt1• 0 0 O 0 1 Ralleff I « ' o 1 Armstror>Q o o o l I Knlq/lt I 0 1
0 , Allred • I IJ
1 J 1 Total• 1J IS tt »n ..
Halltl,,,.; HM-o.-. e..e of r99111ttloft
H•t •. Tot .. foul•: H•r-n , S-1•~• 2t
Fouled OUt Fe.....ce 11W11«1. "*'' C~I TllOfnes IHMtlorl, t.AV•ll .. ISHdi.Nclll, Gatll
IStdd1eo.01 ree1v11u11: 11.,.,..tt (~kl
Ohio Selects Coach
ATHENS, Ohio <AP>
-Brian Burke, or·
MAGNAVOX
· ten sive coord1nator at
th e University of
Virtinia. was named
Oblo University's bead
foolball coach today.
Kappes, who led Ohio
to a 3-8 record lh1a fall
also was one of the nnai
four canrudat.es for lhe job.
COLOR PORT ABLE
The Perfect Christmas
Burke. 42, a 1958
graduate of Kent State
University and a former
Ohio ~ school coach,
s ucceeds Bob Kappes,
who served on an In·
lerim basis this fall
after Coach Bill Hess
died of cancer lo June.
Basketball
OlltU' eutcaTNU.
C-uT--..e s.MlllMI•
~M.~Jt M•rlN ~l<lo-4ltu,..., 14, 0 111..
1 .. 011em u. N111ter 20, H•~··· 1,
$( ........... 8trry 1.
kwe..,~
Mtrl11a 1l t1 I• I._..
Cv11reu 11 1) It tO-st
MAJOR COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
ATHLETES IN ACTION vs.
ALABAMA
LONG BEACH ARENA
D!C!MB!R21
l :OOP.M.
• TICKETS • le, $5, $4, $3 AVAILAllLE
•ANAHEIM CONVENT10N CENTER
•AJA TICKET OFFICE· a..WINI
•TICKITRON
GIFTlfm=ifJmlft
OTHll GRIA T GIFT IDIASI
• Tr•tlll• ..... • Clelfl ..... • ,.._.,, C4lel' TV • ~ ._,. •
ltwM• • , .. ., anlc "" hi ·
,...
Waves Sink Foe
Stan/ ord, Maryland Log Victories
From AP Dt1p1&ebet
MAUB\J -Ricardo Brown scored 18 Points
and was credited with seven aHlsls Wednesday
nlsht to lead Pepperdine to • 62·51 non·conterence
basketball victory over visiting Illinois Wesleyan.
Tony Fuller added 12 points for the Waves.
who raised their record to M . The loslna Titan•
dropped to 5-3.
Pepperdlne, which made just nine of Its 29
fleld 1oaJ attempts lo the first ball. conDected on
17 of 30 noor shots after the lntermlsslon. Illinois
Wesleyan was 11 of ~ lD the open.ins 20 minutes
and 11 of 28 In the second hall.
St..tord •· Seco• Ball N
ST AN'FORD -Seton Hall fell from the ranks
or the undefeated Wednesday night as the Stanford
Cardl.nala, led by Kimberly Beltoa, came from
behind ln the second half to post an 86-80 victory.
Down by seven at the half 41·34, the Cardinals
came to life as Belton, Brian Welch and Jeff Ryan
topped thescorfng parade. Belton bad 19. with Welch
and Bryan 18 apiece.
"'-1Jlaacl J24, No. Caro. Sc. J Je
COLLEGE PARK, Md. -Sophomore Enue
Graham scored a school record 44 points and led
Maryland to a 124·110 Atlantic Coast Conference
upset victory over fourth-ranked North Carolina
State Wednesday nJgbt.
Graham scored 14 points in the first hall.
which ended with the Terps ahead 47-42 after State
rallied from a 32.17 deficit. Graham bil seven of
bis first nine shots at the start ol lhe second ball to
give Maryland a 68-52 lead.
State. now 7-2. tried to rally several limes
behind Hawkeye 'Wtiltoey, who scored 37 ~ts.
but Maryland sophomore guard Greg Manning
took over the scoring load ln the stretch.
M annlng scored 18 or bis 2S points ln the final
nine minutes as the Terps won their fourth In a
row and are now 6·2.
Marquette 16 .. W. Mfrld9•11 88
KALAMAZOO, Mich. -Odell Ball and
Bernard Toone sparked a second·h&lf surge
Wednesday night that propelled 13th-ranked Mar·
quettetoa76-60vtctoryover Western Michigan.
Marquette. whLch llfted its record to 6-0, had
trailed by as many as nine Points. 26-17, in the first
half.
Ball and Toone each scored six points in that
stretch. Ball wound up with 16 points and Toone 14.
* College ··" o. ..... , 1t.11e91•0 ~ Mof>t-•1,0YU·Hew•ll1,l
E . Wulll111t1111 •. $1 ~ry'l, MINI ..,
HU,.,boldl" 11, ( OrAOOfl '' H•• Maitl<O .. , UC O.vts 7•
Pfllperdl ... U , 111 W••leYM \I ""oat Soulld•.C..Milt Cl.Al 7t i.eo1•110t9'. USIU 1' St. MM'llll'•tt. L-lf'lfi.ld re
$tt11fonl 16. $0100\ Hell to
Weller $1 tO. ~•lll<t tO w, Wa.hlflQIOI> 10. 5-<rameneo St ..
wv..,.1111 io1 • ....,._ S4 •l
UST
C.lllllwP. Pitt U .... °' ...... ~. ,,,._ .,
HO.lhft'llem M. 0...tmouth fr. OT PeMM,WalltFor~I ..
P.,,,,io.Me Ii, Ill. C.OllfWI A~ T •> Tempft ri. -.tl<lfl .. IOUTM Al•.·81,,........ re, IOW•k"
Flo.149 UM'7, Jtc:lt.Oft St ...
Oeortla $011111 .. ,. 11, UNC•
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M .. Ylend 114. N C-IN ~. 110
MIOWf:IT M~te r•. w ¥KMoan tO
Ml-Mite ... " P'lorldt S4
WICllll.a 54. 1 It, Ill. o.11~ S4 11
SOVTMWCIT Bav~e1. rea.as'Wnl<tv<lflll
Houttoft ... Pt11"-1'ktft 1t
TOYRNAMUfTI
w.tf~tc:tlClatak G--oet-. 0 (.ft, f'r-!>I •1
He'lada A-11&, E. ICt nluHY '4
W.,14·T1-Me41N¥ CUttk l>tlaw.,.14 so..1" Ca<ollfWI 11
Vlreffll• Tecllez. SI. L.ovn 11
JunforCollege
LAM..._,,"· 5'lddletNKll .. !OTI C ypr-eu SI, Nit S... ..,_lo) I
GOklmbla .. 0.....-t4 s... 0 .. MeM ... Soulhwtllf'f'" 1S . ._....,_ ...
l o• A"'9ttft CC.,, I.A M•u lon «« lllYffs.i* IU,Mlr~-
High School
T,.,Tw .... ,,,
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C.On>M dM Mar 1-. Trey 61
...... Pl«.
Foothill 66. El Do<-1'
CMMl4itiMO......i.s11111
MIU tOn VHljo6S. BVPN Pao u
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G•brlllOIS, 1.,-Se,.,.. SO
OOft LU90SI, lntM.,
Worl,.,... 6-i. Overt• 6t
...... " 11. Onl.atlo .. C-......_OMMtlrllMlt &..Id•'" P-U. Aovlrw' $1 E 1\lflOrt 1.S. 8.auel U
Au1>ldo\11 '3, Sien'• Yl'la 60
OUOrll HllkU. Lo19U'W Hill' S1 ............
eo1 .. Gf....,. 1•. Lo\ Atem ll0$ •S
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DAILY PILOT ·~
Gullikson,
Ashe Fall
In Tourney
SYDNEY. AustraJap
<AP> -Alan StOt'le <'/ AustratJa upset Arth"f
As he of the Unite[ States, 6·2. 3-6, 6-3 toda
and moved into th
men's quarterfinals of
tbe New South Waleil
Open tennis tournameo\.
The victory by tt\~
33-year-~d $Lone waan~t
the day's only upse\.
Earlier, Kim Warwlcpc
or Aus tralia beat
American Tim
GulUksoo, 6-4, 6-4 and
South African 8ernl~
Mitton eliminated Kett
Rosewall of Auatr)U ...
6·3, 5-7, 6-2.
The 'leadlne wome"
also had their problemt-
T op seeds W end)'
Turnbull and Dianne
Fromholti of Australlla
s truggled into th~
quarterfinals. I
· Turnbull downed Weit
Germany's Katja Eb·
binghaus. 7-2, 6·1, 714
and Fromholt.z rallied &o
beat Daniella Ponio of
Italy, 4-6. 6-1, 6·3.
Only two of the tc:;>
eight seeded men r
Argentina's GuilleralO
VIias and Australic
Davis Cup star Job)t
Alexander -remaba t,'l
the tournament
Alexander reached t1'e
quarterfinals with a ~.
1·6 victory over Pet~r
Feigl of Austria .
Sherwood Stewart beat ·
Victor Amaya, 6-7, 7-6.
6-4 and Tim Wilkinson
defeated Hank Pfister.
6-2, 7-6, 6-3.
Lesley Hunt eliminat· ed Hana Stracbonova or
Czechoslovalda. 6-3. 6-0.
Nevada-Reno I 16, E. "~"'"~"" 84
e""°ll ~" u.
11~ 41 •e"""""e""'e~P ..... •.BE"""""~u~ ..... e .. E""'a""'•·•
Pro Scores RENO -Nevada-Reno broke open • close
coolest Wednesday by bombing the Eastern Ken·
tucky Colonels, Jl.6-84 in the nightcap Of the thlrd MatieMI Medey~ annual Wolf Pack Classic. NY 11-.n•. lklfl•to> Detroit>, Vancouwr? Jobnny High paced the winners with 24 points T"'°"'°._~.,
i ~· a RADIO PAGER
E RENTAL
E Low Co1t Sou9iem p Cetlfomle Coftt ...
nnd was followed by Edgar Jones• 22. The Wolf CM~~'A""
Pack shot 54 percent in the second hall, compared ,,..,,_121.&o11oftt0s
with 40 percent for the visitors, led by James HY "'"""'Ut,At'-• m
Tlllman's29polnts. ~:;::;::-~-::: a
Earlier, lo the operung round of the clusic1 :,:;::~:~;::,::.":,. E
• New Moeorota ~
CeltofO...
P.ERCOM Fresno State tried a freeze against 14tb-rankea ~ 1n . ..._~"' -c..--... G-eorgetown but Craig Shelton pumped ln 20 points ~ S...11 .......... IPNa ., E MO w. ,. St. CM -_as=.:tb::e~unbe==at.en=:_H:::oy~as=d:ef:,::e:a:ted:_: lbelbe::..::B:ulldoc=:!:'~4M2::::::,· _ _:s.....::":.::-W:1MWS::.....,:s~.CM1c:~..__:.._=1:.1 _ _!=:::=:=:::::131=.02Q2:====
Whether the home mecharuc m your hfe IS you. or someont1 t:Jlsc,
this week.e'nd's your chance to pick up the ideal gift.
An automollve rep:rir manual from the world's largest pubhsher of
automotive information.
For Arnerkx:m oor owners. there's ''Chilton's Auto
Repair Manual l f!l9." Everything the experienced
do-it-youraelfer needs to know to perform even the m06t
difficult repairs on all }'.X)PUlar American cor models.
1972-79. With over 2.700 cnsp, clear illustrations. charts
and diagrams.
For people who own
imports, there's "Chilton's
Import Automotive Repair
Manual." The b:x>k includes
repair and tune-up
procedures, spedficatJons and
maintenance tips for 17 makes
of unported cars. Audi. D::rtsun. Toyota.
Porsche, VW, and mor.e.
So pick up one tomorrow. U it's for
«>rneone else, you'll have it In time for
Christmas. U it's for yoursell, you11 have it
when you want 1t most. Right away.
CHlllON BOOK COMPANY
Radnor. PA 19089
A.mlable at theM Orange County locatlaaa:
B. Dalton Pickwick Uttle Profoosor
Santa Ana Boobtore Thft Book Sholl
Thn fty Drug Storoo
PepBoyu
Marrlners Crooly'o Bookntore Chtaltoch
The Mogle Speller The Book Case Dorman'a nre & Auto Storoo
Zody's Dtsoount Department StortlS Gemoo Membership Department Stor&S
.... •
. , . . . . .. ; . ,, .. -• •• ., ,.: " ·.• . , .. ... , , .. ~.-........ · ... ~,.,... -...... . . . . . . ' ... .. ,f' .-• "., • ..
..
IN DAil. V PfLO T
By DICK aOBJNSON o.ltw~-~ ....
CADO SAN LUCA • Mu One t.brouah th
door of th DC 9 J t, the 1mpac\ or leavm(I th Unit~ St1t bejlJUj
Spanah la spoken on this A~roMt11co plane
Paaaenttrs art for I.he moat part Mexican chlldr~n
and their pal'('n\I and they and the cabin pttSOnn~I <'h~ller and l•uth In tho Uquld mu IC that la lh
·panlsb lanauaa
AC'&OSS TU ' I l, b a )'OW\t Lad namfl'J
t\l•Jandro Suaru •Ith many m•ddl• nam , who
hud tht M>llmn. t"riOUll ml m ~4"1tlun l'hlldr.-n
b1t\e "Ith alr&nJ n 'lnUI t..h tmllt
Alt>}ondro and hi.I molbtt • n-rtturnlna to
Guadal..aan from t..oa Anctl Tit. O\ rhud ratll
lo\ 811 hlll\Ct •ilh lhtl ftUtt4 n( lhetr \ tl lo (.~aJ1fornla
Tht-rt.' ••t're o~t baaa and uc~• WI d wllh
('h11 tmu pn>srolJ Ind &oocb
Alt~jandro &1M> had a P•lr of hlnotulan with
Nolen fflu.ile, 0 0 Phone 6U UHi
'f\\esa \7erde ~quof~
SALE! SALE! SALE!
SAVE $2.61 !
KAMCHATKA
VODKA
R99.
S9.49
I 75 lltn
JIOfl'lbo Sin
SAVE $3.07!
J&B
SCOTCH 1.75 lltn S 1688 1-,. Slt.95
SAVE$2.40! s599 LORD CAI.VERT Qt ..
CANADIAN •99· se.lt
PRICE CUT 11°/o!
BALLANTINE'S $688
SCOTM.J 750 Ml
U1 le«). $7.79
GIFT DECANTER
RHE WIMES rttlCED SS It UHDElt
We ~ ., ••••• ••p•el•ll• c.u1 • ..-. tot•••· lt'r •rll•er c••c ••.-e el Clw .....W'• N.c tel••• e•• •e p•ff•••d ,..,.
SS• .... '*' •r k>H. lt'e ••e e • real .. ,,..., ~--•f 1•••e •••••• ••e• ......... ..,.,. • ~ tllr•rrfpt .. • ...... 8• ~ -... .,....,, .. , ........ ••r ..,, ......... ...r _. .,,._. 1r•• e•• lhuL T•e ~ ..
mf11 •• I~ lwre • • • ••Ill tr••'re ...C •
..--te111Pr, tr••'~ a frf••UL
OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY 'Ill 10 PM
FREE GIFT WRAP! • FAST SBYICll
Sale Prices Limited To Stock on Hand
------PrK:es OOOd Thru Sun 12/'l4/78 -----
549-4044
... BAKER AT HARBOR_~
whteh he ttd down al lh pu1ln1 landacape
and then patl4!d tb 11u1 to \hole around hlm.
INTEaaOGATING THE AMEalCANS
ntarby. ht!I 800r'I lurned lhe m n were fishermen.
peec1utor • oo their w11y lo Cabo San Luclll to
hunt the martin. dorado and wahoo
The Am rtcan ti~ermen were dressed ln deck
1h.oea. T lhhu aod abort and lont nahlq paoU ln harp contrut to lhe conveoUonally dresaed Mex·
•cana
Once In l.a Pu. Ute capitol ol Bltja Sur. Cape
ftver be&lna to 1et ln. Ttre air la clear. aoft aod
•*•t-l, u 111 f"h rmen 1olnt on lo lhe Cape 150
mll ewth, cllftlbed aboard 1 well aeuooed seo
model MtO Commander, vlnl&I• ~.
MIGVt:L MONSON. THE SOLE PILOT, was
drt-and aJmllar to the fljhennen.
MOCUIOO la a v4Mr10 of the MexJun Air force.
but h bu bePo n.Ylna for thla aJrUoe for flve years
t'&rrytnc ponarraen to the Cape. aod to places llke
Ran<'ho B~a VIJta. Laa Cruces and Muleae.
wh rt the fllb are thick
Ile W1>r'U ror Servlcos Aerot, S.A .• the ''T·
1h1rt" AJrllne that also operates aom4' well·a1ed
DC 3 Thla la th worllbone a.lrline, and lbe
1rln11os the o&d Cape handa, and tht pUOU of lhia line
know eacholh rby rtratn1rne.
t'AOM TAKEOFF' AND DURING the climb to
,,600 f(.'d, the nat lands.,reen wllh 1rowin1 pro-
duct•, rt.e lo meet the arl • roo1h land that makes
up tho nanks ol lhe ruued mouota.ln.s lhal are the
•vine ot.Uua peohwuJa.
Threc hundred reet below are the jagged.
istrpentlne rocks pocked and pierced wltb boles
from tho mllUons of years of the sea's assault.
Thla atructure embraces I.he rue harbor at land's
end at the Up ol lhe 8-.Ja peninsula.
And there ls Cabo San Lucas, lbe re~ote cem
of a town aet like a plece or l"Olllh cut Jade oo the
golden sands or lhia sapphlre bay where the rolling
Paclflc and the Sea or Cortez meet.
Frothy wakes of outboard engines driving the ··pongas" from yachts to shore crfss·cross the bay.
Moored ln the harbor are scores of sleek yachts.
many from California. rigged with the important
gear to carry on a fight with a big game lisb.
AND OUT BEYOND the rocks is the open ~
where the big flsh swim we hope to meet.
And there is Charro. J im Murray's fi shing
machine. nestled there among the other yachts
ready lo carry ua there.
Turning, Miguel n ew over the town that ts now
a sprawl of 5.000 people. The Finisterre Hotel
frowns down from lls perch high 00 the ridge or
the Cape. And there is the Hacienda Hotel on the
beach with red tile roof and white washed walls.
And there is Mar de Cortez, oo the main road. and
Tagged Marlin Caught
A striped marlin tagged by Richard BarTett.
NewPort Beach. on Oct. 12, 1977, some three miles
southwest of the Osborne Bank below Santa
Barbara Island. was caught this year by Peter
Groesbeck l.S miles orr La Jolla oo Oct. s.
"This is the first recovery or a tagged striped
marlin in Southern California waters in the IS.year
history of the tagging program." said James
Squire of the National Marine Fisheries.
Over the years. said Squire, several thousand
marlin have been tagged about the tip of Baja
California. Up until Barrett's ma rlin w1s re ·
cover~. all the tags have been recovered off the
tip of Baja, or ln distant waters either towards the
Hawaiian Islands. or in the South Pacific near the
Marquesas Islands .
Said Barrett, "I have tagged hundreds of fish
over Jhe p$8t years. but this ls the flrst recovery or
one or my fish, let alone being the first striped
marlin recovery in Southern California waters.
However. three other fish tagged·by friend.a and
family in Mexican waters have been recovered."
Surfing Meet Set for HB
The Natiopal
Scholastic Surfing Assn.
champi008hlps will' be
hel d i n Huntington
Beach ~.~JO.
Competition will be
the Loe Arcot compl~x of mobile bornes .
' WHAT WE8£ ONCE Dl8T roads with an oc·
caalona.l car and trut-k are now paved roada and a
-teady stream of tralfic.
The blabw1y Mtiuel follows east lo Chtueno and
ls now payed. but cowa and horses and 1oau 1UU
araze bylt.ulde.
Now there ii Charro ahnd. The ponga carries
us past famlllar boaU ruid faces from home.
0
TWO PONGAS AND THEN C8EWS were
OUTDOORS I HORSE RACING
PARADE OF LIGHTS f •
or RW. Wltla U.t
Or ...... W.tctt,,._-n..
Int VlitwpaW 0. n...,
Dec . 16 thru the 23rd
,..,. t.fo & ll4tterf ...... Ctl ... .,.,. a.y.a.w y ... a.
631-1900
enaacod ln a canoe tilt same whttre \he boau dart , ...
et each other and water ia splashed by natun1 the / '
oara. 1 '-•, In this far orr place. men without their wotben I 1 make their own run . ___ , •
rt la sunaet. a brilliant one. The clouds ate r---- - -<-OUPON • --..,
artre to the west. And ln the east. a full mooo Is I I
rt.lint ln chartreuse and plnk etory. ~ I MOVING SALE I
There wUI be an early start !or the flahln& I MmlYS. 200/o Off I banks tomorrow. I I
I H"5-300/oot1J t The Cabo San Lucas story will continue next 1 CL~· 40o/0 o.. I
week. 1 1 . ' t 6Jt..ot72 OPef~SAT I
t 7llW, t71e1St.c..t....... t.._lcOO I ~ - - - - - - - -COlJVON - - - - - - ---.I
Alamitos Entries
,., ... , •• ~_... ..... ri..
111m-1:1.,.,,.,
SIVENlN aAelf -UC) Y•rth l ----------------------
111a1T aM:lf -MO tatd\, 3 vttr
olct\ & vo Putw U 100. Ctalmlr>q
e>rfOU,000
SoloM•ll'\ Wotld 18•11-\I. Pau•1110. .. ,, .. ,,, ... ,, ltl•POllO
18<-•I. ,.._.,., Limit IF<HIOl'll;
'·-. I My IHI: , ....... 8uc UI llC11IOMI. Dullt'\Nl-IAOUQfll ' l.o
Prla"' IWtlMN'I. Clltrlje Gt•y
IHtrll, Ca1>l u<ed f"tlC!le\
ICt fllOt•I
SlfCONO ·~ -tOOyaro., t fftr
Olll .... ~ Pll<w u. fOO. ''"''"'"9 1>'10 U.GOG.
Oewt1 8"'9 a.n ILwlllel; Supt,
Slf\l<l.,... IW-1. ~Sio 18-•I.
Mayo Ma1<11 1c.rc1ora1, Hldcff11
Bou IT<Htu<el, .l'llOIM• l imu
ILewhl; G+cro Aloy 1Her11, ,,.,.
SI• ILll>f\aml. CIOud Mal> IMalrl;
Blue LHf fMylftl.
l Ml•O •ACE -J~ yard\ ) ... ,
old lllllet, Pur\e U.400. Cleo,..ltl(j
1>rlc f \S,000
<~••Cl•" w • ., IP•• .. ••>: Buo Menow lfrenur@I, fhl' Pe•r•
IW•rOI. Tlpecllo IMy ... \I, (Hite Out
1 Lipham>. Mt\\ l(.Allt Moo••
IC•rctor•I. 9,_, Here llCn•Of'tl C~rl \IY love 18tooktl: Collv
I Adtlrl; Tumblin Tu,..bl•wel'O
IH•fll
,OUant llACI!-l50var6'.h•••
Ol<h & uP Pvrw "·lOCI. C14tmonq e>rl<t M.000
M•r-um A W1fWltf '"'"""'''·Mt 8o Cll•r9<! ICl<!rl\W'I NH CtnQl.l•ln
IW•<dl, Smooth Me IH•.,···· Abovtpar IWOOI Alaloe> IAdolrl
FIFTH •ACE -))0 V•<Ch l ~•t
OIO\. C•lll ""'°· Purw U ,400. Cl•tm·
tnqP.,oU.000
HOW\'\ M•"""" Man IMY!nl, C.OI l rOYble I W.,dl , Sllell.tr Be ..
I IC nl9ht1: JatLOlY Jon I H•rt I, l Inv
Jer• IBroohl li.h Spill IPemul
Hot \tory ILu<~··· E•~· ltmlt\
IAd<tlrl, P .. i.1"9 .1'"9111 ISumo!tr>,
BoC.onllrkler ICMdot•I.
·Slit TM llM:f -))0 Y"'d' l v•or
old\ & ue> Pu•W' S.,000. Cf•lm1n9
Pr1<e \ IS,000
Or Twl ......... ICMOOttl, Bo N_,
I TrUW<'f), 041 N~.i 8•r IAO•lrl,
Ovoll<•I• R-t IS.nl\\I ll1t1taQ<•
V••r IW<t<dl , ... Fly\ <C••-rl
Udt•• IClnc:ltMan IA""9fll
I
Deep Sea
Report
OXHA•O -U ""'Jlef'\ , .. rock
Cod,'<-<00, 3 llnq <OCI
VEHTU•A -IS-'""' n1 rock
COCI, I C-tOd, lllnQCOCI
SAN M<*ICA -17 ""O ... H 110
bonito. II 11'\;)(ker•I, • Wiid IM\\, 1 uucot>an
'""'" ....... ,. -•\•"II'•" S6S roe lo. ""'· 110 ,..., v.-r, 10 11n9 <00, I bonllo, I Ull<O IHI>\
MAatNA DEL al!Y -13 anQlrr\
lH roc k <OO. 1 <Ow <Od, 11\ MOKkerl'I
AVILA aAY -I...., Safi Luotl -u tnql.n S. roe tr coo
•l!OOHOO -JI •nQI•" .)q\ roo lflll, I (OW <Od
s•AL •lfACM-.. ""9fer• ""''O("
<Od, t bltO.\HO.H
vur 010\ Purw n .100 ,,.,,.,,,..
PflcUA.000,
"'•'"It~ I~(""'""'' lo,,,. Limit ICotrl-1. ~ O...t o.t1q111
ICre ... rJ, "'-flny IHtll'ttl. W•i.
'"" Wtttr~ 1Fro1, Wer Ftn<., 1Her11, 8rlQM P .. s IW..01, Wltl-
Wlll IFre\IOlll, '""' Stv-.tll O•tV
(Tre,nurtl, He\~ IAOtlrl,
l!IONTM •aca:-S50vard\ lY••• 010\ ~ llO .l'ltowancll Pu< .. '7 .500 "'"'c" l'orct 1Carc1o1a1. Tr.. Tulw ICtd ISumptert, '''""d lluler IMltcflelll, O..rotr>q lllrd ILll>tltml,
l(ltloout Jr 1~,.,,.,,, Mr !.4.co BOC>
IR""Clhl, A-al Aocket IWal\Orll,
Jtll'\ J•I I Hartl
"IHTN •ACE -3}0 ,,.,d, l vur Olclt , .... ,_ Purw Sl.-00. , .......
lllQ e>rlo U .000.
S<oot on s.itor 18-\1 All'' 11.-.1.
l'I IMylHI, BP Then Earty IAOA;rl,
01 .. PtO\I fCl.,.•,W'I. lnu W1nn1n
PotltY ITr,.ewrel, Swl\l RoO•n•
I l iPll•"' I, C•Pttln SoUl1 IF '"VI S.)•• Come Ho .... IHerll lOl\t
T•let1I ICerOOltl , Lt,.Ot Ch•rm
I Pt•tlt• I
Alamitos
Results
O...•••-... b ,_~,
~h't r•«f'-Hu\tl•" 9«•<"'
IC trCIOt• 1 • JO, 1 IO, 1 70. VIO lnQ~
C,el tAd•trl M 00, S JO, Ott Chott""
6•• 16•rdl J 10 U E •t<I• IS II
S..IO
$uo11d <•<•-Co<1>oral• J t'I
ICr .. Q<tr I )$ 60. 10 10. '1 10 C.rt,..l>v
rwo IPemt'fl 4 00, 3.10, ~· Ct•
1Htr111IO
Tl'tttd r•c•-Suo•r Surcf\•rOP
IP,.rnerl 580, 360. 1.40, C-~•ate
J .. I IMll<""'" • 10. J 00 o..ottq.,10
1Ctroo1• 1 J •o o c ••<ta II II
'~~ Fourth r•ce Flay LI""'~""'
I PHfttt I It 20. • 00, • 60 Vt.n I nd1<1n
IH•Vf'\I 1100, IO 40, RO<k'I' V....oy
IHt<ll 3 10
~11th r •ce -M•"" Pr O~<t'H
~1p11•m1 ~oo. 1000. 11 oo. s.,.,
M•\t ... IClflrlHel 1.40, S 00; 81•ilH
8fues IROUQlll tOO \.S Ea.ct• llHI
tlSt 00
S••th r•o--Fl<lel AIH1 ''""'"'"' 1J 00, S ?0. 4.60, 0... S..retf' I~,.,,_, I
3 00, J 00 Tri Ottlcf'r (Mll<Nlll IAO
Soeftlh tac:...-P-Le\I C"«'Cf'
IHtrtl 10 00, I .0, 4 00, Nu J>I"'"°""
I P.,ner I • 40, 1 10. Mori•• LO<•
r Broo• lleoOI l .cl U E •A<lt II II
S2'l 00
Etq111" rac:-w" 5omptn *<••t
ILl~ml S 40. UO, 1 tO ~tit ChOu
IAd•l•I 4 40, :LIO, 1(1p,w1 ICardo1•t
• 00.
Nlntll •H• -Wl'ndv~ Ouu
181-\1 13 60. 1160. S IO Oro Priel•
IH•rtl 140, •lO Tiny S•o l.l'Oelrl
3 00 IS E •e<lt 11 ll"" ~ "" -~ .. ,
OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGeMENT
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
Pre-Christmas & New Year 's
Luncheon Party -Buffet
FRIDAY DECEMBER 22
FRIDAY DECEMBER 29
11:30 AM -2:30 PM
MENU : Teriyaki Chicken, Sweet
& Sour Pork, Banana Squash,
Fried Rice, Potato Salad, Jello
HORS D'OEUVRE$ AND
ENTERTAINMENT 4 to 6
Alisio's Wishes You A Happy Holiday
Reserve Now For
NEW YEAR'S EVE
$42.50 Per Couple
1670 NEWPORT BLVD.
COSTA MESA 642-8293
Heed
f ronspo'rtofion !
(,IC f S.
For CllS.Sified All ACTION caa
A Doily Piiot Ad·•h~
'42-5678
OCEANSIOE -74 t\llQl"s 11
bonito, ,. ,..,.., tMn, 1 htllt>ut. 50
---=~~=;;i;;;iiiiir:;;;:;;;~ mtOt,..I. ltS roo coo. ?Sc-c Od r LOHO alA04 IOwffto't -..n1 -
provided by college and
h igh school athletes
fro m Hawaii, North
Carolina, South
Ca rolin a, Florida.
Rhode I s l a nd a nd
California. IF I Fila, creativity in sport.
PUBUC NOTICE
f'IC1'1TIOUI aUllNIU
NIIMI I TAT8M8Nf
,.,. 101-111 Pt•Mlll •• <1111no bu•I ,.. ... ,
Mlelt IM&.I, ltl .. ~•lnwftt Ctr ,
'-••l•V.....,,Ut•ll•
l•wft h ... Nit II Ill~ l'tl,,..110
Cir ,f Mlfllfl"V•llrt,tA'2fOI l~I' llv\lnK\ I• <llllOIKloa II• ..-lfl •Mdutf
t •-•H ~ttll II ""' ......... "' ••• "''° .... ~ '" I 011111 • ( l .. k Ill tlr •"ii" ( 1.llHllY Oii Nov U hll
8tnQltr\• 170 roo coo
DANA -""' -Jt ""O ... " ~4 t>ao, I bonito, Sro<kfl\l>, ISroocoo
Nl!W~•T IOeYey't Ulcllffl -II •Nl••n ns rO(.k ( 00
MALtau -41 -l<tt'I 1'lO rcxk coo. 1 <ow <Od. 4 1111<1 <oO, 100 roe• ,.,,.
Leaders
For NBA
NI W YOlllC IAltl T11ro N•lltJNI ....... ,.,." ... oc .... o .. •(OfltlQ, ,.
110v11Cllflll-•M"4.._,
c:.trv111 s A H".~D
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)4 Jf) 10 .. ft I
3t ,_.. Ill IU H 4
J1 JOI 1t4 IOt U J
10 JOI Ito IU U I
)t IU U• i.. t• I
t\JOW
n~E'LARQST SELKTI()"
Of WI llTE LINE RLA
IN ORANGE COUNTY' I
BAYSIDE DRIVE• NEWPORT BEACH .......
t'ulll"NO f:Jr~ r u"'' flet1y PllOI Ne v lO. o.. I .. II .. ,.
M lllf'lllM>ll. Mt
We•tfl/lel .....
llnbf 11>04' N 0
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.l'IKIUl l-L.I'
IC•-·'·
JO hJ JI\ ,,. 1•.
J) J}I '" ,., ,. ' H 1'16 Ut .. , 1> I
Merry Christmas
BAYSIDE CENTER, Bayside Drive at Jamboree Road
(at the entrance to Balboa Island)
''!!.~
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'lttlftOU• au•tNIU
NA#I UATIMINT '~· to••ow•no IMI' ""'' ••• oe111e
llU\IMtt ••· lttfJ f'llHONAl TOUC H
(I.C ANING 'LllVICI\, U•t ... _ ... ,"' ..... (..etll-• tJ114
111 Atlr.00-UI Alltl• 8-flo,
.. I llh•OCllCI00 lrvt11t, C.111-a 07114
fllf\ -·I\ ttfldue-UY ... Ill
CllVlflllal
Alkla lk>NtlO
Tiii• •l•t-wet lltecl wllll 1i..
C-h Cle<' ot Or•-C-ty on
OecemO<tr It, tt11 .. ,....,
Pubfl....., OrtftQt '°"'' Otlly l"flo4 Oe<•m~r JI •• ttTI -J""UA'Y •. ti,""
PUBLIC NOTICE
. ..........
MtloM, HOU\
llOblll\All N 0
Al>Ollt ll)t)r tell
C.ttrnore, CN
Slklll•. S.•
.. Of ... ,°"''
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HI It '~ Ut IJ 0
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JO m 10•
JI lSJ 10 I
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1• IN Ii
Trout Planl8
Lot AHOeL•' -(.ttt .. < t.••t ,
Hafltafl a...-. LAOt La•••· P.o
RI*! ~··~ '-"'M, l'llll04"9'-LA•t>. $an O•llrltl Ill .. , !Wet.I, £t1t .,,.,
Nort" 'orhl, UPPff Plru Ct .. •
(l'teft<llM&'l't "-'' SAM al•HA•OtMO -lvtl• ,, .. _
IMlfldlt -...,,,. '0t•U
?b fo\h1on lslol"d
Ncwpot1 Bench
Phone b40 «21
f'ICTITIOUSaull .. UI OaANel -Lot0uN HI-I .-.,.
NAMIUTATIMIHl' LtO l ... ftl'°"'"'911t<Wfl lt00ff>tllutlt'tn _,!•,!:IY~l~•!!l~IDtl~-==~~l~t ·~.,...,,~~Ol~r:_ ________________________________ _
•• ••Mn•o .. o O•LAHO t. -NI! LL, l fO, Mii Vtt Llelo. ~It• 21» • ....... _.. '"°'· , .. ~ • ., .. ,
.l'N!lltlllfl9 IR,iot ...... C-Y
• C•lllorlM• CO"OOt•llOfl, )411 Vlt Lido.
S<llM *-""""°" e.~11. (•Ill-• fMJ
T .... llY\Mett I\ ~tao Dy a llMll• .. ,.,,,..,,,,,p
··-~1!11 .... •tleflC:.' ~II~"'"'' • A, Anntlrol\O ,..... ,, .. ~ ... Iii.cl Wllll , ...
C-IY (ltO M Ora-(-IY 911 O.t•lll-It,,.,.
WEIGHT WATCHERS
COOKING DEMONSTRATION WITH SUSAN• D~. 20·22
""-~~.S~~ ,.,..,.
""•"'""Or~ Coa•I Ottlf ~1191, Of( ,,,, •• ,.,..,.J.., 4, 11, .. ,. '-------------------------~~~~~--,....,.
• • --. .. . --. .,, .. -........ ·-
........ ,. ...... ~ ..... ·-.............. . • t .................... ~ ,... ---.... .. ..... .-.
STOCKS J BUSl~ES~
Thur dav' NYSE COMPOSITE . TRANSACTIONS
2 p. m . ( E OT) Prices °'*••-. ............ ~ ......... Y ..... .,...~ •• ,..,.,If'. ..... ......_.. Dtlttl• #f ,,~·-" \'°'" ~ .... "'*' ...... .,.. ~-oiu•cl.li..t11«11tllle• Ottlfru/ld l11ttliw1
DAILY PILOT
. . ""' ~ ,. ·-·-···~· • t ... " ..
Thuceday, O.C.mber 21 , t078 D~Y PILOT •s
Slagle Basket
All Firm's Eggs Are TMre
8 7 MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Tampax Inc .• one of lhe last of tbe one.product com·
panle1. 1-4 having some new experieaea these daya.
It'• making let11 money um year Ulan lait year. lt''
advertising on televl1ton. It's balWn& tome 1>eaky com-
petitors.
None ol these Wngs ever happened before to Tampax.
TAM.PU IS A VICl'IM OF lta own aucttt1s. ll did so
well that It attracted competJUon. Now It has &o defend Its
position.
Headquartered ln Lake Succesl, a suburb of New York
City. Tampax was ataJUd In 1938 to manufacture tampons
ror remlnine hygiene. The tampon 11 the only product it
has ever made. ln the beclnnlng lt wasn't easy. V!rtuaU.y
aU WO!Dft\ uaed sanitary napkins. But TamplJC patiently
developed th1J market. converting t.M youncer women.
Each year, the tampon ae1mertt of the feminine hygiene
market expanded.
The company 1rew
along with the market.
Other companies en·
tered the market bul
their efforu were halt·
h eart e d . Tampax
stayed on top for many
Money
Tree
years with 90 percent of the tampon businHs.
That was all right as lone as the tamp0n market re·
m atned small. But as it continued to 1row, crossing $100
million and then $200 mUUon. other companies decided
Tampax had too good a lhing &o keep to itself.
TODAY TAMPONS ARE A $300 mllUon·a-year busi· ne11s a nd they are about to pass sanitary napkins ln total
sales. The alternative fielded by Tampax In 1936ls1oing to
win. But Tampax. which had 75 percent of lhe tampon
market etghl years ago. la capturing only 45 percent of thffe sales.
The strongest challenge has come ftom Playtex. a uni"
of lhe giant congk>merate. F.smark. Pla~x introduced a
new wri.akle. deodorant tampons. pricing them well above
Tampax. Its share of the tampon dollars bu been estimal·
ed as high as 36 percent. It advertises heavily.
Another new entry was O.B .• also priced considerably
w gher than Tampax and also heavily advertised on
television by iLo; m aker. Johnson and Johnson. It has
grabbed 8 percent or the market.
WAl'llNG IN THE WINGS is1he biggest advertiser or
them all. Procter and Gamble, which has a new tampon.
Rely. that it has been testing In various cities.
All of these companies are larger than Tampax. All of
the m are more experienced Ulan Tampax tn marketing to a mast audjence and selling into supermarkets.
On Its side. Tampax has that rarity. a debt·free
balance sheet -and $60 million in t:he bank. It can afford
to Increase its prices and still be competitive.
lt7t IS nrus SHAPING VP as a crucaal year for Tam·
pax. es~iaJly if Procter and Gamble decides to mov~ Re·
ly iDto national distribution. There's no doubt In anyone's
mind lbat lhe tampon market will continue to grow. The
question is:
WW the company that established and nurtured this
market -aDd never made another product -be able to
hold its leadership position?
Air Cal Rejects
Offered Route
The Ci'fil Aeronautics Board hu decided that AJr
CaUlomJo. headquartered in Newport Beach, can fly noo-
slop between Oakland and PortJand. But Air Cal doeso't
want to.
Robert Payton. Air Cal's dJrector of pubUc affairs.
said Wednesday the airline, which was granted the route
Monday. notified Lhe CAB that the route can be awarded to
som ebody else.
TRE SffUATION AROSE AS the result of a scramble
in early November when the CAB awarded 248 routes
declared dormant.
Airline representatives stood lo line for a week to get the
routes. In the scramble. some routes were awarded in error
a nd 31 were reshulned. including the Oakland·Portland
route. which was reassigned this week
Payton explained that, in November. Air Cal was 18tb
or 19th in Une an~didn't expect to get more than u few or
the routes It requested .
.. WE APPUED FOR ANY ROUT£ that we had been
tn various stages of looking at or analyzing,"Payton said.
Air Cal offleials requested 23 routes and. to their sur-
prise. were given 22 of them. he said.
Since they don't have the equipment to Oy all of them,
Payton sajd, Air Cal officials decided the most lucrative
roules would be Reno from Orange County. Ontario,
Sacramento and San Jose, and a new San Diego-Palm Spr·
lngs route.
TUE NONSTOP oaANGE COUNTY-RENO route
went Into servtce Monday. he saJd.
The rest of the routes, including the one awarded Ulis
week, A.irCal won't be flying, Payton said.
Market Posts Gain
Despite Oil Threat
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market moved sll8htly
hl1ber today u It ahru11ed aff news t.bat further lncreases
ln crude oU prices may be announced next year.
The Dow Jones average of 30 lndu.strials was aheld
after J.47 points to 79$.13 alltt lour Mun, with advancu
outnurnbertng declines amonc New York Stock Exchange.
listed tasues.
Rene OrtJz, HC:retary genttal of the OrcanlaaUon of
Petroleum Export.in& Countriee, said OPEC ma~ decide to
raise prices aaaln before June ii lbe dollar continues to
decline and lf "tho lntemaUoaal economy deterioretes
rapidly.''
OPEC's announcemtnt lh1I week of a 14.S ~rcenl
prtce boost ror ttn9 sent the stock market lnt.o a stH p
decline Monday.
Gold Drops 82 to $4
81 fte ANOdakd P,..
Seleeted world pd prtces today:
L•••: momiAI nxl.nl $213.~. down S3.05; afternoon rl~ln1 Cl.3.80, doW'n tt .o« -.-P 11'11: altemoon fixlnl $211.00: down $J,..,,
Fr..a.tllft: clOH S:U3. I, down ... 08.
Z•rtdl: SU2.50. bid down M.00; $2U.25 asked.
New Ylft: Kandy 4c Harman bue price. S2li.&O, down
"·00N.,. v...-: Bncethard ..wna price, a12.eo. down
sc.ooNew York: Enltlhard fabricated \.Old, '218."3, down
$4.10.
... l
J
.,
\
-ONLYPlLOT Business ' ' '
.,..._llCMISA&.lr----..Gas Rise Gradual
IYIM.A51'1Ma PUCI
1 ..
. .
Althouah puce or mind I priC'f'lt "OU dnn·1 hau• 10 buv en
m\'d•C'ln or sPf'f'd an v mon" lo 9'C'h~• It Alt
~011 nf'f'd I 1 • •tnC't'ft' ff4-lr lo altaln H
Dur•. nit tht' ·romln11 Hohd1 \ vu.It ti. Un'b
nr Tt'mpl of 'CMW ~
i nd II tf'n t n ln1p1~
f'tmON v.ftkotl On bf>lp
vou Hnd lhf' ..,., t n
t•l .. rnttl tninqullll~ and
pt'IH'-t•
Our '1n<'t'tt> v.L~ I
1h111 \"aU NH'•
NEW YORK <AP> -OPtt's de-
clalon to rtJM crude oU pric •• 5
pt>f'Cftll will DOt t r al American
au pum.-for at l ut aev ral wwb, ••peru M)'. and the lnlllal lncreua
.. 111 be only about a PftUl>' 1 a.anon.
But the OrwlnluUoa ol Pllrdeum apot'l.IQs Countrl • doc.ti on Su.n
d11 wW lead to t Latal Im lotr.ut"
at at Laut I u pe1' 1aUon. •• ~ ~line And poutbJt llftln1 of
federal ~ on 1uottne and otl
prtcn could rah• a 1auon·1 l"Olt
uolbft' three ttnta by the end ol neat )ear
GULF OIL COaP. said lt t'XPt"Cta
pr1e to ata.rt rtllnc by I ate J a.nuU)'.
but Olbef c:omp&nJet aay tonaumeni .woa't pay more unW late •lnwr
OalOUae pn~ awraie about•
tta\a a 1aJJon ln the Unlted Stat
b\lt \'AfY wtdely in different parts of
lb" n a Uoll.
OPEC made aellt for 112 70 u 42·
1aUon barTd. By October. the priee
wtll 10 to fl4.~ a barrel. with one·
third ol the 14 5 J)el'cent boost duo
Jan. l
OPEC PaODUCES about $7 per·
cent or the oil consumed here, but
aince many otbtt producers rollow Its
lead, lbe increase will affect about fiO
pt>rcent ol U.S. crude cooaumptjoo.
··By late January you'd expect that
aome amount at crude at the higher.
n in 1979
( CON lJMER )
prlc wlU ttarb th• U.S., be pro-«ued and make It down to tbo pump
ltvtl 1l a hither price," 11Jd OWi
ap0ti man Kwt Voeley.
But Carl Mey rdlrk, a apokesmao
for tand1rd OU of lndlaoa -pro-
dunr of Amoco 1uollne -Hid, "rt
wlll take a wbJ1e for the hllbtr·
prlred oU to aet worked Into the 1up.
ply .. We doo'l antJelpate any In·
rru1et \S\UI lho 1prtn1."
AMOCO an.MATES ITS prtces
will rise about 3.6 eenu a f(lllon by
lbc end of U119 becauae or OPEC'• IC•
lion
ft'eder1l re1ulatlona permit the
wbol ale price to rise only u much
u cosll lncrcue. said Meyerdirk.
"We won't make any money off of
\his.·•
Spokesmen for Sb U, Texaco and
Mobil Hid company pollcy bara
speculation on gasoline price
chan1es.
The Department of Energy la con·
slderlng a plan to lift all federal con-
troll oo 1uoU.ne prjces. The depart-
ment agrees with oll companies that ,
current regulations are unworkable
and discourage expansion or the
industry.
SPECTACULAR
WHITE WATB VllW ••• D~Y & HIGHT
• O~LAGUMA!
MSI Data lncoine
Down bi Quarter
AT&T
Gains
By 18o/o
NEW YORK (AP> -
Am1rlran Tclephon &
Tele11raph Co. uya
.. ,ntnp for the quarter rnd d Nov. ao roee by
1boul 11 percent over
thOtt ol • y11r belort.
AT.,T 1111ld WCK!nolday
II Hrntd 11.38 billion, or •• ·•1 • •hare, 11aln1t tl.16 bllUon, or 11.74 a •h .,, In the eomparable
II II I f l t r 0 f l 8 1 7 , ft•V•lllutt fOH to llO.~
hlf llon from u .u t;tl Ion.
J'()A 111~ 12 morith
•ndtd Nov. 30. AT&T
Uld ll urntd tS.24
bOUon , or f7 71 a 1h1re,
llP from '4.41 billion, or
te.18 • 1h1ro, • year •arlltr. A'r~T'1 re·
VtflUH fOf'""' l2 month•
tlJttl d '40 7 bllllon, up
frum t3e OG btlUon.
A'f"T i• lha n1llon'1
matt w1d ly htild com·
p1rny , wllh nearly 3
mllllt>n l hitreholdera IL
a;rt>vlel-. 1w•arly 80 per·
rwnl of t.._ l.t'lt-phonet In
01 United Htat.eit.
• REDWOOD & GLASS HOME
•CUSTOM DESIGN
• 3 BEDROOMS. 2"'1 BATHS
PLUS LARGE FAMIL V ROOM.
MSJ Data Corp. 's earol.ogs ln the third fiscal
quarter eodi.Dg Dec. 23 are expected to be approx-
imately 30 percent lower than in the comparable
period of the prior year, the Costa Mesa·base<A
firm announced.
On the Beam
ATlfl' HAfD Ila r port
f'd e•rnlnf(A for the p111t
four,.-1r11 havf! be~ rtt·
vlae diJWnwud, and lta
rurrent f'1>rnln1Jll re•
duced, "" a rt11uJl of o Callrornla Public
UtilltlCA Comml111lon or·
der affectJng \he com·
pany'a Pacific
Telephone & Telearaph
Co. subsidiary. Comtemporary Oestgn .. An archltectural
mastert>leoe
MUJT II SHH _TO UPllQA11!
For AfttMll: "' Cal 4'4-1546 ChJJ752·ll47 c~
MEMO TO
ATTORNEYS
The Verdict /1 In! USC'1 "Gi/tl with
Lifetime /ncome"il a wanner!
The University or Southern California's
Trust Plans not only can provide your
clients with a lifetime income and
excellent tax advantages but will con-
tribute to the support or priv~e
education at the same time!
A staff of financial experts are standing
by at USC Lo help you in this highly
specialized area.
,. - - - - - --- --- --------=·46·~-.
1 William E. Nies. Counsel for Development 1 , Univenlty of Southern Ca.llfornia IAdm. 1101 1
LosAngelct.CA 90007 • (2131741-2682
Please send FREE brochure.
I A[)Ofl(SS
CltV
Can Your
Orfidals attributed the decline in earnings
primarily to lhe unavailability of semiconductor
memory chips used in both the MSI/77 and MSl/88
baodheJd portable terminals.
Despite the lower·than·anlicipated third
quarter earnings, and on the assumption that
memory suppliers meet delivery commitments.
MSI expects earnings for the fiscal year. ending in
March to approx.imate those of fiscal 1978.
MSI is a manufacturer of port.able data entry
terminals. Its common stock is traded over the counter.
Goklen West Net
Shou:s DeliiIW
Golden West Homes, Santa Ana, has an-
nounced net income for the second quarter was
$951,000, or 43 cents per share, compared to
Sl,543,000, or 70 cents, last year as adjusted for the
February 3-for·2 stock split.
In addition, the company's board or directors
declared the regular quarterly cash dividend or 16
cents per share payable Jan. 24 to stockholders or
record Jan. 10.
Sales for the quarter were $22,047,000, com-
pared to $26,329,000 in fiscal 1978.
Officials said Golden West is continuio~ to ex-
perience the effects of a slowdown in retail busi· ness activity. ·•
Economic Issues
'
To Be Explored
A one-day workshop centering on Orange Coun-
ty economic issues will be presented by Coastline
Community College rrom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Jan. 20 at
the South Coast Plaza Hotel, Costa Mesa.
The workshop, •·orange County Economic
Forecast," is co·sponsored by the Small Business
Administration.
Fee workllbop ls $17.50, lncluding lunch. Pre·
registration was encouraged by Jan. 12 and may be
made by mail or in person to the college, 10231
Slater Ave .• Fountain Vallev 92708.
More informaUon is avaUable Crom the college,
963·0811.ext.216.
T DOLLARS
J~bs Open
For Grads
WASWNGroN CAP> "°' Help Wanted: High
school graduates for
secretarial, clerical and
bookkeeping Jobs.
GENERATE INCOME
for You?
There are opportunities to convert monies normally used to
pay taxes into investments that can generate potential income.
By using a variety of tax shelter programs currently available, it Is
possible to generate an infinite rerum on
investments. But you should act promptly,
because the new tax law shuts off a number
of techniques that are still available for the
remainder of 1978.
For information contact
Parker Dale, Senior Vice President,
:lt (714) 6i4·4620 or at the addres.5
shown below.
lnvt~tn1Cnt Senkna Inc~ 11H6
Mtm\'.cr Nr-w Yorlc Sr1iclc i;ilchanj.,'t' nJ Odl\'.r Pnn<iJ'lll £xch.1n1.~
Li AnJ;eb • S.1" func1)(11• Nev.fl''" Brach• N~w Yltrl • Crc,hJm. Ot
606 S.•uth Olht Street. Ltt Ani:cl". CA 90014 <
-. ., • • # • , ,. ... . .. ...
A government survey
places those jobs at the
top or the list of employ·
ment opportunities ror
high school graduates
without previous ex·
perience.
The people most ln de·
mand amona thoee with
more than a hl1h achoo!
education: accountants,
computer prosrammers,
electrtcal enalneera and
nur1e1.
1 SI 500 Mlnlmu".'
Tax Shelhrecl
lnvnln11t1t1
•1 •1•111 • I •r••O on.w ............ ........... , s. .. , .....
()Illy ... , ...............
...WL._.
644-2107
J I
Henry Segerstrom of C. J . Segerstrom & Sons signs the last beam
put in place Wednesday at the One Town Center Drive omce
building across from South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. Scheduled
for completion in September 1979. it is said to be the largest office
building in the county in terms or space-350.000 square feet. Cost
of the 16-story structure has been put at $25 million.
r
O ver The Counter
MASO UstilM)s
MUTUAL FUNDS
On Dec. ll, the U.S.
Supreme Court decUned
to review the order.
which would r equire
Pacific Telephone to
lower rates.
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' ,_
. . . ..
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..
..
· INSIDE: •Horoscope •Erma Bombeck ..--------•Ann Landers •Comics
nu.diy, 0.0.mber 21. tl71 DAILY '1LOT
Robert Pennington, caterer, with huge fruit platter.
Perfect Parties
Most local caterers ~pare the food, decorate, provide
costumed serving people and even clean up the mess.
By MARCIA FORSBDG
OI ti• Delly ~ MaH
They're a.it still talking about the elaborate
holiday soiree that Mr. and Mrs. N.8 . Trendy
threw last winte r -the spills ol strawberries
flown in from Australia, the sliced pineapple
from Hawaii, the s hrimp rrom Louisiana.
The valet parking and red carpet, the serv-
ing maids in short black dresses with frilly
white aprons, the bartender.
The gleaming silver trays, the ornate anU-
que accesson es, the crystal wine goblets. The
musi~ians, multicolored fioral centerpieces,-de·
corat1ons.
And Mr. and Mrs. Trendy didn't lift a finger
for the ret.e. They simply let the caterers do e.erylhlng.
Arter consulting with the host and hostess
on the decor and menu·planning, the caterers
took over and did it all -rrom setting up the
three-tiered buffet to cleaning up every last
flake of pastry and every butt.fiUed ashtray.
EMPLOYING A caterer seems a conve·
nient and ideal way to give a party these
days, especiall)' for the hostess who is loath to
stir up the clam dip at the last minute. Plus, it's a splashythlngtodo
A lot of people are doing it, judging Crom
the dozens ol area caterers who are ua'1ally
booked months in advance. Catering la bit busi·
ness along the Orange Coast -for parties, grand openings, corporate events, banquets,
weddings. bar mitzvahs and you name it.
A SURVEY OF local catering outfits re·
veals that they us ually do a lot more than fix
the food. Most will help plan a theme and de·
corate, transforming a house or business into a
mghtt-lub, Mexican fiesta, western town, Vic·
torian v'llage or Polynesian paradise, plus
they'll provide appropriately costumed serving
people. They'll even round up entertainment -
musicians. magicians, clowns, handwriting
analysts or caricaturists.
Costs range from $3 to $5 per person on up
to many thousands or dollars. It all depends on
what you want. say the caterers.
EACH HAS his specialty.
Robert Pennington Enterprises in Santa
Ana is known for it's dazzling desserts. The
sweets include cheesecakes with fruit toppings,
strudels. tortes and miniature French pastries.
It's an array to take your breath away.
Ray Bradley, catering manager at Dana
Trader Res taurant in Dana Point, offers
dockside parties for boating enthusiasts and will
deliver party platters to bo-ts for Harbor cruises
I
Gloria Belknap, owner/chef or The San
Francisco Chef in Laguna Beach, is a graduate
of LaVarenne Ecole de Cuisine in Paris and i&
proud that "everything we do is prepared on
site. Nothing is frozen or pre-prepared. We try
to hold as true to the European standard as
possible -everything is made by hand in the
traditional way."
Jean Jemison Party Food and Service in
Newport Beach does a popular deli menu, in·
eluding big boats or Icelandic cod, sliced meats
and s alads.
COSTA MESA'S Catering Unlimited's
specialty is theme parties, say owners Bruno
and Eve Biava. "We s it down with the client
and build the menu to coincide with the theme.
We've turned an insurance company's vacant
second floor into a nightclub, we've taken a whole warehouse area and made it look like a
western town and we did a 'Star wars· party for
another company.
"We're doing a 'Christmas in Tahiti' party
(See PARTIES, Page CZ>
Bruno Biava with-Teresa Umetsu.
Eve Bl,va and Marvin Davis, chef.
• t
.. .
'
'
CJ
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llfllSIHtlOOl lrY ,_.. .....
Holiday Past
A glance back at that first wonder-filled meeting with
jolly old St. Nick.
As we took the Christmas decorations out of
dusty hibernation and began changing the col·
ors or rooms to red and green, trimming the
tree and hanging toy Santas and long-legged
elves from ceiling lights -J was greeted by
memories of holidays past.
Because my own children are home sick
with the nu. I was reminded of the year when
my sister, Dede, and I spent Christmas with the
measles.
I was probably all ol lhree or four, one year
older than my sister, and it was the first year I
remember anything about the holiday.
It was Christmas Eve and we had been
warned earlier that Santa Claus, who took pity
on little girls whose races were splotched to
match their red nightgowns, might be paying us
an in-person visit.
We all sat there waiting and waiting with
our parents, two sets or grandparents and our
great grandparents for something to happen.
I remember wondering how Santa was go.
ing lo get in. We didn't have a fireplace in our
prefab, postwar crackerbox house and the
furnace shaft was too small for even a cat to crawl down.
The tree was a mass of twinkling lights
reflecting in toy-colored globes and the presents
already brought in by other relatives filled half
of the tiny living room. Grandma J ., I think,
took fl ash pictures with her new box camera:
while Dad, who always loved a party, mixed
Tom and Jerrys and got in Mom's way in the
kitchen.
Suddenly there was a knock on the door and
calls of "He's here! He's here!" And for the
first time, I felt the butterflies that would be a
part or every exciting -and frightening -mo-
Morris
Writes
.Jones
By PHIL THOMAS
NEW YORK <AP> -•·tr I don't make it," a
seriously Ill James Jones told friend and fellow
writer Willie Morris, "you are going to have to
help me out." .
Jones didn't make it. He died in 1977.
agonizingly close td" finishing "Whistle.·· the
novel be had thought about ~ worked on ror
more than 30 years and which he had felt would
be the cap&tooe of his artistic career.
"He was struggling againJt death to finish
that book," says Morris in his soft Soutbem ac·
cent. "He only mlsaed b~ about 3"11 chapters." ·
Cloee friends and neighbors, they lived a
few mUes from each other on New York's Loflg
Island. Morri.I says Jones "loved to read from
hla own work, so I became very famlllar wlth
'Wbiatle.'"
V81NG NOTES BE had taken as he sat by
Jones' hospital bed and listened to the no~Uat
"u he sketched ln conaiderable detail me re·
mainlng chapters" as well u tapes Jona had
made. Morrtt fi.nlshed "WhlaUe" ror hia rnend,
who had died at 55 of a heart condition .
.. It WU. penoall •ad professional obUt•· ·uon." 1aya Morris "I didn't try to write the
book the wl)' he would have. t laid out hit lnten·
<8ee MOaaJs. Pqe CZ)
a.e,.,,1 ··-·
ment throughout my life. (A few months later
when' I contracted polio, the butterflies re·
mained for a long while.)
Dede and I ran to the front door -and then
ducked backward when it opened to reveal a
strange-looking creature dressed in a red suit.
He was wearing black hiking boots that
looked suspiciously like lbe ones Grandma Rose
wore to work in the garden. His face was cov·
ered by a plastic Santa mask.
Now I looked very carefully at the visitor
from behind the s~ety of my mother and said,
"Why is he wearing a Halloween mask?"
Grandma J .• as always, had a simple ex· planation:
"He's wearing it because the nights in
Southern Calirornia are so warm. Santa is
perspiring and he doesn't want you to see him
looking messy."
Then the visitor. in a voice sounding very
strange and high-pitched. srud, "Ho; ho, ho!"
and extended his black-gloved hand to me. I
drew back. Maybe he was Santa but l wasn't
convinced.
"Where are your reindeer and sled ?" I
<See R~MO, Pege C!>
..
James Jones, author of Vtfllstte'.
..
•• .,-..•-.•-•.-,,•-..•r •••••••••-••••••
· C2 DAILY PllOT
••• Par.tie
<From P•Je CU
fnr on advertJMnK a1t-ncy. with wind macb1~.
..,t,nd. palm lrt't''I und an eruptlnc volcano All
ltu• girls "'1U be dre.-•ed ln muu muua," HY1
Mrs mun
Th >' r earch eecb \heme ror aulbenucttf
und whffl trav.Ung th y "lalll t.o chef& Ui dl
f\"'1 t•nt hoteb 'n dUftrent parlll ot the world
They 'Ive"' rtttpel," 11ht Midi
Th• Blavu a1IO "do drawln,p ol t.he \&bf
'IO wt know whero t1vcu·y lhJn1 la to be pl1ted
And we try lO 10 lo evuy party. even when
wr'r dolna rour . day, Uke we .... DOW .. They
MORMAM ROCKWELL
PLATES AND FIGURIMES
"AT THE VETS"
Height 6"
WestclffPlam
I 112 lm..A._
548-7921
NOWIN
PROGRESS
Ho AdmiHiOft c--.
Choose from our Large selection of
t>eaut1ful Feathered Doves & Cardinals,
Imported Handmade Ornaments. Door
Swavs. Wreaths. Permanent Canadian
Pine Garlands. Everlasting Chnstmas Ar·
rangements and Center Pieces . . • and
rruchmore!
Large Poinsettias Reduced to 6.50
OPEN EVERY EVEHIHe '11L 9 P.M.
John Thomas 1.td.
_ ....
Marl-Bey
LAMPSHADE
Co.
'l(.eady made •
Custom~
By cfj4ari-Bey
llOITHAT
LAST MINUTE GIFT
IEE OUR LAftGl MUCTIOH
Of' MtNIATUM LAMPI
f1NtALI ANO UNIQUE
~TOfll"1Ma
OUR IPICIAL 'TY ,
• • Cuttom '9CO'Mlnt of fl'fY frllftt • ~,. ,,,,IQut ..... ~ ... ,.,,,.,.
• WI llto CMTY I I• .. Mltttloft
of ''"'Pl end O•entt Couniv'a l"fM
•lfc11011 of rlld'f""tdl lllldtt
Wt J1t11fll YfNI to Wtit
Ol.Jf MW CofN MIN Jhowroom
Cotta Mtte. CA 92e21 lont 8"ctl, CA I0912
1" I . 17th StrMt I 1741 Allenllc Av..
..... _~ .. ~ '14 ..... 7753 2tJ/lfl.eoocl
Mondi~ 1hrt1 S1t11td~y 10:00 M4 10 S:30 ,M
(Of»n '11/ 1 f'M fOl tllf Citrl1,,,,., Ho/J0.;1J
-.. ,
,
add that Dttflmber and June are the bu.ieat
month• for catcrens
"WHAT Wt:'aE DOING ll putting on •
1bow," 1ay1 Biava. "We're maktne u
r•taurant in 10mebody'1 home or bullneH. and
when the cu.rt.ala 1oes up at I o'clock. tl'• up to
us \0 put on~ 1how." Gloria Belknap 11.-... 1aytnt. "We do a
whole pq ant We'" Item Ob preaeouUon -
we U• ln evetythln1. th nowen. the food. You
eat w•th your •Y• lint. and it'• Important that
evUYthlni looU aood. · • Alto mown for IU abowmauh!p la South
Cout Ptau Hotel caterlna. accordinc to Joh11
M anderfeld. dl~tor of caterlftt. "We 1enerally
lr)' to do the apectacuJar here. Uke oftertnc
rl'eftch Mn'tc. <• method ot aervID8 trom a
1Uver tra,y onto each plate>.
"hl ~ banquet room. we do everytblna
from ca"1na Of the entrff. 1uch u bfff Well·
tn,ion. to toalna ot the aalad, t.o uamtna of the cherrla jubU or strawberries Romanoff. And
we offer hot at.eamed t.owela alter the entree and
before the detffrl, aa a r~frelher."
••• Morris
(From Pace co
Uons very (actually and with no tendency to
dramauze No stlf·respecting writer would in·
trude on another writer's sensibility in that re· ea rd
Morns, who now t.ells of hls relationship
with Jones and his family as well as of Jones·
ble In "James Jones: A Frieud.ship," says he
haa no doubt Jones' work will be remembered.
.. , THINK JVST on the bull ol this war fi e·
Uoo -·From Here to Eternity,' 'The Thin Red
Line.' and 'Whiatle' -that posterity la going to
regard these books witb eoormoua respect. 1
don't lh1nk it la too far.fetched to say that many
years rrom now people are golnt to be reading
Jones' fiction or World War II t.o aee what it re·
ally was like for human beings during those
years.
"I have no doubt Jones ls one of the impor·
tant writers or our time."
Morris, an amiable 43·year-old, is a native
or Yazoo City, Miss .. currently living at
Bridgehampton, N.Y., but "I coaslder myself to
be a Southerner."
He says most of his five books have "a
Southern theme. If you are a Southerner and
you deal in the written word then you are Ob·
sessed with the places you came out of -a
sense of place. To me it's no accident that Mis·
sissipp1 has produced some of the great
liter ature of our country. Remember, we bad a
fellow named William Faulkner?
"I've never really left the South," Morris
says with a smile. "I came to New York City In
1963 to work for Harper's magazine. I was there
for about 10 years, about four of them as editor·
tn·Chtef."
W1111 TWO BOOKS t.o his credit, Morris
left the magazine in 1971 for a full·Ume writing
career.
"I give lectures, I wnte books. I do oc·
casional magazine pieces in likely and unlikely
places," Morris s ays, "and I'm making it."
Morris currently ls at work on a novel that's
set in a small town in Mississippi dunng the
Korean War.
"It's called ·Taps'," he says, "and the
thread of it is sort of autobiographical. Another
boy and I used to play trumpet in the high
school band and when they brought back
casualties from Korea we sometimes played
taps at the grave. You might say it's a book
about growing up during the Korean War."
Morris says he used to do his writing in a
house that was located in the middle of a potato
field.
"I lasted about a year," be says, "and then I
got so lonely I decided to move into a house
right m town. Writing ;Jlways ls lonely but at
least now I can see people walking up and down
the street. mailing letters, talking to each
other."
( -noroscope
$ J
··a10AY. DEC. 2Z CAPRICORN (Dec .
22·Jan. 19)· Make od ·
By SYDNEY OMA&R Juatment on home front.
Be dlplomutlc. but
AaJE8 <March 21· adhere to principles.
Aprll Ul): Find where You're due for promo-
you ~IOOC -determine tlon, additional autborl·
where you want to be. l)I -and more money.
Spotllaht on Hleatyle. Taurua, Ubra. Scorpio
domestic eventa , rea· persons figure in your
HOROSCOPE
PVllUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE ldence, marital atatua. fieraonal scenario. Yet. "'"•AMoa«10.1tT h •• lft" 1. ,.. AlfO"eALntlV"°"tlOfl Ytl, it i.t tJme for IOUJ• e Qg "°On wae way, TH• AHHUA&.ITAT.MINT '~c;:m::::::s
narchtna. Start taking A UAR I U 8 <Jan . •llH 11toco ,,.,. '°'......., --it clOlfte .,~
ae rloualy your own 20·Feb. 18): Take long. ~caMa:•i1.tm ,.. .. .:,'c.c.a.ASSOC1ATU,a11cT
needs. Beware of those range view -atop llllllM-Utt eNTUPRtl£S.c>TH•o1n1POT.
who t~to tell you t-0 bickering about details . ,.:.":.'=-.~. *' s.nte ,.,..., -a, eo.1e -... c.e. "Her :·Illa Ume to Refuse to be trapped In ~.•M•••• ...,_ ~crea vetyaelfl.sb! maze of petty jealousy. TNU-ln.d-.t• MlAOO,m cunon" c::.-.e1r.:n s.m.
TAURUS <Aprll 20. red tape . See places. 104•111•'411tt.t tuiu10 ~.;.:~=~~:., .. "'.
May 20): SpotUgbt on people as they are. not ~~~~·~t,~ ,...,,,'° oM41"''c•1t1111 14 c:onet ....
basic issues. services. merely as you wish they '°""'tMM-11111• '·'"·m Tiii• lt•.._.,j ... 111ee1 w1t11 ~ "0Uld exist. -U"H'''"" -·-111"'1 •• 1•.m C-IY c~ of ~ ..... QM/ftly °" d f p e n de n ts , p e t S , " 0•11\ 11.Mtl u--......__ t• -PISCES (Feb. 19· ••OfnOPe• .. io... •.oovo .................. '· .... ,teaa Pisces, Virgo persons March 20 ). Tb'as ls 8 11><ru " 10ec,..-11" PuOll•'*' ()'.,. CoHt o.uv Piiot figure prominently -. C.1>1t•••.WSU<JJ11ndllr11191m .. ,.m DK ,. 11 ,._...,.J.M.• ,.,, ~71 and so does the number power day for you. '"~tnc•111Foru • • • '
7. Steer clear of short N o t h l n g o cc u r a i n Ac~=:'-'"' u.uuoo PVBUC NOTICE
C Uts , get-rich·qui c k lukewarm fashion. Jt ls IH'...,llnftt·net 2'S,OH
Scbem-. One w1o11-cares all or ..,.. .. i.... Know It '""''1ne• 111 Fo.c•· "'C'Tmou1 au11N111 ...... IW ~ ... "&. • C.lllor .... SuslMt•P• ... u .122 NAMalTATeMeN' much ror you ls sincere, and don t st.art anything A<<'*"'..., ,_1t11 r11e tot,_._,. ..-it dOlf'9 """-
but could be mlsln · u.nless you expect to r.~:=&:i':!~P... t$.'Sl -c~:1.-co1.0R PAINTING. '" formed . .Act according. finish lt. we ,_..,., cen11v tMt..,. •• .,. MOf'll• v1t1• A,,...ue, '°''• Mew,
ly.G""MINI M r-1r.illili'4r-1 :::;·,·:.~::..:::~ ·:M·i:,.::; c.ii::,'!:':.111en\Gtlet., "''-""
11:1 ( ay 2 1· OtcemDtr 31, lt11 mtae to the VIiie ·-· eo...e Mtw, C.llfot'fllt June 20); Good Moon '"-Ill(• c..-wu1one,. °' .,,. S«at• .,.,, aspect coincides now UPHOLSTHY ofC••llo•"'•·~.,.,o•-" Thlt busifteul1COflCNctt011Y.i1 111 T~ J SchOettlt, S;,, dl~IOlltl. wltb involvement. emo· WlillliY•W.e P_._.. E~w.01"" llon a l respon ses. in· ..._._.. -.. .. ,..,.,.,. Sc~ie. T1111 ,,.,_,,. "'n 111.., w1111 '"" S.Crllt.ry (O<iftlY (lerll of OrM19e eo-intv Oft tensified relationship. lfUHcnlor•"4. Pvb11,,_.,0r.,.ca.s10.11yPl1cM. No•embt'rio.••n acting on impuJ~. If you c .... MeM-M .. l IH O.<. 11. n. n. i.. n. m• r1ows1
are not Sen·ous about a -::~~~~~===~S.---------~:'!!!!.:!.'11~ ,.uothlleCI 0r.,. coau o.11r P1101, -OtnTbe< n. 21, 1'11 -J lf\utrv •. relationship -or com· 11. tttt
mitment -you get hard *""
facts or life. Money and
love are a major part of
scenario.
CANCER (June 21·
July 22): Don't bang on
interfI\.lnably -know
whe n to close d e al.
transaction. Cycle is
such that you can apply
rinishing touches. Aries.
Libra -and the number
9 -fi gure prommenlly
You will lay to r est
doubts, rears. ghos ts.
You will again become
your own person!
LEO CJuly 23-Aug .
22): Stress new s tarts.
th e co ld plunge,
c reativity. inde pe n ·
dence. Your ability lo
graphically illustrate, to
dram atize surges to
forefront. Short trip is
on agenda. You receive
repor t s . ca ll s.
messages. Key is to be
discriminating.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept.
22): Emphasis on collec·
lions, payments. budget.
finding what has ~o
missing. Aquarius .
Cancer, Leo pe rsons
could play key roles.
Your position is stronger
t h a n man y mig ht
s pecula te. Don't sell
yourself short. What you
offer is worth plenty!
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct.
22): Be a self.starter -
stress independe nce,
daring, pioneering
spir... Moon is in your
sign -you get chance to
prove an Important con·
teotioa. Popularity surg.
es. You'll get message
or call which. could be
cause for celebration.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·
Nov. 21): Being tem-
porarily coofined should
n ot b e cau se for
depression. You have
diamond pendants
in natural gold
A. S350. 8. $350. C. $225.
D. $215. E. $95.
PlJIWC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU$ llVSIHES$
NAMa $1'ATUo"eNT ti. IOl-llQ ,.,._, I\ OOifl9 bl.t)I• nenn
JASON FINE AltTS, l3SS VII
lido, !wit• J14, NewDIH't 9ttc:ll, CA .,..,
Aob•r1 14e•otd Nuo-,.t. l1'~t
Vel!Owltone Le .... El To.o. CA '7e.JO
This bl.t•tntts •• conclllet-o bo; •n ,,..
Ol•ldll•I
ROl:lHt H••okl NUQl"nl
Tfu\ \lM~ w 4" fHt'(I Wltf't ffNt
Counlo; Cl•~ of Oonqe Countv .,.,
Dt< 1. t971
FIOUJO PvOll\lled Or ... Coa•I o.lly Pllnt,
DK 1', 11, ,., 1'1'1, J'" •. "" ~~.,.
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5MISINEH
NAMlfSTATEMl!NT Tiie fOCIOW!t>Q !!WSCft It dol119 ~' ........ Pt.UM81HG ev J 0 . 11801 Sl••flre ~ne. l4u11ll11910f'I lleecn.
C•lllotl'W.,._
JemM w DeV~I•. tteOt 5terim
Lene, H..nlll'QtOn !Mtell, C.lllOtll•• ..,...
~··~···~"" .. ~ CM~I J-W DtVetis
Tiits •1.tt_.t WitS 111"11 "''"' I~ COunl~, Cttrk ol 0ret'9 County an
Oe<ef'llbef ... ""· Fl-)
Pwlt~ ()r~ C.oeit Otlty "''°'· Oe<emoer 11, 21. 1'11 .,., Jtnll4•Y •.
tt, ""
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aU"NESS
NAMe STATEMl:Hf
T,.,. 1o11ow1no --i. dOf"9 bu" "HS.,
KASt4Mllt ENTERPlllSES, "in
UC4111111e, ~elll Vlltn, CalifOfftto
91108
Jo>ePfl C J Otmo~r. ••» L.C~lllt, ~ Veoey, c;.11.....,,,.
'"°' Thh bU1iftt\i I' C-i.d by on tn
dlYi®tf
JOMOll c. J. ~ ..
TMI Sitt_,.. wa\ llled wltll ttw
C:-ty Clef'k ol Or-c-ty Oft "°" n. "" Fltsnt
Pll«llll-Or-eo.t 0.lly Pllni Ho11 JO,Oe< 7, t•.11, 1q71
~1 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 9CISIHEH
HMM STATMEMEH'
The tot'°"""'9 __, h c1o1119 bu\I ,,.n.,\
ch a nce to get seeond
R wind -make the most Omo o r "study time ...
• • • Aquarius, Taurus -and
-------------------anoth e r Scorpio -
M N C OATA Sf:llVICES. 2611
Cre\l•lew 0.1 ... ,._t lie.er., Co
'1toU
JemH A Ctt•. 1612 Crtstvoew
Ott,.., Nf'WIJOl18e.Ch, C.. 926/ll
TlllS bu~I 1, <-.CWO by e11 tn.
dl•kllHI•
! C Prom Page CU
uked, causing him to look nervously at the
other adults in the room .
"I left them in a grass-covered field so they
could rest up and took a helicopter over to your
house," he said, indicating the helicopter was
now resUng on the trolley tracks with the engine
still running.
"Can I see It?" Well, by this time Mom had
Intervened to remind o'ede and I we were both
s ick and would not be making any trips outside
to s ee any helicopters.
But it didn't matter anymore because Santa
and Dad were bringing in all aorta 0( bright·
colored packages and when I saw the huge
maroon Packard that I could sit bi and drive
around, 1 knew he was Santa Claus.
And as suddenly as the man in the ~ auit
had appeared, he waa gone.
Yeara later, my maroon Pacltard gave way
to rust and rour of the grandparents who were
there that night -and Dad -passed on. Dede.
now with her own family, lives in Napa and
Mom moved to the Colorado Rtver several
years ago.
But the memories are here and every year
wbeo we celebrate Cbrtatmaa .ct the two re~•
maialq IJ'andparenta Join us, I ult Gra.ndmP
J. to tell me who that Santa Claus really wu.
Sheoeverhu.
3601 A FUN ii ,~w,
Newt from •II over C.llfontl•
la rounclecl up
.. chd•r
'"'"-DtJLY PILOT
figure prominently. You
get chance to express
yourself in meaningful
manner.
SAGITfARJUS <Nov.
22·Dec. 21): Member of
opposite sex cares very
much and proves it. Ac·
cent . on creativity,
rom a nee, stgnlflcant
changes. travel. getting
meuage across. Get
files -and thoughts -
in order. Gemini, Virgo,
Libra persons figure
prominently.
I I
CllBl8TMAS 9l'OaE eouas:
H a.1n. &o t p.m. Moaday Ul.roaelt Frtday It a.m. IO 6 p.m. Sala.relay
BanlcAmericcrd • V1t0 • Mt16kt Cha~
CHARLES H. BARR
For the new
Mother .••
OM of a kind aterflng
silver Humpty-Dumpty
Rattie with i¥Ory
Mthing handle
from France
cirea. 1850.
fOUt' hundreds dollara
J-A.Clte
Thi' ~ was llltcl •tit\ the
CAMlftlY C*I! of Or-C.OUnty Oft Oe<•m-II, t'19.
FtOt/ .. P\11111-Or ... (OHi Oally PotOt
O« 21. 21. "11. J ..... "· ,,~ -"
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PltttTIOU$9USINHS NNM ITATifMeNT
TM tollowlfll pefWM ere doll\9
Wt!Mt••: SOUT H COAST UNION • INSU"AH(I! Ol!NTIST9'Y, JIOS H.
Hertior 81W., c..i. Mete, CA~
0 ,. A"'91d M, P'len1" 0.11111
Cetp. 1 Clflferllle UOIOf'•llOn. " CNtrvHlltl~,..._.,8'_,CA
TMl~lt~bye (or·
tlOf ,, '°".
o.M.iC... Or.At..-oM.•~ ~
Tilll It'""""' WM filed wttfl ti...
Couftl y Ci.tit of Or.tnl9 Cillflty °" ~tMW I, "11. ,,....,
"'*ltNd Or .. C:.... Delly PllOI
Ot<. '· ••• tf,.""
.....
lt\tflllSMd ()nllalt (lOe\t 0.11¥ PllOI,
OK. IA, U, JI, 1971. Jtn, 4, 1'19 HI'
. a
----
ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK Thut9dly.~21 .191'8 DAILY PILOT £3
Let om-in-law Do Dishes
• • •
DEAR ANN. I need
help M y husband
brouaht his parcnw here
from Europe for a visit
They don't •peak
Eo1lt1h and l don't
wptak their oatave
tonaue. 8ut that's the LEAST ol any trouble.
My mother to·l•w la
drivlna m nut.a• $h(" re
u1ta to use lhe da.h
~••btr l wouldn 't
mlnd ''she'd WASH the disbea. bul I'm let and
tared of 1eeln1 coft.e talns ln my cup11 and
Undlng pulp from
lemonade lo my 11
To make malt r1 WOB •
s he nevt>r dr i e s
s nyth1na. I don't know
how m ny Umes I ' vt-
reacbed in the cupboard
for a plate t.lnd apUJtd •
half cup of w11t~r on
myself
l 'm 3 MrVOUI wrec«
n4 my bu.band w nta
lo know what's wron1. If
I H> anyt.run aeaJrwt hl1 mulhfr. 1C would
start a n ht ma foltu.
plannt'd to 1t1y for a
month and announced
YtSt•rday they ar~ ~
tend l n1 their vltH
another lbre weeks
PIHH tdJ m Ytbat do
do. I u.n't risk otrendln.r ber -STUCK
OEAa 8TtJCK: \'ou
~u M IJ'Me(lll la'a oe.ly
U1ree 11tore ueka ln· mad of a ~nna.Of'Gl •r·
ru1e--.. u ll ll for
.... ...... •ho •rllt"
le me. la Ute meullml',
ltl Iler ~••tl••t" to "•aall" Lk ~but
pat thm la a dl1b
waaller alter abe bu
flnlall"' -qalnly and
•ltlto•t ~mf'•l. U tlK>
uua. .. yoa -no harm
doae. ' 'II ftt1urr It uut.
No &rall&latJoe wlJI be
Det' Ill')'•
DEAR ANN· Thn.'t'
cb Ort (or Lhal •mort I ady ..,ho haa no aw t
room . no bid away bed,
aod aof 1111 that ere too bort Lo p oo
A woman'• home bould be HER caatl .
loo, und 1l<>t 11 tree hotel
ror 1hap..hul;r1y 1tYJ>!11t•s
The other oon who ex
pre •t'd d~1ght ut bed
dln1 down und ret.'d1ng
f'aaht unexl't'Cl4!~ rel
u tlv{''\ for hH· du y~
muat l>t' ~on an lhl' ht•11d She a lso mu!it huvt• a
!'>l'<'rtt tunnel to I ht' 1-·ir~t
NallonuJ nank.
Yt>a1 s back when I
had n extr-a bvdroom. at
wu• nevl'r vucant /\II
f.O rlti of reluhvt.•5 and
frlt'nds cam@ to vlslt WI ,
bnntc lng huge appetile1'
and several pieces or
lug((l.11(0 lalwaya a bad
uti n). On e co upl e
br o ught thei r St
Rernard dog and, would
you bt-heve, two boxes
of dog blscuts! Two
month:. after that ~x ·
i>•'t'lence. we converted
the extra bt.>droom Ullo a
w or k s hop f o r my
hu&baod and we've
never been happier Just
algn me -
FAM I LIARITY
BREEDS CONTEMPT
DE AR FAMILIAa·
ITY: I wu 1"*-11""9
tba& tbe vut majority of
readen wlto wl'GW &o ex·
prea1 their vlewa oa this
H b)ect actaally love U •
n pecied company! It
doe1 ladeed take Ill kladl
of people to make a
world. Speakl.Dg s&rid ly
ror myself, I'm the otlter
kind.
Chriatmaa un 't Chriatm~
without a gi/ t /roin
Jleta'1
under the tree !
Getting It All Shaped Up
I h a ve always Bd·
mired women who can
w e ar a one ·sl ze
s wimsuit. That as. either
a slze 12, a 14, or a 16. I
wear all three sizes at
the same time.
In the modern-day
vernacular, I can't seem
to get it all together. My
friends tell me exercise
1s the secret. It's not
how much weight you
carry. it ls how it is
packaged and dis·
tributed.
l stood in front or the
mirror the other morn-
ing and assessed myself.
Imagine if you will the
state of Texas. I look
terrific at Amartllo, but
by the lJme I hat Dallas
and fo'ort Worth, I begin
to blouse, and don't real·
ly thin out agam until
Corpus Christa. (But
a fter Houston, who
hangs on to i,ee Corpus
Christi?)
I've exercised. I really
have Once I signed up
for a course at the
neighborhood YWCA.
The classes were held in
a church and because or
the popularity or the
class, we were put in the
church proper. One af·
temoon the minister vis·
ited and paused long
enough Lo see me in a
( Singles
Calfttdar )
O R ANGE COAST
SI NGLES: Christmas
Part)' at Jim Hurdler's
begins with cocktails at
6 p.m . Saturday, Dec.
23 Dinner start.a at 7:30
and it's pot luck and
B.Y.O.B. FoT lnforma·
lion call Julie Hubbard
at 645-1726.
There will be a New
Year's Eve party and
reservations are a must.
For details call Sherry
Grossman. 640-9839.
8 I N G L E
EXPERIENCE: "Being
Single in a Two Person
Society" is this week's
program beginning at 8
p.m . Friday. Dec. 22.
All ages welcome, $5 per
person. For information
call T he Self Center,
997·9600.
PARENTS wrrBOUT
PAR TNERS: For in·
formation about holiday
activities, call 546-5788.
Giant shopping malls are just made for conven·
tional shoppin.8·
At Knott's Berry Farm. we think Christmas shop-
ping should never be conventional. Which seems
pretty natural for a place with 32 different stores
specialiung in onc-of·a·kind items.
For example, where else can you find an old·
fashioned bonnet shop, a ma! general store or an
Indian cnading post. And what better pl~ to set>
the complete wortment of Knott's Holiday Gih
Packs than right httt on the farm.
pair or r~ded pedal
pushers trymg to touch
my nose to my bent knee
wbicb was rest ing on a
pew and said, .. You are
desecrating the altar " I trans ferred to a cake
decorating class and
licked my way tos1x addi·
tional pounds.
For awhile, I used to
eat m y d esse rt a t
breakfa s t whil e
watching a Swedish girl
oo television. She held
me s pellbound by wind·
ing her leg around her
neck. I watched and
listened to her for over a
year and one day I
wheezed, strained and
gasped and finally got
one of my ankles hooked
over the other. I quit
before I r eally hurt
myself.
The idea of going to a
spa really intrigued me.
I thought how great it
would be to splash
around in the water and
steam your pores and
ride a bicyc l e to
nowhere, but going to a
spa is like having a
cleaning lady. You can't
go to a spa looking like
you need to go to a spa
anymore than you can
have a cleaning woman
walk into a house that
needs c leaning .
Somehow, l just couldn't
get myself in shape for a
towel.
For the last year. 1
h ave watche d m y
husban~ faithfully ex·
ecute his Air Force ex·
ercises (which could ac·
count. for the decline in
enlistments) If there is
anything in this world
more boring than a m an
who exercises regularly.
I have not met it.
"You should join me,"
he keeps insisting. ··A
few pushups: a little jog·
ging. It's good for the
old body."
"Then why aren't
your knees s traight
when you bend over to
touch your toes?"
"I suppose you could
do it better?"
"Sure, by letting my
fingernails erow 14 inches." ,
He th1nb he's roollng
around with some .
amateur.
them with your own camera. Then, everyone can
enjoy a delicious home-style dinner at one of
Knott's great places to eat.
Christmas shopping at Knott's. Unlike all the big
~lls. the best part Is it really does feel like Christmas
here. And that's because. the Knott family wouldn~
have it any ot~r way. ·
•Get in free to shops inside the paid admission
area from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday thru Friday
unril December 23rd.
•Of course. there's olways free admission to
shops outside the Main Gate from Be sure to bring the kids along
too. They can chat with 5-nta
while you take f rtt pictures of tt,.. IOa.m.tolOp.m. I o 'i7 •Most maior credit cards accepted.
6£1®'F~.;.
8039 ~h Blvd .• Buena Park, CA 90620 •( 714) 827· l 776 • Free Parking
...
. .
••
[ ___ L_M_. e_o_Y_o __ ) INFORMS In the DAILY PILOT
Santa
Sells Out
10-BO~
Come 1n now before Santa comes to his sensesl
~ ": •• ·• • • l • •• ','::·:·:--. :~ •• :4 ·:.· .... :·~.: :·:·~:-··:;.·.:-:. :.·:"·.:~. ~·· ij-.
BtC AN\ml. Roe«. . l~.99 80 CDllin1lt.U oan41• . . . . . . . " off
~=:.=-..,~.: ......... 8"
B.&ndblown. e.oa. ftte. a.79 198 'rlalip wt.a. .................. .
11 • Cll'J9t&1 plM& --tt99 478 Gil .... .i,an.-................ .
fi:f.T.=f.;1~~·.~~" .... ".118
Ii Any 9 all!
Reg. 2.49-39.99 --.-Jara
88" off
YCJU ~ poUJ' a qt. Ref. e.49 A M
...... p1'4sher ••.........•••... -.
Any 9 alll
Reg. 12.99-19.99 .....
88" otl
611.Zee for c1r1nk.e. Reg. '7.99 s•
liar allop •.W ................. .
Dlabwuber ... ftoeC. '7.99 s• ~-ll JlaD4 '-l>CI· ••..•.......
;:.::-~-~~·~·············"-
Safe 6" push toys.
Reg. 1.99 ea..
Woo4ell '°78
.98 ••.
~u:;oru:a: .. ~~ ........... 8 98
::.=;,z:::e:~.~~~ ........... 8•
Handsome 3-pc. eet. Reg. 8.99 see
W'h1'9 poroelaill baUl •et . . .
e.oa. Reg. 1.99 l&8
lrtah ooff•• •obi-' ............ .
Elegant eating.
Reg. 19.99
llmok•Cl ,i. ..
diJulerware
1411
OARD!N OAOV£
13081 HAA80A BLVD.
131.2411 COSTA MUA mo HARIOR BLVD. M0-73# LAGUNA BEACH ANAHlll
IOI I. KA11UA AVE.
772·M12
12M S. COAST HWY.
..... 101
····--............. ____ • ..., .... ,._..., ..... ....,.._ __ ""'1 ·h'rt**n·ort am·v·ar nrt''t ''a ··tz1
•
()t DAI. 't Pll.OT TIMl41y, ~r 21 , 1171
MARMADUKE by Briel Andtrson
O•tt, .. ..., • ...,.. ..,.... -.
''He LOVES to hormonl10 ! "
SUPERHEROES
SHO E
With ell the wholesa~
ad~sing that assaults
vs duri~the~ys,
FUNkY WINKERBEAN
PHJ \.()t.LNfEERf> 'R> WT
~ lME TREE. ~ Pu.ED OOT~
MISS PEACH
~c.v
Sc.a~
~AllsoN
~
1 A'tlnt•~~ .. ~
by Jeff MacNelly
AGATHA CRUMM
MOTLEY'S CR EW
by Tom llUuk
PEANUTS
I AAvE °'50!1' CM~
FOR AU. TI4E 8leT
~TM>AAN~ IH
Tf4'~-
COMICS /~ORO ..
by C9'are.t M. SctMlll
'
1 BllT '™€ MAN IN THE ~EUOW SllO<~ AW
816 RU~ SOOTS
NEVER FAL"SEO ''
HA HA HAI
HA ~HA!
HA I HA! ~
... AND MY OOCT~
WOH"T LiT Mt
E~ ,w(THING !
by Blll Hoest
n ''
by TtmpMton and Forman
.... ~ ................. .. _,_
by Gus ArriN
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE I
TUMI L WllDI
cOMe ON, 'WPrPS ..• I'!.. I 1J\Kl 'tt)(J 10 ------
A Sl!CMflNO/AN cc:m N'ONIAL NIOtff PANCe.
IN./ ~·~· ~J.i ...
NANCY
THEN vou'o
BETTER NOT
GOTO
SCHOOL
.l
. . . ..,.
WELL I l
uOT AWAY
WITH THAT
by Emit lusltmllltr
··THE SCHOOL IS
CLOSED TODAY
BECAUSE OF A
6~0KeN WATER
MAIN
ACROSS
' -section. Mith
I lAnd units
11 Gennan ,,,,.
Cle
t4 Filed st¥
15 loop
I& Adjectrte
suttir
17 l.oell - -
19 My· Sc>.
20 Head: Fr.
:tL~e
22 Eut. nation:
Comb IOfm
24 Cefemony
le Hurt
27 Nebr.Ski
river •
30 FoUO't'ed
S2Songs
33 Artll~s
34 Peatef
17CNlled
38 Peeled
39 Portend
40.1.-ef
41 Slomtl
'2 Ollll '
'3 Unlodled
45 Ability
.. Rue .a Otop
'9 Deputy UNITtO FHtur• Syn<11eat.
50 Ref>ul Wtdneedly'I Puute SotYed 5.2 Doi or land
5e Krtly
S7 Y actlting tro-
phy: 2 words eo Mlnefll
&11<¥1 Mlf'a
lollowtW
12 Pnase
13 Remote
64 Tricil
65 Analyze syn.
IP
DOWN
ri I l o , rn1 ,r .. r• '. , '
l I .& • "o•••o• ,. & c 0"
• 0 y I II ' u-i•-i11 •• c • I I
I I I y I '·-01 " . • I ' ' & • lft I•
• l .. II JI• "1. •'• • t I ••• T I • 0 • • O •l
I A II I I . ' , I I
0 I A a I . " f f I I I .. 0 . ( ' I 0 u • l • I • I I I
II A O I T • ii I I Q .. 0 1 u .. ' II I
'I r• ' llj llWll 'f • .1 11
I IT II IOfJIA l ~'IHHl
,U It ,. •,. • rl ~ T Tfll ....... _.._._ 1 Jargon
2 Molding J-eoo 4 Put in trectlOn C1 A1>1rtments.
!> Engllsll rlVef 26 Splotched e O
8 -Oakley 'l7 Smug one 42 Buddy
1 Prrce 28 "Time" 4A Sty
8 Syslern toundef 45 M1ner11
• N1Uve: 29 Weather· .e In Ille --
Comb lonn ll\ln'a IOOI !tie gods to Solp 30 Elhausted •7 Assembly
operas. e g. 31 Bever1991 ca 12tm
t t loin securJ. 33 SellfY 50 ~
ty· 2 words 35 Asian port Sf lrtl1nd f.
12 Clone 36 MM. lnlor· SJ Blemish':.....
13 Got up 11\11 SC Ears
t8 Bone: Prell• 38 Gtsp SS Sword
13 Bond 39 Ancient war SS Assembled
2S Vetb con-m~1ne 58 Vipet
•
\
. . .
• • -ENTERTAINMENT J INTERMISSION I MOVIE REVIEW Thursday OecEmbfi1 21 19711 DAILY PILOT C:J ,
Top Actors, Actresses Applauded
BEST ACTRESS Nor"" F•rley
BEST ACTOR
Alch•rd Aow1•nd
'Uncle Joe'
Indulgent Film
By ARTHUR KNIGffl' TIWHoll.,._._....
"llncle Joe Shannon," wntten by Burt Young
and produced by Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartiff
for United Artists, has to be the most excessive case
of cinematic self-indulgence since Wallace Beery
shufned off this mortal coil. Make that Wallace
Beery and Marie Dressler.
ActualJy, "Uncle Joe" in many ways comes off
as an instantreplayofBeery's "The Champ" (which
is currently in the process or being remade). '\'oung
is a champion trumpeter, not a boxer; but by the
time the credits leave the
screen, his wife and child
(
uo•nE J have died in a nre and he is ,.,., ~I reduced to a Skid Row ex-REJ'IEJJ' istence -still clutching
....,, ---------his horn, but a hopeless drunk
THE JACKIE COOPER role is played by Doug
McKeon -also Dickensian. This waif has been
abandoned by his mother -a thler and a pro-
stitute. Not only that, be Is suffering from a rare
and virtuaJly incurable form of bone cancer.
But Young, who apparently was one or his
mother's regulars C although the film is much too
PG to show It>, takes the kid back to his room ,
shows him a good time and then, just when the
boy 's initial animosity is beginning to wear off,
turns him over to an orphanage -naturally, for
his own good.
<Also, it gives Young a good pretext for a cry
scene when he leaves the orphanage. Next to play-
ing drunks, actors love cry scenes. Young has also
scripted himselt a chance to exercise that whinny-
ing laugh that he popularized in "Rocky" and
"Convoy." Happily, he only uses it once.)
I COULD GO ON <The film does.) In a sudden
access of remorse, he s pirits the tyke out or the or-
phanage, and they do a Santa Claus number in
Chinatown. When the boy is finally admitted to a
hospital, Shannon stages an elaborate sujcide al·
tempt, fl ailing out into the black Pacific waters
But he undergoes a sudden change of heart, re·
turns to the hospital and rouses the kid, now an
amputee, with his renditJon or "Silent Night" in
the ward. There wasn't a moist eye in the house.
mine Included.
In point of fact, alJ. the characters in th~ film
feel so sorry for themselves that I began to feel
sorry for myself as well -just for being t here.
•. ., ................ ~ ..... (ii).
llllSTOL CINEMA STADIUM DRIYE·IN
Costa Mn a !>.40·7444 Or•noe 639·8770
CINEDOME UA CINEMA
Oranoe 634·2553 Wes1m1pste1 Mall 893·05-46
SADDLEBACK PLAZA E1 ·Toro 714/581·5880
~OR ()RAN()[ COUNTY PROGRAM INF0AlolATl0N CAll "'FREE
SO!'ttt-. "°h t.fl t •CU P1rO 'Oii ,..,. tllfCUOtJH.••
tThu " 1111 fourth In a 1.rt11 of /UJf colvmM re·
ul.wlnQ tlut II~' lt71 m lh•at., o£ono IM C>ranQ• COOlt
In a vlntaae yeur ror comrnunJty theater.
sC'lect1n11 the out.st nndmfl performances of the put
12 montha bt><'amcs ex r •eJinaly difficult. The 20 perform rs who are honored today
reprH.nt aix dlff rent tbealAlr 1roup1, with the
Weatmlmttr Community Th ater comlna In ror
top honclrt1 with e1f ht menUona -or nearly half
the lotal Clearly. t woi; an exceptional year for
Weat minatc:r. which placed four 1howa on this col-
umn'a I.Op 10 Tu day
AMONG THE 'IOEUGRTS ln today's 14th
ftnnual warda ~lumn the best actress winner
.. ,, the daughter of the best actor of llM lo the col·
umn't first Aurh undertakln1. Duke Farley for
.. All the Klna's Me n " And. recretfully. the
performance of Lul>onna de Barros In "Suddenly,
Laat Summer'4 ~t the Saddleback Valley Com·
munlty Theater cannot be Included because of
personal involvement In that product.ion.
The envelopes, please.
BEST ACl'OR -Richard Rowland, "Two by
Two." Westminster Community Theater. Runner·
up -Walt Douglas, "Equus," Laauna Moulton
Playhouse.
Honorable mention -Ron Albertaen, "The
Lion in Wanter." Wes tminster Community
Theater: Martin Fuchs, "Last of the Red Hot Lov·
ers." Westminster Community Theater; Ralph
Richmond, "The Lion in Winter," Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse.
BES T AC T R F.SS -Noree n Farley,
"Busybody," Saddleback Valley Community
Theater. Runner· up -Jean Koba, "Twigs,·•
Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
Honorable mention -Elaine Jimmerson,
"The Rainmaker," San Clemente Community
NOW PLAYING
CINEDOME Orange 634·2553
UA ClllEMA EDWARDS' HARIOR
Westminster 893·0546 Costa Mesa 646·0573
'.
Intermission
Tom Titus
Theater; Jean Hyde. "The Fatal Weakness." Sad·
dleback Valley Community Theater; Genevieve
Murray, "'Jlle Uon in WloLer," Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse.
BEST SUPPORTING ACl'OR -Jim Flynn,
"Twigs," Lacuna Moulton Playhouse. Runner·up
-Bill Jones, "The Rainmaker." San Clemente
Community Theater.
Honorable mention -John Autry, "The Lion
in Winter," Westminster Community Theater:
Daryl S\randllen. "A Man for All Seasons."
Newport Harbor Community Theater: Scott UUey,
"Tbe Lion in Winter," Cos ta Mesa Civic
Playhouse.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS -0 .0 .
Calhoun, "Once Upon a Mattress." Coeta Mesa
Civic Playhouse. Runner.up -Ann Cossman.
"Last of the Red Hot Lovers," Westminster Com·
munity Theater.
Honorable mention -Susah O'Connell. ··Any
Number Can Die," Westminster Community
Theater: Pat Burson, "Last of the Red Hot Lov·
era," Westminster Community TbeaLer : Sandra
Barratt, "The Uon in Winter," Westminster Com·
munity Theater.
These performers wt.·re the standouts an a
season ftlled with fine individuaj efforts up and
down the Orange Coast. ln Friday's final yearend
column. the spotlight swings to the Daily Pilot"s
fifth annual man and woman of the year in local
theater.
Across the Galaxy
escape Laser they warped to
Destruction thr
energy of Rock M sic ...
Timeless
lsslon $3.50
Matinee ho 1 -nder 18-$2.50
Newport Blvd. .
Info: (714) 673-8350
or534-FREE " .
..............
Backstage S~ow
Wh en Gregory Perk went barkstage after
seeing ··on the Twentieth Century" on
Broadway. he got another performance -
John Cullum doing his version of·"Orar ula.",
Looking on are Cullem's co.stars in "Cen-
tury, .. Judy Kaye <left > and Imogene Coca.
J111 ~~1 at ... ~
MIT WNO WAT IU'r lOOll IN) ,,. • a.u • tiM • .,. a ,.,,,
cNJiill .. ·-· I ........... "'-'-' .. ~
MIDHIOHT UNUI 111 ........... : """ K4·2AOO TAJll DIMllWI
°""'A"'-' NI• ~r KING Of ntl OYHIH111
IWI ·-· ........ .,.,, ltM
I.I .I ., ....... ,
lOID Of ntl llNOl(N l .,, ... 1'11 ........... ,.,.,
..... '-·-... COM .. A HOUIMAN INI 'lUt
THI 'AUINOll'"'
....... All n.. '--, .. c...r
MIDNIGHT IXPlllllt11 .wt
IHADOW Of TMI MAWtt IN!
.-. ......
NITTY IAIYll> ~"'
lOOIM '°' ... OOOllAI llJ
a1 ... ~
MIT WNO WAT M lOOll1Nt .....................
n~HC ,.___IAll.T ,, .. ., .C...CM&C_ .. ,,,.., ...... "UP IH SMOlr Ill 494 1~1'4. .....
.. OU111J.CMOUS"
cun IAJTWOOe
"'IVllY WHICH
WAT IUH.OOSI"' ,.,. ...... ~·-
lltCHAll~S
.. Ito HX"
PU/\ ....
'"HOUSI C.US"
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••
PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES.
-"" Tlv\ ()per> I t S • Fn Sii S.... I 00 e SI-. SO.. 11 t ~ IMrORTANT NOTICE! CMILORDt UltOfR IZ fRHI .... "
h~ ,,..... •• , • .,, .... •(...,._•II Mk·~ .....
-.,_ ........... "'""-' DIAnt ON THI NIU1M1 """ MAIATHON MAN111 ..,w..w..
.JAWI 21N!
PUii
nNTOUIA C91 .,..o-...... ~ ......
OUVll'S ITOllY 4"1 "'"' DAMNATION AlUY!NI
...... , ..........
t.01D Of THI IJNGS
ll'Un l"I
lOVI A .. DIATH rNJ
0 1 ... .......-
MIY WNO WAT lllT lOOM INI ll'Ult THI OAUNTUT I'll
01••• .. ~
MIT WNO WU lllT &OOM t"' "'"' TMI eAUNTUT flll
, ... , ...
'· 9IOOVI '°"" .. , 2. llJl Wrnt A IMtU II> J. AMllUCAN Tlanll IWI
.... ()"Moll • C.0.-.. -...
OUVll'I ITOIY !NI
"'"' MIATHON MAN111
I
l I I
• -·
'
0 DM.YPILOT Thu'1CS1y, O~mber 2t, 1971 Telev TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
llll ~'>ll\\
DeMltl'• Dehuf
Singer Debby Boone and John
Rubinstein slat ln the musical vendon
of 0 Henry's "Gift of the Magi" tonight
al 8.30 on NBC. Chunnel 4 <see review
below)
P1odueeoe11reclor Elon
Soltoe up!Ot• Ille grOWlfl
ol (~ bfOldce911ng
In the United Sttttl '1\)~
(() SUI IEAIJTY et.ow
(lt MATCH GAME P .M.
9-00 I) (J) Titl WAL TOMS
OIMa't .ilO<tt 10 !>ting lhe
'"""" IOQtllwtr lor a CMttmae E\'I dlMer ate
lhrMlentd by a ttglng
snowltonn D UT'TLE DAUM~
BOY· 800t<•
• • ·•rt1tty rtoht HCM ..... HI tt101 o. . .,, Mc0•
W\. W-.i Windom A~ ... ~~· lo ~ • lff9a II ... ~ ... """"' 11 lnl
·ONQ.~ ANOPMNOI
0..1""" ...... .WYll
• • " ''lotdllf Atllef"' 1 tlU) Joel McC• ..
.,~De c.rto "" ....
t Coll,..111 Ot!Pl•ln
.... .. tiu)' emmunltioll
wlCI .....,.... lrem 1 ~
"""O'll'-(I"'.~~ I :.~..::=,IVI ~
Ari '*-of IOflV9 WIO
ChtlalM.. lufl tor 1"-
wtlole I~ (Al
• CW..fllOeTa
1111.0. "~C)IMllMI" uo a Qjf'l' 01 ncMAOi
CMbby '°°'"' ..cs JoM ~Win f)Cltl·ay. "'UO-
gilllg W'OWIO ~ ·~ lo Q9iebfal1 a "*'Y
Owllfn\N In 1"'9 M11P141•
110nolO ~·1ci...io 8 9 WHArt ~
~ WIG Atrun llf'IWll11ngly
,,., I l)utglolr ....... I.Mir
......... lncludlnO !Mir
CMetmuglftt.
• 1"' 000 OOUfl'l.a
Fth'I l>tOtNr. llo)'d. Pl!'•
a*"9 Ftlb 1he1 hit 111.ae
le no4 In hectic M~ltll'I,
bU1 t>eColl •• llo!'l\e lilt
Floyd'e laclOfy. m TIJAHA80UT
"Hendll With Care" N4Wt
~Iola lfl 4Jll.'*"9d.
lnOludlnQ nurw pr9Ctlt1ot>-
er1 end pn~· _..,_ ...._
t:00 8 (J) HAWAII FJV6.0
McOAnetl IUIC*lt• lh&
1nan1n111on •ll•"'PI
mede on en ~•I'•
life .U dorlt fOt tMli*ttY
Pll'~
Oaa111H'fLbci119s
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC} Los Angeles
Greet Gareon 11 narretor
tot thll entmetld eequei to
the d\Rdren'• CM11mu
I ale of a OOOf dNmf'l'IGI'
boy
D MOVll
• • • '-' "Holiday Inn"
(1~2) 8lrtg Orolby. Pred
Af!Mre Aller IOalng hll
lloncee. a man tetr•t• to
••• Connecllcut latlft, ~ ht MM lnlO a ...
• 9 8NIH£'t MIU.8'
Barney'• equed "* lo
hold onto 811 MCaQe ettllt
unlll tie It returned lo )tll.
• MEWONff*
<Weet1: Orton Welles. Jiff!·
!!!l Gl'iOPO. • KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles
• KABC-TV (ABq Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Outgo G l<HJ. TV (Ind.) Los .Angeles ltl KCST (ABC) San 01ego e KTlV (Ind I Los Angelos
tonal "'" I 2 llrll I
tiiJ 6Jj) CHAIBTMA8 HENTAOE
Edward Aowe. Ollvllf
~. Len Wood. Allet.ir
Coolc• and Sclotl ~
day locMI II Chtlt1tnee ~
tom1 In Ille U $.
t:30 U O IOAP
e KCOP·TV(lnd) Los Angeles 9 KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
ID KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
8 9 MORI< & MINDY
MOftl ..... hi .. getting In
the "'ftY of MlnOy'a low! Hfe
ond runt -•Y· fAJ 0 MDVII
(~ 38) Danny end
~ buf10le 811 llltmpl 10
Julius La Rosa
Ousted. Again
By EILEEN PVTMAN
IRVINGTON, N.Y. <AP>
Julius La.Rosa may be remem-
bered best for being fired.
When La.Rosa was canned by
Arthur Godfrey on Godfrey's
live television show, he was a
cocky, fres h-faced kid from
Brooklyn whom Godfrey said
,..')KkS humility."
Tbat wu 2S years ago.
NOW LA ROSA, graying
around the temples. bas been
fired again at the height of a
comeback att.empL
The pop crooner, who'll be 49
in January, wu to star in "A
Broadway Musical," scheduled
to open before the end or the
year on Broadway. It was a role
be want.ed, badly. But a new
director decided La.Rosa "didn't
fit lbe concept" of the play.
"ll was a very important thing
for me," says La1\06a, "I was
very disappointed and upset."
"Thi.a is Julie' a swan song, ..
Godfrey announced to millions
of viewers on CBS television io
19S3. When Godfrey made bis
famous "humility" remark,
LaRosa says he was getting
6.000 to 7,000 fan letters a week,
many more than Godfrey
him sell.
••1 WAS A THREAT to him,"
LaRosa says. "I was 23 and he
was 50." Today, Godtrey re-
memben it differently.
··1 did not fire him," Godfrey
recalls. "J releued hJm from
hiB contract."
LaRosa describes the rela-
tionship between himself and
Godfrey aa an •·employer-
employee relationship ...
"Part oft.be man's secret suc·
cess," LaRosa says of Godfrey /
whom he's ~n only once in the
last 25 years, · ·t.s that be kept
everyone at a distance and
saved spot chatter for the air."
IN THE STORMY. up-and-
down years since he left the
Godfrey show, LaRosa has
made one disastrous movie ("I
hope I have enough money some
day to buy up aJI the prints and
burn them"), played countless
night clubs and d.id a few theater
roles.
•·I went out and learned my
job," ne says. Thal job is sing·
ing what LaRosa describes as
"intelligent" soniis. standard
pop classics.
But t.be years on t.be road were
tiring, and LaRosa never re·
gained the popularity he enjoyed
with Godfrey.
·'When I left the Godfrey show
I should have gone to college,"
he says. "At 23, my whole world
changed a.round me. It was too
ere al.
"I ALWAYS DREAMED aa a
kid that I would be a famous
singer. When it came true, I
began to wonder whether the
dream was a nightmare."
Eight yean ago, LaRosa took
a job with WNEW radio aa a
disc jockeJ lo the afternoon
"houaewife" spot. But the job
grew boring, and he left last
year to launch hls Broadway
career.
Now unemployed, LaRoaa
spends bis time writing
vignettes of bis life and collect·
1ng quot.es from favorite authors
in hla suburban home in the
Hudson River village of Irv-
ington. He bapea to get back into
APW•I ........
COMEBACK CUT SHORT
JuHua ... ROH
the Las Vegas circwt.
The Broadway firing, wblle
"temporarily devastating," is
not another swan song, LaRosa
insists.
.. IF TRIS HAD h appened
when I didn't know I was talent-
ed, it would be more than tem·
porary."
Still cocky. LaRos a has
mellowed noticeably.
"l guess I'm vindictive about
some things," he says. "Many
artists are milled and attempt
to do more than they are capa·
ble of dom,. Mine ia not a heroic
talent.''
But atill a talent, LaRosa
haate111 t.o add.
''Beal talent maintains it.sell,"
LaRosa likes to say. "Mediocri-
ty becomes tbe victim or its
masters."
King Hosts Special
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Alan
King will be the host of lhe third
annual People's Command
Performa.ncetoalronCBSon Fri-
day, Jan. 5. The two-hour special
will be taped ln Hollywood, New
York, Las Veaaa and Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. A special guest
star wUJ be CarroU O'Connor.
TUBE TOPPER
KCET D 0.00 Ov ·r ~y Nov
ellsl Irwin ST1uw dlRCU4'!1~ lht> l'V l't'fl8'4
bolled on his novel, "Rh'h Mnn. Poor
Man."
N})c., 8.30 -"Girt of thP Ma.ii .•
Debby Booru• talk " her firttt ortlng role
In tht1 mU5IC'OI odaptatlon of thP 0
Henry story. (Seo rev ll'w below).
CBS 9 12 00 "Quo Vooi"" An
epic movie about Rom P. In thP tltnt> of
Nero wtlh Robert Taylor. lJrboruh Kerr
and Peter U1tlnov as the mad emperor
tMY !....,. •• r~ and
lefleon ltllJ J~ P'""'
.. ~ end wtl• 10
... t\llb lll'ld Dulci\
• M>UNO THI T Aki
OMOl.MG
TIMI 1 ..... t of "'°'' It.-! ~lllH'drMI ~
If• OOftlblnld .., '""' c.llOf., ~tetlOn 10!00. CIJ aMNA9Y .IONl8
Whll• IMHllOatlno a
...,.!Qty rOYtlna lnllut·
enc• cfll"'· e .. nahy
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Oen ~ att~tt 10
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Pl"'*'O legllly dl'#e(lllO
Or'UOt 10 NII~ affkwll
pal Mini• ··=y ~ Oec*Oel 10 tfl""6
CfwillmM IOC>etd • bl"
bound lot 8Mttlll at!•
OC*llng I gilt eeeac:itd by
n.r ,.., pet.,,ta Ml0t•
lllelrclea111 • IM'\..I OIFT8
"'SIJI Epieodell FOi CMet·
-·· V .... of I.ht holiday __, by VlfOll* WOOif.
Theodcn ~ lll>d M4* Hlfl .,, animated
tet;tO;~ I LOOICIHG FOR
AQUNllU8
"Celltomia'• 8-d\ Fot
Wat•r" Tiii• pro0ram
examin.. the lleilnUfle; end
pubflc pollcv tuu ..
f999'dln0 ...-reeourcea
lnlMWllll.
11;00188(1)9 NEWS UAAICU.e
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accidenl tD CAPTlONE> Mt;
HEWS
MOfffNO
12:00 8 TWlUCJKT ZONE
"Bid LMll'lt< Jac.ilets ..
Debby's Debf:1t Show
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'Magi' Sugar Coated
BJ aoKE SILVERMAN
NEW YORK CAP> -Debby
Boone's acting debut may not
have been among the most
eagerly awaited events of 1978,
but there it is for all to see
tonight in NBC 's mus ical
version of • 'Tbe Gift or the
Magi." <Related story Page C7>
Pat Boone's pretty daughter
-as the publicity release teUs us -"achieved ovemjght sing·
tog stardom" with her recording
of "You Light Up My Life,"
although she neither appeared in
the film ol that name nor sang
the soundtrack version.
THAT SONG WAS perfectly
s uited lo her voice. which is
smallish in volume and sounds
appealing only over a narrow
range. Judging by "Magi," her
dramatic range is so far not
much broader, though it must be
said that the show 1s so relent-
lessly upbeat that even a subtle
actress would be hard·pressed lo
create a believable character.
She plays Della, the poor
Italian immigrant wife who sells
her long hair to buy her husband
a watch chain for CbMstmas.
You remember 0 . Henry ·~
ramoua abort story -be bas
gone a.od sold bis watch to buy
combs ror ber hair.
However sentimental. 0 .
Henry's story has the virtue of
belng abort. The TV adapters, on
the other band, have all but
buried the rragile plot In a go.
mlnute extravaganza filled with
a dozen aoogs and extraneous
c omplications about jilted
aweethearta and estranged un·
cles. <Channel4,8:30p.m.>
TUE OPENING scene, set
aboard a ship bringing Imm•·
granta from Europe, is typical of
(TV REVIEW)
the script's determination to
s pread a sugar coating over
potentially somber realities. The
steerage occupant! -who in
truth often died from filth and
disease -are so many musical-
com edy choristers, ready to
break into song and dance at the
drop of an anchor.
Adapter Fred Tobias, who also
wrote the lyrics, had the notion
of putting 0 Henry himself into
the story He 1s played by a
bespectacled Peter Graves, who
looks rightfully embarrassed as
be approaches the young couple
in a saloon and sagely surmises:
"There's a story In you two.
Maybe it just hasn't happened
yet."
JOHN RUBINSTEIN, a
versatile performer who stars
on ABC's "Family," plays
Della's Iris h immigrant·
husband, James. He expends
considerable charm and energy
lhat could have been used to bet·
ter effect elsewhere.
Also largely wasted are such
pros as Jim Backus, Alan Young
and Biff McGuire JoAnne
Worley hams it up as Rosa,
Della's bosom buddy.
Young ctuldren may be enter-
tained by Utis "Magi," but most
adults wilt find it overstuffed
with Christmas cheer.
TJl's 'Mary' Says
Pot Not Hannful
NEW YORK CAP> -Television's Mary Tyler Moore
11ay1 she's smoked marl.Juana and regards It as no more
dangerous than her nightly before.dinner martinl.
HER 11\JSBAND, Grant Tinker. quoted also ln lbe
January l~ue of Ladies' Home ,Journal, said he too has
smoked pot and agrees with tus wife that marijuana
possesaion laws should be eased.
On using bard drugs, however, Miss Moore says:
"PEOPLE WHO USE drugs are not facing the reality -
of their problems, or of their lives Jn general. And that's sad.
"I guess I've always had a .Bood outlook on my work
and lite in general, because I never tried lo commit
suicide; J never became an alcoholic; I never got into
drugs and all those things that people who are intrinsically
unhappy eventually go to."
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
..
-.... -
•
ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION I MOVIES
• pec1a eason
Cel,eba Turn Out /or Yule ShmaJ
By PETE• J. aovaa
LOS .\NOEL <AP> -Cbr\atm
la • mqtc and 1Jivln1 Umt and
teltvlalon ilk .. to do lta part ci>t ~
1ule HalClll. The networtla, ln fact.
have a apeclal "Chrlatma• ff&tlOO " to ao aJona wltb lbear aummt_r
eeHon. tau •euon ond mld·IUIOn
leNOOI.
A1 In the ~al world, l~I ~100'1
Chrt1tmu aeaaon l~ a Umt of iJvtnc
TV'a favorit 1lll 11 Ute Chrlttma S]>eclaJ.
ll't I uaetuJ, v•ruUle llf', and aometJm Hf'\' a double purpoee
One Clft can nu tv.-o t<M!kiop \1)4'
viewer'• and that or the holiday
celebnt,y
TH HOl.IDAY celebrity IS 1 ~rformt'r who ort of dnrl.a around
on the hi~e or our awaren unUl
a holid-,y ma11cMJI)' hurl• tum or her
onto tentt'r ata1eo with a holiday •J>e~•al Eultt ia OK for thla k'\nd ol
thtna, but Chns tmu Cbnatmas ta best.
Not many holiday celebi O'-'l of
work lh1I Ume ol year
and aomo 1ucst '1tara usually other
hoUday eel brtU .
TV aud.lenees have pulled lho p&ua
OD each ol the above perf orn:i ln
trlu at weekly aeries. nut put lbes
celebr1U ln a Chrl»lmu apaclal,
and America •currlee lo make up for
pa.t nqleet.
A newcomt.T lhia year . and • aU1ht
urlatk>a of the lpt'Clet, makM her
hollday •J»eelal d but tonl1hl. Debby
Boone cbeckAI · 1n on NOC lonl&hl al
8 30 with a mut cal vtrt1oo ol O
Hc>ory'a "OU\ of tho M•1l." the 111torY
of • Yount Chriltmu coupl~ who cared but had nuty luck wit.b attq.
DEIUn', PAT'S GIRL, 11 different
from moll oth r holiday celebriUcs
JU&t bfocaUH 11he'1 n~ver bad her own
falled show She'• n ver had amy
ahow She's nt-ver 1acted Debby 1
h~re on the s trcn&th of her pop music
hit, "You U ght Up My Ure:•
John Rublo..aleao, 100 ol p la.nl1t
Artur, a.llo st.an-.•
Debby entered 110rt of a lull period
aft.er her h uge, Grammy·wlnnJng hit,
appearine mostly on talk 11hows to
sing "You Light Up My Life."
..
Thurtdey. O.C:.mber 21. 1071 DAILY PILOT (;7
APWI,......
iva&yTold
Cary Pursued Sophia
NEW VORK <AP) -A love affair between
Cary Grant and Sophia Loren m 1957 was th(!
catalyst which forced Italian film producer Carlo
Ponti to divorce hi.a wife and marry lbe Italian ac·
treas, M1sa l.A>ren says.
The previously undlacloeed romance between
the two IOOvie 1reats evolved durtne the filming or
"Tbe Pride and the Paaalon"' ln Spain, Miss ~en
says In her autobiography, excerpted in the cur
rent luue of McCalla ma1aaine.
"CAltY T~EP ABOUT getUna married,"
Mias Loren said. With every passing day, he said he
wu more sure that we belonged
toget~r, that finally he had
found In me someone to whom be
could totally relate ...
The Italian actress termed
her days dlninC with Grant every
ni1ht u "thole perfect days."
Yet the relationship threw
·her into a turmoil, she said . since
"l waaalloinlovewilhCarlo:''
' LOltEM
MISS LOREN'S CONFUCT over the two men
came to a head in Hollywood.
By that Ume, Ponti bad separated from his
wile and two cllildren ud was living with Miss
l.A>ren.
With Grant continuing Lo court her, Miss
Loren said she rmally gave Ponti an ultimatum
and the two were married.
HappUy, the networks attn't the
only ones who f~I the cheer of the
seuon. Viewers, too, know the mean·
ln1 of Christmas, and usually areet
the special.a with a g•ft of their own
-nice ratings.
Even though she admit.a, "I doo'l
know ii I can 1tct -It scared me to
death," she is certain s he doesn't
want to limit her show biz career to
making records.
Dope's Seeing Red
VIEWERS WHO ordinarily would
rather shovel snow or fertilize the
winter graaa than watch a musical
variety show suddenly dash to lbe '
screen when Perry Como or the
Carpenters or Mac Davls or John
Davidson sbow up with a few carols
.. , WANT TO do a litUe bit of
everything," she says. "I'm always
wonderiJli what I'm going to do. See, I
don't wanttodojustonelhlng."
Comedian Red Skelton (right) make a rare television appearance
Friday on Bob Hope's Christmas special. He's show. here in his
famous "Freddie the Freeloader" ee~up.
o MASmtPIECE
of ANIMATION •••
o acMST of FUN
and AOVENJURE
Ab, a specials artist waiting to
bloom.
Publie TV Projeet
Gold Rush Series Set
RENO, Nev. (AP) -The days of
the California gold rusb and the
Nevada silver rush as documented in
the prolific not.es of Alfred Doten will
be made into an eight·part mini.aeries
for public television.
The University of Nevada·Reno
Presa baa signed a two.year option
agreement with Robert Guenette
Productions, Inc., of Los Angeles to
develop tbe project., according to
Robert Laxalt, director of the UD·
iveraity press.
SINCE THE SALE of the fllm will
be to public TV, "there really isn't
that much money Involved that wlll
be going to the university. However,
VIAOINIA WOOLF
1:00
PETUUA-e:OO A 10:20
l fee l the prestige that will be at· J.ltR. tolJclen'•
tached to Lhe University of Nevada l9RO Rh
will be enormous," Laxall said. ~d16 a AMll.7.A!ln'Z.!£.IWlllUCTIOfl ...... l91S 11
The handwritten notes of Dolen '-'' ll'llO .IA
were turned over to the university --------~
_,_
.,,_ ,,_ -_,_ U A.CftyC-C-•V._,
St-Dt ....
C-•C-
U.A.-vl••
several years ago and were edited by AIWJ'ffllAKIHl rut Western author Walter Van Til......... J.R.1t'Mlllll~"TML011>"'ncA1HOS·-·™~ 1r~iiiiiiiii:iiiiiii~~~~~;;;:;;;::~~~~~~ IAU g ..... ..a.OOMIUKl .. Pl:TD S.mAOIZ· .... -·-flJ. .... ,.... II Clark into three volumes containing --....-.1MLWJm·-11tRAL1t111A1111
nearly one million words. • ..._ ---====
Up i11 Arms APWl ........
Actress Linda Purl shoulders a
rifle while filming a TV movie
"Women at West Point." She
plays the role of one of the first
64 fem ale cadets.
Clark. whose works include "The
Ox·Bow lncldent," won acclaim for
the Doten papers, which have been
called one of the most honest and ex·
baustJve studies of the 49ers.
DOTEN, A MINER, musician,
carpenter and journalist, owned the
Gold Hill News near Virginia City.
He made and lost a fortune during
his We and died poor and alone ln
Carson City In 1903.
Laxalt. said the television series
would deal primarily with the period
of Dot.en's lite wben be sailed around
Cape Horn from the East Coast to
California during t.he early days of
lhe gold rush.
"It will show the expectations and
dashed hopes that so many had and it
will show the d ecline of t h e
California gold ruah and lhe life and
time's of the Nevada silver rush
which followed on the beel.s oft.he gold
rush," Laxalt said.
HE SAID PLANS were being made
NOW PLAYING
IDWAllDI llEWPORT •1 Newport Beach 644·0760
CllDOMI
Orange 634·2553
to film the series in Virginia City, '-----------' Carson City and in California mining
towns.
Sf.Wiflt!tJlf:~~A~
~ , ..... '-'~ •\ ~,...,,,_ MATINEES DAILY
\ {'\~ \'1) • TUESDAY, DEC. 26 "1 ,~
THAU SUNDAY, DEC. 3,-.. "IY"!.1111~
ANAHEIM ~i.i'/~~<~~
CONVENTION \ii ·-:r
CENTER " ~f.'
ALL NEW
1979 Edition
featuring
*A Galaxy of
Skating Stars
•A Perfect
Holiday Treat
•Fun for the
Whole Famlly
Tu ... Dec.21 • ....., .......... IPM
Wed. Dec 27 .,....,.-........ IM•
Thure. 0.0. 21 •.•••.•• 2 PM" A 8 PM'
'"· Dec. 21 .......... 2 PM" A I PM" lat. Dec. IO .......... 2 PM" A 8 PM
luft. Otc. a1 .......... 1 N A I PW
ALL SEATS RESERVE~ '8, P • Jftl. 14 A UNOlft ¥1 PRK;I
TtCKETa AVAILABLE AT:
CONWNT10N CINn" BOX OFF!~...t..~L TIOKETRON
A MUTUAL OUTLETS.
VIN .net Malter Cttar ..
accepted
FOR M . Cl'TtZEN,
SCOUT a QftOW Dt8COUNTI'
CALL (714) 136-llOOO
"KING OF THE GYPSIES" (R>
"PARADISE ALLEY" {PG l
"WILD GfESE" (R)
"THE BOYS IN COMPANY C"
.. BOYS FROM BRAZIL" CR>
"MAGIC"(Rl
"PINOCCHIO" CG)
"SINBAD-EYE OF THE TIGER"
"THE GROOVE TUBE"
"HALLOWEEN" CR)
"MAGIC"(R)
"CORVETTE SUMMER"
ANIMAL HOUSE ..
"MAGIC"
"EMBRYO" (R)
"UP IN SMOKE"
"'BLACK SUNDAY" (R)
ALL O,.tYa•INS OPUC t 1ltr.M.MMMn\.Y
Clll .. Unllet , , ,., •• Unlto • Kkl•I• Pl.tnHuM
.. ... -~ , •
••
...... Timi. Nut Yea' lllllMp ID .. Ill SIHIOll school of play
~ ........ But 11'1 -,.,, .............. IDUC.-... tbe dm'ld8rl ...,. .... tllllr ....... ty."
:--Stepnen Farber, New West Magazine
The Midlch Corporation ~
Ellen Burstyn Alan Alda
El.l.fN B<JRSTYN and Al.AN ALDA In~ TIME.NEXT VEAR"
A Waltw Mlriach/Robert Mullgan Ptoductlon
~ ~ 8EftNAAD SLADE ·Bated on the 1t11ge pllly by BERNARD SLADE
Produced on the stage by MORTON OOTIUEB • ft\lllc by MARVIN HAMUSOt
Produced ~ WALTER MIRJSOi mid MORTON QOTT1Jl8 ·Directed b)1 ROBERT MUWOAN
A Onlverul Pkture ·Technicolor" Now a DEU. Book
Theme lone-·The LA11 Time 1 Fett Ukel'NI." !Mlr1Q 11y.JQftfY MATHIS & ..we OUYOR IPOlMfTM.llWlWITY • j ~ by~RILYl"I &Al.AN eEROMAl'4· ""'*by l'\AIMl'4 ~ . _,_,.,....,.,_ • ...,.,... __ .
STARTS T<>M<JRROW
ClmDOlll Orange 834·2553 EDWAIDI' llEWPOIT Newport Beach 644-0760
-
• "' .
. \
Q .,..,...,, P+lOT ENTERTAINMENT I HY GARONER I MOVIES
Bajold: Fro• Convent to Stardom.
Q: Fiii •1 la H U11t ....... , Mt ra&Mr
my1t.eno. ac1reu, OetteY1e" ........ WH IM
really ra1M4 la a cnna&T -alcll Dfflla Od.lud. '
A Born In Monti tal of French ·C.n1dlan
parenu, shct ~ntered a rc>nvftll at the aa of fiv
E•rly ln h r lttns, 1ht' '*" choHn by t.M 1tsttr1 to
mike wt-lt'Qmtna •Pff'Ch to vtt Una pri at.a Thb
ta what h\Aplred her to ~om• an 1ctreu
Jolrun• l~ l'b11tre de Rideau B\l}Old .
tourH Caanada playln~ rol ln both French and
t;nauan tn i~. tM company
lourt'd Ruula and Franc .
Three t"reocb fUma h made lo
Par11 o lmpr ued rrUtn.
G n YI ve waa caat opposlt
Rh:bard Bu.rton'a Ht nry VIII tn
"Anoe ol a Thou.land Day. "
Tbla ,.on )>eat actreu Oscar
nomlnaUons u well " a ColdPn Glo~ 1n the same cate1ory She
plt'ked up IJ\OUU'r t>.1t oc~
award ut thr Canadian Fllm •~o Aw ardl \~r.mooy
t'lyln& to t;urope. •he )otnect Kalbarln~ Hep
bum. Vam: a Rto'dl(rave and ln-nt! PapH '" the
Greek l rnti:"'dy "'t'he Trojun Women " Sh\• was
also set>n an "J.o;urthqu•ke" and M brace of oth r
American films llncludin& "Coma") achanln&
anternatwnt.I stardom
Divorced from dlrcctor PuuJ Almond. Ml"
Ni~e Guy fn Trouble
'Glad You Asked Thcit'
tty M•llr• _. Hy • ..._
Bujold llvee qulelly with h r 11 year~ld ton Mal•
th w ln Mulibu Drach. CaHt At~ and 103 pounds,
abe wC'l.UU leaa than the trophies ah '1 accumulat·
ed aln~ bttom1n1 •n ectreu "Another Man,
Another Chane "b h r latest movie.
Q: How doea movie act,.. Beoewd Cba•i.1
fMI abMI& brilli ealled ••a le•aJe 0.U. Beff· ..... ,_.,.,Ill. Deull, ..........
A· It doet1n't fu her at all "l 'm a character
aclre :· •M aaad "Wh n l'm ualy, I'm Brando.
Wh rn l'm t>t-autllUI, I'm Dyan Cannon. But don't
set mt' wrong. J do relate ~o 1ex roles. too "
Q: Wba& actor playt4 &M Sllado• t..M loatett!
And who ••• UM! (In& Hlrfll &o play die pert of
Mario Uhe CNtly peraoa kaowa.1 Uae ldeaUty of the
badow>• -Mn. llyn Knepek, Syracae, N. Y.
A · Ain Moorehead was lbe tirat Margo.
Brett Morrison pluyed the role of the Shadow for 10
years (19H·l9S4 ) Other Shadowa lncluded Orson
Welles (when he was almost too thin lo cast a
ahadow• >. J ack Lacurt.o, Frank Readick, Robert
Hardy Andrewfi a nd Blll Jobnltooe. Remember
Acting Fun for Curtis
By MICHAEL PRECKEa
E lLAT. Israel <AP> -AB uaual,
Tony Curlis is lll trouble.
NOW PLAYING black·wfiite team of Bill Cosby and
Robert Culp in the hit TV series.
•·And ln the end we wind up with ICMITI CUIT
notbtn1. but we're buck together CotG Mtu 17141541-2711
again." IUUIAPUllDIHft41
Buena Palk (7141821-4070 The $'5 million film, scheduled for u TWll "I"
the utch line -"Who knows what evU lurk• lo lbe
he•rt1 oC men• Th Shadow knows."
Q : I Hy movie 1&ar Alan Ladd dJed ol H Her·
don. FrittMll d1111ree. W~a& WU aM real fHIODT
-E. Wllllama, ladlH1pol11.
A. The r cord• dlfrer. Ladd Cwbo didn't live
lona enou&h to see hla beaut.lluJ daugbter·ln-law,
Cheryl Ladd. replace Farrah
Fawcett·MaJOn 1n "Charlte's
Anaels"), was reported ln some
obits H a aulclde . The real
cauee. further reaearch reveals,
was a cerebral edema (an ab-
normal accumulation of serous
fluid in connective Usaue -or
in a serous cavity).
Alan. genUat of the movte
1 'kllJers." waa a gractoua.
u.eo friendly penon, totally unlike
his acting Image. Born in Hot Springs, Ark., on
Sept. 3, 1913, hla career caught fire when he was
cast as the killer in "Thia Gun for Hire." a UM2
study in violence·for-entertainmenl. It made htm a
tremendous box-office star. He died in 1964 al bis
home in Palm Sprints. Caur. I
Smcl f/OUr quell'°"' to Hy Go1dMr. "Glad You
Aaked Thal," care of thil ~. P. 0 . Boz 11748,
Chicago, Ill. 60611. Marilyn a1ld Hy Gardner wiU ~
a.a man11 queat'°"' cu lheJI can m tlria colwmn, but the
volume o/ mail make• ~·Oft4l repluea lmpouitH..
l'MUTMl-OMNGE CO
SENIOR CJTmMS S2.00
<;O COAST PL Al A
M1t.,..awn11 ,..,_
.,. .. SMOO" ,., This time. he and Lou Gouett are
a couple o( wisecracking adventurers
left to die in t.he Sahara Desert, who
find themselves embroUed in a baWe
over waler supplies to an African
village.
··I· m always a nice guy in t.rou.
ble," Curtis said between lakes on
the set of "It Rained All Night the
Day J Left," a comedy.adventure be·
mg filmed in the desert near here.
release next year, Is the first to be Wtsll'Mllllr (714) 893-1305
filmed under a Canadlan·lsraeli co--!:======:::::::;'.;======~ production treaty slgned last March.
SO COAST PLAZA
........... 11111111 ....
"--~ c...-a .....
"I LOVE THAT part," said CUrtis,
53, who is making his 104th movie.
"The characters never repeat
themselves. There are always oew
subtleties, new variations to include.
I never get tired or it."
And apparently neithe r do au·
diences. "It's entertaining. People
are attracted to people a bit ir·
reverent because that's what lire 1s
lake," Curtis said. "And everybody
lakes to see the hero gel the pro·
verbial pie in the face. Well , " I gel 1t
aJ I through this movie."
Partners Curtis and Gossett ("Fid·
•ler" of TV's "Roots") become en·
meshed in a mixture of love and war
wit h ri c h land owner Sally
Ke lle rman. he r daughter, Lisa
Langlois. and her rival, J ohn Vernon
<lhe tormented college dean or
"Animal House">. before lbe whole
escapade explodes in native rf·
be Ilion
"WE'RE KIND OF like 'I Spy,' on·
ly a bat hipper. because it's 10 years
later," Gossett said, recalling the
Under the arrangeme nt, interior
scenes were filmed in Montreal ln
October , before cast and crew moved
to Israel's Red Sea resort 200 miles
south of Tel Aviv. A week of shooting
at El·Arisb in northern Sinai follows
in late December.
Substituting for the African locale
is a desolate patch of desert ringed
by craggy stone peaks which has up·
rooted two plantation houses, stables
and a primitive village.
IMPERSONATING other countries
is nothing new for Is rael, which
works hard lo lure foreign film com·
panies. Besides the m any biblical·
oriented films shot he re, Israeli
landscapes have served as backdrops
for cowboy shoot· 'em ups and tales of
Arabian intrigue.
Last s ummer, "Ashanti" used
Israel to recreate Africa and Arabia,
while in "The Big Red l." Lee
Marvin stormed onto a "Normandy
Beach" just 20 miles north of Tel
Avtv.
"Of all the countries we have co-
production agreemenl'i with, Israel
ha s the mos t s pectacular
panora mas," said the Canadian pro-
duction manager, Mathiew Vllbert.
"FA.Ul.OUS IS THE
WOllD FOR 'THE Wll.'
A colossal entel'folnment. Visually, 'The Wiz'
outdoes ever.,,,,ing I've seen on the screen in
d d E • • -· • -I.--" -llle•Aeed eco es. veryone 1s 1vst ,,.01npe,..nru ...... o..., ......
"A musical J)OW9ftiouee
that .... the spirit
aoerlng. Hallelujah! A
celestial take-off dme at the
movlee again. Within the
ITamewor1< of a mU81cal tan-
taay, Sidney lumet'a epec·
tacular. jOyou8 prodoctlon
of 'The wir generme. •
mood of wonder erld aentl·
mental repture recal11ng the
arrival of the Mother Ship
In 'Cloae Encoun'8f8 ol the
Third Kind."'
-Gert AtrtOld.
W.slllngtOn Poet
"Diana Rose ta a Whiz in
'The Wlz."'
-SOOft c... ,,,. Allltll• JourMI
111)(1 Conat!llOOI!
{
DIANA PDSS1n
ii-£ WIZ-
"Roa le aupero In 'The Wlz':
her performance rankt with
that of Bart>ra Streisand In
'Funny Glr1' and Liza
Mlnnelll In 'Cabaret'"
-0-Slak•.
CllbtQO T t1tx1M
"Great fun. Color. lty1e and
flair. II wort<a delightfully.
You want to )ump up and
dance &Jong."
-Wt c.n, 0.0. "'--
.. Even If you'Ve watched
'The Wizard of Oz' every
one of 18 times ifs been on
'9levlslon, chanoee are
you've never seen anything
like the ITlOVle 'The Wlz. "'
-Svs&n Slobo/il'I,
O!Woit NtlWS
Aho~ MICHAEL J.ACKSa'4 · NPSEY PLl55El.l · TEO N:>5S · LENA ~
O'ld PJCHAl\O ~(OI iK WJ
ii«"WffiH oiAAli"SMA.w . Q'Kvnis . KENH'Ai\Prn DED£'Au.£N
OSWDMOONSm · Auiffi'WTOO ·JOEL ~N:tt:I\ PCOCOOEN -· SDEYWM£T ........ ,... .......... ~ • ...,.. ........... a.. ............. -. ................. .,.~-....,,,.,,. ·---._._ ,_.,..,,_, • ....,._ I °""'• ~"'* .,,.,\o. I ..,.. ..... _.. ...... -..-,,....,._ ~onlltCA1...,t,, 1;> ----, I
STA RT S TO M O RRO W
a i1•WDT .... .... ......
._._,...._ (714) 992-4493 Ntwport '-" (714) en-t350 °""" <71•> -.1022
-
. .,., .. , .... .-
G II IHI
• I ..
-ounrs STonw IPGI
...,..,_,.,,..~-,.
........ ,M
SO COAST PLAZA
115 Selfltwf Mt-mZ nu ""'"" --•-ITAllCAST "'SUP'BM.A .... IPG I
~ .... ,
"UP .. SM()t(f" Ill
..,.....GOOl'TS
FttlDAr'
CINE MALAND
141ua.11ner .... m1111 oo.-
CIHEMALAND
ICl4S. .... Allllllll51'11 1111,....
~ .... ,
"COMlS A HOISIMAH" .,... ,,.. rAtfTHa
STRIUS AGAt .... INI
I
----~-----
WIO.ffl, t:ao.10.40
Pl1111 IPO> "A W.OOINO''
,---r-.--..:=~""" WID .........
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=-.........
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(PG)
Ptvs '"OfATH
-ONTIC .. UE"
.,.
For quick results( set your sails
for the Boating c assified ads of
the Dally Pilot.
642·5671
.
~ . . .
•• -· ~
I
l l
t
r
---~~
DAJL. V Ptt.OT • '
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
~-Y~o•u-C~•-n_s_e_n_i_t,_F~ln~d-1-t,..._ .... .._ __ ~[~!~~--~!-•~!~J----....... ----~-·-o_n_e_c_a_n~s~e-"~'c_•..-'/, _ Trade It With a Want Ad _ •·1
_ ., Fast Credit Approval '·
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
......... ....................... ....... ,.,. S4lle .-... ... s. ........ ,_ w. ........ ,_We ....... For We .......... Wt HMMi For w. ....••.•..•••.......... ....................... ....••................. •...••....•.....•...••. .•...............••.... ....................... ....................... . •••rel 1001 I ti 1002 I••"' 1002 ., .. ,.. 1002 a, .. ,.. 1002 t 11tl IOOZ _. ... ,.. IOC . , ..•••••.•...••••....... ....................... ....................... .......•...••....•...•. ....................... ....................... ....................... . ' ,,,..,_kcal LA~&M.U•tl ______ ._ ____ _
142-5&71
EQUAL HOUSfNG
OPPORTUNITY
,,,..., \WO bumb1b•lh1
.,.. 3 bedroom.a, 2 balh
b1r1aln1 The 11lr.1n1 .~Wl l
~"I:., : ~1*l11!w'• Mettu: ~: -All rut Mlele advcrfaaed
rJc.. are M .500 and ,too rHpecll vely
.averne 11 toce ted
twrou ~ 11.ra-t rrom 11
l*rk and Mara•• hu a
Wt't bar " a utJ\t"Cir•I r•1lln1 Vou'\lt aiot lO
r beck out these two
t wu lht!arl1 CA L.L
~2(Sl i:;;: •:• :: "' uu r>MnrJ:r u aub = $.: := 1t<t to t~ ,,., tralr ~...,, -Hou11n1 Aot of 1988
\::l:i'::,..,.... = .. tik n makes 1t 111•&•1 to C SELECT t::\.~ .-ad vertlu "any prt• T'PROP_ ERTIES ~i...w. -ferencc. llmltauon, or ~:::""::. • ...._ : dulcnnun10ori bak'<I on CUTI HOUSE
MIU fff'T[ rwe. rotor, reU&IOn. sex . ......... R·2 LOT -'~ • or nauonal or1(11n. or un "'" =:~,,.1. :: tnkntion to make any Eutaldet Colle Meu. 3 t.-!..~!-,. 1ucb ptt(erence. IJmita· Btdtmcnarmer Formal ~='l%(:,l!h l!: t.10n.ord1Scnminalion." Uvtnt rm w/real wood c::i-"":'.'Z;:r.n• ,.. bw'n1ng flreplace. Love·
u...6n .. " ... s..i. ::: nu. neW'lpaper will not ly remodered kitchen l:~'t'4 := koow1n1ly accept any W/custom cabl•ets & ~~'' uc. advertlsirig for r eal pass thru window to dtn· ••1t ".,. Trlf ,,,, g: estate which 11 in viola· !Ill area. Added on faml· =~ .. _, -IJODolthdaw ly rm. Converted garage (~c-.'::r,.,.• : may be used for lge --. ~ game rm. AU this at an • ,.,.,, c;-" ·-affordable price. 573,35.50 t:llllWloo~-.:;:" -aac>RS: AchertlMrs C»1•1111o .. ,s 1t.1o11C1 M "'"' [f::~ i ~=r: [VI 1181
t:::::t~· = DAILY PILOT a1.....,1 HtUYIEW ~!i~r' :: w.tr•tt.eflntht-REGIHCY :=:~:;-:,~., e COfftd._.riloftOftly. ONLY$65,500 =:: • ....,, .,._ ,. For this lvly 2 bdrm -,,...... :l': .... adult condo w /fmly rm & ~ .... ~.,:.., ~ Ho.ft for Sale <.'Ov'd paUo & frml din Vw-11...u1~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, a ir cond1t1oned. ='1~ t:: Gwral I 002 Wall< to markets. bariks =.-::!ta1 -••••••••••••••••••••••• & resuurants. Magnifi· .-,,.,~ = MICM.ICTID GIAMT cent grounds. Serene! ~': • .-. ::l Abandoned 2-story 1 CUil today. S4S.9491 "'* 11........ -llSIN£Ss. INYEST· Huge 16x32' swimming pool! Quiet cul de sac• MOil, ANANC£ Needs work! Owner 's =~ = delperate" Hurry call ::::::::::~' ::: •.. . 11-., to l.6.o JftA .. .,...,........... lb,1')
"""' .... Tf) • 3G» • AMtOUNCEMOOS,
PEISOllALS &
lOST & fOUHO
)tGI) l IR-FIXER = FORECLOSURE! THE TOWERS
IJ3I TRUE! 3 Bedrm fixer-~ upper, will go Into
foreclosure sh ortly!
Danit has notified owner
ol it's lnt.enL Good IOCB·
Newport lch COftdo
Two bedrooms and two
baths. One lbe water
with fabulous view.
Totally redecorated.
Security bwldlng. AP· proximately 40' boat sllp
available. $21.S.OOO.
COUOFNEWPORT
-lion. 61Xl07 Lot slu. Fu II
price Just $65.000! Take
advantage, call 752·1700 Now•
Ol'INlll'>•ll\IU"110ttl'l;1((• REALTORS 675-551 I
~ [ e 111111 ~~r.·~·l'!i
: . · ::u••11a::::c.r and Found columns. 5 COLLEGE PARK ~· ~r:rr:~d10:~
-4 Big ~ms and a ttemolvalue.
:: guest auit.e, make thla a ---------•
-very livable pride of = ownerabip home. Local· 5 :1~ ~~~il\!'e~rb~
::, t.op rated schools. Full SELL -price $116,500. with VA
:: terl'M. Call 751-3191. The ' :: owner is very anxious. ITEMS
AITOS, NEW o-·• AUTJS.M
-
tllO tuo tuO
"'° t lM
tllill "1-tlOQ
IM(ll
-u-.1 . •• ~. -... ~. .. .. t:.wl!ll•t .. ~ ('•M-111\I
tt;.':'. = ~. = =~ .· ·= •• i··.J . .. . = i..... .. • " MU i::=n ·.·· .. :.···= =:a. ... ;.: .. = = ............. = ~~··: .. = ~.. -v... "'• ...._,.._
For Claulll.cl Ad
ACrJON
Call•
DaU1PUot
AD-VISOR
ICWf1I
CSELECT
T' PROPERTIES
7 ls It PoulbM 1
OLD
CORONA DEL MAR
4,000 sq.ft.
YES!!! Triple A, double
wide lot Just off Ocean
Blvd. Formal living rm
+ family rm w /wet bar
5 Lar~e bedrms. each
with Its own both. 3
Secluded private patios
Spiral slalrcase leading
to 2nd level. 4 C ar
enclosed garages. All
this under one roof on
comer lot. Don't let thii.
one get away! Ca II
673-8550
Ol'IN ltt 9 • II\ I U•I rl.)~I '' I l•N~tl
UNDER $50
WITH A
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
ONLY $2
for more information
and t.o place your ad
call a
642-5678 "'"»
C 6 V D T J E S E V A G R 0 S C H E S
S A 0 A N 8 A H A N E S S L L k 0 0 E
CRDNCC RWN PRCOU AGO GH
R H M L S k A A M S H C t E R L A H l
A I G C 0 G Y E H I H T H 0 0 U A N S
S A H P E H U A L G A E S S 0 I P R E
0 t E A R C Y L N 0 D C k V L C 0 E T
L C ~ L A I I N 0 R H E A E C k 0 W E
k P E A L N k G A E D T I 0 L J L N
U I U L 6 C I C N L N E N Y U Y E l k DPRTHYHDUE £NYE
£DAICKMOGC N£HL
L l L S A C E T Z L S 0 P E M
Y I G 0 0 R N U I L P I U Q U M G R £
l N ~ 8 I D I £ k N C S R T P £ U L
~: Hlodlll "'°'*.,.... ...... ~ ......
_.._ ........ Ot ~. ,lllCI ..... ---It'"-~
Anne Sdrilllnt CtntMIO "
llUJM Shtbf D._ "'
An9ct Soldo o""""' ¥ ~-o'**' o..._ .,..... A....._. K.,-
T•omw: OrW!tlt hwlrvnn
leell office lfld1p111CNMty
owftffMll~ .....
Lt.CIC IA Y VIUAGI
Price reduced to $109.500 on this 2
stry, 3 bdrm .. 21h ba .. end unit. Owner
anxious . Submit your creative
financing.
S UMITS WESTMIMSTB
Pride o f Owners hip. quality
construction. Separate owners house
& 4 two bedroom units. GSI. $1.450 mo.
OWC 2nd T .D. Exlnt Location.
R.C. TAYLOR CO.
640-5112
w 1-:~ 1.1-: 'r '.'J • •
TAYLOR CO.
l{i':/\l.TOl{S ·.1111·1· l ~HH
IRVIME TERRACE VIEW HOME
Spectacular panoramic view of the
harbor. jetty. city lights. Catalina and
gorgeous sunsets. A sight to behold ! 2
Large bedrooms plus maid's rm &
s itting room. forma l dining room &
den . Lovely poo l in encl osed
courtyard. S310.000. See any time.
WESUY M. TAYLOR CO .• RIAi.TORS
21 I I San Jooquht Hllh Road
NEWPORT CENTH, M.I. 644-49 I 0
cerrRAL MEWPORT 584SUOUS HOUSE
Huge 3000 sq. ll. 2 story.
IOHUS ROOM rt.US FAMILY ROOM
They're both in this Fountain Valley 4
bedroom. 2 s tory with 3200
immaculate square feet of living.
There is a lso two air conditioning
units. a wet bar and location that is
convenient to beaches. freeways .
sch ools and s hopping. Proudly
presented at $140.000.
U~l()Ut: li()Ml:S
REAL TORS'. 546·5990.
1526 Mesa Verde 011ve. East, Costa Mesa
dlso in Coron" clel Mar . al 675 6000
Lingo
Rulf:sTATt
MIGUEL SHORES IS SPECIAL
-A be..tfful pri•ot. conu:u1itt wfftl ..
tM ClllMlillff for yow fClllllty'1 recrNHOMI
,.._...., This to~ hen two 1toritt
and 3 bedrooms, 2 112 baths. PIHh
corpetlnrJ. paHos mMI dKb. Jent lbt.d
at. . .$122, soo
499-4551
DUPUX
Xlnl locaUon In 100 blk.;
rented summer ;winter.
with xl.nt rental hislDry. 2
Bdrms. down; 1-bdrm.
up. Obi. garage & you
own the land, for only we.ooo
designed ror sensuous _________ ,, _______ _
couple. madly in love
with each other. Lux·
wious master suite with
shower for two. enclosed
spa In tropical garden room. Separate maids
quarters . Ass ume
115,000. first trust deed.
Call Mack, 962-7788
673-3663 675-4777 Eves
associated
9 11 1' I( E ll S 11 l fl l T <ill 5
lUJ' ~ (!.It, u t 'I lb'-
CdMCHARMER soum OF HIGHWAY Deidltful 2 bdrm home on Jt.2 lot-cho1~e loca-
tJon! Large new kitchen.
covered patio. a real
beauty! $167,500.
PfTE RHETT
~ K€Y '651 f\€ALTORsA
R·2
lutLDAILE
LAHDI
Room for 9 units I 10 possible w /valance>.
:»422 sq.ft. of land. In de·
ve)oplna area. 371' deep.
Ideal for condos or apts. ~ now to inspect. ~9&1 .
IUSIMESS
OPPORTUNITY
Be )'OW' own boss. Owner
will carry with minimum
cash down for auto parts
store. Ask for Roy
Siemens. 631-l.266
REALTY of Costa Me11a. Irvine IAYFllOMTDUPLEX Newport Beach. Inc. .-----"'-2.·5200-•I Spacious 3 bdrm. & 2 234E.17lhSt .• C.M. bdrm .. units wilh frplc. & 63I·1266
LOWDOWN
Large duplex in xlnt
cond. on qwel st reet.
Just across street from
channel. ~king $190,000
Seller will carry It all
w;a small down pay-
ment.
JACOIS REAL TY
675-6670
4 car gar. A superb ren· Nationwide Network of
taJ property w /city. bay Individually Owned
be a c h a m e n i t i c s . and Operated
$395.000 ! Oceanfronts --~-al-Es•lJl-le•Of-fl•ces-•
Crom$37S.OOO& up.
lcAoolayProp.
Reattors
• 675-7060 *
Trade your old stuff for
START
WITH A DUPLEX
EASTSIDE a 3 bdrm and
a 2 bdrm. let us help you with investments
Want Ad Help? 642 5673-new lfOodles with a
· O&Mllied ad. 6'2·5678
Pre Counseling.
Call for appt
file~.!.~~ tt;;dh,£\
SHIAJC
NIVtlW nus home Is not sup.
poaed to be on the
market unUI after the
first. but whal wilh
Quist.mas & all. if you are looking for an ocean
view home. we felt we
could share um new list·
ing wrth you. Really a
dynamite home with 4
bdrms .• family rm.,
formal dining rm. & a
completely unobstructed
View. in Harbor View
Hills. for ~.000. Merry
Oiristmas!
673-4400
HARBOR
1\ l>I\ ''u•n or I l.11 hor In\ t"<lrm·nl <:n
C .. ISTMAS
WATERFRONT
$385,000
Unobstructed \llew of
boat parade and a ll
harbor boating activity and n ight lights
BeautJfulJy decorated 2
bedroom with the finest
quality amentttt•s .
Security buildinA with a
prestJgious address.
WATERFRONT
HOMC.S
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
Cadillacs ID Go-C. rts
Whatever the Fad RoU 'em off t.be market
With a Classified Ad
CaJI Now! 6'2·5678
LIDO ISLE
Bay view from 2 patio decks enhances
custom spacious 5 bdrm.. 4 bath
traditional home: like new. Ideal tor
entertaining. $500.000
OCEAMFllOMT
Quality craftsmanship in mahog. trim
& oak noors sets off this landmark; 4
BR. 3 ba. home in finest location.
Es tablished trees & lawns. S47S.OOO.
IACK IAY
Fine 4 bdrm .. 21~ bath family home on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool.
playhouse. storage S169.000. Terms.
IAYFllOMT
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & s lip
AVALON
Well constructed. 3 BR. 1 ba. oak
fl oor , partial basement, concrete
foundation. Flats area. $120.000-Fee.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR ;
J.11 Hoy,•d· (), ,.,. •, I'. 67) f.1 6 1
BAY& BEACH
450 NEWP RT CTR. OR • 7SSll11
CANYON CREST!
Spacious 2·sly. end unll
overlookin~ al m ost
private tennis courts :
tJus 3 bdrm .. 21-':J balh
condo lS tastefolly de·
rorated with neutral col·
ors 1n t'arpe l s &
drapenes. Many extra~
including frplc. tn mstr
bdrm. Xlnl prict! of
Sl33.500.
ESTATE STARTER
2 Uruts, 2 bdrms .. i bath
each: also e n closed garAge for each unit: lot
SOxl20. fee land <you own
1t ). Located Easts1de
Costa Mesa. EJisy walk
ID banks. PoSt omce &
sUPer markets. Sl20,000
BAY& BEACH
450 NEWPO T CTR. DA. ~11
UkEA
WATER VIEW?
See thls highly upgraded
townhouse tn presllRIOUS
Rancho San Joaquin 3
Bdrms • :t balhs. over
looking Mason Park & lake. with prcturcsqul'
UC. I. Campus & Turtle
Rot'k Hiiis in back·
ground. Walk to golf
COUtl'e & tt'MIS t'OUrt~
REAL
ESTATE
THE BEST
GIFT
OF ALL
CLOSE
IN 1979
AVOID
HIGH
INTEREST
RATE
New legislation, n ew
financing techniques 3nd
new court d ec1sio11:-..
makes it eru11cr lb ant'\ 1•r
ID pw'('hase or sell a pro·
perty & close escrow 111 a
matter of days t'or 1 he
fU"St time. Bank:. ha\··
utgs & Loari.11 can pro\ 11Jc
·wrap around· rmanc1n1:.
that IDgl'IJ)cr with st•lh:r
rinanc1ng ran beat h1~h
interest rales. Our :.tarr
of exper lent'ed pm
ress1011als help th1•tr
clients buy. st>ll. or c•c-
changc $63 m 1II 1 nn
dollars worth or rl•al
estate tn the pas t 12
months. Call now & ask about our many homl·::..
& investme nt hst111~::..
Call 7~·1920
'
QUAIL
IUCHDUPUX PL\CE
No down VA. $64.900 Un NOfllttTIES'•
believable 2 houses on I 1,.,.__ 111 l :JO, ..... 1 lot. Uve 1n one. collect --~-.....
rent on the other. No
BA YFRONT HOME
LARGE SLIP. FEE LAND
BAY FRONT HOME
LARGE SLIP. FEE LAND
BA YFRONT HOME
down VA Move in 1m · Uttle Is ~!! me: med. ~3666 Oassilied Ads are really
IBDlll BLlllS CD. 0 .,.. ••••••. ~.~ •. ~.:.~·.·~.~.:w-.~.~.:;_.~.:~~ LARGE SLIP. FEE LAND
BALBOA PENINSULA $750.000
• COLOWILI. ...... co.
844·9080
2,t, MM JOAQUIN HIU..9 RO.
IN NIWOfn CINftl'l
s~~~lA-'2'E~s·
Tlrol /nfri9uln9 Word Game wiflt o Clt11dl1 •-4 '°Y WI,. I.~-----
·~':!~!.! ~
low to '°'"' ·-timt>le -d•
I AtNTOA
' I* I' I I I
1 n·' n I l
II I
s., YI R ,o RI 11 ni. rwon ldee1 die ~lallly ~ In IOfM Medi II NceUM they
· · -: oen•t 1tanc1 -OOflf!Mo
I l> I k " y L I !Mnt.
I I I I r • ~~t:-... :-~·1o: '1'911 .......... ~ .... ~
• ,.,N, Nl.Ml(ttD r r r r r r .mm 1N 19U•m I' I' I
I . I I I I
ICl'MUT'I _., .. ,.. 1111
OVER SO YEARS OF SERVICE
CAPtSTlAMO IEACH
Oell~htful duplex on the beautiful
sandy beach. Each unit has 3 BR
and fami ly rm . w l fireplace .
Winter /summer rentals ;--price
S650.000.
(i)
•''
~II. macnab I Irvine ?-realty
llG CAMYOH
SPACIOUSHISS. • •
Is found thruout this custom wood &
g lass 5 BR r es. fea turing 133'
frontage on the golf course, formal
dinin~. brkfst area. huf{e master
suite & close proximity to ~chools.
s hops & fwys . $650.000. <11·112>
S • CUSTOM HOMI An exquisite wood & Spanis h
ccra mic tile entry hints at the
elegance which Iles within this
beautiful home. Oversized game
rm. formal dining & country
kitchen are fine livin g areas for a
busr. ramHy. Other amenities lncl.
poo • spa & covered patio w/outdoor
BBQ lor year •round enjoyment.
$680,000. (H·l13)
LYNNE VALENTINE644-6200
'42.UH MW200
tOt Oo\oer Drlw tiarbor View c.ttW
lrvkle at~ Vattty Otftttr
712·1414
. .
' Jllj!:~~~:.:..,:;;,:;~-----....:T.:.:h.:.urtd~tty~·.;;;~..;;.;;oT'."'-_,.;.;...,_J_•,"'.:t'.""t-:11 ~.'!~~••••••• ~.~~••••••••
,__.._;;,r.--........... '* ............ s. .•....•• ~~ ......................... !~!! ~~ ..... ~!~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 014
1!
I,'
1
......... 100 c... .. w. lOJJ ~~............ ROU:EO •DUPLIX. •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• •-ucon••t 1-----~-fir Oeean aide ot hwv. tevct
LOVll. Y LIDO
hOme on a 1pac1owi ~·
kit. A roomy alnale alory aBd:rrn. lam rm home,
char&J'ln&IY decorated
wlth country French
kitchen. oak lloora. flttside, rormul dlnlnl(.
IUi.ned and lnded with Illus window• and warm natural wood tooe• thru
out
• duplx. lncl\ldlnl bay • -"' •~• 11AaA .... -·•-beach f'ronl to exC'h down I ••Ml -()Ml ' ~"'..., ""'' Mty ac .. -..., ·
4 IDIM POOL HOME
778 AUtcheny
al*a. 11J"'4 3100 :nrw~'":ood floara. IASTSIDI QUICK SALE ~ Cf1:h::''::n/'& ••AU> ST. bMINd ""tiap, 2 O...trwl rMd. muat Thil f)eautJtUJ 2 bedroom 1~come . tlurry only nr.placet rou.ntrY *I Na lowb. newly N · Sequoia model In U · •• 900 ~ With ~ner'1. un lulcbla ~ •Nf M!M'Ol'ul elusive lrvloe Grovel MiMk>n ~ally 4!M.o'731
4 8dnn 2 baill, firepla~
renced yard. covere~
P8Uo.1$7S mo. Nr. SOUth ~Piasa
I\, toed lotatlon. dbl """ t'd 4 bdrM 2 bath hol}\• hu Juat b«fl rc-chared \o ovou•u1c AftCHETEC· •~ 2 ltpl c .. .,. 2 Bdrm, 2 btlth lnrome !olparklln• ntw ultrii acll Now hntutlc T, .. U~AIUR E 1 u .. u r" Mlller W\U tarf')' lat T D at vt ti d mt:ldfm C"OUn\r)I kltctltin .. ,
_.,-,~[Il-
l • > •111 ,1 I•
&Ml. Wl w:g pa o an Ra.&IMld tk'&l'\h flrC'plurrf p1rk1ldtt. cul d _,•UC1 amtnJtln. ~••n view. Ml'WrOITllACH )ant.St .OOO t-..<Wl.JISonelnnatura nur pool, •P• •no and Iota ol apace lo thl1 llAL Tl , C4 644-72 II ~ QWtrry tllr ~ntry dubhouM HUR KV ON out new 4 bdrm. home.
• ' • ' "'•' .. ~ " !r ,.. •
PLUS
61 .. IHJ .. Z..076 11 n d w a Ill . Yr on l 'ODSOl'/E" SeelUodayl 1316 000
rnurt ya rd 8rl11ht,
ll*'M)IA at\d ('btrmloj.
You'd biller hurry and
A lati4l pool 1111~ llOUlh
paUo. ,.
133' OCEAN FRONT
B e ou llru l CO M · MERCIAL LOT. No. San
Diego Cty. $280.000. O,.ner/Agt. Submit
terrm. 714/$1735. Bkr.
F• All Actill
Cll 1
Illy Pillt
AD-VISOR
642.s&JI
SELL
ITEMS
UNDER 10
WITH A
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
ONtY $2
for matt 1nlorma tron
and lo place yoor ad
calla
642-5678
Absolutely Easiest
9412 a.20
"" 1'f M t-1Tf t...\-r .....
c:....... 1024 .......................
-~ ..... HERITAGE
. REALTORS
illOOSY"
CHARM ...
. accent.s tlul4 top lo<'8t-
ed 3 bedroom, 2 bath & 3
ce r garage. Fas t ~; Owner anx· lou• Loweal price 1n 11ru. E Z to buy at maoo. 14$-7221
STOP!!
Take tJme lo relax and
shop at home It's simple
w ith Daily Pilot
Classified Ads. And if
you have somethlng lo
sell, c:all a frie ndly
Clasalrted Ad· Visor at
&CZ-5678
Beautiful Blouson
WI OM 11 llOO 000
CalJ M>-ll5 t
. ~"',. HERITAGE
. RlAl TORS
Atrium MocW:
Near Park &
Schools
Color coordlnutt'd 3 bOOrol>m homl' 1N1th din
1n1. l•m•ly area and hreplace A\tnclt vti
peOo HKR Ca II $40 1120
TMmL ---
,_AT
WHATS'SMEW
Just hated 3 bdrm, 2 bath
home in Mesa Ve rde.
Completely remodeled
wslde and out and loaded
with cb1trm. Super loca·
hoo near 1chools and
shopp&na. Ca 11 S46-S880
for more lnf'orma Uon.
J ~ e~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
$195,000
5 SINGLE FAMILY
HOUSES One 3 Bdrm-roor 2 bdrrru, all with
enclosed garages. Call
6'S-9161
; OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/.
1034
Ml. & MRS. CLEAM
Sha.rpesthomelntown.4
bdrm, 3 years new. Cul
de sac. Like new C3rpet·
Ing. C\.15\om drapes. 2 full
baths. Pool sized lot.
er.-:.. I .. JI tt
I I 'I • l
I ,'1/!1(1
SAC RU'l CE1 Bout
Woodbndao 3 nr 21-&lJ' PLUS e&eM•nt 2 Ur <'Ondo
Drtced below marktl.
&lh or lake 813 4311.
Owne:f I Atlt ·
--;; I : 1\ NCI I ~I .I /\l lY ~ 11111 :'UOU
MOVE IM llFORE
CNUSTMAS
New Woodbridae Estates
c.ondo. cape Cod style.
Adams Pian. 4 bed, 2 Y.t
ba., $1.23,000. Call George
or Roxan n e a t
(7l4)S52·3700 Macnab·
lrvine RJly Co.
LAKIROMTIM
WOOOMIDGE
New Woodbridge Est.ales Wuhin&lon Plan ready for move In . 3 bed & den.
2Y.t ba. $166.000; Special
upgrade package in·
d uded. Call George or
Roxanne at (714 >552·3700
Macnab lrvlne RltyCo.
B~BUY IN IRVINE
Woodbridge Brighton.
AJEUJE'LL
5 Br 2 Ba. $2500 down,
Sl.220 pr mo. Call Mr.
Black. l-898-7879 a..,.a.....,.. 1052 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IYOWNER
38R. 2balh Eut Nine
Condo oa El Niguel Goll
Course. Furnlahed.
~/down or lease at
S560/mo. 496-77116
OPIH SAT /SUH I ·S
One of a kind. Brand new
w /oc:ean vu. Elegant
Fren c h Prov . In Monarch Bly Terrace.
32719Sea Island Dr 640-6259
<l~
appra.laed value $125,000. ---------owner mustsell. $117,000.
561--0685
WOODBRIDGE PLACE
3bdr., 2 ba., Stonewood
model A/C, Jacuzzi. Lge.
l ol Many Cus tom
features By owner
552-35&1
GORGEOUS LAKE
-VIEW
End unit. $207 .000.
Contract of sale.
l.N.d.n. Bob Marcel.
Moore lnveslments.
673 2511
Laguna Niguel
Realty •
$295,000
for ...... to ...
c.1~4-7211
Walkutg to schools and EXECUTIVE shop~g. Offered ror
J:e-p-4~...,,,-! ...... g~p,a-· -. --rHE-·c·oc.-OH-v .. -SPECIAL .!:1 ~c1'M~·e~73~..821()~~~1 • -u QUE h • th ln a neighborhood of Im· :: ·4411 IQ: • NI • l at s e ~Ing homes. This 3 word for lhls award wio· I 076 n ing mode l. Three rm S turdevant Clel911h
bedrooms, Including a Westcll ff home Is a ••••••••••••••••••••••• IWINcl••Klt 1040 large muter s uite. bargain, priced for you l.HM,LMOpt.or
••••••••••••••••••••••• Separate famiJy and din· at $158,000. There's old S-. ,..__,.., IY OMA.II-In th r1 t •-fashioned quality ln thls d I ~ '""'"" it rooms· e nes uo modem home St.art the 3bdr .• Pres I e nt a I 2Br. 1~Ba. blt.ns, bUI wall cove r ings a nd new year n ghl in the HgS.s .. Condo. Lease S42S
.._ Pr°"rty JOOO •••••••••••••••••••••••
brick frplc, nr oco & carpeting. gOOd locallon Newport Hl"h School Mo .• OpUoft Fee Sl.500 sboppin&, reCrig. As· . flexJble Cmanclng and it District. To see this tn· Aakmg S87,500.
sumable Joan, SS7.SOO. can be yours for only stanlly appealing bocne. --. llrnt. lltty. Beauty Salon Hur styling ~~ Wl.000. call""'al..,."1""1 496-7711 men & women. Sell or
-.,..,.. J.,J lease. 15 yrs C.ost.a Mesa 3 llDttOOM SS 7,500 I OI0 63 ._1_-4415 __ 0C'_7_5_1._1122_. __ Blke to beach from this s.taAM -
beautiful garden home. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TAX 184EFtTS:
Family alzed lvng rm .====-=--!~~~~~~~~! $261 PER MO. FourPlex,Gdrental Wtcradcling frplt. 12.350 PIYI alJ when you as· Closelosbops.f'.J>ua.
2 br hse w/gar. patio.
walk bch, 4dults. no
pets. &mmed Occ. $SOO.
't»l&!XJ.
COIN W... 3224 . ..................... .
3ZZ6
dwn. Act Now call (714) 180 DEGREE awne ?V.% loan. 3 BR. MULHEA"" 3 bdrm. lrg. feoced Joard. ~9.11s1v1vro1HNl(1> ~~ ..... ~~~ VIEW ~~So l.R.E.N. ~~~~t.r fr9V: :~~m~~ 1~~1: [.~11M1I. :111 .. tl ~~~·~:~~~ T... 1090 _U_M_lfl ____ C_LO--S-,-.. -G-~~~~mi pet.s .. 5'13"' .......... ft..._._,.,E
i: .. b ••••••••• Ma ....... _,~ 3 BR. waU·~aJ.I c ... •• rncd ~~·"~' ~ '~~1daetri1num. Protr· •• $5 .... 0.0 •• 0 ••• D •• OW.... rlUIWW ,....... -.,..., -the....... J"llll Seller to carry Trust rearyd.$360.2622·ESan· Luxury 2Br 2ba W.8 . I 044 ~ & landscap· Deed. 334 spaces. Part ta Ana Ave . 7141249·~ Arborfake twnhse . 2 car
tng.759-UiOI By owner, 4br. 3ba . KOA. 7% cash return. Jbdrm..2 ba 1 ·-evanl g.ar. frplc. laW>d rm. nr Corner lol, circular &M-9513Agenl. · ...... ., , · lake. Vacant $SOO/mo or
•••••••••••••••••••••••
~ Witlker J; Lee driveway. New carpets. Ca.NoUpetsaft. f!!~ J~.~ l11e/opt1on. 893 &370 , YES ANITA drapes. Will 1ell on con· lNDUSl'Rl.AL USERS· • _.... .....,.. ~1833 495-5906 I Real&,tate trat'lorleaseopUon. Va · rNVESTORS 2199 Meyer. Ne ar or
there i. a Santa Claus but eant. Move in today· Only a few left in park. Harbor/ Viet.on a SPACIOUS
Tomneedslosellhi.scon· Can~ SACRIFICE Pnndplesonly.754-6.519. 14-50,000 sq ft.$C7S.OOO-3br,2bll.b1Uns.frplc.dbl family hom e, 2.0SO 7236 dosohe canpa.yttie rent ·&~' Beaut4BR,pool,apa.lge ·-yousHR~? Sl,400,000. 20% down. garg. $il80. 821 Presidio. square rool Hampton ~ on I.he apt. Then Sanla yard. Xlnt area. $142.SOO. ,,_.. .,.,..., Near NB /San Diego ~1926 model In Greentree. 4 or /..,, f"\n 0~ will have a place to visit r~n...t 673-4311 Agt. .Don't lose a minute. 5 RR frwys, & airport. Call . ~ bedroom. 3 bath. 2 v-,t-K.i.c& you&Taura.Thecondo ~&~•T HOME+..... custom ho me with Oenlson & Assoc .. In· New 2&3 bdrm. rrpk, storyhome.$650/month lan'l very big & not ex· • .._.-• 11weeplng view beyond dus t rt a I O iv 1s1 on . bkas. 2 car gari.ge. $4.SO Pvn th11 sol' MW blouson on penalve. Perbaps so· 2BR house+Apl over belief. Superb entertain· 673-7311 •-.. a,....., Mr iknl\. pants' meone with a Chrlatmaa CUSTOM DUPLEX gar. R2.. Big comer lot, mC!llt lS afforded by huge •LIP·'""'""""'·
SUlloped scooped nee~ "'" spuilwillwa.ot\ohelpby Well·built 3 bedrooms, 2 view. D /R, L tR. den. icame room and family East Costa Mesa. 4 re· "503 br, 2 ba. near new, ~eM1.. blous.eo iuist-tts 1 calling bathsinea('hun.lt.Wlde S225,000.Apptonly215St. room.Solringcalhedral modeled houses on lot E·s1de, ya rd
1
W/O
t>t.iu1y1 llnit or 4plt. med111m oae&I> view. near beach Andre ws Rd. Agt c:elllnga accent living f'or Sale by owner. taoollup.2careoc1.gar.
we1aht1tiyl1CS4)0rly11nin1111>-"adjacent t o Sao 640-0608 roomaodformaldlnlng. 963-s:ln TSLMgmt 642·1603 bed 1>1ttt1n stitch Pattern ~mente aolf courae. ---------I r h
1"36 Siles 10-16 incl. lnc ud'-b 3 flrep aces or l at av.t. 4 Pl.EX 3 BOR•• • ..,.,_BATHS ' ~ooo 4 duplex, 1 ... g ay warm and cozy reeling. ...,. m , yz
SUO lor uc.11 P•tte1n Add 40C • front to be exc:baoaed Hundreds ol aq.rt. of Asking only Sll2.500. twnbse. S. Cst P lau
QUIET
1,soo s quare foot 3 bedroom. 1-'• bath. ram1
ly room, country kilch\•n,
air conditioned hom•·
$500 /montb. Ais k ror
Craig Balley 631-1266 RE/MAX
REALTORS uch Plfttn1 loo fKs1<lau 111· U06SO.Cout HJway d o wn 1n a pta . deelJo~abouod. Un· Must sell fast. Sc:ott area. refrtg. WtO, air,
m11l 111d handhne. S.d k lnVl.llaaeFalre 1 ~213~18M!!::3ZOI~~----..... 11 le low pricer RcaJty536-7533 1ar opor. 1550 mo .1--------• LJNA •· ""' eva · 636-e'18ev1; 831·2386dya 1 Br Orangctree Plan 3. ABSOLUHL1 the m1ut Met.._.. LAOUN BEACH On-....W .. •-.,_ BuUdlr wanbl, out I New 4-Pltt. S&0,000. Conluct A/C, te nnis, pool, no
I Needlecraft Dept. 10S 497 2457 ... -· .~ .. -........ llldveeent. mr· o( 1alc. s houses 147.000. 38r .. n .. btt.ol 2 cu gar .-........ 751 1154 dress-nowaist~m. no11ppet. Dally PllOt • ll75,0CIO A&Gol ~ TY Call Marcel. 770 7271. no'"'9pe't s . s'.&85 mo'. Log!M.--·..-:~-~ 32 .. 1 Chdn <Ml ,our head. with wide .. lU, OM CW.. Sta.. llew 2br 2ba ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I -.1111ZZ __.. ,.
$leM$ easy plhm btnutll' '"' IY 10011. hitlt ...... ~ ~~ •• bf.. 2 ca~ -= IN-7'77 _Uia_..;.;_lk_h.______ S.1088.540-6262 •••••••••••••••••••••••
oo.. btlt 9412 M W... r.,. r.ttn """""' h'p&c patio. Up. a..-._. 1048 1.-._. ICMI LdlferS. 2200 a Br l ea. East.side. No 3br, ~sq rt. \'Qn Printed Pa!tefn · ~ N(Vt1H()Wt Our 1919 NHOt.E° ~. vacW. Call PM •H••••• .. •••H••H•••• ~................ Olllrlelll ..... ....................... ch&Jdren, $&25. 645-4461 Iv t e m po r a r y b m
Sizes 8. IO.
12 14
·
16
·
18
· 2? CRAil CAIAlOC -OW'f 100 PoQu ., ... ,147c •• 7., .. 00 By -••••••••••••••••• , ... ...-.. MIC meua•e. Panoramic white water Sue 12 (bu\I 34) tak.~ , 111 dtM&n~. 3 lret ..P•tteins '"'" ., • • .. ..... tto.1 ~""""" ...,
•••O\ 4
!1
11
"
11 tlbtit ponltd inSl<le Stno 7':>1 Owner. ~ ,..S. 1100 OCEAH VIEW .EA.5TSIDE 3 br, l ba, ~.~Imm~ occpnc} ~ t.50 ter tldt ,....,., AM l~lasy Tfll!Sftn $1.SO ....__ Coldwel 8m lllcer' _ .. "............ Fu II on e ha It o c re (rplc. eoc:I. back yard. --------* fir tltll ,..... ,. flm. lzt.,lkltt11" Qtrilb . . SUO I Ill:' Newport Bench lot 1n the Nr. shopping & schools. s TO R y S UN N Y w.11r111111.-.....~t1J l27<Aflll1M '11'G.ille • 11.so Ulti--'-~t,ielfNllA4 8QOl<£AAG€COMAIWt MOll.IHOMI excl1.1$lve atwded 1eat.e kiO. M0-»35; ~-4471 SPANISH 2 br .. I'+ bu.
l1Utlftr"'"" .. I.SO IHUfC' eommu.olly of Harbor eves. walk /beach I town MMtM MAITllt lMttlfs O.ilta ..... ·fl.SO .. m everythinll' Thi~ 5 .-ottMATIOH Rid ge. Will accom· , .. _______ ,
1
$.'i95 /mo. Adults Avail P•ttern "'--t 4'2 IZUtltts 'n'~ l.SO bdrm .. 3 ba. t lam. rm. 1 ... .u ...... -·CH 1 1 ·-Rent, ODtJon to bu.y I~,~· rnodit.e a tennla court.1• f
1
mld.Jan41M·2764. '" ....,.., ' l2J.Stltc11'11'~1tdiQtitts1US Suwar<t. Mode l In ----'" ..-• repo'a,loln auurnp...,n Cell Jac:k Cu ater a t aat.Zba. amlyroom,1--------Dally Pilot l%2·s..ff'11' hffCMlll . IJS 1\u'tlerock Hlthlands f' a n or am 1 c 180 vi e w Io t. e&c. Ealy finance O.A.C. l714>'40·6776 Muaab frplt, covered patio. aculn view 2 br. m""' lllll St.. lltw '"" IZl.fllw~.. uo t\111 It all, VTEW. plua Unobstructed ocean. coast line and tome.. IMMRltyCo. ao.e to park. shoppln1, atudio. 3 btl, bli:i frplc.
ll'f t•u. Pltat llMll. • 111..W, ltulata'•t .. 1.tO °"" t:I0.000 apeot In up· rity light vie ....... Plans included for ......,..._ S.W. ...... etc. Avail lmmed. ""50 deck. patio. pr vacy. -.SS. DP, SIZl • mu ll'-ltltfrF1"7 Olllb . UO l'*tin&I ..... W.Anabeacn 7&1'1441 Wlll tnde a aul>dlvl...., per mo. c.n TM Real many xtru. $650 -.a. ll~ ~ . . 1.00 a 4 BO 3 BA home. 1145,000. Aaabelm 95f.t0ll ~i!:' Vttu.i.ror c:a1h, ·~ ~231l 41M-730
Let'i M lll1ttlc.l4-'°" set u~ CHb. . . l.eo S....ADa ~-7cm> t. car, a.iamooda, ~~~·~~~·~~·---.. -,--~32!»\J '"°" for i. s .,. '°" • 11 .. lUiftJ..., . . 114 ..... __ ......_. t5'-4$00 a". 87s.?e8'7 = ~
Sfild lot new fAUwtNftll t•S.. & •llii . . $US --m -Redec. 2 Br 1':·1lde ••••••••••••••••••••••• J~IONS.t().SCWCATAlOG Hei l•IMt.Mt 11w... . $1.00 • COUMai. ..... co. ~ MMl9(', ~ Ocean View Lot pr, facd ,patio. Marrl~ •Br. 38a. la Cam rm,
$150 COUl'On IOI ITtt Pit l ........... ,..._ Sl.00 496_7222 831 _0836 lU OOeq.rt.Call ~.no.,.U.&46-J078 N'Khll,abopa & fwy,
tern of ,ovt~t .... 7~ t• lM-...._ ~ .. Sl.lf 847·$887 MOO mo. owner 962 ~
117Wt.IM I toe..._...., 11.eo OfftCllUILO.... Rear 2 BR w fYanl . no or882·7SIO.ft8PM , ........ ,..._ W 1.• llJ.lt Qlllb .. ,,.._ , -,,. ftr9e till .. llr.... .. ~-u .... .--800 Haw IOmetbln& you wanl peu, 2 chlldren OK. 1900 --
Ill-'*'""" Qailb 1.11 lOUIMtaQlllta~ 711 a.a.-..... r..:.-"..:ioa-;, &'ker: to..U?Clualfled •dido Pomona Avt ~·t dla· 3 Br 2 be, 5'SO +util u~v~ ... ~w-~ ... ~ ~~~~~~S~;i~i~~ii~~~~~H~~··~~.~~m~8~~~~~~~~~~·~·.~-~c~a~11~N~o:w~ .. Ll';~~b~,~~~t~~~·~a~~~.~~:LlA~~~~~·~h~~~b~l~.~F~arn~11,~ . ......... _.. .. ._ ................... l..S25CA~MJa:IRV1ffl ::; ...,.,_,o mo.m l1t'M818.evea. nopeta.'7914116.
--' _.
.. -......... ,
' ., ..... ~. . ....
t
f
l ,
\
t
I
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-
•111111 U.fu 'iw ~ U. ... .a.4 • Af lwlh ,_......a.M ...................................................................... .,_ lw1b u.fw8. .,.. t1M~h u.twt...
• • • •• • • • • • • • •• • •• •• •• • • ·•·•••••··••····•····•· C..Mete lll4 .w ..... 9"Klt 31'40
..._fth "'rnl•hed l'hurtday. Oeoemt>er 2'. t978 DAILY PILOT P3 "orUnfllmlthed 1900 ~-..;._~~----~----~-----......;.--.... ~-~-
...... , ................ OHlc•llftltat '4400 LOlt&'-d 5300 (ad:,..... .. t .. z~1.._. H"MI ,_. IMd JJ6f t•z rt.._. n•t ........................................................... .:. ................ . • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Suwiid Villa e New 1"2 bdrm 1f xury
uduJt apta In 14 pl11n& trocn Sll5 + pools. lt.•n
nb . waterfalls. pond''
Frum San Diego Frwy
t.lrlvt' Nor1h on Beach to
McJ.'llddcn "1 n West on
Mc Paddcn lo Seawind
V\lla6te. <7l4 l893·5198
----------1 · .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . "' ,.1111oa ~ 6GO lao& '"1 (\ L•11una lAllt Of >'ew'ld • Pt'lf Cell t••• ••••••••••• ••• •
IHfORMA TIOH Sch XJnt hlw11y vl:ublh An Im a I A 11 Is tan<' I! Schaoh &
• .. .-.. . ..
NEWPOIT BEACH
14Yfll0 .. T nwto. a BR, a ba , )'nr· lY trJ'Smo ~MT
2 lill. I&.&, yrl1 ~
OCIAMNOMT
t BR. & ba • wnlr S.-.00
51WSTOHACH
2 DR. 2 b41. •ntr M2S
3 ua. 2 ba. yrly llT5
2 BR. ' ha. yrly .. 3$ 3 BR. lb.I, yrl)' ~
PARIUDO
J BR. t ~. frpl f'oot Mu.u ..
associated .... -. .. "',... .... . "" ' ' ..
Lat1l ol lh n w homt's on the ~att-r
for I ase only Ll\.e and entertain in
deg~ ln your new custom hom~
with designer lnlertor. Conve~ltncc ,
ortenled to indude 3 car "nrag w1lh
automaUc openers ; kltch n111 wt th
mlcro·wavt' range •. 1tlr-deanlnR
ovens. trash ("Ompactors. and BBQ
range t~. '4-Cl ·bar~ m all modt>b .
rtreplacl' ln l1 v1 n g room. &
bed room Ii, mdoor I nundry :treu; gue~l suJ t , ramlt.) room nd muC'h
mo"'. Oo<.'k av llablr to nil tt'nunl\
Shown by nppoantmeont Call Lmrla
llaun '714) 833 3150 c8 to~ .. ~·kda)'8l <>:Nn1ronl dllc 2 br. 3 lfa, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~roml>'tb ui Junc
......... lJIO S..~ 3216 'If lwllh ....................... ....................... ......~
N.-3br 1 bo on Ink''· lilt l~ lNlture adlli.. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••
frplc, A C. r\'t f•l'll rd, $C2!I mo no JW'U, n< n .... PtMtsulo 1107
$tll!IO. Sf).4634 \1eW. uUl pd 499 2170 •• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Lla bayftunl Vl'r)' lr.i. 2
Bdrm, 2 ft.J. ('OfldO boal
•hP avai l VtDtl)
~ rno bi~ tm~
l.--..... J152 Walk to bt•arh ru.iy i*dob"
"••••••••••••••••••••• I BR h-1' l''t <ll\' II 4 Bdrm 2 ba Fam r palJo. fpl<-bl•4m N·1I A&rium. all bltlns Or1·':n lflO>. w 1743
v\ew. SM ~•ch N1aiu\'I T•tl.t 3290 Sbor\l&. llOO 1~14t.5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
W) uul pd I Hr tlupll!it.
11tove & refn.:. 110 11el:1
541 W5. GTJ."243
a Dt I Oa. crp\11, dr1J>H. tmt yrd, IO'll 1ar Avail
l2120 Aft 7.1n~ ~lltl
aDRlba U~aq rt l"rplc.
mcl pr. dabv.,her. tea1 b
d pl, n w <'Ph $311~
MttH V\lrdt 16t ::16. Qt,l
..w11m•ns
1 Bdrm " loft mo Pool.
Ja<'um. cloetd fC&ral(oa u ... • W\r &Id AdulUI. no ~ .m lt.mllwo. C M
t.4$..Wll
llllr, l'-'8 ti . frp le ,
rpll t drps. rdrii.:.
Wl'hrldryr. yrly h.e, ~
cno MZ~ -----lttaut. arountls. nice &
qwd Adults. no IXlls 3
Br bung,tlow. Pool.
Jiat'IJT.il ai bbq areo Also
2 br townhow;e I oq 177 t.: 22nd St .• f 10 64~!<198
I Br baehelor, utJJ lncl
1916 Wall11ce SIM mo
IJ46.26M
~ ~ 8 r townhouse.
frplr. p11 t10. ~ u ode<' k.
:.cfoll8. no peL" ~ · · 8 "
llrl&l\ill ~ 7UOS
W.rgl' lbr upl
Good Joe at.Jon. S2SO
6'l0·49'79
0.EA.N. QWl'l ~ Br. I Uu.
no l)t'l.li. 1981 Maple $275
PH mo . ti3 l 1266
RE/MAX
NIGUEL S U OR~;s Ooodo 2 BR. 1''2 ba. de ~ 4 bdrm 2\t ba roral.t'Ci. lrl( i>•tlo, pool, ra.m rm. bear h.' tt'nn1:.' childn'fl OK $315 mo
16»/m o. 49S 6293 or 998-2m6_ ----831·1~ ....,.,_ .. ~or .......,.._d llOO
Luxury bnyfronl 3 br. 2
ba, dOck 111cl $1000 mo
673-4928 UtJIJllcs tnt'luded I br
C ... 1tr.., leoch 3818 $195. Pat.lo. Adull.S. <iwet.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'4..fl}S8
Beaut.l.IUJ Home 3 hd nn. 3 •••••• •• ••• ••••••••••••
ba. Formal dln. pnvate1---------~omm . wilb te nn1i.. ~uHoM• jacmzj & beactL $675 mo """"9f ic
m.9223 or 4919-4611 IMF<>aMA TIOH
Ni'-""" Rent, option to buy info. ....... Slllores 4 br. 2 ba, repo's, loan assumption
Sea Terrace. Pla n J on etc. F..asy r1nance O A c l&e lot. Newly palntf'.d. 90mces.
t'Tplc, ram rm. tennis. MoWt. Home Store
pool, J~cuui le beach. An.ahelm 956.1011 me2, ~l-2J38. Santa Ana 55-4-7010
F.astAnaht>1m 956-4500 ...... VJ.io 3267 W.Anahe1m 761·1442
••••••••••••••• •••••••• Westminster 848-8895
Clean 3 br, 2 b11, frplc. ~· patio, gar. fncd Out.st.anding bayfrool hse .
yd. Kids & pets ok. $$~. & pier. 2 bd. 2 ba. 3 AtJ.. no fee. 964-2566 or frples. garage. $10SO
973-2911 monthly. 6'75· 7285.
Lovely pool /sp a hm. 3 Br, 2 br. 2 ba. duplex by
2 ba + fam rm. $500/mo. water, NB. $1125. Marina Call 494-3702. Realty 642-3850
Townhouse 3br, 2~ba .
frpl c $375 mo 2
<'htldren, n o pds
( I >496-0351.
Coroftodel Mor 3822 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOVELY 21r u,,..-
with fireplace. prt \'ate
pallo. Enclosl'd ~ar
North or Coast ll11(hway.
No pets. no e h1ldren
$425 1mo Call Linda
6'7H3ll or aft 5, 646-6457
2 Br upstairs. frplc. lgc
rooms. 5 years old. Im·
m ac. C hoice upper
Narcissus. :iingle or cou-
ple only. 12 me>!> lease. re·
terences i\ v a 11. Jan.
15t h . Owner day:.
633-5001or541·3l22. Eves
640-76l0.
CoadoMllMM 2 Br upstairs. frplc, snrm,
... .,.... IHch 3269 ......... Wd 3425 lg sndk. beam cc1I. gar .
••-••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• • • • ••. ._. IV'-OC'ean. $'25 752 7811 :
Sl.500. Modern 3300 sq fl Bay frt. Btlmonl Shore 2 eves 6'75-91J5 G1.:ori:e or
cuatm 2 s ty. 4 BR. br., 2 ba condo in Sec. 67S-3877 Bob.
w/pOol. Lrg Back Uay b Id g . W e t b a r •
lot. 64S-7783 eves. wshr /dryer . adults only Coda Meso 38 2'4
HARBOR VIEW HOM ES BX>/mo. Boal slip a vat I. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Carmel Model 3 bdrm. 2 21.J.43.i-9603. 540-9797-orr. $315. 2 br. 1 "• ba. pauo. lndry rm. adults. no pets. be. fam. rm. dbl. gar. TSL Mgmt 642· 1603
gardener incl. $675 per mo. Call 644-1697 LA MANCHA APTS
UDO ISLES ldrm ~!~~ ..... ??.~~ Lar~e 1.2&3 bed room
136 Via Trieste Spac.'1ous 4 BR. 2 ba, 0 /W. frplc. ~ en apts . Adults. home w I ge II v Ing Gar. year round. $600. whr, bltns, ent'I. gar.
rm + d e n . I m m a c . 675-SSOO gas bbq. Pool. Gas Pd. $1250/mo Iae. 778 Scott Pl. 642·5073
~-~~~~--~
New lg Jbr apt. Balcony ~uo. fri>lc Upgraded. $4SO s.48-1238164t>-4670
Large Easts1de. Brand
New! 2 bdrm. 2 ba
Duplex. Crpts. drapes.
OW. Close to everything
tld.IL'I, no pets. $335 per
mo. 645--6043 or 646·6429
Brand new 2 BR. pvt
patio. fplc. enc l i:ar.
Adults. ~5. 642-5722.
1 BR apt. mature adults
only. No pets. East C.M.
$250. Eves; 645·2331.
Easl81dc custom I BH.
duplex. Fplc. small pet
OK. $250. 675-0700
2 BR 2 Ba, fort'ed air heat
encl gdr. Mesa Verde area $300. Ask for Betty
64>9161 Or 644 2270 i\VBll
Jan 15
Newly redecorated 3 br, 2
ba, crpts. drps w tt.Htn
stove. encl. garage. $350.
5574238
Quiet Mesa Verde 2 bdrm. S300 lsl. & last. Ref. rcq.
498-1936 aft. 5.
TWNHSE. 28R. l ~'lBa.
rptc. pvt pat .. gar. new
pwnt. Adlts. no pcl!!. $300 mo. 548-5479
Townbous•. lovtly. 11par .
41 hom4'.'·hk~ 2 br with
pYt.. 1•led entrance + 2
p.Ue1. Som~ with Dll
aaraite. Swimming PoOI.
Jacw.u. T(•nnls courts. I
blk to HunUnitoo 11hop
pl.f\i <'t'nltr mall. Adul\:s
No pels From $43)
SeaWlnd V1lla1e, 15.SM
HuntlQ&ton V11lag~ L:in~.
H B 17141898-9961
2 Br. ctuldren welcomr . oo pet.a Starting ut $270
mo.846-am
Near 5 Poin ts. <.;om
modore Ctr. Apt.s. 2 br
Kld.'4 wclN>ml'. ~ m~r
at 7G71 Commodore Cir
Ai>t 3. $285.
SHARP. be:ich l.Z & 3 AR.
(rplc. d1shW11hr. garagt•
& patJOIS 900-23S8
31'4'4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Adult Condominium, I BR. pool, jacuzil. 1.Jghted
tennls. $300 mo . Call
Vogel-Pac1f1c 640-6161
LalJmcl leoch 3841 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Root.. ~on to IJuy Info. l)', new crp\s, paint. l\/C, Lc•gUG. ~·22'73. no le~ IMINctiCMI 7005
'"''"" ""' ... , ('· • h 1 EWARD!! tor return or -.nn's A"n .. "um(ftion. unde r arnd p11rk'g . R •••••••••••••••••••••••
etc k•Y fln1an<'Q AC ,... .. :an .,. i I Vl\•ws . n~_. z EST "'TE rlQlli-~ll86.499-3922 boy i1 Hlar k Ba lboa ~ A ~......, C r u 1 • (' r , t a k e n o n
..... ..._. Ston AJRPORT OF'FJC~ ll/22178. Pluse r ail. LICENSE
Wealmll\skr s.48-889~ 1 lo 3 room s uite:.. all child heartbro ken SCHOOL
W i\tt.llhtlm 161 1442 &el'VICeB No lealit' rc..-q'd 00.~7.
Anl!K'1m 956-101 l From ... "" I "" --------Santa Ana ~54-7070 • ....,.,. mo. mm .. ". ~REWARD. Lost Slue· OFFERS
I!:. Anaheim "6-4500 ~u~ao~., 20ll2002 SN. ~· poull Siameeo. It 11ry fut
THE EXCITING PN.M MIS• •ns
MIN\ITES TON PT BCll
8a<'h, 1&2 BR from ~&up.
Adul\5. NO pet11. l~l Me6a Or
15 8Jk.s E:iult or Newport
Blvd I
9am·SP"!)46=0tl60
ROCIM5 4000
(714>M7·70l~c ' .u . ~·~:r· Cumeo Shr3
PUSTIGE OFFICES
MOW AV AIL.AIU
FOR LEASING
New offices ror lht pro-
fesslom1I , C<'ntral loea·
t1on tn Hu n t1nwton
Beach. I block we l of
Beach Blvd. on M;iln
Stroct Fully improved
pnviil.4: swtes from 400
stf lO 1200 s /f. Lease In-
REWARD. l..olll 12/IG,
fem. Shth ·Tzu. s ml
bl.lt/Wht lg h1ur dog. Vlt•
17th/Irv. 754·1033 or
~
LOST: Male Siamese cal.
••••••••••••••••••••••• clades all utilities &
Cf'OISled blue eyes. fro nt
claws declawed. blue <'OI
lar w /blue rtun~Lone:1
Owner h eartbroken
REWARD. CdM ;,rca
64().SS34
.. Aftlboasodor INI *
Lovely gardens Brooks
w1r fill
•Kitchen Far1I oviul.
•Jarum. heat\.'<l l)UOI
•WkJyordaily ma1d s rv.
•1V & phone available
As low os $6 3 Wk
2277 Harbor
C.OSta Mesa 645-4840
Room w 1k1tchennclle
$60 week & uiJ.
S48·91~
Sleeping room w bath.
pvt entr. 2 blks to brh
Employed pen.on $100
mo. 204 43rd Sl. NB
JaruLonal services paid .
Leasing stair Mon thru Fn or weekends by appl.
TIIE MAJN Of"FIC E
847·5338
Cot.ta Mesa 2 pnvate or.
fires rum. S150 t>a<'h or
$2:5() both. Good location
Ava.ti Jan I. 1979 Call ~7 UKlO or 152·0099 arter
6pm
No Costa Mesa. 700 sq. fl . $3.SOtmo. Ground floor.
Tom. 54()..2200.
Offices 750 & 500 sq ft. ex-
celle nt location. 11101
Nl'WPQrt 645-2111
PIGG Encutin
FOUND· Germ S hept
Husky mtx fem. Laguna •Wis Mall Red Banduna
831·3397
Lost· Malt.' & rem. Wesl
Hi2bland while terners.
HJJtf'V area. 962·9563
REWARD
Los t : male blk /slvr
Ge rma n S h e phe r d
wteurled up bushy tail
No collar. Ans . t o
.. Bear". Dog needs
medlcauon 673-5946
.Oasb Counc ava1loblc
•Matenals provided.
•Small <'l a nes fo r
pet8001lliwd lnlilrtl<'UOn.
•ChooSe own taste-d11y
& rught t'lasites.
•Vlacemt.'nt-up \o ~'t.
COl1\tl'USS10n.
Free3W1.-ek
SalesTrai~
Call ForD 11
131°1003 493°0442 .
Knell a
Real ~tat.e School
32031 Camino Ca pislra no
San Juan Capis trano
Hafp W..tecl 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ACCOUNTING
SUPERVISOR
1 BEDROOM, '-': BLOCK 494-6044 TO BEACH . $350 Pt-:R --------MO. 494 ~ Vacation Rentals 4250
Suiffs
Found Sia mese Cat. Vic Balboa l'en.
675-5424
Career opportunity for
expenenced person rn
account.Ing supervision
Salary ll.214.-$1 .476. J)l'r
month with excellent
benefits. Please r o ll
Mrs. Finnegan, 631-1200
between hours R.00 A M .
to 5:00 P.M. C-Osta Mci.u
County Water Oistnct.
1.96.S Placentia Avenue. Costa Mesa.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Mawport 8-och 3869 Lake Ar r o w h ea d
••••••••••••••••••••••• lakefront condo. s ips 8.
PARK NEWPORT 8JO. 7022
Ba c helors, 1 or 2
Bedrooms & Townhouse!>
From$349 50
Spectacular spa . total
recr eation program.
SOClal program. 7 pooh.. II
tenrus courts. At f"a11h1on
Island, J amboree & Sa
Joaqwn Hills Road. •
1714) 644-1900
BIG BEAR Cabin, i;lps 14.
poollable. color TV. 2
frplcs. 545-6916
Tahoe·Stud10. c;tps 4
Avail. 12 22 to 12·2ti &
12·30 to I 6 & F('b $Ii()
per nl. $.175 per week
6'73-92(XJ
Rancho Las Palmas Con
do 2 bdrm Avail da1Jy &
weekly 673-(}122
Pnvate swte with rcCoP·
\ton & i.eer~t ura al
i.e1 v11:e. c.-onft.'renee
room, all rac11Jl1ei. 2082
Michels o n . lrv lnt.'.
7!)2 0234
SPACIOUS 650 Sq ft. 3·4
rooms, shower, beach
area S350 mo. 673· 1092
~s Retttal 4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TOP LOCA TIOH!
17th&~wport Blvd.
Successful retail shop
approx. ~i.q rt
~Per mo. Bkr 675 6700 Bachelor unit l,li block
rrom beach. All Ulll pd.
No kids. no pt!ls 201 E
Balboa Blvd. $250 per
mo. + secunty dep. Call
Sue 556-77CY7
2 Vacancies downtown RentafstoShore 4300 llunllngton Beac h 210
••••••••••••••••••••••• Mall'I St. Mint mall.
Found . Iris h Se tter .I•--------• female. approx !I mo'i. Acctng Bkkpng
old. Vic: 23rd & Santa TEMPORARY
Ana 631-0148 Reglster today to work
Found Small blk female on ven ous accounl1n~
dog, 12116 Vic Beach & and bookkeeping assign.
lndianapohs 536-0069 ments . Work close to
your h o m e . Figure
FOUND Male dog. Blk. Clerks to Sr. Accoun
wbl & brown. Med s ite. lanls needed thru-oul
Found on Adams. CM OrangeCounty
751-3474 Robert llatr'i.
f ou n d : Wht /blu e
ParaJu .. -et. near Arbor.
CM. Ann. 979-1942.
~
Accountemps "SOOS. Maan,St.e501 No. Tower. Union Bank
ln 'The City of Orang1.·
714 ttm-4103
Lan. 12/16.27 mos. pups.I~~~~~~~~~
I blk. I whl w/blk spat.<. 3 advert1s1ng salesmen
96J.a2 for Orange Country are.i.
Cut down 960-1558
U i-s..-1 --------fOUND: fo'em . lni.h Set·
•".., -rMH. lndustriat Retttal 4500 ter. Gold Relrv. max
Share a home or al)lment ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vic Npt tfgts. 12/18
XJnt eomm1s111on. The
Real Estate Trad1n.:
Post, 3645 Sav1ers Rd .
Oxna rd 93030. 805 / ~3SS7 ask for Dave
Clean& H~ot
3 Br. 2bath. rareplor c
stt>pstobeach. $6001mo. QousE ·GJArtS ThruMJTW LOIJW'O lffch lndln. _646-662 __ 1 -----
U,.k -..-< ~~ ~' .. "' 4 s 5 . i 8 3 o s q r 1 . PtnaMts WaA«frOftt Ho.-s
631-1400 C4I ~ b.iuC1•"'4 $250·$700 /mo. Ans Ph ••••••••••••••••••?~.~~
832-4134 Sin(e 1971 _646-_335_7_. ------
On Finley eanal w ith
dock. 2 Br I Ba. gar. nae~
yard. $550. Call Hill
673-3417
•SHARE A HOME*
Selective counsehni;.
645-7464 or 761·2284
Dover Twnhse. dbl i:ar. Bayfront home. pvt swte.
fri>I. washtdryer. pool gar .. resp. adult. Non·
Adults S425 mo. 645-9412 i. mo k e r S 4 o o m o .
673-1521 before IOpm
Major H . exposure
·1420·1704 sq fl un1t11
mullHe nant . approx
240 sq ft or A IC & healed
offices: spnnklered· 100
a mps, 120/208. 3-phase
power: 1<})(10' overhead
truc k door s . L i nda
Polverim. 752.2404 John
G Valenune&Assoc.
4600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ftELAXlNC MASSAC E
Bob James-Lie Masse ur
Outrall 9·9. 494.511 t
PREGNANT? Carin ~.
con!ldent.1111 rounsebni;: &
referral. Abortion. adop
lion & k~pmg.
APCARE 547.25(;3
COUMTRY GIRL
*ESCORTS*
Anhnal Hospital
Groom er, ba lhl•r.
cleaner . fo' / T 1 n c I
Sat/Sun.
644-546.1
APr MGR-<:ple for nl'"" 32 lmit H B. Call S36·472'J
or536-4022
ASSEMILHS
SAILIOAT
We will tram ~ per hr ,\
up. MacGregor Yachl
1631 Plarenua. C.M
Waterfront Homes lc6oo Pa•sulo 3707 2 Br. l ba. all elec. Brand
631 -1400 •••••••••••••··~··••• •• new. tin E. 18th St. $375. ~. or Unfurn. New 2 I BR. qua e t. Easts1de. 2 b J f 1 adults. no peti.. $250. ' a. story, rp l'. Huge condo Bluffs. view.
frplc. pool Female. S245.
758-1419 Renee
Res pons1hlt>. working
writer see k s o ne
bt'droom eotlage 1n
Coroiw del Mar or Costa Mesa Quietness e11sen·
Ual. Wnte Class1fwd Ad
•~. Dady Pilot. P 0
Box 1560. Co:.ta Mesa
~or call 6'75·3862
-~~h_rs~-~-~9~5~~··84~74 1•---------ASSEMILERS SpirttYat Rffdt.r
1815So. El Camino Real
San Clemente: Pully he .
3 br. 2 ba, lge encl patio
Gardener Incl. No Ptls.
~~58
BEACH. View. pter. 2br. mo. Agt 541-5032
SfJ(X). i\dJts. ulal pd. T1I
May. 303 E. Edgewater.
540-0093 nr water. dbl gar. 1181 i PRECISION/MECH
Pos1u ons avail wtfa :.t
growing Newport Bl'a1·h
co .. Involved m a~mbly
of compass & camera un·
its. ApplJcants should ex
per wo rking w /s ma ll pans. good m ech apt.. &
et\IOY • Benefits include 2
""'-~ vac • I week sack
leave. & profit shanng to
name a rt•w . Ca ll
557-9051. a~k fo r Kdy
Gallman
t 1 )871·2866.
Lido Isle 3 BR. 3 ba. Small t br $275. w1lh
.SQ It. drps, bllns, 4 yrs utiliUes. Adult, no pets. _old. toOO. 631-~7. 673-4!r28
-~~~---~-Walk to beach condo. 2 br, Costa Mesa 372'4
21'2 ba, W /0 . gar. Pool. •••••••••••••• ••••• •••. ~182 SUSCASITAS .. uoo lSLE. 3 BR 2 Ba. Large & SIJ\311 1 bdrm.
lovely lge. patio. $7 encl. gar. $245 & up Mo.~.~-Gtl22 Adults. no pets . 21l0
. ---Newport Bl 548-4968
4 BR. very ruce area. Ill.'> Port Taggart Pl. incl. Large 2 bdrm. Adults No
gardener. wate r . $70 pel s . Inqui r e 179'"2
mo. Available now Rochester rear ~LJ.52. 644-5769 ----Studio apt .. decorator
Newport Shores. Jbr. furn. prvt patio. wtr &
atrl um. jac uti 1. n r . gas pd, $200 mo. 646·5330.
beach. P ets ok. S550. 548-7980eve. 1&2 Br Cum. bltns. pool. close to stores. adults, no
RACH $650 /rm Yrty pets. 9.11 W. 19th St .
Utilftie-s hid HoattiiiC)lot1 t.och 37'40
Large 2 story home. bi ••••••••••••• •• ••• •••• • rooms, vaulted/beams , •Bach Loni:: Beach .
buge bedrooms, 2ba, Privacy. Uttl pd. SIGS.
l11>lc. deck. 2 patios. ~a,' Adult. oo pets. 833·8974 BBQ. D/W, rdng. Enc
gar. work space. laun l.GglMot.och 3748
hkkp. l ehild. no peU. ••••••••••••• •• •• •••• • •
lireat house. 960-5844 LAGUNA BEACll MTll
THllLUFFS
INN. S7Stwk & up. Maid
~ .• color 1V. heated
pool. Ulll (71'H 494-!>2!14.
~N Coast llwy 4 Bdrm .. 2 i,, b (I.,
fam /lt.il, ~ formal din· ine: freshly pa anted. t•wpori •och 3769
cnisp & clean. Mo' c m ••••••••••••• ••••• • ••••
now al S600 m o.
Agent 64().5560
3 Br. 2h ba, brand new.
~. mo. Nwpt Terrace
2 miles t.o beacb. \213 1 •sooo
Ba~hores. 4 Br 2 Ba Prlv. beech comm. ~7 mo wtnt~r. Year + lsc avail.2131472·9226 GREAT Rl::CREATION
Sw1mm1n1t. i..iunai-. :!
CANAi.FRONT 4 br. 3 ba. health club~. b1lh.ird-..
lmmac, w&lk to beach night li i:ht,·d tt·on"
Now only S750. rourh l'ro & p1 o ~hoµ.
Marina ReitllY 642·8850 ~olf dnvln~ r.inl(c. ~Jrl~
40' Ooat dock. 3 br. 2Yl ba room condo. 2 story. frpk. bltn fl' N /\ l' T I \' I 1' I 1-; s :
kitc he n . Yrly $800 fo'\1llt1ml' dtrl'l'tor. f11•1•
675-4rT1S Sund;iy hruni·h. lllllf,,
BUJFFS. lge. 3 BR. 21;
ba .. on greenbelt. S650 Mo. Agent 644-1133
trip~. p .ar111•-.. 'port
toumomt•nt~ It mor1·'
U£i\L'TI 1-'l'l. AM'S
S1nall'1>. 1&2 bc-dr'oon"
3 Br condo, nr school. F\arn & unfurn M1Kh-I:-~ l lh Ba. $475 open dally 10 In 7 Hoom
____ r_.640-0 __ 1_92 ___ 1 mutt-iwrv1rt• ,l\a1I Nn
Harbor View Home 3 Br, Be, prden.ln• lncl. Avail
Jan. 6. $600. M0.0178.
M>C!Oor $46-84'71
s.a..• l276 .......................
Ocean Hiiis Condo. a
bdrm. 2~ ba. rrptc . golf
C!OW'N, PoOI. ocean view,
No pet.I, Sf75 per mo.
~or66l-689'7
l~aw requ1 rl'd Sorry
adult:. ool). no ~h
Oakwood
Garden Ap.utfN'nts
.....,.,. 9"d/Mlttt
1700 IGl h St
1 Dover at tilth 1
642 8170 s.ctacul .. View 20 . 3ba. pool. golf
~ o u r • e . Yrly In. SOO. Ph Seil t.h1np fut wllh Deily m.-1111:11. Mv<Sm PUot Want Adt.
-
Westld&e VII.__ 43rd. t 7 14 I 67 S ·5864
"'"S"' (21J )006-96CMS Beautiful brand new meSliB.JIU N.B. ex~. condo. ocean
adult apts. No pets. Pool. New bea utiful garden UDO VlEW 2br, frrilc. vu. pvt. pool. tennis $300 JaC\ll.Zl. Open weekdays nor4 pal.to, sep D.R. Adi ts. 548· 7813 am. 64().5357
For appl. 492·7296
XX DANCE OF FUN XX
Bea ul1ful nude ~iris.
dance at exhibition & r.:ap
sessions . 9AM lo 4AM
eve ry day. 2060 So
EuclJd. Anaheim, exc1t
1ng 24 hr rt.'cord1n ~
54.11422
2-6; weekendsl0-5 9~5 W. a,,... ~menls. Sli001mo. 675·635~. l.9lh St. Bachelor $275 OCEAN FRO MT
noommatc wanted. non
s mkr lll•nt ncgot Bach. ~·S2~ I Br $315 2 Br $340 1 Br $290-$305 Adul ts. no ""'L'> 2 Br $335-$350 ... ~ TSLMgmt 642 1603 22SOVanguard '.\ay tut Newport Bhd1
BRAND NEW ~9626
2&3 br. 2 ba, all electn c DcMo Point 3826
Covered parking. $375 10 ••••••••• •••• •• •• ••• ••. $475 mo. 600 W . Hamilton. 838 2917 or 2 Br Twnhs c . 2 ra r 00·21~ garage. frpl<:. dt-n p\t vd ,
I yr old bldg s.115 mo
F''OUR SEASONS A PTS
Spac: 2 br townhow.e. 11 '2
ba, pvt patio. pool.
i\dult.s. $300. 735 Joann
St 64lHi483 eves.
•East.side adult 2 Br. den 2 Ba condo. pool. dbl gar,
5'25. 559-6588. 645 6822
2 bdnn. I ba. cur port.
erpt. drafX'S. lndry fac.
good loc. No pets $280
mo. 271 !!: I tit h l' I
644-0452
3 Br. 2 ba lownhou:.l'
guiH adult ll\·1n l!
Enclosed ((ar. & pal1G.
No pets. $400. &15-3381 or
675-5949
MESAPIHES
1 BR S3l5 2 HI< $.J80
Pool. jacuzzi. )lnr. ;ivaal
Adults. no pets. 2650
Harla Ave. 549-2447
Near new townhse. 2 Br.
77Q.8053
I bdrm. new <'rpl & paint.
l(arage. $275 pl!r mo.
s:ll-9325
... llitwJon t.och 38'40 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ViaG Pacifico
H~w
HHrOuon
Juruor I BR. l OR & :?
BR. 2 BA. Secunlv l)ro·
vtdcd by pvt kl!)"tard en
try . Blln k1t c h
w/lwrunous clgs. Plui.h
carpet. lge pvt patio or
ba l conlei. w /x l ra
storage. Pool. s pa. light·
ed tennis court. lndry
racll Limited prt\1tw
rentals From $290 per mo Models Open daily
101\M to dui.k 2 1!>
W1r h1t a A Vl' l at
Yorktown ) Slc. 409M
714-SJS.445.5 I ' 2 ba. gar, fncct pat •
SK5 mo. 645·4655 rM & $26.S; Spa<' 2 bdrm. apt. 2
wlmds KJ<il> 0 K. Avail now
$J75. 2 br, I 'n ba twnhsc
Gar. fplc. patio. ~ood loc.
&i;ide.
1lil.. Mgmt 642-1603
Zbr $295 ~Elden
IJ79.Z188 646·4904
Beaut 2 BR. 2 ba, Mesa
Drive. nr Sf\. Cnlry
Club. Pvt fncd yard, 2
carport w /storage. $435
mo 61J..8139 . 63J.1816
2 BR eottage, f(a rage.
wa11hertdrye r hookup.
$400. 552-1200
I Br. crpls , drapes,
cari>0rt. kids OK. $2•10
rno. Nodog.s. 979·0l36
2 BR. 2 ba. all elec. ne w.
Cov'd partung. 310 Vic·
tori a. Ownr I Atil. $375.
642-2164 : 552-4894.
2 bdrm l ~ ba. patio. ,:>et OK. no children S32S per mo. 549-0433 or 548· 7645
To p~ace your message
before Ute rudJnt public.
phone 0&11¥ PilOt
CluaUled. Mi·5678
After4 30call847·0967
IEACHWOOD Ans
19132 Magnolia. L11e I br,
av&I now $285. 2 Br. 2 ba sns~· 1 &. l Ba trom
$260·$285. avail Jan.
Bllns, pool & 1acuu1.
962-u.>O.
New 2Br frpl. palt0s. i1ec
gate, adlL'I. 1702 t"londa
at Adams 536-4729
Near beach, 2 br, 2 bo up·
per. encl garage. No
water beds! Adult3 nnly.
No pet s . 2 170 2
Brookhurs t. $325.
982-0T18
2 bdr , 2 ba., fri>k . gar .•
lndry rm.. S360 900-"76
ot67~agt.
SHARP/Nt:W 2 bdrm
+den1 frplc, garaae. No
e hllaren . $375 m o .
962-7788 ult ror M cu:k.
SUPER I br. POOi. aar,
frplc, ll"ffS. $27:S. Adult.I.
8'2·958S: 642-Wl
t MO FREE RENT
3 br. 2 ba. rrplc . au . gar.
5'75 G-t454
MIO· ~ SpaciOWI new 2
br,2.,.. ba townhomr apts
w/lwcury features Small
ettok.
Q.emlnl Rf',.ILy 839 662..
Ocean front Newport
Beat h. Winter rent.ii J
bdrm 2 ba. !luge Mtn
deck. Right on sand On
bei.l beal·h Full\
runushed & fl'Ud) lO IJ~
cnjOy\.'<l. Day!> 752 74 tO
£\·es Wknd::. 838·2Ui9
LIDO B AYFRONT
Supe r b view , i.a n dy
beach. rrpl<-, 2 BR $65()
A\'atl 1 2 79 645·~
Step. to bch. Lge modl'rn
2 br upper. bt•am 1:1•11,
frplc. all bltns. $425
&\2-3400
UHF.· YEARLY
2 BR. Iba .. nr bch .. $135
3 BR. I ba. nr bc·h . . $1165
2 BR. l l>a .• Lieto .. $500
3 BR. 2 ba .. Lido .. 5650
3 BR. 1 ba .. Lido . . sno
FURN.· YEARLY
548·9411 Npt tkh __ _ Business/Invest/ Rnane~
M F . Non s m o ker . •••••••••••••••••••••••
Sl4(}+i.-. Ulll Co::.l<t Me:.a luliftcu
home. lmrnl'll occupan Opportunity 5005
t'Y 645 .. 8434 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Sm:ill gardenrn~ route for
sale Ca II a ft 5. 548 tl833
or 642-IJ 14. '4350 ••.•••••.....•.•.......
Double ~;irJJll'. 20t h &
011\'e, HIJ. S60 1\lso
s ingle. same Jrt•a SJS
~5200 ---------
Single garagt• lor rcnl.
19l6 Wallace. C1Js t:i
Mesa. $35 mo t>i6 2653
Office Retdol 4400 . .•..•.........•.......
EXECUTIVE
SUITES
Luxurious ofrt<'l!S.
~s,Trust
DHdS 5035 ...............•...•...
LOWEST
lnffttlt RotH
I st T.D.'s. also
2nd T.D. Loons.
1-":ure:.l Term:. :.tnl't• 19-19
Sattler Mh} Co.
642-2171 5'45-061 I
•UDO ISLAND•
Wanll'd $100.000 2nrt t''IC
1~l1n~ l!>l 1i. $~>1 uoo
Propt.•rty ~alue SIOO,UOO
(iTJ 2289
-------
*ESCORTS*
972-t 138
AIEKAIAHUA
or Purple. Danny v.anls
lo ~-e you Please 1:.ill
213-l23·7526. Caroll'.
LINDA & VICKI
Outcolt Mossoqe
For The rvn of It!
Servlllt'( al I Orangl' <.:o.
835-7313
MICHELLE'S
•Outcalt•
HAM 2A M 1135 37 49
Attendant for morn.
pt'rsonal help 5 dayi. a
wk m HB. Vic Uca1:h &
Adami.. (.;dr r t-q .
900-3.164.
Auto eorner nl•eded in
Lag Bch. San Clement~·
area Eve:. Oep¥11dabl1·
car a must Call The
Register. 5111·414 I.
Auto Sunroor lni.tallt-r
Tratnee fo\Jll llmt'. '100\l
mt..-ch'I ab1hly & work rt·
cord. Catalin a Sunroor
~4040EOE
Babysitter 1::1 Toro an·a.
Mature woman. starttn(!
Jan 2nd. ~k days 7 am to
St' r t· n a d e , 0 u r 4.30. Care for infant.
Penonaf Ser'flcH 5360 .......................
l BR. I ba .. Bay Ave $395
SHORT TEttM, FURH.
3 BR. 2"'1 ba nl'w home.
oceanfront, wk or mo
IAUOA-HEWPORT
REALTY 675-8170
t•X
~<'ut1 ve ~e<'r11ar v
1wrsona I phont• t·o·v '.
t•rage, receplaona:.t 1•on
ft'renec• room. \1•rt1x
notary Lea~e o r month
lo month Neur i.o Co11:-I
Plaza. 0 C :11rport .!.
freeways Cnll 97!l :!WI
Swt.>ethcnrt Gin· ·the ttirt Ref. req 76tl·N46
2N D TD FOH Si\l.fo: of ~on g dur1n~ the Pnml' re:. prOlll'rl v in hohday:. Rob 99:).11762 Babysallcr m.~'<:h'fl, Mon
$175 3 br. 2 ba, balcony,
encl. garage All blln:..
blk to beach. Yrly
TSL M~mt 642 1603
Eastbluff, I Or. pool. $320
523 SQ. fl orfirt· 'pare lo
i.ub ll!ni.e In l .. 1a.:un .1
Hills, $3(1K month A\1111
Dre lst. 830.6().'j()
Oronl!t' C:o Ti•rm-.. Fri arternooni.. Call ~.000 <it IU . pa~.1hll·i ----------1 ~.Chm
1•. per mo 101 ;, yr-. ~TICE
\.. .. To plaet.• your mci.sa1u.-""' l'rY ~l'rnn.'. 10'' 111~ lwfon· th\• how Dioly P ilot Clas~· count l'all 714 :;2!} i!1ll:J 1fced ads dis play l.heir reud111,.: pulJIH'.
mo. Cull
&"1·4767 Deluxe medtc·ul s uite" Allnoutctmtnh/
ground nr . Corona ctl'I Panonols/
Mar. Rcalonom11:i. Corp. Lost & FoUnd
phone me:ss&Jtes with leg1b1hly
Daily Pl lot and impact? Our ads. Wl'
C ·' are proud to say. really la-.i1uaed, 642·56711 gel r e s u Its . Pho n c BRIGlrT 2Br. beach a rco.
S350mo. ftt5 6700 •••••••••••••••••••••••
673 1092 Allnoutcemtnts S I 00
Of'rice-Ston · 4llO l"l .. crpt. ••••••••••••••••••. •••• d~. AJC. 17301 lkar h
Bl . H B. LEASE842·2834 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. quiet arc•a
Upper deek. yrly $.SOO
67S-{j67() A gen l
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
EXCLUSIVE OCf,AN
FRONT l & 2 bdrm
apt'11. avail. Security
system, elevator. dl!>h
washer. dbl ovens. Pen·
thouse with frplc & prv
sundet'k rrom S325 up
492-4929 nr ~-1123
2 Br, lr1t deck. walk to
beach. g uage. $35U.
Ev~ 498-0318
2 BR apt, 1215 mo. Close to
beach. 498-6324
Downtown Huntington
Beach 2101;-z Mam St. 2
orfices available. One
2·rm Sl.20. one 2·rm SllO.
900-1.5511
Town & Country Shoppln((
Qr. 1.8582 Bcu1:h DI . HH.
962.6f1.11
MEWPORT CENTER
10,000sq ft
Luxurious pnn<'l<'d of·
fires w /s~rlal t-xtras
C o n r e r ,. n c· t'
rm t buthro o m
shower/kll<'htn C:onturt
Lou&Bt> Uahl
c;()RPORATE RF.ALTY
t75-0181
ocular View
2 3 b I Ir 125·500 :sq fl OHiCt'S ' •' poo ' KO (')-om $&. Incl. utll 779 COUl'M\. Yrly lse $450. Pu m.~1. 640·51'77 w. l9th St. 540 2200
s.hAIMt 3180 445Sq ft $24S.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4001 Bu'<'h St. N B.
Sbarp 2 bdrm. 2 bo Agenl,S4lS032
Tropl<'al 11cltln1C. pool, S MAl.L Of'"t'ICE POR
jucuul. Ne11r So C RENT. ll6."i
Plau. ~. 4!18-QlV A.acnl 548 7729
1 4c 2 bdrm Apl Al $340 & Sd.ltnt an)'Ul,n1 wttb a S3llO per mo AJao 3 bdrm t>a.11)' Ptlot Cl au If it'd f\d bouSt Call 675 9991 or Is a slmpll' tnt1ttcr •.
8»'1MO Jost Call 642 ~8.
PENNY
PINCHER
ADS
ONLY $2
Stoll 11ny 1tl'm °' com
t.Hn11uon ol •tt!mi> for S7~ or lo• w11h 11 Pl'nny
rmctler Ad. 3 Imes ror i
l'On ~uuve dw)S Eurh
od<lllinnal hoc 11-60' for
Uw:? day~ Ch•trlt•' 11 •
No romml!rr1al 11d,.
f'or rnOrt< lnform11t1on
i111(J lu pl11c~ your ¥ll l·11ll
642·5678
SCRAM-1.ETS •
ANSWERS
R4Uon 1-:tlh•
Sorry -KJndly -
SOlJTAltY
Thf reason Ideas die
quidly In M>mt ht3d'I 1 bt.'<'•~ Uw)' can't 11tand
SOLrTARY ronllnc mrnt ·
..................... ,_642_5678 ____ ~--
~~~ ..... !L~~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~
LIFE INSURANCE
Brokeraqe Supervisor
We ar(• looking for an experh..'11ccd
Lil'<• s:i l espcr~on <Supervisor) to
promote Lift-business. ca llin g on
independent Property ancJ Casually
agents in Orange. Rivcrsidl' and I San Dll'go rount 1cs. We need n
rwrson with tet·hn1l'al k nowhow ii\
ull areas of L1f(• l n~uran("l' :rnd the
ability and in1tial1,·c to operate on
his <or hl'r 1 own.
We offer -Excell ent sulury.
production honu!t. company cn r.
expenses and a compll'le benefits
PIH.'kU~l'
tr you're ready for a real challenge.
r<'ply to·
Peny SMH. CLU
Haffoftal Life of C CIRClda
I 00 PIM Strfft
Se111 Frmtelsco. Ce. 94 I I I
_,
\
\ •
... ..,_IT••.-... Cata.... ..,._. L••t1f'111 -~ ·,.....;r.,.-n..t" ....... ~--·-••••••••'•••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;r.~~ ••••••••• .............. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... .... let --• •••••••••••••••••••••• ?r.'.!.f •••••••••••••••• ··•••••······••······•· ............................................. .
()t,m wort, Oft dHllM &ICnfCf.ul
flWltN•a W r oast CATllll.. ~. Oomm1. Ind "•nbl
OCC~ a Too trUC"lt AM WAV Cotmt1tlr 1. L M.S.-Roto ., Sod or PaioUng.. Extr/Jntr. 1':11 =al~bei"t(l"turea !Aodaupo Cr .. Uona f;a·
T'ruh. tr trim. Hon Nutlillc>n. tlo~ew•res, Set Cl• d L • w n I· pr'd. honett. nut. rciu UT. lfl·IOf ,.rt lhapin1. lh1n.nJ01. llCH703.N -m4 Homo Care a. Comm'I. l;prlnklen. r11ntin1 Uc'd984 l04.S0ave llWmpnmcwaJ.175-Zlal. lht)', NB. NII SQlll Prol lonala anllabl• l:Jf!IUPft' LJt' 2110'1 •~ce 1-.1.. -tor all aflaih c;AU. '4M I H ----ea W. Cootr. Lk. 1*4Lt, Eit· PATCH PLASTERING lm. ~ h1w or ctn 1n{th1na , -------l:'tllf'l'lt ~eta. 87H&S3 Prd pajnUn1. Ext .ti Int. A 11 t )' p e,. pr re --------•••••••••••• ~ ••••••• ~ t~ t"I - -
8 J Orian l!p~H Coob , ] ...
& AWll 16QC' 1'ktr\ CON'r ACT • • •• • •• • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • •
_.Clatnlll. comm' or'" Mlll•Mle•:! &Aw. ra.te1. ftef1. Pree atlmatea.Call ~ Scoll'I TrH Service:' aldenUal, rea.1. ral•• ••••••••••••• ••••••••• Euro~an Land1c1pcr. ell.~80.$3&-.4383 ---------Al1.ladc pruJq " re
TRIP CHAR • & SJO w lf'bff K • II Wood fenctna. caU1nyt.1rM .-.... • ROBIN'S HOUSl:· Toe> work. f'alr prictt ft•111'' J movq. t 11'1 La coatt.al
-Cf,EA.NtNO SE ft VICE. M1lnt. Rd1. 646·481' flne Exter. Painting by .. ••••••••••••••••••••• are., Uc. loa.~ ~ M~lo. S A HotolUlt\)' ResourC'ta &Ill• 6 fmnt r11Jalr ~am__ 8.\7 UlClll l411 W•ttlilr, SI M MM010 &U·Cll 511
...... ... 1ln '~"'1)Qrt l ('h ... I ' -
ClfBArt:sr h1ullni In '°' a thorouahly clean dYJ/tvN. !e~S.:S~c~n1 Try PERRV'SPLUMBlNG COMPU."'TECARE ~ ~.!:1~lh1\atei. ~~'I Dlll·ll t..aodscape. Reas ~:.ettiut!u"m~t~ Trlmenlnc, removal •
....................... cn-10 tli ou1~• ~-......... ; •.•...••..... ---MINI MA.ID SERV, Rtl j»'i('M Prof. land.tu.,.,~ EXCELL.ENT PAINT· c I e. n In I· Fr 0 Cl cleanup•. 11c'dJiD¥
l.1t1 1'l11.1Ue1 mo\llnJ. bhtEW'p.U'ndl)flrtonnt1I. !prinldera.64&-7070 lNO. Rellj()nGble ratt~s . fttlm1tbl. 1A hrstrvlcc. ~ • <M, MCM\l'). I Drivt'"'1t)'t •Putr•n1 lot Jlavtn1 an Aft air~ C on vpa, JllulloJ.
•tt ... p1un •S..,.1"n•\ln1 P'l'\nie rlM:I ""Ill ra~r =p~ lruut
•l,11.' NO, (''9 ~U1 ,..._.llU Call IUOB
Ottt•I• Yard ti onan.e .£ ..un1, lndry.58~ ....._ FnMtaumatet.$48·2706 maw ;=::::;;;:::::====~ Re11 ral8 Mi~ __ , ........ __ ~ -
TIIEQ..EAN1.NO l.ADY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~wo.u W•Upa f Plumbtn& repair. Spec. ln rao ., tt u b b Ith II au 11 n 8 , fJftclalt h3~1n·c. rillla· Brickwork. Small Jobs. All WorkOuar. "Est. remodetin& & copper re· ~fj WiUn l)hall~ 48TI T»I Dll 11 LandtC'lpr
(",..,I ... C 11•wtor ~IC:::;:o run.Uture movin1. huullt' bJe aervite. rcao ratu. New'port, Cost.a Me.a It 6'73-4l$8 pipe, Good pntes Top ·.-.w-
., yar d tlea nln1 Wutcd~l3CM lrv\oe.8'7r>-317~evH. Holiday Emugenrys ~Plwnblng.5313194 .............................................. __ ...;;...-
('af'p.'mtt ~r'( l'.t>l \n) R11m1)(Jt"I rl"(la lr , on a._4 W.kH
~a-wnabll.' 6 Rtllablt! -_, / Wf1M ~1 ~ Want a R&Al~LY CJ,EAN ...._._ Please Call 931·~ 11\ S. ....... • lQlf
------JIOUSE? Call Oln!Jham :;:;:;?•••••••••••••••• l2 yrs exPf!rienre. I'm ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• u, I .... .i. jota. C\111 i\llan or carp•nCr ) old tlmt ••••••••••••••••••••O•
Ttw\y 1146 t'Tll\atmnll!IJp l• )r In •Ml. fflfT•
c.,.tS..-.lc• ~ l~I~ Mr Pal<>m Cu~nter . p1ln11na
•••••••••• ••••••.,..... J"4' ratra l) >rt In ~ Ir ftt'Mm rlHn 8tdrtc• AM ..!!_!_T~
t&nlinc • U«'IM'ral C'lcrctn OJrl Preenl M$ $123 ~malll . my pnces ure ft"'DAJR., RE .. OOF. All ~" .. • -.~ up, tonun " n 111d Prof Mrvlce with AtlH smal tr.;C e 1 • 11 h ann 11 0 .,. • , neuon r•trs 9621462 Mlyako ffouA4't'lunin11 Vaotinesco.tt nomorc! -1-t /IL' t R 0 bl r""' shak""ll·compo·t .. r. anyUnl\.\. l\>ati.. J).llrtiH It hou~e-11 fo'ree eat. for locals. n r.x · us n a e :--.~a-~ " ~ ~atlna 1pttlal fwk atorage, & lon;c dla\. u tes Yree Est. Call n -"""' '" -, ..._ C_...._. ly IKW'\l\'f'' Mon f'rl. 10 moves . Sl • l LI t' Rob SC8-2Bl7 u...... R n 1 ... ••••••••••••••••••• •••• 1 O/\M 675 •23.. Tl c.,,.. "'ul.M)' oonng. Aspha l , ({ C&ikw bnt1ht.-nt"I • "'hi •• • ••• •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •
ciu lOmli1 blrorh c ·1,~ ... n tUlt_,, a.ctrlt I DO fT A&.L
~
!_l'll•'•F_ I _-=--:!. 110~ ....... :noo Pl..o&Of9MTIMHMJ shingle. wood 11hakc1
l.OWrOST'roVOl' eo 1 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _guar. Free eat. Call •
bv. dln rm,•hall SIS ''' Lh·3Z7LM-.t-anc -nn $'1 50, c-ou; h 110. t hr -..._ «> OWi.i' ,•om l)l•t U1lor FJJ', 'TttlnAN Pttn -d ;;.;;;;:•••••••••••••••
~mpl•ldeaH nmak1' r,xtr I ouaec unlni: hllll'"-J/P•rifHJ PlanoUming&r'lialr.2$ 1·10PM.8ob.87~1681 ........ the ......... -...---.. .... \OUr hn m .. h .,uul 0 1'1\lntllv.-perionel ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........, _...__, m !Jll03 11.-rvlc't' to Teet you a PETERS rAJNTING yn ~p. Ma11t"r' deg. In Have you read today's •wMt'eMmlnflUfllCtll
<.)It NJ>.tllr, t~ )tit "'fir neht '~' • llmalf' on Haul \lllploAcfrr ihim1• f1t'4otl" ...... ot0·· music. Th as coupon ~., _.._ ~ll•hh l"/\S ,• · ""' " F.xpr'd Jt o11 Ra\u worth..,.661 1433 Clusifltd Adi? If not. ··--~-Oo "'cM'il m)'•~t'll Hd lltr"., nr •1lllll JOb$ 1.1' ' .di.I\& tn•t "'ri. ~I OU.II ~~I iU 03.Mi ~ION c•tc IUI 1~7 ll'111 OllKP.Jlt<. SF:IJ, k11t ltl'ms with u f'ree t:st. Call Gene )'OU'tt miaalna the ~at IWH§ii
t iualf\loll M tMZ .1"18 ()9Jly PUot CIHRlflcd ~d. ~~ Claasifitd AIH &42·S6'78 batl(alns In town! ··--..
tw. Ww.4 7 I 00 Hlfp W..t.4 71 00 He4p W..t.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ _., T-""--Ukkpr 1-\ill or 1'1' to Ytorli ....,... .ewe.... .._... 1 n 11 n 11 c r 1 a: o r < t.~rell~nt b~n eflh Wu tm11uhr 1trl'w.
l,.VlMI N•Uonal Uen~ IWl ~
Call Janet Vanl>ylH• ~00 OUOKK Et-: V f. R t-'u II
F..quaJ ()ppt '> F.mph1> l'r r h11rl(I'. for pro;ct•Ulvr ----rump&oy l'rdcr com·
u"""'lNG pukr '-'xper. S1•l»ry rom
un.,n • meni.1.1ralt1 w ablHty C-rc•le"" N on s moker St•nd
loc rn Npt Br h now 1n Rt>sume to llu•s h
teor•vlewing t:XP l.;tt AP ManBl(t!f1K'nt Co . 3.'120H
1~LIC'ANTS for pos in P:&Sl'O Cern1a, Stl' (' .
t' Id R N C R r r oo f Siin Juan C'u plstrnno,
t iper&Wr, Note Telh:.•ri. & Ca. 92675.
IOOICKHrH
lnl\!lbgent. expenenr rd. ~~~~~~~~~ bookJteeper for Newport liearh Boutique. Must be ---------1 knowledgeable io all
Tt<llers Call for appl
1714 ) 759-1448, U'ik for
Samanl111t Ketrhum
IJankmg aspects of retail book· TaUtt F /T keeplnlf. I Call 831t-4782
Branch ofc St!ekS bond a· for Interview
IJlc f"tr Teller. Conta<:\ -------
Ravl'Tllla C..sh. or Rolla\' BOOKKEEPER Rrous ard a t f7 l4 1
ti44·~
\\'&rr1-;RN flWERAL
!>AVL~GS
2744 f:. Coa!il llwy
Corona del Mur
Knowletll(e-exp. In
)Ourm.1lli. GL. TB. Od
typing Mklll&, Gen o(r
Sa I a r y up t• n . ( 7 I '' >
f..11 -5001
CLERKS
1n:uv•:nvmtu. ~ ~'If' 11ute> paru bu1lnf'11111 • 1 IMlkpr $1:1K m1~t be ov~r lll w111uoo Sf>cyA.4111 IOSW<I
drtviJ\I rtte0rd & llv.-In l>utu Pnx'eninit
UTOTEM U1t1ti. °M•'t!O arN1 l'hone 1•1 icrmr An11ly11l11 ~K ~ 1140tl for lntc•r vl"" C:ell Por An Appl
Open.inga Now Avall1bl,• 11ppt Irvine PeNIOllnel AJCl'nl'y
'
, ·'I 1 I k 4111\ E 17th, <Mlttt Mt<11a
(JI(' ,., or ,P.1t me c "' ,. Ut'fllaJ a.111i1111ml d 1111t Suit"' •r~t r.~"' 1470 m 2nd & 3rd 11hln!> Nu ' ..., ,... •• 80fllet-•~rientt'••r ~.-t'Xper Detl•suiry·w•· lrlWWIJ(. t'our day w1•1•k ------trlll.n SlAtt $3 sx•r hr, As l.1tl(Wli. Ucar h. 4tM 7622 Ou !{U1tlon11
a.t flillMK rt. to 13.60 hr --l<~pt'rkm•t'<i aervlfe ~to
MMaimi to~~ hr Ad OF.NTAL "'flONT U,.T IJ(.ln h(>lp, 3rd shirt, full
vancvtn('nl oPPor\unitM1 ln.i t•icp..r, It typ111.: "''" Ume AVPIY flQO f~ f'l:ll. lo lhcllie who quuUfy. Jo'or Npt IJrh orcu fol' ~I NU
lnrormatlon go to ou r - ---"" --· -----
nearest market t1r 1·011 DfHTAL-ottTHO OFC. Gtta.A.L OFFICE
tart the personnel oHlc~ Jh 11·5. lYJH' ~ Wl'M.
al Exper 'd Orthodonl1c i.-tood phone per11onulHy. 12«2 Lampson St chrslde &Jor lab 8111,111• mlt.'lt have prevloua O(C' G:i.rcienGrovc~--4840 t.anl oeeded tor Nwpl cxpcor.Call53l 0842
F.qua.l Oppor Employer Centcrofc. 644 1405
Q.BkTYPIST
Typing 45·50 wpm .
prrsonablc. well
-groomed. Good bener ·~
ApplfHE IRVIHE CO
HY11 Camelback
~ipcr
PCB
DESIGNER
GENERAL
LABORERS
TRAINEE
~SEMBLERS
EOE M F' BOOK.KEt:PEH -l.rvlne &«·9010 PACKERS ----Ll sery work. L1vt• in
Banlun11 C.M orea ~ 8408 form·
EXPERla.CED ten l<'W .appt. __ COU!CTOI
T11:.1 • EaS BUSBOYS F:xcelle.,t opportunity
Manlianurer of electro·
mechanical products n··
quires a proven P<.:B lay
out per&On who wants on
opporturuty t.o ma kl' ex
..reUent wagt-s. Plus. be
1.t1timately 111volved with
new projects from ron
ceptlon to r1eld use. Wt.>
want an lndlvidual who wants lo grow with a
great team. t:qual Op·
porlunlly E mployer.
MW.~7·0554
Must have rela uble
transp. & phone. Long &
short t.erm a551gnments
HoUday & varation pay.
tlospitalizallon plan
available
~ for 11\divadual wilh ex·
SouHIC~t Weekend nltes and perience In te lephone
tW'-cll loM slJ(:Cial part1e11. Expr'd rolleruon. Position open
Ari lndt:pendenl Bank only. Pvt. club. 673·3515 In OW' Costa Mesa orftce. -. Coftlact Mike Sullivan or 849Sunflower C M Bus boy PT. _Apply 1n-'""Rl11-WOtktn11, al 17U>1 ________ _
~_5300_ ·-penion. Le 8111rnu . 414 549-4200. Equal Op·
Banklng ~ewport Hlvd . NB portunity Employer
TELLER ------
Dial A Ride
Dri••n
Operate modern equip
menl & door lo door
transp. Calir. driver:. lie
req'd No prior cxpcr
nee. Good dnving rec a
m~t. No Sund11y work
Orange Coasl Yellow
,.~or our South ('<1a:.t CIRCULATION CL>:HK Companion for elderly
Plai.a office. t::vcnini;s. •ull tame ros1llon for lady 111 Balboa. couplt•
Monda) thru l"raday & ctrcuJ11t1on clerk. Mus t _O_K_._SGS53l.
every Saturday. Ex type45"'Pm & use lO kl'y
pen erwl' prl'ferred. G.111 addJng machine. Some
Klllhy AmburgC'y or Mr clerk al expenence ls de·
Kinning& itt ~•066. s i r a b I e as we 11 a 11 Cdff. Federal pleasant phone vo1re as IJght phone work Is ah-.o Scrtiftc)s & Loon required. Good company
3333 Bnst.ol St , CM benefits Including 2 wks
Equal Oppor Employer vacation after 1 yr ., com·
-----pany paid g roup in· UanlonR surance. credit unle>n,
COOKS
Expanding res taurant Cab, 17300 Mt. tier·
chain wit.h over 50 uruts rn»M, r . Vly. Fam.rly-0wned organiu· -----'-·----lion offers pleasant DOCK MASTERS ASST
wo rking conditions 1-·rr & Prr. No exp nee.
Geod opportun1t1es for Call 673-35~.,, ... advancement. Eitcellent ----------
company benefits. t.:x· •DRIVER• '
perienced desired. Apply Expanding co. looking
lnperson. for ~ople wllhng to
SltnlJugo Bank 111 opening etc. Apply at ORANGE
o new office Xlnl caret!r COAS1' DAILY Pl LOT, nppurtun1t1l'~ for bank :mw. Bay St, CM. Apply
cxpenenced perM>nnel al between 9AM·4PM. Call •l...1't• O.w.-...
our Tustin & Newport .642-<lJ21, 11 219 for &P· .J'"-:J ~·· Hea«h offarf!S. Currently poolt.ment. E.O.E.
~. Neat appear. Good c.lrivuig ~. ·over 18. Co.
vehicles. S2.8S per hr +
Incentives. Call Erlt'.
tro-9283 ml1·rV1l'Wlng for
TEUBS C L E R I C A L I
Mu!>l have pleasant SECRETARIAL 8 ·30·5. Jlt'r"S<H\Ubly. be outgoini: KnJdg of ofr procedure:.
& ~ V\'Ople oru.:ntcd Call for appl. 64~SOOO l'Xl
.,\Ill t1mt' & part llmt· _520_.______ _
1M>1lloru. available. CLERICAL
MOTfTEUHS ~HoMda , Uc ready for rhallengt' of Y
widevuri<:tyofnotefunc· om
hons U1. lfto. Chri•
HEW ACCOUNTS "6tly, c...-,, Chck
COUHSILOllS To All
\.ood C'lmmunic1nlon & 540..6055
'IPllmgaJulls es~~lJal eo.w 'ff"SOftMI C~,SHVICIS AtJtftCY
Trlilllt.>e position to start 2790 Hsti _ CM
yourbankingrarcer. AUJO~EE
Sant.Jago Uank offers an
•I tA ,1.j.• I
llll W COctlt Hwy
Mew,_.t•och
Count.er Help, I' 1T. hrs
tl·3. Capt Mike's Fish
fry. 645.2875
Counter llelp IOpm to 61m. Winchell's Do Nuu
253 E.11th st.C M.
COUNTERMAN
/\uto parta. Min. 3 yrs job or exper. Must be well
groomed & personable.
Phone 54~·8408 for in
t.erV1ew appt.
DELIVERY
DRIVEltS
Men or women 25 yrs or
older. Know the coast
<'lUes. Net $180 a week or more. Orangt Coabl
Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt Herrmann, Fountain
Valll'y. (No of Slatt.>r
belwn Newh ope &
Euclid>
DRIVER
WANTED
SUNDAY ONLY
Q:lijl
31 COftlP'I' D •• 54t..4741
I Across From Orange Co. Airport 1
F,qual Opport Employer
GIRL FRlDAV·
Vaned ofc work w/small
mlr ol Molh tear hing
rm chines. 497 3600.
G-R·E-A:.T
SALES JOI HOW
C>nH
GOOD PAY. GOOD
HOURS. GOOD CON·
DITlONS . MANY
f'RJNGI': BENEf'ITS. Jo'ASI' GROWING COM·
PANY P.ROMOTES
FROM WJTlllN. TRAIN
i'' 0 R T 0 P
M ANAGEMENT
STA RTS "IM ·
MEDIATELY "
K E Y H 0 A R D
EXPERIENCE
HELPFUL. WE llAVE
OUR OWN TRAINI NG
PROGRAM PUT ON JJY TilE COUNTRY'S TOP
ORGAN SALES
PEOPLJ-; CALL AT
ONCE f'OR
INTERVIEW. ORGAN
EXCHANGE. ST/\N
NUNN 7141586-7302.
GUA.IDS WAHTEO
Jou ll or pttlme. 2 yrly
ra!M!s. Apply 610 I!:. 17lh
St. Santa Ana
HOUSEKt:ErER.
Uve lt1 oomc't!tlc, r lean
~.do lavndry, cook,
"ure for two chlldrt'n
whllc partnlll are at
work. Musa hav l yr. u.11
pc•r .. dnt physlral cond,
•Prok Enill~h. Callt.
dn ve~ _l_lt' 1 bt• wlllina ti)
Uvt> aoroaa s.505 p11no
Take t•d lo Empk>ym<"nl
Oevelopmcnl Oepo rt
mmt J)(Yf, 30J 474 Ad
paid for by fmploye_r ._
tloust.>keeper /Cook for 1
<'lderly lady LI vc In
Own rm/bo. Xlnt 11alarl Own trans . 60·61;.,5
lf ou s ewlves & ~lea.oera. We have
work for you. 64~2839.
968-2810
1.NSfRUCTORS P ff for
womens figure salon.
Mature & r e liable.
people-Oriented 642·5762.
lMurance -Outstanding
opportunity In Costa
Mes~ general agency
Expenenr~ necessary
Low pressure offirc
wJfulJ range or dally in
surance duties . Com·
pen sa t1on com ·
mensurate w /abllilles.
1142·6500 or 546 3206 .
IMSUUMCE
Large Insurance agent•y
111 fo~ountain Valley has
opcningsforexpenenced
office personnel. Salary
<.'Ocntn<ln.'lurale with ex·
penenre. all \'ompany
benefits. Call Kathy
S4f"8161
JAMITott
Days, n o exp nl'c.
Newport Beach. 7:30·4.
Un iforms furn. Good
wortu.ng rond. Must h3ve
own transp & ph
833-7015.
ICEYPUHCH
OPHATOR
Nlght shift, min 2 yrs ex·
per. wUI punch on key
dl$C syst~m. Xlnt salary
MATllUAL
HANOUHG
Exvenen<'o de11I rc.-d. not
rt•qulrl'd Wiil train.
Must pass company
phJllcal lncludanic back
x ray. :-40 '1639. lrv1nt
f! 0 Y.. -----MF-OICAJ. Rercptlon111t. expcr. onty. Call 630 1111111
bclweftl9& ll:JOA M
Mt..'DfCAL Ass't • bar k of·
fccc wllh X ruy permit
Call 636 9850
MOVIE FIRM
SEEKS EXTRAS
Exct'ptional career opp.
ly for tho8e wl1b111ic to
break Into the movie
buslneu. S20·S200 pu
day + re s idual
posslbllltlei.. <714>
761 ·l2H . V I DEO
CAST ING SERVI CE oow lo our 3rd year.
~
LVN. 7·3 & 1 l-7. Country
Club Conv ff obp.
~:nu
Nur!.es Aides. 7 ·3, ~Hld $3.Z.$4 hr. ex·
penenced SJ.SJ.SO hr.
Mesa Verde Convales-
ProdllcffoR T,....
Rubber hole products.
Irvine art•. M1.111\ paaa
<"Omp1ny phyalcal In·
~ludina back xrar Call louPSJt, $40-7839 f, 0 E.
UALISTATI SALISPIOrlE
Wesley N Taylor Co. •• 1 33-year old firm wholly
owned ' operak'd by Ill rounder We ore not a
su bfi1d1ary. branch or
tr&Mtuse Just head·
quarters with a r'OUJ)d ·
the·c lock acceu to
manaJtt'menl for a s·
11.st.anct' at any lime Our
In ~ vld4!Q tape hst-
lnit & aale11 training pro-gram by Tom Hopkins Is
the finest rea I est ale
traJl\ing availablt'. Wt'
have an open111g for 2
salespersons with en·
lhus1aam, character &
lntegrity 1.0 match our high sta ndards. Your own private desk It no
part-time salespeople O>mml5slon split up lo
70'7,,, Interview by ap·
potntmenl only.
w~ N Taylor Co.
Ru1tors &U-4910
Reataurant uodwlch
makt!t'. no eicp. Ov..-11.
12.-mtoaiart.. ruu •PT. F'rltianko«« S93S Warner Ave. •m 8*44~
ResUurant
COOtlS Coopnr~pa•d weekly.~.wo
USTAUllAHT
16175 Harbor at Edinger,
Jo'ountain Valley.
EOE
Re9la1.rant H~p: Cook~.
Wailreues && 8u1boy11
needed lrnined.11\dy.Ap· ply Charley Don s
Res\aw'ant. 2AlC)22 Ca~
Dr .. Laguna Nlcuet.
Sales
LOVE PEOPLE?
Have some saleti or
mechral back around "
Demonstrate f ace &
body massager U> pn>· iUge dept. at«es. Com
m1 uion po\tnll a I
$2000 +by Christmai.
Start Immediately. Call
Dawn. 2L3138J·3906.
WES LADIES ,_.r_
Call oo retallen. 16 hr!>
REALESTATESALES wit. Earn up to $100 ~k
cent Hosp .• 661 Cenwr , ... _______ _
Sl ,C M ~·MSS 1•
Nursmg Llceo.o;ed °'we will train comm. 956-22'1•.
Ly.._. you Cor state exam. cu.,..,,..., .. ~ Y'"CIITS
f""lll Limited offer. C11ll ~-.· " Pff-3 to 11 shifl. Xlnt Kon a Marine. L ido
benef. Holiday pay 1 m -1~Ca!~!!!!&!!!Co!!.!!"94-805!!!!!!7!!·~ _Vi_W_a...;;;g_e._7_J4_!6T().. __ l_403 __
med. Bayview Convales· 1: SAL.ES. Pt tJme. fabnc. 2 cent. 20:\S Thwin, C.M. Recept1oni1l, Young wtui. &C2-3SOS. fnendJy woman good 64&-4040
~ wllh dealing w /people. ~ECl.EANIN~ Apply to Sue. J ohn SaJes Person witb Hp.
Pff evenlnRs. Exper. Wayne T ennis Club. seib.ngolcsuppbes.
a<lults only. $4 hr or t.ub-644-6!00. MamnersSlaUonera.
contract. 927-011.S 22$ f'ottst Ave.
Recep0onlllt oceded. for ~ Bead\. Office Manaf'er-Sales Good opportunity fof' ad·
vancemenl. Will train/no
experience necessary.
Must l>e 25 yn old or
older & be avail on
Saturdays. 557-0824 or
774·6090. 1525 Mesa
Verde lf206, Costa Men.
young <>mg Coty firm.
Lite typing & neat ap· SALES-RETAIL
pearance a m ust. Wood office s upply & :.ta-
L.lghUnf' Fixture Co • llOnf'rl, exp retaH sal~
2031 S.E . Main. Irv .. penon. full Orne. Ph for
MacArthur & Main, nr ~ SSJ-9212 Ask for Mr
0 .C. Airport. $46-2001 _cs_t ------
Rffeptionisl wanted for
& benefits. Wllsllands O.RDER DEPT Mic hae l Gttrrlson ·~
Hairc utting Salon.
642-M70. SALES
TRAINEE
DAILY PILOT
Bank, 979-4600. E.O.E. trainee to fill orders for O(f. supply Co. Ph for l<IY PUNCH appt ~7-9212. Ask for onRA TOR Mr. West Several openimis exi!>t , ________ _
for exper'd o~rators PART TIME Univac 1900 exper
help(uJ, but will train. EVENINGS Swing shift $100 shUt d1C.
rerenUal. Salary will de·
pend on your background
& expcr. and is com·
l>lemented by manr fine benefits & our idea N.B.
location. 1-'or appt. phone
Lynn Stansfield
<714) 759-7853
AVCO
RINMdal Senlcet
620 Newport Center Dr
NB92660
Equal oppty Employer
KJtchen Helper, foll·tame.
Adults wltb outstaodlnJt,
aUroctlve personalities
who enjoy working w11h
kids. St.art at $3.SO per
hour. Pl>one&t2--t321 Ext.
250. Bt.."'TWEEN 4:00·5 .00
PM.
A.Iii for Ji"'
Jo~ual Opportunity
t:mployer
P~TE-UP
PERSON
RlCEPT'IOHIST
Finandal service oft'.
N.8., aper required. at'
rurate typing. 50 + WPM. Call Myra HPM
Mon· Fri 833·2462
RECEPTIONIST
Immediate full-t ime
opening ror 1 harp , personable PBX recep.
tlonist with various other
office du1les . Please call. (71417S2·2:600.
IRVlNE
SAVINGS AND LOAN
E.O E. M 1F
R. £.Sales "Uc. Only"
THIMKIMG out s tandln g b encf 1t11 •CL-E•R•J•(;•'AL-----•
purka(<t.' & opponunlty
(OC' advancem\•nl with a MftTY ChridMH
progrci.s1ve orip.in11:0 &
... full time for local de liven~. t-:xcel dri v1ng
N'C' req. Ph for appt
5~7·9212. Ai.k for Mr
Wes\.
To dell ver DA l I. Y
PU.<Yr bundles lo rar·
riers 111 Newport Bearh
area. Requires van or
large station wa"on & a
good dn vlog rerord.
Call .
GUARDS Mon-Fri. 11 :30-8pm,
f'1U&p/\lme All arens S3.15 pH hr Good
with at lea'lt I yeur ex· pe r1enc~. preferably. newspaper. Excellenl
romptllty benefits. Apply
between 9A M & 6PM,
Mooduy thru Frlduy .
OF A CAREY
IH UAL IST A TE?
Thli highly a~cessful
local newspaper has an
oCJeOllll lit the cfrcuJa
lion depart.IMnL J ob In
dudes utea1 ~vke, eof
led.ions ano supervision of t eenage carrier,.. Selected applicant Villl
rettive a ll~al startln.: salary a nd recularly
scheduled ta'5es1 bonu11 opportun.itJes ana many
fringe benefiU such ait paid vacauon.s. medlral.
de ntal a nd ltre In ·
surance. Position al"o
provides auccasruJ av·
plicant with late model car or van wfth personal
use pr1 vlleget. uon Apply al. HCllPP'I Holidays
SANTIAGO DANK •• lrom Oebveryman. LA Times. ~o~~!t~~~.>tr~~n ~8~ 0 f f i c e • S days pr wk. Mon t'ri 4AM ·GA M . 673·2515 , 64~4321 ~;·t~~·5200714 1~·~~ over~-~~d 64&_14_u______ Atkfor
557.00.-1 DELIVERY ft!RSOM 0.. WltliGMt or
IS..nlun.i 37Zl litch StrHt for busy Irvine Travel Herry s..ley
Newport •och Aa<.'l\Cy. MutSt huve rclla lqHI Opportuftlty FULL .. TIME EQualOpporEmplyr ble molorcyl'le & in· IEKcplopt' suran()(!. Approx S hours ___ _...;..__.,__ __ _ TELLER ---------
POlllUOO I» av11lable in ---------Cl.£JUCAL
1 PAY DAY
LIFTUMTIL
C .. ISTM.AS
1-)im utro Christmas
l1lOn(')' now'
TYPISTS PIX
our Weatm1mtA:r Branch
for an lnd1vldu1tl with
previous teller or
fash.iertng exper bark
ground. 1be person we
e.eek 11hould enjoy public
cont.act aNl:detall If you
nre seeking a <'oret>r
poiitlon please roll Mr
Bill Moort" .11 ('11 4 > G 0500 or Sheila llur
nJl(JI) Ill 121.3) 476 2201 ACCTCLIRKS
We provide fM! rom kEYPUHCH 0,11
p:.any p11ld unaformi. In CLERKS . "'1d!Uon lO a 1h·nt·rou11
bend1t3 packa&e which Must havr phone & rclla·
Ui.u medical and llfC' In ble tran.sp. Long & t hort · __..,_ I term usl111m 'nt.s. tloli· M.11-ancf,....,l .. bumentpan. day & vacation pay. t~Uon.. re m raement, Ro11pltallutlon plan ~ purthase pion 1na avallabM
rme parkln11. • ...... • .... -.. -=~~0 1!'•451
& LOAM .• ': ~7;4 ,Drln
lD>l San llncente Blvd <At-t'Oll• fo)-om
IA Al\lt<lta, CA llOCM9 OrMjt Co A.1.rport >
daiJy,Mont.hru•'ri.Hrly Eleclrlclao w 1com-
wage & mileage paid. merclal exp. Salary ac·
95'7·2700 cording to exp. Call
Delivery -· 963-7879, 7am·Spm or
Early AM newspaper :131>-7tmal'l6pm.
route. P>O mo. 5 duy wk. t.c. Secnt.ry
Small cor required ..,,,. ... lltof
CM/KB. 892-6566 ..,., ....... AcMttcy.
Deliveryman for early Thia oppor[un[\y re·
AM L.A. Tirnes home de· qulffl' oxcellent trptn1e
livery rout~. Must hove sldlliJ /11horthAnd. Client
econom.ical car. Adulo; rontlK'l ll some I.ravel.
only 21-'J hrs pr doy. No Mu•t bave ra1hlooable
oollectlng.$42.'lprmonet ap pearnncc & pro·
t•ke home. 118 11reu. r~ionaJ telephone man·
638-0 l.26 ocr.
DelivttY p /tlme AM. LI\ This ll a key position.
'nme• dellv. SIOO per 1buucceasful candklatc w~. Laauna Buch ~ be articulate, one ~ wtto cao 1tep lnto a client
-nlm9Y/SALIS comact altuaUoa " toke -"'-d.w'le. Cosnpeoutlon 41 Moo·f'ri $.-9 ev s. own beaell\I commensurate
tranap. S)l.olll wtlheipertcnce.
, STOfl!I Re.ume thouJd be aub-
TMe Ume Lo relax and ~ln~nden~to: lhoo It bocno. lt'• 1lmplc WUUam rawcdl
w l l b D a ll y P 11 o t 90.U 4' J acobl
C1 ... t.ned Mt. And U 4121 W--1.y Pl. 1113
you have eomethtn1 to Newport Beach 926fO
benefits 1::.0 .E Uniforms furnis ht>d Bayview Conv Hosp .
Agei. 21 e>r over. kct1rcd """'" Th St c M w1•lcome. No exrvonence •.v.,., urin, · · · ... ~ 642·3505 nee. Apply Univ~rs11I ----------
Protection Scrvm:, 1226 l..andscepe Maintenance
W. 5th Street. Santa Ana Coouuner gardening. lull OIAMGE COAST
DAILY ,.ILOT LntcrvieWl> hours 9· I 2 & lime. 494·0168 14 Mon lhru Prl. 642 5682 ---HOTEL FEONT OESK
CLERK-4 day week.
J.JJ. Some weeke nds. CaJI for appt.. 6*5000 ext
~.
Hotel
.._ ... ~IMJPorlft'
1::.> to 4. ooday lhru
f"'day. Union btn<1(1ts
Cull <or appt. 645·~.
~lon520
~ ~reta~ tralnw 330 w. Bay St or experienced. airport Costa Mesa
area .. Must h ave t:X· t;quol Opportwiity
rellcnt typiflg. 90wpm + Employer College degree In ---------English preferred . PBX ANSWER IN O lllOO-Sl.200 pr mo depend· service operator. Exper
Ing on skills. 979·11616 or w Jtraln. 549·3015
MACHINIST PBX
Auto parts m ach in e Answeri ng s er\ll ce
llhop, e11per deslttd. Will operator full & P ff, Call
COMMier a sharp tralnct.>. _m. __ ase_1 _____ _
Phone 645·84-08 for In ·
terview appt. Penton to lie papers 3 to 6
am. $10. dally. a· doys
MAld1fwan~. lop wagei. Wttk ~.
paid. The Inn ut Laguna.
211 N. Csl Hwy. J,aguna
Housekeeper Fl & PT.
11ood benefits. EOE
Ooyvlew Convale11cent PIZZA
llolp. zo:is Thurln St. M1lntenance Man. Cull Help Wanted. Call t.odoy,
_c_.M __ 642_-~-----ume, eicper only. Apply S48186.1
Howetteepcr fBabyalttn.
2 acbool 11e children. Own \rana. Mon. 1'1.1es.
1btn afternoon. O.gln J1n.882.aMO
Newport COnv. C~nter, ---------
1556Superior Ave • N B. PrlnUn•
MAIMTIMAHCI
P/tlme student • work at Party reouaJ store. Apply
D:SNewport Blvd, CM
IMM81An
°'911MGS:
1 Foldtr operalor and 3
8Lndery tnloeea.
TPS 2ZI08 Oul'()nl Onve
Aoalwlm. CA 9280e m•lN7·~•
~I Opportunity Eq\11) Opporl Employer
plO)'er M / t' w..,, Ada Call S42'M18
1tll, call a frltndl)' -----------Cl1&1ltled Ad·Vl1or at Have aomtthlnl Lo te117 • ._ ______ _
eo.W71 OaNifiedaclldoltweU. 1•
MANA(;t:R
R etired couple to
manaie 75 unit mobile hmw park, Malnwna.nc•
ff olffc• upcir. req'd.
Llvln1 q uarters " aa1arY. SeOd retumt to SPMC. 303 Hamilton. c.2. Cella Me11925287.
SellWldlt.mt Ml-~11
F.Qual Opportunity
f:mploycr M 'F
'
• r -" . . . . . ' " . -..... . . -,
Free training
af you guahfy. Call C7141 ffl·06'0
RISIARCH
ASSISTANT
E.P.A. Research Grant
wastewater reclomntlon.
located In So. Oran1e
Qy, blo. & chrm bkgrnd
prefe rred. II m lted manual labor involved,
mornings. 30 hu wk .
Needed lmmed. Equal
Oppty Employer .
83l·l51S •
RESTAURANT
Hai'TESS 6.30to2:30 Mon-Fri. Call
ror appt. 645-SOOO exl 520
Restaurant
Dfdl C....-Ch'• ...........
COOKS
WAITRESSb:S BUSBOYS Dl.SHWASllERS
Min or n0 ex~r nee. F\111
& part .time 2898
N e wpo r t
Blvd C M
Rettau ... n~ Brewster'•
Family n uuura11t. ODtr\1111 Y, January , now
acceptl n1 applications
for •II food service
penonntl. Waltrcuca.
tlulptnonl. ~. lw>&\a
It w ... e:&. dWlwuherl 118'\'tce ba~. fooa
pirc,p. Apply In penon. Mon-Sit. ll 10DO We.met'
Avt,FlnV1y.Ca.E .O.E.
Appbcant must be 18 aod
have good driving re·
cord.
Jfoun are approxlma te·
ly 11 AM to 9 PM daily.
Weekends optional but at
overtime rates.
ll )'OU are quallCied and
Interested call the
<lttula!Jofl Department and uk for the 011t.r1ct
Sales MaD1ftr'11 In· lef'VieW,
QRANCHCOAST
DAILY PILOT
U>W. Bay St.
Cost.a Mesa
642-4321
An Equal Ops>orluo1ty Employer
SALES·TEXAS O IL
COMPANY n eed s
malw-e JICl"IOO for short
trips tur~lna Cotta
Me sa . Co nt act
ciatornert. We train
Write D.U. Dick. Pres .. S outhw •a t ern Pecroteum, Ft. Worth.
Tl. 'mOl.
SCHOOL au s
DRIVERS-"*°" 4 brs
Jl9' day. _war, MM per
hour. Uct'f\Md or will
train. Appl)> Newport· .._. th\1ned School lMs
trlct, Mon/Wed/Thur ff
il't liuft.IJ, T\MI l ·3Pm.
leDl Y&b Slreet. Newport BNctl,CI. E.0.£.
------..... ·-1--
0 ••
J
lD
In·
an
lf )>
• ..
!~ ..... ?!~ ~.!~ ..... ?! ..
&.eril.ary ,... l
Lookla1 (or c1reer .. ~ '° aulat ln run ~""'""~~--~ .. IMM&cft MtlM ~ tYIMA. tU• 311 • • .... ~ Xtftt Of11ll ...
dclMI. •Wan m11k.ln1 abtllty. ~nd re.um
wJMLaty b.latOI'}' to Ad
• ~ JllOl W•tni.Y Pl , s.i llZ. NB. 112MO. --
---· -11-AIY llC9'TIOMST
fOf' 1rowtn1 Newport 8rtldl Nal ~Ute nrm Sahry b••ct d un
.-quaDncaUGM. • 440-•112 ! WRIT K R • : t• If 0 T 0 0 R A P IC E R : • ••-a-.a....s * P\JIUJ<''IST ewe dod ror : ~ ~••IW tur &o Cow\l}' Axenc)'
· · t ~·•••t• Loh af 'Ulf'l )' " 1 CliolMil JJulDd ~ Send Rnumr • ~ -.yAJJ Y 4 ~•l.r · n ~f'di. t o
1 ! U.l11 n~At1MY Qwll\td Ad •:111. Oa.JI)'
' .... litt-bSl. S." 104 PtkA f'O Heu~ 1500. C0>t.i
Ntwloft •Ktt, UHllO CA DZ'2ll <:alll"or Appt1r .• 1H•b ... ----
• Mak• your 1hoppln1 CW\)' REX cata, kittens,
-'«'by ualn1 the Dally "now ott....S u peta. IMO.
P\lot Clualtled Ad•. &tM870
t..~----..:·~·~:.:-..;....---
'
\
• 1
•
tile •• ·-1010 ltw.ndly. o.c.mw 21. 1979 DAit. Y Ptl.OT DS .......................
,,_, .. , bou h Id I ftw& Ow gu s IOff ..,....., St o Lem. u••••••••••••••••••••• for ule. New-Un&aaual. ~ ........ ....-..1.... 1 1 mone)' ... vtnl opportunJ ... __ nanGI or11 e.
ty available. 496-3371 Graoda·Orute Oak up _.._...._ _____ ...;. .. _ ~l"rHdtl.
2 ~·MU ol nl equip. 09iht "-o SM
tlec:. Royal t¥pcwritcr. llJOl'UmtJtoo Ave. t( 8 .
let Orlent&l vuea. Tur· 1u.a111 (JUO&Mlalvr watchb•od. SS2·31'19
tlSO --------· ...................... . Honda 17$CcXL
Oood cond;UOO nu. pr~
8T3-0562
'18 llONDA ATC90. uM"d 3 hours~ ukln& $700. a.am
SKl BO<n'S, Dyn1tll. az l, Honda Trail 70 Blkt'll
w/raek. uaecl $ Umes. ~fl UY'f' like new! Lesa than 100
l50.8"-0lj5 WUtUtze.r Spinet Ori:an .xii ~ ml. $32:$eacb499-2416
---------w/Leslie spe1ker. 17' .... 30' '18Honda115. 1200 miltii.. ~-P"rfect cond1 Asking w .... _,,,,. n-.d IOI I '900. Great Chnstmaa ... eoew840."'tm
••••••••••••• ••• • •• • • •• gift. Mt· 7400/955-0266. HAllUSOM'S
SWORDS. DACOERS. SIARAY IOATS ·1~ lluaqucvarna. 175
Art dealer wlll buy In· Com Prelude orean, Uke 3101Cout Hwy. N.8. Md.ocroea. Set up for eu terHUn1 Items. (7l4) new. aiet SUOO. aak 9800. 631·2541 duros. 615·7~. mech
6'7W543. &n-35M. ~~~~~~~._aound;.;..;._=-_;...;,._----
--
vm Peugeot Moped, xlnt
coodllion, $350. -.121111
Blanch! Moped, •Int CIOlllL, make offer. ......
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
J0Ml H l\~BOR HVO
<0\111 Ml ~A 6·1 l OUIO
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
)I\(,' lll\RROR n1vo
• c 1• JI\ Mt\/\ t, l ,' 1)010
'12 Ford Van, aink.
~. tt.ove, AM/FM. 8 tn. PS, PB, SMOG PP.
f13.'77IO l~ •-c:c" tllO .. ford konoUne van .
...... ••••••••••• ••• •• • ntfds IOfM work $300. Cl& ...... n.. _•_122 __ , ------
•• Hin Mwt Mii '78 Ford Van
B\Q' this almost new a.tom SOO take over
HDGda to '°" YoUt aoe or p&ymeat.a. -.STss
daqpt«. ODly dnven '70 VW camper v•n. nu
100 mllH.1. aao. Pb .,. nma st..,~ clean maucwanl....., a.ton«.
. -_,_._..,. ---
....
C •/ s i
0
'
f
l I
' . ~
.
' l
.,
' I .• I
~
11 .
L .. C·
It
{,
t
' I
Dec.MW It tf11
AlllllWah~ tttt ~w-.. HK Ml!' w:1'•11 Htl ...................... ....................... ......... . ••.•........
WI IUY WI Wa&. IU'Y WANTIDI -:-Ul9CM -YGUalAnMN
Late model Toyotu, ... ,. U. MW ~roM\ PAID POA Oa NOT
Vol'*-PkiNlil 6 Vw dtlllm 11116p ill I.be lrYtM TOP'°'& •I Otlha&o4QI Mio c.IMr. We oMd
~wtloneed (Wplct 11Mlt •• wtult tM
DAI.LY l'ILO'I'
E.RVICE OIRWT'ORY
.. .UabcMI ---MeM.Mew
10'll' .... ~,
JOI
MAC ... SOM CNPIOUT a M!Man< Orin IRVl.HE
761-7122
. ..
hhllWt• II (•Al',LJ ~4
t: I • '', I I\ ( '', -------
WllUY
CUAMCAIS
•TIUCIS
C ON.Hfll
• Hf'fRu1f1
',41> I JOO
WEIUY
USED CARS
CALL PAPPY
UMdC.rM1r
~5130
NOW IS 1"1 TIMI
for job .-era to cbttk
tbe Dally Piiot Help
Waal.ed dualtkaUon. ff
the job )'OU want 11 not thens )'OU mJpt ron.alder
ollertn1 your 1ervlces
with a.o ad 1n the J ob
WADl.ed ute1ory. Phone IG-6178
Mew tlOO
••• IM'I Ill CAUllll • • •
INTHE
No Lead las Shortage
Ml CAI Runs on
ANY TYPE Automotive
IASKl•EI
BRAND NEW
1978 CIVIC
SGA-46424 f3..:J.326
THE CAR EVERYONE IS
-TALKING ABOUT -
HONDA 4
ALL MEW FOR 1979
SAU NICI GOOO TMIU I J·J M e -SUIJICT TO "'°' SALi
SAYE •OW M 1978
DIMOMSTIATOIS AND DIC. CAIS
R
ALL WITH LOW MILIAGI AHD llMAIMIMG FACTOIY
WAUAHTY
HATCHBACKS -ACCORDS
WA ... S
~ --
CREVIER
&1Sl 61~'t
SAMf A AMA
835·3171
""•USlblMW.:
'730.Y. SIR (5'1ffJP>
'74 3I02.a SIR ( l40LG F >
'7S 2ll02 Auto air l2236 l "763.0aiS/R (eraRKM l
'T153>;4epS/R <0179)
'TTG)cti4/apd (T~) ao.ed Oii s •• ,.
Dahllt 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
*DATSUNS•
~ SelectlOft
OfAIModtls
SAL~LEASING PARTS-SERVICE
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
•DIUVEA * * UTI'LE ••• *
SAVE A LOT • • • • • ~.
BARWICK DATSUN
'' ' ' 8J1.111r,4qj lJ75 -----
"We need to buy clean De~u.o uaed cars''
S WW Pay Top Dollar S
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
.......................
mirac le
mazda
T, ,
~ 1978 Clas11c White
·~Sliver Cloud 1
Sl9.000 915 ..... u44
wired. $2000 & take over T....... 9767
balance or $650/rno lse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 83t-3m I 978 TRIUMP'H
'SJ JOO, 4 dr. Runs greal, A srrTFIRE
c~1c. A very low mileage ex·
493-5177. ample wilh less t han
ll .. 000 miles! Fini.shed in 1968 Mer cedes 2SOSE, Brit.iahraclng green with =· ant & eng xlnl, ..... '""' <Ser 2•«1\1 On . 776-~ aft 6PM ~ f~mOnJy . ...,.., .
'fJ7 25UiE cpe, needs work.
Beal offer over Sl200.
~~3
9742 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lt76 MG MIDGET
Thia UttJe car la lD fine
<.'OftdJtlon. Yellow with black Interior. t Ser .
8 7).
$3695
IAURMOTORS
282S Karbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
979·2500
$5495
IAUBt MOTOIS
2925Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA
979.2500
Classic convertible, '64 TR 4, looks great, xlnt
n.a:uung cood. gas saver,
$14.50. 494-6213.
1976 TRIUMP'H
TR·7
In British racing green
with tan trim. Fitted
with air cond. & stereo cassec.te. <Ser.3'04>.
'71 MG, good condillon. no $4995
engine. M us l sel I. IAUIRMOTORS
646-%.109 2925 Har bor Blvd.
2 Swedlllh Volvo
Mech1nl u now at
IYan '•~.1905 Hubor Bivd.. Cm. ~1982
YEAR END
CIFARAMCE
COMMELL
CHEVROLET
·-" II .. I 1. " II •
' • r-I \ \11 · '
su.1200
197' GIANA04 S399t 2 Or. wtlh automatlc air
cond., pwr. ateedn1. vln)'I top &r radio-a GREAT b1a)' for tht>
money! (m;PPI.
COHHEll
CHEVROlfr
•.,.I , t. I
' f \ \' I
S4b-1100
'77 Monaco B~ham : 4
dr. vnyl top, S4200 84'1·3870
'SS. 2!9 3--spd. new patnl. Rood tires , c l e a n ,
AM/FM cass., $1600. 49'J. 7529. Brad
lt77C..VIOLET actu.Dbila 9955
IW ALA, Sii) AM •• ••••• ••• ••• •••••••• • • Automatic, pwr. ateer-
iog, factory air cond ..
timed glass, w1w tires.
wheel covers 4' LOW
miles U c. 857RLD SUc.
P3642.
$4777
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
'l<Jt,IJ llAllB< JI! fll 1/0
((),!A Ml~A h·l1 0010
'76 OLDSMOllLE
$4299
2 Or. with VS, air cond ..
•UIA>maUct pwr. st.eer1n1e &r brakes, oucket seats&. radio. Looks BRAND
NEW! <245NWlf).
CONNELL
C HEVROLET
'.'\. '>" If .• rt,. r I~ I' d
' I ,,.., I \ ,, ~ ·' \
546-1200 •
Meal 9744 COSTA MESA
•••••••••••••••• ••••••• ___ 97_9_._2_s_o_o__ --------·i~ ............. !!.~~
1977MCH
COMVSlTll&.I vo1cs..,... 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Yellow exterior & fitted '7S VW Beetle-Tawny
with ractory wire wheels. beiJe exterior. deluxe in.
<Ser.IJ:lj), Oo sale for tenor, AM t FM Stereo
284SHAR BOR BLVD only Ma&s & radial tires. One 900 So. C:O.t Hwy.
54CM410540.021l •.t995 owner. Prl. Pt. $2900. ~•--a.
"12 Ru n about. good
transportatio n ear.
needs body work $300 or
best. C11 ll 5 411 ·248~
8etWM'!> 8:30 & 5 Mon·
Set
~ Ql.11633-2791 __. '72 Pinto Runabout. new
1974 Dat.auo 8210 Htchbk. l.uat MOTOAS 94-1ll1 Ures. Just tunt!<i. Call
nds eng. ar body work. 29'lS Karbor Blvd. 67 Sqiweback. rblt enli. (714)846-7473 or 12t3 I ec>. S.0.91U COST979~2M50ES0A fltaM clu. Bst ofr I lra e ~2_. 61 7 1 , ex t . J 8 5
orlruck.642-2978. '76 Monte Carlo. new ....,, .. 5pm '77 28JZ 2+2 5-spd, all op· ----------------bru d 1s h ----------lions. copper. $7900. 1977 MGI '&f VW Bus. Must Sell. es. new ra 18 • w t """'*"' 9960 487·~. 497·1033 ROAOSTH All)' reasonable ofr. side-wall!>, blue landa~J ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2J.3..633..()844. full po wer· AM / f' M '66 PLYMOUTH Satellite '78 280Z, xlnt cond. mags, A Vef'Y attractive con· radio. spec .. alnpplng. 2 dr hrdtp Low mileagl! vert.ible apOr'lacar filled 'Tl Super Beetle, Recent 26k m1 . mint cond · · AIC. ataeo. radio, gape, With gaa saving over· rebll. Radials, Xlnt all ~ Besto<rer reblt engine, radio, nu bau. Mulholland sus· drive 5th gear Must be ort cond 499-3618 · heater, au cond <need:.
oenQoo. l5800. Atk for driven to fully 11~. g · · Vega Sta. Wgn, '74, lo ml, repair). power steering bl c k. 549-4834 d ys . .......a Se • 6 8 v w 8 u 5 . atlver, good eond. Asking & power brakes Gd
6'2-seT.levea/wlcnds t""""'8llJ. 1 r. 222.8). " DESPERATE! Any reas Sl~. ~-3223or 552·5856 transportation, SOOS. Can sale for only cl 122 be seen this weekend.
'71 510 Sedan: brand new $5495 r.645-322:6. 979~ '76 CMvy 10'.!pala 4-dr, CallSSl-"435 .
motor under Wrnly . IAUIAMOTORS '75 Rabbit, stereo cass.. PIS. PtB, AIC. Ptsts, nu --
$1200 642·2434 Days 292:5 Harbor Blvd. AtC. 51K ml. xlnt cond. baU-tJreii.brakes. Pnccd ·75 Plymouth Fury Sport ~9502Evea. COST.AMES.A $2700/080.842·MS2 tosell.49e-3729 Coupe. 37 ,00<l mi's t ownr, good cond. sun· LATE '75 280Z 2+2, wht. 979·2100 '71 vw 7-pass Bus. rblt '68Nova. roor, cruise control
l mmac. Every xtra. """"""' 9746 eng, radials, Make ofrer. Best Offer llM-2&39 $8.~ • .:.~.s7t~on&ecuo. _,... 6"-02lll2 557·5983 ..__...--------9-9-6-rr. Cdro --. ....., ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------.,.._ i. '74 Opel Manta Coupe gd. 'Ill vw convert, yellow. '65 Cona, new eng. 4 brl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rat 9725 trana., 1uto tnns. ylnyl Orig. owner. well malnt. amtfm, .Mags, 6ucket.s. '68 Pontiac Ventura. Xlnt
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ble, 681·3610 l2200/mkofr.673-7032 tl50Wila Bilf64e-70t6 cond. lllOO!bstofr . a a DD dyl, «·ZMl2 eva. 77 HOV .A COUPE ll60·3S36
,.. dw 9750 ~~t;'O: ~~ptr ~n~ '°"Uy equipped Including '87 Flrebinf .
• Fant.uUc CloMout •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• llOO.flM.3421 talleywheels . (267RZLI Bestofrer. S397S )48-4198 onlt'11Model1 1179Models
now urt ving MUST SELL J>lat MILLER
M01'0RS
13>W. Warner,S.A
SST·2l.32
1977 flOttSCHI
924COUPI
Ku aJJ ~ possible tx·
tru le l o w ml l ea l (ll>tRSCI
ONLY $1991
HOWAUCIM..,....t
JI.Mt Married. Mull 1ell I Dove" Quail St.a
'77 Xl9, fully loaded. NEWPORTBEACH Take over payments. ___ l_l_J._O_H_s __ _
s.aeu 81 ~to. 9S'li restored,
HMdD t727 l"fldwlblatklnt .. Clasalc ••••••••••••••••••••••• S4&-31181
..... New '79 '11 9ll SC petro blue. HONDA Can io.ded. xlnt cond. low ml.1'M502
MANY ToC .. IHI ,,_1 '78 91J.SC, Snrf. GM ml. Ai r . M in t. '27.SOO. UMIV•SITY m-im ..-1UH~t40fc.
oe.•H1 'M Con~blf. Runt I d ..... C... • •MC t.l .,.. aome reator· T...a ,,_ Ml.llt s.l.I or will COft·
80 Harbor Blvd. 8'clet' take~ P•1ment a.ca .,.. 540-1&4G plan. 995. m tae.
'11 Honda CMc !katJon '• ~· 81.Z. Rblt en1. 5 W iood cond IPd. Allo)-9 •httlt , Mu1t ;:r"' *·3$51 5111. "'°°· •2t41.
You "°"' Med a 1ws to UU Honda CVCC .. .._ fut" wtMn you
bat.cbback xlot condl· Dlet'e aa act lft u.. Dally
Um. Oood I• 111U.a1e, PUat Waat Adel CaJJ DOW !lrf delOMNll• _....,.,
'al VW Bus, reblt. radialJS
AM/F M. clean Sl6SO/ cir. 836-6114 eves.
·a VW Fa1tback, Xlnl
oond. Rblt eng. $800.
64$-6394
CORMIER leasinf '78 TRANS AM. Uke new.
Al Irvine Auto Ct>nteJ' 6.000 ms . Uoder Wmty.
zw:l Rockrleld Blvd. rrv. Ply. 838-S807
Lake Forest Ttt d11blld H70
76M026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •VERVCLEAN• '74 OISher, 2 dr. aft, T01> Chrpter tt2S 11 T·Blnf, low m l. m08t
cond. S2UO ••••••••••••••••••••••• xtras. Mom's cir. 16275.
548-31175 '7 T Co rd o b • / f u I I )' 768-3401
Vaho 9172 equipped, lo ml T cop,1--------
••••••••••••••••••••••• vfnyl roof. fu I pwr. Yt91 9974 stereo H trurk, llhr Int. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OIAHGICOUHTY w1cordob11n spec. paint '75 V8 Vega Panel Wagon VOi.YO Mu1t u ll $6295. Pr :m HP 3:iC> Motor. Needi.
EXQ.USIVl!:LY VOLVO S.·93:Jl M·Sot. aome work, body In good
Larieat VOivo Dealer Ccu.,..,,.llhlt ttlO ah ape. $600 call aft
tnOranceCowity! ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• &:OOpm wk . nlte11 .
BUYorLEASE '78 Mark V Ol11mond 8118«1'fJAaltforBryan
DIRECT JubUM model! For HIO '73 Stal.Ion Waaon. MC. ~'~~llm~ or aMume. "" ly loaded. mlnt cond. Only 30.000.
Mooll roof, Diamond blue New Urea • brakes ! ~ ! =no~:,_7~~tolfer. $1175/blt ofr. 752·0283
~ S ·----1'74 Ve11. auto., new QJ~ :: 99lJ radl1l1, llln\ cond. I Anaheim 750-2011 •••• ••••• •• •• • • • • • •• • • owot'I'. $1150. 14e-4~
.,, LllOES. A C1Ullc ror :.14 XR7 Cl~IO, loadedooo. T2 Ve1• OT 5450 R bit mUtt ••Cnr!Ct"! 13, -..c-ood Call OlftltmAt. OnlyJtM ml BntOffer.'31·2883 ::~·.!!""1. I · Ott Ccnd. Sll~~ stereo. .__. Alr. "100/0fr ..... 1.212. n... t9H ____ ......_ ____ , ... -;:; ................ .
is iec, ao.ooo ml. atk, a/c, "14 Dut. alr cond, racllo,
.Weo ta~. P/t ,p/bw, 13200. 752 5011 day1 ,
ltictllllal, OIU M>-G'IO MCID·frt 10-5. lkltn
O«OREEN cuh for WHITE elephants
WIU\ I Claaitred Ad
CaillUwrt
. . . -.. . . ' . . . . . . . ~ . • I .. '
• L
•
D1•ntwngton -Beaeh-
Fountain V alley i~
Y our Hom tow
Dally ew!!Jp ap r
\ (,. VOL. 7t, NO. 3SS, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CEt'.····. i THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1978 '
Heavy T r affic, Drunk Patrols Fol!ecas~·
\ • I
. ' . • ,
j
{
c
I
Moton•ll should upttt h•'O
lhln11 l''rid~. traffic Jama and
•n •bundance of Cahforma
Hiahwa.y Patrol off•urb who
wlll be watcbina ror lht• dr'UJ\k
driver.
Lt. Marlow Johnston . thf'
CHP'• Santa Ana diVUJ'on ek
ucuUvt omcu. 1atd \h~ morn
lnc that tbe state's truway
f o r ce will b e deployan c
specifically qa.tnAt t.ht drmlunll
d river . especially dunna eve
~barwn
Attacks
Israelis
TEL AVlV, Is rael (AP) -
Guerrillas in southern Leba00n
fired a volley of Katyus ha
rockets into the Israeli frontier town of IGryat Shmona today
killinJt one man and woundinR
seven persons in a spiraling eye-
for-an-eye fight between the
Palestinians and Israel.
The Palestine Liberafion
Organization in Beirut said the
• • town was rodtoeted in retaliation ror Israeli air strikes on Pal-
estiniancamps 12 hours earlier.
After the rour or five rockets
slammed into Kirvat Shmona rn
the o~rthei:n Galilee panhandle,
Js raeh artillery opened fire on
Palestinian positions across the border, the military command
said in TeJ Aviv.
The army s aid five children an
Kiryat Shmona were treated for
shock after being evacuated
from a building hit by one or the
Soviet-designed rockets.
~ "Usually you can bear • Katyushas,'• said one resident.
I' "hut this mominic I didn't hear r aJJytblog, just a massive ex-
pfosion and Ulen I was covered
• • with dust. I took the children out
to an underground shelter."
I ~ .
The woman, Mrs. Sama Ben-
Da v id, Jives next door to a
second-floor apartment that was
delnolished.
The military said the rocket attack was the first across the
Lebanese border since June,
when Israel withdrew an &n·
vas ion force from southern Lebanon after a 90-day sweep to
drive Palestinian guerrillas
from the frontier.
Palestinian-sources in Beirut
said the Israeli air attack at sun·
d own Wednesd av k illed or wounded as many as 27 people.
Israeli military officials said the
raid was ordered in reprisal for a
string of Palestinian bombings in
Is rael that have killed four
civilians and wounded 70 smce
Nov . l.
The Israelis also re ported
three persons sUghUy hurt in a
erenade attack in the Old City of
Jerusalem a rter nightfall
Wednesday. It was the second
born bing of the day in the Holy Ci.
ty. An earlier blast in the doorway
of an Old City restaurut slightly
wounded six ~rsons. Egypt's floreagn Ministry de·
nounced the lsraeli attacks as
"a threat to the current Egyp-
tian-Israeli peace process."
But Cairo went ahead with
plans to send Pr;me Minister
Moshe Dayan and Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance this weekend
for another attempt to get the
stal!ed peace negotiations going agaan.
Carter 'Graded '
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
sroup of 33 leading conserva· r tJonists gave President Carter
\ high grades Wednesday for his
record on environmental issues. "!' saying his performance in the
past two years "has been out-
standing." •,
' 4
. ..
I
&!At Ordered
For Caner
W ASRINGTON (AP)-
Prealdent Carter canceled his appointment scbeduJe
today and wu ordered to
re1t in bis living quarters
because of wllat was
described as an aggravat-
ed problem wl\h hemor-
rhoids.
Wbtte Houae uaociate
~re11 1ecre.ary Claudia
To•nHDd Hid the presi·
dent was belna treated by
his personal pbyaiclan,
Rear Adm. WllUam M.
Luk ash.
Carter "has h•d thla
problem belore altbou1h lt
apparently wu never so
aevere," Mt. Town1tnd
told. reporter.
nln and hU ru ht hour.. Lut )'4.'l r , t\e uid , the
Hl1h-a}' Patrol alone Jllllf'd 296
motorltnb 1n Oran~e ounty who
v.-re hf'H •vl"<i to t... driving un
df'r the anfJu nc~ bt'lwttn 6 p.m.
t'nday and 6 a m Tuei.day. lht!
nlt cnt.i<'nl period thts yoar
The number moy ~ 1reater
tbu year, h<.• ronJectured , Tht! en p . ut conJ1,1nd1on with Ult
Oranae County Sh<"rlff's ofhce,
ha11 "streumbntd'' boolnuw pro
cedurn that should aet officers
back on ~ freeway Cuter than
in lht' p l
Mixina those snarls with Fri·
day afternoon partygMrs and
weekend hohd y drinkers }I
almost ruaranteed to otrer lew
c nlo rce m e nt o fficers the
Chriatmu blues.
Moton sta who flnd themselves
wt1avln3 a bH or demonstrating
"anythlns else unuMual " may
ftnd a roo Ugbt Oa.'Jhtng in their
Al'WI,..,....
Ready .f o r S a 11ta
Rick Stellwagen or Trevose, Pa .• cleans soot out of a
chimney JUSt outside Lititz m preparation ror Santa
Cla us, who lends a hand. Actually Santa is fellow sweep
John Sutton, who donned the red suit for the holiday
season.
County Employment
Rate Record High
Orange County's unemploy-
ment r ate reached its lowest re-
cording ever in November when
it dipped to 3. 7 percent.
As unemployment in the coun-
ty reache d a new low, the number or those employed hlt an
all time high or 962,400 job
holders.
continuing surge in manufactur-
ing activity in the county.
When s ummed up. EDD's
monthly labor study puts
Orange County l'n, the forefront
or employment activity in the
state with the lowest un employ-
ment rate and the fastest grow·
Ing job market. . ·
rear·vlew tnJrror. Johnston said.
The Highway Patrol is putting
all offlcers into the field over the holiday. ·
Tb~ drivers who slur a bit or
appear a little glassy eyed may
end up taking the freeway.aide
sobriety test.
Those who fall will be
handcuffed. placed ln a patrol
unit a nd whis ked to Orange
Co1mty Jail where they will sub-
mit lo one of three sobriety
tests, urine, breath or blood
sampling. Refusal. of course,
leads automatically to a 8U8·
pended driver's Ucenae.
Fol lowing the tes t . the
motorist will be booked Into the
jail until released on bail that
could go as high as $500 or until
they see a judge the toUowing
Tuesday morn.ng, Johnston
warned.
All in all, be mused, it's not
too good a way lo s p e nd
Christmas.
Johnston warned that county
motorists shouJd allow plenty of
driving time to reach weekend
holiday destinations as well as
watch their intake of booze and
drugs.
"It'll be a mess:• he warned.
noting that Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport is predicting two-
bour-long waits in traffic just tp
make the loop through the
<SeeTllAFFIC,PageA%)
Probe Doomed?
HB Police Panel Under Fire
By ROBERT BARKER
OI ... DMIY l'MM St.ft
A special fact-finding commit-
tee that was formed last July
when the Huntington Beach
police officers came under fire
from a number or citizens may
be facing an early demise.
Mayor Ron Pattinson said
Wednesday be favors disbanding
the seven-memberA>anel that OS·
tensibly was set up to look into a
number or problems dea ling
with city matters .
1WA Jet
Hijacked
By Woman
MARION. Ill. <AP> -A
woman claiming t;c) ..be rtued
wUh dynamite hijacked a Trans
World Airlines jet with tfl people
aboard today, trying to force the
release of a prison inmate, the
Fede ral Aviation Administration
said.
The woman, who said she had
s trapped thre e s ticks or
dyna mite to her body, forced the
pilot lo land al WlUiamson Coun·
LY Airport in Marion. the FAA
said .
Flight 541 from Louis ville to
Kansas City was hijacked short·
ly afler a scheduled stoe in SL
Lou is . Wh e n it landed in southern Illinois a short lime
later, an FBI spokesman said
agents at the airport were
negotiating with the woman.
State police said the woman
was demanding the release of in-
mate Garrett Brock TrapneJI.
who is on trial today with two
other inmates in nearby Benton
for allegedly laking part in a
prison escape last May during
which a woman was killed.
During the escape, Barbara A.
Oswald or St. Louis hijacked a
.helicopter and forced the pilot at
gunP.oint to fly lo the federal
penitentiary at Marion. The pilot
wrestled the gun and Mrs.
Oswald was shot to death.
Trapnell was to act as his own
attorney before a U.S. District
Court jury.
A TWA spokesman in Chicago
said the DC·9 carried 83 passengers and a crew of four.
"They're doing what the hi-
jacker is telling them to do,·•
s aid John Leyden, an FAA spokesman in Washington.
Joe Frets, an FAA spokesman
in Kansas City, said the jetliner was hijacked on Its approach to
Kansas City Inte rnational
Airport.
Frets said the jelllner "pulled
up, squawked the proper 10 for a hijacking and as ked ror
clearance to Carbondale."
which ls served by the Marion airport.
Frets said he did not know
whether more than one person
was involved. The plane landed
in Marion at 8:48 a.m . PST.
However, the c0mm1ttee has
dealt solely with allegations of
pelice brutality. generally in
connection with downtown
melees last July 1 and July 4.
Pattinson. a former city police
officer, said the panel. which
was formed by a split City Coun-
cil vote, has been a sounding
board "for the same people to
scream the same old things
against police."
He saJd the charges have not
only ~. unsubstantiat.ed but
29th Fatalitg
that they also have contributdi
to poor morale within the polida
department.
Pattinson added that there a.¢
other avenues to follow. 1 "First, citizens should take
their charges to police. tr they
don't feel they get satisfaction,
they can go to the district at-
torney, the attorney general or
the grand jury."
Pattinson said charges that
stemmed from the quelling of
<See PANEL, Page AZ)
Cycle Crash Kills
~untington Teen
Charles Anthony Grein, ta,
died Wednesday afternoon. from
injuries be suffered when bis
motorcycle str.uck a road
divider and be was burled into a
row of metal posts near bis Hun· tingtoo Beae.h home.
The fatal crash occurred at
12:35 p.m. on Warner Avenue
between Scepter Lane and Los Palos Drive where the teen-
ager, of 17342 Wild Rose Lane,
I lost :control ·.of> his westbound
motOt'cycle.
Tb_e youth.· who .. police • said
wore complete protective riding
gear Including a helmet, became
the 29th traffic fatality on 'Hunt-
ington Beach roads this year.
Twelve of those fatalities in-
volved motorcycle crashes.
Grein was pronounced dead on
arrival at Huntington Intercom·
munity Hospital at 1: 15 p.m.
Funeral services are pending.
Soviets' Probe
Sends Venus Data
MOSCOW (AP> -The re-
search section of a Soviet
space probe landed oo the hot,
cloud·covered surface of the
planet Venus today and
transmitted almost two hours of
scientific infonnaUon to Earth
the Soviet news agency Tass re:
ported.
The research part carried out
experiments analyzing the com-
position of lbe atmosphere and
clouds,. and solar radiation and
e lectrical charge dispersed in
the atmosphere. it said.
Tass said scientific meas ure-
me nts from the 900-de gree-
Fahrenbeit surface or Venus
ft said the probe.landed at S:30 continued ror 110 minutes. . Another Soviet probe, Venus a.m. (7:30 P·ID· PS!r Wednes-11 wb'ch s la unch d r· day> on t.be; fili side er •li"arth's • 1 wa e t.Ve ne-arest planetary. aeiih~ aft'1' days before Venus 12, is due in
a 98-day fiiobt·~·er.ang · mof.e· t he vicinity of the plaoei
than, 149 .mi.Dfoa1m " ·' Christmas Day. , ·: • t1' ( The U.S. probes were designed
1 '' ' • primarily to provide informal.ion
The Soviet. 1 , ~ ~· on the atmosphere. alt.hough one
days afte
1
I": • ,. Ufiei' did continue transmitting for an
capsu es p g, ·'~ t'h~I hour after landing on the sur-
v.enusian' at•o p.h~~ nd ~ face.
radioed back ~infonnaf.ldri'a1>out·1 U.S. researchers plan to s wap the planet. Four o(nlhos-.. st.Nck . information about Venus with
the surface and one~urne'd· up iri" 'the Soviets. .
the almosphere. During I~ ~~-month night.
In October 1915, two. SDviet
probes landed on Venus an<f.sent•·
pictures to Earth. ·
On Tuesday, two days ~ore
entering the thick, searing at-
mosphere of Venus, the desce11t
vehicle bearing the Soviet Union
coal of arms separated from the
main Venus 12 staUM, whJch
was launched Sept. 14, Tass
said.
·~enus 12 earned out other re• ~earch. induding the study of
1gamma splashes" of solar •d
galactic ongin that were part'Of
a joint project with France. •
Coast 1,
'
Weather Those figures are the
highlights of the state Employ-
ment Developme nt Depart-
ment's <EDD> monthly labor re· port.
The report went on to predict
that total employment ln Orange
County wtll hlt another new hlgh ln December.
More Price Hikes Due?
Sunny and a little •1 warmer Friday with highs ~
60 to 6S. Lows tonight 32 to
40.
INSIDE TODAY
That prediction was based.
chiefly on what was then an·
Uclpaled Christmas season hlr·
ing a 1 weJl as "many new busi-
ne11ea plannlng to open their
doora.••
On a more pesslmlsllc note,
EDD'• report no\-ed Ulal there ls
usually a slowdown In trade dur-
tn1 the Cirat quarter of a new
year.
Sl0multaneous lv. however.
ED analy1ta mentioned that
the antltl1>atec:t 1979 slowdown
atrectlna employment ttcurcs
could be onset by an expttt.«I
' '
Oil Cartel May Consider Further Increases Calem-1 in the area wm
do more than pr-epartt the
mt"" -tM,'U decorate provide ntertoinm1nt and
KUWAIT (AP) -The head of
OPEC saJd today the oil cartel
may consider rurth.er l n -
crealltS in the price or 011 tn tne
first half of um lf \he dollar
falJs too much and world lnll•·
lion continues 1tronJ.
At a meellnC last weekend lp
the Persian Gulf emirate of Abu
Ohabl, tbe t3·naUon Oraanita·
llon of Petroteul'I\ Exportin~
Countriee decided to ralH world
crude olJ pricet by 14.S percent ~... rour •tes>s ln tm. beslnnlnc ' ~U\ -.5 percent booet Jan. 1.
•
meetin1 .may be held before costumed .----. -'• ,.nd tben ," be said. .... . .,.,.,, _.,,,.., ..
Ort h rejected Western Alt1t cl«111 llf> tlw men. See crltlclam aroused by Ule prtce FNturlftg, l'Of1e Cl.
Jncreaae. calJlng the hil(e a ... ex "very moderate and reapouible au:;!:.:: au .._... ,,
move." .,... o '""""'•"'"' cs
He aaJd lt wH iu1tlfled as '".:.:i' at :.::,~_.. c•.fl
PM'llal, compenaatfon for the '-'' 0~.l :::=.r=. ::
le .• tired by OPEC coun--10 e1 I~· ae
cit the. decJlne In :v'Jc" a'i: , 11111.,.. •ij• oJlak-, t~ C\lf• , ,.._ ae ... .,, ...
41de,•iand . ''-::':Z.. ~'! Sl,~.• c•,~ . 'Git oll "' "S ....
"~'~ A1 .. ~ .------..... ..--... ----""'
' J
..
....
di DAIL V PILOT HIE
Uttle Banaag
County~Eares
'Well in Cold
By J EJtR\' (' St;N
Of -°""' ...... , ....
· Or.m-t• <'•Hmty n •ully luC'lwd
out ," ""d asir1rullun :1pokt-11n11rn Wliym• App l lha:..
mornlna ~ wh•t 1 ~kperted to
be lh" lut chtll or 1918 tnovf'd l'astwant
• • W l' 11<.i -.oml' cold v. ath4"1
but H •ry ltllh• damJ.it' ~nm
IH.lH'd to "hJt thl') had In S.Vn
D1oao l'ount) Jlld c nt r I
l'alllurrua, · ttu.• dt'pul)< l'OWlh
~1r1c:ulh&h' \·omm1 iunt>r u1d
thl• monun,v
Bob Annt') of tbo vocado Gruv.~r. <'001ml m Fa.lib~
JUbl •Outh of Or1tt11ic> ('ounh'. "'"d
Jbc>ut ~ l'l'' t"eDl ot San Otl'A•• t~ounh a nulhon '"''und t'l""J'
2 Cl1iefs
Co11lra t,
Exte1ided
1"ountam V1dlt'' ~t•lt•111cntary )
S('hool l>tl>tnct trw.tcei> have ~~
h.·nded the conlrarl!!l of Superm· tt•ndent 8111 Pla."llt•t 1111d Dt>puty
:-.uperrntendent Cill·nn Hardy un tal Junl' JO, 1982
Tht> ront racts or the district ·s
top a1de-s were 1ruhally set to ex-
p1 re June 30, 1980 Plaster's
$39,500 annual sa lary and
Hardy's SJS.563 pay w ere un
<'hanged by the board's actjon
In a related action, school
board members also agreed
Wednesday to increase the dis·
trict ·s 37 management employee
fringe benefit packages by less
than one percent for the next six
months.
The increased benefits for the
district's school principals and
other top aides will cost tax-payers $6,512.
Trustee Karen Ackley noted
that the sli~ht iMrl'ase is within
the stat.e's guidelines. State of.
f1 c1als have imposed restrictions
on school dis trict employees· pay and benefit hikes
Mabel Hough
Dead at 95;
-Rites Friday
G raves1de funeral services
are scheduled Friday for Mabel
Hough, a 35-year flunlington
Beach r esident who died
Wednesday at the age of 95 m a
local convaJescenthosp1tal.
Hites for Mrs. Hough, mother
of retired Huntington Beach den-
t 1st Dr. Dougl<:1s If. Hough, will
bl' <:1l 11 a.m m Jn~lewood Park
C~melcry, Inglewood.
V1s1tat1on by friends was
scheduled from 2 p m. to 9 p.m.
today at Pierce Brothers
Smith's Mortuary, which 1s
directing the services .
She ls survived by her son Dr.
llough, of lfuntin~ton Beach,
who practiced al M~un Street
and Ocean Avenue beginning m
the 1940s: another son, Harold
Hough. of Munhall, Pa. and a
daughter. Mrs. Vera May, of Hun-
tington Beach
A longtime member of the
Baptist Church, Mrs. Hough also
leaves s ix grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren.
Bloodmobile Slated
In f."ountain Valley
The Red Cross Community
Bloodmobile will visit Fountain
Valley next Wednesday from J
to 7 p.m.
The vehicle used to collect
blood donations will be parked
ut the Fountain Valley Home
Owners Association, 10101 Adobe
River Ave., near Brookburs t
Street and Talbert Avenue. For
appointments or more informa-tion, call 835-5381.
ORANGE COAST -. f
DAILY PILOT
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I.-• .,,, Pvbh'-"•f"IQ(~'f ~""' •t" "°'''°"""'•'• rwt>t1\~•o Mond~ t~~ ft•d•• tor Co\t.t
Mt .,. ,_,t""1)0f1 a..t~ Uvnt""Qf,_, 8f'.C" ,.-Gun l•·l'll V•ll,.¥ •r•..w \~&fo..-~ "°"''"'°"'"'A ·~tie '•9~ f'OlltOftt\~\NG \f•utda'f'\Arvt
,f'd,¥\ f#w ,.,,,,....1Mf f'UO.tl\ft+f'(I fol.,,1 I\ Al )JO
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i\.'\1\t•nt MAn.QlfMI l~•Of\ . _,.,_
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on1c: ..
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~uelftM Adv.111""9 ~MTI
~•Mliltt<l"°'-<-•~11 .. 540-t220
~··c ::. c:.:io. <::t;:,:;:~:s.= *"f't•f er ·-•••UWMtf\I\ Nttttft M•y .. '•itrM••U~4 •ttflleut ,,.,, .... '""'•''• tf .... , ...... _
r..~ .. ~~· .. ,:::~r. .. ::··..:'t~.:. ~~
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hkely w1U bolost
And aJl'lt'uUur t fl11pt1rta rrom
rrt•,niJ to thtt M••~trun b<1rder
rt>portco<t .,rc•llminan l''t1mah•'(
111ct1ute that (rorn HI lu 40 [K'r
..-rnt ot thtt C'ltrua truH now on
lrt><'\ h•~ bt't'1l fro.l d•m•l'-'\S
"\-CX: ado •nd C' jtnl llfflY,. l ,.. ln
OritOKI' ('fl\Ul() (1rt-d up 01C'lu 11d
ht"~,tt-r .tnd turnt'(l on tlW1r wm1t
mo1rh10 durm~ mldWC't'k. bu\
tc·mperatur<''I nf•v"r drol>Pl'd bf.lo~ 32 d an . ApPf'I uld th111
mornl~ And flvt> day warm
rn.: trend 1 prt"<J1c-tt"d, hf' note'<t
'\llutd kt"pt Ota"Jlt' Count,> ollt
of lroubl«" · Appel aid of tht'
minor froet lh.l'I Wffk
Hf'' 1d tht-l'old 'nup ol lk.'<' b ~
~a~ more 11 c•r11, wt th t"m
pPraturr• d1pploi Into thr
mad 20s 1-:'M' -.o. ht' Hid, llttlt•
dam"~., w dont> to 1•rop.1 oth,•r th~n to tomuh~ th•I had not ~·11
hoirVl'Sh'll lht•fl
.. ·n·d tu•llf'r, Uall H'UltUrt.' \'l<'t'
Jlfl''lldt>nt for Irvine Hurar h
whtt'h 16 the t•ounty':. ltiri~'t
<"Uru• and uv<K"udo grower, ~Ulld
1hl monung thttt aoml' oranse. l~mon ~nd .:r pcfrult trt.>ftl liul
frrt•d duma~(' TUl'l)du y i:rnd
\\ ~ut<sd••Y and there wus u htth:
fruit lo!>!.\
"But tt'li not maJor Jt lh1:.
tlml'." Keller added.
"We're sweating out January
now because 1t 's predicted lo be
fl.urty cold, l'Older than normal "
Freezing weather 1n lall'
January not only would
create citrus and avocado
problems. he said, bulcoutd badly
damage blooming s trawberry
plants
Wntimte
Cluistmas?
ll had been a long and
grueling year for the
Newport Beach City Coun-
cil, and their last agenda
of 1978 was a heavy one.
Relief was evident
among the members
Wednesda night as they
agreed w continue several
of the thornier issues until
January.
But that didn't seem to
be quite enough for Coun-
cilwoman Jackie Heather,
who looked up wearily as
the meeting ended and
so meone called out,
"MerryChri.slmas."
"I move we continue
Christmas until Jan. 8,"
Mrs Heather said
Connie Bauer
Nained Aide
For Wieder
Connie Bauer. a secretary to
the Huntington Beach City Coun-
cil for the last fo11r years, will
become executive secretary for
Harriett Wieder Jan. 8.
Mrs. Wieder, a former mayor
of Hunµtlgton Beach, wlll take
office as Orange County
Supervisor in the Second Dis
trict on that date.
Mrs Bauer began her service
with the city as an intern in the
public information office in 1974
Before that she worked for the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District.
She bas been a member o( the
HOME Council, League of
Wome n Voters, the Environmen·
tal Council and was on the board
of directors of the local YMCA ·
From Page Al
PANEL .•.
disturbances in the nl-;r area
have been cleared by the distnct
attorney.
To n y Amador , who is
chairman of the fact finding
committee, said he has called a
s pecial session Dec. 27 to con-
sider the panel's continued ex·
istence and to make recommen-
dations OA its findings.
The committee has railed to
muster a quorum at its last two
scheduled meet.ings.
Other sources indicate that the
panel has been hamstrung by its
lack of subpoena power and its
inability to get confidential
The panel has received about
IS complaint.a involving police
brutality with the majority of
the charges pl'evtousl_y alred at
stormy City Council meetings.
Mayor Pro Tempore Richard
Siebert called for the review of
the committee this week.
"I want to know If it has
served a useful purpose or If It
has caused problems," he said.
• ll should have to juatlty'lt.s ex-
iatence."
Sgt. Jeff Cope, president of the
Huntington Beach Police Of-
ficers Association, said the
committee ts a wute or tax·
payers' money and t.ime.
He saJd comelalnta come from
only "sell-servtnc" individuals.
The fate oft.he panel It expect-
ed to be decided by the Clly
Council at lta Jan. 2 meetlnc.
~s~
O.ry ,. .... Matt ..,....
Husband:
~Right . -.
To Sex?'
SALEM, Ore. CAP> -John
Rideout "honestly believed 1f
you are marned to a woman.
you have a right to sex." but did
not force his wife to have in
tercourse, his attorney uys.
Rideout is on trial on a chuge
or raping hi1I wllo. The prosecu
hon uya Greta Rideout w11 1
testify the intercourse took place
as their 21.t'z·year-old daughter
watched and cned, "Momm.v. Mommy."
WAU TO WALL TRAFFtC EXPECTED ON ORANO! COAST FAEeWAYS THIS WEEKEND
Meny of th• ca,. Wiii Be CaUfomla Highway Patrotmen Watching for Drunken Dfivera
The charge was flled under a
1977 revts1on of Oregon's rape
law that removed marital
privilege as a defense againsl
rape Attorneys for both side!>
say the tnal ls the first in the na
lion 1n which a hus band 1' ~harged with r aping his w1f1·
while they were living togetht•t
Mrs Rideout 1s seeking J
d1vorc'
Newport Completes
Rulings on Dell!lity
By JACKJE HYMAN O! tM D•llY l'IMt 11..-
Tht.' Newport Beach City Coun-
cil capped almost a year and a
half of debate Wednesday by ap.
provmg general plan amend·
ments that will cut density on
large undeveloped sites in the ci-
ty by as much as 3S percent.
The d~ision at the council 's
last meeting or 1978 was greeted
with mixed reactions from a
spokesman for the Irvine Co ..
which owns most of the parcels
affected •
The land company's Robert
Shelton told the council that,
while the slashed densities seem
arbitrary, after more than a
year of uncertainty, "we're
beginrung to wonder if ma~be
arbitrariness is better than in·
decision."
The cuts were approved 5·2.
with Mayor Paul Ryckoff and
Councilman Donald Strauss op-
posing. Both said they wanted
the council to take more time to
look at each individual property
In order lo forestall the possibili·
ty of having to make additional
changes in the near future.
Ho wever, Councilwoman
Jackie Heather apparently
spoke for the majority when she
said, "This ls broad brush, but it
at leas t gives us some planning base."
The city's general plan sets
forth permitted uses on various
land areas. While a general plan
designation is less specific than
zoning. the latter must be com-
patible with the general plan
designation.
Commercial developments af-
fected by Wednesday's decision
are Newport Center, Castaways,
Bayview Landing, San Diego
Creek Sites and MacArthur I Jam-
boree Sites. .
Residential undeveloped sites
affected a r e Westbay,
Newporter North . Freeway
Reservation East, Fifth Avenue
Parcels, CalTrans West and
Beeco Property.
The council generally agreed
with planntng commission rec·
ommendations for acr,oss-the· board reductions. but disagreed
with a recommended Increase
from 538 to 800 allowable res·
idential units in Newfort
Center as a part1aJ tradeor f~r
commercial cuts. The council
voted to keep the figure at 538
units.
After hearing from the
chairman or the board and the
director of the Newport Harbor
Art Museum. the council did
agree to increase from 4,000 to
10 000 square feet the area the m~seum can add. The area will
be used for storing the perma-
nent collection, for office space
and for c l assrooms, the
spokesmen said.
One other parcel given special
treatment is the CalTrans West
parcel in West Newport.
Because Proposition 3 on the
November ballot now permits
the land to be acquired by other
s tate agencies for possible
recreation or open ~race
purposes. the counc1 r~desi~nated that land from multi·
family residential lo recrea-
tional and open space.
A spokesman for the state
Department or Transportation,
who was not aware of the
change until after the vote had
been taken, told the council
CalTrans has some obJectsons.
which Wlll be ~ubm1tted in wnl·
ing
The reductions in permitted
densities were 1mllated by the
city council because of concern
with traffic problems and possi-
ble overdevelopment of the city.
While sweeping, the changes
approved Wednesday night were
less radical than some that had
been suggested durin g the
lengthy review period. including
the idea of redes1gnating many
of the commercial sites as res-
idential.
TRAFFIC .•.
terminal area.
.. And they are projecttnl(
absolutely no parking at LAX .
only in outlying areas surround
ang the airport."
Orange County Airport. ht'
predicte d, will be LAX 1n
mamature.
"All main routes out or both
Orange and Los Angeles Coun
ties wiU be jammed on Friday,"
he warned.
Traffic is ex~ted to slack off
somewhat Saturday and Sunday
with a gradual buildup ag;un
throughout Monday w1lh more
Jamming expected from return
mg motorists late that day.
And if it snows in the rnoun·
lain areas, which he said may
be a possibility Friday. the
snarls will be compounded as
motorists grind to stops at the
Grapevine and in Cajon Pass. -Shah's Foes
Set Demands
TEHRAN, Iran (AP> -One of
Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi ·~
veteran political opponents re·
portedly has agreed to form a
civilian government. but leaders
of the anti-shah movement have s pumed him.
Informed sources said Golam
Hossem Sadiqi accepted the pn·
m1ership in a new governml'nl
a fter the s hah agreed to .i
number of political conditions.
T he sources. who refused to be
identified. said Sad1q1's demand~
included dissolution or the cur·
rent Parliament. It was not 1m
mediately known 1f that demand
would be met. Under the con slitution, the government would
have to hold a general election
within six months after Parlla
ment is dissolved The shah had
already pledged to hold free elcc·
lions next June.
01s tr1ct Attorney Gan
Gortmaktor told the four-man
eight woman Jury Wednebda~
that 21 -year.old Rideout chast<J
hli> wife and repeatedly hit her
before the t11lcged r<Jpe. fie swd
tt•i.llmony wlll show the couple
fought the night before about ex ·
tru marital afrairs
But defens<> attorney Charles
Rurt ~ays sex was always a prob-
1 em in the youn g couple -.
.. tormy m arriage. and It ~d'
their CU!>U>m lo make up after a
ra"ht by hovmg intercourse.
Burt told the Manon Counl)
C1rcu1t Court jury .that Rideout
admits to having intercour">e
with his wife Oct. IO. but de111~
using force He !.aid test1mono,,
will show Mrs. Rideout snqum·(f
about Oregon's rape l:.iws befort·
accu~ing her husband of rape
Burt said the rape accusall•m
stemmed from Mrs. R1deou1 ..,
"serious sexual problem " 111·
U>ld Jurors Mrs Rideout knet'd
her husband in the groin an1J
was slapped in the face Oct 11>.
the day or the alleged rape c.t
their apartment.
Refemng to a transcript of a
pretrial hearing, Burt said Mr'
Rideout testified she had an uf
fwr with her husband's !>lc11
brother. He also said she told
her husband the step-broth•·•
had raped her. but later derucd
the rape had taken place.
liefore opening argumenr ...
the Jury viewed the area outs1d1•
The R1deouts' Salem apartment.
and heard a recording of Mrs.
Radeout's telephon e call to
police Oct. 10
Rideout was indicted Oct 18
on a charge of first-degree rape
and is free on SS.000 ,bail. If con-
v 1 cted. he faces a maximum
:>entcncc of 20 years in prisoo
and a $2.500 fine.
Mrs. Rideout, a cleric.ti
worker. and her husband hwd
together for about four year~
Rideout, a cook, 1s living with
h1i; mother.
Quake Hits Idaho
SALT LA KE CITY (AP> -A
small earthquake measuring 4 2
on the Richter scale Wednesd<ty
s hook residents of Malad City.
Idaho. but it caused no damage
Sadat Attacks
Israel's Intent
Wrap Up A During Our
MANSOURA, Egypt CAP> -
President Anwar Sadat accused
Israel today of "intentionally
misleading the world" by claim·
ing Egypt had Introduced new
elements in the peace negot1a-tlons .
In a speech broadcas t live by
Cairo radio, Sadat warned Israel
not to expect a separate agree-
ment to result from any revived
treaty talks that are a rranRed at
a tripartite meeting in Brussels
this weekend.
·'Those in Israel must hear this
again," Sadat told members of .
his newly founded political party
ln this Nile delta town. "There
will be no separate a~reement.
There must be a comprehensive
settlement throu~h which the
Palestinian problem is solved."
Anny's Green
Cluistmas
MORGANTOWN. W.Va. <AP>
For the third year in a row,
Grover Cleveland has turned up
m a Salvation Army kettle in the
form of a $1,000 bill.
Ca pt . Oliver Michels said he
received a call lntormlnB hJm
that there was s omething
s pecial in the kettle outside a
local bank .
"They told me •you need to
check the kettle at the' First Na·
tlonal Bank· and that's what I did.
I'm not solng to argue with
ahyone about lhat, ·' he said .
Garage Approved
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE <AP> -The Tahoe Regional Planning
Agency 1overnJn1r board went
against the advice of lts altomey
late Wednesday and epproved a
•caled·down parkJnc iarage (or the Sahara· Tahoe. .,
•
• I OO's of LA·Z.IOYS °" dbplar
'* IMMMlat.FltH ..... ,.,
• AtnplePmkhtg
WHITE'S . , . la.ZIJO~., ·
4 ~41r Jl·• l a.,~
1 "' }( Jj_J/Jl l
'
-, --·----·-.~ . ..,,.~, .,.-..... "" ~ ... -........... •
SALE!
Tit.y rodt. They 1wlv ... T1tey reclH. Attd w•'••
got fflem • -every style of Lo-z..loy "'ars
... ac1 •• Al ....... hi -........ •wWIJ of
fabrics mtd •lnyh ift al '°" morh colors. So
come In mMI choose ftte Lo-Z.loy thar1 ritM
for YOIL
COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO
3fi E. t1t" St. 21112 M•~uet1te Ptly. • ,, ::i" So.I .. 5oulll r. ••• ·~~ /rl)m lt.t1Pl\t "'II VolYO 0.•l•rl IM/tl MM/e C••.,....11
~2-M57 495-5902
Mon.-frl 'M Mon . .f'rl. 1CM I -S•t f0.5 lat. 10-s -CtoMd Sund•Y CtoMd lund•y
,
"""" '°"' llO« Of ,,.,_,,.... -----'-
Teacher Strike
I Plan Outrageous
If the teal'hl'rs or the Huntmaton Btocb Union Hlah
School Dlstrtct go along w\tb lht1 even•point strikf .,Jan
outlined ror lhem I st w k they will be gualt-y or th srosse t unpror onaJ condutl.
: The plan calls Cc>r an outro1eous aed or uch
: di ruptivt\ actions os.
• Deliberate wilbholdln a o{ t~ che r controlled
' materials that "'ould mak it almost \mpoMlbl ror o 1 sub Ulutc \ chl'r to perf onn
: -rgin,t tCuf hcrs tn other dlstnct.s to be a.bM!nt un
strike day <Jan. 3) so th pool or subs\ilut "·ouki be
shrunk.
• -Withholding or fttudent ~rode mat~r1 I. mokm s 1t
• ulmost Impossible for '1 s tudent s \\·ork anrl pro gress to be
evaluated
The Huntington Beach 01 ilrtct Edurator\ Assoc1ntlon
ls almoc;t challina ty blunt about the purpose or the ~tnke
plun. A cm:uJar di1:1tr1buted to teachers declared the soal
to be: "To completely dose the school t1nd hove the
board not mootthe minimum school year "
ln other words, the associa tion "a nts to disrupt the
educational program so totally that It cunnot be completed
without e xte nding the s chool year w e ll i nto
o e xt s ummer -quite a burden for bo th d istrict
taxpayers and for the 20,000 s tudents involved.
The teachers· union bt?hind the s trike plan -the
California Teachers Association's local branch -is
putting up a bold front and claiming that 85 percent of the
district's 830 teache rs will Join in the plan the d ay after
Christmas vacation ends. Since fewer than half of them
even attended the meeting at which the strike vote was
called, this may be wishful thinking.
We certainly nope so The punitive effects of the
strike plan would be no credit to the teaching profession.
And show no regard for the educational effort of thousands
of young citizens
Recall Lacks Substance
Huntington Beach City HaJI has been hit by a number
of shock waves during the year but the biggest or all was
saved for last.
·That came Dec. 4 when four top city officials were hit
by a recall election.
The targets are Mayor Ron Pattinson, City Attorney
Gail Hutton and City Councilmen John Thomas and Ron
Shenkman.
The action against Shenkman appears to be
particularly senseless iRasmuch as he has resigned from
the City Council. He had announced his intention of
stepping down two months ago for f amity and professional
reasons.
Recall backers have couched reasons for their action
in general terms and thus far have declined to go into
specific allegations.
At least until they do so. the movement appears to be
based on narrow political reasons that don't figure to
stand up to inspection.
Recalls are serious business and should be reserved
for evil or illegal performances. So far any evidence
along this vein has been noticeably lacking.
Recalls are disruptive and this one threatens to
accomplish little more than increase suspicion. mistrust
and innuendoes that already care too commonplace.
The rt'call movement can't claim credibility unless
and until the backers make known some solid reasons for
their action.
Ruling Overzealous
As Fountain Valley City Council member Bernie
S valstad remarked. this was a classic cas e of
· ·o~ ergovernmentalization."
Svalstad was referring to reversal of a Planning
Commission ruling that denied a business permit to a
hyP.nosis therapy firm that wanted to use an office
b\ulding suite to hold self·improvemenl classes.
Planning Commission members fell the classes
would mean traffic congestion and disturb nearby
residents.
The council found no residents opposing the hypnosis
firm and the parking and congestion problems could be
solved by limiting class size.
No residents spoke against the classes and the
council members limited the sessions to 10 students when
the Planning Commission action was reversed last week.
Jn hindsight, Planning Commission members appear
to have been overzealous in their ruling to ban the
hypnosis center
• Opintons expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd/Sony
ByLM.BOVD
Original name or the multi·
billion-dollar Sony Corpora-
tion in Japan was "Tokyo
Tsuahin Kogyo." Westerners
found it difficult to say. So Its
chief executive Aklo Morita
tinkered with new-name no·
lions. Finally, he combined the Lal\n "sonus" meaning
s ound with the hlghJy
Amen can "Sonny Boy'' a!'I
p0pularized by Al Jolson and
came up with Sony.
Christmas In Yugoslavia ls
preceded by another holiday
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
For what doth It profll •
man to come to work
slck to help th e
company when lt
means 1 week Jat.r 10
more men will be ofl
sick?
C.J .
called Ochichi. Youngsters
on that day traditionally
grab their fathers, lie them
to beds and chairs, and decline to release same until
said elders promise to de·
liver the requested
Christmas presents
Adolf HiUer always put a
heaping spoonful ot sugar in
bis wine.
Q. "A female donkey b
called a jenny, right?"
A. Unless she's exceeding·
ly small in which case she's
called a jenneL
At least nloc U.S. presl·
dents had at one time or
another owned slaves.
Q. "What's Alzheimer's
Disease?"
A. The technical term for a
brain ailment that most peo.
ple call aenlllty.
Q. "In skateboard Unio, what's 'looly (oot'?"
A. A rlde wtlh the rt1bt root
ahead of the left'.
The rounders of Jericho,
Minn. were o religious
bunch. They named their
town in honOr of the Biblical
Rlvtr. Bul they weren't
straitlace~ They financed
lbelr publfu budaet with a
munlclpaUy owned saloon.
Robert N WM'd/Publl~M, ThOmes Ktevlt 'Edltot
Barbara 1Crtlt>IChlEdltorl1I P199 !dltor
China: The Lifestyle Changes
TACHI NG , Chino Tension bt\w~en 4t & n rau on or 'tule·
lml'Oll'd ~orm1ty nnd the n w
tt t1rr1na to w a rd pers onal
frer•dom 1n China helps explain
lhl' r ~•pon$e ot a 17 ye r ·old gl rl
co t ontrolled but s1gnitlc nt
rha nt:t htirtt
We were tlllcl•n to visit the Im·
m aculate cra rnpc:\1 quartcm. of u
si x mltmbe r
family living
and working
wllh u hair
m ii hon other
C hin ese Mt
the TacMni:
011 rlelds. The
h f'll d of the
ram1ly w llS a
b m1l1ng .
orc hl'ly p u l
"model worker" who as a driller
helped open these fields m the
lat e 1950s but now does the
lighter work of watch repairing.
Aft e r s om e p e rfunctory
slo~aneerinJ? from this worker .
we asked his eldest child, 17,
about her plans after finishing
mldcUeschool.
"Wh atever the state wants me
to do." she replied automalicaJ-
ly. We pers isted: surely, you
must have some desire of your
own. She giggled. Then after
brief hesitation, she said, "My
father repairs watches, and I
would like to work making
watches."
THAT MAV seem a modest
statement of independence. but
It could not have happened mere
wet-ks ago. In the presence of
important cadres Crom the oil
fields. this simple girl was re·
vealing something important:
she has ambitions and desires of
her own and is not a mere pawn
or the s tate.
The brave Chinese who put
up wall posters in P eking calling
on Jimmy Carter to Investigate
human rights in China (and
pasted them up again after they
were tom down) are the tap of
lhe iceberg. Beneath them are
untold millions whose personal
lives were disrupted more than
the outer world imagines by
China's last decade of poUUcaJ
tumult and now are cautiously
Mailbox
setklng a less fett ered e x-
aslencr.
Apart from dramatic wall
pos t e r s and the regime's
headlong ruah toward lndusU1aJ
modernization. the human story or China is the quiet. gradual re·
moval ot the Maoist straitjacket.
While Western diplomats fear
this may be followed by Iron
r epression, the needs of Teng
Hsiao-ping's government are
geared to liberalization. Teng Is
committed lo ties with the West
and a shakeup of the immense
bureaucracy -goaJs that run
c ounter to Red Guard die·
tatorsh.ip.
NOTHING BETTER ii ·
lustra tes this than the re·
gim~·s decision. unprecedented
for a communist country. lo
send young people to Western
universities. Students Jn the U.S.
and Western Europe will soon
reach the thousands.
S imultaneously, Peking
University and other Chinese
• coUtges are experiencing their
own trans formation . Clos ed
down for five years by Lhe
Cultural Revolution and then
constricted intellectually tor
another five years by Maoist
radicals, the universities have
been reborn.
Their students are now select·
ed by nationwide competition.
and the Cultural Revolution's re·
quirement that middle school
graduates must work in the
countryside before continuing
their educat.lon has been quietly
dropped. Peking Univers ity stu·
dents are prominent among the
young people who gained the
world's aUention with their
demonstrations (or free speech.
The university's English read·
ing room orfers uncensored U.S.
newspapers and magazines. One
foreign minJstry interpreter ac·
companying us was reading that
old anti·communist periodical.
the Reader's Digest. Another in·
terpreter was deep into the final
(and overtly anti·communist)
volume ot w•nstoo ChurchUl's
memoll'1. At the Hsi Tan wall ot
posters, yOWlg Chinese told us
how much they e-njoy the Voice
ot America in ''special Enelfsh' •
(limited vocabulary, slow de·
Uvery>.
WESTERN CLASSICAL
musk and ancient Chinese
opera, b&Med rrom China tor
over a decade, are back. When
we attended the open, the
theater was packed with men
and women in Communist
China's "blue ant.a" costum• but
there were exceptions -such as
one woman witb a fur coat.
brightly colored scarf and curly
hairdo.
· Dresses are to be seen in
China, especiaJJy in ShanahaJ.
and such non~nformity may
&pread to men. "Our clot.bing is
much loo stereotyped." one
young party cadre told us, ad·
ding he thought traditional
Chinese dress should be rein·
.rod•Jced ror certain occasions.
Creeping individualism can
~pread rrom dress to political
thought. Liu Shao-chi, the
former chief o( state purged by
Mao Tse-tung <and now believed
dead>. is -Still excoriated u a
·revisionist" one briefing
at Tach.ing. But at the Hsi Tan
wall in Peking. posters demand
his rehabilitation.
Whal is a self-r especting
cadre to do? He gets no
guidance from Teng himself.
who in his interview with us
side-stepped a question about re·
habilltating Liu. "So many
things have been said about Liu
that it's hard to know whal to
believe." a lower.fevel foreign
ministry official told us. After a
pause, he added: "Things are
complicated."
The idea that life is "com·
plicated" without explication by
official dogma is in itself new to
CommunJst China. Although this
country's tradition or cen.
tralized authoritarianism will
certainly not give way to de·
mocracy. the rush toward
modernization is changing the
way Ch.inese think and live -
and faster than anybody deemed
possible.
'Tests' Can't Change OC Airport Facts
To the Edit.or:
Thanks to Mrs. Reynolds for
her fine Dec. 17 story on "dirty"
flights from the Orange County
Airport. Thanks also for your
paper's continuing coverage of
the main problem that faces
Newport Beach in its fight for
survival.
Your story on the dangerous
cutback altitudes being forced
upon the airline pilots by their
management serves to s how
that the current "test" utilizing
three·engine B~ing 727 aircraft
by Hughes Airwest is an invalid
evaluation of its possible lessened
noise impact.
The current "t es t" is
significantly being conducted
during our coldest months of the
year when noise tends to be mut·
ed, with reduced payloads so
that takeorr angle can be higher.
and when engine cutback can be
accomplished at lower altitudes.
IF A V AUD test were to be
undertaken, wouldn't it be better
conducted during the summer
months when those of us under
the Infernal Olght-path are most
aware of the noise? In the sum·
mertime, the passenger load is
more near capacity levels. the
warmer temperatures require a
4·degree decrease in takeoff
angle. and the l,OOCHoot cutback
would be mandatory.
J am distressed that we are
being "tested" without our con-
sent with loaded dice. I know of
no other human experimentation
In this country that gambles
with the health and well·being of
people without their express
permission.
Our Board of Supervisors, 12
years ago, declared ·'the Orange
County Airport is not a jet
capability airport," yet the
board continues to expand the
jet flights out of It. Tha
superviM>rs In these acts prove
their political and economic tn.
lerests outweigh their regard ror
the human constituents they
were elected to serve.
The burden ot proof should
rest on the Board ot Supervisors.
the airport, and the aJrlines that
by Oylng jet..!! over my head lt is
not harming me. As It Is now, I
am belnc required to prove It u
harmlni me and my city. This r
have no reaourctt avallable lo
do.
lt Is hJgh tJme the people of
this county and their elected of.
(lcial1 race the feet that the
Orange County Atrporl is no\
and will never be the answer to
Oranac County a ir transport
nc~u . Another airport must be
bullt. lt must be localed so thal
It haa mlnlmum odve~se impact
on the residential areas of the
county.
In the meantime. under no
c ircumstances. s hould any
further expansion or the present
airport be allowed or condoned,
even under the guise of "an ex·
per1mental test."
RICHARDS. JONAS, M.D.
Won'tStrilce
To the FAitor:
There are many teachers in
the Huntington Beach High
School District who are going to
walk through the picket lines
\Yednesday, Jan. 3, and they
need to be heard. l am one or
them.
I will not strike, nor will I
ne glect my work. l am a
m e mber of the District
Educators Association, the
California Teachers Association
and the National Educators As·
sociation. but I do my own think-'
ing and will be neither in·
timidated nor manipulated.
I WILL NOT strike ror several
reasons: First, I agreed to teach
for the '78-'79 school year, aod l
will honor that commitment.
Second, l do not believe in blnd·
mg arbitration because it takes
the control of the schools out of
the hands or the duly elected
Board o( Trustees and gives it to
one who may not have a vested
interest in this community.
I believe those who are paying
the taxes and giving us their
young people s houfd have a
strong voice in the education of
their youth. If we do not approve
our school board, we can change
It on election day. Third, rather
than striking for binding arbitra-
tion. we should be educating our
youth. fighting the Metro Plan
and trying lo preserve public
education in CalltornJa.
Please. parents and tax· payers, don't put all teachers in
the same category.
LOWELL R. SPANGLER
Teacher,
HunUngton Beach High School
Celeartllfl
To the F.ditor:
Small, mun, vicious. petty,
seJf.rlghteowl, vindictive, cold,
opportunistic, demagogic and
cowndly.
The above terms describe
Orange County's two slate
senators (John Schmitz and
John Briggs>.
Tbelr re<usal to vote either ln
suppon of or in oppoalllon to the
unanimously passed (30 to 0)
s tate Senate r e solution in
memorr oC the r~cently H ·
sQslnate 6 San Franchto
supervisor. Harvey Milk. wa
frlghtenlntlY lnsenaltJve.
Within the framework of our
representative democ racy, I
ha~ come to expect and to ac·
cept the fact that these two
senators will invariably vote
against progressive and humane
legislation. but in this instance
their attempt to politicize as.
sassinalion not only r eveals
their essential inhumanity but
also casts doubts upon their
ethical and moral suitability to
represent those or their constit·
uents who abhor violence and
believe in as well as attempt to
live up to those Chrisllan prin·
ciples of demonstrating love and
compassion ror all of mankind.
TOM WERT
Olllritt1 (,~ldflfl
. To the F.ditor:
Yecch! I just re-read Mrs.
Shirley Sheppard's condemna-
tion or the working mother
<Mailbox. Nov. 30). What a total
lack or human charity. For the
sake of Mrs. Sheppard I sincere·
ly ho~ God is not a reader or the Daily Pilot.
SANDY BOOSTROM
A.-.ed • To the F.ditor:
-Carter's Taiwan d ecision will
be known to future students or
history as the DEC Caper. not
only ror the month of its pro-
nouncement, but for this mean·
Ing;
O tor Disloyalty
E for Expediency
C for Coward.ice.
Mr. Carter said his decision
was not for expediency. Then for
what? Perhaps he wants the two
monkeys off his back -the U.S.
trade deflclt, and the US.
economic condition. Will selling
war planes. arms, and computer
technolo;y to the People's
Republic of China do It? If so,
why muat we glve up formal ties
with Tolwan to do so?
WHY MUST we serve up a
frlend to Communist China by
removing troops, dlssolvlng
diplomaUc Ues. and actually an·
nounclng that Taiwan ls a part
or the one and only Chlna'>
Where are all of Carter'' ideals
of human rlghts? Communist
China is not noted ror kindness
for thOM of her race who oppose
her.
D.oes Carter underestimate
U .S . power! Certainty Red
Chin• ls not )'tl such a threat
that we muat ltow·tow to her \n
Quotes
"Wht n th press ~ free and
c e\•ery man able lo read. ell ~
I itaf~." 1
Thome• Je/(eraon
.. -.... -............... eu tk•l'nt*a VIUWIU Ul '~...UV. &rat l lllO • •
order to trade with her. She
needs us more than we need her.
All those arms s he will buy
might give us more reason \n the
future to act the coward.
President Carter's act has
made the American people par-
ty to an inexcusable disloyalty.
Where are our value standards?
Who will be next? Israel? I am '
ashamed.
LA DORNA E ICHENBERG
Oarflt1 OppofttfOfl
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot editorial of
Dec. 3 that newly elected State
Senator John Schmitz "could be
an effective representative" is
commendable and appropriate.
Yet, the con nent of disagree.
ment on ••son .: issues -notably
his chutth·rooted views against
abortion and any form or gun
control" seems lo be unfairly '
highlighted. Most of the promi·
nent Orange Coast political
figures -Marian Bergeson,
Tom Riley, Bob Badham, Den·
nis Carpenter and Tom Rogers
are opposed to abortion as welJ
as to gun control.
Surely a paper as lnnuenliaJ
as the Pilot has a right to favor
abortion, but why single out this
issue and imply that Mr.
Schmiu's position stands aJone?
IS OPPOSmON lo abortion
wrong because it is "church·
rooted"? Anti-abortion views
are rooted from and can honest· •
ly be supported by the Jewish
and New Testament. Un ·
fortunately, to many people the 1 scriptures have little application •
in this permissive era of "rel·
ative morality," "sltuauon
ethi cs" and ''doing your own ,
thing." Opposition to abortion ls
al s o based on medical.
psychological and soclolocical
grounds in addition to theology.
Furthermore. does the Piiot ad· •
vocate the conUnuance ot stale ·
financing or this abomlnation
that many consider to be a form
of murder?
Perhaps ror the sake of an
enlightened dialogue on this COD·
trovcrs laJ subject the Pilot can
make Its po•ltlon better un·
derstood ht a fUture editorial. CHlUSTOPHER STEEL I,
r . ' LAfttr• from rtodne on totfcorM. !
TM nohr to condn.a• lfttera to /d
.,ct or tliminal• libel te rt#r'Wd. f utt~" o/ 300 wordl or W.. "'"1 bt'
Qlumi pre/ef'tnl:t . All ldrer• """tin· ' elude r1gncrure orad ~ addreH
bMl nomn mo11 bf wdMdd ~ ,..
~It 1/ 1ufltcltnt rfOtOft uafipa:rnt.
Potr,.,, wm nor~ ~bU.thed.
CALIFORNIA ~. 0.0.mber 21 1978 DAILY PILOT A 5
Jones-Hit-Mari in SF~
Plan To Kill Defectors, 'Officials Revealed
,.,..,...,....
SAN .. ~RANCISC:O (AP> -A
lender of M WJISll88lru.atlon team
1111l1&nod by th~ Rtw. :Jim Joo
to kill Poople1t Temple defect.ona
and public offlclal• remains
allvo In San J"ranclJco. attorn y
Mark Lane Hid h WH told by a report«l Jooet ·confidant. Lane told reportcra Wedncs·
day that h1J ell nl Terri Buford.
who h aald I fl Jonestown thret'
we kl before the mus murder·
aulcid• ln Guyana. knowa thu
name of the peraon.
ASKED WHO Wall Involved In
the plan, Lane roplled, "Thole
who played the role of euard In
Jonealown ttnd those people who
nim»lned here m San Francisco
And 1'crr1 Buford says 11he
know• the name of the P«&On
who la here In San F rancisco
who had the responslb11lty to
carry outtheproaram."
Lane, however, declined to
Identify the person.
Those who miAht have been
marked for aasa.ss lnatlon before
Jones ordered the deaths of
Otildren, Mother Rescued Woman Gets
3Yean in
Fraud Case
Mary Orth .r eaches for her son Ernie Jr., 1'\AJ, after
s he and three youngsters were rescued by a California
Highway Patrol helicopter from the snow near La Porte in
the northern Sierra. Andy Anderson, cente r, carries
Monica Guerrero, one of the other two children rescued.
They had been trapped in a camper pickup truck in the
snow fo ur days.
Asbestos Workers
Ask Medical Exams
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
24·year-old woman, corwicted or
welfare fraud in Ventura Coun·
ty, has been sentenced to three
years in pnson for her role in a
welfare schem e that netted
$123,000 from Los Angeles
County.
Patty Mouton, ~. who pleaded
guilty to four counts of forgery
a nd welfare fraud in the Los
Angeles case, was sentenced
Wednesday by Superior Court
Judge Leslie W. Light, who aJso
placed her on nine years proba·
tion.
• •% :. ~ .. •"' ... •
SAN PEDRO CAP) -A union representing 2,400 workers has
asked government agencies to force Todd Pacific Shipyards lo pro-
vide annual medical exams to &uard against disease caused by
asbest.os.
Local 9 or the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding
Workers of America filed complaints Wednesday with the stale
and federaJ departments or occupational safety.
All workers at the shipyard are affected by asbestos "because
the asbestos particles become airborne and fioat throughout the
yard," said Steve Roberts, executive secretary of the union.
ROBERTS SAID THAT although only shipwrights and joiners
work directly with asbestos, all craftsmen at the shipyard are cov·
ered in the complaints -marine machinists, boilermakers
pipefitters, welders, ship fitters and riggers. '
A union request for checkups an July was rejected by the com
pany, Roberts said.
Noting that the Navy announced in J uly it would provide
medical exams for military and c1v1lian personnel exposed to
asbestos, Roberts said, "ll seems lake we m the private sector are
second·class citizens . They lTodd officials> say we are not ent1Ued
to a medkaJ screening program."
A 45-COUNT complaint issued
last September charged Miss
Mouton and two co-defendants
with cheating Los Angeles Coun·
ty out of $122.957 between May
1976 and October 1977 by receiv·
ing aid for 66 non ·existent
children. The same three were
convicted of bilkin~ Ventura
County out of $14,000 In a similar
scheme.
Prosecutors said the defen·
dants used counte rfeit birth
cert1f1cates for themselves and
the f1ctihous children.
1) I esti mate my home's value at $ ______________ __
2) Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
4) Balance I still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligi~le to borrow (subtract 4 from 3)
6 ) Amount I'd like to borrow
With a Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California, you
may qualify to borrow from $3,000 to $30,000 (or even more!) to use
for your children's education, trayel, other wort~while investments -
almost any purpose you can name.
Calculate your borrowing power, adjust that amount to your needs
and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your
home, now let it work for you.
THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA
Newport O.>nrh Off\"'· 1401 Dow S1,.~t. Newport Dl'nd1 92663.1714) R.1.1·3511
..,. .... ~·-• ,. ,,.,,,,._..,_..,,~....,. ,.. ~•O•C '
' ' I . '
. -
.,
more than 900 pt>r !'lona In
Jonestown hove not bt.-cn public·
ly ldtnUlied.
Lano commen~ to reporters
aa the woman tettifled before a
federal arand jury lnveaUaaUng
tl)e ambush elaying of Rep. I.AO
Ryan. who was aiunned down
wlth four other pert0ns at an
oir11 trtp ~ore lhe mua deat.M
took place.
Whlle none of the testlmony
wa!'I made public, Lone uld ahe
had answered all the grand
Jury's <1uestlona and did not lake
the Fifth Amendment or uk for
immunity.
Lane aald she had already
turned over Peoples Temple
bank account reeords showin.c
that the cult had more than $7.5
mllllon in uie account ln Swl1111
banks In Panama, and that she
had no information about ftyl.lll 'll
death.
Lane alAo said that a mesHgc
from B controversial naure In
the Peoples Temple case de·
live red to Jono1 m ay have
touched oll th mus deaths.
Lanp 111ld thlll. Timothy Stoen.
a defect.or from the lemple, aent
u mcaugt' to Jones wamlng that
nny dd4 cllona prompted by
ltynn'11 vl11lt lo Jonestown would
"mean tho totul destruction of
J im Jon :a W>d JoneAtown."
Lon • Who l'lJC•ped J onntown
at the atart or the death rituaJ,
said he wu prusmt when the
meHutre wu dcllvered verbally
by a temple mombcr t.o Jones
Nov. 17. the nlJ(ht before tho
airstrip ambush
Stoen, unavallable for com·
mcnt. knew how to mlllllpuJate
the c ult leader, t•ccordlng to
L ant•. who ""'" Jonell dll'llrWJt~ Stot•n fMrln" he wu11 a govuni·
rrwnl agmt
Sloon lll 9 fnrmflr Callfomla
pr<>l'lt<'Ut11r wh(I •• now a private
I 11 w yf'r rPprti'lt'nllnSl former
Peoples Temple members who
are auina the cult. Stoen's son
waa among thoee who died at
Joneatown.
Meanwhile, a California at·
tomey general's tuk force ls
took 1ng into a llegations that
Stoen, who headed the San Fran·
claco dJstrlct attorney's voter
fraud unit, covered up a probe
Involving the Peoples Temple ln
1976.
AS MANY as 1 ,000 tempJe
members were shipped from
Loa Angeles and Me ndocino
counties lo San Francisco to
vote in the clty's 1975 municipal
election, according to published
reports.
After belng a temple member
more than alx years, Stoen left
in 1977. He had served as aaais·
tant proeecutor ln Mendocino
County during lbe period, and in
1976 wu named a deputy dis·
trlct attorney in Sari Francisco.
Small Plane Crashes at L AX
LOS ANGF;l.F.S (Al'>
Turbulence from n n url>y
jetliner may hflvc nlornrn1'(1 11
s mall charter plMnfi onto o
runway at Intern•tlonal Airport,
injuring both men Aboard. one or
the men aays.
Pilot John Howerton, 2S, of
Burbank. wM listed in crltlcul
( .r.,TATE J
lhf> Atat.e of not Implementing a
luw rc<1u1nng cm~rgency iud in
cu11esofnc00.
health dlrector of the Desert
Hospital here -two years pro·
bation and a SS.000 fln(f ln con·
neclion with the burglary of the
office of Dr. James O'Connor of
Yucca Valley.
Talllu>r Breaks Do"'n condition at Hawthorne 1108pltal u -1 B ... u •-
a fter Wednesday eventnJ('s ·~ °"'•'• .,toscn LONG BEACH (AP) -The ..
crash, which occurred as th· SAN DIEGO CAP> -Police Atlantic Conqueror. an 80().foot
California Air Charter Cherok~ arc loolung for severaJ cases of tanker loaded with 81,000 tons of
Lance was landing. pot e ntially dangerou& "seal c rude oir waa bei ng towed
passenger John Thomai. bombs" stolen from the tuna toward thls port today after its
Howell. 25, or Valencia, also a seiner Mermaid at the Street main engine broke down about
licensed pilot, was ln good conda· Pier. officers said. 125 miles southwest or here.
t1on, a hospital spokeswoman The small explosive devices s aid. are used to "shock or frighten" A Seattle towing tug reached
"An airliner just in front or us,/"""nals ir:t tuna fishing waters and, the Liberian·registered lanker
-a jet, a 727. I think ~ a.ccording lo fire department of· Wednesday. Fears that the wind
turbulence that slammed us into f1c1als, could "kill or severely and current might f~rce the dis·
the ground," Howell said. in1ure" humans. Frank Correia. a bled vessel onto Bishop Rock.
own er a nd captain of the a~out 100 miles we~t o_f San
Gilt al Protnt Me rmaid. found 1.872 of the Diego, and cause an 0 11 s pill had
bombs rrussLDg Tuesday. -P!ompted the earli e r dis·
SACRAMENTO . CAP)-lt was
a Christmas gift of protest from
a group of militant welfare reeip·
ients to Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.: J ars symbolizing blood and
ashes.
Ke v in As l a n ian, an un·
employed San Jose man who
gets welfare for his wife and
three children, led the group to
Brown's office Wednesday. Asia·
n1an is head of the Welfare
Recipients League. Aslanian srud
the group has riled a sujt accusmg
Conrit>tion Chan~d
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -The
fe lony conviction of a Palm
Springs psychiatrist for solic1la ·
ta on for burglary of another phys1·
c1an 's office has been reduced to a
misdemeanorJ ..
However. despite the reduc·
lion Wednesday an Riverside
County Supenor Court. the sen·
tence was unchanged for Dr
Morton Kurland, former mental
More Parking Places!
For
south coast Plaza
customers.
The day
after Thanksgiving
and every weekend
'tll Christmas, our
2800 employees will
be bused to the Plaza
so that you ,
our customer, will have
more convenient and
close-in parking.
~
J)atchtng of the Long Beach
harbor tug Spartan to hold it in place.
Body of Di"er E'ouNd
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The body
of John Andreoli , 38, who
Jumped to his death off the
Ocean Beach pier last week
while wearing a weighted scuba
diver 's belt has t>een found noat·
ing in the s urf. the coroner's of.
face said.
SOUTH CQ\ST PlAZA
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Bnstof & san Diego Fref1NtIV
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VOL. 71, NO. 3SS,' S CTIONS, ..0 PAGES
Will .'King
l 81 PIDUP a08MAal .:l. Oflillf .... YPleeelUl'I
wlth Mn Gtlldo on the lllhl tnd
or a S·Z • aw. said h 'd vot lo
dump Vanlouli• 'nd appoint a
mayor ,."h<lff term rwll from
January to January. rather than
lbt current M11reh lo Marc
n11men
ll ,.here'• • plot a&li l the kif\& in lrvh~.
Coundlwoman Mary Ann
Galdo in to Pf'Oll09•. at l.he
J ID. 9 meet.it\& ol lbe cou.aril, a
plan that woUld dePolt ll~'Of'
Bill VardoWt1 IUKl lecl a new
moor.
Councilman Larty Atran. who
re1utarly (lnda ttlm•eU oeallt'd
VardouJJ1 11 aleamln1. and
deelared, Wtdnelday "Th r•'a a
plot lO set rid ot th~ mayor."
He appear1. however, to be
safe on hla muni'Clpal throne,
with the ""t of \.he council ml·
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1978 TEN CENT.S 1
• Vardoulis' Lose
Jorlty, royallata David Sllla and
Arthur Anthony. al bl.I aide.
SUia nominated VardouUa for
his cu~t ttrm as mayor An·
thony haa been publicly boltUt
towarda Aaran and Mrs. Gatdo.
Mrs. Galdo broached the sub-
ject wlth Vardoulls tn direct
luhion.
At a clOled aea&lon ol the COUil·
ell Tu8day. accordinl t~ ttaose
who were there, she looked the
mayor right lo the eye and 1ald:
"I think you ought to step down,
Bill. l think you're a lousy
mayor."
Vardoulis reporUdly was
speechless.
He said Wednesday. having
recovered his voice, "We were
discussing the Job performance
evaluation or the city manager,
when she blurted that out. My
feeling was. what does that have
to do with the price of peas in
China.".
Mt$. Caido explained her plan
Wednesday. She said that in
light of a recent voters' dec~ion
to change the dales of city coun·
cil elections f1om March to June
of even.numbered years, the
selection of mayor-normally
held just after election-may
become even more political than
ills.
Reacted Sills to news of the
plan: .. I would not. under any
circumstances. be part of a
coup. We're not high school
sophomores . going around
dumping people out of otrlce
before their terms are through.
"I think Vardoulls has been
doing a good JOb. J certainly
wouldn't votetoremovehim."
Agran said a calendar year
mayor "would minimize the
polillcizallon or the mayor's of·
fice."
Agran was the early victim of
<See MAYOR, Page A21
Newport Slices
.. . Fut11re Density ·
17 .
By JACIOE HYMAN
Of U. Delly ~lo4 Sutt
The Newport Beach City Coun·
cil carped almost a year and a
half o debate Wednesday by ap·
proving general plan amend·
ments that wiU cut density on
large undeveloped sites in the ci·
ty by as much as 35 percent.
The decision at the council's
last meeting or 1978 was greeted
with mixed reactions from a
OCJobJess
Toll.lfits
low Mark
Orange County's unemploy·
ment rate reached Its lowest re·
cordfog ever In November when
-it dipped lo 3.7 percent.
As unemployment in the coun·
ty reached a new low, the
number of those employed hlt an
all time high of 962,400 job
holders.
·.
. . . · ~ ...
~
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' " ' ti
~ . , . .
.~ -.,,, -.. . . ·.
·-. '• .. -. . . . ·. .> " ' -~ , I· j .: ., ., .,
'j I :· . ~· ~ • . .
~ " ..
Those figures are the
highlights of the state Employ-
ment Development Depart·
ment's IEDD> monthly labor re·
. port.
The report went on to predict
that total employment in Orange
County will rut another new high
m December.
That prediction was based
chiefly on what was then an· ticipated Christmas season hir·
ing as well as "man)' new busi·
nesses planning to open their
doors ...
On a more pessimistic note,
EDD's report noted that there is
usually a slowdown in trade dur·
ing the first quarter of a new
year.
S1multaneouslv. however.
EuO analysts mentioned that
the antJcipated 1979 slowdown
affecting employment figures
could be offset by an expected
contjnuing surge in manufaclur·
ing activity in the county.
When summed up, EDD's
monthly labor study puts
Orange County in the forefront
of employment activity in the
state with the lowest unemploy·
ment rate and the fastest grow·
ing job market.
Jn the past 12 months, for ex·
ample, 48,600 new jobs have
been added to county payrolls. a
6.9 percent arowth rate, accord·
ing totheemploymentsummary. .
Carter 'Graded'
WASHINGTON <AP> -A
group of 33 leading conserva·
tionlsts gave President Carter
high grades Wednesday for his
record on environmental issues.
Coast
Weather
Sunny and a little
warmer Friday with highs
60 to 65. Lows tonight 32 to
40
INSIDE TODAY
Cotttn1 hi tM or.a will
do mort than prepote tfw
menu -thet1'll dtcorate,
proolde emmainnient and
co1tum«I wniing people Oftd
even clcan up tlw meu. Sn
FeaturlftQ, ~ Cl.
I••e•
·~:.. ...... ~ .i! ~ D • if1 .... ·-~ lil I~ cf,J ·~ ca~ ~ ~ .... ::
\
I
spokesman for the Irvine Co ..
which owns most of the parcels
affected.
The land company's Robert
Shelton told the council that.
w'..ile the slashed densities seem
arbitrary, after more than a
year of uncertainty. "we're
beginning lo wonder if maybe
arbitrariness is better than in·
decision."
The cuts were approved 5-2,
with Mayor Paul Ryckoff and
Fala La
Yourselves
A frightened Greentree
resident oC Irvine called
police to report someone was pounding on her door
and wouldn't go away.
Offlcers sped to the
neighborhood. captured
the culPrits. and informed
the tttn·agers they were
scaring the cheer out of
the woman. so they'd bet·
ter move lo the next house
t o do their Christmas
caroling.
The carolers tunefully
com lied.
FAA Pushing
For Airport
Safety Checks
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Federal Aviation Administration
said today it intends to upgrade
sa f ety procedures a nd
machinery at the nation's major
airports.
It conceded that numerous
safety deficiencies were found at
•the San Diego airport where a
commercial jetliner and a
private plane colllded three
months ago, killing 144.
l''AA Adm1n1strator
Langhonme Bond said the agen·
cy has ordered arr ll·point pro-
gram to improve operational
safety at San Diego and said
"im plementalion of these
measures on a nationwide basis
are appropriate.'' .
He sald tbe FAA wit\ announce
details of Its plans for other
airports next week.
Bond said he ordered an ln·
vestigaUoo or safety procedures
at San Diego's LindberJh Field
after the Sept. 25 collision over
San Diego o( a Pacific Southwest
Airlines 727 jetliner and a
private Cessna aircraft. A total
of 144 pe rsons a board the
jetliner , the small plane and on
the ground were killed, maldng
it the worst alr crash in North
America.
As a result o( the crub ln·
vesUgaUon, Bond said, "there
will be a good many changes" lo
airport safety procedures
around the country. He declined
to say what soeclfic airports
<See SAFETY. Page A2>
'
Councilman Donald Strauss op·
posing. Both said they wanted
the council lo take more lime to
look at each individual property
in order to forestall the posslblli·
ty of ha~ng to make additional
changes tn the near future.
However. Counci I woman
Jackie Heather apparently
spoke for the majority when she
said. "This is broad brush, but it
at least gives us some planninR
<See DENSITY, Page AZ>
Airliner
Hijacked
By Woman
MARION, Ill. <AP> -A
w~an who claimed she had
three sticks of dynamite
hijacked a Trans World Airlines
jet with 87 persons on board today
and tried to force the release or a
rederal prisoner convicted of hi·
jacking. authoriUessaid.
The plane was diverted to Uus
sou them Illinois town,. site of a
federal prison. ·
Three hours after the plane
landed, the FBI was negoliatlng,
with the woman through control
lower communications. She re·
fused to ~llow an agent on
board, the FBI said. But at mid·
day she released five persons-a
motherherinfantandthreeelder·
lypersons.
Flight 541 en route from
Louisville. K.y .. to Kansas City,
Mo., was commandeered shortly
after a scheduled stop in St.
Louis.
The woman was demanding
the release of Garrett Brock
Trapnell, who is on trial wilh
two other inmates accused of
taking patt In a heli copter
escape attempt May 24 during
which a woman was ~hot to
death .
At the time, Trapnell was in
prison for a ur12 hijacking ln
which he unsuccessfully tried to
extort $306.000 from TWA.
During the escape attempt,
Barbara Oswald or St. Louis hi·
jacked a 'heUcopter and forced
the pilot at gunpoint to fly to the
penitentiary. The pilot wresUed'
the RUD and Mn. Oswald was
shot to de~th. The hijaclter today
was identified u her daughter,
Robin Oswald.
U.S. manhals at the Benton
courthouse were on special alert
today because Trapnell was
scheduled to argue on hJs bebalf
before a U.S. District Court
jury.
Trapnell told a television re-
porter two months ago that he
would break out or the Marion
prison.
TWA said the DC·9 carried 83
passengers and a crew of four.
"They're doing what the hi·
<See lDJACK, Page.\2)
Thar She Blo11·s
Chad Mccallum. 10. looks like he's spotted
a bi~ one on this ··take" at Adventure
Playground in University Park. Irvine.
Shipmate Ty Ramsey steers a clear
course while Corey Sh<'ulter. 7. tries to
beat them solo. Youngsters took advan·
tage of early wee~·s heavy rams. which
created the wale( body, and c reated a
n ew adventure for themselves on these
flat·bot.tomed vessels.
Tipsy Drivers Beware
CHP to Be Watching for Dnmk Motorists
Motorists should expect two
things Friday. traffic jams and
an abundance of California
Highway Patrol omcers who
will be watching for the drunk
driver.
Ll. Marlow Johnston. the
CH P 's Santa Ana division ex·
ecutive officer. said this mom·
ing that the state's freeway
force will be d e ploying
specifically against the drinking
driver. especially during eve·
ning and late· night hours
Las t year. he said , the
Highway Patrol alone jailed 296
motorists rn Orange County who
were believed to be driving un ·
der the influence between 6 p.m .
Friday and 6 am. Tuesday, th~
same cribcal period this year.
The number may be greater
this year. he conjectured. The
CH P . in conJ unction w 1th the
Orange County Sheriffs office.
has "streainlined" booking pro-
cedures that should get officers
back on the freeway faster than
1n the pmJl.
Mixing lhose snarls with Fn·
day afternoon partygoers and
weekend holiday drinkers 1s
almost guaranteed lo offer law
enforcement officers the
Christmas blues.
Motorists who find themselves
weaving a bit or demonstrating
"anyttting else unusual" may
Truck Driver Dies
In Irvine Tragedy
A truck driver was crushed to
death under a wheel of his vehl·
cle today while working on the
engine in a lot at the Armand
Hammer Technical Center an
Irvine.
the driver. Henry G. Favls. of
Or ange, was apparently working
under the tilt·up cab of the truck
when the enfline .slipped i_nto gear.
Police said t:iey believe the
truck jolted backwards. causing
the cab lO fall onto the driver.
pinning his arm and head.
The man was dragged about
75 feet. The truck struck a curb,
police said, and the impact ap·
parently knocked the driver free
or the cab but dumped him un·
der a wheel.
He was taken to Tustin Com·
munity Hospital. where he was
pronounced dead at 7·47 a.m .. a
half hour alter the accident
Police said the man was an m·
dependent truck operator work·
ing under contract for the Sully·
Miller Contracting Company of
Orange .
He was delivering a load or
asphalt ror a new parking lot at
the Armand Hammer center.
2100 S.E. Main St., police said.
fmd a r~ hght nashang in their
rear -view mirror. Johnston said
The Highway Patrol is putting
all omcers into the field over thl'
holiday
Those drivers who slur a bit or
appear a httle glassy eyed may
end up taking the freeway-side
sobriety test
Those ~ho fall will br
nandcuffed. placed in a patrol
unit and whisked to Orangt•
County Jail where they will sub
mt\ to one or three sobriety
test!'. urine. breiHh or blood
!'ampling Refusal. or course.
lead s automatically to a sus·
pended driver ~ license.
Following the t est , the
motorist will be booked into th<'
Jail until released on bail that
could go as high as $500 or until
they see a JUdge the following
Tuesday morning. Johnston
warned.
All an aJ I. hc mused. it's not
too good a way to s pend
Christmas
Johnston warned that county
motorists should allow plenty or
dr:vmg time to reach weekend
CSeeTRAFFIC, PageA2)
1bree Irvine
City Leaders
Get Pay Hikes
Three high-level Irvine city
administrators have been given
yuletide salary increases by the
City Council after a c losed
personnel session this week.
City Manager W11111t ...
Cult mt t_.tst Oal1ned It had been a long and
grueling year for the
Newport Beach City Coun·
di. and their laat agenda
of 1978 was a heavy one.
Woollett Jr. was boosted to the
top of his salary range, to $45,000
a year. That's a 4 5 percent In·
crease. from $43,046.
The pay raise matches the
salary paid the city manager or
Newport Beach. Th city
managersof'Costa Mesa and Hun·
lington Beach are paid, respec·
t1vely. S45.528and $53,316 a year.
t.. Temp/,e Official Namea Goldwater, Stennia Re lief was evfde nl amons the members
WedneSd1 night as they
a1reed lo continue several
of Lbe t.homler l&aues wtUI
January.
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -
Terry Buford, ooetlme flnanclal
manaaer ot tbe W·f ated Peoples
Temple, warned today that
senatort Barry GoldJWat.r and
John Stennll were on i Temple
''hit llat" tad accused attorney
Timothy Stoen or "mllllrmlnd•
inC" tbe cult'• llle1al acUvlUee.
<Related atory, AS)
Ma. Buford told newsmen that
"every W .. al act. every plan ror vloltnff waa either lnJUated
or approved by Stoen,'' who
Joined the Tempi• ln lMt and
wa• a hlgb·ranktng member
before leavlns the church ln
1977.
M 1 . Buford aho 1atd
California Attorney Gen.rel
Evelle You.nser and U .s. At-
torney WUUam Hunter were on
the bJt lilt=l~ t.o be killed tn ca1e 1 ever bappeaed
to cult le Rev •• nm Joa..
She ldeDllfted UM peraon in
ehar1e of cUTYtDI out UM bit
ll1t 11 Smdra L. Bradshaw, 32,
a Temple m.mber in San Fran·
cl1co.
Ms. Buford, clad in a navy
corduroy pant.suit. trembled as
sbe told reporters ahe learned or
Stoen'• role because ahe served
aa his letal a11istant from July,
1912, to early 1917 . But that didn't &ffm to •
be qutte enouah lor Coun·
c1lwoman Jackie Heather •
who looked up wearily as
the meetlng ended and
1omeone called oul,
"MerryCbrlalmas."
"I move we conllnuo
Chrlstmu until Jan. 8,"
Mra. Healber •aid.
She al1e1ed th~t Stoen planned
the ktllln1 or Rev. "Lester
Klosolvtng, a columnist ror the
San Franclaco Examiner, sent
death U\reatl to bis wlf e alter
1he left the Tomple and 1mu1·
Cled "500,000 into f>anam1 for
depo1itln a 'l'emple bank account. ,
C!ount I • 1 t I • 1 ------------" ...... _, .. -· ..... , ....• J~ .. . .. , i
i
-•-U-1uWl&tUlolJU !MIY~ IUJIHI~\ t'l\I• ... \It ~_,.-... • ., ••-• ,,...., -··~-.. ----•·-
I
Woolleln salary wlll be re·
viewed agam next June.
Assistant City Manager P•ul
Brady go\ a 7 percent lncreue.
to $36.130 a year. He also got Id·
dltlonal t'Ompcnution of a
week's extra vacation, glvln1
bJm a t.olal or alx weeks paid re-
laxation.
City Clerk Raye Klnasbury
wu given a $ percent pay
hlke-Sl.000 more a year-ror a
new salary of $20,626 a year.
. --.. ~----~
• I•
I.
Al t?All.X PJl.OT Tf!yrtday. ptotmbl< 11· 1m
lsr-ael rded
Lebanese Guerrillas hell Town
TEL AVIV . Jar.el (AP> -
GuPrrOlu m southern Lebanon
tared a volley of Katyu1h•
roclleta lnto th I raell fronU~r
town of Kleyet Shmooa today.
kUholt one man and woundtn
scv n penlOll ln • •Plr1tlln1C <'> ~
for •n·eye filhl betwet•n tho
Pule tiniaotandlara 1
border, the mlUt&rJ ~oaunaad
1&ld ln Tel Avtv. Tb umy a d flvci chlldn.-n In
attack •M UM first 1ctou the Leban•• border alnce Jue,
when lira I withdrew an In·
vulon forcci rrom aouthern
Lebanon alter a 90-day 1wecip to
drive ralutlnlan 1 ue rrlllaa
from the frontJer.
Tho PaleiitlnC' Ltb ration Or~umzJtlon tn 8 1rut u1d Uw
tov. n w rockNt>d an '\'ttl1auon for l1r lJ ir atnkK on Pal
estm}anumi-12bour&t1trh :r
AflH lh four or flY( roelltta
t.ltmmed mto K.lr)'al Sbmona "' th" norttwm GaUl, p oh Odlf'
lsrueU 11rUllM"Y ~f'd f1rt' on
Palt•itUruan ~lllona .ac~ Ult'
Cm1'l Bear
11ral Exc11Se
uou~·l'oN tAPt Jon
Ogden was lat~ for school,
but had this note from h111
father:
"Please excus Jon for
being Jate 118 a grizzly
bear broke In our houcic
and it required additional
time to eubdue him."
Evelyn Plotkin, J on's
fifth grad e teacher, ac·
cepted the excuse. She
wrote in reply :
"Thank you for letting
m e know why Jon was
tardy today. Next time
you might try grabbtng
that grizzly bear by his
TAIL -thereby having a
TALE to hang onto."
Shah's Foes
Set D emand s
TEHRAN. Iran (AP) -One of
Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's
veteran political opponents re· portedly has a~reed to form a
civilian government, but leaders
of the anti-shah movement have
spurned him.
Informed sources said Golam·
Hosscin Sadiqi accepted the pre·
miersh1p tn a new government
after the s hah agreed to a
number ofpolit1 caJ conditions.
The sources. who refused to be
Identified, said Sadiq1 's demands
included dissolution of the cur-
rent Parliament. It was not im· ~ mediately known if that demand
would be met. Under the con·
i.t1tution, the government would
have to hold a general election
within six months after ParUa·
ment is dissolved The shah had
.ii ready pledgt:d to hold free clec·
llOnl> next June
Jones' Rites
r •
... ~ v 'Questioned'
CLAllKSBORO. N.J . <AP)
The body of cult leader Jim
Jones is in ashes but slate of·
fi<'ials say th<'Y question the
ll'~ality of h1i. cremation.
De puty Attorney Gen er al
Charles Mysak said Wednesday
"serious quest1oni." concerning
the le~ality of the funeral rite
prompted an investigation to see
1f the cremation wee. done ac·
cording to:.tate law.
~pccial permit s or death
cert1f1catt..'S signed by the next of
km or another lawful authority
an' rcqwrcd for crem ation tn
New Jersey, Mysak said.
Tass View~ China
MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet
news a~cney Tal>S today cast
doubt on President Carter's up·
beal interprctntton or the Soviet view of the recognition of China
by the Unik'<i States. The official
Soviet media has been saying
that while establishing relations 1s a step toward peace, the West
should be wary of China because
of Peking 's "aggrc.>Sslve lnten·
t1on!-l."
(
ORAHOECOAST
DAILY. PILOT
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'
tUryal tihman• • ra lr aled for
ahock arter bttn1 ovacualtd
from a bulldlna hll b1 on flf th
Sovlft anoo roeket. ·'Ut \lany y ou cia o h ear
Kal)'U Ml... 1Ald °"• ,...,.,.,,
"but Lh d)om1n• I dhtn'l hur
nythln1. Ju•t maHlV t>•·
plosum and th on I wH t·uvtred
wllh dust. I lOOk Lh chllclr n out
to an undet&round lwllH "
The -.'Oman. Mn R ma 8di
David. llvea noxl duor to i.
ond·Ooor opartmc.-nl thll
dtn,oh hied. Tb mlhl.ar)' 1a d th rot"ket
lDJACK .••
)•rker ti tellln& them to do,"
l\8ld J ohn L,t•yden, un FAA
ispokesmllll 1n Wuh101ton. Joe f'tets. an f'AA spoke.man
In Kanus City. 1ald the Jetliner
w111 hijacked on it.I approach to
Kansas Chy International
AtrpQrt.
Pal Unian ~ ln Beirut.
aa•d th I.Ir.ell air attack al IUD·
down Wedneadav kH~or we>und~ 114 many u 1:7 e.
f.ra ll mlJllory official• aald the
r• d wu ordered ln reprllal foc a
t lrlna of rat tlnlan bomblntia ln
larael that have killed lour
clvillaoa and wounded 70 aince
No_v 1. Th ltraells also reported
three pt"f'IOftl sll1hUy hurt ln a
uen ade attack ln the Old City ot
Jeruulem after nl1htfall
Wednesday It wu the att'Ond
bombln1 of the day in the Holy Ci·
ty Ao earlier blast In the doorway ot an Old City restaurant slightly
wounded six P-!r&onS· E1ypt's l'oreagn Ministry de·
nounc~'<i th • Israeli attacks as "a thre1t to the current Eayp-
Uan·l•raell peace process." '
But Cairo went ahead with
plan• to Hild Prime Minllter
Mothe Dayan and Secretary of Slate C)TUI Vance this weekend
for another attempt to get the
stalled peace negotiations aoing
aaain.
Frell said the jetliner "pulled
up. quawked the proper ID for
a h ijack in g a nd ask e d for
clearance to Carbondale."
which is served by the Marion ()()I C'L!l-'-nn
airport. ~ IU UT~ Frets said he did not know
whether more than one person ~ .-.. B
was involved. The plane landed ure in us,
in Marion at 8:48 a.m. PST.
Trapnell i.s on trial in Bentoo. • T..ww;n Cri.,..oh about 20 miles from where the .i. • ~., U<O
airplane landed, with inmates Martin J. McNally and J ames SALAMANCA, Spain <AP> -
Kenneth Johnson. A locomotive and a school bus
During· today's proceedings, collided al a level crossing to·
Trapnell left lhe courtroom day, killing 20 youngsters,
three times to talk with securlly railroad and hospital sources
personnel outside the chambers. said. Another 36 children were
When Judge Harold Baker re· reported 1.Jtjured. convened the trial Trapnell All the victims were between 6
asked for a delay because "I'm an~h1; ~~~:·cbifd~: 5:1.!ro
in a very emotional state." the bus apparently survived the
Baker denied the request. accident.
An FBI agent at Marion said Some survivors told the police
sharpshooters and police dogs t hey warned the bus driver
were brought to the courthouse. about the oncoming locomotive.
A reporter· asked Trapne ll but said he told them : "Don't
what was happening. He said. "I worry. We have time enough to
can't tell you except that there's go through."
been an outside threat.'· The driver was among the in·
McNally is serving two life jured and was in serious condi·
t e rms for laking over a n tion.
Am erican Airlines jet and de· The bus was s m ashed into
manding another plane, the first thr~eJ>:1:3Jdng the children to
was damaged while )anding in s c h ool al Fuentes de San St. Louis. McNally parachuted over Peru, Ind.. and was cap. Esteban, lo western Spain 30 miles from Salamanca. The ac· tured five days later in Detroit. cidenl occurred just alter it left
Trapnell and Mc Nally are Munoz, a village 10 miles from
charged with conspiracy lO Fuentes de San Esteben, where
escape, auempted escape, and it had picked up some children.
aiding air piracy and kidnap·
ping. Johnson has pleaded guilty
to conspiracy to escape and at·
tempted escape charges but is
fighting air piracy and kidnap·
ping charges. The trial was expected to go to
the jury today. But before the
prosecution gave it s c losing
argument, Baker ordered the
~ourlroom a nd courtho use
d eared of all but officials and
reporters.
f'rOlll P~ A I
TRAFFIC ...
holiday destinations as well as
~atch their tntake of booze and
drugs.
"It'll be a mess," he warned,
noting that Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport 1s predicting two-
hour·long waits in traffic just to
m ake the loop through the
terminal area.
.. And they a r e projecting
absolutely no parking at LAX.
only in outlying areas surround·
mg the airport "
Or ange County Airport, he
predicted, will be LAX in
miniature.
All main routes out of both
Orang_e and Los Angeles Coun·
lies will be jammed on Friday,"
he warned.
Traffic is expected to slack Oll
somewhat 'Saturday and Sunday
with a gradual buildup again
throughout Monday with more
jamming expected from return·
ing motorists late that day. And if il snows in the moun·
tain areas, which he said may
be a possibility Friday. the
snarls will be compounded as
motorists grind to stops at the
Grapevine and tn Cajon Pass.
f'ro111 Page A I
DENSITY •..
base."
The city's general plan sets
forth permitted uses on various
land areas. While a general plan
designation is less specific than
zoning, the latter must be com· palible with the general plan
designation.
Commercial developments aJ.
reeled by Wednesday's decision
are Newport Center, Castaways,
Bayview Landing, San Die~o
Creek Sites and Creek Sites and
MacArthur I Jamboree Sites.
ResidentlaJ undeveloped sites
a ff ec t e d are We stb ay .
Ne wporter North, F r eeway
Reservation East, Fifth A venue Parcels, CalTrans West and
Beeco Property.
The council generally agr~
with planning commission rec·
ommendations for across-the·
ooard reductions. but disagreed
w~th a recommended increase
from 538 to 800 allowable res·
i dential unils i n Newrort center as a partial tradeof for
commercial cuts. The council
voted to keep the figure at 538
uni ls.
A ft er h ea ring from the
chairman of the board and the
director of the Newport Harbor
Art Museum, the council did
agree to increase from 4,000 to
10.000 square feel the area the
museum can add. The area will
be used for storing the perma·
nenl collection. for office space
a nd ror c lass rooms. the
spokesmen said.
Rocket Launcher
Seized in Clemente
111 Alameda Lane . tney alle.red· ly found the somewhat more
deadly rocket launcher ln1lde.
lf's a Clea11 ltla~ltine
There's the joke that when Cinderella
opened her Christmas present from her
ste psisters she found a new mop. The city
of Irvine's maintenance department has
got this new street s weeper. which officials
say is quieter and faster than those used in
prior private contractor arrangement . The
$61.600 sweeper is expected to be able to
clean up all city st reets once weekly.
Fro91PageAI
MAYOR •••
a break with tradition in the way
mayors have been selected m
Irvine, though it is a short·lived
tradition. considering the city
wasn't incorporated till 1971.
Before Agran's e lection.
mayors had been selected from
the council on the basis of the
highest votegetter in the elec·
lion. Though Agran was the
highest volegetter. two of the
council m e mbers-V ardoulis
and ne wly elected Anthony-
were openly sorry to see Agran
win.
They teamed to block his
b ecom in g mayor. a nd also
blocked Ag ran's compromise
choice for mayor. Mrs . Caido.
Sills joined with Va rdoulis and
Anthony to accomplish the re·
election of Vardoulis as mayor
and the election of Anthony as
vice mayor.
Agran doesn't think the job
should be political.
"I see one of the mayor's pnn·
cipal responsibilities as being ar1
effective presiding officer ." he
said. "I don't think his selection
should be made strictly in
r esponse t o the prevailing
political winds the day a fter the
election.
"It ought to be on a rotation
bas i s . 1f some body we r e
particularly inept, perhaps that
would be cause for change. but
f<>,r the most part. I think we ought
to share the responsibility for pre·
siding.
"The mayor has no inherent
powers that justify a big up·
heavat. He is just someone who
conducts mectmgs in a fair and
responsible manner."
Four Families Told
To Quit Slide Area
By ANNE COOPER
Of tlllt o.lly I'*' SIMI Three retired couples and a
widow we r s erved no tice
Wednesday by owners of the
Shorecliffs Mobile Country Cli.ab
in San Clemente that their homes
a re in danger and s hould be
moved immediately.
The four luxury mobile homes.
loca ted at 9'l, 93. 94 and 95 Mira
Adelante, are the ones closest to
the 60·foot precipice created by
a massive la ndslide Monday
night. The homes belong to
Albert and Marianne Bates. Al
and Ann Heimberg. Robert and
Rita Larkin and (Wary Weber
The notices trom the Del
Prado Company s aid, "The
geologist whom we h ave
employed to look into the failure
of the golf course property ad·
jacent to our mobile home park
advises that your mobile home
should be moved immediately
··Jf not moved immediately ,
your home is in danger of betng
severely damaged by any ex
tension of the golf course slope
failure.'' the notice concluded
Mrs. Weber srud she has no tn·
l ention of moving. The three
couples also served with a notice
s aid they have been unable so
far to locale any available
s paces for the homes. which are
valued at about $70,000 each.
ln the meantime. the Larkins
arc s taying al a mote l, the
Heimbergs with friends. while
the Bateses and Mrs. Weber re·
main in their threatened homes.
Meanwhile. three miles south
of the Shorecliffs landslide, rest·
dents of Calle Nina are work1n1?
franticaJly to repair a similar
slope failure behind their homes
before winter rains set in. A
geological fi rm hired by the
homeowners has advised them
that if repairs are not made,
they might lose their homes in a
massive slide like the Oct. 2
slide in Laguna Beach.
fi'ro111 Pa~ A I
SAFETY ...
were be ing exam ined most
closely.
Bond told a news conference
that the government has "been
lulled into lQO great a security" concerning aerial collisions
be cause there had been no
similar accidents in the United
States for six years preceding
the San Diego tragedy.
Bond faulted his agency for
giving too much credit to exist·
ing radar systems. sayi ng "the
succesi. was more apparent than
real "
At San Diego. Bond said, the
FAA investigation showed that
"there was some doubt" among
air traffic controllers of what
their responsibilities were al the
time of the PSA collission.
As a result. the FAA ordered,
that air traffic control pro·
cedures be clarified at the con·
trol center al Mi ramar Naval
Air Station. whic h handlei.
traffic tn and out of Lindbergh
Field
Wrap Up A During Our
* I 00'1 of LA·Z-IOYS ... ....,
* l111medlateRtH
.. IYwy
~•;t ...
1•• . .
u .-::~ .~ ,,
What began as an arrest for
oossesslon of a martial arti,
weapon ended, poUce say. wtlh
the di&~very of an antl·lank
rocket launcher ln the apart·
ment of a Camp Pendleton
Marine. Laguna Beach detective Mark
Everton was conducllnl a
burglary tnveeUaatlon in a San
Clemente apartment complex
earlier thiJI week when he al·
legedly spotted Cpl. Jerom~ M.
Iverson. 21 . on hla balcony.
1wtn11nc a pair of nunch~aa. a
martial arts weapoa aomowhal
The 66 millimeter weapon.
used to atop tanks. operates
som ewhat like a bazooka. Tho
newer models are light ln weight
and dlspoeable. After their one
projeclUe ll fired, they are dls·
carded.
•A ..... P•llillt
WHITE'S . La.Z-BO'!J' ..
n.y rode. 11'ey 1wlvel. 11ley NCIH. Alld we'•• ........... -••ery ..,.. of Lo-%-loy ....
... ..... Al ........... -........ ....., of
fabric• _. •lwyh hi • yow favorite colon. So
c0111e Iii . .ct chooH th Le-2.-loy t1Mrr1 ricJM .... , ...
COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO
-&. 11'tt ••• 211t2 M,:&u.rfte Pky.
IAtrOH fl'Otf\ ll•tllft•, It l)t«h ti ~Ill (•\I • M"110Motr..,C.t~nl ·-1)11\1 VOi WO •l•t I
Ukt.•hnln Everton contacted San
Clement. offlcera, and when
they entered lh• apartment at ,
1 verson wu arrested and
trao1port.ed to Orange County
Jail where h11 ball was set at
'25,000. The Marine attached to the
First Marine bivtslon at Camp P~ndlet.Qn, racea char111 of
potHlllOn of a deadly weapon
and polMlllon of a d•tructlve
device. •
. ~Jll< )J i~ (/"(1
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142 .. 57 415-5t02
Mon .. ,rl.1M Moft,.,rt 1M Iii l et. 10.s let. UM
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on.
icn·
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Nell
1tial
wor
this
Mr.
ne?
'lion
1rch-
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oest·
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e the
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"rel·
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STEEL
• -..... ,...-,. .,, '""""'"'°'" rur •P-,.. u. na•1 mtnlm~m adverse Impact provat of •'rfntaUve Tract No.
·onl'ermnl tl'I crangert or the pr •
•~rlptlon dru1 Darvon.
qt;.IU ft tu/tk~t ''°'°"ti apparent Potl'll wtll nor bt pMblillwd. ____ L-.
•
.. '• •, ;. .. .. •' .
CALIFORNIA lhurwdliy.Oecember21. 1978 DAil y PU.OT A.
Jones-Hit-Man-· --SF?
Plan To Kill Defectors, Officials Revealed
Otildre11, Mot h e r Res~ued
Mary Ortiz reaches for her son Ernie Jr .. 1~. arter
s he and three youngsters were rescued by a CallCornl•
Highway Patrol helicopter from the: i-now ncllr Lu Porte ln
the northern Sierra. Andy Andcn;on. Cl'ntcr, carries
Moni ca Guerrero. one of th e other two children rescued.
They had been trapped in a camper pickup truck in the
snow four days
Asbestos Workers
Ask Me dical Ex&ms
SAN PEDRO <AP> -A union representing 2,400 workers bas
asked government agencies to force Todd Pacific Shipyards to pro.
vide annual medical exams to euard against disease caused by
asbestos.
Local 9 of the lndustrial Union of Marine and Shipbulld1ng
Workers of America filed complaints Wednesday with the stale
and federal departments of occupational safety.
All workers at the shipyard are affected by asbestos "because
the asbestos particles become airborne and float throughout the
yard," said Steve Roberts, executive secretary of the union.
ROBERTS SAID THAT aJthougb only shipwrigbta and joiners.
work directly with asbestos, all craftsmen at the shipyard are cov-
ered rn the complaints -marine macblnislS, boilermakers,
pipefitters, welders, ship fiUers and riggers.
A umon request for checkups in July was rej~ted by the com-
pany. Roberts said.
Noting that the Navy announeed in July it would provide
medu:-al exam~ for m1lllary and civilian personnel exposed to
asbestOl>, Roberts s uad, "It seems like we JD the private sector are
second·class c1t1zens. They CTodd officials) say we are ool entiUed
to a mro1cal scre<>mng program ..
~AN l''RANCISt'O <AP> -/\
lfad~r of wt • Ol•lnullun t«>am
011110 ~ by th RE>v Jim Jona
to ltlll flf'l()l>lt'9 'ft'm1,1t1 tlef cton
and ru~Hr uffklula ram•lnR all~• ln Sau' 1i·r11ncltco. attorney MArk I.au Hid h WU told by M
~ported JOflOI ·confidant
l.•n told reportora Wedn .
day lt11t h-1• <'II nt Terri Buford,
who tw u\d 1.-fl JonoalOwn threu
w ka befor. th m 11 murdor·
•UIC'ld l.n Ouyan61, know• the
n110• ol tho ~rt<>n.
A Kll:D WllO wu Involved In
tho plan. l..ono replied. "Thole
who s>layed the role of au•rd ln
Jont•atown 1&nd thoH people who
tN11 nlnt-d ht1rt1 In Sltn Franclaco.
And 'l't>trl Buford uys she
knowe the name of the person
who le h r• 1n San Francisco
who had tho reapon11blUty to
carry out th Pl'Oiram "
LMnl'. howover. declined t o
ldtntJty tho petSOO,
Thollt' who might have been
murkcd for aaaasslnallon before
Jonoa ordered th~ deaths of
Woman Gets
3 Years in
Fraud Case
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
24·year-dd woman. convicted of
welfare fraud in Ventura Coun·
ty. has been sentenced to thrtt
years in prison for her role in a
welfare scheme that netted
$123,000 from Los Anaeles
County.
Patty Mouton. 24. who pleaded
guHly to four counts or forgery
and welfare fraud in the Los
Angeles case, was sentenced
Wednesday by Superior Court
Judge Leslie W. Light, who also
placed her on nine years proba·
tlon.
A fS·COUNT complaint issued
last Sept.ember charged Miss
Mouton and two co·defendants
with cheating Los Angeles Coun-
ty out of $122,957 between May
1976 and October 1917 by receiv-
ing aid for 66 non-existent
children. The same three were
convicted of bilking Ventura
County out of $14,000 in a similar
scheme.
Prosecutors said the defen-
dants used counterfeit birth
cerlif1cates for themselves and
the fictitious children.
1) I estimate my home's value at $ _____ _
2) Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
4} Balance 1 still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligible to borrow (subtract 4 from 3)
6} Amount I'd lik e to borrow
With a Hom eowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California, you
may qualify to borrow from $3,000 to $30,000 (or even ·more!) to use
for your children's education, travel, other worthwhile investments -
almost any purpose you can name.
Calculate your borrOVJing power, adjust that amount to your needs
and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your
home, now let it work for you.
THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA
Nl"VJP(lf1 ~·nch Office, 1401 Daw Stn't't, Neowpon lil'l'th 1>2663. (7111 K.'\J.3SI I
'"""-..,.•C--PI• ._,.,,c
• 1
"---..... ----• l 'ft& iJ'-Y ~ -., ... ,., ' ••, ll'l :rumum •dverae impact
•
more than BOO per ons In
Jone.town hove not bcon public
ly ldenUfled1 Lano commented to reporter•
a• the wom.n UllUOed Hrore u
federal arand Jury lnve11ll1•tiof<
tht 1mbush 1layin1C ot Rep. Leo
Ryan .. who wal 1unoed down
with four otller persons al an
ulratrlp before the man dHth.'
took piece.
While none ot the leltlmony
wa.a IJ\lde public. t..ne uld •he
h~d answered all \ho grand
Jury'11 quaUom and dld not lake
the Flft.h Amendment or aak ror
1mmuruty.
Lao• 11.ld ahe had already
turned over Peoples Temple
bank account recorda showing
that the cult had more than $7.S
million in the account In Swls11
banks in Panama, and that she
had no in.formalloo about Ryan's
death.
Lane also said that a message
from a controveralal figure In
the Peoples Temple case de-
ll ve red to Jones may have
touched off t.be mus deaths.
Lane uJd that Timothy Stoen.
a d.,fector from the temple, sent
a meaaage to Jones warning that
any defections prompted by
rtyan'• vtalt to Jonestown would
"mean the tot.al deat.ructlon of
Jim Jones and Jonestown."
Lane, who escaped Jonatown
at tbe 9tart of the death ritual,
sald he was pres«1t when the
measaee was delivered verbally
by a temple member to Jones
Nov. 17. the night before the
a1nstrip ambush.
Stoen, unavailable for com-
ment, knew bow to manipulate
the cult leader. according lo
Lane, who said Jones d1slrust.ed
Stoen rearing he was a govern·
ment agent.
Stoen la a former California
prosecutor who is now a private
lawyer representing former
Peoples Temple members who
are autni the cult. Stoeo's son
wH amona those "(ho dJed at
Jonestown.
Meanwhile, a Calllornla at-
torney 1eneral'a taak force ia
looklng lnto aUecauona that
Stoen, who headed the San Jl'ran~
clsco dlltrlcl attorney's voter
fraud unit, covered up a pl'Obe
involvlng the Peoples Temple in
1976.
AS MANY as 1,000 temple mem~rs were shipped from
Loa Anteles and Mendocino
counties to San Francisco to
vote in the city's 197S municipal
election, accordln1 to published
reports.
After being a temple member
more than six years, Stoen left
in 197'7. He bad served u assis-
tant PrOleCUlor ln Men4<>cioo
County durtnc the period, and in
1976 was named a deputy dis·
lrict attorney lD San Francisco.
Small Plane Crashes at LAX
LOS ANGELES <AP> -
Turbulence from a nearby
jetllner may havQ slammed Ii
small charter plane onto a
runway al lnternaUooaJ Airport,
injuring both men aboard, one of
the men says.
Pilot John Howerton, 25. of
Burbank, was listed in critical
condition at Hawthorne Hospital
after Wednesday evening's
crash, wbiob occWTed as tht:
California Air Charter Cherok~
Lance was landing.
Passenger John Thomas
Howell, 25. of Valencia, also a
licensed pilot. was in good cond1·
lion, a hospital spokeswoman
said.
"An airliner just in front of us
-a jet, a 727. I think -set up
turbulence that slammed us into
the ground," Howell said.
Gilt ol Pro•~•t
SACRAMENTO <AP>-It was a Christmas gift of protest Crom
a group of militant welfare recip·
ients t.o Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.: Jars symbolWDg blood and
ashes.
Kevin Aslanian, an un·
employed San Jose man who
gets weUare for his wife and
three children, led the group to
Brown's office Wednesday. Asia·
nian is head of the Welfare
Recipients League. Aslanian s8Jd
the group ha,, filed a suit accusing
'
( STA TE J
the state of not implementing a
law requiring emergency aid in
J:flSe5 of Deed.
Seal Ba.IJ• Stolftt
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police
are looking for several cases of
potentially dangerous "seal
bombs" stolen from the U.ma
seiner Mermaid at the Street
Pier. officers said.
The small expl06ive devices
are used to "shock or frighten"
s~als in tuna fishing waters and,
according t.o fire department or.
ficials. could "kill or severely
injure" humans. Frank Correla.
owner and captain of the
Mermaid. round 1,872 of the
bombs missing Tuesday.
Conmctfon Changed
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -The
felony conviction . or a Palm
Springs psychiatrist for solicits·
lion ror burglary of another physi·
cian's office has been reduced t.o a
misdemeanor .. _.
However. despite the reduc·
tion Wednesday in R1vers1de
County Superior Court, the sen·
tence was unchanged for Dr.
Morton Kurland. former mental
28~
More Parking Places!
FOr
south coast Plaza
customers.
Thedav
after Thanl<SQivlng.
and every weekend
'tll Christmas, our
2800 employees wlll
be bused to the PlaZa
so that you,
our customer, wm have
more convenient and
close-in parking.
""'
health director of the Desert
Hospital here -two years pro-
bation and a $5,000 fine in con-
nection with the burglary of the
office o( Dr. James O'Connor of
Yucca Valley.
Tallkft-Brftdcs Dotc11
LONG BEACH (AP> -The
AU antic Cooqueroc, an 800-foot
lanker loaded with 81,000 too& of
crude oil was being towed
toward this port today after its
main engine broke down about
125 miles southwest of here.
A Seattle towlng tug reached
the Liberian·regislered lanker
Wednesday. Fears that the wind
and current might force the dis·
abled vessel onto Bishop Rock.
about 100 miles west or San
Diego, and cause an oil spill had
prompted t h e earlier dis -
patching of the Long Beach
harbor tug Spartan lo bold it in
place.
Bodfl of Dl~r FoMJtd
SAN Dl~GO <AP> -The body
of John Andreoli, 38. who
jum ped to his death off the
Ocean Beach pier last week
while wearing a weighted scuba
diver's bell has been found float·
ing in the surf. the coroner's of-
fice said.
SOUTH COAST PlAZA
ACrOSS ftOm SOUtt1 c.oast Pim WlaQe, ertsto1 & san oteoo Fref!!Wt1V
11~•C1CM1a m condltlon1 tor ap-proval ot ·-rentaUvo Tract No.
-.... _ -•ntd\.; "' I.If 1181\0US ~oncernin1 the dangera oC the pre:
1crlpUondru1 Darvon.
tM 11amt1 mOJI t>. witMtld ort ,~.
'l"'lt if n/lfcifflr ''°'°" u apportni Poff '1/ will not t>. P"bluhfd .
• ---·--'--
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ll's
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us
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te.
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en
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... • A8 I
orangoeoasio.,•vP''°' Editorial Page Rober\ N W cdtPubllsher
1 Segre gation More
I 1ban G e ographic
t rvln ' chdol board h d rled the r>ropo cd
1 etrnpahlan Plan for <h"le1r K•\lon o( Lo ng It• tichool~ a. ... dt>t-lruclh • or education ond ('I 0 tYl' or )()(' I
c-ontrol or lhl' bl'hool
Tht.• J'lon ""'Ould lnvolv4! m -. tnterd1&lricl bu11n.c of
brhookhildrcn to m1 urban nd uburban uroups ln l~
Anac-lt.i nd Orun1ic counu -ll tak th • •implhtll' und ~rronrous Vte\\ that the ~c~ of acgr~• Uon a
acottruphu: ruth r than 80<'iaJ ieparollon
The chool bourd went furth1 r th n condemnln ttw
plun. howt•\ t>r, and pl ~Red, bit lhl•alrlcall}. lo
"co tlnut• tu tuke positive tcpe1 ... to assault ... uu~
Nt'rlOU MX'tltl problt•m ..
Thot N<>und ' fmt", bot lht! fuel 1 that m lrvlnr. "till ;i
faJrlY urnucnt. Antelo Am ncan rommunll}'. tl doean't ~eem th~rc l much i:.e~n·11utmn to ~ 2mlvl'<.1 w1th1n lht.•
d1~tnrl
Thtt tt(•hool bo .. m.t hJ., pll-"nty to pornt to of l(ood. i,oh~
progrum~ d e:,1~ned to ulluw <'h Jldren to ht•l'Offil'
comfortubh.· ubout thetr darfert'n<· 'tn 1 ac-t> mid lltt•styfl! It
do •sn •t need tu Call back tln fttt•blr pled'l"k
There ure ftne b1hnguol und b1cultu1 ul studic~. und
thC're lb u proposu1 bt>mg negolJ ated between the distract~
thut would allow lrvtnl! an'1 mn •r city Santu Anu ch1ldrt!n
to communicate \\ 1th · ch other over two wu lelev1s1on
Pro.:rnml'. ltkc tht-se brid*'e thl' gup11 betw~cn
children of differ e nce wt th tnlt:graty and stre ngth
Bay Cle anup Costly
NIWA -Thl' Newport Jrvine Waste-Management
Agencies 1sn 't a group that people get really cxc1t~d
about. It·:, a consortium or lcK'nl agencic11 that surround
the Upper Newport Bay.
It!\ purpose is to <'Om(' up with n plan to r lcan up not
only the buy . but the wutcrways thut empty into it and
have Pollutc."d it.
NIWA's work ought to be of considerable Interest to
residents of Newport Beach , Costa Mesa and Irvine
because those cities a r e members aJong with the Irvine
Ranc h Wate r Di s tric t and s tate and county
reprebentataves. Under a plan recently put out by NIWA,
lhe cost of not only cleanin~ up the bay but also
prevention of future pollution. 1s going to be borne by
taxpayers.
The primary source of pollution in the Upper Bay is
silt that's rapidly filling in the waterway. The state. as
owner of the bay's ecological preserve. is going lo have to
pay for dn.'i:lgmg what's there now.
But t•cmtrol of future siltation is where there's a split
between NIWA membe rs. One group holds that it's nearly
1mposs1hlc to halt the runoff or mud-bearing waters from
upstream construction sites. This majority viewpoint also
contends that some attempts at silt control should be
sufficient ~mcc complete containment would be too costly
for builders.
The other school or thought is that silt containment is
mandatory . Let the builder pay the cost of controlling the
silt (including construction o( a desilting basin s outh of
San Diego Freeway) instead or letting it flow into the bay
where the public pays to dredge it out, the minority
mem hers say.
The NIWA pl~n reflecting the majority v1ewpomt 1s
available for public comment. Eventually a plan must be
upproved by the f cderal Environmental Protection
Agency.
Sincl' e ither plan will cost the public m11lions. it
bchoow s rt·s1dents to educate themselvc.-,, th<:n s hun:
their views with their city officials.
Local Control Thre at
Last week, Saddleback College trustees unanimously
' approved a resolution s upporting the property tax as an
essential source of revenue for community co11eg es.
The move was ironic s ince many Saddleback trus tees
have been extremely conservative on taxation questions
' in previous years.
But lru.t week's resolution r aises a point that goes
beyond the locetl skirmis hes involving higher laxes und
cfficil!nl use of college funds .
As Trustee Robert Prince pointed out, property taxcl>
have bt.>en reduced to 1 perce nt of a home's market valut!,
gravely cutting th~ amount of funds generated for the
\'Ollege.
The property tax has always been a big source ot
revenue for the college. It involved local control since the
amount of taxes was set by the local board -before
Proposition 13.
But the reduction of property tax income to the
college after Proposition 13 undermines loca1 control,
Price declared, because the state will be going toward a
system of state funding for community colleges.
With ull funds coming from the stale, Price s aid.
more und more decisions will be us urped by the state. a
move that cuts at the heart of the community college
concept.
Community colleges are s upposed t o 0{'
representative of the communities in the district they
serve, som e thing accomplis hed through a local
decision-making board of trustees.
Saddleback's trustees believe they could retain some
control of their district's destiny if a fair Portion of the
remalning 1 percent property tax income ts set aside for
commWlity colleges. While the motive is laudable, it
doesn't appear very realistic legally or Politically. • Opinions O)(pressed In the s pace above are those of the Dally Piiot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot, PO.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. PhOne (714) 642·4321 . •
Boyd/Sony
8y L.M. BOYD
OrlglMI name or the multi·
billion·dollar Sony Corpora.
lion in Japan was "Tokyo
t
Dear
Gloorn y
Gus
f'or what doth It profit o
m•n to come to work
islck to h e lp the
company when ll
m eans a week later JO
more men will be oft
sick?
C.J .
Tsushln Kogyo " Westerners
round it difCicult to say. So ltJi
chief executive Akio Morita
tinkered with new-name no-
tions. Finally, he combined
the Lat.in "sonu.s·• meaninj
sou nd with the hiahly
American "Sonny Boy'' as
populatiied by Al Jolson and
camo u51wtt.h Sony.
Chriatma.s tn Yuioslavta lJ
preceded by another hoUday
called Ochlchl. Younl(stera
o n thot day trudltlonally
1Crllb their lather~. t1c them
to beds and chalr1. nnd
decline tQ release same unUI
uld eldera promise lo de·
liv e r the r,quesltd
Chrislmaa prcscnta.
Adolf IUUer alwaya put a
htaplna 1poon!ul or 1ugar ln
hi• wine. ·
. -.
Rowland Evw1 /Robert Novak
China: The Lifestyle Changes
TACUING, ChJnu Tcn111lon
h t"'l'en o l(tncruuon of 1lnte
1mpoaed conformity IUld the new
ll rr loa towurd p t>r sonul
Ir dom In t•h1na ht>lps explain
the responst" of u 17 yc1r-0ld a1rl
to conlrt>ll •d bul s 1icn1flcant
du1n1&et ht•rt· Wro Wl'ft' lnken to v1s1t lhl' 1m·
muculott> crumv«J qu:ertrre of u
•• • · m c111 b4'r family living
aand workinK
wllh ti h111f
million other
C hin es ut
th{' Tucht n~
01 I Ci\•ld!. 'l'ttc
hl'ad of the
fltmlly WI.Iii U
ROlll lll ~. .
arc h etypal
"modl'I workl•r" who us a driller
helved 01>en thi>!iP fi elds in Ow
late 19SOs but now does the
hghter wort< of watch repairing.
Afler som e p e rfunc t o r y
sloaaneerina from this worker,
we asked his eldest child. 17,
about her pluns after finishing
middle school.
"Whatever the state wan~ m~
to do." she replil'd automal1cul-
ly . WC' persisted: s urely, you
must have some desire of your
own. She giggled. Then art 'r
brief hesitation, she said ... My
father repairs watches, and f
would like to work makin~
watches."
THAT MAY seem a modest
statement of independence. but
it could not have happened me re
weeks ago. Jn the presence of
Important cadres from the oil
fields, this simple girl was re-
vealing something Important:
she has ambitions a nd desire~ of
h\•r own and is not a mer e pawn
of the stale
The brave Chinese who put
up wall posters in Peking calhn)(
on Jimmy Carter to inve:.t1gah-
hum an rights in China I and
pasted them up again after tht·y
were tom down> are the tip 11f
the iceberg. Beneath them are
untold millions whose personal
lives were disrupted more than
the outer world imagines by
China's last decade of political
tumult and now are cautiously
Mailbox
•et•klntC a INllf fettered ex·
latence
Apart from dramnllc wall
p oator s 1rnd the reg I me's
hradlon.c rwih toward lndwstrial
modernJ~atlon. the hum•n story
of China i3 lhe quiet. gradual re·
movol of the Muo1sl. straitjacket..
While We.tern dlplomuts rear
this may btl followed by iron
reprc11ion, the needs of Teng
flluao pin1rs ttovcrnment are
tteared to liberahzatlon. Teng is
commilkd to hes with lhe West
and a hukt:up or the immense
bureaucracy -goals that run
counte r to Red Guard die·
latorshlp
NOTH ING BETTER 1'·
lus tratcs this than the. re .
g rme's decision, unprecedented
for a communist country. to
send young people to Western
univers ities. Students in the U.S.
and Western Europe will soon
reach the thousands.
Simultane ous ly. Peking
University a nd other Chine11e
colleges are exS)C!rlenclna their
own transformQllon . Closed
down for rive years by th~
Cultur•I Revolution -.nd then
c on1trlcted Intellectually for
another rave year by Maoist.
radicals. the universities have
been reborn.
Their students are now 11clecl-
ed by nationwide competition,
and the Cultural Revolulion'11 r .
qulrement that middle school
graduate11 must work in the
countryside before conllnuln(C
their education has been quietly
dropped. Peking Un1vers1ty alu·
dents are prominent among the
youn8 people who gained the
world's attention with their
demonstrations for free speech.
The university's English read·
Ing room offers uncensored U.S
news papers and magazines. One
foreign ministry interpreter ac·
comp~ing us was reading that
old anU-rommunist periodical,
the Reader's Digest~ Anothu in·
terpreter was deep into the final
<and overtly antl·communlsl>
volume of Wlnst.on Churchlll's
memoirs. At the H11I 'fttn wall of
vostera. you.nac Chlne11e told u
how much they <'nJoy the Voice
of Americu in "s~ci ol En«llsh"
Cllm1ted vocabulary, elow de· livery).
WESTER N CLASSICAL
mus ic and ancient Chinese
opera, banned from China for
over a decade, are back. When
we attended the opera, the
theater was packed with men
nnd wome n In Communist
China's "blue anL'i" costume but
there were exceptions -such as
on«: woman with a fur coat.
brightly colored scare und curly
hairdo.
Dresses are to be Reen In
China, especially in Shanahal.
and such non-conformity may
spread to men. "Our clothing Is
much too stereotyped," one
young party cadre told us. ad
ding he thought truditlonal
Chinese dress should be rein·
.rodrJced ror certain occasiOM.
Creeping Individualis m can
;pread from dress to poUUcal
thought. Liu Shao-chi, the
former ctuer of slate purged by
Mao Tse-tung <and now believed
dead), is still excoriated as a
· revis ioniRt '' on e briefing
at Tachlng. Rut at the Hsi Tan
wall in Peking, posters demand
his rehabilitation.
Wh at is a sett-r especting
c adre to do? He gets no
guidance from Teng himself,
who ln hls interview with us
sjda-st.epped a ~ueslioo.aboulie·
habilitating Liu. "So ma ny
things have been said about Liu
that it's hard to know what to
believe," a lower·level foreign
ministry official told us. After a
pause, he added: "Things arc
complicated."
The idea that life is "com·
pl1cated" without explication by
official dogma 1s in itself new to
Communist Chma. Although this
country's tradition o f cen·
tralized authoritarianism will
certainly not give way to <ll'·
moc racy. the rus h toward
modemiiation is changing the
way Chinese think and live
and raster than anybody deemed
possible.
'Tests' Can't Change OC Airport Facts
To the Edtlor:
Thanks to Mrs. Reynold!> for
her fine Dec. 17 story on "dirty"
nights from the Orange County
Airport. Thanks also ror your
paper's continuing cove rage of
the main problem that races
Ne wport Beach in its fight for
survival.
Your story on the dangerous
cutback altitudes being forced
upon the a1rhne pilots by their
management serves to show
that the curre nt "t est " utilizing
three-engine Booing 727 ijlfcraft
by Hughes /\rrwest is an invalid
cv a luation of Its possible lessened
noise impact.
The current "tes t " Is
significantly being conducted
during our coldest months of the
year when noise tends to be mut,
ed , with reduced payloads so
that takeoff angle can be higher.
and when engine cutback can be
accomplished at lower altitudes.
U ' A VALID test were to be
undertaken, wouldn't it be better
conducted durm~ the s ummer
months when those of us under
the Infernal flight-path arc most
<1ware of the noise'! In the sum
merlime, the passenger load 1:.
more near capacity levels, lhc
warmer temperatures require a
4-degree decrease in takeoff
angle. and the l,000-foot cutback
would be mandatory.
I a m distressed that we are
being "tested" without our con·
sent with loaded dice. I know of
no other human experimentation
In this country t hat gambles
with the health and well.being or
people without their express
permission.
Our Board of Supervisors, 12
years ago, drclorcd "the Orange
County Airport Is not u jet
capability airport," yet thr
board contb1ucs lo expund the
jet flighlR out ot ll. The
supervisors In these acts prove
their p<>UUcol 1tnd economic In·
lerests outweigh their regard for
the human constituents they
were elected to serve.
The burden or proof s hould
re•l on the Board of Supervisors.
the airport, and the airlines tbot
by flylnl Jets over my head It Is
not hormfna me. A5 it Is now. I
um being required t.o prove It .,
harming me and my city. This I
have no resources available to
do.
It Is high time the people of
this county and their elected of·
flclalt loco the fact that the
Oranie Co1.1nty Airport ts not
and wlll never be the antwer to
Oranae County air transport
n eda. AnolMr airport mual be
butlt. It muat be localed 10 that
It hasi mlnfmum adverse Impact
'
on the resid.,ntial areas of lhe
county.
In the meantime, under no
c ircums tances, s hould any
further expansion of the present
airport be aJlowed or condoned,
even under the guise of "an ex·
perimental test.''
RICllARO S. JONAS. M.D.
~
To the Editor:
Carter's Tarwan decision will
he known to future students of
history fill the DEC Caper, not
only for the month of its pro-
nouncement, but for this mean·
ing:
0 for Disloyalty
E for Expediency
C for Coward.ice.
Mr. Carter said his decision
was nol ror expediency. Then for
what? Perhaps he wants the two
monkeys off his back -the U.S.
trade deficit. and the U.S.
economic condition. Will selling
war planes. arms, and computer
tech n ology t o the People's
Republic or China do il? If so.
why must we give up formal ties
with Taiwan to do so?
WH V MUST we serve up a
friend lo Communist China by
removing troops. dissolving
diplomatic ties. and actu1dly an-
nouncing that Taiwan is a part
or the one and only China?
Where are all of Carter's Ideals
or humnn rights? Communist
China Is not noted for kindness
for those of her race who oppose
her.
Does Carter underestimate
U.S . power? Certainly Red
China 1s not yet s uch a threat
that we must kow-tow to her in
order to trnde with her. She
needs us more than we need her.
All thoso Arms i;hc will buy
might give us more reason In the
future to act the coward.
President Carte r's act has
made the Am erican people par·
t.y to an inexcusable disloyaJty.
Where are our vaJue standards?
Who will be next? Israel? I am
oshamed.
LA DORNA EICHENBERG ..,,_,,,led
To the Editor:
Although I'm not an admirer or Evelle Younger, l found the
criticism for his rent Increases
on hla fourplcx quite annoyln1.
tr his tax~ on his 2-bedroom
property were $2,300, a ur.ily It l1t
not a rundown dump.
And lf hls rents have been only
S230 for two years and the place
la rusonabJy well maintained,
his rent.a were far too low and .n
lncrease to $2.50 was certalnly
Juatitiable.
Ther e ls a tendency to ai:s-
sume these days that all rents
a re too hig h . and people
categorize aJI landlords in the
1roup ol rent gougers.
Too many renters think that
all landlords should refund tax
savings, whether they've kept
up the place and rented for very
low rates. or operated an
eyesore and charged too much.
BOB EDWARDS
Otarft 11 ~~Id .. ,,
To the Editor:
Yecch! 1 just re-read Mrs.
Shirley Sheppard's condcmna·
lion of the working mother
(Mailbox, Nov. 30). What a total
lack of human charity. For the
sake of Mrs. Sheppard t sincere-
ly hope God ls not a reader of
the Daily Pilot.
SANDY BOOSTROM
Cetftirdltl
To the F..d.itor:
Smak mean, vicious. petty.
self·righteous, vindictive, cold.
opportunis tic, demagogic and
cowardly.
The above terms describe
Orange County's two state
senators <J ohn Schmitz and
John BriggsJ.
Their refusal to vote either In
support of or in opposition to the
unanimously pa.ssed (30 to OJ
s tate Se nate resolution In
memory of the recently as·
saasinated San Fran ci~co
s upervisor. Harvey Milk, was
frighteningly Insensitive.
Within the framework of our
representative democracy, I
have come to expt.-ct and lo ac·
cept the fact that these two
"How do we know ft'.s not Ju.st another rJro?"
-~~ .... \t J\ia1 mlntmum adver1t Impact ..,~ • ....., • '"~ ror •P.. provaJ ol ·TentatJve Tract No. ~oneenunc c.ne danaeri of the pre.
acr1ptlondrua Darvon . •
senators will invarlubly vote
against progressive and humane
legislation, but m this instance
their alt.empt to politicize a:.-
sassinalion not only reveals
their essential inhumanity but
also casts doubts upon their
ethical and moral suitability to
represent those or their constit·
uents who abhor violence and believe in as well as attempt to
live up to those Christian prfo.
ciples o( demonstrating Jove and
compassion for a ll or mankind.
TOM WERT
Oarift1 Opposf,lo•
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot editorial of
Dec. 3 that newly elected State
Senator John Schmitz "could be
an effective representative" is
commendable and appropriate.
Yet, the con :'lent of dis agree-
ment on "sor. .: Issues -notably
his church·rooled views agafost
abortion and any form of gun
control" seems to be unfrurly
highlighted. Most of the promi-
nent Orange Coast politicul
figures -Mnnan Bergeson.
Tom Riley, Bob Badham, Den-
nis Carpenter and Tom Rogers
are opposed to abortion as well as to gun eont rol.
Surely a paper 3S influential
as the Pilot has a right to favor
abortion, but why single out tttls
issue a nd \mpl v that Mr.
Schmilz's position stands alone~
IS OP POSITION to abortion
wrong becausf' It Is "church·
rooted"? Anll·aborllon views
are rooted from and can honest-
ly he supported by the J ewish
und New Tutamcnt. Un-
fortunately, lo many people tbe
srr1ptures have little application
in this pennissivc eru of .. rel·
f.llivc morality," "~ltuallon
ethics" and "doin~ your own
th mg." Opposithm to ubortlon Is
u ls o base d o n medical ,
psycholoRicol and soctologlcal
J(rounds in addition lo theology.
Furthermore, does the J>Uot ad·
vocoto the continuance of state
financing of lhls abomination
that many consider to be a form
of murder?
Perhaps for tho sake or an
enlightened dl•1oauc on this con·
troversial subject lhe PUot can
moke its position better un-
derstood in a future editorial.
C»RISl'OPll~R STEEL • Lt1ter1 from rt1odtrs art wrlcomt .
TM r1ght to condtn1t letter• to /it
tpae• or tltmlnate llbtl ti rtacrUfld.
IACten of 300 words or ltH wifl be
gtW'rt prt/trnce. AU lt'lln• mutt in·
cJudf ngnatur• and moilmq atldrtu
btJt nomt• mOJI bf wUltlwld on ,.,_
qut•C If IM(ficlnt tfotOft .. apparfftf.
Podf'J/ will not t>. pu~ 1
..
\
l a,g11na-1South £-eas t Yo "r Hometown
-D a ly Ne•·spa per~-,
VOL. 71, NO. 355, •SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1978 TEN CENTS'
t·Heavy Traffic, Dr.unk Patrols Forecast'
i llotoriat.a thoWd llpet't two
lhlo11 11'11day, tralfac J•m aod ~-n •bundanct of Callfornaa
JU&bway Patrol offtc ra wbo
wUI be watdUnc for lh drunk I drh r.
Lt. Marlow Johnston. tht
CltP'a Sant• Anat clivb.loa n
· •cutlve otnceT, •• d lhl• morn ln1 that the. state's freeway
forc e wlll be d•ploylnt
tfpec\flcally against lhe drinking
.trlver. especially dur1n1 \; .
t
f Pre a c h er
I Assails ,.
~Police
t ,
)
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of 11119 o.lly ,..._. StMf
He hadn't even collected the
Biblt-s from the s mall group of
• transients when two Laguna
Beach officers approached the ! eroup and demanded identifica-• tion.
' That was lhe claim of Rev.
t. Carlos Abernathy before Laguna ~ ~each councilmen this week. r The ordained "International
' f'ellowship of Addicts for ~ Christ" pastor said h is small f congregatioo was harassed by
J two police officers while
• worshipping on Main Beach
! Park two Sundays ago, and he
wanted assurances from the
'
council the incident would not
happen again.
! But that's not the way the t Laguna Beach police, depart· r. menl recalls the situation short·
• ly after 1 p.m. that Sunday.
rilil& andlale ru•hl houra
L•al yf'ar . h 11 Id . lb~
Hl•bw1y P1trol alone J•Uect 298
motor1 t.11n Oranao County who
w r~ bc'U ved lo bo dr1 vma Wl
dtr the annut'nc~ betw n f p.m.
F.r1d1y and 6 ,_ m Tuesday. the
ame cr'IUcal perl041 th11 year.
The numtk:r may be 1reater
th4a year. h,• conJ~ctured. The
CH P. m conJunttlon wltb Lhe
Oran1tt Cwnty Sht'rlff's ertlcl!,
has "strt>amhned" booking pro
cedurtt lhlt ahould get officers
back oo ~ freeway faster than
ln lhe put
Mixlnc thote snarls with Fri·
day afternoon partygoers and
weekend holiday drinkers is
almost 1u1ranteed to offer 11w
nlo rceme nt officers the
Chriatmu blues. Motorlata who find themselves
weavin' a'bit or demonstratinc
"anything else unusual" may
find a red light n astung an their
rear·vlew mirror. Johnston aaJd. Th~ Highway Patrol is putUng ·
all officers lnlO t,he field over lbe
holiday.
Those drivers Who slur 1 bit or appeai: a UttJe glassy eyed m1y
end up taking the freeway-side
sobriety test.
Those who fail will be
handcuffed; placed in a patrol
unit and whisked to Orange
County Jail where they will sub·
mil to one or three sobriety
tests. urine. breath or blood
sampllne. Refusal. of course.
leads automatically to a SUS·
pended driver's license.
Following the t est . the
motorist will be booked Into the
jail unW released on bail that
could go as high as $500 or unUI
they see a judge the following
T,uesday morning. Johnston
warned.
All in all. he mused, it~s not
too good a way to spend
Christmas.
Johnston warned that county
motorists should allow pl~pty or
driving lime to reach w~kend
holiday deshnat1on6 as well as
watch their intake of booie and
drugs.
"fl'll be a mes!I." he warned.
noting that Los Angeles lntema·
tional Airport 1s predicting two·
hour-long waits in traffic just lo
rn.ake the loop.
4 Told to Move
Clemente Homes Threatened
By ANNE COOPER
Oft .. Delly "'1414 Slaff
T hree retired couples and a
widow wer served noti ce
Wednesday by owners of the
Shorecliffs Mobile Country Club
in San Clemente that their hOIT\es
are In danger and should be
moved immediately.
The rour luxury mobile homes.
located at 92. 93. 94 and 95 Mira
Adelante. are the ones closest to
the 60-fool precipice created by
a massive landslide Monday
night The homes belong to
Albert and Marianne Bates. Al
a nd Ann Heimberg. Robert and
Rita Larkin and Mary Weber.
.
The notices rro,n the Del
Prado Company said. "The
geologist whom we have
employed to look into the failure
or the golf course property ad·
jacent to our mobile home park
advises that your mobile home
should be moved immediately.
"If not moved lmmedia\ely.
your home is in danger or being
severely damaged by any ex·
tension of the golf course slope
failure." the oolice concluded.
Mrs_ Weber said she has oo in·
tentaon or movaog. The three
couples also served with a notice
said they have been unable so
far to locate any available
Rocke t Launcher
spaces for the homes. which are
valued at about S70.000 each.
In the meantime. the Larkins
are staying at a motel. the
Heimbergs with friends, while
the Bateses and Mrs Weber re·
main in their threatened homes.
Meanwhile. three miles south
of tt\e Shorecliffs landslide. res1·
dents of Calle Nina are working
frantically to repair a s imilar
slope failure behind their homes
before wtnler rams set m. A
geological firm hired by the
homeowners has advised them
that 1f repairs are not made,
they might lose their homes an a
(See DANGER. Pag~ AZ>
, • "Our officers said they never Seized in Clemente
1WA J et
Hijacked
By Woman
..
. .
.. .
. =~ .. ..
.•
. . . .. '· ..
• " . .. . ·. :; • . • .. .. . , ... •• ::
: : ..
'¥ .. •• .,, ·.
1· .,
·!orl
went near the group whJle they f were worshipping," said Capt. ._
Nell Purcell. "Rev. Abernathy
has been in town ror eight years
• • and we never bother him.··
,
I ,
• t
He sild one-ef lbe officers did
approach two members of the
congregation a few minutes
later to question them about an
unrelated Incident, "but the
services had ended and people
were getting up to leave."
Purcell said his officers, "cer·
~ainly recognize h is
(Abernathy's> constitutional
rights." adding the officers' In·
tent was not to break up the
• meeting.
The incident prompted a ques-
tion as to the need for a permit
to conduct religious services on
Main Beach Parle.
City Manager Fred Solomon
said a permit is required for
private use or public parks.
But Abernathy said he was not
sure he could afford the cost or a
permit, adding "My wife's been
uptight for eight years because
1 'm paying for this out of
pocket."
The pastor provides meals for
transients following· bis weekly
services. collecting dated food
from catering trucks.
·'It was a distasteful situ&·
Uon," Rev. Abernathy told coun·
cit m e mbers. "The service
wasn't over, we had open Bibles,
and they came up and asked for
ID's and made a big deal out of
it.''
John Gabriels, who claims he
witnessed the Sunday incident,
told the councll police waded in·
• to the group and interrupted the
~ services . ' ··oo we allow police to go to
ti other churches, yank
•· parishioners lo their feet and de·
C mand identification," he asked.
But Purcell said the officers
t merely talked to a transient who
f waa spotted walking against a
~ <See PllEACHEll. P•1e A%)
/I
,
What began as an arrest ror
oossession of a martial arts weapon ended, police say. with
the discovery or an anli·tank
rocket launcher in the a part·
ment or a Camp Pendleton
Marine.
Laguna Beach detective Mark
Everton was condu cting a
burglary investigation in a San
Clemente apartment complex
earlier this week when he al·
legedly spotted Cpl. Jerome M.
Iver son. 21. on his balcony.
swinging a pair or nunchukas. a
martial arts weapon somewhat
like a holn
Everton contacte d San
Clemente officers. and when
lhev entered the apartment at
Meeting Slated
111 ·Alameda Lane. they al le.zed· ly found the somewhat more
deadly rocket launcher inside.
The 66 millimeter weapon.
used to atop tanks. operates
somewhat like a bazooka. The
newer models are light in weight
and disposable. After their one
projectile is fired. they are dis·
carded.
Iverson was arrested and
trans ported to Orange County
Jail where has bail was set at
$25,000.
The Marine. atla<-'hed to the
First Marine Div1s1on at Camp
Pendleton. faces charges of
possession of a deadly weapon
and p()SSession of a destructive
device.
,.,.w,.._..
Tax i Hearing
Splits Council
Readg for S a nta
An hour-long argument over a
proposed shared ride taxi
service for older Lagunans
ended in a split vole Tuesday. forcing the mayor to call a
special meeting on the con·
troversy for tonight at 7 o'clock.
Rick Stellwagen of Trevose, Pa .• cleans soot out of a
c himney just outside Lititz in preparation for Santa
Claus, who lends a hand. Actually Santa is fellow sweep
John Sutton, who donned the red suit for the holiday
season.
State Funds Sought
For Doheny Acres
Laguna Beach, which operates
its own transit system. is re·
quired by the Southern
California AsS-OCiation or Gov·
ernments lo develop a five-year
financial plan.
But a shared ride taxi system
proposed Ul the program races
opposition from at least two or
the Laguna council members.
And, since Councilman Kelly
Boyd was mi ssing rrom
Tuesday's meeting. a stalemate
prompted Ma yo r Jack
Orange County officials said
today they are trying lo gel state
money to pay for part or the de·
velopment or the newly acquired
7 .5 acre beach next to Doheny
State Beach .
County s upervis ors voted
Wednesday to spend $2.5 million
to buy the strand that is located
just south of the state beach.
About $313,000 of the purchase
price is coming from a federal
grant.
Laguna Niguel
Cyclist Injured
An tS.y~ar·old Laguna Niguel
boy escaped serious injury
Wednesday evening when his
motorcycle struck an eight.foot
piece ol Umber on Crown Valley
Parkway, hurling the youth to the
pavement.
Breu Jackson was treated and
released from Mission Com·
munity Hotpital for a broke~
wri1t followlnl the 6.30 p.m. ac·
cldenl near Chaparoea Orlve In
,l!.aguna Nlauet.
Bob Fisher, of the county's
Environmental Management
Agency. said that development
of day use facilities at the beach
is golnf to depend on the
availability of st.ate fwids.
He saJd construction of a 143·
s pace p1.-king lot. showers,
restroo'!ns a nd lifeguard
facilities wtll cost about $300,000.
C.Ontinue
He aaJd county officials are
applying for a state grant to pay
a portion of that cost and are lt had been a long and
also negotl1Ung with stale parks grueling year for the
officlala to share development Newport Beach City Coun-
costa of the facilities that could ell. and their last agenda
be common to both the state and or 1978 was a heavy one .
county be•ch. Rellef was evident
He said a date hasn't been amon g tbt: members
established for the construction Wednesda night as they
of those racllllies. •rreed to continue sever1l
The p-rty, the former slte o the thornier issues until • .,,.-January. of a Spanish·style mansion built But that didn't seem to
in the 1920I by oil magn1te be quite enough ror Coun·
Edward L. Doheny Jr. It was cllwom1n Jackie Heather •
later 1 private club. who looked up wearUy 11
A portion of the property wu the meeting ended and
ori1in11ly identified for state someone called out,
·purch11e. but that plan WIS • "MerryChrtstmas."
abandoned ln 1972 and the coun· • · t move we continue
ty h11 been ln netotl1tk>n1 since Christmas untll Jan. 8."
then with lhe previous owner Mrs. Heather 1Sald.
C&ee FUND8, Pa1e .U> 1· ·-=···~-·-.......... ~. " -'· _ .......... "' ..... , •• .,..... • ..... ~
McDowell to call for the special
meeling.
The shared ride concept pro-
vides senior citizens and han·
dica pped Lagunans cut-rate
rares for .taxi service within the
city.
Eligible riders would pick up
coupons at City Hall for a re·
duced cost. and be able to get
around the city for less money.
The program was approved by
the former City Council. and
first year cost to the city would
be nothing. If the first "dem·
onstration" year is proved
successful. the city would be
committed to picking up the tab
for the following years. eslimal·
ed to be at leut S7.500 per year:
It waa the commitment for the
following years lhat prompted
Mayor McDowell and Coun·
cllrnan Howard Dawson to op· pose the project. with Dawson
terming the p~al "pure and
simple subsidy.·
Both men cited budget con· straints under Proposition 13.
and the uncertainty of bow much
the city would be picklna up an·
nually in costs ol the shared rtde
program .
But Councilman Wayne B8'lln
said the need for transportaUon
for senior citizens 1urpuses the
cost. • "This town has not come close
to tapping the till for what it
owes the senior citizens," he
Slid .
Councilwomen S.Uy Bellen.ae
a1reed.
(8eeTUJ, P1•e .U>
More Cove r age
Other south Oran1l' Count)'
cover'aae appears todl)' on Page
" A9A.
•
... ~··'-·........, .... ._, ."""'° 'l · •~11a.r,1JWUft'hlM wvt:rse nnplfc\ .. r\n'•t « .acuuiLoe uect J'llU.· ~rfPl.vt"'-"'•"'*-.•'" .
•
MARION. 1'1 . <APl -A ~
woman cl&mini.c to be rigged
with dynamite. tujacked a Trans
World Airlines jet wilh 87 people
aboard today. trying to force the
release or a prison mmate. the
Federal Aviation Adm1n1strahon
said.
The woman. who said she had
strapp ed three s ticks of
dynamite to her body. rorced the
pilot to land at W1lhamson Coun·
ty Airport an Marion. th€! f"AA
said.
Flight 541 from Lou1sv1lle to
~aosas City wall h1Jacked short·
ly after a scheduled stop in St.
Lou is . When 1t I anded in southern Illinois a short time
later. an FBI spokesman said
agents al the airport were
negotiating wtth tht.• woman
State pohce said the woman
was demanding the releast• of in-
mate Garrell Brock Trapnell.
who is on tnal today with two
other inmates Ul nearby Benton
for allegedly taking part in a
prison escape las t M.iy dunng
which a woman was killed
During the escape. Barblira A
Oswald of St Louis huacked a
helicopter and rorred lht> pilot at
gunpomt to fly to th(' federal
penitentiary al Marion The pilot
wrestled the ~un and Mr!>
Oswald wa.c; shot to death
Trapnell was to act as his own
attorney before a L: S D1stncl
Court JUI'}'
A TWA spokesman an Chicago
said tht-DC 9 rarr1ed 83
passenger.; and a <-'rew of four.
··They're doing what the hi·
jacker 1s tellin~ them to do,"
said John Leyden, an t'AA
spokesman m Washingtor .
Joe Frets. an f"AA spokesman
in Kansas City. said the Jetliner
was hijacked on its approach to
Kansas City lnternat1onal
Airport.
Coast
Weathe r
Sunny and a little
warmer Ft1day with highs
60 to 6S Lows tonight 32 to
40
I NSIDE T ODA 't'
CattrtT1 m t~ area wtll
do mort' than prepare the
mt'n&J -they'll dt'corate,
prorndt' en1erta1nm~t and
coa1umed Hnnng people and
even clean 11p tht' meH See
Featamng, Poot Cl
ladex
.......... ---...
,
,,.
s
ti
d
>r .ls r.
{!
on
ch·
ws
,st·
ish
Jn·
the
Jon
tel·
:Ion own
iO \s
1a \' (\cal
agy.
• ad·
state
tation
lonn
' Al DAILY P!L.OT LIBC lbu!JC2p. Rtctmtttf 2!. 1111
Utt'le Ba•age
ConntJ . .
• Well m Cold
By JDaV Cl.A H
OI • a.ii. ,,.._."'"
"Oraft(C!' C',ounty reaJly luC'ked
o ut." ••ld aarlc ullure spokeamu Way,.. Ap l th)
moralna as wb"t LI expected to
bl' the 1 t chUt or 19111 mo~
t'l\&t want
Density t
lnNewpon
Proje ts
By JAC1DE HYMA
Ot , .. °"''• -~, ...
Tht' Nl'-..iport Bt>ach Ctty t.:oun
cit cafsx'<i u ln\06t • yur and a
h1t1' <> debutti Wednesday by ap·
provang acneral plan amt'n<I m~ta that ~lU cul dtin.alty on
largo und veloped site. in the ci
ty by as much as ~ percent.
· The dt"c.'hnon ut the council 'tt
last meeting of 1VT8 wa£. greeted ~ith mlltt"d rcaNlons from a
!>'pokesman for the Jrvute Co •
which owns most of the parcels
urrectl>d
The land company's Robert
Shelton told the coun cil that.
while the slashed densities seem
• arbitrary, after more than a
year or uncertainty, "we'r e
beginning to wonder if maybe
arbitrariness 1s better than in·
• decision."
• The cuts were approved 5-2.
• with Mayor Paul Ryckoff and
Councilman Donald Strauss op·
•• posing. Both s aid they wanted
the council to take more time to
• look at each individual property
• in order to forest.all the possibili-
ty uf having lo make add.itiooaJ
changes in the near future.
However. Councilwoman
Jackie Heather apparently
-s poke for the majority when she
s aid. ''This is broad brush, but it
at least gives us some planning
base "
The city's general plan sets
forth permitted uses on various
lund areas. While a general plan
designation is less specific than
zoning, t,tie latter must be com-
patible with the general plan
designation.
Commercial developments af.
fected by Wednesday's decision
a re Newport Center, Castaways,
Bayview Landing, San Diego
Creek Sites and Creek Sites and
MacArthur I Jamboree Sites.
Fro11t Page Al
PREACHER.
red light to get to the park, and
the conversation took place on
the boardwalk well away from
Abernathy's group.
.. Rev. Abe rnathy le ft his
group and approached the of-
fi cers and the transient to ask
what was goi ng on," Purcell
said, adding the group was more
than 100 feet away.
Councilwoman Sally Betlerue
asked if a permit is needed for
religious services, adding, '·I'd
hate to see the services stopped
because of a permit. He's provid-
ing a service that is needed in
Laguna Beach."
Councilmen directed City At-
torney George Logan to re-
search the fee schedule and de-
termine whether the c ity can
waive such a fee for Abernathy's
services
Logan said he would also re-
:.e a rch whethe r a permit is
cons t1lut1on a t ror religious
services."
Me anwhile, Capt. Purcell
said s uch lb 1nc1dent as oc-
curred two weeks ago Is unlikely
to happen again.
"We realize Abernathy has a
basic right to preach. and my
personal belief is that he is
earnest in what he is trying to
do
"He's offering guidance to the
transients," Purcell said .
ORANGE COAST USC
DAILY PILOT
"" Or..-.oir (N\I ().t,1, P1tot •11ft w~h ''<om °'""""' '"'• ~ Pt"~ ., OW()f1\1Wn D¥ ,,,. o...,..
C""'' Pvbh~C.~w S-~.tt•"'Ctt•'«'"t•••
puOll\Md ~f' ttw~ • f10..y fOt (°'I* ""*'• NfJ"#POt1 .. .t(Pt ~1•f'IO't0ft e,.,.,,. '°"""
l•tll'IV•fl•,.lrYtftf' l~9--M:ft'$ovtft(M'\t A
.1ftqlfl t~~~ f'dtlte:W" I\ ~l\f'IPG fMttWt'CMf\ Aftd
~ .. .,, .,.,..,...""..,..°'*''"'"'pt~,, ... no w•\tRA;~f'Nt CoU•llM>w C•lt•Ot~•••Jt,. .. _ .. _ ..... ,_ . ..,,,_,_
J•O II, CiortoT Y10 ll>ttl<IOfll •MGo_ol__.. ,.,._ .. 1(-
CdtlO<
~~t..'1t
o. ...... ~ ........ , .....
'"'"''""' l'MMt•,,.c-,
Telel*On• (114)MM»I
CtaUffl9d Advetttelftl ~
&..eun• leech AH ~m: Telel*One 4'6-MM
'•-SMt1e-4IMIOO
~oe ::. °'..:r: .. '1::'.!!..~~:s.r r::f,,, ., ~·n•w~fth Mr•l" "'•Y ~ ftjtfHIKM Wlt-1 \-lal ,., ... 11\lff ';'I U••rlf'll-
'" .... !Ito M\I ... H I• ott (M'la Mt ..
CA•ll••fll• 1vl>Htllt .,. "' <•"''' ~) M ::.::w:, ~~!' .......... , ""'' ,..,,
"We IOl eome cold weather
but vt9r)' llUle d1m11e rom·
pared to what they had ln Sao
Dl 10 Cdunly and central
C11iforDl1 , '' lM "'1u~ 1.'0WI~ 11rltull~ comml N r aaJd lhl~ monuna • ~ob Ann y of tht' Avocado Gro•~ra Council tn Jo'al,lbtook,
Ju1t aouth er( Oranao County. 11.W
about 2:5 ptn:ent ol , n Dit' o
County•s 300-mllhoC'l·pound crop
ltkely wlU bf' lolll
And a(nc:uJturaJ e11~1U trom
Fr 1no to lho Nelllnn bard
rt-port<'d preliminary •Umat
lnd1ulc-that from 11 lo .0 per <'eat of I.he caln.w fruit now oo tr~ bu bet.'fl froet dam111ed.
Avocado And cllt'U •row In
Orana• County fired up orchard
beatus and turned on th lr wmd
m .. rhl,..... dunna midweek, but
lt>mperaturc ne vf!r dropped
~tow 32 dear~. Apl)t'J 11111d lhl6
morning And u five day warm-
tng trend l. pred1cted, be noted
"Wand kei.>l Oran.ae Count1 out of trouble,' Ap~I suld or the
minor fro1t this week
He said the cold snap of~. 6-8
wab mor~ 11tivere, with t m-
peratures dipping anto the
mid·20ll. Even so, he au.id, little
damage was done to crops othur
than to tomatoes that had not been
harvusted then.
Fred Keller, agriculture vice
preside nt for frvlne Ranch
which is the county's largest
citrus and avocado grower, said
this morning that some orange.
lemon and grapefruit trees suf
fered damage Tuesday and
Wednesday and there was o Uttle
fruit loss.
.. But it's not major at this
time," Keller added.
"We're sweating out January
now because it's predicted lo be
fairly cold, colder than normal."
Freezing weather in late
January not onl y would
create citrus and avocado
problems. he said. but could badly
damage blooming strawberry
plants.
Quote Wrong
On Lifeguards
Pact Story
An ~rror in a story Wednesday
about two Lagun a Beach
lifeguards winning a contract to
guard several Orange County
beaches, completely chan&CO
the meaning of a quote by San
Clemente City Manager Gerald
Weeks.
His city and Laguna Beach
los t out to a ne wly fo rmed
private lifeguard service in bids
before county Supervisors.
Weeks said his city would suf.
fer some losses as a result of
losing the contract with the
county. but added. ''if the county
gets an adequ ate level of
service." from the new firm it
would be rine with him. The
story errneously said "inade-
quate."
The Daily Pilot regrets lhe er-
ror.
From Page A I
FUNDS ...
and the current owner. the Unit-
ed California Bank.
County officials originally
wanted lo buy about half the
parcel, but the bank took legal
action claiming such a move
would prevent development of
the remaining parcel.
Wedne s da y's vot e b y
s upervisors marked the setUe-
ment or that suit when the ba.nk
agreed to lower its selling price
by more than $1 million in ex·
change for \he county 's
purchase of the entire site.
According to a spokesman for
lhe county counsel, the purchase
will be recorded in mid-January.
Toilet Water
Douses Flame
.'\ Corona del Mar home de·
veloped an impromptu sprinkler
system Wednesday when a fire
in a bathroom was tebasket
cracked lhe toilet, which poured
water onto the blaze and ex-
tinguished it, New&>ort Beach
firemen said.
They said the blaze began
about 8:15 p.m. in the home or
Roberta TriPC>ll, 404 Iris Ave.,
when some klnd of hot object ap-p~rently kindled a fire in the
second-floo r bathroom
waalebaaket.
Man'8 BOdy Found
BAKER CAP) -The bullet·
riddled body or a 30.year-old
salesman has been found by San
Bernardino County sheriff's
deputies In his car oft Interstate lS
near the Nevad• border. Deputies
said the man, identified as Wylie
Boyd Hall ot Vernal, Utah, wu
found Wednesday lyln1 fac.e down
lo the backorh!acar with multiple
gunshot wounda ln hia head and chest.
\ ~;:.,_=.,•~ ,...._ • J inear puuu"' .,.. .. , • .. .... -
\...,_ / municipally owneo saloon
Ubanon
Attacks ~
SPJ1for Spirit
Israelis
TEL AVIV, Is rael (AP> -
GuerrtlJu In eouthcm Lebanon
fired a volley of Katyus ha
rocket.I lnt-0 t.he Iaraell frontier
Lown of KJryat Shmooa today, klllin~ one man and wounctuii
1Jtwen pe.nona in a spiralina e)'C·
for-an.eye light between the
Paleatiruans and Israel.
The PaleRtlne Liberation
Organiiataon In B~lrut said the
town was rocketed In retaUatJon
ror Israeli air strikes on Pal-
estinian camps 12 hours earllel'.
Arter the four or five rockets
sla mmed Into Kiryat Shmoaa in
the northern Galilee panhandle.
Israeli artillery opened fire on
Paleatlnhu1 positions acr05S the
border. the military command said an Tel Aviv.
The army said five children in
Klryat Shmona were treated for
1hock after being e,vacuated
from a building hit by one or the
Soviet-designed rockets.
Vu l Hemsley Oefl) of San Clemente gets
<.an early Christmas dinner serving from
Y asko Garno at annual event for city's
senior citizens Wednesday. About 200 resi·
dents turned out for hot turkey and all the
trimmings at the San Clemente Communi-
ty Cenler.
.. Usu a lly you can h ear
Katyushas," said one resident,
"but this momine I didn't bear a nything, just a massive ex-
plosion and then I was covered
with dust. I took the children out
to an underground shelter."
Home for Christmas? The woman, Mrs. Sima Ben-
Da v 1d. lives next door to a
second-noor apartment that was
demolished .
The military said the rocket
attack was the rirst across the
Lebanese border since June,
when Israel withdrew an in-
vasion force from southern
Lebanon after a 90-day sweep to
drive Palestinian guerrillas
from the frontier. ,
Shorecliffs Residents Can't Bet on It
Se veral res idents in the
Shorecliffs Mobile Country Club
tn San Clemente don't know
whether they will be home for
Christmas.
Christmas lights adorn many
of the carports along Mir a
Adel ante. But several of the cars
parked under the lights are
loaded with clothing and other
personal belongings: They're
ready for a quick getaway.
The reason ? a massive
landslide opened a 60-foot deep
chasm Monday along the backs
of their homes where they over-
look the Estrella Golf Course.
1-'our families have been told
* * * From Page Al
DANGER •••
massive slide like the Oct. 2
slide in Laguna Beach.
And at city hall, dirterences or
opinion are surfacing among
San Clemente city officials as to
possible implications of recent
landslides.
De velopers of nearly S.000
acres on three San Clemente
ranches are cWTenUy request-
ing variances to lbe city's
h ills ide grading ordina nce.
which prohibits development on
slopes with more than a 30 per-
cent grade.
Co unc ilwoman Donna
Wilk inson s&d Wednesday that
recent slope failures would not
influence h er in dec iding
whether lo approve developers'
requests ror variances to the
grading ordinance.
Mrs. Wilkinson said an ancient
land slide apparenUy took place
on the Shorecliffs property
thousands of years ago, but the
mobile home park was approved
just 15 years ago by city of-
fl c i als. But another c oun -
cilmember had a different
opinion. 1
"That's exactly why such
projects should not be approved,"
said Councilman Howard
MusheU. "We know we are deal-
ing with WlStable land. and Coun-
cilwoman (Myrtis) Wagner and I
hav e been voting agains t
variances to the hillside grading
ordinance for this very reason.··
Former San Clemente plan·
n ing commissioner Clifford
Gellatly, who recently prepared
a slide presentation on the city's
slide problems, said he believes
the city is heading for "big trou-
ble."
On the planning commission,
Gellatly s pecialized in re -
searching potential landslide
problems on new ranchland de·
velopments. When he was not re-
appointed lo the commission last
spring, he prepared a slide pre-
sentation for the City Council,
s howing existing landslide
problems In the city. He urged the
Ci ty Council lo adhere to the
hillside grad.iDg ordinance.
"Someday a judge is going lo
say that the city fa11ed to an-
licipa{e slide problems connect-
ed with massive hillside grad-
ing, even in the race of evidence
of such problem•." said Gellat-
ly. "When that happens, the city
l s g()ing to face certain
liability."
Gellatly said he would like lo
see the city lake a more active
role In trying to protect Its
citizens. He suggested that a
1eolog1st be hired lo make in·
dependent 1urvey1 of sllde·prone
areas.
"A geologist hired by a land-
owner 11 l<?inl to have a bias." he
said.
"Aa it ii.'' said Gell1tly. "the
city la ahting back on its
haunchee, while the citizens are
1ett1n1 the shaft. This Is an on-
10101 problem that aoes beyond
the Sboreclltr1 slide. It'a a aitua·
lion whlcb deservee the alteo·
Uon or everyone ln the city."
by the management that their
homes are in danger and should
be moved. Others wonder
whether their homes might be next.
"We are playing at both
ways," says Marianne Bates or
92 Mira Adelante. who has been
told s he and her s husband
should find another place for
their borne or four years.
"Some of our neighbors are
staying wit.h friends or in motels
as long as there is a possibility
of danger," she said. "We're
staying in our home. but at lbe
same time, we have our car
packed and parked in a sale
spot , so we can get out quickly If
we need to."
Monday's landslide appeared
to come as a great blow lo the
community, compnsed largely
or retired people.
"I always felt so safe here,"
s aid one woman, who was visit-
ing the slide area rrom her
mobile home farther back in lhe
park. "I could walk the streets
a lone at 10 o'clock at night
without fear. And now this hap-T M R h pens." WO en 0 "We thought the only thing we
Viejo Market
A clerk was hit over the head
with a bottle as two men
described as in their 20s held up
a Mission Viejo all-night con-
venience market early today, a
sheriff's officer said.
The two men Oed the scene or
the robbery at 23012 Los Alisos
Blvd. with aboutStOOincash. A sherifrs spokesman said a
buck knife was used in the
holdup and one or the suspects
struek a clerk with a bottle in
the 3:50 a.m. incident.
f'ro• Page A I
TAXI •..
had to worry about was an oc
casionaJ golf ball." said Mrs
Bates' husband, Al. "Sometimes
a golfer down below would slicft
a ba ll up here from the 15th
fairway. My neighbor had a baJI
come through his window and
I've picked up four baJls outside
our plaee."
But now his wife moves
around their comfortable home,
preparing as best she can for the
eventuality that it may go over
the cliff created by Monday's
la nds lide. Furniture is rear-
ranged, a valuable antique plat-
ter carefully tucked into the
cushions of an armchair.
Responsibility for the slope
failure which has disrupted the
lives or Shorecli!fs residents has
been attributed by geologist
Adoption or the five-year plan, Ja.ck Stickel to water s aturated
with or without the shared ride soil, perh~ps cause:<f by above
proposal, is overdue. Municipal normal rainfall during the past
Services Director Terry Brandt µar .
warned council members. ..,....,,.. A few doors from the Bates
So they'll meet again in coun-home, a license plate frame on a
cil chambers tonight -then parked car reads. "San
hope with fi ve members -to Clemente -world's greatest
make a decision on the program. weather."
Palestinian sources in Beirut
said the Israeli air attack at sun-
down Wednesdav killed or wounded as many as 27 people.
lsraeh military officials said the
raid was ordered m reprisal for a
s tring of Palestinian bombings m
Is rael that have killed four
civilians and wounded 70 since
Nov 1.
The Israelis also reported
three persons slightly hurt in a
uenade at.tack in the Old City of
Jerus alem arter n ightfall
Wednesday. It was the second
bombmgoftheday in the Holy Ci -
t y. An carlterblast in the doorway
of an Old City restaurant sligh!.!.Y
wound<.'d s1 x J>ersons.
Egypt's tore1gn Ministry de
nounced the Israeli attacks as
.. a threat to the current Egyp.
tian-Jsraeli peace process."
Laguna Thief
Gets Jewelry
A Laguna Beach man r e
turned home and found more
than $4,500 i n jewelry and
valuables missing, police said
today .
William Robb. 281 Ledroit
St., told police he left home for
about an hour Wednesday night.
returning to discover thieves
had slipped a lock on the back
door and forced open an inn~r
door.
Missing was jewelry valued at
more than SJ,000 and television
~ets, radio and stereo equip.
m ent. Total loss was set at $4,595.
Wrap Up A During Our
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JIM RICHARDS (LEFT), TOM ANDERSON PREPARE FOR TAHITI CRUISE
Epic Voyege In O•nJ1h folk Bo•t AurOf• Wiii T•k• Almoat Two Ye•ra to Complete
Oeean Journey Gift
Dana Point Man Plots 2-year Voyage
By WILUAM HODGE
Jim klchards' Cbnstmas gltl
lo himself will take years to en.
JOY and an ocean to contain.
That's because lhe 23-year-old
Dana Point man and twi ship-
mate Tom Anderson are plotting
a two year trip down to Mexico
and across the Pacific in
Richards' 25-foot &aiJboat.
They're leaving Saturday.
"I've been looking forward to
this for a long time." Richards
said Wednesday as he looked up
from his boat. "Aurora,"
moored at Dana Point Harbor.
"I bad a friend I met here in
the harbor that sailed to Hawaii
two times in a boat like the ooe
I've got," he continued. "It
sounded like a ereat way to
spend two years."
Richards' 25-fooler is a Danish
Folk boat, so named because the
makers built it using elements of
several plans submitted to boat
builders after World War 11 to
get the industry goine again.
"They didn't like any or the
plans. so they combined them lo
build this boat," Richards ex ·
plains. "They wanted something
rugged and seaworthy.''
Richards odyssey toward the
ocean journey began several
years ago when be and his
brother decided Lo purchase a
sailing vessel. They found the
Aurora in a Long Beach
shipyard.
'"We didn't know anything
about boats when we first got
her but we lucked out and got a
good solid boat." he recalled.
"When we round her. I just fell
in love with her."
At first, Richards was just a
part-time sailor, but as hts ex
perience grew, .he came to love
sailing.
Then. he read a magazine arti·
cle about a 57-year-oJd
grandmother who decided to sail
around the world alone in a boat
similar to tus.
"If a grandmother can do it
then I've got Lo do at ," he said.
"It's a challenge •·
Richards and Anderson, 24, of
Westminster. plan to sail lo
Mexico's Sea of Cortes before
beginning the long voyage
across the Pacific toward Tahil.l
and French Polynesia.
"We're going to spend about
two months in Mexican waters
before we sail across," Richards
said. "We want to pick up some
more supplies in Mexico like
fresh fruit-coconuts and
mangos.
"We want to talce advantage
of the warm weather. lobsters,
tequilla and senoritas."
The two men have been work-
ing on the boat. close to two
years.
"I didn't realize it would take
so long to get the boat ready,"
Richards admitted. "For the last
two years I've been putting
money into it and getting it fixed.
"I've done everything but replace the keel bolts.'·
Anderson , seemingly, the
quieter of the two, worked for
two years on a freighter out of
San Diego. An electronics
technician, Anderson worked on
ul'dersea closed circuit cameras
for the freighter operators.
Richards characterizes An·
derson as a calm, laid back
fellow .
"He used to have two cars but
he didn't like driving, so he
hitchhiked a lot," Richards ex-
plained. "You've got to take it
as It comes. you can't get
frustrated going out in the ocean
in a s mall boat.
"Tom's really casual."
The two plan to visit several
islands once they reach the
South Pacific in the spring.
"French Polynesia has some
islands between nine degrees
and 11 degrees south of the
Equator that are supposed to
be the most beautiful islands in
the world." Richards said.
"It's JUSl a tropical paradise,
I'm told."
When pressed on the exact
duration of the trip, Rich~
hedged.
"We're planning on staying
around the islands for at least
six months," he said. "But
that's up in the air-we might
just like it and decide to stay
there."
Spill Threatens
Caribbean Beach ·
SAN JUAN. Puerto Rico (P)
-A barge oil spill, already af.
feeling beaches along Puerto
Rico 's northwes t coast,
threatens some of the island's
best tourist areas, a U.S. Coast
Guard spokesman said today.
About 6,000 barrels of heavy
"Bunker C" fuel spilled in rough
seas Wednesday after a Sun Oil
Co. barge suffered structural damages. It was en route to San
Juan from the refinery in
Yabucoa on the southeast coast.
A U.S. Coast Guard National
Strike Force team, based at Bay
Saint Louis, Miss .• arrived here
Wednesday night to supervise
the cleanup operations which
have been hampered by the
rough Atlantic waters.
Oil slicks threatened Luquillo
Beach. the largest beach in
Puerto Rico which is considered
one of the finest beaches in the
Caribbean.
The resort areas of l sleta
Marina and Pajardo. where the
Conquistador Hotel is located,
rerortedly bad already been hit.
Al are located about 30 miles
east of San Juan.
Lesbian Loses Custody
DENVER (AP> -A judge
who denied a 36-year-old woman
custody or her two children says
his decision was not affected by
the mother's lesbianism .
Denver District Court Judge
Roger Cisneros said Wednesday
that it was in the best interest or
Audrey Lynn Stover. 8, and her
brother, Jesse, 6, "to be with
their father." Harold Stover, 41.
A report by a Children's
Hospital investigative team in·
dicaled, "Kathy (Kathryn
Slover> has needs that interfere
wilh her abilities to cope as a
mother." Cisneros said .
"The court has not considered
the lesbianism on the part of the
mother as central lo its de·
cision." the judge said.
Jn a last-ditch effort to rebut
testimony ch111lenging her
qualities as a mother. Mrs.
Stover took the stand Wednes-
day.
"What I've rebelled against is
the housewife. homebound,
traditional view or women. . ..
I am the mother and I want to
be the mother," she said.
"I Uke my children. I think
they're neat little kids," Mrs.
Stover told the court. "I have
not been an untouching, unfeel·
log, uncaring person."
Asked if her lesbianism affect·
ed her children, Mrs. Stover
replied, "It affects the lives or
all of us."
Asked tr she wanted her
children to be homosexuals, sbe
sa1d she wanted them "to have a
free choice of who they want to
be as adults."
After the decision, tbe Stovers
shook bands and huJKed, then
Mrs . Stover broke into tean.
She and ber lover, Ann
Adams, both nurses; left with
AP..,..,....
KATHRYN STOVER CONSOLED BY LESBIAN LOVER
Father Granted Cu1tody of Two Chlldren
their attorney, Ruth Buechler.
Mrs. Stover refused to talk with
report.ers .
Ms. Adams, who moved In
with Mrs. Stover ofter the
separaticln, said, "What Is there
to say? We love the children and
wlab they could be with us. We'll
just have to gel by
"This ls t.he best Christmas
present t ever got,·· Stover said
with a grin after lhe decision.
The children had lived with
their mother since the Stovers.
married In August, 1965,
aeparated lut March.
their pub~ IJ\lo•e\ •u" ..
munlclpally owned saloon
•
Th!J!Jday. Oe~mbor 21 , 1978 s QAIL'f' PILOT tt3 .
-oliee (;ritieized
Anaheim Rapped in Park Flareup Case
AlthOUih lt said "there ls no
clear evTdence of Indictable of.
fenaes," the Orange County
Grand Jury gave Anaheim's
police a slap on the wrist Thurs·
day for their handling Of the
People'• Park Incident rut sum·
mer. In a letter to city manager
William Hopkins. the grand jury
said:
"There waa some evidence to
1uege1t that undue force was
u11ed by some Anaheim police of. flcen in \answer to a situatioo
caused b.ll the public who acted
out their anger and frustration by throwing rocks and bottles."
The jury went on to make a
series of recommendations re·
lated to police handling of situa· lions similar to tbe People's
Park confrontation last July 30.
At that time. a group of resi·
dents alleged that police called to the park turned on those who
sought their aid and, in so doing,
ignited an ugly disturbance.
Man Awarded
life Term
For Murder
A Warren. Ohio man was sen·
tenced to life in prison Wednes-
day after bis conviction in
Orange County Superior Court
for the 1973 murder of a Midway City youth.
John B. Tidwell. 30, whose ef. forts to obtain a new trial were
rejected by Superior Court
Judge Walter Charamza, was
convicted or first·degree murder in October alter a six-week trial.
He will be eligible for parole in
1984.
Evidence during the trial
showed that Tidwell shot Harold
Rinehart. 18, on Dec. 13, 1973,
then dumped his body on a lone-
ly road in Silverado Canyon in eastern Orange County.
Prosecutor Paul Meyer
claimed Rinehart was killed for his share or a $100,000 burglary
in Port Orford, Ore.. a week
earlier.
Fire Kills 2 Boys
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two
small boys have died in a rire at their Willowbrook area home
alter their 17-year-old babysitter
left them unattended while she
took her sick child to the
hospital. sherifrs officers said.
Firefighters found the bodies of
Ismael Pacheco, 3. and bis 4-
year-old brother Leopoldo in a bedroom of the house du.ring
Wednesday's blaze.
In lt.s letter to Hopklns, the
grand jury referred to the inci·
dent •• "a clear cut case of bad communication between cititens
and thole persona hired to pro-
tect and serve." While the jury's sting was
directed chiefi"y at the police, it
reminded those cltiaens who
were involved In the park fracas
that they too "must share in the
blame for the melee."
When making recommenda-
tions for averting similar inci· dents, the grand jury recom-
mended:
-Continual fsychological
evaluation of al officers as a
means "to give adequate warn-
tne when an officer bu become
so overwhelmed by his job as to
render him a danger to the peo-ple he is sworn to protect and to
himself."
-Police involved in public
confrontations have their names
and badge numbers in clear view, a recommendation aimed
at making il possible to Identify
officers who might be involved
in subsequent allegatlons.
-PoUce can carry a number
imprinted in a contrasting color
with letters at least four inches high In plain view:
The grand jury's letter to the
Anaheim city manager carries no other weight than that at-
tached to it by the public and the
concerned city officials.
&Pwi.._..
Behind the Times
An English gentleman in a bowler hat reads the 193·
year -old institution known as the London Times on Nov.
30. That was the last edition before the Times suspended
publication amid a labor dispute. No one expects it to
reappear soon. <Story Page A9>.
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Gi,ve Up
In India
,_jF-K-Plot-1-lint~d
NEW DEUO, lodia <AP>
,._o YOWi air bl)acktts wbo d
mended the releue ol fonna Prime Mln.later lndlra Oandhl
from Jail aurreoderN today
after almost all tbetr 130
boalq• Oed out the J~ 1 rurni
Tbe bijldt'rs' weapom turned
OUl to be a lo)' P4Jlol and I red
cricket ball.
• U. GANDRI remalM'd In
jaU, and other olfldw ol ~r In
dlra ~ Party cbarct'd the
hlJeeklna wu • plot to dtatrf'(JJt the party
The luJM'kttS ~tt"e tahn to
Lucknow. 2l&O mil~ aoutheut ot
New Delhi Orrtda.l.a said Lbey
would be allowed to bold a oews
coolereace. lbua meet.in& ooe Ot tb~r ~mand&.
No OM was hurt ln the !Ml
de1>t Wfdne&d.ty. At leaat OM
American was abo&rd the plane.
TUE IUJA UNG Wt'dne.day
was lbe moet unusual ~cur·
rence in a day of violence
touched off by a parliamentary
vote Tuesday that ousted Mrs.
Gandhi from the seat in the
lower house she woo tut moolb
and sent her to jaU ror lbe rest of
the current session of Parlia-
ment, scheduled to end Friday.
F1iee on P r o tiftfio11
Andrew Zimmer, 18, convicted of setting a fire that
killed 42 people at the Maury County, Tenn .• jail, has
won probation and been allowed to return to his home in
Superior. Wis. In a deal worked out in advance by
lawyers, his sentences ln the arson and deaths were sus-
pended. Judge Jerry Scott said he had been punished
enough.
•
Evidence of Fourth Shot R epo rted
ORA.ND RAPfDS. Mich. (AP)
-New evidence ln the In·
veatt1aUon of the KeMedy a.s·
sassioaUon reportedly shows
one •bot was fired from the area
ol a 1rauy knoll, ln additJoo to
Ute three fired from the Texa1
School Book ()epolltory. dlsput·
lng lbe tooe &Ausln conclusion
of the Warren Comrniuioo.
The evidence raises the
posalblllty of a conspiracy lo
Kennedy'• uaaaalnaUoo. reject·
ed by the Warren Comimiuloo.
THE COIUll88ION found Lee
Harvey Oswald acted alone ln
killing the president and lhat on-
ly three shots were fired, all
from the Book Depository.
The new acoustical evidence,
two members of the House as·
sassinations panel said Wednes·
day. shows "beyond a reas0oa-
ble doub(" that four shots -
from two directions -rang out
in Dallas lS years ago.
The Washington Post, In
today'!' late editions, quoted an
unidentified committee souree
as saying;
"THE WARREN Commission
blew it. The commission said
there was DO sclenlilic evidence
or more than one gunman
and tberef ore there was oo COO·
splracy.
"We've est.ablithcd lbat there
w11 a consplracy. If we can't
identity the second gunman,
that's because It'• lS years later.
I don't kbow wJlat you do about
lhat now," the source said.
Rep. Harold Sawyer. R-Mlcb,
said the acouatlcal experts.
tesUfylng before a private com-
m lttee seesion Monday, "con·
eluded that there were four
ahot... tbe third of which was
fired from the grassy knoll."
THE GRASSY KNOLL area
borders the route followed by
the Kennedy motorcade In 1963.
and has long been the subject or
unsubstantiated reports as the
source of gunfire and the hiding
place or the second assassin.
Rep. Christopher Dodd, D·
Conn .• who confirmed Sawyer's
disclosure. said the evidence
raises serious questions about a
second gwll'Dan. But he said the
committee had not been able to
conclude from other evidence
that a second assassin was in·
volved.
Despite the new acoustical
study, Sawyer said there 1s no
other physical ev1dence support·
ing the four-shot theory.
SA WYER SAID the eicperts
concludtid there was a 95 per·
cent chance that four shots were
fired at the Kennedy motorcade
Nov 22, 1.963.
Sawyer sald he could not re·
member the names or the ex-
pert&.
"I don't know or any reason
not to accep( It," Sawyer said
about the new evidence. He said
the dlscl06ure "leaves me en-
tirely up in the air" about Ken·
nedy's assassln.
IN WASMNGTON, a commit
tee spokesman and officials in
the office or Rep. Louis Stokes.
D-Ohio, assasslnationa commit·
tee chairman, refused comment
on the disclosures.
But a knowledgeable source
said· "I don't think Mr. Sawyer
would go on radio and he."
Dederich
&arrested
In Arizona
More than 18,000 supporters of
the former prime minister were
reported arrested, many volun-
tarily to embarrass the govern·
ment, and five persons were re-
ported killed.
$1.1 Mi11ion m Gold Missing
LAKE HAVASU CITY. Ariz.
<AP> -Synanon founder
Charles Dederich has been
placed in custody at his home
alter being re-arrested on a war.
rant signed by Gov. Bruce Bab-
bitt.
Mrs. Gandhi, prime minister
for 11 years until ousted in the
1977 electioo, was expelled from
Parliament and sent to jail on a
finding lhat she blocked a 1975
parliamentary investigation of
the auto business started by her
SOD SanJay.
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Federal officials say 325 pounds
of Uncle Sam's gold, worth
about $1. l million, may have
gone up iD a New York chimney
in smoke or out the door with a
thief.
Stokn or Melted Away? somebody has been stealing,"
he said.
The U.S. Secret Service, the
Treasury agency conducting the
investigation, ha s been
searching for a culprit for
months. b~ said.
Babbitt signed a warrant
Wednesday charging Dederich
with conspiracy and sollcitauoa
tocommltmurder.
A &ESOLUTION by ber sue·
cessor, Prime Minister Morarji -
Desai, found her guilty o( COO·
tempt of Parliament and breach
of parliamentary privilege.
They know it's gone, but they
don't know where.
.. WE'LL NEVER BE able to
ans we~ all the questions," As-
sistant Treasury Secretary Joe
Laitin acknowledged Wednes·
day night.
Jf lbere were some way to de·
termine that it was all stolen,
officials said it might be the
largest theft of government-
owned gold from a lederal
facility ln the nation's history.
The government isn't even
sure exactly how much gold is
missing from its U.S. A3say Of.
fi ce in New York City. But it
estimated the amount at 5,200
Border 'Seal.' Urged
Panel: Tighten L a w to Curb Illegal Entries
WASHINGTON <AP) -Say·
lng the United States can DO
longer be a "safety valve' .. lor
Mexico and other developing na-
tions wilh burgeoning popula·
lions, a House committee 1s rec.
ommending tighter laws to ball
the flow of illegal aliens into this
country.
The House Select Committee
on Population released a report
Wednesday that also ur,:ced bet·
'llJUANA COPS
JfJN R41SES
TIJUANA. Mexico CAP> -
Police are getting a 50 percent
pay ra1se "to stop the attempts
lo bribe them," says a city
spokesman.
The a nnoun cement s aid
salaries of the 500 police officers
will go from a minimum or
about $195 monthly to $292, start.
ing Jan. 1. The top wage will be
about $440.
In the U.S. city of San Diego.
separated from Tijuana by the
international border, police pay
averages more than $1 ,000
monthly.
ter e!forts to "seal" the U.S.·
Mexican border by devoting
more federal money and law en-
forcemerit personnel to keeping
out illegal aliens.
REP. JAMES II. Scheuer, D·
N.Y .• lbe committee chairman,
said 60 percent of the "hundreds
or thousands" or illegal aliens
who come to the United States
each year are from Mexico.
"They come for the s imple
reason that job opportunities and
income are better here, and it is so
easy to cross our borders illegal·
ly." Scheuer sald at a news con·
ference.
Th e United States has a
"chaotic non·policy" of keeping
track of foreign visitors who
come to this nation temporarily
to study. do business or see the
sights, Scheuer said.
THAT MEANS THERE is no
reliable record of how many
foreigners illegally remain in
the United States, he said.
He estimated that 40 percent
of the illegal aliens enter the
country legally as students or
tourists, overstay their visa
limits in violation or the law,
and then melt into the immi·
grant community.
Although the committee re· port said there is no accurate
record di how many illegal aliens
are In the United States, it said
estimates· range between two
million and 12 million.
TO REDUCE THE likelihood
that illegal immigrants will be
able to find jobs in the United
States, the committee recom-
mended setting up a fraudulent-
document laboratory in the Im·
migration and Naturalization
Ser v ice to control the large
market for counterfeit Social
Security cards, birth certificates
and drivers licences used by ii· legal aliens.
The committee also urged
Congress to pass a law malting
U.S. sponsors of legal immi-
grants financially responsible
for them.
Among other recommenda·
tions, the committee also wants
a toughening of regulations to
prevent visa abuses.
Much of Nation Freezes
HeaVy Snow, Gale Warnings Up in East
Teatperat_..,
HI Loi ~ ..
All><lnY ;n 24 .S1
A11>u·que 4, n
Amarillo n " An<-aqt' 20 10
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Hunllllf'ell H'd Ht'""°" llHCl'ttl'
WtvH -fO ,_ IC.I C-11...,. -,,
troy ounces Wednesday in an an·
nouocemeot.
MEANWHILE, IT is still
chttkiDg Its books, as well as
nooks and crannies of the build·
ing in lower Manhattan where
the assay office is housed.
Oflicials say there are two
basic problems in trying to pin-
point the amount of gold miss-
ing and w)lere it went.
First, the office records from
the time it opened in 1854 to
1973 are so bad it's bard to say
exactly how much gold was
supposed to be there in 1973.
when record·k eeping pro·
cedures were improved.
THAT RAISES THE possibili·
t y that the amount missing
since then might be more than
announced. or a bit less.
Second, the office's main task
is not storing gold but melting
down such golden objects as
necklaces or nuggets. Some
gold is lost routinely in the fiery
refining process.
"The laws of standard com·
merc ial practices," indicate
nea rly half the S,200 ounces
would have been lost in refining
s ince 1973, Laitin said. Other
ounces may be s mudged on
walls or lodged in cracks. he
s aid.
"8\JT WE'RE NOT overlook·
ing the poss ibility that
Pine Pots
Rogers' unique hoUday
pines combined wtth holly
and other colorful planta
make • la1ttn9 gift that wm
ac.c:ent any home'• patio or
entry.
Giant Poinsettias
Roger'• Giant Ecb PolnMt·
t1M hl'lve never been more
lMautlful. They are avail-
able with muldple blooms In
either Christmas rcct or
wta1te.
That in~tigation has led lo
no a rrests, a lthoug h o ne
employee was caught trying to
steal gold earlier this year and
is in prison, officials said.
THE TREASURY Depart -
ment began looking Into the
matter about a year ago when
Sen. William Proxmire. D·Wis ..
received a letter alleging gold
thefts and turned the letter over
to the Treasury.
Flynt Fails
To Stop T r ial
ATLANTA <AP> -Hustler
m agazine owner Larry Flynt
must stand trial on obsceruty
charges brought against him in
Septe mber 1977, a district court
judge has ruled.
Judge Dorothy Beasley over-
ruled motions by Flynt's at-
torneys, who sought to quash the
charges. claiming Georgia's ob·
scenity law was unconstitu .
tional.
Fulton County Solicitor Hmson
McAuliCfe. who fil ed the
charges, said pretrial hearings
in the case probably will be
scheduled in January.
CALIFORNIA GOV. Edmund
G. Brown Jr. told The Associat·
ed Press in Sacramento on
Wednesday night he sigoed an ex-
tradition warrant Monday that
was rela¥ed to Babbitt.
Dederich had been fr~ on
SJ00 ,000 bond after his arrest
two weeks ago in connection
with a rattlesnake attack on Los
Angeles attomey Paul M.orantz,
who won a civil j ud gment
against the foundation.
Dederich's doctors apparently
told authorities Wednesday be
was too ill to be moved from ha!\
home. An armed guard was
posted in his bedroom.
AUTHORITIES SAID two in-
dependent physicians would ex·
amif\e Dederich today to see ff
he can be moved to the Mohave
County Jail or Mohave GeneraJ
Hospital in Kingman.
Dederich, 65. left a Phoenix
hospital last week against the
urging of his doctor and family.
His doctors said he was being
treated for exhaustion and men·
tal depression.
DEDERICH'S attorney told
Mohave County Attorney Davs:
Babbitt and Superior Court
Judge Leoourd Langford they
would fight Oederich's extradi-
tion to Californi a, where he was
ordered to stand trial with two
Synanon members in the snake
attack
l.ast
Minute
Gift
Ideas
Our excUlng array of
Indo or a nd outdoor
plant• make perfect
ChNtmu gtfta for fam-
ily frtend8 and bualnae
8NC>dates because they
a.re gifts duit keep on
giving year after year.
And , don't forget
Rogen Gallery, full of
unique ornamente and
decorator Item• or
Rogers Florist for that
cv1tom holiday floral arrangement yo ur
9u e•t• wlll never forget .
r>ecorator lterns
The Gallery 11 full of very
unique gift Items from
Imported ornaments and
ltallan miniature tights to
exquisite European
decorations, Chrf1tma1
garland and much. much
morel
•
Gift f:erti8cates
E\lel'Vbodv appredatn a gift from Roger's and with a gift
~ftcate you CM let them
Mlect aaedy whllt dMy nm! tor their home or ya.rd. Avail-
able In MY denomination.
San Jooquln HIU. Road at MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beoch, (TI4) 64().5800
Open Delly 9am-6pm
CIOMCI Chrt1tmu Dey. New Veen o., and January 2. 1979
r
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CALIFORNIA DAILY PILOT A J
Jones Hit Man in SF? ;--
'
Plan To Kill Defectors, Officials Revealed
Al'WI ...........
SAN FRANCIS('O (AP> A
lt'Odt•r of un Ill "ll&&Slnutlon ltmm
•11l•ned by th Rc.-v. Jlm Jooe:i
to kill Poopl Temple dcrtJetors ""d public offkaula rem•lns alive ln Sun f"roncl1co, attorney
Mark Lane uJd he was told by u
reported Jon 'confidant
Lane tokt rep<>rtora We<ines·
day that hlJ client Terri Buford.
who ho aald left Jonestown lhret
woeka before lbtt ma1111 murder·
s uicides ln Guyana, knows the
name ol the person
ASKED WHO was Involved in
the plan. Lane replied, "Those
who played the role of guard in
Jone.town and those people who
rtlmainf!d here an San ·Francisco
And Terra Buford s ays s he
knows the name or the person
who is here in San Francisco
who had the responsibility to
carryout the program."
Lane. however, declined to
Identify the person.
Those who might have been
marked for assassination before
Jones ordered the deaths or
Oail drn1, Mothe r Res~ued . Woman ,Gets
3Yean in
Fraud Case
Mary Orth r each es ror her son Ernie Jr., 1 ~. after
sh e and three youngsters we re rescued by a California
Hi ghway Patrol heHcopter from the snow near La Porte in
the northern Sierra. Andy Anderson, center. carries
Monica Guerrero. one of the ottier two children rescued .
They had been trapped in a camper pickup truck in the
snow four days.
Asbestos· Workers
Ask Medical· Exams
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
24-year-old woman, convicted of
welfare fraud in Ventura Coun-
ty, has been sentenced to three
years in prison for her role in a
welfare scheme that netted
$123,000 from Los Angeles
County.
Patty Mouton, 24, who pleaded
guilty to four counts of forgery
and welfare fraud in the Los
Angeles case, was sentenced
Wednesday by Superior Court
Judge Leslie W. Llght. who also
placed her oo nine years proba·
tion.
\
SAN PEDRO (AP) -A union representing 2,400 workers bas
asked government agencies to force Todd Pacific Shipyards to pro-
vide annual medical exams to euard against d~ease caused by
asbestos.
Local 9 of the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding
Workers of America filed complaints Wednesday with the state
and federal departments of occupational safety.
All workers at the shipyard are affected by asbestos "because
the asbestos particles become airborne and float throughout the
yard," said Steve Roberts, executive secretary or the union.·
ROBERTS SAID THAT although only shipwrights and joiners
work directly with asbestos, all craftsmen at the shipyard are cov-
ered in the complaints -marine machinists, boilermakers
pipe{itters, welders. s hip filters and riggers. '
A union request for checkups in J uly was rejected by the com-
pany. Roberts said.
Noting that the Navy announced in July it would provide
medical exams for military and civilian personnel exposed to
asbestos. Roberts said, "It seems like we lo the private sector are
second-class citizens. They tTodd officials) say we are not entitled
to a medical screeni ng program."
1) I estimate my home's value at
2) Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
4} Balance I still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligi~le to borrow {subtract 4 from 3)
6) Amount I'd like to borrow
A 45-COUNT complaint issued
last September charged Miss
Mouton and two co-defendants
with cheating Los Angeles Coun·
ty out of $122,957 between May
1976 and October 1977 by receiv-
ing aid for 66 non-existent
children. The same three were
convicted of bilking Ventura
County out or $14,000 in a similar
scheme.
Prosecutors said the defen·
dants used counterfeit birth
certificates for themselves and
the fictitious children.
With a Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California. you
may qualify to borrow from $3,000 to $30,000 (or even· more!) to use
for your children's education, travel, other worthwhile investments -
almost any purpose you can name.
Calculate your borrowing .power, adjust that amount to your ne eds
and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your
home, now let it work for you.
THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA
NN110t1 8•>.11th Office. 1401 Dow StrMt. Nf'W'POl1Beer"92663. (7141833·3511
~-,_~·-
more than 900 persons In
Jone1town have not been pubUc·
ly 1denunec1.
Lane commented to reporters
aB tb• woman t.esUlled befoN a
federal 1rand jury investigating
the ambush 1Jaytng of Rep. Leo
Ryan. who WAI aunned down
with four other pentODS at an
olrstrlp before the mass de~
took place.
While none or the testimony
was made public. Lane said she
had a nswered all the grand
Jury's questiom and did not take
the Fifth Amendment or ask for
immunity.
Lane said she had already
turned over, Peoples Temple
bank account records showing
that the cult had more than $7.S
million ln the account in Swiss
banks in Panama. and that she
had no information about Ryan's
death.
Lane atSo said that a message
trom a controvenJial figure in
the Peoplee Temple c11e de·
hvered to Jones may have
touched off the mass death1S.
Lane sa!d that Timothy Stoen,
a defector from the temple, sent
a message to Jones wamina that
a ny de(ectloos prompted by
Ryan's visit to Jonestown would
"mean the total destruction oC
J im Jonee and Jonestown."
Lane, who escaped Jonestown
at the start of the death ritual,
sald he wu present when the
message was delivered verbally
by a temple member to Jones
Nov. 17, the night before the
'\irslrip ambush. .
Stoen. unavailable for com-
ment, knew how to m anipulate
the cult leader , a ccording to
Lane, who said Jones distrusted
Stoen fearing he was a govern·
ment agent.
Stoen is a former California
prosecutor who ls now a private
lawyer representing former
Peoples Temple members who
are suing the cult. Sloen's son
was among thole wbo died at
Jonestown.
Meanwblle, a California al·
torney general's tuk force is
lookln1 into alleeallons that
Stoen, who headed the San Fran-
cisco district attorney's voter
fraud unit, covered up a probe
involving the Peoples Temple in
1976.
AS MANY as 1,000 temple
members were shipped from
Los Angeles and Mendocino
counties to San Francisco to
vote in the city's 1975 municipal
election, acCOTdlng to published
reports.
Afte r being a temple member
more than six years, Stoen left
in 1977. He had served as assis·
tant prosecutor in Mendocino
County during the period, and in
1976 was named a deputy dis-
trict attorney in San Francisco.
Small Plane Crashes at LAX
LOS ANGELES <AP> -
Turbule nce from a nea rby
jetliner may have slammed a
s mall charter plane onto a
runway at International Airport,
injuring both men aboard, one of
the men says.
Pilot John Howerton, 25. of
Burbank, was listed in critical
condition at Hawthorne Hospital
aft er Wednes day evening's
crash, which occurred as tht:
California Air Charter Cherokee
Lance was landing.
Passen ger John Thomas
Howell. 25. of Valencia. also a
licensed pilot. was in good con<h·
lion, a hospital spokeswoman
said.
"An airliner just in front of us
-a jet, am. I lhlnk -set up
turbulence that slammed us into
the ground," Howell said.
Gilt ol Protnl
SACRAMENTO <AP)-lt was
a Christmas gift of protest from
a group of militant welfare recip-
ients to Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.: J ars symbolizing blood and
ashes.
K evin As lanian, an un -
employed San Jose man who
gets welfare for hts wife and
three childn!n, led the group w
Brown's office Wednesday. Asia·
nian Is head of the Welfare
Recipients League. Aslanian said
the group bas filed a swt accusinf
( STATE J
the state of not implementing a
law requiring emerge.ncy aid in
casesofneed.
Seal BOlllb• Sto~n
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police
are loolcing for several cases of
potentially dangerous "seal
bombs" stolen from the tuna
seiner Mermaid at the Street
Pier, officers said.
The small explosive devices
are used w "shock or frighten"
s~als in tuna fishing waters and.
according w fire department of-
fic1als. could "kill or severely
inJure" humans. Frank Correla,
owner and captain of the
Me rmaid, found 1,872 o( the
bombs missing Tuesday.
C'onvict ion Changed
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -The
felony conviction of a Palm
Springs psychiatrist ror solicita-
tion for burglary of another physi·
ciao 's office has been reduced to a
misdemeanor .....
However, despite the reduc-
tion Wednesday in Riverside
County Superior Court. the sen·
tence was unchanged ror Dr.
Morton Kurland. former mental
More Parking Places!
For
south coast Plaza
customers.
The day
after ThankSQiving.
and every weekend
'til Christmas, our
2800 employees wm
be bused to the Plaza
sothatvou,
our rustomer, will have
more convenient and
close-In parking.
~
h ealth director or the Desert
Hospital here -two years pro-
bation and a $5,000 fine in coo-
necUon with the burglary of lbe
office of Dr. James O'Connor of
Yucca Valley.
T~B~Dote•
LONG BEACH (AP> -The
Atlantic Conqueror, an SOO.foot.
tanker loaded with 81.000 tons of
crude oil was being towed
toward th.is port today alter its
main engine broke down about
125 miles southwest of here.
A Seattle towing tug reached
the Liberian-registered tanker
Wednesday. Fears that the wind
and current ntight force the dis·
a bled vessel onto Bishop Rock.
about 100 miles west of San
Diego, and cause an oil spill had
prompted t h e earlier dis-
patching ol the Long Beach
harbor tug Spartan lo bold it in
place.
Bodfl of Dlvn-Fo11nd
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The body
o r John Andr eoli. 38, who
jumped to his death off the
Ocean Beach pier last week
while wearing a weighted scuba
diver's belt bas been found float-
ing in the surf, the coroner's Of.
fi ce said.
SOUTH CO\ST PlAZA
fa'OsS from SOUth coast Pla2a VN&age,
Brtstof & 5an Oleg() FfeeW;ry
..
u ~rongoeoastoa11~P,101 Editorial Page ................................................................... Thunldly. O.C.mbctr 2 I 19 7 8
~Obert N W~'dlPubll~hfr
Barbara Kre1bi<h /Edltorlal PaQe Editor
Federal F und Aid ~
: The O nly S olutio n
:· '•
.. ~
'-.. . .
Laguna Bcu<'h orr.t'luls und t'lty.tured a loal LI havl'
done thetr part No\\-al'3 up to (tel ral Ovt'mment lo
dt.ttl•rrrune wh<'thl•r reMoraU of Bl blrd Knotll l1 \' •n
.a p0 sablllt1
Geologu.t h vc ('um~»l ~ a hnuJ f't'IPOrl on Uitt caun•
&ind curt' for lh ' Dlut•b\ru Cunyon Ian Ud wh ~ 22
home~ wertt d t ro~ HI ind anoth r Z8 rum1h lrrt
bomclt' la:,l Oct 2.
Cot>te~ t•f th l "t•ll rt C" .rrhC'd !"\'port huvt bci'n ~l·nt
tn ofhcial« .,, lh • I•' d r l U1aa l t A ui tunc"
t\llmam:;lrul1t>n '" lhl' hopt· roo f al rnon ) will be romtnij
Luguna'io. "a\ for iutdllmn l m r.c •nc\' wurk anti
restoration of th • J ~ t'n th•
The repo1 l rite" ht• '' ruin' last ·' nu r> .ind
f''l•bruury u~ th~ rnu ,, ur th.-arth r 1lurl' lty ofhrHth
hope to pt•r:-.uacfo Uw &:<I\ rnunt•nt lo fund emeqwnc•\ pt'O)l'Ct~ .uuJ rt''!!lo1·ut1on ul public roud~ .Jnd uUIJlll'-a
c tm~ nrarl) $2 a m1lhon
The cit,. ,·onu.•nd~ thl' (){·tobt•r s lide :.hould foll unrtttr
tU.!.aslt•r u1,~1 .. t.mC't' 1t" •trth'd a" J I t.t!lult o( ()nod ond ram
dam UJ.tl' lus t "11\h•r
Wtthout thost• fedt•rul rurl<b rt'hlorn\\lm or OIU<'b1rd
Knolls tx'C'omt•s econo1n1rulh 1mpo~'lblt• Thut wo uld
ll'U Vl' u bllJ:ht that \\\lUld h~mnl L._~unu for )'t'ur-1 lo
4.'0rlll'
ROP Worth Saving
ln\•est1J.t~l10n!l. of alleFtcd m1~condu rt by
administrator:-. of the C .ip1str<ino-Laguna Beach Rcg1on,,1l
OcrupatJonal Pro~ram have prroccup1ed the progrum·~
~ovt>rnms;: board Mncc Sl•ptcmbc.•r.
l.a~t Wl'\'k the bcrnrd m·ccpted the resignation of <.;h1ef
dm1ml>tral0r Jt•rold Simons Assis tant Administrator
Edwa1 d Qul':o,ada has been on pajd leave s ince Oct. 3, his
future with the proJ1?1·am still uncertain.
But other serious problems face the program,
l':o,PCl'lally l>urv1vmg financial implications of Proposition
13 o new courses will be offered in the spring, despite a
proved demand for them. Established programs also
rna~' h;ive to be t.•ut.
The ROP Is a program which meets a real need
:Jmong both teen·agers and adults who want to enter the
JOh market. Classroom instruction is supplemented with
an internship. which offers students JOb contacts and
work experience.
Board members will now be turning their attention to
lo<'aling a qualified administrator to succeed Dr. Simons.
The new man s hould have a large meas ure of community
:md staff support. Ile will be charged with trying to save
:J valuable educational program and will be operating
w1lh a very srnc11l margin for error.
ROP is worth salvaging if it 1s not too late.
l..ocal Co n trol Thre a t
La~cck. Saddleback College trustees·unanimously
approved a resolution supporting the property tax as an
essential source of revenue for community colleges.
The move was ironic since many Saddleback trustees
have been extremely conservative on taxation questions
m pr('v1ous years.
But last week's resolution raises a point that goes
be yond the lo<'al s kirmishes involving higher taxes and
efficient use of college funds.
A-:. Trustee Robert Prince pointed out, property taxes
havt: been n:duccd to 1 percent of a home's market value.
gr..,vely culling the amount of funds generated for the
college.
The property lax has always been a big source of
revenue for the college. It involved local control s ince the
amount of taxes was set by th<: local board -before
Proposition 13
But the reduction of property tax rncome to the
college after Proposition 13 undermines local control.
Price declan.-0, because the stale will be going toward a
!)yslem of state funding for community colleges.
With all funds coming from the s tate. Price smd.
more and more decis ions will be usurped by the state, a
rnovc that cuts at the heart of the community college
<:once pt.
Co m m u n 1 t y <· o 11 cg es a r c s u p po s e d to be
representative of the communities in the district they
serve •. something accomplished through a local
decision· making board of trustees .
Saddleback 's trustees believe they could retam some
c·ontrol of tht•1 r district's destiny if a fair portion of the
remaining l percent property tax income is set aside for
l'Ommunaty <:ollcgcs. While the motive is laudable, it
doesn't appear very rct1listic legally or politically.
• Opinions eicpressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed o n 1h1s page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot, PO.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·'4321
Boyd/Sony
By L.M. BOYD
Original name or the multi·
billion-dollar Sony Corpora·
t1on in Japan was "Tokyo
Ts ushin KoR yo " Westerners
found IL difficult lo say. So 1ls
<'htef executive Ak10 Morita
tlnk\'n,'<I with new-name no·
tions. Finally, he combined
the Latin "sonus" meaning
so und with the h ighly
Amerkan "Sonny Boy" ut.
popularized by Al Jolson and
came up with Sony.
o~ar
Gloon1y
Gutoi
For what doth It profit a
man to come to work
1Jl ck t o help the
co mp a n y whe n It
mean11 a week later 10
more mm wlll be orr
a1ck?
C.J .
Christmas In Yugoslavia Is
preceded by another holiday
called Ochlchi. Youngsters
on that day traditionally
Rrab their fathers, tie them
to beds and <'hairs, and
decline to release same until
said elders promise to de·
liver the requested
Christmas presents.
Adolf Hitler alwayis put a
heaping spoonful of sugar •n
hia wine.
Al leru t nine U.S. pretl·
cients had at one tilJle or
another owned slaves.
Q "What's Alzheimer's
Disease'>"
/\.The technical l4!rm for a
brain aHment that most peo.
pie call aenlllty.
Q. "lo skateboard Hnco.
what'• 'goofy foot'?"
A. A ride with the right foot
ahead of the left.
The founderi. of Jericho,
Ml n n , were a re llgloua
bunch. They named their
town In honor of the Btbllcal
River. But they weren 't
straitlaced. They financed
tbeJr pubUc budael with a
municipally owned saloon
....
Rowland Evan8/Rob rt Novak
' China: The Lifestyle Changes
TAClllNC , Joa -Tension
•bctYw cm a Kt'M'roUon of l\atc·
lmpoacd ronlo:rmlty and the new
t tlrr&n1 toward porsonal
frtl"t!Om ln China http explain
thl' r aponsc ot u 17 ye r-old girl
to controlled but aa1n1facant
(him.en h«lrc.>
\\-l' wt>rt' t&a.kc•n to visit the Im·
m1culalt> crJtmJ)«J quarters of 11
au m •mber
lamlly llvlna
and worklnit
with a half
million other
fh 1n ut• ~t
the Tachlna?
Oil flttldll The
h••ad or the
fumlly WUll U
~m 1llntc .
.1 rt· h C'ly pu I
"m()(h•I workt>r" who as a dnllcr
hl'lpcd open these f1~lds in th1·
I u l c lU~Os but now does the
llahll'r work or watch repairing
Artc-r omc perfunctory
11loaaneerifll( from this worker,
we usktd his eldest child, 17.
about her plans after finishing
m1ddluchool. ·
"Whakvcr the state wanls me
to do.·· shl' replied automaticaJ·
ly. We persisted: surely, you
must have some desire of your
own She giggled. Then after
brief hesitation. she said, ''My
father repairs watches. und I
would like to work making
watches."
THAT MAY seem a modest
stateml·nt of independence, but
1t could not. have happened mere
weeks ago. In the presence or
important cadres from the oil
fields. this simple girl ·was re·
vealing something important·
she has ambitions and desires or
her own and is not a mere pawn
of the state.
The brave Chinese who put
up wall posters in Peking calling
on Jimmy Carter to investigalc
human rights in China (and
pasted them up again after they
were tom down> arc the tip or
the iceberg. Beneath them are
untold millions whose personaJ
lives were disrupted more than
the outer world imagines by
China's last decade of political
tumult and now are cautious ly
Mailbox
aeeldna a less fetterod ex·
h1tenc~.
Apart from dramatic wall
poBters and the r egim e's
headlong rush toward industrial
modernizat.ion, the human story
ol China Is the quiet, gradual re·
moval of the Maol1t straitjacket.
While Western dlplomalt reur
this may be followed by Iron
represaion. the neods ol Teng
ll~llao.plng's government are
scared to Uberulizatlon. Teng is
committed to t1cs with the West
and a shakeup of the immense
bureaucracy -goals thnl run
counter to Red Guard die·
ta tors hip.
NOTHING BETTER II ·
lustrates this than the re·
~1me's decision. unprecedented
for a communist country. to
send young people to Western
universities. Students in the U.S.
and Western Europe will soon
reach the thousands.
Simultaneously. Peking
University and other Chinese
colleges are experiencing their
own transformation . Closed
down ror five yearit by the
Cultural Revolution and then
constricted Intellectually for
another live years by M aolst
radicals. lhe universities have
been reborn.
Their student.CJ arc now select·
ed by nationwide competition.
and the C\<und Revolution's re·
qulrement that middle school
graduates muat work In the
countryside before continuing
their education has been quietly
dropped. Peking University stu·
dents are prominent amone lhe
young people who gained the
world's attention with their
demonstrations ror free speech.
The university's English read·
Ing room olfers uncensored U S.
newspapers and magazines. Ooe
foreign ministry interpreter ac·
companying us was reading that
old anli·communlst periodical.
the Reader's Digest. Another in·
terpreter was deep into the final
(and overtly anti-communist>
volume or Winston Churchlll's
m emoirs. At the H11l Tan wall of
posters, you.ng Cblneso told ~
how much they enjoy the Voice
of America in "special Enitlish"
<limited vocabulary. slow de·
livery),
WESTERN C l~ASS I CAL
music and ancient C hlnhc
opera. banned from China for
over a d(•cude, are back. When
we attended the opera, the
thcaler was parked with men
and women in Comm unisl
China's "blue ants" costume but
thens were exce1>t.ion1; -such a~
ont-woman with a fur coat,
brightly coton..>d scarf and curly
hairdo.
Dresses are to be seen In
Chana. especially in ShanJ(hai.
<ind such non·conform1ty may
s1>read lo men. "Our clothing is
muc h too i>tc reotypcd," OJH.'
young party cadre told us. ad·
ding he thought lradil1onal
Chinese dress should be rein·
.rod•Jced for certain occasions.
Creeping individualism cun
~prcad from dress to political
thought. Liu Shao·ch 1. the
former chler or state purged by
Mao Tse·t.un~ cnnd now believed
dead>. 1s still excoriated as a
·revisionist" one brleCing
at Tactung. But al the llsi Tan
wall in Peking. posters demand
his rehabilitation.
What is :1 self.res pecting
cadre to do? lie gets no
guidance from Teng h1msetr,
who in his 1nterv1ew with us
:.1de-stepped a question about re·
habllilal1ng Liu. "So ma ny
things have been said about Liu
that 1r.s hard lo know what tu
believe," a lower·level foreign
ministry orf1c1al told us. Arter a
pause. he added "Things arc
tom pl icated."
The idea th~at laff' 1s "com·
phcaled" without cxphcat1on b)
offac1al dogma ll> m itself new to
Commurust Chana Although this
cou ntry's tradition o f N'll
lralazed authoritarianism "'"'
certainly not glV('<' way to dl•
m ocracy. th<• ru~h towc.1rd
moderruzal1on as changing tltt'
way Chmc!'ic think und hv1•
and faslcr than anybixJy deemed
possible.
'Tests' Can't Change OC Airport Facts
To the Editor:
Thanks to Mrs Reynolds for
her fine Dec. 17 story on "dirty"
flights from lhe Orange County
Airport. Thanks ulso for your
paper's continuing coverage or
the main problem that races
Newport Beach in ils fight for
survival.
Your story on the dangerous
cutback altitudes being forced
upon the airline pilots by their
m anagement serves to s how
that the current "test" utilizing
three-engine Boeing 727 aircraft
by Hughes Airwesl is an invalid
evaluation of its possible lessened
noise impact.
Th e cur r ent "le s t " is
:o.agnificantly being conduct ed
during our coldest months of the
year when noise tends to be mut·
ed. with reduced payloads so
that takeocr angle can be higher,
and when engine cutback can be
occomplished ~t lowcr altitudes.
IF A VALID test were to be
undertaken. wouldn't it be better
conducted during the summer
months when those or us under
the infernal fiight·path are most
aware of the noise., In the sum-
mertime, the passenger load 1s
more near capacity levels. the
warmer temperatures require u
'1·degree decrease In takeorr
angle. and the 1,000-foot cutback
would be m andatory.
I am distressed that we are
being "tested" without our con·
:sent with loaded dice. I know of
no other human experimentation
in this country that gambles
with the health and well·belng or
people without their express
permission.
Our Board of Supervisors, 12
years ago, declarod "the Orange
County Airport Is not a Jct
capability airport," yet the
board continues lo expand the
jet flights out of it. The
supervisors In these acts prove
their poUUcaJ and e~onomic in·
tereats outweigh their regard for
the human constituents they
were elected to serve.
The burden of proof should
rest on the Board of Supervisors.
the airport, and the alrlinH that
by flying Jets over my head It Is
not harming me. Aa It Is now, l
am beln1 required to prove It 11
harmln1 me and my ell)'. Thia I
have no resources available to
do.
It la hJgh Ume the people of
thla county and their elected of·
rlclals face the tact that the
Oranee County Airport Is not
und wlll never be the onswer to
Orange County air transport
needs . Another airport mu t be
built. lt muat be localed so that
ll has, mlnlmum adverao impact
on the residential areas of the
county
In the meantime, under no
t'irc umstanccs. s hould any
further expansion of the present
turporl be allowed or condoned.
even under the guise of .. an ex-
perimental test."
RICHARDS. JONAS, M.D.
Water ,,_..ifl Logfc
To the FAitor:
In this age of militancy and
demonstrations, all too often.
fervor displaces r eason and
logic. Consider the continuing
actions in opposition to the
water recycling program recent·
ly approved by the citizens or
San Clemente.
Makes one wonder when dem·
onstrato rs will commence
decrying Santa Claus and
motherhood!
Consistent with PL 92 ·500.
"Federal Pollution Control
Act." In 1976 the Regional Water
Quality Control Board required
San Clemente to rehabilitate the
treatment plant and construct a
sewer line coMecting the plant
with the new outfall al Dana
Point <SERL
Although not required. our Ci
ty Council composed of Donna
Wilkinson, Mayor: Patrick
Lane: William Walker: Anthony
Di Giovanni : and Thomas
O'Keefe, all dedicated only to
value judgments. In 1977 un·
anlmously adopted the plan de·
veloped by qualified engineers
and financial cons ultants as a
desirable means of meeting en·
vironmental requirements and
increasing water available for
irrigation, with promise of finan·
cial reward to the city.
The feasibility study recently
completed by Bein, Frost & As·
soclates, engineering con·
9ultanla, con/irmed this to be a
viable program!
SO, DE8PfTF. what some may
believe. I did not or1glnnte the
plan! But, after detailed review.
I believe the 1976-77 City Council
should be praised for ,their
acumtn.
Perhaps a few facts will oll•Y
any doubts created by some ()CO·
pie about the program.
Reaolution No. 12-77 adopted
by the Plannin1 Commlaaloo on
Oct. 4, 1971, recommend• lo City
Coun91l "that effluent water
usafe master plan be Im·
med atety prepared by the Cl·
ty." In part, thls resolution
states that lhe master plan shall
provide Cor use of ctnuent woter
tot all tnctt. commercial and
lndu1\rfN "J)eraUons.
Included in conditions for ap-
proval ot ·1'ontatlvo Tract No.
10225 <Elmore Ranch> and made
part of cond1l1ons ror approval
o( a II new tracts as the followmg :
"Provisions shall be made coin-
cident with the installation of all
landscape irr1gat1on. lo connect
to city effluent water when 1l is
made available "
Motion for adoption wus made
by Coun ci lm an M u!>h ett.
seconded by Councilman
Hamm. and unanimously car·
rled by City Council on Aug 2,
1978.
Wonder why Mu s h e tt &
Wagner and Company don't un-
derstand that the above dictates
expediting of design and con·
strucllon -and not sabotage~
Sale of an estimated 3,600 acre
feet a year al $130 an acre foot
will relurn over $400.000 a year.
near term. and ultimately sale
or about 5,600 acre reel a year at
S130 an acre foot wlll return over
.$700.000 a year. That's how
revenue bonds are reprud, from
saleofwaterfor lrrigataon
CllARLESG. BRl::NT
Oaarlt fl La~kfng
To the Editor
Yecch' I JUSt re-read Mrs.
Shlrley Sheppard':. condemna·
t1on or the working mother
(Mailbox. Nov. 30). What a total
lack of human charity. For the
sake of Mrs. Sheppard I sincere·
ly hope God 1s not 11 reader of
the Daily Pilot.
SANDY BOOSTROM
Cotl'Grdlfl
To the Editor
Sm all. mean. vicious. petty,
11etr righteous, vlnd1ct1vc. cold.
opportunistic. demagogic und
cowardly.
The above t erms ducribe
Orange County's two stale
senators <John Schm ltz a nd
John Briges>.
Thtir refusal to vote either In
support or or In opposition to the
~nanlmou~ly puftd r30 to 0>
s tale Senl'.lte rusolutlon In
memory of the recently es·
1u1sstnatcd San J;~ron ciisco
s upervisor. Harvey Milk, wot.
frighteningly Insensitive.
Within the framework of our
representative democracy, I
have cQme to expect and to DC·
cepl the fact thot these two
Quotes
"We can't bf sure. but based on
the pl~ or the pu1ile we know
about, It doo8 appear that Darvon
Is lnvolvod In more deaths than
heroin." -Nlcol11 kottl of the
National l""Utute of Drufe Abus .
conceminc thedangen or the pre·
acrlptlondrua Darvon.
I
-.enators will invurwbly vot1·
against progn-s:.ivc and humurn·
leg1slat1on. but in lh1s lnslanct•
their attempt to pohtacize m,.
sassination not only reveah
1he1r essentjal inhumanity hut
a lso casts doubts upon their
ethical and moral suilab1hty to
represent those of their constit-
uents who abhor violence anti
believe 1n as well as attempt lo
· hve up LO those Chr1st1an pnn
c1ples or demonstrating love and
compassion for all of mankind.
TOM WEHT
Oarll fl Oppo•lt Ion
To the Editor
The Dady l'ilot (1d1lonal t)f
Oct• 3 that newly clcclNI St ah·
Senator John Schmitz "could ht!
an effecllve represenlatlvt"' ll>
commend;ible and appropriate.
Yet. the con ':lent of disagree
menl on "sor ~ issues notubly
his church-rooted views against
abortion and any form of gun
control" seems lo be unfairly
h1~hlighted. Most of the promt·
nent Oran1t<· Coast polal1<'ul
fl i!Url'S -Marian Bergeson,
Tom Riley. Rob Badham. Oen·
nas Carpenter and Tom Ro~crs
are opposed to abortion us well
ai. to i:tun control
Surely a pa1>cr as influential
as the Pilot has a nghl to favor
abortion. but why single out thb
1-.in1c and amply that Mr.
Schm11z·s pos1t1on stands alone?
IS OPPOSITION lo abortion
wrong be<'ause it Is "church-
rooted"" Ant1·abortion views
ar\• rO<ltl'<i from and can honest·
ly be SUPJ)Orkd by the Jewish
and New Tc stam~nl. Un·
fortunately. lo many people lhe
t1~r1ptures have httle application
in this perm1ss1ve era ol "rel·
at1ve morality." "siluution
~thics" and "do1n11 your own
thing." Opposition to abortion Is
:ll!\o based on medical,
p:iychological and soclolof(i<Mll
wrounds in add1t1on to theology.
Furthermon•. does the Pilot ad·
VOCale lhe COfltlflU tlOC\' or stale
fmancing of lhas abomination
that many con!>1der to be a rorm
of murder?
Perhaps for tho soku of an
enll1htcnl'<.I dlalolfUE' on this con·
troverslaJ subJect the Pilot con
make lu position better un·
dcratood in a future editorial. ·
CHRISTOPHER STEEL • utttrt from tf'tldtrt ore Wtlcome.
T~ right 11> rondtnit ltttm to fit
rpoce or l'hm1notf' hbef 11 re1"1Wd.
l..ettt,. of 300 wordi "' le11 wilt be
Q1MI pre/er•mrt. All ltlt4"1 muit In·
rludt 11gno1urt and mollirtO oddrt11
btll "°'"" mo11 bf wtt#IMld °" r•· qu11t 1/ 11'/ f sdtnt rtolOfl i.t apparent
Poelf1/ wtll not bf pubUllWd.
--·--'--
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Y o ar Hometown ------Dally New paper
: VOL. 71 , N0.31,sS, ~SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1978 N TEN CENTS
Heavy Traffic, Drunk Patrols Forecast~
1 llotortlta ahould nped l•'O
lbl.,_a Friday, tr.me Jama Ind an abwadHce of California
Hlftbway Patrol officers •bo
wi be watehlna for the drunk
driver.
n n• and late rught hours Lut ynr. l'lo uld. the
tU1bw1& Patrol alon jaUect
motoriltl ln Oranae County who
w rt belitwf!d to be drmna un-
der the lnlluenc betw n 6 p m
Friday and ea m Tuesday. the
ume cnUcal penod thll year.
cedures that should 1et olllcers
back on the freeway raster lhan
In the paat
rear-vlew mirror, Johnston said.
The Highway Patrol is putting
all offlcen lnto the field over the
holida)t.
tests. urlne, breath or blood Chriatmas.
sampling. Refusal, of course. Johnston warned that county
leads automatically to a sws· motorists should allow plenty of
pended driver's license. driving time to reach weekend
• I
' '·
i
{ •
• ~.
• t • ~
Lt. Marlow Jobn1ton, the
CHP'1 S-.. Ana davtsion
.cuUve ctfkttr, utd lhts mom-
ina that th 1tatt1' freeway
fprce wlll be deploy lng
1peclllcally aiainst the drift.kin&
driver, especially during eve-
The number may be areater
tb11 year. he C?Of\JC"Ctured. The
CH P , ln conjunction wllh the
Oran1f' County herUf's offlce.
has · strmtmhned" bookana pro-
Ready f or Santa "'WI...,...._
Rick Stellwagen of Trevose, Pa., cleans soot out of a
chimney just outside Lititz in preparation for Santa
Claus, who lends a hand. Actually Santa is fellow sweep
John Sutton, who donned the red suit for the holiday
season.
OC Employment
Total Sets R e cord
Orange County's unemploy-
ment rate reached its lowest re·
cording ever in November when
it dipped to 3.7 percent.
As unemployment in the coun-
ty reached a new low the
number of those employed hit an
all time high or 962 ,400 job
holders.
affecting employment figures
could be offset by an expected
continuing surge in manulaclur·
ing activity in the county.
When summed up, EDD's
monthly labor s tudy puts
Orange County in the forefront
or employment activity in the
state with the lowest unemploy-
ment rate and the fastest grow·
ing job market.
M lxlne tho6e snarls with Fri·
day afternoon partygoers and
weekend holiday drinkers Is
almost guaranteed lo offer law
t.'nfQrcemenl officers the
Chrlatmas blues.
Motorist.I who find themselves
weavlflg a bit or demonstrating
··anything else unusual·' may
find a red light fiasbing in their
•
Ne
Those drivers who slur a b1t or
appear a little gluty eyed may
end up taking the freeway-side
sobriety test.
Those who fail will b e
handcuffed. placed in a patrol
unit and whisked to Orange
County Jail where they will sub-
mi t to one or three sobriety
Following the test. the holiday destinations as well as
motorist will be booked lnto the watch their intake of booze and
Jail until released on bail that drugs.
could go as high as $500 or until "It'll be a mess," be warned,
they see a judge the following noting lhat Los Angeles lntema-
Tu es d ay morning, Johnston tional Airport Is predicting two-
warned. hour.tong waits in traffic just to
All in all, he mused. It's not make the loop through the
too good a way to s pend . <SeeTRAFnc, Page AZ)
Qrt Density , Cut
'Mixed Blessing' for Irvine Company
By JACKIE HYMAN Ol 1111 o.lly,.... ,..,.
The Newport Beach City Coun·
cil carped almost a year and a
half o debate Wednesday by ap-proving general plan amend·
ments that will cut density on
large undeveloped sites in the ci· ly by as much as 35 percent.
The decision at the council's
last meeting of 1978 was greeted
with mixed reactions from a
spokesman for the Irvine Co., whtcb owns most of the parcels
affected.
The land company's Robert
Shelton told the council that,
while the slashed densities seem
Newport
Giv es OK
To Condos
A request to convert 255 apart-
ments at Versailles-on·lh\'·
Bluffs into condominiums won
approval Wednesday from the
Newport Beach City Council
after council members said they
had no legal alternative.
The vote was 6-1, with Coun·
cilman Paul Hummel saying he
understood the le~al necessity
but decided to vote his con·
science anyway.
A spokesman for residents of
the apartments near Hoag
Memorial Hospital told the coun·
ell there are no comparable
apartments in the city. He said
rents are lower than those at
Park Newport and Promontory
Point.
The spokesman also com·
plained that be believes rent
bikes last July from $'275 to $325
for a one-bedroom and from $225
to $275 for a bachelor were in·
tended lo manipulate the council
into believing the occupants
were high-income and would not
suffer a hardship iC they bad to
move.
Hummel said he opposes the
con version both because he
believes there are already too
few moderate-cost apartments
in the city and because he
doesn't think the units will have
the ameniUes usually associated
with condominiums.
However, the starr report in·
dicated that the state's Sub·
division Map Act provisions
have been met and the city had
no discretion ln the matter.
The applicant for the project,
Daon Corporation, is required to
,ive tenant.a 120 days notice and
irst right or refusal for
purchase. It must also improve
tbe wUta to meet condominium
standards.
In addition, David Neish, a
spokesman for Daon Corp .• said
the company is willing to set
aside five percent of the units
for two yean, at existing rents
plus a 10 percent hike per year
for infiatlon, to accommodate
hardship eases.
He said the corporation will
also pay up to $250 ror In·
divlduals' moving costs.
arbitrary. after more than a
year of uncertainty, "we're
beginning lo wonder if maybe
arbitrariness is better than in·
decision."
The cuts were approved 5-2.
with Mayor Paul Ryckorr and
Councilman Donald Strauss op-posing. Both said they wanted
the council to take more lime to
look at each individual property
in order to forestall the possiblli· ty or having to make additional
changes in the near future.
However. Councilwoman
Jackie Heath er apparently
spoke for the majority when she
said. "1bis is broad brush. but it
Continue
Cluistmas?
It bad been a long and ~Tuelin1 year for the
Newport Beach City Coun~ cil, and their last agenda
of 1978 was a heavy one.
Relief was evident
amoiu the members Wednesda night as they
agreed to continue several
of the tbom.ier issues until
Janqary.
But that didn't seem to
be quite enough for Coun·
cilwoman Jackie Heather, who looked up wearily as
the meeting ended and
someone called out,
"Merry Christmas." ·'I move we continue
Chril_tmas until Jan. 8,"
Mrs.'1ieather said.
Plot Thiekens
at least gives us some planning
base."
The city's general plan sets
rorth permitted uses on various
land areas. While a general plan
designation is less specific than
zoning. the latter must be com-
patible with the general plan
designation.
Commercial developments af.
fected by Wednesday's decision
are Newport Center. Castaways.
Bayview Landing. San Diejito
Creek Sites and Creek Sites al)d
MacArthur I Jamboree Sites.
Residential undeveloped sites a ff ec ted are W est bay ,
Newporter North. Freewav
Lands Saf e lg
Reservation .East, Firth Avenue
Parcels. CalTrans West and
Beeco Property.
The council generally agreed
with planning commission rec-
ommendations for across-the-bOard reductions. but disagreed
with a recommended increase
from S38 lo 800 allowable res-
ide n ti a I units in Newrorl Center as a partial tradeof for
commercial cuts. The council
voted to keep the figure at 538
units.
After hearing fr om the chairman of the board and the
director of the Newport Harbor
(Sff DENSITY. Page AZ>
'Dynamite' Woman
Bijitcks Airliner
MARION. Ill. <AP> -A
woman who claimed sbe bad
tb.ree sticks of dyn~~ite hiJacked a Tr¥& Worfd Airlines
jet with 87 penons on board today
and tried to force the release of a
federal prisoner convicted of hi·
jacking. authorities said.
The plane was diverted to this
southern Illinois town. site of a
federal prison.
Three hours after the plane
landed. the FBI was negotiating
with the woman through control
tower communications. She re·
fused to allow an agent on .
board. the FBI said. But at mid·
day she released five persons -a
mother her infant and three elder-
ly persons.
Flight 541 en route from
Louisville Ky., to Kansas City,
Mo .. was commandeered shortly
after a scheduled stop in St.
Louis. The woman was demanding
the release or Garrett Brock
Trapnell. who is on trial with
two other inmates accused of
-taking part in a helicopter
escape auempt May 24 during
which a woman was shot lo
death.
'King' Vardnulis
'Safe on Throne'
At the time, Trapnell was in
prison for a 1972 hijacking in
which he unsuccessfuJly tried lo
extort $306.000 from TWA.
During the escape attempt,
Barbara Oswald of St. Louis hi·
jacked a helicopter and forcoo
the pilot al gunpoint to fly \o the
penitentiary. The pilot wrestled
the 2un and Mrs. Oswald was shot to death. The hijacker today
was identified as her daughter,
Robin Oswald .
By PIDIJP ROSMARIN
OI Ille o.tty ,.._. 5e.tl
There's a plol against the king
in Irvine.
Councilwoman Mary Ann
Gaido intends lo propose, at the
Jan. 9 meeting of the council, a
plan that would depose Mayor
Bill V ardoulls and elect a new
mayor.
Councilman Larry Agran, who
regularly rinds himself nesUed
with Mrs. Gaido oo the light end
of a 3-2 seesaw, said he'd vote to
dump Vardoulis and appoint a
mayor whose term runs from
January lo January. rather than the current March to Marc
regimen.
Vardoulis is steaming, and
declared, Wednesday "There's a
plot to get rid of the mayor."
He appears. however. lo be
safe on his municipal throne.
with the rest of the council ma·
jorlty, royalists David Sills and
Arthur Anthony. at his side.
Sills nominated Vardoulis for
his current term as mayor. An·
thony has been publicly hostile
towards Agran and Mn. Galdo.
I
Mrs. Galdo broached the sub-
ject with Vardoulis in direct
fashion.
At a closed session of the coun-
cil Tuesday. according lo those
who were there. she looked the
mayor right in the eye and said:
"I think you ought to step down,
(Sff MAYOR, Page AZ)
Man Cr ush e d
Under Truck
lnlrvine
A truck driver was crushed to
death under a wheel of his vehl·
cle today while working on the
engine in a lot at the Armand
Hammer Technical Center In
Irvine.
The driver, Henry G. Favis, of
Orange, was apparently working
under the tilt-up cab of the truck
when tbeen~neslipped Into gear.
U.S. marshals al the Benton
courthouse were on special alert
today because Trapnell was
scheduled to argue on his behalf
before a U.S. District Court
jury.
Trapnell told a lel~ision re·
porter two months ago that he
would break out of the Marion
prison.
TWA said the DC-9 carried 83
passengers and a crew of four.
·'They're doinsr what the hi·
jacker is telling them to do."
said John Leyd en , a n FAA
spokesman in Washington.
Coast
Weath er
Sunny a nd a little
warmer Friday with highs
60 to 65. Lows tonight 32 to
40.
Those figures are the
hlablighta of the state Employ-
ment Development D epart -ment's (EDD> monthly labor re-
port.
The report went on to predict
that totaf employment In Orange
County will hit another new high
In December.
Cult mt IJlst Clal1ned
Police S&ld they believe the
tnack jolted backwards. causing the ca"b to fall ooto the driver,
pinnln& his arm and head.
The man was dragged about
75 feet. 'lbe truck struck a curb.
police said, and the impact ap·
parenUy knocked the driver free
of the cab but dumped him un·
der a wheel.
I NSIDE TODA\'
Cat~ in t~ area WiU
do more than prrpare the
rnetlu -tMJi'll decorate,
provide entertainment olld
c:oatumed .rvma ~ and
e'*I clcon t.tp t/W me11. See
FNturmg. P0Qe CI.
That prediction was based
chiefly on what wu then an-
'ticlpated Christmas season hlr· • inc as well as "many new busi· naaea planning lo open their doon.''
On a more pealmutlc note,
EDD'a report noted that there i1l
111ually a slowdown tn trade dur· ins the flnt quarter or a new year.
Slmultaneoualy. however.
EDD analyst.a menUoned that
lbe aoUclpated 1979 slowdown
I
' ,
,~ ............. ·--·
Temple Official, Names Goldwater, Stennil
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Terri Buford, onetime financial
manager of t.he ill-lated Peoplea
Temple, warned today that
senators Barry Goldwater and
John StA!nnil were on a Temple
"hit Ust" and accused attorney
Timothy Stoen of "mastermind·
tna" the cult's llle1al activities.
<Related story, AS>
Ma. Buford told newsmen tbat II'
"every llletal act, every plan
for violence wu either initiated
or approved by Stoen ,'' who
jotned the Temple 1n 1989 and
waa a bi1b-rankin1 member
before leavtnc the church in
1877.
Ma . Buford aho .aaid
California Attorney General
Evelle Youn1er and v.s. Al· tf!_m7 Wllllam Hunter wet't on
lhe bit Uat of people to be killed lft caee anything ever happened to cull leader Rev. Jlm Jonet.
She alJ~ed that Stoen planned
the kfllln1 of Rev, Lester
Kin10Mnc, a columni1t for lbe
San Francleco Examiner, sent
death lhreau to hl• wlf e after
she a.ft the Temple and amu1·
•led ssoo.ooo*~~ H de-Wlwl a Te • r"Ti1i;I:" •
He was taken to-TusUn Com·
munity Holpltal1 where be wu
p,-onoUnced deaa at 7:47 a.m., a
half hour after the accident. Police said the man was an ln·
dependent truck operator work·
in& under contract for lhe SUily·
Mlller Contractlnl Company ol
Oran1e. • , He wu dellverlnc a lold of
uph•lt for a new partdn1 lot at
,the ~fn\and Hammer center, a1" gs1'Mai., St., l)Olke said. . ... , u .-,
•••• At 'Y-lenk• ~11 "-C::... C2 •r:·:::rc-~ ~~ g .... ,....,... a,1 .. ... ,,......,,.... .. OM,._._...... -.
2! re--. .r::
"" ·-llJ (S,1'j ~ a.~
:,~ cy =:-.:... ::
...
..
r
s
!
IO
h·
NS
$l·
sh
n·
.he
ion
'el·
ton
IW1l
~ls
al ,
lcal
igy.
ad·
.late
Ilion
!orm
i an .coo-
t can
~ un· ...
rEEL
A2 QAILY PlLOr
__ £011r ·Hom.es in J;Janger
By A..'-'NE COOP I Ol .. o.il'f .........
Three retired coup and •
wldow wer e.or ved noti c
W~dn~ day b)' OYrne~ of the
Shortcllft1 Mobile Cuuntry Club
in San Clemt-nte that th tt homci.
ar• tn danctr and 1hould be
movtd tmmt'dJal ly
Tht' four luxury mobile bom lout~ at Q'Z, 93, t4 find " Mlri
Adolante, att th on cl Cl'l to
the &O·fOOl prtt1ple«1 cre1ted by
a m Hive l.nd1Udt1 Mondi)
nl1hl ·rhe homr hl"lon1t to
The l\OUCH rrom tbt Otl
Prado Company uld, .. Tbt
1toloaht whom w havtt employed to look lnto th laUure
ol th '°'' cou .... property Id JU•·nt to our mobile hom.-park
.idvts that your mob1I born
houJd be> mov~ lmmf'CUi.~ly
"ft not moved lmmedlaU>ly.
your homr 1 in danger qt bt n,
•eivcn-b dom-.f'd by any H ·
wnaloll cl tM .., c!oune a)ope
fa lure," U.. aoiliilt tonchldtd.
Mn. Weber n1d _.,. b• ..o ln·
t•nlloo ol movU.s. 1'11• u.r. coupl• UC> MrVtd wlth a not.le. ••d they have ~ unable IO
ru to Joule tn)' avallable
apacea for the homet, whlth are
valued at about tro.ooo each.
In th mtantJmc, tho Larkin•
ere-ataylnf nt a mot61, the
Helmbttp wtlh frl~. wbUe
tht 81l aad Mrs. Web« te-
rn 1in in th~rlbreatea.td bomet.
Israeli ToWn Rocketed
Lehane e Gu
TEL AVIV. brael IAPl
Gu"• rlU to bouthern lA'banc>n
fired a volley or Katyuaha
rockeu into lb · In eh lroouer
town ut K.lryut Shmona tod.t),
k1lho.i oru: mun Jnd ~ouod1n.i ~even J)t'f'M>llll 111 u bp1nahn6'! C) l'
for ;rn t'Yt' f1f(ht betwt•t•ri lht•
Pult>11llru..ir1~wld hirJcl
·rh~ N•·wpo1't Harbor
t)()ut 111.tr&d<> wtll continue
to light up the harbor
tonight through Salurduy
The 59lh annual boat
parade begins at 6 o'clock
each evening and lasts
about three hours . Tht:
boats st.art at lhe Balboa
b land Ferry and proceed
counter-clockwise around
the harbor.
About 200 lighted boats
are part1c1palang in the
event SPonsored by the
Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce.
Viewing 1s available all
along the harbor, includ-
ing on Balboa l sland
beaches and street ends on
the Balboa PenJnsula.
f'rot11 r IJflt-A I
MAYOR •.•
8111. J think you're a tou~y
mayor"
Vardouhs reportedly was
-i.peechleu.
fie said Wednesday, having
ri>coverl'd his voice, "We were
d1scuss1og the JOb performance
evaluation of the city manager,
.-hen she blurted that out. My
reeling was, what does that have
to do wilh the pdce or peas in
China "
M rf) Ga.ido explained her plan
Wednesday. She said that an
light or a recent voters' decision
to change the dales of city coun·
c1I elections from March to June
of even numbered years, the
&election of mayor-normally
held just after e lection -may
become even more 1JOlit1cal thC1n
It IS.
Reacted Sills to new!! of the
plan: "l would not, under any
l'ircumstances, be part or l:I
coup. We're not h igh school
!10 phomores, going a r ound
dumping people out of office
before their terms a.re through
"I think Vardoulis has been
doing a good JOb. I certamly
wouldn't vote to remove him.''
Agran ~aid a calendar year
mayor ··would minimize the
politlclzation Of the mayor's Of·
flee."
Agran was the early victim of
a break with tradition in the way
mayors have been selected in
Irvine, though It Is a short hved
tradition, considering the city
wasn't incorporated till 1971.
Be fore Agron 's election,
mayors had been selected from
thi: council on the basis of the
highest vote~etter In the cle<'·
tton. Though Agran was the hi~hest votcgeller, two of th('
1•ounc1I members Vardouli~
and newly clec~ed Anthony
were openJy sorry to see Agran
win.
OflANOI COMT
DAILY PILOT
f .... Of' ..... (61o'4 (Mtly,..... "'tf"Wf\~f\1\t.,., tl•"-'Gttw-~'""'"'' ""'°'''-.... db,fJW.(),_.. t O"''' t'uetl"'°'i"t~' '-'t.,.••r"H•fllO't· •'t
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·~··' , ... ,,.,. ....... l~Pf•M n •t >• *"'' tte, \ffWt CMt• ._w C•i1IOfN• ,,.'-
'
, ... , " Ciwtl't Vt(• PtHtdit'U M9G Ylf"""' .. Mlt_.....,
r....,.., .. ....._
Mt~ .. • ... lditw
CMNI If. I.Mt lllCMN, -......... ~, Me~•t•"9 l4il0f\
f lll ,MM (714)MMaa1
Cl...tftedlt/ff..it .... .....,.
,
rrillas Kill On , Wound Seven
Tbt-Palestlnt-Llboratton
Oraan1iauon In Bt-lrut aaid th to~ n ""a:1 r'Ol'ke\t'd 1n retaUeuon
for lt1rae1J air Slnkt"I on Pal
e•t1n1antump.1 l2ho1.m1oarl1er
Afh.•1 lht• fow or hve rodtt:U
:olarnmt'd mlo K.tryat Shmona. In
th~ northern Galllt~· punh1mdle.
lifrat?h artillery Op('ned fire oo
Pales\ nlan pos1llona a ·rosi. the
border. the m1ht.ary comml&Od
:i&ld ln Tel Avtv
The army alt.Id flv~ children In
Kiryat Shmona were treated ror
3hock after belng evacuated
from a buHciing hit by one of lh •
Sov1el designed rcx:keb.
· · Usuafly you can hear
Katyushas," Htd one resident,
"hut thu. mornmsz I didn't hear unyth1ng, just a mC1ssive ex
J>IO~ion and then I was covered
with dust. I took the children oul
to an underground shelter ."
The woman, Mrs. Sima Ben
David, lives rfext door lo a
second·floor apartment that was
demolished.
The military said the rocket attack was the first across the
Lebanese border since June,
when Israel withdrew an in·
vasion forct: from southern
Lebanon after a 00.day sweep to
dri ve Palestinian guerrillas
from the frontier.
Palestinian sources in Beirut
said the Israeli air attack at sun·
down Wednesdav killed or wounded as many as 27 people.
ll'lraeli milll~ry officials said the
raid was ordered in reprisal for a
istrmg of Palestinjan bombings in
Israel that have killed four
civilians and wounded 70 slnce
Nov.1.
f'ro•Page A I
DENSITY •..
Art Museum, the council did
agree to increase from 4.000 to
10.000 square feet the a rea lhe
museum can add. The area will
be used for s tonng the perma
nent collection, for office space
and for classroom s, the
!lpokesmen said.
One other parcel given spec1aJ
treatment is the CalTrans West
parcel in West NewPort.
Because Proposition 3 on the
November ballot now permits
the land lo be acquired by other
state agencies for possible
recreation or open s pace
purposes, the council r e ·
designated that land from multi·
famlly residentiCll to recrea·
t1onal and open space.
A s pokesman for the ~tale
Department or Transportation,
who was not aware of the
change until after the vote had
bee n taken, told the council
CalTrans ha.CJ some objections,
which will be submitted in wnl·
m g
The reduct.ions in permitted
densities were initiated by the
city council because of concern
with traffic problems and po&SI·
ble overdevelopmenl of the city.
WbiJe sweepmg, the changes
approved Wednesday night w~re
less radical than some that had
been suggested during the
lengthy review period, including
the idea of redeslgnatmg many
of the commercial sites as res-
idential.
* * *
The lanells alao reported
thre ~non.i all11\Uy hurt tn a ~renade attack ln the Old Clty or
Jtrusalem after nightfall
Wedneaday It wu Jhe seeond
bombing or the day In the Holy C1
ty An earlier blast m the doorway
of 11n Old City restaurant slightly
wounded &Ix J?!rsons
E1ypl's ftore1in Ministry de·
nounced the llsraeli attacks as ·•a threat to the current Egyp-
Uan·hsraell peace process."
But Cairo went ahead wit.h
plsns to send Prime Mlnlster
Moshe Dayan and Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance this weekend
for another attempt to get the
stalled peace negotiations going
again.
f'ro• Page A J
TRAFFIC .•.
terminal area.
"And they are projecting
absolutely no parking at LAX.
only in outlying areas surround·
ing the airport."
Orange County Airport. he
predicted, will be LAX ln
miniature.
"All main rout.es out of both
Orange and Los Angeles Coun·
ties wlll be jammed on Friday,"
he warned.
Traffic is expected to slack off
somewhat Saturday and Sunday
with a gradual buildup again
throughout Monday with more
jamming expected from return·
ing motorists late that d ay.
And if it snows in the moun·
taio areas, which he said may
be a posaibllity Frlday, the
snarls will be compounded as
motorist. &rind to stops at lhe
Grapevine and in Cajon Pass .
* * *
F mr Weather
For Holiday
Period Seen
Fair skies and rising tem·
peratures are_predlcled for motit
of Southern California over lhe
Christmu holldaf L according to the National Weamer Service in Los Angeles.
Sun and te m peratures Into tne htgn ws are pre<i1ctea ror tne
local coastal area with night·
time lows droppine into the up-
per 30s and k>Wer 40s.
Mountain areaa are expected
to reach Into the upper 40s and
lower 50s durinc the days and
drop to between 15 and 25
degrees for the lows.
0 pp er deserts are to be windy
with the hlgh.s in the 50s and the
Iowa between 25 and 35 degrees.
Lower desert regions are to be
in the 60s durtng the days and
down toJ5.45 during the nights.
(luake Hits Idaho
SALT LAKE CITY CAP> -A
small earthquake mea11urlng 4.2
on the Richter scale Wednesday
1hook residents of Malad City,
Idaho, but U cauaed no damage.
Council Action
At Its last meeting of 1978 Wednesday, the Newport.
Beach City Council We<lnesday:
-GENEllAL PLAN AMENDMENTS: Approved
across-the-board cuts of up to 85 percent on a number of
undeveloped commercial and residential aitH and
changed the designation of the CalTrans WMt property
from multi-family residential to recreatlontl and open space.
\ -VERSAILLES CONDOMINJtJM8: Appro\led u IP·
plication by Oaon Corporalioo to convert ~ 1p1rtmenta
at Versailles-on·the·BluJls lnto condom ln1um1, noting that
the city bad no le1al 1round1 to deny the application.
-TltAFFIC PHASING: Continued untl1 Jao. 22 dll·
cusslon of poolble a mendmenta to the city's traffic pbas·
Ing ordinance.
' I -CENTaAL NEWPOltT PAalDNG:, Acc41pi.ct .. a
resource but did not adopt a parking atudy, and asked the
Planning Commission to proceed with specific area plans
tor redevelopment In the Cannery VWaae and McFadden
Square veu.
-OU.DING oaDINANCE: Pollp)Md wtUI UM 1tudy
tesalon ot Jan. 22 conalderauan ol ~ 1meodmeata
to the cJt)''11tld1n1 ordinance.
-a<K1l'E u ooaamoa l'l'lJDY: Appolnttd Couft.
cUrn1a P aul Hummel and Don W•~:. clty cooperaUve proJ·
• eci. enciMer. to Hrve on • Caw'ornla Department ot
TraD1port1Uon atudy of 1lternatavea for Newport
Boulevard and t.b• poulbl• exteu&oq ol Jhe COit.a ,..,, Preeway.
•
MHnWhlle. lhtff mne.-.oour
Of the ~Wfa laod.IU<le. tell·
dtnta ol Call• Nina are worklu lr&DtJcaUy to np11r a almllar
alope failure behind lhear hom
before wtnter rains 11et In A
1eolo11cal rlrm hired by the •
bomeownert hu 1dvl11~ them
that if repa.in are not made,
they might lose their home.s in u
mautve slide llke the Oct. 2
slide In L&IWl• Beoch
And at city hall. dlfftirencet o(
opinion are aur(aclna •mong
San C)ement.e city officla1s as to
posalble lmpl1c11llom1 or recent
landalldes.
Developers or nearly 5,000
acrea on thre4! San Clemente ranch~ are currnntJy request-
1 na variances lo the cily's
hiUaide aradin1 ordinance.
wbacb prohiblta development on
1lope1 with more than a 30 per·
cent erade.
Councilwo man Donna
W1lki.nson sidd Wednesday that
recent slope fa1lures would not
influence her 1n deciding
whether to approve developers·
requests for variances to the
grading ordulance
Mrs . Wilkinson said an ancient
land slide apparently took place
on the Shorecl1frs property
thousands or years ago. but the
mobile home park waa approved
just 15 years ago by city of.
ficlals . But another coun·
cilmember hlid a diffe r ent opinion.
"That's exactly why such
pr~jects should not be approvt'd,"
said Cou ncllman Howard
Mushett. "We know we are deal·
ing with unstable land, and Coun·
cilwoman <Myrtis) Wagner and I
have been voting against
variances lo the hlllside grading
ordinanceforthls very reason.··
Former San Clemente plan·
nlng commissioner Clifford
Gellatly, who recently prepared
a slide presentation on the city's
slide problems. said he believes
lhe city is heading for "big trou-
ble."
On lhe planning commission.
Gellatly s pec1aliied in re·
searching potential lands lide
problems on new ranchland de·
velopments. When he was not re·
appointed to the commission last
spring, he prepared a slide pre·
sentation for the City Council.
s howing existing la ndslide
problems in the city. I le urged the
City Council to adhere to the
hillside grading ordinance.
·'Someday a judge is going to
say that the city failed to an-
ticipate slide problems coMect·
ed with massive hillside grad-
ing, even in the race of evidence
of such problems." said Gellat
ly. "When that happens, the city
is going to !Bee certain
UablHty."
Gellatly said he would like to
see the city take a more active
role in trying to protect 1t~
citizens He suggested that a
geologist be hired to make in
dependent surveys or slide-prone
areas.
"A geologist hired by a land·
owner is going lo have a bias." hL•
said.
.. As it is," said Gellatly, "the
city is sitting back on its
haunches. while the citizens are
getting the shaft. This is an on
going problem thot goes beyond
the Shorecllffs slide It's a situa·
tion which deserves the atten·
lion of everyone In the city."
.... ,,.,....
That's B e ftP r
Former Secretarv of State Henry Kissinger looks up at
his painting. as Kissinger reJected the first effort. The
painting was unveiled at the State Department in Washington. 0 .C.
Soviet Probe Gets
A Touch of Venus
MOSCOW <AP> -The r e·
search section of a Soviet
s pace probe landed on the hot,
cloud-covered s urface of the
planet Venus today and
transmitted almost two hours or
sc1enttfic iolormation to Earth.
the Soviet news agQJlcy Tass re· ported.
It said the probe landed at 6 30
a.m . (7:30 p.m. PST Wednes.
day> on the far side ·or Earth's
nearest planetary neighbor after
a 98-day fii~ht covering more
than 149 million miles.
The Soviet success came 12
days after five U S. sc1entif1c
capsules p1unged into lhe
Ve nusian atmoi.phere and
radioed back 1nformallon about
the planet. Four of those struck
the surface and one burned up in
the atmosphere.
In October 1975, two Soviet
probes landed on Venus and sent pictures to Earth.
On Tuesday, two days before
entering lhe thick. searing at·
mosphere of Venus, the descent
vehicle bearing the Soviet Union
coal of arms separated from the
main Venus 12 station. which
was laun.cbed Sept. 14, Tass
said
The research part carried out
experiments analyzing the com·
position of the atmosphere and
clouds. and solar rad1at1on and
electrical charge dispersed m
the al!'Jlosphere. 1t said .
Tass said scientific measure·
ments rrom the 900-degree
Fahrenheit surface of Venus
continued for 110 minutes.
Another Soviet probe, Venus
11, which was launched five
days before Venus 12, is due in
the vicinity of the pl a net
Christmas Day.
The U.S. probes were designed
primarily to provide information
on the atmosphere. although one
dad continue transmitting for an
hour after landing on the sur-
face
U S. researchers plan to swap
mformat1on about Venus with
the Soviets.
During its 3Yl·month flight,
Venus 12 earned out other re·
search, mcluding the study of
"gamma splashes • of solar and
galactic ongln that were part or a joint project with France.
Tennis Class
Signups Set .
Registration 1s now open for
winter tennis classes from
beganrung to advanced levels or
fered by the Newport Beach
Parks, BeacJles and Recreation
Department.
Clasacs will start the week of
Ja n 8. Cost of the course is $22
Registration 1s available al ci·
ty supermarkets or the depart·
ment office at City Hall. Enroll-
ment 1s hm1led For additional
mformallon, call 640·227T.
Man's Body Found
BAKER <AP> -The bullet·
riddled body of a 30·year·old
s alesman has been found by San
Bernardino County sheriff's
depulles in hlii car offlnterstate 15
near the Nevada border. Deputies
s aid the man, identified as Wylie
Boyd Hall or Vernal, Utah, wa.<>
found Wednesday lying face down
in the back of his car with multiple
gunshot wounds in his head and ches t.
Wrap Up A During Our
• I 0011 of LA·UOYS ... . .,..,
............. Fiii .. .. .,.
•A...,a.P.,...
THy rode. n..y swivel 1'ey ~. Aftd w•'v•
got ........ -••ery style of Lo-Uoy..,.
Mad•. All avl-... ltt mt ftlOf'WIOltl variety of
fobrict 9'd vlnyh lft all 'fOllll' favorite colon. So
CORM lft md chooH the L•Z..loy HMlt'1 rigid
for you.
142-1167
Moft.·,rl. tM
.... tO-•
Caoe.d lund•y
r I
' I
415-5902
Mon.0,rl. UM
tet. 10.S
CloMdhnday
•
Ae
N oranoe caastou11.Y P11Q.1_Edft
Bay Cleanup Cost
A P ublic Concern
NIWA -The Ncwport.trvlne W le·M naaem nt AJ~cnclcs -isn't n group lhnt. poople et. really excited
a boul ll' o con ·ortium Of h')(' J ogcncae that tturround
lh<> pper N ~port Ba'
lls purpose Is lo comt: up with a pl n lo ct~an up not
only the ~·, but t he waterway~ lh t empty lnlo It ijOd
hJ ve polluted lt -4
NJWA'5 •.r.:urk ought to be o< con-iderabtu tntere l to rc~\denls or NcwPort B t'h. Costa Me • and lrvme
bt·r ause tho~>e c1ues a re members along wllh th Irvine
H a n c h Wu tt• r 0 1 s l r cc o n d l at e n d co u n l y
n:pr ·• cntativcs l 'ndcr Jl)nn recently put MJt by NIWA .
the cost or not only c:leunang up the bay but ah10
prevenl100 of futu re poltut l n lb ROlnil lo be born by
1.1xpayers
'l'he pramnr) source or pollution tn the Up~r Boy lb
!)llt thut's rapidly filUng In lhe wate rway T he s tale. a:-.
tiwncr of th<' buy'b erolo1ucal pn! E'r\'C, 1s"going to have to
µay ror dr~m-whut'~ there 00"'
But control of future s1ltat1on 1s where there's a split
Llctwecn NIWA member-. One group holds that it'~ neurly
impossible to hull the runnf( of mud bearing waterb from
upstream conbtructton sale Ttub majority Vlewpolnl alb<>
contends that som e attt!mpL" at silt control should be
sufflcient s ince compll't~ co ntammc nl would be too oostly
for builders .
The other school of thoughl 1s that silt containment is
mandatory. Let tht> bu1ldt-r pa y lhe cost of controlling the silt (including cons truction ot a desilting basin south of
San Diego Freeway) tn!-.lc ad of letting It now mto the bay
where the public pays to dredge it out. the minority
members say.
The NIWA plan re flecting the m ajority v1ewpomt as
available for public comment. Eventually a plan must be
approved by the fed e ral Environmental Protection
Agency.
Since either plan will cost the public millions. it
behooves res idents to educate the m selves, then s hare
their vie ws with their c ity officiab.
loss fo r Schools
Donald Smallwood wiH be sorely missed on the
Newport· Mesa School Board.
Smallwood. a local attorney who's served on the
board since 1971 and c urrently is its president, is
resigning in January .
lie has cited frustration with eroding local control as
one of the rea sons for his departure. In addition, the
death of Ms wife, Costa Mesa City Councilwoman Mary
Smallwood, in October has taken some of the enjoyment
out of civic activities for him.
Smallwood's intelligence, liveliness. genuine concern
for the people he served and hard work have made a
significant contribution to the school board and to local
citize ns .
We wish him well as he turns his attention to his law
firm and private life.
And we can't help hoping that someday once again
he'll choose lo bring his energy and discernment to
e nrich the public scene.
Onistma s Spirit
Forme r actor·stuntman John "Monty" Ryan lost his
$307 Social Security payment to bandits in a Newport
Beach parking lot e arly this month.
The Costa Mes a man, crippled by a stroke that has
left him unable to work s ince 1970. figured he'd never get
the money back -money that left his family short of
making its $385 monthly rent payment.
But Ryan had forgotten the power of Christmas
spirit
His loss was returned five-fold.
Orange Countians have pitched in directly or through
the Newport Beach Police Department to aid Ryan, his
wife and their three children.
When Mrs. Ryan learned last week that the fund had
r eached $885 she pleaded for Daily Pilot r eaders lo send
their donations elsewhere.
"You've got to call this off," she urged. "It's needed
more now by other people."
But the money continued to dribble in -the fund
finally topping $2,000.
Christmas will be merry, indeed, for a family whose
burdens have been somewhat lightened this year by the
gen erosity of others.
Mrs. Ryan s aid s he had forgotten how really
"wonderful" peopJe can be. that thas year's Christmas
has proved something special.
It is special. Not only for the Ryans. but for those who
made it special for them.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader commenl is invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·432t
Boyd/Sony
By Lift. lr()VD
Original name of the mulll·
bilJlon-doJJar Sony Corpora·
tlon in Japan was "Tokyo
Tsushin Kogyo." Westerners
r found it difficult to say. So its
chief executive Akio Morita
tinkered with new·name no·
tlons. Finally, he combined the Latin "sonus" me._aninj
sound with the hlg hl y
American "Sonny Boy" as
popularized by At Jolson and
came up with Sony.
,
Pear
Gloomy
Gus
f~or what doth lt profit a
man to come to work
sic k to help th e
co mpany wb~n it
mealll a week later 10
more men wllt be otr
sick?
C.J.
Christ.mas in Yugoslavia is
preceded by another holiday
called Ochicbl. Youngsters
on that day traditionally
grab their fathet'S, lie them
to beds and chairs, and
decline to release same until
said elders promise to de·
liv er the r equested
Christmas presents.
Adolf lliUer always put a
heaping spoonful ot sugar in
his wine.
At least nine U.S. presl·
dents had at one time or
another owned slaves.
Q. "What's Alzheimer's
Disease?"
A. The technical term tor a
brain ailment that most peo-
ple call senility.
Q. "In skateboard llnco.
what's 'f<!OIY foot'? ..
A. A nde wtth the rtgbt foot
ahead ~ the left'.
The founders of Jericho.
Mino, were a rellelou1
bunch. They named their town ln honor ol tbe Blbllcal
Rive r. But they weren'l
alraltlaced. They Unanced
lhelr pu_blJc budaet w1th a
munlclpaUy owned saloon.
~obOrt N Wttd /Publl\het T~1 Keev111edlt0f
~.December 21, 1978 Barbara Krelblchl l!dltorlat Page Editor Pgge
------------------~~~~~~~
Rowland Eva11 /Robert Novak
China : The Lifestyle Changes
TACHING, China -Tension
belV; m a aefM!ration of stale·
Imposed ~ormity and the new
1urr'n-t owtard pers onal fr~ dom ln China bt"lps explwn
lhu response of a l7·year old alrl
to c ontrolled bul s 1gnlrtcant
chang~ here
W c were tokf'n to visit lhti 1m·
maculate cramped quarter$ of u
s lx ·m e rnber
ramaly hv\n&
ond work1ftg
wUh u half
million other
Ch i n ese at
the Tacblng
Oil r1elds The
h ead of the
lamaly was u
s mtltng .
ar c h e t y p1d "
·'modl'l worker'' who as a driller
helpt!d open these fields in the
late l950s but now does the
lighter work of watch repairing.
After s ome pedunctory
sloRaneerina from this worker,
we asked his eldest child, 17,
about her plans after finishing
m lddle school.
"Whatever the state wants me
to do," she replied automatical-
ly. We persisted: s urely, you
must have some desire of your
own. She giggled. Then after
brief hesitation, she said, "My
lather repairs watches. and l
would like to work making
watches."
THAT MAY seem a modest
statement or independence, but
It could not have happened mere
weeks ago. In the presence of
important cadres· from the oil
fields, th.is simple girl was re-
vealing something important:
she bas ambitions and desires of
her own and is not a mere pawn
of the state.
The brave Chinese who put
up wall p<>sters in Peking calling
on Jimmy Carter to investigate
human rights in China <and
pasted them up again after they
we re tom down) are the tip of
the iceberg. Beneath them are
untold millions whose personal
lives were disrupted more than
the outer world imagines by
China 's last decade of political
tumult and ·now are cautiously
Mailbox
seektni a leu fe ttered ex ·
lattnce.
Apart from dramatic wal1
pos ters a nd the regime's
headlon1 ru_sb toward lndustrhd
modemitation. tho human story
of China is the quiet, gradual re·
moval of the Maoiat straitjacket.
While Western diplomats fear
this may be followed by iron
repression, the needs of Teng
Hsiao.ping 's government 11re
geared to UberaUzaUon. Teng is
committed to ties with the West
and a shakeup of the lmmense
bureaucracy -goats that run
counter to Red Guard die·
tatorstup.
NOTIUNG BETTER II·
lustrates this than the r e·
gime's decision, unprecedented
for a commun1st country, to
send young people to Western
universities. Students in the U.S.
and Western Europe will soon
reach the thousands.
Simultaneously. Peking
University and other Chinese
collegea are expedeneang the! r
owo tranaform1tlion. Closed
down for five years by the
Cultu-ral Revolution and then
constricted Intellectually ror
another five years by Maoist
radJcals, the universities have
been reborn.
Their students are now select·
ed by natioow1de competition,
and the Cultural Revolution's re·
qulrement that middle school
graduates must work in the
countryaid~ before continuing
their education has been quietly
dropped. Peking University stu·
dent.a are prominent among the
young people whQ galned the
world's attenUon with their
demonstrations ror free speech.
The university's English read-
ing room offers uncensored U.S.
newspapers and magazines. One
foreign ministry interpreter ac·
companying us was reading that
old anti·communlst periodical,
the Reader's Digest. Another in·
terpreter was deep into the final
(and overtly anti·commumst)
volume of Winaton Chur~hlJl's
memoirs. At tbe Hsi Tan waJI of
postert, ,young Chinese told us
bow much they enjoy th~ Voict~
or America In "special English"
<llmlted vocabulary. stow de-livery>.
W ESTEllN C LASSICAL
mus lc and ancient Chinese
opera, banned from China for
over a decade, are back. When
we attended the opera, the
theater was packed with men
and women in Communist
China 's "blue ants" costume but
there were exceptions -such as
one woman with a fur coat.
brightly colored scarf and turly
hairdo.
Dresses are to be seen in
China. especially . in Shanahai.
and such non·conformity may
spre,ad to men. "Our clothlng i\i
much l oo stereotyped," ont>
young party cadre told us, ad·
ding he thought traditional
Chinese dress should be rein·
.rod•Jced for certain occasions.
Creeping Individualism can
spread from dress to politicaJ
thought. Liu Shao.chi, the
former chief of state purged by
Mao Tse-lung <and now believed
dead), is still excoriated as a
·revisionis t" one briefing
at Taching. But at the Hsi Tan
wall in Peking, posters demand
his rehabilitation.
What is a self.res pecting
cadre to do ? He gets no
guidance from Teng himself.
who in his interview with us
side·stepped a question about re-
hab i 1 it at i ng Liu. "So many
things have been said about Liu
that it's hard to know what to
believe," a lower· level foreign
ministry of(iciaJ told us. After a
pause. he added: "Things are
complicated."
The idea that life is "com-
plicated" without explication by
official dogma is in itself new to
Communist Chana. Although this
country's tradition of cen·
trali2ed authoritarianism will
certainly not give way to de·
moc racy. the rus h toward
mode rnization is changing the
way Chinese lhmk and hve -
and faster than anybody deemed
possible.
'T ests' Can't Change OC Airport Facts
To the Editor:
Thanks to Mrs. Reynolds for
her fine Dec. 17 story on "dirty"
flights from the Orange County
Airport. Thanks also for your
paper's continuing coverage of
the main problem that faces
Newport Beach in its fight for
survival.
Your story on lbe dangerous
cutback altitudes being forced
upon the airline pilots by their
management serves to show
that the current "test" utilizing
three·engine Boeing 727 aircraft
by Hughes Airwest is an invalid
evaluation ofits possible lessened
noise impact.
The current "les t" is
significantly being conducted
during our coldest months ot the
year when noise tends to be mut·
ed, with reduced payloads so
that takeoff angle can be bigber,
and when engine cutback can be
accomplished at lower altitudes.
IF A VALID test were to be
undertaken. wouldn't it be better
conducted during the summer
months when those or us under
the infernal night.path are most
aware of the noise? In the sum·
mertime. the passenger load is
more near capacity levels, the
warmer temperatures require a
4·degree decrease in takeoff
angle, and the 1,000-foot cutback
would be mandatory.
I am distressed that we are
being "tested" without our con·
sent with loaded dice. l know of
no other human experimentation
in this country that gambles
with the health and well.being of
people without their express
perm isslon.
Our Boa.rd of Supervisors, 12
years ago, declared "the Orange
County Airport is not a Jel
capab111ty airport," yet the
board continues to expand the
jet flights out of it. The
supervisors ln these acts prove
their political and economic in·
tcrest'8 outweigh their regaro for
the human constituents they
were elected to serve.
The burden or proof~-ould rest on the Board of Supe rs,
the airport, and the airlines t
by flying Jets over rny head it ta
not harmlna me. As It la now, l
am being required to prove It ii
huming me and my clty. This I
have no resources available lo
do.
It is h1ah time the people of
this county and their elect.ed of.
flclals face the tact that the
Ora.nae County Airport ls not
and wlll never be the answer to
Oranae County air transport
nffda. Anotbel' airport mutt be bu.Ut. lt muat be located so that
It has. minimum adverao lmpact
•
on the residential areas of the
county.
In the meantime. under no
circumstances , should any
further expansion o( the present
airport be allowed or condoned,
even under the guise of "an ex-
perimental tesL"
RJCHARD S. JONAS, M.O.
To the 'Editor:
Carter's Taiwan decision will
be known to future students of
history as the DEC Caper, not
only for the month of its pro-
nouncement, but for this mean·
ing:
D for Disloyalty
E ror Expediency
C for Cowardice.
Mr. Carter said his decision
was not ror expediency. Then tor
what? Perhaps he wants the two
monkeys off his back -the U.S.
trade deficit, and the U.S.
economic condition. Will selling
war planes. arms, and computer
technology to the People's
Republic of China do it? If so,
why must we give up formal lies
with Taiwan to do so?
WHY MUST we serve up a
friend to Communist China by
removing troops. dissolving
diplomatic ties, and actually an·
nounclng that Taiwan is a part
of the one and only China?
Where are all of Carter's ideals
of human rights? Communist
China is not noted tor kindness
for those or her race who oppose
her. •
Does Carter underestimate
U.S. power? Certainly Red
China is not yet such a threat
that we must kow·tow to her in
order to trade wllh her. She
needs us more than we need her.
All those arms she wlll buy
might give us more reason ln the
future lO act the coward.
President Carter's act bas
made the American people par.
ty to an inexcusable disloyalty.
Where are our value standards?
Who wUl be next? Israel? I am
ashamed.
LA OORNA EICHENBERG
11e..c 1 ... 11w
To the Edit.or:
Although I'm not an adm~r
of EveUe Youn.1er, l found the
crilld1m for hl1 1'enl lncreatf!I
on hia fourplex quite aonoytq.
U his taxee on hi• 2·bedroom pr-operty were $2,300, surely it ts
not a nDMSown d1.tmp.
And If hi• ...,&a have been only
$230 tor two years and the pla~
ls reuanably weU maintained,
his ren&a we~ far too low and an
lnueue to $UO wu certalnly
JutUfl1ble.
There is a tendency to as·
sume these days that all rents
are too high , and people
categorize all landlords in Ule
-Iroup of rent gougers.
Too many renters think that
all landlords should refund tax
saviQgs, whether they've kept
u9 the place and rented for very
low rates, or operated an
eyesore and charged too much.
BOB EDWARDS
O..rltfl L~ldt19
To the Editor:
Yecch! I just re·read Mrs.
Shirley Sheppard's condemna·
lion ol the working mother
<Mailbox, Nov. 30). What a total
lack of human charity. For the
sake of Mrs. Sheppard I sincere-
ly hope God is not a reader of
lhe DaUy Pilot.
SANDY BOOSTROM
~"'"' To the Editor:
Small, mean. vicious, petty,
self-righteous. vindictive, cold,
opportunistic, demagogic and
cowardly.
The above terms describe
Orange County's two state
senators <John Schmitz and
John Briggs).
Their refusal to vote either jti
support of or in opposition to the
unanimously passed (30 to 0)
state Senate resolution in
memory of the recently as-
sassinated San Francisco
supervisor, Harvey Milk, was
frighteningly lnsensiUve.
Within the framework or our
representative democracy, I
have come to expect and to ac·
cept the fa~t that these two
"How do we know w~ not Just anocber UF'01,.
I~
senators will invariably vote
against progressive and humane
legislation, but in this instance
their attempt to politicize as·
sassination not only reveals
their essential inhumanity but
also casts doubts upon their
ethical and moral suitability to
represent those of their constil·
uents who abhor violence and believe in as well as attempt to
live up to those Christian prin·
ciples of demonstrating love and
compassion ror all of mankind.
TOM WERT
Oariffl Oppesftfe1t
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot editorial of
Dec. 3 that newly elected Slate
Senator John Schmitz "could be
an effective representative" is
commendable and appropriate.
Yet, the con ~ent of disagree-
ment on "son ~ issues -notably
his church·rooted views against
abortion aJ)d any form or gun
control" seems to be unfairly
highlighted. Most of the promi·
nent Orange Coast political
figures -Marian Bergeson,
Tom Riley, Bob Badbam, Den-
nis Carpenter and Tom Rogers
are opposed to abortion as well
as to gun control.
Surely a paper as influential
as the Pilot has a right to favor
abortion, but why single out th.is
iss ue and imply that Mr .
Schmitz's position stands alone?
IS OPPOSmON to a bortloo
wrong because it is "church·
rooted"? Anti·aborlion vlews
are rooted from and can honest·
ly be supported by the J ewish
and New Testament. Un·
fortunately, to many people the
scriptures have Uttle applicallon
in this permissive era or "rel·
alive morality," "situation
ethics" and "doing your own
thing." Opposition to abortion ls
also based on medical ,
psychological and sociological
grounds in addition to theology.
Furthermore, does the Pilot ad·
vocate the continuance of state
financing of this abomination
that manY consider to be a form
of murder?
Perhaps for the aake or an
enlightened dialogue on this con·
trovenlal subject lbe Pilot can
make tLS poslt1on better u.n·
deratood lD a Mure editorial.
CHRISTOPHER STEEL • Ultn• from "OIU'• °"' aodc:onv. TM nolal to cond111H ldtn• to /fl
apact or tUmmcitt Ubtt u rtwruecl
Utln1 o/ 300 wordl or ~ .. ""1l 1-
gtwn firt/nt11". All ldt,.,, mUlf in·
clud• lignature and mailiftg addrf11
but 110mc• mar be wilhhdd on rt-
quett fJ "4//ici.rtl rto.tcm "opporna..
Po.I,,, &Olli "°' be publiWd.
J
CALIFORNIA ~.December 21. 1978 DAILY PILOT .4 5
•t Man in SE?
Plan To Kill Defectors, Official,s Revealed
,.,. ..........
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A 1 ader ot an u1auinuUoo team
H1lftned by th Rev Jlm J ooe1
to k I Peopl Temple defec\Ortl
and public otflclala r e mains
alive ln San Francllco, attorney
Mark Lane uid he wu told by a repo rtedJooca· coottdaat.
Lane toid report.ere Wedne8·
day that hl.I tUent Terri Buford.
who be aald left Jonestown three
w ka ~Ott lh mus murder·
autc:ldN tn Guyanaa. lu\owa lbe
name~ tho persuo.
A K D WHO was lnvolved In
the plan. I.Moe replied, ''Those
who played the role of 1uard ln
Jonestown and those people who
remained here an San Jt'ranclsco.
And Terri Buford uya s he
knowa the name of the person
who la here in San Francisco who had the respooslblUty to
carryouttheproaram "
Lane. however, declined to
ldenUfy the peraoo.
Tboee who might have been
marked for assaasinatlon before
J ones ordered the deaths or
Oaildre11, ltloilaer Resf!ued Woman Gets
3YeaT8 in
FroudCase
Mary Ortiz reaches for ber aoo Ernie Jr., 1~. after
she and three youngst ers were rescued by a CalUornla
Highway Patrol helicopter from the snow near La Porte in
the northern Sierra. Andy Anderson. center, carries
Monica Guerrero, one of the other two children rescued.
They had been trapped in a camper pickup truck in the
snow four days
Asbestos Workers
Ask Medical Exams
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
24·year -Oild woman, convicted o!
welfare fraud in Ventura Coun·
ty. baa been sentenced to three
years in prison for her role in a
welfare scheme that netted
$123,000 from Los An geles
County.
Patty Mouton, 24. who pleaded
guilty to fou.r counts of forgery
and weJJare fraud 111 t.tie Los
Angelea case, was sentenced
Wednesday by Superior Court
Judge Leslie W. Ugbt. who also
placed her on nine years proba·
lion.
I
J
SAN PEDRO (AP) -A union representing 2,400 workers bu
asked government agencies to force Todd Pacific Shipyards to pro-
vide annual medical exams to guard a&ainlt disease caused by
asbestos.
Local 9 of the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding
Workers of America filed complaints WedDesday with the state
and federal departments of occupational safety.
All workers at the shipyard are affected by asbestos "because
the asbestos particles become airborne and float throughout tbe
yard," said Steve Roberts, executive secretary of the union.
ROBERTS SAID THAT although only shipwrights and joiners
work directly with asbestos, all craftsmen at the shipyard are cov.
ered in the complaint! -marine machinists, boilermakers
pipefitters, welders, ship fillers and riggers. '
A union request for checkups in July was rejected by the com-
pany. Roberts said.
Noting that the Navy announced in July it would provide
medical exams for military and civilian personnel exposed to
asbestos, Roberts said, "Jt seems like we ln the private sector are
second-class c1tiiens. They <Todd officials) say we are not entitled
to a medical screenmg progr am."
1) I estimate my home's value at
2) Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
I
4) Balance I still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligi~le to borrow (subtract4 from 3 }
6) Amount I'd like to borrow
A 45·COUNT complaint issued
last September charged Miss
Mouton and two co-defendants
with cheating Los Angeles Coun·
ty out of $122,957 between May
1976 and October 1977 by r eceiv·
lng aid for 66 non·e xistent
children. The same three were
convicted or bilking Ventura
County out of $14,000 in a similar
scheme.
Prosecutors said the defen-
dants used counterfeit birth
certlficates for themselves and
the fictitious children.
With a H omeowners Equity L oan from The Bank of California. you
may qualify to borro.YJ from $3.000 to $30,000 (or even 'more!) to use
for your children's education, travel, other worthwhile Investments -
almost any purpose you can name.
Calculate your borrowing power, adjust that amount to your needs
and budget and then stop by or call us for deta\ls. You worked for your
home, now let it work for you.
THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA
Nmwpon lknch OfRce. 1401 ~ Stn,-«t. Ntwp0n Be1teh 92663, 1714) 833-3511
M(-~t-..... ,,,. ..... e--... --·;·c:
more tha n 900 p eraona In
Joneatown have DOt boeo publlc·
ly ldenut\ed.
Lane commtftted to reporten u the woman teet.llled before a
federal srand Jury lnvesU1at.tq
the 1mbulh elaying of Rep. Leo
Ryan, who wa.. cunned down
with lour other persona at an
alratrtp bel0re the mus dtatbs
took place.
WhUe none of the t.esttmony
waa made public. Lane aald ahc
had answered aJI the 1nnd
Jury's quesUooa and did not lake
the Flfth Am~ent or uk for
lmmun.lly.
' Lane Hld she had already
turned over People• Temple
bank account record.I abowlng
that the cult had moce than $7 s
million ln the account in SwWI
banka In Panama, and that atte
had no inlormauoo about Ryan's
death.
Lane also said lbat a meuage
from a controversial figure lo
the Peoples Temple cue de·
livered to Jones may bave
touched off the mus deaths.
Lane said that Timothy Stoen. a defect.of from the temple , sent
a me111ase to Jones warning lhat
any defections prompted by
Ryan'• vtalt to Jonestown would
"mean the total destruction ot
Jlm Jones abd Jonestown."
Lane. who esc•ped Jonestown
nt the •ta.rt of the death ritual.
uld he wu present when the
m~aaage wu delivered verbally
by 11 temple member to Jones
Nov. 17. the night before t.he
airstrip ambush.
Stoen. unavallable tor com-
ment. knew how to manipulate
the cull leader, accordint to
Lane. who said Jones distrusted
Stoen fearing he was a govern·
ment agent.
Stoen ls a former Callfomla
prosecutor who ill now a private
lawyer representing former
Peoples Temple members who
are' •u.ln& the cuJt. Stoen'a son
was amoac thote who died at
Jonestown.
Meanwhile, a California at·
torney general's tuk force Is
looking lnto allegations that
Stoen, who headed the San Fran·
claco district attorney's voter
fraud unlt, covered up a probe
1nvolvlng the Peoples Temple In
l976.
AS MANY as 1,000 te mple
membe rs we re ah1pped from
Los Angeles and Mendocino
counties to Sao Francisco to
vote In the clty's 1975 municipal
election, according to published reports.
After being a temple member
more than sht years. Stoen left
In 1977. He had served as assls·
tant prosecutor In Mendocino
County during the period, and In
1976 was named a deputy dis·
tract at.tomey in San Francl&co.
Small Plane Crashes at LAX
LOS A NGELES <AP> -
Tur bulence from a nearby
jeUiner may have slammed a
small charter plane onto a
runway at lnt.emaUooaJ Airport.
injuring both men aboJl'd, one oC
the men says.
Pilot J ohn Howerton, 25. of
Burbank. was listed in critical
condlUon at Hawthorne HospitaJ
after Wed nesday evening's
crasb, which occurred as tht:
California Air Charter Cberoket:
Lance was landing.
Passenger John T homas
Howell. 25, of Valencia. alao a
Ucemed pilot. wu in good c:oodJ.
lion, a hospital spokeswoman
s aid.
"An airliner just in front of us
-a jet, a 727. J thJnk -set up
turbulence that slammed us into
the ground," Howell said.
Gill ol Proini
SACRAMENTO <AP>-lt was
a Christmas gift of protest from
a group ot militant welfare recip-
ients to Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.: Jars symbolizing blood and
ashes.
K e vin Aslanian, an un·
employed San J ose man who
gets welfare for his wife and
three children. led the group to
Brown's office Wednesday. Asia·
nlan is head of the Welfare
Recipients League. Aslanian s&Jd
~e group bas filed a s ult accusinf
( STATE J
the state of oot implementing a
law requiring emergency aid in
cases of need.
Seal Bo•b• S tolen
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Police
are looking for several cases of
potentially dange rous "seal
bombs" stolen Crom tbe tuna
seiner Mermaid at the Street
Pier. officers said.
The small expl06ive devices
are used to "shock or frighten"
suls ln lWla fishing waters and,
according to fire department of·
ficials. could "kill or severely
inJure" humans. Frank Correia,
o wne r and captain of the
Merm aid. found 1.872 of the
bombs missing Tuesday.
Con""-"tion Changed
PALM SPRINGS <APJ -The
felony conviction of a Palm Springs psych.iatnst for soli c1ta·
tion for burglary of another phys1·
c1an 's office bas been reduced to a
misdemeanor .....
However, despite the reduc-
tion Wednesday in Raversade
County Supenor Court. the sen·
Lenee was unchanged for Or .
Morton Kur land, former mental
More Parking Places!
For
south coast Plaza
customers.
The day
after Thanl<Sgiving
and every weekend
'til Christmas, our
2800 employees will
be bused to the Plaza
so that you,
our customer, will have
more convenient and
close-f n parking.
"'
health director of the Desert
Hospital here -two years pro-
bation and a SS.000 fine in con·
necUon with the burglary of the
office of Dr. James O'Connor of
Yucca Valley.
Tallker Brftllu Doae•
LONG BEACH CAP> -The
Atlantic Conqueror. an 800-foot
tanker loaded with 81,000 tons or
c rude oil was being towed
tow.ard thia port today after its
main engine broke down about
l2S miles southwest of here.
A Seattle towing tug reached
the Liberian·regtstered tanker
Wednesday. Fears that the wind
and current might force the dis-
abled vessel onto Bishop Rock.
about JOO miles west of San
Diego, and cause an oil 'spill had
prom pted t he earlie r dis ·
patch ing of the Long Beach
harbor tug Spartan lo hold it in
place.
Bodfl ol Di.,.-r f 'ound
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The body
or J o hn Andreoli. 38. who
Jumped to his death off the
Ocean Beach pier last week
while weanng a weighted scubet
d iver's bell has been round float·
ing in t.he surf, lbe coroner's of·
face said.
SOUTH CO\ST PlAZA
/laTS frOm SOUttl coast flt3l.3 VIiiage,
Brtstol & 5an DleOO ~
N
Orange Coast Daily Pilot Editorial Page Robert H. WoedtPubllther ThomH KwvU/Ecmor
B~nbarl Krelt>lchlEdltorfat Ptve E!dJIM
Bay Cleanup C o st
A Public C o ncer11
NIWA -The Newport Jrvtne Waste-Mana c:m nt A~t!ncl isn't o grou1> that peopl 1 really excited
ubtlut. ll' · a con!lorUum or loe~l aa nci that urround
the Up~r •wport Ba~
W purposc:-ls lo t'om up wnh a plun to cl an up not
only lh ~v. but tht' v.·uteNay thot empt) Into It md
Jt Jvc polluh>d It
NlWA'~ work ou 11ht to oo o( con Id r bl lnt •r ·sl lo n:saden~ of •ewport Beach. C l M a and ln·lne
ix.'NlUb the c caU arc members Iona "'Ith th In lnl!
lt;tn c h Wut cr l>htrtcl .ind late and counlv
n.·prt"b\.'f\\UllVt"S Untlt•r a pl., n flnUy put out by NJ\\' A,
the t~ost uf nut only clcanint; up the hlfV but aliw
prevention Of (UlUrC putlultOO, I going to be borne b}
taxpayers.
The primary source or pollution an the pper Bay Is
\Ill \hut's rup1dly (itlmg in Uw waterw u) Th • s tutt-. '"
owner of thl' buy's t'C'Olo~1cul pr~!>c>rve, as 1eoins to huvc to
pa y for dn-dgmg whut '~ tht>re now • •
But control or rutur~ Mlle.hon '~ where there·~ a sphl
b~lween NlWA ni mbers One ~roup hold.-. lhul at 's nearh
1mpol;isabh.• to halt lhl' runoff or mud bearing "aten. from
upstreum eonstrnctaon sate:i. Th.J:i. rnaJortly v1ewpomt alw
contends that :;ome attcmpt.s ot s ail control s hould bo
sufficient since complet~ ('OntJmmt•nt would ht: too <·ostly
for builder~
The otht!r school or thought a~ lhttl Mlt containment 1~
mandatory. lA•t thl1 bushier pay the C06l of controlling the
sail (including constructwn of " desallmg basin south of
San Diego 1-'rct!wuy > m!>tcud of lettmg 1t now mlo the bay
whl!re the public puy~ to clrc..-dgc it out. the minority
members suy.
The NIWA plan 1 dh!ctmg the maJority viewpolnt ts
~vailab\e for public romment t::ventuaUy a rlan mu::tt oo
a pproved by th1t fl'tforul Environmenta Protection
Agency.
Since either pl~n will <·ost the public· millions. it
behooves resident~ to t.•ducl;jte themsclvc~. then share
the ir views with lho1r city offi ciab.
Loss fo r Schools
Dona ld Sm a ll wood will be :,orely missed on the
Newport-Mesa School Board.
Smallwood. a local attorney who's served on the
board since 1971 and currently is its president, is
resigning in January. ·
He has cited frustration with eroding local control as
one of the reasons for his departure. In addition. the
death of his wife, Costa Mesa City Councilwom an Mary
Sma llwood, in October has taken some of the enjoyment
out of civic activities for him.
Smallwood's intelligence. liveliness. genuine concern
for the people he served and hard work have made a
significant contribution to the school board and to local
citizens.
We wis h him well as he turns his a ttention to his law
firm and private lif c.
And we can't help hoping that someday once again
he'll c hoose to bring his energy and discernment to
enrich the public scene.
OnistIDaS Spirit
F'ormer actor-stuntman J ohn ''Monty" Ryan lost his
$307 SociaJ Security payment to bandits in a Newport
Beach parking lot early this month.
The Costa Mesa man, crippled by a stroke that has
left him unable to work since 1970. figured he'd never get
the money back -money that left his family short of
making its $385 monthly rent payment.
But Ryan had forgotten the power of Christmas
spirit
His loss was returned rive.fold.
Orange Countians have pitched in directly or through
the Newport Beach Police Department to aid Ryan, his
wife and their three children.
When Mrs. Ryan learned last week that the fund had
reached $885 she pleaded for Daily Pilot readers to send
their donations elsewhere.
"You've got to call this off," she urged. "It's needed
more now by other people."
But the money continued to dribble in -the fund
finally topping $2,000. .
Christmas will be merry, indeed, for a family whose
burdens have been somewhat lightened this year by the
g~nerosity of others .
Mrs. Ryan said s he had forgotten how really
"wonderful" people can be, that this year's Christmas
has proved something special.
1l is s pecial. Not only for the Ryans, but for those who
ma de it special for lhcm.
• Opinions e•pressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Sony
By L.M. 'll()'YD
Original name or the multi·
billion-dollar Sony Corpora·
lion in Japan was "Tokyo
Tsushin Kogyo." Westerners
1 found it difficult lo say. So its
chief executive Akio Morita
tinkered with new-na me no-
tions. Finally, he combined
the Latin "sonus" meaninJ
s ound with the highly
American ''Sonny Boy" as
popularized by Al Jolson and
came up with Sony.
'
J)ear
Gloomy
Gus
For what dotb it profit a
man to come to work
al ck t o help th e
company wh e n H
means 1 week later 10
more men wUJ bo orr
sick?
C.J.
Christmas in Yugoslavia is
preceded by another holiday
called Ochichi. Youngsters
on that day traditionally
grab their fathers, tie them
to beds and chairs. and
decline to release same until
s aid e lders promise to de-
1 iv e r the reques ted
Christmas presenti>.
Adolf HiUer always put a
heaping spoonful of augar in hJs wlne.
At least nine U.S. presi·
dents had at one time or
another owned staves.
Q. "What•• Alzheime r's
DlHl&e7"
A. The technical term ror a
brain ailment that most peo.
pie call aemllty.
Q. ''Jn skateboard lingo,
what'• 'aooly foot'7"
A. A rfde with the rt1ht fooC
ahead ot the let\°.
The founden of Jericho,
Mi nn, were a rellcloua
bunc h. They nemed their
town ln honor of the BlbUcal
R lver. But they weren't
atraltlaced. They financed
their public budcet with a
municipally owned uloon.
Rowland Evan /Robert Novak
China: The Lifestyle Changes
TACHINO. Chtna Te~tOn
bc'twttn 1 aen rauon or &tat
lmpoted conformaty aniJ \ho new
1tirrln1J toward personal
fr tdom In China helps explain
lh&t r pon.ee or ll l7·yuar-old alrl
to controlled but l&nlflc&nt
c banaet hero
We w~rc taken to vb1l the im
mocul lt1 cramped quarters or a
six· m ember
family living
and wc>rk1n~
With Q hllll
m1lllon other
Chine!lt' a t
the Tachlng
oll flelds. The
hc lld of the
family wb u.
smi ling .
arch etypal
"model worker" who as ll dnlll'r
helped OJ)cn those fields In the
li.te t9SC>s bul now does the
lll(hter woric of watch repairing.
After so m e p e rfunclory
sloaan~rioJt from this worker,
we asked his eldest child. 17.
about her plans alter finishing
middle school.
"Whatever the slate wants me
to do," she replied automaticaJ-
ly. We persisted: s urely , you
must have some desire of your
own. She gig~. Then after
brief hesitation, she said, "My
father repairs watches, and I
would like to work making
watches."
THAT MAY seem a modest
s tatement or independence. but
it could not have happened mere
weeks ago. In the presence of
Important cadres from the oil
fields, th.is simple girl was re-
vealing something important:
s he has ambitions and desires of
her own and is not a mere pawn
or the state.
The brave Chinese who put
up wall posters in Peking calling
on J immy Carter to investigale
human rights in China cand
pas ted them up again after they
were tom down > are the tip or
the iceberg. Beneath them ar e
untold millions whose personal
lives were disrupted more than
the outer world imagines by
China's last decade of political
tumult and now are cautiously
Mailbox
seeking a leu re uered ex·
l&tence
Apart Crom dramatic wall
po•Lers and the rcsime•s
headlong ru.sh toward Industrial
modernization. the human 1tory
or China 14 the qulel, aradual re·
moval ot the Mao st atraltjacket.
While Western diplomat.I lear
thia m~ be followed by iron
repression, the needs of Teng
H1lao.ping'5 government are
geared to Ubcr11Uzation. Teng Is
committed to tlea wilh the West
and a shakeup ol the l mmense
bureaucracy -goala lhal run
counter lo Red Guard die·
talorsh.ip.
NOTHI NG BETTER ll·
lustrates this than the re· '
glme's decision, unprecedented
ror a communist country, to
send young people to Western
universities. Students in the U.S.
and Western Europe will aoon
reach the lhouaands.
Simultaneously, Peking
University and other Chinese
collea~ are experiencing their
own tranaformation. Closed
down lor live years by the
Cultural Re volution and then
con1trlcted lntcllcctually for
another five yeara t>y Maollit
radicals, the unlveriitles have
been reborn.
Their students are now select-
ed by nationwide competition,
and the CUitural Revolution's re·
quiremenL that middle school
g raduate1 muat work in the countrysid~ before continuing
their education has been quietly
dropped. Peking University atu·
dents are prominent among the
young people who gained the
world's attention with the ir
demonstrations for free speech
The university's £nglish read-
ing room offers unc~nsored U.S.
newspapers and fJl&gazines. One
foreign ministry interpreter ac·
companying us was reading that
old anti·communfat periodical,
the Reader's Digest. Another In·
lerpreter was deep Into the final
(and overtly anti-communist)
volume of Winston Churchill 's
memoirs. At the .Hsi Tan wall of
posters, yoqng Chinese t.old us
how much they enjoy the Voice
or Amertcs In "special t:naU:sh'0
Cllmited vocabulary, slow de· livery ).
WESTERN C LASS ICAL
music a nd ancient. Chlne:sc
opera, banned from China for
over a decade, are back. When
we attended the opera, the
theater was packed with men
a nd wo m en in C om rnunisl
China 's "blue ants" costume but
there were exceptions -such as
one woman with a fur coat.
brightly colored scarf and curly
hairdo.
Dresses are to be seen In
China, especially .in Shanahai.
anti s uch non·conrormity may
spre,ad lo men . ··our clothing is
much too stereotyped ," one
young party cadre told us, ad-
ding he thought traditional
Chinese dress should be rein-
.rod•Jced for certain occasions.
Creeping individualism l'an
spread from dress to polittcaJ
thought. Liu Sh ao·chi. the
former chief or state purged by
Mao Tse·tWlg <and now believed
dead), is still excoriated as a
·revis ionist" on e briefing
at Tach.ing. But at the Hsi Tan
wall in Peking, posters demand
his rehabilitation.
What is a self-r especting
cadre to d o? He get s no
guidance from Tl'ng himself.
who in his interview with us
side-stepped a question about rc-
h a bi 1 i ta ling Liu. "So many
things have been said about liu
that it's hard lo know what to
believe," a lower·level foreign
ministry official told us. After a
pause. he added: "Things are
complicated."
The idea that life is "com·
plicatM" without explication by
offi cial dogma 1s in itself new to
CommWlisl China. Although this
country's tradition of cen-
tralized authoritarianism will
certainly not give way to dt ·
moc racy. the rus h toward
moderruzation is changing the
way Crunese thank and lave -
and faster than anybody deemed
possible.
'Tests' Can't Change OC Airport Facts
To the Editor:
Thanks lo Mrs. Reynolds for
her fine Dec. 17 story on "dirty"
flights from the Orange County
Airport. Thanks also for your
paper's continuing coverage of
the m ain problem that faces
Newport Beach in its fight for
survival.
Your story on the dangerous
cutback aJlitudes being forced
upon the airline pilots by their
manage ment serves to show
that the current "lest" utilizing
three.engine Boeing 727 a ircraft
by Hughes Airwest is an invaUd
evaluation of its possible lessened
noise Impact. '
Th e curre nt · "t est " i s
s ignificantly being conducted
during our coldest months or the
year when noise tends lo be mut·
ed. with reduced payloads so
that takeoff angle can be higher,
and when engine cutback can be
accomplished at lower a ltitudes.
IF A VAIJD lest were to be
undertoken, wouldn't it be better
conducted during the summer
months when those of us unw
the infernal flight-path are mosi.
aware of the noise? In the sum-
mertime. the passenger load is
more near capacity levels, the
warmer temperatures require a
4·degree decrease ln takeoff
angle, and the l,OOO·foot cutback
would be mandatory.
I am distressed that we are
being "tested" without our con·
sent with loaded dice. I know of
no other human experimentation
in thi!:; country that gambles
with the health and wcll·being of
people without \heir express
permission.
Our Board of Supervisors, 12
years ago, declared ''the Orange
County Airport Is not a jet
capa bility airport," yet the
board cootinuea to expand the
Jet fl ights out o f it. The
supervisors in these acts prove
their political and economlc ln·
terests outweigh their regard for
the human constituents they
were elected lo serve.
The burden of proof should
rest on the Board ot Supervisors.
the airport, and the aJrUnes that
by nytna Jets over my head It 111
not harmina me. As ll la now, 1
am belna required lo prove It u
harmlna me and my city. This I
have no resources available to
do.
It II hlah Ume the pe<>ple of
this county and their elected of·
flclala face the fact that the
Or1n1e County Atri><>rt is not
and will never be the an1wer to
Oranae County air tran aport
need1. AnotMr airport mutt be
bulll. It m1.11t be located so that fl hH minimum achene Impact
I •
on the residential areas of the
county.
ln the m eantime, under no
c ircumstances, sho uld any
further expansion of the present
airport be allowed or condoned,
even under the guise of "an ex-
perimental test."
RJCHARD S. JONAS, M.D.
A.ala a med
To the FAit.or:
Carter 's Taiwan decision will
be known to Cuture students of
history as the DEC Caper, not
only for the month of its pro-
nouncement, but lor this mean·
ing:
D for Dis loyalty
E for Expediency
C for C.Owardke.
Mr. Carter said his decision
was not for expediency. Then for
what? Perhaps he wants the two
monkeys orr his back -the u .s.
trade de ficit, a nd the U.S.
economic condition. wm selling
war planes, arms, and computer
technology to the People's
Republic of China do it? 1f so,
why must we give up formal Ues
\\!It h Taiwan to do so?
WHY MUST we serve up a
friend to Communist China by
removing troops. dissolving
dlplom11tic Ues, and actually an-
nouncing that Taiwan is a part or the one and only China?
Where are all of Carter's Ideals
or human rights? CommunJst
China is not noted for kindness
for those of her race who oppose
her .
Does Carter underestlmate
U.S . power? Certainly Red
China is nol yel s uch a threat
that we must kow-tow lo her ln
order to trade with her. She
needs us more than we need her.
All those arms she will buy
might give us more reason in the
future to act the coward.
President Carter's act has
made the American people par.
ty lo an Inexcusable disloyalty.
Where arc our vaJue standard.4'?
Who will be next? Israel? I am
ashamed.
LA DORNA EICHENBERG
11e..c1..ca1w
To the Editor:
Although I'm not an admJrer
or EveUe Youn1er. I touod tbe
criticism ror hi• rent lncrell8
on bl• fourpln quite aMOYlnc.
If his tax• on his 2·bedroom
property were $2,300, surely lt Is
not a nmdown dump.
And 1f bit ttnll have been only
$230 for two years and the place
11 ruaonably wen malnt&lned.
hi• renta were far too low and an
incireaae to $260 waa certa1nly
Jut Ult able.
There is a tendency to as-
sume these days that all rents
a r e loo high. and p eopl e
categorize all landlords in the
1roup ol rent gougers.
Too many renters think that
all landlords should refund lax
savings, whether they've kept
up the place and rented for very
low rates, o r operated an
eyesore and charged too much.
BOB EDWARDS
O..rft11 L~kbtg
To the F.dilor:
Yecch! I just re-read Mrs.
Shirley Sheppard's condemna·
lion of the working mother (Mai1box, Nov. 30). What a total
lack of human charity. For the
sake of Mrs. Sheppard I sincere -
ly hope God is not a reader of the DaJly Pilot.
SANDY BOOSTROM
~rd ..
To the F.dltor:
Small, mean, vicious, petty,
self·righteous, vindictive, cold.
opportunistic, demagogic and
cowardly.
The above terms describe
Orange County 's two s tate
senators (John Schmitz and
John Briggs).
Their refusal lo vote either 1n
support of or In opposition to the
unanlmou.4'1y passed (30 to 0)
s t ate senate r esolution 1n
m emory of the recently as-
sassinat ed San Francisco
supervisor, Harvey Milk, was
frighteningly lnsensili ve.
Within the framework or our
r epr esentative democracy, I
have come to expect and to ac-
cept the f acl thot these two
"How do we know lt'6 noc
Jutt •nother UFO?"
• r
senators will invariably vote
against progressive and humane
legislation. but an this instance
their attempt to politicize as-
sassination not only reveals
their essential inhumanity but
also casts doubts upon their
ethical and moral suitability lo
r epresent those of their constit-
uents who abhor violence and
believe in as well as attempt lo
live up to those Christian prin-
ciples ot demonstrating love and
compassion ror all or mankind.
TOM WERT
Oariffl Oppo•f tfon
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot editorial ol
Dec. 3 that newly elected State
Senator John Schmitz "could be
an effective representative" is
commendable and appropriate .
Yet, the con nent of disagree-
ment on "son' .: issues -notably
his church-rooted views against
abortion and any form of gun
control" seems to be unfairly
highlighted. Most of the promi-
nent Orange Coast political
figures -Marian Bergeson,
Tom Riley, Bob Badham. Den-
nis Carpenter and Tom Rogers
a re opposed to abortion as well
as to gun control.
Surely a paper as influential
as the Pilot has a right to favor
abortion, but why single out this
issu e a nd im1)ly l ha t Mr.
Schmitt's position stands alone?
IS OPPOSmON to abortlon
wrong becuu_se it is ''church·
rooted"? Anti-abortion views
are rooted from and can hone&t·
ly be supported by the Jewish
a nd New T est a m e nt. Un.
fortunately, to many people the
scriptures have little application
in this permissive era of "rel·
a tlve morality," "sltua tton
ethics" and "doing your own
thing." Opposition to abortion ls
also based o n m e dical .
psychological and sociological
grounds In addition to theology.
Furthermore, does the l'Uot ad·
vocate the continuance of state
rlnanclng or this abomination
that m any consider lo be a form ot murder?
PcrbaPf for the sake of an
enlightened dhlloeue on this con·
troverstal subject the Pllot can
make Its posltlon better un·
derstood in 1 future editorial. CHRISTOPHER STEEL • l.Attt11 from reOIUrt ~ wrcom..
TM right to conden•• lt:ltflf• to fU
lpQCt OT elimt"att llbtf ii rsN'nlfd.
LAtttr• o/ 300 word.t ar ltu wW bt
prwnptt/~~t. All let1mmutt m-
cllltU lign(.lturt ond moUllag oddrtu
but "°"'" mov bf coUMdd on ~ ~st t/ auf/fdtnt "°'°" u CJA>Omd.
PodrJ wm not bf publWN!d.
'